HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-12-26 - Orange Coast PilotI
----IAllY IUll
•,tJNOAV UL<.f MIH U Ji, 1'111! ' IHI\" f 'I I ""," -( f I\ I 11 ( J II NI/\ ,1 J I f N I "
At FV hospital, iD.f ant care
anything but elementary • IS
By PlllL SNEIDEJ\M.AN Of .. DllJ .......
In mid-November , Kae
Jimenes of Hu..ntlngton Beach
learned the reaaon for her
dWicult precnancy -ahe WU
carryinc twln1. She received
another aarprl8e one week lat,er
when the twin boya decided to
make their entrance about two
montha early.
Jeremy weiahed in at 3
pou.nda, 1 ounces. H1a brother
Jamie wu an even 1kinn1er 2
pounda. 13 ounoea.
After their blrth Nov. 28 at
Fountain Valley Community
Hmpltal, the premature lnfanta
experienced breathing problenw
becauae their lunss were not
. fully developed.
'1 The b<>y1 were placed in the
boapltal'a new Intennediate Care
Newborn N~. when their
breathlna wu atabillzed. They
now reaide in the nuraery'•
1ia.-encloeed t.olettea, which
keep them warm and monitor
their vital Qr».
The twfn1 ' health bu
improved, and they probably will
10 home In January. In the
meanUme, they will remain ln
the intenaive care nuraery,
receivtna attention from doctors
and nUl'lles •P.«WIY trained ln
Inf.ant care.
Their mother, who 11
pennitt.ed to villt the twtna every
day, ha1 obaerved their
lm~t. 'They're definitely more
alert," she uld. '"llley even amlle
llOCDethnes. ''
Jamie and Jeremy are among
the flrat babies to receive
treatment in Fountain Valley
Community'• new 1ix bed
Intensive care nuraery. (The
faclllty eventually will have
eiaht beda.) Accord1ni to Dr. Leonard Fox,
co-dl.rec:tor of the unit, there are
three levela of hoepital care for
newboma.
Primary care refer• to
traditional nwwrlea for children
born without dlfflcultlea.
Tertlar}' care, available in Qranae County only at UC Irvine
Medical Center and Children'•
Hospital of Oranae County, la for
the most extremely ill newboma,
Including thoae who require
lona-term breathing ..i.tance or
heart surgery.
Intennedlate nunerlea, such as
the one at Fountain Valley
Community, are for le91 aerlously
• . Jam.le Jfmeaes, Jtoiili No.. 28~ wean a llOeldq eap ta Im
· '9oleue. The eap. dacMip f.at.~ i... a wiom parpoee -it
helpe Jamie retain body heat. A heart monitor abo is attached
-:-to Jamie.
.oc • a1.r
·travelers
diverted
m Infant• who neverthele11
require 1pectal care.
Fox ukl Fountain Valley la the
fifth Oranp C-ounty hospital to
receive at.ate oert16oation for an
intermediate care nunery. (The
.other four are MarUn Luther,
Weatern Medical Center, St.
Joeeph and Hoaa Memorial.)
The phyalclan aald theae
Intermediate nuraerie1 are
Important becauae they free
needed beda at the tertiary care
centen.
Fox and h.la partnen Patrick
Walah and Marc Lietner opened
an earlier Intermediate care
nuraery at Martin Luther
Hoa pl tal in Anaheim and
patterned the new Fountain
Valley unit after It. The three
doctora are neonatologlsta, or
speclallata in the care of
newborns.
At leaat two Intensive care
nuraes are al waya on duty in the
nunery.
E.ach month about 175 babies
are born at Fountain Valley
Community. Modern medical
1 testing during pregnancy can
help doctors detect aome Infant
cli9orden even before delivery.
Dr. Fox aald generally 5
percent of the bable1 born at
Fountain Valley fall into the
high-rlak category. The ne"!
nursery allow1 some of theae
newborn• to remain at the
hoapltal , rather than be
transferred to one of the tertiary
care centers.
The intennediate care nunery
ia equipped to help Infant.a who
need 1hort term breathing
Ulistance or who need to be fed
throuah a tube extending
through thelr moutha directly I into their lt«Daeha.
While ftllt1na in an laolette. an
intenave care newborn 18 boobd
up to a deYb that maniton heart
rate md .._thtnc and Is css-bJe
of alft11nl a nww lf harardoua
change• occur. Becauae a
.( ... INTENllVlt, Pqe AS)
·Jenny Ball of Denver makee her way alons a downtown 1treel
on ·1ki1 after storm dropped more than two feet of snow.
Travelers stranded by storm
BJ die Aaaoda ... Prest
A 1tonn that burled Colorado
ln up to a feet of mow moved on
Saturday, •vtna behind ckmd
rolda and alr'port. and thduanda
of aauded travelen. -rain and record warm i.mperaturet ln
mmy Midwatern dtill melted
boDel for • white antm.. "It'• )alt i.nt~" a.Id poUc9 Stt. Mike SU.-ln Ration. N .M.,
Oil the C.olondo bcnler, .. P.».-
foroe wtndl d.rUWd lnOW .. ~ u car rooftop•. ••t don t
Nmllllber a aiorm um bed."
In th• lower Ml11l11tppt Valley, heavy rain and
thunderatorm• 1radually
decreaaad Saturaay after
~atleMt21~ln ~ and 10 in MfMil'.ui cm
1'rtda7. rnra of floodtn1. .......... a..n.d .. rfWll n.t frClm Che .,.,.._t rain.
One P.,•reon WH ktlled tn
'
Riverilde, Ark., ailcf ie' people
were injured in Friday'• twtlten.
The round of tornadoH the
prevlou1 da)'. tn Mtuouri,.
Arlwwu and Oklahoma mu.eel
about $10.e mllllon in damaae·
Heavy ralna In aouthern
ll11noil caUMd acatteNd fl.uh
floodtn1 and forced aeveral
famOlee to 9WC\&1te thelr horw
ln Pulukl County. Ralf of the
1ttffta in Marton, Ill., were
clo11d from floodtn1 before
daybred Satunt.y. . In MinneaDOUI. i~ lnchea of
rain fell in the 24 bou.n tnd1q at
4 a.m. PST S.wrda)',J!f': dian UMt dty hM ftW' ......-for the
entire month Of o..nw, the
Nadanal W•thtr &ervlce Mid.
In CoJQ_rado, 1 state of
--pney ,... diec:MNd in the
Denver ane, whire Stapi.ton
International Airport cloHd
Friday and 1ta1•d cloHd
Saturday morning due to deep
anow. About 2,000 1tranded
travelera 1pent the ntcht in the
airport -on lobby oouchea and
even ln heeted planes.
Amtrak'• San Franciaco
Zephyr train bound for Qbao
Wiii halted OY'e!'fticht at Denv.?1
Union StatJon beca~ of .-.ow-
covered traclu, J•ld Amtrak ~okHman Wally Cantu.
Stranded train trawlen stayed
ln the atatlon lobby or in the
train.
''ThouHnda ot atranded
snotcll'tlia have ~ S*kild up."
-.Id Capt. John Callahan ot the
Colorado State Patrol. No
fatallta.e or~~..,.
~boweYer, _,_,,,. ......... _ _..
Jeremy Jimenez'• day hand la IMtld -
reaMUringly by bit mother, Kae'Jimenez,
at Fountain Valley boepital._
1 Syndrome Which
afflicts women
under scrutiny
..
By JOEL C. DON
ofhDelrNee .....
The sudden but regular bouta
with depreuion, fatigue and
nervouaneu started about alx
years ago.
Two weeka before the
beaf nning of every menatrual
period, Susanne Rem 1uffered
th.rough a whirlwind of emotions
coupled with bizarre cravinp for
aweet and ulty foods.
She turned to aleeplng pllla,
alcohol and even contemplated
IUic:ide to rid henelf of the pain
and anguiah. Her phy1idan1
of fer e d re fer r-a 11 to
psychotherapista.
"Two weea out of the month I
WU a different penon." uid the
34-year-old Garden Grove
ha1rdre9ler. "'The docton would
lilt.en but the)' dlc:!n't want to
hear it. They tb<>U&ht I WU juat
another crazy woman."
But Rom wun't the victim of a
multiple penonality disorder,
thouah she often felt pci•med
by two very different people.
Lut April. lhe read an article
ln a popular women'• mapaine
ab.out a condition that 1trlkea
females with llmilar ntahtmarlah
~ma. Rou learned her
wam't in her head, but
been linked to a hormonal
imbalance related to her
menatrual cycle. Her doctora
couldn't help becauie the
diaorder hH received little
attention in the United Statea.
The agonlzing symptorm that
send women on an emotlonal
roller-coaater ride have been
labeled under the term
premenstrual syndrome, or PMS.
I>octon who nave apeclalised
in treating PMS victUm believe
40 to 60 percent of all women are
affected to 8()IDe ~. Severe
1ymptom1, like Those that
diarupted RQu' life, occur ln
, about ~ percent of women.
Since the oondldon can ca..-
extreme mood chanaea and
violent behavior, PMS recently.
hu turned up in courtroom. • a
controvenial legal deferwe for
women on trial In murder,
child-beating and other cuea.
For the majority of PMS
aufferen who ~)aven't broken the
law. PMS can 1pell ruined
relatlon1hlp1, marriaau and
careen.
"People are just ~ to
realiae lt'1 a valid-medfcal
e_robl~m," aaid 1ynecolo&l•t
Derydl Kent, who teechea at UC
Irvine and baa a private Jll'l .. ,._ .... c:Uce_
In Newport Beach. ustudla
indicate that mmt of the ---violent crlmea commlUH by
women in the Unli.d 8\at8 dd
any cou.ntry happen ),.i befcn their perloda. ••
Kent aclmowledced Anmican
docton have juat awakened to
th• problem• 1ome of their
(See PMS, P ... D)
.....,_ __ ...,.llDEX--------.
<>ranee County conllnuet to attraet
in•eeton from other coutrie1 teeldq aa
attracti•e uad profitable climate I or their
money. See P .. e DI.
F3-8
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,~-·-~=·D=l-8 ----· Al
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Movjee
Public Notic9 :c:Markee.
~~
'Ibeaten TiiVil--~......-=---.._.·
W•ther
I
I
l
l
• ecess1on or no,
hr.istmas comes
but once a year ...
at ..... AIMda~ .,..,
'A woman ln lnd1ana lnvttecl t...r mW. town to d1nner and a New Yorlt hcMel lll"Y9d honwle.
l*>Pl• a turkey dinner from
lilver diabee • Christiani around
lbt world pthered to celebrate
tba joys of ChrlstmM.
For eome, huatn 1 11 oen and the
~ trcm Bethlehem to San
Frandtc0, receuton dampened
the holiday cheer.
But the traditional appeal for
~ on earth pnMded a brief
belt to fi&)ltlnc In El Salvadar.
U.S. Marin.. celebrated the holi~Lebanon only • mile fro tlana and Moslem.a
wt:.o tlnUlld to ~ fire. tot . R>Dvi fur
a do n whiw =tmuee u warm -.at.her contributed to
Uoodln1 In Arkanaaa and bf>uaht n1n 11o New Jl:na)and aki .,..,
Thouaancb of the poor and
unemployed turned out for
hollday mieaJa In llOUp kitchens
~thenaUon..
Pretldent Rea1an apent the
day at the White Howie with !u.
family and cJme friendl.
ln N.w York. the Shenton
•Centre hotel and dvtl aroupe
praerlted m elabont.e OVtstmM
dinner to 500 ot the city'•
hom ·-· and recetwd a call of q>part from the prelident.
.. It'• a p-eat thina/ou are
doln1." Rea1an tol Klaus Ottman. vtce pnlklent and .,.. manaaer of the Sberatcm Corp.,
aa volunteer• be1an 1ervtn1
gUMta from the dt>":• abelten..
Tbou1h a publlc addreH
hookup. he wtabed the bnrneJeaa
a Merry Chn.tmu .. they dined
on tw'My amJd red table c:lotb9,
allver chaUn~ahea and
aparldjna cmdeJ
Vlrldn1a Wat.en of Nappanee,
Ind., 1Dvl11ed her enUre town of
4 800 to Olr1stmu dinner at the ~Church of God. She aaid
ahe d.aded to live the dinner
becaUM "you've aot to ahare the th1ftCll Ood If vea you.''
In Bethlehem, ahopkeepen
blamed world rece991on for th•
poor turnout In Manpr Square.
In bettel' y-.n more than f&,000
people came to celebrate at the
tradition.al b1r1hplace of Chriat.
But th.la year, only 3,000 came.
"We walt for Chrlatmaa all
year, but there were no foretan
people," uJd ahopkeeper Nadia
lfalbaun.
Jn h1a "Urbl et Orbl" memap
to the city and the world. Pope
John Paul II prayed f« all the
1ufferln1 people on earth,
ee~y In bla native Poland.
'I ardently wlah all my
brothen and llaters of Poland,
part1cularly thoee WliOiUlfer and
tboee who are separated from
their loved onea. a new hope, a
new Light." the pope laid in h1a meence to ~.000 pthend In St.
Peter'a Square.
In El Salvador, the auerrtJlu
returned to their camps and the
army went to lta buncka, but
there waa little joy ln the war-
tom country.
"Many people pua tbU day
udly, the men who 1oat a wt,fe or
dau1hter." said Dorotea
Gclnnles, a flower veodel-at the,
central martcet ln San SalVlldor.
Jn Lebanon. the tiehtina did
not atop, wtth rtcbtist ChrUtian
an<I leftlat Druae 1unmen exch.anaiDI mlper fire about a
mlle from where the U .S.
Marinea were camped.
The Americana ate a apedal
ChNtmM dinner Oown In from
ahip off:abore. They were vilited
~banne President Amin
yet and TV actl"tm Lyd!.
O:imell, Ital' of "Too Clme foe
eo.ntort.••
About 2,000 holiday travelen
apent ChristmM Eve ln Stapleton
International Airport ln Denver
aft.er 2 feet of mow hit Colorado
ln the wont atonn a1nce 1913.
·Man dies in shooting incident
A Lona a-di mm WM lbot
and 1dlfed earlr Ch_!latmaa momma af1er' be allepdly brOke
into the Seal Beach apartment of
hla former 1irlfriend and her
roommate, Seal Beach police
aaid.
Neville Ambro9e Hart. 39, WU
pronounced deed at the 8CeJle of
the 12:05 a.m. ahootina at 12200
Monticito Ave., police offidala
aaJd.
Hart apparently broke into the
apartment of Nancy Beiley, 29,
and Bruce R. Colmer, throu&h a
alidlng glMa patio door. Coliner
told police that Hart was
carrying a gun.
After Bart be1an hlttin1
Bailey, police aaid, Colmer
intervened and a 1tru1gle
followed. During that struggle
the aun accidentally dilcharged,
Colmer told police.
BalJey waa taken to Loa
AlatniC.O. General Hospital with
heed injuries. She waa reported
in atable condition Saturday
night.
Colmer waa booked into
Orange County Jail on auapidon
of murder, a police apokecnan
said. Police are continuing their
lnvestiption into the lnddent.
Mark Ley10D and Steve Johmon are advertising executives who
also are ru11:time joke collectors. They put together 'The
Newport Bea~h Answer Book.'
The joke's on Newport in this book
By STEVE MARBLE or ... o.ar .... ...,.
"Surprllingly honest." writes
T.L. of Irvine.
"Scurriloua -yet refreshing,"
auggesta S.K. of Andover, Mus.
''Why did you eend me th.la?''
wonders S.C. of Minneapolis.
Good question. Why indeed?
The blurti. -fictional thouah
they are -are straight off the
bluahln~"t,k cover of the
Newport Answer Book, a
63-page collection of Jokes, pokes,
inaulta and more 1.nsulta aimed at
just about e verybody in the
beach city.
Example:
"You're probably a Newport
Beach executive lf you make
reservationa at the Ritz every
day, whether you go there or
not."
Or:
"You're probably a Newport,
Beech woman U you belong to
the Newport Harbor Art
Mu1eum but you haven 't
undentood one exhibition yet.''
And there are joke.a -like:
Why did the Newport Beach
woman atop after having h er
fourth baby? She heard ·that
every fifth child born in the
world la Chlne.e.
Or thia one:
"Why did the Newport Beach
man never aay an unkind thing
about anyone? He only talks
about hlrnlelf ."
AccordlnJ to lta cover, the
book WU wiitten by Carl Benson
(''He now baa several paperbacb
to h1a name and one he'• actually
flnlahed reading"), Craig
A.ndrew. ("Most people call him
prolific, but there are aome who
don't know who he la") and
Carlotta Stromberg ("She wu
born in Newport Beach").
In truth, the namea are as
fictional aa the blurba. The book
wu compiled by Mark Le)'90n
and Steve Johnaon. They're
advertising executlvea and
fulltime joke collectors.
The book jacket notes the
collection was illuatrated by
Laguna Beach cartoonlat Phll
Interlandi. 'That much la tn.ie.
Leyaon, a bearded young man
who baa lived ln or near Newport
all his life, ~ there are a
lot of "trulama ' tucked ln the
book.
Li.ke:
"You're probably a Newport
Beach executive lf your
Mercedeil license plate rim says,
'My other car la a Mercedes.'"
But the book, perhape, best
uka the question; Can N~
Beach take a joke?
The answer appears to be yea.
One Faahion hland shop
reported that the book wu even
out-aelling "Real Men Don't Eat
Quiche.''
"One lady I heard about
bought 20 copies," says Leyaon.
"and aome real estate agenta are
leaving a oopy of the book and a
bottle of champagne In their rental unlta. II
The authon ay if anyone ln
the be.ch dty la offended by the
jokes or the ribald illuatrationa, it
hasn't got back to them.
"We k~ bearin1 a lot of
people aay, 'I aure can aee my
frlenda in thla book.'" Leyaon
aaya.
Sure. Like right ln the old
mim>r.
The~outita
duda. MileCi rlght-~·;;th the
beat of the yuckera are little
nwnbera like:
Did you hear the one about the
Newport Beach woman that waa
a total mob! She had alliptor
bags under her eyee.
R.o-hwn.
Leyson. though, aaya acme of
the worat clu.nken In the book
are held up by reedera are their
fa writes.
"Even Johnny Canon geta off
a few bad ones," Leyeon adda.
Le)'900 and Johmcn aay they
intend to write a second joke
book that will have nationwide
appeal and touch on broader
aubjecta l.lk:e 0non Welles or pick
on lamous plaicea nu Gila Bend.
Ariz.
''And we might come out with
a revt.ed edition of the Newport
book lf we get enough jokes,"
exp1aina Le)'90fl.
. lnddentally, the price of the
Newport pke book I.a *6.95. And
that's no joke.
Widow facing eviction 01ay stay
live with her aon. Racer Kirby,
56, a quadriplep: World War D
veteran.
Sunny days due
LONG BEACH (AP) -An
86-year-old widow facing
eviction from her home of 58
years Pld Saturday ahe bu
tentatively dedded 1ID accept an
offer that would allow her and
her quadriplestc eon to atay in
the houae.
But developen have offered to
pay $225,000 for the property,
then tear down the bllck of the
bu1ldln1 -which contain•
1aragea and allow Kirby to
continue llvtnc in the front.
tree at all, 1 just couldn't. II &be
said Saturday. "But quite a
number of people have brought
u1 Chriatmaa 1lfta. It'• very
touchln8, becawie eome of the IEifta come from people I didn't
~. J didn't know there were
that many 1ood people-In the
world, af1er' we've hem treated
the way we have.''
!it' Coat1tal
P9tdly ~ fog ... ....,..
and earlr 111ornln9 houre,
.othefwlM fair. T ""'*'"'"' In OOlllMI ..... from .. to 1e. &AM
,. to ... Wlnd9 daa ..... "' """ dW .... 9WOUGh tocMy.
Small cnft acMlofy In en.ct
-0011MM ....,.. Met out eo ,,... ...... to~ ....
10 to 11 lln04I. ComDIMd --Olltar .... 10 .... to 15 .... .., .......... 5tol ...
W.-r1y..,... a to 5 ..... a.r
tolMy.
California
f!.S. •~mmary
1or e--.
8lowln9 1now waa a\111 a PfOblem In perta of Cotorado,
--·~--Ngh•7 ..... Wind Qll9lld to 40 mptl In '*"of~ Md~
!ll .... ~ r8ln fllllnd road• In northern Maine and
--"'°"*'Cl too...,.., midi of ecMNrn ..... EngMnct ..... Jerler Md .....,,. , .........
w""' ....,_ QOnClnued -mud\ of .. &iM Md ........
wtth ~ lllgtw ~ In the IOI In IOlltNr'll .... Yor1l, Oh6o,
Mlenlgln. W• Virginia. ~
Kentudly, W'9ool• 8'ld ~
Huntington and Charl11ton,
W VL, bottl gclt up to 70.
Temperaturea
dnoet
Nblnt 43 M
~que 37 24 51 11
Andloraga 17 10
~ 57 aa A...,,._ • It
AllenUC Qty 51 4t
~ 71 II ..._. ee • ... 30 13
•mll 9""" .. a
lllnw'dl 24 I ... M • eo.ton 43 36 . .,.,, .... 12 10
alfllllo 5e ...
~ 4& " 24 4
awte1ton. e.c. • ...
Ctlartlllton. w. v. .. .,
~H.C. 71 63
~ 31 10 g::o_ ~ 51 17
~ 13 ..
CoMnbla, 8.C. 75 46
Colul'llbul to A .,......,.. WOt1h 70 ..
~ to N
0....... .. 1t Dletitolr'9 66 II
O.Wolt N IO
°'*"" .. IO . ,.. ..... ......... _. -20
~-It I
IO 1a Cll.-fltll n 11 ..,_.. ae aa =· II 0 12 ..
' Howton
~ ldlal lllPolll .-.eon ...... J~
""'-~City
lM Vegea
Uttlil Rodi
~ .....,..
Miami ~
Mp!Mlt. Paul ..........
NewOrtaanl
NewYonc
NorfOll
Nor1fl ,,..1. ~City
°"""' Otlaftdo ~ ,,_,.. ==r.Me. Ponllnd, ON.
l"r~IOI =City
Nolvl*ld
ltft lllll• len Aneor*> .......
C:f.::
... LOUii lt.,..._T.,,..,. . , ... ...,..
-
71 .. S90k-2t eo 59 Syr-40
7t 72 Topalca eo 71 58 Tucaon 48
35 " TulM M
5t 46 Wllhlngton ..
49 40 WlcNta 5e
71 55 n 11 CAU'OMAA
a..erafleld 41 72 .. Eurella 50 71 14 ,,,_ 4& 41 47 L.8n0Mter 41 38 ,.. ~~ t2 72 N Ml n 11 Paeo AoblM 51 54 41 Aed 81Utf 55 71 53 Redwood City 57 311 17 IWlo 33 11 34 a-.-to 41 41 27 .... 5e 11 13 9an Diego .. &I lit Sen FrMClloo 57 56 38 ....... " ., 62 ltOdlton 64 2t 21
43 ..
40 ~ PAN AM 11 34' ..
.. If .. » 17 • .. 11 .. .. 11 .. 74 .. 11 4' M n
IO M .. :: = .. .. 11 t1 .. ,1 .. " IO It
It ..
\ IT ..
21 34
40 21
" 48 32
S2
30 H
21 44 ,.
IO 37
40
1' ti ...
44 45
32
21 .. ft
13
41 n
70 11 n n fl ., .. .., .. .. ,. .,
ti ,.
Superior Court Judae Juliua
Title on Tburaday denied a
niqueat to postpone next WMk'a
acheduled eviction of Bertha
Kirby. The Lortc ee.ch Houatna Authority and the Covenant
Presbyterian Chun:b want to
remove her pink atuicco bouae to
make way for a parldftl lot for a
planned aenlor dti.liem bouslng
complex.
Kirby aaya ahe bu not been
able to find another suitable
residence where lhe can afford to
The widow aid that alnce her Jesal appeal.a haw hem rejeded.
ahe bu t.entatlvel.>.' decided to
accept the offer 'but we are
analY'lina it, the long and the abori of It to tee if it'• what we
ahould have."
"Nothing ta qned and J can't
tell you anythln! before
Monday," idle aald. It'• a big
undertaklna. ''
"I don't have a (Chriatmu)
After
'"rue.day they're png to kick
ua out" unle1a ahe acce~ • noted. ''The aherUf'a already
been here and told me. It WM a
nice thought to leeve with U8 for Ouiatlnaa. ,,
"Nobody can underatand
unlela they're threatened with
the lam of their home. YOU have
to ex~rience it to know the
atlng.' abe aa.kl.
Christmas Bill
and Parka Sale
on Mistral Skiwear
Mistral skiwear Is a very
personal expression of your
lndlvlduallty. The designs were
Inspired by the high energy
graphics and colors of the Mistral
salt bOards ..
Lldlt1 Pllt11 R11. 1215
Stretch mJ R11. •250
R11. '225
Swtltn •••• f 71
Cyanide-laced pill
LOI AHOit.ai CAP) -
................. fAMld OU' Wouih lln Nto on laturday af• the
dl1tover)' of eyanlde In
Ma1dmum·8tren1t1' Aoaoh•·I aa..,_ which bad bMn handed °""' to the heelth deu1rnmlt but ww.n't WIUld tor 11 da18-
'n.. taJni.cl •PIUI• turned ln Die. 11 by a San Pedro woman
cmne fraD the aune code nwnber
-ft28 -II ANdn·3 caplUI• that mAde a San J~ hou.ewlfe
lll tn November, aatd Howard
Ratllicy. a food and drua apecial1.et
with the California J.lealth
8ervk:. Department.
Ot the 20 cap1ulea In the
bottle, which wu purchued at a
Sav-On Druptore, 18 contained
cyanide, Ratzky aald. Each
contained about 20 rniJl1Faml of
the pcUon. he added.
Sav-On ordered all contalnera
of the Maxlmum-Strensth aa..W-pulled off lhelves at lta
l"n aiore. ln Calltomia, Nevada, Tex.., Oklahoma and Louiaiana
"immediately after we received
word (of the oontamlnation) from
the ltate, '' aid Dennla Palmtt,
-11tant to Sav-On'1 executive
vice pr'Mident for operationl ..
Comumen are bel.ni urged to
return to stores any Anacln-3
bottlea bearing the number F229
and 1tate health offices in
Sacramento and Loa Ansele1
remained open through the
. weekend to d eal with the
problem.
'11\e capsules were purchaaed
D• . I In 8an l'edra. a L.01 Ani'ltl J.....W ~unity. TM woman wtto bou1ht them,
&O·)'•ar·old JM'qu•Tin• Koael,
tunwd the bOtU. 1n to the local
Ma.Ith department atw l"Mdlna
about tht ~ ln San Jolt,
300 mllH to the northwHt,
Ratlky Mid.
But the capi\&1• weren't talt.ed
until Friday. Ko.1 had no\ bMn
lnjund and ~Ul• from "tMt
particular lot number had been
teated hu"dred1, perhap1
thoulande, of timel after the &n
JoH incident wlth ne1aUve
result&." Ratzky l&ld.
John Harrl1, a 1upervi1or-
inapector for the federal Food
and Drus Adminiltratton, .. id
that becau1e 10 many bottle•
from lot F229 were found to be
free of cyanid.e, 1tat.e authorities
had auume~ the San Jose
incident waa a cue of tamperina
done at a loca1 1tore.
"So the priority (for teetina the
San Pedro capaulee) was not
high," Harril Mld. lt was the la\est ln a aerlm of
reported contaminations since
aeven people in the Chicago arN
died alt.er taking Extra-Strensth
Tylenol capsules that had been
laced with cyanide.
The amount of cr.anide ln the
San Pedro capsules 'ia 1-than a
lethal doee foe a tingle capsule,
but consumption of 1everal
capsules could cauae death," said
Health Services Department
spokesman Pete Wei.sser.
Ten lnn1t11aton from tht rDA ~nd tour ffom the elate
Htallh 811\lkH DtgatUntn• ~hed ""''C?U-'1 tM s.n .,.,,, .,... ll1 earch of a&orw open on
Chrilunu Du that rni&ht haw ~tlel from IM wne lof number
or o\htn without tamper-proof
aula ltlll on th•lr ahelvee, Han1I
Mid.
"If we flnd them wt'll take
them to the 1u.te laboratorl• and
teat them,.. ht l&ld, addiq that
moet bottl• of Anacln-3 now on
thtlv.. have new tamper-proof
..ia.
Th• fact that the tainted
botUea from San Joee and San
Pedro came from lot F229, even
thous}t-cyanide hat not been
found ln other bottln beartna
the ume code, hu authorttia
puu.led, Harril and Ratzky said.
Both men said the two
incidenta probably were Llolated
incident.a of local tampering, and
that It miiht be a oolncldence the
bottlea carried the tame code.
Harrla alao said lt waa poulble
that whoever added cyanide to
the San Pedro c aps ules
intentionally sought a bottle from
lot F229 aft.er reading about the
San Joee pol.lonlng.
But Ratzky conceded that "we
can't rule out that it (the
cyanide-laced capsulee) might be
comi ng from a unllorm
batch . . . You can't tell if lhls
originated at the manufacturer,
supplier or local level."
Clark gets best gift of all -lite
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -
The family of artificial heart
recipient Barney Clark said
Saturday they are grateful he
lived to celebrate ChNtmaa and
now believe he'll live to go home.
'Tm 80 grateful that we still
have hlm with u1 and. this
Chrlatmu, at leaal, we'll have
forever," l&ld Una Loy Clark. 61,
at a Chrlltma1 Day new•
conference. "We're all hoplng
and praying juat like you would
be lf it were your father and
buaband.''
The 61~-old rednd dentist
from the ttle area. in hit 24th
day with the mechanical device
beat1n1 In hi• che1t, was
"lpeeldQI volubly,'' and ate .xne
rlOe, bean.a and a little bit of onnae Cl'9ID JIM CluislmM E\re,
aald Dr. Chue Pet.non, vice
pN18'1:1ierst 6:ir health ldenl'9 at
the Utah Medical Center.
"I feel good within myaelf that
things will work out for the best
and I think that there will be
another Chriatmu,.. aaid Karen
Shaffer, Clark's daughter. .. rm hopeful," the said. "I can
see where definitely the chance
for a good quality u:e has been
given to ua. I can aee where he
can go home."
Clark, still lilted in aerioua but
stable condition, wu continuing
to take short at.epe from hia becl
to hit chair and wa1 on a
respirator only at night -mostly
to. provide humidity, Peterson
1a1d.
Clark Mid her husband •till
suffen from oon.fuakm. but lhe'•
been .-ured by docton that la
nocmal foe ..neone 80 Ill.
"I have noticed a p-eat deal of
improvement in him within the
1Mt few daya . . . and rm not
nearly so concerned about that a.s
I was a few days ago," ahe said.
"He reoogniz.e8 it. He said, "I am
kind of confuaed, aren't I?" And I
said, 'Yes, dear, you are,' and so
I'm just praM that it will clear
up completely.'
On Christmas Eve, when a
decorated tree was taken by
doctors into Clark's room. Mra.
Clark uked her huaband lf he
knew what day lt was, ahe said.
"He said, 'no,' and I said, 'It's the
24th ... and what is tomorrow?'
He 1&1d, 'it'• the 25th' and I said,
'no, that'• not what I want you
to uy,' and he aaid. 'It's
Christmas.' ..
The family doea not have
many 8ifta th1a year becau.e they
pooled their money 80 the three
srown Clark children can fly
from their Seattle homee to 11ee
their father perlodk:ally, she uid.
' PMS' SPELLS PAIN FOR SOME . . .
From Page A1
patfenta experience about two
week• prior to every
menatruatlon. He noted that
PMS 1hould no t be confuted
with bad menstrual cramps, or
dyamenorrhea. In fact, aevere
-i-na during menstruation are
a good lndication that a woman
doesn't have PMS, be said.
'"Th.ta (PMS) wu not taught to
medical students 10 to 15 years
•·" he aaid. '-ibey thought lt wu in the woman'• head and
accepted it aa the emotionality at
the time of the period that the
woman had to put up with.
"If men had premenstrual
t.emion I believe half the national debt would be spent trying to
fiad a cure and the reMOO for it."
Though no one knows why
aome women suffer from the
debilitatinl aympt.oma o1 PMS,
the condition i• 1u1pected of
being a foulup ln the delicate
btc iDObe balance that regulat.ee
die menstruatkln cycle.
About two week• before
menstruation, the body produoee
e1trogen followed by
proge1terone to prepare the
Unin1 of the uteru1 for a
~ egg. If fertllbaUon
't take place, the uterine
llntn1 ii abed ln the proce11
called menatruatlon. PMS I ~ depr!rr\oo. bJoetin•,
mood 9WiQ&ll end violence ~
wtb:ue during the two weeC 1 ~ to a woman'• period.
Brltiah endocrlnolosht
Kaiharlna Dalton, who baa
1tudled PMS for nearly two
decadea, uae1 pro1e1terone
tupplementa to treat patienta
We're
l Listening •••
...._ ·~842-6086· ,. ..
because she hu found women
with the disorder have lower
than normal levels of the
hormone.
Dr. Kent agreee progesterone,
taken l n vasinal 1uppoaltory
form. hat been of JDGSt help to his
PMS patients. But he i1 alao
interested in other medications,
including on e that lnhibita the
prC?duction of proataglandlru,
'hormone-like substances which
1 may abo be linked to PMS.
Progetterone should not be
oonfuaed with the synthetic form
of the hormone . called
proaeato_sena. used ln birth
control pills. Indeed, it has been
found that the synthetic
hormone makes the body think it
bu e nough of the natural
progesterone. Thut 90me women
suffer PMS as a result of using
birth control pil1a.
Progesterone la difficult to find
ln the United States •Ince t'le
federal Food and D ru g
Ad.ministration hat not approved
lta u.e foe PMS. However, the
hormone, which 11 extracted
from sweet potatoes. has belJWl
to turn up at newly formed
cllnica throughout the nation
spedallzirig in PMS.
But medical treatment may
solve only half the problem, uid
Kent, who is a· proponent of
coun1ellng for moat PMS
patlenta. Since many women
have had their livee crumble at a
result of the condition, support
therapy la important in the
treatment proce9S, he aaid.
"We see lt (PMS) u a double-
edsed problem," said cllnlcal
peycllologilt Doyle Edson, who
runa an Irvin e practice
1peclallzing In PMS. "It's a
medic al problem and It's
psychological.
"Women want to it to be a
medical problem like
hypoglycemia (low blood sugar)
so they can get back at their
huabanda for calling them crazy."
Emon. along with gynecologist
·Lloyd Greig and family
cou.ntelor Stephanie Hill, offers
education, therapy and medical
treatment for PMS victims. A
patient's lifestyle a lso la
examined, including eating
habits, streaa coping 1kllls,
exerci.ae and alcohol use. Si.nee
vitamin B6 has helped some PMS
patients, a vitamin-mineral
1upplernent may be advised.
But much of the effort is in
helping the woman return to a
norinaf llle.
"When a woman is chronically
unhappy, irritable and hard to
get along with, the hat a very
negative aelf ·image," he
explained. "Having physical
relief is not neceaaarily the
answer.
''Our aoal in treatment is to get
them off any progeste r o ne
aupplement1, but we ute them in
the moderate and aevere caaea."
F.dton uld most women are
usually free o f 1evere PMS
symptoms within three months
of medical and paycholoslcal
treatment. Still, proge1terone
doesn't cure the dlaorder.
"People come to us because
they've been dlag:noeed u crazy."
he l&ld. "Medical ldenoe it just
beslnning to discover what's
going on here.''
Whal do you like about the Dally Pilot., What don't you like"
Cali the number at left and your meuage will be recorded,
tramcrlbed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24·hour a,nswerin1 service may be used to record let
ters to l~ editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must include
their name and telephone number for verification No circulation
calla, please .
Tell us what's-on your mind.
0AAN0E COAST Dilly Piiat
l..,man4 Mact..on
ec-oe. l
Mlchoel' '· ~ OW.-elMer~ '°'~
Fountain Valley Community Hospital nurse Kathy Ankenman,
·surrounded by sophisticated equipment, uses an old-fashioned
rocking chair when taking care of one of the twins .
INTENSIVE CARE FOR TWINS • • •
From Page A 1
premature infant sometimes has located in a se~tion o f the
difficulty generating enough hospital's new wing, but plans
body heat, the i.solette is wanned call for it to be moved to
to the proper temperature. e x pa n d e d q u a r t e rs i n a
nurseries for newborns. Dr. Fox
said
Dr. Fox said mothers are refurbi.ahed area of the original
encouraged to visit frequently hospital building. The project is
with their newborn• in the expected to ooet $250,000.
intensive care nuraer because of As the population and the
the importance of establl&hing a blrth rate increue in Oranae
strong bond between them. County, a need may develop for
The special nur1ery now la _even more tnten1ive care
But at the same time, medical
advances are helping doctor•
detect and correct many infant
problems even before the
children are delivered. If such
advancee continue, Fox u.id, the
day may arrive when newborn
intensive care unlta will be
needed f'?r far fewer caeea.
Semi A1111aal Fall Sale
SU"N ht
MEN
SUITS & SPORT COAST . ............. .. 25 % 10 50 % OFF
SELECT GROUP OF CORDUROY
SPORT COATS .. .. .... .. ... .... . . .......................... 95.00
•
NEC KW ARE .......................................................... 20 % OFF
~~ER~sfil4~~.?.~.~~~ .. ~.~ ............. 20 lo 25 % OFF ..
SWEATERS .................................................. 25 to 50 %' orr
LADIES
VARIOUS fAU FASHIONS ...................... 20 lo 50 % orr
RCl3ERT Pt I LI '5
form<"tl) Pok> Srnr•
SOUTH COA T PLAZA -3333 BRI TOL T.
..
armer
~J'O.J,W' IJRlll
Donna CoC'krtll hu lived
throu1h h•ll for lhe lH' five yean.
She Mid 1ho'1 1uftered panic
attack.a, overwholmlna anxiety
and terror.
"My doctor uked me If 1 could
t<quate 'he feelln11 of a pAnlc
attack with thoee of belna on a
b9ttlefle1d with bombll droppir\Q,
beln1 fired upon or w1lkln1
~ • mine field.
"That'• the best analo1y I've
h eard that de1crlbe1 the
feell.no." -
CoCkrell, 34, of Fountain
Valley la a victim of aioraphobla
-the fear of open places or
public places. It alao has been
deecribed as fear of fear.
_ ..
.'r clue' no lonser pu hing the panic button
'''fl' 'u &hu,er1, drh•·ln ....... 1aur1n11. aus-nnarklftl and 111
on.
"ikQ vtnuaUy swrychlnt
wu 10 frt1htenlna. I blelme an
evenlna and WffKend recluH,
usually venturlns out only when
l had to 1hop for food."
She aald 1he aearched flvt
yean for relief. She had blood
tesia. brain acan.a, aller1y tnta
and vl.alted PllYChlatrilta.
"The expen1e1 were
aatronomical.''
Finally, Cockrell aald 1he
checked lnto the menial health
unit al Hoag Memorial Ha.pita!
and became a patient of Dr. Noel
Drury , c hairman o f lta
department of JlCJChiatry. .
tr •trnrnt CHrw 11nult II •
r111n ·prntll u11t•nl11tlon th•t
ltHll ••unphoblu throua1h
p1yrhol09lc1I 1nd Nlf hypooUf'
method• dt1l1ned to •nh1ne1
their ••If •ll ••m and
well-beln1.)
"We an not a1aln1l dru1
th.:,.py," Or*" aald, .. but we
arCo' u1aJnat over-rncdJcatton. Ht
uld peopl• can devtolop a
tolerance of drua• and can be
turned into "walklnai veaetableti"
through overuae
He aaid relaxation, aood
an internal prot'fta. "lt'a cau.aed
by an accumulation of all th.at
garbage r«eived ln childhood."
He aaad re1axat1on. 1ood
thoughta, a change In attitude
and a feeling of self-esteem are
important to recovery.
Through It all, she has kept
her job aa a secretary for the
Fluor Corp. In Irvine. But it
ha.an't been euy.
She said that Drury, over her
protests, pel"'luaded her to try an
anti-depresaant drug called
Nardil.
"Within three week.a I eeiued a
notable difference," ahe aa.ld. "A
sense of calm and peace began to
replace the feeling• of chronic
anxiety and frequent panic
attacks. The agoraphobia waa
dissipating at last."
Recovered agoraphobic Donna Cockre ll cha ts with Dr. Noel
Drury, whose prescription seem s to h avt-cured her anxiety
He claimed that non-chemic.al
treatment haa brought about
unlimited recovery for yean.
Cockrell, meanwhile, said the
is anxious for her story to r,:t out
so that fellow sufferers 'know
there is more than one approach
to receiving relief."
"I experienced high anxiety
which freque ntly bloesomed into
sheer panic."
Attacks occurred for no
apparent reasons while she waa
riding elevators and eacalators,
when people approached her to
talk, while taking dictation,
when walking to and from the
parking lot, in the company
cafeteria or at meetings.
She said she also waa fearful ln
situations outaide of work -like
driving. riding, visits to doctors,
She said ahe'a 96 percent
recovered. Stle'a driving on the
freeways, e njoys going to
supermarkets and reatauranta
and likes to visit friends and go to
parties," she aaid.
"I feel as if l'd died and have
come back lo life. to punue all
the things I wanted to do before
attacks.
my death."
Cockrell believe• the uae of
Nardil has been her salvation.
But Ila use has spark ed a
dlffere~ of opinion.
Drury, on one hand, believea
that agoraphobia may be
biologically caused and that
Nardil la an effective treatment.
He &a.Id uaers don't develop a
tolerance to it and that It baa no
known harmfuJ side effects and
is not addictive.
He said the medicine appears
to help agoraphoblt'S because It
appears to have a beneficial
effect o n subst a nces called
neuro-transrmtters m the brain.
Neuro-transmitters, he said ,
are molecules that p e rmit
electrical energy to flow between
nerve cells in the brain and in
other parts of the nervous
system.
Drury sa1d that Nardil brings
people "back to the base line."
He said they have little
awareness, if any, that they are
takmg medicine
"They don't walk around like
zombies," he said.
But Mel Green, executive
director of the New Beginnings
Foundation of Los Angeles, said
he had concerns about the
She said she believes some
agoraphobics have overcome
their problem through
psychological therapy and
behavior modification.
She said she has al.ea learned
through her five years of "hell"
that other agoraphobics need
medical attention that goes
beyond psychotherapy.
Robinson's
$2,000,000 SEMl·AN~UAL
LINGERIE SALE
SAVE ON LILY OF FRANCE; MAIDENFORM~
OLGA, VANITY FAIR~ VASSARETTE~ AND WARNER'S~
~II so "1006
Werner 1 Sizzles .. underwire bra with lau " 119 .. tJ
shimmery see-through cuos '" ivory blac~ mocha u•
sahara nylon spandPir 34 368 C
3/$14.40 ...... .,. 0 300•
Liiy ot Fr1nce Collon Lilies"' b1k1n1 Only the '>Oii
aosorbenl cotlon touches your skin -lhr spanrteir
l1bers are complNely surroundP<1 In while " be1g1:
colton 'spandex 5 6 7
$9.99 R~ Sil •311
Olga 1 Olgalon lightly-lined lacy Shellcup brt1 In wh1tP
or nalurelle nyton/polyesler 32 36A B C Also •310
m paddedvers1on 32·36A B RPg '14 SO Sa1P $1199.
,
SPECIAL SHOPPING HOURS SUNDAY, 9-8
\ \
b
Warner 1 No E~a9qe1at1on • undr rwire b•a In wh1I!'
" beige nylon spande• 32 42C A lsv 32 420 00
Reg Sl5 SO Sale $12 99
$.10.99 Re9 \14 =1261
Liiy of France· Romance umJP•w11P ora with 11bb<Jn·
strtPPrl see lhrough cuos and f11>nt closurP In wh•le
blac~ ,, blush polyf>stl>• 34 • 368 )J J8C 32 360
•40614
Maldentorm 1 No-Snow · brief with lacy clas11c al waist
and IEJ9S In while or nude nylon trtcol w1lh cot1on
panfll 5 6 7
Warner I wll<•n L•IC''> brtl f with llai l.'13!.ltt !t1m JI Wd•SI
;in<t IPQ'> In whiff• )1 b1 1qf' 100 , P1mJ coll 'n 5 6 7
$9.99 Rr-q $1? D4J1 T
Vas11rette 1 Fran1o.1vF1-m1n1n1 "' I• r w•<f' b•a In while
nude or oearl oiush nyll•n 111c 01 J2 JBB C Alstl
32 380 RE'Q SI:> '>0 SalP $10 49
Sl5 50 •319
Olga 1 No·S!'am Sud<lt•nly Smoolh'w bra lor the fuller
figure with bu1ll·uP comlorl slraps In wh11f• or nude
nylon/spandex 32·38C 0 00
$8.49 Rt~
Warner s My Skin w soil cup bra with <H eo plunge
rn wh1lf' 1 be1g1 nylon soanell'Jt 32 36
S11 14063
vaaserette s Matchmakers bra w1lh 1ac1 solt cups
ad1uslable slraps In while 01 nu 1e nylon spande).
32 388 c
~----.... I , )
$9.99 Reg '11 50 lt407
019a s W::>nderwear • brief w1lh tummy panel for firmer
support and elasttc at waist and legs for smooth flt
In while or nude nylon1spande11 S-M-L·XL
3/$5.97 ... u ....... ,.
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MalcMnfOnn 1 Swfft Noth1ng1 t ofl cup bra with dMO
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S13 60 116887
Meld9nform I Sw .. t Nothlng1 • underw1re bra wllh
l~•e<fO•d plunge. llQhtly•Pldded cups and front
cto1ure In wt11te or body bluth nylon/1p1ndn.
32-38A. B. C
$10.69 Aeo 113$0 175100
Vtrllty Felf'I f"rench Fhrt1· t1ey net und rwire bra In
white or beige nylon/..,.ndt>t 32 389. C Atao32·38D
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1trls>t• on white s. e. 7 Slfe endt Jtnuery 30.
A~ 114' 50 Seit t11.4t. in Robtnaon a Foundahont. &I l.11lQ•r1t/Oa)'WNr, 91
To or~r. call tolMtH 1-eoo.MMIOt
01.,... I I •
Unemploy d h ro arn job, call from Pre ident Reagan
NIW Y0°RK ':J:/. -A Job ref ere from Pr.nt ~
and 1 new Job lniYtid ln qUlck
1ucceQlon for 1n unemployed
father of •~l who rWtttd hll llf o '° MY• a blind ft\An ftam belnl maahtd by a aub+i'ay train.
PrHldent JlH1an calJ•d Reatuld Andrew• lut WNk,
but h took awhile for A.ndnwa io
beUeve It.
111 1hau1tH u WH (tamlc:
l~,_JNUGf) lith L,IUlf It flnt. J 11 WW ll ll WM I n'llik or
for '"1. The more he 1.atUd. the more I l'MllNlll lt WQ him.''
The prttldent oa 1116 to
<'on1ratu1l1t• Andrew• for
uvrn1 70•yHr-old David
Schnalr1 a blind man who
miltook tne •I** between can
for a train doorway and f•ll to
lht tradu 11 1 M1nh11lan
1ubw1y 11.aUon.
"l wun't thln .. ln1 about the da.naet ju.It that 10mebody nHdt
htlp/ Andr1w1 Hid of IHt Monaay'1 ......u .
Andrewa, 29, who had beers
unempl~ed for about 1 year,
rMCu.d SchnaJr whll• on hit way
hC)l'N from a Job interview at a
Manhattan MC'at piM:ker, where
ht wa1 ompeUn• wllh nine
oUwr IMn Rt• 11 n a ho calltd Id
MarbllCh viol ptttJCS.nt of Janw
P'Nun food, tn. me•tJ)ICbr, to
put In •Jood worcf for th•
u.nemploy "*'· "BJiill you, Mr. MarbMh. St..
'Jf)_IA_J" Marbach quoted the pra1dent u aaytnc
Marbach then called Andrew•
•M &old him the jDb WU h1a and
that he could 1&.att wotk In twu
wNlu, wh•n '°m kne. ll~nLI
Andrew1 1uff•r.d In lh• retCUO .,. hNltd.
Andrew1 u ld that th e
prHldenl "11ked how J W H
d olna H t1 11ld he knew how
knff lnjurlea are -when he
played football -and he advlted
me io t.akl' care of ll. Then ht-
w11httd m• 1 m.rry Chrl1Lr U
Ind I h1pp)' Ind prc9p.l'UUI 1W
)'tar and r wlah«I hlm th4r ~' w., didn't l.alk pollib " " '' ·<
Duputy Whit• JfuUH pre
M><:rt'tary PN.cr Rou1NI uld tM
Pru ldent call•d Andrew•~·••
cummond him on "hla coura
and h~rulam and hi. tflo >pot
lo find 11 job " U'1t ------~.-· .,. t
• :I
.•:t~·l
I l
SUNDAY. DECEMBER 26, ALL ROBINSON'S STORES
I I,./
I
Jo.J '•'i
.....
WILL OPEN AT 9 AM TO GIVE YOU EXTRA HOURS TO
SAVE ON THE BIGGEST SALE DAY OF THE YEAR AT THE
STORE WHERE A SALE IS STILL SOMETHING SPECIAL I ••
Robinsons
AFTER·CHRISTMAS
CLEARANCE AND SALE
SHOP SUNDAY 9 AM.-8 P.M.
SHOP MONDAY 10 A.M.-9 P. M.
40%·70% OFF*'AND MORE ON THIS PAGE OF EXCEPTIONAL VALUES.
45%-59%0FF
SILK DRESSES. ORIG. $110-$148. SALE $59.99.
4000NLY
Robinson's Oresaes. 17/84.
,
6'~0FF
MARISA CHRISTINA SILK/COTTON WOMEN'S
STRIPED SWEATERS. ORIO. •58. SALE •19.99.
LIMITED QUANTITIES
Robinson'• Sweaters. 1.
40%0FF
WOMEN'S FAMOUS MAKER LOGO SHIRTS.
ORIO. t28. SALE •14.99. LIMITED QUANTITIES
Robinson's Weekendwear. 130.
60%0FF
WOMEN'S SUEDE JACKETS.
ORIO. t125. SALE t49.19. 250 ONLY
Robineon·s Coats. 38.
40%0FF
UZ CLAIBORNE DENIM ANO TWILL PANTS.
ORIO. f38-f40. SALE t21.99-t23.99.
LIMITED QUANTrTIEI
Robln10n'1 Young Designer Sportswear. 105
42%0FF
IAINT TROPEZ WEST llLK BLOUSES.
ORIO. tit. IALE t3t.t9. LIMITED QUANTITIES
Robln10n'1 Pacesetter. 80. all 1tores except
Anaheim. Palm Springe. Panorama City
or Santa Anita.
I0%0FF
STOHi MOUNTAIN Ll!ATHIR HANDBAOS IN
TWO STYLU. RIO. fl4•f 72. SALi f31.tt·t35.tt.
ONE DAY ONLY
Robln10n'1Handbag1.186.
IO~OFF
ALL TIXTU .. aD AHD 'AaHtON COLOR HOSllRY.
A.G. tl ... 11. SALi f1.IO·t7.IO. ONI DAY ONLY
'
R~'t Leo F•hk>nt. 8.
In OPP
OU" OWN VILOUR JOQ SUITI.
ORIG. tTI. IALI fSl.H.
Roblnalre 8oort1wear, 140,
~ OP.F.
GLORIA VANDIR81LT IT"aTOH JIANI.
ORIO. •47. IALI tlT.H. LIMITID QUANTITtll
Rob1nalr'8 SPOrtewear, 115.
40%0FF
JWR JR'S CA&.VIN KLEIN ACTIVEWEAR.
ORIG. $28-$42. SALE t15.99-S24.99.
JWR JR'S, 179
40%0FF
JWR JR'S TOMBOY ARGYLE COTTON VESTS.
ORIO. $27. SALE t15.99.
JWR JR'S, 154.
$84. 99 SPECIAL
WOMEN'S LEATHER SLING-BACK SHOES
BY BALLY, OURS ALONE.
Robinson·s Designer Shoes. 158
40%0Ff
WOMEN'S LEATHER SLING PUMPS BY AMALFI.
ORIO. •88. SALE t49.99.
Robinson's Amalfi. 177
47%0ff
ALL CHRISTIAN DIOR VOYANT ROBES.
ORIO. •95. SALE •49.99. 300 ONLY
Robinson's Robes. 40.
50%0FF
ALL OLGA CAMl80tE8 ANO HALF-SLIPS.
ORIO. t11·t14. IALE t5.IO·t7. ONE DAY ONLY
Robinson's lingerie Oaywear. 91 .
IO~OFF
BOYi' ltZEI 1·20 SPORTCOATS.
ORIO. t41·t81. IALE t21.99-f28.99.
Robln10n'1 Kld1. 22
40~0FF
l'AMOUI NAMI DRiii IHIRTS FOR MEN.
ORIG. t27. IALE t11.ff. ONE DAY ONLY
Robln1on'1 Men·a Or"' 8hlrt1. 20. '
40~0FF
'AMOUI '"INCH DISIONIR MIN'I
IWIATl"I '" t•LICTID COLORS. ORIG. f St.IO. IALI t22.H. LIMfTIDQUANTITlll
Roblnton'1 Men'1IWHter1,195.
~ ... _. 7°;.._.... -
40%0FF
LONG SLEEVE RUGBY KNITS BY GANT.
ORIG. $37. SALE $21.99. LIMITED QUANTITIES
Robinson's Men's Knits. 21
40%0FF
FAMOUS NAME COTTON CHAMBRAY DRESS
SHIRTS. REG. $56. SALE $32.99. ONE DAY ONLY
Robinson's Mens Polo Furnishings. 112
40%0ff
MEN'S BELTED CHINOS BY AMERICAN
TROUSER. ORIG. $32. SALE $18.99.
Robinson's Men's Sportswear Casuals. 123
64%0FF
SPRING AIR TWIN-SlZE MATTRESSES AND
BOXSPRINGS. REG. $279.90 SET. SALE $99 SET.
Robinson's Sleep Shop, 75.
60%0ff
ALL MIKASA CASUAL DINNERWARE SETS.
REG. $100-$180. SALE $39.99-$71.99.
ONE DAY ONLY
Robinson's China. 67.
66%0Ff
REVERE • 8-PC. STAINLESS STEEL COOKWARE
SETS. IF PURCHASED ,
SEPARATELY $150.50. SALE $49.99.
Robinsons Housewares. 62
60%0Ff
EVERY FLOWER AND CANDLE.
REG. •2.50-t10. SALE $1 ·¥· THREE DAYS ONLY
Robinson's Gifts. 59.
70%0FF
DIANE VON FURSTENBERG AND M.I M. VERDI
OPEN STOCK LUGGAGE. ORIO. t27-t185.
8ALE '7.99·•49.99.
Robln1on'1Luggage.19
· 64%·84% OFF . WAMl~TTA• ,, ... T QUALITY COMFORTER I .
ORIQ. fll•f111. l•LI '21.18 ALL llZEI.
Roblneon'• Bedding, 51f
61~·71~0FP
.
)'.l11
-· ii -t ··~·i I .,1...,
• .'14 . " ··'1-i ' !in
' t If
·'''" I l #J
! :
.
. et the public hear
• • airport site report
There ia 1omethln1 very
unsettling about the way the
Board of Superv18ora has hand.led
a ttudy of the potential for a new
airport ln Orange County.
II • '1 The study was initiated in
J'\'bruary 1981, when the board
~ conaidering a now-defunct
l ater plan for future
l ' rovements at John Wayne
port. In a move to appease
o lala in Newport Beach, who
feered John Wayne was destined
tQ become a regional airport,
Sl@ervisors decided a committee
lllould be fonned to look at other
potential sites.
The board turned to some of lb~ co u n t y ' s top b u a i n es s
executives, f lgu ring these
managers could bring their
particular problem-solving talents
to the laue at hand.
1 The committee was formed. It
WOTked for more than a year.
Mt.er considerable wrangling, It
pinpointed Santiago Canyon -
located in the hills east of Orange
-1t as the best site for a regional
fadlity.
The recommendaUon WH
contained ln a report that wa•
approved by the committee and
sent to aupervaora. And that wu
just about It.
The reeulta of the oommittee'a
work were never placed on the
board's agenda or formally
considered. The committee was
not officially diacharaed.
Thua, it strikes us aa
interesling the comment by board
chairman Bruce Neeta.nde that the
committee's report had been
received and filed and the
committee ~banded.
It may be that Nestande has
receivec:\ and filed the report. But
the full board -the county's only
policy making body -did nothing
of the sort.
Whether Santiago Canyon
could be, or should be, the site for
a regional airport is not the llaue
here. All we're saying ii that the
supervisors should addre11 the
report as it adctre.ea all the other
studies it receives -at a public
meeting when open d1alasue can
occur.
lf7 eigh sports proposal ..
If gymnast Cathy Rigby's
I
d~am comes true, Irvine will
bticx>me the U.S. capital of her
sport, a center for training
~pic-c.aliber female athletes.
' The Cathy Rigby Gymnastics
Foundation is requesting the city's
support for a non-profit regional
seorts center that would offer
t r1a in in g for begin n in g ,
intermediate and advanced
gymnasts, along with a sports
ntedicine clinic and a fitness
center.
Money made from the clinic.
the fitness center and te.>m for
t>. adding gymnasts would be u8ed
to~ spedaUud training for
potential world~ athletes.
Because of the non-profit
1tatua of the proposed factuty,
organlz.en are asking the city to
provide land in a city park for a
token $1 -a-year leaae fee, as it has
done for the recently opened
Irvine Boys and Girls Club.
Since the renowned Olympics
debut of the Soviet Union's Olga
&or but, the popularity of
~ as a sP,Ort for girls has
soared, but so far American
contestants have failed to match
the medal-gathering 1kU11 of
gymnasts from Eastern Europe
andOUna.
Rigby ii convinced they need
only the intensive training that is
offered ln other countries to reach
the top level of international
competition.
Irvine was selected by the
Rigby Foundation as a central and
affluent location with sufficient
cllentele to provide revenue for
the training program.
lronJcally, the city currently
is embroiled in problems involving
ita Olympic-caliber aquatics
center, where two of three pools
have had to be cloeed down for
costly repairs because of
mechanical problems that cauaed
aertous leaks.
It is unlikely a sports center
would wind up in this sort of
trouble, but if it is operated under
city sponaorship there could be
questions of liability. The
proposed facility could be a great
asset to the community, but
officials will be well advised to
weigh the city'• responsibility
carefully before granting the
requested leue.
Stop seasonal slaughter
!)
u ' We don't know where the
espreuion .. one for the road"
came from. but we certainly hope
it predated the automobile.
'; This is the time of year for
W. of celebrating. It aeems to havt?
become a sine qua non of our
culture that celebrating brings
wtth it ~e ingestion of alcoholic
'*verages. In an area such as ours,
~ towns are extended along
tfteways, alcohol and automobiles ~A! a particularly deadly
~bination.
Why do people drink and
dlfve? On the surface, it makes no
lfl!hle. Numerous teltl by .cientista
~!\d law enforcement officiat.
~e ahown that even the most
Dn>derate blood alcohol level
~~r1 judgment and reaction
'J!·.r There seems to be a vestige of
6 frontier spirit at work here.
~know, the old "a real man (or
woman) can hold hl1 liquor"
~· Well, that was OK back ln
did days when a ride home aft.er a
involved a hone and a lot of
space, but it doean't work
~·
"''· And there 11 nothing ~bjecUve about It. Alcohol doeln't lllf pelr just some of us. It impair& ~erye>n*. No macho exceptionl. ,
Yet knowing all of th.ii, there
will be eome ap1n th1a year who
think they can "handle it" and
others who are ao drunk they
never even poee the question.
The result will be holiday
death tolls. We wouldn't allow a
blind person to fire a gun in a
crowded room, yet some of us
object to strict laws covering
drunk driving. We don't agree. DrivinB dnmk ii a criminal act. It
should be viewed u such and
punished as such. Saying you
didn't mean it a few hours lat.er
when you're IOber and eomeone ii
dead is no just recompense.
We support local law
enforcement agencies as once
again they mount a counterattack
ap1nlt this seuonal alaughter. We
do not see their eff orta aa a
violation of4 anyone'• rigbta. The
right to drive drunk was pot
included ln the Constitution.
And if you will be drinking
th1a week, don't drive. Take a cab.
Have a friend who has not been
drinking drop you off.
Holidays are a joyful time.
Don't let this one a end in tears -
for your f.amily or the family of
eomeone you don't even lcnow.
Automobiles can run on
alcohol. Drivers never can. . ' Intent nprffMCI In tht 'PKt atiow lrt thOM of tM Dally Piiot. <>'ht"' Yltwl H •. _. .... on thf• pege art lhOM of their authort and artl1t1. AMder tomnMnt 11 lnvlt· Olf. Addrell The 0.lly Pltot, P.O. lox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA '262'. Phone (714) 7z4111, I
E~TLY WM~T l'~
BEEN· MOPING
· FO~!
FBI lab: Famed and feared
In the Great Depnmlon year of 1932,
a lone man hunched over an old
mlcroaco.sae In the FBI building . In•
Wuhfnat.on -8qWntina and aeerchinl for apedr:a and cluee en • allde.
Not even hb crtm.lnal-lnvestigaUve
coU..au• of the then-infant Federal
Bureau of Inve1t11at1on paid much
attention. To them, be wu 80IDe eort ol a
lon1-halred nut gazing all day lnto a
~~t one man with hll
micnm:ope has come a Pant of foremlc
8dence that makee a1m1nala vulnerable -..J..ina hb, ocher, eventual conviction
in every mow made in the committing of
al.mmt any crime.
DOWN THE line they must face the
famed and feared FBI Laboratory -
now celebratlns lta 60th year of
advancina crime de1ec'tion t.o lncrediblie
achJevementa. and putting una•eil•ble
credibility into the proceuea of
proeecution.
Now "The Lab" bu srown to 119
Special Agenta, 309 support perBOnnel
and an equipment inventory of $12.5
million -all of It capable of tracing and
confirming the most minute bita of
evidence In crime and dlaaater
inv.tiotiona. In l 034, the first yar ac:tu.a1 statiatica
were maintained by the FBI. the
laboratory conducted a total of 983
forensic aclence examinations. It
bounded to 61,000 examlnationa in 1942,
doubled that number f!VerJ aucceeding
dtade and DOW -in the J)Mt fiacal year
-910,000 examlnatiam were completed
for federal, state, county and munk:ipal
law enfwcement.., =Win connectlon
with crtmlnal c.m.
Quite a nm from the ooe micrmcope
of '32.
FBI Director William H. Webeter, U'1IClnl the rn1nd9 of '"nle Lab'' from
-fll-11-1-cl-ll-lil-T -Ji
ita inception ln the current FBI Law
Enforcement Bulletin, notes: "From a
beglnnlnf devoi.d to provfdlng the
wor1h of (Ol"elWk: 9dence analysis to both
the public and the police prolemion. the
FBI Laboratory has moved on to
rnearcb and traininC. It bu been a
vtndicatkm of both the worth of fClft'mk:
adence and our system of aervioe to local
aovemmeot.''
It baa been all of that. Hundreds of
thou1and1 of crimea have been
~ -a majority of them 80lved
-in the 50 yean. The Lab Ma (p'OWn
into the mo.t 80ph1aticated ol crime-
detection fadJJtiel. The FBI Laboratory aervicea,
includine both examinations end
aut.quetU IUppcrdve i.atimoQy in the cowu, are available without .CI09t to
federal aaendee and mllltary tribunals in
crlmina.I and civil matten -and t.o all
other law entoroement bodies dawn to
the county level.
"A. the value of foren.alc 1elence
became apparent t.o the law enformmmt
communhy, laraer police departments
establiahed local crime laboratories,"
Webeter aaid. "The number baa been
rapklly expanded ln the past dec8de and
a half u a rt.ult of f\mdini provided by
the OmAlbua Crime Control and Safe
Streets Act of 1988."
In 1973, individual atate and local
crime Jab dlrec:ton uked the FBI to
eerve aa a tralnina and raearc.h center.
A year later the Ji'IH was ln the buainem
of putting atate and l~l officera
through spedaUzed dmtific cow.a at
the ~ Aa/JlmY: In 1981, more than
1,300 were 1ralned tn edentiftc tddlls tn
the tight aplnst rising crime.
THE NEW, yeer-<>ld 7,0()(Mquare-foot
lab buildq at the FBI Academy ia in
full operation -manned by a
permanent FBI lab research staff,
reaearch personnel repreaenting
academic inatitutiona end othen from
apedaliU'd area of forensic ac:ieooa.
'Ibey can take a atrand of human hair
carefully remov•d from beneath
finpmal18 o1 a murder victim and nee
it to a killer. 11wy can do a tbo•nd
other thinea that make ft ~ ad
toughet' for a crim1nal to operate without wbxtinl up ln the FBI Lab net.
It h quite a blrthclay for law
enfOltiemenL And a bad day for tbup
and marauders.
Letters to the editor
Don't overlook
TV tax funding
To the Edit.or:
The Pilot edltorlal of Dec. 19 on
KOCE-TV'a recent pledge break dJatorta
the true funding picture at th1a public
television station which, by the way,
does not be.Jona t.o Oranae County but to
the taxpayers of Coaat Community
Collete I>Latrict. FOC' your information,
Coast district la only one of four
community college d.latricta in Orange
County and comprhes lea than one-
thlrd of the county'• population.
You atate that KOCE-TV la at a
. ''ftnandal dJudvantap'' becau. it ia not
u well-or widely-known u KCET in
t.o. An1e1". Thi.a 11atement la pure
bogwaah lince KOCE-TV hu been -ana contlnuee to be -the beneftdary of
milllona of local taxpayers' dollan.
While KOCE-TV may rffllle, after
expenaea. $100,000 or more for ita annual
drive for membership, lt takes, even
today, almost 20 times that sum in local
tax revenuea. Thia year, the
telecommunicatlona bud.et of Cout
diatrlct aa directly paid for by the
taxpayers of Cout Ccmmunlty ColJese
Diatrlct -not Oran1e County -
approechee a1moet '3.5 mllllon.
ltOCE-TV hu a u.eful role t.o play u a
public ICrvke station. It lhou1d be mote
openly acoountable to the public via the
elected boud of trwteee. Howwvu, tilcal
and pr'OlraJD accountabWty have prcwed
t.o be impcmlble under the curnnt board
leadenhlp wtllch baa l:lven a prtva~
foundaUon the Uc.me, and countl ...
public IWOUl'Cle9, io aovem and operate what ahould be a public televlalon
·station, reapomlve to the dlltrict coDese
and student populldon needa.
While the publit W.W... °lhow IOOd
taate'' in their 1upfK!r_t of ~ 9u0Hc ~ station -W1*t\ KOCE-TV la
-the)' lhow a1anntnc lponnct Md
pneral apa~ to WI~ ft.:al,
ind ~ p6ctWe whkh .-. In
the t•lecommunkatlon• pro,..arn of a.t diluict.
LD'l'J:IUS LA VRAKA.8, Ph.D
Miuiles or. mllli
MAILBOX
for 12 niWlon hun~y unemployed people to find many for whkb t.o
give than.ka this year. aplte of the
rece91Jon, the aphit of ~alive
and well. The lmperiaf ~and
Loan A.odatian " to be d for lta ldnd-beerted c-ty in helplnc
the most needy • of Southern
Calitomla have a men1er Quisbw.. For
the put four canaecutlve yean. Imperial
baa taken the mooey It ocnnally wouJd
uae for Cbriltmas treea to deoorate lta man~ branch office9 and put it toward
the lhoppmg prcJlram.
WHAT A wonderful ChriatmH
tradition if Imperial could eet a
pr~edent for all banks and loan
-.:tatklm aero. the entire nation. to·
join ln thil pr'08l"alll. We could ecmmence
by elimlnatlng all the White Ho\,lae
ChriatmM trees and put the tu:.,.Jen'
money to a better we.
Mr. Reagan could do our country a
tlemtt:adoua deed if he would apply the
$988 mll1ion t.o buy an ample amount of
milk. eaa. fruit and veaetablee rm the atarvlna chOdren of America, lmtead of
competing in the anm l"llCe. There ia no
way to control a nuclear war once It
ata.rW. We already have~ bona
and mlllll• to destroy the SOvieta -
and they us -many times over. c.c.-qu.ntly, you can't have a way of
life if you're c:IMd. IDA Z. WILLIAMS
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See lnatruotlont beloW
Recall contusion
o( context in order to coovince vol.en of
their cau.e.
THE RESULTS of an independent audit~ supported by all five board
memben, releeeed tb.ia month con.firm
dwd district f.act8 and deny allep11ona
made by the milCWded CARE a:immitt.ee
whoae Jre was ralaed by chanaea
oocurrloa Ja their Mcbboc'bood achoo1a. Doud ~ were made aher five
month• of study by an advlaory
commltt.ee. wbme meetiD8 were opllrl to
the pub~ com11tiDC(if ~--~ staff; a total of seven public ~
were held. pM four public worbhopa. to
which every dtben waa Invited and
fNf!rY parent lnfonned by mail.
Complacency by a few parent• throuChout the9e pc'OCledW9 is no exa.-
to react neptively and loudl)' when
elec1.ed board members finally make
ethical dedalona for the good of the
whole dlatrict. Cltbena of Fountain
Valley have hiatortcally taken pride ln
their achoo1 d.latrtct and DOW la the JUne
to retnfxlrce their IUpport of their elected
aehoo1 board.
LOJS J:V121CH
I I
POA THI Al!CORD
Ye11dell Tyler and the Rams hope to find eome daylight against
the Chicago Bean today.
se
Pr pc• n In
1our11•n1 nl pl•1·
,, page s.;.
D ~
0
Only pride left ..
Ranis, Bears have little at stake ..
By JOHN SEV ANO ortt1eo.11r .........
The Rama and Chlcqo Bean have very_ little al
ei.ke when they take the fleld today ( 1 o clock) at
Anahelm Stadium.
The two clube have won only 3 of 14 eamea
between them, leaving potential playoff pomibWties
harder to achieve than jobe. And the prospect.a of
aalvaging what haa been a diamal campaign for both
were cfuhed when each team dropped a
heartbreaking contest l.aat week.
It's a worn-out cliche, but realiatically the only
thing the Rama and Bean have left to play for LI
pride.
And for beleaguered Ram1 Coach Ray
Malavui, today'• game will most likely be hi.I last
as a head coach in front of the home crowd.
Malavllli's five-year tenure has certainly been
filled with more ups and downs than Magic
Mountain'• Col<*ua. The 52-year-old mentor enters
today'•~ with a 39-32 record during hia retgn.
He s led the Rama t o three playoff
appearances, two first-place showings and ~me
Super Bowl stint. Still, pie last couple of years
haven't been kind. The team la a staggerina 7-16
(1-6 this aeaaon) and is currently dead-last 1n the
NFL in total defenae.
The Rama have alao blown lew this aeaaon of
23-0 (to Green Bay), 21-0 (to Denver), 14-0 (to
• Atlanta) and 21-7 (to the Raiders). Thus, It should
come as no surpriae that the club haa given up the I moat point.a (196) in the NFL.
Malavasi goes on, though, despite the rumors,
and despite his apparent dem.i.e.
"It's difficult to disregard the rumors,"
Malavaai admitted earlier this week. "At times I
feel I should say, 'to hell with it.' But at other tlmes
I want to prove what I can do. I still look forward to
getting up and making the game plan. "f think you have to be careful when you
analyze things. You have to do it in proper
perepective. You can't blame youneli. if it's not
deaerved and you can't make excuaes when they're
not there. You look at productivity when you have
players and when you didn't have players."
Defensive end Jack You~blood, who will
decide during the off-8eUOO if hell come beck next
year or bang 'em up, la ~t one of a number of
players who baa come to Malavasi's defense.
"I don't think Ray should have to take the
blame for our record and I don't think it would be
right to fire hlm.'' noted Youngblood. "Changing
coeches would have an effect on the Rama, but it
would be a negative one.
"We've had '-ood pine plans. That hMn't been
the problem. We ve beetl prepared for pines. The .
preparation haa been there.
"KAy hu worked harder than any coach l'v~
been auoclated with," Youngblood added. ·~
aaiatani. have, too. lf I had an a.n1wer I would f#.>
11.raJght to Ray and tell hlm. We play well in ~
firet halt. We .eem to have control of the pme,
then loee it.
"I think that hu to fall back on the individual
players rather than eo11ehlng, but there hasn't~
Al times I feel I should B1Jy, 'to ·
hell with it.' But on other times I ..
want to prove what I can do. I
still look forward to getting up
and making the game plan.
,
-f'am• Coeofl ..., M 'IY..i
one specific thing wrong. We've looked all over the
pl.ace trying to figure out what's gone wrong. It'• a ,
very nebulous thing.
"A situation like this shakes everybody'•
confidence," Youngblood concluded, "and you need
confidence in this game. Confidence inatllla
greatness, I believe.
"What we have to do is fight that feeling thd
this is going to keep happening to us. We have to
keep thoee thought.a out of our minds. The way to
do that is keep the intensity up, to go out there and
keep on fighttng."
Bears Coach Mike Ditka, although his team la
2-5, doesn't appear to have Malavaai'a troublee.
Chicago's highlight today, however, figure9 to be
running back Walter Payton, who needs just nine
yards to reach the 10,000 mark rushing during hia
career, which started in 1975.
Only three players in NFL history have
bettered 10,000 yards -Jim Brown, 12,312; O.J.
Simpeon, 11,236; and Franco Harria, 10,722, Harria
(Pittaburgh) ia the only member of the trio still
plaYing.
Payton came into this aeaaon with a net gain of
9,608 yards ruahing and haa added 383 on a lO'l
carries th.la year.
"I don't know what our chances are. It doesn't
look good for ua but no one on th1a team I.a reedy to
give up," promiM!d Youngblood .
. Huskies say aloha to Terrapins, 21-20 Raiders
seek hoDie.
advantage
BGNOLULU (AP) -Waablnaton
quarterback Tim C.OWan u8ed a pus play
normally reserved for extra-point
conversions to 1eore a touchdown with
llbr aconda left and lift Wuhing\on to a
21-20 victory over Maryland in the first
Aloha Bowl football game Salurday.
.~an connected on an 11-yard pus
wttlj split end Anthony Allen in the end
zon, on their third touchdown
combination of the day to give the
Huakiea the dramatic victory before
30,005 at Aloha Stadium.
"The out.aide llnebllcker pve ua llOl'M
room and we just took It." Cowan eaid.
'The .ruor quartert.:k aa1d the team
never lost confidence, Wen when it wu
trailing by aix polnta and stood ~ yards
from the £09l line with less than four
minutes to go.
"We had to believe we had a chance
and when you get a chanoe you've got to
take it."
"The last paaa was a two-point
conversion play," Cowan said. "We got
in an area where we thought it could
work ao we decided to give it a shoL It
worked perfect because it won the
prne.··
Waahinaton Coach Don James said
that if the pm play had failed, 'h1a team
would have had time for at 1eut two
more throws into the end zone.
"It wu a wild game," Jame. said.
"Our defeme pulled WI out of critical
situations. And it waa a great drive by
Tim Cowan. We just hung in there.••
Maryland eo.ch Bobby Rom said he
didn't think Waahington would 1COre on
the last play.
Cowan said the play was a crossing
pattern with motion to the right that bftl'Dda Allen agalmt the flow and into the
left comer of the end r.one. "We had \wo men on him (Allen) and
it waa a perfect pus. a good catch and a .
Tar Heels unfazed ""
by weather, Texas
EL PASO, Texaa (AP) -
Everyone ei.e wu \alld.ng about
the unuaual El Puo weather
Saturday, but North Carolina
C.oach Dic k Crum l.mlated "l t
didn't really bother ua that
DlUCh.''
Nevertbeleu, the Tar Heela
1truagled through an error-
• wind-blown tint half. But
erupted for tm. field aoall
two t.oucbdownl in the final
period to upeet eJabth-ranked ,.riu 26-10 in the bluetery,
_.,-whipped 4.9\h annual Sun
..,.,,. pme.
••Believe 'tt or not, we pnctk:ed lit weather wcne than th.la bldt bOIDe prepuina foe the pme ..
uid. I th6uaht wtloeVer
the wind 1-t would win if lt
a clme pme.''
Jecf only 10-3 entertna
the final period when North
Carolina got the wind, which
swirled up to ~5 miles an hour, at
its back.
Rob Rogers, whoee 53-yard
field aoaJ. equaled a dm reoorcl
and produced the Tar Heels' only
flrat-balf potnta, added a
47-yarder; Brook• Barwick
booted a pair from 28 and 42
yards; and b.ckup tailback Ethan
llorton plowed for 119 aecond-
balf yar~ark North
Carolina'• •
"Of ~. it'• an advant1&9
when you can kick with the wind
behind you," Crum aald. "You
noticed all our ftlJd p.11 today
were kicked with the wind. ..
Thu c.o.ch ,... Abra -.kt
North Ca.roUna "did what they
bad io do ln the eecc>nd hilt. l
teal1y felt we ahouJd have Md
two ll¥ln.. iouchdowN, and lf we
had, I think we would haw won. the=· On J day 'Uka tbll. the ~and~ pldftl
pane .... llll09t affected.''.
Aft.er ftocen' 41 ·yardei' on the ~ ~)' of the f1nal q\WW trtmmecl TUM' hl1fdme leed to 10·6, be 1qulbbed an oru(de
kick and NCO\l•-.l it hhmelf at
the TexH 47, 1etUn1 up
Barwkk'• tint field pl 12 pla)'I
later.
Barwick, North Car0Una'1
1hort-ran•• and medium·
dlitance placekldter, drlll4id a a .. yald fteJd pt Wtth •:ee '*" '° p1a1 &tiat pUt tba Ts &jell tn frant 12·10 ..... ~ .,..,.....
lt up wtth two touchdoWM In tht
1IMl 2:17.
aooci job of staying in bounds.'' Rom u.id.
Cowan drove the Huskies 80 yards in
16 plays in the final four minutes for the
tying touchdown, then All-America
kicker Chuck Nellon booted the winnina
poinL
After Maryland miaed a 32-yard field
goal attempt that would have clinched
the game, Cowan hit nine paaeea and
twice ran for first downs in the winning
drive.
Cowan completed 33 of 53 pemes for
350 yards overall and was named the
game's out.standing offensive player.
Allen caught eight paseea for 1~2 yard.a.
Maryland, 8-4, ranked 16th in the
country, had taken the lead 20-14 for the
first ti.me with 10:-M rema.inllyi in the
game on an 86-yard drive capped by
John Naah'a 2-yard run off right tackle.
Ninth -ranked Washington, 10-2,
9COred flnlt, takini the opening kickoff
and driving 80 yarda on 12 plays. 'The
score came on Cowan'a 27-yard pua to
Allen, who had beaten the Maryland
detenae on a deep down-and-out ln the
end zone.
Maryland retaliated on the first play
of the lleCOnd quarter when quarterback
Boomer FA!aaon connected with fullback
Dave D'Addio on a 6-yard touchdown
pua. But the Terpe miaed the extra-
point kick and ltill trailed, 7...fi.
Then Washington moved into a 14...fi
lead on a 71-yard Cowan-to-Allen TD
pass down the left sideline with 5:21
remaining in the half.
In the third quarter, Maryland took
the kickoff and drove 77 yards in &ix
plays, with F..Won pusing 38 yarda to
tight end John Tice for the score. The
Terpe attempted to tie the .::ore witb a
two-point conversion, but it failed and
Washington still led 14-12 .
LOS ANG~ (AP) -The
Loa Angeles Raiders already
have clinched a spot in tbe
National Football League
playoffs, but •till have a lot at
stake before poat.aeaaon play
begins the weekend of Jan. 8-i.
Becau se the San Die10
Chargers beat the Cincinnati
Bengals last Monday night. the
Ralaera are in a position to auarantee thernaelve. the home
field advantage throughout the
playoff:a by winning their final
two regular-ee.-.i games.
The Raiden, who entertain
Denver today before fin1ahing at
San Diego Jan. 2, lead the
American Football Conference
with a 6-1 record.
While the Raiders are.
ent.ertaining hopes of quallfyina
for Super Bowl XVIl at the 'Roee
Bowl in nearby Puadena Jan. 34> ..
Denver can only look ahe,d lb
next year. The Brcocm are 2-5
and have been eliminated from
playoff contention.
Delplte the di9parity ln the
recorda of the teams, and deepile
the fact that the Broncds are
ellnilnated from ttie playoffa,
eo.ch Tom Florea of the Raidert
expecia a touah pme. ,
That won't be anythina nieW' tor the Raiden. They have had.
lM>thing but tough pme11 a1nce
the season resumed Nov. 21
followin1 the 57-day playen!
ltrike.
Lo. Anaeln hu a 4-1 poet~
•trike record, but it.a larst~ marlfn of victory WU lix polo,...
"The Broncoa are 1olna to
come out here and try to p~t
pomethina In thelr Chrlatmu 11ocldna." II.Id nor..~ ...
1tlll enouah veterana on tlillt =to alve them a aenn te .. . :
The Ratden are 8-poi~
favorite•. Lot Anfel" bu • CCllDlnAftd1nc s 1-11-leld ln •
•dee acalnat the ~ * the tMml h4ve 1pllt \hW' 1-ID ..,... ~ .
.. BlraUMt of the ~ ~
thle wi. we haw to~
th.Iii .......... another ~ ..-t
Mid no... "You want to ~
• iverybody tr.lb and beel8 .
the ~ta. But you Uo
to kHp everybody workl tiMildler IO thM" 1f14A'N a uftlt otteiitV911 aiit -Mlllltwtt.
•'The bottoin bnil ta \bat ~~~~ .. , '° ~ W• dciil'i:wan1 CliiUliti itiOUt Whln ._,.
to pa,.y tn the PIQoHL ..
f
~
I
·Russians are coming,
Russians are coming
Prom AP dJ1pa&eht
MOSCOW -A 27-man &vtet ~
• team wu named Saturday for the •
'1x-match aeries with top National
Hockey Lea1ue team• In North
America starttna TuMday apiNt Edmonton and
Wayne Greuky.
The Sovieta are flying to Canada Monday
for a tour that luta through Jan. 6. The Montreal c.anadi~ and the Quebec Nordlquee are other
NHL tHm1 they will face.
The world champion Soviet• won the
bvestia Cup tournament ln Moecow thia week by
defeatfna Czechoslovakia, Finland, Sweden and
West Gennany. However, the Ruaiana ahowed
90lne weakne.es on defenae which Coach Viktor
'Ilkhonov blamed on Inexperienced new players
in the lineup.
Tikhonov aaid the Soviet.I were looking.
forward to the 1eries, but he complained that
NHL offidala had made up a 8Chedule that was
"not convenient" for the viaitora.
After almoat every match, he aald, the
Soviets will have to move to another place,
covering large diatance9 and croeaing 1everal time
zcmes.
"It will be a eerioua psychological stress for
the 1portamen. Th.la I.a why 27 hockey players
were included in the team," Tikhonov waa
quoted by Taaa newa agency.
Quote o( the day
"I'm too11m811 to even get pt involved
with the offid.ala." -Promoter Doa Illa&.
answering charge• of fix alter Michael
Dokes won the World Boxing A...ociation
heavyweight championship with a
controversial 65-lleCXJl'Mi victory over Mike
Weaver.
Little extra
University o( Washington's Leroy Lutu (81) stretches (or extra
yardage as he's pulled down by a pair o( Maryland de(enden in
the Aloha Bowl.
Trailblazers upset Sonics, 95-98
Guard Jim PHIOD tallied 22 m
points aa Portland scored a 95-88
upeet win over Seattle to highlight
NBA action Saturday. The Sonka,
who now trail the Laken by \.i-game in the
Western Conference'• Pacific Dlvilion, never got
cloeer than .even pointa in the 11eCOnd half ...
Elaewhere, Bliek filll1am1 ICO~ a 1eason-high
30 pointa on lel\Mtional 14-of-15 ahootfna to give
New Jeney a 112-110 overtime victory over the
New Yock Krucka ... Ed .. e JobaoD and Dan
Rouclfleld eech acored 27 polnta to lead Atlanta
to a 97-91 victory over Wuhin8ton ... Forward
Maartce lAcaa ICOred a game-high 29 points and
guard Deul1 Jollaaoa added 19 aa Phoenix
breezed paat Utah, 111-100 ... Denver
announced that ita ICheduled home game against
Golden State tonight will be played Monday
niS~t instead becau.ae of travel complications
aria1ni from a record-breaking mowatorm in
Denver.
Marino tops O'Brien award liat
DALLAS-The offemive leed-m en of the two teams in the Cotton 4 • t
Bowl and 10 other colle1e football
fame• have been named flnalut.1
or the 1982 Davey O 'Brien National
Quarterback A ward.
Quarterbacka Dan Marl.no of Ptttabur8h and
Lance Mcllh~~:J of Southern Metliodlat
Univenlty will their rapective tea!Dll ln the
New Y ean Day contest.
Alao nominated for the 1982 award are
Reggie Collier, Southern MlaJuippl; Todd
Dillion, Long Beech State; Tony F.uon. Dl1noia;
John Elway , Stanford; Boomer Ealaaon,
Maryland; Doug Flutie, :SO.ton Collep; Todd
Blackledge, Penn State; Wayne PMCe, norlda;
Tom Ram.ey, UCLA; and Alan Rlaher, LSU.
The award, honoring the late Texa1
Christian Univenlty 1938 All-American and
Heilman Trophy winner, will be pn!9ellted at a
dinner Feb. 15 at ~ Fol't Worth Club.
Gr y'
Tohav
·Cr ts
onte fun
MONTOOMl~~1 Ala. (AP> -t~ quanar le Oary Ku ... · yjd he a.nd two ~
Aa.M \Hmm1te1 had fun pl1ytn1 footb1ll ht
8atwday'1 Blue-Oray CJ.-0.
Kubtlk and hJI &eanvnatee i.d the loUlhlim
all.,Llt -auad \01 30·10 ~over the Blue.,_,
"I\ helped~:Q.!.wo becb here.'' .aid "'9 &·1, 19&,poU.nd .
Runnina Johnny Hector Of Taut M&M
ecored 1wo touc~na and teammate Elm"'
Jack1on ru1htd for 71 yard1 In tht 1nnu1l
ChriltmM O.y conc.t.
uwe Wtre reallx ntlaxed and ~t came here
and played fooU>ell, 1 added Kubiak. who WM the
pme'• most valuable player.
Reg1e Collier of Sou\bem Mlllillippl aha.red
the quartert.ck.lna dutiel with Kubiak, but It w•
the Texu A.&M atandout who led the South to a
flnt-half leed that lt never rellnquiahed.
Kubiak threw 10 pe11e9 for 126 yards while
CoWer completed ellht pe11e9 for 64 yards in the
South'• flnt victory alnoe 1978.
The Blue aoored flrat, takin~ advanta1e of
Clenwon runnina b.ck Cliff Austin I fumble to •t
up a 37-yard field 1 oal by Steve Schonert of
Northern Iowa.
The Gray tallied two touchdowna in the eeoond
quarter, the first on a 26-yard pua from Kubiak to
Hector. On the next pc:meaaion, Hector vaulted over
the top from inalde the 1.
The Blue team rallied on a fluke play in the
third quarter to narrow the Gray lead to 14-10.
Quarterback Steve Clarbon of San Joee State
fumbled and running back Ken Lacy of Tulaa
.cooped it up. Lacy then pu9ed the ball 32 yards to
Wiaconain'a Tim Stracka, who wu waitfna in the
end zone.
The Gray ICOred again in the fourth quarter oo
an 8-yard pass from Collier to wide receiver Stanley
Waahlngton of Texat Christian.
Carter named Big Ten MVP
CHICAGO (AP)-Michigan receiver Anthony
Carter, who eet an NCAA. record by averaging 17.4
ya.rd.a every time he touched the ball, haa won the
Chicago Tribune's Silver Football award u the
most valuable player in the Big Ten.
Carter, who averaged more than 100 yards per
game for the last three seasons, edged Illinois
quarterback Tony Euon for the award. He wa1
1elected by a panel of coaches, Big Ten official.a and
Tribune 1portawriten.
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Ralph Sampeon Henchel Walker
Two of a kind
Sampson, Walker unique stars
~ WILL GRDtsLEY
....... C.1 Cflfl?l
Henchel Walker finally got his
Heilman but 40 yean from now,
when he'• rel1xin1 amona hi•
trophlea In the family den, his
peateat pride will be centered not on
I the old bronze atatuette but on a
aimA1e framed parchment on the wall.
'that, if he pursues his avowed aim,
will be his degree from the University
of Georgia where la is majoring in
COMMENTARY
criminology with the idea of beoornlng
an FBI agent, a career that would
have to await a fling ln profeaiona.l
football.
The parc hment will be a
proclamation that Henchel Walker,
BA, onetime TB, had choeen to stay
the course, a1 did his basketball
counterpart', skyscraper Ralph
Sampeon of Virginia. They paid for
their echolarahlpe -they flni.ahed
college.
THESE ARE two of the moat
remarkable young men of our time -
Walker, the bull-necked ball carrier
of the Georgia Bulldogs, and
Sampaon, the 7-4 hardw o od
phenomenon now in the midst of his
final aeaaon.
Both were 1porta prodigiea who
became outatanding atars in their
freshman yean, record-breekera both,
who proceeded to lead their re·
spective ie..m. to national bonon. A.
.ucb. they fmn)ediately attnlcted the
~ eyes ol the proe and ..-ita.
who aw in .cit a talent capable ol
•Yin& a franch18e. The preuures were tremendou..
'lbe Bmton Celtics repcx ted1y offered
to pay Saml*ll\ '65(),000 to tum pro
after bi.I freshman year. Walker, who
did more in football than any colleje
player had ever done ln three yean.
waa told he could get $1 millkm eaan~
a year lf he choae to quit achool and
challenge the National Football
League rule barring bJa participation
until bi.I c1ua eraduat.es. Additional
millions were in the offing from
endonements.
Both have aald, "No, thanka."
There· waa no problem for
Sampeon. The National Buketball
Association had abandoned ita old
hardabip rule and there la no
deterrent for an under clasaman.
Magic Johnson left a national
championship team at MJchlgan State
to join the Loa Angeles La.ken.
IN ADDITION to the advice to
challe nge the NFL rule, which he
would be bound to win. Walker heard
offers from the Canadian Football
League for immediate placement.
After b eing named Helaman
winner , the Georgia running back
repeated his intention to stay where
he la.
"l want to fln.Lsh college and try out
for the 1984 Olympics," lnaiats the 6· l
222-pound thunderbolt who, despite
his size, posseaaea near world class
sprint speed. He runa tnck In the
winter.
Sampson a ckno wledged that
temptations were great, ain ce he
always hoped to play with the Laken
who reportedly bad offered to pay
San Diego $6 million for the No. l
pick, but he clwee to finish college.
"I really enjoy campua life," he
said. "You are young only once. You
can't reach back and get thoae
relatlonahipa aaain. I feel there'•
plenty of time for me t o play
bukett.ll for money.''
W AL~R AND Sampson have
apurned all•tbe warnln11 of the
opportunists: "What if you are
lnjuttd?" "You better i"t It while you
can." "Where elae can you ,.i to be a
millionaire?''
The.e two young men, unique ln a
tlnaeled, heavlly·commerclalized
world, have kept buic values in place.
The National Football Foundation,
whkh held it.a annual dinner recently,
ahould strike special trophiea ln their
honor . They repreaent what the
college game should be.
0-·1 ...... _ ..... ,._,, .. t:_,,__ ...,,.,_
c-w.rcMal ---""'
,------------------------------:....~.,..,.1--------------1
I I • • •
'White to get clo e look at history
CHICAOO CM'> -MU .. White pniblbly
la1ured ht'd mid• • UtU• hletory br. maneuvtttna llUnoAI llUo the Ut.rty Bow ,
the 1rhooJ'1 llllt puet•leMOI\ 1ppttatanat In
nearly two dec:ldn. But even h• never
thou1ht It would twn lnto 1 flnt·hlnd look
1t Ume marchlna on -8-r Bryant'• lut
pme It Ai.bunt.
"It'• alw•r! aood to be P9J1 of hiltory," aald WhJ&e. 'Ttie ctrcwnaiancee couldn't be
beutr . . . Tht 11me now haa a new
dlJMnaion. It lt •pedal to lllino'8 becau.. of
our return to poetaea80n e~ and It 11
equally 1pecill to Alabama wie of the
recent announcenwnt."
Bryant'• I.It pme maria! the end of one
era, and for th• Illini, perhapa, \he
beg1nn1na of another.
UntU While and hi• wlde-0p.n olflnlt
arrlvtd two YHrt 11ol th• bttt lU INIJa'
rebulldln1 •fforta COUid product wit 1
conUnuaily COU.P1Jn1 hcK.-of cardl But
White'• unyttldlftl l1Jth In tht forw1rd i'"· bol•t•red tiy quarterback Tony
.l'.Mon'I throWIJ\I arm, h.u ~lahed
what the fOU( coechtl who ~ h1m
could only dnJem about.
"What prov• whether tho ayat.em haa
been •~ful to me, II to a c:te,ree we've
accomplilhed what we •tout to do," Mid
White. ''And that la to become a OQmpetit.ive
Bia Ten team. The commitment to the
forward pu1 •tarted at Stanford (where he wu an ..mtant to John Rai.too). At that
time, we were ln a pmltion a1m1lar to the
one when I came to CJ.lnoll. We were not at
tht top of th• oonttrtntt IH t.,m.t •l permnnel.''
WhJ&e I.Oak hll lUmpi ln h1t I~
'Y"' (1980) 1t1lllnota, pasW., .....
And U.tenlnl to the crtUm cowwellni nm.
l'\&n, run -the 11aplt of INt Te\ dJ9\t.
But hi• a_pprentlcHhlpt under wdl
Callfomla •ki• -.. tttant ooechlnt It
Stanford and the hetld job It Callfomla -
made him believe Ch4I ball could llwa)'f'
thrown ~here.
And that made him 1omethln1 o~ a
reactionary In a Mldweatem conferenc.
rooted ln the 8J'OW1d pme. Thua, the ~l
bid comes u aometht.nc of a vindication '/pr
White, who wu willln8 to take his lumpP.•t
the at.art to hand out h1I fair ahart later.
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i\V omen resume action
Edison, Estancia ho I tournaments Monday
Toumamm\ ICUon ln women'• h1Ch echool t.ketbell ruchee lta
&9lllh lhll w k on two fronta
wllh 32 tN.ma oompeUna ln the
&uancla and &dl1on-Marlna
tourney• 1tartln1 Monday and
canclud!J\I Thu.nday.
A\ Elt.anda, where Coach J~
Wolf 11 pre1ent1n1 the fifth
annual out1n1. h1a F.qle. ahould
bt the favorite to capture the
Utle with Villa Park, Mlulon
ytejo ana Ph.&1 X amon, the top
cqmpeUnl t.eeme. Othen ln the
top bracket and first-round
tavoritee include La Quinta, Lu
Vepa Hlah. Brea-Olinda and Las
Vepa Valley.
At E<li9on, the hoet Chargers
(10-0) are alto the top choice
after •tarting the 1ea1on In
lmpreeaive fuh.lon.
Other team1 that tlgure to
contend for the title Include
Sun1et League foe Fountain
Valley, Mater Del, Foothill and
SaV&nna along with Burrougha
and Chino. Ocean View and
Westminster are abo amona the
top choices from the Sunset
circuit.
Qne tq reuon why Estancia wm be the top choke to capture
i •:tourney 11 the return of
J:¥>bie Hughes at center. HU1hee
Ebeen sidelined with an ankle
and hasn't played ln any
, Eagles' games to date.
'•'She'• beck pnictk:lng with UI
'-~ abe'll be atarting in the
~nt,'' Woll aaya. ••1 don't
~ who ahe wW replace yet.
\liOuah.'' -Hughes WU a third tam All-arr .election lut eeuon and fint
tetm all-league. She la abo the
tallmt member of the team at 6-0.
Villa Park hu a O·U C9nter ln
IMtAkJt ConnJo Weikle aJona with
6· 11 tophomoN Mary Popt
MJM!on Viejo ii 1od by Mary
Madlfan, a 8-0 all leaau•
performer and one of four
tenlora on the aquad.
Piua X haa 8-3 junior Te,....
Poindexter H lta leader on a
aquad that haa aix aenlon.
The Ediaon-Marlna tourney
alternates vanity and junior
BASKETBALL
vanity action annually between
the two achoola. Thia year the
varahy competition will be at
Edieon. Both tournamenta have a
junior varsity tourney running
almultaneoualy.
Among the playen to watch ln
the vanity action at Edbon are
Terri Carlander, a three-year
starter on the front line for El
Toro and Ocean View's Tammy
Webb, a third team All-CIF
player and Suiuet League co-
MVP last yeai:.
Another top player la Diane
Watson , an outs tanding
volleyball player for Weetmlnater
who had to ait out the 1981-82
basketball aeuon with a knff
lnjury. She ha.I helped tum the
Llona around th.la 1eUOn.
Shelly Trepl is one of two
regulars returning for the
Charpn and ii an outatanding
outaide shooter and a very
aggrealve defenalve player and
floor te.der. Gretchen Meinhardt
(6-0, jr.) bu been the team'•
leading ICOl'ef' in most pme9 IO
far ana will start at oentet'.
Sandy Corbett leada the
Pratt to run at Sunkist meet
'Leslie Pratt of Edlaon High will be among the oompetitora 1n
a~talented field of middle-
dJstanoe runnen in the Sunkist
lndooc Invitational Friday night.
Feb. 21, at the Loa Angeles
Spcrta Arena.
Pratt will be competing in the
880 event againat. the likes of
Foothill's Amy Cox, El Toro'•
Nicole Biggers, Treeda Palmer of
Weatcheater, Millikan'• Kerri
z.leski and Ganesha'a Michelle
Taylor.~ Amo~ the entries for the 500,
El Toro a Tanya Ranaom and
Suzy Heusel of Valencia High
top the field.
Competition on the faat
160-yard board track atarta with
the high achoola at 5 p.m . and the
first open event, where
America'• premier female miler
Mary Decker Tabb and We.t
Germany's 'Thomaa Weainahage
are headliners. la let foe 7:f5.
GetU~lb SJ.ootaVa
Refund on
dainl
cmditior1 nt
Final Ner
~ Rnat Net-12.oz. ~·et MNo1Ct··.eoue 11~. Concltlon"' Sharrc>oo .......... 1.A7
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Marina Vlk.lJ\111 and wu a first
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laa\ yNI.
Ch.ryl Dland (8·3) 1"da Dana
Hilla, Alonda Varl1co l1 the leadlnl eoorer for Mater Dlt and
Darlene Trenary and Becky
Redl-of Savanna are amonc
the bmt outlkle lhootera ln the
tourney.
The champlonahlp 1amee for
both the Marln,--Edlaon and
Eatancia tournament• are
scheduled for Thuraday. The
Marina-Edlaon tourney fin.al will
be played at 7:45 p.m., followln8
the third-pl.-ce battle 1et foe 6.
The EalanCla finale la 1et for 9
p.m., with the third place contect
slated for 7:30.
* ....... • .._Tourne, ............ ~ AllV...,0-.. .. ~
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11:30 &.n'I. -a.venna Ye. WMlmlnater 10: 15 Lm. -El Toro ve. Menn.
Noon -DMa .. vs. Ooelill Vl9w
1.45 p.m. -Chino vs. l'ootNI
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5:15 p.m. -'°"nteln V9'tfr1 ve. eypr..
1 p.m. -LI Wiiton ve. !d(eon
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Jx ar a I am compel
The 1111 uf four day• of 1ourn•m1nt
bltketblllJ '°'.,... hlCh ldlOOJ IMl'DI WI an t.p &hit
week with \he tq attncUon •• OulprMn COU..
wbeN ttM Orano ()pUmit1 Tcliu.rTwMnt unlokl.
with Ua l&·wam lonnat
Amona the entrln are S.tanola, Fountain
Valley, C.cllta M , Marina and Newpan Harbor.
Other tournament• Include Vllla Park,
(Lquna Beech), &ncho LM v.,_ (Hunu.n,ton
Beach), Caraon Chy (Edlton), 8antla10
(W•tminater and Saddleback) and Bnle-OUnda
(Woodbridp), the laner ptck1nl up after the flnrt-
half of the firal round wu played Thun;!:~·
HunUnaton .ee.ch hu drawn a at1U ln the
tlrat rouna at Laa Veaaa, meetln1 defendln1
Nwada champion Lu Vepa Valley, a 9-0 teem
which feetures 6-2 guard Freddie Banb.
The tournament pairlnp:
Oru1e ODdmltt
MoDday'a S'chdllle
9 a.m.-Eltanda VI. Foothill
10:40-Fountain Valley VI. CentenniaJ
12:2G-Coeta Mesa va. Lakewood
2-Marina vs. Servite
3:30-La Quint.a va. Sant.a Clara
~:10-El Modena VI. Newport Harbor
6:~f~11:-Orange 8:30-I:'Mna VI. Mater Del
Vllla Park
Moaday'1 Sdedale
3--Compton va. St. John &.le>
4:4~ (1W::oma) VI. Santa Ana
6:30-Notre Dame (Sherman Oau) V9. La
Habra
8: 1 ~Villa Park vs. Laguna Beach
Rucbo Laa Ve1u
Moaday'1 Sdled,Je
(at Nevada-Lu V91a1 Norft am)
3-Langley (Pittsburgh) VI. Oaceola (Florida)
~F.ast Anch~ vs. Laa Vegas Gonnan
7:30-Paloe Verdes vs. Rancho Lu Vegas
4:30-West Philadelphia vs. lolani (Hawaii)
32 • teaHJs vie
• 1n HB tourney
TIUrty-two high 9Chool ax:cer teama, incl1adina
South Torrance Tournament champion Canyon
High of Anaheim. will compete in the fifth annual Huntington Beach High Tournament beginning
Tueeday morning.
Sl..xteen first-round games, the fint ~
at 8 a.m .. are echeduled. Al8o on Tue.say. aecond-
round championship bracket and conaolation
bracket gamea will be played.
Among those teams entered are all SUIUlet
League teanu except F.diaon, South Bay-area
_P._fm_l'_SOO __ r:_E_ll ___ _
powen Palos Verdes and Ha~ and recent
Hacienda Heighta wu..i Tournament nmner-up
Bell Ga.rdiem.
Host Huntington Beech apor1a a 4-1~3 reoord
coming lnto ita lint-round contest with Lacuna
Be.ch.
Other flnrt-round pmea lnvolvtnc Daily Pilot.-
are.a 8Cboola include Westminster vs. El\anda; Ocean
View vs. Tuatln; Fountain Valley va. ~and
Marina vs. St. John Boeco.
La Quint.a. Pakle v erdes, Marina and Canyon
were aemifi.nalisia of the 32-team South Torrance
Tournament which Canyon won last week with a
victory over Marina.
'the champion.ship match ia 1eheduled for
Thuraday at 7 p.m. All games will be played at
Huntington Beach High.
The 1"91 round pe1nngs; a Lm. -LAI Ouint• w. Kai.la; Foothll w. Downey; eepo v.., ..... ~. Menne ¥9. St. Jofln 8oeco.
9 Lm. -Uqune Hiiia ..... Peloe Verdee; &tMCle YL W8lltrl*wter.
MIMlorl Viejo YL eypr..; ~ V... .,., TUltln.
10 e.m. -Sente Ane va. 80IU Grende; Velencle .,., Gerden
()(ow; .... .., Del ..... ~ ~°" e-:tl ..... lAlgune 8-:11. 11 • m. -a.ii Gardene va. H9Wthof'M: Founteln v.,._., va.
&perenu; &.Mt• va. lAultnger: CMYOn w. V1lll Pn
Boardsailing set
for '84 Olympics
Yes. Virginia. there will be boardaaill.ng ln the
1984 Olympic yachting games at Loe Angeles.
After nearly three yeara of litigation
Windsurlina International, Inc. of Torrance and
Wldgllder o1 Gennany have reached an ~t
that would allow both boerda to be U9ed in the
Olympe yacbtina games.
After the selection of the German-built
Windgllder by the International Yacht Racing
Union (IYRU) u the board to be uRd ln the
Olympb, ~International, manufacturer
~-~ ~pular' Windsurfer, went to court to prewnt
Wlnd&llder be.lna imported to Ulla country becauae
of patent rtghta held by the Torrance tJnn.
Under the a,reement reached by the rival
aailboard bullden both bouda would be allowed in
the Olympic.L The plan calla fOf trianaJe ndnl by
the Wlndgllder akma with • demomtration ne11t.
lncludlna a1alom, freestyle and d1sta.nce f8dnl by
the Windlwien.
The plan baa been endoned by the Olympe
Or1a.n.Wna Commitwe and IYRU, accordinc to
Hoyle Schweftser, prettdent of Wlnd1urfln1
International.
-Alm• LoekabeJ .
yn
al Chapman
(II NttMa-1A1 V ... 1 ...... O•>
1-Norlh HUl1 (PU&aburah> v1. Lu v.,..
Clark
t-HW'IUl\llOft ~ vt. LM v..., V&Uey
7:IO-~ (WlltlJ.naton) vs. 8L 8'mard
4:30-Penn HlUa ""tt.burp) va. LM v...,
Ctuipural •
ea,... O&J M .... y•aaew ...
3:30-~ vs. Spara r.--c.m w. Reno
6:30-vs. a.ec:t 8-0ouaJ.aa vs. c.u.on
Su*&o
M_..J't SCMdaJt
6:30-Kennedy vs. Garden Grove
8-Wl!9tmlnster va. Buena Park
TMM.a1'• SeWlll•
6:30-Tuatin VL El Dondo
8--Saddleback VL 8andqo Bree..OU.U
MIHaJ't Sdted11le
11:30-El Toro w. Lquna Hilla
1:16-M.lalon Viejo w . Dlunond Bar
6:30-Anahelm vs. Sunny Hilla
4:4~omla vs. Woodbridae
S-Schurr va. Fuller1on
8:16-Brea-Ollnda va. Pac:Wca
Portable Color Te lev1s1o ns
Our RtCI ... IAW
ACAffR291 9 Color 269 oo u..oo aoo
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IOY n.l(J92C a· Poltot>le C01o1 2•• oo 112.00 n.oo
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G £ IJAC3M2W 13 Potlolllt
COlof. INmolt ComOI
GE l7AC3e42W 17 Pot10l>lt
Colof Rtmolt ComTol
RCA FGll.eowR 19 Ponooie
Colof Rllnol• COnflol
G E l9PC3 742W 19 PortoOie
COior. Rell'IOl9 Conltol
Zt114!11SYl91719' Portoblt COIOt Rllnott Co<ltrOI
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36600 J14.00
371100 ut.00
39900 Jl&.00
'69900 42'7.00
52900 C74.00
41800 Mt.00
Gas & Electric Dry ers
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G t OOE&300ll • fleclnclTimed ~"'-29900 174.00
6 E. 00663808 ' Cot./Tmed Conllol PwlnoMnl Pr-338 00 I07.00
6 E 00£7&008 ' Elfctnc/Au!O Of Timt~ PreM 311100 na.oo
G E D001UOI. Goa/Auto Of Tim. ~Pr-35400 126.00
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9tc1llc/3 Temp 6 C\'Ci. 377 00 2M.OO
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WNl1POOl l.f7900XK • Eleelflc/9 Temp ) Cyclt;'Hompl! Dool 381100 IM.00
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NU Wt8TIMOOWIMNCI ........ ~ * L.-UMrt 21 I 771 ..... II 7 710 i. ..._. 17 11 I01 •i.
PonMNI 11 II Mt I 0.... Ital• II II .4" t i. len Oleoo 4 H .141 17 ....... ~
K.-CM)' Ill I 121 len Antonio II II U I
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Oalae 11 14 . ..a ." Oelt¥W 11 11 .407 •
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ATJONAL OON'PEBENCE L T Pet. PF PA
1 0 .8$7 179 90
1 0 ..861 1~ 118
2 o .m 110 126
2 1 .Ml UM 13&
3 0 .511 142 129
3 0 .571 111 121
4 0 .429 133 129
4 0 ,m 84 127
4 0 .429 117 112
4 o .429 109 lN
6 0 .288 84 122
6 0 .288 143 149
6 0 .286 163 172
6 0 .143 163 196
AMERICAN CONFERENCE W L T Pct. PP PA
Ila.Wen 8 1 0 .8&7 192 lN
Onc:tnna11 5 2 0 .714 173 140 MillmA I 2 0 .714 137 114 NY Jetl & 2 o .714 190 116
~ll'eeo 5 2 0 .714 210 lM .-u.io -.. ' 0 .571 121 97
NewJ:nc, 4 3 o .571 99 101
Pltt.btar&b 4 3 0 .571 130 111
QweJaDd 3 4 0 .429 " 131
S.Ule 3 ' 0 .429 lot 112
Denwr 2 & o .288 1t'1 1ee
KanlM City 2 6 0 ·* 128 145
Houston 1 6 0 .143 95 190
Baltimore 0 6 1 .077 80 168
I
Pl•k• ....... ..
Sun., Dec. 26
Rams
over
Chicago
* San FrandtcO
•vet
Kansas City
* San Dfetlo
over
laltlmcwe
* lolclen
.
Getting ready
UCLA quarterback Tom Ramaey gives instruction to his troops
during pauing drills Friday. The Bruins play Michigan in the Rose
Bowl Jan. l.
Woolpert could see it • coming
Former USF coach not surprised by basketball's down! all ' .
SBA'JTLE (AP) -Twenty~ht aeuona have ~ llnce Phil Woolpert co.chea the University
of San Frandlco to the
flnt of two corwecutive
NCAA baaketball
champiomhlps.
1'hose were the
Dona' halcyon days, the
days of Blll Ru..ll and
K.C. Jones.
With Ru .. ell abowinc oU eome of the
defeme that later would
make him a supenW'
wtth the Boston OeJdm.
USt beat I.a.Salle 77-63
in the 1965
champlomhlp-pme In
KanHI Olty. In the
NCAA title 1ame the
followtn1 aeuon, the ,., I rt
Dona were 83 -71 woo pe
wtnnen aver Iowa ln Evanston. m.
But USF doesn't have a oollep basketball team
this aeMOn. That'• becauae the university, ln a fit of
pque over' ~ted NCAA rules violations by its boOsten. ooadV!e~--and recruiters, h.u dropped the
•port. "Obvioualy," Woolpert aaya. "it'• disappointing
a1 It could be becau.e the achool had such a Jong, ,...t 1-ke1ball tndldoa. "I ._ quite abocked when the deci!!lon wu
flnt announced tbta l\unmer. But sin~ the
announcement of the declaion wu made, I've
become aware now of a lot of what the bedqp'ound
was and I want to aay I am ln total agreement with
the decision."
With Woolpert at the helm, San Francl8oo
est.abllahed iQelf u a national power, leading the
country in defenae for four straight years. Woolpert
coached the Dom for nine eeuona -from 1950
through 19~9.
In 19~7, the year Russell and Jones were
rookiea with Bo.ton ln the National Basketball
A..>dation, San Frand.co made it to the NCAA
Final ~ tin1ahiJ\I third.
· the Dona never won another national
after Woolpert left. they ~dnuedto
have junor •KJOUHI In the lNQa aDd lf70L But
not without problema.
In the mid-19701, the ecbool'a reputaUon
became tarnlahed with ._ .tull-bla.WA .NCAA ·
investigation . Bob Gaillard and Den Belluominl
rea1gned as head coaches of the Dona.
1ben came the Quentin Dailey acandal at USF
during the 1981-82 ~In the end, the 8Chool'1
prealdent, Rev. John LoSchiavo, aaid he wu
dropping basketball.
"I 'm very aorry to aee it happen," aay•
Woolpert. "But now, looking beck. I think it wu
inevitable that it bad to happen In vtew of the
wamlnga Father LoSchiavo had lmued.
''The achool had been bitten a couple of times
bef<>tt and the red light wu cn. To me, eamebody
had to get the~-But. obviowly, ~didn't."
The pre11ure on today's major college
basketball co.chea la enormoua. Woolpert notes.
because of the huge swm of money lmolved.
DECORATIONS, ORNAMENTS
& GIFTS
Save big right now on an exciting selection
of Roger's custom wreaths, swags, center---·
pieces and an array of hand-·"
crafted ornaments from all around
the world .
Come early for best selection.
Sale prices effective thru January 7.
f'oolt!'I Giident wtfl dote 4 P.M. New YNrt Eve.
..
0 R NG • () A s n .. ,. D
• Blend your own fr•gr•nce .... C2
• Holld•J p•rty wr•pup ............ C4
.
·Rinda Carter, left, and Anna Pinon of Costa Mesa wear fashions designed by Pinon
By VIDA DEAN . .,,. ....
"No one should go unnoticed," savs designer
Anna Pinon, whose creations seem to assure her
clients that It won't happen to them.
.Zer -nfal
"My fashions are for women who have an unusual
amount of confidence, who don't mind being the
center ot attention and who love bTttltant jewel•tone
colors or dramatic blacks.
"I don't design in murky colors," says the petite
blonde who spent several years In the Far East where
she once was married to a Thai/Chinese. ~n~fion:
~U66eaiJJ~
' • I
Her Oriental connection probably explains her
affection for silk. In her Costa Mesa showroom, she
displays her creations that are exclusively f n silk
fabrics made expressly for her In Far East factories.
She deal$ primarily in batik, a wax resist dyed
process and In lkat, a tie-dyed, procen with the
......____. __ oe1lgn woven Into the fabric .. The materials look
good on both sides.
....._ _ _...... Pinon was born In Texas, bur left 1here at the ~ge
of 3 months, when her Air Force father was
transferred to California.
She began her romance with silk when she was an
exchange student in Japan and later in Java where
her tattler was then a civilian engineer.
In Japan she said she was shocked to learn how
much money 3eople spent for silk kimonos. "At one
time," she sai "women would wear as many as 12
kimonos at a time. They put their money on their
backs. GoTd ancf silver were considered cold gifts,
but silk, since it Is a form of life, was considered very
precious." .
Pinon says -she loves the vibrant, true colors In silk.
"It dyes very well, and the colors reflect the same
brilliance as jewels. Silk is luxurious and warm and
does not have the glassy look of polyester and
rayon." Plnon's designing career began In Semarang, Java
where it was necessary for her family to entertain
business contac;;ts.
"There were few readymaC:te clothes f n the jungle
area, so I began to sketch clothes for myself and for
my sitter,'' she said "and thef"t a dress ~d........,+-4l'N
make them ur:
(IM none DWNI. ... Cl>
t
l
'
•••
Personalized fragrance makes scents
Ono of yuur Chttltmaa p1tka ,,-,nualned
1 bottle of Ptrlu~1 but you can't 1&and tho
fr..,..nm. The txltue a. bnulllul, but there lt
no way )'® can Uve with that ....,nl hour 1fc.r
hour. l\'1 a v:J dllappotnUna expeNra.
An ope1 bottle of per£wne la not one
that you can reu.am. However, IJ It'• not coo tMld
you can u. It • 1 roam 1pr1y or put a UtUe ln
the rlNe waler of bed l1MNI or t.owela. The
bett bet ii to find I frtend who UU. It.
But, there ii a way you can pt euctly
What you want ln a f.rqrance.
A fairly new boutique, Dana un Jardin (ln
a prden) ln Fashion bland cuatom blenda
penonaliled ~-It offers I eeJection of 00 e11ential olla that
can be blended. Available are fioral, fruit,
animal, leaf, herbal and wood ecenta. Wlth t.hia
many . .centl It wtl1 be euy to find exactly what
you Uke and you'll be the only one with lt.
And how do you become an amateur
perfumer and create th.ls nice aroma that you
can live wf1h?
It worka like thlt. aocordini to Rhonda
Noble, owner of the boutique, . . . you lit
down with her or <ae of the othei tralned
apect•ltsi. few a ~ They will want to
know your ute.tyle, what you have been w....m, and your tuts ln aienta.
Darlene Ferrari and John Cramer
VOA
Althouah some women wW moc.e two
ICe'flta mixed, you l"Mlly abould clw:ae three,
Noble said. You need a top note, which la the
lnitial aient you pt after applyinl a trurance;
a mldcpe note, the one you 11D9ll after 16out
five nilnut.es, and a bottom note, whlch you
amell aftert£mlnutes. Noble aaya the mlddJe note la the ooe.
After ot lh1a ll'De1linC and dedd.11\1 j,llt what you want, ~ choices are m1ad and_
you can take them home. The entire prca.
takea about 30 minutes.
Your custom-blended fraarance can be
made into eau de toilette, or lI you would like
lt a little auoncer. a concentrated perfume or ln a
bath oil. Very lhortly, Noble aaya, the boutique will
be able to aupply matching bubble bath.
..
Holidays,
festivities
cheered
A great way to aee the
decorated boetl ln the harbor ..
to get on one and cnme along
with them.
That'• what 90IDe of the IUMtl
did at Darlene Ferrari'• holiday
party that began at her
waterfront home ln Newport
Beach.
Actually, there were several
types of people there -tome
had already teen the boetl and
stopped by for a bit or cheer;
aome had come from another
party; aome were off to another
party, and then olhen we.re
there for a full ~ of .tun.
After chatting and cocldalla.
the latter group bundled up and
embarked on the champape
crulae for viewing the festive
ll1hta, a little carollna (never
mind that aome were forgetful of
the lyrics) and exchan1e of
greeting• with other boat
cruillen.
The party continued with a
buffet aupper in Ferrari'•
festively deconted home.
Party1oer1 Included John
Cramer, John Ell.Iott. who found
a lot of fellow Texan• for
rem1nilcing lDduclina Minerva
Bnden Black. Gearae and Unda
West, Tom and Olnny Haley,
Judy McPhal1 and her bl1dearoom Rotiue Hemley, (married about
three week• aao and
honeymooned in the Hawaiian
lalancla), the Phil Jrnda••w. Sally
and Ray Gruber, Nancy
Thornton, Brett ADdreaoo. SJ
Cbedlthe, Boots Tallman and her
list.er Martha Mid l'..lalne Blythe
from Hollywood. pnmldent ol the
FUm A.dvl8ory Board.
OPIN 7 DAVI A WllK
WEEIUllTU 'TIL I (DC. IOWITOWI L.A.
60'' JERSEY
PRINTS l SOLIDS
EJrlRE SELECTIOll HTIRE SllEC II
1 C METALLIC
. mlti SWCTIOll
-45" $ CORDUROY
DRAPERY
FABRICS
81/V 1 VO. AT AEO PAICI OIT aNO YO. FOA 10
NEW YEAR'S EYE
~~ KNITS
t..y rtnt producu ln thl..,,.. • 11ve. u
1&aytn1 powd.
TM ooncactJonl come ln a plaln bot&», but
U you want ~ fancier th.y a1lo hav•
old fMhklned flmn,
You.r '!Ndpe" wUJ be pi.c.d on flle and
you can NOrder anytime.
Y ® can a1lo haw thll 1ame formula made
up In an •••not to bum 1n lampe « on ecmt.d rti"9 near a lamp bulb. The hut ftom the bulb
aendl the IOlnt UVOUChout the room.
Th.la boutique la one of more than 100
\h.rouah®t the world. It'• twd to keep an
aoc:urate cou.nt. becaUM Luelle de Baudry
d'Amon who staried her cba1n of boutiques ln
Paril ln 1978 ii oPen1na thmn up ao f.alt. She
WU hire When tM boU~ opened in late
November and It WM her third one' that week.
The J'Mhk>n bland bouUque loob exactly
Like the othen ln the chain -bright -decorated 1n pwerl and white with latticed
.anta and ~ carpedJ\I. D' Amon m1ll them her prdena of buuty. ~ Che cwtom-made acenta, the pl8Cle ii
abloom with .. .,., lotions, bath pla and akin
care producta made from plant and,flower
extaw:ta.
'lbe Udn care line oonaiatl of 17 producta
featwinc IUCh itema • eye makeup remover
with comflower. ex1oliadJ\I cream with
camom11e; purlfyina mask with efNiena, and
hand cream with aloe.
In the buddlna Stale at the aarden la a
comnetJc 11.ne. It wi11 "bloom" ln J'ebruary.
George and
Linda West
Elegant Gifts
at Sp•cial Prices
for the New Year!
FLATWHRAT ., .. Rat ..... BnloeMt
~ an.ts ................................................ ssa.•
8" Flet WhMt Br"°"" ,.~J:t':..dt··~··••••••••••· .. ·••••H•••••••••" 143.99
11~=·:c.··~ ................................. 187.H
Aegulw l1t7.t5 .............................................. W .H
. HERltlNGBONe
20~M~.~ .............................. '49.H
30" ·~Neck CNlln ~u..;W.M .............................................. S79.H
Exotic designs
From Page C1
It was after people began noticing her
designs she was asked to create fashions for
friends, and her career was launched.
"I still have~ of thoee same customers
today," she said. ''They live all over the world,
but they call or write and ask me to make up
something for special occasions."
Customers also can select fashions at her
showroom where s he has about 350 pieces
available, and a great number of them are
"one-of-a-kind" items.
"My customers do not want to see the same
dress on other women, 80 I keep records on who
buys what, and I will not sell the same outfit in
the ume fabric to anyone el8e in their llOdal
circle."
Pinon adds that women come to bet" for the
unuaual and exotic. SnakNlrln, feathers and fur
are often u8f!d to add glamour to her designs.
Besides the exotic outfits already in stock,
abe baa what ahe calla her everyday Iii.lb -the
clauk dresses and two-piece pant and top
coordinates that can be worn under a fur. They
are made of crepe de Chine and Thai silk..
A woman can &190 have a Pinon creation
cu.tom-made by choosing from swatches of
fabric. The clothes are made in Bangkok,
nw.tand in a factory she once owned when she
lived there with her Oriental husband. It takes
about two months to have an outfit made there,
and all of her clothes are hand finished.
"About every two and a half months I go
back to Bangkok to check on the work at the
factory," she explained.
In 1984, Pinon will open a boutique in
Jakarta in the Hyatt Regency Hotel.
Pinon speak.a Indonesian, aome Thai and
aome Japanese. Her father ia half Filipino and
half Gennan, and ahe aaya her fashions " ... are
like me, they reflect East and West. They are
Oriental silk interpreted into F.uropean designs."
Mext year ahe pJana to open a boutique in
the Co.ta Mesa-Newport Beach area. "I already
have ordered the furniture," ahe uid, explaining
that she chose this area becauae "I like the
climate, the cultural mixture and the neame9B to
Loa Angeles. It's 80 easy to get to the Orient from
there."
Abo, Pinon sees a great future for the
designer dress buslnea becauae of increasing
aoclaJ life. "With the new Performing Arts
Celt.er and the South Cout Repertory Theater,
there will be even more occulom for women to ru.. up," ahe concluded.
On the cover.
The fabric in the faah1onl worn by Anna
Pl.non and her mother Rinda Carter, who ia the
abowroom manager, la Thalland-made silk copied
from a cotton Indonesian .cart. Pinon'• two-piece
creation in violet w{th metallic threed features
interfaced winged ruffles. Caner's three-piece
aqua ememble oonalatl of a bustier, reminilcent
'of the '40. and·~ glamoroua wrapped btou.s
wom with knee-length J>91ltl and dncbed at the
wailt with an obi belt. Over this ia wom a
reversible kimono jacket. The two were
J:!:.totr&phecl in their Oriental~antlque filled
ie 1n c.o.ia Meu home by Lee Payne. Dally
PUotstaff.
Dellr .... ,...... "' Lee .. 9YM
Styles gain attention
Anna Pinon's fuhion are labeled
with an unwritten guarantee that a
woman won't go unnoticed at a party.
They are glamoroua and unique. In
the photo at right Pinon w ears a
ruffled creation in purple, magenta
and turquoise with a gold thread.
Ruffles accent the deep V -neckline
and mutton sleeves. Queen SLrikit of
Thailand purchased 20 yards of this
fabric for an evening gown she wore
on a 1981 trip to the United States.
Sable tails add interest to the two-
piece orange, pink and purple Uc.at silk
that she models at left. The vertical
striping that appears to be braid UI
actually woven into the fabric.
Rinda Carter, seated on a tongue
covered in ailk wean a three-piece
Chinese silk chiffon ensemble an
green. Pinon's fascination with silk
dates back to her days as an exchange
student in Japan and was further
fired by time she spent as a resident of
Thailand a nd Indonesia. This
involvement with silk extends into
her showroom's telephone number -
641-SILK.
. Today. Tomorrow, Forever.
Yow diamond wedding set wlll renect Y04I
love through all the Joycx. yeas. These
newest designs are In 14 karat yeUow gold.
A. $760. 8. $995. C. $2650. D. $1100. E. $1600.
Balley Banks & mddle
World RM<IWM!d ~ Sina! 1&12
SOU1H ~ PlAZA. OQITA ~ Riii Lftel. near n. ~ (714} HI~
Now on Sale ... The Silk
Print Dress: Originally
s168, Now 119.90.
• Shown here, the softly
bowed dress with an
elastic waist It's 1ust
one from our exclusive
collection of pure silk
dresses which also
includes chemises and
shtrtdresses.
• Choose from dots,
:,tripes, and small
geometric prints in
blue, black, red,
fuchsia, grey and royal
blue colorations for
sues 4 to 16.
• Now on sale in
Sportdres5 Collections
-where we are all the
things you are
\ou1l1 ( lld'I l'l.u.1 I 11 I Hfhll>I \trN'I ( 0\"1 Mr'J
..
.·
• ..
~ After Christmas
Sale
rrM Shop tor Pappagatto
Lido Marina VIiiage
3404 Via Oporto
~rt Beach
875-5454
A 1-0T or THOll ptOI: &~~. '°,m~: ~.~::'nd•~ 1v1ntn1 were m1mber1 and *"-" arrtv:lnl for Lit liUCll de ftavtdad. Thej were petkinl at
th• Lutheran Church incl at
Newport Harbor HiCh and belnC lhudW owr for tbe f..UvtU..
Alta 81bl1 Women '•
C.ornmltW ol tbe Orance County
Ph1lharmonic Sodety 1ponlONCI
the pll, ... 18th.
Durlq tbe cockllll hour the
more than 17& party«::!!
watdwd the boet par9de
conUnuln1 with dinner and
dand.na to the mUlk of the Dick
PowellQuartitt.
Ou.ta Included Dr. Daniel and
Bart.ra Abbot1, (the'• PNlklerit
of Alta Bahia and Women'•
Board of Directors of OCPS), Jlm
and Irene Bentley, Fl09 and Ed
Schumacher, Gloria and Mark
Fahey, Dr. Davtd and Lynne
Bloomber1, Chip and Robert
Little, and co-chairmen Sally
tnene and her huaband Howard.
EMMELINE AND MIKE
V ASQUJ!:L entertained members
of the Huntington Beach
Aaiat.ance League at a holiday
party in thelr home. After a
potluck aupper the IUeltl viewed
the Huntington Jlarbour boat
parade.
Members of the chapter hosted
another party when guests were
studenta of the 1peech center
they 1porwor. Betty Crouch WU
chainnan of thil event at which
the old man in red attended,
game• were played and
ref:relhmenta .erved.
Be1ide1 the 1peech center,
chaired by Lee Bonaventura,
memberi sr.on1or Operation
School Bel , which provides
clothe1 for 1ehool children in
need and SAT Review Seminars.
tiley all donate their time u a
community lel'Vioe.
THERE'S PROBABLY A
ClDLD at thil moment playing
with a cute stuffed toy that
90IMOOe purchaed at the annual
boutique and luncheon held by
Laa Marineraa Auxiliary of
Family Service A.adatMlll.
More than 200 pthen!d at the
Balboa Yacht Club for the festive
event and had the chance of
picking up mme lut minute gifta.
Karen James and Kathie Sond
etan9ed the party and Lynn
Dowty, presiderlt, WU on hand to
welcome sue-ta lncludina John
Van Glahn. d.ittctor of fSA of
Oranae County. Auxiliary members, their
hu1band1 and guest• were
partyln1 again on Monday
evening at a cocktail buffet
hosted by Chris and FraDk
Manha1l The waterfront home
Las Marinera8
members -Karen
James, Kathie Bond
OlllJ,... ... ,..... and Chris Manhall.
DllJ ......... .., a.....,
Sally and Howard Ulene, left, with Barbara and Daniel Abbott
provided a great place for
watchlna the boat parade.
FOR THE FIFTH YEAR, the
0ranae Cout YMCA hu held a brunCh to thank the volunteen
for the thouaandl of houn they
donate to the 1outh Oranae
County qency.
Board members and their
1pouse1 attending this year'•
event In the home of YMCA
director Jim de Boom and hla
wife Barbara were Micheel and
Bert Adle, Hal and Delote1
Joannlns, David and Lori
Oberbeck, Dan and Jeri Beall
and David and P.mily Tolh.
Othen were Dr. R. Morley
Davia, Joan and Bob Flnnepn.
W. C. and Nancy Fox, C>Wen
Gorman, Lee Jones, Charle. and
Dorll Lee, Theodore and Glnl
Robina and Barbara Robtman.
0
'tJ c::§!;flfrom \X.'yndham Leigh
~ 1mpnnt~ s~ gift box made 1n
Switzerland and the tine wrapping with
the embossed gold stidcer are nice. t>ut
what will really excite her about the gift
from \X.-yndham ~lgh will be the jN/elry
~t. ~ry that you tool< the o~ to
choose.just as our~ and crafts-
men took the ti~ to~. making cer-
ta1n that every detail was exactly right
\Xie do not compromise on design or
quallty and our reputation speaks for
this fact-chances are. she knows that.
and the wrapping tells her that you care
enough not to compromise either.
l.kliq~ and exciting.Jewelry from SIOO.
Wyndham Leigh ~~rt.PAT
127 Fashion Isl.and. Newport Beach. G4. 92660
T~~ 714/644-0501 • ~ar Bullocks Wllshi~
120 degrees
Ir ITAN DELAPLANE
Thie l1 Ch• d ... rt Outbeck. 8corpoww and eandltormL ln the
A'-Wtralian mid·IWIUIWI', the heet can .. , uf to lDO dean--120 61 a ••coo day." Peopl• llv• In
und.raround homea, fully
equlPDed and fumJahed. "No po1tcard vt•w.. No luxury
swlmmlna pooi.. No four-atar
reMauranta. But yes, the tourl.lta
do come here.••
tAuatralia -17~ houn and
tl.199 from the w.t Cout -not
• tourist country. J wouldn't eo to
Coober Pedy now for a dozen cues of Foeter'• laaer. But a
curioua Joumalllt friend of mine
did for me.)
"Nine of every ten of the
world'• opa1a oome from Coober
Pedy. But it'• the We--atyle that
brinp tourists, three flying houn
from Adelaide.
"The aubterranean homes
were excavated with dynamite.
Finiabed off with m.l.nen' pick.a.
They're elaborate five or aix-
room layouta. Living rooms,
dining rooms. Some have dena
and bllliard tables. Cost: about
$85,000.
"The town's two churches are
underground. Coober Pedy
cou ldn't have survived
otherwl8e. Below ground It never
gets warmer than 72 degrees,
even on the fiercest summer
day." • • • "There are 3,000 people in
Coober Pedy. lt'a eot achoola and
ahopa. A few motels, a new
haspital, a police outpo1t and a
drive.in-movie. (Now ahowing a
Mel Brooks comedy.)
"The Acropoloua restaurant
makes a decent moussa.k.ha for
the Greek i.mmigranta of Coober
Pedy.
Ylllt cJw Umoana Mine on Main
8trfft and r•nt 1n overni1ht
rnod.t dupat for M." • • l"
"It'• HI)' to pt hooked on the
Coober Pedy opal. They're
creamy, rich aerriatonea that fluh
red·blue-sreen flr• when you
turn them 1n your hand. J\18t the
other day 1 SydMy jeweler eold
a Coober Pedy os-) the aize of a I"/: for $32,000.
' Some miner• have made
fortunes. Moet pt callou.. and a llvtna wage. One chap attuck a
.earn of fl.re opall while he waa dUna out a plaice to live. He'll
be in beer for the !"Mt of hJ.a life.
But he ataya in Coober Pedy.
"A dJ.ager told me: 'I've been
min1ng in this bloody town for
tea yea.rs. But I wouldn't go blick
to the city for a thouaand a week.
And the Missus agrees.' "
• • • •
"It's a jolting 18-hour bus ride
from Adelaide -100 miles is
Wlpeved. The road cuta through
Blg Sky COWllry. The air amella
of the de9ert scrub. The aky ia
clean bleached blue. The color of
a faithful old pair of Levi's.
"The land is flat. Mabe of big
gray kangaroos go bounding off
Into the bush. 'nte 'roos are not
an endangered apeciea though!
atockmen sometimes shoot them
to save more forage for the cattle.
"Lioemed hunten take them
for the akina. They don't eat
kangaroo meat here but a small
amount ia shipped to Japan. It'a
considered exotic. On the printed
English aide of the menu it
translates 'jurnpsteaku'. '' • • • "You don't need to be rich to
own a fire opal. Just get down on
your hands and knees and look
for them. 'Fossicking' they call It.
Whole families spend a picnic
weekend sifting dry creek beda
for opal chips. 'l'ourlsta do it too.
a 'cool day' • 1n the desert Outbac
"The local people call
themselves 'Diggers'. You can
take a long, bounc ing tour
through the opal fields with an
ex-miner, John Gibbs, A dusty
old trip, but a charmer, Gibbs ia,
all for $10.
"Crocodile Barry runs a
home-turned-museum. You can
"The professional opal miner
doesn't look for chips. He'a out
for a fiery aeam of them. When
they've got a 'parcel' they take
them into Adelaide. Chine9e are
the opal buyers.
Crocodile Barry lived through the wild and wooly days of claim j umping and big opal strikes
at Coober Pedy, Aust ralia, and tod~y runs an opal museum in h is living room.
·' • .·
Dysrhyth unia problem _for long-distance travelers
BJ 'DICK DOYLE ............. .., ....
One of the most common aubjecta of
~to loog-dlstance air travelen la
dylrbythunla. better known • jet Liii· I
.. ,. don't worry ~t it, ).-apend 10'.lr
flnt day restina and you'll be bettllr ol1
far the remain3er of your lnt.emaUonal
atay. But. here'• what othen tell me.
1. Get adequate preflight rest. I
recommend that 1f your flight is 10 hours
or more get 10 hours of sleep for the
three nights preceeding your flight.
2. Comfortable clothing. Guys need
not wear a tie and jacket. Looeen your
belt. Ladies do n't need undergarments
that fit them like sausage casing. Kick
off your shoes ahd walk around in your
stockif\I feet.
3. Walle around. Take a strqll from one
end of the plane to the other every hour.
That keeps the circulation of your blood
going in the right direction and preventa
what doctors term "pooling" of the
blood. If you walk every two hours
instead of once each 60 minutes, you
ml'bt u well curl up ln the fet.al
pmition and not walk at all. Jet lag will
have you in its clutches. WALK UCH
HOUR!
· 4. Go lightly on food and drink. When
you travel a great deal, this is normal.
Leave a little on your plate~ You
probably can't eat all your dinner or
breakfast anyway. Don't try And, don't
get snockered. Drink a lot of water. Take
a folding cup if you can, packed away in
your hand luggage, 90 you won't have tu
f1 II one of those airline one ounce
drinking cups half a dozen times. Four
ounces per hoOr Is a good rule of thumb
as a minimum water allowance. Besides,
the walk to1 the rest room will do you
good after the fifth hour.
One final note: (f you're takln~ a
• •
'\
LIDO DRUGS •
•
3445 via Udo •newport b-ch e phone67M1SO
European vacation, it will laat a little
longer becauae the trip home won't be as
quick as the trip over. It's westerly
winds that slow your return flight.
* * * . In a recent column, we wrote about
how to pack and what to pack for a two
or three week vacation. We've been
asked to elaborate on some odds and
ends you should take with you in
addition to the "nonnal" clothes, etc
Here are some suggestions:
Wear your heaviest clothes on the
plane. Your bags are weighed and you'll
be socked with an extra charge if they
exceed the airline's weight limit (44
pounds on economy, 66 pounds first
class) ...
Take an extra pair of your spectacles
or the prescription for same. Or take a
pair of drugstore reading glasses for
menus, telephone books, etc . . · .
A Ii hter. Matches are a rarlt ln
Europe, at leatJt the fl'ft kind . . . By all
means, take t1 dry apot remover, not a
liquid. European and South American
drycleaning is expensive -how about
$7 for a suit? . . . By all means, take a
bar or two of 90ap, wrapped In foil. Most
hotels don't have soap in the bathroom.
If you run out, you can buy more
overseas. But after a long flight, nothing
la better than a bath or shower -if you
have aoap .
Take a travel clock. by all means.
There are some wonderful gadgets on
the market. including those that wake
up people with the nationaJ anthem of
the country they're visiting. But you can
probably f&et by with a regular clock,
priced at about $10 ...
Without endorsing specific products.
take the following or something similar
to It:
Mylanlla, Sinutab, Kao-Con, your own
brand of tobacco or ci arettes, Woolite
• •
•
•
•
•
(about half a dozen small packages),
litUe pllCka of Kleenex that can come lo
for uses you never conaidered at home,
salt tableta, foot powder, and, finally,
about 20 pack.a of th<JR towelenea that
can be a llfe·uving refresher at about-4
p.m. after a bus tnp that started a~,,
a.m. . . . • ...
Finally, the item that 1S probably die
most important Toilet paper. Europ$n
toilet paper isn't real. It's Christmas
wrap, wax.paper or food-storage paper.
But, It LSn't toilet paper Bring your own.
Crush it flat or take the cardboard tube
out But take some My wife has some
kind of felith and collects foreign toilet
paper samples None can be considered
civilized.
If you're planning a European or
South American or even a Down Under
vacation this winter, do all the planning
you want but still talk to your frlen~y
travel agent.
•
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • SALE STARTS SUNDAY, DECEMBER 26! • •
• Lift your Holiday Spirits at our Annual After Christmas Sale. • Buy yourself the gift that Santa forgot at savings of 1/3 to •
• 1/2 OFF. A larve selection of Fall dresses, sportswear, coats, • • • lleepwear and MORE!
?''6-4 111 • • • • • • • • 50% OFF
Chrlltmu cards, wrap and selected glftware
I YA N
CLEARANCE!
MERVYN'S IS OPEN
TODAY. .. AND FROM
10 A .. M. TO 7 P.M.
YOU'LL FIND A STORE
FULL OF · BARGAINS AT
Here's your chance to take advantage of super buys on clearance
merchandise. Hurry in for these and many others. Quantities are
limited, but the values are great. Vfe list just a few.
Intermediate markdowns may have been taken.
w omen's cardigans and
pullovers at a great price
Add these warm sweaters to your wardrobe collection.
Your choice of cardigans or pullovers. Each is available in
an assortment of colors and fabrics. Junior, misses' sizes.
Orig. 16.00 to 22.00
9.98 to 13.98
clearance prices on
warm coats for women
It's the time to buy that coat you've wanted. Pantcoats
or stadium jackets. Plus all weather coats; some
with zip-out linings. Broken misses', Junior, half sizes.
Orig. 50.00 to 85.00
clearance! shoes for
Mom, Dad and the kids
You'll find bargains galore during our clearance of shoes!
We've quality dress, casual and active shoes for the whole
family ... but you'd better hurry in for the best choices.
Orig. 7 .oo to 36.00
3.98 to 21.98 .
don't miss these terrific
buYs on jaCkets for men
We have a great collection of jackets that'll go fast at our
low clearance prices. So make sure you come to Mervyn's
early for medium weight, heavyweight. ski jackets, coats.
Ori g. 60.00 to 75.00
I
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IUNOAY, 0 C Ml " e. tH2
STOCKS 03·4
•
Wi ltly ''"""• • lltilll tor Or•n Counly
IJrm• •re re~lew t(
In table on Pa11e 02.
OC's overseas allure keeps growing
BJ UREN E. u.EIN
.............. !
Southe~ California, Iona a mecca for thoee
Heklna 1ood weather and 1ood lnveatment
opportunltlea from around the natlon, hu
developed international appeal u well.
Since the euly 1970.. foreign direct lnvestment
bl On.nae County hu lncreued sixfold. A growing
number of forelgn lnveston, neaoUatina mainly throu8h U.S. f.lt\ancla1 advt.on, have concentrated
their interesta on county real est.ate and business
ooncerna.
In fact, Lo. Angeles la the only county in the
nation which pl.aye hoat to more Japaneee lnvestora
than Orange County does, accordlng to Jlm
Buchner, president and chief executive officer of
the Orange County Economic Development
Corporation.
"At one time, Canadians owned about ~()
P.!rcent of all our developable land," Buchner said.
'They were buying on tomorrow's appreciation."
lndk:ative of the county's heavy involvement in
foreign lnveatment la the World Trade Center
Amoclation of Orange County, only the sixth World
Trade Center ln the nation. There are 28 auch
centen worldwide.
Yet, though it is known that world trade ia
prevalent ln the county -and that trade haa
lncreued lllnce \he worldwide recwion -no one
knows for sure how many forelan lnveston own
buaineMea and real estate here.
Experta estimated that between 2 percent and
~ percent of the buainemes ln Ora.nae County are
foreian-owned. "They play a atanlflcant role, but
not a dom1nant role," Buchner aald. "There'• not a
foreign company here that'• even half the size of
Hughes Aircraft or Dianeyland. There's not one
that employs over 1,200 workers."
Foreign investmenta are difficult to pinpolnt
becaWle often the investon u.e banka or linanciaJ
advisers u truateea on thelr contracta and deed.a,
according to Steve Quinn, vice president and
maoager ol the rear estate dlv1a1on or John
Burnham and Co. of ~ewport Beach.
Mitaublahl will headquarten its new U.S .
offices in Cypreaa, Qulnn sald, along side
Kawasaki's Western Regional Headquarters.
Mitsubishi manufactures TVs while Kawasaki
makes motorcycles.
1bough foreign investment may make up only
a ama1.l portion of the total business lnvestment
centered here, that portion is considered important
enough to lnapire local government and business
aroups to actively seek out foreign love.tors
lntereeted ln comlna to Oranae County.
A dele1ation of Senta Ana bualnemmen and
government offldab will attend a convention In
March called "Invest ln'America'a Cities," in Hona
Kong°'\ to Induce added foreign Investment In
OrllJlie County.
Santa Ana, which wUJ repreMnt all of Orange
County at the convention, will be one of 100 dllea
throughout the nation participating In the
conference, according to Hank Cunnln1ham,
director of the Santa An.a economl.c development
office.
Thoee attending the conference concentrate on
making contact with foreign lnveatora and
promoting their cities aa attractive places to invest,
Cunninaham said.
"Alter the conference, we hope to invite a
delegation of lnveston from Hong Kong to come
here," he added.
The delegation won't have.a hard time selllng
Orange County. The area has many good polnta
built in to it, according to Cunningham.
Generally, tl\e bigaest aaet ia that the U.S. ia
perceived aa the moat at.able government in the
world. "That's a big change for a lot of people who
are uaed to coupe d'etat," Cunningham said.
Orange County ls unique in that It ia the only
market outalde New York City located ln the center
of a tarae. heavily concentrated population .,..,
Buchner aald.
He added that Oranae County I• a youn1.
IJ'OWin1 area with an unrettrictlve atmoephere
re1ardlng trade. "U It can't be done in Oranae
County, It can't be done anywhere;• he aald.
Lua Trankiem, chief executive officer of Delta
Savinp & Loan A.adation, cited more pereonal
reaaona wt\y investors, especially tho.e from· Aa1a.
wiah to come to the area.
"They would like to be in thla aree for the good
weather and the conveniences offered here,"
Trank1em said. Abo, many foreign lnveston llend
their children to boarding achoola In the U.S. and
want to move here "to keep an eye on what their
k.ida are doing," he said. .
Some lnveatora have special reaaona for
wanting to put their money ln oveneaa marketa,
real estate manager Qulnn aald. "There hu been a
flight of capital to the U.S. from Hong Kong," he
Jl&ld. "becauae the Chinese land leaae of the i.land 10 tne British expires ln l~ years."
At that point, many fear, the Chinete will
regain control of the ialand and confiscate all
private. busineaa interest there. So Hone Kong
48ee OVt:K:St:AS, Pase DZ)
rrHCOA
Irvine Co. casts
lease-option plaii
to lure tenants
.·
Longer name, .
same hotel
Costa Mesa's South'Coast
Plaza Hotel was
re-christened by Santa Ciaos
last week as the Westin
South C.Oast Plaza. Worken,
top photo, replace old letten
so inOatable Santa, bottom
photo, could be lowered
Thursday by helicopter. A
live Santa, already atop
building, unveiled new logo.
Seattle-based Westib Hotels
manages South C.Oast Plaza.
•
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•
,., ll1L Wl\TIN ~UIH COASI rtALA
I I •r I I
, ' I I
• I
f •
I .._, -•
•
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By GLENN SCOTI' °' .... .,..,,.. ....
The Irvine Company la
offering a leue-purchue option
-a common tool In selling
hOU8eS -to convince ~
to buy land ln one of ita large
induatrial parka.
The financing tool la relatively
unusual ln large oommerdal and
indu.trial drclee, but company
offidala aay It la a eenslble way to
draw new buyers Into their
Irvine lndumtal Canplex-Eut.
The option la intended to help
fl.nm locate ln the oomplex at a
time when they might otherwt.e
a1ay away becawie of concern.a
over flnandng' 009ta from bich
lntereet ntee. .. nm. are still very arudoull to
purchue land," noted Dan
c.ri.on. a compmiy apokf!!l!Nn.
"But with current interest rates
-even though U\ey are oomlna
down -companies are a bit
reluctant to make the
oonunitment .••
According to the plan,
Industrial flrma agreeine to
atandard 65-year leaaea for
property in the complex can
receive at no charge a two-year
option to buy the land. Seventy-
fl v e percent of the lease
payments would be credlted
toward the purchalle price.
Sam Van Landinaham, the
company's dlrec\or of
development and marketing,
offered tb.ia example: A company
la interested ln a one-acre parcel
valued at $446,!W>O and acres to
pay ann~ nmt of $44.~.
After two years, It buya the
land. aettlna *66,976 subtracted
aa 75 percent of its rent from the
~-Tile new purchue price la
$379,525.
Company officlala introduced
their new concept lut week
during a brea.k:fut for local real
estate brokers. •
The company baa since
received several queries from
broken but has not yet aianed a
contract including the 1eue-
• purcha.ae option with tenanta,
aaid Andy Schul1, manager of
development and marketin&·
The l,200~acre complex la
located juat aoutheut of the
confluence of the Santa Ana and
San Diego freeways .
Development bepn there four
yean aao and 12S fl.nm either
have opened plants there or hlive
acquired property.
The Iar1e.t of the lnduatrial
realdenta la the Lucky Storea
distribution center for Southern
California.
The Irvine Company owned all
of the one-time farm land when
it won dty approvala to turn it
into an industrial park. It still
owna a majority of the pl'operty.
About three-fourths of the
developed property waa
purchued by the private finm,
said Carl890n. The other quarter
la leued.
Van Landingham noted tb4t a
benefit of the new plan la that It
freezt!9 the purchue price while
firms decide whether they can
afford to buy.
"A company can acquire land
right now throuah an attncUve
leue arranaement that )ocb in
the price, and then h.aa two yean
to decide if it Wanta to buy the
land, .. he aaid.
Cons umers w ary as
'
bankruptci es grow
• BJ UREN J!;. KLEIN °' .. .,.., ........
When Wendy be&an Plannina
her poat-hollday ald trip, ahe
cledded to do thinaw mimply and
buy an all-lncluslve package deal
that aipplied her with lodlhll.
air tickets and lift tkketa.
In September, ah• placed a
t200 depollt on a pllCkaae ottered
by a local travel .,ency, knowinl
that lf ahe made her r.ervatiorw
eerly ahe would hlive no problem aettinc onto the crowded llopea.
But th1a Chrtatmu, lmteed of
..,erly antidpatlna her vacation..
Wendy la bitterly dluppolnted
over the km of her money and
the Nin of her plana. The travel
apncy went broke only a month
after the pve them her ~t.
Wendy, who uked that her
I.Mt name not be u.d. ia ~one
of a arowtna number of peopJ•
who find thitmelwe left out ln
the cold when bullMmll with
which they have dealt declare
benlm.IJ)WY.
"We 1•t calla wee kl)', and
almolt dally at thJa polnt. fnlm
people Who ay thlnllt lib, 1We
Olclend -f\lmlture and put •eoo down and now the =~~r~J-.:.r...=
director of Oi'a~ Count1'1
............... "-i-'°'!""1"¥'-'"' "Al eu do It .u tt.n to Ill' 1ep& cou:n.llnl. •• M111ndiii.,.
ia&d.
•
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' 1•1 lllVICUa TUT 1enoon SICO•ITJU CC>nOllTIOI llU I ~I-ID IUl.t.llC8 1oon Ullu.ILI Oii TllU co .. PAn b:t.eul•• errort-•.,... •M to .....,.. "ta• &OO"Qraor ._.. tteell•u • ot ~ •t.a ... talnN in 1-. ••• t..ebl••· •Illa .. •r• .... u oe aauro.• '•ll•••d \.0 M ,..ll••l•, t>vt. ~ e.-..r•or 6ed tl•llM•• .,.. Nl .-.rut.., aad ...,.rt lenrltl•• •!'Ml t.•t• ......
paper •-'•Qet no llalttltt., tor an7 l fteocvaol•• or •tt•l l"••• ot l9'• Mt.a ""*ll•lt•C he ..... Co9tll•4 •r Un l •tto•f· , MIKID• SlPC 11 .. tllloUID
dONSUMERS WARY • •
From Page 01 can be liquidated and diatribuled are skyrocketing, conaumera
to the creditors," he aaid. should be more cautious in any
Generally, if a con.aumer or a bualnela deallnga, Hobeon aaid.
buainela la lilted aa a credit.or on "If you're making caah
Irvine woman honor d
lrv1 l-'•·1fk> · utlv• lltll Trtff nl lrvl
hMt l n •I t.ed • the f ll'll WOftlM &o t'f\1'11Vt Ult
MH t' 'npwn muuuna •Ward p,....nltld by, UM
Sal•• and Mukellnf Council of the 8ulldJn1
lndU1try Amocl•Uon o Southern C'allfomla .
Klrt8 D•w1ot1 of ANholm hu bMrt honot9CI
by th• W•l Orant1 County Board of Rnhon by
belna natMCI "Afflll•~ of the Yur." St.. la d"U1ct
manqer for Oranae County Title otvlak>n of rtr1t
American 'ntJ• Inturanm Co and wrv• the areu
of Garden Grove. Los AlamJtoe, W•\minattt and
West Orange.
ptetldent ll tho Newport Beach refk>naJ oftlot. He
WH f orm•rly a v ie• prHldent wuh Mhaul
Manuf tc:turen Bank and C.Uf omll J'tnt a.nk.
MJclaael F. Couert of Hidden HW. hu been
named vice prealdent and chlef finandal officer ot
Applied Technology Ventw., Inc .• of Santa AN.
In addition, he hu been elected to the board of
dittcton of the corporation .
DHl•I R. Frl .. mH hat Joinect th• <:>c.an
Services Dtvlalon of Fluor Enatnwn, lnc , of lrvtne.
u vice prcsld•nt of project manaaement. He will
head th Wt1t Coast olfk:e.
Prudential lnaurance Company announcee the
openina of • new office in th~ Liberty National
Bank Bulldina, 7777 Center Ave., Suite 200,
Hunt.J.naton Beach.
Gary Boelmer of Newport Beach h.u joined
Kerr and AModates u an account executive, It wa.
announced by Chene Kerr Doremus, president of
the Huntington Beach-hued public relations firm.
S u san Ty r a o f Diamond Bar h as bee n
appointed V1<.'e pres1d1.:nt, cashh~r of Frontier Bank.
which 1s scheduled to open at 7000 Beach Blvd ..
t'Orner of Beach and Orangethorpe Avenue, Buena
Park. after th<' first of the year Nancy J. Barber of El Toro hu been promoted
to corporate controller at E.T.C Carpet Milla, Lid. of
Sant.a Ana. Hoyt Aldrid1e h.u joined the firm aa
chief operating officer of the Sunapun Yarns
division.
Robert N. Manley, 37, of Yorba Linda haa
joined Great American Bank as regional vice
Mlcbael Brandma n and Associates, Jnc.
announce the opening of their profeHionai
con1ulting firm at 18021 Sky Park Circle, Swee E-2.
Irvine. Prindpa.la of the firm are Tltomaa E . SmJ"7
J r ., vice president: Sandra BHer, Lloyd Booko•t
and Larr y D. Maaaey.
Cainpus-husiness ties discussed
By LEE MITGANG ..-~.,...,
PHILADELPHIA -It is an
uneasy marriage, but botb
participants say they peed each
other. They would 1t.ay totiether
anyway, if only fer the sake of
thE' "kJds."
But controversy is another
ofupring of the wtlon between
big business and college reeearch,
and that tension was the 1ubject
of a two-day convention here
that brought together 400 leaders
of lnduatriea and wtlvendties. ,
The meeting, "Partners in the
Research Enterpriae," dealt with
the poaible conflicts posed by
univeraltle1, which prize
intell~tual freedom and oJ>4!n
infonnation, becoming research
partners with corporations,
which 1trive for profits and try to
keep new product.a aecret.
Such industry-academic ties
are nothing new , as W .G .
Simeral, executive vioe president
o f DuPon l Corp. told the
gathering. ln the 19201, his
company worked with the
University of Notre Dame to
develop Neoprene, a rubber-like
substa.nce u..ed in ahoe aolea and
many other goods.
Since then, universities have
produced other highly profitable
dia'overies: anti~ta at the
University of Wi1con aln ,
stannous flouride for toothpute
at Indiana Univenlty, Gatorade
aoft ~ at the Univenity of
Florida, to name a few.
But the relationship has come
under public acruUny ln the last
several years partly because the
financial and scient ific stakes
have Increased rapidly .
CUSTOM BROCHURES
Induatry-financed research haa
grown to more than $200 million,
up from less than $100 million in
1975. It l.a expect.ed to re9Ch $600
million th.la decade.
Recently, many echools have
entered multi-million dollar
reaearch deals in genetic and
biological n!9ea.J"Ch, including a $6
million pact between Harvard
and DuPont, a $23.5 million deal
between Washlniton University
in St. Louis and Monsanto, and a
$70 mllllon contract between a
Wett Gentlan firm. Hoechst, and
the H a r vard -a f filiated
Maasachuaetta General Hoapital.
The conference's goals wer e
m.odeat: to d1acua, not tolve, the
problems both buaineaa and
academia have in joint re9eaJ"Ch
ventures, and to open the
dialogue to public view. There
were no cloeed doon th.la time, as
there were in Mareh at • much-
critici7..ed meeting at the Pajaro
Dunes resort in Watsonville,
Calif.
The m ost evident problem
stems from how the goals of
academia and indu1try are
perceived. >.. Yale pttSldent A.
Bartlett Giamatti put it,
wtlvendtlea exilt for "the open,
unimpeded and objective pursuit
of ideu." Otben aoeed. noting ll
waa preclaely that unfettered
. intellectual freedom that attract.
busineta to campus laboratories.
B ut what happens when a
corporation. looking for profits,
finances campu1 research? Do
teachers engaaed in corporate
research that could produce trade
1ecreta need permlasion to
publish th eir wor k , or even
disc uss their findings with
colleagues? Who h olda the
patents and li ce nses on
di8coveries?
Above all, will profit become
the prime motive for wtlveraity
research? If ao, what would that
mean to a public that depends on
college laboratories for countless
technological and scientific
advances?
Industry-financed campus
reeearch has been hotly debated
but busine9 actually contributes
only a small portion of ~ money
for re.search. Leas than 4 percent
of the $6.3 billion spent by
American univeraitiea on
research and development comes
from lnduatry contracta, aald
Herbert Fuafeld, director of the
Center for S c ience and
Tec hnolo gy at New York
University.
Much of the balance ia federal
money. And at a time of acarce
federal funds, that meam the
public cannot be Ignored as a
partner in university research,
said Jacqueline Wexler, president
of the National Conference on
Christians and Jews.
"I would like to challenge this
gro up to communicate its
mesaages to the general public,"
Wexler told the pa.rtlclpanta. "U
corporate and univeraity
leadership builch rapport with
the public, together they will be
able to press government to
support basic research in the
wtlversity."
But if the public isn't helped to
understand what'• at stake in
university laboratories. "they
will never support reeearch and
development," she ea.id.
IT'S ALMOST TOO LA TEI 5 DAYS LEFT
Te Eltnlftlll ,_,_,..,..Ind It.Ila llef'M Tax Ind ftlcetwt I Check From the
~ llurH 111I ,. Tam Ytu Pl6d Ml 1111-1•1 .
••eta creditors can reach," ~n aaid, "But probably most
~them have been comumed. A tor might get IOl'DI! fnction
o • hia investment back -uy 10
~ 20 percent.''
a bankruptcy petition, they will depoe!ta, lt'a beat to deal only
be informed if their money can with companies that have Tt ...,. .... MW11t111• tpptl1lftltlM .n91tanttdpNc1
be repaid outatandln1 reputationa," he To Place your ,,... Nd,........., tu ........ *
Creditors who have unaea.ared
debta in a bankrupt company -
like Wendy'• $200 cash depoait -
altnost always loee all or at leMt
~ of their money, Hobeon aai.d.
. i'Sometimes a buaineaa may
114ve aaaeta. like furniture, which
I n Wendy'• case, anoth er aald . But beware. Old , "Fast Result" Te ctllh yew 1Mttnpi_.....
company took aver the bankrupt establish ed companiea can go Please call oow to make an lnltlal no fee/no commitment appointment with our staff of ai;t: travel agency and promlaed to bankrupt too, he warned. Service Directory tomeys and ac<:ountJnts lo review your situation. We will be available every day except
pay her t.clL She'• .U.U. waiting ·•Anyone that'• ever lent ad . Call Now December 24 & 25, Including Sunday's. 9am to 9pm, to serve you
to recetw her $200. eomeone money and never eotten 642-56 71 DALTON, DALTON~ COOPER 6 FRANKLIN, INC • In bad economic lime... ltbeckeanbetympatheticwith• 14)641·3781 especiallywhenbankru~~~p:t.cy:::_~ra:tes~--~cz-,~~~tar~,_"~h~e~aaJd~~-----------_J~~~--~~~----.l.!~~~~~~26:!!91~R~~h~te~r~A~ve~~·~~!....:1~0~2.~l~rvl~ne~-~N~u~r~J~ambof~~et~/~4~05~·~~~~~~~~~~~ t ' .
OVERSEAS • • •
Fr'pm Page 01
inVeston ~ ac:rambllna now to put their money
eltewbere -many of them inveltinl in 0ranae Cdu.n~. .
' Though many mt.side buainemnen grumble
~fcnip invest.on buYi.n& up larse shares of
Oii' opening large b111fream here, Buchner
fofttgn inw:stment la a boon foe the area.
"l'oreAcn money l.a aood beca.~ lt creet.-jobs. ~ rnan.apment brino in uecutivs but worlcen
pnMded locally, .. he aal.d.
'If they build a plant ln Sou th America it
't do anythlna for our people,'' he aaid.
Beechner Mid Orange County la a 1arae enough
k withstand forelan competition. And
rem1nda ~l i.nveatment ii a two-way ltreet:
buy property in othef' oountMI and
bullnemea ove:r...." he eakl Any rwentment Americanl feel toward fcntgn
~.ten ill bliled en lllCk of knowJectce, be Mid.
•
L9ls look At The FollcMlng ""''* ... Pllpt ::.er. ~klloh (IK)
Nowl.:Loc.c
A F'9W 82'1 Left
10.9% GMAC
FINANCING
ucente (CIPPfaO~~~~~~~~-"'...-
•
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deadline to save on
1982 income taxes with a
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~·
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. . • ~
Doing But1ne11
OnarA
flctlt16u1
N•me?
Mo • n ho
recovery begins,
analysts reporting
ly DAVID GOELLER 27 pelU'nt. t r ad it Ion a II y u l • 1
•11111111•,,... .,_ But economiata My the act Iv l\ y 1low1 l'n
WA 8 HING TON houatna rebound i. not u September and doet1n't
S p u r r • d b y l o w e r atron, u the apurta that pick up ~n untU early
mortfaie ratea, the toreahadowed paat •prln1,' uld board
nation 1 howalna lnduatry economic recoverlm. president J_. W. Clary.
la maktn1 a modeat Ja c k Car 11 on , And tn the Boaton
recovery. e co no m I 1 t for t he suburb of Hanover,
That'• good new1 for Realtor'• a11oclatlon, recent salee h'lcPeues of
construction worken, for commented , "there'• about 66 percent have
lumber companies, reuon to believe we're poeed a problem for the
furniture deale r s, improving, but it'eonlya realty firm of Jack
appll ance make re • half-baked recovery ... Co nway and Co ..
Re a 1 to r a a n d at takes a long time to according to Jon Bond,
homebuyen. And that overcome people's fean." Conway'• advertl1tn1
broad lmPKt, economiata d.irtttor.
say. rne ..... that a reviled Henry Schechter, ti --di t f th AFL "Li1t1n11 are 1et n1 housing industry may rec or 0 e -d
h 11 h h 1 CIO's office of housing scar ce." Bond aal , elp pu t e w o e and monetary policy, adding that not many
ecoru• nomy out of ill deep p 0 i n l e d 0 u t t h a t people pul hOU8ejt up for
... ) h h 1 a.le around Chriatmu. •'I th Ink housing a t oug nterett rates Still, "we're all mnillnl
Little gem
IBM technician
Nancy Nelson
examines a metal
wafer that will 1
allow computer 1·
storage product&
to h andle j
information 1
faster at leu ~ I • recovery is a good bet for on government-insured again, .. he said.
1983," said 'fed Gibson, mortgages have dropped, ~~~.::__::::_ ____ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~========~
h f only families in the top ouslng economiat or 3 0 percent i ncorne Crocker National Bank
cost.
. ln San Francisco. But bracket can afford to
high unemployment, he bu.~.I look for some warned, "casts a shadow over the pl"Ollpecia." i m p r o v e m e n t ( i n
Mark Riedy, economist housing) but not much
for the Mortsaae more, and if interest
Bankers Alloctation. said rates don't come down
he noted much recovery some more, the recovery
in mortgage demand and won't be sustained,"
the •• ati.rrinB of a plckup" Schechter said.
in new construction. Although a housing
Lwnber companiea in recovery may be under
the Pacific Northwest way• it alone is not
8 a y b u s i n e 8 1 l 8 1trong enough to lead · · the entire economy out unprovmg. of reoMBion. said Donald "October especl•llY Straaz.heim of Wharton was a very good month for new lumber orden, E c o n o m e t r i c s i n
and it continued through Philadelphia.
Novembe.r," said William "The key to all this
J . Ki rt 1 a n d o t the recovery ii (that) interest
Western Wood Producta rates have been more of
As.sodation in Portland, a poai tive than the
Ore. "rm •ure increued unemployment rate (of
o p t 1 m i s m a m o n g 10.8 percent) has been a
homebuilders made It negative," Straszheim
take off." said. '"Our expectationa
A d . are that mortgage rates cc or 1 n g to an will decline further." informal survey by The
Associated Press, many Robert Ordway, chief
in t h e i n dust ry are Commerce Depar tment
b u l li sh ab o u t l 9 8 3 economist, differed with
because they expect the private economiata
interest ratea, which about the ~tude of
began declining last the hOl.lalna iebound.
•unmer, to hold or drop "It'• atar1ina to abape
a bit. up u a falrfy normal
B u t 1 n d u a t r y rece11lon recovery in
economlata worry that housing activity," he
r e c o v e r y m a y b e aald. "I think it will be
nurdect" it p o.tentiaJ one of th~ l~ Ind
.buyers beck off became atroq aedOra ln 1983."
t hey fear loains their Jim Young, a Jc.mu
jobs. And they aay the aiy developer, aya he's
recoveq could be halted returning to building
if huge federal budget after a two-year hiatus
defidtB push up interest ev en though the
rates. recovery in hi. area ii
Sales of new and "ao pute it's hard to
existing homes neared 6 know it'1 happening."
million unita In 1978. In Joliet, Ill., where
Three years later, salea h a r d t i m e 1 f o r
noee-dived as mortgage Caterpillar Tractor
rates climbed 'above 17 mean1 a 25 percent
percent. jobless rate, builder
For 1982, the National Lynn Krau.e said that
Aasociation of Realtors the drop in interest rates
projected aa 1 ea of prompted increued sales
existing houses at only of lower-priced houaes.
1.9 mllllon. with "housing Also reporting an
1tarta at 1.1 million or up1win1 in b usin ess
less. were contractors in
~ relief appeared Boston. Grand Junction,
in •\e summer, when .,Colo., and i.e. AngeJea.
interest rates began while real estate agenta
dropplng to their current reported better times in
levels of 12 peroent for Dallas, Minneapoli1,
government-insured Atlanta, Seattle and
mo.rtpgee and about 13 0 r a n g e Co u n t y i n
percent for conwntiooal Southern Callfom1a..
Joana. 'nle Be.rd of Realtors
As mort1a,ae ratea in Montpnery County, =ped, sale. of new Md., in the s uburbe of
e-tamlly houlel re. Wa1hington, D .C .,
38 percent from July to r e po r t e d 1 a 1 e 1 i n
October. Between June November were 50
and October, hpuaing percent above those a
starts roee 24 percent and year earlier.
building pennlta -an "What makes the
i n dication of futu re incre11e all the more
oonst.ruction -went up i m re as i v e ii that
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IJ RISTO MAENPAA 111111111 ...........
HELSINKI, Finland (AP) -Finland,
•• eecond-leedina tredlJ\I pu1nel' ln tM
ii uylna to eliminate a diplomatlcally a.lnl trade 1urplua with ita aiant eutem
bor.
The Finn• want to do it by buyin1 t.hina other than oil and natural pa. their tlona1 lmporta from the Soviet Union. But
materiall aeem to hold the key to any
of the imbalance.
Non-traditional pouibllltlea are heavy
thduatry auch aa steel and nuclear power planta
<Sr technology, throuah llcenaea to produce
SOviet-patented procmes developed there.
Bµt despite a special trade relationahlp,
Which features agreementa 1lvlna the Finn.a
fdrur-tenn trade leCW'ity enjoyed bl:t~j; othen "1 the West, Weetem analysts ln He aay the
1'lnna face the same problem u other Wat.em
countries in trade with Moecow.
That la, most of what the Soviet ha for we .
-except raw materiala and energy -la not
worth buytnar by W~tem standarda.
• Unlike -trade among Western natlona,
Flnnlah-Soviet commerce la not on a free-market
baail but follow• arrangementa eet down in
l6ng-term trade agreements. Soviet and Flnnllh
offlclala, and generally Flnniah entrepreneurs,
Uke the arrangement.
Finland currently exports around $727 .3
million more a year to the Soviet Union than It
bnporta, deaplte the aareementa specifying
generally equal two-way trade.
Finn1ah offtciala tend not to deecribe the
imbalance u a problem, but they are known to
be concerned at their inability to live up to the
balance commitment.
' Twenty-five percent of Flnland'• foreip cnde la with the Sovieta. W~t Germany, with a
much larger ecooom1c and population bMe, ta the
only other West.em country whoee trade volume
with Moecow ii higher.
, Finland aenda ahipa, machine9 and consumer aooda eastward in exchange for Soviet natural
1aa and oil.
Yet Finland'• oil oomumptioo la decltr»na,
~Y to a poblt below the amount it brinp in
from the Soviet Union, and high Soviet gu
~ are driving down Finniah u.ap.
Finland's first concrete step toward a
tolutlon was to le& up ln London an office by
Neste Ltd., the state-owned trading company
that la the main funnel for Soviet crude oil and
Ji'Atural gaa into Flnland. Neete will buy oil and fas from the Sovieta and aell it to other countries.
Neete has bought a million tons of Ubyan oil
bn the Soviets foe dlttet re-ule abroed, the
tint time the Soviet-nnnlah relationahip baa
been allowed to spill over lnto other countries.
ngress seeking
w interest rates
..,
'"' """ "' ..... ,,,,,
............ --.:..... ... .......... t ' I 41..,...-.,,. ........,. .,.. ·-...._.. ~-·-· , .... O•••~~
I 900 0 1000
.Libya al
ll'.A'19rLI CAP> -11w n1 Co =Ute ,......, per,.,....l for
. W •11 Up to 11 Jl.Utw1 to
bye for thal l'OWU.ty'I .. Ut atru.n..
company·~ .. ,. "rll t'Oftllnn the •••nee of ll, not
the de..U.," llid Pete lkalh eo.tnt•
director of publto relatlon1 and
advertlllna.
In 1980', the State O.J>artment
blocQd a limllar ptOpoted Boelne .. 1.
to Libya on IJ"C)Undl that other Boelnt
iet.a had been Wied to ferry troop. to
lJaanda to IUppor\ ldJ Amin. -r.-T"ht; la a new tubmtaaon," Jim
Boynton, a 1pokMnan for the 8oeln&
Comrnerclal Airplane c.o. u.ld. ''Tlmee
c hanae and pe rhaps the State
0 ght
Dlpartm•ttt hm • difltf'Mlt awum.
Th•t'• wKy •• 1ubml Ued 1n
applk'•Uon "
Boynton Mk.I a CONdderatJon ln the
applfoaUon la lh• po11lblllly •h•t
Libya will 10 airplane 1hopptn1
ellewt..re.
"Thal'• • dl1Unct po11lblllty,11
Boynton •id. "If Libyan Air c.an't pt
the equipment it needl then it wW
ctrtalnly tum to somebody \hat will
sell It to them.
"They're .looklna for the beat
equipment t o meet their
requirement•. It the State
Department IAYI no, they'll take U\eir
bus1ne9a to the next IJUY. ''
PRICES COOO THRU DEC. 31, 1982
HOME CENTERS
!
'
[-I ve"'MONT
AMe"'tCAN
~ ..... ....,
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ty bltl. llaell ~ u.u. , ...
13-PIECE
Ori II
Bit set S99!
2·3HOUR
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l-1Y•-T -..... lllfCAN
Sim from,,, ... °"",,.-. For por-
bbte dr111sand Orlll Pt1lllll. 111SSD.
10-FT.X20-FT. Entire Stock
Cllrlstmas •ercllandlse Wood Lattice
Patio cover s199oa SD o/a wt111e
OFF °"t:t'es
CIA IFIED
Not a great year f Or Broadway '82, hut hope on horizon
Ir ~A Y SHARBlJ'M' ,, ....... .....,
NEW YORK -Broadway '82. A fine year for
f.ilne., a tepid year for theater-goen, and the lut
yar for \wo famous old theaten, the Helen Haym
and the Moroeco, the latter the 1lte of Eu1ene
O'Neill'• fi.rtt Broadway e._lay.
"Cata," the made-in-England musical hued on
T.8. Eliot'• cat poetry. leaped into town in fall. It
prornpUy became THE musical to aee, openlna with
what a 1pokesman said was a $7 mlllion-vlua
advance sale.
It was the thlrd rut in three yeara for "Cata"
oompoeer Andrew Lloyd Webber, whoee "Evita"
~nd "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor
Dreamcoet" still were In buainess on Broadway at
yeu'1 end.
c.YaMUA inm ~IUCll --~ CNma C... Edwll'ds Woodbndgl Edw• SOlltll COM! CIMdallle
171 ft41 Clnlma 551 0655 494 1514 634 25SJ
• lftSTWTUI Eclw~ C-West 891 3935 1------1 ACAOEllY MEMBERS: Your card wHI edmlt you
end a guest to any peffonnance Monday thN Thureday.
Share The Joy
Share The Magic
Share The \\bnder
'l"his Holiday Season-
ET.
un'u_,,.._
• •
~ .............
But cloalna noUcll were po9ted for the Helen
Hayes and the Moroeco which once howied plays
auch u "0.," O'NtW'1 1•Beyond the Horl&on' and
TennetlH Wllllaml' "Cal on 1 Hot 'nn Roof."
There were dramatic IMt-minut.e prote.ta by
New York theater folk. Colleen Dewhurat. Ja.eph
Papp and MJchMl Moriarty amona them. But the
Hayes, opened ln 1911, and the Moroeco, in bualneaa
al.nee 1917, were tom down ln March to make way
for the ~0-1tory, $292.8-miWon Portman Hotel.
The demolition left Broadway with 43
rernal.ning theatera where, with few exceptiona, the
new-1how offerlnaa of 1982 proved alim ,
particularly ln the mUlk:al field.
"Muter Harold ... and the Boys," by South
Africa'• Athol J'uaard, 1ot many bravOll. So did
Georae C. Scott in h1I raffiah, rolllckinc revival of
Noel Coward'• "Pr.ent Laupter."
"Good," a Brttlah Import eet In Nut Germany,
received critical bl..tnp, u did "Air* of Ood,"
about a YOW\I nun with a dark NCret, and, llkewt.e,
a lat.e-1prln1 ''Medea" with Zoe Caldwell and
Judith Andenon.
But crltJcal pwnmelllna attended '"nle WU.
of Jamey J'oeter,'' a 1hort~ved eeoond effort ~
Beth Henley, the youna, Pulltur-wlnnlq author of
the hit Southern Oothlc comedy. "Crlmel of &)» Heart."
The James Eul Jonea-Chriatopher Plummer
"Othello" wu a Tony-wlnnin1 triumph. And
''Torch Sona TrilOIY.'' an off-Broedway t.ranafer,
proved an unuaual Broadway aucceu, belna a
4 'A-hour tale of the life of a drat queen.
And two famed huaband-and-wlfe acting
teams OJ>ened to generally favorable notices -
Hwne Cronrn. and JMl!ca Tandy ln "Foxfln," a
gentle Appalachian play, and Anne Jacbon and Ell
Wallach in "Twice Around the Park,'' a pair of lliaht one-act oornedies about New Yorken.
Bernard Slade'• "Speclal Occuiona" proved otherwise. Nicol William.eon 1uccumbed in h.te
eccentric "Macbeth." Faye Ounaw_ay, who yean
aeo hit lt bit in WWJam Alfred'• "Hopn'1 Goe""
didn't in hie new ''The Cune of an Aching Heart."
Cher, the pop atnaer formerly of Sonny and~.
made her Broadway debut ln ''Come Back to the &
and Dlme, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean." She ~
fairly toad notices. Unfortunately, the play dldn t.
Liv Ullmann alao wu a Broadway cuualty, 11)
a tepid revival of Ibeen'1 "Ghosts." It wun't Ibeen'1
See Review, Page E2
:-__ ,,.
The Helen Hayes
Theater was
demolished in 1982
despite public protest;
Betty Buckley (right
photo), plays the
starring role in the
smash Broadway
musical "Cats."
"One of the finest pictures of the year. Paul Newman
is extraordinary." Gene Shallt. The Today Show. NBC-TV
"One of the best movies of the year, a certain Oscar
contender and the most powerful movie in .
recent memory.'' Pa1Colhos MomongNows CBS-TV
"Paul Newman (is) guilty of
committing to film one
of his best
performances ever."
.>oe4~
GooO Morning~
ABC TV
TWENTIE11t CENTURY-RlX Pmmb A ZANUCK/BROWN PRODUCTION
PAUL NEWMAN I CHARLOITE RAMPUNG I JACK WARDEN
JAMFB MASON / THE VERDICT / Mno O'SHEA Mus1csv.10HNNYMANDEL
EXF.On'IVE PRODUCER BURTI HARRIS I SCREENPLAY BY DAVID MAMET
IWBD ON 1llE N<MJ. BY BARRY REBD I PROOUCED BY RICHARD 0. ZANOCK AND DAVID BROWN.
DlRECTFJ> BY SIDNEY WMfi IRI -·---, ....... _ ... SUlLltW ~:=-' .,.f'MJll_,..,.
CPI"'~~ ..
P.ROJECTIONISTS LOOKED OUT!I
UNITID ARTISTS THEATRES
UNFAIR II
W• .,. loltcecl ..t becauM we refUMd to loee up to 75 ~ of our Job8, double the work lotd ot thOle
remefnlno end ettow our expertlM to be utlltzed to en.bi. underpl)d, Inexperienced kld9 to handle tM ~ oomptex equipment In the ~ roome of the United Mletl ThMt,.., '
-•l•Ment •n=mnd unl•U illw ~ thmt MCh projeottonl•t emptoyee MMoe 11 many M ~ ec:nenl In ..... much ..................
W• beMeYe thft to be_,.., to the I0-75 .. °' tM pro~tk>nlet• thet .ould h.w Iott thelf' ~ une.t'
thote condlttone, Md ......., to the movte PIWON we.o ... ~ .., ,,... tot tMk' ttCtt• _.. tM cmenoe of Mllng .-. ......... ,r1J1 ..... , Of the ....... ther, PIN' IO .... '
W• ... Wtl6nQ to negotlete, but the Cornpeny ........ ..., Ind ...... .., LOCICID ua OUT.
YOU C•N H•~PI
,.·
.·
..
on Mill r'
I 0-year odyssey
BJ IOI THOMAS .......... ,.... ...... 1h<>w. but If the film ~·t move p.opl• and
entertain peopl., the ,...t la academic:.,,
movod lo Bro•dway,
raptured lhe Tony ,
Crhlca A ward and the
Pu.Utser Prize.
Warner 8rother1
bouaht the movie IUhtl
for l2M>,OOO, and MTller
waa hired to write the
HOLLYWOOD -It
wu the day when Juon
Miller wu addlna the
1-t touch• to h1I fllm.
"That Championship
S...On,'' and he eeemed
Uk• a man relieved of an
~burden.
HJ. concern for ''That
Champt<>Nhl Seuon" la
deep and :.:r It WU not
merely a hit play that
estabUlhed hl.t fame and
reputation.
acreenplay. Meanwhile, .=:;;;;;;;;=;;;.;;..;.._;;;;;..;===;.__
·~Wo wonder. P'or 10
years he had been
•trivin(J to put hi1
•ard-wlnnina play on tbe screen. Now it wu
done, and he aeemed
re 11 eve d , happy,
exhausted and
~henaive.
Thtt 1tory 11 almple:
William Friedkln ca1t
hlm In "The Exorcl.tt" u
Father Karraa, a role
that drew an Oscar
nomination tor beat
1upportJna actor.
Miller'• actlna career
prospered, but "That
Champlonahip Season"
foundered.
"It auccumbed to a
difference of oplnJon on
casting and location,"
Miller said.
He and Warner•
[gj·
TECHHICOl~
----1jNOW SHOWING -I ---
HIA .._.,.u,.un
COITAMUA U.... a.-c.c .. 171-41'1
COITA MW
u To110 HA .. 1 ~ 17141 Hl·HIO UA City~ 934-3111
fOUITAll llAWY OllAlll ,....., T-11141 ff2 1241 AMC 0tMet Mii 931 0>40
lllYlll OllAllll
UA C....1111 M8 OU4 W~l7141 Hl·OtH S~Hlm 01 8391110
WllTMllllTlll c:W.. W.. "1·UJI
''Now the sellins
beltna." he li&hed over
coffee In the cqnuniasary ol MGM, where the
pl'Oductlon waa being
c l> mp I et ed . •'But
tnithfully a picture aells
i'8elf. You can do 6,000
U;tterviews and aopear on
ttle ("Tonight'' show
l\ost Johnny) Carson
Four members of a hlah
achool baaketball team
that won the
Penn1ylvanla state
championship meet with
their coach 2~ years lat.er
for an eveninal of booz.e
and remlnTacence.
Compllcatlon1 arise
when the five men start
talklns of their own
lives, their aucceaee and
failures. their old
antipathies.
Miller wrote the play
when he wa1 a
struggling New York
actor. It opened off-
Broadway In 1972, llOOfl
parted ways, and the --r=========================:;----project moved to
Review ...
P,iom Page El
Yillu". either. Even an ambitious musical baaed on h1a "~ Doll's House" failed to pus critical muster.
Qititled "A Doll's Life," directed by Harold Prince,
i(eame and went, quickly.
t= It wasn't alone, 1982 being a pretty miae.rable
y.,. for mu.slcals, if not patrons facing a $4~ top
~t price for the hottest shows.
~._Only two major hits checked In -"Cata" and "~·" the latter about the love and career criaes of
a~ Italian director played by Raul Julia.
_ _L;?. Flops abounded. Memorable acorea, well-
~ted books, <>rfBina.Uty, all seemed on vacation,
with clumsy forgettables like "Cleavage" and "Play
~a Country Song" filling the void.
Record mogul Clive Davis, making hia
Broadway produciJlg debut, posed the muaical
q~tion, "Is There Life After High School?" Nay,
~ reviewen. Out it went. So did a noisy "Rock
& ~: The Fi.rat ~.ooo Years," oonsllt1ng 1e>lely of l"04k hits and rock-star imitations.
Two bright-eyed young. pilgrims from pop,
y Osmond and Debby Boone, made their
way debuts In mualcala In 1982 _: he In a r~ival of George M. Cohan'• "Little Johnny
Jones," ahe In "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers."
: But each bombed. F.ach played at the Alvin
'nieater, which itself didn't have a very goo<t year.
Qrice the home of "Annie," it housed four
1u4cesa1ve musical mlafira In 1982 until the anival
of ,a revival, "Your Anna Too Short to Box With
Odd," which enjoyed a modestly successful run.
: Not a great year, Broadway '82. But hope
~rmed on the horUon u it ended, with at.x new
ya -two starring Tony-winners Angela
J.AIJabiW'Y and Ellen Buntyn -and one muaical
vka8 in December. Ttie pla~ ranpd from a murder mystery,
unnit, • by Anthony Shaffer, Tony-winning
of "Sleuth," to William Glt.or1'1 "Monday
the Miracle," aet 20 years after events In h1a
Miracle Worker," hla acclaimed drama about
Keller and Anne Sullivan.
Columbia Picturea,
where Miller wrote
another screenplay.
Afaln, there wa1 a
dl ference on where
to film "T hat
Champion.ship Season,"
and lt fell victim to
executive in-fl(Jhtlng.
Next, producer Ely
Landau took over the
property and
commi11ioned another
script writer. Nothlng.
"Finally I bought it
back from Landau for
the original purchase
price," said the
43-year-old Miller.
Friedkin agreed to
direct. The cast Included
the late William Hol-
den , Nick Nolte,
Martin Sheen, Paul
Sorvino and Miller.
Production was to start
in the fall of 1981 in
Scranton. But delays
caused postponement.
Then Holden died and
Friedkin dropped out.
He dedded to direct it
hUmelf. Menahem Golan
and Yocam Globua, the
ownen of Cannon Filma,
agreed to back him.
Robert Mitchum took
over •• coach, with
Sheen, Sorvino, Bruce
Dem and Stacy Keach as
h1a former players.
Miller rehearsed the
cast for eilht days In the
indoor aet at Zoetrope.
Studio, ahot three weeka
ln Scranton and four
week1 here on a
$5-million bud&et.
And Miller learned a
great .deal from hla first
dJ.recUng job.
"IT'S A GREAT MOVIE!"
"Olnt Eastwood shines u 'Honkytonk Man.'•• -Tl_,,,.._,.,
"My hat's off to Oint F.astwood in
'Honkvtonk Man.'" _ • .._.. .11,.._ ,.,.,..,
"A superior movie thafs an adventure for the
6eart. Clint Eastwood bu never been
better-and what an lmjresslve debut
for Kvle.
-f>•t Co111 .... C'lU· rl lmrwl1t~ ,.,,..,,,
·-
'~ '.
I 1 ... 1 "'-4 '\ I .... ,' h
~
"The best film Burt Reynolds has ever made ...
Goldle Hawn's IOJellest performance.
A dellclous romantic comeO( audiences wlll l0te:' ,
"BURT and GOLDIE, Their Chemistry le Dynamite"
***Yz An endearingly funny movie. Burt and Goldie generate so much
natural warmth that 'Best Friends' has the cozy appeal of a well-lit
fireplace.
------
-HEW YC>f!I< OAll. Y N£W8 KATHl.EEH CAAAOLL
1lS1110a ...,.UIO_ -tMIO -ua!T 11119.,. ._. -·-llGlll '-lt llAI•~ ..... i-................... ~
~====""""" ,,_ ....... f'ltll•lllUtlllO ...,.,_... ·---· ·-·~~
f'
A MAAllOlll'I ""'1111 ~·----·.u ................. ~ .. __
22nd IMASH WUKI
COITA MllA fULUJITCMI llHDO MDYI OU111
Edwa1d1 Mtu Fox Edwardt Wutbfook AMC Otangt Ma•
848 5025 S2S 4 7 47 S30 4401 1137 0340
"UPROARIOUS ...
M06t of the routines are
huge fun and a couple
approach greamcss.•
V1nun1 C.nby, NEW YORK TIM.ES
._ a~ ~lllUCll IM-~ ,.._ .• ~ ~s--. _......., ,_ ....... ~
Drtftetrf.MM Mt 6UO a.-.... .-tel 04$
OllTA ... UAO....~.Sto -a...-IJ41$$J llO•---n.
* aARQAIN MATIN••••
Monday thru Saturday
All PerfonNll\Cel Mfore 5:00 PM
I~ l,.aal £11111•u1J IM lttlUpl
MUtTFIUIND8" ------
"THI ftRDtCT" ... -----
--TOOT811" ------
..,,. YBIDICT" ... -----
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH "'"' • '"
.. aaxna1<•"------
,.
ANAHEIM ()!;IV! IN ..._ .... ._ ..
.,._MIO
.. ~ .
BUE NA PARK r>~·" " __ ..., __
llMOJO ..
LINCOLN 1 111\. t '"' ----·--llMOJO
f I lU Nl /'\IN VAlll y
l)J.1 1\.I I ~
.. 41HR8." ... ------
"THE TOY" .. -----
.......
QOOOeYr ------
"'TMmTOY" --...,... CtlAZY"' -
C:.-·11-
"THm DAM CtlY8TAL'"--.. ,.., .....
... ......... -..........,.. ... ~ ...
M~· ,,. .......... -....-.u. ......... ~....,. ..
1:19·11-
Legendary •• m1m ter e oquent off stage
Pl ~t?ll,.~tt!UON
,\,Rll -Ht'• rather rumpJCld ~ with curly IJ'llY hair and H1ht brown eyH, and he
pme.bly wouldn't be ~red
cm the 1tnet -except f « the .......
fll•n:el M•rceau, the 1.,aendary
mime, 1e1ture1 •• much In
ordinary life u he doe11 on the
l\ap.
''It'• a new battle every night,"
he aaya, hitUJ'\8 the velvet aofa In
hla dressln.a room for emphu.la,
a1 he talka about the taxing
effort he put1 Into each
apeechlea performance.
Ue wean corduroy pants and a
turtleneck sweat.er -a far cry
from the white-faced Pierrot
. style he wean while performing.
Marceau, who was born the
ion of a butcher in 1923 an
Strasbourg, France, g1ve1 a
.phenomenal 300 performa.ncee a
year -"6& countries on five
tontinenta ao far," the l1lllTle says.
He la windin1 up a wildly
IUCCe891ul run in Parta -his first
in three years. In January, he
eetl out for a 10111 tour in the
United States, to culminate on
Broadway in the spring.
"It's my second country," the
Frenchman says of the United
States. His first tour to the
United. States was in 1955.
"Way back in the '50s, the
A.mer lean crl tics understood,"
Na.rtwu Mffi. "Brook.a AddnlOO
and Walter Kerr knew thl1 wun1t jult 1 vart.ty lhow, but
an art. •Landi"f, on It.I own " Marce1u'1 18lp" charactl'r
with the whlte Nllor 1ult and
floppy roH on th• hat hH
~ a beloved character all
over the wo~ld. When Mal'C'l'au
c:reetes a pfiekpocket, a frustrated
train traveler, an artilt lu.Ung
aft.er hi. model -the audience
lovea It . His languaae la
International.
Some of hla newer sketches are
quite abatract -a tree In a
forest, for example -and
sometime• obscure, although
French audiences seem to
approve.
"I can't call my work dance,
alth~h there are affinities," he
says. 'Mime is autonomous,
standing on its own. It also has to
do with drama. F.ach I.a perfect in
Its own way."
Marceau singlebandly brought
back mime ·as a popular art.
"Of course, it has ancient
origin•," he says. "But closer
inspiration was from (silent
acreen actors) .Charlie Chaplin or
Buster Keaton, as well as my
teachers Etienne Ducroux and
Charles Dullin.
"My Blp character was
inspired from Pip of Dickens'
Great Expectations.'"
The French in the 1950s were
not as enthusiastic about
Mart au thtty .,.. now Ottly
In nt 1 a11 hu htt lvt'd hl•h honon.
ln 1971, he wu &ty•n a 1tant
to 1t1rt an "J:cole du
Mlmodrame" or .chuol of mlmo· drama.
''Only 70 or 90 talent.ct younc
peopl from all over the world
ar~ admitted," 11y1 Marceau,
who reareta that he tr1vela too
muc.'h to devote a lot ot time to
t.eachlna.
"Thia 11 my consecration In
France," HY• Marceau of hl1
lateet Parta run.
He pacea the floor maklna
large aeeturea. "I'm reachlna a
whole aeneration of young
people who didn't know about
mime.''
He shru11 off the arduoua
physical training needed to be a
mime.
"Ju.at t.echnJcal," he aaid. "We
do exerclae, fence and practice in
other ways. But we are atriving
for aomething more -which la ·c .. rwa.fh~ only word he ever 1poke
1n a performance wa1 a
reeounding "No!" In Mel Broou'
film, "Silent Movie."
When Marceau I.a home -a
rare event -It's at a quiet place
west of Paria, where he 1penda
lots of Ume painting. His pictures
of rather eerie audiences and
perfor mances have been
exhibited. and sold In Paris.
Magic created • ID production
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Filmmaker Steven
Spielberg is a man who knows a th.Ing or two
about special effects, but he was impressed when
he saw the magic created. by art director John
Napier for the play, "Cats," at the Wint.er Garden
in New ~rk.
At t.ije cloee of a show it appears that a flying
• 'J " ' • . . • • . ~~::
~ucer lifts Grizabella, played by Betty Buckley,
up to the heavens.
Spielberg directed "E.T. -The
Extra-Terrestrial," "Raiders of the Lost Ark,"
"Jaws" and another movie about a UFO, "Cloae
Encounters of the Third Kind."
After seeing Napier's work, he immediately
signed him to be art director of his next film.
lul 1f ter hi• n1tme 1ncJ
palnt1n1. he c.-om11 back 'o 1
f1vorlt• logic America. "I
don't think rm tnvenUna the fact
that Marcel Maroe1u 11 a
houlehold word In Amtrka -
lt'1 aynonymowa w1th m1me
11J'r1nc• mtaht have older
tradlllona In c~ture," he Nld.
"But America It • wonderful
... __ ,..,.
S7tSUt
catamM ~·~O TU~
WlllmM ltw __ ,_
Ill l.SOI
p &o thaW off art Amtrk na
a,. ut.chJnt up have cautht up In ev.rythln1: thHter,
billst, couture, delian.
'"n>ey have a .,_t talent for uatna the put, the pNMnt and
the lutur• to make eomethln1
unique from any art."
M1rce1u pacea the floor ,
aropl.na for words out o1 the air
u If he •W re ptc:klna ·--·••n•-flow•~ ON\q .
"Mime la now e<npied u 1
total art, like ballet or mwilc, and
'hat'• In 1ood part th1nl&1 t9
America," he uy1. "l b~
m1me btck. And u Americl
done with 10 many thJna--
made a 1ynthetll of the put, tht
praent and the future." •
_. .... ~~lU~X@U!RY[TftHj!E!ATf!11[ESL2J•••• ~1l
ltti.elibtflff .. llc1011US2.MU11tmOtlltrwiM"9tM _, s 11at1t§rX•»•I4''6J~ 2sss1~~, J s
tr FOR FUOI EXCITEmEml V111tOur ...
fl(;) ij (iia I f.ji.i§ 6 l619 8770/~~)
SUl'("'""'"SovnOOlr~• To11:>urCorl0<1loOrlrlnQlali..r11o<--GP~ llonk11ton1cMaa'
And 1141 PQI P!ut lftrtt ltood IR)
~-r ~"~A'~ 'l'Ootsl8 J'"'l~s . u m
TtleW1tcllerlnTlleWoodtlPGI Plus S.0.8 . (R)
E-r THI EXTRA jlfllJl•11 "''"H"""
• •• TrRRl:STRIAI /fl!"'!::: ¥,d 91ia. am "'~cNli~W!.cPO> ni~ & A:rn·,r.r, * Driv•ina Qpen 6:45 WMlcnlClttb I 6:30 WMkend• * Children U.der12 Fret Unless Noted
• ....... • D/OCJlllll~ .. l
• ..... l~T'UUR ---
In Six'Weeks, you can find
memories to last
a lifetime.
B
...
1'
_l
....
"A magical blend of • .,
mythology and ~=
fiction. Every IOet'9 ..
contalM weird and .1 ;_
"A dazzling
deecnptlon-d9fylng triumph
of the Imagination~
embodying the moat I~ 1r111try and
ldVanced technology ...
breathtakingly rtch . . .
temlndlng ua anew of the
tnnntte poeefbuttlea of the ecreen.··
wonderful thrtlta ana ,
dlacoverlea."
-R.x ~,
N.Y.Pfliftl .::
J
TUBE TOPPEIS
KNXT (2) 8:00 -"Archie Bunker'•
Pt.c: " SHH '• newfound phlloeophlal
awaror could be hauJ'dOUI to her lov Uv•
KNBC (4) 9:00 -"Battle Beyond the
Stan." l\J.chard Thomu, Joh.n Saxon star.
A representative of a aalactlc alliance
round• up a motley aroup of 1p1ce
warrlon to thwart the 1cheme1 of a
ruthlna conquerer.
KCET (28) 10:00 -"Profiles in American
Art." Pilot, 1-wyer and landacape artiat
Wilson Hurley 1hare1 his personal
thoughts on art.
OeYld 8tuce.
4:308 MOW!
• •It ··Tht•'• A CrOWd"
(1Me) Larry Hagtnen. E J ,....,,
I 1 OH LOCATION
WAIHWOTOH WEEK
INNWW
• IVEJM>AY 000t<JH0
WfTH JACOUU PEPIN
.. Apple a.1et1e·· JacquM
,,..,.... ~ how to
buy tind i.. dltt.'ent kind•
of ICIOlet and prepw ..
r~ * *°" ""-FO< Y04.lf Ute, Charlie Brown I" ( 1977)
Anlmeted.
l.'00. HAPPY £MYS AGAIN
Troublee with hil ~
and 111'1 lneultlng profwlor
e auM Pot•I• to quit
ldlool.
• AllCNEWS (!) UNITED NEOAO
OCM l EOE AMO
TE.ITHOH (OO«T'D!
• FIAllHG UNI!
"How 00.. One Find
Faith" 0-.t Mak:Olm
Muggerldge. (R)
• THl8 OlD HOU8E
8oC> VIia and Norm Atlfem
undenall• the t.ull of
framing the ,_ 1982 wing
of the 18509 Oreell Revlv81
I~. Cl> u·A·s·H
Hawkeye and B.J. Olecowr
Ctleriee M'IJ the lite of
Ril9y due to the attenoona
of IW menially paid KO<_,
.-vent ~= • • ''Cettie King" ( 19$3)
Aobett T eytot, Joan CU.
lltlld.
(Q)MOYE * • "Buddy, Buddy'
(1M1) Jec;ti LAnvnon, W•
ter M•tthau. Whlle 111'1
....in concentt.,.. on
,. nu1 kmng. he .. Nd8ly
~ by. IMnblng
,..,,.. of • mlll'I who " ..... """'° ...... 'fr l:to. 1.AVUINE & 1HR.EY
&OOM/l'AHY
~ bega CanT"'1e to
f ,_ lltiglrlo ..__
~
Aoed .... of the front-
---dt'M AMC I Aen8ult
A-.. ~ Md ""' Ponctle 1144 IJ)Of\I c;w.
Cl) Al.IC£
Alt ~· lihllk• up Mlll'•dlner. I :.t#EWS **"' "The L8dy Peyt Ofr'' (1952) Unde OlrMI, s..., McH8lly
ll)MOYE
••• "A Chrl1tmn
Ceror' (tt51) AIMt81r Sim,
KatN8ert H8"18on
(%)MOVIE ***"' "Night Tr8111 To Mindi" (1M0) ..... 91"'
Lodlwood, ,... H8n1lon.
EWNNQ ... ~
.... ...._ 8111 HllP-
s-i'' (1818) ~ ~
Nlgon.Patl ...... A 17·
Y••r-Ofd •clloolglrl
~tllelone~
of • etwt.trn. E,,. ,,..,,_
orMll In the Amazon ~
a~
A~mmrll___,
~ .... ,.. doctor "'1tl ..
~ ~ 1111 dl8gr'O-..
• THOM AMAZJNQ
AHMAl.I
~lhe ....... of
-~..,,St . .....-.
in.cu • food: the llW'dl
of ttle IPlnY fol>tt.,.,
cNm-.o.-.; wlld do08; •
doO WUl IC)idtrNe -~ * * • "Oldgel" (1Ht) 88ndta Dee. Clltt Aoberl-
'°"· Durtng ---llofl, • girl ~ tun. _,
llnd rorMlnCe. • MOYie. .
··~ ...... Come The ......_ .. (1962) Oz-. end
Httnll. Rodi Hud8on. Deel .,.... '° "°" 1M ~ "°"' OltUno .,,.., After hill
1wO .... "" l'lllud up wllh "*"· • WON.OWAAI
"0.0., Al ~· A•
turll IHdl •"""'"'' ,.....,_ ..... Ad tr.::A" lllncMno
''n. T~ .._. ... Tiit ,..., ....__.
..... #;A~
~ .... ~(">
fi-wWt~ QtW)l.I •-.r•..,_.. r .. ...,... .. Mlly. 1:.--.... .,.. ~ .. ,, ..... , ......... V• ~. A wto o1
-···...,... '° .... .................. °"'" ................ "' ........ ow ... ... .................
,~....,... ....
y .... ~mll-~ ...... ;a.r;:.,.:r .. :
-----~·· --~• pa
I WHY IN THIE WOflLD
QINEWS
MOVIE *. * '" "8nllf'l'I Song" (19711 J-Cun, 8llfy
0.. WNll8ma. Two foolb811
P'8Yw• lhw•. , .... friend.
llllp untlf C8nC*' d8lml
-of them. 1~11:v-:=
All Adwnturoue rogue and
• young OfpNn journey
through lime to help Wll·
but and OtYlfle Wlighl per
l8c:t the~ (RI 8 9 AIPUY'8
KUE\'! IT OR NOTI
FNluted a roy81 IOw
ldfAlf tl'Mlt led lo the coro-
Mtlon Of A .-e1e1on q-.
unueu8I food1; the myth Of
!tie gl'N1 ..,_; Ulr80<dl-
118fy wdleologicel ~
® D MADAME'S PLACE
Plnlcwton IM• owr Mien
M8d8tne'I egent qultl.
end A MW '*ClflbO< IUnll
out to be • vemplre
(!) UNITED NEGRO
COlilOI FUNO
TE.EntOH (CONTD)
• AU CAEATUM.a
GAE.AT AHO 8MALl.
"Pr8Ctlca M•• PerMcl"
Trl8ten f.it1 1111 oam.
J-l.lnCOYWI I guffty
Heret and Siegfried
.,,..batU on 1 phy9lc8I flt-
-program. (P811121 D NATUM
''The ~ 01 Ar*M1
~ 9918 Md &g-
"818" The axperlmen11
dOf'9 by Kett YOn Frtldl,
JullM Huxley, KonrMt
Lorenr llnd OCher neturll-
llU owr the <*'tl.lfiel to
INmthe~of ..... "*' -toqllOrad e OMNOE OOUNTY
8PORTI ICEHE ~::w * • "Siience 01 Tha
Horth" ( tNt) Den eur...
tyn, Tom S.errltt In 1919,
• ~ -·· rnwriege to • trepper laadl her to •
... of twdehlp In ,,,. ...
.,_ of northern C-d-. •pa·
(%)MOYE
•• ._. "TM hgulled"
(19711 Cline Eutwoocl,
Ger..,_ Peioa. Alt lntur'ed
Un6on ~ recuperating
In • glr18' 8Clflool hM 1111 i.g naedf...., wnput•led by
Ille ...... ~...., he II Ql.lgllt wlttl one
o4 the glftl. 'A• 1:ao• ~12
Chrlatn1M Eve bring•
mix«' ~ to Malo)
Md AMO when they '-
to 11n-1 s.m. ca...
• MOW!
• ·~ "l..8tcen(' (1M8)
John PeyM. Owl Dufyw.
A ~ con 8'tl94 OM-
WI098 • -Mdow ttwt --~ ... --eyln • ~ llnd open.
1lve tribute 10 her
dloelMd llullbend
(II) NHL HOCQY
lo8 ,,,..,.... l<lngl w. v-
couwr ~ a:oo. (I) MCtlE
~~ ...... MWfoufld phMo-
~ -·-OOUld be IMlz.wdoU8 to her low .... aaa..
Poldl 18 '"'1oduc8d to 1111
,_ pertner, Tom l.Mordll
om • '"9dlng ** ... end
Pond\ II robbed at • ._,.,, dub. (A)
• BfTIMMMEHT
TtelWll!JC
lntenn.-wflh Ooldle
~ aw. HAid, the
~ 8'otMn. and
Lome Gt-. • lo«* 81
~ !hat explolt , __
•a::hHOWTOH
M•tt lnvet1I041IN th•
dteth o4 • YollllO KtO< who
-to ..., In • 911.-fth ...,
mcMlt~.(R) rr•WNTTEH
NIEW8
'"41TAUICW
~
The ~ Opera Houw of
c-it Oetden. London
iw-ta ..... etlCOf9 pr-
eni.tton of a '°""' -...... ~ etwrtng
~Domingo.
• *Ml * * "A T1IN Alf ~ 8-on" 0172) flOourMn.
tllfY. A IMl'I #Id • yowig
boy...,.. tile IOftlldc*lg
AMilkM .....
• NAT\N
''The '*°°"'Y Of MllNI
~--MdneN'' "-.... ..,... ...
--~!Wt-~ JWIM HUJlley, Konrlld a.-... -.,,.... •owr .. _,.,,..'° "°"' ......... of .,.. .............. .. ~---'"TO .... n.n "I My .... ow.. ..... . .. .......... .a.
.......... D!Mf'• ... ·-=-"'"tl)Q 'Ir.\. ~ YN .,.. Oililf'. CMtl ..... .._.. T .......... ... ................... ..............
£;
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Or• A telllNil4 ,.._ftltll '" """ ., ....... ,,,.,,, UMa.f ...... ., ..... ffWI ,, .................. . ... ,,..,,. .. "°"" .,.
... AwWI -"· In Ille ~"' ....,eM!On o· "'.Cl> eLONA Joo.I.. --tlW ...
......... ,.._ llltl • "Mii
~ .. t"-' ... ''-'"C..
lfornl8 .. Ille ~· iuo-r THI WON.O TOMOMOW
HO 8 (I) T'H9 Jll'nMOHI
f'IOf-'1 uncomptOMll·
Ing attitude t-d 0-ge
llfWlnOM ...., "' gl\IM ,.,.,
• hOt "'-lmen1 UC> DQIMOVW
••~ "881Ue ~The
l1ar1" (11101 Alehard
Thomee. John Sbon A
fept-t•tlw of • g818Cllc
llllenoe rouode 119 • mot·
feof group of ~ wwrlote
to tflw8f1 the IChetnM of •
ruthlwa conquer.,
• WILD K.fNQOOM
Wonder1111 W~ OI The
Wiid" Mllf1ln hlghfl0h11
IOl'l'9 of Ille doM c:81t1 And
••citing •llP«lencN he
hM encoun1areo tn the --•@MOVIE * .......... _ .. (1979) 8-'I
eonn.y, Natella Wood
Aln«IC:lll'I Ind So¥le1 Id·
enll1t1 rec. eg.in11 time 10
ltop • 18fge meteor lllal i.
on en unciontrOlle!M ~
lion COUt'M with Earth. (RI
i~~
Ho11. C•rrle Fllhar
Guwt1. The 9luw Broth-.,.
• MA8T£NIECE THEA~
"To Serw Them All My
08ye" Chill, 1'18..tng lose
the -.ctlon. "'*'• • ded-
llOn About Oevld'1 mw-
rlege propoql (P8fl 121Q ID MYSTIERY
"Quiet M A Hun" Wt>er'I 1
nun dm of 1tWV111 ton In •
conYWit tower. •"9vlllon
ln18Mew9r ""'*"' Shota,
• lonner pupll 81 the con-
-..nt. II Mked IO lnYeSll-
a;•~ 11Q
* * ·~ "The L8dy From
Taau" (1951) Howard
Ouff, Mon• Freemen A
pecull8f otd l8dy thought
by INlnY t.o be.,_. ..
underSl8ndlng Md ermpe-
thy from • cowpoke Md •
~~ • *°" "Cheech And Cllong'a NIOe DfNml"
(1M1) ~ "cn..th"
Mwln. Thom8a Chong
Two lnwterata po«llNda
lc>PNf 10 118"9 found thelt
tnJe eelllrlg • they peddle
lc8 craMt on the ltfMll of
lo8 Angelea. 'R'
'(%)MOYE • *"' "Tll9 ........... Alw Of J. Edger Hcxww" ( 1117$)
8roclenc* er.wtof'd, JoN
Ferrer. The Federlll Bur-..
of in-tlgetlon gr-In
dout Md llCICIP9 under lhe
i.der9hlp "' the c:ontro-_...Hoover. 'PO' l'.:aO. Cl) ONE DAV AT A
~
Pl8ylng ""*...,.. 10 her
entire fwnlly begll'9 to lak•
l~'E:S'
tO;OO Cl) TIW'PER JOHN.
M.D.
A drun•. lhra•dbare
llrMtcomer s.rtta. 8dmll-
ted to San Fr•ncl1e:o
Memori8I In c:rttXal oondl-uon. """--t181 .,.. iii -very. (RI I WON)~~y
~CMCU:
~ ..
AMINCAN Alff
''Wlllon ~·Plot, ....
yw and-~ --Wlllaon HUftliy "*-,.
~ lhouO"tl on 811
;~MOeT
fNGUIH
•• ,,..... Red HerrinOI'' The
polo8 _.,.. .,... de9lh of
the --~ .. die bot-
tom of • ollfl -eoclderl-181. (Pert 2)
®MCMI
•• ._.''The 8ord8r'' (1M11
J8Cll HICl'lollon, Valerie
Pwrtne. A T-bordtr
guerd'• ,,,..... -In
conftlet wtttl "-"' ,. com;pt co-wor11 .. and hil
IT\llter1811etlc ..... 'R' 10:" CC> MOYie ·~ "Big 88d ,,._ ..
(1974) N98 DldtlNon.
WllllMI SNtner. A women out•. pelh Oii ~end
ron1ene1 through the
8outnw.1 Of the 1~
'A'
~. WIU>, WILD WON.D
CWNMIAL.8 .. AnlmalA OI The PoMr
o..1'' The l'WAly -llfw o4 1M POW o-t.
one oC IN ..., rwnMlln;
~~of
the woncs. •~. I .MMIY IWMGMT
TOHY lflOWN'9
JOUNW.
"A Qler Of~" Tony
lrown •1•11• J•clllyn
McOoNkt •• ~ °' lie).
Ille °" anernlL I 100Q.UI
NIW~VINBlllt
10l41 ~YWOMS
PAGI u•••••Clloa ... I 19CHAN> •• IOHI MNWMNlft .. ,_.. II The t-TOUOfl
~?" .WK,..._
.... GltillW Md .....,_
l~ ~ ..... Of
'rhtft«I•.'' ""°"4lyienll • Mcf\" and ''1ft nte .. Of .,,.....,..... .
(l)ANIWOl'Y ..... A......,..._..,M'ftl• ...---"* • ..... ............. C'W't .MCMI ... ,,. ......, Of n. .,... .. ,..r.c•: .-..; ...... .
--···t~-=~=E:.:.. -· "" ...
":r f M 1 ............... .,.,.,....,.., ..... ----... ,,,.,....,. .. , .. ,~ .... . t. INllllWrt NIM.
HCWTT• ., ...
AfTMI~ "..-r ..., ... a.. .................... ..,,. ...... ,,.,. .. .............. ~ • co.. &.OYI'"' ~
Ho8lol All UMllltMr Mii
C.ol u.r---... ......... ._ -~ of IN W0t10'1 dllo
dten ~ :=. n4e NATION
• • * "ThOM D•rl"f Young Men In fhelf ..._,.,
.JelaOleA" ( tMt) '°""""
T O#r'f CurUI Mo1* C8lto
II lhe -I« en.,,..,_
tlOnel CM race In "'**
dt't¥er1 81'-"Pt to Ntle>-
~ = oa-* *'" ''Thtough The ... i>Yf81'nkf" (1M1) Vic T..-.
b•ek, Chrla larne•.
Tfltough the meglc oC • tor
pyrllmld, • young boy ..
treftlCIOF1ed bedl In time
10 Ille ~ of the tlo,
king Tut (R)
(O)MOVIE * * "Buddy, Buddy"
(1MIJ JD.~. Wfj.
tar Metlhau. WN18 ...,
8MUlin eoneentr.,_ on
,. next lclllt'CJ, he .. ~
lnlarNpted oy • bufftbllng
lllllur• qf • -who ..
ettwnptlng euldda. 'R'
(I) ,AT COUJHI
HVf'NOTlZU THE COPS
~Plf~tunw
~~'-'to• hllar'loul .,, form .
11:46 8 MOVIE
•• ·~ "Tlvough Tll9 ....
l'Yfemld" (IN 1) Vic: Ter-
b•ek, Chrl• Barnae,
Through the rMgle of • tGY
V'Jf "'11d, • young bOy ..
ltWllC)Ofled b8dl In time
lo the ECMI( of the bOy
ktngTut (A)
• MOYE * * * ''Love Among The "'*"" ( tt741 K.lllhartne
Helpburn, ~ OIMer.
All ACI,,_ decldel not t.o
marry • young men and
Tlndt ,.,.,... In, legal tro...-
ble (t)wow: * * .. A Der>olrOUI Friend"
( 11171) Rlc:Nrd n.om..
e.tw. IW GeddM.. A
~ ~-old vtc.-
tlmla8 • )'OllllO -who .. ~ to'*"-'A'
t1:t08 MOYE * • * "The Troub68 Witt! Angell'' ( 1MI) Aoa8lnd
,__..,~..-..Two
,.. ltUdentl Ill • peroc:H-
.. bo9rdlng 8dlool ~
to outwit the Mottw aup..
rlor
11:66(H)MCME
••• "Don't Cry, It'• Only
Thw1cls'' I 1N2) 0... awtetopM1. a.-8elrtl
J-. A ...,. Anwr
doe10f' Md • ~
prone medic: ,_..,two ruw
twtno • or°'4I of Viet-'
-~loM!Nty. 'PO' ,
12:0017'00 CW8 THEILSn'C.-.
Ho9ta: Sun ~
C.oj ~--Guwt.: Mike Oouglaa, Didi Ven
Petten, ... ...._ Mc:Go-
wm ~=FAlMU Cl) BAM'\' ,,,.,.,..
''R8c>el II The '--Tough
Enough?''
'2:30 (!) MOYE ** .............. (1966)
!Ao Gorcey, Hw1'J H ...
Some o4 the boY9 get
~tol*P•,..._,., lrtend oo .,, taepoee on
~ c:om.iptlOn, then
find INY'W -., ~
cr-4
• THI lllOOIC8
Terry -to find IN ,,....
.,.., of !hit .... oC 111'1
o6d glrtfl'telwl of Illa.
(l)MOVll ***"' "Ey-1tne11"
(1981) Slgowney w...r.
~Hwt.A~
l'8POf'1er i--~
with • jenltOf' 9flO Mey
know more 8bolll • -dertflellle.t;) ....
.... ~.'A'
OMOYE
•• ~ ''The King Of M8rWI
o...dena" (1972) eruc.
Dem. JO Nlcflolloft. TWo
brott.'I, lnll1t1Md with
.,. --. ~ Git retlr·
Ing to • trope.I ,....._
'R' '~I OS. ICOTT WONDEft WOMAN
1;t5 MOYie **** .. Stoeert IClc8ee" (1M8) ~,...,.,.. ~.
Delphln• 8•yng. Tfll•
toud*lg~ ..... ...,
~.)'OUllO. .....
flrtl-of ..... V8del fll9IQ Ill
low.'"'
1:20m>MOYE
• ... "llrtllt ... The Heed
Of AlfNdo GanM" (1t74) w-0.-. a., v...., " ~ '*"° ....... OUI Ofl a '°'II Incl ...,.
,,..ln..__to~ • ,,, .......... _,.. .
'~lir:=:wl
** "TlkaAIOfMe"' (1t1tt Ndlarcl ......
Pamela Vlncaflt. A11 ........ ~ ..... ................. ....................
••1'1U1 ...... a~ ............. .,..
llOIOICOflf
V ION Y OMARn
.. ...., l>H•• .. , 17
AR{ (Marth 21 Af.rll Ill): tuikeu .. en du.
-alt &I ll'f'll u.wa.lly • c1ut•t." Vtan. are rwvllfd,
concept. ll"ft rt!VIC'W~. vi Jg ,. poalpm'Mld Home
,.novaUQNI art" fN tul'C!d, TA\Jk~pr&t 20-May 20): f0t'WI on lnconw, ""-''-bllll>' to IPf'(lal J>ttm•nt11 colleeUon1, I unuaual nolkw and lucallon ofTa.t lt.mw. Bwer c1-r of eelf-deatpllon &e plaoi!t. people ln ,..U,Uc
I U,ht.
1 OEMINI (May 21-June 20): Lunar cycle at
peak -you'll have mor. 1"8ponaib1Uty, there will
be additional challen&ea and you'll tuive chance to
pin pl'fttige, promotlon.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Hotpltal vl1&t
boa.ta morale of one who means much to you -
uplift alto affecta you in favorable manner. You're
aided by meditation, time alone.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Focua on romance,
emotional responaes, ability to make wlahe. come
true. Emphasis on friends, hopes, uplraUona -
you'll get to heart of matters in dln!ct, dynamic
manner. Another Leo figures prominently.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emphaal1 on
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am an executive in a
middle-aiz.ed corporation. In the la.st two yeans there
have ~n at least three instances when employees
(either the bride or her parents) have put wedding
invitations on the company bulletin board. Thia tort
of thing gives the lmpression tha t everyone and
anyone in the firm ~ invited. I am conatantly being
asked, "What are our obligations? Are we auppoaed
to aend a gift? Does this mean our entire family ia
alao invited? Are we expected to respond and say,
'Yes, we accept,' or 'No, we can't make it'?"
Two of my own children were married in the
last four years. I asked only my close friends in the
corporation, and they were sent per90nal invitations
In the mail. It seems tacky to post a wedding
invitation on a bulletin board. It alao places one's
co-workers in an awkward position.
Are other offices having this problem? What
should be done about it? -CONFUSED IN
SEATI'LE
WINE CELLAR
SPECIAL
FOR HOLIDAY PARTIES
CHAMPAGNE and SPUMANTE
30% Discount on c ... of 12 Bottlea
2400 West Coast Highway
Newport Beach. Callfomla
(Across from Cane's)
(714) 6 42-5749
IOlll 011 lllDll
av OHAA H 0 HANO OMAR
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19): K Hp
reeolut.1.ona concemtna dental hystene. r.c:reaUon
and medical appo&ntmenta. Focue alto on people
who rely upon you, 1peclal iiervloel and care for
peta.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emotiona tend to
dominate -define temw, 1trive to avoid aet·rich-
quick echemes. Someone la "danglina a carrot."
Know It, don't be taken ln by glitter or "fool's
gold."
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Property values
are emphaaized -take ste119 to Insure your righta.
Focus a1Jo on safety, security, special agreement
with family member.
DEAR CONFUSED: A weddlDI lDvltatJon on a
bulletln board woald meu, to me, a free-for-all.
Everybody I• Invited. No need to respond. Come If
yoa feel llke U. (Tlloae wllo plaa to 10 are, of
coarse, obll1a&ed to brlD1 a sift.)
J a1ree that tilts lt not die proper way to lnvlte
gaest1 to a weddlng. It Is lmper10aal, 1aaclle aad
gives a clrcH Oavor to wllal slloald be a warm aad
Intimate occa1lon.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I started to read your
column when I waa 11. I'm 23 now. A man I'm very
fond of moved in with me a few weeks ago. Neither
of us wants marriage right now, but that's not the
problem -so no morality lectures, pleue.
D Aa Ma. ooa N
Q.-r ... , .. , a. ...... '" ... t ... ~ ,. ..... u. ...
la ,.., ....... I .... ,.YIM!
t.111 llriMJJllt, Ml .. N&
HH J1t1t .... at111 .. &.
re••I•• &I•• .. ,,4 u4
wlileU.er &. .,,a, die ... . ....... ,. .. ,. ......... ..
,.,,._., •· \'Hr .. el' w...W
lile ap.,..cla&.4. -Q, Baker,
New Hnea. c ....
ITla11 q .. 1t1ea hH been
awarded tale wMkly prhe.1
A. -Even though you
underetand the principle of
revaluation, let me explain it
brieny for other readers.
When a Cit la known to ex lat,
handa increue in value. For
opener, a fit becomes
established when reaponder
rai1e1 hla auit, or introduces
a new suit for which opener
has good support. For
responder, it is when opener
raaaea his suit or bads a suit
for which responder has four
ca~ support (or good three·
card supportl.
The method of revaluation
differs somewhat. When a
player revalues has hand
after his suit has been raised.
he adds points for length. For
a fifth card in the tr ump suit
he adds 1 point: for the sixth
If it f I oats,
ind """ Hlra lrumsi htt add~ 2 polnl11 fo'11r a fourth
1nd/111rh H\ra r11rd In a 1ld•
1ult h• 1dd1 I pulnl. To II
lu1tnl .. huw lhl1 work•, lttl'1
lake • hand rrom on• of lhl•
w .. k I C'OIUmnt:
•AlOQd ~t& 0 AK •AlOS
f'or purpoeea of openlnir
the bidding, th11 hand i•
worth 17 point• 16 llCI'
and :t for distribution. If parl
ner nlees 1padea, you mutt
revalue your hand. You add 3
point• for the length an
1padee -I for the fifth and 2
for the llJtth 1pade. In effect,
thi1 reflect• the change an
the loeere in Uie 1pade 1ult.
What 1tarted out 11 a 1ult
with two or three loaen 11
now probably a suit with no
more than one loser .
When raising partner's
suit, the method or revalua
taon 11t dafrerent, bul the logic
is the same. Suppose you
hold the following hand:
•Q9~ <:?7 OAJ9U +762
Partner opens the bidding
with one club. Your hand is
worth 9 points -7 an high
cards and 2 for the singleton.
The actual worth of that
singleton is hard to assess for
the momenl -if partner's
second suit is hearts, even 2
polnla ml1hl ''ov• lu &U41
hl•h, t.e .. au .. lh• hud m11
be pls1•d In no &rump wlltrt
you hav• no dl1tributlonal
valut1. Out Ir partner open•
on• 1pad1, your hand Im
provH. Your rieart 1riortnt11
1hould enablt partner lo
1rore two or thrH ruU1 In
your hand. You revalue your
hand .. ro11ow1:
Doubleton -count I point
lno chsorel
Singleton -count 3 point•
ladd I polntl
Vold count 5 points ladd
2 point•)
In support or spade1, your
hand now counts 10 point•
an1lead of 9. The same princl
pie of revaluation applies 11
soon .. one player has a m
for his partner's SUit,
regardless or whether at i•
opener or responder.
Sead u y ca•11U..a fw tllla
eel .. 1 &e: Claar ... G.,.1 ... o • ., 81aarif, cl• tide ...........
Eecll weela • priM .. a eef1 el
~ ... '°GWH01 8"4p C-·
pie&.," a St.ts ...... wW "9
awarded r. Ule ~ J ... ed ~ IM1trwelved. c11 ... 1.. GerH aad o ....
81aarif per....Uy C&UIM ...Ser•
take &e u1wer all qweeU..1 ••·
•ltLecl.
A long time ago a girl wrote to you with the
dilemma I am now facing I laughed when I read
her letter and paid no attention to the advice. It's
my honey's toenaHs They are sharp as knives and
my ankles are all scratched up. When I ask that he
trim them, he laughs. I need help and I'm not
kidding. -BAND-AID BERTHA IN MEXICO
CITY
chances are you'll read about it
DEAR BERT: Maybe lovey doesn't OWD a pair
of toenail scl11ora. Bay bJm ome. If be refa1ee to
•ae tbem, give blm a cbolce -be can wear socks
to bed or sleep alone.
5° COPIES
YlaLWt ..... ...........
3461 Vkl Udo 675-6122
Nex1 10 EOW11tda LIO? ~
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTllllY .. ,, .... , .. ,.....
1922 HAlllOI IUD.
COSTA MISA -141-115'
NEW YUIS MAT
~~~
3901 E. Coast Hwy. c..a ..... 759-1154
Begin Your New Year
at the Marriott.
King'• Wharf -135.00 per .,.rM>n
• Prime Rib dlnner/aalad bar
• Champagne at Midnight -one bottle
per couple
• Dancing In the Main Brace Lounge
• Favors
Plldflc: a.nroom -175.00 per per90n
• Steak & Lobster dinner
• Unlimited Coektalls
• Champagne at midnight
• Favors
• Continuous music with The Soclely
for the Preaervallon of Big Bands and a Las Vegas show band
For Information and R"ervatlons
Phone 714/84<>-4000, Ext. 8100
••••
ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY
4-STAR HOTEL
900 Newport Center Drive
Complete Top Sbtola. Tatyalll St• or Ptawu DlnwL
$pedal ftlaa m. thae woo't lat foawwww,
10 come to Start Aada9oe• today.
Yoca'N ... to feel t004I lnllde.
------
in the Daily Pilat 642-4321
OUR $3.00 OFF
Will
MAKE
YOU
SMILE
To take advantage of this special offer. present
this coupon to our photographer and make a 95¢
deposit on your $12 .95 collection.
TOTAL PORTRAIT COLLECTION INCLUDES:
2-8 x 10s, 3-5 x 7s and 15 wallets.
NOW ONLY 99.95 ~f~RLY
with this coupon ------------1SAVE~00
I
I
I
I
on your child's regular $12.95
portrait collection .
~~~~~ . . ------------
THESE DA YB ONL YI
MONDAY
TUESDAY
·WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
DAILY 10AM • IPM
I
DECEMBER 27th
DECEMBER 28th
DECEMBER 29th ·
DEeEMBER 30th"
DECEMBER 3~at
..
. I
I I
' I I • I • ' I I ' ' ~ f
' I I i I
I l
I I
\
froz ' h tarv d,.h di d -and wrot about it
rAlBBAIOl8, Al ka CA.Vt T•I uf u th
ind MISM1lr ln the fro n north ar not n w In
~111k1n folklore, but no poet wrot• of Carl ~c<'UM'• fatal ldv n&ure. tf• wrote ll him.If When the 1tat. ltooper cut open thti tent 1nd
'ound Carl Mt'Cunn'1 wul41d body, he allo fQU~ 1
Uaty th.t 1\ar'Yed man hid kept unlit he nck<I hit
.ormt'nt wtUl 1 rtQt bt.lU t
He di~ at .,. 3& In a wlldem .. camp nnr a
nameleu lake tn a nam•le11 valley 22~ mile•
nort.hea1t of Falrbank1. He had aone there to
photqp-aph the natural beauty and my.tenet of the
tundra. But he had not been 1peclflc about plana to
be nown Out, and IO he WU l trtnded.
Hia diary, 100 paae9 of looeeleaf paper, beean
ln tidy, block letters recordlna the wonden of an
emeralna 1ummer. It
ended, eight and a half
rnonth1 later, In the
mwl of an abandoned
1oul crippled by
froetblte, flghting with
ravena and wolves for
tcnpe of food.
The diary wound
up In the coroner's
office in Fairbanks,
wbare, at an Inquest,
the saga of Carl
McCunn unfolded.
On the last page, he
wrote:
"Am burning the
laat of my emergency
Coleman light and jult M
fed -the fire the lut of cCUNN
my apllt wood. When the ashes cool, I'll be cooling
~with them."
ldcCunn had been flown into the valley about
75. miles northeast of Fort Yukon in March, 1981, as
winter was ending. He knew the area. In 1976, he
Md spent five months alone In the desolate Brooks
~ time, with about 500 rolls of film, photo
equipment, firearms and 1,400 paunds of provisions,
he planned to stay through mid-August. Beans and
rice were hia staples.
Eventually, he ate tree bark to stay alive.
tit• lath.,, ~urwvan Mt• 'unn ut an
Antotllu, 1'11lM, ti -. ht1 IUh t I• WM 0 foot I,
240 puundl, wlth c·urly, r«ldlth hlonJ hair •nd •n
UU\IOIMI ,_.,nallty
Alwr hllh 1Chool, tw tam.d In l'()ll a&• tor a
aemmwr before a four yur hJWh ln \he Navy. 'l'hen ~ w~~~~-o~~ l!f_? ~tw~ ~~~~.!e~.!'t'f: ------~ ----c-:..---~ -~---·-. hunw In Alalca In about 1970
At the coroner'• lnquHt, teallmony from
frlendl -and Ml'Cunn'1 own diary 1ua•l.t'd he
had failed to make 1podflc arran1ement1 to be
picked up.
By early Augutt, with hit auppUea dwlndllns. ·
hit concem ,rew with the change of the ~uon.
"I think l 1hou1d have uaed more forealaht
about arranging my departure. I'll aoon find out
Am down to bew now . . juat over a 1allon. That
may not lut two week1. li'lnlshed oft the rice
ye.terday."
By mid-August -hla diary entrlea were not
dated -he spent much of hla time searching for
food. He tells of ua1ng a net weighted with links of
chain to cat.ch fiah In a creek by the lake.
One day he heard a caribou thrashing In the
lake. He watched It dte.
"Fr8h caribou meat! Just hope to God that it's
not wormy."
The next day he waded chest-deep into the
cold water to retrieve the prize. With only about a
half gallon of beana left, McCunn concentrated on
the caribou.
"I oouldn't stop eating today ... three large
meala . . . first the liver, then a oouple of steaks off
the hind quarter, then the rest of the liver. l'U bet
I ate aix or seven pounds of meat today.
He ate rosehipe, trying to get to the pungent
petals before the birds. Each day was a painful
battle with stinging, biling bugs on the tundra.
Still no plane. His anxiety grew.
He dried the caribou meat, and managed to bag
some duclu. The nighta became oolder.
tte turned to other food sources. Muskrats. He
was down to a five-gallon container of dried meat
and 20 caribou ribs.
Meanwhile, concerned friends aa.ked the
Alaak.a State Troopen to check on McCunn.
Troo David Hamilton flew over McCunn's
TDDAT'I CIDSSIDID nllLI
ACROSS detty Paul: Abbr. mountain ae Small ruo
1 Drive 79 Ranked, In 137 Short crest 880n -own
onwwd terinla )eck•ll 17 Sped! 89 Boundtwy
7 Cllpltal of 81 s.am. 139U..a 18 "The Wlz.atd llO Enda
'Nig.ta 82Cobbl•l"I atopwatch of -.. 91 Poket
12 Cllpltol Of tooll 141 Earth 19 Tell •tat!•
Tlbe1 83 Withered goddeN 20 Figu<•of ~ Embroidery
17 Soll 84 Mlcleeat 142 o.lo coin mpeectl 95Groaned
2\Ambuae-btMd 143 Javaneee 27 Raiaied 97 Speectl
dof 85 Edge ,,.. 29 Extremely 98Freeof
r1nip t.. t , t Ult 11w M ·um1 w•~lrtl • f'tllJ lq ti 11Jd h rll'\~ and M ~nn "wavtd In
• l' ual martnc-r and wa1.th0\J u. fly hv "
"W• 1urmt.d lh4tre wu no lmmM.llaw llantt r
or ~ for miorpnc1. aid."
In hit dlary, Mt<.:unn tellt of first beloC •l•ted
1buut atahtlnl the plane. Later he rHllwd hl• hud __,__ •• ---_,..._._, ·-•'----.-.at....e
an -·.~J .. ~~j-;~T.t~i';;;y -rtaht ~d. ah-Ould~r hljh
and 1hakln, my fltt ·on the plan '• l«'Ond peas lt
wu a Utlle cheer -Ilk• whun your team arorcd a
touchdown or 10meth1na.
"Tuma out that'• the 11.cnaJ (or very 1imllar)
for 'ALL OK ... 00 NOT WAIT!' They probably
blew me off u a weirdo .
ReaUzina hi.I lul chance for aid before winter
wu probably gone, he •tarted to batten down hia
camp. He dua a four-foot hole In the around to
pit.ch hit wall tent. and found a jar containing a few
plece1 of candle, some rabbit 1nare1, cigarettes
papen and an envelope containing tobacco
The snow came. T he lake froze over. He saw
hi.a flntt wolf.
He began salvaging partially eaten kills from
hawks l'nd other predators -"Now I'm a
ecavenaer! Bad as the jays and ravens."
By October. he was competing with wolves and
foxes tor the rabbits he snared. Then he was down to a handful of beans.
"Certainly somebody In town should have
figured something muat be wrong -me not being
back by now. But then again there's probably no
one In town who gives a . . . What In the hell do
tho1e people think I gave them maps for?
Decoration?"
Testimony at the coroner's mquest showed that
McCunn had had at least three maps of his Intended
camp area. They were mailed to friends 1n
Fairbanks and to his father.
Hla father said that McCunn, on a previous
wildemesa excursion, had been late, and he had
notified police who started checking with McCunn's
friends. "He told me not to do that again," the
senior McCunn said.
In several diary entries, McCunn says he
expecll!d pilot Rory Cruiluhank to pick him up in
August, but he allO writes, "Aft.er w e later got
ether and I'd decided to come here, he told me
nut l'OUtl\ un h htlp • ti n•)' t. In Al hor.,. ...
Cr ulk1hank Hid Mc: •u1rn hid •l\'e.p film
1nontt7 to rC'S-lr hit alrpllr and fly hlm tnto -nut
oul u th bu.ah Mt unn apparently flew In wllh anottwr pilot
without advl1ln1 Crurluhank where h• wa1 or
when ho wanted to come out.
Winter advar'IC.'ed:
· il 1 oven a wrnoia o•y 1fJr me •no &won' 10
Into ll Handl i UJn&"'OWnt fro1tbltten every day
flnaertlp. and eds•• of hand1 numb and
1Un"lna Ft.-et 11 wt!U. Ill only mlnua five deeree-
on the thennomet.er but l!ffma colder. ~ "Have only one meal worth of bean. left.
Hone1tly, I'm 11Cared for my life. I don't feel there'•
much hope I'll eve11tbe alive In a week. But I won't
give up '
In November, Carl McCunn ran out of food. All
he had left were a few 1pleft.
"I feel very down, but not qwt.e out. Damned
dose however." He waa reduced to eatine "palms full of ground
red pepper, lhme and salt, juat to let my 1tomach
know I'm still here ." Later, he would nibble on the
rabbit heads he had used as bait for wolves and
foxes.
''} feel ml!lerable. Have had the chilh upon
awak,nlng for the past three days . . . I can't take
much more of this . . Can't atop thinking about
usmg the bullet either."
Another passage: "It's weird to feel on death'•
threshold. When's it going to end? One way or the
other, I keep telling myself, 'Hang In there, man
... somebody will fly over!' But rm beginning to
believe I'm just lying to myself."
He used the last of hla fuel, and fed the fire a
final time.
"I (chickened) out once already, but I~n't
wanna go through the chills again. They/UY it
doesn't hurt.
"Dear God in Heaven, please forgive me my
weakness and my sins. Pleaae look over my family."
He added a separate note asking that his
personal Items be returned to his father.
He signed his name and attached hia Alaska
driver's license.
"The l.D. i.s me, natch." l
With those words, the diary, and the life of
Carl McCunn, ended.
OllE
WEEK
22 Trtfte 8769Mr• 145 MUM of 31 Compea 102 MalCUllne
amofoualy 89 ln1ertwlned ~ point 104 Remainder
23 Blue la one 110 Liquid 147 Dwetl 34 Prepared 1045 Moccaaln
24 f\lwrln meaure 149 Cheef for print 107 Young hog
Getmany 92 Moecow 152 Phllty'• 38 Hoo'lef Dam 108 Collleriea
25 Pt1nter't name State laka 110 Small
meuut• IM CNlatmas-153Stage 38 Sylvan amount
28Grant'a -tide wtllspera delllee 111 All wl1h air
28 8akery 95 P9rk>d 155 Lwge vats 40 Cloek 112 Ruffle
purc::hale of lime 15 7 South A tr1-42Mak• 114 Mot• com-
· ll Store Wide Y~~E~~Clearance.
30NatUfal 9& HamlMger can Du1ctl
abllty ''helper'' 158Aftertn
32 Behold! 97Seeeaw 1llO Kand of
33Devouf9d 99Soelt ct.-
358landatd 100 Hebf'-182 Crown
37 Deni meeawe 184 Rowel 1110 3t...,,. 101 The..-t-atwut>--
netwOft( sop 188 Cheuftew
408erwt 102 Church 188 -date.
411'obert -aervlce 2worde
Niro 103 Goddeu of 18' Dinner
43Want heeling OOWM
45Gloomy 105 Mend 170 Pert of a
41N.8.'a 107 Sin. for ftlhlng !Ina
Nighbor short 171 Honor qp.n,., 109 Conducted
41Whlrl 110 Fountain DOWN
5t Arrow order 1 Entr•ty
5'Gtoeey 111 Snell• 2LMM
tabric: 113 Rage 3 IOng of
158.f:tende 114 Gr.-letter eaan.n
115 Abbf., on a 4 Actor
5tr>eteetaUon ,,..... o·an.n Slt=hoM 116 Oelry 5 Shon Jeckat
Ii Of1I unit Pfoduct 8 Ade .odltlve
82 Dull one 117 Lamprey 7 8&Mball
~MatUl99 1188.ad poeltlon:
M"\.atln con.-120 Cerium Ab4>f.
8f~lon 9Y'1Tlbol 8 Prleet'•
121 Promptly ~· 87Toend -122 Location 9 Mlle
68 Alalatant 123 Conftagre-10 Mountain
etc.lum tlon nymph
eymbol 124WM#'y 11 Fllgltl
71 Crlmlon 128 Lower In of ltepe
72 Pintail d\d rank 12 EdltOf'S
14'f\lver In 128 Ogle abbr.
8pali'I 130 Slppen 13 Torrid
78 Telle one's 132 See 8 Down 14 Winglike
pan 134~ 15~ nUncooked 135 Animation ..,.,,..,
11 feutone 138 Peter Of 18 Rugged
mlatatl•
44Sketdl
48atyln
N9Yllda
48 Addltlonal
49 Portion
50 e.t
51 Author Jofln
can.
53Wute
altowanc:.
55 Coltege deg
56 Secret
writing
58 Degrade
llO Tldy
82 Propoel-
Ilona
65 Knight of TV
881a 111
118Pl"oofrud-..... mattt
70 Stoctll1olm·
tte, ueua11y
72 Authc>f Anya
73 WIWdelt
75 Job for I
jazpteyer
78 More
pleMlng
nHappen
again
79Storage
ltruciur•
llO Plungee
82 More com-
pet«tt
83 More
mtonal
84 WOf11ed al
one's trade
poeed
118 Mud
117 Green lend
119 Court Ofder
121~1
122 Secure
123 Per1 of a yd
125 Aclot
Jannlnga
127 Oz aunt
128 lncllnee
129 Angry OU1-
burat
130 A lhletlc
lleldl
131 Stow onee
133 S«ld forth
138 Parts of ....
138 Beer mug
140 Avoid
143 The two
of -
144 CSOee
MCUrely
148 Her.idle
t>Mnng
148 Pltc:t.
teeturee
150Towwd
lhetter
151 Damage
153 Wine cup
154 Mrs., Span.
i.tl atyte
158 Gal Of ::? 15' Ulumlnat
181,...,
183 Ptlid notlOe
185 150: Rom.
167 Btother of
Odin
20
To Stock on Hand, Some One of A Kind. All I :Cco4J ~ Merchandise With Full Factory Warranties.
.-. .
~':!~.L
• 24 Heur ,, .. rammable
• Wlte'4ttt lemere
• 11ectrenk Tuner
llLY '69911
RCA
I" llAl•IL 11/IO
OIL.II TIU
•Tlnted Sun A!!!!l!~r
1cr .. n
•llectrenk
Tuner
•Weather
land
Hr VHS
• lledronk Tunln9
• Aute lewtnd ........ '•""
• ""' Pvnctlen ........
• 100" ...... ..... ......... -'"" .. ... ,.
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From all of us to all of you· ...
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4
Adam Alexander plays with
his invention -Alexander's
Star, a puzzle akin to
Rubik's Cube.
.~
This Diogenes
• seeing, stars
'1J ~r.,B~!J:!-TT
NEW YORK -Adam Alexander would like
the world to oorne to his tub, not hia door. There,
like the Greek philosopher Diogenes did
centuries earlier, he would deliver criticism of hia
fellow man.
Inatead, Adam Alexander la hop-skipping
acrou the country on the talk show circuit
huckstering hia invention -Alexander's Star -
in plaals like lndianapQlis, Detroit and Grand
Rapids.
The Star l.s a 12-starred 10lld puzzle -a
dodecahedron, if you will -that ia being
brought to you t.hia year by tha.e same people
who brought you Rubik's Cube. It ia, 1ay1
Alexander, an extension of the Cube and like the
best-aelllng Cube, a book will be &Jona ahor\ly
expla.bUng how to 90lve it.
Alexander i.s a 36-year-old mathematician
wha.e first gray hair appeared at age 9 and
whoee shoulder-length hair is now completely
white. A few dark bain apedde hia beard and he
accentuates the whole effect by dnmlng only in
gray. Always.
M 1 'atur viii g
grows •.. and grows
Pl'M'IBUROH (AP) IVW)'
Chrlat.rMS for the pu\ OI yun,
Charlea Bowdlal\ ha1 bten
crH\lnl • m1nJa\UA wonderland
an old·tlmer'a ath to the
YOW\I and lhe YOUl'\l•&t-heart
In 1919, Bowdish built an
electric train and a hand-craftf'd
miniature vlllaae around a
Ceatlve tree for hit brothor'•
ChrlatmH day weddln1. He'a
been mak1na It biager and better
ever aince.
"We've alwaya h a <t. a bli
Chrlatmu, and I ju.at wen t kind
of hog wild tha t year," aald
Bowdish.
He estimat es that 400,000
people filed through hia home in
Brookfield to tee hla miniature
creations be fore the annual
••some are historical
and all are built to
scale."
diaplay was moved m 11148 to the
B u hl Scien ce Ce nte r i n
Pittsburgh, wher e more than
3 million people have seen it.
For Bowdlah, 83, the fantasy
villaget replaced the life he and
his family lived aa membera of a
muaical troupe that traveled the
country performing In canvas
theaten until 1917.
The KeneS he creates combine
imaalnatlon a nd me mo r y,
Bowdish said . "S om e are
h istorical, the stor y o f thi1
country and aJJ are bullt to
acale," he u.id.
Each of the 1,000 lead and
plaatJc f~ 25,000 trees and
shrubs, aix Lionel trains, three
boats and 64 animations la
conatructed for the young-at-
. heart.
Viewe d from an adult's
vantage point from above, the
bean In their den are tnvtlible, aa
ia the mother, crying babe in
arma, who endle11ly paces a
floor. A man r ocklna in ~ii
hammock elude9 many adulta, u
'1u.. the COil worker feedint a
bNhlve cokt oven.
But a chiJd• .. ye viArW NYM1a
all \M\ -and btrdl ln ~deer
under a dramatic train trettle
and analere mapptnc thelr wrllta
to cut flahine un..
Aa children of all ....-form a
constant Uno around the exhibit,
Bowdish ahiftl the ec:ene from
dayli&ht to nJ.aht. Electric llahta
come on everywhere.
The vlllaje, 10-by-78 feet, la
destined to demonstrate how
people lived. worked and played
at the start of the century.
Realism rel1n1. The re la a
d ilapidated home. A flock of
me uy pigeons con1re1atu
out.aide a ham. A pipe releues
polluted water from a coal mine
into the at.ream.
There are l<>8JP.ng campe, mills,
nurse ries ana-an abandoned
farm.
The re are 1wing1, cotto n
candy, a baseball diamond and a
tree houee.
The local hotel la called The
Way Inn. In a back yard, there's
a tire awing.
In the town center la the No
Hope Volunteer Fire Co .. and the
Miracle Machine Co., whose
s logan, "If it works, It's a
miracle," hangs out front. A
fence la constructed matchatick
by matchatJck.
The vlllage "la frankly a
009talgic visit t6 the put," says
Carl Y. Wapiennik. a physicist at
the adeooe center who helps run
the diaplay for Bowdish. "We
feel there la a place for Rntlment
in today's hectic world."
Preparation.a for the village
begin ln June. Bowdiah built 12
new structures thia year; the
othen come from hia collection.
Until t.hia year, Bowdiah slept
on a cot at the 8clence center
while the vtllap wu beLna built.
just to be sure everyt.hing wu rtaht.
"Now rm just a straw tx. ...
he said.
A native New Yorker, Alexander grew up in
the world of private IChools, skipping the sixth
grade, hanging out at the Stqe Deli where
"I learn not to get excited by fAIJlOW people,"
and since 1952 watching every lanioua
aky11C:ra_per in thia dt)' of akym:rapen IO up.
·ue's dreaming of
. "'Be would lib to .et up bli tub in Manhattan
at the comer of Eighth Street and S1x1h A venue,
a bust1inC intenection.
"I would have people come by to be
critidJled by me." be aya. ••Accurate critidmn ii
oommon eo both mat.hematb and phlloeophy."
D101ene1, who lived in the 4th century
before Cbria, wu most famous for carrying a
lantern about in broad dayJ.iaht in 8MrCh of a
single honest man. He wu ala> a public ICOld, a
pest and a Uormed jester. hiatoriana tell ua.
He had a cynical way of aaytna thfnea that ia
dear to Alexander'• heart. Diopnes ia ttpor1ed
to have said, "Go about with your middle
finger up and people will aay you are daft. Go
about with your little finger out and they will
cultivate your eoqual.nt.ance.''
Alexander refen to affected reatauranta and
the like u "extended pinkie" establlahmenta.
"'That picayune quality la at the heert of
mathematics and I try to extend that," he says.
Diogenes w• reported to have lived In a
tub. Adam Alexander llvea in the Eut vma,e in ,
a neJ&hborhood of derelicta and bomeW. men.
"It's a nevtt-forget neighborhood. the bottom of
humanity,'' he says. Bia five-room apartment
renta Im only $191.51 a month In a cit)' where a
one-room studio in a decent neiahh9rbood
commands about $700 a mooth.
"Renunciation of we.Ith, .. be obeerwe In a
~ DlAJlner, .. ia 80IDeth.lnl only money
can Duy."
But then he m\.18ell how nice it would be to
grab up a few surrounding apartmenta and
create a super apartment in thia down-in-the-
heela neighborhood.
IAlT1 ..... 0M
SMTM & TIIYMU
WHtcW. CMAl'IL
427 E 17th St Costa Mesa
848-9371
•
I / 11 o u a re d" f n g
bu1ine11 under a
Fictitious Buaineu
Name you are required
by law f 8urine11 and
.Pro/11.U,,,, CCHU. Sec.
17900 to 17930 J to file o
FtctWou1 Bu1tne11
Nomt Stoterunt and houe it publf1ud for
four CO?Wcuth,. tuetb.
WE at tht DAILY
PILOT COft htlp with
both Call tlN LEGAL
DEPARTMSNT at
542·4'21 £rt. JJJ /or /urtMr fn/ormotiofl.
a striped Christmas
ALBANY, Ga. (AP) -While
l1l09t people were l'Mdy for
ChrUtmu 1982, Bob McCormack
Jr. and hia family are gearing up
for Christmu '83.
The McConnadca have to aear
up abeed of time to keep pace
with demand at their lamlly
bualneaa, Boba Candies Inc.,
which claima to be the world'•
lar8est maker of candy cane&.
TWmty-two million pounds of
Bobs candy canes have been
&hipped to atm'e9 In all ~ states
for this year'• holiday aeuon.
Now the factory ia churning out
canes for next year.
"Unlike most buaineaes, we
really have only one aeaaon,
ChrlstmM. .. said McConmck. the
company'• president and
nameuke of ha founder. "But
the factory ataya at full
production all year long."
Because candy canes are a
all>ple blend of sugar, corn
tyrUp, peppermint oil and food
colorlna, with leaa than one
pe rte nt moisture, they store
easily, McCormack explained.
The warehowle is filled from
November to Sept.ember, when
the oompany hep. &hipptna for
Chria1maa, be aald. fl01iriC, "horn
September until Tha~vtnc la our busiest time of year.
Bobs Candies, which alao
makes other kinda of caddlea,
00. not dlecbe lta aaJ.ea flprea.
• But to '*"-tta da1m to the dti.
of the lat,.i manufllcturer of
candy canee, the company *'8 ltl
·~dally production ia 69,
207 pOunda. or 1.0 million candy
~anH , and lta total yearly
production ia 18.J m1lJJon pou,nda,
Of' 3M m11llon candy canes.
Sine~ the company beaan
ma'kin1 candy canea ln 1119,
&bl CAnd.lea hat eold men than
6 billion of the red-and whtte-
atriped treata, McC.onnack Mys.
But !l wasn't 1.&ntll the
mid-1940• that the company
gained an advantage on lla
competitors throu1h the
lnventlvene. of McCormack'•
uncle, a Roman Catholic priest.
When be wasn't tendJ.na to hia
priestly duties in Arkansu and
later In Alabama, the Rev.
Gregory Keller tinkered with
machinery.
One of hia tint inventiom wu
a machine Bobe Candie. wed ln
the 1940• to produce peanut
butter and c:racker undwiches.
Then, aeeina the laborious
candy cane-maldna sircx-and
lta uneven reaulta, Keller
invented a machine that
stretched, twisted, a&t and bent
candy cane9 automaUcally and
turned out uniformly at.riped
ones~Ume.
The machine, which Keller
patented, revolutionized the
proce. and establlabed Bobe ..
the industry leeder.
"lt'a a fun baud..,., but it's allo
a bumne. that still requlrea a
aklll, .. ~ aakl. mentnc
to the dellmte pl'OCell of Itri~
the canes and pnven~ aapr
~ bumlnc under blah beet.
McCormack said the candr·
bua!nw 19 not ~I;° , but Bobs Cmcllea ia ita
own and amid tbe current
economic uncertalntlea.
'"lbia ia a 1ew1 year foe ua. •• he
Mid. '1 think l1 people .,.. pn,
to c:ut back on bu)'tnl candy,
tbey•n cut bldl on chocolata.
Hard candy l• relatively tnexpenalve . .,
Md ......... be added. "Whal
la Chrl1trnaa without candy eanear·
Murder billboard 'too rough'
f
•
--llvuld tell Dad was proud,
arul .\tum was really beaming .
A11d et:en Atm t Harriet got
a little misty around the eyet:;.
Aunt Harriet
swore
fdgoto
the dogs.
Mom always wanted me to be a doctor. Dad didn't
much care, as long as I amounted to something.
But Aunt Harriet was convinced I would come to
a bad end.
The reasons Aunt Harriet was not exactly kindly
disposed toward me stemmed from when I inadvertently
left a pet ~erpillar in her sterling candy dish. After that,
Aunt Harriet felt that my chances of evolving into a
reSJ>Onsible human bein~ were bleak indeed . "Headed
right to the dogs, that boy;· she'd mutter.
To pvercome this grave flaw in my character, she
began bombarding me with US. Savings Bonds. Figuring,
no doubt, that money might lead me away from evil
rathe r than toward it. After all, I needed all the help I
could get. And Aunt Harriet oouldnl have helped me
more. Those Bonds grew up, along with me, into a nice,
fat nest egg. One I kept tapping as I moved along in
my life .
I fi nally hung out my shingle today: John Petrie,
doctor of veterinary medici ne. J could tell Dad was
proud, and Mom was really beaming. And eve n Aunt .
Harriet got a little misty arQund the eyes. Afte r all-shes
the one who predicted J was going straightlo the dogs!
Buying US. Savings Bonds on a· regular basis helps
America . And it can help a dream become a ~ity
instead of something that might have been.
..
'
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Jenvery 13. 1983
TN• bulk 1ran1ler It lllbject to
C1lllornl1 Uniform Comm1rc111
Code Section 81oe
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•ffPOllM °' p1N<11no. 11 any m•r 111 ''••llldtr'i
hied on "'"' Tn11 lllll"'"'t wat hi.ti with tit• A Y I I 0 I U ' I a It II I 1 I cl o COunty Clltk Of Otlnge COunty on
cltmandalto. II lrllll11nal p11acla o.c. 1, ttU
dlclcllf ..... ,. Ud. tin ~.. • '20D01
-que U.. r"""41a cllft1ra PublltheO 0••"11• <.:0111 Dally IM IO dlll. Lii le In~ qui Pilot. 0.C !I. ll ltl, 28. 19112
tlQUI. SJJ8 82 ~. Ustto Oe••• 1011c 11ar el ------------con1110 oa urt lbog•Clo '" .. ,. P\ISLIC NOTICE
aaunto, C11b1r11 hacello ------------1rnmte1111amen11. oa NII ma1*a FICTITIOUI OUllNla•
au tHpuHla 1l1g1c;1on 11 hay NA• aTATIMINT
1lgun1 PUICll • ., regllllldl I Thi lotlowmo l)lllOl\I ... dOO!il
h1mpo butllnl" •• I TO THE RESPONDENT The ASSOCtA TEO ST UOENTS
Pt111101\lf hu flllel 1 p11111on SALES. 2338S Via Sen Geb11el
<.OflC*nlnQ Vol# matrtag.. II yov 1111 L-oun1 HlllS C1 92e~
to 1111 a response wlllun 30 dl)'I 01 STEVEN HOWARD HERT l
th• datt that Ihle 1ummon1 is 2338S VII St ll G1b1111 Laguna
_..Id on y0u your dll•ull mey bl H~lt. Ca 92M3
.. A pvbllc hiving win lie held on
Wtelnllday, J11111aty &, 1~. 11 7
p m In the lkllldtno 8 COnNtlll\Ot ,.oom, D411r1o1 fdllClllon Cenltr.
102&1 Yorktown Ave n ue .
Huntington Blacfl, Cl , 10 review
'"' ECIA, Tllll VII Oemol\alrallon Prolee1 appjlc:lllon lor llmllld Ind
non Enollall ICIMl&lnQ lludln1• IOt
Iha 1913·14 tchoor .,. .. , tor th•
Hun11no1on 811ch Union High
Sd\OOI Oi9 If let ..
Publlt hl el Orl !'QI COH I De lly
Pllot,Oec 21,22,13.24.26,28,27,
IN2
65117·112
'ICTmOUe .,.... ..
N.AMI ITA TUlllNT Th• tollowlrtg peraon It doing
bUllMNU' Cl!YLON PPRf88 l TO . H3 t
Oumateck Of • Hul\llngton 8aacih
Ca 92 .... Varlnl Oii SN111. 1163 t Oumbrecfl
Or • Hun11no1on leach. ca Ut48 TNa blltlnlll ta oonduellel by 1ri
inOMdull Vanni Ot Sliva
Thie 111tetn111t w11 llleel wllh 1111
County Clltll of Otll\QI County on
Novlrnblf 16, 1912 ,2021 H
P11bll1hael Orange COHI Delly
PllOI Dec 12 19, :le. IN2, Jan 2.
1983 Thi rtl ml lrtd I CIClflU OI llHI
pwaon -4th whOtn ci.lme mey bl
NICI la Mike 0 SrtOW, 788 Hlwlon
Wat'. Colla Mela, CA 9H27 1nC1
1tle tut day lot llllng Cl.im. by eny
ClldltOt "'"' bl Jal'IUary 12, 1~ wtllcfl la lhl 1111..._ cs.., before the
coneumm1 llon C11t1 1p1clll1CI
.aio...
Mllfe<I ~ tlll COUt1 may enler a ROBERT HARLAN HEAT l
1u<1gmertl co1\l.,n1rtg 1n1urtc11ve or 1113e 1 8'oc*hursl !>O Hurlllngton
01111< ordlfs conc1<n1ng 01v11H>O of a.ach C1 92$415 1------------5457 82
prope11y 1pou111 support cn.1e1 Thll bulllllll '' co11ouc11<1 lly •
cu11oor Chlld support anornay general par1ner1h1p
11111 COll11 and IOCh olh11 rll .. f IS SI ..... H•tU
rn•y bl 111an1eo by tlll court The Th•s 1111tlnllflt was 1111<1 w1111 1ne
oarn11hmen1 ot WIOH t•k•rtg. of County Clltk of Orange County on
tnOOly or property. Ot Olhef court Nov 29 1982
O.tlel ~blf 23. 1982 Keith HOCIQdOtl
Intended Tran1r.11
Pvbllthlel OflnQI Coatt Dally
PMot, Ole 28. 1982
MllC NOTICE
K-Gr1t1
au .. tUUOlll COUlllT OF CAL.IPOfllNIA .
COUNTY M OfllANOI!
700 Civic Center WHI
Santa Ana. CA mo1
PLAINTIFF: COMMUNITY 8ANK,
1 Cailfornla corporal'-.
DEFENDANT: 81LLA80NO
l'lllODUCTI, INC., 1 Calllornla
corporatton; DOff lllllU.Aft; LOl.A
lilllUAJI; Ind DOEa 1 "'""'9h 10,
au1ho11zeo proc111<11ngs may also
result Oiied July 11 1982
Lee A B1anc;11 C11ri.
H-M 011en, Deputy
Publ1SheO Orange Coast Daily
Pilot Dec S, 12 l!I. 26 1982
S331·82
PUBLIC NOTICE
FtCTTTIOua aua1Neaa NAME aTAffMENT
The loll<. Wing Plrtonl are doing
bustrteH IS
CROWN INVESTMENTS. IS85
Sunland l ane, Coale Mesa. CA
92828
AO<I S Chamt>erlatn. 2945 Maul
Place, Costa Men, CA 92626
Thom11 J Rausch 167 1 Klam'1h, Orange CA
Jetty w Townnno. S 13 w ~ 1UftlltltOH8 Alplng, S1n11 Ana CA
CAM No. M10U Jamu A N1chol1, 19261
NOTICl!l Yov llHe been ellld. Canyon Drive, V1Ha Park CA
The -1 may decide aealnll yov Th11 butlness ~ coneluc11e1 by a
...,_. ,_ ~ tlMrd ....... O-llP111•-•t11p
JOU r9l90ftd wltfWI ao dare. ,.._, RO<I S Ch1mbe<ta1n
.... lnlonnet'-beaow. Tl>ts •••tement WU llllCI .... n Ille
If you wish lo Milt the IOY!Oe ol County Clerk of Orange County on
a n attorney •n this malllf, you Nov 23. 1982
9houkl Clo eo p.omplly eo that 'fOUI F202l17
wrlllel\ re~M If arty may bl Publlsheo Orange Coatt Dally
llllcl on 1ilTll P110t Ole 5, 12 19 26. 1!182
"°*'97 PuOllthe<l Orange Coa•I Ou1ly
P110t Ole; 5 12 19 <'6. 1982
52:.'1·82
Nil.JC NOTICE
flCTTTIOUI llU .... ta
...-HATS ... NT
Thi fotlowlng pwaona 1ra dOlng 1111-"'-u : SANTA'S PERSONALIZED
CHRISTMAS LETTERS, 191511
Sacr1m1nto Ln .. Hurtlif191on 8each.
Ca 92&48 J ack S Hanart. 19511
Sacn1m1n10 lrt., HunllMQlon Blech.
Ca. 92 ....
Kathy A H1 n1rt , 19511
Seel-to Ln , Huntington Blech,
ca_ 9284t
TIM9 t>u*-la concJllC11d by I
general partner ll'llp
Jec;ll S Hanan
Thie 1talament wU flllCI wllh the
County Clerk ot Orange County on
o-tlblr 8, 1982 ,_
Publllh.0 Orang• COHI Dally
Pllol Otc 12. 19. 28, 1982. Jan 2 .
1983
64SS.82
P\aJC NOTICE
PICTITIOUa llU8*Ea a NAM« ITAT1MINT
The tollow1ng p1r1on 11 <101ng
bus1ne11 H
ROD CHAMBERLAIN AIR, IS35
Sunla nd l a ne. Coile M•••
C1hforn11 92828
Roel S Chamblrlatn. 2945 Maul
Place, Colla M .... Calllomla 92626
Thll bullnltt II COl\CIUCled by In
tndlYIClual
Rod S Chemblrlaln
This slulement waa llled with lhe
County Clerk ol Orange County on
Nov 24. 1982
ACTIT10U8.,._ ..
MAim aTAT'lmNT
The tollowlnO ~rtM>n It Clolno
~ ... MIKE'S AUTO 8AlE8, 1731 W
f'lrl1 SI . Santa Ana, Ca. 92703 Oa va ldo Ferrta ndu, 1213
OorMt Ln .• Coela ~ Ca. 92828
Thia blllj-.. conducted by Ill
lnCIMClull.
Otvlldo flfnanclll
TNI 1111-1 WU llleCI with the
County Clerk of O<ange County on
o-Ylb« 16. 1982. ,..na
F202t70 Publl1h1CI Orarig1 Coatl Delly Publl1heel Orange Coaat Oa11y Pllol "-19 2t 1982 Jen 2 9 PllOI, Dec S. 12 19, 215, 1982 1983 .,_, ' ' ' • ,
5341·82 151589-82
Ml.JC NOTICE
f'tCTITIOUI .,._ ..
NAm ITATDmN'T
The 1011owlng ~raon 11 doing
~ ...
J ACK'S TEXACO, 17988
Brookhurtl, Fountain Valle y,
CalllonllA 92708
~ H. F11CI, 2017
W. S!a n Lorel\ro, Sa nta Ana ,
Callfornla 92704
Thia ~ le conducted by an
lnCIMdual GllCJlemholaajn H. F..CS
Thll 1111-1 ... lllld With lhl
c-ty Cttnt of Orange County on
Deeamblr 8. 1982.
POOLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOU9 8Ul lNU8
NAME ITATEMENT
The tollow1ng peraon '' doing busine» as WESTERN STATES HIGHER
EDUCATION SERVICE 197
\llrgln1a, Cot1a MMI CA 92627
KEN HUTCHINS 197 V11g1n1a
Costa M... CA 921527
Tiiis Dusmeas 11 conoucieo Dy an
1nd1vldua1
Ken Hulch1na Thta s111emen1 wu hleO with 111e
Counly Cllfl< of Orange Coonty on
Olclmber 2. 1982
F20:Mll
l'1IMCIM Publlsheel Ora~e Co1sl D11ly A V I I 0 I U • I • cl Ill t I d o 53M>-82 r dtMlndado. El lrlb11nal pueda ------------.... _,,, Ud. '"' ~ta • l't&.IC NOTICE
FlCTITIOUI au ... H MA19 ITATnmNT
Thi followlng penolll .,. doing
Publlalled Orange Coul Dafly Piiot Dec 5 12 19 26 198<'
Piiot Dec 12. 19, 28, 1982. Jan 2, 5293 82
-que UcL ~ dentto ------------de IO dill. Lae la lf'l'-eclofl qu1 aTAff•NT M Wl'THDfUIWAL .... ,,_OM PAii~ .... ~I 0
Ulleel oeue aollct11r 11 ONlllATINO UNDt!lll
con1eJo Cle un ~bogaelo en "" 'ICTTTIOUI au•••• NAME a ,unlo. 01b111e hac1rlo Tha lollowlng parson h11
lmmedl1lameol1. de 1111 maner1. wOhelrawn u •general pann« from
111 reapyesla llllQlta. al hay 1~n1. Iha partner.nip O()lfl11ng urtdlf 1111
J)Uede w regl1tr1<11 e nempo flcllllout bu11n111 rt a ma ol
1. TO THE DEFENDANT: A cMI CHORUS LINE DANCEWEAR, 369
coll'\plalnl has bHn llleel by thl Eul 171h SlrHI, Cotti Mela. CA
pl.,,tl1f aa-lnll you. II you with to 112827
dlf9rld thf1 lawtlllt. you '""'' wlthlfl The llct111ou1 bualrteH na me SO oa yt 1fl1r 11111 tummorta la ttllemtnt for !hi partn«etlip wu
a.wd on you, nte wtth this CO<Kt a llllCI on ~II 2 1982 In the Covnty
wrlltan rlllPOflM 10 lhl oompffllnt of 0t1noe
~ ... 1982
El..SINORE EQUITY COMPANY
2123 YICl'll Jvlla, Newport Blach, ------------Cllllornla 92ee0
C. R Berreman, 2123 Yacht P\ISLIC NOTICE
Julla. N-port 811ch. Ca lllornla ------------
92880
S . T 8errem1n, 2 123 Yacht
Ju"•· N-port Beech. Ca lllornl• 92eeo
Thia ~ le con0uc19<1 lly Ill
lndlvldull. C.R.~
Thll ltll-t -filed wllh '"' County Cllflt of Orange County on o-tlblf 8. 11182. ......
PublllhH Ot•l\il• Coul . Dally P11ot O.C. 12, 19. :M, 1182, Jen 2.
1"3
"CTITIOUa aualNE•• NAllll! aTAT!IKNT
Thi followlng per1on II 001ng bu1lne11 at·
LANDMARK FUNDING, 964118
Bo111, W11tmln11er. CA 921183
Vu Huy Tan, 228 Quall l a ne.
Otanoe. CA 112689
Thll bllaln.11 la c:onouctld lly an
lnCIMOull
Vu Hur Tan
Thlt 1111emen1 w .. flteel wtlll lhl COunl)' Cler1I of Orange Counl)' on
Ole 2, 1982 .
P\llJC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOU9 ..........
NAm ITAft_,.,.
Tl\1 followlng perton It CIOlf'tO
~ .. :
ANALOG SYSTEMS, 1260·0
Logan Avenue . Colla M111.
Cl#foml• 92929 Rodolfo Oavlel Ferrari, 23181 GvlnM. El TOfO, Clltlomla 90230
Thia ~ .. conducllel by It!
lndMdual.
R. O.FINW1
Thia .... _. -llleCI wtlh lhl County Clel1t Of O<ange County on
Decamber II. 1882. ,....
......., Pvbllt hld Oratlil• Colt! Dally
~ you Clo ao, 'fOUI dlf9Ufl wlll Fun Name 1ne1 Aelor-of 1111
be ent1tlel OI\ appllcallon of lhl Peraon Withdrawing All ...._., '*'"1Hr~ and Ihle court may enter a •ka ,.... IL ...,._ 1825 Wle(diff
judgment IQ&lnal you l0t the reflef Or Newport B11ch, CA 92880
def\anCllCI fn the c;omplainl. wNctl
COUid rH ull In glfnl1hm1nt of S19n1CI Allee M 8•.::.;; ·-------------· Publl•h•O
Wlgll, IMIJn9 Of IT\Of'lty Of Pf'°'*'Y ~ "8JC flOTIC( Pllol, 0tc 5
Orange Co11t 01lly Plot, Dec 12. 18, :M. 1912, Jan 2.
,2 1t, M. 1982 tM3
15339-82 0 , 'other relief ttqu1111e1 in th• Publlthl<I Orange Co111 Dally 1---;;~mciiii"iUiii~r-·I eoinc>IM'll Piiot Ole S 12. 19. 28 1982. I HC lliiOUI llU Ill... .---------------"-------------!
0.11<1 Slcltembl< ~. 1980 1527t-82 .._ 8TA~
Lee A. 8'WICh. Clltll The ~ s---doing
Joyca ..._ NoNrtec:. Deputy P\llJC NOTlCE ~ •
,.ubll1h1CI Or1noe Co1tl Dally------------RfTIREMENT P LANNING
Not. Dec. 5 12. 19, 29 1982 ~ .,_.. 8£AV'CES. tet71 Red Rodi Clrdl.
5331-82 NAm ITAT'lmJff Hurl1lngbl 8-:ti. Ca. 92048
The 1o11ow4no l)et90N -doing Dme C. ~. Hlt71 Red rtaJC NOTlCE ~ -Rodi Clrctt. HuntlnQ1on 8Mlln. ea. CUSTO M WHEEL 92948 9'0'nC8""' APPUCA'nC* ACCESSORIES. 15701 Cllemlcal Sarah M. Mayswlnkll, 18971
fOR A~ ""' A ~ ~. Hlll'lllngton 8-:tl. C.. 826411 Red Rodi Clrde, Hunttngton 9Mch, 9'Y A 9AM( HOUlelO ~llltfY K o n 1 u I rt t a r n I t I O n a I Ca. 92&48
NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN by Corpora II on Ca C a I If or n I a Thia ~ la conduc;t.cs lly an
Or•noe Bancorp, 1010 1 Sla ter oorpora11on}. 115701 Chernlcal LMM. lndMduat. Avenue. follnlllln Vllwfy, c.llfornie Hunllnglon BMdl, Ca.. 92649 0. c. May9Wlnlcla
82109 ("AppllcMrt") ltwll It wll llPPY Thi• ~ .. oondllctld by • Thie 1"'9mln1 ... llled wltn the
lo Ille Feder1I AHerva Board COfpot .. lon. Counly Clar* of ar.,. County on
pu19U91t lo MCtlorl 3 Of the Bal* l(onn.i lntlfll8llonal Corp. Otcamber 18, 1982.
Hqldlng Comp1ny Act fo r Richard Ching, ,__
E Of ...,_ of a Mr*. Thi Vlee Prealdlnt Publl1hld Orange Co11I Da lly
lntllld• 10 llCqlllt'e 163,· Ti\19 1111amen1 ... n11e1 wt111 '"' Pilol Dec 19. 2t, 11182, Jan. 2. 9,
(6 I Of uie outltanOlnQ enar.a County Cleftc Of Of9"QI Coul\ty on 11183 °'The ..... °' Norttltm Clillfornje o-tlblr 8. 1912.
(In ~}. 1831 Notth Artt ,,_ 1-----------av..t. San Joee, c.Nfornle 96112. Publl1h1d Orange CoH t Dally ftllJC NJTlC[
The pvOllc: II Invited lo 111bml1 Pllol Oec 12. 19, 2e. 1N2. Jen. 2. (-----------=~~--w rllltn com m1 nu on lhla 11183 ACnnoua .,_ ..
~tlou to tile Fldetll ~ 5-454-82 ..,._ 8TATW
loerd at ttlt Federal AeMtw Bank ------------1 The foltowlnG l*9Cltll .,.. doing of 8an Francraco, 400 S1nA10m1 "8JC NJTIC( ~ -= BttMI. San Franclec:o, Callf"""8 UNIVERSITY HONDA, 2880 M120. The oommenl penod on tNI Hwbor Bou!e¥1rd. eo.ta MeN, c..
9'11)11caUon wtll not end before ...-l'TA~ 82t2e .-..,Y 20. 11183. Cal Mt. GorClon The fo9ow4ng 1*90t11 .,.. doing W•lem Deller SlrvlCe Corp
..,_ (415)644-2229 at Ole F«ttral ~ • ~llornla cor51orat1on), 2880
A1Mrw Ber* Of San Fnnclaoo IO TRA\IB. PER8EPCTIVE8 l TO . ..,...,.,d , Coml ...... Ca.
_., out w ~ 11e¥t eOcJ1Uona1 time 2w E. come Hlahwwr. eorone dll neie tor aubmltung commenta CM\ thla Mer, c.llfornll ~5 · Thll ~ II coneluc:lld by •
lll>Pfleatk>n Of If yov ~ mofl Treffl AQ1H!I Tovra. Inc., • ooipoitdol<.
tliformallon about avbmltUng Calttornla oorporaUon, 2956 E. WEST£AN OEALEA
CIOlt4'•1ta. The,,..,., .. "-"" .. C-1 HIQflWlly. Corona -Mii, SERVICE CORP
co111lder commenla, lnclvdlng c.lfornlll 92C25 811 fl Llllla. ~· f()f • P\lbllc me9tlno or Thie "'*'-1a bllnQ condllct9d ~ '°""91 '-1nQ on the lllP'c«le 1, If by a OCtl>Ot"°'' Thia ~ waa Ned wtltl lht
tti.y -rlCllved lly IN F«Mrll Jf1i/ 8 . Smith Counly Clel1t Of Ortng1 County on
.....,..,. Ber* dunno lhe comment Thia 11111men1 flle el wllh '"' Oeoamt>er 11, 1982 '*'°°· County a.ti Of Oranga County on Pvblllllld Orange CoH I Dally Oectmbtr I . 1882
P.-
Publl"'-d Ora ng• COHI 0 111)'
P9ot Dec. 19, at. 1882. Jan. 2. 8, Plot Dec. It, 28. 1M 2 '-OMDee al 66IO-t2 ITnllf IL 1("'91
------------Alll1 f f -~..._ MUC NOTIC£ _..,,_~
1M3
f'ICTITIOUI 9UIMH """ C • Hiii M'1
NAME I TAft_.,T (11') .._ MUC NOTICE
file l()ltowtng Plf'IOlll 11t8 OOlng
bwl-11 EM&C ENGINEERING
ASSOCIATES, 14661 Mytord Rold.
8-2. Tut tln, Ce 92880
MOttAMAO IBRAHIM EL GAFI.
tM & Shtrlnglon PIKI, N~ort
Buch, Ca 92883
-F\ICHARO REYNOLD
FUAAELl. 211972 1111 Grande.
Mleliofl llllJo, Ca 92891
GOAOON RAYMOND SHORT, ~= Catninc P1pel El T0to, Cl
l hlt ~ It conc:IUClad lly tn
vnlnc0tPQtaled anoc;lellOI\ olh1t
INln •'*1~ MOftafnad El Gell 1Nt ... ...,,.,, .... ~ With "-
Covnty Qerfl o1 <>ranoe County on
No¥ 2', 1 .. , ,...,
i11111bll1h1CI Orang• COHI O•llr
.eMt. Dec. S, 12. It, 2', tN.2
5M--1'"
~
P11bll1"9d Oran1>1 COMI Delly
Pllo4. O.C. 12, 19, a . 1"2. Jan. 2,
1913
F'ICTn'IOUI llU .... H
.._. .. ITATS•NT
Thi lollowtng PlflOl'll lrt CIOlng
blltl-H: HU.PEAIN INVESTMENT ----..,---IC-~-Tl-,.-t---1 COMPANY. 1917 Y1ch1 Purll1n ,.._ nu ~ N9wpor1 8aech. Ca 92te0 --,.~te""'""'T~fT~iOU~""t""'_,...---.-.---1 JEROME H El PER IN, I 9 17
...._ ITAT1•NT Yacht Pvrllart. Nlw1>0<t Blach, Ca. 92MO Thi fOllowlno l)WIOnt -c:IOlng JOHN CURCI, 918 Via lido ~ 11 No<CI, Newport Blaeh. Ca 92te0 HUNTINGTON SURF & SPORT, LOUIS A TURNER, 1807 1808 P acific Co111 Hwy • eayadltl Ten-. C«ona c111 Mw.
Hvnllngton BMcll, Ca 92$48 c """""15 M ROH JACK PAI, 204e2 Allee 1 •""" ~. Hvntlngton Beech, Ca 92648 TN• ~ 11 c:on®c11d 11't '
TI* ~ la coneluClld by '" QIN'll parlneflhjp
lndMcNll --Helpefln AatOf1 Jo Pll Thia 1111-t waa lllld w41h lhl
TIMI Stal_,. -fllld ..... '"' ~ C"'11 ()If OrMQ!t County on
Coul\ty c.-Of Orenoe Coul\1y on Nov • im natn
NOY f2. 1H2 Publlth.O Orange Co111 Dally
,_,_ PllOI, Dec S, 12. 19, 28. tff2 ~ubtlat\4'd Orenge Co111 D•llY 5321-f: ~I, 09C 15, 1:Z. 19, 28, 1UI
~82
NEW BUSINESSMEN
Contact the DAILY PILOT for
Information regarding the
county requirement• for ualng a
Flctltloua Bualneaa Name.
Cll lflll .....................
642·5678
6
4
2 !
• I
5
6
7
8 I
I
D !
A
I
L
y
I
p l
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
P•ltllthr'I htlat1
All rllll tata11 tldvertlMCI
In 11111 new1p1p tr 11
IUbjeOI lo th• ,ederal
Fair H~ Ac1 of 1"8
which mu. It Ultgal lo
ICIVtrtlN "t ny prtftr· anoe. llmn.UOn 0< dllctl-
mlnallon bued on r-. color. rellg lon. H ll or
nallonal origin, or any
lnllntlon to m1kt 1ny
IUCh pref1tenca , Umlt•-
tlon or dlacrlmlnatlon "
Thie ~ w111 not
knowlngly acce pt •ny
edv9fll1lno for r .. 1 .. _
tale whldl la In VIOl1tlon
WISLEY I. TIYLDI 111
Wlllll 111 I
MERRY CHRISTMAS
All I
HAPPY NEW YEAR
WUUl I. THUi OI., IULTIU
2111 ... "•:r.• ......... llWPHT OUTU, I • ..._.11
ii0ii1 tiiheii1awiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiil'lta=-;''-11:-:-----1ot=2 ~u "1 ... HU lnt1t ,.,, ...
HHH1 Advertls-WT •11m
ers should check TU-•LTDn
their adt dally and Pending 1orec:1oeura -1
report errors Im-w411 coneldtf •">' otl« on m ed I ate I y. The qu11e1a1m bu&a. 281, o.n,
DAIL y PILOT a s-pool, SC>•. n0-59«18
sumes llablllty for Certaa ••I lbr 1022
the first Incorrect FlllY OLAISIO
Insertion only. Ptrftot O.i•ltltl
DADE ...
)'OUf l>Oflng lnCome pro-
perty 0< outgrown rttld·
tllC9 with the •ge 9qU·
lly for thll nee1 ruatlc
and roomy 4 Bdrm, 3'~
bl homa In WALK TO
THE BEACH CORONA
DEL MAR LOCATION
with 1pec:1acultr 180
deg. ocean, Catalina
ltland and herbor v'9w
PtiQed •I c:urrtnl appr ...
111 o l $475,000 1 ..
5 Bdrm, 3 bath, lncludM
matter 11111• and la rge
ltmlly rm Ind olf-•lrMI
I"." •... •-)e patklng fOf up to 7 cara. I Owner llH 1195,0 00
- -Only 5 door• from tnlr· j equity and wlll C#r/ 2nd
Ital Estate
C..arll 1002 inc:• to Mein BHCh T.D. • .... 1•11 ;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;i ~ on marll8' al $575 __.. a
MUI YllW OW.lu.1211 ~"'4 1Gr l 00111•L11&1 c111,U &
5 Striking conte mporar) ~ A5SlJ[IAT[
design fMtured In Home
& Gt rd•n Magazine. t '' · Wha1 1 WoncMrful WOftd
Paln11tklngly bulll 3 ~ of Shopping, right at
bdrm home on prlvat~ your flnoert'91 ~
corner lot wlln b1y Cla aalfled Ade '" lh• Dally ffllol Clu•lll•d
OOMn, & jelly Ylewe Thlt anaw., 10 a 111cc ... 1u1 Ada To plaoe )'()U( ad.
home 11 truly a 1how· garage Of yard 11191 II'•• call &42-6878 Ind let a
plaoe the1 mv11 be_, belltr way to tall mo<• eta.l1lld Ad-Vlilor ,,.,
10 8')C>feclate. $975,000. peop191 you.
••n1 ....... hlPfl
3 Bdrm . with curb •P·
peal. New car1)el allow·
anca . Move In fa11.
&45-5735 Of M<M>255
L.911181 IUI.,. IUll
Hera'• the p..-19cl New-
por1 "*"" home w11h 3 8drml , 2 ea. flrtpl9Ce
and low price ol 1 159
000. 044-1'020 u.e UAL man .. , ... ,_ ....... ,
Pool, tpa, lmmac. ~
0111( 3500 tq.tl. with f
Bdnna on a quart« acrt
IOI s.li.t "9xlble, Hat·
bOr HI OiSlr1cl. $339,500
l l"-llOOt f1()~1:i
AMII°?' 875-S-'lOC>
.. n on mus
From the ttalf of
HERITAGE REAL TORS
540-1151
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
GEORGE ELKINS C
"''-,.. RWYUll
Only 15000 down pay·
men u Sup•r Condo •
e nd vnlll CloH lo So.
COH t Pla.r.a. S e curlt)'
gala, poola and 1ennl1 coum. Owner w111 c.ry1
ONl Y 164.900. Cell nowt
979-6370. -\ f >I I. I 11F1:
.......
An •bunct1no. or , ...
1on1 10 buy. Conve ·
n .. ntly loc1ted Tl'lrff
~rooma. Open 11001
plan . Pool and 1p1.
1242.,000. Av.itable fOf ..... at 1 1100 rnonttt. .... ,,
1082 Geatul
NO
DOWN
CLOSING COST ONLY
PRINCIPALS
ltn
4 BR. -2 BATH -3 CAR GAR.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
PAYMENT $1200/mo.
WALT a MARGE HAMMOND,
AGENT&
...... 1508
RfSIOfNllAI ACAi fSIAff SfRVIC£S
·WllOfltlT .. H,111
Low, low down or lease/option !
How many waterfront properties
are available on theee terms! 2 BR,
lush carpel , imported drapes,
hardwood floors, cu s t om w all
coverings, abeolut.ely gorgeous!
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
,,_ ...... ....... ,._ ·-.. . ....... , ............ ,, .. ..... . ..... ..... . ...... ........ . ...
H A 4t°""' .. ,...... .,..,.,.
IJO., .,or....
t4~ MN* . .......... , .........
..... •0-..•1111:4 ,,~ •• ,"""*"' .. ,. .. ..
..... •C.. ... .. It CM• t\...._ .,.~ .,.,. ,,......_.... .,, .. .. ,.,. ...... , •Mil .. --.... ........ ., ....... ,,.. ., .. ~ ..... ··--lt'tw •-.. -~ .w...,..
H 0 S T 0 E
I I I I I'
SLU M ES I
.... .. ..
When it comes to
selling boats and
supplies,
Classified really
stands out!
560/o of all boat and
boating equipment
purchasers shopped in
the Classified ads before
buying!
642-5678
+ American RedCrol<K
*$279,000 * DOVIR SHOllS *
Tct rl>t .. 11,
IU·.\1.1 OH~
Spacious executive home featuring 4 hr & 3 ~ ba, pool & a view of the
back.bay & Anthony's Pier! Thia fine residence ia located in a very
desirous area & priced for immediate sale. Low interest assumable
fl.nancing available. Call 759-1501 or 752-7373.
ISTATI SIZID LOT
* CAMIO SHORIS *
Thia outstanding exec home features what must be the largest lot in
Cameo Shores! The rear yard features a Japanese garden, waterfall.
Koi pond, pool & volleyball crt. in a specious environment designed for
memorable days thruout the year. Alge liv nn w/frplc overlooking the
pool & gardens exemplifies \he open apacloua feeling prevalent
thruout. A huge kitchen. fnnl din rm & 4 spacious bdrms including a
mstr suite w/blt-in shelves, sunken jacw:r:i tub. Offered at $670,000. fEE w/aasumable f1nandng at 11.75 ... 759-1501 or 752-7373.
*NIW LISTING*
HARIOR VllW HOME
'Outstanding Portofino on FEE land! Excellent family home featuring a
premium location with ex1ensive use of used brick, 3 BR's plus large
covered patio. Priced for immediate sale at $315,000 with 10~ ..
assumable financing!! Call 759-1501 or 752-7373.
*DOVER SHORES*
1Thia custom Ivan Wells designed home was built w/executive
entertaining in mind. Quality thruout, from the aolid oak paneled den
'to the mahogany paneled fmly rm. Some of the numerous features are:
,sensational view of Fashion Island & ocean, black bottom pool & spa
w/outaide bar. 3 car garage, complete security system & of courae
formal dining. To view the luxurious features of th.is magnificent
'residence, call 759-1501 for private showing. $1,~00.000 FEE!
OCIAN VllW + POOL
*SPYGLASS HILL *
Th.ii truly magnificent residence ii for U>ON who embrace relaxing
luxury u a way of life. TbU home la completely remodeled &
decorlted. featuring hnponed paven beglnn1na on the front patio &
continuing into the en1J'y & thnlout the fmly rm. kitchen & breakfut
area. Decorated in Mediterranean style w/curved arches, rec:ewd
IJahting & liberal u.e of mbTon. The remodeled gourmet kitchen
features eolld oak cabinetry. Jen-Air Range, Portugu.e.e Wes & a
breakf.allt nook w/ocean view. Naturally there l8 ape.no~ ocean & Naht view from LA to C..tallna & of COW"le a pool & apa are encl'd in
a private courtyard. Thia fine home a. wunlatakably Newport! Priced at
$84,,900 FEE w/~ flnandna. 759-1501or752-7373.
*WADIPIONt HOMI & SLIP*
Sensational executive home featurina 4 Br, enormous living & dln1n1
room, 2 fireplaces & room for 55' t>o.1! ()r:\Jy $559,000. FEE with
•urnable financing. Call 759·1501 or 762-7373.
. .,. ...
Tiii ••1
~IANDONID ARTIST'S CHALR
SACllPICI PRICI OF $ 169,900
Thia Eng,lish Tudor style home ls vacanl ,and waiting for a new owner.
It is cuslom built with many features nonnally found only in higher
priced properties. Notice the bay window and artistic wooden plant.er
boxes. What you can't see ln the picture are the five skylights. used
brick entryway. ceramic tile kitchen flooring, secluded patio or the
lofts found in each of the large bed.rooms. Added to that is a spacious
family room and three full baths which make this oozy five year old
home.located onlv two miles from the ocean trulv an exceptional value
in today's market. 9032 Adams Ave .. Huntington Beach. For more
information please call 5~7035.
HOW DO YOU
SPILL SUCCISS?
A Rolls Royce of a home! Of course every detail has been attended to
for the discriminating buyer. Tant.alit.lng colors. Perfect flow for
entertaining with <.'Oey comers of "at home" living. Three thousand
five hundred square feet of uncompromising elegance consisting of five
bedrooms and three full baths. The master bedroom suite is
particularly enchanting and includes a luxurious sunken oval tub and
separate tiled shower. There is a separate family room with wet bar
and a 15'x21' bonus room for the children. Formal dining is provided as
well as an eating area off the kitchen. Beautifully landscaped yards
including a custom spa. The $354,900 price is surprisingly aHOrdable in
today's market place. For complete details call 963-5671.
CAPI HUNTINGTON tOWNHOMI •
AFFORDAILI llACH LIVING
What would you nonnally expect to find for $11 2,000? Certainly not a
double car enclo&ed prage with an extra large patio, and probably not
a den with a wet bat or a large family eating area. But even if you did,
we'll almost guarantee the master bedroom suite wouldn't be 18'xl5'
with mirrored cloeet doors. All this and more can be yours within a five
minute drive of Paclfic <:<.st Highway. We'd be delilhted to give you
any additional information il you'll just call us at 963-5671.
DILUXI llAUTY SALON IN
HIGH TRAPPIC ARIA LOCAJION
You would· have to aee this custom designed and decorated interior to
believe it. Five busy operators and five additional stations for future
expansion plus twin nail atationa and a facial room. Also included are
six hair dryers, three sham~ atatJona and two supply rooms. All
equipment ls topof the line quality aiiOliarelYf~years new. Seller Is
willing to remain aa an employee of the new owner. C.Onsld~ the
location and cash now ia reaaonably offered at $74,000. 556-7035.
llCYCLI TO THI llACH
PROM IUPIRI LOCATION
Thia highly upgraded home with eolar heated pool ia only minutes
from the ocean and la in the much tought after Edison High School
Oiatrict. No exS>el\118 has been spared in lavishly appointins thla
showplace With wall coverlnp. wooden 1butten, mini-blinds, mlm>red
wardrobe dooi'I and MORE!! A very large formal dining room la
perteci for the comlna ho.llday .-on. With all of theee amenltl•, you'U find the price hard to believe: lt'a offered at the May, 1982
a&ppraleed value of llH,500. Call u• for detail• on the exclU.n~
finandn1 plane we have availabl•. One la certaln to be riaht for you?
61MM035.
..HUNTINITON MACH Ol'flCI
AMERICAN HOME SHIELD I032Ad•1Aw.
,
"We Protect & Service
Things That Service You.'' Hunt•••• llloft, U Ul4I ~')Ml-ton
2 8d HOUie end 2 8d
plex ....... ,.... Ult ~~ 2111 StNoCM HOMES FOR REHT
Minion Vl•Jo 8 a. -4 .. 8' condo for i..e. 2' Bdml. f700-V25. Fent> Ba, 1860 1.f., tennl• eel ywdl a. geraoee.. IOdl
pool, rec. No peit.a. Aef9 6. p • t • w • I c o m • Aval 12/1, 5'44-8071 ~2000 Agent. no .... 739-&521 •• • .
1 ...... emf ""'l!!pr!__......,_._ .. _ ......... =' Rno. yetd, No ~ Utl1-pd. •526/mo. 1at plu Hsbor "'-Horne9. 3 bd.
• • c • 8 4 8 v. w 2 ba. iov.tv home. comrr 181h..4K-1817 po o I. gar d • n • r Eaetllde lldlta 11200 /mo. Aval
*'-'· '2 n:,> 1 ba. ger 1/15-83. ~ aoe. M251mo. 769--111 EHtblulf Condo. 4 br ......;~------· 2'M>a. 835 Amigo (No 8) e.ttlde 3 er. ~ ea. pt1-1 a• s . 1 e o -a 3 e 1 ,
vata patio w/epa, 213/541-4480
bec*yd,r9l'OOCI. kltc:Nnr~-------2 c:er giwaoe. lff()/mo PLUSH 2 BR VERSA.IL·
11t laet ~ eec. 646-3632 L E8 PENT HO USE. --------1 Quiet. All amenltlH •a Br. TwnhM, nr S.C Avall now. •eoo Plua. 8.A. Pool, IP• 14&-0860. gar. •1eo1mo. w/d hk~--------
up. 75U822 ....... Wrll
2'.t bath condo. N•• ~ paint, dMf'I and
aveltabl• now. •1.oso mo. &44-03!0 Ev.
1 Br. Tl'llller, pfivat•. utllr
peld. No pee.. Range ' refer. 11t. plUI HC 1885/mo. 499-1817
.....
When it comes to
selling camping
equipment,
Classified really
stands out!
37 'lo of all camping
equipment purchasers
hopped in the Classified
ads before buying!
c.ww• RA --·-u... I llr. I ... ~ .......... 11171, Oef ~tn.mt
•
for'°"' •ttl'1ood
refrlterator
----
'
~
OLLAR4
------
•. ·~ . . . . •
....... It •~!!• JtfJ
-.i1r la ''"" lllr 21.\b• conda In N I '270/mo
1no ulll Ot t0t4 or
97&-42&9
NMd' Roomma~t
!Mne A4>t 9300/mo + ·~ UtH Ken '67·8"1
MIF tor 3 br bohfrnl llPI ~wpt 8ch Nonamkr
&toreoe
SlOAAOf YAM
•2600 eq 11 unit with
5.000 lq f1 y11d
JIL. ~HI Mii.,_,, I'll
1 .Jml;lm=llLll.I. a•llltil '"i..!••• on1, CutlClfl'I f 1111u, Pnone 11 6 00 ... 94V Tth
COO¥« .. llOn wffh ..,.,. WallrH•'• Walter•, • WHUL CHAI"'· motOflHCf
MCJIVllA 14 hta .. .,. ... .-l111ande;1 ovet 11 "AMIOO" almoat n••
Celll3t-010f ...... llftlfl Mutt l\lw ..,,_,, ~ l10to. wH IUU
IPIRfTUAL RlAOIMll lfl jtlfeff If Maaadoi t1t-ttl'
Advice In tit m1111t1 ..... ,,.... "8tleutent HM Hew etAUTNI~ MINK COAT,
tove. m1rt1101 a bu1I ltltt '"' ..,.., por1 lfvd., O.M. knee tengih. mt qU41111y ~:~: S:'c~ r:::!•= ::'~tfllft~ :,;: : WlllllllE :._ cor,1Jk ~91/W
!'Ian Clem 492-12" Up to t4 90 • ~ beo No hperlenoe "'eq Poe! lallte. ha loft btd
U 10 mo 110·4 141 •b-000 IQ It vntt wtth ... -i -111 a
Av911 Imm.a 10,000 sq h ~•rd. •HA •
come mo11 •1t' d Y~ Metle \19to112/ht 9tert w/ gold coyer and ou· wlll be promoteo to 1no pey. ,ull/PerMlmt thlon 135 mom•. & ~ .. 1¥1111. In our P'!blloetlon 752·5H2 velt Call: 7f4-N7-4840 Call today f or •Pot
H y.ar o1e1 v1ee Pretlden• Fla1acl1l
of majof Corp wm at1111t l14/ll1·41IO Room & bath 1n tuunobUt
lnt1rvlew1 held •very N1·2NO KING Gf10 ..... Wpt.. IUI
Wed ... 7 pm It 111 Del -Z,l.'J ".I -
Mat, Coett Mell. £.O.E.. WOMAN -CompeNlo-PU!A8E HELPll 1 need 3
,, ==-=-I.I'!! ..,, ....... , r,9 ., .. ,. .. -;;"''" ... _ , ..... ~ ...... ~_&:;
.. MO to MMltft ., . ..,, ..
fNIOM .. I.,.......
tlort Iliff .. -,..., tr•ln ••t t•n•f • (l;;'Ji.,, ma
"'' ....... ~ ~ '°'d .. __ .. 20IO...,., ~· _ _.,..,.ltul ..... m. M2.0010 11
35,000 """' Al ., .. --------0.•S*•t• • mutt .... ,... IJll
7141131·11?& 1• ..
·• 1 aooeo twt>o ftl, ....,. mtAll
roof, ~ oond., .._I 4 .... tr--. & •
301< ml, 131,000. Oy• ..,_ redlo.,. ~·
1 3 o. 3 7 eo . w 11 n d ' ta. ~nzA>.
3 tldl'm 2 ba 2500 eq tt For LMM Otflct 3 rm1 home. ~ blk to ocHn
l'tou•• with o"' prot 1200 eq tt Good trllf\cl l'urn or unfvrn, a2601rno
mele $460 mo. EHi· good tlgl'I a .. poiuro. 11t11Ht A¥all Jan 1. Rele
t>lutt, Newport 8Hcl't 111423 Beach Blvd HB plHH. Call ell 8 pm,
840-7043 Call 831-7900 Af1 8 & 900-5844 MARKETING
MGMT
TRAINEE
nata, IMng lllone In M.I or more FOSTORIA HA·
etet, w/Hlra bdrm tc VARRE Wine Ooblell
board a.nd W.. tor .-Wl41 pay 119 to '25 ~ bef\1\lld, •lightly hand· ce
!capped tchoor otrl, 3 Call 6'44-73&4 daye
* '7 .. 3201; tuto .. tun 844-lW ....... , ...
roof (7008) '79 3000. tunroof, t•~ lall.&JI * '70 320I; 4 tpd , eun deck. Muet Mii HOO Hwtxw...,.. Prof fem, 21-35 no lmk. wknda 831 9309 --------
to ltlr Plfl "ft' 2 Br llP' Otta epece lo• ..... 7 10 •••!! te W.a 4124 nigh II per wk, non· or 842-1886 -
amok er. "'•Ply 10 Act 1;:1 \I .; WE llY
OWi GAii
All TllOll
roof. (0321) Cell 240-7208 coeTA MU.A '
$220/mo & I\ tMc:. CM. tt S5951mo Ulll1 paid -1031, Bo• 1aeo, Dell) liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim * '79 5281, 1uto. 1un ... 1.
roof. (<M5ZCF). •" flfl --------845-IM92 •It ~m. air. ground lloor 1056 Ei llLPlllfl
M/F to ehart new 2 bdrm, Camino Or C M 3 bike E 11 on 1he wey tor your
2 cat gar Weetllde CM of Felr¥1aw & Adame money probtem. LOWNI
duple.JI $27S mo Ind ulH 754-1040 Mr Tr.cy rt1•. Inter•! and 0091
730-7207 de, 640-5524 Olflc• for rent Newport 111. 2nd. 3rd T0'1. Cell
:~ Coeta MtH. C>. lllLP lfff A * '78 7331; auto. io.oed ..... •..._ ____ -.;.;;,m "II L11 ....
(735ZFH). • '11 -ltlll1D
~1!§9 Woman lo talc• cere of olo
lady eonveteaclng troll'
bf <*en hip. Reft. Slllltl
negottabll 1148-3005.
"'"' Tll rrum
* '80 3201; euto., iun Thi• corwertlble hM' 4 Alt conditioning I tull powerl to d•Y power
roof (4094!) •PHd tt•n• .. 4 cyl . a 1 r • 1 n w • r r • n 1 y .
Ill Bob Sch, $ l30lmo SmaH wt O" our exp1rt1 at no Mother ehort of CHh
need• Ill• 10 welaul1 to
1111'1 l'ter 6-yr .-old ton oft
In hi• eurllng oar11t
Need tor Sant• to INll•
CONMRL
CHEVROLET 111-1111 AM I F M c .... ti I . (113WY•).
208 W 1•t. Santa Ana (733XZX). .. •t -•
•HOUSEMATES thin eoc tulle Cari coet ~57_1422 '>l.')111,"'"' II.:
''"I \ \H " \ CIOMd Sunday ... , PlU -~ Aoblne FOfd Theodore Aoblf'9 FOrd ROOMMATES• 540-0919.
ea11bllehed 12 y..,,, LoweR YOUR ovER No Experience •-i-11, · S4f>. I ZOO
under th• tr••· Call j-H-10;;....H..;.e.;;;;S.;.;T=.C.;.;A;..S_H..;;l;;;;m;;;;m;;;;•-.·
a n • w • r • d II 5 7 I . , dlettty for you \l9tllcle
&42-4300, 24 hre. dome11tc or rtorelg~
CHOICE INVENTORY
VOLUME SALES
2080 HMt>Of et. C.M. 2080 Hlll'bor 81 .. C.M. 842.0010 640-t211 842-0010 MO-a211 •All r1r1 cheeked• HEAOI ••rt1yn, T.D.'14121 111119
•Pflotoe llktn• Prof wenlt to sublMM • Re~· ed Den SSH Speclel ,,... off to all who part of your office .I. UmEI r::~------=o;;,;
need • place ·~ "-1H • C11t-unity Codcer Soen1e1 pupt ••• .111•.11 ,,.I IU1 846-5021 or 557·8197 81• -· • • Young lndtd People buutt l201200 ' -·-•• '" ---Special zing In 111 l 2f)d Only • •ukal 651-8285 $.
'71 Ford Wagon. Rune '77 MOB, nu red paint. Perfect. Comp« Aebtt
top, tlrH. ttereo. xtnt 1715. To be eeen et
cond S4100/ofr . Newport Exxon, 2121 75~1800, 87~223 Br1ttol, H.B. 56&-4071 &llPOllT·O.O. TO'a alnce 1949 • c-·1 2• Hour• 170--481' 12..... wamat Shr lrg home or condo, p 1 N toe 11 R s .... c •• -.. la1tnanta -ht laet deposit utlle r me ewport a on Obi. attter Nn/ ,.. 11•11•1•1• AKC LHASA APSOt ~79, 862-2449 below market. 700-200<.' RE. Broker 8d Reeltore .-.-• Ltvety, at11ctlon111 CHRISTMAS OIFTll l..111t rnod4ll Toyotu Ind e.r Cell 7 859·700C 642-2171 545-0611 •~---~ __ _....... ChooM your Chrtetmu s11ver1one 2 keyboard Vollloe. CellutTOOAYI
Male looklng for male to JoAnn __ WIDOW HAS US tor TO'e -_.,.. puppy now. Take home organ. 1160. 845-040
ahart home on Linde I . RE Loan• IOK Up No Ftbulou9 wortllng cond~ ell holld•y• $300 X103 lite, NB waterfront auaesa lealala 291' Cr-dlt Ch:......k. No Pen· llont. No exper nee. Wt u.1 51~~ 1---· ------
v "" train, -IChool CIRCUS "" • "° Oflict Fualtart a S.parlla bedroom. anc:t Retell store tt 2650 Avon atty Oennleon & AMOC MAXIMUS. 719 No. Her· AKC SHITZU PUPS •--i t I""" TOYOTA·YOUO balh. $800/mo. lncldr 11165 sq It plus 8 ca1 1173-7311 bor, Fullerton 87CMl192 Adorable mllel, 12 Wka. ., ... ,... 669 ltU..__ •••
u111111.. Cell 8111/oNlct garage 6" 1.9777 --------·~ ..._____ 12 __ .. ~ -~2•7..... ...., ••--s c .. 1e ...-. 95>3993 ---1194 I YUi TIEU "' .,.,...._, .... -.,.. _., _., -•r; P Mon-Sat SM Kelty 7 ..... '-, t•~ Pit a.JI"''"""' ••~t "---.ea s-... --. II\. '46-tJOJ • u .. uu Roommtto MIF needed tc Ctaal. laalala 2t11 S60,000 15% 3 yr note & ....... -· ...,, ,,......, ,.._ ........ _ ... ....
h 3 BR h I 2nd TO behind $78 000 & dog hOUH. PtdlgrM 9&2· 7033 • "' ouse n For Lease Ofllce and Bot•, lat on 1 • 150,'ooo I •• I II Costa M111 21 35 yn "' • w1p1pere .... ue ae LETTER-QUALITY PRINT· · -shop area 6600 sq It vacetlon nome In th• NO ~8500. ER for ~ei comput-Old $250 per mo. plut '" Cost• MN& $1782/mo Trinity Alp• Paye S750 ......... ~. ~1~:7~ de alt 8 PM Cell 8'\6-9358 mo Sell for $48.000 AKC OLD ENGLISH ere. BROTHER HR·1 ~-
I • I t 1 2920 (7 l4) 240~ 123 wttdye SHEEP 000 PUPPIES rllltl Xlnt cond lnatruc-
U .... , tenllH • alt. ta I I · (1119) 729-3049 evs/wtlnd UPEllEICE 1350. 97~ 1478 11 on m •nu a I S 7 7 5 $685 1900 It I d I I WIRE FOX TERRIER _T_'4_l_-84_oe _____ _
WI llY
USED CARS & TRUCKS
COME IN OR CALL FOR
FUI &PPUIUL
Cormier ·OeLlllo
01m1LET
Ill ltlllUI ...
SaJte..Setvloe-LMal"O
828 S. Euctkl Alie.
Fullerton
(l14)t1MllO
Open Sunday
S.,.._Servtc.Leulf\O
RJYCARVER
R. lli R.llCE · l:MW
MOB '78, 1oW ml ....
"4290 .
848-1217
0..1 tlll
'75 Sportewagon, c ... n •
good cond. Orlgln•I owner. 581-1248
Per1c~• t117
t.llSTER
NllOIE/1111
13831 Harbor BIYd.
Oerden Grove .........,.-l.alils
11 .... 11-1111
'll riii ""' 4 cyl, 4 •P••d trent,
AM·FM c•••· Grell
Tr1n1port1tlon (~). ... ,,nu
Theoclof9 Rot*1e Ford
2080 Harbor 81., C.M.
842.0010 640-8211
'79 Grenade Ohta, lull)
~.'4000. 846-06e8
'11,..mT•
You must .. tNt OMI
90 df1't poww tr.In ....
renty. (1EST850).
~r~~~~~~·~~r: olllc"t 18101 R~du~nrd~ ll~ + 4 II. Jilli 0n;_Ch.lrMl~erk1orttlnltge comFlrr': •20QFllJIM080' ~ .. year1 '>H2 PlaaH 60rt&at1221 844--038t Circle. Huntington $25,355 note eecured by v-• ..,. .._ ...
18211 BEACH BLVD
HUNTINGTON BEACH
141 -1011 ., ,..J -··•"' ..... , ''" '~"" '75 9118, new paint, rM-........ .,, .._ ... " ,,.,.,_,,,... tllllc green, Terge. tun-
... ,.21.,
Theodore Rot*le Ford
2080 Hllr1>cw Bl., C.M •
Beach 842-2834 TO on 1 unite In Long pany st• potltlont. 28 Conn Oroan
M_I F to snr 38r Exec 8Mch Behind $13.602. lmtnecUatt openlng9. Fut• M L--•l ''500/bett offer Ml-1111 842.0010 5'40-8211 '11 Iott ID td, 114.ooo. 87M025
Snrl lllnt exttrior, Int• '72 911T C4I' dk btu/blc, u..la IJU
r10t. eng nde wt!. 12700 lowered, 7'e, c .... u •. 070 4 Dr ,.. red/ bftcel
hOme, Back Bay, w/pool 1000 sf space w/OlllCf ahMd of $203,000. Wiii beneftU for bflghl, herd trC... II 557-9359
& frpk;. $250 mo. + utU on W 16th SI, CM pay off In 4 moe. Sen for wP~·.,..tl..:.... C . .,.., a aome •--=-n toll l.......,.lai 11-.-...1. t•"t 631-8220 645-9907 $21,500. 240-8t23; or ..... _ -!!!.! ~ -_. .,
NEW AOE EXEC will ahtrt lltfllt 2922 evvwknde 493-l lS:J. $14 400 WESTMINSTER ABBEY 1111 Utp A
780-0700 $8000/blt ofr. 7~ 1800, bet OoOcs t 87~223 · rww.
3 er furn Condo w10nt s s 12· 19·~·· --------AHTIQuE MALL lff Tll Prof ,.,.,M>n Female n.ef •oraoe pace x £ I I• ..._ ___ ___.t-.1...-11 lelh l!zet 1111 MSO. 846-0054
• !!!nm IU9 I -'Hi11e llS9-4524 .... door $70/mo pkn S70 •• tfll••t PER ' c•R 11751 Weetmlna1er Aw.
.._ MC depollt 873-4154 - -"""' GARDEN GROVE mUTI
Furnlahed Condo, Fe. o"""' Newport Beecl't. Btlt Wut.. Slot ce11 tor Appt Sun-Wed. 56'4-e103 Mother •hort of cuh
Br & Ba, HB area All AHletant Ins markellnn ___ 7_14_-"4-__ 63_5_•__ netde llza 10 wettlUlt to
emenlll•• $250/mo • lllllTat IMS I •1"1 her 6-yr.-old aon ott . •-ao•DCt•tDtl rep1, F&C tic pref. Send lllllE -I II 864-8029 °' 644-2583. nm R.tume 10 Claulfltd Ad n hi• eur no career. -••11 ••H F• FllMTllE Need for Sllt\lt 10 i..w Room In CM A.aatuctant1 3002 •887, Dally Pllol PO Box ~.._. ~ 497-7090 under th• lrH Call
$225/mo pkl• $50 utll 1580. Coat• MeH. Ca ~-· (Lh• la) 1 n 1 w • r e d • 5 7 8 .
84 l-4913 SCRAM-LETS 92827 Uc d nurte or Pllyctl tech Attll&acn toll 842-4300. 24 11r1. ~i:.;•,;:,.~•:d~
Newport B~tch Condo, BABYSITTE.R WANTED ICF-DD·H program for HARBOR A.REA • Price &. s.tectlon. Sl,
room 10 rtnt, pool, Jae ANSWERS For 2-yr-old boy. Pert/ children who have mufti-APPLIANCE SERVICE TV /WM/lier• IUZ OOO,OOO ln"91'1tory. tennis. 845--11168 I\ fUN Orne Referenoet re-pit handlcape 8 btd We ... I reoond., guer. ltll 11 __
Soothe. Muuet quired Call 845-0887 group homt Muralng epp11110C91. 540-3077 BEAUTIFUL 25" RCA ~ ,_ ~.hrc~;:~ ~ ~/~k; Admire. OppoM _a_n_._s_p_m_. ____ ctr•. mHI prep, ••••• Color TV. 2 yr wrnty J<>rang.e ... _ HISI"'"
... -•-nr SC Pl••• & Leaon . Pebble B•BYSITTER It I " eupervlelon. Expr. req I HY~ SHI Free delivery. (' t .-4 • ...-.. tr•-., AM/FM ..,.. """'""' -so••e.ONE ELSE " ' P or • "---'ltlw Ml'""' room ' -""1 81"" "----Sun 03S ......,.... _.., Celvary. 841-9656 ... mo. old. Loving Grand· .,...,,_. _,, ..... •0 • ~ .._, • ---,:_ -ot stereo tape pleyer wtltl
Definition of th• word moth tr t Y P• Rt I. :i:.=dd• ~.benef!Sola~•.· Wllher-Oeyer l1l&... TV .Jonn'a &4e-1788 .m•-•• tosrt •SA eutett• lepe & ouaton-
M/F to ahr beau1 Back polM: Polee le laug te2-4025 ,. _ __._ .,_ .. r-~ 't'o , Olthweatler t100 Magnavox 25" C<*>r TV, 111•1 ,_., •11 m •1 6u mt Whlate. (IMISYNE).
Bey condo Pool, Jae. a1 your very be11 toll --------._..,_ "'""'"' -·-6..t • .....,. •~• o:•H t ot t>Mu1ltul OILY •_.QI tennla. '300. 845-5123 when 11'1 t:>elog told b) BABYSITTER wanted, 2 M S.J.H Inc 7772 M• • .,..rig.-"" .,..........,_ ren'!Ole con r • '79 Ford F-350 1 Ion ..
..... W ~ --SOMEONEEt.SE. chlldren,myhome. drll9ne Wey, Cartabad. REFRIGERATOR c abinet SU5• CdM cu11omPU,PS,PB,blk, IUlllUll'IM I I Ian. .,_.. 5'4&-8401 Ca 9 2 0 0 8 . Ph e MW, frOl1 free 640-l980 aft 3PM. AM/FM atereo 8 Irk.
Y,.....,. Couple .... _ .. _. tc W.t A fea.. 2"4 ... --• 819/942-8832 11 . 1193-908( eunrl. cep, Kint cond 2900COSHerbot'T• M.,!M'· ~... ..._.... • ... ,_ E.0 .E. M/F/H ·-·ta $4000ofr.831~7211Tom ·-""111t"°A
l D[AlER IN U.S.A. "II IMll g.. l
~I~ ~ r:::'c~.'!i~ NJL.l.rN..../I~L more. (.288XHP) "Al-"41~_,,.r,...,, ... f MlU ;~:-:: Theodore~ Ford
2080 Hllr1>cw ~· 1978 Rolle . Sll\111 842.0010 11
Shadow/mint cond. Slit-
., wired IHthar. orig ...._ 12J1
owner. Cell 875-2311 Of ... -nu· .. 87~11 ..... ULll"
'74'h Sliver Shedow .,,, 71 ,...,. .,..._ -.. ..... sunroof. Excell. cond. ._, ~.......,
$29,190. (Mey tredt). :!/l=:';·eJz~
P.P. 780-1475 1EJU23e 81** 5 9')d ·n CMv OMw4tt l 187t ...... tll2
~ ••n• .....
111-1141 .....
0028U 4 epd, ..,
·~~
'71"""°H811880 ettuZD tuto .•. Pl
rent guett hou•e Ot ••on ,,.._. 11 ••• to 8 p•• model t.1.., blue/rr2•= .... ----------__.. • teperatt apertmenl "' ·rn "''"' .., OIL co••p•NY '"" •-f AA.AA • Would exchenge hol-. NIU'\ s to come to my hOme nr OPENtNGS ~ or. Runt good. 7! Pewer 7112 UI mw '73 1110 Wegon. 4 9'>d
dMnlng & yard work for f uunu AD MarlM H s Call t>eitore Offahor• rtoe Ho ""* ~ Spencer 44, xtra nk:it Aft· OWTllr 14$5.
1 Y•iklw!I!! tl!2
Buy -a..,. Tredl
4d W. Bay, C.M .
acroee from Aoblnl
Ford Pertt & ~ part of rant Rel'• 11 AM 893-830l nee Start lmmed. 135 C~~tlc !!, ~_p•t;•ke cenb, cntr cockpit Full 6'45-7578
869---0318 ARE fRE£ ooo + a yr. For Into cell Free te fn H22 ~~. 87~18?."· crutelng gHr Aver) BOOKKEEPER (3121 920-e3u ext ·-, 1175-8990 ..... 87~895 "' u1111 u11
w11n1 2 Br. wor111ng 1aoy Cal·. f•• 1 -·••• 2239B,.. Llf••• • UI ...., 38• Chrl• cre11 com· •-tl GOOD COND. 13905. Need FI b 1 UP t o ._ _ _, --mender 1979 twin dleMI IUI .... , 8'0-2878
$450/mo 831-7048 Ml·Hll Our growing Co need• OIL CO. OFFERS ucel Allecl~t~~~ I 119,000 or olfar Cla11lct t049 .70 DATSUN 510. o\Od N'trpt/CM .,... bookkeeper who hu lent opportunity'°' high puppy,_.,......,...,,,. 646-e015
compt1tnce through Income, aecurUy. CHI' 8-42--0100 te9--1221r--------1111 &lllU cond. S1200. Beat offer
Carlttl m a .. t 2tl2 ~~~~~~~~ OenMal Ledger Ind Trial bonu1H, benefit I IC Sall 7814 SJ>Mdeter repllc.. The Lindi 6'$-439S __
$55 tingle garage, eafe & Lott C.M . Baker/ Paula-Balance. Quarterly CPA mature peraon In Ofenot fualtut 1t25 llUJll na llOI motl ~t con.,,.,.itblt =·~ ~;;_~'fa1st ~":'n. F~h~~~":~~.~: :!:=on~:;~ ~~.~~ **I BUY** FOR SALE :::~.1··" 12018). wu Ferrari tlll
862-7«2 AEWAROt Ilona Huntington Har-Read, Americ:at\ Lubrl· 842-4844, M-F, 0-5 •W S~l 00 llUU IH<'i Ooubl• garage. Cefl bou r-.._ cantt Box eta .._..on • et0fegtonly.$75mo.310 Lost. Sm Blk Terri X r tocatlon ru".,..... ' '~P • Good uMd Furniture & Sebol with Mii• & oars Theodor• Ford •Y llTIMIDI Av oc• do St . CM. Mele Lo1t 12-13 Vic nelila. Mr Reynold• at Ohio 45'4101 . Slrel~ht ~RI wlll Mti M UST SELL $350 2080 Harbor 81. C.M. FE••••1
'"'1·2177 Atlanta/ M-noHa. Re-Red Balloon LTD/South commlu on bulld ng or 8E1.L f« You 76IMXMIO 842 ""10 5'40-8211 .,.....
.,.. ward 988.11352 Coa•t Tredlng Co. Call product ""'· 11&11111 lH1111 ..,., NU f""t
otfin lntala itl4 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiljij 8<4&-0011. 84&-3024 for PAIT 'NII HI llll Ul-tu lllp a Dec•• 7022 '"4 ..... lff4e4 ~-------~~ llWPtlT BTU LOST melt BLACK/ Interview E.,.. and/or __.endt I BOAT SUPS AVAILABLE 1948 Ford Woody Wa-
WHITE SHITZU YIC BREAKFAST COOK Reeponelbll edutta. °"" I HY FWlnlll Newport Baedl 25', 28'. Qon, S13.000.
'87 VW 8quarebac*, AMI
FM .eereo. Good concs-
t Ion 11900 080
561·5'4i2
'IMI VW BUG. RaAN good.
'850/obo. Cell
5'4~7158 Jim
,.... tl!I #,, .........
lllrMn.....,S ~-,,,
A/tO'y Brown e.g..2913
:."'m~·.. Avocedo/ waterfront Xlnt benefit• Apply In 21, wtth outtlandlng at· L• 957-8133 30', 35', 40', a 45' Cel -_.,. CdM. 12· 18/82 RE · perM>n ONLY. Jolly Rog-trlC1111e penonalltlel tc 8'42·4844 from 9-5 1929 Ford Model A Town
$650 .Fum/unfum WARD 1175-4455 tr Reeteuranl. 2300 work with youth (ag" 2 eotld oek delk1, 1 ere-Mon-Fri. S • d • n , S 10 ,0 0 0 . -----~,,---,
AN you need for one Herbor Blvd. Colla 10-14). Cell 2-&PM clenu. 4 cMlrt. Debby 81101 Avall Huntlnglor _8_7_5_-e_1_8_1. ____ _ ~.
monlhlyfeel FOUND Young F/Oolden Mesa. 842-4321, ut 3~8 842-3578 Harbour Bey , O~ '113 Thunderbird, Mini
840-$4TO Lab. vie Harbor/Wlleon COUNT€A HELP'°' cat.. E.O.E. KlnQ tlz9weterbtd. Maplit ~5645 M&-778&, 8-9 Condition. S2395. To be --------&ates ......... •Hlm "'1Cf11t cenler Owner Identity terla styl• ret1euran1. PUT~ wlbook""'-Belt Of. P M , 8 4 O • 4 O 9 1 -et Newport Exxon. ..... tl-
l MO. FREE RENT coUlr.e.4&-3810 RecketBall/HMtthClub nulWiOIJllS ter.857·5088NttyA.M 714/8'0-78711 2121 Brletol , N .B -..... tJf!
1 room to 2800 sq. rt In IN!ne. Mon apllt """· or _..1nge. f Rent 20 30 40' boa' 558-4079 -•r•t '11--at From 11.18 a eq. It AdJ S1UU ..... ltd~ Tuu lhru Fri evee Make llltra I$ helplng Dinette Set. tll wood Ir ~ ....... Fun ~ Balbot 1941 CADILLAC Wt can help! Before YQll -
Alrporter Inn & Frwyw _.., 973-083&. youth carrlef• e><omott .......,. cond. I 1110. ~--•---1·~ --~ Mdl 81 2 dr mint "' ~ etleck our unbeet· Tlllt °"' "-low mlll 1
Cell AM 833-3223 •lellllf tf 1 lti. I CUSTOMER SERVICE their own Htlbllehec:t _..... .,41111 ,88 con'"'.,,':'! -;::1-71•· 1 .--• • ' or.,.. It very aharpl tO di)
• l t routM. Mature. outgo-" -•--,_., ....-•uto. radio, 83·000 ml • .-.ctlon, Mlllnge pow.r tr•ln w•rrenty
1817 w .. 1cttff, N.B 25&
to 4000 eq. rt. 1tl. floor
Agent 5.t 1•5032 ==---
,..,.. • ••• ,. • Expanding NB Crtdll Ing, •1111C11YI parental Smell Ratllln dtek "'· 3 PIER: 2en •1001mo, lldt '8500. 84~1 and~~ (1AOTM4). S.Mtt.. llWAll Ctrd Co. hll position 1ype pereon. p1eue call plecH. D k • -----..a lllVllllT'f .. •t ••.11•• 842.e&17 or &4e-7478 open In CUltom« eerv. 2-5PM. M-F. 842-4321. • • b I •. ;·1 2 ~~-~ o' 111 " 175/mo. MtrCIJf ...... a.-·~ -
dtpt. Appllcant mu11 nt. w . 548-6488 Channel 85().8l45 Alla..... tits UllS I Ill• Theodore Aotler'8 Ford
LEARANCE
SALE!
1979 CADILLAC
COUPI DI VILLI
(1CMYSO)
$8995.
••
!!"'-IT__._. Lo1t: On Balbo• lel, rw. _.,_ 12121, gold brecete1
With uae of reception. OtMt Mntlmentel value ex>nf. roorn.kttotl,phone. Atwlird. 840-2497
MCl'etlrlat a wor-d pro---------Ollllng. Mall a meaeege Found· malt Springer
~ .:=:: REAL ESTATE Mattr_. S.ta. twin S80 lttr!J• JU4 LUii A 1111 2~~E:cs· .=,~ ~11
consclentloue & 1111-Seleemlln. Netd 1 _.,. lull 185, quHn I 105 DRY ST()RAl'C ALIA .... Im 140-IMO W111ac NII 1981 CADILLAC
motivated exp. pref rienctd peraon In com-king S125. 750-5832 ~ •••l -PUITWOOD
Contact W Duncen. merclel & lnduttrlel l'MI Monthly boat etor'ie • 1111 1111& 1M W1111' OUOH•M CCMR
.-v. 111911. eeperately 11 8peni.t, 18th it. area,
Mon-Fri, 8 am · 4:30 pm ettatt fOf 8 ~ & ltu •-eny .U., 24 hr MOUrfty &.57 plu1 tax pet month 1 .. J ... •IPI .....aM II~
75t-7GOO growing firm. wHt Hltl fret lau~~ for 48 monll'ta on •P· .. l.S9,... (18WU151) &.. "'°'1!1ng oondlllone •--'L mP11J... proved credit Cep H" In _,lomatlc: trw of late model, low m-. 114 995 IEOll&Till Ul.U In Newpor1 Buch l!pl!!! ..-sa co st -11_~.l~oo 00; &. ONLY lO,ltt mllH' •oe C•dllltCI In IOU· ,
PIT. FIT, !tint commit.., 714/&4e-5051 llMtrte w 1111 ..-.., ". reelduel-$-.M; total (lBIC~T). """' ~ See ua
dealrtd. Cell: Jene. C.M. 845-0511
11•necM>100 p,,...ie Jill
DHmft llfTll fllll\I~ CIDCUS wortt In OC. Mu.I he"9 IMI htllte hHlt Hldt+bed, couchH. ......fl of pc)"Ml ... 17,884.11 ., 14111 today1
Full ~. Keep you• ftRl\AH I\ =-~~9C04or. wff1 trllln. Leem how 10 ~.. kitchen and houtehOlo To atlll'1 ..._(lit month UlllS ... UI 111111 ~ low & profel. OIK trlllnlno wlll OIW you mlec. 1444 w. Bey A.Ye. RV & BOAT & llcenH)·UU.42 HOO Hll'bOt ltvd. u~aaL• Jll ltonel lmege high. p,.... Maxillls DECORATOR Ass1sT· ""11~ you need, aun. ~5. 873-~ 102560). s-"' NOw1 C08TA MUA ---~ .. ~ W~ ... of FUii °'Pit, t1e1r for dee. anO our 1n.nouM pro-J ,_ Ill DRY SJnD1Gf Wll ...-n ... 1MI HOO Harbor IMS. Newport B11ch. 181 MltHge Ptrlor Oor Exit pey. Cell fOf' Inter· leott wlll 01..,. you tht m, 4 """ 841oa..,.8tNet COSTA MESA 'l._~• ...... ~,or . Ste. 14, ~f=~i~~ YM!wl36-8t88 pro0uc1. EmeJalda; Rublee, 81p. .. ,.,..... NEWPORTB!ACH 'll llll&lftl •••1111 -----------1 AM.7 dtiyW a week. Fr .. Dental 850-1940 .,...., etc. et wtlol.... Wet 8oet...,. 111..... ~· MO ttw. r9Cllo, __ .... _____ _ IELIJE SllTE buffet. 710 No Herbo Experienced A.0 .A. R tiofis p r loee or below! 1Yaltet>lellto. AUi tlrJ _. ... tt.(eotzL\). 9'!1!1!! pH
ltvd, Fuu.ton neeclecl for OrthOdonUc eceP. t a..o.ttla • AIU -.. _, 12111 ·-....... •*' frHt at.I. 11WlM1t• prac:dce In M-..on Vlefo '71 5000, 1unroof1 full Tlleodcn Aoblnl FofO ..a r ... 11 ~~.~:.:::-::!. ~~i~ri =-=~t"f.No ~~0~,•~l;;m.:'~111111111 .:::-... ~. J)OWlf.:rs:.:!~411' .=,~~11 ri:n~H~r:=
OFFICE SPACE FORr-.. -T'l-.. --IT-.. -,,,-*-ff.:i.!LIOeneerequlred. ~~1:.011
or ~.~ 30 !!!M""' 111-1n1 ...... ti! ·n Accord~ e a..w ....
LEA81!. 700 1q ft, "'" 24 ht Outc:all Me.I CIC'• 1:'f P:nt'f.~J°">· R11ldent Manaoer for hlloont. ~ tot all 3too 4~•mlft11. ' CONNELL
(•~fVllOlP ~toe. e.48-7721 ....,.1.. I--;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-;;,;~:;;;--wornena ~ r9flebll. ooo•etona I holld1y1. flllllltlltita ·ee Auetln HMjey IOC>Or---·------~ llMU arm tatlon pr09ram. GOOd Oe llv.r•O enytlme. -----r90lng medllne at200 ..... IHI a11m. WU No hptrlenoe Aeq. ~·""·•••MY op~. t7t-441t c.m Hl4 -
2Ahouf9·Cllll35-t18' Malle up to SUllH Celll41H4t CAAi i1001 TAUCKI 41tatc.moet,10W,wttt '73 M.wtln Mam.. Mint
lt•rtlnQ P•Y· Full/Pert ~ KouleliMPlincl 17111 Avelt•l>Je •t IOCll IW'dr.-0 llfta . .....,.. Condttlort. t2000
Umt .wilt. In our ~ iuendant neecMct. Thi ti o v ' I ea I•• • O a I I IHO. Oernper Jaoke
cation. Oall today for Tow•re AHi, turf t ( r • f u n d • b I •) Mo. appt 137·2810 KING IMd Hotel • ..,.. liPeell \..(J111·H1·Ht7 tal JU-1111 ln~ll•fl. Cell Donne 22* for )'O'W ~I===-----~ i~;;~iiiiiiii= ~ • '"......., '" ••~••· on floW t.o puroflW. 24'-\IUIMll!L--.a,. tnoome. 8ALH ~OPLI neededl-"'*--------111
T60-T3n p•rMlm• or ful~·-•!m_•J fl .. ,,_ pltlowe OIMned, bl*~ Tr~ 1..oen 111C1f1 PoMnlll w/'lffNIWI ••nlttaed. N•w Down•
PrOQMOr. Mu•• have fir ~. F0t more Info t~ Uoktno lncl'd. exp1rt111 In 'HA/VA Olll '11~1Mf 1 ___ 70.._ ___ _
Pf~. Xlnt......... llCMTA"Y ITAl'P Alo ~~m~ ll9Ttofter1~
714-7»oe1t In 8 f9lt ~ _.. atlftOaPf*t, ..,_, ftMI.
Oonttct lh•ll~ (714,1...;""Ni~;:-::;:==:="'~ MT.... I
Fer Ad Action
' .
.... ~ ~ ~11'1
1979 CADIUAC
ILDOIADO COUPI
AITIGaOOf
(2UVU)
$11,995
1981 CADILLAC
ILDOUDO
llARlfTZ (1ASGM1)
$15,995
1980 CADILLAC
ILDOl.ADO cou"
(IACl71Ct)
s12,995
1979 CADILLAC ICY1LU •
~VPSJ
111,495
' ' CMON •• 1 LI.
SMOW VOV
AND TME 1100F PRINTS FROM
THE ~EINDEE~ .. SEE ? R16HT
ALON6 MERE ..•
AND NOW '(OU CAN SEE
WMERE !MEY ENC' ••• nus
IS f'R08A9LY WMERE THEY
TOOK OFF INTO TME AIR .•.
OL' -5AMTA JUST.. COUL"~'T
CARE L~_ASOUT AN
IN NOC ENT LITTLE SU~P.
AND A FAITMFUL D06 ••• .
BUT, AUNT FRITZI,
I'M NOT 5LEEPY
TRY COUNTINCT
5HEEP
'
1
ON CHRISTMAS EVE ~E ~AD TO FLY
ALL OVER ntE WORLD DROPPIN6 PRESENTS
DOWN CMlMNEYS FOR AU. TME K105
12-Z6
I'M AFRAID HE'S VONE 8ACk.
TO THE ~TH A:XE. eo'wS.
.: .
i
• . .. .
~ . . .
~ •
'; .. . •
_ ...
1 I
j
I
1H~E 'S A lOT TO SEE
AND DO HERE AT DfSNfgLJ\NO ...
D~O'\or /~I\~~ OFF WE'RE DUE m MEEI SACK
DC.rV"C. '"1'\.JU .,,,~ ) ' LJ~PE IW" "TJ.IE 8055~.C.. IN ~·· FORGE.T 4'• ric;I' ,., I t;...J HAlF AN HOUR !
MOON MULLINS b Ferd and To111 Johnson
~----
SHRE WD, WHAT'D PRETTY SHREWD,
IHS WAY you GOT
AROUND GIVING LADY
PLLJSHBOTTOM A
PRESENT YESTERDAY, -
LORD P.
UA t WISH I 'r>
SEEN 1'~,AT .'
HEl-Lq DEAR··
.JUST SHOWIN~
MooN MY .
CHRISTMAS
<ilfTTCYo
\\.:· ..
BUT H~Do?
CMl:AP!
~· . ~ ..
DOCTOR SMOCK .. By GeorQe LemOnt
SIF(, w1-rH
"T" .... e CCVI t...IAN F'OPOL-A"lf Ot-J
INCRSASIN<S 90 SL-OWL-Y
i -rHese PAYS •••
WHY C'O "T"He
ME:PtCAl-SCHOOL-S
Ke;:eF' CRANKIN''
ou-r MORe AN"
MORES C'OC"T"'ORS
ESYESRY Ye:AR ~
'trHA"l'S . I A cSOOP ..
QLJESS"llON!
'
-ne A POu:-ro ONE: t?l\Jt7 AN~
A HOOK101HE ~ eNt7 ANP rr CA1'CH~ FISH:
.,. Hf: V.Ortf-rl:l..L ME
WHICH el\ltl 1011£::
1-0 WHICH .
I •
• ~ • l: .. c 1 .... ... . . '
, .. ~'''"~' -·-• .. tiV.d' .., .. , .... t• ~•'t'4\Y ~ 1•-0".-u \• A,pag c .1.t1"°"' '' O..t '"•d c Ui1•w1''1u•td t ~~>u•,•u•o
,AltTYOAMI
llNGSllLL
Try thl' \tunt ,,, • ...,.. ''*" or out ... W.,_,. ther• It
~breahbl••nd
loft of room to move .,.,,,., Ask guHts to
ff'.sp Nnds and form
• 11"1. Ti.• small '&ell to tM wl4tt of the last
perMn I" tM I I ne
Now, wttftovt lelt•nt
goef ~,,._,Invite the
flrtt pertOn In fine to
try Intl c•tch up w1 th ..... ..,, fMr'Mn •ncl
ring the bell The ,,_,
son w ith the bell. of
courM, ettempts to
ktep hi s or h•r
dlstence ea gr .. t •• SKY WATCHI Whlf1 toint on lft tlMct eboVef To find tut.
possible connect st•r dots with missing linH from I to 2 to J, •tc.
For Better .or For Worse
CG>~e.oN,
'/OUTWO-
IT'S.
BEDliMe.l
-· .
by Ljnn Johnston
AW, DRDD'/ ! -
NoTYe..-r~
GORDO
One Grand rize!
r; ,go rirst rizes~
., ('! ve ryone Gan
et a Cash .Rebate!
,,
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==.-,
Are JVCl comfortllble wttb
1'0'I" 9Cl"em ~ -A.C., JoBd. ID.
I suppose most people see me
as sexy, blond and kind of
fun. but not a great actress. I
am oombrtable with that I
like being liked I don't want
to be rontroverSal or have
anyone see my movies out of
curiosaly. I don't think of
myself a.s a great actress -
good. perhaps. but not sreaf.
Aa die .. .,.. al •
.... p1odlMB', ... ,..,. ..... alaperimeee wYe tipf-J.a..
Aa&iwa,
Aa a ftnt grader. I looked out
my bedroom window one
momlng and saw a m<>Mer •arms at me. t fted down the
stain to the kitchen. yelli~ !O my moth~ "There's a Di&
moruiter In our yard!" She was
busy mlxlng somelhlna red ln
a bowl and abeentmindedJy
repUed, "Yes dear." Her c.alm-
nesa relaxed me and I asked,
"What are you mlxlna?"
"Blood, darllna." she
aoswem1. I INl'Jlfd later that
my father wu "'mCa horror movte In oor . The
mon«er wu a lnosaur and
the "blood" was to be
lmelr'ed on one of lta vk:tlms.
YOURSELF
Send Ill« quatlon. on a potltOrd, ro ""Aak," FamJly Wnldy, 641 Lexlnf"O" Ao« . N.w Yoric. Ny 10022 141«'11 pay JS for publilMd quation.9 .so.rv. IH COii i ON&HT Of.Mn
John Boy m IM john· Thomas malfo a dftJn bmlJt from IM
Watons to fill rok ol surger Honll Wi/llams Jr. in TV blO.
RtOMTm ,, AllC" ...... nmi.iOll ....
llUSIC N011& Look for ltlchM-d,........ to shed his
"John Boy," milk and mokies
Im~ In LJvinB Proof. the u~
a>mll18 1V bk> of oountry
singer Hmk w.... Jr.
The llory of booze, pills and
anempeed suicide is a Iona
way from Walton's Mountain
Thomas even does aome of
the linaina -Hank Jr.
hlmaelf ihe -Fell .... Are 11M
llolllaa 9tOOtl9 startlna to gather ITIOll? Their recent
ltallan tour failed to Uve up to
pt!dk:tlonJ, and It'• whlJ.
pettd thlf their three ooncetts
left them ln the red by a half.
million dollars . . . Remem-
ber 1be B ...... clas.sic
9008. "A Day In the Life"?
We'll soon get a chance to see
a l\ctional day In Pml Mo-
Cartaey's llfe. That'• the sub-
fed of a new feature--length
film Gue My Regards to
Broad Street that Mc:Cartney
recently began filming in Lon-
don. Also stanii:!B. wife Unda
E....., and K1nto Starr.
the movie will indude music
by The Beatles. Wings and
solo McCartney. . . RESO.
Uf110NS: from this ~
ment on. Pb,m. Geone.
sportscaster. former Miss
America and wile of Kentudcy
Governor John Y. Brown. will
think thin and try to stay thin
That's because in Februal}'
she's oomin$ out with The I
lwe Ammco Diet (to be
published by WiUiam Mor·
row) and resolves to be a fit·
ting ad for it .... Aulhor·lV
pmonality ....... HoWll'
vows that she will no longer
panic about the economy and
will stop menUonin8 calories: ''Finances and weight are all
people discuss these days.
Whatever happened to spicy
small talkr' ... NeD c.ter.
star of 1Vs Gimm~ a Bttalt.
swears, "I will not do any
more hard cro.wword puzzles,
part-tlme brain· surgery -or
windows." ... ICatbryn
Croeb)' (widow of Bing) will
pradlce, pnKtice, practke, IO
lhe can play in the ~
Golf 10\Jmament In February
without emblrrasstng 10n Nao-
•het"l the nlllon's top am•
teur golfer. Wonden Kathy:
"Why ls It that It's O.K. br
c:tiUdren to emblnul thelr
partnts. bW not the other way
ilound?''
star ofl'he Flghtet. on upcommR 7'
m()(M
With wbkb actJ eee do
yoa moll w...a to work? -
F.G.. fort Smida. Ark.
Vanessa RedaJave. She is one
of the finest actresses I've ever
watched. I have never seen
her give anything but a per·
feet pertormance. and I am
always moved by her work
What I say probably won't sit
well with those concerned
with her extracurricular ac-
tivities, but I don't j\Jd8e the
rest of her life.
-•••wan, ~and otllhM of FMnds In HW\ P\aca (MocmllonJ
Mea'• fublou rarely
cb•DI• bat womea '•
~ .... ~~;~
s.o.
I true that changes In
men'• fuhlons are more sut>
tie. Fuhlon editors assume
that women can be taken for
a ride -and unhappUy, they
are often rtaht. Much of the women'• fllhion nonten1e
that emerses annually from
Europe II only there to
"hype'' the Ucensln11 of Eu~
pean de9i1ner names In the
American mvtet.'
Cooper: Let me start by tallong about
leadership. With you and Gerafd Ford
and Jimmy Carter. we have three lo~
Presidents. How would you suggest that
we "exploit" that leadership experi-
ence?
Nboa: WeJl. many have suggested tha&
the United States should adopt a provi-
sion. which seems to be In effect in
some other oounlries. that former Pr&
dents become lifetime members of the
Senare. Knowing the Senate. howiev~
that rather exdusive body isn't about to
~ IO that. There is, however, a pre>
vision. I think in the Senate rules now.
which allows for a bmer President to
address the Senate. If he chooses.. on
some occasion. Now none of the former
Presidents has ever done that yet and
maybe the ice will be broken sometime
on a major issue. I don't know. Certainly
the experience of former Presidents.
apart from the fact that they are in diJ.
terent parties and have different views.
is a national asset. I'd say, particulatlY.
their experience in k>reign policy. I don t
think there's any way that you can use
former Presidents effectively on
domestic policy. becaa•• those issues
are too divtsive. On the other hand. in
the fteld of lorelgn policy -the Middle
East. China. Russia. etc. -generally
your former Presidents, while disagree-
ing in some details. perhaps, do not
think parochially, they think inter-
nationally, they think gSobal~n
that cue It would seem any · 1,
be he RepubUcan or Democrat, lhould
lap that kind of expertise. Howev~ it's
up.to the Presidents to do it.
Q: Are you cxmamed about reports re-
OMlly of 1 thaw in Sino&viet relations?
Nbrcm: I am c:onciemed, but I am not
pesa&milllc. I mean if we're not con-
Cl!l'Md, wre stup6d. I know there are
thole who say thal It doesn't make any
dllterence whit the U.S. does ln lta rela-
tk>nlwtth Peklna, betauaetheyhaveno
ocher plMle to go. But don't ldd younclt
• FA111U W11D01 • OllCDellt a. ••
en years after he was re-elected President and eight
years aft~r the W~tergate scarydal f~rced him to resign
the Presidency, Richard M. Nixon 1s becoming increas-
ingly visible. He has appeared on network tefevision to
anaixze the recent midterm elections and discuss his
new book. leaders (published by Warner Books). He
. was the host of a black-tie dinner for 200 ~pie in
Washington. D.C., to commemorate his 1972 Presidential election.
And '.'ecently, in his New York City offices, Nixon, who turns 70 on
Jan. 9, talked with FAMILY WEEKLY Editor Arthur Cooper about
Presidential politics, foreign affairs, Watergate and himself.
they have another place to go. They
oould move back to a relltionshjp with
the Russians if they (live ue on us. That
Is why our handling of the Taiwan ilaue
-while we should always stand by~
wan -has f:>t to be worked out ln a
way that does not Irritate the Chlnae to
the ix>'nt where I.hey say. "Well, ~will tum e!sewhere for our future." They
oouJd tum back to the R\llllanl, and the
whole bllanoe -d power In the world
would chanae. We have to bear In mind
th• my trip to Chlna In 1972 chanted
the blllnCle ore.rraverytmponant that it not be beck;
However, when ~ rm not ~
, mlttk I mean by that 1hlt the O\lMle
~-th• whUe ~ UIUll~ In
their public statements. talk about two
Weal superpowers, the US. and the
SOviet Union. as if each was as bad as
the othet they know very well -and
thm CXJrneS through in private oonvma-
dons -th• the Soviet Union threatens
them and h• desfar\I on them. and that we don't Thlt'a t.fie difference. And 11
Iona 11 we do noc take them for granted an4 tJy to deveop better ea>non\k ft!la.
dona, make It worthwhile tor them to
look Well lither than North 10 the
Sovietl. rm not conc:emed.
Qs Ate )IOU pemmbllc •bout our rel•
donl wkh MOlcoWl
...... Pi ...... ~ of coune.
hll beal atidlld for .. ~ IN>
Moscow rhetoric and particularly in has
last European trip. Again. I think that
we've got to look beyond the rhetoric.
The interests of both the SoV1et Union
and the United States demand that they
find a way to have a live-and-tet·live
policy. I mean we can talk very loosely
about nuclear war, but those in Moscow
and those in Washington know that if ii
comes. it will have clisa.strous oonse-
quen<:e5 for both countries and for the
world. Now belinning with what is
possible. I think that it is essential for
President Reasan and [Yuri Andropov)
to meet next year. I think it's vitally (m.
portant at the meeting that they aa ~
reduce. to the greatest extent poiatble.
the fador of war ooming through miscal-
culation. The seoond point Is that, ln buUding a
more peaeeful wortd. arms control has
got to be on the aQenda. And while tt' 1 a
vety. v~rv difficult thi!l8 to negotJate. I
think that President R.eapn will have
set the table tor U by a strong rebuilding
of our own defien.ses so that Moecow will
realize now that they aren't aoma to
have it all their own way; lhal iI theie ts
an arms race. that they're 80'"8 to k>le.
Let me say that those wdl-inten-
tioned people. who flett that If we just
froze nuclear weapons, then that would
oontribute to arms oontrol, they're jult
out ol their minds. I know the Russians.
and you can't set anything from them
unlesa you have something to give. And
under these dn:umstances, I think it's
vay Important tor us to make ii dear to
them th• we're ready to ~e. U
we're ~ to limit or freeze or wh•· ~ 11 s IPina to be tt ~ levels. Which it Would not be IS ol today.
Qt Would )'OU like to return 10 publk lite
-at, -.y, an ambulldor Of ln a:>me ocher llgnlbn& role?
..... No. l feel that .... former.,_
dent1 my molt utelul role ii to be ,.._
endtn~ofMy~b
the~ op11ition ol an lril~
or what have you. I do travel some: rm
able to write and speak on occasion
And rm totally free to say Whal I
believe I'm not running ror office; rm
not seeking any office; and I have no ob-
li~ations to any office. And I think that
kind of freedom is imponant. so I prefer
that.
Q: You have said you expect President
Reagan to be re-deded in 1984 But if
he chooses not to run again. is there a
Republican that you would like to see as
a candidate?
Nm.: Weil. rm not going to go be-
yond predid1ng what I think will hap-
pen for the reason that. the moment I
start to speculate about who would run
if he didn't, thar's going to open the
door. Let me be quite direct. I think
President Reaaan is the only man who
can keep the Republican Party tOlldhet
I think he will run because his ft'e,aean
Revolution will not have been co~
pleted by 1984. I think he will recogmze
that if he does not run or the Republi-
cans do not wiO in '84. then his attempt
to tum the count.ry around. to build a
new prosperity based on low inflation.
will have failed And the country will re-
vert to the policies of the past. I'm put·
ting it the way I think he sees It. So
under the circumstances. I thjnk he will
run and I think he should. I think he
should. I think he will and I think he will
win
Q: And who will President Reagan run
aeainst?
Nixon: Teddy Kennedy has said he
won't run But in this vola1tle poht1cal
climate. it 's always possible that he
might change htS mind. II he does. I
think that he will be an odds-On favo-
rite to win the Democratic nomination.
Now. the others who are in the run-
ning -and I think these are the only
ones who will be considered -I would
say that it's going to be either Kennedy
or. possibly, Mondale. A dark horse is
John Glenn. And I don't believe there
is anybody else on the scene who can
make a realty strong race for it. There s
no Democratic governor or any candJ·
dates around the country that I can see
who could do what Carter did an 1976. I
thmk the Carter phenomenon was a once-in-a~tury development. and I
don't 1hlnk it's going to happen
again
As you look over the Senate today as
coml)Mtd with what it wa.1 when I came
to Washi~on 37 yean 9 , _pr even 10
yffrs aso. when we had lfle likes of
ark9en there and Lyndon John10n. and so lorth. further back.. there are 00( many
interesting people. There just aren't.
Some of them are fine senators and
they're very responsible and to forth, but
they're not lntcrestlng.
Qt You've written in your book th• ~ the end of the century we wut
probM>fy elect I ~ to the Vice
Presidency. and pc>Mibly to the Presi-
dency. Is there some female political
timber on the landscape now?
Nboo: I don't see any women in the
House or the Senate at the present time
who have what Qare Boothe Luce had,
for example, back in 1952 When I was
nominated for Vice President. She was
mentioned then as a potential candi-
date. but it was too early ror a woman to
be seriously considered. If Oare Boothe
Luce were on the scene today, she· d be
on the Republican ticket next time, rm
sure. Because she was exciting. she was
intelligent. she was controvet"5lal. she
was interesting. And above everything
else an politics. let's understand that a lot
of things are important -brains and
character, etc., etc. -but the most im-
portant thing is not to be dull. particu-
larly m this ~ of television and mass
communication and so forth. People
jus ... they don't want to necessarily
see freaks, but they want to see people
that are exdtlna,
QJ What about the Nixon daughters?
Ntaa: Well they are . . they rnwrally
are. both Julie and 'llisha. they' rt very ~ Of COUl'le I would !11.'f that be-c:.auae they take after their mother. But
on the other hand. neither of them has
any political aspir•ions at this ttme. So
ltt me oome back to )'OU' quesllon. If ln d\s Senaat or the ffouse, one of me
women there, Republican or Dernocnit.
rbesabovethePICk. teim an IMUeand
becomes a nlldonal flaure, lhe hit 1
wry aood chance ol be1na tlkm on the
ticket. Because . you take President
Reagan. One of his major ~
today is weakness among women. And I
don't know that a woman as Vice Prest-
dent would rectify that There are many
who think 11 would hurt. because they
say women don't vote for women. But
frankly, I'd gamble on it. if you could get
a toi>-ftight woman to run. A woman for
example -and there are not any like
her at the moment -like Margaret
Thatcher. If a Margaret Thatcher were to
come alof\8 in the United States. she
could be a candidale not only for VIC'e
President. she could be a candidate for
President Ifs going to oome-I'm sure
of it.
Q: You've also wnnen in the book that
sometimes a leader has to dissemble in
order to prevail on ouciaJ issues. Can
you give an example of when a leader
has to lie?
Nbom Well, I think we have to define
what a Ue is. A lie can be just simply an
outright moral defect. where somebody
Just cannot be trulled. ~ on the other
hand. It may be In th• very lM>ecwten
ground. where a leader cannot divu)8e
wh• he knows beat ... of larger Jn.
terest.s that he mua ~ or m09l ~
tually. by whlll he MY.I-drtve ~
off the path of wh• he Is attemptln& to
do. I think the belt example I can a1ve ls
our Otlna lnltllttve. Ow Chlna lnitta-
tlve ln 1972 c:oold never have oome oft u. between Henry KlMinaer and m}'leJf.
we had not toaedl~ .~ refuled to tell memben of tM HouM. and plltku-llrlY members of the Sena. members
of the media and lortiF pemmenu
with whom we were dealing. that it was
going on. And a lot of them 80C their
noses out of joint as a result. In fact we
not only didn't tell them. but we had to
deny that anything was going on, even
though we knew something was going
on. Now why did we do that? The reason
is that we felt it was vitally important to
bring off the initiative. and we knew that
the Chinese -if it ever leaked -that
the Chinese might blow it. because they
were very sensitive .... Let's under-
stand, the Chinese were very CX>Ocemed
about not havtng anything public ~
cause there was grear opposit10n in
Chma to what Chou £n.lai was doing.
They were concerned also about the
relations with the Russians . . so you
talk about lying. We were right on
target ... Henry Kissinger, we had to ~
him into China for a secret meeting with
Chou Errlai and Mao Tse-tung. So I had
him go ovet' to Afshanistan. And frank·
ly, our press secretary. his press seer~
tary, the State Department. m1Sled the
press and said he was in Afshanistan for
the pwpo6e of an important meeting
Then he dropped out of sight in
AfRhanistan, and we were asked.
"Where is her· and we said. "Well. he
had a stomach ache. He had the ftu ...
and so on. Now. an}'bodr, lookina at that
said, "That was untrue. ' So was that a
he in an immoral sense? I don't think so.
Because I think it was very important for
Kissinser to get to Peking and for us to
find a way. a cover. so to speak. And all
the time we have covers of that son.
And rm sure that it will be in the future.
So it has to be judged In terms of what
you're trying to accomplish
If you just lie and as a result ... for
purposes of misleading the public and
taking them down the path that they
shouldn't go. that's one thing. But this 1$
somethina e!se.
Q: l.e('s talk about the public persona
and the private person. Is there any-
thing about the public perception of
Rkhard Nixon that you disagree with
and would like to correct?
Nbm: Well, I don't think I could prot>
ably. . would try to ooma anythlf\s by
just making what would be a self-RrV-lns ttatement .... f have aeneraJly
found that if!\ far more effeCtfve tor
others -be they friends or even fair-
m!nded historians or commentators or
pundits. etc. -for them to correct lm-
prusions that may be unfalt. ra&h«
than for an lndMduaL Nobody is QDins
to befJeve a publk figure when he tries
to talk or writ~ hls way into h~ Now
W1naon Oiurdttll was an ~n.
win.on Oiurd\lll often said. "Hlttory
wtll be aooct to me b«luae rm Fina to write lt." But thwthUI WM I 8JeM
writet t don't pretume to be " IJ'tll
Writer eo th• hiltoty will have to be
good to me In I dlfttftnt way.
Qi Well, 1et•1 uy 10 ~ h1-y'e
F~~·.....a•·••5
llDDll
verdict on the most signilicant accom-
plishment of your Administration. What
do OU think it will be?
._ .. .-.....
Nboa: Most people l8l"ee that in the
field of foreign policy It probably is the
Ollna initlatfve which will be I~ it
will l• through the next century I
hope. I would add to that our movement
toward arms control with the Soviet
Union. In other words. it had to happen,
and we at least started it. Whether that
stands up depends upon how it's fol-
k>wed u duri this Administration
and those alter it. Or whether reiation-
ships with the Soviets will cool to the
point that the new relationship there
will be destroyed.
In the domestic rieJd ... now this Is
not as well known, or it's as weJI known
but not given credit: I think the most
lasting domestic contribution is in two
areas: one, the peaceful desegregation
of schools in the South. Nobody thought
it could come about. I was ab[e 10 help
bring that about because I had the trust
of the responsible people in the South,
and I also had the oonfidence of fe5JX>n"
slble bUck leaders. Another major
achievement was my appointments to
the Supreme Court. I appointed four
people to the Supreme Court: I think
they have done an excellent job in
restoring balance to the Court's deci-
sions. I don't agree with some of the
critics, the liberal critics. that say they' re
reactionary. I think what has been
called "the Nlxon Court" and now Is
calJed "the Burger Coort" will be recog-n~ as being one of the best Courts
that we have had. And I must say that I
fought some bloody baltJes to get some
of those people approved. but l think it
was worth it. I think that was my major
domestic achievement.
Q: What was the happiest moment of
yow political career?
Nboo: I think probably the first lime I
won. It's always that way, really. I mean,
winning for the Senate was exciting, the
Vice Presidential victories. Needless to
say. being elected President the first
time was exciting. But there's nothing
Uke the first time you win. You hear the
botba11 ~ayers say their first Super
8owt is the one they remember, their
6nt pennant. I notice, lor example. one
of the players for the St. Louis Cardinals
was saying he was hoping the younger
felk>ws would appreciate this. because
he had already had It and he wanted
them to appreciate IL People like Bruce
Suiter, the great pitcher, had neYer been
ln a Wortd Serles before. never won.
And I would say winn 'Yir Congress back in 1946 was the light of my
political career. And Mrs. ixon agrees.
Then. of coul'le, we were bright-eyed
and bushy-tailed. We had won a&alnst
gJeM odds. As a matter ol fact our total caml:r expenditwe that year was $25.~ Today ~$500,000 to a million. And the CX>ntrltQlon
we ~ th• year was . That shows
)'OU how thlnp change. But we won
that, and that was betore tome of the
d1silluslon.ment lets ln and )'OU have '°
80 th\"OU8h the fires that )'OU 80 th~
when you come to W~on .
,-
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enhance any kitchen decor. 'Jeweled'
aatlrMlnlafl ln'4tflore are euy-to-cleatl ...
,..._, 1tldllng and acratchinf1. Spa..:. 199
Free Gifil
Up To A SIO Value!
Ordet Wlthfn The Ne•t
10 D91e a Aecetft A,,.. QffU
haat-ret1l1tant handlH and knobs . made
tough for yeara of wear. 8u1)41rb craft• manahlp. Why 1pand thrH Um" !tie
money. You can O'#fl thl1 handaome 1~
plac. flret-quallty Coppet CIM 8talnl ...
Cookwera. Hurry! Order NOW and beat
the ruah. All ordara 1hlppecl on a fir"·
com•flrat ... rved bHla. Only $18.88 ...
OONT oev.v ... thl• tncredlbl• lo• tHlce
can't lutl
DYNAMIC l'ttlC[ COMPARISOltl!
co""' CLAD ltT
"' qt. $.wet P111 lritll -· 1 Qt Sita P8" "itll -z qt. Sauce Pen wltll -
5!h qt. Dvtcll °"'" """ C#W r Skllltt COMBlllEO lO'A N Skllllt0 rtllCEI
Sll.88
c:owuuu .... s 9.50 13 50
18 00 27.75 14.00 19.50 ho:z.zs
(plus 11111 ta1)
•covtt 1ntm11e,.ea111e •ltll <Melt <>w.n
THI llAUllTll YOll 1111111 lie c""'lettl1 utta-llM. If llOt, mll"ll !flt/1111 14 dlyt tor 1 11111 rtflllld (UUt!I ,_t. & hd ... ).
Old Village Shop ttanow.t, ,. 1na1
r--------------MflWACTtC* tuMMnllM MltL TOOIYt ·-----------1 u ftAAll ..... ..,._ va:-1ue. M,.,..--. .......,, N 11111
,... .. rualt _Mt<•> of I~"-C....1 CIH I
9J1lnlfl1 ltlfl Cook"•'• !...!1UW fOr tftl Jn-.IWll t
Cl'Mtllty IOw prlee or lftly Jl..,. plu• 14,ff ·---t ~ •fllocllna and handllnt on ,.ull -ltllO*Y 9ACa .UAllANTD. Md ,,.. ... -CITY I clOae ~Gift Wlttl_mr ontw <ZMflJUQ I 0 9tn'll Uft MOMJ Ofd•r TWO .... fOt ITATt zir ____ _
flM' t'!..-!O ptue M 00 ~•vrwllll't 1111P"1"' o Clltcll llert 41114 Mftf IOt tor lllitctl,. 1 c..:=.m·~=.~· A"~i:'~~c1u11 11o11 t• -~-~~ .. ,..,. 11tt• • ,_. 1 O AtNrican ti;... O Carte ~~cha O VISA lolta IJ~ 0.W ,_olle) la to ,,... I Acc't .. _ Ill Oflltn ,,...,iy, Cfldlt cM .,..,.. I
..._ tf't .,,...... _. Creflt WfOltlll. DI·
lap, Oat• 1111 Mttlltd .r:1r. 111.,,._ ..,_ I ,,......_le• C'A ,._odd ellH ta.> ._ wtllllll ... , t
-----.-.-------.--•M.M.1.tM.1• .. ---------.------•
SALE' FIRST r1r~1E
•AT THIS PRICE' ·
• 0ura1e Moleleel Solt' .... ,
• Ct.Ute Wint· TIP StJlln1
• Amertcan Mldt
Tllh 11u1ky, htnJM>m• lt•O<lt• n1¥er look9d
btlltf! Tilt quality Ind COl!'lort tit built '" fOf yH ra of HIY W1lkln1! All 11 far less thin th•
prteH eh1r .. d by l111ey mtn'I sllolls!
Juat check 111 thtst INluinl The tetluied
IHthtf UPPtf fits your loot hkt I llOvt ...
Petf• ind wl111·tlp 1lltcilln1 1111llt It 1 ct.ulc. Stro111. "Hillie moldtcS c0tnp01ttio.1 sole 111C1
hHI c11llllCM1 evff't atep HHl's rtlnf~td l0t aypport 111C1 d11rlblllt7; storm well adds utni
orotecloon. lfylon IKH rn lst sool acid. oll. Cobbler cr1fled lft Ult U.S.A. Step otl It ...
cfOll't mlu out on Ill• tlloe .,., ... of IJI• YN rt .... ·.si-1, 1y,,a,Wt.9.t1i.;.10, 10 .... ,u .12.
Wlllllta: C. O. £. EE. t.lers• !rOWll Of eiac-.
TIY Miii IT Olll • 11111 S.toslactlon Cu.r1ntffd or Your Molley 8Kk (UCeQI pOll. & hdll.)
OU YIUMl llHW, "-•,. tnlt
s.tvina Satlafled Customers Since 1934
"The Diplomat"
Wing!l'ip Brogue
•Touch Solt.a.slstant Laces
Black or Brown
GENUINE
LEATHER s17aa
2 pn $34.00
Tllousands Sold
At$19.88
-SATISIACTIOll CUAaNITtCD-folAll COllPOll TOOAY._ :: ~.:::.~1u.
,... .. ru11t ___ ::· of t,t Gtlowlat ~.,
;~''I': ="~~;~ ';.1 I= ~ ":.r::..~ ~ ·--~&Aft -I 0rW .... N 1'1 ler .lo: U.00 .t• .!:;~ =· f~'ft.~,--• ,_Hite. Slrt ·---_, ____ _
-"" ·-(111271_., ~ Wt«ll ____ _
CllMSl ITo L "-IC• Ca1Wtt1 0 GI-. Cl• ..J YISA -Mo1t-
A<c'I llo h p. Diie ---
(M..,... It S-------,.,..., -__ ., ------------
Ct rt -------------fTATI --------ZIP ---
------" "·"·'· llK... llla ·-----
-.
v-. ct.er we --. "DidGlnl ~ med a ~90C9i't gist
when !hit sad news hit Lendon In 1870. "Thal &Di.B FatMr Chrimnas ct.
too? .. Hu ClOflfu9on was natural-no writ.er beaer caught "tltt! lpOtl of
•
.. -ji!!l!!!ll•Chrtstmaa." And Just as Tiny Tim. Bob ~ and Scrooge M 00. ID doa !he
fjow d DlcMns' Er9and-In fact. the "°" """ brtsjlten
lt'°"8 dull days d Janu.y as Voll enjoy our h..,.,... New Yw'e --Oaries Dk:Mns' llwl.fe ..d~ tiNtdtol. Nlc:ldeby on
1V stm1ons In the •MobiJ Showe.ale Network." lrne(;nc: nine full hours (two
each on January 10, 11, and 12, and attn.hour~ ftnale January 13) a
the O!t!fnal production by Brttaln's R.,,.a ~ Compeny . dcmllng
acting. mime, rnu91c. You'll I-.. dw bat oftlma.
TaD, al two ctUe.. Nldtolal Nlddell, opened In London In .lune 1980
.nd eoon b6oomed lnlo • eodal pll•o••• ~ .. _,...,,hit.· c.ro.. mobbed dw liu6tg mm lib rod ....... Cr1lb raved ('"ao
rfdaly }ofloue • ., fmmodocately rtle lflldt ~.drama. colour, and
ader11dH OU. ., '* enhandng" J. ... Nldrl.., ....,. u 8rttWi ......,......_That. cammetoAmaica ... ,....,,,~became
a • ' q Wocti , , tour 1m1¥ _.. the Nnr Yadl Drw
Citic::s' .,..,.,. • .. ._ play." ..ii more ..ao.t ~ ... ewst at the
ra:urd $100 a , .. dcbl prim. Now JIOU cm ~ Nlclr/..., b tr. on
'"MoWI ~ N«worll" .......... the so top 1V vlcwtng arw.
"Nm ~ 1.oit • u. got eo c:hangs the CIOftPW'SI nanw:'
Gr..a ... I Mii 1m 1 Look forward 10 bder than fronts«NI wts: Thie TV
~(that In London'l~adYcThembw).,.you .. opera glows'"
bt llOOm you~ end ll'OUnd the ..... Md the 150... .. ~by )a.llt
l9 adan. You'll go cyebeD IO .W ..., a ~ ec:boa' M
. ta .... ,._. fa•int co.pie In Victoria• tktlon•• .. and a -.. •rte
ci ........ lea that slra:h In adDr"s \lllllldly fromdmficD~ IO daoed And
IO lntloduol aD he fw\, your glllilal halt wll be ,.._ lJellDotl
1'le Diet-. fll* .... Mon tt... )ull a toOd dme. Nlctb•, II bltllll
................. Ok:Mmii wodd ............ md~
d.....-;dml.Wmula8CllMlhcMWthe .............. ~
..... the.....,,..~ pawed .......... ,..... ....... *"'Id·
.... ptVW8 ...-id ..... t conupt " thaw'I liove ••. Md "°"' .... The
wldrad .. lbdr • c'-ta. ....... den I(• ... ,...._ wl Ml
............ ..... .... ~In .. wl ..... so cf-' ~loClll ~ i... dw n •W*n a l'-f the bltup(.iftd ltelPihe lddl ~n...11..-.......,....:a...•--. Dtr:h I
.....
the problems that led to the Watergate
crisis differently. I lived through it at the
lime. and in my book. and I don't think I
really have anything to add. So I think
perhaps rn just ieave it there .
Q: John Dean contends that Alexander Haag was Dttp Throat. What is your ~
action to this?
NbrAm: Well. it's lncn!dible. It's just i~
~ble. A)exander HaiQ. durin& the
penod ol the soalled ~ 1broal. was
suppoeed to be talkina to Woodward anCf Bemttein ol the Washington l'osl.
Ale.under Hai& was ~ with
the Vtetnarnese, along ~ Henry Kis-
singer, to brinll an end to the war and
(let back our POWs. That was the year
l 972. He wasn't everl lamiliar with what
was QOing on on the political side. I can't inul8ine what Dean is relerring to.
~You think there was a Deep
NI-= I haven't read the book. may I
say. I don't read boob about me; in bid I
have diliculty in~ writing them 111)'-.u. and then once rve wriUen them I
don't read them ipin. There obviously
were tome peop&e -one or more -
who were. sh.all ·we say. not particuJaJ1y
trustworthy. Bui I have never tried to go
back and try to rehllh who ~ was. I real-
ty don't know. If I knew I would say so. But I don't know who it was. and I don't
know how ln the wortd John Deen
would know .
Qt But It's not tom«hlnt that kept you
up nJabt after n~ wOnderin8 who could this character be? •
Nmms No. no. No. 1 am very ruJstJc
llbo\.lt that. Ir IOtMbody II Fin& to do
you In, they'~ ao6na to do you ln and ~ don't wonY a6ot1t It un&e. .•. I mean I worry about tt If I can do tome-lhlne about lt. If I can't do IOIMthln&
lbcMJt It then I f) on IO other thlnp. e.c.. If ~ ipend too much tinM
wony1.,. eticMit the ~ '/Wre not ~
-------_,_ --~~
---"'!
Q: Mr. Nixon. why didn't you destroy
the White House tapes?
Nlxoa: Well. I should have. As a matter
of fact I guess it was very n&ve on our
pan but J • at the time I thought the
tapes had a great deal of historical
value. For exarripfe, meetlng5 wi1h the
great of the world are on those tapes.
Those that came to meetings and the
Cabinet and so forth and so on. The
amount of material on Watergate is in-
finitesimal. maybe 3 or 4 percent or less
out of the many. many hours. And I ~
~ the tact I didn't destroy them may
indlcale tha« I honestly felt at the time,
and mistuenly it proved, that the tApeS
did not have anything on them that l
would find fatal. let aJoile embarrassin&. But I proved to have been wrong-they
should have been destroyed. And they
should have be.en destroyed for MOther
reMOO. They were not taped delibenle-
ty; I mean the taping machine was put
in there. it was not turned on and off
manually. and it taped~ iJl. dudin& the barit of a dot or the 9Cftect'I
ol a car or a siren. That CX>uld tet it ol.
And the tapes were put In tlMft a the
purpoee of being avaBable to the Pl&
dential Library. for h.istoricll pwpoleS.
As you know. of ooune. Ebenhcr#ier
had some ~ Kennedy . .'. ttltft R
200 reels of tapes at the Kennedy
Ubrary; Johnson hid a huae taipina
system there. In the JohmOO UbfarY.
And we had OW'I. only for the lMI two
years, but l suppo1e that'• the la t...,ma
there will be. now that that'• done.
Q: What three adjedives do you think
belt dt:laibe you?
N-. Oeicribe me? Oh. I would wold
that one. I never believe lrt thll Jeff.
analysis nor ln ~I will de-
scribe othert. bUt noc my.etf. I don't
think an lndJvfdual ls • pJd ~ ol
hhntefl 8ecMa1e mwthl~ lhll. I \liould
AY that'• polltl\tt fl ttlJ.eel'Y1nC; and
1nythlna thll I wouk.1(111 that II ,...
tM. peoplewould ~ didn't l1Wln .. Jo
I lull NllYe It rWit there. IW
J
l5 mg. "Ill"'. t1 mg. nicocilt .,, ,. ciplUI, m: . Alpart OEC. '81.
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OUR ANNUAL
FOOD FAVORITES
Here they are -the recipes you told us
were tops in your kiJchens in '82.
By Marilyn Hansen
IYI Dae. ••ll•w ..... mt la Yt-111.m c-...
I ta•11.,ax· .U.......-e ,._, tm... .... ....... %ta"1•11••••• ... .. I mm (II-.) ta '._, mane1J
di ...........
le..-.... ~ ......... barley.
1:Z1.,a1•W. 1 ....,..JMCt
It" 0 IU .... ·=··· ........... ~ ....-11111c:1s,.....
1 ~(IO.-.).._.mlor
mt ........ % CllSl9 anoc .._
I c-.'*-7 ....
1 c-.cw..., c••n•• ......
I. In Wae bowl, dredlle meat in flout In
6-qt. Dutch oven. brown melt and p.rlic in
oil. Drain flll ii neceaury.
2. Add tomatoes, wacer, barley. Won:ester-
shire aauce. salt, bull and pepper. Brina to
bolling, cover. redooe hell and simmer 1
hour. Md remalnlna lnlf'!dients. Brina to
botllna. a>ver. reduce hell and simmer 20
to 25 mlntaa or until me.M and waetables
are tende: Moltes about 4 quam
•vou can subltltute ~ cup quick barley lof
"8\llar barley, If desired. Add quick ~ey
to soup with veaetables In •es> 2.
and brown the other side. When browned.
transfer to a hol planer and keep warm.
C.ontlnue in the same manner until all scal-
lopiru are cooked. Sprinkle lightly wiftt salt
and lreshly ground bl.:k pepper.
S. Leave the pan drippings in the skillet
and add lemon juice. white wine and
broth Heat to boiling and boil for 2 to 3
minutes. shm113 to looetn all browned par·
tkles Add parsley and remainina 2 table-
spoons butter. bit by bit
4. Place KAllopini in the skUlet and heat.
1umins eld1 In the saooe for just a minute
or two An~ scalloplnl on wvm serv·
Ing platter and pour the sauce over. Gar-
nish with a few peeled, thin slices of
lemon Maltts 4 $0'\lltlfS
Note This recipe can be made uslf\8
chicken IC.lllopinl-thll ls, boned. skinned.
ftauened chicken breasts -for a reMOn--
able alternative 10 the veal. Some martteu
also carry boneless. skinned. lllced turkey
bruit. which also makes a good substitute.
D•BIRDllCAD
1 t
.. -.
.................... ........... _ ..... _,
O~'hdl~ o ..... -. c-..~ o~ .............................. ...,, . ....,. ... .,_.__,....,,,
or., Ulllnllll 1 o re.t ... 1 o a...., OCour*y 6(notell .,_) O JISf 4 (nOl'lllll....,
"
By Michael D' Antonio
Th~year~ Laura Lamb, a
bright-eyed girl with a hear1-meltin& smile. is boeh a symtO
and a statistic. Ar. the nation's
yooneesa QUldrtpleg;c, wih no move-
ment or fl!iellng ·below her shoulders.
she's one of the 750,000 Americans
who are injured by drunk drivers every
~--L.ilesavinc treMment al Johns
HopkinS Hospital in 8aJtimore and an
~ counieeous modler have made
Laura a symbol of an exploding
ausade against the traaedY ol druni
drtvina. a O'USade whidl viu recently
ttwan1ed with the~Coogrell ol Iliff drunMrivins
The numbers by the Na-
tional HighW1l'f 1ra!6c Salety MhninJt.
tnltion (N.H.T.S.A.) are horrUying. For
the past 10 years. at least 2""6.000 Americans have been killed every year
by drunk drivers. who ate also blamed
tor nae ~ S5 billion per year in
medical bills ind property a.rnaee. h Is
estimated that so ~t ol all
hiszhwa)' farallties and injuries are llnk-
ecf to drunk drivina -and this will be
true for the nearly l50 deaths expected
this ~ New Yu.ts holiday.
Perhaps the moll shoctin8 IUlisbc of
all is thal one out of two Americ:mls will
be UMlMd In an ~mated auto
crash in the CDUl"le of his or her liletirne.
But the •ltiltk:s cannoc dr.:laibe the
nldhtmAn> th• victims or drunk ~~Ult live with. The head-on
era.sh that aippted Laura at the age of 5
months cMnaed the COWR of her life
and tbe lives of thole around heL
Laura's mothel Ond1. whoMI drivng
the Lamb's pickup truck. was holpiW-
ized tor morKhs. Medical bill.I tor the
two have topped SS00.000. Ondl and
Alan Lamb's marrlaee CX>Uldn't survive
the crash. Their home ln the Mcyland
c.ountl)'lide has been replaced by an
lpll'tment In Balt1mott Where Laura
can hive the run ot the place In her
wheelchair.
Ondl Lamb now dreldl "the de)'
when my daUQhter asks Why W's noc
like other ddldml." MeenWhUe. their
routine ls a IChedule of l11pt to the
hoepkal, tpedll ll:hools and rehlbOlta-
tion oenten -all beclutt a man who
loll his liceme Iler three ortor drunk·
drivina convldkw went lor an lftei-
noon drtve after a momlng d dJ1nldna.
R4J. lrlidtotd D. Barno. et>$llOltlO' of tlw ~ bill. wt/I Louro Lomb.
formed IUppoc1 groups b victims.
111e fact that some
26, 000 people are ldlled
each year by dnmll
drWen haa made
citbsena MADD and
apurred nationwide
elforlll to
change lenient laws.
"MADD wants to make sure that
every posible step is taken to prevent
the future killing and maiming of inr»
cent dllldmt by drunk drivers." Ushtner explained al a Congreaional
hearina this yeat "I hive learned tha
death caused by drunk drivi~ Is a
sodally ~e bnn of homkide,''
she adds. ibal attitude must be
ctianaect"
The tttack on drunk drtven. SDUrred
by dt1zl!ns sroups like MAOO, tw
taken different shapes In dlffem\t
states. In California, tht state
l~ature adopted •ricter drunk-driver laws th• took eflel:t Jan. J, 1982.
Thole i.ws make bloockkx>hol levels
ot .10 percent (the equiv~ ol bur
mixed drinks wtth one ounce of wh1sky
each, CONUmed by • 140-pound per·
IOO) Of hi5at.>iute eYtdmce of dtunk driv Repeat oler'iden filce
rnandltory 1111 1en1encn now,
and **"' ...... Cll\ be °"' def.ct ·bY{tlldl••~fttlt In ....... ~ SliTillir lawt hM -. ldOpted
~ar,:~ .. :n, ~--~
mlDI& ft conMdlrtOI ~ ••idnl IDf drunk dltVtn nt laws
k>werin8 legal blood-alcohol levels.
Local police .departments all over the
oountry Ne' steppins up highway
patrols and even putting up roadblocks
to screen nighttime drivers.
So~ it's difficult lo tell how effective
the stricter laws will be nationwide. But
California officials rted an I~
mediate drop in traffic ~hs when the
new laws took effecL A spokesman for
the California Highway Patrol. Ernest J.
Garcia. says the publicity campaign
that acmmpanied the new laws made
drivers wary. "Most people say. 'The
Jaw has teeth now. rt lOoks like you
can't get off with a fine or going to
school. This might mean a jail term
and I don't want to go to jail,"' ~ates
Garcia.
Researchers aren't so sure that strict
laws make a lasting dtfference. H.
LaumK:e Ross. a professor of sociology
at the State University of New York at
Buffalo. found in a 12·nation study for
N.H:TS.A. thm tough Jaws are most e#.
fective around the time of their ~
lion when driver a~ Is tugh and
enbrcement Is strong. But Rem's study )-
also revealed that as time passes. in
mosa ca.es. the fatality and accident
rates dlmb back to prelegisladon I
lewJs.
Norway and Sweden are commonly
believed lo have had sucx:ess with their
!trid drunk-driving laws, which make
bk>od-akohoa levels of between .05 and
.15 percent proof of guilt and require
prison terms and licente revocation.
~ Ross tound lhll the incidence
of drunk driving has not been drama-
tk.alJy reduced by those laws. In fact,
onty when police mount speclal cam-
paigns to caldl violators do crash rates
dedine.
Rem did find a suc:cesstuJ drunk·
driver campaign in Vanoouver. British
Columbia. where arrestina offlcen uR
suiprise roadblocks. mobile bk>od-
akx>hol testing units and on-thHpot.
one-day licenle suspens6ons. That ex-
traordinary power was granted to
polke by provincial Government otfi.
di.ls. who hoped th~ such swift penal-
ties would deter drunk drivtrs..
Three yean after the Venoouver pro-
pm betan, ICddent fttalltles were
id1J down 20 pertent, leadlns Roes to
mndude thlt the unique l)'ltern of
te>UO een&e"* and Immediate
punlsaament, a>mbiMd With a vflilant
police brce. mt)' be the recipe lot ~
cea "The men retrw:tk>n ot the
cMYtf'• liclnl8 tor a t8W wwb mWd
be nodcMI* and elacdw P'llfih-
\
7 l'llQ. •11r•. 0.5 mg. lllCOtN a.'* aprn by FTC llW!hod..
f-fere comes
A fresh new taste e~rience
that outshines menthol.
It not only tastes fresher while you smoke.
It even leaves you with a dean, fresh taste.
DNYmUI WHO DN•
menL" the Ross report says, if drunk
drivers ~ they will be <:alJ8ht and
9elltenced.
In America. the 50 stales present a
patchwork of laws and programs to
combat the problem. Some enforce
mandatory penalties for first offenders;
others offer enoUQh legal loopholes for
th09e convicted repeatedly to stay out
of jail and on the road. The man whose
car C1'09ed the center line. hitting Cin-
di Lamb's truck at 70 m.p.h., never
RrVed a dly in jail for his drunk·
driving oftenees.
"He had no license. he had no in-
surance. he wasn't even driving his
own cat" Mrs. Lamb says in disbelief.
''The judse gave him a suspended
sentence the last time. that's why he
was out sainklna drunk on a Saturday
momins 90 he could run into me and
my~"
A iustke sy1ten lhlt allows moll drunk driven to ltay out ol jail II llto
blamed br part .ol the drunk-<Jrlvlng
criris. Cindi Lair!\ went to work ei8ht
mocW ... the aoddertt at the
MM)'land ~ ln Annapolis, convindna lawmakers to ~ six new
ltat\US that pe ~~wer to crack down on drunk
drivm. And there'• evidence th•
c:ourtl in ~and other ltates are 81:t,..'°1:n.n. a ~ ln nearby
Flirfu. Va., .aya ~· cririddnl down on drunk drtYtri In her CX>Ult. Btl lhe
ttdnu .a o1 ~ lhlm her~ ·~ *'We tMM to inlke lnttfte1id0n the norm. ... tlyL ""Ibo mlllY '*'*
think ii'• am when the lie o1 the p11ty <111¥91 ..
In W_~, O.C., the anf!:J
by MADD iirid other P1Pi hll
friendly ears. In Congres.1. several
senators and representatives lobbied
for a stro~ drunk-driving bill which
~signed into law Oct. 25. AJong with
RepreserltatJVe James Howard (D.·NJ.).
Representative Michael D. Barnes.
(D.·Md.). who is the Lambs' Con-
gressman. sponsored the bill which
they believe will make a signltk:ant dil-ference. •
The Howar~Bames Alcohol lrallic
Safety Law and National Driver
Re8i51er will reward states incenlfve
grants from existing money in the
Federal h'8hway trust fWld (tapped for
construction and road repairs) tor
establishing comprehensive, corn-
munity·based. drunk-driver control
programs. Among other things. states encourasect to allow prompt
sion of a drunk driver's license
-ays for the lint offense. one year
IFYOUAAE
5'6" or taller
THE T All COl..LECTION
Features spc>nswear, ~.
ooata wld mcn ... all ptoportiol led lo
fit )'OCI pet'fecttyl
• Tel sizes 10 to 2fJ
• Shoes s1a 9 ao t 3, MM ao EEE
for FREE c:al8log m8il coupon to:
The Tai Collection, Dept. A.
lndlanlpolle, IN 4'6201
------Apt.* --
Crty State l.Jp __
'IJ.JQ).S J ---------------1
IFYOUARE
5'3" or under
LB FOR SHORT IS JUSt for you!
Value-priced epol1Swear. dresses
and much more
eepeoalty created for petites
• Mls$es Petite sizes 2 to HJ
• Junior Petite sizes 3 to 15
for FREE catalog mail coupon to:
LB For Short. Dept. 8,
lndianlipotis, IN 4'6201
------Apt.# --
City State __ Zip -------------.':°~~ IF YOU ARE I
size 1 O or over I
NANCY'S CHOtCE ·--~ I new tatNon ~tor~. Sulta. I
eepetDlntmore:etat~ I
~' I • Mlael lizet'10 to 20 I
• ~lliDll '"'ao~ I • Women .. lbl:Je~• I
tor FAE£ c.c.6og ml6I coupon ID:
~··°"'**·Dept. c. . lndlanlpolll, IN 4e201
Now ... an exact 22kt gold replica will be created
for each new U.S. Commemorative Postage Stamp!
22kt Gold Replicas
of United States Stamps
Exact replicas on a gleaming surface of real gold.
U ndet' a noo-cxdusin licensing agreement
with the U.S. Postal Service, the Postal
Commemorative Society is proud t0 make
available an authentic replica of each new
U.S. Commemorative Saunp-recreared to
exacting standards with high-retid sculprured
deWI oo a flawless, mirror-smooth gold su.r-
f.ce. Ac.companying e.ch mint-perfect replica
is tbe acmaJ saunp, c:a.ocelled with the Official
Pint Day of Issue Posunark. The result is a
collectible of unsurpassed meaning, beauty,
and importance. And. if you reply prompdy,
you will hsft the opportunity to start your
collecrioo at the favorable issue price of just
S5.SO e.ch.
Nothing caprures the grandeur and glory of this
land like America's scamps. For here is where we
honor the men aod womeo who made dlis oacion
great. Where we relive the high points in our
history. Where we rejoice in America's magnifi-
c:rot naru.ral beauty. Where we pay tribute to our
customs and folklore, institutions and ideals.
Each new stamp is a pttriotic treasure. Aod each
is also an imporramoriginal work of arr-creatrd
by one of America's finest living anists.
Imagine the excitement. then. when each new
•tamp is immortaliud on a gleaming~ of
22kt gold!
Each 22kt gold scamp replica will be
authenuc down to the smallest detail.
For each new commcmoracive stamp chat is
issued., the U.S. Postal Service ma.Us available
a photograph of rhe original design. From this
photograph, cbe stamp is then recreated on
sheets of paper-backed 22kt gold precisely co tM
ongina1's siz.c, shape, and official design.
First, rhe skiUcd craftsman hand-imcribcs
every line and stroke of chc original in raised
relief on a dac. The dje is then used to strike the
22kt gold surface in a flawlC'SS proof-likefinish-
jusc as if one were producing a magnificent
medal or coin. The result i.s not an ingot or a
medallion-but a dramatic, three-dimensional
frosccd sculprutt scanding in high relief on a
mirror-surface of gleaming gold!
Much in the manner of a precious med.al or
coin, each proof-li.lc.c gold replia lS displayed
against a rich velvety b.dcground-aod pre-
served forever in a dar protective capsuJc co
guard against dust, loss, or harm from fioger-
pri nts. A ~rfect mint specimen foryoucchildrcn.
your grandchildren. aod their children tO enjoy
in years to come.
The actual first Day of Issue Swnp
anescs to the faithfulness of the ttplica!
Perfectly complementing the gold stamp replia
is rhc actual stamp-bearing the Official First
Day of Issue Postmark ro certify that these gold
replica-bearing First Day 'Covers am never again
be issued. & you examine the Intricate details on
both the stamp and its replica, you will Stt how
perfectly the two cor~spondl
A custom-crafted collector's aJbum will
showcase your collection to best advantage.
A luxurious collector's album will be cwtom-
craftcd for you. Your name will be stamped in
gold on the fronc cover. In.side, transparent vinyl
podcets will display each cover. You may slide
each cover from its pocket for closer inspection
and scill not worry about the gold stamp replioa
itself-sealed within its own protective capsuJc.
Subscribe now for a favorable issue price.
Subscribing before the end of the current enroU-
ment period guaranl'CCS that you will be enrolled
at thr favonblc issue price of justS5 .50 per cover.
This prier includes the gold scamp replicas, tht
proteetively snJed capsules, the First Day of
Issue stamps, the Official First Day of Issue
Postmarks, and the descriptive faa cards. There
i.s no extra charge for the personalized collector's
album with dear vinyl pockecs.
No payment needed now.
You need seod no money now. Simply retuco
FIRST
~. Jolut H. Jo...u
*· Jolut H. )OllU
HS Mui SCALi.t
A>l!/ldl~. U.S.A. 11J4~
NOT'B: TIM 1,_,,, -~ 1bov.;,, ""1 tf'UMUUoe.,. /rrHll ,.a i11w1 • •n 16-/<W ilhut~lw 1.,,as.1 Ofti?. Yo• wJI ,--.. ~ o/ J--U.S. C-..-"'11 s,_,,,., thq-ilr-'.
you.r application today! As a subscr~r, you can rive releases, with 3 covers per shipment. You ro the greatness of America-a collection that
espect to reoeive your rovers approxinutely will be billed with each ship~nt. surpusa anything previously seen. A collection
8 to 10 times each year, depending on the that you and your family will trcuurc for untold
PostaJ Senia's scheduJe of new commemora-Join us for this magnificent philatelic tribute generations co come!
r--------------------------------------------------····---------·····----, Su.btcription Application 1300
22 kt Gold Replicas of United States Stamps
Postal Commemorative Society
47 Richards Avenue
Norwalk, Conn«tlC\Jt 068n
Guaranteed accrprana
at the pri« quoted herein only
if postmarked by March } 1, 198}
Platt mroll in<" 1 wb.crlbcr to 221ct Gold R.epUca. al United Scatn Scampi1. 1 will ttec1w 1aotd1t1mp replica~
nch and evny MW U.S. Commemonrive Sump. I can e.pttt to tteetve my~ samp rqilicaa 1ppro1umlt'ely 8 to I 0
dma eech )al (ckpendirc on thr U.S POM11l StrW:c' • tchcdule ci new commcmorurve amp ~leuet), an iieu ci chrtt each.
I will be bilLrd SS.SO (plus S ~ shlppins ancl handlul&) for each ao&d eump ~plica. I Will be billed u nch ehlpmmt is
emt to me. A cwcom collect01''• album wiJl be 11ent to me at no adJlnonal cha,..e. I undtrmnd that eit+ter party may
can.eel du.a M.Jbicripdon a~cmcnt at any nme.
OAla rocweruence.1 ~to haw my n1u Gold Stamp
~teat chupd, 11 the rimt o( eh1pmenr. to my: I CJ Mu~rd CJVJSA Addm. ---------------
Cnv '
er.4lt C.nJ ~ 5t1,w._.__ ________ Z1r ------
I would llU my c~~
0..-1
r-------------------~----~-----~---, ot.O VILlAGC SHOt", Dept.VZ·UJ1,)40 ........... Street. Ha_..., r--17:Ul
~se ru\11 Genuine Anti~ Dolls
(14506'3) '°' JUSI " .. UCll plus 52 9S POSI·
•&• and ~andhn& on lull money uca 111o1rentn ""1"' IC.u. Al<D pluu tllCIOH my rR£l C:I" aS4SI I IX).
r SAvt MORE! Orlltr TWO for Just $7.00 plus AOOllUS ------------$S 2S st11pp1n1 and 11andhn1 on samt mono·
back l"'•Mttt Ptf'IK1 tor l•tawred a•lts
C11tl0Md 11 (l'A rta ldd wits tul CITY -------------
tMl.Cl IT: C Al'lltrltaft [aprtaa 0 MISltrCltll r VISA 0 DIMf"I Chm -Clrtt llancllt STATt -----ZIP _____ _
Our POotCy s 10 proceu 111 0tden prOl"'pll)
Acc't No. Credit card orc!ttl "' procturd ypon crtd•I tpprov1I Otlay. notlfitd promptlJ. Sfuomtnl
[lljl Datt 111o1rH lttd w1th1n 60 dly1 L--------------eMJt.1. tt11G.1m~---------.----.J
Here'• a doll Juel Ilk• grendmothef had when Iha w• a llt11e plrtl Alt ...
Qulslle 10W'G mlu thet Wiii delight oollectora of all agM. To 11lve .. a
gift • • or IO k-.p for yc>11rMlf • • to
truMlre from geMratlon to
geMJatlon.
A llOft' WONOUllU\. QWTI
Thia bNlltJfVI doll het 1119 kind Of Q\llllty orlftllmanthlp found only In
the llMtt helrtoo-.
Not• repl'Oducllon, but genuine antiqu41d poJceleln, dellcataly hllld
painted jutt llltl II ... O'l9f 7& ~arw
ago. Her llrt11 la the flnMl Vlclorlan
faahlon, Ill lace and rlbbonl.1. authen-
tic rtoftt down to htr I"-""'• a lland-«ochtted flat lo "' ofl hat poldln t,......
Nor a m/tt/111111 ••• a tull 11 In. tall!
H«e'1 • ool*tot'• bvy-of+llletl .....
}'Oii won'I went to m• But our w~uM Inventory It alrlcUy limited
"'cf at ttlla low Pf'I04I la 1ure to to f111. lo lturry, ordW now.
MONllY MC1' OUMAHTU ... ltlll Oenlll111 Allll'"4 Dell lor f PUl-•lf. Our ~ltit lt UM9Mltienlllf •~ te 1111-rw I•..,..~_., ., lW' ~"-~ Nfll""41. I.._,. ,_... I lla<lctHntl. ne euMllOM .....
r--------aATll,ACTION GUAltANttED--OltOV. HOWi --------~
ot.D YILLAGa ~. l>ept.VZ·IU•. MO~ k , "-• "" 17"1
'1'9'! Pltde 111111--"0.l&J Otlillll" 21).~.. l.:loMdb PAres.MclwlUtu) DtcorllOt bt1I CnMl!lllle(J) a4074521) as Ii.di Qtff .,..._, 01 full MoM7 lalc.IL C: ... 111rtM.
Al'IO JINtl MtlOH l'llJ fr" alff (%"651 llX). "''HT NAi« ----------
COlOll CKOla:: Al>Oll(SS __________ _
P C:OkL-OIJ 0 ll11e-Qty. O l'lnl_QIJ _ Ollt lath CllieMblt for only SI• aa pl~1
U 9S lltaW1"1tlc11t Po•U&• and 11andlln1 CIT'I -------------:J SAVC I TWO 8'UI Set~ p1..:n In tll-Otlly
$21 00 plus $5.00 11uvywt11M Poll & hdt&
CllAIU IT: J.J ~rlun hprtu _ D1ntrs Club lJ VISA :._ lillHlttCatd .,: Cartt 811ndlt
Acct No hp. Datt ---"·
STATt ------ZIP ___ _
D Cllecl 11.,t alld tend * for AOacrtptlon to
Oii• cautos of II•• 111ts Hd 1uh1on' (ZU9"5X).
Soft, Absorbent, Luxurious-
A Complete Bath Ensemble for the Whole Family I
20-Piece Decorator Bath Set
Dal1y-D1zzled Prtnh,
Garden-Bright Solid1I
You Gel All Th.._
• 2 Print Bath Towell (22x42")
• 2 Solld Bath Tow111 (22x42")
• 2 Print Hand Towels (15x25")
• 2 Solid Hand Towels (1!ht25")
•"Print F1ngenip1 (11•11.")
• 4 Print WUh Cloth• (12a12")
• 4' 8olld Wath Clo1h1 (12X12">
loft, trrimy, now.r..-tMI\ ·~ Now
your b1throom wlll loot! Ilk• "'""Y tu• tMr11me every day ol lht yeer. lYJtYIY
Balh Sel IHtur11 cri1py WhtlU llrtwn
wllh dal11.. plus (how beauhlult) cotor-
coord1naled 10l~1 A truly ••eoant deco
rator tnMmbf-ao lu1h, lovely pllcM In
all. Wonderfully aoft, 1001h1no. ablorbln\
-1u1t ttle lond ol balh 1owel1 to wr-
your.ell in wllen you atet> out of the tub.
Alf !OP Qvlllty 100'9 COllOll-'*&tht t>le,
011ttble. cattfree. Fabulout till Id••' z.ttr.ea-• ... , ............. tt4.ll
f'UU.Y QUAU..TUDI
II JOV doll I I-t"-111_..M lN"' lllCllJ
You "''* .. CMOlelelY , .. -.N tn ~..,
•ilft , ... "°'"' o.llfllt • ,,. ..... lef. n 1191, .. ~ 1H1"' I« ~ f11n ........ .. ......... ,. .... ,.. .... Md MMll!!f) ,.a11r 19 .,_ tit ........ ",.,..'"' I Cllf :,:., .... DIOUtMd llHll C!IO•I
....-1cO.•"' 11•1r... ,,.,,...., "'''"""' ~W!tlt•nt00•
-
I.EI' ENERGY.
GO UP THE CHIMNEY
His Greatest Hits Ever!
SPIKE JONES!
-•• , Wiil.i • s~= JT({))
& •cm IUCIUS
Here's All
1n the world °' rm-=. tM name Spike v G
Jonacanoriymeanonedq ...... ~. I OU et:
tun.cy! Here on thia truly memorable Cocktaila For Two
al>um, Spake Jones and hill strange frimds
perform their zaniat and me.a famous Laura
hats Hear such side-spitting c&a..ica as Glow Worm
Cocklaila For Two .•. My OW Ra...... o.ao.
°'*···Gow w.-... 1..ow .. aoa.. Hoidliy For StJia191 ... I Dnam Of Beown6e With 'The Ll9ht
Blue Jane ... and eo 1ft11ftY more. ti I.. -n War a..nt ............... ..............
Al ol Sp.kc Jones' famot» petfomwnatt ~ In lloom
hrttincluding; TM .......... ...._ My Old flame
............. Dr ......... Q...... ---Of ..... o ..... w-wia. .......... ...--The Hoare ...... n.a WM:lq, WMe+' I and ShiD Of Anlbsl
more. All selections are the orWna' Va. We...._ No 8arw
recordings. A..,_ ce9acter'a ltea. I 0.... Of awwwlil Wildt
UMITED EDl110N llECORlJN:J 1he lWit a. Jim.
llWa calaclilOl1 • ON al ow '' ' 1 You~ Hm1
FAtkw Sena, and Wit urg1 ).QI to bike 1"' One You tow ~al tis <*r TODAY. I ).QI do •
not ..-that tNs ii one al the most Diii' F..._a'• nc.
~tful record and tape collctb• ).QI \\" a T• Owrtwe
haw cwrowned, timplyrmm it to"9b • None But The l..omly "-t Y and c:omPtt• mund. No ........ ......._ ---On--.. J::L.&.... .,.. __ 8*d. Order now while dw edition ii ltll I,_ ....._.. I._ • .,,.. I·--
.~. NOT IN STOllES
MAIL COUPON TODAY r:-------NOlllSkC<>UPC>N -------,
I TlteGoMMMiclliec .... C. .• o..t-tMMO 1·
~ Ew""9 Street, Par11-. NJ 07652 --
I AiaM rush me THE WACKY WORLD OF SPIKE JONES album on your unc:cril· I I dOnal money b..:k guanintH. 1 undentand thlt f fNY return it for any r-.on I I whattoeWrandNCCNitacomciletcNfund. MWchec:kortnONyordrr .... to I
I Goiod Mu* ft.cont Co. •
I 0 I mcbl ... 0 I-=-t9.98 0 I endcm ••• I SlrdAlca'CIMwn Stride ,.,y_. s..ta.Track:rape I I (Eftdoee ti.a•,._•~.> I
IMlrN I I Adiha ... I
IQ!w s... Zip J _____________________ ,
---WHEN E.T. PHONES EARTH, R2-D2 MAY ANSWER ___ _
-.. _ ..
hat lovable drold in
Siar Wan. known simply u R2-D2. did
everything from aolving mathematic.al
prob1ems to <X>nlOlina hll lovesk:k
owner, Luke Skywalket The arrival of
such a computertzed companion might
not be so tar away. In fact. a three-fooc-
tlll home robot wllh ultrasound and lo-
in.red eyes and the ablllty to lin&
lpelk and ~ l do a ila could be mar·
keted within the )'eat The bl'llndlild of
SUk:x>n Valley entr~neur Nolan
Bushnell. founder of 1tchno6-
ogies. the robot will be "a · not a
thine." Bushnell has Mid And expens
In the field of robodc:s predict thtt In 25
years It won•t be unUIUll for R2-DZ·llke
madllnes to help people balance
ch~&ook ., the ~ like dean iM floors and
dishes as • answer the Phclne. ''The paeaibWties are truly erMUat. ..
ARE CO
ARE
A blast from tM luturt An asxmbly.l/M
robot !Mids ~~ the rmr whtt/ openlt:tf
of a Rtnoult m a Wisronsin loaory. {Rf&NJ
Good hdp is hard to fittd· An (lliftOis
handyman spent thrft )'lt015 tronsforminS
auto saaps ""° A~ ~ 4ofnalic.
claim• John Peers, fou~ and ~
dent of 'lechnololY Industries. a Santa
Oara eiedronlcs ftrm. Peers believes
that someday robots could care b the
aged, analyze car problems and db-
pente tlps on pl&ytna the •ock"rnwket.
By comparilon, howevet todqa ln-
dUltrill fobot hes I k>n(I Way to 80-He
ls It belt I functional kllot: ll Vt'Cd, I
menace thal can halt entire a.mbly
lines. Uaually a jumble ol wires In an
G,
G
awkward body. he has a gangly pneu-
matic daw for periormlna simple task&
Most Ukely you'll find hfm In the auto
lndultJy or oa:.ulonally workJf18 alona
oonwyor btltl In the canning. ptw.
11'11CeUdcal, bottling and even r«X>rd
companiet.
Thirteen ft~atlon robots psp
and whine evewy dly as they pertorm •
tedious epot-we6dlng chores on the u-
tembly line. • the Ford Motor Com-
ModtlM llw)fX Al llw Fon« Limited plant
In Japan, roboll help produce othn
robot$. Th• ni1ht 1hift, except for a watchman. d comp#ttly 111111W11rMd
2e F,,_, W9IJJI • lllCIMll • • 1111
pany's manufacturing plant in Milpitas,
)lJSI north of San Jose. They're only
some of the estimated 3.000 industrial
robocs wortcing in the rountry today At
the Ford plant. Donald Kuckens. a de-
~ ~r who manases lhe robot
bnaade. says he experienced horren-
dous breakdown problems with the
robots at firsa. Now the oompany is
having "a great deal of~ about
90 percent of the time.~
The Ford plant is the only business
..tn the Silicon Valley using robots for
daily production. Several firms. such a1
Fairchild Camera and lNlrument Corp.
in San Jose, Lodtheed Missiles and
Space Co. in Sunnyvale and Hewlett·
Packard in Palo Alto. have their own
labs that test robots to see If they can
be useful in these businesses. Lock·
heed is trying to determine if robots
can rivet airplane partS together, ~ oordin8 to a company spokesman.
One of the oompanies supplying
robots ln the VaJJey is Autobotics of San
.Josie. the brainchild of Jeny Fedoc The
company manuladures tw<>fOO( taJI,
30()..pound robgts, used by many 009-
nesses to perform monotonous duties,
generally pick-up and puHn·p~
WU. The robots don't resemble
humans -they don't have heads -
but they do have 12-lnch pneumatic
anns with grippers on the ends. similar
to fingers.
"These aren't as exotic as many,"
says Fedot "But I think the market is
tremendous for this type of robot. The
most elaborale ones on the market to-
day go for between S35.000 and
St00,000 apiece. Ours only oost
Sl7 850 each "
M&ily in the Silicon Valley think the
robotics field today is in the same~
lion oomputers were a decade ago.
They predict that the S 150 mlJlion
robotics industry in America. compris-
ing upward of 50 manufacturers, 1s on
the verge of widespread growth. Sales
ln thls oountry are pro;ected to be as
high u S9.2 bUllon by 1990, with more sober estimates hovering af about M.5
billion, Pem says.
"Almosl every firm ln the Santa
Clara VaJley must think about robotlz.&.
lion because of the high cost of tabor
here," Peers often. "I believe that In
the decade ahead we will see full auto-
mation in the Valley."
Optimists say that if both Gov~
ment and industry are willing. robot•
oould actually play an lnnuential role In
revitali.zJng American Industry durtn~
the next decade. After all, robots don t
tire, get h~er1 or have marital
problems. They can work m>und the
dock and are the.aper than humant.
because employers don't have to pay
retirement ot other lrtnae benefits.
But labor oppolhion Tn thll country
will problbly hln.ae on unerT1Pkmneril
rlUl lor bl~ worken. So far the
blue<Ollar worker'a lbkude lo*aid hJI
coklheMed cohort hM been anyth1na
~ ~ moltJy becw• he lelrl
losing his job to a robot. These ~
cions may not be unJounded. "Every
time the COit of labor goes up $1 an
hour." Roier B. Smith, chairman ot
General M0tors. has sa.ki, " I .000 more
robots become economical.''
"Workers haven't lost jobs yet," says
Jim Tunmin~ an electrician with the Ford Mocor company and the new-
technoloA.Y representative for the
United Automobile Workers union.
"But the robots prevent us from aeaing
more people. It atfeas the men coming
lo the door looking tor a job."
Yet in the country that harbon 70
percent of the wortd's robot populace,
there has been little resistance to
robots. In Japan, h.ighJy developed
machines are put to work in nearly all
types ot manufacturing. and robots are
introduced to indUSlly at the rate of
20,000 a ye.at Japanese workers toy
with their mechanic.al surrogates. nam-
ing them after rode singers and movie
greats. Thia attitude has been inst~
mental In puUlfl8 the Japanese far
ahead in the Industry. Robotics backers
point out that Americans m~ play
catch-up to the Japanese, whose robo-
tics industry is already S3.S billlon
tarse.
Meanwhile, back In the Sllkx>n Val-
ley, exciting brealthroughs in robotics
are being forved It places like the
Machine lntelTlgenc.e CorporaUon ln
Sunnyv•. whlch sharpent vision
l)'ltems lor roboCs.
"We give robots~ and brains to
they can ptck up plrts by lifJht, lndud-
lng auto parts. toxic chemk:als and
other materials," Mys 8any Rlpom. I
vke ~ of marketlna at the th~ ftrm. This~· vi-"°" ~ wtllc.tl hOo1l into robW llradY on the rht.rltet. ~ tDbots to =Ind~ ~n.w.. amona
PerbQ the .... contrtbutiont It Stantord'a ·Altfi.:lil lntelllalnce L8b ~
also in the area of robotic vision. A few years aao. a graduale student named
Hans Moravec built a four-wheeled cart
with a camera mounted on lop. The
cart drove itself, stopped when it dis-
tinguished an ob;ect in front of it, turn-
ed to one side and then retreated or ~
vanced when the field WM dear.
Another Stanford project being de-
veloped is called ACRONYM. Here, a
computer is used to se4ect general ot>-
)ecls with the aid of a photograph. For
in.stance. if the computer is told what
the general shape of an airplane looks
like. It ca.n then scan a large pho(<>-
graph al an airfield and quicldy count
ihe-number of planes in 1t. When this
vision syslem ls linked with the physi-
cal strength of a robot, it will greatly ex-
pand its talents.
NUltlmarely. the robot would not only
be able to identify certain ob;ects. but
also be able to exrract and isolate them
as well." says Dr. Sidney Uebes. former
senK>r research assodate at Stanford.
Of course. the ultimate robot should
be able to hear and feel, as well as see.
Evenrually, robots will be able to c:any
on limited d~ with one another
and with humans.. They also will ~
nize a speaker by voice and diacem has emotions by the IOM of his voice, ~
oording to Tom Carroll. president of In-
ternational Robotics F'oundltion, a
robot-developer's dub based in Los Anaieles.
£"ven so, 90fTle folk.I may stUI have
dUftculty refatlng to these metallic
marvda. Part of the reMOn, says Peen.
ls that IOme domestic robott wW be
horizontal (more like a doe or cat) fn.
stead of having an upri8ht human
aance. .. But ~ vtll Rd mat to u loot
when they· realize how Uldul It can
be, .. he ldds. "'
Now you can plan your 1983 cruise with the
most generous savings ever offered by a luxury
cruise line. Save in every season. Save in every
category. And there's j~ one string actached.
You must book your cabin by March 31 , 1983.
Thar's it. No complications. No restrictions.
s..s-.. c."" ... Tl alCa he
Save $500 per person (double occupan·
cy) on the vacation of a lifetime. For
14 lovely, luxurious days you'll explore
the exotic Car:ibbcan, the glamorous
Mexican Riviera and the man-made
wonder of the Panama Canal.
Sianar offers 6 different itineraries
i:n 1983. F111t ctuarter ai1h9 depart
January 15 and 29, February 5and19or
March Sand 19.
Slillf s.u.s -....., CniM.
Save $500 per couple on any 14.-day Alaska
cruise. Save $400 per couple on any 7, 10 or
11-day Mexico cruise.
Save $400 per couple on any Caribbean
cruise beginning April 9.
II Sii • Ca uh-.
S-'' ...... a. •••
~·re VC1)' ~about our reputation.~ may
temporarily mm our pnces, but we'll never cut
back on the luxury Sitmar is famous for: 24-hour
European style pampering, m3B!'ific.ent dining,
spacious staterooms, sparkling entertain·
ment and more ttrne ro enjoy shipboard life
and a fascinating variety of ports. ... .., .....
And even with these savmg, you still Ay
&et tO and from the Llberian·rqistered
T.S.S. Faitlca or Fairwind. But remember
March 31. It's the only string anached.
The Sitnl8T ~rience is IO&d
exclusively by ~J aavel qents.
Comuk YotJr'S today.
--
AngleD1cldnscm.sap:
"MQbe JOU.love Avocados
because thaJ'xe good for :youtw
If you're absolutely craey about avocados, Jil8iYbe it's because
your 1:xxzy' wants w hat's 1n avocados.
I .. I
I
Jlm'8 pol I tum~ a lwnene
8'Y potassium to most people,
and ~
~.~
nas~ But,
surprtsel
Ounoeper
ounoe, avocados have 66% more
potass:tum than bananas. Plus
4 other esaent1.al minerals
1nclud:ing magnesium, phos-
phorous, ca.lc1um a.nd iron.
'1lnl clmt* Un to 'be .. Cll'llll&e
to Jurn V'blnntn C. An average
4-ounoe avocado half shell pro-
vides 12% of the RDA of VJ.ta,.
m1n C. You get vitamin s A, E,
Bi, Ba. and Ni&o1n, too.
A1rooadm Un •lleolme)1'
DO chnJ• uoL Bure, avocados
.taste riah and sa.t1s(y1.ng. Yet
they have absolutely no cho-
lesterol. And they're low 1n
sodium.
AD Ulia pct mmtUaa 11ar
fewu aaJart. Uaaa JOQ
U,tp)r
There are only lB3 calories
1n a.n ave~e 4-0unoe
avocado half shell
Now that theta's such a
healthy supply of avocados
fu your store, you should
be 1ru'1 tl" ng yourself With
a olee.r oonsmenoe. Your
body knows what's good
tor you.
PICTURES AT
ANEXHIBmON
By Michelle Bekey
California's art muse-
ums are as diverse as
Californians them·
selves. To sample the
state's offerings of art
treuJres. visit these leading
~nodeeo. The M.H. de
Young MemoriaJ Museum.
founded in 1894. is situated in
Golden Gate Park.
Designed in a neo-Egyptjan
style, the museum's entrance
ramps curve around a lily
pond.
The museum's primitJve
and Western art collections
are its prized attractions. One wiJl8 displays primitive works
from Africa. the South Pacific
lslands and India. The other
wing houses ~ian antiqu;..
ties and American and Eunr
pean art.
Museum hours are Wednes--
day through Sunday, 10 A.M.
to 5 P.M. Telephone: (415)
558-2887
Me'P-The J. Pau l Getty
Museum. Founded in 1953 by
the oil billionaire. the
museum first occupied pan of
a diff-top Malibu mansion.
When it OU~ that space,
Getty commlSSioned a new
structure. modeled after an
ancient Roman villa. A nar-
row pool runs throueh the
center of the courtyard, and
statues cast from those al the
original villa gJ"ace the garden
Renowned k>r its collection
of Greek and Roman art. this
museum also has a fine collec-
tion of Western art.
The Getty is open to the
public 10 A.M. to 5 P.M., Tues-
day through Saturday. (213)
454-6541.
Pew >• The eleflant Nor-
ton Simon Museum ol Art. aa
the ba.se of a mountain range.
boasts one of the world's fin-
est collecUons of a· ti pnnts. tapestries and
ture. Rembrandt.
and van Gogh are among the
famous ~ represented in
its European collection. And
mol'e than 100 Degas a::ul~
tures are featured.
Museum· hours are Thurs-
day through Sunday, noon to
6 P.M. (213) 4-4~.
Sui MartDo. The Hunt1fl8"
ton Libmy, Art Gallery and
Botanical Gardens. which first
opened in 1919, is California's
largest museum.
Such priceless lit~ trea-
sures as the earliest edit>0ns of
Shakespeare's plays and a
Gutenberg bible (circa 1450)
reside in the ljbrary. The
gallery boasts a fine ooUedion
of Britl.sh 18th-and l 9th-
century art which indudes
Gainsborough's "The Blue
Boy" and Laurence's "Pinkie"
the museum occupies the
former home or its Joun~
Los AnseJes businessman and
bibliophile Henry E. Hun-
tlnfon. Plants. trees and a
vanety of gardens fill the
207-acre groun<b. Open Tu&
day through Saturday, I P.M.
to 4:30 P.M. You'll need a writ·
ten request for advance
tickets for Sundays. (213)
792-6142. fW
YOUR GUIDE TO UPCOMING EVENTS
JM. I: Tournament of Roses
Parade/Rose Bowl Football G.vne.P~ Jaa. I: New Yeu's Day
Sailboat Handicap. San Dleao
Hllt>or J••· 11 Penauln Day Ski T•t Mtsa'on e.Y .a-. •Ski W'an. South Lake
niho9 J-. Uh S.Vtrly Hiiis Doc
Show/Obedience Trials, Los
A"J::. I.Ir H~ 211 ~Si.aOot him
Sprin• •
Jaa. 1 t : All Breed Do1
Show, Ventur11 Ju. 111 Folk Dance Festi-
val. Los AnaeJes
Jaa. 11·201 Si erra Ski
R&nc:h/lWlot Carnival, South
Laken.boe
Jam. 11-JOl Seventh Mnual
Stockton ~ EJq>O JM. U 1 Super Bowl Sunday JOK Run. RedOndo Beldi Jaa. 211 Minion Bay
Marathon
Ju. II, J01 Mounted
Pollot RDdlo tnd ,,.. Pllm
Sprtiw
~--··
AMAZING ~1.00 OFFER
JUMBO l'ACK£T OF Rt'RCF.S!i GIANT CL/Nil/NC mNA ro SFFDS FOR JUST JI{)()
IS~ I\.~ ~I~ ,,.iwl
GROW HUGE, JUICY
TOMA TOES IN 90
DA VS -HAVE PLENTY
FOR CANNING AND
GIVE BUSHELS AWAY
TO YOUR FRIENDS!
EXCLUSIVE
BURGESS
TRIP·L..CROP
GIANT CLIMBING
TOMATO GROWS AS
HIGH AS 26 FEET !
Biptt, ..-tie.t, jUIClftt lC>mllto.l
you'" ner ta•* 1
Vine quldtty ructies 12'·18 -S-·
~-11025'1
Tometoet l'OW bit a 6" .aot1 --·
• mudl a 2 pounds I
TAIP·l ·CROP lS A
"llnt oi 8urpw" WINNER
'T'tl• •lt'-ty t1 ewhtA,..if'ltl ,,. °"' h\t of ow•• JO t•,,.•t• ,..ect.,.•u ANI •• "'ow•• •Mw • 0014 r.tt •Mwt !, ... ,.. teM1toe• -we'Yft ... .._ :::.·:-,::-.. ·~:::: ::'J~J-:.:~:;~: .. :::-.:, tt.e• ._.ttUNI ... TeMtte .._,.,,.,hut tt H ........ le .,.,,..., .. ••V te Ute ''H"Y fl1" ,..,..., .. ,of ... ,.. ... ....,, •ft• •&a"h
CMowa -tH4h1 -f9Cl\IK.. ..mon te:2'ale"a~!l2'.ii~~~~~!'22~:2.2ri!2"
no roam I
:>t I ( •• \'11':. i ('•
. r. .·. •. · . ~ ; ~ ... · .·• : ·, ·, i ~ .
'n.io--._ ... _.., __ ....., _
--"" ~ _.. ..... ...,_ ...,,,.._ ........
HERE'S OUR GUARANTEE
tf ,.., .,. fltOf C8f'\···· .. , .......... ..... . ... ····i ., ....... of yotu T••·\.-Cf'O• TOM1t• :::· .. :.::~!:~~rv..;'~-:e • .::·:~~,:.~:::r::
.... ft•I"\ ................ f'OW C_.,_•t ... . -UNO NOWI
_. -..i-TII• '" .... .._ -v -11-to .. M'tZM!l81i18111aii-ail11811-~2eilad ...... cMltc_ ............. __ • .,. , ... ......
---to Ms! ... ...-..... et .... ,__ ..... r:--..------:::Jl"'T-'1'T-orn:=-""'ll'T-v--··-...-i ....... -i--••-._of ---................ ., .... ~.
-9 .......... T•l.O.. -1 __ .,..Cll...
: •,' I • ',' ;,
I-J I { T ' I • • I ~ ',' • r • ' t t ~ ' •
' II jr"
"""" Seed • "'9ftt ~ny ._..lnfton, 1111"°'9 81701
ORDER HERE TODAY----·
8URGUI SEED a ~NT COW.ANY
OCl'T • .,_. _,,_ ............
lloMfthy.oft, '"IMil 1 rnn
HQ l'OS'TMU Oil HANOI.I ... CHAAOl
0 1tto .,,.,._ .... a ..._ 0--.V
........ 11 •1.00 fer -1P02 .,_.. PIMllM ef ~ Tu~l~ T-'9 ... -....... ~lll ............... ,.._AM.,, ..... Tu.
80R"V LIMIT Of' 1 ~AOCAOI Nit CUITOMlfll.
CITY~------------'IT-...A_Tl.._ _______ ._1, ______ _
............
Colorado Blue Spruce
Fwe Year Old 1-2 Ft. TaH
Only $1.95 ea.
3 for SS.75
9for $15.95
6for $10.95
12 for Sl9.95
Now you can purchase the ever-popular.
ever·bHut1ful Colorado Blue Spruce
(PICH punaens gl1uca) at tht5 $peetal
low price-only $1 95 each These
versatile Blue Spruce are lovely as
sinele .ccent ptant1nc. as a pnv.cy raw
or windbreak. and as a colorful corner
aroupma Its rtGh silver-blue follaae
tn.i. It a~~ att ~r around
You'll r~ive select, nicely branched
5-yur1>1d transplanted trees that are
at lust 1 to 2 f"t t.111! Hav1nc been
transplanted, the root system ts well
~and Wiii hefp the tree pt off
to a fast start. Order your Blue Spruce
on the conv«111nt coupon below Send
$1.95 tor 1, 15.71 tot 3. $10.95 tor 6
$15.95tor9. and 12tor $19.95.
SPECIAL OFFER
COLORADO BWE SPRUCE
3 Year Okt 10 to 18 Inch
J tor Onty $2.49
6torM.85 9torS6.95 12torS8.95
SfrOf11. -1Mrfl .,_,, 10 to II• 3 ,_ °"'
~ .,. NurM<Y .,_.. They're IUll IN
r9'114ft tor~ Thew 1.--.... "4llP ,,,..,,
'Pit pre! Into • .,_ .. °'°"Now
QUINAUl T EVERIEARING STRAWBtRRtES
GREAT NEW VARIETY
rtCK IDlllD t.-TO 2· IN
OWlnl1t fltOM .u.E. .. TIU FROST
10for$1.95 25forS 3.95
50for $6.95 lOOfor $11.95
ftlAHT THIS YEAR4tARVEST THIS YEAR ...... ....,~ ..... ,-~ .. -_.....,.51,...
bttry !NI r-10 bit .. '*Mte IO I .. ,o.. .. rt llfteocl '°"-'I '*-"' 9ut ~ ..... -lol#Kl .. bit" t.
cup&• Thll-.....~ -~.,,-~II.It• ~ ........... ..,io-.lht.-~ -~,_ __ 1t1IJ1tetaendC.-Wll
..-... ... 1u111-_.tor_ ,._....,_.,.~IT
W~ rou.«> TO Ill THE MOIST DdEASE-FAU l'VtlllllEARIHC
Wf HAii£ EW1' Tt:STfDI e.c-11 It 10 ,_IN~ • Siii C-,. Meted IM II ~ llO .....
.. t11t ..,_,... ., ....... it a wwy ~ 'II 1i01 IN lillOST POPVlAA VNl.\£TY Of EVEllllEMIHO
ITltA~S AMAZE ~ RllENOS-00....,. d Illa. delbout Str.....,,_ _, .._ ..-.
.. -... "-.,.,.., _., toclfy enCI ... 1'-lt.nwd -0rOW 91 1111111 "'Oleftta IO II) them °"' or_.."'°" mn _. n-,...,,. °""-" c-~• 1111191pr..,. -s _... _,,. ... ~ ... ,.,...,........_ .a119n,,.,....,.....,. Mid .. _..,
EASY·TO-OROW-elG-TDCJER
DnJCtOUS
ASPARAGUS
11 ...... OllJ $1.00
1tt.$US
Jlt.SUt
.......... dtltelOut-
•M~tllt-PMI ~ .. -~. 0.-.... thld"".,. IMI .-.11111 ,_.., pro.
6-WID,_....,,..
WaalliflltOfl YWltty ,,...
d.,Clt9 ellvftdll11t. 111111 ...........
.. __,,.
DUI
If you're rejected ror per·
sonal credit and feel it's ur>-
justified, you don't have to
take it lying down. Under
Federal law, you have 60 days
to object to the credit tum-
down and ask for the reason
in writiflS . "Complaining can't hun.
and it rould be enough to set
you the credit you want," says
Bruce Hall. ronsumer ea>~
mist for the Cornell Coopera-
tive Extension, "especially if
you are a borderline case ··
These days more and more
large lending institutions ju<ise your credit worthiness
via an internal computerized
sconng system instead of us-
ing independent credit-rating
bureaus that simply monitor
how well you pay your bills
This more impersonal sroring
system weighs stability, ~
pat1on. income, financiaJ
hLStory and aee -then rom.
pares your total score to !hose
ol others in the data bank to
detennine how good a credit
risk you seem to be.
Problem is, computers
malte mistakes. and some
applications may not eJ1011he
kind of information that
romes out in the type of per·
sonaJ credit mterv~ that
was common in the pa.st. f'or
example, say your applicarion
is rejected because you've
been on your job for only
three months -but you
spent 10 years at your last job
The fonn may not have asked
tor that information, but a
credit manager might be
swayed enough to grant the
loan
"=r:lra:-
--~--.... .:...c;;.. ac=.•
~~ c.... ........... ,.,.,.
30 f'M&Y Wtlm. c.:nma ••...
HILPINOTHI gyr•uzm
• Warning s The Surgeon General Has Determined •rw. Mom. •.-c •Ml
That Cipett1 Smoking Is Dengeroua to Your Health.
It's Hard To Believe
Th.tt These Are Simulate d Diamonds 1 They Looi< So ''Rear · Youd
Nee d To See T hem Under A M icroscope To Be Sure They'r e Simul ated
YOU DOWT HAW TO IE A MILUOlllAIRI TO LOO« LIKE OHE WHEN YOU WEAR llMULATED
GUSTONEI ''"* ~USN GALlllUU. Y• doft't hewe to .... *100 • • Oii .... -tD oww one
ol *-,a1d lo11d11' rl• d 111 ... O......,...,...., no ~on .._ Piii • oaat you,,.. than
... 00. Miity 001t ltllilt .... .,... 11-'Jlid dl:Mt ....... IO brilliant arid,....... only~ dlamoNI OX·
part -................... dhMl .. I And ..,.N IO held they Will cut .... I 'flMIN .. alto a..ud•
M ... I ........ JIMJdJtid,...... ci1HiM'""' Ey•. demiltt li•utftld ltar .... , ....... ll""Y
...._ M .. tet a. ........ ol ~~..a ...... ._.. for your fnori1ll now we.Me 1MI...,..
W _. ..,_it s"lilih. Y• ~ ..._ tt yw .. not._......., •tisftld mum to• bW lNIURED
IMIL fw fJdl ftlllilll. ORDER TODAY. lwry ... Ii luxurtoUll'y Ifft boad.
e,....
A ............. ....._ .... ltalre 0-nr.
(9') c .......... .,... .... _.._ .. , ...
~ wt• n ._.,.,•..-it• .. ... ......_.1 ................ ... .... ~, .......... .,...__ _. ...
5 -1 ct. 14Kt.OI WA. l .4t -t ca. l4KtA11 Va tAt • -• n. t4KtAll .... • •• ,.. .... -• ... 141041 v... .. .... 111! -a ct. , ..... wa. 11.et ....... -,ct.'"" .... v... • •.•• " -..... •4Km .... .. ... 1111-· ct.. 14K y... .. ... -•ct.·-· .... ...
..... ~ IUGHTLY ENt:AJtGID :re> IHDll DITAIL
_,,..... ....... , ........... .......................... ........................
hwlft .. ,. """·..... • ... .. ..... ..,. v ............ ..
PULL ONl·YEAR GUARANTIE 1--------·;;;.;;;~;;---------·a
I Cl'OWH QALLSllUU l"OSTAO• I
DIY"'-11 .. ll't1ntJttA, •-l'l'•l'AID I I o.t. t2ia-10a I
UtJ bit OMlllM """"' 0 tNO lllLAHT.-ON. INC. , I ..._.,.. .. ., 1 ........ 11111
:::::~ u.-:::_l9TV·1;:;1·~~ 1 """'~'2! I =J I t..,.-r••:--& .. ...,_ ... _( I llllilll19 -... t~ ......... ,.._ •... llllMf• ._,.,. .... , ... "'.....,Te•----
... ..._ ........... ·-Telll 11l111Hnt•11eto .. ...... ....... *' ............ ~ ...... .... .,...~ ................... ~" A ••••••• , •••••• M
Dll,LAT TOUll TWWUllED
'LATH en nanosom• h11a· •004 lungea taHts Eteo1nt
ebony 1n1met lin1sn
SlloW1 tnem ott beaulllu~' !J r E1111 !53~5! . 0 F hHI 53652 .
TllHTEI WDHLT CHAlll
LIU; rungs any loose wood
101nu-w1thout 01ue clamps
mess' Pen inJects 1mu1no ,.,111nl 1gent t1111 m1•u
1m 111 stay tight' ...., Ttt1-Jtl1t ( 738 74) ,.,....
DUTDDDll THEHDMnEll
pr111-mounts to your window
outstde-you rnd temptn·
lure 1n comfort from '"'"'' E11y-1ud1ng• Pt11t1c. iv.·
01i.Mr· Tllttll ~-
( 870311 ···~
. VII II"' mM All ----· ,.....,,..,, ........... ........ ,,,,, ...... ,. . .,,,,, ,._,°' ......... "' ....... :liar" lltll ltM It AllOl.V11L Y
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fvllY llOJ 1 ... lly Cll~llllftt
NJrl '"' Wiii ... llOlfl I "" '% lllwt 1111u110 lrtm ltd• ,. ..... 11110118 '"' ltan Tiit tluttv• unicorn PIOC.,•mtd 1 n111ve ot 1n
clenl lf\011 11 1 1ymllqt of JVrlly H1011ly 9tutd lach ~llOUI 4• ~I ,.. ...... " 510ll ~ U1lnr1 hit ......._ 51251 .....
ICHOOL MIMOIUH 1001 11 111rt111fln• w1lh c1111d a n1mt1 12 -MPHkt t nv1lopu fo1 lat grade lhru '2111 i'adt. placH for ~otos 11Qna1uru etc tatt 111 H!,1 __
O kllffl-llaya IP 985S8l ~
HI ADDIUll UIHI t• flAIHOW COLORI ado chur 10 ma11 . tnd writing rtlurn 1do1111• Jual Wll & suck 3 11nu-
1tatt ...... ''" '"'"'· 1111. n '"L•ht• 10-2oa.t21 0 Dt1111111r (3S8651
I To:
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I CITY TATl __ ZtP_
~Im IONl'I PAcm EHTAV TICQT
~-----------------~ A
llUIMT OWL roTIIOlDElll UI 9.AllfTlCI A WIM paJt
of jllft handlers-they ldd I
cllury note to 111tcr11nt
O•llt9d rayo111totton. 6W' •
SW a.tetz.
0 DWI Mii* lo-83'61) it.tt
COUfOtl uwa WE kMPI 'em orpn1nd usy to Ill ndll Wlllle I hop p1 nt
Sturdy 1nvelo1>11 tor t2 gro· cery 9roup1n111 bound Into ~ bookltl 6W I~ D ~._(111211 ~
COffH,QT LDOl·ALllE
orettoly llolds 1nst1nt cotttt
on !Ult Screw·llte hd -MP•
1t rrnll Nice lor sugar too Crystal·clur plullc llanoy
sooon incl •'I·· 111
n c.""''' 1111ee1 s""'t
OH ITllOH ITlll,. DFf ROLE lSlllEU lrom ur ot com• Juat sltp over 1no-down stroke shears olf every
kernel wl!Ole1 Chromed metal
D Cen-ltrl"" (t9038) ~
A Mtel TWiil opens tilt most
stullllorn Jiii & bottlu• HHtvtr· •t• Jar Wfencll loosens hd• hom tiny natl poh1h bottle lo bit ptclilt llr. Plated 1t"I 7>1<' 111 ~
O lel Wl'..a 1•5131) ••--..
CUVH COITOUR IMICf'H IT1lAlllH let• you dralfl IOOd
ripl ftom 1111 pan No more ~II•. Durntd lllndsl Pluuc tOV'.16.-0 .......... i. (83170) ••"'«
lllTAllT Mil CADDY l11m ., t• 24 •IH•t• ot soup UUCI. dressing m1aes HOICIS
em upright. easy-lo-find' WMe. plnltc·coalld Wlrl r
1 3W stands. lllftgs .:J .,. ~ 1867 2) ~
"'EICH RtY CUTTtll IUUI mtl IUCEI qu1cl!ly eas1ty1
Sharp mttal t/lruds form gno tlllt shus 11g11t 111rouo11 po -
1110-sav• fime lu111 Un•·
loon IUca fry befttr. too•_~~·
D '" Cetttr (13303) ST."tt
MUT·llEfUCTlll Dll" PAii spud coo11.1ng no "°""'' llelKt Mltl Chrome plated stttl. ht notched pan elements
:J t' Drl• he 1738581 IN 0 t' Drt, , .. 73866 SH(
llAllDY IWlklll 'II EIDI
AHZDI IUUIWOMI l.lbeta lrozen looos wnh tht con· tents I date Sp1c1a1 Ink
Wrllll on 1011 lrHZtr ""'1 blQI & boHI WH't 11111 lft o Jr111·•m (2<>6151 ~
ILICE 011011 'lllfECTLY,. IAfELYI Handy lloldtr llU ,., 1t11n11u atttl pronqs to grip sltppery on1on1, gu1C1e kn1l1 lor oertecl. 1111n 1ltca1• Wide handle kHP• nn11•rs "1'1 . O O.IM-MeN (99093)~
~~TS ~=: c:~. llNCe , .. ,
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dM IO poor WlnelllllelO VISton•
Cll1m1c111, tru ted 'Pono•
lltlps ietp window• m1rro11 ~-lrtt tor weeks• 0 ,,, .••• , (8'1111 lt1(
ILAH lAPf lllDI LIU 1111L ITllAPll Stfl·ICllll·
alW polytrter relntorctel wttll ...,Qlau-rllll1• up lo 200
-stmat w wld• 0 41r ..... 1ll,. .._
(412 .. l .. ··~
DOl'T LOU YOUlllELF OUT
OF KOUll. CUI M1onel1c
CHIS h1d1 lf)lrt kers Hiiiy CltnO lo iron or llH t1cll1-
b1h1no drain unde1 lender
tic Steel 1 w 1 2V•" let tf2 n ..,......,. 1o-eaa:n1 mq
MIX OR MATCH
ANY I rTUll
CAii DAIKIDAllD CHPUI shows 11u1 01r1ct1on 1 Don· 1 ~1 losl on 11ntam11t11 road•'
Bold lll•c• I.tiers M ID h•P
you on courH '" Cll DOii 1· d11m Suctton·mou•m..._. r c..,. .. 1•J02111 •··~
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p11'1 ut• return Wlltn hi
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w1nd1h11ld 1 Ends 1c11p1ng
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1re111d with 1nlt·ho11 101n1 -1u1t rub on Rtuubll = ffelt·Any (787411 lf'14.
(1 to 5 """' ptloed
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FOLDAWAY DlllH flACI HDI IPILL.a 11 CAlll Fllp1 011tn lo hold can 01 cup firmly
Folds ftll to shp 1n glcwt com
11<1rtm1n1 Hooks secu111y into window lrldl Pluhc, r.;: lg_ 0 OrlM·Kat• (13342) ~
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ITAfl ITllll Per1on111ud mat ~ .. c1tn11·fHt loam ctn·
111 10 ttop 1lldlng-pro11ct floor Y111yl 21W 1 14',.Y .... !'! ...... 0 '91 !bl (P·02253) ""tt
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MASTERCARD = VISA -<IMERtCAN UPRESS
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IU TH CARDI WITMOUT
IUllEll Standard·Slle ·Carda lllv• g••nt m1rk1nos ,0 l·Z IN Hk
• at.Han (32284\ ~ • PIHCMt (841621 .
:IMle (72728) ,,
YOUll OWi PllllTll8 H TI
YM 11t I H•11lel1 l lfltl· h te, 11•hr1, •Y•••ll-
ph11 stamps, ink pad.
lwffz1111 P.,sonaltze cl\Kks
llooka. fnnt s19ns etc 0 '"" ... 113136) st.tt
Cltllll IUUTlfUL MOHlO
llUll 11 HALF TMf Tl•f wtth Jilly Rug Gun• Jut load .
press rtluae• l(nots 1n pre· cut y11n1 twice as tut (up to
600 1n one houri•
...J .... 811 (440991 $~
VEIUI flY TUP' CAJCMll a
UTI llllCTll Em mut 100• 011t ol naturt s 1111110• Prod11cts exotic wh•tt
tllonoms pin-trap1 Bulb develops 1n 3·4 11rttks :J YIHI Trtll (92080) lttt
CAKllLED CMICll COULO
IAVI YOU •OlfYI So kttp tlltm Hit l handy I Sturcty ea·
pandable nit llu 12 comp11t·
menu 10 kttp chtckS 1n
monthly order 4• c 8" :::J c ... , fllt 191533) •"4(
,URIHECT •on P'AD FOii
CAT lOVfllll Each sh111
burs ll1t1y oortr11t ''' el
41. 4W a 5:,;,· Au t COl~S -Tal"r 1749•81 I . -111 .. e11 1749711 I = P'111t11 1149HI I
rn YfAR LIGHT IULl-gumnteed
to burn b11ght1y a lull IO YHrs-or
•• ,, r1p11ce I 1111• L1bor11ory
tureo• Saves S S S in reo11cement
COSIS Inds fteQUlnt Chang1ng1 Ideal
tor llud·to·oet·lt llx1ures Burns IP· prox1m1111y 10 000 11ours-out1uti !!.E> to 13 ord1nuy bulbs'
.... Tu Yur h t• hell ~
HW 1693021 78W (69450j 41W 69~01 1HW 199468)
NW 694~3 1NW (69~92)
lllllHT VIU L·COATED ITHL Cllrl Strong enough to llano 11run decora
ttve enough 10 nold papers on
ouk bull11tn boud 2 lg
Au t colors P'kl et 11 :l Cell cu,. (0 91751) ~
IU·TMllU ZIPP'Ell CUE NOnCT1 HITI, WOOL.Dl1 tor storao• or tr1v11' Great for sw11ters, llngerlt. blouus
Z101 ahut tor motflprooling
Ht1vy plastic Btg l()" IC 1J" .
:J z1,.cu1 (936091 ST:q
TMllUD UV HEDU II·
ITA•TLY w1t11 A111omat1t Threader• Just pul lhrnd 1n groO'le. push button & you rt rudy to sew' Bulll·ln cu1111 snips t/lread at any lenotll 'l Tltleafet (00307) ~
MUI 1Z IMlllTI II 1· Of CLDllT IPACf-w11hou1 crustuno wnnkltno• Just llOok caddy over closet rod & nano
clothing Ta9er·d111gn avoids
wrtnklinQ. Steel e· wide .:J IMrt teMy (697081 lf'tt
IEVlll HUO·lAUIDEll
MDII 011 LIHElllE Wiii
Do tnem nt1ly 1n wurier & dryer •II/I nylon 111sty
Wuller Cue• Protects from snags. tw1als' Holds to 12 pr -W.U·Cut (810671 lf'q
IO·IMIH PllU lll8 W•lll S•I·
1cone·l1n1sh iron cover• Slip EZ·Pr•n onr iron & press sh1nl·
tr"--.Vtrl s1n111e11cs' 0 11·"911 172314) ,.,....
HEP HWll8 MACtHIE DUIT
fllf£1 Plullc cover k"95 dirt out of mechanism & off your wort Sltps on off' fits standud -~m&ehtne ~ 0 ltw·Ctffr183980 )
IEVlll WUN WIHOWll Just wtusk Wonder Ciotti over any glu1 aurlact Sptct1I ch1m1cals ru111 wat11 sums,
smudges Grtat tor mirrors,
••nd1h111os too' ur • 1r
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IO MORE "IOAP' Dllff Jti.1.Y-
wlle n you kteO lhe bu on t111s
open 11r stand A,1 circu· 111n-ou Ortu tlloroug111y1
No drtppy mess• No waste! Cnrome·plated metal :J INll Dryer (21 4851 I~
fOLO ·AWAY IClllOlll IO HYWNlllll Tuck 111 11urn
pocket IUllCUt Ahny1
~andy wlltn you nttd 111em1
Sllarp ""'' ICIUOra fold 10 [!!II 2'h·1 In v1n11 UH
0 , •••• """ (&ISll) ~
"ltOT fODT" Mii • .., t1tt
•tnl 1n cold wtlllltrl G1vt
glowlng w11mth on body con
Cacti Trim & 11111 into 1hot1
Cu1111on '"' 1001 Grtal IOI an~ outdoor actmly' ho...a 0 Mtl fNl (92304) •• ~
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you 1t1111t11 or re1111et runot ICltWI 1n HCOnd•' Hu mini· acrtwdrtvtr m1on1ty1no
g1a11 4 screws Stvu t11p1 lo op11c11n-& monty• U hna Ill (&9501) I~
TAU 'UU 0,, IWUTlllll A
ltw IHOUI With O·Fvu·ll
w11110 oa111no m1111no 11111
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Q D·flU·lt 1227481 ~
lllllOVI CAU.UIH. COllMI. MUD llll-Q111ckly
p11n1t111y & 1conom1ully1
Foot Smoother 1111 fine atain
1n1 111t1 abru1v1 turfact
Salt & uay 10 1111 LV• :J ,......, .... 1ose111 n:ott
CATCH NAiii TlllM Cll,,11111
Mo mtlly clun 11pt •telly IWr down llKk' Snap-on w1ny1 c00t11-11p llu
n111blt rim Grtat lor p11m•.1.&!
0 11'1• Trty (232117) ···~
11 ITllL TlfTif CWTCH ICf Ull CUWll Gin ult. au rt looting on
thou 111ck 1urf1cn Just 1llp
ovtr '"°'' boot• £tulle band 101u111 to any 1111 111oe1 0 ICI 811111 (5H25) ~
ZA•Y IUDll ,AllTY IUll -tor a drink with ·oody''
ChOOlt malt 01 l1m11t IKll .w1111 111 1111 ot11111 11111 make
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