HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-03-01 - Orange Coast PilotMONDAY MARCH 1 1CJfi.'
AP .......
GOLDEN OLDIE -E lizabeth Taylor and her former
husband Richard Burton (left l celebrate her 'soth birt~day
in London with Zev Buffum. producer. of ··The Little
F oxes." which she· 11 star in for a British tour
I
Liz, Burt-on deny
'third time'~ rumor·
LONDON CAP) -"Elizabeth
and I will never remarry,"
Rij:hard Burton said today,
squelching a roar of romantic
rumors reverberating since his
weekend reunion with Elizabeth
Tulor, their ..Ji.I.st meeting in
five years.
lJurton and Taylor spent much
of the weekend together. holding
hands, dancing and talking, but
Provost aids
chase, capture
of suspect
only a few hours of it were in
private. And three of he r
children were reported on hand
then.
The reunion was a bonanza for
most of the British press. which
"' specula~on tbe possibility that
they would marry for the third
time.
"We haven't discussed it
'<marriage). It's not going to
happen." Burton was quoted as
saying today in an interview
with the Press Association,
Britain's domestic news agency.
"We love each . other with a
passion so furioas that we bum
lne another out," Burton was
quoted a s saying in the
interview at his s uite in
t-Gndon's fashionable Dorchester
'Hotel. WASHINGTON (AP) -Purse "I've got two certificates
snalchings rarely attract much which prove that I was married
allenUon these days, but when to Elizabeth al one time or
Kathy Tollerton's purse was another -and we don't need
grabbed, five motorists , one another one," he was quoie<I as bicyclist and a church provost saying.
took af~er t he s uspect and Earlier, William Hickey, the
caught him. . gossip columnist of the Daily Mrs. Tollerton said she and~ _ Express suagested th~re nrltht
her husband were ~alkinl home 'be a c~nnectiQn with Visa
from church .services at the Taylor's coming British staa~L
Was hin1ton c .. thedral in debut in "The UtUe Foxes."
fash ionable northw est HWhen 1 uked Burton lf bis . Wash~ when someone r!lD well-limed mettina with Ua .. _
past her and grabbed her was love rekindled or merely the
··•boulder bag Sunday. most outra1eous plug London
"I was yellin1, 'He's got IJlY bad seen iq years be could only
purse,' and .. my bus band ran reply wearily, ·Goel knows,' "
after him , ~he said in a wrote Hickey. -telep~ interview. -''I .Ull love l!:llsabetb,'' the · The commoUon attracted the 56-year-okl Burton told reporters
attention of bicyclist Lewla Saturday nllbt.
Re1enaleln, several other And Use 51)..year-old actrtaa
'cilbem and the Rev. Charles A. said "we've 'always loved each
p e i: ~-Y.J _ __P r o v o st of t he olher" u they drove off tofether
Wa•ll.UIPJll' cathedral, who was to a party Sunday nllbt.
1tuck m traftlc nearby. <See uz, •ate Al> 1h1en•tein 1blfled bis '
l0-1peed bicfele bltD blab ...,.
and took off after the ~ r ---vaniahea· tnatclllr ,.tdle tbe Rev. ~
ploll:ed up Mn. TollertoD ... .LA .rou.A (AP) -aeieardi ll•bmll ID 1111 w.na· • ......_ equlpmeat v.lued at up to ~·!"'ld·a...i:... ,_ ··-...... ......,from tlae ~--dll.-. ,__ ... plapta stonroom of UC la tM ..... ....... •• ..... Dt ....... 1t'N -.-at ...
...Sft ht 1...,-...Utodraw_ ~.1~~ la fllc:al 1911,
( ... OIAIS .... Al> a~. . ••
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• * • • • *
Ylll lllDlll llllY_NPll
ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
' , 31 arrested at weapons lab
One demonstrator found inside classified qrea at Livermore facility ,'1.
LIVERMORE <AP > -At least
31 demonstrators. including one
found inside a classified area,
were arrested today during a
protest of nuclear weapons
development :it the University of
Cali fornia 's Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory.
It was the s econd mass
demonstration at the facility this
year.· On F eb . 1, 171
demonstrators were arrested.
All but one of those arrested
were booked for investigation ol
blocking a road way. One
unidentified person was charged
wi.th trespa ssi~ after he
climbed a fence and dropped
into the laboratory compound.
The laboratory is owned by
the University of California and
performs nuclear weapon s ·
research for the Departm'ent of
Defense and the Department of
Energy . It has· be en a
l ong-standing symbol of
anti-war protest and the center
of much controversy among the,
UC Board of Regent s. Gov.
Edmund G . Brown Jr., a
Beatie all>uni dUe? .
Old, tinreleased recordings m~y be combined
--· -·---"'='*---LOS ANGELES CAP) -A Johnny Preston's '~Leave My
new Beatles a lbum? It's a KittenAlone." ·
POSSiJ>ility, thanks to the dozens EM-I also bas a five-song
of unre leased · · Fab Four'' Beatles audition tape and other
recordings languishing in record "demo" songs as well as tapes
company vaults. of familiar songs that differ
s ignlficantty frbm the final
T he Los Angeles Herald album versions. However ,
Examiner reported. that later because of legal obs tacles ,
this year EM I Records may chances are that these and other
release an album of tunes unreleased recordin1s will not·
recorded by U)e Beatles before be offtc:ially made available in
the group'.a members -Paul the our futw'.e,.a.ltbouth 5ome
McCartney, George Harrison, bve surfaced recently on
Ringo Starr and the late John bootleg tapes.
~noon ,-went . their separate The newspaper said a number
ways in lt10. The album would of soap appearin1 on a tape
include the Mitch Murray aoq played clurinc the "Beatlefest"
"HOJV Do You Do It" and _~-Loe Angeles may have been
i llegally removed from the
vaults or EMI. •
· The hidden recordings vary in
quality, from excelle nt to
unfinished, but even the poorest
of authentic Beatles tapes would
be extremery v"aluable .fo 'Beatie .
memorabilia collectors.
There are, for example , hours
and hours of s tudio tapes
containing everything from
outtakes and sone scraps to jam
sessions and-t'ebearaals:-
"T be recording studio was
their laboratory -they left the
tape machines running all the
time," formt?r Beatles press
a1ent Tony Barrow once ~aid.
<See BEAD.ES, Pa1e A:~
member of the regents, has to.it
been opposed to the university's
involve.ment with ~acility. Protesters g'a&ler today in
the rain ·a half, miJe m the
facility and paraded. with arms
linked chanting refrains such as
"We Shall Ove r come" and
"Power to The People."
When they arrived.at the south.
and southwest entrances, the
demonstrators sat down in rows
bloc king the entran ce of
e mployees arriving for work.
UC police methodiCally placed
each demonstrator under arrest .
There was no resistance.
Among the first arrested was
.Uu:...!\~v. Cecil ~llial!lLJ>astQ.r_
Ofi'fre "t.1i'de'Memorial Church ln
San Francisco, who said, "I
very stro.ogly feel opposed 1 to
nuclear weapons development.
William s. n oted f or
anti-poverty work, said "The
nuclear arms race is ··ued to
urban poverty and money that is
spent on weaponry couJd be useft
instead to help those in poverty
in the inner-city."
Another demonstrator, Bob
Jones. 53. of M artinez, a
psychology teacher. participated
because "I want to be a symbol
of the opposition to the arms
rac.e. I think all .the experts
agree, we don't need anymore
nuclear weapons."
...., ............... .......,
MIDGET MIXER Mic!get Ocean Racin_g Club racers in Series winner was Allan Rosenberg's lnteqse from 'Alamitbs
Newport Harbor Yacht Club'·s Corke tt Trophy series , 'Bay Yacht Club. <Story on Spoft.S . Page Cl>. __
scrambled.Joi:. position at.. st.art of ~day '"6 dista.Dee--race. · · •
Stewardess: 'I'm not ready'
• I t ,,, •
Survivc>r of cra8h killing 78 describes last mome1.1ts ..
W ASIUNGTON (AP) -The
sunlUi'lll-atewardeu from tbe
Mr Fforida flilbt that cr&lbed
into 1'ie Potomac River t8ltifted
toda)f tnt tbe ·plane betaa
abuddertq u it toolr off llDd
that ta U. lec:onda before btttlDI ~~· •.ater ,7'81 wracke~ bJ "YIOJent M!DNtlonl.
Once tbe BoetDa TIT bit the
water, Kelly Duacan told a
beartq, "MJ llUt f .. Uq WU
tbat t wu floaUaa. . - . I felt I
WU dJlbl ud I Just 0-.aN, 'I'm not,,_., to die'." .... ., ...... ,, l*PI• died .. U..Ja IJer.b. , • , .. .,..,.... ..........
National Aliiport runway, lbe
felt IOID8tb.iDI WU wroq, Ill.
Duncan told tbe Natloaal
Traa1portation Safet1 Board· beartnc.
''The takeoff WUD't U loud U
It uaua.lly ii. It Mellled Db an
UDUIUallY loq time ........ we pulled oil &M ...... ., ...
Federal laY_.t11aton IY••
.aald tbey believe lee la tile
en1m• may ......... •
IDdlcatGrtop.. .......... .....
rea:rc. u eo *9 -••• ti :=r:.r.---.........
~·· ahoraft. wltla' tt , ....... ,., ...... . ....• . '•i·-~~r
·aRAlll ClllT IWlll
Mostly cloudy tonltbt
through Tuesday. Cbabce
· p f rain 80 '9~t tonight.
Hitha 58 to 82.
11111mat
-
Soviets receive pnotos, data. after ~oft ldnding
MOSCOW (AP> -A SoYltC
1pac. probe made a aoft lancllnl
on the planet Venua lodly ua
wa'i YDdlDJ back pbotofrapba
and •fnform•Uon from aoll
aamplH, the official n•w• -,.,e11ey TUI rtportecr.
The Soviets and the United
..,.Statea have prevtoualy landed
, unmanned space probea on
Venua, the nearest planet to
Earth. Tass said a second
module is due to land on Venus
on Friday.
1 • Tass said a module descended
#rom the unmanned Venus 13
spacecraft "this morning after a
four-month flight.
"The r esults of the n~w
cosmic ex pe riment will
sig nifi cantly w i den the
information about the planet
nearest to the Earth," Tass said.
mlDU&H today, accordlDI to
Taaa.
Venua 1J wu launched Oet, •· Taa1 tald Venu. 14, lauocb9d
Nov. 4, will reach the pa..,.
Priday . Both cl'aft were
lauHhed from a 11lellttw 1Jl
earth orbit Tue Hid. Th~ SOvJet Union started ltt
Venus reeeareh pro1ram 1.n 19U.
A year later, the U.S. 1pace
probe Mariner 2 passed by the
planet.
· In 1987, a U.S. pro~under the
Mariner program and a Soviet
5 f eated dead
in plane cra8h
probe r.aehed the planet wttbln
a few boun ot each other.
Tbe Sovllllt probe truamttled
lnlormaUon for about U
mlaul••, ttopplnf after
temper__.. above 500 desreti
.rahreahett were ncorded at
what wu later determlned to bt
about 20 mile. from the planet's
aurface. The u .s. probe,
Mariner 5, passed about 6,000
miles from the planet's surface.
The U.S. launched two Pioneer
spacecraft ln December 1978,
one which went into orbit of the
planet and the other which split
into nve separate landing space
probes. ·
Tass aid its current Venus
p robes will test the ground
surface of Venus ln an ertort to
determine what elements are
pre se n t on t h e h o t ,
c:loud·covered planet.
•
The news agency said the
probe had already sent -back
pbotograJ>hS and scooped up a
soil sal'l1J)le.
RENO <AP) -Five people
were believed dead alt.er their
i1ingle-engine plane crashed and
eirploded into flames on a
mountainside eight miles west ot
Reno, Washoe County sheriff's
authorities said loclay.
'he mother ship, Venus 13;-..
passed al a di.stance or about
The de sce nt vehicle
transmitted information from
the surface of the planet_ for l27
From Page A1
POTOMAC • •
the s~cond witness to appear at
the opening day of hearings
before an NTSB boa rd or inquiry.
Asked whether she now plans
to continue working as a flight
attendant, Ms. Dunca n told her
questioner, .. Yes, sir, I will."
She said she bad had to sWim
to the surface and then fought
through pieces of ice back to the
tail section, where she awaited a
rescue helicopter.
Describing her nearly 30
minutes in the icy water, Ms.
Duncan said she had opened a
life jacket for another survivor
with her teeth because he r
hands were too cold.
A tt-~h-~f-the ques-tioning
focused on whether the plane,
which wailed for more-than 40
m inutes in a steady snowstorm
before getting takeoff clearance,
had been properly de-iced.
Investigators have concluded
th'at the plane's de-icing was
completed at 3: 10 p.m. EST. The
flight began its takeoff roll just
before 4 p.m.
"Testimony to be ptesented
later at the hearings is expected
to s how t hat an American
Airlines ground crew de-iced
half the plane more than an hour
before takeoff and the other half
a lmost SO minutes before
takeoff.
The NTSB's chief investigator,
Rudolf Kapustin, the leadoff
witness, said there has been no
evidence found to indicate any
st ructural· or mechani cal f~ilures of the plane's tw"O
engines ..
But, be noted, as has been
made public previously, that the
plane cockpit's voice recorder
indicates 1the aircraft was not
getting enough thrust as it rolled
4 ~own the runway. .
From Page A1
BEATLES •••
There is also an unreleased
Beatles film docume ntary,
originally compiled and edited
between 1968 and 1971 for Apple
Films, a division of the group's
_ company, Apple Corp.
The unreleased material also
includes 34 songs recorded by
the Beatles for the-'British
Broadcasting Corp. between
1962 and 1965. Twleve of the
titles never appeared on albums,
including -reportedly -songs
by Chuclc Be rry a nd Little
Richard, as well a s others
gathered by BBC researchers
working on an upcoming special
comm emorating the 20th
anniversay of the Beatles' first
appearance on British radio.
A dozen years after the
Beatles' breakup, Beatlemania
persists -at least to a degrees.
The newsp~r reported that the,
group's original albums still sell
a million copies a year in Great
Britain alone, with various
Beatles repackages also se.lling
in the millions.
The idea of a Beatles museum
to preserve the mountains of
memorabilia bartered at such
-gatherings as the· Beauereat is
gatherin1 steam, and the
ne)Yapaper said Paul McCartney
recently made a number of
purchases at Sotheby's in
LonClon with such a museum
possibly in mind.
Sgt. J oe Martin said the plane
burned on impact Sunday on the
northwest side o f Peavine Mountain.-
22,32() miles, Tass said.
The news agency said Joint
Soviet-French experiments were
carred out ,during the flight to Venus .
............
SMOKE FLAP -Ri chard Moss. ·38. has been booked for
assault on charges of stabbing a woman in the chest after
the pair exchanged words about her s moking in a San
Francisco elevator. Moss says he was attacked by Doris
Collum. 26. and was acting in self-defense.
Two victims
of Newport
er.ash named
From PageA1
CHASE • • •
attention to the thie f, Mrs.
Tollerton said.
As the group began to close in.
A man and woman killed in a the man jettisoned the stolen
fiery high-speed collision in purse , but the caravan or cars
Newport Beach last week have and the bicyclist m aintained
been identified as residents ol pursuit and cornered the man.
Santa Ana Heights. They were On~ cnotori.st managed to nag a
apparently on their way home P.ohceman and the man was
from work when their vehicle t aken into custody, Mrs .
spun out Of contro , police said. --Tollertmnatd:-. "He wasn't in very good
·Through tile use or de n tall shape, he. kepl getting winded,"
records, the two have been said Regenstein. "His se~ond
identified as James Ray pro.blem was that he stayed
Padovan, 41 , an d Linda (running) on the sidewalk the
tfa rgeret Kurzyniec, 32. Both whole time we were chasing
lived al the same Santa Ana him," instead of ducking into
Heights address, poli~e said. alleys or wooded areas.
Tbe couple were killed last ''The community is very
Wednesday wben their pickup concerned about crime and we
truck spun out of control on have a cr ime watch i n the
J amboree Road and slammed cathedral co~mu":lty," said the
Into a power pole, police report. ~ev. Perry. I lhmk 4he purse . s n atcher was scar ed. He
The truck, officials said, probably dldn'l expect all of this·
erupted in flames following the to happen."
accident and ~~ed the bodies There were no Injuries in the
beyond recognition. snatching or subsequent chase,
Bla~e kilu 2;
arupect arre1ted
'SANTA BARBARA (AP> -A
$250,000 fire that destroyed a
drug a6use trealment cente.·
and killed two m e n was•
allegedly set tSy a resident of the
program, police say. . ·
The pre-dawn blaze on Sunday
also forced the evacuation of 80
people fl"'QIJ'l an adja cent hotel.
Mrs. Tollerton said.
District of .. Columbia police,
said the suspect, charged with
robbery in Sunday's incident,
also is being held as a fugitive
from justice in Bru~swick, JIJ.J .
FromPageA1
OAAHOI COAST Diiiy Pilat
CleNMed ...a-.1141142-M11 .
. All oetter detl•""** 142-4121
When ihey leri the party, and
·reporters asked whether they
were thinkin1 of remarrying, be
s napped, "We are," but abe
shouted1 ''He's married, and I'm
marriea." His aide Jo LusU1
sald angrily afterward that
Burton meant botlr were already
married. ThorM8 P. Haley
,......-~~--Offlctt
Robeft N. Weed ,,......
Thomas A. Murpt'llne ...
LK8yScnulU ==:.---~P.HaNey ..... .,.....
MIW•llMI N. Godd8rd Jr. --a.tie H. Looe ......
----·-------
MAIN 0PPa .... .., ... c-. ..... CA. MeM ...._: 991\ 1,..,C-..._., CA. ...
c.ir,,..... ... Or .... c:.ilt ......... ~-... _..._ , ............................. .. .,.......,.._...._,, ........ ..... ..... ,"'' l•• .. ~-.
-Mi u Ta y lor r ecently
announced that s he a nd her
sixth husband, U.S. Sen. John
Warner, were ae~ated. Burton
and hll third Wife, 33.year~ ·
Suaan Bunt, split lut AUl\llt.
The Sun tatd Burton. told ltl
reponer: "Of course, I loft
&1118....._ -ad I love Sulla. I '°"' -llltb, d•lllll It ... And wllat t'd hw thetn do ll for
them to come lnto tbta room and
n1bt !tout between tem .•·,. .
WABASHEO An eastbound semi-trailer
crossed the Interstate 7.4 bridge over \he
Wa bash Ri ver near ~Ovington . Ind .. where a n
..............
ice jam threatens the span. u111c1a1s say 11
the river continues to ri&e it will be necessary
to dynamite the ice flow to prevent damage . .
Weather howls · up north
Storm-weary 4 residents fight 'heavy rain, winds
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A
Pacific storm expected lo Vefll
~ts fury on the Bay area today
mstead bore down on the Pacific
Northwes t . sending isolated
pockets of heavy rain and high-
winds whipping ac r oss
s torm .wear y Nor thern
California.
Nearly two inehes of rain fell
overnight on Mt. Shasta, and
heavy rainfall was reported
from San Francisco north to
Eureka and mland to Red Bluff,
the National Weather Service
said.
The rain was expected to
lighten as the cold front passed
through the area today, with
s howers continuing through
Tuesday.
High wind warnings were in
e ffect for t h e northern
Sacr amento Valley, as well as
Humboldt and Del Norte counties.
'"We are expecting 2() to SO
mile-an-hour winds," Del Norte
County s he riff's dis patcher
Thf'resa Bostwic k said late
Sunday. '·My front door keeps
on opening up by itself."
The National Weather Service
predicted that the front crossing
the ocean from Hawaii would
drop up to 5 inches of rain ln thei
San Francisco Bay area, where
a violent storm Jan. 3-5 killed 31
and caused al least $280 million
in damage.
But forecastel"s said Swtday
that -rainfall would not reach
projected levels.
~en -r.dtes-m eras;-
police hold driver
''Total rainfall amounts are
now expected to be in the l· to
3-inch range rather than the 3 to
5 inches forecast earlier,"
forecaster John Plankinton said
in a special weather statement. Plankinton sa1d t'oday's front
was moving much faster than
January's storm, which dumped
up to a foot of rain in som e areas
in 36 hours and triggered a spate
of killer muds lides.
A fatal traffic accident late
Saturday on Irvine Center Drive
near the Laguna Freeway was
the second in six months on that
stretch of road
But a city traffic specialist
said today Irvine Center Drive
has not had an unusual\y hi gh
number of accidents. and the
'two crashes were not similar.
Jeffrey Tripi , 19 , wa s
pronounced dead at the scene
about 7 p.m. Satur:day after the
car in which he was a passenger
swerved off tbe northbound lane
and s mashed into ·a utility pole,
tearing lhe car's top off and
leaving the vehicle in two major
pieces.
The driver. a 17-year-o ld youth
from La Habra whose dame was
11ot released, was arrested on
su spicion of felony drunl<en
driving and manslaughter. He
suffered minor injuries.
T he juvenile driver was going
as fast as 80 mph prior to the
accident, investigators estimate.
The crash six months ago was
the r esu lt o f so ber but
inexperienced driver who lost
control of her car, said Dennis
Wilberg. manager of the city's
transporta•ion services. / "Up until this lime. there has
not been a particula rly bad
accident history in that area,''
he said. ''We've had accidents
out there, but not an excessive
amount.·• .
The speed limit of the street is
SS mph, with adv.isory warftings
to reduce speeds in curves, he
added.
Road w i dening and ne w
interchange projects on the ·
drive are expected to begin late
this year or early 1983 as the city
prepares for development in the
Golden Triangle, the area within
the intersection of the Laguna.
Santa Ana and Sa.1 Diego .
freeways, he said .
Crash k-lls
pair riding
mot_orcycle
Two men were killed Sunday
when their motorcycle collided
with a car on Newport
Boulevard near Cowan Heights
in O range, the Ca lifornia
Highway Patrol said.
Officers identified the victims
as Terry Frost, 22. address
unknown, and Daniel Roberts,
24, believed to be a Marine
stationed at the El Toro Air
Station.
Bo th m en were on the
motorcycle headed southbound
on Newport. The CHP said it
was unsure which man was the
driver. .
According to officer s, the
motorcycle crossed the center
divider for an unknown reason
and collided with a 1980 Honda .
car. Frost and Roberts were
taken to UC Irvine Medical
Center In Orange.
The driver of the car was not injured.
.. The big difference is that
stbrm sat off the coast, and this
storm looks like it's going to
keep on going," Plankinton said.
The initia l fo r ecast h ad
warned, "People should take
steps to protect life and property
before Sunday evening."
The rain was expected to
spread southward over central
California t oda y. turning
1showery tonight and laperir.g off
Tuesday. Plankinton said. .
Snow was expected to fall to
aoout 5,000 feet in the northern
Sierra Nevada and to 9.000 feet
in the southern Sier ra.' 4 •
~
Meaning of story
altered by typo
A typographical error •
changed the meaning of the lead
paragraph in the Sunday Special
story.
It should have r ead : The
pros pect of u~i ng treated
wastewater to keep parks. golf
courses. greenbelt areas and
playin g f ields gree n has
promi>te'd five area water
districts to seek construction of
n e ·w · or ex'panded w a t er
treatment and delivery systems.
The word "prompted" was
inad ve rte ntl y printed a s
'"promoted.'"
classic windbnz.akczr. ..
th<l original G-9
windbnz.oke.r, 'idrz.ol fur
g>lf' or outdcx7r "Ml.Or.
mack or ·ligh"t~~t
c.otton-poplin wilh e
ttlrtan 1iniaj.
aveiloble in na~l,
british tan, navy
or nzd.
mnz, fbr us in cmglond. .
H lb8Non ,.land• NeU1port 8Hdt•7J4/844·8070
iooi ~ Blvd.•*'8aaoooct VW..•2131•19·1127
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een-ager invents Video game; ~sses $60,000
ORINDA . Cellf. <AP> -THa.~a1er . Tem McWUUams
lnv•D\ed a vtdeo ••me ln four
monb • ..,... •.ooe 111 •·· 1••r end 11 coacoetta1 a
tbree·dttn..a1toul apace 1eme
he bope9 to manet IOOD.
Bill be 1ald lt' 1 DO b1' deal.
u Orlida tcbool'11Clmce falr;
tbt ltaDlord Relearcb l.DIUtute
A r t U l c l a l I a t e 111 re a c e t.altot .. )' ..,. ~ad the
bo11 were ln•lted to bulld
wlaatever they-,teaed.
He'• been dolq Juel that ever
aince.
"Some people ere now callin1
me Richie lUcb," be aaid, "and
"It'• cruy," tbe lt-year-old
lllramonte Hilb Sebool Studm&
aald of the publicity b• baa
aenerated. ''I don't see wby it'•
bappenlnc: There. are a lot ol
kids my a1e developln1 1amea
l at 1cbool aome people are ukin&
me when I'm gonna set a car, or
ii they can borrow some
for computer firma." ·
Whep he waa ln the seventh
1rade, McWiWams and a friend
built a prhe-winnini robot for
mon•y.'' •
After the Stanford lab took
notice ol McWUUama, he alal"ted
workinc with computers .at the
University of California
...........
INVENTOR -Sixteen-year-old Tom Mc Williams stands next
to computer s howing "Outpost. .. a vid eo game he
programmed and copyrighted earlier this year. His
royalties and fees so far have amounted to $60,000.
Lawrence Hall or Science ln
Berkeler. tau1ht hlmHll ho• to
wrl\e orouam.e tJ>d worked u a
clerk In a San Francisco
computer store.
Wfth tua earnincs. be-boutht
mi Ap~ II computer aod added
to bll tomputer techniques,
developing ·'locks" to block
th~ft of lnformatlon stored by
computer. •
Executives of Sirius Software
Inc. of Sacramento saw hi.a work
and hired him to develop their
computer program protection
systems and to invent new
games .
• •·outpost," which puts the
player in the midst of a cosmic
baClleground lo defend a space
statlon against attack, was the
first.
The game, commerciall ~
available in a 51A-;1nch floppy
disc. took four months -
working part-lime -to concoct.
The game has sold about !i,000
units since Its introduction in
November; and the royalties,
co mbined with f ees for
computer program protection
wdt-k, have grossed $60,000.
"It seems he accomplished
these wonder-tut things in spite
of us," his mother, Marge, said.
Her SO!l spent so much time in
computer work, she said, his
father worried that he wasn't
devoting enough time to other,
more traditional games such as
basebal l , football a nd
basketball.
Reagan plans
4-day ranc~
• vacation
WA S HI NGTON CAP) -
President Reagan will speak in
Wyomiqg.._ New Muic.o....ancl
Southern California next week
before starting a four-day
vacation at his California ranch;
the White House has announced.
Ttte president is scheduled to
go to Ch eyenne, Wyo .• and
Albuquerque, N .M ., fo r
fund-raising rallies for GOP
Sens . Malcolm Wa l lop of
W yoming and H arrison
Schmitt of New Mexico. who
are up for re-election this year.
On Wednesday. Reagan will
address the Los Angeles County
Board of Supervisors and then
go to his r anc h near Santa
Barbara, the White House said.
He is scheduled to r eturn to
Was h ington the following
Monday.
wet weather seen
Bvtfelo
Cllerl1t11SC
Ct1erlst11WV ci......-c111ceoo
Ctncl11Mtl
Mostly cloudy tonight through Cltvtl•fld
T.,.telay. Clwnc• .,. rain .0 perctnt Colum-
tonlght. ~ O.ys. Oal·FI Wlh
Coastal high~ Tut.oay. owrnlglll Denver ._ n. watt< 51. Des Moines
Inland high u Tut.oay. owrnlglll Detroit
._SS. (Muth
EIMwllert, 1'9hl varia ble winds El Paso
becoming ,,_.ly -.th to 1out11 .. '1 t Falrba,.lts
to tt ti.-ton19M. Wind waws from Hartt0<d
t to 2 -· WHlerl~ swells t to l Ifft. lffltna Clouoy with a chance for rain Honolulu
non!Mrn wettn ~Ing sout!IW•rd Houston tonl9flt. llldllaplll
Jac:ttsn"11•
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iltlll .,_ llngaACI over nortMrn Mtmpftls
NllMHOte and upper Mkhltan. llOflt Miami
drl11lt was scauereel over th• ~~:"""st~ •C-lln.5, .., _,y Kies COYolrtd ...,.. .. •
most of tt1e rest o11IM netloft. Nast.ville
lta 111 was forecast acrou the Ntw Oyr'--
Pac:lflc ~ lllto Ille Plai.eu rf91on, New -...0 .,_.WM expedeel an>uncl llte Norfolk
I-er GrNt Lattn and N-Er1111en0. Okla City
wltll rain In the Mldclle Allentlc Coast gn'•"" 1.-1es. Sunny ski.s were lone•~ tor Pr1
1an0o0 .... ,_ most otller areH. h I• ,..,..,
TtmpWl!turM •-Die nation at P-nlx
mlddeY s..-y r..., tror-1 -ot Plttlbul'Qfl I dtttff 111 ~. olt.alN, to a P11and, Mt
hltll ol 15 It\ Miami 1'11-. Ort . llepld City
------------RtftO
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'forecast
COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN
AltEA$ -weonuday through
Frida y: Felr -warmtr Ulrovgll period. l.oc al gu1ty winds In
Salt L•llt
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........ ._. TODAY
A'W Me• Ott s.c--•: .. p.m.
TUIUINY
w "'""'._, t:40a.m. u
"'""-•:If e.m. U W ~flllll 1:9'p.m. u
w Secaftd -•:oitp.m. U
W Sun Mt1 S:9111 p.m., rl•t •:tt a.m. , ..... ., .
_...,, WU It: ti a.m. Tw.May,
rllat to: M a.m •
·New Pilot price 84.75 atai-ta today
Home. delivery chutes for the
Orange Coast Daily Pilot will be
·'4.75 per mon\h effective toda)'4
Coet lncreaMI ln all upeeta of
newss-per production, lneludlq
1 DIWllll'1at and cliltrif:MIUoa, make•
tbe 7kent lncreue DeeelNl'J.
In a contlnulDI effort to
lmpron·clellftl'J Ml'Yiee, Delly
PUot ean1en, no operu. I"'
independent busineaaes, wlll,
have the opportunity to eam 33
percent of the reflected
increase.
Dally Pilot home delivery
coets have not lncreued over
\be pal\21 moatbl.
Slalle ~y neW11tand pricel
will ~ at 25 c:eall ud SO
cents an Bundays.
Orange Coat OAJL Y PILOT/Monday, March 1, 1982
·.~ ........... LOVABLE FAMILY -"Silver Tabby," an
American short hair. and her male and
female kittens play in Best of Show trophy at
Empire Cat Club exhibition at Madison
Square Garde n in New York
OPEC losing clout
,--
Wor~wide oil glut cripples cartel's market power
NEW YORK (AP) -The
reported U.S. deciston to halt oil
imports from Libya is not just a
signal of American irritation
wit~ Col. Moammar Khadafy ..
but a clear sign of the declining
clout of OPEC.
The signs are everywhere. Oil
sales by the Organi-zation of
Petroleum Exporting Countries
have tumbled to lhe lowest level
in more than a decade: Some
members have ,been forced to
borrow money as export
incomes dwindle. J
The cartel's pres"ident. Sheik
Mana Saeed O taiba of the
--1.Lojt.ed..Arah Emir.ates. uses-the
word "crisis" to describe the
new pressures on OPEC.
More importantly, countries
outside OPEC are taking the
lead in setting prices. This week
Mexico cut its price by $2.50 a
ba rrel, to $32.50, putting it
below OPEC's benchmark of
$34. Great Britain, which now
charges $35 a barrel, was
reported ready to drop its price.
"Suddenly OPEC is on the
run," Stephen A. Smith, an
energy specialist a,t Data
Resources Inc:, an economic
research firm , said. "The whole
tone or the oil markets has
totally reversed." As a result, No 'r l h African nation 's
prices of gasoline and other high·quality oil , the companies
petroleum products are falling now are turning to cheaper oil
sharply in the United States. available elsewhere.
Administration officials say The timing is ideal for lhe President Reagan will announce the boycott of Libyan oil next administration to place a n week. embargo on Libyan oil, analysts
The Reag an administration say. There is a huge oversupply of oil on world markets that has accused Libya 's leader. Col. would make it hard for Libya to
K h ad a f Y • 0 f Pr 0 m 0 ting sell the estitnated 150,000 barrels
terroris m. · of oi l a day that the United
Thal the United States would States now buvs .
even consider cutting off oil
imports from Libya underscores The United States can turn to
the shift in power from the other suppliers -most likely
oil·rich countries of the Middle Nige ria, Alger ia or Great
~ to the big consuming _B..ti1.ain.....ly~.e no ~t
countries of the industrialized on U .S. cons ume r s , but the
West. headaches fo r Libya could be
lo 1973, Arab members of enormous.
OPEC slapped an oil embargo
on the United States and, the
Netherlands for their support of
Israel in the Yorn Kippur war,
setting off the surge in oil prices
and stunning Western
economies. Since then, Arab
n ations have fr equently
threatened ~utoffs for political
purposes. · ·
"'N6w, the tables have turned.
Whereas Libya once dictated
to American oil companies what
price tbey would pay for the
Libya's troubles stem from its
hawkish pricing policies,
unalysts 34i!ree. Through last
summer. while the world was
awash in oil, Libn kept its
offi cial price at $41 a barrel. But
the world's major oil buyers
s imply refused to purchase
Liby an crude a nd exports
dropped to 600,000 barrels a day.
. L1 bya now is producing at
estimated 800,000 barrels a day,
after cutting its price to S37.
.
• DU1IRUe &DiJtafm!• .... eotkll
SflN fRftNCISCO SJ9
SflN JOS£ J9
OftKlftND J9
R£NO 42
S65
65
65
65 .
t
One of the best
on-time records going.
That's style. Fares that save
vou money every day on
every flight. That's style.
too. AirCal. We d0.more
than get you there. We get
you there in style!
PHOENIX 42 64 . '(
----~---.......... ----_.....
flESllO J6 55
UIS V!CiftS ltO 59
"LowCal fare\ reQU•re advance pUrthase. Seats are limited and othef' restrictions apply . .
. .
8 er.no• OOllt DAM. y PILOT/Moftdar, Mll'Oh 1. , ...
' .
U.S., SOviet ~rms -_sales m _oun_t
WeapOns outstrip economic. aidJor. "Underdeveloped nations
By a . GaEGO•Y NOKES ._ .... ,,... .. ~
1 WASHING TON -Arma
sales rather than economic aid
ia becomin" the local point of
the U.S. and Soviet rivalry for
t'ht hearts and minds of
underdeveloped naUons.
The point is made in a study of
global arms sales by Andrew J .
Pierre for the Council on
Foreign Relations . He says both
s uperpowers now sell a greater
value of arms to Third World
nations than they give in
economic assis tance.
The United States is the
world's leading a rms supplier,
with saJes estimated at about $16
billion last year , a record. The
Soviets are next and Pierre says
they could overtake the United
States this decade.
More than three-quarter& of
the global arms trade now goes
to Third World nation s.
according to Pierre. That's a
change. Until the mid-1960s,
most weapons went to developed
nations in NATO or the Warsaw
Pact.
Co n sta n t -doll a r a rms
purchases by underdeveloped
countries totaled $15.5 billion in
1978 compaff)d with ta.I bWlon
in 1969. Constant-dollar nauree
mean t he price effetts of
infiation b.av& been discounted.
"No area bas not seen some
growth in its imports," Pierre
writes. "After the Persian Gulf
a nd Middle East, the most
notable increases have been in
arms sent to Africa and Latin
America."
The United States accounted
for 45 percent of the total arms
sa les to underd e ve lope d
countries, followed by the Soviet
Union, 28 percent ; France, 20
percent, and Great Britain, 5
percent.
Pierre concludes that arms
sales "may now be the prime
instrument available to the
Soviet Union, and a significant
one for the United States, in
their rivalry for the allegiance
of much of the world."
In s tatement that may
s urprise many Ame ricans,
Pierre offers one possible
explanatlon why thls bu
bappened:
••A contrlbutln& factor to the
em eratne importance of arms
transfen u an instrument of the
East·Weat compeliUo~as been
the relative decline of ldeoloay as an element in the continuing
stru1gle, because of tbe
d iminishing attractiveness of
botb .the United St~tes and the
Soviet Union as models."
Whlle many .Americans may
react with disbelief to the notion
that other nations are no longer
eager to emulate the U .S.
economic and political system,
there is plenty of evidence to
support Pierre's contention.
One recent example is the U.S.
sa l e of $8 .S b i l lion in
sophisticated radar aircraft,
-missiles and other weaponry to
Saudi Arabia. The amoun t was a
record for any sJngle arms deal
A high Saudi official didn't
exactly endear , himself lo
adminlstration officia ls when he
said recently that the Saudis
view the United States as "an
arms merch t and we pay
cash.'' .
The Reagan a lnistration
ha s nfade m a ·o r and
controyersial arms dea s since
Ca rter af.proach waa very
succesatu , he does warn of
pitfalls ln the present policy.
The now of sophisticated arms
to underdeveloped nations that
have not had them before may
encourage these nations to settle
their disputes by force and make
the wars worse when tbey
happen. There is the added
d anger tha t the s uperpowers
could become involved when
their client slates are at war.
Another adverse conaequence
is that poor nations m laht be
diverting money to arms that is
needed to feed their people and
to improve their impoverished
economies, he said .
Pi e rre said the cost of
weapons purch ased by poor
nations almost equals the total
econ omic assistance Uiey
receive. Thal, he said, raises the
question of whether the rest of
the world is n 't in fa c t
subsidizing a rms purcha ses
under the gµise of providing
economic aid since the poor
nations seem to be spending
almost all the aid they gel to buy
weapons.
·~-....... TOGETHERNESS J e ff and Teri Litton of Spoki.lnt'. both 21.
a re processed into the Marine Corps. thl' first married
couple to join together in two years . Sgt J S;rnehez helps
with the identification· work. They'll be stat1onl•d apart for
their basic training but may be reunited at a l~ildie dut:-·
station.
Water. everywhere,
hllt. none to drink
Reagan goes right to the top
Fund-raising letter begins 'Dear Mr. God ..
"coming to office with Saudi
Arabia, Pakistan and Venezuela
and has s harply inc reased
overall global arms and security
aid whil~ holding the line on
huma nitarian and economic
assistance.
It has stated its readiness to COMMACK .. N.Y. CAP> -A lette r from l he president thought so highly of his work He
KEY WEST, Fla. (AP> -Key
West is having its winter water
shortage, and while tourists are
being kept happy with bottJed
water and booster pumps, the
_.locaUolk.s...b.ave to grin and.hear
the drip, drip, drip.
The. Florida Keys Aqueduct
Authority cut water pressure lo
the minimum this week after
h eavy w in t e r de m and
endangered the island's one-day
reserve supply of 7 million
gallons.
·on the first noor, pressure is
normal only at mealtimes; the
rest of· the day. it just trickles
out of faucets. On the second
fl oor, forget it.
"It's giving us a fit," said
Edwin Fulton, manager <ff the
A& B Lobster House. Fulton,
whose business is on the second
floor, said he instaHed a booster
pump to get wate r to his
180-..s..e.aL.I~staw:~ after ~
severe water shortage two years"'
_ago.
''I· ve been able to maintain
the restaurant because of my
pump. If it hadn't been for the pum'l, I would've been out of
business," he said .
The Keys draw their water
through a 130-mile pipeline, built
in the f!arly 1940s, that flows
isla nd to js land down U.S. l
from Florida Cit y, where it
joins the Florida mainland.
s e 11 a r ms to Chin a while President Reagan seems to show he does not mess added that the letter implies Reagan is ready "to
continuing to sell a rms to with middlemen when it comes to campaign give the ck!vi l his due, and put God on the
Taiwan and has made clear its contributions. presidential task force."
willingness to negotiate a major . A three-page le~ter bearing the president's He also intends to offer "a little prayer" that
arms deal with Jordan. Israel signature was delivered to the Rev. Doyle Reagan policies work a little better than his ~ an<f Turkey-contTilue a~ trnugtrerty, --,,:f.fo1l"-oMft-C·~norc1f of Go~-rn--· compulerized mailings.--
major recipients of U.S. arms. Commack. · ,.,, . h
Syria, Libya ·and India are ."Dear 'Mr. God," t~e letter reads. "I. _am .. Worm ivas rig t
major Soviet arms clients. calling u~n you to ~ake a m~t unusua.1 sa~nf1ce.
In fact, Pierre ,says the most The sacrif1c~: $120 m ca!'lpai~n contnbut1ons to BANNE;R ELK. N.C. CAPl "'7' The mayor of
di s tinguishing c eat u r e of keep Republican senators m office. Ba nner Elk predicted way back in Octo~r that the
President Reagan 's foreign ''Right now we Republicans only have a slim cold and snow would come early this·winter and be
policy, froiv that of the Carter four-vote m_ajority lead in the Senate. ~ha~·s all !.. followed by a n unseasonably mild spe ll in
administration, is the emphasis Assurtng Mr. God that he 1s in good Fe bruary and a cold, snowy conclusion. He knew
o n arms s a I es. Former company. the president continues: because he read it on a worm.
President Carter sought to "Believe me, I'm not asking everyone to join Mayor Charles Von Cannon says people may
diminish arms sales and curtail J_his club -only proud, flag-waving Americans have scorned his use of a woolly worm to predict
them entirely to nations with 11Ke you who I know were wimng to sacrifice to the weather, but so far. he says, the caterpillar he
poor human rights records. keep our nation strong." looked at in October at the Woolly Worm Festival
Wblle Pierre doesn't think the For his p~rt. Daugherty was "thrilled" that in Banner Elk was right.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
....... , ....... Fi•• SENIOR CITIZENS ,.., ,.., ,_, ........ Tlli11•.
You'w ·heWd grMt tNnga •bOUt th9 Yoga CentM ~ 1970.
theN busy SW-Wed deys don't you owe yourself one mght a
wMk to leem how to relax and Yitalile your body at will! AlsO, you
can eneble 'fOAJtl mind to experience yOOf lnnef Superconscious
Self wtth ltl wildom 8& power to change thingSI ,;.
"'.., ••n mm. llLI •at-• -.n•amm•m1n•••
-···-··· Tllll'I • • .al'I ma. Yc~J'I be taught the higher Yogas by one of the tew masters in
·-
$1.00 Hearing Test~ Set
For Newport Beach·
ELECTltONIC HEARI NG TESTS will be given a t
Newport Beach Hearing Aid Center
Mon., Mar. I, Tues., Mar. 2, Wed., Mar. 3
9 A.M. to 5 P .M ..
Construction
. ll}ODeY · available at
the wor1d todey. RerNkrilhna AnendeJI it tntern.11on111y known
• • mallet, not orl(y of Yoga but etso or ~•physics and
Mysticism. A practical. unp1etentious. humorous. Western· botn Guru, he transmits enlighterung consciousness as well as ......,..._..., ,~ .._,. _
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COME TO THE FREE DEMONSTRATION. Tara and Larry F , EE
.. demonltrete the netural and eeay ex~ of Hllttw Yoga
and ltlOW you how 20 mlnut• a dey can vttaltle 'fCM hMrt. =-~.tir;:;·:::..~ :~~::C:: =.!'~ DEIOISTIATIOI
Hearin~ tests will be conducted by a Hearing Aid Specialist.
who is hcensed by the California State Board of Medical Quality
Assurance as a Hearing Aid Dispenser .
Anyone who has tr ouble hear ing or Wlderstanding is welcome
to a test emploiying the latest electronic equi~ment which will
determine his or her particular loss. You will see a modern
hearing aid so tiny it fits totally within the ear. ·
NEWPORT BEACH HEARI NG AID CE~TER
1600 West Coast Highwa,y Newport Beach 646-8266
Heritage Bank.
. Residential
· COmmerclal Bulldln~
Takeout COminltment required
. along with leases.
Conlac1:
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SOUth Orange County/Irvine
7'41851-4050
American
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+
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well· being. TIMlon II reMOneble and tN benefb .. prlce6ea TOIOllOW
A11oyouwll!teemttwFu11Breett1 -C8naddYl'Wltoyow11te. ..,, MAI. 1st at 7:31
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SEA OF SHEEP Traffic was delaved wtlen
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........... High~ay 41 between Laton and Riverdale in
Fr~sno Count~· for f ecding
•
Firm fined huge sum
Mining company hit for polluting ~acr~'!1'~to River
r WIS;; WU voii 7oia vou vOisvOis~v----i ioii 'Voii Vois 10isw~
~I . ."3~2 MON .. TuEs. & WED. I•
;11 Pre~ent ~is £'!?.~g~!-:~ 2~!~~!:!~oW'coupon !!
and get doubte the savings from Vons., Nat to I nclude retailer. free coupons. I
I I coupons greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. c: 11 I . K I Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 3 coupons per customer. ._ 1 I rl Excluding liquor, tobacco and au dairy prodycts. • -1 I I~ Coupop good Ma~ l, 2 & 3, 1982 I
UOIS VOIS VOU-VOIS MOU V4U VONS VONS VOQ:-V.-.S VOii VOii VOU YOU VOllS VOIS I r--------J------------------------~-~ I VOIS, VOIS VOii VOIS VOIS to1s VONS VONS YOU VOii v• VONS VOIS VONS VONS VOii YOU I •I *332MON., T<JES.&~o: 1: ii . DOUBLE COUPON 1:
I 11 Present this coupon along with any ~ne manufacturer's "cents-pff' coupon 1• cs and get double the savings from Vons. ROt tO include retailer, free c.oupons,
REDDING (AP> A judge violating a cease and desist caused by rain and spring water I> coupons greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. I
has handed down a $16.8 million order, also for about 1,000 days. flowing over the metals in the I: ' C§I
judgment against Iron Mountain T d A 'd t f th mountain and that the only real I~ um·1t one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and la'ml.t 3 coupons 'per: customer. • . •I Mines Inc. for poll uting the · e rman, presa en ° e solution is removing the metals. .. Sacramento Ri ver. Sacramento-based company Arman said the construction I; Excluding liquor, tobacco and al dairy products. • 31
. w~ich bought the mine in 1~6, of Shasta Dam and a debris dam !ii: -·-_ __Coupon _go~ ~rch J. 2 & 3. 1982_ Ill T he de.cision b y. Supe ri_o~. s~~~e WOl;!ld move .~~, ~ett-Spring Creer·~ggravate<hhe I
Court Judge William -Phelps last a<i ne Jud~menl. 'ke saia. he problem. I VOii YOU VOU VOIS VOlll YOU VQ81 VOIS VOll .. V91 Wiii VOii VOIS VOIS VOIS VOii WIS ..
week was in a suit brought by recentlys1gnedacqntract w1tha·• t-------------------------------•-•-th·e ·state's Central Valley. ·major company with_ a new The mine started out in the tlOIS VOii VOii VOii WOii VOii YOU VOJIS VOii VQ .. V0111 VOIS VOIS VOIS VOii VOIS vnu 1
Regional Water Quality Control technique of removing the 1860s as a gold and silver mine, 1 ., c:
Board. pollution. but became the 10th lar gest I . 11332 MO~ •• TU~. & WED. 11
copper mine in the world by I · I
The board-says water draining "We intend to clean up the 1901. State records show that :1 ooue· LE ~ouPON c-·· fr pm t·h e mine 1 O mi le s ~ater for the state of California more than $1 billion worth of ~
northw..est of Redding contains a nd to go ahead with our metals, at today's prices, were
copper, zinc. and iron that is long-range program which is IS taken . from the mine before • 1 Present this coupon along with any one manufactµrer's "cents-off' coupon a·.
polluting Spring Creek and the years of mining," Arman said. mining stopped in 1965. and get double the savings from Vons. Not to include, retailer, free coupons, II
Sacramento River. The board He said the mountain still . Arman protested a recent •,. coupons weater than one doUar or exceeq .the-value of the item . c: I says the polluted water kills con tains minerals-vital to Tepo rt by th e f e d e ral • 0 fi"h national defense. o •I "f • Environmental Protection I> Limit one coupon per manufacturcr·s coupon ·and llmlt 3 coupons per customer. M
The amount of the judgment Arman d en.led that the Agencywhich saidtbeminewas 1r-o Excludlngllquor,tobaccoandalldairyproducts. ;11
was based on $10,000 a day for pollution was caused by the among the three worst pollution 111 Coupon good March· 1. 2 & 3~ 1982 •I
polluting the river for about mining, whic h was done by sources in Cal.ifomia and among ~ MI
l~days and~•ad~a_y_f_o_r __ P_re_v_io_~_o_~_e_r_s._H_e_s_a_~_i_t _~ __ t_h_e_1_14_w_~_t 7~_t_h_e_n_a_ti_oo_. __ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.
Ancient
• tissue
'I
studied
BERKELEY (APl
A bit of hardened tree
resin purchased from a
Polish amber salesman
has given scientists a
view of fly tissues 40
million years old, the
o ldest tiss ues ever
exa min ed
microscopically.
There is even ··an
extreme longshot" that
the tissues contain.DNA,
t h e U n iversity -o f
California scientists said
I ast week , although
most studies indicate
that DNA degenerates
after one million years.
The muscle, fat and
other cell tissues or the
Oy "corresponded to
what one would expect
,to find in a routine
examination of
present-day insects,"
said George 0 . Poinar-
Jr. and Roberta Hess in
their article in this
week 's Scie n ce
magazine.
P oinar , an
entomologist, said that
COMJHfl'iSOfi of the n y-s
tissues with that of its
descendants may help
s h ow how qui c kl y
· evolution works oo. the
cellular level.
The fly itself look&
·much like the current
family Mycetophilidae
Dlptera.
The small , brown
female fly apparently
settled into sap from a
conifer tree on a spring
• day along what later
became the Baltic coast,
the sdentlst.s said.
It apparently li vecJ
during the early Eocene, ..
at a tlme when early
deer , hor ses and
rhinocero1e1 were
eppeariq on earth.
Our exclusive
Brookslinen
·for women
~ ~ ~. Ir::0~=Jnt:~: ::~ ~
"\ handsome blend ~
adds to linen's ~
distinctive t~xture, ~
the crea~e-res1stance ~
of polyester. Each ~
of our attractive ~
separates is. fully ~
hoed. In blue.~ ~
~~-___,-Vp_16 >:!'gu lar,_ ~
6 to 14 petite. ~
3-butron jacket, $200 ~
;a..lo.oW.~ ... --ront.pleat.skir.t., $95 -
Exdusivt cotton gingha""
shi71 with pleat front,
round Cf liar. Taritr!~/lo
chtcks of brown-blut-tan
~,. havy-pinlt-grey.
6to 16 , $36
,·
"''
. . LARGE AA
EGGS
DOZ. IN CARTON
Sllf'.'i PRICE Llf'.'IIT 2
SLIM PRICE
BACON
SLICED REGULAR
LIMIT I PUR. OVER LIMIT I .59
.. • z
•
·.99
..
1
I
,-•-'
I i I
• I I
. · •
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILQ.T/Monday, Maroh 1, 1912
The children need
• comm unit)':
Thcrt• is one 01'ang" <ia 11
go\'ernrnent aun<:~· ttJJ,t h~• proved . rfmu rkilly resilient in
the foce trl mut'h Wd\'C'rsit~· the .
Al beQ ttfon 110111 for cl~~ndeat •
c hi OranJ .
acilitf I!'! wht•& C'
ub tter~ and uhi:tecfOned
C'h • r thl' county g~· \\rh<'n e · s he lter is neeclect
he reporll•d io~identl'
of ·abus e in lhc <.'ount\:"'
h1t :f 11\rrc.•ased 125 fM:l't·on't
o,·(.lt t.he past fh'l' 't•ars. \h(.) cte~ on lhC' homt_; ha\'(' lx>l'n
g-rear. ltlC j)(•l'mlss iblc.• CUf>Ul'll~
h as oft-et1 hl'en n •a('he<I . ()r
l'X<.'eed ed.
Children who cannot he t•a1'ed
f o r a t the.· h orn<.• are sent. to
lemporar~· l'ost<.•r fumilies. wh1d1
p r o vi ct e s 1 rp 1 I a r l ' !ll l' r g <.' n c.· y
s hclte1· t'arl' undl•r c.·nnt r~\,rtual
arrangem<.•nts with the c.·ount~·
To · copP wilt& th<.• ·increas ing
need for c•meqn ·ney slwltt•r b\•ds.
th<' ('ount~· has l'Xpanckd Sitton
h o m <' l o 1 2 8 h t· cl <; a n d 1 ..,
support
~Ul~ to t.•xpunn th<.> fos tl'I' ~·)l'ogram rrom th<.· 1>rcs1.:nl
..-.... lOOlwd s .
B.Ul more 1s .nl!Nh.'<I Thul 's
wh,· plans w~·r announrcd lus t ~Lc'up· for <'W>1\,"i tr u t lion of
Oran1tt"''UOd ... ·']\~\\ home ro ..
dl'pcndrot <·h~.
Thert.• is.~ •toun'ilswc.•11 of 1rnp_1xwt for 01·a ttg-t•woocl .. Jus t
ftftW hU'gl' it is Will hl'('OITil'
k now'n Thu r s da " wh<.•n th \• non~1>rofit Oran~e,\•oocl hoard of
directors nam<.'s se\'<.'ral ma1or
contributor:-,\t lhl· s aml· t11nl'.
Orangl•wocHI "Ill kiek ofl 1i...
form ~1I fund r<11s 1ng l'umpaig11
• About SO 5 million is nl'l•dc.·d
to construC't t h(' 154-beci fad l11 ~ at
thl• sill' of the <''ds ting ,\ltwrt
Sitton llomt•
Th a I 1.., a <' o 11 :-1 cl l' r u b h•
a m o 1111 I o I m 11 n l' ' Bu l I h t•
prnhll·m of <'h1ld · :d H1sc.· and
1w g l<.·c·l 1s a eonsicll'ral)lt• oiw. too
( >rangl'\\'Ood ckst•1·\·t·s l'\'l'r~·om•s
~upport. and t·ontrihulions
The Caribbean plan . '
P.1-¢ s i cl t' n t H t' a g u n · s R l' u g u n a t 1 t• a s t h a s
long-awaited plan to <.1 id some.• suggested doing ~oml'thing ahout
n eighl>Ors-to the south is <J good it Rut. .hr n·. too. as in thl' l' S
firs steJ). put som e cumpromis<.·~ fin<Jn('ial pn!'!I urc h l' f'<H't•s a
wilt"'bl!'"l1l!l'de<1 •md the progr a m !'1tuatio11 !w rnh<'ritl'C1 hut diet not
will take time to 1mplt•mcnt. ('rcall'. Wh11l• Rea gao cun bl a ml·
The pres ide nt proposed $350 FU! c I Ca s t ro . mos t o I l h c.·
million in ceonomie fundin g problc~s ,W<.'rl' th<.·r<.• long hl'fon•
principall.'· for tht• troubled· Ca.stro anti. in fatl. ht•lpt•d him
('OU ntric s or El S ah·aclor. into powt•r
J a m aica. Cos t a_ll!g_._!l~ .. li""l.:.~.._,-____ ..,ij..,.u,...r..,ri .... r .... i11A'n ... L·-.s -.hil\:.l' ~i.LSl;J.J.cd-_
M---Ho n cturas and th<.• Domlnit·an sornt• t•('onomil'S Rt•n ·ss1on. 1111
Republi<'. That in itst•lf pos es priN•s. <l e p<.•n<lt-nc•e un su~ar
problems in our rl'<'l'~s ion . · trade and hauxit<.'. a downturn in He also o\·e rrulNI somt• touris m :ind n 1nnus prol)ll•ins
adv isers and s poke loudly ;.1bout plilg ll\' othn bas in t•otmlrit•s .
t h l' · · S o ,. i <.· t b a c· kl' d Initial reat'lion has g<.'lll'ntl l ~
C uban-man ug<.•d s uppo rt for bt'en pos itl\'C'. from hasin offi ('i ~ll s
\'iolt•nt rc,·ol ution 1n Ct•nt ra l !'l lud ~·1 11 g cl <.•tail s of th e
Ame rica ." proposing SfiO mitl11111 fa r -rang ing plan. The \'iew:-of
mort'inmilitar~ assistant·~ :'\lcxit·o i.lnd Ven e zuC'l a 1n
While we do not qucstron this particular will ht> important
dang e r . the churae l C'riz<1t111n And certain!~· gi\·e und tak<'
again raised the SJ>l'('tcr of pa ~t w ill he r<.'f1uirt•rl on both sidt•s.
U.S. colonialis m and ciistra<'li.'cl Th<.• L'n1ll'rl States canno t t ie
from th<.• pos itl\'l' a s pN·t s of dl'\('I Opm e nt sole!~ to
t rade. in\'l'Stmcn t a ssistante m1d a nt i-communist po lltic:s
fi na ncial aid propos a ls. The ac1dit ional (unding for El
In addition . ..t he presicl<.·nt Sah·~ ror example. pos<.•s th<.·
pointed to the l'X odus of refu~<.'es J!"l"e ate s t po I e n ti a I for
fro m Cuba but s kirted· an <'untro\'ers ,·
im migr ation polit~ Still. t he LS. this timl' has
The Carihht•a n bas in poiws ;.1 proposed srndin g businessml'n.
C'h 1c ken·or-r g g prohll'm: without I l' c: h ni l' a I c x pert s and
1_n\'estment: lht·rt· 1s no stabilil.\' a dminist rnturs instead of thl•
And without ..,tahilit~-. there is nn Marines. Hutt<.•r 1s a mu('h h\•ttc.•r
m\'estment approach 1 han guns .
·• .
Schmitz seems .forgetfel
State St•n .John Sl'hmi1 1 b
nothing if not t onlusing
In one brea th ht• c-laim~ lht•
furor O\'e r his wiclcl ~· publir1z<·<I
r e m a rks rd<.•1T1ng t n "hard
.Jewis h and I a rg11ahl~· 1 f'emalt•
f<t c es .. and t·;.tlling a frmin1s l
a l t o r n t' ,. · · a s I i c· k h 11 I c.· h law~·t'ress:. has in fa ct he lp<.•d his
c ampaign for the L'.S. Senate and
brought in a lol of conlrihution:-
:'llow. hc.1\'ing b<.•t•n s tripped 111
his s tat e S<.>n atc rnmmitll'l'
c h airmanship and rl•mo\'(•d from
the national tounC'il or the.• .John
Ri rc h Sociel\· b\•t·ausc.· of I hos t·
remarks. he see m s In be.• fa ult ing
thc media.
Schmitz ~ay!'I he.· will not g i\ l'
up his membership 111 th<' Rir<'h
Soriet\' because ... , set· no r ea scin
to give you ~u~·s in the merlia·that
c:omfort. just s o you <·ould \\Til t•
about J ohn Schmitz 'kirked nut
h~· the John Birc h Sotii·t~ · ..
The m edia. Mr. Sl'na tor . f.!l'I
no co mfort from n •po rtmg ~·our
o utlandish remurk ~ Anet in
•
... u gg(•sting that th e.• nwdia m;i~ in
:-o rn e ''a~· lw n •:-pnns 1blc.• lor
k\•t•ping this n m of \\orms opt•n
~OU Sl'l'ITl In fOl'P,t'I hem II ;ill
s t a rll'd ·
Th\• rl'marks i11 qut•st11111
\H'rc.· not pit-keel up h~· tt rl•portl'I'
111 an inll'l'\'ll'\\. or in .c·m·c.·nng
nn e of ~·our s p<.•cthc.•s. anct thc.•n
hlown mto a hl•adline
The" \\'l'l'l' wrille n out 'c.•n
(' a r er ll i'' ·' i n ~. () u r () \\' n p rt• s s
r c I e a s t• . 1 n s c 1· i h c.· cl on I h <.'
I l't l <.• r ht• a d of ~· o u r St' n a I l'
commillel'. a nd cl1st rihull'd lo lhl'
m t•dia In 'ou. w ith tht• n•n
ob\ iou:-1ntt .. nt1on nf hann~ thc.•m
puhlis hecl
The rt·s ult. of <.·ours<'. was tht•
publi cit~· ~uu clearl y s ought .
Whl•t h<'I' or not ~·ou a lso sought
tht· SenulC' n •primanct an'cl tht•
Rirth SoC'it•ty nus t <.•r is bes idt• th\•
point .
.Jus t don I Ir~· lo put I ht•
respon~ib1hl ' for I his ffil'S~ on lht'
ffi l'<fa Yoti'H· h<.'('n ho1stl.'d with
~ nu11 Hwn 1wtarrl .
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views e>C·
pressed on tl'li!> page are those ot their a utnors and artists. Reader c,omment Is 1nv1t
ed. Address The Da ily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (7141
;642·4321.
.L.M. Boyd/Writing trick
You want to wrlte gag lines?
Nothing to lt. Take any three unfunny
unrelated words at random. Sheep.
Jacket. Saddle. Link them in a lively
Una.: "This jacket fits like a saddle
on a sheep." Not funny? Keep t.ryinJ.
In no time at all you'll hit a ..
combination that's humorous.
ORANGE COAST
llilyPilat
Q. Qo camels bite people?
A. Do indeed. Kick. too. People
have been killed by camels.
Q. Isn't It traditional that all the
French waiters wear mustaches?
A. On the contrary. French chef&,
yes. Fren(h waiter, never.
..
• •
'Safety net' misses
WASlllNGTON • J e wel Wins ton
Williamson is one of those faceless
Americans who has slipped through
Ronald Reagan ·s "safety net." The
preside nt had promised that his net
would catch the tgM.v needy who might
be hurt by Cederalbudget cutbacks.
But like all the others, Williamson has •
a face the weathered, wrinkled face
of a 72·ycar,old man who was born and
raised in the piney woods of Dodge
County. Ga. He yas a cabinetmaker
until poor health forced him to retire 12
years ago. His wife died in 1972 and left
him a1one in a world that has now
passed him by. He has two sons. but
they arc only a little better off than he
IS.
THE OLD CODGER IS stubbornly
s elf-reliant the s ail of the ea rth in
President -Rettgtli'H! romantic view of
Ame rica. Williamson doesn't want
som ething for nothing. and he doesn't
want Lo beco m e the ward of a n
impersonal government Hut he is too
drained of life lo provide for himself.
lie nee ds help.
A few years ago. he w<1s filed away
like an anonymous st atistic in one of
those cattle-pen nursm ghomes. He had
$4 .20 in his pock et when friends,
res ponding to his pleas. managed to get
him out. Now he h ves in a public
housing project in Alma. Ga.
"f got this place to live," he wrote to
me "The rent was $30. $t5 to get the
light turn on . $20 to get the water turn
on. There was so many roaches. I paid
$30 to ~et it s prayed.
"I had no furniture paid $50 for a
second hand bunk bed and mattress . I
gave $60 for a second hand cot. I had to
s it on the cot to eat chicken winj(s
and neck bones About six months ago,
a little girl g<1ve me a table and two
chairs I lo~t my food stamps. all
I
JICI 11111111
but $14 worth and get a social security
for $174.90 . .. .
William s on heard about a
government program that helps the
nee d y pay their he atiJig bills He
appli ed . but he was told by a
functim1a1 y . · 1 know you need lltrrp arid
need it bad. but r m not goine to s ign
you up bttause you live down (here on
s kid row."
The utility bills keep going up "My
electr.icity bill last month was $60 10,"
Williamson wrote "I cut the heat orr at
night and keep il down every day Now.
this month. the weather been so bad I
know it lwill be1 S80or more
"Last summer. I was so hot dry , I
had Lo buy air condition. It cost $452. $52
down 38-months no pay J. I had to stay
ins ide like I do now. I got an oxygen lenl
s ide my bed. I have to pay about $30 for
medicine myse lf the Medicaid don't pay
for . _There a re lots of old people s ick
m these apartments."
A representative of the Alma Public
Ho using Authority ac knowledged the
•J
a few
accure1cy of J e wel Willia mson's c laims.
but told my associate Sam F'ogg. "I
didn 'l rec.1lizc he had any serious
pr.oblems When he comes in he.re. be.
likes lo make little jokes ..
WHY DID Williamson wnte to me?
Because registered letters he has paid
for out or his monthly pittance have
repeatedly gone unaoswered by state
a nd federal bureautrats
.. Please print this in your column so
the President will know we didn't get a
penny," Williamson wrot~ "If he knew.
I believe he man enough to see the next
lame the poof needy would gel their
s hare The only way the President will
r eally know 1s for you to print I thank
you ..
Jewel Wi ll iamson conc luded with an
obseur.atwn lhat may mako.-no &eAse to-
the c o l d ·eyed budge t -cutt ers in
Washington But. it speaks volumes for
the poor a l'ld e lderly ~ho are being
syslt•m a t1 c all y r o bbed o f the ir
dignity ··1t 1s not the money:· he wrote.
"It is the way we are pushed around. I
s ign this with m y hand on the Bible. so
help me God."
Footnote Smee he wrote. Wil liamson
has been having trouble saving enough
for the elcctnc1tv ball. He called -
collect. from a pay phone and said
he's afraid "they'll cut me off and I
m ay have to go back to another nurs ing
home: I don't want to do that aj?ain."
Then he e1dded: ·Tm not mad at
Ronald Reagan. What bothers me is the
money is n't ge tting down to us that need
1t Somt'thmg is wrong · · ·
Get the people off governmenf s hac~
The ne". new Federalis m is here. In
a major pohcy statement. Secretary of
State llaig said that domestic opposition
s hould not pr~v ent t he f e de ral
governmenl from sending troops to El
Salvador if it wants to
"If we were to d eterm inc our foreign
policy based on the lowes t co~mon
de nominator of the national mood ... he
s aid in a television intl'rview. "I think
we wo uld be o n ve r y fallac ious
ground ..
A PORMERLV unidentified White
House s pokes man confirmed that
General Haig's remarks constituted "a
giant s t r i d e f orward " in the
admmistration's.domesllc policy.
"Now that w e have gotten
government oH the backs of the
p_eople," Presidential Adviser Ellington
Pricely told reporters. "it's high lime
weo got the people off the back of the
government. ..
Pr icely told r eporters that it was the
lowest common d e nominators -or
"LCDs," as they are referred to in
Was hington -who .. constantly
interfered" with thP. orderly workings of
government.
·'This· adminis tration has been
continually harassed by LCDs." he
said. "You wouldn't believe the amount
of time we've had to waste answering
letters a11d phone calls from LCDs
complaining about this or that. If it's
not some little old lady whining about
he r food stamps being cut o(f. it's a coal
mine r grous ing about unemployment
"Why, JUSl the other day we had an
l'nlire g r o up of LC Ds who c all
them s elves 'The Children's Defens e
Fund' beefing bel'ause we cut $8 billion
--i' ART HDPPI "S ,
in ~o poor kids from the budget al'ld
increased residential expenses for the
White HQuse by $800,000. T hey actually
s ugges ted we e liminate a $400,000
annual s ub5idy for Defense Secretary
Weinberger's private dining room
Whose dining room 1s it, anyway?"
Pricely said that getting the people
off the back of the government meant
the administration would "no longer
have to listen to such claptrap" and
co uld pursue its aims unconcerned with
public opinion. .
·'The pres ident will be a ble to stand
up to the Russians all he wants without
worrying a bout what some cowardly
LCD in Kokomo thinks.'' he said. "And Mrs. Rea gan can borrow as many Lear
jets as she'd like from Lear jet
des igners lo help out the Lear jet
industry ..
··As for you m embers of the press."
concluded Priecly before storming out
the door. "you won't have us to kick
around any more This. gentlemen. is
our last press ..:onference."
ODDLY ENOUGH, most LCOs I've
s poken to out here in the provinces
approve of The New. New Federalism
"Ever s in c e Rea g an g o t the
government off my back." said my
neighbor Mr Crannich. "whatever they
wanted to do back there has been no
concern or mine ."
Didn't he want to hear what Mrs.
Reagan was wearing or whether Mr
Reagan was chopping brush on the
/South Lawn·>
··couldn't ca re' less." said Crannich.
"That General Haig. who 1s cle arly a
hig hes t uncommon d enominator, is
right as rain: If they want to gel into a
war in El S alvador , that's their
bus iness. I'll he a good s port and wish
them the very best of luck. I JUSt hope
they can raise the money back there to
pay for it ..
Did he really think we could get along
without Was hington?
"Don't see why not." he s aid. "AU we
have to do is form a government or the
lowest common denominators. by Uie
lowest common denominators and for
the lowest common denominators "
I shook my head. "It'll never work." I
s aid.
City and country folk don't see-eye to -eye
A friend down from the country for
the hoUda}'S was expatlatlng at lunch on
\he ·~ru<feness .... of crty dwellers. a
well-worn topic I have grown tired of
hearing about. I agreed with much of
·~
IYlllY IA.Ill ~
what he said. but pointed out that
rudeness takes different forms and
different faces.
Almost all rural people. for lnstance,
have a residue of hostility toward c)ty
folk, but they would never diaplay it as
such. They are much more oblique and
subtle than they are alven credit for
beln8 and enjoy nolhlna better than
.quietly turning the tables on some
presumed wise cuy from the ... city.
road. "About two miles," he said.
When the ur left, he turned and said,
"That branch office is closed for the
season now -but he didn't ask me
that."
He didn't ask it, and he didn't get it,
and went several miles out of hJs way to
learn the truth. His informant was both
courteous and correct -but was he
really being helpful or mischievous?
There are s\mply different sorts of
"friendlinesses" in urban and rural
regions. The city person may be curt.
brusque or indifferent, but he accepts
strangers. is tolerant toward deviance
and s low to make moral ot social
judgments based on superficialities. He
is democratic In that he treats everyone
with equal lack of r espect.
piqued to learn that the natives still
regard them as .auslandua. only
slightly more lofe rable fha n the
weekend trippers .
Rural people will do anything for you,
but they won't accept you. City people
won't do anything for you. but they will
accept you. Whichever you want. you
can find but you can't get both
together and will only lose a lot of sleep
trying to.
111111•
Won't "punlshlnc'' landlol"dl onlY mue
the rental pktun worse! . HOOL.SSS ....... ..-..-................... . l waa getting gas at the Yillaae pump
nol lon1 aao when a lar1e out-of·slale ear pulled In and the driver-uked
peremptorily, •'Where'• the Marett
• bank?" The operator polnled up the
THE IUJllAL OWELLEa la polite
and concernfd with those he knows or
can easily Identify witlt. but uneasy
with the alien, t.be unc0nventlon1I, or
an)'one who seems con1plcuou1ly
dJfferent. People whose famllln have
had summer '*'" ln t.he same place
for 50 years and more are always -~................... ' ....... . ...... .-..y ............ , ii $
•
closure
trQhed
By J EFF ADLER ., .. ....,~ .... , ....
Investigators from two
agencies want to know why a
,Santa Ana real estate loan
servicin g agency closed its
doors last month after it
defaulted on loan payments
totaling as much as $500,000,
according to authorities.
Both a state Department o!.
Real Estate and a Santa Ana
police spokes man said they are
interes ted in determining
whether fraud or embezzlement
played a part in Professional
Controls Inc'. 's alleged inability
to make good on real estate loan
obligations it was contr..acted to
handle for its 1,350 clients.
"All our investigations are
..aimed at determining whether
there 's b ee n tr a ud ,
mis representation , dishonest
dealing or some implication of
wrong-doing," said Randy
Brendia, a real estate manager
with the st at e Real . Es tate
Department.
The 11-year-old firm. once
located at 1921 N. Tustin Ave .. in
Santa Ana , acted as a perpetual
escrow agent between buyers
and sellers of property who used
creative financing to close the
deal.
It was allegedly Professional
Controls' responsibility to pay
insafance pmi'l'i'Ums~ taxOills
and m a ke all !'JlOrtgage
payments in teturn for-a
monthly ser v ice fee . The
majority of the company's
clients were Orange County
property owners. •
Sixty checks written to pay·for.
the first installment of 1982
Or~nge County property taxes
were returned for insufficient
funds, Orange Coun'ty Tax
Collector -Treas urer Ro bert
Citron said. The checks totaled
$56,039.
According to Santa Ana police
detective Chuck Magdalena. o(
the department's fraud division,
the company defaulted on some
aspect of one month's payment
for almost all of i~ cli ents.
Magdalena J>Qinted out that
even though Professional
Controls has defaulted on almost
$500,000 worth of payments, it' is
up to each individual property
owner to make them good.
..
.;. ,
..
CAVALCADE
COMICS.
TELEVISION
/
What next? Julie Andrews plays
a woman masquerading. as
a man pe.rforming. as. a woman. .83
Earlie r-thi s month ,
Professional Control$' accounts
were taken over by another
firm , W ester n Data
Management, of Irvine. Western
Data handles a ccounts for
approximately 22,000 customers.
However. thi s firm was
ordered to close today by the
Real Estate Department until it
obtains a real estate brokers'
license.
WALLOWING IN THE WINTER -For an
escape from the balmy weather at home.
Indian Guides from the Orange Coast YMCA
headed for Camp Arbalado at Barton Flats in
the San Bernardin o Mountains . Todd
Koehler. upper right. was a·mong the first to
Delly Niil ,...,. ~ •k ... ,,. 1( ......
s lide on tires down the hillside. Then he
joined Ben Shapiro on the b~rs. leaving the
tire for Lee LaFlamme to tackle. The Costa
Mesa contingent was among 150 sons a nd
fathers representing tribes from Orange
County an<t Whittier.
-Revo.lt by-Western Wealthy spurs Eastern cynics
MISERY & SUFFERING DEPT. Given the
opportunity. it ·s difficult to res ist the te mptation to poke
josh at the more affluent citizens alonJ! this t_>est of all
possible coasts.
Most recentlv. the Wall Street Journal. a periodical
of certain repute. ·round itself with the opportunity.
The J ournal jumped at it.
The case in question is the curr.ent hassle bet ween
· Newpmt Beach and Irvine
leaseholders and the
Irvine Company. wherein
'· The Committee of 4000 is
" · ;:-...\ ~pposing lease payment
-·
1
mcreases Tl. IDD ... 111 ~ I Taking off on this . nrn ~ particular circums tance.
the · Journal devoted a lengthy Page One piece to thl'
subject. plus map to show folk s from Omaha or Green
Bay where Newport Beach is. plus a lengthy continuation
of the story on inside pages.
"ANGER IN PARADISE," the Page One headline
proclaimed. "Soaring Rents Spur a Revolt of the Rich."
The inside headline back on Page 24 was even larger
as it called attention to ··a Revolt of the Wealthy.··
As for the story. it was a pretty good reprise of the
hassle between residential leaseholders and the Irvine
Company. It was pretty much tongue-in-cheek as it
pointed out the renters revolt involved "rnilli'On dollar
homes" and the "guarded comP<>und of Bayshores where
'John Wayne once lived" and that Barbara Young. leader
of the-revolt "lives in a house she guesses is worth abou~
half a million dollars:·
BEFORE SETTING this stage, the Wall Street.
Journal writer suggested that this scene in Newport
Beach ls .. an unlikely place for a lent-control
movement.'' •
So. by noting that Mrs. Young drives around on her
protest rounds in a Mercedes Benz, you can see the
Journal folks were havln1 a bit of fun at what they figure
wH the exPen:M of the affluent Newport SMiety.
-Truth ts, of course. that not everybOdy that lives on . .
Vision you might dream up after r~ing Journal account. of Newport ~each affluent marching in protest .
our enchanted coastline resides in a castle. Som e places Newport Beach residents among the clientele .
still use wall heaters and need a new roof. All thal however . wouldn't have been ;is much run
NOT ALL BOATS BOB upon harbor waters with·
music ~aftlng forth and ligh\s twinkling across the bay.
Some sufrer peeling paint. leaking timbers and actually
sink at their moorings .
While the Journal also delighted in noting that auto
dealer Roy Carver sells more ROlls·Royces than anybody
else in the country. they neglected to point out that
Volkswagen dealer Chick Iverson does a pretty hefty
trade, too ..
As a matter or ract. if you ply the used car lots or
nearby Costa Mesa where it may be a doll•r down and-a
dollar when they catch you, it's possible to find some
· ror the Journal as making the affluent squirm and bring a
little bit or c'heer into the hearts or those wh~pay high
furnace fuel bills back there to the east.·
MEANWHILE, IRVINE Company executives on the
other side or the debate probably weren't cheered too
much by being characterized in the Jour~_al as (ilthy rich
land barons.
So here alone the coast. we'll just have to grin and
bear it.
-Look at the brighter side. Maybe the Journal article
will dlscouraae anybody but millionaires from the next
heavy rni(ration to Califomia.
But don't bet on tl. ,.=..,,,..,-
..
..
1
I
1
•ERMA BOMBECK
•HOROSCOPE
'
..
.
Grie:Ving sister filled wi~h self~Ri!y, anger ..
. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You've been
like a close friend at QUI' breakfast table
for sd many years. and how we are turnliag
to you· for help. I'm writing about my
sister.
Celia and Bill h a d a wonderful
marriage. Three months ago, shortly after
they celebrated their 20th wedding
a nniversary. Bill s uffered a •sudden
coronary and died within hours . Celia
considers Bill's death~ a personal insult
rrom God. She is filled with rage and has
become so vindi~ti ve anll unpleasant
nobody wants to be a round her. ..
Frien~. family and bei9hbors quit
pa~ calls week1 ago~y just couldn't
take'tler outbursts of self-pity and person al
attacks. She screamed at me last week.
··sure, it's easy for you to say I should be
grateful for the good years we had! YOU
s till have your husband!"
How does one deal with a person who
HIGH LEVEL CLEANIN8 -Hu Yaobang.
chairman of the Central Committee of the
Chinese Communist Party <fore.ground 1
can't come to l'erms with grief? Please'
don't suggest professional help. We have
done that a lready. and she thinks ·all
psychiatrists are crazy. What now?
-ALSO GRIEVING IN N.J .
·DEAR N.J .: Stop catering t~· your
slater. Treat her as you would any other
unpleasant acquaintance. Wbe a she
discovers that h er behavior ls
unacceptable, she wtll stop trying to punish
every.-e for the misfortune In her Ufe. Or
-sbe will fldd herself very much alone.
DEAR ANN LANDERS; Our church
group has a social club for "Over 60' · -
moatly widows and widowers. with the
exception of a few who have never been
married. We meet twice a month in our
homes and have a good time.
Several weeks ago l bought a new wig.
It looks very natural aqd 1 have received
many compliments on how nice my hair
...........
pitches in to help sweep Peking sidewalk.
Other mel} are unidentified.
.
loob laC.ly. When folb. comment. I say.
"Thank )'OU." I don't feel it is necessary to
say more.
Lut night we had the "Over 60" ineetlnl at my home. A member brought
her wklOwed brother fro1Jl out of town. The
Jlnt thing he said to me was. "Whal lovely
hair you have !" Before I could say.
"Thank ~ou ." Mr. X, a loudmouth member
of ton~ standing. blurted out. "That's_ not
her hair -it's a wig!"
I told him in private to keep his oig
!J10Uth sh.t about such matters. He said
letting the man believe it was my own hair
was the sam e as lying. What is your
thinking on t his matter~
' -SEDALIA. MO.
DEAR SED: SOme women don't mind
If the whole world knows they wear a Wig
-others would just as soon keep it quiet.
ltt-s up to the woman to decide how she t. _, ..-
wishes to deal with it.
Whe n you received that ~alee
compUment, lt was not. incumbent upon
Mr. X to offer a statement or origin. He
was out di line. ·
Discover how ro be date bait without
falling hooR. line and sinker. Ann Landers·
booklet. "Dating Do:s and Don't&." will help
yo u be more poised and sure of yourself on
.dates. Send 50 cents along with a long. stamped.
self ·acJdressed e1welope with your request to
Ann Landers. P 0 Rox 11995. Chicago. Ill 60611. .
Shoppers guide d~ta
There are two kinds of grocer~·
s hoppers In ttlis----Worla. There are -chose
who shop in the daytime and those who
s hop at night. The differences between
them are vast. .
Daytime s hoppers try two or three
carts until they get one with the wheels
that go in the same direction.
Nighttime s hoppers grab the first onC'
by the door even if it has a brown piece of
lettuce caught in the seat.
Daytime shoppers enter the store and
ask. ··Where's the sale detergent? ..
NIGHTTIME SHOPPERS enter tht•
store and ask ... Wha t time-dowlf\!itrSe? ..
Daytime shoppers have li·sts and when
they buy an item . they mark it .off with a
sharpened pencil. .
Nighttime shoppers come in for a
quart of milk and will leave 15 minutes and
$73 later.
Daytime shoppers put on their ~lasses
a nd pick up cans and boxes to examint·
them care(ully for content. .
Nighttime shoppers close their eyes
a nd pick out anything that feels like you
"just add water ...
Daytime shoppers us ually shop alone
and regard it as a pleasurable social
• experience.
Nighttime shoppers usuall~· have a
child or two in the cart· and regard
shopping as a punishment from God.
flMA IOMlfCI
ATWIT'S END
Da~·time s hoppe rs bu~· tofu and plain
yogurt. ·
Nightliml' shoppe rs bu~· potato chips
and a six-pal'k
DAYTIME SHOPPERS r e ad the
sensational tabloids at the che£~VL..P.UL
don't buv fflem .
!'Ji ghttime shoppers bu~· the tabloids at
the checkout but don't read them.
IJ <1ytlme s hoppe rs will a s k the
managenf the• produce is fresh
Nighttime shop pers will <1 s k the
manager if th<.' beer~s cold.
Da~·time s hoppers have a handful or .
coupons and don 't seem to be in an~·
particular hurry .
Nighttime shoppers are double-parked
a nd will gi\'e you a hlank check to let them
out.
· Daytime shoppers squeeze the fruit.
Nighttime shoppers squeeze the toilet
tissue
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
Sagittarius: ·Str_ess partnership MY STRATEGY
Tuesday, March' i
ARIES ~March 2l·April 19 >: Special
errands dominate agenda. You're able to
collect bills. fees: It will be necessity.
however. to make trip and personal
appearance.
TAURUS < April,...20-May 20 >: Study
Aries message for valuable hint. Accent o.n
payments. collections and completion or
HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
a~signmen t. You require additional
information prior to beginning project.
GEMINI <May .21.June 20 >: Highlight
independence. originality, new starts and
willingness to pioneer a project. Take
c,ban.ce on your own abilities.
CANCER <June 21 -July 22>: You gain
acces5 \o information which previously had
been canfidential. You change mind about
places, people.
LEO (July 23·Aug . 221: You're invited
-»EAR DOCTOR: My doctor .. ves me
an unaaual reason for refuslng lO'preacnbe
estrogen. \ am in my ~·menopaas~
More ala• most women my age, I'm 1&111
s ufferl•I from bot fla s h es aad
Dervc•RHI.
I'm willing to take the chance of taking
, estrogea iB spite of warnings abcMlt getting
cancer of the uterus. I lmow tllett a re
some women who "'at to take hormones
so they can s tay young and look weU.
That's not my problem.
All I WMt to lte ts more oomfeftable.
Why ... , •Y doe&or prnefllte M&ro1e11!
Be 1a.y1 &mle's mere da=me 1.W.1 a heart au.ell thaa de ca•er of
my u&en11. Isn't that so 1 aew? I 've
never bea"9 that bormoan cause heart
attaeb. -MRS. H.
DEAR MRS. ff.: There's alwa)'a
aometNa1 new in the w_, ot theories about
the ceme and treatment or illness -
whether it's involvement of the heart or
anYtbllia-elle.
YCU' dDctor bu .andoutadly re8d tbal
• estl"Ollll teplacement in Poll·...,..•••I ·
women Increases the rtai of mroeardial
Jnlan:Uon (heart attaelo ..
ta. help celebrate special occasion. Focus
on bµsiness meeting. sales· confe rence.
chance to fulfill aspirations.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 1: Goal is
alte(ed: you gel what you want ir you
realize rules have. c hanged. Emphasis on
revision. review. details connected with
business or car eer.
LIBRA <Se pt. 23-0ct. 22 >: Spotlight on
com munica lions. travel. publication'.
education and a re -evalu'ation of spiritual
concepts. Sense o f perception i s
heightened.
SCORPIQ <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Budget is
stretched for purpose of improvin g
domestic environment. Genuine bargains
are available if you dig deeP'.
SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 211 : Go
slow. lie low. define terms and avoid
s e If-deception. Lunar emp hasis on
partnership. joint efforts. legal papers and
marital s tatus.
CAPRICORN <Dec . 22 -Jan . 19 >:
Practical matters dominate: you·n discuss
terms. money, time and need for speciaJ
material. Scenario highlights pressure.
ch allen ge, intensified relationship and
opportunity for greater rewards.
• uncertam · r . t'!~R '-~!!!~ ' ___ ... (_ -~ ~ --.
• But recent studies yield conflicting
results. For example. C. Bain., M.D .• and
colleagues present an tnteresliftg repGl't in
the medical periodical. CircGJation (July.
1981 ):
A quesiionnaire was sent to more than
)00,000.women between the ages of 30-55. A
group of 123 post-menopausal women with
heart attacks were identlfied. Their use of
estrogens was compared .with a n
age.matched control group who had no
history of heart attacks.
Altbou1h the use of estrogens waa
similar. there seemed to be no poaltive
asso~ialion between poll-menopausal
hormone use and heart attacks. •
U your doctor la aware of this study,
Mn. H., and 1UU lnaiate •nut prescriblns ntropn for you, he m~ lllte &ood reuon
not to clp IO. Better folloW llll advi~. tr
you 'r• 1t1ll uaconvlnced, 11k for
eOIP ... lcwt
AQUARIUS <J an. 20-Feb. 18 1: Focus
orr affection . romance. emotional
responses and ·confidences confided by
mem ber of oppos ite sex. Rambunctious
young person demands attention.
IS, WMENEVER POSSIBLE,
~.~ TO '. ------=-_.., -.._ KEEP OUT OF
PISCES <Feb. 19·March 20 1: Deadlock
is broken through intervention by third
person. Long-range decisions. poli cies will
favor· you.
l
GOIEll 011 BRIDGE ·
) THE AR.ENA.
,., ... ,.."~ 11-..~ ••• """"''' ~ C>•I C~ ,,...,_ "9 t ......... 5,.-""<.
BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1 Q.1-Botb vulnerable, as
South 7ou bold:
•Um <::i A8 OKJN •AQ95
Tb• b6ddiDa bu proceeded:
.... WMl N..di Eut
1 O P .. 1 <::i P ...
INT P .. I• r ...
1
What act.ioD do you take?
A. -Partner'• rebid wu not
fordog, and you have little
more ttlao a minimum open·
ing bid. Nevertbele•. we
1ugae1t a raiae to three
dube. Yolll' excellent Ot for
partner'• teeond ault and ace
in hi.a fir1t auit make your
band wonb more. tb&4 it iJ>-
pean.
Q.J-Both .ulnerable, u
~7oubold: •a o• OAlotTI •• Tiit Mddilla .... proeeecledi N_.._ ....... _.
... 11" ... ... ...... ' . WU& ldloD do you tau?
A.~ Ena lJlough · part"r
,.... wtpnallJ, he CUllOt
ha" aueb .... than u open· lat Md tar Mm reop9nhlr dou· we. Tllat gt._ Jour '* UM._ ....._ of power. aDd liDee
JOU Un I aood 1uJt to leal,
you ea.a expect to defeat one
no trump e..U,. P.... •
A.-Your plethora of tens
and nines made your hand 'a
trifle too strong for a one no
trump~pening bid. Now. you
can expreu the full value of
your hand by simply rebid·
ding one ne trump. In thl1
type of sequence, that show1
a hand that wu too strong to
open one no trump originally.
Q.4-As South. vulnerable.
you bold:
•Al(I <::i tl Ol(Q7 •AQJM
The bidding bu ptoceeded:
Nertll Eut S..Ui w .. t
l ........ .. ....... ' What do you bid now?
A.-Yolll' main concern is
the heart ault-partner can
ban a eound opening bid
wtthou' .tther of the two top
heart t.onors. Bid four ~-U partner does not
b6cl fov hearU in reaponse,
JOU ean 1how your excellent
,,... &ad concern about
hHru by bidding five spadea
next. That abould clear up
any doubll about what you
DMdtoreJam. •
Q.1-Netther vulnerable, u
8ouU1 JOU ltold: .
• &JT14 c:::i&QIT O Al •Qt
The blcldlq llaa proceeded:
....... Ntrda.:..&
....... 1 0 ...
I O· ... I• PMI ' ~ W~t • JOU bid now? A.-r.t,... ..... to, .... ............. ~-........... ,.. ...... . ....... wu.. ... ..
mean that you ahould now
commit the hand to 1lam.
However. you should adviae
partner or that possibility.
The simplest way to do ao is
to tell partner of your dia·
mond value -cue·bid four
diamonds.
Q.1-Both vulnerable, aa
South you hold:
•IU763 <::i J8 OltJt54 · •s
The bidding hu proeeeded:
Weet Nertll Eut S.-.
t <::i r• r .. ' What action do 7ou take?
A. -It is true ttlat, in all
prob&hillty. you have a bet-
ter spot in either diamonds
or spades, but there i1 DO •
aafe way to explo"9 the
poasibiHtiea. When it loob u
if.,-our 1ide hu It potential
mlafit, get out of the auction
as quickly u poalble-pua.
l
..
AQMANCE -Randal Saunders and Susan
Zaguirre discover each other as Verdon
As hlly Simpkins watches approvingly in
"South Pacific:· pl aying at Sebastian·s West
Dinner Playhouse in San Clemente through
April 11.
'Centerfold' .tops
The following are Billboard's hot record hits ·
for the week ending March 6 as they appear In this ·
week's issue of Billboard magazine :
HOT SINGLES
1. "Centerfold" J . Geils Band (EMJ-America)
2. "Open Arms" J ourney CColumbia)
' 3. "I Love Rock 'n' Roll" Joan Jetr & The
Black hearts ( Board<:Yalk )
4 ... Shake it Up" The Cars <Elektra)
5. "That Girl" Stevie Wonder (Tamla)
6. •'Sweet Dreams" Air Supply (Arista)
7. "I Can't Go for That" Daryl Hall & John
Oates (RCA>
8 "Mirror Mirror" Diana Ross <RCA>
9. "Leader of the Band" Dan Fog~lberg ( FuJJ
Moon-Epic ) ·
10. "Take it Eas) on M~r-Band
<Capitol >
.. ·r
Orange Cout OAK. Y Pf LOT/Monday, Match 1. 1982 *
Julie· Andrews wears
., 8081'8011.U ......... .._ .......
HOLLYWOOD -El1bteea montba a10,'
JuDe Andrews kept bearln1 cbucklet from the
attlc ol her SW. chalet. "What'• ao funny? abe
called to hel' hutband. . •·r u tell you later," replied Blake Edwards
troqi hia ~µn, room.
Film aiacllencta can now ahare what w ..
amusinC Edwards. It's the new
MGM releau , .. Vietor.
Victoria,·' atarr lnr .. Julie
Andrews, James G~mer and
Robert Pl'eaton, and the
• director-writer said he believes
the film la his belt.
That ls an uncommon piece
of hyperbole from the man who
made "Oper ation Petticoat,"
'
1 Breakfast at Tiffany's," Days
of Wine and Roses," "10" and
all those " Pink Panthers.'' ANouws
Miss Andrews, whose film career in rec~t
years has been mosUy devoted to her buaban4's
movies, also is pleased with "Victor. Victoria,"
and not merely because of Its showy role.
"I like It oot only because it is very funny,"
she says. "I also think Blake raises a lot o(
pertinent questions con cerning our sexual
attitudes: Who are you? How do you feel about
your~ell? What are your preferences? How does it
matter?
·'Those things are treated in an amusing but
also a thought-provoking way in the movie," Miss
Andrews says.
The plot runs like this: Miss Andrews is a
starving opera singer stranded in Paris during the
1920s. She teams up with a-homosexual cabaret
performer, Preston, who teaches her to pose as a
man doing female impersonaUons. The ruse works
until s he falls in love with a Chicagoan, Garner,
who is puzzled by bis own affection for the
presumably male entertainer. Confusing? Not the
way Edwards writes and directs n. -
"My agen foun<it he story in a wonderful
black·and·white film made by UFA in Germany in.
1933," Miss Andrews relates. "IL was called
'Viktor, Viktoria,' a nd it was written by Hans
Hoemburg, w~lso wrote the original film on
Ike Turner acquitted
TORRANCE (AP) -Rock musician lke Turner
was acquitted on a charge of assault with a deadly
weapon in a shooting last April 13 that injured a
newspaper delivery man in theilnkte.
Turner, former1¥ of the soul-rock Ike and Tina
Turner lteview, was accused of firing two shots at
which Billy WUder baaed 'Somt Like ft Hot.'
"The same director, Rbelnbold Sebunael,
made • Ftencb vertloo, then u ~U.h veraion
wu made lo the 19308 with Jetale Ma1thews, '' she says. ·
"Blake wrote the script quickly aft-er finlshln1
·s .O.B. · It took him three to the mQntha, whereas
• ·s .O.B. • wu wrltten~v r a period of 10 yeara.
"I don't com t ·too much while he's
workina. After he has lnlthed, be will Jet me read
a script, and then we will dlacuss lt. As a wile, I
pretty much have a cut lftsUnct about what Is
pleasing him. And I knew be was very pleased
about 'Victor, Victoria.' "
The script presented the actreas with an
unusual chaUenee : she had to play a woman
masqueradinl as a man performing as a woman.
"The choreocrapher, Patty Stone, set up the
numbers as If I were a guy," she says."'J don't do
very inucb in the way of movement. The chorus •
Oscar Fever
--*URQAIN-MATINe• ..
Mand1y thni Saturday
All Pertotm•ncH before 5:00 PM
(Exce,t 1!*111 EfttltllMflll IN ltllldlys)
--·llA'lll-"MAICING LOVE" .-i , _ _.., __ ,ltjll --· "0U.TI4 WllH II" "1 '~····;···--_ _....,. ... ,...-'° .... _
"CANNUIY "OW" -, .......... ,9;41
Andrew Francis , 49, outside ~e~ !!!Blewood . .r--..cn...~ home. Francis dehverea-tne· u · lfiY Dai y .~."" ~=--Breeze in the southwest Los Angeles suburb. "'·-.
•oc111ry 01 Cono1ewood
• in 'Victoria' ..
.
1uy1 around me do the movtn1. tD the aceot1
wl)ere I Jail.>' Victor, I w., t.rrin1 to thtU 11 • man
thlAkj, behave u a man beUvea. For lllltace, I
noUced that when men sit down , they don't cro.1
their legs Immediately, as women do. Mtb are not
as fussy with their hand.a.
"One th1n1 amazed me: bow any mao un
survive in a tuxedo? To me lt wu like beint l.n a
vise.'' the actress says. "Partly that wu becaus.
my bosom was atupped down. Blake and I
considered a Une tor the ads: 'Try to tlod what you
saw in ·s.0 . .8. · "
The reference, of course, to her OO.Om ·barlnc
scene that created a publicity stir laat year. An
uproar was anticipated from the fana of Mary
Poppins and Maria Trapp.
"I was geare d for the hate mall," Miss
Andrews admits, ''but to my delight, nothing
happened. Everyone seemed to ac~ept the scene in
the good fun with which we playe41t."
NOTICE 0,. TllUSTll'S SALi
T.S.Ne.7-J
· All E NOW!~A~Y
At Ari Six in o mes · There's A Lot Being Said About LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALi< IH 211/111·9llO
AMERICAN TITLE COMPANY •>
duly a1>polnled Trusle• under Ille
follow11!9-.Crl-deed of 1""'1 WILL
SELL AT PYBLIC AUCTION TO THe
Hl(i.HEST BIDDER FOR Cll$1/'
IP<tyable al tl.-of w le in !awt"''
money of TM l1nlled Sta•ul •II rlQftl,
1111• and lnlffest conwyed to -,,_
held by II unditr Yid °"" of Trust In
Ille pr-rly ,..einatl•r de\<rl-; ~------~-.-..-." TRUSTOR, PAUl. S V OAV.S •"" • Aaodlrny A-.:1
SHELl..Y LYNN DAVIS RE! IPGJ
BENEFIC IARY GERRY L 12: 4:308:30 TH O M PSO N •nd JE AN Y . No aues
THOMPSON. llUSl»nd •nd wife .. No Econ. S.ats
jolnll1t,,.,.ls
RKO--.ni.r l ... ,. H lnslr
Ho. sn2 "' -12'10. -not of Oflklal RKords IA. Ille of11u ol llw
R•corder ol Orlln9t County; Hkl-
ol lrusl ducrlbu Ille lollowlne
pr-rty: . A,_,.,,.,.., Eslala In •nd lo
LOI 21 -Ille NOf111erly 21.00 !Mt
of l.ol 2tln 81oclr.1lol TrK1 Ho m , In
!he Cllv ol Htwpor1 Bff<h, COUftlY ot
Or•llQ•. Slate ol C.lltornla, as· .,.,
M•P .-cord9d In -n , -· S -•• MIKell-s M~. In Ille offlu of Ille counlv rocorder ol .. 1c1 county t 1<1tpll1>9 llwrtfrom Ille Northerly
11.00IM1oll..Ol21.
fU Prosp•cl, Htwporl 8eacll.
'C•llfornla ~
"(If 1 slrM1 .odreu or common
destvnallon Is sllown aboYe. n
.,arranty Is o lve n •s lo lfi comple\t1WUorcorrect1WH) ..
Tiie be<Wfk l•ry und., w kl l>ftd of
Trusl, by r-of• ""9•ch or del..,11
In Ill• OOll9Alk>ns se<urlt<I 111ereby,
llertlolore eucuted -delivered lo
111e u~ •writ-0«1a r111on
ol Oef•uft ...., o.m.nd for S.le, .,...
wrllten notk eof -.Cll •nd ol tle<llon
lo c•uM Ille undersl9Md lo wH ..,.._
pr-rty to wllsfy w kl OOll9Alk>ns,
-111erwi.r II• undltrslQMd cau~
Yid noll« of bn«ll ano of e1Ktlot1 eGi
be recorded Howmber 11, "" at.
IQllr. No. ltOll In bootl lf2'l. -"'·
of ..... Olfklal '""°"" ~ Mle Wiii bit m.di, bul WllllOUt cowenanl or w•rr•nly, upreu or
1 ......... •eoM<llno lllle, POHHSIOn. or
1naom11r-.n. lo i;aey lhe ,.,,..•lnlno
pt'lllCljNI M1m of the not• (S) S«Ured
llY UICI OMd of Trldi, with lnterul H
111 .. ICI -proYided, •dY-n, II any, .,..., tht ••l'M of Mid DMd of Trinl, ._.,, cller .. s •lld upensn of Ille
T,..._ -pl IN ll'VtlU c,..lleel Oy ulCl~offnm.
Said wle wlll bit held on WeclrwSdey.
M•r<ll 1', 1_, 11 1:00 p.m. •I Ille
Chipman A-entrance to Ille Civic
cent.,. lkllldlnQ. lOO E••I c._....,
AYenue, 11'1 Ill• Cll y of Ora no•.
""'lfornla.
Al Ille lime ol Ille 111111•1 out>tk al!Ofl
of ltlll notl«. the tot.i -ol the
u11p1IC1 ~l•ne1t of tll• obll11allon
MCured by Ille·-dHCrl--of
trust 11141 fftlmlleCI c.sts, e-~.
-edYanc,ft Is Sl2,'16.J3. To~ l"9 -""'9 bid. 'YOU ~., call C7IO tl74't6.
Dale: FltlrUlrf 1t, 1911
AMERICAN TITLE CO.
as sa Id Trustee,
By: T.0. Set'Yk lt Go.. ......
By·~Nelc•.
Anltlllll Se< ... lolry
0rw City 81\'d. West,
0.angt,Clllf.t1 ...
17141 ~
Plibll.-Or-Coetl D.ily Pllo4, ,,._r 1, t. IS. 1"2 •
Olan• Keaton In SHOOT T.-lilOOll (Al 12:15 2:40 S:IO '1:40 .. 10:0$
STADIUffi ~
Scr<Z<Zn Driv<Z-ln
call 639 8770
mR'&"-7.~~
RevolutioMry Cine-Fi Sound
111.., ""'., .... .. .. ""-. ...... .... ............ ,,., .... ~ ... -.......... ...-..... ...... ,..._Millt....,._
Kate Jackson
MAKING LOVE (RI Hinory Of
Thz World I !RI
LOVE
._,.......,a_..,.~
n. CIA tr•• Nm. ~ .................... .............
they ellMdow-..d Nm.
.Magic
..... every piece of magic and skill haa
been uaed to free our imacinatlon, to let
it soar."-Slui"' a.....,,
LOS MGELBS 11'618~....,. .____-..
-c econ ,_...,...,._
"TAPS"-1~-. Seti. II; .. -· ...
LA KE WOOD CENTE~
SOUTH WAlll' IH.
f()Qjlfy Al Del Nr.o 211/6M-t211 . --·--..J 'RAIDERS 01" THE LOST ARK" ·-· .... "·~ "~· I . I
L,-.GUNA
_ _.. ...... T0.-10..--
"CANmY ..ow'' -•t:a.--1<•1.-
_.,.....,... ... .,. __
"MAKINO LOV£" 1111 , ....... a:411,••·····""'
-CllOUAIOO--.. CHARIOfS 01" l"IRE"' INI
•1tt.,•~··~~.,.
so. COAST WALK ·IN
Soulll Coou Hlwoy
a l t rooOwoy
494-1514 _c._,. ___
.. TAPS"-.........._,.,.._
Mt ..... 1:,...,..1:, ....
......... ~,o ... e·15 ,,. ~-·6:oo) ... ;~,.., .. e:46
IMPOfHANT'NOTICl! CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE!
H••t .. , ... w ..... 11 .. llKw flO 5 30 • $11 Swn Hth4 30 rM CM-R SOU1C1 • 'IQlll All CAii IWIO IS YOUfl V(N(JI
,, Ill).,. (All l\l!Olll Wl!lt ~ ~' l'OSITOI -""" uo llOllTllll 1• Al! Cllll-ll 011M.-s &:ID Oii 1111 IWIO
ANA>lflM
ANAHEIM ORIVE·IN
~tlot l-SI
179-tl50 --------~~ "WIMOWALKElll" --''9'K>HCO BIU Y" -
CIM fl SOUllO
ftUIN A PA~•
BUENA PARK DRIVE IN
Iii!~ t "". ". '-'•
LINCOLN ORIVE·IN
ltnco•~ A•• Wetl ol Cf\Ott
121·4070
lla--·--"CtMISTIA• , ... ,_ -''oaAn.tlP""'
Cllll·HIOUllO
I •lo"'~ I
lA HABPA · u ~! ·••
c,.... .. ,._ ..
"Dt!ATI1 WISH II" I'll .......
··THE BUflNING""'
Clllf II SOVNO ,, ACADC.,... A.Mo.;.;;....n;;--
.. REDS" "1 -"PROPHECY"-e1-t ,. S011110 °" ____ , __ ...,..._
•'VJCf SQUAD" tltl -"H.,.DCOlllE" 1111
_.. oorT1lUll un --"MAKINO LOW" .. 1 .....
"HISTORY 01" TI1E WORLD
ftART ONE" .. l ---"D£ATI4WllH11" ,., ....
.. THE BU..NIHO""'
CNIEllSOUllO
leocft 11\0G So Of Gor-0-0.. ,._,
191·3693
_c._, ---"TAn" ... "'"' "MOOOtN "'°9LIM$" ,,_
Clllf·fitolMO .-. ... .._.wit•e•~
"THE AMAftlM" .-i -''tlOUneN CC>flWCMT'' .-i I
Cllf II SOUllO ""----"<* OOl.OIN HHe•.,.. -..... _. ...... _ ·--..,,. ... ,CTittC~· ...
IJHMI --...
ORANGE ('II'\ f IN
"'"'° ,,,... ,,.. asiola c.-.
IN·7022 ........ _____ _
·wia~··••CGM"11t
MISSION I ••vi •N
' . -
--·=1--.,,. AMA IM",_ -''IOUT't9M OOMf!CMt ....
..
Orang• Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. March 1, 1982
11Claire's havin' o birthday party and she wonts
o doll stroller, o monkey swing ·
. or a mini-kitchen!"
..
M.\RM:\Dl.KE by Brad Anderson
~)
"Mom, I wish you wouldn't send Duke
for me in front of the guys!"
WHEN 5AM DRIVER
l'El.L& LINDA MAY'5
AGENT THA'f HE
5HOUL.D NOT L.ET
HEI' RETURN TO
WORK.THE YOUN6 AC TRE55 6REAK5
lNTO TEAR5'
ACROSS
1 Fllel higtl e Rage •
10Mlkes·
*-• 140ofe.ir:g
15 Arab r\llef
16 PtlCid
17 &Mntlel oil
tlGluaplece
19 t<lnd ol
sldr1 20~·
22 Mottled
24 Loeter
21~• 27 -~
30 To..i.M>fd
31Cellt --
32 Tram
37~ •Golt 40 ., • .. ....,
.. u.. .. ~ ,, flq:dll JI .°" ..... ......
58 EolOED
59 Buahet
61 T ennls $h0t
62 Allldlmtnl
63 Iroquoian
84 Expel tmeots
65 Bird·• cry
&&Gest•
67 Outck
drlrlk
DOWN
1 TlllllM1d,
once
2 Prepoei11on
3 Anent
2WO<da
4 Oulckly
® DID THEY
MIS PL.ACE
THE DECIMAL
POINT.?
~~
SA TUllDA rt
ptJmE IOLVID
5 8lg t19'> 25 Tlrt type e Subjugltor 21 Henpecks
1 Cup 21 T urldet\
• lnMlllct ctMlrnblf
• Qltte 21 All -
tO Storm 33 Comc1ed
'' _..... Clly 34 Specie 11 Ooctme 35 -~
13 0.ogMOrt .,. ...
ltCMrMlll ......
.... JIJolnld
II~•--UCilltOlll••
t'
ii ' I • ' " . ,. . "' ..
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
....
c:::::;>
"I hate Mondays."
Hank Ketchum
~' " l ~
j
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
I/JELL, M.Me FIFI [)I[)
SAY IT'D BE A
STUNNING OUTFIT.
OKA'( MIRED HANO ...
HERE'S WHAT I WANT
YOO TO DO ...
SHOE
HEMS UPPOR
™E S~CRT JVM~ ...
HOW DARE
YOU SAY
'THAT--·
•T~Kl. "l~KERBEA~
DEFINE ™E FOU..OWIN6 :
-9"' .-1 •
..
•
CALL HER
BACK AND
SAY, YOU'RE
SORRY
..
~Y Tom-K. Ryan
A COMA~He S"Tm'EP
IRMA, I'M SORRY
I .SAID YOU WERE
DAFFY---I
MEANT T O SAY---
ol\J MY H EA 17.
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushm1ller
(I. )·REBATE
I WASN° 1 6€.tMC. CIM1l'-L ~
I l.llA'S S\M~L" bOIN~ 'fo
COMME.N1" oH ~ NICE.
Ii LOOKf.0, 'fOO 61&
J£RK!
~
WHAT MAKES OU
"'Tl-tlr"tK 1HAT1HIS
WAS PLANNED ? .
by Georg'e Lemont
•
1 I
J
T
••
e KNXT lCBSI
e1<Nk <NICI e ICTLA (l!W.)' e KABC (ABC) e IC"FM8 (G8$) e KHJ·TV (Incl.)
• KCST <AK ... e K TTV Uf ... 1
'e K'COP-TV OncU
•• KCET (P8S)
e KOCE (P8SI
(I) On-TV
(J) l-TV
®HBO
•
rD {Clnemu)
,,• m>'(WORl NY.,N.Y.
GI lWTBS> ~ -~ <9--(ljlPH)
S fttlowttme>
.·• Spotllilflt ••• (C.ol•News~k) .·
'Divorce Wars~: .
....... .......... ..
~ ............. . ..,.. I llo:•'t ..... ......... !ft, ......
(I)~
• • • '"n..Ooet Of wr· (1MOI Olw11111N w-. .-.T ... .....,.,,,.., r.:. ........... Mowe"
C1'HI 0.. ......,_.,
.---Wtmn. A $1rM1e ..... .., .......
KABC • T;80 -"Eye on L.A." Report
on peoPle who claim to have psychic
powers .
...,....,..,.. ___ ....,,_
-~-------.a --wy ,...,,,. to ...,
1 r11 DUIOll, 'ft' .. (I)....., ....
4111t(Jl)MOVll ----·---· ............. lflC#-
.... lna .. Of--................ KNXT 9 8:00 -"Mr. Merlin.'' Zac to
take part in hilh·1tate1 plna pong match. • l
••• ""-0...11111 I"
(1MOI Nalwd ~ Aliff 1n4nt. TWo ......... a .... ,,.....,,.... . ~ ....
**'4 ..... TM~ ....., .. ,,., .. ~.
,._ ... Jourllellte ........ ~'*'
Jiii 111IOl1tlado• ""°'*" ~ to OO'flel' totne
KOCE 9 8 :45 -Bernstein /·
Beethoven ." Leonard Berns tein
conducts VieMa Philharmonic.
OOOlJ l lltlGn lllld tMI .....,
low fot .., Ollw -.... tNlt pr~
tf ll'nllllofW.. 'PG'
(J)oooecll 909 TO
THl~At
of ............... lrld
...... of .. .... 'IOI end .ny '10. .• ,..
KNBC e 9:00 -"Roy Acuff.·:.. Minnie
Pearl hosts tribute to the . fa\he r of
count~y music. See photo, left.
Coolie flnda ... "-"• •
"*Y plloe #but ""'' by wlltl tM lllllp-of her f\1andl .
.MCMI ***~ "M1nll11t1n"
( 197'1 W°""f A.llln, Diane
Keaton. A New Yorti City
comedy wrtttr llt'aalll up
wtlh "" tong.time glt1-friand to IQUlra around an
(l)MCMI
***~ "TM Ult Of M-_.l~(tln) Gl'IMlft a.-
Jl'WI. <JoM CleeM. In ....
""' oemuty, • .,...., ..
• ~proclmlmeda,,_..
lflMcl~tN .......
of a et..e Nllglow ,...:.
mm....-1111--. 'A'
-.... OW9 109 ~ ... (I) ~CAlll ... e MCMI ~Mand In 1M ~of
.... ''Wtwl'I .._ "'-Y-_.. ~ ~ 1-o.d _,.. 111161 ,..._ Slllerl. ~· of Charley'•
,..._ O'TOCIM. A conlUlld (C) MOYll
youno -..... help • • • • "Nor1h By Nof'lh-lrom an even more _. .. (lNt) Caty Ol'ant, ~ =· Eva Marte a.int. An._.
How ''adof>t+dllld'' TV Ullng man'1 ... II ctllftf9d
lflOWI help chlldren find dtMttcaly wtler'I ht_ .. ,.._
OOod ~:on tilt r• tlklrtb'•aAaoent •• ,
with QOUl'ttry ""* ...., 10:GO. (I) LOU CIMNT Roell'• dooged lnvaatlga-Bar1wa Mandr... tJon Into wartime prom-. • MOYll
• UM. MmllCAH
eTYU
• IU)Rf NIWlmAT:
CAIMIOMA 00Nt111•11~ ~
._.wn'H
GC>009YW
''The o.iti Of lvtin ~··
A 9'0llP of~•
patient• axprffl hletr
oplnlonl .,.., ..-a a
dtwnattulton of TO-.o(t
olaaalo view of tM man,
~ofdylng.
11:41 CC> MOYll * *'A "The Anfll Wore
. ~" (1NO) Ava Gatdtler,
Dltk Bo9111'de. A prialt
IMwa 1111 order to 1'9tum
to a llllOl'ld '°'*ad by • ~ ..,.,,_.
-MllflGHT-* * * "79 Part! A--" Ing IM• an ernbarrllllng
(Part 1) (1977} Leat.y Ann lturn •.•• NlW8 1~· IHANANA wwren. Poly Bergan. A "'°""8 IN • Ou.ta: Martha "--
llrNl·WIH young glrl ~Alff and The Vandalla9.
unju8Uy aMt to reform The Hfe and wort< of marl-• di MOYIE
acflOol IC*'l In Ulldelwotld time ...... ,., John Stobart •• .,., "LO...-For Rant" ,_of P"*IMlon up0n ,_., ( 1979) LIH Ellbachar,
htt ........ .,. IMlured. Q Annetta O'Toole. Two
• IHOQ( Of' TH! NeW ....... Nducad .... • GNAT ··---l'Vtwe That WM" In young ....... VJ ~ """ I.ht glamorout Ille of IN
"Brld11head Revl11ted: tilt conc:tudlng progrem of big dt)', .,. loroad to
The u.-Hoc*" Julie hit algllt-part ..,..., Rob-become high-priced
antrMll Ctlat1el to find art ~ ~ the t -11. (R) .
Sebeltlan In Morocco and 1mpec1 ~hew had G MOYIE
bring him bactc to -hit on modem art. (R) **'~ "Olamonda'' (1978)
mothat; Lady Man:tlnlaln, !'9.~··eyawllnau" Robert Shew, f\lcbard wno11c¥nQ .. (Part no Round1t ... A 01r1tt thlaf ()) ~/IRNM (1981) Slgoumey w-. trlet to rob the.., ... oi..
CB) ...,,.~ Wiiiiam Hurt. A laieYtelon ~ EJu;ftange'1 bufdar· **Yo "Arly wti1c:t1 W'1 repot1er ~ lnvot¥ed proof vault, wNttl -
You c.n·· (1NOI CMnt wlttl a janitor wtlO may d11lgned by hit' twin
E.altwood, 9ondt9 Loc:U. know more about a ITV· brother.
.._._ ----..__ with der trial he wltne.ed than • Ml(E DOI IGI A8 .......,,. ....,,_.,, ....,...., htll---.... 'R' hit gltl Md pet orangutan, 10:aO 1 .-; Cohot,t: Pat Boone.
a bere-lllted llghtar Ilona TONY MOWN'S , Oueltt; Junior Waller and _ ::.l'. •P':. i.t.~llllve=..i'-+--~R'°""------t-. ~~~W_ ... _.
"The OU.-e.ttle" T"""' • i =•UP.~ Brown rftlawl blacll P,:,~ mu~ MtlRICAH * * * 1-i " Man h aJ tan · • tlclpallon In ltle mltllary · :'Love And The ()\Alty eon. CID UP TO NOW ICienoa' .....,, (197.8) Wrxxty Allan, ~ Tilt latmt _,II, ldau . ~ ~on. A New Yortt City ~of t,.,wto to*'-
..--. wt1ter brellll up and newlmlikara are paro-'* hulMnd. "lo\le And ;;-hi. 1or9'tlme girl· dladAn a 1«1et of comic The 8IO Surpriaa'" Dk*
friend to -...... around an lllatc:hm. . glY9I Nan a blrt~ pr-.....,.. 10:11 Cl) MOVIE .... .--....... ..-.... 1~ ent. ~ ··--1 . ....., ..... ~ ** "Sch1~~" 1·~t73) uol"WR",.,.yATI John l.Andt1:S.U. ~ ~
...,_..., A monatar. ballaYed to be .MOVIE
Benjamin apota • m11111a a genetic "mlallng llnk," * • • "MHn S1r .. 11··
being 'lf'Mlled Into Fort Ooat on a r~ of Jar· ( 1973) Hlf'l9Y Kaltat. Rob-
Br8dley buf cen't oat eep.. • rfl/f. 'PG' en De Niro. A lmll-tlf'ne
Win l.wll to~ her. 11:00 ••• ())a. hood and hit lneaponalble
• AU. IN THe FAMILY :W:.1\lflDAv NIGHT friend find plenty of trouble
Arc:hla 1-a .for hit llfil In New York'I Little ~· before an operation u HOii: Richard Ot9)'fua. 'R'
thlnga oo ffom bad to ou.t: Jimmy eun.t. Cl) MOY11
WOtM.(Part 1) • Ko.we *** "NI Nlgflt Long"
• ~IMN< • ™EMFEMONI (1981) Oar19 He!*men, ~ ldl9dulad pro-• .MNP0N>AN080N a.bra Stralland. AIW
,,amm1ng mer be~ I DO<cAvUT being demoted "°"' oor-• due to plldga brellll.' "'°""8 IH POt8te aucutt¥a to ~ Ne ..,..,... / ~Alff 1tora night ftlllNIOW, a
9IETHOYIN The ... and wortc of ~ m6ddl1 9d man'• ...
Leonard e.m.a.tn and ltle """ '*"* Jotlft 8tobart ltyte Md ....,. -turned Vienna Phllhlirmonlc per. .,. '9etut9d. 0 upeldMlawn. 'R' •
tonn Baatnoven'1 Sym-(D).MOYIR 1l:I08C9LATENIGHTwn'H
phony No. 8 In F Ml.jot. ***~"Gimme ShelW'' OAYIOL.ETTEMtAN ~ 88 (19701 Rollng StoNa. _,.,_, Ouailts:-~ crlOcl -
HO e ()) M ·A ·a·H teraon Altplanl. Thll docu-· -'T
Hawti_,., BJ and Cftarlel mentary of the Rollng 4 1Slek=:=v Ebert.
IUffW a~ barrllgl of Stonee' 1"9 Amerk:lln NIW8
prafarenllal lrHtmant tour lllCludel--of the 12:.40 ()) COL.UM80
from the enllltecl panon-rioting and murder at an A fading actr-plot• the
net wNrl tNy -plaoad Altamont ~ frM
on the mmp'1 l)(omotlon concar1.
-.eh of a longrhatld ooe-
~ CIOIUmnll1. (A) 1•• MOYll ·l:=our * • * "Wiid II The Wind"
( 1H71 Anna Maonanl,
""1ltony Quinn. Trouble
et""'9 .._ a young man
.... In low with the -.... of hit Ol*dlan.
CIDMOYll
~ ""'*' '-!Jll'f 'A'
4:80 (I) WILOOME TO MIAMI,
CWANOe
Floride .. doudad with
prtjudloa Md probleme lot
Mike wtlO ll'IUll oome to
or1'lt wllfl 1111 Cuban her'-...
Tmw•dq11'•
. Da11tl•e Mo11le•
* *.,. "The Pollman
Alway• Ring• Twice"
( 118 1) Jac:tl Nlctloilon,
Jelllca Lange. A young
woman and hat io.... ptot
to murder,..., huaband. 'R'
(l)MOYIE
>A ''8M'1 19 AnC1 Reedy'' -MORNIG-
11NO)A young girl long9 to .._. /'IJ'\ * * * "T.._ T-.._ -~total fulftllment. ......, \&I ... ....._
'A' Trap" ( 1966) Debbie Rey·
1:21 CC> MOYll! noldtl, Frank Sinatra. A * * * "The Changallng" 1ophl1tlcated b1chalor
(19801 0-ga c. Soott. down on marrlaoa l'l'leel• 1
Tilah Van 0.-e. A wld· i!!_I who II apt him.
owed muelc pror ... or t:ao • * * "Red River
renll an Old l'IOUM that Ring•" ( 19311) John
llj)pMf9 to be haunted by Wayne. Raly Corrigan. The
a r...._ 1P1f1t with a 5(). ThrM MeaquilMft Mt out
year-old aCor. to aetttt. 'R' to nab • gang of callll
1:80. INTlllTAJNMEN'T thi.v.t opatlllng along the
TOHIQHT Rad Al-.
Bo and Jonn Der~ di$-CC> * ..... ''Tilt y~
c:uae the r ...... of Mir Old Lovan" ( 18501 Sally For·
explollatlon film. r•t ~· Br....... A QI~ Pfomlllng young danoar le Cl)_, ... ~ S1tldtan with 1 perlfyzlng ** "Hlgf1Country"(l981) d ......
Timothy Bottoma, Unda • * * * \o\ "Scarface .. Pun. An ~ c:onv1c1 (1932) PIUI Munl, 0-ge
and hit ~ girl-Raft. A ainall-llme hood-
lrtend llM to tilt mouo-lum r1lel to tilt top Of the
ta1n1. 'PO' heap during Pronlbttlon.
l:tO I~ 10:00 CID * .... "Trll>VI•" ( 18801 _,,.~ Jack Lammon, Robby
**~ "Arly Whk:h W>Y e.n.on. An l<raapontlbla
You Can" (1980) Cllnt &roadway preu •o•nt -•&eH• .. 1•t~~~~dta-4.ocMl...--t--~Pfll~~~ .... _._~ 8efofe Mtt11nQ down wtth life and hit tatlYOUI rlll·
1111 girl Md Piil orangutan. tlonlhlp wlltl his grown
a bare-ft918d fights 81gn1 ton. 'PO'
up lot one lalt, lucratlve Cl) * * * "The ~1-match. 'PO' llon".(1980) Rk;hard Oray-
2: 161 NIWI lull. Amy lrvtng. Two plan-
t:aO N1W1 1111 at • San FrancllCO
• l:IO M"°8lalE mu1lc competltton find
Oat 1n lhac>a, lode good, that their love 10< each
and ..., grMt wt1t1 l111J other confllctt with their
~ 111,_ progrem. prot...ional 1mblllon1.
{H)MO\ ·pa·
• t:al .... ~ Of A Stranger" · 11:00 0 * * * "PatadlM Alley"
(1981) LaYt.i T-• ....,_ (187111 Sylwltar Stallone.
niter JUOft ~ An Armand Atlante. Tht ..
lnqullltlve TV repofte< IChemlng btolhtrt from
11 .. t 1 madman r~ the Hlll'a Kitchen MCtlon
ble for 1 -* of r.,._ of New York City combine
murdln. 'R' ..., I~ of btalnl and
1:11 • llltCMI *** "L0¥1nf'' (1170) Oeotva Seol'. EYa ....,,.
8alrrt. A ~art.Ill II
~by guaet9 ...
1wtnolng party u he
maa•low to•-
blfor9 doaack*~ -....
le1t (C) MOVIE •• * • .. Animal Ct'ac::lt.
..... (1830) Mani Brottllra •.. -.. -~ ~. Iha Afrtcan
explorer, and hit &MY
partnert do coiielc*mia
damage to a aoc~y
matron·• party.
~ ii their elfortt to
-I• benar ltvee for • ..,,.__.PG'
11::IO CC> *•Yo "Aatum
Eno•o•m•nt" ( 1971) Eliza-
beth Taytor, Joaaptl Bot·
tome. A tocmar actr-
wtle> II i.ecHllO II I lln8ll
colllOI lorme a epec1a1
rllatlonahlp with one of her
lludlnll.
12:00 G * * ~ "The Bella Of New Yortt" (1962) Fred
Allaire. Vara Ellen. A tlde-
wallt mTNlo!! linger cap-
turaa tM ,_, of 1 debo-
nelr pleyt>oy. • • * "S.O.S. Pacific"
(19641 Richard Allenbot·
ouefl, Ive ...,_, ,._...
ormfl ..... llttMdad °" 1111 i-.nd l*flf wed '°' ......... ., ....... .... ~°'~ ••• * Mo.ril eom.
111and.. ( 1140) John
WfltM, W,,_ ll'ldfaOlt A
...... llWtMI ...,,....
wtlll • r\ltl)llMI guerrlla
.... Wfttf~-•
IOwnful of -*' and cM-
dten.
C8) * * ~ "The Man Who ilw Tomor-row" (1N 1)
Oooumenteiry ....,,~ by
Otaon w..... 'OOtllOI of _.. ,,. pr'9llctecl and
dfwnette r--IOl11 of
hit ..,. CIOlllPfila ,.. look
at I~ H~lury Fran(lfl
~. •trofooar encl myetle, *Ml de .Jlottr ..
Detne. llnown .. N°oetr•
damul. 'PO'
Cl) * *. "All Night Long" (19811 Oarl9 Hadlman,,
Bllbr• Str•Nnd. Altar
being demoted from eot·
porlle eMCUllYe IO ct\atn-
llora night INlftaOat. •
mlddl.-llQad man'• llfe.
llyle and.....,..,. turned_
~°""'·'R' 1*1* • • "c.ddle" ( tH 1)
Halen Morie. JIC* Thornp-
ton. A young woman
IMvee her comfortable
IUbuttlerl home and hat
cruel huaband, determined
10 take NII r~bllity
for 1UPPOf11no her c:Nldfan
by dOlng wtiet-odd
Jot>• the can eat.
Cl) * * * "The Tender Tree>" ( 1t55) o.bbla Re_y.
noldl, Frank Sinatra. A
1op111111c11ad bachelor
down on marriage ~II 1 i!!_I who trapa him.
l:IO W * * * "Royal Flath" ( 1975) Maleolm McDowell,
Alan 811•. The n0C1urnal
aecaptc:lel of the nutt-
buckllng Capt: Herry
Fluhman land him In th4t
arms of Iha notorlou1
cO<Jrt111n Loi• Montai
and on the wrong elde of
the powerful Count Otto
von Biemarll. 'PG'
2:00 ® * • • ··s1mon" 119eo1
Alan Arkin, Auttln Pendle-
lon Scianllltl I t I blz.arre-
ly mlldlractad t/\IM tank
con111nce a Dumbing col-
lage prof-IMI he la an
llllarl from OUllr ~
'PG'
1:00 8 • * • 'Geronimo"
(1882) Chuck Connors,
Kamala Devi. Rebelling
agalnll the greed and 1)'1·
anny ot an Indian agent,
Geronlmo declarea wer on
_-lba.LJ..S.
3: tll CZ) * • * "'The Dogs Of
War" ( 1880) Cnrlltopl'ler
Wlllten, Tom Ber~.
Alie< being tortured and
daoorteO by en African '
dlctetor. e mer canary
retum1 to 1411d e revOllJ-uon. ·R·
4:00 CC) **yr "St0<les From A
Flying Trunk" ( 19781 Mut·
rey Melvin, members of the
Royll 8111411. Three Hana
Chrl1Uan Ander_, stories
111 btoughr to Ill• through
ballet, Hve ICIJon and anl·
mat Ion
4:30 0 * * • ·~ 'Scar11Ce"'
(1932) Paul Munl, George
Ratt. A ltTlall·llma hoQd..
lllm rta. 10 the top of the
hellp OU<lng PrOhlbtllo I.
6: 11 (%) * * • · · Flrtt F llftlly''
119801 G11<1a Raid..-. Bot>
Newhart The sexually
rec>rNMO daughtt{ of the
country• ""91rdast pr-.
oant11I t1mlly c:ornpllcat•
htt f1tner'1 atlllmPll to
conduct • th• 1ffalr1 of
11a1e. 'R' &:to ~*** "Oh OoOl 8<><*
II" (19801 George Suma.
Suzanna Plelhetta. God
r1furn1 to F1tfh and
ct1ooMI Iha young dtugl)-
llf ol an e4ifarlltlng exec-
utive to tpretd h11 ~
Hge to the world. 'PG'
boerd. (I) MOVIE
8C9..0VACUP'F ... IO *** "Popeye" (1980)
; Y1AM THI f<*G Of' Ro01n Wlltlam1, Shelley
JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk
COUNntv MUllC Duv911. White IMtdllno for
MtlWl6e Pearl hoatl ""' lllalether, the~:
tribute to the hither of the Inf Mllor vlllta a quaint
OrW!d Ole ()pry, fMtut1ng hMll9t wtwe he l**a UP a
1nMY of IN top ,_.,. In follftlllflg Md 1 •1nny
b~WAM: 11ilo;r;---~ •
A}.OYI ITORY 8 aiTHE ..t Of A nierrtad coupte become CAMON
~ ...,... durtllg tM ~8~.J.,nn
prooe. of ""* ... ....... Bob ......,,. TOfll Selec* and.,._ CIA'· • Linda~ (A)
tin ttar. • 9 MC NaWI I ....V..... NIGIHTUHR
••Al•/ • ALL.INTMU'AMLY WINCHIN
Who.'s Winn.er?
MY GUEST IOD~Y
IS IHAI 'INACKY
WE.16HTWA'1CHER, RICHARD 51MMONS .••
IHE MAN WHO H..a · MADE Hypgw:.TNny
: AN ART FORM.'
Show captures human moments, trying situations
8)' FRED &OTllENBE&G
APT .............
NEW YORK -Television ia
most enJi&btenlnc when it
becomes a mirror,·capturlnfour
most human momenta mad our
most trytnc aituatkms ... Divorce
Wars: A Lo~ St«y'' on CbaMel
7 at -t-tontgbt ls Ula ilDd of
f
., reflection.
"!!nry divorce depends,
ultimately, on the peopte," aays
one character in the movie. "It's
like a·war. You can fi&bt to the
lut mu and end up with a lot of
devaataUon ud tel a lot of
innocent people kllled. At· a
certain potnt, nooe ol it b worth
it."
Tbat'a tbe boUoln-Uae leaaon •
in toldOt'• preMDtatloD cm tbe ''AllC -,,...._ ol tile ......,,,
tbe Mtwork'• ........... for apeelal prod11ct1• tat wtll ne•lr lie eadf1illed .,.. 0 11ortr
aad Mlnclr Vlalt f'antHJ
lllaad.''
Tom Selleck of "Masn111, P.I." plays Jaellr ...... a drhn divorce lawrer wbo
me...,. Ida nee.I la Ill• b)'
tlle c .. M wtm. 1111 ...a v111oa 1a U••• ,,.,,.u :::c;;r-.. °'
ell & ea•• r
.. ._
show. Richard& and Phil Ganyon operate San
Die10 teminars on how to g~t c~en and win
at games.
1 r I
•
cSrangp Coaat DAILY PILOT/Mondar. March 1r 1982' #
..
. l
· · . · han. . . · , ~sir: · · · -·.
. aHier Cal\a b\ C\ernens ' 1111.r. Scoff-.
"'' ~ ..,-han~'f.:>o, 12.a~ . }Ii, M . P~nnon Thanks, Mtt Fi+ch · ,,
. Thanks Mr. Barro n·--L . .J . .LJ· AA . . . Thanks, ~s."Duncan ~ . ne '-''·Ms· r..IUl~ras n~ 'rlS.~111.t>t-s .
· 't'oUre welc.0me, Mr·:-'°P · . · \..\ello, M.s. Hut'sf-. Tha11.ks Mr. Grant · ki
/.le/~, fat~ Reas?anks~~ 8Val:nz.ueta l,\e.\l~, Mr. Ba1;,~ 1hanks, Mr. /-l<ift:hin5 ~;., Mr. Fotd ~ . '· r: · . ·re we.\come, Mrs. Ctai.9 '· ~· Morgensh!rn
GOod rnorning! Mr: Rogers . ·'<00. . · 1 , Good mo . )6°t-e We/co~
. an Th~nk yo· AA ne//o . A-11 . rn1n.9, A1 c-l Afs A~· .. . : r.-S\ake\1'\ . 4,r1r. Rarnanis , ,.,,,..s. Cunnin h t:~/aughf-er ·'VJVe;, ~,.~ We\lo, t'ir. Gonz.a/ez -tlello, Ms. Kirn 9rn=~ . · ~r . · ~ellO, Mrs. Sane!!i-k M. Lee 1-l~llo,Mr. ~per H1, Mm·% Choce
. . 1nan 1t>4 . rs. \~~ ( 1nanks M M n I • I-JI Mr. Ferrati , . cw:-v-.e · · . l t: a _S<Jtno-fb
l-lello,1
Mrs. Y~ .. H;,·Mr. ~t~~oon,Mr. Thanks ~!~~Y~~~re11"~=~ _ - ---:_ ·~ --~~,~-·ph·t\• , '•t.;;.f!Z/nski M .e o, ir1r.vv11~orr \}e\lo,Mr. Levy. [:p>" . ~anks,Mr. ' •ps · Goodbye Mr. Chips
' .
We ..,amise to •nile.
1b say '"hi'' and ''tlmnks!'
·Arid.to cal
-every-11.r name.
. Or Jiu get a dollar.
On the spot.
' We've been learning a lot of new names lately.
Because we've been helping a lot of new customers
switch their accounts from banks t9 Fidelity Federal. More
than 42 thousand in 'the last year alone. .
They like our interest rates -the highest rat~s allowed by
law. They like our name-calling guarantee: we'll use your name
and make you feel welcome.or hand you a dollar. On ~he spot.
If that doesn't seem like reason enough to switch your
account to Fidelity Federal. just remember the last time
you fell into the clutches of,an unfriendly, indifferent banker.
And keep that picture m mind. when you walk into
•
I
1
f
..
-Fidelity Fed. •
Where more than 700'of the nicest name-callers tn the--·------
business are standing by. ·
Ready to help you switch your account. To call you by
name. And to do one heck of a lob with all your banking needs.
1 At Fidelity Federal. we· re on your side.
..
KAREEM-ED Laker renter Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was a
prominent figure tn Sunday's one-po int win o,·er
Cleveland at the Forum. He pulls down a rebouno 1 ~eft 1
Westhead still can't •
figure out his firing
But he refuses to hold. any grudges
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Three
m o nths after h is s uaden
dismissal as head coach of the
Los Angeles La'kers, Paul
Westhead is still asking himself
why.
"I still can't piece together any
signif\Cant eviden.ce that I macte
serious mis takes," said
Westhead, dumped Nov. 19 when
Valenzuela
talks 1nake
progress
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Los
Angeles p itching sensation
Fe.rnando Valenzuela and his
r e presentatives m e t with
Dodgers officials for more than
three hours Sunday and "some
progress" was reported in their
contract talks.
Another m eeting was
sc h ed ul e d for today , a
spokesman for the world
champions said.
Steve Brener , the team's·
publicity director, issued a
s tatement saying that although
a contract agreement for 1982
was not reached, "both sides
reported some progress."
The statement also said that
the time and site of Monday's
meeting was s till undetermined,
and "both parties agreed there
would be no further comment at
,this time.''
Lakers' star Earvin "Magic"
·-Johnson said he was unhappy •
playing,under the coach.
Westhead, wh~ided the
Lakers to the Natio Basketball
Association Lille i the 1979-1980
season, remains without a job, but
hopes to return to the NBA soon as
a head coach.
"If I haye any choice·, I'll stay
with the ' pros," he told Tom
· Cushman. sports editor of The
San Diego Tribune , i n a n
interview. '
"The only job I. have now ls
picking up the kids at 3: 15," he
said. •
The Lakers who 19t off to a Z-4
star t , we re o n -a five-game
winning streak when Westhead
was fired by team owner J~
Buss. ·
Johnson, citing dirrerences
)Yith Westhead, had demanded to·
be traded, saying "I can't play
here anymore."
Since his dismissal, West.head
has refused to lash ou~ at Jo~
Bus.s or the Lakers.
"MY FEELING was that so
many good things had haP-.P-ened,
why should I tarnish them by ....
reacting publicly ,•to something.
already done," he said.
_ "The experience overall was
one or ups and downs. There was
t he obvious e xcitement. or
winning the championship, of
being involved with some of the
great players in the game, or
achieving a certain level of
p'.ersonal competence.
"On the downside -and I've
gone .over this In my mind
meticulously -and J still can't
Ucl ls RE' _..DY piece.together any aitnlficant
/S evidence that I made aeri0\11
.mistakes. I had accepted the idea FOR OPENER 'that if you win, you're loved, and
. if you lose, you're 1ooe. Durinl
The UC Irvine basketball the time J was with the team, we
team will open the PCAA were 10 percent Winnen.
post-aeaaon t ournament
Wednesday nllh1' when it baWet ~~~~~m=p == = Ut~h State at 7 o 'clock in tbe dkt.a.a-ttar ..... •-·~ Anaheim Convention Center. • -.,-,__,, Other ftnt·round patrinp find (1181),especlallylnll-'1tot apc
Cal State Nlert.on taD1llnl wt&b beln1 out for as· 181DN. II u
the University of hclllc in tbe 4 economist c'-"ed claarta like
o'clock opener witb Lone Bneh tboae he'd ftnd no nUOD b'
State meetin& San JOH State at chan1e, but -for whatever t . rea~ -they sokl me lbort Ver/
Jf tbe ADte.ten wbt ~D fut. ·
plar Ill t o•elld Tlniri"cia1. Rl• fee1ta11 tod•J towaH c~p 1ame .. PriclltJ. ~--T "A IUOd penoa," Mid T an on 1ale llt UCI ' 9ltllud.
Ww• t and •· ucl at u. Jerrr BmaT ••a. ·--" ~ O.•..._ c.e.r betwem 11 lmpoulbl• p,r to deal WU. adl. Ta..,., r,_. .........
.. ......., ... ID laardjlJIMll ...
o.lty ..... ,......., •1c-.-.......
and swin_gs in the air < rjght l under the .watrhful eye of
teammate Jamaal Wilkes. Jabbar·s s kv-hook with two
seconds left gave the bakers a 102-101 vir"toi-~·.
Intense winner
in yachting's
<Jorkett series
See Page 93 .
L&kers pull : . . . escape act -.
Lowly Cavs prove pesky ...
·!
By CUllT SEEDEN Of .. Delty ...........
INGL-EWOOD -Magic
J ohnson and Bob McAdoo were
missing from the Laker lineup
Sunday afternoon. And, for the
.better part of the first hall, ·so
was any enthushtsm from thi!
rest of the Lalcers,
-Fortunately for Los Angeles,
Sunday afternoon's opponents
were n one other than t he
Cleveland Cavaliers, winners of
just five games on the road this
seas on and only 12 overall.
Cleveland, a team molded out
of several questionable trades
and often maligned for inept
management by owner Ted
Stepien, did everything possible
to take advantage of the al;>sence
.of Magic and McAdoo, however.
THE CAVALIERS built a
19·point advantage in the first
ha lf, dominating the game so
much that Laker Coach Pat
Riley set a halftime goal or a
IO-point deficit on which to build
for the remaining 24 minutes of
action.
half of the Lakers· curreftC
sev e.n-gam e winning streale
whi ch h as moved the m 3~
gan:ies ahead or Seattle in the
Pacinc Division.
But ~xpanaing that bulge was
a much bigger task than the
Lakers expected. To begin with,
Magic was missing from ttie
lineup because of ijle death ol
his grandmother.
THE GUY WHO sparks the
Laker running game flew home
a nd is expected to rejoin the
team for Wednesday night's
game against New Jersey at the
Meadowlands.
··We miss Magic in so many
ways," admitted Riley. "He j ust
adds so many dimensions to the
game." ·
Without Magic, the Cavaliers
a lso added a new dimension to
the game. It's called surprise.
"I know they're struggling,
but Cleveland has a lot of talent.
Cleveland played as well as
anybody could play against us ,"
Riley praised.
The Cavaliers , after falling
behind early, 11·4, made the
And th~t·s exactly what the Lakers look lazy on a lazy
Lakers did Sunday afternoon, afternoon as Cliff Robjnson and
culminatin g lbe.i.1:-comebaek-vet-enn ·~ Jinnes Sll6..._
effort with a 15-foot s ky book s parked t h em to .a 34-25
from Kar eem Abdul-Jabbar a d va ntage · after th e first
with two seconds remaining for quarter.
a 102·101 victory before 14,882 The Cavaliers shot a sizzling
fans at the Forum. .714 percent~ge in that quarter ,
"I thought we had to s cramble connecting o;, 15 of 21 shots from
when it counted," said Riley. t h e fi e ld . T h ey a l s o
after the game. "And Kar~D) · o_utrebounded t.be t,akers in Ote
~as alw~ys the~e at 'the ng~t h~st quarter, 12·5, which can be
time. Hes been mstrumental m d 1re-ctl y att ribute d to the
our last three games." absence or McAdoo who is still
Those three ga11;1es -vi~tolies nursing a pulled calf muscle and
over Seattle, Ph1ladelph1a apd will not accompany the team on
Cleveland -account for nearly CSee LAKERS, Paite C1>
Wheelock happy
he took his shot
But majors didn't work out for him
ByJOHN SEV~
Of ... INlly ...... Staff
Ab, it's almost that time
again. The .crack of a bat ...
the chatter around an infield
... the sounds of leather.
Yep, baseball is just around
the corner. Yor many veterans,
the star t or s pring training
represents a grueling six weeks
of labor. For many youngsters,
spring training represents a
chance -a hope -of catching
on wi~h the "Big Team."
F ormer UC Irvine standout
Gary Wheelock knows what the
latte r is like. From 1974, until he
le rt the game in 1980, the
rlght-handea pitcher yearn~ ror
that golden opportunity. .
Wheelock was drafted by the
Angels during the summer of
'74. He was assigned to the
team's Quad Cities farm club in
the Midwest (A ball) where he
arri ved with some impressive
credentials.
Wheel9ck was 17 ·2 for the ---.LOOKING BA.CK -.
Anteaters his senior year with a
1.70 ERA. In his career, he was
37·10 with a 2.28 earned run
av~ra.ce.
The right-hander (and then
desi1nated bitter , too, with a
.309 average in 1974) led UCI to
a pair of NCAA Division II
World Series tJUea ln '73 and '74. ·
He wu also an integral' part or
UCl's 32-aame winning streak
during the 1974 campatp. In
fact, Wheelock recorded the
liJlal vkLory In tl'i• ~ttond
Series, burliDI the tJlteaters to
a 14·1 decision over N,ew
;Orleans.
In ~~ came. Wheeler pitched
a five-blt1'r as be struck out 12,
laclu~q the laat seven in a row.
, Pltcben with tllloee kladl ol
cnd•l•I• uaually ft•ure to be
1boo-IDI for tbe maJon. But
Wheelock became victim to .... , ..., ~-eJed hopelula
become •letlm &o -the aumben 1ame.
Y• ... , ..... It eom .. to :'·--=rli J• --,_ .... ~Ill ............ lllulb
I piQ9r a lpot Ge ttie ............
Wh~e~
Of •11 effortl wu • . ..........
1
MEMORIES -For mer UC
Irvine s tandout hurler Gar.·
. Wheelock fondly remembe~
h i s s t i n t i n t h e m a j or.
leagues. . '
. . . 88 of those coming in ~
season. .
Was there dis~pP._Ointment?.
Bitterness! Resentment? Maybe
for some, but not for Wheelock;
who watjust happy to have bad.·
the chance.
"I'm g lad I did it," aaig,
Wheelock from bis homt IK
IJe llevue. Wash. "It wu
something· l enjoyed and J'al
glad I got a chance to play ln tM
big leagues. . ·• •
"You know, at Irvine I nevw
tho\Jgbt about the ba. Jeapes. It
was the farthest thln1 from my
m ind. I was wrapped up iD
college and winnin1 tbe = Series at the.time. raever
dreamed a bout tbe blll le
· ... I certainly wun'f ~
OD it." .:,
Wheek>Ck spent 19'14, 'T5 ...
almoet all of 'Te bl tilt ~ farm ayatem . Hh fir• -
appearance in a major 1
uniform wu at the tallnd of
'71 ..... qaiDlt tM llb-·
TwlM.ltw•aa ~a.·•
lllOOD ..... too. ..,,. wwtm-~·~ftn(
IH t ••P•r•••e ,. ~· . .,.._ ........ ..
Hl'J ...... " J111M , ...... K ... , ftrit time f ..... • ...
t ... GUY, .... CI>
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.. f' •
From APdlapatclle• • • ·
ARCADIA-He's a special horse, E this oqe.eied, claustrophobic colr
named Cuaaleria. •
"When he first arrived in California, J
thought, 'You poor devil, you've 1ot to 10 throucb
all the wars of racing and you've aot this
handicap'," recalled 'trainer Ron McAnally.
"And what it something happens to y~r good
eye?" ·
"I have a real~spotrorbim."
Mc.\ilally also has high hopes for Cassaleria,
wb~ despite his problems has emeried as one of
1 the too3-vear.:Olds in the countrv.
"He's a goOd Kentucky Derby prospect now,
and I think it would be just excellent for him to win
it because of the handicap he has," said the man
who also trains John Henry, the 1981 Horse of the
Year.
Cassaleria. bred bv James Brady of
Kentucky and owned by the 20-20Slable group that
includes Brady, McAnally and three others, has
not finished out of the money in nine career starts,
with three victories including the El Camino Real
Derby at Bay Meadows. His next scheduled st;lrt
is the San Felipe Handicap at Santa Anita March
21.
Quote 'of the day
Tex Winter, basketball coach at Long
Beach State: "Money. It's all one game,i
whether it's football or basketball. You've
got to be successful to exist. Bowls ,
television, basketball playoffs. You get to
the Final Four in basketball, and it will be
worth $500,000. You get into the
t-0urnament, and It's worth $1.20,000. I think
it's bad. I'm n ot so s ure a lqt -of
administrators don't make budgets
counting on that money. I think it's b1td. It
puts an awful lot or pressure on the·
coaches today."
.
h . "I Jo rw...,,.,.. hll former matt1
.,_. , ...... ~ ll ol hla al
28 potata la the loarth qual'Ur to rally
the Pboenlx SU. to a lOMI victory
over S•attl• In &he National
Batketball Aaloclation Sunday. Joblfaon, a
former Sonic. llelped PhoenJx overcome an
early 11·PGln& chftcit ..• llerun1 IUq pour.t
ln 28 polnta and Wedd F'" chlPI*! tn wttb D
leadtn Golden State to • 10~-17 rout oi
IAtl•nta . . . Scortn1 a Jcar..r-bilh • polnta, 1.-.,
DHla paced lndJana to a
lit· 10 l trt d mph o••r
DetroJt . . . aay Wllll••• not~hed 23 Poiota to lead New
Jeraey put San Dle10.
110•95, the CUppert' 10th loa •
tn their la s t 11
1amea . • . •icky Soltera
came otr the ben~h to score '°" .. '°" I 18 of his aame-high 28 poUlta
in the rourth quarter to lead Cbicaco to I 11 .. lOC
triumph over Midwest Dtrialon-leadlng San
Antonio . . . Key .. Grevey scored the 1ame's
las t seven points in overtime, belph~g
W ashlngton record a 113-109 win over New
York ... Lerry Bird shook orf a blow to the
head that kept him out of the third quarter and
scored 11 fourth-quarter polnta to lift eoston to
a 106-102 triumph over Milwaukee. The victory
was Boston's third strai1tfl. white the Bucks
were losing only their second game ln their laat
15 outings. 1
·canucks ·salvage tie ·with Ftyers
Gary Lupul scored.. his seventh lii1
goa I of the season with 3 : 25 "
remaining Sunday oi~ht to give Ute
Vancouve r CanuclCs a 3·3 tie with the
Philadelphia Flyers in the National J{ockey
League. The single point moved the Canµcks
into second place in the Smythe Di vision, one ..
point ahead of Calgary .•. Wayne Gretsky,
the NHL's record-breaking ~corer, colleded two
Edmonton goals and assisted on anothef as the
Oilers defeated Was hington, 4-1 ... Aaron
Broten scored the winning goal in the second
period a s Colorado topped C hicago,
5-3 ... Right wing Willy Lllldstrom scored two
go_als and added an assist to lead Winnipeg past·
St. Louis, 5·2 ... Dino ClccarelU §cored with
just 11 seconds remaiJling to propel MTnnesola
to a 5-4 triumph in Detroit . . . Veteran Gary
' Edwards, in his first start as Pittsburgh's
goalie, stymied the New York Rangeis with 36
s ave s as the Penguins prevailed
4·2 ... Goalie Deals Herron posted his second
s hutout of the season as Montreal blanked
Griffou 'not a ronlacement' Hartford. 5-0 ... Defenseman Stuart Smith "'' ..,,.. _ was recalled Sunda by th~ler~. __ _
en Grtffey is stffi ·a bit illa t Ii
ease at staking out the right field O
Yankee territory that once belonged kamoto captures LPGA tourney
to Reggi~ Ja~ksoa,. but he'~ tryin~ not to let ~t. Ayako Oka~oto sank a 15-foot •
bother him. I don t. feel I m takmg anybody .~ birdie putt on the second hole or a· . pl~ce now tha~ J_tegg1e has gon~ to the Angels, sudden·death playoff with Sally Little
·'
said th~ $~ m1l~1on-a-year outf1elder'who came to win the LPGA Arizona Copper Classic
from Cmc1~~at1. : .. C,l,audeU Wasblngton was Sunday. For Okamoto, a native of Tokyo, it was re~rtedly .. oo his way to the Atlanta Braves . he r first LPGA win In the United States,
spring trammg camp Sunday, and the absence althougti she has won 20 tournaments in the
of the starting right fielder and leading hit~er a Japan LPGA ... Lucille Lee Of Orange
year ago .~ad Man~ger Joe 'J'.orre mildly defeated defending c ham pi on Shirley conce~. He ~sn .t have a. we1g~t problem, Muldowney in Sunday's finals of the top fuel
so theres DO quesb.<?n tn my f!ltD~ he II be ~e~dy ·category in the Bakersfi~ld Fuel and Gas
to open the season! Torr~ s~1d. But ye~. it is a championships at Famoso Drag Strip. The
problem to the point you d. hke to get him here match of the two women in the finals was the
a n d .. c a u g h t u P I n t h e w h o l .e first time the situation ever came about in the
thing. . .. Catc:her Charlie Moore dropped ~1s history of professional racing. request for the Milwaukee Brewers to trade him
I after talking with General Manager Harry.
Dalton Sunday. "He'll be competing for ~n
outfield job," Dalton said. ''l'in very pleased
about it. I feel I've picked up an outfieldet' and
kept our catching strong."
T elevisi()n, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Hockey -Kings at Quebec, 6 p.m.,
KPRZ (llSO).
Bean postpoD.es celebrfttion
Inquiry, prompted'by viewers' calls, delays outcome
MIAMI (AP> -Andy Bean had
to s urvive an inquiry into a
possible rul~ infraction -an
inquiry prompted by numerous
telephone calls rrom television
viewers-before he was declared
the winner or the Doral-Eastfm Open golf tournament Sunday.
There was no penalty. Officials,
one or whom was on the scene
when the incident occurred. ruled &here was no infraction7
But, at least for a moment when
he waa coming down the stretch locked~ a multiple-man struJgle
ror the tiUe, there was some
· doubt. It was not until be had been
interviewed by officials in the
scortngtenttbatitwasresolved.
''I think the camera angle
showed something that really
.wasn't," Beansaid.
The incident occurred on the
14th hole at the Blue Monster
. course at the Doral Country
Club. Be&Q bit his tee shot under
a tree.
· ·'I was standing about 2 feet
from where I would stand to bit
the shot," Bean said. "I wanted to
see If I could take a full swing and
I took the club back. A limb was in
the way. I couldn't make a full
swing. So I told .Dennis Chis
caddy) 'I'm Just gonna have to
punch it out'."
He then took-his ~lance and
played a half-shot out to the
fairway.
Viewers who telephone d
. claimedBeanbaddislodgedsome
-leaves on bis practice-swing and
that it appeared be bad improved
his lie, a rules infrac~ion calling 1
for a 2-shot peqalty.
"Fortunately, an official was
sitting in a cart not 15 feet away,"
Bean said.
"After I'd bit the shot, I heard
something from a spectator that I
miihthave broken a rUle. I didn't
think I had. I didn't think I'd done
anything wrong.
•·But I went back to the official
and asked him. I said, 'If there's
any question, penalize me. I don't
wantanydoubtaboutit.'
"He said, 'Don't worry aboullt.
There's no penalty.'
"The camera angle made it
Area gridders
lwrwred tonight
(Sea\)'). 3 .8 <Bondi >. 3.5
<Batchelor) and 3.4 (Reyes).
Othen from Orange County to ~ honored include Foothill'•
re•a Haly, Pacmca·a Doa
bitael, Villa Park'• areal. Bl•baar, Senite'a Doq 8\llllr,
Fullerton'• Mike WUJn, Oraqe
1.utberan'1 Nathan Nebeo, El
Dorado'• Brent Hoo.ver and Fullerton Colle1e'1 Jeff
Bucbn. •
Alto lD line for hoeon ae
Rear Madral (bl.) Tbomm J.
HamU&aa ad Elvin C Dueb> Drau.
look like I was doing something I
wasn'tdoing," Beansaid.
Bean, sidelined most of last
season wttb a band injury, scored
the eighth victory or hia career
with a closlng 6land a 278total,11
shots under NJ'.
A single shot back at 279 were
Scott Hoch, Mike Nicolette and
Jetty-Pate. Hoch had a 89 tri the
mild, cloudy weather, while Pate
l\nd Nicolette._ enjoying the l:iest
tow-namentofbis4-yearcareer-bad matching 70s.
.Jack Nieklaus, only 2 strokes -
back when the day's play started
lhnd apparently poised to make a
run at the title, never 10&
untracked. He made double
bogey-7onthet2thholeandhadto
birdie the 18th for a 74 that left
him well behind in th~ pack at
ZM.
I
Ray Floyd, winner or this event
the two previous years, never
really aot into contention. He
finilbed with 10 and a 286.
· CdM plays
Thllnday
..
..
/ . .
IN CONTROL Kurt Rambis. all 6-8 of
him . skies to get r ebound Sund a~· as
~ ........... ., ........ _
Kareem Abdul-.Jabb'ar watches . 1.akers
escaped with 102-101 wtn.
From Page C1
• •
~-.~ <
LAKERS SLIP P AS.T CAV AI,IERS.
!ts mfee-gai'i'iFSWing tiroug
the last.
THAT PUT .an extra burden
on both Jabbar and forward
Kurt Rambis, and both emerged
from the game with more than .
impressive statis tics ..
Rambis scored a career-high
12 points and also turned in a
From Page C1
career -best rebounding effo-rt
with 17 boards. He .even
delighted the crowd with 4-of 9
free throw conversions. which is
better than average for the 6-8
workhorse.
"Yeah; it's just a matter of
confidence," Ram bis admitted,
trying to hold back a grin. "I
have lo have it right in my head
GARY WHEELOCK • • •
three runs in the first inning. I
remember I was throwing the
ball hard, but I was so excited I
just tried to throw it by people
and that never really worked
well in the big leagues."
Wheelock ended up pitching
two innings that day and
surr endering six rW\s -all
earned -for a less 'Chan glossy
27 ,()(f ERA.
The following season he was
picked in the expansion draft by
Seattle and spent tfie entire
campaign on the main roster
posting a 6·9 recor<I (for 17
games) and a 4.91 ERA. ·
Arm trouble then plagued the
right-hander shortly after and
Wheelock was sent back to the
minors for '78 and '79. His last -
a nd final -chance came
against the Twins in 1980. He
pitched three innings before a
1 i n e d r i v e.. off t he bat of
Minnesota's Glenn Adams
bounced off Wheelock's right
wrist tlnd put t~ right·hander
nut of baseball for good.
"H e CAdams> wa s a
l e ft -handed hitter and I
remembe r throwing him a
fastball away ," recalled
Wheelock. "He hlt it right up the
middle . . . he seemed to hit a
lot or them right up the middle.
Luckily it went to the second
baseman for the third out."
Unfortunately for Wheelock, it
put him on the sidelines tor two·
weeks. In I.he meantime, the
Mariners purchased Dave
STAY ALIVE
DRIVE 55
Heaverlo from San Francisco.
By the time Wheelock was ready
to come back, the re was no
room.
"I knew I was n 't going
anywhere with the Mariners,"
said Wheelock. "so I asked for
m y release." Seattle obliged.
Today, Wheelock is in his
second season as a pitching
coach with San Antonio of the
Lo s ·Angeles Dodgers'
organization. Wheelock admits
it's quite a change going from
the instructee to the instructor. but he's adjusting.
··coaching is different and I
still have a lot to learn." he said,
"but I had a good time. It was
fun for me. Actually, it's the
best time I ever had in my pro
baseball career.
"The most important thing in
coaching is to get along and try
to understapd your players and
r ealize everyone is different.
The fact I played in the big
leagues has -grven n1e some
credibility ...
In Wheelock's heyday as a
major leaguer he· comm anded a
salary of $35,000 -which is·
admittedly small in respect to
whet-players are getting today.
As a roach, however, It's even
worse as Wheelock gets a paltry
$15,000 for his services.
"Coaches definitely aren't in
this game to get rich ," he
explalned" "But I'm not in it for
the mon«:y . It's something I llJce
doing. I just like baseball."
when I'm up there (at the free
throw line>."
Jabbar, meanwhile, bes ides
tossing in the ga m~-winning
basket, led all scorers on the
fl oor with 32 points, winning the
battle of the centers with the
Cavs' James Edwards who had
25.
In the six victories prior to
Sunday's triumph, Jabbar was
averaging 25.8 points per game.
Ile turned in a seasonal best 41
points in the Lakers' victory
over Philadelphia Friday night.
"The wav teams have been'
playing· us lately, we just don't
get the <fast) breaks that often,"
Jabbar explai n ed of h is
emphasis on offense. "We·re
having to go to our set game
more often. Ear,,Ly in the season.
we were trying to run an the
time and our guards weren't
always taking a good shot
se l ectio n . Now . they 'r e
(opponents) getting back on
defense, forcing us into the set
offense."
THA'f ... OFFEN~E revolves
around Jabbar who can either
go to .the basket via sky hook:
slam dunk or whatever, or pass
off to an open guard "when they
triple team me." he added.
lful with h seconds remaining
in the game Sunday, and the
Cavalie r s ahead 101-100
following an Edwards basket,
the Lakers called time out and it
was pretty obvious Jabbar was
designated to lake the final shot.
And just like he calmly sank
two--kee-throw:i 'Friday to send
the game into overtime against
Philadelphia, Jabbar tossed up a
perfect sky hook that ten tbe
Cavaliers winless in nine of their
last 10 games. ·
* *· * LA•E• oa1eaL11 -TM C.vellers cur,.,Uy own Ille ~I l'Konl In the HllA Hon\'lalty, llte
only OOoCI tNno th9t COINS CMll of• yeer 11 ... .,,.
-cie ... ...., fs •a;perien(lft9, Is • iwwttv 900CI
sMI come coll•te drtoft llme. Howe ... r. 119<-In lttO. Hie Cevt -•lnecl 0.. ~ .. !~.., Ille
L•-••s. In retUNI, LOS ...... ,., 1"9<e1Wd IMC.YI'
lksl.rovnd drtofl choke. AllCI tllet me-, tM
L•-•rs ,.. ... • sllot et •lenlflO VfrOlnfe"s 1-4 • .._..
'-"',_ -If ~ clKldts to •-Ip Ills -lor yHr to turn pro,
DIVORCED? s•ARATED?
Zillgitt and Wrigh~ • intur:mce asnits' and brolrcrs
,.
~ .
1
. '
IOrwtgeCo.t DAIL"'( PILOT/Monday, Mllf'Ctl 1, 1982
SLOW OOINO, COMING -Hana Ho <77007>. Morrie Kirk's Santa Cruz.so
from Balboa Yacht Club, jumped off to a good start in Saturday's first race.
to Catalina Island and led tne fleet home in Sunday's windless race from
DellY ...... ~ i.y A-LKl!Nef
the island to Newport. Hana Ho was unable to save her time in Saturday's
r ace which went lo the Choale·48 Brisa. CO·Skippered b~· Dennis Choatt'
and Dick Meine. Los Angeles Yacht CIUb.
Whitbred race still in doubt.
·Tw'!'french yachts bat~ling for aggregate· time trophy
:::., race due to damage· and the many hazards in the
race :
MAR DEL PLATA, Argentina -As yachts
headed home to Portsmouth, England, on the last
leg of the Whitbread Around the World race
speculation mounted over the eventual overall FLYER -Crushed finger to a crewman on leg
handicap winner. two. .,. or the.6bree principal trophies awarded by the FCP Challenger -Miscellaneous penalties.
Royal Naval Salling Association of England, the Skopbank of Finland -No major difficulties.
Roaring 40s award has alJ.'eady been won by European University Belgium -Dismasted BOATING
Ceramco New Zealand. It is anticip~ted ~-'t_E!.ttL_.n.n.legJbr~ ___ __,_..._...,__ -----------====--
will wm the trophy Forifie best elapse<rtime. Gauloises 3 -Dismasted on leg three and -' ~
T.he ~tbread. trophy for the best aggr.,at.e retired from race.
handicap time wlll be hotly contested on the Save Venice -Br6ke forestays on leg one;
fourth and final leg by Charles Heidsieck Ill and suffered damage to hull in leg three; retired from
Kriter IX, two French yachts tbat are both named race.
for champagne companies. _ Berge Viking -Protest lodged against her in
Charles Heidsieck holds an 11 ~ hour leg one by AJaska Eagle for alleged illegai
advantage over Kriter IX. although Kriter bas a communications.
slight advantage in IOR rating. Flyer, currently Ceramco New Zealand -Dismasted on leg third on handicap standings, would have to finish 90 one.
hours ahead of Charles Heidsieck to win both Charles Heidsieck 111 -Forestays parted
elapsed and handicap honors, a formidable task during leg one; broke boom on leg three.
for-muter skipper Conny van Rietschoten. La Barca Laboratoria -Dismastea on leg
The first yachts are expected in Portsmouth one; did not compete in legs two and three.
about one month after the re-start. Outward Bound -Delayed starting· leg two
Only 10 of the original 26 starters have come due to a'rreat of crewman for alleged drug
throu_gh the first three legs with no major offenses; charges later dropped.
difficulties. Disque de Or 3 -No major difficulties.
Here is a recap of the start ing roster, Walrus 3 Berlin -No major difficulties.
including yachts which have dropped out of the
Racing uni·on
plans races
The United States Yacht Racing Union has
announced that the 1982 U.S, Youth sailing
championships will be held at the Fort Worth,
Tex., Boat 'Club :June 28 to July 2 in Lasers and
Laser Ils.
Competitors will provide their own boats,
However, some boats will be ava1lable for charter.
USYRU's Olympic Yachting Committee will
again sponsor a two-day racing seminar June
26-27, open to all Youth Championship
participants.
The winners of the single and double-handed
events represent the U.S. at the 1982 Jntemational
Y a c h l Ra c i n g Union '-s W or 1 d You t b
Championships at Lak~ Como, ltaly,.SepL 1-14.
Funding for the U.S. team will be provided by the
U.S. International Sailing Assoeiation.
The winner or the single-banded series will
qualify for the U.S. Single-banded Championship
(O'Day Trophy) ·Aug. 16·20 at the Mission Bay
Aquatic Cent.er, San Diego, to be sailed in Lasers.
The top single-handed sailors will be invited to
compete at the National Sports Festival July 22·28
at Indianapolis, Ind. All expenses. including
transportation, will be paid by the U.S. Olympic
Committee. Interested sailors should write to the USYRU
One:Design Office, Box 209, Newport, R.I. 02840
requesting notice of regatta and entry application.
Hobie Midwinters
set fbr this month
More than 350 Hobie Cat sailors from
California, Colorado, Utah, Wyomiqt New Mexico
and Texas are expected to compete ID the Hobie
ltidwtnten Weat Re1atta at Saa Felipe, Baja Canrorma~Jlircti~~ · ..
The ·evenn. l~y the Baja Califomia
State Tourtaml>ept.-aad tbe CoDvadioe Bureau of
llexlcaU.
The 11.idwtntera West marb UM flnt major
reiatta for the year ln tbe IOUtbwelt. Sklppen will
be awarded points toward the tan national
champklmblpa in the respective c....... .
ct .... ICbeduled to race at Su relipe are
Roble 14 A, Band Turbo; 1e A, 8, 0 and novice;
and 111 A, B Mid •vice.
. ' Contrail fmiahee firet·
ROLL VGO -Dis masted on leg one.
Traite de Rome -No major difficulties.
Ilgagoma ~ Started 24 hours late ,i.D leg one;
suffered mast, radio and electrical problems on
leg one; nearly engulfed by .a wave oo leg two -
skipper Roberto Vianell9 suffered an •cute case of
frostbite in his attempt to right the boat after near
engulfment. ·
Xargo Ill -No major·difficuJties.
Krit.er IX -No major difficulties.
Alaska Eagle -No major difficulties.
33 Export -Dismasted on leg two; missed leg
three; questionable for lea four.
Bubblegum -Hit •whale on leg one and
broke steering C"a bles -continued on jury
rudders; radio and electrical problems on leg one;
leaking deck, rudder failure and loss of radio on
leg three.
Swedish Entry -Retired from race after
sec;ond leg due to lack of financial backing.
Euromarcbe -No major difficulties.
Croky ~ No major difficulties.
Licor 43 -Retired from race.
Scandinavian -Retired from race in lee one .
due to mast and electrical problems.
Vivanopoli -Delayed in fipishing leg one
having been seized off the coast of Africa; missed
legs two and three.
·United Friendly -Started leg three with
damaged mast.
Mar Bihan -No major difficulties.
Sailboard flap
, tiine extended ·
The International Olympic Committee's
executive board has granted the International
Yacht Racing Union's reque5t to extend, the time
for reaolut.ioo of the Olympic boardsalling nap.
The IOC bad previously inSlrl-Cted I)'RU and
Windg.lider, selected as the sailboard forr the 1984
Olympic yachtiag aames, to resolve cllfficulties
that have resulted ln several court acUona.
The extension ca~e during toc·s week-long
annual meetln1 with lnlernatlonal sports
federations held recently in Paaadeo~. ~ ,
IYRU bad prepared a report cltiDt the reuom
it felt an extension wu neceuary. IYRU president
Beppe Croce and secretary 1eneral Ni1el Hacking.
presented the report to IOC president Juan·
Antdnio Samuancb and prosram eo•ml•loa
chairman Arped Clanadl. .
McLean wins
match race
Doug McLean of Del Rey Yacht
Club was the winner of a Prince of
Wales Bowl elimination race in
the Marinadel Rey area Saturday
in a match race series against
Steve Gillon, King Harbor Yacht
Club. The regatta was sailed in
Santana-20sloops.
The Prince of Wales Bowl is for
the Uni\ed States Yacht Racing
Un ion mat c h r acing
championship. Skippers and crew
sail a ladder·t)'pe elimination for
the' rjght to ,r epresent their
USY RU area. Calif.ornia is
des ignated Area G.
Tupman victorious
Tom Tupman of the host club
defeated 23 rivals in a five race
Lehman-12 regatta for'the Mann
Series Trophy.
Second was a boat co-skippered
by Mary O' Brief\ a nd J im
Buckingham, NHYC ; third was
Tom Schock, NHYC; fourth was
Bruce Ayres, NHYC, and fifth
was Pat Seaver, NHYC.
Intense
is Corkett
• • WIDner
Intens e, s ailed by All a n
Rosenber g of Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club was the overall
winner Sunday in the four-race
series for lhe Corkett Trophy out
of Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
The Corkett Trophy is symbolic of
the Orange County Midget Ocean
Racing Club championship.
Forty-nine boats in two classes
competed in the event which was
m arked by strong winds for the.
first two ra~es Fr.i day , a
moderate westerly for the 15·mile
distance race on Sunday. One of
Sunday's two closed courses
races was canceled because of
light wind and a deep haze which
reduced visibilitv.
"10R C is be c oming
increasingly popul ar in Southern
California with stations in Marina
del Rey and the Los Angeles·Long
Beach and San Diego are as.
International · headquarters for
MORC is on the east coast.
Class trophy winners:
CLASS A -1. Picante, Bob
Hatch, LA YC ; z. Fast Lane,
Sh adden-Cole man , LBYC; 3.
Main Street, Rich Marzinger, Sl
BY C ; 4 . Hot F oot, Ron
Doug~rty, SDYC; 5. Intense,
Allan Rosenberg,ABYC.
CL~ B-1. Expoobident, BiJI
Me nninger, LAYC; 2. Pocket
Rocket, Blair Francis, SDYC; 3.
Sea Dr~am. Paul Yates. CYC; 4.
No Pain, Charles Bartell, LBYC .
5. All Spunked Up, Scott Ramser ,
NHYC.
· Li1ht tq non .. xlltat wtnda
alon1 the coast were mettnc 11ow
ollrfCSt use ncoacrrace-or--..,.
'
Newport Harbor· YICM Club'•
Ahmanson and Dtctsa.on aeriet
from Catallna liland to-Newport
lateSunday. •
The aeries started Saturday
'with a race from Ne~rt to
Eagle Rock off Catalina l•land
and the neet bedded down at
~ E[';er-;1d ~o~~ ~tgrda! nl&~!
.B0A.TfNC .m
tto r · 4 • e :=:J I betore starting the second race
home Saturday.
Morrie Kirk's Santa Cruz-50
Hana Ho, Balboa Yacbtctub, was
!the first boat to fifilsb Sunday at 5
p. m .• followed a few minutes lat.er
by Mtke Braun's SC·50 Shandu, 1 Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, and
Brisa, .co-skippered by Dennis
Choate and Dick Mei.ne. LA YC.
Choate said the race started
Sunday at 11 : 30 a . m . in a
moderate 12-knot westerjy, f>ut by
2 p.m. the wind shifted to the
~out h and s hut off almost
completely.
In Saturday's race the overall
ha ndicap winner was Brisa.
;.mante, a Choate-48 slster ship
sailed by Mel Richey,_ scored
second in Class A behind Brisa,
but was dropped to fourth overall
on her handicap rating.
Seco n d ove rall w as
Fla mbuoyant, co-skippered by
Steve and Barney Flam. Long
Beach Yacht Club, and third was
Bigwig. Ron Melville, Balboa
Yacht Club. •
I Class winners in S~turday's1
r ace:
CLASS A -I, 8rlu, C'-le·MelM, LAYC. 1. Amante, INI Rlellley, LIYC; l . Free E~M.
Olclo. E"lnQtr,NHYC.
CLASS 8 -1 Flarn0uoyant, Stew and a..,
--Fi..-n. LllYC; 1 819*~. ROft MelYltle, BYC; J
A~aCIOU$,Mll(el(-f.1.AYC.
CLASS c -'· Insanity, Wayne ·-•Tom Omohundro, NHYC; 1. Calltorni. Gold, F.rH O'~onner,O'PYC •
PHRF·A (Ok.._, S.riff) -I tf.,.,_., .J-
Oii.on. LBYC. 2. Tor,, Bob Ooclcl5.fNHYC; J
Ma1ar191, eo'-nt•r. eve.
PHRF·B -I. Contenllon, Gor<lcn Gr-.
SSYC; 1. N119le Too, Jim N""nt. BYC; J.
lmpe1-.s.PllllGla-.BYC .
PHRF< -1 Foll GIOVe, .J-EHi~. AM
YC; 1 Scctcll Mhl. Oon """'""011. llYC;, °""'· R09er~r19, VYC.
Coast Guard
sets exams
U.S. Coast Guard Flotilla 15
has announced dates for its
program of Courtesy Marine
Examinations. The courtesy .
inspections are available to all
recreational boaters.
rollowiog are the dates and
places set up for Uie CM Es:
Dana Point Marina launch
ramp -March 20. 10 a.m. to 3
p.m.
Lake P erris Boat ramp -
Ma rch 27, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunset Aquatic l:.aunch ramp
<Huntington Harbour), April 10,
10 a .m. to 3 p.m.
Dana Point -May 8, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Sunset Aquatic Launch ramp
-May 22, 10 a .m. to 3 p.m.
••
• ,
~ I
1
..
' , .... .J.------~--........ --~ .... ~1!!!!1'!~"""' ........ ..,,,,==:":''e"'---~-.~=-.:.-="""'"" .... :..."""~;:J----""-........... ""'""""""~-.~--~------------.... --~~--~---~~~~-~, ............... ~.~r:=r:::I•"';•"""'""" ..... ----.... --"""'""' .......................... ._ .... _. ...... ~ ........ --............ T.:a
,
..
.
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Maroh 1, 1982
NBA
waneaNcON,•••Nc• ,.eclfk,DlwW. . w L l"d. o• u11 .... 41 11 • 101
Seattle 17 20 .... 3\o'J ..._.. .. SI 24 • SM ll'J
GoldanSWle 31 u .SM • P'wtl•l>CI H 27 .Sii II
San Oleoo u 41 .a.a Ul'J
-..Div._ San Antonio ,. 20 .MJ -Hovaton n u .561 4\o'J Denver H 21 .SOt 1\lt
Dallas " ,, .Dt 17 Utah 19 11 .Dt 11 Kanus City 11 40 .>to " IASTEaN CON,Ea&NC& AllMtkDMai.
40 u .721 BoslOfl PhllaOelpflla ,... Jertey
WaP,lngton
Hew York
40 " 713 \It H H 500 J 2\o'J 27 •. '91 IJ
2' J:J .441 14 c-.101w1Me11
Mllwauk• 40 16 7U lndl•... 27 31 ..... 14 Atl..,ta 24 JO .444 U
Detroit JS 32 4Jt U\lt Chlc990 21 M ,m 11
Cleveland U 41 .211 2711>
~y'ak-
Ullen 102, ci. ... 1-101
Boston IC», Mllw..,.... 102 Golden State IOS, Atlarit. 11
Wa1hl"9!0n Ill, H-Yorll 10t Coll
Clllc990 111, SanAntOftlo IOt
Hew Jen.y 110. San Dle90tS Pfloenfx IOl. SNttJe ti fnclla,..112. Detroit IOI
T ........ tO-Ho o•mes sc,_lecl
T-rao-San Olaoo at H-Yorll
Hew Jervy •t WHhfflQ1on
Detroit at Mllw•llk" Pllllade~ a1 Chlc990
Boston at Dallas .S...A-.lo~
Kanus City at Ulah lndla,.. at Denver
Phoenix at Portl-CleJte._ at~ State
•
Lakera 1021-Cavmllera 101
CLEYl!LANo -Rol>lnton 12,
Wedman S, Edwa rds u, Huston t, Siias
16 R. B,_ t7. HUllC!ercl J. Aesl~nl O. Wilkerson 4. Totals: 4115-24 101. •
LOI ANOELl!S -Aambll 12. Wllkn
26, Abclul·J-r 32, C-o. Hixon 17, Jordan 2, J. Brewer O, McGee l ,
LandsC>eroff 10. Totaw 43 l~J:J 102 k-lly~ Clavet•nd M n 1• H-101 Los Ange!H u 20 u n -102
Fouled out -Rol>lnM>f't, Wecim .... Total fouls -Cleveland 2', Los Angeles
24. Tt<hnlcal -WflltH. A -U,112
COLLEGE
Howtoo20fered H-Ille T119 1' .... ty i.ams In The :.~::~::!!:.~· cdlleQll -•lb\!I poll
I VlrOiflla 127~) tieat Wake F ... ·esi
.... ; I09t to MarvtMd .... 11111
J . Nonn C«ollna 114-21 Cleal Geonoi• Tac1171-M; -t 0..... .....
J 0.P.,1 (J6..11 beet Furm.., 7S-i4. Cleal Notre Dame 11_..
4. Ore90R S!MA (1'·Jl -t UCLA 72.jl; Cleat 5-.m Calfloml• 4S-3' • S. Mluourt Cn.3) lost lo Kansas Stale
S7·56. . .
6. West Vlrolnla 114-2) Cleat Plttst>urall 12·11; lost to Auto-n , .. 4.
I. K...WCky (21)4) Cleat Mlulutppl
State ll-)ol, IO'AtOLOUts5-Sl .. et4-11.
I Tulu (2Ml Cleat ~tMrn llllflols
U..1; -t Oral R-rtl ,tl-70, -to Bradley°'2-7' loll. t I d4111o ( 14-21 CINI B<M1e S\ltt .. ~ 11. • 10 Memphis Slate C21 ·4l loll lo Loulswllle u-41; _, Tu!MW ....,.,. -
St.Louls ... n . 11. I-• l~SI Cleal Wlt<onsln 1 .. u ;
lost to Ml~ SJ.SS Holl
12. G~ 123-41 Cleat Providence 60-42; C>ealC-lkut60-42.
U . Minnesota C~SI -• M1<n1a-.
61-SO; -1-a SMS Clot) ' u Fr""° Stale 124-21 Cleat Peclflc S1~; be.t Ulah State,,..,
U . Ar-an .. s C21·S) CINI Soutl>em
Me-fs1S4-S:J;C>NtTexetTe<h '7•1. 16. San Franc:hco 114-SI _, Loyola.
Calif ... n ; -to ~lne 106-llO.
11 Al-12041 Cleal A'*'m 74-72: l<KI to V enclwbllt 11>41. ~:=.:::{!:~~:...~:.= ~~nla
1' T-11MI IOSt to Gaorofa
..wl; lost lo AUl!Wfl S.S4. 20. UCLA CIMl 1oSt to Or...,. S.-n.se; -~ ....
Colleae acorea IA TUillOA Y'k. li•llTe ICOttH
Alce60, TeusSt
u Arti,·Llnle Rock 67, Hard1 ... s1m-
s.an1e P«fflc ... "-' 5-ld 11
SUNDAY'SKoaH Lovlsvllle IO. Ma.._ite 61
O.Paul II, Notre~" ,.. ... ~. ...... .,,
Al•.·Blrmtnoh•m ••. Va . Comm-lth&3
COLl.EGE STANDINGS
Pedflc-10 eont.rence
C.. C-'M9-
WCAC
W L • L
IS 1 tt I 12 4 ,, •
llS ll 7
11Sl1 1
10 6 16 It 6 10 11 14 1 10 u 13
412 '" a tJ 1 t7
2 u 7 It
c-t. w Ml--L W L
" IO
I
1
1 I
I
1
0 ,. 6
I U S
s " 10 6 16 10
6 IS 11
10 II IS 10 ·101S
12 I ta
Big Ten Conference C.-f, .. ._
W '-W L IN• IJ 4 • s Ml-eaca 1t • 20 s qiw.s.... 11 s • 1 .....,. 10 • ,. • I~• • 1 " t ~ t 1 12 IJ Mldll9aft S.. 1 t 12 t4 Mldllpn S II 6 11 Nortto.......... 4 •• • 11 WIK~nlln 3 13 J It
Big Elgh! Con,.rence (~) ,cw. A•O-W L W L Ml ..... rl 12 2 !J I
K_.154W tO 4 JO 6
OlllallofN • ' 11 • ,._.,allla • 1 1 1s 11
Olllallofna Sia.. 7 . 1 IJ II
Iowas._ s t 10 " Kansas 4 10 ti n
Color-3 11 II U
Southwest Conferenc. ,,._,
ArkanMs
~!~":&M Baylor TCU Taus Tech TexH
Alce SMU
C .... AllO-
W L W L 12 421 5
11 s JO 6 to •• 11 t
• 1 " 10 •11212
I I 16 IO 6!01610 • 10 u u I u • 20
Metro Conference
CaM. A•G-
W L W L ~mPhls State 10 7 21 • Loulswllle I 4 II I
Tulane I 4 17 1
Vlrolnl• Tech 1 s 11 • Clnclnn_.I 4 I U 11
f'forkla State 4 I 10 16
St. Loul~ 1 11 6 20
Big S6cy Conference ,,_I
C .... AllO-,W L W L
lclal\o 13 I 24 2
Montana 10 • 11 • Heweda·A-t S II 1 Weller St•te 6 I U t2 B<MM State 6 I 1J 14
ld•lloState s t 14 n
Monte,.. State s t 11 II
Nor1Mm Arirona t-tt • 20
Southeastern Conference ~.-MO-
W L W L
Kentucky 13 s 20 • Tenne•-IJ s II I
Alat>am• 12 • 20 • Louisiana State 11 1 14 12
MIHIUIP9f 11 1 16 10 Geef'tl... 10 • I " fO Auburn 1 11 n 1a V-rl>ln 7 II 14 12
Mlsslulppl StN 4 t4 1 11
Fk>fkla 2 16 S 21
Atlantk: Coa.t Con,.rence
Vtrolnla
11tort11 c-1 ...
:-,i t:=na St. Maryland
Ovlle Clemson Geor9la TKll
C.-f. "" ._ W L W L
122211 12 2 24 2
• ' It 1 1 1 2t • S t IS 11 •101014
' 10 ,. 12
3 It 10 "
Mld-Amertc:an Conference ,,_.,
Gmf. ,..._
W L W L llall Stat. 12 4 16 1t
Bowllno G,..... 10 6 16 10
Northam Ill....... t 1 IJ 11
Ea.tern Mk...... I I IS 11
Western Mk....., I I 14 12
Ohio U. I I U ti
Miami, 0-I I II U Toledo 1 t U 11
Ceftlta l Mic..... 4 12 10 U
WHtem Athletk: Conference
c-t. A••-• L W L
Wyomlno 12 2 20 •
San Ole90 State .to 4 " 1 hHt-EI PelO 10 4 It I Hawaii I 6 16 t
Brl9h•m Youno I • " II Utell 6 I 11 U
New Mulco 5 t 12 14
Air f'orce 3 1J I It
Color-State 1 12 1 11
MIHourt Valley Conference u·-• c•. o..wa11 W L W L
Bradley tl J 20 • Tulu 12 4 21 s
Wichita s.-12 4 n ' Hew Muk.o Stat' 10 6 16 10 Dr•~· 1 • 12 14 SoutMrn llltnok 1 f 11 1J
Cre!911ton 4 ·11 1 It -·I Tun State J 13 11 ,, lndl•na St... l u • 11 Mafor lndeperidenta
0.PAUI Ma,_tte "04yton
Hev..S.LnV-IMwO.-
-f~~~
Penn SI. So. MIKIM!ppl
Teft..--St.
Hortfl T net St.
E. llllnols
111.<hkaoo ewe• 899(1st W. lfllnols Wls.-0,_,llay ... C-0.-Wll,.,...... No .......
s.c -11na SW*-c:.ftlllbe41 Hotreo.Me U.S. lntwnatlonel
Valper•llO T au s-S... Antonio
PaftAmerlc.,
NlchelltSt. GA'ilist. Utica Col ....
W L 2' 1 a I II I
II I II I 14 IO 16 II U II U II II II 14 12 14 n 14 ti n IJ IJ IJ
U IJ u 1• 11 IJ ti ,,
12 ••
11 u
I " . " t II
I It
s " s • • n 4 n
PCAA pelftngs Cat,.......CW: II c.Mwl WeDM•IOAY'l eAMel 4 p.m. -C.I tt.te F11ller1o11 n P•dflc
7 p.m . -UC ll'YIN .... Ulell si.e.. • p.m . -L°"' 9Mch s..-n . S.... J-s.-. ,
CSern lllnalt Tllurtcta y anct
UMrn.....,.,rlClllYI
SCOREBOARD
communl'.1 coffee ... ,. 00&.H WHT ti) ., .... , • .....
Halton II ,..
llowen II SU ~':! • • -II Jlt J.c:OO. ,IN
l!\lef11.9rt u " OVrllAm 24 140 My lea u 114 Marllno 1 I ltevls 21
Bradley I McGee J • OllANOe COAST 11•u1 ,, ... , ..
0 ,..._
.. alley II 6U G.Kr_..... 21 310 aeldwln " 111 Tllom•• • '" T . K rOlllllelcft 21 131
C•lhoun 24 • HenM>f'I 17 4S Malhl•u II ,.
Hattan 20 26 Olmalante 10 • SADDL&aACK 11 .. 111
0 P't. Turner JO S71 Doyle JO ,.,
Wllflle-1 JO 356
Oodcls
Mite hell Hiii Reid
FUKhar
Bryant
Ground
AHCI
" Ul
21 110
11 UI
20 • 11 " t2 • It 4'
2A "
Senta Anita
SUNDAY'I ••IULTS
... ILi 11.t 1U IU 6.t ... u 4.t
4.0
J.O
2.0 u
A\lf. tU
11.0 6.S u 4.1 u 2.6 u
l.J 0.6
A .... 1'.2
12.1
tu
11.4
10.0 t .2
4.• u u u u
':':::i ~I.~:.,~:: ... "'"" .. ,
Pl•'• Prince Al 1eas..,,..> •.oo n.oo uo
E-Seft ~f!llocay) ---1.00 l.AO
&oict OIM>lay (TOfO) t.20
AIJo raced: Decoclecl, Oonalcl,
M•JutlC -Court, Spinoza, O"p Blue Water, Plreta, The Bio T., He Man Sam.
Time: 1:•21s.
S•COMD llACIL 1 1/16 m CIK. Pannv•-CLlpNml .. ., 1uo e.eo H•tMnoto cca.-1 ,,.. 2• s. ... ntll Dwarf CCordtrol •·• Alto rececl: Brooll't N' eruca, Allled
Com,,,_, Tlmtlerl.Ck. ..... -· Flawlfll ~. 5-1Jve, l'H,_
Fou..-. Roi-H-nla-r, EMIY Matter. •
Time: l :G. SJ DAILY oou-.. 12 ... l "611 $61'.a.
TH 1 ao llACL 1\111 !""-• turt.
"attl's Trtumpll 1"--J · .. 16.Jt SM UI
• ..,..... cSM1111e1 a.• ue
IMPKh CDll ....... 19) 2 ..
Alto rlad: Y_..., MwtN-, """' OfUeM. ...... S-.. Tlfft9: 1:47 1/J.
POU•TN llACL 6\ll ._,...._
Tftf Of T .... CSMlel •.» la... t.Jll G1'9yS-..(.._I tM U1 AluN!la IMtCar,...) 1M AllO ,_, .. , Gefttle H-. Soft Softt,
Nancp'1 9-. R ........ UllforoeftaMe. Hatty Sucrw, UpCIMe. SWppln F-.y,
J ..... y l'actDr.
Time: 1:14J/J.
"I "N aACa. I 1/16 mfl<K. Journey At SH
l....,.,11_1 4.<IO J .00 2Mt
R"Yel Cllptiw <s--tlar) e.• ••1 A* Ma IMtCarronl I.•
Alto r-: 8-. K-11111, 5"ttan 0 1 Swint . Frisky PurchH•. Court
Compllance. Mu .. ve To Garcle ,
1teco11flrm. F'" Out\I. Home C""'1 llulln.
Time: 1 :41 11s.
SJ EXACT~ U·Ul "'°"m.so.
lllCTM llACE. 1111' mlln.
EM Tou CMtCarronl 7.40
Roek Softly IOelal'!Ous~ye) Western 10..rral Also r•ced. Mof\tc o, Paft<hl<uy.
Tl171e: 1:0 2/S.
l.IO 2.60 , .. 2.60
l.00 Grf stie.
SEV•NTM aACa . 6\o'J turlon9s on turf.
Vocalist CMtCarronl 42 oo l•.20 s.«1
Clletuw 0-Cer CPlnceyl 4,60 J.20 Brlo111 Ycly CValenNela) l .IO
Allo raced: 6aclutlve fy ll•IHd, lllh.,.,.., Courtly c.n._. Pink Saffr, What Heaven, Undlf19 Lady, S-d o ....... Tim.: 1:W2JS.
SS •XACTA C~I "let Ma.50.
U "ICK SIX Ct ... 2·S·1·tl paid •tt.Jts• -12 w1n111n9 11c11.~ Uh1 IMJtSft,..-V l'lcll Sia c-atloft pa14
Ulif .dl wltll 11l ttmt119 lttk-·1-
Mrtfll. -•
...
HCOMD •AC•. 011tt mlle pece. '**" o.. '"'*'-' n . .o uo J.• Del_,. Cua.~ J.00 Ut 4U't Mer-. I I a.• • Al• r_.: Mlle Oei41, ~ a9M, Cef.!::1tf:;'tf....,·
T~~DllACa.OMmlle"'•· T~n:,.=..,,,," ..... u.-1.•
MHterVelUe( ........ ) ISM 7.IO
OlemelM .._ 10.-r) l .ot
' Alto r-: "t'Oltl' Sil'-'· Doll Cers Star, Lucky C•d A, Kiwi .. ,,..., S1ed99
Ha"'1'1Mf', ltell<IWll. • Tim.: 2:04 1/S. ta I JUCTA CJ.ti palct MM.•.
POU•nt •ACI. Olltt mlle pace. fir~.... .... uo
a.I C"""'4> CGoudrHoil 2•
2.60 t.M fllll l"«UC ( .... erl
Allo r•cH: Desmond,
vkior, MllWO.
~BY• By•
11me: 1:)1 4/S.
Pl .. TM •AC•. Onemlle pace
S<rumpy (Gr-ml 6.40 J.IO 1.00 HorOel Tryax (Anclersonl J.tO 4,00
CrulM•wev CAMl11 uo Alto recect: korlflo 0r1 ... , 1-.. uc Kl:,:.~~~i~r1tcl LIOlll, GunDerrel.
U •XACTA t•JI pakl '2'.IO.
SIXTM aACe. One mile 11«e
Leopard (Aaarmaft) J.20 2,40 2 20
Cr alt Del IGouctrHul l .tO 2.40
KC'1H4l'IDllCP-.,l 2.40 Alto recect: IWchMl'I Glory. f'lylnt
Riva I.
Time: 1:•3/S.
1ev•NTM •AC•. One m11e11ec•. Sea RoverH IT-I 11.20 t.60 2.60
Mac Adlos A (KueO!arl I S.tO 2.40 Almetos (Anderson) 2.10 Alto r a ced. Southern Allylhm,
Stalker, Tlw ~tro H, Not>le Alno,
BuCk Fifty. Time: 1·,.11s
U eXACTA l:MI "kl .SO.<IO
H ,.,Cl( SIX (~7+++21 palct .. out
with ll wltw1lfl9 tkMIS (lt\te horNll. U
P lcll Sia c-tlon .,.Id •1t.<IO with 471 wlnnfn9 tlckab (four Mr9"). '2 Pick
Sia scratcll G~tlon paid UH.OD with
2 wlnnlno tlcllets lthr" horN•. one
scr•t<lll.
E IOMTM a ACE. Ona mlle pace ·
Ma<llOL,H (Af!de,_. ·• UO 2.60 UO ~ fMal«I J.IO JAO
Tlma ~ -1"°'-.1 UO Also rKM: Master Joke, Wl11l•r
Qualle, R•-'• Golcr, l>lne Alona,
Locallsm.
Time: ''" J/5. U •XACTA C•11 palCIUA,00.
NIMTM llM:a. One mlle pace.
T1.~cu11~1 r t.211 4.20 J.«lf
trlah ...,_CT-II) 7.Jo •.20
~rktAwlllftl 2.60
AllO raced: T•ll-. Froaty Hunter, Allely'I Hound, ... k ..... C-ta.-V UM.-.-. Time: l:•11s. ta • XACT A 12> t I palct t.Sl.20.
WCT tournament . (atO-.ltaty) ~ .. 1 .. 1 l••n ~ def. Vltas Geruialll•, ~I. • 4. • 7. •·> CL•ndl w ins $100.000; Gerul•llls wlna SZJ.0001.
Grand P rtx tournament
Cat-.,..,, Mellkel
SMtlietP-Jlmmy C-S def. Jol\en Kriek •2, J-t, •·J <Connors w1n1 M0,000; i<rie-wlnt uo,0001. Dit9lea , .... I
Victor Amey•Haftll Pfister clef. Mal
Purcell·Tracy Delete, •·3, 4 ·1, •·l I Amaya, Pflsterdlvkle •11.0001.
Women'• toumament (a!Oatl ..... )
~p-
Al'ldre• J.._,. C!Jf. tfifrs E ... r1 Lio~. l•.M (~rwlni.U0,0001.
Padflc Coeat Doubles ........... , ........
Rlckr Leech (lA911 ... BHCh l-Tlm P••H !Sent• A11•I def. John Van
Nostrand CP9pperdlne U.l·Blll e.x1er (Pe-rdlNU.l,M ,M .
SeMlllult L••<h·P•wsat del. Dan Salli
CUCLA).ROClt>le Venter CUClAI, ~7. ~2. 6·1; Va11 .. _,..,.llaJ1ter Oel. Tom Leona rd CFAll~)-Jerry v.., LI .... CCorOMctell!Mrl,M ,M •
-~~~
f I . ' ., ..
C~el.WbeN a min beloims .
•
DorelOpen letw.Mi) ,.-
AllCIY hM,IW;OllO "'*72..._271 Scott Hoch,SUAQO ... 10.71..._27' Ml .. Nlqiltttt,UJAQO ~10-11·10-Ut Jerry ".t•,122AOO 10.,_1C>-11' Cwtls ltr-..SI0,9'0 70.7 ..... 7-2'1 C.Mfl Pwtlt,Sll.t!O '7·11·10.71-211 C,rale S!Mllw,.10,9'0 -7~7l-•1 Jim Oeftl..... 1H2·12•7-212
Eric ••tten-".000 '1·12·12·71-2«2 Sew ae11--.-.100 .,.71-75-41-ISJ
Eel "'-N,t6, UO 70.7).7Mf-2M
Tom WellllOPf, ... llO ... 7Hs-.t-2M
Barry J -kel, ... 150 7E5t7).70-214
BoO«>y Wac11tln1 .... uo 67·7 2-71-214 Nici! Faldo, .. ,ISO ~12· 71-214 Rick Pu.-. .... 100 70.14-10-6'-JtS
Woocty 81<~,200 12·74-1°'4t-2tS Barney '""'-.... 200 n ·12·11·10-2tS
lsao Aolll, .. ,200 70.12·12·11-JtS
Ed Florl, .. ,100 7J.70.71·12-2tS
L. Thll\9tft.12,11S 10.14-1--19'
Ray Floy<UJ,1'1S 7H0-7S-1'C>-2 ..
Tom J-IM.U,115 12-11·1).11>-a
Biii Brtn0fl,'2.7ti 10.1s.11.10-n.
Jim Nelfonl,U,115 12·70.7H>-"6
Hut>ert G._,u,m 12•,.12·1)...."6
Phll Hancock.U.130 11-1H .... 1-H1
Larry H•l-.U. Ull 7Hl·11·70-H7
ktl EH-.'2.llO 7t ..... IS.12-217
VMCe Heafner,$tMO 72-75-74-67 HI
Geo<oa ~.s1.110 10.11-14-11-211
Wayne Lewl,•tMO •~71-7).7S-Ht
Jim Coll>H1, ll,620 70.7J.7S.71-Ht
"Jofln FOUQH.St,6JO 4"74-'74-72-Ht
Tom McGlnNUl.620 n• .. 14-14-1"
8ol>by HlcholUl.2'° 74-1)-7 .. t-HO 8ol>by Cole.Sl.2'0 71-74-74-11-HO Glbtly Glll>H1,.$1.2'° 11H1·11·n -HO
One EG_..,,.t,HO 7~74-72-71-Jill Jim AIC14n,$1,HO 11• .. 14-1• 2'°
Tom 5'1-.•1.2'0 <f0.7S-71·74-HO Jim B-.•1,290 ... 1).14-15-HO
Steve Beftson,sm ... 15-l~n Ht
Mike Sulllvan,•m 72-7).74-71-HI
Scott Wellllns.•m 12-7;)-74-12-2'1
Jett s.n0en.•m 14-12·11·1 Ht -~ .. 1-r.nn 11-7).71"76-HJ
Perry A,,_,VJ3 74-7HS-n-m
Sk"ter Heatll.VJl 7).P).7).7)-HJ
Mille McCllllOuO".J113 10.1S.1).1t-H2 Hal Sutton,$1D 10.1s.1~1t-m
Biii 5-der,Jl'D 71-11·7HS-2'2
Bruce OouvlMS,.733 7HS-11·7•-m
CllAf'IHCOOCly,.... 12~7H7·71 -m Mark M<Cumt>er."'4 n.12.11>-13-m
Gr .. P-.,*4 71-74-71-17'-m Mick Soll,"611 7HS.7S-12-2'M
Lee Trevino""° 7S.71·7S.73-2'M Jerry H-.1,S.WO ,,.1~7•73-J<M
Larry Mitt""° 7l-14·74-7l-2'M •Dick SICl9rowf 70.74-7HS.-2'M J-ny Elarn,Mo60 ,,.71-71·76-J<M
Clllp h<ll.S6» 10.11-1/.IS-1'1 llNu B..._..,. 6 .. n .1os-m
Lyn LotU61' • 1H1·1S-1S-1'S .....c..m.atl.J411 11-74-17·71-~
Johll 0.Fnt ... 11 11·1~11·1J-,_
Mark Celvcchla, .. 11 10.11·1>-16-1'1 ken G,_,MOO 11-10>.1s.1s-2'1
Pat Ll.-Y,NOO 12·1J.11·1._7'1 $alp D-y,MOO 71-72-73-IO-2" Miile Smlt!l.$.512 10.7HS-7._2" Tommy Vlf'tlN.1512 1).7).74-7 .... 2"
Maril J-,'5C 61-IS-1~1' -2" NIM<oel Plftwo,'5M 12-7~7J-l00 Frallll c-."'4 70.71-73-lOO Cllarles Krenllill,"'4 70-11·1~71-lOO
Davlct T...,,..,u.t n -74-11·71-lOt
Ray Barr.u.t 12·7S-7~7-1
Mauhlra KrmUS17 7H~l~lt J07 Lon Hlelsen,W7 1).7).1._.._.,,
Jim Kiely 12·10.71-WD a-Am.t-
LPG.A tournament
Ca!TIOC-1 a-011-.111,7!0 70.JN~ 211 Sally Llttle, 12.lSO 1;i..10.n..._211 Alfly Akot\.tl,750 71-70.70.7J-214 Lynn AelerM,S.S ... ZS 12·7H0.11-2tS Patti Rluo,S.S,6ZS 71~7)-I• 2tS ,,_ Joyce,_..000 14-1 ... 1-11-• lleclly ,...,_,.M,000 7)-7~72-71-216
J -t C<MeaJA,000 70.70.7Hl-1" S.Cnnl,,.,_,U.lSO 74-6'-71·7>-217
Terri MoodY,U,250 72·71-12-77-211 Myra YanHooue,lJ,625 11·10-14-61 HI
Katlly Wlltw1h,1,62S 7S.IH2·70-2tl Chrl• J-...,u .•u 12.11 .... 10-,. Marlene FloycUI,., 7~7)-10.l~lft Kathy Martln..s1.-. 12·7).7).71-7" Haney WM-tn..si.-. , .. ~14-12-Ht P.t Bradley,$1.... 7).4 .. 74-17-7"
Yuko Mr9C111..S1.-. l1·11·14-1l-21t
Donna ea.oni.s•.-. 1 .. 1,....n-m Jan F•rr•ls.Sl.311 11-7.........._HO Karolyn l(rUmn,11.•1 74-72·7~71-2'° ~ DanleUt,lll1 7HJ.7S-71-HO K•lllY H"-.St,HO 7...,_71-72-HI
LAUra Hur1bt.Sl,l50 7).70.,..7t-2'1 Allton ShNrd.$1,0U 7J.7Hl-70-H2· Mary 0w1'ff,'1A2S 14-16-11-n -m TatsuloOMl!.o,$1,0U IHJ.74-74-2'2
C.J . 011111.Sl.OU 1J.11·14-1 m B•~r• Mo-.,$1,m 11.1 .. 1;i..1 m
co.11 H1r.e.,•t,ou ZH J·ll-U-m a.v ... ly IC1-.Sl.OZS 1,.._n.1 m
!Yttly YOU111.Pll 1u .. ,..n-m
Patty HA'fft,1711 n.1._1 .. n-m
Alke.av-,pe1 7NH4-75-m ,..,,. G letaft,$111 1J.72-7J. 7~2tJ
•'H•ncy Tomich 11-12-11-11-m
Betty Bumtnctt.tui 7S.71·17-71-2'M
Lori Gart1ec1,tul 7~1l·IJ.12-2'M
SMiiey HMNln,14S4 7.Ml-1'·11-"4
Tiie,... HHCtol'l,UH 74-75-7•70-HS
Penny Pvlt,SS7S 12·7>-IS.7S-2tS
Marlene He0alt.$$1S 74-72-74-75-HS •-AlftM-
•-WOfl plaYoff
·'
•
NHL CAMPeELLCON,eltENCI! .....,..ow ...
Edmonton Vanc:ov...,
Ca1tary .....
c-r-
W L T 0' GA ""' 42 IJ 11 JSS 2A6 ts 24 11 14 221 1*3 .i ·u 21 u,.. m .,.
11 n ,, ™ m 47
14 <IO 11 201 '" Jt .....,..DW.._
MlnnelOla St. Louil
Wlnnli>eo Chlcaoo Toronto 0.1rol1
27 " 1• 2ll 240 13 27 32 S U2 216 5'I u 21 13 1"I 2n n
2J 31 10 21' H7 S6
27 31 " 2SI "° so 11 3.S 12 m u.. ...
WAL£5CON .. all&NCa "*k•Dl• ..... NY lslandtrs 41 14 7 .)tt 1t7 ·ti
PhllaOelPlll<t J2 25 6 2U Ul 10
NY Ra119en JO 21 10 2:16 242 IO
Plttst>urQll 24 JI tO n1 275 SI
WUlllf\910n 20 1S t HI ,.3 ft
...-D1vt.-Montreal
Buffalo
Boston
Quebec
Hartford
,. 12 ,. ,.. , ...
, ~ ;~ 1: mm ~
H 1J 13 211 210 11
,, ,, 14 lOI 21• ...
., s-y'•k-Mlnnesoca s, Detroit 4
Mon1ru1 s, Har11orcl O EclmOflton 4. Wasl\lnoton 1
Pina-., 4, NY A_,.., 2
Winni-s. SI Louil 2
Color-S. Chic-3 Phll-pllia l , V...cou .. r 1
T........-.o-1u .. , a1 0ue1>e< NY 111-rsal Toronto
T-r'•Games W.lnnlpeoal Phll-IPlll•
Edmonton al Monlroat
Calgary •I NV lalanders Boston II St LOUii
Misc. . .
· Surfing
COMMUNITY Clk.Ll!GE Or ... CMtl 1', ,_Lema .. or.,..~•.LAMa..-o
Or-GMsl lop llnl.,,.ra -Bryan Merleaux, Wood Weclclutacl, Mike 8ennett. Tom Mc f;lroy. Dou9
~•cKenrie, Tracy Prouse. Dave weroln \f n" rklerl. Mluv Pr tor ltoP women I
Weekend tranaac:tlona
aASEaALL A~-~ NEW YORK YANKEES Sltnecl
Afcll Cerotw. catcher. 10 • one·veA<
COfttr.c.t.
TORONTO BlU£ J AYS -Sloned
Mltcll Wtb<t•r. Jay Schroeder and Aon Shepllarcl, oulllelcler\, Brian Miiner. ulcher, and Maril Elcllllorn, pllc...,r N.t ..... IL-· ATLANTA BRAVES Sltnecl 'lick
Mahler and Boll Wal~. pltchen
NEW YOllK ME TS Signed Ed
Lynell. pllcller, Wally Backman,
lnllefdu, -Mille Howard, oulflel<ler
ST LOUIS CARDINALS SIQnecl Joe
OeS.. hrsl t>aw"-. A""'y Rincon ano
Dave LaPolnt. pitcher•. ~d Mlh Ca Ilse. 1111rc1 t>aseman aAMCETBALL
NatleMI --ff As-latleto DETROIT PISTONS -SIQMd Stew
Hayes, centtr, to• 10-day cqntract_
"OOTaALL NatlaMl,...._..L_
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS -Hamed
Ton Bass defensive coordina tor
HOCl(EY
NatleM!HkUJLe .... HAlll'FORl> W11AlEAS -Recalled
Stuart Smllll clelenseman. from
Bln011amtOfl ol \lie Amerk4'n H«tty
l.e90ue . LOS ANGELES KINGS AHIOfled
Steve Je-n1en, forwa rd, •nd tan Turnt>ull, _....,..,.,to New Ha...., of
the Amerl<an Hock.ey Leaoue.
COLLEO& WASHll\IGTOH STATE -Nemec! Jim Burrow ofienslwe lootbell c-Olnator
• . . . ' mti:;-=.-:=:::::::;;:::;;:::;::;=:=S~====-=~~--~----~~-==--==::!:=~~=-·~~==-~~===============~~~~=:s:e~::::w·~,,,_==~:;:::;;=====:::=::::.::::::::==:~-=~:::::;:::::_-=:==::====~t
•·
Garage sales, yard sales, rur'f'.lmage sales, street sales ... no matter what
you call them, the id_ea is the same -TURNtNG THINGS YOU NO LONGER
· NEED INTO CASH. When you get tired of fighting your way into a crowded
attic or garage, or when you need a Rttle extra cash, have a garage .sale! So
get into the act, clean out those unwanted items, and make mon·ey doing it!
lt,'s fut'), it's profitable, and ~ollowing these 10 steps will make it simple. ·
Decide on dates.
Look at a calendar and set the dates af'ld times of your
•
sale. Weekends are usually good,' but many successful
sales have been held in the evening, just after work.
Check the weather forecast in the paper, and watch for
any other large event that may attract potential buyers
away, such as fairs or community events. Have your
sale run at least two days-· some people may not. be
able to co me on any single day.
~
What to s~ll.
. Everything! That is, everything you haven 't used in the
• last year. If c.n item has antique value, or is brand-new;
or has unusual value, be sure to ask a healthy price for
it. Get a pad of paper and search your whoJe house.
Look everywhere, and list everything.
Fwnffure. This is your main-attraction and your
best source of income. Be sure to place furniture
where it can be seen from the street. Price ·
furniture low enough to beat auctions and
secondhand sales (check the clasaifieds1or
compartsons), but high enough so you can come
down a .little when someone shows jnterest.
Rockinq chairs, chest of drawers,_ tables and
chaff's are-all very successful at garage salesr so :
feature them in your ad.
Antiques. Smaller antiques should be grouped, and
kept close at ha'nd wher~ you can watch and talk
---------_atiout tbem. Nostalgia i~are Vf!ry popular -display them well. · ---
.....
)
•
Clothing. M~ke sure clothing is clean, and mark
the price way down. Put as many things as
possible on hangers. separate kid's th ings by age.
Display adult clothing by sex and age group. Low
prices are a _. on clothes except for unusual
• items, which stiould be tagg8d wittt an
explanation {like, "han~mbroidered flowers, · a ress worn by Mae West)."· ·
Appliances. These will sell for a fair rice WJIY if
--tney wor . No one w111 take your word fo.r it. Have
~n exten.siqri co~~-~o t~y ~n be-~~sted ; .or better
yet, have radios playi~g , old~TV sels-fufnea-ori .
etc. Ma~e sure buyers understmid they are sold
"as is". Plcints. These usually go fast, but keep them out of.
• direct sunlight. A good Idea is to nanie your plants
before the sale (Spider Lady, Cousin Jasper,
Maggie), and write a line or two on the
name card about how to care for them.
·Write your ~cL ·
·Here is a suggested ad: "Gara~ Sale-desks, II Bentwood rocking chair, tqys, infaqts' clothing, 1922
Victrola in original cabinet, many Oadgets, lots of .
unusual items, rock collection, plants. Refreshments, 8
a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. 1234 South
Anystreet, Yourtown. Just weat of Main and 2nd." i. ·r,
Use this sample ad as a gwidlt. le sure to Ust unusual
it~ms. ee·as specific as ~blf. Give directions if .. · \
needed. Don't use ab~'.-many people won't :
bother to de9ipher them. CMJTtON:oon't adMrtl•
anything you don't raaMy· haW. Every item In the ad
must be on hand at th9 .wt of the sale. ~ . .
. " -~Orange Com DAil Y .-tLOT/Mond-. Maiott i, 1982
-~raJe .. ·
.Sale ·
Where to advertise.
I
't
·Place yoyr ~d ~here it will be seeJ'I by people who live
in the area -most people shop close to home. The 11 Daily Pilot is read by 88,CX>O adults in Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach, ·Laguna Beach, Irvine, Huntington ,
Beach and Foont~in Valley -guaranteeing you wi de
exposure. And With the Pilot, you 're ri.ot paying for
waste circulation in Los Angeles or·Anaheim. Plan to
run your ad 3 times or more, and start it a few days
before the s@le so bargaioJlunters can hmte plenty of _
notice.
~ake ·a sicjn .
To help make your sale successful, make a few signs II from cardboard and letter with a mag ic marker. A good
·sign size is 14" x 22". ·
Pl~cin9 your sign~·
· The morning of the sale, bert not before, place your
• signs. B~ SrJre ar\d' add your address and any
directional arrows. Th is should be done about a half '"
hour before the sale starts. Place· your sign where it
can be seen from both sides of the street by passing
cars and -pedestrians. CAUTION: Some towns have laws
that restrict the placement and-duration of garage sale
signs. Please check with your town 's planning
department or clerk ..
Markin9 prices.
Mark pri~ wt)ere they can be seen clearly. Oftrce
II supply stores have varoius sizes and colors of stickers
that work well •. or yQu cary use masking tape. However
· you mark them, make prices low. Garage sales are for
barQain hunters. Remember, whatever you can't sell
y9u II have to drag back in the .house and store again
for another year. .
__.-::;... ---
This doesn't have to cost much, and creates a friendly II atmosphere. It also encourages people to stay longer
. &fld perhaps buy more. You could even charge for
expensiye' items li.ke donut~, or t_he kids could go in
business for the day, with a lemonade stand.
. ' .,, .
I • •
Make sure everything can be seen. Have card tables or II bo.ards used.as, shelves betweeo two chairs. Don 't
. cause peopre'to ~nd over unlesS ;ou can 't he1p it. Use
one table as a desk wher, you'oan see everything and
take mon'eYi. Use only one cash box (tin cans or boxes
w~rk fine). and make sure.aormone Is appointed
"cashier" at all times. Arrange beforehand for a friend
whQ can heTP answer questions, relief for lunch, etc .. ·.
'
'"
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Mor}c!ay, March 1, 1982
.,.... " ·-. .,
I • Research Results ConclUsive: .,
. .
..
.. J
•
' l
)
2·out of 3 smokers choose MERIT low tar/good taste
· combination over leading higher·tar brands.
__ Taste way qut of proportion to .. -
tar.
That's the MERIT message .
And, in extensive tests against
cigarettes ·.having up to ~ice the
tar, the message came through-
loud and clear.
M ERIT Taste Scores.
In· impartial new tests where
brand identity was concealed, the
( overwhelming majority of
smokers reported MERIT taste
equal to -or better than-leading
· higher tar brands.·
: . Moreover, when tar levels were
revealed, 2 out of 3 chose the
. MERIT combination of low tar
. and good taste.
"Best~Sting Low~Tar .. . .
· I've Tried:'
In a separate part of tbis study,
smokers report that MERIT taste is a
major factor in completing their y
successful switch from higher tar
brands.
Confirmed: 9 out of 10 former
higher tar smokers say MERIT is an
easy switch, that they didn 't give ·up
taste in switching, and that MERIT
is the best-tg.sting low tar .they 've
ever tried :
Year after y.ear, in study after
study, MERIT remains unbeaten.
The proven taste ~ltetnative to
higher tar smoking-is ·
MERrr .
. Kings: 1mg "w;·0.5 mg ftictli"8-100's Rat : 10fftg "tw:·.~· ~tt'!'l'~~·~
0.7 mg n1co1ine-100's Men: 9 mg "1ar:· ·
0. 7 "'nickine w. ""cignnt. FTC Repon Dac'.81
,
..
MOTtC• TOc••OITO•S T._ ·
TO THIE C•EOITOAS OF GLEN It. MOTICa CM' T•UIT•a•s SAL•
LOVIE, TltAH~EAOlt. • Fot9<-•Ne. TSOl5'1 Pu,._. to 5ec11onU105 -6107 of ON MAlt()H 2:1, 1tll. et 11 :OD A.M.
Ille Uftlform C"""'1et'C1411 C-. you CAL I F 0 AH I A LAH 0 T IT LE
ere llereby noUflecl et followa:1 COMPANY, Hduly....,lrllecl T ........
TltANSFEROA It .....,. to ..... e e Ullder -pur-1 to Oeed f>f T-1
lr11111ter to IN ........... lluyer'1 .. KUtelfWMICHAIELL.FUAIANl,e
T•ANSFEltlEE·I• bulk e ll or 11 ..... "*'·a Trwll« tor IN -flt
sub1teftllel per" of ,.,. meter'le11, eftd security of 'ANITA MA A IE
IUPPllH, mercheftdlH or other THORNELL. ff &eMflclery, deted
lftVeftlory, eftd equlpmeftl of 111•1 MARCH ..o; 1• llncl, rec:orOtd ....
cert.kl ~ -Wt... Tewm, ·-Instr..,,..,,. Mo. lt01t °" MARCH 14, ... Tift Uzde ell o1 wftkh 11 locetecl el I* of Offldel AK-lft Ille office of '752 Selnt Clelr. Coli. MeMI, County of Ille Couftly Recorder of Or•ft ..
• Or .... W»,Celllo!'!)le, County, Stele of C.ell .. rftle WILL
• Tll• PteMftl ft•MH •nd l>Uslneu SELL •AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
addtUMI of the Trensleror end HIGHEST BIOOElt l'OA CASH,
Tr11111 ........ , CASHIER'S CHECK o• CEltTIFllEO"
_ TRANSFEROR: GLEN A. LOVIE, CHECK IPllY ...... llfM of sele '"
152 Selnt Cielr, Coste Mela, Cell""111e lewtvl ,.,..... ol ~ Stetell '9t: IN
..,.., • THIE LOBBY OF CALIFOUNIA LANO
TRANSFEREES : ALVIN F. TITLE COMPANY, 1010 NOltTH
BOEHM; DORIS L. BOEHM; GIEHi! MA IN STR E E T, SANTA ANA,
H '" FAULSTICK, 1192 Celllornl• CALIFORNIA ft1Qt ell rteM title -,.,_, •21, a-Peh, CAllfornle lrllef'eltaanwyeclto--heldlll' It
"'21. u11der said Dffd o f Trust lft Ille
AJL..oU.er buSlftHI .,.,,, .. eftd ~ lft\Mlted Ill Wlllt C.Ounty •nd
ecHrestet u-by Ille Trefttferor State det<·rlllld •: wlthlft IN ltlr• yun IHI past, so fer LOTS I ANO 3 IN BLOCK U2 OF
Hk-11totNlr-ef' .. t er9N-. CORONA OEL MAR, CITY OF
Tiie bYlll trensler 11 to be NEW~OAT BEACH, COUNTY OF
c-IN'9d•I BllllMlt~ty ORANGE. STATE OF CALIFORNIA.
WOfld, 2530 _,,, Gre .. , s.ita AN, AS PEA MAP RECORDED IN BOOK c-ty ol Orenge, Ctlltornle, on Of' J • p A G IE s 4 I A .. D 4 2 0 I
efter Aprll 1, 11112. MISCIELLAHIEOIJS IV.PS, AECOAOS
Tiie 1-* 6ey to enter ctalrM In !Ills OF SAIOCOUHTY.
ncr-ltMan:t.,.Jl, 1"2. EXC'a"ING Tl41EAEFROM TH•
Oeted: ........,23, 1"2 SOUTHIEASTll!ALY 5'.00 FEET
4U¥te P....... THE•IEOF. DwteL....... Tiie 9ttte1 eddreU e MI Olllt'
.._ M. Pe.lllkll com-*"-lion, If ~. ol Ille Tr_.._ rul pro11trt'I' described •bove 1 ...
Plltlll-Orenoe Cotti Ot llY Piiot,. pUrPorted lo bet 403 FEANLEAF, ,f!l!r<h 1, 1tl2 t11.-i. CORONA DEL MAR, CALIFOltNIA
I !f'Jt2S
lllOMIN•H P'Oi. ~BLIC OP,.CI
CCANOIOATOS PA•A OPICIO
~BLICOI
.NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN -I
tll• lollewl,.. perso11s lllaw• .... ,.
-'!letltd tor IN oftlce1 hffelneftt' -ftliaMd to be fllled el IN 0-.el
flhtftlclpel ll!lecllon to be lleld lft tllo City of F0Ynlel11 Velley Oft
T-y. the 1•or,ot Aprtl, 1"2.
tNOTtc;.A SE OA POA ESTE
MEDIO -1o1 ~ cencllolMos
..... side •-lllllldra -· IOI Gfkl• ""I -.ro _......_ -_.,, 9C~dos en la GeMrel El•cclon
Mw111c1 ... 1 -,_,. 1...-r •ft I•
CludM ........... Velley-.tl
.. UdeAllrll,cl*,tl21.
................ Cltl'C-11
(Pere Socio de le Junie M<lllklpoll
THIE UNDERSIGNED TRUSTEE
DISCLAIMS ANY LIABILITY FOi.
I NCORRECT IN FORMATION
FURNISHED.
THAT Mid sele Is mede wll'-1 (.._.. ., • .,,_, r ........... title,
~---ances,w estt 1-..itftyOftltle. I
THE letel -· of Ille -eld belanu Gf said ollll9t'1lons IOQll~
•Ith --· end ""mated «•sh ellCI ••-·Is UCW,'°5.1'9. THAT NII<• Of bruc" of .. 10 *"""°" -eleetlon to sell Mid rN I -rty wes rK.,,_ es lns~t
No. 10» on NOVEM8Elt IJ, 1'11 ol
Offkl•I Recordl 111 Ille office ol ti.
c-ty ~r of ORANGE C-llly,
sc-GfCel~. ~rui1e, Of jNlr1y condlletl"ll Mile:
CAUPCMINIA LAMD
Tll'J.I c;oMPAllY
.. UNIY•MALCITY PLAZA
UMIY•llSAI. CITY, CA. t~
ATTN: f'llNtlla.OMla• IHIPT.
Y ... ter ..... Cll Cttl)flNPm V•--m DATED:-'-Y11,1-
DANIEL B. MORT()fj
LINDA.MOULTON BETTY MIGMANELLI
CHA•LES W "M IKE "
MICHAELIS
ltEN MOU.ANO
"tl!DVOSS
JAMES E. NEAL
BEN"· NIEL.SEN
JAMES k. CREIGHTON
•oY ltOOGEltS E*"' McCleftdoft
Qty Clertl of -City of FCIUMaln V•ll..,
(iec ....... lo Muflki.ol. 141CJumdde~ln
Velloy.~
DATED~10,1tl2 ( tt•,..,..,.., * 1m1 I '°' .... c.... Deify ..... .... Mwcfl 1, Ha IOG
8y CALIFoANIA LANO
TIT\.IE COMPAHY
ByCam\IM..........,, '-9ciosin OHker -
PvblllNd Or ... C.0.M Oelly Plllilt.
Merell I, I, IS, 11112 _..,
Anybody
need
a bridge?
SHEBOYGAN, Wis. ·
<AP) -Rosemary'' --· IF YOU · Miley says the town of ~ have• servi\e tA> offerorl •Sheboygan Falls bu a
8DOdl to sell, flace an ad eal deal for someone
fA the Da I)' Pilot itb an interest in
· a..ifted Seetlon · · ·1 history: a 1912-vintace ~Hme~~S0.;;::5671::;;;;;:' ====;;;;;;;;:\ h ig b way brid ce tb at. ~ otherwise will be 1 destined lror the scrap'
heap.,
110 BroedWBY ea.ta Mesa
642-9150
·'The bridle b as'
considerable ~historic
.merit and, located in· a
park or golf course
wbere it wouldn;l be
au bjected to h~ a vy
traffic, it could l'aat
another 40 years or so,"
abe 1ald ol the Rio Road·
·Bridie, wbicb spans the 1
Sbeboypn River three
miles northeast ofj
{»lymou&b. "We must be
•able to find an adaptive·
luae, other than for
1alvate." 1
I As president of•
Sbeboy1an County
,Landmarb Ltd., sbe
lb • 1 m o u n t e d a
cam.,.ap to ftnd a new
'Joeetkm for tbt &tklce. l •
Tbe ......... •boat tO
feet laa,, wdeecrlbed u 1 u~flltllltPrat&
J trut deal1n, a ••ttimea called a, rumltle brldl•"
, ........ of tbe DOlH
f•ade Wbea T•llle1H1 --~. ,
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Lor1191 COl8l DAILY PfLOT/Monday, M~ch 1, 1982
........ Wt ....... w.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1111M1e11• .. •••••••-••IOM--, •••II ,.., _.. .. ••a,.._ .....................................................................
PIMMIUl.A HOttlS
Jtemodeled , decorated 3 bdrm, 3 bath,
mstr bdrm with ocean view $425,000.
West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boall,
remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath $1,200,000.
Ocean" jetty views. Marine room. 4
bdrm. 3 bath. 3700 sq.ft. $1,385,000.
L.o ISLI HOMIS
Prime Lido Nord bayfront. 5 bdrm, 5
bath: Lge L. R. 2 boat slips $1 ~500,000.
Remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath + 1'4,rge
rec. rm. beam ceilings, $420.000.
DUfUX
COIOMA D8. MAI '-' pe-reiinll t money
niter In old Corona del
Mar. 2 bdrm. bouae +
bdrm. Janie apart·
ment. Super location .
Creative rinancln1, m .soo.
17141 '7M411
lllJIH ......
MARIOR
A Division of
Harbor Investment~·
• Orange Cocut relident• boMQhl 0% or
: all MW cara told in t~ cotmfy lalt 11"1'
even though they comprise only~ of
the county's population.
........ Wt I
..LAND
M1W!9.IT ICM Si*ioul amhy Tiome wlth eor&Y fireplace and
new abutters. Alarm
111tem and 1parkl1n1
pool lo front yard. Call
Sl6t,to0 Brand new townbome, 2
master bdrm suites,
each with balconies. 2\'J
bath . fireplace
skyliahts. mirrored
wardrobes, microwave
oven, trash compactor.
A Southern California
,
:t aft. ~~~'!1 1n
OWDel'I u rut . also 2 br
rental cottace. All In
llwpcond w/excel loca· Uon. Owner will carry ltt 2nd TD. Best buy In
town for onl)\-$280. 000.
c.1644-721'
UNDA ISU IAYFIOMT
Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath,
playroom. dark rm. den. $1,350.000!
&11:SUME LOW ~an view at this price ~ will soon be history.
,.
0c .. ,,_.c_.
.. c ... IMTBEST LH With 2oll down. 143
Popular 3 Bdrm 2 bath financing available. Trade equlty 4bd 2ba Uoobatructed Ocean .,
Anaheim hse. Boat. Chanel View. 2BR. 2BA.
1irplane, auto. etc? Pool, Jae Boat Slip
Mlke840-S614, 530.5904 Avail. SS25.000. Prine
floor plan in a fine area Generation Realty
of Costa Mesa. Great as· 549-1400
sumable loan and sellerlaiiiiiiiiiimiillliliili•ll
CAINATION COYE
Spectacular bayfront view 4 bdrm. 4
bath. 2 boat slips Sl.900,000.
will lallor to meet
buyera needs. Best buy
aU129.000. Call 646·7171 tlWM1
AISOt.UTE STE~L
ladllc.ctSIS0,000
MOW $525,000
SPYGLASS
oJl.R-~~l~NG
VIEWTOWMHQMES ~:;..GUSH Masur suites. Vu~w or OOPLEX 4Br +2Br. 1
Ocean & Night hght5. yr new. $398,000. 709 ' ~et Area. Parks, open 709v. Orchid. ca 11
spaces. $137,000. Xlnt 8S1·9WOwner/bkr. fin. Hal or Pat Agts • _751·~. 673-7300 Coehl Meta I 024 TllS-YIST As.MISSION VIEJO
New French Normandy 4 bdrm, 4
bath. guest house in lakefront comm.
$795.000. Sl~,·lSO 6br/4~ba 4100sq ft ~, ~ Bodeea Bay ------·
Cele. j) •••••••••••••••••••••••
•MISAYBDE * WlnfPOOL AND SPA
Spacious 3 Bdrm. 2 ba.
Beautiful area. $15.000
do. Aski[\g $240,000
Slim/mo pymt:PP:Agt
700-7<*1
· IARGAIH' . eauowner. 159.0137
Starter condo! $µper1--------•1 Of••Jl>Wf.
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
· : " y., d t [) • ~ • •. • fi 11 ) 6 I()
W LSl.LY ~
TAYLOR CO.
Ht:A LT< ii\'.'-. ..... :11 I l ~Hf)
LIU MOD&. HOME
Elegance describes this nr new 4
bdrm & f am rm. Libra r y with
fi replace. Spacious entry. Formal
dining. Huge kitchen. Gourmet's
delight. Bright. cheerful throughout.
Pool & s pa. $62.5.000 including land.
Dover Shores .
private and quiet
Bdrm 2 bath. I story
near schools and s hop
ping Good assuma bl4
loan. Try i.ma II dowt1.
Call us. 546-2313
ASSUMAILE
..t.OWIMT"
One ol the finest rondos
in Costa Mesa Dt'slra·
ble end unit. larJ?e livlnic
area. fireplace. l'ountry kitt'hen with bui ltin
desk. utility roum. 3
l\ujte bdrms. sundtt·ks .
mUfh. m11<·h morl'. Only
$136.900. u11 now. 1·alJ fM11
RCTaylorCo
YILLAPAllC Cllstom lot near million
S homes 27 de~ree view
and superb financing. SlllS.<m .
W0Blr11a.
•75·5511
WooclNidcJ-
Da•a111e 2 .. ....__ ...
......, .. gr11ded, ....
utry & Mirrored
....... fiood ...
CHAIMEI 2 Units + Separate Col· tage. Great Owners Unit cw Rental Prop. Cabin
Like Int Easts1de.
Creative Terms. 10~
Down. Break eve n
$141.SOO Brkr
--~ttt TD-frt:==~~~ -~.:=----~
COLDWeu.
BANl(eRO
IAYSHOIES
Sltt,500 l;owest prire in de·
h11htful water 1mcnled
owe • 2•d. v •ry .tl•aled. $149,000.
4 Mltodr La.. '"*·
COU OF ..WPORT
MAL TOM
HULee.tNwr. c:..-.....
e75·1111
...... slmd 1006
••••••••••••••••••••••• area Extra bpenal.l•--------1
VA
~SUMABLE
$129,!IO CMIAT ASSUMAILI AMAMCIMfi
Prime Harbor View Homes location. 4
bdrms. ram rm. 3'.n ba. Guest or
teenager 's private s uite. Spa.
Community pool. $345.000 including
the land. $.52,000 dn. Owner finance .
Vacant.
t'Oty s tart er home..
Lari!' )Carden & patio. Cull for terms un very l•-... jlmll!ll.----1 f u vo r a b I 1! I cu s e .
Deter part or monthly
payment on Ba I boa
Island property. Low down or trade.
4 Bdrm. low interest
loan. Be low market.
Hurry! 645·9161
•IAYflOMT•
IOATSUP
WISLll tl TAnOI CO .. llALTOIS
2111s-....-.......
1111,000 WOW!-T.owl'st prll'l•d
bayrront homl' ON
RALBOA L'OV,.:s l.ar.:1·
4 bdrm. 3 hath. 4foubl1•
fin-pla<·e. 111vl•n•1I pal111 MfW?OIT CENTll. M.1. 644-4t I 0
................•......
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
,...._,'sHotiu:
ATI-reil utate ad·
ver tised in this
DrNSJ>aper is subject to
the Fede(.al Fair HOU5·
inl Act of 1961 which
~kes it Illegal to ad vertlse "any preference.
limitation. or dis
crimination based on
race, color. religion.
sex. or national origin.
or an intention lo make
any such preference.
limitation1 or dis·
crimination. • •
This newspapu will not
llnqwin,ly accept any
advertising for rea I
estate which is in viola·
· Uonoltbelaw.
mlOIS: Act.trtlHn ...... ~ ..... --=--,..., .n.
DAILYN.OT •-• ....., for te-. flnt
hlcerrect l11ertl01 -,.
HllMlforS-. ................. ~ .....
I002
plus mu1·h mun•' Will
AITD or t ra11l' ror
LOWEST PRICE Eastbh'f Bay,;hun·s1 or., .. .,,,
CDMHOME ~.cm. Redul'ed a11um .._.layP,.op.
· by rmtivaled seller As IHlton
sumable rmanl'inic. (;01,y •675-7060 * I rire,la<'e . beaut1ru~·-------
klt1·hen CC>v'eled p:itln. calloow,673·8SSO P'resthtious Estaks in fashionable Mohll•r l'a· !J.i!!f f j!:!~ ~~j b~~~,h~~ ,'~1.t,~ ~:=! lal(oon Attra1·t1 vl'IY
landsuped. Det•oralcd Mo a...fVM By L Harding. $495,IMMI. on thisTneal":J-·!Jdrm. A I' 0 r n R (' u I l y
laree yard. near M lie ?.14197~·7J;l3 Square Park_ Askinll
$81.900 Submit your
terms.
Murchison Enterpirses
--556: 113;!
DOH'TMISS
ntSCOMDO Lowest priced an owner will finance at lo
interest wilh 20r: down
Highly upJraded
private location. com
mwilty pool. jacunl. re
room and tennis courts
Woo't last at $106.900
Call 646-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
•TUITUIOCI •
SI 27tPllMOMTH II Ali you pay when you
takeover ulstin1 lat
T.D. Spacious 4 br tx·
ecl.t.ive detached home
featurtna rrmt din. rmty
rm ' hplc . Only W.SOO. FEE. 7S9·150t
or752-73'13.
~ Walk er Blee
LUCKY 13 • $13.00o-dOWn. $1300 mo. eoir 3Br W/pool " spu. F\th price Sl~.000. Call m .m1 .
C:::::. ',I I '
..,..., f I[~( ~ 'f j ~ • ,I ')
C>C;IANYIEW Beaut1lully appointed
Nwpl Crest split-level
twnhome. features 3Br. + den. parquet nrs no.
and a ren'll rkable ocean
View. Seller will be very
cooperative w trin anc· . .
c:::::. ..
..,..., • I• I ,
llSTIUYI 4 Br borne in Costa
Mesa, Owner will assist
rib fin-.cln1. Sl20.000.
Callrrt.5370
ALLSTATf
"EAL.TORI
Versailles Condo. $79,900. Sacbel« w/bdrm, down
PQt n.xible 'ft /credit . '1S-Oll4 eves ii wltnds.
Bz2"'*'· ....................... ~--····· .. ~~~;..;:;;;..;;~:;;;:~ ':::' ~ lw\-4£~s· =
......
--~-".'IA I bai'b 'C:t •Illa 1
-----..... .,QA, .. ,..... ____ _ .................. .,~ ................ _ ......................
fi"ri'1 It
M 0 A & E 1-..
1 1 r r · I
lndudt>s plun." for U ·
pans ion
644-toH
.... sty. llltr.
"'"*' . OPEN HOUSE
IHAl TY
/ ~ .1002~-.. --1002
••• ·~.... • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• Ji"'!!!!!!!ll!!!!!ml!!!!!ll!!!!!l!!!!l!!!!!I!!!!!!!
CONTEMPORARY Nl BAY
Opew 9d !oh of wood, CJl•u Hd
........ Yo.4J 2-story 9'o•• wlt9'
...... cftUets, ....... •It• wlt9' ~ O.ertDoliiilt .... ,,... ,.. 2
otller-IM•aa•, ._.,,...ct cliil"'9
,.... &c .... ''Gold Coast" locatioa. e.. for .... s °" .... •••1181• . S4ll,OOO. '
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
MO MONEY DOWM tto qualified buyer)
Mesa Vet de custom.
3bdrm + bonus rm.
2' ~ba. 2 frplcs. lrg yrd
S2~.000 Owner Bkr
~9m
Stl,500
12"eLOAM Best value in Costa
'Mesa. 3 Bdrm 2 bath.
large lot. new roof. good
location Call S40·1151 to see.
·u_,. HERITAGE
REALTOR:>
• ~ REAL ESTA TE
v s.ir. ~ "'-"Y ~ .,..,.. I 026
24J6W CowH...,, twwport St.ch
Hl-140t
Dir
~ YOUI DllAM 1m1AT In
gorgeous Erwin Lake, Big Bear. Cl~ to skiing, lake:" elc. Two
flat buildable adjacent lots. Call
office for directions to property.
Mountain air -Mountain view.
$27,000 Julie Van Wieren 551-8700 <XlB>
&lllll
&IAll/OPllOM OI IALI
·Excellent Terms! Larae Assumable
.Loan Witb 30 Year llxed Rate.
Owner WW Cam Larse 2nd T.D. At Low lateJ'elt. lmely 3 BR Encl '
Unit, W /Wrap Around Patio On
Lush Greenbelt. Llsbt, Cheerful Home. Only $210,000.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
I.I ACISTAn Soperb early Calirorni1 design and quality con·
structio11. featunn' custom pool and spa.
antq Mexican pavers. 3
fireplaces. sky lights.
air cond ' moch more . Beaut. hill and vallt)'
views. Sma 11 orchard.
Plenty of room for tennis
court and horsl'S or.
fered at Sl.200.000 Ask
for Linda.
Wlha. & ~eltt 1.1
4tJ..2752
......... Kii 1040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br older home. cnr lot.
[ft' roof ' furn. owe . 213-447· 79>. 448-3271
SSOOO dn. Beaut. lgt 4 br
hon in H.B. or 3 br in r.v. 952.7940 act
4 Br. 2'2 Ba. noolt. famill rm. 3 cu garage. pro .
landscaped. 2 patios
w/roven. wallpaper ii
cl.LStom paint thru-out.
leCUJ'lty system. uown
mouldlnc. Mexican
paver Ooorin&. 2 used
brick frWc:t. blt·ln TV
stereo cabin et fi
boobhflvee In f1m. rm. Hilb uaumable. Must
ue to appreciate. SZll,000. <>Den Sat/Sun .
Tl4/NM1l3. Private Putr· .
..... 1044 .......................
TmtllRC
-~~ra. I bl . .__,, Model Ill
Tbe Ttrract .
· ra•t•ltlc f 1uli1 t ....... ~--· LENll&,,l • A ,... llllllltery w W... 11r1 1 ................ ...
Ev8ytlllac ...... ··•· Inf di1\aJ11ce .. prlctd llllfow•~!•qllin ... mt.GOO .• ______ __. ............... ... MOWISMTM ....... &1•.U ........... ~ ~ ....... "' •.
tlle 'DlllJ Pllel Http can hr
..... ell '"ll•h• u. ... ,. ... .
... JI'! ....... NI• .... .,,., ... , .. , . ............. ._ ~ ••• ,,, ..... 11 _...'!!!!' .....
P •!1!9! .... :'1111'1111 ~ .. er.
&AllUL '
, " ~ . . . ~
Ti..{~ p: !» •. . . . ... . ,--
l:... "'I " ,'' 1 ~~ :_:i
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. \
,. How's this tor a good answer: money. Read our newspaper, and
cash in on advertised values. discount coupons. food news and
consumer reports that can save you money every single week.
We also save you time. Which is important_ for busy women
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.. ~ . -.---
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appears on every page of
• II
-642-4321
••
i
I
_..,,,, ,.. __
I
I L • •
~ .
• '
FORECLOSURE
-Fixer-Oceanfront duplex 2 lge
3Br 2ba units Try low or no down Lender Owner
can be very creatl\e
Pia a R E. ~73-1900
WESTCLIFF
Beautifully oecorated !Ind designed 3 Br 2ba
w great office den and 2
frplcs Assume lge 12 ... ,
In w 20'i dn. $269.SOO fee
land. 645. 74c.I
~Yi•wHoMH
3 br. 2 ba Good fin Fee
land By owner $279.WO
~9·87~ .Qt 644. 7220
OPEN SAT 1.su ... I 1-6 New J story beach house
Bay&ocean \lews
Oceanside Balboa Blvd
1911 Court Ave nr t9th.
675-2291 or 848 3133
·Am le al'kin in rear
PAHIC! Payment s late!
Sacrifice almost all
equity 3 Br home .
$180,000assume loans.
Della63~
2='~:.! 2 b1tb. prlute p1tfo.
Avall1bte throuara •111112. suoo .. •llUL
ll(iDr, IJMIOO.
'
Driveways, Parkin$ Lot Repain. Sealcoat10g.
S&SAspball
Lk631-4199
Ra/comm. Seakoat. re-pairs, resurface. Free
est"64.5-428J e vs: wk n d
MspittlncJ •••••••••••••••••••••••
For all you need to know
about bankruptcy. call
714/835·9162
1 . ·1
~.............. ...................... ~~.............. ~~~~l~!f.~........ &;-.. ··:rrc .... ••
OUMPJ08S Pttlonal' Busin\u In NELSONSPAlNTING Nutpatchtt,tt!(,JurH 3om~a rr~:t.
•SmlUMovi,.&Jobl come Tu Retur Int/Ext Retld/Cotn m frft..nt._ l!H.il llfkt'JSHOI ~ MIKE64t·U9 Preparat~n Avell lo Acc'll.lllUc ·ctll~n •· Rtr11 , .. .,,,. 're'· .J.() -KMlt.INOlrDUMP .Evonlno,WeekendOf· U 'd est. -~37 P&.n.")iERPA "'" Cerimtclllti lrmarbltln· '-""'""""--1 JOBS, uk for Ra.ndy, rlee or Home Appoint· qual.lt Pt ~ I t Restuccos. lnttuxt 30 at•llation at aenalble
841-8UT menta. Jamu L. Zlm r1w/1n !itect wlf~;c~r Jrt. .NeaL PaulW·2?~7 'M , ilob_81S.$048
J-o-tvt-·1-r1 .... 1"""'t movana • nwrman. CP~. eu..t212 l't'lia I • 848·56411 ' M_Ji £D'S PLASTERlNG Trtt S..lce baulln~ Tree/yd /aar FEDERATBD T)'l)t'S Int or Ext ...................... . cllM&>.l:!:eeHt.842·~7 l.ncomeT11Servlce PAINl'ERNEEDS ~-Jlree~~t •£sptttTrttPrun1n1• lbm1de•lm1 1131·C87l WORK!30ytteicp,lnt ..._..,9 ConimtrclaJl.1nd1npe
...U11-=::='---1:.Jjt:.%:==1 ......... •••••••••••••· ext. Acoustic ('elhn&s ••••••••••••;•••••••••• Services t57..&311
GIDtral Mlillt.nance Want 1 REALLV CLEAN ....,_., Davis Paintin _M7 5186 Drains cleared from SIO Q)~eteTree Service
Rapa"°"'Decoral1n1 HOUSE? Call GlnJham •••••••0 •••••••• .. ••• Collfae atudent 7 yrs ex· Plumb1n1 MepallJ Geft'l ..a...·llP' 1rr159 • lit •Ra 840·5144 Glrl. eeest. 645-5123 8RtCKW.()RK: Sma II .. l r D t'r est M&M 642 9032 1 ......... "'m HOME IMPROVEMENT R08lN'SCLEANlNG-Jobs, Newport. Cosl11 g:_· ://ext, re i ana _!L:_. --..: · '$... ~enov. S36· 14
REPAIR-PLUMBING Servic athoroucbly \teu, Irvine. Refs -1 ~ee_p_lr.iin&) ~M•191• .. Trwt.,..;.---
He1tin1. carpentry, clean house. ~O..o85 875-3175. Bishop&Son PatntinK ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
el«, Ule. Jl'tee est. No Custom Brick, Stone, 30 _yra up In Buch PROPEITY DELINQUENT' TopQuabty/Reas. RatH II!!·.,.,~ ~t S'8 IO'l9 ~4.&u•L.i. Judicial For"""l""'urta Pref bachelor homes Block. Concrete, Stucco ,....,..,.. 1 --~ .... _ 121~'39-8907 _ _ Rel Free ~t. ~9·9492 mtaS PAIMTIMG Oran~e area. 15 > r~ Harold F McGralh F.sq
Quality . Dependable M. ArO ..... RY 10 yn ex~r. 1nt or .fXl expenence Call for info ~1·1771 _
C.11 Pam ai Bob Dwl11ht, ~ " ~~ -' and rates. TMtoriftci
67 ·7012 S2.10J~5-4J94 -..tJl·l 182 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-==~~--1 ~~~ H~nr\1"ix~~~1: ~l~~n~~!ooms MoYllg ~!'!! ••••..••••..•• ~••••••••••••••• ~ll~~'.a~exdp~k;~~~
Mowing, SlO, Sl5,. $20. yrdwn . re as. Jerry, garans. whatever! ••••••••••••••••••••••• HANGING SlO/ROLL REPAIRS0FOR LESS int,. Spes:t,z~ng grades Hauling/ Dumping, 965-3315 Arecent.UnJVersilyorll -AICMOVIMG-Stripping-disroopaper Shlnglts. al 30 Yrl l_l_t. __ ._7 __ ~szo. 754-9904, 9SS·0095 Beti's Mainteoaoc.'e Serv. llnois college gradual< Q!Jlck:_rareful 552·0'410 YJ~ M5 --64_5-9325 ~·Free est 7JO 272S Pnva1e Tutor to teach
Mark Plumb-elec·carpentry lw decided to become 8 •;...I MOVING• UC. PAPER HANGER lfuber Rooftng-1U types basic Freneh. Russian:
Resld/comm /indus. Pain · . Call964·5231 California m111ionam Top Quality. Special Bonded & guar. No JOb New·rtt0verdeck Germa n for travel coo
Maint..._ clean· ups. tree Dependable & Honest. by HARD WORK. Sht care In handling· 25 yrs toosmaJI or too larj!e. Llr hll802.~·9734 veruell('e or longer term
lrim, rree est 641·1096 Will do any type or Holl'll! already bas a good star1 exp. Competitive rates. F'r~L J.Q~_898·<!7U ROOF LEAK'?'?~?' ror study or literature
Pete Improvements. ~~f;; 1igia re~~:en~~~ Noovertj_me.J30· 1353 QUALITY Courtright & Son ~nsw~r Ad 11622
Clean-ups, Tree Trim Reaaonable. 554.4454 (fontrajghl people I STARVING COLL EC E Papering/Palnt1ng Roofing " 1.,_._-~1~;
Mainl. Resid /Comm 'I. ...... Average . S45 per week STUDENTS MOVING Fr~est. Janis 552 0231 f_'ree Eat 5116 5~ .!~••••••••••••••••
Amie$48·841_4 __ ....................... SSO every two weeks CO. Lie. •Tl24·436 Wallpaper contractor & s.ctblaltt.g SAME DAY TYPING
Expert. Reasonable HAUUMG/ClUHUP For further details, rall lnsurec1 641-8427 Paintmg Lie 328240 O C •••••••••••••<••••••••• Servi re-now serving Garden10g,clun·ups , Const.·Tree·Y<l-Garage THElllOOMS(i>UAD WATCH USG_ROW' 2J yrs Gary Gompf Bl'DGETRATES Ltc 'd IOCll businesses' Wi ll
.Inmmln.&. TJlm 631·7819 •Rent.al re air 63-1--0322 _ 673-3J tl_ STARVING ACTORS ~ Lo" m111 Sml Jobs OK J>i~Ai~el 556 2724 _
Jessie's Gardening Q.lAH UP YOUR ACT Hou1nfftiltg MOVING COMPANY Expert wallrovcring 1n free~ _641_7~1 Typini-resumes, term
Clean-ups. tree tnm TODAY ! "Vard /garage ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fast & Careful. Lowest stallattnn. Rea!>. pnn·s s.cretorial Sen·lcH papers. dissertations
&malnt. serv. _?10-8035 cln·up. etc. I Ion t.ruck . Avail. Mar 20th, reliable Ratt'S Law Allows. M C Consultant Assignment ••••••••••••••••••••••• word pr()(esslng. Reas
_m:_s:U·1993 !24hrs) mtlts.Rer. -p:~t/lns sn.08.~3 581-8500 OffiuS..-viets rat ~s L.P. orrirc
Demolltion·Grading -~J~ WALLPAPERING Typing senetanal .Se!"~~ ~·7135
Tran.sport. Asphalt, COD· lllcCM9 G ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exp'd bonded Ltr ~~mg &44 5050 W'mdow Ca.-1.w. • crete & tree removal. ••••••••••••••••••••••• F\ne pa1nt10P by Richard C 6 366M3 Discount-. on ~
So EXPER PRE "·---I> Tia... ••••••••••••••••••••••. ii prep & planting. . PARER ...,..,. L1r. ms 13 }rs of wallcovenngs Free e~t -"Let theSunshineln"
Operated eqwp. Com m ·1 Enrolled to pra rl 1 ce happy local customers Rod 1-739 !i80tl •••••••••••••• ••••• •• •• CallSunslune Window
&Resld'l.642· before the IRS. Quality Thankyou 631 ·4410 p R ol TILE INSTALLED Clo•nlll",Lld ....... u .. •••••••••••••••••••••• l t ••9"•18 ---,,..,. ....,. AllK d G d .... (\I .;J'IO~ R 111 I HAULING tudent has a reas. COi ·'" • ..., c.. · · "'T"' tn 5 uarantec oor: Mont~ly Disco!!fil_
haolot ing. c eanup. 1-t.ruck. Lowe•t rate FAST -ACCURATE fOft'IPa,..titta ....................... Rers John840·P217 ·uiing. odd jobs, Free .. ~ " 25 yrs exp. Lie 41f.tt14J •BRY1lNT'S• ----•RESIDENTIAL•
est. 494·5841b~9am , aft Prompt. Call 759·1976. Income lax service.your Bonded. Ins Refs. Color Wallcovenlfg Removal Have somethini: 10 sell' Avg 1 sty SJO. avg 2 sty
6pm. ----Thankyou,John. hom!byappt. 963.:6821 e~rt 91!3-09_1.!_0ick All~. 6421343 c1a,:.1fieduds doilwell ~Chris_957.:~--
•SPtllTUAL Lost· F Chihuahua mix. •••••••••••••••••••••••
ltEADIMc; Lost. Blue Velve t brownt beige. o/ery Linda&Y' ., JobsWanted, 7075 ApartmentManager Ex A\,IOMOTIVE
8 S El C * R l j Jewelry Box & contents. rnend~ on . 16th St ICkl S ••••••••••••••••••••••• penenced couple Beaut * LOTMEH! 1 15 · ammo ea · Vi<' Newporter Inn, NB. N t ..;5 C~ld 's ""l. u 'th II I maintained 44 units. I
~~!'!: ... ~!.~~,:~.~.~ ...... ~!.~~ ..... ~.~.: .... ~!.~~ ~ ......... ~!.~~ ~! ..... ~.~:.~ ..... ~!.~~ ..... ~:':'!::! ..... ~!~~
San Clemente 492 7296 Elk Cl b NB wp ... . .... •ESlORTS• man WI tnle el't ua ('he\'' delaer offers run • • • 1 or s u . . • ..,_ • ...,., •-""' d k Costa Mesa Nu pet<. ' fo\ill hl' REWARD 7608645 """""""" BACK BE'rTEI' uaCni;roun sees live • vr =rt·lime permanent ___ ._ ________________ ._...,. __ _. . . . ---... ---~---·5l50 TilAN EVER ! 24 lfRS in position a!> rook, JI ;\pl + sal;lry bonu:.. positions lo youths to as-
R .... ton--..a30010Hlcel..... 4400 C:O....rclaf , 1 -·t •-h" F' 669_0207 tendanl for 'eldcrlv or 642·4~.wkdy~~4 s1s1111· the body &serv1'ce _.... , 1·--a 1r 11:-..-..1 530 ~ ·gray "' w 1te cat, ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ .. , ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rtlltals .. 75 .,_. .._... collar wirabies·tag from · lVUt<, secretary for pro APT. MANAG •:R depts. in \ 11 ried. 10-, "'fi r l 38S ••••••••••••••••••••••• s ud A b" L Aa.t--&:s Mass~ I Oulcalll ressional person Cu II .,_ ed I r ter-llO' " task• See Mr. Fmle wants roommate t I u ace space or ren . ••••••••••••••••••••••• a 1 ra 1a. aguna "'._....... ....-rru·reur coup e or ..., .. ., share F.V. Condo r Ice sq r~ .. second floor Prime Tu st an & San Niguel Reward 643-01 Open 24 hrs ad . Ans "· er Ad • 6 2 I 18 wul Adults. 1n Nwpt Stude al
washer/dryef prlv rpba Prest1g1ou$ Westchff Cletrenle retail or oHice -a.fl.~'!!:.-7days a week •ACTRESSES Hefp642·U>O~h~s._ ~laintenance exp req HOWARD c~-,rolH
gar. 96J.9S84, ~liends & area $1.00 sq (t Med1ral spare. 7J0.1471!,_83}!69!L FOUND ADS 69 Go rgeous girls to MODELS• WWJRV 71 OO 646·1801 Do\'e Quail Sls Bid Cal1645 ~1 SIOO REWARD Blk pamper you Jacum . NEWPORT BEACH 557-SOOOX 306, wkdays. · · tftdiatrial lttfttal 4500 Lonfha1red cat. "M~al· Sawia. Locals as w-:11 as Hollywood Dare rt or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Afftftdant ----
Shr. 2br/2baapl, Lag. ••••••••••••••••••••t•• IDrfR££ bal " 6'3·'8912 d->'' 1ouris l s Bank seeks newtalentlode PARTTIMF: Oranji?eAU'l'OMOTIVE n~i. $255Mo-Pr1vateotrice' NB 3975Blr h 8860~ Mt 97>3771e Ame ·r ad M ster velop for TV. movll'~. Airlines Ct Swap Meet S·l ·n ""''" ocean vu, terrace. parkin~/kitchenette s~c · .. l' · ' · Call --~ ----ri r · a com mA re 1 a Is 1213 • ,, '~ '1
. SALESPERSON .494-6109493·2308 ft.orless.MIAzone, • Charge. Ameriran Ex· ~ • A" ht rlorSun A8pl v SWAP 18600 ain St.Hunt Br . rt A t Found· Bike. CdM area. D · 11 llOl 3711 . 752-6285 lg M E E T r' F I ,. E WAMTED!!! F lO shr Laguna Beoch Da1lyJantr Allull'lpd per s q ge n ' press. iners a " . . S4!·5032. 642·5678 C'.alltoidenlify. welcome. T14f~S-3otJJ Now1nour6th1'ear "eekends 7AM to I PM t.:nlim1led opportunity,
home. Non.smkr. refs A\'ail now' (7141848·3133 644·6006 2112 Ha!_bor Bl. CM A d OC Fairgrounds Costa earnings to SJOOO month .497·3017afl.2 m 1100 sq ft 2 offices. ,.,,_.MrviCH5l60 tten ants \1esa & demo program No
3 BR 2ba o•head door. front & re· Or T b ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-------•I i!Ulo sale~ expenencf house with all •H UN TIN G T 0 N arentry, frwy close , top Lost: ange young a · SWEDISH MASSAGE necessary but ~ales ex-arMnilies. Non-smoker. BEACH• l'OOd. ·S251. by male cal. Whit o.1 r....... ..t...-ti rri ( d $22S + l't util. Da ys 1080 SVeFJlr•'t• ~· cftest/paws. COM lfVH. nc axing, non.sexual .--_, c ca tr ATTENTION: perience pre erre .
832 .. M Ind · Ip k 711 ... -._ ...._ L.---..1 • s F A b't b s d Theodore Robins Ford .47~ eves 836·5757 • •'3 Priva e ires esa u.stna ar . 7.,.,,..,,,,., ru ---'" •• or m 1 1ous oy an . askforKod. * •2Staff Areas W. 17th. St. Pacific L.A. CGlif. Positi0tt rt· girls 10.13 years old. lo Call Tom Aiken at
Housemate Wantod , • •Wetbar Sh.ifs lndustnal Park, ·-work one or two l'\ICO 642·0010fordeta1ls_. __ ~ 1835 Wh1"tU"er Ave lU\11. -.cl"H --wlc contact, 1n°s a ·• tak acc tt 10 u ~;n~ily r:l'f::~~.er~e!~~ ·::v:.:.~U-"'(~:.:.~4.!.!1~=848=no'-".;:.::~:..:15:...t-Floor 1000. 3700 sq fl units.Of: 8 DAY WEEK SPECIAL :d...i:-:1ronl, and ne~spap"er~ sub.\tnp" --------
be -nee-warehouse space ntrt. ftelibility itl lions Transportation IAIYSITTEI
ac and community MEWPORT llACH w rarpets, drapes, wet • woril ~-Must and constant adult Person needed lo meet ~s3oo a monlh AJRPORT Custom or bar.642-4463,642·7~ 8 O•yt • 3 Linet • 8 Ooll•rs be U.S. citiiet1 or rt-super\'lston pro' idt-d 6 yr old girl after school rices. 600 lo 1800 sq rt . CA--..a550 '• Call 3 to S.~PM . .isk for at I 55pm & keep until
F lO shr 2 br, 2 ba apt,
C.M. S250/mo. + •,, ulils
675-5612 aft. 6.
From~ pers 'f --r , cJistered ditt1. Somt Andrea. 64 2 4321. ext approx. 2.4spm e\ery·
Mullan Rlty. S40·296:Q._ ....................... It's easy to plac e your 8-0ay Week Class1f1ed b y mail and 1t· c~ Is pnferr•d. •343---.-----•I day. Mon-Fri MUST BE
1 ________ ~~~~e.P:~rne~rr~ Jo{~ costs 1ust $8 -that s ontya dollar a day! :ro Qualify for this Applcants must~ 18 • DEPENDABLE. Must
Roommat o k r .,_ s o special offer. you must be a non-commercial user offering --of-. ha•• a~~ live nr Sto ne creek e,n n-sm r or execuplan ....,ne (l0~1x20~,). 15 1·-· _,.. Elem Woodbr1'dge btfl lg apt. Nwpt/CM mo.673-~673·3939.:__ merc handise for sale up to.$800 per ad. and the price must mini...,. h•i9hth of Irvine. St ucten'\ ok ·
::1e.!:,.,S215. Ca rolyn. RV bo 5'1" wr.t.1. w•1'11ht 1-ff Ref's. Pl0 ase call ,,,, _.., . at. auto storage. be 1n your ad The cost stays the s ame w hether your ad "" .. '7 '" • ~
"A Mew Co11e .. t" Fenced. secure. s.10 mq. need·s eight ..4ays se.lling time or IUSt one proportio" a11d bt 552-0461a ner5 JOpm Quiet female to share lg 2 fo\111 service custom C06U. M~a 646·16§6__ v _
1
• .wtll cyoa111ed a11d
bdrmapt.S230 C::all11rter of(ice&deskspace ~.CaUl4 151 ---61 ~Z.118 Nr. o.c . Airport S T 0 R A G E U d h Ab I 4 d k Barber Slyhst wanted to
R .._ C d ·'See to Appreciate'" WAREH OUSE J4Xl2 se one wor 1n eac box OU wor S ma e one Oft S.ft. hb. D work m Laguna Beach mmle sur nu on o 759-8978 NB area sm . 642 2255 f f M 3 I p 28 or .... _. M-ch I, oublt Check C M non smk W D ClaSSI ted line 0 type 1nimum ad IS 1nes lease print --salon. ~ood ennron·
s:i95: Leave m'essage 1--------•1 Mter~30rallS48·l558 plainly tot. schedultd for an ment. 5 da\s a week
Joan646·9926 ~nt In your tht Bargains C)ll 4~·88118·
Respon. sgl F wanted to lusiMss/lnvest/ r------------------------------, ~or Hftd yaur r.,. Beautman shr ocean vu tue in Log MEWPORT CENTER FWlclKt ~ to Pacific fx. " llamiressers to ~ork 111
&h No pets. S350 mo Excetleftt Offict ••••••••••••••••••••••• I p 0 lo 8072 tn lhe I plu.~h '.lit~ pon Beach ioclutil.499-1856. SDCIC lll'ffttmttlf I P""' · · · I Oath P1lo1 salon ll 1~h pay, gd sooto2000sq ~ Ava ila· Opporlwlity 5015 .._-----+----~-'-----,._ ____ -f=.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ S.F. Intl. Aif?Ort, Sa11 Classified "orkmg ronds. fnnge
M/F rmmte lo sbr with 2 ble for Lease ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 1 Fr a 11 sci s c 0 , C A loda). benefits. some chentele
othen, 3br home. pvt CallWm.F.Cote ln ves tor t s Wan · 11-------+-----"4,._----+------+-..-.~=-.;.....ij '4128. Must be ,pref 6426164
llOOI, ;ac. l:f.B. 848•49i7. rormoreinformat1on ted-s10.ooo t otal nr S 00 I b · V•LUES 644-2030, Milch. 1 I I ava la It to start "' Beouly Spa~e ren tal uni
Busi. man shrtum. 2 br. 2 Y pa y. mt only mo. (200'7, I 1-------+-----"4,._----+------+-------4 .. __.., "'mtQ!la • · GALORE que decor. spacious . t Cote' Realt 10.SU>OO. 20r;. 2 yr . oan • ~ I .. , t ly ' . .
ba deluxe apt. pool. $250. & In vestment sec. l PLUS 200'ff Dep. I · 1 O .60 EOE. area. Su~r opportunit.ft
Wkdys631-0115 640-5777 wnte-()frPLUS25'h Tax 1-------+------<------+------4'----.-"4 j~~~==::!~~:'I ~----~~ ~':r~f~~~'il~nin C~url
050 ........................
--Oouble garage for 'storage only . S90 I mo
H. 8. 96()..!i260.
3 car garage or storage Nr. Newport &·19th. Al·
ley access. 640-8107
Offlcel..tal 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1617 Westcliff. N.B. Want
financial inst. 70005.f.
1st. floor. Agent ~1-5032.
EXECUTIVE
SUITES ' IN
tan'AGl
PU1A New luxlll')' omce space
in ITvloe's busies t
center! Easy Frwy ar·
cess. Avail. now!-Call
for details. ·
111.1211 640.42]0..
* DILUXI OFFICES* From l room up to 2000
1q. ft. From Sl.16 1 sq. fl. No lease requl red. Mr Airport.er Inn • .2172 =l. l:all' AM .
17THmHT
COSTAMISA I fl' J room Otfkt fllilea. ~·= .:rc:i1 Utll Reta..ig . f1W100
..... ft ..... .....
HHPI
L --~~t ~~~S ~~ l~r ~Ni ! 13.20 Use the Datly Pilot Kelley Hannum. 645-0662 J.59.0564 1 1-------+------<,._----+---.....---+------4 "Fast ResuJt" service No need to travel all over
KOUCEHTEI MEWPORT Need eq u1 ty s h are
El l E ·l · partner w/S25.000 to buy egan xec sw es in X-wUe out or C.M. con· presligi()\IS I oc. Jn cl do. 631_,.1.,., B_ill eve..L._. secreta rial. recep· .,, '"
tionist. telephone ans & MoMy to LoC1f1 5025
rmre. Ofcs from $436 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. On-call ofcs $165 2nd TD to SI mill. EZ mo . T ff E H EA D · 1·r D S QUA RTER S CO M 9ua 1 y. owoey av·
PANIES A ( . 1 mgs Mr. McQuarne . ; pro ess1ona 96J.26ll environment. (7 14 )
851-0681 ~s. Tn11t o.idi 5035 BUSINESS ADDHSS. Answering & mail
service, conference
room . Adj. OC Airport
SlOO/rm. 7141851-1342
Orrice space on busy
Newport Blvd. Approx
8l sq. ft. S«O/mo. in
cl~ utils. 2450 Newport
Blvd. Costa Men. See
Manager.
"Tstrt~~r.-
lrvine Airport exec.
suite, nice offices In
friendly at~1o~here. Alll;..:RrY-in n>lni ..
Xerox avail. 9,57·Wl
Prime Newport Beach of·
flee space. Newly re· trodeled. beauUfuL Call
Mark m-eeot.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
I 15 80 dlr'""'OMI Your town lo look for a•rage IOAT SHOW -• P.• ., "' Homema .. e .... stud•n··-
1 sales ... you'll fin them ,.. • ~ ' "' 1-------'------"''------.._ ____ ....... ____ --1 service 1s our n'ght b.. · Cl ·n d P T . t em p he Ip .
add $2 60 f h ddttl 111 f 8 ti I .,re m assi ie • I L.----"---· __ o_r_•_•_c_• __ o_n_• __ n_e_o_r __ m_•_• ___ __, spedalty I To place rour garage Cashier. ticket takers.
I Call 642·5618 ext. 322 sale ad, cal 642:5678 parking attendant. etc. ,
1 Publish my ad for 8 days starting _______ _ l Classification _____________ _
I Name-,--_______________ __ I Address ______________ _
I· City Zip __ Phone ___ .
1 Check or M.0 . enclosed O I Charge my ad to: I 0 ~ # ________ Exp. __
I D • # _ __,_ ________ Exp. __
L---~--------------~-----------r··••••••• WE 'LL' PAY THE POSTAGE
! 111111
BUSINESS REPLY LABEt
llOSTAOE WU BE PAO ev AOOACSSU
Or19·Co11t Dilly Piiot ' lllil Piii . I .
lo1190 •.. .., •.
Coltl ..... ,CAlllll
NO POSTAGE
NECESSARY
If MAILED
IN THE
UNITED STATES .'
---_Call Hea~er jlt 646·3963.
, t ___ co=-a __ > >
WANTED .
< <--ccs---> >
'tlewspaper
Carriers for ~outes
in Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley & NeWRbH lteach
\
...
r
t
I
~=r~a~'~n-ve•tmen Fi rm . Reapoulble For daily
fimDclal transadioaa • Computerized G /L'a. · Analytical ' minded
penan. Expr. Required. ca11 MO-Ol.23
afme~~t•ln.
Experience preferred.
Pleue call, 55'7-0182.
CLlllCAL/ 6A&.MmAY AslistaDt to omce M 1r.
Typing, lite bookkeep· • ins. payrolJ Ir busy phones. $5. to s\art,
raises commensurate
with adaptability to job
poeiUon. 4-0 br weell:.
Call: Mary Anoe, bt wa ~ 12 48:J.-OllS or 831-0751
CEEll
HCMl .. llAl
· SA .... SILOAM
Cleft needed lmmed. to
work drive·thna photo
booth. Ex per. helpful a. ndt nee. Call tor In· tervlew: (714)114-7080;
IG-1270.
~-For elderly ttrean Lad7.
1:30-ll:JOPll. $100/•ll· ly .. Call: before ZPIC.
•tMI
•
$11,600
MAMA6H Mature couple to a
manage large, quiet
complex in Costa Mesa.
Salary + Apt. 64S·l:llll
675-SIN9
--
CONNH.l
CHEVROLET
..... •!' •
r~ \ \• ~ '
S4b-I 200
CREVIER BMW
1'he bdtWtci '12
IMW'~ Jien! A few re ma 1ntn1 '81
Models & Demos are still available! Wt>
specialize in: European
delivery and flawless
pre-0wned BMW's. Where Cust.ome r
Service Comes lst!
Sales-Service· Leasing
2al W. Jst, Santa Ana 1714) 835.3171
Clolled Sunday
MOORS
IN STOCK
HOW!
Clltc• ••rt••4 11ltetf.. ef DIMO•
• •·4 9 UAL IT Y ,.f.OWMID
AUTOWOIUS•ftl ................
_. r'l a.
Ceil or COlnt ht .
TODAY!
SW.S • SllYICI
LIAS.MG
SADDLES ACK
IMW
21402 MAIGWRfll
P'IWY.
Ml SSIOM YllJO
Avery Pkwy ott l·S
131-~ '9S-4949
Oosed Sundays
tl.MetthciffltcJ
'artOfYow
IMWflwcltaMOr
&.HM c.w ..
Mcl.Cll-ettlMW!!
a.,0rL..oN
lyO.."'-e"-!
(7141522·5333
ORANGE COUNTY'S
~ST _
·ti Jg
SaJes.Ser\'1Ce·Leasing
'IVt' CARVER
ICU.S-fVtCE·IMW
IMTDATSUI
a.OUNCE Sllf
f
•
..
------~ -~~·-....---·. • •
'71 Hoftda Clvl<'. J. tcllld. moo or ma llf of, ferMD-1141,'7~2777 '76.._.C--
it Honda At'C'Otd LX. $ IPd. •Iii-~. am fm
'Pd, <'Ult rima. cnlal ~. • 2 xtra i1now
I ~..a M t II HA ~.tz'i'GO.fn.$02$ 'tl mzJ(: z+ z. JOOO ~M.,. UI It' -··-........... '740 ! ..U.. lla&bel' iat. SIOO + ."""4--••••••••••••••• TOP. '9M 8'1·$101 ........
' '74 MllZ new-palJlt Urea •••••••••••••••••••••• ........... • 1 + -a&ereo. • .. 100. '76XJ12L. Ja1uar. Ea· .......... ..
·~~·· + ··------~ TWMtcwtt lt-11114'. nuctuwn. 1111 MODl'.l.8 r __.. luw im. ,.)'ft•nlli. 12A llP!llK NOW!!!
'11 -·· ft'tallk bl. f'onlc<tw, it, 141·2143· twtll• S.rvlre·l~a.lnl(
, ..... l'l\I. l'fttC rt•bh Ut 11% l'orllt'h•'. 'till, l(t""I s~ .... -~-10 ...... ml. •lllJ('rb c.'OOd d b I ---..-""-lltruout -t . .00. Wiii ''°" . "'''~II / t' l(t" ........... .,. •,too. ORO, Ml·J1311 -• ::'rl.der Jt'rll'I• • i• a•' '9 tllT. 1111 uoo ml Mllft)' Q l·tMO 49Mt4t
·• VW Raja, IH~rt'. i'..enltJI rub, 8'• P1tlnt, brallet.•d l11lt rlor.
buc:·ket aelU. 11lumlnum d• llftd ,.nei., fie.a. moo obo ma1' Andy
'Jl'fW --------xtru. ~Int ~·01111. IWMRU '71 WMWN . .... .a.a. Movlnic. mwil llt'll 132116. •:,u~ ~Ion.
'7Z 1•onwht• 111.a (iood .-r.flllJ, lllZ·IHM 11rt'll. pulnl. uphol11tery .
t'tllld. "''• t•lutl'I:• t'ull ,.,... 9765 t'llr~llnl( 11nd cniclne
l"n'll 7$1·911111 • -•••••••••••••••••••• AII.Nl'!W!
._ MB 450 St •• C.'ham · .__ 9755 n U.'lk11 ~'T. 111110. AC 714 /$21-11124
...,._., lt-atlwt' t'llllM'llt• -!IM'f'llO hlPt'. lo mi. \'t'I)' i 41.:.o..... .... ... •-•• 39< W $127 ••••••••••••••••••••··~ llt•llt .-.incl. $19110 0110. .....-r ·~"""'· ... "·
•to 30880. IM.clOO ml. MIAT 11114·7'HI.\ Jtl/5'J.JI 10
whit«> w/bumboo int. 511.JCTIOMI ·71 t'orollu 2tlr. nuhal 1'73 Supt•r. lk•cllt'. ~l'W
11111 undt'r wurr:snly llNAUlT tl~'t .tlrt'1i. l(d 1•ond $11110 paint Ir 11tul t't.lvcr11, u•k·
m.1519. Sl'Cillr11111rid wui:ilf\ll with 1146-1118: 1'42-*2 1na: S21C~U36·4743
/t.0011.Mlu l~t
( ,,..1,1 Mt-.1 <,.t() 111()()
COHHEU
r HfVJl(Jlff
)4b I t Ji.
•••••••••••••••••• • Oldl Cutl111. Lo Mi. Xllt c.d. P'\IU Pwr A :.i-a1n fJITS. UO-Gltl,
imMOlllfJCarlo, ow. 71 C.... ......_ -.W. PB~·PI. AV. 1il50 firm
'IO Eldorado llarr\tz 4f5..cml , Lve muaa e W.T1t0
M=70M,1'1.St•. ceptionalb !.'!:: -410BOID ... .. IOOd toed -· • ..... 1 ·a Milz ~I •. r11rt• dub '71 20051 Call Pnl 714 /133·2212 eom:f:'L °' Im· ,,.. au1il'. rl'lllll\'. lo".
Rllny nptioo:c tu 1"ht11111t• T t 111711 ·1111tu,1 l'l'bll w1rt•1•t•ipt11 (mm an• 11\'lltluhh• now 0l 11, a. ' wai:'.'"· nt'W paint ' Int. flaw:
et11ck. all eqyipment. i7 Nova Haub.bk. Au.to, 10 Cutlau Calal1 . II 000 miles. like new PIS, A/C, xlnt c:ond, lo loaded, white w /blue r00.1se11.,sse-5JZ7 _ ~ mi. Lotr.644"541 vejour int '°°°. ~Itch
'70 Ma1tbu ·2 dr. runs J. W ·9381. aft. 5 le
$ ,ttereol32'7S 8:311AM .. PM ports Dil'f't't ~AM' and .0 11W>. mini t'tincl, Sl7.5CIO.
2 &46·5931 i4 Ja1 XJ6. 52K miles. mos. senali.le "it)'mltl. t7lfl~I ·
'80 1118X. foJd. alnt ~~ own.r. Service ff· D i a I Z I 3 . o r ._ 9741 CIGDd. alr. tape dttk. s ailltt new. S7.000. 714/MERCEDES as 213 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~lK mi. SS400. s.o.1'11 or7!4L@7·2333
. .tW)4S2-~ lHo"m'!~.J'Wh lte 74450SlC
llult Sell Immediately w/buckskln leather In· Si Iv u 6 f u e I b I u t•
• 1l71Z Xlnt cond. reblt ~. f\ill pwr. stereo CUstom lo;adM, Covt'r · enc. imp. 645-30l2 aft 6 cassette. lo mi. Mint $l~.7so
cond. ~days 644·~ M . 9725 &fS.21J"·950 Pvt Pty ---~aul W ....................... --='-===----Get Ready 1975 Orig owner. Beaut ~ se~ing! _'67 Con·
ForSprlng! car with tender loving veruble Classic St5.000 lf70 RAT care. . 846-8098 • or ?f7.}-0l42or67J.7081
tlO Sl'tDB J---9732 '75 3t00. whale in ' o~t. COMVBT•E ....................... (act. au x lank. air.
ClNLY35,000mUeson re· ·74i,; J e nsen He aley stenio. rass .. ps. pb. 4
built en&ine, AM·FM Roadster. Ne w lotus spl~.6751528 · atereo, 4 apeed trans.. nr. 2.5 mpg .. AU rebll. ·ss~L. cream
DI'# brake• Ir two new . 87,..7676. .S14.000 =it!ri~f~~. PJu'lT ..._..... f7l4 _<ill_IJ20.S886
AlTIMTIOM ..
OwMllS TONN EAU t'OV 1o:1t
Fits MG"s. '71 ·111
Nt'Ytt Wl('(f, S7$
Milria631·7797 lvt• m11.:
'llJ MGB Convert. Nt•w l"r
End Ir Brh, Cluh'h.
Runs Good. $2 100
586-256()
at: W••h. 5 l4ptl, i\M /l'M . k fl250 661·~ OIN44ll CO•S.T t'Mll, Sl9!15. 645 :112.~ ~04• • THI WMST good, neecb light body ftnd. 131-18126
... ~/.... 'IO Ct>lft·a· Many xtr;f:f Y.e.. 9772 ;A~ -ml. ~I. IW(). IG77 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ot I~ low work .am HH milta«t C11dlllau In Dedft ~ ttJS _ ........ _ ...... ~ ..
252A"ITarlior 111,.,1. 541;.ZA~ l'N'<rR~~~:~~~~.
5611123 1~7770 ...... 9770
Southern Calironua ! .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 79 Plymouth, bea,ut. hke 'Ill DART. Auto. CHS/ new. PS, PB, air, new · NAl•S spkra. N~w ballefy. tires. 49K ml. S2950. .... _.. 9756 •••••••••••••••••••••
-,-. ..,_.~ VW lt•ft ' ri,:ht ••••••••• • •• •• • • • • • • • • • dnor. ·73 lt•ft 1t11or ~I
#1 M•LfR IN US A t•1111t. Wt'llll'm i1tyl1• whl
KA · • · rimti for Supt•r lk•t•llt•
CARVERR:Jt(.'E. eol'u. 5411.9744
70Ywc ... Good t-ood. ffrw t iro·~. "::':~~,:'.,:~w rud10. $3$00 b'7S 57!'!3
O OSIO SOHOAYS '70 KUS. nt'w pa1nl. 1ww
M11'11tli11 tir~. nt•w sun 9 7 60 roof. W0-8719
••••••••••••••••••••••• ·77 RU S. t1on\ 1nlo Tiie I 912s · t·umper. no pnptop.
. ARE HHE! =~~sound s•ooo
900 series 3 dour:;. 4
SALIS. SllYICE
ANDLlistN6. OVt'.RSF.AS-i>ELlVf.HV
t:Xl't-:RTS
CADILLAC starter S400 . pbon ~5'5~1~·2811_1 -----
2600 Harbor Blvd 661·2371 HH
COSTA MESA ll~ge Charger. 8000 •••••••••••••:••••••••• 540· f ILft ma. Qtate sale. Must Ii· 73 Pontiac Grand Pnx. • • · · Y.J/ '°'-ql.idate. Call 541·9128 or decet car. reasonable '77 CdV. loaded. loral. tan 54e-0195 cir. S.4m
in ' out. leall!er. full R--1.---99 .. 0 n. II rWrd tt70 warr lhru July 82. 46K. "'"' ,.
S58l> 67S· IS28 ••••• •• •• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••• • • • • • • •• • • • •
l~UllE
YOLYO 1966 llarbor Blvd COST A M t:SA
6.._UOl 540.9461 '77 El Dorado. xlnt 1·onct. SAU SAU SALi Lo ~J~~ 2St,_~9'72 T·
'75. Y,OLYO l64E . low m1lea1te. Bird. f\111 rwer. Xlnt
640.5122 cond. Ca l ·sank or Load('(1-$399S fi7S·4016 .JJ -We have over 30 1979 and ·71 uiu~ De Ville. Low 1...,. f'ai·rmonts. Cit•· Anrica Tl'\llt De~t '76 Vnh•o 24401.. ulr. ·1 rl S21CJ\ ....., , ... ••1 .. d 3. rru es. ow P ce ~ uons. Montt' Carlos and -w .. a · radw. lapt'. lo m1lt'al(e. Like llt'W 645 5146 mll$t ~t'll. Rt>:1t urrer · - -LTOS These isre Fleet y... 9974
SELL! Call Rob at ~··~~··••••••••••••··~· 4505a 1979 7a<m after 5 p.m. & '68 R~RED $3350. •LOADED• weekeGds County s s harpes t Qr~/ev760"8321
i1 MG Midttel. SllAltl'.
Car Cover. So(t Top.
TooMau Cover. Mu~l
sdl S1SOO 080 S45.m74.
546-~, doonl ' Turbos a\•11ih1· ·111 V W Vun run~ •d '7 44 ble NOW! Comt• in & · bKly. totak-ct 'sooo (11.'h;
drive .Rt!ad ~ Tra1·k e9·57JO ·
~7 11964. C:--0 9917 Return Cars and being ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• olrered to the public for ·14 Veea. new black ... ~ , ... _~ '81 Camaro Z28. 4 speed. betwttn S800 and Sl200 paint. \'al,·e job. See to --,.,_ Met browo. P W. Tilt below wholeolt' Blue belif\·e . 646·8189 · lBSE962. Resale Sales. "19 Slrada 5 spd, am /fm 4'.1 W. Bay. Costa Men JOO CD '78 *"°· A/C, excel cood. ~2963 Supercood. 43.000ml -a..182 . 645·$168 .,.,_, 'l!O RX7 GS. 24,000 miles, - -
'731lBS£L. Ma&azine s d1u1t·c or lht• Xlnt Cond. Mon·fo'ri. BEST s ports 11t'dan of
I the '80s!
' 78 FI at : 128 3 P stereo/cassette. air Metcedes Bent 79 3000. Hatchback .. good cond, cond., moon roof. dnl Silver, sunrf. dnl cond. •••••••••••••••••••••••
new tires, am /(m cond.Extendedwarran· $1 7,900 P P Dys, 75o..tltOOW91
cusette, low miles. ty. (lACMt68) 497-6333 851-8288 evs/wkndi> Greaf~ai>eSZ.000
'74': IEACH IMPORTS 811 DoveStreel. N.R.
75~0900 19111 Harbor Blvd .. l'.M.
'2500.175-9961. or~2l620. ~ 63 Hi811 ill-7170
1 ..
............. ••••••••••• Wheel. Air. AM FM Book All exrelltnl -
. ., l.>sl Rabbit I ownt>r Md. 991 O Stereo Cass. 4000 miles malntalntd and ra.rr~· ThPSe hllle ads reall~
SOm1>11. Xlnt 1·ond S.'IS(lO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mint SIO.OOO. Days Warranty. Further info w 0 r k ! J 0 i n 1 h e
¥U .. rall642·53(M .. 70 .. C.V.T .... 3SO fl:'S;~lO_.t:\·es~·Q9~. -r ail . J oe CHron. thousands of other Pt'O-Read ... _ .,., D 0 "? 1 n 1 5 · C 0 0 k · 11le in this area who are u"' class1fled ads Rt•stored. WTCMR O. "77"Sl1rk.S2950 M c f ar land Co regula r use r s or ..J.11.e best dtals in Resale Sales. H J W. 290ZAI Resale Sales. Jll'e 11oport ·Anahe1m I Classifi ed Call our .id ~~men t renta l s~ ~~Costa Mesu . :_~Bay.Costa Mesa 8J2.s:n.a.SSS·59S8 taker_!l6.aZ_:S678
I I
MATCH Tf'IE t!IUMIERS OM THE
• .A TlAS CHIYS&.aft.YMOUTH
2121 ~or Blvd .. Costa Meee. T"el. 546-1934. 3 blockal 'lf>uttl bf San Diego Freew1ty off Hert>or Blvd. Complete
1~ ahop. S.lea. Service. Perts. S.Vice Dept. OP9n
Mond9y thru Frklay 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. end 8 A.M. to
5 P.M. on Saturday.
· llACH NOln'S
.. Do'M StlMt. Nftlport a.en. Tel. 752--0800. Call us,
... ,. "'-~ialiata for Alfa Romeo, Peugeot, Saab &
~····
T~l IOllMS FOltD
. Modefn ..._ eervlc., par1a, body, paint & tire cfepta.
Oofnpetttlve ratae on '-& dally ,..,,...., 2080 Hllft>Of'
..... CoMa Meea. 642-0010 « S«>C11.
-
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES'
~DATSUN
888 Dove Street. Newport Beech. Tel. 833-1300. Al the
triangle of JamborM, MacArthur & Brlatol behind Vic·
toria Station. s.Jea, S.r'viee.L ... lng & Parta. Fi.et dla-oounta to the p<tbllc.
• . NAIHSC~C-. ~
2600 Harbor Blvd., Co•ta Mae.. Tel. 540-9100. Orange
County's Largest Cadillac dMler. s.i.. S.Vic:,. L._.
ing._ .
• DAVID J . PHIL&WS IUIC&fOMnAC-MADA
Laguna Hiiis
Sa .... Service • L..alng
~4881 Alicia Pnwmy .
837·2400
•
• IOI LOM6Pll POMTIAC
13800 Beach Blvd., w .. tmlnnw. Tel. 882-«151 . Orange
County·a .okteat and largest Pontiac dealerahlp. Salea,'
Service, Pans.
• SAIL CHIYIOLIT
900 South COMt Highway
Ulguna Beech "arr(• ........... ,.., ..
SALES HOURS: Mon.-Frl. IH, Sat. •5. Sun. HM
414-1131 54l-tM7
COST A MISA DATSUN
2946 Halt>or Blvd., Coeta Mesa. Tel. 540-6410. Serving
Or.nge Counfy fOf' 16 yeers. 1 Mlle So. 405. 1
• SUMSIT POU, IMC.
(Homa of 'Willie the Whale~ 5440 Garden Grove Blvd., w.tmlnster. Tel. 536-4010.
• • SANT A AMA DATSUN
2001 E~ 17th Str .. t, S.l\ta An& Tel. 568-7811. Your•
Original Oedl~ted Dataun Oea!er·
• MllACU MAIDA
W."'9 '"°'*91. Our new loailion II 14215. a.., 8trNt.
eoeta ....._Tel. 54W334. ~-~a vtalt our tlntnd new ahowrooll\ and .. wtty ... ,. the 11 Mazda ....., In
loulhern Gellfamia. a... 8eMoa. P.-and LMling.
• ~
AtW•ltMAIDA '"OllrO.C. .......... .. ,,.. ........... c..-
801 S. Anaheim Blvd.. AMflelm ... 1.,. JU9t north of e.ntl AM 'rwv. on ///lllhelm IMI. c.t ua ftntl '
'WIMtHMOTO .... IUT'WOlln'HtTI''
MM UA~. IMC.
730 w.'ffth St.. Coe• M~ 842-1944
Vou'reln for ••urprlaeat DOM l..Mli~
• IOYCMrillOl&.I~
.1MO MM191• ....... Ne a•• llmlh ........ .....,
llMoe. ~-Md~
·'
IJli , t 4 , '\ f ,. , • , •, ~ ! I
-~. -· --··---, ... J ..._ ...... ---. -. . ---·
.............
GOLDEN OLDIE Elizabeth Ta\'lor --iind her form er
husband Richard Burton 1le ft 1 celebrate her 50th birthda~·
in London with ze,· Bufman. producer of .. The• Little
Foxes:· which s he "ll s tar in for a British tour
Liz, Burton deny
'third time' rumor
LONDON (AP ) -"Elizabeth
and I will never re.ma.rt~."
Ri chard Burton said today ,
squelching a roar of romantic
rumors reverberating since his
weekend reunion with Elizabeth
Taylor. their first meeting in
rive years . •
Burton and Taylor spent much
-0f the weekend together, holding
hands, dancing and talking, but
only a few hours of it were in
pri vate. And t hree of he r
children were reported on hand
then.
Provost aids
c~se,captur~
of suspect
W ASHJNGTON (A P ) -Purse
~matchings rarely attract much
attefltimt these days. btit when
Kathy Tollerton's purse was
grabbed, fi ve motorists, one
r>icyclist and a cnurch provost.
took after t h e suspect and
caught him.
Mrs. Tollerton said s he and•
her husband were walking home
from church services al the
W as hin gton Cathedral in
fa s hio n ab l e n ort h west
Washington when someone ran
past her a nd g r abbed her
shoulder bag Sunday. .
"I was yelling, 'He's got my
purse,' and my husband ran
a fter him," s he ·said in a
telephone interview.
The commotion attracted the
attention of bicyclist Lewis
Regenstein , several other
citizens and the Rev. Charles A.
P e rry, provost of the
Washington Cathedral, who was
stuck in traffic nearby.
R egen s tein s hifted his
10-speed bicycle into high gear
and took off after t he purse
<See CHASE, Page AZ>
The reunion was a booanu ror
most of the British press, which
speculated on the possibility that
they would marry for the third
time.
"We haven't discussed It
(marriage). It's not going to
happen," Burton was quoted as
saying today in an interview
with the Press Associatiop.
Britain's domestic news agency.
"We love each other with a
passion so furiow. that we bum
one another out," Burton was
qu o t ed as say ing in the
inte r view at his s uite in
L~ndon's fa shionable Dorchester
Hotel.
·'I've got two certificates
which prove that l was married
to Elizabeth at one time or
another -and we don't need
another one." he was quoted as
saying.
Earlier, William Hickey, the
gossip columnist of the Daily
~xpr~ss, suggested there might
be a conn ection with Miss
Taylor's coming British stage
debut in "The Little Foxes ...
"When I asked Burton if his
well-limed meeting with Liz ...
was love rekindled or merely the
most outrageous plug London
had seen in years, he could only
reply wearily, 'God knows,' "
wrote Hickey.
"I still love Elizabeth," the
56-year-old Burton told reporters
Saturday night.
And the 50-year·old actress
sajd "we've always loved each
other" as they drove off together
to a party Sunday ni(lht.
When they left the party, and
reporters asked whether they
were thin.king of remarrying. he
snapped, "We are," but she
shouted, "He's married. and I'm
married." His aide J o Lustig
said angrily afterward that
Burton meant both were already
married. •
M iss Taylor recently
announced that s he and her
<See LIZ, Page AZ)
-_,.Crashes in county-.
claim three lives
Three \)eople are dead and two
remain in critical condition
today following separate traffic
accident.a over the weekend in
Orange County.
Laguna Hills resident Jeffrey
Tripi, 19, was killed Saturday
e~eninl aft.er the car he was
rldln1 ln swerved off Irvine
Center Drive in Irvine near the
La1una freeway and slammed
into a uUlitr pole.
Irvine omeen uld the car -
driven by an unidentified La
Habra 17-,...-old ,outb -bit
the pole IO bard tlaal the top ol U.. car .., ripped off, IHW.1
-aalo ia two thunb.
t ••
The driver suffered minor
injuries and was arrested on
suspicion of felony 'drunken
drivl.n1. eolJce said.
It was the second fatal
accident on the road i tre\eb tn
the put six months.
An Irvine traffic specialist,
thou1h, reported that Irvine
Center Drive hu not bad an
uDuaually lll1h number or
accidents and that the two fatal
• cra1bel wen not llmUar. •
"Up until tldl time, tlMn bu
not been a putlcularl1 bad accldeat ldltorJ in tllat .,.., ..
1aid o-11 Wllberl. e1t1.tnme
( ... QA ......... AI) ,
I l•<ANliE l OUN I y ( A L I f <>H N IA 25 CEN TS
'Coupty. buy Qf ·Ziggurat posed
Nestande pushes Niguel building for lo_cal agencie~, courthouse, jail 'I
~ ~ruce Nestande, chairman ot
the Orange County Board o(
Supervisors, pr'oposed today thal
th e county acquire the
mllllon-square-roo t C h e t
Holifield Federal Buildinc lo
Laguna Niguel from the reder-1
government.
Nestande said the building,
which ls now largely vacant,
could be used to house a variety
of county agencies.
An aide to the supervisor said
a courthouse. and possibly a jltl
would be among possible uses.
BeatleS album on the way?
The county already has a
regional civic center in Laguna
Niguel, but it is currently filled
to capacity. the aide sajd.
Nestande's proposal for a study
on potentia~qulsi~ion of the
so-called zrnurat building is
scheduled to be considered by
the board or supervisors at a
meeting Tuesday morning.
Old, unreleased recordings may be combined
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
ne w Beatles album? It's a-
possibillty, thanks to the dolens
of unreleased "Fab Four"
recordings languishing in record
com.pany vaults.
The Los Angeles Herald
Examiner reported that later
lhis year EMJ Records may
r e lease an a lbum of tunes
recorded by the Beatles ~ore
the group's members -Paul
McCartney, George Harrison,
Ringo Starr and the late John
Lennon -went their separate ·
ways in 1970. The album would
include the Mitch Murray song
"How Do You Do It" apd
Johnny Preston's "Leave My
Kitten Alone."
E Ml a lso has a five-song
Beatles audition tape and other
"demo" songs as well as tapes
of familiar songs that differ
significantly from the final
album versions. However.
because of legal obs tacles,
chances are that these and other
unreleased recordings will not
be officially made available. in
the near future, although s~me
have ·surfaced recently on
bootleg tapes.
The newspaper saJd· a number
of songs appearing on a tape
played during the "Beatlefest"
in Los Angeles may have been
i llegally re moved from the
vaults of EMI.
The hidden recordings vary in
qu ality from excell ent t o
unfinished, but even the poorest
of authentic Beatles tapes would
be extremely valuable to Beatie
memorabilia collectors ..
There are, for examp1e, hours
and hours of studio. tapes
containing everything from
outtakes and song scr.aps to jam
sessions and rehearsals .
"The recording studio. was
their la!:>oratory -they left the
tape machines running all the
time." former Beatles press
agent Tony Barrow once said.
There is a lso an unreleased
Beatles film documentary.
originalJy compiled and edited
between 1968 and 1971 for Apple
Films, a division of the group's
company, Apple Corp.
T he unreleased material also
includes 34 songs recorded by
MIDGET MIXER Miqget Orean Ra,cing Club racers in
Newport Harbor Yacht Club·s Corkett Trophy serif.'s
scrambled.for position at start of Saturda~"s distal'M'e rare.
t~e Beatles fo r the British
Broadcasting Corp. between
1962 and 1965. Twleve of the
lilies never appeared on albums.
including reportedly -songs DY Chuck Be rry and Little
Richard, as well a s others
gathered by BBC researchers
working on an upcoming special
commemor ating the 20th
anniversay of the Beatles' first
appearance on British radio.
A dozen years after the
Beatles· breakup, Beatlemania
persists -at least to a degrees
The newspaper reported that the
group's original albums still sell
a miilion copies a year in Great
Britain alone, with various
Beatles repackages al::;o selling
in the millions.
The idea of a Beatles museum
to preserve the mountains of
memorabilia bartered at such
gatherings as the Beatlefest is
gathering s t ea m . and th e
newspaper said Paul McCartney
recently made a number of
purchases at Sotheby·s in
Lo ndon with such a museum
possibly in mind.
Nestande said consultants will
be a s ke d t o a n a l yze the
feas ibility of acquiring ttie
building via a joint venture
involvi ng private enterprise .
An aide to the supervisor sa,jd
r ecent tax law changes give
grea ter fl ex ibi l ity for
public/private acquisition and
use of buildings.
The fede ral governme11t
acquired the Ziggurat in Maren,
1972 from North Ame·rican
Rockwell Corp. which built the
s ix ·story structure in 1971.
Rockwell (.lever occupied the
building because of the slump in
the aerospace industry in the
earlv 1970s
. Tht> federal government has
becn'uri a ble to m'ake the
building attractive to its various
agencies, primarily because or
the high cost of housing in
s urrounding communities.
The building currently houses
a branc h of the Nation a l
Archives, the Internal Revenue
Service. the U .S Geologic
Sl!.rvey and recently provided
temporary s pace to worker:;
conducting the 1980 U.S . Census,
o.lty ...... .._ .. , .._ ~,
Series winnt>r was Allan Rosl•nbeq(s lntenM· from :\lam110~
Ba~· Yar ht Club. < Stor~· on Sports. P;,ige C:l 1
Police seize
31 protesters
at Livermore
Stewardess: 'I'm not ready'
LIVERMORE <A P ) -Atleast
31 demonstrators. including one
found inside a classified area,
were arrested today during a
,protest of nuclear weapons
development at the University ot
C al itpr nia 's Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratoey.
Tt was the second· mass
demonstration at the faclllty th1a
year . On Feb . l, 171
demonstrators were arrested.
All but one or those arrested
were booked tor lDvesU1aUoa ol
blocking a roadway. One
unidentllled person was chatted
with trespauin1 arter be
climbed a fence and dropped
tnto the laboratory comPoUnd.
The laboratory ta owned by.
the University ol California aDd
performs nuclear weapons
reeearch for the Department ol
Defense and the Department bl
Enersy, It bas been a
Ion 1 ·standin1 1ym bol of
uti-war protest and the ~
ol much CICllllroversy amOll,I tM UC Board or Re1ent1. 0n:
Edmund G . Brqwa ,r., a
member ol the ....-u. bu ... bton:;;;; ao tbe •Hl'llll'• (.. • ..... Al)
~
Survivor of crash killing. 78 describes last moments
WA SHINGTON (AP)...-The
s urviving stewardess from the
Air F lorida flight that crashed
into the Potomac River tesWled
today that the plane began
s huddering as it took off and
that l.n the secon~ before hltUng
the water was wracked by
violent sensations.
-· Once the Boeing 737~ hit the
water, Kelly Duncan told a
bearing, "My next feelinl waa
that I waa noattn.1. . . . I relt I
waa dying and I Just thoulbt, ·
'I'm not ready to die'."
Seventy-elabt people died in
the Jan, 13 ~ruh.
Even before tile plane left the
NatlonaJ· Airport runway, she
felt aomethinl Wal Wl'OQI, lb.
Duncan told the National
Tranaportatlon Safety Board
beartna.
. "The takeoff wan't u loud u
it usually ta. It ... med like u
unuaually ao., Ume befon we
pulled olf the .,. • ., . ·~
Federal i••Mtlta&ra baH
Hld. tbey beU.•• lee la tM euta• ma1 llaft c .... •
tadlcat.or to "" tM pllal 1 t.aie ........... ..... .... .,
tlu'ual lie ......... d .... ..
takeaft roll. T•• alrcrtft , wttlt Tl . \
I
passengers, began losing
altitude almost immediately
a fter takeoff, struck a busy
commuter bridge and plunged
Into the Potomac. Seventy-four
people on the plane and four on
the bridge were killed.
As soon as the aircrfaft was in
t,he air, Ms. Duncan said, it
.. started lo sbudder and it got
increasingly more violent.''·.
The s tewardess, who was
s ittin1 n ear the re8'r of the
plane, s aid s he d ld l'l ot
remember the impad.
The Air Florida f light
attendant, one of only rive
people on board to survive, was
the second witness lo appear at
lhe opening day of hearings .
before an NTSB board or lnqulry.
Asked wbe\ber she now plans
to continue ~rtlne as a flilht
attendant, Ma. Duncan told her •
que1t1Gner, "Yes, sir, I will."
She laid ahe had had to swim
lo tbe IW'f llOe and then foueht tbfOUlh p6eee1 ol ice back to the
tall Mltioa, where abe awded a
NHDa belleopter.
DHerll»la1 her nearly IO mlaua. la tbt lcy water, lb.
Duaean ....... bad opened a
life ~ llDr llDGlber IUrvlWW
" '
with her teeth because her
hands were too cold.
Mu c h or the questioning
focused on whether the plane,
which waited for more than 40
minutes in a steady snowstbrm
before getting takeoff clearance.
had been properly de·lced.
lSee Pf>TOM.AC, P.a1eA2)
llllCI l:UIT 1111111
Mos tly cloudy tonlgbl
through Tuesday. Chance
of rain 80. percent toni1ht. · Highs ~ to 62.
111111 TlllY
··Divorce War•: A Looe
St ory ." copturea human
momenta ond tr11ing
situoUoiu on .TV '°"'""'· Sn Pa~ 85.
11111 ' ..........
~ ce.--. a..... ~
Ci • ......... ........
·-t7 '"'" .. ,.
I
MOSCOW (AP> -A Sovttt
apact probe IDaM a IClft landlaa
on th• planet Veoua today al
waa ....Un1 ~k pMtocraplll
aod loformatlon from ••H
.... PIH. tb• offlelal DI ..
•1•ney T ... reportef:-
' Tbe....,. and ... UnltM
Stat• ~ 'previouely landed
unma..-.. pace •robea u
Venua, tW eareat planet to
Earth, " ... said ' HCODd
FromPageA1
CHASE • • •
snatcher wbUe the Rev. Perry
picked up Mrs. Tollerton and her
husband in his brown MercedM •• and followed in pursuit.
Four other drivers joined bt
the chase, honking· their horns·
and fiaa)ling their lights to draw
attention to the thief. Mrs .
Tollerton said.
As the group began to close In, f the man jettisoned the stolen
! • purse, but the caravan of cars i ' and the bicyclist maintained
· purs\tit and cornered the man.
I i i
t
I
One· motorist managed to flag a
policeman a nd the man was
taken into custody, Mrs.
Tollerton said.
"He wasn't in very good
shape, he kept getting winded,''
said Regenstein. "His second
problem was that be stayed
(running) on the sidewalk the
whole time we were chasing
him," instead of ducking ·into
aUeys or wooded areas.
' ' -·
pnbe Ud already· ••t back' ~ Ud •cooped up 1 1811 aemp&e. •
Tbe de1cent vehicle tr ... mJtted lalorrnaUoa Crom
tM IUl'fllce ot the planet for 1J'I
mlnute1 today, accorcUa1 lo Taaa.
Veau1 1J wuJaunched Oct. IO.
Taa1 NW V•ua 14, lausaebed
Nov. ~ ..tU reach tbt plaet
Friday. Both craft were
1
lnto ilve separate l1ndtn1 •INI#'
launched from a 11telllte In
earth orblt, Tua tald.
The Soviet Union started Ill
Venus research procram ln 1961.
A year later. the U.S. apace
probe Mariner 2 passed by the
planet.
fn 1W7, a U.S. probe uuc1er the
Mariner pro1ram and a Sovitl
probe reached the planet wtthln
a few hours of eaeh other.
''The community is very
concerned about crime and we
have a crime watch in the
cathedral community," said the
Rev. Perry. "I think the purse
s natchet was scar e d . He
probably didn't expect all of this
to happen."
There were no injuries in the
snatching or s ubSequenl chase,
Mrs. Tollerton said.
DEATH SCENE Irvine Police Officer Jim
Potts surveys car torn apart Saturday aft er
ripping into utility pole on Irvine Genter
Dallr "91 ...... -., O.ry • ....._
Ori ve. Passenger J effr e~· Tripi .. rn .. 01
Laguna Hills died. Driver had been dnnkmg.
police said.
District of Columbia police
said the suspect, charged with
robbery in Sunday's incident,
also is being held as a fugitive
from justi~ in Brunswick, N.J.
From Page Ai
PROTEST·. • •
, involvement with the facility.
Protesters gathered today in
the rain a half mile from the
facility and paaded with arms
linked chanting refrains such as
1
'."We Shall ,Overcome" aod
"Power To The People." i When they arrived al the south.
' and southwest entrances, the
.I . demonstrators sat down io rows
blocking the entrance of
employees arriving for work.
UC police methodically placed
each demonstrator under arrest.
There was no resistance.
Among the first arrested was
the Rev. c.cctl Williams, pastor
of the Glide Memorial Church in
Sao Francisco, who said , "I
very stroagly feel ·opposed to
nuclear weapons development.
William s, noted for
a nti-poverty work, said '"I'he
nuclear arms race is tied to
urban poverty and money that Is
spent on weaponry could be used
instead lo help those in poverty
in the inner-city."
From Page Ai
POTOMAC • • Investigators have; concluded
that the plee's de;icing was
completed at ~~10 p.m. EST. The
flight began its takeoff roll just
before 4 p.m:;--
Testimony to be presented
latet ,t the hearings is expected
to show that an American
Airlines ground crew de-iced
l'\alr the plane more than an hour
before takeoff and the other half
almos t 50 m inutes before
takeoff.
The NTSB's chief investigator,
Rudolf Kapustin, the leadoff
witness, said there has been no
evidence found to iorucale any
structural or mechanical
failures of the plane's two
engines.
From Page Ai
IJZ .••
sixth husband, U.S. Sen. John
Warner, were 1eparated. Burtoq
and his third wife, 33-year-old
Susan Hunt, split last August.
The Sun said Burton told its
' reporter·: .. Of course, I love
Ellzabeth -and I love Susan. I
love them .bOth. damn it ...
And wball'd'have them do is for
them to come fDto this room and
fight it out Wtween them."
From PageA1
CHAS.HES KILL THREE. • •
specialist. "We 've bad accidents
out there, but not an excessive amount." ·
Meanwhile, two men riding a
motorcycle were killed Sunday
wht>n they struck a car on.
Newport Boulevard near Cowan·
H eig hts in Orange, th e
California Highway Patrol said.
The motorcycle riders, taken
to UC Irvine Medical Center io Orange . wh-ere they-were
prooounced dead , were
identified as 22-year-old Terry
Frost , address unknown, and
Daniel Roberta, 24, believed to
be a Marine stationed at the EJ
Toro Air Station.
The driver of the car was not
iojilred
In Fountain Valley,
16 ·year-old Gunnar Swanson
s u ff ere<l. crUi-ea l inj uriea
Saturday morning when he
toppled from b1s mo-ped under
tbe-.rear wheels of a truck.
The Fountain Valley youth
was taken to Fountain Valley
Community Hoapital where be
has underg-0ae surgery ror
internal and chest injuries.
Police. _officers s aid the
teen-ager w.as driving alongside
a two-ton truck o n· Warner
Avenue near San Bruno Street
when the truck made a right
turn. The mo-ped rider, police
-said, clipped the truck and slid
under its tires.
In Mi ss ion Viejo , an
unidentified 17 ·year-old was
seriously injured Saturday when
his motorcycle was struck by an
oncoming vehicle on Moulton
Parkway near La Paz Road.
Police said the driver of the
car, 33-year-old Cheryl Brad$ of
Mission Viejo, was not.injured.
Traffic otl'icers report tl\at her
car crossed over a center
divider and struck the
motorcyclist, who was rididg io
the oppoeit.e direction.
Addlne to the grim weekend
statistics wu the identificatiOn
of a man and woman killed in a
fiery high-a_peed collision in
Newport Beach last week. ·
Throwgb tbe use of dental re~ds1 the palT kthu last
wediiesaay on Jamboree Road
-bave been identified as James
Ray Padovan, 41, and Linda •
Mar1eret Kurzyniec, 32. Both
shared a Santa Ana Heights
address. ·
Politt-said the couple were
apparently on their wa"y home
rrom work whe n the pickup
truck they were riding in spun
out or control. careened ore a
median strip, plowed into a
power pole and erupted in
flames. ·
.3 suspects ai:rested
ID-Mesa burgl.-y ·,.
Costa ""Mesa MC>lic._ arrested
•-three Loe Angeles County men
earl1 this morning on suaplcion
of burglarizing a Costa Mesa
appliance store.
Police officers Tom Pipes and
Mike Howard were patrolling
the area along 17th Street at 4
a.m. wh~n they heard the sound
Meaning of s tory
altered h y t y po
A typographical error
changed the meAning of the lead
paragl'aph in the Sunday Special story.
lt s houla b1lve read : The
prosp~ct of using treated
w'letewet.er to k~ep parks, golf
CO\ll'Se&;' greenbelt areas and _pl~y~ lielda green has
pro.mptJd Uve area water
districts to seek eonstrucUon of
new or e~anded water
1lrelt..dMat and delivery systems.
l'he word "prompted" was ln1dY~ri~ntly printed as
"promoted:"
of breiking glass, P,Olice said.
' Officers report~ that they
saw th e trio leaving
Davis-Brown, 411 E . 17th St ..
with videotape recorders.
One of the suspects, Gregory
C. Calhoun, 18, Long Beach, was
arrested three blocks away
followipg a foot pursuit.
A broadcast of the suspecl'S
description and van 'l"esulted in
the arrest about an hour later•
by Newport • Beach police of
RQOsevelt Roy, 18, Long Beach
and Charles Dotson , 35, LOs
Angeles alon_a Pacific Coast
Highway. All three remained in
Costa Mesa Jail this morning in
lieu of $10,000 bail.
Atlanta probe.
to be closed?
"' ATLA1ITA (AP) -Wayne B.
ORAHOE COAST a .. eMM ........... 114.4142.-n
Williams fears be could Jose his
chance to be cleared of his two
murder convictions if the books
are closed on most of the
slayi.ap of YOU(ll J>lacka that
borrifted Atlanta lor nearly two
years, 1U lawyer says. Diiiy Piiat _
Thom11P. Haley
"'......, _Cllllll ._ ...... Ollie.<
Robert N. Weed ,._..
Thomas A, Murphine ....
L Kmy Schultz .......... ........... _ __._.
MchMI P. H9rvey ..........
~,8'ddard ¥·
Qw1el H. Loot .,.... .....
All otMt .......... MMJ21
Alvin Binder, the Mississippi law1er who headed Williama'
defeMe during a sensational
nla•week trial, said Sunday
that Willia~ was upset over,
reports that authoritlea now plan
to cloae the boou 011 27 sla)'inCI.
Binder aald Wllllam1 hoped the
iD•ettlptiaD WllMald continue so ... ,,.... ......... t.ed .
A Sllp•rl•l' Court Jury
delllJlrated 12 boun Frid., ad Satur .. , Wore flndin1 UM ·=~•r·••• fr•e ·l 1aee ltl raplau and aapb1af ta ltGUl ~ftilty ol mu.rder In
the deatbl Ol Nathanlel Cater,
27, and llmmy Ray r•yne,21.
Ram ple ads -
• • mnocen t 1n -
driving c a se.
Lo s Angele s Ram s
quarterback Dan Pastorini has
ple-aded innocent in H a rbor
Municipal Court to a charge or
misdemeanor drunken driving,
according to the clerk at the
Newport Beach court.
The plea was entered late last
week and a pre-trial con!ereoce
was set for M ar~h 25 in the
courthouse.
Pastorini , 32, of Newport
Beach, was arrested Feb. 14 in
Huntington Beach after failing a
roadside sobriety test. Police
alleged they saw his Porsche
going on Pacific Coast Highway
in Newport Beach at speeds as
high as 100 mph.
H e wa s r e leased from
Newport Bea'th Jail Feb. 15
after posting a $1 ~500 bail.
Susp ect h e ld
in HB the fts,
rape a tte mpt
A 26-year·old transient who
officers say posed as an electric
company employee bas been
arrested in connection with five
burglaries and an attempted
rape, all in Huntington Beach,
police said today.
The man, Tom Ross, was
arrested Thursday afternoon
after he allegedly gained entry
to a local home saying he was a
utility serviceman and
a t t e m p t e d t r a· p e l h e
22·year-old wo an who lived there, police
lnfpr••tloa if or ·a bout 11
minutt1, 1&0,ptn1 after
tempwatww alMive 500 de.,._
F1hrenbelt .were recorded at
what wu later -.rmlnecl to be
about JO mllet from the pl&Mt's
surface. The U .S. probe,
Marlalr $. pMMd aboul 1,000
mU11 rr. tile plaMt'a aurtace. The U.1. launelled two Pioneer
spec_. ill December 1'71,
one •eta 'tNDt Into orbit ol Uae probtl.
A 5 -year -old San Juan
Capistrano boy drowned Sunday
In a Pond in the rugged back
country of Cleveland National
Forest, according to an Orange
County Fire Depa rtment
spokesman.
Capt. Steve Wbiticker said
efforts by two physicians, a
p1tramedlc unit and a Marine
Corps helicopter crew failed to
save the life of Antonio Lemos.
Whiticker said the boy at
about 1:30 p.m. fell into the
pond, located in Verdugo
Canyon on the James Ranch
about. 3 miles south or, Ortega
· TaN -1d Jll current v.._.
probn will teat the 1round
turf ace ol veo .. ln u e1rort to
determine what elementa are
present on lb• laot ,
cloud·covend planet.
The mother •hip, Venua 13,
paaaed It a diltut• ot ......
22,320 riillet, T ... Hkl.
The newa a1..ac1 11ld jo6nt
Soviet.Ptincb eapertmentl were
carred out dmin• the m.in to
Venus.
Highway. He aajd two doctors
who were on an ·outing' in the
area tried to revive-the boy
before th e arrival of
paramedics. .
Whiticker said a paramedic
ambulance was unable to reach
the area, causing paramedics to
be delayed.
A Marine Corps rescue
helicopter was called from EJ
Toro Marine Corps Air Station to
fly the boy to Minion
Community Hospital in Mission
Viejo, Whiticker said.
He said the youngster was
pronounced dead on arrival at
the hospital at 3 :21 p.m.
Test drive of auio ,
.leads to ·slaying?
Police said today they believe
a Huntington Beach man was
shot to death Friday while
allowing another man to test
drive the 1979 auto he was
attempting to~ell.
Westminster ~olice officer
Earl& Graham said police were
sear ching toda y for the
prospective car buyer and the
dead man's missing auto, ,a
white BMW. license number 412
XNJ.
Graham said the car's owner.
Ro y Saburo Naka se , a
36-year-old printer, was found
Friday night in a vacant field at
Hoover and Wyoming streets in
Westminster. Nakase was shot,
once in the chest, a pparently by.
a sm all caliber handgun, he
said.
The printer was trying to sell
his auto and left on a test drive
Friday from his home with a
prospective buyer, police said.
He said officers believe N akase
was shot sometime during the
test driv~ and his body dumped
in the vacant Westminster lot.
Slain womanfouml,;
cops seek id,entity
Police are trying to identify a
young woman whose body was
round Sunday in a Costa Mesa
pa rking lot by an DH-duty police
officer on a family outing with
his two sons.
Police Lt. Jack Calnon said
the woman described as possibly
of Lalin aescenLhad been shot.
He declined to s pecify the
location of the bullet wounds.
She was believed to be in her
late 20s, about 5 feet 4 inches
and weighing about 150 pounds.
The woman's fully clothed
body was di&covered about 11
a.m . by an off-duty Jngl,ewood
officer who had laken his sons
go-cart racing in a vacaqt
parking lot at 1650 Sunflower
Ave.
Calnan said it appeared that
the woman. wearing a red dress
and high heels, had tseen killed
at the scene.
An ·autopsy will be conducted
today to determine the cause
and time or death.
Thi~~es get $106,000
in Newport Beach theft
Burglars took more than
$106,000 worth of jewelry and
other valuables this weekend
from the Dover Shores home of
marine engineering firm owner
Jose Rosan.
P.olice said the intruders
tipped over ·furniture, emptied
drawers and lelf other items·
strewn on the floor of the house.
Rosen told polk-e that when he returned hOme Sunday, he found·
all the doors to his house were
open and his front yard covered
in toilet tissue.
He said the burglars took
jewelry, a sterling silver set, a
television, video r ecorder,
camera gear and $500 in cash.
Desert shaken
RIDGE~REST <AP ) -A
moderate earthqual<e with a-
preliminary measurement of 4. 1
rumbled under the desert floor
11 miles north-northwest of
Ridgecrest on Sunday night, b1Jt
caused liWe ground motion and
no damage, officials said.
classic windbrQ.a.kcz.r. ..
tha. original G-9 .
wind~Ktz.r, idio1 fbr
~lf or outdoorwusr.
mad2. qf' l~~t
cotton· poplin with a
tartan lininrJ. ·
evailob l<i in na~'\.,
britishtan, navy
or Nd.
mode fbr us in qngllltd.
. .. .
'·
.. " ..........
"HUSBAND'' WEDS -Ben Gazura an<l. his bride.
German model Elke Kriwert. are joined b~· actors John
Cassavetes. left . and Peter Falk, aft er their wedding in
New Yo rk. The three actors starred in the film
"Husbands" .together. The couple were to hone~·moon in
Brazil after their Frida~· cercmon~·.
Brady retaina aharp memory .
Presidential press
secretary James Brady, 41,
who suffered brain damage
after being shot during an
attempt on Preside nt
Reagan's life. retains his
near-photographic memory,
his wife says.
In an i nte rview with
People m agazine , Sarah
Brady said her husband did,
A Syracuse newsp aper
began a drive to keep New
York Mayor Edward Koch
out of the race for governor,
saying his interview with
Playboy magazine proves
"the biggest rubes live in
Manhattan."
The combative Koch is
quoted in the magazine as
ca lling s uburban l i fe
"s terile" and rural life · .. a
joke." The remarks stung
New Yorkers outside the
city, whose support Koch is
Less than an hour after the
~uilty verdict in the ·wayne
Wiiiiams murde r trial,
commemor ative T -s hirts
were being sold at $4 .25 each
in the cQurthouse press room
in Attanta.
The polyester-cotton blend
shirt. available in a range of
sizes, bore the message in
white letters: "This T-shirt
Coastal
Mostly ctoucly lonlghl 111rou911
Tueldey. C"-"to of r•l'I 10 Plr<llll
tonlgllt. COOier O•y\.
Coestel lligh S6 TUMday. owrnoglll
low S2 ~-. lnl•llO lli!ltl •2 Tunday. o~IOlll
1-ss. Elsewflero, lloht v•rleble wlnO•
toec:omlng ..-tly •ovtll to 'iOUthwHI a
to II lt-s tonlgllt Wind ., • ...,, from
1 to 2 Ifft W.1torly •-ts 1 lo J 1111.
Cto110y wltll • <ll•nce lor r•ln
northorn w-· Sl)rM0'"9 sou111W•rO
tonight.
Belllmo,.
Blrml119hm
Blsm•rck
Bolw
Botton Brownswil•
Buffelo
Cl\erlsln s<:
Cl\erlslnWV
ClleyonM
GNu9o Cine Inn.Ml
Cl1ve11nc1
Columbus
O•l·FIWlh
Denver
01\MolroH
O.troot
Duluth
EIPHO Felrt>anks
Herlforo Het ....
Honolulu
Houslof\
tnctnaptls
-----------Jacllstwt11 lunee u 1 V.S. summary ~::~~
~lltle Rock
Gele wamlnQs -• post.a toOey Loulswllle
· al0ft9 tM cont • wind, rein •no Momc>llb
,_ pelt.cl the Pklfk Hont.wnt Ml•ml
ano snow loll In Ille nortllern Mllwoulte.
Rockies. • Mpls-Sl.P
Scatter.o .,_ CIOIMO ,,,. ._, Hesllvllle
Mlutulppl Velley •llO 1111 u-r Hew Orlffns
GrHI Lakn. A.it1 -· o ... r -Hew Yorll Clfltral -»Utlllm Atlanlk U•teo Horto11t mo.,.o 1111o111e A11an1k. Oltl• City
Eerly momlnQ skies wen lelr ower Omolla
mucll of tlll rest o4 Ille n.Mlon Orl•nclo
Tiie lot'KMI cellacl 1or 119111 snow Phll•~
sce ttoroO lrom llM Greet L•ltu P'-nia across _,...,.,. H-Engle..o wltll PltlfbU'Ofl
rain mlxeo wltll •now wld•ly Pll•nct.Mo
scatterao o.,.r the_, Olllo Velley. Pllend, Ore
Felr SJ<IH-. eapecteo o-mucll AeplO City
of tM rHt of -nation. A-Tomper•turu erouno tho nellol\. ~~,":"..~ early !Oday rlfl99d from IS bel-In ... .....e HouHOn, Millne to 70 In Kev west, Seattle Fla SI Louis . StP·T-
St Slo Marie
Sooll•ne·
for a time, have trouble
recalling recent events
following the s hooting, which
occurred nearly a year ago.
Every day, a White House
van takes Brady to George
Was hington University
Hospital for 41fl hours of
physical. occupational and
s peech therapy.
seeking in hi s newly
announced · gubernator ial
campaign.
Th e Syracu s e
Herald-American blas ted
Koch in an editorial a nd
printed its coupons bearing a
picture of the mayor and the
words, "I don't think Ed
Koch would make a good
governor.'' Readers were
asked to sign the coupons
and mail them to "Stop
Koch," ca r e of the
Herald-American.
ma de of fi bers from the·
Wayne Williams trial, Fulton
Co. Courthoose, Atlanla ,
198 1-82."
D eput y S h eriff T .H.
Connally, who organized the
entel'flrise, said 260 shirts
had been pre.ordered. There
was a waiting lis t acrd
another printing was being
conte mplated, he said.
41 10
41 '5
21 0
58 41 ,. 10 .... JI i.
4J Q .09 s. :12
41 :n
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tO :n
SI 31
JJ 10 33 ll •• "° s ...
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62 41
SJ 21
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S7 ~
71 SI
58 JI/
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JS JI " " ... JO
so " 41 21 u l4
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S2 JS n s.
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11
f\1u on
Tulu
Weslllngln
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CA&.IFOllHIA
B•lte,.flolO
Bly Ille
Eurek•
FrHno
L•M•Stft'
LosAngelft
Marv•vllle Montuey
Hoeclles
Oekl•riO
PMOA-Red Bluff
Reowooo Clty
~<r4'mento
S.llftas
Sen Diego
~n Francl~o
Sent• B..-. Santa Marie
Stockton
Thorm•I Ultlell
Barst-Big BHr
CaUlll\I
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ra1111, 11 1uln1 hlm for
4&vor• ID Loi Anpl .. , left
th• Di plomat Rotel la
Hollywood , Fla., In the
middle of the nJaht laat week
to Ml=to the nlntb floor ol the r 1 ln lhe capital
oflbe B amu.
A Lot An1relea J udie awarde4 the .. helka a
three-week t e mporary
s upport payment of .f75,000.
The theik't lawyers lnalat the Callfornla court haa no
Jurl1dtctlon 1n tha case: ___ ~
· E~angeliat BUly Gralaa•,
tireless after over 30 years in
public llte, Is back in Britain
saying he has -no plans to
retire and announctna a bUI)'
proaram or crusades.
Graham, 63, ln Britain for
two crusade meetings and a
var iety or perso nal
appearances, said the Billy
Graham Evan gellstlc
Auociatio n , b ased I n
Amsterdam, is planning a
conference next ye ar for
"itinerant evangelists" from
around the world.
For three months later this
year. Graham added, be will
hold a series. of "spiritual
awakening" mission s at
universities in New England.
Whil e high sc ho o l
classmates in Orinda try out
for the football team and
s trugg le t hrough math
classes, Tom McWUllam1 is·
earning a 'li ving zapping•
electronic alien s and
advising co mput er
manufacturers.
"There are a lot or kids my
age developing games for
comput er firms ,'' the
16-year-old says.
He 's al r ead y earn ed
$60,000 for his computer work
and he 's wh ipping u·p a
second video game he hopes
to market soon. ·
··Qutpo s t ,'; his firs t
commerciaJ game, has .sold
5.000 copies as a 51/ .. -inch
floppy disc.
J eane J . Kirkpatrick,
appointed a year ago as the
United States' ambassador to
th.e Un ited Nations. will
pr~side over the Security
Council during March.
The council pres idency
rot a tes amon g t h e 15
countries on the council in
alphabetical o~der.
A sheik related to the Saudi
Arabian royal family and
de fendant in a $3 billion
divorce case has moved his
entourage into the top floor nr the Paradise Island Hotel
in Nassau, Bahamas, is land
newspapers reported ..
..
40
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OnUrlo 11 SO
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COASTAL 'AN O MOU NTAl"I
AREAS -WoOnosOey throuQll
FrlOey: Fair -wa,,,_ ""°""'' perloO. Locot oustv winos 111 ,,,._.alM ~ anO Tlturtday.
H'91tt '" coastal .,.., 62 '° 1t ~ 1eW 41 to M. H .... Ill mounttlns 46 lo
sua·f RIPORT
Calgery
EOmonlon
Monlreot
OIUw• A911ln1
Toronto •
Vancouver
Wlllnlpeo
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TOOAY
•-•-' 6:41p.m. t.I
TUHOAY
Flnt 111911 I: 40 e.m. 4.1
Flrttl-t . th.m 0.7
Se<ollO 111911 J:SI p,m. U
S.COllCI -l:DJ P.m. 1.3 kn ..U S:JO p.m., ri..s 6:71 e.m., TllHOey.
Maon •h U : II •·""-T""41ay, fllff tt:»a.lft .
New Pilot price 84.75 8tart1 today
Home delivery charges for the
Orange Coast Dally PUot wUJ be
·$t.75 per month effective today,
COit lncruaea la all upectt of
newspaper production, ln~ludln1
newaprlnl and diltribuUoa, make
the 75-cent lncreue -.....,.
In a contlnulnl' eftott lo
improve delivery Hr¥1te, Dally
Pil~ canien, wbo apera&a r
independent businesses, wlll
have the opportunity to earn 33
pe rce11t o f th-e re1lectei1
increase.
Dally Piiot home delivery.
costs have not inci-ea.Hd over
the past 23 moatbt.
Sin .... eopy newtllaDd prices
will fesna1n at 25 centa and S»
c•ta cm SiundQI.
LOVABLE FAMILY -"Silver Tabby," an
American short hair. and her male and
fem ale kittens play in Best of Show trophy at
Empire Cat Club exhibition at
Square Garden in New York.
OPEC losing Clout
Worldwide oil glut cripples cartel's market power
NEW YORK (AP) -The
reported U.S. decision to halt oil
imports rrorri Libya is not just·a
signal of American irritaUon
with Col. Moamniar Khadafy,
but a clear sign of the declining
clout of OPEC.
The signs are everywhere. Oil
sales by the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries
have tumbled to lhe lowest level
in more than a decade. Some
membets have . been forced to
borrow money a s ex p ort
incomes dwindle.
The cartel's president, Sheik
Ma rt a Saeed Otai ba of t h e
United Arab Emirates, uses the
word "crisis" to describe the
new pressures on OPEC.
More importa,ntly, countries
outside OPEC are taking the
lead in setting prices. This week
Mexico cut its price by $2.50 a
barre l, lo $32.50 , putting It
below OPEC's benchmark of
$34. Great Britain, which now
charges $35 a barrel , was
reported ready to drop its price.
"Suddenly OPEC is on the
run," Stephen A . Smith, an
e n e r gy s p ecialist a t Da ta
Resources l nc.. an economic
research firm, said. "The whole
tone of the oil markets has
totally reversed." As a result,
prices of gasoline and other
petroleum products are falling
sharply in the United States.
Administration officials say
President Reagan will announce
the boycott of Libyan oil next
week.
• The Reagan administration
has accused Libya's leader. Col.·
Kh ada f y , of promoting
terrorism.
That the United Slates woUtd
even consider culling off oil
imports from Libya underscores
the ·shift in power from the
oil-tich countries of the Middle
East to lbe big cons uming
countries of the industrialized
West.
In 1973, Arab members of
OPEC sla~ped an oil embare
on the United States and, the
Netherlands for their support of
Israel in the Yorn Kippur war,
setting off the s urge in oil prices
a nd stu nnin g We stern
economies. Since then , Arab
nations have frequ e ntly
threaLened cutoffs for political
purposes.
Now, the tables have turned.
Whereas Libya once dictated
to American oil companies what
price· they would pay for the
. .
North Afr ica n n atio n 's
high-quality oil, the companies
now are turning to cheaper oiJ
available elsewhere.
The timing is ideal for the
adl'l'linistr ation to place an
embargo on Libyan oil, analysts
say. There is a huge oversupply
of ·oil on world markets that
would make it hard for Libya to
sell the estimated 150,000 barrels
of oil a day that the United
States now buys.
The United States can turn to
other suppliers -most likely
N igeria, Algeria or Great
Britain. Analysts see no effect
on U.S. consumer s. but the
headaches for Libya could be
enormous.
Libya's troubles stem from its
h awkish pricing po licies,
analysts agree. Through last
summer, while the world was
awash in oil , Libya kept its
official price at $41 a barrel. But
the world's major oil buyers
simply r e fused to purchase
Li by an c rude and exiJorts
dropped to 600,000 barrels a day.
Libya now ls producing at
estimated 800.000 barrels a day,
after cutting its price to $37.
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MOSCOW (AP> -PretidtM
Leonld J. Brelhnev of the So¥let
UnloQ ,...&eomed Oen. WoJdeds
J aruaelald with comradely hup
and ld.aaes today. at the start of
the PoUab Communist ruler'•
first Kremlin · vlalt. since he
decrNd martial law in Poland
Dec. 13.
Sovlet national televl1lon
abowed the 75-year-ola SoYtet
leader walking stiffly across tbe
tarmac at Vnukovo Airpbrt with
other high-ranking Soviet
officials, to greet Jaruzelsld as
be Jtepped off the plane from
Warsaw.
Stock excha'nge
rocked by blast
NEW YORK (AP> -A Puerto
Rican nationalist group claimed
responsibility for setting off
powerful bombs that rocked the
two major stock exchanges and
other buildings along Wall Street
but caused no injuries, police
said today.
The four blasts .-which
sources said packed the power
of three or four sticks of
dynamite -shattered windows
at the New York Stock
Exchange and s urrounding
buildings and blew out part of a
wall at the American Stock
Exchange s hortly before
midnight Sunday. police said.
Plane hijackers
warned br Britain
STANSTED, England Jl..P"°-"Don't ..come to Britau)", ·• the
British government warned
hijackers todaY-aft~r the talteove~ Tanzanian airliner
ended Pft'cefully with the
surrender of four hijackers and
the release of their 82 remaining
hostates.
"The message is that
hijackers coming to this country
will not be perpiilted to leave,"
said Prime Minister M ~rgaret
Thatcher as her government
prepared hijacking charges
.,., .... four Taa1..._1 ~
Ml•ed t.1111 Air Tan1•81• Jet.bair
durhal • dom"U~ Rt1bt o~ their .East African bOmetiiG. -.
Teanu&er1 b~lc
freiglal contract
WASHINGTON CAP)
Me1nber of the Teamster•
union have over.wbelmlnfl'Y
tatltied a 37·month national
freight contract grant&ni maJor
wage conceulona to the
financially ailing trucktn1
Industry, unlon president Roy
Lee Williams announced today.
Williama said Teamster truck
delvers and freiaht handlers •
approved the labor s~tUement
"by nearly a two·t.hirda vote" in
a mail referendum.
Court to rule
on generic drug•
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
U.S. Supreme Court agreed
today to rule whet he r
increasingly popular generic
drugs can be sold before they
are . reviewed by the Food and
Drug Administration.
The justices said they will
review a lower·court ruling last
year that FDA approval is not·
needed before a generic drug is
offered for sale. .
Social Security
-.
.~ ..........
A LOT OF OOMPH -Andy Jones, 12. of Newton Center.
Mass., tries to play what has been described as the world's
largest tuba. The instrument was on display at the Third
Annual New England Tuba Festival during the weekend at
Boston's Berklee College of Music. '
DSTRO!T (AP) -It W&ll\'t vote of 48,883 t.o 15.933, or 13
UI)' tor Ua.tted Auto Workera. percent ln favor. mem .... to stve an eaUmat.ed UAW President j)ou1lu
'l bUb JD wace c:oncesalOM to ., Fraser aald Sunday tbe vote
l'Ord Motor Co., but when it ' · u n q u ea ti on a b 1 y • ' w aa
came to voting they heeded their influenced by the number of
union leact.n and remembered Ford workere on indefinite
their laid-oft colleagues, unJon layoff, "plus the fact that Ford
officials aald. . has bad some plant clo1tn1a
The UAW announced Sunday within the past year."
night that Ford workers raWied Jerry Herodoo, bar1alnin1
• propo1ed new contract by a committeeman at Ford's Wixom
assembly plant in suburban
Nixon library
put on hold
DURHAM, N.C. (AP> -Duke·
University officials have
sidelined negotiations to acquire
Richard M. Nixon's presidential
library, citin~ poor economic
and-political conditions, a Duke
attorney says.
"At the this time, the.trustees
have de<:ided not to aggressively
pursue an agreement," Eugene
J . McDonald said after a
meeting of the Duke Board of
Trustees. "We are still exploring
and will re main alert to
possi bill ties.•·
M c Donald also ~ai4.the
, university did not think it could
count on required congressionaJ
approval for the library because
1982 is an election year and the
House and Senate are bogged
donwn in fede ral budget .
considerat_\ons. ..,. ..,.
Detroit, said accept1tnce of the
new Ford contract would
"relieve the tension."
"No one likes conceulons, but
most guys felt they wece livini
up some things to help out their
laid-off co-workers," Herndon
said.
Union concessions will enable
Ford to resume Supplemental
Unemp!oyme nt Benefits
paymepts , which provide
eligible laid-off Ford workers
with up to 95 percent or their
take-home pay.
The payments to workers with
less seniority were cut off in
February beca\tse the Ford SUB
fund was depleted. Under the
n e w pact , Ford must
-immediately deposit $70 million
into the fund.
Ford workers agreed to accept
a wage freeze for the duration of
the 3l ·month pact , defer
cos t -o f -li v ing allowance
payments for nine months and
forfeit eight paid personal
holidays.
freeze propo'aed ·
W ASHING:J'ON (AP> -
Congress may free~ Social
:{\issinger claims Nixon unprepared
Security benefits at least NEW YORlC tAP> -"No
temporarily this year without modern president could have
wailing for President Reagan's been less equipped for political
blue·ribbon panel on Social lire" than Richard M . Nixon,
_Sec11rity re!oa:n_ to.Jiniah Jt.s_ __ accordingld!Heru;y.Kiasinjer~
work, says Sen. Bol> Dole. In the second volume or his ·
Dole, R·Kan .. told fellow m e moirs, which is being
mernbers of the National excerpted for a second week in
Commission on Social Security Time magazine, Kissinger says
Refo.rm .at its Cirst meeting Nixon was "painfully shy" and
Saturday, "We may have to do dreaded meeting strangers,
something on a temporary basis character traits that led tQ his
in Congress thjs year with Social isolation in the White House.
Security, notwithstanding the The current installment or
president's indication that we Kissinger's memoirs deals with
should not." the Watergate ·scandal and its
nrew Ill T1a1i11 11tl Fiatl
des-truction o f Nixon 's
presidency.
KissingeT says Nixon. who
appointed him national setYrilY
adviser and-secreta-ry of state,
was "painfulcy shy . . . fearful
of rejection ... deeply
insecure," and isolated himself
since he •'dreaded meetin.&..
strangers."
Kissinger says Nixon felt
threatened by his opponents and
·his animosity fed on theirs.
leading him to actions that
eventually ruined him.
YHr l11er Power ta Cll1111 Tlli111.
While there was "no excuse
fer the extralegal methods that
went under the name of
Watergate." Kiss inger s ays,
ixon'a oppooentg were vicious,
self-righteous and occasionally
brutal.
Kissinger praises the role or
hi s o wn f o rm er d e puty ,
Alexander M. Haig J r .. saying
"only those who lived through
. . . those months can fully
appreciate the debt the nation
owes" Haig for "conveying' the
impression of a functioning
White House" as Nixon's chier of
staff.
But Kissinger says Nixon aide
John Ehrlichman "responded
th a real that·was-sometimes
excessive" to dissent and news
leaks, and that H.R. Haldeman'
was "con vinced that image
defined reality."
Haldeman, however, was not
responsible for the !>resident's
isolation, Kissinger sli'ys. And
"although he eventually was
destroyed because he carried
out the president's wishes too
literally . . "
SENIOR CITIZENS
$1.00 Hearing Test~ Set Ybu've ·heard greet things at>oot the Yoga Center since t970. I
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Newport Beach Hearing Aid Center
Mon., Mar. I, Tues., Mar. 2, Wed., Mar. 3 --·-• M1111 If llllTl'lm --·•-11. ws • • 1!111'• .... 9 A.M. to 51>.M.
vou·1 be taught tne htQl'lef Voges by one of J'-tew masters in
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Hearin~ tests will be co~duct~ by a Hearing Aid_ Spec~t.
who is hcensed by the Cahfonua State Board of Medical Quality
Assurance as a Hearing Aid Dispenser.
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding is welcome
to a test emploiying the latest electronic equipment which ·will
determine his or her particular loss. You will see a modern
hearing aid so tiny it fits totally within the ear.
av:= at
Heritage Bank
• Resklentlal
• COmmerclal eulldlngs:
Takeout COminltmenf reflUlred
along with leases.
COn&act
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SOUth Orange COUnty/lrvlne
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NEWPORT BEACH HEARING' AID CENTER
1600 West Coast Highway Newport peach 646-8266
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LON G B E A C H (AP> -; A ltO·foot
anlab·recbtered car10 abip received mlDor bow
amqe after it bit a brellkwater m IAq Beacla
arbor, apparently beeame ol COGl\laloa about ··
Uptl ma.rltha\ lbe harbor •traoee, the Cout uard.uid. ,
No injuries were reporUd ln tbe accident
Su.nda.v .. altbou&b the vHMI, the Axel Maenlt, susta~ some dami1e to the bow under the
waterline, said Lt. Scott SetUmo.
Tuo freed the veuel from the breakwater
about three hours after the accident and the abtp
sailed to Berth 228 under its own power.
~ Bailey arre1ted
• 11" • SAN FRANCISCO <Al>) -F . Lee Bailey, the
: namboyant Bost.on defense attorney in some ot tbe r---- ------------------------ -------~
1
.. nation's most celebratecf"t:riminat cuea, bu been I VM-VHI VOii VIII WM VOU VOii VOii VO• VOii VM-VOii VOii-voit VOit VOii voa1 1 arrested for investigation of drunken drivin1, 1 I .· . •3'2 MON •• TOES. & WED. =I authorities said. =
{. · The lawyer refused to take a blood, breath or 1
1
1 r\et'\.UBLE COUPON ~II ' : Utine test to gauge sobriety alter the a rrest UV • i' : Sllnday at Laguna and Union streets, said Deputy I "' I
Al Dworkin. ,1 ~sent this cpui>on along with any one manufacturer's "c ents-off' coupon c: 1 2 in 1loop re1c ued I e nd get d o uble the '8vings from Vt>ns. Not to indude retailer. free coupons, 1 i
SANTA BARBARA (AP> -Two men aboard a • ....... coupons greater than one dollar or exce~d the value o f the item. I
. sloop that drifted, dismasted by gale force winds, NEVER TOO LATE? -Jack Arak. 77. a nd h is II I , for rive days were reported sale and uninjured wife Lillian don't quite know what to make of I Umlt one 'coupon I*' manufacturer's coupon and limit 3 coupons per custo.,.er. I
after they were rescued just four milel' from his letter from the Selective Service Sy~tem 11 · EActudlng llqu~,'to~co and all dairy products. I'
where their voyage began. telling him he had until today to register for . Coupon good Mar(\h 1 • 2 & 3. 1982 I
The 36-foot sloop J .B. Express was Wwed to the draft. So t.he Thousand OakS' man tried to I · ..
Santa Barbara by the Coast Guard cutter Point do so at his post office. where he created a bit I VOii VOIS VOIS VIII 1111 VOU VO• VONS VONS VOU VOIS VOii VOIS VOMS VOU VOIS VOii i ~~~~~~~~ti~t ~l:e:ng1!: a'!;:~a~~!:T~e :Ua: or a stir. r Viis ;;.i¥oii;;. Voii~ois v0iivo1ivoi you Yo.; vo1i ¥oii vou voiS Vc*ivOis 1
. tri_p to Monterey. I .. L
J .B. Express crewmen Skip Wriaht. 40. of Ma d •332MON .• T<J ES. & WED. 11
R ichmond, and Chuck Baggett. 37. were n accuse I
uninjured. They had been trying to deliver the ,. DOCJBLE COUPON · cl sloop for its owner, David Borton of Sunnyvale, · Ii
and two partners. · • k• Pr~pt this cou pon along with any one manufacturer's "cents-off' coupon Pem. hoapi tal p,robed . m sm 0 mg row I and get double the savings from Vons. Not to inclUde retaiJer. free coupons. 1:
RIVERSIDE ~AP> -A state controller's audit coupons greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A man accused of t! cl scheduled for release today says a Perria hospital stabbing a wom an in the chest during a dispute g II
wher e 11 P.alients were allegedly murder ed over her cigarette smoking in an elevator said be > Umit one coupon per manufaeturer's coupon and limit 3 coupons per customer.
altered minutes or the hospital board in a possible was once a two-pack-a-day smoker and often asks 2
charged excessive amounts to Medi-Cal and I Excluding liquor, tobacco and aU dairy pro<'ucts. I'
l to t t th · · tt · k' g Coupon good Mar1:h t, 2 & 3. 198 I . "attempt to .mislead the_Health Audits Bureau P.e<>P e pu ou eir c1gare es in no-smo m
auditors." , areas. · · VOii VOU Y0111 V011$ VM VOa VOii VOii VOIS VHS VOIS VOii VOii VOIS VOIS VOii Von I The mismanagement and "improper acts" the • . Richard Moss, booked for in'-'estiiation or' t ... ..
. Communily Hospital of the-v.alleys-i&-accused of--assault With a 'cfeacUy weapon, and released on , vo.i Viis VO.i Voii V'cm voii -v.;.-~=ivoa Vo'1i VolS Viii VOIS ;,; voii 'Vois I include overcharges to tbe state of at least $3,500 bail, said he acted in self-defense alter the "'""• 'fV"" SS63.~1 according to tt~e re~rt obtained t1t the woman jumped' him Friday. 11 ' •332 MON., TOES. & WED. I' Riv.ers1ae Press-Enterprise. . . s I
vc ia·w•chool• io~to.et • rele~!:if°rom:~~~~~i:c~=:~~:~rt~a~~ :,I DOUBLE COUPON 1·.·
SACRAMENTO <AP) ~ c.;ritacmng-the Saturday. She' declined to comment on the case,
University or California for "continuing to pump saying, "U you want to hear..,.,hat I have to say, I Present this coupon alo ng with any one manufacturer's "cents-off' coupon I' meet me in court." I free out laW)'ets," the powerful chairman of the Senate· I> and get d o uble the savings from Vons . Not to include retailer, _coupons, I
Finance Com mittee urged the university to close Moss, a part-time campus secretary who said 'I · coupons greater ttfan one dollar o r exceed the value of the item. c I its four law schools ~o the state can save money. be ii WOJ')ring op a master's degree in psychology I
Sen. Alfred Alquist, D-San Jose, said state's at San Francisco State University. is scheduled to I El. I . dwindling revenues and gloomy economic outlook appear in court March 4. Umlt one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and llm1l 3 coupons per customer.
should force the university to "question old 'I Excluding Uquor, tobacco and all dally products. I' assumptions and establish new priorities ... in an He said be is sensitive to cigarette smoke, I Coupon good Mar1:h 1, 2 & 3. 1982 I
era or demand for technically trained gr aduates especially brenclosed places, and is polite when he . 0 •
.• __________ u_~_ci_g_~ ___ be_m_u_f_~-·--~-----~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~!~
TV star
Carson
booked
BEVERLY HILLS
<AP) -"Tonight" show
host Johnny Carso11.
s topped f o r an
out-of-date car license
plate after dining out
with M s wife , w as
booked for investigation
or drunk driving t his
weekend, police say.
The arrest took place
at 1:30 a.m. Saturday
after· Carson was
stopped while driving
north on La Cienega
Boul evard south of
Beverly Boulevard, Lt.
David Griffey said
Sunday.
The street, lined with
chic restaurant s . is
known as "Restaurant
Row " and Carson's
p u blici s t , Jam e-P
Mah oney, confirm~
that the popular
I entertainer and bis wife
Joanna had just been
djning out with friends ..
"Carso n , who
~ ~ ~
I ~ ~ ~
-----------,.
Our exclusive· ~
B:ooksline n ~
Ir=~=;~~:~ t
.. handsome blend ~
\ adds to linen's ~.
distjnqive texture, ~
the crease-resistance ~
of polyester. Each ~
.... •
LARGE AA,.
EGGS
DOZ.JN CAgTON
SUM PRICE LIMIT 2
.69
SLIM PRICE !
·BACON
SLICED REGU'l..AR
LIMIT I PUR. OVER LIMff 1.59
'
. normally abstains from
any form of alcohol,
adm its to tiaving bad
wine with friends at
· dinner ," Mahoney said.
"Carson can't recall I receiving as much as a I parkiilg violation in the · t • past and he sincerely
~
I
of our attractive
separates is fully
lined. In blue.
6 to 16 regular,
6 to 14 petite.
I ~ ~ l ·LB. PKG. .-99 1
t 1 regrets the inddent ."
, He added that the I arresting officer stopped
1 the car be<:ause it did
1 nol liave a·u~ae plate : strcker required In
California each year U>
! s h o w t h at tb e f r eglatratlon is up t o
I date.
"He (Canon) wu not
dr l vlng irre1ula rly ," M~honey . said, adding
I t hat Car son . wntln1ly .
s ubmitted to a lieJd
sobriety t..t .
S1t. Tom Van Andale ·
said Carson's blood·
, alcobbl level wu found .
to . be lo Hcea of . l Ot
percent. '
,
~
3-button jacket, $200
Front _pleat skirt, $95
Exclusive cotton gingham
shirt with pleat front,
rou"" collar. Tott1rsall
checlu of brown-blue-tan
of navy-pi'fllt-1ro
6to16, $36 •
I
~ VON& ENGLISH
MUFFINS :-.
I I I
I ·I
I
KAREEM-ED Laker renter Kareem Abctul-Jabba r was a
prom inent figure in Sunday's on e -point win O\'er
Cleveland a t t.)le Porum. He p ulls ctown a rfbound 1lert 1
. .
W esthead still· can't
! figure out his firing
But he refuses to hold ciny grudges
"' • • SAN DIEGO <AP> -Three
•. -months-after his s udden
dismissal as head coach of the
Los Angeles Lak-ers, Paul
Westhead is still asking himself
why.
I
"I still can't piece together any
significant evidence that I made
serious mistak es ," said
Westhead, dumped Nov. 19 when
Valenzuela
talks make
prQgress
LOS ANGELES <AP ) -Los
Angeles pitching sensation
Fernando Valenzuela and his
r epresentatives ~et with
Dodgers officials for more than
three hours Sunday and "some
progress" was reported in their
contract talks.
Anoth e r m eeting was
sc h ed ul ed for today , a
s pokesman for t h e world
champions said.
S t eve Brene r , the team's
publicit y director , issued a
statement saying that although
a contract agreement for 1982
was not reached, "both sides
reported some progress."
The statement also said that
the 1.ime and site of Monday's
meeting was still undetermined,
and "both parties agreed there
would be no further comment at
this lime."
.vc1 IS READY
FOR OPENER
The UC Irvine basketball
team will open the PCAA
post-season tournament
Wednesday ni&ht when It· batUea
Ut11h State at 7 o'clock in the
Anaheim Convention Center.
Other ftnt-round pairlnas find
Cal State Fullerten tanilinl with
the University of Pacllic in the 4
o'clock opener with Loo1 Beach
State meetina San JOH State at 9.
If the Anteaters wtn, they'll
play at I o'clock Thursday. The
ebamplonsbip 1ame lltl"rtdQ · ·
Ticket.a are OP aal• ai Uc1
between I ud 4, ud at the
Convention Center betwffft 10
and I .
Lakers' star Earvin "Magic"
Johnson said he was un_.!Y'PP¥
play ing under the coach.
Westhe11d , who guided tbe
Lakers to the National Basketball
Association title in the 1979-1980
season, remains without a job, but
hopes to return to the NBA soon as
a fie ad coach.
"If l ha ve any choice, I'll stay
with the pros," he told Tom
Cushman. sports editor of The'
San Diego Tribune, in an
interview.
·'The only job I have now is
picking up the kids -at 3: 15," he
said.
The Lakers, who got off to.a 2-4
start, we re o n a f4ve-g.a-me
winning streak when Westhead .
was fired by team own41 Jerry
Buss.
· Johnson, citing diffe rences
with Westhead, had demanded to
be traded, saying •·1 can't play
here anymore."
Since.his dismissal. Westhead
has refused to lash out al Johnson,
Buss or the Lakers.
"MY FEEUNG was that so
many good things had haP.P.ened,
why should I tarnish them by
feactinl publicly to something
already done," he said. ·
·'The experience overall. was
one of ups and downs. There was
t h e o bvious excitem..ent of
winning the championship, of
being involved with some of the
great players in the game, of
achieving a certain level of
personal competence.
"On the downside -and I've
gone over this in my mind"A
melkulously -and I still can't
piece together any sianlficant
evidence that I made serlou.s
.mistakes. I had accepted the ldea
'that if you win, you're loved, and
· if you lose, you're gone. Durinl
the time I wu with the team, we
were 70 percent Winners.
''The champioaabip spew for
ltaell, but I actually tbouebt we
dld a better job the foUowlal year
( 1981 >,especially i~ U1htoflla1ic
belna out for 35 1ame1. II ui
economist checked charts lllle
thole he'd rand no realOft for
cban1e, but ~ for whatever
reason -they sold me abort very
fut.''
Hia feelln11 today toward
Jobuon? "A iood penoa," n.ld
.,, •tbeacl ..
Jerry Bua? "He wun't •
impoulble 1uy to deal with. •
Trutblully. I found blm to be
, e1peelall1 JOOd In bard Um•.•• •
l
......, ""' ...... .., •1e...-.......
and swings in the air (right 1 under the· watchful e~·t· of
teammate J am aal Wilkes . J ahbar·s s k\'·hook with lwn
seconds left ga\'e the Laken a 102:.10°l \'ic.tor).
LIT flNCI 00 -Laker guard Norm Nixon hret away tor
two of his 17 points .sunda~· O\'V the defense of
Cleveland'~ James Silas. . .
Intense winner
in yachting's
Corkett series
See Page C3 .
Laker~ pull ..
es~ape ·act
Lowly Cavs prove pesky ..
By CURT SEEDEN
OftM~tyl"tNellMt
I NGL'EWOOD -Magic
Johnson and Bob McAdoo were
missing froD\ the Laker lineup
Sunday afternoon. And, for the
better part of the first half. so
was any enthusiasm from the
rest of the Lakers.
Fortunately for Los Angeles
Sunday afternoon's opponept~
we re none oth e r than the
Cleveland Cavaliers, winners or
just fi ve games on the road t his
season and only 12 overall.
Cleveland, a team molded out
of several questionable trades
and often maligned for inept
m a nagement by owner Ted
Stepien, did everything possible
to take advantage of t he absence
of Magic and McAdoo. however.
THE CAVALIERS built a
19-point advantage in the first
half, dominating the game so
much that Laker Coach Pat
Riley set a halftime goal of a
10-poinl deficit on which to build
for .the remaining 24 minutes or
action.
And that's exactly what the
Lakers did Sunday afternoon,
c ulminating their comeback
effort with a 15-foot sky hook
from Ka reem Abdul -Jabbar
with two seconds remaining for
a 102-101 victor y before 14,882
fans at the Forum .
·'I thought we had to scramble
when it counted," said Riley
..!fler the game. "And Kareem
was always there at the right
time . He's been instrumental in
our last three games.''
Those three games -victories
over Seattle, Philadelphia and
Cleveland -account for nearly
half of the Lakers' current
seven-ga me winning strea,k
which has moved them 3...,
games ahead of Seattle in the
Pacific Division.
But expanding that bulge was a much bigger task t han the
La kers expected. To begin with,
Magic was missing from the
lineup because of the death df
his grandmother .
T HE GUY WHO sparks the
Laker running game flew home
and is ex pected to rejoin the
t eam £or Wed nesday night's
game against New Jersey at the
Meadowlands.
"We miss Magic in so many
ways," admitted Riley. ··He just
adds so many dimensions to the
game." ·
Without Magic, the Cavaliers
also added a new di mens ion to
the gar'ne. It's ca lled s urprise.
·'I know they're struggling,
but Cleveland has a lot of talent.
Cleveland played as well as
anybody could play against us,"
Riley prnised. ·
The Cavaliers , after falling
behiqd ea rly, 11 -4, made the
La ke rs look lazy on a lazy
afternoon. as Cliff Robinson and
vet eran gu ard· J a mes Siias
spa rke d them to a 34 -25
advantage after the firs t
qu.arter.. ·
The Cavaliers shot a sizzling
714 percentage m Chat quarter.
connecting on 15 of 21 shots from
lh e . fi ,e ld . Th ey al s o
oulrebounded the Lakers in the
first quarter . 12-5. which can be
d i r ectl y a ttribu te d to the
absence of McAdoo, who is still
nursing a pulled calf muscle and
wall not accompany the team on
<See LAKER S, Page CZ>
Wheelock happy
he took his shot
But rrrajors didn't wor~ out for him
By JOHN SEVANO
of tile Deily !'JI ... S'-'f
Ah. i('s almost that time
again. The crack of a bat . .
the chatter around an infield
. .. the sounds of leather .
Yep, baseball is just around
the corner. For many veterans.
the star t of s pring t r aining
represents a grueling six weeks
of labor. For many youngsters.
spring training represents a
• chance -a hope -of catching
on with the "Big Team." -
Former .UC Irvine standout
Gary Wheelock knows what the
latter is like. From 1974, until he
left the game in 1980 , the
tight-hande.d pitcher yearned for
that golden opportunity.
Wheelock was drafted by the
Angels during the summer or
'74. He was assigned to the
team's Quad Cities farm club in
the Midwest (A ball> where be
arrived with some impressive
credentials.
Wheelock was 17 -2 for the
LQOKJNG BACK
Anteaters his senior year with a
1.70 ERA. In his career, he was
37-10 with a 2.28 earned run
average.,
The right-hander (and then
designated hi~ter. too. with a
.309 average in 1974) led UCI to
a pair of NCAA Division II
World Series titles In '73 and '74.
He was also an integral part of
UCI's 32-game winning streak
during the 1974 campaign. In
fact. Wheelock recorded the
final victory in the second
Series, hurling the Ante~rs to
a 14·1 decision over New
Orleans.
In that game, Wheeler pitched
a five-hitter as he struck out 12.
including the last seven in a
row.
. Pltcbers wlth those kinds of
credent.lats usually rigure to be
1hoo-lns for the majors. But
Wheelock became victim to
what many starry-eyed hopefuls
become vlcti m to -the
nwnben11me.
You 9", when it come• to HH~I, J:::! becauH you're
....,.. It n't •utomat.lcall,y
earn a player a 1pot on the
25-man l"Olter.
Wheelock spent .even years
trytac to make hil stay with the
M1 de ,ermu.at. The total
reaul\ of h11 11fort1 waa h
lnnlnp pitched In the· m~n
MEMORIES FotmC'r l'C
lnine standout hurler Gar\'
Wh eelock fondl~· rC'mC'mbe1:s
h fs s tint 1n lhe majo r
ll·agues
... 88 of those coming in one
season. Was there dis a ppointment?
Bitte rness? Resentment? Maybe
for s ome. but not for Wheelock1 who was just happy to have hao
the chance.
"I'm glad I did it." said
Wheelock from his horn~ in Bellevue, Was h . "It was.
s ome thing I enjoyed and l'rft
glad I got a chance lo play in U\e
big leagues . -
·'You know, at Irvine I neva:
thought about the big leagues. l(
was the farthest thing ftom m;.
mind. I was wrapped up hi
college and winning the World
Series at the time .. I never reaJli.
dreamed about the blg leatu*-
. . . I certainly wasn't counttq
on it.'' · •••
Wheelock spent 1974, 'JS Pis ·
almost au of '76 in the An1e1s•
farm system . His firsC:
appearance in a major leaaoe
uniform was ~l the tailend of tbe
'76 season agaln~t the Mi~
. Twins. It was an oudftl lte'd just
aa soon foraet. too. .
· "The hills' were raJ ftnt and
last experience la t9'• bl&
leaaues -end neltber one wu
very pleuant,'' jolted Wh..aock.
''My fint Ume r lhlnk I ta" up
, .. GA&Y, •••• Cl) I
\
,
•• .. .. .
-----~-------..------------------· .. , .
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
: .... ._~~-, ........................ WK.~ ..... ~. ••no•• • ., CH•C-n'l"'9 ••cu .. et.,.. ••,.."'• 1v , .. , .... ••• ••n••••
Tiie lllde• of Lead .. , llldlca&on ftU ror tbe ninth 1tralgbt month in January, and the 0.1 percent
decline would have been much wane U the impact of
aevete winter 'Weather bad been lneluded, the
Commerce Departmul reported. The IDcMX' would
have declined 2.8 percent ror the mootb, but
department officials deleted effects of on• lnclieator,
the average workweek, which was sharply d•,.-eued
by the bad weather. The index bad declined o.a
percent in each ol th* preceding two moot.ha . . .
Ford Motor C.. '• ullion workers overwbelmlntly
approved a 2~-yea.r concession package, clearin1 the
path for-an anticipated resumption of talks between
the Ualted Auto tlfonen an~ ~ral MoCon Corp
Ttte drop in 1aaollae prtcea over the peat 12
months is chiefly attributable to the fierce
competition in gasoline marketing, accordinl to the
Laadberc Let&er, a weekly oil industry newaletter.
Retail price~ fell about 8.46 cents a gallon over the
past 12 months, the newsletter's author, analyat Daa
LW1dber1, reported . . . ,
The U.S. Air Force has awarded a ~.8 million
contrpct to Rockwell lll&eraadollal c.r.. to continue
the manufacture of "smart bombs" a\ its facilities northeast of Atlanta . . .
Raytheon Co. bas received a $605 million
contract from the Kingdom ol Saacll Arabia for
continued work on the Improved Hawk Air·Defense System .
,nan B,.. ..... _ ...... __ _
Savings and loan associations in Callfonala,
Arizona and Nevada saw a net new savings inflow of •
$343 million in January with jumbo certificates of
deposit getting the biggest boost, the Federal Rome
Loaa Bank of Sa, Fraaclsco reported. The inflow,
which follows two months of outnows totaling $452
million, contrasts with an outflow of $177 million in
January 1981 . . .
Contlneatal AlrU.es, which lost $60 million last
year, said it bas borrowed an additional $25 million
and that its auditors plan an official notation on the
airline's 1981 financial statement questioning the
company's chances for survival . . .
Pacific Telephone & Telecraph sllareltolden
have. voted to approve a . merger with Pacific
Transltloa Corp. Americu TeleplloM Ir Teletrapli
owns aH of Pacific Transition and 91.S percent Q,f the
common stock and 78.2 percent ot the preferred stock
in Pacific Telephone-, ..
Beatrice Foods Co. is qegotiating to buy
Coca -Cola EoUlln• Co. of San Diego lind is close to an
agreement to acquire Coke's Saa Beraardlao
franchise, a spokesman for Beatrice said. Beatrice
recently bought Coca-Cola of Los Angeles and
Northwest llld•tries beverage business . . .
Whittaker Corp, said it would appeal a· federal
judge's decision in Chicago clearing the way for
Brunswick ·Corp. to sell its Sherwood Medical
Prodllda subsidiary . . .
Applications to establish nationally chartered
banks in California almost tripled last year to 73
from 26 in 1!81, while state bank filings declined to 18
from 35, acco.rding to data supplied by Edward
Carpen&er & Associates lac.
IAllllU if;
New World Computer Co. of Irvine for the
quarl-er.-en.ded Jan. 31 had net income of $51U58. or 1
cent, compared witb a net loss of. $151,702, or S cents
for the like qu;art.er of fiscal 1981. Revenues were
$531,887, up from the $57,236 from last year's quarter.
'
Gold, metal@ quotations
Gol,d
By The Associated Presa
Selected world gold prices today:
Loadoa: morning fixing $358. 75, off $3.85. ·
IANtoe: afternoon fixing $361.25, off Sl.35.
Pana: $358.05, off SZ.12.
Frukfart: $360.00, off $4.99.
Zwicb: Late fixing $359.00, off $3.61 bid ; $361.00 asked.·
Handy & Harmaa: only daily quote $361.25, off $1.35.
Engelhard: only daily quote $361.25, off $1.35.
Engelhard: only daily quote fa~ted $379.31, off
$1 .42.
Meta/A
NEW Y<>R~P> -Spot nonferrous metal
'today: ~
Copper 77~.ao c a pound, U.S. destinations.
Lead 28 cents a pound.
Zlnc 43 cents a pound, delivered.
Tia '8.6080 Metals Week composite lb.
Alambuam 76-77 cents a pound, N.Y.
Mercwy $375.00 per Oask.
Platlnm $343.00 troy 01 .. N. Y.
Silver
Handy & Harman, $7.815 per troy oun'ce.
l;olJ. coim.
prices
NEW YORK (AP) -Prices late Friday of ,old eoins,
compared with Thursday'& price.
&rqerrud, 1 troy 01.,)ne.oo, off $4.7~.
Natle leaf, 1troy01., $379.00, off $4.7J.
Mexku ao peeo, 1.2 troy OI., $451 .oo. on $5.1$.
Atll&rlaa UIO crowa, .teol troy 01., $158.50, off tt.50.
Source:-t>tat.Perer•
NEW' .BUSINESSMEN
Contact the DAILY PILOT fir
lnformai1on regar~lng tli•
county requlrementa tor uelnl •
F1Clltloua Bualneaa Name.
l'
Mes& gets Specific on GeneFOI ~laB
By JODI CADENHEAD o1 .. Deity ...... MMe
tdftor• Note: During .a rttnt mt•nMio CO$la Meia smk>r ~
Jlllce Robin1on e:.cplaaned how
rtridm1 will be . affected bJ1 tM
cft11'1 Gftam:U. Plan. In the coming
month& the City Council wUl u t
prioritN• for .adopted goo~ .and
public hearing• will be held to
po,.ibly rt'ZIOM ao~e city. area&.
Q: What l•. Geneul PIH!
A : Basically it's the Cit y
Counciflla.-statement of. intent
regarding the development of
the city. It includes the goals
and policies and objectives the
city will u se to develop
programs.
Q : Why is • Gemmtl Plan
Important~
A: It sets out in a document
how the council wants to see the
city deveJoped. It also provides
d evel ope r s with broad
para meters of what the city.
wants. Costa Mesa's plan covers
l a nd u se, e nvironm ental
resources managem ent and
-commun ity development
management.
Q : What did tbe City Council's
•doptlon or• Geneul Plan lut July mean?
A : All the council adopted
we re goal s . policies and
objectives. We're going through
the1rocess now or dealing with
)!lJl use and zoning issues.
Q : The r e were sever•I
development options outU.Ded In.
the pl•n, could you ellpl•ln
them?
. A : Option 1 would reduce
intensity. Option 2 would leave
the city the way it is. Option 3
would mean higher density in
residentia l and more intense
commercial development. What
the council will do is. use
diHerent options in different
parts of the city.
Q: What effed will the plan
have on the city's population?
A: The current population is
about 82,000. Under option 1 the
city's popuJation would be about
91 ,000 by the year 2000. Under
option 2 it would be about 105,000
and under option 3 it would
reach 107,000.
The biggest increase would
co rbe in the a r ea or
employment. We'd double the
number or jobs in the city ii we
go with option 3, from 45~000 to
about 89,000 by the year 2000.
Q: What areas of the city will
be most affected by the Gener•!
Plan.
A: All areas. There are in
different pl anning areas. Mesa
Verde will probably be least
affected because single family
residences make up a bout
three-fourths of the area.
Q. Wh•t is the llkellboM of a'
homeowner having bis or her
proi>erty rezoned?
A : The city counciJ has taken
a pretty long view that anyone
with i:esidential zonin, will
Detty~ .......
ANSWER MA~ -Costa M esa
se hior planner Mike
Robinson tells how General
P lan will govern the future of
the city.
remain that way. But -ju~t
~ecause you have a piece or
single family property ·doesn't
mean you're imml#De to change.
Q : Wh.t h•ppens to a
homeowner If the property la
rezoned?
A : If a property is rezoned to a
lower density homeowners have
20 years to com ply. If it's
rezoned to a higher density then
it's not a problem because you're under the maximum. -
Q: Does tbe General PIH call
for greater or less density In the
city?
A : The council members will
have the option of increasing or
decreasing the density where
they feel appropriate.
· Q : How will thl plan be
Implemented?.
A: Public hear ing9' wiU be
required and notices will be sent
to property owner s . Also,
individual public hearings will
be required in each of the study
a reas. Each area will have a
neighborhood advisory group.
Q : What r ole will the
nel&bborbood dvlsory groups
play?
A: They will act as a focus to
the public participation aspect
or the land use studies. They'll
advise the council.
Q : If one of the groaps ls
opposed to a )M'oposed aoae
change IQ tbelr area , ~ow
effective will it be ln preventing
a zoning change?
A : The council will rely on the
advisory groups . If they can
provide justification for their
position their argument will bt>. a
lot stronger than just saying we
don't lijte nigh density.
Q: Wben will the neighborhood
advisory groups be established?
A: As soon as possible. We're
sending out letters now to all
interested groups in the area,
such as homeowners groups and
the Chamber of Commerce.
Q : How can someone join a
group?
A: We haven't established that
yet. The council . wlll choose
from -. list ot candidates.
Q: Wbea will tM Geneul Plu
be lmplemea&ed?
A: We hope to get the land use
1'•ue done by the end or t.be
year. 1be .rest will be an oneoing
·Process. . Q:· Bow were tlte U4 dlfferettt
policies Included In lite General
PIH establlshed!
A: Staff members developed
the polic ies and had public
t
hear ings at which time 'the
co mmunit y ,' plannin1
commission and City Council
expanded on them. •
Q : How wW Uiose poUelea 'M
pat In prlorttyf
A: The council said, this ls our
s h o ppi ng list . They will
prioritize them aonu•lly -
review1ng a certain number
every year. .
Q: Oae of the policies Woeld
require homeow•era to ._tall
1moke deteeton upon resale.
How ...W aometllJJl& llke &Mt
beea'-"d!
A: Probably by an ordinance.
· Q: ()yeraU, how do you tJalak
the G•eul· Plan will •fleet
Co1ta •esa?
A : It affects everyone
because It's the · statement of
intent as far as bow the council
( e e \_s t he c 1 t y s h o u I d be
deve loped. It t alks about
services that may or may not be
offered. It has a potential for
impacting everyone ln t he city.
' Q : Row wlll ·the bHlae11
com mUlll&y be affected!
A : It could be affected ln some
of our strip development aloo&
Newport Boulevard from 19th to ·
Mes.a Avenue because one of the
plans under consideration is to
convert parts of that to high
density residential.
DMty ..... """"a..~ -STRETCH OF SOLITUDE _,_ Ellen Walrath
of Irvine med itated. a bove. during a
··Total Yoga Experience" conducted at
Oran ge Coas t Co llege by S w ami
Jnanananda. manager of the Siddha
As hram in Los Angeles. Don'na Hoffner.
right, was coordina tor for the works hop in
relaxation te<;hniques. ·
Sexuality, maniage
.seminars offered
Seminars on sexuality and
second marriages are being
offered at Orange Coast College.
27 and April 3. Parents and
children ages 11 and 12 from
10:30 a.m. to noon, and parents
and children ages 13 and 14 from
12:30to2p.m.
Colleges laud
four students
"CTITtOUS aUllNIU
NAMI nAflMllNT
Tiie IOllowlna perlOnt e re doing _,_ .. :
$TA MESA EMERGENCY CIANS, JOI Vkl0<le Slroet.
IMM. CA '2627.
T.cJl6
NOTICI M T•UUla'I SAL• c ~·:~:-: ~ "::~~ c:::~~ o
. F«ecio.~eNo. TS•JU61 ~aLICOI c ~~ 1"':~~~ !'• ,~ ~'o'\~ T\~ ,.OTICE IS HEAHY GIVEN _,
COMPANY, H duly -lnled Trust .. Ille followlng ~rSOflf M ve !Men
-r end ...,._, to Oeecl of Tr.. Mmlfl•'"! tor IN offk H ._,.IMftff
necutedltyMICHAEll l'UAIAN I.• ~lo fie flllld •• -~I ""9M ........ Trvsl..-tor .,. -flt Nh1111c1 .. 1 EIKll .. to .. Mid In
end u cu;u, of ANITA MARIE I ll• en, of l'ou11teln Ve lley o" The sexuality seminar is for
parents and their children
between the ages or 9 and 14..
OCC human sexuality instructor
Shirley Lampert will direct it.
Work.shop sessions for parents
who atte nd e d a recent
orientation are scheduled for
three Saturdays, March 20 and
The fee is $8 for a single parent and child, $14 for a
couple and child and $15 for an entire family.
For further information on the
seminars at the Costa Mesa
campus, call 556-
'f'our Qrange Coast
students were lauded for
achievement at colleges
and universities.
Susan Chaffee or
Costa Mesa was named
to the dean's list for the
fall semester at Pacific
Colleg~ ~osts told
-DEAR READERS-: Therec are very few•
services that have ' price ran1e of $125 to •lmost $10,000. The annuu cbu&e of a
colle1e education, however, fa.Us into that
cate1ory. For example, dwina the 1981>-81
school year, a student could baw paid •.200
for a year at Harvard ipcludlq room and
board, or u Uttle as Sl.25 for tulUoll alone •i
\ tbe Univenity ol.. the SUte ~ New York
Re1enta External Desree Procrain. "t
The NatioQal Center for Education
. ~tatistks ha.I &atbered coet ialormltlon fn>ID
, ; nearly 2,000 public •M private four-year
colle1e1 ~ unlvenltles m the U.ut.d Statet.
Tbe report includes twU01i' Wormat¥m for
both ...... IJ'aduMe ... II' .. ltudmtl,
whether tbere 11 ID llHtate md oat« ... tetll
tWUOG cbar1e-, ud room and board fte1.
AltboNb the refQlt nfteda e..,... for the ldloolrw ~ ti.u Mlpall • ...,.,..
coeta bltw..,. 1ehooll for &be eamlq ,.....
For ,_.. copy ~ "CoU•lt eo.ta:• MD!I sa to
' ..
the eoiisume nfOrmation cent~. 222!. PWeblo, Colo. 81009.
Where'• T. Tal Cookware?
DEA& PAT OUNN: I've trted le locate>
tlae aew llle ..... J'ten for T, Tai Cookwue,
lNt ltana't W 01 l11ek. ne old ......_
waa P.K./Q I& .e Pnd9dl la Olup. Tlall
.. ten..&ne e.Mwan tM& yea eu ~
for Jaalf.prtee. Ma1llle 1• • ,..., readen.
bow~ tM9 eo•puJ II tee.W.
E .W.,B ........ Beacla
' A YS had no luck locatln1 tbil firm, but
perhaps our readen can help you. U so,
JOU'll be contacted .. -
. '.
University in Oregon.
LI n d y Le e c.h o f
Huntington Beach was
s imilarly honored at
Miami University of
Ohio.
B a te s Co ll ege
sophomore Ruth Slocum
o C Cos ta Mesa was
named to the dean's list
:at her school in Maine.
Paul Christiansen cit
Laguna Niguel was
awarded a juris doctor
degree from West ern
State University College
of Law in Fullerton. He
has been certified as a
candidate to take the
state bar examin•tion._
ARY A. MURCHISON, JR.,
.0 . NC., e c;.tlfor'nle ~•lion.
to1' Arc:lllbeld A-. C-ue-.e.
CA t27:10.
, LUTHElt M. HANO, M.O., INC.,•
,CelHOrnle ~ellon, olOO N. lut.l
StrMt, G..-, CA tt:io..
MICHAEL OOAOON MORAIS,
M.O .... Vie Correl, A-'"'· CA
t2IO~A0l M. UMOF, M.O., INC., •
Cellfor11I• corporellon, H UO
91ue*•lltf' I.MM. H""tlngt.,. lleecll.
CAnwt.
Tiiis bull-It cotMlvctecl f)V .,,
vnlnc..,.....,, •MCletlOn 04Mr lllOn .,.,_nNt>.
lloery A. M11rclllHn. Jr.,
M.O •• lnc.
llo!ltY A.~ J r . ...........
Tlllf *""'*" WM llled wltll IN C-1Y Ci.rti of Oreno-C-'Y on J.,,,
0 E T-J,IN IJllldevofA"'11,t"2. TH AN LL. iH Benellclery, ci.ted (NOTICIA SE DA POR ESTE MAllCH 64h, 1'10 and rec°"dod e lnslrumenl No. 1601' on MARCH i•. MEOIO -IOs $!9UIOnlft <Anll ......
19'0 of Off k let A.cords In the off Ice of lleft lido ,.,,.,_ -• IM ofk lea Ill• County Record., of Ore ngo -I dell4ro monclonecloa -_..,.
Cou111y, State of Cellfornl• Will 'KVP•llM "' le ~rel elecclM SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO IMvnlclpel que t~re 1.,._, .,, le
HIGHEST BIOOER FOR CASH Clvcl.M de..._.,. Vellrt ....-., et
CA$HIEA'S 01ECK OR CEATll'lfD die UdeAIWll.dt 1"21. CH~CK (peyellle et lime of .... '" I 1ew1v1 monev of united s1e1 .. 1 tit: 1N 11• • ........,. ..... aevc-11
THE LOBBY OF CALIFOONIA LAND ,(Pere SoclOde le Jvnle Mun6c'--11
Tl•TLE COMPANY, 1010 NORTH I
MAIN STREET. SANTA ANA, Y ... for .... 111
CALI l'ORNIA 9'1101 ell t lgM 1111• -Y• -.._Ill
lflt-tl ~toeM-NICI.,., It under Hid Oood of Trtnt 111 tM DANIEL a . MORT<* .,._rty sltlltlted In Mid G-y eftCI LINDA MOULTON
Stel•-n.d M : aETTY MIGHANELLI
LOTS 1 AN!> 3 IN BLOCK U2 OF C H A A l ES W. ' 'M I K E '•
COllONA DEL MAR, CITY O F MICHAELIS
'111117 NEWPORT BEACH, COUNTY 0 1' KEN HOU.AND
PW!lllwd Orenge CMlll o.tly Piiot ORANGE, STATE 01' CALIFORNIA, FREOVOSS
n , n12.
FM! U ~II I I IS t"2 11..ft AS .. ER MAP AECOllDEO IN M>OIC JAMES E. NEAL . 'r:c z+ ' ,,;,, e , J , P A G E S • 1 A N D • 2 o t aEN II. NIE~N
I[ -.., : MtJC:lll.ANf.OUS MAPS. RECOR OS I JAMU It. CREIGHTOH ,......1911( OfllSAIOCOUNTY. I ROY ltOOOUtS r--------Po--~t : EXCEPTING THERE,-ROM 1141 E""9tMcCleMlft ~tenTIOUllWllN•U SOUTHEASTERLY St.00 ,-EET CCllty~!!.!!! NAMelTAT11MINT T"IREO... ty,...--va119y
Tiie follewl111 ,.,.eft ts 1101111 Tll• •''"' acldrou ond ottt.1 (S.C:lwtaf'lo-=:::• ........, ·~ ~-"'°" dttlone•'•· 11 .,,,, of .,.. I ~:C.,~ laU~f~:e u5 :~c::.!.A ~~ .. ~.~ ;:~~;:-::·:·~~R~e-.~~ L:DATEO ~,.. ·-..........._,,,CA....,,_ COR. ONA OEL MA"-CAllf'ORNIA 1,-ECKA: tt• .............. 1•1
I LOUIM OAVl$0tll, ,, ~ ..u ~ 0r ..... c.. Oelfl',...... c-t.~9-:11,CA~ THI VNOEltSIOffEO TltUITIE .tt.~l,IW NMI Three Oran1e Coast , ™' ..._ is ~..., -. .... DISCLAIMS ANY LIABILITY 'o" women are amma 2S""" .....,,..... INCO .. ltECT IN,.O ltMATION . ---,.,._ ~Oe¥tlell f<UltNllHIO. _.,_.. natlOD1Vide named Tiiie ....._ -ftled wltll... THAT Mid._ I' m.O. wit'-!. ,te'TtnouleuMM .. Outltandlna YoUDI £-'' c..,.·of 0t.._ c.vMv • _..,.,..tW.c.,,...,_,..,1tto, .._..,.1'U911T
W ~Am--' .... ·r•.tt.tW. ....,..,.,.,RMWllW..-,w.. TM ......... --. -....... ome UI c11C• UT • ,,... ._............. •• .............
tbde '-~u_e_·s board o.f --~ ... -°"""'·'·'~'-Deity~ T"I ..... -·of tlle llllCUTIVI aut•"IU a v~. . _..--.... '"""!-... -~· .. NH ....._._ ~!llVICIS, 1171 c.-C)rM ......
Fifty-one wlnnen -. ....~.:.:,;:--c i::c,"•.,......a..o, , .. .._,.
one from each atate and THAT MOc. ot •eoc11 ot , • .,. S.M.l11rtWt.1'11t.._v ....
USI THI ='"" ... ~" ... 1'*'"' °'~ ""--.....,~ .. Puerto Rko -will be .... ,:L ':'=.-:::_'~a."':-' L~ .. -. c ..... 1 ,....... u•. chosen for award• DAILY PILOT · 1rv1M,Clll9MIMt11W
' bearln1 the name of =-===:~..,-~ TMt :=-.: 0 11
"'""-. • their home 1tate, and ..,AST --,L~ ~-.°"'91
from tbole 51 wUJ be ·USULT" • ~ ~~=:~ .... ! T111a '=-: =:-c:,~
,c b 0 •• n t b e Te ft lllYIC'I ..... ~c::r~ ' . ,..,_., ....
Outttandlnc Youn• DlllCTOIY ui111H-.crn.u.ttm 'Womm ~ ~mirfea. ant1t NHP -•••Pf. Loe.a ..... cbORi ror Reeult o::~.,.., .. ... are i..uaa ·l:IUott a& Service Call a.cau ...... a LMtO
Coeta ..... Jmlee ••i-••11 :~..:.... W1ma aad Mlcb'll• ... JU ,...a ••°""* Scbal•, ... ~ ...... .. ~:::r Cll9ll.,.... =
11
I
~-P.~ '"'= .;;snfe"W,ir; .. .._UN 1--.._...aDI--" , .............
~··"·-T ........... .-.. •••••••••••••·············•··••••••••••••••••...._, ,..,~jt··························~····················•!!''·-~..-.~······································v··········· ---.,. .......... ~...,,._.. ................................ ...... ...... ...,,...,,__.. .................................................. . 11.......-._._1~1 .................................... •·••·"'"• .... CL.-).,.._._,..._.••············•··••••••••••••:•••••••• C•) ttJ, .. 1iic.-co.:-1 • c.-. ...i IWlllll .............................................. , ................... (~) ...... ,. 11111111(_111,": ........................................... au,.,• ·~.._...., ..... ~_ .......... , ..... , ................ "-.....
l!1Mft ... lft'9ltt4,.....,.... ~··~·--·-~--~l.----.ClliNll .... -....~-0~:~ .••••••••••••••••. ;.;.;::, ---~·-----•-IPl• .... tM ............ .., .. ...., .... o.c..-r "· "" .......... ...._ C....."""'9rtf tllel._ef CtllftflN, ............. , , ...... ,.... .......... v ............ ....., .,....._°'.._.c ... o.11., "'IOI. l'a ».•-.c• t, a. a. tta ttMI.
ll1'8 ANDACCtDaNTAllON~1'.ll
IY~fl 01' TM8 AMMUAL ITAT81MMT-
Y8A" 8MHO Oa~• 11, ttll .. ~ .......... u...__c....., ,_......,.C:...-Olrw, P.O ........ ...._...._-.~ ...
T ... l~Aab ............................................ U, .. ,711..IM
Toul 1...Ult ............. , ....................................... a.-.tlt.G ~1...Wup .............................................................. .. Or-paid In and contrMMl1ed Wri>ha ••••••...• w ........................... 11
S,.Clel _.,... Fundl .............................................. It, .. .., u_._.....,. 1---) ........................................ "'·"' ... 0. .. (~I I,__..._ ........................................ 14,"1.SO
IM-co.cr.->•c.-.. ...is...-.
..... ,.. ........................................................ ,....,,JU 1-lijlCllMl"erc;t: N9t-.................................. tt......,.....
Acc ........ ._111\ prtf'lliuftls-net ... " ......................... IMMt,ate 1--"' ~: CalHeml4i Acc...__ Ill F9w: ~ 9.U-..................... t,1M.6W.W Acc-..e•--~-Olt'ec;t: -c............---............................................. ltt.>O ... w...._cenlf'l'-.. .. .,.....1...,.-111~ • .-ti.~
St. ...... tor .. -W11MC1 o.c.-11, tt11 .,... 1it t11e •--• C_m.......,ef l"'9 SIMe 9f Cell!onM.t, ~ 1itlaw.
Wllllem o. 91Mep
.... Vice
OkaV.,Treliefl ..... "'*llMd,°' ... COHI Oeil'I' Pltoe, FeO. 17, a Mw'cll t, 2, l, t• ftMI
'~ 11111 llll!ll
• SLAGLE Mildren Gearhart. Funeral
W. F . (BILLI SLAGLE, services and Interment will
resident or Anaheim, Ca. be in Newark, Ohio. Pierce
Passed away on February Brothers Smjths' Mortuary
27-, 1982. He bas been a'r o rwarding directors.
resident of the Long Beach S36·6S39.
area since .l9il and moved tol BOWIUNG
Orange County in 1953. He is THELMA C. BOWRING, a
survived by his wire Orpha!resldent or Oceanside Ca.
of Anaheim, Ca., c~ildren1Passed away on Feb~uary
Ila Ganath of Hunljngton12s. 1982. Survived by her
Beach, Ca. and etllyton1hushand Jack Bowring, 2
Slaele or Long Beach, Ca.150ns if;irk Bowring and Allen
and 3 gran~chlldren . Bowring of Costa Mesa, Ca ..
Graveside services will beh daughter Klkl Ahrens of
held on 1\lesday, March 2.1s.an Diego , Ca., 2 aunts
1982 at ll:OOAM. at Harbor Mary Sarver of Kansas.
Law.n Memorral Park . Missouri and Opel Thomas
Ser•ices under the dlrect!on.0 f Omaha, Nebraska, 1
of Harbor Lawn-Mount Ohve gr a Addauahter K ri sty
Mortuary of Costa ·Mesa. Ahrens and other loving
540-SSM. 81.,.,. .J friends and a family .,
· r.vEn Graveside services will be
!!VERETT EMERSON held on Tuesday March 2
BI EGER, r esiden t of 1982 at l:OOPJ\of 'at Paclfi~
Newport Beach. Ca. PassedjVlew Memorial. Park.
away on February 28. 1982. Pacific View Mortuary
Born June 18, 1896 inldlrectors.
L a r a y et t e • ~I n d i a n a . PELLJGRJNE
Survived by his wife Linnie MARY PELLIGRINE. a
A. Bieger, son Everett E. resident of Huntinaton
Bieaer, Jr. of Tustin, Ca., Beach, Ca. Passed away on
dauahter Joyce Gill o~ Costa Sunday, Febru&O" 28, 1982 at
Mesa, Ca .• 4 grandchildren. HunlinJtoo lnlercommunity
2 g reat ·g~andcbildren. Rospit.al Huntington Beach
sisters Mit.tie Basset.t of Ca . F~eral serylces and
Florida and Alice Travis of interment are pending at
Fullerton, Ca., and brother Pierce Bl'others Smiths'
Lawr ence R. Sieger of Mortuary.~.
Bakersfield, Ca. Mr. Bieger JONES
was a resident or Newporf FRANCES DOROTHEA
Beach, Ca. since 1946 and JONES, deceased February
was the owner-operator of 26. 1982. Etemally J>elqud
the Lee Raven Traner Park
1
wife of William Moseley
in .Newport Beach, Ca. for 36 Jones 11. mother of loved
years. FuneraJ services wiJJ and loving chl1dren ·wrnJam
be field on 'M\ursday, Match. M o s e I e 'I J ones 11 I
4, 1982 at l :OOPM at Paci.fie (deceased) and daughter
View Me m oria I Park. 'Shelley Jones Owens .
Interment Pacific View Cryptside servicet wUI be
Memorial Park, Newpom held a l PaclficVlew
Beach. Ca. Pacific View Memorial Park Crypt 1628
ltijortuary directors. i1l V a 1 en ci a Court on
BOWDEN · Wednesday. March 3, 1982 at
E D N A A U D R E A 11 ~OOAM.
BOWDEN, age 74, a resident 1 QUINN
·of Huntington Beach, Ca. THOMAS FRANCIS
Passed away on Sunday. QUINN, resident of Newport
February 28, 1982 af'Beach, Ca. Passed away
Paci r i ca Hos P 1 ta I • February 26. 1982. Born
Huntington Beach, Ca. Mrs . Janl ary 22, 1903 ln Jersey
Bowden was a member of City. New Jersey. Survived
the Huntington Beach Senior by his daughter Letitia Cit~ens, a volunteer at the· Q u i n n a n d a s i s t e r
HW\tinaton Beach Thrift Bernadette Krauer of West
Shop, a member or the 1covina and her children,
Lincoln County Chapter of g r a n d c h i 1 d re n a n d
the Womens Democratic (great-grandchild. Recitation
Party and a past matron otjor the Holy Rosary will be on
the Eastern Star. Beloved Monday, Much. Lr -1981 al
mo1trer of Jerry E. Bowaen 16 : JOPM at Pacific View
of Ne~ark, Qhio and _David Mortuary Chapel. Mass or I
Bowden or Finley. Oh10 and Christian Burial wUl be at
N,ina Brodric~ .or Bonsall. ,1o:OOAM on Tuesday, March
Ca .• also su.rv1vmg. are her 2, 1982 at Our Lady of Mt
brother J~1e Dobbins a!ld 3 Carmel Catholic Church . sisters Wilma Dobbins. 1441 West Balboa Blvd.,
Louella Str-achen a nd Newport Bea~h·, Ca .
HAlllOI L.AW~MT. OUVI
Mortuary • Cemetery
CrerMtorv
1625 Gisler Ave .
Costa Mesa
540-5554
PmCl•OTHBS
18.l•OADWAY
MOaTUAllY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
MLT26 ... aOH
SMITH 6 TUTHIU.
WISTC ..... CHAP8.
427 E. 17th St
Costa Mesa
948-9311
NICl.Ol'tmS IMITMI' MOllTVMY
827Maln St.
~ntlnaton Beac:h
63H539
Interment at Pacific VJew
Memorial Park, Newport
B each . Pacifi c Vi ew
Mortmary directors.
MOTtcaTDc••o•TCNts
TO THI CtllOITO•S o• OLIN "· LOVE, T~lltO". ~. S.CtllN ·--·*of tlw Unfferm C~lel Ctlle, '°" ere ll•r•b'I' netlfled H lolle#a:
TAANSP'ERO• Is ee.ut tit m .... e
lreMffr to IN _........,. ~· TAANSFIAIE·ln b11l1t e11 er e
111b11t•tlol pert of Ille moterlet1,
111111111u, mercllentllH or otller
lnventery, efttl ""1.....-t of tllo
ceruM .., n Wiiie Tewm, -
M Tin Llale .. , llf Wflkfl Is IKMIMI ot
7ft Solftt C191r, C.... Meu, Count'!' of °".,,.. ..... cellfwnle,
Tiie IWftetlt -..... Wtlnttl etltlre1tff tf IM Tren1le rer •nf Tr~-: T•ANWlllC>lt: GLEN A. LCWa,
1'1'9Waolr.CAIM~ . .
TltANSl'E•EIS : ALVI. I'.
90eMM; OCMIS L. ~MM; CllNE M. l'AULITICIC, lttl Cellferf'le .,...., •n . .._ ,..,_, C41...,.
""'· All fl~._., .... ,..,.. .. ,,,_
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ID*to..U.Dlattuadi 'f• Ute Dall7• Ptlot1 a 'fled 8tdlcm • . ·1 ..........
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~ ..... ,.. »• '"'"'...,. o, .. ., ~ ,.,) IMNW11t •1"'11~ )i!l.9 "'-' .. ,.... 3ICI ..,,,, .. ~ ...
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n1m1[[M(JfS.
POSllAl.S &
llST&fMI ,,..... ..... "" ··-w... ........ ""'''-.... _. ...,,.,,..,....
r'-'-'' SIM£S
"'""'""""-' EIMlllT& .......
... ... ... .... ----
l
... lll'-A HOMll
Remodeled, <htcorated 3 ~dl. 3 bath,
mstr bdrm with ocean view 1425,000 .
West Bay bayfroot. Slips for 2 boats.
remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath Sl.200,000.
Ocean & jetty views. Marine rool\l, 4
bdrm. 3 balh,.3700 sq.ft. Sl.385.000.
WO IS&I HOtB
Prime Lldo-NQIG' bayfront. S bdrm, 5
bath. Lge L.R. 2 boat slips St,soo.ooo ..
Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 ttaUt + large
rec. rm. beam ceilings, $0Q.OOO.
LNA.. ISU IAYRONT
Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, S bath,
playroom. dark rm. den. $1,350,000!
C_....TIOM COYI
Spect.scular bayfront view 4 bdrm , 4
~ boat slips fl.900,000.
Tl&YISTAs.MSSIOM YllJO
New French Normandy 4 bdrm. 4
bath. guest house in lakefront comm.
S'mS.000.
BILL GRUND Y. REALTOR
. . . . " .. . ' . .
\\ t .... ! ! ': ',
TAYLOR CO
HI ,\ 1 J 11L..., I' I'' l•
LICI MODIL ..,.._
Elegance deseribes this nr new 4
bdrm & ram rm. Lib.rary with
fireplace. Spacious entry. Formal
dining. Huge kitchen. Gourmet's
delight. Bright. cheerful thrQughout.
Pool le apa. $625.000 including land .
Dover Shorel.
WT ASSIMA•t·RMAMC ...
.
Orange Cocut reftdnta bought 42% of
all neur cari aold In IM count11 laat ""°' even though tMJj com,,,;. onlJI 30% o/
the count11 ·1 population .
DUPLD ,.c="'m~y imker ill old Corona del Kar. >bdrm. hOUH + bdrm. 1ara1e apart·
ment. Super location .
Creative !inanclns. •.soo .
1714167M4M
lllJI 611-1111
NAR801l ''"·'°' Brand ... town home.
aster bdrm ulilu each wiUI balconies. 2Yl
bath . rtreela c t ,
ekyll&hts. m 1 rrored wardrobe1, microw~ve
own, trasb compactor.
A Southern Cahforni1 &ll!SUME LOW ocean view at this price ~ will soon be history. IMTERIST LM With 20% down . 14%
Popular 3 Bdrm 2 b1tb flnlllCing availablt.
floor plan in 1 fine area • Generation Realty
ofColtl Mesa. Great U · 549-1400 sumable loan and seller lliiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiil
will tailor to meet
!Mo'ers needs. Best buy
Jl 1129.000~ Ca 11646· 711 l •aa• AISOWTI STEAL ••c-4 SIS0,000
MOW $$25,000
SPYGLASS
oJl8-~~l~Nc
Sll.750 6br/4"'1ba. 4100 SQ ft '
25 Bodega Bay · IARGAIM! Call owner. 1~4131
Starttr. condo! Supe.J•-••-----1
privatt and quiet.
Bdrm 2 bath. I story
near schools and shop
ping. Good assuma bl4
to.ii. Try smi.11 down.
Call us. ~·2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
RCTaylorCo
.. VII.LA PAIK Cwitom lot near ,.million
S homes Z7 degree view
and superb finaneing.
P5.000.
3 erl 'T!~:S 1n owoen unlt · al.lo 2 br rtntaJ c~taae. All in
sharp cood w/excel loca· Uoa. Owner will CllT)' lie 2Dd TD. Belt buy l.n
town ror only RIO.GOO.
Ctill 644-7J 11
/Jn "<:i.
i}~ , r , .
• • C.l'r "; c_ h) ~ .H .. >'• ..._ J
ac .. ,,....c ....
Trade equity 4bd 2ba Unobl~~un '
Anaheim hse. Boat. Ol&MI Yiew. 2BR, 2BA,
airplane, a uto. etc? Pool! Jae. Boat Slip
Mike840-5614, 530·S9CM _ Av1i . '525.000. Prine
Y11WTOWMHOMES OnJ .6*7!73
Master suites. View or COUMTIT USH ~ , ..,. ht 1. ht OOPU!X 4Br +29r, I ""ean 1•ll 11 s. yr new. $398,000. 709 ' ~et Area. Parks, open 709111 Orchid.. C111 ~ces. Sl37 ,000. Xlnt 1Sl·&13S0wner/6'kr. ·1~~:.:~tfaJo C-. Mete I 024 ------· .-=. .. j)) •at .. •n-sst: ...
WOCNlwfdp
DD.HM
2 .......... . w..., ...... d ...
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
•~YBDI• W111rPOOLANDSPA
Specious 3 Bdrm. 2 ba.
Be1ut.1ru1 area. SIS,000
dn. Asking $240.!>00
Sl&a>/mo pymt. PP Agt.
760-7089 -CHAIMEI
2 Units + Separatt Cot· ta~. Great Owntrs Onit
or Rental Prop. Cabin Like Int. Ea s ts1de.
Creative Terms to•-..
Down Break tven
St~.500. Brkr.
"
RCTaylorCo
~ I \'\_)
ntry & •lrrond -*•s. Good ...
.-bl• I at TD & awe • 2.c1. v.,, .... -.ca. s 149 .ooo. -,...:M..-
ASSUM AILE
"'LOWIMT" Orir ol the fmesl 1·onctow
111 Cost.u Mt'Sa Desiru·
ble fnd unit, lurJ:t' livin.: area. firl'f)hll.'e. t•ountry
kitchen with !Jui ll in
desk. '46£tlity room. 3
-bcTrms. sundN·ks. much. m11t·h mort•, Only
Sll6.lll0. :1\1 now. !'all *l .
COLDWC!U.
BANl(eRO
IAYSHOIES
.. Melody w '"'"·
COLE°' -...oAT RULTORS
HtlL~Nwf. ·c-.. _
S15·55t t
Sltt,500 -. L.owest prtt·r to dt• ..... ......, 1006
Large R-2 lot with nice remodeled 2 bdrm
home . Low 1nnrul
r1nancmg ~n Sun 12·4 . 1010
W W11son.7141S4Htol
~IJ/689-4384
VA ~-
A.UUMABLE
$129,110 --............ .._,._ ,.,. -.,, ,_
Prime Harbor View Homes location, 4
bdrml, f~ rm. 3'h ba. Guest or
teenager s private suite. Spa.
hl(htful wuter ori~nted .. ••••••••••••••••••••• area. Extra 5pet·1ul.l--------•I
t'OZY sturler hom~ ()e(er part ol monlhly
Lar11t ~arlten & patio fayment on 811 lboa
U.11 for terms on \t'r)' I sland prz.rty Low r---------1 r ll v 0 r ab I l' ll• ii s l' ....... -lndudt's plun~ for t'X uuw" or lr ·
4 Bdrm. low interest
loan Below market.
Hurt} ! 645-916 l ...._
:=... _ Community pool. $345.000 lncluding
-the land. $.'52.000 dn. Owner finance.
: Vaca.nt. = WIS&IY M. TAYLOI co .. llAl.Toas = 21tlS. ............. § I ~-~·~'POl~IT~~CIM~~··~~u-~~!!!!!'!!!~~!!!!!!!!' 1
:j....... -.. . ..................... . --· -------... --------... .... ... ... ... .... ..... ... -.... ..... ----... --
""' -• 1M ,,..
"" '111
'"' '711 -'ITU .,...
'll'l'l m. tlJl -... ,, . ti• "" .... -'111
fl• mo ml fllO rm = --1llJ '"' '"' -
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY .
, .......... Moffcr.
Alrreil estate •d· vertised in th is
newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair HOOS· ing Act or 1968 which
makes it Illegal to ad· vertise ··any preference.
limitation. or dis ·
elimination based on rice, color, reTI&1on.
sex, or national origin.
or an intention to mah any such preference.
limitation,· or dis ·
cri min1tion."
This newip1per will not
knowinf ly accept any
advert sin& for real
estate which Is in viola·
tloo of the law.
mottS: Act.trtlHrs
..... dtlCl ..... ..,, ... ;,:::..,..
...s . T1tt
DAILTPILOT •-• ....., for ... first
S.corr.ct l•atrflH -,.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
LOWISTftlCI
·-~~~iculn
by n»Uvated seUer. A~· ... i. fin1ncin1t. Co>:y
fireplare. buutlru
kllcben. Covered paUo. can now. 67J.&SSO
tfM1 q..1,,-M on ~\l:t~3drm.
large yard. nur Mlle Square Park. Asklnic
117.900 Submit your
terms. Murchison Enterpir5ts
----~1?32
O<irTMISS
TtlSCOHDO
IA•••t. prlud-an
owner wUJ rlnance at lo irUreal with 20'-' down
Highly up11raded private location. com
munity pool, jacuzzi. re
room and tennis courts WOll't l11t at Sl06,900
Call ... 7171
THE !<EAL
ESTATERS
•TUl11.8lOCI * Sl.27tPllMOMTH Is ilf you pay when you
takeover exlslln& let T.D. Spadoul 4 br U · ~ve detadled bome
featurine rrml din. fmly
rm ' frplc . Onl y
fl13,SOO. FEE. 759·150? or?S2-ms.
..,,,.
Walkr.r & Lee
•IAYMOMT• IOATSUP
$$55,000
pansion. •~sty, lttr.
'44-9060 675-21,6 . OPEN ~wu ~E
RlAL'Y
/ WOW! l..ciwl•sl prin•d ~ 1002 ._.. 1002
bayrront homt• ON ----J!-•••m!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!! BALB!U.A ruv a.-;s_L_ar f.!C • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·.. • • • • •• ........._. •• • ....... . 4 bdrm. 3 IJulh. doublt-•
fi!'l'lllat-e. l'll\'l•rl'd pul in
plu. m11t•h mun•! Will
AITD·or lradl• for
FMblulr fr:.iyduir<'sl Cl"???!! -
...... , .... op.
IHhrs
*675-7060• I
Prestiieious fo:."tult•i1 tn
fashionable Moh IN Ca ·
nyon. Anaheim llilli<·4 bed.31>3. t'•R. G1R. K<>i
l111oon. Att r;1t·~i n•ly
landsraped Det·oratrct
Ry L. Hardini1. $495.000 A ro rn •R t'alty
1.l4frIH333
LUCKY 13 • su.<iio-dOWn: SIJOO mo. Coir 3Br W/pool " spa. F\tl prire SIM,000. Ca II
7$1..3191
c::. ',f I '
-t-"; '·J .• '• . . • '
---. -----
IHTIUTt 4 Br -ti'ome in Costa
Meil. Owner will aulst wil.b flllUdn&. $120,000. eau m.mo
ALLSTATE
Rl!ALTOM .
VS'l&illea COndo, 17t.900. •dlelot w/lldrm. down P9Yt flexible w /credJt.
m.GIH eves Ir wkndt.
toNmfOUIY Nl BAY o,.. 9d lots of wood, C)lesa .. d
........ YM94J 2-atory llom• wltla
...... c ......... , • .,. Miff• wltla Wc9t.::-;1:11~ ........ ,... ,... 2 ... ...., ,. ...........
............. "GaW Cwt" loc.tioa.
C.. for .. .,,, °" to. •••lleltl•.
$431,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
s.i.. fltftt• l'T·-"Y ~
1430 W COOl4 Hwy m ~ ,..,. ,......._, &ech Biibo. w.nd
Hl·l41t '7Uttl
IJ!IMACNAB HI~-
IUl.D TOUI DllAM UTllAT In
gorgeous Erwin Lake. Big Bear.
Close to skiing, lake. etc. Two
flat buildable adjacent lots. Call
office for directions to property .
Mountain air -Mountain view.
$27,000 Julie Van Wieren 551-8700
(Xl8)
MO MONEY DOWM (to qualified buytr I
Mesa Verde. c.ustom.
3bdrm + bonus rm.
211ba, 2 frpk1. lrg yrd.
$235,000. Ownert Bkr: 6§.-!!711:~----
Stl,Sff
12".LOAM Best value in Costa
Mesa. 3 Bdrm 2 bath.
lar~ lot, new roor. good
location. Call 540·1 IS i to
Stt
-~s ... HERITAGE
REALTOR::>
112' •••••••••••••••••••••••
l.IACESTAn &li>trb early California
desil)I and 11.u1llty con· atrucllon. Futuring
~om pool and .,a . an&q Mexican pavers. 3
riNPlacet. sky ll C'ts.
air rond ' much more. Beaut. hill and valley
vltWI. Small orcurd.
P\tnty of room ror tennis court and horses. Of·
rend II Sl.200.000. Ask
rorUnda.
w...&wftlau
4tJ..Z75J
II M __ .._. 1040
••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br older home. cnr lot .
new roof ' rum. owe. zu..447·76I0:441·32'71
l!OOO dn. Beaut. l&e 4 br
hon ill H.B. or 3 br in F.V.962-7M>a1t __ _
I 002 Bx owner.
4 Br. 211 Ba. nook. family nn. 3 car garaae. prof.
ludecaped. 2 patios
wtcovttS. walb>aper ' custom paint lhru•ut.
t«Urity system. c.own
moulding. Mexican
pavtr noorin1. 2 wed brtct frplcs. bit-In TV altreo rab laet Ii
bookshelves in fam. rm. fll~ asaumable, lil&ast ue lo-1 ppredate.
ltlt.000. Open S.t/9uD.
714 /MS·llU. Prlute rw .
............. •••••••••I•••••••••~.::;:~;:::.;.;:;~ ~~~lA-4~ ·= -------.... ., CUf .. ,_ ____ _ ............... ., .. . .... .........w ... .. .....................
' FUil[$ I I' I [ I ·I -t
" 0 A·' [ I · 1 1 r r I
L[IHJl 11 I I r I ~
GA llU L~
arrrs
llASl/OPllOM OI SAU
·Excellent Termsr Large Assumable
Loan With 30 Year Fixed Rate .
Owner WW Carry Large 2nd T.D. At .
Low Interest. Lovely 3 BR End ·
Unit, W /Wrap Around Patio On
LUlh Greenbelt. Liebl, Cheerfu l
Home. Only $210,000 .
9llftMIAI IQMll.
r#.1 IWIOM lffllTOIS
AUl'active Spanish 2 Bedroom
Fu.rnlsbed f.Plex. No vacancies.
Good Location. South Of RivenWt .
Excellent ,Terma. Reduced To '121.500.
lit
·IM4 •••••••••••••••••••••••
T9tllRC -~. 2 ba. Wlndlot llodtl ..
Tiit Terra ct ..
lvtlJUa6n& wlt.IUa ••· la1 dtat .. ece .. prlrtd
below marte\ !or q II ...SUI,•,.
• • •
snatcher while the Rev. Perry
picked up Mrs. 1ollert.M and her
husband in his brown Mercedes
and followed in pursuit.
Four other drivers joined in
the chase. honking their born&'
and flUblng their lights to draw
attention to the thief, Mrs.
Tollerton said. •
• As the group began to close in,
the . man jettisoned the stolen
purse, but the caravan of cars
• and the bicyclist maintained
pursuit and cornered the man.
One motorist managed to flag a
policeman and the man was
take,n into custod y , Mrs .
Tollerton said.
"He wasn't in ve ry good
shape, he kept getting winded,"
• !taid Regenstein. "His second
proble m was that he stayed
(running) on the sidewalk the
whole ·ume we were chasing
him," instead of ducking into
a eys or OOCJe<l areas.
''The community is ver y
concerned about crime and we
have a ~rime watch in the
cathedral community." said the
Rev. Percy. "I think the purse
. s n a t c her was scared . He
probably diAn't expect all or this
to happen." ,
There were no injuries in the
snatching or subsequent chase,
Mrs. Tollerton said.
District of Columbia police
said the suspect, charged with
robbery in Sunday's incident,
also is being held as a fu gitive
' from justice in Bruns wick, N.J .
From.Page A 1
I PROTEST. • •
1 involvement with the facility.
Protesters gathered today In
the rain a half mile from the
facility and paraded with arms
linked chanting refrains such as
"We Shall Overcome" and
"Power To The People." ~ When they arrived at the south. ~ and southwest entrance's, the ~ demonstrators sat down in rows
blocking the e ntrance of
employees arriving for work.
UC police methodically placed
1-Jeac~iemonstr~tor under arr-est~
There was no resistance.
Among the first arrested was
the Rev. Cecil Williams, pastor
DI the Glide Memorial Church in
San Francisco, who said, "I
very s~ngly feel ·opposed to
nuclear weapons development.
·William s, noted f o r
anti-poverty work, said "The
I nuclea r arms race ls tied to I· urban poverty and money that is
1 ·spent on weaponry could be used
instead to help those in poverty
in the inner·city."
1 From Page A 1
·PoTOMAC • •
Investigators have concluded
that the plane's de-icing was
completed at3:10 p.rn. EST. The
• flight began its takedf( roll just
· befol'e 4 p.rn. •
-Testtmo~to be .presented
later at the bearings is expected
to s how that an American
Airlines ground crew de·iced
t\alf the plane more than an hour
before takeoff and the other half
almost 50 m inutes befor e
takeoff.
The NTSB's chief investigator,
Rudolf Kapustin, the leadoff
witness, said there has been no
evidence found to indicate any
structural or mec h anical
failures or t he plane's two engi_nes. ' ·
I
. From Page A1
sixth husband, U.S. Sen. John
Warner, were separated. Burton
and bis thit'd wife, 33·year-old
Susan Hunt, split last August.
The SUn said Burton told its
reporter: ••of course. I love
Elizabeth -and I love Susan. I
love them boda, damn it . . .
And what l 'd have them do is for
them to come i{ito this room and
~ight it out beJ'ften them.'\ ..
ORANOE COAST
DEATH SCENE Irvine Po~ce Officer Jim
Potts surve~·s sar tarn apart Saturday aftPr
ripping into utility pole on In ·ine Cente r ·
o.lty,..... ,,_...,Gary A--
0 rive. Passenger Jdfre~· Tripi . _HL. 0 1
Laguna Hills died . Dri,·cr had been drinking.
police said
From PageA1
CRASHES KILL THREE. • •
specialist. ''We've had accidents
out there, but not an excessive
amount."
Meanwhile, two men riding a
motorcycle were kUleii Sunday
whf'n they s truck a car on.
Newport ·Boulevard near' Cowan
Heig hts in Orane-e . the
California Highway Patrol said.
The motorcycle riders, taken
to UC Irvine Medical Center in
O r a nge wh ere they-were
pronounced dead , we r e
identified CIS 22·year-old Terry
Frost, address unknown, and
Daniel Roberts, 24, believed to
be a Marine stationed at the El
Toro Air Station.
The driver of the car was not
injured.
J n _Fa u n t a i n -Yall e--y~ -
l6·year-old Gunnar Swanson
suffered c ritical injuries
Saturday morning . when he
topeled from .his mo,,ped under
the rear wheels of a truck.
The Fountain Valley youth
was taken to Fountain Valley
Community Hospital where he
has undergone surgery for
inte rnal and chest injuries. ·
Police o(ficers said the
teen-ager was driving alongside
a two.-ton truck on Warner
Avenue near San Bruno Street
when the truck made a right
turn. The mo-ped rider, police
said, clipped the truck and slid
under its tires .
In Mi ss i o n Viejo , an
unidentified 17 ·y.ear,old-~
~seriously injured S11turday when
his motorcycle was struck by an
oncdming vehicle on Moulton
Park.way near La Paz Road.
Police said the driver or the
car. 33·year -old Cheryl Brady of
Mission Viejo, was not injured. I
Traffic officers report that her
car crossed over a center
div.ider apd st.ru c k the
motorcyclist, who was riding in
the opposite direction.
Adding to the grim weekend
statistics was the identification
or a man and woman killed in a
fiery high·s peed collision in
-Newpori-Beach la&l--week .
Through t he use of dental
NlCO rds, the pair killed last
Wednesday on Jamboree Road
have been identified -as. J"ames
Ray Padovan, 41, and Linda
Ma rgeret Kurzyniec, 32. Both
s hared a Santa Aria Heights
address.
Police said the couple were
apparently on their way hom'e
from work when the pickup
truck they were riding in spun
out of control, careened off a
median strip, plowed into a'
power pole a nd erupted in
flames.
3 suspects arrested·
in Mesa ~~glary
Costa lf esa police arr•t.ed
three-Lol Angeles ~ounty men·
tarly this morning on suspicion
of blll'g.larizing a Cosla Mesa
appliance st.ore.
Police" officers Tom Pipes and
Mike Howard were patrolling
the area along 17th Street at 4
a.m . when they heard the sound
Meaning of story
alter~d by:typo
A typographi ca l e rro r
changed the meaning ol the lead
-paragraph in the Sunday Special story.
It s hould have read: The
prospect of using treated
wastewater to keep parks, golf
courses, greenbelt aTeas and
Pla ytng fields g r een has
prompted five area water
districts to seek construction of
n ew o r expanded water
.tr.attnenl lllldltelivery systems .
The word "prompted" was
inadve"?tently pri nted as ''pro~:''
or breaking glass, police said.
Officers reported t hat they
saw th e trio leaving
Davis·Brown, 411 E. 17th St.,
with videotape recorders.
One of the suspects. Gregory
C. CalhoWl, 18, Long Beach, was
arrest ed three blocks away
following a foot pursuit.
A broadcast of the suspect·s
description and van resulted in
the a rrest about an hour later•
by Newport . Beach police of
Roosevelt Roy. 18, Long Beach
a nd Cha rles Dotson, 35, Los
Angeles along Pacific Coast
Highway. All three remained in
Costa Mesa Jail this morning in
lieu of $10,000 bail.
Atlanta probe.
to be closed?
ATLANTA .(AP) -Wayne 8 .
Williams fears he could Jose hia
chance to be cleared of his two
murder convictions if the books
are c losed o n most of the
aJay inp or young blacks that
horrified Atlanta for nearly two
years, ~lawyer says.
Ram pleads
• • mnocent 10
dri~i~g case
Los Angele s Ram s
quarterback Dan Pastorini has
pleaded innocent in Harbor
Municipal Court to a charge of
misdemeanor drunken driving,
according to the clerk al the
Newport' Beach court.
The plea was entered late last
week and a pre·lrial conference
was set for March 25 in the
oourthouse.
Pastorini. 32, of Newport
Beach. was arrested Feb. 14 in
Huntington Beach after failing a
roadside sobrjety test. Police
alleged they saw his Porsche
eoine on Pacific Coa.sl 1-0ibwu
in Newport Beach at speeds as
high as 100 mph
H e was released fro m
Newpurt Beach Jall Feb'. 15
after posting a $1~500 bail.
Suspect held
in HB thefts,
rape attempt
A 26·ycar-old trans ient who.
officers say posed as an electric
company employee has been
arrested in connection with five
burglaries a nd an attempted
rape, aU in Huntington Beach,
police said today.
The man. Tom Ross. was
arrested Thursday afternoon
after he alle-gedly gained entry
to a local home saying he was a
utility se r vice man a nd
attempted to r ape the
22 ·year·old woman who Lived
~ere, police said.
Daily Pilat
Thomae P. Heley
M=NOfflCE !!''.-:: 1._SL,C....MeNi.CA.
-r_..tt9.c..llMeM,CA ....
Alvin Binder, the Mississippi
lawyer who headed Williams'
defense during a sensational
nine.week trial, said Sunday
•'
,....... _ Cllllf ._"' ... Olllcet
Robert N. Weed
~
Tllon9a A, Murphlne ..., .
• that Williams was upset over,
• reports that au.t.horitles now plan
to close the boOks on 27 slayinp.
Binder said Williama hoped the
tnvesUaat.loD would continue so
he would be •xon•ated.
A S11perlor Court Jury
dellb9rated j2 .. rrtdQ and
Satarda7 before flndla1 UM
11 · 1 tar· e I• Ir• e · I &a e e =::r••pHr and .. ...,... -~otmurdelrli tbe d..abl (j Nithanlel Cater,
27, and Jimmy tt.1 PaYMrll·
t
t nformatlon for a bout 15
..mlautea. 1toppln1 aftef
temperatures a bove 500 de,..... Fahrtnhe~ wer• recorded at
• what waa later determined to be
about JO m.Uet ftom the planet'.-
surface . The U .S . probe.
Martner s. paued about 6,000
mllea from tbe plaMt'J aurfact,
Tiie U.S. launebtd tv.>o Pic>Mer
sp1tctcratt 1n Decem"r 11'71,
one which •"1t into orbit ot the pro bet. .
Tau aa1d itl curr.nt Veaus probtt will teet the around
aurface ol Vtnus In an ettort to
determine what elemeotl are
pr eaent on th e i.ot ,
cloud-covered planet.
The mother ship, Venu.8 13,
paued at • dlatance or 'about
22,320 miles, Tua ••Id.
The newa aceocy aald joint
Soviet-Freneb expertment.i we"
carred out durtn1 the m1ht to
Venus. ·
San JUaD. boy, 5,
drowns in pond
A 5-year-old San Juan
Capistrano boy drowned Sunday
in a pond in the rugged ba&k
country of Cleveland National
Forest, ~cording to an Orange
County F fre Department 1 spokesman.
Capt. Steve Whiticker said
e fforts by two physicians. a
paramedic unit and a Marine
Corps .helicopter crew failed to
. save'the life of Antonio Lemos.
Whiticker said the .bo'y at
about 1:30 p.m . fell into the
pond, locate.d in Verdugo
Canyon on the James Rancp
about 3 miles .south of Ortega
Highway. He said two doctors
who were on an outing' in the
area tried to revive the boy
before the arrival of
paramedics.
Whiticker s aid a paramedic
ambulance was unable to reach
the area, causing paramedics to
be delayed.
A Marin e Corps r escue
helicopter was called frp m El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station to
fly the bQy t o Mi ss ion
Community Hospltal in Mission
Viejo, Whiticker said.
H'e said t he youngster was
pronounced dead on arrival at
the hospital at 3:21 p.m.
-Pest-drive of auto
.leads to ·slaying?
,,
Police said today they believe
a Huntington Beach man was
shot to death Friday while
allowing another man to test
drive the 1979 auto he was
atteJDpting to sell.
Westminster police officer
Earle Graham said police were
searching today Cor the
prospective car buyer and the
dead man's missing auto, a
white BMW, license number 412
XNJ.
Graham said the car's owner,
R oy Sab u ro Na'kase , a
36·year·old printer, was found
Friday night in a vacant field at
Hoover and Wyoming streets in
Westminster. Nakase was shot.
once in the chest, apparently by.
a s m all caliber haadgun, he
said.
The printer was trying lo sell
his auto and left on a test drive
Friday from his home with a
prospective buyer, police said.
He said officers believe Nakase
was shot sometime during--the-
test drive and his body dumped
in the vacant Westminster lot.
Slain womqnf ound;
cops seek itlentity ...
Police are trying to identify a
young woman whose body was
found Sunday in a Costa Mesa
parking lot by an off·duty police
officer on a family outing with
his two sons.
Police Lt. Jack Calnon said
the woman described as possibly
of Latin descent had been shot.
He d eclined-to s pecify the
l~ation or the bullet woun~.
She was believed to be m her
late 20s, about 5 feet 4 inches
and weighing about 150 pounds.
'
The woman's fully clothed
body was discovered about 11
a .m. by an off.duty Inglewood
officer who had taken his sons ·
go.cart racing in a vacant
parking lot at 1650 Sunflower
Ave.
Calnon said it appeared that
the woman, wearing a red dress
and h1gh heels. had t>een lcilled
at the scene.
An autopsy will be conducted
today to determine the cause
and time or death.
Thi~ves get $106,000
in Newport Beach theft
Bur glars took more t han
$106,000 worth of jewelry and
othe& valuables this weekend
from the Dover Shores home of
marine engineering firm owner
Jose Rosan.
Police said the intruders
tipped over furniture, emptied
drawers and left other items
s trewn on the Aoor~r the house.
Rosen told police that when he
returned home !:iunday, he found
alJ the doors to his house were
open and his front yard covered
in toilet tissue.
H e said the burglars took
jewelry, a sterling silver set, a
te le vision, video r ecorde r .
camera gear and $500 in cash.
Desert shaken
RIDGECREST (AP) -A
moderate earthquake with a
preliminary measurement of 4.1
rumbled under the desert floor
11 miles north-northwest or
Ridgecrest on Sunday night, but
caused little grounlI motion and
no damage, officials said.
classic windb~akcz.r. ..
th<Z. ori~inal G-9
windbnz.okrl.r, idtz.o1 fur
~lfor outdoor~r.
mack or 1i~1:Jw'z.)4ht
cotton-poplin wilh e
tert.Bn 1iniaj.
avaiktblcz. in natural,
british ten, navy
or nz.d.
moda. fbr us in <lnSll'nd.. ..
_ ..
-
-·
.. _ ..__ ·-· __ .. ..._ ..... ·-............
•
------
.--~ --· _...,. . ·-
•
·~· ........
GOLDEN OLDIE ~lizabet h Ta\'lo·r a nd her former
husband Richard Burton (left 1 cele brate her SOt h birthda~·
in London with ze,· Bufman. producer· of ··T he ~itllt!
Foxes ... whic)1 s he 'll s tar in for a Brl6is h tour
·Liz, Burton deny
'third time' rumor
LONDON CAP> -"Elizabeth
a nd I will never remarry,"
R ic hard Burton s aid today.
squelching a roar of romantic
rumors reverberating since bis
weekend reunion with Elizabeth
Taylor, their fi rst meeting in
fi ve year~.
The reunion was a bonanza for
most of the British press, which
speculated on the possibility that
they would mar ry for ttie third
time .
• "We h aven 't discussed it
(marriage >. It's not going. to
happen." Burton was quoted as
saying today in an interview
with t he Press Association~
Britain's domestic news agency.
• ..
Ym ·•lllll llllY NIU
<JH ANC.t I UlJNI' 1Al11 ()H NIA i'> C l.NI~
County hu;y of Ziggurat posed
Nestande pushes Niguel building for local agencies, courthouse , jail
Bruce Nestande, chairman or
the Orange County Board of
Supervisors, proposed today that
th e count y a c quire the
ml 11 lon-sq uare· foot Ch et
Holifield Federal ltuildlng in
Laguna Niguel rrom the federal
government.
Nestande said the building,
which is now largely vacant,
could be used to house a variety
of county agencies.
Beatles album on the . way?
Old, unreleased recordings may be combined
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
n ew Beatles' album? It's a pos~ibility, thanks to the doz~ns
of unreleased "Fab Four"
recordings languishing in record
company vaults.
T he Los Ange les He rald
Examiner reported that later
this ye~r EMI Records may
r e lease an a lbum of tunes
recorded by the Beatles before
the group's me mbers -Paul
McCartney, George Harrison,
Ringo Starr and the late John
Lennon -went . their separate
ways in 1970. The album would
include the Mitch Murray song
"How Do You Do It" and
Johnny Preston's "Le ave My
Kitten Alone."
EM I also has a five-song
Beatles audition tape and other
"demo"· songs as we ll as tapes
of familiar songs that differ
s ignificantly from t h e final
a lbum ve rs io ns . Ho wever ,
• because of legal obst acles.
chances are that these and other
unreleased recordings will not
be officially made availa ble in
the near future, a_lthough so_me
have surfaced .recent.ly on the Beatles for the British
bootleg tapes . • Broad ca sting Corp. between
The newspaper said a number 1962 and 1965. Twleve of the
of songs appearing on a tape titles never appeared on a lbums,
played during the "Beatlefest" including reportedly -songs
in Los Angeles may have been by Chuck Berry and Little
i llegally removed fro m the Ri ch a rd . as we ll a s others
vaults of EMJ. gathered by BBC researchers Th~ hidden recordings vary in working on an upcoming special
quality fro m e xcelle n t to comme mo rating th e 20th
unfinished, but even the poorest anniversay of the Beatles' first
of authentic Beatles tapes would appearance on British radio.
be extremely valuable to BeaUe A dozen years a fte r the
memorabilia coll ectors. Beatles' breakup, Beatlemania
There are, for example. hours persists -at least to a degree.
a nd ho urs of s tud io · tapes The newspaper reported that the
containing everything from group's original albums still sell
outtakes and song scraps to jam a million copies a year in Great
sessions and rehearsals. Britain a lone. with various ·'The recording studio was k I I their laboratory -they left the .Beatles rep·ac ages a so sel Ing in the millions. tape machines running all the
t ime," forme r Beatle s press The idea of a Beatles museum
. agent Tony Barrow once said. to preser ve the mountains of
There is also an unreleased m emorabilia bartered at such
Beatles film docume nta r y. gatherings as the Beatlcfest is
originally compiled and edited ga theri ng s team , and t he
between 1968 and 1971 for.,A-pple newspaper said Paul McCartney
Films. a division of the group's recently m ade a number of
company, Apple Corp. purc hases a t Sothe by's in
The unreleased material also London with s uch • a museum
incluqes 34 songs recorded by possibly in mind .
An aide to the supervisor said
a courthouse, and possibly a jail
would be among possible uses.
T he county already has a
regional civic center In Laauna
Niguel, but it is currently filled
to capac ity, the aide said.
Nest.;lnde's proposal (or a study
on potential acquisition of the
so-ca lled Ziggurat bunding is
scheduled to be onsidered by
the board of supervisors at a
meeting Tuesday morning.
Nestande said consultants will
b e as k ed to a n a l yze t h e
feasibility of acquiring the
building via a joint venture
involving private enterprise.
An aide to the supervisor said
recent tax la w changes give
g r eater fl e xibility for
public /pri vate acquisition and
use of buildings.
T h e fed e ral gove r nment
acquired the Ziggurat in Marci),
1972 fro m North American
Rock well Co rp. wtiich built the
six·story structure in 1971.
Rockwell never occupied the
l)uilding becaus e of the slump in
the aerospace industry in the
early 1970s
The federal government has
been un able t o make the
huilding attractive to its various
agencies. pri marily because of
the high cost of housing in
surrounding communities.
The building currently· houses
a branc h o f t he National
Archives, the Internal Revenue
Service, the U.S . Geologic
Survey and recenlty provide<I
te mporary space to workers ·
conducting the 1980 U.S. Census.'
Burton and Taylor spent ~uch
of the weekend together, holding
ha'nas. dancing and talking, but
only a few Hours of it were in
private . And three of h er
childf'en were reported on hand
"We . love each other with a
passion so furious that we bum ·
one another out,·· Burton was
·then.
'frovost aids
o .. chase, capture
of suspect
WASlilNGTON CAPJ -Purse
snatchings rarely attract much
attention these days. but when
Kathy Tolle rton's purse was
grabbed. five motoris ts, one
bicyclist and a church provost
took a fter the s u s pect and
caught him.
Mrs. Tollerton said she and•
he r husband were walking home
fro m church ser vices at the
W as hington Ca th ed r al in
fashionab l e n ort hwes t
Washington when someone ran
pas t he r apd grabbed her
s houlder bag Sunday.
"I was yelling, 'He's got my
purse,· and my hus band ran
after h i m," s h e s aid in a
telephone interview.
The commotion attracted the
attention of bicyclist Lewis·
R ege n s tein , sever a l other
citizens and the Rev. Charles A.
P e rr y , provost o f t h e
Washington Cathedral, who was
stuck in traffic nearby.
Regens t e in s hift e d h is
10-s peed bicycle into high gear
and t.ook off after the purse
<See CHASE, Page AZ>
f q u o t e d a s s a y i n g i n t h e
i n terview al his s u ite in
Lendon's fashionable Dorchester
Hotel.
"I 've got two certifica tes
which prove that I was m arried
to Elizabeth at one-time or
another -=-and w4'<1on1t need
another one," he was quoted as
saying.
Earlier. Will iam Hickey, the
gossip columnist of the Daily
~xpress, su ggested there might
Lfe a connection with Miss
TayJor 's coming aritish stage
debut in "Tt\_e Little Foxes."
"When I asked Burton if his
well -timed meeting with Liz ...
was love rekindled or merely the
most outrageous plug London
had seen in years, he couJd only
reply wearily, 'God knows,'"
wrote Hickey. ·
"I still love Elizabeth,'' the
56·year-old Burton told reporters
Saturday night.
And the 50-year·old actress
said "we've always loved each
other " as they drove off together
to a party Sunday nii;t ht.
When they left the party, l\nd
reporters asked whether they
were thinking of remarrying, he
s na pped. "We are," but she
shouted, "He's marr ied, and I'm
married." His aide J o Lustig
said ang rily a fterward that
Burton meant both were already
married.
M iss Tay l o r re ce ntl y
announced that s he a nd her
(Sff UZ, Page AZ)
Crashe~ in county
claim three lives
Three people are dead and two
remain in critital condition
today following separate traffic
~cddenta over the weekend in
Orange County. ·
Laguna HJlls resident Jeffrey
Tripl, 19, was killed Saturday
evenlni &Iler the car he was
riding in swerved off Irvine
Center Drive in Irvine near the
La1una freeway and slammed
into a utility pole. ·
lrvim olftcen 1aJd the car -
drl ven by an ualdenUfled La
Habra 11·JHN>kl 1outh -hit
tbe pole IO laard 'that the top ol
tbe car was ripped off, leavtq
tbe auto lD two chunk.a.
T he driver suffered minor
injuries and ttas arrested on
sus picion ot felony drunken
drlvln1, police said.
It was the aecond fatal
accident on. the road stretch ln
the past six montha.
An Irvine traffic apeclaliat ,
tbou1h, reported that Irvine
Center Drive bu not bad an
unusually hi1h number of
accldenta and tbat the two fatal
crubel were not 1lmlJar.
"Up untU lhil Ume, there hU
not been a partlculatly bad
aceldet history la that area,"
taJd Deanla Wllber1, ctt7_tramc (lee caA .... , .... AJ)
Deity_,......,.._.~
Series winner was All an Rosenber g's lntens<' from Alamitos
Bay Yacht Club < Stor:-· on Sports. Pa~e C:ll
MIDGET MIXER MicJget Ocean R acin~ Club r arers in
Newport Ha rbor Y acht Club's Corkett Troph ~· s e ries
scrambled for pos ition at start of Saturday 's distance rat·e. _;_;,__;....:....;;__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Police seize
31 protes-ters
at Livermore
LIVERMORE <AP> -Atleast
3i demonstrators, including one
found inside a classified area,
were arrested today during a
protest or nuclear weapons
development at the University of
C a J II or n la· s Law r e nee
Li'v er019re National Laboratory.
It was the second mass
demonstration at the facility this
ye ar . O n F e b . 1 , 17 1
demonstrators were arrested.
All but one of those arrested
wer~ booked for investigation of
blocking a roadway. One
unidentified person was chlJ"led
with treapassin1 arter he
climbed a fence and dropped
into the laboraton compound.
The laboratt>ry 1, owned by.
the University of CaUfomia and
perform s nuclear weapon1
research for the Depanment ol
Defense and the Department 'OI
En er 1 y . It b a 1 be e.n a
long -standln1 ·symbol of
anU-war protest and the cent.r
of much controversy amOQI tbe OC Board of Re1ent1. Goy:
Edmund G . Brown Jr., a
member ol the ..., .... hu kmi
been oppoeed to the Ub.lvllfllt7'•
(lee PaoTBIT, Pap Al'
•
Stewardess.: 'I'm not ready'
Survivor of crash killing 78 describes last moments
WASHINGTON (APJ -The
s urviving stewardess from the
Air Florida flight that crashed
into the Potomac Ri ver testified
t oday that t he plane began
s huddering as it took off and
t hat in the seconds before hitting
the wate r was wracked by
violent sensations.
OnfF the Boeing 737 hit the
water, Ke lly Duncan told a
hearing, "My next feelint was
that I was noating. . . . I felt I
was d.yipg and l just thought,
'I'm not ready to die"." " Seventy-eight people died in
the Jan. 13 crash.
Even before the. plane left I.be
National Airport runway, ahe
felt aomething waa wron1. Ma.
Duncan told the National
Trana\)ortation Safety Board
hearmc.
"The takeoff wasn't •• lo\ld aa
tt usually ia. lt aeemed Ulle an
uruttually lone Ume before we
pulledolfthe nmwar."
Federal lnv~•tlaatora have
aald they believe Ice ln the
en(lnes may have cau1ed an
lndlcator to ti" tbe pilot • falle
re1dln1 •• to tbe amouat ot
tllrult be WU aettlnl dvrinl Ull
talleo«roU.
The alrtraft, with 7t
passenger s , bega n los in g
altitude almost immediately
after takeoff, struck a busy
com muter bridge and plunged
into the Potomac. ·Seventy-four
people on the plane and four on
the bridge were killed.
As soon as the aircraft was in
t he air, Ms . Duncan said, it
"started to shudder and it got
increasingly more violent."
The stewardess, who was
sHUng near the rear of the
pl ane, s aid s h e d i d n ot
remember the Impact.
The Air Florida fli ght
attendant, one of only five
people oo ~rd to survive , was
the . second witness to appear at
the opening day of hearings
b efore an Ni'SB board of
lnqulry. ·
A1ked whether she now pl811!1
to conUnue workin1 as a flilht
attendant, Ms. Duncan told her
questioner, ''Yes, s1r, I will."
She said she bad had to swtm
. to the aw'f ace and then rou1ht
throup pieces of Ice back to the
tall Hdion, where 1be awaited a
re.cue helicopter.
Deacrlbln1 h er nearly 30
mlnulle lD the icy water. 111.
Duncan aaJd •he had opened a
llfe Jacket for another 1urvtvor
wi th her teeth because her
hands were loo cold.
M uch. of the questioning
focused on whether the plane,
which waited for more than 40
minutes in a steady snowsCorm
before getting takeoff clearance,
had been properly de-iced.
<Sft POTOMAC, hit At>
DRllCI CIAIT 1111111
M osUy cloudy· tonight
through Tuesday. Chance
of rain 80 percent tonight.
Hi1hs :56 to 62.
111181 TlllY
'·Divorce War1: A l.ooe
Stor11 ," copturu humo"
m o menta and tr11•"11
muatioru on TV to.right. Sn
Page BS.
litlll .... --..a ...
L.M..... M
~ .. c..... .. ~ DM c.-n .. c ........ .......... ...... M a M L M .......... ..
A
H
• . DoW Jones Final
UP 4.00 ..
CLOSING 828.39
The Index of .Leadla& lndlcaton fell for the ninth
straight month in January. and the 0.8 percent
decline would have been much worse If the impact of
severe winter weather had been included. the
Commerce Department reported. The index would
have declined 2.8 percent for the month. but
department officials deleted effects of one Indicator.
the average workweek. which was shar')>ly depressed
by the bad weather. The index had declined 0.3
percent in each of the preceding two months ...
Ford Motor Co.'s union workers overwhelmingly
approved a 21.h·year concession package, clearing the
path for an anticipated resumption of talks between
the United Auto Workers and General Mo&on Corp
The drop in gasoline prices over the past 12
months is chiefly attr ibutable to the fierce
competition in gasoline marketing, according to the
Lnndberg Letter, ~ weekly oil industry newsletter.
Retail prices fell about 8.46 cents a gallon over the
past 12 months, the newsletter's author, a n;alyst Dan
Lundberg, reported . . .
The U.S. Air For~e has awarded a $55.8 million
contract to RMkwell Inte rnational Corp. to continue
the manufac.t,ure of "smart bombs" at its facilities
northeast of Atlanta . . .
Raytheon Co. has received a $605 million
contract from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for
continued work on the improved Hawk Air·Defense
System •
11111 ~-----...,,
Savings and loan associations in CaUfornla,
Arizona and Nevada saw a net new savings inflow or
$343 million in January with jumbo certifinteror
deposit getti ng the biggest boost, the Federal Home
Loan Bank of San Francisco reported. The inflow
which follows two months of outflows totaling $452
million. contrasts with an outflow of $177 million in
January 1981 . .
Continental Airlines, which lost $60 million last
year. said it has borrowed an additional $25 million
and that its auditors plan an official notation on the
airline's 1981 financial statement questioning ttrr
company's chances for survival ..
· Pacific Telephone & Telegraph shareholders
have voted to approve a merger with P acific
Transition Corp. American Telephone & Telegraph
owns aJI or Pacifi c Transition and 91.S percent of the
common stock and 78.2 percent of the preferred stock
in Pacific Telephone ...
Beatrice Foods Co. is negotiating to buy
Coca·Cola Eottling Co. of San Otego and is close to an
agree ment lo acquire Coke's San Bernardino
franchise, a spokesman for Beatrice said. Beatrice
recently bought Coca.Cola of Los Angeles and
Northwest Industries beverage busin ess . . .
Whittaker Corp. said it would appeal a federal
judge's decision in Chicago clearing the way for
Brunswick Corp. lo sell its Sherwood Medica l Products subsidiary . . .
Applications to establish nationally chartered
banks in California almost tripled last year to 73
from 26 in 1980, while state bank filings declined to 18
Crom 35, according to data supplied by Edward
Carpenter & Associates Inc.
11111111 it,
New World Computer Co. of Irvine for the
quarter ended Jan. 31 had net income of $58,158, or 1
cent. compared with a net loss of $151 ,702-, or 3 cents
for the like quarter of fiscal 1981~ Revenues were
$531 ,887, up from the $57,236 from last year·s quarter.
~OCKS IN THE SfttlLIGHT AMEtlCAN LEADERS
.. W VOi* ~-S.leo noon "'""' -"" dW'ltflfh _, ...... -............ t""--II~ ... _.., al,_.._
5H t'SAole l,4l6,40D 1714 . ..,, E~*lnl .... 200 284 ·~ -. IBM Ml'.100 UV. Norlf'ICI P$ 5'0,ICIO 11
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MolO<Vle '14,000 s.~ + 1'-'\ :.~T 4'1,G ,...,~ + 14 ouaa l:RI. -Y. MAOOM 'l',700 "" -n• Sony Corp »1,1• 1"6 -~ ~~ JM,UIO ~ .,~
JJUOO f1 -I'> Nars.N w,a J1"4 +IY. Pfllla Elac m:: 1~ Mobil I .22'-..
METALS
HEW YORK CAPI
met"' prkti tedfv
c ...... , n ._.,tO cents a 11ound, U,$,
UPS AND DOWNS destln•tloM
La.-2t cenb • "°""4 l lM 43 Ctflls a pound, "911 ... tM
Ptl. u.. 4),1 u, l~.7 UP IU UP• 12,J U, IU
UCI 11.S "' 't1 ~ ... I• UP 7.$ UP 7.1 UC1 7.0 Up ,,,
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Ti. \4.tOID#le\als w-c-•te 111 . ... ,.._. 1t.n cents• _..s, H v
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SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
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SYMBOLS