HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-02-09 - Orange Coast Pilot* * * • * *
DUICI ClllT YDIR ·11111• DAllY PIPER
··: TUESDAV .. FEBRUARY 9, 1982 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS .
Newport Center expansion repealed
By STEVE MARBLE OflNDelly,.._S...,
The Newport Beach City
Council put an end to months of
controversy early today by
repealing the Irvine Company's
$123 million Newport Center
expansion project.
The development plan, the
subject of a s uc cessful
referendum drive, originally
Barber
to stay
• in center
By RICHARD GREEN
Of , ... Dally ~ ... Staff
Jim Anderson the barber has
won has battle against the Irvine
Company. a victory that means
he'll be able to continue cutting
hair an a company-owned
shopping center an Irvine for the
next five years.
•1n a 2:30 p.m. ceremony
Moada)', Anderaoea •fs!Md a five.year e~ion on the lease
for tbe University Park Barber
Stylists shop.
This represents a policy
reversal for the company which
had drawn sharp criticism from
AnderSQn, his customers, city
officials and other shop owners
when it tried late last year to
cancel the lease because the
shop didn 't attract enough foot
trarfic.
Following the ceremony m the
shop at Culver and Michelson
drives, David M Koch. director
of property management for the
company, downplayed the role
public pressure played in the
company decision to extend the
lease.
"The pressure didn't have as
much to do with 1t as the cooperation of the people here,,.
Koch said. looking around the
barbershop at Richard Radies,
owner of the University Park
Coiffures shop and Roger
Elgram, owner of In & Out
Photo shop.
Elgram's shop was to have
displaced Anderson's Instead
an agreement was reached
whereby the photo shop would
occupy 900 square feet of unused
space at University Park
Coiffures; which as adjacent to
the barber shop
"We 'll all be happ y
ne 1 ghbors," R adi es said.
beaming.
Asked why the reared lease
cancellation had become such a
big issue, Anderson said,
"We've been here for 13 and a
half years and a lot of people
have drifted through
<See BARBER, Page AZ>
was to be put to a citywide vote
in June
But the council -on a 4·3 vote
agreed to toss in the towel and
call off the election at the
request of the Irvine Company.
Robert Shelton , a vice
president for _.he development
firm, said it was unlikely that
the project would be given a fair
chance at the polls .
··Our discussions 1n the
co mmunity." Shelton told the
council, "clearly Indicate that as
a consequence primarily of the
leasehold controversy there is
an anti-I rvine Company
constituency that will seek to
s trike at the company by
opposing completion of the
center."
He called his firm's request an
"unhappy conclusion" but one
that "we hope will mitigate the
•rw.,......
BIG FINO I.I Ranch ~1sll·it of thl• San Dtt•).!o polin·
clt.•partment fan~ part' of SflAOO in l'<l'-h lound In :1n
un1dt>nt1fied man Ill .1 trash l"an Th<' man -.ai<I ht· lmincl lht·
<·.1-.h "htlt· ('ollt•<·tini! oln nt'""PaJ>t'r" loi .1 l'hurC'h
func1 rat"IOJ.! Tht• man who ;.askt•d ht~ 1cknt 11' ht• kt•pt
'-l'Crt•I ft•ar-.. tht• mnnt'' harl ht><.'n "tashed h~ nno! 11l'all•r-..
Candy court order
Sweets go to wife in battery case
OTTAWA. Kan u\P1 Stevt• .Jackson will Ix.• g inng
his wire a hox of c•:.rnd' for \'alt•ntim"" Da' h\ C'ourt
order · ·
Franklin Count\ District Judgt• Lari'\ C1n1r-..t•n orrlt•r<.•d
the gift m lieu of a (ine after Jackson. 22. plearl<•<I guilt' to ;i
c ha rge of batterv on his wife.
Coursen sus.pended a SSO fine and ordt'rcct .J .ickson to
buv a box of candv for at least $20 and pa' court co"ts
· The sheriff's· office said Jackson \vas charged with
batten· Dec 28 after he allegedh· awakenen hi s "if<.• b'
hitting her on the s houlder and ar"m ann orctrn.•d hN In gii
outside to get firewood for the stove ·
Nixon loses round on· tapes
Fe~ral court . rejects illegality claim on screenings
WASHINGTON <AP > -A
federal appeals court threw out
today ex-President Richard
Nixon's appeal that lhe federal
covemment is actine Illegally in
processing his White House tape
recordings for eventual public
screenings.
· The three-judge panel of the
U.S. Court of Appeals also ruled
the 1overnment was usin1
proper and constitutional
methods to separate Nixon's
"diary" recordlnaa. which will
be returned to him on privacy
1rounds, from other recordlnp
that wUJ be made available to
the public at 11 deal1nated
centen.
The panel's decl.lon ufbeld a
ruJin1 by a lower federa court,
wblch said the General Services
Administration'• rulea for
proce11in1 the tape1 were
conaUtutlonat.
Nixon claimed the procedures
l
· violated his constitutional rieht
to personal privacy, Political
privacy and the presidential
prlv'llege of confidentiality.
The ex-president aaid the GSA
administrator should have
es la bllshed regulations lo
m I n i m i 1 e c on s tl t u' l o n a I
infringements aod 1u11eated,
for examf.le, a system In which
the adm nistrator could have
made available to the public
only tboee recordinp relating to
Watergate, or could have
restricted the availability of
recordinp to a fixed period of
years.
The appeals court, In an
optnlon written by senior U.S.
Circuit Jud19 Carl McGowan,
said tbe regulation• permit
Nixon and any othen whose
rlgh ta are thiettened &1
dlsclolure to ot>Jeet and obtain
Judicial review of any 9dvene
determination by the GSA .
McGowan said that Nixon
claims he has the right of an
Individual to operate personal
and business affairs outside of
the public's view or listening.
''Mr. Nixon, however, can
claim no such broad rlaht of
privacy with respect lo bis life
while president," McGowan
wrote. "For presidents and
ordinary citizens alike, a
personal privacy interest
protected by the Fourth
Amendment must find Its source
In a legitimate expectaUon ot
privacy.
"Mr. Nixon while preatdent
could hav~ had auch an
expectation in some materials,
1uch aa diaries or other
com munlcatlona rHpecting
personal matten unrelated to
Ma public duties, but no& in
material• related to the coaduct
~8" NIXON, Pile· tU>
divisive c lim ate we see
developing in the community "
Councilman Philip Maurer,
who voted against repealing the
plan which the council approved
last summer, called it "a black
day for Newport Beach."
"If we rescind this project
there will be a lot of inflated
egos in Newport Beach," said
Maurer, "and I won't let that
group ever to do this to the city
again."
Mayor Jackie Heather was
joined by council members John
Cox, Don Strauss and Paul
Hummel in rescinding the
massive expansion plan.
·'I feel this issue has been
dealt with in a destructive way
and pushed into the political
arena," said Cox. "I don't lhink
the Irvine Company should have
to put up with th1~ mob scene."
Councilwoman Ruthelyn
Plummer. who voted against
repealing the pro1ect, charged
that referendum leaders used
.. diabolic deceit and d1stort1on"
to gather signatures.
Ron Covington, an elementary
school teacher and leader of the
referendum drive. said lhe
drawbacks to the Newport
<See CENTER, Page i\2)
Reagan attacks critics
Says Democrats pre]Xlring 'horror stories' on budget
DES MOINES. Iowa (AP> -President Reagan. going on the
attack against c ritics, says
Democra'1c demagogues are
preparing "horror stories"
about his 1983 budget but offer
no reasonable altemative.
Reagan was taking his
sharpened sales pitch to the
Republican-controlled Iowa
Legislature today where he was
expected to continue the
ad-libbed slashes he began
Monday in Minneapolis at the
ltaftel •two-dQ ......... s; ,,. ......... WU 1W1'
up the promotional tour a Indianapolis lat.er today. Similar
ouUnp through the West and
Deep South are planned next
month.
total speding in 1983 wall be
higher than in 1982 and that this
year's total is higher than 1981
because of automatic escalation
created by Democrats.
"We have been reducing the
rate of increase that has been
built in," Reagan said
The president complained that
while Democrats criticize his
budget because of the $91.S
billion deficit it projects. they
have nothing to offer themselves
except higher taxes.
..._ 'Uld be -11l not back
dow6 on hia Plana for greatly
expanded defense s pending
despite suggestions that
Congress, especially the
Democrats there. will insist on
some cuts.
While Reagan drew cheers
from Republicans, about 5,000
protesters jeered him and his
policies
As Reagan appeared at the
fund raiser. the demonstrators
gathered in 8-degree weather
outside the Carlton Celebrity
Room
It was believed that Reagan
was whisked into a r ear ,
entrance and did not see the
crowd
The bundled-up protester s
carried placards. some reading,
'·Fill lhe Missjles with Grain
and Prlme Rib and Let the Good
Times Roll," "Mr_ President.
You Are Wrong , .. "Put
American Back to Work Stop
Impom .' 'Money for Jobs. Not
War "
They also chanted. ··we want
1obs ! .. and "Hey hey, ho ho ,
<See REAGAN, Page A2> •
"You have to get about 50
miles at least from the Potomac
River and the District of
Columbia to get back to the real
world," Reagan to l d an
approving crowd in Minneapolis.
''In the days ahead you are
going to be subm erged In
demagoguery about the '83
budget," Reagan continued.
"You 're hearing all kinds of
horror stories about the people
who are going to be thrown out
in the snow to hunger and die of
cold and so forth."
2 firms join move
to cut air fares
Reagan fired his impromptu
rem arks at a rally for Sen.
David Durenberger, R-Minn.
Deputy press secretary Larry
Speakes said some of the barbs
were written on the flight from
Washington but that Reagan
thought of most of them as he
spoke.
"They came from the heart,"
Speakes said. thumping himself
on the chest for emphasis.
Reagan said Democrats are
accusing him of cruel budget
cutting when he actually has not
reduced the budget. He said
NEW YORK c API Cuts of
as mu ch as 52 percent in
transcontinental air fare~ have
spread throughout the a1rhne
industry. with Trans World and
Eastern airlines following
reductions announced by United
Airlines, Continental Air Lines
and World Airways.
The new, unrestricted one-way
coach fare between New York
and Los Angeles will be $149.
TWA and Eastern off1c1als said
Monday. That compared with
the previous $310 TWA rare and
a $205 fare on Eastern.
Both airlines said they would
raise those fares to $169 April 1
The other airlines announced
reductions last week
Rapist sentenced
Gets 15 years for 'sickening' act
A Halloween night kidnapper
and rapist who was tracked
down by police when he left. his
wallet at the scene of the crime
has been given a state prison
term of 15 years, eight months
by a superior court Judge in
Santa Ana.
In handing down the sentence
Monday against defendant
Vfncent A. Clawso12, 19, Judge
James 0 . Perez described the
circumstances of the crime as
"sickening."
Those circumstances lncluded
the robbery and kidnappine or a
74·year-old Los Alamitos man
out w1Ukin1 his dog, and the
rape ol bis 65·year-old wife at
the couple's home later in lbe
evenlq on Oct. 31, 1881.
Clawson, a transient, pleaded
JuUty to char1ea of kldnappin1.
robbny, forcible rape, false
Driver to blame?
VICTORVILLE <APJ -
lnvestJ1ator1 who 1t.ayed up all
nl1ht tons ptectn1 fact. to1etber
uld a weekend church bus
accident ln which two bl1h
school tudents were killed may
have been cauaed by driver error.
imprisonment. burglary and
grand theft..
De,Puly District Attorney
Martin .Engquist, who said the
defendant could have been
sentenced to life Imprisonment.
called the term imposed by
Perez adequate.
"The sentence that he got is
appropriate ror what he did,"
Engquist said.
Clawson would become
elleible for parole consideration
after serving 10 years or his
sentence.
According to investigators, the
defendant accosted the elderly
Los Alamitos man near his
home. Clawson robbed the man
or $13 and. dissatisfied with the
money, forced the old man to
drive to· his home, where b1s
64·year-old wife wu alone. The
dl!(endant , accordin 1• to
En1qu1Bt, tied up the man and
ransacked the home. He then
raped the womab, tied her up
and ned lb the couple's car.
However, in cleantnc up the
home ~he followin1 day. the
couple'• .0-year-old aon found a
wallet "belonatna to Clawaon,
who w• Immediately located by
police and cbaraed with the
cr1me.
TWA 's 52 p ercent cuts.
e ffective today, will apply to
flights from New York to either
Los Angeles. San Francisco qr
San D1eJ!O
TW/\ <ilso announced
reductions rangin g from 44
p~·rccnt to 49 percent on
transcontinental far es from
Wa shingt o n . Bos ton and.
Ph1lad('lph1a to California
In addition Continental cut its
prac(' for some transcontinental
roundtnp flights to $258.
Continental, which had been
charging $298. said the new
fares would apply to flights
between its West Coast and East
Coast serv1ce points wh1ch make
stops 1n either Denver or
Houston
Contin e ntal serves Los
Angeles. Sa n Diego, San
Francisco and San Joie on the
West Coast and New York,
Boston , Philadelphia and
Washington on the East Coast
10RANGI COAST WIATHIR
Mostly cloudy tonlgt\l
and Wednesday. Chance of
occasional light rain
1~creasing Wednesday
Little temperature
change. Highs 58 to 64
Overnight lows 48 to SS
·INSIOI TODAY
Donald P.oton i3 one o/ the
/no rtmaming World War I
/lying atts who, al.though lte
never got o 11Jot CU tu Red
Baron, recalll an ~tn
with the famed Germon
aviator. See Sto1111 Photo, •
.P.agt AB.
111111·
____ ....... -·----·----
PRESENT Sam Matar holds tattered
mbrella. part of 26 tons or scrap metal
u.mped in front of his Monterey business as
irthday present from brother John .ol
Chicago. The junk is
VolkswMgen Sam sent
bi rt hda~· last .Jul~ 1
ecycling drive on move
etitioners rally against throwaway cans, botlles
Boisterously singing in
pport of their cause, members
• f Californians Against Waste
fficially have fired ttie first
alvo in their battle against
rowaway beverage containers.
'"" Traveling in caravan across
Southern California, the group
iprmally filed petitions Monday Jn Orange, Los Angeles and San
Diego counties in the hope of
qualifyjng their bottle and can
~ecycling initiative for the
' ovember ballot.
'
The initiative -loosely based
on Oregon's recyclln1 law -
would require that beverage
distributors and retailers place
a five-cent minimum refundable
deposit on all beer and soft
drinks packaged in bottles and
cans. A retail store would be
required to redeein any empty
container of a brand found on its
shelves.
A bout 25 supporters of the
recyclh1g initiative. carryin.z
/)fficials querying
:fake record charge
.:8Y The· Associated Press
: .. A former medic's account that
Army records were faked to
conceal high levels of radiation
received by soldiers who
witnessed atomic testing in the
1950s "doesn't ring true," a
federal official says.
bavid Miller, a spokesman for
tbe Department of Energy in
-Las Vegas, on Monday said
former medic Van R. Brandon ~·may be rememberin1
tlncorrectly. ··
"\1
,, Brandon. a retired postal
worker from Sacramento, said
1Sunday that exposure records on
{housands or soldiers who
.p bserved atomic blasts in the
J 950s \Vere phony and the real
records were kept secured in a
.. ,hot book."
On Monday, Miller said the
·tnilitary might actually have
been keeping two lists of
participants: one with those who
had received the maximum dose
of radioactivity and the other
with names of those who could
receive more exposure
M lller said if Army officers
were doing something wrong,
such as overexposing troops, "It
would be crazy to keep a record
of that. Thal just doesn't rin&
true."
Many tats were conducted at
the Nevada Test Site, 75 mllea
northwest of Las Ve1u by t.be
now-defunct Atomlc f!aa1y
Com mission. The Department of
Eoerif now direct•
underlJ"OUiMS t.tin1.
In Wasbinrton, Army Maj.,
Chu ck Suits. a Penta1on
spokesman, said, "'l'he DefeDle
Department is involved in an
investigation right now .... It
is following up on the char1es
made by Mr. Brandon."
Meanwhile , a national
veterans organization and a
group of Canadian veterans
pressed Monday for action on
Brandon's charges.
ln Burlington, Iowa, the head
of the National Association of
Atomic Veterans said she hoped
other soldiers would come
forward and discuss their
experiences with atomic testing.
signs and singing, showed up
Monday morning to deliver
petitions bearing the signatures
of 49,252 Orange County
residents to the Orange County
R egistrar or Voters for
verification
The signatures, of which more
than 500,000 were collected
statewide, are some or the
346,119 needed to qualify the
initiative for the ballot ,
explained Julie Finkelstein.
Southern California director for
Californians Against Waste.
Additionally. petitions bearing
84,163 s ignatures were filed in
Los Angeles County and
petitions with 105,391 signatures
were delivered to the registrar
of voters in San Diego County,
Ms. Finkelstein said.
Petitions are to be filed in
Northern California counties
between Feb. 22-26, she added.
The organization's treasurer,
Amy Hewes, of Sacramento,
aaid the petition drive had cost
$135,000 . She said the
or1anizatlon hoped to raise
another $600,000 lo campaicn for
the measure. In explaining her reasons· for
1upportin1 the recycling
meHUJ'e, Ms. Hewes pointed out
that Californians throw out
seven bHllon beverage
containers each year. She said
that amounts to 13.000 bottles
and cans being thrown away
each minute.
Ms. Hewes said a recycling
Initiative enacted by the voters
is necessary because similar
recycling legislation has been
defeated in the California
Legislature nearly every year
since 1973
Seven s tates, Oregon .
Vermont , Maine, Iowa .
Michiga n, Connecticut and
Delaware already have
recycling laws, she said.
(Golden West's Williams dies
"' ~College creates.annual scholarship in his memory i· Golden West College .h~s
j t:eated an annual scholarship m
1 emory or public relations
· irector Bruce L. Williams who ~ ied Saturday of cancer at the
:. ge of 53.
i'. Mr. Williams , a former i newspaper reporter. combat
'-correspondent and magazine
editor, started work at the
i;college in Huntington Beach
when it opened in 1966.
t Memorial service ror friends
nd family ls sc heduled
aturday al 10 a.m. at the First
nited Methodist Church of
range, 161 S. Orange St.
Memorial donations may be
made to the Bruc.e L, Williams
~ cholanhip Fund at Gohlen
est College. The scbolanblp
will be given annually to a
~olden West student whose goal
}s public relations, a college
~pokeswoman said.
Mr. Williams lived in Oran1e
lth bil wife, Dr. Louise Spivey,
n instnlctor at Golden West.
In 1989, Mr. Williams w11
mong organizers of the flnl
unUneton Beach City Festival
blcb in 1978 became the annual
OftANCMCOAST D1llJPHat
Community Feslivaf involving
five cities.
He also was active in the
United Way of West Orange
County and vacious c:itiaen
advisory panels for city and
county government officials.
In 1980. the Commtaatoo on
Public Relations for California
community colleges awarded
Mr. Williams its PRO Award for
best promotional campaigns.
Before coming to Golden
West, Mr. Williams was director
of communications for the
United Methodist Cb-urcb,
Pacific and Southwest
Conference, in Los Angeles.
Prior to thaty he was a
reporter for 10 years, includln&
four years as a war
correspondent in Korea and
Japan. He worked on the
Nashville Banner, the Geneva
Daily nmes in New York and
tbe Schenectady Union-Star.
During the Korean Confllct,
Mr . Williams was a
correspondent for the Pacific
Stars Ir Stripes. The Army
awarded him a commendation
for writin1 a story from a
SUCCUMBS lirlH'l'
Williams. public relations
di rector or GQlden West College. is dead ut 53.
Korean foxhole about a squad of
seven aoldters and the
mementos they carried lnto
battle.
1 He later worked as associate
editor of two national Methodist
maiazlnea: To1ether, and the
ChrlaUan Advocate, both based
In New York.
Mr. Wtlllams"'ll aurvlfed by
hl1 pa,..a., tM hY. and Mrs.
Harry L. Williama of San
Clemente; his wilt; a daupter,
Carolyn Pi~d ol Euaene, Ore. i
'two ton1, <.:al\lin and David Of
Hunttn1ton Beach : two
at.epdaulhlerl, Susan and Sheryl
Splvey: a 1Llter, Winifred of
Botton. and tbr•e
1naoddilld.ren. •
'
Anotlier snowstorm. hits
Winter warnings spread frqm Midwest to New England ~
81 Tbe ~lated Prell
A 1nowatorm plHtered much
of the nation from Oklahoma
acro11 the Mtdwut lnlo New
En1land today, closlnc hundrtda
ol schooll and tyln1 up
ru1b·hour tramc in the urban
Northeast.
New snow collected •lmoet a
root deep in Kann• and
elsewhere ln the Midwest, which
has been hit by almost weekly
storms since early January.
Winter storm waminss were
in effect in central lndlana,
central Ohlo, the northern
panhandle of West Vlr1tnla,
western Maryland, the lnt.ertor
of east.em Pennsylvania and the
Catskill Mountains or New York
State. At lea.st two people were killed
in Oklahoma where up to eight
inches of snow fell. The hithway
patrol issued a plea lo radio
stations to tell travelers in the
central part of the state to find
lo~ging and slay off the
highways.
Schools closed in cities such as
Baltimore, Philadelphia and
Boston as the storm reached the
Northeast In the predawn hours.
"We've had numerous mul·
tiple-car accidents." said Cpl
Jim Sartori at the state police
headquarters in Boston. The
worst of it's on the East Coast
right now."
Police in Providence. R.I ..
From PageA1
NIXON.:.
and ofricial duties of the
presidency."
The court also said that
government archivists must
listen lo recorded Dictabelts
that Nixoo said were made for
his personal diary.
Nixoo claimed that listening to
these recordinp also violated
his privacy. But the court held
that the diary materials are
commingl ed with official
recordings and it is not always
possible at the beglnnins of the
diary re~ordings lo learn
whether the recording is private
or official. Tape reeordlngs played at the
Watergate trials are already
available for public listening ln
Wa1h1ncton. but they conatitute
only a small portion or Nixon's
White House tape recordino.
The appeals court cited
fta'U'• esti:a~~ tll .. B L 4+ -,.._ ••
prffldential ma eow In ~ ~~ ol tlllejGSA.
Hitler's art
in Virginia
NEWPORT NEWS, Va. <AP>
-Museum officials say they are
just trying to show "an unusual
aspect of Adolf Hitler.·· not to
glorify him by displaying four
watercolors he painted.
The paintings, usually kept In
the archives or the U.S. Army
Center of Military History, will
be shown Friday at the War
Memorial Museum of Virginia.
Hiller fancied himself an
artist as a young man. Many of
his paintings were destroyed as
the Allies invaded Germany
during World War 11. These four
are the only ones in U.S. hands.
Remap hill stalls
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A
long ·stalled, Senate-approved
reapportionment plan for the
four State Board of Equalization
seats has been blocked again
with the Assembly's rejection or
the measure
repo1"d do1e111 of accUlenll on
lnltrltat.e 95 ln the metropolitan
aru, Tractor-traUer trucks
we... wiable to climb tbt hilla
and cara tryln1 to avoid the
1talled trucks skidded lnto each
other on tho Wlllnded ht1hway.
Some lnJuriet were reported.
In Indiana, where anow depths
already meuured about a toot,
another 10 Inches was forecut.
Schools closed in lndianapoll1
where the snow fell at the rate or
an inch an hour.
The Indiana Toll road wa1
closed for a 10-mlle stretch from
Angola to the Ohio stale llne
after a truek carrying liquid
propane gas jackknifed, skJdded
off the roa• about 11 p.m.
Monday and began leaking gas.
The toll plaza was evacuated.
Up to eight inches or snow in
parts of Missouri left a cover of
20 Inches on the ground in St.
From PageA1
Louts, which wu paral1Md by •
two-foot snowtau 1 week aao.
Sleet and treatn1 raln made
drlvtn1 baurdoul over/art.a ol
Kentucky, Arkan.sas an Texas.
Brldtes and overpaues in
Dallas were 1lazed with ice.
Freezinf rain, 1leet and snow in Mary and and Delaware
forced schools to close ln 1everal counties.
Numerous schools also closed
lo Connecticut, which was
cau1ht o(f guard by the storm.
One Oklahoma state trooper
was urging no one to try to
travel through Grant County
because there was "a good
chance they will not make it "
Temperatures this morning
dropped below zero from Monta~a and Wyoming to
Wisconsin and upper Michigan,
with readings colder than 20
below in some areas
REAGAN ON A TI ACK. • •
Ronald Reagan's got to go!"
The sponsoring Anti-Reagan
Coalition claimed to represent
more than 60 groups
disenchanted with the
president's policies. They
Included fired air traffic
controllers, homosexuals,
women's groups, blacks, Indians
and teachers.
1 n his speech to the Iowa
lawmakers. Reagan insisted he
expects his tax cuts lo rescue
the economy in the long run.
Outside, an estimated 1,200
protesters marched in
opposition to administration
policies.
Some demonstrators. who
came from labor. religious.
women's, elderly and civil
rights groups, carried signs
reading "Reaganomics Rob6 tbe
Poor and Gives to the Rich."
Coast to get
I: .,,t,.t • ? aaeaa r81D.
The· chance of rain for the
Orange Coast will increase to 30
percent tonight and Wednesday
with mostly cloudy we1lther
predicted, according lo the
National Weather Service.
A 1pokesman for tbe weather
service said only light showers
are likely . Daytime t•m.,....__ are e.xpected to be
from 58 to &t degrees. dropping
to the 48 to 5.S-duree rJ.Jlae at
nlsht.
Scattered drizzles were
reported throughout the county
this morning.
Varilble cloudiness should
hover over Southern California
through the end of the week.
From PageA1
Inside, Reagan told the
legislators: "We must bold firm
to our tax cuts and reduce the
budget even more. We have
much to do before we see the
light. but I think we are at least
approaching the bend in the
tunnel."
He blamed current economic
problems on his predecessors.
·'Forty years of uncontrolled
government growth and
mismanagement, 40 years of
removing the American
economy from the hands of the
Amencan people, have resulted
in a painluJ recession that grips
us today," Reagan said.
He said recovery "will take
spirit. courage and strength for
the long haul" and warned
against Democratic
obstructionists.
From PageA1
BARBER. • •
"I "d like to thank all the
people who have helped us. I'm
happy to be here."
The earlier Irvine Company
decision to cancel the lease was
c riticized by the Irvine City
Council. which demanded that
the company preserve
neighborhood business
eatabUsbmenu.
Responding to the crttici.sm,
Irvine Company Prsident Peter
Kremer made a rare
appearance before the City
Council several weeks ago and
promised the company would be
more responsive to the needs of
retail shops leasmg space from
the company
CENTER DEFEATED. • •
Center plan "are just loo great."
.. I take exception." Covington
said . "to the theory that we can
be auctioned off for a few more
dollars , for a few more
businesses.
•·And for you t the council l to
point the finger and say we've
been destructive just isn't true
We never intended to do that ··
By law. the Irvine Company
can not resubmit its plan to
expand the shopping and
professional center for at least
one year
Several Irvine Company
officials, though, hinted they
may wait longer than that.
"We have no definite plans at
this point,·· said Shelton after
the vote. .. Hut Newport Center
will be built out that's its
destiny."
The plan lo expand the center
with a hotel. office buildings.
restaurants and a residential
tower was approved by the
council on a split vole following
months of debate and bickering.
The referendum drive was
launched s hortly after a
disclosure that three council
members had met privately
with top Irvine Company
executives. including the firm's
prf.!S1dent.
U nti I this week. it was
e xpected the council would call
for an election . which the Irvine
Company had predicted it could
win.
WHAT MAKES OUR SOLITAIRE
/ •
COLLECTIONS SO SPECIAL?
Color. clarity, cut and beaut'/. These are the standartis we judge dfamond:s by. And we accept only the finest
for our diamond collection.s. That's What makes each gem such a joy to wear. Let our experts shoW you thtt
difference true qualtt;y makes. From our diamond
collection In 14 karat gold. the rtngs shown are priced
from $300 to $10.000. Pendants from $150 to
$5.000. Eanings from $250 to $7.500.
SLAVIC K'S
Plnl .......... 117
WM~ rJw bats~ ~n.
r111fiDn111111111(71~..._,.,.~ ...
AlloOr..w ~ Mllllll·• Olllt· ... -....
• )
A~W ........
SMILES SHARED -Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak,
left, grins with West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt
as they chat during p hoto session prior to' their talks in
the Bonn Chancellory.
M wkie resting after surg e ry
BETHE.5DA, Md. (AP) -
Former Secret.ary of State
E dmaad Maakle was in
"good condition and in good
spirits" a fter undergoing
back surgery at Bethesda
Naval Medical Center , a
hospital spokesman said.
Lt. Cmdr. Ronald Arrison
said an enlarged spinal disc
was ~moved from Muskie's
back Saturday . The
operation lasted 8t,.; hours,
according to Gayle Corey.
spokeswoman for the Muskie
family.
Muskie , a former
COLUMBIA, Mo. <AP> -
Singer Clllabby Cltecker has
recovered from a bout with
pneumonia a nd h as been
released from a hospital,
officials say.
Patsy Moore, a
spokeswoman for Boone
Hospital Center. said the
40-year-old Checker was
released on Sunday.
Checker's manager said
earlier that he planned to
, resume his tour.
Checker, famous for the
"Twi.t" ~ el the early 1960s, wu preparing for two
concert! in Columbia last
Tuesday night when he
became too ill to perform.
His manager attributed the
illness to the change in
weather from the Southern
states he had been touring.
Democratic senator from
Maine a n d one -time
presidential candidate, la
expected to remain in the
hospital for about two weeks,
she said.
Muskie's back problem
stemmed from an accident in
the early 1950s, shortly
before he was elected
governor or Maine I Ma.
Corey said. Muskie fell
through a stair railing while
doing repairs at his
Waterville bome and broke
his back.
NEW YORK (AP> -=-Stu
Gel& says he hasn't mastered
the tenor saxophone yet. but
he'll keep trying.
"I'm :till teaming," Getz
said after pla)'in& at bis 55tb
birthday celebration at Fat
Tuesday's, a Manhattan jau
club. "I learn somethin& new
every day."
Fans included wife,
Monica, his son St eve,
manager of the club7 and Ilia
uncle, Benjamin Geta, a New
Ydrlt prilltef'i
"He played at my wecld.i.aC
39 years ago,·· the elder Gets
said. But it was eaaier to
make people happier then.
"It's a tough audience," be
said. "Youn& folu are bard
to please."
OMAHA, Neb. (AP> -Lar!l a 1 f aaya b.11 Ute
ba1n t been the aame 1Jnce
bt knocked LJ•••t• .. 8'Mak.y" PIM•t to the
1round 11 ab• pointed a
plltol at tben·Presldent Ford
ftve yean •I<>·
"I ltarted taklq llte ooe
day at a lime. I 1tarttd
appreclat1n1 people mon,"
aald Buendorf, '7, ~ new
•sent ln charp ol tbe Secret
Service in Omaha.
Whenever be beara of
another aaaa11lnallon, be·
rellv• the event, Buendorf
Hid.
''After (Efypt.laa)
Pnaldent Sadat WU killed, I
tbou1bt of tbe revlewln1
1tanda l stood ln front of,"
the •1ent said. Sadat wu
fWlDed down last year while
seated oo a reviewinl 1tand.
Protectfnl public officials
la a stresa-ftlled job. Buen-
dorf said. "You are always
lookinf for the unexpected.
The clays often are Iona. tbe
duty ls strenuous." he told
The Omaha World-Herald.
NEW YORK <AP) -The
Metropolitan Opera says it
will present soprano
Leo a tyae Price and
me110-soprano M a r llya
Horne in concert together
March 28.
The concert, with James
Levine conducting t he
Metropolitan Opera
Orchestra, will be taped for
TV broadcast at a later date.
The program will have
arias and duets plus
orchestral selections by
Handel, Mozart, Orasini,
Bellini and Verdi.
The concert will be a
benefit for the Met Opera
sponsored by tbe
Metropolitan Opera Guild. •
Drizzle likely
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What do yoll Uke about tM Daily Pilot? What don't you like?
Call lhe number below and )'Out mt11aae will be recorded,
trana(ribed ahd delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-bour anawennc Hrvlce may be used to record let·
ters to the edilGI' on Ml)' t•c. Mailbox conlributor1 mu1t include
their name and telephone number tor vertncauon. No clrculaUon
calls. pJeue.
Tell us whal'I on your "'lnct.
Orange Coat DAIL. Y PILOT/Tuesday. February 9, 1982
Sam-~~eks permanency ..
County man hopes for reversal of dewrJQtion order I
8y STEVE IOTClll:LL °'....,,.. .....
WhJle Llberlaa-boro S•tn
Wlllett la ~mbu.fti!l a ·'" a San Juan Ca ano fllt ftM ....
reataurant t 11 week, Rip;•
Robert Badbam wUl be. I•
W Hh1naton attemDtlAI to t'll'D .
around a declllon tbat would aee Sam deported July 5.
Sam, now 28, waa adopted by
David and Ruth Willett a ct.cade
aao when the couple worked for
the Peace Corps In Liberia.
The San Juan Capl1trano
couple waa 1ucceaafuJ In
obtainin1 a student vlH for their
aon, and, until recentb. Sam
attended Saddlebac-. C'oll•1•
where he took bu1ine11 and
accountln& cluaea.
But the House Subcommittee
o..n lmml1raUon baa ordered
Sam deported next aummeT,
citing a 30-year-old provision of
the Federal Immigration and
Naturalization Act as the
reason.
That clause says Sam was too
old at the lime ( 10 years ago) to
be considered an adopted child.
He was 16 when the Willetts
adopted him.
His family's request for a
special act of Congress was
rejected by the subcommittee
last fall and a deportation
hearin& held in late December
resulted in an order for him to
leave the U.S.
Another setback for the family
came last Friday when an aide
to Rep. Badham told the couple
the immigration subcommittee
bas refused lo re·hear lbe
matter.
"It's absolutely not fair," a
tearful Ruth W111elt said this
morning. "There was a white
couple in Palos Verdes who got a
private bill through to adopt a
21 -year-old white Yugoslavian
boy," sbe said.
"And he had not lived with the
couple. Sam has been an
integral part of this family for 10
years," she said.
An aide for Badham said the
congressman will be meeting
with Rep .. Romano Manoli, a
Kentucky Democrat and
chairman of the immigration
subcommittee. this week, "in an
attempt to turn this thing
around."
.......... ""9
WAITING GAME -Sam Willett. the Liberian-born adopted
son of David and Ruth Willett of San Juan Capistrano. gri~1 hamburgers at a fast food restaurant while awaiting word
on efforts to turn around a deportation decision.
''Jn essence," the aide said,
"the subcommittee's rejection
was based on the fears it would
set a bad precedent for future
(immigration) cases."
In addition, the letter to
Badham assertedly stated that
Sam's case ''lacked merit."
BuL Badham intends lo
persuade Mazzoli that he did not
have an opportunity to testify
when the deportation issue first
came before the subcommittee
..
.. He was not afforded the
opportunity to s peak," the aide
said. And while Badham lobbies 4k'
Sam in Washingt.On , David 31'
Ruth Willett's friends and fellow
churchgoers are contacti.\ll
other legislators and sendiJIJ
telegrams to Washington. ·~
Meanwhile, Sam plays a
waiting g ame , workida
part-lime al a fast foo<l
restaurant.
I '
UCI bowl team disappointe d
A member of UC Irvine's
college bowl team •owed
Monday the squad, which
finished .~ixth Saturday at a
regional tournament in
Stockton, will do better next
year.
Hugo Jimenez said his UCI
teammates wer~ surprised by
the serious preparation
displayed by some of the other
13 squads.
The UCI team competed in
four matches in the
double-elimination tournament
at the University of the Pacific.
(One to a f amJJy
wNie the supply l.&sl.s.)
The ·~bowl " matches two
four-person teams ... al co•pete
to answer questions a bout
science. math. literature and
-other subjects.
Irvine beat San Diego State
Uniyersity, 185 to 100, but then
"lost '·to Cal State Fresno, 290 to
150. In the consolation bracket,
UCI beat Cal Poly Pomona. 150 tb 100 (after trailing at half 90 to
10) but lost to Stanford
University. 300 to 195.
The "players" win points by
beating opponents to a buzzer
before correctly answering ule
qoest1on !
· · 1 n both the Fres no and
Stanford games. it was just a
matter or beating people to the
buzzer," he said .. And they beat
us a lot... '
Jimene z said he will sugg~
that UCl select its team earlier
next year so the squad has more,
lime to practice. as did the
Fresno and Stanford teams. ,
Fr es no Sdte won the
tournament. eammg a trip to
West Virginia for the national
collegiate championships. ·
"Light Cuisine"
1 foranew
weigh
of life
Free cookbook from
Republic Federal Savings
162 slimming recipes that don't stint on taste or
full nutr~ion. A prized collection of easy·to·pre-
~re meals from the Callfomla Home Economics
Association. "Cook light-eat right" Is the theme •
of this delightful cookbook. Everything from hors
d'oeuvres, soups and salads to entrees and des·
sert.s. Also, low calorie pre-planned meals for busy
people. 92 ~ges with color Illustrations.
Drop by for your free cookbook and get acquainted with Republic's many services. Ask about
-CHE~N;-ourinterest·eamlng-ch«king occoun~nd-tfte.~ t&x-deductiens..for-tRA ~
and Keogh plan1 for the self-empl~. Inquire about tfie hlgh yields available for these retirement
accounts and current rates on ReptJbllc's Tax-Exempt c'.11 Savers certlflcates. ..
EvelY tim e the Roo.ter Crowa your Money Orowt
REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS ...
I I II
Orange Coast DAILY PH.OTfTue1day. February 9, 1982
Grading
of beef
studied
By Tbe Aleoctated Pre .. ·
The ,overnment ls beaiinning
heuinil this week on a proposal
lhut could change the look -
and possibly the taste·-of somo
of the beef Americans eat.
The proposal comes from the
U.S. Department of Agriculture
and affects the department's
trading service which ranks
beef according to quality and
yield .
The change would involve the
quality grades only. The yield
1rades -which reflect the
amount of usable meat a
carcass provides and which
most consumers don't see
anyway -would not be changoo.
In general, the proposed
switch would lead to leaner beef.
It would reduce the amount of
marbling -the tiny flecks of fat
running through the meat -
which beef needs to qualify for
the higher grades.
To produce marbling,
ranchers must feed their cattle
on grain rather than simply
letting them graze on grass.
Grain ·fed b eef i s more
expensive to produce; that's
why the top grades of beef C05t
more.
The N.ational Cattlemen's
Association had petitioned the
USDA to make a change in the
grading standards. The final
proposal is roughly in line with
the cattlemen's request, but
requires more marbling than the
ranchers wanted.
The Community Nutrition
Institute, a consumer group.
also wanted changes to promote
the marketing of leaner beef.
But Ellen Haas. consumer
director of the institute. said the
US DA proposal. was "just a
reshuffle of standards without
any consumer benefit. ..
Note : Consumers do not
always see a quality grade on
the beef they buy. Government
grading is voluntary. and some
major supermarket chains have
their own standards and quality
rankings.
Hearings on the proposal will
be held in Salt Lake City today;
in Atlanta on Thursday; in
Washington, D.C., on Feb. 16; in
Des Moines, Iowa, on Feb. 22;
aad in Dallas on Feb. 25.
The last major changes in
grading standards took effect in
1976. They also lowered the
levels of mar~ling required for
the top grades.
COSTLY COMPARISON -The 58-ton . M·l .
first all-new U.S. tank in about 20 years, has
been counted on to offset by quality a 4 to 1
Soviet advantage in numbers. Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger. however, has
.,. . .,..,...
said that the new tank. the most costly ever
built by the U.S .. may disappoint hopes· of the
militarv that it would be better than the
Russian tanks it might face in combat
NATO waste said • In billions
Two defense experts ca ll system ''logistic. ni ghtmar e"
List growing
on pr.esidents'
t • secret taping
WASHINGTON (AP> -Now
it turns out even Harry Truman
may have recorded some of his
Oval Office conversations. That
lengthens the known list of
presidential tapers to Franklin
D. Roosevelt, Truman, Dwliht
D . Eisenhower, John F .
Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson
and. of course. Richard M.
Nixon.
Aides to GeraJd R. Ford and
Jimmy Carter said
conversations weren't taped
during their presidents' tenure.
Spokesman David R . Gergen
said President Reagan is
recording only hjs interviews
with reporters and not his
private conversations.
Although the fact that
Kennedy taped some of bis
conversations was well known ,
The Wa shington Post on
Thursday told of the logs that
s howed which conversations
Kennedy taped. That list added
to an alrea'dy imposing body of
knowledge that Nixon wasn't
alone in bugging his office.
although he surpassed the others
in scope and volume.
collection, there are scattered
transcriptions of monitored
telephone caUs, whkh was the
way ll was done "
A man who worked ln the
Eisenhower While House sald an
Ampex tape recorder was in a
cabinet in the office of secretary
Ann Wh itman, a machine
modified so il could record for
three hours. Ike 's reason
according to the source, was ~
mangled English; he was angry
at being misquoted.
Among the transcriptions is
one of June 29, 1954, where
Eisenhower chews out his vice
president. Nixon , for attacking
Democrats over their handling
of foreign affairs. Twenty years
and a few months later, Nixon
was forced t o resign as
president by incriminating
Watergate revelations from his
own tapes
Nixon always maintained he
got the idea of taping
Dr. Benedict Zobrist, directar
of the Truman Library in
Independence, Mo., said there
are 10 tapes that "we think were
BRUSSELS, Belgium CAP> -France and Wes t Germany as winner 10 all countries. made in the Oval Office" during
Twoleadingdefenseexpertssay an exa mpl e of weapons' "Rather than four or five Truman 's time but not
"There ,are
.none from t he
Oval Office, as /ar
,as I know."
in a report made public today duplication. different countries competing necessarily with Truman's conversations from Lyndon B.
that the North Atlantic Treaty They said the cost of research and then deciding upon the best consent. Johnson
Organization wastes billions of and development for the U.S. tank. each country for its own ' · They a r e r e a l I Y .. President Johnson sent word
dollars a year by not developing Abrams tank, was $1 billion. reasons, proceeds with its own unintelligible," he said. "You to me that he had learned that
and using the same weapons. Perry and Laberge contended tank, regardless of the merit of can hear somebody walking as one of my first actions upon
Calling the current system a the countries should have held that tank," the report said. across the floor. hear a word arriving at the White House I
"logistic nightmare," William an open competition for the best "The present system is a here or there. But you can't tell had ordered the removal of the
Perry and Walter Laberge tank and then produced the logistical nightmare," it said. what was said at all." recording devices h e had claimed that if war broke out in The tapes were not among installed there," Nixon said in a
Europe, some NATO forces Truman's papers but were sent sworn affidavit in 1975.
fighting side-by-side would be A;rl;ne urges' un;on to Independence in the mid-70s "President Johnson said that unable to s hare ammunition. l.t l.t l.t by the Roosevelt Library in the recording he had made of his
··Today. NATO wastes Hyde Park, N.Y. conversations while president
perhaps several billion dollars a "Some of the old timers told proved to be exceedingly
year in redundant developing, t t l · 1.f. us that as soon as he learned va luable in preparing his
since development of essentially 0 accep ayo s about this (the taping> he had memoirs and he urged that I
the same equipment is the system pulled," said Zobrist. reinstall the recording devices."
duplicated four or five times "We• Are not even certain it's Director Harry J . Middleton of
withinthealliance,"lheysaid in DENVER 1AP ) Union million without cutting service Truman(onthetapeJ... the LBJ Library in Austin,
a report published in "NATO's me m b c r s work 1 n g for or the number of flights, Warde Not much remains, either. of Texas. said there is nothing in
15 Nations," a bimonthly review Continental Airlines must accept said Sunday after he addressed Dwight Eisenhower's recorded the files to prove or disporve
of military matters concerning layoffs from among their ranks a closed meeting of Continental Oval Office conversations. Nixon's claim
the Western alliance. so the financ i a ll y troubled employees. "We don't have any tapes, but Nixon still is fighting to keep
Perry is a former U.S. deputy airline, which lost $60.4 million we have a bout 47 pages of his recordings secret. Of the
secretary of defense. Laberge is in 1981, can get back on its feet, Warde said he told the transcriptions taken off some more than 5,000 hours on tape,
a former NATO Assistant President George ,-arde has audience that Continental hu kind of device. whether a the public has been able to hear secretary-general told a union gathering here imposed layoffs on non-union Dictabelt or tapC' recorder... on ly 30 conversations -the
The report cited the separate Thl' objective of Conllnental's workers. but mus t furlough said John Wickman, director of tapes played as ev1dence in the
development of battle tanks in "prosperity plan." is to reduce union members as well to the Eisenhower Library in 1974 cover·uptrialofNixon'stop
the United States. Britain. the comp;rny's payroll by $100 n·\'enw its losses Abilene. i<an "Throughout the heutenanL<t . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~_;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---"'--~~~--"'==
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ENTEAT AINMENT NITEL Y
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Nuke test observer
says data fa ls if ied
SACRAMENTO <AP> -
RadlaUon expoaure records on
tbouaanda of aoldlera who
oblerved atomic blaata 1n the
11501 were falalfled while the
real readinp were kept in a
secret "bot book," a former
medical corpsman aaya.
Retired postal worker Van R.
or tbe dol1meten. The uaodatlon contends that
vet4'rana of nucilear teats who
Ille clalma with the U.S.
Veterans Admlniltratlon tor
nuclear-related ailments are
routbaely told they were never
exposed to dangerous levels.
Brandon aald some ot the
readlogs reeorded ln the "bot
book," "as beat I can recall,
Brandon, a member of tbe
National Association of Atomic
Veterans, said he knew about
"tbe bot book" because be
handled animal experiments in
five atmospheric nuclear tests in
Nevada and the Pacific in 1955,
1956 and 19S7
were way over' I the accepted
safe level, "dependina on where
you were'' in relation to the
radiation source.
On the "very dirty" tests, he
said the readings were often "at
least ball again" as high as the
accepted sate level.
TEST OBSERVER -Van R.
Brandon, a former U .S .
Army medic, claims
radiation exposure records
were falsified.
At a news conference Sunday
in a Veterans of Foreign Wars
post ln suburban North
Highlands, Brandon described
bow dosimeters, which record
the amount of radioactivity
absorbed, were worn as badges
by soldiers participating in the
tests.
The association, based ln
Burlington, Iowa, is undertaking
what it calls "the largest
manhunt in history" to gather
information from observers of
the teats in order to support
medical claims.
bold hearings on the matter.
Brandon said he had been
sworn to secrecy by the Army,
but decided to talk to reporters
because "I'm scared of what. my
grandchildren can go throuib"
because of possible
nuclear-related genetic damage.
He said high-ranking officers
kept the books under lock and
key except when recordings
were being made. But he never
knew what became of the books
A vice president of the
association, Jess Clark of San
Jose, said Sens. Alan Cranston,
D-Calif., and Orrin Hatch,
R-Utah, would be requested to
Having come f o rward ,
Brandon said the Army "can try
me for treason. If they do,
they're going to open up the
whole thing."
Auburn Dam
minus funds?
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The proposed
Auburn Dam is left with no money in President
Reagan's 1983 budget, the Sacramento Union said.
The newspaper also said that two Northern
California utilities, the Sacramento Municipal
Utility District and the San Francisco-based
Pacific-based Pacific Gas & Electric Co., are
talking with the federal government about buying
into the Auburn project.
A Washington-dated story said Sunday the
only money for the Auburn-Folsom South project
in the budget proposal is $5 million to complete
recreational facilities at Sugar Pine Dam, a small
reservoir high in the Sierra.
Elsewhere in Northern California, $2.4 million
is slated for fire safety work in the Wawona Hotel
in Yosemite National Park, and $5.S million to buy
land in Lassen National Park.
In water development programs, the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers has budgeted a
relatively modest $108.6 million for California,
nearly half for routine maintenance, the Union
said.
Another $600,000 was proposed for anotber11tudy
relat-ed to the possi ble deepenln1 of tbe
Sacramento Deep Water Channel.
But $4 million was set aside for work on the
channel that serves Stockton, and $5.3 million for
improvements to the Port of Los Angeles.
Other corps spending in the proposal includes
$12.3 million to keep up construction of Warm '
Spring Dam in Sonoma County, $5.S million for
channel work below the New Melones Dam, $4.3
million to design a dam for Cottonwood Creek west
of Red Bluff, and $900,000 for bank work along the
Sacramento Rl~r· and tributaries.
About $60 million would be spent on the
Central Valley project, including $38.2 million for
the San Felipe portion, $11.9 million for six small
irrigation projects in the Arbuckle, Colusa and
Orland areas. and a $9.9 million loan to the
Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District to finish enlarging
its main channel.
As for the Auburn Dam, 3S miles northeast of
Sacramento, construction was slowed five years
ago by an earthquake in Oroville that raised safety
questions.
Work has bei!o going on for more than a
decade, and U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
spokesman Jerry King said it would take another
10 years to finish it. But King said the price,
estimated now at about $1.l billion, is cheaper
than some other projects the utilities are
considering.
Body of heir
to be exhumed
LOS ANGELFS (AP) -The body of Herbert
B. Lutz, the EH Lilly, heir found dead in a
rundown apartment rented for him by bis second
wife, will be exhumed for an autopsy, the
coroner's office says.
Lutz' Jan. 13 death was originally attributed to
"natural causes. but no autopsy was done," Philip
Schwartzberg, ai;sistant chief of investigations for
the coroner's office, said.
He would not comment on why investigaton
ordered Lutz' body to be exhumed next Tbunday
from Forest Lawn Memorial Park cemetery in
Glendale. ·
"We are saying nothin1 other than that the I
investigation is continuing," Schwaruberg said.
Tbe '17-year-old Luta' first wife, Evelyn Lilly,
died in 1970. She was the only daughter of Eli Lilly,
founder of the giant lndlanapolis-baset =:i
pharmaceutical house. • ..
Lutz inherited $3.5 mlllloo ol the Eli Lilly
fortune but in 1981 was found incompetent to
bis estate. ~ ilillii~iii!iiiiiiilr-----i t
,.,.
NURSERY
DWARF CITRUS
5gal reg115.00 '8.98
SELECTED SHADE
TREES 5· 15 gal. 60D/o OFF
INDIAN HAWTHORNE
reg. 113.50 57.98
STAR JASMINE & sa 98 TEA-TREE 5 gaJ values to'13.50 ~U.
ESCALONIA 5ga1reg 112.00
GERANIUM. AZALEAS
& MARGUERITE
DAISY 1 gal.
STAR JASMINE, TEA,
TREE . DMRF WHEELER!,
BOXWOOD & LAVENDER
STAR FLOWER 1 gal.
DIOSMA, ESCALONIA,
NANDINAAND
VARIGATED
PITIOSPORUM 1 gal.
C0C.OR PACKS reg. '2.69
4" BEDDING PLANTS
& PONY PACKS reg. si, 19
'5.98
values to '3. 75
51.98
values to '3. 98
51.78
values to 13.50
s1.48
s1.69
s.69
INDOOR PLANTS
6" HOUSE PLANTS
8" HOUSE PLANTS
6" CYCLAMEN
BASKETS
reg. SALE
•10.95 '5.95
128.95 115.96
18.95 14.95
2511/oOFF
FLORIST
VALENTINE ARRANGEMENT '21.95
reg. W.95
SILK FLOWERS 2511/o OFF
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTue1day, February 9, 198.2
Search
pressed
for girl
CONCORD (AP ) -A
2-year·old girl snatched from a
parked van while her parents
ran an errand may have been
the third child in Concord
threatened with abductton
within an hour. authorities say.
Tara Elizabeth Burke of
Pittsburg was kidnapped
Saturday as her 9·year-old
brother, Jeremy. watched in
fright.
-Only 45 minutes earlier, two
men , one matching the
description of the Burke
kidnapping suspect, attempted
to nab two 5-year-old girls,
police said.
s 41
..........
Tara's parents, Elizabeth and
Steve Burke, who had been in
Kragen Auto Supply for five
minutes, said the girl is allergic
to milk and needs at least three
calcium pills a day. She said she
hoped the abductors would "give
her a lot of love because she's
used to pretty much constant
attention."
As the search intensified for
the tot, police looked for a
motive and said the kidnap may
be connected to an earlier
incident the same day in which
two men attempted to take the
5-year-old girls.
HAPPY REUNION Kathy Cochran and her 3-~·ear-olcl
daughter Natalee. of Hawt horne . wen· reunited at
the Philadelphia International Airport Sunday. Natalee had
been missing from her home for more than a week when she
was rescued by the FBI in Lancaster, Pa. Her babysitter,
Jody Finkle, 19, was charged by California authorities with
kidnapping.
• • •
FANTASTIC ...
PATIO SAVINGS
=== TROPITONE reg. SALE
TAOPI KAI
42" TABLE SET '725.00 '379.00
48" TABLE SET '758.00 '379.00
CHAISE 9237 oo 1185.00
MARRAKESH
42" TABtE SET '718.00 1430.00
48" TABLE SET '751.00 1450.80
CHAISE "l72.00 '190.40
CANTINA
• 48" SQ. RD .• TABLE '966.00 '878.20
CHAISE '340.00 '255.00 •
==BROWN JORDAN==
TAMIAMI
42'' LEG TABLE SET
48" PED. TABLE SET
CHAISE
18" SIDE TABLE
MAUNA KEA
48" LEG TABLE
CHAISE
ENSIGN II
42" LEG TABLE
48" LEG TABLE
CHAISE
UMBRELLA
ICE CREAM SET
rm.oo '389.50
'655.00 1427 .50
1319.00 '199.00 :
1110.00 '75.00 :
'875.00 '812.50
t389.00 '272.00
'695.00 1417.00
'731 00 1438.80
1329.00 '209.00
'289.00 '199.00
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
30" TBL/2 SIDE CHAS. '235.00 '179.95
=====AWBERT======
• DANGARI
: TABLE/W 4 CHAS. ·u:~o.oo '940.00 •
GARDEN SUPPLY
2 cu. ft.
ROGERS POTIING MIX
~#
reg.
'8.98
SALE
'S.98
ROGERS SOIL ACTIVATOR
12 #
BANDINI 2-WAY
24 #
118.98 112.98
99.95 '7.95
BANDIN! 2-WAY
20#
BANDIN! SUPER BLADE
40#
117.95
'6.95
BANDIN! SUPER BLADE 112.95
14 #
PAX SUPER CRAB
8 oz.
112.49
114.95
'6.30
'9.80
'9.99
ORTHONEX a.1.98 '3. 70
16 oz.
ORTHONEX '7.98
ORTHO SPRAYETIE •7.98
BANDIN! LAWN SPREADER '34.95
AMES® SHOVEL 113.99
AMES® HOE 112.99
AMES® FLEX. RAKE •10.29
WATERWANDS 99.98
85.98
'5.80
'25.00
89.99
'8.99
'7.99
'5.98
COLOR PRODUCTS·
10" RED CLAY POT
REDWOOD CRATE
14" HANGING BASKET
113.50 '8.95
124.95 '14.95
'42.00 '29.00
POTfERY
LG.MEXICAN PEDESTAL
22"
MEXICAN LOW BOWL
10" RED CLAY POT
10" RED CLAY SAUCER
12" REOWOOO
PYRAMID BASKET
2" x6'
114.50
122.00
'4.70
13.00
'8.40
'7.50
'8.98
'2.99
11.75
REDWOOD STAKE •3.60
'6.98
'2.80
'8.50
'8.98
14" MOSSED RD.BASKET •14.00
20" BAIL HANGER W/00. •15.50
Pnce1 ettee1 Ive
tll1u l'et> U and
1ut>jeel lo quenl· 4'
111 .. on nenO
2A
MOST BEAUTIFUL GARDEN CENTER
Open 9 to 5 dolly • Son Joaquin Hiiia Rood ot MooArthur Blvd • A01011 from Foahton Island In Newport Beoch
NURSERY • INDOOR PLANTS • FLORIST • LANDSCAPING • PATIO FURNITURE • ANTIQUES
• > .........
*'-
~I
)
~p ,,
"' ti,
". ''
II
1• ,.,,
it I
11'
1,
~ . .,
,,
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOTfTuHday, February 9, 1982
Nuclear plant not
public playground
ln Southern Callfom.la'-it ls
axiomatic that notnlpg
concerning A. nuclear power, or
B . beach access, will go
smoothly.
The latest example is
Southern California Edlaon11
dispute with the California
Coastal Commission on the
question of limiting public access
to beaches in front of its newly
expanded, $3.3 billion San Onofre
generating station, three miles
south of San Clemente.
In quick succession, about a
week ago, the utility filed a.
lawsuit in U.S. District Court in
San Diego against the state
panel, and proceeded to build a
fence on the beach in front of the
plant
Edison sa \'S t ht• fen rt· "a!'-
allowed under provisions of its
construction permit granted l>~·
the Coastal Commission in tht•
.1970s Furthe rmore. the plant 1s
located on federal land on.>r
which. Edison believe~. th<.'
commission ha!-. no authonl\
The commission , never
Home loans
The U. S Supreme Court
finally has agreed to hear
California's plea whether home
loans by federally c hartered
s avings and loans can be
.assumed by a new buyer of the
home
At stake are millions o f
dollars in home equities on thl'
Orange Coast alone.
But the court won ·t hear
arguments until the fall and a
decision is not expected until the
spring of 1983, at which time
value of the equities in question
w1 II be even higher
Appropriately. the case to be
heard involves a Huntington
Beach house and Fide lit v
Pederal Savings. which sought to
foreclose on the property when
Reginald and Margaret de la
C uesta declined to pay th~
outstanding mortgage 1or trust
deed> balance
A trial judge backed the
Fidelity position. while the slate
Court of Appeal ruled in behalf of
the couple. Now the nation·s
highest court will hear the casP
F e deral regulation s bat:k
requiring a new loan
State· chartered sa vmgs and
loans cannot block a loan
a s s u m pl i o n u n d c r CJ " t a t l'
willina to yield control of
anylhini havtna to do with the
coast. dlsngl'et's It contends lhe
f e n c t' w o u I d 1· l' q u i r e a n
amendment to the Ol'l1?1n al
"ermit. Without a waiting lor Cinal
commission approval or
~isapproval, Edison simply
erected the fence. At the same
time, however. it offered the
1tate about $3 million for park
development lf the commission
withdrew objections to the fence.
It might have been more
reasonable lor Edison to have
awaited final commission action
next week in Santa Barbara
before proceeding with either the
lawsuit or the fence building. But
with the plant now within weeks
of receiving a low-power test
license for its new unit, the
anxiety to keep t he public at
arm 's length is more or less
understandable.
Now. presumably. it will be
up to the court to decide if the
utility was within its rights to
restrict public access to the
beach in this case. Meanwhile,
the fence will remain.
• in limbo
Supreme Court ruling in 1978
known as We llenkamp.
But even that ruling is under
attack. Legislation 'is pending in
Congress that would allow any
institution state or federal to
demand repayment or the loan
w hen the property c hanges
hands
We try not lo exaggerate. but
in th e present market
circumstances passage of such
legislation might mark the end of
ho m e resales on the Orange
Coast and across the country.
Much has been written about
young people not being able to
buy homes because of high
interest rates.
But passage of the legislation
also might. in effect. lock many
people into their homes and
prevent them from moving into
larger or s maller homes or to
other areas.
We have s upported the
concept of home loan
assumptions and welcome the
high court·s acceptance of the
case But we wis h home owners
along the coast with federall y
charter ed loans didn't have to
wait another year to find out
what will happen
'Smile' catches a frown
Pacific Southwest Airlines.
which uses the slogan "Catch
Our Smile", is catching an
expression from Orange County
Supervisor Thomas Riley. Only
it's a frown. It appears thul R1h.•\ I" not
µleased with PS:\. "h11·h
operates two rl1~hts clath I rom .John Wa~·nc A11 pol"t . hl·l·,1uw
certain of its adH•rt1!>mg in<·l11clt•s
the fa cil1t \· s former namt·.
Orange Cmlnt~· Airport It """ Riley who suc·rcssfull~ propo,1·d
that the airport he• 1·l·nam<'d I 11
honor th<' latC' art111
The supervisor has sent two
letters to PSA since October to
complain about the Orange
County Airport references. Riley
initially wa s disturbed by
advertising placards affixed to
Orange County Transit District
buses, and a large billboard m
north Santa Ana. ·
The trans it distri ct
advertising campaign ended in
November. and the billboard
came down -only to reappear in
•
the Santa Fe S prings a rea.
alongside the Santa An a
Freeway.
If an~·th1ng. Rik.' <11 ... pla.' t•d
his disµlcasurt' in hi s most n·<·l•nl
lt>tter to PS:\ on•r tht• ;.irln•rt1sing
1 " " u C' F o r t h t• 1 r p a rt . PS .\
officials sct·m .i hit pc·rpll''-=l'rl h\
t ht• supl'rnso1 ·._ "' :in<'l' Ont• --11~gestccl th.11 Rilt·' ''"" h<.•1111:! ;int a,IWnt!'-t I('
Which may be true. Riley has
been less than enthusiastic about
PSA since it mounted a legal
challenge to his plan to regulate
which commercial air carriers
serve the airport. It's pretty
much boiled down to a Ril~
versus PSA issue.
A spokesman for the airline
says the offending billboard will
be repainted within the next 30
days. That should put the matter
to rest at least we hope so.
John Wa y ne Airport 1s
confronted with far more
pressing problems than what to
call it.
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex-
pressed on tn1s page are those ot 1ne1r autnors and artists Reader comment 1s 1nv1t
ed Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 Bo• l~O. Costa M esa. CA 92626 Phone (71'1
,f,42·432l.
L.M. Boyd/ Prairie dogs
Ranch pilots say they can spot
prairie doa villages from the air. The
llttle animals clear off sb.nlba for 30
or •O yards around their dens so
predaton t.bat want to sneak up on
them can't find cover.
lo Sumo wrestling, you 108e, lf any
ORANGE COAST D~ilJPilot
part of you other than the soles of
your feet touch the mat.
If you're reasonably active, you
lose about 1 percent of your a\.ren,ih
every year after age 25. So contends
a University of Florida physical
education professor.
Thomas P. Haley
Pub II sher
T_~s~. MufPl'ln•
Editor
BartNtra Krelblch
EdltorJ•I P•g• Editor
. .. ·~-------..... ~~"""'6< ... ~ ............ ~~~~~,._~_,...,,..,.. .. lm'!~!ill"~~~lllll!lmlll!~ ..... ~ ...
. '·
Soviets eye Antarctic riches
WASHING TON -In a development
that gives literal meaning to the phnse
·'cold war,'· President Reagan's
intelligence advisua have warned UaaL
the Soviet Union may take the top
position at the bottom of ~he world.
A classified report, now under review
by the National Security Counc~, w~
that the United States is in danger et
losing its leading role at the Squtfl Poli
-just when decades of lnv~mell\....
might begin to pay off. •
IF THE United States loses its
• foothold in Antarctica by default. 'it
would be a historical irony -a reversal
of the way we acquired Alaska in 186'7
from 1 Russian government that
couldn't see the potential value of tbat
inhospitable icebox.
In 1959, the 12 nations with interest in
Antarctica signed a treaty \hat
suspended territorial claims for 30
years and reserved t.he contiJ\ent for
peaceful research. The treaty has been
observed scrupulously ever since -
probably because no nation tbougtu a
scientific laboratory in the world's most
hosti-le environment was worth
quarreling over. ·
But that attitude has changed no~. ln
recent years, the scientific ....e.irch ,.,. moall)' by AJnericau and· -...iana'
acting independently -has ~al~ _
that there's a lot more to Ant.rctka
than penguins and paralyzing cold. The
continent could be another Alaska in the
value of its natural resources.
For example, Antarctica has been
foutu\ to have huge beds of krill. a
shrimplike species that may well be the
world's richest marine protein resource
an important copsideration for a
country like the Soviet Uqion, whose
agrkulture routinely fails to meet the
de.,,ands of its hute population.
.\J,\tarctica also l$ known to have oil
under allUijll ice; some experts suspect
.... .
J!111111191
ls ho mqr~ than Alaska. And scientific
stucl{es indicate that minerals are
abundant.
1'fy associate Dale Van Atta, just
back from a personal inspection or
Antarctica, has seen top-secret CIA and
National Security Agency reports and
an exhaustive review by a 14-agency Antarctic Polley Group. These
docaments note that lhe Soviet presence
on the frozen continent bu increased
gruOy in recent years. The Russians
now have eight bases in Antarctica to
our four.ft-. tbouah t.be U.S. scientists•
.ar sdtt ~•ad••af" rtre Soviets in
-r~arch. ·
Part ot the 0.S-preeminenee is due to
the Amttndsen.Scott South Pole Station.
the Amecican base lbat sits right on the
s pot where six nations' territorial
.
claims meet But the policy group
expressed concern that the U.S.
presence will diminish, despite the
longstaJ1dtng presidential order that the
United States will maintain an "active
and influential presence" in Antarctica.
"CONTINUING DECLINE of the U.S.
presence and level or effort in
Antarctica will force the abandonment
of the prestigious South Pole station to
probable occupation by the U.S.S.R .. "
the group has warned.
The ease with which the Russians
could take over the South Pole if we
abandon it was made clear in February
1981, when a Soviet aircraft -an IL-14
equipped with skis -flew 12 Soviet
scientists from their base at Druzhnaya
and landed at the U.S. base. This and
other developments, the policy group
warned, may have given the Russians a new "mobility , flexibility and reach ..
One confidential document said that
the U.S. program·s budget is already
.. dangerously close to a level that will
force a choice between a mere presence
and a low.visibility but quality research
program.'
ShouJd the United States be reduced to a "mere prese.oce," the advisers
warned, tt wouJd forfeit J"5 Ua1Jue11u.J
role ln "determibing Ufe political and
economic future of this continent, its
surrounding oceans and its continental
shelf." The vacuum would be filled. no
doubt, by the Soviet Union.
Why not giVe states defense, too?
You've probably been wondering
what the phrase "the new Federalism"
means. Everyone·s talking and writing
about it. The way I figure is that it means
pretty soon now we won 't be paying too
mu ch 1n taxes to the federal
government in Washington, we·u be
pay ing too much in taxes to the
government ln our state capitals. The
wholE! problem of how best to waste our
tax money will be turned over to state
government.
We needed a change and President
Reagan is giving it to us He's giving it
to us good. The question now is. has he
gone far enough?
IF THE PRESIDENT really wants lo
reduce the bureaucracy in Washincton
and cul taxes, why doesn't he atart with
the most bureaucratic, tax·spending
government department of them all the
Defense Department~ Why =·i be turn over to the states \be res bilU)'
for their own defenH~ jnst •• he
proposes to tum ovei-welfare ~ams
to them? If it's good eno\&O IOI' food
stamps, why isn't it good eQO&tgb for
defense? " , The Def@se Department carrenOy
spends about 30 percent of evel')' 'IQIJar
we pay in taxes. At the Pent.a.,.. .. they
set the high bure.aucraUc a~that
other government agencies can only
hope to achieve If the President closed
down the Pentagon and turned over
defense problems to the individual
states, he could cul taxes practically in
I~''
-11-Dl'-iD-·ili-fY_ ...... §t
hair and biilance the budget aJmost
immediately:
As I see it, it would be a lrade-0ff
comparable lo the one the President
proposes when he says the federal
government will take over Medicaid if
the states take over Welfare. The SO
states would each handle their own
defense by forming their own Army,
Navy and Air Force. The federal
government, for its part of the bargain,
would take on the responsibility ror the
horse racing, numbers, and lotteries
programs now b~ing run by many
states.
As I see it, there would be about as
many advantages to the people of this
country in having each state defend itself as there are in the states taking
over in the areas Mr. Reagan suggests.
An example that comes to mind is
KeeP t~e-~f ounders ~: at-eam
Thoughts at Larte~
-Ameri~a must rilmain the one
country in U.. world wbwe everyone
can flee to when be feelt bls has become
intolerable, or lt loses the largest part
of. the dream or its founders.
-Film actresses now do on the
IYlllY IARlll
screen t.be Wpcs they used toJSo off.the
screen ln order to ge\ on Uic ac~
-Falth, H they sly, ii boWlnt
there ls an ocean becauM f~ b•ve H~n
a brook; blind faith la blUe~ wlat
JOU have been told about tJte timel ol
lbe tide in uaat ocean.
-or all modern 1taU1Uc1, tbe
naUonal 1ukide rate 19'ma to me the
moat aroul)' unrellablt, almply
con1lderin1 the num* of one.car
fatalities thal al'e unaccoun\ed for.
-Presidents require two terni•
becauae they bav. to ~ tbt aecood
rour years trJln ~ ~a.uver on the
#
what would happen in case the Russians
decided to declare war on us The
Russians would have to decide which
states they wanted to fight, and they
probably don't even know the names of
all 50 states.
Inevitabl y, there would be a
migration of people from the States
that provided the least protection in
time of war to those stales which have
consistently provided heller service to
their citizens. Alabama, Georgia and
Tenoessee spend a little more than half
as much per citizen on education as
such states as California, Michigan or
Oregon. for example. Their defense
outlays might be expected to be
comparable. If a state legislature voted
against raising the taxes it would need
to buy its own battleship, its own fighter
planes and its own nuclear warheads.
that would be its own problem. The
federal government has coddted some
states long enough.
THE SUGGESTION has been made
that the bus companies may get rich
under the President's plan because poor
people will be leav1ng some s lates in droves and going to others where the welfare payments are better. The
situation could gel worse if people
started leaving the states with
inadequate defenses to go live in states
with good armies, navies and air forces.
If this happened, the answer would
simply be more new Federalism. Tum
over the Customs Bureau to the states
and let them control their owo immi1raUon rates. If Montana didn't
want a lot of people from Kentuckyf for
example, it mlght establish a quot.a as
low as 35. Each state would have its
own border police to prevent illegal
entry from adjacent states.
Finally, when the new Federalism
program Is complete, we mJCht rewrite
the preamble to .the Constitution. It
would begln, "We, the People ol the
Untted States, ln order to form a mote
imperfect union . . ••
Re tbe IRS declalon to offer tax
pnparatloD belp only to \.bl bllDd, the
illiterate and members ol eoa,,..:
/.n they tryhlf to tell UI tolDltblq!
WORB.JBD
..
i
I
t
~·---·--------------
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Tuesday, February 9, 1982
How-to · books hurting video games cash take
·~·
.,. ..........
NJ:fi YORK (AP) -Tbtre'1
trouble lD Vldeo Game Ctty -code
books. Memorise tM maQual ud
Yff'll tet houn ot plartn• time fot juat one quarter.
More IDd IDOi'• Yid.o butfl bave
beH tnb•n1lnt tecllnlqut1 for patten pla;111, .1tadln1 arcade
ownen, wbo P'OIHd u estlmat.ct S5
bUll90 tut ,,ar, to the ed1e of
f1nalldal bnftlpac..
Now the OWQer1 faee a new
pro)>lem -a 1rowln1 number of
beat·tellinf paperbacks by vldeo ••me wilU'dl that aervt u bow·to manuals.
"Of courae lt '• 1oln1 to hurt
butlneH," uld Irvln1 Tauve,
co-owner of Mancbeater llualc, a
New Hampsb.ire comp&Qy that owns
about 'JOO video 1amea. "The loqer a
pel'IOG plays oo a quarter the leas quarters I 1et."
There are at leut nve paperbacu
on *he market: Sirnet'• "Mutertq Pac·llan" by blaclrjack expert Ken
Uston; Bantam'• "How To Muter
the Video Games," Pocket Boob'
"How to Win ,t Pae-Man," Slmoa
• Scbuster's "Ho" to Beat the Video Game•" and Warner Book1'
"Scorin.g Btc at Pac-Man."
Tbe boob ranie ln price from •us to $3.95.
"Theoretically, you could have •
user,'s manual for each of these
games," Uat.on said,.
, SPOIL &PORTS -Arcade owners take a
dark view of manuals on how to play video
games a long time on a single quarter, thus .
hitting the management where it hurts -
in the profits.
The origlnal preaa run on Uston'a
book was 500,000, and accordin1 to
Signet spokeswoman Fem Leiber .
EdiBon, store orders before the book
was released required printin1 of
another 2!50,000 copies. Aller two
COWNl-
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weeka ln bookitorea, Uaton'1 book
bu climbed to No. 5 on B. Dalton'•
mus market best-1eller list.
Bantam '1 entry, written by
11 -year -old New Yorker Tom
HlracbteJd, baa sold about &50,000
copies and recently appeared on The
New York Tlmea man-market
paperback list.
Pac.Man bas received so much
literary attention because it Jenda
itaelf to more thorou1b analysla than
attack Jbd reflex 1ames. Uaton said
maie 1ames like Pac-Man require
"the most skill, about 90 percent, and
only 10 percent hand-and-eye
coordination." Attack 1ames ranee
from 90 percent hand-and-eye
coordination to ~so. be added.
Uston turned bis attention to
Pac-Man ~hile awaiting the outcome
of court appeala on his banishment
from casinos in Atlantic City. He la
an expert blackjack "count.er" who
can calculate the chances of a hlth or
low card tumiDJ up after se.eral
decks of cards have been played.
Ustoo's book is the moat elaborate
on Pac-Mao, still one of the most
popular of all arcade games. He
provides diagrams of patterns for the
original arcade games, gives advice
. on how to handle new pro1rams and
tips on how to play the various table
models, some of which look, sound
and play like the larger arcade
versions.
"The manufacturers are so
worried that everyone's going to
master these games," said Uston .
during an interview conducted
recently over a Pac-Man board at a
Broadway arcade.
R
·-EMJNDER
"But look, I juat meaaed up," he
said u h.l.s Pac·Man wu cau1ht by a
purauln1 monster. Until he waa
dlatra_~ by 1_u.o.w.d wblch. bad
110\erect around hla board, be had
effortlessly reached a score Jn excess
of 50,000. Novlcea have to scramble
to 1et ~.ooo.
Uaton, who It wrltln1 a secood
book on arcade games, doesn't
consider hlm1etr an expert al ~~ jual;...at an.al)tcln1 -At
recent arcad• party held to promote
Coleco'• new line of portable,
self-contained 1amell. lncludlna
Pac-Man.
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IJJ.1113
. .
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, February 9, 1982
.
World War I f lying/ace re~alls the glorY,,Gftltl fear., of.air fiittlia
~ PALM BEACH, Fla. <AP> -.. The secret was to aet on t.op were deltroyed In a fire re.rt combat. before he had scored L .....-:~~~--it wtt .. clear day early-tn-191'1 -so-you h-ad tbe-td-vantate. irgo, bat-he-stttl trarhts-tunk, · hts first ''idtt."
The Sopwith Camel waa crulaing Richthofen generally flew at helmet, ao111les and Ule mo1t "lt wu close. I turned and !
AP ......
MEMORIES OF WAR -Donald Paton, 82, So~with Camel
pilot in the first World War, has vivid memories of fierce air
combat over Europe's battlefields. He had 11 confirmed
"kills" and two probables.
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..
at 14,000 feet, In search of enemy about 17,000 feet, and when he treasured garment of those war '!law th1a German comln1 after
fl1htera behind German lines spotted an unauspeclin1 Brttlah pilots of yesteryear -the white. me. I went into a dive and be
near Arraa, France. or Canadian plane, he aod part silk acarf. followed me down. Suddenly, I
The pilot, sllk scarf snapplng of bis cover would awoop down "It kept you warm, but It wu swun1 to the right and he
In t he sllpatream , hunched and knock them out of the sky." a lso a badae of honor," he says. whlued past me. his guns 1oin1
forward, scannln1 the sllles The London-born Paton Most of the ptlots, Paton adds, where I would have been."
between bis twin Vickers vividly recalls the 21Aa years he had the scarves specJal·ordered Aerial combat was In close
machine 1una. Suddenly, servedasafl1hterpllotwlth the ·trom 8 fine haberdashery ln encounter, he says. Planes fired
headin& north across hls path he Royal Flying ~orps ln E~rope. London. at each other wh.ile only feet
saw the famous bri1ht red At 82, records indicate he a the apart. "You'd get in the middle German Fokker. youngest living World War I ace "There was a spirit or nobility of a d_QA(lght and discover
-Its ptlot -Manfred vorr ---a-title-fll'fit given In that war a.m.ong pilot$. 10 those dq1-It. severalof the enemy swanning
Richthofen, the Red Baron! to pilots who destroyed at least was a gentlemen's war in the air around you "
"If he didn't have his fiveenemyalrcraft and dogfights were a sort of Paton became a double ace,
h duel." 'umbrella' with him, I'd have Paton says he saw t e Red totaling 13 kills -11 confirmed attacked him " remembers Baron again a rew months later The famed Sopwith biplane, and two probable
D ld P ' f h d · U dlt' says Paton, was tricky. "It was O!l a . a ton . one o . t e un,, er s1m ar con ions . . If h d He was awarded several dwindling number of living Both limes he was about very sensitive. you a 8 m .. d a 15 1 nc 1ud 1· n,. the W td W I fl · I th 'I A f clumsy fist, you woUldn't make ,.. "' or ar ymg aces. " went ree m1 es away. ny o ~ a good pilot in the Camel." lhstingutShed 1''1ying Cross. after him, but didn't get close would have risked almost
enough to fire. With the cover be anything for a chance t.o bring With 71h hours in the 110
bad, it would have been foolish down Richthofen " mile-an-hour Came}, be was sent
to stay there." Still strikingly handsome with to the front as a lieutenant. He
The Red Baron's 'umbrella,' gray hair and a thin mustache, was hlter promoted to captain
Paton explains, was an escort or Paton lives a quiet life in and made flight commander of a
40-50 German fighters that retireme nt with his wift', groupofsevenplanes.
always accompanied him on Shelagh. Paton remembers when he
patrol. Man of his war momentoes first experienced fe ar in
,' .
.. ' .
: ·' ..
After the war. Paton went to
South Africa , where he was
Involved with experimental
agriculture until 1926 He then
moved to the United States and
became general manager of five
plush New York City hotels. He
retired in 1970
II
\
•
...
Dally Piiat
TUESDAY, FEB. 9, 1982
CA VALCA DE
BUSI NESS
TELEVISION
82
83-4
8 7
A 50-y ear-old manual .i sn't
ideal for getting modern-day.
advice. See Ann Landers B2 .
D
0
Man's concern aids
bald eagle in hunt ·
for wintertillle meal
SKAGIT COL1NTY. Wash Rud Bullt•r 1s a bird
watcher a eanng bird watc·her .
'Buller SJ)('nds countless hours watching b:.ild eagles
and other winged s pN·1es of the Pacific Nor t h w<•st area of
Washington state ft•ed upon fish he grac1ousl~· provide"
He patwntlv dnv<.•s his old beatup \'olks\\agen ttlong
tht• snow~· b;rnks of Skagit Count~ l'l\'t•rs and wht•n he
spots a hkel~ ft•t•dini! spot stops
Rullt•r unloads fish he has let tha'' o\t•rn1ght. pla('(•s
thl'm on rot·h along th<• nvcr and then dnvC's off
But the.• rc•t 11·t·d man and admittC'd natun• lO\'t•r
<lot'sn'I motor far Ii<' parks his C'i.lr 1n tt spot that won't
cl1straet th<.' l'aglt•s and using his \'t.'h1ell' as a hhnd sits
and wa1h
Thl' wait usual!~ isn't long
ThL• bald eaglt.• t'ommon to thl' an•<.1 hut hampt•n•d h~
\\'tntcr weather 111 its hunt for food . sp1t•s the fish ;.rnd
!'>\\t'l'p:-. in to makl• a · <·a teh .. T ht• sight 1s rC'\\ard t•nough
for Ruller
And orcas1onallv thl' elder h mun ha:-to reallll' a
mort' common bird suth as the <:l'O,, nr "Pi.ll'l'o\\ ma~ tr~
tor their share of fish
UNLOADING FISH Bud Buller unloads frozen fish J mm
front e nd of his car a long r iver In nor lh\\est art'a ol
Washington state. Buller lets fish thaw d uring the night and
.............
in the morning places them on rocks a lon g t he edge of nvcr
for bald eaglt•s to feed upon.
Thal dot'sn't happt•n often O nt• or mnn• bald eagl<.•s
are usua ll~· statione d a<'rnss rivl'r to shoo i..l\\'i.l~ intruders
F o r Bull l' l' such f ow 1 p 1 a' 1 s a mt• 11 o" an <t
t.•ntl·rtainin~ ,,·a~ to pass a wink1"s da.\·
EAGLE'S LANDING With wings spread. a
ba ld eagle p repares to land and in doing so
WATCtFUl EYE -An eagle rests on limb of a
downed tree and watches other eagles reed on
opposite side of river. Bald eagles come from
attraC'lS att<.•ntion of eight other eagles and a
Ion(• crow 1Id:1 at l'l\'t•rs1d<• lt•t•<h ng :-.tll'
as far away as Alaska to feed on spawned
fis h In Washington. ·
-'
A fish story
th!J,('s real
SACRAMENTO <AP > -A
fis herman angling for sturgeon
ca u g ht a Volks wa ge n van
inst ead after he hooked the
vehicle with his line and reeled
it in lo shore when it noated by
in the Sacramento River.
The van plunged into the river
after it sailed off Highway 160, a
levee road, at about 60 mph late
Sunday. The driver, 48-year-0ld
George Nicks, suffered severe
facial cuts and was reported in
fair cond itio n at Ka ise r
Hospital. The cause of the crash
was under investigation.
Nicks. who climbed out of the
van . r eac hed s h ore a fte r
passers-by built a makeshift
bridge with wooden pla nks
ENJOYING THE VIEW Bud Ruller puffs on cigarette as ht•
sits in his car a nd watches bald cugles feed He uses his ear
as a blind to watch t he birds
Highway Patrol offi cer Jim
Koroush said witnesses reported
that Nicks was driving north
when he swerved off the right
shoulder. overcorrect ed, then
crossed the southbound lane,
narrowly missing a car headed
south. The van crashed into an
irrigation pump tower. smashed
through a wooden bridge and hit
the water. Koroush said.
FEEDING ON FISH -An adult bald eagle uses
its wings for balance as it feeds on spawned
fish at edge of rushing river. Snow-white
head and tall feathers indicate an adult bird
at least' 6 years old.· Bfrds With black and
white feather s over large area of their
bodies. such as eagle at right, are 3 to 4 years
old .
----------...---·---'1 YI F
°'1nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. February 9. 1982
•ANN LANDERS
•ERMA BOMBECK
•HOROSCOPE
Advice • ID 50-year-old manual out of date
DEAR ANN LANDERS Several
weeks ago a young man wrote to you
saying he was consumed with sexual
desires. but his moral teachings a nd social
position in the commun1tv made it
impossible for him to engage in sexual
relations with a woman You advised him
to satisfy those urges by h1mi.t•lf no
partner involved .
I remember reading ~omt'l hmg in m~·
Boy Seoul manual SO ye<1n. ago under the
heading of "self-gratification." !.o I looked
it up in order to get the exact wording. lt
s aid. "Any habit that causes sexual
arousal and results in the consequences of
throwing off the natural secretions of
manhood will detract from the manliness
of the person who engage;; 1n this h<.tbit ··
Now what do vou think" Can 1t h<.• that the
great Ann Landers gave the wrong ud .. ·1('l'"
ALBANY FAN
DEAR AL: I think the sam•• as I
a lways have. Now here's a question for
you . If you wanted advice on what to do
about cancer. h igh blood pres'iure or
ALL HANDS ON DECK Officers Clnd crew of
the British submarine HMS Courageous
stand at attention as the big sub enters the
San Diego Submarine base Navy officials
dlabete~. or matters dealing with
elect ronics, nuclear fission or
aerodynamics, would you consult a book
that was published 'SO y.-ars ago? Thanks
ror writlru~.
DEAR ANN Like: "8urga1n Ba~eml'llt
BI ues I am look mg for a decent g1 rl I
a lso want someone who ti1:1s compassion. a
sense of humor and son\ethmg above the
eyebrows The problem l met such a girl
recentlv. but s he has confessed that s he 1~
no virgin in fact . she told me very
opC'nly that she has had several lovers.
Is it possible for a woman who has
bl'en promiscuous to be a faithful wife" I
am ambivalent. disturbed. torn and
SEA HClll~G FOR TRL'TH I'.'/
WOIH'ESTER
DEAR SEARCHING : Yes. it is
possible. But the operativt• question is
whetht>r you could forget her past and
accept her as she is.
Many a virgin bride has turned into the
town tramp, while the girl with the purpl.-
past settled down and became ·a good wire
.,,.... ""',..., _
said the submarine is on an .. operational
l'ru1se" and will be in San Diego until the end
of lht• month
Gemini position strong
Wednesday, f'ebruar~· Ill
ARIES (March 21 April 19 1 You can
s uccessfully settle µraclitul 1\s ue!'>
Domestic <1djustment 1s on agenda Focus
also on dependents. employment and µcl!'>
By utilizing quiet diplomacy you make
significant gains Wha l now seems out of
reach will soon become available•
TAURUS !April 20-May 201 Emphasis
on creativity, affairs of heart. childre n .
s peculative ventures and the "'inning of
contests. You·11 see people as they arc and
could thwart efforts bv onr who would
deceive you. Pisces. \'i.rgo natives fi gure
prominently
GEMI NI <Mav 21 -Junt> 201 \'our
position is s tron'gcr than orig1nall~
an ti ci pa led . Persona I possess io n s.
including property. require professional
appraisals Relations hip intensifies and
long-term agreements are part of scenario
CANCER cJune 21 .July 221 Don't
jump at first offer. See pictur(• as a whole.
obtain long-range view Outline sales
promotion. determine pulse of public and
re p I ace t r.a d i ti on w i t h 1 n no ,. a l 1 v e
procedures Relat1 ve relH•ves '1H1 of
burden. Aries is m picture
LEO <July 23·Aug. 22l New approach
results in progre ss Highlight
independence. originality and willingness
to get to heart of matters. Focus also on
money, personal possessions and ability to
u se material at hand. Aquarius and
another Leo figure prominently
VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22> You're on
POTSHOn
BY ~SHLEIGH BRILLIANT .
•l l ft
WHV
o() THE THINGS
T'H.AT
MAKE YOU
FEEL
S AFE
SO OFTEN
MAK£ ME FEEL
THREATENED'?
. .
• HOIOSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA
right lra<'k mone~ will tx• <1v;11lable plus
moral s upport from fomtl~. loved ones
Cancer. Capricorn. Aquarius Pl'rsons µla )
important roles. Timing, Judgment remain
on target Gel tG heart of mi.llll'fS and do
"'ear bright colors.
U BRA 1 Sept 23-0ct 22 > What had
hl•t•n CJ source of fear. doubt and irritation
could no\\ hl' tram.formed into a definite
a~set You II ha\'C access to material
prev1ouslv restricted lfonzon~ expand.
lines or ('O mmunication open and ~·011
participate in prest1g10us social affair
SCORPIO l Oct. 23-Nov 21 >. Your
counsel will be sought. prC'stigt~ rises and
you make right m ove at right time
Emphasis on friends. hopes. desires and
profit from career. husine;;s or recent
stock purchase. Another Scorpm figures m
unusual scenario.
SAGITTARI US 1 Nov 22 Dec 211
Open Imes of commun1cat1on with those in
positions of authority Express views.
preferably in writing Your requests will
be granted. Know it and t akl' care with
what you ask Be s ure you can cope with
what you get.
CAPRI COR N (Dec 22 Jan. 19 ,
Circumstances take turn m your favor
suddenly people agree to your requests and
are enthusiastic about your propos als :-
concepts Domestic picture is more ·
harmonious, you'll have more money and
love.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 18 1:
Maintain independent stance especially
in dealings with those who claim to know
more about what s hould be done with your
money. Insist on definition of terms. Dig
deep for story behind story Pisces-. Virgo
persons are In picture.
Pl CES c Feb. 19-Merch 20l : Trim
verbiage make meaning~ clear in direct
fashion. Accent on ability to represent self
in plausible. legally correct manner.
Capracom native will become ally. You'll
rebound Jrom apparent setback. Ultimate
decision bringt; plea~ure .
I
a3d mother. As Barbara Walters says ...
"Go know."
DEAR ANN LANDERS· In regard to
the 17-year-old who is confused because
her 40-year-old aunt insisted. "There as no
such thing as love ... I have this to offer
q AllN LANDERS
I was divorced at 23. widowed at 48 and
am now married again to a fine man. I
have been in love and I have been loved.
but never have 1 been loved bv the man I
was in love with. ·
I settled for home and family. security
and companionship because there was
nothing else. Love just never worked for
me Rut J am not complaining l know
what I have and I am satisfied I also know
how much more I might have had 1f love
had existed on both sides at the same lime
will see themselves in m) column today'!
Millions, you can be surt'. Thost> or you who
are loved by the ones you love are indeed
the luckies t people in the world. Take care
of il. It's precious.
CONFIDENTIAL to Nel•d tlw Hight
Words· Borrow a re~ from DISl'i.Jl'h Nt.•\t
To love and be loved is the richest of
all blessmgs. Deep down I will always reel
I misse.d out on the mos t magical
experience of humankind WISH IT
COULD HAVE BEEN FOR ME
to knowing when to se1zl' an oµporlunil'
the most important thing m life 1s to krw\\
when to forgo an ~vanta~e
Drugs'' /low much 1s tuo nwd(' /!.. pot CJK '
Is c:ocame too much·' If you re un dopt' 11r
cons1dermg 11. get Ann Laru1Rrs new bouklel
DEAR WISH: I wonder how many
married people <men as well as women>
·The Lowdown 011 Dope ·· For earl1 hook/et
ordered. send $2 f~J plus a long. self addressed.
stamped envelope t 37 cents postaqe 1 111 A11n
Landers. P 0 Bn.r 11995. Ch1cag11 Ill lillfil 1
Weathering
I'm a worrier. Especial!~ when the
'-'Cather is bad and I'm housebound.
•
EIMA BOMBECK
AT WIT'S END
Like. where are the Nielsen families
and why do they watch all the s hows I turn
off" They're the most well -kept secret
s ince Judge Crater. !'lot only have I never
seen a Nielsen family. I have never known
anvone who has ever seen a Nielsen familv
or· even fi!Olten a Christmas newslette·r
from them
In m v mmd. I visualize them as a
family of pale. hollow-eyed TV Junkies
where the "Daddv" carne!-. the• TV knob
a round · in his pocket. .. Daddy" likes
women with good posture. a good car
chase. and has seen more Bowls than the
latrine officer at Ft. Dix.
1s going to confusl· lhl' ans\\ t·r of
sex education exper ts like m' -.C'lf "ho
said. ·You com e from Ohio . .,
MY ULTIMATE AIM m life 1s to be
offered a television series called "The
:'\11elsen Family" so I could turn them off.
I suppose I'm borrowmg troubk. hul
where 1s our vice pres1dl'nt . Gt·orgt•
Whatshisname·• I haven't sel'n hide· nor
hair of the man si nee h t• at tc•ndc·ct u
wedding or was it a funl'ral ' '.\lo. I
remember now. it was tht· inauguration
Some ~ay he's keeping a low 1trof1I<•
Sandra Dee keeps a low profile
And where is Mrs. Tucker·s Inn·) Mv
hus band and J have been looking for a
whipped cream experience in some little
lodge oH a country road for a long time. It
has to be the onlv restaurant in the world
with an unlisted phone number
He wa~ a n1ce-look1ng man . i..IS I
remember him . and spoke well ot hi-. 1oh I
certainly hope he's a ll nght
I'll be glad when spnnJ? come<, I \\Ol'I'\
less m the spring.
And what in the world do all those
a nchorpersons do with those papers they
s hufne around all the time·' Dan Rather
~tides his one at a time to a faceless person
off camera. J essica Savitch marks things
on hers John Chancellor straighten§ his
hke he's putting them back in a ream. and
Roger Mudd folds his and takes them with
him when he goes
The news 1s on a teleprompter. so how
t·om(• they fiddle \\ ith all those s heets of
papl'r"
of Laguna Beach
AND WHAT'S GOING to hapJ>('n to the
test-tube babies when they grow up and
tisk the time-honored question. "Where did
I come from·"· Have you any idea how that
"I'd like • r.iae to get out ol 'alw•ys·bein&·
brokenomica. • "
GOREN ON BRIDGE
BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHAAIF ·
Both vulnerable. Nort.h
de ala:
NORTH
•A9U
"'Q9051
0 12
• J 5
WEST EAST
+85Z •K&
c:::i K 103% c:::i J7
O IUO• O J965
•A 107 • 98432
SOUTH
• QJ107
c:::i A8
o AQ83
•&Qt
The bidding:
Nortll Eut SHOI Wut
p ... r ... l NT Pua
2. , ... 2 . , ... s. , ... '. , ... , ... , ...
Openinr lead: Two of •.
Plan the play of the hand
before you commit yourself
to lhe first trick. By doing so.
you might be able to emulate
what today's declarer had to
do to land his four spadt'
game.
Art.er his parlner opened
one no trump. North used Lht'
Slayman Convention lo pro
be for a 4-4 major fit. He then
invited game by raising his
partner's major. Since South
could hardly have more for
hia opening. he accepted with
alacrit.y.
• West led a trump and.
when dummy came down.
declarer realized lhal he was
in danger of losing a trick in
each auit. Since he could not
afford to have East win the
fint trick and ahlft to a dla·
mond. declarer cbOM to give
up OD \be trull)p finesse. He
rose wltb the ace, and took
care to play the ten from hia
hand.
Since h• wanted to ret rid
of dummJ'a diamond. the
jadt of dub1 waa led ·at trick
two. WHt won the ace and
reverted to a trump.
Ded&Nr dropped the jack
under tut'• k.inJ. preaerv·
lnr the •ve.n. Eut mact. the
expected ahift to a diamond,
but deelater ,_. with the
ace, euhed th• ldor.qu"n of
clube, dlacardlnr dummy'•
rernaJnlns diamond, and now
•
had to go about selling up
dummy's hearts.
He led ace and another
heart. West won the-lung and
cleverly continued with a low
diamond. However. declarer
did not have to risk running
this to his queen. He ruffed in
dummy. ruffed a low heart
with lhe queen of trumps LO
set up the suit. and could now
cash in on his earlier unblock·
ang plays an the tr ump suit.
Dt'clarer was ablt' lo cross
to dummy witb t.he seven or
trumps t.o the nine. Thal
drew the last trump and al
the same time provided the •
entry to the board to cash the
Jong hearts and bring heme a
welt-played contract.
R11bb•r brl•1• claba
UtN-.M•& tM eHllt.r)' ate
&Ji. r...r-4eal brMlc-, ..... t..
o. &.Iller bew -•&Wilt,. .. •••'tT Cllarl•• Oerea '•
"f••r·Deal 8ri41•" wm
t.ecb ,... di. '" ........ ... &Mdte ., ..... ........ ..
...... tk& ... .W.1&.M can.., ....... n1W.we. , ..... , .......... .
.... H .'15 i. "'Geft .. r._. o...... ~.,. •. . ....
.. ,,.,.,_,P.O. ht tH,
NenreM, N.I. 01M8. Make
cMelr• p&JUM t. N•w .. ,.,."'9eb.
[
\
n
"
rl
II
'
I l
.
I
I I
Long service rewaf.ded
Huntington resident !uJnored fo r 40 years with firm
By PHIL SNEIDl!:RMAN °' .. ~ ........
Terence Doyle deacrlbes
himaelf u a man who ju1t didn't
know when to qult.
The 62·year-old Huntington
Beach resldenl wu honored
recently by the Federal
Envelope Division of Champion
International Corp. for 40 years
of service with the company.
Doyle worked his way up from
envelope machine adjuster to
production manager at the
farm's Seattle plant He was
transferred to Southern
California three years ago to
help the company open a new
facility in Santa Fe Sprin1s.
Though he's officially retired,
Doyle said the company may be
calling him back as a part-time
consultant.
Doyle says be owes his four
decades In the envelope making
business to his early interest in
professional roller skating.
In 1941 , he was an apprentice
ma c hinist with another
company, performing at roller
rinks in his spare time. A fellow
s kater who worked for the
envelope company suggested
Doyle also apply.
Soon after he was hared, World
War II intruded. A Canadian
native, Doyle attempted to enlist
HONORED -Terence Doyle.
62, has been honored by
Federal Envelope Division
of Champion International
Corp for 40 years of service.
in the U.S. Navy. He was turned
down because he was not a U.S
citizen Yet in Jan 1942, be was
drafted by the us. Army.
R eaumina his wotk •l the
pla.nt after his mllltary t.our,
Doyle witnessed many cbanics
Ln the industry. ,
"We used to have a
tremendous number of people
making envelopes by hand when
I first started." he recalls.
"Now, that's been virtually
ehminated.
·'The machines used to
produce 3,000 envelopes an hour
when I started. Now they put out
50,000 an hour."
Doyle oys there Is much
more emphasis on plant safety
today than during his early
years on the job, when workers
sometimes lost a finger in the
machinery.
The Huntington Beach man
dad some traveling to Aus\raUa
and South America for the
company, and he plans to use his
retirement years for more
traveling with his wife Lois.
He's especially anxious to return
to New Zealand, another place
he vis1ted on business
Doyle says he's keeping busy
bicycling along the beach,
swimmi ng , playing the
accordaan and keeping up his
stamp collection.
''I'm even thinking of getting
a surfboard," he says
California home resale 'v olume
registers first big increase
LOS ANGELES <BW > -
California home resale volume
in December registered the first
increase in s ix months , the
Ca lifornia Association of
Realtors has reported.
The December statewide
seasonally adjusted annual sales
rate of 291,218 units represents
an increase of 14 l percent
above November.
However, the year -to-year
co mpari so n o f resale
transactions shows a 41 percent
decrease in resale volume from
December 1980
"With the more than 200 basis
point decline an m o rtgage
interest rates in November.
activity in the resale market had
begun lo improve," said Seb
Sterpa, C.A.R. president.
1"However, the increase in
Interest rates over the past two
months may have arrested any
recovery. Without a reversal or
this recent trend and more
sign ifi ca nt interest rate
declines, activity will continue
to be severely restricted ·
H not resolved, the inherent
conflict bet ween government
a nd private sector credit
demands will fu rther limit the
extent to which any home resale
volu m e increase can be
s ustained during the r1rst
quarter or 1982, reallor!> caution
The statewide median sales
price increased a margmal 0.2
percent to $102.791 an December.
According to the realtor's
associatio n . prices were
appreciating at a rate or 5.2
percent on a 12-montb basis. the
second lowest annualized rate of
appreciation to 1981
"The magnitude or the current
economic downturn and
resulting weakness in the
bouain1 markets will continue to
constrain price increases." said
J oel Singer, C.A.R director or
p l a nning , r esearch and
economics
The median time on the
market of existing smgle-family
homcs sold during December
was roughly 74.5 days, an
1 n c rcasc or 3 9 days from
November. The inventory index
or unsold homes declined to 20.5
months , a decrease of 3.8
months from the November 1981
mdcx
'The invento r y index
ce1lculates the number or months
it would take for all currently
listed homes to sell The decline
in the index reflects both the
increase in sales activity and a
declinc m the number or unsold
listings." Smger said
Traditional mortgage
financing arrangements as a
percentage of market sales
continue relatively small. In
December, only 19 percent of
exiatin1 single-family home
sales involved conventional
finan ci ng or a cas h
downpa y ment and a n ew
inslltulionally originated first
mortgage loan.
Foreign
farm
cash up
SACRAMENTO <AP)
Foreign investors
increased their holdings
of California farm land
by 57 percent during a
20-month period of 1980
and 1981, says an
o rganization that
specializes in land data.
25
Available
for
Immediate
Delivery I
G reat selection of the custom 42. 45
or 48-inch conversion. Includes 8
inch color TY, bar, separately controlled
rear air-conditioning, power Chauffeur
divider window ... PLUS many more
features!
The Sacramento
Union. in its Sunday
ed i lions, quoted the
Homer Hoyt Institute of
Was hington , D.C., as
saying international
in'vestors owned 705,000
acres of farm land in all
58 counties at the end of
the reporting period last
September. BUY O R LEASE.
(213)
868-9931
(714)
521-9624
~
ROGER PENSKE
CAUfORNA'S LARGEST CADIUAC DEALER
WHEAi! ntE • AHO CD FMEWAYS MEET IN DOWNEY
(F0RM£Rl.Y 808 SPREEN CADILLAC)
WE'RE A LOI MORE THAii
A BELL Oii YOUR •LL
Behind the bell Beh1"d the
famous Seacoast sticker. Behind
all the stal«t-<>Hha art protection
(jevlces we make and Install, Is
Seacoast central station.
When an •farm oo•• off on your property, we get the algnal in a
nearby, 24-hour·•·day central
1tat1on If the 11gne1 Indicates fire,
burglary or hOodup, we call lhe
pollce or fire department
Since our central atatlon la UL
lltted , our central atatlon
customers can qualify for 11 al.iable
dlt<lovnr on their Insurance.
And to lncreAM our reach, make
rHponH lime even faster and
Improve efficienc y wt're
comP'Mrill"9 our 1bltt0n
BUI ~It nn·t MW to &Mco .. l Wt'\19 bffn ~ttlno b9tter for 21 ~And todey we·,. the leaden In the a.curlty bulln ... In th• l\atbor .,..a with
~ 10,000 CUltome+'a lncludtnv e wide ranoa Oj big end 1mall 1"9tall, Industrial
9fld oomlNIClaf tltabCWhmenta.
To find out mott about 8Mcoltt centr•I 1tatlon Wflte or come by our new
faolllty•t.2.418 Newport Blvd .. Costa M ....
2488 NEWPORT BOULEVARD • COSTA MESA CALl~IA ' 92827 • f714t M2-3490
In Kem County at the
southern end of the San
Joaquin Vall ey,
foreigners own the most
or any county -106,122
acres. the institute said.
They also own 102,540
acres in Butte County
north or Sacramento.
The Union quoted a
U .S . Department or
Agriculture publication
as sayina that
foreigners own about l
percent of all of
California's farm land,
but feWer than 1 percent
or the farm and forest
land in the United
States.
A bout 80 nations are
represented on the list of
foreign Investors.
·· lUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTUY
... 11-.h•t• _._~_'
ltll MAllO• IU D.
COSTA MISA -141-11144
•
V~ne's
Att Show
<net gtfte trom
Hunttngton Cent•
dally thru f«), 10.
Orange Coast OAJLY PILOTfTueaday, February 9, 1982 ..
.f . 4 , . . ,, •'
MeaLIY
SAHl•M
'"'" IULeY
OTT 'UMINO
Local firms tell promotions
JI m Mayfield ha s been
appointed direct or of Mel
Thompson & Associates,
Executive Search Division
Mayfield is a former managing
associate with Korn/Ferry
Int er n atio nal , a Lq s
Angeles-based executive search
firm with offices in Newport
Beach.
Services Inc. of Irvine He li ves
in Costa Mesa.
Beach offi ce of the Big 8 public
accounting firm of Ernst &
Whinney . • William J. McClellan has been • elected president of the board of
directors of Big Brothers/Big
Sisters of Orange County He
lives in Corona del Mar
Tom Sumlno of Irvine bas
been appointed vice president,
sales planning and control of
Kawasaki Motors Corp., U.S.A.
* • ~Terry Bochaoty has been Bob Sasseen has been named
senior vice president , loan
administration at Her itage
Bank, Orange County's largest
andependeot bank
• J erry W. Neeley, chairman of
the board, president and chief
execut1 ve officer of Smith
lnlernat1onal Inc . has been
elected to the board of directors
of Avery International Smith
International 1s located 1n
Newport Beach.
named national sales manager
for VH D Programs lnc He
pr eviously work ed at
D1scov1s1on Associates to Costa
Mesa
* • Jo~I K . Harris has Joined
*
Costa Mesa-based Spaghetti Pot
investments lnc. as director of
educational services.
James D. Ott has been named
c hi e f financial officer and
cashier for Liberty National
Bank, a full -service bank now
being organized in Huntington
Beach. * Frank L . Speers has been
promoted to vice chairman of
Newport Beach-based Avco
Financial Insurance Group.
•
Mlchu l Harwick has jomed J
A Stewart Construction Co. of
Westmins ter as project
manager
• J udlth A. Puke has been
appointed manager of Glendale
Federal Savings and Loan
Association ·s Huntington Beach
branch
• Richard P. Riley has been
named general manager for
Manufacturing and Consulting
Donald R. Horflaoder has been
named a partner at the Newport
OVER THE c OUNTER NASO LISTINGS
NEW YORK IAPI ComCIH NASOAO ciuoc-1 CmlShr "-Int""'*'' bids Cmwh1
•"" -often Dy CMPep .ma rket ~ n 114 Cordi•
Mender. Pf'lce1 do Cro1Tre not lnclucM rel•ll CutlrFd s markup m•rkdOw" Cvcnron 4'n •"'-k•i1S1 pt or commlnlon for Ote0.1 ' ,,.,.., l•E ll•lv., NIDMeY OeylM I 11"' 13V• Kemeft t
AFAProt ,,..., ,,..., 011"' • ••n. 11 1 ~:!)l;~r AVM Cp 4~. 4 .. O.klOAg 13' > n""° KimCMll Accu··~ ,~ ..... 0.ICenT II II Klf\911\t Addl111W IO .... 11 O.weyEI J 3 .... K-G Ad••->-. JV. 01eCry1 14 d Kl\-V Afletll 1 JO ~ Olan(ru JI 37 Krelff Allcolnc fll>fJ 41 Oocutt 1 11 11-.. ICutKu All.. 2~ 3 OotlrGn I-17 "merea 11Vt 11"'-OoylOll IS ISi') ~~:, AFur11 4 .. 4 7-1' OrlefCn 111<11 J1Vt L.afteCo AGrfft I-'"-DvnllO S 11"'-IJ Lll11vs Al11Gp 1 ....-. .,.,., P.vrlrn 1 1;v., 14 LtdStor !:'~r~: : ~"' E'elllVM u .. LlftBcll Ao!.1< "-, .... Econuo ,,..., 11\lo ~~rn
AltHMe S--1:::~ 11:: 11\lo NiG1.fOll ...... • 11 t9 leM«I -,gt MedM;E ANldlle ......... IEl-1 I tl 14 Ma IPt "119SA ll'l't 11 EMO.• IJ IJI? Me O<' p "119AGO ....., 10• > EnrMel"° J•. 1'-~.~:'I "PP'l'C ti''> I~ E R ~ -" .. p+dMI 1' ...... II IY OF"O ..... Me Ir.ti I ,.,..,..,G ,. '"" Enlwlill ~ t.\o Molrion 1 ,..,Clllp n.,: n~ EQ11ISL ,...,. , •• MeulLP 1 ·• EqlOll ..... e<. Mol P1 "llGtll IS u~. vlFSC ~ "• M y 011 Atte11R• 1"-1011. l"eOrlTk ' ~ln
BIMrdC& Alo "" S'l't S IS. .. Mc F:';7' BellyP '"' S... FermGp )7 11\io M<O...Y 8-HE 10 1014 Fidk:Ot J4h U MldnW Jleslc R 9 l 7.14 Ft811Sy• l1\4 >7'11. MdlclC• 'BeulFr 10Vt 21 Ft&o.tn » )1,1/. MldlRH
Bert1Mll •~ 1 FtEmpS 11 "'" MldlB-1 11 .. 11... ,.... FtWftFln •\· .... Mllller e ... 1P1 ~ 2 F1eoBk1 D n1& Miu tG
BeUL • 291>'> Flk:llJ' 11~ 11'4 ¥Olea 1 :r~t :~.,, l! =~:ioc~• J~>i. ,,~ -Col
BlrdSoft '"' 10 "-•o U'• 14"' ~"";I., Blrlcllr •'• 5' F°'"'lllll 1', 1 ... NIDrVRH
Btyv-' '' Frellk(p I~ "'" Mor1111n Bon.,.r , ... I 11·1 Fr-El i.•·, 17 MolClul> 8rwTom 10-\. 21 FrH SG J0•1, ~ Mut ller
B11ckOH '" t• Fremnl 1 ••'n •~ NarroC Buffeh JO•. ~ FullrHB ,,.,. ,,.,, NOIA • 8ur11upS II'• 12 GnAulm 4\'t •V. NJllesc CNL l'ln 1 1• C.110.•0 t''• ~ NYAlrf CPT ' " u·. GnAIEll ,,..., ,, NlckOG CalWISv Jl.\1 l7 vEFn t•. "" Hkolel
C..,redH 2'-2' reScn • ••~• l•'f> Nletv. A Ceo En 15' 16 ' 1 I reyAdv II 7• Nielsn 8 CeoSw 1 .,,, ll' 11111tsl ••''> U NOCerG• CplllAlr >'"• •' yroclyn ~ I\, NwtHGs
CereCp 14.,, IS' HamtPI "" U'h HwstPS Cl\erRI• lS'• •' Hardwh ~ l'-No•ell CllrmS 1 10 to• HrpRow ""' "'' Nucrp , Cl'lf'IHOu ' ""• 17' HarpGp 30•. J0'1'1 HutrSy • Cllml.. 16 11 HartlNI 10"• 201') O<eener ClletUll 11'~ " Hecllng s 151,, IS>i. OllilvyM Cllvbl> 4~ 4S HenrOF 1S 1511> OflloCe1 Clr11co • .., 1 HOIObm ,.. J\4 Ol\Ferro
CUtSoG• .... I Hoover t'!o ... Oti.rTP CIUUIA l4"• :M' HorlrAI J... 4\. PCA lnl
Pl•UIB 12', XI Hyettfnl 14''> 150.. Pabst& CfarllJL 2S ~IMS lllt It•<. , ... PcGaR
CIOwCp 411> 4 111trelno • .,, •>i. l>auleyP ColrTlt 11\'t II Intel 14>i. 15 P"rMf C~M J..I• ~I 111trcE11r S'. 5 ... PeneEnl
MUTUAL FUND
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t~~; :r~ :h UPS AND DOWNS
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~\ .~' ~ Disabled ~ getting ahead
While the Reaaan admlnl1tratloa'1
bud1et·cutters a.re 1luh.1n1 tunda to desltn and
lnstall equipment to help the handicapped. prtvat.e
industry and the band.lcapped thenuelvos are maklnl
surprlsinily lmpresalve proaresa on thelr own And
this hll Uttle If anytblnti to do with 1981'•
International Year of the Olsabled Person, generally
dlsmlued tn th1J country as a dismal failure, deaplte
otticial atat.ementl or opttmlsm.
Jn fact, so far at
least, the ~ handicapped seem t-0
be more than holdine their posltiona ln the • ,.. ~a~e s0 'u t~eg 1eene[a~ lfllll PllTll ~Z
joblessness .. Surveys ::I--
again are
underlining that qualified handicapped workers have
a lower rate of absenteeism than their physically
able counterparts, higher dedication lo performance
and a higher quallly output.
From the corporate side, there are hundreds of
positive examples or what U.S. corporations are
doing for the qualified handicapped. As a sampling.
-IBM has for many years modified buildings
and redesigned equipment lo accommodate the
handicapped;
-Sears Roebuck's handicapped roster includes
repair technicians, attorneys and retail managers.
AT&T has developed a program to train
managers of disabled people (which will survive lls
breakup).
Xerox is training disabled people in
computer·related jobs where al present there is a
s hortage or physically able quaJifled workers.
-The Travelers Insurance Companies installed
a variety of sophisticated equipment that includes
writing machines to enable a disabled person to write
out his/her program in Braille and video screens to
advise the hard-of.hearing that the telephone ls
ringing.
In the words of Edward H. Budd, president of
The Travelers, which has some 100 disabled persons
on the payroll, ··we have to have qualified people to
do business, and lo overlook qualified people because
they are handicapped would not serve any purpose.''
From the side of the handicapped, this nation's
blind population of around 470,000 offers the most
outstanding examples or people working, earning
wages based on their productivity, paying taxes
and generally smashing our stereotyped images of
the blind into sawdust.
There are workshops for the blind across the
nation. where men and women operate complex
machines, such as dnll presses and electronic
sealers: run switchboards; assemble writing
instruments ; make brushes on high.speed
equipment; conduct complicated sewmg operations
and package the widest variety of products.
None of Uus tells the fulJ story, though, of what
earning their own way does for handicapped persons.
It's not just that the earned income means increased
buying power. It's also that nothing beats a job for
giving a person a sense of self.respect In 1982
particularlv
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
... ::.i.ne 601) 190 71'• t ·• '.:SO pf nlS 15 , l60 'S Ft.ilV I011 1" 17"'° J•m•w 11 S 116 ' ''• N•IEdv 1~1 7 79 14'u-V. AtpAlr 10 lOI l~ ,,.. Tr•nln< 2 12 11 14t.
Al\l\eul 1'11 • ..., .,, : -ComDln 1 IO 6 ., 71't .. Fle•I pl '.. " o-.. ,,,, Jaj)f\F I lie •1111 '" ... NalFG 1 '° s " Jl ... t-"' RtpCo .., • 7 221'> '. T ., I Anl•lrs 16111067 "'• • .._ CmDEn 1 t0 I 262 dll'e l't Fleal pt• IS 10h2t J•llPtlt I S7 & 2'I 15'• N•ICiyp 1 • 7 131 10V,..... ... RtpF'l'IS 1.10 IO , .. lt14-'• T~~ICP~ ~.87 1': !~~1~ NEW YORl(IAPI FIMI OOW..J-•"9l lot -....,, ,M> •.
Antin SJ S 1M 13' 1 Como. I JI 10 22'9 1S"-'-FHg1SI • It 1J H -"-JtrC Pl 9 J& rSOO SJ"°+ I. NIHOM e4 J""-l't ~•P_!I!, ! «>1• •. 1s2 M""1,~ -. ',,.• Tr611ten 10 :7t 7 S.... .. 1'ntlln• 440 I & 6-. CmSwn 20 I 141 l'o FloltPn J• t>t 1'0.. '" Je•CPI IJlO 1110 IO'l NM6Ct• 46 I 27S 7 Ito "N\,.. • • 7'" T..,.P_.1~ 100 .. A~ J• I] m u-. , Comdr! ,. 103'1 ., ' ,. ' Fl•EC. IO u • Ill-> ' J trC pl 1 ,, I 12\. • NMCIEll\ «>10 IJ:H IS-~ RNY pl,\l IJ . J 10\'> •• ,, .......... -I .
... pel!P"" t. 1J ""' I , Cm#E 180 7 ls.6 10 • Fl•PL ) 04 1 174 11'~ , JewelC 7 J• 6 lo JJ><. • '°' NMI,..!> Olt tS 46 1--1.4 RepSll Ja 2 S03 U\oo • "• r~~l1 '° : I~ .... ApPwor740 rlOO .. •''• CwE!IA 141 9 ll't 'Fl•Pw l lO• 17' u • .. " Jewl« • lO 4'o t NPr"tt..S. S I--· .. RtPTt•t• • ... n -'" TARll, It t) lllt-....
ApplMg • "' II • '• c .. e pl ''° &I 12•.. • Fl.Sit' 711 ' • ,, JllnJIH 111111 nn )7'• '• NS.....1 ,, uo " _, ~~PJ!cin ~ • ~ ,J?_ll> ~ Tr•-Y 1.-• 21 fl-" Arel\1 10 21 JI', C""E pl 1 12 l7.. '' Ftwc;.n 17 9'1 10 , .. JC>MfF 1' 11 18 'II l'o NISvl11 I .. • 12 ~ 0.. "'"""' ., , ~ • ..., T I J JI • ---~ ArUt !IA 1 6 SS • ', C#E pf I• lSOO S1 •I Fl..or 10 9 1)70 01''~ ~ JOIW>C/I I AO 1 I 24 • .. 111~.11""41 1 2471,1 , 1 14'A-:; \.\ Revco l 76 11 105 J•~ l't rev " ~ --.. ••ut"' 2. 16 s 'Ill CwE p1 J 11 JO t&l , • '• FooleC 710 1 11 JO Jonlon t0 1n n •, N ISll ,70 ,.,,.._ ""' Revere a ti tJ v. J':~on ~:';, ''; l::%
At<llOS l•O •1511 11 -'• ~=~= n! .~ !~ ForOM 1101 11l\ ,,.1 Jorr.::1 I 6 J20 •7~ '\ NllOM 1.«) UltlClltllt--111> Revlon I .. I .. JI';, ... l~l~I~ · ·1114 ~-. .... •r11~PS 1.21 • • ••·· comes 11111 • ,. tl\\ '• ForMK rn • •• m ... v. ~g1 ~• ,~: ·~ ;;.~ 1'• ::!"'...:'1 • .: 7 ~ ~~·iA :::~,~ ~ ~da~ ·v; rr1e111e1 40 1 10 12 _ w. •rl 10.70 . rUO .,._ _ "" ComES Of' IO rl220 °'' ''• Ft0.1r I 31 t6 ''• \1 y ' n Trl•PC 111 S Ullo " Ant cit t0 S I• a..-' Com .. t 1lO11 J01 •11.o "• FIHO•O IOI U 101 11'~ .. KDI n -l(~ll l ' • NewP pf 1 t0 1100 IO'o "eynln 1 llO • UI] ...... '/'J Trlco • II I tO II-\lo :~~~:.IO~,~'~· •• CoP•v<> JJll S6 10'• •• FO\IWll .. ···~ l]I. VJ ICOT 104 1 ... ::::.:~~ • .: ·~-.... ;~l~~~iu,;;.~dol,·.,·.· •• ~ TT~!.",'Y Plftll) ~ .'u,, '1~-=-~ •rmedil , ..:. : Comocy ti u I .. Foloml " .... KLM ,. 111 }l'• ''• NE"!IE11.t0. fl 1S-...• ,.,, "• ... , -.. -E , ... T .. Armco 1 IO S ,.S 23'-'• Com!D<. 11 111 1J ' " Four P" )0 ~1 _. ''" K 'll•n .. 9 1'19 , •• ' "o NY!>EI; 1 S '10 14\fo + .... Rio an 110 • :i.s 31.. ' T•lnO\ 1 10 S D I~ _. Armc of 110 • ~ '• CPIVWI \ 11 uo JO • I Fo•SIP .... "'° ~. .... l(eovAI ' AO s 170 l•l.o • NVS pf l,, ••50 JS "'°°'Of IO t04 17 ... Tvcol • 70 s .. 11-.... • _, ... ,,. ,~ ~ ConAQf .. 8 ]7 II'• Foaoro 14012 , ...... ~ "'K•h"• 140 6 n II '• My•p1 J11 ' ,. Rll•A• IOIO .ao 1t Ty .. rCp .., 1 ,, 10 -\lo ~.... ... ' ' ,., ,. • c.oneMI 110 I 61 1'I I , Fre:Mc loO • 17'° 19•. • .• l(.,,;:s, 8 1 ' " ~ Rol>\tlw I 40 10 JS ?2.. '• Tvmll\r II ,,, " ~~~"11,~: l~ m:-I~ ~~'i.~ i~ t I~ H~ ~ =~.,.'~: .:·~ :; ::v •.. ~ ~:~::'' I~~ 1~ ~~ :: =~~~:03 J,~ ~ HE'~ a~O(gt~(i~·,·,~ .~ 6222~ ~.1,:'! ',-:. uu~L, ,-...~ •• ~.'°1-,".~:-' •.
•rrowE 1610 101 11>' • '' Conrac 90 U )7 n• • '• Fuciue tO IO ~ ''I l(l(CCtyLPSl) !! 5 Sl8 12~ •' Newml tAOe IJ SIS -'°' " " --..,, ... "' "' -T -Ar1re 10 JI I l'O>'ll-'• ConECI ) J& S 1951 JJ• > F\1111 pt I tl If llE < "4t P> "' .,. l'IO 1s•·1 Nwperk 16 I 711 OU'4 .. Roell Tl J 04 I JD ,, .. ' ,., UGI pl J 7) t20 10 • "'I
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A\l!IO Oil '6 11 '.11't • C"iFrl I S1 4 S3 JSl.o' ' GEICO • I 11' J714. ''• KenPLI 140 6 tS 1' ' 1 o NIMpl IO&O r.10 74"' I,_ Ro•ll~ l 5' • '3 It'-'"" U11INV 4.SS. S 11 ti -I"' AMIOGl.llO I 61 11',, • CnsNG l 1' 6 •1 0 '• , .. I Gel< pf .74 1 "411> ICePl pl1 J1 1 1' ~111i1C~ SAii J1~ • 'O" 1"1 ~ RolmCp D 19' >4''t t''o UC•"'9 > 7 • 47~ i.
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•tCyEI 111 S '4 11-"' CnPw pf7 4S '''° O '• 1\lo Gennell 1.72 11 1• ~ 'l'I 1(•11f8r 14 13 '30 10.,, 'o Norlln fl l.t l7V.-\.\ Rowan 01 6 1Ht 12°' 1 UnEte< I.SJ • flt II'!>, , AllMtro ,0., S J'I 11. CnPw pf7 n 1400 47 \lo G•.Str " S 16 1111> l(•llf• JO 6 4CI • • ,' t ~oo~elrkn 7 ~ s, .,!! 2l1h~ "" RC Co\ I 04 t 4S ISV• UnEI pf 4 dO i. -.... """"" 140 •2144 ll'--1 CnPw pf7 7' •SO ., .. ., .... GHSV< l,lt •• ,, ·~ ..... ICelloo; 'lO . IOS 73'• .. "" -, .. .,... RoylOdt>t s,... )I ' u Et pl '° 100 ,, ' AllRC !IA J I .n..•·,-21' • CnPw Pl 4 10 J•'" 141 c;.artot 31 ' ll" """ " ICellwd 40 10 • l't • 'I N•Coal n ,,. J~U•<. -.. Rublwm 1.2' 11 4J JI '• U~EI Pf : S. 1 <10 ~:Ill>
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AMERICAN LEADERS
AUQel' J2.. SJ 13 -•• C"Pw prt" • 14 (iAmOll """ ,,, ll_,,.. ICerrGI\ ... ,,. "'•. '. NC•ISl • 9"'-.... -S--5 u El pf 1 n ' 11-UPS AND DOWNS AufOt \ 44 I! 319 14-'°' CnPw on 4l S IS '• Cin8oll • 4 7) 17'11., " l(erG pl 110 J "" ' NlllCIP!> l,jO I ,.. 1-\.\ m 20t 7 .. lO ... n ~~ AvcoCP 1 20 S 4'11101s•-.-'Ill ContAlr l4l '°" GClnm tt • t.J 31 KtrrM' I 10 I 2412 l1 2'_; NoSIP• J.5' 1 l"1 ~ l<'I Jolt 1 S 7' 71''• ~ UEI plH 1 4 •11>-"> NEW VOfllK CAPI -TM lolltw"'9 llU
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Handel's 'Israel '
no 'dejavu'
BJ &OBUT FISHEil ..................
J<11eph Huaatl" UCl prof~r of mualc, bu a "-Oduml fat lhe abulou& wotu o!. Handel Lui
Aprll, almost a year ••o, he directed a
multl·wonderful performance of Hande l '•
"Mea1lah." Then, in VCJ'a Crawford Hall, he wu
able to impreasively mastermind the art of
nmnulum performin1 and bleacher echoes.
8'4 lut Sunday was no 'deja vu' when Hualli,
the Callfomia Chamber Chorale, the UCI Chamber
Stn1ers and the Irvine Symphony round
themselves stuffed into the Turtle Rock
Community Center auditorium lilte a cake mto a
sandwich bag to perform Handel's "Israel in
Enpt."
By all accounts, this general purpose room is
not equipped for this kind or musical performance.
"Israel in Egypt" is far too sophisticated in its
sounds to be handcuffed into a wooded alcove.
Audiences have the uncanny ability of sensing
performer distress ; it gets uncomfortable. The
musicians are the cooks and we're the guests; and
ln this case, it was Handel's stove. And rightly,
you don't ask the banquet chef to wear woolen
mittens.
It was a shame, too. The performance was
well thought out. and at times even bad an oceanic
now in the abundant harvest of single and double
choruses. The high tides of pleasureable oboes
were loot beneath the murky sea.
Part I of "Israel in Egypt" sets immediately
to work with highly s uggestive moods and
orchestrations or the plagues and eventual escape
or Israel from slavery. Flies and lice, as do blood ,
hall and darkness, each have their moments to
punish oppression.
The chase and prayer scenes of Part 11 present
a baroque clockwork with choruses each of a
thousand gallons of air. The work ends rapidly:
Handel knowing, and Husru well aware, that once
the story is told, don't add appendices.
Next year, let's play in the gym.
~---NOW PLAVIND----
llllA El TOflO •OIAHGE Monn Brea Plaza Soddlebock C1nedome
(714) 529.5330 (714) 581-5880 (714) 634-2553
•COSTA MESA r<>UNTAIN VALLEY WESTMINSml EdWOrds Town Cenrer Fountain VOiiey U A Cinema
(714) 751-4184 (71 4) 839-1500 (714) 893-0546
• o:~<O(XJ[~Y ~~~-
JACK NICHOLSON ~
THE BORDER
I\ UMllEll~ 11110 l'ICIUll( -
f AS1 CASH\ un£R 10 CASH
coN\JtR1 '(OUR Cl CAll 642-5678
IN A ClASSIHEO ~~~R Will \-11'..lf> ·
A fR\tNOlC'<~~ ON \\-It
'(0\J CAN
•
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT(Tuesday, February 9, 1982 .. '
New productions welcomed to stages
' By TOM TITUS under the direction of J ohn Spindler at The Re.iinald Ro11e drama "Dear Friends," ! of-..,_.,.......... SebasUan's, 140 Ave. Plcp, San Clemente. Darrell orl"inally a telev11>1on production, is the latoat 1
f'our new productions -lncludin1 a pair of Sandeert and Llsa Cutler play the leadina roles. Showcase offering, with Jun Koba directtn1 the ~
Pullti r Prii winners -mount the staaes of the with Randal Saunders as the American lieutenant 1tudy of lour modern marriaRH Cut memben
Oranae Coaat'I p~feaslonal , community and · Performance• of the Rod1era and are Tom Kl ein, Murcia Wtlsoo, Edward Staneck.
collesiate theatera thla week, offerin1 comedy. liammei:-stein ahow will be Jiven ni1hlly e}(cept Olona Freedman, Art Frankel. Corrine WllUama.
drama and music among-them. --- -"Mondoys at varying curtain tlme4 tbrouah April 11 Alex Koba and Carma McMurphy.
Start.lo• thlnp off tonl&ht ia the venerable at the dinner playhowse. Call 492.99:50 for ticket Pt>rformances will be given Fridays a nd
"501-&th Paclflc" at Sebastian's Weal Dinner information. Saturdays at 8 30 through March S and 2 p.m.
Playhouse, while UC Irvine loUows Wednesday Moliere 's comedy-ballet "Tbe _ Bouraeols March 7 at the Westminster Auditorium, 7571
with "The Bour1eoia Gentleman." The Gentleman " plays a four-performance run, Westminster Ave at Hoover Street Reservations
TV · Ins pl red d rem a Wednesday through Saturday, at the Fine Arts are belng taken at 957 2515 or 894·6786
"Dear Fl'iends" arrives INJIRMlalDI Village Theater on the .UC Irvine campus. Drama The other Pulitzer Prize winner Is "A Delicate at Showcase Productions chairman Robert Cohen is directing with James Balance," earned by Albee in 1967 for his probln1
in Westminster FTlday, Penrod choreographing and Peter Ode1ard drama of psychological terror The Irvine
while Saturday will be providing an original musical 1core. production will open Saturday smce the Turtle
o p ening n I g ht for William Needles. a drama professor at UCI. Rock Community Park auditorium will be closed
Edward Albee's "A Delicate Balance" at the takes the leading role in the 17th century comedy. Friday for Lincoln's birthday.
Irvine Community Theater Curtain ls 8 p.m. Wednesday throu1h Friday and 6 Eileen Fishbach is directing the show. which
"South Pacific," Lhe Pulltzer Prlze·wlnning p.m. for Saturday's performance, which Is sold features Art Winslow, Jane Nigh , Valerie Mcilroy,
musical of 1950, begins a two-month engaaement out. Call 833·6617 for reservations. Co rbett Barklie, Richard Drake and Betty Young.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~
G ..... •!WltM..l&Ullr ........... ....._.~ .. ,... ........ ,_,
A IWW.O.NT ~ : •
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11&ctnc..u
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UIWAllOl IAllDUIACIC lllUIA 1'11111 Dlllft·I•
El 11110 511 ~HO llueN Pat> 821 4010
THE P O RT THE.A TR f
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EVERY MONDAY ALL SEATS $2.00
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plus
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• • .'IJ'lt E COAST t-n'IY COllONA GEL MAR
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
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yt:~n~tty ~1~~8 30
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r UMOUSINE SERVICE
TO SNOW SUMMIT
Phone 714 -494-2805 . W, 1$Zlaii CAI.£. flOa IBMYATIOMI
•BARGAIN MATINEES*
Monday thru Saturday
All Perform•nces before S:OO PM
(Elctpt Spec111 Eng1g1men1s and Holkl1ys1
LA MIRADA MAU o M11odo ot to1oc1on1
LA MIRADA WAllC·IN 994·2400
MO... c ec:on • ....,,.,,. flMTTOl9
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fOCully At o.t Amo
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AHAHllM fT'W au. ...... 1'w.::e ,... ,,.
ANAHEIM DRIVl·IN G0009YE. UIMAHU£Llf -l••••Of ti ol l•"'O~ ~' ·•SECAETS·· 1111
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l•ncotft AM WMt Of l"o"
121·4070
l u! "'"' PAii•
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lf•1•.11•mi..t1"'111w•n•fi•1r-.~.c:u:;'=~;:::'.s
son O..Oo lrwy 01 t•oo•"""' (Sol .-n MOV11E" tlll
962•24fl C•IOf fl SO\lllO
Say "I love you!" with Hickory Farms DMIB __ ~;_",_:r_;_;~_·1-_0l_y _
··.t.1tn.n.··--"Sn.~S· t•I
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Give your swt•et ht art a Eif t of old-time country
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Lots to choose from. in almost every price range.
Let us send your gifts. we'll handle the details.
Assorted Candy $}99/lb.
reg. S259 lb.
It's from all over the world, in dozens
of scrumptious flavors.
Offer good February 1-2 t
Your nearby Hickory Farmsr" is your year 'round gift store:
(INSERT STORE ADDRESS)
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Lower Carousel MaU
OPEN DAILY 'tl'IL 9 P.M.
SATUBDA\' 'ftL 6 P .M.
SUNDAY 12 TO 5 P.
~=~1''°":',J ... /iiM .. , ..... ........... . ,_,. ..... .. ...... .-.._. ... ..,_ _.,..... ..... ... ... -..~ ......... ..
~
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CUtf " IO\IHO ...
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C...lt~
ORANGE OAIV t IN
I "'ntl HDUCTION _,,__..... .. -... -
"THI eooc.,. .. 111 I ··ux AND THE LONn.Y ··w.:OW· WOtllW' •1 -lftt-~ ........ -----llll..;;._ __ C'IOtOOL019'L tftat ... Dr pt .... ',,... -I ''-.._.,. _,_.. _ _....,
"THI llC>UCT1C*'' t1111 -MISSION OIUVf IN . ·'LOOKllt" "
Jl.
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WAllNE ~ D ·Iv! 1 ·i
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTffutlday, February 9, 1982
THE
t'..\MILl'
CIRCl'~
BIG GEORGE by V1rg1I Partch (VIP)
"Mommyl Billy said
a bod word.''
"I didn't mean to. It
was a misprint."
"Golly! I can SH cttar to China."
by Brad Anderson
Z:f
"We rattled you off, Marmaduke, but you
know how to find your way home again." , WE'RE REAW, LORD •.. LET 'ER RIP! I
Jl'DGE P .\RKER
WHAT MAKE5 ME
FURIOU515 THAT &AM DRIVER 06VIOU5LY
KNEW EVER't'ONE WOUL.D 6E LOOKIN<;_.......
F()f( LINDA MAY C,REER'
ACROSS SO Negative
1 Leg SI Ofllce cllrtt s Herring S3 Falhtr Arab
10 On - -SS Tlltt.
with S6Grett
14 Ctuitlng 61 Aoclf••
Hi Sn1t 62 HotM
18 Pine fruit tllplor~
17 Rout sllotr 3 words -.11mm1 2 wordt 14 Count~ l!I
19 o.linquent 01 85 S..1
20 C'"*°1 VIP 66 Matured
21 <>c.tl bird 67 Ms T yltr
22 61$/44: Moor•
:· 2 word• 66 Rapt
23 -cloth '80 Conf\lte
25 H .. ttn DOWN
2t Thlc*tl 1 Dllel -
30 Farnll'y Oii 2 Ciecn river
31 a.ma 3 Vanlton. • O 2 word•
M Minor 4 EflOlltll IPI t 2 Wiid ox
prophet !I Exempts 13 Depend
3f~ •-chm 18S.-
38 he""' 7 BNt-10-24 8lcyclN
39 MUtuel • front. 25 Floch
,....,. 2 WOfdl 2t MOw
,2 "~ • Colulntlll 27 Olllfnc11on '3---•i..n o·a-2ts...,_ ... ...-r Llw"Y 2t Sn\111
4$ -""91 I........ 31 PIWIQtllTI
'1 '-" to NOW9 Scotll. 32 ~ .... ~ 33c.1fr • a... 11 ..... 31 MolMltnt
~L....., I Ufsa 37 Awlr\t
WHILE ~E WERE WORRIED TO
OfATH, FE>Jl!FUL b0Mfn41NG
HAPPENEDTOTHE LITTU ~~CE~ Of TV. HE WA!> Off
6AU..IVAtfflNC, AAOUHO
TOWN ~liH HER i
40 Prlv1t1 rOOl'l\I
41 Grell( left« I
46 Styhll
48CUddlt
··~ 52 Std.Im )°'II i...t--t--1--1
53 Enoe' lldlW
5" Aumcalt
SSPrMl
57 Mttll
MForcl~
stPNflx kw ----.,
IOWl*\*I
13 LAttuol
\..()()t(, l'M MOT C«YIN{;) ~ l'M Hllln''
l'M JU~f MAO~.P'MtoO!
Tl:MBLE" EED8
antM INPIANS POfl1srr51P'1N&
COi~ ANP HAW A CfWJFFEtJft
WNO RMPS 60&1'HE 1D 1HM1!
SHOE
VISIT
OUR
BANK
I I -l
0 0 0
GORDO
W'E PAY
5!i'6
INTEREST
ON YOUR
SAVINGS
0 0 0
t '(;NK \' "INKERBEJ\N
by Charles M Schulz --------1 WAS WROH6 ...
™AT'S ™E FIRST
TIME l'VE EVE~ SEEN ~
A 80SM PILOT! ~
~
by Tom K. Ryan
HMM i si=Nv -n+EM S'v'MPA-IHV CA~P5 AND 13-IL.L MY A!C:oum:
by Jeff MacNelly
~T UNTIL Tht'r' CCM~ UP W ~ (){
1"AT 4*J ~ UP ON 5Al.£~EN.
~
THE:."(
~IZ.l~H
~ eot"'-1.
~ ~"TU
THI': Mll.V
At-JO~
iO-n-IE
~Win<
~ fi(().o\ 1lV-"f'~I~
Tr:~,
U.,d.~.1
by Ernie Bushm1ller
YOU DON1T PAY
ANYTHING
by Gus Amela
by Tom Bat1uk
--~~~~~~~~-......,
I CAN'T 88...IEVf <,()(.) (:i)T
A ~NICAl CAUED ON ~
IN lHE GAME LA5T Nl6Hf,~ !
.. ..
CAN :r
HAVe SOME:
POPCORN ,
ONCL-e
POC"rOR?
by Kevin Fagan
.:)
. ~ }
..
. .
•'
I
h ,,,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Febr'l•'Y 9, 1982 .,
t..-00188 NIWI OHAM.E'I ANOILI
NM IAll<.ITUU
Allenle Hewt11 Yll. Loe
Mgelel Uill ..
• THI JlffPION8
8 HAWMFM..o
"rm A femlly Cr<M* -
Don't SllOOt"
1 ......... AE.PORf
UNOEMTAHOING
HUMAN MHAVIOR iSSogy"
&MOVIE
•• •14 "The Wey We
Were" 118731 Berbra
Str~. Robert Redford
A ~ COiiege couple In
,,,. 1fl30t cl*-lhal
their polttlall diner-
-1tr0fl(t er1llUgh to ~
wdlze IMlr 1'Mrfia09.
UO . WELCOME 8AQ(,
KO°""' 9 KCET HEWSeaAT:
CAUfOfMA
CONOAE.88IONAL
REPORT G IUllHE88 AEPOflT
(l)Q!NEWS
9J 8AAHEY MILLEA ~MOVIE
••'~"~Won--."
I 196&) AnM Bencroh. &le
Lyon w~ w11h vary;ng
bed&ground1 1no posi-
tions lnlerrelele 1n 1 Chi·
-mlSlllOft aclK>o4 CS) THE LOI ANGEl..D
8IO LAf'F Of'F
Contesiant• from the Los
Angeles arN vie IO< the
Chence 10 be finalists in
Ille" 1981 N111on1I Big LIN
Off ..
1:46 [l.) MOVIE • * • • "R101no Bull
11980) Robert De Niro
C11hy Mori.t1y Bo••no
champlOn Jel<e la Motl•'•
1ptlluda for violence
bnnga hlM ~ 1n tile
11ng l>ul d11rup1a 1111 per
~~le 'R'
7:00 ti CBS NEWS D NBCNEWS D HAPPYDAYSAGAIH
fJ A8CNeW8
Q) M'A'8'H
Wlnellester and Hot Ups
get lood po1M>n1ng trom en
Imported can of pheasant
end Hewlleye la r89rl-
rnended for fighting
CD JOKEA'S WILD
&;) ~EASY
G~I Leny HagtnM fRI
~ OOCCAVETT
Gueal actreu Mona
w...,~
()) TIC~ OOUOH 0 ~RTAINMENT
TOHIOHT
LB0r1ard Nlm<>y dlacuaaes
Ille IHmtng o1 "Star Trek
ti"
Qt TME MUf>PETS
0~1 BobHope
(ff) VIDEO JUt<E.BOX
(O)MOW
"Lei The Balloon Go On
Tiie A.in' nof) 20NTHET~
F .. lured • IOOll onto pos1·
dlYOrce relallonshlpa. wnet
Loe Angelea wu like dur-
ing Work! War ti, a mftn
wt>O cl1lma 10 own just
about every 4!> r p m
record thll was ever
pressed a a FAMtl. y nuo U LAVl!AHE & SHIRLEY
&COMPAHY
Tiie Foru drops ON a
~ -Moraan Fairchlld plays
a danceroua romantic aame wtttl
Ferua.ndQ Allende -uslna her power to
keep him interested in an atf air that
threatens her marria1e and b1a careeT
-on ".iamingo Road" at 10 tonight on
KNBC (4).
ttHPf1M bundle et IN
Qltl•. 9C)8111Mnl
• EYIONLA.
FNIUtect • tool< •t .,._
trend• In aleepwt111t: •
report on apeclel tfftc1•
for televlllon, a report on
heedllctle c:urM.. e w·A·a·H
Outing • cold enep •• pelt
of longjohM --.110 Hewie·
•from home~ •
much-toughl·•ftet com-
ll'Odlty
I T1C TAC pouGH
MACHEJL/LEH~
REPORT
'11) NEWS
()) P.M. MAGAZINE
A former "Moonle'a"
escape from the Unlllc1-
11on Chutch, collagen
1n1ect1on1 lot remov1no-
wrinld .. and _,,
9 YOU A8KED FOR fT
Featured "Plrlllha Attac:ll
BruH'a River Of Death ·
:IDMOVIE * * "The 8lectc Hote'
( 1979) Mulmlllen Schell,
Robert Fortier. Yve1te
Mimoeu• The crew ot a
tutunauc aoKMhlp di._
cov.,a 1not11er veuet
perched on Ille eooe ot •
l0<metl0n which pYlla .,,y.
t11lno nearby Into a giant
vokl whet• time and ~
ceaM toexlal 'PG'
8:00 f) ()) SIMOH & 81MOH
A wealthy Ind beaullful
Houston 10Clallle hlr•
A J and Rick to rind the
llance whO lilted her el the .,,.,
D Qt FA THEA MUAPKY
A pretty bank robbery
eccompllee don I I he habit
of 1 dead nu<1 and o"9n to
help 'F1ther Murphy wi1h
the children at Iha 0<phan-
;' ~
"Fl1ta 01 Fury ti" Bruce LI
fJ 9 HAPf>Y DAYS
Fonzie ~a Ille Lone
~o CD P .M. MAGAZIHE
A former "Moonle'1"
~ from the Un<tk:l-
llon Church, cotl1gen
1n19Ct1ona 10< removing
wnnlti. and KM• -~ • * • "Relwn Of Th9 Sev-
en" (1116&1 Vut Brynner,
RoOef1 Fuller Aher one of
the "Megn1llc:enl S.-" le
kidnapped, hi• former
comrldea COOl4I 10 hi• r ....
cue
SI Uf£ ON EARTH
"Con~t Ot The Waters"
Oavtd Allenl>OtOUQh looka
et the astounding ftah
dynasty with ita 30.000 d•f·
lerent 1P9Clel O
'1!) HIOVA
Finding A llOICe SeYerll
YiellmS of -e .,..ct.
dlaeb1lltlea relate llOw they
overceme the4r ll•nd~s
Q CJ MOVIE • * • "The Asphalt Jun
ote" ( 111501 Sterling Hay
den. J1me1 Whllmo<• TM
polloe ltl belfled by I
crlm1nel m11termtnd'a
t\alf-nvlllO<l-doll•t robbery
Cl)NOYll * *" "Salem'• Lot"
0910) o."1d ~. Jem.
....._, A ~ "91unw
to hi• boyhood home to
put en end to tr<Mll>Md
MM'IOl'IM but tlnd• lhal •
..,..., mya1er; ehrouds
lllatown 'PG' 9MOVIE * • • ~ "Soldier Of Ofenge" ( '919) Edward
Fox, ._ Penl\alloOft
8Uc ~II a Clutch
uni..~ 00 ,,.,.., eepe-
r1te W1l'fl ~war l>reaka
out In Eurooe. ·PG·
UC> 8 !1Jt LAWIN! &
SHlflLEY
Leverne a1ana detlng •
married min Q 0 YOU ASKED FOfll IT
F .. tUfed "Plr1nh• Atteck
8tU11'1 Ri-Of C>Mth."
tD AU IH THt! FAMll Y
Grendp1 Archie b<lnge
Glorle' a little belly 110me
for 1 o.,... or poller with
lheboyl
t:OO 8 CJ) MOVIE
"01~ou1 Comp1ny"
(Prem!erel 8-1 Bt1c:lg-.,
Certoe Brown The true
atO<')' or hardened crlmlner
Rey JOhnson. wt>O efter 27
YMI'• ol ctlme and lmc>rls-
~t became • rMj)eC1·
ed cltlun, la totd a a eAET MA\IEAICf<
A l>eaullful con "1111 tries
to relllndte the bitter_,
,-~herend
Ma~ a o THN!IF•
COMPANY
The roomma1.. S()er>d 1
bucollc _.end II Cln-
"'(1 _.., •• lwm 0
0 YOU Alt<£O FOA IT
11etu..S: "BrUlllanl Cap-
ture World'• L1roea1
Snake" and ,"Hor&el Of
Ol<tot>ertest."
ID MEIN OIWFlN
fill AMERICAH
PU't'HOUS«
· 'Senae Of Humor Any
F r1end Of NicholM Htc:llle-
by' a II A Friend Of Mine"
In an 80ec>tellon Of Ray
Bradbury I "-l .. Or)'. a
stranger In town IMChM •
young boy eome ~
....... In ln.lld!INp and
'"" po.-Of .. Imagine--lion O G URONE.Mni
"~t Of The W1t81'a"
OeYld Att.nb«ougll ladca
11 IN ... oondlnQ lllh
dynuty with It• 30,000 dff. ..,.,..,lpedel 0 cm..,.,. • • * "Tiie Ollence"
p11131 s-i eo.v.y, T,..
vor Ho.ard While 11 ... lng
cto.n • child moleet•. •
London Oelecttve lilowly
edgM hltneelf towwd 1
MrVOOl l>teekdown R'
['ZJMOVIE * • ·~ "Sury Al Vou Are"
( 11180) Merceflo Mlllrolen-
nl. NaallMll Klnskl A
married. middle-aged man
emblttla on an aftalr with 1
teen-ege gift WflO may 1>11
relai.cl to lllrrt 'R'
•.30 8 9 TOO Cl08E FOA
~
... .,_ ..-... ~ ... _
11 .......
~TOHART
WllJI• on veoallon 111
H .. 111. tfl. H.,,, 119001ne
~In• mwca. plot
ln'<IOMng . ~ -
olN of JonMMll't Q
• PNYIN ANO TI4I
""'9UMH
.. ,,.. 'll•D•fei." IUa
~~~ wltll AndN ,....., ..,....,. ____ *
~ .. ,., ocwnllO. ;MOVm
••• "T'N ~ ..
( 1MO) o-p 0. tooct.
l"rtlft Ven 0.-.. A 11116-
0W.O mu.IO ptot.Nor
rent• an Old ~ lh.i ..,.,. '° ti.,_., by
• ,...... ..... wltll • IO-&r.::-tQ--'"' * *.,. "T~ l"l1llftg"
(tMO) Jeol( HICllOleon.
~ Oull9ll OtreQed by
Stlrlil¥ ~ A tomwr
IClflooltMClh« hired .. •
winier cieretttller few •
--.. end ~II)'
~. Colorldo llOt• ...
enowbounO then! ..on ..
wife and~· young
~.'R'
CIMOYll * * "Oii leughlllQ" ( tMO)
Robby ler'90!\, ~
()uMHlo. A ~'"9 ~
ClrlYef .. 9lded by a -1 "'°"*8Y In prO'llng ,..,_. ·-I of a mutO.. ctiwge. 'PG' ....... .,..,.
~NRWI
• MimlCAH "'-'""°'* ··s.n.. Of Hum«: Any
Friend Of Nlcflolu Nici!•
by'1 ta A Friend Of Mine"
In en adeptatlon Of Ray
8r adl>ury'• lhort llory. •
1tranger In town INChM •
young boy -YilluabMI ..._. In friendlhip and
IM poww of Ille~
lion 0
10';36 (%)MOVIE ***• "Tess" 119711)
Nutuele KlnUI, ~er
Fltttl. U-Mugtlter of e
poor Englleh fernier
l>ec<>mM the victim of her
family'• upntlon• and
her own bMuty 'R'
11:00988(1)9'9
NIW8 8 SATURDAY NIGHT
Hoat· Kirk Oouglu
GUMll Sam & o. ...
(ii NM.HOCKEY
"34th Annu•I All-Sier
a-" 8n4e~
A lelevlelotl docutnenlll)'
()ti loulee'• -with • IUlclde hotllne could .._,
to a OMdly llollure.
CD 8ANIOAD AMO 80H
Fred eccl6ent.ily fir• an
entlque gun IW\d tMra IN
worst wMri ,,. neighbor
oo.n·1-
• DICKCAWTT
Gu.I IMhion dMigfw
Perry EJlll
(Q)MOYIE
"Penor-Blue"
11•8 ()) ALICE
Ao'• third ea-huablllld
-1"al they -l1JI merrlad. (R)
8QITONGKT
Hoet: Johnt1y Ce~
~' .... c.,,.,., ,,..,
~
8111 MCNEWI H9GIHT\JNa
• 000 COUPl.E
F.itlr and 0.:. t-*' IN
time Feb photognp.d
hie ~ tor IN Pl9yboy
C91 lter1old.
• LOW."21!1 CAN
smi
"LOYe Anet Murpfly't Bed"
Sareh end Jotv\ .,,,,..
1-eap«alaly ··~
And The Loet Dog" £lee..
nor pull., ad In the~
IO< a loal dog thel ahe MY·
., hid.
f£) KCET i.wa&f.AT:
CAUfOANIA
COHGAE88IOHAl.
MPOAT G CAPTIONED A8C
NEWS
11:40 00 MOVIE
..... Modern~"
TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA e 8:00 -.. Fists of Fury ll ··
Bruce LI demonstrates his Kung Fu
defending his honor
KTrV • 8:00 "P.M. Ma1azine."
A former Ptfoonie tells about his escnpe
rrom the Uniflcatlon ChUtth.
KNXT 9 9 :00 -··oan1erous
Company." Beau Bridges is star or
macte.for·TV movie premiere. See ttory
below.
KNBC 8 10:00 -"Flamingo Road."
Michael Tyrone bombs the Clarion's
office. See photo at left.
au.1a: awo. ~
d.U. 0-•· Pudgy,
Moor•'•~~ -~AWMJN4 ITY\.I
''Low MO TM Under
•tandlng" DDdo'• lluebend
le fooling 1tound. "Love
And The ~ancy'' lr•'I
""'-It ~ ti*< "'" baby
(C)MOYll * ......... ., lktddwlng" .MOYie **'A "The MW\ Who Saw
TomomiW' 11911) Oocv-
mentuy Mart•ted lly
<>non w..... Fooeaoe of
-II he p<edlc:ted and
drwnatlc re-ct"Mtlonl or
h6a -COfTl9'lee ... looti et IM 17t!M:entury Fr..c:h
ph'191C1M, MlrOIOgef and
myatlc Mlchel de Mollre-
°""8, known u Notitre·
~'PO'
12:06 8 CJ) M(Nt ...
Clt01'411TI
LU ~a Jennlf9''1 '*" 10 dl.uede Herl>'• ~ and lnforma him
Of the plot (R)
U:aO 8 8 LATE NIGHT wrTl4
DAW> LETTaMAH
GuMll: mlor John HOuM-
men, former middleweight
champion Jake LaMott• 8 MOVIE • * * * "Cocoenula"
111129) Mane 8rolhe<I, 1(1y
Francie. A group of Ul\iM
tall .. °""' e rM«t hotel In
the cl.-,. of the Florid• lend
boom
• WB40EHT
NETWONC..wa
(l)Wt4AT'8 ~ ~
~ .-11ng·e hletoq
and curr9nt t~. rode
medicine 11 I Rofllng
SI-concert; the flrlt
p<ohnla•--
tler; llOw IO rnelle money.
t2l40 e CJ) Mdcl.ouo
McC1oud dlaCOYer'e t,.,.I •
hellCOpler trllg9Cty waa not
an llOCid9nt. IR)
1.:008 MOYIE •**'At "Inherit The
Wind" ( 19e0) Spencer Tr ..
Cf. Fredric: Metctl tD MOVIE ..... "Act One" (19831
0-ge Hmmlflon. Jaaorl
Aoc-0.
1:108 MCME **~"I~ You. Good-
.,_., (tWfl) "°" L-ve.
E9i Mamllw\.
1:.1= **'Al "Honeyeuckle
Rme" (tMO) Wlllle ...-.on.
~ Cant>On WNte on
-. • • Teua country-
~ lir'O" ~
~ ..... the~
deugh• Of hie aid81tldl
-"'°'91 he ... lo¥u
hie_.,......._. w!te 'PG'
, •• ENT'ERTA.Nmlf
TIMOHT
Leonerd Nttnoy dlacu-
tM fMmlng of "St1t Trek
II."
alNEW&
(l)MOVIE
e Y. "The Stu<I" (111781
Joen Colline. Ollver Tobi·
u. A waiter adv~ hll car-by Ueac>lng wOh hie
l>oa'twlte 'R'
.UYIMOMTMI
OOMIDV 8T°"9 (%)MOYIE • * * 14 "le Cllge AUil F<*N" ( tt7t) Ugo Tog-
nam. ~ Serrautt A
nlghtdub -1nea to
pr8'Nff hit t~tlte
IOYer for a vlelt by hil ~·1
fl1nce•'• l•ther. Ille
mor81a ~of
Franoe. 'R' 2:Q)!= * * •.; "The Frleco Kid"
119711) 0... Wilder, Hetrl-
~ ford A PCllWI ral>l>I
llnd9 hin\Mff ln"'°"'90 In
wild frontier mludven ·
lut .. with • dlfing bank
rOC>ber wMrt he Ir• ..... IO
San Ff~ to Wk• over •new conoreo•tton. 'PG· 2:2111 Nl:W8 2:.80 MOVIE * * * "Thunder In The
Sutn" (ttSllJ ~ Hey·
-cl. J9ff CMt>dier A low
ltlangle OCC)U(S during the
1850a emong • group ot
8aaqllM journeying 10 the
c.lllomla ..tneyerd1
CIMOVIE * * ·~ "Fallo'' (1NO) Dom
0.U-. Atllte e.nc,ott A
portly oomput.iw .. ..,
find• lhet nothing C8tl
dempen hie~ lot food
untll he 19111 In kMI. 'PO' 2:408 NEW8 2:NG MOVIE * * "Shattt Kiii" (19Te)
Richard Y n1gue. Phlllip
Oertl. A mwtne l>lologllt
.,,., ... oil compeny 8)l9Q>-
1Ne 181 out to ~ a
& 10.000 llounty fOf IN
eec>tur9 of 1 greet .wte
llh8'lt
ae10CZ)uow
••e'A "The Wey We
Were" ( 11173) 81rbr1
Streiaand. Rol>er1 Redford
A young COiiege couple In
the fll30I di-fhal
the!< polltleal dltf-
.,.. 11rong ~ 10 jeop-
erdlze 1'*' rnerrl9ge
3: 15 CH) MOYIE ** •·r,. ,. EMs" pte11
Ooa-11wy Fiim roo111g9
end drllfl'lallc r.aMtlOne .,.. ..ea to tell the ••O<Y of
EMa Pr.uey • Hie and
Clf-a:20• MOYIE * * "Fe>r1 WOr'lh" 11" 1) ~ lcott. OeWt 8f1.
an. A gunellno9r ·turned·
~men"'* Ill••
hie pr°'"89 Wtui • 11•·
ahoOlfr " ... root• efl'eo.
tlve than wordll In dMllno
with ......... .....,.,,Is
I~ (I) OOOt<IE 000 TO
THE H08AT Al.
Cooltl8 lndl IN "°9pltll 1
IC8f'f ~ but get• by
wltll lhe help of her tnenda
4--00 D MOVIE • *"' "BeNnd The Mewl"
(1940) Lloyd Moten, Oorb
~ A cruudlnQ
,_.p8'>8fman expo ...
corruption In hi• town's
oovernmer11
CS) Ml.COME TO M\AMI,
CU8AN08
F'lorid1 It douded with
prejudice and problem• ror
Miiie ""'° muei come lo
JOHN DARLING
·' ~ Wltfl ... ~ rw1-•1•~MCM1 ***14 "Oey ro-NlghC"
( 1112) JeoQU91ine ......
Vlllenllrut Cort-Direct·
eel by 'tancolt T Mfeut
Tri. it¥t8 and lo.-. Of lllm
pertonneta .,. lludled In a
movle·wllllln•••tnovl•
'PO'
':al> (l)WHO W~ TO• A
HMO -~ • • • • ""eolnf lull" ( tMO) Ao'*1 OI Nero.
Cllthy Mor~. llo•lnt
~J-LeMona'•
•e>tllud• for 'tlolenct
bf'lnga """ ..... In ""
l1ng but ~ "" per· eon.I lb . .,..
We-d•r•da1t'•
Dafll IMe-HolJW•
·-MOR.Ht.o-
7:00 ~) e * * ~ "The Cal And
The Caner(' 11931) Bob
"°"9. Paut.11e Oodd81d
In ord« 10 oollec1 their
1nlletltanoe, 1 l1mlly must
~the night In 1 haun1-
ed llOUM
CH) * * * "An Scr.-cl
Up" c 1111e1 Luigi 0111er11.
Ntno Blgnamll\I ~
by Una Wertmul141r A
group of Souttwn ~
tty to find WMHh and h9'>-
~ 1n NortMtn lt8I)'
Cl**'"' "Ode To Biiiy
Joe" (11178) ~ Ben-
ton. Gtynnl9 O'Connor
8Med on l"8 ~ by eot>-
1>19 Gentry A lonNnled
lMn·aget'I put expen-
encM oompllclrl• hit tlret
true romanoe 'PG'
8:00 ()) * • ~ "AM. Al\y Gltf'
1111591 Shlr1ey M11elalne,
Oevld Niven Job and hua--
l>end·hunllng occupy Ille
time or 1 Q1t1 MW!)' etrlvecl
In N.w YOf'lt City
ll30 ct) • • • "The P-d
Is Courege' (1M3) DIR
Bog1tde. M8lll Peradly A
World W1t ti 8r1lllh Officer.
Ctianee Cow1td. '9pMled·
ty outwit• the Mula wt>o
llletnpl 10 hOld him ...
wer prlaooer
t:00 0 * * •;, "PlftChclltf
Grand Prla" Animated
Alter Illa C8f deelgn II
1toten by an ex-c:ollMgue.
1 brllll1nt mech1n1,i::
decldee lo build .,, awn
bel1er redng m8Chlne and
oomc>t'I• wlltl his ...,,.....
'G'
9:30 ID * • "LOC*lng For Den-
ger" 1t115n eo--, Boye.
Otto Aeoctww. The Boye
lc»e .., Army coolc.lng PC>'
In North Africa
10:00 (HJ * * "The tnglOrioua
8aat1tda" I 1111111 8o 5....,.
eon. Fred Wllllamton Two
men IOf'm an unuwet
lrlendthlp during their
effort• 10 auNlw enemy
lllllCK• and 'lllolent de9ltl
during Ille tumulluoua
d8ys of World Wit It
Cl) •• * "Nori" By
Nort,_t • I 11159) Cary
Gr8nt, Eve Marie Saint An
adwr11sing rnen'a Ille ts
c;f\8nged drMl.tc811y .......
he le mtst..., lo-e CIA
10:30 (!)':-* * 'h ''Pitt 2 Soun-
der" 11111e1 Herold s~
t•. Ebony Wright. A rural
~ tMllly of •h-
croC>P8fl struggle to build
• .:hool In l.oui91Ana dur.
lt'9 the Oepr...ion 0 **~"'The ManWho s-Tomorrow .. 111181)
Oocutnentwy Herreted by
Orlon W... Foot~ of
-· he predlcted end drwnettc r.-crMllont of
Illa life cornpr.e 1hla looti
111 the 17lh-<ienlury French
phytletan, utrologer and
myttle Miehe! de Notitr•·
Dame. known • Noel••·
demus 'PG'
12..-00 0 •• "Women In The
Rain" Bat1>er• Lu,,.
......... Seret<>oe"
(11137) Clerk G11>1e. JMn
H4RM TN tulVy Nugh. .. °' a .....m.y --bl'....,.._._ r-u.
""' IMGMd ~ • ~ tllN llOOll1e • • * '4 ...... Frlgl1t"
(ft60) Jene '/tlymall, MM•
""8 Dlettietl Aft« pleM>
Ing Int--to a frMnd, the ~ In • llllltder
-llMN out to .,. gwlly
(JI)*** 'h ''Tiit ~ ....... (tteO) Jcft1 ..,,
AtletlOny .....,.. A ...
oaled e>l\yMclan tlltll•
Vft//W .. MnO a ~
dllt«IMd -.......
Ufttll "*' MO ~ t1*11
Wt~hM~
'PO' 9•• .. HMll'kTM
Sl•yer" 1t11111 I J101t P*-. John Tetrv An
edWlnturoua YOUllG MMl
eniata the aid or • band Of
warrior'e to fight hi• eYll
unc:ll8, the OYWIOfd who
klled Ill• tether and .. ho6dlnO an abl>MI for tM-
*" (%) •• * ·~ 'Le Cege "'-'•
Foltel" 11117111 Ugo Tog
nUZI, MICNI SerrlUll A
nlgfltelub -. trlel to p<~ Illa trana-t11e
lover for a 111111 by hll ~ '•
ll1nce•'• father, the mor• oommlaalonet' of
Frence. 'R'
tt:aO CC) * * •• "8~•"
( 11157) Mllt1on 8tendo, Red
8utlon1. An AmerlcMI jet
-"-a C)Olgnant etfalt ...tth .... ..., e>ertormer of
a l......eid J.,.,-llC11ng
COfl'IC)4ltly
t:OO CJ) • e •;, .. ,._Any Girt"
I t"91 SNttey Meclalne.
Devld ......... Joi> and llu•
llend·hundng occupy the
time of a glt1 ,_iy ltrlved
In N.w Yonc City
2::60 (%} • * *'At "Le Ceo-Auic
Follea" ( 1919, Ugo Tog·
n&al, Mlche4 Serr1ult A
nightclub owner trl• 10
preoere his ttW1a-111e
lover fOf 1 ,.,.,, by 111a eon'a
flencee'a lither tht
morell commi~ of
Franoe R'
&:000 * • * "O-Oey The
Slath Of June 'I 19541 Rob-
ert T•ylot. Rlchetd Toad
A.. 19-rolel In the Nor·
mandy ln~esion loom cloa·
er. t...o mlNtary olf1ee<1
.acti review thejr M(>arate
memories or 111e 0111 they
bolll 10"8
(C} **'~"The hiking
P1tcel" I 11178) Anlmeted
A young girl. 1 petrot and
• toed n1ua1 °""'come •
horde of eYll -pents to
rree • W\Ufd ·G·
3':30 (.HJ * • "The Evtciors'
11117!1) Vic Morr-. '*-8
H1tper Two young i->P1e
tn0"8 lnlO 8 hQuM Wl111 lhe
not0<ioua reputeuon of
cauaing the dNthe of eny-
one dering to 11"8 there
'PG' 0 * * "Young And Fr ....
Eric Litton, I A Stain
Wiien lregecly forces a
yOU"'O) t>oy to jOln a w-oon
trlln In the rugged -t. lie
,,_,. 1 young tndl9n girt
lnd~•-llle PG
4:00 ct) * * * ~ Pert 2 Soun·
der" ( 1117&) H&told SytYM·
ter. El>Ony Wright A rural
l>llCk lemily or .,.., ...
cre>pper$ etruogte to build
•~In L°""*'8 dv<·
·~ the OeprMll<>n
4:30(}1 • * * * "Touch 01
Evil" 11958) Cll1tlton Hea-
ton. Orton Wellel A Mex•·
can polioe lnapector end
hla A merrcen bride
1>ecorne the Yictlml or •
amallllme gMlOStet and •
lhac1y lherltl dv<ing • """.
der lnVMtlgauon on Ille
border
5;00 CS) * * ' The lncredlbi9
Sl>nf>lllng Wom9n" ( f9801
Liiy Tomin. ChltlM Gro-
din A ~fe llnd• ti
hard 10 cope when al>e
suddenly begin• to lllrlnk
1n Sire 'PG'
0 • • '" Fatso" (111801
Dom Deluise Anne B•n·
croft A portly cornpulSIYI!
eater linds thet notlllt>g
can d-.pen 1111 o.sire for
lood unhl he lalla In lo"8
by Armstrong & Batluk
CHANNEL LISTINGS
Herwy'. friend Char11e, •
pr~ )c*er. oomM lor .......
• ce FVT"t llUl.LSl"ff
1198 IJ Albert 8roou.
Kattwyn H1ndd. A tllm
editor tnea ~ to
win beck the ,.,..,, °' l'lle
womanhe~'R'
l'M ~Y. Rt:ED! 1 GAYE rr IHE OLD COLLEGE il<Y, 0u1' 1 .JU5T CN-fT GO
THROU6H WITH IHIS MLID-
COME ON, 0REN~/ OON'T
0E 5UCH A BASY.'
00 'IOU REALIZE HOW IVIUCH
SOME WOMEN PAY AT SPAS
IN 5WllZE~LANC' FOR A
MUD0ATH LIKE YOU'RE 0 l(NXT ICBS> 0
C!) KNBC' !NBC I l
0 KlLA (Ind J H
0) I< AHC. (ABC I c
0 KFMB ((A~I •
0 KHJ TV (lno I ,,
a:> K(ST IABCI [
0) I( TTV llnd I s
Cl) l((OP TV I Ind 0
On TV
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HBO
IC•n•md~I
IWORI NY
!WTflSJ
I ESPN1
t5how11mt I
Spot11qlll
NY
IB)MOV1£ * * * "The CompeUtlOn"
11980) Richard Oreyfuaa,
Amy Irving Two plaolat• ••
• San Francltco mullo
competition find 11111 tti.lr
loY8 ror eacn olt\er Qlll·
nlctl with lhel< prof~
al em1>111on1 'PG'
1~ D OJ RAMINOO "°"°
MICNel Tyrone l>Oml>S the
=-MDIGKT~ WRESTLING STUNT.'
12:00 D SHA NA NA
fZl l((E l tP8S1 B l(ablf N""'' N1•twork1 ci.non·· offloe. ~
1njufing Slcipc>er and Alicia
~: Rol>er1 Gullleume. 8 9 ,NIT,..., lllAND
A ....,trtloqulst'• dummy
~ to llfe and a televl·
alon actor went• t o
b«:orne lhe CllMecter he
portreyed In hie ...... (RI
• .-.EDOUOIAS
Cohoet Jim S11lfo1d
11) 1(()(£ IPB!'>I
Convict, con man movie subjects
'Dangerous Company; true ; 'Any Friend' adapted from Bradbury story
By FBED &OTBENBERG
A~T........_ ......
NEW YORK -Tonight's two TV
questions are: Can a convict change bts
stripes, and can a con man change his
lune?
"Dangeroua Coflpany, .. a CBS movie
slarrtng Beau Bridges, is baaed on the
lrue story ol Ray Johnson's strucgle to
10 straight after 'rt years of crime and
punishment. Johnson is a remarkable
man and be does eventually team to
Uve in the 1tt1aJ l•ne, but um weakly conat.Nctecl movie doesn't fully capture
bis acbievementa, m0Tin1 lnlltead in too
many~.
Over on public televlaion, "Any
Friend of Nlcbolu Nidleby la a Friend
of Mine," is the lates't of P8S'
"Amerlcao Playhouse" series. It's
adapted from science fiction writ.r Ray
Bradbury's abort story about a dreamer
wbo comes to a very sleepy town and
masqoerades u Charles Di~eos. He
never can atop cooni.nC blmsell, and tbe
plaJ, bU1ed u a comedy, ii never the a.a.at btt amuatn1.
"D.,.,-OWS Company" alrsoa KNXT
(2) at t ~t. ud "Any P'rimd" aln f:::,?rr UI) al I ud OCl ltOCE (50) at
Tbe latter ·ato.-y ... ~lvoa aroui>d the
limited ed.steoce of Ralph Spauldi.ns . e
12-JUf·Old IMnc with b.1,1 crand~\I
•
in Green Town. 111 • in the 1940s.
Ralph's life is shaken up by the
appearance of the mysterious man Fred
Gwynne.
Ralph, played by Brian SVTUSls, la
drawn to the stranger and helps bim
record bis la teal work ... A Tale of Two
Cities." The relalioosbl~ wqrts for
Ralph, since it brtnss some excitement
to bis life and some appreciation for the
classic "A Tale of Two CUle.."
Ralph needs to dream; every >'OWll
boy does. But thb Dtctens feUow ii put
50 and suppoeedl.J put f00Un1 blmself.
Ewen though Dickens li nol tryt.na to
burl others by bla maaquerad•t a.e
meeu some reaenttn.at. Tbt locel
barber, a lonely man who sees 1l1I
companionabip with Ralph beln1
undermined by the new arrlnl in town,
tells Di~bns he's • fraud. Ralph'•
crandmother doesn't realise wbo bt't
supposed to be and calla bim llJ'.
Dlcbon.
Only Raleh's 1randfath•r '' accepting: "AllJ lrtend Of ljlchOI
Nick.leby la a trieod of ml•·•
Gwynne's dl~ fJnalljJi lPI•
to . Ralph the Pffd to ma..-' U..
charade liDce he'• a mlMht.11 faUed
writeT and tllah tb• ~ ....... ate'• ever wanted to do. l• rWal'rlD1 Diekeoa ls wiut be mutt. to 1urvl.._.
"We make do " bl ..,,_ • t
It ·s valid to make the point that
people can construct wha~ 1t takes
to cope witb llfe, but there's 1
difference between dreamlnc and
haUucinatinc. After all, then 11 a real
world out there.
Ray Jobnaon discovers this ln
"Danaerous Company." When he's
rinally paroled from priloo, a tuard
advlaes him that, ln moat states,
ex-cons can't vote, they ca'l become
berbera, undertaketa or archlteda, and
they can't even drive cabll.
Today . Jobnaon is a aucceuful
security conaultanl to national
corporatlona, but the movie doun'l
ad~1:1-ateb' explore thia evolutiaa. The bu.U~ c6 b1I new proteuklDaJ and
penonal life would seem to be unique
enoulb lo build a movie around, and
"Danceroua Company" could have
eiam.iMd wbetber tbeN .. llf• llt4r'
prtloG.
lnl~'-lb!t • dweQi-.. ae Ida W• In ,..._, .,..,.. .. , I• UaM
Jqlut'°8l Md tr-.. ...... Ullia .a, two
1M11 to ~ fr'Cllll h&liam PrtloD ID
)J ....... Aa a trip MOYie, \bl dram.a
lin~t .-~alMcl.
That'• partlallJ beeaua Jobaloa, a
har dened crlmlnal, 11 depleted u
bappy:,.wuct, and played too 1weetly
by Br1clpa. ..
i
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t.
EVERYBODY'S TARGET Fount ;1111
Valle~ lligh·s .Jeff Hughl'" h.1 .., ht'l'n .11
th<' rt'ntl'I' ol thc 8<.i ron ... "IHTl'"" "11 h
DlllJ Piiat
TUESDAY, FEB. 9, 1982
h1 .., lt·thal 1111tsi<l<' s ho11t111g Ill•.,
;l\ l'l'.igm~ 20 i poinh .i ~.inw ,,.., .1 "l'l11e11
.111d 18 I 1111 ,1 I \\II \ 1•.11 1·.11 l'l'I'
By Jp_!!N SEVANO °' __ ...........
The continual punishment an
Olympian -or potential
Olympian -endures through
four years ls hard to imagine.
The oonstut grind, the dally
ritual, the pain and agon1 these
athletes subject themselves lo
usually goes unnoticed but (or
one brief moment when tl'1e
whole world is their audience.
Greg Louganis knows the
sacrifices an Olympian must
tolerate. For 13 year~ now he
has toiled and sweated for one
goal to be the best diver in the
1984 Olympics.
FOR THE TIME being,
however, that ambition has been
placed an a·state of limbo. Some
time this week a decision -a
critical decision -will. have to
be made concerni ng the
youngster's future.
Numerous dives, sever e
training with weights and an
awkward fall have l e ft
Louganis' left s houlde r in a
shamble
Originally diagnosed as a n
"impinchment of the rotator
cuff." doctors who performed
exploratory surgery last Friday
a lso found .. a torn this, a
severed that and so m e
bleeding," said the 22-year-old
UC Irvine student. "The doctors
knew the shoulder was inflamed,
they just didn't know to what
extent until they went in there ''
LOUGANIS WILL meet this
week with Ors. Robert Kerlan
(Rams' chief physician and
consultant to Lakers, Dodgers.
Angels> and associate Frank
Jobe fo r more testing. The final
decis ion will be based on a
evaluation of Kerlan, Jobe, Dr
Sammy Lee (former Olympian.
coach and a "second father" to
Looganls) and Dr. Ben Rubin .
<w ho p erform e d Friday's
exp lo r ato ry proced ure ).
Naturally, the ultimate vote will
be cast by Louganis.
"Right now, the doctor is my
coach ," said Louganis. "My top
priority ls the '84 Olympics. If
that means I have to sit out to do
1t, then I may have to. "1
With the '84 Games less than
three years away , time
obviously becomes a factor.
Louganis has three ways he can
go : ( 1) he can ignore an oper·
ation and continue to accept the
pain. <2> he can undergo an,
imprncbment operation, which
would sideline him anywhere
from three to six months ; (3) or
he can go through a major
procedure in which his damaged
left shoulde r would be totally
reconstructed -much like a
pitcher's arm that has gone bad.
There arc two problems with the
third choice, though -a one
year (minimum ) recovery
period, and the possibility of
Ii m i ted rotation with hi s
shoulder.
LOUGANIS doesn 't know
which route to take, "although
-Hughes..--he's jllst -like a burning fuse
Barons' star doesn 't show. a lot of emotion, but he's the igniter of Fountain Valley's success
By ROGER C.\llLS6N
Of .. Oelly ,_ S-
Tbere 'S one nice thing about playing
Fountain Valley High's Barons 1t
doesn't take a genius to figure out how
to defense them.
All you have to do is get a half dozen
fans and have them sit on Jeff Hughes,
keep him on the bench. lf he gets away
and on the floor. assign your best
defender and pray .
Hughes as In a burning fuse has
Ignited the Barons' offense for the past
two years with h is lethal outside
shooting and when the term outside Is
uaed, well. 25-foot range Is a more
accurate description, at a better than 50
percent clip.
A shade under 6-3, the Fountain
Valley senior has averaged 18.1 during
a two-year span, covering 46 1ames.
Tbil year's pace is 20.7 per start (Sl
pertent from the field> and his stats at
the-tine are the same as when he was a
junior -74 percent.
A star at Fountain Valley as a
freahman when be averaced 19.3 a
fame, be allo quaWies u a transfer,
btcause be left after that first year
when hil dad, Rex Hughes, moved to
Laa V«1aa aa an us.istant wtth UNLV.
But after a year the ltuct-ramUy
left Nevada wben Jetra d1d plcked up
with Convene Shoes in TeJCu, but it
didn't laat Iona wtt.n it \vu reaUl!td
Jeff would be lnell1lble ror a YHr,
because of that state's attitudes toward
any type of t{ansfer.
So. they came back. a week before
the 1980-81 season began. to the delight
of Fountain Valley Coach Dave Brown
"The one ingredient we were missing
was what Jeff could provide," says
Brown.
··He 's a beautiful mech anical
s hooter .'• continues Brown. "with
superb wrist action.·• For a quick
evaluation of Hughes. simply follow the
arc.
A great deal of it is because of natural
ability. but Hughes has something extra
going for him with bis dad, who was
Redondo Hlgh's coach in the glory era
of 1964, later to coach at Long Buch
City College, and as an assistant at
Nebraska. USC and Las Vegas, in
addition to t.akinl the head coachina job
at Kent State.
"My dad has just worked with me,"
says the Fountain Valley senior. "I
started shooting In the seventh arade
and a lot of It has just come naturally.
But my dad always works O\lt With ~e.
sometimes I get In a bad hablt. ·~
Hughes hu become acc.,m.cl to
belna the tarcet or opposint teams, but
It doesn't matter what the d~.1ou
won't be able to read ~·lfu~·
expression.
It's ail buainesa for l{u&bes-e~en ln
colleae, when he dtcldes whet.her it'•
Colorado State, Sant.a Clara, 1 Portland
Univeralty, Loua Beach State, UC
lrvine or elsewhere, It's a butlness rns~r that he'll pursue.
If you've seen Hughes. watched his
form . realize his range. the fact that
he's not being recru1tf'd heav1er. would
seem strange.
But Brown cltes Hughes' play during
tbe past aummer as a primary reason.
!'They <college recruiters> go so
much t)y what happens in the summer
The one ingredient we
were missing was what
Jeff could provide. He 's a
beautifu-l mechanical
shooter with superb u.nist
action .
-Coecti De" Brown
(prior lo a seolor'1 fioal re1ular seuoa>.'' aay• Brown .
•·JeCf really a~ldn't have played et aJI bec11t11e of a bad pull in hb le1. Ke _,.. ll•'9ni about 50 pertent thm alMI a
loi of people are Wllthinl then, and
UMy dcn't ~t him."
Bro\Wi, for one, thlnks soMe mistakes
ere belna made by would·be ~ruitera.
''Jeff has everythin& u 'a shooter. And
he'll aet better as he cct.s atroncer. Hia
delivery ts about as cood as you can
get . He needs to Improve bls
ball-handlln1 a little blt and his
defensive quickness on man-to-mtn out ..
away from the basket. but that will
improve with maturity ...
This is Brown's 13th year with the
Barons and there have been some
outst andin g shooters for Fountain
Valley in that span (i.e. Scott Ford,
Roger Holmes, George Barrios and Jeff
Christensen), and Brown is hesitant to
start a rating game.
But you might look at is this way.
Right now, with two Sunset League
games left and perhaps a few more ln
the CIF 4·A playoffs, Hughes is No. 3 on
the all·Ume Fountain Valley scorlnC
list, behind Holmes' 951 points and
Christensen's 943.
Hughes is at 836 with at least two
more eames and maybe more Jett, and
tt'a Without the benefit of a llOl>hornore-
season for the BarobS. The sixth man as
a sophomore on Blsbop Gorman Hi1h's
varsity, chances are he would have
been ln FV's plans at that time.
"Simply as an out.side shooter Jeff
certainly hu lo be one of the top two or
three to come out of um area," saya
Brown.
And, t hose numbers bave been
ac:cumulaled •••Inst virtually every conceivable defense aimed at hlm. In '6
1ames for the Barons, Hu1hes bas been
held to less than double fiaures oRly five
times. He's had a bl1h of S4 and been ln
the 20s or better on 22 other occaalana.
A lot of pressure for some, but not for
Hu.rhes. "I worked Jtard durlna the
(8" BVGHF.S, Paa• 0),
•
INJURED Greg Louganis'
Olympics future may be in
jeopardy.
r · m tired of taking pills for the
pain ·· The logical choice then.
and the one Louganis 1s leaning
toward, 1s hJS second option
Of course. the sudden tum of
events comes as quite a blow to
the silver medalist an the '76
Olympics Not that Louganis
hasn't been disappointed before,
mind you. President Carter 's
pullout from the '80 Games
certainly didn't set well with 1
him
It's just with the 1982 World
·I have to compete
with myself. If I get
beat , it's usually
becau se I beat
myself.'
Games around the corner, and
the Olympics shortly after,
Louganis' latest disappointment
couldn't have come at a more
inopportune time.
"l'M GOING to dive,' insisted
the UCI drama major "It's not
just four years of work. although
that ·s the only time you hear '
a bo ut us . I 've bee n diving
toYi:•rd this for 13 years now."
Louganis, who has been at the
top of his class for some time.
figures to be the diver to beat at
the Games in Los Angeles. He
was only 16 when he ca~ured
the silver m e d a l . (in the
10-meter platform) at the '76
Olympics. and he's done nothing
but gather awards since.
Lougan1s 1s a three-time
NCAA champion (he has also
qualified for this year's NCAA
championships, but it's doubtful,
with hi s injury, h e will
compete 1. the 1978 AA U Indoor ;
and Outdoor one-and-three #
meter champion . the 1978 world
champion in the 10-meter ,
platform ; the 1979 Pan
American Games three and·lO
meter champion.
In (980, he made a clean
sweep of the U.S. Outdoor
Championships, was the U.S.
Indoor one-and-three meter
cltampio'tl ; a nd, in '81, was
crowned the 1981 U.S. Outdoor
one and·three meter champ.
That's a lot of diving.
"THE NATIONALS really
lake a toll on me," admitted
Louganis. "It's like a diving
marathon and you have to make
every dive count.
''I've been known to sleep for
three days l get so exhausted, or 1
I c r y for hours to get my
emotions out." •
It 's not unus ual to find
Louganis competing in three
events (one meter. three meter,
(See LOUGANIS, Pa1e C2)
PCM MOVES UP
TO DIYI ION 1-A
MISSION, Kan. (AP> -The l
Pacific Coast Athletic
Association on Monday was \
placed in Division l·A of the 1
National Colle1late Athletic i
AS'sociallon , the NCAA l '
announced.
Tbe NCAA said the conference f
1alned the new at.atus after two
of lta member 1chool1 -Pacific I University and Utah State
University -were 1iven a l·A I
claasllicalion.
Two other PCAC achools -
Fresho State and Nevada-Laa
Veaas -already were clasalfled
l·A
( ...
C2 Orange Coa1t DAILY ~!LOl'!Tuetday, February 9, 1982 ··--.-; .... ______ ...... __________ ..,
,
Oroom arrested • robbery ewpecl
INGLEWOOD -An E "off.and-on" borae-raclna croom hu
been booked for lnn1U1atton of .
robbery lo a 1trlea pt beblod'\be·~ holdups
at Hollywood Park race tract, police Lt. Ray
Smith said Monday.
Jimmy R11·8rown, 21, of nearby Compton
waa arrested Saturday near the racetrack for
lnveaUralJOif or pouea11n1 and beln1 under the
lnnu nee of PCP. a dru1 alJoiknown u "an1e1
dust," Smlth eald, addln1 that he waa booked ln
the robbery case later. after be had been 'Doug Fr1·1z s'uccumbs ldentlfled as beiDI aou1ht ln l.be e'ue. Police lnvestf1atora believe "be bad worked after long illness ,, ;:r,TJ~!r. otr and on at different race tracu ...
Doug Fritz, a former athletic II
director and an orl1lnal member of
the Saddleback Collece faculty in ·
physical education, died this put
week in Carson City, Nev. after a long illness.
He was 51 at the time of his death.
Fritz was the Saddleback baseball coach
from 1969 through 1974 and the campus field is
named in his honor.
When he became ill In
1980, Fritz stepped down u
athletic director. He bad
served the Saddleback staff
since 1968 and bad tau1ht at
Costa Mesa , lltarlna and
Tus tin high schools. .
Al Compton College he
was an All ·Am e rican
community coll ege catcher
in 1951 a nd la ter played ,.uTz professionally in the Detroit
Tiger organization. He received his degree at
Long Beach State and earned his master degree
al Chapman College.
Fritz moved to Nevada shortly after leaving
Saddleback College to 'be near his family. He
leaves his wire, Priscilla and two daughters.
No funeral is planned and the family bas
asked that no flowers or donations be sent.
In a resolution honoring Fritz last year,
Saddleback district trustees declared that the
field named in his honor would serve as "a
tribute to t h e e nergy , enthus ias m and
dedication or Mr Fritz to this district
From Page C1
Quote of the day
S&H .Joaea, former Chlca10 Beari
player now coachln1 the J)enver Broneot'
defensive Hoe, on 88·year-old O-eor1e
Halas's return to callln1 the shots fol' the
Bears: "Amaun1. This Is like Orvlllo
Wright comina back and decidlal to run
United Airlines."
Yankees open spring training tOday -. The New York Yankees open II s pring training today with pllcbers,
catchers and selected other players
invited to the early camp. Owner Geor1e
StelAbrenaer, impressed by the fast start by
Oakland last year, ordered the early Yankee
opening . . . An arbitrator in Chica10 hu ruled
in favor of Cincinnati ln Its pay dispute with
pitcher Frank Pa1&ore . •
Conner leade Beavers past Cal
. Lester Conner scored 20 points m for Oregon Slate as the Beavers
s truggled past California, 5T·SO.
Monday night to move Into a first-place tie with
Washington for the Pacific 10 Conference
bas ketball lead ... Senior forward Gres
Skulman and sophomore guard Rklty Norton
combined for 19 points as Arkwas's bench
produced Z7 points in a 79-619 win over Texas
Christian University . Freshman Keith Lee
scored 24 points and grabbed 18 rebounds as
14th-ranked Memphis State dumped Ball State,
75-04 .
LOUGANIS OPTIMISTIC. • •
10-mete r platform) during a particular meet. Such
a practice isn't highly recommended, although
Louganis approaches it as a test.
"J don't really know why I compete so much,"
he said. "It's a challenge, a challenge of my ·
stamina in pressure situations."
IN TIIE '84 GAMES, Louganis will have only
two events (three meter and 10-meter platform> to
concern himself with. Of cou~e. there's the
competition, too.
"In '84 , I don't think the Russians will be my
chief competition as much as It will be the Chinese
-and I think that will surprise a lot of people.
"Loe Angeles will be their first Olympics.
They didn't want to compete until they had a
chance to win (in diving). They are very strong."
Loucan.ls got a !int-hand look at the Chinese
when be competed in an international meet last
year. In fact, "they have one woman diver now
that's as 1ood u most men, and that's including
myself."
. sm.L, IT WILL BE Lou1ani.s everyone will
be gu.nnlni for -includ.inc Louganis.
"I want this to come out right," said Louganis
in a soft-spoke• {Dinner. "I'm a competitor, but I
know when I get up on the boards I have lo
compete with myself. If I get beat, it's usually
because I beat myself
"It's scary to be No. 1 and usually I make light
of it," he added. "When you're No. 1, they're all
looking to beat you and that's an awful feeling.
"Honestly, when I'm in a meet I'm rooting for
eve rybody to do well because that pushes 01e to be
that much better That's what makes the good
divers great, they keep pushing.
"WHY DO I DO IT year after year? Because
it 's all worth It in the end. My goals in diving
aren't like most divers. I'm not out lo win as
much as I am to bringing more people Into d1vmg.
l want people to appreciate diving u a sport.
Diving is an art and I would like people to realize
that." or course , m order to do that. Louganis is
going to have to get well acaln -soon.
"It will depend on the damage, but if it takes
only three months to recuperate, then that will
leave me two months for the World Games trials."
Louganis explained. "It's all quite frustrating
because I'm in a stale of limbo. I have to pretty
much take things one day at a time.
"The layoff will probably hurt me
psychologically more than anything else. But I can
come back ; I have come back before. Either way
(the rest> it could work to my advantage."
The injury ls nothing more than another
challenge -in a long list of challenges
Louganis will have to meet . . and overcome.
Lopes' future
__ is .with Oakland
WINNING ROUTINE -Greg Louganis shows
pictttre perfect form.
Bask~tball . scores
Cof.:.r
o.._51 S7,C.lllorftlat0
-.C:lllitt
,._ #llxl<e St .... Dnk• ti
lll'Oflt-11 "· f;.°"9911.t
"
Tn <....,_ID, VMI It
W. CM'041M•, 0.V_ ..
Wllli.m • #«V ... Vl1'9li'lle T9(11
J•dMIWll .. n, South••~ n Cot I
Ct11t_., • NI! l<~i.1-71
OAKLAND (AP> -Second baseman Dave
Lopes was hope(ul about the future followinc bis
trade from the Los Angeles Dodgers to the
Oakland A's for minor league Infielder Lance
Hudson.
"I had said one lime during the course of my
career that it was Inevitable that I would be traded
someday, .. said Lopes, a lour-time National
Lea1ue All·Star who bas played all his nine years
in the majors wit.b-lbe-Dod1ers. •
"My main concern was once I was rejected ...
that someone else wanted me," he added after
the trade waa formally announced Monday.
"Oakland showed a tremendous amount of interest
in me, and I'm extremely thankful for that. I will
pay them back for wantina me here in Oakland,
believe me:''
Lopes, 35, is the first member to leave 1
Dodier Infield that bu etayed tocether for a
record nine yea~1 an lafleta t.bat lncludes himself,
Steve Garvey. Brn Ruaaell ahd Ron Cey.
Referrln1 to a recent dinner wtth Ru.uell. Cey
and Steve Yeqer, Lopea aald, "That wu a very
dlfflc\llt altuatton . . . at the dinner it tot quite
emotional and we had to cut ll k1Dd of abort."
He Hid he would min pla)'tn1 for lhe world
cbamptona, "but I'm looldn1 forward to
t1t.abllsbln1 newer relaUoolb.IPI ber. ln Oak.land
and doll\I whatever 1 can to help thb team wtn a
world champion.ship .. th•l'• m,y concern rl1ht
• now." \ -----··---------'\·.I
CaUfomlan heads Indiana Peoent
Fruk llartaaJ, a CaUfornla rnl • eatate a1ent and a mlnorlty owner of ,
the Indiana Pace rt, has been named
prealdent of the NBA franchlae ... Terry
Labome wu awarded second place in Sunday••
Busch Clash followln1 a rovlew of f.hoto fltlllh
films. NASCAR offlclala said the n ma 1howed
L1tbonte'a Buick Reaal "an inch" ahead of Nell
BooneU'• Ford Thunderbird ... The
International Auto Sport• Federation Is
expected to anoounce today the cancellation of
tbll year's Ar1enUne Grand Prix . . . All·pro
wlde receJver lamea Loftoa of Green Say ·
predicts that NFL player• will atrike ... West
Vlr1ini1 hat moved into lh.e naUonal rank.in&&
with a 19-1 record and holda coUe1e buketball'•
longest wlnnin_1 streaki.,.~~ in a row . . . The
owner of the Colorado l\VCltlet formally uked
permission to move the nnanclally lrOUbled
hockey team to New Jersey while a 1roup of
Colorado businessmen took steps to buytbe ch.lb
and keep It ln Denver . . . The Phlf adelphla
76ers, despite rumors to the contrary, want to
sl~n Darryl Dawkln1, not trade the 6·11 center
T~evision, radio
Followlno are the top 5')0rts events on TV
tonl;ht. Ratlnos are: ., .t .t " excellent; .t " / worth watchln;; t t fair ; .t forget It.
A e p .m., Channel 9 ./ { ../ ../
NBA BASKETBALL: Laker s at Atlanta.
Announcers : Chick Hearn and Kei th
Erickson.
The Lakers are attemptln; to overcome Seattle and get back In first place in the Western
Conference, Pacific Division. With Magic Johnson
sidelines, the team came from behind a 23-Point
deficit to win Sunday ov,er the Boston Celtics.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was the catalyst for the
Lakers In this one. Atlanta, although in second
place in the Eastern Conference, Central Division,
is 12 games behind Milwaukee.
OTHER TELEVISION
11 p.m . (9) -NHL ALL-STAR GAME -The
Campbell Conference vs. the Prince of Wates Conference, taped earlier In the evening at
Landover, Md
RADIO Basketball -Lakers at Atlanta, b p.m., KLAC
(570).
ROSSIGNOL
FP
RtR S2i0 1/2 PRICE'
CMV
Re it SZ'60 S 17988
HPM
Reg S240 Sl698'
626·R
RtR '180 1/2 PRICE'
K2
710-FO
~tit S270 V2 PRICE'
355 s
Rtit S275 1/2 PRJCE'
305 M
Rrg S230 1/z PRICE'
510
Rrg S240 S16988
PRE
1200
Reg S265 1/2 PRICE'
1100
Reg S245 IJ8988
Rrg S280
MARK Ill
Reg S265 1/z PRICE'
AUTHIER
EQUIPE F
Rei: S2% S2()918
ESPRIT
Reg 5280
.... '
Costa Mesa
near playoffs
Cost.a Mesa Hlab moved one 1tep cloter to IU
rtrst CIF playoff berth since 19M Monday nt1ht •
with au.83·50 rout of Irvine In the Vaqueroa' nm.
The win Improves the Mu1tan11 Sea View Lea1ue
record to 9·4 with one 1ame remalnlni. The
Muatana.s close ou~ the re1ular aeuon Wednesday
n11ht a,ain.st El Toro while Newport Harbor <M> atlll haa University
(1 ·5 > and E1tancla
(10 ·2> left on lta
·scheduie.
Ken Bardsley led
Cos ta Mesa to the easy
win over Irvine <1·12).
Bards ley hit on 16 of 22
shots from the floor and
finished with 33 points.
a season-high for the 6-4
senior
Jim Pelichowski (10 ),
John Rishebarger < 14 >
and John Strayer 00>
also finished in double
figures for Costa Mesa
as the Muatanp shot S6
KEN BARDSLEY percent (35 of 62> as a te am.
Mustang senior Jeff Field was scoreless bul
Cost a Mesa Coach Tim Parsel credited him with
much of Mesa's offensive success. Field passed off
for nine assists.
In other action:
Saddleback 69, El Toro 60
Larry Davenport, Saddleback's 5-11 senior
guard, had a game-high 26 points to lead the
Roadrunners to their first Sea View win of the
year.
Da venport connected on 11 of 20 shots from the
floor and Saddleback outscored the Chargers, 19-8.
St. Paul 72, Mater Del 71 (2 ot)
Mater Dei appeared to have the game locked up,
leading by fi ve with 16 seconds left in regulation.
but St. Paul tied it a nd won in the second overtime.
• •-o
All.SOP
SHOCK RACER
Rl'~ S58
HIGHLIGHT
Rl'): S20 1/z PRICE
K2 '~
TEAM
Rl'!! SJ! 1/2 PRICE
OLYMPIC
Rri: s12 1/z PRICE
BARRE-
CRAfTERS
AP40
Reg Sl6 1/z PRICE
SKIWEAR
1/ UPTO
/2 PRICE
PANTS
up to l/2PRJCE
Roffe
Fera
Obermeyer
Europa
WARM UPS
&BIBS
up tol/zPRICE
Roffe
Fera
Obermeyer
Europa
ROSSIGNOL
TEAM JR
Rei: s 100 112 PRICE'
160J
Rrg S62 72 l/2 PRICE'
KN El SSL
JR RACER
Reg SllS 75 1/2
PRICE'
This Is it. The biggest ski sale
we've ever had. Half price with
half the season still left to enjoy
it. And not just a few items -
we're blowing out all our win-
ter merchandise at up to 50%.
These are big names at big
savings - a lot of them below
cost. So hustle on in before it's
all gone. At 50 below, we're
expecting blizzards of custom-
ers every day.
PARKAS
up to •/zPRICE
Roffe
I· era
Obermey1r?r
E:.uropa
SWEATERS
up to 1/2PRICE
Demetre
Meister
Lido =--~
NORDICA
COMP S
Reg 1295 112 PRICE
POLARIS
"Reg S275 l/2 PRICE
HURRICANE
Rr1t S200
VEGA
Rtg. Sl60
No.IA
Re~ Sl60
Sl4918
•11911
1/2 PRICE
•IWPOIT llACH ,aahlon Island
IMIWftll l11ff111"t • &rMdlwey
M4·ZUl
-o.4-
Umlted quantmee. Nol all slzee .mt colors In all
stMee. Not all tterns In all ltOfft.
IANGE
XL-S
Reg 5255 SJ8988
XL-FLEX
Rtg. 1185 113911
SALOMON
SX 90
Reg. S255 118918
sx 70
Rt~ '190 113918
SANMARCO
AX 1
Reg. S255 l/2 PRICE
BX 1
Reg st 95 1/z PRICE
LX l
Reg S200 112 PRICE
~
SKI BOOTS
NORD ICA
SLALOM
Reg Sl 25 l/2PRJCE
All
Ski Hats
All
Gloves 1/zPRICE
All After Ski
Boots 1/2 PRICE
Ski Grabber 1/zPRICE
Allsop
Boot Ins
Allsop
Warm·N Dry%PRICE
Selected
Ski Bags l/zPRICE
Selected Boot
Bags l/i PRICE
I i .ut m w.
.U2 • .>It UVt .)11 U VI
&AIT&llN CONl"&llaNCa A"-Cl<Dt,,.._
M 12 .11' Boa ton
l'tlll14elpt>ll HotwJ-y
W1llll"1110f1 HewY-
" .. » u . 101 1~
n 2• n ,.
-·~ 12 .,.. 12
4SI 13
C-•ICM• ..... Mii•..,.... J2 1• .... Atlallta 19 U .,,
Dtlroll 20 21 4»
1 ndl•"• lO 21 ,,. c111c-11 29 .m
Cl .. eland 11 " JJ9 '-MT'•k-1.allen '"· 8ol;lon 11J Pllllac191pN1 123, CNca90 101
0.11.,.r 11•, w..,.lnQlon llS
Mii•-• 107, -nl• '1
H0<11ICW112'. Kanw• City 110
G.,.Clen Sta'9 11', S.. Amo...lo 111 Ne• J-y 110. Cle.,.1-M
$a•ttl• ... s.. Ole90,,
Por\llnd 100, ..... YOf'll"
T.......-10-No~,._~...,
COLLEGE
Top 20
I VorQinll I S71
, Honn (.Moll.,•
l DtPeul Ul
• Mluourl UI s 10 ...
6 Dr•IJWI SI
1 1 u••• 8 Arlr.Ml\I\ , M1n""'10l1
10 Alllla<N
11. Wttl Vlr9lnl1 u KtfthKky n 101no
U Mtmpf\l\St
IS Kan .. •SI
"WalleFOl'nl
11 S1n Fr1n<•\CO
II FrlV>OSI
1' Wl\lllnqlon
10 c.-oeiown. o.c
COLLEGE
UCI 1tat11tle1
11 1
If 2
10-1 1'1-1
II 1
16·]
16 l
I&]
15-4
11 )
1t-1
IS S ,, 1
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17 l "s
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ltO
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l<t¥1nM-JO 20] 13" S.oO
R1nc1Y~,.._, 10 131 lll >01
8•n McOon••o 20 •• 31 219
Reiner Wulf JO S9 29 ....
Ktvln ~ ullt r 20 .s n 11 J
Bob T llO<nlon " ,. 23 ,.
L.o,.1ro Jon"~ 19 ,. 12 ..
JOh'1 B•rlll:~'I " 11 10 ,. c;,.,,, T 1vlor 10 IJ • JO
A•O Ct•C<>O 1 J II
Curt1\ (tO\\lfy • 2 0
M•rk !apmn 6 0 l
lot••' 10 uo ]10 I S!O
HIGH SCHOOL
Co1ta Mesa 83. Irvine 50
110
U1
11 0
/]
H . ,
] .
3 I
l I
JI
0 I
OS
11 s
COSTA MESA 8UO\lt• ))
Pelle-• 10. R••""b.t'9ef ••. Slro.-10.
PalMl>I-J, E-2, C-2. -"'O •. G
l'lelclt,J l'leldO r .... ~ 3513-1113
111\llNE C..rver •. 8a"1er I, 8ro10•k1'
I Hui I Jonn> I> U•~ 11 Mu101 J
lolol\ JJ •• !O
Saddlebeck H , El Toro 10
aL fo.Q -i.-1• II, 1,,.......n I, ,...,_,
II, A•M._ U. IU<llltr 4. MertlftMn t,
Hemm .. I Totoh U 10-IUO
IADDLAllM:• D1v.,_.i K , LI*<• t , M<Atll ... f $, C.aoe 10 ~•IM1n t , _, ...
•· we1ton1, O.Prel110 Ttt••• n tUo" ac_,,ow,.,..
II Tor• i. 2• 1 1• '° '"4tlell9cll n n 1• 11 •• fotol touh: El TOf'o It, S.cldl•b•O i.
St. Paul 72, Meter Del 71 12 ot)
MATall Dll Cook 4, T•rbell it. Jtcll-1'. heuw• .. rt 11 MtaQlwir O.
,,..., IO, ~"'' J, NHWlh JX Toi••~ 1• ,,.1111
IT, flAUl Fou 2 R1mer1u I
Cl•mtlltt 17, Qulrot •• Slt'l<lewll( 'I Qolnl .... • 10 T041h 11 1•2' n • se.. .. ,.._
Miter o.t ll 10 u 12 I • 11 Sr Pout It 13 1~ 11 • ~ n
Tol•I foul• Meler Del If St Paul u Feuleil oul A-le• ISi P111U c .. ,,_,,
1$1 Paull. Jack_, IMll•r Dell
Sea View LHgu•
t..-0-..••11 W L W L
Cororta clet "'-'
E\11n<l1
C0>t1 Mlw
NeWPOr1 HerbOr
UnlverJlly
fl Toro
Slo<l .. IM<k
ti I 10 , • • • • I S
l •O
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I IJ w..,._,., Oomft 11 •1
ES11r><'" •I COl'ono a.1 Mor u .. 1 • .,..11y •I Newpor1 H1r110r
El ToroetCOll•MUO
,,.,,.. •t Slddleb.t<k
Angelus league L_.,.
YI L
S..-rvltt • 1 e .. noP MofltQO<nHY 1 J
Met•r D~t 3 •
81\hOI> Am .. t 1 •
SI Peul 1 •
W-y·•G...,Hll Ml
SI P1u111 8l~l'IOI> Am•I
8ish0p MofltQO_,.Y at Se,. 110
It J
II • •• • I] •
13 •
16 •• It
o ... , ... w l u I ,. ' l1 9
1 •
I 12
HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER
Sea View league w L
E•t1n<11 r l
Coron• oe1 Mir I 2
s.ddlebl<k s 3
El Toro s s
lr'Wln• • s
Nf'WOOrt H•rtlOr • • Un•"•nity J I , ... ,.-.. 1 1 w--,·.o.....,
Corona 0.1 Mir •• El Toro $4tddle!M<k 11 UNV~tty
Eit•n<•••tCost• ~ Irvine •t N-1 H1r110<
U.S. Nallonal Indoor (M~.T-.1
Flntll ... S .....
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Ro><,. hn11er <Ml Mike Clll•ll ._. 1 S
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V1Ml<k -def T .... rry Tuta ..... ~· ... 1
Johan l(rtek de! Pelo..,,.. •-4 I l.
Women·1 loumamenl , .. ._c;_,,
Jllntll-~
Miry UlU Pialtk def Pat -·-1-t &-4 And,..• Le-de'! ~y Colllr>t, M .
61 (leudl• K-0.I Eva Pl1ff .... , ... ,
Colteo-women uc1 .. 111e1,0r..._.c ... , .......
lllt ... IVC lrvlM) d.f ,__, .. J. 6 J·
M11 .. ry IUC ,,.,,.,_., Oel Q•tt11n ..... W , S.rrtno 1uc 1r.in.1 ,., KllOnly, 1 s. , ,.
1<•111 IUC ''"In•> ciel t lvln, •'4. t 2.
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Glo<dlMti. IV( lrvir\t ftl ltla.'1 t I • I ~.
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O.rwlll a.J.,, •·2 • J
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NHL leaders
Grtlt~y EOmor>lon
I' Stutn•. O\.oet»<
S.•ard.CN<-
M.eruk WeV>lnQton
llou v NY ,.,.,_,.
Smith. Ml,,.,.t.Oll
l rollfer NV l\la,,q,.r
Ol9fl111,IC"'9o
T1ylor, Klnet
AIWkr.on. Edmonton
Wre1tllng
HIGH SCHOOL
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S.pitinaro, l 03
119 McN•ntt tNtwPOr1 Hertlorl plt>ntd
Hohltttor. J 31
US Sommer 1Ntwpor1 Hart>orl p1nne<1
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10 -Ge\lll!VI ICdMI pinned HlnlO". • «>
148 Av• 1Newpor1 HorbOrl dee Loftus. 1-4
151 Pe,,., tN•wporl H•rborJ o•c
McPuko SJ
110 ReYH ((OM I a .. SIO..-. 1 >
tee StoU9 ICOMI won by •orlell
JOl -<Ill l(dMI •on Dy lorlolt
Hwl l UOWllJ,,... ((OM! won Dy fort•••
Mondar.'• lranHctlon1
8ASl8ALL A-... 1.. ......
CHICAGO WHllE SOX N1m.O A,_i Vuq~z lo lwndl• Laltn A"'WIU" plo.,....
....,...._~ Announ<.O 11\at SI••• Trout.
1>11<"•' ""°" '" •r1111rall0ft, wNte ti.I -won 1n orbilrotlon wllll 8111 A'"'on lllfle-
lr>CI 80C>t>y Molln••IO. oum.io.r
MINNESOTA TWINS SIQn-.1 hrrv
F•lton, p1t(~r. ano M•rk Funderburk
outfl•ldH to on&!"·V••r tontr.ch
N-lu-(INCINNATt REOS Announud ,,..,
the te•m won •" •rbltr•tton •1th Fr•n•
Pl\tore. 1111crwr
LOS ANGELES OOOGERS Trllde<I
D•HY LoPU u cond bowmen, 10 IM
Oo•l•no A s tor l...C• H-.. lnllelder
MONTREAL EXPOS S1onM S<Olt
S.ndt>r'°"' ottctwr. toa thrtt Y••' tOf'ltr.c.1
IASIC(TIAU.
N•-1 IMll-H A»>CIOllH
INOIANA PACERS Nemod Fronk
~rtan1pr~t
l'OOltALL
NotleMI l'•-11 Lt-
N E W YORK Gl4NTS SIQ,,tO Jett
Bedn•'tll. detenUY• end M t<••Y
Flttverotd, _,.,A---. T-• we11on
•net L•rrv Colt•~. '""nlrtQ ~''· Ktvln E•••H •nd Mlk• lu•ll. ••lellu , !><ott
Phllllps, w.ot re<•'Yf't. Ht,b~ ~Pt'rK•r and
L•rrv Werti. t1net»<k.,,
HB prep golf saved
Oil com]Xlny, two. area courses come to the rescue
When the Huntington Be ach H1&h.. School
district cut golf from the school programs. several
local companies and courses came to the rescue.
A check for $977 was presented to the district
hy the Cht'vron Dealers of the area, proceeds from
a tournament held for s uch a purpose.
Fount;.un Valley Mile Square Golf Course. with
Jim Casp10 as head professional, will provide free
gree n fees for Ocean View and Pountam Valley
Huntin gton Seacliff Country Club in
lfunttngton Beach is offenng the same package to
Westminster. Huntington Beach, Edison and
Marina Brian Lake. president of the Huntington
Seacliff Corporation, was instrumental in securing
the donations along with a guarantee of golf balls
from several companies.
"More money will have to be raised for
e xample. to pay the $42 per school lease
perc~ntage required by the County of Orange
before free play is permitted," Lake s ays
Mile Square leases the land from the County of
Orange
• • • SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA collegiate golfers
will begin their 1982 tournament schedule by
competing in the 12th annual Gary Sanders
memorial invitational at Pomona National Golf
Club Thursday and. Friday.
Among the favorites to capture the individual
title will be UC Irvine's Dave Beatty who was
medalist when the Anteaters tied UCLA, 299.299
last week al Bi g Canyon Country Club Beatty
ftred a 68.
DelendinJi? champion of the event 1s Ron
Com mans with lhe USC squad the defending team
champion Commans has turned pro and will not
defend his title • • • THE COSTA MESA GOLF and Country Club
men's club did it again. The group, under lhe
direction of Steve Pappas and Tom Throp, report
that their Toys Fore Fairview tournament raised
over $3,000 in cash and $1 ,000 in toys and gifts for
the hospital.
In addition. Len Peverieri donated a color
television set. Incidentally. Bob Hale had a net 60
to win first place for the second consecutive year
In the competition. Congratulations. • • • ON the upcoming tournament trail . Lee
't'l'evino will be among the contestants in lhe Los
Antieles Open at Riviera Country Club riext week.
When the pro-am is presented on Wednesday.
GOlF
HOWARD L. HANDY
F'eb 17, former president Gerald Ford and Bob
Hope are among the celebrities
Out Palm Springs way. at Indian Wells to be
more specifi c, Gene I.1tllcr and the Hebert
brothers. Lionel and J sy, are among the
contestants lis ted for the Vintage lnv1tat1onal
March l0-14.
The event will be held at the exclusive Vintage
Club.
The lle bert brothers ea ch won the PGA
championship, something no ot her brother
c-o mbmat1on has ever accomplished Lionel, the
younger of the two. won in 1957 and Jay captured
the PGA title In 1960
lnc1dentally. this year's tournament will
be nefit Angel View crippled children's foundation
with season tickets priced al S40 to include all five
days or action Daily prices are considerably less
than a year ago at $5 on Wednesday and up to $10
on Saturday and Sunday • • • JOllNNV MlLLER WILi, BE back to defend
h1 i. title at the Los Angeles Open. Feb 18·21. Miller
won th<' Andy Williams San Diego t>pen last week
und earlier had won $500,000 in a c;pecial event in
South Africa ·
Others who will join Miller in the h eld include
Mark O'Meara of Laguna Niguel, Hale lrwin. Tom
Ki~. Ed-Fiori, Bobby Clampett, Bttly Casper,
Craig Stadler. Dave Stockton, LaMy Wadkins and
Jerry Pate among others.
Spectators at the LA Open will havt an
opportunity to have tbeir owo 1olf awinl
photographed, analyzed and fetord~d on •
permanent dis play card which can be uied by
their own club pro as an instrucUonal tool.
A $5 donation entitles the participant to: three
swings on the computer swing analyzer providing
1mmed1ate. simultaneous feedback on seven
diHerent aspects of the swing . ao instant
photograph which shows in stop action eight
consecutive parts of the golfer's swing, and brief
advice on the good or bad points of the swing from
a PGA teaching professloruil.
. . . . .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Tuesday. February 9, 1982
From Pjie C1
HUGHES IS THE FUSE. • •
11u m nfor because I knew lbi1
y~ur would dcpt•nd a lot on what
I d1cl ... ~u1ys Hughes
· So 1 was ready Toward the
Rustlers play
at LA Harbor
Golden West College, coming
orr a convincing victory over
East Los Angeles C~&e . wiJI
trv to make 1t two straight when
the R ustlers travel to LA Harbor
tonight (7 30>
GWC, 4·6. 17 8 defeated the
Sea hawks 48 46 in first round
action o f Sou thern Cal
Conference basketball play back
on Jan lS
The Hus tlers boast the top
scorer in the conference in
guard Truiett Hatton who
1:arries an JIU> average into the
coflteat
Woodbridge,
Brethren duel
Woodbridge High's Warnors
make their final regular season
appearance tonight in free·lance
basketball. playing host to
Marshall High of Pasadena m a
game that could be the key to
their Cl F playoff aspirations.
The Warriors enter with a 13·8
record . but on the heels of a
tbree-game los ing s treak
Mars hall fell to Woodbridge
earlier. 50 ·16 Ttpoff is at 7 30 ,--
I
end of Jut year there !\Ome
gurnt!:! with a lot df ~mphas1s to
stop me, so 1t hasn't bel!n that
big ot a ,·hange "
"He's r eally improved his
poise," say-; Brown, "the way he
res pondi to press ure Hti's
playing the game harder and
t-ach week he's playing more
auresslvely ..
So, the Barons enter the final
week. lied with Marina and
Ocean View at 4.4 and a game
behind second place Hunttn.aton
Beach in the wild, wild Sunset a
C.:IF 4 A playoffs berth to but t.:Vo
of them
And 1t appears crystal clear, 1f
the Barons are to ea rn a playoff
berth it 'II be behind the play
of Hughes
Vortex wins
H ibachi race
Vortex, skippered by Bruce
Twichell . Voyager's Yacht Club,
was th(' class-A winner m the
second race or South Shore
Yac ht Club's Winter lf1bach1
series
Class B winner was Me N
Pete , co.skippered by Fyfe and
Colwit'k. VYC, and the class C
winner was Immoral M1nonty,
Paul Blank, SSYC
In the small boat d1v1s1on the
winner m the senior sabot class
was Betty Knudson . SSYC, and
the JUntor winner was Worth
lloughton, SSYC
The
healthcare
plan for
employees
that actually
~rovides for
their care.
Gret~ky,
·Cmnpbe lls
favo red
LANDOVER, Md (AP> -The
Campbell Conterence, led by
record·breaklnl acorer Wayne
Gretzky of the Edmonton Oilers,
seeks a second atraltbt victory
over the Wales Conference In
tonight's National Hockey
League AU-Star game.
A crowd of 18,130 is expected
to rill the Capital Centre. where
only o n e sellout has been
attracted during the current
sea son as the Was htogton
Capitals struggle through their
eighth campaign
The Wales Confe rence had
won five straight All-Star games
under the format adopted for the
1974.75 season. with no game in
1979 because of the ChaUenge
Series with the Soviet Union.
The Campbells notched their
first decision last year
Yacht race ends
Brisk winds off the Mexican
mainland brought the last of the
35 boats in the San Diego to
Manzanilla yacht race safely
into port Sunday night and
Monday.
General chairman Fred Frye
said the finish times are being
fed into a computer to determine
the overall and class winers on
handicap time Final results
were expected today
for
their eyes
for their
teeth
for their
body
right
down to
their toes
FHP isn't just an insurance company. It's a Health Maintenance
Organization with seven medical centers in the Los Angeles and Orange
County area alone.
Family Health Program provides the dentists. The doctors, including
medical specialists. Emergency care. Hospitalization. Eye care. Preventa-
tive care, including regular checkups. Even family counseling.
We don't just cover your employees' medical expenses. We also pro-.
tect your employees' health by providing care to help keep them from
getting sick in the first
place. Head to toe. A ff DE RALLY QUALIFIED HMO
Fos t e r , Mets reach 8greement
For more information on
the group health care pro-
gram that gives you more
than just insurance for yoyr
money, call (213) 429-2473,
Ext. 513 or (714) 898,.3516,
Ext . 513.
JllEW YORK (AP> -Georae
htter and tho New York Mets
tuive reached agreement on the
CiftclM8ti slugger's request (Of
1 fl mllUon, interest·free Joa,
th• final hurdlt to com,._ a
tr14e Md formalin a COQtreet, Met.a General Manaaer Prank
Cuben said Monday.
Tom Reich, Foster's •tent~
spenl Monday In Caltfornla.
"
attending to business for some of
hia other clieots. He waa
expected In New Yort Tuel4eJ.
to con<:ludc talks with c....-..
which should deliver Fciiter. a
33·year-old lert fielder, to the
Met.a.
Cuhen and Reich spent two
da11 together '" FlorOf a lut w ekood and reacbed
•agreement on • tontnc:t *hleb
•
will Pll.Y Foster SiJ million over
the next nve year'IJ1 P6st.er wa.a
receiving $800,000 n year from
C!1lclnnntt as he entered tbe ~ xear or his contract.
• U •o Foster·-req__ue~l 'f~~ '°'*' which kept ~ Hedi uvm ilantng him agarn. Cp•h"n aald
Lhi loan was tbe t1\tbJect of the
Pjorfda talks, but added: "I'm
not al liberty to report on that."
C 19112 fHP
'
.. . ..
' ~
... ~ .......... ~ ........................ '""" ................................ """ ............ ~~="t'~'"."7""" .............. ""' ...... '""' ............ ""-F' ..
Orl(lgJ Co11t OAIL Y PILOTfTu .. day, Febru1ry 9, 1982
valu& .. ---------,_,.---
I ~,.ft11la. l1 ~·Ung i12M.F-I l orown Ktnt1Jeky f;'rJed Chicken plus bl'Own l(entucky Frltcl Chicken, with IOldtd wllf't tlftMn pieces oi Juicy, gi ~ alnglt mvtngi ot colt •"w. masf'ted tour roll1 • 1 11/ge colt al1w. 1 largt 1 go1<11n brown Kentucky Frltcl Chlck1n ,,,
(,)
;;»i potatOH and gravy 1nd 1 roll I INtl'ted potatots 1nd 1 mtdlum gravy o 0 Limn two otltrt lltt pUtCl\iM CO\lpon good Z
1,.1m11 two olltrs oer P11rcnue Coupo11 good umu two Olttlt I* 1111rc~H Coupon good 1 onty 10t coml>lnatlon wl\ltt/darl! Oldtrt 1 I O(lly IOI combltlitton whltt/Cllrk oroers I only fOr Q)lllbinatlOn wM1/dark 0rtStr1 Cuttomti pays tll &ppllciblt utts \Ill
C11ttomt1 PIYI Ill APC>li"blt Mltl I» Clltlor'Nf P'Y1 all IC>l>i~t>lt UIU 1A.t
I Ofter expires l'ebruary 21, 1982. I Offer expires rebruary 21 1982 I Otter expires Ftbruery 11. 1982 I
Pr1ct1 may v11y ii P1f1ICll)lttr19 1oea11ons Pt1ces may v1ry al P1t11Clp.i1tlng loullona P11c1s may vary " Plfllelpatlng toeattont
I CO<Jpon good only In Sootlltrn I Couoon good only In SOUttltrn Callf0tn11 whtrt I Coupon good onry In SO\ltntrn C.llt0tni. I
cauro11111 """' you '" tht mtm you 11,. the r!llMWsl\lp sul 011ht Kentucky wnere you '" tht memoersnlp ltll ti in.
1>e11nlp ... , OI lilt l(tntue~y Fritel C~lelttn Auoclatton 9 Kentueky Frltd Cntcken Auociatlon ..
fllliii'llW_..... __ COUPON -• -----
•_IS!_ntuck.J ;t'ried Chicken ._
PUIUC llTICE
ORANGI! COUNTY
MUNICl .. AL COURT
HA.-J..-Clel Ol1trkt
4691 Jem••r•• aeulever41 ,
New,... -di. Cellto,..I• tU.O PL ... INTIFF: MARC R. TOW
OEFENO.\NTS JAMES
BRIDGEMAN. NANCY BRIDGEMA"' end DOES I 10. tnclvslve.
SUMMONS
flRU AMENDED
C ... H NUMBER.,.,.
NOTICE I You ... .,. --·· Tiie c°"rt mey -I• ... ..,11 ,_ wlt-t
, ... , Ml"I '*'"' ...... u -..._. wltllln • uy .. R-llMI letwm.irt .. 11 ...... . II you w1111 to -k Ille iMl•lce ol en
1ttorney In t+l11: metter1 vou 1houd do
•O promplly so that your written
rupon~ ti eny, mey be Hied on llmt,
AVISOI Ua..t M tide •me...S.d9.
l!I trlkMI _... d9cldlr contn U4.
tin eudlucla • mo1101 que Ud.
rHpollU •11tro • JO di... Lu la h•formeclon q• sl-.
SI Usttd Otwe '°'lcller ti con1<tlo O•
un •£>09td0 ft'1 tstt •sonlo. dllberl•
n•certo lnmeo1at1imtnt•. de @'U•
m•n•ra. 1u respur,•• 1Krlt11,. "' ha'f
11oun•. o~ y.r re9•'t,.adl • tiempo
I TO THE DEFENDANT e civil comp1e1nt ,.., lll•d by Ille plelnlltf
•c:i•1MI you II you wl\11 to oei.nct ltllt
lawsuit, you must within 30 o.rs attor
thl' \vm~ l1 serYflJ Of"I you, f1lr
..,Ith thl• court • wrlth!n rHl>CIM• to
the compl•lnt. Unl•u you 00 so your
t11tt•ull wlll be •ntereo on appl1Catlon
ot the pl•1nt1H. and th!\ court may
•nter e 1udQITM!nl •oalml you tor Ille
reilel oomencted In the complaint, #hlch could rflUlt in c;iornl•hment ol
N4Qtl, taklnQ ol money or property or
other rettet r equ~it•O In the
complalM.
D• TED O«emlltr 29, '"' J, Peter\On,
C~r~
By V L 0 1,.,,t'O,
Dti>oJty LAW OF,ICES OF
114.t.RCR TOW
eruo G. "-"· EtQ. ,,., D•.,.Stt"Mt,
Fourth F-,
New Port 8Mcll, CA fl..O
(7U > 7U·J<l1J
Publl .. ...O Oran90 COol•I OdilY Pilot.
Feb 1, ~. 1&, 13. 1"7 1'1-81
l'VIUC NOTICE
SUPERIOA COURT Of' THE
STATE OF CALI FORNI ... FOil THIE COUNTY OF ORANG IE
711Clvk c ... tor Orho West
$elltl Alte, Cellto"'1a tJ701
PLAINTIFF MEREDITH WI LLS,
DOLORES YOUNGER, lndlv1dull•,
WILLS .\NO YO U N G ER
INVESTMENTS••
OE F ENOANT HA L FAEELANO,
BRU CE JOlllES. lndt•1duel•,
CALIFORNIA INVESTMENT
LEASING CO~PANY , INC , a
Corpor auon. encl OM• 1 thrnuoll 30,
fnctu\IV~
SUMMONS
CASIE NUMB Ell 1Sl11•
NOTICE! y., M•• -...... Tllo c ... r1 m-. *<'-... 11111 yo11 wlt~t
yMlr '61.,. -rd ""'°'' you r<KjMNMI wltllln JO uys.. RH41 llM tftformallOft .......
tf you w1sn to W}e'k t~ .tc1-..1ce of •n
,.uo,.n@y in thi\ malt~r. '°" should do
\O p,.omptly $0 tt\.tt your wr+tten
r•iponse. It •n~. m•v be flied on·
Hmt
AVl~t Vlted IM tldo .................
Et lrl .... nel .,.-W<ldlr cOftlro Vd.
1111 ••lllo11cla • meno1 •u• Ull.
respe1141• ..,t,... de JO dlu. L• ta
tlOformeclon q• "-SI Usteo OIHH \OllC 11 ... , coni.elO.,.
un abo9ad0 en e~tt a\unto deberl•
nacerlo •nmrdta1•mt'n••· Oe •i•e
m11n•r•. w r~\OUltSt-4' Merit.. \I h•v
alc;iuna, ~ ier reQlstraoa • tiempo
NOT1c'e OF DEATH OF
LORETTA THUDIUM
BICKELHAUPT AND OF
PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A-1 12017.
To all heirs ,
beneficiaries, creditors and contingent creditors of Loretta Thudium
Bickelhaupt and persons
who may be otherwise
interested in the will
and/or estate:
A petition has been filed by Allan A. Sigel 1n the
Superior Court of Orange
County reQuestlng that
Allan A . Sigel be
appointed as personal
representative to
administer the estate of
Loretta Thudium
Bickelhaupt (under the
I n d e p e n d e n t
Administration of Estates
Act). The petition is set for
hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Center Drive, West, in the City of Santa
Ana. California on March
3, 1982 at 9:30 A.M.
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearing and '!>tate
your objections or file
written objections witt} the
court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
1n person or by your
attorney.
PUIUC NOTICE
NOTICE INVITING 8101 Nollce h hereby given 11'1•1 Ill•
&o•fd ol Tru\l•H of Ill• cont
Communtty Col9-Olslrlcl of Orenot
Cou11ty, Cetlfornl•. wilt re<elv• ... 1.0 bldl yp to tt.00 e.m .. W•dnoMtey,
Fobru•ry l•, 1"2 at Ille Pur<llMlng
Dopert"'*"t 111 said coll090 dlalrtct
loc•led el tS'IO Mam• A•Ofluo, cone
Mu•. Celllorlll•. et .. l\l<.h limo Hid
bld1 wlll be PVll41cly -""" eno rMd
tor:
PlllNTING & BINDING OF
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE CATALOG. t9'2-t3
All bids ere to " In eccoroence wllll the Bid Form lnll•ucllon• and
Conclltlons end Speclflcetlons whlct'I
••• now on Ille end may i. -ur..:I In
Ille office 111 Ille Purclleslng A911nt ol' salo coll-dl\lrlcl,
Eech l>lddtr must 1ubmlt with his
bid • ce.>lller's che<k, urtllht<I Cheek,
or blOOer's bone! m-peyebt• to Ille
o"'•r ot the Coe\I Community COl'-
0 Isl rlct Board ot Trust .. , In an
emount nQ4 le" ltwn live percent 0"'1
ol Ille •um bid •• • 9u•r entH Ille! IM
bidder ..,Ill enter Into tllt proe>ot«t
Conlrect II lne .. ,,.. is ewarclod to
l\lm In tile O'ftnl ol l•lluro to enter
Into such contreci, Ille proc..O• ot tllt
che<k wlll be tortelleo. or In Ille t.se
of • bond, 11\e lull lum tnoreol will be
lortello<J to wold colleoe dlftrlc I
lllo bli:'<ler may wlthdr•w his blcl tor
a period of lerly·ll•• 101 d•Y• ttlwr
Ille date l<tl for Ille opening trier.of.
Tht 8""rd ol Trustus reMrvH the
f•l•lio90 111 rtle<tlng eny afld all bids
or to wah* .tnv '"tQul•rltl•1 o'
lnform•llties i" •ny bid or •n ow
biddi119
"' NORMAN E WATSON S.Crflarv,
8""rdol Trustee• Coesl Community
College Olllrk t Publl\hecl Or•090 C.,.st Delly Pllol.
Febru•ry 91 l•, 1'82 ~Jl..tl
PUIUC MOT£E
NOTICE INVITING
SEALED l'ROl'OSAL.S t810$)
FOR THE CONSTRUCTIOM 0,.
SANO CANYON AVl!NUIE
WATER TlllAMSMIUION MAIN
SANTIAGO AQUEDUCT PAR ALLI! L
TO IRVINI! Cl!NTl!R DRIVE
l"RG.ll!CT NUMBER U17t Jllfl THI! IRVINI! RANCH WATER OllTRICT
IF YOU -ARE A
C REDITOR or a~
contingent creditor of the deceased, you must file
your claim with the court
or present it to the personal representative appointed by the court
wlth'in tour months from
the date of first issuance
of letters as provided in
Section 700 of the Probate
Code of California. The
time for filing ·claims will
not expire prior to four
months from the date of the hearing noticed above.
NOTIC.E IS >lEREBY C.IVEN tnet th• Irvine Renell W•l•r o .. trlcl
lnvilel and wtll rtcolv• se•led pre>PO$al• (bld•I up to the hour ot 10.)0
A.NI. on it. 'Ith O.y ol Merell, t..n, •I
IM olflcr ot lfW EnglMer/Archit..:t,
as Qinn below, lor tumlslllng to .. Id
Olslrlct ell trensportallon. meterlal1,
tQulpmtnf. l~bor. services. •nd
w119t1tt neouary to comtruct "'"' work lor tr.. 01\trlCI. et wlllcll llm•
said prooowls will be publicry opened
and read e-.it tne office of.
lrvlne Rencl\ Water Ol"rlet
1880'1 Bar-A-YOU MAY EXAMINE
the fife kept by the court. If you are interested in the e state, you may file a
reQuest with the court to
receive special notice of
the inventory of estate
assets and of the petitions,
a ccount s and reports
described in Section 1200.5
of the Cal1forn1a Probate
Code.
Dennis Booth; Allan A .
ir vino, Cellfornl• 9171$
Saki OIOi lllall conform to ana be
••"'°"''~ to lllt conlrect OO<u..-nts tor .. Id work H lle11!1olort approvod
by ••Id Ors trlcl and mull be •«ompanlf<I by IM s«urlly reterre<I
to therein
COPi.\ 01 tnt cont re< t 00<um.nts ere
on Ille and may be tum1ned In ltw
offlu of tne Oislrk t and In tr.. offlco
of the Enolneer/Arcllllect al Jolln
Carollo Enc;i;neeo, tOMO Werrwn A .. ,
Suite 100, Fo..w11ain Velley, CA n10t
Copl .. may tit pUrct\aw<! el the
office ol Ille Engl.-r/Archlte<l by
peymont 111 '30.00 per wt end !hi• con
h not retundable r•c;iardlUS ol
NM1'4' t716LK
NOTICI! TOCREOITORI
OP BULK T•ANl~aR
11eu . .itt•t•1 u.c .c.1
Nol le• rs ,,.,.by given lo "oclttorl of
tllO •llt>tn n......o .. ,, ... ltlM • 1>111-
lrenat•r I• eboul to bo med• on
P•"onet proP•rh 11er•l11etter
deKrlti.cl.
The nemes end t>ustnou _,.., Of
tllo l11undld tran~ror1 ere· Rlcherd tnd Grotc,,.n _..,.,
IOU Beker. COiie Mase, Cellfornlo .,.,.
Tll• netnn end bln~s -rHs of
the lnte-lrensl•,.... ere:
Ctwng ~ -Seunc;i Soot. L .. , H H Funhlll Clrcte, Apt. A,
Hunllnc;iton llM<ll, CellfonlU. ,, ...
Tll•I lllO property POr1ltwftt h•roto It doscrlbo<I In 911norel ... furniture,
fl•tures1 equipment, tr•O•n•me,
QOOdWlll. loese , lee••hold
lmptovem•nts, covenent not to
compete -frenchlM. end Is locetod et· IOI$ Bel<.,, COiie Mew, Celllornle
'26U
The b~""' neme u»d tty Ille l•ld
trensferors al Mkl loc•tlon 11 ALT""
OEHA DAIRY
Thh bulk trtMI•• f\ subloct lo
Celltornla Uniform Commorclal C-
S.<11011 •tO.
That Hid bulk trensfer ls lnt•-.i to
be conlumm•I~ •I Ill• olltce 111
SERVICE ESC.ROW COMPANY, P 0
Bo• 118, Wutmlnste r, Celllornl•
'2.aJ. on or ettor Merci\ t. "'' Th•t IM I.st d•t• '°' flllnQ ctelml In
the etctow rtf•rr•d to ,,_r•tn h
February 1•. 1911,
So I•• •• I• known to wld lntenOe<I Tren•l•r9" wld Intended Trelltleron u...i th• totlOwlnc;i ecldltlonet buslnen
nemu and addreues within'"" thr.-
YH" last ~I none
Oettd Fet>ruery 3. 1"2
Cllanc;i Sue> LM
5eunQS«*LM
tn1..-frenslen•H
SERVICE EICROWCOM .. ANY 142128Mdl81'111., w ............ cetr ....... '241'
Publllhed Or•ncie co .. 1 Oa11y Pilot,
Fobruary 9, 1"2 .,.,.,,,
NMIUJ
FICTITIOUS 8UltNl!SS
NAME STATl!MIENT Tllo lollowlnQ per-ere OolnQ
buslneu •~: W0008RIOC.E TOWNHOMES, I 7100 GlllC'lte, I rvlne, (A t17U. W•rmlnQIOn Men_,.,_, Company,
• CelllornlA corporetlon, 11100 Giiien•
A•e .. It vine, CA 911U
E G Wermln9ton EnhrPrh*'
lncor-oo,.•1•d , a C•tltorn ta
corporetlon, 17100 Glll•tt• Irvin.-, CA .,,,.
T111~ buSlnou " conducted by • llmll•d par'lntrv>lo.
CorPoretlon N•-:
wenntnQton --ment
C.-Y
JarnH P Wermlnc;iton Pre1tdent
CClrJ)Or •lion Heme E G Werml"910f'
EnterprlW\ tncor-•led
E G W•rmlnQton Prt\lclent
Thi\ •lal""""'I w•> 11100 wllll IM
CounlY Clerti ol Oranoe County on Jan
'1'I 1911 ""'u Publl•lled Or•090 CoH1 Delly PllOI. Feb 9, 1&, 23, Merell 1, IW? •U.fJ
PVIUC~
Sigel, One Wilshire Blvd.,
Suite 2323, Los Angeles,
Ca . 90017; tel : (213)
624-0262
...... ,,., Ille plaM -~lllcollom NOTICE OF MARSHAL'S SAU
ert roturr""' Ne. nu•z
Plans •11<1 spe<llic•llon• will be PLAIHllFF El OORAOO BANK, :;'.~1::;,"':':', ·~·d:~,~~511;~ • Cellfomle cor-•tlon.
(nonre1..-) lo cover Ill« cost ol DEFENDANT. JOHN RODEFFER,
Pubhshtd °'"'-Gout Oellv PllOI po\tage end "-dllnc;i •I •I I TO THE DEFENDANT A <lvll Feb 2, J,9, 1"2 14 Under the pro•11ions ot Ille By virtue of en Ue<utlon 1""911 on
compl4lnt ha• oeen llleo by '"" Calltornl• Ulllor c-. Ille Dlr.ctor of Jenuary t . "" by the Muntctp•t pl•lnllll -IMI you 11 you .. 1111 10 Ille Oepert,,,_.o# 1-rlaLRAJteu.-~~o~u;r~t'.. Cenlrel JudlCl•t Olslrlcl, defend tnl• 1'•w•ui11 you mu•t. within ____ ,...._,....,....,.... __ ,...._, hu O.ltrmlnod the prev•lllr111 r•t• al Coun of Orange, Steti on:illrorftfi,
JO den -r 111 .. "'m"'°"' is W!rncl NllJC llflC( ••Ott tor tne lo<alitY In whlc-rt the upon • l~I enttre<I In ltvor of
on you, file with lhl• court a wrlllen wor-h lo bit pertorm.o end the trvlne EL OORAOO BANK, • Celllornla
rell>O"!W 10 tllt complaint UnlflU you R•n<h Water 01\trtct has •doell4'd Hid corporetlon M IUOQ<Mnt croclfto" •net
d<>M>, youro.teultwllltM!enterfllon l"S916 pr•••ltlnc;i rate of ,._, A COPY 01 IQalnst JOHN ROOEFFfll end
eppllcallon ol the pl1lnl1H end thl• NOTICE CM' TRUIT!Ell'S IALIE the~ P•tvtlllnc;i ratH are on Ille et It. K ... THY ROOEFFEll .. jud;ment
court may rnter a juOQmont eoatn<t ..._ f'TA-1• olflce ol the lr•lne Renell Water deblo,., llloWlng • Ml btlell<e 01
you for Ille rell~ oemandtd In Ille On Tllllndey, "*'-'f 11, tta. •I 01\trlct el'lcBl\all I» m.OO •••II• .... to '7 ,043.61 Klualty duo on sakl ludtlm.,.t
comptalnl, which could r•wll 111 11·>0 A.M.. IMPERIAL MNCORP, • eny lnl•••Sled party on r~~\t. A on tllt del• of tne l•s..an<:e of \aid
11ernhhment ot wac;ies, l•td119 of Cettfornte Corporellofl es duly copy of lu<ll wage rat•• shell bo e•ecullon, t heve tevle<I UflOtl •II Ille
monof or propertv or olhor rellef 1191>0lni.ctTrust .. ~Jtl'IClpU,_I posteo on lit• lob•lto by 11'1• rlQl'll, 1111• encl lnlorut ol uld
(O(IUO\ted In lllt compl•lnt to 00.0 ol T,,,.. ~..-F.....,y 17, Contrector judQment dtbton In lllt -r1y In
OATEO· MArc1111, 1'et Hit es instr. No. ao7, 11oo1< tMM, 11 shall IM mendatory upon Ille tilt County Of Oren11e, Siii• of
LEE A. BR,.. NCH. PAOll JO, 111 OHklel Recwa, •11e<wt.M Contrector 10 "'"""' 1,_ c:ontrect 1, Celilornle, clHCrlbed HfoHowf:
I Al PORT OP CONDITION
Consolld•tlno d01T111tlc su~ldl•rln of ttit Ne!Nport
Harbour Natfonol Bink of Newl)Ort 8Hch, In the
1tete of Cellfor11la, at the close of b"slness on 0.C•JJ.'.'lber 31, 1981 published In re$ponse to ull m•dt
'by <:;omptrolltr of tht Currency, under title 12 • Unit~ Sutes COdt, Section 161.
Charter n"mber 16131
National Bank Revlon Number 14
ASSETS
Cash ant,t di.It fro~
Donar Ameun1s
In ThouSMd&
depasltory Institutions ...••. . 2, 1f9
.. .. 92
• 1SO
U.S. Treasury 'ecurltles ....
All other securities ......•.... Federal funds sold and securities, purchased under agreements
to resell , ....... , . , ........... . 4,865 a . Loans, Total (excluding
unearned Income) . . • . .. • .. . 3USS
b. Less: Allowance for
possible loan losses
Loans, Net
Bank prmlses, furniture
and fixtures, and other
333
30,922 ·
assets representing bank premises ....• ,.. . .. 711
A II other assets . .. .. .. .. . .. .. . . . ~. 1,023
TOT AL ASSETS .. .. . .. .. .. .. 39,882
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of lndlvlduals,
partnerships, and corPoratlons .
Time and savings deposits of Individuals.
4, 137
partnerships and corparatlons. 29,547
... 20
. 801
34,SOS
All other deposits ............ .
Certified and officers' checks . . .
TOT AL DEPOSITS ..... .
Total demand deposits .
Total time & savings del)osits
4,958
29 547
All other liabilities ........... . . . 577
TOTAL LIABILITIES
<excluding subordinated note<;
and debentures> . . . . . . . . . . . 35,082
EQUITY CAPITAL
Preferred stock
No. shares outstanding -None
Common stock a. No. shares authorized 675,000
b. No. shares outstanding S00,000 ,(par value) 2,500
Sur,plus ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.SOO
Undivided profits and reserve
for contingencies and other
capital reserves ........ . (200)
4,800 TOTAL EQU ITY CAPITAL ...... ..
TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO
EQUITY CAPITAL ... , ... , ..... 39,882
MEMORANDA <amounts outstanding
as of report date)
Standby letters of credit, total
Time certificates of deposit
987
in denominations of
S 100,000 or more . . 22,069 Tota I deposits. .. . . . . .. .. . . ........ 33,668
we. the undersigned directors attest the
correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by
us. and to the best of our llnowledqe and belief is true
and correct.
'SI Madine Carpenter
SI William A. Schmidt
t sl Richard Flagg
I, Thomas E . Gruenwald; Vice President and
Comptroller of the above-named bank do hereby declare that thi'!> Report of Condition is true and
correc.t to the best of my knowledge and belief 1 /s/ Thomas E. Gruenwald
1-29-82
P-Or-Coelll Dally Pllo4, Fob.t, ~'1-«t
Ml.IC NOTICE
NMt7•
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Of' aUUlTRANSf'IEll
tl«I. ~•M1 u .c .c.1
Nol le o 1' here«>y 9lven to creditors 01
Ille wltl\ln ..-tr.,..1ter11r• 11\al e
bulk trenster I• about to be m-on
ptr1ona1 proptrt't f't•r•ln•ftet
dot<rtbed
TM n6me'l •nd bus1n.si •ddrrss of
lne lntendt<I tren~teror. ore
J~ and Fleur Yfl9'\lay•n. tl4JS
Jeffry Road, lr•lne, C•l1lorn1• 91714
Tllo l~tlon In Calllornla ot tho
chief e .. cultve olfict or orlnclpel
busln•n oftl<• ol Ill• 1nttri<1to
trarulororts· .. mea.atJow
All other t·.u,ntft•S.' n•m•t-end
eoor•l\t\ ~••Cl by tn. onl•noed
tr•nsferOf\ w ithin thrH ~ear' l•st
pelt so l•r u ~-to the 1n1enooo tranifHM•,.. ~ ..ifft• n•nw •nd re,•O•nce of t1'• lntend.o tr.en.U.ree .,...____ _
Touran Sa ta h i R•n1bar. 9Sl1
M•rc;iaret , Cyi>,'tu, C•lllornt•.
CellfortW•~
Thel lhe pr_.iy C>1Prtlnenl llOroto I•
dH<rlbed In QeM'•' •• LUNCHEON
RESTAURANT end I\ localed •I
,,,.lS Jeffry R....O, Irvine, Celllornl•
"'" The businHs name u...,d by Ille ••Id
tr•nf.feron at 1•kt •oc•tlon i\
JASOHS LUNCH BOX
Tllel said bulk transtor I• 1ntl'1ldtd to
bo consummtted at tho 0111ce ol ESCROW ENCOU,.TEAS. INC., 11310
Boach Btv<I., Hunt111gto11 Buel\, Celllornle .,,._, on or f!ler Merell I,
"" This bl.i" lr•nsfor IS Sllbl•CI 10
Celltornla Uniform Commorrlel C°""
Section •IOI>
Ti.. nome -•OdfeH Of ,,.. perwn
wllll whom ctelm• may ti. filed "
ESCROW ENCOUlllT E RS. 17'10
Beech Blvd . Huntington Beectl,
Ceutornle 91(,47, -lhe lest day tor
1111"11 <1•1"11 try any c1'9<1ttor •fllill it.
F•brua ry U , 1981, wlltth h lh•
bllsln.,s dtY befort tht conwmmellon
date •pee 111..i abOv~
Dele<I F-....y 1, 19'2
Touren s.1e111 ll•nlN •
1n1..-rranJfel"ff
isCltOW ENCOUNTERS, INC.
''"' •oec.11 ....... H..W ...... lleKtl, (e. ftM1
•K-Ne..1 .... P
Publllhocl Or•• (Otll Dally PllOI, Fet>rueryt, 1'92 .,.,..,
PUU NOTICE
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
CALLING l'OR 8105
S<hoot 011lrlct: COAST COMMUNITY
COLI.EGE DISTRICT.
Biii ONclllne: 11'00 A.NI. 111 Ille I Ith
OeY of -ell, 1"2. l>te<e of IMd llo<.•lpl OFFICE OF
THE PUllCHASING AGENT, MS.
M ... RIAN PERRIN. COAST
COMMU,.ITY COi.LEGE DISTRICT,
1J70 ADAMS AVE., COST ... MESA. CA
91'14
Proiect ld•f'l1ittc ahon Jr\famc OR ... NGE COAST COLLEGE
800KSTORE FIXTURES ANO
EQUIPMENT.. BtO N~? ......
Piece Pion> are on Ill• Office of
Plly\lul Fecllltlos PiennlnQ (Trelter
Complu>. Ooon A or 8, Jolln Potter,
Director, Cotst Community COll•Qe
OIUrlct, 1l10 .\dem• ,...,. . Costa
Mesa.CAt74a
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ltwt
the •bOve·Mmod Scl!Ool Otstrlc I of
Orenoe Cauntv. c .. 11orn1e, •<I~!>¥
end throuc;ill IU GO•ert1ln9 B.,.rd.
ll•rein•lttr •••••••cl to ., "OISTRICl," Wiii te<el•• UC> 10, but not talrr ,...,, tilt a!>cwo-stt-.i limo .
.. aled bid' tor I~ awerd ol • contrec I for tht ebove pra,e<I.
B Id> >hell I» re<elved In tho pie«
1~n1111..i ebove. and sll•ll be --end publicly reed etoud •I 11\e
ebove.tteteo II~ •nd piece.
Tiier• wlll be • U0.00 dep0\11
roq11lre<1 tw ee<h wt of bid document'
to guarantte th• rolurn In c;iood
condition within 10 days after Ille bid
openlnQ clet• CHECKS ONLY/NO
CASH
Eech Diel mull conform end be
'""'°"''.,.to tl>e conlrecl ~u,.,,..,h. E•ch bid "'•II be ec;compeni.cl by
tno \tcurlly r.terreo to in IM conlrect
cloc umfntJ <I"<! b'r t~ 11,1 of prOl>OM<I
1ub<ontrector>. The DISTAICT rewr•t• ,.,. rlQl'll to
reje<I any or ell bid• or lo welv• any
lrrtt uterll!H 01 lntormellhe• In ""Y
blO\ or In llWI bkldlnQ.
Cler-by; MOHAMMAD OAOASHZAOEH ewordo<I, end upon any •ubconlrector l.OI 19 of frecl 'ISO H otr ~orded
By·J.Oatlre, end EHTRAM HIEJ ... DHASHEMI unoer him, to pey not less then Ille ln8oot-.JtlP-sJStol7,lll(futlv•,of i----... -IUC--lillllli-flC_( ___ _
()eputy OAOASHZAOIEH. lluSllencltntlWll•es sptclll•d r•les to ell workmen mlt<ell-. ,,_, In IM llffk• Of .... ftlll
The OISTlllCT ne. oblelned from
Ill• Director of the Oeparlrnonl 01
tnClu•lrl•I R•letlons Ill• 11•neret
proalllng rel• of per Cll•m •tOe> In
tllt locellty In wt>tch this work Is to be pertorrNCI for tech craft or tyoo ot
workma" needed to •••<ute th•
contrect. T,.._ r•IH •rt on lilt et 11'1•
DISTii ICl Offlu toc•l~ ., Coe JI ComMunlly College Ol•lrtct, IJ70
Adems ... _. COii• MtY, CA '7424
Coe>I" mey be Otllelno<I on r~uost A
copy of tfle9e retH shell be po>lod •I
IM jotl\lle.
MACKEY & ALPERT lolnl tenents n ltldtor(•I, In h oftlc:o employed by !Mm In Ille ue<utton of lllO County RecorO..-In tr. tounfy of P-----..... ----.......... -
1S7t1 RI--. ... °"'""· t tll• C-'Y Recorder of 0rMlf ,,,. contrect. ~•noe: "'P No. ~n·tl
ftll "-· 011n1Y. Stile of C.lllornte, WILL Ea<ll bid or PnlC>Olel melt be mllde Moro commonly known u 1
Sllffm ... ~.cat-•••4J1 !ELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO out or Wbmli.<I one form furnltMd Rlmro<k, Clly ol lrvll'lo, C4ul'llY Of
121lltel.-HIGHEST lllOOER f'OR CASH etpertofll\tcontrecldocllmOnb,enct Orenoe.StetealCallfoml•
Publl•lied ()r-(out D•llY Pilot, (peyaltlo •I "-of .... In l•wful mu\I be KC-led by • CHiiier's NOTICE IS HERE&Y GIVEN tMI J~n J•. f'tb ) •. 16, 1911 01·8' y OI mt Ut1lted Sl•lffl et. lNI cllec•. • artllled <lleell. or a bklO.r's on Tuts$y, Merell l'lld, 1'112 11 ) 00
-ro"t of IM .. UUAL THRIFT end boncl In en emount not loss lllen 10'!1. of o'clocll p,rrf et County Cour1f>IMISe,
PUIUC llTJ;E LOAN bulldlno et 102 Wett First Ille •mount of Ille bl<I, m-peyeble l.o ..01 Jembor• 8ouleverd, II'""'' "'
troot, Twtln, Cellfornle tt..O •II IM order of. or tor the lteMflt of. uld CourtllouM), City 111 .,._l!Ort &Mell,
ltfll. tltte..., ~I con .. ,.... to Olstrlct,esthtuwmeybe, •nd .. cll CounlyofOrenge,SteteofCailfomle.t
MN.m.. now ....., by 11 -Mid Deed of blO or -• ,,..11 be M•le<I end ... 111 sell et P\A>llc euctton to IM 1119f!fft "CTtTIOUS BUSINIEU Ttldl 111 IN cir"'911Y tltual.ct In Mid 111~ llll l~ •-I I -DI t kl bidder, for cell\ In lewful -y of Ille ..... /o\E STATEMENT tv--' ••~e-rllled H : "" w ,,. _,,,. ery o me 1 r United S!Allos, ell IM flQhl, Ill .. end Tll 1 11 1 0 1 • """' ,,_ et or before tt. time In tlllt nottco • o ow nQ P<l"0n• •r• 0 n; Tiie East 90.00 f-1 ot IM Wost )10. provlclod. n.e ebow ,,,..,oonoc1 ,,.00 Interest ol Mid fudgrnoftt Cletlllon tn
bulinoss es. ft91 o1 ""Soutll 41&.00 f.-t of tot !f ......._11 tit QI•*" ., ouerentoe IM •bO.,. ducrlbecl projler1y, or '°
AVALON Mill~fVRti.G. tt F•lr•-F"""9, •• _,,,,.m. tllet Ill• blcl<Hr Wiii ... ,., Into • mucll tllt~ .. may be PltUSMry to
Corporal• PIAa, Suite 210, Newport 111 a... I, P1tgt 71 of Mll«t'-Oll contrecl wltll Ille Olstrtct If ewero.ct uttsry said uecutlon. wllh eccruect
Beech, t:e, 92660 epa In IM offtet of Ille (6UM lnt•rHl -Cotts. Assoc le ltd Beverage Company, Recor~ of MIMSCouftty. .-th• work. elld will II• dn '•'•d Dated: 1'4'1rvMY i. Itel
tnc. t• O.lewero corporellon>. n70 Tit• tlr••I tddr•o encl otlt• lorlelt•d If th• •vccu1ful ltldd•r Herbor Olvl\lon
E•st 2•tttStr .. t. Ver-.. C•. 9002J omrl'IOll Clt9itNtllefl, 11 My, ti refu .. , ""-' tntowldcontrect.
Tiiis bu•lnots It conducted by • ••I pr09trly dffcrllted ltloft 1, Th• loero 01 DlrHt0'9 of Ill• corporollon. .., to 1191 m eon.-. Coat. Dltlrlct -tho rlQM to ,..,le<t
Auoclet.ed Be.,.,. , C .. ltcwtlle, eny encl ell bkh, end towel-. ...., end
eon-iy, '"'· ,. ... ~ Tl'\ltt .. -'1Clelmt •11 lrr-.ilanty In •nv bid.
Honnen M. N .. flOft, lltlllltt; '°' My lllCWl'e<-.. Pullll•hocl OrenQe (OHi Delly Piiot vtca Prosl0...1 atnltt ...,_ ...., otW ,_ Feb. 2,t, n12 su.-:
Tt'llt ftet-'1¥• 111.0 with IM t11elttfl.tteny, ............ n.
county Cl•tll of Orange Coullly on Salct MM wlfl tie m.IM, ._,. wltlltwt ' PlaJC llftC(
.Jltft111rv tS, t"1 • PtlltM ev..,e111 °' werremy, .,......, °' --.......... ______ ,...._
IHU&MANe&.L.A lfl'IPI .... =.-:::·==
.,,_, wtfllM l<ltwektu>N lnct..i """ ot .,.. ,...<•> _.,.... , .. A_ .............. 7lt .... ~ .. T,,., ..... -...
Ut AfltlllH., C.. • ...., !Mr-, ff P"l'tldld lfl Mid Mllit(ll
Putllltltlcl Or#!Ot Coast O.lly Piiot tll!llMOI, If ,,,,.,, .............. et
Jen f•, at. ,,..._ 2, t, "'' »'"'2 teld o... o1 T""'.1 ._, <fir• -
•• ,... ... If .. T Nllllle ... Of IM
tfVlb ~ W .._ ~ .. Trt1tt
.... "" ,,.,... ... ...,. .. lfNt .. ... ,= ..
l'M . ..,,. ~ .... °""'"' ,.AMe ITAftUllT' Trul lttrtttftrt enc11t•• .,.. , T ... 1011-1119 ,_,_, .... dtlflt ~I""""' W tM _..,..,...a .........
bullnttUI. Df<let .... tit Opf*lll Md ~ o. 9ARl'lllG ... , ... ,RISU, .., .......... wrlttM Netlce ..
t0'1t$!0ull •l•.,,...._llt"ll .. y, CA OefMAt _,. ~Mt'-tt .. II Tiit
tt1& ...... ....., • ..,..,~ ....... ..
O 8Alf/lllO llcfe.R"?'IHS, • OeftMjtt ._ 1~141!1 " ... I te ..
C.llfernl• "'"""•ti.ii, ..._ Sltlla ,..,... 111 tltl ~...,. h ,..,
Rl,_,,.....wv......,,CAf90t. ,,....,'9llallllll.
Tith IMlllMU It C~..-1 lly t ~ ,,__.,,~"* ~"".-e:'iA.wtO ll'ITUlfl•tSH l#tltlAI. t.ANClOttfl ..... , .... ~ :r.:::-c. " ..... n11t.........,.. -lllH Wlttl.. to*-e:::Of.
Clllflt• C-..elCW-... CMlty Oii JM. = ~~1•1171
"· ttn. ..._ ,_., l'JO) .....
.......... Or ... c-. .,...., """ .......... Or ..... c.. 04fly fllllt, Jell .... ,.. 1, ... ,. ,.,.... ....... ~n.... .ttMli
PICTITIOUI auso1ua
NAM• STATaMINT
Tit• lotlOWlng oortoftt ,,. dOlno
autlneuet.
SKATE MANAGIM~T
PROPERTIES, 1901 '"''' t.eno, AnelMIM,C.,.,_
Rollef'l I!. ~r. 1'tlt Sen a1e1,
MIHIOll Viejo, Ca. '2'9t
Rotlln IE. OsllwM, 1'571 ........ o.1ve, Mluton v1e1o. ca. m1s
Oor•IO fl C.,r.,, •NO H-til!Ot ftMll,OrMQlt,Ce.mt'
RoMl'I IC. lllloO, lflt T,....u..,
1AM,5aflUAM,C1.~
Tltll ll\lt111 .. 1 II C~lltttd W t ..,....., ,,.,_.,,ljl,
Oer ... ~.CWTM,
'"""*"' Thh ~ -flled WIUI tN COllflt, Cterk of o .. _. c:-11 on
JMwtry "· ltb. .. ,..,,
-..-
DOn f . RltM,
Mersltel, Orlfllll County Geretd w. "-"Oii,.
11002 LA l"H Ad. SUit. U.,
Mlulon Vteto. ca. '26fl ow tJ14)11
llublltlteO Orenvt Coelll o .. ,, l"IMM,
f'tll.9. 1',U, !Wt tlH1
~ L----
SURl"UIS .. ROl"ERTY SALE
•aouHT ~OR BIDS .. OR
THB SALIE 01' SUR .. l.US
.. ltO ... R'TY
COAST COMMUl'llTY COLL•O•
OllTRICT
fft.W-.A-
C-.. MeM. Cell..,,...
Pur•uanl lo C•llfornle Educotlon c:-Sections 11,..:1, 11441, ¥c1 11~.
no(k• ts hof'eciiv QI..,, ltlal th• CoeJI
Community Coll-Ol•lrlct 111 0 r6"9e county, c.lltornr•. •Ill rK•llt• ..., to, I llO lelff.,..,, tt:OO e,rfl,, Moft<ley,
Merell I, "" ""''" btch lo< tho sate of:
<OUNd~
Wflkh 11'9...,, O.Cl•rod surptu' lo lllt
MHt Of Ille 1>111r1<1.
lllditllllt lltJtr~ll.,1 end ltld lormr
ere •••II•• from lllo Purche•l"11 Oepef'llMM et the .tllow -...s~ Cali
Mn. ,..,,111. 1'141 Ht·SHO lor
9'dclltlonel lt'lfenNtlOll,
/\I NOIUAAN f . WATSON s.cm.ry.
....,,, ot """'"' 1"111111"'*1 Dr' ... C0.91 D•lly Piiot, ,.br.u.rv•, ,., ,,. . , -~
Tll• tor-lnQ Kheclllle of par diem
wec:i-s Is beM41 upon • worittnQ cley of
•IQM m houn, TM .... fOr llollde y
end ov•r11me wart! INll IN! el leest
llmt•nd-11 .
It lhell bo m•nd•lory upo11 1110
CONTll!oe'TOR le wltorn tho COl'lrec:t
Is ewerded, end 11po" en y
sub<ontrllCtor unOer lllm, to pey not
t .. 1 lllen tN 'Miki ~lfi.d r•I., IO •II wottimt11 .....,1oyeo by tt.m In the
.. «utlon of I,. contrec:I.
No ltlddef may withdrew rtlt bid lor
• porlOcl ol tidy (tOI deys efter Ille
d•W Ml lot IM openlnQ of bldt..
A PtY!Nftt bond tnd • partormence
be"d. wlll bo req11lrod ptlor to
•••cullon 01 Ill• conlreCI. Tiie H~ bllfld tNll lie In tM IOttn Ml
-111 tlltc-•tdO<-t~
Gowmltlll .... 1'11 lly Normefl I . WetflOft ~ry.
80tf'll Of Tl'll-• PllbllMld Or ..... GoeJI Otlly Plio.,
'"· '· , •. 1'12 ~
-. -. . . .
Basketball
g o e s: cold
Wooden favors shot clock
By HAL.90CK .,.._....._
lo Uit lut two weeks ln Januury, there were a
dozen collese basketball games In whkh the
wlnnln• Wms •~red fewer than S2 points.
That.Nib of 52, by the way, belonged to Penn
State and the Nlttany Lions managed that total
only because their game against Pitt stretcbe.d
Into two overtimes . The Punthers managed just 48
that night.
Instead of the January thaw. collefe
basketball, like the weatherman. supplied a deep
freeze.
Here's a score from college basketball In
January; Colgate 25, Princeton 24 Takes you back
lo the days ot the two-handed set shot. doesn't it.,
THE SAME NIGHT that Colgate and
Princeton put the ball in the Ice box, North
Carolina Slate beat Georgia Tech 49.4-0 That at
least . was a partial defrostin,g. '
Twice in January, freeilng Maryland has
scored just 40 points in a game w1th different
results. Lefty Ortesel's Terrapins lost in overtime
against Virginia 45·40 but beat Duke 40·36.
Here are some more icicle scores. Top·ranked
Missouri 41 , Kansas 35; St. Bonaventure 30 ,
Rutgers 29; Kentucky 34, Notre Dame 28. in
overtime: Wyoming 27, Brigham Young 25
And. for the piece de resistance. High Point 12,
Elon 10.
High Point., Not that night.
The slowdown is beginning to disturb soml!
serious observers of college basketball The
solution is simple. It may be time to put the shot
clock in the game.
That suggestion comes from no less an
authority than John Wooden, coach emeritus at
UCLA, who won 10 NCAA champions hips
including seven in a row -in his last dozen year!>
on the job.
"Yes, J would favor a shot clock," Wooden
said. "Not 24 seconds like the pros. but maybe 30
or 35 seconds ."
THE FREEZE STRATEGY 1s used by
overmatched tea m s lo prevent ra cehorse
shootouts against superior teams. and it 1s clearly
a valid approach Wooden and other critics
appreciate that. "I can't criticize a coach for us ing
that strategy if he thinks it will help his team," he
said. "But the beauty of basketball is the action
the game provides. And the freeze 1s no action at
all."
That's exactly the point. Fans are paying full
price for a game and shouldn't be forced to sit
through a game of catch which simply shortens the
real playing time in the game.
"I remember one year North Ca rohna State
and Duke played a game," Wooden continued
"They were both fine teams. but they played a
freeze game. The halftime score was 3·2 and the
final was 7-5. 1 think. That ·snot right, for two ftne
teams to play a game like that. ..
That game -the actual score was 12·10, N C
State -was played in 1968 in the Atlantic Coast
Conference tournament On the other coast at the
time. Wooden's Bruins were in the midst of a
47-game winning streak. Later there would be an
NCAA record 88·game winning s treak with
powerhouse teams led by Kareem Abdul·Jabbar,
then Lew Alcindor and later Bill Walton that could
blow you right off the court. Natur ally, some
opponents tried to freeze UCLA out of those
winning streaks.
"SURE, WE FACED IT," Wooden saul The
way to handle it is with a pressure defense not a
full C'lrort-press--:-btrt -an aggressive. -pre~sut'e
defense. And when you get the ball, dvn't shoot
wildly Just play your normal game. taking good,
high-percentage shots "
Or, you could put 1n rules that would force the
other team to play the game the way 1t wa ~
designed to be played. instead of turning the ball
into an oversized ice cube. A shot clock, forcrng a
team to surrender the ball every half minute or so,
would achieve that.
The teams in over their heads would squawk,
of course, because it would deprive them of a
chance to steal a game. But a more sensible
course would be for weak ·sister tea ms to
schedule opponents in their class instead or tryrng
to knock ore the heavyweights with boring ball
R eaga n salutes
1NHL players
WASHINGTON <AP> -President Reagan
seemed as impressed with his National Hockey
League guests as the officials and players of the
NHL were with him.
And the president, ever the entertainer -he
even skated in practice with an NHL team while
making a movie back in 1939 -made everyone
feel at ease with his opening remarks at a
luncheon he hosted Monday at the White House.
"IT'S A THRILL for me to see Gordie Howe ...
Reagan said , referring to the legendary right wing
who retired two years ago at age SJ. "l remember
my mother taking me by the hand to see him play
"Gordie , would you believe I was a
teenaJ(er?" the 71-year-old chief executive added
amid the laughter or the 40 NHL All-Stars and
assorted league representatives.
Reagan didn't s pare the game's current
superstar, Wayne Gretzky. from his eommenl'I,
e ither.
"Rumor had It that our team here in
Washington is trying to get you," Reagan said to
the 21·year-old scoring sensation. who was seated
at the head table.
"I was told Edmonton gets two first-round
draft picks ... and lhe state of Texas."
The president also saluted the sport.
"This rugged sport has connected the border
with Canada and the United States and it is
somethinJ that should never be overlooked," he
said. "We're more than neighbors, we're trlends.
This sport rep~sents what Is best 1boul that
relaUonshh>."
NHL President John Ziegler presented •
replica or the Stanle~ Cup and an All.Star jersey
wlth the No. l and "Rea1an" printed on it to the
president.
\'111E ONLY WAY ~e roQ)d come clOse to
honorfnl you was to see th.at ~ eot a repUta or
what these cenue.mc .,Ork so hard fol' -lb•
St1nle_y <lip." '
"( thoqht I WIS gettlnt Ute real lhln1." Hld
the pret11Smt. "1 ..,., an>l.lom to have Lt dhpl1Jed
boro."
. -.. ..,..
1 ·
A, .........
A NEW HAT Formt.•r Ood~rr Davt.•\ I.opt•'
triei-. on ha s nt.'\\ Oaklund Yi-. t·ap afll-1 thl·
trade wai-. romplctt•d \tonda ~·
Magic's fans
still booing
By The Associated Press
Earvin "Magic" Johnson , tiis image scarred
three months ago by a messy coaching c hange on
the Los Ange les Lakers, is still s miling his way
through the bas ketball season
"As long as I'm s miling, it means l 'm having
fun on the court." s aid Johnson, whose wide,
infectious grin 1s a s muc h of a trademark a s his
nickname. "The Lake rs are moving and we'r e
e xciting."
THE FACT THAT Johnson believed the team
was n 't moving a nd exciting led him to speak out
bitterly after a loss to U tah Nov. 18, saying he
would r ather be traded than play a half-court
offense with the Lakers.
,.
Orange Cont DAILY PILOT!Tuesday, February 9, 1982
• Andretti to fight l'ICTITIOUI 8UitNUJ IU,.lltO .. cou•T o~ TH• NAM• ITATaMaHT UA'a Ol'CAU'°"lllA l'O•
INDIANAPOI.IS <AP> Une 00 May .... b"l race ''" 10110.1111 111reon " 001n1 n1a~NTY Ol'Ou110• ..,. .. l>U•lnen u tn , ... ._._,. ot "'9 A•Outi.n If lt 's a n e w year but oftlclals penallted him v1010 1>1.u1. ,.,, w1rnor Aw . ION VAN TAAlll
M. l Ad ttl h I r I ~lletl .. HllftClntten8Hcll.C•t1"'1 NoAll2001 rao n re as on e ap or pass na c ars All•• o 0 1111r11 11 .... to1t 0•0•11 To '"ow c Aute Fo11
vowed to cont In u e on the l rac k a s h e ve11nu ... o. M""11nv1en .. ec:,. C:• CHA~I o' NAM•
b.ttll i 1982 f d h It t1MI Wfllf .. ~ IM oetlllOn of S-Ven ng n or move on t t" lrac ·s T111, wslfW11 1. t-..c1ec1 11y.., ,,.AN,, .. -n 111..i w11111tw , .. ,... .,
victory in last May's apron while le~lVlna the lflcll•ick.111 11111 tOurl fOr •n order tll1no1no c 0 n t r 0 v e r • I • ' pit area. AllM o. OllllnUfl•m Pllltlon•r. 111m• from SON VAN
d Tiii• •la'-1 .... , '"" wltll Ula TltANtoJOSO .. VAINOCMANal.. In lanapolia 500 Cfllnty Clerk 01 Oren111 Ctuntv on IT Ill Hlltl8Y 0 110111eo 111a1 ell T he Au t 0 m 0 b i I e _.,. •m Jwwery u. IC De•ttfll lfl•erol•d II\ ... Cl matter
C ~'ti Co I t ..._ I ,..,.,, ..... , -11\h <OUr1 •I 10 ....... , om~ on mm t ee F------------,11011&.1110 O••noe t .. ,, oelty > ,..., .., o.-1,,_, J w ,_ ca11w
tor tbt United States ,1amovs au,1••11 Piiot J•" ''·at F .. t. •. ,.., _.., "'"Y 1111 • ..,..1011• .. r ,,,_.. "'
fi\CCUS) hH d eclined Tiie ,:~!:,~:;:'~, d01,,11 PWl& ll1lC£ M,~1~;:::_~::1°,.,.0 ""' •
to hear And re t ll 's ~.,.,. .... : copy ot 1111\ oro.r 1o '"°"' <•uw be a~peal o r a U.S. Auto 80AT WOtllKS, JOI ~Ill Strffl, publhlllcl O!IU ..... for IOUf IMw110r1 a..dl, Cllllofnl1 fJMJ l'ICTITIOUI a Ullll•H lUCCOtl .. -~t prior to llW NV ol C Ub appeals pane l Oret fle.,y, .ot l •tll SlfUI, •AMatTATIMEllT 1ald llearlno In Tiii Dally l'llot, • d e c i is ion de c I a r in I "••_, 8Mcll, c.i1......, • .,..,, eu!C:..~0~~-1no N''°"' .,. 00•r10 r1•••PaD11 01 Q1ner•1 c 1rcut•110~
Bobby Unser as the 1~~·:.,,:i-• Is c-...,.., bv •" tu.,.1.AM Lill ~ w •·•-llf"~~:':~:!:.~4:"~'Y1:!~'-
winner o f the 65th o,..,......, w1teJU,-PGr1 ... c11 tAn..i llOfotAl.OH PltENHtit
i r th ld' Tiii• .. ......_. w• tll«I with ""' Manlll .,_,,.. 8i•wll 4>4 All'° J .... Ol I ... runn ng 0 fl WOr S COll"IY Clerk OI Or•nte County on Aft., ll-18N<ll. CA'7..i s.-tor tour•
richest auto race. J81l1H1•Y n, nm T~m .. conion B1 ... 11. 4>4 Au.o ..... o""'"
Unser was the r1·r s t "'""' A.,..,H-POrtBM<h.tA., .. > ...... 11eo1M1J• l'Ylllltlleel Orange c: .. ,, !>Illy Piiot, Tiii• bv•lneu 1' <oll<luct•d lly •n At1w11ey 14 Lew
drive r across the finish J..,. u . 1'10. 2, '· "· 1• ,.,. n '"""'1d~· a1swu
"CTIT10UI 8USllllH •AMIE STATIMlllT
Tll1 tot1ow1n11 p1non1 er1 doln11
O..t11141U ... !EUROPEAN PAINtERS, JS6 CHI• _ _. St,, eoti.. -... C• mv
Vllcll .... r Belllk, J1' c .. 11 -.. SI , Cote. MHA. 0 fU17
Jlrl Ileen, 11' Cot11 MeM St.,
CO.II -... CA '2627 T11l1 1>v1tneu II conc1uttec1 by • Qentr1l 1»r1ne<lftlp Vllcllmlr 8etllk by M. Belllk Tllll sletemeftt WH Ill.cl wllll In.
County C:ltrk ol Or1n111 County on
J1nuerv U 1tn
,~TIOU& auso1au
•AMll ITATaMallT
Tll1 tollowtno penon II dolno
blitlnlU .. ;
LOtlU!TTI VANllETTI l TO ,
1.0tlllETTI VANZETTI, Jlt >Sin Str11t Slrlll, N-1 BMch. CA t1...,
LOREnA JO 8ALOIVIA, lit Utll Sir-."-' ... Cll, CA t16'.J
Tiii• """"'" I• <~'"' .,. en lnlllvldu.I.
L.oretta Jo 8elcllvi.
Tiii• st•ment •• Hll4 wllll 1111 County Cltrt. Of Or-Countv on J.,,
"· 1"1. ,,_
Publl-Orenv-c ..... O•llv Piiot,
1'111111 F.t> l, t , ... ll. 1"2 Hl .. 2
Publl-Or1n99 C-•I O•llv PllQt Jen It 1•. F~ l, t, •"1 1n.t2
l'ICTITl®S 8UllllHS
11~ ITATmMlllT
FICTITIOUS IUSfllllS T lie followln11 perton II doln9
llAMIE STATIIMlllT IMlllllfls 11· '
Tiie tollowln11 P•non It OOlflll PROGRESSIVE AVI AT ION O..slneu11 OEV ELOPMENT, >JOI S.1vle•
(II JAYNA ASSOCI ATES· :oronadel-.CAtl•H
E N T E RT Al NE lt S, 11> J A y ltlCHARO A. GAO&OIS Ill, :llDt
MILBURN, 5'01 Wer-A .... Sulle i. .. 1 .... caronaclllMer,CAfUU. SI. Hunt11191<>n 811<11, Ca. '1... Tllll ~NH It conllvctecl I>'( en
J1mes Milburn Smllll, Sl9' P..iue •ndlvlch,.I.
Or ' HunUnvton S.1<11. C• '1... RKlllnl A. Gldbot• 111 Tiii• tiutlneu Is Con<IU<lecJ b~ ... Tllll •lit-I w•t Ill.cl with Ille 1noi.ic1ua1 ::oointv ciert. of 0r.,. County on J.,,
J1mn Miiburn Smltll I 1"2
,.,_.,_ J 81Hlll
Tll~ otet...-1 Wft 111.0 wllll IN
Ctuflly C .. rll ol 0""111 Coointy on
F .. S,I.., "'II* tl'vllll•lled Orenve coe11 Oelly Piiot,
Feb. t, 14, 21, IMr<ll J, 1•~ t l'"'1
l'ICTITIOUI auSlllllfU llAMIE STATIEMEllT
Th• tollowtno per •on t\ do I no
°"''"'"" YAMANO INTEllNAflONAL. 1°'4e
Ape<he Alvtr Av•., Fountain V•lf•y,
Cellt 9210I
Ooneld K Vam.1no. IOUI Ap.c ...
ltl•er. Fountain \'1110 Calif t170I
Tllll bu\lnes6 I• CONlu< 1.0 by •n lncllvldull
OonllCI ll Y""""° Tllll 111..,._I ••> fllt<J wttll ll>e County Clerk ot O,.nve County on
FeO S, 1"2. l'IHM)
PubllSNcl Orenvt C ... \I 011ly Pilot,
Feb t. 16. ll. Maret\ J ,.., s~n
PVIUC llltE
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINIESS llAMIE STATllMl!llT
Tf'1t fotlowlno ~r,on' ar• dolno
0..1lneMU"
CALIFORNIA OIEUl SERVICE, _. H1rtlor Bl•O (Olla Mell CA
'1'1•
n• •-.... _ it.-1
.. ,.U AM, C.....,.,,.•
0141 '41,ltil
PublllNcl 0raft9' c ... 11 OaHy Piiot Feb 1 t , 1'. U, 1'81 j,._t;
PUIUC NOTICE
PUIUC MOOCE
l'tCTITIOUI 8 UllNUI
NAMalTAflM ... T
Tiit loft.wfflt ,......,,, ,,.. de4nt ...., ....... ;
"11110 .. IUTIU WHT MOMa 1.0All, ,_ tttll Stteal, New,.rl
a..tll,c.l ..... mtJ
f'tllOl'EtllTIU wan INC .• Cellterftl• ,.,._etloft. IOI 2"11 \t....t,
New,.,, lee<ll, (;ellto"''• n..1 Tiii' l>VtlMU .. (Ondu~l•d by • (OtPOtttl•n. ll'roflertltt WHI, Inc
0-H 5"'11fl, ,, ......
Tl!lt .UtA'TWll WM lllClf wllll ttw '"""'Y ci.r-" 0r..-oa , ... ,,., Oft J-ryn,1., ,,.,.,.
, .... I,._. °"""' COltf o.llY "llel, J•fl 24. Fell. t, t, i•. ,.., ...,
P'ICTITIOUS 8UllNl\J NAME STATEMENT
l f\.-•ottO•lnQ Otr,on '' 001n9 Tllll 1111..,_I w•\ 111.0 with Ille 1'1-0-IM J Siemer u Orelle• Bev Or , Ce><ona def Ma• CA t14JS --------------1 bu"n•\\. a\ Co..nty Cler-01 Or•nve county on Publlllleel Or.-.ge c,.,.,, Oelty Pllol.
Jlf\ulty u. ,.., F.i> 1, '·I•. n . I'll S4J.ft
Fl11 ... Publllhed Or1"91 C:O.\I O•lly Piiot
Ji n "· 2'. Feb 2 9, 1"1 197.17
NIUC "11Cf
FICTITIOUS aUSlllESS
MAMIE STATIM&llT Tiie lollow1n11 pe,.on h 001n11
bU\IMUaJ· THE COSMIC: GARDEN, lU Uni Sir HI, Nl'#IJQf1 B .. cll, CA '1..i.
OOREEN ANN GUNTHER, 11°"°
OoWNY A-. • !03. htlllowe<, CA to70.
Tllll tiu><ne·u ll C-Y<le<t by 1n
1ndlY~"'-t Oor_,G...,!Nr
l'ICTITtOUS IUSllllSS
llAMIE ITATIMAlllT
'"• foUowu,9 "'"°"' •'• OOfn9 O..•IMH .s
THE AORIAN COMPANY. 107 E
11th Sir-. No 1000. Co.la -.. Calltornl• mn
B Mo Adrlall, 143 St. Clalt
StrMI, COlll Mnl, Callf.,,,,11 ~,. Lucy E . .t.drlen, ... 3 St. C111r
SlrHI, COile Mew. Callfoml• ~· Tiiis 0<i•ln11• I• conouctl<I by •
91ft'ral~P 8 M.. Aclnen
Tll~ ,.....,_, w• Ill.., .. 1111 Ille
County Clerk ot <><•-County on
Jenu1ry2'J, 1'12 Tiii• •u-wu 111..s .. 1111 ttw County Clerll of O<-Co•mtv on Jan .. ,.,.,,
1'1-.n Publl-Or-c~·· O•llV PllOI, 1', 1•1
Publl•-Or-COlll Delly Piiot. J.,. U , Fib. l , t , 1•· lta 377.ft
Feb 1 t. 1'. U ,.., 5-UG
FICTITIOUS auM•ISS
·~ STATEMaNT Tll1 tollowlno per~n h oolno
AUQuot P .. 1 Rot" t)41 WlndH Or
Ora"9fl, CA.,...
TM• Du$1nHs " conou<1eo Dy a OI"'"' P..-tnerlhlp Oauoll• J '>l•mer Tt\11 tlll..,_t "as tlloo w11n tne County Cieri. 01 Or•flO<r Counly on
Feb S, 1"1
P'1'"'7
PublltN<I Or-c ... 11 Dall• Pilot
Feb • 1' 73, March l. IW'l •:i..11
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS
llAMIE STATIEMENT
The foUowlno "'"°"' •rt OOfnQ Dutlneuu LIFEPOWER, tSIOI Htniev Or
westmlMltt, CA n.u Mary -vuml VllWk H•fl. U•OI
Henlty Dr . WHlmlntltt. CA 91.al
Ma re.... Mlf1nl "O " S..rt• 1c1t ct N•wpor1 _,.,,CA '1..0
Tftls Dullneu " conducted DV t
....... 1 ~
-,,vi.w~ H•ft
Tiii• sta-1 "'" t11ec1 .. 1111 1~ Counh Clerk of o,.nqo County on
Fetl S, IC
FICTITIOUS I USllllSS
NAME STATEMENT
fhf' follow tnQ 1Mr\ons •r• OolnQ
blllln•u 11 CENTEq FOR RE11REMENT
PROGRAMS 1:101 Oov• Str"I S..lle
400 Nt•-1 6H<h Calllornia '"'° Aenitit SluT\rr\f'I 4S:OO P•rlll
N•woor1 &e.cn C.alltorr'I•• 92..0 ~AS F1nMK1AI In< a C•liforrtl•
co,.oor•Oon 1J01 Oove Sire-et Su•tit
400 Nt •-1 Bffct\ Calolornl• t2660 q,,_ Stimmel
SAS Flnar.tl1I, Inc
Slt•lf\ A Scott
Pre'\~I
ft\11 •Ill-I ... , 111...S .. 11n '"' Coun1y Cler• 01 Or•noe County on
J..nuery 21. 1"1
Fll1 ...
Publl\necl Ot1not Coe1t Delly Piiot
F•b J t, "· ll. ,.., S,...,
PVIUC llOTICE
P'ICTITIOU$ 8USINIEH NAME STATEMENT
Tnf' toUo-.;1nQ ptor"M>n\ •'• ootn9
tM.n1n•s\ .,. MISSION PLAZA APARTMENlS 17>1 Mll<IWll Slret"I Tu•l•n, C• '7tl0
RANC:O 2,._ 8 .. swood Newoort
Buell, c:..111orn1a 97"60 L v•e Rand•ll, , .. 4 Bauwooo, N•wPOrl Buell. Ctlltornl~ t'/MO
lhl\ bu'\lnHi I\ c.onchJCt•O Oy en
in41•10u4'1 Lv,.qeno.11
Thi' \t•tti'TM"nl w•' fllfld w ill\ tfw Coun1, (110 ot Oret\Qft County on
J•ru.;•rv ts t912 ,,,.,.,.
Publ"lled 0<.,,0t Coelf O••lv Pilot. Jan It, U r~ 2 • 1'111 l1H2
PVIUC •TIC£
l'KTITIOUS IUSllllESS NAME STATEMENT
T "" follow1n9 p•r \on I\ Oolno
bullMHM
MOTIVATION ASSOCIAT ES."°"'
Ola Mill StrMt. lrvlM, C:•lltomll '27 It
Blfb<lta Trt••• SI.,.,., -I Old Miii StrHI, trvlrw C.lltornla '1714
TllJI bu>lr>n• II <ondu<IOO bV •n ll\dlvkfu•I
Ba<t»r• T Sloan fllit f\11-1 .... tllfd Wiit\ tne
County Cltrk ot Or•nve County on
J•nu•r'f •• 1"1 P'1'12'4 Publitlleel Or.onoe Coest 0 1llv Piiot.
P'ICTITIOUS 8USINISS
NAME STATEMENT
l ftt toltow1n9 oer\on u do1nq
bu'ln•U .,
\/Alf NATIONAL AlLE NTOWN BUSI NESS SCHOOLS. AqlZONA AUTOMOTIVE I NSTITUTE ,
NATIONA L I NSTITUTE OF
ELECTRONICS SKAORON COLLEGE OF BUSINESS fAM PA TECHNICAL I NST lfUT E ,
KENTUCKY COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY , ARKANSAS
COLLEGE OF TECH NOLOGY , NAT IONAL INSURANCE COMPANY. O•I Blrct\ Str .. t. Nt.,P<>rl e .. ct\
Calltornl• '1..0
NEC Rt .. Otnl S<t\0011 In< ~
C•Utornta <orporat1on ,,,, 81rcf\
Str•e t frr4e.,port B••ch C•hforn••,.. ,,...,
Tf'lt~ l>uSUW\S I\ (.OftdUCted Oy I
POraUon NEC Rtto0tn1 X hOOh,ln< J tlfrrt A Brill
Tf\t\ \t•tef'TW'nl WM fllfJd Witt\ tfW>
County Cltr-ot Oran~ County -
O.cem""r JI "" l"l1-
Pubtt\lwd OrM\9f C.a.\t O•••y Poot,•
JA~ " ?• Feb 1 • 1'111 137.-,
PVIUC NOTICE
The n ext day, Coach Paul Westh ead was gone.
a nd Johnson 's 25·year, S25 m illion contrac t with
Los Angeles naturally led people to believe that
the man who perform s with s le ight of hand on the
court had made the coach dis appear with a flick of
his tongue.
"If I had known they w e re going to fire the
ooach, l w o uldn't have said anyth ing at the lime I
did," said J ohnson.
l'ICTITIOUS austNESS
NAME STATEMENT Tiie to11ow1ng p1r1011 Ii ooln9
OUtlf'WH a1·
bli•I"'""· All AMERICAN BUSINESS
"''"" Publl•...O Or•nvt Coe•I Di lly Piiot.
Feb t , 1'. tl, Mar-th 1 "'1 SU.fl
Roy E O~lv & Company,
CO<POr•fl WOods 81d9 I•. Suit• »O.
9111 Wot llOlh Slrffi Ovorl.,,d Peril
K.anw•'4710
Jt n 7• Ftb 1 9 I•, 1'81 O._.J 1--------------
''But I had t o say something about the
s ituation. Whe n w e m ove the ball, teams have
trouble defending against us, when we don't it's a
lot easier ror them ...
Since Pat Riley took over a s coach, and a
s peedup o ffense replaced the slowd own s etup
under Westhead, the Lakers have gone o n to post a
33-14 record, third-best in t h e National Basketball
Association behind Bos ton ~d Seattle J ohnson
h as done n othing to tarnish h is place alongside
Larry Bird, o ne of the b est all·around players in
the league .
IN-ADDFFl6N to his 1-9-point -sconng-aventge
a nd nine r ebound norm per game. Johns on is
second in the N BA in assists a nd firs t in steals. He
is the only p l ayer in the game who has proven
himself al each position forward , guard and
center
But the s igns that has popularity have taken a
nose dive are unmistakable He was a dis tant fifth
an fans voting for an All·star s tarting berth. boos
o ften overpower cheers and there were reports h e
would be dropped fro m 7 -Up television
comm ercials .
Pll.0.GENIC OF HOLLYWOOD IJ0..111 Wtoon lrwlM Ca t771•
Kyp-.-. IJ Qu .. 1 -· lrVIM, c..n 1u
Tiii\ Dusi,,..• ll <-ut:IM by •" INllvlOull
KypS...wr
Tllll \181....-t .... tiled wltll llW
C:ouftlV Cl•O of Or1<1Q1t County on
J1nu.,y IS. 1912
l'ICTITIOUS a USllllSS
MAMa STATllMlllT
The tollowlnQ per\on i1. do I no
bvliMUM --C61tl"~F~llJU~..UUl
Santi t..tiel, Fou,.111n V•ll•• C•
'110I
Dale Palmer Wiii 171SJ Senta 1 .. ~1. Fountain Vlllley, C:• "1709
Thi\ bUsl,,.., " conauclltd by •n
lndlvlOllll
01•• Wiii Tiii• •ta-I wa• Iii.cl .. 1111 IN
Countv Clen. of Or•nQlt Countf on Jen11ary 1'. ,..,
OIRECTORV, i.u ...,._,_, COiia
Me", CA '2to2'7 RICHARO JAMES STORY, 141J
P-row. Colle Mew, CA m11 Tt••• -I• , __ ~ .,, lfldtvlcl ... 1
Rk-J Swry
Tlllt lt.t'--1 "" tllM wllll IN Coo.1nh Cltrt. ol o..,. COUl\ly on J811.
"· 1"1
l'ICTITIOU& au1111•ss •AMa STATaMllllT Th• tollowln9 tNr•on I• doln9
w.tneu .s. RAIN80W SPORTING GOOOS,
'"' Ii hi -·· T-"'· ~ ....... ,,..,
Bruce S Sw•ncutt tJtl £ hi SlrHI, TuslinC.lltorn11•21MO
Tnls Dusirwu 11 <ondu<led by an
lncll•lduel
Bn.c•S Swancutt Thi• •tat.,,_t .... llle<I wilt\ ,.._
County Clerk of Or•nQlt County ""
J•n~ry ?2, ttl'2
F1f1W
F1al1t Publl....., <>-. '°'" O•Hr Pll01, Publlslled Or-c: ... 11 O•llY Pl~ Jen l•. F.0. l, t, 14, ttll Jl4..ft Feb 2, 9. 16, Jl, I.., 4 .. ..,
NU "11CE
l'ICTtTIOUS eUstlllllS NAME STATEMENT
''" followlno per\on 1\ do1no
bu•lnenH COAST CLEANERS. I W1ndflow•r.
!Nine. CA '110
Gene Edwaro Poc ll.,d, Ull
UftlwnlfV ltvlne CA t1'1S
Tiii• buSlneM 11 conduellrd by tn lndlvld,...
c;..PIC.llMd
Tllh statt..-1 w•• flied wllh tfW County Clerk 01 OranQlt C:ounlv on
Fe11. s. IC FttUet
Publl.-Or-c: ..... 01lly PtlOI
t'eb ••• n ""'"" 2 ,.., •».t7
PllUC llllCE
FICTITIOUS I USllllEU
NAME STATEMENT
Th~ foltowin9 Pf'' \On\ •rf' 001no O..\INUH
R c; AG POWEqS •a E 11th St
an1 c .. 11-CA'1•17 t:h~"d•f Grainl PQwe-r~ MU Am1ooi Wey N.-..oort Beacll CA tl..O
Gleet\ H -·· IOI Amlvo• Wey NtWPO<"I Bekll, CA '7MO
Tllll buslneu II <onOu<lt O by
11usb1nd -wilt
R G -• Tiiis •tatemH•I .... filed ...... , ...
CouftlY Cle•• 01 Oran~ County on
t f\I\ bUJtfW'H ., ( onouc t•O l)y • ~rwral perlrwr>ftlp .----------...._ __
RoY E 011y A Co l'ICTITIOUS IUSllCIEU Miry Ellen 011y l"orlMf NAME STATIMl!llT
rn1, n•ten'Wf"1 ... , Wf'd won thrt t ht' follow1n9 p1tt\on '' oo•no
County Ctttk of Oran~ (CM.1ntv on bu\1ntu ., Jenuarv 1a, l'jl7 OIHGHV vAqo, 117 JoeM Str11t,
TNOMAS WELl.S AL.aw c._111e11 ,.. 11 ... __. ~ ~ Stitt• ne .... ,.,,-·ca n-Publl"*' <>-(Ol\f O•lly Pll01
Ftb 1 t,.. J. 1"1 537-tJ
NIUC llllCE
FICTITIOUS aUSlllESS
NAME STATEMENT
fne to11ow1n9 Ptr\Oft\, ere 001no
t>u\tN>n ~
TRES BIEH SOI Aven ldt
Vequ•to San Cl•m•ntf C•Hlornf• .,.,,
l •" l M<Cull<>vo" S1• 61.,.bird
C•nvon Aoctd L •Quna BP•cf'I
C•tr•orn1• 9'1*S1
JacQu•• Swf'fl 1U ) Cat•tln• Laouno s ... cn Callloml• ttU1
T1111 bu\•ntu I• <onductfHI by an
un1ncorporattc1 •HO<lallon 01-tllan • pertntnnlo l•" L Mc:CullOUllh 1111\ Siii•"""'' .... flltcl .. ,,,, , ...
Coun11 Clerk ol OrenQ4' Counly on J1nu.ary lj 1492
Cott• ,,.. .. ,C• 92671
Fvmlo Nl•O•k•ml. 111 Joe nn Slrttt (<Kii ~ Ce '1•11
Tllll """""' " <Oftdu< l...S I>'( an 1NS1wiOtHI '""''° N~lt•ml '"" stal-t .... Ill"° ...... , ... Cour\ty Clerk of Or•nve County on
F•llru1ry I, 1"2
Fll2:Jt1
Publlslleel 0r""9 Coe•t Oallv Piiot
F•b 1. • "· n ,.., s~
FICTITIOUS aUJlllESS NAME STATE MElllT
Th• tollow1n9 p•r\on •\ doing
:>U\lne\\ ai BOBCAT E .. qfH MOVING
;PEC:IALTIES Jt.JO Lln .. ton Plec:e
:ost1 -... CA 92•2• PETER GRENFELL OIBRUYN
100 Lltlll1on Pl.C~. Costa """· CA nu•
Tiii• ""'°""' I> <-..Cted by •n ndlvid11•i
"-'" G. cit Bruyn
When h e was introduced as an All-star
s ubstitute t o the crowd at the New Jersey
Meadowlands arena. he was the only player who
was booed loudly .
FICTITIOUS aus1111ss NAME STATIMEllT
FICTITIOUS IUSINUS
NAME STATEMENT
The rollowinQ o•r~o" h do1n9
Feb I IC
Tlllt st.t-t wes flleo wllri Ille
C:ounly Clerll of O<-County -Jen
t'ltlHI 11 1"1
l'l"'-il Publ1111t<! Or.onQt Coe\I O•·•• P1101 "'"Ml Jan 1' 1• F~ 1 • ,.., J17 .. 7 Publltlleel Or-C:oHI Delly PtlOI, T llt tollowlno Perso11 ,. Ooln9
bv•lne1111 """"'" ... NORI.IN PAPER COMPANY, .01 Pub111Nd Clr.O"IJIO COISI Dally Piiot. Feb 1 t 16. ?3, 1"2 SllM'l FIG t 16 73, -rt111 1"2 6J1.t7
··All the residual e ffects of the W esthead
incident haven't worn orr, but in Los Angele s h e is
being c h eered more than ever," Riley says .
"People stall get on h1m an other places . But when
you are prob a bly the mos t celebrated marquee
name in the game a nd lave your life in a fishbowl
e very day, you can expect som e negative
publicity "
WILOWOOO COMPANY, No 1
8aruna Court. Ntwport Beech,
Catllornla Alan K..-, JIO WHI •.500 so .
S.11 l akt City, Ullt\ M107
Tll" bvslne11 I• conckKttCI by an
lndlvlOull
At•nKnud-. Tllll sllt-1 wa\ filed wllll llW County Cler-of O<anQlt County 011
J.,.uery ts. ltll ,.,., .. ,
Publl•lle<I Or-Coe•t Dally Piiot,
Jen 1', 26, Ftb 1, t 1"2 l1..e2
8 rookv1tw WAY , Co••• MIU 1-------------
NIUC llOT1Cf C•lltorl• m2'. Otnnl• Arthur -..orlln, •Ot
Brookview Wey, Co•lt Meu.1-------------
Calltornla m2' l'ICTITIOUS 8USllllEU
Tiii> OUtlnen " <-lt<I bV an MAMI STATEMIEllT 1no1v1o~i• A NO<'lln Tht to1low1n11 per\on " Oo•no
Tllh •~I -~ tllt<I w11n lne l>U•l~'~"'!~IATES 210 AwnocM
Counly Clerk ot OreftQI C:""nly on 0 11 Mer, S..ll• IA, Sen Clemente.
Jenuary IS, 1'81 If I mn
l'letM4 Cal ti."r~sllna C Honrocl<, llOI PubllllWd Or-Colsl Oeilv Piiot Ori NI I Jen It. U , Feb ?. '•I* )JI.ti Nallonel Pert. ... L<tQuna Out. -------------~-D_E_l_l_H __ l_m ___ C_l_S _______________ ~-~~-~-------,~~~s••<~d~~h·
llmlltd l)ef1Mn'llP Olrl .. lne C Henrick r ... Cl ..Ol'tBS """"II Tiiis 1teiemen1 .... 111..S with llW SMITHS' WOftUMY County c .. rl< or Or1nqo County on
LOVE Ca., and Donald Carr or San Diego, Ca . a sist er J.,..,.,y n . 1912
6'17 Main St. Huntington Beach WILLIAM MARS HALL F'resno, Ca a nd 13 J ulia Mae Topolesk1 of Big
53&-6539 LOVE . a resident or great grandchildre n B ear Lake. Ca, bro ther&
Newport Be11ch, Ca Passed Graveside services will be David o f Ph1ladelph1a.
away on February 6. 1982 held on Tuesday, February Penn~ylvAnia and Murr or
1'111'21
Publl"*' Orll\Oll (NII O•llY Piiot.
Jan U . Fib. 1. '· 1•. 1"2 ~
PllUC "11CE
1-------------1
PVIUC NOTICE
NS t14J4 FICTITIOUS I USllllSS
NAME STATEMENT
T n" tottow•nQ ~r1on\ •rt-doino
t>u>lntn •• CENTURY COURIER SERVICE.
1JHI P1uo Oe Vll•nt•• t aoun•
Hilh C:allrornfe ~?UJ
G•ll L Gorw.o. 7111 Jhl Sl<HI.
Wnlmln•ler. C:•ll•ornl~ t!.e:J
Moll1mmild ~llOI E'1tfa1t, ~7
Wot P•lm Orlvp Ho C, Gllnoa•e Calltorn1a '1207
T llts bu•lneu " conoucttd by a 99nerat swrtner,,.tp
G.t1l L Gon<oe
Tiiis "a11..-1 wn tiled wit h t"9
Countv Cler' ot Or•nQI Co.."IV on
l'ICTIT10U~8USllllUS "AME STATUAIEllT
T ne tollow1n9 peri.on ~' do1no
t>t.ntnf'11 a1 I AI LY NCH ll EALTY. I BI
l YNCH REAL TY COMPANY, !Cl
l YNCH REAL TORS. end 101 l YNCH
REAL ESTATE COMPANY 1.0
c"''"""l•t wav. S..1tt ''· T""'"· C• 974'0 loulw JN" liberty Lync:ll, IJSU
WIWmbly Or . Senta Ana, Ce t170S
Tiiis l>Ull,,..• ii <onclu<llCI bf an
11\dlvld"'I
Loutw L L ync II
Tllh tt•tement w• fll..S .. 1111 llW County Cleno ol Orenoor County on
Jenuerv :rt. 1'8? 1'1--Oecem""r ti, 1911 .. ,,.,.. Pubfl~lleel OtatlQlt CoeJI Delly PllOt
Publl•lltcl Or-COl>I O•llv Pllol, Ftb 7 ' ... 13 1"2 4'1 .. ,
Jan " 16 Feb 1 • Itel 11'-U
MN·~ FICTITIOUS au5111ESS NAME STATEMENT
Thi tolto•lnQ Ge""°"' •rt do1n9
bu\H'W'H .,
AVAlON eqo 1<ERAGE
COMPAN Y, "C:oroo••tt Plaa S..•t• UO, NtWDOrf BH<ll, Ce tlMO
A,M><t•l9'd 8# ... rr•Qe Comp•nv
Inc f • 0.fawar• COt'PO"•HonJ l720
Ea>t ?•tn StrHI V•rnon C1 iOOJJ
Thi\ bus•nrn " <O"IOuct•d by •
cor~•hOf'\
~~to<•ilf'd S.v•r~
Comoeny "" Honner. M. Ne•'°"·
Vice-Prettdent
Thi' \tft~t ""'~"" •11~ with t~
County Ct•rk of OranQf' Counh Of'I Jenuer'f IS 1"1
F111111
IRELL A MAlllEl.LA
All"'t .... Wllnw S<-klllrd
, .. Ave If IM Sl•11. Stt 7'e
Les Arl .. M , Go -1 PuOllShe<I ClrMIQt COl\I 011ly Pl!ol Jan 19, 1•, Ftb 1, 9 1'1117 JIS-11
FICTITIOUS a USllllESS NAME STATEMIEllT
Tftt" tooow•FWJ ~""°"' •rf' 001n9 bv•lntt>ll lHE JOH N BOHLS
ORGANIZATION, 1 .. 47 ~l<Ar111ut
B•vd , S..11~ O S, lrvl,,. Cellfotnl•
t'/IU
WESTERN EICEC UTIVE
SEARCH INC • Ca lltornl•
corPO••'-.... , -Annur Blvd S..llt O S, Irvine, c .. 11torftla t711S
Tiii> O..slt>HJ I• con<lu<l...S by 1
corpOrlllon
Wttltrn E •Kutlw
S.erct\, tnc
Jotlfl8ollls. p,_.-.,1
Tllh 11at..,_1 ,.., 111..i .. 1111 llW
County Clen ot Or•fl91' C:ounlr on January 2:2. 1"1
MAI.COL¥ A DAI. Y
A'*-'t' .. UIW 4111~ ...... -.... , ottkl ... 1110
New,..-t llMcll. ca•-• n.u l'H1U1 Publl.-0--c ... ,, Oallv P11o1,
J•n 24. F.O 1. • "· ltll o~
l'ICTITIOUS aUSllllESS
"AMIE STA'fl!MEllT
Tll1 tollowln9 tNtlo,.. ere OOln11
O..llntU •• PINEWOOO APARTMENTS.
141~ Reel Hiii A•H'.-Tu\llrl, CA .,..,
rAaACY•W
MIMOIUA.L. r Ml
Ceiretery Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Fac11tc V1f!W Drive
NewPort Beach
644-'1700
Born September 16, 1908 m 9. 1982 al Harbor Lawn Pomona. Ca Cremation and
lnd ianapola'I, Indiana Memorial Park Ser vices bur1alatseabytheNeptune "~~~~!::!':::s
PIHE.....000 COMPANY, Clo Roy
-------------·• E Oely A C_,,v, Corpor•te w-.
McCoaMICll MOITU,AR•S
L.aiguna Beach
494~15
L.aguna Hills
76&-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1n6
HAIUIOlt LAWM-MT. OUYI
Mortuwy • Cemetery
Crematory
...
1625 GISier Ave .
Costa Mesa
~
IA&.TI -~ Slil1'M • 1VTMLL
Wll1CLl'P CMAl'IL 427 E 1711t St. ec.a .....
M&«t71
~11rv1vl'li hv hi<, w1(p Esther under t h e direction o r Society Tll• tollow1no "''°"' .,. dolno
o f Newport R each. Ca . lfarbor Lawn Mount Olive SCHNEIDE R 11u>lnet .. s: ,1CTmousaus111us
daughter Sharon Ras ins o f M o rtuary o r Costa Mesa I s A D 0 R E J MIDWAY ASSOCIATES, 78tl HAMIESTATIEMENT
Cost a M esa. Ca . sons 540·5554. SCH NElDER. resident o r ~:.:.:~~nlll, MIOWIY Cily 11u!1':i:.::~•owlng PlflOn h Oolno
George Love of San F er· LEMON Irvin e, Ca . Pass ed away on G.t.CKG.GOEN,G-•IP..-t,..,, '"' SHE,.l.OC:K HOl.MES
nando, Ca and Louis Love JOSEP H WILLIAM F ebruary 7, 1982 He was a 1141 H•,,,.., "-· ~•ow•y cu.,, ACAOEMYOFINVESTtGATt<>N,1B1
or Oregon. also 12 g r and LEMON, age 68, resident o r member of the Lions Club. CallfomleftW SHEtlll.OCK HOLMES OETIECTIVE
ild h ROBERT M SMITH, Generel AGE NCY, and IC:I SHEtllLOCk. ch ren. brot er John Costa Mesa. Ca. Passe d The Amencan Association of P1r1 ...... 1...., ""''" s1r111, s..11e 110. HOLMES 1Nvesr10AltON, a o
Love or Santa Barbara, C a ., away on F ebruary 7, 1982 m Retired Persons. a member Hunt1nvton9Nc11,c1t11ornl••-C•r1tenn1a1 Wey, s..110 "· Tu111r.. C•
George Love of Alhambra. C hapman Hospital, Orange, of the J ewis h Federation Tiit• business" wino conducted 11y mos
Ca • sisters Eva Buser or Ca. Survived b y his wife Cou n cil a nd many othee' uertne~M ~1111 0,1v~~~ ... ~~ ~1W w11emD1y
Glendale. Ca. Elizabeth Margaret. son Bruce of o r tianliations. H e la Tlll•t1•.....,tt1...iwtt11t111 c011nty Thi•~· tt c-uc•eo by •n
Mahoney of lnd1ana. Helen Westminster, Ca. sister survived by hla wire Ruth or c .. rkotOr .. eoun1.,~Jen...,ytt, 1Nl1Y'°"fotinv LvMll
Oeggendora of Walnut Kathryn Witt of Bettendorf. lrvlne. Ca., sons Robert of 1* Ftuv1 ,11 .. ,ta.,._1 .... ""'°"'''11 1111 C reek , Ce Funeral services low a . He retired in 1978 Tu s ll n , Ca ., d au g h l e r f'\IOlllMcl Orange c ... ., o~v Puoc, co11"1Y c .. ,,. of Or•n .. c:oun1y ""
wiU be held o n Tu:esday, rrom lntentate E leetronlcs Miidred Schr'ttbt!r of New ~""·'· 1'.U , 1m UMt Jen111rv1t. l"2
F e bruary 9, 1982 al 2:00PM In Anaheim. Ca. where h• York City, N•w York aod 1------------1 Pu1:111,._ Or•-c;o.•t 011~1=
at Pacific View Mortuary was anenjJineet. Hewasbom Alice BeatA>n or Lot Ange les, Piil.iC -~ F•b '· •. ••. u. 1m 49'•i
C hapel wtth the Crescenla In Canlo n1 Mioouri. He Ca .. 5 arandchOdren. also
Valley Muonlc Lodge #652 m a r r I e a M a r gar et survived by 2 aiaters and I PICTanouuu•111ass
F&AM orrktaUng In lieu of Schroeder I of Davenport, brother all or Frovldence. Tiie r:..:T:=•.-r,. OOI~.
f 1 owe ts m e mo r I a I Iowa in Chlcaco in 1937 Rho de Island . Fun eral 111111 ....... :
contributions may be made During World War II h e services will be held o n TH• vlSUALtSU, • ....., ..
to the Maso nic H o m e ser ved ln the U nited State• Monday, February 8. 1982 al~~"· c..-•1 ""''· Cellfofllt•
Pacific View M o rauary Navy as a Qua rte rmaster 2 :00PM al Harbor Lawn Jttttrt J. tt""'ter, a ~ ..
ttlrf'rtors. 2nd Clas1. The body w .. Memorial Cha~!. ~rvlcea ""-· c--•1 MM, C•llfOtftl•
GAJlDNEll c remated. ~rvlces b y the under the dlrecllon of.,.,~., .. l.VfW' ,,.,,1, .,. ~
E D N A M A R I E Neptune Soclfty Harbor 1 .. wn·Mouot Ollve IAvfft.,., c.r-•• -., c.11fot'Al1 GA RDNER . resident of PDORtN M ortuary o f Coata MeH. mu
Colla Men. Ca. Puaed J o H N vt ( 8 I LL 1 *·»St '"" ""•'-•• '~'" l>Y •
away on February 5, lM2. PERQRIN, a rtaldent o r · 1.-r••~:,
•Sttal ~ICT1TIOUI aua111au
NAME ITAHMaNT Tiie toll-lno .,.,Mn, er• OOiflf
~1 ........
tHe (Af!MA•SAlllDl.INO OflOUP, ,.,,, ~ A-. lrvlM,
c.i1tar..ie mi.
'9ftll\' ,....,11111 & AIMIC ...... I fl( ,
e C.llfonlle c_...,eCIAll, IUft Hei.
A.,.nue, '""'"'· Cel .... tDI• Tllft htillMt It cencN<tw DY • COffOrOtlM\.
~ .......... .
l'ICTITIOUS IUStlllSS
NAME STATIMlllT
fht tollowlno "''°"' er• dolno 0..>lneu 1l: YIU.AGE WEST .t.PARTMENTS.
11'19 Tutlln VIII-Wey, Tu•lln, CA n ...
ROV E DALY & COMPANY,
(;Ol'po<--l lOll 14, Sult. SJO,
1717 WUI llOlll St....t, 0-1-Part.,
ICantH'4)IO.
Tiil• bt,.ln•u It <enduct.ii by •
QIMr•IP<W'M .......
t1tqy I . Oily & Co ¥Mv Ell..-O.ly, ...,,,.,
Tllll tlat-1 wa tltecl wllll IM Ctun4Y Clerll ff Or.,. CAUfllv .,._ J.,,
II. 1"7 TMOMASWILLS
ALAW~--Mll•-' c.-, Df'lwe.141"9 na ............. , ......
,uttlltMd OrMOa Coatt Ollly l'llOI,
l"IO.t.t.1',H.lta ~
,~tTIOUS au11,.a11
NAMll ITATaM•NT0
Tiie !'041-lnt peflOl'lt •rt •Olflt --·"· DIXIE'S CMll.O CAltE, 4lt2 "'••'~' Clrcte, lrvlfl•, C.a1nMfll• '111• l.•wreno Sflllltl • ..., ,, ... ,.,
ClrClt ,....,..., (Ill..,.... '2U•
oial• 1.. s111p,, •m l'l .. •tu
Clrt It , I fVIN. (.ell+omif "714
flllt bull~\ It ~IH 11Y •" llftl11Corw.rw -lallfll elfllr tllMI ~~~.~t.::'"~r:: ~frrh:~ ~~!f::a;or C: l!:u~!!.~ ·· OfPOl'RMTY ' c!':::, ·~:;;-:: t~~:!:', '=
Fr e 1 no , Ca. , 1 rand F e bruary e. 1982 at H o•1 iufocU oft-. ..._ )'OU ,,_ry u . itn. ""™ ._ .. , .... fl(
ey• "·A. $eftdll119. ,.,......,. t ."" ....... Ltwrtftt• s.-i.., ~au,rhtera Linda Carr M emorial Hospital. He b UM,..._..._ Dall1 ,..,..w..~eoatto.11,.-ai.t. iof Tl!xas. Jan Petton of aurvlved by hla Wife ol '4 Pllol C' ifhd-A.da t0 J9fl •· ,,_,,,, 1,, 1,.. me
Santa Ana, Ca,J;a JOMS rear•,, <>Dal Martej bis aon ruea UM ~ CoMe.
of lrvlne. C a .. 'tund1on1 1 o h n-ve r Ir l n--a" a ~
Daniel Brouiue of Anaheim, dau1bter·in·law Ka.thy or P'boDll0-1171
I
Tiit. .._. -11 ........ "" C-ty CJar._ 9f Ora .... '*"""t 911 J•-"'"·'-
Tllll .....,.... -tllM Wllfl IN c;w..1, Clefil ., Or.,. c°""'' .,. JMIAll!'Y14. I-
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BESS, INVEST
MIWT, FINANCE
-=~=,:, I•\~'""" U9()'Jt1 ' ln\ ...... 1tMc4
\&Mt\ lu I.A.fl ~I~ Y.•otf<I
Mot1u1n TH"'
ANNOUNCEMENTS,
PHSONALS &
LOST & FOUND
SHYKES
0.PlonlCNT &
PlfPAHTIDR
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A1rrn ft '·--·-•JMnclon " ..... -Md.-t ,r.._ "•'"' Mate• Hll\11 :i..w K"M Tradtt' r,.,~
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UTIS. NlW
AlllS. lfSf I
Of•ngt Copt OAlL Y PILOT!Tuelday. February 9, 1982 I
Among people lookfng f '!1';..a rental, M
read real eatott claslifaea 00..
"-tri For S. I Hoaft For W. Ho.Mt '9r Wt ...... ,_Wt ···············~······· •••&••················· ••••••••••••••········· .....•••••.•.•••.....•. ......••••••••..•.••••• ••••••...........•.•••. ····•··••········•·•·• ............................................. .
• ...... 1002 o ... ,.. 1001 GIMf'Clll 1002 o ... ,.. 1002 CarwclelM• 102 o..r.. 1026.,..., .... 106'
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••
LOW INT. FIN. VllW LOT COUMTIY ENGLISH w/pool und spa. Fonner * * LOW S E C L U D E D t BR and ronv den condo Jtlll 8( MPT HEIGHTS
AVAii.Aili P9IMSULA HOMES COIOMADlt.MAR O\JPLEX·4Br + 2Br. 1 model ' Mini ocun A SED That's rl&hl! Own th1~ R od d Cholcelocationwlthba> yrnew.Goodaasumable view ! SlOS,900 30 yr CHAIM newly decorated horlw em eled, ecorated 3 bdrml.t,bath. and ocean views. 75,~ Assumable hnoncing, fixed !flt~ loan! Low VAl.U[I, A private contemporery
In ooe ol Costa M.eaa's mstr bdrm with ocean view "1lQ,000. rmanctng. ~s.ooo 1398,000. 709 ai 709Va down O. w. c. MI M entertainment home w/3 ranest areas. 4 Bdrm. 2 , Orthld Call 851-9135 for Henry.'Owners,631-6666 Take advantage Bdrms. centr l11td1.
balb. wiUI great terms West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boats, ' ~· Owntr/bkr. ~ le 111 1040 Beautiful Woodbr1dce woodsy sethn&. lots oi EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
E\111 price, $129,SOO. Call ·--,.• oc homr with apa. Pnced lo 1tas1, towering tree1. fordet.al)s, 8"·7171 remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath $1,200,000. •H•••••••0•••••··~··• .U.. call Ed B for de llnd spa Room lo ex ATTM: IUILOHS ARTIST ABODE. I m1 to iJ panel on ai out + alley
Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4 WI VACAMT LOT bel<'b, 3 Br, 2 Ba SHOK, access Beat st 1n Hau. ~· ,...,......,Notice:
All real estate ud
vert11ed 10 tbia
newspaper lS subject lo
I.ht Federal Fair Rous·
1n1 Act of IMS w"ich
makes it Illegal to ad·
vert.ise .. 1111 preference.
hm1tat1on, or du;.
bdrm, 3 bath. 3700 sq.fl. $1.38.5,000. ~c%~loSuFboPrCdiHnate ket~if8~212:12 ~I \\bodbr1dge -Pn~ at only .'!"1~ I Ruhu I ana a .... 1. -
•--T S~ UDO ISLE H"a...tH $ZIO,OOO SMALL DOWN! • -O ~ A Dlv1s1on of 67a.1771 Take ovu 10~4 FHA 551 ·3080 • •
Well maintained mlly PrimP T.idn Nord bavfronl. 5 bdrm, 5 ll.irborlnve111,.~nl Co loa.n.3Br.1'11 ba.Cbo1re me man P'll•>.lrtlH "
THE :REAL
ESTATERS -----
~~bi~nar~;1ft,r0~ bath. L«eL.R.2boatsups$1,500,000. H.B. locat100 Walk 10 U,..INdl 1041
2 Ba family room. lrg ~f1 ~ch~ & l shippin~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Canal Front. Newport
,,.., cnm1nat1on based on
1M race. color. rehg1on. :~: s.ex. or natwnal ongm.
•• or an mtenlton lo make ::; any such prefetfnce,
1n ltm1titt1on. o r dtS· =: cnnunat1on ..
lot. Owner wall be i·ery Remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath + large .,.IGHT LIGHT Y • o eac A Lot Shoru. 4 Br Den helpful With r1nanrmg " S9l.OOO Ask for Jim $2S.IXX>down. Owner will
Full price $ISO.ooo rec. rm. beam ceilings, $420,000. + BAY VIEW ~8149 A_&t_. For A L.ittt. carry Must sell! Make 7S1·3191 Spacious 5 BOrm 1n JASMINE CREEi lrfilt I 044 I acre + bldg Sile, aent otrer! TeM1S. pool, walk I.NA ISi.i IAYflOMT Eastblurr1 Elegant Superb loc ation ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly sloping partel short to beach Agent 646·1044 forma I dining Frenrh excellent cond111on 1 2 DE.r• ... ,.. TE I distance from tennis & or~21Ml5
"l'•t 0 11 This newspaper will not r--.......c..~---~!Z knowin~ly accept any DREAM HOUSE ~: advertising ror real WITH CHARM!
.... , estate which 1s in viola· You 'II love it here! z:: t.ionofthelaw. _ E}iglishTudorstyle. lov·
""" --------• ely tree lined street. pride or owners hip
,,.., alOIS1 Adnrtilen
1: .......... cllitc.k tt.W ada ~ .., cmd .report .... .-ron.._.....,.Ta..
!: DAil Y rtLOT as-• = Wlllty for the first =: h1correct h1ttrtl011 .... .,. .....
neigbbomood and an as·
sumable loan or $74.000
at low interest rote Full
price on this 3 Bdrm 2
bath doll house •~
S104.900. CaU 646·7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS ::.:. ---------4·--------1 .....
:: HmMs for Solt *'14YFIOMT•
IOATSLlr
&l)lj •••••••••• •• • • • • ••• • • • • ssss.ooo
::1 ~ 1002
11., ••••••••••••••••••••••• WOW ! Lowest pnt·ed w.• bayrront ho me OIS
:~: VIEW TOWHHOMES BALBOA COVES Large
Master IUllei V.ew of 4 bdrm. 3 bath. double Ocean & Night lights fireplace. ro1ered patio
, Quiet Area Parks. open plus much more' Will !'..'41 ~ces Sll7,000. Xlnt AlTD-or trade for ··•• H 1 p F.a3thluffs ptoperty . ~"'' a or at Agts • .....__lo ,_1 7Sl·980Sl..673-7300 -yProp. ~1 •DESERTED .,~trG;o.
*BARG AIM l!!!--!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!1m11!11 Mesa Verde's finest! Va· cant. owner wants out!
Large 3 Bdrm. 2 bath
VIEW VIEW BARGAIN!
,.,,, home. Family room . )~ bnck fireplace. q u1et ~: lree·lined street Close
~ Mp111g. l'all no".
·~ii8Mi
Spectacular hidden 2
story home m beautiful
Mesa Verde Elegant
covered entry wa).
formal lil'lllg room and
dining, family room.
gounntl kitchen 4 huge
bdrms. 3 baths.
beauurul v1ev. from rear
yard Assume 'ery high
loan Price $239.900 Ca II
~2313
.....
91/•%LOAH
Redilc.cl $100,000
SPYGLASS
BY OWNER FUii Pnce-SS75.000
MonthJy Payment $2999
SO\mf PORT MODEL
6br 41,,ba 4100sq ft
25 Bodega Bay
Call o~er 7~-0737
$112,000
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
COLDWC!U.
BANl(eRO
"'"' NEWPORT ICH! "'a Beautiful upgraded 2 :,~ ·Bdrm 2 bath condo GREAT RNAHCIMG
'""' Vaulted ceilinged living Compact & charming 3 ~: room. bright s unny BR.FRhomemrneodly
"'" k 1 t ch en A l l a c h e d Baycresl. Room ror boat
:._,., !a:upgn~~ B;.~1Raro'"r mocasrhe or R\1. Expansion poten·
vu• '"' "" I tiaJ. Fabulous starter
:: det.atla. 546-2313 OOnll. Atlt about tenru -raa j!!S2tl!!!,(XX)!!!!6!!!!.4!!!!4-!!!!9!!!!0!!!!60~~·1
..... •COM ST ARTER• 5 -----JUST LISTED '<*' Pri~ for fast sale' As ~-orPOITUHITY sume low interest Lsl.
: knocks often when vou Cozy fi repla ce +
....., ~result getting Oath beautiful kitc he n
Piiot Class1r1ed Ads to M<t.ivated owner' Only
;: rearh the Orange <.:oast ~.<XX> Call 673·8SSO ,.lll marl<t>t
''"' Phone 642-56'18 THE :REAL
ESTATERS "II V18J
''" IW .....
BIG CANYOK-All VIEW
View frCllll •row! Costywd ..try to
tMs tow Ai 111• wfflt Z bt*u• ,... dttt.
l'macy .t ...-lty. ltd:lllM CS.cor.
, .... pool ...S.,.. $350.000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INc.
Rf.Al £ST A Tt
S... RmM, Ptq1111Y Monotrrnml
2436 W COMI tt...y JtS ~IM
l'lewport IW1eh lWIOI hWld
611-14" 67UMI
UIK&RNlf DELAWARE
Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, doors and windows Bdrm plu s den. 2 _.ao1A beach Ownr hu~ in playroom, dark rm, den. $1 ,350,000! Swl.'eping views t~ruout ' r1replares. vaulted ceil yrWoodnewbndLoge 3dBorwn2ba, l rluded plans for cuslom --•u•D•O-l•S•LE--•
CARNA TIOH COVE
Spectacular bayfront view 4 bdrm. 4 bath, 2 boat slips $1,900,000.
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
;l' ' 1 •. 1. lJ• v· NI\ t.'~ ~IOI
W ~:sLJ< Y ~
~YLOR CO.
HEA LTOl{S "1 nu· l ~14f.>
llG CANYON IROADMOOR
HEW EXCLUSIVE
Plan 4. 4 Bedrms. Family Rm with
fireplace. Formal Dming Rm. 212
Baths Newly decorated. Beautiful
new cpt.ng & window coverings, new
marbfe entry floor Pool & spa.
Spacious play yard.
WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
Z 111 Sail JoaqMin Hiit Road
M!WPOIT cana. N.I . 644-49 I 0
S AXER.UPPERS S
32 .wts · CorOtlG "O"VACAMCIES
f"ar below ma rkt't t'or
s et.up r .. 11 H1CI..
.in)'tune 714 7fi4> 7292
WAHTED: LlqwJ partner to com
plete cu!>tom Newport
Bt.•achho~
FHLAHD!
Tremendous profit tu ~hare' C.ill Bkr 714
760 7292 anvhme If \OU rr looking for J bet ·
ter Job )'OU v.on t v..int "' ea.'y "~ d11ltn1t )our
tu mL'i. the emplo\ ment I phone Gl\e.t l·all Wt• 11
rolumns m Cla!>~1rit>d do the rest 642 !1678
GE
GEORGE ELKINS CO
EMERALD BAY MODERN
Ocean View•Home. Superb Modern
Stylin6. Sharp. Clear, Clean
Features. Many Special Attributes.
Excellent Financmg. Undoubtedly
One Of The Best Priced Homes In
Emerald Bay . $695.000.
·--........ _ ..
759-9100
# 2 Cotpoi ... Plall
M.wportC......
E.ASTBLUFFS ANEST
This beautiful 4 Bdr 3 Ba home has
. it all-magnificent view, parquet
floors, large custom designed
family room , plus exceptional
assumable financing. All this could
be yours for only $299,950. Call now
for futther information on this
fabulous new listing.
'::!::.' S«:\\.otllA-" t.~s· :::: ~ 1"y CIAY 1. l'OUAN -----
•=·~~~ ----.. ~--
A wilt wu painting tht ctll>
lflO a• Mr hvtblnd WllChtd
Only $305,00Q Ca 11 mgs and 11llr11ct1ve as w · as villa $175.000 Spel' 67~ sumable Cinanc1n g sume loans. Need fast tarularviews! IAYFIOMT
$349.500. sa~UcCESS REALTY MISSl4~~~ALTY $1,000,000 r£4fi~j}l!I 642-5200 ---_549-7991 By owner Laguna ~:.7~~h.2p!~~d~W~ __ -~L~ Uruvers1ly Park 4 BR. 211 Beach 2 Story Ocean to acl·omodate 40' boat
BA, Fam room. green Canyon View~ 4 BR. North side f"or an ap·
4 lfDllOOM HOME belt loration. cobble JBA. 2 frplc's Complete pointment to see tb1s ex
in Costa Mesa J yr home stone drive & entry· md lnlaw Apt. Lrg Lot clus&Ye properly. call
warranty and owner will ITlllOY xtras' Must see' S3SO.OOO. Owner assist ~11.SI
assist with tin11nc1ng Sl7S,OOO w' min dn F\na_nCI'!&. 494:..4819
Sl.20.IXX> Call 979 5370 0 W C a t 1 2 '• '. -Costa Meta I 024 Owner/agnt ~2·8046 or OwMfr w• FllHmce! ··: ... HERITAGE
ALtSTATE
REALTORS ---UJSert 1 rule
GONEw1thlhe WIND' Sbr .. Mansion·· owner'
STEAL THISWKNl>'
S2.fl.500 6'. dn owe
Noquahfymg ' !IS7 0744
mse~1 rule
•SIOOO•
•REIATI• o n brand n e w
lownhome' r e11tur1nl(
pmar). 2 master ~uite:. & den loft overl()(>k 1111!
hvmg rm at Sl23.9SO I .
Walker & lee
Real lsrare
B9-ISOI
High. on a hill m V1~t.1 .
set'luded 2 HR + den or 3 BR 2 ba Complete v.1th
d1n1ng . f.1m1 ly.
fireplace E'en a pool &
:.ea 11ew SU.0.000 b>
CM'ller 714 -lJ3 5751
OUTSTANDING
VALUE!
Immaculate 3 Bdrm LUSK built home 1n
Harbor View Hills
Master Bdrm suite.
family room. kitchen &
breakfast nook look out
on one of lhe loveliest
yards 1n Corona del
Mar Lowest price 1n
a ru S299 .SOO
••••••••••••••••••••••• 17021588-8123 North end 2 Br unit REALTORS
RV ACCESS WOODIRIDGE CrHent Bay buch ter l~!!!!!llll!!!!!!!!!!!!m!!!!!!!!!!lll!!!~ Great comer location m nfic buy ' $149.000 s.'5CXXI dn. no quallfyUlg on
2 BR & den. 2~ ba con
do Approx S2700 mo pmls Walk to beach
~I .OW, 833-8100
Mesa del Mar 4 Bdrm. 2B~&'t:~~BtA I ~VI~ R.E fa m II y r oom. n e v. 497 17 I Panoramic •
I kitchen 11:rpllanr~ lo' el) yar Fu II pm·e Lakefront V1ev. LOIJlllll NMptl I 052
$142.IXX> 7Sl·3191 P r o f e l> s 1 o n .i I I ) A•••••••••••••••••••••
Flf:B)OM HOUSE
3 Br I Ba large yard
$95,IXX> 64 I 0763, Ail
MESAVEIDE
3 bdrm. 2 bath. frpk. dbl garage , A I ro od
Sl.34.SOO Owner will as
s1st m financing
Roy McC.rcle, llJtr.
541-7729
* MESA VEIDE • WITii POOL ANO SPA
SpiicK>US 3 Bdrm. 2 ba
Beautiful areu Sl!l.000
dn Askrnl( $240.000
$1605 rro pymt PP ARt
7li0 7(81
HEW COHDO SO DM Ajent 631 !1737
MESAVBDE
Landscaped Beal·h & •OCEAN VIEW •
Tennis Club Good Nigu e l S h o r es Financing Owner Of tov.•nho use . largest
rered a t $29 7 000 model $289.000 ownr
M2-8362 _ .s:um
GROSSMOHT OCUHFIOHT
LEASE/C>nlOH 4 Bdr. pvt comm . only
$3500/mo trade Ownr
l.::661-Mll
Ldleforflt 1055 •••••••••••••••••••••••
111 Univ Park This 1s
1>t'rfert for the sma II
family. 2 bdrms. 2 ba
central air ('Ond cov
ered £atio Assoc1at1on
pool tennis d ose by
Walk Lo shopp1n1c 1--------schools and l'hur1•h PARKWOOD
ESTATES $~,500.
4Br 217 88
21SOSq Pt BEITER TllAN
MODEL HAS EVERYTlllNG
Cul-de sac st reel
Sun&Sa1l II Club
$210.IXX> Wllh $160.otO
al 12' t
.. ic.itt ,._ "-'--1 No points or qu.,hrymg ~Q 1.AMPV5J1a:ll'\'HOIC. 770-0:M7 Owner Agent
:~,;~~ ~~:r 10~~ 1 ~O 000 ON Mrwportleoc• 10" ' 2 bdrm M-V rde ..,., ••••••• ••••• •• • • • •• • • • • I "'~" e l'OO· 4 rm" + bonus rm.
do S'919.IXX> 7Sl 23IMl _ pool and 1arurn Owner Harbor Ridge Lucerne
I MESA VBDE will help fi.nanct Only flit.ale Model S625.000
4BR. 38A. r.,m Rm. Sl.82.IXX>.Call64.$-9161 HomP IS $100.000 undt'r
PooJ. Spa owe Assume I appraisal ' 10'. down
ExlSltng Loan:. Equity I Xlnt. terms 760 1977
Shanng Stra111ht Nole 1 or Trude SIM.000 By WhJI " Wondnful \\ orld
Owner 979 5!114 ! I pf Shoµ111111? rtl?hl .11 ~our ft11Rl'rt1 1'' l'I l'rl *VA 111'2% • I cl av' D ,1 1 II r ii o t
....-.c,....
2 bdrm plus den condo
Secunly guard. pools,
Lenrus S:llS,000. Assumt 9l• ,.., lsl Owner Agt 0
887 '11'.J'I, H 640-6188
FIHllOUS ROYCE
Lido 1.sland By Owner
Spacious 3BR. 2BA Home On 56 · Lot
Includes Architect ·s
plans for additional
Bedroom & Bonus
Room Plus Owner's
1961 Rolls Royce Silver
Cloud II . Over S360.000 lll
Assumable Loans al
I 2 ~ .. '} S S 6 0 , 0 0 0
714·~·1623
JUST REDUCB>
JI 2 blocks rrom beach
and only 2 yr.> old Ocean view 2 & 3 bdrm units
Thrtt bdrm unit great
for owner occupancy Ov.-ner financing avail
Only al.000 Ca II today
m~o
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
..._oftkYr!
6°/• 0..-..y Owwr! Lovely 3 br N.B Gotr
Course view home '
Appraised over JOOK
STEAL 1249.500' OWC Noqualirymg!
llurri.-nll now967-0744 JBR +l 11ba. 76K at . GetGREENt·agh Cla!>s1r1l'<I \cl, To µl.i n· ~pill w poss $5500 dn. ror WHITF. t'lephanb \our ad. I j II 1>1:! si.;11 SEU. idle items v. 1th a
pnnonly Bkr667 3863 with a l'lai.s1f1l·d \ti .ind 11;'1 .1 t'l;1,Mf1l·tl \rt Dail) Pilot Clai:.s1'1ed
LWEOPTIOH -~al!t>4~51;iK \'1,orht•lp,nu Ad
$4,000 .............................. .
RIM SI ,000 "'°· e e
'"'
52~.,;:~·••• 1 : 8-D~! ~~.~.K. ~!:!.~IAL :
"11111111 .... ~,... ~:1hr ~:i1c igi;~du~1r~ 1 • II s ~sy lo place your 8-0ay Week C1ass1l1ed by mail aM 11 •
....,.lllcmd 1006 paymenh t3'. fixed
1
• costs 1usl SS -lhatsonly a dollar a day' To Qualify for lhis •
rate Stl9,SOO 2960 Royal e soec1al offer you must be a non-comme rcial use•r ollenng •
••••••••••••••••••••••• Palm Dr Ov.ner bkr e --------•I 642 n.u 1 e me<chand1se for sale up to S800 pe r ao and 1he once must
Defer part of monthly ONE-YEAR VOLING e be in your ao The cost stays the same whether your ad e
payment on Ba I boa • 4 neeos e1gn1 days selling 11me oriusl one e
Island property Low bedroo m 2 11 bath e
down or trade Meadow home 15 close to e Use one word tn each tx>J AbOut 4 words ma1<e one •
Iii u-...ot... Rltr South Coast Pluta and e ~sty. . the hub or Orange Coun • class1f1ed line of type Minimum ad IS 3 lines Please oronl
675-21'6 ty Ideal for the youn~ e plainly e
professional' f orma • r-----------------------------.., • By owner J•'J br. 2 ba. dm1nf room. 1011ltn1t e • all remod Copper ram1 > room and a I I
plumb. lath & plaster I warm toasty r1replare e I t e ~o.<XX>. 613-~39-_ P r o r e s s 1 o n a I I y e I t
I 0 landscaped yard High I e CoroMdtlMar Z2 balaneti assumable loan • I ••••••••••••••••••••••• b k I 100 e al elow mar et 1n e I · MUST SEE lerest. and owner will , • 1 10 SO e Ocean & bay vu. 4 Bdr help with rinanctng. e 1 • e
w/bonus rm. pool , spa. $204.900 Call for tn \ 13.20
+city lites. Prof. decor. formation, 979-2390 e 1 •
Assume 11.78": A great TAI llULTO S e I 15.IO I value. $429,000. Won't • I as t. Pat r I ck . a g l ~ Vlllacp e I Add S2.IO for Heh 1ddltlonalllne for ltlmH
l20.IXX> down A model. e I •
As sume $122 .400 at e I e
t2"•"{ owe at 13'" • 1 Publish my ad for 8 days starting e 1!78..i.500 Ph J44-6426 I
4BR Pool Home m Mesa e 1 Class1flcat1on e
Verde. Lrg Corner Lot. e Name e Brttieway 2 car Gar + •
Muth More' Dnve By. • Address 2828Tlbago Piere. Then e --------------! e can for Appl to See. • City Z1p __ Phone .. •
157·09S9 Open House Sit/Sun ll-4PM Pnred e Check or M.O enclosed O I
to Sell at 111sooo e Chargemyadto • W1As111mable Loans e t
Ccop!raUoo with Aats1 _ e 0 ..,.. # Exp I
Int. I 04 4 e lillliil e
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••••••• .. • .. ••••••••••• e 0 !!Im # Exp t ~--·--· • l..------------------------------• I . r·-··:···· WE 'LL.PAY THE POSTAGE ••••••••••••• , t
L0¥a.Y 'AMLY M .. Charming, well kept 4 BR home
ln Mesa Verde area or Costa Mesa. Features fruit treet, BBQ
• RV accaa1 &ovely pantllne and
more! $-134 ,900 MadeHne
Crawford 153-1414 CT20>
: ! 111111 ~~m;.~c,r i : • ti II =~I~: 0 : •
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BUSINESS REPLY LABEL ~ I ·.~, >.-. • ••\! <l•U•U'-'""° II CO\fUAOA (ALllO'lllo• ~
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~···················· ........••..•......................•........................................................ ·······'··············· .................................................................... . nr..w. aUyouneedtoknow ~ll1team elt•n. !1..tXTRJCIAN -priced nllO~SHOPPlR DUMP JOBS BRICKWORK: Small Palo.lloa'atheOame •BRYANT'S• 8UOOETl\ATES/l.Jt'd .-u. •boulbankr111>tclic11l Qilor bri&btentn• wht riCl\t, fret aUmate on <:ompletelawnmalnt. 'Sml1Ulovin11Jobt Joba, Newport, Co1t1 Pedmen'atb•N•~1 waueonrlncRemoval towJnift.ftmljc*OIC '1157 a-DI 7l4t83S-tl Clll'I · 10 min. bleach. larftournallJobt. lndoorplanhpeclallat Ca11MIKE84e·1391 Meu. Irvine . Reta. Uc.mM w.oei2 All1)pp. tu.aw Freest.Int.
,,;,; rlf II ...... Kall, llv/dlft. rma SU; lk.. 9'73-03$9 Pominidt,!:48Sl HAULlNG,DUMP 875-3176. HMPlinlill&·~ll.uad ~
l'aALLyouply ........... , ... , ...... , ~room S'f.50: couch lJC'DELECTRICJAN ,a_ ..... __ ""11l·YdC'-~ JOBS,ulltorR111dy, Hart M11011ry. Brkll, 7 .,11 -...,~uaUtu wor ... tt••••u••••••••••••••• fora FlNE HOME '""• cht $$. Ouar. elhn. Qu.al. wolt ·Reas. ratea ._1UK41.,, w Bt--" c R f ' ....,.. 1 • -Ht 30day ad IMPROVEMENTS petodot. Crpt "'pair. ~est. 631·5072Tom Treetrhn·E:tpert m.a t. S4l""2'7 """• oncrett. e · IHWralel. l!ll Ml·l· PLASTER PA"" NO
In the Mdillonall Remodellnf 15-yra exp. Do work roPQUALJTY Jlm&sl.0129 CL1AM UP YOUI ACT Uc. 3882N. 6'6-l5'7 L.J.B. PAINTING Rtlhictoa. ~t/ext. 30
D4K. Y m,yse!f. Ref a. sn.oLOt Electrital work at GAIDEti SERVICE TODAY ! Yard/ &araae Masonry our Specialty! Q UALJTV. RE~. )'!'!·Nat. Pi MS.Zt'11
PILOT __ El IN. NoSteam/NoSltampoo JW.t.ratea S3l·S065 TreeTrfm/Removat cln·i..,. etc. 1 ton truek. Clea.o, quick, depend•· Larry14$-t31hft.1 Nuti>t~fi~iture• s.,ltWs SMVICI cdt.Sf StainSpeclaU1t.F1al Eletttlcou~Speclalty l e42·1337aru 1Z5.S3H993(24bn> ble.We.'tr.~~eJob. INT/!XTPAlNTINO h..t. ttJ.IOt ..................... ..
DIUCTOlY --•<-OONTUO'fWt dry. Freeest.839·1582 Clean. quick, depend•· Mowtnc. 110. SlS, $20. TREES/SHRUB TRIM EXPERT BRlCK AND Quality work. Re11. ED'S PLASTERING **~'* *
OOJTNOW! Uc.t~ no-uw' c:.,.t/U ... ttf'y ble.Wedouyiliejob. Haulioat Dumph11. Garaae&YdClean·up:s , Muoory. Small Jobs, 1'-eeest. Steve5'1-4281 ~ lnt.orExt. All Slus lnatalled. A911,..,. 5-*-....;.;;...~-....=-....,;:~=..;;. ....................... •631·2345• US..$20. 75'-9904, 155.0095 free•t. 657·8271 repairs. Prplc faclnaa. BOGDANOV PAINTING Free e1t. Grut Pricet, Ul•lfAA
Your Dally Pilot MecHMICOMSTI. NewYr'sSpeclal' Crpt R~D/COMM'L/INO Man I DermUUon·Grading Re11.661~. 760-7074 16 yrs O.C. Top quality, PWTERlrS'l'UCCO lit
Service Directo.ry ~ustorn hoines. fram· i..,hol. cleanin11. Scotch 3> yn ex~. Do my own '-'ti Senk" Transport. Asphalt, con· LANmCP /M~ONRY Neat. St. Uc. 334950. Repair. No Job too sml. ••••••••• .. •-'•••••••••
Repmentatlve mg, remodel. l)'ench &\&lrd, Free est. 972·8839 work, Lied. Al846-8l2G ....................... crete & tree removal, Con ret Ll . ~/839·1816 '4$-~fgu..&H9 TILE INSTALLED
642-1671,txUU doors, a)Q'Ugbta & patlp c...t/C:O.Crett RoorCo-'--TreeTrim&Removal Soll prep It planting. 3>yn. ~eee~t.cs:~14 QUAIJTYINT/EXT "' &I 1 AllKindlOuarantecd
llll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f covera. IM8·3652 ••••••••••• • ... -., Home Re~alrs • ~ated equip. Comm 'l Uc'd. Refa. Free est. •••••••••••••••••••••.. Ilda John 840-9217 -= ••••~••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1--. 3 It id'I ., ... 7638 Mo..._. MCIE """8 c:--.t~ THOMPSON'S C.J1'el IJ Linoleum For ,,.....,.,,pr ·904.3 .,,_. • ..., **646-10670 DralnulearedlromflO CUltomCeramkTlle
...,, ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• /V\NCRETECONSTR. Ho-Van •-uotor e,1• 11 General bauUn1 & mov · ........ ••••••••••••••• '"'··"t Pt Lo I t PlumbincRepalra Promptserv. f.'reeeat. •••••••••••••••••••••• CU<"IV'l.M C w .. ..,, • ,. _. •• ., i T k •ABC MOVING ·Exp., _.... y g, w w n er u Chu k87E l•OI P/RQtrlies·Fin.Stmts o1v ABINE;rs Uc.#383383 8'2-8'82 Home.Mi~Dave. ••••••n••••••••••••n• ng ree wor • gar prof. low rates. Quick, rat.ea in effect. Hooeat, Freeett.Mtr ... 642·9033 ----'=uc;;;.;;;..~"~;..;;.....--
Compl.Set-up&cServ. Kit.,bani,gar.urute. ~·-I F b b TRACTOR, Ideal for cleanup F ree est ca-·1 .. 'servi·ce.u".'"lO rellabJe.IMS-5648 ATLASPWldBINO& 25YrsExp.freeElt.
Re Refs. ~l/S49.J88S ---"J _...--. CH or t e est lil e &c ll ••" 714-842 4597 rerw ~"" n--·--b'· W .. G u . 540-$834 ••••••••••••••••••••••• linoleum flooring. call an acreas ar~as, ..., · J•E PAlNTING HEATING-REPAIR .._._... .., ora. uar. Corpeaht PEP GIRLS cleaning Greg 67s.,c39c. We're wide ,Kub<?ta slllplo1der. Howtde .. g •A-t MOVtHCW• Comp!. painting int/ext. REPLACE 8'S·l688 'John 492-3382
• ...................... service. Homes·Office•· proudofour work ! $.llbr. lns d. "2·5006 ....................... Top Quality. Special Free est. Low rale$ ,.. ri1 M llf T Strtke FINEF~NlSHWORK Apts.548·0663 friilltu lefllblllR Ha.dytm• Want a REALLY CLEAN care in handling.~ yrs Compl.bandyman :~ .. !'~.~~~ ..... ~ ........... , ..... ..
Reroodeling/Doors bung ,.--" od G----• -t 9 ....................... HOUSE? Call Glnghafll exp. Competitive rates. service ---n •Elpert Tree Pruning• Randy720-t260CdM Wit or&, wwwnn ....................... Carpentrv M••onrv Girl. Freeest.MS·5123 Noovertlme. 731).U53 Lic.'412000 Evs642·1305 nu,,r-u. ""A-mercialLandaca-
........ ......................
-••••••••••••••••••••••• SPECl"'L . ., a.ii ·~ ...... .,.4 1MIMT l,NUI r"' CHAR RENOVATING ADD'NS/REMODELING * "' * Roo(111g ·Plumbing ROBIN'S CLEANING SfARVJNG COLLEGE PAINTER NEEDS _,_., Services 957·8388
Driveways, Parking Lot lnt/eXl·Cablnets·Boal Plans. Lic'd. George Any chair band·slripped Drywall· Stucco · Tile Service-a thoroughly snJDENTS MOVING WORK!~ yrs exp, int/ OraJ\4e C.o. area. 15 yrs 'free Trimlng, clean ups.
Repairs, Sealcoating. docks. 25 yn. 645-3749 Pilmer & Sons, 557-11932. or reglued, $19. 75. A Rerrodel. J.B. 646·9990 clean house. 540-0857 CO. Lie. #T124·436. ext. Acoustic ceilings. exndpenence, Call for info. Moolhy service free est.
ALLSTATE PAVING
Sealt'OaUng · StriplnJ
Repairs. Comm./Res1d.
Lit. l!n362 645·8181
S •-s CU Touch Of Cius ln· Gener 1 u · lnsu~ 64l 84Z7 D · p · t' 0•7 5186 1 rates. • ~· 5 6 T · T .. Asphalt STOM ADDITIONS Additions, remodels, terien. 711 W. l?lh St. a mamtenance WA'OCH US GROW! av11 am mg .,.. · 96U IU .... 6-7 5 ony s ree
__ .;;;;U:..:;c.=63::..::l...::-4.:.::t99~--i KI t ch en re mod. . home imp rove me nt Repairs & Decorating IMM •cu• "'TE SUPREME PAINTING ..=Serv::::....:.;1~ce:;__ ____ _ Skylites. Refs, Bill windows, doors, patios: #A21C.M.642·77l2 •Qi..iality• Ray640~ "' """ SfARVINGACTORS Int/ext. Wallpaper R.E. broker will manage ~ ............ 646-0002 driveways . re •••g HOME IMPROVEMENT .~~=~~!s MOVJNG COMPANY European craftsman your office bldg in re· !~ .............. ,
AGGRESSIVE LEGAL ***** plumbing, etc. Li e •••••n•••••••n••••••• REPAIR-PLUMBING Fast & Careful. lowest Unbeatable prices . tWll for office. Bkkpg Reading & related skills.
Representation. Law of· TiredofPlainWalls?ln· 3787ltPh960·0635 TREES lleatrng. carpentry. . Rates Law Allows. M/C 960-1~-_ serv.avail.543·1927 Credentialed, up. car·
fices 2Um. 545·8422 crease the Value & JM llA.o syr.t.... Topped/removed, clean elec, tUe. Free est. No HorTE cleaning: dependa· Visa. Llc/lns. 673·~ ,__.__ a.fWtW.g ~· Speciali1ing grades ~~.;;.:..;;;;:..::.:....::...:::..=..=--1 n..auty of Your Home ...... U"" la~ renov 7ct u 76 iobtoo•mall. eu.2311 ble .. bones. t. Cleaned to p..a..aa.... ,...._,, ....................... l •. 11••.7779 A -t1·-1JC Free design free est • t"'I WU • .J .... C::--•.. ___ .,...,___ satisra .. 1on. U .... H• _...,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'O ln'I "'-'" With The Richness of R i I ~-. "'",....,... HANGING $10 ROLL J.D. Hom Re(mishing .......... •••••••••••• Solid Wood.496·6961 Room additions. tenant K&DLandscapeMai.nt. e pa1rs, pa. ~l n g, LORRAINE'SHOME ••••••••••••••••••••n• I Antiques, kit. cabinets, W'-dow~
TIR.OH YOUR Cil Custom Carpentry By improve men l . in . Resld/Comm. Clean.up. cliaarpeblen897try.~n11t1an, re· SERVICE. REFS. Fine pamtin~ by Richard Slripping-disr on paper F\ne painting. 645.0664 , ..................... ~ .. •---ad of 0 surance work, decks. UHauling.548·2489__ """' n...-Sinor. Lie, ms. 13 yrs of Visa/MC 645·9325 --''LeltheSunshmeln ......., wax.' mo. ''Jay". (Formi·ca & . -vwutrans 962·0510evs happylocalcustomers. •· .... /R.....I "·II"·· 1.:-Wlnd ...... 7c"5007 7c""""'2 paU06 F,,.nrun· g Own Busiftess·, JACKOFALLTRADES · UC.PAPERHANGER ...-*9 ... ,....r """ ~nsrwae ow .... · "'-' I .,.. . ...,.. Tile) "•2·8809 or Call 77(). L. v ... "'op""··"ty/Reas Rates Thank you. 631-4410 Cl · Ltd c•o ""c3 .,.. ---~7 1c 313174_ 4 Yrs Exp. Landscaping. Call day or night. '' ......., · -Bonded & guar. No job •••••n•••••••••••••n• earung, . ....., . ...,..
POOF. POLISHING Answer Ad #620 at REMODEL IAD()..ONS Grtklg & Brick Patios. •Jack675·30lh Pref. bachelor homes C.fotltPm.HllCI toosmallortoolarge, COMMBCIA.L 20% Monthly Discount =:.~k1~~~~~ or 642-UX>, 24 hrs. &Carpentry. Lir'd. Gntd. Prof. Service at REASONABLE <2U>4!9·8907 25 yrs exp. Lie. 4o!IMI Free est. Tony 898·Z728 /IMDUSTllAL •RESIDENTIAL•
---------1Cabinets. Counter tops. 25 yrs. Irwin 548·Z719 Prlres Sure lo Please. PROMPT. FREE EST nJE Bl_tOOM 89UAD &oded. lru;. Refs. Color WALLPAPER lE:MODWHG! Avg 1 sty $30; avg 2 sty MysittlRg Doors, Greenhouse win· ratioftt 4911-~1~.L7JI & W IE_._ ALMOST EVERY Quality · Reliable expert. 963-09ll Dirk All kinds. Free est. Tum lost or unused MS. Chris 957-8388
.................. , .. , dows. Finish work. COf10 Gardening -Compl REPAIRNEEDED . Housecleaning.673-3121 SU/roll.Lic.330986 space into a workable
Babysit, our CM homes. l 754-4420 ··~~iA~ .. o~s"" clean up~ tree hauling 1 __ DAVE645·4757 . Reliable Lady to Clean c.to.P~ Norm645·0880 area·rooms divided. ~l~~~ei~s a~o~;e~.:~~ 0~
YT".,'!· .. ~r~~· Carpet Senice & PARTNERSHIPS for us~ble items . I Masonry-Carpentry-Tile House or Boat. ~~ei::S. ~~rs~ Col~~ THE PAPER HANGER drywall, drop ceihngs & spider and read in the
....,,......,.., .....,.s759 ••••u••••••••••11••••• Formed by Attorneys M1rhael 645·6734 _ , ~lumb·Roofing-Remod 873-86M expert. 963·0911 Dick Prof .. quality work. trim carpenlry·lo com Dai Iv Pilot Classified
Babysitting Mon · Fri. WeCareCrptCleaners Reas.rates. 557_5700 Gardening Wanted
1
Stucro-Drywall536-8700 lilc.cimTa I'm Small-My prices Freeest. Steve547--4281 pletton.CallTomorJe(f M!<1ioo about M1~s Muf·
Newborn lo 2 yrs. 6 to Steamclean&uphols. -----Mowing.edging, raking, HOMEIMPROVEMENT •••H••••••••••••t1•••• 11, CdM NB QUALITY at66l·291Jor 493·3886. fet's Tuffetandbought 1l 5:~. CM. 1142.2995 'l'ruck mount unit Drywal s weep in g Fr e e Tile floors . Fenring EXP ER. PREP AR ER ~p·~":on·673·6477 . Paperlng/Patnling RooflRg for S9 9S. You can sell
INFANTS & UP cared Work uar. 645·3716 •••••••••••••••••••0 •• eslimates. 645·4372 or I Plumbing-All small Enrolled to practice Freeest. Janis552·023J ••••••••on••••••••••• your tuffel and lots or for, my C.M. home nr1 KaszSham"""'&Steam DRYWALL1ACOUSTIC ~5737 w... 28 rs exp 979 2265 before the IRS. Quality G.L, Mangun Painting REPAIRS FOR LESS other things through
19th Pl """' 14yrsexp '°'·llyl1c'd&. · c:=-:J!!l!::_ · · Cust work Lic#"""•78 Wallpaper contractor & D ·1 Pl Cl ·r· d & acenlla. C.M ll!<sqft,OverlOOO,lor ru CUSTOMGARDENING , f a_t_~~~t.549·2A..!!__I · · ""°' p · Li 0 Shingles. Oat. 30 yrs a1v 1ot ass1 1e 646-5759 Th Bad N msured. S_3_2_-~4_9 European Cra ts man Ins. Free est. 731·8281 8111tlng. c 328240 ,C, e~p. Free est. 77().""25 Ads. ·call 642·5678 at oXtraChg --Resid 'l/Comro ·1 Ben's Home lmprov. FEDERATED 23 yrs. Gary Gompf --'-'-" ..... _-'--"-'--""-'---'-'-''--• .:..:==~:==---
Uc'd childcare, loving Rick, 642-6194 DRYWALL TA PING Ctn-. 893-3577_, X_4_3 and Ma int. 954.5231 aft. 2 income Tax Service NELSONS PAINTING ._,.-'366 ~ R~ Make v. our shopi Ing •-· h' All 63 •"7 r t Int/Ext ResidtComm ~"' d°~=ns 1p., Have something to sell? Freetextures & acoustic WANT ACTION? ___ 1..,_1 or app · Acoi.istic ceilings. Refs. Have aomethmg 10 sell' "Qua 'ty Roofing or e~1er by using the ally
-----· ___ _. Classified ads do it well est. Kevi.n 675·9088 (.1assi!ed Ads 642-~7~ Classified ~ds 642· 7.§61_ lic'd. Free eat. 837 .2637 Classified ads QQ)t well. Fine Homes." 645-0104 Pilot Classified Ads .
a.-&tat. o.itus/ cwotstote .· .... ~ HcMtMtu • ....._. ......... u • ....,,,_, Homesu.t.Mwd ................. ••• ••• IWta s. 1100 Propet1y 2600 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •.•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• M~leach 106 ~s.Hoft• 1100 .............................................. lalloalslmcl l206 CoataMna l224 1Wi9••ac• l240 Mtwportleodl l26' Mtwportleoch l269 a.-• l276
•••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ crwMt" CDM DDb. iraut.irul too ft. x 200 .n ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••!•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• •••••••• Harbor Ridge, s partner . Great rentals, red"uced ronta~e ~n scenic Bayfroot. beach.. 2 Br. 2 8 1 d HOM E FOR RENT Harbor Ridge lease. 4 Br, j""~ B.R , B Co c Broadmoor 4Br wantedtobuiJti custom2BrDblw1deacrossfrom toS280.000~Call RogueR1vermSouthern Ba. 123 E. Bayrronl. 2Ad~i.senc\s~~~· 2 Bdrm. S600. Fenced 3.Ba.DR .. F.R .. study. P"0:3 s ·2(; A S ndo. 2bahome.sepdining&
horm. 759-0481. Hughes ~ Supenor & sn-9667 ~'eingon. ]rees. water· Balboa Island. si2oo m w :,::U:, 631.4889 yard & garage. Kids & highly upgraded. Cab v.u. DeOOr ~8s0 rr:,r.7:-,s~!,l, ram rm, Ocean view ., Placen~1a. .. S22.950 ~ ~ ..,.. f , .. -.ose to town. winter. Sl400 annual · · · pets welcome. 545·2000. guard gate. pool/tenn~. · · Gardener $950/mo ..._,Ylewttlls Terms hke rent. Agt ._,,......,. 2000 $40.000. PO Box 469. Herb days 2131478.3577. VIEW FROM N:eot,oofee mx>tmo. Bob or Dovie Or492·0590.AskforAnn. 493-1357 Spacious Family Home 5.5'7·9300or962·1868 ....................... Grants Pass. Oregon 1 EVERY RM 38 21 b -dbl ~gt 759·1Z21 New po r l C rest'-=::...=::..:... _____ _
Alanyext.ras-Lge fee lot H.B. 4-P~EX. ~ br, 2Vl ba m36.1·50.H76 .. 149L_ Capittl90 leodi l218 New 2Br 2',.,ba, micro. r h a. enc gar · ' -Townhouse New I y ,_..a..cf or
nwbl,terma$48S,OOO 1;:~~ .;:i:~2~~er~~~t owners unit, frplc. •~ ,.._ ···~··•••••··~···•••••• spa ss5o, 541 4165, ~~le. bRaut patiG. '8GCA.NTOM carpeted and painted. 3 shed llOO Bkre'IS-4494/~·1300 950 557 9390 Super lax benefit.a. 2 yn ~ • O Capistrano Palisades lux , 6?S.l7SI ~· osemary O.Goff COWM bdnm. zi, ba. Walk to Sl6. · Agt . · or new, Onl_y $39.000 dn. By --.nft 270 ocn yws. brand new side --1 3 Bc1nns. 21'J Ba Pool beach. teMis. pool. spa. COME SEE Gorgeous 962-1868 ~I, agt, 972-~300. • ....................... , by stde duplex. 2 master 2Br. IBa. nr S.C. Plaza. 2 bdrm condo, new c t. Jacuul & Tennis. Newly Mini Ocean view. Av all
4BR, 2'hBA. Fam RM. '75 5th whl lrlr. 35', ate, 32 U·2YRSOLD 10 Acres avocados. bdnm/bas. walk lo bch. full sec, pools /spas, ~-f 'd I t I.> dee. VacantSl 200/Mo. immed S850 mo I yr Pool 2 Frpl's Terms lo t $7900 Rancho Cal 12•1. int e7nn ..,.,2228 Adllsonly SSSO 546-4529 '"""' n g, poo • enms, · · · · ' ' · w spa~ ren , · l{UNTlNGTON BEACH Sl6S 000 X In. 1 1.n'vest' x~-· ....,...__ · -b ba--h · r 1 handball, clbhse. No We:9eY M. T~ Co. lease. Children 0 K i=o.==------
• OHeaP!.?._r DLaan1 .. e'.' .,.1.200042. 631·30'77,548·3663 --S2.472KFtP•12.000dn. ~3288· ·"-.. Mor 3222 3 r. 21 ~e. rpi~,; pets.~ lst. last $200 Realtors 6«-4910 640-1644or545-8407 """ ... .,.. NWPT BCH 28 I 1 · to be h "P 'd '' ...,,. -gar awn ma mt f7..., ..._ Also 3BR. 2BA.Pool, . . · r. poo · mi. ac · " e · ---•ouu••••••••••••n••• ·.,..,.7002 640 1c·oo U9'· 788·7633 Beacon Bay 2 Br I Ba.
S 92 0 A )acurn bch SlO 000 l.25% tax shelter 1st yr. ltlal Estate horecliffs Mo to mo lse 2 rm . .....,. • · ~ -l-1...-A ·1 •1 t I J ... e11
3400
~00· wner/ gt. Bkrtowner675'-4Q!Q..· __ · Cal1Pb~2-9300, ~ 2800 Brl"'i ba ram rm living F..astsideCondo2 Br. I'"-'.....--l244 IAYFtlOMT uoNncl 1tttune.,,..,,,.,
. 25· Airstream wiroom. --•••11•••••••••••••••••• nn kitchen 2 rj,cs lge Ba frplc, garage, •••1111••11•••••0 ••••• 2 story. 4 + bdrms. 2
•••••••••••••••••••••• II ocean view. 2 BR. 2 Ba , furn beaut ..
microwave, overlooking
pool area. Sl500 mo. IM/opt. 673-7300 Carol. a .
--------•!across street from IMCOME Want a lax shelter~ Sell yard. Pets/k.ids ok $950. ~/rm._~~J, ___ ~me.newJbr.Jba . ! baths . fire~_la ce. GuardGated
DREA.MCA.STLE beach.$6000.SeeatHun PROPERTY myl/l2yearnewtriplex tst /lut. refs req I Yr New Condo l400 sq ]a~j,r~~:;x,p~~oos'?°l.l ~~view. ieAal)~ la~ieG2~.~~~m . OH LIDO lington by Sea Park. SPECIALIST or exch~nge eqwty for 644-0164 ----ft JS' Beamed Ceihng. . -·--. F~ 1 per mo, va1 Deane Home This new 3 bdrm jewel 21871 Newland . Space rondoor. Owner After7 Microwv 2 car gar WOODBRIDGE Jbr 2ba · ·
has all the features of a I JO H B or ca 11 Select from multiple un 714-700-07:14 SPYGLASS HILL wlopener Pool Sec !Ip atrium. detached -_ lL~_mp240-~-
million dollar home 1·737"9466'. . llS. Terms available to ---Spectac~lar ocean vu. g arci; MORE' $69s Mo home. Gardener incl. nr oova SHORES
UPER VA CATION RATE Exclusive Indian
Wells Condo. pool. spa,
gotr. tennis, prof de coraled, 2Br. sips 6, Wknd /wkly /mo nlhly
rates. (714) 549·1930
wkdys' ( 714) S86-4130
Detailed craftsmansh.ip 2 bdrm. 1 bath. new swtyourneeds. Rentals J+ family. forma l dm +uSe<: Call6Jl-5628 pool /lake Yr lease S875 Nr. new 4 bdrm & fam
ll!ed throughout. Too & d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ing . pool & s pa N.-1 --28 -18 ~ rm. home in quiet.
manyamenltl·estomen· carpel r apes J-.. u....--"'-·-1-L....d S200()/mo.Ga.rdenerand ice cean r a. ---1~ .. LS secluded We stclirt Beautiful adult park. .-.->nlrmHft' pool rare in cl. Agt enclsdgarage.yard.new 11:1"11•"' I.km. Pricedri ht. towspace rent. 6411·8612 ~ •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• 700.9333 paint & carpet. No pets 1Br.1 ea S650 F qrove. formal din. rm .. ldboal.a.d l106 2-8 R 18--A Fr--1-r-$550 +security 2544 2Br.lBa. $700 4t5 Br.2 Ba, amilyrm .. library w/b,rlck f~lc . r-a..-• ..L./ .. p Dining rm .. I block from h"" f k t b l -;::;;;! ~ • ••••••••••••••••••••••• B · d C 1. · Oran ge. house A 2Br.2Ba SSOO I NH H h S h 1 _e am. 1 c en. oo _,,,... 1500 IYMtJ)U!'f\'lfOC I! (21 2bdrm homes. eame ei in gs ~·ZT78. 3Br 2Ba $1250 · · ig r 00 · &spa.12.500/Mo. ICclllda.W.-
, ...................... =.!-Of ';7 1700/mo.thruJune.An· ~~ Old CdM s.s95 LeRaisorRlly83J.8600 I L11~/mo Agent W~M.T~Co. "'9flni1Md l42S
2 c e meter Y lo ls . 71'1 64 t·0763 nual rent. $750 & $850. -----lll. ZIA. 2 Br+ d d S · --Realtors 644·4910 •••••••••••••••••••••• Westminster Park. S900 :?92.'i College Avt> Can be un!um. 675·9667. Soectacular ocean & city Newly rmdld. No Pets. . en con ° on an Bh.tf Condo. 4 bdrm. 31 -aut. 2bdrm condo, forbothOB0.847·7946 Costa Mesa.CA.. ----------fights view from every New Bil ins w/DW. Joa~uin golf course. baths.Sl200month 3Br.stud3.3 Ba,l~.. prime S.C. Plaza toe. CoroMdelMar l122 room Large2 Br frplc Frplc,elc.LrgPvtyrd. Ava 1 Mar 1. eves 644·26<Y7 I BALB ABAV LUB waterfalls. streams . Slt,000 C-rcial -----•••11••u•••••••••••••• ma n.y amen i't le s ' 723 Center Street. $725 752•8581 --~ 1 or 2 year sub -lease. (fia. pool saoo mo
CONDO .. Balcony, ocean Prw.rty 1600 ·-LEV "LLEY Upgraded 2Br 2ba. yard. Sl200/mo Call Anlhonz rm '-t + Dep Ava1·1 -•"'ECO .... DO CShoanal Front. Newport 12.~1 mo .. unfurn or 14)67'9019·, 61t """"'" . ••••• ?;;~ .. •••••••••••• iv..-"' carport. n 0 d 0 gs . · · "' · · """"'~ ~ res. 4 Br +. Lease or partially furn . beaut •~-=.;;..;.;:; ... -=c=.... . .::..;..;::~....=..::;..:.=._ view, guarded gale, sub· ' Ten SMtter $7~/mo. Agt 673·1181 days 642-5757. eves Mar.1.646-6423 l bdrm m spac1~us Ion, OPtion to buy. $1500/mo . bay front & view. 2 1--------• terranean parking, MEWPORTllEACH Near new 4·plex. _2 ---wknds631·6630. 4 Br. 3 Ba. hse .. frplc, greenhouse window, Tennis. pool, walk to bakonys 2700sf 2 park WESTCUFF elegan~ ct'1ubho~se I & High visibility. C-l bdrm, 2 bath each unit ~ 3 2 2 Br 1 Ba .rottage. frplc. fenced yard. No pets. enc'd p~tio, central air, bearh. Agent 646· 1044 or ing. new ly dee. Unit Exceptionally neat con·
gym . u an ea ty Oceanview. l20fl. Cron· wit.!1 fireplace, enrtosed ...__. 14 beam ce1l, 1 car gar. S780/mo. + dep. Agt. f~.As.snpool.apa,len· ~2800. #314. 1mmed. occupan-do Ground level ~2960 ask for Lori. patio, garage. 9a,r,i Isl. ........................ ~/mo. 673-1.249 Eves. 642·5722 ms . ~ear Northwood ; ry .. Contact Gary . leas-Spacious two bedrooms. Ltown-Al-~g~~exis~ngbbui!~d Pos cash .rlow. Now Luxury l rt·level CottaMesa 3224 3bdrm, 2 ba, dble gar, Shopping Center. SSSO llCWCA.M~ONLSE ing office 9.4 Mon·Fri Two baths . Pri vate
Br 3 Ba '!:Er·~ h m0g""" fsq.0 .or w.11 SLS9.500. Bill Grundy. townhome . 3Br 3ba. c•mnrt and patio Yd permo+SSSOdep.+SIO 2BR McLain .Condo., only&45-5000Extl6l patio Love"'"rounds& 4 · · xec. ome. 1 ·"""sq. t. wner wi Rltr,675·6161. Pool. tennis. P\1 beach, ...................... , -rv · · cr edit check . Rod $ll25permo. Call Gerry . -· · pool . Aduif ~omplex. f~\~~ n~l~tyr~d~c. di~~ ~~f.15,000. 631·7300, sunit, C.M. A8t. 1980 \714)84().2268 IEONEOF o'::~de~~:~~Oil!e s.52-5742,M1·6611Agt. 673-n6lor760·1397 '~1~r:i~nvduo.1:a~~· F.asy walk to shops and
side & out. lO'k assuma · j!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!ll priced. $248,000 WC. Noiporl leadt 3169 Re~nU~~? ~a's duplex Fenced yard. 2 ~rondo. l~ ba. Wood· avail. 2 15 St Joo: banks. S6 70 month.
ble loan. $275,000. $1300 6'l5-'iff75 548·5763 ••••••n••!•••••••••! .. NEWEST ga ted ZO grdn.r inrl'd, pet OK. bndge, all upgrades, llGCANYON 644-?~ Bkr. ~~~{~.lease. Broker.
per mo. 752·2550. Oceanside 17,000off /com· CaMery Village Mobile Townhome VILLAGE Ol5 $750. 5SM8'74, 979·3080 Luxurious three 4.5 Br. borne 3 Ba . ·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!1""'!!!1~ • OLD mercial. near rrwy . Home Park F\Jrn1shed 2 COMMUNITY. 2 & 3 Br. 541Vi855,64S·7301 &..p. IHdl 3241 bedrooms. Two baths. Eastblutr. 11200 /mo . I~
SClllDAM 1010 Sl2M. Good financing petsBr. 2bat' Po<>~· a~lts. n~ 2"18a.16Q0.1800sq.ft.of 3br, 2ba. ram rm, Mesa ••••••••••••u•••u• .. • Formal dining ,room. 644-l.547or640-8314. HewCOlldaC.M.. ....................... MEWPORT ILVD Mr. Rossi 851-00ll. • c ose 0 s ops C" ... luxurv. Garages. v_.... Bit IRS 1'mmac oc·· .... -..... Rkhlydecorated Ill mut-2 bdrm. 2 ba. Nr. So Cst 8442 ft c 1 t d 2 restaurants. 1750 mo yr-~... ·~ ""'""· ·m ' • ~""""' ed tones. 3000 sq. rt. PENTHOUSE VILLA Plaza, Waterr1tlls. HOq&JALIFYIMG/ builsdqln gs ~i:~ ·s5 SUM.C M Bargainless ly \nclutil.673·3685or ydro·tubs in master ST15incl(J'dnr.557-6853: MOIH.IHOMIS J1cuui orr master BALBOA.lbdrm+den. slreams.pool.sna,enc ASSUME Freeway window thanlOyrsold.$238,000 1·525·1648,1-772·1801 suite, dining rooms. ~m>;831-3J65. \\mi of pvt bch,24 hr bedroom.Jcargarage. fpc. pano;amic qcean garS750mo .. LOW~LOWDOWN3yr Owner financed with £~£.,5 ..... 5763 Teac he r /wife w i ll wooihumi.ngfireplaces, CIM4rm<'Oltagew/ securily,lotsofcoves& $20SO month. Yearly andBayViewSkyhghts .. _759_-0934_ .S5J-?360 . new areamhouse, 3 Bd 2 responsible down pay· ~..,, .,..., housesil your bay /ocean micro-wave ovens· petsok, today '375 rocb, 2Br. adlts only, lease. Ca ll 631 ·7300. High Security. Water & ~ ---
Ill, fam rm, cul·de·sac, ment. TRJ .. .,v5155 OOO fronthome 646.3557 private patios It yards. OCl\ENTALS 7S0·331' onl.y·nodogs.4fochoose Realtor. gupd.f750lle.M6·7010 arge 2BR 3BA up·
2 1 1 t Ilea 1 rw;A , • Garde net provided. Rem>deled 2b / k from. -.Wto llOOO. m•> graded. m Newpprt Ter-~ gaowcg i · u . $245,000 l.Qcated m Costa Me~a 2Br mobile. Lido Pk $700 Elegant Uviftg only 15 r w wor -..is HURRY! 3br. "fixer" in race. Rec tac .. jaruui. ' · ase o~· COROHA.PA.CIFIC these 2 Bdrm 2 Ba umts lmmac 3 Br Twnbome minutet from F.ashion sbooll&!i~ds$450 POOL HOME Corona,kid·petl350 .@mo~_+_util,.l!.4?·}917 ':=t~~.~uH1n~~ng: 11.ALTOIS 644-8567 are great rentals. They $1Z7S Island, 1 minu~s to s.c. OC-R~~ 750-3314 2BR, l~BA. f'81c. View, 3BR Frn home Bk Ba y OC·RENTAL 750-3314 1im-------
~·· •• I I t f I
R&IM~
OllerltlA• .... .......................
~Wt ..... 1100 .......................
•DC1TING• .... w.
With or without furn.
have patios & garages. Waterfront Homes Plua or O.C.Airport. OC·RENTALS New ~t. Ider Cot· l13lOlrmCa11Suzanne ~rt Crest, close to THllLUFFS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!1111!!!!!!!!!!!!1111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1111!!!!!!1 Assume9SK tstloanand 631·1400 Just eaat of Newport Hbr'sS200to$2000 \aft.~o.875-0349 ils.3445agnt fr tennis courts. 3 OWC2nd. SEAVIEW ' F rmer Blvd.&so.ofSanDlego 75Q.33JA open7days Forlease2bdrm,2ba. Nwptffgta,2br,verypvl, 23~ ba. tile entry, Onestory.endunit CO\"
--'-J · b 0 Fl'wy. Starting al $900 a a Lovely Laguna Beach gar. rfr beach fr Hoag trash cmptr, $950 mo. tr e d 'Pali o T .,.. o ".~. 3Br 3 a. Ocean rmnth. 631-5439, 2473 MISA.V DE home with washer / holp.Nopels.645-9095 Ptuib"lse/oPllobu~. bedroom. two bith
VleW. $2000/mo. Dennis On nae Ave .. Cetta 3 Bdrm , 2 bat b ' dryer swimming pool Super Harbor/Ocean Vu. 673-,._Catol, agt. Adults only. S800. month ~l~Us & Assoc. Mesa. ~~~~l:~··v~~:wa~~~rh ek, ~~Y furn. st2$ 3llR. 2ba. Sl18S mo. 239 Lease/Op\ion. Harbor ~~~~.lease. Rroker.
Lrc 4BR Exec Style 1 • m>._.wvv OctanVu.6'75·2967 Ridge Crest 3 Br 3ba, ~!!!11!!!!!11!!•!!!!11!~•· Home. ID Prer.r•ed eardentr. $77$/mo. Ph 1_ ..._ XI f' ~· I"'! "' 545-~74 ...,.... ...... JZH 2 Br. 2 81 . w/stone frplc, ....... nt man .... 60.000. i-------• Residential Area. CM . • ....................... f!d . pool ' gar . 6"~_ ..
Brand New, Carpets, Lo?tlw Ho.I Thrf!e and five bdrma. ~/mo. 675·2520days. Westdiff. Sharp II( 38r. DrepH, • Paint. 3 bdrm. i ba, water, landlc•_,. y rd Co -1 t b'
Tbrnjhout £very fardenerlncluded.1795. munit,y~t 1and ap~: J~9t ,~~· ~f6 .tH~t
Room. Window. a Car childdl.6"·2778 mlerowave OVt(I, di•· THflLUFH t!;SH1!7.
Gar. Fenced Back Verd. Clean a Br. 1 Ba. duplex, hwuher, 2 or 3 ba. 1775 Ont story. two bedroom, Gardtoinl Strvict, enclacl Jat_.t...i>rlv1lt to t87S. Mon thru Fri twobttbcondo. Endun· 2bdrmr~rkl.1do <.:nndn .
Or111•• Tree. Water. i@ard. NO PETS. $485 ' 11'·18M121 eves wkenda It Gorseous 1reent>ell. nr Jlo;ia. $$9$, li1t htxt +
Peli Subjett to AP• _ :W:M8tl · 71U!IH025 Covtrtd palio with SZOOdep 78.7., • .,
VILUIALIOA Attrutl~·~ oondo
Modern ~urity build
Ing. Onan ''It'~. l ~room II COf\\'\'rtiblt' den. Adult.son)\· Yl'Ul\' luae. 1800. ·mu nth".
Realtor. 63"7300.
pr~·~· lmmed Occ. ·~· &Qlictit and Indoor/out· w _, -=~=-::;=='---~ J20? l1JllO o.9ST•• ';-~:9'.:~.~'ii1~1::: OCUNFIOMT doorcari-t.Adultaonly. Be11.tiful a bdrm. 211 ba m.--. ..
....................... Sharp 3 b~" 2 b1. rt,rl& w/d pet 011 Lr1 •Vr.fvt comm .. f9U month. Vurly townho"-with ()\•e1u1 HU 9001/1111_1 bbq, car/ '800/mo + iec refa' ttnnil, poo etc avail. i.e. Btoker.&31-7300.. vitw. 2' tlrepl~r cs IBnALS carpet, Clr111e1, ntw s..eMl t.5pm· 5se..o10i Option post I bit enclcMd 2 r1tr 1111ra11l' .:;;::.=u...;:~.:...::;::~~-•Yearlr:Wee~lf.Wl11ter kttcben. ,195/mo . af\Jlm • usoo t mo . Owner Bll·fn•. 11eutt1I. ..,,~
U.4 Bdnu, Newport lst /lut. $00 dep. W~ 1" 8 1 Ba 11 J.i!l-GM IAVl'IOMT qt.Inc~~ 759.9103
2150 "-"•Balboa. : S!tTISO 2 Br i"' a:· avaU NoltllVW.28r.lten.2 ba, Pl« and allp for '"ft MIWPOITH6TS JACJ!!SAL, ty CHOeCIL SIDI p . Oaraie. yard: m 1~•.r • .,':~{\ :~: t::l· Furnllhtd • x i;Jd.' den. family rm . ... ~ -... """'-··I ... 1'4.Ba, frple. bll.ll ,,...~.IU-07&1, ~IJ.r, &176/ftlO dtM.7':on!'v:.c1I>•~ f:!t.311.1 blk toNIUI ..........
•Aas. us A rea In w.a~ r•M•l,,.u, d11lw1br, It d , ..... JJ•O !!:IY!· _ = eo1trla and ft . ~~~~,.a::iy+ :! 47Ml1J . ~lli, P~. p':'f:. ~1'i _ .. , ................. ._....,._. . Jijj · Shott tann or .._ optklft. Dtt111. •II\
.............. ol Hamil&Gll. tlr.Jla. Dialft1, , ............................ ) .. ra le~tt auot .. .. ,_ ... , == b a._.. Rm. Near LAllJOIDTJ1Cor7.a ~.....,..111.,. . ...,._.. SIUtdlt ..._ wlt.ll a lieaell. l.1111 ••ao •-.a~o.waw, l.l!!!!!..l:!~~~~-·......-.......... ......_--~~1 •:Nle la Daltr:"Plloti:Vla•lffH Brthr t·u .uu:· !1!:11111& •t AnlL
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'
a Orange Cout DAILY Ptl.OTITueld.y, Ftbruary 9, t982
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ZJ7JO If T-~ 8 T-17141 7'a.JU6
ln,Saddleback Valley Plaza
Al*,,., .. ,, IJulfw-.. [~A.pea ,,...,. .. u.tw.. ..,..._fl u.tw.. I A.pea tuw1h Ulrfw'll. ..•....••.............. .•••.•.••.••.•......... ·······················1······················· ~.~~~ ... ~!.~ ~~ ....... !!!.~ ~.~~~.~~.~!.~~ Htwport leocll lHt iTEP TO OCEAN Most •••••••••••••••••••••••
h . Id C e 1 BR refnfo( ml I no l..oJrgt> 3 bd rm 2 balh p1n1 NEWPORT ~:~la 111r';plc 0o7:aan pets S37S l,nctl') f.u 11 frplt' patw. · i:arJ~e · M
\ 1 e v. r r om de r It 851 2l7S Xlnt 1625 67S 9q2 COUNTRY CLUI SllOOim> Call Anthon) lbr lbarondo JJ<" p<H>I F"rplr 3 Rr212ba 21·ar , UYING
days 642-5757. eHs & rarport. o"look1~.: t~nn1' 2 blk, from be uh Bachelors. l&2 twdroom
"1mds 6Jl-66JO C.-f15. full Se! :SCI ( OJ'\l $i5() llYl 968 9110 apl.s & lownhoUSf'lt
Cute2BR I BA Frplc Plaza area S-47!1 $.~SO olrg lbdrm rnndo patio ~'rom~'IOOO 6« 1900
good area . $600 furn or unrurn ~Jll v.a,hdn frpk pool &l'lj() FEE' Apt & Condo !
mo ye a r I y B r k r Tm, 646 ~ 631112211 1 fJ1 i.er .:Jtc• rloi.e 10 l'ffltab Villa Rentiili. 675-4912 QI.let IBR (1Jrd1•11 \µl lt'arh ti m11 ne14 ~.-..i 675 4912 Broker 1
M7Sm; So of Hv.} W 14 Caqil'h Bit '" I !l6ll56.12 I Lar~ lBR Ut1I pd Spot Olarming I BR 1 yr 0 R ~'rld!lt' $3'10 (;J, f\lmL\hed & l'nfurn I 2 3 less Qw •t S4SO 24ll r
lease. Nev. rarpet + rl' Pd Nr Bu' & Shop~ lldrm •\P1' G.\ m 1tihs1 Js47l8
der. garage. lnd11 rar ~ 3563 I Jani/II s.1u na pool Nopels Avail M,m·hG 21ir2R.I nuuph 1•1111 lt·nn1' 'ollr\l1all ~~l2 Rr t Ba ~ar.igl',
714 883·2123 7 9l'M .:Jr 1 , hihl 1111 111 i-I hJ,k1·1ball ~dme rnom pool. adults. nu pets
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...
4 bdrm home bet
81~ Md Qirean Avail
now f7~Jl37 aft I PM
FShrlBRApt A\llll reb
2Uh. CM Arte No l.11t
ot S*S413
NBprol m11t wilJ ahr tie
Harbor View l\ome
W/ftm 30+ S37S
_..'7tO-OllOZ ........ ...--.__ -
44tt
NIWPOaT EltcuUve Sulw1 h11 of
fica avallablt nr 0 C
~r1. rrom SJl.S w1full
wvlce 1vull1bl1 Call
now for 1 month free
l.aum.9976. -----
8outb l.•111na. Ocuo Side cl Hl&hw1y. Gated
Area. Pool. Pvt En
trance, Bath, 129~. + 631 '.m •q. rt. $1.00 per
Util Muat be empl. have llQ ft .. 397S Birch .. N B
~~.E2 E._v ..... es__ ent S41·5032.
f. child ok. 1hr lux 4br fice space for rent. 385
rondo, pool, teMj1, etc. sq. rt Sl'cond Uoor $275.~$12a{'olaacy Prest111lou1 Wutellfr ........ -.......-.......-......---.__.....__1 are1 St.00 sq ft. Mtdlt'al
F Rmml shr Spacious AIAo Call~"650_1 _
2BR. 2BA. full Fae CM ~ ~
Apt. p!O.l=_!len. SU.<W6
Resp M1ture f z5.35
Needed lo 1hr 2BR . 2BA
inCdM $32S + ~ .. ulll
760-3!173_
Prof. 2S 3S w/retp Jub to
shr houst tn N 8 Av11l
Mat. 1. l · 718-6826
MtF 30-SO to shr w/F.
ONE 8LK TO BEACH
Balbo1 PeOlnsula Pt X
lg 2 Bdr. 2 Bat,b Apt 1700
sq ft $350/mo yrly, uttl
S25SMo-Pnvate utrice
partdng/kltchenette spr Ul600 Mean St Hunt Bch
Daily Jantr All util pd
Avall now'l714)848-3133
..wroRTHACH
AIRPORT Custom or·
fices. 600 to 1800 sq rt
From90< per sir
Mullan Rily. s.&0·2960
pd 673·S622 art 6PM
m.Ol62ex312Ann execuplan
Spec. view. sec. gate,
pool, J&C. N.B. S2t5tmo "A"-• Co.c.,t"
+ It hselt28 760·9307 f\ill serv1ce/cus1om
M/CHRISTIAN RMMTI<: off1re&deskspace.
2BR lBA . E.C.M. Nr O.C All'l>Or1
13 mo. 631 4796...Qan ··Seeto Appreciate!"
Female roommate to shr ~!!!!!!!!711!!5911!!·8978!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 2Br Ilse, CdM S325 mo. r 12) offices for rent. BP·
prox 400sq rt. A\•ail 1m
med $375/mo Supenor
Ave_:S.M.645-t'l~-
+ 'l'2 util 673 2670
Morn/e~
Rmmt Wanted. 1180 Mo
HB ClllSrott 2 ofhces w warehouse 841Hl872 ----Pool hm. Br Iba 5275 spart avail. wet bar. ut1l
incl. Nr fw ys " OC Furn avail N o Airport. immed oc drinlt drugs S4S SIOS rupanry. $S90 mo ~rs 00 54>-0636 __
M Ftoshr2 Bdr 2 Ba apt. Prm~ Newpon Bearh or
HB 1245 mo Tammy fire 944 sq ft newly re·
Dys 84 6 3321. e~es modeled. beautirut
840-223S Martt 673"606
Rmmte wanted, Shan~ Newport Beach 564 N.
home. Dana Pt. non Newport Blvd 33&. '34.
smkr. Fem, S29S ulll in BOO. 1237 sq ft at S5< 8 sq
rl 661-8525, 831 8626 fl Private entranre
2BRNBApttosharew Sierra Mgmt Co re1nale over 45 1197 SO 64\.1324
.-1, Utll 645·7460. art ~ NEWPORT HACH
F to Shr Lrg 38R House •FULLSERVICE•
NB Area All Pnv S27S M Office Spau
M h II S48 0087 •S.utes from $495" ~<' e e, · --•BranrhoHice·S90/mo.
Resp M over 25 to shr "ftll 7c~ "'""
JBR Condo w 12 resp f'. l.iiiiiiiiiiiiiil....,m~oum""""'miiiiiiiiiiiii'i in HB Nr Bch 1175 + 13
Util Call 9&"6390 Eves.
7~~0_21¥_5 .
I So.MtL..-1 Ocean Side or Highway
Guard Gated Arn Pool
PYt f.lltraoce. Pvt 81Ul.
S29S + Ul.JI ltfusl be
Empl. ha\e rtrs
499-4722 Evts
050 •••••••••••••••••••••••
COIOHA DEL MAI
~ sq fl in Newport
Balboa Savings Build
mg. Air ronditioning.
cafl)ehng. ulllit1es and
jarutonal at $1 per root
Mayd1Y1de
( 71 +t '73-44"
IJIJI UJ.Jfft
HARBOR
A Dl\1\100 of
llarbor ln\t!>lment Co
. c1u ... -) [·,.;:-?-: .... ,........... ·~ .... ,,...Wcil .......... _.IO~-
-f6J•544~
,..•••••••••• ••• • •• • • • • 1rn AIH I I~ nu IJt'h I' r,., storaoe only It C-ta ._. __
0 382 ... it~lO &II i w:.1 11un1 fkh >i-16 01;19 ll!OI 15th St !\pl <i ... ~ .. 11 nrum ~ Br 1\nl i\l:lull~ .$:'100 rro 642 7340 0..-G:::r
• ..,., ·i· .. I" f "i u 11 '"11\ nn ix·t~ -.pae I or 2 br ;ipb I m1 "' .. I IR. 2 IR. l BR. ~~119~,,,' " "1 1 ., 'ltio 267:, I from bearh No 1>('b, ~9S40. 960 S260
HEWPOIT CEMTB
bteltwt Of fie•
Spoc.e ~to 2000 sq fl. Availa
Ille for Lease
Nel'ly tltornr Ga~ pd ,~150 ~!Ill 211 ,, ~I int I adult!.onl.' 642 2357 • Offlcelfftfal 4400
~nh pool. bbq Adults n~ J1h1ll "''I"'" l't••I lth11 lund "' Hd1 llt•'l llHr. 1 blk to hJ)' & ht•h. :Rooma 4000 Hotels Moteh 4100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Af lwllh hrmslted UuufwNshed ts. 642.5073 t. 1•111 1, ti i: .11 .1 i:, , \1t'J "" l'l'l~ 1!33 33117 S4Clll rro lse li7:1 li211l or I••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••;•••••••••••••••• 1617 WestrhH. N B Want •••••••••••••••• ••• •• •' •••••••••••••••• • • • •• •• .ee . -~tu:-. m' i..11 .!:! • '· DELUXE 2 IR I I.. eH-s 673 2493 fmanrial in st 7000s f ~ •-h 37'"0 • .....__P-'-···•-3107 ~<'IOUS 2 Br 1 Ha $3% • ""
1
1 ~·antaslll'Ck·n frt \U' l~lboa Inn $90 & up n the beach. hotel Isl floor A11ent~l..so32 ·--.,o.-ac .. ---3Br 11 Ba· •• .,< I ·,,.,.,., ' "' 11 1:·11 11rl>d1 rll'" frvll' µaim kl Kt h t kt h tl & :R ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• • 2 .,......, .Jun , 1 11 1 5.l'IU 1 · · lipper 2br xtru h(I' rmi. v.t•e ) 1 c enne le. rooms. 1 c ene e --
Call Wm F Cote
for more 111forma t 1011
'*Cote Realty
& Investment
640·5777
encl gar tJ w asht•r rla rhl'lur & I fl1 \pf, \II ~
H. •• ftlJ{Cf ocr.• ... fllo...... di}' fa<.' ,200. I 548 9S5'i t\lU ,,llh",!~~'.1'-.·,'. 1 ··111·1 l!.H I ~hw~ht•r fl50yrlJ 642.3912 ' OC'l'llnfront 6758740 bath. S290 +$290 Sl'CUrl I EXECUTIVE
t I I " ~ """" ". r I I ~,, '"''k•• Jlarm. bJlron) · 1 I'" k ty deposit 2306 w SUITES SpanisnEatate 1ving ' 2 bdrm 2 bath new irep ace. poo · 1"1 1 \1t11lh $165 before DELL'XE SPACIOllSd ,1 kenl no smo1 Ming or l 0reanrront Newporl . . Buutl/ul park·hke sur pamt & ·carpel Yearly pal!o. d1shv. a'her on RRESIDE COMFORT lll'M 960 4til4 UDO 2 Rr 2 Ba rrpk & nn mg. pro O\"er Be t'h 673-41$.c 1N Due to m&Jor expansion
roundings. Terraced lease S76S Call Linda or E side. all m ' lrs: 2 !Ir 1..ir gt> I H It cl c•" n ClOSE TO IE •CH lrg pal.lo. Adib SIOOO 40 fl85 mo 556 0631 ~1 -a ___ ----1 HHITAGE d tenant, EXECUTIVE
pool.Sunken gasbbq. Art67S.7060. g,ardenapl~FromS!>StJ "l>Jtin& \..rd 1111 "" 6756359 PnXFRmmtShrHme. Ho.Its 4175 1 PLAZA ROWrNC .oneorthe
sparkling fountains Nua3BR.2BAy;;rl) ~~·2841 I" bJlmn\ & 1•1tlll'clr.il ~ im 3Br 283 <\pl LtdoBayfront.2br.2ba. lBA No Pets No •••••••••••••••••••••• oldeste$tablished09771
Sp a l' 1 o us r oom) Frpk. bit ms. gar. park • 3 Br Condo nr S <' tl·1hn~ frµlc cl "' """' :! riir Rarage Sma I I nev. ly deror Beaut <.1utch-en art 7 aro,.,.-, Gn:MIP H111 'I New luxury .off ire spare pror exec suite com
!ieparate d1n111g area ing Clo<e to ba, & Plata. SA Pool ~Pil ~pa. 1 Jr port 'rn 11d '. 1· h 1 1 cl "k \ a rd · bearh. Yrly tse $975 mo I!'\ 646 8694 d)'S 968 7138 Sr C1tzens 1155-6221 in Irvine s bus ie st 1 plexes. has omces for
W l " I " , S750 adulb unh $46~1 t. up "''"ht'r dner hook up. . -----~tr' Easv Frw> ac I ho~"'l;k: {1t~~eent s& ocean Brki:,6754912 -gar~~3232or&H 14611 2651111.irla ).t'llll• .111 built Ill'> <'Jll for 673 1283 or6JS-JSSI Wor111nt rem 2540. i, YacatiollRttrtah 4250 ress Ava11 ' now' Call lease or mo to mo ~a'-'--'· Wallt lo lfunt C>:ean f'ront Lra I BR. --I .cp"' 3 Br Condo $695 mo blk bl.' . NB . unfum . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ror ...... 111 From S 19S to $530
m"'ooCenter Ba. Frpk Yrly Adults ly .. rtA st0,0 rAfna And 11nol 1 ;1r111ir1 • .. 11111 TSl.,IGMT 642 1603 <•" 3 -'t • kl 551-1231 640-4230 S I • uu~ " Br Adult.s. no peb nt·~ l"'1ar .! 'Ion 2 Hr I' t 1•1 '" A\a1I now non smkr S'l75 67S 1106 >CEANF'RONT 2 & 4 Br ~ Serv1res 111cl Recep
.,,.1 Bdrm.furn 1485 No Pel s $600 Mo ~ ~ ~ " " ,.... • 11 ....., 41 I " .. Avail W111ttr Wee y ----t1on1st. err eta rt a
• 673-4894 ,paho~ 979l4IO $.li!I rn> 23lll'.'-Jlll.t '"·' !He~ih''&1~'1ri'., i\5
11:;!r -)le~ to be3rh 2•, Br Rmneededforfemw Ill· !fon.!!!!1. . .§"73·7873 •DB..UXEOFRCES• Word Proressmg. Photo
A4ults. no pets Ba Ibo a p I er I R r PAL)1 ~ff.SA A PT5 \\l' llJ 375 1!107 V.ater p31d Adults no f11>lr lmmarulate cond ranl in xrhan11e for Palm Spnngs area I Mon . f'rom I room to 1400 sq Copying Computer Ar
Utilities Pree' S36S mo Single Adult 1561 ~1e"a Dr EASTSIDE pt·L' r.111~52iM'MI \gt-nt .R>SO 673·2507 Agt babysitting or hspkpg lettY CCI rondo 3 BR 2 • n f'rom $1 IS a sq rt No rountmg, Telex Mail &
no pet Sa\al(e Wilde & 2 Br. unf u r~ ~-&25 Dl Pl.F'\ :! hilrm I h,1 nort'l' Spacious 3 BR 2 Ba. fpk. 957 8390 Ba . furn w at n um I tease required AdJ Mess e g e Sen 1 c e
LAQUINTAHERMOSA Co 675-6600 Adult.s onl). lall htwn 1rh1lcl11k $4i5 IH UH T 1 HGT ON de<'ks.gar.SMO f'urn rm ror rent 111 Gotr. tennis Dally. Airporter Inn 2172 Ou Telephone Ansv.ermg
.18211 P1rb1de Ln. I blk Penn Pomt lBR upstrs 9:4 ~98§0 675 i!Hli. ti41l \:H.1 673-9060 a.gent N ewreo rt. $25 0 1 mo . weeklr & monthly rates pont Call AM ·833•3223 Fal'1hlles incl Con ~ie8:ach. 3 blks s or ~~g~~trhs':9~ulye~~~~:· ~~~ J.~drPla~~n1~·~ -~~~~ ~l~~ 1i~~:;;1·~1~;: Sp.cuo:~P~'~?rhelor ~~~ ..... !!?.~ ~ema e prer 645-~48 ~t-i~i~~.·asllr!;~:J.coo 1 trfH STIHT ~~~;~aT'~~~::1~~.<·~:;~
147·544L 67S.7996or673·!!~ 'aterfalls, stream~. Heaull land~rn11111~ So & 1 Rr f'rom S3SO mo ! Br 112 Ba. garage. laun Room for rent in my No. Tahoe Condo. 4 Br S COSTA MISA prlcg. 24hr 1 da~ v.eek • L.,.. leach J7 41 ~f_i:_;67~~~9. ~~t354~0 Pl'L' LE~;WMH> A l'TS ~~~~ ~~ ... ~ <ka 1~011~:s~ dry. b lk to be ac.-h . ~an view home Just a nun lo Northstar S400 2 or 3 room orrire suites arl.'e'Ss Loc.'ate<I ~ 11h111 2
........................ --' 2(0) f\tllerton, fi31 11397 p11l~o<.. pools. J9CUZZIS. ~ll'l_lO..:. 974 7225 -rew steps rroi:n the beach wll. Tom 857-1668 A 1C. plenty or prkg Ulll min of oc Airport at
Luxuey studio. spa , TV. WT SIDE APT. MANA<a:H tennis & laundry rue NICE 2 BE o RO o M ~ Vlctona in Laguna Mammoth 3 bdrm condo. mct. Avail. now. Call Jun c t 1 on J :un
nwid service. phones. SS7S iro 1 2Br. 1'2Ba Semlrellredrouplt'.for 4901 lf e ll . Bo lsa a rtmenlwilhviewor ,arug.e.fireplace.derk. $8.HllO/nighl Realonomtcs 675·6700 boree MarArthur IS wk. "99-22Z7 twnhse. yd ba Irony. 16 unit romplex 10 c· :'vi I (.111ca Heil, 846-1323. J: golf course. hills. nice kilch. rull bath. et.c 499.5304 Blvds. Con' enient ar·
122(). furn, Sm, rozy, s1ndmall pet Toh~· all hlln~. Maintenanl'l'l'XP retr EXTR tt NICE 2 bdrm. 1 public tennis courts ?!5~0 neg David Latxe Big Bear cabin, Pt'Qlik who .1Tl'1 '1k"·k, 1111:1• cess (rom Do\'e St 3901
bacb. Nr Bch. Ulls pd. ryrm 1~onewon l ~9(14J.1 ba "·h Yd Ut I Pd behind property. 2 .....,. -Pool tbl. color tv. 2 an apurtnwnt cKI 1r' MatAtttlur Rl\'d Suite
No pell l Resp emplyd, last F.''\1dl' JHr 2h.i. 2 ~tor) nr "" . • enclosed ca'!,orts. all Have ni~room Ill 4 bdrm I rp I cs. SI ee ps 14 m l'la,i.1r11•d Will 'our 21 1. Newporl Re a1·h aCilt. 49M200. ]"SL r..1GMT 6421603 I"' I Pat I 11 f rµ It 2SSRlrOSJ6..I ha22nlr6 uunt 'lrbr buillins. laun ry rac1hly l'c>N me. kuse pnvoo1leges. u.~ Jd lie.· llh1•r1'1"' To plJt'•• 714 752 7170 Tell' x
• " r m4unilmodern spanish onsfftO tr SJ mo. = HJUrJc l'J 1tli!!'l4lil! m2310or277i78 . t .. wport ltach 37 69 flj(KI rro. b40 Ot.l'Ji i')ld gar. encl patio. no style bwldtng 2 adults lst, last. 833 8814 --. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'e8liBJI' A.VAIL. HOW pets~ rro. bldasl + only No children or pets Roomate nttded. lotrh • • . • '.~.ii .. OC£N'FRONT 2 & 4 Br. APAITMEHTS l.Ju.:1• I Br t'Jr port. S2SOser. 842·3889_ -pleas ~ per mo nth. pnv1leges Mesa Verde
Avail. W111wr. Weekly/ Spadous studios one Beauttlul garden apts pool & 1,uodn Adull, H~Oft Available February Area. SZ50 tnd ldry· '
Mqntblx. 673· 7873· •nd two bedroom apan· Pauostdecks Spa. heat no ~ S41S t S26S d.r HartMMr 3842 Ca 11 own er l7 J4 I utJllt1es 549· 1043
Want •omething xtra menls FURNISHE(> paid. Adulls. no pets I ~~~2931 W 19th St c•••••d•••d••••••••••••••• ~1.38--RM. 1215 t Sec. Lndry special 1n a 2 Br ~ UNFURNIS .. ED. 28R 2BA ~ ....,""" 1uar e gate. tennis F S If • r S d.
Townhou.w. rompltttly O""'··.....,. ·• ... ._ -w· ·1 631 u.., ESd-b h I 1 rourts swimming pool ~ ......... 111...-.1........ ar 9 5 r an • I
rum!tlll$. Mo. 760-9117 • All Ut*'6tl Ptild PlNE BLUFF' APTS w fncd patio S3'i~ \ t1l ttle roof. robble stone _ ~-f R : ..... vvu .. so Y'-· ....... I~---~ I l't'07~ .. r t-oruP. . • T'-.~~-J,00 Lea_ye.Messa&e.67~ .-~~··_ .. Wll s1·00
OC ....... _,.. ..... , 2 Br 2 Ba No peta. nA 631-4320 Agt street. on channel ad JI •••"•••••••••••••••••• o om o r en t Io ""'"~v"' ·•~ ~ •· lJ I W Be1ut1ru1 lrvint Home s bdnn. 2 ba mo lo mo ~ Patio. view. frpl~. ntE VICTORIAN Ntlw· w~~ll\ll~nll n que s EA I M D wilh Married Couplt.
'tllsumrmr. S'1SO ·s1 Million1n Jac11U1. gar .. gas stove. ly d~r 2 Br w 3ar . 1;m.5022_ VILLAGE C.11 · fl}2010 Rec:re.tlon ~·~i107 _ _ nev. rrpts 4c dr1pe~. bit !.?!!Z~u_...__.__ .....
OCEANFRONT I br till And Muell More' BeauuCul 1 Br. Apt. (J111r1 ms. patio ,.dulls Call 2 BR. 211 BA CONDO New 1&2 bdrm luxury ------•-•!
6·15. furn·USO , un bldg, near s hops & bet~~~ l SF M 630 41 20 SllSOimo adult •pt.I In 14 plans. I s.At.-furn· UOO. wkdys FOfamoolh o11 flfe-buses. 213/498 6788 or J§l_G V.,!..ctona S470 7~---BdrmfromS490.2bdrm (kfanSideoi Riahwar .
*33·3'143. tVH/wltnds time Modtlsooenatllv 213159'7~. VACANT 2 Rr 1 b11 no l.ocJMleech J141 from S570. Townhou1e GuanlGat'tdAre~.Pool. ~· -- -:'c:i~ Munsonb' 2B2!s1BCAa.noy1donbub~le~no ~slsc·r;~o~ $410 mo 1····oc···E·· ... ·:.,·;;;O•::;•••• ~ =rf~1~'.;o~3~i ~~tr~t~T· ';.u~':~
ftlm.2br.2ba.lfepatlo. ... 11 S390 ~ ~"' "' Gasfor~lftl •htlt· Empl1 !\ave reh. tmnla ·~I. Overlook· Olkwood Prts. 2nd oor 0-P-1....l 3126 M05l elegant 11part~nt ina paid. From San 49!M'J22'Evu. ~y. ll&O/mo •. Short ,,_ _._ Sferra Mii Co. 641·1~ """' I bu1 ldtnJ tn Laguna DI Fr d · N rth ~~l!!!!~!!l!!!!!!lm!!!!l!!!!!lll! \Hrden ~rtm.ntl 3BR 2ba ti Cl t !•••0 ••u••••••••••••• Bearh Finest loratlon i.n ego W'/ nvt 0 ~ <!'. 1~rm. ~-~ • nope ose o ,harp a br vuy lrg 11 8 1 ht k oo Bearh lo McF1ddtn m w.1Yt. e;t.~ ,kl,. • \?enallltt View of t11r NewpoftBMch/No. s c:hools & frw y duplex bit ma encl ar I ~wn. rea 8 ing then WeslonMcFadden ln<lrY rf~. \ltft 1Mt. l\o.a--.aa~ 2BA. Nlt'el.y 880 Irvine SS.ZS+dep. Avail now Simll child ok0 Nr ~Cl! views All bll·ms. heated to Sea wind VI Ila gt. Pre( E/11 e c M I
.,.._ u ....... (ttelhl ~%MS •·MI t~.'>< ""'"•""I pool, s ubt garage. 1n4 <199 o..1 ~f\630 ~'u.f1!. ~~· !t2·---1 ------.!! a aJa. 'e'""' 7.,.,..'!:!."" elevator Lease only. -. ., · -nci ~ a · ; ' .i.tCh ,.... 311' (1MJ ... l104 STIJNNING large 2 8~·i H"'"'9CMtltoclt JU01 IBSO & up 330 Cliff Or. roonwaw 122H11260
....................... Ne•port Btloh/So. Ba. garden apt , 7pool0 w •••••••••••••••••••••••' 494·83. I.. rec. area $435 - -----l Br 11.t ba, •• • to 1100 t91fl St 1 Sl · 2 bdrm1 l '~. ba. S375 :i bdrm, fireplace. tarce "9ch. 125 t.a Palomla. {PoYl111 tetlll +1315 oepc>11t. Gas pd 1 deck. Ocean View S600 I . ·1'll (714) MMtta &Side rourplex 2 Br I Nr Bt1ch Bl ' Me rad· 1 rm. ousro , ................. ~ ........................ __
Ba, w/lrt sundec:k.. aar du. Adlta no pets 'Ocean Front. 1BR. +
wllaun«'l ry ht~o~. ---den.lllOldMedVilJaon , = no pe · · Otltlu poolaide 1tra <ll/fOYerlooldna Octao.
la¥t· 1-0". re14 \OdaJ • ,. • =2br, 2 ba, bltftJ, Ftpk, Leaded wlodft1. ~ ~t lC J 1nldt ,_. old 1tulf r., . l~ mtlel btub. c:uport. lffel, Pwt Bc:b.
• ad. ..:'~'.:j . DO ptt,J. aoomo. = 2.uL .$850 Mo.
•
BY WRl11NG THE MOST
CREATIVE LOVE LINES!
.. ..
Say "I Love You" to your special someone with a
Valentine's Day Ad in the Daily Pilot Classified Love
Lilles for only $1 a line (3 hne minimum~.
II your ad Is found to be the most creative by our panel ·
of j~. Y.Ou'll receive S100 . to spend Oil yoUJ-,
Val1nt1M, of course. •
0 ft • a 0 a .J, m ftp ... n -m mft e= on an n
~r-, Ftbru.,Y I. 1112 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ •........... ~.~ ·~···············~··
LF.OALSECRITAIY 1tc.ft Ml f(11her11dryer .' fltt
Btadl Stor.~~por\. Walk traffic• • ~·
I UOD! IOO sq. . 115-4115,
f71.140J. .
SWe lllO A. ~ -
..,,.Office
--··••111 Gitt ;;!aay.-Secret•l'J mod•h . SIOO Up La,una Klllt. Recent l\~-/&tnwb.., VI I h 0 ~ t 1 • p I 0 I Dt l iv tr 1 I 1t t ~=•l,;. ~~: ~ otv.'ot· ~wltd,., a1cepU9n ~rereha ' •·
ctllent &yelna • 8/H • ..,.. Orab'• Covnly £ • I e r 1 • a c • • • Ki .. ,....,~'!'--
lltlllt req'd, Clll Mrs. OlausluDJcat• Altft· ~. hr PtHI· ''lllS'' ~
Wln1lc>w ror appt, ey medl a.uilt•llt for .. t • C-lroller of 1Mtrow1ve outt. lkt 83'1·UIO Al'a. Hand .. variety of ata~ Real !'.ltatt MW tOS0:5"· _
Ll&bt OfUce/ L~bt =Ible dutlet, aood DIVtJos>fl'tnt Company llUY UPUA.MCIS
u • ...t.u "'"I .. u • Mtrttarial sklllt ln J'ashloo J:sland. Not• • -957·81J3 ,._._ ""~ es . ...,.., · /1 J. Xlnt belltfH,I. 1 Man t Girl Of flee ._
SHl"days.9'0-Wl!:nc. Clll Sandy Btadehaw.' ""'8141 Retrta. 1250., W,er,
MIJtlAIUCk (714)75,3.8111. Cochran, S!X:JlEt.AllV/RECEPT. °'1"9t, Frttz-.f, le STAITH•I ~.UvlnptonACo., hwuber suo a
The t.QJ An&tlet Times Irvine. Prttt11lou1 Arcflltec· , .... •• ...... •-•-----
la look Ina for well• R &C £PT lo NI S 1 / t11re • Co1utructlo11 Rtn'lrtrator. late ~del,
groomed, enthu1i11Uc TYPlSt. La11t111 8U11 l\nn aeeb an efficient. vt17 clean,•* 44if~st.
peqple to earn UJ> lo 'le1al firm. Requlre1 wtlJ orpniml. maturf .•90l!O __.
•$50 per d_, for a ft¥t aenenI office akllll, aC· ~ wll.ll bus~et1 of· 8efrl 1, tr qt If ~ee .
hours work u p/tlme ante typilt, et wpm Jiu apptarance & ttemaker, like rrew .
sale$ rep. Hours are minimum. Call Mta. fn.db' phone ~nner. p .548=449i ~·
from 4Ptn·9Pm • train· Winslow ror a ppt. ,.... have tood offi« llefriae ... tor-"Wbirlpool.
ing will be provldt4. •lOIO . sldllalrtype~m. lm· $dt rJ. Side. Harvest
Your earnin11 •• a ffiitiura.it ....U.te openlAJ. Send .......... k N $350 Times sales rep. will be Male or Fe•le. r.11 or ,.._ to: lb. Lage! ~, e ew, ·
CD. auuantetd Part Ume. Apply It: Kervlftator lt.J CV rt
hourly wage ot tUO + to.lZAM. n.tlloU.uette. Fr0ttless tr~ r P·
generous commlNions. 2111"8.UtolSt.C..M. ~ ... -.-~,,.J r1lk fut rn.t•trs Full·&ime, permanent Since this ii 1 new pro· ~ )lrpl0.S40-030%
emplo)'ment for am· grant opportunities for RctaU ~..c Lad1 Kerimo~Walher Ii 1~111!11111111 _____ 1 bilious person, 40 hr adv•ncement are elf· Ataflt•I MfJr & d-er. $200. ta. Sears
Wfek, some nigbta & Sat. c f "~, t St c •• ._. ·'" •~ cellent. an now or -.1"1.-1 U:SlOovt .,......,....,, frip, $150. Xlnt Cond.
:&.!~~ .. %&· ;,-., ... caU.wtl~me.
Newport lhd. te• 93'.0U I ....... '"" .. furbished bllt ror o(fice .....,.,.._.., ----;.La
or rttall. 0pett ~raf\tn = offtce aetts (2l Freflcb cbi-s, ...... m!ilil!I -=~----.---o1, T 11 E bri~ noo Ill· n. + t 'M.rt... ,......_ 53 mo e era. x-~/AJ.:•;~J. rd' .1Ji' ia. ~ ltH ••:·~"•••••~ .. ••••••••• ~:iJ'~Wire:tr::~
C _...... + . •-••M••••,•n••••n A •tee1 cashierin& experience. -~=-'1UM-.a$i.5,000''t'D. M •d•f' Uintemtecipleaseapp-.... ••n H ~-fl44 Mo. a days a ffk 1u t f.f 1'-te Pl ................ , ... 1... m 1G-•1 • Gorceo'tt ilrla to v a ...,rpora au,
C l Prooert.Y a 8r1 l la. .~ '--pamper you. Jac"f&i, Q>utHlWght5~M houte · 1n lliO inmc __.... MhL -· Sauna. Locals aa wel •• • -area of lfesUMe Cotta AH~ ol ~al estate tour j st s . Bank -"""--...--------r FIDllAL SAV8"GS Mesa. 1'.ntfic fOC"'Alltl· liMStftntss1nce1M9. Amerlrard, Muter APT.MANAGER J4CorporatePlaza
cuie 5'op, Auoenttng fffc .. ~.. aiaree. American Ila-Sem6'"'1Nd tot11>le, for Cou1Highway
<Xfice, IAw Offa, etc. JMT'Dt pros, Diners •H Mid\ ~a in C.M. Newport Beach, CA.
Xlnt putlnc. WUJ 411· '1Qrlt71 HS.0611 welcome. 714/64S-3U3. M~e""' req. £.0.E. M/F
cuss mnodella& to s'1l: tilDOW HAS SSS for 2112Harbor Bl. M ~:-;-~..om~~---ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i A~. 900 aq. ft. ex TD' R -;-_w ....... ..-d chadilll tbe )'&rd. !t E ~oans. lOK ,__.ana.er Beauty
$500 /mo . 541·S40, ~l'<IOCred1l~heck.No 1-.a.ayw.;•5 Alliltant lmpGrt Sales Posh Newport salon
770-5629 ~: Dennasson As· Lll::COIT"t! llanacer. $1950 Mo. 2 seeks stylist. Poss. ren·
---toe. '7311 n.,.,,,-........ Yrs Sales Mana1ement tal. Tele. llam-6pm: ~-. .-, CASH? on..-.-;ui:.n H Esp. lpeal, Read Ir 675-2492 ar ~~ta,~P Trust Deed money ntANEVEBI i&H 9 Wrlte German "1---·-----ne ......, -esa ost availible. Znd or ltd 669-0207 Enallah. Coordinate Bea~ty . Oper~to r &
• Officel«!Omo.548·5114 TD'eonresld~u.·alori,n· IOutca.111 lllutettaa Procedures. Manicunst stations for
t W1 Aseist in formulating lease. F.V. !oration. lliclldllall ..... 4S ~~-·.ro~lrr1aenag .... oef Ftmale Wa.nted SU8ual Poli,.., &r Planntn• ol 170/wlt. Call Kathy ••••••••••••••M• .. ••• ~ rut . ~ atY -., • ~1455 SU..0688 N.B., 3915Birch.._,141. n111tpge coverage at SLllm1 TemR ~r~t .. o,r 1 ~~~Jt!m11,1unkicatde eves
fl or less. MlA SOGe, llOt very competitive rates. ast ng e tao._.-.. P ...... _..,n. Ta ea !>-MANICURIST. Also per sq. ft . Aaent Cou.rteay to Brokers. Leave Messa e Adriea to EDD llOl S Grandi beauty oper. w/follow
541.so.12. HA·'1S0·1551 ask for 645-1839 Sensual Slltn Ave. SA. Sota Ana.! Adams /Harbor 1Mesa
lnd18tri I bid MIO S!Jve~Duane. G Avera e DOT 183.11'1·014 . ~d Verdurea> 549-1~
• ft. w/s~le~~trirri':r Mww A•.nc.Mt Palm-Psychic Readings Paid for by Employer. IOOIKHPEI
overhead door• fenced for . 2nd "l1>s up to $1 Past, ~=~~-future A.uodateba SoftB•s•reDEng. Busy insuranre com· ~C::er':t:Sedruf~ l4Ulcn Easy qualifica· 1 1 • 1 8 7 t · 5 l 2 o . Mut . ve . · · e!ree pany has openine for
Pa u I ar in o. C . 111 . ticlllDowne~Savings 21315'·~ Lie · = ': :'!e 8!: • fast-paced person to ~9671. . ... -All Readinp, Pvlft Ooo· tan . f handle accounts nay a. .... v. fidenliaJ me 0 com-r: ~3000 sq. ft. by N)lt. Bnnt McQ\larrie pater laniuage Design ble. bank deposits &
fwy fl ~ f~. i"rom LONELY OR BOR_ED ? 6 implement ~rtwear ag~ocy statemen~s .
$504 Mr .. 0 Kufel' 5rE/ Elcitina ladles will e.n· tat ... ms " review Paid company benefits. SSJ-tm ·-·--/ tertaln you bJ. phone. uistini tat ..... cltages & Attractive salary rom· For Rent-5,000 sq n IQ· ~ n~ & phone Hor .... mensurate w 1th n -
du.Wial .blda. Avail im· •H•••u•••••••••••••u ~-C~ ~ ~ ~~r:n..;h~!e~~~ perienre. Call Sally:
med. For more into caU h•a ac-• 5100 gn0412t>, ' sMwear products are -=-5'9-~9'23=·------1 tWS-811 ,.......... •• • • • • • • • • • • . ed 8
Indiatrial Park Units for wau.4.a. ~1 ,_._. s.r.ktt 53' treat · U 7 01 mo · IOOnt ATTIHDAMT
leaae. t.5G0, 1980, -• ~111•yF~"st'1·ng, 2 -•••••••••••••••••••• f/tlme. Tate ad lo Assertive person. · •• . ..-.a ,.. ""' ucp Emplo1meot Develop· Newport A r c h e s 3700,IQ. ft.-.... AnU. dll.alideorwb'del~· •PIOF * ment l>el)l., 1001 So. Marina. Call btwn. 9AM br unmed. octupanc,. tJan.AUmethodsofbirth UAr.f.U . ,.._ ........ A Sat A Office fl war-ebous control; Abortion. M hr Mon-Fri 840-NJl VI_. ve. n a na. & 5PM, 642-4644. Mon·
space with carj>el•. ~ be, J:onfidential C A,_t~ oA5d. ~dof T Fri., ask for Judy
drapes Ir wet-bars. Womn'sCeote.r, 1125 E. I •:e..e& a ..... ~-.-.. paa or BUSBOY &
36'·38• a •tt. f:l, Clll 17tbSt .. UIOEast. ,._,.,..... byemelqxer. ROOMSERVICE ~.Moo· Fri. s.5. 547.9495 ..................... .,.. AU.enlioll Homemakers: Day shirts for hotel
5.50 sq . rt. Jnchastrlal •-•r--~ SJOO Sdlle.e.& Need.3peoplcwbohave restaurant. Exper.prer Stora ., .w .... , W.ut _ _..._ ... -1005 10..lUm. hr-S.per week. Coo'•"' J "'"' 4477 C.M. . ..... •••••••••••••••••• ,_.._ Can .... _'"' t.o ..,$8/hr. -~· an: ._,. . •H•••••••••4'••••••••9...-• . ~u ..,.. ~ ... ~ 'ft< cau 54111o-1M2. ""'4-...... ll11•9'1 W_._ 4 IAat: Parrot...aml green. ill 90/WK 1-'-'--------
........................ dusky Co~ure, H.B. Hot 11lftt'h. C.lli: Club-CAStlBJ:ALES ~nlres' IP~~.'/o,"!aro am.,mrar .848·1659 U.OPrescbooi.8"-5'23 A"1MTIOM: HOUSIW EDCEP'T.
r 'I HWA.RD• Ambitious boys and ~UUme. Apply : rown C: ~o~~ 0{o 1N2t Loli: Ore and white ..... W-.4. 7 011 Otts 1 .. 13 )'tan old, to Hardware. 31Cf1 E. Coast
Udo ff male cat fn Feb 5 vie ....................... wort ooe or two even· Hwy, CclM. area. ave r s. " S LA ~ Gentleman 000·1 i.; ~u...::;=-----1 613-59&6 Broob·,..reat t. ,.,. k .11 h l't in&I a week gettin& CWldC.rt
n..•ett/ Loe.t· Blk ' wbt Fem ddt.ies for reduc rm UOIU. Transportation _ _..._ lovm· g, dependa· .... soa r w1 nc ed I e oewspapef . su~crip· 1 Couple on the move
,.. • ~. -•-, "KabJ·ua''. !!°.!!1 (sleepiDI) d t •t d It """""' . ......,. ....,. _.u.,, aa coos a.. •. u ble, mature lady lo care ....................... !lfqltjfTJ.19116. ~~------1 1u;per•l1lon provided. for2scbool aee children
....... Lost: •" Gnma n QillishRousekeeper CIU3to5:38PM. ask for In their home. Must be
O,.a ....,, ltM d. 9 mo old M. Wl11·vtbe·i~fe,~ent .. cesatio':e1kos Andrea, 642·4321, ext. avail for ov ernight
••••••••••••• .. uO•u• ARD! 131·1173 .. 1 .. • .. .aa stays. drivers lie & ref Costa Mesa LIClll· , young obedient Oran1e C4. with ·JU> req'd. call Mrs Miller dry-'Uf~:'ntmo. mf'l Lab Huntington smaUchild . 710-4341. 67S-3ll93
·--·c' .; ,. HarborFebl/112846-4838 Young married man Auto Mechanic "-'-'OfcM~ ~'"' --.&UI TS wouldlikeoddjobseves Wheel align -lite _ T Pff SHOP ~£ & wkends. Can do a mecbmical Own tools. ti'tthll5., effirient & or. ~WI IAINlfBS variety or bandymaa 50°-" comm. HUNT gan. w/bkpg exp. 4 da y •Newporiii!aehLoe. ....""' jobs. 972-9525 eves: alt AUTO CENTER. 1825 wk. Pd VIC." holldays . * r.UlJM.-. APast-Poucb -ror Bill. Laauna Cyo Rd. Lag C.M. s.~.
•GlusBlrdlloom Jlaeer-Famous -W.eed 7t BcMM·3m,83M966 DENTAL SECRETARY-
&FrolltWllldow P~RAM ....................... ••WSfT111 aper. Are you looking • Formlea Doa 6. A wje · pelntlng the •cc ......... 1 -' ror a rewardin• career catC..(et eelJiq u •kr llusband "' ~· ..,. needed.5 days per .. • Ele<tmiiclleckter ntcW TV. "Deir, If I llCllVAM weell in our home to sit opptyWitb xlnt potential
• Hlgli Orilflip fal. wllll you call an am· a.• for .l8 mo old boy. for personal growth &
•NlecP\ltlU'W ~u when the Establ•"•'"•" '"'apor• SH·SH5 aft 6 call recognlt io11? Our •GroomlUJPadlltJ ~RAJllsover!" "' ~ "' ~ tcPrllTt modem progessive ofc w 1Adl•ear..1ee martetbl& firm netdf . seeks your expertise to •WeU&ttd..s . • accounll reulvable MBYStTl'D·mY home. complimedt a highly WitbM~ Tu-your: clert. Duties are code A 9:30am·11 :30am. M· motivated & skilled •InThea.-. ._. '" inputinvolca•eashre· W·F,N.8.area.64M099. team. Xlnt benefit
Over S Yeart • ""usabtes oelpts into lBM System Bibysltter·•Y Home . pat'kaae, inrl med ins,
Sac:rlfKe Pll~forquick Into 34 Computer~ prepare With 6 Yr Old Girl. + permitageof produc·
sale $38,080+ iaftci~ • usable monthly 1tatemota. J:l>AM ·1:4$ AM 3 or 4 lion. $16CO if qualified. ~i:a~,;f.·ee1&ent I cash.tall weekly sales report•. McmlnCSPtf'•eek. Vic : N.8.640-7922.
cost! l. Daily Plfot etc. Xlnt beodila • lMDe • Jina Drive. Dentist
For IJlformation call: salary. Noa-maker on-Cll.MM&St ~DA ~-Im. • Claaifiecl ly. IMS Equipme.Dt. 9l5 Dlfreetih1per'd Assis·
• . MZ.5'71. !:~ca Rd.• lrvhte. Uu tbe Dally Pilot tant needed for busy Have someUWl:f.to Hll? __,,._ ""'-E o E ·•rut Result" service pradlce Classffd au It wtlt. · · · 548-Sl'io Ask for Toni
• . • •
• .
ctittt'tory. Your
atrvfd b our DETAILlNG .-....:....M. Sleve'• Det.alliDI need• ~ lwdworldag clean cut, Cellto<"'9~ 1Z2 enertirtlc detailer for
~term employement.
axikkeepu•I exp. pre· rmre lnlormation about needed for cootem Newport Beach. CA •zsza lerred. Apply In person· this rreat opportunity. JIOl'ar)' rtt&lhtor.. lluat ._, ----------
·a...........a.. a ,__ ~ Call Moo-Fri, 957·23&1, bedynamlcflbave1ood ·-/"'DM•u · 19'bfrigendor -,.._.. ... '""" women's wear back• -• •"' '" WESTIN<IHOOSE. SOUTHCOMT PL ZA e.... ....... around. Experience nte charge person lor Side-by-side. Frost free,
COSTA MESA MANICURIST need IW11)' appJy. Salary N.8. Adver. PTomotion wtpte. $195. 760 -0998
GIRL FRIDAY. Balboa Scuh>Wred oaila. Rent + commlssioo. Ple.-e fl r m . · T Y p i n g I 080
Peninsula. Type, non· booth. l*>/wk. Be )'our call or co1M In to: Sborthand/Phones Sal.Hotpoin ---. _t_r_er_rl_g~a...,.)>t-.sz.
smoker. 1ood skills. own bo'5. 646-3313 Apropo, 01, Fashion open. 642-4097 coppertone. xlnt rond.
ms, sal. neg. Med ins. MOTa Island, N.B. 64HU2. Sewers 1125. 9113-9934
Super Detail Person! Front offlre rterk. Part E.O.E. S.uf'U MA.KB ~ 9020
67J..3591 n~. 1142.3030 SALIS tlmti.nf oo Bch 898· 1991 .............. .,. ..... ..
..._...,.. S•• Newspaper Delivery & Aggressive 11lesperson SR. A.CCOUMTAMT 80)'5 Mongoose Bilc.e $35.
li\ill or l>art-Time. No Stuffing. L.A. Times to ~tr!:i~egll ~:~:1 Rapidly cro•ing multi· Rally lOspeed Mixte $85.
Sundays or Evenings. homes on Ba Ibo a to busa·n·sses. Cham· branch.company bu an Botbgd. cond. 760·~ See Steve. H W Peninsula. Van or sta· .. I d te eed r a Bl.ke16"boysorgJrls1ncl
W r i g ht Co I 2 6 tion wagon req. Early piocls Unlimited Call Mr mme 11 0 If t 0~ training wheels ~lilt
RochesterCM. AM. 1900+ per mo . WardaUM·2805· :, ~'!:rfak!eo~~: 0~~ condSJS s.s7.~u •
HARDWARE SALES S411-844l; 644>-Hll. Sales entire acct 'g depart·
Full time. Apply in Nursing F1time saluperson men!. tr you are
person : Crown LYN .needed to work on qualified you will be
Hardware, 1614 San Balboa Island. Must be ~with this rareer 3·11 full or part lime abl .. to work weekends. ~uru·ty RE ba"k u•g·-1, N.B. h'ft M d. t i •· '" """'°'' . . . ' . mi_"" s 1 a. e H'a on ... Call Annalee at 752·6771 ground preferred. Start·
HllUMAKERS treatments, good salary or~. ing salary open depend
& working cood. · II" t M-·VerdeConv. Hosp. mg upon qua 11ra ions. ' Telephone interviewers ...... SALES For Interview call Pat needed by nation al 631CeoterSt.,C.M, lmmediateopeningfora ~
market research( firm 548·558S full-time ruder-ad ..=:...=:..:.:..· -----ro r varied s u r ye y t" f . 'd representa 1ve or ma1 e .,,.,,.,_t Jo .... studies. No selling. Part-PART TIME sales position. Must be ..........,." HE~YI /time evenings & 6-9p E • d'"' th I Ith ...... _ .. _ H 1 m. xp .. n mg you assert ve person w IOYlf '-IRLS w...,..e~. our Y pay counseling firm has past telephone sales ex· ..--
Reply in own handwrit· opening, for 3.5 sharp perleoce. Apply in How would you like to
ing, inrlude your phone outgOing mature people pel'900, Ul60 Placentia earn as much u SS0.00 a
number. to : Trendex. to motivate ambitious Ave .. C.M. week? Do you like drive-
P.O. Box 85703. Los 1~13 yr olds. Call 2·5pm. in rrovies. picnics, piua
Angdes. CA !I007J:___ 642-4321. ext. 30. AJk for•------• ·parties, beach parties.
Housekeepers wanted, 1 Andrea. Sales plus many other things?
full, 1 part time ror l"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ JOINASUCCESSFUL. Then you wouldprobaby small retirement homer: NATIONWIDE probably enjoy working SALES TEAM f In Laguna Beach. Must orl.9. ,
be able to work some Paste.up P~ Be ooe ol over 600 in-QlJALIFICATIONS:
weekends. Pleasant Needed,parltlme.Work dependent sales agents L<Werl2yearsofage.
working rooditions. For 1.5 to 25 hours per weelt. selling products of the 2. Neat. honest and de· .....,, II 4M-9'S8 evenings and possibly Thoe. D. Murphy Co., a pend.able
a..,... ca · • Saturday. Experience in pioneer In specialty ad· 3. Work ~fter school and
HOUSBCEEPERS ad building or page vertising since 1888. Saturdays.
the Searlirr Motel, 1661 makeup desirable. Abili· 1'hroo&h our sales force, CALL TODAY !·
So Cst Hw y. L.B tyt.o workfastandar-we provide Imprinted 537·5936or531 ·52S7 ~!7.lL___ curately under pressure calenders, sperialty 8AMtotOPM
INSURANCE-Exper arl"l neressary. Salary de· Items and exet'utive $
assista nt for rom. pends on experience. gifts to their rustomers. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! m!rriaf lines wtmajor 'IM Daily Pilot is an This is your big OP· j SSS SSH
MUST SELL at" Young Man,, Varst·
ty Schwinn 81.t'yc.le.
Gray !Excellent Con4.)
16(). Aft 5:00 Mon-Fi'\.
962·tB'74 -10 Spd bike-Sears good
ccmdition $70.
499-1439. I
Ladies' sgl spd bike. 26"
whls. $45. Men's 3 spd
dem>untable bike , 20"
whls. $75 104 Via
Cordova,N.B.673-4063
Mans 3 spd sso. Boi• IO spd 16.5. Mall.$ Sclurjnn
lO spd 1125. AU in Xlnt
Cood &37 .;n 44 •5548
Mlclftg Mattriah I015 .......................
MOWZS•iFT Redwood 2x6 &ecking,
4-~' long; also red,Yi'ood .
feneing. Lowetl prire
guar. J llD or Ken
anytime, 646·9885.
C:-rm& fllpl,..... 1010
··················••••4 Minolta XG7 Telephoto,
Wide Angle Lenses. $325.
New Cond. 6•5 · 4 199.
~ ... f equal opportunity portunlty for good rom·
11\S brokerage irm in employer. Women and missions and continued
NB. sala r y r om -minorities are en· income from repeat or-
lll!nsurat.e w/exper, for couraged toapply. ders. Commissions are
an appt call 1714 ) Submlt applirations at paidimmediately.Jfyou
1040 SUIVEY TA.IRS Dop PAIT-TIME •••••••••••••••••••••••
644·5522 front COUJ1ter. want independence and
INSURANCE 'S Coast a selling rueer contact::
Auto rlaims dept. has I Pilot John E. Morrissey.
new posltion for out~o-lJO la St Phone &OU25-733S. 2851 mg person. Must have • · 'f ' So. Camino· El Grtco.
communication skills & '"'!!!!!!!C!!olfa!!!!!W....!!!!!!C!!!A!!.!!I Green Valley, Arizona lite typing. Salary rom -= 15614. ,
International Corpora · KE~HOND Pups AKC.
tion Needs Loe a I & Champ sirt,, M IF. Pet &
Dependable Men & s how . Pvt pl )
W~n to take Surveys 213/al'7·~aft 6J>!!l_
Coor to Door. INo Sell· G Shep pure bred pups.
Ina> No Experience Re· Parents from Gmny. qi.I~ Convenient Hrs Fmle 12 Jik s. $250 . to Choose from. Eun 4964182
mensurat.e with ability.
Paid company benefi~.
Calf Mel: 549-9923.
Crom SlOO to S200 Per AKC Golden -Rft n-e-ve7
PULSUIX week + Bonuses< Call to· pups, Champ ltoes, Work temporary jobs Sales, p/time, The Mole da.)' for Interview. Call shols & wormed. 5195_ closet.o home. Hole. Lido Village, ex· . Kmat833-~ ~711114 LlGALASSIST. VICKIHESTON l eer-~-673-4655. TEACHER -OO=LD_EN_R_e'T'_Rl_E_V_E_R
X.lnt oppt'y for take· &ASSOCIATES Secnt9Y Private school teacher Fem. 6 mos. AKC. $200.
charge Legal Assistant. --~0400--Part time for .(rchitec· needed. Out of slate tolovingho~~7-77a7 .
Able to assume a ll PH<YrOMODEL: Attrar· tural olfice. Exper re· credentialsOK.646-1444. 2 Shepherd-Malamute
respon independently & live-needed for full qiared. O>ntact Lrnda pups . 12 wit s. de -'. with corporate law figure modeling in our at Tellpltw9Pfr .. or wonned. all shots S2S knowledge. I person comm'I display ads. No 549-2338 Answering Service 7-3 tM6-a3
non-smk g office 1 n exper nee. Send photo to shift. Many benefits. Ex----------
Newport Center P.M. Novelties. p .0. SICRETARY perlenre only. 362 Third Golden Retriever & Blk 644-~.days &nights Box 2255, Newport Someone who doesn't St.~C.LagunaBeach Lab mix puppats, 16)
~Sec-'-aBe~cbt, CA. 92663 for mindwortingforeliv· T&8'HC>titESALES $Z.Avail2·13.642'.$939
• • ·-r pp inc. Raises without Uk· •Poodles "R.. People• lmme t.e opening for · m· ., " vou're worth 1·t. 3 Fff position open for as-' ... "# · · h T-Cups . Toy. $250 lo exper. legal sec'y -rn PIT c1erk-typist. some girl office. Expr. or Mft.ive person w1l past $550. Pets Boarded & rapidl,y expanding pre· bkkp'g helplW but not trainee. 642-12'¥1 lelepholle sales ex·
stigious Npt Brh law necessary. Great wort-perience Apply in Groomed. 546-2848_
firm, Musi be self ing atmo&.J!bere, NB,. =c Front Office penon at 1660 Placentia German Shep pups .
starter. Mag card II ex· Hrs 9·2. Call Judy Secretary Wanted. 75 _A_ve __ C._M_. _____ AKC. see pari!Ots. shots
pef'. Real &.tale back· .::.~;o;:c..;:l.::.:49c.:..t _____ WPM ACt'Unte. General nPIST romplete for I yr w. ,.....,..,i helpful Salary! 2 h vet's certifirale. AKC &<"""" . Ptri~. 7 days, rs. Office, Organtutlonal Arcurate so wpm. 40 hr. ~~Cal l Hilda . daily.AMdetivery.L.A. Skills,llWordProreasor per week, rompany :g~a~~e~~~~~46_e._S2_7_5
--1 Times. $100/wk. Laguna Experience r,equlred. benefits . App I y in -If you'rt' 111 the ma rket Beach. 494-8496. SllOO Mo. + Benefils. pel"30n: Golden Ret. PQJ>S AKC.
for a better car. be ~ure PIT _Se:..:...;;:;cr...:..e~ta"'"ry'-/T-y-p-is_t _1 Cootact Mr. Toko. Unit-I 1<8 Championship Titles
to check the man~. autos Gd. hrs. &r gd. Pay. Cati t d I n d u 1 t r i e 5 , Jtwtfs ly Jo....... 493-6861 _ ~~~™~ for sal e in aft.6PM675-042 n~lll05 SOlmfCOASTPL~A YelJowLab. Male.
COSTA MESA lYr Lovi'n Fun .
( l ) ) .
-c c,...-~o~-~, >
WAl'J'RESS /WAIT ER $300. 5SHOll4
w/car for wlt'ker basket AKC Chesapeake Ba Y · '11111Chstrv.9:30-1 :30pm, Retriever. m;\le. l yr
Man·PWi. Elm $159-Jl75 old, trained Very reas
\ftly. Must be neat. to good home . Loves
pti'lonable & ftMrgetic. kids & wtr Ca II bl WI\·
t7t-074l al\ lOam for 7PM-8PMg;Jl·t760 __
1,.;;aU<..;;.;_~_....._ __ AKC Corker Spaniels.
IMf. M!f For Valen·
tines. $150. 839.2972 '
------~-,. .... , •ose
•••••••••••••••••••••••
**I BUY i * ·~
Good used Fumlt11re & •---.;..;...._------; Applian('tS Oil I will
1el!oriELt.ror You •
MASTllS AUC-TlOM ,.., ••et. •,n.'625;
~ IOfu. Ht*. • Lov:
eseat1 $88. Sleepers .
..
' " .. 1 Cl8
-•
I.: I u 11"11•1111••"' ..-.~1rW w...-.1..w ._.,._
COHN EU
CHEnOLET .'.JI.,. 11.,r 'A•r 11
111:'\f\\H,\
546-1200
-~ -
"79 Lincoln Verullle~
IJghl blu' Xlnt t'ond .
S1ll00631 2345, MHOIO
Mwc.y "IO •••••••••••••••••••••••
WHOUSA&.f
..UllOOk 7srwow..-1184UMX>
SIHO
Theodore Robins Ford,
2060 Harbor Blvd • Costa Meu 6H 0010 nr
~11
EAALEllE
VOLVO
1966 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
6-46-UO) 540.,4'7
19116 VOLVO Diesel l64
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immaculate 1098475 l
112.500 Jim Manno
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Brougham Extra
sha11>' Must sacnfice
Best offer over 59.000
714~S280after6 m
THIWGEST
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of late model. low
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5_40-1.860
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Body rough. runs ok mo. . m 9961
78 Ci»' de VIie. mint
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'79 Stvme. Xlnt t•ond. 33K. SI0,500 Slh ('f. lonl
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IUlll CQllT
TUESDAY . FEBRUARY Y 1982 ORANGE COUNl Y. C ALIF ORNI A ~"" Cl N 15 .
: Newport Center eipansion repealed
11
By STEVE MARBLE
O( .. Otllly ..........
The Newport .Beach City
Cotlncll put an end to months of
con\roveray early today by
repeallns \be lrvln Company'•
'U23 million Newport Center expansion project.
The development plan, the
subject of a successful
referendum drive, originally
Barber
to stay
• in center
By RICHARD GREEN
OftllehltyP'l•SIMf
Jim Anderson the barber has
won his t>atUe against the Irvine
Company, a victory that means
he'll be able to continue cutting
hair in a company-owned
shopping center In Irvine for the
next five years.
In a 2 : 30 p . m. ceremony
Monday, Anderson signed a
rive-year extension on the lease
for the University Park Barber
Stylists shop.
This represents a policy
reversal for the company which
had drawn sharp criticism from
Anderson, his customers. city
officials and other shop owners
when it tried late last year to
cancel the lease because the
shop didn't attract enough root
traffic.
Following the ceremony In the
shop at Culver and Michelson
drives, David M. Koch, director
of property management for the
company, downplayed the role
public pressure played in the
company decision to extend the
lease.
"The pressure didn't have as
much to do with it as the
ctoperatit>n of the people here,"
Koch said, looking around the
barber.;bop at Richard Radie:i,
owner of 'he University Park
Coiffure!t s hop and Roger
Elgram, owner of In & Out
Photo shop.
Elgram's shop was to have
displaced Anderson's Instead
an agreement was reached
whereby the photo shop would
occupy 900 square reet of unused
space at Unive r sity Park
Coiffures; which is adjacent to
the barber shop.
"We 'll all be happy
n e i g b bo rs , " Ra di es s a id ,
beaming.
Asked why the reared lease
canceUation had become such a
big issue , Anderson said,
"We've been here for 13 and a
half years and a lot of people
have drifted through
"J "d like to thank all the
people who have helped us I'm
happy to be here · ·
The earlier Irvine Company
decision to cancel the lease was
c riticized by the lrvisle City
Council, which demanded that
the compa n y preserve
neighborhood business
establishments.
Responding 10 the criticism.
Irvine Company Prsident Peter
K r e m e r m a d e a r a r e·
appearance before the City
Council several weeks ago and
promised the company would be
more responsive to the needs ·or
retail shops leasing space from
the company.
was to be put lo a citywide vote
In June.
But the council -on a 4-3 vote
-agreed to toss in the towel and
call off the election at the
request of the Irvine Company.
Robert Shelton . a vice
president for the development
firm. said Lt was unlikely that
the project would be given a fair
chance at lbe polls.
·'Our discussions in the
com munlty." Shelton told the
councU, ''clearly lndkate that as
a consequence primarlly of the
leasehold controversy there is
a n anti ·lrvine Company
constituency that will seek to
strike at the company by
opposing completion of the
center."
He called his firm's request an
"unhappy conclusion" but one
that "we hope will mitigate the
divisive cllmate we see
developing In the community."
CouncUman Pbillp Maurer,
who voted against repealln1 the
plan which the council approved
last summer. called it "a black
day for Newport Beach.·'
·'If we rescind this project
there wilJ be a lot of intlated
egoS" in Newport Beach," said
Maurer, "and I won't let that
SCIENTIFIC Physics professor Jim
Rutledge explains operation of a machinE.·
t hat ca n isolate material s at lo\\
!Hiltl'W1'9ff~
temperatures at a science clinic for hil!h
school teachers at UC Irvi ne
'Science clinic' he.Id
UCI faculty lectures high school teachers
By GLENN SC01T But she added: "There has collegiate coursework. To
0t .. o.1ty,..._.. been enough concern about complicate things, Or. Miller
Tbe high school teachers education in general that we're noted that the state Legislature
heard lectures on subjects as maybe turning things around... is becoming less willing to fund
small but basic as quarks and In offering the science clinic. such courses.
neutrinos and as large but exotic the UCt professors bad to tiptoe Neither the UCI professors nor
as a deadly new disease from along the highwire of diplomacy. the high school teachers were
the Amaz.on. They didn't want to give the paid a penny for the Saturday
It was all part of the first simplistic impression that h.igh event. Dr. Taagepera said she
·•science clinic" presented al UC school teachers have failed -has attempted to address the
Irvine by faculty members o nl y , s he explained , that current crisis "hair out of
trying to improve the academic educators at all levels must de speration , half from
quality of their freshmen. work harder to· coordinate sell-protection."
To achieve their goal, the efforts. She teache s f resh men
professor s in the university's Their attempt seem ed to chemistry. In ract. she drew a
science fields have focused on succeed. few laughs during her opening
the training their students "We're pleased to have this remarks Saturday by telling the
receive prior to college attention paid to us as science teachers:
Thus, about 100 high school teachers." said John Kalko, a "I've been trying to teach
s c i enc e t e a c h er s fr 0 m physics teacher at Woodbridge freshmen chemistry for the last
throughout Southern California High School in Irvine. during a five years ... and I'm getting a
-but especially Orange County lunch break little tired of hearing my
-were on hand Saturday to tour Said another teacher, Jim students tell me sulfur 1s a
theuniversity'sscience labsand Gregson of Wi lmington's colorlessgas "
hear the latest news of scientific Banning High School: "All this Sulfur actually is a yellow
sorcery. information will gradually filter solid.
The day-long workshop was down to the students." A neutrino meanwhile, 1s a
organized by UCI chemistry Or. Taagepera and colleague subatomi c p a rti c le which
professor Dr. Mare Taagepera. George Miller both said they co-discove rer Dr Frederick
who has mad e head Ii n es sense that the quality of new Reines of UCI explained during
previously with her efforts to students is beginning to improve a lecture has never been shown
prepare students for the rigors from a low point about three to have mass. or weight.
of a university curriculum. yeers ago. But they agreed more A quark is hypothesized as
She was careful to note that improvement 1s necessary. another particle that may
the clinic by itsell wouldn't solve They said remedial classes in cluster to form neutrons and
the problems s he said are the sciences still are necessary protons -once thought to be as
common to higher education for many students who aren't sma ll as you could get ,
nationwide. prepared out of high school for according to Dr. Riley Newman.
Nixon loses round on .tap~s
l\nd the infectious Chagas'
D ise ase. said Dr . Stuart
Krassner, afflicts as many as 15
million people in South and
Central America, and no drugs
or vaccines have been developed
to counter it. F e!leral court rejects illegality claim on screenings
eroup ever to do this to the city
11gain."
Mayor Jackie Heather was
joined by council members John
Cox. Don Strauss and Paul
Hummel in rescinding the
massive expansion plan.
"I feel this issue has been
dealt with in a destructive way
and pushed into the political
arena." said Cox. "I don't think
the lrvine Companv should have
to put up with tfilt mob scene."
Councilwoman Ruthelyn
Plummer , who voted aeainst
repealing the project, charged
that referendum leaders used
''<habolic deceit and distortion"
to gather signatures.
Ron Covington, ao elementary
school teacher and leader or the
referendum drive. said the
drawbacks to the Newport
<See CENTER, Page AZ>
Girl, 13, says
suspect shot
her, friend
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Qt .. et.tty ..... S&.tfl
A 13-year-old Lake Elsinore
girl told a closed preliminary
hearing that s h e and a
companion were gunned down
last September by a man who
pulled alongside them in hi s
truck in Cleveland National
Forest and called out. "Hey
girls."
According to transcripts
released today, the witness,
Kelly Cartier, identified former
Costa Mesa resident Thomas
Francis Edwards, 37, as the
gunman who wounded her and
killed a companion, Vaness a
Jberri, as they hiked near Blue
Jay Campground on Sept. 19.
Edwards was ordered to stand
trial in Orange County Supenor
Court on murder and attempted
murder charges following his
preliminary hearing on J an. 29.
H e also face s s pe cia l
circumstance allegations that
could lead to imposition of the
death penalty if he is convicted
Edwards is scheduled to be
arraigned Wednesday an Santa
Ana.
The defendant's hearing
before South Orange County
Municipal Court Judge John
Griffin had been ordered closed
by public defender Mike
Giannini.
However , transcripts of the
hearing were opened to pubUc
inspection today They showed
that t he prosecution 's key
witness. Miss Cartier , identified
Edwards as the man who pulled
up in has red Datsun pickup
truck where the girls were
hiking and opened fire without
provocation
Questioned by Chief Deputy
District Attorney James
Enright, the witness said the
truck passed the school once and
then came back in the direction
they were walking.
·· We were walklng a litUe
farther <down the road) and
then I heard this car coming and
I told Vanessa to get over to the
side of the road." Miss Cartier
said "Then <the truck > stopped
and <someone inside) said. 'hey
girls.· and then it jus t "
"Then what happened after
that?" Enright asked.
"Then, he said , 'hey girl -
girls and then -then -he
shot ... ~he testified
Mass Cartier. who s ufrered
head wounds m the attack, said
the assailant "got out of bis car
a nd he opened the door and then
<See EDWA&D6, Pase A%>
Sallta Ana Freeway
widening studied
Widening or the Orange
County segment or the aging and
deteriorating Santa An a
Freeway from six to eight lanes
to relieve congestion is now
under study by Caltrans.
In an apparent shift from a
previous position , Caltrans
regional director H einz
Heckeroth said Monday that the
e ight·lane alternative will be
con s idered in the overall
planning f or futur e
improvements along one of the
county's busiest north-south
traffic corridors.
In the past. Caltrans has
objected to widening of the
freeway between the San
Gabriel River Valley Freeway
in Santa Fe Springs to its
southerly terminus at the San
Diego Freeway in Laguna Hills
The department, instead, had
supported spot widening or the
route, construction of bus
express lanes and installation of
mete ring devices to control
onramp traffic now.
Caltrans officials, including
Heckeroth, decline to say if they
will ultimately support widening
of the freeway to eight lanes.
But members of the Orange
Co unt y Tran s portation
Com mission say the state's
willing ness lo s tudy t he
eighl·lane proposal shows there
has been a definite shift in
attitude
The freeway now is being
widened to eight lanes in the
segment between the Sao
Gabriel River Valley Fr~way
and the Los Angeles downtown
business district ll also is eight
lanes wide after merging with
the San Diego Freeway in the
south county
Other options that Caltrans is
weighing in its study will range
rrom doing nothing other than
minor improvements to
expanding the freeway to 10
lanes five in each direction -
through Orange County.
After receiving a briefing on
the rreeway widening study,
transportation commissioners.,1
voted to endorse Caltrans '
request to seek $600,000 from the
federal government for design
studies on the potential project.
WASHINGTON (AP ) -A
federal appeals court threw out
today ex-President Richard
Nixon's appeal that the federal
1ovemment iJ acUnt llle1ally In
processme bis White House tape
record.inp for eventual pubUc
screenings.
prop er and constitutional
methods to separate Nixon's
''diary" recordings, which will
be returned to him on privacy
grounds, from other recordings
that will be made available to
tbe public at 11 deslaoated
centers. '
Administration 's rules for
processing the tapes were
constitutional.
Nihn claimed the procedures
tlolated bls conslitulionaJ right
to personal privacy, political
prlvacy and the presidential
privlle1e of confidentiality.
$300,000 donated
to Music Center
ORANGI COAST WIATHIR
Mostly cloudy tonight
and Wednesday. Chance of
occasional Ji&ht rain
·increasing Wednesday.
The three-jud1e panel of the
U.S. Court of Appeala also ruled
the 1overnment was uslng
The panel's decision upbeld a
rulln,-by a lower federal court.
which said the General Services
Camly court order
Sweets go .to wife in battery case
. 01TAWA, Kan. <AP) Sttve Jackson will be giving has wife a box or candy for Valentine's Pay -by court order. ·
Franklin County District Judge Larry Courscn ordered
the aift in lieu or a fine after Jackson, 22. pleaded l\dlty to a
charge of battery on hls wtf e.
. Counen suspended a S50 tme and ordered Jackson to buy a box of candy for at least $:ao and pay court costs.
The aherifrs office said Jack.ton was charced with battery Dec. 28 after he allegedly awakened h1s wife by
hittina her on the stioulder ana arm and ordered her to eo outalcle to 1et firewood for the stove:
'
The ex·prealdent said the GSA
administrator should have
eatabllsbed regulations to
minlmhe constitutional
lnfrln1ementa and suggested,
for examr.le, a system in wblch
the adm nistrator could have
made available to the public
only those recordings relatin• to
W ater1ate, or could have
restricted the availability of
record.ines to a flxed period of years.
Tbe appeals court ln an
opinion written by aeftlo.r U.S.
Circuit• Judge Carl McGowan,
uld the re1ulatlons permit
Nixon and any other• w"°'e rl«hlt are threatened by
dlaclolure to object and obtain
judicial review of any adverse
determioaUon by t.bt GSA.
M cOowan said tbat Nixon
clalmt he bu t.be l'labt of an
lndlvldual to operate penoaal
CS.. NIXON, Pale· A!) •
.:II
Edward and Florence
Schumacher of Newport Bead\,
lormer owners of Global Van
Lines, have contributed more
than $300,000 toward the
construction and endowment of
the $59 mllUon Oranae COunty
Music Center, It was annoul\ced
Monday.
Mra. Schumacher la a
member of the Mualc Center'•
board of directors and baa served aa vtce prealdent for
aS>eclaJ events ln connecUon wttb
uriou1 fund·ralaera for the
performlnf arts center to be
built In Cetta Me1a.
She bu allO been acU~• lll the O.raa11 County PbUhumOAlc
Society and the Orancc County
S7mpbocut ~laUOn.
Edward &bumacher la still
pretldent ot the Aaabtim·bi.led
movtqnrm.
The Schumacheu' con·•
t.rtbuUOll of aecuntiea valued
at more than $300,000 was
pledged in 1981.
·'This magnificent gift Is
doubly appreciated because It
represents a most generous
financial commitment by a
ramlly which has already
committed unt-0ld bour5 to the srowlh of the arts ln Orange
Cou nt y ," said Henry
Seaeratrom , music center
trustee chaltman.
To date $20.6 million tn
pledl•• ·and 1lfla bat been
raise<l tow•. ·d the construction
and e.ndowmeftt of • main
3 ,OOO·tea\ theater and a
1,000-teat theater to be built on
land dQnat.ed by the Seaentrom
famllJ.
When completed In 1IM U>e 3,000.ieat UMat.r will be oN1
tbf third ln tbll country capabM
of pro.tdlnl aympbocu, open.
ballet and mUsleaJ thHt~r.
J
Little temperature
change. Highs 58 to 64.
Overnight lows 48 to SS.
INSIOI TODAY
Doraald P.olon •• OM of IM
ftW" rtmcinino wo,Jd wa, I
flying ace• Jio, oUhough ri.
ntvtr got .o #tot .at tM lttd
Baron, rttalb on ~
wW1 the fam•d Germa"
.aviator. Su Sto"l/. Photo,
Pog• Aa.
lltDll
t
I
11
·'
• ____________ _... ... -·---·---
'
Orange Coat OAJL Y Plj..OTIT u•adey, Feb u
Budget 'horror stories' charged
Re~ 1ays Democratic demagogues off er no reasonable, alternative
UCCUM8S -Hruce illtams, public relations irector of Golden West
Uege. is de~d at 53.
• • DSS MOINl8, Iowa (AP) -
,.,..... ........... Oil the
attatk a1ata1t crltln, HYI
Democratic d.ma101ue1 are
preparln1 "borror atorlH" about Ida 1ID bud'9t but olfe:r no reacmable alternative.
RtafaD WU taktDI bla
sharpened aalea pltcb to th• Republlcan-controlled Iowa
Le1lalature today where he wu
expected to continue the
ad·llbt>.d alubea be be1ao
Monday la MJnneapolla at the
start of a two-clay, Midwest trtp.
Tb• praldent wu wrapptna
up the promotional tour at
Indi~polia later toclay. Similar
ou\lnp throu•b the West and Deep South are planned next
month.
"You have to get about 50
miles at least from the Potomac
River and the District of
Columbia to 1et back to the real
world,•• R eacao told an
approvin1 crowd In Mtnneapolil.
"In the days ahead you a.re
goin1 to be submer1ed in
dema1oguery about the '83
bud1et, · • Rea1an continued.
"You're bearlna all kinda ot
horror ltorta •ut the people
wbo are 1oin1 to be thrown out
In the anow to hun1er and die of
cold and to I ort.h."
Reaaan fired bl.a Impromptu
remJrlta at a rallt for Son.
David Durenber1er, R-Mlnn.
Deputy press secretary Larry
Speakes aald some of the barbs
were written on the fiilht from
Waahlnaton but that Reagan
lhou1ht of most of them as be
spoke.
"They came from the heart,"
Speakes said, lhumpin1 himself
on the chest for emj>hasil,
Rea1an said Democrats are
accusing him of cruel budtet
cuttina when he actually baa not
reduced the budget. He said
total speding in 1983 will be
hi1ber t.ban in 1982 and that this
year's total is high~r than 1!191
because of automatic escalation
created by Democrats.
"We have been reducing t.be
rate or increase that has been
built in." Reaaan said.
The preaid~t complained tbat
wbll• Democrat.a critlcise h1a
bud1et because ol tbe $91.5
billion deftcit lt proJecta, l.My
bave nothlnc to offer themaelv
except hl1ber taxes.
Re11an Hld be wlU not back
down on hJs plana for areatly
expanded defense spendina
despite su11eatlon1 that
Congress, especially the
Democrat.a there, wlll lnailt on
some cut.a.
While Reagan drew cheers
from Republicans, about s.ooo
protesters jeered him and bis
policies.
As Reagan appeared at the
fund raiser, the demonstrators
gathered in 8-degree weather
outside the Carlton Celebrity Room.
· It was believed that Reagan
was whisked into a rear
entrance and did not see the crowd.
The bundled-up protesters
carried placards, some readina,
"Fill the Missiles with Grain
and Prime Rib and Let the Good
Tim.. Ron:· "'Mr. Pr .. ldent,
You Are Wron1," "Put
American Back to Work. Stop
Import.a," "Money for Jobi, Not
War."
They aJao chanted, "We want
Joba ! " and "Hey bey, ho ho,
Ronald Rea1an·11ot to 10!"
The sponaorine Antl-Rea1an
Coalition claimed to represent
more than 60 croupa
disenchanted witb the
president'• pollclu. They
included fired air traffic
controllers, hoD)osexuala,
women's eroupe, blacks, lndlana
and teachers.
In hJ1 speech to the Iowa
lawmakers, Reaaan insisted be
expedl his tax cuts to rescue
the ecooomy in the lone run.
Out.aide, an estimated 1,200
proteateu marched in
opposition to administration
policies.
Some demonstrators, who
came from labor, religiouaf women's, elderly and civl
rights aroups, carried alps
reading '· Reaganomica Robs the
Poor and Gives to the Rich.·•
NEW CtftEF -David Tappan
Jr . has been named
president and chief
operating officer of Fluor
Corp
illiaD18
f GWC
uccunilis
1 Golden West College has
iereated an annual acholanhiP. in
ienemory of public relations
~irector Bruce L. Williams who
Youth gets 15-years for kidnap, rape
Fluor post
goes to
Tappan
ed Sattirday of cancer at the
ge of 53.
' Mr. Williams, a former
ewspaper reporter. combat
rreapondent and magazine
ditor, started work at the
eollege in Huntington Beach
when it opened in 1966.
Memorial service for friends
and family is scheduled
Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Finl
United Methodist Church of
Orange, 161 S. Orange St.
• Memorial donations may be
fPade to the Bruce L. Williams
~cholarsbip Fund al Golden
tWeat College. The scholarship t-rill be given annually to a
.6olden West student whose goal
,ts public relations, a college
11pokeswoman said.
· Mr. Williams lived in Orange
.fiith bia wife, Dr. Louise Spivey,
lo instructor at Golden West.
In 1969, Mr. Williams was
among organizers of the lint
Huntington Beach City Festival
which in 19'18 became the annual
Community Festival involvin1
flve cities.
He also was active In the
,United Way or West Oran1e
County and various cilizen
advisory panels for city and
county government officials.
' In 1980, the Commission oo
,,-Ublic Relations for California
community colleges awarded
,,ir. Williams its PRO Award for
~t promotional campaigns.
Before coming to Golden
,West, Mr. Williams was director
of communications for the
United Methodist Church ,
:t>acific and Southwest
'Ponference, in Los Angeles.
Prior to that , he was a
reporter for 10 years. including
four years as a war
correspondent in Korea and
Japan. He worked on the
·Nashville Banner, the Geneva
:Daily Times in New York and
e Schenectady Union-Star.
During the Korean Conflict,
r . Williams was a
orrespondent for the Pacific
tars & Stripes. The Army
warded him a commendation
or writing a story from a
orean foxhole about a squad of
even soldiers and the
ementos they carried into
attle.
He later worked as assodate
'tor of two national Methodist·
a1uines: Together, and t.be
bristian Advocate, both based
New York.
Mr. Williama is survived by
·a parents, the Rev. and Mn.
arry L. Wiili.ams of San
lemente; bis wife; a daughter,
rolyo Floid of Eugene. Ore.; sons, <.;atvtn and Davtd of
untin1ton Beach ; two
pdaughters, Susan and Sheryl
ivey; a slater. Winifred o(
oaton , and three
andchlldren.
....,,.....,..er arreete
EL PASO, Texas <AP>
wenty -flve suspected
JDUI.,_. of Wetal aliens were
ted and 115 Meldcana being
ulbt acrou t.be border were
ken Lato custody In the aeeoad
art of a Border Patrol
ckdown.
A Halloween night kidnapper
and rapist who was tracked
down by police when he left bl.a
wallet at the scene of the crime
baa been itven a state prison
term of ~ years, eight months
by a superior court Judie In
Santa Ana.
In banding down the sentence
Monday against defendant
·Vincent A. Clawson, 19, Judge
James 0 . Perez described the
circumstances of the crime u ·'sickening."
Those circumstances included
l'erll Newpwt
·j
... -:: ........ "·':, · , •.... :-. :. : , l •Cl'fl::E
the robbery and kidnapping of a
74-year-old Los Alamitos man
out walking bis do1. and the
rape of his SS.year-old wile at
the couple's home later in the
evening on Oct. 31, 1981.
Clawson, a transient, pleaded
guilty to charges of kidnappina.
robbery, forcible rape, false
imprisonment, burglary and
grand theft.
Deputy District Attorney
Martin Engquist, who said the
defendant could have been
sentenced to life imprisonment,
lr•ln• Teruc•
0.llJP't ........
CENTI" PLAN DUMPED Graphic shows areas of
expansion in Newport Center that the Newf?Ort Beach Cit~·
Council repealed early today. Plan was. to 1~clude a hotel.
office buildings. restaurants and a residential tower. The
Irvine Company project was under the threat of a
referendum.
FromPageA1
CENTER DEFEATED. • •
• Center plan "are ju.st too rreat."
"I take exception." Covt.nitoo
said, "to the theory that we can
be auctioned off for a few more
dollars, for a few more
businesses.
"And for you Cthe council) to
point the fmger and say we've
been destnactive just isn't true.
We never intended to do that"
By law, the Irvine Company
can aot resubmit its plan to
expand the shopping and
professional center for at leut
one year.
Several Irvine Company
officials. though, hinted tbey
may wait longer than that.
''We have no definite plam at
this point," said Sbeltoo after •
tbe vote. "But Newport eeow
will be built out -that's ltl
destiny."
The plan to expand the center
with a hotel, office build.inn,
restaurant.a and a residentlal
tower was approved by the
council on a split vote foUowlnt
monU. ol debate and blctmn,.
The referendum drive was
launched shortly after a
disclosure that three council
members had met privately
with top Irvine Company
executives, including the firm's
president.
Until this week , it was
expected the council would call
for an elecdon, which the Irvine
Company had predicted It could
win.
From Page A,.1
NIXON. • •
and l>Usiness affairs outside of
the public's vjew or listening.
"Mr. Nixon, however, can
claim no such broad right of
prlvacy with respect to his life
while president," McGowan
wrote. "For presidents and
ordinary cltiiens alike, a
personal privacy interest
protected by the Fourth
Amendment must flnd its source
in a le&itlmate expectatioll of
privacy.
OftA-*OOAST 1111y~1at CIHlfflecl ......... 71411414111
A• otfMlf d1pa""'9nta Ml~
"Mr. Nixon while president
could have had aucb an
expectaUbn ln some materials,
s uch 11 diaries or other
communications reapectlnc
peraonal matters un11elated to
hia public· duties, but not in
•materials relai.d to the conduct
6Dd official duties of the
presidency.''
The co1.art also .. Id that ·
10Ternment arc:b1Tlat. must
ltateb to recorded DJctabelta
lbat Nlxoa said 1Were made for bil penMIUI cllary.
Tape reclot~Slayed at~ Watertale trla re already
available for pu c ll.atlAlna ln
Wublnltoo. but 1 eoaaUlute oaly ·a lmall poltloa of Nlxoa'a
WbU. HoUM tape rewc dlnlll·
•
called the term imposed by Perez adequate.
"The sentence that he got is
appropriate for what he did,"
Engquist said.
Clawson would become
eligible for parole consideration
after serving 10 years of his
sentence.
According to investigators, the
defendant accosted the elderly
Los Alamitos man near his
home. Clawson robbed the man
of $13 and, dissatisfied with the
money. forced the old man to
drive to his home, where bia
64-year-old wile was alone. The
defendaftt, according to
Engquist, tied up the man and
ransacked the home. He then
raped the woman, tied her up
and fled ln the couple's car.
However. in cleaning up the
home the following day, the
couple's 40-year-old son found a
wallet belonging to Clawson,
who was immediately located by
police and charged with the
crime.
Another snowstorm
plasters Midwest
By The Aasoclated Preas
A snowstorm plastered much
of the nation Crom Oklahoma
across the Midwest into New
England today. closing hWldreds
of schools and tyin1 op
rush-hour traffic in t.be urban
Northeast.
FromPageA1
E.DWARDS. . -~
I guess he put something in
there ... "
"Did you see what happened
to Vanessa?" Enright asked her.
"I just know that she got
shot," she answered.
Miss Cartier said the gunman
quickly drove away.
Asked by Enright if she saw
the man who said "hey girls''
and fired the shots, Miss Cartier
identified Edwards, a burly man
arrested by authorities in
Maryland days after the
shooting.
She said she saw a gun pointed
at her and Miss lberri from the
truck window just before she
wa s wounded and her
companion killed.
She said she never actuaHy
heard any shots. though she saw
a gun pointed at her from the
truck window. "It just happened
so fast that I dido 't -I dido 't
hear anything," she testified.
Sbe said that she saw the
gunman get out of his truck
after the shootin".
I
New snow collected almost a
foot deep in Kansas and
elsewhere in the Midwest, which
has been hit by almost weekly
storms since early January.
Winter storm warnings were
in effect in central Indiana,
central Ohio. the northern
panhandle of West Virginia.
western Maryland, the interior
of eastern Pennsylvania and the
Catskill Mountains of New York
. State.
At least two people were killed
in Oklahoma where up to eight
Inches of snow fell. The highway
patrol issued a plea to radio
stations to tell travelers in the
central part of the state to find
lodging and stay off the
highways.
Schools closed in cities such as
Baltimore. Philadelphia and
Boston as the storm reached the
Northeast in the predawn hours. "We've had numerous mul-
tiple-car accidents," said Cpl.
Jim Sartori at the state police
headquarters in Boston. The
worst of it's on the East Coast
right now."
Police in Providence, R.I .,
reported dozens of accidents on
Interstate 95 in the metropolitan
area. Tractor-trailer trucks
were unable to climb the bills
and cars trying to avoid the
stalled trucks skidded into each
other on the unsanded highway.
Some injuries were reported.
In Indiana, where snow depths
already measured about a foot.
another 10 inches was forecast.
David Tappan Jr .. who has
served a variety of
administrative roles during his
30 years with the Fluor Corp .•
was named today to fill a newly
created role as president and
chief operating officer.
The announcement was made
by J . Robert Fluor. who remains
chief executive officer and
c hairman of the board of
directors for the huge ,
lrvine·based multi-national
corporation.
Tappan, 59. of Newport Beach
had been vice chairman of the
board, and Fluor said that
position won't be filled. Both
Fluor and Tappan are major
stockholders. Tappan's salary is
$685,000 a year. according to
proxy slat.ement.s.
"Due to the company's rapid
growth. I have concluded thal
we abould now cC>mplement my
role as chairman and chief
executive officer with the new
position of president and chief
operating officer," Fluor said.
U oder the new system.
Tappan will be in charge of
Fluor's operating susidiaries.
The firm , which provides
engineering and
project·management services
and also runs diversified natural
resource operations, has a
worldwide work force of 40,000
people, a company spokesman
said today
Tappan will be responsible for
s trategic planning and
day.to-day policy decisions, the
spokesman said.
Tappan joined the corporation
in 1952 as an administrative
a ssistant. He became vice
president for domestic sales in
1959 and then was put in charge
of all sales operations in 1962.
In 1971, he organized Fluor
Engineers & Constructors Inc.
and became its first president,
according to a company news
release
Stolen child,
mom return home
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Little
Natalee Cochran is home today
following a 10-day cross-country
hitchhiking trip with a
19-year-old babysitter who was
arraigned In Pennsylvania on a
federal charge of unlawful
flight.
WHAT MAKES OUR SOLITAIRE
•
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Color. clartty. cut and beauty. These are tlle standardS
wejudge dramonds by. And we accept only the flnest
for our diamond collectlons. That's what makes each
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difference tnJe quallty ma~. From our diamond "collectSon rn 14 karat gold, the rings shown are priced
from $300 to $10,000. Pendants trom $150 to
$5.000. Earrings from $250 to $7.SOO.
SLAVIC K'S
AWJlilMWl9ata ~tl7
Whtrf w &a;$~~ I
--------....-.----
r
·~· IMILU IHN'!D -Egypt's President Hoanl Mubarak.
left, 1rina with West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt
aa they chat durin1 photo seulon prior to their tallu in
the Bonn Chancellory.
M uakie reating after 1urgery
BETHESDA, Md. CAP) -
Former Secretary of Stale
Edmaad Muakte wu in
"I~ condition and In 1ood
spirits" after under1oin1
back suraery at Bethesda
Naval Medical Center, a
hospital 1pokesman said.
Lt. Cmdr. Ronald Arrlson
said an enlaraed spinal dlac
was removed from Muakle'a
back Salurd•y . The
operation laated 81,AJ hours,
accordin1 to Gayle Corey,
spokeswoman for the Muskie
family
Muskie, a former
COLUMBIA, Mo. CAP> -
Sln1er Cllubby Cbecker h~
recovered from a bout with
pneumonia and has been
·released from a hospital,
officials say.
Patsy Moore , a
spokeswoman for Boone
Hospital Center. said the
40 -year-old Checker waa
released on Sunday.
Checker's manaaer said
earlier that he planned to
, resume his tour. Chec~r. famous for the
"Twist" son1a of the early
19601, wu preparln1 for two
concerts in Columbia laat
Tuesday nl1ht when be
became too Ill to perlorm.
His manaaer attributed the
lllneaa to the chanae In
weather from lbe Soulht!m
states he had been tourlna.
•
Democratic senator from
Maine and one -time
presidential candidate. 11
expected to remain ln the
hospital for about two weeu,
she said.
Muskie's back problem
stemmed from an accident in
the early 1950s, 1bortly
before he was elected
1overnor of Maine. Ma.
Corey said. Muakie fell
throuah a stair railin& while
doing repairs at hia
Waterville home and broke
his back.
NEW YORK <AP) -Stu
Ge&a aaya be haan't mastered
the tenor saxophone yet, but
he'll keep trying.
"I'm still leamtn1.-· Gets
said after playln1 at hla Nth
birthday celebration at Fat
Tuesday's, a Manhattan Ja.u
club. "I learn somethin1 new
every day.'' ·
Fans Included wife ,
M on lea, his son Steve,
mana1er of the club, and b1a
uncle. Benjamin Get&, a New
York printer.
"He played at my weddin1
39 years aao." the elder Gets
said . But it waa easier to
make people happier then.
"It's a touab audience," be
aald. "Yount folk• are bard
to please."
OMAHA, Neb. CAP> -L~ .. 11e1rf H)'I b1I Utt
bun t bMD the 11m1 alnee
bt knocktd LJ••••• "l4l••all1" Jroo•• to th• 1round H 1bt potnttd a
plltol at tbeo·Prwldent Ford
ftvt yean •IO·
"I ataNd taklnf lift OCM day at a Umt. atarttd
appreclatinl people more," aald BumdOrf, '7, tbt new
11ent ln chart• of th• Ster«
Service ln Omaha.
Whenever b1 hura of
IDOtbtr HllHinaUon, ht
rellv• the event, Bu1ndorf
aald.
"After (Et)(ptlan)
Prt1ident Sad.at WU killed, l
thou1ht of the r1vl1wln~
1t1ndl I 1tood ln front of,'
th• •cent 11id. Sadat wu
funned down lut year while
Haled on a revtewtn1 1tand.
Procectint public ottlelala la a 1trt11-ftlltd Job. Buen:
dorf 11ld. ''You are alwaya
looklq for lbt unHpecttd.
Tb• daya often are lon1, the
di.ity la 1trenuoU1.'' he told
The Om1h1 World-Herald.
NEW YORK <AP> -The
Metropolitan Opera saya it
will present soprano
Leoatyne Price and
meuo-eop.rano Martlya
Horae ln concert to1ether
March 28.
The concert, with James
Levine conduct1n1 the
Metropolitan Opera
Orchestra. will be taped for
TV broadcut at a later date.
The pro1ram wlll bave
ariaa and duets plua
orchestral aelectlon1 by
Handel. Mourt, Oraalni,
Bellini and Verdi.
The concert will be a
benefit for the Met Opera
sponsored by the
Metropolitan Opera Gu.ltd.
IN CONCIRT -Leontyne
Price will join soprano
Marilyn Horne in concert
at the Mtropolitan Opera
March 28.
Slwwers on way?
Coaatal
Extended
forecast
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What do you llkt ~bout th• Dally Pilot? What don't you llke?
Call lb9 number below and )'OUr m111111 will bt recorded,
tranacrtbtd and dtllveted to the approprtatt ldltor. 1 The 11me 24·ho:ur an1w1rlnc wvtce may bt uatd to record let·
ttrt to the tdltor th aay topic. llaJlboa contrtbutora mu1t Include
thtlr name and telephone number for verlUcatlon. No ctreulatlon
Cllll, pltaae, I
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' I
Orange Coat DAILY Pl,LOTfTU~Jdly, February 9, 1982 H"
Sam· seeJi~ p.eti"ranencj
-l ' l C aunty man hope8' for rever1al of deportat~on order
Sy ITIVS MITCHELL of ............
Whllt Llberlan·born Sam
WUlett la irtmn1 hambur1•rt at
1 San Juan Caplltrano fut food
r11taurant thl1 wttlt, Rep.
Robert Badham wlll be In
W11hintton 1ttemptlna to tum
around 1 decllton that would Ht
Sam deported July a.
Sam, now 28, waa adopted by
David and Ruth Willett a decade
a10 when the couple worktd for
the Peace Corpa ln Llbtrla.
The San Juan Caplatrano
couple waa 1ucce11tul In
obtalnln1 a student vlu for thelr
ion, and, until recently, Sam
attended Saddleback Collete
where be took bu1lne11 and
1ccounUn1 clusea.
But the HoUJe Subcommittee o.n Imml1ratlon haa ordered
Sam deported next 1ummer.
cltinl 1 IO·year-old provlllon of
the Federal Imml1ratlon and
N aturallaatlon Act 11 the
reason.
Thal clause aays Sam wu too
old at the Ume (10 years a10J to
be consld.,red an adopted chUd.
He wu 16 when the Willetta
adopted him.
His family's request for a
special act of Con1re11 was
rejected by the subcommittee
last fall and a deportation
hearln1 held In late December
resulted in an order for him to
leave the U.S.
Another setback for the family
came lut Friday when an aide
to Rep. Badham told the couple
the lmmiaratlon subcommittee
haa refused lo re-hear the
matter.
"It's absolutely not fair," a
tearful Ruth Willett aaid thiJI
morntn1. "There waa a white
couple In Palos Verdes who aot a
private bill lhrou1h to adopt a
21 -year-old white Yuaoalavian
boy.'' she said.
"And he had not lived with the
couple. Sam haa been an
lntearll part or this ramlly for 10
years," ahe said.
An aide for Badham aaid the
congressman will be meetlna
with Rep .. Romano Mauoll, a
Kentuck y Democrat and
chairman or the imml1ratlon
subcommittee, this week, "ln an
attempt t o turn this lhin1
around."
-
Dmlfr ...........
WAITING GAME -Sam Wmett, the Libertan-bom adopted.,
son of David and Ruth Willett of San Juan Capistrano. arms
hamburgers at a fast food restaurant while awaiting wor<l
on efforts to turn around a deportation decision. ~
"In essence," the aide said,
"the s ubcommittee's rejection
was based on the fears It would
set a bad precedent for future
<I mmigration) cases."
In addition, the letter lo
Badham assertedly ~lated that
Sam's cue "lacked merit."
But Badham intends t o
persuade Mazzoli that he did not
have lln opportunity to testify
when the deportation issue first
·came before the subcommittee
J
··He was not afforded th~
opportunity to speak," the aide
uid. 1.
And while Badham lobbies foi
Sam In Washington, David a""
Ruth Wlllett's frleods and reno..;
c hu r chgoers are czontactina
othe r legislators and a.endin~
telegrams to Washlniton. 4 Meanwhile , Sam plays l1
wall i ng gam e . workln&
pa rt -ti me al a fas t roo ~
restuurunt
UCI bowl team disappointed 'J n
A member of UC Irvine's
colleae bowl team vowed
Monday the squad , whic h
finished s ixth Saturday at a
re1ional tournament In
Stockton, will do better next
year.
Hu10 Jlmenei said his UCI
teammates were surprised by
the serious preparation
displayed by some of the other
13 squada.
The UCI team competed In
four mat c hes In the
double-ellmlnatlon tournament
at the University of the Pacll\c.
The "bowl " matc bes t wo
four-person teams that compete
to ans wer ques tio ns about
science , math. li te rature and
other .subjects.
Irvine beat San Diego State
University, 185 to 100, but then
lost lo Cal State Fresno , 290 to
150.
In the consolation bracket,
UCI beat Cal Poly Pomona, 150
to 100 <after trailing at half 90 to
10 ) but lost to Stanfor d
Unlveraity. 300 to 195.
The "players" win points by
be ating opponents to a bun.er
be'fore cotTectly answerln1 lb(!I
question ~
"In both t he Fresno and
St anford games, at was JUSt i
matter of beating people to th'
butter ,·· he said ··And they bea\
us a lot." :·
J 1 menez said he will suggest
that UCI select Its team earliet
next year so the squad has mort
ti me to practice. as did the
Fresno and Stanford teams j
F res no St ate w o n th~
tournament, earning a trip t ·
West Virginia for the nationa
collegiate championship~.
~'Light Cuisine"
fOranew
weigh
of life
Fr~e cQokbook from
Republic Federal Savings
162 slimming recipes that don't stint on taste or
full nutrlUon. A prized collecHon of eeay·to·pre·
pare meals from the Celifornle Home Economics
Association ... Cook llght-eet right" ls the theme •
of thts d~llghtfµI cookbook. Everything from hors
d 'oeuvres, soupa end salads to entrees and des-
seru, Also, low calorie pre·planned meals for busy
people. 92 peges with color lllustretlons.
Drop by for your free cookbook and get acquainted with Republic's many services. Ask about
CHEK/IN, our lnterest·eamlng checking accounts. And the new tax-deductions _for IRA accounts
and Keogh pl1n1 for the aelf-employed. lnqulre a6o\,lt thenlgn~le{d,~ ovalleble (or these retlre<Mnt
eccount.11nd current retea on Republlc's Tex·Exempt AU S.veca certlflc:etea. · •
·-'
Every time the Roolter CroW• your Money Orowa .
. "" ....
•
A4 H/f Orang• Coaat DAIL y PILOTITuHd•v. February 9, 1982
millu~rn~ Japan .air crash
claims 24 lives Laker air empire
goes on the block TOKYO <API A Japan Air
Llnt1 DC·8 wlth 174 peopJt a board hit a aeries of llaht potea
11 It came down for a landln1
and alurnmed lnt.o ahallow water
Ill the ed1e of Tokyo Bay today,
kllllna 24 Jap1ne11e pauen1en.
there waa nothlna unu1ual about
the apfroach and no warnln1 of
tro ub e until there waa 1
"sudden Jolt" 1md the plane hit
the water. ' LONDQ.N (AP> -Sir Freddlt
Laktr'1 banJaU.Pt alrllne emp\re went up for 1ale today after a
1rouf of bank• and a 1e1lon of Joya tmployffa talled to rettue
tht out-ratt travel company. Tbt IDOlt profitable pieces of
Laker11 bu1ln e11 -the
Arrow1m lth and Laker Air
Hollda ya pack11e tour
compant .. -were the Oral on
the bloel<.
Wllllam Mackey, one of four
recelvera natned to take over
Laker Alrwaya' flnanclal attalra
when lt crashed Friday. 1ald he
hoped to have the two businesses
aold by tonlaht.
lnapecton probe
Tokyo hotel fire
TOKYO <AP > -Offlclala
be1an H fety inspections today
at 980 hotels. a day af\er 32
people were killed, lncludJn1 an
American, ln a qulck·spreadln1
fire In a 10-atory hot61.
More than 300 people were In
the Hotel New Japan when the
fire bro~e out. Slxty people.
' includJni two other Americans.
were hoapltaUzed.
Haig in bloat
at USSR, Poland
MADRID <AP> -Secretary of
State Alexander M. Hali Jr
accused the Soviet Union and
the Pollah military aovernment
today of "a wUlful violation of
solemn international accords"
becauae of the martial law
crackdown In Poland.
In a blistering attack on the
two countries. Haig objected to
talklnt In Madrid about
improved relations between
East and West when past
agreementa have been violated.
T billa rise
for fifth week
up from tht 18.84e percent of th•
prevlout Monday.
Compromue eyed
/or El Salvador
WAS HINGTON (AP> -
Liberal Senate Democrat.a art
urfint Prealdent Rutan to
coneJder a ne10Uated end to the
Salvadoran civil war, wamln1
that otherwise U.S. combat
troopa ml1ht be needed to block
a leltllt victory.
But a hlgh-ranklnt State
Department offlclal ruled out
•such talks Monday. saylna a
negotiated settlement that &Ives
a share of power to leftist
auerrlllu would amount to
"handlnl over" El Salvador to
the communl11ts.
Piwta in craah
were 'buddieA' I
HOMESTEAD. Fla. CAP>
The pilots of two planes that
slammed together over the
swamps of the Everalades
National Park. kllllna all el1ht
people aboard , were llylng
buddies who took frequent air
trips toaether. a nelahbor aay11.
The victims, returnln1 from a
seafood festival In the aouthwest
Florida town of Everglades City.
weren't found until Monday, one
day afler authorities said their
planes plunged Into the mud and
tall sawgrass of the Everglades.
Cauae of Ginna
accident revealed
'"' .,...,.,_ STRIKE ENDED :'\ur'lt' llu;wl Ll'lllin1.•n. l<.•f'I . <.•ml>t\ll'I''
\s htahula. Obin. Ct'nl'ral :"iursl·s \ ...... 11c·1;it ton pr<•.,1d1.·nl
\Jar~· Hun~·on ~Tonda\ lllJ,!ht uftl.'I' nlll''i<'' \Ot<.·d to l'rul ltw11
11·1·ord 570 da~ "' nk1.• [}t>.,p1t 1• -.omt• 111 11('1 rw........ t ht• !Iii
'triking nu1"•.,1•-. apprO\l'cl .i ho,pltul 11111.•1 In n•111rn th1•111 111
!he• positron., tht•\ \\orked lwln1 1• lht· \\,lll.11111 011 .ltth :!I
I !1811.
U.S. to build new
chemical weapons?
Af ter a day of chan1lna
<' 111ualty fl1urca, 1 police
11pokesman said tht other 150
pa11enael'1 and crew members
were reacued, but 78 were
hoapltallzed In serlou!I condition,
and the real we re sll1h\ly
Injured.
The only forelaner aboard waa
a South Korean. who wu
slightly lr\jured.
Seventeen minutes before the
crash, Capt. Seljl Kataglrl
reported he was entertna normal
descent pattern• as he neared
the end of ll domestic rnaht from
Fukuoka. in southwest Japan
The sky was cloudleu and
headwinds were moderate But
the Jetliner clipped s everal
stanchions extending out Into the
boy with landing approach lights
and pancaked Into the water al
8 47 am.
Nobuchlka Shlkada, 20, of
Fukuoka. Hid people screamed
but the stewardesses
Immediately took char1e and
told people to remain In the
cu bin
"I w1111 11Crald It was foln1 to
11l nk. bul it Klayed leve for an
hour untU I was re11cued," he
said "I never want lo fly
u1ain."
Haneda Airport. built on
reclaimed land about 15 miles
from central Tokyo. has been
u11cd primarily for domestic
flights since the new Tokyo
I nternatlonal Airport opened In
11178 at Nerita. 45 miles to the
northeast
Two inmates
killed in
prison flap The n01ic section of the jetliner
broke off and was partially
submerg<'d under the fuselag•.
whi c h came to rest . PETROS . Tenn fA P 1
comparatively undamaged. in Seven white inmates at Brushy
the muddy water Mountain Penitentiary look four
'There was a great shock and guards hostage ju11t'long enough
the front part of the palne was lo steal their keys and shoot four
gone," said a surviving black inmates 10 their cells,
passen1er killing two of the prisoners and
Eight hours later. the last rn1urmg two others. authorities
person aboard. a crew member s aid today
wh o was not Immediately The white prisoners gave up
Identified, was rescued from the a nd the guards were released
crumpltd cockpit. Although all unharmed• in Monday night's
eiaht crew members survived . incident. which lasted 40
the pilot and co-pilot were minutes in a maximum security
serious ly injured. cell.block of the prison 40 miles
WASHINGTO N <AP > -Reagan request for s20 million Although t he plane wa s northwest or Knoxville, said
President Reagan has offl clally to Install production equipment apparently too low as it came in Warden Herman Davis
noti fied Congr ess that the for oew nerve gas agents at the to land. offi cials said the reason A11ked whether the attack was
administration wants to resume Pine Bluff, Ark . ar11enal. was not known They speculated racially motivated. Sgt Kay
production of chemical weapons. But Reagan told O'Neill it could have been due to B r ad s haw . a pr 1 son
WASHINGTON IAP> Glnna but ha s rearr1rme d a c hemical w ea pon s are malCunctloninthesteerlnggear s pokeswoman. said. "We don't
nuclear plant operators turned longstanding U.S policy against necessary. or the airport's instrument know. but it looks that way ..
off a set pf emergency water uslngthemflrst landing syst e m , a sudden Dav1s saidthe mmates.armed
pumps "somewhat too late," The Unit ed States hu not ·'Considering the current turbulence or pilot error. with a .25-caliber automatic
causing a second release of manuf actu r ed c h e mi cal worldsituatlon,parlicularlythe About 500 rescue worker~ pistol, took the guards hostage
radioactivity during last weapons since 1969, but Reagan. absence or 8 verifiable ban on using vehicles. helicopters and at 4 50 p.m PST and notified
month's accident. a Nuclear In a letter Monday to House Prod uclng and stock pl lint boats converged on the plane prison officials over a radio
Regulatory Commission staff Speaker Thomas P O'Neill Jr., chemical weapons. the United and the debris around it Rescue lie said he didn't know how
report said Monday D. Mass . fu If ti I ed a I e ga 1 States must also deter chemical operations were hampered until the inmates got out or t heir cells.
WASHINGTON IAP>-Ylelds requirement f o r formal warfarebydenyln1asienlflcant 3 ,000 gallons of fuel were although they may have sawed
on shorl·lerm Treasury A safety valve opened and certification before production military advantage to any pumped fro m the plane to throul(hthebars
securities rose for the fifth released the radioactive steam can resume possible Initiator ... Reagan's m I n i mi z e t he danger o f "They forced the guards into
stral1ht week In Monday's as "a direct result" of 1huttln1 The pro posal to restart letter uld uplosion the corridor, took their keys and
dctlon.a, reaching the hiahesl down the pump1 "about 30 manufacturing chemical Reaian adde d : "Such 1 Most of the seriously Injured s hot the Inmates in their cells,"
levels ln just over four months. minutes too late," Hid the draft weapons la likely to encounter deterrence re q u 1re 1 apparently were in the front or Davis told reporters who
officials said report, prepared by Themla P. tough opposition In Congress. modemlzatlon of our retaliatory the plane Many were covered gathered early today outside the
About $5mlllioninsix-month Speis, assistant director for Opponents of chemical capability , as well as withmudundsludgewhenthey prtsonwalls
bills were sold at an averaae reactor safety of the NRC's warfare came within two Senate Improvement of our chemical reached rescue stations Davis said 12 or 13 shots were
d_1_s_co_un_t_r_a_te_o_r _1_3_.9_33_p_e_rc_e_n_t. __ d_lv_1s_1_on_of_s_y_s_te_m_s_1n_te_1_r_a_u_on_. __ v_o_t_e_s_l_a_sl__._y_ea_r_o_f_d_e_le_a_t_in..:::.g'--a-.:.:.w..::.arfare protective m_ea_s_u_r_es_._ .. ___ s _u_rv_1_v_in_g_p_a_s_s_e_n_g_er_s_s_e_id __ n_re_d_10_t_h_e_1_so_-m_a_n_c_e_ll_bl_o_ck_._
Giff -.....
°""' Sunday
Fiii To Go
Mo llnln1
S..Tele
0,.Pw ........
'7M731
Also Located On
Balboa Island
.. , '.
•ta• t I .... . ...
ENTERTAINMENT NfTEL Y
COCKT AlLS I CASUAL DINING
11 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M.
545-1711
t \ \
Hauiaade 9ullts-
Gifts • Antiques
142-3112
Send'lhe
veblrd Bouquet.
Valentine's Day,
Feb. 14.
l
__ j
~UffiU~
Stars support bill
on animal research
SACRAMICNTO <AP> -
Saylna 101t pet1 1hould not
become vlcUm1 of painful
reuarch, al~ Hollywood 1t1re
are ur1ln1 the Le1lal1turt to bar
poundl fh>m provldln1 1nlmal1
for laboratory t11t1.
prt1ldent pro tem. 11ld nine
atatta have law• that do the
,1amt thin• u hll btll, SBl~.
and that tbt National ln1Ututea
of Health doean't •UH pound
anlmall In rtHart'h
He 1ald laboratorlea are better
o ff u1tn1 1nlmal1 ralud
1peclftcally for reaearch.
·'The heartbreak of IOllnl a
pet 1hould not be compounded
by the fear that It remain• aUvt
su fferlnl 1omewhert In a
laboratory experime nt," uld
actreu Loretta Swit of the
television Hrlea "M.A.S.H."
S he appeared at a Pl'tll
conference Monday to urtt
pasaa1e of a bill by atale Senate
leader David Roberti, D-Lo1
Antelea, which would prohibit
pounds from sellin1 or 1ivln1
stray anJmals to laboratories to
be used for research.
Laboratoriet don't know the
1enetlc or environmental
back'1rounda of 1tray do11 and
call, and pound 1nlmal1 tend to
die 1ooner In a lab 1ettin1 than
reaearch animals , the bill's
1upporten 11ld.
M1. Wyler and Ma. White said
pound anfmala are attracUve to
labs because they can coat more
than $100 less than a dog or cat
ralaed for research. but Kanaly
uld there are "hidden costl"
Involved In u1ln1 atraya.
NAMED JUDO! :\1uu1Wl'
J o ll 1· d u n <' • d l' p u t \ I (' Jl <i I
uffutr!-1 SN'l't•tun ·to Gov
Edmund Arn\\n . \,us numl•d
bv lhl' ~on•rnor :\111nctu~ to
t h <' :\1 on t <' r <' ' (' o 11 n t ' ~uniC'1pul ('0111·1
Bargain canceled
Also at the conference were
Gretchen Wvler and Steve
Kanaly of "Dallas," Betty Whlfe
of the "Mary Tyler Moore
S how," Earl Holliman of
"Policewoman," and actress
Gloria DeHaven.
Roberti , the Senate's
Holllman, preaident of a 1roup
called Actors and Others ror
Animals, said allowlna pounds
to sell or give animals lo
laboratories "undermines public
confidence in the animal shelter
system."
SACRAMENTO <AP ) -
Disagreeing with an earlier
decision, a state appeals court
has ruled that a convict whose
probation Is revoked can be
sentenced to a higher prison
term than he plea-bargained for
originally,
'Adults only'
renting barred
SAN FRANCISCO <APl -Children may llve
In apartment buildings prevloualy reatrtcted to
adults. the California Supreme Court aaya ln a
landmark decision lh•t l•ndJorda contend wlll pit
renters a1aln11t each other.
The 5·2 declslon Monday wUI affect nearly half
the housln1 In California, Hid attorney Eu1ene
Gratz, who handled the cue for a Loa An1elea
couple.
"All it means la that families with children
can now compete freely In the hou1ln1 market,"
Gratz said.
The decision did not apply to houaln1 reserved
for the elderly.
Attorney Richard Hamllln said he needed to
study the case before decldin1 whether to appeal
for his client, Marina Del Rey Ltd .. owner of a
388-apartment complex In Marina Del Rey near
Los Angeles.
Gratz said he thinks the rulln1 will s tand
because there are no 1roundl for appeal.
Plane loae• engine
LOS ANGELES -An en1lne broke otr •
Continental Airlines Jetliner when the empty DC-10
ran into the tractor that wu towln1 It from •
maintenance base to the Continental terminal.
orricials said
No injuries were reported in the Incident
Monday, and authorities said the en11ne problem
had nothing to do with any defect In the plane -
Just with the collision
The plane was maklna a tum at about 10 mph
when the t<>w bar between It and the tractor broke
and the air craft kept foing, said Continental
spokeswoman Domini Nash. She said the rtfht
wing struck the tractor and the en1lne broke
away. The plane waa beln1 towed to a Continental
satellite for a flight to Denver.
F etwea guarded
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Hundreds of human
fetuses were being guarded at a 1tora1e container
company while the dl1trlct attorney's office
decided whether crlmlnal char1es would be filed
for Improper disposal, ortlclala uld.
"The county la provldln1 a security order ao
that we don't have any break·lnl at the 1tora1e
company." David Chlldreu of the County
Department of Health Services aald Monday.
He said the ahlppln1-1tora1e container In
which the fetuses were found Thursday "la
evidence right now."
JI eta' bill backed
SACRAMENTO <AP ) -Vietnam war
veterans who ml1ht be 1ulferln1 from poor health
because or exposure to Aaent Oran1e and other
herbicides would receive state help under a bill
sent to the 1ovemor.
The Assembly, In a 81-0 vote Monday. sent
AB14 by A11unblyman Patrick Nolan ,
D·Glendale, to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
Some veterans 1roup1 claim that A1ent
Oran1e. a defoliant widely uaed to clear jun1le In
Vietnam, 111 allll caualn1 health problems In
veterans who were expoeed to It. The 1lle1ed
problems Include akin condltlona, headaches,
nausea, birth defectl and cancer.
Pot diapo1al delayed
LOS ANGELES <API -Althou1h a federal
jud1e 1ave pottce approval to bum more than five
tone of marijuana that takes up too much apace at
headquarten, th• 11r1eant In char1e of property
says other hurdltl may delay the bonfire.
Police alJO need clearance from a California
court and the 1tatt Bureau of Narcotic• before
torchlnl mott of tht u.aoo poundl of pot aelled In
the West Cout'1 lar1eJt rtetnt drui baw, Sit. Ken
G afton 1ald.
HOU\f-or
t All ORlt-K,
,\ I ' 111 f\ ''I )t I. I ' '
"I ti ,•. W • ••·~I 1 l
1.\ I' A, '
''
I
II
NURSERY
r:NVARF CITRUS
5 gal reg 115.00 18.98
SELECTED SHADE
TREES 5·15gal. 60D/o OFF
INOIAN HAWTHORNE
reg. •1uo 17.98
STAR JASMINE & la 98 TEA TREE 5gal valuff to113.50 Tu,
ESCALONIA 5 ga1 reg •12.00
GERANIUM, IV.ALEPS
& MARGUERITE
DAISY 1 gal.
STAR J~MINE, TEA
TREE, OW\AF WHEELER!,
BOXWOOD & LAVENDER
STAR FLOWER 1 ga1.
DIOSMA~ ESCALONIA,
NANDINA AND
VARIGATED
PITIOSPORUM 1 011.
COLOR PACKS reg. '2.69
4 '' BEDDING PLANTS
& PONY PACKS reo •1 19
'5.98
vlk.les to '3. 75
11.98
51.78
values to t3.50
'1.48
11.69
1.69
INDOOR PLANTS
6'' HOUSE PLANTS
8" HOUSE PLANTS
6" CYCLAMEN
BASKETS
reg SALE
110.95 '9.15
'28 95 '15.18
'8.95 '4.98
251/oOFF
FLORIST .
VALENTINE ARRANGEMENT '21.95 reo. W.96
SILK FLOWERS 250/o OFF
640-5800
Or•~· Coa1t DAILY PILOTfTUHday, February 8, 1882
Moscone
bust
hacked
SAN FRANCISCO I APl
Artists and 1&rt 1tudenta
carrvloa 4lbstract picket ail(nl
end C!han~lnt "Buat or butt!"
protested the art com ml11lon's
rejection of sculptor Robert
Arneson'• bust of slain Mayor
Georse Moscone
Monday's demonstration In
tront of the San Fran cisco
M uaeum of Modern Art drew lS
prote1ters who called on
museum officials to put the
controversial work on public
display.
The $37 ,000 sculpture wu
removed from Moscone Center
In December after some people
objected to the references to
Moscone's murder Integrated
lt\to the work The cerumlc head
and pedestal have been locked
up in the museum until Arneson
and the commission settle
differences over the $18,500 the
city paid him and the Sl8,500 due
him for the comml~sloned work.
.
\
.I
" I}
ol ,,
I
11
II
•I
,,. ..
\
{
George Neubart , the
museum's associate director.
said the museum wu "not
trying to hide the sculpture but
merely protect It until we hear
from the artists and the art
commission ..
.. , .. ,....... -~
MOST DESIRABLE Singl'r .\ncl~ Grhh gl'I ... t·nngratul:tlon I•.
kisses from .Ju cqull' Krnkas 1right1 and lkn1s,• Bl.1m<l;1 "•
uftc•r being selt•Ctl•<I "most ck :-;irablt• 111 lhl· .\l';1r .. Ill .1 /
nut ton\\'Hft' l':tmpu" poll c;1hh "a~ JH't''''"' t•d 1 hl· ''" ;1rd .1t •'
I TI.:\
FANTASTIC ...
PATIO SAVINGS
I,: TAOPI KAI
TROPITONE reg. IALE
42" TABLE SET
I 48" TABLE SET
'725.00 '371.00
'758.00 '371.00
'231.00 •1es.oo •1 CHAISE MARRAKESH
I
42" TABLE SET '718.00 '430.00 I
48" TABLE SET '751 .00 1490.80 !'
I CHAISE "272.00 1190.40
CANTIN A !
48" sa. RO. TABLE W .00 '178.20 :
CHAISE '340.00 '25&.00 i
==BROWN JORDAN Z
TAMIAMI
42" LEG TABLE SET
48" PED. TABLE SET
CHAISE
18" SIDE TABLE
MAUNA KEA
48" LEG TABLE
: CHAISE
'179.00 '389.50
'666.oo •421 .eo
'319.00 1191.00
•110.00 '75.00
'875.00 '812.50
•389.00 '272.00 i ENSIGN II : i 42" LEG TABLE 1695.00 '417.00 :
: 48" LEG TABLE '731 .00 1438.80 !
: CHAISE '32Sl.OO 9209.00 ! i UMBRELLA 9289.00 1191.00 i f ICE CREAM SET !
I 30" TBL/2 SIDE CHAS. '235.00 '179.95 i =:z::== ALLJBERT :
I DANGARI :
TABLEM'4CHRS. •1.~.00 '940.00 i • •
GARDEN SUPPLY
2 cu. ft.
ROGERS POTIING MIX
~-
reg.
'8.98
SALE
'5.18
ROGERS SOIL ACTIVATOR •18.er '12.98
12 #
BANDIN! 2·WAY
2•# BANDIN! 2·WAY
20 #
BANDIN! SUPER BLADE
~#
BANDINI SUPER BLADE •12.ae
14 #
PAX SUPER CRAB
8 Ol.
ORTH ONEX 1e oz.
•12 49
'7.95
'14.98
'5.30
'9.80
'·" '3.70
ORTHONEX '7 98 '5.18
ORTHO SPRAYETIE •7 ge '9.80
BANOINI LAWN SPREADER '34.95 '28.00
AMES* SHOVEL 113.99 '9.91
AMES~ HOE •12 99 '8.91
AMES" FLEX. RAKE 110 29 '7 .91
WATERWANDS 99.98 '5.98
COLOR PRODUCTS·
10" RED CLAY POT
REDWOOD CAA TE
113.50 '8.95
14" HANGING BASKET
'24 95 '14.95
'42.00 '29.00
POTI'ERY
LG.MEXICAN PEDESTAL 114.!IO
22 "
MEXICAN LOW BOWL '22 oo
10" RED CLAY POT 14 70
1 O" RED CLAY SAUCER '3.00
12" REOWOOO
PYRAMID BASKET 18 ~
2" x e·
REDWOOD STAKE 13.eo
w· MOSSED RD.BASKET •14.00
'7.50
'8.98
92.91
'1.75
'9.11
'2.80 .
'8.80
'8.98
'rtctt "'"""' tllr11 flit!> tt, enCI IUl>jtOt to 11111nl• ..
Ill" on MM
MOST BEA UTlFUL GARDEN CENTER
'.
,,.
"
"
I•
I/ I
'I
I
'IL .. ,
ln
"' 1/1
Open 9 to & dally• San Joaquin Hiiia Aood at Moo.Arthur l lvd • Acr011 trom ,all'llon latond In Newpott hoch
NURSERY • INDOOR PLANTS • FLORIST • LANDSCAPING • PATIO FURNITURE • ANTIQUES
_._, ______ _ _,
. . '
I
!1
-·
' '
D Dally Piiat
TUESDAY, FEB. 9, 1982
A 50-year-old manual isn't ~
D CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
TELEVISION
82
83-4
87
ideal for getting modern-day. advice.
See Ann Landers B2 . ...
lllTllGTDN BllCH If BUNTAIN VllllY
Murder probe pressed
Complaint sought following. arrests in Huntington slaying
Huntington Beach police
investigatons were meetin1 with
Oranie Cou nt y District
Attorney's officials today,
seeking a murder complaint
against a 22-year -old Long
Beach man suspected in the Jan.
12 slaying of Huntington Beach
salesman William K . Norman.
Gerald Henrickson, described
by police as a former tugbolft
engine worker who is now
une mployed, was arrested
Friday at the Long Beach
Municipal Courthouse on the
murder charge
At the same time , a
17 ·year-old Cerritos youth was
also arrested in connection with
the slaving and was turned over
lo Ora~e County Juvenile
authorities
Huntington Beach police Lt
Merle SchnebUn said it has not
been determined yet whether
the teen-ager, whose name was
withheld, will be tried as an
adult
County population
older, more varied
Norman wus found stabbed to
death in the bedroom of his
co ndominium in the
securit y-ga ted Huntington
Landmark Communitv
Schneblin s aid the two
s uspects have been lmked to the
s laying by items allegedly taken
from Norman's home at the
time of the slaying
TRASH FINO Dommi(' Munoz of Huntington
Beach savs he often finds food . s uch as these
75 loayes of bread. in dumpstl'rs bl· hind
grocery stores H e sa) ~ he f11eeze -. th1·
Deity ........... Pllett
d1sc·an.led food and gives it to ·friends He said
he r<.'fused to be photographt.>d Ix-cause he
ft.an·d ii <'<ntl<I hampe1 hi s tra<;h d1ggin,:?
.I l'l I\ ll ll''i
Trash bin 'pot of gold'
Huntington man's scavenger hunts keep him in bread
By PATRJCK KENNEDY
Of I ... o.i1y ...... S'-ft
Dominic Munoz of Huntington
Beach is sort of a modern day
Robin Hood who says he takes
from the trash bins and gives to
the poor
His specialty is grocery store
trash bins. On Monday morning
he drove behind his favorite
grocery store and snatched 75
loaves of bread that had just
been t ossed into a large
dumpster
He says the store manager
came out and yelled at him to
get away and the two exchanged
angry words B u t for the
26-year·old Munoz. a part-tJme
a~phall worker with a wife and
tlhee children. it was just
another day of bargain hunting
for food.
"Trash digging, that's what it
comes down to," Munoz said
"But I don't care what people
think. It's the smart thing to do
because grocery stores throw
away good food I get it and give
it away to friends who are
starving I can't understand why
they waste good food."
Munoz says his father has
been a trash digger for 15 years
Munoz, a burly, red-haired man,
s a y~ he 's following 1n hi s
father's footsteps
Sometimes Munoz c limbs
completely into the trash btns in
sea rch or di sca rded
unpurchased food , he says
"I know it's still good because
I've been eating 1l for 15 years
and I'm not dead," he says "If
the bread has mold on 1t you
don 't eat 1t , 1f the baloney
package is swollen. you don't eat
the meat
·'I don't ha vc a high school
diploma, but I can tell 1f food is
good. it ·s simple ..
Munoz says his father 1s 76,
h ves in Costa Mesa and still digs
in grocery store trash bins for 80
percent of hi s food
He says his father's most
memorable haul was a find of
500 eggs. "He was giving eggs
away for days," Munoz says
"We ate eggs with everything."
Munoz says he also has had
goo d find s and that he
1mmed1ately freezes the food
and then gives most of 1t away.
Munoz says he goes to the
markets early in the morning so
recently thrown away food is
sllll cold "If you freeze 1t right
away. the expiration date don't
mean nothin'." he says
··I · ve gotten dozens o f
packages of baloney. cases of
yogurt. cottage cheese I mean
enough to fill a refrigerator -
boxes of apples, oranges, ice
cream. frozen dinners, cakes.
"You name it and grocery
stores throw 1l away while it's
good."
Executives of local grocery
m arkets say food may stiJI be
good for a day or so after its
expiration date but If it's not
purchased by that time it's
tossed away
"We have a responsibility to
the customer to only sell
products we know are safe and
fresh," says Bill Wade, vice
president or advertising for
Alpha Beta.
"I'm not sure if trash digging
Is unlawful, but It's not a good
way to get food," Wade said.
"Kids ride by on their bicycles
and yell things at me or people
give me disgusted looks,"
Munoz says. "But when I give
away free food . I don't get
disgusted looks People s mile."
By 'EFF ADLER Of Ule Delly l"IMC $'-fl
OranJ(e County grew larger,
and its residents became older
and more diverse between 1970
and 1980
That 's the conc lusion
government analysts have
drawn from 1980 census fitures.
released r ecently a fter two
years of compilation.
The 1980 census sets Orange
County'..s population at 1,932,709
people, up from the 1.4 million
counted in the 1970 census.
Current population estimates,
however , place the county's
population at 2,027 ,000 people ,
acco rdin g to county
demographers.
The census also sets the
county's median age <middle> at
nearing 30. an increase or more
than five years from the 1970
census.
M ore significa ntly, the
percentage of non-whites living
in Orang~ County increased
from 3 percent in 1970 to nearly
14 percent in 1980.
The county's Hispan ic
population Cboth white and
non-white) was set at 286,333 by
the new census, or about 15
percent of the total population.
Also, Orange County has more
than· 2S,OOO black r esidents .
more than 20,000 Japanese
residents as well as large
populations of lndochinese,
Filipino, Korean a nd Chinese
residents.
The census reports that the
median value of owner-occupied
homes in the county was $108,000
in 1980. Cities which had the
most expensive median bou.smg
O.C. Population
1970 1.4 mill
1980 1.9mill
Latest estimates 2 mill
GROWING Graph ~hows
the increase 1n Or·ang<.·
County population O\ t.•r tht.>
pas t 12 \'ears
prices were Laguna Beach,
Newport Beach and Villa Park,
all with values of $200,100.
Although the number of people
living in Ora n ge County
increased. th e number of
school-age children decreased
between 1970 and 1980 ,
accord.mg to census figures
The number ol children
between five and 17 dropped by
nearly 8 percent.
Bruce Nestande, chairman of
the Orange County Board of
Supervisors. commented that
the census shows "we 're
becoming more ·mixed' <1s a
people. so cially a n d
economically, so that there is
probably no longer a s ingle
Orange County lifestyle so often
portrayed 1n the natrnnal
media "
He declined to immediately
identify these "items," saying it
could Jeopardize the murder
case
He said an informant notified
Long Beach police that someone
had possession of items taken
from Norman. The informant
was questioned by Huntington
Beach police. leading to the two
arrests. Schneblin said.
The slain man was identified
as a salesman of promotional
materials who lived alone.
Norman's Orange two-door
Dat sun auto, which officers
discovered missl11g a fter the
murder, was found abandoned
several days later in Long
Beach
Valley sets
hearing on
funding law
The Fountain Valley City
Council will conduct a special
meeting at 7 p m today· to
consider the required second
reading of a revision in the local
ca mp aign contr ibution
ordinance
The council meets at City
Hall, 10200 Slater Ave
The proposed rev1s1on would
raise the anonymous campaign
contribution limit to $50 .
Currently. a candidate must
identify anyone who gives $10 or
more to a campaign
The change was approved by
t he council las t week 1n its first
reading If the second reading is
approved tonight. the revision
will take effect 1mmed1ately
Bottle recycling
hackers hit county Rough times for Irvine Company
Bois terously singing 1n
support or their cause, members
of Californians Against Waste
officially have fired the fi rst
salvo in their battle against
throwaway beverage containers.
Traveling in caravan across
Southern Ca lifornia, the group
formally filed petitions Monday
in Orange, Los Angeles and San
Dieizo counties in the hope of
Tenants eyed
/orex-FV
school sites
Fountain Va lley School
District trustees have agreed to
seek a 15-month tenant to
occupy the dis trict's former
headquarters
In addition, the district is
proceeding with m or e long
range plans to redevelop the
buildings and property. located
on the northeast corner of
Talbert Avenue and Newland
Street. to provide additional
income.
The district is seeking tenants
to occupy two existing office
bulldinp on the property while
the redevelopment plans are
prepared. Excluded from the
15-month lease are the distric:t's
maintenance and ware house
faclUties on the site, alon1 with
1everal softball diamonds.
Bids for the 15-month lease
are 1cheduled for opening on
March 2. The trust.ea wUJ voto
March • on whether to accept •
bid.
Tbe dlat.rlct a1ao wUl be.am'
seeking btds from contutunta
Interested In preparln1
m • rkelllll document• for
redevelopment. of el&bt ol tbe 10
acres at Newland and Talbert.
The property Ja iooed ror com merclal·professional uae,
and a condominium office complex could be built on lhe 1:::..
qualifying their bottle and can
recycling in1t1ative for the
November ballot.
The initiative -loosely based
on Oregon's recycling law -
would require that beverage
distributors and retailers place
a five-cent minimum refundable
deposit on all beer and soft
drinks packaged in bottles and
cans A retail store would be
required to redeem any empty
container of a brand found on its
shelves.
About 25 s upporters of the
recycling initiative, carrying
signs and singing, showed up
Mo nday morning to deliver
petitions bearing the signatures
of 49.252 Orange County
residents to the Orange County
R egistrar of Voters for
verification.
The s1gnature1> or which more
than 500.000 were collected
s tatewide, are some of the
346 .119 needed to qualify the
ini ti ative for the ballot ,
explained Julie Finke ls tein.
Southern California director for
Californians Against Waste.
Additionally. petitions bearing
84,163 signatures were filed in
Los Angeles Cou nty and
petitions with 105,391 signatures
were delivered to the registrar
of voters in San Diego County.
Ms. Fin~lstein said.
Petitions are to be filed m
Northern California counties
between Feb. 22-26, s he added.
The organjzation 's t reasurer.
Amy Hewes of Sacramento,
said the petition drive bad cost
$135 ,000 . She ea ld the
orcanilation hoped to raise •
another $600,000 to campalsn for
the measure.
In explainini b.er rea ona ror
1u pporllng t.be recycllna
measure Ms. Hewes pointed out
that cahfornlen1 throw out
s ev e n b l ll lo n beverage
contalnel'll each year. She aald
that amounts to 13,000 botUea •
end cans being thrown 1tway
... -.. :. ol~auw.
'
LARGE TARGETS DEPT. -Recent bbtory for
Irvine Company executives has been a lime that ran
fairly be c haracterized as a period of agonizin~
reappraisal They have been fightin~ battles on too man~·
fronts at the same time. A tl pparen y,
~ llR~Pllliirllif,11 ~ TOM
they were losin g.
on a ll of them .
' It started some
time back with
mas ter pl anning
for the final phase
bu i ld -o ut of
Newport Center,
the commercial and high-rise complex in Newport Beach
on the hilly knoll above Coast Highway.
Then there surf aced the question of increasing rents
ror resident 1al leasehold properties m Newport and
Irv me
Finall~-. there was that barbershop m Irvine
IT ALL ADDED UP to an enormous public relations
pratfall for the ranch company that has been a pivotal
enterprise m the history. tradition and growth of our
coastal region since the early da~·s when oranges and
cows were big business.
The way things have been aolne for the landl
development ranch hands in recent times. they may a ll
now wish they were back in cltn.as and cattle.
Just look at the record. Irvine Company brass trotted
out a pretty well wrought proposal for final development
phases of Newport Center. It was promptly assaulted on
several fronts and ended up with a Newport Beach
committee circulating petitions to stop it
• THESE FOLKS GOT enough signatures to neutralizt
a Cit y Council approval of the plan and rorce it into a vote
of the people.
No sooner bad this come to pus than the co~
sto rte<t notifying som e leasehold residents that thelr
lease rents would rise upon renegotiation. Screams of foul
filled the air
Next thing you know a commltlee claiming 4.000
me mbers formed to do battle against the company on the
lease hikes .
Meanwhile, over in the city of lrvlne. there was Jim
Andtrson·!§ barbershop out. in University Park. H~re. the
company ex.ecs felt the barber was not creating enough root traffic for the shoppina center.
DESPITE THE FACf that Anderson had been in
ft
~.
Cit&ttM' committee preparmg to call upon the lrvtM Company
business for more than 13 vears at thl' loc<1t1on . thl• fr\'ine
Company people notified ·him that his lease wouldn't be
renewed.
.Now plain citizens and the Irvine Cit ~ Countil its<.>lf were rising up to the barber's deft•nst·
Meanwhile. the residential leaseholders in Newport
or at let1st some of the vocal ones we re vowing to
1oin opponents or Newport Center when that master pla n
C'a me up for a vote next June.
Put it all together and th<' Irvine Compan~ was
abruptly suffering Excedrin Headache Number 412 A
real biggie.
Thus it was in recent days Irvine Compan~ President
Peter Kremer appeared before the Irvine City Council
and vowed more consideration for barber shops Mondu~·.
barber Jim Anderson got a new lease.
Irvine Vice President Robert Shelton in the early
pre·dawn hours today was before the Newpot't Beach
cou: "ii asking that the Newport Center plan be scuttled
and the election be rall~d off be<'ause or "'th(.' cllmate in
the community · ·
YOU SUSPECT THAT the ranch people have indeed
beaten a strategic retreat on a couple of fronts and will
pause to re-group.
One thing about the Irvi ne Company is that 1t '!;so biK
and so visible that peorle J\lst love to tung rocks at it
I
And just look tit al those gla,ss windows. .
-
I ..
I
.
• I l
i I
I
Long service rewarded
Huntington resident Jwnored for 40 years with firm
By PlllLSNEIDERMAN ot .. Otltf,.... .....
Terence Doyle describes
himself as a man who just dldn't
know when to quit.
The 82·yHr·old Huntlnat.on
Beach realdent was honored
r ecently by the Federal
Envelope Dlvlalon of Champion
International Corp. for 40 years ot service with the company.
Doyle worked his way up from
envelope machine adjuster to
productlon mana"er at the
firm's Seattle plant. He was
transferred to Southern
Califomla three years ago to
help the company open a new
facility ln Santa Fe Springs.
Though he's officially retired,
Doyle said the company may be
calling him back as a part·lime
consultant.
Doyle says he owes his four
decades in the envelope making
business lo his early interest in
professional roller skating.
In 1941, he was an apprentice
ma chinist with another
company, performing at roller
rinks in his spare time. A fellow
skater who worked for the
envelope company suggested
Doyle also apply.
Soon after he was hired, World
War II intruded. A Canadian
native, Doyle attempted to enlist
HONORED -Terence Doyle.
62, has been honore d b )
Federal Envelope Division
of Champion International
Corp. for 40 years of ser vice
in the U.S. Navy. He was turned
down because he was not a U .S
citizen Yet in Jan 1942. he was
dratted by the U .S Army
ResumlnJ hla work al the
plant after t\18 111Ultary tour,
Doyle wltneued many chances
In the Industry.
"We u sed to ha ve a
trumendoua number or people
makina envelopes by hand when
1 first started," he recalls.
"Now, that's been virtually
eliminated.
"The m11chlnes used to
produce 3,000 envelopes an hour
when I started. Now they put out
50,000 an hour."
Doyle says there is much
more emphasis on plant safety
today ,than durtng his early
years on the Job, when workers
sometimes lost a finger in the
machinery .
The Huntington Beach man
did some traveling to Aus\ralia
and South America for the
company, and he plans to use his
retiremeot years for more
traveling with his wife Lois.
He's especially anxious to return
to New zealand, another place
he visited on business.
Doyle says he 's keeping busy
bicycling along the beach,
s wimming, playing the
accordian and keeping up his
stamp collection.
"I'm even thinking of getting
a surfboard," he says
California home resale volume
registers first big increase
LOS ANGELES (BWI -to be severely restricted "
California home resale volume If not resolved. the inherent
in December registered the first conflict between govern ment
increase in six months, the a nd private sector credit
California Association of demands will further hmtt the
Realtors has reported. extent to which any home re~ale
The December statewide volume increase can be
seasonally adjusted annual sales ~usta ined during th e first
rate or 291 ,218 units represents quarter or 1982 , realtors C'aullon
market of existing single·family
homes sold during December
was ro,ughly 74 5 days, an
increase or 3 9 days from
November The inventory index
of unsold homes declined to 20.5
months. a decrease of 3 8
months from the November 1981
index.
an increase or 14 ) percent above November. The statewide median s.ales
However, the year· to.year price increased a marginal 0.2
co m par is on of res a 1 e percent to $102 ,791 in December
transactions shows a 41 percent According lo th e realtor's
decrease in resale volume from association , prices were
December 1980 appreciating at a rate of 5.2
"With the more than 200 basis percent on a 12·monlh basis. the
point decline 1n mortgage second lowest annualized rate or
··The inventor y index
calculates the number or months
it would take for all currently
listed homes to sell. The decline
in the index reflects both the
increase in sales activit y and a
decline in the number or unsold
listings." Singer said.
interest rates in November. appreciat1on in 1981
activity in the resale market had "The magnitude of the current
begun to improve," said Seb econom ic downturn and
Sterpa.C.A.R president. res ulting weakness 1n the
1" However. the increase in housing markets will continue to
interest rates over the past two C'Onstrain price increases." said
months may have arrested any Joel Singer, C.A.R. director of
recovery. Without a reversal of planning, r esearch and
this recent trend and more economics. significant interest rate
declines, activity will continue The median time on the
Trad1t1onal mortgage
financing arrangements as a
percentage of market sales
continue relatively small. In
December. only 19 percent of
existing single·family home
sales involved conventional
financing or a cash
downpayment and a new
institutionally originated first
mortgage loan.
~ ..................... -'-~~~:;.,_~~~~~~~---~~~~......,,,
25
Available
for
Immediate
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or 48-inch conversion. Includes 8
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divider window ... PLUS many more
features!
BCJY OR LEASE.
~
ROGER PENSKE (213)
868-9931
(714)
521-9624 CAUFOANIA'S LARGEST CADILLAC DEALER
WHl!AE n1£ e AND CD FREEWAvs MEET .. DOWNEY
(FORMERlY 801 SPREEN CADILLAC)
WE'RE A LOT MORE IHAll
A BELL • YOUR WALL
Behjnd the bell Behind the
famous Seacoast sticker Behjnd
all the state-of.th• art protection davjces we meka and install, Is
Seacoast central station
When an alarm goes oll on your property. wa gal Iha a1gnal 1n a
nearby. 24-hour·a·day central
station. It the slgrial lndlcatas lira, burglary or hoodup, we call the
police or fire department
Since our central 1tatlon 11 UL
lltt•d. our central station
cuttomers can quallly lot a slzebla
dlSC!ount on their ln1urance.
And to lncreaN our reach, make
ratponH time even l11ter and
Improve efficiency we're
eomputan1lng our 1tahon
But lmptOWmenta aren't new to S..Cout. We've bffn 09tt1ng better for 21
yMta. AtWJ today.,..,. tt. i..cien In the security business In tl'la l'lartlor arH with
O¥tr 10,000 eUltOt'nel'1I lncludlnO 1 wide range of big and small retell lndustriel
and oommerGlal •t.abllltlmenta
To flnd out mort lbout Saeco•t cantral 1tatlon write or coma by our new f.clhty It 2488 Newport Blvd , Cotta M"'
......
2'488 NEWPORT BOULEVARD • COST A MESA CAUFOANIA • 82e27 • (1t4J 6'42-3490
.Foreign
fann
cash up
SACRAMENTO !APl
Foreign investors
increased their holdings
or California farm land
by 57 percent during a
20-month period of 1980
and 1981 , says an
organization that
specializes in land data.
The Sacra m ento
Union, in its Sunday
editions, quoted the
Homer Hoyt Institute of
Was hington, D.C., as
saying international
in\testors owned 705,000
acres or farm land in all
58 counties at the end of
the reporting period last
September
In Kem County at the
southern end or the San
Joaquin Valley,
foreigners own the most
of any county -106,122
acres, the institute said.
They also own 102,540
acres in Butte County
north of Sacramento.
The Union quoted a
U .S . Department of
Agriculture publication
as saying that
foreigners own about 1
percent of all of
California's farm land,
but fewer than 1 percent
of the farm and forest
land In the United
States.
/\bout 80 nations are
represented on lbe list of·
foreign lhvestors.
. 'RUFFELL 'S
U'HC>LSllaY
-l1i;t l'u _._~.
ttU HAUOl IUD.
COSTA MHA-141·1 INI
Valentine' 1
Art Shaw/
Ortat gtft• f rc>m Huntington e««er
·daltvthN Feb. 10.
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/TuHday, February 9, 1982
111111.IY lf'llU •11.IY
SASHlfll OTT SUMl"O NO,f'l.AfllHll
Local firms tell promotions
' Jim Mayfi e ld has been
appointed directo r of Mel
Thompson & Associates,
Executive Search Division.
Mayfield 1s a former managing
associate with Korn /Ferry
International, a Los
Angeles.based executive search
firm with offices in Newport
Beach.
Services Inc. or Irvine. He lives
in Costa Mesa.
*
Beach office of the Big 8 public
accounting firm of Ernst &
Whinney
Wllllam J. McClellan has been • elected president of the board of
directors or Big Brothers/Big
Sisters of Orange County He
laves in Corona del Mar
Tom Sumlao of Irvine has
been appointed vice president.
sales planning and control of
Kawasaki Motors Corp . US.A. • * Terry Bochanty has been
• J erry W. Neeley, chairman of
the board, president and chief
executt ve offi cer of Smith
International Inc .. has been
elected to the board or directors
or A very International. Smith
lnternat1onal 1s located in
Newport Beach
named national sales manager
for VHD Programs Inc. lie
previou s ly worked at
01scovision Associates in Costa
Mesa
Bob Sasseen has been named
senior vice president , loan
adminis tration at He r itage
Bank. Orange County's larg~l
independent bank
* * Joe l K. Harris has Joined James D. Ott has been named
*
Costa Mesa based Spaghetti Pol
Investments lnc. as director of
educational services.
c hief financial officer and
cashier for Liberty National
Bank. a tull·service bank now
being organized in Huntington
Beach. •
*
Frank L. Speers bas been
promoted to vice chairman of
Newport Beach-based Avco
Financial Insurance Group. • Richard P. Riley has been
named general manager for
M anufactunng and Consulting
Michael Harwick has joined J
A. Stewart Construction Co. of
We s tmins ter as project
manager . • Donald R. Hofflander has been
named a partner at the Newport
Judith A. Peake has been
appointed manager of Glendalp
Federal Savings and Loan
Association's Huntington Beacll
branch '
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
HEW YOAK CAPI ComC.tH -~ t11tmtG• "" t'-Ptfltelt ••"• t• SltewCI "; J ,.,,
HASOAQ ~tlon> CmlSllr u• . ..., ••• ln811W'11 12 ... IJl't Peoc>Eap 101
• '°"' S..1Mr11 J7"1 .. UPS AND DOWNS '11owl119 MQNst ~ CmwT•I 11 13''> lw.Sout n'"' "" Petrn • ,, n v, ~~E~ , • ., l"e
""" -affe" by ConPIP 14"' """
JMn,bV ... , It P•lll-IS tS•1, 1S U ''> ~rut ~ff Of Cordi• 10 J••lco ' """ .. Pllll1Hat ~ TOK \ :s:i·~ ••
Monoey. Prlcu oo C•o•T•a ~n ~:7,~c1, '"' ,,, Pl•rc.SS 111/• l1~ TIME OC I'"' 1•1
not Include r•tall ClltlrFd • Ito iv. )llo 11 Plnkrtn 52"1 SS\li ~:::d°~·. '.l:J'~ :s:J'"' m1rk11p ~rll-n Cf<"'°" •~• •Vo k1t1SI pl n "n"" PlonHl8 .. .. v • 2A"' H V1 HEW VOAK IA PI TM 104-lnt lltl or commlulM for 0 •OH ' 13\11 leE Kalver I'"' 1 S-1• Pta•lln. I l'lt Te<umP ., ~ Mlowl IM Oof~ -C-MondAy. g1~':" ' 11'4 Ill/• Kaman • ""' " Pfl\11 Sift •V. TtlcmA llV> 71''o •to<lt" and w1rr 11111 I hat "•"• VoM ..,
AFAProt 11'11 1]\li • 1 .. JU ll·t• ~=:!1;~~ )011) •1 PtflGM 321,., "''• Tenant • 1••1t II IM moll ...cl _,, t,,. mos1 -on
,."" 30'/o Pr\Stevn 26'1 77 T .. A8 • JOV. l()ll) percent o4 <'-,...,oieu Of --AllM Co •• • ·~ DOlbA' 11.,., 2~ Klm~ll 1~ ..... Pr09rp 1"• 1 ~~~c>r. 12h IJ''o It>< -Y· Accur•~ , ... ,-.. O.tC•11 11 1 Klnotnl I I" PoSvHC ""'' ,,~, ~. UC::. -:.r::· i!;:~~.:~:r:.. ~ AOOI"' '°"' II O.weyEI l J\li KloOfG ~nv. Purta.., ,,.,., 17"' ~_qyot• • u ... 43"' AdvAou Pot J I-> Dl•Cry\ 1• tS Kni::,11 IS'" t• ~~f~ ,, • ., 12 rleoPd »'') iiv, oitlorenc• be-ttw ,,...,,..,.,. <IOMftl "'IBM! • 10 '°"' OlanCr'll JI JI Kr • 1 10'# 10111 ·~ .. ~ TyW>nfd uv. 13i,, Old ode• -~V'• 1 .. 1 bOcl ori<• Allcolnc 111'11 4l Doc11t1 ' 77 11·~ K 110 I"" IS A•91nPr I ••• Un Mc Gii 10 ~ 4'11H 1\io J OollrGn I~ 11 11 •
Am•rH 11\') 11-., Oo~DI IS 1511') I:.~~~ n~. n•,., lbyc!W>I ~"' S1'1t US Ent S•• • """ ' A•rmnc1 22"' 13'"' us Slit .. """ A Furn 4'11•1·tt Or i,n ?ti. 11\li L.e...Co "'" » """• . »··· .n•.-, US TtO I?"' 11•~ "" AGtNI 19'0 I~ OuM1 s 11\o 11
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AO... ........ EeOftUb 11\lt """ ~rn IS IS\lo 11 ...... "'· """ Iv ... " ~ s•~• J Input 1~ . .... Up 10.0
4'Au:4 S.... , ... EIPHEI 10!'tt 11 M IC 31 ... ll\io S.Oller '.)\\ • V•INll s '"" 71"" • Al1S1<8cp l \lo Up t1
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t.ldC81P• n.Z 22\li EqutSl '"" IV. MaulLP 2t ,,.,, SllMeCI 33 Jl'. =~J 11 11'" ., Moelulln .... .... Up u
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NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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9r Jilt 2\lo-"" tr 41· J Jt ~ HtwtP 1 .t• 1' "" .01'1-"' fo\tMlle t 0. • It.I *" ,rlmeC 11 UOt 21'--14 Tcl'IClr . 11 4 t4 t Ill>-"' f'I .«1 l It K -._ Ir I ... ti •1 m.+ \Is 1111 vff l t: m~I ~ta II 1'4-'-' Metdt 1 t I S<I~ Prlmil .IS. 10 72 1.,.._ I.lo Te•trnJt ' 1 ti 1n ~,...._ ~1 enlthll .*O l IM ! ......... •rtUM IAlt ,. "' SJ~l\t. i*tf • ., . s " 10 + ..... MtrT•. I tt • ,. 11-. Pl'll<I uo • 100 G\11+ "'-akom tt -~· " Ifft. ,,. M tti.-t
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1
,; H~-·"=::ti:~1 ... l.~·"·" .:l>ff:·.: ='.;= ~9~ u• 1 j fit\ : rt r. f .. tt::: HmeG pit.to " 1\Ao •... _ ... IA,, flt H -,.. p In pt ,,~. "°° 7~.... Ka•·er lot•e• L -av
;o;11.1t -· ltl>fQt.10 .. ntOO I•~··~=·.::!",~ !!,_ ... >..:. ~--· • IO '"• "'NH l. • t10 j>•·•··· -o o f'&e y Wll.:rf '1 I -1 coPt 1tt 11 n ,,.._ -. ~1 ,.,., ·-..... .,. MO"llf't .-. + 451 •~ ~ gR· f ··, •~ ..... "' "I '" 4 t::: ~ ""''" . 1$ J JI 1 -"" r~ f;g i .. ! r--~ ,,,.11"' J 12 It IU _, ~~·:Ji .. HE= FONTANA (AP) -K~l' Steel
1=11,.1 U .J "~-;~ ~· -t"1a-.,-. ..... ~I "~U ~ :=: .. ~ 51,F-rt~l .:~11:·~~. !! '"'J'!f'.:.:i 1sa r:'.._t Corp., which plans to close its =:"I. 1 fo-.-" ~ ' 1 "I Vi + " • ~' 41) ,,._ .... eei l~ 't I + ~ O' l.44 t "" ' l I k I ( l l l t I d .~~·~'·f-: ~ .... ::~~ ;;a.,,:: • .: ·m~~ '""11"° 1 ~t"~·~1~·~~ t ,u ~· , aut :: ; w~ ~e::,~ro~.c~rmp:~ de:,~lld~\!: If"" , 1
·
1 ·1 .:J 3;:;·1' ~~'° .. ' ,~·~ .._,~ . ; ;~ il"'• : M ut J'.11 'tt lF=. ~ :nt :: •i ~· • ~ reported a 1982 tosa or "3'1.5 million, ~1 I " '!:: .. ii i:•ft1 ·1.il 11w!~1rf·tt :i,~ ,, -~ ~.:;-1J 1==·11: p..,:·:1 ~ orJGt.s3a1bare. Ull~tAac,..<f'';::~i =~~ ;~~i ~15 ~!y ~i·*';ri'~\;~.! &tt~·· 1 j lm:~} mr~::•j 1d :J:::~ ·:!:~rLt1=~·.5~~ m~ U9
1tJ ~ ... ~ ~ .. 1 ,! tF-~ H t t -·~~if. == ~ ~:llfl' , 1 •~"'== h •'-•t.. 1 1.-, .-t ., ~ ,. ~ , ..o .• • -. < .,. _ "' ,n, . • • .. , . t rou..., ,.ue lint three monlhl of "" u " • -• .. ,... to .,, " . -,. ~""~-"° " ..... .., .. , 11 .. ••• ..iu • ,.. •" rtaeaJ tJMa. f/f I 1' 1' it•. , """'" ; "'"• • ...,..,, • ~ ... "
~·
I
~ ••"' ... ,~' Disabled
getting ahead
Wblle t.be Reagan admlnl1traUon'1
budaet·cuu..era are 1luhln1 funth to deslin and
lnstall equipment to help the handicapped, private
indu1try and tbt handicapped themselves are maktn1
surprlsln1Jy lmpres1fve Proiret• on their own. And
this baa little tr any thine to do wltb 19111 'a
International Year of the Dlaabled Person, 1enerally
dismissed in this country aa a dismal failure. despite
official statement.a or optimism.
In fact, so far at .
l e a s t • t h e ~-· handicapped 1eem to
be more than holding
their positions tn the • t« ~a~e s ofu ~eg 1eenef a~ IYlllA Plllll G Z
joblessness. Surveys 3.. -
again are
underlinlng that qualified handicapped workers have
a lower rate of absenteeism than their physically
able counterparts. higher dedication to performance
and a higher quality output.
From the corporate side. there are hundreds or
positive examples of what U.S. corporations are
doing for the qualified handicapped. As a sampling:
-lBM has for many years modified buildings
and redesigned equipment to accommodate the
handicapped;
-Sears Roebuck's handicapped roster includes
repair technicians, attorneys and retail managers.
AT&T has developed a program to train
managers or disabled people (which will survive its
breakup). ·
-Xerox is training disabled people In
comput.er-related jobs where at present there is a
shortage of physically able qualified workers.
The Travelers Insurance Comparues installed
a variety of sophisticated equipment that includes
writing machines to enable a disabled person to write
out his/her program in Braille and video screens to·
advise the hard·Of·hearing that the telephone is
ringing.
In the words of Edward H. Budd, president of
The Travelers, which has some 100 disabled persons
on the payroll, "We have to have qualified people to
do business. and to overlook qualified people because
they are handicapped would not serve any purpose.''
From the side of the handicapped, this nation's
blind population of around 470,000 offers the most
outstanding examples or people working, earning
wages based on their productivity. paying taxes
and generally smashing our stereotyped images of
the blind into sawdust.
-There are workshops for the blind across the
nation, where men and women operate complex
machines, such as drill presses and electronic
sealers ; run switchboards ; assemble writing
instruments; make brushes on high-speed
equipment; conduct complicated sewing operations
and package the widest variety of products.
None of this tells the full story, though, of what
earning their own way does for handicapped persons.
It's not just that the earned income means increased
buying power. It's also that nothing beats a job for
giving a person a sense of se.Jf·respect. In 1982
particularlv.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW YOlll( IAP'I-5elts, 4 p.m. price and Ml Cllanat of IN M "1011 KIM Amtrkan Stoek E~c....,.. l•-ltad'"11 Mt-Uy et m«t Ulan It. 0omt1ttr1, m ,JOO .... -4'
S..SW-E"I • 230,100 29l'a • " GutfCan o 111,100 1111> -1't ~::8.~r n:1: ~~ ::1~
R•"9"r0ll 114,200 6 -" MtclllE s "·'°° 17\it -"-AZL RH M,IDO 11"--2-
DorchstGa .,,JOO ""' -111o Mffkl n JUOO 14 -lit
GOLD COINS
Nl!W•VOfllK (API -Prlala lele -'I'
of toltl <GIN. <~Nd with Frkley't Of'ke,
............ I lnlYOt., "'7,1S,tff tA.1S. ...... ltMI, I troy N ,. "'7,fS, tff M.71. , Meua tlD ..... u trey ea., tnt.rs. '" u.u ..
.--. 149 c,_, .Mt trey ai., un.u. ........
119urc;e-Deea•l"orere.
642-4321
Dt~ect or colUd.
· to au~ to JIOU'
home~ fXllJf't, Uaa
.
• I
.. ,
NEW YOftK(AP) final Oow-J~ e¥9> ~OC~y, Feel. I .
JO tad °t:tt :r,i ~ ~'~ 20 T rn n.At lSj. 341. 1' kS.ff-11 .tt U Ufl tot.JO '°'-IOS.12 105..._ I.Al
U Stk Jal.ot DUI 12t.40 121.~ 1.41 lndut 4 ..... Tran 1,ttt,1'0
Ullla ne.700 u Sit< .. 7 ..mi.100
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK IA,;) Fff I ,.._ T..,,. mi ID!
JIQ tt1J 10 107
NEW YORK (API Feb I
-... ... 2:2 •
p,.,.,,
METALS
Toclo 111 lOO in 110 10
40
~ 24 "' ,,, • 21
NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nont.rrout mei.1 orot _,..
Ct•fltr 7'-tt ce nh e poul\d, u s dHllnetlons. '
LeM JO.-» c-a -"'· llM 4 ~ • pouncl, dellve.-.4
TM •7.SN>IMi.ISW-t-IW 11>
Ahlm'-" 1•77 ce.rtsa oeund, N.Y.
Mettwy ..-.oo per 11..a,
f'Ml•---.OO•rovoi .. N.Y.
SILVER
Handy & H....-nlM, '8.47S per troy ounu.
GOLD OUOTATIONS
IY Tiie A-IMl4' '"'-
$e ltt(tfd -10 told prk et tocley ·
...._t mof'lllfltli11lno"7UO, offl1.7J
......_, ...,_ tlal"I UJa $0, Off •1 tJ
Pel1t: ..,. .... ofl 10.J7.
Pr....,.,,: S171AO, off U.00
llltkll: l.aM flalnt P11 All. off U oo aid.
AtOOOetlled.
H..,41, • Ma"".,.' (only ... 11, quot.I S»UO, Off tt.U.
......... ! (only <Niiiy ~I .,,. JO, °"
t i.JS.
• ......... (Ortly clelly ·-1 f~
•tt7.4 Ofl$Ul.
SYM80LS
. Dilly PUil,
• ·~ ..... ----=-..-.
'
. •
• • I • • • t • • ' • .. ,
'
.'
-
Handel's 'lsnael'
no 'deja v u '
., aOBl:AT fi'ISHEa ........... ....., ......
• Joetpb Hua.U, UCI proreasor of music, has a
peacbant for the fabutous work.a of Handel Last
AprU, almoat a year a10, he dlrected a
multl·wonderful performance of Handel 's
"Messiah." Then, tn UCl's Crawford Hall. he was,
able to lmpreaalvely mHtermJnd tbt art of
1ymnulum perlormlna and bleacher echoes.
But la1t Sunday w11 no 'deja vu' when Husni,
the Calltornla Chamber Chorale, the UCI Chamber
Singers and l he lrvine Symphony found
t hemaelv.es s t uffed into the Turtle Rock
Community Center auditorium like a cake Into a
sandwich bag to perform Handel's "Israel in
Egypt.''
By all accounts, this general purpose room is
not equipped for this kind of musical pedormance
"Israel in Egypt" is far too sophisticated in its
sounds to be handcuffed into a wooded alcove.
Audiences have the uncanny ability of sensing
performer distress; it gets uncomfortable. The
musicians are the cooks and we're the guests ; and
in this case, it was Handel's stove And rightly,
you don't ask the banquet chef to wear woolen
mittens.
It was a shame, too The performance was
well thought out, and at times even had an oceanic
. flow in the abundant harvest of single and double
choruses. The high tides of pleasureable oboes
were 106t beneath t he murky sea.
Part I of "lsrael in Egypt" sets immediately
to wor k with hischly sugf'esti ve moods and
orchestrations of the plagues and eventual escape
of Israel from slavery. Flies and lice, as do blood.
hail and darkness, each have their moments to
punish oppression.
The chase and prayer scenes of Part II present
a baroque clockwork with choruses each of a
thousand gallons of air. The work ends rapidly :
Handel knowing, and Huszti well aware, that once
the story is told, don't add appendices.
Next year, let's play in the gym.
----NOW PLAYINCl----
llf.A El TOIK> •ORANGE w.onn Brea Plozo Soddlebock ClnedOme
(714) 52Q-5339 (714) 581-5880 (714) 634-2553
•COSTA MESA f'OUNTAIN VAUEY WESTMINSTa EO,...Ords Town Center Fountain \A:llley U A Cinema
(714) 751 -4164 (714) 839-1500 (714) 893-0546
JACK NICHOLSON ...
THE BORDER
~ ... ._.... -,
.-t!1 ·~l "-, .. .,-r..,., ....... __J
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT{Tuesday. February 9. 1982 H /F IU
New productions welcomed to coastal stages
By TOM TITUS under the di rt:ct1on of John .Spindler at Alex Koba and Curma McMurphy.
OflMO..,Pitllheft Sebastian's, 140 Ave l>lco. San Clemente Performant'e!-1 Will bt' alven fo'rldays and
Four new productions includlna u pair of Pedormlinces of the Rodcers and Saturdays at If 30 through M1trch 6 and 2 pm
Pulitzer Pr1ze winners mount the staaes of the Hammerstein show wlll be 1iven niahtly except March 7 al the Westminster Auditorium, 7$71
Orange Coast's professional, community and Monday11 at varyina curtain times lhroulh April 11 Westminster Ave at Hoover Street Reservations
cvlle1h1le theaters this week, offering comc:dy, al the dinner pluyhouse Call 492-t&SO for tlckels are bein8 taken at 9~7 2515 or 894-6786
dr&mM and music amonc them. Mohcrc'11 comedy-ballet "The Bourgeois The other Pullt1.cr Prlic winner is "A Delicate
Startin& things off tontaht Is t.be venerable Gentleman" play-u rour·porformanct run. Daluncc," earned by Albee In 1967 ror his probln1
"South Pacific" al Sebastian's West Dinner Wednesday throu1h Saturday, at tho Fine Arts druma of psychological terror The Irvine
Pluyhouse, wh.lle UC Irvine follows Wednesday VIilage Theater on the UC Irvine campus. production will open Saturday since the Turtle
with "The Bouracois Gentleman." The William Needles, a drama professor at UCI , Rock Community Park auditorium will be cloaed
TV in spired dram¥ takes the leading role in tbe 17th century comedy. Friday for Llncoln 'i. blrthduy.
"Dear Friends" arrlves-1-11--1-1-1--1-1-1-1--1..... Curtain is 8 p.m . Wednesday throuah Friday and 6 Eileen Fishbach as directing the show, which ~l Showca~e Productions p.m. for Saturday's performance, which ts sold features Art Winslow . Jane Nigh, Valerie Mcilroy,
an Westminster Friday, out. Call 833-6617 ror reservaUons. Corbett Bark lie. Rlt'hard Drake and Betty Young.
while Saturday will be ---------• The Reginald Ro$' drama "Dear Friends," Performances wlll be given Fraduyts and opening rflght for originally a television production. is the latest Saturday~ at 8 p.m . through March 6, with
Edward Albee's "A Delicate Balance" at the Showcase offering, with Jean Koba directing the matineei. at 2 p m Feb 14 and 21 at Turtle Rock,
Irvine Community Theater. s tudy of four modern marriaaea. Cast members on Sunnyh1ll Road off Turtle Rock Drive, Irvine.
"South Pacific," the Pulitzer Prlze.winni"g are Tom Klein. Marcia Wilson, Edward Staneck, Tickets are ava1h1ble at the door and reservations
_m_u_si_c_a_l_o_f_l_9_50_, _be_a_ins __ a_t_wo-__ m_o_n_t_h_en_g_a_&_e_m_e_n_t _qloria Freedman, Art Frankel:.i.1...::C::.:o::.:r.:.ri.:.:n::.:e:....;.W:..:i:.::11:.::i•::;m=s..:... __ a_r..:.e_n....:o....:t_n-=e-=c..:.c:~:.;s:.:a:.:r...::y ___________ _
~·--....... ---.. __ _
A IMMOM l{;Ttff .' •
NOW PLAYING ~ -ci.r-!
UA CITY CllMMA o.anoo &34 1911
lDWAllOI caw•• CHTtll AMC DllAllO( MALL Coill Mt~ 979 4141 OIMlQC 837 0340
UA CllllllA
WtS!mll\$111 193 0~46
OMllllf lltUWl-111
0tll1Qe ~511021
lOWAllOI UDOUUCll IUlU rAlltl OlllWf.111
£• turo sa1 ~aeo _ B'le"' P••• a11 4010
THE PORT THEA TRf
r, l ~ b:?hO
EVERY MONDAY ALL SEATS $2.00
uGo TOGNAZ.ZI
1s ... o1 l• c.,. A ... foolt.t
in
ORANGE COUNTY
PREMIERE
plus
"Cousin-
Couslne" <PG)
·' ,•11•1t• £ <...O AS! 11~·1v COIH1NA D!:L MAR
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
A.Ll IC) lfD ANO 00fllMS11£CE1Vl
n•c SEAl OF I Hl MO "0" Plf. 'UllE
t:CIO( OI' ~Hf RtOUlAll()N
• j
LIMOUSINE SERVICE
TO SNOW SUMMIT
Pflone 714 -494-2805
lllJ I $ 11ia UU. 1110a MIMY ATIOtCS
*BARGAIN MATINEES •
· Monday thru Saturday
All Pertorm•ncea before 5:00 PM
(Except Special Engagemenis and Holidays)
lA MIRADA MALl o Muooo 01 Ro1ecron1
LA MIRADA WALK -IN 99•·2•00
.. _ c M>O" • --"""°" I
TAPS -.......... ._ .....
rCil-ri"C*iMT°~ &ACM OAT
... ""'' OA.•""9 ~llCSI a...&.f ----IHOWO...• W0..,.8.&. .. ._. ....
::'_ _.._ REOS j!: •a.._. ,
SHARKY'S MACHINE" '°I ,.. LU t•t•,teM ............ ,.,
''THE SIEOUCTION" '°I '9 U T l...a, I tt, .......... 1 ti. ... t•:M
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN
--·--RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK' ----·---ti• IM.tt-11 t-• , ..... --·.o .. u...-wti()SE LIFE IS IT ANYWAY~"
tltl t..• •• ,. tt'1t
"" 'MOOERN PR08l.EllS" -...... , ........... ... ... ,.,,. ,,...._ .. ..
FOUR SIEASONS'' -..._ ... , o·•~••.111 ...... ,.. ...... , ...
o cully al COl\<llewooo
213/531·9580
ICATMMlt ..... ..__ .. •Ml.MU~
"ON GOIJ>EN PONO" 1"'11 I ............................. ..., .. ....
.., .• ...........,.0.,. ....... ...-••
__ ..., ____ _
..... " ..... J •••• lit, , ... ,, ,.
M<JlllKll C KlC)n • Til!IO''"" """"°"
TAPS" IP<ll u -. ............ ..
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALK IN
Foculty Al 094 Amo
"REOS" 1001 •1:•.••,La
SHARKY'S MACHINE" 1111 ,.._ ...... ,..
'VIENOM"l't1 ·~·-
.... ,~ ..................
"ATLANTIC CITY" llll ... ·~·-·-..-.. .. -
213/634·9_2_11 __ -.-__
--·....,..·~ AAIDERI OF THf LOST AAt( ... ,_ ....... tttit -LAGUNA so . COAST WALK-IN ---· "THIE BORD!R" .._.
_,..._
... , .................... .
... cmo.. ....... ~
CHARIOTS CW ISWllE" -.. , ... ...,, ..... " ..
So11111 Coo11 H1woy
01 llooowoy
494-1514
IMPOR TAN r NOTICI 1 Ctlll ORI N UN Of R 12'fRH 1
t411b~ •nf ,.,,.,.,Mt" 1ftr~ h 1 6 30. ,., Sw11 MIO 4 30,M
CINI fl !.OU'IO •!OUR • ., CA.111\AOO 1$ fOUll SIUll!~
I I "° A\4 LAii llAOlll Wll" l(',HltlC)lj AGCISSOlll l'QSfl'100j 1J11HG ... I i'Ol'IAll f I• All Cl!* f I OllM•S llO ON AM l\AOO
ANAHfll\ll
ANAHEIM ORIVl-IN
''•••Of •• at l•mO" SI
179-9150
SHARKY' MACHINE 1111 ...
'STRIPES "" ....
BUSTIN' LOOSE" 1111
9U(NA 'AllK
BUENA PARK DRIVE -IN
l1f\Co&ft ••• •••' of •tt0n 1 21-4070
SUI NA PAii~
LINCOLN ORIVE ·IN
~·nCOH''I ,..,,. W•\l o t Cf"Ott
121-4070
.T ... AU MW A• TWa """" ·ooooevE. EMMANUEUE" ... , -"SECRETS" llll
C1'of I• S0\1"0
Cheech 6 Cllonr:_ NiCe ~i·
Cf\ffch' Cho':!! N .. t Movie"
l up 111 smou "''
"'"• h \OU~v ---------THIE BOOOLNS" a.i -VENOM' t111 .... --...---800Y ANO SOUl' 1111 ...
"BOULEVARD N1QK111'' fl!
•1•1•.1••1·:~fj~1i~il1=~·m•1•r-·r---.-.CH~.{:c:~=·::,.s
So• 01900 ,....., 0111oo••w11I (So J NEXT MOVIE" "1 962-2411
WI SIMINSllU
C•NI II 100"0
S.O(n 81>0 So Of
G.l•O.n Gro"' frtt..OY
Say "I love you!" with Hickory Farms
~. \hlentine's gifts.
HI-WAY 39 DRIVE-I N
"ARTHUR" t"'ll "' ...
891-3693
...,_ e econ, ...,,,. ..,,..,..
"TAPS""'
Givr your swt'<.'t heart a gi ft of old-time country
goodness from Hickory Farms~·
Lots to choose from , in almost every,price range.
Let us send your gifts. we'll handle the details.
Assorted Candy $}99/lb.
reg. S259 )b.
It's from all over the world. in dozens
of srrumptious flavors.
Offer "ood February 1-21
Your nearby Hickory Farms,,~ is your year 'round gift store:
(INSERT STORE ADDRESS)
South Coast Plaza
•
Lower Ctrousel Mall
~ OPEN DAILY 'TIL 9 P.M.
SATURDAY 'TIL 6 P .M.
SUNDAY 12 TO 5 P .M.
ms:;IRI y I
..,'if" a=l'='IAI
-"THIE CANNONllAU. RUN" -STRIPES 10 1 -'STIR CRAZY 1•1 Ctflll 'I S0UM0 -<t----------... --·--"ON OOLOIEN PONO" --"lltE EUCTIUC HOfllblAN ·
Clllf II SOIJloO ...
, ..... .,911 ..
LA HABRA DRIVI IN
lnlo&.I. ...... __ __
"00008\'I, H •ANUIJ.LIE" 1111 ...
"NCR~' 11111
Cl!fffl~ ""--·--"ON OOU>I N POttD"' --"-•-• ...,,...,. 4 •• -~THI IELICTRIC: ~N".,. 17M H 2 ---
·PA ~\.t
ORANGE 0111\lf IN
I "TH9 RDUCT10N -'-~·-··· -"THI •OOOENS" flt I "IU ANO Ttte L.OND.Y
"VU:oir· WOMI...-fll ----====........,"'---('ICHOOLOt"L HfTCK.Htl<IEA" f!11
Ati 111A,_. A1' 1.., &lrf
MISSION 0 111V f IN -.-..·--"T"' H DUC'T10N" "I -"LOOKIA" -
• _..,..,..._
. ""'' '2..l'BIML ... ._., .,._ .,. .. MtrMOell IL MY 0. LOI T~ •
•• Jl4 • "' I I A
WARNER UQ•Vf .N
··-· •••••• , .... a. ...... M7•Utl "An.ANnc c1rr· ... ,,_,..,_
"900Y MIA f'• .... " ... _""'
! ..
~ > .
aAITa•N CON'alHNCa A-...COh ..... Bos loft Pfllladelpflla
,....•Jerwy Watlllft9\on .... v-M II " " 1l u 21 ,. n ,.
,,,.
.101 1111
41• 11 471 12
01 II
c-tnlOl•la'-
Mll••v-.. n u •• Allallla It ts 412 0.INll 20 t1 •'-
IMiaM JO t1 4Jt c111c-.o 11 ,. .m c .... 1.11e1 11 " ,,. --,.·.1c-L.alten 11•, ..,.,on Ill """-llN• 1n, Chic-101 O.nwr IM. W1atll~ !IS
'""I•~ .. 107. "'-nl•" Houtton 11'. K..,_ City no
OOIOefl SI•• "'·""Antonio 111 ~::nt:~~0b c•'111-..
l"Or1l•llCI 100, -~-" T ...... tO-Ho119,,_K,_ltd
COLLEGE
Top 20
1 v oro1n1e 011
J Nor Ill Caroline
l OtP ... 1 UI
• MltlOll<I (I)
S lowe
t Orel)Ofl SI
7 Tulu
I Arkanwt
' MlnneMJla
10, Al•IN""'
II Wt\I Vlrolnia
17 l(tntU<ky
U Ide"°
U Mtmphl\SI
" ••11u.s1 It we-. !'or.ti
17 Stn French.co
11 Fr .. noSt
" w "'" "(lton 10 o.o,.._ oc
tl ,
11.J
to I
, ... I
17 ,
It) , .. ,
1.ltl
I°'° I Ol'J
1,004
"° "' m ••·> 661 15.4 .. ,
l/·l "' 1•.t JOI
"' 411 .. , tlO
,... J7t
16"4 lU
IH,.., ,,. ". II t
II l , .. , xn ...
•tO
COLLEGE
UCI 1t•tlstlcs
l(t•lnM-AendyWhlf!ldon
Btn McOoneld
AalntrWulf
Kevin"""'' 1100 1-nlon
Leonerd Jotl~n
Jolln Berk•Y c;,.M rotor
1110 CletflO
CMr1f\ c fOUlf'y M••• SP'M lolalt
G 1'1 l'I..,.. A-.
JO lOl llol ~ 11 O
10 1)) • J07 1S I
10 •• 31 lt9 II 0
10 St H 16' 7 l
10 cs 12 ,,, )t
" ,. ,, 7t ,,
1• 1t 11 .. l •
!I 11 10 M l I
10 11 • 10 l ,
t I l 11 11
l 0 4 0 I
6 o J l OS
10 610 JIO I UO 11 )
HIGH SCHOOL
Cost• Me11 83, lrvlne 50
COST A MESA BerO•lt• JJ
Ptok,,._1 10 "",_CMr~r u . Streyf' 10
Pelmbl-J. EdlO<\ l. Coolt 1. Molino ; {,
Fltldt,J FielclO Tole!• llll·llU
lllVINE C11<•et 6, B••lor I 8rotovl<ll
t. Hui I. JOhM t, Uuuy 11 Merlo! 1
Tol•I• U••so
leddlebeck et, !I Toro 10 II. TCMIO I.awl• 11 lntle....., I ,_
11, ArM1411 It, llll<lllet • Merllll .. 11 I. Htllllllell TO\llt U 10-IUO
IAODUllAClt OI..,,_. H, 1.1-k t , McAlll1ter t, c.,. 10, Wotm•" t _,._.
t, Waltofl1, 0.~t!llO Total• ti U to••
'"" ~y OWt.W" II Tore If 14 I ,._ tO
........ o 11 n 1t '' ., Tttal i.ult II T~o tt. Sed91o1141~-14
It. Peul 72( Mu•r Del 71 12 ot) MATalll 01 Cook • hrbt ll u , Je<k-lt, INuW•Nrl U MoftOM• 0, J~t ... Pwrlilllt 1, Nn .. 111 JX lolel• >t IJ.,JI 11,
tT. ,.AUi. ,., .. J llemerl•• t.
Clemt1111 17, Outro1 u SJ101 lo•IU ti OomlfltUH 10 Toi.It ,, ,. 2 n
SC-llf~ Mal•• Oel u 10 •• tt • • " SI Pa11I It I) It I I t ) h
Telal fou11 Malel Del 11, St ,...,, u
l'OlllN out A,_rlot CSI P..,11 Clomenh "I .. lull, JKklon IMMor Dell
Sea View league
Corona cwt Mllf lttencta
Coste Mew
HtwPor1 tlertlor
Vnl•er.lly
l!t Toro
SffdltlMK•
~
W L
11 I io t • • ' )
10
" I 11 w-,·· Gem" 11 Ml
E lltncle at CCWON Ml Mer
Unhtff,lh1 et ~•wport H•rf)Or
Et Toro et Coote Mo"
1'¥1nt 11 ~ltlMO
Angelu1 League
L• .....
W L s. ... 11. • 1
8111100 Montgomery 1 l
Meler De• J •
81•1\op Amal J •
St Peul 1 '
WeclnlMey'• Gem" 11 M l
St Peul et 81•"°1> Amil
81\lloPMonlQOmt'ry et ')tr• Ila
Owr•N
W L .. , ,. '
U I
IJ I
IJ ' • 14
I II
I 11
o .. ,. ..
W L
II I " . ll •
I ' 1 I,
HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER
Sea View le1gue
W L T oe
Et11nc1• 7 J I
COfone dltl M.. 1 , I
s.ddleN<• I J 1 IVI
Elloro \ S O J1 ,
Ir.int 4 ~ I )
NowPor1 HarbOr • 0 Jn
Ul"tl¥tt\lh' 1 0 •Wt
'°'"Mow J 1 1 ~ w-,··o-corona Otl Mar a1 El Tero s.oe1..__ •• un1....,11,
f \Ion< la el Coote Mo .. 1,.,,,. al H---1 Hertlor
U.S. N•tlo"al Indoor let,,,...,....., T-I ,_ .... "'9M
11-ot Te,..., 084 Ml ... C"'1111, M 1)
Jollft Alaa-r def 11<1.,, Goctlrieo •I.
1• OelW Mayer oar Jeff""°""'"'·•• t t
YI Ml(k -a.< Tlllen• Tul8\IW •I • 1, JOhan Krie-Ot! Pet DU9<Y, • • t J
Women's tournament
lltltM.,.Cltyl ,. ... , ...... , .......
Mery Lou Pleln def. P•I Mt<!<-•• I,
• ' Ano,... LoallCI a.I Sanely Coltlf!' .. o
• l Claudll l(-dltl t;we Plott, .. t, ... I.
Oolfe09 WOIM" UC: '"'IM f. OfMetC .... I ..... Ill•• II.It tr•IMI .... 1t....i. ~11 •a. Mlll•rv IUC lrV\MI .. , O."teh ..... w . .. ,,tMJUC: lry1,,.1 def I\..,.,, 14, M, IC111! I C "vine! cNI llVlfl, tt, t t ,
eer1110 IVC '"'Intl fol IOarwlll. M . ·~· Ol9t .. 1WH1 IV( Ir.Int cjel ••I..,, t l , ....
O....t Ito• 0 .. 10111 tO••ne• <.u•ll 01
.. , ..... ,1i.c19e, •.O 1. •.J "•"' ...... IV( tr.IMI •• 1u ...... ···•n •• ,, ••
Ol9r4lla,..111 C-rrnen IV( lrvlnt l dltl
Oerw111 .. ,., • l • J
NHL
T.,.ltM'•O-
All S!Ar 0-al la-ftt, ~
NHL leadere
Ortlrl•Y, 1!-lon
" Stotny. Out-s .. ard CN<~ Me•u-We\Nnqlon
~\Y NY l\lendltn
~mllh M•,...tot•
Trollltr. NY 1\l•no.r
Ole11fte,111,,.,
Toter,ltl"tf
And••lOn E<lmonlll'l
Wresttlna
HIGH SCHOOL
0 •• u , .
" 40
~
)() u
JI 31
,_ ll, .. _ _. ....... ,,.
A u .. .,
tO
" )I
" .,
u
)I
101 ManhNl<O IC.CIMI won Dy IOrltll
IOI OOuDle ronoll
~ iu .,
" ..
" ., ., ..
fl ,.
II) HOieman INH•Por1 Herbor I pinned
White •·!)
Ut C.-11• t>;ewt>0'1 H••OOtl plnnoCJ Sap1111ro, I OJ
12' McNlllff co;•wPo•I 11er0d•I oln"'o
HOl•lettor. l JI
11) Som""" IN•wfJOrt HerbOrl 01nneo
Ain-tnD«h. S IJ
141 Gaup l(.dMI pln""d 111nlon • 40
1.a Ry• 1Howpuf1 H•'111><1 ci.c Lo41u\.
I-•
UI Perry fN,wPOtt HerbOrl O.l
McPaue 11
110 R•VH ICOMI d« itoen I ,
•• Sla<lb ICOMI •on Dy lorltll
101 ~1011 ICOMI •on by tor loll
Hwt l uclwlq ... n l(dMI WOii Dy IOtlell
Monday 1 tran .. ctlooa
....... I.I.
A,.,...kMLe-
(HICAOO WHITE SOX N .... .., A119tl
v,.Quel 10 ll-lo L•lln A,.,.rtten ltl•vtt
ci.wetopme•U .,,,_nc:.., -Si.w Trtlll, ollc""' won In ert>ltretton. wlllle Illa '"'91
won tn arbUr aOon w ith BIH ••~ 1nf .. tid9r
•nd lot>t>y MoUn•rio. oulflill•O.r
M INNESOTA TWINS 51Qntd To,,y
f •flori p41cPMr •nd Mark f undt rburti
ovtflt lf.:t•r to OtW .,.,, <°"tra< tt
NetleNILo .....
CINCINNATI REOS Announced INI
tti• •••m won 1n •rbltratlon "'"" ''•f'ltj Putore. oll<,,...
LOS ANGELES OOOGFll\ Treci.o
0a¥•'f' LOCMt, ttcona 01'-•mal"I to '"•
O•"l•nd A' ror l ance HUOwn lnfl•kS•r
MONTREAL [)(PO\ S1onoo S<Olt
S.no.r'°" pltc.hrlr to 1 "" .. v11r contrec:1
IASllETIALL
H•-.i lftllel:Mll A\-181 ....
I H 01 ANA P•C f 115 o;•m•d F re"~
...-.rl•n• ttrHJO.nl ,OOTIALL
NeUMet 1' .. lMM L ... W
HEW YORK GIANTS Soon•d Jolt
ll•dn•r•• df'ftn\1¥f' t nd M l< e..ey
Fllroor•ICI -• llOl>I"'°" ltd<h werton •nd l•rt'f Coffey nmr'llnQ blH.k' k•vW't
Even' •r\d Mtllt Lu\'1 ''''''''· Scolt PhUllp,, ...,k)t re<•lv•r H•r~ \e»n<er •ftld
Larry Wff1•. llnoDllOtl'\
HB prep golf sa ved
Oil company , two. area courses come to the rescue
When lhe Huntington Beach High School
district cut golf from the school programs. several
local companies and courses came to the rescue
A chC'ck for $977 was presented lo the district
by thC' Chevron Dealers of the area. proceeds from
a tournament held for s uch a purpose.
Fountain Valley Mile Square Golf Course. with
Jim Casp10 as head professional, will provide free
green fees for Ocean View and Fountain Valley
Huntington Seacliff Country Club in
Huntington Beach is offering the same package to
Westminster. Hun\lngton Buch, Edlaon and
Marina Brian Lake, president or the Huntington
Seacliff Corporation. was instrumental In securing
the donations along with a guarantee of golf balls
from several companies.
"More money will have to be raised for
e xampll'. to pay lhe $42 per school lease
percentul(e required by the County or Orange
hetore free> play Is permitted," Lake say!\.
M 1le Square leases the land from the County of
Orange
• • • SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA collegiate golfers
will begin their 1982 tournament schedule by
compcling in the 12th annual Gary Sanders
memorial invitational at Pomona National Golf
Club Thursday and Friday
Among the favorites to capture the Individual
lllle will be UC Irvine's Dave Beatty who was
medall6t when the Anteaters tied UCLA . 299·299
last week at Big Canyon Country Club. Beatty
fired a 88.
oerendlng champion of the event IS Ron
Commans with the USC squad the defending team
champion. Commans has turned pro and will not
defend his title • • • THE COSTA MESA GOLF 1od Country Club
men's club did It again. The group, under the
dlr~tlon of Steve Pappas and Tom Throp, report
that their Toys Fore Flllrvlew tournament raised
over $3,000 In cash and Sl ,000 In t<>y11 and girts for
the hospital.
Jn addition, Len Peverleri donated a color
telt,,.lslbn 11et. lncldenhally. Bob Hale had a net 60
to win first place for the ae<:ond con\ecullve year
In the competJtlon. Con1ratulaUona. • • • ON th.e upcomlna tournament trlll. Lee
Trevino will be amon1 the conteatanta In the Los
A.n1eles Open at Riviera Country Club next week.
When the pro·am 111 pre ent4d on Wednet1day .
HOWARD L. HANDY
f'cb 17, former president Gerald Ford and Bob
Hope arc omonft the cclebnl1c~
Out Palm Springs way. al Indian Wells to be
more l\pf'clflr. Gene Lallier and the Hebert
brothers, Lionel and Juy, arc among the
contestant-; listed for the Vinla~c lnvllotional
March to 14
The event will be held al the exclusive VmLage
Club.
The llebcrt brothers c11l·h won the PGA
<'ha mp1on~h1p , somethan~ nn other brother
com binallon has ever llccomµhshcd. Lionel. the
younger of the two, won 1n 1957 and Jay captured
the PGA lllle m 1960
lncadentelly, this years tournament wilt
benefit Anecl View crippled chllclren'l\ foundation
with season tickets priced at $40 to include all five
days or action. Dally prices arc considerably less
than a ye1tr ugo al $5 on Wednesday ond up lo $10
on Saturday and Sunday • * •
JOHNN\I MILi.ER WIU, BE back to deCend
his lat le at the l.011 Ani;teles Open. reb. 18·21 Miiier
won the Andy Willlum5 San Dwgo Open last week
and earlier had won $500 ,000 an u special event In
South Africa
Others who wall Join M tiler In the field include
Mark O'Mcaru of Laguna Niguel, Hale Irwin. Tom
Kite, Ed Flori, Bobby Clampett, Billy Cuper1 Croia StudJc1-, Dave Stockton, Lanb)' Wad.klnt ana
Jerry Paw amona others. .
Spectators at the LA Open wlll have al\
opportunity to have their own ,101f awlna
photoaraphe<i. analyied and rccor.ded oo a
permanent display card which can be used by
their own club pro as an instructional tool.
A SS donation entitles the participant to: three ~wlng11 on the computer swine analyior provtdtnc
Immediate. alrnultaneoua feedback on seven
dlHerenl uptct.11 ot lhe ;iwin1. an instant
photo•raph whJch ehows In 1top actton tlfhl
consecutive part.I or the gotror'11 11wlng ; •nd brief
advice on the 1ood or bad polnt11 of the 1wtn1 from
a PGA teachlnl prore1t11lon.al.
FoSter, Mets r e a c h agreem en'
NEW YORK <~P> -Oeorae
P'otler and the New York Milt
tuive reached •lrHmtnl on the
ClnclNl•U 1lu11er'a requttt fOr a a.i mllUon, lnterett·fr .. &Mn,
the flu.I bW"d.&e to compl .... 1
tr18-W1d rormaltM 1 oomrtct,
Mttl General Mana1er ,.....
C11htn Hid Monday. ~
Tom ~tc.h . Foattr'• a11nt,
spent Monday In C1IUornt1, t
attendlnl to buainea1 ror aome of
hh other client1. Ht VI
txptcted ln Ntw York :rUlldl1
to conclude talk• wltb CUhln which 1hould deUvtr FotWr, 'a
st.yen-old left tl•lder, to U\e
Mtla.
C11ben and Rtlcb ~~n da1f to11thtr ta. Flon«a • w••k•n~ and f••~b-4 11reetnent on a COD.tract which ...
will pay F~ter 98 rnUttoCJ over
the nexf:flve year11. F"oater w.,
rfcetvtn1 saoo.ooo a year from
Ctftclnpall aa ht enter'~ tM
op• )'e1r or his conlricl. 1t \riu Foeter1t roq__. lot a ~ *'11Ch kept tit R• fftm
1 f him •«•In. O••htn aald Joln was the attbfec( of the 1 ldrlda talks, but added: "I'm
not al liberty to report on that."
I
• I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuvaday. February 9, 1982
From Pp C1
HIJGHES IS T HE FUSE. • •
l'lumm.r becau11ti f knew thla
yo11r would d('1>t•nd a k>t on what
I did .. HltY~ Huahe11
"So I was rl!ady Towud the
Rustlers play
at LA Harbor
G1lldcn We&1l College, coming
orf a convlnt"ing victory ovor
East Los .<hMelcs College, will
trv to make It two straight when
the Rustlers travel to LA Harbor
tonight <7 3Cn
G WC'. 4 fl. t7 R defeated the
Seahawks 48 46 1n first round
ac:llon o f Southern Ca l Confcrenc~ b1u;ketbull play b11ck
on Jun 15
The Rusllers boast the top
!!corer lo the conference in
guard 'l'rulctt Hal ton who
carries an 18.U average Into the
contelt
W ood.hridge,
Brethren duel
Woodbridge Hagh 's Warriors
make the" final regular season
appearance lomght in free-lance
basketb.1.111 , playing hosl lo
M arahall High of Pasadena in a
game that could be the key to
lheir Cl fo' playoff aspirations.
The Warriors enler with a 13 8
record. but on the heels of a
three game los ing s treak
Mars hall foll lo Woodbridge
earlier .~ 46 Tipoff ls at 7 ·~
end or . J1111t year there 11omt
eame.111 with u lot of emphaslA to
StOJ> mt'. so It huisn't been that bit~ of u ~hun.it' ·
"llc'a n•ally improved h111
polae," 11ay• Brown, "the way he
re11pond1 to preRsurt• He's
pluylna the game harder a11d
euch wt'ek he's pl1Aylu1 more
agareM1lvt'ly "
So, the Baron11 enter the final
week. tied with Marina and
Ocean Vlc>w ut 4 4 11nd a aame
bt.•lund ~econd phtce Hunllnitton
Beach In tlw wild, wild Sun11et. •
('IF 4 A pluyoffs berth to but two
of them
And It appears crystal clear, If
the Barons ure to earn a playorr
btirlh It'll be behind the play
of II u l{h<'~
Vortex wins
Hibachi race
Vortex. skippered by Bruce
Twtt·hcll, Voyager'!! Yacht Club,
Wllb lhl' class·A winner In the
second race or South Shore
Yucht Club's Winter l11buch1
series
Clu:>s B winner wa!i Me N
Pelc, co·skippered by Fyfe und
Col w1ck. VYC. und the clu11s·C
winner wus Immoral Minority,
Paul Blank. SSYC
In lhe small boat cl1vis1on the
winner in the senior subot class
was Delly Knudson. SSYC. und
t he Junior "inner was Worth
Houghton, SSYC
The
healthcare
plan for
employees
that actually
~rovides for
their care.
Gretzk y,
Cmnpbells
favo red
I.ANDOVER, Md. (AP> -The
Campbell Conference, led by
record·breaklnt 1corer Wayne
Grel~ky of tht Edmonton OUera,
seeka a second 1trat1ht victory
over the Walea Conference ln
tonight '• National Hockey
League All·Star 1ame.
A crowd of 18,130 la expected
to fill the Capital Centre, where
o nly one aellout haa been
attracted durlnl the current
aeason u the W 11hln1ton
Capitals atru,ate throu1h their
eiahth campal1n.
The Wales Confe rence had
won five 1tnt1bt All·Star 1ame1
under the Format adopted tor the
1974·75 sea.son, with no 1ame ln
1979 because of the Challenae
Serles with the Soviet Union.
The Campbe lls notched their
first decision last year.
Yacht race ends
Brisk winds off the Mexican
mainland brought the last of the
35 boats In the San Dleao to
Manzanlllo yacht race aafely
into port Sunday night and
Monday
General chairman Fred Frye
said the finish times are belng
-fed Into a computer to determine
the overall and class winen on
handicap lime Final reaults
were expected today
for
their eyes
for their
teeth
for their
body
rlgllt
down to
their toes
FHP isn't just an insurance company. It's a Health Maintenance
Organization with seven medical centers in the Los Angeles and Orange
County area alone.
Family Health Program provides the dentists. The doctors, including
medical specialists. Emergency care. Hospitalization. Eye care. Preventa·
tive care, including regular checkups. Even family counseling.
We don't just cover your employees' medical e)(penses. We also pro·
tect your employees' health by providing (are to help keep them from
getting sick in the first
place. Head to toe.
For more Information on
the group health care pro·
gram that gives you more
than just insurance for your
money, call (213) 429-2473,
Ext. 513 or ('14) 8~8·3516.
Ext. 513.
A FEQlRALl Y QUALIFIED HMO
'
Orange Cout DAILY PIL.OT/T uelday, February 8, 1882
ing values.
.99&1
for thrH pl'°" of hllC'/ OOld•n I brown Kentucky FrltCI Chicken plua
single eervlngt of colt alaw. maahld
potilo .. and gravy an<I a roll I
Umtt two Ofter• Ptl pu1c11a.. COi/Poii QOOO
fOf nine piece• ot Mey. gOIGtn llfOWll l(tntucky FrltO Ohlck1n, v.lth
tour 10111 , 1 larQt cole 1l1w, e 11rg1
INlhtCI pot1toe1 arid a mtcllum gravy
Limit two Olltrt ~ purcl\a.ae Coupon good
onty fol tombl11ttlon wMte/dirk OIOtrt
Cuttolnlr PIYI al1 111PllUblt Ultt II.It
I OOldtn brown Ktntuck~ ,,ltd Ohlektn t '
lilllll two offer• ~' purcllaM COllPon OOod i
I Only IOt comDln.tnon wlllta/dttl! 010trt 1 only IOt comllln.tllon wlllltlllark OIOtll I C1111onw OIYI Ill appOubla ult1 II.It Cllltomtr paya all applicable Mitt tu
Otter txplttl Ftb1u1ry 21. 1Q82 I
"1ctt mey vary at pat11c1pe11no IOUllOllS I Otflt taplrt1 February 21 . 1982 I
Jill!lCH may very at per11c1pa11no IOUllona llltcu may very '' PllllCIPlllllO loc.llOAI
Offer 1xplrt1 February 21 1982
, Coupofl good only In Sout11er11 I
Clll!Olntt wtllft you HI Ille mwn
Ot<thij) .... ot Ille K1nl11CllJ
COi/poii OOo4 only In Southt1n c1111orn11 Wharl I Couiion OOoO only In Sou1111rn CaM .... nll I you ... I.lie memotnlllp ,.,, OI Ille Ktntuelly Wfltll you ... Ill• mtmbtrtlllp .. , ~ t!lt
flleel Clllektll AUONttOll • Ke/11\IOy kltcl ChlCkl ll Anoci.11on -.JI Wlllll°P I
--COUPON --·--------Fried Cbicken.
PllUC Mint(
OltANOI COUNTY MUNICl .. AI. COUltT M..-.r Jlldklal Dltlrkt ••tt Jamll•••• la11 le¥a r•. New"'1 ... ell, C:aljf9"MI tt ... 'LAINTIFI" M41tC ii TOW OE,ENOANTS . JAM!S llltlOOlMAN, NANCY lllllOOIMAN 1no OOE 5 MO, lnclu1I••
IUMMONI lllHT AMIN DID CAH NUMllll 4tUf
NOTtCll Yw Mft ..._.. -·· TM c ... rt may --... Iii.ti 'J'llll Wltl\OWI , ... , IM4111 ....... Wllffl , .. '""""" wlttlh• • .. ,._ It ... llM lfliwmotlafl .... _.
If yo11 wish to -~ ,,.. adlllu ol on tll0<"9Y In 11111 me1t•r. '°" tllolld do \O promptly 10 lllat your wrltt•n rttPon .. II an), may llO 111..i °"time AV1$01 U ..... MtMm..._ ...... El tr1MNI ...... *< .. Ir < ... tu u• t i• a11 .. 1•cla a m••H ~11• U•. rH,..... ....,. .. • ..~.. Lei .. 1111erm1e.__....,.
SI Utteel •-IOll<llar ot con Mio a. un a""91H!O .., Ult •"'"lo, CltDerlo
f\a C•, IO lnm•Ol•l•M •l\ll ••••••
"1•n•t• w rlltlC)Uet1• t\<rtte * 11 hay
119un1 p--r•e•1trooa • ll•"'Po t TO THE 01!,ENOAHT a <1•11
~omplelnt llel llttCI Dy tPle Plllfttltl
101ln•t ,.., II vov •Ill\ to Gel•l\CI ""' lawsuit YOU mint wllflln )Cl d•Y• afl•r Ill°' IU"""°"' I& Mrwcl on you, fllt
•Ith '"" c,purt • wrlnen '"-to Ill• comota•ftt urv .. 1 vou CIO .o vour O.laull •Ill M ..,,.,eel Oft •flllfl<atton
Qt tllt platnll" •ftCI tf\11 covrt m1y •nltr • tudtlmenl 1eall\tl you tor tl>e ••II•• oem1ncttC1 In Ille com111a1nt,
"'""" co..ICI '""" In earnt111mtnl o1 w•ve• l•klnO of"'°"'' or procioMY or
UHttr r t U tf flQUlitld '" .. ,.
complaint OATEOOtum .. rH Ult
J PettrM>n
(ltr~ 81 I/ l Dimeo,
o.t><JIY LAW Oll"Cl!S 0,
MARC"· TOW
.... ,. Q "-· .... UOI Dew Strwt, ,..,"" ,_, New,.rt -ell. ca ntoMI C1t411SM41J PuDllSr.CI <>""99 (OHi Dally P•IOI ftD 2 • tt.1l 1"1 h i a?
PVIUC MOntl
NOTICE 01' DEATH OF
LOR ETTA THU DI UM
BICKELHAUPT AND OF
PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A-112017.
To all he irs,
beneficiaries, creditors
and continQent creditors of
Loretta Thud ium
Bickelhaupt and persons
who may be otherwise
i nterested In the w ill
and/or estate:
A petition has been fifed
by Allan A. Sigel in the
Superior Court of Orange
County requesting that
Allan A . Sigel be
appointed as personal
representative to
administer the estate of
Loret ta Thudlum
Bic kelhaupt (under the
I n d e p e n d e n t
Administration of Estates
Ac tl The petition Is set for
hearing In Dept: No. 3 •t
700 Civic Center Drive,
West. In the City of Santa
Ana, California on March
3, 1982 at 9:30 A.M.
N01'tCI INVtTtNe &lot Nolin 11 llatetty tlon Illa! Ille 901rd OI TrutlUI Of Ill• CU'1 CommunCty Coll ... Ol1trlct of Oran .. CCM.tntv, Calllor'ftla. w111 rtctl•• ....... 111111 up 10 ILOO •.m,, WtOnodoy,
Fe~uary 2A. 1"2 et tilt l"111•c11Mlno Oepar1..-1 Of MIO coll-Cll1trlct local•d et tUO Adam• ,....,.ua, CMI• MAM, Calltornta, at wlllch time u kl bid• wlll be Plll>ll<ly 01MMC1 encl r .. o tor: P"INTINO & llNOING 011 OA 4N GI! COAST COLt..1'.01! CATAl..OG, ltta-G All blelt at'I to llO In accordanc:• wllll Ille 11111 P:orm lr1•tr11clloftt al\CI ConCllllOl\I -SjM<lllC1tlon1 whl<ll are l\Ow Oii iiie lllCI may l>a Mell,... In Illa office Of l.N Pur<llAll"9 A .. nt al Uld coU ... dlttrlCI Ea<ll ltlOcllr mutl tut>mtl wllll lllt ltlCI a <atl>ler'I <NO, urtlfl.cl cllaO,
0< 11111oer'1 -m-NY•tti. 10 ""' ora.r ol tM Coat1 CO"lmUftlty COll99f Ol1lrl<I lloarCI ol Tru\11*' II\ •" amoUftt not te11111an llH IM~•nt u-.1
Of Illa '""' blct 1t a 911¥1nt" fllat 1"9 llldeler wlll ..,,., 11\IO the ''~ COftlroct If ,,.. .. ,..,. I• •wer-10 him In IN • ..,,, ol fallut'I I• .,,l•r ll\lo •uc11 contrKt, IN Pro<-Of Ille cllac-•Ill De forf911.o, or I" Illa <1&• of a lloncl, "" full '""' ,,,., ... wtll De lorteiltcl lo ulcl coll1919 dl1trlct No D._, may wltllclta .. 1111 bid ltr a period Of 1«1Y lt¥t Cd l day1 111., tlla elate N'l lor ,,.. _,,,. lflOraot Tiie eo.n1 Of Trvll ... ,_,,,. .. IN ,Prlvli•Ot Of re la<t1"9 any encl all 1>14U or lo waive al\f trre911tarlllu or lnlormalltltt In any bid or II\ ,.,.
llldCllnO
111 NORMAN E WATSON S.Cretarv. Board Of T rutlttt Coest Comm\Hllh Collf919 Oltlrl<I PublltlleO Orenoe Coe" Oollv Pllol February•. 16, ,.., ,....,
PUlllC Mm:l
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition.
you should either appear
at the hearing and state
you r objections or file
written objections with the
court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
in person or by your
attorney MOTtC• INVITINO . HAI.SO l"ltO~LS C 11011 I F y 0 u ~ A R E A llOlt T"I C:OfUTltUCTIOfe 011
C R E D I T 0 R o r a sANDCANYCNeAv1Nu1 contingent creditor of the wt.Tiit TUNtM1t110M MAtN deceased, you must file IANTIAOOAOUIOUCT l'A•AlLIL TO tltVIN• CINTllt D•IYI your claim with the court l'ttOJ•CTNUMH• 11111
0 r present i t t 0 the Jl>l "HI lltVIMI UNCH
personal representative NOT•c:'~~~:~•::1~:vEN 1,..1 su111:1t10tt cou11T 011 TMI appointed by the court '"• 1rv1ne "•"c" W•t•r 01ttflc1 STAT1011u.1..11101tNIA "°" within four months from tnvllu anci w111 ••<•Iva ua11e1 TMllC:OUMTYOllOttAM•a: the date of first issuance prOjM)Ui.ll>ICl•l uotot,,.,_rof 10 >0
1• Cl•k c-tw °"" Wftt f I tt id d I A ,,. °" ""9\11 .,.. Of Merell. '"'·al PLA'::ti~· ~1aT~11~1LLS os el ersooas prov e n ,,,. ottk• .,. .,.. Ent•-1Arc1111 .. 1, ec t on 7 of the Probate as ,, .. ,, -·· '°' fum111t•nt 10 u 1e1 ~1L~~e: ~o::~oEY"o i~o~·~":'~ Code of C•lifornla. The o111r1<1 •II tr•-1•"°"· matert11•
INVESTMENTSn. time for fllin" claims will eciwtpmont. taoor. Mrv1u1. anci W WHllH fte<KMIY to COl\tlruct Mlcl DEFENDANT HAL t<ltEELANO not expire prior to four -· 10.r -Olttrkl, at wlll<ll 11 .... ~=~1c,,E0~~~f~·N ~:~;'~11:~\ months from the date of Mid p,_1, .111 11e l>Vbllc1y -
LE ASING CO~P4 N V, INC •• the hearing noticed above. •nelr~~~"';:"~~'::.:~~~trkt ~~~:r:;lan, =-=~II IPWOU(lll )0 th:?i~ ~~ybyer;,:'t~~~ l~=~r.=..~~J
c•S• NUMlltt w11~ If you are Interested in the S•kl Dkl• .,,.11 conform 10 ano .,. NOT1c11 Y• ,..,,. -... C..... TIM e!'tate, you may file a r•-•1w 10 ,,,. tOl\lra<t dO<u-"h IO< MICI -II a• Plet'ltofot'I -rovacl ,..,,, may_ ... -IMI -wit-request With the COUrt to tty U ICI Oltlrl<I enCI mutl bt , ... , Ml .. _,.. -· .,.. '---" •""'" • .. ,. .. """ .. 1,,..,...a1i... receive special notice of ~:~:-;::"''° bY 111a sacur1h rei.rrea Mia•. the inventory of estate coo1110llP1econ1ra<t00<um..,1 .. ,..
If you wlMI ID-· ti. oelvlo of an assets and Of the petitions, on Ille and may ... uamlntd Ill Illa 1t1orney tn 1111• mott.r • JOU .ile>ulO 00 a CC OU n t S and rep 0 rt S off IC a Of Illa Oltlricl end In Illa o"I<• .'o promplly to Illa! your wrltltn ol Ill• Enolneer/Ar<llll•<t al JOM rupo,, ... 11 •"Y. mey tie 11110 on· desc r ibed In Section 1200.5 Carollo e:,..1,_,. ,..., ..,..,,.., ,.,..
time ol the California Probate Suitt 100, Fouma.,; vall•Y CA '21111 • AYtSOI u.-11a ...... ma_.. Code Coplu mav 1>a Purc11•-•• ,,,. It ,,,._ ,.... -.C .. lr <entr• v• · offlu .i Ill• e:netn..r/Arclllta<t by .... •••l•fl<la a mlflH ~ ... u• paym•l\I Of UD 00 per wt •nCI llllt totl
, .. ,. .... ..,,,. .. >I ell•• .... •• Dennis Booth; Allain A. It 1\01 ralunelabl• ••e•r•l•ll OI ,,...,"'ac:•-tltw Sigel, on. Wllshl,.. llvd., ,..,,.,,,., "-... ,,. --111c.t1.,, SI UUH daMa tollclter ti CO"MIO oo S I 2,...3 A ero rtlwrrwa "" a~ .., .,,, """to o.11er1a u tt .... L Los nttlts, "''•nt •"d •1>a<lt1ce110"s w111 IN 111ur101.,medl0Um1nt1 01011 Ca . 90017 ; tel : (211) moll.ci.-.._11,to-"w man•ra, w ,.._,,a •><rtta ti lley 624-0262 DIOOer• fo r 1n 1CIC11tleftal U ff aleu"• ...-wr r191"r..u •'"""DO (l\01\refuoncMlbla l IO cowr ~ c.., at
Pu1111111ee1 o--ea.rt oa11y l"llol DOtt•ee and "-dllne , TO THt DEFENDANT " <1•11 FtD t .•• ,., '4 u nO t r Ill• proYlllOl\S Of fll• comptafftl llu Dttn 11100 II• ,,,. Collforftla ullor c-. Ille Olrtclar of piolntlff 9991n11 you II you wltlt to ,,,. ~,,._,el tnclwtrlal ltelltlion•
cllfend 11111 '"'"''I vou mu1t wtfllln 11u OtlermlMCI Ille pnvalllflt rala at • Clan efter llllt tummont It .. rveCI PVllJC ll'flC( w19" I« lfle le<atllY 111 wNcll IN
Oft YO.., Ill• will\ 11111 co..rt a wrllltl\ ------------!work h lo De 119rlor....,. aftd tllo Irvine ~":~~~::,;::mt ::~lln~ u.,,r11,,'r'~}°"on I R•ftCll Water Dl•trtcl hi& .-.iact MICI • --l"Am6 P<Ollllnt r-ol we ... A ~ Of •PC>ll<otlol\ ot IM 111alntllf ano lllit NOTIC. Ott T•utTaa•1 t.Al.S ,,,.,. pravautno ra1•• are on Illa et,,.. co..rt may enter • 111dQm.,,1 e911nn M. """... ofltce of Illa lrvln• ltancll Wet•• vou lor ,,... rtlttf dtmende<I In ti. Ofl T~, ....,_., II. tta, iH Olttrlct afld-11 De "'-av•ll-i. complall\I Wlltcll (01110 ..... 11 In 11·.o "M., l~•tAL tAHCOlt .... •"Y lnl•rHteCI NrtY ... ........ A oernlsllmenl 01 ••O•\ IOlno ol C•lllornla Cerparellan •• 0111, <OllY ol well ••9' rot•• •llall b• money or prooertv or otllor rotltf °"'°lntacl T.--.,_!IV~ DOt .. CI on th• jott•ll• "' 111• reouesteo In ti.. complaint '° o.M • ~ _.,... ,...,._., 11. Contractor. DATED Marti\ 21.1 .. 1 1'11 .. "'*· .... .... ..... .... II 111•11 be m•IWl•torv 11110n .... LEE A BRANCH. .,... •• "OffklM ......... ., Conlr•<lor 10 -m Ille c.ontract "
N....,, ..
'""'" MOTICI TOCalDITOH O~ IULll TltANll'la c1ecs. •1tt•,., u.c.c.1 Nolle• 11 llet'IW t lvt11 lo <recll1ort of Ille wllllln l\amecl partltl lllal a but• lran1far I• about lo ba madt on p1r1one1 property ll•rotn eller
clftc~.
Tl)e nOmH encl ltwtllltH aotlftll ol IN lnl•-trent1e rw1 ert: ltlcllarCI anct Oretcll•" Morano. tots ll•k••. Cott• Ma .. , Celltor11la n.i. The n•"'" oncl blltlnatt addttlt ol Ille lnlt-lr!Of'llfe,.... er• Ciiano Sup IM a..no toall L ...
UU llerl\llltl Clrclt , "'' .t., H1111lln9111r1 leMll, Calltorlll• fit.ft
Tll•t Ille -t1Y ""''"""' llareto 11 da1<rl-In """'•I a•: fwmlhlt'I, ll atwr ... 1qwl•m•nt. lraoenom•. 900Cl wlll I••••. l•attllotCI lmprovem•""· cov•ftant 1'101 to compat. and ••-NM, and It IO<atacl II IOIJ ...... Cotta Mffa. Colltorrll•
t262• Tiie _,,..., name ..-ct llY tPle Hkl traMlero" al Mid IO<atloft 11 A.I.TA. OINA OAtltY Thlt Dlllk .,.,.".' II twble<I to Calllornla Ufttform Com,,,.,cf11 C-Se<llon ttOI That u lCI Dull lrentfer 11 tnlendtd to
111 con1ummetod at th• elfl<t of
SI ltVICE UCltOW COM~ANY ~ 0 lo• 211, Wotml,,.t•r, Catllornlo
'2"1, OI\ or ..... Mo•tll I "'1 Tll•l Ille 1•11aattlw1111119 c11lm1 111 Ill• ••er-referred la llereln 11 F11>ruary 1'1 lW'J
So lar al It •no-le Mid l11l•-Tron1I•,_ MICI tl\lencllel Trar1ti.r-utt<1 1111 followtne -ltlonal llwtlneu namtt •rlll ..,.,,.., .. , within ,,,. ,,.., ..
Y .. rt I•" !Miii' _,. Daleo Feoru.,.y J, ,..,
cnonos.,pi.. ..
Sollne Sook l " lftltftde4 T ran•lt•-H ltYICI •&e•ow COM~ANY 14JU IMdl l lft.,
lllutMIMw, CallhnN nta Pu1>ll1NC1 Oranee Coot Dally Piiot. '•llruory •. ttta W.,
PUIUC l)ft(
NMtUJ P'ICTITIOUI IUSINIH N"""I ITATIM•MT Tll• fOllowll\Q PH'°"' ••• dOll\9 l>•Jtll\tH •• WOOOllltlOOE TOWNHOMIS 11100 Gllla1tt Irv Int CA t2114 ' WarmlnQIO" -...ment Company. a C11ifornta corporei1o ... 111oa Glli.tta Avt lrvlne CA '1114
E G W1rmln9to" E"torprlu1 1ncor11or•1tO 1 C a tlt or~l a corporet...,, 1110D OllltH• INIM. CA n1u Tiii• Olltll\IU h <OftCIWCl•O lly O llmlttO l>Af1,.rtlllp
CorPOtallon Name WarmlnqtO" Mlftaoam.,,t c-y J-P wermlnqtO"
Prtllcl9M CotPOrallOft Na,...· IE o. WorMll\OIO" Efttarprllff ln<woor•t•CI E O. WarmlrlQIOn Pre1lotn1 Tiii\ tlAll-1 WU fll•d Wltll Illa CO..l\ly Cltr1< of Orenoe County 01\ J.,,
tt IMl 11111142 PulllltlleO Otano-Coatl Dolly Piiot.
~•II •. "· U, Merell 2 1"2 Us.41
PllUC ••f
NOTICI 0, MAIUKAl.'S ULI Ne. ltUtt PL4tNTIP';: lL 001tA00 IANK, a Calllom1a corperetloll OIFENOANT JOHN "OC>aFFl!lt. •I al lly virtue of a" uec:.,.1.,. IS-on January I, ,.., tty Ille Mwnlcl,•1 Cowrl. C•nlr•I Jwdlclal Olllrl<I, Coun1y ol OraflQlt. Slale of CallfOmla,
-• 1 ..... 1 •M•red In ,.,,.. Of IL OO"AOO llANK, a Catlfornla <arf>O<alloll M ~I U"ecll'°'I a~ •ealn1I JOHN ltOOllllf'Elt anCI KATHY "OOl!FFElt H J"4tl'Mf'll Cle•tort IMWll\t a Mt llatalKa Of l7,0U '1 K1YAllY MOii Mlcl J~t
Of\ lfl• -· ol ,,.. l•wen<e of .. .., Ue<Wlloll, I ll<tW i.vlecl MHI\ all ti. rl91'11, 1111• aftd lftlefUI at Hlcl
'~"' *"°" l'I .... ~· '" Ill• Counly of Oranto, Slala of ca111ornta, det(flNCI a• 1-110wt1
RIPOlltT Ofl CONDITION 1 Con1011cs1t1no domHtlc 1ubsldlarlt1 of the Newoort
Harbour National Benk of Newport BHch, In tM
1t1tt of Cellfornla, et the close of butlnt11 on
Otctmbtr l1, 1981 published In rtsOOl'\M to call mad4t
bv Comptroller of the Currency, under tlttt 12 ,
United StttH COdt, Section 161.
Char1tr n~mbtr , ...
National lanll ftetlon Number t4 Deller Amounts
In TftouHnclt
AlllTI Ctsh and due frqrn
depoJltorv 1n1t1tutlon1 • . . . . • . • • , • , .. , . . . 2, 119
U.S. Treesury Jt~urltlts ...• , • • ............... 92
All othtrsecurltJH .. .. .. .. .. . . .. • .. ....... 150
1Ftdtral funds ~old and securities
purchased under aQrtemtnts
to resell .. , . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • , •.865
a . La.ns, Total (txcludlno
unearned Income) . . . 31 .2S5
b . Less: Allowance for
possible loan losses . . . • • • • • • . • • . 333
loans, Net. . . . . . 30,922
Banlt premises. furniture
and fl•turts, and other Htttl representing blnk premises ............. 711
All other assets . 1,023
TOTAL ASSETS , • .. • .. • .. • 39,882
LIABILITIES
Demand deP<>'lts of lndlvlduals,
part!"ershlps, end corporations . . . . . . . . • . . •. t37
Time and savings deposits of indlvlduals
partnerships and corporations 29.5•7
All other deposits , . . . • . • . . . ... , . , ... , . . 20
'Certified and officers' checks . . . . . . .... 80t
TOTAL DEPOSITS . . . . . 34.SOS
Total demand deposits . ...958
Total time & savlnos deposits 29,547
All other llabllltiea..... . 577
TOTAL LIABILIT IES
<excludi~ subordinated notes
and debentures) . . . . . . . . . . . . 35,082
EQUITY CAPrTAL
Preferred stock
No. shares outstanding
Common stock
None
a . No. shares authorized 675,000
b . No. shares outstanding 500,000 !par va lue). 2,500
Surplus....................... • •. 2,SOO
Und ivided profits and reserve
for contingencies and other
'1200) .uoo capital reserves . . . . . .
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .....
TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO
EQUITY CAPITAL ........• 39,882
MEMORANDA
I amounts outstanding
as of report d•t•l
Standby letters of credit, total .
Time certificates ol deposit
987
In denominations of
S 100,000 or more 22,069
Total deposits •..........••.............••...•. 33,668
we. the unders19ned d irectors attest the
correctness of this statement of resources and
llabllltlH. We declare that It hat been uam!Md by
us. and to the best of our knowledge and bellef Is true
and correct.
/S/ Madine Carpenter
ISi William A Schmidt
ts / Richard Flagg
I, Thomas E. Gruenwald. Vice President and
· Comptrolle~ of the above-named bank do hereby
declare that this Report of Condition Is true and
, correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
I sl Thomas E. Gruenwald
1-29-82 l"v.....,.. Or ... CMot Dally ,.,.,., ,,_ t, I* H7~
HM11 .. MOTICI TOCltlDtTOU 01' IUUt TltAlll.,llt
llKt. tlt14M7 U.C C I Nelke It ,.,eoy ,, • .,,to creo11orto1
Ille wltNI\ ,._ t•e!'lltror• thal • bvlll trant .. r 11 aboul to t.. m-on portor1al prooo rh lltrtlnalltr c1t1crll>eel Tiie nOmH al\CI llUlln"u aCIClrHI ot ti. 11\lendeel tr.,.mror\ art JOMllll -Fl•ur V99fllaU" 1J4.JS Jeffry ltoeel, lr¥1nt C11thlrftl• t2714 Tll• IO<allon 1n Calllornl• ol tll• clll•t 1ucv1tv• otflco or prlft<lpal 1111neu ottl<• of 1111 1nt1ne110 lrontt•ror It Mme., •IJO•• All other bu''""'' n•m•• ef'\d addreuu uua D• 1111 1ntoftaao lr•ntf•rofl wltllll\ tllrH Y .. " IHt pall IO ,., H 11,_n to tll• lftttftC)eCI
Ir •n•t•r-M erw ftOl'l4' Tll• name 1n<:t '"'Otl\<t ol 1110 ll\lel\Cled ,,.,,,,., .. are Touran Salalll ll1njbo r '5U ¥••••••1. Cyor•u. Calttor"la Coltforftle QlO That Illa pr......,y P6rttnant l\er•to I• d .. crfllecl In ..,,.,Al., LUNCHEON ltESTAUltANT .... It lo<ateO al IS4U Jlfff"/ "MCI, lrvtne, C•lllorftle
"'" The l>Ullneu name uMCI by Illa u lCI tr•n•ttrort 11 Mlct IO<alton I• J4$0H' LUIKM 110)( Tllet Mid l>ul• lrontltr 11 Inion-to w cont11mmatael al Ille o•fl<t ol l!SCltOW l'.HCOVNTE"S. INC,. 17J10 1••<11 lllvCI., Hul\ltneton Guell Caltto•nt• .,..7 "" or alter Muell 1 ,..,
Tlllt 1111111. transfer 11 tuDloct 10 C1lllornto Uftllorm Commefclal Codi
le<tlon 110t Tiit ft---tt• Of ,,,. peroon wttll .,,.,,, <11111'11 may l>a 11110 11 £tc•ow ENCOUNTEltS, 11)10 l•ac II l lvCI , Hwntln9to" 11 .. cll Catltorl\la 82M7. -11>e 1.,t CllY •or mine clalrnt 11'1 Al\Y ,,...11., •hall .. ll1bru•r• 26 "12 wlllcll h lllt ltlltlllMt Cley -•• IPle <onwn'lmallon dale •pe<Hlacl allO,.. O.t.ct fl-.-y2 ,.., T-911 Stlflfll "•"I._, ,,,,..-Tran•le•H •scaow 1~9lra1t1, 1Nc 1r• ._,. llltd . ............ -C'll. Ca. n.ll aw .... ..._-~
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MOTICI TOa.T•ACTO•I CAU."'0 POtt 1101 kllOOI 01\lrld COAST COMMUNITY COL.LEO£ OIST•ICT 11111 0.oelll""· II 06 A M Of tho 11111 Clay of W rcll. ,.., Pla<t Of lllCI ltKtlPI OFlltCI'. 011 THI! PUltCHAllNG AOl!HT, MS. MA"IAN PEltlt l N. CO AS T COMMUNITY COLLEGIE OtlTlttCT. IJ10 ADAMS AVI!, COSTA MHA, CA
110• Prol•ct ldonllfl< 111on Name OltANGIE COAST COLLl!O I llOOKHOltE "JtTUltl!S ANO
IOUl~MINT., ll10H~1 ....
~••u ~•-"" on fll•' OfflH of Pl\yll<al FKlllll .. PIOMlnv tTfatt•• c-..le•l Ootrt A or II, JOfln ll'ott••. Otr•<IOr Goelt C-.munlt, Call ... Ohtrtct, UIO AGam1 AO ,, Cott• MeM,C4mltt NOTICE IS HEltEIY OtVEN lllal ,,,. al>O¥e-n1mee1 S<-• Olnrkt Of ore,... C-ty, Celltor11ta, actlnQ by end 111ro..011 Ill Governll\f lloerCI, ller•lnatle r rolorrecl lo •• "DISTRICT," Wiii ............... ""' not later 11\an ti. olJO.,...telaCI time, ... 1.a blcl• lor !Pie awerCI of a <olltrecl lortllea-prejKI llCI• tNll De ,....,_ tn aw flta<•
10.ntllleel -· and "'•" ... ~ 1nC1 pullll<ly •••Cl al011d •I Ill•
abo••·tllltd """ -place. Tll•ro will II• • uo.oo C1epo1ll reqwlr•CI for HCll Ml Of l>Cll lfo<u,,,..,tt lo ouarel\I .. Ille retur11 In 90011 <Ollelltlon wllllln 10 cMIYI att.r I,.. bkt oa•ftll\O .. ,. CHECKS ONLY/NO CASH loch 11111 m111t conform AM l>a re-tl"9 to l"9 (Ol\1'9<1 dO<W-"h lacll lllG "'all .. occomp.enlH tty Ille M<vftlY r ... ,,.., to In tlla <.Ol\tract Oocum•nh -by tPle 1111 of or_...,
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Thi OtST"tCT llal CIOlalMCI from lht Ofractor ol ,,,. Department Of ll'tdvllrlal ll•lallon1 Ille e•n•rat prevolllne tot• OI per diem .... , In tPle lo<allly II\ wlllch 1111• worti I• lo lie pa rl111,.,... IOr MCtl er*" or t y119 ot wo rllm•n naatltO lo aHcutt 1111 contra< I 'lllo• rai.. are on Ill• al Ille OllTltlCT office to<alael at Coa1I Commulllt y Colltee Olllrlct, 1170 Adam• A-. C•te Me .. , CA t2U., Coplu mey lie OCltalnocl.,. , ... .,.,.. A
copy ti ...... reltl lllall 119 "°''" II Ille lob1lt. MAc~-~ •• ! .lltT OADASHIAOIW, ............. e .. IPe<lft•d ,., •• to •II wor•m•n ""' "~~ joint ~ftl~(tl,lfltfloefttca ,mllloyect by V..m tr1 IN •lllKlllltn vt' UlOI 111...n'-Ori,.., I tll• c-v ltttw•r fff O!'a1111 IN contract.
n~ "-· ounty, Stele of Catllornte. WILL lacll blG or Pt'OPOMll •llall 119 maoe SIMrma110tb.C.llf9rnle'14U ILL AT l"Ul\.IC: AUCTION TO o..t or 111bml!WCI or1 1 hlrm hirn .. Nd nm t11.-e IOHl'.ST llOD•• l'Olt CASH Ht1Ar1oln..cOl\lreclC1oc-11.-PuDll"*I 0rln9' Coa•t Dolly Piiot, (payelll• at llme • Mia In lawful m1111 be accompe111ed by a caltli.r't Jan 16, Feb 2. •.It,,.., 01.fl ney of ,,. ""4Mcl ltetttl at' Ille <lle<k, • certlflH <lie<-. or a t>tct•r't
ront of IM,.llUAL T .. ltll'T and bOnCI '"•"-not''"'"''"",..,.. ot DAN llllllldlne ., '" Watt ll lr•I Ille amOUftl Of IM llWI, ,,, ..... ,.D .. to treat, T11t U11, Cllllw11I• t1tlO •II ,,.. oroer ot. ot for tilt ~It tf. Mid ruauc •t1E
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Ille Covf'lly It«~ Ill ttlt CM'ly Of r-------------Or8"98l Al"Ho ...... J1MI, Mor• commoftly llnowft al > ltlmroo, City of lrvln•. Co111\ly ol Or•nQt, Si.ta 91 Calllor1\la NOTICE IS Hl!ltllY OIVEN tllal "" TuHcMly, Merell 2nd, ltt2 at 2·00 o'clock p rrf at Couftt'r Ctvl11,.llH, ..01 Jamtior" 90\lltvaro. l'ront of CovrtllO..M), Clly of N9Wj181'1 ... ell, County of Or•noe. s1a1a of Calllernla, 1 wlll H it al Pllbll< a\K1IOI\ to IN 111oi.-' blCl•r, to< c .. 1111\ lawful~ Of Illa Ullllacl Stalff, •II IN rlollt "'" .,,. lntarttt of .. 1c1 1~1 ~ In IN alto,.. dlt.crl-pl' ... 11., Or to mu<ll 1--8t may IM IWCHt«\' la
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tttot Le .... "" ~ .. *· Min ton Viele, Ce .... I 111'1 ttl<Cllh '"'".......,Or.,._ CMtt Oally '''*'· ""' '· "· u. ..... .,,.
Tho for0901nC1 oc-.i10 Of per diam
w .... ,. ~upon a -i.111t ... ., Of •lvhl Cll ~ TN rot• i.r llollday el\CI over11mo -" •llell be at tta-1 time 8ncl-"eH. 11 111•11 be rne11cia11ry u11111 ,,,. CONT"ACTOlll lo wi'IOm Ille contract It •••reed, and 11pon .,., tub<Olllr«lor 11rtder lllm, It pay not leu tllan IN Mid -lllH ratot to All wor•1t1en ""'P .. vact tty tNm '" Ille UICllli.tl of Ille (tfttroc1. No ti~ may •llMr•w 1111 11111 tot
a ...,foci el """' 1601 daYI ailar Ille Claltt Ml fw Ille tOIMllftt of lllClt. 4 PtYl'IWfll boftd -e Ptl'fwmente llfftd wlll bf requlnd prter le e'l1<11ll•11 tt tit• tantrt <t Tiit "''°""" ..... INll lie In lllt letm •t tol111In11119 c...tr«ldt<-lt ~ ..... • ., Ner!Mft I . Wal-
lllC ... ry.llt. e..f'dol._ lt11.iltlled Or .. Cotti Dally l"ttot. ..... ," ,. ....
Basketball
go~s cold
Wooden favors shot clock
If HALIOCK .~ ...........
In the lut two week1 ln January there were 1
dostn oolltte baaketball IAD\01 ln which the
wlnntn1 tum• acored tewtrlhan 5a polnll.
That hi th of 5a, by the way, beJon1ed to Penn
State and the Nlttany Llona managed that tot.al
only becauae their eame a1atn.at Pitt stretched
Into two overtimes The Panthers mana1ed Just 48
that nl1ht.
Instead of the January t h aw , coll11•
basketball, Ukt the weatherman, supplied a deep
freeze.
Here's a 1core Crom colle1e basketball In
January· Colaate 25, Princeton 24 Takes you back
to the d1y1 of th~ t wo·handed 1et shot, doesn't It'
THE SAME NIGHT that Colgate and
Princeton P'*t tht ball In the Ice box, North
Carolina State beat Georgia Tech 49·40 That. at
least, was 1 partial defro1ttn1.
Twice ln J anuary, free&Jn1 Maryland has
scored Just 40 polnta In a same with d1Herent
results. Lefty Drlesel's Terrapins lost tn overtime
acalnst Vlrainia 45-40 but beat Duke 4-0-36.
Here are some more Icicle scores· Top-ranked
Missouri 41 , Kansa s 35 : St. Bonaventure 30,
Ru.tiers 29; Ke ntucky 34, Notre Dame 28. 1n
overtime; Wyoming 27 , Brlgh1tm Young 25.
And, for~ piece de resistance, High Point 12.
Elon 10.
High Point? Not th et night.
The •lowdown ls be1lnnlne to disturb some
serious observers or college basketball T~e
solution ls simple· It may be lime to put the shot
clock ln the aame.
That suggestion comes from no less an
authority than John Wooden, coach emeritus at
UCLA, who won 10 NCAA champions hips
Including seven in a row -In his last dozen years
on the job.
"Yes, I would favor a shot clock," Wooden
said "Not 24 seconds like the pros. but maybe 30
or 35 seconds ·'
THE FREEZE STRATEGY 1s used by
overm etched team s to prevent racehorse
shootouts against superior teams. and it is clearly
• valid approach Wooden and o ther critics
appreciate that "I can't criticize a coach for using
that strategy if he thinks it will help hts team." he
said. "But the beauty of basketball is the action
the game provides. And the freeze is no action at
all ··
That's exact ly the point. Fans are paying ru11
price for a game a nd shouldn't be forced to sit
,through a game of catch which simply shortens the
real playing time in the game.
"I rem ember one year North Carolina State
and Duke played a gam e," Wooden continued
"They were both fine teams, but they played a
freeze game. The halftime score was 3 2 and the
final wu 7-5, I thlnk That's not right, for two fine
teams to play a game like that "
T hat game -t he act ual score was 12 10, N C
Stale -was played In 1968 in the Atlantic Coast
Conference tournament. On the other coast at the
time, Wooden's Bruins were in the midst of a
47·game winning streak Later there would be an
NCAA record 88-game winning streak with
powerhouse team& led by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
then Lew Alcindor and later Bill Walton that could
blow you ri&ht off the court. Naturally. some
opponents tried to freeze UCLA out o f those
win ning streaks.
"SURE, WE FACED IT," Wooden said The
way to handle it 1s with a pressure defense nol a
full court press. but an a((gresslve. pressure
defense . And when you get the ball. don'l shoot
wildly Just play your normal K.ame. lakin~ R<>od .
high -percentage shots "
Or, you could p ut in rules that would force the
other teem to play the game the way it was
designed to be played, instead of turning the ball
Into an oversized ice cube. A shot clock. forcing a
team to surrender the ball every half minute or so,
would achieve that
The teams In over their heads would squawk.
of course, because it would deprive them of a
chan ce t.o steal a game. But a more sensible
course would be for weak-sister teams lo
schedule opponent.a in their class instead of trying
to knock otl the heavyweights with boring ball
Reagan salutes
NHL players
WASHINGTON <AP l President Reagan
seemed aa Impressed with hi• National Hockey
League guests as the officials and players of the
NHL were w1th him.
And the president, ever the entertainer -he
even skated In practice with an NHL team while
ma king a movie back in 1939 made everyone
feel at ease with his opening remarks at a
luncheon he hosted Monday at the White House.
"IT'S A THRILL tor me to see Gordie Howe,"
Reagan slid, rcferrlna to the leeendary right wing
who retired two years a10 at age~ "I rem ember
m y mother taking m e by the hand lo see him play
''Gordie, would you believe I was a
teena•er"" the 71-yeat-old chlef executive ad4ed
amld the lau1hter of the 4-0 NHL AH-Stars and
assorted lea1ue re~resentatlves.
Rea11n dldn t spare the 1ame's c urrent
supentar, Wayne Gretzky , from hls comment!,
either •
"Rumor bad it thet our team here in
Washlnfton I.I ~yln1 to 1et you," Reaaan said to
the 2l·yt1r-old 1corln1 1en11Uon, who wH aeattd
at the head table .
"I w.I told Edmonton 1eta two flret·round
draf\ picks ••• and the state of Texas." The pre1ldent Jl10 saluted tht sport.
''Thh nlittd sport has coMected the border
with Canada and the Unlted State• and lt ls
1omothlnt that 1houJd nher be overlooked;' he
11id. "We're more than nelchbora. we're frleodl.
Tbl1 sport repreaenta what l1 Mat 1bout that
relattonablp."
NHL Prealdtnt Jottn Zte1ler preaente d a
replica of the Stanley Cup and an All·Star Jersey
with the No. l and "Rea11n" printed on it to the
prealdent.
0 TRI ONLY WAY Wt coWd come clOM to
honorinl you wu to '" lb1t you tel a rtpllea of
what \Mae ~tnU1m1n ~ ao bard for -UM Stanley~
.. J ~ w111 tttllAI U\e rul thlnJ," 1&MS "
t.b• p1"9ldmt. "l wu ansloul to bavt lt dltplar-d
btre.11
------·--••
I
APW .......
A NEW HAT F'ormt•r Dodger Davey Lopes
tries on his new Oakland A's rap after the
trade wa~ tompleted Monda~
Magic's fans
still booing
By The Associated Press
Earvin "Magic" Johnson, his image scarred
three months ago by a messy coaching change on
the Los Angeles Lakers. 1s still smiling his way
through the basketball season
"As long as I'm smiling, it means I'm having
fun on the court," said Johnson, whose wide,
infectious grin is as much of a.trademark as his
nickname. "The Lakers are moving and we're
exciting."
THE FACT THAT Johnson believed lhe team
wasn't moving and exciting led him to speak out
bitterly after a loss to Utah Nov. 18, saying he
would rather be traded than play a half-court
offense with the Lakers.
The next day, Coach Paul Weslhead was gone,
and Johnson's 25-year, $25 million contract with
Los Angeles naturally led people to believe that
the man who performs with sleight of hand on lhe
court had made the coach disappear with a fli ck of
his tongue
"H I had known they were going to fire the
ooach, I wouldn't have said anything at the time I
did," said Johnson
··But I had to say something about the
situation. When we move the ball, teams have
trouble defending against us. when we don't it's a
lot easier for the m "
Since Pat Riley look over as coach, and a
speedup offense replaced the slowdown s etup
under Westhead. the Lakers have gone on to post a
33·14 record, third best in the National Basketball
Association behind Boston and Seattle. Johnson
has done nothing to tarnish his place alongside
L~rry Bird. one of the best all-around players in
the league.
DOTH 1mas
LOVE Crl'C'k Li Funl·rul services
WILLIAM MARSHALL -.ull be held on Tuesda).
LOVE , a rf.'Sld(.'nt or Febnaary9,1982at2:00PMat
Newport Beach. Ca Passed Pac1f1c V iew Mortuary
3wav on February Ii, 1982 Chapel with the C rescenla
Born September 16. 1908 in \.'.<.1lley Masonic Lodge. #652
lnd1anapohs, Indiana tie 1s !'&AM off1c1atmg In heu of
survived b) his \\-lfe Esther f I o we rs me mo r 1 a l
or Newport Beach. Ca . contnbut1ons ma) be made
daughter Sharon Rasms of to th!" Masonic Home
Costa Mesa. sons George Pactf1c View Mortuary
Love of San Fernando Ca Newport Beach directors
and Louts Love or Oregon. 1 GARDNER
step-son Anthonv Shepherd E D N A M A R I E
and 16 grandchildren. also GARDNER. resident of
brothers John Love of Santa Costa M esa. Ca Passed
Barbara. Ca and George a""av on Feb~uar) 5. 1982
Love o f Alhambra. Ca , She " s urvived by her
sisters Eva Buser of daughters H elen Carr of
Glendale. Ca , Elizabeth Fresno •• Ca. granddaughter
Mahoney of fndnrna and Linda Carr of Texas. Jan
Helen Deggendors of Walnut Patton of Santa Ana. Ca •
--------------.Pam Jon~ or lrvme. Ca ..
grandsons Oamel Brougue
or Anaheim. Ca . and Donald
rlHCI '80.,,_S
IMITHS' MOITU.MY
627 Majn St
11unttngton Beach
S36-6S39
P AClffC V•W
MIMOllAl. PAltl
Cerretery Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pa<:rflc View Drive
Newport Be a<:h
644·2700
MKCoaMM:ll MOITUAJ111$
Laguna Beach
494-9415
~unaHrlls
76&-0933 San Juan Capistrano
495-1n6
Carr or Fresno, Ca and l:l
great grandchildre n
Graveside services Tuesday.
F ebruary 9, 1982 at H arbor
L awn M emorial Park
Services under the direction
of H arbor Lawn·M ount Olive
M ortuary of Costa M esa
~o 5554
MODLIN
LLOYD C MODL I N ,
resident of Costa Mesa. Ca
Passed av.ay on F ebruary 6.
1982 He was 60 at the time
o r his death Loving husband
of Audrey. loving fath er of
M ichael D Modhn and Mrs
Patt1 L J ordon . also
survived by 3 grandchildren
He was an e mployee of the
l..os Angeles Times In lieu
of flowers the family
requests donations be made
to the American Lung
Association P rivate family
services.
PEllGRIN
lltCTITtOUI tull .. HI
NAMl ITATIMiNT Tfl1 lollowl119 jltrun h doln9
llwtllWH et
Cl) JAYNA AUOC:IATl!I·
IHTlltTAIHlltS, 121 J AY
Mll.aURN, MOI W9'r-M A ..... hilt
SI, H1111llnglon llMc:ll, Ce t14M
JIMM Mllllum Smllll, ,.., ........
Or , HllMI,,..... 9Hcll, Ce.~
Tlllt 1111\l""t It Conwtl.cl 11Y Ill
lndlvlcluet
J-Mllllur11Sll'llU1
Tlllt t\All-1 WM lllecl wltll IN
COUlllY Cito ot Oten .. C-IY .,.
J-rylS, "a "'" ... P11bllllled Oreft91 CMH Delly Pllol
Je11 "· 2t, Fell. 2, t, 1912 1t1-p
PIO .m
PICTtTIOUI IUttMaU
NAM9 STATIMIMT
Tiie lolfowl119 "'"" I• dol11t bull!WUH. THE COSMIC GARDEN. IU I~
Stfff'I, H-' 8MCll, CA ntt.J.
DOREEN ANH GVHTHl!A. 110t0
DowMy A-. • 10). llellllowet, CA
t070. Thi• -1MU 11 CONlllCltd tlY ell
lndl•ld.,.I 0or .... cunther
... 11111
•tCTtfliOW._ .... UMIJ ITAUaMMT Tl•• , ......... .,.,_ •••• ,,.,
~-... 1.0ltlTTI VAltllTTI I.TO , 1.0ltlTTI VANilTTI, tit_,. ..,._, ,., .. ,, ~ 9-0I. tA ....a.
1.0ltlnA JO 141.0lVtA, tit Utll
IWHt, M-' -..c:tl. CA~
Tlllt ~ 11 ~IH -... e11
lllflv IAIM
~Jea.lf!Vle
Tfllt ...._ w• ,. ... wttll Ille e ... 111, CINt. el Or-. C:-r Oii J.,.
"· 1"2
PICTITIOUS aut1 .. UI NAMI ITAflMIMT
Tll• lellgwl119 p., .. ,. I• delllt
1111~··· l'ltOOltlHIVl AVIATION
DIVl!l.Ol'MINT, UOI hevlew,
C-11• .... MM, CA nw.
IUCHAltO A GADIOtS If I, llOl
'9evl1w. Cl"-491 Mer, CA '2US.
Tlllt IMliw.1 II ~Wf ~ ...
•IWllWlcllOel.
IUCIWrO A 0.-oit If I
Tlll1 N~ Wet llleel wltll Ille
:eunty C .. ,_ of o..,.. Counly.,. Jiii
~. ,..,
Piiia """II~ Or.,... C•~ Detty PllOI. .... 1, '· It, u. ,.., S042
'9CTITtOUS eUllNIU
MAM9 ITATIMINT T,.. tor-1119 .,.,..,., .,. ootnt
Dl!illltUet:
THE AOl'llAM COMPANY. 101 E
11111 Str .. t, Ho 2000, C•te Me ...
C•lltornle "'21
II Mea Adrien, l·U SI Cfe lr
Str .. 1. Ca.la Mt11. Cetlfomle •M» L11cy E. AOrlen, 14.J St. Cle fr
SlrH I. COiia Mell, Ceftfor11le n.26
Tiiis buslr>Ha It COflduCI"' DY I
oenere1 _,_IC>.
II M. ""'len Tnla sw..,_I w .. 111eo w1111 the
Co11nty Clo•k ot Orenve Cou11ty °"
Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/Tut1day. February 9, 1982 H/F ca
l'ICTITiout IUatNIH
MMlllC ITATl ..... T Tiit lltltwl11t ,., .. II It •tl11e
M llltH" VIDlC) Pt.VI, tttl Wa""' ... $1111• Ill,~ lfftll, C• tl .. 1
Allltl O. •11t111ell•lfl, 1112 Velonl>M Or Hurlll.....,. luotll, C• ., .. ,
Tllla lllltll•tta It (trlO\ICI"' OY ...
INllvl-1
Atltn D Olllllltfle"'
Tllfa ·~ _, llled wtlll Ille Cttillly CIH11 el O•tl\99 Ct1111ly Oii
Jenvery IS, 1"3
"'CTITIOUI aUAIMIU
NAMllTATIMIMT Tiii toflowlllt ,_,....,, .,. dolnt
llwliw.••t: su•,SAIL5 L.l.d., 200S w •••tiff
Wlte tol. NtWj)Ol1 ... Ch, CA '1..:1.
M••"'9 JMnlnt lll•Wll, "" Allw A.,,.., N...,_, .... II, CA n..,.
Tllomet Cellton ll•wll, 4:M Allt0
A ..... , .. ....,_, aM<ll. CA.,..,
Tllh llullMll It tOlldY< IHI by •~
ftdlvldwal
T lllt•ll
Met\he J a .... 11 Tiii• __ , ,. .. 111..i with the
Cew11ty Clerk of Ot•f199 County °" ..... ,, '* ''"* ....._.1.-o..,. c .. si 0111y P11ot
IUl'SlttOlt COUltT 01' TM a
ITATI OP CAUflOltNIA l'Otl
TM• CIOUMTY 01' o ...... a
Ill IM ..... 9' ... ...,OOUlll ..
ION VAN'tltAN
Ne A· llllOOt ltOllt TO IHOW CAVIi l'OA
CH•NOI or MAMI Wllereet, l"9 ,_.11"41 .. .., v ..
TltAN II ....... tit.cl wllll llW cl9rk ..
tllh .. .,,, tar •" .,.t r c11a11el11t OtlllltMr't lllmt !rent ION VAN
TRA,. te JOIO'f VAtHO CMAH&L
IT II HlltllY o •D•it•o , .......
pt •Hnt lnle,.tl•d In ••I• melt.,
..... , ....... tllltl ... rtll lt.••fl',
,., .. ., "' o.-tmtnl ' .. ·-, ..... wlly 1111• -.ptlt•lllll .. , ,-.. Of
neme •MUld Ml tit tr'"'-f
•tCTlflOUt eutu""
NMlla tfAHMeMT ,,_. ........ ,.. ,...._J .,. ......
~ .. .
"llOl'alTlll WllT HOMI
LOAli, * "'II tirHt, lllt•,..•I ._.. c.t...,.tw.a
•flOPlltTtll WUT, INC e
Ctlit.,nl• <..,_,•llon, * ntll .. ,. .. .. .... "'1 llMCll, Cellflrnl• ~
Tl>1t• ht!Mtt It Uftd11<led lly 1
<~-·-""""* Wftl. I~ 0...H Smith,
p ........
Tlllt ... .._. ... ""'"' Wltll .... CO\lllly Clerk M Ot1119t Coullly ell JMootry 22, ,.., p,,,.,.
""-""*' Of ..... GN•I Delly .......
J111 ,., ..... t, '· 1•, 1912 MD-41
•OnC8 W T•utT8&'HAt.e -~ Ori ,.,,_..,It, t-el Mi• AM , •u•tt• te11t111•1 <•'""""'· • Celll.,1111 ctt•••t llet1, u •wri ..... l'tMI T~ _,.., ... .-.....
le Ot4lf 9' TIWI ,__, ~ I,
lt1t, H .......... WI .... U:U1, -
U t, el Offklel kw•. ea.c.,... tty,
J ... ,. A.,.C Pletlle, e11 IHW'llM'tlW
-"· •• ~. Ill tlle office tf ~ c-1, .. .,.r • o,...,.. c-nty tuwel~,'#tUHUA~
PUILIC AUCTION TO HIGHUf
llOOllt ~ C.uH I_, .. ti II ....
tf .... "'l9wM -y el lilt U11llM
ll•tetl .. : ~ .. Mtlft,....,"' '--tl•n Ttclt I-Met CWptUI*\ , .. Het111 erN4wu, ..... ,. A11t,
Cetltonlll, elf tlellt, tltle -Im., ...
"""''" •• flllf -..... ~ It -H id D-of T•11•I 111 I,_ pr_,,y
IT If "URTHIA OROIAIO tllM •
COOy of 1111• ..... r 10 •llOW t lUM ..
1111llll•ll•d 011<1 • wull tor tow• tU<ctttlW -h prior lo the OIY ot
.............. In Tiit D•llY Pllol, • •llueled Ill N kl C.Ullly •llCI Slele
HtcrlMdn ·
Ut soot Tr.ct Ho mi, In ,... Gtty l'ICTITIOUI IUllMIH ol c .... MtM, .. pet otlep tKO'*d 111 111w.,4llltf or etntr•I flt<ul•llo11 1--------------
prl11tt4 111 ,,,. County ot D••noe.
Oelt J-ry li, 1''2
AOHALOH PA!MNfA Judoot vi ,,,.
S.-lot Cou'1
L.ewOHke ..
It-lit OIMI .Ir
Altl"•tYetl.ltw
n•M-P-Stl"ltl
1 .. UAM,Gall-
171•) IMMUI ,.ubll•-0reft91 (oest Dally Pliot
F•D 2 t It. 23 ,.., Ut-1(
MAMaSTATIMaNT ..... 114, p .... u lo ., 01
Tiit lotlowlfle ..,_, ., ... ,llO Mlec•lf-~. In Ille on~ • .,
llu•ln1u •• t .. c:-tv lte<Ofdff Of,..., C-y.
HOLISTIC NUTRIT IONAL Tiie altH I edd•tu e nf tll\H
PRODUCTS. LTD . 0..1"' P1ut, 270 c.,,.m.,. c1in19netl011, If .,.Y, .. tto4
Newport G1111er Ori ve, Newport rte I or..-rty dn<rllMd eOOve If 8HCll,Ce ft6'0 Oevld Gr-m, c;.ne.el Per1-. llU,,....loecl to .. IM II Cemflll. C"UI IN .. ,c;..11tom1• I JOl Forett ..... , \AqUlll lie.ell, C.. Tiie "'*'•'-,,_ "'::::'.:l
'1.Sl --Je<k vi .... G«>ef•I "•rlN• IOI = ~.·=:i:..=:~ "'!c':;,"t-
F0te11 • ..... ~ lleecll, C• '2UI dttltMtlM, tf ..... "'°'"" lle••MI
Tllh !Mnlntu It COflduCled '" • $eld .... wllf ........ IMit .,..,_,
llmtteo PMtnenlllP <•w•Mtlt .. ••rt•lr, ••Pf"• e.
,ell •. 1• n. Merell 2 1tn tt>-t1 • PUIUC NOTICE J eck Ultff, lmpl!M, ,.._.lllftt tfflt, ,..»MIOll, or G«>efel Per""" •iKu,.,..,_... It pey Ille t'Wftalftl"'
PICTITIOUS aUSIMHS
MAMI ITATIMIUIT Tl•• tollowl119 per.011 It dol11g ,,., .........
YAMAHO INTERNATIONAL I0441
._,... Al_. Aw Founleln V•ll•Y
Celll '2'°9 Oo11eld IC y.,.,....,. 1oue Apeche
RIVff, F-lnV•ll•y,Cellf n1oe
Tiii• bldiMU II COndV< t•d bV en
lftdMduel.
~lclK Yemano
Tiii• SW-I we1 llled wlll\ lhe Cou11ty Ciera of Orenve County on
Th!S •tel-I Wtl 111.0 wllll Ille prlll(I~ WM el Ille -.tll N(11t.O
Ms-met ~:::~~;~:.:I 0<""99 COUlllW Oft by .. Id D1ef et Trvtl. wltll '"'""'
I TATIMIMTO,WITHO•AWAL l'lll .. T lller...,,M ,__ •1n .. ld110 .. lt l
,ltOM Publl"*l Or-c ... , Delly Piiot lldvenc"-II -· "'*" Wit "'''" 91
PA •TN I •IHI I' 0 PI • AT I HG .. Id 0-et Trvtt, '-· C"-'9" and UMOllt Jen " :i., Feb J ' "" ,_, .. , U-wt Of Ille Tnnlel .,., Of the
PICTITIDUS aUSIMIU MAME -------------·I tnnll tr-lrt Will 0..0 .. Trlltt The UllClenlVMCI hereby 1te111 MJC .TIC( 1°' .... -,... _ _,y Hll,,...lecl 111 T'lleflCllllOulllu•IMHnemtof ______________ , •• .,. Ul4,i4S41
I,,. Pertnet1hip 11 PAN AMERICAN PICTtTIDUS austMaSS Tiie Nfteflclery -..... Oeed of EOUITll!S MAMI ST•T•MINT Tr1111 llenlolore ... c uUO •nO
111 The flclltlou• llu•lneu ,.,,.,. Tne 1011owl11g person 11 doing O.fl••red lo Ille_".......,• wrlltan
1teten1tnt of the P•rtnenhlp w•• llled 11uslnen u O•<••••llon of o.1 ... 11 -O.tne11<1
In Or•no• Counly, Celllornl• on JT PLUMBING. ,304 Redlend1 lor Sele, •ftd • ••lllen Mollo ot October 10, 1'1t Or , M•*POtl Btecf\. C• 92660 D•leull e11d El•ctlOll lo Sell. Tf\e
UI , .... P<'lntlpel PIK• 01 lluslrw•• Jey 0 T••-kt, UCM Redl•ndt lllldl taltned G•UMd H id Notice OI
of ,,,. Per1ntr\111p " 1oc11tc1 el 1112 ur . Mt,.PO<I !Mech, Ce, '2660 Oefe11fl -Ele<llOll lo Sell lo 0. This Itel-I we• llled with the
C:ounlY Cletto Of Ot-County on Jflll
1'. ,..,. '"'w Feb. s, "'' P1ata
Pubfltlled Orenoe COHI Dally Piiot. Publl.-0r•"IJlt Coe•I Delly Pllol,
J ... u.,.., n. 1912. DuPonl Drive. Suite 202 1tvlne. Tn1s llu~ntts h tond<l<ted bY .,. ••corded 1" lhl county wfler• lfle , .. ,
Cellfornl• '271S lnotvtouel or-111111°'•1'°·
t•> The pertMr w1111<1nw1no trom Jey o hrnow•k• Deft: J_.., If. •"1
P1.-2 !et1. u. l'.O. t, t , ••. 1"2 Jn.a Fell t . 16, "· Merci\ 2. 1"1 s,..,, Publlthed Orenvo Coelt Delly Piiot, llle Pertnerlhlp Ii ROBERT L BERG Tnls 1telitme11I we) 111.0 wllll 1"9 :.~cr'::::::· Cot1>.
ruldlng •t ll&4 Coroni1 L•ne. COil• County Clt rk of Orange County on lly s... Kelly Feb. 2, t , 1', 23, 1"2 SUC2
l'ICTITIOUS eustNISI
NAMa STATIMINT
T II• tolfowln9 peno11 h doln9
bullMU .. P ILO-GENIC OF HOLLYWOOD,
13 Quiet-· lrvlM, Ce n7u
Kyp SUU.r, ll Oulet -· l••I .... Ce '27U Tiii• t>uslneu h conoucted by on
1ncitv1ouer l(ypSuuer
Tllll 11ei-1 ... llleO •Ill\ the
Counly Cl•"' 01 Ot•nve County °"
J....,.ry lS. 1912
"ICTITtOUI IUllMHS
MAMa STATlaqMT
Tiie lollowlf'lt '"''°" 11 dolnt ..... 1 ....... ,
ALI. AMEAICAH llUSIHl!SS
DIAECTOltY, 16'3 Ponderowo, COii!•
Me .. c•nw
RICHARD JAMl!S STOAY, ''" P--· C.U Mtu. CA nt.21. Tiiis _,,_, 11 conducted by en
tlldl•lduel
IUcllenl J SIOry
Tllh Uot.nwm ••• llled wltfl 1"9
Couftly Cle"' Of 0.Mve Coullly on J.., Jt, ,..,
Ptl*J
l'ICTITtOUS aUStMIU
MAMa ITATl.WMT Tiie tollowl119 .,.,....,. ere doing
butlnenH
CALIFORNIA OIESEL SERVICE,
>00t HertlOt lllWO • c .. 1. Mew. CA n.2• °°"9lel J Slefnff. 14 Orelle• Bey
Or., C..,.,...del Mer,CA ntb
AllOUst Peuf Roni. tltl Wlnd>H Dr
Ore,..., CA ....
Tiiis buSl,...1 Ii COndu<leO Dy I
-··'~ Douo ... J ~.
Me .. , Celllornl• nt'6 Jenu••Y IS, 1'111 A11tflotlred~l11t•
Tiii. •Rte~~~ ..... ,r~ 111~ -Ill\ ,~. '11110 "7tS Stpulvede Btvo
County. c~~;·o, o'..n;; Co11n1°;: J:..u~~·~F~T:. f~·· 0•11~ ,:~'.:~ ~~~~,CA 'I004$
Celllornle on Jet1U1Jry 11, 1'111 P111>tl-Or11191 CoHI Delly Piiot. 'u,.,a •-II' ~( Je11 u , Ftl> 2. •. t"2 4lH2 P11bll"*I Or-Co .. r Delly Pllol. J1J-ltllllllo
Jen U Feb 2 t "· 1"7 ., .. ., l'ICTITIOUS aUllMl'5 MAMI STATllllllMT
T nt tollowi"t per\on i\ dolno
--------------.111u1lneu ••
PICTtTtOUS aUSIMESS
MAMI STATIMIMT
Th• foflowlno pe:r1.on1 •t• dolnQ .............
AANCO. ,.... .... -. N.,.POtl
BHch. Cefltomt• •2..0
Lyle Aenoell Ut4 Beuwood.
Nowoorl llffcn ce111or11I• '1660
Tf\1\ OU1,llW'\t l' COndV<t9d bf •n
1ncUvldu.I
PHUC llTICE
,ICTITIOUS aUSIMIU
MAME STATEMENT
Tht followtno oersol"I •1 ao•n9
bu\fneu as
Plfl,., PubU.-Or-Coe11 Delly Piiot.
Publl"*l o..,. CoMI Delly "'lot '•" 1. t, "· u. ,.., su.a
Tiiis st.I-"'" 111.0 wltl\ lftt Cou11ty Clerk of Orenve Cou11ly on
Feb S. 1"1
CENTER FOR RETIREMENT
PROGRAMS f)Ol Dow SlrMI Suitt
400, N..,,_.. s..tn C111t0tnl• 91660
AenH Stimmel HOO Perk
N••POr1 8"cll C•lltornle ,,_
1,.yltR..-11
Tllli llelitmefll we• 111.0 wllf\ lhe
Counly Cltr~ ol Oret10t Cou11ty Ofl
J•nuerv lS 1'111
VALE NATIONAL ALLENTOWN
9USINESS SCHOOLS ARIZONA
AUTOMOTIVE INSTITUTE
NATIONAL INSTITUTE Of
El.ECTAONICS. SKll>ORON
COLLEGE OF BUSllOESS TAMPA TECHNICAL I NSTITUTE
KENTUCKY COLLEGE OF
TECHNOLOGY ARKANSAS
COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY,
NAT IONAL INSURANCE COMPANY
4UI Biren SI'"' N••PG•I Bu<h Celllor111192660
Jen " i., Feb 2, t, 1"1 Jlt-n -------------
l'ICTITIOUS aUSIMaSS
MAMa STATIMINT
Tiit tollowln9 p1no11 h dol110
bu•IMHes CEATIFIED SERVICES, l1U2
Se11te 1w .. 1, FOU11tetn Valley, C•
'17111
0 •1• Pelmtr Wiil, l1U2 S.M•
1 .... ,. Founteln Veltey, C• '1109
Tiii• buslnen 11 ~'"' by en 11W1lvtduel
O...Wlll
This stelefl'Wlt ••• lllocl wllll IN Co11nty Clerk ot Otel\119 Cou11ty Ofl
PICTITIOUS eUllMIH
MAMa STATlllllU!MT
Tiie toflowln9 person Is dolno _ .........
RAIHllOW SPORTING GOODS. lJ" E ltl SI-', T11stl11. Celllof'nle
'1..0
lltu~• S Swencull, IHl E hi
SlrHI, Tustin Cetltomle t-Tlllt _,,..u 11 c-ucl..S by 111
lndlvlduel
lll'\IC.I S. Sw.ncutt
Tlllt tlel-1 WM Ill"' wltll tlV
County Clerk of Ot•l\99 County °" J.,.uery 12, 1"2. Jen11•ry ,,, 1912. Plnt7t ''t"n P11bll•~ Or~ Coe5' Delly Piiot Pubfl-OrMVe Coelt Dally Piiot,
Feb 1 t. 16. U. 1"1 4"-G Jen t•. '"-I. t , t•. l"2 ~
,ICTIT10U$ aUSIMISS
MAMl STAT•MaNT Tiie fot1ow1no per1011 ft doing
butl~ ... WILDWOOD COMPANY No 1
8.,11ne CotHI, Newport a1ecll.
Celll0f'11le
Alaf'I IC-, -Wm 6!00 So • Seit Leh City, Uteh .. t07
Tbll ~""' ll COllOUCI .. tty ... 1nct1v1oue1
AlenK..-wn
Tiiis ttet ....... t ••• ti..., Witll lllt County Clttll ot 0<•"99 County °"
PICTITIOUI eustNHS
MAMI STATIMIMT
The foUowlno P•rton h dol"O
bu•hWH .,
NORLI N PAPER C().oillPAMY. 601 Brooto.vltw 'WA Y, Cosll Men
c.111or~~ De111111 Artll11r Norlin Ul
lrookvfew Way~ Costa M•'•·
Cetll0tllle n.a
Tiiis lluslnn• 11 conducttcl ov •n
lndl•ld"'I
Otnftlt A M0tlln
Tiiis 1te1-1 wn tltecl wllll u..
County Cler~ of Ot•fl9t County °"
J.,.11.ry lS. 1'92 J e11uery u, •"2 '111M7 ,.,., ...
Pullll-Or-Co111f Delly Pllol, P111>fllhed Or-CM" OeJly Pllol.
J en lt, ,.. Ftl> 2, '· t"2 n..n J en lt. ,.. Fell. 2. t. 1912 Ul-G
,,_
Pullll"-0 Ot•nQt Coe" o ... , Pllol.
Ftl> t , l•, U. Mer<ll 2. 1"2 •-2
..-1CTtTIOUS aUSIMEH
MAMISTATIMIMT
Tll• tollowl110 ~nons .,. dolnQ ...........
LI FE POWER tSlOl Henlo Or .
WHtml-,CAfttl) Mery Meyuml Vl•W~·H•ll, ISIOI
Hellley Or . Wftlmlntler, CA '1te3 Mercelle Mennl"9, 1' Sur!side CI
N1Wpor1 IM<fl, CA '2660
Tiii• bu1lneu " conducted by •
oentre I part...,."111p
,.,..,..,vrewk Hell
Tiiis stel-l wet Ill~ Wllll tM
Countv Cl9rlt ot Or~no-Counly on
Feo. S, 1"1 l'll1M$
Pubfl•""" Or-Coe'1 Deily Polot
Feb t, l•. 7J, Mer<ll J 1 .. 2 SU.al
MOC lllTICE
..-1CTITIOUS auSIMEU NAMI STATIUllEHT
The toUowtnQ oers.on u dotnQ
buslMU .. C.OAST CLEANERS • WlncttlOwer
1nr111e. CA nns
G•11• Edwerd Plck.,d )JI)
V11lven4ty, INN. CA 927'S
Tiiis -1MU I• cono..<l+d bV e11 lndlvl<Wel.
0-Pk lUlrO Tiii• -t ,.._ llllO with tne
County C..,.lt ot Or•nve County on
F•b S, 1912 '1au.
Publlsr.d 0reft91 Coe1f Delly Pllol
"'" t. "· n . Merell 2 ,.., u112
SAS F•nenc1el Inc • C•hforn•• CO•PO••llOtl llOI Oov• s1 ... 1. Sullt
400, M••-1 8ffcn C•lll0tnl• t1660
11-SUmrntl
SAS fl.....clel. 111(
Stewn• xott.
Prtt-.1 Tiii• \lel-t wes 111..:! wlln lr.
County Clor-01 Oren~ County on
J•nu•r• 11, 1"2 ,.,,, ...
P11bll1""" 0.•"9' c .. st Delly Piiot,
F•D 1. '· l•, 23, 1"2 ,,,_n
PUil.JC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUSIHEU NAME STATEMENT
T ht tollowtnQ pers.on• •rt do1nQ
llullntu •• MISSION PLAZA APART MEN TS
llJl Mitchell SltMI l u•l•n, Ce 92'80
Roy E OAIY & Comp•nY.
COtl>O••te Woods Bld9 14, Sull• s:JO,
f7'7 Wut HOln Strut Owrlend Perk, Ke11 .. s~IO
T "'' builnH• IS conducted by • ~nerel pertne"NP
Rov E Oely & Co
MMY Eti.r. Dely P•rlne•
Tiii> ll•l-••• llllO wttn ttw County C .. ,, or ore...,. County "" J.,.uuy 11 ,..,
THOMAS WILLS Al.e•'-'--
F111 ..
,_ M9-' ~~ .• WM nt
... w~ ...a.. Ce.,.,... P111>11.-Or-Coe\I DeJly Piiot
Fell 2 •. 1•. "3. ,.., »7..,
'9CTITIOU5 ausrMEH
NAME STATEMENT
T ht fo11ow1no Of'rs.ons. •r• doino
,.,.,.,.
Publl"*l Or-Co .. I Oeuv PllOI
Jen 19, Jlo. Feb 1, t 1"2 Ua.tl
FICTITIOUS aUSIMIU MAME STATEM•MT
Tnt followl110 pe,.011 It doing
buSIN\,i~
MOT IVATION ASSOCI ATES, ~I
010 Miii Strfft, Irvine. Celltor11l1 •2714
81tber1 Tr•vl• Sloan, ~l Old
Miii Strff'I, lrvlrw. C•lll0tnle ttlt4
Tfl)s bY>lr>tu I• cond11cted by en lnofvlouel
&Ml>M• T Sloen
Tf\ls 1lel-I ... , Ill"' Wiit\ '"• County Cl••k ot Or•n<I'! Counly on
J1nuary " 1'117
1'11U ..
Publl•~ 0r•"9t Co.u OallV Piiot
NEC Resident Scllool\. Inc . •
C•tUorn1• c.oroor•t•on. •161 Birch
Street, Newport 8ettcn. C•lltornt•
'1..0
T hl1 bu••n•'' 1s concwctto bY • porlllon NEC Resocwnt
School•. Inc Jtfl,..y A Brill
Tiii• >111-..1 we~ Ill~ woth 11\e
Co11nly Cltrk ol Or•n<I'! Counly on
Oec•m~r ll 1911 ,11-..
Publl>""" Or-COHl Oe1ly Pilot. J~" .. 24 F•b 2. • 1"1 ln·t2
Jen 1'.Feb 2.• l•.1"2 04-111-------------
PUIUC llTICE ·
,,CTITIOUS a USINIH
MAME STAT&M&MT
T "" toltowlno per•on h dol"O
bu'tn•ss •s OIMGHY YARO. 1Wl JoeM Slr"t
CO\I• Mew. Ce '1'21 fumlo N•oet.emt. 7'2 Joenn
Str .. t, Coste Mete. C.e n•n T11I• b<Nness h conelucllO bV •n
1ndtvtd..,..I
FumloM-'<•mf
Tllli ste-wes llled wllll !ht
Counly Cter~ of Or-Couftly on
ftt>ruery '· 1"2 ,,mn
F>ublllhed Or-Coeil Oelly Pllol
F.O. 2. •. ''· Jl, I.., S~
PVlllC NOTICE
__ .,,..
,,CTITIOUS aUSIMESS
MAME STATEMENT
Tiie fOllOwl119 ... , ..... U• OolnQ
bu\1"•" •• AVA LO N BAOICERAGE
COMPAIOY "CMPot•l• Pleu, S..11•
UO Newport e.ec11 Ce '1660
AUo<lellO Bt•••-Comp1ny
tn< C• Olot•w•r• c«oorat1an) Jno E .. 11.111 Sir Ht. VtrftOft c. '0011
Tiii• 11v11 ..... Is (Oftd11Cled by •
COf PO<ellOfl
A.-.. 1ec1a. .... _
'-•.Inc Norman M Nett.on
Vktl're<'°"'t
Thi\ 1\litf'f'nif'f'\t _..., t•teo •ltl'I ow
Counly Clerk ot l>f•"<lt Co11nly on Jen11••Y 1S. ,..,
IAELL & MAMEllA
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE
rvu NOTICE bu\I,,.\\ ., ------------~
Attftltlell. WI,_ x-'caMNI t• Ave et lllt Sten, Stf 1• 1.MA,......,Ce _,
age 87. J IC!>ldent or San
Clemente. Ca P<issed away
on February 6. 1982 H e
moved from Beverly Hills.
Ca . to Balboa, Ca and later
lo San Clemente. Ca H e was
a member of the Wilshire
Country Club. and the Irvine Cout ·Country Club,
the Balboa Bay Club and the
Jonathan Club. H e slal'ted
the House <1nd Carden
furniture Store on Newport
Blvd • or1g1nated the
Thin -line F urniture
M anufacturing Compan)
H e 1s survived by his son
Richard of Corona del Mar,
Ca • and his daughter Eloise
Edmger of San Rafael. Ca •
also 9 grandchildren and 2
great grandchildren
Private serv1c~ wrll be held
later
VENOOK
H E R B ER T R O,Y
V ENOQK. resident of El
Toro. Ca Passed away on
February 8, 1982. He was a
member of the Musicians
Local Union 1313. H1 la
surv ived by hi s wife
Charlotte Venook of El Toro,
C a . sons Stuart of Irvin e.
Ca and Or Alan Venook of
Sacram1mto. Ca . brother
Dr Joseph Venook of Ohio.
s isters Dorothy Hausner of
Flor ida. Esther Sle&el of New Jereey and Bertb.a
FICTITIOUS aUSIMISS
MAMl 5TATEMEMT
Thf' foflowlno '"'''o"' .,., dolnQ
oustneuu
II G & G POWERS •1111 E 11111 Sl .
• 12 l, CO!lle Mtte, CA ttU 1
Re1101t Grenl Power•, llOt Amigo•
Wey. N""""'1 Beech, CA t?MO
Gfe•ll H P>owen, IOl Aml901 'Wey,
Newport BH<h, CA '2660
Tiii• b11slneu IJ cono11Cl•d by
flu~ndendwHt R G .._,.
TRES BIEN, SOI AvenlOe
Vaqutro S•n Clemenl• Celllornl• fan
Leri L Mc Cull0U9ll. SJ• 811-.bord C•nyon lload, !.aQun1 8••<11. Callfornla 92&SI
Jecqul• SWHI ll•2 C•fallne.
L•owne B•ecn. C•lllorn11 nut
Thi• bw•lnen I• conouct•d by .,.
unl11c0tPot•l9CI H-~llon o"'9r then eputn-tc>
Lero L McCullOU9fl
l 111• llel•,.....I ,.._ Ill~ ,.Ill\ Ille
Cou111v Clerk ot Or•n<I'! County on Je11uery IS.,..,
l'ICTITIOUS auStMIH
MAME STATE Ml HT -r "• tol low \n; per lOn I\ do•nCJ
>tHln1H •I BOBCAT EARTHMOVI NG
;PECIAL TIES, 2430 Llll .. lon Pl•Ct,
:oste Mew. CA tt•:tt>
PETER GRENFELL cle8RUVN. l•lO Llllletor> Plec•, COlll Me ... Cll>
IUU Tiiis bu•ln .. • t• conducted by an
ndlvldu•I
"91tr G dellruyn
Tiiis ste...,_t we1 llled wllll lftt
County Cltr'll Of Or-CounlY Oii J .,.
Publl"-0 Or-Coell Oeoly Piiot
Jen 1', 2• ffb 1, '· 1"1 l1S 11
PUIUC MOTi:(
FICTITIOUS aUSIMES5
MAME STATEMENT
Tiie lollowlng Pt•M>n• •rt dolnQ
bullnfl• ..
THE JOHN BOHLS
ORGANIZATION, , ... , ~cArtllur
8tvd . Sulle •U. lrwlrw, C1t.1ornl1
'171S
MOSCOW tAP1
Nlkolal A. Sem yonov, 64,
who was thought to have
played a maior role m the
Soviet nuclear arms pro~ram. died Jan 28. the
government n ewspaper
l tvesha reported
TlllS llei-1 wo 111...i will\ 1r... r:111es1 n. '"' WE S TERN EXECUTIVE SEAR CH, INC ,• Celllornl•
corporetlon. ,..,.2 Me<Artrwr 81"'1 s .. 11. os. t•vlnt. c.111......ie •nrs
Co11nly Cler~ of O••nve County on Pul>ll1twd Or-Coe•f 011lv Piiot, Flllttl
Jiii lt t• Feb 2 ' 1"1 321.n F>ublitNCI Or-Coell Delly Piiot,
NEWARK, NJ IAPl
E l izabeth B e nne tt, 94.
former secretarv to
Thomas Alva Edison.' died
Sunday
BOSTON IAPI -Jordan
M . Wh itelaw, 61 . t he
principal prc:M:tucer of radio
and television programs
featuring the Boston
Symphony Orchestra, die-d
Monday
PELHAM. N.Y. cAP>
Maurlce Robinson, 86,
founder and chairman or
Scholastic Magazines Inc ,
died Sunday ,
DENVER 1AP1 Dr
Soloman Garb, 61 , who
Feb I !'92
"'UIJ' Put>fl•-Or•nva c ... , Delly Piiot, i--------------•
feo •. '•· U. Mere~ 2. 1m •3'..,
M5t~
,.CTITIOUS ausrHISS
MAME STATEMIMT
'9CT1T10US aUSIMISS Tiie followlnt person1 ere do1119
MAMI STATIMIMT llV\l,..u ..
Tll• lollowln9 Pe,.on h dolllt CENTURY COURIER SERVICE. °"''""' n tUH Pe.... De Velencoe L•o11n• SHC ASSOCIATES 210 A~lde Hlfll, Cellfomle .,.SJ
Del Mer. Sull• IA Sen Clement• Gell L Gonco. 7tll 71\l Slrett.
Cel"orlll• .,.n Wntmln•t•r, Celll0tnl• t1613
CllrlUl111 C H•nrlc k Jlttl Monemmed M<llldl n11tel@. '42
Nl1ionel P•'1l Otlw, LllquN Mlg.i.1. Wul Petm Drive NO c. Gl•"'2•1•
c 111r.rnle ntn Celllorn1e tl201
Tf'll• butlMH Is cond11cted by • T 1111 butlneu h conduct10 bY •
llmlt..S P9'1M"lllp. o-111rer pertnenNp OwlttlN c H•nrlO Gell L Goncoo
Tf'll• lltl-1 .., .. llled will\ lf\t Tnl• Itel•'"""' wes filed wllll llle
CounlY Clerk ot Orenve County on County Clerk ot Or•n<I'! County on
Je1111ery ti, 1'12 Oecemt>er ll. "'' 1'111tltl ,.,,., .. Pulllltlled Or-Coell Delly Piiot. Pullll1hfd Or-COHI Dally Piiot,
J111. u . r:et> 2, •. 1•, ,.., :itJ.tJ Jen. t~. n. Feb 2. 9, 1"1 >29·11
d evote d most of his MJCllTI(
professional life to cancer 1------------
resea rch. died Thursday
from stomach cancer.
C LEVELAND (APJ
Joseph Tholl, 72 , a
handwriting and document
a n alyst who helped police
here solve thousands of
crimes durln1 a 27-year
Ptcnnous IUSIMIU
NMdSTATIMIMT
Tiit torrow1119 "''°"' ••• dolno bvslllfttn·
MtOWA'I' ASSOCIATl!S. JUI
Herll•Y A•t1111e. Mldwey City,
C .. ltomle .. U
GACK G. GOEN, G-•I Pert...,.,
, .. , H•rfl•T ·-· M9-ey ClfV. Cet119mle ftUS
PtCTITIOUS IUSIMIH NAMI STATIMIMT
Tiie folfowl119 perso11 I• dol11g
lluslneu n
I A) SHERLOCK HOLMES
ACADEMY OF IMVESTIGATIOM, 1111
SHERLOCK MOlMIS DfTECTtVE
AGENCY, e11d ICI SHERLOCK
HOLMES INVESTIGATION, 160
Ctnt.nnlet Wey, Suht tt. T111t111. Ce
'210S ROlllRT M SMITH, Ge11eral
P-. llleo Melfi Stnel. Suitt llO. career, dled Thund1y Hut111,......a-l\,tetttor.w..,...
Jof'lll V Lyncl\, l)Slt WhelYlbfy
DtlVt S..C. Ane. Ce '1l'OS
Tllh tllnfMtt I• c-led by tll lnell•lfuel "''' ~ .. be!llO c--. tty ---. ,.,,_.....
SAN FRANCISCO !AP) ,._.,"" 5nllt11 Ru.11ell C. A.rquetw, 80, n.rut-.it 11 ... wlUI ,,_ COUMy hud o r the firm which Clt,.OfOnfttitC-~OllJ-rylt,
tilled teat 1wmic bombs "112· ,.,_,
over the Nevad• desert and ""1>1'-Orwlot Coe• o.11v PllOI,
the brotber of the late ..... 2• t, l6.U. tta SottG
JofWIV Lyncl\
Tlllt ne--t •• tiled wllll ll>t
Cou11ty Cfet'll of Or•.,.. Coumy on
J on.,.•v", ttia ......
P11bll•llecl Or-Cotti D .. ly Piiot
"•" , • '· "· J~ "'' .,,..,
Feb 2. '· l•, ll, 1"2 S»C
l'ICTITIOUS aUSIMaH
MAMI STATIMIMT
T lie tolfowlng perso11 It dol119
bull MS I e1
IAI LYNCH REALTY, 181
L YMCH REAL TY COMPANY ICI
LYNCH REALTORS, •nd IOI LYNCH
REAL ESTATE COMPANY. 1.0
Ce11l.,.nlet Way. Sul,. 1'. Tu•lln, Ce
91680
LoulM J..,. Ubtrty Lynell. USU
W,,.mbfy Dr Sent• AM, Ce tt10S
This llu\l""I It conOll<tH llY a11
lndlYfd11el
L.oulM L. Lynell
Tiii• sttt-l •• llled •1411 1114
Coun!Y Cltrk of 0<•1199 Cou11ly on
J11111arv 1', 1"2.
Pll-
Publltllecl Ore"IJlt CM•I Oelly Piiot
Tllh 1>u11nes1 11 cond11cted lly • corporellon -lff?t E•KllllYe S.er<ll Inc
)ofWlllohh. p'"'°"'' Tf\11 •lat-I we1 UIM With tr.
County Clerk of O••n~ CCM.1nly on
Jenuery 12, t"2
MALCOLM a DAI. Y • ._..,. .. I.A. ... ~ ........
..... Otlke ... Jilt
lffw~ IMOI, Cell-•~ 1'11'621
Publl.._., Or-Cde•I Delly Piiot.
Jen 2•. feb 2. t , It."" 03"'7
Ml.IC •lll
'9CTtTIOUS eustMHS
MAMI STATIM•NT
T II• toflowtne e>«M>nl ••• doln9 butl11tnu:
PINEWOOD APARTMENTS. -------------1 Ul.0 Red Hiii Av..,,,., Tu1t1n. CA tl.-0.
Feb Z, '· I•, U , 1.., 4'2_.,
PINl!:WOOO COMPANY. C/O Roy _____________ , E Dely .. C-Y. c~··· Woocb
..-rcTtTIOUS auttMISS MAME STATIMeMT
Tiie tollowl11g person• ••• dOlnQ
lluslfteHH
VILLAGE WEST APARTMENTS,
U•tO T...il11 Vllleqe Wo, Tutlln. CA n..o ROY E. DALY & COMPANY,
Corpor-WMOt 8109. u . Sullll "*I,
1111 WH1 '*" s1.-, 0-19(141 Pet'll, K•Mt•~10
Tfllt ~MU II conclv<ttf lly •
ventr•t ~.,.rtll!P Rey ll Defy & Co -.,e11 ... o.1.,.
Part-
Tlll1 .-1 w• 111.e wltl\ "'°
C-Y ~of O.efl9' Ceuttlv Oii J ett
"· "" TMOMASWaLU
AldWC.-....
........ ~Oft ............ .. .._..,.a.di, CA tlMI ,...,,.,..,. Or .... G .. tt Dally .. llol,
"•'· t. t. '•· n. ,.., ,,...,
81d9. 14, S..lle SlO, '1'1 Wul l lOlll
Street. Qwttend Perti ICenM1 .. 210
Tiits buslneu h conducled by • ttmlled pe"'9nNp
Roy E Dely & Co
Mery Ellen 0.ty,
P9r1r-M
Tlllt ......,_, WM Ill.cl wllll -
CouMy Oel'1l of Or-County on J *' , ... ,,.,
TltOMAI WIL.U Auwc:..tr.._
•N.....,.C-Df1w,~m
.......... a..dl.CA'2Mt .. . ., ..
PUOll ..... Qrc .... Coell Delly Plklt,
F .. 2, '· "' 2>. 1"2 SlU2
MOTICIO" ~ltHl'O'tltelUTY
Nollet It lier.tty glffll tllet '"' lll'dfn.,.. "1111,.. .. ~.._tot
JOHN W . !BI LLI
Zella also of New iersey.
grandson! Chuck and Ross.
Services will be held on
Wednesday, February 10.
Im at l:OOPll at Harbor
Lawn Mount Olive Memorlol
C h apel with Interment
imme diately following
Services under the direction
o f H arbor Lawn·MOWlt Olive
M ortuary of Costa Meu
540-~~
comedian, Cllff .. C harlie 1-----------1 :.~Te:!-:!'~~.,..!:·
PERGRlN. a resident of
o.&a .... ea . for za years.
He passed away on
Saturday. February 6, 1982
at Hoaa Memorial Hospital.
He ls survived by hla wtre ol yura Opal Mario, his ldn
J oh n Per1rtn and
deu.bter·ln·law Kathy of
San Dleio Ca • a 1lster Julia Mae -?opoleskl of Big Beer Lake. Ca.. broth era
David of Phlladelphla,
Penn1ylvania and Mun of
P o m ona, ca Cremation a nd
burial at Ma by lb• N e ptu ne
Society
ZWICK Wuver" Arquette. died ~ 9llC(
ANNA ZWICK. 1 former Tuad1y. ""*' retldent of Le» An~IU, Ca.,. ___ __..._ ______ . PIC'TITIOUllUllN&h PtC'flTIOUl lUllMIH
P flUllltTATC ... NT MAMllTAHMINT auod away on Fe ruary 1, '9JC '9111 1 Tiit totMlwlllO ,., ..... , ere Clelftt Tiie 1011owl11t peuo11t ert do111e
1982. Sh• la aurvived by her 1tut1MH": ""''~••· dau1hter Dorothy Davit of • TH& v11UALt1Tt. • ....,.,. TH• c~"MA·SANOLt N O A h I C •~•~M••u A\ltlllll9> c::--••Mer, Ctlit.nll• 01toutt, t~ H•I• A-. 1rv1111, n • • m • I • • ltAMlllTATllMllMT mu Cttlflrllt.'271•
ar•ndcbUdren. Lind•. Tiie l•llowt111 .. n.... •• ...... teflery J , kllllmr .... .._,. S.ndYltfldllllo&•»«i.W., lllC.,
Harry. J ofl •nd rred ........... : A-. c....... •t Mer, C.llNml• • C•t1'°'111t ~llf'llCN'tlltll, ..,,, H•I•
i re •l ·1randc bl ldr•n . IOAT WOIUtt, -Mt!\ ..... ,, ..u Aw-. IMM,CallfM'l'll•tfJ"
' ...._.,.IMdl,c:al""""'..., Carel L'IM TrlVI-. • .....,_ Tl\lt "'9illtt' I• <olldllcltf by • u Io nea and J • t l y n. Or•\.'!:'¥· * "4111 "'"'· 11,,_ cww •• ,,..,, c.11tetlll• _,.,.1..,.
Ornealde MrVlett wtll bt .......,. ,c:.......,._. tMtS ..,.,.11111111110
h eld on Tuadl)', February Tiii• ......._ " c.tftM'9f "• Tiit• -...i-I• ct!Mlll<IM ttv • A-11•. '""·
t, l982 at 2:00PM at Harbor IMlvt.iw~NwY .... ,.1:f':::. ~..,_.,.._
L1wn Mtmorl•I Perk. Tllll....,..,. .. "... •• ... Tiiie .......... -fl ... wtttl... Tiii\ ......,_. waa 11 .... wlUI ...
'9C'TITIOUI eUltMHt
NAMI ITAT•MeNT'
Tiie 1oi1ow1119 oeraons ert fetllt
.,.,,,.,. .. It:
Ot)(t6'1 CHILO CAA5 , ... ,
Fl•41•1•• Clr<I•, Irvine , C1llltr1111 n1u 1.••~tflU "'""' •m l'l .. ater Clrtlt, ltvlN, ee111...,.••2'u Olalt L llllif", •m Pl .. tler
CtrCle, lfllN, Cltlf!Onlte mu Tlltt Ml-I• ~-lef llY on llltlM ... -M .. -!alien....., tll .. .... ,,~
~tft-Tlll• tlNfMllt -tlftf wttl\ Hit
myMtl, .,.., entr tllll4N ... Oelllf Wt twl .. , Of ,,__,.,.,. 19'1
...aA COHST"l>CTtOH ~,...
1-.U ,IOf'IOt St., ·-Hllntl ......... II. CA ftMt
Plllttl .... Or ..... c.nt DtllV Pll«.
l"MI t. 10,i._tta -
,
Ser vlc under the dl,..c:tlon C-ty Cllftl .. Gr ..... c:.iMy. ~(tent .. Ot-.. CM!tlt'f Ill (-l't Cleft. .. Of.,... c-tY M C9'111tY C*1ls .. o.-.. CMllty ell ofHarborLawn·MOWllOltve .,.....,n.,_, , ...... ,_,.,u,,• "* 1-rv••.1• 11,,.,," ,.,....,..,,.,,._ ,,_
VENEMAN Mortuary of ~ Mesa. ......... er-. c:-.e Oii" ,..... ,,..._. ar.,. c..-o..i" ...... ~or.,. c.-. °"" "'"' ""*....,Or~ C'M11t o.14y ::J CARL COOK VENEMAN. 540·5"4 , ,,_..,,. .. ,,,.. In.a ,,_,.,,...t.• .... 1w £aMt ,,_,. ....... a.•.M.• ttua Je11·"·• ~t.\99
,
lAIUIA BllCH /SDUTH COAST
Oelty_S49ff_
JUST A TRIM, PLEASE Laguna Reach mamtenanc('
work~r stands in aerial bucket and uses power sa\\-to
rempve dead fronds from a palm tree high abovt.> Het!>ler
Park Dark clouds and an early start made for few visitors
to the park Monda~ morning. allowin~ cit,. crl'ws
unhampered access to the tall palm'
Council-filing
deadline today
With the filing deadline at 5
p. m . today. IO Laguna Beach
residents remained in the race
by mid-morning for the April 13
qty Council election
Candidate and city activist
John Gabriels announced today
* * * Candidates'
night off
A "Meet the Candidates"
night, scheduled for this evening
at Laguna Beach City Hall; has
been canceled due to "Ski
Week" at Laguna Beach
schools.
The candidates for three seats
on the Laguna Beach City
Council were to discuss their
qualifications from 7: 30 to 9:30
p.m.
A new schedule of candidates
forums will be announced later
this week
he had changed his mind about
ru nnin g , and wo uldn 't be
returning hi s nomination
papers, thus disqualifying
himself from the race.
According to City Clerk Verna
Rollinger. four candidates had
yet to return their papers by 10
a . m today. They were Pat
Barry, Boys Club director ;
Terry Klein, an urban planner.
Beth Leeds. an employee of
Victoria Airlooms in Laguna
Canyon. and Ricky Slater, a
church employee
Candidates who have returned
their nomination papers,
containing the required 20
signatures of registered city
voters, include, Kelly Boyd ,
council incumbent . Dan
Kenney. director of pharmacy
services. Bobbie M1nk1n.
homeowner association officer,
Ron Williams, r e al es tate
broker. Bob Gentry. UC Irvine
administ r ator . a nd Paul
Christiansen. owner of the Hotel
California
Jesse Riddle feted
on lOOth birthday
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of -D.ity ...... SUfl
Jesse Riddle, a pink carnation
in bis lapel and a smile on his
face. liste ned attentively as
friends some dating back 50
years lauded the n ew·
centenarian.
Gripping his (ane in both
hands, the white-haired former
Laguna Beach mayor sat in his
chair and laughed silently a" his
former lawn bowling buddies
joked about the "birthday boy,"
who turned 100 years old
Sunday
M ore than 75 friends
celebrated Jesse's birthday
Monday at the Laguna Beach
Lawn Bowling Club in Heisler
Park.
Because of threatening.clo'bds.
the members, all attired in
traditional white , crowded
inside the tiny clubhouse to
honor Riddle, a 37-year resident
of Laguna Beach.
"Jesse told me the secret to
longevity ," jolted Carl
Waterbury , hims e lf an
86-year-old lawn bowler.
"He told me, 'l never drank,
never smoked, never gambled
and never ran around with
women -unW I was 14'."
Jesse Rlddle1 wu born in
Calhoun County, Jowa, back
when James Garfield was
president of the United Stat.es.
His parenta ·~• f armen, as
w a1 more th an b elf the
populat.ioa of &M country then.
The averaa• income in thoM
days wu $C2I a year. Waterbury
said, and lbe avera1e cbUd bad
only four y an of educaUoo.
Riddle t0ld lnsunnce ln Iowa,
and moved to Callf omla In 19'2 attu docton told l\im he wu
lol.DC to dle. '-
The sunshine and salt air must
have done him good. because he
late r was elected to the City
Council.
Jesse was mayor between 1956
and 1962, often holding court
under a large tree on t he
Festival of Arts grounds.
In an interview three yea111
ago, Riddle said he enjoyed his
years on the council dais.
··we always had a pretty
good-sized council audience," he
recalled. "They were interested
c itizens. but they were n 't
unpleasant about it ..
Some of the accomplishments
h e remembers as mayor
included a Sl.5 million sewer
. bond for the city; widening and
paving Glenneyre Street Cat a
cost of $225,000). and a tight
budget "of about $1 million, 1
think It was."
But his fondest recollection ta
refurbishing an old mud hole
beblnd Boat Canyon into what is
now Riddle Field
He wanted it "for the Utlle
fellows to play softball," and,
even today, Jesse Riddle tosses
out the first softball of the
season.
Jesse moved In with hls
daughters in Whittier after the
death of his wi(e, Cora, ln 1978.
The city threw a aeries of
partles for htm at that Ume.
wbJcb led him to remark, '"Ibey
mutt be~ I'm lenta1."
But be was back in town
Monday , renewln1
aequalntances with hlt fellow
law11 bowlen and former dty
employees.
And he'll be back aealn this
sprins to toss a softball to Mayor
Sally BeUenae.
On the field named In hit honor.
-·
. ••HJ Plllt
TUESDAY, FE8. 9, 1982 0
A 50-year-old manual isn't ~
0 CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
TELEVISION
82
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ideal for getting modern-day. advice.
See Ann Landers B2 .
Survey mystery unraveled
Results to be used in evaluating Laguna Beach .. City Council race issues
Bf STEVE MITCHELL Of-~,.... ....
The phone caller would lint
ask the citizen why he likes
La1una Beach.
Then he asked if the Laeunan
considered himself or herself a
conservative or liberal.
He asked for an opinion on the
need for low-income houslne in
the Art Colony, and if there
Pentathlon
scheduled
for county
The pentathlon, one of 23
events scheduled for the 1984
Los Angeles Olympic Games,
will take place at Coto de Caza
in Orange County.
That disclosure came today at
a meeting of the Orange County
Board of Supervisors from Dick
Stevens, a Corona de! Mar
resident and Wrather Corp. vice
president.
Amy Collis, a spokesman for
the Los Angeles Olympic
Organizing Committee, said she
could not confirm Stevens'
r e p o rt "I expect an
announcement s hortly,'' she
said.
In the pentathlon, athletes
demonstrate their skills in five
sports -shooting, swimming,
running, fencing and riding.
Coto de Caza is a private
community located in the Santa
An a Mountains northeast of
Mission Viejo.
Stevens was introduced at this
morniniz's board meetini by
Supervisor Harriett Wieder. The
Wrather Corp. executive is
serving as "supervisor for a
day" as part of an American
Cancer Society Charity benefit.
Stevens said he learned about
two week s ago that the
oreanizing committee bad
decided on Coto de Cau u the
pentathlon site.
He said that the five events
would be conducted over a
five-day period.
0 t ·y m p i c C o m m i t t e e
organizers thus far have
orrtcially announced that one
event, wrestling, would be held
in Oran1e Co unty . That
competition is scheduled to be
held at Anaheim Convention
Center in Anaheim."
should be further development
on the city's hillsides.
The telephone survey was paid
for by a group calling ltsell
La1una First, but any of the 400
or so respondents would not
have been told that had they
asked.
"We can't tell you who is
paying for the survey." said
DEAD AT 51 Doug Fritz.
founding m e mb e r of
Saddleback College physical
education facility. has died
Saddleback's
ex-athletic
director dies
Doug F'ritz, a founding
member of the Saddleback
College physical education
faculty and later the college's
attiletic director, died Feb. 3 in a
Carson City, Nev .. hospital
following a long illness. He was
51.
Mr. Fritz, who also fuided the
fortunes of Sadd eback's
baseball team from 1969 to 1974,
was on hand a year ago when
friends and college officials
dedicated the South Campus
baseball field in his name
Mr. Fritz stepped down as
athletic director in early 1980
due to his illness. He joined the
Saddleback faculty in 1968 when
the college opened, having
taught and coached previously
at Costa Mesa, Tus tin and
Marina high schools
Mark Rosenstein . project
director for th e San
Francisco-based Public
Responses Co.. which polled
Lagunans by phone the past few
weeks.
The survey laker was even
less illuminating as to the
proposed use of the s urvey
results.
"I can't tell you that. either,"
he said.
But a quick c heck with many
of the 11 or so a nnounced
ca ndidates for the April 13
Laguna Beach City Counc il
e l ectio n resulted in th e
discove r y Lag una First 1s
paying for lhe s urvey
Ron Will ia m s . him self a
candidate for one of three seats
o n the coun c il , s aid the
2·year-old organization plans to
u se thE-s urvey results to
··evaluate the issues "
K ent Snyder. chairman of
Laguna First, said he would
have preferred the group's
participation in the phone
survey remarn "anonymous,"
but admitted the organization is
funding the project.
"The only way to make aure
the issves are clearly defined for
the April election is to poll the
populace in Laguna Beach."
Snyder said.
He said his group will u.se the
results or the survey "to help the
candidates we back undenstand
where people s tand o n the
issues." But, he said, Laguna
First has yet to announce a slate
of preferred candidates.
The phone survey, comprising
a bout 40 questions. has been
completed, and Snyder said the
results will be made public in a
week or so
Council vote likely
on Laguna parcel
Laguna Beach city council
members will con s ider fmal
approval next week of a
s ubdivision bet ween Park
Avenue and Alta Laguna
Boulevard that would see 12 new
units allowed on a 47-acre
parcel
The land , s haped like a
reversed "L," is owned by Alta
Laguna Associates, whose
president is Leo A. Fitzsimon
And while the general plan
s hows the potential for 49 uruts
t o be cons tructed on the
property above Canyon Acres.
other fa ctor s lowered that
number to 19, then 12 as the
project went through cil,,.Y
governmental bodies .
Those factors included nearly
37 percent or the property which
shows slopes or 50 percent or
greater and nearly 80 percent of
the land with 30 percent or
greater slope.
Last week the city council
voted 3-2 to tentatively approve
the pro1ect, with some changes
regarding location or the
proposed units Mayor Sally
Bellerue and Councilman Neil
Fitzpatri c k opposed the
conditional a pproval
Under a new tentative tract
map, submitted this week by the
r---
1
I I TENTATIVE
I TRACT
I 10054
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Deity-....
SUBDIVISION Twelve new
units would l>t! allowed on a
H -acn· parcel in Laj!una
B t• .1 c· h 1 f p r o J e c 1 1 s
ii PJH'O\'t•d
developer, seven of the dozen
lots would be located on Park
Avenue and the remaining five
on an extended Alta Laguna
Boulevard.
The developer would have to
construct about 300 feet or
roadway to extend Alta Laguna
Boulevard from its current
terminus
[;#' ~~ Rough . ~ L . C times Jor rvine ompany
LARGE TAllGETS DEPT. -Recent history !Or'
Irvine Company executives has been a time that can
fairly be characterized as a period of agonizing
reappraisal. They have been fighting battles on too man~·
fronts at the same time. A 1 ppa rent y,
. ' . ~
~'\ MIRPHlll ,~ TIM
they were los ing
on all of them.
It started some
time back with
mas ter planning
for the final phase
build -out of
Newport Center.
the commercial and high-rise complex in Newport Beach
on the hilly knoll above Coast Highway.
Then there s urfaced the question of increasing rents
for residential leasehold properties in Newport and
Irvine.
Finally . there was that barbershop m Irvi ne
IT ALL ADDED UP to an enormous public relations
pratfall for the ranch company that has been a pivotal
enterprise in the history, tradition and growth of our
coastal region since the early days when oranges and
cows were big business.
The way tblnga bave been going for the landl
development ranch hands in recent times. they may all
now wish they were back in citrus and caWe.
Just look at the record. Irvine Company brass trotted
out a pretty well wrought proposal for final development
phases of Newport Center. It was promptly assaulted on
several fronts and ended up with a Newport Beach
committee circulating petitions to stop it.
• THESE FOLKS GOT enough signatures to neutralize
a City Cot.men approval of the plan and force it into a vote
of the people.
No 110DDer had t.hla come to pua tban the ~
started notifyina some leasehold residents that their
lease rents would rise upon renegotiation. Screams or foul
filled the air.
Next thing you know a committee claimlng 4.000
members formed to do battle aaainst the company on the
lease hikes.
Meanwhile, over tn the city or Irvin'. there was Jtm
Anderson's barbershop out in University Park Here, the
company execs tell the barbel' was not creating enough
foot tramc for the shopping center.
DESPITE THE FACT that AndcrsOn had been in
t -•
Citi.zlens' committee preparing to roll upon the lrvme Company
business for more than 13 years at th{' location. the Irvine
Company people notified him that hts lease wouldn't be
renewed
Now plain C'itizens and the Irvine Cit~· Council itself
were rising up to the barber's def ens('
Meanwhile. the residential leaseholders in Newport
or at least some of the vocal ones were vowing to
join opponents of Newport Center when that master plan
came up for a vote next June.
Put it all together and the Irvine Company was
abruptly suffering Excedrin Headache Number 412. A
real biggie.
Thus il was in recent days Irvine Company Pres ident
Peter Kremer appeared before the lrvine City Council
and vowed more consideration for barber shops . Monday.
barber Jim Anderson got a new lease
ltvine Vice President Robert Shelton in the early
pre.dawn hours today was before the Newport Beach
coui1,•il asking that the Newport Center plan be scuttled
and the election be called off because of "the climate In
lhe community.··
YOU SUSPECT THAT the ranch people have indeed
beaten a strategic retreat on a couple or fronts and wUI
pause to re-group.
One thlng about the Irvine Company is that It's so blg
and so visible that peorle just love to fling rocks at it.
And just look at a l those gla~s windows. .
..
. Dilly Plllt ' TUESDAY, FEB. 9, 1982
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
TELEVISION
82
83-4
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A 50-year-old manuql im't
0 o~
IRVlll
ideal for getting modern-day. advice.
See Ann Landers 82.
INCISION INTRIGUING -No one said being a scientist
would be easy. But Marlis Ayer. Teri Williams. Wendy
Holm, Nikki Woodland and Amy Rogers give fi s h a
thorough inspection.
Curiosity comes • in waves
Annual report shows Marine Institute shipshape after first year
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of -D .. ly f'llGt S'-ft
Officials of the Otange County Marine
Institute at Dana Point Harbor say they
have two reasons to celebrate.
First, the oceanographic studies
center was a year old Saturday. And
second, the fledgling facility is
managing to pay its own way.
Dr. Stanley Cummings, director of
the marine institute, said the amount of
money being generated through
educational and recreational programs
is meeting expectations.
"Our, charter says we have to pay our
own way," Cummings said . "Our
budget estimates show that we have
turned the corner and are now earning
as m.Qch as we sp,end."
The· institute operates on a $<t50,000
annual budget, earned from f~ and
private donations. Work on the
3,900-square-foot building was com·
pleted a year ago at a cost of
$600,000.
The marine center served more than
30,000 Orange County students in
kindergarten through community
college last year. according to
Cummings.
The small structure houses offices,
classrooms and laboratories and serves
as a shore learning base for various
marine studies programs.
Construction of the institute was
financed with $400,000 in county money
and $50,000 each from Rancho Santiago,
Coast, Saddleback and North Orange
County Community College districts.
Plans call for the building to be
expanded to 40,000 square feet on the
i·nstftute's Olree-acre county-owned site in the west basin of Dana Point Harbor.
Cummings said the center won't be
competing with Marineland and Sea
World theme parks that attract
thousands or visitors each year.
''Our primary emphasis isn't
entertainment," Cummings said. "The
major distinction between us and those
POWERFUL PINCERS -Robby
Dorris watches how lobster wiggles
parks is that they offer a passive type of
demonstration where people simply go
and watch."
He said the programs al the center
stress active involvement in the
scientific process, leading to first-hand
knowledge of the area's marine life.
Cummings said the major attraction
at the institute and largest income
earner is the Pilgrim, a modern replica
and namesake of the sailing ship that
author Richard Henry Dana sailed on.
The brig, owned by Marion Barich of
Long Beach, was brought t.() Dana Point
Harbor from a San Pedro boat yard lost
May after a phased purchase
agreement was reached.
Cummings said the Dana Point Ocean
Institute Foundation, the fund-raising
arm of the marine education facility.
has yet to come up with the SS00,000
asking price to buy the ship.
He said $20,000 had been paid so far to
keep the Pilgrim in Dana Point, $10,000
from the foundation and $10,000 from
shop owners on the harbor. To date, the
Pilgrim had earned about $55,000 for the
institute.
Cummings said the institute sponsors
overnight stays on the ship for young
people, as well as family weekends,
where those bunking onboard act as the
crew. At least one couple have been·
married in the stately square-rigged
stiip.
Cummings said. institute officials
would be asking Orange County
Supervisors for $30,000, to be used to
prepare a master plan for eventual
expansion of the marine center.
Planned expansion would include
more exhibits for the public, as well as
research facilities, which would be
manned by personnel from nearby
universities and independent
laboratories.
''How much we are able t expand will
depend on how much we can earn,".
Cummings said. "I am happy to say we
are at a point now where we are
self-supporting."
Most popular at the institute this
month, be added, are whale watch
cruises which leave the marine center's
dock ~everal times a day. The vessel
Sum Fun takes passengers oU the Dana
Point shoreline to watch the southward
migration .or_ California Gray Whales.
MINI MANEUVERS -Mlc~cope shows Tim Schultz and
Paul Kleizo what can happen ln a drop of tidepool 'water.
CUTS ouTi..INEO -1 Instructor John Rogers gets institute
class started on dissection procedures for fish .
l
Arson called
cause of Irvine
school blaze
Arson -not an electrical
m alfunctlon as previously,
believed -was responsible for a
Jan. 20 fire that did more than
$200,000 in damage to Sierra
Vista Middle School in Irvine,
school district administrator
Dave King revealed today.
"Our insurance investigator
has determineo that someone
stuck a piece of paper in the
edge of an exterior locker and lit
it," said King. "There were
probably books and papers in
the locker. It smoldered for a
while and started to spread."
The fire in the girls' locker
room building of the school at 2
Liberty was first reported to the
Orange County Fire Department
at 3:20 a .m. on Jan. 20. The
two· alarm · fire was limited to
the one building at the
10-month-0ld school.
Orange County Fire
Department officials were
unavailable for comment.
Fire officials said after the
fire that they suspected that an
electrical malfUJ'lction set off the
blaze.
School omcial King said that
the Sierra Vista Middle School
campus -like the other
campuses in the Irvine Unified
School District -isn't fenced.
''We like lo spend money on
landscaping instead of fencing,"
he said. "These types of things
aren't supposed to happen in
Irvine.
"I don't know how you can
avoid these problems. We can't
tum our schools into prisons."
County population
older, ·more varied
By JEFF ADLER
Of .... Dally ...... s-
Or anJle County grew larger,
and its residents became older
dnd more diverse between 1970
and 1980.
That's the conclusion
government analysts have
drawn from 1980 census figures,
released recently after two
years of compilation.
The 1980 census sets Orange
County's population at 1,932,709
people, up from the 1.4 million
counted in the 1970 census.
Current population estimates,
however, place the county's
populatjon at 2,027 ,000 people,
according to county
demographers.
The census also sets the
county's median age (middle) at
nearing 30, an increase of more
than five years from the 1970
rP.nsus.
More significantly , the
percentage of non ·whites living
in Orange County increased
from 3 percent in 1970 to nearly
14 percent in 1980.
The county's Hispanic
population (both white and
non-white> was set at 286,333 by
the new census, qr about 15
percent of the total population.
Also, Orange County has more
than 25,000 black residents,
more than 20,000 Japanese
residents as we11 as large
populations of Indochinese,
Filipino, Korean and Chinese
residents.
The census reports that the
median value of owner-occupied
homes in the county was $108,000
in 1980. Cities which had the
most expensive median housing
o.c. Population.
1970 1.4mill
1980 1.9mill
Latest estimates 2 mill
GROWING -Graph shows
the increase in Orange
County population over the
past 12 years
prices were Laguna Beach,
Newport Beach and Villa Park,
all with values of $200,100.
Although the number of people
living in Orange County
increased, the number of
school-age children decreased
between 1970 and 1980,
according to census figures.
The number of children
between five and 17 dropped by
nearly 8 percent.
Bruce Nestande, chairman of
the Orange County Board of
Supervisors, commented that
the census shows "we 're
becoming more 'mixed' as a.
people , socially and
economically, so that there is:
probably no longer a single
·Orange County lifestyle so often
portrayed in the national
media."
UCI engineers
plot zany antics
UC Irvine 's annual
Engineering Week, which
consists of a series of zany
events ranging from a "nerd"
coolest to paper airplane
competitio'\, will be helc1 feb.
16-20.
On Feb. 16, contest.an~ wUI nr
Irvine eyes
property
/or shelter
Irvine city officials say they
hope they won't res9rt to
condemning property lo acquire
it for a new animal shelter, but
the city council will consider the
move tonilht just in case.
Ai their 7:30 p.m . meetlna at
the council chambers, 1'7200
Jamboree Boulevard, the members will hold a public
hearin& on a proposal to
auhorise condemnation of 10.S
acres of land at a Sand Canyon
A venue and Irvine Center
Parkway. ..
, T'-e l~ belon1s to the Irvine Con1~any. which bu aa~ to
donaate lt to the city in extbanCe
for future aasurancea for land
development.
In a letter to lbe council, cltJ
Admlnlltl'atlvo Ser•lcH
Olrector Michael McNam1ra
aald t.be company baa "shown
1ood faith" ln neaottattona by
otferiftl to donate llvt of the .,
acret the clty eventually hopes
to acquire. o1
homemade piper au-planes orr
the Engineering Building
balcony at 9 a.m.
The nerd contest. in which
engineering students dress as
they believe they are perceived
negatively by others, will be
held at 11 a.m. in front of the
same building. At 2 p .m .
students will drop eggs in
specially designed
shock-resistant containers off
the building's balcony.
On Feb. 17, a bridae building
contest will be held at 9 a.m. in
Room 136 of the Engineering
building . Frisbee golf
competition begins at 11 a.m. in
Room 331 of the same building.
Al noon in front of the buildiq,
a "Simon Says" contest will be
held . Tug of war contest.a between various campus groups
begins at 2 p .m . in the
engineering parking lot.
On Feb. 18, a five kilometer
run will start at 8 a.m. in tront
of the engineerinl buildin1. cars
powered by rubber bands will be
raced at 11 a.m. in Room Dl ol
the Englneerin1 bulldln1. A
tricycle race begi.Ds at 2 p.m. in
Campus Park. A Video 'ft: contest begins at 3 p. m. ln
331 in the Enalneerinl Bulhtlna. On Feb. 19, a 1enerator
crankln1 contest betlna at t
a .m . in flulit ol the Sn~
Bulldln1. A· Rubik'• Cube
contest ls adMdaltd for 10 a.m.
ln Room 331 of tbe bulkltq. A
car rally will at.art at 1 p.m. In
the en~ parkllul ldt.
The public II lnvtt.d ao vMW"
Ah .. • eventa free ol ~. For \..mofil tnronnat.laft cau ...-r•.
1.
• •
IUlll CUii YIH lilOIWI llllY PIPER
TUE SDAY. F EBRUARY 9. 1982 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS -
Newport Center expansion repealed
' By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. DIMy ""' .....
The Newport Beach City
CouncU put an end to months of
controvert)' urly tod1y by
repeaUnc the Irvine Company's
$123 million Newport Center
expansion project.
The development p lan, the
s ubject of a s uc cess ful
referendum drive, originally
Barber
to stay
• in center
By RICQARD GREEN Of .. Deity ...... l<ft
Jim Anderson the barber has
won his battle against the Irvine
Company, a victory that means
he'll be able to continue cutting
hair in a company -o wne d
s hopping center in Irvine for the
next five years.
In a 2 : 30 p . m . ceremony
Monday , Anderson signed a
five.year extension on the lease
for the University Park Barber
Stylists shop.
This r e presents a policy
reversal for the company which
had drawn sharp criticism from
Anderson, his customers, cit y
officials and other shop owners
when it tried late last year to
cancel the lease because the
shop didn't attract enough foot
tramc.
Following the ceremony in the
shop at Culver and Michelson
drives, David M. Koch, director
of property management for the
company, downplayed the role
public pressure played in the
company decision to extend the
lease.
"The pressure didn't have as
much lo do with it as the
Ctoperation of the people here,"
Koch said, looking around the
barbenbop at Richard Radtes.
owner of the University Park
Coi Uures shop and Roger
Elgram, owner of In & Out
Photo shop.
Elgram's shop was to have
displaced Anderson's. Instead
an agreement was reached
whereby the photo shop would
occupy 900 square feet of unused
s pace at Univers ity Park
Coitfures; which is adjacent to
the barber s hop.
"We 'll all be happ y
neighbors .·· Radi es said,
beaming.
Asked why the feared lease
cancellation had become such a
big issue , Ande r son said,
"We 've been here for 13 and a
half years and a lot or people
have drifted through.
"l "d like t o thank all the
people who have helped us I'm
happy to be here.'·
The earlier Irvine Company
decision to cancel the lease was
criticized by the Irvine City
CounciJ, which demanded lhat
the co mpan y prese r ve
neighborhood business
establishments.
Responding 1.0 the cril1c1s m.
Irvine Company Prsident Peter
Kremer made a rare
appearance before the City
Council several weeks ago and
promised the company would be
more responsive to the needs ·or
retail shops leasing space from
the company.
was to be put to a citywide vote
in June.
But the council -on a 4-3 vote
-agreed to toss in the t.owel and
call off the election at the
request of the Irvine Company.
R9bert Shelton, a vice
president for the development
firm, said it was unlikely that
the project would be glven a fair
chance at the polls.
"Our discuss ions In the
community," Shelton told the
councll, "clearly lndlcat.t1 that u
a consequence prlmarlly or the
leasehold controversy there is
a n antl .Jrvlne Comp1ny
constituency that will seek to
s trike at the compan y by
opposing completion of the
center.".
He called his fl rm 's request an
··unhappy conclusion" but one
that "we bope will mitigate the
divis ive climate we see
developing In the community."
CounclJman Philip M1urer,
who voted against repealing the
plan which the council approved
last summer, called lt "a black
day for Newport Beach.··
· 'lf we rescind this project
there wiJI be a lot or Inflated
egos ln Newport Beach," said
Maurer, "and I won't Jet that
SCIENTIFIC Physics pro fessor Jim
Rutledge explains o per a tion of a machine
t h a t ca n i so late m ateria ls at low
.,...,..... .... ~
temperatures a t a science clink for high
school teachers at UC Irvme
'Science clinic' he.Id
UCI f acuity lectures high school teachers
By GLENN SCOTT
OftMDIMy ..........
The high s chool teachers
heard lectures on subjects as
small but basic as quarks and
neutrinos and as large but exotic
as a deadly new disease from
the Amazon.
It was all part of the first
"science clinic" presented at UC
Irvine by faculty members
trying to improve the academic
quality of their freshmen.
To a chieve their goal, t he
professors in the uni versily's
science fields have focused on
the training their stude nts
receive prior lo college.
Thus, about 100 high school
scien ce teachers from
throughout Southern California
but especially Orange County
were on hand Saturday to tour
the university·s science labs and
hear the latest news of scientific
sorcery
The day-long workshop was
organized by UCJ c hemistry
professor Dr. Mare Taagepera,
who has made headlin es
previously with her efforts to
prepare students for the rigors
of a university curriculum
She was careful to note that
the clinic by itself wouldn't solve
th e problems she said are
common to higher education
nationwide.
But she added: .. There bas
been enough concern about
education in generaJ that we're
maybe turning things around."
In offering the science clinic,
the UCI professors had to tiptoe
along the high wire or diplomacy.
They didn't want to give the
simplistic impression that high
school teachers have failed -
o nl y, s he explained, that
e ducators at all leve ls must
work h arder to coordinate
efforts.
Their attempt seem ed to
succeed.
"We're pleased to have this
at tention paid to us as science
teachers ... said John Kalko, a
physics teacher at Woodbridge
High School in Irvine , during a
lunch break.
Said another teacher, Jim
G r egson o f Wilmington's
Banning High School: "All this
information will gradually fllter
down to the s tudents "
Dr Taagepera and colJeague
George Miller both said they
sense that the quality of new
students 1s beginning to improve
from a low point about three
yeers ago. But they agreed more
improvement is necessary.
They said remedial classes in
the sciences still are necessary
for many students who aren't
prepared out or high school for
collegiate coursework. To
complicat.e things, Dr. MIUer
npted that the state Legislature
is becoming less willing to fund
such courses.
Neither the utI professors nor
the high school teachers were
paid a penny for the Saturday
event. Dr. Taagepera said she
has attempted to address the
current c r isis .. half out or
desperation , hair from
self-protection.··
She teaches freshmen
chemistry. In fa ct, she drew a
few laughs during her opening
remarks Saturday by telling the
teachers.
''I've been t rying to teach
fres hmen chemistry for the last
five years ... and I'm getting a
little tired of hea ring m y
students tell me sulfur is a
colorless gas.··
Sulfur actually is a yellow
solid.
A neutrino meanwhile, is a
s ubatomic particle which
co·discoverer Dr Frederick
Reines of UCI explained during
a lecture has never been shown
to have mass. or weight
A quark is hypothesized as
another particle that may
cluster to form neutrons and
protons -once thought to be as
sma l l as you co uld get,
according to Dr. Riley Newman.
Nixon loses round on tap~s
And the infectious Chagas'
Disease, sa id Dr . Stuart
Krassner, afnlcts as many as 15
m illion people in South and
Central America , and no drugs
or vaccines have been developed
to counter it. Fe!1-eral court rejects illegality claim on screenings
group ever to do this to the clty
nain ...
Mayor J ackie Heather was
joined by council members John
Cox , Don Strauss and Paur
Humme l in r escinding the
massive expansion plan.
"I feel this issue has been
dealt with in a destructive way
and pushed into the political
are na," satd Cox "l don't think
the Irvine Company should have
to put up with t~if mob scene."
Coun t'i lwo m a n Ruthel yn
Plummer. who voted against
repealing the project, charged
that referendum leaders used
"diabolic deceit and distortion"
to gather s ignatures.
Ron Covington. an elementary
srhool teacher and leader or the •
referendum drive , said the
drawback~ to the Newport
<Su CENTER, Page AZ>
Girl, 13, says
suspect shot
her, friend
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Of tlle Delly ..i1et S\sH
A 13-year-old Lake Elsmore
girl told a closed preliminary
h earing that she a nd a
companion were gunned down
last September by a man who
pulled alongs ide them in his
truck in Cleveland National
F orest and called out. "Hey
girls ··
According to transcripts
released today. the witness.
Kelly Cartier. identified former
Costa Mesa resident Thomas
F rancis Edwards, 37 . as the
gunman who wounded her and
killed a rompanion, Vanessa
lberri, as they hiked near Blue
Jay Campground on Sept 19.
Edwards was ordered to stand
trial in Orange County Supenor
Court on murder and attempted
murder cha rges following his
preliminary hearing on J an 29
H e also faces special
circumstance allegations that
could lead to imposition or the
death penalty ir he is convicted
Edwards is scheduled to be
arraigned Wednesday in Santa
Ana.
The defendant s hearing
before South Orange County
Municipal Court Judge John
Griffin had been ordered closed
hy public defender Mike
Giannini
However, transcripts or the
hearing were opened to public
inspection today They showed
that the prosecution's key
witness. Miss Cartier, idenllfied
Edwards a!> the man who puUed
up in his red Datsun pickup
trurk where the girls were
h1k1ng and opened fire without
provocation
Questioned by Chief Deputy
D1 s tr1ct Attorney Jam es
Enright, the witness said the
truck passed the school once and
then came back m the direction
they were walking.
· · We were walking a little
farther 'down the road) and
then I heard this car coming and
I told Vanessa to gel over to the
side of tht' road," Miss Cartier
said "Then lthe truck> stopped
and <so meone inside > said, ·hey
girls,' and then it Just . ··
· Then what happened after
that.," Enright asked
Then. he said. 'hey girl -
girls and then then -be
shot.· s he testified
Miss Cartier, who suffered
head wounds In the attack. said
the assailant "got out of his car
and he opened the door and then
<See EDWARDS, Page AZ)
Santa Ana Freeway
widening studied
W idening of the Orange
County segment or the aging and
d e t eriorating Santa Ana
Freeway from six to eight lanes
to r elieve congestion is now
under study by Caltrans.
In an apparent shift from a
previous position. Caltrans
regional d irect or Heinz
Heckeroth said Monday that the
eight·lane alte rnative will be
con sidered in the overall
planning for fu ture
improvements a long one of the
county's busiest north south
traffic corridors.
In the past, Callrans has
objected to widening of the
fr eeway between the San
Gabriel Rive r Valley Freeway
in Santa F e Springs to its
southerly terminus at the San
Diego Freeway in Laguna Hills.
The department, instead, had
supported spot widening or the
r oute, construction of bus
express lanes and ins tallation of
me tering devices lo control
onramp traffic flow.
Caltrans offi cials, Including
Heckeroth, decline to say if they
will ultimately support widening
of the freeway to eight lanes.
But members of the Orange
C ounty Transportation
Com m1sswn 5ay the state's
w11l 1 n~nesi. to stud y the
eight lane proposal shows t}lere
has been a definite s hift in
attitude
The freeway now 1s being
widened lo eight lanes in the
segment between the San
Gabriel River Valley Freeway
and the Los Angeles downtown
business district. It also is eight
lanes wide alter merging with
the San Diego Freeway m the
south county
Other options that Caltrans is
weighing m its study will range
from doing nothing other than
minor improvements t o
expanding the freeway to 10
lanes five in each direction -
through Orange County.
After receiving a briefing on
I he freeway widening s tudy,
trans portation commissioners
voled lo e ndorse Caltr ans'
request lo seek $600,000 from the
federal government for design
studies on the potential project.
WASHINGTON (AP> -A
federal appeals court threw out
today ex·President Richard
Nixon's appeal that the federal
government is acting illegally in
processing his White House tape
recordings for eventual public
screenings.
proper and constitutional
methods lo separate Nixon's
"diary .. recordings, which will
be returned to him on privacy
grounds, from other recordings
that will be made available to
the public at. 11 designated
centers.
Adminis tration 's rules for
processing the tapes were
constitutional.
Nixon claimed the procedures
violated his constitutional r ight
to personal privacy, politicaJ
prwacy and the presidential
prMlege of confldentiality.
$300,000 donated
to Music Center
ORANGI COAST WEAIHIR
Mostly cloudy tonight
and Wednesday. Chance of
occasio nal light rain
increasing Wednesday.
Little temperature
cha nge Highs S8 lo 64 .
Overnight lows 48 to 55.
The three.judge panel or the
U.S. Court or Appeals also ruled
the government was using
The panel's decision upheld a
ruling by a lower federal court,
• which said the General Services
Ca,,P,y court order
Sweets go to wife in battery case
OTTAWA, Kan. <AP) -Steve Jackson will be giving
his wife a box or candy for Valentine's Day -by court
order.
Franklin County District Judge Larry Coursen ordered the gm in Ueu of a fine after Jackson. 22. pleaded guUty to a
charge of battery on his wife. · . Counen suspended a $50 fine and ordered Jackson to
buy • box of candy for at lea.st $20 and pay court costs.
'Ibe sherifrs office said Jackson was charaed with
batteTy Dec. 28 after he allegedly awakened his wire by
hltUna her on the shoulder and arm aod ordered her to go
outside to let firewood for the stove .
The ex·president said the GSA
admlnltttrator s hould have
establish ed regulations to
minimi ze constitutional
tnrrln1ements and suuested,
for example, a system in which
the administrator could have
made available to the public
only those recordings relating to
Watergate, or could have
restricted the availability or
recordings to a rlxed period ol
years.
The appeals court, ln an
oplnlon written by senior U.S.
Ctrcutt Judge Carl McGowan,
aald the reaulations permit
~txon and any others wh°'e
right• are threaten•d by
diacloeure to object and oblain
JudldaJ review of any adverse
determination by the GSA.
Mc Gowan 11ld 'tbat Ntxon
cl1lms he hu the rt.cht ol an
lndivldual to operai. peraonaJ
(See NUON. Pave· .U) •
•
Edward a nd Floren ce
Schumacher of Newport Beach,
former owners of Global Van
Lines, have contributed more
t han $300,000 toward the
construction and endowment of
the $S9 million Orange County
Music Cent.er. It was announced
Monday.
Mrs . Sch umacher h a
member of the Muelc Center's
board or directors a nd hH
served '8 vice prealdeot for
apectal events ln connecUon with
various fund·ralaer1 for the
ptrformln1 arts center to be
bullt ln Costa Mesa.
She hu also been acUve ln the
Oranct County Pbilbarmonlc
Soeltty and the Oran10 Count.y
Symphony Auoclat.lon.
Edward Schumacher is atlll
president of tbo An1belm·bued movlnarl:rm.
The Schumachers• con·
trtbutloo of 1ecuriU11 vallled
at more than $300 ,000 was
pledged i.o 1981.
''This magnifice nt gift is
doubly appr~iated because il
represents a mos t generous
rinancial commitment by a
fa mily which has already
committed unt.old hours to the
growth or the arts in Orange
Co unt y," said H enry
Segerstrom, music center
truatee chairman.
To date $20.6 mi l lion In
pledges and aifts haa been
raised toward tbe construct.Ion
and e ndowme nt of a main
3,000 ·teat theater and 1
l ,OOO·seat theater to be buUt on
land donated by the Seaeratrom
family. .•
When completed lo Ult& the
a 1000..ut theater wUJ be Oftly
the third In tt. country c1pable
of provldinl tYDU>honY, opera,
ball et and musical theater.
INSIDE TODAY
Dooold P.olon is ont' of tM
ft'w remaining World War I
/lying ace1 who,' aUhough M
MVt'r got a •hot .at t~ Red
Baron , reaJU& an ~ountn
with tht' famed Gt'rman
avia tor. See Stor11. Photo,
Page .48.
DtOll
Orange Cout DAILY Pt_LOT/Tueaday, Ftbrutty 9, 1882
Reagan challenges budget foes
lnctiana legislature hears it's time 'to put up or shut up'
UCCUMBS -Hruc e illiams, public relations
irector of Golden West
ollege. is de~d at 53.
illi81118
OfGW C ,
INDIANAPOLIS CAP) -
• PrHldent Rea1•n aatd today
tbat Amerleant ue 'tUred ol
tbeatrlca" and cballeo1ed
opponenta of b.ll campalsn to
reduce federal 1pendln1 .nd
balan~ the budiet to "put up or
abut up."
"Web.aw a .olid plan a1"ady
In place," he told the Indiana
Le1illature. "What do they
have? Either 1ive the AmericlJl
fieople a better alternative or
oin with ua in our efforts to set
be eccmomy ri&bt."
Earlier, in Des Moines, the
president denounced blsl
Democr•lic critics •s
demagogues, elitists and knee-
Jerk reactionaries.
"Even before the bud1et came
out, you could bear the sound of
knees jerking all over
Washington," Reagan told the
Iowa Legislature . "The
knee-jerk reactions and the
instant analysis were as hasty
as they were incorrect."
Later, he told the Indiana
legislators that his economic
plan "is based o n sound
'economic theory, not on political
exped.ieocy" and tb~ be will
1Uck by It.
"We wW not play hopa~h
economlca, Jumpln1 here and
Jumptn1 there as the daily
situation chan1et," be said.
And tho praldent, apparently
sensitive to con1reasional
criticism of the proposed jump
In defense spendlnl. said: "I
cannot close my eyes, cross my
fingers and simply hope the
Soviets wW behave themselves.
·'Today, a major conflict
involving the United States
could occur without adequate
time to upgrade U.S. force
readiness."
He also noted that some critics
say bis new federalism proposal
''is a mere diversion from our
economic problems. Or that
federalism Is simply a means to
cut the budget further.
"Don't you believe it."
Earlier, as an estimated l,roCI
demonstrators marched out.side
the gold-domed Iowa Capitol
building in protest against his
policies, Reagan said there was
no 1eneral bud1et cut thhl year
and there wu none lut year.
"What we did and what we're
dolna la reducin1 the rate ot
1rowth in federal spend1n1,"
Rea1an uld. "What we are
doln1 is brin1io1 old·tuh.toned
diacfpline to the bud1et."
Rea1an conceded that the
projected $91.S bllllon denctt ln
hls budiet proposal ls too big,
but said: "I'm not about to use a
magic pencil and merely create
a balanced budaet or a lower
deficit on paper, as has been
done In the past.
''The budget we have
proposed la a line drawn in the
dirt," be said
·'Those who are serious about
reducing the deficit will cross it,
and work. with us on our
proposals or their alternatives.
Those who are not sincere in
their concern about the deficit
will stay on the other side and
simply continue their theatrics.
·'The American people are
tired of theatrics. They want
action. Let me tell you. they
know the difference."
Ru7an continued a 1aJe1
pitch or bla bud1et poUel•
durt.u a two-day 1wtn1 UtrouCb
the Mldweat that be1an Monday
1n Mlna.eapoU.. SlmUar outJ.no
are planned for next mootb lo
the West and South.
·'You have to 1et about 50
miles at leut from the Potomac
River and tt~e District of
Columbia to 1et back to the real
world," Rea1an told an
approvtna crowd in Minne.polls.
"In lbe days ahead you are
1olng to be submersed in
dema101uery •bout the '83
bud1et," Reagan continued.
"You're hearin1 all ldncb of
horror stories about the people
wbo are goi.nc t.O be thrown out
in the snow to hunger and d.le of.
cold and ao forth."
Reagan fired his impromptu
remarks at. a rally for Seo.
David Durenberger, R-Mlnn.
Deputy press secretary Larry
Speakes said some of the barbs
were written on the nteht from
Washington but thal Reaeao
thought of moat or them as be
spoke.
NEW CHIEF -David Tappan
Jr . ha s been named
president and chief operating omcer of Fluor Corp.
~succunilis
I
1 Golden West College has
created an annual scholarship in
memory of public relations
director Bruce L. Williams who
1lied Satlirday of cancer at the
Youth gets 15 years for kidnap, rape
Tappan
promote d
at Fluor
ge of 53.
• Mr. Williams, a former
ewspaper reporter, combat
' orrespondent and magazine
, di tor, started work at the
ollege in Huntington Beach ~hen it opened in 1966. I
Memorial service for friends
.and family is sc heduled
Saturday at 10 a.m. at the First
United Methodist Church of
.Orange, 161 S. Orange St.
Memorial donations may be
made to the Bruce L. Williams
Scholarship Fund at Golden
)West College. The scholarship
,.will be given annually lo a
Golden West student whose goal
~ public relations. a college
spokeswoman said.
Mr. Williams lived in Orange
,,..ith his wife, Or. Louise Spivey,
an instructor at Golden West.
In 1969, Mr. Williams was
among organizers of the first
Huntington Beach City Festival
which in 1978 became the annual
Community Festival involving
ftve cities.
He also was active in the
United Way of West Orange
County and various citizen
advisory panels for city and
county government officials.
In 1980, the Commission on
Public Relations for California
community colleges awarded
Mr Williams its PRO Award for
best promotional campaigns.
Before coming to Golden
West, Mr Williams was director
of communications for the
United Methodist Church ,
'Pa cific and Southwest
Conference, in Los Angeles.
Prior to that , he was a
reporter for 10 years, including
f o ur years as a war
correspondent in Korea and
Japa n . He worked on the
Nashville Banner, the Geneva
Daily Times in New York and
he Schenectady Union-Star.
During the Korean Conflict,
,Mr . William s was a
·~·forrespondent for the Pacific
::;tars & Stripes. The Army
'.\~warded him a commendation ~ or writing a story from a
: orean foxhole about a squad of ~seven soldier s and the
~mementos they carried into
'battle.
I. He later worked as associate ~teditor of two national Methodist · agarines: Together, and the j hristian Advocate. both based
'in New York.
•. Mr. Williams is survived by
1 bis parents, the Rev. and Mrs.
•Harry L. Willi.ams of San ! Clemente; hi_s wife; ~ daughter,
:farolyn Floyd of Eugene, Ore.; • wo sons. Calvin and David of
: untington Beach ; two
; tepdaughters. Susan and Sheryl t pivey; a sister . Winifred of •ll o s t o n . a n d t h r e e i randchildren.
i $. order arrests
I(. EL PASO, Texas (AP> -
:rwenty-five s uspected
Jmugglers of illegal aliens wen
· rreeted and 195 Mexicans being > rought •cross the border were
J ken lnto custody in the second
•rt of a Border Patrol
' uckdown.
A Halloween night kidnapper
and rapist who was tracked
down by police when he left his
wallet at the scene of the crime
has been given a state prison
term of 15 years, eight months
by a superior court judge in
Santa Ana.
In handing down the sentence
Monday against d e fendant
Vincent A. Clawson, 19, Judge
James 0 . Perez described the
circumstances of the crime as
"sickening."
Those circumstances included
the robbery and kidnapping of a
74-year-old Los Alamitos man
out walking his dog, and the
rape or his 6S-year-0ld wife at
the couple's home later in the
evening on Oct. 31 , 1981.
Clawson, a transient, pleaded
guilty to charges or kidnapping,
robbery, forcible rape, false
imprisonment, burglary and
grand theft.
Deputy District Attorney
Martin Engquist, who said the
defendant could have been
sentenced to life imprisonment.
nine Terrec:e
Delly----
CENTER PLAN DU MPED Graphic shows areas of
expansion in Newport Center that the Newport Beach Cit~·
Council repealed early today. Plan was to include a hotel.
office buildings, restaurants and a res1dent1al tower The
Irvine Company project was under the threat or a
referendum.
From PageA1
CENTER DEFEAT ED. • •
Center plan "are just too great."
"I take exception." Covington
said, "to the theory that we can
be auctioned off for a few more
dollars, for a few more
businesses.
"And for you (the council) to
point the finger and HY we've
been ~tructive just Isn't true.
We never intended to do that.''
By law, the Irvine Company
can not resubmit its plan to
expand the shoppin1 and
professional center for at least
one year.
Several Irvine Company
officials, though, hinted they
may wait longer than that.
"We have no definite plans at
this point," said Shelton after
the vote. "But Newport Center
will be built out -that's lt.s
destiny."
The plan to expand the center
with a hotel, office buildings,
restaurants and a residential
tower was approved by the
council on a split vote followtn1
months of debate and bickering.
The referendum drive was
laun ched s hortly after a
disclosure that three council
members had met privately
with top Irvine Company
executives. including the firm's
president.
Until this week , it was
expected the council would call
for an elecUqo, which the Irvine
Company had predicted it could
win.
From Page A.1
NIXON. • •
and business affairs outside or
the public's view or listening.
•'Mr. Nixon, however, can
claim no such broad right of
priva~ with respect to bis life
while president," McGowan
wrote, "For presidents and
ordinary citizens alike, a
personal privacy interest
protected by the Fourth
Amendment must find its source
in a legitimate expectation of
privacy.
CIHalt'led edwettlalftt 714"42-MTI
All othef dep9~ M2~
"Mr. Nixon while president.
could h•ve bad such an
expectation in some materials,
s u ch as diaries or other
communications reapectin1
personal matters unrelated to
bl• public duties, but not In
materlala related to the conduct
and official dutlH of the
prealdeney."
MAIN Ofl'FICa ..... .., M.,C-.. ...... CA. IMll ..,_: ._ , ... QIMA-..,CA. _.
The court alao aald that
1overnment arcbtvl1t1 muat
listen to recorded Dlctabelta
that NlxOn uld ••rt made for hit penoaal dJa.rv.
Tape ~ played at the
Water1ate t rtala are •lNady
a•allable tor public Uatenlq ln
Wuh\nctCO. but they conaUtute
only a small portion of Na.xo.i'a
Wblt. Houle t.ape recordlnp.
called the term imposed by
Perez adequate.
''The sentence that he got is
appropriate for what be did,"
Engquist said.
Cl awson would become
eligible for parole consideration
after serving 10 years of his
sentence.
According to investigators, the
defendant accosted the elderly
Los Alamitos man near his
home. Clawson robbed the ma.n
of $13 and, dissatisfied with the
money, forced the old man to
drive to his home, where his
64-year-old wife was alone. The
def end ant, ace o rd Ing to.
Engquist, tied up lbe man and
ransacked the home. He then
raped the woman, tied her up
and fled in lbe couple's car.
However, in cleaning up the
home the following day, the
couple's 40-year-old Ion found a
wallet belonging to Clawson,
who was immediately located by
police and charged with the
crime.
Another snowstorm
plasters Midwest
By Tiie Auoclated Presa
A massive storm spread snow
and ice from the Tex•s
Panhandle to Boston today.
dealln1 the Midwest another
staneriot blow and disrupting
the ~ rush hour in some
Northeast cities.
Three auf ckles and two traffic
fatalities were blamed bl part on
From ft!a! A 1
EDWARDS ••.
I guess he put something in
there .. :·
"Did you see what happened
to Vanessa'?" Enright asked heT
··I just know that she got
shot," she answered.
Miss Cartier said the gunman
quickly drove away.
Asked by Enright if she saw
the man who said .. hey girls"
and fired the shots. Miss Cartier
identified Edwards, a burly man
a rrest ed by authorities in
Maryland days after the
shooting.
She said she saw a gun pointed
al her and Miss lberri from the
truck window just before she
was wounded and her
companion killed.
She said she never actually
heard any shots. though she saw
a gun pointed at her from the
truck window. "It just happened
so fast that I didn't -I didn't
hear anything, .. she testified.
She said that she saw the
gunman get out of his truck
after the shooting.
this latest storm of an unusually
harsh winter.
Snow falling at the rate of an
inch an hour in places broug1\t
the total on the ground to more
than 2 feet in some locales as the
third s nowstorm in 10 days
swept across the Midwest.
Hundreds of schools closed.
Countless traffic accidents were
reported, particularly ifl cities
such as Baltimore. Providence,
R.I., and Boston after predawn
snow and freezing rain.
The almost weekly assaults of
bitter weather in the Midwest
since lbe first or the year took its
toll in other ways as well
In Toledo, Ohio. where snow
was falling on top of 16 inches
already on the ground, the
coroner's office reported three
suicides Tuesday morning.
"Sure, it's the weather," said
Or. Harry Mignerey, the Lucas
Co unty corone r . "It 's
d e pressing. I don 't know
whether you see the results, but
we certainly do. Three suicides
in one day ... Never happened
here before that I recall.''
Two traffic deaths we re
reported in Oklahoma where up
to 8 inches of snow fell. The
highway patrol issued a plea to
radio stations to tell travelers to
find lodging and stay off the
highways.
Winter storm warnings were
posted in central Indiana.
central Ohio, the northern
panhan(Ue of West Virginia.
western Maryland and eastern
Pennsylvania.
David Tappan Jr .. who has
se rved a variety of
administrative roles during his
30 years with lbe Fluor Corp.,
was named today to fill a newly
created role as president and
chief operating officer.
The announcement was made
by J . Robert Fluor. who remains
chief executive officer and
c hairman of the board or
directors for the huge ,
Irvine-based multi-national
corporation.
Tappan, 59, of Newport Beach
had been vice chairman of the
board, and Fluor said that
position won't be filled. Both
Fluor and Tappan are major
stockholders. Tappan's salary is
$685 ,000 a year , accordine to
proxy statements.
"Due to the company's rapid
growth, I have concluded that
M abould now complement my
role as chairman and chief
executive officer with the new
position of president and chief
operating officer," Fluor saJd.
Under the new system ,
Tappan will be ift -Clharge of.
Fluor's operating susidiaries.
The firm . which provides
e ngineering and
project-management services
and also runs diversified natural
resource operations. has a
worldwide work force of .0,000
people, a company spokesman
said today.
Tappan will be responsible for
st rategic planning and
day-to-day policy decisions, the
spokesman said
Tappan joined the corporation
in 1952 as an administrative
assistant He became vice
president for domestic sales in
1959 and then was put in charge
of all sales operations in 1962.
In 1971, he organized Fluor
Engineers & Constructors Inc.
and became its first president,
according to a company news
release.
S to len child,
m o m r e tUMl h o me
LOS ANGELF..5 CAP) -Little
Natalee Cochran is home today
following a 10-day cross-<:ountry
hitchhiking trip wtth a
19-year-old babysitter who was
arraigned in Pennsylvania on a
federal charge of unlawful
flight.
WHAT MAKES OUR SOLITAIRE
'
COLLECTIONS SO SPECIALl
Color. clarity. cut and bea~. These are the standards we judge diamonds by. And we accept only the 1'nest
for our diamond collections. That's what makes each
gem such a joy to wear. Let our ~rts show you the
difference true quality makes. From our diamond
collection In 14 karat gold, the rings shown are priced
from $300to$10,000. Pendants from $150to
$5.000. E.arrings from $250 to $7.500.
SLA.VICK·s
.... ...... ttl7
WMtt ~bat s.,,,,,UC.S •·
hltllon lllllftd (7~) ...... ,.,. ~ llld\
.Ot.-rtMMgllll•Sln ~·Lm~
• •
.
IUlll l:IAIT
DlllJPllll
TUESDAY, FEB. 9, 1982
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
TELEVISION
82
83-4
87
~
0 I ..
A 50-year-old manual im't 0 ideal for getting modern-day. advice.
~ See Ann Landers B2.
--.
Tentative Banning OK upsets nearly everyone
With a packed audience
booing them on, the Newport
Beach City CouncU t.entaUvely
approved a modlfled version ot
the Banning Ranch project
Monday that seemed to leave
the developer as upset as the
plan's critics.
Taking straw votes, the
council agreed to allow
construction or homes, offices
and industrial buildings on a
75-acre chunk of the sprawling
West Newport ranch.
But it wasn't as much as the
developer wanted nor as little as
the critics had hoped for.
"I'm disappointed," remarked
Hancock "Bill " Banntn1,
president of Beeco Ltd .. after
the lengthy bearing.
Banning bad asked for
permission to build 239 homes
and nearly 750,000 square feet of
induatrial and office structures.
Instead, the council
tentatively decided to let
Banning build 379 homes but
only 300,000 square feet of office
and industrial structures.
Banning, the council voted,
can add on an extra 100,000
square feet of buildings alter his
firm completes a new road.
Mesa tobacconist
puffs to victory
By JODI CADENHEAD
Of .. Delty ...... StMt
She eiUled, brushed a strand
of brown hair away with her
carefully polished pink
fingernail and took another puff
on her favorite dark stemmed
pipe.
The stereotype of the typical
pipe lover goes up in smoke,
pardon the expression, as soon ..
Talks urged
in lease
fee dispute
Newport Beach City Council
members ha~e unanimously
urged the Irvine Company and
the Committee of 4,000 to drop
their sometimes-bitter dispute
. and sit down and negotiate.
The development tirm and the
homeowner group are battling
oyer increasing lease fees that
rrtust annually be paid to the.
Irvine Company.
The council agreed, though,
that it will not recognize the
committee as an official
bargaining agent and council
members say they want to
remain an arm's length away
from the dispute.
The action follows a similar
stance taken by the Irvine City
Council in late January.
"I've been trying on my own
to get the sides together without
much success.·' remarked
Mayor Jackie Heather.
Several members of the
committee. which claims to
represent up to 4,000 affected
residents in Newport and Irvine,
last week filed a class-action
suit against the Irvine Company.
Prior to that, the Irvine
Company and the committee
bad traded offers and threats
with littJe sign of progress.
Robert Shelton , a vice
president for the development
firm has its reasons for not
recognizing the committee.
He did not detail the reasons.
"We feel we're making
progress with people," he said,
adding his firm has met with
individuals and homeowner
groups.
N-M lru8tees
due report
Trustees-for the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District will meet tonight at 7;30
to consider a report by the
Educational Resources Advisory
Committee.
The committee of parents and
teachers has, been meeting for
the past year to study problems
confronting tHe district that
include curriculum, finance,
enrollment and special
education. The acbool board will
meet at the Harper Community
Center. 425 E . 18th St , Cost.a
Mesa.
as anyone meets Jean Bain,
recent winner of the National
Woman's Pipe Smoking Contest.
The attractice 36-year-old
Costa Mesa tobacconist says
very few customers object to her
smoking, especially after she
shows them the correct way to
pack a pipe.
Pack it down in three stages,
she advises. The first should be
light followed by increasingly
lighter layers.
It was that strategy that
allowed the cheerful brunette to
out-puff 79 other tobacconists
with a winning time of 41
minutes (the pipe stayed lit for
that time).
Each or the contestants were
given 3.3 grams of tobacco, two
matches and a pipe cleaner.
·'It's how you pack your
tobacco," said Ms . Bain. "If you
haven't packed your tobacco
right you're out."
Ms. Bain ought to know. It's
the third time she's won the
contest. The first time was in
1979 when she competed against
mostly men.
"It was a joke," she said ol
her first pipe-smoking contdt.
"I had no idea that I'd win. But
as all the men started dropptn1
out I got really nervous."
A former bookkeeper from
Indiana, Ms. Bain didn't begin
smoking a pipe until her
European honeymoon 13 years
ago.
Her job was to light the pipe
for her husband who was
driving. But pretty soon she was
puffing more than passing. ._
It took six years for Ms. isain
to turn her love of tobacco into a
thriving business. When the
chance came along seven years
ago to buy the Tinder Box
tobacco shop s tore at South
Coast Plaza she jumped at it.
Ever since she says she's been
the top winner for sales per
square foot at the mall. She has
also opened a second shop at the
Westminster Mall.
Blackstock
rites held
in Newport
Funeral services were held
late last week for longtime
Newport Beach resident and
former cafe owner Mary Vera
Black.stock, who died Jan. 30 at
·the age or 76. ·
Mra. Blacksft>ck, who rDOYed
to Newport with her husband in
the 1930s, was the former owner
and opeTator of Gilli's Cafe in
Newport and later was
employed at Shep's Cafe, also in
Newport.
A nursing school graduate, she
was an active member of the
Church of the Crossroads in
Santa Ana.
She leaves one brothe r ,
George Capps of Louisiana. and
several nieces and nephews.
Services and burial were
conducted at. Pacific View
Memorial Part'-
Artist rites held
Funeral aervlce• ~ere held
today for prtu-winnln1 artist
BeJ"l'&rd Zahaky. 57, who died
Sunday at Hoa1 Memorial
Hospital of a heart ailment.
A 1raduate of lbe Cblca90 Art
lDJtltute ud Art.ee Oecora\lM
ln Nice, Pr~. be Md resided
ln the Harbor Area for 30 yelJ'I
before recently movtnc to Fortun.a WW. Im wife, SU...
Cartoonlat Ferd Jobnaon
described bis eon.a.-at tbl
ean.11 aroUaill CorWl.a d81 Mar
u ''th• moat educated ud
cu.rrent art.lit around. Bende
-•d atudled In Europe and •estco and wat a wonderful
tHOIMr.
u \; ...... ~.. .at1mat.el1 bU.-
creat artists painted. He could
duplicate a Retnbrandt or a
Cezanne, plus he bad bls own
st.yle and wat wonderful wt~ portraits, landacapes and beach
scenes."
· Mr. Zalusky, who b•d
exhibited bh artwork In
ChJca10. Now Yor~\ Lot An,elet
and Newport Beacn Clt)' Hall, won the blue ribbon at tbe first
Newport Buch Artl F..Uval.
Suniwra, belW. Ml wtdoW1 are acm JObtban. Dultl ana David, all of Corona del Mar,
and \wo bl'Otben ln Cblcaio.
Servi~ were held at Paclflc
View Memorial Part and •O• ~"">'. Nnputt. o.ac:o.
\
The COW\cll, which ls asking
Banning to build roughly 140
more homes than he asked to,
reiterated its stance that
Newport needs a new stock of
affordable housing.
There was no mention, though,
of bow affordable the homes
would be
Louise Greeley, leader of a
group claiming to represent
9,000 residents, s aid she also was
disappointed
Her group, the West Newport
Legislative Alliance, had asked
the city to hold Banning at
100,000 squace reel or industrial
space and no office construction.
"We're going to meet next
week to review our options," she
said after the vote while other
alliance members loudly
proclaimed there would be a
referendum.
"I'm ready to start gathering
the signatures now," the woman
said.
The council, which bickered at
length during the voting, 1s
expected to fQrmahze the action
next month
The Banning Ranch, a former
sheep ranch now covered with
brush and dotted with oil wells,
Dell¥,..._..,~ IWT
UP IN SMOKE Costa Mesa·s Jean Bain is the <'h<.1mp1on
women·s pipe s moker in the United St<.1tes Shl' own!-a
tobacco shop at South Coast Plaza.
LARGE TUGETS DEPI'. -Recent history (or
Irvine Company executives has been a time that can
rairl v be characterized as a period of agonizing
reappraisal They have been fighting battles on too man~·
fronts at the same time. Apparently ,
TOM
. ' . (;;,
~\
MIRPHlll m
they were los ing
on all or them.
It s tarted some
time back with
mas ter planning
for the final phase
build -out of
Newport Center.
the commercial and high-rise complex in Newport Beach
on the hilly knoll above Coast Highway
Then there surf aced the question of increasing rents
for residential leasehold properties in Newport and
t rvine
Finally. there was that barbershop in f rvine
IT ALL ADDED UP to an enormous public relations
pratfall for the ranch company that has been a pivotal
enterprise in the history, tradition and growth of our
coastal region since the early days when oranges and
cows were big business.
The way things have been aoing for the landl
development ranch hands in recent times. they may all
now wish they were back in cltrus and cattle.
Just look at the record. Irvine Company brass trotted
out a pretty well wrought proposal for ftnal development
phases of Newport Center. lt was promptly assaulted on
several fronts and e nded up with a Neweort Beach
committee circulating petitloR6 to stop it.
• TH~E FOLKS GOT enough signatures to neutralize
a Ctty Council approval of the plan and force it into a vote
of the people.
No sonner had this CCJme to pea than the compu;y storted notlf ylng some leasehold residents that their
lease rents would rise upon renegotiation Screams oC rout
fllled the air.
Next thing you know a committee clalmlne 4.000
membent formed to do battle agalnsl the company on tht!
lease h1kes.
Meanwhile, over in the city or .lrvlne, there was Jim
Anderson's barbersbOp out 1.q Umverslty Park Here. U\e
comp'11)' exec relt the barber \fas not creating enouah
foot traffic for the shopptn1 center.
D~PITE THE FACT that Ande!'1on h9d beeo ln
la located inland of Pacific Coast
Hl&hway und west of Superior
Avenue. The land is adjacent to
Costa Mesa.
"I'd like to see more of a
low-key residential mix,"
sucgested Councilman Paul
Hummel at one point. "In fact,
I'd Ulte to low-key this whole
thing."
Hummel , expressing
frustration at voling in the
minority with Councilman Don
Strauss on most or the points of
the plan, made an unsuccessful
motion to deny the entire
pro)f'ct
"Why don't we <Hummel and
Strauss> just lay out for a while
and let the rest of you vote in
these high denalties," Hummel
remarked at another point.
The alliance had asfted that
housing be buJlt at five onits per
acre while Banning pu.ihed for
11 units
The council went with the 11
units per acre figure adding a
provision that Banning consider
building the Newport end of the
property at a less dense ratio
and then transfer leftover units
to the Costa Mesa end of the
land -By STEVE MARJJLE
County population
older, more varied
By JEFF ADLER
Of t ... Dally Pl ... Si.ft
Oran~e Countv grew larger,
and its residents became older
ctnd more diverse between 1970
and 1980.
That 's the conclusion
government analysts have
drawn from 1980 census figures,
released recently after two
years of compilation.
The 1911) census sets Orange
County's population at 1,932,709
people, up from the 1.4 million
counted in the 1970 census.
Current population estimates.
however, place the county's
poi:Julation at 2,027 ,000 people,
accordipg to co unt y
demographers.
The census also sets the
county's median age (middle) at
nearing 30, an increase of more
than five years from the 1970
rpn"us.
More significantly, the
1 percentage of non-whiles living
in Orange County increased
from 3 percent in 1970 to nearly
14 percent in 1980 .
The cou nty 's Hispanic
J>-Opulation (both white and
non-white) was set at 286,333 by
the new census, or about 15
percent or the total population
Also. Orange County has more
than 25,000 black residents.
more than 20,000 Japanese
residents as well as large
populations of Indochinese,
Filipino, Korean and Chinese
residents.
The census reports that the
median value or owner-occupied
O.C. Population
1970 1.4miH
1980 1.9mill
Latest estimates 2 mHI
GROWING Graph shows
the increase in Orange
County population
homes in the county was $108,000
in 1980. Cities which bad the
most expensive median housing
prices were Laguna Beach,
Newport Beach and Villa Park,
all with values of $200,100.
Although the number or people
living in Orange County
increased, the number of
school-age children decreased
between 1970 and 1980,
according to census figures.
The nu m-ber of c hildren
between fi ve and 17 dropped by
nearly 8 percent.
Bruce Nestande, chairman of
the Orange County Board of
Supervisors, commented that
the census s hows "we're
becoming more 'mixed' as a
people, socia lly and
econom1calty, so that there is
probably no longer a single
Orange County lifestyle "
Citianl' committee preparing tb roll upon the lrviM Company
business for more than 13 years at the location . the Irvine
Company people notified him that his lease wouldn't be
renewed.
Now plain citizens and the Irvine City Council Itself
were rising up to the barber's defense.
Meanwhile. the residential leaseholders in Newport
-or at least some of the vocal ones were vowing to
join opponents of Newport Center when that master plan
came up for a vote next June.
Put it all together and the Irvine Company was
abrupth suffering Excedrin Headache Number '412 A
real biggie. ,
Thus it was in recent days Irvinl' Company President
Peter .Kremer appeared before the Irvine City Council
and vowed more consideration for barber shops . M<mday,
barber Jim Anderson got a new lease.
Irvine Vice President Robert Shelton in the early
pre-dawn hours today was before the Newport Beach
cou· .. 11 asking that the Newport Center plan be scuttled
and the election be called ort because of ''the climate in
the rolflmunity."
YOtJ SVSPEcr THAT t~ ranch people have indeed
beaten a strategic retreat on 1 couple of front.a arid will
p~uu to re-group.
One thing about ttie Irvine Company is that it's so bl&
and so visible that. people Just love to mn1 rocks at it.
And just look at all those eta s windows.
'
Long · service rew&rded
Huntington resident Jionored for 40 years with firm
By PHIL 8NEJDE&MAN °' ................
Terence Doyle deacrlbea
hlmaelf u • man who juat dldih't
know when to qult.
The 62·year-old Huolln1ton
Beach resldent was honored r e c e n t l y by t h e f' e d e r a I
Knvelope Dlvlslon of Champion
International Corp. for 40 years
or service with the company.
Doyle worked hle way up from
envelope machine adjuster to
production mana.cer at the
firm 's Seattle plent. He was
transferred to Southern
California three years ago to
help the company open a new
facility in Santa Fe Sprioas.
Though he's officially retired,
Doyle said the company may be
calling him back as a parl·time
consultant.
Doyle says he owes his rour
decades in the envelope making
business lo has early interest in
professional roller skating.
In 1941, he was an apprentice
ma c hinist with another
company, performing at roller
rinks in his spare time. A fellow
s kater who worked for the
envelope company suggested
Doyle also apply.
Soon alter he was hired, World
War II intruded. A Canadian
native, Doyle attempted to enlist
HONORED -Terence Doyle,
62, has been honored by
Federal Envelope Di vision
of Champion International
Corp. for 40 years of service
in the U.S. Navy. He was turned
down because he was not a U S.
citizen. Yet in Jan. 1942, he was
drafted by the U.S. Army.
Resumlnc his work at the
ph1nt after hls military tour,
Doyle wllnes!Je(I m1ny chaa1e1
ln the lnduatry.
··We uaud to have a
tremendoua number of people
maklng envelopes by hand when
I flr11t started," he recalla.
"Now, tb1l's been virtually
elimln1ted.
''The machines used to
produca 3,000 envelopes an hour
when I started. Now they put oul
50,000 an hour."
Doyle says there Is much
more emphasis on plant safety
today than during his early
years on the job, when workers
sometimes lost a finger in the
machinery.
The Huntington Beach man
did some traveling to Australfa
and South America for the
company. and he plans to use his
retirement years for more
traveling with his wife Lois.
He's especially anx.lous to return
lo New Zealand, another place
he visited on business.
Doyle says he's keeping busy
bicycling along the beach,
s wimming , playing the
accordian and keeping up his
stamp collection .
•· 1 • m even thinking or getting
a surfboard.'' he says
California home resak volume
registers first big increase
LOS ANGELES < BW > -
California home resale volume
in December registered the first
increase in six months, the
California Association or
Realtors has reported
The December statewide
seasonally adjusted annual sales
rate of 291,218 units represents
an increase or 14. l percent
above November.
However, the year -to-year
comparison or resale
transactions shows a 41 percent
decrease in resale volume rrom
December 1980.
''With the more than 200 basis
point decline in mortgage
interest rates in November.
activity in the resale market had
begun to Improve.'' said Seb
Sterpa, C.A.R. president.
•"However, the increase in
interest rates over the past two
months may have arrested any
recovery. Without a reversal of
this recent trend and more
significant interest rate
declines, activity will continue
to be severely restrict~d
If not resolved. the anherent
conrlict between government
and private sector credit
demands will further limit the
extent to which anv home resale
vofume increasC' can be
sustained during the firs t
quarter of 1982. realtors caution
The statewide median sales
'price increased a marginal 0 2
percent to $102,791 in December
According lo the realtor's
association , prices were
appreciating at a rate of 5 2
percent on a 12-manth basis, the
second lowest annualized rate of
appreciation jn 1981
·'The magnitude of the current
eco n o mic downturn and
resulting weakness tn the
housing markets will continue to
constrain price increases," said
Joel Singer, C.A.R. director ol
planning, researc h and
economics.
time on the
market of existing single-family
homes sold during December
wa s roughly 74 5 days, an
increas e or 3 9 days from
November. The inventory index
of unsold homes declined to 20.S
month s. a decrease or 3.8
months from the November 1981
index.
"The inventory index
calculates the number of months
it would take ror all currently
listed homes to sell. The decline
m t he index reflects both the
ancrease in sales activity and a
decline in the number or unsold
listings," Singer said.
Traditional mortgag.-
financing arrangements as r
per~entage of market sales
continue relatively small. In
December, only 19 percent of
existing single-family home
sales involved conventional
finan c ing or a cash
downpa yme nt and a new
institutionally originated first
mortgage loan
Foreign
farm
cash up
SACRAMENTO <AP>
Foreign inveslo"S
increased their holdings
of California farm land
by 57 percent during a
20-month period of 1980
and 1981, says an
organization that
specializes in land data.
25 G reat selection of the custom 42, 45
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inch color TY. bar. separately controlled
rear air-conditioning, power Chauffeur
divider window ... PLUS many more
features!
Available
for
Immediate
Delivery! BUY O R LEASE.
The Sacramento
Union , in its Sunday
editions. quoted the
Homer Hoyt Institute of
Was hington, D.C., as
saying international
in'Vestors owned 705,000
acres or farm land in aJl.
58 counties at the end of
the reporting period last
September.
~
ROGER PENSKE (213)
868-99'J1
(714)
521-9624 CAUFORN.t:S LARGEST CADILLAC DEALER
WH€AE THE 0 AMJ • FREEWAYS MEET 1H DOWNEY
CFOAMERLV llOB SPREElll CADILLAC)
WE'RE A LOT MORE THAii
A aLL Oii YOUR •LL
Benind the bell Behina rhe
famou~ Seacoast sticker Behind
all the state-of·the art protection
devices we make and Install. 11
Seacoast centrlll stallon
When an ala'rm goH oft on your
property. we get the algnal ln •
nearby, 2-i·hour-a·day central
1tatlon If the signal 1nd1cate1 lire,
burglary or hoodup, wa oall the
Polle• or fire dapartmant
Slt1c. our central station 11 UL
llated. o ur central station
customers can qualify for a alzable
dlsoount on ttiell lnaurance.
And to increaM our re.ch, make
rHPonM lime even f11ter and
Improve efficiency we're
comput«l%1ng our st9\IOO
But tmp~tl ....,.., n.-'° s..coaat. We'Ye been getting better ror 21 ~ NttJ todey we're the i.-,.. fn &hf security bualn .. • in the h•rbor ar.a with
0¥9r 10,aao OUlt~ Including a wld9 reno• of big and 1mat1 rtt.11, lt1duJtrta1
afld OOlftlt•C ..... tablW\mentl.
To ftnd out more *>out S..00Mt c.ntral atauon wrlte or co~ by our new
fecllf11 tit a4ee ~ Blvd., (:Qtt• Meta.
a
2411 ~BOULEVARD • COST~ MESA
CAl.lfEORNIA • 92927 • (1141 P24400
In Kern County at the
southern end of the San
J oaq uin Valley ,
foreigners own the most
of any county -106,122
acres, the institute said.
They also own 102,540
acres in Butte County
north or Sacramento.
The Union quoted a
U.S. Department of
Agriculture publication
as say ing that
fore igners own 1'bout l
percent of all of
California's farm land,
but fewer than 1 percent
o( the farm and forest
land in the United
States.
About 80 nations are
represented on the list of
foreign invest.ors.
. /RUFFELL• S
U,HOLSTERY
~ ... ~.&r .. •.'-!!_
I tll HARIOl IUD. COST~ MISA-141·1 II"
Orange Cout OAJLV P1LOTffu,.day, February 9, 1982
•IL•Y
SASHaN on &UMINO NOflf'LA•DClt
Local firms tell promotions
Jim Mayfie l d h as been
appointed director o r Mel
Thompson & Associates,
Executive Sear c h Div1s1on
Mayfield is a former managing
associate with Korn I Ferry
Internati onal , a Los
Angeles·based executive search
rirm with orfices in Newport
Beach.
Services Lnc. or Irvme He hves
in Costa Mesa.
Beach offi ce or the Bag ~ public
accounting farm or Ernst &
Whinncy •
William J . McCleUao has been
elected president of the board of
directors of Big Brothers/Big
Sisters of Orange County He
lives in Corona del Ma r.
• ·.
Tom Sumino or Irvine has •'
been appointed vice president,
sales planning and control or
Kawasaki Motors Corp., U.S.A. • • Terry Bocbanty has been
* Jerry W. Neeley,•chalrman of
the board, president and chief
executive orricer of Smith
International lnc .. has been
elected to the board of directors
of Avery International Smith
International is located 1n
Newport Beach
named national sales manager
for VllD Programs Inc. He
previously worked al
Discovision Associates in Costa
Mesa.
Bob Sasseen has been named
senior vice president, loan
administration at Heritage ,
Bank. Orange County's largest c
independent bank.
* •
Joel K . Harris has joined
•
Costa Mesa-based Spaghetti Pot
Investments Inc. as director of
educational services
J ames D. Ott has been named
chief financial officer and
cashier for Liberty National
Bank, a full-service bank now
being orgamzed in Huntington
Beach *
•
Fraak I •. Speers has been
promoted to vice chairman or
Newport Beach-based Avco
Financial Insurance Group • Richard P . Riley has been
named general manager for
Manufacturing and Consulting
Michael Harwick has joined J
A. Stewart Construction Co of
Westmin s ter as proJect
manager .
* Donald R. Homander hai been
named a partner at the Newport
Judith A. Peake has been
appointed manager or Glendale •
Federal Savings and Loan
Assoc1at1on's Huntington Beach
branch
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
NEW V04'1t (API ComCIH *" "° lflfml(H ~ ·~ P•nl•tr 11't 1' Slr•w(I ""J 24''1 NASDAQ ..-.11-CmlS/\r ""~ u~ ln81lW"1 1111\ u• ... PeopEq> 10'· 100. Su~, .. p t,, .. UPS AND DOWNS -lfl9~1111Cli Cmwhl ,, ,, lw•SoUt nlt. 21" Petri! • :n :nv. tr~E: 7YI 1'• •ncl '°--' .... ,. tty ConP•P ~ 25~. J.,,,U>y ltV." PflU-. 1} U'"' l} is•,
~rllei~••of Cordi• 211 l'O\I> Jerico • 1""' " Pllll•N•1 ~h TOK ! 33"> ••
Monctay. Prl<H do Cro1Tr• 27"" n ~~r:,,e1, loo .,., Pleruss ,,., ... ~ TIME OC ·~ 11->
1101 111cl11cH ret•ll Cllilrl<d • 'IV.. 31''-:n Plnkrln ~,., u .... ~:::r~·. ~»io.
m.,kup mertcOOwn 't<"'°" • .,, •"-k•l•St p1 21··n 11i PlonH18 .. "'"' 'lAV. tA'll NEW ~OAK -IAPI -Tiie tof-lnO 11t1 or commlulon tor 0 •0.• • IJYt l•E IC,91ver IV. 1 S·1' PIHllM I ,.,, Tecum~ '2 .. tnowl -o-llW • CoullW Molleley O•ytM ' 11~ IJt/, ltam•n • """ 11 Possl1 }l/o 6\1.o hkmA 11 .... 'Ht \IO<k• .,,., ... ,, .... '"'" ..............
AFAP...:i llV. 13\'t oeeer • 1 .. 3'. ,..,, ~=~~r lOV'l 0 Pre.OM l1\7 """ Teflanl • ""' 11 ,.,. mo11 --,.,. -bM9d ., 2'"'4 JO .... PnSteyn ,..,. 11 lew.A8 • • .,. 30~1 r,:rcent ol c'*'9t r-dleu of ~-AVM Cp 4\&o ·~ Oelllt>A' U V> 13"" l(lmlMll I"'"~ P"'9rP "'• ' ~~~;,r. 11'1'1 u .... °' MoncMr. Accura~ 7~ , .... O.IC.•n 11 11'Wi l(i=::nt I IV. PbSvHC 11~ ,,,.., •'Ill J No wcuril • 1r.a1~ tie-U ... ltoel· ACIClltn IOY'> 11 Dewey f.I l , ..... It G ~,,.,, Purtaen 11•7 viw. ~.2YOI• • ~ ... udeCI Net -~Gen -,,_.. •'* lfW Actvltou ~ l V. Ol•C•v• ,. d Kn•:," UV> 1' ~~~ 11''> 1, rlcoPd 13\fJ iiVt At1•111 • 211 ~ Dl•nCru Jt 11 1tra , dllleren<e !»-IM prevlciut <i.ll'lt
AlkOfnt _,, 4' Ootutl I 11 27\.lt 10\1< IOI.'> ts><. 1~ TysonFCI ,,..., u~, t>ld pro<t ..>d t-Y"• 1 .. t blCI prlu.
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EconlAt> IM 17~ ~ I) ISi!. = 171-, 17h v .. 1A ff ~ , lnPYI 1\io II. Up 10 .. !~ = ~ El~•tEI I~ 11 tc"' ,,., ""' J'-• \lalNll s 711.'> 11"' • A1Hll8<p ) .... VI> 'I
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-~SA "~ I? EnrO.• 1) ""' ~~;' sv. Siil SIP..,1 '°', -Vlctr•St ' ''• 1 GerlW ..... . "' Up 6.J
..... O\'t t=· :::j;:~ ~~ s• .. µ. I CffloJnP! 11.-. . ,.,, Up tj !=ct = =: Enr-11111 n. ':'-l!Mr.A• SY> S"' Uh 11' ' EleC:S<r s ,, .... . 114 Uo
A Mt 16 ,..,., Enlhv ~ • 'I Me ~rt s """' ..... Svc-r IO'I > ·~ WshEn• "" "'" 10 GllmS.. 1·~ . •• Up u
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"ll<IC81 1 27V. 11"1 Equ!Sl 7'.. 7' • llMulLP 11 '"" Sh-Jl 331. =~..r ,, 11', u ~In .,., Up u
All<hL.1 II Ill.. E~IOU r.. 1c, MeyPt 1..-..11 sn-mut ,,.,, ,, ... .., , 411 • 11 l(yC....1..1 "'' 1 Up S.A
At...,fls IA. 10.., ~ S.C s:n 1.. ""•lnOll 1"4 1.,, SMr•A• s .... f' I WmorC '° '°'~ u AmP« I . \, Up S.J
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8•11vPi S'• 5"' I .. 5 11-1• M<F•r• ... 9 K.•IWtr u • ... 11~ WolvAlu ,. , '" .. Utl\lll"' I . \, Up u F•rmGp :n :n~. McO...y IJ'" I)\,>, SwEISv 13'· ··~ Womel 1'1 "' 11 011119118 -• I Up s 1
8-HE 10 10 ... Fldk• 1•'-. U MictuW 11"' ""' si-..n • ... W-lol l3 JJ\> 11 Mrs. ... 1" . ... Up u
1akA 0 l, .. ) l<llllSYI n•. :n .. MCllCIC.•P .... 1011. SldMkrv .... '" W<IQl\IW • .... 19 NTe<ll • 1\to . '" Up ...
ffllFr :IO'h '1 l<lloltn » »• • MkllAe1 ... 1S-1' ~;::~i· l3 J:J·~ ZIOftUI • 1•"-JS•· '° Ol>1A«o I•., '· Up ...
a.,tsMll 10'.,, IO l<tEm,S 17 17 .. MICll8k , n n ... lO ]1 n• Nol -'k•bl<P ,. T•niHL\ 1~ "" Up . ..
a.nne Slw Ftwn '" ."' ... MUii , IPi ..... StertSt Pio 7" V1cttTC.O 1t'o "' VP • s
a.<ltPt l'-1 Fll::\8h 27 27 .... Mlue1G Hiio I• n CoBoll~ o l . "' Up ...
a.ill l 2'11> Flk J' 17 .. 11\lo #.01-1"o'>~ ,. Tl>elfdCp J . "' Up •.J • ..,#.Vt 1S U Fl•N 1• 17"' 2111) ~~ sv. S\O 1S WffO"'W 0 lto Up . .,
8ltlbCo IJ\'t •• l<luroct> 1 1\lo MonuC 11 ,,.,.
81n1Son M 10 ForHIO 13.,. ''~ Moon~ U\.l 1•'• 81rtchr •4'1 S l<Ol"ml~ll '"" '"° MoraAt• I ..... OOWIU Bly,,_ ' 9 Fra1111 p 10V. 111'> MorWlln l.\r. .... N•mt IAll C"9 Pct. 8onM\a 1"' I IH Fr•nkEI 16''> 17 -!Club 8rwTom ~ 21 FrMSG 30"" JO.\io Mu•ller S'-s•, l CornPIS • 3 1 Off u.c ... ,, ,..,, 7 O•lco n 1\to .. Off 14.1 8uclll>H ''" Fremnl • 16''> 16.Y. N , c " '° l11ttets 30"· F'ull•H8 11•1, 11•, N;,~o s NASDAQ SUMMARY l (mp\llCI ..... 1~ Off 10.0 I~ ll•lt • A•a<U>PI , ... " Off 17' 811rnu~ 11'1 11 GnAutm 6'" 6\4 NJReK ... ,. 1•" s Tr•on Slill '"· °" IJ,j CNL In 7 ' G110ev<1 .,.., ~ NYAlrl JV .. )II) CPT \ 1S 0"" Gnlllhl ISV. 17 NIOOG NEW YORI( CAPI Most act Ive over • \ll\Scl .... 1 Off 17.• 1~ ,. .... !Nr-COllM~r ttocb \ullf.llf'd bv NASO 1 Al\BCm ,. .. , l Off 17,I C•IWIS• ,.,., 37 •EFn '"· .... Nico••• ,.,,,.. 11-.
C•nr..SH no 1 Gr•Scn ' 16"4 1'''2 Nltlsn A .,'" .:S\9 N•me v~~ :1" "'~~ Cl'f" • C•llonPI 5" I °" ls.7
MCIC • Ol•Wll ,, .. ..., Ott 1•.a C-..En lS-16 1 1 I roActv 11 76 NltlPI 8 •1''1 ., .... E11A>• t ... 000 .... '" .,, 10 GeoSv • 1 ...... 21.'> Oft .. , C~Sw • 11'·1 1) Glllnhl 14'7 II NOC.uG• •3'"'-1eT Newpn s 1S7 .000 111\'. "' J 11 MCIOVI , .. .. Olf U.J CplnAlr l~• • yr~ ~. '"• N•INGl 11E 1 l'-C.,eCp ,...., IS\lo H•ml IS'" IS' 1 Nw\IPS lnlel 1•7 700 1•' 2S ... " S.P•re• ,,, .. "' Off 1'.3 1~ 1S" G•Mll u2.100 J'. , .. ) .. IJ SMrpfGI J II> Oft 14.J '""'Al• lS ....... Herelwllt ~ , .. No .. 11 Jl JJV. Appl•C Ul,100 .•. ,, 11" 1·~ ,. M11w '''• I ... Off 14.1
ChrmS \ 10 10 HrpAo• "" II'• Nucrf 1 ~SI • Conlr<P 11~, 100 I .. 1 ... IS 81o\Pl>r \ ,,,, II'> Off ,,. C1'r1Hou 1 1'''11 17 H•~P JO'• lOY> Nulr 'r s n 'li n"" Air Fl• 130,900 . ,., ... .... " BHu \ ·~ "" OH IU ChmlAa 1. II H• tNt 2110.. 10'1> §iHn•r 17 17\, Cmpllld 111,!00 . ..,, ..... 1~ II Sw1<c1" 1 ... .. Off 1U c11 .. u11 1,.,,, 1t H•<llnJ s 1s•,, ·~ l!,'2"" ~, .... BrwTom 101 000 '°"' ,, I\. It Ttpr•ry 12'r\ ' Olf 11.• C""bCI •~ • Henrd U 1S'1> •• 4l'H 411 J " Vor1e< ... ,,,, Ott ltt Clrlko ,.., 7 Hot«lm 'lto '"' °""trro ,,, 1'' ACIYanced uo 10 PelOY 11> loo Off CilzSoG• '"' I Hooor t' • ,... OnerTP 17\t 17 ... O.cllnect 1, 117 ,, HIStoy ,... .... OH IH CillUIA l'Yo J4 Hor>IAi µ. 4''< PCA lnl ··~ s~ Un<"""9fd '·-n 8ren1P 0~ ." ... Oft ru (:h1Ut8 %7•1> Jl "J•ttlnl 1•''> H i.. P•tt.18 13 Ill• T ot•I i\IUH >.Jn ll HlH Pt l" ... Ott U.5 ClullJL U l~ I S lnl It'• "" '<G•lt 1,.., 10
C-Cp •h ·~ lntr•lnct •n ~ •11•u;P I~ ~ .. Ne .. h19'i 11 ,. lnlT-• ,..., II) Off 12 I
COlrTle 11\'li II lnlel 1•"' u PMr , Hew to~ 13' H A•PAtcl l\IJ y, Oft 12.5
ColoGH l-1• ~t lnlrcEnr s•~ S .. Pen•Ent 10''> 11 .... Tol•I wle• JO.Sn 000 ,. S1tt•A' \ ""' , ... Off "' " 1)•1.
MUTUAL FUND
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,1
J
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' .i . J
While the Rea1an adm1n11trat1on'1
bud1et·cutten are aluh.lnc IUnda to dalp ud
lnatall equipment to help tbe handle~. private
lodmtry and the handicapped thetmelv11 are muto•
aurprlllnaly impressive propeu on t.beir own. And
this baa little if anytbla1 to do witb 1111 '•
lnteruat.icoal Year of the Diubled Penoo, 1enera.Uy
dlsmlssed in t.b1s country aa a dismal failure, deepite
officialatatemeata of oPlimlsm.
ln fact, ao far at .
least , the ~ handicapped seem to
be more than holding ' 91 ,.
their positions in the ~ u ~a~e sofu i:ieg g:ne[a~ .lnA PllJll~?
Joblessness. Surveys --------•~ ... -L._-a gain are
underlining that qualified handicapped workers have
a lower rate of abeenteeiam than their physically
able counterparts, higher dedication to performance
.and a higher quality output.
From the corporate side, there are hundreds of
.J>OSitive examples of what U.S. corporationa are
doing for the qualified handicapped. A.a a sa111plln1 :
-IBM has for many yean modifted buildinas
and redesigned equipment to accommodate the handicapped;
-Sears Roebuck's handicapped roster includes
repair technicians, attorneys and retail managers.
AT&T bas developed a program to train ,
manager$ of disabled people <which will survive ita
breakup). ,
-Xerox is trainin1 disabled people in
computer·related .Jobs where at present there la a
shortage of physically able qualified workers.
-The Travelers Insurance Companies installed
a variety of sophisticated equipment that ineludes-
writing machines to enable a disabled penoo to write
out his/her program in Braille and video screens to
advise the bard-of.bearing that the t.elepbone is
ringing.
In the words of Edward R Budd, p~idatt of
The Travelers, which bas some 100 disabled perse>QS
on the payroll, "We have to have qualified people to
do business, and to overlook qualified people because
they are handicapped would DOt serve any purpose."
From the sick of the baildicapped, this nation's
blind population of around 470,000 offers the most
outstanding examples of people working, eamlng
wages based on their productivity, paying taxes -
and eenerally smashing our stereotyped ima1es of
the blind into sawdust.
-'ft1e!"tl are Workshops for the blind across the·
natiob, where men and women operate complex
machines, such as drill presses and electronic
sealers; run switchboards; assemble writing
instruments ; make brushes on high.speed
equipment; conduct complicated sewing operations
and package the widest variety of products.
None of this tells the full story. though, of what
earning their own way does for handicapped penom.
It's not Just that tbe earned l.neome means increased
buying power. It's ala<> that notbinl beats a job for
'giving a person a sense of self·respect. lo 1982
particulady.
STOCKS IN THE SPOlllGHT MtEllC~N LEADERS
.... YOlllt IN"l --· --- -~--------y--~ -...... NllMINllJ "' --
UPS AND DOWNS
·COLD COINS
-II'>
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:.:· i4
-1\')
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N•W YotttC IA .. ) -~ i-....._ '! .... ~_.........1111 ... ,.Y'.~
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---...... l.J "'" ...... ,..,., ... .. JI • ....,... •<-. ·-.,..., u.. '10'7..tt. .,, .....
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METALS
HEW YORK IAPl -Spot _.._.
-'-' itrlc:es IOdey; c.,.,., 79·11 cents • pououf. U.S .
... lll'l•llDM.
..... INIC...-S • llOUftd,
llllc O_,.. • -4. •H-.o. n.v.DAD-..sw .... ~11>. ~7 .. T7c9"1setl0Uftd,NY
*"-YU.AD per"--· ....,.._...._tre¥tc., H.V.
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
•• Tiiie ._..... ...,_
~-WllOICIP'bslMeY.
UMllll: _..,. tllllfte $171AO, off SI.?$.
......_: ....,_ ll•lftt P1UO, off S1A
hrtt: S111.M. ... to.J7 • .. ,....,.; Q19.00, Off u.a.
lltfte•: u. flalftt t»7.00, on ~uo ...... .............
MeMlf 6 ....--1 IOftly Mtly 'lllOWI
.,,..., .... 1.1$.
' ....... ! feftly deity .-> SS7LIO, tit •11.u. .
....... lf""""4'111y ... )I~ ...,.4 ,llft$Ut .
. SYMBOLS
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