HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-01-22 - Orange Coast Pilot......... ~-~ ........
IUlll CUii .
I ti 11 H •I >A l' I A N l J /d n . · · 1!1 1
Ex-captives seriously abused ------
Wycliffe
official
abducted
By JOHN ANTCZAK .--....... _ .•. -
Missionary Chester Bitterman
affiliated with the Wycliffe Bibi~
translating group of Huntington
Beach, has been kidnapp_ed by
armed terrorists io B~gota
Colombia , Bibl e gr o up'
spokesmen reported today.
According to the spokesman
the terrorists burst into a missi~
house where Bitterman , 29, of
Pen_nsylvania, was staying.
Bitterman was taken by six
men and a woman armed with a
machinegun and pistols who
raided a mission house al 6 a .m .
Monday, said Bill Key, an assis-
tant to the Wycliffe Bible translat-
ing group's Latin Ame rican
director.
Bitterman of Lancaster. Pa ..
had suffered abdominal pains and
was scheduled for s urgery when
he was taken by the terrorists
and it was not known if his ailment
was Ufe-threatening, Key s aid.
Tbe reason for the kidnapping
wasnotknown, Key said.
"We're not sure just what they
are looting for or just what they
wanted lo accomplis h,·· he said.
"We've heard rumors and so
forth. There bas been guerrilla
aclit<ily in some of the areas we
ba ve been working there."
Key said security forces are in
the area and have warned mis-
sionaries of guerrilla acli vity.
Key speculated that the or-
eanizatioo 's contractual link
with the government could be the
reason for the apparent guerrilla
action.
"We have a group house there,
a house where people going in and
out of the city C Bogota) can
stay." Key said, noting that Bit-
terman was only staying there
for medical reasons.
."There were about half a dozen
people and this group ca me in,"
he s aid. "We're not sure just who
they are. There were seven of
them -o ne dressed a s a
policeman -and the rest ju,,t
barged in. They had machine
guns and pistols .··
The unidentified band was ap-
parently looking for the Bogota
mission director, Al Wheeler, who
was not at the house, so they took
Bitterman instead, Key s aid.
No ransom demand or com-
munications have been received.
he said.
Bitterman has lived in Colom-
bia with his wife, Brenda, and
daughters Anna, 3, and Esther. 1.
sinceSeptemberof 1979.
Wycliffe, a non-sectarian Chris·
, tian missionary group, translates
the Bible into native dialects in
Third World countries. The Hunt-
in1ton Beach organization con-
tracts with governments in those
countries to educate and improve
literacy, Key said. He said he
doubted the Colombian govern-
ment wOuJd have any reason to
takepartinthekidnapping.
Colombian police sources said
authorities made some arrests in
(See KIDNAP, Pa1e A!)
Tying one
on/or52
WASIDNGTON CAP) -
The nation's capital is go-
in1 to 1reat len1ths -
literally-to show it will be
tlad to have the 52
Americana freed from Iran
back 1n tbe United States.
An -.toot-Jona yellow
ribbon bu been tied all the
way around the National
Geo1raphic Buildin1 In
downtown Waabtn1ton.
Another ribbon encirclet
Ute alr traftlc control tower
at NadouJ Airport and yet
anodMr 11 ltripped acrou
tb• Key Bridle Marriott in ............... ,..Va. ••lf e bed to do aomethln1
to •Mw our re1pect for Ute1e bo1ta1e1," Hid
Htlmtlt KalPJ!L 1eneral
maa ... oltJM Aey Bridle .........
Thirsty new~omer
Melody Burkhard, a sophomore at Costa Mesa High
School, feeds an hours-old lamb born Wednesday at the
school's animal ~arm . The runt.~f twina, it is being hand
fed because of ats weak cond1taon and will be fed by
Melody every two hours for the next day or so.
County man sought
in doctor job try
~· I An Orange Cqunty man who is <.'~arged with_ pos ing as a physi-
c_1an and causmg the death of a pa-
tient faced a $1 million bench war-
rant for his arrest today after al-
legedly applying for a doctor's job
in Wisconsin.
Orange County Superior Court Jud~e Richard Beacom issued
the warrant for Gerald Barnes
late Wednesday after the Dis·
trict Attorney's Office informed
him of the matter.
The Coto de Caza resident who
faces trial on secon11-d ~gree
murder c harges in March, had
once before been jailed when he
S?ught employment as a physi-
cian at a Los Angeles clinic last ye ar.
Previously Barnes had worked
for the Pacific Southwest Medical
Group in Irvine for two years.
The ()jstrict Attorney's Office
told Beacom that Barnes applied
for a physician's job through a
pe rsonnel agenc y in Milwaukee.
To support his application, the Oran~e County resident used
$3.5 million
cocaine held
VAN NUYS CAP) -Police said
they seized 18 pounds of pure co-
caine from the baek partlq lot al
an apartment buildln& here; ar-re1tin1 11 after a four-month ln-
vesti1atJoo into the smu11Unt al
hl1h·srllde cocaine into the Unit-
ed States from Colombia.
''The cocaine wu worth S3.5
million, it wu our bt11eat bull
this month," narcotics Detective
Hank Foresta said Wednetday al the dl"lll bull.
In custody on '50,000 bail each
were: llbmael Behran, •: Um-
berto Hernandes, H ; Jesua
VUJ .. u, 35; Perna, lloatano •·
Carlee Cuart8!1 11; l:vaqeim~.
Jaramillo, .0; Hector C .... po. 11'
and sn.,, San Clemente, • all
of ColomMa ud f.olla ~ 21, 1:1 SalvtMior; Fabio Ro.I•,.; .,._mo Rieo ud Rina JUot. 11,
l:eudar. rar.ta1ald.
documents that are copies
papers seized by officials here
when Barnes was fi rst charged
with the death of an Anaheim
m an, who died or uncontrolled
dia betes.
Barnes has been free on $10,000
bail since a preliminary hearing
in O range County Harbor
Municipal Court late last year.
He is charged with causing the
d eath of 27 -year-old J ohn
Mc Kenzie. who had been ex.
amined at Pacific Southwest two
days earlier .
It is alleged that Barnes. once a
pharmacist in llliniois. used the
medical records of a Stockton
physician named Gerald Barnes
lo pass himself off as a doctor.
Ylll HlllTlll llllY PAPIR
OH AN C f COUN I Y (A L If OHNIA :..>5 C ENTS
·Triumph
over foe
hailed
WIESBADEN, West Germany
(AP> The freed American
hostages ga ve new reports today
of brutal treatment by their Ira-
nian captors beatings, mock
e x ecution s. g rim gam es of
Russian roulette, death threats
. and former President Carter
a cc~sed Iran of "savagery
against a bsolute ly innoce nt
hostages.··
At the military hospital where
the 50 men and two women are
~recoveri n g from their J4 'h·
m onth ordeal. a State Depart·
m ent offi cial said . "it is clear
we are continuing to uncover
evide nce of serious mistreat-
m ent Qf our people during thei r
captivity."
But former hostage Richard
Morefield said in a telephone in-
t erview broadcast by CBS that
.. we beat them ,·· triumphing
over the Iranian captors by re-
turning healthy and sane despite
the brutal treatment
A gr oup o f t h e f o rm e r
hostages e me r ged from the
hos pita l today and walked
across the street ror a dental ex-
amination. They wore blue pa-
jamas or Air Force parkas and·
many waved to well-wishers at
the hospital gate.
State Department s pokesman
Jack Cannon said in Wiesbaden
that mistreatment included poor
food, solitary confineme nt and
being blindfolded.
·'On a number of occasions a
numbe r of p e r sons we re
threatened with loaded r e-
volvers." be said.
"On a number of occasions
s ome were thre ate ned with
dea th. Some were ordered to
strip and lie on the floor and
were threatened with death,"
Cannon said.
In Moscow, the Soviet news
agency Tass said the American
press had launched a campaign
of anti-Iranian "hysteria" over
treatment of the hostages. Tass
also claimed that the former
hostages "will be s ubjected to
d eta il ~d .i nJ_e rrog at!on and
o ramwashing" before they are
allowed lo meet with reporters.
Ba rry Rosen of Brooklyn,
N. Y .. chatting with re Porters on
the way to a dental examination,
said the former hostages had
"many stories to tell" and that
t he agreement with Iran should
be reviewed.
Rosen was not specific about
his treatment as a captive, but
said, "I just feel ttiat Iran is an
outla w country and it does de-
ser ve trem e ndous c r iticism
from the world."
At a press briefing near the
hospital, Cannon said he had no
reports of specific inj uries suf-
<See HOSTAGES, Pa1e AZ>
52 candles
Freedom seroice tonight
An hour-long c andle light
service celebrating the release
of the 52 American hostages
from Iran is predicted to draw
an overflow crowed tonight in
Newport Beach.
The service, involving con-
gregations from seven Newport
churches, is to be held at St.
Mark Presbyterian Church and
Shir Ha-Ma'AJot Harbor Reform
Te mple, which share common
facilities in the Eastbluff area.
Rabbi Bernard King, of the
Harbor Reform Temple, said the ~hem~ will be one of thanksgiv-
mg with "prayers for reconcilia-
tion between our country and
Iran "
As a symbolic gesture, he ex-
plained. 52 persons in the con-
gregation will light candles dur-
ing the service. He said prayers
also will be said for the families
of those who lost their lives in
last year's a borted attempt to
rescue the hostaj!es.
"We'll also pass on tlw hop1·
that the emergence of prt>Judic<·
and fear that seems i.<J IJt' ttJm in~ about in this country. as
evidenced by s wasuka., !Jc·ing
sprayed on walls. will nut ht• the
way this country i:ot•s • ..,a11i
Rabbi King.
He said clergymen from f1vt•
Newport churches a~reed lasi
week to hold t he ~crv1<'c' 1incc
the hostages werC' n.>lt·as1•u .. /\
lot of people j ust wantl•tl to
share their tha nks." ht' -;ai<I .
"and this seemed to he th1· a11
propriate place."
Churches laki n~ p<irl in thl'
ser vices include Coru11a <frl :\1ar
Con g r ega tion a l Chu r l'h ,
Lutheran Church of the M a'tcr.
St. Michael's Episcopal <"hurch,
·New port Ce nt<.'r Mt•lh•1tl 1s1
Church and C'hri~t Churl'l1 ti•, the Sea. ·
The 7:JO p.m scr vit••· " npr•n to the public
In Westminster
Teenrage rapist
stabbed, then shot
By ROBERT BARKER
Of the O•llY .. I ... SUH
A 19-year-old rapist was slain
when he was stabbed wHh
h i s o wn knife b y hi s
victim's boyfriend and then
shot by his victim, a ccording to
Westminster police.
Police said that Craig W.
Dragovich. whose last known
address was reported to be 15561
Ashley Circle, Westmins ter, was Co~nd dead in a nearby park by
officers shortly after the inci-
dent Wednesday.
Westminster officer Earle
Graham said th~ events began
at 4 a.m . when the rapist en-
~ered an apartment of the sleep·
mg coupte at li large resi<Jent.Ial
complex on Belgrade Street.
A ccording t o Gr a ham Dra~ovich held a knife at th~
m an's throat while forcing the
woman to tie her fnend ·s hands.
:While the rape was being com-
mitted, the male victim broke
loose from his bonds, wrestled
the knife away. a nd stabbed the
intruder once in th e chest
Graham said . ·
Graham said the suspect then
broke loose and approached the
woman.
She then reportedly gra bbed a
.38 calibe r h a nd g un from
somewhe re in the apa rtment
and fired several rounds at close
r ange at the assailant. Craham
said.
The wounded rapist then fled the apartment. He was found
dead in nearby Mc F.adden Park in
the area of McFadden Avenue
and Brookhurst Street by officers
icalled to the scene.
Graham, who declined to re-
lease the identification of the
Heat continues
By 'l1le Auoclated Press
Record high temperatures
have been matched In the
southern San Joaquin Valley to
continue a four-day winter heat
wave. The valley's hot spot
Wednesday was Bakersfield,
which tied a 1974 record of 79
del(rees.
M.4GAZINE TELLS
llE4.L111 TRENDS
Today's Dally Pilot tak• a
look at bealth-related activities
and trlndl. ·
Look for "A Healthy You," a
20·pa1• Periscope ma1a1lne
fHturlDI atorl• and pictures about bealth oa tlle Oran1e
Coa1t.
''A HealtbJ You'' alto pre.
vi••• tlae World •aetera II aratlloe of lnl•• a9d the .__._. .. ,. ....
r ape victim or her t:ompanion.
said_ no t•harges are pe nding
against t h e couple because
evide nce indicated they wer e
acting in s elf defense.
He also said inve sl1~ation
positively determined that the
crime of burglar) and rape oc
curred.
Graham said the• assailant J1ed
from gunshot wounds
The vittim w<i~ list11d n~ un
employed
His weapon was dl•s1•n lH'tl ti~
Graha m as a Meak knit 1·
Iran students
doubt claims
LOS ANGELES ! /\J' 1 Ira
ni an students al the l 'n1 \"(•rs it,
of Southern Cali fo rni:i S('•lff ;.it
the claims of th<.' <.·x ho,l:igc!-.
t hat they wt•r(' mistrculNI h\
their captors ·
O n e st udc nt. intcrv1cwcd
Wednesd ay. s aid .. Nothing is
wrong with the hostagl's. mc•ntal
~Y or physically People arc tell
ing them what lo -;ay nr what not
to say."
.. We're not bar1>art<.1n~. · ~a1t1
another . "Any dcnnt 1wrson is
welcome then• II ran l ··
Or:n:ewi '(:'" 1
\\'eat her
Chance of rain 50 per
cent tonight increasing to
60 percent c ha nce of
showers Friday. Coasta l
low tonight 50, inland 55.
Highs Friday in low 60s
along beaches to mld-fiOs
inland.
INSIDE TODt\ l'
Mtttories of the pre&Jden·
tiol inoMgUTOl wlUrl Unger /or
three Horbtw Area women,
plaotogroplted in IMir formal
finn'JI 1>11 Dail11 PUot photog· roplan Patrick O'Donnell. See
Page BJ. •••ex At\'_..,_. M
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LC-. .... AtJ = tt<4 ...... Ct ,...._ .
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,
DAILY Pll. I
1 Dedit•afion due
The new Orange County Marine Institute
"111 bt.< d~1cated J an. 30 at Dana Point
I lar1><1r Th~ $60,000 facility is expected to
ser ve 30.000 youngsters a year. with pro·
g rams planned to start in September. Fo r
stor v see Pa~e R 1.
HOSTAGES
fercd b) lht: host<1ges und tn re
ply lt1 a t1utislion added. ··we
ha Vt' no reports so far of sexual
abus l'. ·· lie said '"some were
manal'lt'<l lO t•ha1rs for 14 or 15
days "
Cannon said the Americans
wen• expected to return home
low ard the end of the week and
t hat the~ "fee l 1t is ve ry
necessary that they have this
period of privale rest and re·
cuperation ··
Malcolm Kalp, an economic
adviser accused of being a CIA
agent by his captors, told hi s
family in a telephone call he was
beater;i and spent 374 days in
solitary c·onfinement because he
repeatedly tried to escape.
M ic·hacl J Me trin ko. a
political offic·cr from Olyphant.
Pa_, said he was held in solitary
for 81 ~ months, ;ind Moorhead C.
Ken ned y .Jr., the t'c:o nomic:
counselor from Was hingt on,
0 .C . sau.I ht' and ot hers wer<:•
lined UIJ 1n their under wear.
guns t.o their heads. for a mock
ext'cut1on
M ann1· Sgt .Johnny McKet'I
tol<1 h 1~ pa r <.·n t!) in Bal<:h
Springs, Texas. that an Iranian
guard knocked out his tooth and
an interrogator said hi s mother
had died. lit' said he was told if
he wanted to go lo the funeraJ he
had to give the Iran ians in-
formation. but that all he gave
was na m e. rank a nd serial
number.
Eliza be th Mo nta g n e . a
secretar y frecd with four other
woml•n and c1~ht black hostages
three Wl'eks after the embassy
takeover, said in an inter view in
the United States that the mili·
tants for ced her to play Russian
roulette in an attem pt to get in·
formation.
Hostage wife
denies story
LOS ANG ELES (AP> -The
wife of ex-hostage Jerry Plotkin
has criticized a newspaper story
that reported Plotkin was being
investigat ed by Los Angeles
police for possible drug dealings
just before he was taken captive
in Iran.
"The shock of this ridiculous
story has overshadowed and in·
terfered with the joy and relief
that I s hared with all of you for
the pas t three days." s aid
Plotkin's wife Deborah. . The stor y w as p ublishe d
Wednesd ay by the Daily News
of Van Nuys. But Los Angeles
police officials said the depart·
ment "does not have and has not
had an active nar cotics in-
vestigation involving .J e rry
Plotkin.''
Hotel cleared
BEVERLY HILLS (AP>
Sixty rooms in the posh Beverly
Hilton Hotel here had to be
evacuated when an underground
water main was obstructed and
flooded the second floor and
some lobby areas. a hotel of·
ficial said. Water was shut off
for t wo hou·rs Wednesday mom·
ing throughout t he eighl·story
building.
Car goes 'crazy'
in highway horror
NORTH MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (AP) Don Moore reached for
his pistol when he heard shouting. Shirley Gussman could only
watch in horror. Evelyn Mullen screamed <JS a runaway car ran
over her fool. and dozens of spectators stared in silence.
Inside the vehicle. the driver's door open, was 5-year-old
Suzanne Martinetti. screaming and clutching the front seat.
Then. 25. year-old secretary Angie Butts rushed to the rescue
She chased after the runaway sedan circlin~ wildly in the middle
of U.S. 1.
"NEVER IN MY LIFE HAVE I SEEN anything Like 1t," said
Susan Moore, maanger of the nearby North Miam i Reach
Greyhound bus station. "This little girl was in the car screaming
and this lady was chasing the car, tryrn g to get in, as it went
around and around."
Moore, her husband, said, "By the time I got out there. one
woma n was lying on the ground. This ford Torino was doing
circles. you know. doing doughnuts in the middle of U.S. l . and this
worn an was hanging onto the steering wheel
"She was half out of the car, tfeing dragged along."
Minutes earlier , Mrs . Gussm an had driven up to the station,
put her car in park and st arted unloading suitcases as her grand·
daughter sat in the front seat.
Evelyn Mullen, the child's great-grandmother . climbed out or
the car . Then it jumped into reverse. 1he women said, and rolled
into the street.
"IT HAPPENED SO FAST," SAID Mrs Gussm an, 53, of
Miami Shores. "The car j ust bal'ked away. r an over my mother
and went out into the street."
The car, traveling backwards at speeds up to 20 mph. bounced
1w er the median strip several times.
Ms. Butts drove up, nearly striking the runaway vehicle.
"I don't know how fast the car was going." she said. "But it
wasn 't going slow because I couldn't catch up with it."
So she kicked off her clogs and finally grabbed the steering
wheel.
"It was jammed," she said. "I couldn't turn it. So I just
stepped on the brakes and the car stopped "
BY THE TIME POLICE, A FIRE engine and an ambulance
arrived, Ms. Butts w as in the driver 's seat. the child was in he r
grandmother's arms and the great-grandmother was being com-
forted on the pavement.
Rescue workers took them all to North Miami General
Hospital. where Ms. Butts was found to have a bruised knee and
Mrs. Mullen a broken foot. The child, unhurt, was given a soda.
Ford Motor Co. has agreed to mail warnings to the owrters of
20 million cars and trucks built since the 1973 model year that thefr
automatic transmissions could slip into reverse. North Miami
Beach police, however. said Mrs. Gussman's car was a 1972 Ford.
The automaker has contended the problem is due to drivers
who do not shift all the way into park.
Last June, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra -
tion said the slips had caused some 6,000 accidents, 1,710 injuries
and 98 deaths .
Ganvood claiming
Viets lwld Yanks
CAMP LEJEUNE. N.C. CA P>
Marine Pfc. Robert Garwood
claims to know of U.S. soldiers
s till being held in Vietnam and
''is concerned because he thinks
that knowledge s hould com e
out." a U.S. Navy psychi atrist
testified today.
Navy psychiatrist Capt. Ben·
jamin R. Ogburn. testifying in
G.arwood's court.martial on
c harges of desertion and col·
laboration with the enemy in
Vietnam. said the defendant ap-
parently was never given an op-
portunity to comment on other
Americans still being held by
the North Vietnamese when he
returned to the United States in
ea rly 1979.
Attempts by the defenst' to in·
t roduce evidence about the
possibility or remaining POWs
were ruled irrelevant in the
10-week trial of Garwood.
llow ever. Ogburn m ade t11 s
statements while testifying as a
rebuttal witness for the prosecu-
tion.
0 g burn said the m alter 'Of
ot he r Americans in capti vit
cam e up while he was evaluat·
ing Garwood in October to de·
termine hi s mental capabilities.
''Garwood felt that he was
treated differently from anyone
e ls e when h e came home
because h e wasn't full y
debriefed:" Ogburn said. "His
main concerns were other
Americans that he knew were in
Vietnam. He did not know exact•
ly who they were."
TELEPHONE
Prosecutors insisted that
Garwood was debriefed in the
presence of his previous defense
team. But chief defense counsel
John Lowe asserted that it was
o nly a partial d e briefing.
Ogburn said he had been in·
formed .by prosecution lawyers
that the debriefing was not as
comprehensive as that of other
returning POWs.
Thomas P. Haley
~ .... " ... '
Robert N. Weed
~rHlden4
M. Thomas Keevll Efltor
ThOmas A. Murphlne
llMM9"'9 Edit•
Ct'larl.s H. Loos
AnlttMI ~Editor
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All de,....,...: (714) 142~
Cteutfled Mwe"9llr19: 142-15171
OFFICES CO!ll• Mft9: JlOWHt ._., Slrwt
L ...... llNdl: 1021 No, CMtl Hlllh••Y
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Memorial slated
for UCI prof ess~r
A convocation will be held.Fri·
day at UC Irvine in memory of
UCJ -professor Dr. Arthur
Marder, 70, an Internationally
known authority on British
n aval history wbo died on
Cbri1tmu Day. The public memorial
ceremony wUl be held at 2 p.m .
in Room 174 ot the Computer
~lence Buildlna.
•
IRA kills nohleniftn·
PoliCe hunt terrorists, in Belfast
BELFAST. Northern Ireland
CAP> -The outlawed Irish
Republican Army today claimed
responsibility for shooting and
killing a .titled 86-year-old
Protestant poliUcal leader and
his 48-year-old heir and bombing
their ancestral home .
Troops. police a nd a British
army helicopter ranged over the
. countryside today in search of
terrorists who murdered Sir
Norman Stronge and his son,
Jam es, traded gunfire with
police and es caped o n foot
toward the Irish border Wednes-
day night.
A police spokesman s aid hun-
dred s of troops on both sides of
the borde r with the I rish
Republic had sealed off a 10·
m ile wooded a rea where an
eight-man IRA guerrilla squad
was believed to be hiding.
"This is one of the biggest
l'ross-border sec urity operations
l·ver mounted." the spokesman
s aid.
Police s aid they believed the
I RA attack was carried out in
reprisaJ for the attempted as·
sassination by Protestants on
Friday of Roman Catholic civil
rights c rus ader Be rnadette
Dev lin Mc Al iskey and he r
husband.
They said the terrorists in·
vaded Tynar1 Abbey, near the
f'ro•PapAI
a.rw • ..,...
SLAIN IN ULSTER
Sir Nonnan Strong•
border with the Irish Republic,
and k il led Sir No rman , a
baronet and former speaker of
No rthern Ireland's proviqcial
Parlia ment. and his son. J ames.
another former member of the
legislature. with gunshots to the
head.
They said three fire bombs
were apparently planted at the
Newpttrt 111an
a bbey during or after the kill·
in gs.
Police. who rushed to the
burning home after hearing two
explosions, used th.eir cars lo
block the main driveway in an
a ttempt to stop the gunmen, who
a lso were in cars.
Authorities said the driver of
one of the two getaway cars
tried t o cras h through the
blockade. When this failed, at
leas t eight masked gunm~n
jumped from the two cars and'
op ened fire on the offi cers .
Police returnt-'d fire and the ter·
rorists s cattered on root toward-
t h e Irish border. a police
svokesman said . -
Sir Norman , a leader of
Northern lrcland·s Protestant
majority. was speaker of the
Northern Ireland P arliament
from 1945 to 1969, when he gave
up his seat in the legislature
because of his age <.ind was suc-
ceedc<l by his son.
Educated al Eton College. one
or En~land 's top private schools.
Sir Norman won the Military
Cross, one of the highest decor a-
tions for bravery. during World
War I. lie was holder of a title
conferred on an ancestor in 1803.
Their de<1ths raised the toll
from nearly 12 years of politi~al
violcm•c in Ulster to 1.076, in·
duding :1:36 British soldiers .
KIDNAP ...
rnnnection with Monday 's kid
napping of a staff member of the
S ummer Ling ui stic Ins titute
headquartered here. But. the
sources said, the suspects were
released for lack or-evidence.
Sentencing date set
for pimp, panderer
··We are actively continuing the
investigation, but the details are
confidential," said Col. Salomon
Rojas. commandant of the Bogota
police.
Police say they believe the six
g unm en who k idna pped Bil·
term an belong to one of the leftist
groups waging a sporadic guer-
rilla campaign to replace Colom·
bia's democratic government
with a Marxist regime.
"We have nllt received any call
or written demand from the kid-
nappers.·· a spokesman for the in·
st1t ute told The Associated Press
in Bogota on Wednesd<Jy. Hi s
statement appeared to refute
published reports that the kidnap
pers had called the institute and
demanded that the organization.
which e mploys some 100 scholars
studying Indian tribal la nguages,
leave Colombia.
Wheeler said the kidnapping
was the work of·· people who want
us to get out of the country.··
Witness d e tails
disposal of body
LOS ANGELES< AP) Fidget·
ing nervously, one of two men ac·
cused in a string of torture·
murders of teen-age girls testified
how he and a Burbank machinist
allegedly found an "ideal spot to
get rid of a body" in the San
Gabriel Mountains.
Roy Lewis Norris, who has con·
fessed to taJcing part in the five
murders. gave a detailed accoun~
Wednesday ln Superior Court of
how he and Lawrence Bittaker al·
legedly kidnapped, tort ured and
k illed 16-year -o ,d Lucinda
Schaefer of Torrance on June 24,
1979.
Sentencing has been set for a
Newport Be ach entre preneur
convicted of pimping and pan·
dering in a c a se in which
evidenC"e on file includes a little
black "trick book'" of cli ent:;'
names. authorities say
Tommy Liotta. 38, ope rator of
Tommy·s of Newport. an outcull
massage sefvi c~ authorities
claim was a front for prost1t u
lion. is due hack Fe b 6 10
Orange County Super ior Court
Judge Frank 01)m enichini
could send the prev1ousl.' con
vi l"led Liotta to stale prison and
Orangt!' County Deput) D1stnct
Atto rrtey Oave Brl)wn SiJ ld
Wednesday his offi ce is pres!>tng
for justthaL
Liotta was convicted by a Jury
Jan. 5 of two cuunts f.'ath nf
pi mping and pandering after a
trial highlighted by testimon) or
a disgruntled fo rmer associate
and employee. Marge Moberg
Mrs Moberg. an adm1ttC'd
prostitute who 1eslif1ed al the
municipal court lt•\"tol th<Jt her
husband arl'ompanu:tl her to hl·r
job interview wtth Liotta to set"
1f he approved . tf'st1f1 cd thl'n she
w as not receiv1n~ adequC!le
wages
The s uave. snappily dress.ed
black-haired Liotta looked bored
during most of that hearing last
Fall in Harbor Judicial District
Court.
He was arrested in the cor-
ridor during a recess, however.
on charges of assault and bat-
tery after allegedly flipping a
cigarette at Mrs . Moberg and a
female friend who came to court
with her to offer moral support.
The friend s uffered a hole
burned in her blouse.
"I don't know what happened
on that one." s aid DA 's in·
vestigator Brown. ~ut he made
Give her one of fife's simple pleasures.
She can't resist anything as
appealing as these sparkling
diamonds. set in 14 karat
yellow. gold. Diamond stud
earrings from $150, pendants
from $425 .
SLAVICK'§
Fhw J"-"" Sinn-1917
F11hlon lalend, ~wport C•n-.r, N•wport &..ch, 714/644-1380
Wn tmln"'ttr I l.6guna HIQ1 I Mitlioft Vlfio I North OT•11g" I Tlw Cl~
Lot C"rrl'°' • Itta M91b
Aho C"'•ltt Lot Anplft I S9fl °"lo/ lM V~t
it clear his offi<.'e will ask the
stiffest penalty for Liotta on the
four morals charJ.?es
Brown l'ited l.iolla 's prior
rcC'ord. which he says includes a
I !I 6 9 c o n v i c: t i o n i n v o I v i n g
t rans 11ortat1on and s ale of
dangl•rous drugs
Brown <;aid l.101ta was also
rnnvi('ll'tl 1n Hedwood City on
for1H·ry an<! bad C'heck charges
and served a st;itc prison term
fnr l hose nff ens es
The latest cast' dates back to
St•pt r mber of 1979. Brown said,
when l.wtta allemptcd to set up
:i prosllt utwn ope rat ion featur·
1 n g h 11 us t' 1· a 11 s l hr o ugh a
I cg 1I11 n all' count) construction
C'ompany
L1ntt<1 ~a~ arrest ed 1n that
l·ase based on evidence gathered
b~ the l at e Orange Counly
S heriffs Detective Sgt. Les
l.c•be r. wfio wal> planted to pose
a~ an ('Xi.•«Ultn· of thl' company
during nc1>?ot1atwns ove r the
dl•al
'f('Sttrnon.' b.' Sgt Leber. who
dH.'<.l las l \l'<J r uf CJ heart a ttack, w;i~ ust1l ·in the form of his writ·
ll'n reports uf the investigation.
Brown said Liotta was still
f<l C'tng ch;.irges stemming from
that l'ase whe n h e was re·
arrested on similar counts in·
volving Mrs . Moberg.
II e said names in the little
bl ack book of clients us ing Liot-
ta 's girls' ser vices would raise
eyebrows tn county circles.
No other women would testify
but Mrs. Moberg.
Liotta. who at one time made
his headquarters at 525 Victoria
St.. Costa Mesa. m eeting pros·
pective female e mployes in
nearby restaurants fo r in ·
terv1ews according to testimony.
has remained free on bail.
u..-9f Slfotdl'•"""""""" ctlelp ,..._or _,,&,...... VISA. "'-a.,t.
M""""' FiM lftllNrt Ci11IW
..
'
....... ... • -.,,.. •• .,-... ,.-"·--···.-· ·-·----. • .....-. __._..._._.._ .... __,, __ .__ ...... -.. #,,-.. ~ -'. .... ----..---·-·-··-~ ... .
• ,...... P•...,..1111 bus ....... ..-.-..... _,, ................ ,... ................ ,, ........... ~ ...... ...-~ ~---..,._ __ .. _..._....,.._.....,....c..,__, ... ~ ......... ...:... •• -..;·,,; .. ~
('111t1f•f,. ""'
,.,,, •. \· '. "'" "" r
:W ayor t:d"ard I . Koch n·
tt·<·kd a11 1nv1l<.1!11>t1 lo nim
Pt'lt· 111 a l'arn1•l r;11·1• with th.-
ma\ or 11f lnd111. a 1·11n1 mu111t'
1ha1 c-.db 1t-.1·lr ·1>:11" <';ip11,1I
t)f lhl' World ··
l11d10 M:t\llr Phil Ht·t•tl 111
I t·rt•d lo "'.1g1·r Kw h a IJU~lt<·I
or I nd1 11 cla 11·-.. <.1g.11 nst .1
1111:-.lwl nf apl'h:S f111rn t lw Big
l\ppl<· H1•1•d .... aul h<' ~·ot lhl'
ldt•a ror a l'<.11'1' Whl'll hf' -..a\.\
1111·1 un·~ 11f K1wh .1111p <1
<·:1m1•I dunng ·1 rt'1T111 \1 111
<I le F..1st tow
I\ llt' h <kt'l irll'd I II l'l'frl pt•!<•
during lht· F1·h 1:1 lt l>att·
F t•:-.lwal. "·" 111g c·u 1111·I-.. ha\'I'
:i "nit-cli:-.1111~1 111111
S\ nd1t'at1•d 1"11lumn1:-.1 J\rl Hu~hwahl ..,;!\:-. h1., rn111 alt·
... 11<1rt·d wlt1.ll' "a1<·h 1n g
Konalct Rt>agan·~ inaugura
t111n hut only lll'('auM· he 1~
a ":ii 11'1'.'>I
Th1•r1• will lw ~omt·
111a1 '!•lou'.'> ..,, uff for somt-ont-
" h II h ;1 S l (}
n1.1kt• h1~ l1v
Ill ).! Ill a k 111 1!
f 1111 of 111·11
pit'. h1• told
"I ll d ('(It S a I -~·-... •-\ rizona Slult·
l n I\ 1·r-..1l'
"I ... aw tho~1·
-..la nd ~
pa1•kt•d With ~·
m :t r \ l' 1 o u ... BUCHWALO
Jlt•oplt• who an• going to -;up
port mt· for the' next four
·' t'<Jf~
Hu l·hwuld wa~ on t·ttmJHl!-
to 111rnrrnalh adv1M· mcm
hl·r:-. nf tht· Wt·:-.tcrn llumor
· and Irony Mcmhersh1p on a
1·11nfl·rt•nt·t• t h1· grouµ has
,.,l'hl·dulctl for Apri I l'oors
l>a' l!IRZ
Muhammad Alt will
soon be m your
neighborhood
beverage store __..._ as a
d ecanter of
grenadine. The real
article shows off the
simulated ver sion at a
Los Angeles news
con/ e-rence.
No parties. no movies, no
walking, no talking That's
diva Marilyn Horne's advice
for stet•r111g clear of lht-flu.
The 47 -year -old m ezzo·
soprano has been rcheari,1ng
for a Carnegie llall rctttal,
one that has bct:>n postponed
tw1t·c hc('ause of her· bout
w1lh mflut·nza
· 'Tht• origi nal date wa~
Dt'<' Hi, hut th al had tu h~
put off IH·eaust• of a flu v1ru~
I 1m·kt-<I up in l><illas in Nov
t•mbcr. until Jan 11." shc
-;aid in thl' Nt"'I\ York T1mt·s
IH:.at•h l'hlldrcn will bcgrn
planting a "J ohn l.t>nnon
l't·at·t• 1-'on·st'' next month 111
memory of the slain rorrnt•r
lkallt•
Tht• ron~~l. to lit· plankd b~
Jewish and Ar;.ib youths rn
the mount<1inou~ c; u Ii lt·t· re
~ 111n . was ttw ~dt•a of a group
of Ortho<lox .h·w1:.h irnm1
granh rrom tli t• L'n1lt'<l
States who c·ollcrtcd money
for tht• proJ<~d from (;al1h.•t·
n•s1tftont-> and .Jew-; l1 v1ng
,1hr11ad
Press report~ :.aid Yoko
Ono, tht· widow or lht·
~up l·rstar :.hot to death in
Nt•w York las t month.
µrom1SL'Cl to <:ompl)i,e a s1;ng
rur lhcforcst "" <frd1l'at1on
Tht· St•natc 11vc•rwhclm1ng
I.\ 1·onfirmt•d Ah·xandt•r 'I.
llaig as Prt"sident Reagan's
s ct' rt' tan 11 f s t u l E' am 1 d
1ira1'\t.' for. his tough forc·1gn
µolu·.' ~tum·e Jnd fl'M'rva
t II> n :-. a ho u t h 1 ~ r ci I l' 111
Walt.'rgi.11<'.
llaiifs nomrnat11m w<i:. ap·
)JfllV !'tl !l:I 6
Scnall' Dem11l'rat1t· l.cadt·r
Robert <". Hyrd Joined thl·
vot1· against lla1g , sC:tying
t ht> fl' wt· r e · · un;in:-.wt.•rt•d
qut·~t111n~ rt.·garding th(•
a bus<· of powt•r ..
Name tags a problem
Report slwlvs most employees dislike them
Th(• t·nst to pin a nam1· on an ..,icier Hiley's prOP.£>sal during its l'Ounty,'~-e:sa1d .
t·st1matt·1l ~·~·" Orangt· ('l)unt y mt•t•trngTuesday After the 1n1t1<.1l l'Ost of printing
employl·t·s who work at public· I he b:-adges, the ('Ost would go
count tr:. would h<: a bout $2.175 for SAY t:RS NOT•:s in his reJ->Ort down 111 subsequent years Io about
the f1r-.1 Vt'<ir. <11·rorcllng lo a new that about 400 of the 950 workers S725 fnr lll'W and rc·pla('l'fl name
n ·port · 1dPnt1f1c'(I as working with tht-plate..,, hc·saitl
D!•SJlllt: what 1·11unty offil'ials publlt.· are lihrary e mployees, TIU: RADGt:S would l'OS t
S{'C a:-a sr!'all !'<1st. th<· ('C1t1nly l\d wh•> already a rc encouraged to about $2.Z.'l cuc·h and would in
mini:-.trative Orflt·1· l'aut111ns th<it Wl'ar hadgl's Ahout un(' th1nl of l'ludeaphotogruphofthewt1rkcr
ot ht•r 1iril·kl~ prnhlt·ms an· rel at them do. he said Otht•r county cmployl'l·~ who
ed Ill n<imt· t;ig:. M <iinly. About JOO of the cm11loyces areconstantlv.i n contactwilhthP "n111l11\'"l'" don I ·1lw ·1vs Wl'ar · ' ' ' • . work an the county Environmen· publH', SUl'h as s ht•r1ff's ckµutic•s. 1 hl'm 1 al M anagl'mt•nl Agl'nc·y or the firefighters and agricultural in
· · A P P R 0 X I MAT 1-; I . Y f 1 \ {'
·' C'ars ago IKith tht· t·nu11l) Clerk
and till' llcallh l>t•partnwnt dis
t11nt1111wd lhl' u~l' of name badg1·~
for all 1·1nplovt•t•..,," sa id lht• rt•
port prcparf:'d h~ analyst Hohert
San•rs "Al that 11111<'. these de
partmt•nts frlt the ,,ffort rt'<1111red
to cnforl'l' wt•anng badge!. ex
t·ecdl'<I the lwnd1t~ ll;11lgl•!. pro
vidl'd."
s hl'f1rf's department. Tht· others S JH•c·tor~. t rad1t1onally havt· worn
art• 'M::lllt'rf:'tl throughout the n;.1mt•pl<11l•s.
1'1fth 1>1 slric·1 Supc·rvi~or
Thoma:. Hiley !.Uggt·'otcd th!•
namC' badJ.?cs last Novc·mher. lie'
said ttw name· pl all's wnuld make·
the <'ounty workers seem less likt•
nameless burcaul'rnls to mt'm
hers of the µubli ('
Laguna eyes land
for bike motocross
The hoard is sC'hcdult•d to eon
SC man held
at library
An unemployed San Clem ente
man was in jail afte r he was a l
legedly spotted breaking into the
San Cle me nt<' br anch library
Wednesd ay
A resident of l\ven1da
Granada l'alled poli<'4 shortly
after 3 a .m. to report seeing a
m an climbing through a broken
window into the library at 2.33
Ave. Granada .
Police arrived moments ~ater
and arrested John W. Dunfee,
27, of 602 Ave. Vie: tori a.
Dunfee faces charges of at·
tempted burglary. I
I .aguna Beal'h city offlc·1als arc
studyrng the feasibility of us ing
c ity .owned land possibl y
Sycamore llills fur a bicycle
motocross trac·k
('1ty council members have
dirf:'ctcd City Man ager Ken
Frank a nd Councilman Kelly
Ro vd to look into the possibility of
usi0nJ.? municipal property for such
a racrtrack at nocosttothecity.
ONE OR TWO acres of land
would be needed, s aid Hoyd, who
had urged the council lo explore
the matter.
Boyd said interest in bicycle
motocross racing is growing and
that Laguna Beach youngsters
must now be taken lo Irvine or
Westminster to participate.
The operation and size of lhe
tracks vary. he said.
In Westminste r, the city leases
the land for Sl a year lo a service
club, and the servi ce club
operatesthetrack.
Council member Sally 8P.llerue
said possible parking problems
for such a lrack,,should be studied.
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contributors must Include their name and telephone
number for verificaUon. Nv circulation calls, please.
Tell us what's on your m ind. The number is In
service 24 hours a day. seven days a week.
842-6086
And Bru ce llo 1>p1ng o f
Laguna Bea!·h c·autioncd lhat
such ;_1 faeility m:_iy cause' l•nviron
mental damage
"In power·d r1 vc·n motm-ross.
the damage is 1n1·rediblc ... he
said .
Councilman Neil f"it7.patrick
said that aftPr a frw races. lheen
vironmcntal damage could be as-
sessed lie noted that fam1lie~
parti<:ipating in the raC'es ofte n
bring motorhomes and pickup
I ru(•ks that could C'ause damage to
the terrain.
But Jim Knee. a Iota I hike shop
owner. said lhat youngsters " are
goin({ to r ace anyway.·· and that a
track provides a s afe place to d o
it.
Frank said he would look into
a ll r elated issues in the matter.
War surplus
llll£tion set
Bargain hunting are you?
An auction is scheduled by the
U.S. Defense Departme nt's
D e fense Logistics Agency
Property Disposal Office Thurs-
day at Camp Pendleton.
Registration ~gins al 8 a.m.
at Building 2241 and bidding
starts al 9 a .m .• on 257 different
items. according lo Defense
Department officials. The public
la invited. •
Merchandise offered ranges
from field Jacket.a and a four·
door Hdan, to hydraulic nwd.
paint, a mlxln1 tnachlne for
baklnt In Iara• t>,tches, tnack
patta, tents, ponchos and aleep-inl .,.,..
llost ol the ttema come in one
basic color.
J,
Contract
handling
rapped
The Or angf County lluman
Services Agency has been angri-
ly denounced for its ha ndling of
several t·ontracts under which
ambulance ser vice is provided'
to indigents and jail inmates.
The furor over the contract
admini~tration erupted Tuesday
when members of the County
Board of Supervii.ors learned
that the c·ounl\ hai. continued lo
pay for btlled ~mhulante i.<:rv11 ·t•
dt'SJlltl' lhe faet :.cveral of tht·
tontracts hctwccn thc l'nunt''
uml the ambulanl·c 01H·r<1t11r·..,
h.1d .t•xp1rt'll
· Thl• whole thing 1-; ~U'i (H"C'I ,
d t>c lart•d Su1H·rv1 ... or f\ru1·1·
:'lll'sland<> ·1 1·<111't hclit•vt· the·
1·ount,\ 01Jf·rat1·<l 1n this mann£'r ..
Ac·1·ot'th11g to agl'll l',\ orfle1als,
1 h1· c·ounty ha:. b1·c11 bdlt·d for
ah 1rn I SI 0 , 000 1 n am h u Jan(' c ""f\ I('(''> <;IO<'t' Jul \I, wh1·11 I h··
n1unt,\ <''oun~t·I '~ Off1<·1· n·<·1 11n
m<"nd'-·d tlw t\u<l1t or ('<111lrnlll·r ..,
I Hfit'l' ... top pay1nJ.! l>il Is 111Jl c·o'
1·red In r•mt ra1·1-; Supt:rv1:-.•ir~ rl t•l;1) '-'<I l•ir one
"1•l'k al't1on 1111 I lum<tn ~t·n·11·1·..,
i\i.:0ney rN·rm1rn<'ndal 111n th<it
t ht· n11"1\ clt•rum·t t11111 r<1t·t., he· r1·
rww1·d -..c1 l11l ls 1·11uld lw pa11l
.\gc·rw\ 11ff1 nal., ;d-..11 n •1 oni
11H·n1lt-d that ~1 I <1:.k f11rc·1· lw
formt·d 111 stud' wht'llwr llH·
1·ontrn1·t:. ..,hould ill' p1•r rna111·nth
t•l( tt·nclt·<I
1"1Vl' c·1 1n1par11P:, h;n (' pr·<1v1cl1·d
a 111 h11l:111t·t· ~t·n·11·1· 111 l hi· 1·11u11
'' ... u111n1·orp11rat1·d ;irp;,.., und1•r
.1grt.•1•11wn1~ dat1ni.: li<tt·k to Ulfi<!
Thl· <.tJ.!rt'l'm1·nh c·xp1r1·d .11
\ill"IOUS d.tll'S lhf• ('<irllt"'' 111
11172 and tlw la11· ... 1 111 1:m1
t ·pun lt.·;u·n1nJ,! I hat t hc• 1·11un1 '
c·1111t1n11t•rl lo )J il \ for htll1·tl
:.f'r\'t•'t''>. Nl'~ta11tl1· '.'>;t ill ' llov.
l'an th1.., ha11pt•11'''
Sara Walkl·r. an ai:t·rH'} J s-.1 ...
I ant d1rl'etor. I old ~upl'rv1sor~
that thl' c·<nml\ n1unsrl '-; off1<·l'
rul 1c·d 1n 1~177 that payment
without thl' tontra<·ts wus IPJ!<il
and tht• prat·t1l·c <·ontinut•d until
I ast s umrn<·r
prt"'"''''n I ht• 1·on1 rac '" wi·n • "a lid ." ..,h<· :-.a 11l
Board C'ha1rman Halph C'l<irk
<o;tlll·tl th1• pro<·t•d url's ··.,1<1111>'
"Whl·n ;1 l'nn1 rat"t Px111r<·~ "'"
s11 down and rl'1wgo11atl'. ('l:trk
sa 111
Su 1Jl'f\·1sor ltogcr St<1nt11n said
I hl' situation rt•flt•cled a "total
ahst•nt•c of respon->1hility ;rnd a1•
!'llllnlal.H hl ~
Ambulanl'l' <·1int ra1·ts wt•rt· ;id
m I n I :. I t> rt' d " ~ I h t' (' 11 llll I \ c ' o u n s e I · s < 1 r f i c· <· a n d l h l'
Sheriff's l>l'partmenl until
f o r m " t 1 11 n 11 f t h <· c-11 u n t '
EmerJ,!enc•\' Mcfl1t'al Sl'rv1c·e~
D1 v1s1on of lh1· lluman St•rvw('"
Agl'nl'.\'
.. llOW('Vt•r . n·-..p11n-;1hi1 1I \ for
the agn•c•mPnl:-. "'<1~ unl'l1·~1r <ind
no <l!·partmt•nt tmik an a<·t1' 1·
roll' in thc•i r administr ation · <11·
(• II r d I 11 g I , , a r {' p II r I ' "
'-llPt•rv"'or-..
Thursday January 22~ 1981 DAIL y PILOT AS
o .. •IY •••tot -fiilAtl Photo
SUPERVISOR RILEY ENDS HIS STAY AT HOAG
Hospital secretary Mavis Sumers accompanies him
Superoisor Riley
e1uls lwspital stay
\\1th h1-.. -..pint:> high, l>rangl' ('1111n1' !-.11111·rv1s111 Tl11Hn,1.., Hilt·~
lt•ft ll11aJ.: ll11..,111t al 111 ~t·\\port H1•1wh W1·d111·~da~ folli1w111g 11 Iii
da.1 ... , .. ) f11r tr!'tilmt'nl or iJ rc~ptratur~ 1ll1w~:-.
\\'1th his v.1ft'. Emma Jane. and 111 ... pli)<..1c·1a11. l>r ,J11h11
l!t1111sf..td. al hi:-side. thv 5th l>istnl'l :-.U)Jl'r\ 1sflr :-.auJ h•· will lit·
haC'k 111 hi s Sanl<s Ana 0H1 t'l' on a regular lia!'-1~ heg1nn1ng M1111day
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'
~
TUDOR
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~
TUDOR
For Peaks
In Ocean-Going
Performance:
Championship
Surfing and
Tudor Submariners
I~ JI' ..,. l"!M .,, 1l •, l.. t • le
" b-.J,,....-) lud ~• J ,, l ••h
11 •. r.,.1 ... •• l'°!''""h•·· .,,,i,
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fft~\ 1••~1 *''h revolv•nq
n <lpH•-1 I "I' betl'I <>nd
mgtchlnq Fl1plocl brocolel, \ell
windinq and p<enu••·p<ool down to tHJ lee1. Both mod.ti,
leo1 .. e thio T """eel ..,rd"'9
uown and ore ovo.lol<le -111 I~ °' blocl dd oo-d betel
., ...... ..... ,..., ... .... ......
-.4., DAILY PllOI s Th11raday. Jan11ary i2. 1111 NATION I WEA THEA
'Delt ... an•.:ing' . bl .... ~ To•'~~,.r ,. ... , .....
The party's over
Ex-hostages
tell treatment
IA.HT WA)tHINGTON DATt:lJNt:: In contrast lo sun·
~h1ne, u n1lt-11 111nd 1001 llnea ut llmoualnes that prevailed in
our <'•l•ilal cn y (JVter the pa1t rew day5, Waahinaton early
W t·dne8<la) 11eem4'd hlle a. caly dramed ol everythln&
Th., wother cam" up cold, low mistA swirled over the
t 'i.1J1l1JI Oome 1and lnh:rnilth:nt ra.anspl1&tlered dty streets.
ll wa" lake uyin&, ''1md Uu:n there were none " No·
trowd11 J1tmmm1 the s1dewalb. No tuxedos or nowing ~uwni. No11lrt-n111> i.lonac boult1vuds with t'hilitary escorts.
r\T ,THt: INTt:aNATIONAL Inn on Thomas Circ~e,
"'hert! the Oranace County Luicoln Club had made its
\\ •iohmgto11 he;:adqullrters over the past three days, lug·
g•~e dJld ~pie In travelin1& clothes Jammed the-lobby
"'h1ch ooh hours before was filled with smiling inaugural
hdll celebraills and scurrying military aides.
Oespale the fadlna celebration and the emotional drain
htore O\lt;:r the JOY o( the Yanks being freed from the Ira-
nian mtemational thugs, there are still some leftover hip
pol'ket notes on the late, great inaugural celebrations:
Of the nme rnaugural balls held a cross Washington the
t ll) ·~ motorcycle cop corps with their while sidecar-
to4u1pped machines, got first prize for the best show at the
Shoreham Americana Hotel when President Reagan ar-
ra\led about midnight. The bike cops spun speedy circles in
I he street. swooped around and parked in formation.
THEY REMINDED YOU of those trick riding Tijuana
motor cops who always appear in the Costa Mesa Fish Fry
pa rade or the big Huntington Beach Fourth or July march.
The ball at the John F . Kennedy Center won top honors
"It's getting late. why don't went thi& one out?"
for the m ost chartered buses parked out front. You count
!19, 100, IOI and then lose count. The Reagans made their
most brief appearance of the evening here.
Ballgoers at the Museum or Natural History were treat·
t-d to the most bizarre bar. It was located near the roach ex-
h1b1t . next to the white polar bear and just in front of a case or
human skulls.
Never mind the90-(oot blue wha le suspended overhead.
MOST TALK OF THE former hostages was evident at
the Pension Building ball . No wonder. That was where the
diplomatic corps and S upreme Court justices celebrated.
I lenry Kissinger and Alexande r Haig got together here .
Most wearied-appearing crowds seemed to be at the
Washmgton Hilton ball. with much grumping about the A
versus B ballrooms. The Reagans visited only A, where
Paso Robles anthem singer Juanita Booker sat with
Charlton Heston in his box.
.Through it a!I, you could tell that weary bones were
begrnni!lg to set m among the Orange County Republican
de legation. One prominent Lincoln Clubber was heard to
exclaim as he tried to maneuver at the Watergate. "Damn
these rental cars. You pull on the parking brake and the
hood goes up."
AND THEN THERE WERE Dick and Georgia
Spooner. he the just-e x-Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce prexy, who tried to negotiate the escalator to the
Washington tube.
Abruptly, the escalator started sliding backward.
"Run faster 1• run faster!." the people below implored.
Rut then. like all inaugural celebrations, it all came to a halt.
And so has this. Turn out the lights. boys. the party's over
It will be good to get home.
WASHINGTON <AP> -
.. --ormer hoataae Eli&abeth Mon-
taane, caJlln1 her treatment by
Iranian captors "degrading,
humlUaUn1 and dehumanizing,"
says the militants forced her to
play Russian roulette.
"It was mental abuse," she
said an an interview. "There was
never a threat of physical beat-
ing with ... fists or clubs, but it
was mental abuse. And, there
were threats with guns ."
"l don't want to go into detail
about the lhre·ats with the
guns." Ms. M9nlagne s aid, "but
everyone called it the Russian
roulette incident. That did hap-
pen to me."
MS. MONTAGNE WAS one of
13 blacks and women released a
few weeks after the U.S. Em-
bassy in Tehran was seized by
Islamic militants on Nov. 4 ,
1979. She said the mistreatment
she suffe red occurred during the
first four days or the takeover.
Lloyd Rollins. another or the
13, told NBC News that the mill·
tants tied some hostages to a ta·
ble, gagged others and waved
guns "in our faces."
Ms . MJ)ntagne and Rollins, 40,
had withheld comment on their
treatment until they were sure
the 52 hostages left behind until
Tuesday were free.
ROLLINS SAID the militants
played Russian roulette with two
female seeretaries lo try to "get
information from us.··
"They put a bullet in the
chamber. spun the chamber and
they clicked the trigger orr on a
couple of the girls.'· Rollins
s aid.
State Department spokesman
David Passage s aid government
offi cials had kept quiet about the
brutality because they did not
want to endanger the hostages
who were still in Iran. For the
same reason, the 13 hostages re-
leased earlier were a sked not to
t alk about abuse, he s aid.
PAS.SAGE SAID that after of-
fic i als have talked with the
hostages freed Tues day, "we
will have a good deal to say
about it.''
The only previous report or
brutality to the hostages was a
Nov. 7, 1979, statement by an un-
identified U.S. omcial who said
the hostages had been "pushed
around, abused, intimidated and
m ishandled," but that there had
been no evidence they had been
··beaten, stabbed or shot.•·
Rollins. who is now stationed
at the U.S. t:mbassy in Ottawa,
Canada. and Ms . Montagne, who
said she is a starr assistant with
the State Department's China
desk. gave differing accounts of
the duration or the abusive treat·
m ent by their c aptors.
Rollins said the scare tactics
ended within a few days, "when
they got to know us."
''The guns dis appeared, the
weapons disappeared, and they
tried to reassure us that we
weren't going to be hurt," he
said.
Cancer test pushed
WASHINGTON <AP> -A ma-
jor pharmaceutical company
plans continued research and
development in hopes of market-
ing to hospitals a blood test de-
vis ed at Pennsylvania State
University to detect a range of
cancers. Warner-Lambert Co ..
or Morris Plains, N .J ., said it
hopes to deve lop a lest that
could be used in any hospital.
Mild readings prevail
..., ...... "WY ........... Mnno•y F • .,.., II you dO 001 .._,..
Vflv• P_. Ill' & )() 0 m Gall "'°'• 1 t' tn AM ~ (."10y ..,.11 Of dthvtt·ect
!Jttur<l•v and Suftaav Ir 'IOU do no1
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Ms. Montagne said although
the abuse lessened somewhat
arter the firs t few days, "I
·wouldn't s a y it improved
dramatically. We were merely
tied up durins the day. We had
to ask for everythins. and we
were tied up at night, when we
were sleeping."
She said the abuse became so
routine that it became "dull,
after a wt)ile. I guess."
Rollins· comments were made
just minutes after he saw live
television broad<.·asts of the 52
hos tages arr iving safe ly in
Alge ria after 444 days of captivi-
ty in Iran.
"DURING THE first part of
the captivity our hands were
tied very tightly. and on the
secon d day o f c apti vity a
number of hostages and myself
were tied a r ound th e am-
bassador's dining room table,"
he said. AP'Wtr..-e ·'Som e of u s even wer e
gagged. There were gun:; being
waved in our faces and threats
be ing made." Rollins said.
He said the abuse stopped
because they "weren't getting
the information from us. They
knew that what they had done
was illegal.''
TREE UT -Lights of National C hristmas tree lit for first
time after announcem e nt former hostag es h~d been re-l~ased from Iran, s hine near White House as fireworks
hght the .Tuesday night sky in Washington, D.C. The
p yrotechnics we re part of the celebration of President
Ronald Reagan 's ina ug uration . Former President Carter
had ordered the tree r e m ain dark until the hostages we r e
freed.
Reagans attend 9 galas
Followers celebrate but some guests angry
WASHINGTON (AP) -Decked out in white
tie. sequins and formal clothes. triumphant
followers of Ronald Reagan gathered at nine in-
augural balls to put the finishing touches on their
recapture of the White House.
"I finally decided I'm not going to wake up It
isn 't a dream,·· a jubilant President Reagan told
the crowd at the Washington Hilton Hotel, his first
stop as he set out to visit all the galas in four a nd a
half hours.
Reagan wor e white tie and tails. but his wife
Nancy stole the fashion show. Mrs Reagan. with
her hair pulled back in a chi~non, wore a white
satin and lace sheath that sparkled with crystal
and chalk beads.
"I think s he looks gorgeous," Reagan said.
THE R EAGANS STOPPED for onlv 10
minutes at the Sheraton-Washington Hotel Tues-
day night where an estimated 6,000 revelers were
jammed s houlde r-to-shoulder into t he large
ballroom.
Before leaving, Reagan and his wife stood on
s tage holding hands while entertainer Ray Charles ~l"("America the Beautiful," one of Reagan's fay~nte songs.
The fes tive mood of lhe crowd turned
somewhat S()ur after Reagan left when about 1.000
t1 e k ct holders WC'r<.' barred from cnteri ng the
ballroom by f1rl' marshab Many o( the guests had
paid S2.000 for a box with eight scats.
"We JUSI c;,in 't get in,'' l'omplamed Kim <.;ale
of OCJllas . who wa!> with fritnds who had
purchased <t box "I gul·ss we t an hllve as much
fun <iul here as 1n thC'rl'. but 1t 's JUSI tht Idea.
"One man WCJs li\'1d. ·said an inaug ural staff
official who did not want lo h<' named. "Jle bought
a tux. s he bought a 1-!0~n . thl'y hough! a box <1nd
flew <ill the w1:1_v 1n hl·rc Wouldn't you be mad""
HeCJgan CJrnved ;,it the Shon·ham llotel ball at
7 12 pm PST, II! minutes aht•arl 1>f :-.c·hedule
llF. JOK ED TllAT llE could :>t'l' the :.iudienre
bl·tter lhan he l'ttUld 1n the morn1n~ Echoing his
inaugural :Jtlrlrt·!-.:-., hl' :-.aid, "We don't have a thrng
to worry about w e're gwnl;! lo straighten things
out ''
Hobert l1r ur·1· a gut•\l 1•1tmpla1nt•rl that wht·n
H1·CJ~an l'CJml-. h·· Jnd mun\ ••thcrs were locked
outs1dt• in ~· li>bh' ;.in<! the Sl·ITl'l Sl·n ·wr refused to
let thl•m 1n
.It.-
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Reg. 850.
W.16J9 •
PROFESSIONAL
IHTEAIOA DESIGNERS
'
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Top grain leather m seven best selling colors -Gold. Rust.
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For a hm1ted time only M1111mum Saving of 25% on any style.
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Your ,..vorft ~ IW ,. Happy To..-,..., You
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U I I MAllOl ILYD.
COSTA MIS& M6-U71
... -... .._. _________ . -·----~._.._......----..--------·-·-._..
................. ..,... ..................... --.......... __ ... _"-' ........ ___ _.. __ .,... __ .
CALIFORNIA ..
Crime figures sentenced
Five reputed Mafia members get prison term: ~
I.OS ANt: t.:I fo,:-0 I I' I A
d .. fen!i. .. ltllomt•\ 1111 "1 111111 te1ar '
•tult' Lr. 11111 t11 w111 lt•o11·111· for
bl• <'hmt hl!i h1ltw1 heli111·
a Judlt' whu 1l~1;n11Jt•J llw Lo.'>
Ana•lf"\ mob &h 1.111 "' l'r the hill
1an--.t·n1t•n1·.,d f l \I' n·11u1t·d
Mafia nu•mht·r !> tu pr l\(111 lt>rmi.
Th .. ll\1l' tOll\ll lt'l1 Ill ~I)\'
f'rnbt•r 111 ltn iJllt'i:t-d plut 111 ~hakt·
down 10<'&1 1mruo~r uphcr' w1•1"
gl\ "" krm '> ta11t(111.i froni l~u tu
fl\t' )t'~,..., 'l'ht'\ ~rrt· frn-<I 1111
• bond ""mtJn~ c11J11t'ul
h1~ Miil fr11111 M.if1u involvement
~11111'lht'lt'i.~. llattcr sentenced
llrvokhcr, 67, to four years 10
11ri,.o11 llullcr url{ed Brooklier
tu 'hn ·ak tt1111 bond you have
~1th lht• Muf IU "
('O Ut:t·t~NU ANT Michae l
H1u1tl'llo. 5:1, wa:-:-entenced to
f 1 \'t' 'cur' in 1>r1~on Louis Tom
111 al(1111 5tl got lwu cars in
we re convicted on various
t•harges of racketeering, ext.or·
lion and conspiracy stemming
from an a lleged plot lo shake
down Los Ange les pornog-
ra1.1hers They wer e acquitted
of 1\11 counts involving the San
l>1ego slaying of mobster Frank
"the B()mp" Rompensiero.
Thursday. January 22, 1981 s DAILY PILOT ,4.
A~Wlr .. i.to
Gay-study panel
named by Brown
SACRA MENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. has named a lS·member Commls5ion on
Personal Privacy to study discrimination against
homosexuals.
The announcement said that the chairman·
is Los Arigeles City Atlorney Burt Pines.
The members will get expense money but not
salaries. They are to report by December 1982.
Others named: W•ll•• Albert\Ofl ol Lo• An91tlt• • UCLA ltoKl\11>9 fellO• Ind ..... o•
«tor JiKk Albe'1\0n Nor• Ba••d•r••n of Culvtt City • rntnl•I ru••llh con
•u1t1n1 's11«i.111lnv .n H•u•llty •nd dlwt11111Y Geot91t E .a•n of Sflt•m1n
O••\, Pine\' Chief •!lsl\l•n1, Ted ~rllQ of S<&t(r•mento. t ••<ut1vr dlr@clor 01 the Society ol Calltornl• Account•nh
St<1111c!y Fl•l•flman or Bn uly H•ll• dn 1110tney ""° l\IS h•ndl&d ., • .,.1 POrn09r•v <•w~. Frankie J•cob\ G1Uet1• oi s~ F'r.tn(i\CO, e>rOQr•m
coord1netot fOf ~ fltOtr•I C-ommunuv S.rvtces Aorn1n1"''•llon W1lll•m :;tt~s of S4l'I Frantl\CO, .am1n1\lr "''"" •\!t•\t•nt to CJ•lf Sue»rv•M>r .,.,,, .,
Thi· mt·n ~·ouhJ h.,, 1 1 t'l't'I\ t•d ~u > t• r in Jirhc•n .. Ph't 1·
AT TH l St~NTt;N('IN(, h t·1sr
mg l'uesdc1) alH•rnt'} Anthum
Brol1klter l>ega11 t'r) 1ng a~ he
told l :-) Dist m ·t .I udge Tci:ry
lhltt'f th<t l ht' lJt'l1eVt'd h1~
f atht'r f),,m1111 c P h1 l l1p
Brook lier the n·µuted bus~ of
the Mafl<t fam11), W<t=> 111110t•ent
p11~1111 and $50,000 1n fin es
'><1n11wl Orlando St•111rtmo. 62.
J.t1•I f\1111 H'lJr~ 1n µnson and a
$2~.l)O() f1nt-Jack l.0C1cero. 68.
11'( t'l\'t'<l l~•I) ('UI :>Ill prtson. .,.
T he judge called the Los
An~eles Mafia ineffective and
an "uvcr·lhe·hill gang," adding
h~ agret.>d with the testimony of
the trial's star witness. Ala1ena
"Jimmy the Weasel" Fratianno.
who <'ailed lhe family "second
rat~ at best."
LA crime zooming
SENT TO PRISON -Dominic Brooklier,
convicted on racketeering char~es. leaves
Los Angeles court building with uniden·
lified woman after a j udge sentenced him
to four years in prison. Four others also
got prison terms.
Paul Lorch of San Fr•nc1\CO, edHor ol th• 8•v Art'• Aeport•r o o•v
nftWl\Oai»r, Rlch•rd Lu<•ro ol S4cr4'mfnlo. pre\1oent ot thf' Po11cir Officer\
Rtkttrch A'\OC••hon Audrey Mt-rh of 5.Jcr•~nto tUn•t•I dirrctor ot
Ment•I HNlfh S.rv1<•' •• E\katon Amtor1can A:1wr He•tthc•r• C•n1er
David McWturter ot L• JOlld, • P\V<l''l••l"!tl with the (hn1c•l lnstuu't tor Hum•n Rel•hon\l'\lps in S.n OieQO, W•rd•ll Pomeroy of S.n Franc1,,o p\yc.ho1oq1s1 With the ln\lllute tor Aiavan<ect t;tudy of Hum•n S.•u•l•ty Fau,~t1na SoU\ ot San 01eoo. 3\\CXi•le profe\'4f' tn th«' 0.P•llmtnt ot Co"'
m-.;ntty Medk:•nf' •t UCSO, find 9•rb.trd Fayf W•aman o4 S.M'lt• Mon1< • " P\YC "<>IOQl\t w•lh Ptann~ Pdrf'nlhoad
Cock crow net,s five
I.OS ANGELES,; <AP) Call .major crime categories had an
increase in each category in 1980
Wind powe r eyed SA~ YSIDRO CAP J A police officer says a
lle's never lted l<> me. · lht•
younger Rrnokher told Hatter
apologizmg fur his Nnol11m~
!latter consoled the lawyer.
s aying Lherc wa~ no net'd lo
apo logize 111• told the cider
Brooklier lhal t he· defendant
should ht-µroud of his sun and
l'O mmendl•d him for ~h1eld10g
in~ un overall increase of 12. 7
µen•ent 1n nime in Los Angeles
during 1980 an ··epidemic."
Police Chief Oaryl Gates has re-
newed his plea for action to in -
nease the authorized strength of
the Los Angeles Poli ce Depart·
nH·nt by 20 pert'ent
averaging 12.7 percent -and
th<' Los Angeles increases in
mu rtlcrs and robber ies were
more than double the overall
s urge in ma1or crimes.
The poli ce department also
said that as of Dec. 31, officer
strength was 502 below the de-
partment's author ized strength
of 7,146.
LONDON <AP) Brit·
ain's Central Electrici·
ty Generating Board has
announced plans to build
its first wind-powered
electricity generator.
It will be a $240,000 ,
150-foot tall experimen·
tat model with 60-foot
propellers lo be erected
at Carma r then Bay
power station in Burry
Port. Wales.
The board also said it
is studying three other
sites around the counlry
for possible $2.4-million.
410-foot wind generators
to be in service_ by 1985.
peculiar behaving gunny sack led to the seizure of
26 roosters apparently headed for cockfighting in
Mexico and the arrests of fi ve people
"I saw this gunny s<1ck moving Then 1t began
to crow." San Diego polt t·e uffit•er Al Vitela re
ported. "They <those arrestedJ appeared to be
loading the cocks into crntcs in the van."
Those arrested were identified as Jose Raul .
Tht• police department said its
~ l'ar-t•nd a<·tounting of seven
Molina. 58. and Juan Molina. 19. of Chula Vista.
Frank Cardoza. 44 , and his wife Donna. 38, a nti
Augustine Mora. 31. all of Tulare
,.l'orCure Crial
'Girls dead, '
say relatives
TORRANCE I AP J The murder trial of
Lawrence S. Rittaker. charged with the rape and
torture murder of five teen-age girls. turned from
grisly to emotion packed as relatives testified that
two of the victims, whose bodies have not been
found. are dead.
Relatives of Luc·inda 'Cindy" Schaefer. 16, of
Torrance. and Andrea Hall, 18, of Tujunga, broke
down and cried during the testimony as they re·
called the last time they heard from the two girls.
One of them, John Meade, the brother-in-law
of Andrea lla ll. walked away from the stand after
testifying that Miss llall lived with him and his
wife He said, "I hope he rots."
Fire de•lro11• Tur11rr ••..,,lo
INGLEWOOD (AP) -A fire destroyed the re·
cording st udio belonging to Ike and Tina Turner,
raging through the large structure for nearly 51f,
ho urs before 1t was
I
brought under (•ontrol,
fire offic1 als said.
The hla ze b e gan
---------~so mew h e re i n t h e
. rear of Bolic Sound and
12 fi re companies were "brought in from s4rround·
ing cities to fi ght it . said fi re Capt. William
Shorten.
Fire •ar•ltaf'• of tlrr burn•
SACRAMENTO CAP> -When firemen rushed
to a south Sacramento office complex. what did
they fin d ablaze'! T he stale fire marshal's head·
quarters.
I\ burned. along with several other state and
private offices in the 35,000-square-foot. wood·
frame building. Onl y three offices escaped the
fl ames.
The fire, at Bolling Drive and f'lorin Road .
burned for 2' ~hou rs . The cause wasn't known
Sentenre 9tddellnr• adoptrd
SACRAMENTO (AP} The California Board
of Prison Terms recommends that murderers who
are s pared the death penally serve longer t erms.
The board adopted guideli.nes to lengthen the
sentences of murderers who get something less
than capital punishment. It also increased the
types of murders covered by the death penalty.
The guidelines were authorized by the voters
when they adopted an initiativeon Nov. 7, 1978
Tunahaf hit •11 rr<"ord tlnr
SAN DI EGO (AP> -The president of the
Ame rican Tunaboat Association says the $1.2
million fine imposed on the tuna seiner Rosa D by
E cuador is the largest ever levied against a U.S.
boat by -a foreign country.
ATA President August Fclando reported that the largest previous fine was for a little more
than Sl million imposed by Peru last Nov. 8 on the
tuna boat Stacie Antonette.
"This is the most blatant abuse of power I
have ever seen," Felando said. "Right now. seiz-
ing U.S. tunaboats is the biggest racket around."
••u-. ... r •erl'lr• •••••
SACRAM ENTO (AP> -A group has de·
manded that th..e state force the phone company to
offer statewide service in Spanish, or license a
separate Hispanic-run company to provide it.
It also asked for phone service in Cantonese in
San Francisco.
A spokesman for Pacific Telephone & Tele·
graph Co. said it already has Spanish and Can·
tonese translators. The company also said it pro·
vides printed information In the two langua1es in
directories and in advertiaements on radio and
televisian and in newspapers.
But the spokesman, Assistant Vice President
D. M. Cambem, said it would be too expensive to
hire bilin1ual operators and office personnel
everywhere. Robert Gnailda, a lawyer for Public Ad·
vocates, a liberal public service law firm, chart ed
tb1t Pl'llT la isnortnl a Hispanic market that
•pends $11 billion a year. Hit comments came
before a heartq 1t the state Public Utilities Com-
mlulon.
He Hid the phone compan.y mede a ltudy ln am tblt -.ec1 tbe ••er• Hispanic customer ln
Loi Anpltl lpeMa ... a year on pboae calla, and
tlaat IOl.•e.U. a mcmtb 1Nm.a.1rom Loi Aa1el•
tollaleo.
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Pay to the
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MARY B. ANDERSON
1234 MAIN STREET
YOUR TOWN, CA 00000
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COLUM•IA 8AVINDa
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first to open a checking or savings account during our Grandest Opening.
Depending on the plan you choose. you may receive all your Columbia
Charter Checks free. and enjoy free checking with no minimum balance
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is all about.
AT COL(JMBIA, YO(JR MONEY GROWS WITH FRIENDSHIP,
HELP AND CARE
FREE GIFTS AND
SERVICE When you become a
Charter Account holder. you re in ror
special recognition. And you· re in ror
a very special free Charter Account
Gift. Plus. you can take ddvantaqe of
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BORROW UP TO
$] MILLION If you plan to
buy. sell or refinance a ~ingle family
home. Columbia can now loan up to
S 1 million on first trust deeds. This
is a special program designed for the
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HOURS:
Mon. thru Thurs •.•• 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM
Friday ............... 9:30 AM to 6:00 PM
Saturday1 ............ 9:00 AM to 1 :00 PM
COWMBIA
SAVINGS Cl:i
AND LOAN ASSOGIATION. 80 F1lhlon l1land • 760-8551
(comer ol Newport Center Drtwe end ..,.. Roea)
1 -
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.ae •tF ri .. Thc>rn9s P. Haley I Publisher Thomas KMVll IEdltor
OrJngp Coa.i Oaoty Pol o! Edlto al .-ao..e. _________ T·h·u·r•.d.•.Y.· J.•.n.u.·ry·2·2·, .1"·'·-------a.-r~-'.··K·r·~·ib·l·c·h·/E·d·l·tor-1•.•.P.aQe-·E·d·l·to·r·-·
Teacher protests
damage students
oune ner Mid It wu fun to race the pr-Oipect of losina
a Jnb It· f riaihh•n101 .
SUll. th~rc' iom.,lhanM rt!puamu\l Mild unprofea1jonal
&bout tbe work tilowdown '1laruption c-reated by some
tt'afhen 1n tht' ttw1tln(llllif\ Beach Unlon Hi&h School Dis
tru·t Uus we.k no nH&lh!r that the teacher association
bhtb~)' t'aplamed It w111 merely 11 dt!mun•trallon to show
ho"'' m.daet cuts wtll advt'rSt'ly Mffct•t clllssl'oom activities.
Lake mO!lit school boards. hi1h school trustt'es here race
m ·nat•n.i budit~t ('Ul Somehow. they 'vt' got to find $3.9
malhon to tnm fr{1m th•· $42 m1lhon thut already was a
p11r{'d down budf(el ~vet
~wt e natur~ll\·. µerl!)otuwl rt"C.iul·tton 1s one form of cut-
un.i the budget and 75 tear hing pos1t1ons art-Jeopardized
along 14i th5Jc<>wt!.t!hng posts
"lt woukJn ·t bt ~o bad tfthe emotion and acrimony Wt!re
:.tri lb betwet-n the school board and the teacher associa·
t 1on l 'nfortun<stt ly. th~teachers ' highly visible activities m
rt-t·ent day!, havt! dragged the s tudents into the affair
right mhnaJexam week That'SJUStnot fairtothestudents .
Wt! have de~p sympathy for the teachers faC'ing the
pros pect of bean~ laid off At the same time. we wish they 'd
tmd another wety to vent their frustration. some way that
·tloesn'tdrag the s tude nts into the mire.
little acco01plished
Things were only s lightly diffe rent in the 13-school
lluntington Beach (city) Elementary School District
where teacher and administration leaders have just com-
pleted long and sometimes acrimonious contract negotia·
lions.
The talks dragged on rrom last February until final
ratification Tuesday night.
No strikes or serious job actions were reported but
there were unpleasant moments.
Teachers, justifiably frustrated by the bite that infla-
tion is taking from their paychecks, engaged in a brief
sickout at one school and later demonstrated with picket
signs at district headquarters and at all the schools
before class.
Many also wore badges to school, expressing their
sentiments and there are indications that students were
drawn into the controversy.
When all is said and done, the bitter feelings and
manifestations appeared to accomplish very little.
TrU.stees had previously granted 8 percent pay in-
creases to other district employees and it was clear to ob-
servers that teachers ultimately would receive the same
offer.
As it turned out. teachers did indeed receive -and
approved an 8 percent pay increase.
The settlement comes not long before n egotiations
are to start for next year.
Would it be too much to expect that the negotiations
could be pursued throughout the summer this time and
not be allowed to intrude into the education program'!
That would appear to be in everyone's best interest.
Park support unlikely
HWllington Beach officials have been grappling for
months with what they call an innovative way to finance
t he city's 400-plus acres of parks.
Key to the financing plan is the proposed develop·
ment of private commercial and recreational facilities in
the 300·acre Central Park.
Some o fficials believe that if about 75 additional
acres can be added lo Central Park. it would be able to
accommodate suc h developments as hotels, restaurants,
waterslides. bicycle motocross, children's playland and a
large overnight camping facility for a proposed trout fish-
ing lake.
The theory is that revenue the city would receive
from private enterprise would finance maintenance of the
entire park system .
After a blush of optimism. the plan, however, isn't
that feasible.
Most importantly. it requires a bond issue of about $6
millioh to acquire the additional land. In the present
economic climate, it is difficult to envision even en·
thusiastic resi<fents approving such an undertaking.
There doesn't seem to be any outpouring of en-
thusias m for the project. In fact, neighbors of the park
are showing mounting resistance to any development
there.
The City Council recently approved spending $32.000
for a study to see if the proposed projects would be
worthwhile economically.
At this point. that seems like a poor investment or
cit y funds barring an unanticipated change of sentiment
from the public. • . • Opinions expressed in the space above .are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is Invited, Address The Daily Pilot. P.O
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321.
Boyd I Wives
By L. M. BOYD
Many is the city wife who
accuses her buabafld of not
working bard enou"h, of not
earning enough money. of not
belpin1 her enou1h in dealing
with the youn1sten. But the
farm wife who so accuses her
bus band is a rarity. Our Love
and War man bu attempted
t
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
'
Why does thla country
spend hundred• of
thouaanda of dollan lo
brin1 ln people from
Aala and Cuba, and al
the aame time spend
bundredloltbouland1 to
keepournelpbonouU KIP ....... , ... ,__...._ ..... ........ . , ,.. ..... ..-.. ... _....,... ..... , ........ ..
::::::..-=.~~·
to explain the why of this dif·
ference between city and
farm wives. And failed.
Just about every other day
In this country, another
bridge collapses. Happened a
week or so ago near my
place. A little bridge clearly
only strong enough for
haytrucka caved in when ~
driver or a semi tanker
loaded with salt water
evtdently failed to note the
obvious. Too bad. Pretty lit-
tle bridge. It was one of
about 375,000 bridges na-
tionwide more than 45 yearl
old.
When I said supply tenden
sailed behind the enormoua
Chinese Junb of yesteryear,
and that 'vqetable 1ardena
were eultlvated on tbe supply
tenden to pro.tde tbe crews
and p.....,en ol tbe 11"9at
1blp1 wltb freab food, lt
dlcln 't GCp" to me -a• lt dld
to certalll awtft readen -
tbat tbaee veaetablel wen
1nc1eee1 t11e world'• nnt Jn
fooda.
h
Earl Waters
School financing unresolved
Althouah it is not likely thllt
uny significant c hunges in
school rinancing will come out of
the 1981 Le1islature, pressur~
ue being brought to bear by the
lawyers who jolted the entire
st•hool financing system back in
1968 with the now famous "Ser-
rano" case. ·
They had brought suit against
u hosl or state officials in behalf
or J o hn s .. rrljl\11 , a
Haldwin Park
pan:nl who
colltl'llded his
son was being
d e n 1 ed h i's
t•onst1tut1onal
r I g h t S t I)
t: ll u a I
tr e atm e nt
bec aus e he
h\ll'd 1n a school distr1c·t which
wa i. 11111 poor lo provide the
quality l'ducal1on received by
students in "rich .. districts
Aft t:r eight years of litigation
the courts finally itgreed,
declaring the state's system for
rinanclng schools. based upon
the a11sessed valuations or
property within the districts.
was violative or the constitution
in 'that it did not provide equal
amounts to be spenl-"in the
education of every child,
THE RULING ordHed 11
revision whi c h a ll owed
differences of no more than $100
per pupil and ~<i ve the state
until this year to achieve thr
~oal
With th e 1>a s!>al:!e o f
Propos1l11m IJ, hm1ting property
tax es. srhool financing was
ne<'(:OSS <.1rily !>hifled from thoe
lol'al tax r£>venues to the state
Tht• result ha!> been that the
s tate has now a!>s ume ll 80
percent nf lhl· costs for the local
school operations
Hut the Serrano luwyers
contend that the Legislature has
done little to eliminate the
un constitutional ineq uities
which gave occasion to the case.
Jn some instances. they claim,
the situation is worse now than it
was then. pointing to their
favorite target ()f Beverly Hills
which is currently said to be
spending $2,700 per pupil while
Baldwin Park has only $1,400
per pupil. The lawyers say that
this proves the present scheme
or financing will not bring the
system into full compliance in
the reasonably near future or
ever. They threaten lo reopen
the Serrano case if action is not
taken by the Legislature this
year
LEGISLATORS, Gov Jerry
Brown. and state School Supt
Wil s on Rile s di s ag re e ,
!'ontendmg lht· state is now an
substantial complaitnce -Riles
says anything more al this lime
would lower the tal1ht!r or the
entire school system working
unnecessary hardships on
hundreds of thousands of school
children.
He pointed out that many or
the districts viewed as wealthy.
such as San Francisco, have all
of the problems that go with
poverty, minorities, non·EngUsh
s p ea king and culturally
deprived children.
The whole issue m ight be
ea sily put le> rest by the stall'
titking the final step. which
eventually it will s urely b<·
t·ompelled to do. and assume ·
total responsibility for school
financing It would rt-quire only
slightly more thitn a 20 percent
increase in the prsenl funding
BUT THAT sr>lulton 1s bitterly
r e s i s t c d ti y s 1· h o 11 I
administrator!> and teai·her!> up
and down the stale F'or th(·y
know 1t wc1uld incscajJ<Jhly hnnl(
<Jbnul u niform s atC1r1 f's
s latew1d t· for both lhf•
administrators aml l<'a <:hNs 11!>
well as all cithf'r t·m plr1vcc'>
Whtie that probably woul!l bf•
tht· m11st healthy thing 1<1 1•vn
happen in the puhl1C' s<'h1111ls, II
l1•aV('S ltlf• fi.ll~il' !'llnf'f•pt o( thf·
Scrran11 c·asf• unr hallf'ng1•d That
1!> the 1dci1 that thf· '>Jlf_•nrl1ng r1f
•·qual arr111unts on ''<H'h 1•upil will
ini;urf' N1ual1I y 11( Nlu1·<1t1n n ••r 1<.
t•v1•n des1rnhl1·
t:ndf'r prl't;f•Ol (1nan(•1nl( f•Xlril
all11wanc·(·s tin · ma<lf' ''' prnv1d•· f 0 r t h I· h (I n rt I {' a ,, II ,. d . t h I•
u n d c r p r 1 v 1 I " g ,. d t h 1·
non F:ngllsh "IJl';Jkmg anr1 ev<·n
the 1(1fled f:a<"h hC1ve special
n eeds nvt•r 11n rt a bove tht
regul ar v h•it1I prog ram f:,en
!>UCh thin~'> ii'> th1· 1~xlrd busin~.
wh ether t •1un m<JndalNl or •1f
gci11.traph1 e ncrt·c;o;1t y, int·reC1'ie
th1: rwr pupil Nist!> in cert a1n
di st ri<-ts
-~
'Po~ff RI.I~ ME :-F1~r. 1 HAVE m f1ND TuE HfAD END.'
On e hun'1rc1l pncent '\lJ\(:
financing could vastl~ 1mpr11ve
the• µrl'l>t'nt !>~stem 1f the 1·ourt~
w I 11 b CJ (" k a ...... v r r () m ' ht·
manllall' "' '>Pl'nchn ~ t:q ual umounl!> on cat h rh1ld
Mailbox
County needs efficient airport facility
To the Editor:
I was most pleased to read in
the Daily Pilot that Supervisor
Ralph Clark is asking the Board
of Supervisors to consider the
appropriateness of increasing
the number of daily commerciaJ
flights out or the John Wayne
airport. The purpose of this let-
ter is not to re· hash past pro/con
arguments, but to give the board
my wholehearted support for in-
c re a sing the number of daily
commercial flights. The airport
exists.
There is no valid alternative
site. The passenger count in·
creases year by year. This fact
in itself should suffice as ample
rationale for accommodating to
the needs and demands for air
travel or this county's popula-
tion. Orange County and its
cities, its industries and its peo-
ple need and require a first class
commercial air facility. This
damn thing has been studied to
death and if you stacked aJI the
impact reports on top of each
other you probably wouldn't be
able to see above it or around it.
FINALLY, I am a resident of
the city of 'Newport Beach. I
lived for four years in the Bluffs,
first leasing and then owning a
residence directly under the
flight path. When the planes
went over it was noisy and un·
comfortable but my family and I
accommodated to it because we
moved in there with the full
knowledge that we were in the
jet flight path. If a survey would
be made lodav. I'm willin2 to bet that substantially all the res·
idents underneath that flight
path in the Bluffs and Dover
Shores have moved in there
post-jet.
It's amusing to read about the
complaints when I recall that we
sold our home on Vista Entrada
for a substantial profit to
another resident on the same
street and the jets kept flying all
those years. Another cinch bet
would be on the substantial in-
crease in housing resale values
under the Newport Beach night
path.
Let's build a proper terminal
and sufficient parking structure
now ! '
KARL 0 . BERGKEER
........... u.t.'1
To the Editor:
I tnvtte you to look for a mo·
ment at the "liberal landslide,"
the ''liberal mandate." Yes. I mean the election of lut No-
v~ber'4.
-1 have before me the
California ftpes, and lt &. ln
Callfomla where that fa.ante ion Ronald Reaaan la aUDDGHd
to bave done 10 well. Ke -cflda't.
He 1ot • perHnt of tboee eltal·
ble to vote; lbe turnout, aeeord·
ing to the California Secretary of
State, was lhe worst for any
presidential election year since
1912, when the office began lak-
ing notes. A lack of t>umper-
stickers revealed the situation;
almost no one voted /or anyone.
ON mE other hand. two ex-
tra-political events played de·
cisive roles in sellin~ up a situa· lion where we had no one to vote
for . The man the millions
would have voted for, as sup.
porters and non·s upporters
knew. was Teddy Kennedy. but
he was precisely the victim of
the two extra.political events:
Chappaquiddick, which was old
but not quite forgotten, and the
hostage seizure, ideally suited to
a t e mporizing president In
charge.
Take away these two, or at
least the second. and we would
have had a Kennedy nomination.
Let all the people vote their
prejudices just as they did vote.
let Reagan keep his 28 percent.
reshuffle the Anderson voles, add the percentage points to
bring the turnout up at least to the
average for a presidenllal elec·
lion and this gives you what the
columnists and politicians would
call "a liberallandslide ... lf Lhis is
a plausible reading of the out·
come then the new president is in
for a rude a wakening.
DAVIDALANMUNRO
Tree• .. •~re
To the Editor:
l 'd like lo know who is responsi-
ble for the outright destruction of
trees on the west side or town.
Costa Mesa now has a look which
resembles the set for the movie
•'Chain Saw Massacre.··
Whoever is responsible for
this butchering of nature must
have been listening to Ronald
Reagan's "trees cause pollu·
lion." They should be told the
statement is erroneous.
Maybe they'd be satisfied if
they leveled every tree in the city.
TERENCE COAKLEY
Trwlllr frlr ..
To the Editor:
Jn •II of my trips around
Fountain Valley and Huntincton
Beach I have been amazed,
astonished and otheif'wlse
bewildered by the uncanny t.ral·
fie U1bt controls.
If I drive at the speed limit
(when I finally 1et the sreen light at a tralflc control,> 1.ar.
rive at tbe next traffic lllbt
about 10 lecondl after lt chana•
to red and fClfttll another atop.
Tb1I la true on ev•l'J ltNet
and ID may d1neUoD of tra"1 a ·
cept Beacll Boulevard, and
aom.u.,. Brookbunt. In llddi·
Uon to tlU. I bAYe aotlctid that
wbe!Mftr tbla aa..,,_. tlMn &.
'
never any cross traffic to re·
quire the use of lhe intersection
I sit stopped ror no apparent
reason and on the occasion when
there is cross traffic. it is usual·
ly sitting stopped and waiting at
a red light all the while that I
am approaching the intersec-
tion. At the very last second the
light changes to stop me and let
me sit stopped until the next
group of cross traffic ap
preaches. Then I get to watch
this group· get stopped by the
light and finaJly I can proceed to
the next repeat of this se1me se·
quence of events again -and
then again -and so on, and so
on.
HAVE YOU ever asked
yourself how the traffic
engineers can time these lights
so precisely in order to get the
maximum number of stops from
the greatest number of vehicles
for each cycle of the traffic con·
trol?
It's easy -they know how far
it is between traffic lights. They
know how long it takes lo get
there at the speed limit and they
can very easily lime the light so
you cannot get through unless
you exceed the speed limit.
I asked the traffic engineers
for Fountain Valley and Hunt·
ington Beach if they could also
set the timing so you would
never have to stop if you drove
at the speed limit. They all said
yes. it would be easy. It could be
done for all of the streets and all
directions of travel.
But they are not interested in
saving energy or reducing smog
or traffic noise or reducing wear
on your engine and brakes. What
they want is more money for a
computer to hook up to Edinger.
It will take years to install and
years to solve partially a
problem which should not even
exist in the first place.
This is a deliberately created
problem caused by the faulty ad-
justment of the timers and It can
be corrected in one week by Ht·
ting the timers correctly. But
everyone else gets a computer,
so it's only fair to get one for the
traffic engineers.
LARRY JAMES
All,...lefl
To the Editor:
I'm penonally affronted by
the number of Cout Community
College schedules that have •P-
Quotes
peared lately. One from Orange
Coast College, one from Golden
West. and now this evening's
mail brings me the Coast .Com-
m unity Coll ege com ban ed
schedule for ·s1. all at U. S.
postage paid. non·profit and so
forth. and I just wonder
This is delivered to my post of·
fice box. to my residenre and to
my business. I thank it's a terri-
ble was te of the taxpayers·
money I think your paper ought
to lake a leok at this and find out
how to save a few bucks in the
era of Proposition 13.
BILL BENTS
Alrporl rlaofre
To the Editor:
There have been many things
proposed for the John Wa yne
Airport recently and many more
suggestions will be made at the
public hearing before the Airport
Commission. However , none of
the questions have ever been
asked to any of the younger
generation. I am 17 years old and
as far as I know I will be living in
Newport Beach for the rest of my
life. I will be here for a lot lo.nger
than the people who are making
the decisions.
M V POINT is. I understand that
the master plan calls for an in-
crease in the number of permitted
daily departures to SS from a cur-
rent level of 41. Why do they need
to make a major airport out of it
when they have LAX so near? The
main problem is the fact that it
will simply destroy Newport
Beach! Real estate will drop, land
will lose value, the air become
worse than It already is etc. Just
look what LAX has done for Los
Angeles. It isn't exactly prime
position around the airport within
10 miles. Do we want a $75 million
airport terminal or do we want to
preserve one area of nice beach,
clean water and fairly fresh air?
Also, if they want to grow now,
what says they aren't goiDI to
want to grow more later when
most of the older people are gone
and we are still here? I think th•l
it is badenouch the way it is now, I
can't ever look up into the sky and
notspotanairplane.
I think people should consider
these facta and do 1o~elhin1
about them. Newport Beach is a
clean, beautiful anclfun city to be '
in. Don'tdeatroy It!
SCOTT WENK&
• • Lfft.,.. from rndn• en wic:onw.
"Poland la livinl tbrouP a n.""" Co~ l«tm to fta very lmportaat event, radio · ~ ot ,.,,....., Ubill ti,.., ....
trauml...., of tbe bolJ llw LMCm ol • _,.. "''-• eir and God'• word." -• .,... _...,...,,,....AU ..._rn•U•
...... ,.., ........ 1111 ..... cw. .... ...,.. .. =..._
au1uraUa1 wHklJ rell1lou 'W --. N •,.
broadcaat1 la com•••\•t ..... ., .. ,...,,_ .. JU • Poland. ,.,,, ......... ,. .......
• \
MORE OPINION
Rowland ~vanft/Robert Novak
DAIL y PILOT At
, v 7
.r
. ' · ThurldtiV. JanuMV ?? :181
Reagan plan~ing firm stand agaiiist terro~sm
WASHI liTON A1>11ullt•1I
thal t>res1d .. nt l'i.11t•r 1•1111 h11>
me n we r to b111 i.k111 6( 10 tht•
pt-rt' f'I \. cd ., ut· 1· 1•1>1\ <i ( t hu1 r
h 0 ~I 8 JC t' (rt• t' Ill JC v Ill' r 1.1t111 n,
Pr~su1t>nt Kon11lll ltt-illJlilll ~ml
his nlen havt• l.H't•fl vloll111g I.I
Io n.: ou•rclu..-l ' ~ 'u in11111"n
agna ni.t 1€~rro r "111 111 ;.II ah
form
On of th,. 111·~ 1>1 ''"l•lt•nl ·.,
cn1or J1h 1:.t<r'> 1>111 11 to U'> thll>
~ • > r h 1·
IH~ll C'\Ul.)14
t 1on or tht'
.Hlc:r ..id
1n 11\ I :. tr ct l HI n
~Ith human
tl~hl Ill ~II
I ll~ t u h 1•
r.id1l'J l l \
'4 11 l'h t'd to
lht! Rt-a g a n
.od m 1 n1 :.t r a
t ion i. 1>rcot·c·u1wt1un ~llh 1n
tt-rnallo nal terro ra :.m · The
i.w1ll'h t·onn1111·~ o.i promise of
"never again .. 111 rt'SIJOnding to
the 444 da~!> of Iranian 1:apt1 v1ty
o a lion a.I alonufllt'nl for that
111fum y, but 11r11H·111ally to pre·
V\'111 11 11 r t:SJctit1o n . that
lh·a~an ' tOIJ nutwnal sceurity
11ffH·lal11 ure mov1nii 1.tKll&nst a
~ lubul vursc They have qwctly
'"'urn 111 start an 1mmed1ale tn·
tt•r nut 10f1ul effort to reduc·e the
u-.t' of terror as an antcrn1al1onal
puh l H'<•I Wt'apoh
Ttn: "TONEMENT will make
at:i.c lf kno w11 soon e n ough
Hl:agan and his high command
111a µhra11e the ir words careful-
h , but what they say about the
IH11>l al(t' affair will add up to
th11> Never again will the S
,dl•1w 1tsclr to be held hostai.tc by
-.1·1:i:urt• of American c1t1iens.
Behind this l1t-i. a fund3mental
d15t1nt·taon betwt-cn the world
\ 1ews of Carter and Heagan
Private)) affronted by Carter's
handling of thl' ho~tagc C'fll?IS
from the start. thl' Rca~<tniles
saw no glory in the t tth·hour
hostage release after t•ndless
ha~l!linr.:. instead. they ~aw na
t ional infamv in un<·t· feared .
onct'.'·Stronp. Americ·a held at bay
for nearly 15 months by a South
Asian third r ate military powf•r.
T ht: µresident ·s men an effet·t
~ a rll thl' world informt'd that
('o.irtt:r'1> pa~off lo Teh ran will
1101 be repeated lnte rnat1onal
ll·r r oras ts. whether o r not
C'lo<ikcd an the guise of a govern-
mvnt , must understand that
He ai.:im is changing the rules of
tht• ~anw as played by Carter
whatt>ver the cost "We <ire
rnOYIOS! into a very. very tough
Cpur year period. Make no mis -
- -take about that.·· une 1Jresiden
t1al adviser told us
It is partly as a measure or
IRANIAN PERC•;P TION uf
tht.•se changed rules may have
<·on tributed more th an quiet
diplomacy to the hostage re-
lease Reagan's men ar e con·
\'tnc cd Tehran fin ally ac cepted
the ckal because of fear of
Reagan. "They wer e µetnfied.
R19n1 •1ow 1Juri119 1~e RCA XL 100 1n~1an1 Savings Soec1acula1
we r r 01ter111g 1ns1a111 sav1119s 01 5!5 550 01 S 75 u11 ~eltclell
RCA XL 100 19 an~ 25 1ll~Qn1tal Color IVs
l1ml1•d 1im•-oll•1 •nd1 Morch t. t96t
Jus1 s1op t>v fill out me lnsra111 Sa.,ngs Ce11111ca1e anu save 11tslal'lly on 1ne XL 100 mo1JPl nl vour Choice
SAYE s75
So~ HS on 2S' dlo9onol "•mot• Con"ol JlL-tOO
Color TV Oeco1a11ve consoles 01 a rabl~ moflPl all w•lh
RCAs Char111elock Remoie Conuol Three cab111e1 s1vtes
1Mooe1s HR575R GER685R 689R 691R)
SAVE
and rightly so.·· s aid one Reagan
operaliv~ who had helped con·
s t ruct Reagan 's d e li berate
escalation of anli·lranian
e pithets from criminals to kid·
nappers to barbarians.
Brought into lbe firing sights
o f the new administration's anti·
tt'rrorist planning is the Soviet
Union. As we reported earlier.
Heagan never doubted that the
Kr1:ml1n tried to the end to
s idetrac k Carte r 's hos tage
negotiations t>"ith Iran. Every
piece of eviaence presented to
Reagan s in ce h is e lect ion
persuaded him that Moscow's
real intent was to prevent the re-
lease of the hostages and use the
issue lo enhance its own in·
fl u'ent·e in Iran.
IT IS •'AK too early to predict
the precise s hape of Reagan's
l·ampaign against te rrorii.1Tl. The
µresident's national St'cunty of-
ficials are s tudy1n K a just-
µu bl isht•d treatise <' all<'d "Te r-
rorism Threat . H eC:.1 l 1t y.
Hesponsc" by two sometime
Reagan advisers . Robert If_
Kupperman a nd Darrell Tren t
Ano the r soon-to-be published
work anticiµated in high ad-
min1strat1on quarters is by one
of Europe's best -known t'Xperts
on terrorism. journalist Claire
Sterling
However . the campai g n
progresses. one e me rg.ng theme
has hl•t•n fortified b~ etnti·
American Soviet µropaganda 1n
I rnn Musc<>w must ceas e at.s
s upport for terrorism , which so
helps the Kremlin in the U.S.-
Soviet competition, or pay dire
c·onsequences .
These consequences, accord-
ing to preliminary planning, will
include the use of American and
<if Western Europe agrees) of
Europe an s anctions against
Moscow, One senior Reagan ad-
viser claims the U.S. and the
George Mair
West "have the assets to put into
play.. food and strategic trade
if the Soviet superpower is
caught red-handed aiding in-
ternational terror, as it was in
the agonizing hostage crisis.
But the firs t·line weapon
against terrorism is a beefed·up
worldwide intelligence system to
anticipate terrorist activities. If
that fails. Reagan would treat
terrorists, ~hether posine as
governments or not, as
criminals, not bargaining
partners. Failure of the Carter
administration to give the Ira-
nians s uch treatment or to exact
any clear punishment at all has
agonized Reagan's men. lt also
has magnified the challenge of
the new administration's anti·
terrorist campaign.
Have they read Adam Smith?
There is a Joke in Washington
that the official eC'onomist of the
Reagan administration will be
Ad am Smith. the Scottish found-
ing father of ca1>italis m .
If vou talk wilh conservative
business executives, they will
tend to con
firm that they
bel1c\'c in
t·aµ1 t :.il1 s m
an d Adam
Smit h The
on l y thing
wrong wi t h
that 1s mos t
bUSIO ('SS ('X
l'l'U\ I Vl'S havt·
e v ad<·ntl\
never read Ad<im Smith <.ind his
famous t·ap1talis t m<.1n1rt.•s to.
··Th1.• Wealth of Nations ..
I say tha t because Adam
Smith espoused such things as
g o vernme nt r egulatio n a nd
labor unions . which make the
blood drain from the average
business executive's fac:c.
I N FACT. Adam Smith felt
government regulation and
labor unions were essential to
the sucl'ess of the c apitalist
svstem lie a lso insisted that an
o.pen ma rke t place with free
competition was the C'ore of the
cap italist syst em. F inding a
bus int>ss man who buys that
would be tougher than finding a
hooker al a Methodist Sunday
School µicmc
Does l.t·e l acocc<J want an
open market. free compet1t1on
and no gm·crnment interference
1n bus1ncs::-.'' Does l.ockheed''
Does GM. or Ford? You l'an bet
your ever·loving. blue.eyed bip-
µy they don't.
THE PROBLEM is best ex-
pressed by capitalism's favorite
li ve economist. Milton fried·
man. who says l'apitalism 's two
worst enemies are liberal pro-
fessors and C'onservative busi·
ness exeeulives.
The liberal professor s. h\?
says, understand how capitalism
works. and hate it The con-
s e rvative business executives
don't understand how it works,
a nd love iL Both of them. f"ried -
m an sa ys, arc a plaguC' un the
free-enterprise system
Well. who am I to argue with
Milton F riedman or i\dam
Smith''
sso Republic also ioins Orange County
to Denver and Seattle/Tacoma.
rt~)10
GER6'&6
So.,. UO 011 2S dlo9011ol XL-100 Color fV
All leature Au1omat1c Contrast Color lraci..1ng Auto·
mallc Color Conlrol and Fleshlone Correc11on Choice ot
(Models fER520. GER68• 688. 690)
19" dloOOf'OI llL-100 Co4ot rv
RCA's Xlendedlife clllssls plus Autom111c
Color Control and
Aeshtone Correction
Cl
< 11·1 01. o' 111 ,\11 .i-,t, '. 11 1~<·1 1 1!1 t :, • · •, 1• 1 /,.. • •
R1:pld l II 11 • 1•H1 ltJ ll tC lll /\•1•1·1 1,1• I ' • "ti' I'.
\V1th c11111.1•r1('lll tl111l1t•.lr11111 h111 I th•1 ''"il l,,;
yn111 l.1v11• 111, ( r 11 l'r • r >' ti 11 ;,r!' 1rl ,\ .. I '· •.,,.I •1 .1 •1 , • • • 11 ii 1., ; •
v1>11 1111111 ,, 1., • ..,111·11 r~1·p1 it) 1 1\, "''" 11 • .. 1 'I'' 11 • '· .1 • 1 1·.·
Don't (•,tvr• 1111/VI' w1tl (J .• I r I .·/\·· I . ( ,. i •l ., ,•, ( p (j '(''le•'
J\1• 11 1(1r c vc•rylh•11q f111rn R1 1 11ll If ,\ • t • 1 q l·1 1• ! ·1 • 1h
\I( Cl'> tn p 1l I 11q 11p q •\l r1111r1' I 11 ·,I •Pl>' •J ·,1n • ,11 I\•,\:. · 1:
11f f'r11Pr\,\11111 •1•nl 1\\ 0 1' I nq1•r \ p-. ln .1pp I ,. ,, (. 11111 , • •,,'
800 SJH 800() l h1• l\'111 •r < ii l 'P'I'\'·,' I .ircl I,,,, I •r.111 I "1
Ju~t call ymu trcwel agent ancf say yuu wan I to fly Rl1/)u/1/1<. 0 1 <..ill
us any llmc>.1/ fl l.J1 S.J0-2060 m Or,mge Countv. 2131241 tJJJJ
m Burban~. f21J)112 ~ 100 m Lm Anqeles. or //J1 98R 8S8j
in Ontano _.,/ ·
~
Orange County to Ho"ston
Lv. 8 15am Ar 1 57p m
9 55 am 3 33 pm
11 25 a m • 5 26 pm
4 70 pm 10 02 pm
Orange County to Denver
Lv 7 20 a.m Ar 11 30 am
11 25 a.m 3.25 pm
I 50 pm. 5 52 p m.
7 25 p.m_ 11 39 p rn
Orange County to
SeattlefTacoma
Lv 7 40 am.
\.50 p.m •
5·45 p.m
Ar 11 \5 am
6 52 p.m
9.20p m.
~EP~~,~!.c
Joining more of Amenca than any other airline. ,
Return from Houston
Lv 8 25 am Ar 10 50 a.m
9 20 am • 12 40 pm
2 40p m 5 11 pm.
415pm · 8 18 pm.
6 SO pm 9 07 pm
Return from Denver
Lv 7 00 a.m. Ar 9 23 a.m
11 20a m. I 35p m.
6 35 pm 8.42 pm
6 40p m 9 03 p.m
Return from
SeattlefTacoma
Lv 7 45 a.m • Ar I 3Sp.m.
12 15p.m 3 47 pm
4A0p.m 8 18p m.
..,,..-
A. DAIL. y PILOT Thurtday, January 22, 1111
• " " •Jo ••
QUEENIE
'~ \ . . I
,; ..:-·; l .
\1r Powt<n. :.d) ~ht' doei.n I can: 1f you'rt.-an exet·ut1vc
\ 11u dt~·kl·d tht:, halb and > ou ha\'c to undcl'k tht.-m "
"Cot a problem" Then wnte to Pal Dunn Pal wall
cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need
to solVt> inequities m yovernrnenl and business. Mail
your questions to Pat Dunn. At Your Service. Orange
Coasl [)(uly Pilot. P.O Bo.r 1560, Costa Mesa. CA
92626 As many lellers as posSJble will be answered,
but phoned mquines or letters not 1ncludmg the
reader's full name. address and bwtness hours' phonl!
number cannot be consu:lered Thas column appears dai·
ly ercepl Sundays ··
Sntlor• ~' la.r lwttrlll•
DEAR PAT: I retired this year and would like
to know if there are any special tax benefits for
senior citizens.
G.N., Costa Mesa
If you are 15 or older you may claim Giie addl·
tlonal personal Hemptlon oa you tax retUD. Yoa
also may be eli,lble to claim a special credit for
persons wit.II retlreme•t lmcome.
Scm.edllle R ls med for taxpayen 15 or older,
and Scm.edale RP Is for pe...-a llOt yet 15 wlto re·
celve a tauble pemslon from a pabUc retlreme•t
system (<'ivU service, military, etc.). hbllcatlola
5Z4, Credit for &be Elderly, 1lves detalled lalorma-
tlon. It is available at IRS offices or by pbolllml
(800) 24%-4585.
S#lipllWnl• drlaflrd
DEAR PAT: I sent $39 to the Bradford Ex·
change Sept. 19 for two Rockwell plates. I thought
the plates would be delivered in time for
Christmas, but they still haven't arrived. I had to
buy substitute presents and my Dec. 12 letter to
the firm has not been answered. Believe it or not,
this is my first bad experience with a mail-order
company Can you come to my rescue? I would still
like to getthe plates.
H.R.A., Costa Mesa
Lorraine Hoover of Bradford Excban1e says a
production problem caused tbis unus ually Ion' de-
lay in p~essing orders. Tlte plates are beln'
malled now and if yours doesn't arrive by tile end
of January, let A YS know. Ms. Hoover added U.at
shipment delay notification cards were mailed to
customers, but perhaps youn was lost in U.e mall.
Mrdlral hblorl~• lllrd
DEAR PAT: Does the Medical Information
Bureau keep good as well as bad medical informa-
tion about people? Also, can I find out what is in
my file? I am thinking about applying for some
more insurance and would like to check this out.
I've heard that the bureau's reports generally are
used to determine eligibility for life and health in-
surance policies.
P.S .. South Laguna
Tbe Med{cal lnfQrmation BueH collects botlt
favorable and anfavorable information aboet U.e
millions ol consumers listed in lta rues. U yoa ap-
ply for health or life insurance, you slMtald rttelve
a written notice &bat describes ltow dlsclosare of
Information on file wltb MIB may be obtained.
Inclusion of unfavorable laformatloa does not
necessarily mean that you wlll be. ta111ed down for
a new insurance policy.
If you bave more questions, contact tbe
bureau's Information office by writing to P.O. Boll
195, Essex Station, Boston, Mass. tzllZ.
Atrocities revealed
NF.JV DELHI, India !API -Eleven Indian
police offi cials tortured a pregnant woman after
stripping and parading her naked, and delieralely ·
shot and killed three men who tried to rescue her,
a judicial fact-finding commission said.
The woman said she was repeatedly raped by
the policemen at Baghpat. 30 miles nprthea~t of
New Delhi. last June. Three men, 'iriCluding'l\er
husband. were shot dead when they tried to save
her.
The commission said it could not s ubstantiate
the rape charge. The Uttar Pradesh state govern-
ment said it asked the criminal investigation de-
partment to punish the guilty police officials on the
basis of the reporli
(:HECKING ACCOUNTS
TH}H EAf:N INTERl Sl ASK US'
_...,.._ --....... -.... --
)
I
Auto Speakers w/Power Booster
Ortg •................................ 79.H
Merk down price .................... 59.H
Leaa 25% ............................ $15
Your prtce 44.99
Boys' Jackets
Ortg ............................... S24-S2e
M•rk down price .................... 15.99
Leaa 25% .. ~ ......................... -. S4
Your price 11 .99
Cruise Control
Orig ................................. 59.99
Merk down price .................... 49.99
Leaa 25% .......................... 12.50
Boys' Jackets
Orig ............................... S32·S3~
Merk down price ..................... 24.99
leH 25% ........................... 6.25
Your prtce 37 .49 Your price 18. 74
MacPherson Strut Shocks
Ortg ................................. 29.99
M61rk down price .................... 11.H
Leaa 25% ........................... 4.25
Boys' Down Look Vest
Ortg ................................... $11
Merk down price .................... 12:99
LeH 25% ............................ 3.25
Your prtce 12. 74 Yourprlce 9.74
Wicker Assortment
Orig ............................. 5.99-13.99
M.,k down price .................. 2.99-6.99
leH 25% ........................ 75c-1.75
Your price 2.24-5.24
Men's Dress Shirts
Orig .............................. 8.50-$12
M•rk down price ..................... 3.99
Leaa 254Yo ............................. $1
Your price 2.99
Bundle-Up (OulHect>
Ortg ................................... $25
M.,k down price .................... 10.11
Leaa 25% ........................... 2.72
Your prtce 8.16
Men's Sport Shirts s/s
Ortg .................................. 5.99
Merk down prtce ..................... 3.34
Leaa 25% ...................... · · · · · 84c
Your prtce 2.50
Furniture Throw
Orig •................................. 4.99
M•rtl down price ..................... 2.11
Leaa 25% ............................ 72c
Men's Tank Tops
Ortg .................................. 4.50
M•rk down price ..................... 1.99
Your prtce 2.16 Leaa 25% ........................... 50c
Your prtce 1.49
Yardage
Ortg •...•....•.........•.............. 2.H
Mark down price ..................... 1.H
Leaa 25% ........................... 50c
Your prtce 1.49 yd.
Men's Shorts
Ortg •.............................. 3.99-,$12
Merk down prtce ..................... 1.99
Leaa 25% ........................... 50c
Your prtce 1.49
Knock on Wood Kitchen Acc.
Ortg •............................... M-$25
Merk down price ................. $3-12.50
leH 25% ........................ 75c-3.12
Men's Corduroy Pant
Ortg .................................. $12
M•rk down price ..................... 6. 99
Your price 2.25-9.38 Leaa 25% ........................... 1.75
Your prtce 5.24
Boys' sweater & Shirt Sweater Set
Ortg ............................... 5.99-18
Merk down price ..................... 2.19
Leaa 25% ............................ 75c
Your prtce 2 .24
Men's Compact Umbrella
Orig •................................... M
M•rk down price ..................... 2.99
Leaa 25% ............................ 75c
Your prtce 2.24
Boys' Dress Shirts <-'ze 1-12>
Ortg •................................. 4.18
M•rk down price ..................... 1 .H
Lea•25% ............................ 50c
Men's V-neck Velour
Ortg •................................ · .129
M•rk down price ..................... 18.H
Leaa 25% ........................... .4.25
Your price 1.49 Yourprtce 12.74
Boys' Prep Size Velour Robe
Ortg •...........•................... St-111
M•rk down price ..................... 8.H
Lea• 25% ........................... 1.75
Men's Sweater Shirt s/s
Ortg •.................................. 114
M•rk down price ...................... 7 .H
Leaa 25% ............................. 12
Your price 5.24 Your prtce 5.99
Llttle Boys' Terry Shirts
Ortg •...........................•..... 7.50
M•rtl down price ..................... 2.•
Le112I% ...........................• 71c
Men's Fashion Velour Shirt
Ortg •.................. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · S30 M•rtl down price ..................... 11.•
Leal 25% ............................ 4.75
Your pike 2.24 Your pike 14.24
Of course you can charge It
-~ES
Hurry ~uantltles are Limited
,
Men's Wallets
Orig ................................... $13
M.,k down price ...................... 1.50
Less 25% ............................ 1.63
Your prtce 4.87 '
Bean Bag Chairs i
Orig ................................. 29.99
Merk down price .................... 12.99
leH 254Yo ........................... 3.25
Your price 9. 74
AM-FM Radio AC/DC
Orig ................................. 34.95 I
M•rk down price .................... 24.18
leH 25% ................. ~~~; ~~~~ .
1
::~ ,
Multi Play Turn Table ,
Orig .................................. $159 1
M.,k down price ..................... $99
leH 25% .......................... 24. 75
Your prtce 74.25
Stereo Digital Clock Radio
Orig ................................. 59.95
M•rk down price .................... 38.11
LeH 25% .......................... t.97
Your price 29.91 I
Ladder Back Chairs
Orig ................................. 39.95
M•rk down price ...................... 120
le•• 25% ............................ 15
Your prtce $15
Warrior Shoe Skates
Orig ................................. 44.99
Mark down price .................... 29.99
Leaa 25% .......................... 7.50
Your prtce 22.49
Skate Totes
Orig .................................. 8.99
Merk down price ................... , . 5.11
leH25% ........................... 1.47
Your prtce 4.41
Men's Ski Jackets
Ortg •................................ 44.H
Merk down prtce .................... 22.48
LeH 25% .......................... 5.12
Your prtce 18.87
Men's Wrangler Jackets
Ortg .................................. ....
Merk down price .................... 31 .H '
Leaa25% ............................ ,.
Your pftc:e 23.99
Wood Shelving (Colonlet)
Ortg •.......................... 14.""47.lt'
Merk down price .............. 11.1143.11
LeH 25% ....•............... ' .. 2.17-1.47
Your~ 8.91-25.41
Solarlan Floor Tiie (ptcg.>
Ortt. · · · ·· · · .. ·. · ..................... 1,01 M•rtl down prtce ....................... ..
Leaa 25% .....................•..•.• 1.47
Yowprtoe 4.41
•
Cl
............. '-r"e e ... ,.._ .... • ·-• • •• •• • • e .. I e •• ·-·• •• e •, t __. ..... ·-.,,.._ •• ........... ....,._.. -................................ -.. .._..• • --:...,. ----
Hl OuCl:O 10
.
Suo 373
REDUCED TO .
25% off the marked
down. price that appears
on any reduced ticket.
l.01 llH
c Supp, 0537 ... 4
Be Hrly ... quantltlH are llmlted. We don't h.ve every Item In every size and color.
Eaemple of how our Hie works:
AE.OUCEO 10
Selecle<l Women s siac~s • •
Or+Q
Selllcled Girl s 01110 s • •
SIS OrlQ
Selecled Mens Wes1ern Snirrs • •
118 Orrg 120
Now 9.H Now 8.H Now 8.99 . Less 25°0 2.50 Less 25•, 2.25 · Less 25•. 2.so
Your prlc• 7.49 Your prlc• l .7f> Your prlc• 7 .49 2.99 JCPenney Special Saving In All Departments.
~
Yes on every reduced 1lem cunenlly marked dOwn you
can tai.e anorher 25"• oll lhe markeo pnce Mar~ea down 11em~ w• also De ldenliliea on racks and taoles Dy evenr signs ana card
• nerns .aen11t.ed Dy red tag Of reo 1.,e • dO no1 .nclude
tempo<ary reauctlOl'ls ol •e<;iulal •terns
• 'llems Shown as e.118tTlples only nol avd>la~
•n eve<y SIOfe IOPOetS Hu<ry ouan1i1oes 1tm1teo
Ladles' Robes & Sleepwear
Orig •.............................. $1t-l20
M•rk down price .................... 13.n
Less 25% ........................... 3.41
Your prtce 10.50
.: Blanket Sleeper (Detech•bl• "·>
Orig ................................... $20
, M•rk down price ...................... $12
:.. Leaa25% ............................ S3
· • Your prtce $9
" F. L. Sleeve I••• Gowns Orig •................................. -113
M8rk down price ..................... 1.1 O
. L••• 25% ........................... 2.28 !t~ Your prtc• 6.81 . Malle Leave Jewelry
, : .Orig •................................. 1.n
M•rk down prtce ..................... 4.n
Leas 25% ........................... 1.25
Your prtce 3. 74
Wooden Jewelry Boxes
Ortg ................................... $11
M•rk down price ..................... 7. n
• Lesa 25% ........................... 1.13
Your prtc• 5.76
Spring Color Fancy Brim Hats
Orig .................................. 3.50
M•rk down prtce ..................... 2.34
Lesa 25% ........................... Sic
Your prtc• 1. 74
Gold & Stiver Evening Bega
Orig •.................................. $10
M•rk down price . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . . $7
Lesa 25% ........................... 1.75
YOUf prtce 5.25
Toddler Girts' Tunic Pantsuits Ortt· ................................. ·111
M•rk down prtce .................... 12.n
· Leas 25% ............ · ......... · .. · . 3.25·
Your prtce 9. 74
Toddler Girts' Plald Winter Coats
Orig •..................................•
M•rtc down prtce .................... 10.n
Leas 25% .......................... 2.75
Your prtce 8.24
Toddler Boys' Robes
.>Orig •................................. 1.50 .'Mlttl down prtce ..................... 1.21
• Le•a 21% ........................... 1.57
, Your prtce 4. 72
Ardel Eyelashes
.. Oftt •................................. 2.90
Maril down price .........•........... 1. 71
. Leta21% ........................... 43c
Your prtce 1.31
Purae Mirror & Comb Set ;.~ e :;..:_;;_· ............................. .
•"' ~price · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · 2.IO "•" 21% ..............•.•...•••..••. 12c
~! Yowprtoe 1.17
. '
f.lhey
Ml••••' Motion Pants
Ortg ................................... $18
M•rk down price ...................... e.n
Lesa 25% ........................... 1.75
Jr. Poly Belted Slacks
Orig .................................. $16
M•rk down price ..................... 1.99
Lesa 25% ........................... 1.75
Your prtce 5.24 Your prtce 5.24
Women's Skirts
Ortg. . .............................. $15-$34
M•rk down price ................ l.ff.23.IO
Leas 25% . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . 2.50-5.95
. Your prtce 7. 99-17 .85
14K Puffed Heart Charm <5>
Orig ................................. 57.50
M•rk down prtce .................... 43.12
Leas 25% .......................... 10.71
Your prtce 32.34
Jr. & Ma. Designer Blouses
Ortg ............................... S11-S24
Mark down prtce ..................... t.n
Leaa 25% ........................... 2.50
Gold Fiiied Stick Pina (II
Orig .................................. 4.11
M•rk down price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . He
Leas 25% ........................... 25c
Your prtce 7 .99 • Your prtc• 7 4c
Women's Sweaters & Velour
Ortg ............................... S15-S30
M•rk down prtce ............... 10.50-21.50
leH 25% ....................... 2.~5.25
Ladles' Timex Watches (4)
Orig •.......... : ..................... 31.15
Mark down prtce .................... 21.H
Leas 25% .......................... 7.49
Yourprtce 7.88-15.75 Your prtce 22.47
Jr. & Ma. Corduroy Jeans
Orig ............................... 129-142
M•rk down price ................ 14.50-$21
leH 25% ...................... 3.12·1.25
Your prtce 10.88-15.75
Lightning Bolt Pendants (5) -
Orig ................................. 21.99
M•rk down price .................... 19.99
Lesa 25% ............................. $5
Your prtce 14.99
Women's Dresses & Pantsuits
Orig ................................ 122-165
M•rk down price ................ $11-27.50
LeH 25% ...................... 2. 71-8.87
Sterling Sliver Heart Pendants (4)
Orig ................................. 18.99
M•rk down price ..................... 9.99
Leaa 25% ........................... 2.50
Your prtc• 8.25-20.63 Your prtc• 7 .49
Women's Sportswear Separates
Orfg .................................... 125
M•rk down price ................. 1.e.4.99
Lea"l25% ....................... 41c-1 .25
1 OK Stone Rings (7)
Orig ................................. 99.95
M•rk down price .................... 41.88
leH 25% .......................... 12.47
Your pttce 1.50-3. 74 Your prtce 37.41
Jr., Ms., Full Rgure Winter Coats
Orig .............................. $~39
M•rk down price ............... 14.50-ll.50
LeH 25% ..................... 3.12-17.37
14K Gold Fiiied Question Mark
Orig ................................. 1e.n
M•rk down prtce ................... · 12.74
Lesa 25% ........................... 3.19
Yourprtce 10.88-52.13 Your prtc• 9.55
Women'• Blazers
Orig ............................... $41-MO
M•rk down prtce .................... 21.n
Leas 25% ........................... 7.50
Your prtc• 22.49
Women's Sandals & Heels
Orig ................................. 17.99
M•rk down price ..................... e.n
Leaa 25% ........................... 1.75
Your prtce 5.24
Jr. Embroidered Tops -Samaonlte Sonora I Luggage
Orig •............................. $41 .. 100 Orig ................................... t11
M•rk down pttce ..................... 4.n
Leaa25% ........................... 1.21
Yourprtce 3.74
M•rk down prtce .................• 121-ISO
LeH 25% ...................... 2.50-5.25
Your prtce 15. 75-37.50
Mlaaes Dreaay BlouHa
Orig ............................... t1M17
M•rk down price .................... 10.99
Lees 25% ........................... 2.75
Family Slippers
Ortg •........................... .5 .... 12.n
Merk down prtce ..•............ a .... 10.•
Leee 21% ....................... 71o-~.75
. Yow prtce 1.24 Your pttce 2.24-8.24
' Jr., Ma. Dittos Slaca
Orig •......•......................• 11'"'24
M•rll down pttce ..................... 4 ••.
Famlly Shoe Clearance
Ortg •.........•.................. 10 .....
Merll down price ...........•...•. 1 .....
Leaa21% .....................•..•.. 1.21 Le112I% ...........•............ 1.IO-ta
Yourprtoe 3.74 Yow~ 4.41-$15
FASHION ISLAND
STORE ONLY
844-2313
•
Ttlu~ay. Jenuary 22. 11181 DAILY PILOT A•.
WRNINLA -Warren Saunders is happy with
his city, and he wants everybody to knew
he's around.
~':.':~~·~~,,::' :~ ... =ri~:: 011~~·~:~:..,~~ :r ~~:..~rl~~
C•lifornl• ll<""w PlllH "
Paet made
-Atlanta smut
dealers quit
\TLANTA IA P > -Almost all of Atlanta's
adul bookstores and movie theaters have agreed
to ~lte in return for dismissal of charges against
their ·.inployees. and a prosecutor hailed the
barga1. as proof that "law enforcement now has ·
the ~?P. hand'' against pornography.
If 1u need a dirty book, you'll have to leave
Atlanta t get it," said Glenn Zell , an attorney for the stores
Zell S&( owners of at least 16 adult bookstores
agreed to l')se their doors on coAdition that anti· pornograp~ crusader Fulton County Solicitor
Gent:ral . Hi~on McAuliffe dismiss all charges
pending aga11t their employees.
ASSISTAJllt SOLICITOR GENERAL Leonard
Rhodes said th. would leave one adult bookstore, ~hree adult the~rs and one peep-show operating
in Atlanta.
Employees c. some of the bookstores and
theaters were altady packing their b~longings.
Cut-rate ~ale~ wer~eing advertised at many .
... ~e re tired O(ighting. We're getting out of
here. one bookstor~mployee said .
Zell blamed "lf'lation" for the bookstore
clients' decision. to •ove out of Fulton County
rather than continue 'e battle against McAuliffe .
He s aid .. "hassl e~ \th the police, fees for
lawyers. and h1 ghl rents had made "the mar~in al profits for •rnography unbelievably low .'
UNDER THE AGREMENT THE state will
withhold prosecution for s months. H there is no
attempt to resume operatns at the end of that
period. McAuliffe will see to dismiss about 40
cases against Pt'.Ople workinin the businesses.
For McAuhffe. the agr,ment culminated a
campaign against porno~phy, which had
already reduced the numbe\0 f bookstores and
theaters. from a hi~h of ~4 •bo\{our years ago.
Al first, del?ulles cited emoyees of the busi-
nesses for selling pornograph persuading the
courts to impose steadily higt,. nnes most of
which were paid by the owners. '
Then. police began makin cases against
c ustom ers for such offenses , solicitation
sodomy and indecent exposure. ·
REPEATED PROSECunONS\F customers
allowed authorities to build recort against the
facilities as public nuisances. and th, then began
arguing in court that they should be Csed.
McAuJiffe also was able to obtainourt orders
closing the lucrative "peep-show" sejons of the
bookstores. and filed petitions in l\. Di strict
Court against what he called the "pair corpora·
tions" holding title to m any of the store:
"I have alw ays felt that the peoplt)f Fulton
County wanted pornography banished'rom the
county. so I don 't r eally feel vinccated "
McAuliffe said. "The critics never bot•red ,.;.e
anyway."
Two years ago, adult bookstores an movie
theaters were taking in S2 million lo S3 m'on an·
nually. McAuliffe estimated. He said pros·utions
had substantially reduced that figure.
ATLANTA IS THE SECOND MAJOR ~hern
cit y recently to score a major success in th(ight
against p0mography.
On Dec. s. officials in Jacksonville. Fla an·
nounced the indictment of 13 people on rack~er
ing charges involving the sales of obscene .ms
and sexually explicit live performances.
Mayor Jake Godbold said no pornogrltiy
shops were known to be operating in Jackson\)e
any longer. compared to at least a dozen thatx-
isted five years ago when local church lead-s
began pressuring the city council for a crackd0n.
"As far as I know we're the only major city,
the United States now that's free of pornograp•
-:-bookstores and movies." Dual County Sheri
Dale Carson said. ··And we intend to keep it th~
way."
CALL TOM MARSTON
ABOUT A SECOND
TRUST DEED LOAN
UP TO $&00,000 .
Neu.,port Equity 'Funds · Inc •
LklenMd Brotier Sine» 1971 _,
(71,)760-6060 ~
.........
\~!>t'mhl~ 1ndn I 11u
Pdpdn I> M1llltr .11·
h.I ~ c.1 :0.~Utlt>d lh t•
hank1n~ l u hh~ h11
.. µ~ndang $60 ooo l 1i
d ~ ( t' d l h I Ill <il l h l'
p o I I :. l> t.' <' :1 u :. " h l '
.,.,un-.ort-<l d l ~!I hill
lo kt.'t'µ tmnk ~ from
-,dim~ l'l'rtaan kind~
nf 1n:-.urarwt• I It• s aid
hank~ art• try mg to
"<•orruµl lht• pohtu·al
prun'Ss ..
80,000
wagons
recalled
WASlll NGTON (A P l
GC'ner a l Motors
Cor p . has agreed to re -
call 80,000 intermediate·
s ized station wagons
manufactured last year
beC'ause of a defect that
has caused some rear
windows to shatter
Tht• G M annount·e
ment Wednesday l'U me
after lh e National
ll1ghway TraHtl' Safet~
Admin1strat1on issu<·d a
s tat e ment warnin Jl
against a potential s afe
ty hazard with the :.t:
lion wagons
THE SAt'ETY <agt·•~
s aid thert• have h'-'n
a bout 400 rC'ports rm
GM automob1k oycr:.
· about the unexp1.n_ed
shattering or rearWtn· I
dows . At least 15 eople
have s uffered m Pr in
j uries. and two .rive rs
ran off the ro<' when
they were st.a.led by
the windows br•king.
A GM spoken an said
the problem s ms from '
a t hcmi c<Alrcact1on ,
bet ween Wl•he rstrip
µing used mhe rear of
the t•ar an the elct
t rical gr<I on_ the
vehicles· ,ar wincluw
defogger.
THE A.fOMOBILl-;S
involved re the 1979·80
Chevrole Malibu. Pon-
tiac .• e Man s,
Oldsmofe Cutlass and
Buick entury s tation
wagons
Thelafety agency
s aid ,me r eports of
s imil;i problems were
recei~ from owners of
l978•r 1979 GM in ·
terlfdiate s tation
waif.' manufactured in
l9~but that it is still
in vttigating whether to
see' a recall of those
vetfles
+.
officer
omoted
nie l P . Adamson
J , son of Mrs. Dominic J3 . Telti of 96 Goodwill
burl, Newport Beach,
hd Daniel P. Adamson
1f Sherman Oaks , has
>een promoted in the
Air Force to the rank of
lieutenant colonel.
Adamson is an ac-
counting and finance
staff officer at the Air
Accounting and Finance
Center, Denver. ,
Doctor named
Marc Richmond of
Newport Beach has been
named chairman of the
department of family
practice at Santa Ana·
Tusti n Co mmun ity
Hospital in Santa Ana.
Dr. Richmond, who
has a private practice in
Irvine, serves as a
clinical assistant in
family medicine at UC
Irvine.
Moonllte Sale
Sale of sates ll:lrs
frl nit• 6 lo 9 pm
It Hunt1neton Center.
GENERAL NEWS
fkld• are oor
Stardom's g!tter top career choice among studenis
SAN JOSS (AP> The 1lltter of
•lardom uutwelahed »l•ndard pro
f u•ion• and voe atlona amonw
211.000 1ttudent11 .aked what th•·
w 1rnt~I h> qt> when lht'Y a&rtlw up
''Thl• aru ha• tunu·d out u
M ein (irdfin, fo'lef'lwood Miu· 1011.l
ll Slil,llllll• ~lltnOlt'I''\ Ill rt'l'('nl
'l'IH&, i.Jul tt .. w111nul Orru111t
tluna~ram coordinator Sheryl
Pome k. "But the odds of m11k·
lnec I & are t'JCtremely poor "
TIL' proteram, which cov.-rs
purhl in S11nlu Clara and San
Mlc>o t·ow1llt>K, round that most
8edf'nl.'4 wunh"'d to be a "perform ,w urtist "
Tht• :i urvt•y rt·s ults indicate that
many pupils don't think seriously
about tht> future. Ms. Pomerenk
said.
T he pupils were offered choices
among 166 profass1ons.
The top 10 JObs selected by those
in Santa Clara County were :
perfor mini< artist, doctor, airline
pilot. lawyer. professional athlete.
business execut ive, rorest er ,
veterinarian, com puter program·
mer and architect.
At the bottom of the list in Santa
Clara County were such jobs as
underwriter , appliance technician
and stenographer. Only five out of
lhe 9,035 students questioned from
the county wanted to be urban
ITS SIMPLE. ~TS FASt ITS SPECTACULAR!
LJMITED nME
ONLY
planners.
In San Mateo County. auto
m et'hanic was second, followed by
airline pilot, profe!isional athlete.
. se cretary, c osmetologist ,
carpenter. night attendant, doctor
and lawyer
Journalis t ranked 31st and
firefighter was 69th. -------
Right now, during the RCA XL-100 Instant Savings
Spectacular, the popular XL-100 is even a greater
value . Because participating RCA dealers are offering
instant savings of $25 . $50 or $75 on selected RCA
XL-100 19 " and 25" diaqonal Color TV 's.
Outstanding performance features include Automati c
Color Control and Flesh tone · Correction . Xtended Lite
chassis and Super Acculine picture tube . Plus many
models feature Channelock Remote Cont rol .
Limited time-offer ends March 1. 1981
RCA XL-100 offers traditional quality with deluxe per-
formance features and fine styli ng .
Visit a participating RCA dealer. fi ll · out the Instant
Sayi ngs Certificate and save instantly on th e RCA
XL-100 model of your choice .
Sov• $50 on 25"d109 ... 01 XL-100 Color TV
All feature Automatic Contrast1Color Tracking . Auto·
mat1c Color Control and Flesh tone Correction for a
natural. lifelike picture-pro9ram to program. chan-
nel to channel. Available cabinet styles include Colo·
nial. Traditional and Contemporary. (Models
FER520. GER684. 688. 690)
ROii
~
•
r=--w I~.
GEll.690
Get Instant Savings now
on the feature-packed RCA XL-100.
Save S 7 5 on 25 "d•ovo•o•
"•mote Control XL-100 Color TV
Select from decorative console models or a table
model all w1lh Channelock Remote Control Turn th e
set on and oll. ad1ust volume or select any channel
lro[Tl across the room . Cabinet styles include Con·
temporary. Trad1t1onal and Colonial. (Models.
FER525R. GER685R . 689R . 691R).
oJr.1 ~~
FER525R GE"'685R GEll.68911.
Sav• $10
Sav•S25on19':,,., •• o, Table Model
XL-100 Color TV .
RCA's energy efficient X1endedl 1l e chasSIS plu s
Automatic Color Control and Fleshtone Correc tion are
featured on each of these 19" diagonal models Plus
Channelock Remote Control on model FEC468R
Three Co ntem por ary cabinet styles ava ilable
(Mod~s: FER443. FER450 . FEC468R)
on kCA 16"and 19 '~, ....... Dlack and Whit• Portabl•1
All compact RCA Black and White TV's feature the reliability of
a 100% solid state chassis and a bright, sharp picture. Choice
of screen sizes -16" or 19" diagonal-all with ACA's high
performance VHF and UHF tuners . (Models: AER161 . 162.
1~1 . 192, 193).
AEP.192
Ger your lnsront Sovin~s rodoy
or these portfclportng RCA dealers:
-.-.............................. _....,. .... ... ..:emr. • ·---·--........ -.. -..
. '
).
GENERAL NEWS
.. JH-1•
St1n<1 lt' f'rt·Mdt:nt l'ro
Tt•m Oci,·1u Ro l>t'rll
, .. ,,ht> ..... ,11 not a lloy.
'' e mbh Speak tr \\ 111 a· R r u ..... n. ~ a n
f r.:tnl'l:.l'O l>t:'mucrat
and tu ::. a lltt:'!> to die
l<ttt' 11t''A (.'0 0
gre~:.ton al d1-.trH'b
Bro y. n "Jl> 4uut~ a:>
~a~1 ng ht:' "'ants ·d
!>CCOOd · 111 µan1 (' .
Hu use :>t:'at for Lo~
An ge.f es Co unt~
R o berti I !> a Lo s
Angeles De motrat
Right
to 'Lite'
restored
PROVIDENCE. R.L
I I\ P > The Falstaff
Brewing Co. can go back,
for the time being. to
s pelling the name of its
low calorie beer L·l·T·E
lJ .S. D1s tr1 ct Judge
Raymond J . Pettine de·
cided to drop a pre
liminary injunction re·
quested by Miller Brew·
ing Co. of Milwaukee
barring F'alstaff from us·
mg the term "Lite" pend
1ng a ruling by the L! S.
Court of Appeal s i11
Boston.
··Because of the finan
C'ial losses the breweries
s uffered as a result or th e
injunction, wcw11l be pro·
ducing ·Lite' beer as soon
as possible." said David
A. S(·hechter. a Falstaff
lawyer.
Pettine said ret•ent rul-
ings made laws on
trade marks unclear and
lef, it lo the higher court \
to decide wh ether Miller
has exclusive rights to
the spelling us ed on I
MillerLite beer.
Fals taff . whi C'h
operates the Nar-
r agansett Bre wery in
C ranston. di s tributed
27 ,000 t ascs of its "Lite"
beer in the South and
Midwest b~forc being
halt e d by Pettine's 1
restraining order Oct. 7.
The brewery planned
to begin selling the low
calorie beer in Rhode
Is la nd in Ol·tober. but
was stopped by the U.S.
District Court order
Iowans
to gather
Transplanted citizens
of Boone. Iowa and en·
virons are invited to at-
tend the 67th annual
meeting of the Boone,
Iowa Society of Southern
California on .Jan. 31.
The reunion is
scheduled for 11 :30 a.m .
at t he Knott 's Berry
Farm Fried Chi cken
Restaurant (door 21 ) for
lun cheon and a n in-
formal program. ac-
cording to president Bud
Law of Fullerton.
Information can be ob-
tained b y ca lling
.526 -5695, although
reservations are not re-
quired.
Moonlite Sole
Huntington Center's
fantastic 1 1-oour
sale Fri nlte 6 to
9 p.m. and oontinuet
on Silt aubject to stock
on fland. Beach Blvd & Edinger and 405 fwy.
C.tl 142-1171.
Put a few word•
to worll for u.
. . ' . ... .. . . . . . . ..... . .. . ...... . .... ···-·· ...... ......... . .. ..._ ... .... , .............. , ......... ...-~ ... -....... _,. ~-• ., ............. fl, ...
,
Thursday, -*'uary 22. 1981 DAIL y PILOT ... I I
Swingers seek new trial
Convicted couple say \· law 'indefinite' Wilton
Cake Decorating
SAN t 'HANt'ISCO <AP> A
lo'uller\_ora l'OUloll_, who ht!ld
JH1rl1t' ~for "1·onseotrnti adult
111wmac~r"" ., .. an Mn ap1,cal to tbc
('ialafumw Suvrcmt· Court that
ttw1 r i'(lflVH•t11111i. wtirc hase:tt on u
la"'· th1o1l "ui.· .... 11opl too in·
dcfHllll' "
Tht· t•uuph• c·o 11 v1t•l ed fQr
lu·t·p1n.i 1a "hnu:.t• of asi.1wna·
taun." ulM1 '>Uld th.-y de~erved ,
111 \ht· vt!'r)' lc~i;t. a ru.iw trial h,., o.iui.c th\' Munn·11,i1tl Court
11nl ~l' (IAll\-d 111 1hd1111· "lewd coo
'Roman Feast'
to aid youth
I he n111th annual Kum a n
i' t: a~l d !>µa 14hclt1 dinner aimed
..il ·r.u s1ng funds for the Harbor
\r\'a 's Y<>ulh Employm e nt
!'.l·rv1tes, ~•II ht: held Fe b :J at
lht' /\ment·an Legion Hull in
'llewµort Hc:.ic·h
AdulL<> will be t harged $4 and
l·hildren Wlder lhl' a~e of 1·2 will
be t harged $2.:iO for the all you·
l'an-cat affair
The You th Emµl oy m e nt
St>rv1 ce 1~ des igned to help
·' uung ·peoµlc find full-time and
pu rt-lime work
Tht> fWld ra1s111g dinner be~in!>
at 5 JO p m The Legion H;ill 1s
hwated at 215 15th Street.
duc·t" in his instructions to the
Jury
~JOHN LOVIS Shellman and his
wire. Clan. were sentenced to
two months and one month,
respectively. for 1i v ing the
private sexuaJly oriented parties
in their home in 1978.
They filed a habeas corpus
µetition with the state Supreme
Court Tuesday. .
T he pet1taon s aid "a vague
and archaic law should not be
used as a tool of discriminatory
l!nforcement of majoritarian no-
tions of morality against two
law abiding citizens who
privately and eonsclentiously
pursued an alternative lifestyle
l'hoice."
It said adherents to the
:.winger movement are "charac-
Leri zed b y unconventional ..
tolerant attitudes toward human
Sl:.'X ual behavior."
THE TWO WERE convicted on
Feb I , 1979. of nine counts of
lt'wd conduct and one count of
keeping a disorderly house. The
ll'wd C'onduct convictions werJ;.e.
versed on appeal because of im-
proµcr jury instruction.
I\ Court of Appeal denied a
habeas eor pus writ Jan. 6. Sen-
tence has bet!n stayed until Feb.
2l to allow further appeals.
Police filed r harges against
the couple Dec. 26, 1978, after a
pol il·e s tak eo ut from a
n ei~hbor's yard. and after un·
dercover police bad attended
several parties as guests.
Neighbors had complained
about the parties, and police had
notified the Shellmans or the
com p'laint.s.
According to the petition, the
parties give.n by the Shellmans
were attended by male-female
couples. about 80 percent or
whom were married. Activities
were said to include conversa-
tion, dancing, eating, drinking
and "consentual sexual ·ac-
tivities."
Bnrglars busy
on Lido Isle
In separate break ins.
burglars pocketed nearly $30,000
worth of jewelry from two
houses on Newport Beach's Lido
Isle this week.
Poliee, noting the burglaries
may be related, said thieves
took a crown-shaped, diamond
and pearl-studded brooch as
well as other jewelry from a Via
Orvieto residence. Homeowner
Anne Chalillon estimated the
loss at $19.100.
Thieves also made off with a
$7 .000 platinum ring as well as a
diamond ring with an inset com-
pass from Dr. Burnell Forgey's
Via Eboli residence. He estimat-
ed the loss at $10.400.
Classes
Start Soon!
(E><cept La Mirada)
----
Valen11nes Day is coming up wha1 aqreal11rne to learn cake decora11ng Ir 1ust S•l<
weekly 2-hour lessons we 11 show you how to make bt:aut1ful 1ctn9 fhi.vPrs an<1 tal"'ICV
borders tor holidays birthdays ano dnniver'>allf'S Plus 1015 of 11• ,io111.111vi> ways tt•
decorate party cakes tor children
FREE .
CAKE DECORATING
DEMONSTRATION
SAT., JAN. 24 2:00-4:00 p.m.
(Oemonstrahon held 1n all stores except La M1rad<1 & Torr;ince1
CALL FOR MORE DETAILS
LO~ANGELl '" TAn;'ANA If 1HI IAN<..I
• ' t 1'Hi' t c ~, t I '
pin•111 , t.t lll1,• ...
t,' f '. ii I
t 1MHH 'l l•'" ,, • •1 ltJ flf\C, r1)N H! •\< rt
"'1 1 t U f •. I 1 t,\ ti•l? ..,l.\J •
Spring Preview Sale
10 days to save before the season starts
shirts, pants 14. 99-19. 99
Eyecalchlng Hut•p•h print •hlrt•
Bright ideas for spring, these
shirts go for fun in tropical looks.
engineered patterns. novelty and
conversational prints. Short sleeve
in black. burgundy or navy rayon.
plus other fashion colors. S-XL.
mike's place 83 -all stores
reg. $23 14.99
·· Lightweight RPM belted
twHdpant•
The right texture and the right
weight for spring. Great styling In
ideal spring shades of natural, tan
or grey. Easy csre polyester/
cotton/wool. Sizes 29-36.
mike's place 409 -all stores
reg. $21 19.99
ma
Shop Mon. -Fri. 101.m. to g;30 p.m .. S.t. 101.m. to 7 p.m .• Sun. 111.m. to I p.m.
eouflt OOIMt ,,,._An dle(lo fwy. at bristol, coat•,,,..., 548-9321 •• ,,.....,..300 W#tmln.ter mall, 698-2521
fj •
•
,
A JI DAIL v PILO I
l S. \ I< >t ·
under
control
YOSEMITE
NATIONAL PARK <AP>
I OBITUARIES
'Anniversary Sale
Jan. 23rd thru Feb. 6th
.c )\\') >t 'I.IS"
A rive-year plan to
g e t bears to quit
scavenging food from
tourists in Yosemite
Valley appears to be
working, a ranger says.
Incid ents between
bears and visitors are
down 92 percent since
1975 , said Dick
Hiegelhulh, resources
management officer.
At Hr IH ILUI, we are celebrating our first anniversary
wtuch means that yo u . our customer. can now SAVI more
MOHIY than ever on your favorite designer name
brands. such as CALYIH KLllH, •LOllA YAHDllllLT,
IONJOUR, and SASSON, just toname a few. Now is the
time for you to save 30°/o, 40°/o, even up to 100/o off from
the regular price! RP111r111br1111c•e t•ard
Thi lh I• ''"I'' ut c.t c·ornm ·rnorat1 ve postul ('~rd that has been re·
l('ai.t-..1 t" tht l'ol>l al l.,t•1 'u•t· 111 Cowpens. S.C The card <:om ·
nh'mura1t .... I ht• w ot It 011111' t·r-.<11 \ of the battle of Cowpens during
tht· \1t\l'I ll'Jll i<l•\ 111\~l lllll .
For the first time, no
b e ar s had to be
destroyed last year for
aggressive beh avior
toward humans or re-
peat edly raiding food
s upplies. he added. An
average of eight bears
had to be destroyed each
year in the past
When was the las t time you went into a store and were al-
lowed to walk o ut with something for FRll71 Now you can!
Eac h day durJ,rtg o ur s ale. 7 lucky. c ustomers* will be Resusci ta ti on
course slated
~1 l!'>S1011 t orn munrt \ llo:.µ11 ;,I ~n M1:.s11.m VieJO
w1 ll l·oodul·t J "'"hour c·our:.t• 1n c!irc.Jw·µulmonary
re u:.t:1lal1011 u 11 three .,UC\'l'Sl>IVl' Thursday nights
begin11111g J Jll w
Tht.· 7 tu 1{1 p m 't::.:.11>0:. n1:.t $4 Those who
comµlett' thl· rnur:-.c will rct'l'l\'l' ii CPR eert1fic;,te
requ1n:.d 1n l·1·r1u111 J1>h:-., ho:-.p1tal offll·ials s aid
1nrormat11m rnJ~ bl• ullta1ned by calhn~
495·4400. t•xtt·11:-.111n :w1
~aih \of if'f'~
DEWEY
CHARLES PHI L IP
DEWEY, passed away on
January20, 1981 in Newport
Beach, Ca. He has been a
resident of Balboa Island
tor 40 years Survived by
his wife Consta nce, step·
daughter Nancy Haden of
lido Isle, Ca., step-son Or.
James Seals of Corona del
Mar, Ca., brother Maurice
of Illinois, granddaughter
Lisa Soli, grandson Dan
Seals and other
grandchildren, 5 nephews
and 1 niece. Graveside
services will be held on
Saturday, J anuary 24, 1981
at 11 :00AM at the Pacific
View Memoridl Park ,
Newport Beach. Pac1f1c View Mortuary d1 rec tors.
MOHR
CHARLES MOHR, rest·
dent of Costa Mesa. Ca.
Passed away on January
20, 1981 He IS survived by
his wife Helen of Costa
Mesa, Ca . 1 son John Kirkpa tric k of Yuc ca
Valley , C a , 3
grandchildren i1nd 2 great·
grandchildre n. Funeral
servicesw!,'1 be held on Fri· day, January 23. 1981 at
11 :OOAM at the P iercr: Brothers Bell Broadway
Chapel with Rev Bruce
Kurrie officiating En·
tombment at Melrose Ab·
bey. Friends may call at the
mortuary on Thursday,
January 22 , 1981 from
4:00PM to 9 OOPM Pie rce Brothers Be ll Broadway
Mortuary directors.
,
"HCI llOTHllS
llU laOADWAY
MOITUAIY
110 Broadway Cos1a Mesa
642·9150
UL n HaGEltON
SMITH & TUTHILL
WlSTCLlff CHA'IL
4'27 E 1 7th SI
C'oo;t ;i M f•<;,,1
(i4j'i.Q17 1
rtfaCI aaOTHlU
SMITHS' MOITUAAY
627 Mam SI Hunt1ng1on Beach
536 6539
l"IB fAMIL Y
COlOHIAL FUMllAL
HOMl
7801 Bolsa Ave Westm1ns1er
893·35?5
rACIFIC VllW
MIMOllAL rAIUC
Cemetery Mortuiuy Chapel
3500 Pac1f1c View D11ve
Newport Beacn
644-2700
McCOIMlcac MOITUAlllS
Laguna Beacn
494·9415
Laguna Hills
768·09JJ San Juan Cap1str;ino
495·1776
HAalOI UWl'4-MT. OLIVE Mortuary • Ceme1ery
Crema1ory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUI IUllNISS
MAMISTATIMIHT
[ ...
Tl\e tellowlnQ pertoM ••• c10ln11 bu\1
lltHH: I EST ORIVING SCHOOL. ••3' Gercl9fl Gro .. 111ve1 .. G•r!Mn GrO••· cente.111 .. ,... Miiie,_ y_, ...ci H-n Y_.,
par111enlllp, 111" Sa11I• ~•or In• StrHI, ,_tall\ vallo, Galllornta
'21'9 Tlllt....,.... 1• conclucltcl by•" In·
11¥14NM.
Mlf•d•Y-
14-Y-
'"'' AetllNM -flltd •1111 , .. c-tr Clettl .. ~Met C..,...y 4111 , ... ,., .. ""·
Deaths
Elsf!Where
LOS ANGELES <AP>
W1secraking actor Al·
lyn Morgan Joslyn. 79.
whose t•areer s panned
stage. screen. radio and
t<'le\·1sioo, died Wednes
day.
FRESNO <AP J
Jack Harris, 6fi, long.
time western San J oa
q u i n \'a II c y farm e r
c attleman who owned
th e state 's larges t
frcd lot. died after sus-
1 a1ning a he art attack
Mon day night at Los
Angeles International
Airport
Witness
aid plan
offered
Int roduc:torv sessions
for people inter ested m
voluntt•ering for the
Or ange County Vidim
Witness Ass1s tam·t· Prn-
g ram h ave hccn
:,l·hcdull·d at area
t·ourthouscs
Orientation meetings
will be held fro m JO to
11 :30 a .m . Tuesday.
Jan. 27. at the Harbor
Courthouse. 4601 Jam-
boree Road. Newport
Beach. and the Central
Courthouse. 700 Civic
Center Drive West. San·
la Ana.
Similar meetings will
be held from 10 to 11 : 30
a m . Wednesday. Jan.
28, at the West County
Courthouse. 8141 13th
St . Westminster. and
th e South Co unt y
Courthouse. 30143 Crown
\'a lle y Parkw ay ,
Laguna Niguel
Participants will be
given an overview of the
prog ram. which is de
signed to help crime vie
t1ms a nd witnes s es
thro ugh th e co urt
system. Those interest-
ed in volunteering fo ur
or more hours e a c h
week to the prog ram
will be asked lo com
µI etc additional training.
Information can be oh·
tain e d b y c a ll in~
Oarbara Philliµs ,
957-2737.
TELLER
HONORED
PEKING <AP> -A
woman bank tel le r
killed in a struggle with
two armed robbers has
been honored with
posthumous admission
into China's Communist
Party, the official
Xinhua news agency re·
ported.
Tsai Chin.jung, 32,
sounded an alarm and
then fought a lone with
the robbers after they
wou n ded another
woman teller a nd a
man. Xinhua said.
It said the robbers fled
with more than 3,500
yu an, or about $2,333
from the aavinas banll in Datong, in Shanxi
province, ln the Oct. 10
robbery, but had been ar·
rested recently. fll ..... ~ .... Or .... (.Mtt °'"' ...... , JM."·"·"·,..'·"'' t1M1 -----------
j
German
society.
to meet
We carry: Anne Klein. lzod. chosen to recewe a Fiii gift Who knows? You might be
Huk.-A-Poo . R o bert Bruce. lucky enough to receive your favorite to p or b o ttom for
Calvin Klein. Gloria Vanderbilt. FRH iust for shopping at our store' Bonjour. Chic. Lightning Bo lt
and more!
Oran~t' Cua:,t re~•·
dt'nls are invited lo Sun
c.Jay 's annual m eeting of
the Amen can llisloril·al
SOl'let v Of Germans
from Russia at llansa
House restaurant in
Anaheim
Damage caused by
bears dropped lo $10,000
in 75 incidents last year
from more than $100.000
in 875 incidents in 1975,
he said.
While you are visiting our store. take the time to look
at some of our new arrivals for spring and summer.
Fit In Blue. the store where you can ALWAYS buy
first line designer labels at a 20°/o savings! Riegelhuth credited
the increased control to
·'bear-proof" food con-
tainers and an informa-
tion program explaining
to people how lo deny
human food lo bears .
Do you really think you should shop anywhere else?
Moulton Pkwy Irvine Cent•r. Drive
The bus iness meeting
begins al noon followed
by a $6 buffet luncheon.
Al 2:30 p.rn .. the pro·
gram. featuring Reuben
(;ot>rtz speaking on the
ethnic odyssey fr om
Huss1a. will begin .
Rangers will try lo ex-
pand their bear ('ontrol
program to the park's
ba('k count r y ,
-------10 ~ ......
De•LAgo I ~~ fFDt IBturuie
770-1677
r" Mon. thru Sat. I 0·6
Sun. 11 ·4
H1egclhuth said. · CloMd Jan. 22
Information t•<m be ob
tamed by calling Mrs. V1
Rci s hlinc a l 528 6126
ShC' also wil l lake
rcservat ions
---------
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work lor you.
-----"'1~ Santa Ane Fwy
~ >Ill
• Aophes 10 ourchas1nr1
customer~ only
at I :00
Now is the Time
The Greatest Sale of Quality Hoine
Furnishings in Southern California.
:'\o\\ ~:tH' 10 tn ';()",.on tiu~tlity homl· furni!->hing:-. and :tCl'l'"llril'" lrllm I hT\l·I I krit.1).!l I kllrl'll1111
( l'tllut~. ~hnri ll. \X 'dman. ~larj.~l· C:tr~on \X i 1rn.lmark. ~tillk. B~1rctloungcr. Th11ma"' ilk. \in·l1u 1111 .1ml 'I) 111.1rn 11111rl·
DR EXEL
H ERI TAGE
HENRED<>N
CENTI IRY
BAKER
SHERRILL
STIFfEL
LA BAR<IE
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FINf. A'RNffi'RE • INTERIC>tt DESIGN
lAGl'NA HIWi
'\\ I
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l~'A•
2m. ~In Scrtt1at17th Sue~
Phone 714/~1 4}91
AJlcia Pkv-')' at S. D ,..._..y
POOM 714/~1 101
_.. .... ----,_. • -.,,. ...... -.. # ,,. _....., ·--• -• .... -.,,.,,,. • -,. ._ ...... ~::.::.·r. ...
·-··-·-·· .... --• ·--------·-·....-.... ohll~ ...... '1• );"'...U..., .. ~~-~J'SC;of:.i.•.l/f'.~· ... n.'<'~Kt':.#•-.,. ,.
·l
NEWS FEATURES
.. '
Happy birf hday George
-•• .,,, •• fl* ·•••I' 1 • .,, ............. .-• ..-... . ..
Thurtd•y. J11nuary 22. 1981 DAILY PILOT ,4 Ja
Savory Savings
-------AIOUT
1 s199G.EAT I 9 DINNER n .
0 c
"O
0 z
I
GOO<l 101 11\rt!e pieces 01 1u1cy QOldi:n b•own ~(!nlot.ky
Fueo Chot i.en plus s1n9IP :>e•.,ngs ol lOlt· .,1.,w
m ashco 001a1oe.s ano gravy. Clr1d., 1011 L1m111wo otters
pe1 purchase Coupon guo<J urtl~ lo• corno1na1oon whrte1
oa1k orders Customer pays di' dOPlicab1e s~"'' l..t•
Otle• e•P•res Feb•ua•y 1 1981
P"'"" rndy • .,,y at I
11artoc1pa11ng IOCil I _ _ _ hons Gooo on1~ on
_____ .. _
AIOUT $5 ftft SUPERI e.., '7DtNNERI z
GOO<J lu1 none po"c"" 01 1u11 v Qul<Jl•n b•O"" l(PnluCkf ~
Ftot'il Chicken "''" louo 1u1I'> " l<1•Q1• • OI(! 'Sid"' ii 1.;•QC :>
ma,ht.'d potat<>c'> .,no a rnf·d•u111 'l'J•v L1m11 twu 0111'1~
P•'' porChJ'>e Coupon IJ<J•,•J wily 101 1 urnb1na1 •on wlhlP t..,
031~ 0 11.H!1s Gu'>llm•e• IJ<>rs "'' J1Jol1r .• 11>1o· ,,11e., 1a.
Olle• e•r11res
Feoruary I 1981 A"2A
p,,~es mely •3• ~ Jl tM•
to~•iJdlortQ Ive "'"'"" Gv<xl
(Jl'\ty 10 Soulh-. .. tn
11-6.•..... Soulhern C.a1olorn1a I ~~ "'"e•e you se•' ·.-;;..cl ' Arne11Cd s F1avo11tP AC'tor George Burns celebrated his 85th nie Stevl·ns and K<.•nn y Rogers. The tribute
birthday with a dinner party in Los was sr>onsored by Ben·Gurion University of
C a11lorntd NtH .. h · fOu 't.•••
Amc•nt..a ~ F tJvtH•h ·
W•llOOw 8dfln"r
_Angeles Among the 1,200 guests in at· Negev in Israel. ~· W1n<Jow Ban,,
1
cr•'ll• ----=--==-::;;-:=---• tendance were. from left. Cary Grant. Con-
Phou~ <-itlls
FirmtS revise
toll service
By THO MAS D. ELIAS
Some people pay as much as 54 cents JJer
minute for a daytime phone call between Los
Angeles and San Francisco. Others using the same
kind of phones pay as little as 21 cents a minute.
That comparison s ums up the reasons behtnd
the major change unfolding in the California
telephone industr y.
In telephone jargon, the phone comJJanies -
with cooperation from the state Public Utilities
Commission -are "u nbundling" their various
services. Customers are starting to pay the actual
cost of services they use, rather than having costs
bundled together, with overly innated prices for
some ser vices helping subsidize unrealistically low
rates for others.
IT WAS GOVERNMENT DEREGULATION of
the telephone industry that started this. When the
federal government allowed firms like Southern
Pacific Communications and MCA to offer cut-rate
toll service between m ajor cities. the phone com-
JHtnies began to lose some of the toll -call r evenue
that has s upported their other services for years.
No one at either Pacific Telephone or General
Telephone would deny that t heir 54·cent charge for
the first minute of a Los Angeles-San Francisco call
ex reeds by far the phone company costs.
But even consume r
I I
ad voe ates wouldn't deny
S Cal F that the standard $25 fee 0 OCUS ror install~tion of a res-
..... ________ _._ idential phone is lower
than the average cost of
sending a crew to perfor m the service.
When phone companies start to lose a major
share of their toll-call revenues, they must do
something to make up for the loss. So they raise
the prices on some ottler services.
DE REGULATION HAS ALSO ALLOWED
customers to buy telephones from outside source!>
and hook them lo either Bell System or General
Telephone lines.
Thal shift is gradually making the phone com-
panies into something akin to the other large
utilities that provide natural gas and electricity.
Like the phone companies. those firms once
sold or leased the appli ances that were attached to
the ends of their lines, everything from washing
machines to light bulbs. Today they provide only
energy and access to it.
Similarly, the telephone companies may even·
tually evolve into nothing more than firms which
provide a system and access lo it.
THE n RST MOVE IN THAT direction came
when the PUC allowed both Pacific and General.
California's two largest phone firms, to begin
charging St a month for each phone they provide
to a customer . Those who buy their own phones
escape that monthly charge.
Jn its recently submitted request ror a $277
million rate increase. General Telephone s eeks to
double that and charge S2 per instrument per
month. For the consumer . this means that he can
buy a telephone from any electronics shop and in
less . than two years he will save enough on his
telephone bills to pay for it.
What's more, the cost of telephone hardware is
dropping as the dem and for individual ownership
rises, just as happened with pocket calculators.
Since residenlial telephone service has long
enjoyed at least a partial subsidy from toll calls,
this movement toward "usage sensitive" pricing
will hit the sm an subscriber hardest.
EVEN IF THE PHONE COMPANIES don't
get the entire price hike they're asking, they will
get part o( it and that part will involve a heft y in·
crease in basic service rates.
The monthly charge for basic service is the
logical place to make up some ol the lost toll·call
revenue. since it is that monthly fee that buys ac·
cess to the national telephone network.
"A lot of people dian•t believe us when we
warned that toll competition could only result in
hi1her local service rates," said Richard Ohlson,
General Telephone vice president for revenue re·
qulrements.
Bu\ that's the trend today and u tone u the
movement toward less 1ovemment relU)aUon ol
loduatry continues, it can °'!1Y accelerate.
( EliGI u ca col1mu1"1 bGHd in Santa Monka.)
,
YOUNG ATTITUDE SALE
SPRUCE UP YOUR WARDROBE WITH SPRING STYLES.
65.99
Our blazer
is a classic.
Reg. !BO To suit up with all
your favonte skirts and
pants. In hyacinth white
or navy blue. Polyester
and cotton in sizes 5 to 11.
By Larry Levine.
Young Attitude Outerwear. 376
·•
17.99
Perfect pastel
plaid blouse.
Special Charming
Peter Pan collar with
ribbon tie. In muted pastel
plaids. Polyester and
cotton in sizes 5 to 13.
Young A ttitude, 479
23.99
French ·canvas
belted pant.
Special Polyester canvas
pants in camel, navy or
lilac. In sizes 5 to 13.
Young Attitude, 479
29.99
Denim blue Jeana
by Calvin Klein.
Special Your choice of
5-pocket jean o//jesn
with elastic back and
colored stitching.
Both blue cotton denim
in sizes 3 to 11.
Young Attitude, 476
Bu#ock's Mission Viejo, Miaion· V'lejO Mall, (714) 495-3111 .• Bulock• South Colet Plaza, 3333 Msfol, C.M. (114) ~n.
~
' • . ___ ...... ..---.-+ A ... 4 ~Jola,~A~~V. •vti.."11~~·~~r.:t~f~..:.":.~::::";").":).~..,--
;\ f., DAIL" IJll lJl
Punch
"
' • ... .. . ...
t
~ ..
l J .~-~1 -a ~.a --... a-
HB teachers
get pay hike
Teachers tn 1 h t• 11 unl111g1 on Bl'ach l'lly I t>lt>men
tar_, 1 School Dt!'>I rtl'I ha' 1• rt·('l'tVl'll an fl ven·enl pa)
1nt'rcase tu brrng to a11 t•rHJ a length) tl1!'>pule in <'On
tract negotiations
~1ore than :IOO ll'<tt'hl'r!'> rat1fie<l the ('Ontract
Tuesday at tht>ir ~rhoob 1 hrou~hout the day
TEACllF.R 1.EAf>t-:R CA ROi. Al'TRF.\' said
1 ht-results of tht• vol 111g did 1101 rcnl't'l ovl'rwh<'lm ing
Jpptoval bytc<J<'hl'rs .
Trustef' Norma \';rndi·r Mol1 •n voted against tht•
!tc.>tllemcnt. :.ay111g )>ht· "ti:. oppo.,cd to a provis ion
that eliminate~ 20 mtnult•s of dassroom l1m(• (•ach
da" for fourth and fifth lffil dN£>a<·her!t
· Also mduded in the agrN.·ment \\as an agree·
men! to retain prl·~t·nt <"lassroom s1ies ba~H!d on
enrollment at t ht• 1ntli vitlu<J I !>t'h11ols rathrr than on a
ti ISl TIC'l\\;de a VE'ragt•
THE Pi\\' IS('REASt-:s. WlllCll will ('OSI an
co;t1mated S."i75.000, a re n·t rnact1n• to Jul) I
Talk~ had draiU!t'd s1n1·c· I <J~I February
HB Chamber sets
a1,i'ards banquet
l<t-staurc.int c·hain founder C'a rl K:Jrc·hcr will ht•
f1•aturt'Cl sµt•ak cr .it lluntrngton Beach Chamber of
t'11mmer<:e·~ ti7th :.innual 1nstallal10n and awurt.ls
banquet.
The banquet 1s sc·hedule<l Wednesday at fl :30
11 m al SN1cl1ff C'cnmln· ('luh. :1000 !'aim Av e.
llunlmgtcm lk<.1l'h
Chambt•r mcmlie r-; ancl 1ntcre~tcd <·1ttiens are
invitt·d to attend Til'keh at $1 2 50 per person m ay
bt.· JI urchas('<l ur rco;erv<:cl tH <·.:.Ill rng the chamber
11ffin". 962 fifiti I
/\ h1J.(hlt gh1 of 1 ht· Pv1·n in):.! wi ll tic the <rn·
nount·em1·nt of the· 1·hamhcr's annual 'ell 1zen of Lhc
,.,.a r " aw~1rd l>fft1·t·r'> al'>o w1 II he mstall<:d
Valley council
picks architect
The fountain Valley City Council has selected
Weldon Fulton and Associates of Santa Monica to de·
si~n a long-awaited local se nior citizens center
The center. estimated to cost just over $1
mill ion, will be ('Onstructed adjacent to the city's ex
is ling community c·enter al 10200Slater Ave.
Ac·ting 1n its role as the Agency for Community •
Development. the council m embers unanimously
c·hose Fulton during their meeting this week .
Fulton was recommended by a city staff com-
mittee who inte rviewed six architects interested in
the job. The firm was the designer of the city's
recreation Ct>nter al Mile Square Park
T he new center is expected to house a large
multi-purpose hall for use by local seniors and other
1·om munity ~roups .
Construction is expected to begin in September.
with completion tarJ(elc<I for .June 1982.
Softball signups set.
Signups have been s cheduled for the llunlinglon
Beach Bobby Sox Softball League for ~iris ali(ed 7
through 15.
Registration will be held at Marine View School.
5682 Ti Iberg Drive, lluntington Beach, from 10 a .m
to3p.m .onJan.3t , Feb. 7, 14and21.
More information can be obtained by calling
842-3655 or by attending a meeting al Marine View
School al 7:30 p.m. today.
Space junk decreases
COLORADO S PRINGS. Colo. CAP> -Fewer
man-made obje<:ts were in orbit a round the Earth
at the end of 1980 than at t he end of 1979, the North
American Air Defense Command says, but the
number still was considerable -4,419.
NORAD, the nerve center for the continent's
air defense system. has been monitoring man-
made obje<:ts in space since the beginning of the
space age in 1957.
Kay Cormier, a NORAD spokeswoman, said at
the end of 1979, a total of 4.554 man-rflade objects
were circling the globe. but some of them came
out of orbit.
WEEKDAYS 9 TO 9
SAT.-SUN. 9 TO 6
\ -
FIRST
ALERT
LOCAL
BATT~RY
OPERATED
IN'r'ERIOR
WALL PAINT
5~!
LATEX
SEMI -GLOSS
ENAMEL
7~!
Good paint and at a price that doesn't
make your eye twitch. (My eye twitches
when I get nervous. h igh prices make m e
nel'VOUS.)
TELEVISION
SETS
9" T ATUN G AC 1 DC
BLACK & WHITE
7777
13" D.D .G. 22997 COLOR
19" D.D .G 27777 COLOR
Chec k around and
.,....-_
you'll find these a re very
competitive prices If you need
a new set, see these before you m ak e a
d acision.
AUTO STEREO 8. TRACK
CARTRIDGE PLAYER
M an ual progrdm selec t
button , high low ton~
s witch . 1nd1vidua l
c hannel volume
controls Mounting
hardware and
1 nst ructions.
0 &-~ • .... -._
SUPER MINI CASSETTE
WITH AUTO STOP
Has the auto s top that
.,huts off when the
tr1 pe end s. Also has
s lide line volume
control, balance, and
tone control.
" :·~:·., ·.: r~ ~,
~'.Y -e
SYLVANIA
N ice looking and easy
t o as!.emble (Can you
ima gine us telling you
hey. it's a wful. you'll
never get 1t toget her?
N a w ) Walnut finish
5997
IEAL WOOD PRODUCTS
CEDAR STRIPPING
Let your imagination
run amuck and come
up with a wild
decorating idea. Easy
to Us@.
··~ 11
: ·'"' ~_, .. -. _.. :' ·~~]~. ~I f J
SEALED BEAM LAMPS 'STAR BRITE
POLY
"::-:'" .-. -. . .
If yours a re weak or out better
replace. Sure beats being
mistaken for an old Indian
motorc ycle on the way to the
Beverly Hill~ M otocross.
ROUN D
~4000 OR •5001 1.97 EA.
2.22 EA. •60 14
RECTANGULAR 3 55 •4651 OR a4652 . .. e. EA.
LEAF RAKES
It's the time for t h e
leaves to all come
down. It's also the
time for you to
rake them up.
These make
it easy.
SYSTEM ONE
New 3 in I formula
lets 1 t act as an
activa tor. lusterizer,
and sealant. (But
what is it?)
4~~z.
'•
J~~·
Rememhet-that old saying. ·~Better to he
safe than sorry?" That s ure applies here.
Also includes the 9 volt battery so it's ready
to start to work for you .
ALL TRADE 6''
BENCH GRINDER
Bet this could grind up
your bench faster than
you can blink an eye.
Kidding. you know 1t
gnnds. polishes. and
cleans.
3 ·4aa
'z HP
.1 ... ,.....-j
::lYt~:~.\ ~v · I f '• I~)
K-LUX DECORATIVE
HOMETOWN BRICK
Has the appearance of new
brick. is hghtweight and
fireproof. Easy to put up.
'•" thick . 30 bricks to a box
2~!
COVERS 5-6 SO. rr.
77
#$A80
BLACK
& DECKER
3/a " DRILL
Single speed genera l
purpose drill for around
the house and the
workshop. 1200 rpm, .22
HP ( maitimum motor
output )
12~~4
THE NIGHT
SENTRY
Solid state timer tha t
installs in eitist1ng
switch plate. Memory
module controls
lights inside and
outside your home. 1666
GENIE ELECTRIC GARAGE
DOOR OPENERS
i,.4 HP CHAIN DRIVE
97!?oo
·· eoo~
~HP DELUXE
'(' __;:;::;.--,,.. SCREW DJUVE -. . 138.88 #~880
NORMAL INSTALLATION
OFOUR 55 00 UNrr •
You'll love th ... when you don't have to get out
oi th• car in the downpour. Just press th• button
and roll in the garap.
QUAKER
PINEBROOK SHEDS
612'sS'
~. ' -8797
Ii
WOOD SHINGLES
~ •. :j_J
----~ Decorative and helps insulate.
too. And the best part, you can
put these up yourself. take your
time. save money.
HEAVY 1697 APPROX. SHAKE 20 SO. IT.
1997 APPROX. 2s so. rr.
SUPER
PLASTIC
2'' •PLR27 " '· . ..
RUBBERMAID
ROUGHNECK 30 OR 32
GALLON TRASH CANS
Thi• is the touoh one. Traah
men bounce them around. th•y
come up amiling.
10·~ --
!'r : __ -~--
Never hurts to
have extra storaqe.
Makes thinqs last
longer. Sizes
reflect outside eave
dimensions. Sizes
nominal.
~TION Thuradey, January 22. 1981 DAILY PILOT ,4 J.
Wlllte. H•••e eye• ll•J'-L~
01,dest president, youngest 'aide'
Amendment has
NOW opposition • •
NF.WFANf., N \1 (1\1'1 Thlloffl<'lal
lttttr Hid K1clo lh•mmllle w1a11 under
t•ons1d.-ratlot1 for 1i1 vot1ith.m In 1he n~w
Rt•aan admtnistrallon Th~ i.nnoum·t·
mf'nt c•a ft\4' a c1uH1• a 'u' 111 '"''' :1111<·1· R1rln 1 onl ~
I t "1l't hgurt' l•UI v. tw11• th•·~ "ol h1b
, namt'. l'Jl<'<'PI lhrnui;h '"m" n111t uv,
aid l>t(•k ftt'nHnt>h', thl' bo· ·., f1o1thcr
It l'I e.arl) v. & ., n 't 11H-<111t ( 111 nH·
bt>r au-..· 1 don'\ KO h) · H1\'ll '
Thl· lt'tt.cr "lil•wd t" to: l'cndh•wu
J .. "' \'l\ th rt'<· tor of µrc1t1 dcnl\i.I i1~rs11n
nt•I \ld d •• AllhOuKh Wt• < ~111r111t VI etlll'l
when we m111ht be In touch, pleue be
H•urt!d thllt you will be seriowily con·
sldered as we seek the most qualified
team to serve President-elect Reagan
urtcr he tllkcs office in January."
H1rky's mother, Sally Remmele, said
her lion wrote to Reaean after the No·
vcmber election as part of a class
l'roject, coniiratulatine him on his vic-
tor y She i;aid he got a rorm letter from
Heaaian later , "acknowledging what
H1cky had written and saying he likes to
h\'.ar from young people and that he'd
work hard as president.''
"Then last week he got this letter about
a tob, and it look s like it was
h and-signed by this E . Pendleton
Jam es," sald Mrs. Remmele.
Karna Small, deputy press secretary
to Reagan, said in Was hington that the
mistake probably was made in an effort
to respond to everyone who wrote to
Reagan, who was sworn in as president
Tuesday. ,
Asked if he would take--a job offered
by the president, Ricky shook his head
and said, ''No. I just don't want to go."
A"Wlr..,_.e
HEADS FIGHT
Eleanor Smeal
WASHINGTON <AP > -The National
Or ganization for Women is launching a nationwide
woman-to-woman campaign aimed at stoppin1 the
proposed human life amendment to the Conslltu·
tion, NOW officials announced.
As proposed, the amendment would not only
prohibit all abortions but would also ban use or
some contracepfive pills and the intrauterine de·
vices. charged NOW President Eleanor Smeal.
NOW chapters across the country have
scheduled leaflet campaigns, neighborhood walks
and other efforts for today to get the effort under
way. In addition. the group will concentrate its ef ·
forts on lobbying against the amendment on Feb. 4
when Women's Rights Day is held in Wa5hington.
Fashions You Can Star In
eCOSTA MESA
Harbor Center
eCOSTA MESA
17th & Orange
(Mesa Center)
I
Pree .. •ftectlve January 22 U"u January 21. 1181 . Whit• •uDtttlft IHt. SALi POLICY: TM m9fchandlM Included In thle edvertlMm•nt·I• .vallabl• only at the pa,,lclpatln9 Mlll•r'• Outpoet4 tooetlon• Hated. lal• _.. aN not effecttH It any ot our other Mlllef'1 Outpoar ltore•.
•
Thur•day, January 22, 1911 ' "'
a la a m's yellow tag
furniture SALE
it's the time of the year again
for balsam's once-a .. year clearance sale
now in progress ...
11je subject to
merchandise 1n sto,ok
unit as shown. t0 ·~· x 10'?"
modular unit 1n one. two or
three cushion is adaptable to
any room size -matching tables
available -also sleeper -variety
of fabrics -now on sa1e1
contemporary furniture
· · · decora·tor service available
1931 newport blvd.
costa mesa. ca.
(half block north of 19th st.)
548-5518
store wide
SALE
anaheim area toll free 546-1262
~ hpure tues. & fr~ a.m . ·-9 p.m.
wed. thurs. & sat. ro-a:m. -6 p.m.
I clotecl aundar a monclar I
revolving charge
II •
subject lo prior Mle
barzila·y. glenn
calif design
cardinal. motif
david page
unifactor. tomes
custom chair
charlfon. landes
designskill
westbrook, thonet
glass arts
custom style
design trends
artisan house
san d1ego design
.j1llrnQham, laurel
' domani
yellow tag
SALE
entire inventory
'-r~uced!
lOO's of values!
we also have an extensive selection
or decorative accessories
PICTURED ITEMS SUBJECT TO PllKJll MU
A• llluatrated a· JC 11· JC a·
8 pc. modul•r
MCtlOMI with 08k
flni.h woodllne beck
-.wlleble In comer
untts.8"n ..... &
ottomen • In a wide .. ,.atton of --•
• , •
-
A II dressed up for the danre
The inaugural partying is over for another four years, but memories of the Washington
whirl, no doubt, wiJI be vivid for a Jong time for almost 250 in the Orange County
Republican contingent, and especially for the three Harbor Area women above. Attending
a presidential inaugural was a first for them, and each selected her ball finery with care.
Mrs. Rudy Baron (left) of Balboa Island, chose a floor-length white crepe, fashioned in-
Grecian lines and accented with a beaded bodice. Another Balboa Island resident. who has --
Thurld1y. Jeniwy 22. 1981 DAILY PILOT
D•lly Pilot St•lf P-
supported President Ronald Reagan in ftis political efforts beginning with his first
gubernatorial race, is Mrs. Donald Sloper. She is wearing royal blue chiffon with a soft
floating skirt and sleeves that are drawn into a keyhole design. Mrs. Cecil Shirar of
Newport Beach picked a sequin-trimmed accordion pleated gown. combining off·white and
black. ·
Fwtth release
entb Tandy
tax pr'!be
Marine center dedication set Executive gets
King auxird
Orange County officials have
settled a long·running tax in·
vestigation o f the Tand y
Corporation which resulted from
a bribery conviction or former
co unt y assessor and
Congressman Andrew llinshaw.
The co unt y R oa r d of
Supervisors authorized the set·
tlement releasing $196, 100 in tax·
es connected with assessments
from 1969 to 1972. Another
$36,823 was kept of the original
$232,900 impounded b y the
county.
THE FUNDS were impounded
in 1975 after county offi cials ·
feared that the fo't.. Worth, Tex·
as.based corporation had been
given special treatment on
potentially taxable imported
merchandise.
Deput y Cou nty Coun s e l
Laurence Watson said that a
lengthy investigation revealed
that most or the merchandise
had been immune from taxation
because Tandy was considered
the importing agent or the
foreign goods.
THE TAXES that were kept
wer~ in r e lation t o goods
manufactured within the U.S. -
rather than imported and
were properly subject to the as·
sessments. he said .
Hinshaw was indicted by an
Orange County Grand Jury in
May 1975 and subsequently con·
victed of bribery in connection
with about $1 ,000 worth of stereo
equipment he received rrom
Tandy.
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of I .. D•ilr ~llet SUll
The new O r ang e County
Marine Institute, expected to
serve 30.000 youngsters a year,
will be dedicated Jan. 30 at 10
a.m . at Dana Point Harbor.
Work on the 4,800·square·foot
structure was completed this
month and officials are planning
to offer several programs begin·
ning in September at the start of
the new school year.
The $600.000 structure. which
will house offices. classrooms
and laboratories, will serve as a
shore learning base for 30,000
Orange County students in kin·
<l e rgarten through community
college.
DR. STANLEY L. Cummings.
director of the institute . said the
facility will serve adults in the
c o mmunit y a s well a s
youngsters .
"We expect to offer an cxped1
tion package that will include
trips to Baja and the California
Channel Islands.·· Cummings
said.
"In offering these trips we
hope to combine a sense of ad·
venture with learning."
Work on the faciLity began a
year ago with $400,000 in county
money and $50,000 each from the
four county community college
districts -Rancho Santiago,
Coast. Saddleback and North
Orange County.
EVENTUALLY THE tiny
building will be expanded with
the addition of 40,000 square feet
of building space.
The institute is located on a
three.acre county·owned site at
Land divided
lroine W. owru moat
The Irvine Company, which owns about 77,000 acres ol
land, ii the largest land holder in Oran1e County, accord·
ins to the Oran1e County Reporter, a le1a1 publication.
THE SECOND LARGEST land bolder, the Reporter
saJd, ii the U.S. government, which owna 88,911 acres, in·
cludlq land in the Cleveland National Forest.
Next come three South County ranches: the Mission
Viejo Ranch, 52,440 acres; .the Moult1)n Ranch, 10,270
acres, and tbe Starr Ranch, 10,052.
TB& lAGllNA NIGlll:L planned community, owned
by AVCO~Communlty Developenl owna 7,1• acres; the
' Nobl Rueb owna 5,000 acres ana the Loi AlilOI Citna1
Corp. boadl 4,117 acret.
The Bryant Ranch rub elabtb lD boldlnl• with 4,050 acr•, follow9d by Mateo l\eahy, 4,m acres; SbeU OU
Co., 1.• .,.., and Union OU Co., l,D acres.
the cast e nd of Dana Point
II arbor that is leased to the
marine center at no cost.
Cummings said the center will
n ot be c ompeting with
Marineland and Sea World. two
Southern Ca lifornia marine
theme parks that attract
thousands of visitors each year.
"The maj o r disti nction
bet ween us and those parks is
that they offl'r a passive type of
de monstration where people
simply go and watch." Cum·
mings said.
HE R•: WE WILL have more
active involvement in what we
are demonstrating."
Cummings said rather than
having displays for viewing as in
a museum. the institute would
provide opportunities for vis·
itors to handle the materials .
.. We also arc planning a fami·
ly outing series centered around
such topics as marine m a mmals
and pol l ution ... t he marine
director said
.. Parents can come with their
children and take part in the
learning experience together."
JI e said high schools and com·
munity colleges will use the
facilities for marine science
classes and that a dock will be
ins t a lled with boats moored
Study slated
on Onofre
nuke station
A Nuclear Regulatory Com·
mission subcommittee will meet
in Inglewood Jan. 31 to review
technical items relating to the
San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station.
And while the Advisory Com·
mittee on Reactor Safeguards
s ubcommittee meeting is open
to the public, NRC officials say
the meeting will be highly
technical in nature.
The panel will ~eview
seismology and 1eolout issues
relating to the Ucenting of Units
two and three at the power sta·
Hon three mlles south of San
Clemente.
The meeting begins at 8:30
a.m. at the Best Western Airport
Park Hotel, 800 Avenue of
Champions, l"'lewood.
Thoee interested' in attendinl
· the meetln1 should call <•>
8'4·Dl'7 prior to tbe 1euAcm to
confirm tbe 1tbeduJe.
there for exploration o utside the
harbor.
CUMMINGS SAID completion
of the institute bui ldin g
represents about one.tenth of
what is planned for the entire
project. lie said additions might
be a theater. an aquarium and
mor e laboratories.
Money for expansion a nd
operating expenses for the cur·
rent facility will come from the
1,:, unty and private donations
through the Dana Point Ocean
Institute Foundation, the rund·
raising a rm of the marine
center.
Cummings said the institute
would be administered through
the Orange County Department
of Education and the county's
four community college dis·
t ricts.
A week after the dedication,
the institute will be open to the
public during the annual
Festival of the Whales .
CLEVELAND <AP) -E .
Mandell de Windt of Cleveland
h as been chosen to receive the
1 98 1 corpo rat e soc ial
responsibility award of the
Ma rtin Luther King Jr. Center
for Non ·Violent Social Change.
De Windt is chairman and chief
executive offi cer of Eaton Corp ..
chairman of the Cleveland com·
m ission on health and social
services a nd chairman of
Cleveland's United Way.
•
81 ~LYPtLOT Thu11d1~. Januery 22. 1M 1 GENERAL NEWS
Ban lilted
Surprise searches
' for aliens resumed I
SAN DIEGO CAP> -Almost a
y ear afte r the U.S. Borde r
Patrol was ordered to stop its
search sweeps of alie n farm
camps, two-man teams are back
beating the bush es for illegals .
The ban imposed by the U.S.
Immigration and Naturalization
Service last March was lifted
las t w eek by the atto rne y
general's office in Washington.
D.C . Surprise visits to the camps
resumed Friday.
In fiscal 1980, the number of
aliens apprehended in the Chula
Vis t a sector -including San
Diego County and pa rts or
Riverside and Orange counties
-was down by 50,000.
work were uncovered before the
searches were ordered stopped
be cause of the 1980 census.
It was a decision m ade by
fe d e r al orricials who feared
m a ny undocumente d a lie ns
would other wise be co unted
more than onte.
Immigration oHicials s aid the
n e w poli cy s till r estrict s
searchc~ to those done with war -
r ants or court orders or done
with thc owners-. consent.
IN THREE DAYS this we~k . Proud Baroas 203 undocumented a liens w1re
found on ranches and fa rms . Me m ber s of the Fountain Vallev lliJth Sc hool Ma r t hing his toric route to the White House as part of the inaugural u nsanitary conditions under
"WE KNOW THE fa rms and
ranches where the aliens are
working an·d hpw m any were
found then~ in the past," said
Gent• S mithburg , an assistant
regional Border Patrol chief.
· · W <' · 11 bt> back doing it every
day now ..
There arc 540 officers in the
Ch ula Vista sector whe re tradi-
tiona ll v the most undocumented
aliens "arc apprehe nded. -~B~a~n~d~s.:wi:.::·n:_::g~· _:s::m=a:.:.rt.:!;:.Y_:d:.:o..:.:wn:..=....::P_:e:..:.n:..:.n::.:s.:.:.y..:..I v.:.._a:.:.:n:.:.:i..:.a_A_v_e_n_u_e_a_lo_n.....:g:::___ ___ 1_>a_r_a.._d_e_fo_r_P_r_e_si_d_e_n_t_R_o_n_a_l_d _R_e_a_g_a_n_. _____ · _______ w_h_ic_h_ many of them live a nd
• serv1ce due Deaf phone
Devices to be paid for by all customers
SA N F RANCISCO (AP) -
Califom.1a telephone companies
have been ordered by the state
Public Utilities Commission to
provide 90,000 fr ee telecom-
munication devices lo the deaf
to be paid for by all telephone
c us tomers. (Related column.
All .>
The service for ce rtifi ed deaf,
a t no increased charge beyond
t he basic telephone rate, will be
fi na nced by a surcha rge paid by
all customers.
INITALLV, THE s urcharge
will be 15 cent s per m onth,
b a sed u pon a prelim inary
estimate that 90,000 devices will
be needed to service the deaf by
t he end or 1983.
Firemen set
for big ·ball
T h e Fou n tain Va ll ey
Firemen 's Association is now
selling ticket s to its annual
Firemen's Ball.
··P roceeds from the event will
aid local charit ies and communi-
ty organizations. Each $12 ticket
will admit one couple.
The F'i remen 's Ball will be
held at 9 p.m. Aµril 17 at the Dis-
neyland Hotel. Ticket informa-
tion can be obtained by calling .
715-6664.
. However. PUC sources said
the s pecific number of certified
dea f an the sta te is unknown
and could r angeto200,000.
Te lephone companies are to
request bids for the var ious
types of devices whic h have
been dev elop ed . Presently
estimates are that t he devices
cos t from about $375, according
to a bid a lready submitted by
one firm to Pacific Telephone
Co. to as much as $600.
The PUC order is effective in
30 d ays and the companies must
report by May 20 on the devices
to b e provided. m ethods of dis-
tr ibut ing them and administra·
tio9' of the fund to provide the
frt'C service.
A STATE LAW s igned in Sep-
tl'm ber 1919, directed the PUC to
for m ulate regulations requiring
the telephone utilities to provide
telecommunications devices for
t ht• deaf or severely hearing im-
pa ired. together with a single-
party line. t o be eligible for service. a
person must be certifi ed as dea'r
or severely hearing impaired by
a licensed physician, audiologist
or a qualifi ed state agency.
The device itself m ust include
a keyboard. vi s ual electronic
screen. equipme nt fo r a ha rd
ropy printout or material and
must be portable and weigh no
more than 12 pounds. The device
must also be adaptabl e to either
electricity or batte ry park.
E ach u ser wo uld have
s ignaling equipment, s uch as a
light, to show the telephone is
r ini.ting.
The PUC said it prefers the
device be a dual system which
could be used for s peech and
comp uter da ta as well as with
the system now used by about
50.000 deaf persons over the na-
tion
Saddleback chorus
seeking singers
The College Chorus at Sad-
dleback College's nor th campus
in Ir vine is short on tenors and
baSSC!'\.
Area residents who enjoy sing-
ing a rt> welcom e. said ins t ructor,
Jan Wvma. The chorus m eets on
Tuesdays from 1 to 10 p.m. in
room :11 1.
Ex-cop convicted
CHICAGO <AP ) A forme r
police m a n in the suburb of
Eva nston has been convicted in
U.S. District Court of s tealing
Sl l.800 from a bank's a utomatic
teller machine while investigat-
ing a n alarm at the bank. James
Smith. 30, was convicted of theft
in c:onnection with the incident
S<'pt 7 at the F'irst Bank of
Evanston.
SINCE 1926 'MG A.MITSUBISHI ® 6' "' ELECTRIC
AUDIO SYSTEM
VIDEO SCAN SYSTEM
VIDEO CASSETTE RECORDER
MGA COLOR TELEVISION
tt.. To•att ._...,hot offend .-llty ~h ...t
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1Wraa •, .... 1rw. We_.. ......... ow Hfll,...
wltll a ..... to a •w loc""-wtllcll wll ._...._ omr
••ff"90 .... Mies ...t Mnke •palw .. a. We wll
ho•• "scads" of free ,...... wlfll ... , Ill ...t -'
Cllpproechn to Gotti.rct GMI Mel A•tw1. lett of~ .•. ow......., TV & APPl.IAMCIS _. SBVICI 11 .t LOW
PllCIS!
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LITTON
Microwave Oven
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uENN·AIR
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HOME
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perFormance
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,,., ., .... -.,, .. ,,,,. .... ,.
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25% olf this ideal startc·r stereo' Automi'l t1c
3-speed changer plays Cln y size record
Matching speakr·rs sr·parate up to 18 ff>Pt
Includes rr-mo vrihll'-d is covr-r t11 3 -1 H:i6
H ,1µ1,1 II
'\f '' 1 \.lf H .. 'J '• VI~
Phone Answerer with Remote Control ------
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Remote Control
System for Lights
and Appliances
Complete Mobile CB System
eyRu lis11c· Save 9995 19% By Radio Sheck
Save16°/o Separate Items
Reg. 123.94 35~~-42.9! r ... _::_
Save $23 99 on this CO system now. ancf save
a lot of time and trouble this winter1 Included
is everything you need hump mount.
magnetic mount antenna. cigarette tighter
plug and the TRC-4 10 full-feature CB
t121 -540t94011504. 274-33 1
Total control of up to 16 tights and appli-
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Appll•nce Module. #61-2681 . . . . . . . . . . 15.99
L•mp Dimmer Module. #61 -2682 ........ 15.99
W•lt Switch Module. #61 -2683 ....•..... 16.99
8-Track Car Stereo
Player ey R .. 11.uc
Door Hanger
Security Alann
Sy SAFE HOUSE · ~ '
I Save r
17°/o
1995
Reg .23.95
Hang alarm on
door knob or place in side
valuables. When unit 1s '
moved, it sounds shrill
alarm. #49-460 Ba1te11es e1tr11
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18-Range Multitester B y Mlcro11ta •
20.000 ohms per volt. 3" meter
with mirrored and color-
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# 22-201 Bolllery utra
Case for 8-Track
And Cassette Tapes
Hand-Held 6-Digit · Go-Anywhere
LCD Stopwatch AM/FM Poe et Radio
ByRHlllllC
1 ~Reg.
' 15.15
Holda 24 8-track cartridges' or
24 cassettes. Grained-vinyl
t>Cterlor .. red velour interior.
•+4~71 '.
u,
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Clock reads
2495 hours. minutes.
seconds. plus
month, date.
--. --day. With bat-~._ .... -!'V tery. #63-6003
Save
300/o
1188
Aeg.18.95
A great "on-the~o" radJo with
slide-rule tuning, •stde-
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earphone and wrist strap.
# 12-635 lettery ....
·~ YourPbone looll ,. ............. or o..t Nia,_. You ,,.. •• , .,,,,,,,, Af ~ lfOlllll
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ENTIRE ST OCK
OF LIMBER, BUILDING MATERI ALS,
FENCING, HARDWARE, TOOLS,
PAINT, EiC.
ELCOME!!
. . '
lo llmlt on anything. Borrow you~ neighbor's truck, reni a traller..;..
but don't miss this one time only event.
VORKTOWN -·-,------~
I * Hunting1on Lanes
I Bowling Center --J---19761 leach llwd., Huntington Beach
LUMBER ~ ADAMS
LAND ~-,
~
J
•
. J
··who Invited you?"
MISS PEACH-
• -l ..
"He's just clowning."
DENNIS THE MENACE
'
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
IT~ (Jt.fl(.J , l..f.5 ! 1M15 l!JN1T
A ICU~ .1
IT~A
i~ADE
~Ee.ire~
~ltl ...
by Mell Lazarius
eTMIC5
FtOsret 0 I.A~
~f!OM
UVl!.AL.IN~
IT.
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
Y'KNDW, l NEVER Rf:,ALIZED goy, THAT MUST
~ow SMART J REALL y W/6 ~AYE: BE:!:N A
UNTIL l <5~EW UP. LET£>c>WN ...
In fact.the~ is net slimy, ncr is he.
ri ctiUrse. a snaki .
' .
•
NANCY
wow---I've GOT
FIVE PIECES OF
euBBLE GUM
IN MY
MOUTt-t
OH, DEAR··-l'M
GOING TO
SNEEZE
....... -........... _.. ·•#• ............ ···-.... ,.. ... _.'.'.allt ........ -·· ----·-,._ .... '-
by Clalrtn M. Scllul1
--~~~~~~--
~ mwtf' ltU't
.kM~-
i ~
by Tom Batiuk
WEl.i. , ME WA5 ~E.5.SE.D
LIKE A IQ..JNGO~ !
DR. SMOCK
NO, IF
YOU WAN""r -ro oeseRve MY SURGeRY
AN' PO AN AR'T"ICL.f!! ON ME!, 'T"HA'T"'S
FINe ...
OD D
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
I
I i ~
DO'fOU NEED HELP IN
tHERE., Ll"t'l.IE. '?-Cf\LL
t10"""1'1 IF you NEEO
OK, !HAT'S LOl'G-
Et«JOG~. MOMMY'S
COMING To Gl\IE. you
SOM€. .... HE.LP .
by Harold Le Doux
MIND lF l PUT 'THI!:> ~l'T~E ON
lliE fl.O()f{ AND .JOIN YOU ?
..
,
THE FAMILY CIRCUS lty Ill K ...
"Snow is quiet and you can see it. Thunder is
noisy but you CAN'T see it."
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
by Lynn Johnston
.
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Branches
5 Issues
10 Swiss peaks
14 l11sh Isle
15 Cairo VIP
16 Sott drink
17 Take --
Win
19 Enclosure
20 Shred
21 Paint remo-
vers
23 Molding
edge Vai
25 Slithered
26 NHL or NFL
members
30 Changes
34 Gridiron
35 Essence
':r1 Spring
38 Manner
39 Eared seals
42 John -
43 Greek deity
45 USSR city
46 Otd pronoun
48 Declaimer so Shabby
52 Decays
1 I I 4
S4 Tools
SS Palm lru1ls
59 Keep
63 Berserk
64 Rep1lfon
66 Passenger
67 Expunge
68 Ad1acent
69 Expires
UNI TEO Fe.lure Syndicate
Wednesday's Puzzle Solved
70 Frer.ch upper ~~E-
house
71 WWII sue
DOWN
1 Float
2Solo
3 Emporium
4 Estabhsn
S -de corps
6 Bad: Prefix 26 Subsequently 49 long lime
7 Castor's 27 Headdress 51 House area
klller 28 Egret S3 Metnc unot
8 Mexan IOOd 29 Procreated SS Lunch spot
9 R1d1ated 31 Low point 56 Sult3nale
10 Consented 32 Hum 57 Twine
11 Bird 33 Courser 58 Examine
12 Intrigue 36 Foddef PllS 60 Otll herb
13 Simpletons 40 Agonies 6.1 Compound
18 Sh1pworm 41 Worrywart sutt1x
22 Spirit 44 Oarsmen 62 Cruel ruler
24 Claro: Var 4 7 Hurries 65 Amer
I ,
\
l'OCAL. --~Lawsuit .
filed in
IL..
slander
WATSONVILLE <AP>
A $1.2 million lawsuit
has been tiled by a
f o rmer Santa Cruz
County supervisor who
says another former
s upervisor s landered
him by sa ying he beat
" his girlfriend. LL E Y The suit, filed by Chris
Matthews of Watsonville
o.lly l'llet St.II l'IMlo
against Marilyn Lid·
dicoat of Aptos. said
Mrs . Liddico at made
p ublic ac c u sations
against Matthews.
..
Thur--. JMuely 22. 1M1 DAl4.VN.OT ...
GOURMET
MARKET .
DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD
Fresh, Fully Cooked Peeled/ Develned
Medium Sized Shrimp ...... $2.49 half-lb.
Fresb FUJet
Pacific Red Snapper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.69 lb.
MEAT DEPARTJWENT _I
Prirt1l' and Toµ Choice Red. ugt-d not less than 30 da ys
tot he pcuk of pl•rfcC't ion
Fresh Local Turkey Breasts ........ t.98 lb.
Fresh Turkey Legs and Wings ...... 49c lb.
1 lmuted supply I
Our Own Cured Corned Beef Brisketsl.98 lb.
DELI DEPARTMENT
Delaney's Famous
Free Home Delivery Service
1 SS~ minimum I delivered in our complt~tel)•
refr1gerut<.od trucks. Your order is under refrigeration
from our store to your door. .
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
So. American Banaaa1 .............. lk lb.
Green Oniom or Racl11hes ........ 19c bunch
Ruby Red Grapefndt ............ 4 for t.M
Ranch Fresh Cabbage .............. t9c lb.
LIQUOR DEPARTMENT
1111 priC'C'S IJIUS tax
Delaney's Champagne
SZ. 75 per bottle, $33.00 per case
Seagrams 7 Crown .............. , liter> 8.00
Cresta Blanca Gamay Beaujolais ... _. .. 2.95
Bolla Wines Soave or Trebbiano ..... :: .. 3.80
Cutty Sark 'ht er 1 ...••••••.•••..••••••• 11.00
Scoresby Scotch '86 µroof 1
FOUNTAIN VALLEY PAIR NURTURE MILLION DOLLAR DREAM
Dennla Morgan, left, director, and Tim Artaa, aaalatant
··1 can't allow lies tha t
a re so damaging to be
s aid against myself and
everything I believe in.
I still have people com ·
ing up to me who believe
those statements are
true," Matthe.ws said.
M att h e w s, a
Democrat . and Mrs .
Liddicoat, a Republican.
frequently clashed at
board mee ti n gs. Jn
J anuary 1980, Mrs . Lid·
dicoat resigned as board
c hairman, saying sh e
r eceived death threats
from Matthews demand-
ing s he step down.
Neptune Salad ...... , ............... 3.49 lb .• 1750 mi1 15.55 ............... 11liten .... 6.86 .
FV Boys Club
'on the move'
By PHIL SNl-:IDERMAN
0 1 , ... O•oly ""-' SwH
Dennis Morgan .. director of the Boys Club of
Fo untain Vallt-y. is banking on a mllhon·dollar
drt!am.
This month, the Fountain Valley School Dis
trict designated a fire damaged wing at Harµcr
School as a potent ial site for u new boys club -1f
the organization can M me up with the cash for
m ajor reconstrul'tion.
Still. the school board's action is enough of a
l'ommitment for the local youth group to begin
seeking foundation grants and other funds to build
its tenter. Morgan sa ys.
TIO: PRICE TAG FOR J UST a basic Bovs
Club building at 1-larpcr or one of several other
potential sites is $500,000. he claims.
Adding a gymnasium and a closed pool would
raise the cost another $500.000. Morgan says.
The club director hopes to do some pre
liminary planning this yea r and launch the formal
fund-raising campaign in early 1982.
"Then. within a year and a half, I think we'll
be in a new facility," Morgan says. "I know that's
an ambitious ~oal, but I think it's an attainable
on·e-.··
FOR THE TIME BEING, HOWEVER,
Morgan and program director Tim Arias are try.
ing to do their best with what they already have -
a modest clubhouse on Talbert Avenue , a recently
re·landscaped playing field and an abundance or
enthusiasm .
"The kids are out there." says Arias, who was
recently with the Buena Park Boys Clu b. "It's just
up lo us to provide the kind of progr<tmming that
will bring them in."
Along with traditional activities s uch as a Dis ·
neyland excursion and a baseball clinic. Morgan
and Arias are planning some innovative program -
m ing.
Beginning next month . 15 hand icapped
youngsters from Plavan School will be bused to
the tloys Club each Tuesday afternoon to engage in
board games and other activities with non
handicapped members.
The club is ope n to boys and girls. ages 7 to 17.
IN ADDITION, MORGAN IS tryi ng to enlist
several Fountain Valley poli<:C officers to help out
al a one-week camping excursion this summer
near Lake llemet
And the direl'lor isn't neglecting the fund
raising projects needed to turn his million·dollar
dream into reality.
On Feb. 4, form er Ri ghteous Brothers s inger
Ai li Medley will host a benefit concert for the Boys
Club at his Fountain Valley restaurant.
"We have good community support, and you
c an see the progress we're making," sitys Morgan.
"I just want people lo know that the Boys Club is
really on the move ..
Rescue pilots get
honors at meeting
ANAHEIM (AP> -Pilots who new rescue
missions after the dis astrous earthquake in
southern Italy and the fire at the MGM Grand
Hotel in Las Vegas. Nev .. have been cited for
"dedicated and heroic action."
Brig. Gen. Giorgio San Tucci, air defense at-
tache al the Italia n Embassy in Washington.
D.C .. accepted a citation al ceremonies during a
convention of Helicopter Association International.
BIUG. GEN. San Tucci told the crowd of 1,700
that he accepted the citation on behalf of 217
helicopter pilots who flew 4,464 surveillance and
rescue missions in the aftermath of last Novem-
ber's Italian quake.
San Tucci also thanked Americans for
humanitarian aid to quake victims.
The general's award was presented by Gian
Blower. director of Elitos Helicopters in Florence,
Italy. on the recommendation of the director of the
Italian airworthiness council, an association
spokeswoman said.
ANOTHER AWARD honored pilots who
rescued guests from the burning 26-story MGM
Grand Hotel on Nov. 21, 1980. The fire took 84 lives.
Other actions cited include rescues durin1 the
eruption ol Mount St. Helens In Washiniton and
the sinkfnl ol the Dutch liner Prinaendam last
year.
Moonlite Sale
Huntington Center's
fantastic 11·hour
Nie Fri nit• e to
9 p.m. and continues
on Sal~ to ttoek on hand. IHch l tvd a
Edinger end 40& fwy,
r.Tlm
Ulll.'S
"-' I I .. ,.r.o ..... ._ ...... ,, lie",., ... _,_.._ .. .,_o-tC• ......... ., ___ ~
COMA...M1•1• , ....... -. _ ....... 1 _.._....._ __ ,_,_ .. ....,,.,.,,
City wanted
RODEO CAP > A
group pushing for in·
corporation or the town
o r Rodeo plans t o
circulate an incorpora·
lion petition next month,
a t•cording lo the head of
··inc . Rodeo."
This ad dft.t·t 1Vl' Wt•d . I 21 thru Tuei. . 1 :n
DELMIEY'S
ll<t\'lrlj.! a SUJll'I' Howl gl'I togC'thcr µart~"· To
watC'h the· g;rnw on the luhe. t·all Dl'laney ·~ for
tho:;1' gn•at part~ plalll'r'
Store Jtours 9-6, Closed Sunday
2920 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach
673-5520
::::::"' L---" . -
SALE DATES: Jan. 23 thru Feb. 10
Loul•l•n•-Pacltlc Corporetlon
QR no1 Qarden Qrove Btvd.
117.1171 or~
Ol>en: Alon. lhru Fri. I fO t Sit. a toe tun. •toe
t
.,
.. CWl. 'I "Ol
PtJ9UC NOTICI ---'------------· -------------P\J8UC~ll ftJ8UC NOTICS .... .... ......
•H•:=•CM1l'Oll•ta '' .... .,,_ f .L-•1 NOTIC• Of' HATH 01' N·71Stt *""" ",4:6.............. ..o .. tc• .. ''""""' ..... ...,tC. -""'""' MLI ui"'"' 0 11 J-• ..... , ., "•.,.. °" J_, • .. , .. "'• •·"' .... ,..;.,,,-. "'9t ri •\1 a¥1•1C &M flH .• f't ••r t.M8•1CAN TIY L f ~,,,,, ..... "u•· ... AM'"' 1141 u-.u .AlllCICOllPUIY, ·~·-· ... llllt.U•AHC•COMlil•MY.•C.1-.W.
•YaLYM L ...... ,.. NOT•c• Of' O•ATN 01'
AND Of' l'aTITION TO DaLLO••• MARI•
ADMINllTI• ••TAT• TD•" 0 M A $ I • Ill • NO.A•1'1m. LLO••I MARI• • ~,... ltl ... ellell M f~, ., ... ~..... t.,..,.,_ M TPlll ... ,., -~··-.. U \fllli l nn l• Ot '°*U!ult. ltll'i... '''"•I ""''"ft "*tlttlltN Tr11t1•. el INI T o • I I h e I r s , llLLINOI THOMAS, all•
beneflclarlH, cr•dltors DaLLO.•s M .. TNOMAI and c.ontlngem Creditors of AND 01' l'ETITION TO
Evelyn L . Firestone of ADMINllT•R l!STATI!
Laouna Hiiis, CA and NO. A·107•1.
IU \lilOlll Oten li111114 I "Ut ce 11a111 OM41 .. Trv•I ••'"'" t'f .. •1e111 01iM " fP11tl tH<vlM "
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............. ,..... .... • "" 0 '"'"""""' ... >411 '" ..... o.,.,,. ... ,, .. .,., .. ""''-Ho.
persons who mey be To •I I h • I rs ,
otherwtM Interested In the b•neflcl•rlH. crtctitors
will Ind/cw tstete. and contlnoent creditors of ............. Ulldl..... I ........ " Of Qlll• .. I .... , .. ,ti Mlle ffl Oii 1-, .... J1. of Olllclel ....................... 0""•• Cu~fllr (l llltrflle e"d •"W• ..... Ot .. ClllOftty.Cellloflwt,
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A petition has been flled Dtllores Merle Thomu,
by John L. Fl,..stone In tht •k• Dellcwes M•rle Biii·
Superior Court of Orang• lngs Thof"Ns, •k• Dellores
County requesting th•t M . Thomas and persons
John L. Firestone be •P. who may be otherwise In·
........_., __ _,.,..._ .... _ lll1tou"O.' "'Of*• k 11lt111""1 It l••ll•;le•~.,.,.,,,,, l'IO••lntt"•·
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., ... , .. O•tt' tf\•t ""'' '-"'rtW"OOft' I\ \tffif'll'U on l"t 1UI ,,, ,,.,,, ...... 1111 ., '"'' m.,, ffl\.OtO.d In eoo.. Sl, P•Qe\ 41
""'-.; v..Or~ (N \I 0.llt »'liGt .,oy '~' 0t•~1 ft\4~ CJll •rtl•rW'd .-ruJ t.•~o·•••"'Wi•t tt "'°'' \J •'•"9' tl•A(I ••H1 ••Qt Mh(Pll•ntOU\ M•p\, In ttte
.,. n Jit , .. \ U t•I tfl I t tn. t out I ~y eot•• • 1"°"m9fll \ 90 .f'I nt M l'-•Ua•llil\JU~ ~"'h tn IM Ott It.• OlfU fl of ll'W' County Ae<orcHr of \•Id
'••n1n9 ,.._,~ H" OI Ot,.., rw °'" t on "' '"'" \ <Ni'H\" """ .,. 1w t ut \111d l ou"h t CJunty
Pl'BUC NOTICE t •'"'no dP11\fon Of pru.-tty \WU~.-1 l ., "''•' ... u '\HI µtttn.H•Ullt Q•'· E •<•Pl •II o.i petr~tlJm. CJ•\.
\"&>PG•t (.f't4i\f t u\tOdy rf\11'1 '~PfJO'I lij1t>;t ""''"'"'h .. u "'"'•ti •l"dt•ct \Ub b'•4f, •\phallu1n1 Wnd •It k1ndtt d \Vb •HOtt••Y , .. ,. CO\t~ "'"'° ~Uilln otn.r •• ,.,.,,.,,' ., .. , '""'' nmwrAI\ un\Ht.f ut \t•nct'\ MWf OU\f'r rw1rwr•I$ under 1n
fll•CT•T'°"' • ..,, ..... ,. • •••• , """-"'Qr QIMtl•d by ""' ·•lvtt .. , •••• l;tH1I ...... .,~ Oltt 11qf\t tu u~ •"" , ... o l•nd .... (•Pt lhf> rHaftt 10 us.f>.•n;
11.AMa i TATl.Ma•T '"• O·•"H\~mtrf'H ot 1'•fi'I' •t'•1ng ot fWhllon 111 If.., \ulf••• vt th• l•nft for poq1on of Uw wrf~f of tt\p l•nd tor 1 ~ •ot~ .. ne •'"°" ,, dot"Q D\t)• mon~,, Or CHOOtl l'f 01 oou,, <Uurt H1U11t(.t t't•'"lh.n, mut1ttQ m ~v•t'Y dr 1H1nQ oOetiUlon\ minutq 0, Qu•rry
.-... .... , <4lto1lMt1HG "'CK~lr~\ fttt1Y ·•w ,,. ,no ,,, All t.1Ud\ '"' 1w1nv °"'' fW)I ... IOQ o l •II ''"°' In( lu01nQ bul "°' ...
I UO'f' \.CUSTOM lftlt tERfORS 1"il4 \.Ufl 1 lu'l.11/-,, U•l •f'lf OttlllOQ Ull <Mv•loo tlu'l.•v• o• 011 ~II UrU11t\Q_, 011 Of'\l•loP ~"'''""'' a._. f:.~t••n V•lley CA O••to Nowtmt.r 10 fWO ""'''' u11n1ny Of)tft;1t1oth IOQtt0'14rr m~nt mlnlnq OPf'rAllon\, toqethtr
tftOI ~!~/ 8RANC>i ::'17, :~: .. ~~-.~: •. ':.',II ~~~::.~~ -~~· •• o~I =~·.~. ·~: .. ~"' .~.:~•d \Url.•tt 101 otl
JVOy L ~\ _.. \l\Mnrac:& •v~ By A0\4M VUOO•ttf t10t'' U' """"' lh"~,,.._,,. huww11•• I""'-uon ~ ... ~· ,. \, min no ~•c•11• "-''"' v., .. , C4 •1109 Oepo;lv v· ·~ ·-'01 '·-"· Pf<>vo<le<I, ...,.,o~r llte
'"'' ~f'tft\" (onch,c-.. a Oy •n in IL•• Offt<etef 't(lntr '"411 n1u ,,.. (UO\h\Hfd to o•o \t11.mr 't\4111 not bl' cori~trued lo pro Ot.•Olt.t•• ~AN DAO& LINTNElll '""'' ,1,.nt d••"•na or \Ul h uthttf n1bl1, 'htnt drill mg 0, \uch otht"r
JwJt l Ao4nu, l ltJ W 1,_s,e,... c.>Uf'••I•~'' whi~n '" oo ••Y u1 tn •nv operation, wh•<.n 1n no w4y or 1n •ny
J f\f~ 'l•tetnenl W<41\ fll..cl •ilh the Staf .. • m • •••t 4'fff"'t t UW \wrfM tJ flQhh Of Wld #4V •U«I OW \ur1ac~ rfCJf'h g t \.Atd
(o-...nh Cten•. ot or-. County on JMIJ S•••• AM, c..t•..,,_.• ,11.. •.1no ,.nc1 wt·Mh dO nut ~14'r ~•10 l•nd l•nd, 41rtd wn1c" oo "'°' tnl•r U•d ••no
10 , .. , 0 141 M•~u..J ;~, ~ •JOmt '"" tn411n WO'""'' of \Aid sur ~~c! pornt le\\ thdn \00 '"'of said \Ut
~IM171 PuDll\-()<-C°"'\I D••lv PllOI P4RClL ti PARC£
P., .. ,,....., °'"'9t c ... , 0.lly Pllol, J•n II, u 1' F•ll I 1'91 18• •• Loi 11 o• '"'" No 1l•I ••• per LOI 11l ! Traci No 1:MI, •• oer
J•ro lJ H. F•ll I, 11• '"' l11 I I • ' mdp • o<Ol{11>0 +n B<KM lo P•C!e\ J •nd m•P r~•orCIOO In 8.,.,. I•. Pe~s 3 •nd
PUBLIC NOTICE:
l'ICTIYIOUS IUSlllllH
Hl\MI' ITATEMllllT T~ fOOOW1f'1i9 s-r'°" r\ do1nQ D"'' ,..,u as
OESl(;N S HO WCAS E, H?•
"l••POrt Blvo . CO\I• ~'•· C•l•lornl• .,.,, w.,,., A ... llan. <!05 E B•'"°'· 8•1DOa, C•lllOfnl•
""' bu'\t'nt'\S ti conducted by •n 1n :Jt••du.,
W•rnttA0.11•"
Tl\ .. •l•l-1 W•S till!<! Wllh Ii..
COul\IV Cltr~ ol O••n• Co,,nly on
J•"Y•rv•. ttl1
~u"" Put>ll•f'lecl 0<•"91 Coa" D•liy Pllo1. J•" t , 15.17, H 1911 111·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS eUSllllEU
1111\Ml STATEMENT
The fotlo••no per,on" •r• dolnQ
buSIM H •-\
MARKEflN(; DYNAMICS, 111
Rlv•nloe Awenve, Newport Beecn.
C•lllornl•tMl
Jtflr.y l(oit&l. tSO 8 1•U A,,_w , <ierelen(;rove, C.lltorn•••1M4
St•wen Arnot. ™ Lillian, CMI•
Mew. C•li"""'I• •1'11
T'1h D~'""' " conoucled D'f' • ,,. ...... _,,,.,.,,,"
Jeffrey 1(01et.
Thi\ •l•lement .... Iliad With t ....
County Cler11 of~-County on J•n. 10, ... ,
• 01 Ml\ttitlldtwou' M•o,. to ow otUc• • ot Ml'<~ll•neH>U\ Map,, 1n tt\t-office
o·t lh.-Counh qt"C:O'°"' ot \•Id t<Nntv of trw CO\Wtty RP<ordwt ot \•td COUf"v
l W(fi>t tl'Wr•hom •U 01t 04\, 4nd E •teQ4 therefrom •It OH. 9.1\, •nd
othti1r hydf'OC41tb0n~ •nd m1~r•h no., ottwtr hydroc;•r'bOn\ .no m1ner•I' now
•nd h~tt'tltftt'' '"· °" ond un(Mr th•t •no here•fttf tn. Of"I •nd under th•I
P.,, 01 u•d ,...., 1v1nci 11e•-• •Pth ot IM•I o t •tld •-ly•nci tit._• depth 01
SOO •t•hul '""' DelOw ,,... wrtac• ot SOO •ertlc•I lwl lltt-the wrt•ce Of •••d land, l><ll wlthovl ~ny toQlll of tn ••Id l•nd, l>ul Without any r 191\I of tn•
1rv upon •••d land or w1lh1n '""I loP lry ""°" w kt •-or wltMn w ld top SOO lt et lhtreot tor •nv ourooH• SOO feel th@r eot tor •nv purpoll'
wrtt1l\ot.,.r 4\ rn.Prvf-0 •n tn# OH'O to wh•hOf'~ ~h rttH'ved In t,.. deed to
lht H•lt Comoany, , Horded Nolf tn• H•I• Comp•ny, r•<orcted Nov
rmbl!r 5, 19S4 on 8ook 71161, P•ll'l' 7.0 •miler \, 19~ •n Boo-'"'• PaQf! 7.iG,
011oc ••I Rl'Co•d• OH•tt•I Re<oro'
1 f'I~ \treet ~r~\ Of other tommon '"• \trtt1 .od•fo\\ or othfor common
d«'"9n•t1on ot ~aid propri,ly 1\ dtt'l.IQn•hon of \••d property 1\
purporlod lo lie Y•3 Coogre\\, Co••• Pu•t>O•lt!d lo bl! lOOS W•rr•n L•M MH•. C•ltlornla ano 300\ W•rron CoHa MPu, Celilornl• and •o
L•ne. CO\I• Meu C•llforn1a Con9r•u,CosleMe\a,CA
S.td w•• w11f bP m~ without covt S••O wt~ •tll tw m4de without covf!·
FU4111 n•nl or w•,,•nto;. f'•Pr"\S Of' 1mot1ed, l\dnt or w•rr•nty, ••or~~\ or 1mp11eo
Publlu..d Or.n9f Cotti O•lly Pilot, •\to title, PC>\WU 1on or wn<umbritnCf"S •\lo 11111. Po\~\'fiion or •nctJmbrances
J •n 17, tt. Fel> \, 17, '"' Jtt II lo \•11\fV '"" unpa•O l>alanco <IV<' on 10 '"'"'' 1~ un1N1d llalanu dve on
'""note or not~ securoo lly '•Id Dff<I 1n. note or no•~• -ur~ by •••d o..o
ol Tru•I lo w11 '71,~0J. plu' Ille ot Tru•I. lo w11 \21,SOO<tl plu\ '""
FICflTIOUS IUSIHESS PUBLIC NOTICE 1011owon9 P\ltrnalPO CO•I\, e.prn••• lollow1n9 P\timated co\I\, '"""""'
NAMIE STATIEMINT .-nd (ldVdn(.t"\ ttt '"~ '1""'"' ot thf'I' 1"'''"' "nd •<h•nc.r\ at thf' time ot tM 1n1ltil
Tnr fOflo.itjnq per\Of't " oou·ui Ou\t ,ICTITIOUS •USINESS PvOht•tion of tf\1\ Nohtt! of S.tltt-out>l1cat1on ot lh1\ NotlCf' ot St11_. "~" ~\ 1111\MI STATlllllllllT _. IO ~.a 10
SOME THIN(; NAT URAL t011 1'nd The lollow1n9 P••WI\\ •re dolnQ DA l EO JMu<trv S, IQ&l DAT EO J6f\U<l<•IS IQ81
po In ted as per son a I terested In the wlll and/or
representative to ad· ~state:
mlnlstu the estate of A petition has been filed
Evelyn L. Firestone Cun· by Paul M. Teeple In the
der the Independent Ad· Superior Court of Orange
ministration of Est•tts County requesting that
Act>. The petition Is set for Paul M . Teeple be apPOint·
hearing In Dept. No. 3 at ed as personal represen·
700 Ci vic Center Drive lali ve to administer the
West, in the City of Santa estate of Oellores Marie
Ana, California on Feb. 18, Thomas, Costa Mesa, ca.
1981 at 9:30 a.m. (under the Independent
IF YOU OBJECT to the Administration of Estates
granting of the petition, Act). The petition Is set for
you should either appear hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
at the hearing and state 700 Civic Center Drive
your objections or fi le West, Santa Ana, CA 9270 1
written objections with the on February 11, 1981 at
court before the hearing. 9: 30 A.M.
Your appearance may be IF YOU OBJECT to the
in person or by your at-granting of the petition,
lorney. you should either appear
I F Y O U A R E A at the hearing and state
CREDITOR or a cont-your objections or file
ingent creditor of the de· written objections with the
ceased, you must file your court before the hearing.
claim with the court or Your appearance may be presen~ it to the personal in person or by your at·
representative appointed torney.
by the court within four I F Y 0 U A R E A
months from the dale of CREDITOR or a cont·
first lssu•nce of letters as ingent creditor of the de·
provided in Section 700 of ceased, you must file your
the Probate Code of claim with the court or
California. The time for pr esent it lo the personal
filing clalms will not ex· representative appointed
plre prior to four months by the court within four
from the date of the hear-months from the date of
ing noticed above. first issuance of letters as
YOU MAY EXAMINE provided in Section 700 of
the file kept by the court. the Probate Code of
If you are interested in the California. The t ime for
estate, you may file a re-filing claims will not ex·
quest with the court to re· plre prior to four months
ceive special notice of the from the date of the hear-
inventory of estate assets ing noticed above.
and of the petitions ac· YOU MAY EXAMINE
counts and reports the file kept by the court.
described in Section 1200 If you are interested in the
of the California Probate estate, you may f ile a re-
code. quest with the court to re-
MEL SPRINGER, ESQ. ceive special notice of the l
Attorney at Law inventory of estate assets
S1r .. 1 Ntwporl Buen. Cel1lo•n•t1 Du""*".. flRST AMERICAN TITLE FIRST AMERICAN TITLE'
11oU SUNSET SYS I EMS 1 J•n1tor1•I l"ISURANCE COMPANY INSURANCE COMPANY
(natlf;l\ ROl'W'rt C,tfl~'1 JI Sunt1'h 8u1ld1nQ M1 1nten•n<e • 1012 ~CaMo'"'4 (oro tt(•l1l0tn1drorp
206 W. Fourth St., Suite 400 and of the peti tions, ac·j
Santa Ana, Ca. 92701 co unts and repo rt s
Published Orange Coast desc r ibed in Sect ion 12001
Dally Pilot, Jan. 22, 23, 29 of the California Probate l rvlnf' CallfOf'nu• 'f'11.. ' Ca ndl•l10f"lt Cir Hunt1noton 8tt•<" '°'" RPct\l~y 8ru<P Bea .. fey
l "'" l>u'l.11\f"'\\ •\ COl"duch•d t>v an 1n l C,4. •2tt•7 Authorllfl'ld OHue' AuthOrlfMj Office,.
dl¥1du__,1 H•rotd R frf'Otr1k,~n tt10rf> Mew 114 F"'1 Fittn St ,.,. Easl F1trf"I St
CN rle\ R C.tllen Verele Cl , Founlaon V•lley CA '1109 ~·"1• An• CA S4M'!la At!~. CA
th" \Ml•""'"' ... , f1100 wolh 1,,.. Wm Jellonon 1087 C•ndl•1111n11 " 1181711 Ttl SSS-3111
C.OV''('f Cl~r11 ot O•dflC}f County on Cir . Hunllf1910n 6eCKh c. .. 1'7,,.1 Pubtt\hr <J 01 itnQf' .... o•\t O•tlv Pvbh\~ Ofanoe Coa\t Oa11y P1101,
JenuA•v • 1411 Tfll\ 11"''"'" ,, conducltd 11v • p,101 Jdn 8 11 l7, l9't 11~8, Jal\ 8 I\ n ''*' 1.o.a1
F tS>OJt , qener•I ~rtrvr\h1p ·--------
Publl\""d Or•nQI' c ...... o~•IY P1l()I I Wiiiiam 0 Je!ler\on PUBLIC NOTICE
1981 ' Code.
377-81 E. Stephens DiFani, At·
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSllllESS
1111\ME STATEMENT
torney at Law, 1900 West
Redondo Beach Blvd.,
P.O. Box 2003, Gardena,
CA 90247, (213) 324-6626. l•f\ 8 II 11 ~ 1'191 118 91 Thi• \l•le,...,..nl w~\ 111.0 Wtlh '""l
Covnly Ci.,. ot Or-Counh on J•n ,.CYITIOUS IUSllllE SS Tne toll-•"9 per\O'" •re do1n11 llU\I
lllAMI STATEMIHT neu
PvbhsfW'd Ounge CO••• Oa11r Puo1
J•n n . 1l 1'. >•t l •I 81 PUBLIC NOTICE:
P\J9UC NOTICE P\JllUC NOTICE
Cw1t1MtN ........ el Cn•lllA .. "TN8 IANK Ofl O•ANOa COUNTY" ef P_.... Y1lly, e-..ty ..
Ori .... ,_.. Demlltk (MMl.:.• ... llrtet It a.. c .... ef IHtllMU .. ~ '1, .
............ 1171
AIS•TS
TIMuuMI ..
CHh and due from banks •. , ......... , ....... ~~:rs
U.S. T,..asury securities •.•....................... 16
Federal funds sold and securities
purcNsed under •greements to resell
In domestic offlCH ........................ 3,400
a. Loans, Total <excluding
unearned Income) .................. 12,538
b. Less: Reserve for POSSlble
loan losses ...........•................ 12s
c. Loans, net: .... , .......................... 1'2,413
Bank premises, F.F. & E., etc.
<including SNone capital INses) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 540 Other assets (including
SNone Intangibles) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26.4
TOTAL ASSETS .............................. 17 S38
LIABILITIES ' Demand dePOslts of individuals
partnerships, and corPOrat(ons ............ 41390
Time and savings dePOslts of Individuals,
partnerships, and corPOratlons .............. 9,360 Deposits of States and ·
POiiticai subdivisions .......................... 200
Certified and officers' checks .... , .......... , .... 207
A. TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
OFFICES .... , ... , ..... : ........... 14, 157
Total demand dePOslts .............. 4,597
Total time and savings dePosits ...... 9 560
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC 1
O AND FOREIG,N OFFICES ................ 1-i, 157
Tbhfr liabilities .................................. 159
AL LIABILITIES ........................ U ,316
•SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY Common stock
a. No. shares authorized . 400,000 .......... .
b. No. shares outstanding. 311 ,355 .. $3, 113,000
TROT~L CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL ........... , 3,113 eta med earnings ..................... _ ........ 109
TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .......... 3 222 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND '
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY ................ 17,538
MEMORANOA Stand~y letters of credit outstanding ............ 380 a. Time certificates of deposit in
denominations of $100,000 or more .......... 5,-i55 b. Other time dePOslts in
amounts of S 100,000 or more .................. 676
Market value of investment securities ............ 86
The undersigned, Lawrence R. Holmes Presi-
dent and Chief Executive Officer and Edw:iard H
Downer, Senior Vice President and Cashier of t~
above-named bank, each declares, for himself alone and not for the other:
I have personal knowledge of the matters con·
tained in this rePOrt (including the reverse si de
hereo.f), and I believe that each statement In said re-
port is true. Each of the undersigned, for himself alo~e and not for the other, certifies under penalty of
pequry that the foregoing is true and correct. Ex-
ecuted on January 19, 1981, at Fountain Valley California. '
1s 1 Lawrence R. Holmes
I S / Edward H. Downer
Published Orange Coast Daily Pilot, January 22,
1981 362-81
I
PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE I
Notot• '' i..rebv G••<'n •h•I th• 8 •nk NOTICE tlllVITING llDS
ot Or•"91' G~t, 10101 Sf•t•r Aven-... NOh <f' 1\ hf'reby Q•v•n th•I the Fount•1n V•llt 'f, CA 9'110I n-e1s flltd, 8o•ro of Ttu\tft4; of ow Co•'' Com
w1lh tn• Ff'Otr., Oepo~11 tnsur•nct munltv Colt~ 01strict of Or•nQ•
Co,po r•t1on. •n •DPlt<•t•on to County, C•llfOf"ni•, w1ll r~cf'tvf' ''•l•d
E\t•l>l1\h • A •rnot• S.rv1ce-F•c•llh b •d\ YO to I' 00 • m M ond•y, PUBLIC NOTICE: 1 '0· '"1 I F1S414t
FICTITIOUS I USIHESS J•~u~~'1;:c'F~~~,'~~~I Oallv f,'~~I FICTITIOUSIUSIHESS Th• lollow1n9 f>et\Oni •rt do1n9 NAM RON INTERNATIONAL,
HAME STATEMENT bu\ln~H•U 1'767 MacArlhur Blvd Slllff 1\0
lh• IOllOw•flQ ~''°"I\ Ooon9 bu•• THE HEl<iHH. L TO . 21•7 Ou lrvlne. C•lllornl•'l?ll) .
PUBLIC No·TICE wn1tn •PPllUtoon ,.., ecc991t<1•or111 F•bru•rv • '"' •• '"" Purclle \lnQ 1n9 on De<ombor H. 19e0 Otp.,lmtnt of \aid COll89• dlll•l<I
NAlltllESTATElitllElllT
t "~' to11ow1nq Dflr\On\ "'@' doing
OW\lf'lf'\\ ill\
CONCOURS AUTOMOT lllE ~ERVICfS. '" 161n 511 .. 1 Co•I•
116•\t, C•lllorno• •1611
IC and E 01\tributo1 \ Inc rl
C 4 11torn•• <MPor•llon 110 l&tn Strttt
t'l\ftt M•w C•t''°'"'" 92&7'
'"•' OU\I,,...,, I\ Condufltld b'f a (CH
DOrt1tf•O'l
K a!\d E 0 1\lt 11><ito" '"'
(0 I f'OO< y J I( OOj) · fr., .• ,u,,.,
rtu\ \l~ttm .. nt ... , r1IK1 llW'tffl '"P
Ountv (lflo•I!. of Ordnqe Counh on
••nu•r f • 1911
F1Ut17
Pub•"""<! 0<•"11" C°"\I D•llv P1101 J•n 8 a 11.1'1. 111t1 1•1 &1
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUl•USINIH
1111\MlESTATIMIHT
T ... 1011-•nQ "",._.. ... 001119 """ ... ,. ..
OLD COUNTll Y LANDSCAPES
2MJo.onn,Co.1e1111 .. a,Calllornl••1616 ·
Go11y E Bvr•-•. 11' ltlh Slrffl
Nt wpot18each,C•lllornf•t:l616 '
Chfrlfl IC Olt, 2• Joenn. Co\!•
llM .. , C:•l•fornl•t2616
T'11• ""''"*" It conducteo by • Qt nerat.,.rt...,"'lp.
<;aryE Bvrrow-s
T'11l .. 1 .. -...1 .... lllect '"'"' .... CoynlY" Clerk or Ore"l)e Counly on
J•nu•ryl, ltll
1'111147
Pul>IKl>ed Or-COl\I D•lly Piiot, J~'" u .. 21,n ,Feei.s, '"' 111 .. ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSllllEH
:1111\ME STATIMElllT
T lie lpllowtng Pf"°" I\ do1nQ bull
nesi •\• (•I NATY'S FASHION (bl G.8
BOOKfEPING a. INCOME TAX
Sl!R Vl;(:ES CCI DAILY STAR
REAL TY, llW Mud Sire.I. Founl•ln
Ve lley, C•lllomia '1109
Gene "· Blanco, 115JI Mtdd
Slreal, Fount•ln V•ll•y. C•lllo•nl•
Ulot
Tiii• l>u\lne.s •• <ondvcteo bv •t1 1n
olwlCIU•I ae ... A, Bt...co
Tiii• sl•lement WH 111.0 wlln tn•
Cov"ty Cle rk ot Or•nG" Counly on
Jan ... ty 1, 1,.1, l'IS271)
p,,bli\hecl Or•n9t Coe•I O•lly Pl101.
)•" I. 11.11, H , '"' 111•11
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.CTITtOU• IUIUtlH
NAMI lfAT•MIElfT
Tllf lo41owl"9 per-. II llCHr19 l>u.sl ........
PUtlLIC NOTICE n•\\tt\ uonl OrtvP, Sufi~ ltt, ''"''"" N o-on.10Weiwntluh tOTorr~r
I
CONARD ASSOCIATES, 1001> C••1tornl•WllS P int\ L•ne. Ne,.porl B••cn ,
Sw6n Ori•~ CO\I• Mt!•• C•litornoa JHn·l'Mroe SJ>erlinQ, 71'2 Dul>Ol't C•lilornle ~ •
•11>1• Drove. = ttl, lrvl<-., Cal1torn1• tJllS C•l l'Mr9v11es, 1S M•ln Sall Orov•, ~ICTITIOUS IUSllllESS I J •me~ W Con•rO 100• Sw•n Andr•w Sw•••ly, 1"1 Dupont Coron•*' ~r. C•lllornlt •161S 1111\MI STATEMllllT Drlve.Co•ll•Mew.Callforn1••7f>1• Drove, c Ill, 1rv1M, C•llforn•• 91711 Tl\1\ llustM\> " conouclto Dy a
The fot10•1n9 Perso"'' •re dolnQ Th1\ bu11nttu h lMtdu<t•d by •r+ In -.John G Low•. 119? Dupont Drive. ltm ft•O H rtner\hlp.
l>u\inf")\ •s O•v•0"1•' = 1 tt, lf'V•Mie' Cal1torn1• 9711S N. Oo~ld Wttlsenftuh
CLARI( KENNEDY FlORIST Ja ...... \W Con•rd rn1s llu\lnH\ I\ conducteo by • C•IM<tr9ul11" 1••~ Red Htll Avenu«", • fOI, Cot~• '"''' ~t•t~ment w A\ tlleod wilh IP'M! 1 lun•ted par1nerJhip Thit, \tatement w•s t11eici wi th the
Mu a. Calllornla'1161' I Counlv CJtrk ot Oran~ Counlv on Andrew Sw•vrly County Clerk ot Oran9t Counlv 0"
Cl•r• Kennpdy '''l R"tQ~r' Jan"•'V& 1"8t tt,1\ ,1.ttrment was fllfld w itf'I th« Janu•rvt>, 1'81
Ori ... Costa-... Callforn1• 916Jt FU•1J Co,,nly Cl••k ol Or.in11t Covnh on
Oorothy W l(•~Oy, 1713 RulQt"I Pvbli•""" Clr""G" Co.t\I D••lv Pilol, Jenuary 6, t'lt>
f UJI04 Pullli\""<I 0<•"91' Cot\! Daily P1101,
Oro11e. '°''• -... Calitorn•• •1'16 Jan 8, 15, n, 1'1, 1091 t0 -81 FU•t ~his bu•11·wu I\ «><<clv<IHI b• •n '" Publl\l'!HI O<ancie Coa•I D•1ly P1io1.
J•n I 15 21. 1'1, 1'91 "'·81
O•vodv•I I~ & w1f•I J•n 8, IS, 11.1'1, 1"1 111·11 Cl•r11 "•~dy PUBLIC NOTICE
Thi\ \latemenl wa• h ied w1lll I""
Covnly Cl~rl< of Or ""111' County on J•n
10, 1981
f'IM1U
Pvllll\IW<I Oranot Cot•I OallV Piiot, Jen_ 11. tt, Foti. S, 12, 1911 ]Ji.ti
PUBL.IC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUI IUlllllEH
H-1 ITATIMINT
T~ ~~wl~ ~r~M art ~I~
butln .. \\•'.\
INCLININ(; INVESTMENr s. JIU
8YSiM H Center Dr , Sulit 1.&0. Ir••.,., CA ,.JllS
C. K Jr. -L•urel M. Allen. I 14 E
10th SI Coot• ,,_.sa, CA t'427
Steve,, S •nd P•t•rcta J PesclWll
U411 C•lle Coline, P-•v, CA~
Oontld I( ano Sh•'°" N M"neno 11'51 Fla9U•ll L•ne Hunttnglo~ 8ea<'1,CA.,.._
Thi• bvsln<'u '' cond.,cled by • 9ttMr•I ,,.,..,.,\hip, c. I( Allen Jr
Thi> \le1emeftl ""' lllfd with the
Counly ci.rk ot Or-County on Jan
20. '"' FU41_,
Publl-Or-COl\I D•lly Piiot, Jel\. 12, n. Fell I, n .... , JU .. ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IU~INIESS
NAME STATEMENT
Tho IOllowlnQ ll<'r"°" I\ cl01n9 bu••
ne~\ •\
NEWPORT J RVINE COM
MERCIAL EQUIPMENT, IJ Ptnl•ll
lr••M, C.illtornl• 9111' '
R•cnard DPuhtn 13 Plnl•ll
trvll\f', CehtOfnl• '111,.
Thh buimn' ., t onduc.ltd by an In div ldu~I
R1<1Wrd Oeul~h
Thi\ \lal..,,.nl wa\ lilect wllfot I~
Counlr Cler-of Or4'1~ Coul!IY 011
January~. t'l!ll
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSllllEH 111-E STATIMIHT
Th' to••owlnQ Qef\Oft Is dolno buM
nll\\ •S
CORONA P4CIFIC DESIGNS,
tlOll S~yp,ar~ C•r<I<'. Suite J, Irvine.
Calllor11la '111"
N Oon<llll We1\C'nflufl, 10 Torrey
P 1n~s Lan~. ~•wpott Be•<h.
(allforn1a 9M60
1 ht\ bu'\lneu 1\ ConcJU< tf"d t>v •n tn· dlwldua1
N Oon•IO W•os ... fluh
Tll•\ SLlle""'"t ••S fllfd wllh Liie
County Clerk ol o,.n9" Covnty on
January 6, '"'
FU•2
Pub'"'*' Cl< At\QI! Coa\I O••ly Piiot Jar1 I, H 11. 1'. l'ltl 11111
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUSIUSIHIH
1111\MI STATIMllllT
l hP fOllOWh''Q Of'rlOn\ •r• do11t9 bu\I·
n•\\•S
M ICH A EL DA VID
ENlERPltlSES, JOSI Out> House C1r-
<ll',Co\t•Mew,C•lilornl•tt'16
Ml<'-' De••d.JOSIClllbHou .. Cor· <le, Co•l•Mesa, C•lllorn11t1616
Howard L CMlk•i <ieth. JOSI Club
HOUH Clrci.. Co.I• Mew. Celllornl•
'7616
Thi• bv\IM\S I\ conducted by a
Clf nf r .ti p•rtntr\/lop.
Howtrd l CMl-el(;•lls
Tn., ••• ,._,.,, ... , lllfd wltf\ '""
Coul\ly Clerk ot Ora"114' County on
January9, '"'
l'UJHr
Rubh1NICI 0r"'9P Coast Oa11r Piiot,
J•n 1s, 11,n , Feb s, '"' 71•·8'
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI •USINIEH
1 FISJf24 llAMI lfATIMIEllT Pub '''*' o .. ~ Coa\t D<1lly Piiot, Tiit followlng per\Orls ere Clolng
J•n I , U.n.1' '"' IS0.11 llU•lneua1·
"PUBLIC NOTICE
ANDREWS INVESTMENTS, )132
8olH A-, Sult• IOI, Hun0"91on
Beach, C•fliorlW• nMt
PUBLIC NOTICE STATEMENT OF WlfHD•AWAL
~ltOM
~ICTITIOUSIUSlllllU l'AltTlll•SHl l' Ol'IE•ATING
Nl\MESTATIMllllT UHDllt
The tollowil\Q .,.,.0n, •re dolno ~ICTITIOUS IUSIHISS llAMI
busineue1 T"" loll-Ing.,.,..,,.,.., wlll>Orawn
·SOMETHING NICE. JOO Warren •• • 9 enert1 P•r lner from lllf
l •M , CO\le Mew, C•lltornla t 2'16 1M'1narshlp -•atin.9 under In. 11<-
N•ncr Lov Hert, JO•I Warr•n llllou• 1>~1,,.., n•me 01 ORANGE
L•M.CO\teMew. Ct lllorn1t•2'Jt COAST JANITORIAL., llS1 Marsell!•
""'''-' H•r<Md Mt t1, JCMt W•rr•n ~1•. Munt1R91on Beach. Calltornle
L•ne. Co.la -w . CtlllOfnla 92U6 Tiie .llctlllou~ """""' ,,.--.,,, •. Thll bu•IMU I\ condu<l•CI by • ..~ • ' 9e,.•••I perl,.r\hlp menl tor lhe !Nt1tWrihlp wes flled on
N•ncy Lou Hart April tt, '"°In IM County ot Oren~
This •l•t..,...nt w.s flle<I wilh 1.,. Fu11 Nam. e nd AOdr•u ol II••
County Clerk ol OranG" County on p._,.on w1111c1r-1ng-
J•nvery &. 1'81 Slfp'1en Patrick Sh•pa rd, 11\7
l'U•lt M.,~••lle Drive, Hunlin91on 8H ch.
P"blisl'!HI Or•"9f Coa~t De••• p 11011. Calilorn1• 926•7
Jen 8, 1s. 11.1'1. t'8t 11'·8 St-Sfleparo
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUS IUSlllllH--.-
1111\ME STATIMINT
l'U7111
Pvbli•""d 0<•"9t Coa\I Oaoly Piiot, J~arv 1, •• 1S, n .... , Sl70·IO
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th• toll-•"9 ,,.,_, •S doing bu\" STATIMllllTOI' AIAlllDOlllMlllT "'"a\ 01' USIE 0~ CREATIVE WEDDINGS, t~ll l'ICTITIOUSIUlllllHllll\MI
S•n L•on AttnU., Founl•ln V•ll•v The loll-ing per10n Ile• •INndon.d
C•lllornl• '1109 tn. uw ol the llC1i,llous l>ullnHS nt me
B•lh Je•n 0••1>. 10'51 S•n OUICKTAN MFG , 33057 C•fl•
Lton Avenue_ Fount•ln V•llev Awledor, S•n Ju•n C•Pl•lrtno,
C•lllornl• '2108 Celllornle '11615 01!,~i~.':"'lneu I• conduct~ by •n In The F1cUll~ Bu•il\en Neme •f·
0.11• JH n 0 .. ,, ltrre<I 10 -· WtS lllfd in Or.,ge • Covnty on JUM ti, '"°· This sl•lement w" lllfd wilh the Oo9an Klr•mH, '"27 \lprmo111,
Counly Clerk ot Or•ncie Counly on HvntlnQton 0.tch, C•lilornla '2M6
J•nv•rv •. '"' Thi• bull<WU '"" cono..cl@d 1>1 en
l'ISJlll •nd~ldu•I. PubllsNICI 0r•"9t Coa\I Daily Piiot ~n Klrtmll
J•n I, t). U, 7'1, 1'111 11a-1i Thi• sl•l-1 ••• lllecl wllh the
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATIMIHT 01' AUNDOHMllllT
Ol'USIO~
Coul\IY CJttrk ot Orange County on
J anu•ry •. '"' ~,, ....
Published 0r.,. Coe•I De lly Pilol,
Jen.'· n ,22,n . '"' 110.t t
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATEM•llf 01' A•AllDOHMllllT
Ol'UllOI'
l'ICTITIOUI IUllHUS NAMI
The l<Mlowl"9 per-. ha• aO.ndonaCI
-_ Th<' oermenenl iout1on 01 lh• pro· •ouled •' 1310 AO•m• •••nu•, Coll• ~ICTITIOUS IUStlllESS POWO lac1lily I\ 111.0 W•rr-.r A•• Mt'W, C•lilorn••. a1 wh1<h llm• s"d
NAMI STATIMElllT Fovnl••n V•lley, CA '1109 t11d\ ••II lie pUbhcly oe>tl\f'd •no r .. d Th~ follow1no M r\on\ are doino Any Pl'f'IOf'I •rtSl'll"G to comm•nt Of\ for
11 .......... , '"" appllc•llon may Ill• Iii\ commenl\ P RINTINC:. ANO BINDING SHORT
THE METALS INVESTOR Ill W on wr1t1ng wolh ,,_. A891on•I Orrector TE RM SCHE0Ul£, SPRING 1 .. 1
I/th Strttt, G6. C°'lt Mt'w C•illorno• ot lh• Fedu•I D•Po\11 ln\v,.nc• CCC 91611 Corpor•llon al ii> R8ijlontl Ofllce. • All bid\ ar. lo lie on accorO.no with
Tti• Common ~n\t Pre>>. 1roc , a MontGO""'''f' Street, Svll• J600, S•n 11'\e B•d Form IMlr..ct1onl ano ConC11
C•IHornld corPor•t•on n1 w 11th Fr•n<1uo, C•llfornl• t•1CM It •ny t1on1 anc:I *<.itlc•tlons wtuch •r• now
Sir.et. (;6 Costa M~u C•t•forno• .,.,~n O.\ore\ lo proln l ,,,. or.,.lln Oft 111• •nd mey ~ wcureo 1n Ille office
97671 of 1111\ •PC>1•ut1on ,,. ,.., • "9"' to ot Ill• Pv•<~•"9 Agenl ot u1d collf9P
f ht\ bu~1nf.,., ,., conducted o, " tor l 'o 1f h• filf'S • wrtttffl not•<• of his m~ d1\tr1ct
oor•ho" tent w1lrrt ttw Reo•on•I Oire<tor wt1'1•n E•ch btddtr mu\t \ubmlt with t11'S
1~ Common Sffl.e II d•f\ ot ,,,. ••\I P\A>hUllon ot lhr t11d •<••ht«• 1 ~,,.o ttrllli•O cfottt •. p,~, tnc not1<t T~ noncont1denh•t por-Oon\ o or b1d0tr-'s aono m~ p.ay•bt• to t~
P"GO' Ran• •h• •PPll<•l•on •ro on 111• in lht.ord•• of,,,.'°''' Commu1111y Coll119P
Vier Pr~sidenl ReQiOf'l•I Offk• •\ p.art ot IM put>llc D1str1c.1 Bo•rd ot Tru,tees In •n
'"'" \lat•ment <N4\ t11..o wllh IM ftlr m••nt•lrwd by ow COt"oor •UOft ~mount N>t l•H tP\•n ftitt percent ~ S')
County Cl~rk of Or•nof' county on Tfh\ hlf' I\ .-v••l•tMf' for e>ubl•<. 1n\Pf'C of '"• \um btd ., • vu•r•ntff fh..lt the
Januar y &, 1'91 tion dUrl"'J r eiqul•r bLi\lnH\ hOUr\ bidder Wllf enttr Into tl'le propoMd
P ubl1\f\e d P"r\uenl to St<llon Conl••<I It Ille Wm<! " ••trClt<I lo
J03 U(bll 11 OI tn.. R.,10 anCI R8ijul•· nom In tn.. ewnl ol l••lur• lo •nler 1n
tlOflS ot the F_,., l>epcK1I lnwr•nu 10 w en contra I. lht procffd• of '""
•u-Put>llSN!d °'""111' Cot•I D•••v Pilot,
J•n •• 15. 17, "· 1•1 11 .... Corpor•llon-cfltck "'" lie lorfellt<I, or '" '"" c•u
PUBLIC NOTICE Tn. B•nk ol Oren91 Covl\ly of • bond, 11'\e lull •um ,,.,r..,I will bf'
EdWerd H OowMr torlelleCI to 1t1CI coll-di sine I
Sotnlor V10 P•HIMl\t Cashier No bl-• ""~ wltl>O,.,. hi• bid for
STATEMl!HT 01' AIAlllDONMElllf P"llh\lltcl Or-Coa•I Dally Piiot, • Pf"od "' lorty·I••• COi Oays '""'
Ol'UHOI' J•n. 17, tt, '"' l7'·11 ,,,. date Mt IOf lhe oe>tnln9 ther..,t
f'ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS lllAME
T,,. tolJowing -""' ~ •bantlon.a ,,_. uw of,,.. Uctltiou\ bus1rwu n•m•
M & M AUTO BODY SHOP. 1101
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pomon•. CMI• ""'"· C•lllornl• •~21 ~ICTITIOUSIUSlllllH Tn. Flcllllou\ Bu•lnes> N•mt r• 1111\MllTATIMllllT
terr•d lo •bOYP w •s filed tn Or11n~ The following"''°"' •t• 001no bu\1
County on SotPltmlltr 1•. 1'90 .......
Kalm•n• Kuw•, 11• W Jo•nn PARSONS' AIR, INC , "Sll S
StrMI, Co\1• !Mw. C•hlO•n1•'1U7 AirPOrt W•y. Sant• An., C•llfornl•
1 T"" Boord OI T ruslfft ,.,.,,,., th•
prlwll-of ••lt<llng any "'"•ii blCIS
or to ••iw .ny lrrevuter1t1if'\ or tn~
torm•lltlfl In any lllO or 1n IM blOdl"9
NORMAN E WATSON s.cr ... ry, 11o .. d ot
Tr<nteet.Cot\I
C.ommu111tr Coll-01\1,.tl
Pvbll\lltcl 0r.,. Co.ost Delly Piiot,
Janu•ry 22. tt, l"l 11•11
T "'' llvslnns *" conducled Dy .., '1101 lndiv1du•I D1<k'\ Avi .. lon, Inc., • Celltof"nt• ---------
Ka1m..,. l< .. we <orpot •tlon, "Sl' S. Alrp0t1 Way, Suile,
Thi> >lattmonl ... , l•l@d wllh lh• •.S•nl•AN,C•lllornl••2707 PUBLIC NOTICE
Counly Cterk ol Or•n9" Cou,,ly on Thi• blninn•" <ondllcleel llY • cor
Oectmber 30, 19'0 t>O••llon -"CTITIOUS IUSINISS
FltMll Dlcll'sAvlallon, Inc llAMI STATIMIHT
P"bllshe<I 0<""9t COHI Dally Piiot, J•mes R, Persons. The lollow1n9 per son• •re doln9
J•n '· •• •S. n. '"' Slll·IO Prt s.o.nt o•i.lnttt" Thi•""""""' wa> filed with,... COAST PROPE RTIES. JIS•
County Clerk ot Orange Coyntr on C••••tr• Place. Fulltr10fl, C•Jitornl• PUBLIC NOTICE J•nverv ll. '"' 9762J
l'IC1'1T1ous 1usiNEis
1111\MI STATIMElllT
FU»U J •Ck R Bern•.•. II Corpor•t• Pubh•-Or-Coesl Dally Piiot. P lau Ori••. Nowpo•t Be.teh.
T fl• 1011o;wlng .,.rsons "" ooln9
bUll'1•H •S
Jen 15,17,H,Fell I,'"' J)t.e1 C•llfor"'•'1MO
PUBLIC NOTICE lfMSAFE OF LOS ANGELES tJOI
Lo9en "••n"e "B", Co•I• Mua. Calllornie '26111
Planned Prole<llon Inc , llO FICTITIOUS IUSIHIH
Loo•n A•l'nve "B", Colla Mua. NAMI STTI SYATIMllllT
Celllornl• .,.2' The loll-Ing !»•""' i• <1o1no llv••
Tnls bUslnts. I• conducted br" to no• as poratlon CECELIA., I Wt11lewal•r O"••,
Pl--ProtKllOI\ Inc Coron• dtl M•r, CaHfornl• •1'11 St<r.t••Y·Trttwrer LorraotW C N.O•er. I Whlttwater l(tlth ~II Orlw•. Coron• 0.1 M•r. Ca lllorn1t
This •l•l•ment wes 111.0 """ 11'\e 97615 County Cl•r-ol 0,.nge CovntY on dl:l~l!a':"slnns I• Condv<le<I by •n In·
Jan.,.rv 6. '"' f'IUfll Lorrall\e C N.Oler
Publlshfd Orar19t Coesl D•lly Piiot Thi• Slltt""'9nl was lllfd with , ...
Jen. I, U , 12, 1', t"I ·~· Count ii Clerk Of Or•nge Covntv on J•nu•ry 6, '"1
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.,,, ...
Publl\fled Or-Cotti D•llY Piiot,
Jen I, U, 12. n. '"' 11S .. I ------------
Frank Cimono. J r . JIS6 c.11vere Pit<•. f'ulll'rlOI\, C•Hfornl• '762J
Ed Fewr, 1'11 Vi\I•. Lonq S.ach,
C•lilorn1• _,l
Joe McCaleb, U111 Orv C•ftYOI'
C,o ld Creek Road Cala baU >
Calllorn1• "101
R19 W•lll>. '~ Pat> Point Drive. Co•on•, C•lllornl• t1110
N1cno• .. B•llMki, 11HO S•n
Ftrn•nclo Ro.od, Sylm•r . c .. uornle
"l47
Bob Cerullo. :IO'l6 Color-St,...I,
Lo119 Beach, C•lllornl•
lllct,.•CI Ctrvllo, 1177 P•rU l•ld
LeM. Le Vtrne. Celllornle
S.r9lo c .. 1ro ... lS.,, Corl•dt. £1
i,lonte. Calllornl• t lll3 '
ll\O,,..s Beett••. llO T,,. Vll1•99.
•JOI. •-lluch, C.lllornle tOtll
Tiii\ l>•1t1ntt1 Is conouctt<I "' •
QeMrtl -'tW"hlP
Jac:ti " ...... , lfOltMA "°"TMCllOSS, 8 roller -
ll•el Estele Servlcts. 1011 l'tC:TITIOUllUSllllEH
F ...... 11111 •d., T111lln. CA t2MO. HAMI STATIEMINT
Donelct II ...__., 11141 O.OCS.r
StrHt, Fovntell\ VtlltY. Calllorni• 91109
~ICTITIOUS •USIHIH NAlllll
The toll-1"9 person hes eO.ndonad
'"' un of the fictitious bullMn "'"" KA.E OIS"rRl llUTORS, I" W 16111
St'"''· Co.It MC'w, Cetllor"I• t2'21
The Flclltlou• Bu•lneu N•me re.
ltrred to -wes filed In Or.,ge
Covntr "" J-ry J1, 1'11
Rtcfla"' NHf Eelon • .._. LenWOOd
Ori••, Costa Mew, Ca lllornle '1•11
Thi\ butlllHS wal Conduclecl by ... lndlvlelu•I.
I ... USO of ow llcllllous bulll'IHS n•-l'lCTITIOUS IUSINIH
CONCOUltS AUTO 800Y. 115 W HAMI STATIMlllT :~!~7 Slrfft. C0tle Mue. C•lifornla ne~::,l<Mlowlng person Is doln9 llUSI·
PUBLIC NOTICE , This llet--s llled with lllt
Covnty Clerk of Or•"99 c ounty on
December IS, l'IO, ...,_ LOttlM A"'"" Nortll<rou, = ,eet ... r'1111 lld., Tu•lln, CA ... !~~.l<Ml-1nQ oar"°" h oo1n9 l>u•I·
Tlllt ~IS c-.Cttd by ti\ In· Cl'4Af!LES CHIPS OF lllVINE. 3)
JoeM 0. Aftdf9Wt, , .. , Dffder
SlrHI, Founltln Vtll•Y. Celllornl• '1709 llk nero N••I Eaton The FlcllOous Bln!Mn Name re. HOMECRAFTERS CONSTRUC·
ltrred to -WM liltd In o .. ,... TION, 7'17 ............ •8, Hvntlr19ton
dlv-..1• EeQle Point. Irvine, C•llfornla 9711•
...,,,.. Hor'9Kr-F loyCI Tro••ll. JS Eeol• Po1n1
Thll busiMSS Is ,_ .. d by ell In·
dlwldllet ,......,. a wlfel.
This , .. l_t Wts llled Wiii! lllt
County Cltrk ol Ore,,. Cou,.ty on
J•l\11try t, '"'
County °" F.O..litry 2', '"° Stach, C•lllornl• '1M7
Rlcherd Neel Eeton . .._. L•n-Cnrh J•ller y Hultgren, 1121
11111 ,........... WM llletl 11,, tllt tr•lne, C•llloml• •nu c .. rti of Or..,. Count:'o,.J.... This buslMn I• «inducted bv •n in.
~lctll.Andrews • 1''111'1
Drive, Cost• Mew, Celllornle 92671 Hewm•n •II. Hunllnolon B••th,
Tlllt 111111,,.., •H <Olldvclfd by .., C•lllornle fJMI
20 • l'INI• Cllvlelu•I
""""Or ... COMI Delly l'li.t., FlovdT•owell
This , .. _ •M tiled with 1,,. Publlllled Ore119e Coest Oelly l'llot
County CIHll of 0r..,. c-y 011 Jlf'. J•11· '· u , n. tt, '"' ,.,_,j lndl•klutl. Tiiis bullMU Is <onCluctt<I by en In·
RlcMrd N•el E•lon Cllvlduel.
Jlllt IJ, 2', l'ttl. S. It. ltll lJO.tl This slele""'"I w•s 111..i wlt'll ... "·'"!. Tiiis 11 .. _, ,..., 111.0 wllll Ille C""I• J. Hultgren
C•unty Cl••• ol Orenee county on Thh slet-1 ••• lllfd "'"" tlle
PUBLIC NOTICE
County ClerM of O«tn99 Covnlv on
Jt ,,Utr'f' /, 1911
,.,..,.,
P11blltfltd Oranoe Coesl Delly Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE Je"U"'f' •. , .. ,_ Covnty c .. ,,. .. 0r....,. c-•Y 0 ...
Ft HIM Jen. 22, 2t, Fff. S, IZ, II 111 .. 1 l'IDIM J •nuery •. '"'·
Pwl>ll•NCI er.,.. Coe11 Dell.,. ""°'· ""•" P11bllsfJld Or•-. Cot\! Dall~ Piiot.
Jen. I, tf, 12. n. '"' •M·ll
STAT•MINTOl'AUNDO•MaHT
O~UIEOI' !Ja n. I, U. n. 2t, '"' ,.._., Pwbtltfltd Or ..... Cotti Delly l'li.t, t---------------1 J•11. I, IS. 22, 2', '"' 11MI
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI IUlttt•H NAMI
T ... lof-"I PH-l\eW ......
"CTITIOUS aUSIMS.U -.I IM UM .. .,,_ flctlt'-bus!Mu l'ICTITIOUI IUMM•ll
l'ICTITMIUIMlllNlll Tll I ~= ITAT8MMT d I 11•met MAIM tTAf•Mlllf ~ITATI= • O . 119 -IOl\t ere • 119 R It 0 HOMES, IOOl2 O•tfleld T"• tot~ --Is d9f-bu•I· T ......... .__._ .. -.i....... A-... ..,, .. -......... '•'I"--•· ~ ... _. .... • -·,... ._.....__ IMnfllfU CATALYTIC CltlATIOHS, •1t m. r • ..,. '" -,_, __ _.: -
••· r-. llfwl O .. MeM ca IMnl • I N I • G Y 5 Y S T IE M S LAGUHAalACHMOTOIUNH .. --·•\ ' • ' 1 I• Tiie l'lctlt'-hllnass H-.... INTEltHATIONAL INC., 1• ,..,.,_t N. Cfflt M._-y L.-... h ' " mn ltrrtd lo ....._ WM tiled I,, Or.,,.. C t Q I S I Cell.,.....,... • -..--ec • ltlcNf'll Eew•rd H.,wltr. ''°' County °" A""'""·'"'· .::C:~ C.~ ~ ''°· H•wporl
C ...... W ... tillr1" C w.,.. ~Hlllf'f ...... C•re11• ... M•r, DALE SlMaltO, , .. ltftt-'1• H•~ c. Ylf't'I, • o...._ -·
•!If c·~~-~Y'!· ... , aey-•''::::':... ._,.... ,,. '*"" T«rece, eor-•• MM, c .. """'' ...,111e11, .. G--. °''" •tt•. Drive, ~ -II C .. """1• StrMt C.-. MltM ' tttlS McLHll, VA mot .... _ • • ,CellfWlll•...., ' l'HILll> H. McNAMll, 11"4 Tlllt..,_etu....._ ... tyecar. ""' .............. ..,"' ..._ JMctl ....... .,. C9Mlr ., .... ltnlt. ~ ..,...... .. ... ... ., ........ .._ ....... ..., 1111111 "'"'-CW ..... Cellflnlle..., C .. lfi9nlte..,_ -"-Mir
i ""--. Tille .......... c~M "' • '"'-..,_, wit ceMll<ttd " • ''*"" irrc':':'9' ..... ,., ,.,..,,,.. _.., ,.,...,.... ..
Wttty(..... ltlctllf91......... """"" ,_,._ ....... C. YIM
Tilte .......... -, .... Wltll ... ftlh ........... -""" """ ... '"" .......--..... .. .. ,.,....... i=~=·ef ~ ... C--. aft f.~:..°""4f0r .. c-t1JfftJM, ~=~'f.:, ef 0rM8' CWflty 9" 1~~==:.::J::.
• P1._ ....... • • •• ltt1, ~Or-. Clllill Getty lilltlt, ~ ..... 0r-. Celle°"" "91, ........... Or NMttt . PH ..
JM. u.n.1t,,....1,"" ,,,.., Jt111 n , "·,.... s, tt,"" I .., JM. 1, ,., n, -... ""c:... o.ttr ,~ ~ .... 0r-. CNet 09ltT ,._, . "; ..., , ..... ""'·'· ........ "" ,.,..,
.,.,, ,.,.,. ..... ,.. , . ..__ ., .................. ~_...-..._ .....
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI aUllllUI
NAMl ITAHMINT
TIM foltowl,.. ,.,..,., ere ctolr19
IMlslMSlft!
IMAGE TAX t. ACCOUNTING.
tm °'-0r1 .. • 102. """"""°" h«ll, c.llfeml• .... ,,,.... o. ei.-tt ,.._.u.,.,
e C••""""• ""°"'•""· tm 0c-Drtn •tot, H1111t11111111 ••Hll,
c.1"9nll• .....
Tllte ....... '-~ lilY I <Ir· ,., ...... . 1,.....0....c.r, . , wca c. Cell!lt-. · .......... n...~-........... c_,., c""' tf 0r.,... '*""" "' J_,,, .....
PHlwr ~car..«:.-o.llY ....... .JM. I, U, ft. It, "'1 0'41
l'ICTITIOUI IUlllllH
Nl\MI STATllllllllf
Tilt loll-1"9 Pin.I Is dCH"9 bu\I· "'" .. _ l(MY -.ND ASSOCIATES, , .. ,
Vero. MM Drive, Hvnllnoton 8ta<h.
Celllornl•._
Herbe'1 c. v1 .... ll50 Gr...,sboro
Drlvt •tt4, Mel•..,, Vlr9lnle t2102
This buSll\•U It Conducltd b'f ... II\•
dlwlelutl,
1'4ertlH1 C. Yim
This , .. ,_, wes llled With lllt
Coul\ty Cler• of OrtflQt Covntr on
J e ..... ,... •• '"'. ......
PuttlllNCI er.,.. coest Delly "''°'·
Jen. I , IS, 22, 2'. '"' lt).11
PUBLIC NOTICE
HUNTE It A VOH • ....... .,. .. uw
, ... l'alrdll .. Ori ... , ........
.... Oftke ... llt77
l"IM,~tt7U
l'Ul•U l'vl>ll"-0 Or ... C-1 O.llr Piie!,
Jan .. ary 1, •. u, n. l"' s2".to
PUBLIC NOTICE
.,
GENIMLNEW8
Cops gef laser•.
Irvine pblice gt Hugh Hogan prepares to
fire newl) obt arn ed taser. a non-lethal
we apon that fires ele<:tracally charged
dart. The dart, attached to taser by a wire.
...
temporarily incapacitates victim. Police
say persons shot by lasers suffer no lasting
ill effects.
Beating
charges
filed
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-Eipteen present and
former Synan9n mem-
bers have been indicted
by the Karin County
Grand Jury on char1es
1temmin1 from the al-
I e 1 ed kidnaping and
beating in 1978 of a
former member, At·
torney General George
Deukmejian said.
One ol those listed in
the indictment, Howard
Garfield of San Fran-
cisco, surrendered Wed-
nesday. Garfield, once
head of Synanon's law
offices, was released on
his recognizance and his
attorney said he was
near an agreement that
would eliminate
Garfield from the indict-
ment.
Thu~ey, Jenuwy 22, 1111
LIVE WELL FOR LESS
FINAL CLEARAWAY
NOW
2/3_DFF
ORIGINAL PRICES
STARTS FRIDAY!
TWO DAYS ONLY!
I ANO SAVE 10 ANO MORE OFF ORIGINAL l'HICES I
ON SELECTED 1T£MS IN Glf I GALLtRll S
ACCESSORIES ANO THE MAN'S SHOP·
DAILY PILOT ..
····-.. .•. , .
••• '' ,, ..
....
, -
Gas savings urged
The victim was iden-
t iri ed as Kim Myer s .
Deukmejian said he
could give no details ot
the evidence because
the grand jur y
transcript has been
sealed by the court.
So,,v, oo m111 "' fjhone "'d"n All uln f1110.I St.-nli!MJ l ••
•ttm" no• u' Sama Ana Item\ 1n \1ucll. un ~It "'' Mlrk~d 1u ~•ch
U~p1r1mtnt lf'H!tftned•llt' ",1rlii'do1Nm have 1~11 t.tk•n
·.
SACRAMENTO <AP> Callfornia's electrici-
ty supplies are in good shape ror the future, and
it's lime to concentrate on reducing gasoline use,
state Energy Commission members say.
They said .. dramatic" cuts could be made in
gasoline consumption to reduce oil dependence.
.. Nearly hair the state 's energy goes to
transportation, an area in which only small
progress has been made in trimming ruel use," Com·
mission Chairman Russell Schweickart said at a
news conference. · · . . . Not only does this leave us
vulnerable to oil cutoffs, but our dependence on oil
weakens us economic ally."
THE COMMISSION'S 1981 BIENNIAL report,
delivered Wednesday to the Legislature and the
governor, recommends that the federal govern-
ment require new cars to get 40 miles to the gallon by 1995.
The report also s ugge£ls that the state support
development or synthetic fuels, including alcohol
made from agricultural wastes, switch most of its ca~s to alcohol ~'!d establish programs to help people
drive more emc1ently and make their cars use less
gasoline.
In the long term, the state should also increase
support for mass transit. ride-sharing and bicycle
programs, the commissioners said. although no
dollar figures were m entioned.
THE STATE SHOULD ALSO encourage land-
use plans and use or telecommunications in busi-
ness to eventually reduce travel demands.
The 5-year -old commission's duties include
ruling on new power plants. forecasting energy
needs and encouraging conservation and
alternative energy means.
It is required to write a report every other
lroine to spend
'uindf all' fund
The City or Irvine spent less and earned more
than expec:ted last year . resulting in $900,000 in un-
allocated money.
But it won't remain unallocated for long. The
Irvine City Council will meet Tuesday to decide
where it should be spent.
The Irvine city starr bas provided the council
with a shopping list of municipal needs on which
the money could be spent.
THAT LIST INCLUDES NEW stree~ lights,
new city employees and park improvements.
The city council has gone through this same
process for seven years. according to Assistant Ci ·
ty Manager Paul Brady Jr.
The annual municipal budget is adopted every
June, but by January municipal finance officers
typically find that es timates of revenues and ex-
penditures were slightly in error. This error has
always meant that there was a little more money
than expected in the city till.
BRADY SAID THAT IRVINE is one of the few
cities in California that takes a second look at the
budget midway through the spending plan's life.
With a city grQwing as rast as Irvine, it's often
hard to exactly estimate expenditure5. and
revenues. Brady said.
Pandas starving?
TOKYO CAP) -A Chinese magazine said at
least 180 giant pandas died of apparent starvation
in southwest China over a three-month period,
Kyodo news service said in dispatch from Peking.
It quoted the magazine Banyeutan, which is
circulated among Chinese education officials, as
saying massive destruction of forests in the area
destroyed bamboo grass which the giant pandas
thrived on.
China's farm and forestry officials reported
lut year that about 1.000 giant pandas were count-
ed in 10 reserves. mostly in southwest Sichuan
Province.
ON THE BEACH
. AT SAN CLEMENTE
Luxurious All Adult Condominiums For
Lease. Approximately 2100 sq. ft. 2
bedroom. 3 bath. Closed circuit TV security
gate. Spectacular white water view. All
llnenitiel pool, spa. & rec. room starting at seoo.oo:.
SUNSET SHORES
714-4fl.14JI 714-4tl-4JIO
year "to set forth the emerging energy policy is·
sues which face California for the Legislature, the
governor and the citizens of our state."
The re port was approved by the commission
last month after 50 public hearings and sev~ral
draft revisions .
The report does not give costs or its recom-
m endations. Schweicka tt said costs of state pro-
posals would have to be worked out in specific
legislation. but said they would be "near-t erm in·
vestments for long-term benefits to society."
Articles last week in
the San Francisco
Chronicle and the In-
dependent Journal in
San Rafael said Synanon
members believed
Myers was an employee
o f Time magazine,
which Synanon s ued for
libel.
2 Fashion Square Santa Ana 547-5911
South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa 957-1511
The Gibraltar way to get more
than just 51A'*> interest
with your checking account.
--------•--00·000 0:00-
daily balance assures you free checkin1ot with no monthly
service charge. If your daily balance should happen to
drop below $500. a $4.00 fee will be charged for that
month.
Personal I. D. Number. Your PIN identifies ynu as a
valued Rock Solid Checkin).! Aco 1untholdt·r. This as-
sures that you can be personally idcntifiL'CI quickly and
safely at any one of our branchl'S statewidl·-
·-
At Gibraltar.'" we think people shopping for the right
rhcd<ln1ot account d~scrvt' more than today's standard
fare. More than just checkwtitini;.: plus interest. Titat is
why we created Rock Solid'" Checking-the outstand-
ing. new checkin~ plan that combines the highest inter-
est UlC law allows with the handil'st checking services
people Wdllt most.
Rock Solid Checking. It may well be the best checking
account you ever had.
Free to Seniors with Direct Deposit. There is.no
minimwn balance at all for Seniors 62 and over with Di-
rect Deposit of Social sebllity or other Federal Retire-
ment Payments to the account.
Express Windows. A special teller is on standby for
Rock Solid Checking transactions in most branches to •
speed you on your way.
For Starters, 5%% Interest. No other bank or sav-
ings and loan can pay you more. Compounded daily, of
course.
Unlimited Checkwriting. Write ·all the checks you
want. There is no per check fee. So you are not
penalized for using your account as often as you like.
People's Hours. Not Banker's Hours. We offer
longer hours. In most branches we are open 9:00 to
5:30, Monday-Thursday: 9:00-6:00, Friday; 9:30-3:00,
Saturday.
No Monthly Service Charges. A $500 minimwn
Overdraft Protection. Provides qualifying customers
with an instant cash reserve. You may never have to
worry about an overdraft again.
Check Guarantee. Eliminates the need for multiple
pieces of identification at checkwtiting time and covers
checks up to $100 for customers who qualify.
Rock Solid Checking Counselor. There's a personal
counselor in every branch to give you all the help you wiD
need.
Direct Depo•it. Monthly government or payroll
checks can be deposited directly to yoor accoont.
Pre-paid Mailers. Mail-in deposits are the gas-savin~.
time-saving, money-saving way to bank.
Night Depositories. Available at most branches, they
are a handy way to bank after regular business hours.
If you are interested in getting the best checking ac-
cOWlt in town, check with us first. We can give you more
than a dozen Rock Solid reasons to check with Gibraltar
-including SW~ interest on your money .
To open your Rock Solid Checking Account, stop by
one of the branches listed below. Or call this toU-free
nwnber: 800-232-2020.
.. -·' ,...• ..
. \. . ..: ... ·
• .. .... ,
' .. "''
...... .. Fullerton: 255 W. Orangethori)e Ave. I (213) 930-1970 (714) 871-61(}1 Newport Baell: 2700 W. Coast Highway I (714) 631-2611
Huntington Be1cll: 1777 Edinger Ave .. #91 Huntington Ctr. I (714) 896-9666 S. Jiii C1"llb1na: 31877 Del. Obispo St I (714) 493-5011 .. :~ ..
Lagu111 Hllli: 24260 El Toro Rd. I (714) 951-8454 811111 Alll: 39'l5 s. Bristol St./ (n4) 979-75fl) ""'•
Santi Ana: #4 Santa Ana Fa&lion S<Jae/(71~) &14-0717
•I
..
..
• Television DAILY PILOl TONIGHT"S LATEST LISTINGS
..... y ~ ....... "¥-.. "' '"' .. Q!ll l!tettd •II IHldetCO••t
...,,_1 who ,.. •• llOtulQ ti •
Ilene• It\ • MlllY .... I nc "'.c OOUOt4
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.... _ ,MPGMtble
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.._.. ... IN M-~
·-~...,. •• ILICT"!G
ICC..== IUL-IAIW
MLCOMlaACto.
ICOftWl
W•-lQIVOI ~ t• prlll'k
""'~'.. 1•• .....
U¥ift99 lul\O 011.•PI>" .,
.'tpat·~ ro111a11c•e
• KNNY l'tllL
& oe~ Oir-. IOr H 1~1.,~1
..ot f\ .t ".-ro '•"'"' •"•"
•Out
t>l.e t>atn C<1"1"'~' '"''
• PEOPLE Of THE
FIASTllGH1
fo~nn (;rav fall:-. io luvc with an alien
(M ark Lenard I. un a ware of his s hocking
.... el' rel. un "Butk Roger ·· tonight al 8 on
:"l B('. Channel ·l
, Q) SARETIA
Tne No1•.Jgau1.elti.
Focuses on ""' "'uY• "'
wtloCh IOCla~ s Nu• t aQilll
Mt1s stow •o m.iinlllln
1,._. I• adlHons ano rH11'
'J' 34•1 CONTACT (Al
M0A0 1°H
Tile •071111 c.>mp1t~a1vs
tne endeavo1s ot lwo
secret agents 1nvest1gatino
eacn 01ner
1la1etta unw1ll111Qly kill!> a
~O<>fllOI aop;1 puane1 and
1ne vu .. 11m s 'f'OUH\J•J•
O<otner goes gunning 101
Bart11ta
S) OVEAEASV
A Place To lllfe ' Guesl
0. Nan Hu1cn1son (RI m MACNEIL I LEHRER
AE~T
11) TIC TAC DOUGH
(lj) MERV GRlf'FIN
Guesl nos• ()+ct.. van Pal
1en Guests An•t Jrlltan
Belly Buckley Vmcenl Von
Pattvn N11stass111 K1nsk1
O]l llAAHEV MILLEA
Ote111cn •5 ooo""o tor n1s
part in 8 demons1t0t10J1
ano a p10-nuke sc1en11s1
,..,_ n1a lellow Ot•IOf'l-
ers t>y splasnmg them w•th
,.. atomic "'atflt (Par1 2)
1-30 11 2 OH THE TOWN
H os1s Steve Eowards and
Melooy Rogers
f?:OO 9 CM NEWS D NBCHEWS 0 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Richie Po1s1e and R,11pn
mo¥e Into a d1lap1datfld.
on.bedroom aparl,,;&nl
8 A8CHEW8 IJ JOl(!A'S WILD
G) M"A'S'H
Allflt a 1ranslus1on u~ino ,,
ptnl ol Fr3rlt.. s DIOC.Hl
Hawheye suspeclS tum 01
navlng hePAlilts
0 FAMILY FEUD 0 SHANANA
Guesl Bobby Rydell 0 EYEWITNESS LOS
ANGELES
Hosts Paul Moyer and
Inez Pedroia 0 FACE THE MUSIC GJ All IN THE FAMIL V
M'"" musl Clec•Cle 11 he
wants 10 be 1n Ille wa111ng
roon1 or t11e de1tve1y room
ouring lh<l 011111 01 t\•S
baby
Chann~I I .bl ing•
11 K.N ' I t..8 '>• I l\n l•"I"
Q "~1:3( '118 t L I ..\t1 l• '• D i(.TLA I I ·\• I• ..
0 KAllt I I AfK 1 A• 1•• ·•
• ~f'~,B CB 1">11 ) "J• Q KHJ IV d11tl 1l11'-/\11 1!'11•
@l /\C~T 1Aflt I <;,ir, {) .. q,
GJ ~IT I •1 ! ,\" I",
Cl) i,,(_ OP r, r I , .\· I• •
ID Kt[ 1 r _ f'!I'·• t .\., ,. •
C'il !\()( C Iv Pll'-t H11t11 r1ql ''' fi,. 11 11
&;) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
'1!) NEWSCHECK
I P M. MAGAZINE a·oo 11 8 THE WAL TONS 0 BUCK ROGERS
U11CI. arul his cono1 h
U'-• ur t .u; .tlnut CS1plonlat
no a drtn91HOOlll\ fOt.nney to
d t 1uc;.1al pita<-t! t-onle•
,~n("u
0 MOVIE
• • • Madigan 119681
H~ narCI W1<1mai" H""'Y r onoa A New YOU. detec
''"" w1lh qu11s11011able •tlh
ICS runs tnlo Houblt• Will!
•us, c.ommi:.ss1on111u
O no MORKANO
MINDY
Mon. milk•'' M mC1y s f1 Pot
Nay as a r \/ a1111nu11t (•r
ut1lo1gellablt•
0 UFO
Man Who Camu Bae~ GJ P.M. MAGAZINE
The women~ bartllOOI
w!Ht•rs"m•y cti.unp1ori m~
N•llv 50s c,,, Club. Chel
I ell ma~os a vt>al 1t1gou1
Jud• MtS!.611 l"•S anoll1er
jAt1erc1s" f1lr lht' thigh'>.
Jl)y( e Kulll.JWik "" ~OIJr en111gy equ1pmPnl
Cl) MOVIE • * LeQ.,nn 01 Death
Valley 119771 Documenl~
'V John Vt•1iru•r goos lf\h)
Ut•• rem1ttP tPg1ons •>I
()<-.1111 V,,ll<·v IOllQwrng ht~
Qh,."l~gt .. rtt QfJr'CUa thtH $
IOOISIPP~
ID ail THE PAPER
CHASE
A Day In 111e l•le Of A
thtrd·-.P~.H lnw ... tuOt•r•t
(Oa•IC'ne <-utrl almosl """
OV~ly lfijlHP\
IClmf'' 11,)tl
btLyLhllQ
tJamf''>
St~I) while dtlvlng ....
CM .... (11 .aeoM....a
Henry end Kip end theit
1111 .. -egoe ,.,..p' Amy 9411
1evenoe on • polOiClan
wno dvmpecl '*
• CAAOl IU'INETT
ANOFMHC>e
GUHi Wiiiiam Conrad
t:OO 9 MAGNUM, P.1.
Two noloc;aust aurv1vou
t>ecome tatoeta ol unre-
pentanl Null 8 (!I) llAAHFt' MILLER
Hlll"IS IS HStgned to write,
P">Ouc.· •nd d«.ef • po.-
no him tor polic;e uMI
0 THEY AUN FOR
THEIALIVES
• MERV GRIFFIN
Ou111t nosl 0.Ck Van Pat
lttn Gue'1s Ann J111ta11
Betty Buckley V1nc;11n1 Von
Pa11e11. Nasrns~1a Kmsk1,
Eve Arnold R1cn Hail mm SNEAK
PMVIEWS '
ROQe• Ebl'rl dnd Gen.,
S1skttl look at some l1lm~
lhal portroy worrH!n ""
helpless ••Ct•mS btt•no
i\llD(ke<J by a sad•sht
1<1ller lea1ur1r19 scenes from
r11aoy Tho t31h. Hal
lowee11 wne11 A Strano ,
tl1 Coils · and I Sp11 On
8:30 0 10 IT'S A LIVING
V'l(kl tea ,ns rho now mon
1t1 ner Ille tS also lhe 11,;w
man rn Doi s "'" &;) THIS OLD HOUSE
BnD Vila d•scu~ses ~ome
c11 thP ke~ d«r1'\10t'!> to be
m.1dH JbOul G(Htc10mmu1rn
>di(•$ ail CR()SS.-COUNTRY
SKI SCHOOL
Ooulllo; Pol111Q
10:0011 8 KNOTS LANDING
Aboy goo~ d11~1iy 10 J A
l w109 tu a~ ... n1m to tPnd
c;,., ¥ S'iO 000 10 pay c.u "
IMO bUSlntjS.S r1Pdl
Q HILL STREET BLUES
Cap10/n I 1111110 ~Onhnut•>
1w) t-ffC'' l~ ICJ make peac P
l'~lw.-en <NJttmg Q8f\4"J~
jf1<1 d l111ant..1.1lly 'ittapµeO
t Op IS lt1Ckt1d int.-, ••GO •f,>I
mg a payoll DO NEWS 0 IQ, 20 1 20
Cl) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
&;) MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
OB119er l.JXB Brran an()
f11" roornmat~ Ken reh"''"
111111'1 a tJn•nti d•spo~al
Ut1t-•f1ng .• nu d't·
tl"pa1cneo I dt'luS<' ,,
t>oOIJy 11appe<J oomll "' ••
.. ChNll Ydl tl IP·" I Jl
C'i) NEWSCHECK
10:30 m m NEWS ail M YSTERY
Mahn• "'''h tt 4'wr1n1 tl1
r dnHtt•<J R•• ~ "'"'h ... , .... ,.11 f
'\ulh.•'ll tho rr1n1t•m;;1 UfJ''"
ly <.l•SPl11.,••tf f;., I I.
uyfornea,u;q ,...,,.. J1;lq
tP,.rt II
1t:OO 11 Q 0 S '10' NEWS 0 STAR TREK
tnfO;-ltf'S Id~ 1-' I (lt\frQt Of ;l
TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA • 8 :00 -''Madigan."
Ri chard Widmark plays a New York cop
who runs afoul of the police corh ·
missioner <Henry Fonda) in this movie
drama ..
KOCE 88 9:00-Sneak Previews.
Violence against women is examined by
critics Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel in
such movies as "Halloween" and "When
a Stranger Calls."
KCOP Cl) 11 :00 -"Teacher's Pet."
Clark Gable plays a newspaper city
editor who falls for journalism teacher
Doris Day in this 1958 movie comedy,
QJla, y s asylum Slid plan
ICJ '3k8 OVIJI tho urltll .. fStl 0 NEWL VWEO GAME
GJ M•A •SIH
,.. Qt .tlelul pa11en1 o .. vo1es
llln1:.ttlt tn HJwii. ov•~ while
R.1da• hui-; 1rt 1ove arid
¥hnqf.•t marr1·~" by snon
"""'••\'•~ r~cJ10
I!) MOVIE
• • • t .. ac.to'' ~ Pel
f 1\JIJJ\ Ll"'r~ t;nb1.. Oun!»
0.1y t 1,.-.... 1y 1•t.t11,;, nt a
•·lft.}t .. •1flw$par,.t1t qrH;i.!> 10 a
100111ah~m rlas5' at n1gfH
"'·'" ul and fiJtl•_. 1n tove
Ntln tht• IPat htlr ID DICK CAVETT
f r •t t•an H•'" nal•SI~
1r. At Ameut d Gut•t\h
H•·w.. [3f'dnc1c n N1ro1e
•~''' "''""" U•lto Bau(:f 1P,111:tol2)
11:30 0 II THE JEFFERSONS
C,1 ... t-1t~f'· fearns t OVt!.t-' has
httt1d fit1rerV •• J '-» .l hve "'
m.m1 ancJ n11~ 1110 rnol 1RI
Q THE BEST OF
CARSON
C.uP!..I'. Su1-.011P Cir;rne1~
Mrc rrJel Oouqlas Dt.bt>y
~001\(! (fl)
0 tlO ABC NEWS 0 GUNSMOKE
A man !lee"-: n•v.,-11ge
whUt1 ootlaw lmhant. ~'" his
~,,.., .ind bu,u his nome
IPo.111 1,
II) HOGAN'S HEROES
rtH• Ht•f(JeS "'~ .. thP NP.d
JOHN DARLING
Omg ol Gen Burknalle1 s
ruece as a covet lor con·
tac11ng an agent \ m m CAPTIOHED ABC
NEWS
-MIDNIGHT-
12:0011 II MCMILLAN•
WIFE
MCM111a11 1n•e,11g..1es lhe
myStoftOus c.,,cumstances
lleh•nd me ·Suppos11d su•-
1.•de QI [I bu~tnOSS I /LOOn
(RI
D MOYIE
• • • Raw111de ( t9511
Tv1oni; Powe1 Susan Hav·
wa rd rour escape(! killers
nord a "'3y-slat1on keepe;
hrs asS•Sfanl and 11 oeauli
lul pbs.tnger 11osl aQe
0 (I~ CHAl'ILIE"S
ANGELS
A wf!dd1ng in wh•Ch Kelly 1s
takrng pa11 lurns out 10 bt
a camoullage 101 a mu•der
SC"(ltnO (R) GJ MISSION:
IMPOSSIBLE
Tne a1cono1tc w•le 01 a
c11m11 synd1c;a1e 1eade1
µuls lhe 1Mr 1eam on h"
I tail
12:30 D TO"\ORAOW
0 OONLANE
G1•PSIS Doris S1okos Ore~
Sm11h R1>nee Guv••• Rolltt1
Jolly
1'1>0 Q) VOU BET YOUR LIFE
Bu<.101 Hact.:e~tt ('nPf".>t\ a
, MIU UnlvtfH 1unll9t-up, •
bltd watcMr and a Federal a.nit emplO)'M
• N>INHDINT
NETWON< Ne#8
1:108 MOVll • * '"Baker's Ha w1c··
( 1978) Burl Ives LH Har·
coutl Mon1gomery A boy ,
rascutas an abanooned
nawk ano 1>eeomes close
luends w1tti a mvsterious
mountain miln who nelps
him train the bird
@I CAAOl ~ETT
AN0~08
t:HO HIWS
1:300 MOVIE
• • • "rnunder In T ne
Sun ( 19591 Susan Hav-
ward Jell Cnandler A love
111ano1e occu1s Clut1ng the
1850s among n g1oup ol
Basques 1ourney1ng 10 Hie
Cahtorma vineyard~ 0 THE LONE RANGER
"WOmdn 111 rt•" Wn11e
Mai.I\
GJ MOVIE
a• • Barabllct~ t 1'1 21
A111nonv Ownn !)11v.i11a
Mang~1'o l 111' """'
'e'"t1~eo m 11t-1u or J1u.,;'t
wres11us with 011:1 nu,rks •>I
laltJ lnat lntlow rum ... .;ur
a lier
I!) MOVIE
• • i JO t 14"''"'' '" ~ W~tJb Willutm ( uw.11t A
fJ'lundy1119 eo1tn1 s.>t1ll· 1U
O~p111lm• .. nt~ t1•Q••th1•1 tr
gel Ille µap<>r «ut
1:4511 NEWS
2:000 NEWS 0 MOVIE
• • , , 110 1 cri" M,.,.., tr
I t9!>Ji JOt1't "·""'' Jr••111
McC.<tlh.un An ti11ur ._.,,,
mJ11 1~ 'r1leitS.~t1 frnrn •WI
J""' tHm•Q wrrmt;liy on
•IC.tea u t murc.Jf.<'r
2·2011 MOVIE
• • R1<Jp Oif• ttiQt1 V/ln I
'ltJb61 DltrtN1 Mt (, ,.,u,
Mana P t1rsc hy An Atrotn
t_ar. Ou')h Ci••<. f ·"'°' rn41 ro
fe(.f).J(•i d (_..j(.,W '•' l 1.1t
ll100t.•11 \t.Jme..,..,w,.. ,,, .1
Soulh Alt1ra11 d;.;«rl
~:300 NEWS
2:55 0 NEWS
3:00 0 MOVIE
• • • Wn1t,.. w.u t1 (Jru.
10' 1 l9!dJ <;u~'"' Huy
w.._.110 Rnhr-'' 'A•trh11m A
m1s~1nr1+1rt ,11,r•_.µ .,1 "''i' ft
wor• • tJ1M:i••nu., '"' q,1u •1 t
h .. \Ofo.fl l)t ,,,..,. ••ul ... ~
• MOYIE * • ...._ ""The Bleok Olchld"
( 1959) Sophi• Loren.
Ant11ony Quinn A law·
abiding t>uSI,__ end
tile lovely lllklo. ot a gMg·
Sier fall In IOve
3:67 IJ MOVll * * * '"The t.nggae ..
(1951) Paul Oouglu . Her·
l>efl Gregg A Scolllah -
captain gel5 tile bett 01 en
Ameflcan eaecutlve wtto
want& to do some s.,lou•
business
4:t6• MOVIE * •, "Lof l Bat1alron
( 19621 Diane Jergens, Leq·
pold Salelldo Ametrcaifs
receive aid lrom a F11tptno
guerrrlle 1aade1 dunno
World War ll
4:30CI) NEWS
t 'ridat,.•
IJayt i•t> Htu•i_.•
-M<>RNNG-
11-()() I!) • Desert TI ail (19351
Jorin Wayne Mary Korn·
rn.a11 A r()(leo s1a1 so•~ oul
lo l1,1p II gang Of !)~II~
roht)er~
-Af-TERNOON-
12:00 II) • • • Ille Mllurllfl1n
flQlld 119601 J.,m,,; 'lrew
a' 1 C •tunn C..01 nut I An
un\c:111i,..ulous ma1w 1t1 lhe
A'"'Y lonrn~ t.ompn.-:.,1on
attur titt '' cnwgud w11ti
0111w111q Ull v111ag .. s bri1lg
e~ JtlO ,oad!t a9ains.a
ad•ancinq J.,panesP llu•
mq WorldW.Jrtf m • * f..>t•nttomen
Matry Anmc:11es I 1955)
J""" Hu~~ell Jea11n11
(.. ,..,,, r ..,.., snf)w l)11~me~s
,,,.a,H1,.., 1n P:u•s ,~n .... mpt
f<• "l'•fll tOm dt1C.U h wn
1nt ... rl•H1nq w11h 1 ~1eu
... FuePt~
3 oo 10 • • t;t"'""'~ t<otmes
'" "'"~""'9'0" 1 l'l431 B.1~11 Ra1t1tiorw N1qe1
Brt.H •• ttr>lme~ H.!C:OvetS
m1s,.,1n(I m1uo111"' ano a
SPt ,..,I S••' 11Le agPnt
3 30 0 • • Oll ltm11\
119!131 Boo Hop,. Mrc~ey
llooncy A hg111 maMgar
c.onttr\\Jt•'i n1~ Cdre@r p..,pu
1•tPt ttemq 1nOuclO<I into
ltPAtmy
by Armstrong & Batiuk
IHI~ 15 E3~ANI GUM~EL
w nH M~ C0/£~'°"3E: OF IHE suPEaeowi...1
WELL, WE.'\/£ 5EE N HOW
EACH OF IHI:. GUA~1fl?BKJc:S
CHILDC:U::N 15 ro1NG 1N
N<:>N U::T'S I .N-<.t A LOOK.
Al I HE DE.NfAL aEc~os
OF "THE OPl?OS4NG LINEM EN ! SC.HOOL .•.
'Waltons' junkie must find 8 eure
By PETER J .• BOYER
LOS ANGELES IAPl Anatomy
prime time obsession ~ began on the Sunda y night or
e mber 19. 1971 , and, as things
d, it will end on a Thursday night
May this year. As obsessions go, I
s s you'd call t his one rather
1gn.
"8ut I tell you. a grown man doesn 't
I. htly bear such a passion. Much
re wicked inclinations are daily
ulged with more compassion. I
. anc;,t have been for nine years.
dieted to "The Waltons." t · 'ZBS tops a9oi11
The re was a sh arp chill out that
Sunday night , I re memhe r , and
Shiloh the Wund e r D achs hund
str etched and s tirred before the fire
Chicken stew simme red on the stove
I didn't know it. but this homey lilllc
<;cen e was working a t m y s ub
conscious, smoothing the way for
what was to come. .
On TV, the fin al strains of some
for gotte n NFL gam e were played
out. Supper. Then. it ca me -"The
Hom ecoming," a made-for-CBS mov-
ie with Patricia Ne al and Andrew
Duggan. It was a schmaltzy holiday
~'Dallas' still rules
NEW YORK l APJ "Dallas " won
ratings r ace for the ninth time in
weeka, and the series' continuing
cess helped CBS to another first-
ce ftnish in the networks' competi-
1on. figuret1 from the A.C. Nielsen
o. s howed.
The r e m a rkable s tring fo r
alias" began during the buildup to
· "Who shot J . R.?" episode in No-
ber and has bee n broken only be
r e·emptibn and a key "NFL Mon-
ay Night Football" game on ABC that
lnished No. 1 in the week ending Dec.
CBS, MEANTIME, has fini shed
irst or tied for first s ix weeks run-
' Ilg and now leads the three-way
petition that began Oct . 27 by
I over a point over runnerup ABC.
B!f USted six of the JO highest·
ated Mows in the week e ndinJC Jan.
8 and compiled a rating of 20 to 18.6
or ABC and 18.3 for NBC . The
e tworks say that m e ans in an
verage prime-tim e minute during
he week, one in every five of the na.
's TV·equipped homes was tuned
88.
H. iaAnNG ~. "Dallas" in
IDGlll recent survey was 33.4.
ielsen.san that m eans of all the na·
on's homes with TV, just over a
. d saw the latest installment in the ~~·
NBC scored with the "Bob !lope
Anniversary SpeC'tal," No. 6 in the
ratings. while CBS lis ted a new
s eries "Magnum. P.1.," in 10th
place.
CBS had three or the week's rive
lowes t-rated progr a ms, including
"The White Shadow" in ()3rd place.
"'Secrets of Midland Heights" 65th
a nd "fo'reebie <1nd the Rean" 67th.
"Catastrophe: No Safe Place" on
A RC was No . 6 4 . a nd "NB C
M ag<tzinc with David Brinkley" No.
fi6.
IU: RE ARE THE week 's 10
highest-rated programs :
"Dallas," with a rating of 33.4
representin~ 26 million homes. "60
Minutes," 32.6 or 25.4 million .
"Dukes of Hazzard," 27 .8 or 21.6
million, and "One Day al a Time."
25.3 or 19.7 million, all CBS; "Little
House on the Prairie," 24.2 or 18.8
million, NBC; "M-A·S-H," 23.9 or
18.6 million, CBS: "Bob Hope An-
niv ersary Special," 23.8 or 18.S
million, NBC; "Love Boat," 23.5 o r
18.3 mllllon, a nd ''Three's Com-
pany," 22.S or 17.6 million, bolh ABC.
and "Magnum, P .1 .. " 22.3 or 17.3
million, CBS.
LAST CHANCE TO SEE THIS
ZANY COMEDY THIS YEAR!
~·£111$
story. set in Virginia's Blue H1dge
Mountainsduringthe Depression
PATRIUA !'lt:t\L WAS tht: Mama.
and there were a bunc h of kids dcC'
orating the lrl•e and ca rrying on and
wait ing for thetr l>addy to <.·oml'
ho mt• IL was storming o ut. On<' of
th(' kid::., John Boy. wanted to lw a
writer He exaggerated a Southern
accent I not pure Vi rginia. J noted >
and hid his diary under his bed Dad-
dy was very late
After an hour or so of fretting and
tens ion.mounting, Daddy finally ar-
rived. bowed with gifts. It was a
touching m om ent, if you're touched
by s uch as this , when Daddy know
ing handed J ohn-Boy his vcr~ own
Big Chief writing tablet.
Shiloh wept.
I was hooked right then , although I
didn't realize it until a year later
when "The Homecoming "' sho14 ed up
a s a r eg u lar CBS series, "T he
Waltons, .. and 1 found m yself de<Jr-
1 n g away Tu es day s I it wa ~ on
Tues days. then> to watch lhb TV
show. Ralph Waite had becom (' Oad-
d v. Michae l I.ea rned was Mama
Wi II Geer C1nd Ellen Corby we re
G randdaddy and Grandma Walton
RICHARD THOMAS bej.{a n tr>
:;mooth over his C1ccent
The little kids were an amorphous
blue or giggle~ and whines back then,
but soon they developed inti> .Jim
Rob. ~ary-Ellen. Erin, Jason. Hen
a nd little Elizabeth. "The Waltons"
m oved to Thursday. and kept coming
back. So did I.
The fictional Walton's mountain.
its air thick with moralistic homilies,
beck oned anew each season. John·
PROfd.e
1s your guide
to pro
football action.
every Saturday
In the
D1ilyPilat
(aJiluA o1' a~) Mt••IUCI .....
Hoy. t:nC'ouraged h' the gentle <111<!
literary ~chnolma rm. '.\1 1~~ llunter
lwgan ::.er111us pur!>u1t of the h:th'r::.
11 c· went to Bo atwr ight Col I ej? t:.
wlH'rC he read Thom a~. Wolfr
J ohn-IJu\ came b<tck to Wallon·~
Mountain "to publish hts own paper.
T he Blue Ridge Chronit·lc, until final
I.\. in 1977, he went off to New York.
wh ere his first novel was be ing
published. The next year , Richard
T homas's John-Boy Joined the AP in
New York. and was only seen once
th(.•reafter A ne w J ohn-Bov. un
inspired and singularly unsatisfaC'
Lory. is hardly worth note.
MEANWHILE, BACK on the
mountain, Mary Ellen grew up, got
m arried, had a baby and became a
widow. Ike Godsey took on a wire
Co rabeth. a woman of airs. Zesty old
Zt'h Walton died. Gr andma suffered
a stroke. Mama endured a polio al
ta<.·k. but was struck down by con
~umption. The Ba ldwin siste rs. those•
ar ch etypal Vi rginia gentlewomen.
br ewed their Daddy's "recipe, .. and
mellowed into sweet old age.
NQw. a fte r nine year s. "Thr
Waltons" is endin~. Ralph Waite
made his last appearance last week.
IPaving only the Baldwin sisters. Ike
<;<1dser and fi ve of the kids from the
on g1nal s how. At the end of this
St•nes it has no plans to broadcast
any m orl' original episodes.
And I will regain possession or
Thursday nights. Maybe l'll spend
the m drinking or shooting pool, or
perhaps just hanging out on street
corners. Maybe I'll write a novel on
T hursdays, or even r ead one.
Or maybe, if" Magnum P.1.'' gets
just a little bit better ...
••
Ak1S11 •, :.•,;")BP •.,• ,,~ ...
!>&6-1711
'"· GINA...._ ..
FIMT FAMILY rs
I ~3 tS.S ;JO.I U JO 00
For <.la\\ilitd Ad
AOJO~
(all
A DAILY rlLOT
AD·VISOll
MJ.5611
.,,,,co-,,.,,,.
IS Conwnl«nl Locatton1 ld•1rd$ l•111 C1ntm1 Vitro
848·0388 830 6990
NO P..-S ACCA!P'T•tl
-TMSao.oMX:,.... ... I
Hundngton Beach
Pec:lftc to.t Hwy So. of Pm
Newport Beach
t400hcllc.c-tltw,
•••" ... worth
cheering about."
Pc;
<Q>
Nl w f011• OAU r NfW~
••
0 -::::----
NOW PLAYING
com 111m
l•
''I\'•''*',.. , ••. ,,,
' 1•' '• • • t ~, A .1 '""' ,,..,
TUI
SBE DLDWS!
WEEKil>AYS
IO AM
WEEKENL>S
q M l &'I PM
uavint fiom I~ .......
Adult' Sl':· Childrtn SS.
1714• 67f.S?.f5
·-
ENTERTAINMENT / INTIAMll810N
...... ,llGIHI ., .
, ..... , e•M•u•
JI I
, ..... U.HIACll
t
'f"ne
I
Ill •1111 , ....... u .•• '. ,,, • ,1. •I tu
.,~1111 ICQ,, .. •• , •• a.uM•••
l\>wf'r Behind
The Throne
Thur9dey, J8nuary 22. 1981
Thl-ee dramas .• wmgs • m
Sebaatian'• comedy al10 opening Friday
Cummunity tbHters are rollin1 out lbe heavy
artillery thi11 weekend with tbree·dramu 1oin1 on
the board.8, but thole in search of ll&hter fare can
hnd it at Sebastian's West DiMer Playhouse.
The San Clemente dinner theater is raisin& the
l·urtatln on J1ack Sharkey's rirst play, "Here Lies
J e mmy Troy:· Friday Sharina that openin1 niaht
will btl "Another Part of the Forest" at the Costa
Mt'U ('1v1<1 Playhouse," "Rasbomon'' at the
Laguna Moulto n Playhouse and "The Runner
Stumbles " at the Saddleback Valley Community
Thl•akr
AT St:BASTIAN'S, DEAN Stockwell is play-
111~ the title role in "J~remy Troy." replacing Tab
llunter who was hospitalized for a heart attac k.
Sto<'kwell pluyb the role or a legal eagle whose de-
ception:> a bout his credentials get him into an open
and s hut l'ase or trouble.
··Jeremy T roy" will play Tuesdays through
Thursdays at 8:30. fo'ridays "and Saturdays at 9: 15
with Saturday brunches al 1 p.m through Feb. 28
al Sebastian's, 140 Avemda Pico. San Clemente.
Call 492-9950 Cor l1l•kets
Max Kelley, Michelle De Troy and Carol
Stockmeyer head the cast, which also includes
Kelly Bennett, Joe Cordio and Dou1laa Hartman.
Performances are scheduled for Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 p.m. through Feb. 7 with special
performances Jan. 25 at 2:30 and Jan. 29 at 8 .
Reservations 830-9252 or 770·0381.
Winding up their respective stints this
weekend are "Bosoms and Neglect" on South
Coast Repertory's Second Stage and "Father's
Day" al Golden West College.
FINAi. PERFORMANCES of "Bosoms" will
be given tonight through Sunday at 8:30 with
weekend matinees at 3 in SCR 's Fourth Step
Theater . 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
(957-4033). "Father 's Day" is on the GWC boards
tonight through Saturda y at 8:30 and Sw"1ay at
2:30 (894-8995) •
DAILYptLOT
Also on the boards at theaters along the llU mu•u lo .. 1•0~ U.llllW .-
. -
. : ..
I '
··Anothe r Par t or the F orest ." Lillian
Hellman 's "prequel" lo her mbre famous "The
Little fo'oxes." lakes the characters back lo 1880 to
show how their early lives we re shaped. Pali Tam-
be llini 1s directang the drama. which features Ted
Knorr. Sally McGuire . Rob Deluca, Lyle Brooks
and Linda Putnam
Orange Coast are : ll•M \ e ... p J/J C·ntm• Crnlt• Wu tbrook UA c.1, C1ntm1
··The Elephan t Man " in South Coast 114 ~'nJJ" IJ 9194141 1m 1s1o u o1111•1630 91 1
Repe rtory's ma in theater at the aforementioned ::1!Mit :,~: ~111 , ~= :~ :::'.:::-;:;;.;-.
•a•;;•n~~~l CHEVY CHASIE . OOLOJE HAWN
\ "'' ~~' ) SIEIEMS LllCE OLD TIMH (PG)
12:45•3:00-5:• 5•7:45••0:00
GU• WLDl.111 AMO lllCMAllO P"YOlll
mACAAZY(A)
, .. ,, ......... 11·0
I YAM WHAT I YAMI
~~!r!. J!.~>
ou• ......,.. •llK> flUCMAllO PRYOlll
STIR CRAZY (R) ,, .. , ......... , ..
OTHERS IN THE CAST ar e Sharon Lee,
Sher yl Ross. Bo b McCaa a nd Bill Plosser .
Pe rformances a re fo'ridays and Saturdays al 8:30
in the Civic Playhouse on the Orange County Fair-
grounds. Reservations 754 ·5159.
Authentic samurai swords manship will
highlight "Ras homon" at the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna
Beach. Marthella Randall is staging the Japanese
drama which focuses on four different accounts of
the same tragic incident.
Orange Coast College drama teacher Bill
Purkiss plays the bandit with Kevin Burke and
Scottie Kenyon a lso playing major roles. Others in
the cast are Jim Ryan. Anne Wood, Julie Haas
Gar vin. Gene Benedict , Robert Wentz. John Marin
and Greg Nourse · · Rashomon'' plays Tuesdays
through Saturdays at 8 p.m <with matinees Jan.
25 and Feb 8 at 2.30 1 unt il f'eb. 14 Reser vations
494-0743.
"THE RUNNER STUMBLES," which depicts
an e motional relattonshiµ between a priest and a
nun, la unches a three-weekend engagem ent Fri-
day at the Saddleback Valley theater, 25741-C
Obrero. Mission Viejo. Susan Kelley has taken
over the show's di rection from Herman Boodman.
who suffered a heart attack.
Non1i11;1titt11s Feb. 17
address . Performances nightly e xcept Mondays at • m 1 ss1 Of>~~ 1u 631 OHO 11• ·s30 6990 .......... .,......w~·
8 with weekend matinees at 2:30 through Feb. 15 . ~~iiiijiiiijiiiiiiiiiii "Showboat" at the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd. just north of Costa
Mesa 1979-5511 ) nightly except Mondays al vary-
ing curtain times through Feb. 8.
-"TEAHOUSE OF THE August Moon'' al the
Westminster Community Theater. 7272 Maple St..
Westminster (995-3559) Fridays and Saturdays at
8:30through Feb. 7.
"The Girls in 509" at the Newport Theater
Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beac h
1675·3143) Fridays and Saturdays al 8, Sundays at
2. through J an. 31.
··Double Door·· at the Huntington Beac h
Playhouse in the Seacllff Village Center , Main at
Yorktown. llunllngton Reach 1847-4465) Fridays
and Saturdays at 8 · 30 throu~h Feb. 14.
··Perfe ct Pitch" at the San Cle mente Com·
mun1ly The ate r . 202 Avenida Ca brillo, San
Clemente 1492-04651 Thursdays through Saturdays
at 8: 30 until fo'cb 7
* CALI.BOARD The Si!n Clemente Communi-
ty Theater will hold auditions ror "Vanities" Sun-
day and Monday at 7 p.m .. director Monica
Weatherholt wi ll be seeking three strong actresses
between 18 and :m at the tryouts. in the Cabrillo
Playhouse. 202 Avenida Cabri llo, San Cleme nte ..
Oscar ballots out to 3, 738
HOLLYWOOD !AP ) -The the Los Angeles Music Center. -----------------11• nominatio n process for this year's Academy Awards is un·
T he voting deadline is Feb. 2,
with nominations for the 53rd
Annual Academy Awards to be
announced Tuesday, Feb. 17, a t
A c ademy h e adqua r t e r s i n
Beve rly Hills. The actual Oscars
will be presented March 30 al
The bulk or the ballots are
mailed to California addresses,
with 405 mailed e lsewhere in tl)e F..:.,uy
··~·-71ltlJ1 tYO
R08ERT OE NIRO
RAGING BULL (A) ,, .. ,...., .......... ,. der way with the m ailing or
nomination ballots to the 3.738 n ited Stales primarily New
------------------' .. me m bers or the Academy or
Motion P ictur e Ar t s a nd
SciPnces
York and 141 to othe r coun·
tries.
F..: ... ty CHEVY CHASE •GOLDIE HAWN •~f~~= SUMS LIKE OLD TIMES (PO) , ........ ,1 ... --., •• All members will vote for best -----------------Ill pic ture nominations. while only Films given awards
mACAAZY(A)
2 ........... .
members or corresponding craft
branches or the Academy will
vote ror nom inees in categories
involving their particular craft. -----------------.U No more than rive nominees can
N EW DELHI. India (AP/ -Bulgar ia's ''The Unknown
Soldier's Patent Leather Shoes" and the Indian-made "Aakrosh"
shared the Golden Peacock award ror the best feature movie at the
8th International Film Festival or India. CHEVY CHASE •GOLDIE HAWN
SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES (PG) , ........ ,, ... ,.
be selected in each or the 17
categories. Nominees in addi-
tion al cat egorie s cover ing
documentary films, foreign pic -
,Cl:lr:::~~~~~~:'!~~=:-:~=1·~·.tures and visual effects will be
• lloft.J11 ''''· s.t. "'"· Hdldey• 1-00 Sll09 ._,, •:•s tselected by comm1.tlees IMPORTANl NOTICl' CHILORlN UNOlR 12 FREE! ·. •
··A Period of Transition" by the Danisfi director Bent Barfod
was named the best s hort film or the two-week restival. Italy's
Slefamo Rolla was named best director, Gabor Konez of Hungary
was named best actor and Angela Molina or Spain was named best
a ctress.
8-•Cft HI~
\o nJ r • ._-dP" GtOW' ._),.. •• ,
,..,. W)'tl
Shlrtey Mec:Leln• • Bo Derek
A CHA.NOE OF SEASONS (R)
1'1.US
MIOOlE AGE CRAZY IRI
I NO AM CM Radio Wllll i9nllton A(cft-f 9,, .. .,_own AM p.,;,.
.. 8 Che~ CheM • Ooldl• Hewn"
\a :\~::., SHMS LIKE OlO TIMH (llG) (.llO•f" fl,..... ~
••• ,.,. THE MAIN EVENT lllG)
f NeAMC8r tt.iio w1111111niloc1n .A(<fttorY llri"9 .,_ OWn lioM ~
...... ,.., MICHAEL 'ATAKI • 808 MINOft
c.":.!' =-.. DEllHOUlNT ~ttOOl GIRLS (R)
••• __ .. ~, .. ~'!..' -HOU.YWOOO HtGH (R)
I Ne AM CM lteOIO Will\ lllftill9'1 A(<•-Y llr1"9 V-OWn AM
..... .... Clf'lt Eaetwood In '° .. c;..-ANY WHICtt WAY YOU CAN (llG) c;.,. .. ,...... , .....
,., "" HOHIYSUCt<LE ROM (llG)
GeM ~Md fUcMtd l"'9f mRCMZY(R)
-UllD CARI (R)
I YAM WHAT I YA•
POPEYE(PQ) -THltUITU (llG)
_,.,,. ..... ._ ---,.. ., ......
lMlat:lz .. fllt
,. ___ , .. ,.~-· _,_"'_
1:r.m:;1.w1:cg
EDWARDS' BRISTOL
Costa Mesa 540· 7444
EDWARDS' SIDDLHACK
El Toro 581 -5880
EDWARDS' CINEMA WHT
Westminster 891 ·3935
MINN'S BREA PLAZA
Brea 529-5339
'ACtrtC I
MISSION DRIVE·IN
San Juan Capistrano
'493-4545
"ALTERED
STATES" (R)
6
(0)
"FLASH GORDON"' (PG
CHILDREN'S PRICES
I BLUES BROT~RS"
·AIRPLANE"" (PG)
CHEECH & CHONG"tf'
I PR!VATE BENJAMIN""
··GOODBYE GIRL" I (PG/
I "WARRIORS"
··AMERICAN QfGOLO"
(R)
"ORDINARY PIOPU:"
··tTAlln'INO OYER'" (R)
a
,.
"'TRIBUTE' IS TERRIFIC'
r.J.
Cf'l•tMt~ A•~• el$ A , ,., o ...... •l:M·25Sl
N.Y. TIMES:
"E11hll•t1tlnQly bizarre! ObHHlwe, e11clilnQ, scary.
wildly energetic." -J-... w... -v .... ,_
One ol the r-r.'• 10 beat.
-TllM
• J. CMIL V PILOT Thu11'11y. Jenuery 22. 1111
SERVICE TO CITY RECOGNIZED
Retln"9 Officer Glenn E. Welker
Mesa police
retiree cited
Wht•rt Chmn Walker Joint><! the flt!dgling Costa
\h·:-.a Police Department in J uly 1955 , as a
,•t1trolrnun, th<· two year old t•1ty was a village of
18 ()()() •
l>ff1 n•r:-. ra1•t•d tht• same• t:riminal activity they
il11 1oda~. :..alll <'h1 t•f HQgcr Neth. but "there was
J U:-.t lt<S:-. of II
Walker. 51;, retired Friday, 25 years and six
r11unth:-. artl'r µ1nr11n~ on his first badge
FROM T llF. 1.UNCHEON HONORING his
, .·.irs of serv1<.'e. he carried away a silver retire·
rncn1 badge. plaques and a color television set
µurl·hased by fellow policemen.
· t1c"s always been a quiet man," observed
Nl'th. "There wasn't an awful lot we could kid him
.1bout."
When Walker joined the force. only a dozen of-
11c·er!. watched over the com munity of scattered
hoU'>l'S. few big housing developments and a north
,.1dt· devoted prinripall y to agriculture.
llt' quickly rose to the rank of sergeant, in Ju.
I' 1956. and made lieutenant two years later.
WALKF.R SERVED JN SP F.CJAL investiga·
11on bt•tween late IH59 and early 1961 , was assigned
..1:-. :1 watl'h commander for the next six years and
was in {'hargt' of invcsll~allon from mid·l967 to
l:1h: 1 ~17 1
Sinn• tht•n . :..a1tl Ch1l'f Neth. he's been in
1·hJ1 i.!t• of lhC' tlt•partmcnt 's "headaC'hc division."
\s rnmmandcr 11f technical services. Walker
·'<.ti 1 la•tl ovt•r the department's animal control.
1 u'>tod ~ and prupcr1y operations until his retire-
nwn• n·n·mon~ al l\1cs a Verde Country Club Fri-
ti ;t \
I ll~ anomµhs hmcnt!. in<'lude<l development of
the department's Search and Rescue Team and
recognition as an outstanding juvenile officer.
Although l'Onsidering a Possible post with a
f:h·,.1a \'ista firm t hat manufactures fiberglass
pr.,duc·t:-. including motorcycle helmets, Walker
I old fC'llov. offic·ers h~ and his wife Elaine plan on-
1 \'to t'llJm :-.omc t1m<' off 1n the near future.
Grin, bare all
for art's sake
F:AST LANS INC . Mi ch. <APl -Call it art,
ha rely
"This 1s living a rt," said Dave Mikolas, 19, who
S:ll naked playing an electric piano amid a pile of
1 ras h in the student art gallery at Michigan State
L'n1versil y's Kresge Center. lie said he was a living
l•xh1bit
"Harelv are human art models painted with
their clothes on," he said. "It is more natur al that
way. more organic. And we're tryi ng to expQse what
l'ver yonc is trying to cover up, junk."
Askl'd if that meant the human body is junk.
M 1kolas s aid ... Well . you could make that argument.
I gut.'ss."
Seven other MSU art students contributed
~t,vrofoam cups. hamburger wrappers, empty wine
liottles. old tires. billboards. used furniture, chicken
w 1 rt.'. and soggy French fries to the four-day display.
Capt. Ferman Badgley of the campus Depart·
ml'nt of Public Safetv said he wasn't aware of the ex·
hib1t antl was unsure whether it would constitute in·
decent exposure.
SS fraud 'felony?'
WASH INGTON (AP l A government report
rec·ommends stiff criminal penalties rather than
lamper-proof Social Security cards as the best way
to reduce the $15 billion a year now lost because or
fi:audulent use of Social Security numbers.
The General Accounting Office said Congress
should e.nact legislation making it a felony to
fraudulently obtain or use one or more Social Securi-
ty numbers, or to alter, reproduce, counterfeit, buy
or sell a Social Security number or card.
The GAO said an alternate proposal to issue tam·
per-proof Social Security cards wouldn't solve the
problem.
11
'
.
2nd TRUST DEED
LOANS
•Fast Service• Competit ive Rates
•No Points
•Up to 1S years repayment terms
Compare Our Ratn
Diane Sutton 847 ·9661
~o~cbr~t:. :~.:i ci•T FINANCIAL
& p t , '0 II • I SE RV ICES property.
C.I. T. FINANCIAL 8eRVICE8
18"7 8each Blvd., HuntlltgtcM Beach
,.
Neaepori, lfle•a ••• •nlie
Joh class expansion seen
Costa M eaa's ~Cbamber of
Commerce ia atudyinl a requ.t
from the Newp0rt Harbor Area
Chamber that it join in a pro-
&ram enabllna youngsters to ex-
plore the business world and
free enterprise while still in hilh
school. .
Don Porter llftd J ean Whitney
of tht! Newpofl Harbor office
told Mesa Chamber directors
thut the Harbor Occupational
~xverience program has been
so successful it is beln& sought
by the two Costa Mesa public
high schools
uu PllCll -nml J .. llY II, ,.,
All Sile Items are Subject to
Stock on Hand All
Pnotograp111c. Typograph1c11.
Clertc1I and PrinhnQ Errors are
Sub1ect to Corr..ctton
....... ..........
The procrem was launched at
Corona del Mar and Newport
Harbor Hi&b Schools.
Operating with an annual
$12,000 budget, the program bas
enr-01led 2,000 youngsters, 83
teachers and "an incalculable
number ol businessmen," Ms.
Whitney said .
The program features busi-
ness speakers on campuses, stu-
dents shadowing business people
for a day. class visits to business
rirms intern programs and teach~r interaction with busi-
nesses.
D
D
F1mou1 lelex flit well pelnt from Giid·
den. BMutlful flnl1h 1erub1 cteen, ltaY9
color1Ul Euy Wiier CIMn-up.
~.11.89
8~
be glld
you got glldden
Kld·tllted Glldden Spred L1tex semi·
glo11 en1mel give• you 1 1uper-tough
non-yellowlng flnl1h. Reg. 18.59
12~
roll on
and ••• ,
9-lnch cover. Priced to throw away
when the Job 11 donel Ellmln1te CIMn·
up time me ... Reg. 59•
The Mesa Chamber was asked
l o come up With $12,000 in
tax-deductible funds to help
sponaor the pro1ram for Costa
Mesa and F.ttancia Kigb Schools.
Donatiom sought
Blood donations will be ac·
cepted Friday by the American
Red Cross at South Coa~ Plaza
Hotel, 666 Anton Blvd., Costa
Mesa.
A spokesman said collection
racilities will be in operation
between 1:4S and 6:130 p.m.
snare your hair
29 ~::=~·
• d' ~· ,~;., ·"~~ Re&iltraUon is under . lll.. r.· 4ii , trfP:; way for •Prine cluaes . ·· .: .. :: . ' · ·• ~-. at Golden West College . ~...:, ··.-SS' ': : ln Huntington Bucb . -S·y;il!'D _,. through Feb. e. Spring
· 5 -~ T · . ·. · claaaea beain Feb. 2. · UC Through Jan. 28, reg-
• . ,. istration will be by ap-
''. pointment only. 30IN ' Walk-in registration,
· with no appointment 'TM& • necessary, will be held
A.ea .. ·'( from 9 a .m. to 7:30 p.m . ~ . Thursday, Jan. 29, and
from 9 a.m. to 3 p .m .
Saturday, Jan. 3. Late'l'e·
-----------gistration will be held
\:)
qulcll, get
.1 kwlllaet
Feb.2-6.
Bel A i r entry
dHdl1tch lockHI
for replecement or
remod1llng. Elly
ln1t1ll1tlon. ~. ~ ·-
#4008DL.
Reg. 14.99 a••
~ ......... 4.11
,.twryf-. """" ......... 11.11
GERMAlf\.S
to hang
and to hold
Greet piece 10 houM your growing
lrlend1I Redwood. with dr1lnage holes.
Octagon shape from Germain's Plant
nor included #PS-HT12 Reg 7 99
... the edge on beluty
Anr1ctlve ind dur1ble 1lumlnum l1wn
edging 11 5" high 1nd comee In e 40'
long roll. Per1ect for flowerbeds.
Reg. 4.59
Greet Invention to prevent your hair from clogglng up plumbing.
Functions on all household drains such aa wash bowls. sinks,
bathtubs. shower stalls and laundry tuba. Raised screen fits
pop-up stoppers. Sav" contact lenses & Jewelry. tool Get the
Hair-Snare•. Reg. U9
2••
........ than
I PlflY hit
It m1y look Ilk• 1 hit. but lt'1 re1lly a
piper p1lnt 1tr1lner ... for pro11 .. 1onal
rnult1. Reg. 10-
/\rv1
to ...
.. tired up
Arvfn'1 flexlble lllm llne autom1tlc por-
teble heetef with 2 h .. ta. tip-over
IWltch, fen.forced •Ir. #30H20-1.
Reg. 34 .•
28'~'-
I
.........
.... llltllroom
Vin-Net oval llnk complete with pop·
up, faucet, 1nd trap. In your choice of
White or bone White. Reg. 48.95
.3411
.o
.
'
flushed
· with success
T1ke out that old
b1ftcock and float. and
repl1ce them wilh the
quiet water-saving
Fluldm11ter. Adjust.
Ible height. #400A.
Reg. 7.59
411
... ,
Homellte 12" llghtwelght. g11-powered
ch1ln HW 11 power1ul enough for the
tough•t fob1. With cerry CIM.
#XL2CC. Reg. 149.95
11911
to ... ,
In hot ....
30-getton hot water heet•
with energy·••vlng
dellgn. Hlgh-tempereture
ahut-off Ind QIUI lined tantc. Reg. 119.95
.101••
........... IM.ts .............. 111.11
--. ......................... 111.• _,,,,
Diiiy Pilat·
THURSDAY. JAN. 22. 1981
BUSINESS
STOCKS
FEATURES
C4
C6
C7
Bill Mulligan would like
,...._ ........... _.....;;:~a UCI sweep on the road
this week. See page C2.
V ataha views XV with mixed eillOtions
Ex-Golden West star teamed with Plunkett, was recruited by Vermeil
By ltOWAaD L. HANDY Ot-0.11, .. _ .....
Rand Vataha 16 v1ew1na Sund1ty'i. ~u.,tir liowl
XV with mixed emotions .nd one could hudly
Mame tum 1r he d1dn'1 take a stand in i.11ck1ng a
whmer
or C'ollege also has an important role m SUJ'day's
game
\'ataba, a Golden Wt:st <.:ollt:ge .,roduct
(lM7-8>. to&d the Daily Pllot by long distance
teleP.hone from hi s home 10 Canton, Mass this
wttk., that he was p1ck1ng the Oakl;,rnd Raiders,
17-10 •
Oick Vermeil. the Philadelphia Eagle coach,
was at Stanford in 1968. "Yes, h'e recruited me to
go to Stanford and then when the Rams drafted
me, he was the receiver coach.
"When the Rams cut me that year, it was
Vc rmeil who called the Patriots and told them to
ta lk to Plunkett. Jim told them they should give
me a shot.
That's not s urprising when ont looks al the
record to find that be attended Stanford University
and teamed with J im Plunkett. the Raider
quarterback. for two y~ars
"In a lot of ways. Vermeil is responsible for
my playing professional football, but I still haV'e to
root for Oakland. But it would be no big tragidy if
Philadelphia wins the game, either."
He then went to New England and spent five
more years as Plunkell's favorite receiver with
tbe Patriots.
Vataha played six years for New England and
another year with Green Bay before quitting the
ga m e and turning to his racquetball empire in the
New England states .
But wait a minute.
The man who recruited Vataha for Stanford
and was with the Rams when they drafted him out
At the present time, Vataha, Bill Lenkaitis and
George Mathews own nine racquetball courts in
that area. They have three in Massachusetts. two
rtists' conception
Laguna Beach High 's Mike McGrath paints a pretty pic-
ture of form as he shoots over the out-stretched effort of
San Clemente's James Hill (21 ). The Artists came up
with a prize-winning drawing in their South Coast League
opener as they defeated the Tri tons, 67 -66. For story. see
C3.
• contIDue
struggle
INGLEWOOD (AP> -Atlanta
is a crippled team, but it gave
the defending National Basket-
ball Association champion Los
Angeles Lakers all they could
handle for some 42 minutes Wed-
nes<tay night. Unfortunately for
the Hawks , NBA games last 48
minutes.
Norm Nixon keyed a fourth·
qua rter surge, scoring eight CJf
his 20 points down the strelch as
the Lalters erased a 97.95· deficit
midway through the final period
and went on to a 116· 106 victory
over the Hawks .
THE LAKERS s truggl ed
despite the fact that they con·
nected on 51 of their 80 field goal
attempts ror a season-high 63.8
p e r c ent pe rformance. The
Hawks weren't bad either, malt·
ing 50 percent or their floor
shots .
Forwa rd Jamaal Wilkes ,
named to the NBA's Western
Conference All·Star team earlier
in the day, led the Lakers with
26 points. He made 12 of his 19
field goal attempts.
Center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
added 24 points, making 11 of his
17 floor shots. He also grabbed
10 rebounds, blocked five shots
and was credited with seven as·
sists as the Lakers raised their
record lo 32· 18.
·'They were hot out of the
blocks tonight but we caught
up," said Los Angeles Coach
Paul Westhead. "We struggled
to run fluid offensive patterns
and did nothing fanc y. They
forced us into a sc ramble game
tonight.
"WE DIDN'T WANT to
over pass tonight so we went
directly to Kareem. We played a
one-three-one offense and spread
their people out. We pl11yed a
gre at game in Boston, it's
always disappointing lo lose a
game like that."
Wes the ad ref erred to the
game the Lakers lost to the
Celtics 98-96 on Sunday.
Rookie forward Craig Shelton
was a bright spot for the Hawks.
scoring a career-high 22 points
and grabbing six rebounds while
playing only 22 minutes.
Shelton's previous career high
was 11 points.
enegades vs. discipline
Raiders, Eagles present contrasting styles
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -"We
have a reputation of being
renegades," said Coach Tom
Flores ol tbe Oakland Raiden.
"We uetbebad1uy1. Our owner
wean black. I have 1ome black on
metoday."
"Discipline, dlacipllne, dia-
dpllne," said QU:k Yermell,
coach of the l'blladelphia
Sul•. "My natare i1 that when a fellow makes a ml1take I
respond . ,It'• my own
........Uty." I .,,_.. apouncted: "Blaek baa
._ .... •symbol. It'• beea ..
"' IPWe players who h·ad ·prob.
••• with oUMI' teams. Some1 =-clan't live a IUY more .. ebanee.
,,
SUPER BOWL
Wtlbert Moatcomery, once was so
afraid ol him that when they met
ln the ball Montgomery would
duck lntotbeneareatdoorway.
"Wilbert ta a quiet, lntroepee·
live sort ol py," Vermell said.
"He wu not uaec1·to a coach lite
me. When a man makes a mil·
take, I am in bla ear.
''I do that with everybody,
mainly flnt·•trtnaen. beeauae tb97'n ,._ to be in tbe 1ame. Some .rw 1 iet a little QUcbt
about tt. but I ll'J to Dot bear down too laard .••
111CB U tile phlloeopbleal
alllowdowa la Sudar'• 1,ltla
If
Super Bowl for the pro football
championship -t.he Raiders by
tradition brash, uninhibited,
free-wheeling; the Ea1les much
more subdued, more straight-
laced with established mores.
Commented Mark vanEegben,
the Raiden' hard-running ball-
carrler: "The Eagles showed up
in three-piece vealed suits and
ties. We wore tee shlrtl, jeans
and 1andal1."
Bill Ber1ey, the Eagles'
bearded linebacker and a 12·
year veteran, quickly
responded .
"That'• exa11erated," be
aaid. "Sure, Coach VermeU bu
some ltrlct rules. He •ants all
contract• 1i1aed before we
reach camp Ud demandl we
keep In conclltioa · 1n the off. aeuon.
.... • naacr in mfan•
ment of tome clllelpllae but tldl ..................
................. •·10 ..
( ... CONl'Mftl. .... Cl>
in Maine, three in Rhode Island and another in
Scarsdale, New York.
"I really enjoy the change in seasons back
here and I'm tied in with the business too much to
make a move. It gets a little long toward the end of
winter but I appreciate the seasons more and the
fall is absolutely beautiful. I thoroughly enjoy it
he r e even though I was raised in Southern
California."
Plunkett 01 Old. He moved the ball around well and
really mixed up his plays . .He picked out the secon
dary receivers and made the right plays on third
down."
It was during that Oakland-San Diego playoff
game that Vataha decided to go to New Orleans
for Super Bowl XV.
Vataha is going to New Orleans for the Super
Bowl game and is excited about seeing his two
friends even though they will be on opposite sides
of the field Sunday.
"I was sitting and watching the game when it
struck me how much I would enjoy going down lher:
for th.e game, so I called the airlines and they put me
on a waiting list. They called a rew days later and
said somebody had cancelled and that I could have
their seat on the plane. "I think the most surprising thing about
Oakland is the defense and Jim's emergence to
le ad the offense," Vataha says.
.. Jim has had his ups and downs over the
years and he had a number of injuries after his
first year with New England.
"I haven't had a chance to call Jim yet but I
plan on it before I go down there. But he 1s deluged
with calls, I'm sure, and I may have to wait until I
·get there to see him."
Plunkett and Vataha are in the record books at
"But he played a fantastic game against the
San Diego Chargers . It .was even better than the <See VATAHA, Page C2)
It's super tough
Fans pick Sunday's victor
. , . ~
F. GROSSMAN
By CURT SEEDEN
Ot -D•ilY ~net Sutt
A new President resides in the White
llouse, the hostages are finally out of Iran
and a cri ppling winter has gripped the East.
Pretty important issues, heh?
It's nearing Super Bowl Sunday, and the
question on everyone's mind is: who is going
to win the 15th rendition of the National Foot·
ball League's biggest battle.
Will it be the Oakland Raiders . a team
which could bring the first Super Bo" cham·
pionship to Los Angeles, or will it be the
Philadelphia Eagles, who have risen from
the dead to mediocrity, to superiority under
Coach Dick Vermeil?
A sampling or customers at South Coast
Plaza in Costa Mesa this week produced
these comments :
FWRENCE GROSSMAN, NEWPORT
BEACH -"I don't know the first thing about
football. Why wasn't our paper delivered last
night? 1 had to go out and buy one.
"Let's see now. I know it's in New
Orleans and it's Sunday. Wait a minute. I can
tell you who's playing. Is it Oaltland? And
. . Philadelphia."
And after a quick conference with her
hus band. "My husband says Philadelphia.
but I'll go for Oakland. I'm a Californian
now." says the former New York resident.
WILLIE B.
7
GARY STANTON WILLIE 8 ., GARDEN GROVE -"I'm a
little scared about it, but I'll go with Philly
by two. The last time they played, Philly won
( 10· 7 l. I think it will happen again."
DELORES FLORES
GARY STANTON, STUDIO CITY -"I
don't know why, but I' II go with Philly. I
guess it's because I bet on Philly and I'm try·
ing to get some money back from a friend.
I've already lost to him twice. I owe him $40
now. I'm just trying to get $20 back.
"If I didn 't owe him that money, I
wouldn't even turn the TV on Sunday. I
couldn't care less."
DEWRES FLORES, SANTA ANA -"I
don't know who's playing. My husband isn 't
interested in it either. We're not athletes ."
W.W. WEST, TUSTIN -"Both teams
ha ve a lot or desire. but to me, (Oakland QB
Jim) Plunkett is the sentimental favorite.
Still. I think the Eagles are going to win it."
PAUL REGAN, IRVINE - "Hopefully,
the Raiders will win. I really don't know why.
I just moved here from Kansas City five days
ago. I've been an Oakland fan since I was a
littl e kid , though . I don't dislike
Philadelphia."
CINDY BENNETT, IRVINE -"I was
for San Diego, but since Oakland won, I
guess I'm for them, being a California team.
I work for Air California and we fly to
Oakland a lot. In the airport, they've got a
neat display giving the Raiders support. I
think that's neat to see."
DON WILSON, HOLLYWOOD -
"Oakland. There's a mystique about the
team. They've also been there before. They
know what it's like. Pbiladelobia will be
more nervous."
TIM EMMONS, FULLERTON -
"Oakland." .
"He doesn't know anything about foot·
ball," counters a friend. "He doesn't know
how to play miniature golf."
Why Oaldand then?
"That's the only team I know that's in
the Super Bowl. Who are they playin1? I
don'tfollowfootball," adds Emmons.,
MmE . McCARTHY, COSTA MESA -
"Phil~elphia. <Quarterback Ron> Jawonki
is Polish and I have Polish blood in me. My
dad 's mother la Polish. Her name la
Dolbrotoaki. Or maybe that's Ru11lan.
Anyway, Dick Vermeil <Eallea' coach) la
from UCLA."
MAn so••Eas, COSTA ••SA -"Phlllldelpbia. It'• the city ol brotberly love.
Tbey'n alao lolu to win in bm«ball and
hoek91, too. Actuatly, I )Mllen tlMJ'n tM bettli' e.m... '
IOCllASL 9GAN, 8a&A'-"OaldlM.
TbQ ..... the apert-.ce. ,,., ... Wat
tt'a all --. I tMlllt tMJ U.. a ... •· .........................
~
PAUL REGAN
n OAILV PILOl fhu11111y Januarv 22. lMl
"Football for Females,'
a cla 8 for Super !Jowl XV
•·rum AP dllpa&dtH
t i TIANO()(,. Tenn It's clllled "fo'oot [I]
bull fur .. ·~1111AJ~.:.. cmd tht! idea as to help waves ' • 9 •
.rnd ~arllnend!> under~tlind the andiron game their
mt-n Pdld hours watchmg on teleyls100.
Ed ~math . who starred as a Vanderbilt linebacker before
.... ·inning a s~ last sprang with the Balt.imore Colts, is the in·
!>lructor for S~turday 's class It is designed as a three-hour
t'ra::.h course for women on the eve of Sunday's Super Howl
:< \' dash bet ween the Philadelphia Eagles ano Oakland
Raider!>
·' ll 's Just a one ta me thmg, the Saturday before the Super
0o¥i I. so that the females will know what's going on," said
l'am llunt. secreta ry to Chattanooga YMCA activities dlrec·
tor Bobby Martin.
Martin said the seminar. suggested by Sm ith, could form
the basis for a YMCA program involving several sports .
"One of our basic philosophies is to promote family
togetherness and this cotfrse could keep families together
when so many are watching games on TV," Martin said. '
The course is to cover football 's basic rules and regula·
1 aons. and define each player 's responsibilities and functions.
·'The purpose or this course is to introduce women who
are not that familiar with football to the game and to improve
on the knowledge some may already have," Smith said.
....--------flm•• •• nl' f h•• cloy --------.
Roa Erbardt, before being rehired as coachofthe New
Engla nd Patnots, explaining what happened to money
collected from players fined for brawling with the New
York Jets : · · 1t i:oes to a good cause. to the coaches' retire·
ment rund That ·s why. when the fight started, I waved the
whole squad onto the fi eld. "
\••11•li11 !H 0flr••s :l .'i 1u \••• ~ 11·i11
Mike Newlin scored 35 points,' 25 of them in the m
first half. to give New J ersey a L26-122 overtime
victory over Seattle to highlight NBA action Wed·
nesday night. The loss for the SuperSonics was
their fourth straight. Elsewhere, ... Allen Leavell tossed in
18 points. including two baskets and two free throws in the
fina l minute, to halt a fourth-quarter Phoenix rally and lift
Houston to a 106· IOO victory over the Suns ... Freeman
Williams scored 10 of his 23 points in the
last five minutes or the third quarter as
San Diego broke open a close contest and
went on to dump Denver, 125·116. It was
only the second win on the road for the
Clippers in more than a month ...
Reserve Junior Brid1eman scored nine of
Milwaukee's 16 points, sparking a rally
that gave the s treaking Bucks a 105-98
triumph. The win was the Bucks' sixth
straight and 12th in their last 13 ... JaUas
Ervin« scored 17 of his 31 points in the
"IWl.t" third quarter as Philadelphia out-raced
Indiana, 118-104 ... Larry Bird scored 20 points and added 10
assists as Boston breezed lo its 10th straight win. a 117-87
whitewash of Utah . Guard Pbil Ford and forward Re««le
King combined for 54 points to power Kansas City to a 115-108
vit•tory over San Antonio.
Hllu•I.: llu11·I.:" ,,,.,.,. clnu-11 (,'u11odir1u
Re1 Kerr and Al Secord combined for three ~
goals and three assists to power Chicago to a 4·2 '
win over Montreal to highlight NHL action Wed·
nesday night. The victory was Chicago's eighth in
a row. tying the team's all-time record for consecutive wins
set in January and February, 1971. Elsewhere around the
league .. Ric Sellln1 took a pass from GUbert Perrealllt
and fired in his 15th goal of the season with 45 seconds left in
the game to lift Buffalo to a 6·5 victory over Quebec ...
Tim Young and 1'1 McAdam scored goals during a two-
minute span of the !iecond period, giving Minnesota a 2·1 vie·
tory over Washington . . . Goalie Pete Peeten posted his
second shutout of the season and Paal Holm1rea scored a
pair of goals to lt:ad P hiladelphia lo a ~-0 victory over Pitts~
tsburgh . Thi: line of Normud 0.poet, •• WU... and
Wiiiy Undstrom s1>arked Winnipeg to a 5-1 victory over the
New York Rangers . . Power-play goals by St. Louis'
Brian Sutter and Wayne Babycll ~ seconds apart in the final
two minutes of the game lifted the Blues to a 6-6 tie with
Hartford . . . Brett CalUpee scored two goals and added
an assist to lead Edmonton to a 5·1 victory over Vancouver.
MalMH'~ Mllu>• •dflH t• •~• ••-"
Moses MaJGee, Houston's center and the lead· •
ing rebounder and No. 2 s corer in the NBA this
season, headed an experienced group of six re-
serves named Wednesday to the Western Con·
ference team for the NBA All-star game. Other West sub-
stitutes included: Jamaal Wilkes of the Lakers and Leeeard
"Track" RobiDllOD of Phoenix al forwards, center Jack
Slkma of Seattle, and guards Deanls JolualOD of Phoenix and
Otis BlrdllGal of Kansas City . . . The rreed Iranian hostages
will be given lif<'lime passes for all regular-season major
league or minor league baseball games starting with the 1981
campaign, the baseball commissioner's office announced.
Also, the NFL shipped 100 souvenir Super Bowl XV game pro-
grams to the U.S. Air Force Hospital at Wiesbaden, West
Germany for distribution to the 52 former hostages ... The
Kings, who have three players sidelined by injuries, r ecalled
defenseman Rob Palmer from Indianapolis . . . The Cincin·
nati Reds have traded center fielder Cesar Gero.Imo to the
Kansas City Royals for minor league infielder Germu Bar·
raaca . . . J• Nlekro, who won 20 games the past two
seasons. signed a four-year contract extension with the
Houston Astros that would. accordin1 to owner Jolla
McM.ue., "put him in the same neighborhood as O. Slit·
toa." Sutton recently signed an Astros contract at an estimat·
ed $950,000 annually.
T~~ ..... I•
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Basketball -UC Irvine at P acific, 8:05 p.m .•
KWVE (108 FML Hockey -Toronto at Kings, 7:30 p.m .,
KOGO (800).
••
·-------------
Midligan:
he wants
to sweep
SpedaJ &o lllle Dally PUo&
STOCKTON For weeks, UC
Irvine's 8111 Mulll(lan has talked
•bout the dirticulties of winning
on the road in the PCAA. Con·
llnu1dJy, he upressed the im·
f)Ortance or winning at home
beci.use of the pressures of
traveling
Now , howe ver, with his
basketball team 2-0 and faced
with the unenviable task of play·
ing the Uni versity of Pacific and
Fres no St ate' on their home
turrs. Mulligan has changed his
tune
Under his prior thinking, one
would im agine a split would
make the Irishman happy.
Not so
"That 's Cbleep l," says
M ul h~an . "We don 't want to
split, we want to win two. I've
never been happy with a s plit in
my ltfe. why should I be happy
with a split now.;"
Maybe because the Anteaters·
task as so difficult.
UCI enters the dreaded and in·
timidaling Stoc kton Ci vic
Auditorium tonight (7:30) to
race a Tigers· team that is 0-2 in
PCAA play and hungry for a vie·
tor y.
"'i'.es, I would hate to face our
team right now. I really would,"
explains Tiger Coac h Dick
Fichtner, who watched his team
lose on the road last week to
Utah State and San J ose State.
.. And, not only would I hate to
play us Thursday (tonight). but
I would have hated to play us in
pr act ices this week.··
As if in a cage without food,
the Tigers wall be coming out
clawing tonight, and the small
confi nes of the Pacific gym
shouldn't help m atters any.
"We are catching the m at a
bad lime ... admits Mulligan,
conrem ing UOP 's 0·2 start ( 10·4
overall >. "but I think we have
an advantage be<.•ause our seven
top guys have never been there
before ...
UCI, 10·4 and on a seven-game
winning stre ak, will naturally
rely on its offense -led by the
nation's leading scorer in Kevin
Magee (30.0 average> -to help
the Anteaters overcome any dis·
tractions the Tigers ·and their
gym might present.
Pacific. on the other hand, will
counter with a stingy 'defense led
by 6·9 center /forwa rd Ron
Cornelius. Santa Ana Valley
High product, who also leads his
team in scoring at 23.4.
Also seeing time for the Tigers
is freshman guard J eff Andrade,
who is scoring at a 10.0 clip in
the PCAA com ing of( the bench.
Andrade graduated from Ocean
View lligh last year, where the
Seahawks won the E m pire
Lea~ue title in 1979·80.
Area girls earn
volleyball honors
Five plavers from the Orange
Coast area were named to the
All-CI F 4-A Division girl's
volleyball team selected by
participating coaches.
A total of 18 girls were select·
ed for the team including co·
most valuable players.
From the Orange Coast area
were Teri Donohue and Lisa
Neidinghaus of Mater Dei, Kim
Oden of Irvine, Deidr a Dvorak
of Laguna Beach High and Mary
Allison of Newport Harbor High.
RANDY VATAHA
,.. ..... r • ..,c1
CONTRASTS
first year under him , then 5·9 .
Th.e next year we had a winning
season 9·7, got into the playoffs
and he said he wanted to do bet· ler . In 1979il was 11·5 and here we
are in the Super Bowl."
B e r gey sa id r epor ts of
Vermeil's ri~idity were overly
stated .
"We wore s weat suits here,
not vests," he said. "We have no
curfews and bed checks. Coach
works us so hard we are glad to
hit the hay at 9 p.m.''
, li e ac kn o w l e dg ed that
Vermeil once had a rule that all
headgear had to stay buckled
throughout pract ice. Nobody's
allowed to sit on their helmets.
"HE JS ..NICE about al. lie
says, 'Don'{ sit on your helmet
You may need it some day.'
After he'd been around a couple
of years he rescinded the buckl e
r ule. It was a great relief "
!"'lores and Vermeil are the
sa m e age and once played
aga inst each oth er as rival
qua rterbacks in s mall California
colleges Flores al College of
the Pacific. \'ermeal at San Jose
State.
Flores. who had an illustrious
collegiate and pro career . has a
14-year record with the Oakland
club. II<' is a s ha rp-faced man
who wears long sideburns, and
gold flashes from his teeth when
h(' talks.
I le has a reputation for be ing
very low key in a sometimes
l'Ontrovers ial atmosphere.
VERMEIL: WITH a n i m·
µr essive rt:cord or collegiate
coa c hing. is c l ean -c ut and
boyish-looking. lie is renowned
for explosiveness. yet fairness.
lie is a hard-driving martinet
Example: The Eagles had
two·hp ur pract ice sessions
befor e a nd a fte r Tuesd ay's
photo session with the media.
T he Raiders p r acticed only
once.
,,
MICH•LIN
XWW, 15 inch
ma~"' SUCH .. USIWI 174-111. ""''
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205 x 15
581ct'
SPORTS BREAK I FOOTBALL I BASKETBALL
,,...,. ... €.
VATAHA VIEWS GAME •• •
both Stanford and wltb ·the
Patriot.I. ·
The km.lest touchdown pus in
Stanford ftlstory came a1ainst
Washington State in 1970 and
was good for 96 yards with the
duo making the connection.
THE PATRIOT record for the
longest reception is 88 yards and
came in 1971 against Baltimore
on a Plunkett to Vataha connec·
lion.
Of course, Vataha also has his
name in the Golden West record
book for' a 93-yard kickoff return
in 1967 and he is the leader in
·pass reception yardage Cl .222>
and pass r eception touc hdowns
< 10 l along with third in long
passes at 76 yards from John
lnglehart against Orange Coast
in 1968.
In high school. he was a
quarterback and his first year at
Golden West he was a running
back . Coach Ray Shackleford
changed him to a receiver his
second season.
·'I like to think that he saw a
great potential in m e as a re·
ceiver." Randy says~ ··But he
says il was because I was such a
rotten running back." The state·
ment was made with a chuckle.
however.
TU RNING TO HIS former
teammate who has led Oakland
to the Super Bowl this year, he
says:
"It's r eaJJ y exciting for me to
be going to the game. Jim had
s uc h a sensational rookie year
with the Patriots and then he
was bothered by injuries .
·'He eventually was traded to
San Francisco for three players
without too much fanfare and a
Saints coach
lot of bad thiqs happened out
there. Most people counted him
out.
"But he's the type of guy you
can 't count out. There was a lot
of publicity back here when the
trade was made on how much
t h e P a l r i o t s b e n e I i t t.e d
themselves.
"But the Patriots haven ·t been
to the Super. Bowl yet and
Plunkett's there . That should
speak for itself." -
Vataha has done a little broad·
casting with a telev<ision station,;
doing color for Boston College
road games. But he says this is
only a hobby with him.
"I WOULDN'T have time to
do it full time. But I enjoy doing
two or three games a season. I
wa nt to s pend time with my
family and that wouldn't give
m e enough along with working
full time in the business."
The family includes wife Deb·
b1e. a classmate at Golden West
College aJong with two young
sons. Collin ( 18 m onths> a nd
Kyle (three months).
.. I'd rather see the boys play
som ething like tennis, racquet-
ball. soccer or golf but if they
want lo play football, I won't
s tand an their way," Randy
s ays. "I don't miss not being irr
football but I did thoroughly en·
joy it."
A ut Sunday, like any other
football ran, he will have his
mind on Super Bowl XV . He will
be in New Orleans al the Sup·
erdomc watctiing two of h is
favorite people in the NFL in ac·
li o n Jim P lun ke tt at
quarterback fo r Oakla nd and
Dick Vermeil as head coach or
Philadelphia.
Bulll to be nanied
NEW ORLEANS (AP > -The
New Orleans Saints have called
a pr ess conference for today,
almost certainly to announce the
hiring of Bum Phillips as the
s ixth head coach in lhe 14·year
hi story of the National Football
League team.
Team owner John Mecom Jr ..
who said last week that Phillips
was 99 percent certain to be the
new head coach. will be at the
p r ess confe r e n ce. a team
s pokesman said Wednesday.
Phillips was head coach of the
Houston Oilers until Dec 31.
when he was fired a fter his
team ·s 27· 7 loss to the Oakland
Raiders in the wild card game of
the American Football Con·
ference playoffs.
Despite having turned the
Oil ers into per ennial pl ayoff con·
tenders, Phillips was fired by
Oilers' owner Bud Adams in a
diffe re n ce or op1n1 on over
whether he should employ an of·
fensive coordinator.
As soon as he became availa·
hie. Phillips became the leading
candidate to replace Dick Nolan
as head coach of the Saints,
Mecom said.
Nolan was fired with four
g ames left in the season and the
Saints' record at 0·12. Offe nsive
line coach Dick Sl a nfel was
named head coach and posted a
1·3 rerord. At the lime of Stan-
fel's a1>pointment. t he team s aid
he was not to be considered as
a n interim coach.
The Saints still have not given
Stanfel or s pecial teams coach
Wh itey Campbell their releases
so they can talk with other NFL
teams about Jobs
Nolan's firing was announced
to an anternational press corps
gath<>rang on :'llov. 25~
~!~®
FOii •O·SIZE A•ElllCU CUS
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BASKETBALL Thursday, January 22. 1981 DAILY PILOT
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I Jt 11 "' II ii I rrw.111wh1 l l· were
'Ii· ; .. 1111.-"d I
Tiit: AK'flSTS 111anagecl lo
...:l'l h.i1·k 111 lht· gam1· 1n the
,1·111nc l qu<trlt·r on th1· 1>lay of
l' t•rrl l'r ."lcil H 1J1kl I and l>an
1'1111ltn1:-.t·
"l1ll the) tr.11 ktl at half. ;15 26,
.11111 l'\'t·r~ th111g 'eem etl to bt.·mg
g11111g a:. 11 s hould
'11d"a' t h roug h t ht.· th ird
q11.1rt1·r. Stewart a n d Hitldell
1·11111111111•<1 for l'tgh t s traight
p111n h and 'udtle n l y, Sa n
Cl1•1111•11t1· It'll. 11 40
l'h1• Tritrms, with St t'venson
d11111g n11"1 1Jf !ht· wo rk. hullt the
IPad up again. 51 ·1fi when Arndt
Wt•rtl "•Id
WITH l!f St:('O:'lll>S left . and
1 r.11ltng. G5 I~~. San Clem<:nll' had
1h1• ti:.i ll nut with a 1·hante to work
for l ht• la~l ,hnl
Hut on the m hounds µas!>, the
Tr1t11n:-. \H'rl' t:alll'<I for steppm~
on tht> l'ncl lln•'. giving Laguna
tht· hall ;rnd '<.'tt1ng up Stewart ·~
f111 ~d heroii's
··T he ku.ls didn 't p<.1n1c when
thl•) f<•ll hehintl early ilnd that
"as t he ke).'' fo'alc oner :.aid
·\Afr ft.II that 1f we k ept taking
~1111d shot:.. l'\'1•nl ~I v they'd
.;tart falling "
With th1· win, 1.a·g u a 1m
prn\'l'' 1ts "<'ao;on n ·1·o rd to 11 2
CHRIS LYNCH
t: r•>s~IPv l ~a<I~
SatltllPhack
fr t•shma n c·e n tcr Cur ti s
Crossll·~ ~tor~ 19 i,ooints and
pu lied down 11 reb<?unds lo lead
Saddle h:.ick College to an im por·
tant. 68 65. Misswn Conference
v 1ttory over v1s1trng H1 ver s1de
Cru~slt•v , who t•a m e into the
gam1· avt.raging 15 4 points a
ganw, <;<'llrt'<J on a th rcc-µoinl
play wi th :1 42 re m aining 111 lhl'
gan1l' to give the G auc hos < 1:.1·7
OVl·rall, ;1 1 in t onfcr cn cc play J a
fivl' pomt lt•ad, tlti GI
But following ii D<.1rry l P c·
gr am dunk a nd a ba s k et b v
Stc·vc· Manrung, the Gauc hos led
by only ont', H6-H5 Both le<.1 m s
I h t•n lurnto-d th e ball over thrc<'
t 1 m l's 1n lhl' next three minute~
bt•fore Crossley ltt:d the game
b.v h illing t wu frt'l' throws with
only eight set<mcb rern<.11nrng.
In :.idd1twn lo Crossley. Kevrn
Bo wland Sl'flrt'i.1 18 points and
Tom M1·Cluske \ a dded 11 for
Sad dl d>:.i<'k -~ann1 n g le d
H1' l'ro;1dt· with 2fi T he Gauchos
wen· ubll· lo hold J ohn Wilkin:.,
lhl' :O.l'\'l•nth ll·ad111g s t•ore r in the
t•1>nfcn·11<·l· ( lK 7 1 lo only ont!
po int
The <;a udws J<1UrtH!) to c·on-
frrt'll l't• tlnormal l'.1lomar Salur
d ay ntght for tht•1r next out ing
Si1Cldl1•hac k 1s <·urrt·nll} t ied
with Sun Bnn;.ird ino 111 second
pltH·e. u h ulf gam (' behind San
l>1<•go 111 the Mission Confe rencr-
Drought ends for Irvine
Irvine lligh's haske tball team ended a dr ought
that s panned l wo y('ar~ Wednesday night as the
Vaqueros c·ame r>ul 1111 thl' wrnning end of a 43·42
decis ion over hosting l 'n1vt•rs1ty to highlight a rea
pr ep act111n
In other gum<·!'. m arking lht: -,tart or league ac
lion . La guna 111\b topµlp<J l>ana Hills. El T oro
s lipped past <:nsta Mc•:-.<1 Mater Uer routed St
Pau l and M1s'l•m \'1l•Jll l•d,gc<I t"dptstra n<i \'alley
II t'rl' ' a look
Irvine 43, University 42
Thl' V;1querm. -;nap1ll'd u 20-gam e Sea View
Leagu e losing s tn·ak with th1·1r 1·omt·-from heh111d
effort overthl'TrnJ<111:-.
Uob 1-'orin gl•r-'., t7 foot JUrttp shot from just
abovt• th<' frt•L• throw l111 t• wit h 10 -.N·1.mds re m u1ning
p roved lo h..thc· m ;.irg in of v icl•ir~
The Tro1ans h ad ont final t hance at w111n111g the
g a m e , but Hra<I Cuc•:.-;".; Ill footc·r with fou r serond s
lo p lay houn<·t·d <1H lhl• r 1 m
Laguna Hiiis S6 , Dana Hiiia SS
Kl'v1n 1-'rtsont"s 20 foot Jump s hot with two
seconds left 111 11vl·rt1mc gave the lla wks the v1t
1 tor~ rrisone·:-.<·rir •d 16 point-; '>n lh4i night. secrm d
t o Curt Cook '-; HI for top honors
J u n1or forward Scull Swar tzbaugh led th e
Dolphins· attack with 18 pornts while Junior ()avid
Rhore r added 12.
Laguna Hilb trailed by six i::nten ng the fourth
quarter But Cook scored six of his 18 points in the
fi nal per10d to get the llawks rven at 54
In the overt1mr•. ne1thN team scored until
D a n a Hills ' Hon Rentrop s ank one free throw w ith
seven seconds left lo set up t'risone's heroics
El Toro 57, Coit• MeH 53
T rmlrng the entire wa y. El Toro finally caught
Costa Mesa at 45 with three minutes lo go in the
).(amf' The two le arns then traded bas kets and
wt.>r e fort ed into an ove rtime perrod when lhey
1•nd ed rl'~ulation in a 49.49 deadlock .
Seniors Tom O 'Brien a nd Doug Dorfman hit
t "o q111<·k baskets in the overtim e lo give the
Ch a rgt>r.s a four point lead. Greg P acos· two free
throws wilh 25 s econds le ft sealed the victory.
l .. a<·os led El Toro with 17 points while O'Brien
< I (i J and Uor rm ;.in < 111 1 a ls o scored in double
figures IV<'n Barrls l<>y wa s top man for Costa Mesa
with 14 points .
Mater Del 71 , St. Paul 48
Senior guarrl Boh Molls scnred 20 points in
M alc r D<>1 's e<1sv win. T he Monarc hs. who never
trailed. exploded. for 26 µ01 nts in the rinal sta nza to
hl•1w t he gaml' wide '>Pl'll
Maler Oei i ~ now fi-11 over all and 1·1 in
Ani::eJus League play
Mission Viejo 74, Capo Valley 70
Haul Mon lalfo scored four of his gam e -h igh 30
points during lh<' t hird three-minute · overtime
stanza as the Dc ablo!-. o r M1ss1on Viejo pulled out a
thriller
With holh s ides knolled al 59·all al the end of
regulation. lht·y l'Ouldn't break the deadlock after
I he fir st ovcrt1 m<' I fi4 a ll > or the second (68-all).
~( :(: ron•r~ pa~t G u a tt•ruala'I 9:-1-67
Southe rn Cal College h ud fr ve
players scnrc in rl1>uhle fi i!ur c•s as the
V a n g uard:-. w h ipped a tire d
Guatemala Natwnal ll'um , 9:1 fi7 . 1n
non ·confe rc nct bas k c tb<t ll i1Cl1o n
Wednesday night
G uatPm ala . w hic h had 1usl t-n ·
dured a long plane ride . couldn't
keep up with the fres her a nd fast er
\'an g uards. who i mpr oved their
rt•t:ord tu R-1 ()
Leading the w a y fnr SCC in the
'il'ortng parade was 6 2 g uard Mike
Rob e rts. who scor ed 20 points . lie
was supportt'CI by te am males Rick
Porra s (20>, Mar k Roch e ( 12J. Rich
Hogen; flO> and Gaste n Gr a ham
( 10).
By ROGER CARLSON
Of tlM D•llY 1'11.c St.off
It was an ironic sce ne Wednesday night as
Estancia High's Eagles tried to stop the Corona d el
Mar High juggernaut with a de lay game in their Sea
Vie w League basketball opener . It would have
•been even mor e iron ic if i't worked -and although
t he Eagles executed a lmost flawlessly in their at·
te mpt ther e wer e a fe w things going against
the m .
f'IRST, ANU f'OR i<;MOST, the intended vie ·
lim of such antics wa s none othe r th an J ac k Er -
rion, who built a n •put a t ion and career al St An·
thon y High 1n Long Beach frustratrng others with
the s ame rnant'uV<•r !>
Setondl), tht.· ~ea Krngs had the ulti m ate solu
t ion whit•h 1s 75 per cent sh0t>ttng from the fit:ld
and 100 µertcnt s h<>0t 1ng from the line when the
game was on thl· lsne 111 t he fourth quarter .
T hl' result a :1:1.24 victory for. the Sea Ki ngs,
who took th<' lea d al 14 13 1n the second q uarter .
m a intain ed a s mall m a rgin urrltl the fourth
quarter (21-18), then 1>u lled a "'uy with eight for
l'1ght from lhl' fr et· throw hne a:. the Eagles were
fnr1·l'd intu dt·:-.1H·rat1on fouls 1n the late going
"NATl'RAl.L \I W[ l>ON'T lrkP to play that
w a\'." sa id fo~rrton "But I tlon 'l bl am t• them And
1·ni glad the~ did. 1t was a lesson for us T his 1:-.
sum C'lhing wt· huv11 tu hl' prepared for l wasn t
surµrist'tl to Sl'l' it tonight and I won't be s ur pnsell
lo Sl't' ii aga in. c:-.pN·tally aga111Sl El T ur() anti
Costa Mcs<t "
E sta111'ia ('oad1 Larn• Sundt.>rman had t11s
s m a ller team g111nf,! for tltt• surt' sh11t and only
Basketball scores
College w.,,
So<"' <.v1tPQrt q1 <,1,,lf• ""' 1 "',.
11ona1 "'
Wn1tl·l"'• bJ Cl1ttrnu.1<\I M u(Jft '"'
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A ldbdnt.JtU •11"'1'~ 1 1
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tnwa St 8iJ O'l"hmn1t t>'
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Rull"'' 11 fna1an1• t ""' \<I E M 1t n1qan 80 (vnl M•f '11~, .. n l'1
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f 4 •tlf>•Qt\ D•<'-•n~n lfl u ... n 1ruO•• H
S t 80f'M¥Pnlut1 /4 t ... n1'\1U\ &I
V •llitt'tO'ld bl (onfW'• 111 ul \Cl
Q , ... ,..1AI R1<St-, bi()
f ct1rt1~ld 81 MOnh I.tu "-t Pl(
1un.1 II Ntfi!Q.J"·' "'
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C,t Jof\n \ IJ V-tf'n 11.,11 I))
SCMltf'IWf'\t
I"'"'"' t)t f,.A''-1\ I utr\ .. ,tOl /t
Community college
Soulh CN \I Con'9rtM ~
\,1,..111 Al\it ~ M l ~rill Anton••'••
I ull,.rtw,,,.. ">+V1 01t-QO M•''" ....
Cerrito~ o~ (1ro\\mOnl ~
M1u1on Contutnc.t
\cUl'dlf"'ba• Ir tii8 Ri¥"'' '••O•• b\
(.ilrY\t.1, ¥xJtn w1•\t ... rn ~t.
~.,n 0 1rQO < ( 101 P«tlon1.., '"
High school
S..t VttW Lf"MIW'
torond ttt-1 M•u J.1 I ''""' ,,, 1"4
h v•nt-0 , Un1v••t\1'v A1
t 1 T11•0 $1, (O\lA M t '" H
~lh CN\I lU'll ..
l dQUlli.I ~CM h bl S,.u 1 t h•H•t fH4• bl•
l ,.qund tiHI' ~ OM'" Hill\\•, 111
M1\\lon \ltt•10 /~ ( ""'''~ttn11
'Vdllf'• 10 .' ,,,.,,
"WHktnder •.. "
Keeps you
on top of the
entertainment
scene, Fridays
in the Daily Pilat
A~hl\ Lito1Qu•• M,,, •. , CJ• I ' •• 11 ...
f I ,,,If I h• t'l;ll ,\1 ti
(•ntvr, lt'•Out-
t t t• I M·;li t t u
ttl l\h.t ""' •t 1 ,, I'• , ... ,., " .....
J tt If At•I f
G.tr-O.•n Cro""'" l f.tQU•
t f,/ 1 tit t I .• t ,t I I 'ft '"' ',. ... " "' t ••1,t11 '·' ,. I M,,.•
u r .. nqf'' ... q..,...
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1 I • t • t • •• I
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tu '''' If 't "'I •\;.tr 1!o u 't I
1 If f h N .11-'•tOI .t
IV· .. ,, I .... u. ,, ... " •
-_ ....... -----
...... ~ t
We're Higher Than
Any BankOrS&L
203 to 503 OFF
Suits, Sport Coats.
and Wash Pants
' I
' \,-'
17'h & !Nine Ave .. Westcllff Plai.a, NewpcMJ Beech. CA
~
"
16.02% 15.22%
annual yield annual rate
Minimum investment certificate is $10.000 or
more - 6 month certificates· Rate available
thru 1128181 .
• No extra fees. If withdrawn before maturity
you never earn less than 6%. California
Residents Only .
..................... dpatlbooll
.tfO/o AMMIY&.ld ll/1~ .....
-~.
•
1511 ..... VerdeDf.Eaet Suite.,,. c .......... c.1212t
(714) 111-1133
Mike Ma rket's four.footer at the halftime buzzer
was o uts ide or the two-foot range in the first ha lf
a s t h e Eag les were within a UH5 count.
Cor ona d e l Mar, m eanwhile. e njoying a
three-inch advantage In height per starte r . was
('OnOe(•ling Ort 8 Of 10 from the perimeter .
ERRION COUNTERF.O Estancia's slowdown
with his own vers wn of a sure thing offense In the
sct·o nd half and ont'e Steve Moor e exte nded the
m argin to 23· 18 early 111 t he fourth per iod with a
16-footer, it tht'n bcc <1me a c ase of fi~hting fire
with fin•
''T hal ':-. the only approa('h Lo it unless you
have great outsidt> s h•J4>tcrs ." :-.:.i1d E r rion.
E!>lunc1a Coad1 Lurry Sunc.Jcrrn an d1rct led his
unt.ll'rdog!. with a t:ll·ver offense. designed to work
the outsid e . pen et rat 111g onl) un t he basc:hn e for
the pt-n·t·ntage 'ihot
Then it wa~ bat'k to the Eagle!>' zone. but
( 'ornna uel Mar «rossl·tl 11 up with its sharp shoot -
111,g 1£'(1 h~ M ;J rk Spinn·., 1:1 po1111' ·
"WE Wt:Rt:: VI.A \'I NG to ~111 lhe gam e."
s aid Sunderman "It wasn't JU'>l to g<11n cr ediluhty
again:-.t Curnn:.i tll·I :\1 ar We wt•re t omm1tted lo it
a nd down thl· hill'. this d1M•1phne I'> going lo help
'Wt· cJ1dn·1 pul 1·n1>ur;:h pr cs:-.u r <: on them
1 ( 'or ono1 de l M ilr J, hut the\ have suml· duss pla~ er:., und I cl•in'I n1t·an Jtist Spinn, Prit>' and
\1 or1rl' Tht·\ a ll hurt U!\ "
Esl;me;a·., rm l" ll•ath wc·r t' 4 2. 7 4 a nd 1:J 12.
hut 1•ve11 until lh1• final two m111utl''i of the game.
11' f 'dM nuro;ed a zr, 11( lt·ud. ltH.' t-:ugles W(•r e work
1ng lhe dday
Suc(·1·:-.,ful 11111· anti 0111•s Ii\ C 'hrt'i I.) rw h. Sp111n
anti Moor1• 1 1 ~11·1•1,. h<1w 1•v1·r . f1n1 ~h t.>d off th1·
Eai.ilt•"
COLLEGE B85HETB8LL
TOnlGHT
UftlUERSITY UftlUERSITY
OF CALIF. US. OF THE
IRUlftE PACIFIC
7:55 Pf'l
JI • , I ••U I) I n. JJlJI " l I"""•" 1: .. ljr (I~ ~r '•
ti•· 111/ 1lP,f1H1r.111h Mt r, ... ~ c l11y-l1•r f'lyr11oulll
.. • .i N .. 11t1,-. 01i 1 r, > ''""' t 1.111 t1u1 ,1c>r~
E >t!CUl 1-1e Producer R1>y f.11qh:h1e..:111 ..-.--..... -A~~t~~19Pp?
11lAN 1f Ol JNl 1 'iOt IJ!1...1 LI NCOI NM~ RCURY
r ,f A. Iµ• Hlf . I ff AH' OJ I flt! Nfll '( r AMIL y
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FINAL
DAYS
"I llU~I '>ftl
IJI.. ~ t "! 9( ft)l ~
,(~lP01 lS, 111 1111• Ill~\
I ktf'• I '
ti r, IA1, Wft\ ~',dtt 'f,u.,~, ·~..,e.~,·
.;l1Al I! ,,,·,.1r11, 1\\ 4111 , ,1·,, •
1,l)k lJVPfl, l iq , I ! 11 fl (Ii l'IJW°ll'•I' t
111 s~~1 1 1~l 'H ~1 ~ Hf 1111 ·1 ... ,
fAMUIJ, NAM(\ !IHI 11~.I !1VI l 1 ~'>lh't
·"' DAILY PILOT Tlh11td1y J1nu1ry 22, 1111 ......
Sabot sailing
tops calendar
a,. AL•OND LOl1'Aat:\'
..... P .......... 9"'91
Tb.re'll bf> plt>nty of yar hUn& a<'t.aon aJ001 lb•
Ora.nit' COut lhJ1 wMll«nd u thrM yacht clubs
ponsar "''"'_. lnvolvln1 everythlnl from Sabot dln1lu• to olfahore-Perfurtruuwe tl•nd1<•ap Rae
lftl f1H\ y IK'tll.8
L.tdo Is le Vuht ('lub wlll prov1d• con1peUuon
fOf" ad\Al't Sabul talion Saturday in the tblrd race of
1u AduJt Sa~ Ser1n, Soutl'I Shor\\ Yacht Club will
inau1rurate 1\A 1•1 W111t11r tUbach1 Senn for iall
du ~. and C iapmr iano Uay Vacht C:lub will pre1
ent a ne• format for 1b S..1 Ju•n Stin es for
PHRF rauna' apo 8a Yacht Club'~ new San Juian Serie~
differs from past ears an that It '' wnpped up in
l ne wedle:nd of riac1n& An Olympic format for the
t,.o racd> cheduled Siaturday with on e race over
an OI.) mptt· l) pe tnan1le 1tnd the other a Gold Cup
cour c On Sunda> a middle distance race is
~cheduJed
The hr!>l important match racing event 1s
':>rheduled aturday and Sunday when Long Beach
\' a~t Club t.•onducts the i,econd year of Its Pacific
Coast Maleh Racing Champ1onshJp, primarily lo
::.elect a rinal entry in the Congressional Cup
maich racing series an March
Eight skippe rs and crews from San Diego lo
Br itish Columbia will man Catalina-38s in two
days of head·to·head racing. In addition to secur -
ing a berth in the Congressional Cup, the winner
will also receive the Bill Ficker Perpetual Trophy.
Also in the Long Beach area, the Navy Yacht
Club will conduct its annual Commodore's lnvita ·
tional Regatta for all classes Saturday and Sun·
day.
In other Southe rn California Yachting Associa-
t1on a reas
Santa MollJu Bay
South Coast Corinthian Yacht Club -Les
Storrs Series No. 2, (keel boats) Saturday
South Bay Yacht Racin~ Club -Champagne
Ser ies (keel boa ls> Saturday.
Saa Dte10
Santa Clara Racing Association -Winter
(\eries No. 2 Call classes) Saturday.
Oceanside Yacht Club -Winter Series (Sabol>
Sunday.
Sout hwestern Yach~ Club -Winter Series
<ha ndicap> Saturday.
Nortb and bJand
Ventura Yacht Club -Spring Series No. 2,
I PHRF) Saturday, Sunday.
LA Boat Show
to open Feb. 20
The 105,300 square foot addition to the Los
Angeles Convention Center will be ready in time
for the opening of the 25th annual Los Angeles
Boat Show. according to Bill Schicora , chairman
for the sponsorin~ Southern California Marine As·
sociation
Ther e will be 350,000 square feet of covered
s pace available for the West's largest all-marine
exh ibition. Feb. 20·March 1.
The new facility in downtown Los Angeles is
North Hall. It is totally self-contained with food
ser vice. stor age space and a 00-foot public en-
trance and lobby. T hree large 25-foot high freight
doors will open directly onto the main floor of the
area
The buildan~ wi ll have all the comforts, includ·
ing high capacity electric air conditioning and
more.
~' THERE GOES
a ANOTHER ONE
OF THOSE I .
• FUELESS
BOATS!
Since Heh boet it hind built "'°" dtpolit inb.
avoid e>Ur aummtr bttklog end receive yovr bev
boat l/t 'the beginning of iht '"""·
Small depo•i+ rW¥W w'I frH&& 1f\• pt-·1u.
lTiwc. wil be 11'% incnne F.b.l'W\).
GENERAL. SPE~flCATION.S
O~r•U tenllh 11'-o.. S,..d: To, se ~
e .. m ; e 'S C"'ie~ J&knots
Or•Ft' 18 • Dvra+ion: 'l hi~. •s.1 knots 0•~r41ff wet9trt I ~ iO hf't .• 1 Z. Mota
' CApkf+y I ~ Ad11l4'
FACTORY DIRECT SALES ONLY
Wf!K·MYS t-. tDSPM wmcfNI>' by appointiMillt
For edd•t6oftll ..... ,,.,"'. ,.,, .. eoft+octi
Dullield Yachts
660w17th Streat,Gosta Mesa, CA
[71+164~-0715
NaA
tllltTE•N COlll,EltlNCE
p"'"'"'' L•h•~
Golden \WI•
Po•tl•no
S•n OteQIO
Sullt•
~II 4'1\tOlltO
1( ..... , '"' MOV\lon
Ul•h
0.-nwer
0•U41\
'•lfk Dl•lti... W L ,, ..
,. tl llO n ti ..o
141 1l Sit
141 ,. -
n ,, "' ,, 2t 411'
lol-IDl•iU. )) ti .. ,
fl 1t •II
11 11 ... ,. ,. 00
II JI JS. ' ., ''° IASTl•N COf.,EltlNCI
A•....UC Dlwltlw
Pntl•O.IP"•• 0 ' IU
Botton 0 • llt
New York 1• " .041
W••n•noton 11 11 41ff N•• Jer~• i. >I us c ... 1r11 Oi.ltlMI
1"'4:S••n• •
Cnlc•oo
All•nl•
CIOtl•nO
Del roll
)/ 11 ISS
1• 11 seo
17 11 ... 1• )() .•
ti l l )ti
., • 1"0
_.Y'tk.,. ..
L•llert tt•, Atl•nl• 10. Botton ttl, Ut•n 11 New Jer,., ,,.. S.•ltl• 111
Pnltedtlpfll• I II, llWll•N t.,.
I( ...... , City II s. S.n Antonio IOI
Houtton 10., "'-nl• 100
S•n O'-IU, Denver It•
Mil•-.. IOl, Golden St•te ..
T......-10-1 New Jer,.y ., , ..... ....,
Pnlledtlpfll• •I W•"'lnQIOll
Cl\I< •9D •I Detroit
New YOl'k •IS... 01'9Q
LMl.,1 118, H•wka lot
GI
• 11·~
" ., ..... ,,,,
tO
to
Ill>
u•~,
241 I
I
1111 u
21
,,,
15 ti
" u •11
ATLANTA. Drew 11, Pwllom U, t1•~ n. cr1u 1. JOM.on 11. Snellon n, M•tt"""'
•. McElroY •. B"'le"'" 1, McM1ll1n 4 To4•1t
011·1S lo.. LOS ANGELIES Chonet II, ""Ilk•• 76,
Atl<IUl·J-.r 74, C-r '· NI.an 70 JorO.n
I, L•IWl-r0tr 10, C•rtor 1 Tol•i• SI l"-19 ...
k-lly Qu.er'l.n
Allaol• 3t 11 15 1• '°' LO\ Anoel•• 11 JI 2t ,. , ..
FouleO out None Tol•l louh AU•nl•
... LO\ A"9'1•\ 1' A 10,3"
COLLEGE
SCC 93, Guetemel1 67
GUATIMALA I J Am•u 14',A•lart•H.
Cablero I. G•rtl• 16, Our•no 41, MenOet I, E
Am•y• 7, MenclO•• ], R C•blero 1, N .. 1rro
4 SOUTHIE•N CAL COLLE GE
Morl•nton 6, Parr .. tS, Robllrh 70, J1nup
6, Roche 11, Plu1mer •, Rooer• 10, Gr•h.tm
10, Miller 6. S.tclcloll 7
""'"'me sec. ~17 1 ot•I touls. G""lem11a It Soulh~rn C•I
Colleoe 10; Fouled our None
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
S1ddlebec:k 81, Rtveratd• 65
ltlVIEltSIDE Wilkins I, P19r•m 16,
M•nnin9 ,., W•tller •. Edmond•. J1merWM
7. Wllll•m• l. Coon\ 7
SADOLEIACK MtClu•k•Y II Croul•1
1•. Thorton •. D•C•\•S I. 8o•t•nd ''·
,.,..,.. 1. 0.•• 1. J-•.
H•lrtlme S-100.0 . Jl.11
Tol•I foul\ R ... , .. .,. "· S.O<lltblO ..
Fouled out WUttln\. M•nn1n9, Pevr•m
f Atver\1dl>J
STANDINGS
Souttl Coeet Conferenc e
c--e o .......
WL WL
F ulltrlon • o IJ •
CtrrtlO\ l t U 41
S•nl• ,.,,. l 1 11 to
Or•noe Ca.<1 1 7 11 I
Gro\\monl 7 J IJ II
Mt. San Antonio 1 J IJ •
S•n 01100 Mew O 41 1 IS
S.-Y'tGlmH Ora~ Ca.•1 •l S... Dl.iio Mew
Corrllos •I Fultorton
G ro\\mont •I Mt. SMI Antonio
Mlallon Conference c ..... r_e
S&n D••oo CC
S•n BerNr01no
S•dOlel>atll.
Rlve"1dr
'"'"'' Sou111westitrn
P•lom1r
WL
4 t
J 1
l
1
7
' 0
~y'1G1mH
SaOOl-0 •I P•lom•r
(1ltU\•I Alven•~
S•n BtrNrOlno •I S•n Dleoo CC
HIGH SCHOOL
0 ..... 11
WL
11 •
I 11
I) I
II 10
10 10
I) I . ,.
CdM 33, e.tencl• 24
ESTANCIA -G•rdn•r '·Hall •. M .. ktl s. S•mpsan •. Kr•IU o. McC.hlll 2, TIH 0,
Ooul\ch o. s..ntoy0 O. R...,ch O
I COltOlllA OIL Met S,.lnn I], M-• I ,
Pr let 6, Lynell 41, L .. r 0, Ac-O
Sc:-•• O.Ort.n E•lancl1 I I ~ 14
Coron• •1 M41• 6 10 S 11 l3
Tol•I loult E•l•ncl• 10, Corona 0.1 Mer
ll, Fouled OU1 None
El Toro 57, Coltl MHe 53
COST A MISA Bardtltf 14, L•tk•Y 11.
IMclCtt I, ~1lchow1lll 41, Jonu '· Frei 1,
R l\l\el>ar90r •
IL TOltO Grll•lva I, VIII•"° 1, P•c0t
11, Dorfman 10, O'Brl•n 16, Cl••k 41 sc-r, Q111rten
Cotl•Mew II 16 11 10 SJ
El Toro II ' 16 IJ S7 Tot11 loult Cost• Mew II. El Toro t;
Fouled out; None.
lrvln• 43, Unlverahy 42
lltVtN• -Wooclen II, Wllllemu. Wll-. s. P•tterwn 13, Forl1>91r I, Mooth•rl O. UNIVlltllTY -Mc:LAuohll,, IS, G .. H 10,
T 011\ell 2. L•rMn I , Myers 4, Route J,
Slmp'°" o. RetcllH• 0
k-lryOIN"-"
Irvine 11 • I 17 '1
Unlvertlly S t It 11 2
Tot•I loull lrwlne I. Unh1tr11ty U .
FouledOUI· _,.
MY 74, Cepo Velley 70
CA,.STltANO VALLaY -Co ll 1',
C1111t1• to. lteecl . I, O.r9111 I, Br,•nt 11.
I( UH J. •. C.11 0. Mendor• 0
MISSION VlllO -StletWood tt, M-.lfo r' K--V. P J. O.CM4'• 2, '•14man 10, .,11 .... "-.., °'""""' Capl1tr-v1y 11 n 13 u 5 • 2-10
MlnlonVleto 11 ti II U S 4 ._,.
Tot•I '°"'" Cel>illr-Volley 2•. MIHlon
VlaJo 21; '°"*'out: Chet.,., •-. lryent (C1al1tr-v111..,1.
L.....-17, Ian Clemente II
SAN ct.aMllNTa -llortl" l. IE .... 4,
M•I-e . ....._ 11, c-.r •. Hiii 10.
Le-I, H.,.,,...,.. 0.
l.AeUMA ••ACM -Arlldt ... McGrMll J,
St.wett 17, ltldllell 11, Tout-12, SMrt J. HCIMll 0.
IC-Illy .........
S.11Cte-20 U i. 7_..
L1t-1Mch 11 IS to 21-.1
Total twit: left Clemltlltt 0 , Lqww
8Hcll ISi ....... ..,.: -·
L..-... 11,DllftetHtll
DAll'A MIW -~ti, Ill._.,
•It, .. ......, 1, ~" •• ~-4,.
Miiis t, W.,. I. CINI• 4. LMUU MILLI-l",._.te.Otca.-i t, .. _...,,_,. ... , ........... c..a ... .............
l>tMMlllt t4 11 I 14 I -st
Lae-"* If It I W t-• f .... -.: DIM Hlllt N, i..-Hiits
U ; , ........ : ~ IDIM Mlikl, ..... 11.,..._ CU.-Htlll): Ttdlllkll ._.,
WtewtlllelllMlllll.
M•., o.I 71 , IC. Peul 41
MATalt Dal Je<llllOn '· Ma41l llO,
Wllllomi 11, SedtnflO t, hrtiell •, TrlOeft 1.J ..... s.
IT. PAUL Mel-y6,Qulrot 16, l•IH 17 •
Ste,.llewlu 10. 0on11no11eiJ,Morre112.
"-.., oi...-" Mater Del 15 U U tt-71
St, P•ul / 11 11 12 U 41
fot•I loul,. Metw Del 13, St. P•ul 13,
Fouledoul: Wllll•m• (-er Dell
HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS
S.eVlewLHtU•
LNttot o .......
WL WL
Coron• del Met ' 0 10 J
El Toro I 0 • I
trvln• I 0 I
Cost•Mew 0 t • Etl•ncl• 0 I
Unl•e~lh 0 t ,, ... y•ta.-
CoroNOtt ~rat trvuw
Coll• Mew .C Et!Ml<I•
El Toro •I Unl .. riltY
Soutt\ Co•lt L1egu1
~ o ......
WL W L
L•oun• S.ecl\ ' 0 II ,
L•oun• Hill• I 0 s 5
MIHlon v .. jo I 0 • I
C•p11lr•no Vallo; 0 I " a
S•n Clemt'nte 0 I 11
O•n• Hiii• 0 I 1
,r ... ,·.a.-·
Cap1strM'iO V•ll~y at Dan• Htll\
Mitt ion vi.to •t San Clemen!•
L•OUN a.acn •• U9""" ""''
Aft9elUI League 0 .... 11 Le-WL W L
S.r"'1t• , 0 ll • Blthop MontOO""'rY I 0 ,, )
Maler O.i I I • ti
BlthOP Amat 0 1 ~ ti
SI. P•ul 0 I un•v•ll
Fr*Y'•G•"'" B l'hop -lgomerv •• M•l•r Del
Servlte •I St. Poul
BllMP A....e •I SI Fr•n<I• lnon·IHO.,.I
High achoOI renklng•
Clf •·A ""· Sc-.·---f'b. l S.n-<O' (1).4) 110
1. LB Poly 111·2) "
J. Oc-View 1 IJ.JI 1'
4 Ne-ry P•,.._ C 141-01 ..
S. Murphy II•]) 61
6 P•lo\ v ... dl• C ll·ll \I
1. ,_..v_, 111-l) •
I. Comp40f> ll ·S) l4
t S.rro (I).]) H
10 P•-...,lt-41 71
Olllt'rS V-m De1 (1().6) Nolro 0•""'
( 10-71. 11:.i .... l•·SI; l •k••ood 111 0
C•m•rillo l,.Sl
CIF J.A
t St S.rn¥dll•JI 119
1 l • Qu1nla 11•21 10.
J. c . .,_ *4 Mer (t-l) IS
Manno V•ll•• ( 1 l·l) IO
S•n GorQOnio c 11·]) I•
6 Bo.co hell c 11·•> \J
1 LO\ Allo• I l•ll ••
I Domtnouu 110.ll 11
9 S•ne.ANV•ll•v (l .. I II
10 Lynwood 1"-51 15
Oth~rs. Tu\ltn t '1-31 , R1ver,10f' Poi.,
t• 41); W••I Covina I 11·5), P•lm Sprtn11>
"11 . wa,,.,n!I0.51, Jonnw North 19 '>
CIF 2·A
V•<lor Vallo I 1101 111 N~"" I 11-01 104
Capistrano Vall .. 1 i. ?) ~8
• Blair C 11·"1 8•
S B•"tow I 1111 bl
•· S.11 Cle-C IJ.ll U I c;1.,..0.le 19 SI •1 a Pomonelll·21 )/
R IO~lll t 11 411 11
10 C•brllloll l •I 1b
Olllt'r\ Sun"v Hllh I• 51 Bur 1ou9n•
R10~<r.,_1 Ill 3). La S.-rna ( 11 "I
Cl, l·A
1 s ... 1. Cl••• fll-ll "· 7 Tomplf< Clly
I II.JI. "· l Wl>ltti.r Cnri•li•" I II " IS, •
Bann11>9 111·11. 6'1. s cn.owlo c ll·2), '1. •
"'"' B•ll...Jriftrson I• 7> •nd Carp1n1.-11
'' 41, 14. I LA Baphsl 110.ll, ... • S...
M•nno I 10.JI. I•, 10 Ou•r1• 17 II. 10
Olll•r• C•l~s I IO·SI . Wl\IHn (nrt\
l••n ll·Sl. El""°'• 111_.i. Alm al lht' WorlO
11().J). M'"''"''" 19·l l
CIF SMALL SCHOOLS
I Monlcl•tr Prep (9·411. 1 BrMl•oocl
c 10 •). J. Crosvo.oclt 110 J). 41 C•P•\lr....,
V•llfY Clwkt1..., (I.JI, S. N--1 CIW+tt ....
llf.11; • Mt'IOOyland I S.t ). I O•••OOCI
(II.J i. I Ro~mono II·•). • M•n<OCMI
II·]). 10 C•I PttP 11·1).
Lo• Alemfto1
WIOllllESOAY'S ltaSULTS , ......... _ ...... __ ..,,
Flr\I r1<e -.4 K1Slla IMltcllelll, •.OO,
l 00, 1,.0; A·MeU Gem IW•rOI, 1.IO, 1.0, Krypton Rockel (Aclalrl, 4,20 U Hooc:la
11 II P•id llt.40.
Second rece ~r Too (Treasure),
t .loCI, S.IO, 4 20, l(oneque t Alll..,.,), JOOO,
11.IO. NMl>•llif' N..n (8rOOllSI, S .cl
Third rac• ~My 0.•r ICrH90rl. s oo. 7 .ci.1.«1; Aul.ocr•tl< 1w .. 01.1 eo.1.20.
Nun Yo IFlort'sl, •.IO 11 o•CI• 11 .. 1 palO
111 IO
Four"' rece Gvtl0$0 ICrN9er). ll 10,
6.20. • . .O; Sir Jel Clwlr90r (Brook\), It .0,
1 IO; E .. y0v\ll lCl•00111.11 . .o
Flltn rece -S....IOI' ~ (H•r11, HO.
2 '°· 2 .40, Sparkll1>9 Mool\al I HI01n90rl
1 IO, J.00, -toe• Brown ( Bll•1M) .• .,
l2 u•< t• I 2-7) paid M.20
Slath racta Explo\iYf! Nativ• C 8ardJ 1
6.10, ] . .cl, 2 IO; Jet View IAO•trl, J.00, 7 '°·
Eawy Approacn IH•rt), J.00,
S.venlll r1<1 Son<ho (Harl), •.10, 5.00,
•.OO; Ylppl YI Tippy YI• !Flores>, 1110,
1.40, M•'111• IC•rOOHI, s IO S1eu<I•14-6)
paid suuo u Pick Sia 14-l·H ·l·"I pelO »1,131.IO to
ont wlnnltlQ tkk•I h la nor-.\I U Pica Sia
coMol•tlon ~ Stl.10 to 170 wlnnlno tlOets
111 .. horw\l.
E IQMh rooc:e Lah• Soul I Hartl, 7 IO,
J.IO. l .00: JOOv't Glory ICrHoerl. •.00, J.10,
R•pld Ro& (Adair), 41.10.
Nlntl\ ran -OH·Bennecllnur ( BrooUI,
7 20, 10,00, >.•O; OH -C•ron Troubl•
(Cruoer), 5.00, l.«I, S.20. Mitter Met.le
IMltcllelll, UO. OH -DEAD HEAT Uta•
•<II I IA_.) paid U4.00 l1tO<l114·1Ai paid us.oo.
Attendlnco 5,Sll
S.nteAnh1
nl*ISOAY·s ltHUL TS ·--11.-,, ... , ...... _t ... I
First r1<e -J,B.'s o~er IJOllHI.
3'.MI, U.00, I.ID; Miu J im J. (S-ma•orl,
•.IO, S.JO; lttnoof Erin IH•rrl•l, •.Ml
Second r•ce -Sh1'1 Luulou•
IOel1 llo11uo•I. S.70, J.40, 1 •O. Ky
Counselor !Cordero), 6.MI, >.Ml;. Ir• ll•Y
ILl!lfl•ml, 2.10. 12 delly -le 11·2) P81d
1114.20.
Thi rd ••c• Hl o h E•rnln91
IS!lwm•.,>. t .ID, •.Ml, J.40; H•nlmo (Pln-
c e y l , J.IO. J ,00; Cl'l•ntl"O Se•
! DelelleuMeYot). 5 00.
Fourtll rece -Ill Fr• !R-lreil. 46 • .0,
1'.JO. II.JI; L.Mter• (L1""8ml , 1.40, S.ID,
COl'Mtt (Hewlrf). 4.MI.
l"lftl\ rae -Vl-ll1•llon IC0tdlrol, J.411,
UO, I.to; H19111Y Hobie IPlnc1yl, UO, 3.•;
M•ylft (~.,). UO. ts ••act1 l~tl , ... ...,.to.
Slat!\ r•e -Erl Tu IHewley), tt.40, 7.to,
7.ID; T~'I P:otly !Pln<IYl. UO, J.•; lHIWt Gat (SNetneklt), S.to.
s..,.,.91 race -MlfOI' ·1pon (Toro), "·"· II.Oil, J.ID; MMl!t,ef H-ICerdlrol, J. ... t.•; Del*t Dewlft (l'lflCIYl. UO. •s HI<·
ta<f.ll pllld .... to. .. ,ka Sia lt++~t·tl pelt •tt.JSJ ... wll!I
10 •111111111 tkllttl lflvt lltrttll. SI Piek SI• ctftMletllll peld •t•.• wit!\ JU wlMlftt tlc-m ,...., ..., .. , . ., .-.ca 11111 tcr8'cll
c•ll .. lllleft ,.,. w.• wlttl .. wllWllflt
lklltt1 (tlWW ..._. • krllldl).
lltlltfl te<I -,_I IM Pr-IHI
(Hewte;I, II ... J,., 4AI ICartle IH-1,
r.•"'··I ~r (<'M*tel, t .... U ·~-.~ ... Nllllll rec• -Pttllll .... Pr-IMI
1......,,1, 11.-. rM, 4A; ICartle 1"-1. ,.., •.•: "..,.,.., ,~,. a.•. " _ .. ,.., .... .......
A ....... -.... .
.1
Womeft'I tCM.tmement
1 .. ClllC .... tll
........... si ......
H•n• -Ill.OWi def Sl•<Y M•r90lln • .-0,
.... Vir9lnl1 lllwlcl def M.,y LOU Pi1te11.
.......... : Syl•I• Henll• def Nine -· , ...•. ,, .. ,
Monterrey Cup
1a1-.,, M .. l<el
""'111-'Sl•e• Bruce MeMOn def Guillermo vo ... I 6,
•·41, Nl<l S.•lano Off Bal> Lutr, •·•. 7 s.
8ulcll Woltr oet P•I Oupret, •·•· •·•. •.J
FuturH tourn1ment
(ltMeffttHll
Sec .... Ill-SlllllH
C•nclY Reynold• ool E1l1•t.tn Ekblom,
• l, ,,., •·2, Julie H•rrfn9lon del L•n• SM>
Oln, • 1, 6 J, (•rol Ballv Ool AnOru
Butn•n•n. • l . t 6, • I K 1m S•nO\ Oel Cl\rt\llM JOll\Wtnl, I s. '] Elly VhSoe•
Oel D•n• Oill>trl, I S 6 J Marcoll•
SkuMrtk• (let N1Mll• Stllulte, 6-0, • o o 2
Glynl\ Col .. 001 M•r1e C•llet•. • • i..1.
P•ul• Sm1tll .,., ~"· [)elhU\, • I I •.••
100
IOI
It\
111 .,.
13•
41 10
Ill
147 us
I 0. .. ,
111
?07
Hwl
WrHUtng
NIGH SCHOOL
1rv1M ... l1unci.1
~tellfY U) won by forftttt
C•\lelo 111 won bY lor1 .. 1
~ur•t..•w• 'I• won Dy tor•t •t
M111N I El <If'< a ....... • 1
Lowery CEt dec f<no•lt'\ t10
4iturt1vAnl It I u1nnfO """ Dorn
WP•U Ill <MC Murphy. 8 l
Koller Ill"'" Br0<k~I. • 0 Sc"'"lchlenbe•9 ( 1) ponn..O Move•.
P.,.,.. I 11 plnneo Col•m•n. J 11
St•lley II) p1nn.O Kr•Ylll I 06
H•r• ! 11 p1nrwO Gallardo, I•
Sil••• 111 P•llrleO Smltn. \ "°
NHL
tllALESCONP:llllENCE
NWYltOmti_,
W L T GF GA Ph
1t .. • 10" 111 61
76 It s 707 •Jll SI
H•r llOfO
PllhburQft
Oeto•I
.. 17 10 Ill 71~ •
I\ 1• I 117 708 )I
II H ~ u • t% ll
A•am\Oh,.Util'
Mtnn•M>ld 1l It II t•\ I)() ~I
8ufl•lo 11 10 I\ 118 .. , II
8o"on 19 •• 8 117 1.0 .,,
l o•onlo •• 1J I 111 117 Jll
OuelM< 11 1' 17 •.O 70• l4
CA.M .. IELL CON,ERENCE , .. rlcll 0 1 .. ,1""
NY !\land!!" )() 10 8 71q I~ ..
Pnil•dPIP"•• 71 1J I 18'> 131 61
C•l<i•rv 11 11 • II• 170 11
WA\h.,.(ll<lf• lo 70 II 163 117 •)
NY ~•"Of'" 11 7• 8 t•l •81 Al
St Lou1\
\/•n<iouv .. r
Cl\•c•oo (OIO••OO
Edmonton
W1nnl!W'SI
SmylM Ol•i.lon
:Ill 10 8 IOI 11>' bA
10 IJ 11 18l I~ \S
10 11 • Ill 1•• ..
10 n u1 1ao JO
I• 21 •ll IAA Jc s ]) • ..~ 113 ,.
....... y't!><•"
Bull••o •. O...~t s
, Ph1fadtt~1• .\1 Ptthbyrqt\ 0
SI Lou•••· H•rtfo•o • MtM~• ,, W••ll•n91on I
Chlcaoo4 Montrral 1
Wonn1-\ NY R•"'lf'" I
Edmonton\, VMl<OU\let 1
T--·•G•mn
Toronto at Kio• ..
,..Y 1 \IM'ldtr\ •' ~tro1t
St LOU•\ ttl Benton
M 1nn.-sottt at PPul~lpn1a
Men·1 aoccer
INDOOlll
, Surf6, S... D .... S
Suri S<orlno Moyers J. Allon 1. L •nd•a.,. I
Fern•nd4t1 1
HIGHSCNOOL
EttMCi. S, C.,. ....... M•r 1
Etl•ncl• \CorltlO WahMr I, ur~1n1 •
Coron• dtl W..r \Corino Gerr•ll 1
C•uMew t,EITeteO
Co\l• llMY w:orin9 . Son9 I
Men'• aoccer raltngs
HIGH SCHOOL
Clf 4·A
I. E•I-; 1 Soulll To,.ant " J C•a,.
mont. • O•m•~. S AoU1n9 H1th • W l"\I
forr•nu:. 1 S.nta Monie•, 9 P111tos VrrOf'~
• Sant• Ana, 10 ( hf'I Do\ Pu.blo\ and M ir-'
Call•
CIP: J.A
1 St Bern•rd. 1 A1ver\1dr Poly 1
~orw•U1 , 4 C•lt'MICO !t Centr1111 • Coron•
I G•rty, I S.nta M art• fl PAim Spr1ncr.
10 Altm.,., CIF ,,,.
I Sedcll-a. 1 Bell G•tO.nt, l M•H-
\11~10. t V•tenc.••. S. l,.._.. l•«fl, • It"»
Glel>Clalt ar\d la S.11•. 8 lh•l K•pol~ ano
hmp!f C•IY 10 .Aooura
Misc.
Wldneldey·a 1r1n1ectton1
IASllALL
A_,klftLe ....
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Namoo Jimmy
Wllll•mt llrst l>aM ca.ell •"° R•lpn ROWt'
oro•nlHlion l>allinQ ln\lructor
NEW VORI( YANKEES Slgnt'O Ja.
Lel•D•rl, outtlelder, •nO Mike Moro•n.
pitcher. IO< lht' 1 .. 1 MaM>n.
N•tleMILe ....
CINCINNATI REDS TroO~d Co .. r
Geronimo, outt111oer. to lne K•nwl Clly
Aoy•l1 for German 8arra"<:•1 enU•kHr ,.,. 110,.~d l•rr•n<• lo lndl•n•PGli• of the
Amerlc.,, AU«l•llon
PITTSBUlllGH PIRATES S10Md 00U0
Britt, pitch«. OOUO 'robc!I. 1,,11e111er. ...o
Gery Ale•.,...r. c•lcner
ST LOUIS CAROIHALS !>•OMO ROl>t'rt
HeyH,IMI<,,.;.
IASKIETIALL ................... _ .. t ...
IO!>TON CELETICS .tl\<tl••lect M L
Cerr, forw•rd·Ou•rd W•l~tO Wayne
1Cre11.1ow.e--d GOLDIN STATE WARRIORS Slonect
Phli Ctwnler, .... rd, lo • 10-Cl•Y conlrecl.
''•Ced Cllllorel R•y, center. on 1ne ln1urecl
lltt.
MOCICIY
,...._.Mc•eyL...-
DETROIT ltED WINGS Rtcelled
Clevde LeOrli, ..,.,.....,.,, lrom 1<•1•"'8l00
of'"' lntttnetlaftel Hockey Le..-.
LOS AHGIELIS ICINGS -Reullecl ...
'•lmer, .._,,..n. from ll>Clleitapollt tlf
Ille Central Htc-ey L ......
CCK.U•a
HOLY CltOSS -H-4t Jolln l'etenon II·
11t11nt lltM ,...._., cMCh 11141 oflefltlve llN
cMCll; Mlltk DuffMf defeMlve cOOtdlnetor:
Id ltly!MM ClltMtlve N<•fleld COl<h,
, .... Ctrr .. ......_ II-Iler CMClll end
L8rtY McDelllel ~1119 llM CMCll.
l'teldhoctl•J " .... ~ __..... ..........
u 11hrenHytcar111t: """I, P:r.W t,
PltldMobwrdnt• CIP COACMll ~L.
I. U......,1 t . C~ Ottt; l . leMe
Alie VllltYl •. L.I H..,a; t ... .......
M--; ............... '· .... ; .. W1• ln•1 I t.~; If, ~AM.
• I
' '
BOATING I FOR THE RECORD I BUSINESS
Tlaomas S. Santely, a mem ber or the public rel•·
lions stair for Pacirlc Mutual Ufe Insurance Co., is
president of the Orange County
Chapter ot the Public Relations
Society of America.
Ernie f'e llce Jr., South
Lag un a . is president or
H e ritag e Tru s t Deed
Guarantee, a pension plan in·
vestment firm opening this
month in Brea.
'IELICE
Chuck Brauer, Irvine. is account supervisor for
the advertising division of Cochrane Chase, Liv·
ingston & Co., Inc .. Irvine .
Robert Clifford, Newport Beach. has been elect·
ed to a three-year t erm of Goodwill Industries of
Orange County board nf directors and Coalson
Moorls. Corona del Mar. to a two·year term .
Gerald W. Fle ming. Laguna Niguel, is gro up
vice p reside nt of marketing a nd sales for
Microdala International Corp., Newport Beach.
F.dward J . Orlscoll. a graduate of San Juan
Capistrano lhgh School, American lnslilule of
Banking and UCLA. is manager of the Santa Ana
main office of Hank of America.
Joe D. Phares, Newport Beach, is marketing
manager of mlcromin1ature /fiber optics for ITT
Cannon Eledrir, Santa Ana
Robert E. Mille r has been named maintenance
manager for the property managem ent division of
the Irvine Company
Palli Freeman 1s manager of the Laguna Niguel
branch or llomt• Federal Savings and Loan As·
sociation
The hoard of din•C'tors or Vuco International,
Inc .• Irvin<.'. ha:. approved a 4 cents dividend paya·
ble Feh 13 to stodholder~ or record Jan. 30. The
firm manufactures oil a nd gas well drilling and
1Jrodu<:t1on equ1pmf'nl
Louis F. ('ummintt. dislnl'l m anager of 58
branch offH·(·~ or 'ro('ker Rank . including Orange
------(.'1>U nl". has b<.'en nam ed a
-Sl·n1or· v1n· president of the
firm
1 ~ ' Joseph I .. Turnt>r, Jr. is vi<.:e
!1rt·~1<l<•n1 of husmcss develop·
-ment for Flu1>r U1 s tr1bution
f Compantt•s . u s ubs iiliary or
~...... Fluor ('orp . I rvinl'
..._ ,\ rl'j.!U lo.1r qtw rte rly dividend
TIJRNER .,r 11; 1:t·nt~ 1wr ('11mm11n share
pa) able-FC'h 27 111 ~harchl)lders of record 1-'eb 1a
has been dec·lart·d IJ\ lh•· board of director s of
Smith International 'inc .. ~cwport BeaC'h. Thi•
c:<,mp ~my 1s a munufa1·turt•r and s upplier or equip
mcnt used 1n lht· 1111, g<1~ and mint• drilling fields
;
The lhdro C:onduit d1v1~11m of ARC: America
Cor p., :"\ewport Hcat·h. hi:i~ rnmi,ilcted purchase of
assets of tht• St Lou1~. Mo Concrete Pipe Co
WANTED
DIAMONDS • GOLD
.1tth• .. I . • l 1 • ·' t ,,. I I I I' ;1·tt
• • I'~ t': •' • •t : t 1"1 I '• 11
t'f I t o t••• fl 1 t' ! I 0 •
!11' : t 1 1•• ;._1••• I t •' I ' t ' 1•• ~ •t d f
fol 't 1° ' I ' t 1 IJ • f t 11 f <J.tl ."'. '"'.,LI·.,, 1f )' , ( It"'•'' • ,,,
.l["'ELS h~' .IOS[PH
Soulh Coast Plaia. Costa Mna • 540-9066
CALL LINDA BLUE
ABOUT A SECOND
TRUST DEED LOAN
UP TO $500,000
~ezoport Equit~1 ~unds ·Inc
1_1r.ensed Bro~er Since 1971
(714) 760~060
'$50.000 to $500.000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
• lntereet only p11V'J14'nt .. ·--• Co•••rc&.il
• ReeWential
• Weekly co_lt_te
• lllo•tlaly •••41 .. a • 6 -••II• to S yean • So•tlaent C:.llfo..W
c fll.ttl ••llf
loa• lnforaatlo• -"'ke
t••I •,11ur fln.1rn lrlla ll•'t•d'
(714) 759-1515
AMIEftlCAN HOttilf llilO"'GAOE
'30 Newport Cenle• Ori••
Oes•gn Ptaz•
Newport Beech
Ceh!Ort'I•• 9,eeb
.......... ····· ... _........,. .. ·-· ......... ... . .... .-........ __ -----.·~9!'·~~--.. ·~·-"
B11siftess DAILY PILOT f:I
President's consistency. ey~d Hostage
kin due
, .........
~I ;; r t in Cuo1wr l ·u~t <.t \h .•!.41
has been n d ll\l'd l'O m mer<:1al
loan offl n·1 11f l lei\ d~ Hartk
l ' <l I 1 f l • r n 1 •• ' '\ l' "" 11 o r l
L'orpor~te 11lt1L·c 111 \il'V. port
lieat•h
Ky JOHN ClJNNU't' ..... _ ....... , ..
~ 1t;W \OUK Wba.tevt.'r pro wr 1.1 111 !\ llu11uld He8Klln dcc1d~s
111 push durlllt( hu. 1Jres1deacy
"'ust ht• IJUJ>h"-J hard, lonl( itnd
~ 11 h ll'w rl'1>l'rvallo rll'1 af ht' 1:. to
'u al41111 t1n ·l11h1IHy urlll .,ubhc
l"IJO h ll t'll<'I'
Wh11'11 1.:. h 1 tui.Y that t'OllSISlt'll
I \ Ill LI lllU\•h udm&rcc.J \l lrlUt.' uf
l t•ll llt•f°' ,111d au •·t·ono m ll'
Ht·11·, .. 1l) .i~ we-II An wa y, that.
~1·1·11" tu tw tht· Hll'bSagt• run
11111.: thruui.th ,1 vast a11Mirtrnent
111 rt'• t•11l h pulJh:.h1•d 1·1)mmcn
I ti I \
l'I' t:o. ..i h o a 1·ral •t'l !>lll of
I IJ I lfJl• I I' I ... ~ I ti t.' n l J I m m y
1 • ..irl1·r )"hu e rubarkt.'d on four
1l1tfe11'11 t C('IJnOOlll' j.lrogramS
'1 h11 t lt·rt hus tnl'SS uncertain
,1boul ~hal I ll CXIH.'t t nl'Xt and,
l tlll't'qUt>ntly . warv of taking
lort~ tern; rl!>kS
11 1'> wa-;n 't t h 1· on ly ad
m 1n1 '>trat 11111 tu attra l't th at
l'hJqfl' N"wn. f<lr 1>nt.'. 1mµosed
Murray Weidrnballlft
ia waa&e·pnce freeze without any
warning and in opposition to his
own philosophy But Carter did
1t in li wholesale way
Las t year , for example, he
s aitl hc had balanced lbe budtet,
b ut thr e e
WN •ks later
cvl'r y o n t•
c.·o ulc.l s cl' it
w u s u n
ll n I u n 1· e d
ugai n ti c
µrom1 sed t<1
1· ut inflation.
bu t he con·
don t•d 1nfla
t1ona r y
s pending. lie instituted wage-
pn ce guidelines, but afte r a year
he relaxed the wage s tandard.
Ill' be~an a new economic pro-
~ram just weeks before the elec
twns
And the res ult seems to have
l.Jccn a loss of cred ibility and
public· confidence. rooted in the
feelin~ that af the boss didn't
bdaeve 1n his pro~rams after a
Economy chairman selected
WASHI N<;To N !AJ>1 President Hcagan,
completing his l NHTI of k ey ctonom1l' <Jd v1sers. has
chosen Washington Un1vcrs1ty professor Murray
L. Weidenbaum to be C'hairman of the president 's
Council or Economit Advisers, Tht· Washington
Post has reported .
the Nixon administration as assistant secret ary or
the treasury for economic policy from 1969 lo 1971.
Crops do better
A Reagan administration official confirmed
the selection or Weidenhaum, an expert 1n business
deregulation the newspaper saad
We idenhaum. 53. was one of Re agan's
economic advisers dur ing the presidential cam·
paign and headed a transition team on regulatory
WAS .. nNGTON <AP> -The 1980 corn and soy-
bean crops, shriveled by hot, dry weather. s till
turned out to be slightly higher than Agriculture
De partment experts had previously thought.
issues.
Weidenba um.
Bureau of the Bud
a n economis t with the old
et from 1949 to 1957, served in
In its annual review or farm production last
year. the depa rtment f>Ul the com harvest at
6,647 ,500 bushels after est imating it last month at
6.461 ,000. The soybean crop was put al 1,817,000
bushels .
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Chapman College
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
AND MANAGEMENT
P14) 997-6684 .. Professional Leaming of Distinction Within a
Caring and Value-Centered Community"
OPEN HOUSE
Monday, February 2. 1981
4:00 p. m. -7:00 p. m. -Reev es Hall
Counseling-Registration
B.S.B.A. ACCOLJNTINC
F.C.:ONOMIC'S
FINANCE ANll REAi. ESTATf~
MANAGf~MENT
MANAGEM ENT SCIENCE
MARKETINfi
B.A.
M.B.A.
ECONOMIC:-;
MASTER 01" BUSINESS ADMI N<.STRATION
Day and evening classes for all students
Th• Cent9' fOf Economic AHHFCh preMnt11;
Leonard Well
President, Manufacturer's Bank
THJRD ANN\JAL ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS FORECAST CONFERENCE
IMI QUARTERLY ACTIVITY
Frtd•y. Februuy 13, 1181 ·1:39
Chpm•• Collet• · W•l&mu THetre -----------------------------------DEAN, SCHOOL OF BUSINESS AND MANAGEMENT
CHAPMAN COLLEGE, 3" N. GLASSELL, ORANGE, CA. l2MI
PLEASE SEND ME INFORMATION ON:
0 B.A. or B.S.B.-\ 0 M.B.A. 0 CENTER FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
NAME ..... :.. . .............................. ················•········•r••·•
ADDRESS ......•...• , , • . . . • . . ......•.................... CITY ............. · · · · .
9TATI ...................... : ..... , .•• ZIP .......... ~ ... PHONE ........... · · · --
COLLECTORS
CORNER
R•r• Coln• • Stemp•
GOLD & SILVER
PrlcH IOI 1-22-11
Oold CloM IM7 00 S11¥9f Cl 110 H
••Y 5911 I« uq~rr•nd' Ul2.,. U"4.SO
M t!PI• L•dl U11.00 U9t.OO
100 Coron." •Mt.00 U•1.oo ~ P"'o' UOJ.oo rn•.oo ~· ~•Ivor Baq\ 1110"'° """'° ,,._11_ ..... _,"
c.e .... -..-.
(714) 556-ll50
South CoHt Pteza Vlll•g• -.. -.... 1•·---~-1 ·
THERE MAYBE
NO I NCURABLE
By Ter~ISEl.)A~~
Grant,
R. Ph.
=-:01 lonl( ai-:u k1lk r <li!a
l';l!al'~ hk\• :-m;ilf fK IX. tllp
I h 1· r 1 a . 1 ' p h o 1 II .
I 11lll'rl'11los1:-or 1101111 look
1·011nl lt·s:-II\'\'!> ."o~ 1 ht'1 r
111•nb. 1•an lw ;1\ •111kd h~
1•1•rla111 1,.-1•1·aut11111s <ind
prl'\' 1·nt 1\" rrwdll'lnt':-
Sunwda\. in lh1• nol loo
1t1 s111nt li1l0111'l'. ~1 1·1irt· will
tw II 1M·m ·1·r1·•l ft•r ('\er~
tl1sc·a:-l' .\II m·1·r thl' l:'arlh
l"l':H'IH d1 !al'il'lll!Sl!' art'
l'X l/l'l"llllt'lll Ill~ 1\ll h IJtllh
old and n 1·\1 druj'.!;; <1nrl
t'h l'nl klii~ /\!a SIHIO as
I h <'~· 11rt• appr11\'t•d for
saft· us1', \It' 'ilol"k llwm.
~o I lli1l w1· 1«1n fall a ny
ph~ -.w1an·-, prt·scn pt1ons
T ht•rt• l!a holll' l'nr pn •wnt
I II \' II rah k... T tw n (•)(I
· 1111 rad1•' dru14 """ h1•
\hi.· hlt·-.~rn~~ lht•\ · a1 l'
look mi.: for
\ ol "H Pell"l'fll< C. \ '\
l'lllt'\I·: IS \\h1 •n \1111
n1·1·il ,, n11·dw1111· l 11l"k llll
1 0 11 r 11rl':-c• rt 11111111 1 I 'l'"I' pm~ 11\'al II\. or '"' "111 clc•h \l'I pl u nipt h \\ 11 hot ti
('\I t .I 1h.1fj.!I' \ 1!11'<11
m.1n\ """""' c•nll u-.1 ..... \\1th lhc•fl l'll''l"t lpll1•n'
:\1 a ' " ,. 1· 11111 11" u n cl
\Ollt ,·•
P'Alll LIDO f'HARMAC•
ff'ff o.tl•"'J
lSl Ho ..... elRffd
Mewporl l..clll
'42·1510
r
·-··-··-.. -··-.. -·-··-·-1
' I • I e '.,
!It .... 1 -:li I
.•• , ·I -~\'I I
Starting I
a New I Business .
A c c c o r d l ng 10
Callfornla 8ualnaH and
Prolesalon• Code (Sec.
17800 to 119301 a ll
per1on1 doing bualne11
under a llct~• n•-
mu1t Ill• • ttata-nt
with Ill• County Clerk
end hHB It pvbllsfl•d
fo11r time• In a
new1paper "'"'"' th• are• In which Ill•
bullnBH II located.
Th• 11alamant I•
raq11lr•d bJ law And 11
necHtttry In protectlnt
rour b111ln•H nama.
M,at banu raq11lre .,_., of ...... to op911
o.mm•rdll aceounta.
TllB DAIL y "Lor
,,..... --flllnt •"49 pu ... c.,._ ..,--._ Wa
h .. o all tM llOCIOMOry
fer111• 1nc1 !Mtnt•n •
••llJ Hr•I•• to tho
Or•nt• Cauntr
C.Urt ........ llttlof ....
llJ ono ol our
ce1t•onlot1t •"tee• or plloflB tllO LIOAL
DIPARn.NT MMal1. I••· Ut tor 111oro .....,........ ..... ..,..,
I
few weeks then they couldn't be
tru5led al all.
Reagan comes into office with
his economic goals clear. He
hopes to cut spending, c ut the
size of the bureaucr•cy. cut tax·
es , c ut red tape and wasteful
regulations, spur investme nts,
r~jse productivity.
Because he has stated his
views so distinctly. the burden
on him to follow through or else
lose respect is now probably
gre ater than it ever was on
Carter. His performance or lack
of it is measurable .
AND SO, even before he took
the oath of offi ce Tue s day
speculation arose over whether
he might postpone goals that
months earlier he had so strong-
1 y espous ed E ver yo ne has
heard them -that the closer he
got to the big job the more re·
alistic he was becoming, that he
would back off from his tax-cut
proposals. that he move slowly
rather than aggressively
llis term has just begun, and
there are indications the public
wants to give him e very break,
but in a few m onths the ubiq·
uitous polls wilJ be gin p1ck1ng
up the mood and the assessment
of the American veople.
What will they think if Presi·
dent Re a gan has n 't r eally
pushed for a major lax cut·? Will
they acc.epl an explanation that
states that the necessity of in·
creasing defense spending pre
eludes any tax cul no w'?
O r t hat r evenue d eclines
bel'ause of a recession will lead
to an "un expected ly " high
budget defi cit? Or that "we're
laking another look" al the idea
of r educing lht.' Ed ucation and
Energy departments?
Will the Americ an people
feel duped? Will they lose con-
rldence in Reagan because he
s eemed to be losing confidence
in his goals ? Will they decline to
commit themselves to a future
they cannot visualize?
Unfair questions perhaps.
especially when the man has
been in office but hours. But the
popula r Uter alure and the busi·
ness literature is loaded with
refe rences to the inconsistencies
of the previous administration
and hopes that the Reagan one
will bedifferent.
Consistency and credibility
seem to be overriding issues._
and with the Reagan platform so
clearly staled there is little to
hide behind.
free trips
WASIUNGTON <AP) --The
Civil Ae ronautics Board has
granted American Airlines ap-
proval to provide free roundlrip
transportation to a ny hostagt'
Jamily member between any
city on its system and the point
where the former hostages arrive
In the United States.
The CAB acted quickly after
the airline made the request. It
s aid it would give the same
authority to any other airline
tha t applies.
Economy decreased
0.1 percent in '80
WASHI NGTON I A P> The nation's economy declined 0 I IJCr-
cent las t year . as a strong fourth quarter failed to make up fo r
losses suffered in the recession earlier an lhe year , the government
re ported today. '
Preliminary figures show that the real gross national produd
lhe total value of goods and services, afte r adj ustment for infl a
t ion rose at an annual rate of 5 percent ilil the last three months
of the year as recovery accelerated. th l' Commerce Department
said .
The real GNP had r isen at an annual rate of 2.4 perc·ent in the
third quarter after plunging a t a rate of near ly 10 pcr tenl in the
second ouarter . It rose 3.2 oercent rn 1979
The department's broad-based innation yardstick the GN P
im plicit price defl ator -rose 9 percent for the year including a
final-quarter annual r ate increase of 11 2 1w reent. the ~overnmt·nt
s aid. The r ate rose 8.5 percent las t year
lnnation-adj usted final s ales ro:.c :J 7 f1l'rl'f'nl an t he• fourth
quarter. compared lo 4.1 f>t.'rcenl tn the lh1rd q uarter. lht· dt•parl
ment said.
(),·•·r Tht-c:ounte·r
NASO Listinqs
MUTlJ AL FlJ NOS
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h
OOllltHS
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CWLY PILOT Ti,uracs1v. Jenu1rv il2. 1N1
W .. dnPttday'•
( :toaintt Prit•fltt
NYSE · COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
........... -............... ..,... .... ~ ....
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I
BUSINESS I STOCKS
Biglal11 ro111petiti1'~
Airline engines
pick a dogfight
By MILTON MOSKOwn'Z
You may be surprised to learn that airlines not only select the planes they will fly but the engines that will
power their aircraft.
As 1980 drew to a close, United Technolocies, • com·
pany you probably never heard of, tried to make that point
as indelibly as they could by buyin1 lar1e spaces in lead·
ing newspapers to trumpet the selection of their new jet
engine by'two airlines.
The ads were, in ef.
feel, saying to General
Electric: "We sure beat
you to a pulp in this
round."
Money
Tree Here's the sequence
of events in this hieb·
level corporate dogfight:
-Last Nov. 12 Delta Ait Lines placed the largest or·
der in commercial airline history for 60 Boeing 757s. The
total price tag for the 60 jets will be in the neighborhood or
S3 billion.
-On Dec. 18 Delta told Boeing that it wanted these
jets powered by the new engine that has been developed by
Pratt & Whitney, the PW2037. .
-On Dec. 22 United Technologies, the parent of Pratt
& Whitney, look two full pages in newspapers across the
country to rub GE's nose in this verdict. Della. said the ad.
"has made a wise choice."
ON THE VERY next day, Dec. 23. United
Technologies bought another two pages for an advertise·
ment announcing that American Airlines had already
selected the Pratt & Whitney engine for its new airliner.
even though it hadn't decided yet which plane it was going
to order.
It was a sweet triumph for Pratt & Whitney, restorin~
it to its accustomed position as the dominant force in the
aircraft engine market.
How did Pratt & Whitney lock up the Uetta ana
American o'rders? By promising breathtaking savings in
fuel economy. Pratt & Whitney ts guaranteeing that its
new jet engine will sa ve airlines $1 million a year in fuel
costs per plane. For Delta, when it takes possession or its
60 planes. that adds up to $00 million a year
PRA1T & WHITNEY MUST be pretty confident that 11
c•an deliver on this
Pratt & Whitney's comeback marks another !)J't't:
tacular advance by Harry Gray. a hard·driving salesman
who arrived in Hartford, Conn ., in 1971, coming from
California's Litton Industries to take the helm of a com·
J)any then called United Aircraft
United Airr rart was not in robust shape then. Its an
nual sales were about $2 billion. it ranked 37th on the
Fortune 500 list, it dad more than half its business with the
Pentagon and its biggest unit, Pratt & Whitney, was run
ning into problems with engines supplied lo both the com
me rcial and military markeL'i.
IN NINF. YEARS Gray has literally transformt•d this
company.
He changed the name to United Technologies.
United Technologies is also not without friend~ 10 high
places. Al the end of 1979 Harry Gray hired as ht~ No 2
man Gen. Alexander M. Haig Jr . selected by Ronald
Reagan to serve as secretary of state
In April 1980. when Haig was ser ving as pre!>1dent <if
United Technologies. the United States launched its 111
fated mission to Iran lo rescue the American hosta~es. The
raid was called off after three of the Sikorsky Sea Stallion
helicopters broke down.
Sikorsky is another unit of United Technologies, a
company whose parts are better known than the whole.
which is why Harry Gray keeps running ads to s pread the
word about the conglomerate he has created
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FEITURIS ·
Cancer's
mental .roots
.Jh--'OEL C:. DWI! ~-.0 .. ,, ...........
B t"forf' a t•an<·er v1r tim "'H'r umb.-., he
ma) t'Xpt'n .,n<'ti on~ ur more types of
tN'atnu•nt rnr ludlni surgery. rad111Uoll
thfr.rap • c-hemothenp). hormulit' sup
ph•ments and 1mmunotherllJJ\ Otheri., spurn'(! h tht-1tpp11r1tnl fu1lur 1:: of
trad1t1onaJ med1<·1ne. turn to p11mh:M1 } et sllll
unproven ther ap1ei. with me K11v1tamrn:., ex
t'rt'1se. d1etar) supplemt:nts and t ht: t•on
t ro\·ersutl drug Laetrile
Still Olhe~ are adding the i.uµ~td powers
of the rrund to the last of cancer treatments
L nder Uu:. ctpproach. t·a ncer V1ct1mi. must take
full respons1b1llt.> for their d111ea!.e
What that m e an!. 1s their e motional
makt.>up pla) ed a role 1n their disease process.'
said Stepharue Matthew!.-S1monton, who, with
fo r m er hu:.band Or 0 Ca rl Simonton.
µaoneered a canC'er treatment µrogram with a
Pl>' chothera py component
Ms Matthews Simonton, who is program
director of the Cancer Counselj ng and Research
Center based 1n Fort Worth. Texas, will speak
on the role of psyl'hotheraµy an cancer treat·
ment at 7 JO " m. Friday at the Airporter Inn in
Irvine
T h e l e l' t u r t: • s p u n s o r e d b .Y
Ma cArthur Medil'al Center, will tract
the history of the psychological basis
ror c·anl'er and the center's approach t<'
treating the nation 's No. 2 killer and the world 's
most-feared disease.
Proponents of using psychotherapy in cancer
treatment argue that s tress and other emotional
factors play a role in t he development or cancer
and other diseases Through positive thinking via
a process called·· imaging.·' a cancer·stricken pa·
tient may be able to t'hange the course or the dis·
ease.
The imaging process may take the form of a
cancer patient viewing white blood cells, the
human immune system's disease.fighters , as
white knights or mighty warriors. Abnormal
cancer cells are visualized JY the patient as evil or
impish. to be conquered by the overpowering
white cells. or leukocytes.
If the patient is undergoing concurrent radia·
lion therapy or chemotherapy, X-rays or drugs
Proponents of using psychotherapy m cancer
treatment argue that stress and other
emotional factors play a rote in
development of cancer and
other diseases
can be pictured as the warriors ridding the body of
the destructive cancer cells.
Awareness of t he mind's impact on the body
can help psychologists intervene and potentially
change the course or a cancer. s he said, in a
teleµhone interview.
The basis of t he Simonton method for
cancer treatment is that the mind can trigger
th e bOdy's immune system to fail. and thus
make a pe rson more susceptible to disease. or
turn around and fi ght off a serious illness.
The program was developed 10 years ago
when Dr. Simonton. a radiation oncologist,
as ked a 61-year -old patient with advanced
throat cancer to pract ice daily relaxation ex·
ercises and imagin~. Coupled with radiation
tre atments. visualized as crusading cancer·
fighting beams or bullets, the patient's cancer
diminished.
S im onlon th en began explor ing t he
influence o r a person 's emotional
makeup an.d skills f?r coping with stress
as a causative agent an cancer.
As a tean:i . the Simonton's set up the Fort
Worth cancer center and established nearby
rural retreats. P atients seeking alternatives to
the often painful and traumatic surgical treat ·
ments and drug therapies arrived at the center
to learn relaxation techniques, meditation, ex·
er cise. alternative concepts in diet and health
and methods to focus their mental might on
their fatal cancers . .
Likewise, psychologists visited the center
for five-d ay training sessions to learn how to
cope with their terminally ill patients.
According to th e Simontons, s pecific
psychological factors contribute to a "cancer
personality." They include :
-A tendency to hold resentment and in·
ability to forgive.
-A poor 9elr·image.
-A ~r ability to develop and maintain
meaningful and long-term relationships.
-A tendency toward self-pity.
While Ms. Matthews-Simonton admits most
people at some tim e expe rience these negative
psychological factors, she said a cancer-prone
individual would tend to have more profound
feelings of hopelessness or depression or out·
wardly deny ongoing stress or e motional
trauma.
T h e S imon ton t reatme n t method
c o n sis t s o r Jung i an -ba sed
ps ychotherapy In addition to other
. alternative cancer therapies. They don't
1bun vitamin therapy, radical chances ln diet or
Laetrile. And, M11. Matthews-Simonton em-
~ulsed, the psychotherapeutic treatment often
dODI in conjunction with traditional cancer
rapi•.
.. ,,_.. are really two components to our
Pl'Oll'mn;• abe explained. "One l• a Hll-belp eom,__ wblcb coaab ta ol ualq tbe lma1ery
Jl"OC-md tldnkinl about 1oall and improvtnc
tliaequlltJoloae'11Ue.
• .,,,. Gaber C!OIDpoMnt .. to blteneM ln tbe
ca.CANCSa,Pa1eCI)
\ I \ " .
Thursday. January 22. 1981
Thera-play
DAIL y PILOT CJ
In a St op-Gap
play f or her
parents, this
young disabled
woman tvill grow
f r om a seed to
a tr ee -a part
designed to help
her grow similarly
in l ife from
day to day.·
Stop-Gap Theater
director s Don
L ajfeon and Vicki
Bryan lead
r ehearsals f or a
per / ormance at
Hope High School .
.. We 're dealing with
pr ide and f ear ...
says Bryan
Drama has healing powers
By J EFF PARKER
Of , ... D•llY l'iloot Staff
We've all had the feeling: you see a good
play and reel better ror it.
But a Laguna Beach couple has round that
, acting in a play can do even more toward m ak-
ing people feel better -it can be successful
ther apy, especially for t he elderly.
Using t his theory, Don Latroon, Vicki
Bryan and their e1g ht ·mem1>er !:itop-<;ap
T heate r troupe t r avel the county offering
"thera-plays." And allhou~h Stop-Gap stands
for Senior The atre Outreach Program on
G r owth and Aging P r oble m s. the group
performs for young people too.
"WE'VE FOUND that the best way to ap·
proach proble ms is lo set up a dr a matic
framework for people to work in," said Laffoon,
a 38-year-old Purdue graduate. "Putting real-
life r roblems into a drama takes the pressure
off the people and puts il on the characters in
the play. People will talk a lot more openly
wt-?r. :.hey're put in a dramatic context."
Laffoon and Bryan, who both have back-
grounds in professional theater , have scripted
some 50 plays since the group began in 1979.
The plays all deal with tough situations in which
seniors and mentally disabled youngsters often
find themselves.
In "The Bus Ride," for instance, a Stop-Gap
actress plays the lead role of an elderly woman
tryin& to take advantage or a half.fare bus ride
in a strange town.
"THE WOMAN TELLS tbe driver she'd like
to ride for the advertised half fare and shows
blm identification," Laffoon explains. ••aut
since lhe doesn't have the special cud required
in tbat particular city, the dttv• won't &lYe ber
the discount. They ar1ue, and finally the driver
calls the police to have her takm otf the bul."
At &bat PGlnt tbe play llldl, a.t the au-
dience, wtUch baa been cut u pm-. ... on
tbe bul, must tell tbe poltc. wbat bu happened.
and wbat lllauld be.... .
"Ir we were simply lo go into a seniors'
home and say ·now we'll discuss the problems
or h alf-fare bus rides.· we'd probably get a lot of
blank s tares." said Laffoon. "But by easing
them into the drama, we ease them into life
itself. A lot of seniors don't even ride buses,
but all of them will run up against people with
attitudes like that dr iver 's." he said.
IN "CHANGES," the Stop-Gap audience is
worked even more deeply into the fabric of the
drama.
The story revolves around an old residence
hotel whlch is condemned. The younger college
students who live there take the news passively,
but the seniors who live there decide to hold
meetings lo see what they can do to stop the
destruction or the hotel.
"We cast our audience as that group of
seniors trying to save their home," says Bryan.
"They're drawn into the drama, then asked to
pa rticipate. You'd be a mazed at the eagerness
they develop."
"The older people in any society possess a
wealth of courage and endurance. But those
things tend to evaporate with the great dis-
tances between older people and younger peoJJle
in this country. How can you develop courage
a nd endurance with no one to tell about it?"
Laffoon asks.
TURNING THEIR ENERGIES to youn1er
clients, the Stop-Gap Theatre wu recently com·
missioned to work with the Rehabilitation
lnsitute of Oran1e County to heli> mentally dis-
abled teen-agers adjust to jobs in tbe com-
munity.
. '''lbe problem, quite simply, wu tbat these
youna people were falUn«i ln lo••• &lie Jolt.''
said Laffoon. "We were aired to IOlllebow
demonstrate to them what i1 acceptable
behavior to IOCiet)' and Wlliat llD't."
Bryan promptly wrote a drama, ltan1DI
benelf M a diAbled JOUDI prl wbo lnttatel
her fellow wort... by cwt~ callbll Mr
boyfriend on tbe ..... Lana. pl.,.s tbe llMIP
toreman. who had to deal with the problem, and
the soon-to-be employed young people or the
Rehabilitation Institute were ca st as the
workers.
"IT DIDN 'T TAK E LONG fo r th e
youngsters cast as factory workers to admit
that Vicky's behavior was irritating them and
interfering with their work," said Laffoon.
"They were sym pathetic with me in trying to
keep the factory running smoothly.
"If my wife Vicki hadn't been cast as the
heavy, they might not have ~n able to really
level with how they felt. There is a solidarity
between disabled people; they don't want lo
break it. They weren 't risking their friendships
by speaking out against her," he said.
Laffoon and Bryan came together both
romantically and professionally ten years ago
in Iran, where Bryan worked on Educational
Television and Laffoon directed the National
Children's Theatre of Iran under the com -
mission of Empress Farah. For nearly seven
years Laffoon commissioned and produced
some 3> original full-length dramas.
EXCEPT FOR ANCIENT Persian theater
similar to Christian "passion plays," and a
bawdy, gypsy form of tolk drama, no serious
Iranian drama bad been written before Farah
commissioned them, Laffoon said.
"We devel~ an art form from practical-
ly notblne. We built 100 mqnlticent libraries to
perform in the cities, and we toot tbe drama to .
the vWaaea in a $100,000 Mercedes van the
empreu bouabt U1 in Germany. After tbe re-
volution the libraries were :c::!l to men and
boy1, and tbe books were · . I've beard
tbe,'re Ullnl the 1tac• for puppet lbowl," Laf.
.foon aut.
"cmtftl from tbe Chllar.\~tre~ ot · lraa to..-.· tbMter ill Or-.. wu a •
;.::~.~..:"~~= ~l nl•t we cu. a.au,, u.n 18D't a lillll•
prob•-&Mt CID't ... aHrWMd tUeqla
1tMatlr, .... Aid.
..
Dancing up a storm
UPHOLSTERY
Wh...'fwW ... ........
I UZ Herbor lhd.
Co.to Mete -541· I I H
coast residents well represented ~~"'? Gmar~ "·<~.
CUSTOM FRAMING II Open 6 Davs A Week
Mon.·Fri. 9-6 Sat. 10-4
1803 Newport Blvd.
Baldwin
Pianos
and Organs By SANDIE JO\'
01 , ... O•llr ~li.t S .. ff
Wtule more than 100 Orange Coast residents
were dancing up a storm al inaugural trails in
the nation 's capital Tuesday night, hundreds
mor e were drawn to the Disneyland Hotel in
Anaheim for the Orange County Inaugural Ball.
Unlike the situation in Washington, there
wasn't any scrambling for tickets here. The
local ball. billed as a black tie·optional gala.
was free and open to all comers.
There was some scrambling for seats,
though. and for dance floor space -and uncom·
fortably long lines al beverage and food stands
where drinks were selling at $2 a pop and made·
to-order sandwiches for $4.50 per serving. At
times. as many as 100 persons lined up for the
food.
TEN THOUSAND invitations were mailed
to Orange County residents while still others
heard about the ball through the news media or
by word-of-mouth.
An estimated 4,000 to 5,000 folks showed up
at the hotel's grand ballroom which was con·
nected via closed circuit television to each of 10
balls in Washington.
From 6 to 9 p.m .. at least, ii was a stand·
room-onl y situation with the so-called elite and
thC' masses elbow to elbow. attired in everything
from designer gowns and fashion furs lo jeans
and V-necked shirts.
They wer e the re to see. be seen, to
socialize, to celebrate and to somehow feel a bit
closer to events in the nation's capital.
From lime to time. the crowd's attention
was drawn away from the dancing music and
announcements in Anaheim to images of Presi-
dent Reagan and his first lady arriving or danc·
Campa i~n h~~ins
The Newport Harbor Art Museum was the
setting ror a luncheon lo kick off the 1981 cam·
paign of the Special Gifts Committee of the
Women 's Division of the Jewish Federation of
Orange County.
Ann Entin of Laguna Hills, chairman of the
committee. was named "Woman of the Year"
by the Women's Division.
Featured s peaker al the luncheon was
Michael Pinto, general· chairman of the 1981
campaign.
Members or the special gifts committee in·
elude Elli e Burg. Shirley Levy and Nettie
Vigman from Corona del Mar; Toni Spielman
from Huntington Beach : Frances Goodman
from Irvine and Sheila Sonenshine from Laguna
Beach
Members from Laguna Hills include Ede
Baer. Sedelle Belson. Florence Berlin. Anita
Fine. Sophia Hoffman , Carolyn Goldman.
Sylvia Koeppel, Freda Magid, Dorothy Marcus,
Beatrice Mo rton. Ann Mussier, Edith
Rachtman, Naomi Reicher. Betty Roen, Pearl
Rosenfeld. Lillian Savitch, Ethel Schiff, L~
Scully and Phyllis Zeltzer .
From Newport Beach are Sara Fainbarg,
Ceceli a Goodman and Alice Steigerwald.
More8-galn1
for Less lacon!
LAST TWO DAYS
·SALi INDS SAT .. JAM. 24
featuring selected dreases. skirts.
tops, ~nta. blouses. Jackets /'\.
IWMt ..... 8CCeSIO(iet. • '---J
ALL SALi ITIMS 1/J·PllCI i)
Ahe.wtew SIO, SlleM SH led!
ing at balls in Washington.
And, while mostly intent on cele-
brating.-they weren't unmindful of the other
dramatic event unfoldin1 before them on yet
another TV screen at the far end or the room,
the release of the 52 American hostages. A hear-
ty 200 to 300 persons hung on until past 10 p.m .
to watch the former hostages deplane in
Germany.
THE BALL AT THE Disneyland Hotel
was a first-ever for Orange County and, accord-
ing to chairman Tom Fuentes, was the lareest
or 100 local balls being held throuehout the na-
tion. . And while the event was balled as non·
partisan'. lots of Reagan su~porters were in
evidence, many of them sporting Reagan cam·
paign buttons which were selling for $2 to $5.
Reportedly the hottest selling buttons were the
ones showing both the president and Mrs.
Reagan. ·
The Anaheim affair was underwritten by
numerous businesses and individuals. chief
A kiss -on the cheek -was
what Newport Beach Mayor
Pro Tern Evelyn Hart re-
ceived.
among them Ponderosa Homes, which provided
.. a generous financial donation," Fuentes said.
Pondel'06a was represented on the ball commit·
tee and at the gala by Rod Gilliland.
Members of the ball committee included
former Congressman James Roosevelt, State
Sen. John Schmitz, Supervisor Thomas Riley,
Air California President Robert Clifford, As-
semblyman John Lewis, Irvine Mayor Art An-
thony. Newport Beach businessman Paul Salata
and Lois Lundberg, chairman of the Orange
County Republican Party.
SHARING MASTER of ceremonies duties
were Fuentes, who is vice chairman of the
Orange County Republican Party, and Kevin
Pfeifer of Trent Wilson Advertising in Tustin,
which handled publicity for the event.
Other committee members included
William Dohr, secretary of the California
Republican Party; buslnessman Dale Dykema,
Newport Beach attorney Thomas Malcolm,
Newport Beach Councilwoman Ruthelyn Plum·
mer , public relations executive Frank
Caterinicchio, Newport Beach businessman
David Stein. Irvine businessman Randy Smith,
Newport Beach attorney Alexander Bowie,
Maury De Wald. Mary E . Schmitz, Leon Jones,
Anthony Moiso and Colin Butcher.
special honors by Fuentes, who noted that if
Riley was.Present, he'd probably be MC'ing the'
event instead of him. Mrs. Riley was presented
with a large bouquet of roses by Fuentes. Riley
was unable to attend since he still was
hospitalized.
Also given special recognition was Dr_
Lydia Deane, who Fuentes noted attended every
committee meeting and was senior member or
the host committee. Dr. Deane, a retired physi-
cian, is 82, he said.
Also among those attending was Bette
Jones of Newport Beach, who said she was
"thrilled" with the inauguration of Reagan and
with the release of the hostages.
OTHER LOCAL FOLKS attending included
Leon Johnson of Newport Beach, Cheryl Elwell
and Sharon Bonner of Costa Mesa, Marnette
Cooling of Newport Beach and a large cont·
ingent of Irvine residents including Carolyn and
Roger Rapp, Dinah and Ken Bates. Phyllis and
John Murphy, Beverly and Roland Appley,
Johanna and Bill Cros by, John Nakaoka.
Phyllis and Bill Marriott, Denise and Ray Quig·
ly. and Eileen and Carl Morrison . ·
In all, there were guests from throughout
the county and beyond in~luding numerous city
government officials.
Among Newport Beach representatives was
Mayor Pro Tern Evelyn Hart, who accompanied
Mrs. Riley and sported a large Reagan button.
Ms . Hart confided that she had received a kiss
-on the cheek -from Reagan last week in Los Angeles.
And, it seemed. a good time was had by all.
Encycwpedia reconkd
NEW YORK (AP) What begins with
"Aachen," ends with "zymase" and would take
a listener 40 hours a week for eight months to
complete?
The answer was unveiled Wednesday in
Manhattan: the World Book recorded en-
cyclopedia for the blind.
A spokesman for World Book·Childcraft In ·
ternational Inc. said the 219-cassette collection.
the first of its kind, is a non-profit endeavor that
was started with a U.S. Education Department
grant of $365,000.
-~ Where a complete Braille edition of the en-
cyclopedia would take up more than 40 foet of
shelf space, the recorded edition takes up onl y
six, according to World Book officials.
~ Costa Mesa ,. ~~· ">-==:::::!51f.45!:!!!!:::::::!!:1:!::1===.!:~~~~~3li
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
,,
rr,11
o"J" l111rMf ti•~
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f' •ll"uon Island 640·9020
DAILY t0 6 S~ ''' MO~ lHUAS ,,., 10.
FACE-LIFTS
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Giving the invocation was the Rev .
Lawrence Baird, director of ecumenical affairs
for the Diocese of Oranee. He offered prayers
for Reagan as the nation's 40th president and
asked that God "bless our era of new begin·
nings inaugurated today."
Moonlite Sale FINAL REDUCTIONS
Emma Jane Riley, wife of 5th District
Supervisor Ril ey, was singled out for
Sale of sales this
In n1te 6 to 9 pm
at Huntington Center
,------iAAoi. ii;i(i1'a:a:v ;.Gii • · -----;
•
\THE ~ ~ RED BALLOON ~
: ·LTD.: __ J • '-... -..
SALE
Now •••
Only in Fashion Island
Newport ... "EEC .,_...... 1"'5 St.
71C/Ml-:r > 716/ •
II \ .,,
......... ._ .. .,..._ .... ·.....-...-------·---........................ -·'
fl~~
Semi-Annual SHOE
PRICE
Selechcl
Styles ....... sa.
All S'ales Final •
-lllATU .. 11
• • • Cancer's roots
,,.._ .... cu ........ ,.......... '° •treu u .....,.. ... a ..,...
.... ,..... pe~....,lcal aUJtYde that played a roa. la t.Mlr .. ''
la not poulbl• wilb ptyebotberapeutle interven·
lion. aheaaid . "When a new area offers u much pl"Omwe
11 p1yehotherapy with u Uttle aide ettecta and
as 1ood an improvement In tbe quality ot We -
rather than criUcl1in1 in1Ual Private studies the •cientlflc community would behoove tbemMlv• to help fl1ure out bow to deal with
and &et around the me thodoloetcal problems,"
•he Hid.
TM 9'1DOM..-a have lupired a number ol·
M9pttala and l'UCtr trHtm.t t' .. l9,. lo adopt
•l•ll• ID.u.odl Olrouat.out tM eatlon
AM UMJ)' ve al80 draw• ct1Uc~m
"'""'' UMlory hu been ruled I "CNtl hoax" MCI ldeMlU d\all_,• &.be M&U \bat the mind . ~n .Umu&lle lbe bodf't Immune 1y1lam lo
"'"' ..... aucl\ .. UDHt'
"'nw A.nencao Cancer Society 11 aware ol
ao data U\ the peer review ol the 1c1entdk and
lll•Ch<'al Uterature which 1upport1 the melbod
._.ployfld by O Carl Simcantcan M D u beina
lwnt-f1ria.I 111 the mana1emtftl ol c&ncer treat·
ment. · at-cordma to .n 1nterlin •t•temeot by
tk aott«y'a board ol dlrectora.
Cancer apeclaUatA, thou1h, take to laak the
concept ot the patient beln& at fault or cauailla
bis own cancer. They claim that tellln1 patienll
they muat take rea~sibility for their cancers
comes at a particularly vulnerable, already
&uilt-ridden period:
Ms. Matthews-Simonton said stress
manaaement Increasingly is being incorporated
Into medical treatment.
M• Matthew• Simonton, 33, who is
completane • doctorate !in psycholoay. a&THd that no sc••tific studies have
yet validated the Simonton method,
Kost ltf the center's reported achievements
com e an the form of c ase hislories and
tesumoma1s wb1cb, as an the Laetrile con·
troversy. •re aenerally unacceptable to the
scientific communitv
P atienta wt\o 'attend lhe Simonton
cancer center are encoura1ed to con·
tinue their relaxation exercises and
other stress-relieving techniques after a
cancer remission as practice of preventive
health.
"It's not the magic bullet," she said, of the
controversial cancer treatment. "I think scien-
tists are much more skeptical because they
don 't understand it and don't believe that
psychological factors can cause illness."
She said tt's doubtful there will bt any way
to srientifically prove psychotherapy's c~n
tribulion to cancer treatment. Oouble-bhnd
studies. the basis for many medical investiu-
l1ons in which neither the researcher nor the sub·
ject know who is receiving the treatmentor drug,
Proceeds ($10 per person) from the lecture
will be donated to the Community Church by the
Bay in Newport Beach. For reservation in·
formation, call 557-7372.
Family finances
Two sides to story
DEAR ANN: My husband and
I are having a disagreement
about our finances. I say we are
in trouble. He says we are just
fine. Since we don't know any
experts on this subject, will you
please check with yours and let
us know bow we are doing?
We are a family of four. My
husband makes $25,000 a year.
We have two cars, both paid for.
We owe $7,000 on our house,
$3,000 on some resort property,
S4,300 on various loans and
Sl,200 on our c redit card. (Our
credit card balance is S200 over
limit.>
FRIDAY, JAN.13
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES C Mar. 21-Apr. 19):
Roadblock is removed; work
gets done and you receive com-
mendatioo.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20):
Your sphere of interest
broadens; creative resources
surge to forefront.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Change of scenery will prove
beneficial. New approach is
necessary.
CANCER <June 21 .July 22):
You're being pulled in two direc-
tions simultaneously.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ele-
ments or timing, luck ride with
you. You could hit jackpot! t
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Family member makes major
concession. Be a gracious "win-
ner."
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Be
analyticaJ ; strive to perceive
motives. Emphasis on romance.
SCO&PIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >-
Dlg deep for information. Focus
on desires.
SAGITl'ARIUS CNov. 22·Dec.
21 ): Define meanings, com-
municate needs to superiors.
CAPRICOR!CI (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): What seemed far away is
now within reach. Open lines of
communication.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Flalsb rather than begin project.
Focus on investments.
PISCES <Feb. 19-Mar. 20):
Don't hang onto past -cold
plunge into future proves
• beneficial.
Ann. I am against all debt but
in this day and age it is almost
Impossible to be debt-free.
Should I relax about our situa·
lion, or do I have reason to be
concerned? -CASH ONLY,
PLEASE
DEAR CASH: I don't bave to
check wltll anybody to know you
are I• troubl!.
You are paylag lntereat on
$15,511 ia loau, nDlniJll two can
Hd two kida to feed, clotbe ud
ed•ca&e. You don't mentloe uy
1avla11, so I ass•me yo• laave
none.
For lleaven"t sake, 10 to tbe
bank wt.ere YOll de bulans ud
alt dowa ~ta adriser. (ftb
service ls free., Get oa a pay-
back a•d sa~•I• pro1ram
before Y• fllld yCM1rselns so
deepladellty••U•ever1etom.
DEAR ANN LA'NDERS: This
is an open letter -the guilty
party will know wbohe is:
You skunk : I ho(>t you bad a
peaceful sleep the Uher night.
It's bard to imagim bow you
could after what Y>U did. I
watched you pull to he side of
the road. open the toor and
shove your dog out intothe cold.
Then you nonchalantl! drove
away as i{ you bad just tropped
off your garbage at the dump.
You probably think some kind
soul picked him up. Wtll, no
such luck.
Your pet wandered into the
traffic hoping to make it to the
other side. He shuttled ~ween
lanes, not knowing which way to
go. Car~ ·swerved and borns
blared as other motorista bled
to avoid hitting him. He -.s
struck by one car and lb~
another. St.ill alive. he dragge\
himself a few yards before he
was mercifully put out of bis
pain when a third car struck
him.
My children. who saw .. the
whole incident, were bornf1ed .
They kept asking, "Why did that
man let his dog get killed?" I
couldn't give them an answer.
We wept together as we moved
the dog to the side of the road. .
People like you make me sick.
-DISGUSTED AND FURIOUS
DEAR FRIEND: Here's your
letter.1'11..U for sayiag It.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This
letter is for the girl with the
"terrible posture" whose
mother drove her c razy. The
poor kid came from a family of
military -We st Point
graduates, Marin es -the
works. They probably beat her
down and tried lo.get her lo con-
form to the rigid standards they
were accus tomed to. Like most
young people, the more they
harped the more she rebelled.
I would like to suggest that
parenls urge young girls with
poor posture to take ballet
lessons. They can start at any
age. It will strengthen the
muscles all over the body. (Did
you ever see a ballet dancer who
slouched?> Girls don 't want to
look like tin soldiers. They want
to appear feminine and graceful.
I hope you will find room in
your space to print this and get
the word out. Thanks so much.
C 0 N C E R N E 0
GRANDMOTHER WITH
EXPERIENCE
DEAR GRANDMA: I food
tbe space -ud bere's yoar let·
ter. Tbubabeap.
Can drugs be a friend in time
or stress? If you keep your bead
together can they be of help?
Ann Lande r s' new booklet,
· .. straight Dope on Drugs"
separates the fact from the fic-
tion. Get it today. For each
booklet ordered. send a dollar,
plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope (28 cents
postage) to Ann Landers. P.O.
Box 11995, Chicago, Illinois
60611 .
Sex seminar
set in Tustin
••Human Sexuality : For
Couples and Significant Others"
is the title of a two-hour seminar
to be conducted by Counseling
Associates for Human Develop-
ment, Inc .• on Friday, Jan. 30,
'' 7:30 p.m. All who are interested in
c1eatlng open, caring and loving
rttationships are invited to at-
lent. The seminar will be held
at 'AHO headquarters, 18001
Irvi"! Blvd., Suite A. Tustin .
White with Red Interlace T.!I
Novy with White Interlace Ti~
Thuraday. Jenuwy 22. 1981 DAIL V PM.OT ft
.
Embaf f.led mayor
John Petruska, mayor of 'Parma, Ohio. is
leading the city's battle against the U.S.
government. which has charged Parma
with violating the Fair Housing Act. Dis-
tricl .Judge Frank Battisti has accused
th.e city of deliberately keeping out black
peopl('
Bring back phosphates?
Consumers criticize neiu deter!{enls
MILWA U KEE !AP >
Detergents containing
phosphates were shooed from
many s upermarket shelves in
the 1970s. indicted by environ·
mentalisls for their fertilizing
powers that clogged lakes and
streams with algae and other
plant life.
Now the laundry industry is
as king cons ume rs to take a
more critical look at non·
phosphate alternative de·
terge nts .
Industry spokesmen say such
producls not only don't clean as
well as phosphate detergenls but
also damage clothes, washing
machines and the family pocket-
book.
ANDRIA BROWN, AN
economist for Speed Queen
Corp. in Ripon, said her com-
pany spent rr million lo redesign
coin-operated equipment with
non-stainless steel parts which
were better able to withstand
the abrasiveness of non-
phospbate additives.
For the consumer, said Ms.
Brown, use of non-phosphate de·
U.S. takes
conlrol of
U'ildarea
IM PERI AL BEACH (AP>
The Tia Juana Estuary, home of
several endangered species of
birds including the lighlfooted
clapper rail and the California
least tern, is now part of the Na·
tional Wildlife Refuge system.
The 505-acre parcel located in-
side the cities of Imperial Beach
and San Diego has been sold to
the U.S . Fish and Wildlife
Service by He lix Imperial
Harbour Developme nt Corp.
after more than a decade of
negotiations.
Agency s upe rvisor Ralph
Pisapia said the e s tuary
between Impe rial Beach and
Mexico "is one of the las t
areas" for the species .
.. It is a very significant area
for waterfowl and migratory
bards," Pisapia said.
The refuge is one of the last
natural marshes along the
Southern California coast. It en-
compasses about one mile of the
Tia Juana River.
Three-fourths of the estuary· as
located inside the city of Im-
perial Beach with the rest in the
city of San Diego.
tergents may mean higher utili·
ty bills because they need hollt·r
water.
In addition, she said, the Socip
& Detergent Associcition of New
York calculate al costs four
times more to buy extra laundry
supplies to boost the cleaning
power of non-phosphate de-
tergenls "than for a consumer to
pay his s hare of improved
sewage treatment... ·
KA V OLSON IS a home
economics teache r in Wausciu
and a leader ,-0f a ~roup of home
economjsts who are planning to
lobby legislators this year in
favor of a return to phosphate
detergents.
Ms. Olson complains that non·
phosphate detergents are ex-
pensive and, like Ms . Brown,
suggests that environmentalists
should be aiming their clean-up
efforts at sewage treatment
plants.
"I am paying more to have a
clean wash while nothing is be·
ing done to clean up the lakes."
s he said.
Duane Schuellpe lz . an in -
vestigator for the slate Depart·
ment of Natural Resources. says
"there is a counter argument "
to the suggestions that the pollu-
tion problem ought to be tackled
at sewage treatment plants
r at her than in the laundry
machine.
"THE HEAD OF the Chicago
Metropolitan Sewe rage Com -
mission onre predicted a 40 per·
cent increase in s ludge if
polyphosphates were to return."
he said.
The DNR has been studying
non-phos phate detergents for 18
months and will probably report
to the Leg i slatu re wh e n
Wisconsin reviews its 1979 law
which banned the chemicals.
But according to Scbuettpelz.
the department has not been
.. looking at what the laundry
capabilities are" of alternative
d eterge nt additives or in·
vesligaling the increased costs
people may be paying because
of garments prematurely aged
by non-phosphate detergents.
In 1971. Indiana was the first
s tate to ban sale of detergents
containing more than 3 percent
phosphates by weight. Fewer
than two dozen states followed
that lead, despite findini?s in a
Canada-U.S. study soon after
that most phosphorus in the
Great Lakes was coming from
municipal sewage treatment
plants, and that 70 percent of it
originated with household de·
tergents.
l'olunteersinjecfed
Hormone tested
as growth aid
Several years later. the
U S. Envi ronme nta l Protec ·
tion A~en<'Y also banned use of
NTA, nilrilotnacetic acid. a
phosphatl' alternative whose use
as allowed an Canada. But the
EPA's original fears that NTA
wa s toxic have , since been re-
co n s 1 dt• red. a nd some r e-
Sl'a rchers sugJ?est at may end
the ~carc·h for a phosphate
dlt(.'rnat1 vc in the United Slates.
The proble m with alternative
detergtmls seem to lie with the
c hemi c;i l used in s t e ad of
pho s phat es so dium
ca rbonatt•. or o ld -fas hioned
soda .
John llarkin, a University of
Wisconsin organic chemist and
professor of e nvironmental tox·
ico l ogy , exp lain s that
phosphates arc especially valua·
bl e in hard water laden with
m i n e rals s uch as calcium.
Phos phates counteract the
mine r a ls a nd s us pend dirt
particles, making it easier to
rinse dirt out of the wash.
"TO OVERCOME c alcium
problems, phosphates suspend it
while soda precipitates it out."
wh ich coci t~ clothing with ci
din gy. abra s i ve f i lm o f
It me stone. said Harkin. whose
resl'arch on detergents is being
runded by government sources
and the detergent industry
M ;rnurac ture rs o f laundry
ma chines co mplain l h1:1l the
lim estone a lso coats moving
parts. interfering with valves
and lining tubs and agitators
with ;in abrasive film that in-
('rt'ases rahric wear
llarkin's research as concen-
tratinJ? on the effect of non-
phos phatc detergents on septic
systems. The soda alternatives
.. a rc very strongly a lkaline ..
which mh~ht actuall,y inhibit the
bact e ria need ed to dissolve
waste m atter an septic systems.
he sa id
..We don't know that for sure.
We are only a year into the
s tudy." Harken said.
~illio1ltlire's
college ~fl
under attack
' l
..
Cit OM.V PtLOf
Th• Blggeat Marketplace on the Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIE'D ADS
You C•n Sell
Tr•d• It With
It, Find It,
• W•nt Ad (642-5678] One Call Service
Fast Credit Approval
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
G....-et I OOJ CHMret I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••
IASTllOI I YEAR NEW
~:.~~~·······I~:!:.~.~....... ~:!.~ ~ ........ ~~::: !.~~ ~~ ........ ~::: .~~ .~~ ....... .
GeMr_, I 002 G..,._, I 002 G.-r_, I 002 G.-ral I 002 Ge.r_, I 002
·······················1 ·.·.·.·.··.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.··.·.·.·.·.·.··lllil!·~·-·.·.·.··.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.··.·.·.·.·.·· ............................................. .
l1,..Y111r 6', Call
642-5671
llllSfS fet ~All ......... , .. , ..... ,. "'-'t•..i. ,,_. ....... . (•••• ·-... . _......... ,. ., . "• . ........ " ••T'-' ' . " . ..,. tt...M ~"" ..... 1 ,,,..
t ... WM> ~. "i ... ..,...,40
_....,.,,M '··-... '. ,,. ............ "
....... ·"·· .. ~· ,.,. ,..,.._ ..
. .... EQUAL HOUSfNG
O PPORTUNITY
,~....,.., Motke: A real t-!.1"a il' ad
8" a u~fu~Ut,.!e1I1 n e d
11lrNl. w.111 wiay lhru
nower filled yard. leads
to 11h•ke front doll houise.
Charnlina& biay windows
tinbance tb111 3 Bdrm
h omt-O ld c harm
abounds with hardwood
floor11 Huge olden days
lot Not many h•fl Call
now
MIWLISTIMG ~791 900 . Weslcliff adul~ condo
BeauTiful 1 year new close lo shopp1!'g an~
Sandlewood town hom e l r a n s p o r l at 1 on :!
Superb upper location .. bdrm s , 2 b al~ s .
BeauUluJ view o( green· flreph1ce and bar. Light
be ll and recreational and cheerful end unit
fac ilities. Balcony over-Sl29,500.
1714) 673-4400"
121 ll Ul·JIZI
HARBOR
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ONE OF THE FINEST HO~ES EV ER!
. . ' .~
... , ,,
-~t*~ ~·
REALTORS
675-5511
LOVELY "E.. PL.AH
"'-"'• ""• • t4ir .. " ...... .,.I •&.VII• ..... ," .. ,
.. ... . ..
v e rll :.t'd 111 th1 ~
oew.sp;iper b :.ull1e1·t to
th .. Fedt'ral 1-· ... ir llvu:.
1ng Ad of 1968 wh1d1
mall.\!:> 1t 11lcgJ I to Jd
't'rll:.t' any prcfor1•nrl'.
l1 m1tat1 un or t.1 1:.
l'rtm1n;itwn lntsl•d u11
r ul't'. 1•olor. n •l11twn.
.. ex or nallunul uri~tn.
vr Jn 111tt'ntm11 tu m;ikt'
.111) :.u1•h p n°rl0 rl0n1·l'.
l1m1tut1011 , ur d1 :.
('1
looks p ool and s pa .
Space age k1tt hen with
lots of cupboards and
counter s p11ce. Xlnt floor
plan, all decorated to
eart,htont.>s. Shows like a
model Perfect for the
guy or gal on the go! Call
now. 752· 1700 /\ llt\'1'11111111
llJrhrn ln\l•,lrnl•nt ('o
In Cam eo Shores. a sprawling 4
hedroom . with stud~· and exquisite
kitchen wrapµed around an inviting
pool and at'tcntcd with a sumptuous
spa and. of a ll things. a n incr cd ihlt•
garage '. You should set• it '. There 's a
view too. for just $075.000.
llwfft lllOsf poplllll .. ,._, • .,.. ....... wltll
lllo.laift •!.w. 3 ~ f9'llty "°°"'·
lownt "E" naitaba.. $252. 900.
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Hr•I l..-l•h " .. nh·•I
RENTALS
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BUSINESS. INVEST·
MENT. FINANCE
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ANNOUNCEMENTS.
PERSONALS &
lOSl & FOUND
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SERVICES
EMPLOYMENT &
PREPARATION
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MERCHANDISE
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BOATS & MARINE
EQUIPMENT ,,,." .. '"''
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AITIS', MEW
.. ..
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
1 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS
OwMt" Will Financ' S uper sharp Easts1de ... ..
.... I , ..
'•••
"" ~~I I
l"f Im IOlltlOll
rh1s newspalJ<'r "'111 mil
knowmgly J<'l't'Pt .1n) ud vl'rt1s 111~ for r1.·11I
estate whll'h 1:. Ill \' 111la
tion of I.he l<iW
UNTINGTON
VILLAGE
BAKGAIN' Beautiful 3
Bdrm. loct1ted in ex·
rellent area of Hunt ·
mgton Village. Centrally
located. Jog to the beach.
' dollhoust> 3 bedroom s. l
b a ths , b ea utifu lly
l11ndscaped 111 m ovc·in
co nd1t1on Lar gl·
hreplace and open beam
ceiling add much to its
L'h arm . Full prtCl'
$152,500
.....
;.;: ----------11111 Wallung d1st-ance t o•---------•I
E.Ro*s·. "d-•~s-s sh ops, sc hools. goH ~I; 500
""' "' • r-H "· r o u rs e KV a ccess "'6, :·::: should clwck th.ir ads owner may fmance to puts you mto your own 4 :~;. daily ..ct ~ er· qual1fil•d bu yer A Bdrm, AJC home 12
I • ., ro-•-....Uat..a... Th• bargam at $109.000. Call 1 18'1. rinanctng. Call for
1-l • ~ -.... , 52 700 d e la 11 s on 11 u r 1": DAILY l'ILOT aslUIMI now· 7 -l "T ICKET" program I ~:: liability for th•. fint 1 ITHB REALI ... RED CARPET 1 ~:~ incorrect insertio"ESTATBRS •
1 r:~:: only. . -.-.--·7·5·4--1.2.0.2 ... . ~.; ----------i
As~ I 1.6°/o Lo1111 Lrg-3bedroom 21"1 b 1.1th
U~l()U~ t1()M~~-
REALroRs. 675-6000
2443 l•!>I Co.uil Hlghwc1y, Coronc1 dPI M4 r
W Jo: I IA \'1-::lfiOF'f'l IE I! EST l.ISTl:\'l;S I.'\ TO\\'~
DOVER SHORES
UHtEL{EY AILE The ulUma e ui luxun e!>
4,000 sq.ft. of elegant ltv
ing walls of glass s ur
round enclosed pool with
removable s k y light
dom e . 4 m ass i ve
fir e places. s eclude d
master suite hosts tan
tal1zing s p a S p c t·
tac ular view ' Th rs won't
las t 1 1-'or the ult1matc in
living, call now
NEWPORT
SI 59,500
Lovely 3 Bdr m home on
e xtra lar ge lot 1n
Newport Beach cul de
sac locallon. So much .
for so little mone) ~
Hurry call 646-7171
l~A~j
CHAHMEL FIOHT I Bdrm unfurnis hcd .
COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS
2515 E. Coast Hwy .• COf'OllCI .. Mw
675-5511
r l<]I~ ·t • ;'
h J' ~t _,, J 11
[.'(>< J1 t SI· 1!1-~
I-ft .. , f sr~'' r •Cfu f "ICC''""·' ,, ..
HEWl'ORT HEIGHTS
421 San lemardino
Opett Thurs /Fri
1-4:30 Cus tom thrt>l' bt•d rt.tt1m
homt-Fam1l) roum with
we t bar plus hu1lt 111
s te r eo Sunken II\ 111 1!
r oom l ntt•rt·:.t1nl!I
harbor \'11'\lo ()w111•r 1o1o 111
carry c·umplt'lt• f1n a n1· I
1rtlol ' $361! tO J
BIG4 w ... 11 plunncd <!-sty ht1m(:
with formul dintn)! &
family room . nmtral uir
w purifier apd ~1n mvtt
1ng s pa 1-'!atures in
c·lude t u s t o m
dra pl'rtes. thick ea qll't
111R anil a wller anxwu~
lo 'l'll l'rtn"d ht·lo"
ITI a I' k t'l :.ll S Hi K. !I !i 0
iSI :.11!11
«;::SELECT
I PROPERTIES
....... t o 1 I ".. Housn f04" Sale !~:, ••••••••••••••••••••••
1002
BEACH
HOUSE
Laguna Charmer. ten
trally l<X·ated. 2 blol·ks
to the beach. shopptnl(,
excellent locat111n. New
copper pipes . ne w roof
a nd w ood fcnl·e
Heaut1ful stainl•d Rlass
wint1ow Very (le x1bll·
fina ncing A s tcal a t
$110.000. Call now. won·t
STEPS TO l~CH Two 2 Bdrm units . ..:or
ne r lot, ocean view. t'X
cellenl summer wmh•r
rental $210,000.
Costa Mesa condo w /2
car garage & fireplace
Owner will carry lrg 2nd
T 0. Asking $132.500 r;t yearly $450 631-7300 H.8.
1 !\ionlll'ello Townhou">c 31•---------bdrm. 2 ba. rum \'rl) WOODBRIDGE
I h,11 1111111.! 'h 111i.:h •1l l 0\I :::: Gen~al SEA COVE PROPERTIES
$50IJ 642 22!>3 eH'l> Remember When? r jk l' uv1·r \O' 1111t'r1· ... 1
f1 Xl0d r;it1• lu.111 Shal'J> :.I
lwdr1•Jm :! IJJ th Ill ~
t:()l. \ lw 1111· "'"'r S11
('O J '• I i ' I .1 1 ,t IJ 11 1 \
.! llilrn1 \,htunl tn
1. .. k•·'""" 4111 l!f'<•t•lllll'il
1\ "I I l I'd t II ',. I I
::.I 'o I 1"•1
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DUPLEX
$110,000 714-631-6990 associated
llAOl<EAS-AEAL TOAS
l OH W 8olboo 6 7 I !66 I
Call f.42 56i H ----11!11-11111!!1111-• ;11 .
"t.'• "''·.
I' rime Costa Mesa units .
Clean rl'furb1s hcd'
Ftnancmg · Hurry call
for details~ 646 7171 -------------------· ...
i''4t
THE REAL ESTATERS
Here's Premium
The art1~~'fh1s home
1s ms tantly appealing .
Must see this Newport
H1v1era 1·ondo ~lowinJ?
with warmth & comfort.
J bedroom 3 bath l'nd un
1t. Qu1el1y locutt'd two
blocks from pool. tennis
& rt-c a rea !>56 2f>60
last 752-1700 lr.1••.W..,•lllr.•i...
THE REAL ESTATERS
100/o
~SSUMAILE LOAH Sharp~ B~frm. corner lot
in El Toro. New carpets
and paint. New central
air conditioning Large
tree shaded yard. As k
mg $103,000. 1-'or un up
pomtmenl to !lee. l'ull
MO·llSI
JUST LISTED !
Ocecm 11/J llocks Owner anxious Warm &
co1.y dullhou st-' 2
Bdrms. 2 C'ar garal(e
Plus extra park1n~
Land 1nl'lucl ed ;it
$179.500'
Balboa lay f'rop.
R.altors
•675-7060•
I
11
d
11 NewDOrt Waterfront t r.urgtf.5{ nuor r>lan, VICW. I
s ltp rights
JAMES E. GOULD :
S749.000
631 -1532 I
I R-2 I I Uullders, t11·t now f11r I
.... ,, ~::·: «;::SELECT I PROPERTIES ~HERITAGE
<.:o:-.tu Ml.'sa lot with I I
plao~ rl•udy lo hulld
ownl•rs art: ..onx 111us !Jn !
ly SI IS.Ill.JO. l 'all h11 rnon· I
details I
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ti JI
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~., ..
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lfi •• 91'1 1171\l "70) ,,767
Y7111 9"nJ
Now You
Can
Sell
More
1o1.lth Oaih l'i lot Pt-:,~\ ri'\('llt-:R
\ U!'\ "'till uni~ s2.
:1 I 1 Ill'' t111 :! .t.1' '
uni\ '-I ,1 11,1\ .I II .<
lllH'
• • REALTORS
CANYON
CREEK
MODEL Keel brick path t o
gorgeous 2 story 1n
Northwood. 2 Bdrms.
library and den. Giant
ma s ter w ing w ilh
Ko man tub. Central
irtrium. Frenc•h doors,
prest igious e lectronic
gated community. Call
for details. 752·1700
1-:njoy e amcnitH•s of
1
th<' Bluffs and the
spaciousnt.'SS of a larR(' ·
ho me in this sunny end I
condo unit near schools.
recreational fac1ht1es
Walk to shops anti en1oy
a view o r l"a s hion
Is land. $230.000.
Jus,~J~T~!~ely .
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
114-631-6990
hard·t1>-find Bonita plao.
Three separate pahos. W ATERFROHT t:t~ME Spanish tile entry Up· 5 BR;-4 Ba. ~uslom
graded k1 tC"h t>n . 3 wat~r~ront' h ~me
bedrooms. 2 bath:.. m-w ti 7 X38 pv.t dol'k I rtl't'
side ta widry room a nd $1,3!15.000. "or dett11ls on
so me VIEW. $215.000 this horn~ and a ppt tn see. call <.:arol llorr. a~t D.M. MARSHALL 631-1>094
REALTORS
644-9990 760-0835 WANT \!"TIO~"
L"la:.s1fr<I Atl~ ii 12 ;,1;;x
\<I \ I' I I'' I' 11 II t' 11 I'
11101 1• tl l'lll' \ .11111'11
11 p '" :-<llJO Ea1'11
.1dd 1111111.d lllH' I '
unh till(• 1111' lh1· I \\II
d ;1\ ... ~111'1\ 11 0
1·0 1111111·1' 1;11 ;1tl:o.
,1llt1 \\l'tl l°h.Jl'l!I'
\ 0111 1'1·1111.' 1'111d11•r
, \ d (I f' lh I ' \ II ll f
IL1nk ,\11wr11·a 111
\·1s;1 or :\l:istt-n·:irtl
xL~rv1'1~.\s'vear ,_ ........................ "l
around rentals. fl!!!IP
Andonly S249,950! ......
For mun: 111lormJl1<111
and lo µIa n• ""!'r .ul Pall
642-5678
Classified advertising is
a better way lo tell m ore
people about the service
you have to offer . Ask
about our low rates to·
day. 642-5678.
IO'I "
IU \I I \ I '\l
' •I
Elegant Tustin Hills
Cus tom ! 2172 Salt Air
Or . Appr. $397 ,500.'
Ter ms & price negot1a
ble. Call Owner 552-4833
SELL idl<' items with a
Daily Pilot Clas1ilriecl Ad.
OPEN FRIDAY 10-2 P.M. * FOR PREVIEW *
1504 hit Oc••frollt
BBDB&B BLllRS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
GOOD FtNAMCING, Ocl'an.Ba~ View T1o1.1i Ucd r<>om Cun.do In
One or Newport':. !\1o~t f'n·~t1~1•11is ~,u;1rd
Gated Commun1ttcs . l'r1l·<'tl Bt•low S11n1 lar
Models . I.an:(' Assumahl(• Isl Owrwr Will
Consider Second As k mi: SIK!l.!'IOU
TERRIFIC TRIPLEX
In R ap1d I~ A rir1ret1 a t tnl( /\ r<'a of l'osta
Mesa, AdJacenl To New Hedl'\'l'lopm<'nl
Area Charmin~ Rcur llousc. Would l\htkt'
Grt>at Owner·:. llom1.· Olhl•r Two Ht•nl<ll
Units Help W11h l'aymcnt~ & Taxe~. ~:x
cellent Finunc•ini.: ,\ vt1i lahle $15!!.IHHl
759-9100
#2 Co•tM• .. t• Phn• .... .,.... c.....,.
~,r STAR GAZER~•~
1---'-...-..;..,...---111 t I \\ R l'Ui I ,,----..----. tf' .~~·•:, ~ 'fo.,., Oo1lp A01••'" G ... tJ• J:>.
1J •"' •• Auo•tJ·"f •o ,.,,. Sto•f
1 \fr,11 I t¥tt\\Hl' f I •. Jc.1
"od .... 11i.. 1 ·""'"' ·""~"J I 1.1n1Ni1 ,,t "°"., Z•~t·oc.lmth •·G" .,o ....
''"'""" l.1CIH "' .. ,.", ~fOt"tw...
., ... !' ...
NH"'
M l.o.,.t•Ol'll ,._ ,, •*'Ct
IJ()o 1J .... ,_.
I I
'
STARTING
A NEW BUSINESS'?
According to California Business
and Professions Code (Sec. t 7900 to
17930) all persons doing busi~ss
under a fictitious name must tie a
statement with the County Cler~ and
have it published four times in a
new spaper serving the area in which
the business Is located.
I
I
I
The statement is requlr•d by law
and Is necessary in protecO,g your
business name. Most bankr require
proof of tiling to open canmerclal
accounts. The DAILY PILOT provides both
filing and publication services. We
have all the necessary form• and
maintain a dally service to the Orange
County Courthouse. Either stop by one I
of our convenient offices or pll<>ne the
LEGAL DEPARTMENT 642-4S21. bt. _J
332 for more information andforms . ··-··-··-·-· --···-···-· -···-· -~·_..-... --.. --
SllK & FINl1 LETTI.ICE
C AT L T E U P 8 E LA E S S 0 0 l L
SC p y NBLTNAIPDALASST
E RE A O ZR I K pJ E Y 1 A AV AL
SOC AT RAE G PD Y L Ml CC 0 R
RGUOS MCR [JM OOt I BOBS
A N T C O E E H f'V L E N 0 V S X S V
H E T R B 8 R T , S U A B 0 E N W N A
L W E OE E B pJ E S WE L N F l l 0
EHL CT o X· TV S A EE AR L l E
A BI T u c l' K A W W A K E A G W L~A
A I U 0 p T; L J BF CL Al G GTE
DB Q SA s L J W 0 I E Q S Z E 0 A E
OUIEH·REIHIULTVILHL
p R t B y f H L C B M I 0 8 E 8 .O S H
C B LU pA SN T T 0 MN C I U 0 S 0
lnuructioo• Mid<Hn wordt blltow appeer forward, beck·
w1td, up, J#Wtl or diagol'lllly. Find 1acll elld bo• It In,;
Stlld~I Midd •t
Loor' •I
Bu..,·Htld g,tan
Cos S.lin• Vlltev :.:
Hud lctbtrg ..;
Crisp Ctltvct ~
l tef Romtint
Bibb Chicken
T ama"aw: Owll
nntn
O teotton99 le·11,,, ot th•
fov' "'ambled wo'd' be
lo-'O torm lou, t1"'pte wotdt
L A G ll 0 L
I I I I' I
F R A T 0
I' I I I'
--... --... -...--1 ° wish they would11'1 hffp H OCA R I:
~:" liCNt
I• I J I' ::= nying It's • smell world. ..._ .... _.,.,.__,_.__ ..... _ •. ~--That's I ll Wt~ -0 1-i-----..... ==:; wond. • N U C S S E
WATFRFRONT HOMES, INC.
lttAL £STA Tt
5.*t, R.n1.i., PrQP1Prry ~-n•
M»W c-1 Hwy 315"~ A~ """"'°" a .. ch .._ Wend ........ 17J.6911
f '
Sl:.IO IJI~ J ntl ''"''"'' 1o1.1ll 1.1rr) (0.Jll 11to\\ "' , .. ,.
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
Want Ad Rt>:.u lts 1>42 Si:i7HI \~ :1111-~1b I ..o ll ll 1:! .. 1i7H
... ~
For an .Ad in Womrn's Worfd
C~I Sue 642-5678, Erl. 330
4 Ways to Spring!
9261 SIZES 8-20
II fer S. t "-S. ..._., Fef' S. Ha•"'-S-. "-"Fe.-S. Thursday, January 12. 1981 DAILY PILOT CI I ···~··················· .............................................. ••••••#••·············· ••••••••••••.••••...•.. -
•• .,.. I HJ . I OOJ heer.. t OOJ .... ...._ 1114 ..... I 044 .._..,Fer S. ....._,Fe.-S. Hotttet For S. O....,_ IHI 1tt• ··•···················· ...•..............•...• ••.....•.....•......•.• ...................... ·•····················· ••···•·•·•·•··········· ....................... •·•·•······•··•··•····· •......................
....,.._.._,_.Cl
mt fllW LOCAnGN
Panla tl r V1~w of Ouan, bay,,
ISiand" 'atallna, 11.rhhl ar the jell '.
ur h a jo\ to watc h the 111lboat1 and
Jll the boat paradf'!i <'w.tom built to
takt ad ~lali!CI of tht· varw fro m m ost
room Lovely ·• Rdrm11, fum . rm &
d1n1nit Rt.>aut iful ,,.."' l&.nc:ht•apultt on
rf'ar lvrrarf' It i.lopt' :I Cai .:ara.~t
Call lod"' for aa,pt f7~.<nl
WISUY M. TAYLGe CO.. llALTOIS
!Ill '9J110' .......
NIW11111'P09•-"T CIMl'a. N.I. 644-49 t 0
SIJI.... I Br. 1 Ba. t.ar1e kitchen
SMOFP•"S ... '"-1111000 witb built in•. 2 car
IPICa.L MI'S: YOIPI. 2 r. n•OOd•t 1•n1e. Lar1e yard. l..ow4NM-pn«'a4 bdrm A•-C JI &&1 "-.. e.ome ID area. Ver1 •I ~••· oew carpet. I • -.._.
traeUve floor plan CI09e ... u..a. loan. Cli•cll
to beaela Will aell VA. Spiller Gl·ml. * •$131JM!
0.b IHUGO Call lc.ld•Y Ya. bard to believe but
t1t.U70 true! We bne juat U.ted
A LL $'4~ TE :·--R•EAL-T•O•RS--i 2 iovely, free-atandin1 bomes in fabulou s
Irvine, aod ~ under
ftlAL '°"' 9.5 IMTn(Sf Sl38,000! One a 2·sty. 3
CAUFOaMIA
Ht'aut1Pu~~~at·111u:1 3
Hd r m hOMt' 111 jlrl'al
l0t·.it1011 l-'1tbulou11 fum1
1 ly room, 2 hreplacvs.
J a \' u t '-I d ,. 1· u r a I o r
wullpul)l•r 111'.W,llOO L'all
lud ay lt?!I ~o
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
CHU Bdrm home well located
Auume ~down. Luv-
•IY 3 Bdrm. 2 bath faml· ly room, fireplace, open
be•m ed cfilin111, new
copper plumbln1. large
yard, double auaae.
11kyllaht. Only Sl 14,SOO.
t:• II 64>9161
llPfN ~t(llJ \t
IHAL IY
/
in University Park. An
outatandin1 value at
1129.500
The 2nd a one level 3 J
Bdrm dollhouae in "The
Colony" purchased with
as little aa 10"/o aown.
$128,500
Hurry !. both or these
, beauties will go fast
........ 106t ... .,_..._. 106t S.= D ....... /
•••••••• .. ••••••••••.. ....................... C~•• I 071 O.-. S. I 100 . ..........................................•.. ,
EASTILUFF
SHOWS LIKE A MOOt:L P RICED LIKF. A "'IXER
5 Bd. 3 Ba. view. Pool. ft~ee. $190.000
assumable . $319.oeo.
CORONA DEL MAR
3 UNl1'S terms A~sumc $256,500 at 13'¥t. Se ller's
wi ll c~rr v an additional $25 1000.
Gross m corre over $20,000 pet y r .
Purchase price $329.000.
AlkforDarnll,ath 631·1266
Agent for RIMAX realty
HEIGHTS
IYOWMH
Breathtalllna
panoramic ocean view
or Dana Harbor Spec·
t.acular cuatomlzed 3000
sq. ft. 5 Bdrm +retreat.
980.000 Ui up1rade1. As·
sumable l01i'a% fin1m c· I in1. 1299,500. 33801
Avenlda Callta , SJC
714·496-5275. Open Housl'
1·5 Sunday.
BY OWNt:K-Country
EX CHANG t: OR St:LL
El•11ml Dplx, I blk form
Venice Bc h, lg 3Rr ,'
2~8a ownen. unit & cHi· •
ciency •pt. t;an be com
blned to 1 I& homl'. 2
frplci>. 312 811. }d s.
decks. cov pi.rkinM . <'1ly
v i ew , nr M arina
Peninsula. $175,000 l'qU 1 •
ty Exch for equity in :.m
ore bid&. t:omm or ioncd property. Bkr /principal
1213) 822·2436 wkdys
Ch armer, 4Br, 2Ra h•conwProperiy 2000
home in desirable San •••••••••••••••••••••••
J . u a n c a " u 8 UNITS
ne11hborhood. Assumu Located m Santa l\na
ble financing. Prit•ed lo 1\11 I Ur, Income $4!5,1.100
sell al 1124,900. Sec lt> yr "'ull prirc S2:1S.(JjH1
apprec . 496·9274 or Owner wall carry lru
496-6191. 2nd r ruj)O·rty Ill v,•rv
S11nta AM I 010 i.!1>1HI C'onrli1 um
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ PR€\TlGE
IUY THIS ONE /-J.=::+= HOME~ 1---------IMOTIVATEO : Four
------------------ILUff5 LIEASI bdrm with dlnan1 room, l:h•autifol 3bt.~room, 2'• ra m1 ly roc>m . brick
Clean 2 8d homc With a ou1c• -
molher in·law cottage. JBedrodm lousl".2Car Ht•.11 l-:!>latc In ,, . .,, 430Pw.t.ld 3 Bd 2 e·a-_--lr g lot
..... SULA 'OINT IUC ... ONT tJ .a th n indo Trana rareplace About 1800
l'<.1nor 1m11 \ll'\\ JI ~ed~f' fl'Olll 'lu1ll'l End u1Ht un sq feel Two miles from
$185.000. Chuck Sptllt!r
631·12166
Ask for Hobert Milliken Ga r age. i n a n I l' ,. ml·nh
631·12166. Agt Res1dent1al an· a 3~1;1:J W ( · .. J~t 11 w~ :-..11
l,)t l mr IJ f~t' 111( I TJdrrn a hath l'USlom gurgcuu:. grc .. nbi·IL beach Owner wall help
h -( r Fri·:.h valnl. .new oak r 1n a n c 6 SI 12.500
---- -$80.SOO Ry <>wnt•r 645·6646
Watdi the Wa•H 547 3182 oceanfront duplex on l'~~p~~JAIL~,~~A :! unll f1110 'ti I t•tilur111u man nt• r 1 "' ,., our1 11g & IUVl'l y T A R H E L L . the beach. Two 2 bdrm udi11 1090 r1 111111 t•n11\ l1•1r1 u rc1<1 ll' tl1111 11u ~J rthl•lfl ··rt, • ,., 1 ,., • • l' rn l'C an.: H E A LT 0 RS C a I l bdrcn. 2 t..ath ,.J, h 11111l
with far.•pl,11•t•. 1•11ch1!>t•ll
µal1u tluubh-i.:arJl(l'
$165.000 111 11 I i rund ~
Hltr. li75 tjlbl
l!HlrJI liuall "" \'({' l ;J>i,~ ()()() 759-1616 ~0·1720
LIDO tSU 'l'" h rt•11 11.11lt·l(·d tr:.1tf1t1<1na l "l ' It• :1
bd rm :! tw1h h1111w ff•alunng iaq,{l'
r el'rt•<ttwn mom ~~ :! P C:1t1 m1 L1\'1ng
room h ~•=-;it t r;1('f 1 \ t• lw<i rn t:t-ilings.
I 1 n·pla1·1· & I n·11d1 <1nors lt'cid ing ont0
hr1e k p<lllO Nt·" k1ttht•n hit 1n
:.i ppl1<1nc·1·s 1 'ln~t· t o tennis courts .
~•1nd.'v bci.il'lll':-& tlulihuust' l'C:ln be
i:iolcl full\· furn1sht.•d $420.IMXI
IAYFIONT
Wt· Ii~" t' s t·vcral fin e hom l's
w ith pier & s lip
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boy\•d•· Dr•v•· N B 67'l 6 161
F111d "'hJI '"u \lo.int 11•1
Dail.' 1'11111(·1 ... ~-.1l 1t•1h WANT l\t-ru >N ..
Cla!.Mh.'tJ Ad!. 642 5'i711
macnab I Irvine
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IRVINE COMPANY
MANY OftTIONS IN
RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN VILLAS!
Do.you n t•f•d a lt•a!'le. a leasl' option
vr JUSt lo own the bes t Sola no model
in Rant ho S:.in .Joaquin Villas? This
terrifi c· u.nit 1s av;.ul a hlc a ll 3 ways
lease it furn or unf11rn option
for SI0.1100 oµlion mont!V or bes t of
a ll OWN ii : 2H HS & ·den . h ighlv
upg rncted . air·cond, ~huttcrs. mar·
ble fplc: a nd <lramatu.: use ul s tained
gla ss. Right on the golf <·ou rse: 30
SEGU RA. S205.000 T om Allinson
642·82.15 ( y -81 )
752-1414 Hl-1700
Cl'>MPu\ vo11 .. v c ~"'"' w~Cen•e<
642-1211 644-6200
Q()I Dove< 0.ov!' Harbor V~w Centi!<
AESIDfNTIAl REAi FSTATF SfRVICF.S
ftROIATE SALE
Two bedroom t·ondo . Im ma<'ulate .
New carpets. paint & floor in g. Com -
munity pool & clubhouse with full
k itche n. Near free ways & Ora nge
Coast College. $95,000.
' IN NEWPORT CENTER""'
-644-9060
WEST BAY DUPLEX-MEW EX!
bc .... P1' t11ec...__...,...,
......... J.....,JW.a..•JW. • M. cm lie ...., c ... erW .. ...... --,. ,,.. ... ...,.u ..... •i:• Sl71,000. ... -.
~ ON WATEl-VU "-""'-................... .. .,..... & .,.. ............... .. .............. ,.... ........ ....
...... 0 ........... .
LOCATION LOCATION VU VU
•r••t rew pr .. I•• 1treet wit• .. , .. , .. z: •1 ... c._., .....
71 ft. • I .... ••I JE YU 9f
Oc•• •• '•"•· l•rtr Mewpert lelilHEI .... z::r. 9f •n1 I .,._ .... ,_ ....... & ..,..,__, .. ...,.. .. ......
~ ............ , ... .. ..__, ._. ......... , ... , ...
lltAl ES TA Tt s.,, It.melt. Propnty ~nl
KMW.C-. Hwy JIS Mtr.,.A .... ~&tech ~ ltllnd 611·•-,, ......
EASTSIDE C .M. 2512Sanla Ana Ave
H•tilMJtoe1 hace. I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1931 1 Beach Blvd. 1nr
WOOOlllDGE
GAR.ES MODEL
FOllSALE ProfesaMloaDy fom1shed
& landscaped. 2 Br. den.
2 bath at $200,000.
552-0917 Days
~1-0802 Eves
~WIHD Best v-aTue available 2
Bd r m 2 bath ... 11
a menities lmmcd1 all'
possession. Sl~.900
don osen
real tors
17Tll AT PHUSl't-:<'T
T STl:--1
731 3111
VIEW-OWNER 3Br. 3ba+den 200 K1ni:s jOther R•al Estate
Pl Call for appt ,•••••••••••••••••••••••
646 7500 Mobile Homes
For Seit• I I 00
Lido IW DreCllll Ho e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • "N e w1y remode1e':? 3 S41n J uan <"..ivo $.'>:> ooo :!
bedroom -t· ch.-n. 3 rutl Hr 2 !fa MHll "IJ (t K
baths, quality rnni.trul· ) ri. old 1\l(I f>-11 ~.0:1l
I' t',.. p11rl ~hon·-., I 1 II
llll't' 4Ull't park $1 I .IH)\I
16 UNITS
FULLERTON
Sfi4!1.SOO Xlnl 11•111.il
a rt'd ll t·nh :11•1• 1 .. ~
$f>5,0llO , Pl'l''"'"l 1n
I
l'IH'IH' $160,1)(.1111111\lo 11. •'"
~u m•· S:!fill 0011 1 ... 1 .11
I 11J'• t)Wl'IJ.1l,1111P
I '*('otl-ltea ll}
1.\. Ill\ (''l IJll'l11
640 5777
•BREAD & BUTTER• :!II ur11h. '.I I ~ i.:r ""'
OWi .11 :J, 14 :!K tl11"'11
(:u11ct lu1 alhH\
It .df1•rt) t<. I 1•1\Cl Bio,
!I'd .):Mill
I< 1-.S-I \I I< \ '\ I
H \t.1111 \ 1o.;1 \ '-ll 2 BR. 21"1 ba, contemp
design. SI 16.000.
646-504l_6 _646-6093
Adamsl, 50' frt , C·2 '-
Lovely old hse. 1175,000
f.p. 20'{ d p. 14''1' In
Owner (714)199 1901 .
Roy McCarcle, Rltr.
541-7729
t aun. hardwood rtoors
thruuut. wood s hutters
all windows, large• sunny
pallu. step~ Lu ha) &
beach, tennis court:.
yal'ht club. Lido V1llag•·
shopping. many l')(lra~
$1!16.600 assumahlt· Isl
Tl> Prtt·cd to 'i t•ll
SJ'J5.0CXJ 64·1 71.120
5-l>S :WHO I
Herl ut·cd ~llllJIJ t" 111il >
$:il!l,Ooo Sup1•r ~ha qJ l:J
V1 k1111(, 2 llr :.! II .•. 1m
m1·d m•i:p~ li 11:11:1x1
r·: \ u·ll··nl \1.1111 "' 111 .1
1111r1 l n<lud1·' l.11111
hl!l1:~. ,.ti fl'llllll'' I lkll
\Pl1· • I ll1lrn1 .qit I· 1111
('rll .. ~1/11111111 111•111'1
~ 1 I I , ,, r r ' II .1 I .1 n t •·
W $:1110 101 dll\lo II
493-5044.
HO DOWN
'AYMEKT MHDED N'e w lnnovat1ve pro
gram allows you to buy
your home even H you
have no monl'y' Buy Now• <:all for a ppl with
our inv es tm e n t
counselors today.
D•'t le Left Out.
$192 500 S pa cious li o m c , Ir~
backyard. rumpus rm. 3
car garage.
JAMES E. GOULD
631-1532
SPYGLASS HILL
FtNEST
OpN Friday I 0-2
6 3 Moftttcito 280 cfeg. ocean Calalina
& Cll)' lights VICW, I lrl
lots Newly ins tallcrl
French windows i.:atorc
1750,000. Large assuma
ble loan.
G R E E N B E LT C /21 HewportCntr.
LOCATION in Rancho -.1 .. ~t767_
'. t1i2 t..36.'> e b!f.!.OO
SClfl ca, ....... 1076 •••••••••••••••••••••••
6 PLEX/EASTSIDE
RED. TO 1325,000 w1tli-SIS2,000 in assuma-
MO LOAM CO.
2 sty 4~~'r. beauty
w s parkling cool pool +
spa. Get ready for sum·
San Joaquin. view. BR.
Oen, only $53.500 to take
over loans.
ROOM for 30' IOA T 20% DN. 12% IHT.
Duplex on the water 3 & Oce. & Golf 759-1811
ble loans ranging from
9"'4 "k to 11 '7.. 127540
gross income annually
Well kept. single story
un its with 4 garages
PLUS off street parking
on 60' x 300' lot.
2 Bdrms . Deck and COW"M Views patio. "'!replaces. Primc Mot1vall'd seller wall
m e r run. owne r will RedhillARe.,,ltu carry t&OK. ll will not V O.U.J
local.ion. Xlnl cond. 4010 carry 80'/, contract iJt SUPY CUSTOM
River Ave Large as 13',I for 5 )'r.. on spaC"1ou:; I M091LE HOME
552 -7500 last call now ! · I
~GOLDEIWEST j
s um a ble loan. custom home, 29()() !> r 2Br. family rm & ~un
C /2 I .... _ port C tr 1 3Br, 2112ba. 3 frpks. 1.ltC' mom . friendly 5 ~tarj ....,..w II • gourmet k1tch. frml din· park w s hov. hubb~
_ _ -1.~~~!~7 _ ing rm. 12 acre lot Oak ro 11 m . poo I & ~I' J
644-7211
elm ,~ EALTORS
... , ,<ff' !ASSOCIATES
A SMART
START R00Mfor30'10AT ceil & muc h murc sell
parquet nrs. opn beam I Ut·aut1ru1 ..... uini.: ~1 u~I
Duplex on the water. 3 & Ocean + goH cuursc 759-I 6 I 6
I . . . Owning your own home
still makes more sense
than renting. Start with
this well kept I bdrm, I
ba . O r ange Tree
Townhome. 172.500.
2 Bdrms . Deck a nd views from every rm
patio. t"lreplaces . Prim<' S3lO.OOO 447 Cresvi. San • 848.8588 location. Xlnl cond. 40 10 1 River Ave. Largl' as Clcmtmle. 492 8084 Bkr Acreage for Sale 1200
MPT HTS DUPLEX ST AMDOUT sumable loan. cooperation ••••••••••••••••••••••• Kt•rn Count v liO ..,,.,. . .,
OWC w /22% A beautifully upgraded
DOWN Franciscan Fountains
Newport lie1ghts loca home. Fresh paint inside ,
lion with a C.:<Jsta Mesa and oul. Plus luxurious
address south of 16th 2 new carpet. /\spacious 4
Bdrms in front, I bdrm Bdrm 2 Ba beauty with
in rear on a neat tree· formal dining, breakfast
lined sl. Only $137.500 room and more. Super
C /21 Newport Cntr.
76_0-6767
IAYCIEST Assume fge fow int loan .
4 BR 2Y, Ba. fam rm. 2
fplc 's. Lush lndscpng.
$289K. 631 ·2693
CAU.644 7211 fin a ncing by owner BAYt'RONT HOMt: • As king $20!l,900. BY OWNl-:R
s 1 • lcAoo Isl.cl llty .. 523 CAMPV,J>a·IRVlffE New c~tom home with I 673-1700 boat d o c k + ve r Y. b's::z ·------------motivated. Xlnt rinanc·
For Sale By · Owner F. lnille · I 044 L-.... hach 1441 in g . S l . 295. 000 t: a 11
Side CM 2br. lge H2 lot, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• owner. Eves 640-7665 or
attractive. completely STOP, LOOK LClf)lmlCl.lldl C .. .,,.., 675·2763
remodeled. 642·2101 SETILI DOWM Lrf4 HahOIJlem woodsy ----
----in thi s bea uttfu l area nr beac hes 2 •OULTS ONLJI
12% ASSM. LOAN l~maculate 3 B<lr.1':' + bOnus room with bar
Near -new e arthto ne
carpets. s hutters & new
tile in kitchen. Lovely
yard with storage shed
Asking 1168,000. For an
appttosee, call 540· 1151
Berkeley model in de-frplcs. w/fabulous spa. ,. • · bl k Assume ll1h '7.-. $299,500. Spaciou s 2 Rd rm sira e College Par · 4 Call Patrick Tenore. Westcliff condo w1.vw1I. Bdrm. 3 Ba and central ..-~ air Asking only SIS5,000. 631-12166. Agt. Owner will c·arry Is l -----loan. Interest rlex1ble.
~ Hl\NCH ~ HI 1\1 TY ~ ~>!1 1 7000
For Sale, Al Or Part 1124,900. Great buy c·a ll
WOODS COVE now! 645-7221
DUPLEX & GUEST Century 21
COTT AGE _ Wes~Nff Realty
U0,000 DOWH EXECUTIVE
LOVE THE BEt\l'lt
AREA"
~ubm1L ail 11ff1•r"'
751 l :!·li
This brand new c·uslom ComllW'rciol
built home 1s Onl' you 11 Propttty 1600
should not miss It I!> •••••••••••••••••••••••
locatt-d in one or Sun Co11dominiums/Town-
Clemenle 's n1rcs1 are<Js houses for saJe 1700
Everything m lh1!> homt• •••••••••••••••••••••• 1s 1mpress1vc rrom the PVT PAHTY Non n·.ilt11r
ocea n Vlt'W t u the w 1~he~ 111 pur1·ha ~1·
dramatic entry W dY BluHs l\md11. J Hr _:!Ila
There are 3 bedroom!. s1nglc s t o r y 1 11 11
217 baths with a Ja<'U7.Z; 3 4 6 7 7 2 .i E' '"' ~1 1
1n the master bath Tht.> Wnghl
house L'I slamed t·edar Evl•ry upJo?r;1l1•• 2 lldrrn
and glass $31i9.000 rondo Try \',\ $7!J.!llkl
498-4950 848·0iO!I
Sl::LL idle items "'1th a
Daily Pilot Cla s,,1r11·d
Ad
1800 ••...•.•••...•••....•.
II II 4 Pit·~
30'. l>own
12' ~·. Financ·ml!
Owner Rrokc•r
17141841l-2000
M11liilt• 11 11111•· i'.1rl.
U a 11 a'. 'I 1• ",1 ~ I 'l •
'lllll'1•!> ~15i1 '")() s;!:ill.!ll"'
dn 1;11ar,1111 1·" 111 1·a~h
un ,. ;.i-.h , 11 Ii 11 11·11;-;
l'~l'!>. 7~:! .?:!1:1 11\' II~
11wn1•r
1 12 UHITS "' giJr. Or !'11 i.:n·:11 UI•
:.idt: pol•·ntial I CJ" 111l
J~'urn l"t T l> ._ 1 r• 111\ ,.
fin .. rrl'r•·tl tn "'llt•r. $2!1~0I Ol l '1111j1 " lil..r'
St•'''' ll1111·r 11,.
:,57 j111f1 ,.,..,K:ll t.111,
4 PLEX -ORANGE I 1111 r m u II I I ~ .\I I h
~i1r.•>!•'' ;\i•·v. h l•·u'd ··•I
l(t!t1fl .. hill'I' ~111 1 """ H11(hl ltc'.ill '
9 79·8 5 33
I ll ~~~~~~t~,~~~.~S\l\•,,1
n•111.d ~11 1•.1 F1 "1 I' 11 '' :.i~!>urn.1hle ,111<1 , "11 .. 1
will l"<ll'n ,1 l.11 )!1· nd
ha ~ up lq.! 1 ',t(I 1 •f 11•
t.11b
RCTaybrCo
640-9900
FOURPLEX w .... i..1111· 1 • .. ,, ., \11·, ..
:-.. ,. ,. d .., ~ " m • "' " r k
S<i:!,111111 ~ r HH 11111l Vu ll
vrll'" St.!5.111111 '"' ""' "'111 l"Jrn 111·. 111i.-11-.1
"' si:o.11~11111
/('-P~€ST IGf I HOME:S
II r: lrl\1""\m\·111
:1:1:13 W l 'u,"l 11"'' .'\II
645-6646 ~;S~ HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
Oufrageous 2l>r. l ba . VIEW HOME s..ta AM I 010 Santa Alla I 080
owner's unit. Skylights. Walk into the garcf1•n en· ....... •••••••••••••••• ....................... kzbCrdo 183,900
Anllque Doors /Win· trancetoanout"tanding ------------------n'm'lrsuJ)cr ronilo y,11111 HO«THWOOD
l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f Nlce3.y~;~J'~an II
3 ~.c~&~hly
painted in & out. new
carpets , n e wl y re ·
finished cabinets. elec.
1arage door opnr. owe.
lmmed. occupanc y .
192.000. Agt, 963-8182
SIZE
LOCATION '
AMENITIES
Harbor area 's moat
complete buy 2 • 3 bedrooms, UISO sq. ft. or
livin &. plus double
1ara1e with opener,
trash compactor,
microwave, air condi-
tion in1 and cem e nt
drives. Relax in heated
pool or Uletapeutlc spa,
cloae to all s~ln1.
WILSOMPAll
C0990MIMIUMS
JIO W. WILSON ST
Northwood Park de·
tached home with air.
cond, skinny dip spa
a rea, great landscaping
and decorating. $103,000
in usable financing.
Priced to sell al 1152,000.
CALL HOW
'4it.7211
•••STSELL!
Woodbrid1e ele1ant 3
Bdrm 2"' Ba attached
home overlooklftl pool
and park. EXCELLENT
TERMS AVAILABLE.
Sl.51.500
dows, Beamed Ceiling, Turtle Rock Vista 2400 last 2 Br,balrnu) t lo"' ~Frplc, New Kitchen/-rt 3 8d 21 .... 8 LOVELY WIFI MEIDS 1nll'n·~t rat1· lu.111 11r"1
.th' -s.ooo by owner. sq. · rm. 'a a. + ...,, De Condo S300 000 f"'ST S"'LI prl('l'Hl lrv1nt• 1'.d l 1111"' Days 833-3544, eve n · · · '"' '"' S4U-~i 661-<18'2 370 Flora Call B~rbara Glass C/21 • Sandpaper.
.VHYClliTIVI __ 640·49SO ---
Fananc1n1. N"O QlfAL .• NO POINTS beaut. up-FOil SALi IY
1raded home, mln view, OWNEI:
3br, 2ba, + den, hug 3br condo on Lido
MASTER SUITE Island. Dbl encl. aar, a
poolside yards, $20 steal at $325,000. Assum
down or submit trad $80K 2nd, at 7.9~ owner
I boat. auto. etc .) will carry the rest at
ts 4 0 . 9 9 6 6 d a y s . 12% for 5 yrs. Mature
Broker/OwnerS199,9SO adults only 544·4560
days, 873-'31Meves
Hus ba nd already left 3 be autiful 3
bedroom condo unit. Pool. s pa, near
schools a nd So. Coast Plaza. Great
investment prope r ty. Owner wi II
help finance at 12··t,. A Q u ail Plare
F.xdusive . ; (i>UAIL 'LACI
,.O,llTllS
712·1920
Wlllcluff•row! ~tl;io~~•l:~a: ~~~ ~~LnJ.H. u~~~fc;~ !~••••••••••••!~ !!~~••••••••••••~~!~
Wilk• des~ 3 Bdrm with clua ind fabulou Cute 3 Bdrm with
views. SGS.GOO flr~place. Pool. tennis.
L .,._I L wa~ to bch. 1130,000. .... T--r · Own /All 541·1118 or ~~--'...._..~•L7:..%..._~--l_T_IO_·_t2'11 ______ "'-I
Dal~ cf~"2 br, HAllOI YllW 1 ba ..,..., 1 br lowe-r1 MOMTl90
IXICUTIYI HOMl-
LIASI 0"10M 01 IUY Lease it, lease option it or buy it with extraordinary terms. Family
sized executive home in excellent area. Owner transferred and
motivated. Call us for an appt. to
see this outstanding 4 bedroom
•
Whelan
Real Estate
Hc3SOnJhh·
•4 Pll'X •
All 2Br. l'tBa . twnhH'
style. 6 l·ar iiar. Sl50.000
Assume lsl & OWC 2nd
w S<l0.000 dn Sorry pnn
only. Agt. 536·0123
IMVISTORS
Sharl~i>PeP~t1unn11
separate garages and
paltOll . New roor.
cupcls and drapes
Owner will carry the
financtn1 at lJt'•'k>. Ask·
inf SlM,000. t'or more
detail• call.~ 1151
I. HERITAGE
-C ....
new Cl1lt. r,...h paint, Lo down, no qualifyin1.
beamed" celllnp, frplc. 4bdrm, ram rm, lmmac,
dlal•I arH • encl. $211,000. Alt 711·4115, ~==-==~-amta:-ft!r. ............. ..,rh11t-t1 .... ------1~-!.li!olll.!e._ ----------FU.Al TORS
Make )'our abopptn1 _..,.., ...... Ute Daily
PUat Cl..tned Ada.
..
81111 db &ASE I
lt'1aBllEEZE
0-"iedMI......,.
IOIDet.b1n1 va ua-
ble? Place an 8d In our
lMt and Found co1·
-· ........... peo-ple · loak wtMn Llile)''ve
bnl • itcql~ ..iue.
&..hfw .. JIOO .......................
C. II. A·I Wldable lot ., • ..,,.,.. ...... lot 4
cae40&. JCIM Oos. ast.
111·1.m
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.. '.,. --· -€11 DAll..YPU,.01 fhu1-ciaw JenuatyH. lltt ............. ................... N-•Uak 'hll ........... ~·Af••••••~ AJ••••t1u.fwa. _________________ ...;.;. __ ;;,.;;.;;;..r..;;,;;.;..;.;.;..;. • •• • ••••• ••••••• •• •• • • •ff•••••••............. ·········-············ . .. ...•...•.•..•.. .. . .. . .. •. . • . . . ..••. ...... . ..................... .
"91-Uak • t1t1 •tfatt•a..d Juo .,..... JJ•• ..._,.,..._. u•• .._. 1740 c.,.....,._._ 11zz c..t.MtM JIZ4 16 .............................................................................................................................................................. .
......., ....... uc. lo , ... ·-;:;~····c~~~ ... ,,... HOM&roR RENT T H E L A K I! s .. • SpaciOUll 3 BR a Ba. fplc, Bachelor apt, avall now'
..... ...,.SA.,. Oel lle«<lridt f=ed IMll· •••••• .. •••••••••••••• • Bclr•. 9111. Fenced NORTHWOOD C ba~fi"'T\drm Sp~l.'f!t!fJvln&! patlo.1ar.$750mo. 1295 mo. Call ~5880.
Mar •'• lH' Clear lta .... ~... •t~Hal br ~ 2 be, I:'!, I•· Jard • 1ara1e. Kida 6 Secluded, waterfront, • • a I u f f s p I a 1 a BeauUfuJ park-like 1u r· 873-llM aaldor Dave Silt~~ Sell Of tract. ble,w• Mii ::·.~';:o ~~.O~· peta welcome. 114.2511 Zbdrm. l~ba. up1raded •Townbome". Dutch roundin11. T'erraud Lie 3 br, 2 ba, all new, Luxurious New 2 Story lea11ar 2a1.a1 nt4 . 7..,,. _,,· · or 913.Mt. A1t .• no fee. lhro~lhout. pool, sauna , clean 6 freshly painted. pool. Swiken 1a1 bbq, .... • -·--,-----tenn&I. Dy1: 64t·l677; private patio. qr. pool. 1parklin1 fountains. aar, patlo.$850. Open Townhouae,2 8r,21~ Ba. PrtmelAllOUM~Gat .. •••••••••••••••••••••• Jt•I 3 Bdrm. l ~ BM. Up eve16wkenda:7~·1272. S725 mo. Avail. now. Spacious r oo m s .. Sat. 6 Sun. 607t;, Iris. fireplace.'825.S57·3986.
Prlv •at'lalrunl ''omni .......... 1raded. Encle>1ed yud :\at. M0-5580. Separate dinina area. 524·3112 • 2 Hr. Mesa Verde
lower. $425. No pets .
M9·l232 or &U· 1460
t >' ua uoo ""nrn with jacuazi'. double Northwoodl <2> 3 Bdrm Walk-in closets, home· ---------
1aaa .._. ~C~~ aanae. Near 1hoppan1. Homes. 2·3 Baths. single 2 Br, yard, 1araae. 5525. like kitchen & cabinets . Spi.c1ous 3bdrm. 2ba.
•••••••••••••••••••••• Oupea . lit 1 .. tmo. f700. mo.2ll/~·7202or 6 2 sto r y . F rplc, 3301E.l5thSt. Wall1 to Huntington avail Feb. i. Sundeck. o.e., ,.___ 'harm"'•~ bdrm. a ba.tb rent, mue offer Hkina 714/ ... ?W. dshwshr. paUo. fara1e. 640-781' Center. gar, car port. 675-2501,
, -:.--., b•1frunt with • bo•I ~1 mu .. l500 aee till d . •. " .LI 1 Bed I 193 ....... 9 5pm As·k r • JI if JllO J unl' uo. MWit l l'e to 2 BDRM "Cape Hunt· an1n1 • am y rm . room·un1urn. ·-· · or ••••••••••••••••••••:•• flu•I ti•~ m o 8111 Near park. Kids OK, no Bluffs twnhse, 4br, 2Yiba, from $MIO Tami.
• 2 Br. Condo near SC
Plaza, SA. Pool, spa.
5480·~. No pets , t•h1ld
OK. 549·3232 or641·1460. FALLaa()Ot( J U •"'" Ot IWdj.17~ JUll ~pprec1ale C•ll Bt-verly 1n1ton" eondo. Dbl 1ar. Pet 8 • Av a 11 n 0 w . fresh & clean, pvt patio. 1 Bedroom·Curn.
\ .... roatd, •uit.-a Idol Swa n aon 831 5 868 utll rm .. rdn1erator 1700.S750. 964.2566 or or pool, waJk to schools rromS430 Cost•~M 3124
ro t a\o c-ado• ('idl JIJ6 49'1*2 MOO mo. Ref's req'd. 973.2971.Agt.No(ee. 6 sbopplnc. no pets . 2Bedroom-furn,$490 •••••••••••••••••••••••
*Qllaft..rb ••••••••••••••1 ·,.~··• ew,..tleec9a Jl69 A&t.962"4S4 I $795.664-0350 Adulls,nopets. 2~ ll•Aat Esd 2 Br. I Ba. yard &
ga r ~ Orange Ave
$450 552·8343. 645· 1387. Sm11ll I Hr V1lh11 C:ourt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---- -2 brcondo,2 ba;pool,ten· UtllitiesFree' Newly <lecor. (fas pd.
t IH 11hi"O !\th 1uu1 '""' y11rd 1 .. dult Quid Condo for rent Lido 3 BDRM. Crpk , quiet cul· ms. spotless. fully de· East Blulfs, 2 s lorr. e n r I g a r . p o o I .
1011 11hopp&n91 ,t<11lt'1 Wb 11)&1 11'1.l :llll liiland 2br , 1 ~bt1 , enl'I. de-sac. Walk lo beach. corated, $675. 551 _0285. 4bdrm, den, 3ba, lrg hv LA QUINTA HERMOSA ~~~,~3s h e r Adu Its .
..._ ,,.,,,., 2000 hKO .. rr.,irty 2000 dbl ¥tar t•ompl (urn, $650 mo. A&\. _!62-~~ 760·8080 rm , din rm, S 1200. 16211 ,Pi.rluiide Ln, 1 blk ""'
1 bdrm w1lh bit-in stove &
oven . $300/mo. Avail
F'eb 1 19ti4 Anaheim St.
Shown b)' app'l Call
after 5pm 545·32~.
••••••••::•••:•••:••••• ., •• , •• ,.............. ra.iht down to vacuum ATTttl IEACH ---- -759·9S59. W. of Beach, 3 blks S. of t•le a11e1 1111lvc rw1tre' 2 Br. t Ila "Larae yurd. For rent: house an Irvine. Edinger. MEWL Y DECOR.
JI UNITS-TUSTIM
25 t:lAAl t l·lllJ I untt!> tin 2 2 J l't l'~ 111
l>l>0 11l1 11 ~ Tu::>llll Bri ng~ 10 over
W.5 000 µ1 'l'dt ::,41XJ 000 d u\\ 11 a nd
u Y.1w1 \\ill l :Jll\ ..i 1·<111lra l'l fur
$7~1 000 J L l\J'
I UNITS WITH W AITIM• LIST
:'1111·~ ')}J.H' 11111:. Unll~ WI th 3 bt:drou ni
o\\nt•r.., un11 1 Sl·H·n 2 f;idrm . l'e n
tral Or 't.\ lon11 1on Only 10.tiX
Gru::.::. 2i'. llu\\n \\Ill h a nd le iJfld
:.l'lll'r \\Ill t•an~ fi11 u 11L·111g l>on't
mis:. t h is µn111t· pru pt•rl~
rRIMI FOUlrLIX
OCIAMFIOMT
Unohs trul'led µa 11or a m It' vie w .
sfeµs. lo bl'<.1 uliful sa 11d y beat·h
Owner w11l t·an-y.
FUSSY IUYll FOUIPl.U S pa <.'iou s own.c r 's unit with
firtplac:t·. 5 ear garage. Bcauliful
tree lin<•d slrecl Top Mesa Ve rde
area .
9UAIL rLACE
r1or11T11s
Mature adults o nly Rer's & d e p $525 4Br,2112Ba, f'P,dshwhr. Lt".'QFwN~HOMe 847->Wl
$1W01mo 11Va1l March 842-~&S36·2t90 nr pool. schools & rec. 5 Bd rm, rec room. den. 15 th . 544 4560 d :iys, fa c. Av ai l. 1 F e b 2·sty, Cape Cod, Npl $3751up 1·2 bdrm, pool,
673 til!M eve:. 4 Bdrm, •fines t a r e a $700/mo. Alter A. w H Hits. Diana. 631 ·1266 or jac. adlt. 18992 Florida,
$7251m o Agt Lila 8S5·1358 H.B.8tl-2834or842-3172 2 Bdrm, I b1tlh View or 848-0709 .. ~9·~ _ ------
ocea n l> b I ~ u r ------ -L I h 32 .. 1 Newport Terrace condo 2 Furn 2 Br. Apt. Adults
S7VO mu. Agl 752 5710 Lrg condo. pool , garage .• ~ •• ~••••••••:' •• BR 2 Ba. v~ry nice. cul o nly, no pets . Nea r
• 2 bdrm. S 5 0 0 1 m o . de sac location. S600 mo. beach. 960-2675
;,Br, Wa. sleJ)l> lo beach 962·3519 or Call Answer OCEANFRONT Agl. 673-6571 or 675-6000
Avail Lil July $45-0 mu. Ad ,384,24 hrs.642·4300. I M25/mo. l br. I bu. shr (Natalie) LOCJUllClleach 3748
642-5127.642-492\J -----expenses . Gorge ous, -------••••••••••••••••••••••• , Nr ocean, Main St. & new crpl & paint. pvt Villa Balboa, 2bdrm. ram Studio, lux. s pa, TV.
five bedroom, f1 vt' bath pier. Jbr, 4ba. $7:>0 + be ach. No dogs Agl. rm , 2ba , $7 25 m o . maad 'servlce. phonl'.
conLl'mporary homl' on sec dep Mature cpl. 499·1320. 642-9019. SIOO/wk. 499·2227
1 Br. gab pd. enc r gar .
tl twasher. pool. Adults
642 S(y/3
3 ~Townhouse :'liewly decor gas pd.,
e n c l f'a r . p o o l ,
d w ashe r Adult s .
642 5073
LIKE new 2 br. 2 b<t . n r·
dwntwn, ~5 mo
673·2113
WESTLAKE VILLAGE Bl'auuTUfAilult Apts Nu lht! BAY t:omplett!ly 536-5031 or t213156!Ml769
furmshtid Largt' pa ho. ------
Luxurious spa l>ot•k wall 2 Br condo. 1 yr old Im
On Temple .Terrace: lrg s ... Clemeftte 3276 Oceanfrnt Furn 2 Br pets lmmed occupa n1·y
Liv. Rm. Dan. Hm. 2 Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• M.H. Bvt beach. swirn Puol. spa , lndry rm .
accommodate large mac cond l,lu1et com
boat S4400 per mo plex, close lo frwy &
Av a1lableon shurtterm s hops . A v ail n o w .
Stove. refrige. garage Mystic Hill. 4 br. 3 ba. pool I yr lease. 54!1·2405 ~ar avail 2Br S.llU $4110
S70U mo. Utils 1ncld o c ean v iew. f ull y TSL~gml
4!M-0154 la ndscaped, 1 y r old. Newport leach 3769 t>-15 IU:!lort>42·1fiOJ
lease Broker, 631 7300. SSOO , mo. !f62 7278 or ------$995 /mo. 3003 t:allc ••••••••••••••••••••••• .
New 3 Br 3 Ba V1ctorn1 f'rontere l714 )644-9300 Lrg 4 Br, 2 Ba. S750 mo & Qu1t'l 2 Br I Bu with
Big Canyon Country
Club. 2 br, 2 ba. den.
newly de<·or, lurn. or un-
furn. 83J..0209
960·3214 Beach.SlJOOpermo --· --7 2 Br, I Ba. SS50 m o i.:ara ~c . µa t 111. puol * 4 Br. 2 Ba. 1''rplc . BIO('k 497-3374. WestmM1ter '-3'191 Slt•ps lo beach. 673 !1312 Allulls No pets 11101 II ~eunsc~~ r~ bl N ~~~ ~ g :f 3br~ 3ba, pool. atxm• priv •••HOM•E•f!()iff..~'f.t.f .. ' Spectacular Oceanfrunl :1:~~~ts ~f>O ~I~ ~J:.~1
r t
Adams. S70o. + $350 s.d. beac~. $1000/or s han.' 4 Bdrm. $625. Fem·ed Avail. now. 2-4 Br Cun
Hou1n Uft'funlilh•d 642.n.uor 631.4532. 499-4722 eves yard & garage. Kids & do. ti73·SURf'.
•••••••••••••••••••••• . ___ _ _ . pets welcome. 964-~
CorOM .. Mar 3222 2bdrm lwnhs e. 1•11 ba. Lrg 4 Br home, view, 2 or973·2971.Agl.,nofee.
•••••••••••••••••••••• f I (213 c""' 1756 f sundecks, all mode rn, 2 rp c, ,.....,. a ler car gar. close lo town Near new huge 4 Br 2 C4~, 4~D't4 6Pm. or <_!l4)~~·~3· 11000/mo. Lease avail Ba .. fenced yard. fp. Va
Spacious ami y ome.H•tW-Ava i l 2 /1. 497·4095. c a n t. S.W . of S pr Fev:s~°::!i.a~~I~ R'7t:c:l H.,._ 32UI 213/791-4(174 ingdale /Westmans te r
·~··-··················· -$610. 7141768·1677.
NO
LEASE
REQUIRED
Spacwus :! Hr S350 1'0111
& la undry (£11' 54K-!:155fi
from 12 7l'M
Perlect 2 Ir. 2 lo. 1100 S(I ft. fpk. lnllr)
dashwr encl J(ar, S55tJ
It :. \ :.itant & open St'c 1l
at
3106 (.;anl:(cr 540 4400
I Br Poolside Apt s:JIU
mo (.Niel adult hvang
No pels . 731 61129 Ag~nl
2 Br w1garage SJ70
New c•rpts Water pd
157 1 "B " Ur angt>_
636 412tt I 5 PM
$475·~ 2 Br 1 1 ~ Ba
Twnhse Ne a r 11 c w
Small l'h1ld, pel OK All
b lt·ln,., gar. frp lr ,
1>atw backyard
TSL MGMT 642 u;o:1
3Ur, 2Ba, Ol'W rondo U1s
hwashcr. stovt'. laundry
houk up Pool l.o\'cl~
an •u South t:oasl Tt>r
r a l'l' S u11fl 11 w t•r &
lins lol Chlldn•n ()K
$551) mo f..':.ill lj;jK.HllK4.
9.5
Eoshide J llr 'fownhousc Built
ins, µatw. SS25 127 21st
U uys 646 42fi2 1-:v1·s
645·!1~3
EASTSIDE 2 Br lluu.'c with y:.ird
S-1511 127 21st Ua v..,
646 4262. Eve:. 6-15 !IS·IJ-1 644-~. _ Twnhome. 2 br. 2~ ba. ! Lease: Ocean view 2Br.
752·1920 3br. 2ba. frplc. gur. nea~ new. earlh~ones., den, S715tmo. no pets Houinfunlilhedor
•........ ----------------• Poinsettia. 1725. Dys ata1l. on or about Feb. I. Dave. A.gt 644·7211 Unfumilhed 3300 732-4201 · eves twkends S725 /mo. 846-2912 . . •••••••••••••••••••••••
J YEAR·ROUND FUN
Sor.1al Ac.1 1v1t1e~ O
ret.1'•• • ••ee 51>n0•11·
B•unt l'I •BBQ ~• p.,,
I ·P~ • Plu~ much 1'1011•
Lrg I Bdrm l Ba upp,•r.
LUV E LY <!bd rm, :!ha encl gar. $3651mo M e~:.i
studw with frµlc. µal111 , dt!I Mar 751 !f9tJ5 Iv rn!-.~
enl'I ~a r Nt•Wl.Y dl'<'IJr
25 UNITS
CONDO APPROVED
O w n t•r mo\'1n g o ut of s t<Jt e .
app1·m·<J I for Jli l'Ondo's. Tentat i\'l'
tract m<1 p Pnc<•cl at 111.6 x gross
Owner wil l <·:.ttT\' <'ont ral'l al JO'; A <~ua i l Plat·e t-:xt;lus l\'('
12 HICE UNITS
9.6 x GROSS -FULLERTON
Rents l'an be raised on these well
lo<'all'd hrl•ad & butter units. Nu
n<• w ri na n t i ng r e q u1 r e ct. Ta k e
s ubject to cx is(ing loans and owner
will "arn· bal<1 nce al 12'; with 25';
down < ·:111 for details PrinC'1J1<1ls
onl~·
4-PLEX MESA VERDE
Pride nf ownership. Ne w roofs .
dra pes . t'carpets within 2 ~·ears
Tfrnts ll<'lm.,· market. Lots of up-s ide
p o t t' n t i a I P r i <' <' <i r i g h l . n o
v~1 ta11c·1cs Ill last Yl'a r C'all ror
details
PLUMBING/HEATING BUSINESS
APPLIANCE STORE
2 Sl·pa rate business opportunities
for the entrepreneur. An appliance
s tore or plumbing a nd he a ting
bus iness. Well cstahlishccl. Ca ll for
details.
CHARMING TOWNHOUSE
OWNER LEFT
3bcl . 11 :.!ha. 21 :.!H S old . Pride of
Ownership. Nee'd fast sale . Pool.
spa , nl'ar So. Coast Plaza. Walk to
S<'hools. Owner will help finanC'e
Great lm•l'stment
12 UNITS
FINANCING BUILT-IN
12 Units for onlv $295,000. 5
Buildings on ;i lots. 'cood finanting
built-in. Plenty of potential. Close to
downtown San Be rnardino. Call for
detail s.
9UAIL PLACE
PROPERTIES
752-1920
We ha ve a few o p enings fo r
qualified. dedicated profess ionals
wh o arc interes ted in joining
~range County's fastes t growing
income property Re a l E s tate
operations . Quail Place Properties
(714) 752-1920.
CM of~ IOutofC~ "•r+f 2550 f\ooperty 2550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
SIClllS & PISHllMIN
Don't miss this opportunity to own
this 'fl acre lot near Lake Shastina
& Mt. Shasta. 18 hole golf course
nearby. Horseback riding. Build
your dream retire ment home. All
this for only $11 ,500 with $4500
down. Selle r will carry balance.
640 ACllS-1 Ori• UIAILI
Priced at $1000 pr acre, free and
clear. Owner wishes to exchange
mercial iadu1trial Wafer well on property. "
9UA& PLACI
PIOPllT•
711-ltll
833·2427. . --. ---. --.. 3bdrm, ocean view ~on 3bdrm . 2ba , a ll ne w
· 3br hse. 5 doors from san tfo, pvt comm. l'ool. Jal'. custom int. lrg lot nr S55(1 \ltllS !1 121! $150 !bdrm duple x . gur.
a 1 lowan1·l· fl'nced yrd, stove, rt'frii.:. Spectacular Ocean & City dy beach. S950. lease micro. beamed ceilings. s ch o o Is . $60 () m o .
light view. Lrg 2 lir 2 tW2-7794 days , 494 2136 2 frplcs. SlOOO mo. Avail 17141846-9012. GREAT RECREATION wushcr, dryer. adults no
pl'ls SJJ0 mo + $150
s ci· & clcant n~ dt'p
ti31 511JI, 536 4333
Ba. with formal tlanan g eves. ~ow_ 49?·1~ ••
$1100 mo Call Anthony W A T E H 1-· R O N T LDCJUftO Miguef 3252 cc:;ct;::r;c 3425
lenn ~·Fre~ Ue\~ ,r
'"' & t;tC. '>tlr;f, • '
Ht>dllh C1uos•Sa"r"'
HyOt(lmd'>~ge•S"'...,
m ng •Or • • g Rc;ng<-
2 Br I', ll,1 So\ltJ 6111 J u
\ n n S I l' :\I :--; .,
Wkdys.· 642-5757. 1':vcs & TW NH M I rg 2 bdrm •••• ••••••••••••••• •• •• " I Wk ds ~4 ... ooo.u • • bd ••••••••••••••••••••••• n · ......, . ...,.," 211ba w 30' boat :.hp. all 3 rm 2bth. 3 ca r gar lbr nr S.C Plaza pool.
c·hildn·n .... mall llui.: nm
'8dl•rt1.I ti-12 734-4 :!bdrm. Iba. 6 ftonn·d
2 llr ,\pl U1:.hwa,.ht·r. ~a rel + R•tr t gardnr. 2br, Hzba. I blk tu bl·h rec (ac1llt1es iJV aal M1crowave,bltn. p vt s pa . tennis, :.auna
S725 mo · s12001mo. 846·0503 enc. yrd. t:all Milrgac pallO. lake a c. cluhh~c. BEAUTIFUL APART·
MEPHS 5 no1~., • t.
2 a..-nr "'' • ~.,,
I hhq. µatuJ S425 "lU\'l' rdng. $425 m11
4!M 079lor499·345H $435 mo incl. gar; walt'r 673'1853 lnine 3244 Nigu-el Sh~r~s Twnhsc. 12131640·1830 ext 416
Cost• M.so 3224 ia·r:·~u:·c~~d·;··~·;d~ 3br . 2ba,. lge Ind m apctl Robin. l213l!i45-4!Ui9
r· '>l'IP() & U"f JI" sn ... o
1 11.i~, l~i6. 544i·231:1.1 ud) l'lt·aM· l'all lwfon• tipm
1;.i5 JI IK
lllE'SliB.AU
••••••••••••••••••••••• Woodbr idge. $525 mo yrd. priv bch, tennis. 2br. 2ba, + loft . 01·n Iii
KIDSJrETS OK Wayne49!H769. 4!l7 59:i5 pool. attached gar. w d , coastal view. I yr oltl
• ArJu'1 L•v ·'~. "'-r P111 ,
•Mr 0'!'~ 0-c;~r. U..i 1"
9 I<
Dona Point 3826
APARTMENTS ••1 •1 •1 •11•••1 •1 1 •••11•
E S icfe. fe nced y ard. ----m1pets,S750!lst'-Se1· de $650 mo.!l68·ll060
garage, 1 & 2 Br. $445 T U RTLEROCK l"r e!tt posit 496-!>493 Oakwood
Garden Apartments
llt•au11ru1 garckn .Jpt" Suµt·r n11•1• v11•w. 11t•1·k .
1'1H)I & -.1.w .'\tlult:> 11•1 :!Br. I 12 Ba $450
642·2510.646·4848 dent home. 4 br. fam · ----S.C Plaza 2br. condo
r m xlnl loc al 1un 3Br. 2Ba condo "on the very clean all rec· file
• NEW CONDO 3 Br 2' i Oul~tanding cond. $995 g r een .. S65 0 m 0 a vail now S.1 -12'22 day~ Newport Beach/So
'·r11 •Gt~ ~·
µl'I:. 1!13 1..u;.
I lid rm s:J!lll ~0~1
:! Ul11 m swu El Toro 3812
Ba. Ocean view Spa. mo. Agt. 83J..9293 731·8134 or 496-5772 eve:. 559.!Hi6J eves wknds garage, etc S750 + SSOO ----- --·· ,,41 642-5113
2250 \'.1nJ.!u.an t ;),ui ~-UtH • • •• ••••••• •• •••• •• • ••• lit>Jut I )t•ar nc•" 2 Hr
2 Bllr111 2 Ba ~ill g.s;;; I', liJ Condo "1th µ11<11
S.D. 2243 Pacific Ave TURTLEROCK Broad· Miuion Yieio 3267 Lux J BR view. gar
B · 106 , 642 77·•3 o r moor Plan I. 3 br. 2 ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• M1ssaonVlejo. Newport Beach/No. J9H W W1b11n. ti31 !>5M:l Jat·u111. & t·able T V Ill d ll Ycarl~ S.S50 Hrokt>r
675 191:.! • S..8·8475. din rm, ram rm. frpl. lge Immaculate 3 br, 2 ha 955 3052 880 ""' ""' Sl'At' 2BH i\Dt 'l.T I.gt·
kitch, comm pool. Nr hom e, S575 /mo. incl . ~ • . , •' '<>" k1L<'h. 11pen bt•a m:. l'l'•I.
48r an Mesa Ve rde
Gardener i n clude d
Newly decorated. S75U.
838.4921, 4!19-4721.
Mesa del Mar 4 br. 2 ba.
pool. new crpl & paint.
water -garde ne r pool
maanl. incl, S825 .
556-6045. 979.3009
2 Br. Iba, 252 Knox St
E .s ide. $595 ut1I m e
Drive by, call 645·7009
MESA VERDE
RV Gate & Slab 4Br .
2Ba, frplc, $850/mo. Agl.
979·8610.
a , r arpets.
drapes, fireplace. dou-
ble garage, fenced yard
RV access. S700 mo.
Roy McCcrcle, Rite.
. 541-7729
schls. & shopping. Xlnl. ~amt. 551-1842 S~A BLUF f t:ANYON [ 714 545·lt04 1n <'I re frqt. n11 pl'l!> Huntinqton leach 3840
cond.Nopels .$825 mun-C ON00-2Br. l '~Ba j'"'·---------SJ\15 m11 2260 :\1 apl1' SI ••••••1 ••••••••••••••••
thly Call· 4!M-9542 aft Mewportleach 3269 rrpk. 2 car g;:ir. µool. 5·11! i:l.'ltl li?J K>I03 ~hr . 2 ha. frpl<'. wd b<1r
5PM i:u·x .. H~·rt;,~ .. vi;;·jj~·; Jat'. tennis. $600 m u J Hr On 'irnfront · I SS1H1 Call !I 5, :'111111 t-'ri
REMTALS 2+den2"'2 ba
3br 2"2 ba
4br21n ba
4br+ bonus212 ba
3 br, 2 ba. (a m rm . 551 1088a(t6PM Wet·kly ~l o (;ar:tJ.:l'. IHr Srnall1ard St11\P& !lfi02·1.S5
hnt•ns. etc 6411 -li8-l rd nu ,\duh!. "" Jlc'b s kylight. new cpt.lge Nr So. coast l'laza . I SJl5 5--l/4 l:Jii Br.111111ww I Btlrm 1'11·r
S800 patio. dbl gar. $990 mu 2br. 2ba. pool. s pa . uta l:. 1'antast1t· rum Apt with p11111ll' L'ontlo" 1'11111
$900 631·4842 or Answer Ad pd $525 540-3778 pool & Coun t r~ ClulJ Sll,\HI' ~ll·,.,1 \\·11h•:? Bii "l'a . ll•nn1". J.!Jr;1i.:t·-.
$900 11408. 642-430024hrs ~ · F ae Sll50 mo 760 91 Ii 2 Ha . no t•h1lllrt•11or 1wt:. SH5 •2131 596 i21J2 d~" 5875 Nw-p~Sho~~s waterfront huplexesFunt 3650 I S·l51J mc1 t :.l'l' Call 1 i l.S 1 1W2 -li21 l'\'1•~ B C'•••••••••••••••••••••• On lht' beach spal· 3 5-lti ~. ·•"k for l'am 3 r , 2Ba. frpk. ten.nis. 4Br duplex for lease. 3980 bdrm. 2 ba, thru Junl'
pool. SBSO_m~ 968·8263 Seashore Or . Newport 15th . $700 mo Hal·. \'t•ry JltrncllH' J hdrm.
Nwpl Shores, 3 br. 2 ba. 5 s inglt>S we lcom e 956·5871 a \:111 Feb Isl. $550 L'<tll
nr beach, 2 frplcs, gar .!_9!SJm~Yrly; ~7J.5257 675 6606 l.rj;? lbdrm. s l t'JI S l u fl~. Ap•rtmlfthfurni1hed beat·h . oce an view . 2 Br 2 Ila. Lar~1· l'n1
.l52-S099or631-7625 ••••••••••••••••••••••' adults. no pets. now tlll patio I blk to shops &
,,. ......... ,. .. ~11oltoaPftlinsul• 3707 June 21s t. S325 m o. park $4!f5 mo 675-tlti81 ,. ••••• ••••••••••••• ••• •• 673 6640
. I Br. Carpets. drapes. Professionally decoral· stove. refrige. Ulils pd
THE WHIFFLE TREE Luxury Adult unit:. at <11
rorduble hvanj;? 1.2 & :J
Hr Wl•ll dct·o rated
Ol ymp1l' size pool. hghl
cd tennis court. Ja<'UZ7.1,
park lake la ntlscilptng
Most beautiful bid~ 111
H B
From $360 IW6 llfi l!.I
~d. 2Bdrm +den end un· Ute ns ils for 4 . $375 Customized single family 1t Frplc. wetbar. tennis 675.0935 home, 4 br, 2 14 ba . &pool.$950/mo. ------ -
Nt>Wl'r 2 Br 2 lfa ~25
Oceanfront, unlim1 tl'c.l Avail approx Feb b t
view studio apt .. no pets 760 1-1 Ill or M8 8675 l'\'t'S
S395 mo. 631·0527 or wknd:.
I & 2bdrm,., l'Olla~,. ''Y"°
I 1 v 1 n g . 1· h 1 I d o k
S335 $350 1110 formal din. rm. comm. 2br. Iba. $460/m o. till BALBOA BAY CLUB 2 Lrg B<1<'h w P:\.llO SJ25
pool. te nnis. frpl c. BLUf'f'S 6 BR with pool June. 675·4142 nr beach bd. 2 ba furn. Sub 1st' mo 2 Br I Ba dshwH . 847 3020
$87~'!'~--551_.1690 und rec. rm. $12001 mo an_d _b~!·_l!~r. s~cc 642 4097 . 642·4736 frplc-. bakuny S.'>00 mn 2br. 2ba. nr bcaeh. cpl.
Mesa Verde, 3 br. 2 ba. 4bdrm. 2ba. ram rm 8 CH p· pk B w t'n l·I gar 1'0111 . dra pc". built ans. $495 ON WATER 2 Bdrm. EA · ier. r g. 2 r. AP.•rinwnts Ja<•u1.1.1 l'lltl'l atlulls on 53ti·tl!r.!1 fam_ rm. frplc, 2 car house, pool & te nnis _,.,) I Br $425 Adlts U "--= 1..-d • con venient loc a t ion. ...,.,, · · · · n..-mlnc ly , no Pt'l-. 21>.50. Ilaria gar,$650.646·2821 nrby , no pets. $700. Boalslipposs.S7751mo. Ulil pd. Wntr. 303 E. •••••••••••••••••:••••• 5.4!!2447 2 & 3 Bdrm 1\pts
4br. for;;~ dining. frplc. 640·7~1~. W .. erfront Hontes E~~e~_!l~~ ..!_·871-2866. lolboa lllmtd 3806 · S4tMH450 l\uls 01\. ncl
fa m rm, new cpllpnt, 4Br, 2 sty. 2"'1Ba. dining ••••••••••••••••••••••• S475 2 Br 2 Ba Brand µt·l~ !f!i.1·2.5'iti or !:173 2971
1st lasl /d ep $850/m o. rm. & fam rm. frplc. lnc.Realtor1 .IEAC:HFROMT NEW 2 br. 1 ba. fprl. n e w Townhou"e Al l Agl .nnfe<•· 631-1400 W10 share larg~3br ~pl. parking, I house lo bc·h built 1ns. (rpk . lndrv
754·0986 Woodbridge area $850 1 blk from Balboa Pier $675 631-7625, 552-5099 rm . carPort Ad ult:. o~-l'or Least' or by Opllon
mo. 833-0583 Call Mike 571-6271 o r Rr<tnd New Condo loc Sharp 3 Br. 2 Ba. 1-·.P.
Stove . No d o g s .
l s t +depos il $620
- ---MIEWP-T CRIEST 675·3762. l••oa P---··10 3807 ly · no pets d
Le ase WOODBRIDG E THREE"t:autilul con· ••••••••=:::•••••••• TSI. :\1gmt 642 ti221 cir ~~:c:.hi ,\~la~t1~ 1~11~~ 1~:
Twnbme 3br, l'-'Jba, xlnl dos avaJ'lable. Different or-.:_._. Mor 3722 Lower L0 e 2br. lua. + 2 t.>42· 1603
646-9586. · · _ _.. .. 2br +hbrnry + 3ba . 111 rec. pnv. tennis. pool. locations. Pool, lenms. •••••••••••••••••••••• priv pah05 wl lndry & -$675 /mo. 752·0773 d . s pa.Closetobeach and0cean(ronl 1 Br. patiu, gar.$600.675·11213 1 Ur . n pt. d r:.qH'!!. Jbr. + 3ba Approx 3 Br. 2 Ba. Condo. Avail 832 f 1 d 1 garage, put10. $295 mo 16511 . :'il'l' gull', 3 tt'nn1" ·738Seves. Hoag Hospital. rp c. a u ls. no pets. 9.5 - ---Feb. Isl. S595 mo. flighty THe L ""K~S only. $600/mo. 640·9900. lbr apt. Refrig /Stove, nr t>i I 1545 c o u rt " . 11 o o I J a c
upgraded . Guar ded "' C /21 · M•wport 673-7787 the beach. S325 i mo $9 00 m o p1•r 1•a Comm.Call631·6994. Garden lew pan. Prof. Cftlter 675·06l2evenlngs Nice quiet 2bdrm. 2ba, 121:1183:1 136!.I ur l'\'CS.
-----designed interior. Isl 760..6767 1 BR. over garage. $400 -------must util paid, adults. !213)831-5734 MESA VERDE time ofrd. Lge I Br lba . Range & small refrige N i c c 3 bd rm , 2 b a , S4751mo. 622 Hamilton.
3bedroomhomeingreat frplc.bestloc.$52Swlr/· Wa t erfront...Newp6rt Nopet/child.644-4340 $650/mo. till June. Will 5480477
location. Only $650/mo. refrig incl. Beaut. lsland 28r.1 Ba. Lower rurn.675-5710.
Includes gardener. Agt. !and scp, .pool. sauna, duplex. NO PETS. Gas & Coit• Mesa 3724 2br. c_pt1drapes. rdri~.
Call 556-266() Jaz. tennis. For appt. water paid. 1695 yrly. •••••••••••••••••••••• CorOftCI .. Mor 3122 bu all ms. beamed ce1l
----------544.1434 6 544 -8970 673.2256. SUSCASITAS ••••••••••••••••••••••• mgs.adults,no pets S395
Morinen Walk Ap,h. 2 & 3 Br twnllse from
$475. Yard, buill•ins.
encl gar .. nr H !larbour
840·6807.
Mesa Verde 4 Bedroom 2 wkdys ~5pm. __ Furn 1 br. apt. 1325 .It up. Laree 2 Bdrm apts. 1 & 2 2272 Maple. 631 ·2927
Balh. family room, nu University Park 2200 4 Br. 3 Ba. 2 story, 2400 Encl. gar. Adults. no baths. (rplc. Yard. Pvl 2bdrm 2b d . Nr bearh Liie 2 br. 2 ba.
carpets a. paint. (rplc a. ' .sq sq . ft. 1950. Properly pets 2110 Newport Bl. beach access. No pets. • ·. a con ° near frplc. gar . yd & patio,
bit-ins. $795/mo. Availa· It. condo. e nd un1l, House. 642-3850 o r 548-4988btwn8&SPM $95 & Sl565 mo. Avail S .C Plaza. Pool. rec $595. Avail 2 5. Call
ble. 751-3191. Select 3bdrm,2ba,l6X.22bonus 642·1010. F.eb.lst.7ll0-92t5 room. la~ndry. all bit· A n s wer -Ad 11 348 ,
Pro rtles -rm . or adult pool. Ci~D,OIO ans &refr1g.Water&gas 642.4300,24 hr$.
pe $700/mo. No pets . no CUSTOM ILT. AL"L J JES-PAID Lovely, bright. 2 BR. pd. kids OK. no pets . ------•
So. Coast Plaza nu adlt 2 s mall children. Call 4 br/aeri, ram. rm +. almost new. 1625, Dollie S500 mo. 645·2018 tlys. H UNT. HA ft B 0 UR
Br 2 Ba condo. Frplc. (213)59;J·2S91 dys ; Westclilf·Dover. Call compare before you Johnson, 760_1966 or 499·3736evslrwknds. AREA
xtras '5i25. S5l-2425 evea. (714 )616-91.56 eves. 846-4144 days S48-3117 r ent. Custom desi&n 675 6000 B r $.18() Lrg 2bdrm. 2b11 , pool, eves /~. features: Pool, BBQ, --·-------2 r pa 10 apt I mo. jac, adults. $460.
HOME FOR RENT 3bdrm. 11/•ba Wood · cov 'rd 1ara1e. new 1 Br. Firepla ce , stove. Adults, no pets. 731 W. 1888SLynn 846·3541.
3 Bdrm. 1595. Fenced brldte condo, drp1. 4br, 3ba, w/pool, $1000 mo rurniture. surrounded rerrlae. private garage 18th St. Call 640·9900 9.5 . .
yard 6 aaraae. Kida 6 crpll. very clean, nr to mo./Ol'6moa. leaae with phab landacapina. Water 6 Gardener paid. only. or 673-7187. Agt. Beaut 2br s. 2ba s: some
pell welcome. 984-2* acbool1 & abo ppin1 . M0-7551 alt3PM Adult Uvinl at ill best. Adult nopets.$495year· La 2 Br 2 Ba Near SC w t~. frplcs, 30 lte ncl
or973-2971. Ast .• noree. S515 /mo. <213>91M·3470: 8 not f ~b No pets 1 ·1224-6441 · · aar 1. alao2,'851q apt. (213)913-1145. ay ar away ... r, l8clrmrumiabed$410 y .7lt Plaza.Builtinbar.~I. nr Bolaa C hi co Ir
3 Bdrm 2~ Ba condo, pvt pool+ Jae. 2300 28drm(umiahed$490 Studio apt tblocksfrom s p a , several units . Wamer.5021Dunbar.
mod. kltcb .• frplc , 4 Bd family home , Mar1aret Dr. SUO. 315W. Wilaoa,642-1171 beach, '32stmo. So of S425·M50. Call Dee d ays
comm. apa, breathtak· "50/mo. Charley Darr. 957·'7230, 541·2112. Ask PCH TJO.?OOO 675.9116 751-2787, eves 991·02:26 : Sharp 2 BR. bltn1. W/D.
inl vu.m.tllM a1t. for Ray. 1 Bdrm rumilhed Apt. 0 I · 5 t I · 8 O 4 t . J . D . 1undeck. pool. Good toe.
551-NOO llxcluaive Westelifr VIiia Ulll. paid sac> month. eor e. PROPERTY MGMT. 1475. + dep. 19?·1'7~0
b 2 b den 2 rrpl• pool Pr Iv ate park In I . s ctacular Ocean & City eva/wkndw r r. .• •. • W. Side, 1or2 br.1tove, ----------N•ll t;IW ..... JJ40
5 bib to oceu. l:lelant 2 lba bome, pool. tenn • ac. w Br • mo Call An· etrr1:-c1r.,Ort. .
bdrm, fam rm 6 den, 1pa, I car 1ar. adult.I 171-ZW '125 Mo. Deluxe Mobil• tb~ny WkdJ~ MZ.S7&7• drapa. aduJll, no pell,
<'721 mo). Pluab c.,,U, lllO/mo. TIHll'J SpacloUI lbr, 2~ba very bollM. lllatuteadW.1.1. N l:vetAwbd.t.M.-. .._ ... mW. lltb St._:_ ______ _
I" be, cedar 6 ...... M ~ _. peta. Q!Ml, NtUN. l•l Mi·l· 8 I .. ,_ • Pie
Dbl car f"I 1ar, f•llJ Nortllwood lbr, Z"ba, c •n. • PT""• Hewpanm.ct.-.ma. L.oc*lnl for a home 1 r. • .. • •·
malnt. ,., Mull.I. DO faa. rm. a /c, wet bar, J•Olltl~•t1•11et~ .•• ~ou'nmlo. . your ownT You'll find 18r apt. Carpttl•I· eael•• 1ar .. '''''· peta. l.Dln*e atUT lldl. brand n• •. 1111 • " ... Mah your 1boppln1 IDln1 bolnti a4wertiaed • r a P••. Ga re 1 e . War .. r /a.IH C.lta
• to beath.
It. 71'/llO·Ull or W/181'ftHr. no ,.ti. IHllllHd Rultora. wNrby...,U..DailJ for Hit In Claulfled ., ... + SllO ..c. 6 are.:.;,,M• per ••· J!!~~~ ~~~~~~!!~~!!! t1N111. NMAM Mf.Ha PllatCI ....... ~. evtrJdaJ. ,.......... I _;;-~-~--..;;......-,,_
Thurlday, Jlnuwy 22, Hl81 DAILY PILOT
... 1 I ••ttt" I c.,..ts..tce u••ter M•'» r ..... , ..... ,. .. ,... .., .... .......... , .......................... : .................................................................................................... ··················· .. ··· ............................................. . ••••••••••ICAllNrr CARPENT RY ·arpet 6 upbol ch.ianera W alerfroot Const -I do it aU ! Father" 100. Houu cleanint done Movlnt? Tbe Starv~nc Pa perban1er Pro f . Qualified rootin1. repair
laal1Jobl6 Repa1,.. Sl .. na. thamPoO Prof Remodela. Patio Decks veane-.perieoce. tborouOJy. Call after 5 gou~StudenlS :'ova: Reasonable Reliable leaks anytime. xlnt
r r••• 1452003 floor workln1 Wood . •<;overs, C11b1neta, no 87~183 pm.9G-#7SorN2-6786 s !'m e .~~~e ~~~e . (714 )148·4751 eves o r rates on 1halle •com·
tJle, p&rqllet Strappu·1&, ,ub toosm11ll•3012 Home •-Apt. r epaa·r. Wiii clean your Home or lfTJ24.436 Licen se I eav e m e 11 a I e po11tion. Ne w or re·
•• W,11111\I Guar Q ~J -frl 64J.8427 . (710711·5571 Free Est covered. lr7S.ll07 ext ts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dryw.. Electrical, drywaU, tile, 0 . ce at your conve-oreveaMS-5210 l'An tt:H •SON T•pWs>Ciupel t;art-................. h .... etc. Dory (714 )631-4793. naence. MS-#76aft 4pm. • ... /Paperillg Q-Painters, also li1 ht
Ill l'•,........r)'. new ••Id r., WO.Glti UrywallSptitaahsl HOUSE DOCTOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• carpentry iii repairs. lo Roofs for less ._Rock .
'
•udel l'l11ua 147 7111 Sh11am6Sb11mn•w•(;lc1rn Qual. & prud. New & re-H•dwaodfloon h DAVE'S PAINTING rates. FreeEst848·S684 sbin&le, lar , decks. re·
( .,...... d L ' 3 • 9 ... 4 4 • ••••••••••••••••••••• • Rx for a clean ouae S . A 9 • r~ . F t 770 ...... < CU......,>M <:AblNJeTS )nly 12' pttr :tq ft ' m o 1 t o " . HARDWOOD FLOORS 4 ...... ...,,.., er v1111 rea yea " oaars. ree es . ·&.•...., PllT Al1:~1Re"1ur~ 532·~!1 CleanedliWaxed ... ......., MostReasonable latter~...... ... c..:. -------
r e""--Ac ... ttc ROBIN'S CLEANING Ins ured, Uc 'd . Slt6·~25 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Screfftl SEl.rlE 2nd 1erwr1111<M1, 17 yn 111 .._,. llectric• AnyUme, 832-4881 S.A. Neat patches" textures ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. --.-· u ·-• •1· •• • • ••••••••• •••• • • • • •• -I For a thoroua hly F ' · · b 11 n111 c " up q ual Accou11t1c ceataniis ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• H...... ane ext/int painting Y Fr Est lfl·1439 MOBILE SE RVICE -.rt',., M 1 l'11kimbo 1162 "314 cu•tom h•nd texlunn~. ELECTRICIA~ priced ••••••.••••••••••••••••• clean hOWle. 540-0857 Richard Sinor. Lie, ins. -ee • R e -Scree n s , n e w ~" l'LST<>M<'A Kl•t;NTltV I.a<.""'.~.~·~!* n11bt. free es~amale on llauling&DumpJobs. T ired of cleaning your Try m!..:..632·4410 (24hrs) •ratcll"-htjg* SCrt!ens Custom Mitdt-
00 IT NO•• ll11u1 •~·at "u"I w ir ... -h1rg~ or small Jobs. Ask for Randy. spare.Ume away? Call pa·anu·ng •-Pap~rina Al Types ·7113 642·9~ e ....,., "" • 1 •, C....t/Ca.crete -'Lac '337254 673·0359 S4!H368 Jeannie•S39·5052 "' ~ ., ~~~ S-.-e r~il) "n co &4S 41N7 ....................... , Wal1P41per removal klnlblllg Stucco ~C'e~e~~~I() l''oundllliorus, Retaining E leclril·1an·Sm jobs. Ha ul.cleanup.concrett' TLC for yourhome lSyrs -Guaranteed ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
R ~ Ser•lce Wa ll11. Hillside R~stura ma ml & repairs. Lu: removal. Dump truck. ex pr. References & re Paul Cutler 962-3006 ~I um bing, Remodelin1. •St ucco. Repair 1Consl
epraeotathe •:••••••••••••••••••••• lion, S l abs. Pata o), •233108-ClO S48·5203 Quick serv.642-7638 asonabl e. Call Star at J0'7.,--0 .1sc-thru "'eb . Re pairs, Leak De tec •·reeEst.George 642-5'71. ed) 11 S~<1mpoo .. s lu m <'lean Block & Brick 1.H' - -r lion, & Drains Cle11red. M6·1641 --••••••--ml (olu,r bn&hteneri.t Whl 642 8311'1,eves GardeMIMJ San Clem·SJC vie Lale 642·614~--Perfectaorust. 1 do my T o p Ha t Plum b an g Tll
l'Pt) 10 m111 blt-al'h ••••••••••••••••••••••• haul. trash. odd job&, Exp'd daywork . 17 /hr, own work. Curt 978-1314 636-2030 e Cl~an II\'. d111 rm hall Cement, Block & Unck •VERY LOW PRICES• lawos mowed.492·8302 m ature & dependable ~xl 1004 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• E.1m •u •an& <1t bornt-P .. 1d by the pat-l'l'
63l l225
SIS Av&rmS'750 ~ouch W o rk b y JOb , f re~ on landS<'ap~ main -----Ser le T ILi!.: I NSTALLATION
Sl 0. c h r $5 Gu u r estimates 631·3859 lenance.clnups. t:eorge 2 yg, responsible m en 645-4259or642 3299 ~\'e!> REASONABLE P RICE .~.~ .... : .. ~........ Heas. rates. Tile Das·
td1 m1nate pt-I odor 54!12015 ha ve '\.T4WD truek.yd· --lnl. Ext.Freeesl. YOU supply info, w•: r ounts. 1-'ree •:s t CarJ)et r~pair 15 yrst-x CllildCGN GA Hl>L'.>IN''WANTED /tree main. equip Can l1tcoMeTClll Cust.work 636·!H53Jack s upply pro fessaon;il 8304360anyume D k c.!'li u d ... ,... t ••••••••••••••••••••••• - --------per1en ce o w or ••••••••••••••••••••••• _oan,,Y1mg .S48-891 4 Save grief. save llml', Paintmg&Papering looking typed resume+
....... myself Kefs 531 OIOl ,2'.50€wM , Mowmi:. Edgmg. Rak Ho•e Can Senii• save SSS. Guaranll'ed ac Cabinet Refmishmg ~o ~~pies ror _115 54!1 800I TypilHJ Senice ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' , Hot wtAli Chris ang , Swt-epanf(, Waler· Lo ,~ II ••••••••••••••••••••••• W e C .. r e C a r " I ~ · ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'Urate w prices .,a Prof work. Free est T Bookk · Driveway~. parkmic 101 ''I , . St . l.I . c •. taan Prescbool.646·~2J mg Fret-1!.:stamale:. M&BWinler Specials! for appt.S49·8001 R bl Sl 547 '281 oofinc) ypang, L' eepmg my r epairs. se a lc:-o;i tuag '-eaners earn ~an .. -645 57'J7 &16·6402 Cl . sn · eve .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• home r asl. aceurall' S&S Aspha ll 646 41171 Uph ols Wo rk guar C01ttractor . . eanang, _pa i nti ng, AGAPE FORCE New & recovers. Hep-.1r Cullfor rales661-0451
L1 'd Truc k Mo unt U n1L ••••••••••••••••••••••• H•dylftmt carpentry. Lie .. bond~d. Ma1onry :.per1al1st1stay.busy
' 64S·'J716 Design, f'inancm g und ••••••••••••••••••••••• es~. ~-2608, 979·6149 EX.PERT9•e;1~·i;;~;k•& P ainting Company prict.>S. HelJable. 5411·0S l:t Window Cle•iftq .......... Construct ion If you Home lmprovt•ment. 25 -3 Generations or ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1• ,, r ,. t d · f HoUIK.__.._ masonry Lor . rer's . Paintmg Exl'ellencc 11u TY o L' N • ··Let The Sunshine In'' ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. arpel ... art-o ..... os a on t get my ree ~st. 1L yrs l•xp. Fences. ci.rpt•n ----... F air prices . 551 4555. ~ ALI H Or I (,
GEN. CONSTRUCTION Mt!Su Quality work only. could cost you plenty I try & painting ti31 ·4264 w=~~:·REALLV.CLEAN 760·7074 535·6701 All IYPt'S. frt·e l!St !;all Swtshme Wam.low
Additions, Remodel s h a mpoo, steam also tL1c . #'J78711 ) 848-9557 Kave something to sell ? HOUSE? Call Gingham Have somcthmg to ,sel l'.' Visll, MC !'>41 S!l3U Cleunang. Ltd. !'>48·8853
_Lie /Ins, Mark 979·4-4l l rum. 540-0208 Classified Ads 642·5678 (.1a.ssafied ads do al we ll ~~_!'~ee est. 645·5123 Want Ad Help? 642·5678 Cluss1r1cd i.ds d11 !t \.\ell HA KBOH HOOl-'I N<: Wanl ,\<I .He~ull!> li42 5ti71!
.,..._. .... u.fwa. ~Nb u..fww. ........ to SINwe 4l00 R...tal1 to Share 4300 Office R...tal 4400 Office....., 440G Industrial R...tal 4500 lusineu . Mort~. Tru1t
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Opportunity 5005 Deicll 5035 •---.. 3169 2265' J d ··1 orr· uuo1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• M•tfn ........ 3140 ewport .-Slpg only. no cooking , for M I F Room a le . Hous e AIRPOHT AREA. Birch 450 sq ft Del ightful It ·d nd user ~(~ II lJ lloffi~'!> Resluur;.1111 ...................... .
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••o lder e m pl . n on · N~wport .Shores, 25.35 & Bristol 225 lo750sq fL w orking s p.ac t> with. $6c5uolsnno842·"~34 , 3 I ~,~ I (' ., m ll Forlhe h1ghest y1eld on
f II t b M l I k 0 F II b th l ~ """ " u 1 11 11 T U 's & notes. try Dl•n Large 2 Br. l Hu Nace 3 Br. 2"'2 Ba Townhouse, drinker I s m o k er . u •me JO us 1 e From $200. No lease r£» cean view. u a · Capaslranu. San Juan n•~on i\!>six· 547.111126 area , c lose t o alt .11 adlts only. 1525 sq . ft. $95/mo, 1st & last. 1543 Monty Python G428524 quired.Call557-701U '!r old bid~ $4SO mo MESA l'Jp 493 IMI!
gara1e. no ~ls $<150. w 1o hook·up, localed on Orange, CM. eve & wknds -· furner Assocs . 494 1177 Announcements/
760-1713. I ~reenbell Rec center •·----Newly ca rpet ed . own -INDUSTRIAL Halho;i takt' out 11111'1 Penoftal1/ · · .. Room for rent 12 mrle •~em . roommate want~d r""lroom . 300 sq ft . $24() lusinen R__..al 4450
I
ool ncl $815 m o ... ~ """ PARK :.ture. S35.0W 111clu1Jl'' Lost&Found ~vely 2 Br Wllh built Bayw~ apts. At Sa~ from occ. Laundry fac ll) share 2Br house '"I mo.642·1944 •••••••••••••••••••••• raxtun·' ,\ 1n\1•nl11r\' •••••••••••••••••••••••
ins Ctuld OK 1385 J H'll Rd •. S frplc. $185 mo. Fe m JI~· N B Must be rchablc.1 1-'or store & office span• 71 I W . I 7th. St. 'J' .. rm· ~·, ••. Jrl-: l1us. ir11·,.,.· s. "nnounc--t.. 5100 · · oaqwn 1 s "' an sem i ne at & a non I OL' AIHPORTAREA atreasonable rates ' ~' -· "' ............ 842-1652 M1gue1Dr.644-5S55 pref.957·395.5. s moker $230 mo ... ut1I 150 to 3000 sq ft of soot. 2700S Ft CostaMna.Calif. With pro\ en r~.-ord •••••••••••••••••••••••
H•ltW-' Room for rent, male. 646 3723 dcganl exee. space Nu ~H:S~ VElml~Hf 642-4463 :\i acheal H E t;7.t t;f;x4I
HertNMr 3842 Lado Isle, on wat~r, bay S200/mo. Ref's leasc rt.-q. 759.89711 !'LAZA • 2!fUO sq ft unit avail IJtl' .
••••••••••••••••••••••• view. IBr. Lrg. hvrng & M6.4781. Res p prof woman. 25 JS. 1525 Mt!!>a Verde 1-:. l · :\1 Jan •5600 ~I.I rt u111t (.""'a!> ~ 11r uµhubll'I) 2 Br patio apl. S380 tmo danan_garea.675 7155. ---Clean, non s mokl•r lo i-:xecul1 ve suite. rurn. 545•4123 avail earl} Feb •35h0s4 shop ml ~t t1Wlh'I mo\ rt unit JVJ1I l<tt•· F .. h 111.: l11 d Bl.DC; o. t·/1u1µ Adulls,nopets.731 W JB 28 Sl .1 b>··h loo1R&loard 4050 s h r Ir.:. bl•a ut, IBr. n e w bldg. Nl•wporl 18tllSt Call 640·9900!f·S ' a. eps 0 cac '••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 12Ba . Ir v huml' Bt•ac·h . s :iuu .in o NewportstoreoroU.1·1· •<Hfit·c & Wan·house S35•J1lllHl>t;.aS tili:!t•\p:-only,0~673-77117.Agl j Ocean v i e w 16.1*5. Room" board an ex w same $375 mo 1\\'all 752·7891.833l!f72 548 s1f.nrpost0Hh•1· ~pa i·e 111 .. ae h unit B111ik:.tur1·. 1,rinw l11•J
---Property lfousc.6423850 c h a nge for c·o mpa Marchi.Eves 1157 1-1<17, Jt!rry21347771101 •Crpb, drapes & \.\t•I lion 1n l.Jl!Ull,1 l!t-.uh
Irvine 3144 I or 642·1010· n io n s bi P & I 't e 1.,•rr-· Prurcssaon a l orr1ee for h:ir:. •33' Pl'r SQ rt • h k k k .. J l.~J!>IOg uffic:t• hrs M tlll 12011 !ol~ n 49-1 IMl711 ••••••••••••••••••••••• U 2bd b h ousewor . smo er o ll'use liy San Uit•go Ne wport Ueath. SI 2a 1 1,. Fri ~ 4 Northwood condo, l br, pper rm 1 t . '.conv, 581·1000, 586·9893 eves Prof Woman. 30 to shr ~·rwy. 1200 SQ rt . ancl sq. rt. New '11x 11H11't• or l 1l Vt•ntJmg l\IJl'h111t·~
Ask ml( sso11 L·.11•h
7a l 12.i2
o'looks pool. upgrades. to s hp. S5SO. 646·41144 askforGeorgia Capp Cod Nµt ll ~ts recepllona st·s office & ret ail w p vt hath .,NuLcascouthi:,1.:1011 -.q
ja c, tennis, a /c. $<125. d a Y ~ J 4 8 3 1 1 7 H-I ...___.: 4 O home. 1)1an;i 631 1266 or wa1tmg room. 4 urf1C'c:-o. set'urily, ? ('. .600.i -11111 ft wan~house & ofrlt•t: 111 731·1087.675-6729 eves/wn s. otes,"'""""1 10 1155·13511 ki t c h ~neltf•, i! !>Q.fl.5W3h1 S1.•111·x1 ifrluXl'CM t'l1mplex
Lo9unahach 3841 YEARLY Beaul. 3 br. 2 ••••;;;••;,•••••••••••• Sharc homt'on bt•;.il'h bathrooms. A•C. Gv SQ. to B;ink of Newµurt , S600 mo 631 i770 ln•estment
ba.Steps to bay &ocean. Y ULllCE $230 ft.549·2!122 l.1do Cannery a rea 1 Wanted 5020
••••••••••••••••••••••• MOT~sr, •J I ...,50 Bkr 645-3683 li75·3236. (2131641 !J7\/V Stor-4550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apts 1hses. oceanfront & •• · w '-I l .... 4 «r.2· .,.llO -"7-1 .• d 1 eeayrena s rom.., ·1·,,.. .• f ••c.• per mo . ••••••••••••••••••••••• nvcs tor1s 1 nt'l'u\' 11 ocean view. Furn. or un •-6 6 7 27 .. so sq l. ...,,,,1 st f l 11~1 r furn_497.1305 3Bedroom,2 Balh "'up. 4 -445. 2 4 Fem.wilhng to shr 2hr,I ·IOOI Birch St. Newport ore or .east'. ·"Approx 6.000 sq ft.avail orm l'oq 1or,1t1 011 111
OCEANVI EW Newport Blvd. C.M. 1 de a I f o r h 11 111 e 1n Fountain Vallt·y near ruturc radio ::.tJt10n in
2bdrm. patio. gar. QUlcl. 548·8(g') 754·6282 ------ba Irvine apt Pool. lcn lleach Agent ~1·5032_ fur111sh111g. or mtcriur S D Frwy $13:!0 m<1 Lagun:i Bt-<1<'h S1•r111u:-
nas. $250 mo + '• utrli. 1..freat Loe. Ample par k· design. 3305 Laguna t.:a John SSti-!1360, !'>41i-'i533 1 n q u 1 r t <'' '' n I) N. Laguna . built an .
Mature adult. S54Sm o.
1·623·3827
Versailles Jr. I Br. sec.
Hefr1g, patio. pool, spa .
$395. 213/477-7001 coll.
2 Br. 2 ba. frplc, palao. Walk to beach. l Bdrm.
carport, walk lo beach. lots of storaee. $430 mo.
_!-5.!_5. ~-1~: 494-3196 Util incl. Rae, 956-5871
~~~~C§~les 559-864Saft. 6pm. mg. 600 sq ft. $515 mo nyon rd LB -1!14 ·177 1 i l4 19-151129
r h ''all 494·6404. 494.7551 Slorage garage for renl Kitchenettes· Phones 25.35 F No·Smo. Pro · s r " Newport Beach. C1rnner) On Ualboa Pen next tu Money to Loon 5025
"Z"Cha.nnelMovies apt W ln 'I Stew nr Village. ion :"li·w11ort fun .wne110•7rt.x20•,ft.1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Sandpiper,1967Newport Ocean COM S25U mo Exce,l!~t~9r!1ted on Blvd l, approx 600 s1.1 ft 673.~3.673.J!IJO t:q ully & Purt•ha !>I.'
Bl. Coeta Mesa 645·9l'J7 645·06502 I 17th St. Costa Mesa Call incl ulll. month·monlh M o n e y L o a 11.s '
or y rly $575, 675·0120 Rental1 WClftted 4600 SSOK S75(JK · no ti•>'"' n acatiaalewtal1 4250 M f lo shr2br.2ba Wood-Realonomics 675·6700 pymt Credit or llll'Offil'
LOCJmMi Mi9-f 3152 Bayfront 2 Br 1 Ba . no ••••••••••••••••••••••• bridge A S250 +-12 util. ff 'h I W••d•;.;~·E:j:i;;i;"c~~;ie•.: requirements llomt"•.
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\ "'" 1 • .. 1111, l'11wh1•1 \ d u r 11 .. t' \ 11 ti I
U.1111. \m 1·111 .1rd
\ 1-.1 Ill \l .... 1•'1 <",II •I ••••••••••••••••••••••• kids/pets. yearly. For Rent Indian Wells 975·07?7 days. 857 21751250 sq fl o ace. S are p ACIFIC llelp ' Fem. net!d.s room AP l s . Commer< I a 11
Condo 2 Br. 2 Ba. on golf 673-8222 Condo. sleeps 4 $350 ~ves recpl rm & secly sp. use BLUFF I 'o rent SIOO Sl50 ~ help bldgi.. l'ourtes) to hkr:.
co u rse . l n c l d s week 714-497-1084 a ft I o r cpy ma c h , Law with mea l & litl' ~t a Tho ma:-. llt-:H 1'11r "'"ri' 111lorm;,1111n
washer /dryer. frige. I br dplx, utils pd, 2 blks 5pm. --Offic•letdal 4400 1.ib.rary. West~hff Bldg INDUSTRIAL housework F t'b Isl 111-11752-ti.163 J111t1uµlatt·,11ur;i•f•«•ll 5575· 492·6700· beach. Gar. $525 yrly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646_4g.w p .a.RK Hu I h 7 5!1 · '1 sou d a' .
Ken 644·8494 ewtah to Share 4300 Start tht' new year right . 0 . . . "' 4911 53631.Vl'!> • Mon•y Wonted 5030 642 5678 Newport leach 3169 . -. --. -••··~··;•••·~··•••··~·· an well established 2,000 MEDICAL re. SPACI-: 1835 Whittier A•e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 RR. 11-, BA. Townhoust' Moving .. ~VOid deposit~ sq .ft. doctors offiCl' 1350 to 2550 s q. ft 1Pra\'ate Uorrow1•r 1.\,1111:-----------
PARK NEWPORT style. Adult<;, no pets . " cut li~mg •expenses . Onsite p11rkmg Adapla Newport Beach, Car:n CostaMe1a, Calif. lusinen/lnvest/ I Slll.000 ~ef'Url'd II\ :.?nd
$375.548·21682 Professionally s an cc ble for one or 2 phys •· p ~s Dr. SI str. will 64i>ct604 Finance TD on lh•al Es1al1• tiuood
1971. d ans. ('all, d1V1de. :\itullan Realty •1500 lo sq . rt Ull ••••••••••••••••••••••• THW. l'Xt'ellent t'CfUll\'
l'r1 \':tll' st ud111 Photo
~hoot on Sat .. Jan <!4th
for ~t.'r1t)US amate ur
phoh>grapht•rs 2 shoot
111.: ~CSS11inS, !I I:!, 1·4
Exp µrofrsswm1 I 1111 or
"' •·r I m1idl•ls will Ill' pro
\'IO\'d l.1m111'd re~1stra ·
t11111 Call Slolll' & l:l11w1•r
Pruduct1on:.. !17!1·2491!
COUHTIY CLUI
LIVIHG Singles, 1&2 bedroom
2br. acr08s from sand. re· HOUSEMATES IU~D CAHPF:T 544'·2960 ll(s) uvail. for .Ian Ol' IHinen n •que:;lln!( 24 m•in lh:-11r
decorated. deluxe must 832·4134 893-1351 -----cupancy. •3l• per :-.q. ft Opportunity 5005 less Call Buh t'45 l!iO I
see $600/mo.631·5300 ----·N.l.BootS~ace I000-1650 sq rt.rrom ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------MatureFe m.to shr.folly 1617 WeiilC'11H N A.Want w·ath offi"ces uxec· Mort-·,Trust
d h ~ $550/mo. Ideal fur HIS • N EWPC>l'T IH:ACll T"'."7_ .. • • •2 HR l'/\I Ba. studio. furn· . t wn se. Npl. flnan<·aal inst 700lls. r suites. Frm 102 s f lo 969 ('A,.,f'L' Deidl SO 35
apts , & townhouses.
From $449 · 644-1900
Oceanfront for Wll\le r
Rentals . Furnished &
unfum. Broker. 675·4912.
nr Hoag. Adlts, no pets. Hgt s . $2 SO. Eves 1st. floor Agent 541 50:12. s :f. Choice loc_ 851·1666 acctg, r.e or t v r<•paar. L • ••• •••••••••••• •• •• ••• $<175 mo. 631-3888 646-75:;sor 495,9776 C. M. 640-5?75 l1H· a led 1 n shopµ 111 g
----IUSTIHG u .naq ue Ba~fronl Office San Clemente on busy El center. Close to v1'r) ex
2bdrm. 2ba. $585. East * ~ U·~· * T T~J,r. ,.~5, 600 sq ft View p t' n s 1 v t' h 11 m e s
NO FEE! Apt. & Condo
rentals. ~Ila Rentals.
675-~912 Broker
Bl ff f I d. C II , A ~ I . . . -Cumino Real. new bldit Reer W1111• 11" 1111•1 u . rp c. no ~ls. as -ounse rs to per na y L'I g t 1 . l 0 r .. 613 1003 , c. e an sq. · 1-t• ·_ . _ _ _ 3 spaces. IOOO' t'a con hwasher. 817 Amigos select your compatible bldg . m downtown llB • .1 768 735_ S65.llOU. Call Barbara
Way.631·2029. rmmte to s u il your Newer bldg. w onsitc· Luxuriou.">.full serv1l'eof ~~sa~n avaa · · · 1 Glass C 21 Sandpiper
----lifestyle. Shared·Lavmg parkrng Call. face space. 1-6 r ms. co~-C lal 640-4950
2 Br. l Ba. Avail. now
Area of Balboa & Coast
Hwy . $525 mo . J .O
Pro p e rl y M g mt .
7 51-2787. Afl. Spm .
548.8044
$650. 3 Br. 2 Ba. l!.:nclsd
gara1e. patio. walk lo
beach. adults. no dogs
TSL M1mt. 642 1603
LAS \'¥\tlMTS.
WESTCLIFF 2Br. IBa. 631 ·1801. 833 Dover Dr. Hl':UCARPl':T rerence room . sec I 01~ 4475 Condo. Pool, adlls , no Sle 31NB 1193 13Sl ser v i ce:. Ne wport ~ pets .l600mo.754·1630or --------Beal'h. Call for info ••••••••••••••••••••••
957_8350an 7PM. M/F sbr N.B. 2 br. 2 ba. 752_6188 Stor e Space for lease
--------S200 + 1,; utils 835·6261 KOLL CEMTER 1500 sq. ft & 1260 sq ft
Hu1e Beach close4 bdrm. X4542bet. l&7pm NEWPOllT ORANGE CU. AIRPORT 1~ Hu~lrnglon Hcach
3 ba. studio with frplc. - --~lcgant executive su1lcs 1.~ase avail. at 8& llOOO' I' I ex 1b1 e t c rm s
S800 lease. 2131376 4509. Fem. wanted to shr nw 2 an p rcstagt' locatio n build · to suit. perf for 213/S96·720'l J96.8(8). br. 2 ba condo wlsame. With complete support h l Nr. s. Coast Plaza $250 services. arc · engnr. compu ers. C-2. stores. shops, ore's.
3176 + utl. Cal l She ryl 714.851·06HI eleetronic firm. 600&250sq.fl .. Jff•&up
Curtis & Assoc. E /Side CM. 54" 724!1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S49·0558 eves. 752-1330ex 250.500 sq n. grn'1 fir. 556-4570 o-
2 Bdrm Apt.a. 800 ft to bch. 66 days. ut1' ls pd. From $200. 779 lmmac. 1395. 1622 Calle
Laa Bolas. 832·7626. Apt. to share. ""2 rent & v-.. W 19th St t M · Tom
G R E A TEST
EXPOSURE in O.C. 1702
Newport. C.M. 1600sq ft.
ILUE JEAN STORE Own your own beautiful
Jean store and fashion
shop O\·er 135 national
brand names & related
sportwear . $16.500 in-
d udes begmnmg 111 ven-
lory. fixtures. training,
& gr and openan~ promo·
11on You l'an have your
store open in as li llle as
15 d ays . For inform ation
& bnx·hure by mail call
( 800 , 527 0622 Ocean view, pool . tennis
courts. adlts. Bach .. 1&2
bdrm from $420. 5515
River Ave. 642·2566.
5... "--3110 util. Pref. 40·60yrs . of 957-1000.
•-age. 900-51?7 btwn 4PM
LAGUNA BEACll
E m erald Bay P r of.
Bldg. 1-~ull serv. ocean·
view offices avail. mo. to
mo. Kecepl. rm. recep·
t1on1sl. lele. ans. & mall
ser v .. in -s uite sec 'y
ser v 1510 N. Coast Hwy.
497.2503
Owner 760·0227 Classified Ads 642·5678
••••••••••••••••• •••• •• & 6PM ''THE" Condo, 2bdrm. l ll•ba, Nr . EXECl,fTIVIE SUITE
S.C. Plaza, full sec.~ rec Responsible prof. woman Fuffserv1ce ollices an
OCl.AHFROHT rms , 2 poo ls , Jae , 30.40 to shr Irv. home. NewportCenle r Yeany~4br-Oupfex saunas, avail 2/15/81. 5275 + util. Rm, pvt Ba, 640·5470
Acent. 87$-6160 $450/mo. Call 675·8386, pool. nn·smkr. 551.4196
2br.1a,.,ba +gar. Hoag &4Z·44aors73·9052. art5:30
Hos p area, nu decor, •-........ • -3116 ---.-,--Rmmteto sbr2brtwnhse, open hse Sat" Sun ll-3. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool J·ac rec rm nr 4 238 H i laria Wa y . Fabulous ocean vu, • · · $500/mo.830-5875 oceanfronl2Br2 Ba con· Colle1e 557-1861 eves,
do. $IOO. Joe. 6'4·0502 . 642·3&10daya Lee 2 br. frplc, patios.
charminc. MOO y rly. ,.twabr.lll•d F2~':.:':,i:!•e::,t. H.B.
114ns2-0214
2082 Mif helson Dr . •212 2021 Business Cnlr 11213
Lido Bldg bas spacious
single office w /storage
room, $355. 3355 Via
Lido, N.8 .673-4156
_67_5_·_2W1_,_87_5-_3504 ____ 1 or U.,_ llllMd JtOO 980-t 7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14
E X EC . OFFI C E S
Newport Och /Airport
a rea. Library, Conf.
Rm . Co p ie r . full ll~ALS ser vices. lmmed oc· 2 Rental aces Approx. OC ... .-OMT YILY Se-..&..t Yiik.I 2Bdrm l ~Ba Garde n cupancy. 714-833-8990 ~ • _... ~ Apt . Female n o n -SSO sq. ft. Ii up. lnclud ~ Occm•n New lad bdrm !usury 1 m 0 ll er . r e 1 p 0 n . inc uUls. D50 " $450. 118 W. MacArthur &eili-4Br'~2Ba"upetain adult apta in 14 plana SZ05+utUmo.5$l-•31116 2450 Newport Blvd . Corne r or Main & ti lD Dup&n. Wood beam from "15. 2 bdrm from Cost a M es a . See MacArthur, Santa Ana. _._~ A .
eelUnp, frplc, encl1d S$05 + pool•, tennl1, 111/F '°share 1plit level Manager. 1200sq. ft. ldeatrorstore Use ,,,,.WV-,,, service
• lar. W/auto opener, wat.l'falla, ponda! Gal Oc!nfmt Home w/30 yr -----i or otrice. 979·8889 or When pfacing YOUr ad a
watb/dry. fum or un· for cookint • heatlDI old Prof. male. Ul-4919. CdM Deluxe Suites, 11 &45·l280. • • •
rum. paid. From· San Dle10 1qJt. AC, ampl pll1. utll --------Dally Pilot ad number will
OC....._OMT.YILY Frw1 drive Nortb on 111/F roommate needed, pd. 2855 E . Cst Hwy . 14 ~X40 omce/atore / appear in your Classified ad
Dr, 2Ba, frplc, encl1d Beacb to McFadden N.8 . tzrO/mo. uUI incl. 875-8900 bu1l.ne11 loc ation. , •• we take your messages 1ar. w /auto opener. U.en Wiit oa lie Fadden Call BobM1-0718. Harbor· Baker Center,
w1abtdr1booll·up. to Seawind Vllla1e. •DILUXIOHtCIS• 3011·30ZI Harbor Blvd. 24 hours a day ... you Call , t,~~OU· e,. (7141-5111. Roommate&oahr a Br Fromlroomupto2300 AcrourrFeclco Coeta in at your Convenience • Jwuaey condo, Npt Crest 1q. ft. Low rate1. No u ' A
SpeciaiiiirHJ in
2ndTDs
642-2171 545-0611
$40,000 Jrd r LJ .I\ ,Ill
Amort1tl'<I 37 m11. pa~'
$1416 per mo Y 1eld 211· •
Secure<l IJ) comh of n•:.11
prop & :-.eeurat~ al(rl'\'
ment 960 1!157 bkr
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
lilobal Draft
Ho<tt·h C~nsus
SHORTAG E
w1!>h they wouldn't
keeµ -.:iymg at ·s a small
\.\11rld That's all Wl'
nl.'t·tl. a SllOHTAGt: of
~orld
Widow has rnolll'} tu Lu)
or muke 2N D T U l> an) Lost & Found 5300
size abovt• SI0.000 ~u ••• ••••••••••••••••••••
nedat •. no pnlly Fori----------
actaon tall AGT 1;;3 7311
anyti mt>
2nd Trusl Deed an <'Sl'row I
ror sale. Sl6.SOO 2 yr 111 I
vestment, 'l7'. yield. s~I
Cam . res. 645·7009
$15,000 al good ratt's. 2nd
TO on your property or
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
642-5671
will buy your TU J l"!!!!ll!!!ll!!!l!!!!!!!!!!l!JllRll!!!!•I!!!!!~
C a r e Y I K I:: B k r · Losl or found a pet? Call
673·777 1 An im a l Ass is t a n ce
Classified Ads 642-5678 Lea~~..: ~·~3. No f!!:_
... MIU lu1iwen o,,a,._.., 5005 Opportunity SOOS •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
APPUAMCI STOii Been in business 81 :i years. Priced
at $70,000. Owne r says submit on
down and will help finance. Owner
retiring and leaving state.
SMALL •IPT mM
MAMUPACTUllN• COMPANY 7 year:S in business netting approx-ima~y 22o/. pr year. Priced at only
$44,950. Seller says submit all of· ten. •
·I r W/ t ._ 4000 toealty furn. 1115 ulllln'. "leaae required. 2lT2 Du· Mesa. Ava now. It. during Office hOUr~ and net alp,~• bll1view.2 .............. •••••••• I ,._.,., ' Pon.t Dr. AdJ. Alrporter Mt-l• ~ •
frJllC •• , cu .. , .1"''° Ju.. c . J~·ot~·~ ... ~--~~~=f.~~~~~~~~ir~~~~~~~~Y!~:Sl~~n--tt-m ~ ..... ,dey. fully No. Paelflc Coa1t Ill reloca11-· to Dana Pt e . . . th I I Is on Iv $7 so Nn.r.r9l1oJ .. 11. Hw~L•I••• leacb. li,Milr.t°iLrmmwfor • WISn.MITIA OlllllCalP&CIO S Serv Ce ·
TILMeMT5•CI D• .... .,. KltclMD Ir c,o D d 0 /apt . 14214.......... DOWMTOWNlNDl week. For more lnforma-~L .... =..=-.~ wm&er m 1-. ... a1u. ~~•ft•='~f~ ~~:::-.;;:.: .. ~";400~ tlon and to place your ad
......... ,........ ....... .......... Cea&ervw ... letwHD Deatltt'• tulle. I call M2-5678. 1 a.a-&oo• •t'll. prlw. Nr lo* ._Mi,M_ o;.. 2 rrwya. tfi·Mll or . ;r.r..n.wtdarboom. -~-=~===~~:m~ •••=•• ctr • bH. 111 -._ "'' 1 im. tl oo . I mllH from ... n.•wbd • ., ler•uda D•••• lH. Oall Auwer.,u P1Dd ""8l. you want Ila ~ i.-..... . .a Mllelpf la. t• ... -· M llft. Dlil1 PllotClaMlfa.11 •
..
•
J'f4 tWl't' PILO T ......................... .... ~~ ..... '!1.' ~·..... 71ff ....... 71ff ~·.... ,,.. w.... "" ....... JllO . .. .................... ... ...•............••• ....................... . ....................................... . ""•••r11r---~C.:afeterta worker. l·IPlll. Compaaloe for elderly Di I A .... , HANDYMAN : 40 hra. U•• ......... -. :.: ••• •••••••••• .. ••••••I No eaper. Ht'. lilwit be man: aome prutlul .•. ~;-louted la week ... per hr. Apt. cl _..... ---· ......
t
.......................
• FOlllMI ot IOI& • P4'l •
Call •1 W•' re 1h4t t1 .. 1
Pait <'1141'1» i.
A lnund nt lt•l pt-I '
I aU A .. tit llut hn,·
llU ITll I 1111
f'Ull It l'>m tt nl ~1 1•
Ovlth·n H1•trh •• ''' 111n
dull •IC lli.m111.111 Ai
rhur111 l '\I tW;? l .'tl~
• U U rl J I• I I fll I It
hq)h1.ud Whtl•' \I ,, h·
\ 11 ._,,.H 4' I ..o lr.1 lh111I
•n•l11n Ot u1 ll I 11, 1H
llliotl 7'[7
~ .. u ,, 11 , • ,. "' lllf ' I II·' ,.
hl .. 0111• nl1Jl1• " \I l,111
I •• ,, " I' .. I I fl •I 11 II
'·" I l
••••••••••••••••••••• A.,la, Mana,.r n•iha., 1" I BS 11 L , ... Hilla laa p /Ume c •Y• • --Newport Wal Ii 1171 a lM> PIT t'Wftl•r help over ll. .in. waae to aura. np. d esirable . " /Ume ~iliom Gd omplea. Coat• Me1a B • • c b • r ~ •. No a ••••••••••••••••••··~·
1
, • ll'ull"'°916L hat C>Ptm· ~tart. Call before 1PM ~Ult have valid drive drivi .. rec. over zi (in: area.M5-mlorl76-51Nt amoktt'. R.ef'a. 3 amatl
Mr•1M•W..Nanny.rlUld rt1<:rHm1hop.La1una 1011 la tbe t•ountaln 15»·2513 ti c: Non amkr or -1 bo -r t1N1 ......
11
•• er ...... full or 8ud1 W7 ~.I 5 V11ley 6 Hunt1niton . · . ' aurance requ remenU . HARDWARE SALES y1.v15-5MI,
••• •. .._ -lk•char•uforfullt1mct---------•I drinker Full lame Uve-EOE.83CMllllAJDirth Apply in peraon: Crown ------
t• r •'"•da, 1"91 Ena AUTO MICHANIC teller• •:xver pre CASllEIS an. Salary· llSOO/mo Ph Hitrdware, 1024 Irvine. LOAM
M•f•"1IU2U F.ic~mc'i«f ~ dayt1 u ferrt!d. but w1ll tnin 645·0242 Earn•aewiAiatbom e. <W UffPI llPll.slNTATIYE
l b.uflt'u.1\fm<'r ··~ll 13 w vell Own t ou li. Typ1n1 requirt•m t!nt Paldbythepiec:e. _!.~~a )N.B RaprcfTY-itowine. a&· >•• oiul1tnnwd IJ<'nll'fll.11 S..n ·1,·mt'nh· 30wpm C:•ll 7t487l 4244 Comp•niun/bousekeeper 631·3225 He lp wanted for Der areul ve mortgag e
l!J4 ~ 6911 ~t for appt U T .. TI M 10 live with elderly ------Wienersnilzel. top pMy , banklna firm needs loan
At1 1'\llt ,.., "";·h llloth-•luJ•·111 lu
1lu htm.w wvtlr. l11n11u1111•·
"'•"01 ~·1111tll lllt1 Ill l'"
t htHIMl' fo1 I W lll IJv111 ll
1>111 kt'I m1111t:)' l.tt• 1•1UI
~ I' I' I <J h II :10 ,, 111
l'tt'I 111ch'll fl••hl llctr(J
""' IH 1 ll"alhul( tu lt•Jr 11
I' 4 IJ ~utf ,,..,. 1trt11ll<'I
•:qu11I Opp i-:mplyr V ~~~ 10 C0tila Mesa ·~.-..IMft. flex hn. lunch help &i rep. for Org. Co. ter-5"WI~ ., eves. 250S. Bristol.C M rltory. Oppty. for high •UTO MIC HAMIC I, It I' • l' r tl-U n w l' 11
1•4u1v d ~hov Own tool!> ,_.,....., .. ------~ lJ ~ ill (W't'll(ll. lub uf an lnl
w v r i.. 50 ·• <''' m 111 • NEW ~CCTS REr wkJys l...irry llunt ,\ulu Uurclay s Irani C"ost11
l'tr , tic.!5 t.u.:utiJ l'yu Mt•iw 1-:xp req'd Con
Hd Lal( Hl'l1 4!11 :111011. ta1·t ('alhy Antunt•1.
11:i;Jll006-tl31 15ttM fo' II V
\\'UN
MARKETS
t'or 2.nd &i 3fd Shaft:.
l>ELJ MANA<.; t;H
Wt> promote to 111ana1w j
n~cnt & SUJ)t'rvis11111 from
within.
WANT A CA•tt-:Et< .,
Cos~a Mes;i
I.II Ucl Mur
COM l'UTt;lt O~r t-:x
p'd on Uurroul(h'i. !IOUO
Lumber csl1matlnl( (;d
wnrklnl( 1•ond'i. 1-kclwul
& dcnlul 111~ firs II ~ •• ~.
day wk Hunt lfrh
1147 11511
TICHMICIA~ 957-0717. payin& c:ueer in real
I 2 yn." ·wec:h an1cal/ estate lendin& for e11~er.
t;tcflro M ec·h an1cal Hotel hard workin g 1n
"Xper1c11cc d i d I c M ' , F,,_ Dffll Ca.rti va ua . ontact · r .
Cnt t.xperience pre.fe"r-rtid Fosler, 731·5844
I 2 yr1t t•olleatt•, e le<.• Apply to Cindy, Surf & ----
Ironic tec·h St'hool or Sand Hole l Lagu1Ta •MACHINISTS•
m1htary tech. St'hool. Ueuch. 497·4477 . & s..m11e L-.&&..e •< 'IJ will train .....,.. vrn
• ll•·ports dirtt<•lly 16 llOUSE<:LEANEHS Operaton ,
Chll'f •:namee r To work for J anit·c 's I ·• ll11· \till ai n111sl ,huµ 1'11, 1111> ur still ~II ll~~ I
111.,l ht•h.1•11 Hr 11t1 .. 1 I .. llUll• '\b•> \i'llll' M ulti htwn~1-\M dl'M
•rru l\ilh I Ill• "ip1nlll1 ' 111 .111 l~ab)~lllt•r , 1~·.,1m11s1 hl1•
•ARMA ID II u t' k HI I( li a rn l •a 1Jl'1• • . 631 9421
COOK and ti11•t 1111l1•1o ftir
rt•lln•m1•11l h11m1• Start
1mm1'il . salary tlt 1w111l
mi; "" ""flt·t For 1n
lt•t \'ll'W l':Jll, ('t•lt•Slt'.
IWll Ml I
•t:o puad profit shar111g ltaggedy Ann P1T , 11 3. E 4 daw. 40hr Y!t•H
•Vaealw11s & holidays Tues. Fri. 675·25 14 OLER' INDlJsTIUr:s paid 2101 Dove St. N B.
~ N '6. .. t tl>l t~IO J)e:r ,uu Ut•t•l.i.·cl \lft ,1
N 1 i: h l s l ' a I' 11 H 1• h
ttlti !IUJJ ur <tfltl :-,.nu l.al(una He;wh
1~1 !r.:!3:1
•Medical hfcins HOUSEICEErER. Across fro m 0 .C
Sm all CaOioftc Rectory Airpurt ~. '" 1 -111~1 "'' ""' ,, I tkr111,1n .. 111 I' I' bJ:." '" 11 ";,,. l,111 ,.., '" \\ H •'PW.ted 7100 t.1 k 1• 11 \•'I ll)ulhl'I '> l'.IUlH'lilll II COOi(
l..11h.,I 'Ii ,, I •>I •••••••••••••••••••••• dull•·~ .ti h11n11• & i.1r1• l 111m1•d 111><'111111: f1•r unt~t~~l:ih•:idt t'o11v l1e1 .. 11t 1-:x1wr fl IJnly lho!>e see-krnl(
pt:rmunent employmt
nl't'd <tpply
1n No Orange Co Pref
ltve 111. but other ar '4oilltftMllKe/H•dYlftOft range ments OK Xlnt P i'f approx. 20 hr~ wk
t-ur111 \,,l1.hJ11 1.1 .. ._ \1 4CCOUNTIHG
for 5 }r 11111 .:1rl 'I 11 h.ilr<'Utlt•r with l'llt'll -...-........ .-.... -.1 1111 I> Ex 1· 1· 1i t 111 n a I
(.'jlfuflcml"1111-'4414u71 lt•lt• 1.in'llM'tl & '''II r-lh·111•f11., Mt' U:1y salary medical & l'ar 111 R e t 1 r e d Per son
s ur<tnc'e I m o pd vat· a w I mach111e s hvp exp
' \ ., ...... \ ~ ·'' •• ll••li •• CUii< 1·,dl l'tmHiJ:J !1~13 C I I I. t..: N (; I N t: 1-: H 64:! llOW Cal Mn. Pieri ck t11m Hcf:. es:.t•nt 1al pre r 557 3380 a sk for
I \1 ~ ... ~ It .q111ll\ i;row111i; 111
tl•r11.tt1011JI 1·11 '"t'k" ,•11
thus1."11c ,l'fr ,t.;r t111i:
111'11\ 1du..ol 1111 l"1"1t111n 111
\n lJ.: 1>1·111 .JI 1 111
111irJt1• h1·dd4u.tr1<·r:. 111
1,,.,, ... {;11 l)'j.llnit &
111 l..l'\ r .ivub1ht11·::. It'
q Ull t•U 1-.Xl't•ll llllPI ~
f11r ,111\ .Jlll't'llll'lll 11Ul
't.Jlllllflj.! l'll ('O!l\J't'll:>,I
I 111 11 & 111• 11 l' f I l ' 111
UMl'l'~l'l"I' t: H
l',1re fur :! Ix•"·:!': & ti
& 11ur humt' 1'111•, &
f'hur~ t.l JO :> :111 In 1111·
55'1 ~)J
Hl'JUty I l;llAIJ or exvt•r in suh
d1 v1s11111s , )!rad 1nl( &
ti r a I II a I! l' l' I V I I.
I-; 'Ii 1; I 'I .. : Jo: It
DH,\1.-l~Mi\:'ll &It; 11!115
511-lllO
( >~·~2?.~,r~v~~~~ns1• l•---ml!!l!!!!!!!lllml! .. -•I
Reply Adlt07. l);i1ly 1'11111 Mark
t-ut '" -\llj., 111.1' 11 .. \
! ' lu\lo.o l Ill(\ lol l..
It 111 kt J.:11 111 11'
'· .. 1••11 11 ..... " \111111.ol -.ti, 111•1 1.11 10,••
I 1 11 11 ti ll 1· ol " i.. • 1
'II.Jiii• I I l'\I t-1 1111 II I
,JI t'J
1;.111 ' 11 I
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~. t'•o.hl llwv l 'dM \II
' :1111·.;ll t.111 !1!1 .• ~
H.tli\ :.•lll'I 111.11 ur1• 1 '''I'
ver~ull lur 1111 .1111 t11tl
d lt'r m y ll.1r h111 111111!•'
llume I' I' 11w11 1r.111'
1;.iu I <!65
111t .. 1s.;111 w111 k111i.: 1·11 u.•h}"ttl·r I' T \111ir ' 11
\1t 111111w1111'm1l ai·t l'.1t ~'d.\I tu1111t• for :w 11111:.
\1 111' girl 1;.io IL.'ti5
Scif'fttific llankuig
Drillina Controls TELLERS
l.11s1 "' 1,l·rin ::-.hi•p hll.. llltll i Mft1liell South
HAIRSTYLIST
11 .. :1:ri• Wl· Jr•· tu111111i:
J\\ ti) hu.,lllt''!>. & Ill lll'l'\I
of 111•111 ha1n·ut11•rs .111111
uur pn•i:r1·.,~1\1• '>tarr &
l(l'l lllo· lllll~l out of v11u1 l'.1 I' I' l' r • f. 11 11 II ,· II (
h4'111·r1ts · · • I' I···"'' 1 .111
5 IO !!XIII\, ask fur \ 111•1·
II ~:,\ l :TY
MANICURIST i': X V . d f l I Ill t•
111an11·1ir1o;1, ttt',.d•·tl for
busy. pn11:n·s:.1~t· mall
b1•auty ~alon l.rn11I~ of
bl·nd1ts' P is l'all .
MU IS88ll. ask for A It n·
Civil IEncJinHr
A Civil EncJinHr
Desiqnu
t 5 yeurs 1•fvt'r l'o;!.1·11
I 1al Ill des1~n10l( o( s trt•t•l
1rnpn>vt·rnents. ~an1tary
!'.t'Wt•rs, a nd gr,1d111g
plans. Xlnl w11rk1111<: 1·1111
d1l1ons. St!nd rcsumt· lo
J I' KAPI' & ASSOC
5111 l'ARKC l!:NTl-:H L>H
SANTA ANA, CA !12705
I l I lrvull',357 0051 , 1-:or. t-:xvl·ncnc· ... rt'\l'•J 'Cini
ir n 1111 "" 11 rn p 1111 I 1 .... ••••••••-sa ary & lwnd1ts 1\jJJ)I) l•J•·I. llt'l'lh '111 g1·1' i• Pl'rsonnel lo_ .... _r,·~ ... ••t. Gen 'i,~~Rlf~~l' "'IS.
t<FWi\IW ,,11.:n.1~1 .1lt:1 I ACCOUNTl ... G HERIT•GEl ..... K u........ ....... ,.. " "" """ l'ayrnll I' rs nnl'I .lob (or m at u rt'. 11 Ider
1.11:.l .\I t '11ll1,. 1111i. 1111 1 " CLE9'K 721N Eut ltd.Anah1•irt1 Cost For urban de:.1gn l woman lntl'rl'sl•n)(
I.! l I. l;lk i1rr• IJl'lj.!l' 11· Im n1t:d ilJk'nmg for t•x 991 3860 · rirm , sal 1•ommensurut~· work 111 pll'ic.unt nfr on
w;ird Wo• m1:.i. l:11n J>l'rl<'nct><I :ic•counts rt· E 0 !'.: w exp l'lt>ase sencl n• P C II . Npl Bl'h Exv :i
µll'awrl'lum l!l!•:i:!I!' ~·.t•I V.tblt' payal>le clt:rk :.umt• tu PIH< 11101'! m u'it ACl'Urak typing.
f l )p111~ & 11>-ke) acldang, .. !1111111••------• Skypark l'ir In• 92711
1
noshrt.hd 20 hr wk., Ill I l.•'S I' I t!I Sh1·ph1·rtl ma l'h1n1· sk ills n •q 'd Banking clud~::. Sal & Sun fin,
ll u :.k) m1' 111.11 1·' tic1Ud bt'ndlt::. Pl1·asant II I. Li Jo: I. I N i-:1 10A M 2 30PM C Jll
tilk ""ht tJfl 711 lh' Wl1rk111i: t•und $!150 to E · · 1>1•1-;Hi\'fOR l-'ull t11n1• 64ti 7431
1•11.,1., .. lw.! :.10:141 't.irl Call Harb<tra H I T ll£RS... ~1 on F r 1 Fr 1nj!1• j
l'••!>l~• M•·:.a 1ir1"' ('at1 1 t~xp s ales pe r sunn el
!t :l,t;4t; IOO.t I wanlf'<J fur 1.:onll'm
COUNTER SALES fo'ullllml·, 1n busy vrint
"ho1> t.ookml! for ~uod I
t omrnun1l'all1>n 'kills
f1gun• :ivt1tu<I<' & 11uli:u I
111~ pt•r!>ollalily Will
tram J ud11nn. ti4<! :1()3!!
( · 11 o n t 1· r h l' I v F T
K us ll'r 's t.'lt:tirtt•r!. lilli
•: lfith ~·4243
vorary rela1I :.hop Must
he· fo:.h1un oriented &
l'areer mmdt'd Salary
oven. ref's req Call for
app'I A::.k for Bedg1t'
Apruvos, :<2!1 Fashion
hl<1r111 644 265<!
F t-malt· Clerk Wanted
Fount1a111 Vallt-Y llcxall
Drug Store 9611 4447
Fie ld Hl'prescnt;,,t1vc
T1:lepromplt·r C able
Box 1560. Costa Ml·::.a.
C<t !126<!6
P ~9~S~KEtP~~~ . s
llou:.ckecp111.: St>rv11·e.
Callfoirn1a'!> lar gest ,
rlt'l!d!> ~ mature people lo
work po;t homl• $4 Sii
per hr Car & phont· a
must 750 IJl\26
11 n usek cc1ie r rt· I 1 ah It•
pt'rson lo clean llarh11r
H t d )( e II m c w c t• k I .~
640· 1265 l:lfunter llelp, l'art t1m1•
wantc.'tl (iary :. IJt·ll
752 5401 is acclpl1ng a pplin 1 ~l ulu br;inl·h 1·u~ua lt) TV of N .. wport Ht•<tl'h l lnsur<tnl'e
Cn•d1l & Order v1"r1f11.:a t11in:. for l•·mpor:iry hclv 1nsuran l'l' a~cn1·y has
t1on m l'USl11m1•r s1•rv11·1· t11 l!Xthange l'<Jblt' T .V I "pt•nm)!s 1n 11:. \ .1ri11u:.
dt!p'l lleavy tt'lephunl'. t·q~1~m.en~. 1n :'llt'w~c1rt •1Hiee' fur lhi· fvllowini.:
mus t h;ivt' ~ood phone HeM h area ~l ust h;Hc· pos1tums
rapor with IX'OPlc. 61\M dependablt! trdnsp<irtu I
3PM Call Jim ~S 73 111 I tion Wi ll tram St;,rtmg
;,t . S4 50 hr with llll'l'n 1
c RT OPtRA TOJ( I ti Vt' orrer Appl\ ill !lot I
t:xpr . full time po:.1llon West tt;th St ~ H I
0 · Airport .;n·a Musi
bl· fasl & ai•t·urall' ll r~ Fl,;LL TIMI-:. I' 11m1•
II JlJlo-1 30M ... (.'~II for .tns ~en :'lln l'XV Ill'('
•CLAIMS
CLERK :>19 .fll.34 I .,. bt•n1•f 1 l~ 1-:1qJ1•11l'lll'<' d t•ncal
l•'11u11d l r"h ~ •. 11 .. 1 ,\ T~ lockbone of h1·lvru1 ihk fur 1'11m
ld.t1·k Sp.11111•1 ,,,..,,. 111 ACCOUNTING GREATWESTERH! ~l.\STEll llU't-:1•u1 ,·1'. 50
l 111\l'r:.11~ orr 1.1111p "" MANAGER t; H t:AT w 1-:s I' i-: I<"' 234 F1:.d11•1 ,\"' ·\I
:--J11 lllt•i.:11 f1"' 1'1111111· S20.0011 HA 'IG t:: • \' :) 10 -11 7-1 ;;xi ll!ll:! <•ft•·r 1, S1\ IN(.;S h.t:-. a11 op1•n INVENTORY I
uppt !155 34~12 .1sk for I C<tl l Klf.:! 1212 E () E
Nor rn:i
I GENERAL OFFICE Ul'l1H•n tlrn 1·r & 'all'" l'•·rman1·nl fullu m1· 1n
lra1111•.: full or t• T Xlnl1 El Turn Tuke 1·u~l •1m1•r
I .1kt· llllllJ I n •purh II.
foll••"" up on S5 m1lh11n ut
111·rs11n,il llrtl':. .il·1·•11111l ..,
BOOKKEEPER 111g for n :1.1. .. :1t 'liEW
l vtoSt.OOOp1·r mon ACl'UL'NTS 111 t ll ~·ir For8~~K~~~fl~'iural COUNTERS I.ti!'> f' I; I ,1 \ "'' \\ht l <'
!'-1.1m .. ~1· l'.11 I i•1 11ld 1111 I
11'0111 1·l.1\l:. 111,1\ ht· 1n
Jllrt'<I \II' Kth ·"" ()Ji\•• I
I r"int· .ire~• :"-/ E W I' 0 It T II .. : \ t' 11 r I r m . ,I l' l' " u fl t ' H o e,xperience nee. Call 21J lil!2 !12-14 fal'llll) p ••. ~ ,dil1• r~·t'•'" ahl1• ,.,. Special I day inven· I
If II l :!O 'lj) ;1.1:\!I d h ,
'llii'\I) 4ti4!1 l'\ I' I
l-'1111ntl 11(k111t·11 dk i;1.1\
\l \l 11111', 111111! l1.1ir \ 11 I
s •. ~ft~J~ f,;~t~~Y of
l11T Payroll. .\ I' musl
lll' "XJ>t'flt•nt·l•tl l' 1\1
a rl'.I ~l!J 2231\
W:irtl 1 .. 11,, :Wi:! Hi;HX IA1·r1g t'l1·rk 1111111 lljh'll . I 1111: h··•dth , .• in· µrn ~11u11d '··1111"" 1 .. ib. 111• v11h•r (;1·nerel l1•dg1•r &
111.111• .;dull t 'ti \I .11 • ·• i.:1•ner;il an·ti.: kno"" I r1·11
tilt& :!~t;.,.a SaltJry t-'un1rn~n!'-iurJltt
I 111111'1. lri.: lir11111 f1•m
f)oh .. rm:in Wl·1m.1rJ111·r I
ur l'111111l'r m 1\ '"'" !1.:!r111
with t'XPl'rll'rll'•' Call
li40 11!150
Pn•vious eXpl'l'll'lll't' 111 ~J .¥~11•1 ! np tll'sll't•d i tory job. I
S;n m gs ,'(, Loan or ll,rnk l•IO h<!tili 1 W ed., Jan. 28
in~ ts net:e»»J r:V :'tlu»t BOOKKEEPER /PT 5 ·45AMt I IAM "'urk w1•ll with puhl11· ht• 1 • 0
pt·r::.OnJtik .• ind w1•ll "'"'1 ,11111kl'r 1\p11rnx :10
gruomt-'tl l.;:1111\l l1·1lg1 · ol hr~ \lt••·k. T11~t111 \ ll I IO-k1•yandhl!hll~ping1 -. .\I' p,1yr11ll '1.oil 111 !
rt'quirl!d S111nl' !:'.atur I' 0 ll11x 11111111 11\1111•
dJy work nt•t'lkd !li!il3
You'll r111d our ~.dJI 11.,, ll•:11k
0
lt1•t•l11.•r lull o•h.111:•'.
l'11m ~t1t1vt', IJ\•nt•fils t•\ I I -'O tu "k '111111 111t1l1l
ccllent. and rnmfurtablt·i .1~1·111') lii5 :1:!111
working cond1L101h 1\p •
vly 1n vers1111 ,1t 1
F .,~~~".~fa~r.~~1·11111.:
111 SJt' !:-.,ilan 1 tom
Free 9ift for
anyone who
applies befor~
Jan. 27th
Call lnwMdiately
557-0045 .
m-Lfr\:
11µ~11 '> fur t·ullt-g(• 'tu urdt'r~ ovo·r tJh1Jne. f11P SALES REP.
<h•11l & moonl114hll·rs do :.ome typmg & <1::.s•~l
l)\ H Ill Easily 1•arnl wan·house su11en 1:.or 111
Slfl $15 pr hr 1\fl t 1'~1 . retnrdlng fl:iil) s h ip
li:IH 41i05 j mcnb Call li<irh:ir:i ,1t
IJ1•ilvl•ry Jll'l'!'.1111 n1·ed1'd
llunt lll'h ;1rl',1 ~l u'l'
havl· guod tl rl\t' r.•p11·fl
53(; 25!~1
DELIVERY F t 1 m1· for l111·a I d t•
Ii vt•rit•s X Int <l rt v111g
rct· rt•q 'd l'h1Jnt' f11r
avpt SS7 !1212. :isk for
Personnel. Nt'wpo rt Sta
llont'r~. lnl'
Ueli.,,ery
!!55 4-1!!11 f11r appt
GENERAL OFFICE
M a ture. r e:.v on :-1blt·
person with t'Xpl'n t·n1·l·
fo r 1yp111i,:. 1ihon l'~ &
~t·m·ral offlc1· 54fi·ll61Hi C M .
General Office ' Part lime mornings
S4 hr Costa )1c:.a an•a
642-0411
en era
Upt'nlnj!s 1n lmlh I. ,\ (!ol
llralll(t• l'ounl) •11 rn..-~
l n~1d1· :,a lt·' 11 '1 pr11
l' t' S :. I n j.! •\ IJ I 11 &
m11l•1n·~ l'lt• t'' 111·r11 •111·1•
& f1r1· & 1·a:.uull\ li1·1·11"·
µn•frrreol
,\ttruct1v1• ~alJn •. ,.,,,
m I:.!> I 11 fl , & f rt II g •'
bl'l\l'flt:. pUl'ka)(l'
Fur ..ippt. 1·all l.11111.1
BrndSk) al 711 Ii-Iii 11:1-111
or :.end rc:.uml' le•
II untmgton lient•rJ l
16162 Reach Hlvd :r210w
llunt1n)(ton lk •n·h l' \
!r.:!~i
M<tnagt'r
MA ... UFACTURING Plant man<tger 1or a fost
growmg mrg pl<tnt In
S anta Ana lJualif1l'd
l'<tnd1dale will hu\e
"hami'i on" s upl·n·1sor)
c•xp & a proven trJt'k
r et• or ac1•ompl1:.h
mcnlS. Exp 111 h11!h pro
duc·t10n tubt' fabril'l.ltin~
& Wt•ld1ng pr111•1•ss1·s
wou lcl be dcsir<t hk .. :x
l't>l l. sulary & ~rnwth
potentlill Send re~Ullll'
& :.<ilary h1 st11r\ 111
Wo11I H·y i\ss1w·. 11;
C hicory, l rVIOl'. t 'a
!12715
Mt1nll'UrlSl
Im m t·d 11ven1ni.t~ l•1r
Man1cun~b. with l'lll'n
tclt• l.Jt•ense1I & 1·xv 111
;i 1· r y I 1 c· s C '' 11 T" n 1
63!1 !1293
Kf anufaclunn.:
Machinists
Maint. Mechanic
Maint. Painter
Carpenter
Injection Mold
Se Hip
W ar~04.lse Person ;\II f 11m1•, p1·r111 p11~
\not her 1111:-.1t m11 a\ .iii
f1tr p1•rM11) \l 1111• f .lt'lllr~
s1qwn 1s11ry l'XP
C.t\_MIRO MfQ. i tlOI U a \', Hunt n, It
t W of li•·al'h. So ot
c;arf11·lrl 1
i-:1u:
M a lur1• ,;ift•,lad) l1ir
w omen ~ Wl'jf' :\n
111.:h t:., Ii Sund a':. .1
vt•ar Full & p;1rt i1m1·
c all 64ti a:W!
Mechanic
Fill.NU \!,Ill' Ulk !'-.111.lll
i.'olkJIJ1111 '''
II II (; 11 I ol 1• 11 " • ' I
l.lti <!li l2 i:lll :U!l~1
ANIMAL HOSPITAL T1•111p full t11n1• 11rf11·1·
h1•l1l u..;mg coµ) mat·h.
no e"pr nt·c: \hn wai:c I
If 1ntl•rt•:.t1·ol ,1pµI) al
'\ II i\n1 m.11 ll11:>1Jlla I
1:!5 \It•''-' [Jr Co:.la
\f\-,,1
GREAT WESTERN
SAYINGS
111 l' n "' r .1 t ,. w 1 l h I•' I>
Pill I ·I H5
Pa r l t 1 m 1· ti "I 1 \' t• 1 )
'''·" )l>llll• • ·~O,,,Nll SllNl(.t~ d rl \I' r~ Id I' .. I r" r
3723 lirch.Stre~ houst:WIH':., rellrL'(I, & I
Th~ lalboa lay Club
is now hir1n9:
1
1 n l l' r .,,,. p I an l m ,11 n
t l' n .1 11 l' l' ,.. ,. (."
Ope ning ror I Wl'll
quallfitod U<tbun Mt•t·h
w 111· Call 1-'rl'd S<tn-
cln:-.. ISJl 1375 or .t!l:.I 3:.li:1
P ersonab 5 350
Book k1•1•p1•r full dl:it g1· Newport luch studt>nLo; 646 ~1611
lax1''> f111an1'1;1I 11•purts. -1111111111111111111!!11-l!l!l-l!!!!!l!!!!!-•I Rqc-t Club Clerk I t ... 111·f1L' 5-15 li2-rn P l1m1'-.-~in us I lw a\ :111 Nt·t·~j<f,~A:i~,~ ma111 .....••................ Dental As~1st<1nt
I'll E l.,\W 'lutll'lll "'"'ti'
$':5 00 ) \\111 (111 :JIHlhltl ~
I l'l(JI 1'011f1d1·11t1,JI
ll \' ~1 I' 11 llm, ,\;!I~
:-. II !l:.!ji1;:1
,\n:.w1•r phww I' T. 111l'1·
ph11n1· vo1l't·. r<"r ~
Sl 511 hr &t:t H.t:ltl ~ F
450MEWPORT
CENTER DR.
NEWPORT IEACH,
CA. 92660
Sm .di m.tnni• whok:.ak CLERICAl. T empurary work nt'l'dC•d I
A ll , ,\ I'. p..i yro1l I
hu~•nt•loo:. II\ N H t 'all S w1Lclili0ard re lief. lype for lCmJ)Orary aj!Cnl'y,
tk,•ky6JI 4004_ 35 40 wpm, gen . o f c RUA prcfe rrt>d . l'all
Thur, Fn. Sal frnm !I:, Int"! Sale~ :\l.:r
I
:\1 ui.t ha \I' to~ rs "' pt•r
l r"pa1rs. at l'i1r H1•nt<.•I
Ai.:ent') !)!)Ii Ii i I
lanquet Captain ;it rnana1'(1111! '<111•' 11r
duties . detail minded. anyt1mc645 5742 t-:xp rt-q'd . mus t hl· auto~&parti.. W1 ll:.t•l up
<tvail anyl1m1• fure q~n m..irk l'l:. for I sale:. of sunroofs & rotjfs
Mccllari1c:. w ~1·111•r:i
l'llU•P knuwll-cl)(t' to n •
vair at•rial t•qu1p for
:.mall dt!aler lll'<•llli
1.1rograrn, OT 11,. C:ill
for a pp 't M 11hll Sc :i I
f 11 I d i n g . I I i !I 2 E
F1res tont•. La M1rad:.i
! 7 I 4 I !J !I 4 t) :l ll ti .
t 213 lll02 13711
0\rll'l 1Tcxltll'I Exp 111 rt• Afflrmallvl' /\l'liun llnokkeL'PCr full i·h;irl(e, <.:o. nr UC airport
l'O\nl't s I p1•:ib & lay11ub :'lleed1•d Equal Opporlur11l) I' T , ;ihlt• 10 work in l'le a sanl workmg t•on
llF 'I l:W l't ti< I for I' T pos1t11>n in .\11s Employer d1·111"n1lcntly on st•vt·ral d 's. 371'2 hr wk S4 60 per 1-.Sl'Of{'f'~ ;:,:! •i:ltiX '"'" V1cJ1l C:ill Su1.1 :.m1ttl t·ntillc~ in N H hr Call Laura.1!33 8'150.
l'hauVl'I 17 14 17702922 ll:l:l :l4l(io 1401t>oveSL,N B
ATLANTIS MASSAGE lloffm:in(':illr Fabrll's ankm~ S:ivmgs &l.oan lcL~RK For counter &
11 1
, SPA
1
, i\SSEMHl.~Hs Wt' will •l~betf.er•. phone sales. f''ull llml'.
"' .1 m 1~1·1 .. 1 h\ llt l tr:i111 . Apply 11\M TELLER llrid:il s vv . ,1 , Costa M o n Fri Nl'<il ap
H1·au1 (o1 11 , llp1•11 M1u ·(;rc)!orYa1•hls,lti31 ~6esi'~1 556·9333 p ea ran ce Fr.1nge lU/\'wl ll'M 7 d .1y .., A pos1t1on 1s 0111·11 al b e n e fits . M/\STf'.H l'hon1·1;.t5 ;)4JJ I l'la1·cn11a . C11sta ~h'sa lrv1nt' Sav1n)!s for a I -mature. r1·s 111,n.., ilil ''I 8ookk~nq Clerk I Bl.U f..:l'HINT 234 Fis
COVER GIRL ASSISTANT teller 111 work on ~I on ..-ult time exPN ht·lprul Pher. C M 540 ~373
Offic~ Manaq~r We d & Fri <tl our 111.1111 hut not n£•c• Muny com * OUTCALL * E ,I( v lrnuk k ee p e r &I 0Hi1·c & on Sal oil llUI ' pJny hen 1•f1ts Apply :il CLERK;TYPIST
!J:i3 tJi78 :<tH.' \'ISi\ typ1:.l Firm 111 :'licwport Heritage l'IJ7<i urflt l'., lfif>O l'lacc11t1a /\vt• l.rg Newport Beach
ll1•ach aroo,1 Xlnl both 1n 1n ·1nl' !-:'< l'oslaM1•sa C PA firm h as 1m FIRST L•oy h1·nl'f1ts s1•nd rt•SUllll'I per1ent•1• pr1•f1•rrl'd r"?" -----mediate 11pen111)( for a A lo Mr 1\nclnson 177 F' l'le<tS~'<lPPh' ,1t 4NWL.4-<4= v('rm a ne nt, part time Escort. Models lt 1ver..1de 'I H !J2til>3 I ltrukt•rage c lerk t ypi::.L l nrlude:-
1
Irvine Savm!(:. & ll•a11 Stock Cadlier various Offll'C duties a:.
Party DanuN. ----------18552 Ma('Arth ur BIHi Top i'lpl '011! frrm. exi> well as f111anc1;il stale * 972-1345 * I lrvme.C1\!J2715 11ec• Work114 To Sl.200 menltypmg Xlnt work ~1t'&\'ISA/\t•c1·µtt•d To placeyourmessaJ<:e 7522600 I lrvmc Pcrsunnl'l/\gy ing "ond & c·omp
" before the i-: o. E ,1 F IHli 1-: 17th. co ... ta M t-;.a Please send res ume LO
TO l'll ,\CLASS rt'admg puhhc'. Sulll·ZM 642 1470 Coleman, Dorn & Grant , fo~l'OHTS phone 11 "•ll r;· 11111 l'l'adrng 11,.. ~ 5 0 2 0 Ca m p u ~ U r
752 1Jt117 L>ailyPilol 11111, • .Jtb 111 .,1,...,,..1111 . .t l Newport Be•11·1l . l'A
Class1f1ed, 642 5671'! C ·~ D~1vs:~c:: !12660, attn. Ah:.on \lou're m1:.s 1n i: 11 1111 111
1
* ":\ !Ir ;;ii* C er er la>
S I' I fl I T l' \ 1.1----------tit''"~ 1nf11rmal1un ,,.. 770·0222
Hl":i\OINt;s l'<'llas!.omei:rt•al 1111.'"
••
toaru 10 pm F u lly
Li e d 4 !12 721Jll or
"2·9034 "" S t'"m"'" ~ P:~~~:~ c~::DIHGS I ~ 556-1178 J ark
Ne wpo rt Ccntl'r f or
Therapeul1r M a$sag c
M on Fri 1 0 1\M
7PM Sal 12 5PM Intro
Offe r $25 Appl unh
S48·2817. 631-6377 •
AUIA IALANCIHG 2-3-HR. REA-DING S5o
BY APPT 557-5797
+o~.t.~l~
VISA MC
• t1Z0 l Ill•
CO\I A l~I\ COMMOl>ITIES ~ ;1~t1hl'id1a1y 11f C0\1J\l\I\. ;1
di\ t·r-,ifitd financiril sl'rv icl'~; firm ..;pt·t·1alL-:i11g i11111:i11agt·d
rc111111111clity ;tecnunt progr;1m~ ;111d in fi>..('(! tlll'11111<· s1·n1rit il'"'
CO~I J\l<K trndt•s in n1t1J11r dc1111<:st tr and i1111 ·111;1f i111111l 111;1rhl'l:-
\\'1• h;tvl' an exn·ptional oppor1u11ity 111 j"i11 11:-. ;i-. ;111.
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE
Managed Commodity Account Programs
CO~IARK <tcrnunl t'Xt.'C'tttivt·s art' p rofessional c1111sult;111h
who Wl' have fully trained in rnmmodity trac.lin);{ ;111d tlw Vi'iri·
ous 1m1nag~d pro grams avClilttble lo our cli(·nts. Wl' will look
INTROSPECIAL after your traininR. a ltho ugh :my t'Xpt>rit·tKl' in the financial
MYS11C MASSAGE fie ld could help lo make y ou more successful. Mo~t of all we· Sa~~~:E $lO ~~4~ want first class communications skills. a good bus iness Sl'nse
t1ml a re <ll d esire lo s u cceed . 1
PenOMI SenlcH 5'360 If ••••••••••••••••••••••• you think you can handle the marketinj{ of a dynamic fimm·
CtOTHIS SHOPPIM.,_ cial.services package, where y(1ur cnmpensation is tied directly
IL.AHi to performance, send us a re~;ume or le tter tellinj{ us flhoul
Too bUly, wo llred. too your education, experience and ambitions.
--~~~~b""'9.JWlj~~~~u...i+r~~~• mp y a I e l h e
daore7 We are pro·
,...._..,..._.,.and we wW do lt-.H for you ln ._ codon ol your own
..... I• 11 attd in our
per1•d*udlaique ?Cllll-.-.
COMARK COMMODITIES
4000 MacArthur Rtvd. West
Newport Reach . CA 92660 • 7M·8!l1 O!lOfi
Attention: Oiane Johnson
Clerk· Typist
Our bu sy Wl's l e rn
tkgwnal Sules 11rri1·t• 1:-
seck m~ an e ne rgetit•
pers on lo work Monday
thr o ugh Frida y .
0 1ver s1fied dul1t•s re
quire good typing ab1li
lY . phone lechnique &
t'lerical aptitude
Contact Elaine al
17141151-2222
The DURACELL Co.
An equal opportunity
employer
CLHITYPIST
Bkkpr. for m f'rti<'al
clinic:. F /T . New or·
ganizallon expanding
rasl. Call E lvie for a ppl:
855-4(770 or 499.4097
c1e~'-"~~nr~'!cs for
o ur sales ofc:. Need so·
m eon e who can lype
40·45wpm " i.I able lo
handle hvy. fllin& load.
Great &rowth potential. .-w
computer terminal. Ex·
cell. co. paid benefits.
Pia. apply in~:
Pleuey Semtc:ondueton
1141 Kabler Ave, Irvine
Clauified Acb, your one-
aLoplhoppifll center.
...
O c nt:il A ss i s t a nt .
enc rgellt', cnlhus1ast11'.
for private pr;H·tu·e in
Laguna Beach 1-:xp nrt•
31-'i day Wt'(lk , 37·4Clthrs
Call 494 3538. Mo n
Thurs.
Cocktail Wqjtres~ for varu. Must b1· w1ll111g
Exp. rcq d ., Fri. S:il, to lr<tvel outs1d1: the CS
S un days 11r nllt'!i 25'; or thl' l1m1•. lliH l'
Dl..sel Mcch<1n11·
Front Desk Cl~rll f~xp prer·d Must IJt•
av<11I. from 7am 2pm
Please t•all for appt
645-7358, Mon-F'n. 8 .30 5 Service Ml(r
Supervise & eoordmatc
!ll'tlVltleS of )(aragc _lll!_!!lll!!!l!l!ll!lllllllllil!!llll!!lll---l
ser v1rl• dt'pt Pi:rform Gener al
mechanical repair:. on MAIL ROOM
die::.el autos Superv1Sl' Retired? Want P Time".'
e mployees Order pa rls M <11 lroom p ns11 ion 1s
& supphe~ Make rcp;iir open Mon . 5 PM·finish.
estimates Must ha ve Tues . 5 P:\t f1n1 s h .
2yrs formal tra1111ng 1n Thurs . !!AM I IAM APV·
<J1cscl mechanil'S & 3yrs ly Pcnnysa,·c r .. 1660
exp l'n em'l' Full lime Pla('ent1a A ve_, Cost<i
$1740 m u Takf' ad lo Mesa
n earest Stall• t-:mploy
m cnt Ofrtl'<' [)OT
625.281·0!0 Ad pa id for
by employer
I gi~l~hi~li~Ji.,_h &
Spanish speakmg. a1·
c urate typing . C M
556 17R7
DISHWASHER PIJ Ar ut(• care hosplt I 1n (;I Rt. Friday Ht'cepl.
Nt•wµort Beach has an Lilt• hkpg . Lypml(. no
1mmetliateopeningrora s hrthd. Pleas<1 nt nn
part lime dishwasher pho ne Consl. co 111
kitchen hclp<"r M usl bl• tr vim· !>52·5300
II! 11r over. Helicf s hift.
approx. 28hrs wk. For
information & mtl:'rv1ew .
contaet Barbsra l>uran
7 14 645·5707 f: 0 t;
M F
DISPLAY Builder. m111 7
y rs . exp. to build cstm.
h ardwood d isplays
E s tabli s h e d co .
w h ealth plan. pror1t
s haring. pd. v a catio n.
s teady work. sa lary
open . 63 t-<l660
Domestic:
Live in & weeke nd relief.
Assisting elderly . Im·
m ediate pos ition .
G'RLFRIDAY Booming ILE. ofc, needs
secretary. Exp. desired.
For personal interview.
call: Dana, 962·i788
GIRL FRIDAY Typing required necep·
tionist. Part time
Garden Gro\•e. Please
call 9·5: 534· 1490.
GRAPHIC ARTIST Type exp.. proouction
capabilities. color seps.
IOAM -3PM Lisa 855·1231
GUARDS Full It part lime . All
areas. Uniforms furn 'd. 833-2009. ----Ages 21 or over. retire<!
Dr..,-vW~ welcome. Noexper. nee.
!ileecfs efp. T'atilef. -OltS A pp I y : U n i v e rs a I
D t a per y Ser v i c: e . Protection Service, 1Z26
545·5346. W . 5lh St .. S1nt1r -~a:
-----Interview hn: 9·12 It H.
Qrlvers/fum. truck 5apd Mon·Fri.
Bobtail, needed F /T Ii .
P /T , 15.50 lo start. H ai r dresser needs
Raises baaed on licensed assistant ,
perform Hace. Ca I I Studio Five. 640·8443.
848·3444 after !lam.
MOncl bow Dall7 Pilot ClaH·
Hied ads cHap••Y tbelr
......,.. wtU. leatblllty
Md tmpad? <>ur ada,
.. .,. proud to·~ gr.ult..
away Mm_,,• in need
of I Lop baircuttera. Join
our ~ve staff fa ,., the mt out ol tour
career. Lo•d• of
beDeftlll ! I Pleue call
1•1 -111t, aak ror Wncb ..
l!XPt!rll'l\Ct: w11rk1ni: With
<1ut11 m <111ur;.H0tun•r:. &
d t' a I c rs t ' u 11 I I m l'
$23.100 yr Takt• ad 111
lht> nearest S t a l l'
Em ploy m e nl tlff1 l'l'
DOT 163 11 7 014 Ad paid
for by o.>mpluyt•r
I m m!/r~t1J~>~1•n1n.:
Part t1mt>. wknd pos1
twn. 2-11 shift Salarv
negotiable Apply 1n
pt!rson al Advanct'd
Hea lth Centt•r. 1300
Brtslol SL North. Sit:
11100. Newport Hea t•h
E.O E. M t~
Kitch e n he l p need ed .
cook , preferably exp
Fem to 40. bus boys.
food waitresses. 18 +.
Apply 111 person Thurs
I 31'M. Ichabod's. 185R2
Beach Bl. 118.
K itche n prep pe r~o n
needed. 1-:xpcrience
necessary . Apply 1n
person IPM·5PM Tues.
Fri. Sebastian's West.
140 Avenida 1'1co. San
Clemente
~o~~~. ¥£.R~Ar.:'m
T o p s kill s . Salary
comm . w r exper
640·8900. ask for Jill
Legal Secretary. H.B
min Syrs. Calif exp.
heavy res ponsibility.
xlnt skills. qualified on·
ly. Call C7141847·6041.
Sue -------
Legal Secretary Santa
Ana/Tustin area. Posi·
lion av1ilable with firm
spec:ializin1 In litigation,
municipal • business
law ror exper ienced
le&al secretary . S /H
s kills necessary .
Knowled&~ of M •I Card
desirable. Salar y com ·
menaurate with skills &i
experience. Xlnl.
beneflta. 714·1173·2137.
A1k for Kay.
MECHANIC
Needed" t o ma111t:i111 s m
fleet of m111l-bust·s 111
Laguna l11lls t-:xp & gd.
r e feren1·es essent ial
lid 1.:0 benefit:. Salary
based on exp EOE
830 6191 Al Dirth
Mechanic pa rt llmt' fur
Fiat X 19 work at
owners ho mt' 497 5228
M EDlCAL ASSIST
El Toro . 2 weekdays.
9·6pm. 770 1950
MEDICAL-N.I . Baek orlfre s1000.
F tr 40 hrs if type
P /T 28 hr$ if no type
Eves 675-2257
Medical Assistant. front
&i back o ffice, exp
he lpful, c:all IM7-6004.
MEDICAL ASST Newport lleac:hfnlern1st
bas immediate opening
for person
with front &i back offi<'e
experience Write ad no
796, Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa.
Ca . 92626
Medical
Back office a ssistant.
Pediatric.exp only. F .V.
area Xlnl benefits
S47·944.S.
MEDICAL ASST.
And LVN. Prefer appli·
c:anl to be inleresled in
preventive health care &i
nutrition. Call Elvie for
appt : 855 -4070 or
499·4087.
MED. TRANSCRIBER
Mlnlmum of 5 yrs cur-
rent exper in Medical
Re cord• Department;
Kn owl ed1ea bl e In
tranac:rtbin1 all mMic1I
reports l nc:ludin1
operative. Top pay. ...
T1ke lime to ~elu and 711.aaollcm·f'riW.
ahop al home. ll'a aim ·
pie with Dally Pilol ,MU. ,..,. .... rtlllal
C1...aned Ada. And If Mir IO fuGerl LIM
10'I have totnetblftl to ,.. 11 I ....., w .. u. ull • lrlHdly a lllt a1 m.I ....._.
CleMlfled Ad·Vllor at •f U1l1 H•••••H. ....,. ...
-,.
..... w .... "" . ....
......... Offtl atr• .. to•• to •upplt'm•nt 1wr ,........ ~•rnlnM• ..
P T. nu liln. ptlon•• mu .. ian
.?~ .. ~ ..... !!~'~'.?..~.~ .... !!!~ ~!'!'f.~~:~ ..... ?!~ !:'!~~ ......... ~!~. Thur9d•y. J9"u.ry 22. 1911 DAil Y PllDT Cll ....... w.,._. ltttawu& s.c......,,t.Quaalkh. WOID,.OCUSO• ·.!It~~· !ariA!:-.: lsc1l•1w IOIO Milc::c•• .......... II ... , • c:::S~:,•:• ruod ....... • sanc1wlth .. x • ..o..-.-m °"raf"or 11. • . . • ....................... w '°'' s.. .-t zt ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~··-,·-Mabr wWi an h•le .... l DHdecl for intern at 'I. .. DIO. aa.o. Ulle new LUA.a. ....... T ..... as ........................................•.•.•. to.~ IMo cauiru.1. If mar It et ; n 1 firm . colftblMl. 9350. 11113·2419 f WWA AW Ready Cub-1old/1llv. LAIOl Sii IOJMa. •T.,wr...,.• you an frieMI)', (OU· SECRETARY/ Oullta.Ddin1 oppty. Tu.11 Quff BollSprin r o m your busineu any cond. Special att. ~mplO)'eesOfliidatol>e
...... 4L~R)'Y .. l~Orlrl!"'THJ....... f lnlaoua 6 dependable bendil•. Call: Mrs. n ~II. Mat· card. Send one card for ladin/senlon. 646-3400 clowd Pacifica Muine
r,., .. f"I " r." wie wut you weekday• ADMIN ASST Coplan , IMS Equip· tre11 never SUIS. each ta& ph11 one spare. Inc .• a re offerin& ln· ~SIS il &l11Uov&1S& NB ment, 2IOS Barranca D ay 841 ·120S Eve We returnper:manenlly Mn&c• lroductory $18.SO /br. !~d~-·~r'r'~-~~.!.11.,,·,·~l1n1., \t•111 H fr o m "(' fruml-4 ~leaffapp~ln • • Rd .. Irvin e . 92714. UMD sealed atlra~uve t.•1. a, e.1tr•1•h IOIJ labor for prol. muine ......... ..-~ Alrp.11'1 5"1flOC\. Stonemlll er Chai-...,, p09 la our Mt-6901 E.O.E. str ap. meeuna airline •••••••••••••••••••••.. service. Guuanleed est.
do1n1 th• ••m" \hm• race. 29l~ !Udhdl, C M ulea offlce/Optoelec· New exqu.laile cotton sofa 1.0 . requirements. Pre-CONN Direct.or trombone Covers all aspects of
•Ull 0 0 r•co•nllu.in ' l'r" 'lodlUol HHtauranl tronica • Microwave Xlra income! We train. • loveae•t. bst ofr · vent loss. & theft! For u with case. Excellent bollt repairs & main
N...t • d•all.-na"' \ailv TIAC ... S t..'OOK •~•peraenced, Oiv. Sharp. personable. Own hn. Marketin& and 640·508S,M2·72161 peraonali_zed tag e~close condition. SlOO, 675·8052 tenance :~:ro~!~\!;:~~~·~~~ l'o •l11r& 1mm...a1 .. 1t1IY lull tune t>ay or na&ht ulf·•Urler/ab1llly lo ad min. Over 21. Call Solid Ollk Bdrm set. wallpape_r. fabric or afler 6PM. Free Estimate •·~· t um" ~ lwll &inw l'bv •--i.h Kitchen, l008S think on !eel. gd. com-Answer Ad II 2 9 5 , Queen·aiie Bed. Perr. "Day Clo ' pllper & we -645·~ nol \l•ll our ll.,""'' 111 l'n• •"~ ~7 la.3 muntcataons skills a 642.4300. 24hrs. Cond. an. ?pm. 545.6814 wall back & trim your Ibanez eh:ctrlc auilar.
JC\I\ • •l~I n•h11b G 11 rllt'ld A~(! H n muati Ty pin& al SO· ---------tags. Or try two cards Professiorud model with loett M.-
h u• p illil ~ • c fur rll~le.AA. Y14 4338 60wpm accurately is es· ere.._... Beautiful 10· couch & back tob\ck,. . Tree of Ute aoin& up .lo 1-J01•11t 9030 ~ U1H1tt'll •hi11\ '•H h1H" tu "I ..., "'~ II h PRICES h k W · d ., .. r fl Ou 1 h l'•rl tmu.t bllldt1ry hull ....... •-------sent1aJ. icu.ce . arowl ••••••••••••••••••••••• sharp round coffee 111-· t e nee . oo grain •••••••••••••••••••••••
0 ~r r M~ "' 1 l1t llf'DtJt'(J .. t Ot•nni& Prin.,. 81 aW'U potent. for lndlv. wllliruc ~ 10051 ble. contemp. styling. S2 ea or3/$.S body with hard she ll Gray Marine eng · 6 cyl, :;.,m~.::, ·~~ ~~h1~ I ~ lut" t,,. i " 0 I f,. r ll " I 11 l MCDOMALD'S to I e II rn . Co. Pa~ d ••••••••••••••••••••••• like new. 831-2923 4 /5 taes Sl.60 ea. case. $500. S48·6446 100•1,. reblt. iero hrs, inrl
11 .. t ,,
1
•·eri"lit• with .... .,r ul ~e n eflt11 . Apply 1n -----6/9lagsSl.50ea. -trans $lll00.760·0489 a11u • rtnM ... L\t•rw11i. " ~" ~~ Nvw h.irln11.fullorparl person · P l essey Maple bunk beds. mat· 10ormore$1.40ea. Guitar, Guil d D 40 ----Pldljl(I~ ... "' infvr11111 i•vml>""Y 111 l.Jit •111• t1rra· Diays & eves Semiconductors. 1641 ABBEY tr esses, a nd ladder. SalesTax lncluded Acouslicgdcondw/r ase WANTED
lion Ir IOI•'" 11·w r 111l llllli. l:all lt)l ~~ G re at "u r e er o p Kaiser Ave., lrvinl' ANTIQUE MALL good cond S:JS. 964·7166 NO CARD'! $250. Negotiable bef Avon or Zodiac mflata·
Ph> 111 • W 11 ' "•· 1 •-••••••-•I PQrlwulles On the }ob S Daily 10..6• Fri 10.9 -----Draw your own or st'nd \\pm 615·6213 blc boat. 751·8967 ,l4 ~S'tlf1 t•1 ni111t' 111 NOJICT 1ra1n111a fo'or more an ec'y/Glrtfridoy ' Maple· Bunk. Beds Xlnt name. address. phone & Ralt'1ih lhlU. llu,1>1t11I ~l"""HI furm11tJ·oo. <'all 7~-'""•J Need ma lure · e " Closed Tuesday C d M tt S w"'ll make onfi card P"r Trad" or ~ell Conn 'fcn1Jr Zodrnc SPort Boat. new ln
box. SOOO. " """ p e r 1 e n c e d ll7Sl Westminster Ave. on · a ress. prmg. " ... ~ "' ~
l5'11 fo. lfilb !':tt \r "' vvr t t."V"'' l'Ompon1·111.>.. ot wqwre at 3141 Harbor Secretary /Girl fo'riday Garden Grove 554_6103 Ladder S& 495·5602 aft tag. Add 25' e ach. Sax for Alto of. equal
Bf'11cb t. ll to: ~ ., l'lt'• 1r1t ,,1 1•11nnt•1·1ur ... Blvd C M for new CPA farm. Ex· 5pm Send check or money or quality 644-4288 (7141754 1732.
.SES
KS • ICli. {.'. 'l .. Ir'
lXS ~ <\llH.!oi
DAILY PAY
MIWllATES 1
lin1form illu11tll nl" I
l'b OICt' ol hosp11 .. 1:. &
worll.ing h n ('PH & I
he allh d~ar•n l·c r I'
quired
WISTCLIFf
.. • . trv 16~tSWr'112&.1
Newport lleat.:h
631 0610 752 !ll IH
OFACEHELI' Girl F r1 \fJ V
ret·e i.>t111111~t . t yp1:.l .
S Offi\' b1111kk ct'Pl lll(
Take t·hargl' typc 1n
d 1v 1 du a I I' a r It 1 mt'
Good pay Near Oran~c
L'ly A1rp(1rt 5-15 491i5 bl'l
!1&4
h 1· r rn 1· I r 1· :. t• u I :. . dt'r lo lr iu1•.ilun •1 dt•l.1i,:n cbe lle(Jnl .sala ry. wl i,th Oak draw leaf table, 4 Waterbed for Caslle. ('OS Officefwftiture & * MA RI HE J u·H K moilcflJll> &'rrwth0tl:. RESTAURANT ene ts a: potenl1a or c hairs. b eaut. r e -ts S2600 sac $800 PIL~if'~~l~G Equi,....... 1015
Mulhdllll'dl '-,'11"'lll""r llel•• needed deli man. advanceme nt i n 960-2568 , 536·4 288 .. SALE• • '" " •• ... h JI .,· ·t t finished. 962·9642 e ves Costa Mesa. Ca 92626 ••••••••••••••••••••••• L I ., h •. 1ng deierel' v1 d 'd Will 1·ounter help fo' T , P T c a en.,.ing 51 ua ion. ----• Carolyn ' --Sec'y desk, rhaar. 3 misc ... rnie s c eanmg oust.""'
r•·l>Urt d1r•·1·tl)' lo t:hll'I <.:all67S-2l93 CdM Brang r esume with Wicker couch. 4 pre-FOR SALE. Color TV . e hairs, Prtney l'Jowcs would rather see boat
l-;n g11h·er a. ... ~~uml' R s,alary h1ls lor y &.re ssback chairs. sewing Am e ri can Oak 0.rH Chr, ~nd Tbls. Lumps, p os tal m ai.:h1n1• owne rs ai.:qutrt' thest' rnpon~ilHht) for mJr 1:slaurant erences o interview. rocker. lrg workbench w beve led M irror . Child's bed. hanl:ing 631.0210.644.4200 ite ms than the s cr ap d··~··lunnil .. ffort• Immediate part time Ideal Newport Beach· Small Oak Tbl. Old Ma 1 -dlrs Marine winddws
• •• ... • 0 A I • It free 645-8417 wal planter. Samsonite ' • r
l.lUJltf11'd \'JIHllUdte:.
CJll for .. ppl )trs
l'renr k. :illl 3830
Property Manage mi:ot
t:ouplt' wunlt.'<l, 20 unit
bldg. llght m;;imltmanl'e
T t• r m s n ego l 1 a h I t·
7:.tl~
I' lime, 7days, 2hrs dt11
ly, AM llch11l'ry. LA
'rime:-$1UO ix:r wcck
Laguha tkal'h . 494 84\t6
openmgs uvail for cook:. 1rport ocat1on. Cal or pie Commode, Old l>bl IU1(gage, 645_7321 after Desk, Teak f ru1lwood. or t:olumb1as & ls Ian
& d ell very dr1 vt'r s appointment, 752·5615. English Antique Dresser M eta I bed w 1 bra ~s 5PM be autiful. for homc or of dcrs. valut'S tu S.SO. $2.50
Cooks must bt• 18 &sECYiOFC -MGR~Full &chest ofdrawers.lt'sa frame. Oak Hdbrd . fice SJOO offer 552 4307 l'a ldt'al for Vans &
drivers 21 w uood drtv I "•" 646 3478 t:ood slate top n.u•J tabk. • motor homes too. Fuel & " , lime Small N.B. office. stea · 646-7"'"" ... ~~ C..:o nf r en s t d wtr l"nk~ •11me (r"". all rn g re rd fo or in ---••"") Voumove e. t.:c e ruun u ~~ ~~ l'O • Lilt' typing filing re· --"" o k d 1 ..,,,, pede t I tbl 17' d ·• 1'11eap Marine hose· d1v1duals. with uutgomg cord k uu '1n . (·,.,1ud Applimcft 8010 1:.ur pelln smo e gas:. Cull760tn>IO s a ' ram ·' .. ~p g • d1'n1·ng ~~t "lmo~t n w s 1d ~ chr!., $125 .·"t \alut'S to SJO per ft. 25· pt-rsonablu~s & able to h & •• •• • ••••••••• • •• •. • • •• ~~ · u ~ c " ·' ~ work eves. Appl)' daily P on~ manner . o r Washers, Dryers . liE. Sofa & Loveseat S2'75. 41 fly for prn·e of 1. l'an 493.9411 per ft. Maruw toilets SI
art. 5PM. Ask for Jean ganu.anon.957·3046. Whirlpool. Kenmore. Marrantz Stereo. trad1 i\m\"r1c a11 Airl in e:.. Vl'r lh Libert y s hrp
or Mary . Me & t:d's Sewt'r & drain t'leaners Ma.y~ug. Reconditioned. l1onal Coffee & 1-;nd Ta' l'h•uri· of 11 (·ounlrit's f'ets ... 8087 h:.itd1 brds. already efm1shed gua anteed ' ble set. beautiful 25 · $75 497 1051 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~a ndblash:il $25 t.'a . 2,000 Pina, 17th & Tustin. wanll'd. light plumbing. sr14c' del' e' ed 750r ·3103 ''olur T.V. 4'?<Wl '-'11rmal 2 (.; 0 (' k ll t I c Ii;. ha Ii .v lbs bronzc pipl' & marine Costa Mesa. 964·4822 .. IV r . '-.... vv • lb lt<.t) h r . $1 C•) lb 13 • ' -3pcSofasetmclud.&>fa WA,..TED a rnos;""',c~c ilt111g ,,,per . amt REST~UR~uy S it ter n t'ede d f o r llefrigerator, was her. bed 11mmaculalel all 111 Commode and ulilll v n!l9.Wll SI pcr ~uarl. (;car box ot " dryer, elet.: range . chain 1 l d ,, srnk 751 8967 · rvr t hryslt•r en g $5 Catering o. as open· Grandma. Sat. & som e b'k x n con ·v an move. · · · f'ianos & OrCJOfts 80CJO Jlaylht•t.m Mell 1500A, 32
rngs for fulJ time. part Sun. Jlrs · 9·5. Must have saw. 1 e.S42·4083. 17141641 -2\iUti M1111 Blrnib ror sali•. ••••••••••••••••••••••• m1 ra1lar. 1:omplctt' If
t i m e . 5 A M l o l'ar 752·0107 18 <'U rt frost free refrig, 9 pc twin Bedroom set New, undaimt'd S25 Ea M!>ving, must srll l.11wry y11 u 1·:.111 provt• to us you
p T Janitoria l m:.iin 9 30AM IPM for $150. Gas Dryer S75. Call l'atday~546 8!150 C1i l1 f Oq(an. l.1·~1lc ha\t•thel>amc :.clwc'll
tcnance pt•rson. 6a m s andwich & salad as S1'ATION fo:RY STORI': In Washer $7S. Guaranteed S300 Electropcdie lwrn speakt'r~. ~d ct..1nil $500 1:1vt..' lhl l> <•nt..' tu you free
JUum daily exc·t'pl l"ri st-mbly. Also need full <.:dM needs saleslady 546.11672 bed wt massagt· S525 Sl'hwmn 5·speed & Remo 833·0729 Im !>(Ja r•· parb. lOO s
Xlnt '"""ltion fcir student lim': Slicer to tr<1in on F /lime. 5 dayl'.> Xlnl. 545·3463 l'raclit·c set "•)th ••d .• ha":. sa1b. m~111}' ncw. ()f''-'J('L~ 1~<>Sl'l'l(I"' ,,..,., rt l I d t k d
0
" Sk 8093 ... r ,._ •• over IH }rs old ur other ~ ron con ro an par w o r 1 n g l' o n s Freeier · 20 t.:ul ft. <:Om SACRIFICE <·ond Kathy 1S57 0~2 11nq Ill'. UISCOU:--JT w11 ll
(.' I e r 1 r j I s k 1 I I !> de undabl" cori•cien lime _Trami:~. for after· Esper1ally frn c cl1t'ntele.1 m 'I lop load. to -301'' $450. S o f a . Co v e :. " " t . • • • ••••••••• ••• •••• •• •• t h rs .id 100 · s ot hl·r
ncl'essary Van1lrurr P~ ~. ~ I noons. Lem s Kllchen. !'hone 675-lOtOfor appl 1 760·''""" T homasville t'oCft't' 2 cast mm dhl !-.rrtk'. I PRIC£tU:1n.:<:1-:u Ins urance. lllJ ~llf4.i1:1. llous mdavidual $4 /hr 979-0747 I ~ Tbls. 2 wmgback chr~. brand nt·w S60. other llEXt:EL lil.L:El.ln:s ~!~~~.11~:~1~"~~~7S~1' 7~·6417 Appht.:allon:-. a<:t.:e ptcd . -STYLIST Culler. 2 3 af HARBOR AREA huge ocean Sl'cnc otl !>hghll)' u,,ed S-111 (Ill() 175C:\1 w S1tlom11n ~155 ·,1a~t Jlwy. N 8 54K·41!12 I ~t'lwt-cn 9·12 .. ~on Fri. SALES HELP WA,HTED ternoons, sumt' Sal's APPLl.\NCESERVl<.:t: pa1nt1ng 1.rkc ncl4 . 5-ltl !170t lnndrng~ Slti:i Sl"flTT1 _________ _
OFFICE ,t:all <714 14!:13·tll22 for ant1queslore mLB. With or without chcn Webuyusedapphances must be seen to apµ polf•!-. l4 1t h :.tr.1p1t-.. ~
S harp. alt>rl i.!lrl. ,;II I' T Rece tionist T isl Must wor~ weckcnds. in lcle 963-8860 we sell reeond. guar valui: & rond Be~l offt·r Cll 11.UHEN ·s liEA l 'TY 1:nP!. and ll"l' '11>:. Sl5 loah Power 9040 w •numbers Marc rc~lll I' YV • terv1ews Sat or Sun 3305 . P r a • S4\f 3u77 752·9893 days I' ,\I; E.'lff 1;1rt !> :l 11'1 ,\t Both xlnl 1·ontl b-lt; :1721 ••••• ;••••••••••••••••• Yach~. 1631 PlaCl·nlla. wcc.kcnds He~1den!1al Laguna C;rnyon Rd I.. 8 Sw1tchbu<Jrrl Opt•ratur. a p I nces . I rJl'tl\ c & Talt•ntt.:d no"' . 1978 SC ARAI
l' M H 1'. 11 ff1 c·c Sat.sun p art t1mc graveyard Washer&Drycr.xlnt Kmg·sz Watt•r lied ai·n·ptrngapplH·atu~n' SportinqGoods 80CJ4 :11>rt uff~horeboat Twm
I
H 30 5 l.l <'t'n sc pre •SALESL.ADY• sh1fl.w11ltr<Jin.ti423013 t'Ond.Sl25ica W1thhtr.hner.mirrort.>d C"lJlUEN<'IH I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1M \'Ii.-,. lt)adt'd with <1 <'
ONE GIRL OFFICE ft•rred <.:all S uzan FUTlt1me r k h 646-5848 hdbrd 2 shelves, I YI I ~2,3054~ . 1821 Sib j i>hl lhn~ ... t<im\) l'l'~MlrH'S & l11w ht1urs.
Sub conlra <·\m~ T1rrn . 55!! !MOO $HOWOFF · a l' c ar~c o r ont• old, S2SO 963·0433 'If w document Sl,IH./O t•r 1.t•:n 111~ th1• s tatt•,
good on lelei.>honl'. .1<· fashion Island w o m a n I 3 m a n 1 Frigidaire. all elet.: clc Mnh•ii.:any p•11.il lllblt•. ..:ar or trad•· r11r hunt 1 n~ '.\l I' ST SI" l 1 , N
c urate with figure~ a I' T Secretary Local rn engineering mfg salt's luxe washer & dryer. Teak wall uml, xlnl rnnd. ,lat•· bt<I, .\XH. 5275 ~uns + mmlt.'r Ii-Iii :1;17!1 ;1 ~o~ahlt: ,~fft·~ r:·f~s~~·
must. payroll. htl' tJk vestment firm looking SALES Pus. avail. floor otflt•e 1n C..:.M. Top salary used 6 mo. Like new prchsed 1n Denmark . 9 .\~k rur forrv when v11u
kpg. typing. Jll.'rmant•nt for sharp woman with gd coverings. residential . to mature woman ca pa SJOO 761i 9540 will act•epl best nrfN 15:1 l!.14 Surfer~ :.•·a '011 fu ll ,•,ill · · ·
position, l(cxld oppty for lypm.: skills & <:1billly to comm'I. Call Mr. Terry bit' or t•oor thnallng 3 · .-. · 962·8(~. ~·428."> l..'losini:: <111t . ~I f\'.. JJl\l 1'.•·rft't·t X !.rrw l.I s.:o
rrght person Sal com handlc gen1•ral office We l<'h. 751·2324 planl µroduclioni cng. Elet.:tnc Table Top StnVl' , 4u l'S. stun.• r1xtur1•.,, ~real for I I I .I ~ f>-
m ens ur:ite w u hrllty work 6730954 sl·hcdules. acct 's rt•r & $25. After6P M 8 ~ouch. hrwn whl hlkl mu~l ,.ell , 4;14 :!:tnll St. 4~" 11151
546-1200
or 731·82 I 6
Phone betwet•n !1 ~lllAM ' SALES Person wanted pa yable. te lt'ph on t'. 493.9352 striped. good cond Sl2:i N B tl75·ts274 ~V R .
11AM '540 74:;.i PUIL'C RELATIONS for attractive women's 1 & It bk 493.9411 11 • odio, 4 l' Gran Mariner l"ulfy l'qu1pped Pcrft't·\ !'art trml' for resort con-shoe dept. in Fashion ~1~~.cl';Jf~.gPlea~t'eSt'nd Cdom m C~~she r .. !'()().:a s • , . H1 g U1 M· \'ttarn1n~. ck HiFi, Stereo 80CJ8
l'Al N'fl-:H :.1 yr !. l'X do:. liood phone voice Island. Full or p ittme . resume to PO Box 2951. ~ycr. om op . ...., sci. Sectional Curve 9 sofa h\dratt-d foods. llt·rli!.. •••••••••··~··~·~··.••••
perierwe m Apt Paint nl'c AM tAfl Santa Ana exper.nec.640·7810 Npt Bl·h. 92663 Attn Call 675·8172 hid e~b ed f e a t ure . f:ab food slora ~l' pl:J11 Beau~iful H<.:t\~5. (.;l)l•>r
mg Cad I aft(•r 5 Ste\'t• off 1 t.:c Sta rt. S4 hr matching chr. rt•a:._ 8 3 <.:-II 842 4921:1 TV· 2 yr wrnty ~ n •i• tk
II\ l' abuJrd $65.000.
Shp S5U,ll00 ll)an fur 15
)r' at 11 1,•, avail l'vl.
pl} 5~ I 5\J5 11r !WO· 2254
on t.uat 964·4828 543·7957or543-2951 SA LESPERSON f or Tom Thompson licycln 8020 675·2699 .a hvery S\24 64f.17114i
h e alth food s t o r e . T e ache r Par\ lime ••••••••••••••••••••••• For Salt• W"'dding <;own 25··colorTV SISH I \l'Ur
P A R 'f TI M I::. F t 1 m t•
a ns. serv No 1:x p nt·t·
Ca II 892 1212 .. : O E
P,ART-TIME Ambrl1 o u s. l!ual
oriented P<-'<>Plt· 11cr.so11
to assrst m expansrun of
whol es al e o utlt•l
848·6995
Part Time &
Temporary Jobs
Available
"Typists
"Recept1on1sts
• Secrelartes
"General Office
VICKI HF.STON
& ASSOCIAn:s
A Temp Heli.> Scrv
540-0400
PBX Answerrnl( Scrvr<:l'
Eves. Full & P T Exp
nee. C.M 540-1777
Personnel
An You
CcweerMiltckct? Cou nselor trainee
needed for fast pared .
high pessure temporary
h elp ofc. lnte r v1cw,
screen & test applfranls.
Train for placement
counselor pos ition
Nat'I. co .. xlnt benl'f1ls.
Previous industry ex
per. desin.>d, but not cs·
senlial. Call : V1l'lor
Temporary Service.
SS6·8S20 EOE
c~r:rr:vf==t personality, will train.
Gary: 540-&nSS. Coastal
Personnel Agy. 2790
Harbor Bl .. CM. Never a
fee. E.O.E.
REALlSTATE P 1lime or f'time Exp. <.:osla Mesa Christian NEW & USED FURNITUREW/\NTED h•ory. also veil a nd s lip warrantv ·
SALES pref"d.~-9537.541:1-6968 pre-school 646·5423. & accessories 1673 I pcor housdul $120 ~5·05!114 ti42 53-UJ 311 eAftis Twm Screw
Leadmgrealestatl'l'«Jm ---· 1 · <El 6421348 lpay more 5364041 pany seeks professional Sales -Part lime. TEACHER-Pre School & rvme . WA 1_; NE R A I KL 1-: SS TAPCO 6 channel m1xt•r l'ru1:.t•r Ownl!r mo\'log
peoplelomanageresak 'riclalC~•t Aide. Hun. t. Bch area l11iktioonMotffial11025 2mseodCacsol. 2feeloveendsltsa.bwlcasl Sl'RAY_ OUTFIT 2H1.10 & pre .. m p M ocl1·I away Vllf' CB . full
rf W I · · c II M I 847 5284 -....,, PSI f.I l'amix.·r ca11 \'as. sips (i. o ices Prim e areas 1 tram. re er ex a ari yn · ••••••••••••••••••••••• b d d · odd • d · I , eclrtl'I lOO 11 6000R Good sh..il)t• Sl 5U a v a 1 I XI n t p ay & per ience in women's re TE"' -CHER-S W A NT ED . S c r a p e · ressers. s a n I h1>M' Wagner Gun Gocid ~ X R PhaH· ,,h 1 fl •·r. ';rl'at shai.>t' Fun boat
benefits t-:0~ tail sales. -I Plywo<>d, approx 4xH ends. 963-ISOJ Cond Best oHN takes d 1 . . $!1500 OBO. 545·2600
17 14 1963 5671 546·1821 556-9333 To start immediately sheets 751-8967 Call <.:re ~!M~21 mo e "IUO. ~ual ~on ---lllllll!ll!!ll~lllllll!!ll!lll!lll-r<irl l1me or full lime l1 ------GarCIC)eSale 8055 ~ trol. O('W S15 :'oll'\4
Recept1on1st Advcrt1s SALES (RETAii.> Pre school. 857 1263 18" Used Mission Roof ••··~··•••••••••••••••• 2 7• 2ton commt•n:r;il arr Ibanez al·eoust1l· )(u11ar
1ng. heavy typm.: Mon Full & part\Jme. $3.50/hr Tiles. 1450 in xlnt cond Refrrg. Patio Tble. single rondllront•rs Sal•rtfll'<' I · Bult l' rf I.} m 111fr I .,.rt 8 5. Start SHOO t:all + commission lo start. Teacher/Director on pallets, 50' ea 650 be ds, e lec_tri c ov.t•n. at S2.ooo for hoth ll .\t ~F360 Jll ark 14 i1h 1warl
L111sSm1lha1675 4930 Artistic bac kground Pravatcschool Red Patio Bnck Sl50 lawnmowe.rs.20l825 W i\brum!>, 11m1 ;'1;1•wport inlay, with h urlJ~h<'ll
h e lpful . but n o t 642·04ll 675-3048 Spru~e. S.A lle1g hh lltvd C M.646·0223 't•asl.' S35o Wtlltakt•S.551!
necessary. 751-0510. Telephone Solicitors. ---F S&Sun !' 1·ash for all of .11>11\t'
R es ponsible yo un g Cam~cn& Nt•w p•1rt lil'<ll'h Tenn •~ 751J 25 11i li:t l •1 1 IH ,
'tifi Chn~ Craft. 28', twin
IK5 hi.>. ~·iod hull. xlol
cn11d. full c11u1p. 11\'W
1)a1nl \f97 8677
7ti Ht'IOl'll 2.\.
bl Si!Jl)O
Hli/ ·17HIJ, ·l!Hl llli2.
Hecep l10111st T y pis t
nl•cdcd for Nt•wport
Be 11c h C P A f ir m
M ed1l·al benefits. Non-
s moking. 700-KIHK.
S~Lls-RETA.IL women to work even· Eq .. pmettt 8030 Ant't~!!~ti~~~E Sl'l , C lu b famtfy ln•·m 541!tY.l\f5 Pl·l1me . SmaH-or ess · g 5.30 9PM S ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 k bt•rsh1µ. Slielt) h;•fon' Fl'll 1:1' Hoston Whalt•r. 14 :JS slore,EIToro.644·8286. Trnh s .. E··· 13 .50 S.Sun50.·sony Be.lamax nnrt~1blc P rs. c ass player , 1 "13 ).~A2"171 Furl'l'dtnsdl Branllnew Urs ilm ,..v Tapes Be"ch ''ru1s"r "' ,,... " .J11h11~111i. 111 h r.~. l'l)\'cr & · · · · unit, vrden caml•ra. ', · " "" " · Cannon Tl.S Sµll r:. S31HI "
Hc 1·t'pt111n1sl. X-HA Y
LAB. N H..J1te bookkeep·
rng. promolronal duties.
tra1nm~ in X f<ay pni
l'('dures f'or 1nlt'rv1cw
phone 64() 0202
ne~S:e11tr~~r~ PA
per hr. To apply, call r e tail price Perfe ct Ga r dening. Mowl'r . Airll'!':.:.praynj.!fnr,.;ok OBll !yr uld n·1·1·1\tr xtra~S:J21"1 lrl.tHWOdys.
Kellyal54().4088afl.5:30 eond.?60·80'73 PlanL'!,Tools,i''irewood. W ;i~rwr 200(),la\)'ufhm.•· $?5 \~·r oltl llll'll thl ~,. Shaw . li 75 882!J
firm. Duties incl. typrng.
filing. answering phones
& some accnlg. No ex pr.
nee. Call 833-9062
Sun Thurs Camping . B oo k s . & ,., l'~ 14kntls . --~ ------Darkroom Equip for Clothes . much mon· 2 ~uns.SH4lt> trlU~.\:l w branil Iii'\\ S'111 · n1rtrttl~l'. Sllkl l\art•n TELEPHONE Photo Student Incl sm Sl S75. f'r11Sal/Sun 331 Bc.1ul U1rd Ca~c for n·ry 673 2021 SOLICITORS Enlarger call cvcntnl!S W. Bay St. CM 645·7110 IRc turd. Apprux. -l'XG
A c ross r r o m O . c S40-l2J7 Hou1ehold Good18065 sns9s.i Boats~ Marine E~ ~·~~e~!~~:r~ ror Aiq~orl Need 10 im-Dogs 8040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.lqu1datron Sale 20·, 11fr EqUtpmettt
g r o wing s a i l l o Ct . mediately. Evening hrs·••••••••••••••••••••••• KARASTAHRUG whnl1•salc pnl'l': :\larkl'I •••••••••••••••••••••••
631.4660 3·9,Mon.·Fri.Noselling. KEESllONDPups.AKC. 9xl2s1Sl25.640-0172 C t·r :.i mr t·s l\il n ~ &General 9010 No ex per needed Call Ch · M F p > • • • • • ••• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • •
i5 I\ ON,\ \If Ski Boat.
" I 15 h p t•vrnrudt:. spr
l'lt•;in. 254) hr!> on motnr.
~>48 .\il3 <1ftt•r 51':\1
I!! 111bo<1rcl bay boal ,
1'1as:.1c lai.>slrakt..' l!ood
1•11nd ne~t uffc r &44·5613
Hf:c..;1-;PTIONIST
l':xp'd, J{l'rept1on1st for
rapidly expanding N B
Law 1-'irm Some typ-
ing. li te clerical dutres .
Fr o nt u ff 1l'e up
pearance, good d1rtion.
mature 1udgeml'nl re
quired Please send re-
s ume to Classified Ad •
851 c u l>arly Pilot P.O.
Box 1560, CM 9'..!626
SECRET
... RY 966 0151 it tPM . amp sire. et & M 0 V I N G Whct.>I~ for sJ lc. !I :i.I :\I 14' outboard. f1heq~l.1~:-&
,.. . a . . s h o w . pvt pt y EVERYTHING MUST 21111 S Yak Sl S ,\ wood S2011 630 li lll vr :111· Eddy C..:rafl Cabrn
Secy_IRecept neededTennisHostess,F/T.Wed 213/697-1345afl6pm GO Cr yslal , planb . !17!111121 9H ·l205 Cr111~t·r ~lps .t.reblteng.
rull tin_ie for ~mall .com lbru Swi. Private Coun-AKC E gl' h B lid g T Cott I t llt''A paint. very nice puter firm. Lile typmg & . n is u o e rra a pan e rs . sm Gorgeous Wh1ll' Fux l'uat I t M . t ' lite filing. Excelle nt try Club. SS/hr. Tennis 7mo. old female $350. rel rig, lamps. tbls. c·hrs. S2000 080 oa s, • aen .nonce,_ 'lh ap~ ~oo Cash or
working conds . Call knowl e dg e reqd . 545-1867,orl-714-340-1429 pictures, kitchenware. 75!l !JIS3or iSl 2l:J3 Ser"Y1Ce 9020 trade Sllp avail Nwpt
Steve al Seadol Com · 644-5404. for wknds. crash helmets. r adro •••r,;;;1~~·;;j;~;r~;.~;~1;••• li31 J9UO
pulers.642·4'3.59to5pm TYPESETTER .....-;; Sh lt.-l ~ ·I h· co ntrolled dre st'l Barton Industrial Design install n•p;ur Boats Sail 9060 weekdays . e ie n . ma e. c am po w e r e d m o d e I Air <'Omp wt>ldinJ! :-up. 11 1 k c.. 25.,11 •
REC-10 ..... IST · per1enced w/Compu-· bloodl 7 & "'"ua wor .... !I c. t'\' ••••••••••••••••••••••• a-1 " pion incs. airplane. N-Model elec tools r qu1p 1i l t 1
fo'IT . medical front of SECRETARY graphic T y peset ling months. S200. 851-2214 train set. Much more. 546 8145.
fr e e Lile t y ping , Permanent, P/J'. self· machine. Salary de· 6734000 pleasanl voice, persona· starter needed lo work pends upon experience. 5 MO. old black Lab fem _ · · OAK f'I REWOOO
ble & ent'rgetir. can m 0 r n in g s . Ba s ic Good workin& conditions $5.00 Jew.try 8070 Delivered & Stacked
II '011 "r1• lool-1n,I! 101 .1 111•1
t1°rJ11h.)11U \\1111 't \\:Jiit lci
llllS~ lilt• \'ll1 IJl 11,\ n11•1ll
1·olurn11~ 111l'l a~~d 1t•d w o r k w 1 I h o u t secretarial skills re-and Benefits. 536-2568 ~·~. _ •••••••••••••••••••••• .Judy. 494 ·4764
·supervision. Cull Elvie: quired. airport area . Purebred while German Faceted 20 point sap· r----.;;..;;~~---L----------.
855-41Y70 or 499·4087 for Call Grace 549· 1343 Typ1sG Shepherd, gd watch·dog phi res for sale or trade! appt. -----640·8688
--------Secretary /Receptionist · TylJl•StS 50WPM & family dog. s200.
RECErT /TYl'IST type 50wpm, bookkeep· 963·1785.
Newport ~ach area law Ing, gd benefits. profit 01·cta Sec'ys •• to Y-·
firm seeks poised in· sharing, offce manage--
d1v1dua1 with good typ-ment potential. 545-7133. Exec. Sec'ys ing skills. Full time posi-
tion wilh benefits. •--------•! LookiMJ for a Call Carla:SSl-1005 ••SICllTAlllS•• ch..._in 19817
RECEPTIOHIST
Eitper. phones, type
45+ wpm, lile bkkpg,
mi1c. clerical. Irvine
mfr. Call K.H. 540-8894.
T'lS/Shl00/FahlsS15,600 --......
T70 I Allah I FunS13.200
Recpfl'ype/La1BS12,900
Accta 1De1reeS20.000
Liz Reioders A1ency
4020 Birch Eat'64 EOE
Newport/IJl.llJO I F rtt
•CAL 2-27•
S.A.ILIOA.T 1\ f:Jst one w1lh ·a d1esl'I
cni:1nt.'. sprnnakt.'r. VHf'
120 & 155 Genoa s.
burients. aft travt>ler.
s to vc & rnore' Slip
;ivailable? Priced at
BELOW market value'
Please l'all Larry Paul
at 97!1·2500 < 9 10 9) for
appt. to .show. 1f out ,
ple11sc leave message
.......... rW
·········'············
..... ~....... ...... •• , • .-w ............................................. fhurMey, JMwery ti. 1M I ......... ,............... --················· ············-···-t711 ..... t747 t767 .... I t711 .._ "" "JI •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 'H O'l'I, llvr om blk
lm1.W ~UIM -..... ·
...................... ...................... .... . ................ .
.-..... a vad t"eb I. .Iii
to M A* dr)' litOfaae
at 0 & A.NU BAVSIOt.:
llAUNA, N b 11141 ..,, llill
• ......,.. • df>l'C'll l l .
111.• Newport "4-•r b
t•um.11e11
--"----'
'M Lud fWver. • Suw1,
w1m8'1wal. runa. m•h
offctr • J l•
11 J u v J 10 1>ld1up
w 11 hr ll \'f'f ) lu rnl,
p e rft't•I 1•or11J U~UU
•• U»
n J .... , CJ~. \!ll•itu. lu IOI,
•l•r~o 6 maA)' alr•t ,
lo•de'd fur ulf ru•'1mti
A•k m a ~ ~~l. en 1JU1 '"' .... tr a Up with uH•rl•p
Ma•l l11&&on 11.u ho ur aoo-. I ~Will)'\ t • l ' Xl nt com.I, P*
mov u•ec. rd-..t -~u Aitll. ... ot Yc>ur (.;ar'
TNalf l ...... :·~~. ~ ~o (.;,.II Art JOHHSON & SOM ....................... Ms~ ... , t 140 l1U t'l1'1 W•11oi1t. ... r h•d'1cd '2:11t:"r~rvI
•"•••••••••••••••••••• lo m t ttiOOlJ ~!Jr 1 ll'll11 t:o11lia Md • S40·5630 S I L V ER l'OMM \ 1.-u !d~Ol!:W M OP E U \1 11 1
lr•11-pott.a t111rt m 1at
tell. Rut ollt-r <'.ill
~ +.i 3 uk for l hu1 II
iO P .. uce.• 11 re<1t >h"I"'
Ju st lun 1:d \l u )l
"a rri f1cr $3~11 IH'>t
iU ~
~¥~iMtL J/1'~ H
A \.. Ou "'l ~h vt·k b
m 1-'m l '1u.i. Murh
Mure ' li e ~I U l (er
~~10 ~~~
9560 ........•...........••.
Mot.rcydn/ Cht'V)' 76 Pickup, '" ton. Scoohn 9 I §0 J:I{) VIJ, automatu·, /\<.:,
••••••••••••••••• •••••• pwt Slet!nng pwr disc
'1J 0 YA M A II A ti SU brakt!S long 'wide bed SP~ClA!-Lo~ nu SllM>O i;ohd ~ork truck. S<!tiOO'. 642·5340 4~-24(17 Patrick
MONT~A 2St1 L'ot"' T
Trial:., 1000 ma. hkt' n~w
$450 SH 4560 d uyi..
673·6394 t'\'eS
8t) Toyota 5 spd long beJ
pickup. loaded . camper
'ht'll. hke Ot'W. $7!:100. 493 iSsil .
Motor Ho.es, So .. / Nt'al ydlow '72 Dodge "':a
l ... /Storop f 160 ton. ti cyl, pb, auto. trac-
~··•••••••••••••• ••··~· llon. 642·4610 80 Pace Arrow 3 I .
w.,,..,
OVER
r"'o!~~ood VW. Porsche or Audi
VW-PORSCHE-AU DI
445 E Coast Hi way
al Bayside Drive
Newport ~ach 673~0900
Premium prices
paid for any used car
1 rore1in or domestic)
in g()()d condition.
See Us t 'in;t 1
. . . . •••• -.un1•t..o
CONVERTlaLS ·n vw Bua, lllrf. I '1106esel .. .W. .. ,, ... .
llUI& ..u _ ...,.,..u. mllea••· perf. cond. Yellow/aaddle, l.IM el. 8.aT~AM o ... r car or crct. for IMOO /ofttr.IU-41G'T. Dmpt,$U.•.Ml·7~ va. ~-:,..:tr
...... t741 eq&aib . XJa't coadlUoe, ·11 vw 9 puaenaer van ·n E ldondo · lkla t · ::Sei ~~).' • •••• .. •••••"•••••••••• lo.mu., •uum.-. Lo Mllea, 9'.300. PP Loaded. Muat .. n. New • ••.&SE '7tSPITn RE red con;t° 1112·53311after5pm. ear arrlv. 14995 eve $1315 ~ • -$41.7112
DIRECT! lmmac. rond. • i pd, '72 VW B"I AM /FM ---·-----
AM /f lll nu, '"II n ck, 1tereo UOOO. Movin1 '75 Cadilla c Coupe
t"rblntl rlma. 14.llUU mui t aell. Call Gabl at DeVille, idnt coad. new
. ' ...
AT LAS l HH!\l I H
1911,.,.IOT
DATSUN Z turbochar1er TUalOt
6 ln1tallalion kit. 50%·
pit.Al bp. 1150. Complete a• •cH 1 ..... 0ITS l>a\.lun Z lurbo mot.or. ~ .....-
12000. l''iberala11 rear 941 Dove Street
raclq feoders extend NEWPORT BEACH
itoclL I i.nchn ~. 752·0900
7ll·S837 ---f'-ort-C-.. -'-'-~~ 9750
'1'1 2iOZ Turbo. one or a •• • • • • ••••••• ••• • ••• • • •
kind paanl, center line '75 P<>aSCHE
w hls . ste r e o ca ss .. , 914
MSOOtOBO. 644-4593 Dyna mite 5 .s peed
S t e reo, m ags , very
!980 Datsun ~ZX 2+2, clean. <989 MPP)
12.uoo m l . 1mma c S5tt5 $1U00.1195·2178.631·9682
--JIM MARIMO
"HI Datsun 280ZX. Drk Vot.Jr5WAGEH
brwn. 5spd . Alloye 187fiBeacn Blvd
wheels , am 1fm /cass HUNTINGTON BEACll
Xl nl . c·o n d 18500. 142"9000 714 ·546·0331. c·ont ac l ---·6--
Patl1 Mon.-Fri. 8-5. ·79 924. 20.000mi, aar,
-s tereo , s nrf. s ilve r . '78 2dr Sedan, a mac cond, $12,500. 661 ·~ eves.
air, Am/Fm. -
S.SI ·9087 . Porsche 911 SC '79. xlnt
cond , take over lse
'73 240Z : 7 years TLC (216ZAH > ror details call
Light bronzt: r epaint. 682·2222 8·5 wkdays, Joe
air. Mag.s, stack. $4500. or Kalby
o re 67 3-6500. Re s --------
S.52·7423. '76 914 2.0, polis hed al·
--------loys . stereo. Malaga
'76 Datsun 8 210. blue, Re d . rlawless cond
perr cond. $2600/ort~r thruo ul. 17800 Cirm .
5.52·4307. ___ Days 645-2375 : eves
Rot 9725 675·8638.
~····~··•••••••••··~··· '79 928 Porsche, Sspd. red. 72 Fiat 128. must st;ll. xlnt cood. lS.000 mi. rul-
Muac let to! 7&0 7~ VQ-00.. tires. SMOG. 752.2131, Pl 1 'illl U I H
Open Dally •Sunday ........ • t770 '73 Convert., 1t-ereo, '75 CdV: Brown exl. 'tll JO PM
••••••••••••••••••• ••• ma 111. $GOO. Pvt Ply. Bei1e leatber int. 35,000 2929 Harbor Blvd.
'10 VW 499·1'48 m iles. '4000. 751·11Wf. COila Mesa
·s· J5!f~.i9 with '77 VW Wesllalia Camper c__.. ft 17 ~-__ 5_4_6_·_19_3_4 __
factory •Ir . Lo m1le1 Mm/fm c aa1, Michelin•••••••••••••••••••••••
((>55238> tires, !OK ml on new eng, * CAMA•O '71 '77 A.spen Deluxe, lo 3SK •
$7,tS l6800/0~968·1372eves Automalic trans ., a ir mi, S3250
JIM ........ , ..... 0 ol•o 977"9 cond., pwr. steerin1. et c. 631·65.57
...,.. " & Nea t car ! ISer.3281 >. VOlJ(SWAGIN •••• ••••••••••••••••••• Ford t940
Ui'HT&acllSlvd. VOLVO ONLY $4495 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HUNTINGTON 81-:ACll HO~~Jlf Qu~tfs~~ '74 FOID
!~2:200~ SALIS, SHVICE NEWPORT BEACH COUN1'1Y SQUIRE
lo,;&>:it:.~ftR~ust ovE\'S!NHl~Rv •31-0555 L!!~fe~~cired . see! (IJl9J58J EXPERTS '79CAMARO Original and sharp! <232
Air. lo mi, many xtras. MVH)
SHCIAL EAILE IKE inust see. 551·37_71 ___ SIH5
ttf<Wl Uowcwl VOLVO 78 Camaro Xlnt cond. JIM MAllMO
vOLKSWAGlN 1NC l966 Harbor Blvd. Red custom sunroor. de· VOlJ(SW A.Glti4 s:J4.4100 COSTA MESA (ogger Till ar. $4.900 18lIT&acllSlvd. _6~"-9JOJ 54!)-946?_ 631·5671. HUNTINGTON BEACH
13731 Harbor ----· 142·2000
Ga_rd_e_n G rove ORANGE COUNTY Che.,.ol.+ 9920 . ·-=. ~---
·75 v.w
C OHYHTllJ.E Dyna mite -classic bug
c o n v e r t i b le
Yellow/black. Special !
<280 MDR)
S4tt5
JIMMAllMO
Vot.JrSWAGEM 187 fi Jreacn 8 1 vd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
142.2000
VOL VO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 73 GranTonnoSqr Wgn,
E x C L U s l V E L y '7I CHEVl()LET ~ky blue. mint cond. Nu
VOLVO Woufd you believe, only sll bits 11395. 646-7~4
Largest Volvo Dealer only 14,000 actual miles ----
in Orange County! on this Camaro LT. One '77 F ORD G RANADA
iBUYor LEASE owner or course. Must GHIA. A/C, P IS, 6 cyl,.
DIRECT see. (192VRV> AM/FM Slereo. Landau
10 120 Garden Grove Bl
Garden Grove 530.9190
$49tS top. 22·2.8 mpg. MUST
SELL. JIM MARINO $3l.SOOBO. 639·3625
~~?ctt1~~. -------
HUNTINGTON BEACH Li11coln tt45 • •••••••••••••••••••••• -~42·20C!O '73 Conl'I all wM e beau.
'30 day, 5'" m1 ·75 El Cummo <.:lassac.
66l·Ml5. 52.000 m1, all xtras. Orig.
~JJOO. 7 Call rCaro! daily ly equipped, P7 Pirelli
.:AAB 11.it'hM tllld 59·45 ,3· a ler Spm & tires. mag whls . radar wkends 645-6759. detector front /rear. lo
'77VWIUS Sha rp! <069490> SEE us FIRST! ~~1~~~~g,4new atl bits
We have a good selection ---- --very nice. $2750. K42·S7K8 Auto W.ic•, Parts
& Accnsori•s 9400 · 7 9 T o y o t a s s pd . •••••••••••••••••••••••1 shortbed, lo m1. Pioneer A.atos, l~d
t°11.;t,1 \l,•!'·I :'HI\ 0:1:10
------1 '74 124 Sport Cpe 1995, inte rest, lake over lse.
am ifm cass,good cond .. (730XPS ). D ir
498·2503 $1750/0 BO I (7)4 )7~2620.
$5499
'" KfcWr. Uowcwl
Vo l vo B e r t one ,
Showroom Cond. xtras.
~mpg. 16Kmi. $11,990.
979-6016
0 r N E w & u s E D M•rcury 9950
Chevrolet.s ~ • •• • ••••••••• ••••• ••. ••
S SAVE SAVES Am/Fm cass. Xlnt cond. •••••••••••••••••••••••
WITH USED PARTS $4500 494·3781 after AHo ROMM 9705
I mPorteocar parts I 7. 30pm. •••••••••••••••••• • ••••
IM PORT -------LEASE AUTOSUPPLY '78 Dodge 1 ton, HID SUS·
101 N, Manchester . pension, cus tom bed , DIRECT'
Anaheim 776·9900 lum ber rack & tool box· •
--------ei.. H D traile r hitch.
Ford 302 Eng111e in good stereo. cass. 38K $7500.
r unning cond. S300 •ORO 17141645·7!>31.
641 ·9157. :;@.3374 --- -'78 DATSUN TRUCK
1981 ALFA
SPIDERS
DATSUN Z turbocharge r , With Campershell. xlnl IEACH IMPORTS
• installation kit. 500,~ I sh:i ~. new tires $3999. 848 Dove Street
plus hp. S950. Compll•le Call 831·6440. Sal & Sun. NEWPORT BEACH
Dats un Z turbo motor. 9am -lpm We ekdays 752-0900_' __
$2000 Fiberglass rear after 6pm.
racing fenders extend 111tift 9709
stock 8 inches S2SO. VClfts 9570 •••••••••••••••••••••••
768-5837. • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • ..... • • • ·ss Spr ite. f ord Van ·75 E350. Cpts , $1200/0 BO
•1 Heavy duty steel 5 ton paneling, s unrr. xlnt 536-1251
J acks lands S50. Cu ll cond S29CJO, 49!+-5366 or
498·4469 after 7pm. 496·0803 9712 •••••••••••••••••••••• '79 f ord 1-:150. Loaded. For the best d!!al in
Autos for Sale L1£l kat Dua l la n"'8 . Orange County. Come
••••••••••••••••••••••• SS800 496·4162afl 5 See Us Today :: IMPORTANT . --
NCYrlCE TO ·77 Custom E150 Van. xlnt
R1'.:ADERSANO cond. many xlras. make
ADVERTISERS offer. 751-42168. T he price of items ----
ad .. ertised by vehicle '75 Plymouth Voyager
dealers in the vehicle long bed, new pnt. S2500.
classified a dverlisin1 963-0516
columns does nol in·
SAODLHACK
V AUIY IMPOITS 2tl402~aricuerite Pkwy. Mission Viejo
e lude a ny applicable uto1 Wanted 9590
laxes. license. transfer••••••••••••••••••••••• 831·2040 495.4949 fees, finance charges, WE PAYTOPOOLLAR Close<t Sundays
fees forair pollution con-for top us ed cars
trol device certificalions roreagn. domest11:s or
or dealer documentary classics If your car is
preparation charges un· eJC tra c le a n, se e us
less otherwise specified l''l RST '
by the advertiser. -------
9510 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Value lated
UMdCan!!
'71 VW Rabbit DSL.
41,000 ,.;1n, s....-oof,
4 spudr, Am-Fm
cossetre . Lie .
t717VMPI -
$6995
~
ALLEN
OlO\MOlllE·C AOILLAC
G MC • SUBARU
LAWNA NIGUEl
8..31 0800 495 6430
a..rA ·
~·
,, t '"or-. c_..
2925 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
979-2500
TopDollcw!
1,......et.Colll! For any cfean used 1m-
Port or domestic cars or
trucks ~•
Contact Bob Walker
BARWIC K
OAnUN --...... _ . -_ ... _
l!J 1 • ., 4"' I ''-,
CREVIER
& I Sj & H OAOWAY
SAHTA AHA
835·3171
THt.UlftMATE DRIVING MACHINE
•USIDIMW1• '73 2002 (QS58)
'752002a (0035)
·16 2002 sir 4s p. < 1578> ·77 320ia (0474)
·77 6.30d i auto (0040)
Clowd s.days
ORAHGE COUMTY'S
OLDEST
&
Sales-Service.Leasing
RoyC.-.er ... c.
Rolls Royce BMW
lS40Jamboree
Newport Beach 640.6444
------I '75 Frat 124 Spyder conv. '7~ 911 Coupe, 5 speed ,
Xlnt. cond. Custom in· ste r eo, a lloys , ve r y
ten or. amtfm. lug rack. clean. $10,500. 7S9· 1282.
$3825 or best orrer. P.P .. 78 9.,. 1.... .-M-:-1 .. S40·3ml. .,. .... ma, a aga Red, every factory op
Honda 9727 lion. incl p/w. a /c. s/r,
••••••••••••••••••••••• a m /fm ta pe s te r eo.
VISIT YOUR
ORANGE COAST
• HONDA
HEAD9UARTERS
TODAY!!!
UNIVERSITY
SALES&SE RVIC I-:
OLDSMOllLE
HONDA
~fia~~~~v~.
COSTA MESA
540.9640 __
llonda 'IJO Accord LX.
$7200. 5 spd, air.
AM / FM sler cass. gold.
Pvt ply. 551-3741 ---------
ab s o l u e ly rm m al·
$12.500 544·4560 da ys,
673·6394 eves.
1967 PORSCH I!: 912
In Good Con d i tio n
775·68S3 after 2 o'clock
•77 Accord, a/c. am /fm '''I__. 1600
stereo. new eng. & tires. Bestiil'rer.644-7809
$4750. 642·3850. _.,. l t756 -----• oyc•
Jociu• 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. '79 J ag XJSL
541,t1Jo~J~J.~~E
Emer ald green, beige
int. moon roor. all xtras.
p wr . ant . C all Ke n
640·9966 days
cnda 9731 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~~~VER
ROllS·ROYCl
IS. .UmllowH ----~.ell \'----.............
~ VOlKSWAGlN INC ~ 534-4100
13731 Harbor Autos, Used
Garden G rove •• • • • •• •• • • • • •• •• • • •• • •
-AMC 9905
'71 v.w IAlll·T ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dynarrute custom 2 door '69 Rebel. good econ
automatic. Only 26,000 trans por tation ca r
m 1 I es . L l k e n e w 1 548·6066 bet. 8&5 M F
1707U00l ---
$3995 ~!!~ ............. !!!.~
JIM MARINO
~~le?ctt,~.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
142·2000
·75 Chevy Monu 2 + 2 19•1 S .a. ,..1 VW parts. '68 lei\ at right SALES. SERVICE
ANDLEASJNG
CO..NEU
CHEVROLET
~'\.'.>< llJ•l•.r Ill. I
••t-.1\\1~~\
546-1200
'7 5 CHEV MOHli 4 cylinder. 4 speed:-Only
49.000 miles Clea n 1
C390NYl l
$1995
JIMMAllHO
VOlJ(SWAGEN 187 n lleacn Blvd
HUNTINGTON BEACH
·~2-2000
'72 Che vy K1n gs wood
Estate Wgn. all f'll"C wan
dows. scats, door Jor ks.
am 8lrk stereo. a C'. lug
gage rack. many xtrai.,
brown/wht ext. gold int
xlnt cond. S1200 Rhonda
962·5355
'78 Malibu classic 4 dr.
6·CYI. auto trans. A C.
P S . P B. top \!O nd.
$3 100 . S51 6317 a ft
SPM wknds
'7 6 MQMli 2 + 2 Fuel saving. 4 cyl. looks I
& runs good $2875 Call
M ak e S57 35 27 o r
759-0060.
'77 Cor dob a. c•lca n .
load ed . Am 1t'm, a ir.
power everything S2900
P .P 549·7267.
Con.tie 9932
1••····················· 76,000 mi. Runs good
$1800 OBO 962-~30
t740 •••••••••••••••••••••••
"""" door, '73 left door. S50
IE •cH IMPORTS '74 Super Beetle parts. ~ Power 1;r akes, powe r
TUll01 each. ~9744 NABER~· SHOW~O-P-#,FOHD.
.,.. Back seal $20. Right ( ,1\DILL1\ .. window!., power steering
MUST SACRIFICE IWSDoveStreet door MO. windshield S30. /IJA1tt u , .• 111,,, w ith t1lt /le lesr op1ng
'80 300 Cb . Wh i l e NEWPORT BEACH 641-9157 1 '"'·' '"'" ,,411 111JC1 s t eering wheel, air.
w/many extras includ· 7S2·0t00 ----------i ~~~~~~~~~ AM /F M ste reo. re a r ing sunroof, 40 gal fuel •---------·68 VW Bug. Xlnl cond. = w i ndo w d e f o gge r .
tank. Ca ll 646-6503 ORAMGICOUMTY Rbl t. en1. 11 750. automatic trans. Snow
ORANGE COUNTY 'S
LINCO~~WRCURY
DEALERSHI P
~ 671.thl••
1.INCOLN·MERCURV
16· 18 Auto Center Dr
S U t'wy-Lake Fo res t
exit IHVINE
830·7000
'79MERCURY
CAPRI This great gas saver has
hHs or comfort plus
<'conomy' 1 t'eatur1ng 4
cylinder engine with 4
~peed t rans m 1ss1o n .
AM FM :;terco tape and
murt>' 1623923 l Gotta
Go' 1 $3999
JOHMSOH & SON
~!Hf:r'~,erfir:l
Costa Mesa
l4~_56lC!
'IOMERCURY
GRAM MARQUIS Th i s b ea u tl f ul l y
equipped low milea.:c
··f'o RD FACTORY
l::XJ::CtrrlVI.'.: CAR " has
power sealS, power win·
dows. AM FM stereo.
Landau top and much
more ' (664ZRV> Pn <'ed
lh sell now! $9497
J OHNSON & SOH
LiftcolR M«cury 2626 Harbor Bl vlf
Costa Mesa
540-~630
MustmMJ 9952 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 GRANDE. loaded
Xlnt cond. Sl950
545().8615. ~1-524 1
'71FORD
MUSTANG II 1.ook at this very special
find. V·6 engine with 4
speed transmission for
great economy• AM 1FM
s t e r eo a n d ra c ing
str ipes 1964VZX > ll
won't lasl long • $3997
JOHNSON & SON
LiftColR M"'curv 2626lfarbor Blvlf.
Costa Mesa
9520
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
AND TRUCKS
wknds or aft. 5 wkdys. SAAi 1·635-61.20. '10 CADILLAC white with Burgundy in· Im•••••••-'15 4~L. dark metallic BUYorLEASE '69 VW Bug, ne w pa.int, Veg,~!IJl~e!l~~Ethis terior ~.000 miles Im· IOIMcl.AllM"I green. xln\ cond. l6,000 DIRECT n .. w 1. n l e r i 0 r . b 'f 11 . d ma c ulal e lhr uo ut !
'70 Mach I. 3SIC, PB/PS.
Nu brks/tires Runs gd.
Auto, nds m nr body
work + pn t $2000.
760·1834.
••••••••••••••••••••••• AUB U R N P h aeto n
Speedster. l93S clas!lic
1 replica by Calif. Custom
Coa c h . Ne v er r e ·
gistered. Used ror show
.car only ! Bargained
priced! Stt Jim Buie or
'Bernie Ashe. Theodore
t R o b i ns F o rd . 2060
Ha rbor Blvd ., Cos ta ~Mesa. Call 642-0010 or
.~0·8211.
'41 Ford Woodle. restored
,113,000. ALSO ·29 Model
•A Town Seda n. 4 dr.
restored. Ideal for stu-
' dent. Sl0,000.1'15·6161 .
'M Cou&ar Convt.
tOrillnal fl Sllarp ! 2nd
towner. New top. $700
terec>. '3200 or serious
offer. 559-5080 or
Gl·ll.31.
95JO ••••••••••••••••••••• Dodie RV Van. Self·
leontalMd. Xtraa. low
COHHEll
CHEVROLET
'"-" 11.trt••< Iii . I
' ' '°"I \ \1 ~ ~ \
546-1200
HIGHIUYER Top oollars for ·sports
Cars. Bugs , Cam pers,
914's, Audi's
Ask for U/C MGR
JIMMAllMO
VOlJ(SW A.GEM t87filJeacn Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
142·2000
TOPDOLLAI
PAIDFOI
&OOD&CLIAM
USIDCAIS!
mirilc l e
mazda
T • ._ ~
850 N. Bea ch Blvd.
LAHABRA
(5 Mi. No. of SA Fwy I
171 . •41 522.SJJJ SUnaayoy Appt.
OVERSEAS ... eaula u Y eq uappe $8.100 . 754 ·6790 o r mi, $18,SOO. 963·21 16. DELIVERIES automatic,. Muat see t luxury coupe including Answer Ad #Z09. 642.4300 appreciate. S2000 FIRM. leather interior. lilt '1: ;~r~esc~~·e~~1;: I ... ,~,,~,~IJ:~. 968·3l!ll'l :hdeel. c~ulcs~ coontr?! ·24 hrs. ---Old11110bile 9955
, , n so ~u m ,re .. COIHJClr 9933 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $17,500/bstolr.49'·2023 '59VWBUG .Sl200 (604ZBJ > No w JUSl ••••••••••••••••••••••• DSL ·79 Cstm Cruis er
·77 300D. pe rr. cond. 754-6163 SJ2·987· 'IOCOU .... •R Wgn . Loaded, wa rr .
78,000 m i. me talli c 10 120GardenGrOvP 8 1 80 V W C a m p e r . JOHMSOH&SOM xa1',,. sharp.S6800.493·66SS Or
g r e_e n ~ .S J 2 . 9 0 0 . G.m1f'n GrnvP 530·9 190 ai r I c us t o m p aint . ~ ~rvl Driven by a top Ford ex· _4_93_·_8_123 ______ _
<710546-5745. -.,. 9762 AM t FM c ass .. 5 y r 2626Cos~ M~/ . ~~~~iv:vear~d o~~r~:P~: Pinto 9957
'72 250. orig cond, a/c. ~··•••••••••••••••••••• S0.000 mi wa rranty , 54A56JO Id think o( " I d .&.!.!••••••••••••••••••••
P/I, Am/Fm cass. sszoo. 77 Subaru wagon, 4 whl $12.SOO. 831-1217 -----='-=-=-;....;:;.=.;:;....---• ~ou · .. inc u · "74" .. P into wagon. Xlnt. d 4 pd AM /FM an g k ~yle~s enl ry, cond . Original owner . '79 BMW 7331/White 552 -4588, 552 -5073, r,. s • cass. ·74 BUG good cond ask· '80 Cadillac Eldorado, leather tnleraor.~M /FM De l uxe equ i pme nt .
navy, auto.16" BBStP7. ~3·2175. Ma.nl.$3500.540-8783. ing $2800 496 ·4393 . xlnt cood.Sl6,200 or cash quad stereo. cruise con-51700 s:i&-5746 Alpina, Cslm stereo. .75 s ubaru 30mpg good S6Ml66l •takeoverpayments. tro l. F ull p ower ! · ·
many extras. Only 8500 Mu1t Sell: MBZ '77 450 cond S'JsO or best 'orr r 615-2972. (1 83ZRT> Now orrered 'Ir__. 9960 m iles, impeccable . SL, immac, orig priv 646.'8es e · '68 VW Camper Van. S/r, (oronly $7985. •••••••••••••••••••••••
673·0850 owner (714)835-9335 $1500 '71 CADILLAC JOHHSOM & SOM ·10 Ply. Barracuda. Nds
oyota t7'5 962--0048 B.DOa~DO L,_.Merc.v trans. work. S500 or ofr. ·79 BMW 320i, snrf, air, M& 9742 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . O . lt'1 alMimts. OR MY ! lGIHirl>Or Bfvd. 495.4713 whls. Fm/cass, S880(). ~··••••••••••••••••••• •71 Corona Win auto 74 Super Beetle. r11 WHAT A CAR!! Simply ---------
644·5942 eves. 79 MG Mldaet . Xlnt wb\ S4X mi aic new own. xlnl cond. must see can 't llat all of the Costa Mesa 69 IOADIUMMH
cood. 2'7,000 miles. See to tr '1 b k '1 ' II t o a'J>prec . F abulous 1peclal luxury equip· ---""S_.4-=-0-_,5._.6._.J~0'--_--1 Custom· Uit , ne w en1-
'75 S301, auto, leather Int, appreciat.e.848-7187 ca~~.'x1!: :~d~~l~ xtraa, "Ross Alarm" ment loaded with lux· t ran1-p ai nt, xlnt.
a /c , low miles. 96500. M•I ,744 844-1307,M0-29112 System, dictaUon equip, ury! (917UXD) Hurry on '77 COU6AI $1600/0 8 0 . 6'2·0126, 64~mt etc. Lori <714)642·5051 thJ1one! S7l'18 Xl-7 982·9985 •••••••••••••••••••••• '79Cel.lce GTCoupe,fuUy <Weekdays) 646-9016 Pre vious owner d e·---------
'79 320i : LWlUI Group, Al· Sh '77,MGI l loade d , 1nrf, SSIOO. (aft 6PM/wkknds> Best JO...sc>M A SCH manded kM ol luxury! ...._ tHS
loYa. Alr. am tfm 1tereo a rp ·a.-1 por s SSZ·llMS aftSPM Offer ~w.rc.w lnc ludin1 fact ory air•••••••••••••••••••••••
caas. 30 ,000 miles. roadster. Prime condl·•---------1---------llllllirllOrBfvd. condit.ionint . tilt wheel. '77 Trana Am. Power
$10,300. MMl390 lion : ·Wbite /blad: In· '72 Toyota Corona 2000, ''7 BUG, lood cood, nict eci.ta Mesa cr"lae control. power ateerint brakn win· t,Uea.IG·5Ml
W....Drmt 9110 c..e. ..... 641-1700 •75 BMW 2i002, xlnt cood, t.erlor. <CW"ta MG > idnt cond, new paint, paint. lo ml. S21QOO/OBO. ---=14..:.0.=-=5;..;:6;..;:J;..;:O'---~ windows. Bea"liful dowa. AM/FM I 'track.
air, 41Pd. price low at SJttl new Ura, oril owner, 84f·71NO 'IO Seville wht w/mnrf ~:;~r~. <5947ot>1-•-..at_15 _____ _ •••••••••••••••••••••• • rr.~~~~"· lttacllet aaatt, fro•t
i a,ablll•. roll bar • •6re. Yotart for I•·
t-191~ ........ ~~,_........_
W &WTml suoo. d'J.1111. JIM MAllMO ~~ 541·3 417 0
' •72 Bue. reblt, new paint. wirn , l~ded: s11.eoo: • 71 G r a a d P r I x • LateaiOdel"f~.aod .,.t 9715 Yftfl.~tl~ , · am/fm cut, as mps, Lo m i. <213Z F K > J~~M am/fm/lltl,alr,'1•. Vo~•oi . Call \at•••••••• .. •••••••"••• HUNTIMGTONBEACH 71 To1ota Cellea xlnt,SZllJ0.-...11 145--.Dlr., "JlllHirllOr81Vd. ..._ TO •y111 Llltbaek, ao.ooo ml, ood "-·M · ft '7' Capri n to, tnrf, .... _. ..._,_ ...... ··-•• 'TIVWCamper,topolth• '72 Gold Cad n eetw • ~ •a AaaJll'ln.,P~•N.CODlact -=-:;:::::=•,.....:;_::;:=::::::==t==i...;"~-~rw ~ rifi ... 11ffwvD:"'~~~!!11911dr~~~~~~~~~~~-t:::=::~~~!!:::::::=J'"~~~~~~~!!.81'~""'!
Rob 4M·MA an1t\me •a 1108. Sale or u ran=-:..... alnl Am irm. awalni, ca: tree. uooo. T14·1Hl. .....1 uuene deck, 1oo4
att.r•. CoD•ertitM. COINI .... /080. Kao bUrplar alarm. '7800, -.-afterlpm. ...-·u ~.Sll00.Car1Ml.-
._71MAM• m.-•••••••••••••••••••••• 'Tl V ... mint eooct., oril . 141 ... • '1t ISVILI.&. llOCllll"OCll, .. DM1t Dart • .._ _,, '14 .......... a.• .t"
ow ..... orta peiat. P.P .. ·-,-.. -d-.... --l -,-.-.-a-n_t _,lD-1 ELL Idle Item• with a ........... Loedff ..... .i. -IN•t. ·-... --oft. ~=~~~~~~:~bn~t~olf91~~·~-~_.~ _ _J Dall~ PlkltClualned1. Dall>' Pilot Cla11llled Ad. 911,•, ... ,_ -· --· 111.-•
.J
,.
?. A HEAL THY YOU -Supplement to Coast LIFE. Jan. 21 . 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Jan 22. 1981
LIDO NAVTILUS ~CENTER is deai1nin1 individual work-out
programs to 1et you in shape for 1981. Juat 30 minutes three days a week
for total fitness and a healthier you. Call 875-1171.
WE'VE HELPED
A MAN WHO WAS 110 LBS.
OVER WEIGHT ...
-- -
A WOMAN WHO WANTED TO GO BACK
TO SCHOOL AT AGE 42 ...
A MAN WHO WAS IN PAIN FOR
SEVEN YEARS ...
A TEENAGED GIRL WHO IS A
COMPETITIVE SWIMMER ...
A MAN WHO WAS AN INSOMNIAC FOR
28 YEARS ...
A WOMAN WHO WANTED TO DANCE ...
AND
UNDERACHIEVERS (TO ACHIEVE)
SMOKERS (TO STOP)
AT HL~l=E&f.T-0 EXCEL)
STU DENTS (TO CONCENTRATE)
SALESMEN (TO SELL)
PEOPLE WHO WANT TO KNOW THEMSELVES
AND PEOPLE WHO JUST WANT TO
RELAX
WE CAN HELP YOU •••
Initial Interview At No Charge /
The only Hypnotist llcented by the aty of Coeta M..a
COSTA MESA HYPNOSIS CENTER "' ................. c....,..._ CA. nw ,._ Mt-6111
By JAMt:S J. POND
P•riuo..., E•1tor
Good health contains a special significance for Orange Coast residents
who are young. active and sports-minded.
An accommodating climate, numerous recreational act1v1t1es and
services create a health·oriented atmosphere for people on the Orange
Coast .
.. A Healthy You " is the January edition of Periscope. the Oatly Pilot's
s pecial themed monthly magazine
A special feature of "A Healthy You " is a preview of the World
Masters Marathon of Irvine and the 2nd Annual Run for Hoag.
The marathon is co-sponsored by the Irvine Chamber of Commerce
and the Daily Pilot.
Also included in the section ne stones and pictures !>potlighting
health-related activities and trends.
In addition. Periscope staff writers and photographers have compiled
stories and photos of area merchants and their health-related ser vices and
products.
Next month's edition of Periscope, "Just the Two of You , .. will focus
on the lifestyle of rom antkaJly inclined adults.
Popularity of distance running
explained by Coach John Blair
The popularity of organized dis·
lance rwmlng was stimulated about
seven or eight years ago, according
to John Blair, race director and
Corona Del Mar track and cross
country coach.
"That was the time 'Runner's
World' magazine came on the
scene, along with the imported run·
ning shoe," said Blair.
•·People started buying the shoes,
C/ennis ...
c5} CLifetime of
CJ-lappiness
The Tennis Playw'I Club
1171 Jambof .. ~
Newport BNch, CA 92980
Telephone 7141M4-6900
enjoyed the comfort they provided
and started running,·· he added.
There have been road races going
on since the early '60s. but it involved
only 50to t50people.
The number of regular runners
has decreased somewhat but the
number of races, particularly here
in Orange County, have increased to
<See RACES on page 16>
f
J
f
I
Suppl(•no(•nt IQ Cot1>! LIF[ Jdn <!1 1981 IS DAILY PILOl Jan 22 1981 A HEAL THY YOU .I
World MasterC""'============ Two thousand runners will participate in the 9th Annual World
Masters Marathon of Irvi ne Sunday morning.
"'O ro 0 a::
'O I.. 0
of Irvine . RACE COURSE Marathon~
CD
Bryan Avenue
'O ro 0 a::
Irvine Boulevard
@
c 0 > c ro u
'O ~ I!
Finish in Stadium > ---
The event is co· sponsored by the Irvine Chamber of Commerce and
the Daily Pilot.
t"or race facts and timetable, see story on page S
This full marathon hotds particular interest for avid runners
Lhroughoutthecountry
The reason., A fast and flat track with only a few overpasses
The course 1s <'C'rt1hed. and participants can qualify for the Boi.tcin
Marathon
Runnerl>of Lill a~e:-. will he r eprel>ented
Part1ciµat111g <1re ~oel Johnson or San IJ1ego. age 81 <1nd Monte
~1ontgomery of Sherman 0<1ks. age 74
One of the finest hui>b<1nd·wife combanauons. Sue and Pete Peterson
of L<1guna Bea<·h are running 1n the m<1rathon
The American Skate Patrol. a grouµ of para,.med1c '\
will patrol the course while on rollcrskates. attending to
an) µerson needing assistancl'
~ I Walnut Avenue
I
1
! ; ir=--Trabuco Road
Walnut (.;;\ QI
Avenue ~25 -, Start I -~~-JJ
lh•a<'I. a ten-man grc1up ltd by Bcn1amin Kroui.e. will
be in charge of communH·atinn h~ CB radio which -will
!'>11an thl'ent1ret~ of the track
Leading th<.• rart' art' the faml:'d Irvine Pollt•t·
M otnn•) c le ~uad under Ser ge<1 nt Hobert K r ed I
Sc-<111 Perr . Patrol leader ex11la1ncd that the group I a
non profi t urganization I has \ oluntari I) worked at about
QI :J c
QI > ct
"'O .... ro > I.. ro
I
:
,,,\~~· . (fr/ ~ I ,,• '/, > ~ "~J~l"' ct '1~f ~ ® ·~ '" ~ ~ 1
®
Irvine Center Drive
.... QI >
:J u
RACE LOCATION
SAN DIEGO FWY (40S)
> QI .... --QI -,
trn running races . roller!.kating r<1ec:-. and p<1rades.
Hunning duh:-. 1nvol\ed <trl' l.ocst:horns or Orangt•
County. the Newport HcaC'h Hunncr!. A!.sociation. the
St·nwr Trac:k Club. Santa ~on11·::.t Track Club, and San
Ft•rnandoTrac k Club
Volunteers from Irvine lhgh School include Mrk c
Nis hida. Paul Wright, Jonas Oblouk. J eff Wollard, Ken
Simms .• Janel Lam. Sheri Satterwhite. Jason Mills, Mike
Oerair and Cyr il Oblouk
Donating c ups for the event 1s Carls Junio r. located at
4770 Irvine Boulevard and inanaged by Ken Temmie
T hey are also donating their restroom facilities for the
ra«C
I.ate appli cations will be C1crepted until 7 a m on race
day
Late entry fee 1s S8 C1nd includes a tee-shirt
Sa n Diego Creek Bike Trail
The race will begin at 7 :45 am sharp at Irvine J11gh
S<'houl
For more information, CCIII the Ua1ly Pilot at 1342·4321.
cxtens ion242 Please do not phone Irvine ~ligh __
PPOSI PIZZ
20% OFF
(
AMY PURCHASE OVER $1.00
OM RACE DAY, JANUARY 25
HAPPY HOUR OM BEER AL~ DAY
14450 Culver Dr.
Heritage Plaza
C.t.er mcl Walnut
'" ...
Phone 857-0160
4 A HEAL THY YOU -Supplement to Coast LIFE , Jan. 21 , 1981 & DAIL Y PILOT, Jan 22, 1981
ARLYN SMITH, Irvine chamber sports committee chairman, and Kristen
Engel model official marathon tee shirts.
----= ~ ~ ~
M••w ....... _....,... ... ...._,, • ................................ _
., ,..,..., ................. ., 0...,..
C.-ly. ,....., ... .._.., ._...,,. fet
··~.k-.-....--..... .,. ...., ..... , .... u......, .. -:::.-! .. w •... _ .... ., .. ,..., ...
• 16-llGHTED TENNIS COURTS
• 4-INDOOll ltACQUfT IAU. COURTS
• SEPARATE FAC1UTIE$.MEN & WOMEN
IHClUDH:
• EXDCISI llOOM • DAHCJ flOOlt
• JMllZZI • &.OUllR VIEWING IEG
• 2-STOIY QUI HOUSE• HUI.TH W
• PIO-SHOP • #PMB SHOP • SAUNA
• lOClEIS • JUNIOI DMlOfWNT PIOGltAM
SUtlCfN atml COURT WITH
SEATING WMJTY FOR 500 ,------µi.-ar.nu------------· 0 I ®L. L1ND80RG RACQUET (t.UB
..... • o.J~
.,. GUEST CARO P-i ~ ...... , .............................. .
'
,
1
It lilftft\le TO UM AU. ClUI ~ .... , .... , ,,. ............................ _ ' ............... .
Race director
a veteran
Bill SeJvin, race director of the
9 t h Annual World Ma s ters
Marathon of Irvine, is a veteran
when it comes to organizing and
planning marathon races.
Selv10 has been direct i ng
marathons for 15 years. ~elvin, 70, has devoted his entire
life to teaching and lecturing
ph ys ical education, coaching
athletics and promoting various
major athletic events across the
country.
He coached the first girls softball
t e am t o play at Yank ee
Stadium.
He introduced the first girls
softball game at Madison Square
Garden before a tum-away crowd
of more than 10,000.
He s tarted c oordinating
marathons with the Los Vegas Sun
Ne wspaper in 1967.
Since the n, Selvin has held
races at Anaheim Stadium and
Chapman College.
A runner himself, Selvin prides
himself on "thinking of ways to
mak e things eas ie r for the
m ar athoner."
A lot of time and effort goes into
conducting a smooth-r unning event.
he sa ys.
Selvin points to the 1979 World
Masters Marathon as an example.
··I received many letters and
testimonies complimenting the effi-
cient handling of volunteers," he
said.
To insure that the 1981 marathon
1s equally successful , Selvin has
planned and organized for s ix
months.
During this time he traveled
almost every weekend to race from
San Diego to the San Fernando
Valley to hand out flyers and entry
blanks.
Athletic clubs cater to families
Rancho San Joaquin (Irvine) and
Rancho Mesa Verde <Costa Mesa)
Athletic Clubs are full service,
family-oriented health facilities.
Members enjoy racquetball, hand
squash, basketball, volleyball. bad-
minton. swimming, running, weight
training. nautilus, aerobic exercise.
jazzercise, yoga , massage, sauna
and jacuzzi.
According to owner Dick Davis,
personalized instruction is offered
to every member.
Both clubs are private and mem-
bers pay a reasonable initiation fee
along with monthly dues .
Speci~lizing
m
BROILED
FISH
No contracts are signed.
The popular exercise classes are
held throughout the da y from early
morning through the evenings
Davis expl ained.
Some of these classes are co-ed,
a nd some ar e for wo m e n ex·
elus ively.
Club hours are 6 a.m. to 10 p.m
Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 9
p.m . Satur;day and 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday.
Fo r m or e information. call
Rancho San Joaquin at 551·4421 or
Rancho Mesa Verde at 557-4401 .
'O'
FISH
Slaw. Fries and
Beverage
•LUNCHES
•DINNERS
Broiled or Fried Wl91Tlll~Ad
Hours: Mon. thru Thurs. 11-8 p.m.
Fri. 11-9 p.m .
Sat. 12-9 p.m.
For Take Out Phone 559-9111
CAMINO PLAZA ~EFFREY ROAD & WALNUT
at the Santa Ana Frwv.
\ I I I
,.
Daily Pilot announces important facts
and times for Sunday's marathon
Late entrants for the Irvine marathon should
arrive at 6 a .m . lo register.
Trophies will be awarded from about 9:45 a .m.
until approximately noon .
Last finisher is expected at about 1 p.m .
. Spectator vantage points -For the start:
Heritage Park; mile 11 to 14 from Woodbridge Shop-
ping Center. Barranca Road between Culver Drive
and Jeffrey Road.
Runners will pass San Diego Bike Trail afte r
8 : 45 a . m . For the finish: I rvine Hi gh School
Stadium.
Parking is available at Escolar lot behind
Irvine High School and Heritage Park lots off Yale
at Walnut Avenue.
No parking on Walnut Avenue or in the Wa lnut
A venue lot of Irvine Hjgh School.
Wal nut Street will be closed at the start.
Jeffrey will be closed for the duration of the
race from Walnut to Trabuco Road.
9th· Annual
Wot'ld Masters
Marathon ~~
of ITvine
Supplement to Coast LIFE. Jan 21, 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Jan 2~. 1981 -A H EAL THY YOU 5
Beau gr care for the
J health-minded
By SHERREE TRUITT-----------. ... ri'><•,_ Sl•lf Wtll•r
There are many types and makel>
of beauty care products for the
health-minded
Organic products are available
for those who le an toward naturali·
ty. and a still laq~er varie ty of non
or~a nic products .
For health club goers. hair care
<ind fa c ial product s c an be
purchased which react in the sauna
and steam r oom to condition hair
and facial skin
The steam room and Sil una are
excellent fo r cleansin,:: port's of
facial and body skin
Accepted historically as a beauty
aid. the idea of steam to open and
clean facial pores has broadened
from boiling water on the stove lo
saunas and steam rooms for the en·
tire body
Sauna enthusiasts recommend US·
ing a loofah (much like a rough
washcloth) to rub off dead skin
while in the s auna.
When one fi nishes. the skin ap·
pears porcelain-like, glowing and
beautiful.
After the sauna and s team, a cold
s hower to close pores is recom-
m ended.
While in the sauna o r steam
room. indi\'1duals wishing to condi·
tion hair can do so very effectively.
A l'Onditwne r is applied to hair
a nd the head is wrapped with a
towel
Then sauna and !>team using both
the heal and steam to accelerate
the conditioning process.
Conditioning hair in this way will
insure that one acquires full benefit
o r the conditioner
The correct l'Ondit1oner is dif·
fere nt for each person
The best way to find the condi-
tioner which works best for you is to
shop intelligently Halk to a beauty
specialist. or try a health club that
has in -house beauty professionals)
and experiment
Never ente r a dry heat room
(sauna) without first wr apping
head in a towel or l'ap.
Unlike steam. dry heat will dry
out the hair. ,
T he sauna room s ubjects hair lo
an extreme hot and dry environ-
ment. one which can be severely
damaging lo h air if r epeated
without protection.
Always cover hair while taking a
s auna. regardless of whether or not
you are conditioning hair.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S
PREMIER OUTDOOR LIVING SHOWROOM
SERVING ORANGE COUNTY SINCE 1977
_:~-.. -
O QQ O ~ ~v · January Specials
2840 lo. Hert»or 81vd. ~1r;;-rni9!lnil~=~-:::-!..7"W'iliitr--1 Free Spa Box!
With Each System Sold• lenteAna, CA
(714) 548-3700
(1 Block So. of War~r)
0,.. 7 D9YI A Wffla
Hows: 10.6
(ectual ehowroom leyout)
Prices quoted by phone Free
in home Installation quotes
Featuring:
--........ CIDlllOu!ed ...
e A HEAL THY YOU -Supplement to CoU1 LIFE. Jan. 21. 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Jan 22. 1981 *
personal maffer
..
By SHEaEE TllUl1T
~SUt!Writw
If you're looking for the secret to
feeling better and living longer, one
nationally-known medical and
health authority suggests you look
first in the mirror.
·'The realities of modern health
problems point to a new emphasis
on individual and soci al
responsibility for health and a
decreased dependence on the
medical profession," said former
Assistant Secretary of Health,
Rancho San Joaquin Athletic Club
arid
Rancho Mesa Verde Athletic Oub
can make
A Healthy You!
"""'" L . ~ """'-----1flllr.oiil ~ . ....... . -·----,~ ....
Glvt Us A Chance & Givt You,.. A Chane ..
• RaCQuetball
• Volleyball * Aerobk: Dance -Jazzercise
•Jacuzzi -Sauna
• Masaage
• Swimming -Running
• Nautilus -Weight Training
• Basketball
Education and Welfare Phrnp R.
Lee, M.D.
Lee coordinated development of
''The Nation's Health," a 15-article
Course by Newspaper series that
begins Feb. 7 in The Daily Pilot.
Credit may be earned by enroll-
ing at Coastline Community
College. Call 963-0824 to register.
"More and more people have
come to appreciate these realities,
and have begun to take personal
responsibility for their own well-
beinf," added Lee. who directs the
Hea th Policy Program at the
University of California, San Fran-
cisco, School of Medicine.
''The chronic degenerative dis-
eases of the mid-twentieth century
-cardiovascular diseases,
arthritis, cancer, mental illness,
stroke -cannot be conquered by
medicine alone," Lee explained.
"Their multiple causes are rooted
not only in our biological makeup
and responses to infectious agents,
but in our behavior and such com-
plex social factors as poverty and
education, as well as in the modern
industrial, urban environment."
While eliminating some health
hazards may take decades. Lee
says the solution to the country's
number one health problem is right
at our fingertips: "Probably no
single action will have as much ef-
fect on the future health of
Am e ricans as decisions about
cigarette smoking."
We can also greatly improve our
chances for longer. healthier Ii ves
by exercising regularly, holding
down intake of animal fats and re-
fined sugar and eating more com-
plex carbohydrates and fiber, Lee
says.
He sees further potential for
widespread improvement in the
country's health status through col-
lective action, such as demanding
effective measures to deal with
chemical waste. radiation and other
en vironmental hazards. and the
emergence of self-care and mutual
aid groups which now are active in
most communitiess.
Lee, who frequently advises gov -
ernmental policymakers, is well-
acquainted with the complex and
powerful forces that work against
healthier habits and living condi-
tions.
"Special interests often influence
public policy in such a way as to
make healthy changes in life-style
difficult, if not impossible," Lee as-
serted.
"Industries oppose regulation and
claim that it costs too much to re-
duce pollution and protect our
health."
"Progress in improving health
(See HEALTH oa page H>
IRVINE l<XX AND KEY SERVla
1447 4 11C" CUL YB DR., IRYINE
HERITAGE PLAZA (It's A New Location)
•DEADBOLTS
• l<XX COMBO CHANGES
FOR HOME OA OFFICE
• FIRE Al.ARMS
•SAFES
• BIKE l<XXS
• HIGH SEOJRITY DEADBOl TS
• AUTO and HOME LOCKOUTS
IN IRVINE FOR OVER
8 YEARS
Run for Hoag
on January 31
More than 2000 men, women and
children will participate Saturday,
January 31st in the second annual 5
and 10 K "Run for Hoag.··
It is being held in connection wilh
the seventh a nnual "Clambake
Week."
Net proceeds from the week's
events. highlighted by the $25,000
C r os by Southern Pro·Am golf
tournament (Feb. 5 and 6 ) will
benefit Hoag Me morial Hospital
Presbyterian.
The runs <3.l and 6.2 miles) over
a flat, fast certified course, will be
sponsored by California First Bank
and directed by John Blair, vetera~
Corona Del Mar High School track
and cross country coach.
MAP SHOWS Hoag races.
r-------------------1 l ENTRY FORM
I Check OI Mooey Order ~to.
I !'1!'12 Clut:> Run fOI Hoag.
Moll 10'. llun for Hoag.
301 N-porl Blltd • Box Y,
Newport 9eoch. CA 92663
Deodlonec Postmark mldmgl'll. Joouorv 26. 1981
'ie< Mote 0 femo1e 0
Age on OOy ot 111n
Nome
AOOtess
C•'Y SIOte Zip
DoV11me Pf"IOne I
r sn1f1 size S M l XI. (C11c1e one)
SJ w1ln I sn1n
S4 w1lnov1 1 sn1r1
S1() Fam.ly fnlry (Minimum 3 membelsl
SJ I sMt onlv no 1 sMI
tote 1eg1sl!otl0f\ ssoo
l~ANTI LEGAL WAIVIR MUST
BE COMPlmD ANO SIGNED
In constdelotlOn Ol lhe occeplonce of tt>1s enlf\I
1n sold 1ooc:t roce to be held°" Jonuorv 31. 1981
Irvine. Col110fnl0 we tt>e undetslQNKI porticoponts
ond (of por11<:iponl •s unde! 18 veo•s of oge)
p0<ent 0< gvoroon 1n1end1ng 10 be legotty
bound dO t>eret>yfo< OYtsel\/9$. 01 he11s. eiecutors.
and odm1n1stTol0<s waive. re4eose. ond f01ever
dtscr>orge ony ol1d Oii rionls ond c101ms IOI
oornoges wn1<:t> we 01 el1hel of us. moy have 01
...m.cn may hefeofl8f OCCfue IO vs. Of emw of us
ogoinsl onv ol1d oll peti.ons 0tgonizot10ns. ond
legal en11toes olN4oled with sucn roce mae
por1tCUlaly. the Amo~ Alhlette Unior\ lhe long
Otstonce Runnong COOY'11111ee. COltfotn.o F•st Bonk Hoag Memo1101 Ho5QllOI PTesbyte1oon
JOIY'l Btow. lhe City of Irvine togelhet wtlh ITlell
unpecir.e olrtc«s ogents. •8Cl1Menl0t1119S.
en"(Jlovees svccesSO<s owgns ol1d OI SPQnSO<s.
fol onv oncf'oll domoges wtlteh mov be suslOtned
OI sulfe•ed bV us on connectton wtth. OI entry It\ onc:t Ot onslng out ol our tTovelong to, porticlPOliOl'I
in. ond returning !lorn sold •OOd roce
l hls wolllef •s eieoUled by !tie understgned non·
W1lhSkmdir'19 \1542 Ol lhe ColllornlO CMI Code
Stgned
~ed
Suoolemenl lo Coast LIFE. Jan. 21. 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Jan 22, 1981 -A HEAL THY YOU 7
Last year approximately 1200
people ran in the inaugural 10 K '·Run
for Hoag."
It was won by Bill St. J ohn of
Costa Mesa, a student at San Diego
Stale University, in 32 minutes. 22
seconds , over a Back Bay course.
Jennifer Weiss of El Toro was the
first woman to finish.
Applicants may fill out entrv
blanks and submit them at 8 a.rri.
Saturday at the Fluor Corporaticn
check·in center on Carlson Avenue
between Michelson Avenue and
Campus Drive in Irvine.
Awards numbering 85 overall for
16 divisions of competition in the
"Run for Hoag" will be presented
immediately following tabulation of
results.
2NDANNUAL
(;ALIFORNIA FIRSI' BANK
RUN FOR HOAG
Get into the Great Shape·· Diet.
It's the new and 100% 1U1t11ra/way to lose weight!
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ah~olurdy without t·aftdnl' or harmfu l tlnag~.
• Cirl·at ~hap<.· b thl' tripk-action c.lil't aid 1ha1 IC.:alllrl':O"
o ~rx·d;1I hulking a~l'llb 10 make.: ro u li:d full o n
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0 hl·rhal nuil.I diminator~ to flu~h awar <.·X<.'l'SI\ water
\WiW1t and hloat
o dkrarr fih<:r to ~rx·etl fi><><l throu~h your ~rstl·m
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January hon us!
fllll f® ·111i~ m11111h onh a ~ll·IJhkc hollk ol our
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ANAHEIM GAR~GllOVE SAN CLEMENTE
(714) S33-0261 (714) 1041 (714) .fJM.565 "~'fl\ Nf-tt 2374 W. Lincoln Ave. 9797 Chapman Ave. ~ 81 C•ll•de lndustrlas
at Gllber1 near Gemc.o In front of J .C. Penney's In P ico Plaza near Ralphs ~~' In the Garden Grove Mall ~ G NC N ER
COSTA MESA ........ HUNTINGTON a•ACH SANTAANA 1111•:-z•w. ~ (114, "'11'
C7U) 646-9534 (714) 963-5694 ( 714) 549-5203 "'-!ar MoPllllMl'Y W•rds
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next to Ralptls Market In the Albertson's Center behind Lloyd's Bank
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next to Vons on El Toro Rd. In the Von's Center In L•rwtn S...r• Albertton's SMpplng Center
8A HEAL THY YOU -Supplement to Coast LIFE. Jan. 21 . t981 & DAILY PILOT. Jan 22. 1981
Health program
free of charge
.. Fot·us on Communit\' llealth" 1:.
a t•ontinuing year around program
at l'ac1fil'a Communtt.' Hos pital in
llunllngton .lkac·h
T h l' p r o g r a m r l' l' t• 1 \' e ., e n
thu:.1<J~t1 c rc~1><1n:.t· "1th stand1n).!
room onh atll'nclanl'I.' a t lht· foruin~. !>~111 1 11;.tr"> ;ind ""rltshop:.
pr<'M'nlt·d frl·e uf r·h ;:rgr· h\' tht·
ho:.p1tal ·
/\tl·ordinlo( tu l>ort!-C'onfer. ad
rn ir11!-tratur. the h11~p1 ta l's C'arm(·n
Yuppa Confen•n<·t• Ccntt'r 1s usl•tl
for a wide \'anl•t\ of communll'
M·n·1ce and health education pn;
).!rams on :,ubJl'l'l~ including mental
hl'alth. diabetes. strl'!>S, alcoholism
cancl'r. heart attac ks. and more .
"Pacifica Community Hospital 1~
a community Hosp1lal." Confer con
tinued.
"We place emph asis on the com·
m unity because it exemplifies our
primary concern: t he health of the
people who live in o ur ser vice
area."
WEIGlfl" CL-'SS INSTRUCTOR Ron Gentile ,directs members at Lindborg Racquet Club in Huntington
Beach. Call 536-88.12 . DORIS ('O!'lit'ER
'outhern CGlil01ftia
WHAT'S HAPPENING IN SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA ROAD RACING?
Find out in The Southern California Runner. a bimonthly
publication specializing in coverage of upcoming running
events and race results in Southern Califo rnia.
For more information write to The Running Company.
P.O. Box 1497, Santa Ana. California 92702.
. .......... .. .. . . . ·--.......... ·~·
YES' Sign me up for a Subscription to Southern California Runner.
0 1 YEAR SUBSCRIPTION $10 0 2 YEAR SUBSCRIPTION $18
NAME ----------------------ADDRESS ____________ _._ ______ _
CITY ___________ STATE ____ ZIP ---
Make check• payable to: •
THE RUNNING COMPANY c-, P.O. BOX 1497, SANTA ANA. CA 92702
Dental Check Up
• Full Mouth Xrays • Oral Examination
• Doctors Consultation Fee •1()00
Childs Cleaning • Tooth Polishing
• Flouride Treatment
Fee •100o
Adult Cleaning
Fee •1 ()00 & up
ALAN K. NEWMAN, ·o .D.S. Gi1w .. D1atl*y ~
J 117' hi Oltltpo St.. W1e t, S.. .... ce,a.tr ...
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,.
Supplement to Coast LIFE Jan 21 1981 & DAILY PILOT Jan 22 1981 -A HEAL THY YOU 9
Coastline Community College
offers workshops and lectures
Your health and that or your
loved ones is the topic or a series of
progra ms this spring at Coastline
Co mmunity College.
The college and the Daily Pilot
news paper will present "The Na-
tion's Health." a newspaper series
and course by newspaper.
There is no tuition for the course
and only by registering will readers
of the series be able to interact with
Terry Monroe, Ed.M .. M.S .. the
course learning mana~er.
Workshops and lectures on the
topic of health. stress, and wellness
are also offered by Coastline Com-
munity College.
"Your Blueprint for a Winning
Lifestyle: A Living Approach to Fit·
ness a nd Nutrition," featuring
Monroe. is a one-day works hop to
be held from 9 a .m. to 4 p.m. Satur-
day . April 25 at Mesa Verde Learn-
ing Center in CGsla Mesa.
The prog ram will a ddress
personal levels of fitness, stress
ma nagement. and the physical
benefits of good diet.
A $10 re~islralion fe e includes
lunr h ·
ror registration information.
phone 963-0811 .
Other health related lectures and
workshops include:
"Stress Management," with Judy
Albert. from 9 :30 a.m . to 11 :30
a.m. or 7:30 p.m . to 11:30 p.m.
Wednesdays, beginning Feb. 11, at
the Mesa Verde Learning Center.
-"Living Fully and Avoiding
Burnout," with Fr aser Powlison,
9:30 a .m. to4:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb.
28, at the Sheraton Newport.
"Understanding Your Sexuali·
ly." with Carol We lls. 9 a.m. to noon.
Tuesdays, beginning March 10, al the
Huntington Beach Library.
"Living with a Compulsive
Person : How to Make Your Life
Better," with David Lynn-hill, 7
p.m . to 10 p.m. Tuesdays, beginning
Marc h 10, al the Unitarian
Universalist Church in Costa Mesa.
-"The Holistic Approach to
Health: Insuring Your Wellness
and Awakening Your Natural Heal-
ing Powers," with Rita Uni man, 9
a. m . to 4:30 p.m . on Saturday.
March 14 at the Marriott Hotel.
-''Self-Hypnosis: A Key to Your
Inner Self." with Bobbe Sommer. 9
a .m . to4:30 p.m. Saturday, March28
at the Airporter Inn.
"Feeling Fil Looking Good."
with Sheila Cluff, 9 a.m. to l p.m. on
Saturday, April 4 at the Mesa Verde
Learning Center.
"Stress Management: llow to
Relax and Control Worry," with Judy
Albert. 9:30 to 11 :30 a.m. or 7:30 pm.
to 9:30 p.m. Wednesdays, beginning
April 22. at the Mesa Ve rde Learning
Center.
"Reachin g and Ma intai ning
Your Fitness Potential," with Ken-
neth Ravizza. 9 a .m . lo 5 p.m. Satur-
day, May9atthe Mesa Ve rde Learn-
ing Center.
·'Self-Esteem : Celebrate Being
You ," with Fraser Powlison, 9: 30
a .m. to4 :30o.m. Saturday, May 16.
Additional information about the
Course by Newspaper and the lee·
lures and workshops may be found in
the Coastline Community College
section ofthis tabloid, or call the col·
lege Admissions Offi ce at963·0824.
-\
'-~ .
\ ..... \ • FREDERICA L. GOLD, left, and Victoria D. Silva specialize in con-
temporary women's needs through self-hypnosis and applied hypnosis.
Both have doctorates. Their business, Gold, Silva and Associates is at 95.50
Warner Ave., Fountain Valley.
:YOUR FULL SERVICE FLORIST, OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
G ND OPENING
JANUARY 25, 1981
FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS
FREE COUPON BOOK
Good For 12 Months.
WE SPECIALIZE IN:
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•Grand Openings
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PLA•IS A•D llFIS
OUR SPECIAL Tl ES
• Heritage Antiques
• Dish Gardens & Terrariums
•Custom Made Macrames
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•Wood Plant Stands
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• Custom Made Water Fountains
Houra: 10 a.m. to I p.m. Deir; 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sat., 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. lunday
WORLD WIDE WIRE SERVICE HERITAGE FLORIST
14474 CULVER DRIVE • IRVINE • <Corner of W•lnut & Culver>
N
857-1111 WE DELIVER
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1-
10 A HEAL THV VOU -Supplement to Coast LIFE, Jan 21 . 1981 & DAIL V PILOT. Jan 22. 1981
alth
A Dramatic Serles Course by Newspaper Brought To You by
Coastline Community College and the Orange Coast Daily Pilot.
The Nation·s
"Many Americans art' asking today why we are not
enjoying better health and longer life. It seems that
there Is a gap betwnn tht> money we pour Into health
rar.-and biomedical rt'search and the bt'neflts Wf'
recelvt' as individuals and as a society."
Phillip R. 1.ee, M.D.
Amen ra's hc<tlth t'arc sysll'm has 1mprov11d
dramatically in the past two de(•ades Most Americans
are healthier and enJoymg longer hves than they did Cl
1tenerat1cm ago. The inferlious d1seC1ses which have
plagued man since the beginning or time have been
virtually eliminated in this country. Medical technology 1s
at an all·lime high and stands on exriting new thresholds
Yet more and more Americans are expressing
dissal1sfacllon w1lh the system that has provided these
benefits Complaints range from runaway mediral and drug
costs, to over-speciali7.ation. to the enormous influence a
few special-interest g roups exert over the
health destiny or millions
Courses by Newspaper examines this comvlex and
controversial subject in its insightful series on "The
Nation's llealth ...
In a thought· provoking series or 15 newspaper articles
coordinated by Philip R. Lee, M.O, Professor of Social
Medicine and Director of the Health Poliry Program at
the University or California. San Francisco. School or
Medicine, physicians, authors. and educators in various
public health specialties from across the nation consider
such issues as the costs of medical care; the
responsibilities of the individual. health care prartilioners.
and society for health; inequities in health status and health
care : the politics or health: and the issues
surrounding modern drugs, medical technology, and
biomedical research
Additional pers1>ectives on the nation's health care
system, its problems, solutions. and future are provided
in a comphehensive book of readings edited by Dr. Lee
and his colleagues. A Study Gulde containing
bibliographies and discussion questions has been
prepared to act·ompany the course READt:R.
COURSE OUTLINE
Part One: The Role of Medicine: An Overview
I . Medicine and He.Ith
Whal Is the role of med1cme in relation to other
factors that shape our health'!
2. He.Ith Status and Its Determinants
llow and why have our patterns or ht'alth
and disease changed over the years?
3. Th.-Medlcall11tion of American Society
What are tht> assumptions and dangers or thr
increasin~ role or medirine in our society~
Part Two: The Health Care System
.f. The Shaping of Our Medical System
Will America'!! health care system based on
frt.'<' cnterµrisc. he a hie to c1>1>e with the
problems of mrrcasin~ size. romplexit~. and
go\lernment regulation"
5. Thf' Organlutlon nf Hulth Carr
What arc Wlc underlying reasons ror
Americans· dlst'ontcnt with the n11lilm '11 ht•alth
rare system?
6. Spt"d1Usts, <:enerallsts and New Health
Practitioners
What are the forces that ha,·e ~ven nse to
11pcrialization in America's health rare !iystem"
1. The Right tn Health Care
What ronstitutes 8 minimum acceptable lt>vel or health care. and what arc the problems
Part Three: Problems in Paradise
H. Why Dcwi. Medical Care Cost So Much?
llow cl1.11.·i. thl' system of paying ror medical
l'ilrl' tontnhutc to 1ti; h1~h costs. and what can
ht• done to 1·urh the ratt• or increase in rosts'•
9. lnf"Qulti.-s in Health and Health Care
Why ar(• thl're inequities in health and arcess
to the ht:alth care systrm. and what can bt>
don<' about them?
10. Modem Medicines: Miracle or Menace?
Whal is the• role or the government in assuring
that the hencrits or modern drugs outweigh
their potential risks?
Part Four: The Search for Solutions:
Frontiers of Knowledge
11. Of Magic Bullets and the Future:
Biomedical Research
Can medical science cure all ills, physical. and
emotional. and what are the implications of the
medical advances which lie ahead?
12. A Social Science Perspective:
Aging In America
Why is the effect or biologic aging on health
still so widely misunderstood, and how do non·
medical factors, such as income level. stress,
and environment affect aging'.'
13. The Politics of Health
What are tht> major special interest groups
which shape the nation's health policy. and will
Learning Manager Ter ry Monroe.
Ed M .. M.S . is the learning manager for
the Coastline Community College Course
by Newspaper offered through the Daily
Pilot Monroe is the director of Personal
Health Programs for the Newport Bearh
Psychological Associates. Hts educational
background inrludes clinical psycholo~v
and health education at Harvard ·
Leern et Home
"The Nation's Health."
a College Course
these groups continue lo rall the shots? Beginning m the Feb. 7 issue of the Daily
14. The Role of the Individual in Hulth Care Pilot. "The Nation's Health, .. a 2·unit
What is the motivation behind the trend to college credit course. will begin a 15-week
"self-care" and to what extent can individuals run. Preregister for this course with tht•
meet their own health·care needs? form below and complete materials will
15. Health and the Future: Individual be sent to you. Only registered student!'
alld Social Responslbllity will be able to interact with Tern·
What can Americans do as individuals and as Monroe, learning manager. You can learn
a society to control environment, the contents in the ease and comfort of \lour own home
of food 11nd drugs, and lake care of those who with this Course by Newspaper and earn are unable to care ror themselves'.' college credit.
·---------------------------------·----, I Pre-I •• R·e1•1strat·100 Form COASTLINE COMMUNITY COLLEG1E27... 11 10231 lleter A•enue. Founletn V811er. Celllornl• ....
I I I ... n, .. ~:1111111 ·· 11•·:11 111" I I coo •""•C<>"'"'Y"''vc1111•ci• Course :11·:11 111 1·11,1.·:11 11111 1~l:1 I IOf"nl1f1c1hon Nutnt)flt a I ·-..:_ L y :L r11 i "' I I I Un•"""'" '~ ... (ll•n• Newspaper 'I',, Ji, I =:::II~ I I
I I I 11,, .. ,, ""''"'' I
I N•..-r u·~''·n~tt I I l ~,, .... , iVi .... I\,,. , .. ~ ,. .. ~. I
I ( \IARfNl I I i'OnPr\<\ "'-'" & <.tt,.., '"~ ~. •v 'c •·•·• '""'£ I
I I I ,.,.,, N p111 •Our> l•f'fC\fNT su v '"' 1 "' ''°''"''" m c.1N' I ~•''"''~ rt~. "'"'• I I I 11N•1£o s rA1tc:;c111 t £N'O • .. O"leo •fNO •yPf O•ll•'>•,.HO ""'l •'-' H I
I 111(,H[S t (\RAO! C:OMPo 1 rro r11>r1 f l)N( 9 ,,, t I ., t I •• ,... II~ .... • • • I
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Supplement to Coast LIFE, Jan . 21 , 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Jan 22. 1981 -A HEALTHY YOU 11
HE.Al TH LECTURES AND WORKSHOPS
Coastline Community College Offers Wide Range of Free or Low Cost Activities
What are your
hea Ith needs?
Health is more than the absence
of illness.
It is the positive and vital
interplay between the mental
and physical. Healthful activities
can be learned and having been
learned can be used to ward off
those things which cause us to be
un-well -Stress I Nutrition I
Physical Fitness I Negative Men-
ta I Attitudes.
Through Coastline Community
College lectures and workshops,
you can learn: ·L~arn to Cope.
•Learn to break unhealthful
eating habits. •Learn to develop
a positive physical fitness
program. •Learn supporting
mental outlooks.
The college's spring health
lectures and workshops are listed
below. Register with the form at
the bottom of the page.
"Your Blueprint for a Winning Lifestyle: A
Living Approach to Fitness and Nutrition," featuring Terry Monroe, is a one-day workshop to
be held from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m . Saturday, April 2$, at
Mesa Verde Learning Center, (the former ~esa Verde Elementary School), 2990 Mesa Verde
Drive East, Costa Mesa.
The program will address personal levels of
fitness, stress management, and the physical benefits of good diet. A $10 registration fee
includes lunch. Registration information is
available by calling the Coastline Community Services and College Activities office at 963--0811 .
"Stress Management," with Judy Albert, from
9:30 to lJ :30 a.m. or 7:30 to 9 :30 p.m. Wednesdays,
beglnnl1Jg Feb. 11, Mesa Verde Learning Center,
2990 Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa Mesa.
"Living Fully and Avoiding Burn.out," with
Fraser Powlison, 9:30 a.m . to 4:30 p.m. Saturday,
Feb. 28, Sheraton Newport, 4545 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach. S15, includes lunch.
"Understanding Your Sexuality," with Carol
Wells, 9 a.m. to noon, Tuesdays, beginning March
10, Huntington Beach Library, 7111 Talbert Ave.,
Huntington Beach.
"Living with a Compulsive Perwn: How to
Make Your Life Better," with David Lynn·hill, 7
to 10 p.m. Tuesdays, beginning March 10,
Unitarian Universallst Chruch, 1-259 Victoria St.,
Costa Mesa.
"The Holistic Approacy to Health: Insuring
Your Wellness and Aw•kettlnt Your N•turat
Healing Powers," with Rita Unlman, 9 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Saturday, March 14, Marriott Hotel, 900
Newport Center Or., Newport Beach. $15, includes
lunch.
"Self.Hypnosis: A Key to Your Inner 5elf," with
Bobbe Somer, 9 a. m . to 4: 30 p.m. Saturday, March
28, Airporter Inn, 18700 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach. $15, includes lunch.
"Feeling Fit-Looking Good," with Sheila Cluff,
9 a.m. to 1 p.m ., Saturday, April 4, Mesa Verde
Learning Center, 2990 Mesa Verde Drive East,
Costa Mesa.
"Stress Management: How to Relax and
Control Worry," with Judy Albert, 9:30 to 11:30
a.m. or 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Wednesdays, beginning
April 22, Mesa Verde Learning Center, 2990 Mesa
Verde East, Costa Mesa.
"Reaching and Maintaining Your Fitness
Potentia," with Kenneth Ravlzza, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday, May 9, Mesa Verde Learning Center,
2990 Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa Mesa. $10
includes lunch.
"Self·Esteem: Celebrate Being You," with
Fraser Powlison, 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m . Saturday,
May 16, Sheraton Newport, 4545 MacArthur Blvd.,
· Newport Beach. $15, includes lunch.
Registration/ General Information CLIP ANO MAIL
FEES: Payment for activities requiring fees must·
accompany your registration. Should the college
cancel an activity, all fees will be returned.
ADVANCE REGISTRATION : Advance
registration by mall or In person is strongly
advised to Insure yourself a space. Advance
reservation will hold a place for you only until 15
minutes before the start of the event. At that time
all others will be admitted.
AT THE DOOR REGISTRATION: Registration
will be accepted at the door as space permits. It is
advisable, however, to check with the college Community Services/College Activities office the
day before the event to make sure space is
available. Single session registration accepted
only at the door on a space-available basis.
REGISTRATION CONFIRMATION: If you wish
to receive confirmation of your registration you MUST include a stamped, self-addressed envelope
for each event.
TIMES: The times listed for each event are the
pr09ram times. Plan to arrive 15 to 30 minuted
prior to the listed starting time for the first
meeting of a lecture series and for a workshop so
that the presentation can begin on time.
REFUNDS: Refunds will be granted If requested two days prior to the beginning of a lecture ~ries
or workshop. You may request a refund by
telephone, letter, or in person.
PLEASE: For further Information on lecture
series and workshops call (7'4) 963-Gltt, e1<t. 256.
You t.an rttg11tu ,,0'<11111 bv m111 P1ea!'l.e enc!">Sft a SEPARATE.
CHECK 1-?-t fl!ICh lecture st1t11s or worto~hop Maiut tti .. jc '-" P~¥.ithf ..
to 1 Co•stllne Commun•I)' College
Ml•f 10 Corumun1ty Ser11ce-1 & College Ach.-1t1e1
Codsthne Commut'1ly College
l0~31 ~·••e• A;onv~ Founl•1" Vall•v CA 97708
To receive co11t11mah<1n yo.1 MUST tncluoe • siampl!O. s"l •ddressed envelope for Htl: even!
Co"tirm1110~ w1t1 be sent a week onor to each ttv•n1
PL f A Sf PRINT Name _________ _ .... -~--------. &•nrioate -·-------
Add•eu ------·----·--0.r Pllone N" -------
City ------_ _ _ _ --. . .. ___ , CA Zip ___ ·-_ £von1ng Phone No ------
MALE 0 FEl.'ALE 0
HOW D•D \'OU LEARN OF Hos l ECTURE?
0 f'ltflf
( I tu' de1<J my nch'nf" t(l 'f(')\jf O'"'''"'g It SI 'm \'•JJ'!'t::'1!1•h/ 1fllP't'\rec1 .,, __ _
wnt~ '"o pir. 11nt1 'm;tw""'
_____ ,.., ___ --------------
--------------------
--------------------
• Pleue SUOIT\rl • SEPAA"' re Ct'fCI\ PIY3011\ 10 Coaollin¥ l.Cl•tlfT•UnilY Cfllie9e for M en .... nt •tQue~te<!
' lneh.JOt tHlnie ..adres1 11,,,, r1'une numbet -:>f eac::t'l reo1~1t-4.nl 1! dtlOlt'ien' fn;m •tove
11 OG-NOf ~ALL-Oa...~1.LBEG!St.AATION TO .. _. I. ~l..jT~H~E~F~A~C~l~Ll1!r!v~*~·::~::::.:::::~::::::::~:::r:::::::::::~·::::::::::·:-:::::::::::·~·-~·~·-:::::::::::::·::;~::::::~·::::j·~,::~-;;£;-~-:;:::;;:::;;·:::w;::;;:··::;;;;:J:.~.~t°:'..·~'~-~-r~~~-:·~~"t·~~I --• e •,• ... '\• • i'° ~
~----~ ---·~· --·--.--~~~~-~.~
12AHEALTHYYOU -Supplement to Coast LIFE.Jan 21 .1981 & DAILY PILOT. Jan 22.1981
Kathleen Robertson and Tom Hall demonstrate a Nautilus machine at
Athletic Conditioning Center. The center at 4950 Barranca Road, Irvine, of·
fers body conditioning with programs designed by physical therapists and
athletic trainers. Call 731·6023.
The Kuhn F•m•ly successfully ut1hzes the Sundancer for their lamely for fun ·~ health
SUNDANCER OF SOUTHERN CAUFORtlA •
17 141 645-3500 • 12131 467-5363
A healthy. balanced diet pro·
gram is stressed at Diet Center.
No chemicals. drugs or shots are
used.
Gimmicks and tricky diets are
not found at the Diet Center.
Patrons of the Center concentrate
on changing eating habit attitudes
and emotional ties to food.
The Center teaches how to pre·
pare a nutritonally balanced. diet
of fruits. vegetables and meats.
These foods are to be eaten in i.
their simplest natural states
Vitamin supplements ~re an im·
por tant part of the program
Center stresses
balanced diet
Customers are counseled daily.
six days per week in private
sessions.
This encourages discipline by g1\'·
ing personal guidance Help with
special problems are given at this
time. and the dieter is weighed-in.
O n ce a wee k a nutritionCll
behavior modification class is held.
At these classes dieters arc
taught the proper way to cook nutri·
tionally balanced meals. Customers can expect to lose 17 to
25 pounds in six weeks.
Diet Centers enjoy a hi gh rate of
success.
There are local centers in south
a nd north Costa Mesa. Corona del
Mar. Huntington Beach. Fountain
Valley and Irvine.
HEAL II SPECIAL
ANNUAL SALE
All Famous Brand Name Vitamins, M inerals,
Protein, Yeast, and Lecetin ...
20% OFF •OCH1n,.....,.... 1, ''''
COSMETIC SPECIALS
Mill Creek HENNA SHAMPOO 18 oz.
Mill Creek HENNA COND. 18 oz.
Starns VITAMIN E OIL 20.1XXJ 1u
Nature's Gate MOISTURIZING LOTION 11 oz.
•••· SALE
3.51 259
3.15 295
5.95 39 9
4.25 295
COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS
270 E. 17th ST., Costa M1s1, CA
~-.~; Ml:IJl .. ~Ul-6961-Hlll1r1n S~ ...
Spa Warehouse has
spas and gazebos
One or Orang<' County's mos t
compl<'le spa showroom!> can be
found at Spa Warehouse.
" "Since its opening in 1977," said a
s pokesperson, ··the 12,000-squa re-
fool showroom at Spa Warehouse has
become something of a landmark
within Southern California's boom -
ing spa industry "
Cus tomer:-. lookin~ to add a spa,
gazebo or oul(foor entertainment
area h<.tve the oµportunity to see the
fi nished produl'l in a showroom
with individual landscape settings
S pa Warehouse 1s at 2640 S. Harbor
Blvd.,Sant11 Ana.
"The sales staff is well aware
tha t most retail shoppers arc con-
fused as to how lo shop for a spa
.. As a result, the sales people
attempt to act as consultants and
teach the homeowner what to look
for while shopping for a spa or out·
door home improvement," he said.
For the homeowner who is con·
sidering installing his own spa or
gazebo. there are complete installa·
lion <'lasses available. as well as a
fully-stocked parts department
.. Many customers either rent or
want to avoid the building permits
and property taxes involved in
perm anent s pa intallations," he
noted. Therelor e. ~pa Warehouse otters a
fi ne selection or portable spas. so
people can enjoy t he benefits of 11
s pa while avoiding installation costs
and eomplications. .
The primary hnc of spas on dis
pla y is the Marhn hnc of patented
hydro·pcdir contoured s pas
These spas featur e scats and
lounges designed to fit the shape or
the body and arc "extremely com-
fortable.··
Store hours are 10 a .m. to 6 pm
daily .
Supplement 10 Coas1 LIFE, Jan 21, 1981 & DAILY PILOT , Jan 22 1981 -A HEALTHY YOU 13
A NN STONE, L E FT, Ky Park
and Marty Fla<'ks of Coasthne
Health f oods, announce sale offer
inf! up to JO pt;>r <'ent off on famou~
name vitamins The !.ale lac;ts to
Feb 7 at the store at 270 E 17t h
St , Costa Mesa
IRVINE'S OWN FRESH FISH MARKET
OPENING SOON!
.•
THE FINEST SELECTION OF SEAFOOD
FROM AROUND THE WORLD
FROM THE BLUE PACIFIC
Fresh Rock Cod
FROM JAPAN
Frog Legs
Fresh Filet Of Sole
Fresh Dungeness Crab
Fresh Local Swordfish
Fresh Red Snapper
Fresh Pacific Perch
Fresh Northwest Salmon
FROM THE COLD WATERS OF ALASKA
King Crab Legs
Snow Crab Legs
Halibut
F ROM THE WATERS Off MEXICO
F resh Sea Bass
Whole Fresh Lobsters
Halibut
FROM OUR EASTERN SHORES
Fresh Little Neck Cla ms
Fresh Cherrystone Clams
Fresh Bluepoint Oys ters
Fre1h Eastern Scallops
Fresh Maine Lobsters
HOUSE SPECIALTIF.8
Seafood Ka bobs Made with Fresh Vegetables and Selected Seafoods .
Our Own Special Clam Chowder . SeafOQd Quiches Baked Daily. Seafood
Party Trays. Seafood Salads.
YOUR TOTAL SATISFACTION IS ALWAYS GUARANTEED!
We are pleMed to offer from the finest Boutique California
Wineri• an a:traordinlJ)' HlectiOG ol ftDe wiDll ! Callaway L. Vineyarm, Peller Vineyards, aiateau St. J......sutter Home
Sanford and Benedict Vineyards, Zacam•a VlneJ•da.
1"51°D'' Calver-ope. M 1 Daya•A Weell
I JBVINE -SSZ-344%
j (
radH SEAFOOD .U'AILABLE WHEN IN SEMON . "" .
I
... ,,.. .........
14 A HEAL THY YOU -Supplement to Coast LIFE, Jan. 21, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Jan 22. 1981
·Pediatric care
in Irvine
Woodbridge Family Foot Health
Care Center recently opened in
Irvine.
It is a family oriented practice
with total patient care for all ages.
The Center specializes in sports
medicine and podo pediatrics, and
have weight mach ines for re·
habilitation of sports-related ail·
men ts.
John R. Tait, 0 .P.M. and Laurel
A. Tait, 0 .P.M. staff the office.
They are a husband and wife team.
For patron convenience, appoint·
ments are available on evenings
a nd Saturdays.
The Center is located at 4760 Bar-
ranca, telephone 857·1279.
Delicious meals
at Healthy Nut
A variety of salads, sandwiches
and shakes are offered to patrons at
Healthy Nut Restaurant.
"FEEL FREE TO COME IN and ask questions" is the advice at Great Earth, a vitamin store at S22 E. First
St., Tusin.
Hungry customers choose from 17
different types or sandwiches or
five types or salads. Wellness movement offers form of medicine treating whole person
"We have fresh soups and chili
every day," said a spokesperson.
The combo sandwich is popular
with customers.
It contains jack cheese, alfalfa
sprouts, tuna salad, avocado and
bacon bits. ·
Healthy Nut is open from 10 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m. Monday through F.ri-
d a y and l O a . m . to 4 p. m .
Saturdays.
lt is located at 369 East 17th
Street in Costa Mesa.
Much local and national press has
been given to integrative medicine,
also known as the wellness move-
ment.
Recently on CBS's television pro-
gram "60 Minutes," the wellness
movement was addressed.
In early January a local
television station interviewed
Charles B. Bartell, M.O., general
and cosmetir ~urgeon and chief of
WE OFFER A UNIQUE
IDGH QUALITY
PERSONAL SERVICE
TO TRIM, nRM AND
ACIOEVE TOTAL
FITNESS
WIDRLPOOL
SAUNA• SUN ROOM
MASSEUSE
LIFE CYCLES
NUTM I IONIST
500/o
OFF
MEMBERSWP FEE
UMITED OFFER
NO CONTRACTS
OFFER EXPIRER JAN. 311t
IOINNOW
AND GET IN SHAPE Ai roa THE NEW YEAR
MADINE'S HEALTH CLUB FOR WOMEN
Nt:WP.ORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH
mt Qui llRION Vll&IO l•'I Afc-.•
751·3ZOI UIMAlda ftwy. 841·3377
nt-3211
staff of MacArthur Medical Center.
The Center specializes in inte-
grated medicine.
According to Or. Bartell, inte-
grated medicine is not a new con-
cept but rather a return to the
original idea or the "healing arts."
Integrated medicine is a method
of treating the whole person rather
than a specific illness or set of
· symptoms.
ln order to achieve a lasting state
of wellness. home. work and social
circles must be taken into con-
sideration.
Methodologies of treatment at the
Center are an integration of the best
of both traditional and modern medical techniques designed to best
suit an individual's needs.
For a brochure, write or visit the
Center at 18021 Sky Park Circle in
Irvine or call 557-7372.
1981
A New Year - A New You
It's Easy!
When You Put Your Mind To It
• Lose Weight-without feeling deprived
• Stop Smoking-without discoJ!lfort
• Overcome obstacles to successful living
Call Today
For free consultation with no obligation. Our
method is safe, and effective.
964-3
* Supplement to Coast LIFE. Jan. 21 . 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Jan 22. 1981 -A. HEA.l THY VOU 15
SCOTT WINTERS, CLUB PRO and manager at The Irvine
Clubhouse, practices racquetball. The Irvine Clubhouse is at 17850
Skypark Blvd., Irvine. Call 754-7500.
ACUPUNCTURE
FOR FACE-LIFTS
As you have setn on T.V. Safe. No risks. Low
fees. "Aft• a ft'lonth of treatments. 10-12. I
can see lines begin to disappear from my
face .. - a fac&-lifts patient.
These thin needles can take 10-15 years off a
person·s appearance.
Acupuncture has been proved to be effective / •
in relieving beck pain. Recently. World Health _/ '
Organization of the U.N. recommended
acupuncture for 47 kinds of ailments. Some of"" \
them are asthma. migraines. facial paralysis. ~ arthrltll. prostate, bladder problems and
c:yttltil ' . . etc. . .
TNlt 'liehing ~ -the oldest agony. Time • -
Megazlne estimates 75 million Americans '
have beck piobtems.
. 111m1-111T-..,Olt-ACUPUNCTUlf m.
1992911achlhd.
(llAdams)
........... leach
536 •010·
ASHIL.._ CTI.
2720S.lrtatll
(IUite 221)
Pro lock and key service
Irvine Lock and Key was opened
eight years ago by owner Bud Cox.
Family owned, the business was
operated out of the home until mid
January.
burgler alarms, a variety of locks,
deadbolts, key duplication, auto
lockouts and lock combination
changes.
On Monday, January 12 the busi-
ness moved to a new shop in
Heritage Park, Irvine.
The customer r eceives pro-
fessional service for any need relat-
ed to locks or keys.
Irvine Lock and Key offers safes,
Irvine lock and Key is located at
1H74 Culver Drive, Suite C,
telephone 551-4166.
FOiiOW THE Mile 1
9th Annual
World Masters
Marathon~
of lrvilie.
~.~25,1981
Co-spons~~ by the fl:_fJ;. .... <:1 .... --' <f(¢.-.m ond the -J r'..a
RACE IN PROGRESS Daily ,j,~g!
POSTERS SUCH AS this will be marked for runner safety at each
mile on the track. They are visible to both motorists and runners.
We All Realize That In Today's
Rush Rush World We Seldom
Toke Time To Enjoy A
Healthy lunch
The Healthy Nut Can Offer You
A Hearty, Healthy Lunch At A
Price You Con Afford.
Some of Our Specialties Include:
~hakes, Sandwiches.
Salads. Soups, Chili,
Weight Watcher Varieties
. We ore oonvenientfy loicoted at •
369 · E. 17TH COSTA MESA
(Close to your office building
or~ yoor home)
PHONE ORDERS
...
-
~
16 A HEAL THY YOU -Supplement to Coast LIFE. Jan. 21 , 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Jan 22 1981
LES ADEa OF A•BEa LEATBEa at 2850 S. Harbor Blvd. in Santa Ana relaxes in a recliner offered in a choice of colors at a discount.
HEALTH ...
rrompage6
a nd health care is likely to be
dra matic in the coming decades."
Lee predicted. "if we heed the
lessons or the recent past."
Lee also criticized ·'tax policies
that do nothing to inhibit the sale or
cigarettes. subs idies to tobacco
farmers and social norms that sane·
tion smoking. particularly among
women and teen-agers." and "equal-.
ly powerful forces encouraging the
use or alcohol and drugs," as ob·
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
ROBERT V. KOBUS, D.C.
As a PUBLIC SERVICE a FREE
Spinal Analysis including ...
Contour photograph, leg
deficiency check, bilateral
weight balance, blood pressure,
levels of spinal tenderness
a nd consulatation with the
Doctor is offered at all times.
What is Chiropractic
Health Care?
stacles to improving American
health.
He singled out poverty as a major
threat to ·health. citing studies
demonstrating that t ow
socioeconomic circumstances com-
pound many health problems; they
are associated with malnutrition
RACES ...
from page2
a point where there may be as many
as 40 or 50 races annually. according
to Blair.
·'The Participation a nd enjoy-
ment people were getting ,out of run-
ning six or seven years ago grew on
a word-of-mouth basis. which last
year produced a 10-15 percent in-
crease in the number of long dis·
lance runners in this country ... said Blair.
Blair's Newport Beach Runners
Association. which in volves more
than 400 members now. will conduct
a "China Cup Series" during 1981.
with the top men and women win·
ners earning a trip to China in
December for international com·
petition.
The schedule includes a half·
marathon. Up The Estuary in
February. Back Bay 10 Kin March.
1o~mile Around the Bay in May. 10
K Sea King in July, 20-mile June
Lake relay in August, 5000 meter
Corona Del Mar Invitational in Sep-
tember. Newport Beac h t lr·vine Marathon and 50-mile relay tn No·
vember. and 10,000 meters Olym·
pi ans Run in Oecember.
HI air. who stages the "Run for
Hoag... advocates long d istance
runni ng for its exhilarative
qualities: "It produces the same
kind or 8 'high. a few drinks might
after a hard day.·· he added.
"The scenery. the interest, the
mental and physical benefits from
running (somewhat different from
just going around and around a
track) makes a person feel much
better '" says Blair.
Our office presents th.e Chiropractic Story
twice monthly to inform people of what
Chiropractic is and what it is not. This
provides information to decide whether
chitopractic fits your needs.
LIMITED TIME ONLY
Call 964-5911 MON.-SAT.
• Nautilus Equipment • Aerobic Classes Dally
• Karate Classes • Olympic w.tghts
• Life Cycles
• Lar0.5Pa •Steam Room • OrySeuna
• tftdlvklual Supervised Proor•rm
675-1171 I
~
Supplement to Coast LIFE. Jan. 21 . 1981 & DAILY PILOT , Jan 22. 1981 -A HEAL THY YOU 17
Seafood market
to -open soon
Also. select California wines will
be featured.
"We have pl ans for a catering
service which will s pecialize in
clam and lobster bakes," according
to owner, Terry Delaney.
Terry Delaney Seafood Market
will be located al 14450 Culver Drive
unit Din Irvine. Telephone 552·3442.
The grand opening of the Terry
Delaney Seafood Market is expect-
e d in la te J a nuary or early
February.
Top quality gourmet seafood will
be hand-picked and brought in from
Florida. Alaska, Canada and the
East Coast.
Any type of fresh fish will be
av ailable including live Maine
lob s ter. frog legs, s wo rdfi sh,
shrimp, red snapper , salmon and
much more.
CYNDI DeVINNA, TINE NATE AND MADINE CA&PENTE& exercise at Madine's, a women's health club
with the rmest in modem exercise equipment and personali1ed service. Madine's bas three locations. In
Newport Beach, call 751-3200, Mission Viejo', call 770-3200, and Huntington Beach, call 846-1400.
The seafood market will ready-
make seafood quiches and crepes
whic h can be taken home and
cooked in the oven.
A large selection of imported fine
quality cheeses will be available.
'Ill ACnvmlS IHClUDI:
PIO -.US Ill.... UC81nUU C1* • WOlllWS .. , •ILDlll
MW • Ml ~ RAW MO¥• • PIO W lllllllTIOI
UC.nAU C1* • UM SPA NY • mml AWAID PIOIUM
• ••t•IWlllll c:oen. SIM•AIS
s~lal R•t• t1url119 Our Off YOll Mff 'I
w TO MIMmlll•I POI: '10000 SINGlQ, fAMA Y
-1111MN1• ftATUllS IUSWISS, GIOUPS
· • ,, R.CCIUltbln towu • Joaaifta e.-
• C°""*"9 s...; Jecuzzl, -m • Sujiir F~ EWCfte ClnlJI Room, Orv s.une · ' •. Weight Trelnlng • A estaurant-Olftner, Betr, • Penonelllld Instructions
• Social Activities-Fun! 1 • Racquetball-Leagues and
• Speclal Health & Fitness Cllnlc Semln1rs • Dance Classes
• WallybeU Courts • • Child c.te
Coll fodoy for more lnlo I
17150 •YPAll llYD. ,.,,.,Cl~ 9271,4
751-75M ·
JOHN A. TAIT, 0.P:M.
AND
LAUREL A. TAIT, D.P.M.
announce the opening of
WOODBRIDGE FAMILY FOOT HEALTH CARE
at
Woodbridge VIII• Center
4760 Barranca Parttway
Irvine, CA '2714 I
P.odlatry Foot 5Peclallsts
857-1279
<evening hours available)
\
'
18 A HEAL THY YOU -Supplement to Coast LIFE Jan 21 1981 & DAILY PILOT Jan 22 t 981
Serious and
social tennis
Exct>llenc-c in tennis facilities and
service!> makes the John Wa}ne
Tl•nn1!> Club a m us t for serious ten
nis pla) crs
John Wayne decided to build the
~l ub in 1973 at the ··Perfect loca-
turn · · on t;µpcr Newport Bay near
t ht• N l'wportcr Inn
··wt• offer serious and social ten-
ni:. 1n an atmosphe r e of friendship
ancl pndc. ·· !>a1d a s pokesperson for
lht• 1·1uo al 11 11 Jamboree Hoad,
Nt•wpnrt Ul'Lll'h
Tht• duh has seven fu ll-time ten·
n1!> ho!>tcsscs who arrange matches
1n advum·coron thes pol.
S1xtccn courts arc lighted for ni ght
play !>even nights a week.
/\ full s taff o f teaching p ro-
fc!>~HHlab an: available for lessons or
c II n 1 cs
Center court 1s equipped with
t•lt>(·tmnic: !>t·oreboanl
Tht• dub aho re!>pCl'ts post tennis
:tt'tl\·1t1c!>. providing i.I luxurious
c:luhhou!>t' with pub and the .. Duh":.
lloom · ·
t'onipletcly stocked loi:ker rooms
greet mi:mbers after they have in·
dulged tn e ither the whirlpool .
sauna ot ja cuzzi
A beauty s al o n . ma s sage
scrv11:cs. t hlld care ce nter and
snat k shop <.ire on hand
ROBERT V. KOBUS, D.C., Fountain Valley c hiropractor and veteran or lhe m arathon and numerous lOK
runs. says .. balanced structure is essential lo function , and health is 100 percent function or all t issues ·· Call
964-5911
Sundancer trampoline a new approach to weight control
Dr Wina frc d Lucas . Ph.D ..
Diplomate of the Ame rican Board
o f Exa mine rs o f P r o fessional
Psycholoj:ly s u ccessfully utilizes
new approaches to weight control.
Dr Lucas feels lhal the m ini ·
trampoline <The Sundancer ) is an
ideal way for ol<le r people and those
with weight problem s lo attain an
enjoy able a nd comfortable program
of dailv cxcr l'isc.
Excrl'isc on the Sundant·cr e<.in h<:
DIET CENTER
Because you want
to look and feel
your best
I I ~ I II I, '. ! 1
NO\\' Y(Jl I ( t\ !';
I 0"1 17 I 0 :.?5 l'Ot INI ,...,
IN It ...,I h \.\1 11\'I'
ANO Wt-'1 1 I IAC lf YOll
HOW TO KEEP IT OFF'
--,,,,,:·
~o -..N\N ~1 TH E LOs11yG
DIET ~'CENTER tR CALL TODAY!
l-• •u• . Wt Ulll c,.. • ...,..,~....,,. ....... ,_.,.\' ... y .........
-......... ~ ••• tlJ 11•1. . .....
lr>iw SU IJH
~ ··-· ..... ~·· lfJ '"'
m odulated to fit individual need!>
and is made cnjoy<.iblc by musical
aC'compani m cnt
Sundanc·cr excr c1Sl' s tabilizes ap
petite a nd lends its<'lf tu .i regular
ph ysical toning .
Sunclancers a re avail able at Sun
dancer of Southern C'aliforma, 4Rli
F.ast 17thStr eet .No.226
F o r more info rm ation. cal
ti45·35(XJ
ATHLETIC CONDITIONING & INJURY CENTER
Slci Conditionin9 Pock09e: 3 months for 175,.
No Restrictions
P~ Athlete Me~rships: '30°0 iu1r1c1..:1 Ti-•
Athletic Me~rships • 1 .. 1r1ci.d n-•
First Fitness Center to offer
Licensed Physical Therapist~
to evaluate, recommend, and
monitor your individualized
fitness program.
FACILITIES OFFER:
• C<1l1f SI.lit• L11..1•n.,r>cJ Phv.,11 .ii l h1•r.11·1 1
• l;,1 •111i>tir-, & ( ybl•A 11'• IHIQ lr·fllo'I'
• (nprl N.1ul1i11., l n •rc ''•"I 1111mm••nt
• F 11111'.,., "I ('o.,l1no \<•1111•1
• Frr<c> wf"'1q •1r ld 11nq c••11l•·r ir11 lw11•iri ,,111.11
R.irk· It 01ymp1t B.w
• 0(1Cl'v r.' •11011•,1111 11 Tt" l111q I tyclrn• l;llo(
W••1oh111c;
• P11in1.,11,11v f1,nr 111nTi"1, 'il
• ( •mnlPtl• ( lf'll H Tt t111q '"'"')Jill) I ' rt 1111 ..
T f"'lt>mN ry
• l ht>ril(lf'UllC Ho l Tub
• <;pp.tr,Jlf' M f'n ~ & Wompn " L111..k1 •r l\rPc1
& Shower-;
• lnd1V1duill Body 8wlc11119 & En 'rt.l'·P
1ns1ruc1ton-,
• E,c>c11lrvf> I lPallh Tp-;t1110 & Hf'.1l1n Plann1no
Proorams
Athletic C°"ditioning & lniury-Center
Woodbridge Medical Center
4950 Barranca Pkwy Suite 106 Irvine CA
( 7' 4J 559-408' •. ~~ ...... )................................................... I
----~~---l -....---------~--"· ---
Supplement 10 Coast LIFE, Jan. 21. 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Jan 22. 1981 -A HEAL THY YOU 19
Hypnosis is
suggestion
New program for weight loss
Hypnosis 1s a seriously misun·
derstood phenomenon, according to
Dr. Bill Harvey 01 the Costa Mesa
Hypnosis Center
A person under hypnosis is not. in
fact, being controlled by the hyp·
notist, he said.
. "It's tht powe r of s uggestion,
primarily. ll"s an expected reac·
ti on." said Harvey.
Harvey said mi scon ceptions
about hypnosis include fears that
they will go to sleep and never wake
up or blurt out their deepest and
darkest secret.
Another misconception concerns
hypnotic suggestion, in which the
subject is "programmed'' for acer·
tain behavior after the hypnotic
session is over.
"Post-hypnotic suggestions have
a (inlte lifetime ," Harvey ex·
pl a med.
Nutri/System 2000 is a new quick·
loss program that is safe and
nuttitious . tastes good, has plenty or
variety and has built in safeguards
against temptation to cheat.
It is made up or packaged, pre·
measured foods that include
breakfast cereals. soups, beverages
and more than 45 combinations of
solid-food entrees, combined with a
co mprehensive . medically
supervised weight program.
The hi g h p ro tein /low
carbohydrate/ low calorie diet 1s
unique because it enables dieters to
experience rapid weight loss -up
to 30 pounds in 30 days -while at
the same time enjoying three dif·
ferent meals a day .
Dieters don't worry about calorie
intake they just open a package,
prepare the item and eat.
Integral to the long -standin~ sue·
cess of Nutri /System Centers na-
tionwide are the behavior education
program. the optional exercise re·
gime and the full-year mamtenance
approach.
The kind of entrees available in
the Nutri/System line up of foods
protect against monotony.
There are omelets. crepes. pan·
cakes, milkshakes, beef. chicken.
and seafood dishes.
Harvey's schooling includes a
master's degree in hypnotherapy
and a doctorate in human behavior
from Newport University.
Harvey teaches all of his patients
to hypnotize themselves so thP.y can
reinforce suggestions made during
sessions in his office.
JUDY BURLINGTON SERVES fish dinner to customers at Cape t:Od
Fish Company in Irvine. The shop owned by Bob and Judy Burlington
specializes in broiled fish. Call 559-9111.
Betty Otte. manager or Hunt-
ington Beach and Santa Ana loca·
tions, emphasized that the orogram
is completely safe. Call 544-7123.
Many ailments treated with acupuncture
Treatments are short term. usual·
ly three sessions.
On the third session he finishes a
sel(:hypnosis training.
"Many patients want to stop
smoking, biting their fingernails or
other bad habits," said Harvey.
"Others come to reduce stress.
tension and anxiety." he added.
At Huntington Acupuncture
Center patients are treated for
chronic pain or arthritis. back pain
and pain from strokes.
Individuals can receive face lifts
by acupuncture. 'II process which is
becoming increasingly popular with
both men and women.
Migraine headaches are also
treated with acupu.octure. Treat·
-11ness.
The physicians dnd licensed proloss1ona1s di MacArlhur Med1cc11
Center define wellness ,1c. not fl1s1 lhe allsence of 1llne~s h1J111 SICJtc> of
complete rihy'>1c.i1 mentril rinn soc1ril well IJe111Q
Our 1n1cgr ~ted treatment services are des1yr 1ed 10 heir> you achieve
that <;tale 011rue weilr1ess .Jhe medicine we practice 15 c<illed
lntegrat.vc Medicine which l1eats the whole person not '""' lhe
specific illness
II you re tnlerested m learning how tn1egrrit1ve Med1c1ne can 1Jenef1t
you. call or wr 11e for a complimentary l.Jrochure and 1nfor ma11on ~ti iout
ou1 Lile and Health Assessment introductory offer
ON STAFF , .
General a11d Cosmetic Surgeons • 1ntern1s1 • Card101091st • Family Pr ac11ce
Spec1ahs1s • Occunational Medicine Sne.:1a11s1 • Psychologist!> • Pod1a111st •
Acupuncru11s1 • NlJl11l10111s1s • K1nes101og1srs • 81oteedt)ack Srec1ahst<, •
Hypnotherap1s1s • Acupressurist
CORPORATE AND PERSONAL SERVICES
L1te/Heallh Assessments • Mu1t1·phas1c 'Physicals • Emntoyee Sem111..irc; •
-Managemenl Workshops
LIFE ENHANCEMENT PROGRAMS.
Slress management weight reductlQn concen1ralt0n 1mpro11emen1 rel;:1111110n
smol\1ng and alcohol control and others
MacARlHUR MEDICAL CENTER
18021 Sky Pm Cude, Irvine, CA 92714 71'1557·73'12
A MedtcaJ Group • Charles B Bartell. M D . Ct'11el of.Stall
ment takes two to three months .
Back problems are treated with
herbal massage and spinal
manipulation.
According to Dr. Ko. affiliated
with the Center. individuals who
wish to stop smoking can have a
staple inserted in the lobe of their
ear.
This, he explained, sends a shmal
lo the brain which ser ves to help the
individual refrain. from smoking.
Needles used in acupuncture proc·
esses are very fine, and painless
when inserted. according to Dr. Ko.
Dr. Ko has been administering
to patients tor nane years.
The Center is located at 19929
Beach Blvd. in Huntington Beach.
Telephone :>36-4070.
No c.lorit CoH ...... No Met •htekn.
*Tnl~ C:CMlltMioft will 1ltow JH M•
ntl .. llaMtl tllet •tff _., o•tn."-11• •
tM .. of tlw pnc! * 011r "Wtta•••'-*' TM G•.,..•tt: , ••
..., Mttt '"' 1osl or .. , 11Mlflo11el Mr·
•kft en frn .... , .. ff!
'1 Prewn1 IN• ?.!-A!rJ!!~:!tY.! L!.J!~.,. """ .... we'tt , "11~ ~ · OffuctUOW1romyo1Ut PfOl•en'I O..c....., .. rpr..,em; velldfor-clleftll ! ·
• ~ ...... *-Y 14. 1•1 : ;
UMTA MtA/COSTA MBA HUNll•TON llACH .} ' ·~~w· ..!:\','4115, ,<~ "'°""""" ... ' ·--"""'
{ii,111(~--;:.:-a:..:; .~ i ;;..
-
20A HEALTHY YOU -Supplement to Coast LIFE. Jan. 21 . 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Jan 22. 1981
i'
To Your Health!!
M fa-flee f'uheie
FOCUS ON COMMUNI'l'Y HEALTH
SPONSORED BY
PACIFICA
COMMUNI'FY
HOSPITAL REACHING OUT:
Paotnoa Communl'J' Hoepltal la a COMMUNITY ORIENTED ho.pita!. We place emphaela on Community
beoauM I& eaempllft•·our prlm&I')' oonoern: The health of the people who ll•e In our Mnioe area. Since
the oompledon of our Carmen Yuppa Conferenoe Center, Pacifica Community HOt1pltal bu been reaohlnc
out beyond the walla of our medloal faoWty, by pro•lclln• health ed.uoatlon Pl'OSJ'&ID•, preYend•e medicine
oumo. and health care Mmlnan for the re•ldent• of Huntlntfton Beach and •urroundlq oommunldM.
I
PACIFICA
COMMUNI'rY
HOSPITAL
FUTURE PROGRAMS
Li119d betow .. Mime of the PfOlflnll tdledllleil in our Focus On
Community Heeltf\ wies. Pertic~ will bl msnbln of the medk:el 1utt
Ind nun1nt dlplmnlnt of Pecifiu Community HotpiUI. Wltdt flit Pll*
fcw fvture 1MOUncement1 of time, dltl, etc.
Oiebete1E4-tion
Injuries in Junior Attlll191
Cenclf I nfOfl'Mtion HU"'9flfifGTOl'lt
CINTf"
Recontuuctive Ind Cosmetic Surll'Y
The flrobelm of Wlftht Ind How To Control It
Kidney D..._ Ind Hypertenliotl
Cenflotlulmonlry RllUtCir.tion (CPA)
f lYl !t01JtitTI
IHO~tllif(l Cf.ltiff flll
How To ltlndle S1ra
Olluc:oml T .. tint
Hu!Mn ....... ty
Two Wcwtlint """"
18798 Delawan • .._,a-..... Beaoll, California Wta (714) ea.-11
I LLtS
Ylll 11111111 llllY NPll
I t • l I.' I I-· l ·' ,. • . I.
OH AN <~f (OU N . .,. l A t ti (1H N I A 1'1 l.f-NT S
Teachers accused in HB pupil·Walkouts
RespondJna to 1tn11:ry 11a1t!ft-..,
lh&t1ttf\11ori Burh Un1un tu1h
Srhool d1 tnct off1c1ab arc
warninc t \'&c:hers lh•t \hll)'
C'ould be r1rf' 1r the} t ncwraae tud~nu to tatct: w¥1koutA in
prote.sl m propo· td budge\ l'Utb
for nu\ yellr
Supc!f1ntende11t f'r41.flk-.. Jue"
bboll s aid ' ·irate" 11arents
h»"e t'alled the d1str1cl and 1den·
uht'd Ul \eacht:rs 1as reportedly
Captives
tell more
•
brutality
Wl ~BADEN, West Germany
!AP> -The freed American
hostages gave new reports ~oday
or brutal treatment by their Ira-
nian captors -beatings, mock
executions, grim games of
Russian roulette, death threats
-and former' President Carter
accused Iran of "savagery
agains t absolutely innocent
hostages." At the military hospital where
the 50 men and two women are
recovering rrom their 14 ~
m onth ordeal, a State Depart·
ment official said, "it is clear
RELATED STORIES,
PHOTO-Page A4
we are continuing to uncover
evidence of serious mistreat·
m ent of our people during their
captivity."
But former hostage Richard
Morefield said in a telephone in·
terview broadcast by CBS that
"we beat them," triumpbina
over the Iranian captors by re-
turning healthy and sane despite
the brutal treatment.
A g r oup of the former
hostages emerged from the
hospita l tod ay and walked
across the street for a dental ex-
am inalion. They wore blue pa-
jamas or Air Force parkas and
many waved to well-wishers al
the hospital gate.
Stale Department spokesman
J ack Cannon said in Wiesbaden
that mistreatment included poor
food, solitary confinement and
being blindfolded.
"On a number of occasions a
number of persons we r e
threatened with loaded re-
volvers, .. he said.
·•o n a number of occasions
som e were threatened with
death. Some were ordered to
strip and Ue on the flooT and
were threatened with death,"
Cannon said.
In Moscow, the Soviet news
agency Tass said the American
press had launched a campaign
of anti-Iranian "hysteria" over
treatment of the hostages. Tass
a lso claimed that the former
hostages ''will be subjected lo
d etailed interrogation and
brainwashing" before they aTe
allowed to meet with reporters.
Barry Rosen of Brooklyn,
N. Y .. chatting with reporters on
the way to a dental examination,
said the former hostages had
.. many stories to tell" and that
the agreement with Iran should
be reviewed.
Rosen was not specific about
his treatment as a captive, but
said , "I just feel that Iran is an
outlaw country and it does de·
serve trem endous criticism
from the world."
1.1rc111" 11tudc:nts to leave school
in 11rotcbl uf the budae\ pro·
~ah.
Ht' Hh1 those teachers have
been ulf1cially warned that they
rould be fired.
"It 1s 1ll~Klll for a teacher to
urKt: 11tudents to leave campus ~nd we will not toler ate it," Ab·
bolt .SMJd. I Tucher associallon officials
say instructors have been cau-
tioned not to get involved ln the
student prot.esta. .
However, the teacbera as-
sociation has ur1ed instructors
to stqe a work slowdown this
week to protest tbe bud1et pro-
posals.
One-day walkouts, each ln·
volving more than 300 students,
have occurred at three bigh
schools -Westminster, Ocean
Thirsty newco111er
Melody Burkhard. a sophomore at Costa Mesa High
School feeds an hours-old lamb born Wednesday at the
school:s animal farm. The runt of twins. it is being hand
fed because of its weak condition and will be fed by
Melody every two hours for the next day or so.
Spending slashes
ordered by Reagan
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reagan, saying he is re-
deeming his pledge to force gov-
e rnment to "live within its
means," issued orders today to
slash government travel by 15
percent, cut outside consulta-
tions by 5 percent and stop buy-
ing office furniture until further
notice.
Reagan, in a memorandum to
department and agency chiefs,
said he was taking the actions
because "coping with runaway
deficits in the current and pend-
ing budgets is one of the most
urgent tasks before us."
And he told Cabinet m embers
to "set an example by avoiding
unnecessary expenditures in set·
ting up their personal offices."
Appointees. Reagan directed,
··are not to redecorate their of·
fi ces."
The president said his actions
will "help reduce unnecessary
federal spending," but there was
no estimate on how much will be
saved.
Reagan issu ed the memo
shortly after meeting with his
economic policy group. He was
m eeting with congressmen who
head economic-related commit·
tees in the afternoon.
A fact sheet distributed by the
While House said the travel re·
duction this fiscal year is direct-
ed al trips ''that are not essen-
tial to the performance or agen·
cy missions." It does not apply
to military station changes.
The 5 percent outside con·
sultation reduction also applies
to management and professional
services and special contract
studies and analyses. The fact
sheet said the cut was "intended
· to help assure that contracts and
consultants are not used to
evade pe.rsonnel ceilings or to
carry on studies and analyses
that are not essential to the
performance of agenc·y mis-
sions."
View and Marina -in the put
two weeks.
Student spokesmen say they
are protesting the proposed $3.9
miUion cut from the district's
$42 million general fund. The
cuts would include laying off 144
teachers, eliminating counseling
and cutting back some sports
programs.
Several student protesters also
complained about the teacher
slowdown because many in·
struc tors aren'( reviewine
material to be included on up-
coming final exams.
Several students who
participated in the walkouts say
they were urged to do so by
teachers.
Abbott said the district has
received more than 60 calls from
angry ~arents complainlna
From HB group
about the student actions atld
work slowdown.
Th' teacher group, represent-
ing 800 instructors. currently is
negotiating a contract with the
district. It has refused an of·
fered twe>year contract calling
for a 16 percent raise. Teachers
contend the district can afford lu
offer more by c utti11g ad-
ministrator positions and trim
m ing supply accounts.
Terrorists seize
Bible translator
Officials from a Huntington
Beach Bible translating or-
ganization are awaiting word to-
day from armed terrorists who kidnapped a missionary in
Bogota, Colombia.
Chester Bitterman, 29-year-
old language expert from Lan-
caster. Pa .. was seized Monday
by six men and a woman armed
with machine guns and pistols.
Christian missionary group that
translates the Bible into native
dialects in Third World coun-
tries.
T he organization contracts
with governments in those coun-
tr ies to provide education and
improve literacy, he said.
Jn Bogota, police are quoted
as s aying that they believe the
gunmen belong to one 01 thP
leftist groups waging a guernl1;1
campaign to replarc Colomlnci ·~
democratic government w1lh a
Ma rxist regime.
Bitterman has li ved in Colom
bia with his wife and two ~mu l l
daughters since SC' pt i:mht'r
1979.
Bill Key, an assistant to the
Wyc liffe Bible translating
gr ou p's d irector in Latin
America. said that Bitterman
had complained of stomach
pains and was scheduled lo have
a gall bladder operation today.
In Westminster
Key said he doubted that the
ailment posed a life-threatening
situation.
"We were told that the kidnap·
pers were very cordial when
they bar1ed into the mission
ho use where Bitterman was
awaiting the surgery," Key said.
While Key said the organiza·
tion had not received any official
demands from the terrorists, he
said there are unofficial indica-
tions that the kidnappers want
the institute, which employs
some 100 scholars studying In-
dian tribal languages. to leave
Colombia.
Key speculated that the or-
ganization's contract with the
Colombian government is the
basis for the guerrilla action ap-
parently aimed at embarrassing
the government.
Wycliffe, located at 19891
Beach Blvd .. is a non-sectarian
Jury weighs
Hunlington
doctor's fate
A seven-woman, five-man jury
continued its deliberations today
in the Orange County Superior
Court murder trial of Dr. Louis
Alaia, charged with fatally slab-
bing his former wife and a Long
Beach attorney in June.
The panel began its considera-
tion or the case Wednesday.
Alaia, a Huntington Harbour
orthopedic surgeon. pleaded in-
nocent and innocent by reason of
insanity to the dual murder
charges against him .
He was accused of going to the ·
home or his ex-wife, Margy Lou
Alaia, 37, on the night of June 13
and attacking the woman and at-
torney Marvin Tincher. 50, after
being ordered to leave.
Alaia, 50. had gone to the
h om e to d iscuss weekend
custody rights lo his two young
children, who witnessed parts of
the slayings.
Teen-age rapist
stabbed, then shot
By aoBEllT BAaKER . Of tM o.MI• ~W.. It.ft
A 19-year-old rapist was slain
when tie was stabbed with
hi s ow n knife by h is
victim's boyfriend and then
shot by his victim, according to
Westminster police.
Police said that Craig W.
Dragovich, whose last known
address was reported to be 15561
Ashley Circle, Westminster, was
found dead in a nearby park by
officers shortly after the inci·
dent Wednesday.
Westminster officer Earle
Graham said the events began
at 4 a.m. when the rapist en-
tered an apartment or the sleep-
ing couple at a large residential
romplex on Belgrade Street.
Accordi ng to G r a h am ,
Dra~ovich held a knife at the
man's throat while forcing \h1:
woman to tie her friend 's he1ncss
While the rape was being com
mitted. the male victim broke
loose from his bonds. wrestlE'd
the knife a wet\. and srnhhPd tht·
intruder once in lhe c-hco;I
Graham said.
Graham said the suspcrt then
broke loose and approached the
woman.
She then reportcdl) grabtwd a
.38 calibe r h:ind}.{un from
somewhere in the a1>a rtmenl
and fired several rounds at l'losc·
r ange at the assailant. Graham
sa+i·e wounded rapist then ned
the apartment. He wal> found
dead in nearby Mc Fadden Park in
the area of Mc Fadden /\ vcnu t·
and Brookhurst Street bv ofrkers
(See RAPIST, Pag«> A2>
Diedrich denies
fund manipulation
FormerOrange County Board
or Supervisors chairman Ralph
Diedrich pleaded innocent in
Orange County Superior Court to-
day lo charges he participated in
a campaign rund laundering
operation four years ago.
Judge Richard Beacom set a
trial date of March 9 for Diedrich.
The former county politician,
who was ordered to stand trial
last week after a closed-door pre·
liminary hearing, races four
felony charges that he failed to re·
port $72,000 in financial contribu·
lions as required by the Political
Reform Act of 1974.
Diedrich, 56, is also charged
with a misdemeanor count of fail-
ing to report a contribution.
Though there was little delay in
arraigning the former supervisor
this morning. Bcatnm withheld
ruling until Friday on whether the
pr eliminary hearing transcnpts.
s ealed at the request of defense at·
torney Marshall Mor~an, should
be opened.
Morgan argued that he wanted
the transcripts to rem a in !>caled
to avoid prejudicial pre trial
publicity that could force hun to
seek a change of venur for
Diedrich'strial.
<See FUND, Pagt> i\2l
Or::'4l ~~~~•
\l·eather
At a press briefing near the
hospital, Cannon said he had no
reports of specific injuries suf-
fered by the hostages and in re-
ply to a question added, "We
have no reports so far of sexual
abuse." He said "som e were
manacled to chairs for 14 or 15
days."
Cannon said the Americans
were expected to return home
toward the end of the week and
that they "feel it is very
necessary that they have this
period ol private rest and re-
cuperation."
Coast hampered by fog, big surf
Chance or rain 50 per·
cent tonight increasing to
60 percent chance or
showers Friday. Coastal
low tonight SO, inland 55.
Highs Friday in low 60s
along beaches to m id-6-0s
inland.
M4GADNE TELLS
HE4L111 TRENDS
Toct-.v'• Dally Pilot takes a
look at bealth·related actMUea
and trends. Look for "A Healthy You," a
IO·pafe Periscope maeaaine
teaturial 1torie1 and pictures
about health on the Oran1e
Cout.
••A Healthy You'' abo pr• vl••• tbe World maatert
Marathon of Irvine and the
Heoed .. uai Run for Hoq.
By A&TJR.Jll ll. VINSEL Of-Delly Net .....
Big waves shoved over beach
crests by high tides continued
alon1 the Ora.nae Coast today,
fioodinl SODle areas. The U.S.
Weather Service predicts more
water can be expeded from the
1ldea by tonight.
Breakers that peaked
periodically at 10 feet on some
local beaches Tuesday and
Wednesday appeared to be
diminisbine.
Foe, meanwhile, created vii·
ibillty problem• tbia mornlnc
alon1 the Orante Cout, nduc·
in1 commuter traffic to a crawl.
Ofndall at 01'8Dle County's
Jobn Wayne Airport aald today's
foe lntmferecl with fllthta out
only periodically after the Coull·
ty facility opened at I : 15 a.m .• to
private and commercial fllebta.
"This stuff la patchy," said
Tower SUpervisor Jack Evans.
adding that private pilot.a were
free to take olf if they pleased.
He said one Republic Airlines
jetliner and a GoldenWest
Airlines commuter plane 1ot off
the around durin1 a brief break
in the mist that seemed thick
enough to cu.t with a knife
elaewbere.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Wea~
Senice ln Loi A.Dael• predicted
• 50ut chance of •prink)• tonJ • turn1DI to a 80 like lbood of re1ular ,C:!
Friday.
DaJtime t.mperaturea will be
ln the mid•, droppi8' to 50
de1ree11tnllbt.
So far Udl year the Onal•
CoHt hi NCeiYed ... than two
inches of rain compared to 1.26
inches bythiadate a year ago.
Lifetuards from Seal Beach to
San Clemente watched the swf
today, i f they could aee lt
:throu1h the foe, to determine if
more beach erosion and Dooclins
can be expected.
A spokesman al Hunlineton
State Beach said he couldn't
give an accurate estimate ol
aurf bel•bt because he couldn't 1ee tbe ocean. ·
"rt IOUDda like they're about
four to tilbt feet,·· be aaJd of the
atorm...U..
Callfomla Hl1bway Patrol
aPGt.ellllen aaid tlda mornlal
tbey nn IMJ with UM U11m1
number of fot·rel•ted ,__..
bender actldentl on area
frMW&JS1 but DOM were aeftoul.
A 7:12 1.m. mlallap on tbe
Ortega Highway two miles eut
of the Santa Ana Freeway
caused a cement truck to dump
a large amount ol its carco cinto
tratric lanes, but CHP offlcen
didn't know if it wu fot·related.
Oranee County Sheriff's
Harbor Patrol spokesman Kathy
Wa1ener, on duty in Newport
Beach beadquarten, aald vi•·
iblllly ln the harbor waa 1ero,
with no boatiq acUvlty.
Ia Seat Beach Wedaaday,
bllh aurf crested the small city
beach and flooded Seal Walk.
Floodbic aloDa Paelfte CoMt
H l1bwa1 aroaad AadHIOD
1 Stl'fft ID 8'IDMt Beae .. oee.....S
tveb • ....., ... Tu 111111
alowlq traffic near ~ Old
SWlHl 8MCla ..... tower.
Som• Goodt¥ .......... Get • .(._OOAIT, .... AI>
IN81DE TODAY
MemorW• of the premm·
Uol ~ tolllT'l lmgn for
three Harbor Area womm,
phoCOf/#CifMd 91 tllftr formal liMrM bit Doil11 Pilot photog·
rophn Patrick O' DomseU. Set
PQfleBJ. •••ex An'_._.. M
..._ C•
Ul ....... ..... cu
~ u a-.. c•• CIMca ..
Ot• •• .. ........... ...... ,., == , .. 04
.. 4 Ct .... t •
-----.4. • l
. -~ ' .
Dollar on rf"f»ound
l U\l ll( '" , A f' J "'"ht!r U ~-interest rates gave lne d~llu
,1 IH 111"1 .111 \\orld mont'Y markets today after s~arp ~ecl~nes
\\ r•tlm·"d.H 1 ;11\IJ f11'1l·1·-. lost most of Wednesd~y s ga:ns m a 1,H·l..!u~ll•r m.1rk l'l amid gloom} forecasts by bullion dea ers.
111•.-rro~ation abuse?
Rape suspect claims
threats by HB cop
. By DAVIDKUTZMANN
Oll ... O•tly l'lletSIAH
One of four young Vietnamese
refugees chargt'<I with 68 felony
c·ounts in tonnection with seven
Or ange County rapes last year
has testified I hat a police in-
vestigator threatened to elec·
t rorull'him if he did not confess.
"I know you do it. now admit."
defendant Bo Quor Pham. 19. of
Irvine said he wus told by llunt-
ington Uearh <ll•lc<:tive Art Droz
tn August
Ph am 1t•<;tiry1ng ouls1de the
presente of tht.' Jury Wednesday
in Sur>en or Court .Judge 1-~rank
Bnscno'i-. courtroom. said Oroz
told him tu admit to his role in the
sex ual attatks or " we'll put you in
Guitar fest
set at GWC
Toulou:-.(• Eng(·lh<1rdt will
perform i,nginal instrumenta l
r·omµo:-.1tiom. on six string, 12-
stnng anl.I Plcttrk guitars 1-"'ri -
tla)' di Cold<·n West College's
f1rs1 Songhag eorwcrt of the new
\car
E11g~·lh ,1 rd1 will appear as
0<1 rl of t ht> m1mth ly folk music
st•nt·~. prL·sent<'cl Ill a "coffee
house" setting Ill I he lluntington
Bl' a rh <'U m JIUS 's '"'mm unity
1'ent er
Tht> 1•1>nl'l'rt will hegin at 8
p m i\dn11s;rnm is Sl.
On th1· hill with Engelhardt is
( t1M11km '>lngl•r Ken McQueen,
known for Im. humorous ballads
Rrf:l'asl <·ancf>r
topi•· of f orwn
A frr<• public forum on breast
c·ancer will he conducted from 7
to 9 µ.m. Mc1nd ay In the Carmen
Yuppa Conference Center. 18819
Del awar e St . lluntington
Bea c h . Th e pr ug r a m i s
sponsored hy Pacifica Hospital ..
Or Samud M. Cohen wi ll lead
the fomm, which will include
film s. a lecture antl a question
and answer session .
Hot~I cleared
BEVERLY lllLLS (AP)
Sixty rooms in the posh Beverly
llilton Hotel here bad to be
evacuated when an underground
water main was obstructed and
flooded the second floor and
some lobby areas. a hotel of-
ficiat said. Water was shut off
for two hours Wednesday morn-
ing throughout the eight-story
building.
the electric chair tonight.''
The defendant also claimed he
was kicked and yelled at during
interrogation.
Droz, in a later court ap-
pearance. strongly denied he ever
thr eatened or struck Pham, and
added, " ... that's not my style of
interview."
According to prosecutor Carl
Armbrust, Pham made in-
criminating statements to Droz
during that interview in Hunt-
ington Beach, implicating
hi m s elf in four rapes.
Pham and his brother. Dung
Quoc Pham, 18, of lrvine. have
been standing trial in Orange
County Superior Court along with
Minh Quang Nguyen, 19, of Santa
Ana, and Tung Thumh Le. 17, of
S anta Ana . They are each
charged with 68 counts of rape,
sodomy, kidnapping and oral
copulation.
If convicted on all charges, the
four Indochinese refugees could
face prison terms of 522 years
each.
Defense attorneys in the case
had sought to have Bo Pham's
statements to Droz thrown out of
court because they claimed they
were made a day after he should
have been arraiR:ied and also
because they were given involun-
tarily.
But Briseno ruled he would al-
low the so-called confession to be
admitted by Armbrust during
cross-examination if Pham were
1 o take the witness stand.
Defense attorneys later indicat-
ed they would not put tbe de-
fe nd ant on the stand to allow
Armbrust to introduce such
evidence.
During his testimony in court
earlier Wednesday. Bo Pham
said he was kicked and yelled al
by Droz during the interrogation.
"l'm so scared I don't remember
anything." he said through an in-
terpreter.
Despite the alleged threats, the
defendant said he admitted to
nothing. He claimed he was
forced to sign a piece of paper, but
he didn'tknow what it said.
Droz. called to the stand by
Armbrust, said an interpreter
was provided for Pham during the
interview, but it turned out the
suspect could speak English. "He
spoke fairly good English," ~he
police investigator said. denymg
he threatned or coerced the SUS·
peel.
Armbrust has alleged that the
four defendants -arrested by
Huntin2t.on Beach and Costa
Mesa police -kidnapped lhe
yo ung women and drove them to
orange groves near Irvine, forc-
ing them to participate in sex.
Each or the seven vicUms
testified several weeks aao but
only several were able to positive-
ly identify all four defendants as
their abductors and attackers.
TELEPHONE
Thomas P. Haley
Publi~""'
Robert N. Weed
P•••lc19nt
M . Thomas Keevll I Eclllor Thomas A. Murphlne
~lfl9Edltor
Charles H. LOOS AHl'w.t .......... Editor
Copyrltlll "'' Oren .. Coeil P11btl1lllnt Compa ny Ho n••s tlMl•s. 4!1111tr .. 1-. .....,,., mette,.
., "",,~' lleteln may tie r ep•odY<td w11110111 •P•<•••
'9tft\l"*'Of-._,I ~f
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All de ..... nta: (714) 142-4321
Cla\em.d Advef1telntl: 141•1171
OFFICES Co\ta llMY: DI Wnt .. , 5mMt
L...,.. llMdl: 1027 No. c.tlt H ..... ( HllMl"91., lilKtl: IJIWS 9MCll a-i.ver11
. . •
A• Or ... CoUDly man wbo is
charaed with poain1 as a physi·
l'i an 11nd cawain• the death ofa pa-
tient faced 11 SI million bench war-
rant for hls arrest today alter al·
teaedly applylng for a doctor's job
in Wlscon.'lin. Oran1e County Superior Court
.lud~e Rkhilrd Beacom issued
lhe warrant for Gerald Barnes
lt•lt> Wednesday after the Dis·
tract Attorney's Office informed
him or the matter
The Coto de <.:aza resident, who
races trial on second-degree
murder charges in March, had
once before been jailed when he
sought employment as a physi·
c1an al a Los Angeles clinic last
year
Previous ly Barnes had worked
for the Pacific Southwest Medical
liroupin Irvine fort wo years.
The District Attorney's Office
told Beacom that Barnes applied
for a ph ysician's job through a
personnd agency in Milwaukee.
Tu support his <1pplicalion, the
Oran~e County resident used
do<'uments that are copies 01
papers seized by offi cials here
when Barnes was first charged
with the death of an Anaheim
man, who die<l of uncontrolled
diabetes.
Barnes has been free on $10,000
bail since a preliminary hearing
in Orange Count y Harbor
Mun icipal Court late last year.
He is charged with causing lhe
de ath of 27 -ye ar-o ld J o hn
McKenzie. who had been ex-
amined at Pa<.'ifi c Southwest two
days earlier.
It is alleged that Barnes, once a
pharmacist in llliniois. used Lhe
medical records of a Stockton
ph ysician named Gerald Barnes
to '?ass himself off as a doctor .
COAST ...
curred in San Clemente Wednes-
day, leaving the city beach lit
lered with flotsam and jetsam , lifeguards said. -
Lifc~uard Richard Chew said
the city pier s ustained moderate
damage both to its deck and pil -
ings at the seaward end because
of the heavy seas Wednesday,
but that the waves had dropped
to five to eight feet to<lay.
Authorities at Dana Point
Harbor closed the jelly to fish-
ermen etnd sightsee rs for the
third straight day as occasional
swells broke over the rock and
concrete structure.
Minor flooding was reported
along Beach Road in Capistrano
Beach, where residents earlier
sandbagged som e homes.
Lifeguard John Mulvane said
surf was running about three to
f ive feet at Doheny , San
Clemente and San Onofre state
beaches tcxlay.
The San Clemente city beach
sustained some heavy erosion
during the past two days or
pounding breakers an<l clawing
lid cs.
Laguna Beach lifeguards who
witnessed waves up to 10 feet at
times on Wednesday said surf at
the Art Colony had also dropped
to<la v .
FUND ..•
··I think the entire thing s hould
be sealed ." the defense attorney
said.
In a later hallway interview.
M or gan s aid t hat. if t h e
transc ripts are a llowed to be read
by news reporte rs. his client
would not be able to get a fair trial
in Orange County.
ll owever , Deputy Attorney
General Gary Schons said he op-
posed the motion lo seal the docu-
ments and still feels it would be
fairer to open the transcripts than
a llow them to remain under
wraps.
And attorney Duffern Helsing,
r epresenting the Santa Ana
Register newspaper, argued th:it
the public had a right to know
what was happening in a case in-
volving aformer pu~lic o~ficial.
·'There is nothing in these
transcr ipts that the._public
shouldn't know." Helsing said.
"The people's r ights are being de-
nied."
Beacom said he wanted to read
through lhe transcripts before
making any final rulings.
''I'd like to settle it but on a
knowledgeable basis," the judge
said. •
F,....P.,,.AI
RAPIST •.•
tcalledtothescene.
Graham, who declined to re-
lease the identification of the
rape victim or her companion,
said no char.ea are pendin1
against the couple because
evidence indicated they were
actlnl in self defense.
He also said investi1ation
positively determined that the
crime ol bur&lary and rape oc-
curred.
···~········-------... -.. --~~_....., ... ......._.... ........
•
TetaaWlleel
Runaway · car
• causes chaos
NORTH MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (AP> -Don Moore reached for
his pistol when he heard shoutlna. Shirley Gussman could only
watch ln horror. Evelyn Mullen screamed as a runaway car ran
over her foot, and dozens of spectators stared in silence.
Inside the vehicle. the driver's door opeq, was 5-year-old
Suzanne Martinetti, screaming and clutching the front seat.
Then 25·year-old secretary Angie .Butts rushed to the rescue.
She chllSec:t after the runaway sedan circling wildly in the middle
of U.S. 1.
''NEVER IN MY Llt'E HAVE I SEEN anything like it." said
Susan Moore, manager or the nearby North Miami Beach
Greyhound bus station. "This little girl was in the car screaming
and this lady was chasing the car, trying to get in, as it went
a round and around."
Moore, her husband. said , "By the time I got out there, one
woman was lying on the ground. This Ford Torino was doing
l'ircles, you know. doing doughnuts in the middle of U.S. 1, and this
woman was hanging onto the steering wheel.
"She was half out of the car , being dragged along."
Minutes earlier, Mrs. Gussman had driven up to the station,
put her car in park and started unloading suitcases as her grand-
daughter sat in the front seal.
EvelY.n Mullen, the child's great-grandmother, c~imbed out of
the car. Then it jumped into reverse, the women said, and rolled
into the street.
"IT HAPPENED SO t'AST," SAID Mrs. Gussman, 53. or
Miami Shores. "The car just backed away, ran over my mother
and wenl out into the street."
The car, traveling backwards at speeds up to 20 mph. bounced
over the median str ip several times.
Ms. Butts drove up. nearly striking the runaway vehicle.
"I don't know how fast the car was going," she said. "But it
was n't going slow because I could~t catch up with it."
So she kicked off her clogs and finally grabbed the steering
wheel.
"It was jammed," she said. "I couldn't turn it So I just
stepped on the brakes and the car stopped."
BY ntE TIME POLICE, t\ FIRE engine and an ambulance
arrived. Ms. Butts was in the driver's seat. t he child w~s in her
grandmother's arms and the great-grandmother was bemg com·
rorted on the pavement.
Rescue workers took them all to No rth Miami General
Hospital, where Ms. Butts was found to have a bruised knee and
Mrs. Mullen a broken foot. The child, unhurt, was given a scxla.
Ford Motor Co. has agreed to mail warnings to the owners of
20 million cars and trucks built since the 1973 model year that their
a utomatic transmissions could slip into reverse. Nort h Miami
Beach police. however, said Mrs. Gussman's car was a 1972 Ford
The automaker has contended the problem is due to drivers
who do not shift all the way into park.
Last June the National Highway Traffic Safety Adminislra·
tion said the s'tips had caused some 6,000 accidents, 1,710 injuries
and 98 deaths.
Marshland plans
on view tonight
Orange County officials will un-
veil proposals to develop a boat
marina and homes in the Bolsa
Chica marshl and at a public
workshop tonight in Huntington
Beach.
Al Armijo, project manager for
t he Orange County local coastal
plan C LCP> for Bolsa Chica, said
that two alternative proposals
will be presented tonight at 7
o'clock in the City Council cham-
bers, 2000 Main St.
Armijo said that three other
alternate proposals submitted.by
Signal Development Corp .. wh.i ch
owns most or the marsh. also will
be presented. These plans call for
a boat ma.rina and housing de·
velopment, a large scale residen-
tial development, or a large scale
marsh restoration plan.
Armijo said copies of the coun-
ty's land use plan for Bolsa Chica
will be available lo the public
tonight.
He said the two county pro-
posals c all for cutting a navigable
ocean channel to the sea and
possibly rerouting Pacific Coast
Highway inland around the
marshland gap.
The 1,200-acr e m arsh is located
south or Warner Avenue on the
western side of Pacific Coast
Highway. ll is in county lerritor)
bordered on three sides by the cit)
of Huntington Beach and on the
fou rth side by the Paci fu:Ocean
The county's LC P . which
establ i s he s deve lopme nt
guidelines, ultimately must be
approved by the state coastal
commission. First, 1t has to be
certified by the county's Planning
Co mmi ssion. Roa rd of
Supervisors and the South Coast
Regional Coastal Cum mission
Memorial slated
for UCI professor
A convocation will be held Fri·
day at UC Irvine in memory of
UC I professor Dr. Arthur
Marder. 70, an internationally
known authority on British
n aval history who d ied on
Christmas Day.
The publi c m e m orial
cer emony will be held at 2 p.m
in Room 17~ of the Computer
Science Building.
"College
land buy
approved
Coall Community College Dis-
trict trustees agreed Wednesday
to acquire an 8.5-acre Fountain
Valley parcel for a permanent
headquarters for Coastline Com-
m unity College.
The trustees unanimously ap-
proved a three-year lease, with
op ti on to buy. for an un -
developed site on the southwest
corner of Warner Avenue and
Newhope Street.
The purchase price for the
land alone is $3.4 million. It is
owned by Stewart Development
Co. IV of Tustin.
Correllan Thompson. the dis-
lri(•t 's executive vice chancellor
for business services, said con-
s t ru ction of the Coastline
College center will add another
S4.3 million to the total price
lag
Co;istllnc. which opened five
years ago. operates without a
formal campus The college t•on·
ducts classes at 150 area loca
Lions. including schools, com-
m unity centers. churches and businesses
The coll ege currently 1s serv
ing about 25.000 students per
:-.cm ester.
The proposed Coastline l'enter
1sn 't l!Xpccte<l to house regular
cl asses.
The center will contain the
s t hool's administration a nd
(·ounscling offi ces. and possibly
fa ti Ii t ies s uth as a media
1·entcr. book st1>rc and l an~e
<1Ud 1torium or mt'eting hall
College offic ials say pQrtions
or the propos<;-d Coasllint.' renter
m a) he ll'ased to private busi-
nt'SM'!> to offsl't expenses
'oa!>tl1n c: t·urre nlly r e nt!>
!>P<ll't' ror administration offi c·es
o.11 J02:U Slater i\vc
Cuastlin<' now lacks sufhnt'nl
ro11m 1n lh€·sl· lt.'aM.'d facilil1l·s.
(•oll(·ge spokl•sm<in .J<J ck Chap
pc•ll s aid He added thC1t the dis
tnl't ha:-. dt•lnmincd 1t will sC1ve
111om·~ 111 lhc long run h~ build
1ni.: nc•w offi ces for ('oasthne.
r :J t lwr than l·onl 1nw ng to rt>11t
\' 1n· <"hant•C"l lc1r ThofRfJSOn
":.11d lht.' thrl•e yc<ir least• will
i.:1v1· lhc· d1!>lnC'l time· tn design
,1nd nhtain N>nst ruc·t111n h11b for
1h1· ('1wstlinl· •'l'nln
Bad engine
tmairts trip
.\11 1r California jct
bound for S<1n .Jost· wa-. rt·
tur11 c-d t•> Orang!' l'nunly's
.r o h n W a) n t· A 1 r po rt
Wl•snbrla~ n11'(ht after an
,•lt·rt ri t al "hort dl•a<"I I\ at
1•!1 an t.·n)!tnl'
C:11 nlraf\ to :..i rt'p•ir l
from the Orange Coun ty
F1 r'· Dr•parlmt•nt , Tom
Kamrnski. Air California
rl 1r1·<·lor of rommun1ca
t1 11ns. sa11J 1h1• 1•ng1 m· <IHI
n111 t al ch fin·
l\am1ns k1 -;;.i 1d Lh l·
1· n g 1 n t• s h u 1 cl 11 w n
a u I 1>rt1 a I i c· a 11 y <.i rte r th t'
">horl otc•urr('(} and that an
on board t•nginc fire ex·
tmJ!uishing system was ae-
t ivalt.'d
'\h<• I lfi passenger s
ah6ard wen• µl aced on a
c.hffercn\ aircraft for tht
fl11?ht to San .Jose. he s aid
Give her one of life's slmple pleasures.
She can 't resist anything as
appealing as these sparkling
diamonds, set in l 4 karat
yellow. gold. Diamond stud
earrings from $150, pendants
from $425.
SLA.VICK'S
Fhw J•-~n SiMIP 1917 J
Fash6on 11&.nd. N~wport C~nter. N-port hach, 714/644-~380
Wettft\lnst.r I ~ne Hilla I Mluion Vi.jo I Nooh Orin~ /TM City
lm C•nitot • llftt M.lk
Allo CrHtn Los Anpln I S.11 Diego I Let V•'
u.-o1~·,~ct.rp ..... et ~ Ill,_.. "'5A ......... o-p.
Mtffflttr F"•t /ftlJtlm G11tW
. )
..
Con1els 1101
for .'1\'' 11111yor
Mayor ti;dward I. K0<•h re
Jl•t·ted an invitation to com
11ctc in a ca mel race with the
mayor of Indio. a community
that calb itself "Date Caµ1tal
of the World · ·
Indio Mayor Phil Reed of
fered to wager Koch a bushel
of Indio datC's against a
bu~hel of applf's from the Big
A pp le Ret'd s aid he got the
idcu for a rat·c when he saw
pt<·t ures of Koch atop a
camel durinJ.( a recent Mid
die East tour
Koch declint'tl to compete
duran~ the Feb. 13·21 Date
Fes tival, saying camels have
a .. vale ctisr>osition "
Svndic<tled columnist Art
Huchwald says his mor alt'
:..oa r e d whilc wat c hing
Ronald Reagan's inauAUra
twn but only because he 1s
a satirist
··Ther e w1 II b l! some
marvelous stuff for someone
wh o has to
m ake his liv
1 ng making
fu n o f peo
pie." he told
s tudents at
Arizona State
n1 ve rs ity
··1 s aw those
s t a n d s
packed with ~ ,,
m a r v e I o u s •ucHWALo
people who are going to s up·
port me for the next four
year s."
Buchwald was on campus
to informally advise me m
bcrs of the Western Humor
and Irony Membership on a
confere nce the group has
sc heduled for April 1-·ool 's
Day 1982.
Muhammad AH will
aoon be in your
nej'ghborhood
bev~rage store -as a
decanter of
grenadine. The real
article shows olf the
simulated version at a
Los Angeles r1ews
conference
No part1c~. no movies, no
·wa lking, no talking That's
diva M.,arilyn Horne's advice
tor !>leering deetr of the fl u.
The 47-year ·old m e zzo·
~uprano has been rehearsing
fur a Carneg1c~llall recital.
(1nc• that has been postponed
t Wll'e bet•aus c of hc•r bout
with 1nflucnzu
'The or1~1nal,-dat(' was
Det 16. but that had to be
put llff hnause of a flu virus
I p1ckl'tl up in Dallas 1n Nov~
t•an lwr. ur1t1I Jan J•J," 'ihc
~.11d in lht• Nc'4 Yllrk Times
hral'l1 t hiltlrcn will bt'g1n
planti11 g a "John Lennon
Peat·e Forest" next month Jn
m e mory •>f th.-sla111 former
Bl•tttlt•.
The fon·~t . lo he planted b)
.Jewish un<I Arab )OUlhs in
the m1>w1ta1nou~ <;altlt c re
gaon . wai. the 1dea of a gruu11
of Orthodox J ewa~h 1mm1
grants from th1• l'nitl'd
States who collected money
for the projett from <;atilee
r esidents and J c\4 ~ la vmg
abroad
Press reports ~utd \'oko
Ono, tht• widow of th e
s up<>rstar !->hot In 11l'ath in
N e w Yo rk l a s t m o nth .
promasc.'<l to compose· a ~ung
for the fore ·t 's <led1cat1on .
The SC'nalC> m·1·rwlwlming
ly t'onfmnt•d Alexandf•r M.
Ha ig as f>resident Rea~an's
~cc:rctar) o f st all• amid
praise for has toug h f11rc1g n
polit') s tarw c 11nd r<'~t·rva
t 1 o n s a h11 u I h 1 !'> r 11 I c 1 n
Wate rgut1•
llaig's n11minat1on WU!> ap·
proved ~l:l·li
Sen att• lh•m1wrat I(· l.L·adt·r
Rob('rt C. Hy rd Jtn 111•d the
vote aga1n-.t ll<iq.~. ~a) 1ng
t h<'rt' W!·r1· · · un an ~'41·rcd
qul'St1on:-rcgartl1ng the
abuse nf puwt·r "
Name tags a problem
Report slwt:vs most employees dislike them
The <·ost to pin a name on an
c~t1matcd 950 Ornnge County
t•mployccs who work at public
MunlC'rs would be about $2 , 175 for
the fir-.t year. arcording lo a new
re port
Despite what county officials
see as a small cost. the county Ad -
manist rat1 vc Office t'autions that
01 he r pri<'kly prohlcms are relat·
c d l o n:,aml'.' tags . Mainly.
t·mployl'l'!:> don't always wear
them
s ider Rtley·s !JrOposal during its
m eeting Tuesd ay
SAYERS NOTES in his report
that a bout 400 of the 950 workers
identified as working with the
public are library employees.
who already are encouraged to
wear badges. About one third of
the m do, he said.
About 100 of the e mployees
work in the coooty Environmen-
tal Manageme nt Agency or the
s heriff's de partment. The others
a re "scattered throughout the
count'" .. h1· :.<11d
After lht• 1111lial 1·1",1 of printi ng
1 hC' badgt·s. tht· n 1:-.t would gn
<I own in suhst•qu(•nt) t'.I r:-to al)(Jul
$72~ for m•w and r(•pl:.at•l'tl nanit•
platt•s. ht•:-ai<I
T iit: HAIH>F:S \.\ll Ul d t•11c;1
a hout $2.2~, c:<t(·h ctnd would in
t• lud1 • a photograph of t he worker
Other n 1unt) cmployl'rs wh11
arc constant I\ 1n 1•1m1 :wt with thl·
puhltl'. such ~;:.. shl'raff ~ cl i•putic!'t.
f1rt'fighlers and <i g rtc·ult ur<.al 111
spl·t·lors. lratl1tionallv h<1v1· worn
11umc plates .. APPROXIMATEI.\' five
year~ ago hoth th<' county Clerk
and the llealth Deµartment dis·
c·ontanucd the use of name badges
fur a ll employees ... s aid the re·
port prepared hy analyst Hobert
Savers .. At that lime. these de·
part ments fc•lt tht• effort requfred
to t>nfon·e wearing badges ex
cecdC'd the benefits badges pro·
v1dcd "
Firth Di s t r ict Super visor
Thomas Riley ~uggested the
name badges last November. lie
s aid the name plates would make
tht• t'Ounty worker s seem less like
na m eless bureautrats to mem·
bcrs of the publtc
Laguna eyes land
for bike motocross
The board is scheduled lo con
SC man held
at library
An unemployed San Clemente
man was in jail after he was al·
legedly spotted breaking into the
San Cleme nte branch library
Wednesday. ·
A r esid e nt o f Avenida
Granada called police shortly
a fte r 3 a .m. to report seeing a
man climbing through a broken
window into the library at 233
Ave. Granada.
Police arrived moments later
and a rrested John W. Dunfee,
27. of 602 Ave. Victoria.
Dunfee faces charges of at·
templed burglary.
Laguna Beach city offi cia ls are
studying the feasibility of using
cit y .owned land -possibly
Sycamore Hills -for a bicycle
motocross t rack.
City council members have
di reeled City Man ag er Ken
f''rank and Councilman Kelly
Boyd to look into the possibility of
using municipal proper ty for such
a r acetrack at no cost to the city.
ONE OR TWO acres of land
would be needed, said Boyd, who
had urged the council to explore
t he matte r.
Boyd said interest in bicycle
mo tocross racing is growing ancl
that Laguna Beach youngsters
must now be taken to Irvine or
Westminste r to participate.
The operation and size of t he
tracks vary, he s aid.
In Westminster, the city leases
the land for $1 a year to a service
club. and the s ervice c lub
oper ales the t rack.
Council member Sally Bt>llerue
said possible parking problems
for such a tr ack s hould be studied.
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642·6086
I ----·-\
. .... . -..... . .,. .. . . . . . .. ~ .. ,,,.
...
And Rru c e ll111>p1ng o r
Laguna lkach c<1ut1 or1<.'d that
such a fac1ltt v m <t \' c·au:-1· environ
m entalctamagc ·
"In power tlrivf'n muto('ros~.
thc damagc as inen·d1hle," h1·
said.
Couneilman Ne al F1tzpal rtrk
said that aftt•r a few r ac<'s. the en
v1ronment al damage· could he as
sessed. lie noted that families
parti!'ipating an the races often
br ing motorhomes and pickup
I rucks lhat l'<>Uld causccta mage to
the terrain
But J im Knc<'. a lol'al bike shop
owner. said that youngsters .. arc
going to race any way.·· and that a
track provides a s afe place to do
it.
Frank said he would look into
all rel<tted issues in the matter
Pair arrested
in child porn
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP)
A man and a woman have
been arrested and charged with
using the woman's 7-year-old
daughter for obscene purpos es,
police said .
Police said Arthur J . Jones,
31, formerly of Harrison and re-
c e n ti y t r a n s ferred b y his
employer to Austin , Texas, was
a rrested in Austin . Chatta-
nooga police de(ectives arrested
Jean L. Conn, 29, m other of the
elementary school student, who
wasnotidentifted.
A Chattanooga film processing
firm alerted police after de ·
velopin& color slides J ones
brouaht in, police said. Delee·
lives said they obtain~ 36 slides
showing the girl in nude poses.
Contract
·handling
rapped
The Orange County Human
Services Agency hBS been anari·
ly denounc~ for its handlina of
several contracts unde r which
ambulance service is provided
lo indigents and jail inmates.
The furor over the contract
adminhitration erupted Tuesday
when members of the County
Uoard of Supervisors learned
that the county has continued t o
l'ay for billed ambulance service
despite the fact sev~ral of the
t•o ntracls between the county
and the ambulance operators
had expired.
"The whole thing is s uspect,"
<.l ecl<.1red S u pervisor Bruce
Ncstande. "I can't believe the
county operated in this manner."
According to agency officials .
the count v has been billed for
a bout SI0,000 in a mbulance
scrv1tes since Julv, when the
t ounty Counsel's Office recom·
m ended the Auditor·Controller 's
Office stop' paying bills not cov
t·red by contracts.
Supl'rv1sors delayed for one
"'e('k action on II um an Services
Al{CO<'Y ret·ommendation that
the now·dcfunct contracts be re
nl·wcd so bills could be paid.
t\gcnty officials a lso recom
m ended that a task force be
formt•d to s tudy whether the
<·ontrat't:> )>huuld be !JCrmanently
l' x ll' n cfod
F1 vi.· l'l1mpanic~ have provided
a mhuluntP s crvite 1n t he coun·
t \ ·~ uni11<·11rpor<.1ted areas u.nde r
Jgr eemc11t:-dating bl.lck to 1002
The a ~r ec ment:-expired al
various dates, the earliest tn
1!172 and the latest 1n 1979.
l 'p<Jn lt'arning that the county
t·o nt 1nul·tl to p a~ for billed
wn 1n·~ !'llestande s aid. "How
1·an I ha~ hap111·n ·1 .. •
Sara Walk·er. an agency assis
tant d1rcct11r, told s upervisor s
that thc t·riunty t nunsel 's office
r ule d in 1!177 that payment
'4 tth,>ut the contract~ was legal
and thP praet1cc t·ontinued until
last summer.
prl·s:-1011 the t ontracts wer e
v;iltd .' ~Ill' ~aid
Board t'hairman Ralph Clark
t'a ll t>d thl' protedurcs ''sloppy ··
· Wlwn a rnntract expires you
-.11 down and re negotiate." Clark
.,aid
Supt•rv1sor RQgcr Stanton said
the s1tuat1nn refl ected a "total
ahsencc of responsibilit y and ac·
1·ountability "
,\ m hulant•c 1·unl racts we re ad
111 1 11 1 ~1 t• r <' d b ) t he cou n t y
C'1111n -;t•I s Off1c t· and t he
~ h l' ri fr. ... I h • 1><• rt m l' n l u n t I 1
f o r an a 1 1 c1 n o f l h e c o u n t v E m l'q!l'rH·~ Medat'a l Ser vice:-.
l>l\·1.s111n of lhe lluman Se rvices
,\gt·11 1·~
"I l11Wt•vt•r. r esponsibility for
tht· :.igrC'cmt•nts wa:-. uncle ar and
no departrm•nt took an at'l1ve
11>k 111 their administration ... ac
(' o r d 1 11 g l u a r e p o r t t o
'ill Jll'rVIMlr:>
""""-·....., •• 1111
01hy Pllel Still P""to
SUPERVISOR RILEY ENDS HIS STAY AT HOAG
Hospital secretary Mavis Sumers accompanies him
Superoisor Riley
emls lwspital stay
With his sptrtt!> high. Orange County Supervisor Thomas Ri ley
left lloag llospi tal in Newport Beach Wednesday following a 16·
d;i y s tay for treatment of a respiratory illness.
With his wi fe. Emma Jane. and his physician. Or. John
Humsfeld. at his side. the 5th District supervisor said he will be
bal'k an his Santa Ana office on a regular basis beginning Monday.
RILEY WA S HOSPITALIZED Jan 5 with what aides
described as a "severe flareup of a pre·ex1sting asthma condition
tom pounded Ii) the flu ."
'Riley was hospitalized tn May with a sim ilar asthma flareup,
but it wasn't as severe as his most recent illness
Dr Rumsftld said Riley's "overall good health and strong con·
s111ution·· a llowed ham to respond qu1t kly to treatment after he
'4 a~ admitted to the hospital
RILEY'S CONDITION initially was listed as cr itical, but. aft er
two days tn the hos!Jital. improved markedly .
While hospitalized. Riley was treated by Dennis Novak, a lung
specialist and Sidney Rosenblatt. an endocrinologist Rosenblatt,
ac cording to Riley aides. treated a diabetic condition
Rosenblatt said the condition has ~tabilized and is totally con·
trollabl~ through medication.
Stolen county merchandise returned
J\h1 1ul S25 .000 an s l o l<'n
m l'r<·hand1st· put on public dis
pl Lt)· h.> the Or Jnge Coun ty
Sh1•r1ff'-. OffiC'e la:-1 week in San
ta ,\na has found al~ way back to
11<; rightful owners
Sheriff'., 1.t Wvatt llar t ~aid
m un· tha n 3.000 ·people viewed
t hl' propt·rt) <.luring a three day
pl'rtod lasl week The t rimc vie
t 1 rn s were hoping to find stolen
pos)>c·~:-1on~ rceovcrcd with the
arrL'Sl of .1 Santa J\na nrnn last
month
~
TUDOR
II art s aid 25 v1c·ti ms were able
to provide posit 1 ve 1dent ification
of missing merchandise worth
about $25.000
II <' said another 100 people
ha ve provided tentative iden·
ttf1c·ation s of mi ss ing
possl•ssions and could recover
their ite ms with added vcrifica ·
uon of ownership
Tht.' mercha ndis e put on dis·
pl<t y last week had an estimated
\'a IU{' or $300.000 The items
"t•rc reC'O\'ered wit h the a rrest
of Hosendo Torres, 4fi. on New
Ye ar's Eve Hart said Torres.
charged with r eceiving stolen
propert~. 1s believed to be one of
Orangt' County's major handlers
of missing property.
llart said investigators on
the ir own had managed to trace
ba ('k about $45 ,000 o f the
me rchandise to comme rcial and
residential burglary victims in
the c ities of Costa Mesa.
Oran~e . Anahe im , Tust i n .
Westminster an<I Santa Ana.
~
TUDOR
For Peaks
In Oce•n-Golng
Performance:
Ch•mpion1hlp
Surfing and
Tudor Submariner•
lllue-wote< relob.i.ty •S buott "''o
rh1 brawny T .,do. po• Leh
the Tudor L, Oy11e1da•e Sul>
mariner 1n s101nless s•eel ..,,h re·
valving elapsed rime berel and
1T10•d'"'Q bracelet, ,,.11 winding
crd ptes1<1e-prool down to
330 leet Roqhl •he T ..dot * ~ Pr...ce Ovste< '" slo1t1·
leH 1reel wit h 1evolv1nq
elapsed ••me bezel and
mote~ Ftiplo<~ brocele1, self
windinq and p.enu•e·proof down to ~ feel. Bolh models
leo1ue the r ... n1ocl ~
aown ond ore ovoiloble .... 1~
blue or blod dial ond berel
RAFF~Jry
32 FHhk>n lelancl ... .,.,. ..... ......
~
ll
1
11 1
u
DO
w-..
I
nt
le'
al
es
ro
s.
n g
I-
s
!S
e
If
I·
:I
r
' ''"',.._· .Mnwatl H . IMI
.....
~······-~
........ ~ T ... ~~'l r
~lliii::s~--~t .. r-Marpld•e
1he party's. over
IAl'I' WAllllNGifON DATSUN&: In contrut to 1u.n·
1luoe. unUa and lone Un .. ol U1n«M&alnt1 that prevailed in
ou cQ6tal city over lhe put rew day1, Waahln1too early
W eclMlday 1 .. m.cl like a city draln.cl ol everythint.
The wuu..r came up cokl , low ml1ta 1wlrl.cl over the
C • pltul Dome and Intermittent raJn 1plattertd city 1treell
1t waa Hile uyl q , "and then there were none.'' No
rro•d• jammlnt the ·1adewalkJ No hiaedot or nowin1
10•1U Noslr.-a a&oa1 buulevard1 with military escorta.
AT THI INTt.:aNATIONAL Inn on Thomu Circle,
wber~ lJ\t Oran1e County Uncoln Club had made ita
Washinltoo heiadquarten over the paat three days, IUI·
11aie and people in tnvelinl clothea Jammed the lobby
whirh only boun before wu tiUed with smmna lnauaural
ball ce&ebrants and 1curryin1 military aides.
Oespete the fadin& celebration and the emotional drain
bere over the JO.>' of the Yanka belna freed from the Ira·
ruan lntematiooal thuas. there are still some leftover hip
porltet DOtes on the late, great lnau1uraJ celebrations.
Of the rune im1u1ural balls held across Washin1ton the
l'1ty '~ ID()(orcycle cop corps with their white sidecar·
equip~ machines, got first prize for the best show at the
Shoreham Americana Hotel when President Reagan ar·
r1\'ed about midnight. The bike cops spun speedy circles in
the street , swooped around and parked in formation.
THEY REMINDED YOU of those trick ridin1 Tijuana
motor cops who always appear in the Costa Mesa Fish Fry
parade or the bia Huntington Beach Fourth of July march.
The ball al the John F. Kennedy Center won top honors
"It's getting late: why don't~ sit thi! one out?"
for the most chartered buses parked out front. You count
99, 100, 101 and then lose count. The Reagans made their
most brief appearance of the evening here.
Ballgoers at the Museum of Natural History were treat·
ed to the most bizarre bar. It was located near the roach ex·
hi bit, next to the white polar bear and just in front of a case of
human skulls.
Iran ripped by Carter
'Savagery agailut innocent lw1tage•' told
PLAINS, Ga. <AP) -Aeeuainc Iran of "HV.19'1 .. a&Dlt ablOlutely lnnocent boat., .. ,.,
J lmmy can. NCOUDlM tal• ol honor fJ'OID tbe II U.S. bolt.,.. today, lDclucllnl belDI forced tbroqh
a 1 a....u.t ol ~ ud klc:kl before belni freed after
"4d.olc:afdvlt)'. . .. ,,_.,.the actl ol uimala almOlt, '' Carter
aaid aft• nt.aralDI from bis vtait with the freed
h01t•1•mW•tOermany.
He sald a report be prepared in lont·hand durtn1
the fll&ht home was to be hand-delivered to Preti·.
dent Re81an in Waahlnaton this momln1.
The former preaident saJd the "solemn aere.
ment" that wda lb• bosta1es' freedom ls In the beat
lntereata ol tbe United States and should be kept
because it involves the country's word of honor.
Carter made bis remarks in Plains and while
aboard tbe Air Force passencer jet that brouabt him
and his party home after a dramatic dash lo
Wiesbaden, West Germany, as • apeciaJ envoy
repreaentinJ Rea1an. He arrived In Geor1ia about 3
a. m. PST today, less than 24 houn after he had left.
CA&TEa SAID THE DAY he turned over the
White House to Rea1an was the "happiest day of my
life'' because on the same day 14 month.a of effort to
free the bost.,es h•d proved successful at last.
But bis worda were angry when he spoke of the'
abuses the hosta1es suffered.
He said qne hostage told him he had been struck
on the way lo the airport but then added, •'Well.
that's all in the past."
··Even when the hostages were being loaded on
the plane. they carried them to a fairly distant point
by bus and made them walk through a gauntlet, one·
by-one, without even the protection of the whole
group. Jeering and sometimes even kicking to try to
debase the Americans leaving Iran,'' Carter said.
* * * Agreement
• survives
Some ol the 1tori11 that Carter \old bad been re-
layed before by boata1ea' relatlvt1: that some
hOlt.,ee were held ln solitary confinement for as
much aa 400 dan. some were told falsely their
mothers were dead and some were Uned up before
mock execution squads.
•"Ibey tried to convince them we were the
v lllaina, that we had robbed and cheated the J ranian
peoplefor3S years.'' Carter said.
·, "And even after month after month, they (the
Iranians) still took pleasure In abusing them
psycholo&jcally, even physically.·'
Carter said that he told the hosta1es they were.
free to go at any time, but said he "strongly advised
them" to stay together at least through Sunday so
that those who are suffering most from the conse·
quences ol their captivity can receive the strength of
the whole group in a period of decompression. ,
ASKED IF ANYTHING IN particular was
~rong with the hostages, he said that for some, isola·
hon had left them in a state of semi-confusion . He
also said some had lost weight.
Carter, asked about statements that Reagan will
want to examine the agreement with Iran extremely
carefully before agreeing to implement it said a re-
view to see if the agreement has any d~fects was
"perfectly legitimate.·'
:·1n my judgment, the Uniled States' position on
the agreement is a ·very favorable one for us,·• Carter
said . "Not just because the hostages have been re·
leased now lo freedom but because the financial set·
llement is one of which we are very proud."
.. Also. our nation's word of honor is at
stake," Carter said. '·I signed on behalf of our coun·
try these agreements and I think it would be a serious
thing for us to violate them ...
court test
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
agreement that exchanged some
of Iran's frozen assets for 52 U.S.
hostages has survived its first
court challenge, but there may be
further legal tests.
§\JRVl~b
THE ~"
MEDIA
SIEGE U.S. District Judge Gerhard A.
Gesell ruled Wednesday that Jim·
my Carter had the constitutional
authority as president to release
Iran's money, which he ordered
held after the U.S. embassy in
Tehran was stormed by Iranian
militantsNov.4, 1979.
Gesell's decision denied a re·
quest by a native Iranian, now
living in this country, and his
American-born family to force
the U.S. government to withhold
transfer of $.50.9million of Iran's
assets.
A,,W,..._,o
WIFE OF EX-HOST AGE, BERT MOORE, EVADED PRESS
Marjorie with media gift given her In Mt. Vernon, Ohio
•
.... '"-"'
SHAKEN BY RECEPTION?
Kurt Weldhelm
Waldhei01
plan change
reported
NEW YORK <AP> U.N.
Sec r eta r y -Gene r al Kurt
Waldheim was so shaken hy the
reception given him in Iran a
year ago Lhat he changed the
terms of an American proposal,
"the only card the ll .S. held" at
the lime in the hostage crisis,
according to AHC News.
Instead of proposing, as the
U.S. government requested. that
a commission of inquirry be
formed after the hostages were
released to examine previous
American involvement in Iran
Wal?heim "reversed the plan,':
ABC News says in a special report
to be broadcast tonight. at 10 on
Channels? and 10.
Waldheim "proposed a lJ.N.
comrrussion that would go to
I ran without any prior agree·
m e nt on the r e lease of the
hosta$(cs." ABC News s aid.
A spokesman fo r Wa ldheim
l>aid the reµort was "not true."
Pie rre Salinger, t h e ABC
;.; ews correspondent for the re-
µort . sa~·s Waldheim was "in a
state of panie" when he met
with Iran's revolutionary coun-
C'il bt•caus e of J "riul" directed
dt him 10 a Tt>hran t:em etery
Av We~un. the AR C .'.'Jews ex·
t-c ut1ve in chJflH' ''' the report,
said rt>t'(m tl.\ obtained informa·
lion not lo be included in the
r<>po rt tndiC'atcd Waldheim
fl.':ircd he might be tried by Ira·
n1an mtl 1tant~ l!nd t•xcculcd dur·
tnj! the January 19ij() lriµ.
Never mind the90-foot blue whale suspended overhead.
MOST TALK OF THE former hostages was evident at
the Pension Building ball. No wonder. Thal was where the
diplomatic corps and Supreme Court justices celebrated.
I lenry Kissinger and Alexander Haig got together here.
Most wearied-appearing crowds seeme<I to be at the
Washington Hilton ball, with much grumping about the A
versus B ballrooms. The Reagans visited only A, where
Paso Robles anthem singer Juanita Booker sat with
Charlton Heston in his box.
ALI EBRAWMf.'a Houston de·
veloper , his wife and three
children had sought a 10-day
restraining order but were look·
ing in the long run for compensa·
tion for a house and a business
taken over by the Iranian govern
ment.
Christine Nettesheim, an al·
torney for Iran who argued the
agreement should proceed, said,
"This is the first case where a
plaintiff sought to enjoin the ef·
feet of this agreement.·•
BUT SHE NOTED there were
:J38 cases in U.S. courts in which
'claims have been filed against the
Iranian government.
LONG LASTING
LUXURIOUS
Through it all, you could tell that weary bones were
beginni!"g to set in among the Orange County Republican
delegation. One prominent Lincoln Clubber was heard to
exclaim as he tried to maneuver at the Watergate, "Damn
these rental cars. You pull on the parking brake and the
hood goes up."
AND THEN THERE WERE Dick and Georgia
Spooner. he the just-ex·Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
~ere~ prexy, who tried lo negotiate the escalator to the
W ashmgton tube.
Abruptly, the escalator started sliding backward.
"Run faste.r!. run. faste r!." the people below implored.
But then, like all maugural celebrations, it all came to a halt.
And so has this. Turn out the lights, boys, the party's
over
It will be good to get home.
East slippin' 'n'
Gesell said it was "beyond
question'' that Carter had the con·
stitutional right to fa!Jhion the
agreement under his power to
conduct foreign policy. The judge
said the Ebrahimi family could
return to court to seek a long-term
injunction, but that the case had
little likelihood of succeeding.
Under the agreement to free the
hostages, the United Stales on
Tues day transferred out of the
country $7.9 billion in frozen Ira·
nian assets, part of which went in·
to a fund for settlement of future
claims . An additional $3.2 billion
in U .S.-basedasselsremainstobe
disbursed.
slidin'
Snmi\ freeze forecast for uide area
Cll•r.<•OI r•ln !Opercent tonlQllt, lr>-
creHlf'lll to tO percent cll•r.c• ol
'"°-"Frid.Iv. CHst•I low !O, lnl•ncl SS. CCNlll•I
111011 low60$, lnl•nclmld·~. W•lu St.
El1ewll•r•. ll••vy 1w•ll •nd
llH••dous wri ""' ll•rbor entr•nc••· Sovtllwft•rly winch I to U •nots IOfll9llt Iner.Mino Utou•rt0ll Frldev
with J to._,..,,. wind weYff. Wes•r1y
1well S to71wt. 8rM••nlto Uf-.ton -•t le<lfto llM<llH •1111 occetlonel Mii lo !Sleet.
11.s.s-•• ,..
1'09 end frff1lno tempereturn
ceuMd "'-" condlllont ov.r much of Ille EHi eerly todlly, encl Ille
IOl'e<HI celled for -''°"' New E1>9le'"9 .. IN '-' Greet LA•-.
-......, Oflle Velley.
"alft -gele•lw<• winds ree<lled a lo119 the "•clllc Coau trem
llOr111em c.9illornle to Wa~on.
.., .... ......, h.._ I•
Mon<1ty·Ftt0•'Y tr "°" oo not nave
yOu• P•llt' by ~ 30 p "' <•II belOle , o m •net Y'Out coov wtll be d•l•v•'td ,
S.lu•Oh MIO SvOO•y II 't'(>u 00 n01
fK•iwt YQt+ll C00V O; t e m Otll "'°'' 1' • rn ana 'f'OU' coov MM be Othvef«I
M!Owet1 ere c--.W llhly Fri·
.. y In IN ............... , -CCNlllOI •••H, Ille Seftl• 9Mller•Ventwr•
•••• end Ill• ltlver1ld•·S•n
.. Nie ...... -·•"" ... -...... 11111119 ............... In Ille-.
t•lfl• • ...,. -...,,...,alllret ltllitlll IMUllll lie lft ...... IN Mrvk e HHI.
TM ._ IY*m 11 c-lllt llMvy
1well1 a'"9 IMIHtde111 111rl neer
llarllet --.,._.,, ....... .
........ -..... ...,..,... _____ _
peeled to rHcll I 10 '' IHI on .om•
WHl·le<l119 DM<lle .. Tll• llWHI of ••In Fridey I• con
sloered only \119111 In Ille dewrh,
wllere hiol» •'-'O ,.,. from Ille m ld·'°1 Into IN~.
Hlth• In , ... LCK Anvetes ••••• Ille volleys_,,,. Inland Emcolre will ti.
In Ill• low .OS.
T,...iwratM...-•
All>any
Albuque
Amarillo
Allent• Allenllc City
8alllm-81rm ll\9flm
81smerck
8olM
Boston
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TODAY Sec--S:ot,,m. 4 .7 SecondMtfl 11:Jlp.m. •.I
""°"" Finl!-•:Jte.m. 1.• flrtlllltfl IO:Ju.m. u Secend'"' S:JSp.m. 4 .2
Sun WISS: 14 p.m .. rllOI Friday•: f7
a.m.
Moan rt-7:U p.m .. Mt• fr141ev
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............ --.., • • w 4 • w • • w • • w
Chair
Reg. 849.
SALE 639.
Ottoman
Reg.339
Chair
Reg. 850.
SAl.1639.
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1Chair
Reg. 995.
SALE 749.
H.J.GARRETT fURNIJU~E
PROFESSIONAL
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Your Favonte Designer Will Be Happy To A.uist You
O,......_..'nlln.AM.l•tt. Z2 I 5 HAllOI ILVD.
COSTA MESA '46·0275
CMJl'OANIA
rt II west
Area i"ensed
/ordroughl
•
SACRAM ENTO C At~·I Hart• airound 1Al ski •pea and low rf'nrvoir 1 .. vf't.. 11r\I warnlnll
Ner\henl t alltorn111 rt'!ttdtinl• lhf'~ 111•.rb•• tn for
their qcond drouaht In ftn yHn.
Ski r....-.n11 •nd !H1n11• f11rrn1·n art> alrt!iu.ly
<'OUntiftl lht-1r lo11~t·
Ramlall so fsu n ..... ltCbOll lb ,,.,. btih1111I the:
total for Uus date In 11'76, tht• fu r.I vtllH of 11 two
y•ar drouaht th111t tui.t tht' ,1.1t1• hunllrcdi. of
mllhOf\5 ol dollani in Ioli\ r rovii. Ii\ 1•1111wk tr•·c;.
fish, wlltll1fe ·aod tour111t lnt•umt'
0 C'ITV KA OtlT ul w ... 11·1 111 11'?7, tiul
~m••rJ(t'nC) m1•11xun· wcrt• 1111poi.t-.I 11ll'lul.l1111ie l>llJ
rn& watt'r a<'l'O.'\' \ht'. t{l(•hmumJ ~1rn Huhat•I Hru.l.ce
10 M arm Count 11urth or !-.1&n frit.111 1M '\1
k atnl1&1l th11, \ t-ar hia~ l~·\ln t1·i,, lhuo ~ pc1
\'rlil ol ll\t>r1tg,. anll r~tum111K tu 11orm11l •will
tol..t! mor.-than o tug 1ttorm at thh po111\ 11111
l'lorlt dcpul~ l hid of flood OIJt'rlllWlli. fu1 lhl• 'l ctl•·
Ol'Pdl'tmt'11l of W ... tt>r Hc,oure·t !>, ~dlll W cdrll'~da y
Mu<·h of the "1ortht:aM I!> al!>o !>Uffonn~ fmm a
lark of rainfall t:.arllt:r lh1!> rno11Lh , lta· lldawur"'
Ht\ u lial\tn Cumm 1ss1on llec.:lart'll a l.lroulo(hl
1:m er~tnn in l>t ld11>art New Jer!>c't' New York
,rnd Penn:.\ lvan aa ('on!>ervallon effort'> hC1 ve
bt>g un 1n C~n necl1<:ul l.ast wt:ck, l hc M1s!>1S!>1pp1
RI\ tr dropµt.'(i to a rel·ord low level at Mt:m ph11t,
Tenn so ··i\a. T HE I.ACK or !>llOW or rain Jll
:-.:orthern California has hit -;k1 resort!> hurd and
r aused d1fflcull1c!> for grain and li vestock farmer~
Some farmers have had to start 1rngallon early
The Modes to I rrigat wn Dislril·t :.lartt•tl r un
ning waler through 1h 1:anals on Jan 11, lhl·
earliest sance l!f05
Water Master Doug Woodman of tht-King~
River Water Associatwn. which manage~ Pinl'
Flat Reservoir cast of Fres no, !>aid the arl•a ha:-.
had one int h of r ain sinn: <l<'t I Tht· normal ac
r um ulation is eight inc he!>
IN MID-JANUARY, there were only two inrhcs
of s now on Donner Summit near the muin p<1s~
through the Sierrn Nevada, compan.-<l to a normal
50 inthes.
The Heavenly Valley ski resort <1t Lake Tahoe•
hasn't opened. Marketing director Brad~ llo<lgc
said the ground was ba re at the hottom uf the
slopes and there were only six to 10 inches of snow on
the upper slopes not enough for .. a quality :-.k1 ex
perience.··
"This is the latest we've ever gone into Cl
season in 25 year!>." he said.
Some grain crops have been stunted hy tht•
lack of rainfall, but fields under irrigation arc pro-
gressing well. according lo George Tucker Jr of
t he Crop Re porting Ser vice.
3 jewelry stores
robbed; m.an dies
LOS /\NGEl.F.S 1/\PJ Walhin ,, fcow h11ur~
thrc<.' jewelry stores here wl-rt· h1l by robber:. who
killed one man. critically wounded unuther . :-.trug
gled with a third and locked a salesman in a vault
who later convi n<'ed one suspect into !>Urrendcnng.
a1.:t horities said.
Diran Odel. :19. died in his Wilshire Boulevard
store after being shot in the face during an apparent
robbery. said police Lt. Glen Ackerm an. Od<:I':-.
partner. Kegam Toran". 33, received a gunshot
wound in the he ad lie was listed an cnllc·a l cond1t1on
today in the intl'ns1vc t•arc unit of the l 'Cl./\ Medi e:al
Center .
Two men ar rested Wednesday were booked for
anvestigation of murde r They wen • 1dent1hed as
John D. Jones.19, and Aus tin H. Willis, lR, both11f l.11s
Ani:cles. said Ackerman
Bank tdthhold• Iran fund•
SAN FRANCISCO I /\Pl A fed eral JUclge has
a g reed to allow B<1nk of Amenca lo withhold lhc·
transferofS91 million in interest on Iranian bank a<·
counts fro7.l'n aftt-r th1· ~,;i
Am er ic-a ns wcrl' seized . ~---------. l fo'or m t·r P n •s1dent
Jim m y Carter had or
. :ter ed a fund t.rans r1 ·r ....__ ________ _, be fort• I ea vi n~ off u·e Io
secure the hostages' re lease. but the Rank of
America said the interest rates set were "in great ex
cess' ·of those it had agreed to pay originall y
An affidavit filed in U.S. District Court here said
S2.4 billion was in Bank of America accounts from
Iran.
Artreo••' ho•e llMrglarfzrd
MALIBU (API A transie nt was 10 custod y to
day afte r actr ess -enter tainer
Connie Stevens returned to her
Malibu home and found SlS.000
worth of property missing and a
stranger sitting in a chair. a Los
Angeles Count y s h e ri ff's
spokesm an said.
As t he m an sat in Miss
Steven s' c hai r . s h e calle d
authorities, who later arrested
Stacey E. Storm. 21. inside he r
hom e . said sheriff's deputy Jim
Pia tis. STEVENS
Storm was booked for investigation of burglary.
Platissaid.
C'alllenda ••• 9et ral•
By Tbe Associated Press
Rain is ex~ted over most of Northern and Cen·
tral California today, except for the central valley
area south of Merced, where there is only a chance of
rain. the National Weathe r Servicesays.
The rain, heavy al times, is ex~led to give way
to colder weather and scattered clouds on Friday.
Snow was expected a bove the 8,000 fool level in
the Sierra today. with the snow level falling to about
8,000feetlnthenort.hemSierra Friday.
n .. em .............. H>ff
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A former Paramount
P ictures employee convicted ol swindling t he film
studio out ol $495,000 has been sentenced to four
vearainatate~riaon. Fnman G. Packard Jr .. 38, who was found
1utlty ol IJ'UMI theft after a non· Jury trial last Sep-
tember, wu Hntenced Wednesday by Superior
JU41,e0ardan Rinser.
<•nldt-11 a1111iversary
:\('tor Pat O'Brie n celebrated his 50th year of marriage to his wife
l~loisc <it a Los Angeles r estaurant Wednesday night. Helping with
lh t· festivities were their c hildren. from left, Mavoumeen, Terence
and Bn~id. o· Brien. very popular in the 1930s , has been in over 70
fi lms a11d st arred in the TV series. "Harrigan and Son."
............... _...._.....__.....-.. .......... ~--····-· ·---_ ..... 4 ..
Thursday, J.nuwy 22. 1911 H/f DAILY PILOT ,4 ~
Panelist replaced!
South Cotu1t lwwing di1pute grow•
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Leaders of
the state Senate have stepped lnto a
dispute over low-coal housing and
replaced a former developer on the
South Coast Regional Coastal Com-
mission.
The Senate Rules Committee on
Wednesday named a physician, Or.
John Hisserich, director ol re1ional
activities at the Los Angeles County-
University of Southern California
Comprehe nsive Can cer Center
School ol Medieine.
Hisseric h replaces Fred J ohnson,
who has been opposing Chairwoman
Ruth Galanter and the r epresen-
tative to the state Coa stal Com-
mission, Mel Nutter , in a dispute
over low·cost housing in coastal de-
velopments.
JOHNSON, WHO remained in of·
fice after his term expired Jan. I,
predicted that the Rules Committee's
action would thwart efforts by some
commissione rs t o repl ace Ms .
Galanter and Nutter .
He had said Monday he had enough
votes to remove Mrs . Galanter and
Nutter. who support the state com-
mission's guideline requiring som e
lo w-to moderate ·cost housing, or
payme nt of an in-lieu fee, for de·
veloping fiv e units or more.
Johnson. who described himself as
a "voice of reason and moderation."
s aid ht> s upports such a requirement
only for large projects.
"In smaller projects where it was
cleuly presented that there was no
economic feasibility lo include low·
Income houain& I voted atalnat it,"
he said, addint that the requirement
is a "manner ol slopping projects."
Johnson said he beloncs to the'
Sierr a Club. but environmental
groups and "no growth" advocates
had lobbied Senate President Pro
Tem David Roberti, D·LOS Ange les-.
to reolace him .
SI E RRA CLUB .,reside nt J ohn
Zierold said he wrote Roberti saying
that his group had become "dis-
e n c h a nte d " w i th J o hn son 's
performance.
Roberti. chairma n of the Rules
Co mmitt ee, i s o n e o f th e
Legislature's s trongest. supporters of
low-cost housing in coas tal develop-
ments.
Zierold said he did not know His·
s erich. but predicted he would
··probably be a very.objective member
ofthe commission "
Hisserich said in a telephone an-
lcrv iew that ht: was "really con-
cerned about maintaining access by
all income levels to the c·oastline.
"l am not formally a m ember of
any environmt•ntal organization. I'm
concerned about a balance of en
vironmcntal issues with appror1riate
kinds of growth "
FREE REFRESHMENTS AND SURPRISES! FREE GIFfS AND
SERVICE Whf'n vou hN·ome a
Charter Account holder. you're in for
special re 09111tion. And you· re in tor
a very special free Charter A count
Gift. Plu!>. you can lakt" advdnlag<> of
a free safe deposit box and our
full -range of frt·c servi<"'e~.
we· w very proud of our new building. Its architectural design is unique
dnd quite beautiful inside and out. You're invited to stop by to tour the
lubby. community room and safe deposit vault area. It will be an elegant
expcnc·nce. And we'll have delicjous refreshments and gifts for you.
Comt:: to Columbia today!
THOMAS B. ANDERSON
MARY B. ANDERSON
12J4 MAIN STREE'T
YOUR TOWN, CA 00000
1 20
/'11 11 /p / /11• .,,;,,., ,,, ________________________ $ _____ _
CCLUM•IA 8AVIND8
AND LDAN A••DCIAT10N
h 11 --------------1: l 2 C 0 7 0 J. 7 J.. I: Q J. 2 Q J. C l t.. 5 b ? 8 Ci 0 II' J. 0
Dolla rs
FREE CHARTER 5 14% CHECKING Be one of the
first to open a checking or savings account during our Grandest Opening.
Depending on the plan you choose. you may receive all your Columbia
Charter Checks free. and enjoy free checking with no minimum balance
requirement. Convenient, profitable and friendly banking is what Columbia
is all about.
AT COLUMBIA, YOUR MONEY GROWS WITJ;f FRIENDSHIP.
HELP AND CARE
BORROW UP TO
$] MILLION If you plan to
buy. sell or refinance a !>ingk· lamily
home. Columbia can now locrn up to
$1 million on first tru st deed!>. Thb
is a special program designed fo r the
needs of the Harbor Area community.
HOO RS:
Mon. thru Thurs •..• 9:30 Al't to 5:30 PM
Friday ............... 9:30 Al't to 6:00 PM
Saturday ............ 9:00 Al't to 1 :00 PM
COWMBIA
SAVINGS(.£}
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 80 Fashion Island • 760-8551
(comer ol Newport Center Dl'M end 81nte ROA)
'
PeekU'd wu arrested in December 19'79 on
char1•llebllked Paramountoutof$t95,000byform· i•I a ftdlUoua company, called "Scripts UnHmlt· :._ ______________________ _... ________ ,..... __ .__ ___________________ _
eel," for pbotocopylnt televlalon scripts. ·
----··
. . . ..... ·~-'-,.
Orange Coa t'Da1lv Piiot I ..... ~._I ,.. ThomlaP.Haley /Publlthtr ThOn\.1 K .. vll/EdltOI
Ed t.,.--r H,e•••••••••T•h•"•'•td•••v•. J•.•""•.•"'•22•.•'• .. •'••••••••a.•,...,.••••K•r•.•.b•.c."•1e•d•1•'°'•''•1•P••••E•d•''•Of"•••
A• llJF
Teacher protests
damage students
Nooeee"er &1d u wd run to face the protpect of loeins
a Job. It '1 f rt1htt"ftln1
Still. lh~e· aomelhlna t"epuanant and unprof e11ional
about the work lowdown disruption cre.ated by som.e
teachen ln the HunUnatoo Beach Union Hiah SchooJ Dis
trict lhl• wttk no matter lhat the teacher a11oclation blith~ly eJCplamed It w H m.-rely ll demonstntlon to show
how budget cut& will .ttdYeru ly affect clasaroom activities.
LaliJDOlt a,cbool boardl. blah ,.chool truJtees here f •~e
ml"na<-lf\I bud1et e uts Somt-how, they·v~ &ol to llnd S3 9
million to trim from tbl' 542 m11hon that already w1ts 1t
pared down bud&~t ll'vel
Q\Mte natur111l\' personnel reduction i. one form of rut.
tang the budaet and 75 leactun.i poi,1t1ons are Jeopardized
.-lon1 witbSlrouniet-hn~ ~ti,
It v.·ouktn 't be o bad lf the ~motwu jjOd a(·nmony we re
lnl'll.v betwttn the i chool board .. nd the t~ac:her .ass~·~·
lion L'n/ortunatet) 1 he tear her~· highly v1:ubl~ acu v1taes rn
reccnl des} ha'~ dragged the students into the affair
ra.:htanfincl!uam 1o1it-dc Th&nJust notfa1rtothestudents.
We h&\ e deep S) mpathy for the teachers facing the
prospect ol bemg laid off At the same tame, we wish they'd
find another 1o1.a\-to vent their frustration, some way that Joe~n t dra~ lhc.: t udt:nt:, 1ntothe n11rt!
little accontplished
Ttungs were only sHghtJy different in lhe 13-~ch~l
Huntingt on Bce1rh (city) Elementary School D1stnct
where teacher and administration leaders have just com-
µlett·d long and sometimes acrimonious contract negotia-
tions Th~ talks dragged on from last f>'ebruary until final
ratific~tion Tuesday night.
No strikes or serious job actions were reported but
there were unpleasant moments .
Teachers. justifiably frustrated by the bite that infla·
tion is taking from their paychecks, engaged in a brief
s ickout at one school and later demonstrated with picket
signs at district headquarters and at all the schools
before class
Many also wore badges to school, expressing their
sentiments and there are indications that students were
drawn into the controversy.
When aJl is said and done, the bitter feelings and
manifestations appeared to accomplish very little.
Trustees had previously granted 8 percent pay in·
creases to othe r district employees and it was clear to ob·
servers that teache rs ultimately would receive the same 1~fer. '
As it turned out. teachers did indeed receive -and
approved an 8 percent pay increase.
The ~ettlcment comes not long before negotiations
are to start for next year.
Would it be too much to expect that the negotiations
eould be purs ued throughout the s ummer this time and
not be allowed to mt rude into the education program?
That would appear to be in everyone's best interest.
Park support unlikely
Huntington Heal·h officials have been grappling for
months with what they call an innovative way to finance
the city's 400-plus acres of parks.
Key to the financing plan 1s the proposed develop·
ment of private commercial and recreational facilities in
the 300-acre Central Park.
Som(' offit1als believe that 1f about 75 additional
acres c:an be added to Centra l Park, it would be able to
accommodate such developments as hotels, restaurants,
watcrs lides. bi rycle motocross. c hildren's playland and a
large overnight camping facility for a proposed trout fish·
inglake. ·
The theory is that revenue the city would receive
from private e nterprise would finance maintenance of the
t•nlire park system.
After a blus h of optimism, the plan. howeve r, is n't
that feasible.
Most importantly. it requires a bond issue of about $6
millioh lo acquire the additional land. In the present
t·conomic climate, it is difficult to envision even e n-
t husiastic r es idents a pproving such an undertaking.
T here doesn't seem to be any outpouring of en-
thusiasm for the project. In fact, neighbors of the park
are showing mounting resistance to any development
t here.
The City Council recently approved spending $32,000
for a study to see if the proposed projects would be
worthwhile economic ally.
At this point. that seems like a poor investment of
city funds barring an unanticipated change of sentiment
from the public.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those or their authors and
artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily P ilot. P.0
Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd I Wives
ByL. M. BOYD
Many is the city wife who
accuses her husband of not
working hard enou"h. of not
earning enough money. of not
helping her enough an dealing
with the youngsters. But the
farm wife who so accuses her
husband is a rarity. Our Love
and War man bas attempted
Dear
Gloomy
t Gus
Why does this country
spend hundreds of
thousands of dollars to
bring in people from
Asia and Cuba, and at
the same time spend
hundreds ot thousand• to
keep ournei1hbon out!
KIP 0,_...'I G-' C-..lt ....... . ....... ., , .... ,. ... .. .. . ""' ... "', ,...., .. ''"" .. .. .............. _ ... _ .. ..
o.MfCO.,DMIJ,,_,
. _.. _________ ... -----.
to explain the wby of this dif.
ference between city and
farm wives. And failed.
Just about every other day
in this country, another
bridge collapses. Happened a
week or so ago near my .
place. A little bridge clearly
only strone enough for
haytrucka caved in when the
driver of a semi tanker
loaded with salt water
evidently failed to note the
obvious. Too bad. Pretty lit·
lle brid1e. It was one of
about 375,000 bridges na-
tionwide more than 45 yean
old.
When I said supply tenden
sailed behind the enormo.-
Chinese junb of yesteryear,
and that vecetable 1ardem
were cultivated on the supply
tenden to provide the CNWI
and ,..._,en of tbe 1Nat
1blp1 wltb freab food, lt
didn't occur to me -u it· clkl
to certain swill readers -
that thole •ecetabt.. wen
lndeed the world's tlrat Junk
·foods.
Earl Waten
School ·financing unresolved
Allhouth it la not likely that any al1nltlcant chanies in
school flnanclnf will come out of
the um Lella ature, preaaures
are belOI brou1ht to bear by the
t1&wyera wbo jolted the entire
school financlni system back in
1968 with lhe now famous "Ser-
rano" cue.
They had brouaht suit agatnst
a host or state officials in behalf
of John
Serra no, a
Duh.Jwm Park
pa r e nt who
rontended his
son was being
d e n 1 e d hrs
l'.onst1tut1cinal
ri ~hl s t o
e q u a I
trea tment
bl'('UUSl' ..he
lived in a school district which
was too poor to provide the
quality education received by
s tudents in "rich" districts.
After eight years of litigation
the courts finally 1t1reed,
declaring the state's system for
financing schools, based upon
the assessed valuations or
.property within the districts.
was violative or the constitution
in that it did not provide equal
a mounts to be spent in the
education of every child.
THE RULING or~red a
re v ision which allowed
differences of no more than $100
per pupil and gave the state
until this year to achieve the
goal.
With th e pa ssage o r
Proposition 13. limiting property
taxes. school financing was
necessarily shirted from the
local tax revenues to the stale.
The res ult has been that the
s t a t e has now assumed 80
percent or the costs for the local
school operations.
But the Serrano lawyer s
contend that the Le1islature baa
done little to eliminate the
unconstitutional inequities
which gave occasion to the case.
In some instances, they claim,
the situation is worse now than it
was then, pointing to their
favorjte target of Beverly Hills
which is currently said to be
spending $2, 700 per pupil while
Baldwin Park has only Sl,400
per pupil. The lawyers say that
this proves the present scheme
of financing will not bring the
system into full compliance in
the reasonably near future or
ever. They threaten to reopen
the Serrano case if action is not
taken by the Legislature this
year.
LEGISLATORS, Gov. Jerry
Brown, and state School Supt.
Wil so n R i les disagree .
contending the state is now in
substantial compliance. Riles
says anything more at this time
would lower the caliber of the
entire school system working
unnecessa r y hards hips o n
hundreds of thousands of school children. ·
He pointed out that many of
the di stricts viewed as wealthy,
such as San Francis.co, have all
of the Jfroblems that go· with
poverty. minorities, non· English
s p ea king and c ulturally
deprived children.
The whole issue might be
easily put to rest by the state
taking the final s tep, which
eventually it will s urely be
compelled to do, and assume
total responsibility for school
financing. It would require only
slightly more than a 20 percent
increase in the prsenl funding.
BUT THAT solution is bitterly
.r es i s ted by sshool
administrators and teachers up
and down the state . For they
know it would inescapably bring
about unif o rm sa l aries
s tat ewi d e ror both th e
<1d m inistrators and teachers as
well as all other employees.
While that probably would be
the most healthy thing to ever
happen in the public schools, it
leaves the false concept of the
Serrano case unchallenged, That
is the idea that the spending Qf
equal amounts on each pupil will
insure equality or education ur is
even desirable.
Under present financin~ extra
allowances are made to provide
f o r t he handicapped . th e
u nd erprivi l c~e d . lh l·
non-English speaking and even
the gifted Each h;ive s pecial
need s over and above the
regular school . program Even
~uch things as the extra busing,
whether court mandated or of
geographic nt·ressity. in(•rea~c
I he per pupil costs in eerta1 n
districts
~~~
One hundred pt•rt'(·nt stat(·
ftn<in C'1ng could vastly 1mpron•
the prest>nl systc•m 1f thl· courts
W I! I h iJ (' k U w ;i y fr 11 m I h I'
mandult· or ~pending equal
<1mounts on t•t•l'h <·h1ld '~'f RtJ)H ME -fl~T. I HAVE 10 FIND~ HF.AD END, I
Mailbox
County needs efficient airpo~ facility
To the Editor:
I was most pleased to read in
the Daily Pilot that Supervisor
Ralph Clark is ask~ng the Board
of Supervisors to consider the
appropriateness of increasing
the number of daily commercial
flights out of the John Wayne
air port. The purpose of this let-
ter is not to re-hash past pro/con
arguments, but to give the board
my wholehearted support for in-
creasing the number or daily
commercial fli ghts. The airport
exists.
There 1s no valid alternative
site. The passenger count in·
creases year by year. This fact
in itself should suffice as ample
rationale for accommodating to
the needs and demands for air
travel of this county's popula-
tion. Orange County and its
cities, its industries and its peo-
ple need and require a first class
commercial air facility. This
damn thing has been studied to
death and if you stacked all the
impact reports on top of each
othe r you probably wouldn't be
a ble to see above it or around it.
FINALLY, I am a resident of
the city of 'Newport Beach. I
lived for four years in the Bluffs,
first leasing and then owning a
res idence directly under the
night path. When the planes
went over it was noisy and un·
comfortable but my family and I
accommodated lo it because we
moved in there with the rull
knowledge that we were in the
jet flight path. If a survey would
be made todav. I'm willinil lo bet that substantially all th~ res·
idents underneath that flight
path in the Bluffs and Dover
Shores have moved in there
post-jet.
It's amusing to read about the
complaints when I recall that we
sold our borne on Vista Entrada
for a s ubstantial profit to
another resident on the same
street and the jets kept fiying all
those years. Another cinch bet
would be on the substantial in·
crease in housing resale values
under the Newport Beach night
path.
Let's build a proper terminal
and sufficient parkin1 structure
now!
KARL 0 . BERG HEER
..... , ...... IWe'f
To the F.ditor:
I invite you to look· for a mo-
ment at the "liberal landalide,"
the "liberal mandate." Y•. J mean the election of lut No-
vember 4.
I have before me tbe
CalUomla ft,una, and it la ln
California where tbat fa"'1te
aoa Ronald Re.,aa la auPPGMd
to ban done 10 well. H• -cfidn't.
He 1ot • percent ot tho .. .UCS·
ble to vote; the turnout, accord·
ing to the California Secretary or
State. was the worst ror any
presidential election year since
1912. when the office began lak·
ing notes. A lack or bumper·
stickers revealed the s ituation ;
almost no one voted /or anyone.
ON THE other hand, two ex-
tra-political everM_ played de·
cisive roles in settWI!! up a situ;i-
tion where we had no one to vote
for. The man lhe millions
would have voted /or. as sup·
porters and non-s upporters
knew. was Teddy Kennedy, but
he was precisely the victim or
the two extra-political events:
Chappaquiddick, which was old
but not quite forgotten, and the
hostage seizure, ideally suited to
a temporizing president in
charge.
Take away these two, or at
least the second, and we would
have had a Kennedy nomination.
Let a ll the people vote their
prejudices just as they did vote,
let Reagan keep his 28 percent,
reshuffle the Anderson votes.
add the percentage points to
bring the turnout up at least to the
average for a presidential elec·
tion and this gives you what the
columnists and politicians would
call " a liberallandslide ." Jfthisis
a plausible reading or the out·
come then the new president is in
for a rude awakening.
DAVID ALAN MUN RO
Trott •a.•OL-rei
To the Editor:
I'd like to know who is responsi-
ble for the outright destruction or
trees on the' west side of town.
Costa Mesa now has a look which
resembles the set for the movie
"Chain Saw Massacre."
Whoever is res ponsible for
this butchering or nature must
have been listening to Ronald
Reagan ·s "trees cause pollu·
lion." They should be told the
statement is erroneous.
Maybe they'd be satisfied if
they leveled every tree in the city.
TERENCE COAKLEY
Traltk! trtelu
To the E.ditor:
In all or my trip• around
Fountain Valley and HuntiftCton
Beach I have been amaaed,
aatonl1hed and otherwise
bewildered by the uncanny tral·
fie lilht controls.
If I drive at the speed limit
(when I ftDall)' 1et the treen
Utbt at a tralftc--control, > I ar-
rive at tbe next traffic U1bt
about 10 tecanda after lt cbana•
to red IDd toreee anotber stop.
Tbll ll U1ae -.VerJ ..... aad ta 1111 cllrlcUoe of traftl •· ctpt Beacb Boulnard, and
aomtillmll 8romluant. la llddl·
tloa to tlda, I bave notlc.d tbat
wb......, tbll ba,,_. U... ll
•
.. -.. --..... -. ·---.. ----............. --·-,,,,
never any cross traffic to re·
qu'ire lhe use of the intersection.
I s it stopped ror no apparent
reason and on the occasion when
there is cross traffic, it is usual·
ly sitting stopped and waiting at
a red light all the while that I
am approaching the intersec-
tion. Al the very last second the
ltght changes lo stop me and let
me sit stopped until the next
gr oup or cross traffic ap·
proaches. Then I get to watch
this group get stopped by the
light and finally I can proceed to
the next repeat of this same se-
quence of events again -and
then again -and so on, and so
on.
HAVE YOU eve r asked.
you r self ho w the traffic
engineers can time these lights
so precisely in order to get the
maximum number of stops from
the greatest number of vehicles
for each cycle or the t.raffic con·
trol?
H's easy -they know how far
it is between traffic lights. They
know how long it takes to get
there at the speed limit and they
can very easily time the light so
you cannot get through unless
you exceed the speed limit.
l asked the traffic engineers
for Fountain Valley and Hunt·
ington Beach if they could also
set the timing so you would
never have to stop if you drove
at the speed limit. They all said
yes. it would be easy. It could be
done for aJl of the streets and all
directions of travel.
But they are not interested in
saving energy or reducing smog
or traffic noise or reducine wear
on your engine and brakes. What
they want is more money for a
computer to hook up to Ediqer.
It will take years to install and
years to solve partially a
problem which should not even
exist in the first place.
This is a deliberately created
problem caused by the faulty ad·
justment of the timers and it can
be corrected in one week by set·
ting the time.rs correctly. But
everyooe else gets a computer,
so It's only fair to get one for the
traffic engineers.
LARRY JAMES
All,..,.tettl
To the Editor:
I'm penonally affronted by
the number ot Cout Community
C0Ue1e acbedulet tbat have 11>-
Quotes
''Poland la livinl tbrOUltl a
YtrY Important event, radio
trwmt..._ of tbe bob llw aad Ood'a wurd." -• .,...
.... ,...., •• • 1hwlld Ill ID-au1araUa1 WMk\J rellliOU broadcaata la commaalat
Poland.
peared lately One from Orange
Coast College, one from Golden
West. and now this evening's
mail brings me the Coast Com·
m unity College combi n ed
schedule for '81 , all at U. S.
postage paid, non·profit and so
forth. and l Just wonder.
This is delivered to my post of·
rice box , to my residence and to ·
my business. I think it's a terri-
ble waste of the taxpayers '
money. I thin}< your paper ought
to lake a look al this and find out
how to save a few bucks in the
era or Proposition 13.
BILL BENTS
Airport '""°''"~
To the Editor:
There have been many things
proposed for the John Wayne
Airport recently and many more
suggestions will be made at the
public hearing before the Airport
Commission. However. none or
the questions have ever been
asked to any or the younger
generation. I am 17 years old and
as far as I know I will be living in
Newport Beach for the rest of my
life. I will be here for a lot longer
than the people who are making
the decisions.
MY POINT is, I understand that
the master plan calls for an in-
crease in the number of permitted
daily departures to 55 from a cur-
rent level or 41. Why do they need
to make a major airport out of it
when they have LAX so near? The
main problem is the fact that it
will simply destroy Newport
Beach! Real estate will drop, land
will lose value. the air become
worse than it already is etc. Just
look what LAX has done for Los
Angeles. It isn't exactly prime
position around the airport within
10 miles. Do we want a $75 million
airport terminal or do we want to
preserve one area of nice beach,
clean water and fairly fresh air?
Also, if they want to grow now,
what says they aren't goin1 to
want to grow more later when
most of the' older people are gone
and we are still here? I think that
it is bad enough the way it is now. I
can't ever look up into the sky and
not spot an airplane.
I think people should consider
these fact.I and do something
about them. Newport Beach is a
clean, beautiful and fun city to be
in. Don'tdestroyit!
SCOTT WENKE
;
... _____ .., __ ------.-.............. ~ .........,._..._
I ~ ....... .-~ ••
DAILY PtL.OT'
President's consistency eyed H98tage
kin due
, .... ,.. ..
~lJ rtin Ct.1111>1•1 l'11!)lc.• ~1t'!>J
h,1:-. hecn Odlllt'<.l l'U ffirTll'rt'IJI
lopn offu:t:r uf I .Im d~ Bun k
l · " I 1 f ll 1 11 1 .1 .., '.'\ 1 • "' '' o r I
l·orµ Jf<tl\' offt<'l· 111 '\o l'Wp1>rt
Hea t h
B> JOHN ('UNNlfF ...... _ ........ ulytl
Y.W YOltK Wh utt·vt•r J.lftJ
ic • u flh liuuttld Kl!ltl(an det.·1c..lei.
111 push duri11g 1111> prt·xhtency
r11u .. t ~ 11ui<h••tl hard. 1111\' and
""'l\h Ct"" r1•.,crvuuun11 ii he 1.s to
'-11'-l u111 1·1 l•drl11111 ' .111d 1•ublic·
1·1111t1tkn n.· •
Wh1t'l1 I'\ 111 "ll) \hu\ 1·u11t.111\cn
\'\ I\ ol llHH It uJm1 rt'<l \'lrtUl' Of
h ·tAtll'I '\ ,1n<J Ull t'C'llll Cllllll'
1w11•:..,1t \ "' "'1·11 \tl\ wa) that
,,·t·111 ... 111 h1· thl llll'S';J~c run
ti lllt! 1 hi m1~h .i '1111\ a:.:.ortmt·nl
111' 1 u '1•11tl\ 1111h1t,,11 .. d t umrrll'n
I JI ,
l r 1:-. .il-.11 J l 1 1111 l'>ffi ol
l111111 t-1 l'r 1··.a d t'11 I J 1rn111'
1«.11tt·r "'"'' 1•111l1.i1kt•ct 011 fou r
drl f1•r1·11t 1·1·u110 1111t· 11r11~1 .ams
I tn l\ lt·lt hu•,111c.,.., 111h·c 1 t.i111
.1h1•Ut \\h..it , .. l'XIJl't'I lll•,l(t uncl.
11111'\'lfUl'nll) ~JI \ of taking
lull)! ll·r111, ,..,k.,
111 .., "J'itl t th 1· 1111lv arl
1111n1 .;tr;1I '"" I•• ;111 raC'I t hat d1aq.~1· "l1i.t11\, fo1· unt•. imposed
.tlurrag W~den1Jaun1
u waege-price freeze without any
w.1trning and an opposition to his
uwn philosophy. But Carter did
It 1n a wholesale wuy.
l.jSt year. for example, he
!'..ud he had balanced lhe bud&et,
but three
w eek late r
l'Ve r y o n e
l'UUld see it
w a s u n
bu lan t•e d
a~a1 n Il e
prom1::.ed to
c ul in0<1llon,
t~t h e l'OO
tlon c J infla
l1o nar:'\
'Jlcndi.ng lie instituted wage-
prH•c g uidelines, but after a year
ht' r daxe<l the wage standard.
lit• be~an a new economic pro·
grarn JUSl weeks before the elec·
t1ons
And the result s eems to have
bet>n a loss of credibility and
public confidence, rootec..I in the f t't·lln~ that' if the boss didn't
bdit•vt• in his pro14rams after a
Economy chairman selected
l ' WASllJ NvTON c I\ P 1 Prc!.11lcnl He<1 ~un . I hl· ~1xon administration as assistant secretary of "'f. l'ompletmg his tt'am of k~· C\'.onomic a.dv1!>cr!>. ha!> lhl· ln·:i:-.ury for el·onom1c polic.·y from 1969 to 1971.
c hosen Washington· llni vt'rsit) 1JrC1fc:.:-.11r Murra '
L Weidenbaum to be chairman of tht· J,1res1den1 ·.,
Council of Economu· Advisers, The Was h111gt11n
Post has reported.
Crops do better
A Reagan adm1n1slratton 0Htc1al conf1rmt>d
the selection of Weidenba um, an c•xpcr t 1n busin,.s:.
deregulation, the newspaper s auJ
Weid e nbaum, SJ. wa~ ont· of Hc a gan 's
economic advisers during the presidential ('am
paign and headed a transition team on reguh1tory
issues
WASlllN<;TON ( APJ -The 1980 com and SOY·
bt'an l'rop:-.. shrive led by hot. dry weather, still
l urnc·d out to be slightly higher than Agriculture
l>c partm<·nt experts had previously thought.
Weidenbaum. an economist with the old
~~lh~liS!.t from 1949 to 1957, served_!_n
In its annual review of farm production last
_vt'ar, the dt•partment put the corn harvest al
6.647 .500 bushels after estimatmg it last month at
f..461,000 \he suyhean l'rop was put at 1,817,000
bushels.
Succeed in Business withou1 ·1he Expense
Answer Network has a solution to high overhead thill kills
profit. With Answer Network's shared·overhead concept you
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These Services Now Available
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24 hourd1c1a11on
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Scheduling
Reminder servirP
Cont orencP room~
Mall hc:;ts
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For More Information
Call 953.1234
Chapman College
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
AND MANAGEMENT
(714) 997-6684 .. Pro/essional Leaming of Distinction Withm a
Canng and Value·Centered Community"
OPEN HO USE
Monday, February 2. 1981
4:00 p . m . -7:00 p. m . -Reeves Hall
Counseling-Registration
MANAliEMl-:NT 8 .S.8.A. /\CCOUNTINC
ECONOMICS
fJNAN<.:E AND H!-;AI. ESTATf.
M /\NA<; l':M ENT SCI ENO:
MARl\F.Tl"1(;
8.A.
M.B.A.
f,(.'t INOMICS
MASTER OF' BUSINESS ADMIN:STHATION
Day and evening classes for all students
Th• Center for !conomtc AeHerch prHent1;
Leonard Well
President, Manufacturer's Bank
THI~ ANNUAL ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS FORECAST CONFERENCF.
1181 QUAllTERL Y ACTIVITY
Friday, f'ebnaary 13, 198l . t :Jt
CllapmH Cotlel(e · Waltmar Tlleattt
--------------------~---~--------~-DEAN, 8CHOOL Of' lllJSINESS AND MANAGEMENT
CHAPMAN COU..EGE, 333 N. GLAS.~ELI., ORANGE, CA. 9Z6M
PLEASE SEND ME I NFORMATION ON:
0 B,A. or 8.S.B.\. 0 M 8 .A. O CENTER FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
NAME ........ ......... . .................... ..
ADOR~ ......... . CITY ....
ITAT! ............... , .............. : ... ZIP .. ..-.PHONE -........
COLLECTORS
CORNER
Rare Coln• • Stampe
GOlD & SIL VER
PricH for 1 ·22·11
K nJ9en and'
M~PI" Ledl
100 Coron.•~
!>O P•w• 9Q• C)ll'<tH 8ttQ\
w. .. CI '14H ... , ....
Utt. 19 U'4. SO
U7UO UfO.ot $5411.00 Utl.ot
'701.00 '"'·" 1114'11. 116''11.
'·-·---1• c.-.... -.-.
(714) 556-el50
South CoHt Pl•H Vlll•g• ___ ..
( ...... -....... ~ ....... '
THERE MAYBE
NO INC URABLE
By Ter~ISEC)A·SE~
Grant,
R. Ph.
'=t1I lonl( a1411 k11ll.'r ell!>
(':l't'~ Ilk•· 'm;ill pox, rl1p
tlt•·r 1a , l\pholtl .
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1 .. rt o11n prt••·au111 111i; anct
I 1rt'\ t'lll 1 \ t• lllt'llll'IOI.'~
'-11rn1 .. l:I\ 111 1h1• not \0()
d1~L111I llllllrl' J !'llrl' \\111
111· d1!->1•0\ l'r1•1l for l'Vt·ry
d1?-t';1-io• 1\11 ti\ t'I' lht• t'ilrlh
l'l'M':J rt·h '1'14'Tll i~I S :IJ'l'
1•x1wnn11•11l1111! with l111th
old and "''" <lrug:-and d1t·m11·:11 , ,\!'> i;oon il!o
lhl'\ ,1r1• 11ppron~d fur
:-al•· llM'. \It' ,1111·k lht·m.
~o th :11 \H' 1'1111 fill an.\
11hy:o.1t·1an 'pl't'!'>t nptions
TtH'r1• 1:-. ho111• fur prt'i-t•nt
1n1·uralilt•' Tht' n1•xl
·n11rat·1t-· tlrut.t ma~ lw
lhl' hl1·"1111.t!'. lhl·~ ar•·
l1H1k111~ tor
'l Cl\ It l>OC "l'<IH (',\ '\
l'llfl:\10: ··~ \\111•11 .\tlll
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\ 11111 ""'''t'l lfll 11111 11 ... 111111
p111L' lll':trln 111 '' 1· "Ill 111•11\ ,., 111 nrnptl~ '' 1th11111
t•\f i;1 1'11.11'1(1· \ .cn•:tl
m an" 1woph· 1•ntr11 ,1 11:-.
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I I
,,UI( UDO 'HA•MAC•
Ft"MMHry
JSI Hotfllt .. lo.d
.... ..,_., leech
'4Z·IHO
Star11ng
•New
Business
I Acccordlng to
Calllo1nla eueln•H and ProlaHlone Coda (Sac.
17900 to 17930) all
paraon• dolr19 bullnen
under a flc11ttoua name
mu•I fll• • 11a1amant
wllh the County Clark
and have It putlll•IMd
tour llm•• In • newapaper Mr'lllng the
a rea In which Iha
btlllnaH la .... d.
Th• ttalamenl la required by lw end It
nacHHf'f "" ~Int your llutln•H name.
Motl ll•nU ra1t11lre
proof of flll"I to open
C011111'8rciel -'t.
Tit• DAILY ~ILOT
ptOYldet -..It....,,. 8fld
fMIMIU .... -*'-·Wt hne all ltl9 lleeeMMY for11t• .... _........ •
d•lly urvlc• lo Illa
Orartt• Cou111y C.11,,~. lltMr...,
lty •11• ef our
ce11ve11leftt ettlc•• er
pfltlla tit• LIOAL
~~-.. ,..., ......,, ••.. ,,J ,., ••r• .........................
few wec!ks then they couJdn't be
trusted at all.
Reagan comes into office with
hls economic goals c lear. He
hopes to cut spending, c ut the
size of the bureaucracy, cut tax-
es, cut red tape and wasteful
regulations. spur investments,
raise productivity.
Because he has stated his
views so distinctly, the burden
on him to follow through or else
lose respect is now probably
greater than it ever was on
Carter. His performance or lack
or it is m easurable.
AND SO, e ven before he look
the oath or oHic e Tuesday
speculation a rose over whether
he might postpone goals that
months earlier he had so s trong-
ly espoused, Eve r yone .~as
heard them that the closer he
got to the big job the more re-
alistic he was becoming, that he
would back off from his tax·cut
proposals. that he move slowly
rather th~ aggressively
His term has just begun. and
there are indications the public
wants to give him ever y break.
but in a few months the ubiq
uitous polls will begin picking
up the mood and the assessment
of the American people.
What will they think if Presi·
dent Reagan has n 't r ee1 1l y
pushed for a m ajor tax cu\? Will
they accept an explanation that
states that the necessity of in·
u easing defense s pending pre-
cludes any te1x c ut now '!
Or that revenue d e clines
because of a recession will lead
to an "une xpectedly" high
budget de fi cit'! Or that "we're
taking another look " at the idea
of reducing the Educalton and
Energy departments?
Will the American people
reel duped? Will they lose con-
fidence in Reagan because he
seemed to be ,losing confidenc&
in bis goals? Will they decline to
commit themselves to a future
they cannot visualize?
free trips
Unfair questions perhaps.
especially when the man has
been in office but hours. But the
popular literature and the busi·
ness literature is loaded with
references to the inconsis tencies
of the previous administration
and hopes that the Reagan one
will be different.
WASHINGTON <AP) --The
Civil Aeronautics Board hH
granted American Airlines ap-
proval lo provide free roundlrip
transportation to any hostaae
_family member between any
city on its system and the point
where the former hostages arrive
in the United States.
Consistency and c redibility
seem to be overriding issues,
and with the Reagan platform so
c learly stated there is little to
hide behind.
The CAB acted quickly after
the airline made the request. It
said il would give the same
authority to any other airline
that applies.
Economy decrea~ed
0.1 percent ~in "'80
WASlll NG TON IAP> The nation's economy declinL"<i 0.1 per
cent last year as a strong fourth quC1rtc r failed to m ake up for
losses suffered in the r ecession e arlier rn the year, the governmen t
r eported today .
Prelimina ry figures show that the real ~ross national product
the total value of goods and services, afte r adjustment for infla.
lion rose at an annual rate of 5 percent in the last three months
of the year as recover y ac<'elerated. the Commerce l>epartment
s aid
The real GNP had risen at a n annual rate or 2.4 percent in the
third quarter after plunginJ: at a rate of nc&rly 10 per('ent in the
second quarte r. It rose 3.2 Percent in 1979
The department's broad based inflation yardstick -the GNP
implicit µric·e de fl ator rose 9 percent for t he year including a
final-quarter &nnuCll rate increase of 11 2 percent, the government
s aid. The rate rose 8.5 perC'ent las t year
Jnnation-adjusted final s ales rose 3 7 µer<'ent 1n the fourth
q uarter. compared to 4 I percent in thl' third 11uarter . the depart
mentsaid.
( )"·•·r Tiu· ( :ou n I•· 1·
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l rtNo , 1 u , n• .. lit-"" ("IAlr l9t I""-~ Hullbrd 2 • .. 11•11. • M<ICTtl 1 n I It ""'° .. •, :., ,., ~ • ,14 nN•,,. ·". , s-.. ·~ AL wt<> .. " z11o-~ Hutt', .n 11 "' tth . . M111Su1 u2 • •11 12°"' •. , 0, .. "' 1-..= 14 S hi ft I =··iu: t.U. IS I..... .. l~I' r"'t" '. • .. + .... ~~.r~. u:, ~ ~ ft~-:,~ =i~:~ t: : "~ lfV.·; ~ .. , ... 2:: , " -\lo 0 0 pro ts ncrease l~e1tl 1 "li 2J 1m.:.: ~ Eastb '20J iO ~ ;:.._.:.:·~ Hume pfl.!O , 3 ll'ht ,,_ lllllltllr• U D • ti JI -V. -It-It -NEW "ORK (AP) -Standard OU
lirr9" J.tO H ltMI .,.. lllo Ea .. Utl I. I • 12 ..... Hi;nlCll .tO I "' ~. .• Mlltlt I .«I 9 2t llV,. ··· ltlllMI ,. I t 7 ... + C Obi th first aj U S il wt1rl11 •. n • .. 1,... •KIMI la 10 1117 ., .... _ -HutE F' .IO s us :ni~•-v. MlllftG• 2,cw s • It ...... llCA I.Ill • 2'01 ,....... o., o. e m or . . 0
•11tttt 12 ., ,. ....: ~ ..... 1 n • " 11 .•... H,.,." uo 1 J ""°·· MMM 2.eo 10 ..s • .,._ "' •c•,. • .. 1 '' ...•. company to report 1980 earnin.as, _ (.-C _ t lllln 12 • JlS 14 .. .. . -1-1 -Mlnl"L 2.CW 7 10 11--.. 'A ltCA pf 2. 12 . . >2 22h -
C!I '"" u o. 17 o "" • '* 1c11.r•J !.JD 11100. >114-" 1c 1nc1 ' s 1» n11o-~ 11111roep ·" • 1 1011. • 11c• !If J.ts .. » 2114..... said today ill profitl rose 5.5 percent C S 2,IO p 173 • ....,_ 1't. !!.!•r l,J2 1 .. 11 t "°' IC In pf ).SO .. 1 0\4 • V. Mlt11ln1 .IO 7 t SS • • • • ltLC ,M I h ,,_.,_ J' n the 1ourtb quarter but "'liml..--I ., .. c I 7 .:i 1~ ~ ....... ,eo 7 • ~ + .... ICN Ill '~ .... Ml'ecC >.tO • 112 ., • \I) ltT,I .eo 12 ... ---I I' .. uo::u -~ ..... '" • ,, ,,.,._ ~ .... WI .. I 1122"'1-I INACp 2.tO . s lll ·"'· .... Mol"S• ib I • 10 -~ ""' .....• n 7111M 1~-percent for the full ye••.
!tpf 1.11 . t 11"-~ IP-IA 14 1112 11...,_ VJ INA pf l.tO . I 11V.-1 MMll 4 • ~ 7'\li-2\IJ "-.lat I• IJO .___ -
1.1.... 11 t ·• .. iiA• ·• p J 1~~.:.:·~ 1~~~7 \~ i ,a: ::..._:::: =~ .ao~ 1: ~ = ==~':.. . .: 1~ ~' :! .. !. Sohio, the nation's Hth·l&J"lelt oil ~,. ,, 1 i t ~ ~ ~ , .......... 1.12 11• 1! ,.,!".!.: ~ 1!.~.19P 2.• 1 " 11 -,,_ 5:"' 11 ,. ,.. " ... ,..,. lllf( '.. 4s ff"• compan~, said that "bi1her market ~I~ 1'6 \I) tit ..,...,..... ,. ,.. ,.. ,.. 1.70 S lll ltllt-"" K 2t '3,!0llo ... , .... ., .. UO •. It ,._ i -·..I •1 d •--eel H ,. iO " n~"" ... r. 1 ... • 170 u11o-1 , ... " .., ......... 01 u "I 11..,_" ... .,,,..,"' 1 • ~ s -1 pr en or c.-uue 01 an un::reu
.... :. • 107 ... 14 ir., .. 9t •VJ ..... 111""'' 2.• • ., 17-~ ~-1·• • .,,.._ y, "•YIM Ull• .., " -J Alaskan crude on production" ac· ~ S U lf't.~ • ., =~\I.I 1.1' !! Mll12 J127~+ ~ 11"9w ltfl... . . t!O U\4-" M11rcll 1 M 6 21"'-V. lt .... llt a '4 UO 4SV.-...
• 112 '""'· ... -·wA ~ .. 1l ~ -... I'..._ ,n.t0 · '"' u -"" i • s 11 fl'>-11o "-"1·711111 •2 iWo-" counted for much ol the profit 1aina.
-w • .. ·~ .. ~. IE .... TW t.•. ft U \ll + .... 1•11 •• -" "'"'" '·"". " ..-.. 14 ...... :: ~1·~iH , };""~.:"'. = ,.44 , ' "' f:f;" uo 1 1• ,.~"MM u l1: t io • ..... i§:"J'~ .il 1r--v. The company owns 53 perc:ent ol the :.'\:..• i 'i ~ ~~ ~ "'"1"' :.,. .ti ..._·-'"' .n .~ ; l~ *" •• ~ 'I ft~~ . 1
1 i '"'·~ ... oil reserves ln Alulla'a Pnadhoe Bay -., t , 111 I:.!~ = ·::: .. , ~ ~-Ille M' :: --..... ~-., !fl-.. 1:· ~ ~ 1
:.: .l ft ... !. field.
\l' .. fft ~ "' :" 1
:: ': ~ fl::_ = I :1
:: 11 l:-i... : = .. ': "'IJ I j~· t~ :I pl.~ t JI"'::... The Clevelad·bued company said 'i:w~ i' ~.~ 1Wf't1oc _ ·1 .-..... • I . ...,_ l 1 .,._-... _,t .. 1'•' '"'• ~ lt earned MTS.I mllUOG, or ti.ea a .: :: .. ~,~ if-.~):;~·~i ~=~!~ 't.·ad .e ··; .. ~\ 11 .a ·;·~ ~ :q:t ;i:m"·~,.. ~~·~-~=.::.::'..=:
I 1 V. '11 1 2 + -I ' ' r at m-= " M ~t ~ 'j + a year before, Sales l'OH to '3 blJUon -I t 1''" -_.,. ' ff .. · u • 't • ll • ~ ~ .. :{'I Ji:• f • -nu ",;,,. , ,,;:.:.·"· •111 • 1 -.. u t • + "' .•.. 11 ~ ~ • "' .. • rom .4 U&l&lllOft. tllyt t / II 1-.-16 IMllCe •• I .. ,___ ... t tft'I..... 't M t • • • • .. •
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J,
• BUSINESS I STOCKS
Blglalg r09lpetttt"e
Airline engines
pick a dogfight
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
You may be surprised to leam that airlines not only
select the planes they will fiy b'lt the en1ines that wUl
power their aircraft.
As 1980 drew lo a close, United Tecbnolo1iea, a com· pa~y Y~ probably neve r heard of, tried to make that point
as indelibly as they could by buyin1 lar1e spaces in lead·
inf newspapers to trumpet the selection of their new jet
en1ine by two airlines.
The ads were, in ef .
feet, saying to Gener&!
Electric : "We sure beat
you to a pulp in this
round."
Here's the sequence
of events in this high-
le vel corporate dogfight:
Money
Tree
-Last Nov. 12 Delta Air Lines placed the largest or·
der in ~ommercial a irline history for 60 Boeing 7S7s. The
total pnce tag for the 60 jets will be in the neighborhood of
S3 billion.
-On Dec. 18 Delta told Boeing that it wanted these
jets powered bY the new engine that has been de veloped l)y
Pratt & Whitney, the PW2037. .
-On Dec. 22 Unite d Technologies, the parent of Pratt
& Whitney, took ~wo full pages in newspapers across the
country to r ub GE's nose in this verdict. Delta , said the ad .
"has made a wise choice."
-ON THE VERY next day, Dec. 23, United
Technologies bought another two pases for an advertise-
ment announcing that American Airlines had already
selected the Pratt & Whitney engine for its new airliner,
even though it hadn't decided yet which plane it was going
to order .
It was a sweet triumph for Pratt & Whitney, r estoring
it lo its accustomed position as ·lhe dominant force in the
aircraft engine mar ket.
How did Pratt & Whitney lock up the Ue lta and
American orders? By promising breathtaking savings in
·fuel economy. P ratt & Whitney is guaranteeing that its
new jet engine will save airlines $1 million a year in fuel
costs per plane. For Delta . when it takes possession of its
60 planes, that adds up to S60 million a year.
PRA'M' & WHITNEY MUST be pretty confident that it
can deli ver on this.
Pratt & Whit ney's comeback marks a nother spec·
tacular advance by Ha rry Gray, a hard·driving salesman
who arrived in Hartford, Conn .. in 1971, coming from
California's Litton Industries to t ake the helm of a com
pany then called United Aircraft
United Airc raft was not in robust shape then. Its an
nual sales were about S2 billion, it r anked 31th on the
Fortune 500 list, it did more than half its business with the
Pentagon and its biggest unit. Pr att & Whitney, was run·
ning into problem s with engines supplied to both the com·
merciaJ and military m arkets.
IN NIN E YEARS Gr ay has litera ll y transformed this
com pany.
He changed the na m e to Uni ted Technologies.
United Technologies is also not without friends in high
places. At the end of 1979 Harry Gra y hired as his No 2
man Gen. Alexander M Haig J r .. selected by Ronald
Reagan to serve as secretary of state.
In April 1980, when Haig was serving as president of
United Technologies. the United States launched its ill·
fated mission to Iran to rescue the American hostages. Thi!
raid was called off a fter three of t he Si korsky Sea Stallion
helicopters broke down,
Sikorsky is another unit of United Technologies. a
company whose par ts are better known tha n the wholc.
which is why Harry Gr ay keeps running a ds to spread the
word about the conglomerate he has c reated
.fttork• In Tltr
.'ipol llgltl
Dou-Jo11r11_I rrragt-11
Nt:W fUH .. tAPI F•n•• o o .. Jone\ ••Cl\ for Wtd , Jan 11
NEW YORK (API S•le\Wtd P'"" STOCKS Oorn Hooh I.OW Clow (llQ ~':'w ,,.,y'i,,":"""s~~lle ~~·:~:n~°':,:~~1:• JO rno t.• u •sa.01 9JI •• ... 1S • •3 lredlflO nattonelly °' mort tfl•n $1 JO Trn 3'1 tS 3'1.49 llll 91 l97 41> 147
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YIUI 11111111 llllY PAPER
OH ANGE COUNTY ( Al If OHNIA 2'> CENTS
Slash spending, Reagan tells agencies
YI' tDNliTON I ~ 111 Prt:Jil
d tnt Reacan. ~•y1n1 he b n:
df'.-m1na tus µl~llt' to forn· 11ov
f'rn ru t"nl to 11 t' watbui ll~
m .-an 1 U«t ord~r today tu
l<&~h 1<>vci"'nment ln1vel by 15
pt'rc~nt, r ut outMdc t•oruuJtit
t 1on~ b S i"'rccnt lu\tl )lOJ> buy
1n1t o/f1l·e furmtur~ until fW'ther
nmict• '
R"a".u' an 1t nu:mcir anduna to
Ut'IJ.arlmt'ot !iOl.J •ge ncy ctu.,fs.
~1ud he wa.. lllkant the actions
btic ause •·copm& with runaway
lkhclta in the current and peod-
111& buda&et~ iii on" ot the most
urgent tub before us."
And ~ told CMbinet members
to "!iet an example by avoiding
unneces!iary e•pendi tures in set-
ting uv their personaJ offices.''
Appointees . Reag1rn directed,
"a rc not to rt.-decorale their of·
h eel\ "
Iranian 'barbarians'
.... The president said his actiona
will "help reduce unnecessary
federal spending," but there w~
no estimate on how much will be
s aved.
Reagan issued the memo
shortly after meeting with his
economic policy group. He was
m eeting with congressmen who
head economic-related commit·
tees in the afternoon.
A fac( sheet distributed by the
White House said the travel re-
duction this fiscal year Is direct·
ed at trips "that are not essen-
tial to the performance of agen-
cy missions." It does not apply
lo military station chanizes.
The 5 percent outside con·
sullation reduction also applies
to management and professional
ser vices and special contract
studies and analyses. The fact
sheet said the cut was "intended
lo help assure that contracts and
cons ultants are not used to
evade personnel ceilings or to
carry on studies and analyses
that are not essential to the
performance of agenc-y mis-
sions."
The furniture moratorium also
applies to offi ce machines, data
processing equipment a nd other
equipment "that is not needed
for the national defense or to
carry out other essential ac
tivlties."
·'The impact of these r~uirr·
menls and the need for even
more stringent measures will bP
considered over the next two
months," the White !louse state
ment said.
Reagan • Irate over treatment
• • * * * •
More horrors
by Iran told
WIESBADEN, West Germany
(AP> -The rreed American hostages gave new reports today
or brutal treatment by their Ira·
nian captors -beatings, mock
e xecutions, grim g,mes or
Russian roulette, death threats
and former President Carter
a c c used Iran of "savage r y
Fog, surf
hamper
coast area
By AllTHUR a. VINSEL
Ot .. Delly ..... , ....
Big waves shoved over beach
crests by high tides continued
along the Orange Coast today,
flooding some areas. The U .S.
Weather Service predicts more
water can be expected from the
s kies by tonight.
Br e ake rs that peaked
periodically at 10 feel on some
toe a I bea c h es Tuesday and
Wednesday a ppe ared to be
diminishing.
Fog, meanwhile, created vis-
ibility problems this morning
along the Orange Coast, reduc-
ing commuter traffic to a crawl.
Officials al Orange County's
John Wayne Airport said today's
rog interfered with flights out
only periodically after the coun-
ty facility opened at 6: 15 a.m ., to
private and commercial flights.
"This stuff is patchy," said
Tower Supervisor Jack Evans,
adding that private pilots were
free lo take off if they pleased.
He said one Republic Airlines
je tliner and a GoldenWest
Airlines commuter plane got off
the ground during a brief break
in the mist that seemed thick
enou gh to c ut with a knife
elsewhere.
Me anwhile, the U.S. Weather
Service in Los Angeles predicted
a 50 percent chance of sprinkles
tonight, turning to a 60 percent
li~elihood of r egular s howers
Friday.
Daytime temperatures will be
in the mid-60s, dropping to 50
degrees at night.
So far this year the Orange
Cout has received less than two
inches of rain compared to 6.26
inches by this date a year ago.
Lifeguards from Seal Beach to
San Clemente watched the surf
today, if the y could see it
tllrougt(tlle fog, to determine if
more beach erosion and flooding
can be expected.
A spokesman at Huntington
State Beach said he couldn't
give an accurate estimate of
(See COAST, Pa1e AZ)
M.4GADNE TELLS
llE4Lm TRENDS
Today's Daily Pilot takes a
look al health-related activities
and trenda.
Looll for "A Healthy You," a
IO·pa1e Periscope ma1aaine
featurtnc stories and pictures
about bealtb on the Oran1e
Cout.
.. A Healthy You" also pre·
views the World mutera
Marat.bola of lrvlne and tbe
1eeoad anuaJ Run fOt Hoq.
'
a gainst abs olutely innocent
hostages.'·
At the military hospital where
the 50 men and two women are
r ecovering from their 14'h·
month ordeal, a State Depart-
ment officiaJ said, "it is clear
RELATED STORIES,
PHOTO--Page M
we are continuing to -.ncover
evidence or serious mistreat-
ment dour people during their
captivity."
But former hostage Richard
Morefield said in a telephone in-
terview broadcast by CBS that
"we beat them," triumphing
over the Iranian captors by re-
turning healthy and sane despite
the brutal treatment.
A group of the former
hostages emerged from the
hospital today and walked
across the street for a dental ex-
amination. They wore blue pa·
jamas or Air Force parkas and
many waved to well-wishers at
the hospital gate.
State Department spokesman
Jack Cannon said in Wiesbaden
that mistreatment included poor
food. solitary confinement and
being blindfolded.
"On a number of occasions a
number of pers ons were
threatened with loaded re-
volvers," he said.
·'On a number of occasions
som e were threatened with
death. Some were ordered lo
strip and lie on the Door and
were threatened with death,"
Cannon said.
ln Moscow. the Soviet news
agency Tass s aid the American
press had launched a campaign
of anti-lranlan "hysteria" over
treatment of the hostages . Tass
also claimed that the former
hostages "will be subjected to
d e t aile d interrogation and
brainwashing" before they are
allowed lo meet with reporters.
Barry Rosen of Brooklyn,
N. Y .• chatting with reporters on
the way to a dental examination,
s aid the former hostages had
<See HOS'MGES, Page "2)
Ex-boyfriend
sought after
SC shooting
Angela Silnz of San Clemente
was wounde d in the neck
Wednesday night when she
responded lo a knock at her
front door and her assailant
fired a single pistol shot through
her window, police reported t~
day. • The slug hit Miss Sanz, 25, on
her collar bone, glanced off and
remains embedded in her neck
today, police said doctors had in·
formed them.
She remains in satisfactory
condition today at San Clemente
General Hospital, followin1 sur-
gery late Wednesday.
lnvesti1ators said they are
aeekint a former boyfriend who
they want to question in coanec-
tion with the sbootln1.
The lncident bqan about 6:30
p.m . when Miu Sana beard a
knock at ber apartment door
wblcb la in the 1400 block ~ l:l .
Camino Real.
Tbe sunman wu apparmtly •taadhtl near a window and that her throqb It when 1b1 came to
the door.
Dedication due
The new Orange County Marine Institute
will be dedicated Jan. 30 at Dana Point
Harbor. The $60,000 facility i~expected to
serve 30,000 youngsters a year, with pro-
grams planned to start in September. For
story see Page Bl.
Moratorium sparks
hot debate in SC
Suggestions that any extension
of a recently imposed four-month
building moratorium in San
Clemente be put to a vote of the
people sparked a heated debate in
council chambers Wednesday.
Mayor Karoline Koester said
she had "heard some talk" a~ut
putting the issue on the baJfot
should the moratorium need to be
ex tended past Apri I. ·
Planning Director Jim Lawson
told the council it "could take a
minimum of a year" to complete
many of the projects, but said the
council could exte nd the
moratorium by holdlng a public
hearing.
That brought a comment from
Councilman Robert Limberg,
who said he "was probably the
most reluctant (of the council
members) to approve the urgen-
cy ordinance."
"From the first I've had an in-
terest in this being a voter 's
choice," Limberg said.
He said any "prolonged
moratorium s hould have public
involvement."
Bad engine
thu:arts trip
An Air California jet
bound for San Jose was re-
turned to Orange County's
John Waype Airport
Wesnesday night alter an
electrical short deactivat-
ed an encme.
But Councilman Alan Korsen
responded angrily that the coun-
cil has the legal option to extend a
moratorium if the work is not
done by April.
"If you're talking about ref-
erendum (al the end of the four-
m on th period) you're talking
tim e and money to set it up and
lobby for it," he said.
II e said yet another ballot battle
in San Clemente would once again
e mbroil the community in
divisive bickering over develop·
ment iss ues.
"Citizens should have a chance
to speak, but not necessarily at
the ballot box," Korsen said. "We
were elected. and as represen-
tatives we have lo take the in-
itiative."
lie was joined by Councilman
Bill Mecham who said the city
·'still faces the very unfortunate
prospect of m aybe 10,000 new
hom es in a short time."
He sajd San CLemente is un-
prepared lo handle such an influx
of housing at this time, "and I
think the community has said to
us they want us to lake a firm
hand."
Council membe rs voted 4· l
earlier this month, with Coun-
cllm an Patrick Lane opposed, to
impose the building freeze in or-
der to give city planners a chance
to catch upon planning c hores.
Planes collide
LAS VEGAS (AP> -NelUa Air
Force Bue crews were searching
a1ain today for three crewmen
aboardtwoAlrForcejetslbatcol-
llded northeast of Las Vesu.
acattertnc naming wrecta1e for
miles.
Planning
• action
delayed
Laguna Beach pla nning rom-
m i s s i oner s ha ve v o t ed for
30 days consideration or a 153·
page report in the city's general
plan revision process.
The report, prepared by six
citizen committees , is a compila-
tion of recommendations on land
use, noise, circulation. scenic
highways, housing, open space,
conservation. and public safety.
After a three-hour study session
Wednesday the commissioners
sa id that the document warranted
more public comment.
They said homeowners associa·
tions would be contacted and each
of the sections of the report would
be discussed in further detail .
The document is to provide the
fra m~work for a revised general
plan that would be used for the
next five to 10 years .
Differences in how to deal with
illegal rental units -a longtime
local housing problem -were
discussed at the study session.
The citizen committee on hous-
ing had recommended in some
cases to make illegal rentals
legal.
But land use committee mem-
bers h~ urged a strict schedule of
finesforownersofillegal rentals.
The housing committee aJso
had recommended creation of a
view preservation ordinance,
while the land use committee had
advocated individual considera-
tion or bloclted views by the city's
Design Review Board.
More specifics are needed on
view preservation in the general
plan, it wu .. reed.
The commissioners and resi-
(See DELAY, Pate AZ>
Contrary to a report
from the Oran1e County
Fire Department, Tom
Kaminski, Air California
director of communica·
tiona, aakl the enitne did
not catch fire.
K amlnaki said the
en1ine abut down
automat!:!!f after the·
abort occ and that an
on-board 8ftline fire u -
Un1Wlblnl lyateal WU ac·
tivated .
Traffic snarled
Tbe 1H paaaen1en
aboard .,.._ plaeed on a
different alrenft for tbt
ru1bt to San JciM, be aald.
'
A partial load or concrete
spilled from a truck onto Ortea•·
Hl1bway near San Juan
Captltranoearlytoday. .
A apok•man for tbe California
Hlpwa1 Patrol aald a out ~
yards of tie concrete, lllOUlb to
pave a small drtvewaJ, 1.,...S
from U.back ~tbetruek at &boat
7a.m . Tbeapokesmansakl mmtoltbe
m atertal ended up oa tbe abould•
of the l'Mdway, but 1ome of It
blOC!kedtnftle.
The 1pW NDCll'ted1Y WU C ....
by afaultyvalnattheruroltbe
tnack. 11le CHP QOUem• Mid
ro.cl'""8cl.....aupttaemea
Hostage
pact
reviewed
WASlllNGTON IAl'J Thr
Reagan adm inis tratton 1~ 'very
irate, very angry" ovt'r mi.,
treatment of the 54! l\mt·n <·:in:. I he ld hostag<.• 1n Ir an and th<.·
t reatment they rc1·e1\1 •d <:l'r
t ainl y will not rn a k1· 1t any
easier" tu c·ar ry hul lh1· agrf't·
ment with Iran. an adm1ni s1ra
tion spokesman sa1<J tod ay
Stale Departmt·nt s µok1•-,m;m
William Dyess :.aid ht· agrcl'CI
with Pr esident He<ig an and
rormer President C<irter thul I he
I r a n i a n c a p t •> r :. w c r 1•
"ba rbarians ." Said Uycs:., "I
think it's a very apt term "
Dy e ss said th e new ad
minis tration was s urpri~f'd to
learn of t.hc extent of t ht• mi.,
treatment of t ht· host a g•'" <incl
that 1t pl<ins "a form al n ·,1t•tion ·
soon.
At the Wh it e ll ou ~t'. \'iec•
Pres ident Rush said the· report
Carter prepared on hii. v1s1t tu
the hostages wa!> .. pow l'rful 111
its impact··
The report. whic·h Cartc•r pn ·
pared in longhand. wa~ g1' 1•n l•>
Reagan this mornini;: IJ~ Waltt·r
F. Mondale. Rush':. prcdt•1· .. ss1ir
< Ea rlier story. A4 l
Bush said lhl' report w1iuhl bt•
considered as the admmi..trat mn
reviews the ag r ccm c nl wilh
Iran.
He s aid that 1n stu1h in g a
problem, every dimcnsiurl :-houhl
be t aken into c:onsidt•r:it1un
"We'vt• :.ecn a nt·w d imc·ns ion
to this prohl 1•m and tl is an ugl ~·
di mension "
Dyess emphas ized that th<' ad
minis tration still pl <i n~ to "<•arr}
out the obligations •if the· l 'nit<.'d
St ates:· prc:-.umahb 1n 1·luding
the a greem ent t hat led t1>
free do m fo r I ht· ho -,1 age s ,
althou~h he s aid 11 •~ still hl·i ng
reviewed
"We must all n·1·11gnt7.l' th:it
the implementing of th1: :ig reC'
menls will be a tomplPX and
t ime consuming pron·=-~. and
one whi c.ti will r c1111 1r1• lh•·
(See IRATE, Pag(• A21
More coveragt•
Additional sout h Orang<.• ('111111
ty a nd llarbor Area covcragC'
appears today on Page A 14
Or:n::J .:'"I
\\'eat her
Chance of rain 50 per·
cent tonight increa sing lo
60 percent c ha n ce of
showers Frida y. Coas t al
low tonight 50, inland 55.
Hi1hs Friday in low 60s
along beaches to m id-6Qs
inland.
INSIDE TODA '1
Mt""1'N• of tM prenden-
tial ~whirl.linger for
three Harbor Area womn,
phoCOf/#uplted ift I Mir f onnol
fifteTJI ,,., Dail11 Pilot plwtog·
rophn Patrick O'Donnell. Ste
PO{ltBJ.
l••e• ............. Ci ...... .........
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-M
--M I. SC
---JlJST BRE~KING -----
Warsa1v police ~lt
a11gry farmers' rally
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harnfd •• (uiwnn• @I trac1Gn 4rtw• llllJ -.11 ,.,..,.. •
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lh farnw1 1ru 1l 111 1lt1 .. on tho <'ilY ol ByflOlll4:&, l50
main JM•lth••'"' uf W111ru v. hul llOUc>c• tunUn1cnu blocked fi ll
Ho•th• ~llU'I I II 'Mill
\ .,, ... , """'" "alll 1 h '1. f llrm..r11, who ha vu bl!~li praaaoa for
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l.11 kl11 .. t• 1 111 11 l.1 t .11111.I i,:l.1t•1111 l11r•·r1111h b) bullion tkult•rs
HOSTAGES TELL. • •
ma11) '"ir"'' '" tt·ll" anti that tht• a~11·1•1111•11 I with Ir a n ~.houhl
b1· rl•V1t'\H•1I
Hm.1·n wa:-n••t :-1wr·1ru• .1111101
hi:-. tr1·atmn11 <•I'> a c·a,.11v1·, hut
-.aid. ··1 1u:-.1 fr,.I that lrn11 1.o; un
outlc1v. r·ountr~ ;111d 1t llm· . ., dt•
..,(:r \'c· I n·m1·11tlo11' 1·r1111·1s m
from tht· world ·
AL a pn·:-.1-> lirll'fini.: n1·11r lh1·
hos pital C':innr1n 'a id tw hud no
r et.i<Jr\~ lof '>pl·(•lflf' lnJllrlt':-0 sur
f1:n·d IJ\ th1· h11.slagr·' ancl 111 n·
fJI~ tu ::i qut·~llon ;1rld1·d . "We
ha\(• n11 rc:por b so r;1r or s 1·x11:1l
<ibU"' Jlt• ';11rl "°'111111' W\'rt'
manadr-.1 t11 r·ha11;, ... for lot or 1 ~1
da· ...
* -. *
f'roJtt Pagr .. 1 I
IRATE ...
t'OOperallOn of all partlt'!o.
lh'f'S~ said
·DYt•so; d1s<·l 11s~·d Wl•d nesda\
thal the Reagan ;.idm1n .... trat1nn
"as n •vit·wmg thl· .ign•l'ments
Il l' suid all 111 <:xel'ut1\·e order:-.
s 1gnt"d h) l'artl'r to implement
the a gn •enwn1 :-l11·f11n· hl' left <1f
f1ce have tak1•11 1°lfl·1·1. inl'fud1nl.(
the hft1n~ 11f llw \ratl1• .. mharg11
:ig;HnSI lr:tn
llmH'\'t'f. tw !-..ml lht• hroackr
q u£•st11 111 of l ~ tradl• p11l11·v
'""ant lr:in 1s unch'r n·v1cw a nd
· I 1m.1g1nl' nol \'t•r:. muc·h will
happc•n until th:1t n ·v1t·w 1s c•>m
1•lelNI
Man clubbed
in Dana Point
Dalt· C'liffurd Wright of Dana
Poin t was C'luhhed on the head
Wednc ... da:-night by a man wear
ing a sto('king m ask disguise
while Wright was walking along a
<·<1m munit ~ :-treet. s ht>rtff's dep
uties rC'ported loday.
The r e was appar•·nll y no
motive in the assault. d eputies
s aid No money was taken from
the victim Wright s uffer ed head
r uts but didn 't r eq uir <>
hospitalization.
Wright, 23, wa s walking a lo ng
C allita Drive at Elevado Way in
Dan a Point about 7 p .m whcns ur
prised by the assailant. llis ut·
lacker was d escribed a s about six
feet. four incht•s ta 11. 175 pounds .
with s hort blond hair
Sub con1ple tes
missile testing
POINT MlJGU (AP > A sub·
marine-launc he d T omahawk
cruise missile sucressfully found
and hit a target ship on the Pacific
missile test range for the s econd
time in a week. The missile was
launched unde rwater from the
USS Guitarro.
Last T h urs da y a n o the r
Toma hawk was also s u ccessfully
flown. The m issile has been test
nown58times .
1 ':111111111 :-.uitl lh1• Amt•n1·a11)>
Wt'rt• 1•xpt'<'lt-tl ltl re turn homl'
Inward the 1•nd of th e Wl•t•k and
l ha l thl'Y ··reel 11 ts vt•r y
111•t•1•ss;in' thul tht'}' havt• this
111•r iod of privutt.• rt•:->I uncl rt•
1·111wration ·· ·
M alrolm Kulp. an t•t·unom1t·
:11lv1st•r at'C'USt'<I of bNn,.: a l'll\
a~t·11I by his 1•11ptors, told his
fan11 ly 111atdt•phom•1•1111 ht• was
ht·:tlt'n and spt•nt 37-1 cla~·s 1n
o;ol1t 11rv conf11wnwnt hl't'llUSt' tw
r1•pt•at;-dly lru"<i lo t•sca 1w
M 1 1· h :1 t• l ,J M t' I r 1 n k o . a
poltt 1,·al nffln•r from Oly phant .
l'a . :;:11t\ h1• ~•s ht•ld in sohlan
lor H1 :· 1111111ths. and Moorht•11d t ;
1-i. , • 111\l• ll " .I r . t ht' t' ,. 111rn m i l' c11u11~\·l ;1r fro m W us h1n~ton .
P 1.' . s:ud h,• u nd others Wt'rt'
111\l'd up 111 th t•1r underW<'ar.
"'i:UO!o Ill their head s. for 8 mock
~·x t'C: Ut \011
~t anne Sgt Johnn~ ~cKeel
told n 1s p .Hents in Balc h
Spr1n_g5, Texas. that a n Iranian
guar d knocked out his tooth and
an interrogator s aid his mothe r
had died He s aid he was told if
he wanted to go to the funeral he
hod tn give the Irania ns in·
form at1on, but that all he gave
v. <i!-. nam e , r a nk a nd serial
num hl·r
1-: I 1 z a b e t h M o n t a g n c , <i
"t't' n :I ary freed with four other
women and eight black hostages
th r1·1· weeks after the embassy
t<.1k1·over, said in an interview in
the United Stales that the mili-
tants forcl>d her to play Russian
roulette in an attempt to get in
formation.
Ri<:ha rd Queen. a cons ul freed
in July because he was s uffering
from multiple sclerosis, said he
and othe rs were he ld nearly five
months in a w i nd o wl ess
ware house basement, and that
durin~ a .. Gestapo r aid" armed
guards in white masks stripped
the m lo their underclothes and
searched the m .
f'ro• Page A J
DELAY •..
de nts moslofijiem m e mbers of
the six citizen committees -also
heard s uggestions t ha t h azardous
hills ide ar eas be zoned as open
s pace
City officials said they ar e look-
ing al other cities' open s pace pro-
gr ams .
Commissione rs a lso reviewed a
recommendation that construc-
tion on the city's 600 legal building
s ites be phased.
And, they heard member s of the
circulation and scenic highways
committee stress preser vation of
Laguna Can yon and the city's
village atmospher e .
Commission Chairman Ken
Mullens of the planning com -
mission said the cir culation ele·
ment was important because 75
percent or the city's traffic comes
from outside the city, and the city
has less control over highways
than it does in othe r areas.
TELEPHONE
Thomas P. Halev Putlll\h&r
Robert N. Weed P•Hh .. 111
M. Thomas Keevil Ed11ot
Thomas A. Murphine
MaM91no Edilor
Charles H. Loos
AHl\t-' ~Editor
. Copyr10111 101 Or•nvi' cuil
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SLAIN IN ULSTER
Sir Norm•n Strong•
IRA claims
bombings,
2 slayings
11 fo:l.l'AS'f'. N11rtl11·111 l r.-1:.rnl
11\l'I 'l'h1· ot1l l:tw1•tl l ri~h
l<t·p11t11t1·a11 Arr11y lnduy 1'1 :111111:d
n ·spo11:-1h1hl) for shnot1nj! and
k 1l1 111..: a l1tl1·1I H1: yc·ar old
1 • rt1 l t')>l :1111 politn· 1tl leo;11kr an1I
111~ ·1H ~ 1·11r old heir a111I tw rnhin..:
l l1t•1 r artc'\'~t r1tl h1111H·
TnH1p:-. pol11·1· a nd :i Hnt1sh
a rruy lwlit•opll·r ra11~1·d ov1•r tht•
1•1111111 rysttlt· lciclity m M·arrh 11f
terrorists wh11 rnurclt·rt•d Sir
N11rr11 a11 Str11ni.:l' a nd hi)> sm1 .
.I 11111 1·:-.. t ra1h'd .:unr1n· with
pol 11·1• a 11d 1·sc•:q 1t•d on root
toward th1· Irish hordn Wt~nes
ti a y mt-:ht
1\ JHlllC't· :-.11e1k1·srn:111 :-.a1d hun
llfl'lb of 'r11ops on hoth sicks or
lh1· hordt•r' w1lh lht• Iri s h
lh-p11hh1· had )>\•itl<•d off u to
111 111• wootlt•ll an•<.1 whl•r t: un
1·1.:ht llla11 I HA i.:u\•rr1lla s1.1uacl
was twl..-v1-.I 111 h1• hiding
· ''1'111:-1:-11111· of !ht• l11gj!1•sl
1·ross IH1rtlt-r :-1·1·ur11_.. op1•r alion..,
t'\'t•r 111111111t1'il," ltw s p11k1."m1:tn
.;:11d
1'11111·1• .Silltl 1111•1 hl'll1•Vt'i l lh1•
I HA :1tt :H'k wa)> ···arrtt•tl out 111
n ·pri ... al f11r 1111• all1•mp1t·1I a:-.
s ass111:it1n11 h \ l'roll·:-1 ants on
Friel a .\ of 1(11111.111 ( 'ath11llc: 1·1vil
rq.:ht ~ 1·r11 .sa1h·r B1•r11a1lt'ttc n t' \' I I n 1\1 1 · 1\11 :-k I' \ .1 II d IH' r
hush.11111
T hn saul th1· l l'rron :-.t:-. in
\'ad1•tl T~ n:m i\hlil'.\'. lll'ar the
bonkr with tht• Irish Hl'publi<',
and kille d Sir No rm a n . a
baronC't and former s peaker or
:'\orttll'rn I n :lanrl·:-. provin<.'ial
Parl1amcnl. anct his son. Jamt>s.
a nother forml!r memhc r of the
legislature. with guns hots to the
head
Front Pagr A I ' COAST ...
sur f height be1·ause h.c C'ouldn't
see I hl' ocean.
"It sounds like thcy'rt• about
four to c•ight fret." he said of thP
storm swells
Culiforni0:1 Highway Patrol
s pokesm en s<111I t his morni ng
they were husy with the us ual
number of fog related render
ben dl'r ac·ntlcnts o n a r ea
freeways. hul none wc rl' serious .
A 7 12 ;.i m . mishap on t he
Ortega llighway two miles e ast
of th e Santa An a f'rceway
l'3USl•d a ('(•mcnt tru('k to dump
a lurgt• amount r1r its cargo onto
trafriC' lant•s, hul CJIP orficers
d idn •t know 1r 1t was fog r elated.
Orange County S h e riff's
llarhor Patrol s pokes man Kathy
Wagcn(•r, m1 duty in Newport
Beat•h headquarters. s aid vis
1bihl)' in tht' harbor was zero,
with no boating a(·livity
In Seal Heach Wednesday,
high sur f crcs tL'd the s mall city
bea<"11 and flooded St'al Walk.
l*'loodmg along Pa<.'ifi<' Coast
ll ighwu y around Ander son
Street in Sun!>cl Hcach occurred
hnt h Wl'Clnesdav a nd Tuesday.
s lo w ing trarfic· n ear thl' ol<I
Sunset BPach water tflwcr ·
Laguna gets
mystery cash
The City of Laguna Be ach has
received a $9,000 donation to be
used for police a nd fi re pl"otection
in equal a mounts .
City officials said l he money
com es from a donor who wishes to
r emain anonym ous .
T he donation will b e used for
communications equipment and
self-contained breathing units for
the fire department and a video
tape recorder, eviden ce freezer,
tape transcriber and portable
tape recorder s for the police de-
partment.
lifesaving course
set for hospital
San C l e mente Ge n eral
Hospital's cardlo pulmonary re-
suscitation program begins Jan.
28.
The coone provides instruction
and cerUClcaUon ln rescue
b reathlna and lifesaving. For
re1iatration lnfonnalion, call the
hospital at498-1122, ext. 242.
....... -..--....---"
Tot at wheel
Runaway car
causes chaos
NORTH MIAMI BEACll, Fla. CAP> -Don.Moore reached for
his 11i:ftol w htin he heard 11houling. Shirley Guasman could only
w ulch in horror . Eve lyn Mullen scream ed as a runaway car ra n
over her foot, und dozens of spectators stared in silence.
lru;ide lhc vehiclti, the driver's door open, was 5-year-o ld
• Suz1rnne Martintitti1 s creaming and clutching the front seat.
Theo. 25 year.old sccrutary Angie Butts rushed to the r escu e.
Sht• (·hu. ... <-'<I ;iftt.•r tht· runaway sedan circling wildly in the middle
or U S 1.
"NF.v•:K IN M V U t'E HAVE I SEEN anything like it," said
Sus un Moor1·. rnuna.:er of the near by Nor th Miami Bea c h
<:n·yhound hus station "This little girl was in t he car screaming
;1111\ this latly was <.'husang Lhe <·ar, trying to get in, as at went
an111nd und around."
Mmn·. hn husbantl. said, .. Hy the tjme J got out the re, one
wu111 ;111 wu:-. lyin.: un tht· ground This Jo,ord Torino was doing
l'1rdt::-., you know, doing doughnuts in the m iddle of U.S. 1, and this
worn an was han.:m~ cm to the steering wheel.
.. Shi• was half 11ut hf the car, being dr agged along."
Minuit'/'> t•arllt•r, Mrs (;ussman h ad driven up to the s tation,
put ht·r <'ar in 11urk and startt'(I unh1ad1ng s uitcases as her grand
1111111-:h h:r sat in th1• front :-.cut
l*:vl'lyn MllllC'll, lh t· C'hild's great grandmother, cli mbed out or
lt..-1·ar Thc·n ii 1umpl'lf into r<-verse, the wom en said, and rolled
1nt1J 1111' stn ·c·t
"IT llAPPt:Nt :U SO t'AST," SAID Mrs Gussman, 53, of
M 1am1 Shores .. Tht• cur just hackt.'<I away. r an over m y mother
a111I wt•nt out into the s treet.·'
The c•iif. traveling bac kwards at speeds up to 20 mph, boun<:e<l
ovt•r tht• m t'tlian stri11 seve ral times
Ms . Rolls drove u11. nearly striking the runaway vehicll'
.. I don't know how rast the car was going," s h e said .. Hut 1t
was n't goin)! slow because I c·ouldn't catch up with il."
So she kir kt'd ofr he r clo~s and rinally grabbed the steering
wht•el
.. It was Jammed ... sh<· said .. 1 c·ouldn't turn 1t So I JU1->t
s tt·1>11t'(l 11n the· llrnkc:-. and th<· l'ar ~lopped "
RV Tilt: TIMI-: POU('K A fo'IRt; engine and an amhulance
a rriVl'(\, Ms llults was in the dnver·s M·at.. the child wa!-t 1n her
~randmottwr·:-. a rms <.tnd th1: gr<-ut ~randmother was b1-1n~ rom
forkd on th<> 11avemcn l
H1•St'Ul' workt:rs look lht•m <.tll to North Miami (;l'm;r al
1 los pital. wht•rt: Ms . Butts was found to have a hruised knee a nd
Mrs. Mullt•n a broken foot . The C'h1ld. unhurt. was given a soda
l''ord Motor Cu. has agree.'<! t11 mall warnings tc1 th<-owners (If
20 rnillwn cars and trucks built s inre the· 1973 model year that their
automuli1· t ransm1ssrnns c·ould s lq1 into re ver se North Miami
H1•ad l polic-l'. however, su1d Mrs c;ussmun 's C'a r Was a 1972 Ford
Thi· aut11makl'r h as contcn1fod lhl' prnblem 11-. due 1·11 drivers
who du nut shift ull tht· way into purk
Last .lurn·. thl' Natwnal Highway Trarftc Saft•ty Adm1n1stra·
lwn sa11I tht• slips had c·<.1 uSl'<I somC' fi ,ll()(J ac·c·Hlt•nt)>, l .711J 1nJunPs
and !IH d1·aths
No court fight,
homeowners say
M ember~ of the Capistrano
H1;•a C'h Community A:-.sociut1on
have d ecided not to press a court
right with O range County over·
easement rights a c r oss a n
asphalt par king lot <it the new
C apistrano Reach Park.
Ins tead the group will seek a
s l 1pulated j udgment with the
c·ounty which the grou p's attorney
s a ys will pr otect th e
h omeowners' right-o r-way to
.. their homes.
Last fall a class-action suit was
riled agains t the county on behalf
o f the resid ents of 13 housing
tr acts who hold deeds to the ease·
m en t.
The s uit was filed afte r the resi
d e nts were advised by attorney
Will ia m l*'r oe b e r g, wh o
re presents the hom eowners , that
if the parking lot the county con-
s t ructed r emained for fi ve years,
the.easement could be r evoked on
th e g rounds the lot constituted ad·
verSl·Use.
If the associatum m e mber s can
negotiate a stipulated judgmenl
with the county out of court, the
ho m eowners' ri~ht to acces wouJd
be rN·ognize<l in a writtc:n agre1•
ment signed h a J udge
The county would thc•n be legal
ly hound to recognize that eon
strut tion of the parking lot <.'Ould
not be us ed a:. grounds lo wrest
control '''the l'ascm ent rrom tht·
property ownC'rs
"It was m\ rccommt·ndatum
that the assoc;al ion not -.pend an~
more of its money to pursue u
legal action." Froe bcrg said lie
said he believes 1t is in the best in
lerests or these people not to
fund a full-blown tr ial. which he
said would bl' expensive and vie·
tory could not be guaranteed.
llowever . he s aid ind1v1duals
were rree to file the ir own suits .
If the homeowners had decided
to go to court a nd had won. the
county could hC1ve been rorced to
prohibit cars from pa rk mg in the
20-foot-wide easement.
Hut Froebe rg s a id stipulated
judgme nt would allow the count}
to retain the use of the parking
a r ea and at the s ame time protect
the casement rig hts of the r esi-
dents.
Justice
agency
disbands
By GLEN~ SCOTT
Of tlle Dallf ~!tee Steff
Faced with a loss of federal
funds, lhe 28 mt>mbers of the
Ora n ge County Criminal Justice
Council voted today to disband.
<;omprmid of elected officials.
law enforcement r epresentatives
and members or the public, lhe
t·ouncil's role has been to dole out
rede ral funds for local countywide
projel..'ts and to propose ways to
m ak e tht! justice system mor e ef·
feet.iv£'.
After six months of discussion,
the ~rou11 ac(:epted a recommen-
dation from Orange County Ad
m inis trut1vc Orficcr Robert
Thomas. a tount ll m cmhe r, to
<"easi· meeting .
In a me m o to council
('h a1rwoman V1ck1t: Jo~v<tn!-t, the
m ayor of Cypres:-.. T ho m as sa id
thl' t1oun,·1l 's existenrc seems un
necessary without "the glue or
f1•d1•ral funds · ·
Ms. Evans .sa11J Thomas· rec
ommendatwn was approved
with some opposition from puhli<·
r epres<'nlati ves who s uggested
form m~ a committee to studv
ways of C'Onlinuing the counC'1L ·
U nd\•r Thom us' pro posal,
though, a new i.:roup C'ould bt'
form c·d a nd :-.ponsorl'd b) the
r·ount} governmt•nt to exumine
ways of strl'amlin1n,I! 1·11untywid<.'
1ust11·t• syst cm:-
.. I 11 th1· near fu ture , h1:-.tonr
1-(rnwlh trends 1n publu· safety.
and f1rt· threatt•n to ahsorb all ta x
clnllars avadahh· lo loc·al ~overn
111('111. ll'UVlflg nothing for t'Ssen·
t1al ad1111n1:.trnti1in. ht·alt h and
soet~il M·n·1c.:e~. l'nv1ronmcntal
manai.:t•rrwnt, anti nlhcr s uch
c·o:-ts .. Th111t1 Uf, :-.ai<I 1n his
n11•rn•1
~)!., J-:\ :.in.<-s:11<1 reform nr tht•
1uo;t 11•1· "·\;,11'111 ha:-. bc:en a.dvoC'al
··d I)\ all 28 nwmt11•r:-. or thl' eom
rn """'"1 Thi• prolilL·m 1,, a rc I hl' pt'11pl1·
\A ho l n·al l .' llt't'd 1 t w II hng to , ....
1•1·11111 " ,~ ... a:-.kc•d rht:tort<·all)
Tlw 111 .. , uf fl'd1•r:ll runds th e
I 0\11\( 11 h.1s rl't.l'IVl'd a b•>UI S24
11111111111 durtnJ.! '1h tP11urt· wa:-.
1 h1• prc:d1t'\ .illt1· l'•·~-1111 qi fl"(lt·ral
111•11 trµht1•11 111g ... 11, •... :1111
LB cultural
r e port set
l.J~u na 11(.'a('h art)> rom
m1..,:-.1111H.·rs havl' been told to prl'
µan· a document outlining the
l'll ~ ':-. L·ultural h1f.\ory. nt'Cds. and
g1)al!, for an Orange Count~ Arts
.\llwnc1• projl'1·t
Thl' alhanc·t· If. devf.'111p1ng a
l1>ng runl-(t' plun for <'llltural
grt>\\ th tn lht• ('l)Ulll \
Tht• t'111 c·.,un\·ti has e ndorst'd
th1• JlrllJl';., Thl' 1.·om m 1ssrnner:-.
fa1•e u l·\·h 12 d<'iJdline for !'Om
pit-lion nf Lhed11cument
1\'f,..111orial slat~d
for UC I professor
1\ ('llrl\'ll<.'<1t1on w1 II be held Fri.
Ila~ al l T lrvint• in m emory of
l. C I pro r <' s !>or D r A r t h u r
:\1 ardl'r , 70, an 1ntc rnal\onaJly
kno wn a utho r tt~· on British
naval his tor y w h o died on
Chris tmas Oav
Th l' p u b.l 1 c memo r i a I
t•er<'mony will ll<' held at 2 p m .
in R oom 1'74 or the Computer
Sc1t'lll't' Building
,......,..,..~~~~~~~~~~-..-~~~~1
~,, (W
0 €)
c, 0
Give her one of fife's simple pleasures.
She can't resist anything as
appealing as these sparkling
diamonds. set in 14 karat ·
yellow. gold. Diamond stud
earrings from $150, pendants
from $425 .
SLAVICK'§
Fhw l•w•~n Sin« 1917
Fuhion Island, N-port C•nter, N-port S.ach, n4/6'4·1JIO
WHlminswr I Legurwi Hiiis I MiliNon vi.;o ( Nofth °'•• I Tht City
LM C•~ • lru Malls
Alto G,.ai.r Los Anpln I S.n o.p I le• Vfles
U.....,. ol Slt¥1ft.'• COll""*M dlMp ,-. or"'-"-~ VISA. ..._, Owp. "*"'btr Fi1tt ltwtlas CwiU
I
I
Camels noi
for N¥ mayor
Mayor Edward I. Kocb re·
jected an invitation to com
pete in a camel race with the
mayor oC Indio, a community
that calls itself ·'Date Capital
of the World."
Indio Mayor Pbil Reed of·
fered to wHget Koch a bushel
of Indio dates against a
bushel of apples from the Big
Apple. Reed said he got the
idea for a race when he SHW
pictures of Koch atop a
camel during a recent Mid·
die East tour.
Koch declined to compete
during the Feb. 13-21 Date
Festival, saying camels have
a "vile disposition."
•
Syndicated columnist Art
Buchwald says his morale
soH r e d while watc hin~
Ronald Reagan's inaugura·
tion but only because he is
a satirist.
"There will be som e
marvelous stuff for someone
who has to
make his liv-
1 ng m aki n g
fun o f p eo-
ple," he told
s tude n ts at
Arizona State
Univers ity .
.. I saw those
s t a n d s
packed with
m a r v e l 0 u s 8UC14WAt.D
people who are going to sup·
port me for the next four
years."
Buchwald was on campus
to informally advise mem-
bers of the Western Humor
a nd Irony Membership on a
conference the group has
scheduled for April Fool's
Day 1982.
Muhammad Ali will
1oon be in your
neighborhood
beverage store -as a
decanter of
grenadine. The real
article shows ol/ the
simulated version at a
Los Angeles news
conference.
•
No parties, no movies. no
walking. no talking. That's
diva MHtba Horne's advice
for steering clear of the flu.
The 47-year-old meno·
soprano has been rehears ing
for a Camet!ie Hall recital,
one that has been postponed
twice because of her bout
with influenza.
·'The original date was
Dec 16, but that had to be
put off because of a nu virus
I picked up in Dallas in Nov·
ember. until Jan. 11 ," she
s aid in the New York Times.·
Is r aeli children will begin
planting a "John Lennon
Peace Forest" next month in
m emory of the s lain former
Bealle.
The forest, to be planted by
Jewish and Arab youths in
the mountainous Galilee re·
gion, was the idea of a group
of Orthodox Jewish immi·
gra nts from the United
States who collected money
for t he project from Galilee
residents and Jews living
abroad.
Press reports s aid Voko
Ono, the widow of the
s uperstar shot to death in
New York las t m onth.
promised to compose a song
fortheforest'sdedication . • The Senate overwhelming-
ly confirmed Alexander M.
Haig as President Reagan's
sec retary of stale amid
praise for his tough foreign-
policy stance and reserva·
lions about h is role in
Watergute.
llaig's nomination was ap-
proved 93·6.
Senate Democratic· Leader
Robert C. Byrd joined the
vote against Ha ig,· saying
l he re were "unanswered
ques tions . . regarding the
abuse of power "
Name tags a problem
Report slwws most employees dislike them
The cost to pin a name on an
estimated 950 Or ange County
e mployees who work at public
counters would be about $2, 175 for
the first year, according to a new
report.
Despite what county offi cials
see as a s mall cost, the county Ad·
ministrative Office cautions that
other prickly proble ms are relat·
ed to name tags. Mainly,
e mployees don't always wear
the m .
sider Riley's proposal during its
meeting Tuesday.
SAVERS NOTES in his report
that about 400 of the 950 workers
identified as working with the
public are library employees,
who already are encouraged to
wear badges. About one third of
them do, he said.
About 100 qf the employees
work in the county Environmen-
tal Management Agency or the
sheriffs department. The others
are "scattered throughout the
county ... hesa1d.
After the initial cost of printing
the badges. the cost would go
down in subsequent years to about
$725 for new and replaced name
plates, he said.
THE BADGES would cost
about $2.25 each and would in·
elude a photograph of the worker.
Other county employees who
are constantly in contact with the
public. such as sheriff's deputies.
firefighte rs and agricultural in-
spectors, traditionally have worn
nameplates . "A PPROXI MAT EL V five
years ago both the county Clerk
and the Health Department dis-
continued the use of name badges
for all employees." said the re-
port prepared by analyst Robert
Sayers. ··At that time, these de-
partments felt the effort r equired
to enforce wearing badges ex-
ceeded the benefits badges pro·
vided."
Fifth District Supe r visor
Th omas Riley s uggested the
name badges last November. He
said the name plates would make
t he county worke rs seem less like
nameless bureaucrats to mem·
bers of the public.
Laguna eyes land
for bike rrw tocross
The board is scheduled to con·
SC man held
at library
An unemployed San Clemente
man was in jail after he was al·
legedly spotted breaking into the
San Clem ente branch library
Wednesday.
·A r esident of Avenida
Granada called police shortly
after 3 a .m. to report seeing a
man climbing through a broken
window into the library at 233
Ave. Granada.
Police arrived moments later
and arrested John W. Dunfee,
27, or 602 Ave. Victoria.
Dunfee faces charges of al·
tempted burglary.
Laguna Beach city officials are
studying the feasibility of using
city -owned la nd -possibly
Sycamore Hills -for a bicycle
motocross track.
City council members have
directed City Manager Ken
Frank and Councilman Kelly
Boyd to look into the possibility of
using municipal property for such
a r acetrack at nocosttothecity.
ONE OR TWO acr:es or land
would be needed, said Boyd, who
had urged the council to explore
the matter.
Boyd said interesl in bicycle
motocross racing is growing and
that Laguna Beach youngsters
must now be taken to Irvine or
West minster to participate.
The operation and size of the
tracks vary, be said.
In Westminster. the city leases
the land for $1 a year to a service
club, and the service club
operates the track.
Council-member Sally Bellerue
said possible parking problems
rorsucba track should be studied.
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contributors must include their name and telephone
number ror verification. Nv circulation calls, pleue.
Tell m what's on your mind. The number is in
service at houn a day. seven days a week.
And Bruce Hopping of
Laguna Beach cautioned that
s uch a facility may causeenviron-
mentaldamage.
"In power-driven motocross,
the damage is incredible ... he
said.
Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick
said that after a few races, the en-
vironmental damage could be as-
sessed. He noted that families
participating in the races often
bring motorhomes and pickup
truc ks that could causedamageto
the terrain.
But Jim Knee, a local bike shop
owner. said that youngsters "are
going to raee anyway," and that a
track provides a safe place to do
it.
Frank said he would look into
a ll r elated issues inthe matter.
Pair arrested
in child porn
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. <AP>
-A man and a woman have
been arrested and charged with
using the woman's 7-year-old
daughter for obscene purposes,
police said.
Police said Arthur J . Jones,
31, formerly of Harrison and re-
cen tly trans ferred by his
employer to Austin, Texas, was
arrested In Austin. Chatta·
nooga police detectives arrested
Jean L. Conn, 29, mother of the
elementary school student, who
was notldentifled.
A Cbattanooca film procesain1
firm alerted police after de-
v elopln1 color slides Jones
bl'ou1ht ID, police said. Detec·
tlvn said they obtained JI 1Ude9
1bowtnc the strl ln nude poMI.
Contract
handlin_g
rapped
The Orange County Human
Services Agency has been an1ri·
ly denounced for its handllna of
several contracts under whlch
ambulance service is provided
to indigents and jail inmates.
The furor over the contract
administration erupted Tuesday
when members of the Cowity
Board of Supervisors learned
that the county has continued to
pay for billed ambulance service
despite the fact several of the
contracts between the county
and the ambulance operators
had expired.
"The whole thing is suspect,"
declared Super visor Bruce
Nestande. "I can't believe the
county operated in this manner."
According to agency officials,
the county has been billed for
about $10,000 in ambulance
ser vices since Julv. when the
county Counsel's Office recom·
mended the Auditor-Controller's
Office stop paying bills not cov-
ered by contracts.
Supervisors delayed for one
week action ·On Human Services
Agency recommendation that
the now-defunct contracts be re-
newed so bills could be paid.
Agency officials also recom·
mended that a task force be
formed to study whether the
contracts should be permanently
ext ended.
Five companies have provided
a mbulance service in the coun·
ty's unincorporated ar eas under
agreements dating back to 1962.
The agreements e xpired at
various dates, the ear liest in
1972 and the latest in 1979.
Upon learning that the county
continued to pay fo r billed
services, Nestande said, "llow
can this happen"!"
Sara Walker , an agency assis·
tant direetor, told supervisors
that the county counsel's offi ce
ruled in 1977 that payment
without the contracts was legal
and the practice continued until
last s ummer.
pression the contracts we re
valid," she said.
Board Chairman Ralph Clark
called the procedures "sloppy "
"When a contract expires you
sit doWll and renegotiate ," Clark
said .
Supervisor Roger Stanton said
the situation reflected a "total
absence of responsibility and ac
t•ountability ··
AmbuJam·e contracts were ad
minis te r ed by the count}
Counsel 's Offi c e <1 nd th e
S h eriff's De par tmen t until
for111 a tion o f th e county
Eme rgency Medical Services
Diviswn of the Human Ser vices
Agency.
"However , responsibility for
the agreements was unclear and
no department took an active
role in their administration," ac-
co rdin g l o a r eport l o
supervisors.
. .
Thuraday. Jenu.ry 22. 1911
0~11, P••ot \t.111 Photo
SUPERVISOR RILEY ENDS HIS STAY AT HOAG
Hospital secretary Mevis Sumera accompanies him
Supervisor Riley
emls lwspital stay
With his spirits hi gh. Orange c·,,untj Su1,,.rv1sor Thomas Hil ey
left lloag Hospital in Newp<)rt Beac h Wcdn t-sday fnllnwin~ a lfi.
clay stay for treatment or a r espirat1>r} 1llnb~
With his wife. Emma J<Jnc, <snd hi~ pli ~~1<·1an. Dr. John
Rumsfeld. at his side. the 5th District supervisor said he will be
ba ck in his Santa Ana office on a regular bas1:s beginning Monday .
RJl,E\' WAS HOS PITAUZED .Jan :i with 1,1,ha t aides
dt'Sl·ribt.>d as a "severe flareup of a pre ex1.,11n ~ asthma condition
compounded b~ the flu ··
Haley wa:s hospitalized in Ma) with a s 1m 1lar as thma fl ~sreup.
but 1t wasn't as severe as his most recent illness
Dr. Rumsfeld said Riley's •·overall g0<id health and ~tr<in~ con-
s titution" allowed him to respond quickl y t11 tre atment aft er he
was admitted to the hospital
RILEY'S CONDITION in1tiallv was l i ~tcd a!. tnt1t al. bul. after
two days in the hospital, improved. markedly
While hospitalized, Riley was treated b~ OC'nms ~ovak . a lung
s pecialist and Sidney Rosenblatt. an endotnnol()g1 st Roseoblall.
according to Riley aides. treated a d1abet1c· cfln<l1ti<m
Rosenblatt s aid the condition has stabilm.:d and 1-; tr1ta ll v t on-
troll able through medication ·
Stolen county merchandise returned
About $25,000 1n stol e n
mer chandise put on public dis
play by the Orange County
Sheriff's Office last week in San
ta Ana has found its way back to
its rightful owners.
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Harl said
more than 3,000 peopl e viewed
the property during a three-day
period last week. The crime vie·
tims were hopin~ to find stolen
possessions recovered with the
arrest of a Santa An a man last
month.
~
TUDOR
Hart said 25 victims were able
to provide positive ident1ficat1(Jn
of missing merchandise WCJrth
about $25.000.
fl e said another I 00 people
have provided tentatave iden·
tification s o f mi s s ing
possessions and could recover
their items with added verifica
lion of ownership.
The merchandise put on dis
play last week had an estimated
value of $300.000. The items
were recovered with the arrest
of Hosendo T1irrc·s. 4fi. on New
Year's EH· llart s aid Torres.
rh a r~ecl with receiving i;tolen
propcrt~. 1s lwfll'\"ed In be one of
Oran~t· Count~·., maJl>r handlers
of m1ssml!. pro1wrt~
Harl o.;;.11d IO\'t•s ligators on
th£>1r own had managed to trace
ba c k about S4 :i.OOO of t h e
merchandisl' l<1 t·ommcrc-1al and
residential bur)!lar~ \'lclims in
the c 1t1es of Cos ta Mesa .
Oran~c . J\na hc·1m . T ust in .
Weslmmsl('r and S<1 nl <.1 :\na
~
TUDOR
For Peeks
In Oceen-Golng
Perforrn11nce:
Chemplonahlp
Surfing end
Tudor Submariners
Bl~wote< r1."lobolo1y " ti...lt •n•o
lh1 bta-y ludo< po• Leh
1t.e Tudor •, ~te<dott!! S..t>
marfNllf '" \to\n•pu ure4 'Mth re·
volv.oq e'°Jxed ,,~ bt!!z!.'I and
motch.nq brocel!.'t S!.'lf ..,nd,nq
or.1 pre1...,e proof down to
JJO feet Riqht th<! T ~ Sib
rnc:irinet Prince ~te< rn 1toin
le u 1teel woth revolv,nq
elnp•ed tome bl!!zel and
motch.nq ficplod bracelet 1elf.
..,nd1ng and p<1H1ure·proof clo-n to bllJ feet Borh "10d@l1
leot11e th!.' T witlloc~ ""nding "°""" and ore ovo1loble with
blU!.' or blod dol and bezel
llfuNofttll•nd ... .,." .... .......
IWL. y flitL.01 Th\UMey, '*"-Y 21. 119'
..... :··: ~ ...... . •••• T._
Harp•l•e
The party's over
lAft WA8111NOTON DAT&UNS: In contrut to IWl·
shine. 1mJI• and lon1 lln• ol Umoualnea th•t prev.Hed in ow capital city over Ute put few daya, Wuhinaton early
W........._y ... mtldllk•acllydrMntldoleverytbin1.
The weathef' ume up ~, lo. mia\a 1wirted over the
Capitol Dorne and lntermiU•l rain 1platttred clty atreeta.
It wu llh 1ayln1. "and then there were none." No
<'n>wda J•mmant the 1lc14twalk1 No tuxedoa or nowtn1
1own1 No1lren1 aluna boul•vlU'<b w'th military eacorta.
AT THt: INTKaNATIONAL Inn on Thomas Circle,
where the Ora.nit' CoW1t y l.Jncoln Club had made Its
Wuhlnl\Oft beadquarhsr& over the pH t three days, lu1·
&•1e and people in travel.In& "·k>t.hes jammed \be lobby
wtud1 only how-. before wu fiUed with smilin1 inauturaJ
ball t'elebranta and 1currym• military aides.
Offp1te the fadlna& cele bration and the emotJonaJ drain
here over tbe JOY of the Yanks beln1 freed from the Ira·
man international thuas. there ue still some leftover hip
pCX'llet notes on the late, 1re.t inau&ural celebraUons.
Of lbe rune 1mau1ural balls held across Washinaton the
c it) 's motorcycle cop corps with their white sidecar·
eq uipped machmes. 1ot first prize for the best show at the
hort>ham Americana Hotel when President Reagan ar-
rived about midn11ht The bike cops spun speedy circles in
the street. swooped around and parked in formation.
THEY REMINDED YOV of those trick riding Tijuana
motor cops who always appear in the Costa Mesa Fish Fry
parade or the big Huntington Beach Fourth of July march.
The ball at the John F . Kennedy Center won top honors
"It's getting late; why don't we sit this one ow?"
for the most chartered buses parked out front. You count
99, 100, 101-and then lose count. The Reagans made their
most brief appearance of the evening here.
Ballgoers at the Museum of Natural History were treat·
ed to the most bizarre bar. It was located near the roach ex·
hi bit, next to the white polar bear and just in fr6ntof a case of
human skulls.
Iran ripped hY Carter
'Savagery againat innocent ~•146f!•' told
PLAINS, G•. (AP) -Accuala1 Iran of
"Hv..., A1almt ab.olutely innocent boltq•,"
Jimmy Cut« NCOUDt.d tal• of horror from th• 53
U .8. baltal• today, lDcludina beiu fe>tted throqh
a t auatle& of Jten and lrickl before 6eln1 freed after
444 d•~:•pth'ity . . " are the acta of animala alme>11t," Carter
aaid aft• returnint from his visit with the freed hoeta1• in West Germany.
Huald a rePort he prepared in lon&·hand durln&
the fU&bt home was to be hand-delivered to Preai·.
dent ae.,an ln Waahin&ton this momin1.
The former president said the "solemn aaree·
ment" that won the hosta1es' freedom 11 in the beat
intereata ol the United States and should be kept
becauaeitlnvolvesthecountry'awordofbonor.
Carter made bis remarks i.n Plaim and while
aboard the Air Force puaeqer jet that brouaht him
and his party home alter a dramatic dub to
Wiesb.den, West Germany, as a special envoy
representiftl Rea1an. He arrived in Georaia about 3
a .m . PSTtoday, less than24boun after he had left.
CA&TEa SAID THE DAY be turned over the
White House to Reagan was the ' 'happiest day of my
life·' because on the same day 14 months of effort to
tree the boetaaes bad proved successful at last.
Bpt bis words were angry when be spoke of the'
abuses the hostages suffered.
He said one hostage told him he had been struck
on the way to the airport but then added, "Well,
that 's all in the past."
''Even when the hosta1es were being loaded on
the plane, they carried them lo a fairly distant point
by bus and made them walk through a gauntlet, one·
by.one, without even the protection of the whole
group. Jeering and sometimes even ldckinl to try to
debasetheAmericansleavinglran,"Cartersaid.
* * * Agreenwnt
• survives
Some ol the •tori• that Carter told bad beea re·
layed before by boet .. es' relatives: that some
boeta1ea were held in aolitary cOl'finement for aa
much u 400 days, some were te>id falaely their motben were dead and some were lined up before
mock execution sq_uada.
"They tried to convince them we were the
villains, that we had robbed and cheated the Iranian
people for 35 years," Carteraaid.
·-"And even after month after month, they (the
Iranians) still took pleas'.ll'e in abusln& them
psycholoeically. even physically."
Carter said that be told the bostaees they were
free to 10 at any Ume, but said he "stron1ly advised
them" lo stay toaether at least through Sunday so
that those who are suffering most from the conse·
quences ol their captivity can receive the strength or
the whole group in a period of decompression. . ,
ASKED IF ANYTHING JN particular was
wrong with the hostages, he said that for some isola·
tion had lert them in a state of semi·confusi~n. He
also said some had lost weight.
Carter, asked about statements that Reagan will
want lo examine the agreement with Iran extremely
carefully before fgreeing to implement it, said a r~·
view to see if the agreement bas any defects was
··perfectly legitimate.•'
''In my judgment, the United States' position on
the agreement is a very favorable one for us, .. Carter
said. "Not just because the hostages have been re·
leased now to freedom but because the financial set·
llementis oneofwhich we are very proud."
"Also. our nation's word of honor is at
stake," Carter said. "I signed on behalf of our coun·
try these agreements and I think it would be a serious
thing for us to violate them."
oourt test
W ASlllNGTON (AP> -The
agreement that exchanged some
of Iran's frozen assets for 52 U.S.
hostages has survived its first
court challenge, but there may be
further legal tests.
&llRVI~~
THE ~
U.S. District Judge Gerhard A.
Gesell ruled Wednesday that Jim·
my Carter had the constitutional
authority as president to release
Iran's money, which be ordered
held after the U.S. embassy in.
Tehran was stormed by Iranian
militants Nov. 4, 1979.
Gesell's decision denied a re-
quest by a native Iranian, now
living in this country, and his
American·born family to force
the U.S. government to withhold
transfer of $50.9 million of Iran's
assets.
MEDIA
SIEGE
.. ~.1 ... -10
WIFE OF EX-HOSTAGE, BERT MOORE, EVADED PRESS
M•rfori• wfth medl• gift given her In Mt. Vernon, Ohio
,. ............
SHAKEN BY RECEPTION?
Kurt W•ldhelm
Waldheiin
plan change
re~rted
NEW YORK CAP) -U.N.
Secre t a r y ·Ge ner a l Kurt
Waldheim was so shaken by the
reception given him in Iran a
year ago that he changed the
terms of an American proposal,
"t he only card the U.S. held" at
the lin:'e in the hostage crisis, r • accordmg to ABC News.
Instead of proposing, as the
U.S . government requested, that
a commission of inquirry be
formed after the hostages were
released to examine previous
American involvement in Iran
Wa ldheim ··reversed the plan,':
A BC News says in a special report
to be broadcast tonight. at 10 on
Channels 7 and Io.
Waldheim "proposed a U.N.
commission that would go ·to
Ir a n without any prior agree·
ment on the r elease of the
hostages." ABC News said.
A spokesm an for Waldheim
said the report was "not true."
Pitt rre Salinge r , the ABC
News correspondent for the re-
port, SC1ys Waldheim was "in a
state of panic" when he m et
with Iran's revolutionary coun-
cil because of a "r iot" directed
:.11 him ma Tt:hran cem etery.
A' Westin , the ARC News ex-
l.'l'Ut1ve 1n charge of the report,
said rl'cently obtained informa·
trnn not to be included in the
r'l'porl indicated Waldheim
ftt..trl'd hl' might be tried by Ira·
r11an mi litants and executed dur-
ing thl· J anuC1ry 1980 trip.
Never mind the 00-foot blue whale suspended overhead.
MOST TALK OF THE former hostages was evident at
the Pension Building ball. No wonder. That was where the
diplomatic corps and Supreme Court justices celebrated.
Henry Kissinger and Alexander Haig got together here.
Most wearied.appearing crowds seeme<t to be at the
Washington Hilton ball , with much grumping about the A
versus B ballrooms. The Reagans visited only A, where
Paso Robles anthem singer Juanita Booker sat with
Charlton Heston in his box.
ALI EBRAHIMI, a Houston de-
veloper. his wife and three
children had sought a lO·day
restraining order but were look·
ing in the long run for compensa·
Hon for a house and a business
taken over by the Iranian govern·
ment.
Christine Nettesheim, an at·
torney for Iran who argued the
agreement should proceed, said.
·'This is the first case where a
plaintiff sought to enjoin the ef.
reel oflrus agreement."
BUT SHE NOTED there were
338 cases in U.S. courts m which
cl aim~havebeen filed against the
Iranian government.
I
I I
LONG LASTING
LUXURIOUS
Through it all, you could tell that weary bones were
beginning to set in among the Orange County Republican
delegation. One prominent Lincoln Clubber was heard to
exclaim as he tried to maneuver at the Watergate. "Damn
these rental cars. You pull on the parking brake and the hood goes up."
AND THEN THERE WERE Dick and Georgia
Spooner, he the just-ex·Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
merce prexy, who tried to negotiate the escalator to the
Washington tube.
Abruptly. the escalator started sliding backward.
"Run faster!, run faster!." the people below implored.
But then. like all inaugural celebrations. it all c ame to a halt.
And so has this. Turn out the lights, boys, the party's over.
It will be good to get home.
· East slippin' 'n'
Gesell s aid it was "beyond
question .. that Carter had the con-
s titutional right to fashion the
agreement under his power to
conduct foreign policy. The judge
said the Ebrahimi family could
return lo court tosee.k a long-term
injunction, but that the case had
Ii ttle likelihood of succeeding.
Under the agreement to free the
hostages, the United States on
Tuesday transferred out of the
country $7.9 billion in frozen Ira·
nian assets, part of which went in·
to a fund for settlement of future
claims. An additional $3.2 billion
in U .S.-based assets remains to be
disbursed.
slidin'
Snow, freeze forecast for uide area
Cocuial w·.-aill.-r
Ch•rteeol rain SO percent tonlfllt, In·
creulnt lo Ml percent chance of
W#ef\l'rlci.y.
CoHt•I -'°· lnl-H. c .. 11•1 hltlll0•60l, lnl•ndmllHOI. W•ter ff.
E IHwhera, ll•••Y •••II •nd ,h•H•-.Wl'f-r1141rtlorentr•nce1 Sou"'-'"1y wlndl a lo u knots
ton'911t lnc,_lfll UtoU knots I' rlday
with J 'o ...._wind ....... W.Har1, llHll Uo 1 twt. _,_.,..,to 121..t on
.. ,, faclnt llN<llH with OC:<••Hln•I
MtstotSteet. 11.s.s-•• .,,
"°' M4 ''"''"' •• ,,, ... , •• 11, .. <•11-II~ c~loM .... , m11eh
., llM .East •Mly ...... and Ille
fWe<Mt ~ * -Ir-.... l,.._nd lo "'9 '-' 01'9~ LA1•a1
Md ""9r Ollie Valley.
lteln ........ -twee Winds rMC'*I llOnt Ill• l"•ClllC Cout ,,.,,,
Mfttwm Clllfoml• lo W•llll,,....., ........... ..,., ..........
Mond•Y·F•ldr/ If you dO no1 ••-. .
'fOU' p-lrf ~ 30 0 lft Cl ll D910t9 1 1
pm 1no you• coov "'"be O•'•Y9•tl0 ,
S.!u•Oh -Svncl•Y II you dO f>OI ,..,.,_. fOoJt OOC>V lrf t Im '4111
1 Mfore t • A m 8r.d VOV' COOY will be
'<9e'•"9f9d
,--""'T'----------..................... ,,. "''eel 'o •N<h I loll Ifft on som•
SIMWen .,. c-ldltred 1111•1\t Fri·
dey In tN ,,_,..In\, -Coetl•I
ueas, IM Sent• lerlNlr•·V•nl11ro
•••• end Ill• ltlurald•·S•n
.. rMrdlflo -· wlltl "'9 -leffl 1a111ne to a11111ut •.oao '"' 111 ,,,. "*'"· taint WNn l9w ..,,,..raturH lenlfllt
·'*'~. '" .. *· ... Nf'Vk • .....
TIM NIN tYll9m It c-lnt """' •••II• and ltH1ni.us 111rl llHr ,..._ .-r~ lr•en _,. .,..
WHl·le<l"9 llN<MS,
Th• lllr•et ol ••In Frio., I' COt'I•
"dered only slight In IN deMrts.
where h'9hl "*'Id ••nve lrom the
m•d·Jh Imo h '°'· H'9111 In .... Los ........... ,,,. ••lit" -IN lnl•nd £mplre •Ill be in Ille I-Mis. T..,,,..,..,.n>•
AllNln' AllMIC!w
Amarillo
All•Ma
AU•Mlc Chy laltlm-
llrmlnetwn """•ro .....
loston
"'Le~. 24 0 JI 21
41 21
11 24
11 ,.
40 u .o> •J •
.. 14 4• t4 JO 11
s .... Moo~ Tld.-•
~OOAT
5acon411°"' s:np.m. ~.7 Saconllhltll ll:llp.m. a,t ... ,.,,.,.
fllrtllow a:J91.m. l.t
l'lrilhltfl IO:IU.m. S,J
S.COIMll9w S:Up.m. ·CU
Sufi MUS; 14 P·"'·• , .... f<rtdeY 6: S1
a.m.
M-rl-7:S1 11.m., .... l"rMlay
t :Mo.m.
........... ... -.., • • w
4 • w
4 • w • • w
Chair
Reg. 849.
SALi 639.
Chair
Reg. 850.
SALl-639.
LEATHER
Our Best Quality Construction
Our Best Selling Styles
SAVE
UPTO
25%
On Sofas
and Chain
Top gram leather m seven best selling colors -Gold. Ru st,
Moss Green. Re d. Blue. Brown or Black
Your Choice at one low. low. p11ce
For a limited t ime only. Minimu m Savmg of 25% on any style.
1Chaar
Reg. 995.
SALi 74t.
Ottoman
Reg. 375.
SALi 279.
H.J.GAl\RETf fU~NIJU~E
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
'
Your FallOftte ~ WI# B• Happy To .... ,., You
0,........_'111n.AM .......
\
Ull HAllOI ILVD.
COSTA MISA 646-0275
--·-··-·------- -r.:--' -----.,.. ..... .,,;.._,.._.,_.._... ... -: ... ; ~ ... ~-...:.i.:::t_,:.....::-....-:. ::..·~--...:.:-;-: -~.fiYiUOC.::r.-.:...:.:o-
l ..... ,.. ..}
Area tensed
for drought
SACRAMENTO IAPl Buti around al ski
alopH and .low r~nrvo1r lcvcb •ru wflrn1n11
Monhem C:aUfornia rttalden\• theiy may bt1 In for
IMir MCOnd dmu1ht In fivti )'\'111'11
Ski rmorta and som• farnitin 1arti •lrl'•dy
toWIU,,.. their IOiat!#
Ralnlall 8Cl far this 11ui;.111 ji; f•r behtod th.-
tllal for thil dahe an \\f'16, lhf' flri.t )'t11&r uf 1i1 two
Y•H droucht th•t c·o11t th" 11tatt· hundrtid11 of
mlU10N oJ dollan an lost crop&. hvt1,l1K'lt , trtit:b,
"9h. wOdllft lind tuun'lt inc·om •
NO C1TY aAN O\JT uf w1th.·r an \~7'1. bu\
f'mf"rlt'f\O mf'asure!I wt-rt am1~4.'tl, 1nl'luda11ai vap
al\& v.•ater •<'~ thf' R1l'hmond Sim thh1el Hr1dKc
to Mann County nurth of Sim t'n11w1:><'u
Ramlall ltu!I > ur tu•i. ~n le!ls th.rn 20 vt1r
rent ul avt"n1gt-. and rt1tumang to normal "will
take more-than a big !>lorrn at th1i. J>VllH, · Hall
Clark, deput) t ha t'f of fl~ v1.1t:ratto11~ for tht1 i.talt'
Oepartmt1nt o( W <d k t !>ourct1s, saad W~nesda>
Much of the Northt'ii!>l a!I also i.uUenng from 1a
lack of rainfall Earlier tha!> month, the Oelaware
Raver Hai.an Comm1!>s1on dt1clared a drought
emeraenc\ 1n Delaware Nt1w Jer!>t1V, New York
and Pennsylvania Con~ervat1on t Horts have
begun in Connect1rut Lasr week. tht1 Missassappi
Raver dropped t<I 11 record low level at Memphis,
Tenn
SO •'All, THE LACK of snow or ram an
Northern California has h1l ski resorts hard and
caused difftculues for grain and livestvck farmers
Som e farmers havt! h'ad to start irrigation early
The Modesto Irrigation District started run·
ning water through its canals on Jan. 11, the
earliest since 1905.
Water Master Ooug Woodman of the Kings
River Water Association, which manages Pine
Flat Reservoir east of Fresno. saad the area has
had one inch of rain since Oct. I The normal ac
cumulation is eight inches
IN MID· JANUARY, there were only two inches
of snow on Donner Summit near the main pass
through the Sierra Nevada, compared to a normal
50 inches.
The Heavenly Valley ski resort at Lake Tahoe
hasn't opened. Marketing director Brady Hodge
said the ground was bare at the bottom of the
slopes and there were only six to 10 inches of snow on
the upper slopes not enough for "a quality ski ex-
perience."
"This is the latest we've ever gone into a
season in 25 years,'' he said.
Some gr ain crops have been stunted by the
lack of rainfall, but fields under irrigation are pro·
gressing well, according to George Tucker Jr of
the Crop Reporting Service.
3 jewelry stores
robbed; man dies
LOS ANGELES ( API Within a few hour!>,
three jewelry stores here were hit by robbers who
killed one man. critically wounded another, strug·
gled with a third and locked a salesm an in a vault
who later convinced one s uspect into surrendering.
authorities said.
Diran Odel, 39, di ed in his Wilshire Boulevard
store after being shot in the race during an apparent
robbery, said police Lt. Glen Ackerman. Odel's
partner, Kegam Toran, 33, received a gunshot
wound in the head. lie was listed in critical condition
today in the intensive care unit of t he UCLA Medical
Center. '
Two men arrested Wednesday were booked for
investigation of murder. They were identified as
John D. Jones, 19, and Aus tin 8 . Willis, 18, both o( Los
Angeles. said Ackerman.
Banlc tdflthold• lraft fM1td•
SAN FRANCISCO I AP) A federal judge has
agreed to allow Bank of America to withhold the
transfer of $91 million in interest on Iranian bank ac·
counts frozen after the 52
Americans were seized . ~----------.I Former Pres id ent ."9T.4TE J immy Carter had or
:iered a fund trans fer '---------before leaving office to
secure the hostages' release, but the Bank of
America said the interest rates set were · 'in great ex·
cess ·'of those it had agreed to pay originall y.
An affidavit filed in U.S. District Court here said
$2.4 billion was in Bank of America accounts from
Iran.
Af!I~•' lao•., ••relarfz.,d
MALIBU (AP> -A tr ansient was in custody to·
day after actress-entertainer
Connie Stevens returned to her
Malibu home and found SlS,000
worth of property missing and a
stranger sitting in a chair, a Los
Angeles Count y s h eriff's
spokesman said.
As the m an sat in Miss
Stevens' chair, s he called
authorities, who later arrested
Stacey E. Storm, 21, inside her
home, said sheriff's deputy Jim
Pl a tis. nEvucs
Storm was booked for investigation of burglary,
Platissaid.
Calll• .... 1• ......... ..
By Tlte Associated Press
Rain is expected over most of Northern and Cen-
tral California today, except for the central valley
area south of Merced, where there is only a chance of
rain, theNationaJ Weather Service says.
The rain, heavy at limes, is expected to give way
to colder weather and scattered clouds on Friday.
Snow WU expected above the 8,000 fool level in
the Sierra today, with the anow level falling to about
8,000 feet ln the northern Sierra Friday.
n ......... _ ...... ~ II
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A former Paramount
Pictures employee convicted ol swindling the film
atudlo out ol '495,000 has been sentenced to four
vearsblatate ertaon. Preman G. Packard Jr., 31, who was found
pllty ~ arand tbeft after a non-jury trial last Sep-
hallMr, WU MDlmCed Wedne9day by Superior ,.....,_a.::-Rlnaer. 1 wu arrested in December 19'19 on
Thursday, Jenuary 22. 1981 H/F DAil. "( P1l.OT A.
Panelist replaced
South Coa8t houaing di1pute grow•
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Leaden of
the state Senate have stepped into a
dispute over low-cost housmc and
replaced a former developer on the
South Coast Regional Coastal Com·
mlsslon.
The Senate Rules Committee on
Wednesday named a physician, Dr.
John Hisserich, director of re1ional
activities al the Los Angeles County·
University of Southern Cllifornia
Comprehens ive Cancer Center
School of Medicine .
Hisserich replaces Fred Johnson,
who has been opposing Chairwoman
Ruth Galanter and the represen·
tative to the state Coastal Com-
mission, Mel Nutter, in a dispute
over low.cost housing in coastal de-
velopments.
JOHNSON, WHO remained in of-
fice after his term expired Jan. 1,
predicted that the Rules Committee's
action would thwart efforts by some
com missioners t o r eplace Ms .
Galanter and Nutter.
"In smaller project& when lt wu
clearly presented that then wu no
economic feuiblllty lo lnclude low·
income houain& I vo(ed a1alnat it,"
he said, adding that the requirement
is a "manner of stoppin1 projects."
Johnson said he belon1s to the
Sierra Club, but environmental
groups and "no growth" advocates
had lobbied Senate President Pro
Tem David Roberti, D-Los An1eles,
to reotace him.
SIERRA CLUB president John
Zierotd srud he wrote Roberti t;aying
that his group had become "dis·
e n chanted " wi t h J ohnson 's
performance. ·
Roberti, chairm an of the Rules
C ommittee , is one of the
Legislature's strongest s upporters of
low-cost housing in coastal develop-
m ents .
Zierold said he did not know Hi s-
ser ic h, but predicted he would
··probably be a very objective member
of the commission."
Golde11 a1111iversary " ............. .
He had said Monday he had enough
votes to remove Mrs . Galanter and
Nutter, who support the state com·
mission's guideline requiring some
low-to moderate-cost housing, or
payment or an in ·lieu fee, for de-
veloping five units or m ore.
Hisserich said in a telephone in-
ter view that he was "really con-
cerned about maintaining access by
a ll income levels to the coastline. Aetor Pat O'Brien celebrated his 50th year of marriage to his wife
Eloise at a Los Angeles restaurant Wednesday night. Helping with
the festivities were their children, from left, Mavourneen, Terence
and Bngid. O'Brien, very popula r in the 1930s, has been in over 70
film s and starred in the TV series, "Harrigan and Son."
Johnson, who described himself as
a "voice of reason and moderation,"
s aid he supports such a requirement
only for large projects.
"I am not formally a member of
any environmental organization. I'm
concerned about a balance or en·
vironmental issues with appropriate
kinds or growth."
<
'! '
FREE REFRESHMENTS AND SURPRISES!
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Come to Columbia today!
THOMAS B. ANDERSON 12 0
MARY B. ANDERSON
1234 MAIN STREET l2_ .lll-7017
YOUR TOWN, CA 00000 m o
ra.1.1 111 tlw
(lfdr 1 of s
Dollars
COLUM•IA 8AVINa8 rnrnu]~~rn ANO LOAN A••oclA T,ION
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Depending on the plan you choose. you may receive all your Columbia
Charter Checks free. and enjoy free checking with no minimum balance
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AT COLOMBIA, YOOR MONEY GROWS WITH FRIENDSHIP,
HELP AND CARE
FREE GIFTS AND
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HOO RS:
Mon. thru·Thurs .... 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM
Friday ............... 9:30 AM to 6:00 PM
Saturday ............ 9:00 AM to 1 :00 PM
COWMBIA
SAVINGS(f:i
ANc1 LOANAssoclATION 80 Fashion ls&and • 760-8551
(comer ol Newport Center DfM and Santa Rosa) elaarpaMMaedParam~outofMll.•byform·,
lu a le..._ company, called "Scrlpb Unlimit· l,.._ ______ ~-------------------------------------------.r, '' tarpMtoee>pYtn1 tele'riakln acrtpta.
----"
~~ .. ., ........ ~ ..... _.,..,.... .. -~ ,,,., ..........
•9"'···---· ....... ~·-·-......
.•• L/llC ~.,ill·.-.~._..., .. .. Thomas P. Haley I Publlaher Thoma. KMvll IEdltor ~I ~ ~~-~ .................. T•h•u•r•td•••r•.Ja .. n•uary ... 22•,•1•91•t ................ a..ro. ... r• .. K.re•l•b•lc•h•/E .. dl•lor .. l••l•P•.ivt .. •E•d•lt•or .... .
Bet.er . lif egtiard
facility needed
L~a Be•~~ hf.,1uardt havr offer~ to lea!ft-a
)laln S.aeh Park allf", rat1e funds lh•mHlve1 tQ build a
marme alet~ faC'1lll~ on 1t. and then 1lve the s tructure to
th~ d ty .
Tht> lJfeauard Sta) the t•urrtont Mam Rt!llch lower is
c rampt-d 1n th t ummer wht•n 62 lifeguards are
t•mplO)'OO by the city
The l.acw\OA Be1rh L1fl'&uMrl.l ASM>\'lil\\on, Inc . would
o h t 1t fWld.s and nutt•r1al11 and r>O!\!Ubly seek the services
uf fomlPr llfc~ua.rcJb who ~r·t.' bullJ~r1', plurnbers, and
t>lec.·tnCHtl\S
The bulldin~ would m r ludl' un 0H1ni, first uuJ facility,
l()('ker room. and spa«e for records
The ilropoti.aJ com~b thr~ yurs after the t'1ly Coun·
l'\I ap~1ron~ l'Orui tructaon ot a f ac1ht v at the game site.
.-top Pump • ti.lion 11 a t lht' northwt> t end of the par:k.
That proJl'('t ~as i.helvt!d b' th.: rvuncil after the passage
\\f Pr<llJQSillon 13 m 1978
l"ounnl members this week deht) ed a dec1s1qn on the
\ urrent µropo:.al until they det·1d~ wh"ther to contract
ll fegu1t.rd ~en·1l·~s to a private (irm
If the coum·1J reJet'ts the vrivate firm 's proposal, it
"Ill c·ons1der the lifeguard assot 1ation's offer to build the
martnt! ::.afet~ fol•tlil~ The dec1s1on may come next
month
An drgument against the lifeguard association's pro·
po~al hdS be~n that the cit y will have one mor e building
t\; maintatn.
But the strul'lurt:-aµpt:ars to be needed and the pro-
po::.al 1s designed to save the C'ity cons truNion costs . If
the t·oune1l rejel'ts the µrivat e firm's offer. it should ac·
l'l:'Jl! th{' vffor to build the facility
School deficit options
Laguna Beach lfo1fied School District trustees
tonight are expected to approve the formation of a com·
mittce to look into the ramifications of closing a school.
Facing a $.580,000 budget deficit next year. the board
says it has few options other than closing a school and
possibly selling or leasing surplus property owned by the
s mall. five·school system.
A decision to close a school will certainly be un·
popular with some parents within the district boundaries
especiall y the ones with children at the affected cam·
pus.
With that in mind, the school board is going to g reat
pains to make sure every avenue is explored before it
lakes this action.
District administrators will ask the board to set up a
nine-member panel to review the effects of closing each
of the campuses. and will ask that the committee come
back with a recommendation to the board by May.
Prior to that. comml.inity members will have an op·
portunit~· to address the committee on which campus
might be s hut down with the least impact on the students.
The process. doubtless. will be an emotional one for
par ents, teachers. students , administrators and the
school board.
And what makes it more frustrating is the realization
that a school closure will probably cover less than a fifth
of the deficit fat·ing the district next year .
'
Cutting cancer costs
Physicians at four South Orange County Hospitals
have joined forces to form a cancer treatment program
designed to reduce duplication of services and cut costs
to patients.
Launched two years ago as a pilot program, the
Southern Orange County Cancer Program received ac-
«reditation this m onth from· the American College of
Sur geons.
Lt involves cancer treatment programs at South
Coast Medical Center in Laguna Beach, San Clemente
General Hospital in San Clemente, Mission Community
lfospital in Mission Viejo and Saddleback Community
Hospital in Laguna Hills.
Progr a m organizers say the impetus behind forming
the consortium was the high number of duplicated
ser vices found among the four hospitals. .
The hospitals will share cancer treatment equip·
ment and coordinate the purchase of new equipment to
avoid dupli cation and competition for patients.
Jn addition , a joint program is expected to prevent
d uplication of statistical information and encourage cost
s avings for all four hospitals.
T he American College of Surgeons grants accredila·
lion to such multi-hospital programs only under special
circumstances and specifies that accreditation will be
s uspended if any of the participating hospitals withdraws
from the program.
Coordinating m edical services on an inter-hospital
bas is instead of having each hospital purchase identical
expensive equipment is a logical step in reducing the
runaway costs of medical care, which many Americans
find they can no longer afford. • Opinions expressed tn the space above are those of the Dally Ptlot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P O
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321
Boyd I Wives
By Lii. BOYD
Many is the city wife who
accuses her husband of not
workiq hard enouih. of ne>t
earning enough money of not
helping her enough in dealing
Dear
Gloon1y
t Gu8
Why does this country
spend bundreda of
thousands of dollars to
brin1 in people from
Asia and CUba, and at
the same time spend
hundreds of t.houaand1 to
keep ournel1bbon out?
KIP :.•:.:1 ::·.::::::-~:.:-:. -::i -....nir~•w,.... .. .. ~-=.w_... ...... ..
with the youngsters. But tbe
farm wife who so accuses her
husband is a rarity. Our Love
and War man bas attempted
to explain the why or this dif·
ference between city and
farm wives. And failed .
Nominees for membership
in the "My Name Is a Poem"
Club -Bethlehem, Pa.,
chapter -include Jane
McLane and Dora Bohrer
pronounced Borah.
Q. ln bowling, what's tbe
greatest numbe r of con-
secutive strikes anybody
ever rolled?
A. How about 33? That's
how many the 1reat Ned Day
bowled durtq an exhibition
ln 193'1. U that nm bu been
beaten, it'• not in tbe record
at band. Dtlmaton say tbt1
expect to see oaly one perfect
came -12 atrltea ln a
row -every 450,000 aam•
overall.
/
Earl Waters
School financing unresolv.ed
Allhou1&h It la not likely that
a n y slanlrlcanl changes ln
· .srhool Cinancina wltl come out of
the l!IU IA1islature, pressures
are ht-inc brou1hl to bear by the
lawyers who jolted the entire
school financin1 syste m back in
1968 with the now famous "Ser·
rano" case.
They had brought suit against
a host of state officials in behalf
o f J o hn s,.,. r ano, a
Huldwin P11trk
parent who
conl(,'nded his
son was being
denied h is
.<'OOStllUtional
righ t s t o
e q u a I
tr e atment
because h ~
h ved,m a school district which
was too poor to provide the
quality education received by
students in .. rich .. districts.
After eight years of litigation
the courts finally agreed,
dedarlng the slate's syat'm for
fi nancing schools, based upon
the assesse d valuations of
properly within the districts,
was violative of the constitution
In that it did not provide equal
11 mo unts to be spent-in the-
education of every child.
THE RULING ordered a
r e vis ion whic h allowe d
differences of no more than $100
per pupil and gave the state
until this year lo achieve the
goal.
W it h th e passage o f
Proposition 13, limiting property
taxes.' school financing was
necessarily shifted from the
local tax revenues to the state
The result has been that the
st ate has now assumed 80
percent of the costs for the local
school operations
But the Se rre1no lawyers
contend that the Legislature has
done little to eliminate the'
un canstitulional inequities
which aave occasion to the case.
In some instances, they claim,
the Situation is worse now than it
was then, pointing to their
favorite target of Beverly l:fHls
which is currently said to be
spendinti $2,700 per pupil while
Baldwin Park has only $1,400
per pupil. The lawyers say that
this proves tht present scheme
of financing wilt not bring the
system into full compliance in
the reasonably nt\ar future or
ever. They threaten to reopen
lhe Ser rano case if action is not
taken by the Legislature this
year.
LEGISLATORS, Gov. J erry
Brown, und stale School Supt.
Wil son Ril es disag r ee ,
tontending the stale is now in
substantial compliance. Riles
says anything more at this lime
would lower the caliber of the
-~
'!)()IT~~ ME -fl~T. I HAVE 10 f 1ND nrt HF.AD END. I
Mailbox
entire school system working
unnecessary hardships on
hundreds of thousands of school
children.
He pointed out that many of
the districts viewed as wealthy,
such as San Francisco, have all
of the, problems that go witb
poverty, minorities, non-English
s p ea king and c ulturally
deprived children.
The whole issue might be
easily put to rest by the slate
taking the final step, which
eventually it will s urely be
compelled to do, and assume
total responsibility for school
financing. It would require only
slig'htly more than a 20 percent
increase in the prsent funding.
BUT THAT solution is bitterly
r esis ted b y sc hool
administrators and teachers up
a nd down the state. For they
know it would inescapabl y bring
a b o ut unifo rm s alaries
s t a tewid e fo r both t h e
administrators and teachers as
well as all other employees.
While that probably would be
the most healthy thing lo ever
happen in the public schools, it
leaves the false concept of the
Serrano case unchallenged . That
is the idea th~t the spending of
equal etmounts on each pupil will
insure equality of education or is
even desirable.
Under present financing t'Xtra
allowances are made to provide
for th e ha ndicapped . the
underprivileged , th e
non ·En~lish speakm~ and even
the gifted. Euch have specia l
n eeds over and above the
r egular school program Even
such things as the extra busing,
whether court me1 nd ated or of
geographic necessity. incrf'ase
the pt.'r pupil costs in certain
districts
One hundred pe rcent state
financing coulcl vastly improve
the present system 1f the courts
will back U \\av from th f'
m andate of '\pe.ncl ing e qual
amounls on e<Jch child
County needs efficient airport facility
To the Editor!
J was most pleased to read In
the Daily Pilot that Supervisor
Ralph Clark is asking the Board
of Supervisors to cons ider the
appropriateness or increasing
the number or daily commercial
flights out of the John Wayne
airport. The purpose or this let·
ter is not to re-hash past pro/con
arguments, but to give the board
my wholehearted s upport for in-
creasing the number of daily
commercial flights. The airport
exists.
There is no valid alternative
site. The passenger count in·
creases year by year. This fact
in itself should suffice as ample
rationale for accommodating to
the needs and demands for air
travel of this county's popula·
lion. Orange County and its
cities, its industries and its peo.
pie need and require a first class
commercial air facility. This
<tamn thing has been studied to
death and if you slacked all the
Impact reports on top of each
other you probably wouldn't be
able to see above it or around it.
Fl NALLY, I am a resident of
the city of 'Newport Beach. I
lived for four years in the Bluffs,
first leasing and then owning a
residence directly under the
rtight path. When the planes
went over it was noisy and un·
comfortable but my family and I
accommodated to il because we
moved in there with the full
knowledge that we were in the
jet flight path. If a survey would
be made todav. I'm willinJl to
bet that substantially all the res·
idents underneath that fll ~ht
path in the Bluffs and Dover
Shores have moved in there
post· jet.
It's amusing to r ead about the
complaints when I recall that we
sold our home on Vista Entrada
for a substantial profit to
another resident on the same
street and the jets kept flying all
those years. Another cinch bet
would be on the substantial in·
crease in housing resale values
under the Newport Beach fli1ht
path.
Let's build a proper terminal
and sufficient parking structure
now!
KARL 0. BERGHEER .... ,, ...... ~
To the Editor:
I invite you to look for a mo-
ment at the "Uber.i landslide,"
the "liberal mandate:•· Yea. I
mean the elecUon of lut No-
vem ber 4.
I have before me tbe
Cautonda flpres, and lt 11 In
California wbere that favorite
ion Ronald Rea1an i• 1uppaaed
to have done ao ..U. He -didn't.
He sot 21 percent of UtOH •llel·
ble t.o vote: the tumout, accard·
ing to the California Secretary of
State, was the worst ror any
presidential election year since
1912, when the offi ce began la1<·
ing notes. A lack of bumper·
stickers revealed the situation;
almost no one voled for anyone.
ON THE other hand, two e><·
tra·political events played de·
cisive roles in seltin~ UP a situa-
llon where we had no one to vote
for The man the m illions
would have voted /or, as sup·
porters and no n ·s upporters
knew, was Teddy Kennedy, but
he was precisely the victim of
the two extra-political events :
Chappaquiddick, which was old
but not quite forgotten, and the
hostage seizure, ideally suited to
a te mporizing president in
charge.
Take away these two, or at
least the second, and we would
have had a Kennedy nomination.
Let all the people vote their
prejudices just as they did vote,
let Reagan keep his 28 percent,
reshuffle the Anderson votes,
add the percentage points to
bring the turnout up at least to the
average for a presidential elec·
lion and this gives you what the
columnists and politicians. would
call ''a liberal landslide." If this is
a plausible reading of the out-
come then the new president is in
for a rude a wakening.
DAVID ALAN MUNRO
Tral&•~~d
To the Editor:
We emphatically disagree
with the editorial of Jan. 5 en-
titled "Fads Can Be Costly,"
which paralleled the investment
of public funds for skate board-
ing to the use of taxpayer dollars
for bicycle trails. The opinion
was that the present use of bike
trails does not justify "alt the
paving and curb cuts that were
put in" and the writer ad·
monished councils to restrict ex-
penditures for single-use activity
facilities.
This position contradicts an
April 6, 1975 Daily Pilot editorial
position which stated that "the
facts seem to point to the need
for bikeways in California" and
quoted CHP accident statistics
due to unregulated mixtures of
bike and automobile traffic. In
addition a subsequent editorial
praised the completion of a ma-
jor portion of the San Die10
Creek/Peters Canyon Wash
mountains to the sea trail cor-
ridor.
IN 1'74 the Irvine electorate
overwhelmlnc1y voted for a S2
·mllli• bond lalue to hand a model
community blke trail network.
~intent was then and ta now to
provide an alternative mode ol
tran1portatlon, aeeo11darlJ1 a
retreatlonal amenity, and thirdly
a m ulti·use facility The city
gener a l plan . the state or
California. and the federal gov·
ernment classify the bicycle as a
means of transportation, not a
Loy.
What h as developed is a
system of bike lanes and trails
used by bi cyclists of all ages and
trip categories. as well as run·
ners, rolle r s katers, and
·skateboarders. The lanes also
ser ve as bus loading areas and
emergency parking for stalled
vehicles. Curb cuts, by the way,
a re mandated by the state for han-
dicapped and wheelchair access
and are only int'identally used by
some bicyclists
T hough use of the trails by
various categories of riders
seem lo flurtuate, one group
which con sistently rides is
school-a ge children . From
elementary through high school
age they swarm lo school on the
trails and pack the parking lots
with their two wheelers.
While other communit ies
might scramble in response to
soaring gasoline prices, Irvine
commuters will, due to advance
·planning, be ready to switch
over, if necessary. to the most
efficient means of transporta
tion, the bicycle.
JUANITA MOE
Irvine Citizens Bicycle
Trails Committee
TOM GLENN
Jrvine Transportation
Commission
Ano••llrea•
To the Editor:
There is a pyromaniac loose in
Dana Point. This person(s) is
without conscience and mindless
in their actions. Tbjs person is
determined to destroy property
and/or lives to satisfy the crav·
ing for thrills.
But residents must understand
that no one can help them but
t hemselves. There Is no arm of
county or federal 1overnment to
watch our homes every hour of
every night. There is no agency
that can replace family mflnen-
tos or the life of someone you
love. (And he will kill, eventual·
ly, make no mistake).
THEREFORE we mutt help
each other. Be aware, be
watchful, s:eport to the sheriff
any suspicious movement of
Quotes
''Poland la Uriq tbrouP a
very importent event, radio
tranamiuion of tM bo&J .....
and God'• word." -Wanaw
...... lenq •111111111 •*ta ...
auauraUn1 wHkly rellliou
broadca1t1 la eommunl1t
Poland.
c---
people in your ne1~hborhood,
l'specially between the hours of I
a.m . anci 4 a.m. Keep garage
doors <'losed and locked Lock
vour car Get a smoke detector
for your home or apartment. But
above all remember, this person
may be a lunatic but he is
clever . Ill! has torched over 36
vehicles. three garages and
destroyed one duplex coursJ and
he is still getting away with it
and will continue lo do so until
we all help to lock him up
Oon·t be complacent You
may be next.
BONNIE WAMSLEY
Airport rhofL-~
To the Editor :
There have been many things
proposed for the J ohn Wayne
-Airport recently and many more
s uggestions will be made at the
public hearing before the Airport
Commission. However, none of
the questions have ever been
as ked to any of the younger
generation. I am 17 years old and
as far as I know I will be living in
Newport. Beach for the rest of my
life. I will be here for a lot longer
than the people wh o a re making
t he decisions.
MY POINT is. I understand that
the master plan calls for an in·
crease in the number of permitted
daily departures to 55 from a cur·
rent level of 41. Why do they need
to ma1ce a major airport out of it
when they have LAX so near? The
main problem is the fact that it
will simply destroy Newport
Beach! Realestatewilldrop,Jand
will Jose value, the air become
worse than it already is etc. Just
look what LAX has done for Los
Angeles. It isn't exactly prime
position around the airport within
10 miles. Do we want a $75 million
airport terminal or do we want to
preserve one area of nice beach,
clean water and fairly fresh air?
Also, if they want to grow now,
what says they aren't going to
want to grow more later when
most of the older people are gone
and we are still here? I think that
it is bad enough the way it is now, I
can't ever look up into the sky and
not spot an airplane.
I think people should conaider
these facta and do something
about them. Newport Beach is a
clean, beauWul and fun city to be
in. Don'Mestroy It!
SCOTT WENKE
...
., .
• Thurtday. Jenu.ry 22; 1911 use DAILY PILOT . .. -
DAILY PILOT COURSES BY NEWSPAPER PRESENTS
~
Americans are healthier than ever, but with medical costs soaring and no con-
sensus on a national health program in sight~ome difficult choices lie ahead.
• How did things get this way?
• What are the solutions?
• What are our responsibilities as individuals and as a nation?
On the examining table is the health care
system 1n the United States and the concerns
and expectations we as a society have
developed The patient 1s ill but can pull
through Courses by Newspaper provides a
thorough examination" in a newspaper series
and a related college-level course that makes
house calls.
America 's health care system has
i mproved dramatically i n the past two
decades. Most of us are in better physical
cond1t1on and we are living longer. The
infectious diseases which have plagued man
since the beginning of time virtually have
been eliminated in this country. Med ical
Part one:
An overview
1. Medicine •nd
Health Disease control
and other medical
advances have
substantially altered
America's health
patterns over the past
half-century. Yet
medicine is only a part
of the total picture.
What part do nutrition.
. environment and other
factors play? ·
2. Health Status and
lt1 Determinant•.
America's overall
health record has
improved dramatically
in recent years. To
what extent is our
health determined by
medical treatment and
to what extent by our
own health habits?
3. The Medlcallzatlon
of American Society.
Our health care system
has expanded its
control to
areas once the
province of families,
clergy. lawmakers and
social workers. What
are the assumptions
and dangers of an
increasingly
medicalized society?
Part two:
"growth industries."
Will our health system
be able to cope with
the problems of
increasing size.
complexity and
government regulation
that trouble other
sectors.in our tree
enterprise system?
5. The Health Care
System.
The scope. availability
and quatity of health
care continues to
improve. Yet 60
percent of Americans
believe there is a crisis
in health care. What
are the underlying
reasons for this
discontent?
6. Speclall1t1,
Generall1t1 and New
Health Practltlonera.
Kindly, caring general
pract1t1oners who make
house calls are
becoming a thing of
the past. What are the
forces that have given
rise to specialization;
what are its
advantages and
disadvantages? What
is the role of new
health practitioners.
such as physician's
assistants?
technology is at an all-time hiQ.h and stands
on exciting new thresholds.
Yet more and more Americans are
expressing dissatisfaction with the system
that has provided those benefits. Complaints
range from run3l1ay medical and drug costs.
to over-specialization . to the enormous
influence a few special-interest groups exert
over the health ~stiny of millions.
The state the nation ·s health is a
complex and co troversial subject. and there
are no easy answers. Now. Courses by
Newspaper offers an incisive and informative
15-part series which goes to the very heart of
the problem. The ryiost painful areas of our
Serles Outline
7. The Right to
Health Care.
More and more
Americans appear to
favor adding health
care to their Bill of
Rights. What
constitutes a minimum
acceptable level of
health care? What are
the problems inherent
in this concept?
Part three:
Problems in
Paradise
8. Why Does
Medlc•I Care Coat So
Much? "Third party"
approaches, such as
medical insurance and
public programs,
relieve both recipients
and providers of many
"cost versus benefit"
decisions and foster
an illusion of "free"
care. What are the
effects of
technological
advances and
inflation?
9. Inequities In
Health and Health
Care.
There is a clear
relationship between
poverty and poor
health. As more and
more doctors migrate
to the suburbs, inner
cities are becoming
medical care
wastelands. What can
or should be done?
10. Modern
Medicines: Miracle or
Menace? On the one
hand, we look to
regulation to ensure
that prescription and
over-the-counter drugs
are safe and effective.
On the other.
manufacturers blame
regulatory red tape for
rising costs and delays
in introducing
potentially life-saving
drugs. How do we
balance those
seemingly
contradictory
interests?
' national health are examined thoroughly in
this newspaper series and credit course. The
course not only raises key health care issues.
but sets the stage for the kind of informed
discussion that can lead to sensible solutions.
The Nation's Health Course by Newspaper
beg ins February 7 and continues tor 14
successive Saturdays in the Daily Pilot.
The articles have been written by
prominent physicians, authors and educators
in various public health specialties from
across the nation. They outline their subjects
in p lain language and supply readers with
insights from a wide range of perspectives.
Part four:
Search for solutions:
Frontiers of
Knowledge
11 . Of Magic Bullet•
and the Future:
Biomedical Research.
Dramatic medical
advances lie ahead .
What are the social
and scientific
implications of
"genetic
engineering?" Can
medical science cure
al I· ills. physical and
emotional?
12. Aging In
America.
The effect of biologic
aging on health is
widely misunderstood.
How do non-medical
factors, such as
income level. stress
and environment fit
into the equation?
1~:
Part five:
Who is calling the
shots?
1 3 . The Polltlc1 of
Health.
Four major
special-interest groups
are shaping our
nation's fragmented
health policy. Will
doctors. hospitals,
drug companies and
insurance companies
continue to call the
shots?
1 4. The Role of the
Individual In Health
Care.
More and more
Americans are turning
to so-called
··self-care ... What is
the motivation behind
this trend? How is
self-care being
organized?
1 5. Health and the
Future: Individual and
Social Responslblllty.
As individuals. we can
stop smoking. watch
what we eat and
exercise regularly. But
what can we do as a
society to control our
environment and the
contents of foods and
drugs and take care of
those who are unable
to take care of
themselves?
The health care
system
" 4. The Structure and
Practice of Medicine:
An Hlltorlcal
Perspective. Health
care has become one
·'
.~.·· .-.. · Coming February 7 in the
:~~:~~:Daily Piloi
642-4321 • )J'V' of America's ma1or ~~: ,.
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.: .
'IANUTS by Charles M. Schulz
by Tom Batiuk FUNKY WINKERBEAN
lT~ Cit.ff.) I L..E5 ! 1Wl5 16#.ltr
A KU~! rr~ Ol.lR sm~ 11'EK
~VE~110N'~ FEA~ €il£~T, 5UIV\ WHITMAN !
(>JEU.. I ~E WA5 ~~ED
LIKE A KLJNGO~ !
....
"Who invited you?"
MISS PEACH by Mell Lazarius
... ~, r:IEL..LCW~ .JI.A~ !'EiWl!N !A~ : ~
00 VOIA. -rwo MANA6i ro Gl-1•.AT' WIT'MOtAi
IT44 A
Tll'ADI!
~ec.ire~
~I~ ...
eTHrC5
FOtrl!lt D LA~
~rt)M
UVE.A&.INdt rr.
j
MOON MULLINS
SHOE
6'ei'TIN6 CAlAGMT' ??
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
Y'k/'JOW, 1 NE VER REALIZED BoY, THAT MUST
How SMART 1 REALLY W/6 l-IAYF: BEEN A
UNTIL 1 <5~EW UP. LET£>oWN ...
In fact.~ Senator
is net slimy, ncris~.
of~.asnake .
by Jeff MacNelly
DRABBLE
DR . SMOCK
NO, IF
YOU WAN'"f" To o eseRve
MY SURGE!RY AN'~ AN AR'T'ICL.e ON Me, 'T'HA'T''5 F INS ...
OD D
!
l
I • t
! ~
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
DO'IOU NEED HELP IN
lHERE.1 LIZ.1.IE?-~LL
MOMMY IF '/OU NEEO
HELP
OK, IHAT'S LOl'G
E~l-\. MOMMY'$
COMING TO Gl\JE. 'fOU
&>ME. ....
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch GORDO by Gus Arriola
"He's just clowning."
DENNIS THE MENACE
NANCY
\t/OW---r've GOT
FIVE PIECES OF
eueeLE GUM
IN MY
MOUTH
OH, DEAR.---I'M
GOING TO
SNEEZE
by Harold Le Doux e
MINO lf l PUT iHl6 ~ITC~ O~
THE Fl.OOft AND .JOIN YOU ?
•~.H t; •
----.. ...,... ... I AM ' IP ·-·
THE FAMILY CIRCUS '' lfl KMM
"Snow i\ quiet and y~ con ·see it. Thunder is
noisy but y~ CAN'T see it."
by George Lemont
:! ...JU ST' Fl NP 11'° HA~P -ro eeL.-1e v s YOU'RE! FROM ''PSOPL...e " MA<E!>AZINE!
by Lynn Johnston
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Branches
S ISSUft
10 Swiss peal\s
14 Irish Isle
lS Calfo I/IP
16 Soh dnnk
17 Take - -
Win ·
19 Enctowre
20 Shred
21 Paint remo-
vers
23 Molding
edge· Var.
25 Slithered
26 NHL or NFL
members
JO Changes
34 Gridiron
JS Essence
37 Spring
38 Mariner
39 Eared seals
42 John -
43 Greelc deity
45 USSR city
46 Old pronoun
48 Declaimer
SO Shabby
52 Decays
54 Tools
55 Palm lru•IS
59 Keep
63 Bersetk
64 Rep111on
66 Passenger
67 E•punge
68 Ad1acen1
69 E•Ptres
UNITED Ft1t.llfe Synd1tate
Wednesday's Purzte Solved
70 Frer.ch upper ~~
house
71 WWII site
OOWN
1 Float
2 Solo
3 EmPorlum
4 Establlsh
5 -de corps
6 Bad: Preli• 26 Subsequently 49 Long time
7 Castor's 27 HMddress SI House area
killer 28 Egret 53 Metrtc unit
8 Mexican tood 29 Procrea11<1 55 Lunch spot
9 Radiated 31 Low potnt 58 Sun1n11e
10 Consented 32 Hum 57 Twine
11 Bird 33 Courter 58 Eumlne
12 Intrigue 36 Fodder pill 60 Diii herb
13 Simpletons 40 Agonia 61 C0tnpound
18 Sh1pw0tm 41 Worryw1rt suffi•
22 Spirit 4" 01ttmen 62 Cfuel ruler
24 Cl1ro l/1r 4 7 Hllfria 65 Amer '
I
··--····••····· .. ·:.;··c »••· -~----------,----~---------• • ..... -# •• p .. ~ • • • .. • • • ---·-• -• .. -
;
IUlll CUil YIUI llllTDll UllY PAPIR
rtilH4t...,0A¥ .J A NlJ/\HY .. ' illHI ORANGE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
.
Slash spending, Reagan tells agencies
W ~. HJ GT( l I A I• 1 t•re-.1
dt>nt fte•a•n, '>• toit tw 1~ n•
deen\11'\& his plt'dge lo fon·t· acov
t>rnme nt lo II t· w1th111 ·ll'>
m4'•n... · 1Sbuw nrth:r:. lod•) lo
lash guvt!'Tflm .. nt travel b} I~
per cent. cul oul!>ldt: coni.uJl"
lions by S percent <and stop bu}
1n;: offl<'e funutun: until further
notu;e
Reagan. in 4 memorandum lo
department and 1Agent:y t:hsefi.,
,1.11d hl' wit~ taJuna the actions
bl'\ dUM' "covina wtth runaway
dt:f1r 1L., an the current and pend·
111g hud~et:; 1s one of the most
urgl'nl litSks before us "
And he told Cabinet m embers
t\1 '!>t!t an example by avoiding
u11111•l·t!i.bW"Y expenditures in set· l111~ up their personal offices."
Ap1w1 n\ees, Reagan directed,
·arc m>l w redecorate their of.
f st: C:b
Iranian 'barbarians'
The president said his actions
will "help reduce unnecessary
federal spendina." but Ulere was
no estimate on how much will be
saved.
Reagan issued the memo
shortly after meeting with his
economic policy group. He was
meeting with congr,ssmen who
head economic-related commit·
tees in the afternoon.
A fact sheet distributed by the
White House said the travel re-
duction this fiscal year is dir~t·
ed at trips "that are not essen·
tial to the performance of agen-
cy missions." It does not apply
to military station chanies.
The 5 percent outside con·
sultation reduction a lso applies
to management and professional
s er vices and special contract
s tudies and. analyses. The fact
s heet said the cut was "intended
to help assure that contracts and
'cons ultants are not used to
evad e personnel ceilings or to
carry on studies and analyses
t hat a re not essential to the
·pe rformance or agency mis-
sions."
The furniture moratorium also
applies to office machines. data
processing equipment and other
equipment "that is not needed
for the national defense or to
carry out other essential ac·
tivities ."
·'The impact of these require·
ments and the need for even
more stringent measures will be
cons idered over the nexl two
months,·· the White Houst' stale·
m ent said.
Reagan • irate over treatment
..... ,,....._
SLAIN IN ULSTER
Sir Norman Strong•
IRA cl~
boniliings,
2slayings
BELFAST. Northern Ireland
(AP) The o utlawed Irish
Republkan Army today claimed
responsibility for shooting and
killing a titled 86·year.old
Protestant political leader and
his 48-year -old heir and bombing
their ancestral home.
Troops, police and a British
army helicopter ranged over the
countryside today in search of
terrorists who murdered Sir
Norman Stronge and his son,
Jam es, traded gunfire with
police and escaped on foot
toward the Irish border Wednes-
day night.
A police spokes man said hWl·
dreds of troops on both sides of
the border with the Iris h
Republic had sealed off a 10·
mile wooded area where an
eight·man IRA guerrilla squad
was believed to be hiding.
"This is one or the biggest
cross·border security operations
ever mounted." the spokesman
said.
Police said they believed the
IRA attack was carried out in
reprisal for the attempted as·
sassination by Protestants on
Friday of Roman Catholic civil
rights crusader Bernadette
Devlin McAli skey and her
husband.
They said the terrorists in·
vaded Tynan Abbey, near the
border with the Irish Republic,
and killed Sir Norman. a
baronet .and former speaker of
Northern Ireland's provincial
Parliament, and his son. James,
another former member of the
legislature. with gunshots to the
head.
They said three fire bombs
1 were apparently planted at the
abbey during or after the kill·
lngs.
t e
I M4GAZINE TELLS
I HFALTH TRENDS
J
Today's Daily Pilot lakes a
look at health-related activities
aad trends.
Look for "A Healthy You," a
t4 20-pase Perlacope maaaaine
J fHturlq 1\0ries and pictures
about health on the Oran1e
e Cout. b ••A Healthy You" alao pre-
f Ylew1 the World m utera
Marathon of Irvine and th•
HeOlld unual Run for Roq.
• • * * * * More horrors
by Iran told
WIESBADEN. West Germany
<AP) -The freed American
hostages gave new reports today
or brutal treatment by their Ira·
nian captors -beatings, mock
exec utions. g rim games or
Russian roulette, death threats
-and former President Carter
accused Ira n of "savagery
agains t absolutely innocent
hostages."
At the military hospital where
the SO men and two women are
recovering from their 14'h-
month ordeal, a State Depart·
ment official said, "it is clear
RELATED STORIES,
PHOTO-PqeM
we are continuing to uncover
evidence or serious mistreat-
ment of our people during their
captivity."
But former hostage Richard
Morefield said in a telephone in·
terview broadcast by CBS that
"we beat them." triumphing
over the Iranian captors by re-
turning healthy and sane despite
the brutal treatment.
A g roup o f the former
hostages emerged from the
hos pital today and walked
across the street for a dental ex·
amination. They wore blue pa·
jamas or Air Force parkas and
many waved to well-wishers at
the hospital gale.
State Department spokesman
OC man/aces
• imrrant in
doctor try
An Orange County man who is
charged with posing as a physi·
cian and causing the death of a pa·
tient faced a $1 million bench War·
rant for his arrest today after al-
legedly applying for a doctor's job
in Wisconsin.
. Orange County Superior Court
Jud"e Richard Beacom issued
the warrant for Gerald Barnes
late Wednesday after the Dis·
trict Attorney's Office informed
him of the matter.
J ack Cannon said in Wiesbaden
that mistreatment included poor
food. solitary confinement and
being blindfolded.
··o n a number of occasions a
number o f persons were
threatened with loaded re·
volvers," he said.
·'On a number of occasions
some were threatened with
death. Some were ordered to
strip and lie on the floor and
were tbreatene<! with death,"
<See HOSTAGES, Pa&e AZ>
* * * Newport
to hail
freed52
An hour-long c andlelight
service celebrating the release
of the 52 American hostages
from Iran is predicted to draw
an overflow crowed tonight in
Newport Beach.
The service, involving con·
gregations from seven Newport
churches, is to be held at St.
Mark Presbyterian Church and
Shir Ha-Ma' Alot Harbor Reform
Temple, which share common
facilities in the Eastbluff area.
Rabbi Bernard King, of the
Harbor Reform Temple, said lbe
theme will be one of thanksgiv-
ing with ''pr ayers for reconcilia·
tion between our country and
Iran."
As a symbolic gesture, be ex-
plained, 52 persons in the con·
gregation will light candles dur·
ing the service. He said prayers
also will be said for the families
of those who lost their lives in
last year's aborted attempt to
rescue the hostages. "We'll also pass on the hope
that the emergence of prejudice
and fear that seems to be com·
ing about in this country, as
evidenced by swastikas being
sprayed on walls, will not be the
way this country goes," said
Rabbi King. <See SERVICE, Page AZ)
Big surf hits
0.11, ...... St•ff P'-J 0 E AMBURGEY SURVEYS DAMAGE AT GARAGE
Auto firms on Costa MeH corner go up In smoke
Two auto firms
damaged in fire
A stubborn Cire caused ex-
ten sive damag e to two
automotive firms al Newport
Boulevard and Rochester Street
in Costa Mesa early today.
Fire Marshal Russ Henderson
s aid $40,000 dam age was done to
the building housing Jerry Hall
Tire Ser vice In c . at 1762
Newport Blvd. and Ernie Am ·
burgey's Garage, 106 Rochester
~l.
Damage to contents, mostly
tires and tire mounting equip·
ment but also including two
autos, was listed at about
$58,000, Henderson said. Henderson said three engine
a nd one ladde r co mp a n y
responded to the blaze at 3. 17
a m . when a motorist driving
a long Ne wport Bou levard
spotted names and called from a
nearby fire alarm box.
The £ire m arshal termed the
blaze .. a very stubborn fire
because of burning tires" and
noted that it was not brought un-
der control until 4:54 a.m.
No one was injured in the
blaze which started as the resul t or a short in an electrical line
leading to fluorescent lighting.
He said fi re ate through the
roof and its glow was visible
through early morning fog for a
distance of nearly a half mile.
The Coto de Caza resident, who
faces trial on second-degree
murder charges in March, had
once before been jailed when he
sought employment as a physi-
cian at a Los Angeles clinic last
year .
Previously Barnes bad worked
for the'Pacific Southwest Medical
Group in Irvine (or two years.
Coast hampered by fog
The District Attorney's Office
told Beacom that Barnes applied
for a physician's job throu1b a
personnel agency in Milwaukee.
To support his application, the
Orange County resident used
documents that are coples of
papers seized by officials here
when Barnes was first charted
with the death of an Anaheim
man, who died of uncontrolled
diabetes.
Barnes bu been free on Sl0,000
baiJ since a preliminary heartnc ·
in Orange County Harbor
Municipa1Cow1.latela1tyear.
He la char1ed with cauaiq tbe
death of 27.year-old John
McKemie, wbo had been ea·
amlned at Patlfic Southw•t two
dayaearlier.
It la alle,ed th1t Barn•, onctt a
pbarmedlt In llUJllola, UHd the
med•cal ~ of a ~
pby1•etan named Gerald Bame1 to paa1himaelt otf u a doctcJr.
8)' AltTllUR K. VINSEL
Of .. Deltr "9t IUff
Blg waves shoved over beach
crests by hi1h tldes continued
alone .the Orange Coast today,
nooding some areas. The U.S.
Weather Service predicts more
waler can be expected from the
stles by toni1ht.
Breakers that peaked r:rlodically at 10 feet on some
ocal beaches Tuesday and
Wednesday appeared to be
dlmlnlablDI.
Fo1, meanwblle, created vii·
iblllty problem• this momin•
alon1 tbl OrlDI• Cout, reduc·
lDI commuter tralfte to a crawl.
Offtdall at 0rQle Comty•1
Jobn WQM A1rPort Mid toclaJ'• roe hMlf..S wlt.b mou out only ptriodleally att.' die CCMl-ty facOlt;J ...... at 1:11 a.m., to
pri'Yate ...... eamm.-etal fllallU. •• ,,.. ...,, la pMct.J. •• Aid
Tower~Jaa SY-.
addiq tMt ....... p6loU ....
free to take off if they pleased.
He said one Republic Airlines
j e tliner and a OoldenWest
Airlines commuter plane got off
the ground during a brief break
in the mist that seemed thick
enough to cut with a knife
elsewhere.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Weather
Service in Los Angeles predicted
a 50 percent chance of sprinkles
tonight, turning to a 80 percent
llkelihood of regular showers
Friday.
Daytime temperatures will be
ln the mid-eos, droppln1 to 50
de1ree9 at nipt.
So far thia year the Onnae
Coast bal received lea than two
inches of rain compared to a.•
tnebes bytbladatea year a10.
Llf....,. from Seal Bemcb to
San Cl ... ente wateb..t Ute 1urf
today lf tbe1 could He •t
tM foe, to dUrmlDI ti ...... .... ,,,.,...
cube~.
'
A spokesman at Huntington
State Beach said he couldn't
give an accurate estimate or
surf height because he couldn't
see the ocean.
"It sounds like they're about
four to eight feet," he said ol the
storm swells.
California Highway Patrol
spokesmen said thl' momin1
they were busy with the usual
number of fo1-related fender-
b end er accidents on area
freeways, but none were serious.
A 7:12 a .m. mishap on the
Orte1a Hiebway two mUea eut
or the Santi Ana Freeway
caused a cement truck to dump
a larp amount of It.a earao onto
traffic lanes, but CHP oftlc:9'1
didn't Dow tilt WU fCJt·rtl-.d.
O raa1e County Sberlff'a
Harbor P•trol 1)0k11man ltadaJ
WallDll", GD d\11.y la N...-t
leacb headqarten, IOI Yll·
lbllil)' In tbe .......... .... ( ... ,C»Aa'r, .... AIJ ..
Hostage
pact
reviewed
WASlllNGTON 1AP 1 Th(•
Reagan adm1n1strat1rin 1!-. 'very
irate. very angry' ovN mas
treatment of the 52 Amt·ratans
held hosta~e in I ran and the
treatment the) rccel\'l'd '"ci:r
tainlv will not m<.1kl· 11 anv
easier" \o carry out t h1· ugret;-
ment with Iran. an adrn 1n1$lra·
lion spokesman said toda)
State Departml'nl ~p<1k •srnan
William Dyess s<11d hf' a~reed
wi th Pres ide nt Reagan and
former President Carter that the
Iran ian c apt o r s were
"barbarians." Said Dyess, "I
think it's a very apt term "
D yess sa id th e n e w ad
ministral11Jn wa:-. !>Urpri~1·d lo
learn of the extent of lhl.' sn1s
treatment or lhe hoslaj!t·s and
that it plans '"a formal reartiun·
soon.
At the White !l ou se. Viet·
President Hush said I he· rt·port
Car ter prepar(•<f on his v1s1l lo
the hostages was .. powerful in
its im J>acL ..
The report, which Carter pre-
pared in longhand. was l{i v(•n tu
Reagan this m11rning hy WC1 lter
F. Mondale. Bush's prl'dt•n.•:-.sor
<Earlier story. A4 1
Bush said the report would be
considered as the adminl:-.tratson
revi ews the agreem ent with
Iran
lie saui that in studying a
problem. ever y dimcnsil}n should
be I a ken intol'Ons1derati<m
··We've seen a new dimcn~ion
to this problt'm and it 1s an ugly
di m ension ··
<Stt IRATE. Pagf' ,\21
Me morial slated
for UCI professor
A convocation wi ll he held t-'ri
day at UC Irvine in nwrnorv of
UC I professor Ur I\ rthu r
Ma r d er. 70, an m t erncitwnally
known a uthorit) on Britis h
naval hislorv wh o d11•d on
Christmas Day·
T h e p u bli c m e mursal
ceremony will be held at 2 p.m.
in Room 174 of thl:' Computer
Science Building.
Or:::eti_,~oasc
\\·eat her
Chance of rain 50 per-
cent tonight increasing to
60 percent chance of
showers Friday. Coast al
low tonight SO, inland 55.
Highs Friday in low 60s
along beaches to mid·60s
inland.
INSIDE TODA l'
MemorW• o/ the preriden·
liol inaMgurol tolUrl U..Oer for
three Harbor Area women,
pllotograp\ed ift flwir formal
fin•'JI by Daill/ Pilot photog·
NJphn Patrick O' DonneU. See
PaoeBJ.
••••• At\'-~ M
...... CA L.M,..,. A6 ....... c.. c...... A.I a.... c•tt ci.lllt .. c..a =• .. :::-:1 :: II .. ......_ CM
-I 0
-2 •
a • ...-.. a ............ a ........ ........... Cl .............. ._. __
l.c.t. ... A• :: .... c:: , .... _ . ,....... ..
-M --.. '
4J Mil. 'f Pt~ 01 , ..
----JV T BREA"1NG------.
L ut~ llrm• /rum lf.ldall'• tuQrld oltd llGlacMGl UtN ...,..,...,..., •
Fr.eighl,er broughl
i11to Long Beach
1 O"l<i n,.. •'II t Al'l II.av)' l t!Afl rrum a Pac U1r storm
fo 1, 11J th• 1 ·1111 .. 1 I :u.11 rl 111 hrtn.i the fn•1i1htt•r As ia Gt:m with 1t11
1t111ltl1•r11111 I 1r 1•1111f /U H -.1111\ Ill~~ llllO 1i<1rt tod1ty
I b1 I '11.1 •I I 111,11 11 11hu11 wd \ii 1m1vtt1cr t ht-'tu~born (1rt~ by
l•llffi}•IOf th1 hnhl full l)f 111\t ll"t<11 jtQS 'Clflfl:llHtll , lhll Opur•tlon
~ "' II• h11\ 1 tu 1•11 1 11111llt1 \to;\ ltUl!!Hh:i \b'-! h•rwr, but four to sli
foul ~ u1Jd1 ll lou J i fflc.'WI to IUOllU U-bitrM\: w~lh Al~rOtlen
1 1111 .. uul 11> 111~· 1IM111u11•·•I "h 111, ,,dlli l 'o111\l Uu11r1l s pokesman
(1.ulh ..... 11 111 ,111•· 1•1• l11 1•1il.lo\1ilt•r 1111' ht1r~1· l'ould av1>rv;.ich
1111 ,,. 11 l1h I ·l··h ... IHI
'1111111•11 1 .•I••,,, 1 .,;;,l ..:a" lo\1111 h wuul<I cxt1n11u1:.h th\•
1111 I• 11 1I11 llH •\\j'I fl 1111111° hulll
8nuaH•t1 profH-roerrll
\\ \ tll'' • 11 •'\ \I' .-11J1t Hcvuhll1•u11 l,c.i<.ler lloward
II i'-• 11 I 11111,1\ llu '"'llJI• .... 11 h11l1I public· h••Jtrtng:. that v.1111
, q 1\1 011 l11 u1 •• 1 Ir• ,111111•111 .,1111 c\ll"ll 1Alr•><·1t1 e., '1Uff1·r1•cl hv
fl' 111 .,! lt•r 11111 \ 1111 r h 111 """' ,1~ .. ., 111 I 1 un
11111 h• 1111 tu 11,1 •"k'"' ~1·11 c 'ht1rlt·:. l'~rr}, I< Ill ,
II 11ri11111 ••I ti•• ...,, 11..111 h111·1~11 Ht'l.1t1h1t'> l '11m m1ttc c•, lo
, •t;""' 1•,, 1,. 11111~"' 1<1 111 .. 11t1nh u1111I puhl11· 'µa:.sron!. h:n't'
l It ,, ,,1 .. 1
, i I I , 111 I 11\
'' 1 111· II Iii• ,111n I'> not 1·11111ph•lc," Buker
•l'll\ll\ 'II lh1• \llll'IH:lll!\
.,,,,,,.,. ,,,. r1-bcuu1d
I • • I H ,, \I' I ll1:h1•1 l -., 111l1·n·"ol ral\'S ti:an· \It~ <lullur
, 111111 11 ""1 Id 11111111•\ tu.1rkl'I., \1)(!ay aflt!r s harp dt'dmcs
\\. d1w ·"·" 11111!1 pc 11·1·-. I•"' 11111:.t 11r Weclnesday's ga ins in a
I,, h Ii• .11·1 r11.11 k1•1 .1111111 gl1111nn l11r1•1·n:-.ls by bullion d ealer.,
'
.Se11te11,ci1ig date set
for pinip, panderer
S1•111 1•1w111g h." lw1•11 -.d fur a
'\ ''"' p1111 llc'o ll'h 1•nt rt·11r1·111·ur
''""' 11·1111 11f 1••m11111g ancl pan
d1·r1ng 111 .1 c :1:-.1· 111 ~h1t·h
I'\ cd1·11t·1· IHI flit• 1111·lu<l1·-. .1 l1111t-
lll :11·k ·1r11 k honk ' of d 1t•nl"o
n<im•·-. ,1ut t.11nt w-. -.a\
'1 nrnrn' l.11111.1, '.lk 11pt·r·11tw 11(
'I 11 rr1r r1. · 111 '' "'p111 t ,111 11ul("o1Jl
n1 :i' 'ai.:•· "l'r'' 11·1· .1 ul h11r1t It''
< l..11111 ""·'' ,, l1 1u1l f11r 1•r••:-t1tu
I !IHI I du1· lo:il k t· 1•h i: Ill
t lr ;nc~· 1 '1111111\ S11p1•11oi l '1111fl
.J 11 !11•1· I' .111k !)1•1111•1111·111111
• 1111 .f • 1111 1111 pl,., l\lll 'I\ 1'Pll
I 11·t 1·1j I 11111.1 111 .,l,111· l•f!""ll <111<!
f 1r.111J,!1 l 1111111 \ lk 111tl) l)lSlrll'I
\II 11r111•\ IJl1\ 1· 11 r11 "' n ~.11d
W1 •d111 •-.d;I\ 111 -. 111111•,. I " prt• .. ,o.;rnc
for I"'' t II.JI
I 11111 o1 "'·' • 1111\ wt•·cl h\ ;J JUr)
11·n n•11()rts of the invesl1gatlt)n
Brown s aid Liotta was s till
fat·111g l'l1argcs stcmmm~ from
tha t t'aSl' whe n h e• was n ..
.1rr1•stNI on s1mllur 1·ounts 111
volv tng Mrs Mohc•r i.:
111• s aid nam<.'S tn lht• httlt•
iil:tl'k bcN>k of clients using l.111t
t:1 's girls' s1·r v1n·s would rmsf'
1'' 1•lln1ws 1111·t1unt v r irf'll·:..
·, 11 11tlll'r wvntt·r't w11ul<I lt':-.lt f\
h11t l\t r .; )t obt•rt: ·
l.111tta, who al tint• t1mt• mach•
ht!-ht•at.lquar1t•rs at !'l25 \'1C't11r1 a
~t • ~\)Stu M.::..a , nH't•ltng pr11~
p1·1·ll\'t• fem;1k e mµl oycs 1n
111•arbv res taur a nt s t or 111
tt>rv te"s arcording to testimony.
hu:i r~mamt'd free on bail.
Fro•Pa.,.AJ
IRATE ...
-_.,...,._ -
Justice
•
agency
disbands
ByGLt:NNSCO'M' GI-Dally.._, ....
t 'an.od with u loi:is of federal
funds , the 2K m embe rs of the
Orang•• Coun\y Cnmlnal Justice
Counnl voted today to d isband.
Compr1st.'<l of <•lecl,cd officiaJs,
I u w l•nfon·emcnt rcpr~sent~t!v~s
un<l mem bers of the public, 'the
t•oum·rl':.-role has been to dole out
federal funds for lo<· al cuunt.ywide
proJ<.'l'ts und to vropose ways tu
muki• tht• 1us llrc :-.ystf'm more cf·
fN:llVC
i\fkr i.ix months of d 1scuss1on,
ltw groulJ at•tcpk<l a rccom men-
. 1lat11111 fr(1m Orange County Ad
m 1n1s t r .111 Vl' 0((1(· c r R o be r t
Th1>n1t111. t1 t•11u11t•1I m e mber . to
l'l' llM' llll'I'\ 111.:
I 11 a m l' m 11 t 11 1· 11 u n c i I
l 'h:ur"orn.lfl \'1c-k1t· EvJns. lhC'
mayor of l'yµn·s!\, Thomas said
the• t·ouni·11'., t•x1:-.lt•nc·e !ool'ems un
11t•t·t•:-.:-.ar~ without · lhe glu<' of
f1•d..rt1I fund:-. "
M~ £,an:. !'.at<l Thom<1:-.' rct·
11111111t•11d;JI 11111 was ... ,,proved
w 1lh :-.m111• 11pp11:-.ition from public·
r1·pr1·:.t·nt;.ill \ , . .., who s uggested
f t1r m tt114 a t•o111 n11tte1· to study
way::; 111 t•1111lrnu1ng the t•ouncil
\I 11d1·r Thomas· µr oµosal.
though. a 1ww group could be
forrrw<I :rnd sponsored by the
1·11unl) g11vt·rnmt·11t tu examine
w ay-. ol' :-.tn·<11nl111111g 1·ountywidt>
fUSI 11·1·sysl t•JI)~
"In lh1• nt«1r future, hislon c
.:r owth tn·nds in public safety,
l:l nd fire thn•aten to a bsorb all tax
dollars ava1la bh• to local govern·
rnt•nt . l1•:wing nothing for essen·
t t:rl :uJm1111 st ration. hecilth and
!>l•t·tal serv1t•t.•:... 1•11v1ronmcnlal
m :111 agt•mt•nt . and othe r s uch
1·0~1 :..." Thomas .,a id 1n his
lll\'lllll
Ms t:v an:.. :..atd rdorm o(. the
JU"olh'l' ~y:-.t1•m has lwt•n advocat
1•11 "·' all 2K nwmtwr:.. or t he com
m1:-.s1on
·'Th!' prolllt•111 1:-., art• I ht• pc<>ple
who n •alh 1w1·1I 11 willing to ac
t·1·111 11 ., "s'11,-.1skt•tl rh1•torically ~
'l'ht• lo:-:-. 11( f1·1.kral funds the
1·1l11111·rl ha~ n·n·ivl'd ;about $24
m 1111011 tlun11g 11s ll'llUrl' was
tl\l' pn'tlwt.1hlt· n•sult of ft><leral
twit \114htt·1u11g, ~he~a lfl
Honie robbed
in Costa Mesa
.Ian ,, 111 ""' 1·•1u11c-. t•at'h "' pun prnl! .111d l'·•nd•·rrne <J ft n d
ln~d l111t'1l1..:h11·d I" 11 -.11m11n·. ri{
.r d 1 .. i.:1 un111 .. 1 fo1111 1·1 <i'-Vllldl•·
.11111 t'J11(lltl\1·1 \1 ;1rl!l' \!C1hng
\11 \1 <•1111 ).' .111 ,Jcl:n1u1•<1
F. 1 g h \ n• n . ~ l' a r o I d M a r i a
Chnsllna Wa rwick of Costa Mesa
told poht•e Wednesday that two
men enlerE.-d her two.story west
s1d<.• horn~. thr eatened to kill her.
ransa<·hd the t es1dcnC'e and left f)~ e:.s Pm phas12ed that the ad wrt h about S7fi0 tn lo<>t
rn 1
1
ni!>lrcition st~ll plans 10 "~·arr).·~ M 1ss Warwrr k . ci .stude nt. told 11r11.,l1l11l1° \lo h11 IP-.l lflt'I\ ,JI lh!•
m 11n11 1p.1I 111u11 11·\ .. 1 \h,11 hn
ll11 .. h,1nd ,1• 1 "l11p.1l111 d h•'I \11 hl'I
'•U 1hr'.?bhgat1ons of the Coil~\ offr <·e r s .,h l· was watc hing
...,tJ IC''> pres umahl> including / lt•lt.•v1s11Jn1nherllving r uomwhen
th1• agreem e n t lhal led to lh(· tntru1kr:-. !.ucid(.'nly appeared 1111. 1111 1·11 "'"' "'rth I 111\l.1 111 '·''''
II Ii• 1p1111111·cl l1·,11f11·d lh•·n >hl'
11 .1.~ Jl•Jt re, 1•1\ 1 n~· ,1(11·qu ;,.r1·
\\ .J....: l ....
rri·edCJm for t ~e h o~tag ~s . hc h1ndh<·rc·hatr
,d i hough he s aid 1t 1s strll hemg Off1<·i·r;; ;;aid the• victim was not
I ('\'I (•W('(j
1111' ,11;1" 11;q 1p tly tlrl•\.,c•d
1n1urt·d although :-.hl' "iatd she was
We must a.II rt·eogn1zc that for<:l'll to hold a pillow C"ase open
'h:: 1 mpl~mentin.g ''.' the .cig~ct'!-for Liil' pair as they dum pcd fam1 l•l.11 I.. h.111 "d I .1111 1.i l111tk1•d bored
d11r111 · 11111:-I 111 th 11l IH•;Jr1ng l<J~t
I· all 111 11 ,11 h11r .lu<t H·1:.il D1stn<'l
( 'ti II I I
rn nl :-. wtll !)~ a < 11m plc x <Jnd ly ht'limgmg-.111111 iL
r 11n (!-1·on s um 1ng procc~s. and
111 "'a~ at I 1•-.1 t•<I 1n the (.'Or
r1d111 <llll 1111-! .1 r1«·1•<;::,, however .
1•11 1•fi,irl!e" 111' ;11,.,aull and bat~
11•11 af1t•1 alll•g1•1lly rlipprng a
11g.1rl'lh· JI :\l rs M11bcri:( and a
ft·m .111• frw111I \.\h11 l'ame lo court
"'1lh ho·r 111111f<·r m11r <ll SUJJport
Thi· I 111·1J1I ... uff1·rNI a hole
hurnt·d 1n h1·r hlnu-.1•
I d1in '1 kn11\.\ what h;ippenl'(J
o n I h.11 11rw · -;;J 1ct UA 's rn
', . ..,, 1gJl11r Brown. l1ut ht-m ad('
11 <"lt•ar ht:-. offr<••· will ask the
.,tlffl·~t 1wnall~ for L111tta cm the
four murals 1·harl!t''
l\rov.n l'll l•d r.1nlta·~ prior
r~rorcl. wht<·h hi· -.a\'~ includes a
l \HiH t•11 n\·11·l111n invo lving
t r <rn,.p11r1a11011 a nd s ale of
d:.ing1'rnu~drugo ...
Brown s <ird Liotta was also
ro11 v H'tt'<I 1r1 lkd wood City on
for~ery :ind had 1·hl•ck charges
and ·ervt'd a sl:.iH· pris on term
for thnsl' oHt•nsPs.
The latc!-it ('<JS(• d ate!. hack to
St'ptcmbt.•r of l!l7fl, Brown s aid,
wht'n Liotta attt•m pt (•d to set up
a prm;titution 01w ration fealur-
i n g h ouH· ('all., thro u g h a
legitimate <·ount~· f·crns truction
com pany
nn 1· whi<:h will r cqutr<: the
l'1101H·ration 11f a ll partic:s,"
I 1~ ess said
I>~ ess dis r l11s ed Wednesday
lhat lhe Reagan administration
w;.i:-. rl'v1cwrng the: agreem ents
II e sa11l all 10 ~x ecutl ve orde r.,
;;1gncd by Carter lo implement
tht• cigreements before he left of·
fite have taken effect , induding
th<.' lifting of the tn1de embargo
;.igainst Iran .
11owever. he s aid the broader
4ucstion of .S. trade policy
tow<Jrd Tran is under r eview and
·1 imagine not very much will
h<.1ppen until that review is com·
pletedq
Fro•P.,,.AI
SERVICE •..
Liotta wa:-. arres\ cd m that
c·ast' bfsed on ev1dl·nce gathe red
by th\.-latt• Orange County
S h e riH's Dctc(.'tivc Sgt. Les
Leber. who was planted to pose
as an executive of t he company
dur ing n egot iat ions over the
deal.
Ile said c lergy m en from five
Newport churches agreed last
week to hold the services onc-e
the hostages we re r eleased. "A
lot of people jus t wanted lo
s hare their thanks," h e said,
··and this seemed to be the ap·
p ropriate place."
C hurches taking part in the
services include Cor ona del Mar
Con g r egational C hurc h ,
Lutheran Church of the Master,
St. Michael's Episcop al Church,
·New por t Center Me thodist
Church and Christ Church by the
Sea. Testimony by Sgt Leber. who
died last year of a heart attack.
was used in the form of his writ·
The 7:30 p.m . service is open
to the public.
ORANGE COA!T D1ilyP1lat
Thomas P . Ha ley Publi~""'
Robert N. Weed Prt\ICll!nl
M. Thomas Keevil Ednor
Thomas A. Murphlne ,_,.....,,1,,.Edftor
Charles H. Loos
"UIUMI ~"9 Edllo-
top~rl olll 1•11 Or•no~ Coe\1
Publl•hlno Compan~ No ne w•
ll0<les llklllrlfllon>, edllorl•l mtll•,.
or t d .. •h•...,enl\ l\ertln m•y cw
••1>roo11teo .,11110111 >PP<••• Ptrm1uion ol toPYrlQt\t -"'r
TELEPHONE
All depertmem.: (714) M2-4321
CIHslfled Adv9rttsfng: 142·5171
OFFICES
C°"I• Mew: UIW.ll aty S4•..,I 1. .... N 8tt<11: 1011 He>, Coll•I Hltflwty ff1H1tlll9lon 11Nd1· 1111s Bet<ll 80111.waro
Setond <l•n post-"'d •I Costa NltH1 C•lllornle, IUSPS 1~. ~··c'°" .. <M· ~Ti.1~~n:::z.: J.I. = ... ,:: mofi111t•:
rtw or..._ ~ Oeo•y Pilot, w1111 wn.cn 1•
combined tr. New\..Preu . I• pvbllltl*O D~ IN
Or•rive COi" Pulltlffti"I Compen,, 51iaMlfl•
edit-• are ,......,_. Mon!My 111..uth Fr ... y '°' t ftl•. ~r He-1 llet<h, ....... 11,,...,,
Bt•<ht Fount•ln V•llt'(, ~,!( 1.t111n• 8N<h/S9ilttl c:..Mt. A 11""9 r edilioft i. ttUC>lls"'41 ~n ..w Su<wMys. The ~lll(llNll pUD11"'W.,..... It at m W.tt .. , 91,...1, P.O.
Bo• IMe, GllM l!Mw. Ctllferflf• ttta..
YOI... 74, NO. 22
·---
COAST ...
with no hoatrng activity.
In Secil Beach Wednesd ay,
hti!h ::;urf ('rested the s mall city
ht•aC"h and flood ed Seal Walk.
Flooding along Pacific Coa:;t
ll ighwa~ around And e rson
Slr et•t rn Sunset Beach occurred
hnt h Wednesday and Tuesday.
s lowing tr;.iff1c ne<.1r t he old
Sunset Ht.•ach water lowe r
Some noodtnl! and e rosion oc-
r urred in Sein Clemente Wednes -
day, leaving the city beach lit-
tered with notsam and jetsam .
lifeguards said
Lifeguard Richard Chew said
th<.' city pier sustained moderate
dam age b11th to its de<'k and pil·
ings at the seaward e nd because
of the heavy ~Nis Wednesday,
but that the waves had dropped
to ri ve to eight feet today.
A u thoritic•s at Dana Po int
llarbor closed the jelly to fish·
crmc n and s ightseers for the
third strui~hl clay as orcasional
swells broke over the nick and
conaetc s tructure .
Minor flooding was reported
along Beach Road in Capistrano
Beach. whe re r esidents earlier
s andbaggt.>d som e homes.
Lifeguard John Mulvane said
s urf was running about three to
f ive f eet at D o heny. S an
Clemente and San Onofre stale
beaches today.
The San Clem ente city beach
s u sta ined some heavy erosion
during the pas t two days of
pounding breakers and clawing
tides.
Parents to meet
on school closing
Parent m eetings lo discuss
proposed school closure plans in
th e Newport-Mesa district are
sche duled at two e lementary
schools this evening.
The 7:30 gatherings will be
held at Newport Elementary,
14th Street and Balboa
Boulevard in Newport Beach,
a nd at Pomona Elementary,
~1 Pomona Ave., Costa Mes.,
district otricials said.
.... _ ---·-..... ..,...----·--·~-... _ ........ --.-· -··----.,.. .,,.. .. ,... , , ,. . ,. ..... I
~ .
11ri•l fn Mar~la Bad engine
thu:ana trip. Plea entered
An Air California jet
bound foe San Joae wu re-
tu{Ded t.o Oranae County'•
·John W ayne Airport
Wesnesday night afte r an
electrical sb.ort d,acUvat·
ed an engine.
by Diedrich
Contra r v to a r eport
from the Or ange County
l''i r e Departmen t , Tom
Ka m inski, Air California
d ir ector of cc,mmunica·
tions, said ttu! CJlilne did
not catch fire .
Kam insk i s aid the
e ngint• s hut d ow n
a utomatically afte r the
short occurrt'<i and that an
on-bocird engine fire e~
tinRuishing system was ar·
livatt.'d.
Tht> 1 t ti p.assengers
aboard were l'lact.'d on a
different a1rl'raft for the
fli g-ht to Sa n J OM·. he sci id.
HOSTAGES
Cannon s aid.
In Moscow. the Soviet news a~ency Tass sa1t.l the American
press had launched a cam paign
uf a nti-Iranian "hyster ia" over
treatment of the hostages. Tass
also cluimed t hat the former
hostages "will be s ubjected to
d e tail l'd inte rroga tion and
brainwashin.i" before they ar e
allowL>d to meet with reporters
Barry Rosen of Brooklyn ,
N. Y .. chatting with re1><>rter s on
the way Jo a dental examination,
s aid the for mer hostaJtes had
··many stories to tell" and that
the agreement with Iran should
be reviewed.
Hoscn was not s pec ific about
hrs treatment as a r aptive. but
said, "I just feel that Iran 1s an
nut la w eounlry and it does de
serve tremendo us c r 1t1 r is m
from the world ...
Al a pr ess briefing near the
hospital, (';Jnnon !>aid he had nc1
n·von:-. of srwC'ifi c.• injuries suf
ft•red hy tht· hostages and in re
ply to ;1 <ttll'stton added. "Wl'
ha V(· 1111 n •ports so far of sexual
abu :>t:" 111.• s aid ''som e wer t'
manadt'<i tn <·hairs for 14 or 15
day:-. "
Cannon !>a id the Americans
wer e cxpectt.'<i to return home
toward the end of the wet!k and
that the y "feel it 1s ver y
net·essary that they h<tve Utls
period of private rest and re·
c uperation."
M akolm Kalp. an economir
<1d viser ;Jccuse<l of being a CIA
cigent b:> his capto rs. told his
f am ily rn a telephone call he was
beall'n and s pent 374 days tn
:-.ohta r y confinement because he
rcpea\edly tried t<1 escape
M 1chael J . M e tr1nko, a
polili(.'aJ officer from Olyphant,
Pa .. said he was held in solitary
for 811:. months. and Moorhead C.
K e nnedy Jr., t h e economic
counselor from W ashi ngton .
D.C .. said he and others were
lined up in the ir unde rwear ,
g uns to their heads, for a moek
exec;ution .
Marine Sgt. Johnny McKeel
told his 1>a r e nts in Balc h
Springs, Tex<1s, that a n Iranian
g u ard knocked out h is tooth and
a n interrogator said his mother
ha d died. lie s aid he w as told if
he wanted to go to the funeral he
had lo give the Iranians in -
fo rmation. but that all he gave
was n~me . rank and serial
number
Former Orange County Board
of Supervisors ch airma n Ralph
Diedric h pleaded Innocent in
Orange County Superior Court t<>-
day to charges he participated in a caO'lpaign fund laundering
operation rour year s ago.
Judge Richard Beacom set a
trial dateof Ma rch 9for Diedrich.
Th e former <'ounty politician,
w ho was ordered to stand trial
last week after a closed-door pre·
l imina r y h earing, races four
felony charges that h e failed to re ·
port $72,000 in financial contribu·
t ions as required by the Political
Reform Act of 1974 .
Diedrich, 56, is also c harged
with a misdemeanor count of fail
mg lo report a contribution.
Though there was little delay in
arraign.mg th{• former s upervisor
this morning. Beacom withhe ld
ruling until 1-~riday on whether the
preh mirtar y hea r ing lranscnpts,
s ealed aUhe request of d efense al
tornt!v Marsha ll Morgan. s hould bcop~ncd.
Mor gan ar gued that he wanted
t he transcripts lo re m ?-in sealed
to avoid pre judicial prc·t rial
publir 1ly that ('ould fore(· him to
seek a t h an~t· of venue for
l)iedril'h's trial.
"I think tht-entire thing should
he se<1lt"d ... th1· ddt•nse altnrne~
s u1d . ·
In a l<tter hallwa)' 1nterV1t.'W,
M urgci n said that. 1f thl'
tr ansc npts arc allowed to be re<Jd
b~ news reporter~. hr !> d1l•n1
would not~ able to gel a fair trial
1n Oran~eCount~
Dead woman's
jewels gone
in Newport
Newvort Bct1ch d etcd1ves arc
pr obing the d1s aµp .... arant·c of
S81i .OOO worth of Jewelr ) last
st•cn being worn l>y a 7'd ) 1:ar·old
worn an tlw da)' befon• s he rlit'CI
The executor and attorney for
t h (' l u t e Carm l'n G r<Jhi:lm
Kountze. told poli(.'e Wednc~da\'
that One of the Jewelry llCnl~'>
was a :n>-year -old diamond <1nd
p latinum bracelet worth $25,000
Also missing. pohce sard. is a
S50.000 emera ld and diamond
ring . a $10,000 ruby cind diamond
ring as well as SI .000 in rash
Exe1·utor \'1olette !\f(.'Kev1Lt
and attorne~ Hal Seely told of
ftt•e rs that :\1rs_ Kountze was
seen wearing the Jewe lry dunn~
;J v1s1t to the bank last week the
day b~fore s he died
They said they alsl.t searched
w ithout Su(.'cess the v.oman's
Baywood Street hom e for thC'
items. They s ciid the gem s. when
not being worn. wer e kept 1n ll
secret hiding s pot known onl~ to
them
Tr.estle burns
BAKERS F I ELD 1AP1 Fire
has destroyed about 300 feet of
an appr oach to a Southern
Parific trestle across the Kern
River . forcing fre ight trains to
be diverted to Santa F e tracks
Railroad c rews began repairs
lati>r Wednesday on a n estimat-
ed $250.000 worth of track and
supports destroyt'd by the early
morning fire
\~~1
ee
" 0
Give her one of life's simple pleasures.
She can't resist anything as
appealing as these sparkling
diamonds, .set in 14 karat
yellow. gold. Diamond stud
earrings from $150, pendants
from $425.
SLAVICK'S
Firw Jco-k>n Sln<T 191 7
However. Deputy Attorney
General Gary Schons said he op-
pos ed the motion to seal the docu·
m enls and still feels it would be
fairer to open the transcripts than
a llow them to rem a in under
w raps.
And attorney Duffern He lsing.
r e µrest-nling the S a nta An a
Hcto:Hiler news paper , ar gued that
t he public had CJ right to know
what was happening in ci case in.
vol ving a former public official.
··There 1s nothing in these
transer ipt!> that the public
s houldn't know," He ls ing said .
·'T he pt·o1)ll•'s rights are being de·
lll\'d .•
Ut•a c11m !>ait.l he wanted to read
through the transl'ripls before
makin~ a ny final rulings.
"I'd hkt.• to settle it hut on a
kn11wl t'<IJ!t-<.1bll:' h:.is1s, ·· th<.• Judge
~aHI
Wycliffe
~official
' abducted .
Officials frum a lluntington
Hcat·h BrhlE· transl a ting o r·
gan ization arc awaiting word to·
day from armed terrorists who
kidnapped a missionary in
Bogota. Colombia.
Cht.•s tt:r Bitterman . 29·y ear-
olt.l language expert from Lan-
l'<JSll·r. Pa .. was seized Monday
b) s rx men and ci woman armt.'d
wit h m:;ch1n l' guns and pistols.
Hill t\l'). an a ssis tci nt to the
W) d 1 ff e B 1 b It• t r a ns I a t in g
g r 11 u p · :-cl 1 r cc 111 r i n I. ci t in
:\mt.•rit :.i. ~atd that Hillerman
had t·11m pla1ut•d of s tomach
pa111:.. anti w as st·hecluled to have
a gall hladdcr 11µcrati11n tuday.
Kt•\ :-.aicl hi' Jnubtcd that the
ailmi·nt pO!-l'tl .1 hft'-thre atening
-.11 u:.it11m ·w,. w1-n· t11ld that the kidnap
p1· r s "'t'fl' \ L'fY tord1 al when
th t·~ harj.!t.•d tnlo tht: mission
hou~c· wht·rt· B1 tt t•rman wa!>
awu 1t1n1.? tht· "urgl:'ry." Key s;.i1<l
Wl11l1• 1\1·~ ..,;J1d lhe o rganiz<1
l111n had not rl'<'l'l\'l'd any off1l'1al
dl'm ;m cb friim lhl' terrorists. he
... alll tht-rc an• unofftctal 1nd1ca
lt0n:.. th.11 th\· kidnappers ..-anl
llh· 1n~tll u\t.'. ~h1 ch employ~
... om\' 100 :-.thttlar .. s tudying In
11lan tnbal languaiaes. to lean•
C'ol11mh1a
Kt•\ :-.pt.'l'UI JINI that the or
l!an11.;1t111n 'i 1;1mtrcicl with the
('11l11m bt;Jn go\ ernml'nt 1s the
h:1-.r... f11r !ht· l!Ut·rnlla aC'tlOn cip
pan·11ll~ a1m1·cl .it 1•mlrnrrus:.1ng
1 ht: gc1\ crnnll·nt
w, ('ltff1., l11t.'<.t t<·d at 19R91
Rc·a(:h Bh d 1:-a n1m sectanan
Chrr!-.ttan rmssronar) l!rOup thal
I rnn:>latt.•s t he• Rtblc rnto natl\'{'
l11alc·l'\s rn Third World C'oun
\rH'S
The• 11rgun1 zal 1011 cn ntra<'ls
w11h s::m't·rnm<'nt1' 1n those Mun
lrJl'!-to pr<H'Hll' C'd uc·<1tion and
1mpr11Vl' lllt'rac·y. he sa id ~
In Bogota. police are quoted
as sa ,·ing I hcit the\' believe tht• ~unm t.·n tw long to o ne of the
lc·ftisl groups waging a g uerrilla
1·umpa1gn lo replace Colom bw's
democ ratic go,·ernm<.•nt with a
:i.t arx1st regime
t31tt erman ha"o ltved rn Colom
bta wilh his wife and two s mall
dau1thlers s tnl'e Sept e mber ,
1 !>7!}
Fashion lsl.nd, Newport Center, Newport Be.ch, 714(644·1380
Wtllmln~lt'r / lAguna Hiiis I Minion VwjO I North Orangt In.. Cily
~ Ctmtos • •~• Mills Alto c,..trr ~An.In I Sin oi.go / t..s V..gas
Uw _ .. ~·, ....,,~ ... ,..,,. °' A-n l• ...... YISA. ~ C"Mflt,
Mtfftbtr F'i"t /ru~ltrs G111"
-,._ .-.. .._ -----. _ ...... ..
ClLJ'°"1H1A • Thur9d-. Jenuwy 22. 1881 H/F DAILY ~LOT A•~ =::::::.::..=.:..:.::..:~-:-~--~~~~~~~~~..;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~....;.;;.-.,
Area te·med
/or drought
SACRAMENTO <At•) . Haf\· 1&rv1.1ml Ill ski
... ,.. and low rhervolr l~velb att' warnwa
...-it.en\ Cabforn1ll rt:1udt:nla lht1) 111•)' I~ In for
"*r MC."Ond drou1ht ln five yc&no
Ski rellOrtl and om t' farml'r11 11n· 1tll't'1td)
coe1tliai their l0Ht1 la1nf aJI 90 tar thla ~ttaJ>on 1~ fu r bd1111d t h1· ...a '°' th.i• ct ate an ums. ttw flr111 \Nu or 11 1 wo ,. .. , ctrou1ht thMI coiJt lht• 'llllh: humlrt•tb of •lllions ol dollan in lust aov.• .. l1v1•,tod1 lrt't'i-
n.la, wUdhh' and tour l'tl tnc·oow
NO <11'\' aAN Ol'T ol WIA\\'C Ill tlf77 l>1.1l
f'mf'r&.n<') mt'a1>1.1r\•11 wt'rt' 1mpoi.t'(J. 1111 lud1n1t 111v
mg .,. ater ll<'r<»>s th\' U1l·h111oo<.I ~ .. ,. H&flll'l Hnd"t'
t(I Ma nn Count)' north of S&11 F'r1a1w1:.l'O
Ka1nlall thi11 \'tar has tlt•t'fl h .. >i> tht.i11 l<> µt'r
t'f'O I ol a\lerage antl ft'turnrng w 11ur111ul will
c.IH· more than " L1g ~torm al th1'> v<Hnt Bill
l'larlr.. dcpul~ chtd ttf flood o~ratwnlt for tht> ~tat"
l>l'panmenl or Water ReltOUTt'Clt, !>o ld We<lncltda)
Murh of the NurthcaM 11> calso 1>ufferinl( from a
l.l<'k of rainfall to:arltcr th1:. m6nth, tttl-Delaware
• Raver Basin· Cum m 1!.S1on del'lart:tl a drought
e m enenrv in Delaware. New JerSC\', :-.!cw Yurk
and Pennsvlvan1& ('on1>crvatH111 effort!> han·
begun m C0nnt'<:t1cul Last week. the M1:.s1s:.1pp1
Rl\'er dropped to a record low level at Mem phl!>,
Tenn
SO FAil. TH£ LACK of :.now or rain an
Sorthem California ha:. hll ski rcsorllt hard and
raused dlfficulues ror gnun and la vcslock far mer:.
Some farmers have had to s tart 1rrti(ut1cm early
The Modesto lrrigalwn District )tarted run
ning water through il!> l'anaJs on Jan II . the
earliest since 1905
Water Master L>oug Woodman uC th<' Kings
River Water Assoc1atton. which manage:. Pine
Flat Reservoir east of 1-,resno, said lht• area has
had one inch of rain since Oct I The normal ;u·
cumulation is eight inches.
IN MID-JANUARY , there we re only two inc he~
of snow on Donner Summit near th«: main i'a~!'t
through the Sierra Nevada, comparet.l lo a normal
50 inches.
The Heavenly Valley ski resort at Lake Tahoe
hasn 't opened. Marketing director Brady llodge
said the ground was bare at the bottom or the
slopes and there were only six to 10 inches or snow on
the upper slopes not enough for " a quality ski ex
perience."
"This is the l·atest we've ever 1-{one into a
season in 25 years," he said.
Some grain crops have been stunted b) the
lack of rainfall. but fields under irngation are pro
gressing well, according to George Tucker Jr of
the Crop Reporting Service.
3 jewelry stores
robbed; :man dies
LOS ANGELES (AP > Within a frw hours.
three jewelry stores here were hit hy robbers who
killed one man, critically wounded anolht>r, strug
gled with a third and locked a salesman 1n a vault
who later convinced one s uspect 1ntu surrendering,
authorities said.
Diran Odel, 39, died in his Wils hm.• Boulevard
store after being s hot in the face during an apparent
robbery. said poliC'e Lt. <:ten Ackerman Odel's
partner, Kegam Toran, 33. received a gunshot
wound in the head. lie was lis ted in ('nt1cal condition
today in the intensive rare unit of the U<"l.A Medical
Center.
Two men arrested Wednesday were booked for
inv estigation of murder They wtre identified a~
John 0 . Jones. 19, and Austin B. Willi~. UI. both of Los
Angeles. said Ackerman.
Bank adtllltold• Iran fund•
SAN FRANCISCO I AP I A fccicral Jud ge has
agreed to allow Bank or America to withhold the
trans ferof$91 million in interest on rranian bcink cic·
counts frozen afl er the 52
Am erieans wen' st·1zcd . ....---------~ l F orm e r f'rcs idPnl
Jimmy Carter had or
·Je red a fund trnnsfc r '------------' befor e lea v mg offi re lo
secure the hostages' release, but the Bank or
America said the inter est rates set were " in great ex
cess" oflhoseithad agreed to pay onginally.
An affidavit fil ed in U.S. District Court here said
$2.4 billion was in Bank of America accC>unts Crom
Iran.
Arlre••' Ito•• IJ11rglarl.z-1td
MALIBU (AP> A transient was 1n cu!>tody to·
day after actress-e ntertainer
Connie Stevens returned to her
Malibu home and round $15,000
worth of property missing and a
stranger sitting in a chair, a Los
Angeles County s heriff's
spokesman said.
As the man sat in Miss
Stevens' chair, s he called
authorities, who la ter arrested
Stacey E . Storm, 21, inside her
home, said sheriff's deputy Jim
Platls. STEVENS
Storm was booked for investigation or burglary,
Platissaid.
Calllerala ••• pf ral11
By The Associated Press
Rain is expected over most of Northern and Cen-
tral California today, except for the central valley
areasouthofMerced, where there is only a chance of
rain, the National Weather Service says.
The rain, heavy at times, is expected to give way
'tocolderweatberandscatteredcloudson Friday.
Snow wu expected above the 8,000 foot level in
the Sierra today, with the snow level falling to about
8,000 feet in thenorthem Sierra Friday.
,,,_._,....,_.••••••rftl
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A former Paramount
Ptc:turea employee convicted ol swindling the film
1tudlo out ol $495,000 has been sentenced to four
veanillatate~rtaon. J'nman G. Packard Jr., 38, who was found
pilty ol ll"and theft after a non-jury trial last Sep-
tember, •• unteaced Wedneaday by Superior
Jud1e0ordanltlqer.
(•nlde11 111111it'ersory
.-\t:tor rat O' Hrten celebrated his 50th year of marriage to his wife
t-:101:-.t• al a I ,os Angeles restaurant Wednesday night. Helping with
lhl' festivities were their children, from left, Mavourneen. Terence
and Brigid. O'Hnen. very popular in the 1930s, has been in .over 70
rllm:-. and starred in the TV series. "Harrigan and Son."
. I Panelist replaced!
South Coast lwwing diapute grow1l
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Leaders of
the state Senate have stepped into a
dispute over low-cost houaina and
replaced a former developer on the
South Coast Regional Coastal Com·
mission.
The Senate Rules Committee on
Wednesday named a physician, Dr.
John Hisserich, director of regional
activities. at the Los Angeles County·
Oniversity of Southern California
Compre h e ns ive Cancer Center
School of Medicine.
Hisserich replaces Fred Johnson,
who has been opposing Chairwoman
Ruth Galanter and the represen·
tative lo t he state Coastal Com·
mission. Mel Nutter, in a dispute
over low-cost housing in coastal de·
velopments.
JOHNSON, WHO remained in of-
fi ce after his term expired Jan, I,
predicted that the Rules Committee's
a cfion would thwart efforts by some
com missioners to replace Ms .
Galanter and Nutter .
Ile had said Monday he had enough
votes to remove Mrs. Galanter and
Nutter. who support the stale com·
mission's guideline requiring som e
low-to moderate-cost housing, or
payment of an in-lieu fee, for de·
veloping five units or more.
Johnson, who described hlmseU as
a "voice of reason and moderation."
said he supports such a requ.irement
only for large projects.
I
"In smaller projec:ta where lt wu •
clearly pre9ented that there wu no
economic feuibllity to include low.
income housing I voted acainat it, 11
he said, addina that the requirement
is a "manner of stop pine projec:ta. 11
Johnson said be belon11 to the
Sierra Club, but environmental
groups and "no growth" advocates
had lobbied Senate President Pro
Tern David Roberti, D-Loe Anceles,
to reolace him .
SIERRA CLUB president John
Zierold said he wrote Roberti saying
that his group had become "dis·
enchanted" with Johnson 's
performance.
Roberti, chairman of the Rules
Co mmittee, is one of the
Legislature's strongest supporters of
low-cost housing in coastal develop-
ments.
Zierold said he did not know His·
ser ich, but predicted he would
··probably be a very objective member
of the commission."
Hisserich said in a telephone in·
terview that he was "really con·
cerned about maintaining access by
all income levels lo the coastline.
··1 a m not formally a member of
a ny environmental organization. I'm
concerned about a balance of en·
vironmental issues with appropriate
kinds of growth."
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Com<: ro Columbia today!
/ 'u v Ip tlr1•
THOMAS B. ANDERSON
MARY B. ANDERSON
1734 MAIN STREET
YOUR TOWN, CA 00000
120
16 7017 3220
n11l1·1 11J ------------------------S------
-------------------------------Dollars
COLUMBIA BAVINDB
ANDl.OANA••OCIAT10N
/1l/ --------------
1: 1 2 2 o ? o • ? t..,: o • 2 o • 2 3 t.. s ti ? a ~a 11• • o
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first to open a checking or savings account during our Grandest Opening.
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is all about.
AT COLOMBIA. YOOR MONEY GROWS WITH FRIENDSHIP,
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needs of the Harbor Area community.
HO<JRS:
Mon. thru Thurs ..•. 9:30 Nit lo 5:30 PM
Friday •.•••••..•••••• 9:30 Nit lo 6:00 PM
Saturday ............ 9:00 Nit lo 1 :00 PM
COWMBIA
SAVINGS(£}
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 80 Fashion Island • 760-8551
(comer ol Newport Center DrM and Sants Rosa) · fa.rd wu arreated ln December 1979 on
ebar1•belllllled Paramountoutof$495,000byform· lq a ftditioul company, called "Script.a Unllmit· :.._ ____________ ...._ ______________________ ._.._ ________________ ,.
ed," f•pllotocopyinc television scripts.
. . . ' ............. . • ••• ~641
,
.-\• I Jt1 .. 1 ........ ~ ._1 .. Thomas P. Haley I Publisher Tnom.s .C"vll tEdltor
Orange Co<•t D••I~ Ptto t _mg tu.-.. C ''!Jfl.,1elim.••••••••Tt1•u•...ct•••"'•' J•••"•u••'•"'•2·2··'•"•' ••••••••ea•r.,.•r•••K•r••.'b.'c•h•1•e•d•"•°'•'•••• •Paef••E•d•'•'°'•.••
Pollution merits
severe penalties
Th~ ••enc'e 1uppoeedly ~nforrina •late and federal
laws that proMblt dumpinM of w11te water into
t-<·oloe1ully sen itiv.-b•>'• and estuaries hive been
tolerant to a (aull with l.quna llllla Sanitation. Inc .
Thal farm, loratt"d n"ar Uon Countr)' Slillara, bh1tant·
I~ dumped pollut ed wMtl1r tntu San Daeco Creek
throushout 1980 without o mur h ait a major threat from
either t ht? st111" Attorner o~neral's office or the Santa
Ana Regu)f111J Wakr (Ju~Ut> ontrol Board The polluted
"'att>r rrom thaat t·rt·t·k l~ad& d1 re<'tly into Upµl'r Newport
Ba> ,
Af1 .. r norl> a ) cur vf th1 pullution the s~nitalion
<'u m pan) fmall) did hook up•') uutlt-t to feed the water out to
ea <at a ~pot 1ust :1nuth or l.611jW\a lit-a('h ~ut when that line
broke the Olh~r d1ty . the p<>Uutacm ont•t-more was sent into
-san O.eaol'r eek .and do wn mto lht-bay
The N.i mp&n' C'uuld l.;t! hnt!d m or e than $1 m1lllon for
'1olalang the L"lt-1.an W1.1t er AC'l And while the Attorney
Gen er»I':. offic•t> to.ct} 11 1s C'omudering som e action
agamsl lhe firm ll mu~ or may not be forth('oming. The
Regulflctl \\at er Cont rot Board has hardly peeped through
th e whole epa!>odto d ebptll' lht: f al'l that the sanitation
1."'0mpany at.-tualJ~ took on new ('UStom e rs while the pollu-
uon problt!m cx1~ted
It 1s true that tht' polluted material pro bably posed no
threat to pubhC' health and safety.
But ll I!) 11lso true that the authorities who should
ha\ e been look mg after s uch matte rs did an awful lot of
pu~s~ footing iirOund when tl cam e lo dealing with a firm
that so , t0hiled clean wate r standards. Any further
brt.'ar he!) b.\ Laguna Hills Sanita tio n should be dealt with
(irm l ~ and s wiftly .
Costly mistake
The Irvine City Council members have decided to do
awa\' with the t rnivcrs ity Park skateboard course.
Responding to the desir es of residents who live nea r
the t·ourse. the council told the c ity staff to investigate
ho\\· the cours e should be de molished.
The original demolition cost estimate by the city staff
was $45.000. This figure seemed shockingly high and the
City CoWlcil unde rst andably told lhe s taff to go back to
the drawing boar d.
Reside nts who live near the course complained that it
was more often used by rowdy, trouble -making kids than
by the skateboarde rs for which it was built.
ln fact. reside nts. some of whom have hom es that
a but the course. have complained about the facility for
several years.
Bad planning has been the central theme of the
skateboard course s ince the day it was conceived First,
<.'i t .v p la nne r s o bvious ly m isjudged the mid -70's
s kateboarding fad. apparently thinking it would be a last ·
1ng popular spurt . ·
Second, someone in the planning department ques-
t ionabl) permitted hom es within yards of the skateboard
course
Third. whl·n res idents firs t started to complain about
the situation. the Cit~· Council d ecided to build a block
wall near the cours e . The money spent on the wall oy
viously was wasted in light of \he recent council action.
These past m istakes shouldn't now be compounded
hy the c ity . The c·ity s taff would be well advised to spend
as little monc~ as ,µo ssible in demolishing the cour se.
wt1ilc at lhl.· !-am(' llmt· keeping residents advis ed every
s tep along thl' \\a~
Road study essential
Newport Beach City council members agreed this
week to keep long-planned . much-delayed University
Drive on the road map in the cit y's proposed Local
Coas tal Plan .
In so doing. councilme n knocked down recently erect·
ed roadblocks that could have doomed the thoroughfare.
seen as the road to link Costa Mesa and Irvine around
Upper Newport Bay .
The decision did not move University Drive -which
now comes to a dead end on either side of the bay -any
closer toward completion. But it m ay give a signa l of
th ings to com e .
While c ity officials in Costa Mesa and Irvine s upport
completing the r oad. Newport leaders have been reluc -
tant to even discuss the s ubject.
Most r ecently. s tate Coastal Commission planner s
tried lo persuade NewPort councilmen to give up on
University and sim ply erase it from the coastal plan's
road map.
Commission planners cited environmental concerns
with the proposed roa d and argued it would come too
close to the e nvironme nta lly sensitive Upper Bay .
But as several Newport councilmen pointed out this
week, it's a little h ard to know if the road would pose such
dangers if the m a tter is neve r studied. And environmen·
tal studies on Univers ity haven 't been done.
Keeping University on the road map was a good
move but it must be followed up. It's time for Newport,
Irvine and Costa Mesa to sit down and start the process
or determining whether University ever will be. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artist.s. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71•) 642·4321 .
Boyd I Wives
By L. M. BOYD
Many is the city wife who
accuses her husband of not
working bard enouah. of not
•
Dear
Gloon,ty
Gu8
Why doe9 this country
spend hundreds ol
thousands ol dollars to
bring in people from
Asia and Cuba, and al
the same time spend,
bundreda of thowlanda to
keep ournet&hbon out? KIP
~, ... (_. .... .... ......... . , , .... ,. ........ , ~...,..,,..., .. _ ....
=-·~· ... 'f!!!..,_ -.. ,o.,....,..._
earn.ing enough money. or~
helping her enough in dealing
with the youngsten. But tbe
rarm wife who so accuses her
husband la a rarity. Our Love
and War man bas attempted
to explain the why or this dif-
ference between city and
farm wives. And failed.
Half the former priests
who get married marry former nuns.
When I said supply tenders
sailed behind the enormous
Cbineee JWlkl of yesteryear,
and that ve1etable 1ard1a1
were cultivated on tbe supply
tenden to provide tbe crews
and .,.. .... .,.. of tbe peat
sblps with fresh food, It'
dJdn 't oeeur to me -u I& did
to certain swift readers -
that tbole vet.Ubl• wen
indeed the world'• ftnt Junk fooda.
I•
' EarlWaten
School finftncing Unresolved
AlU'°'-t&h il lt not llkely that
a n y sl&nlrlcant chan1es In
school rinaneln1 will come out of th~ 1981 Lelitlature, preuures
are betl1f broulbt to bear by the
lawyers who jolted the entire
school flnancin1 ayatem baek in
1968 with. the now famous "Ser·
rano" cMe.
They had brou1ht suit againsl
a host of state officials in behalf
o f J o hn
Serrano, a
Baldwin Park
pa r e n t who
contended his
son was being
den ied hrs
r·onstitulional
r i g ht s to
e q u a I
t r ea l m'e n t
beca use h e
11\'ed in a school distri~t which
was too poor to provide the
quah\y education received by
students in "rich" districts.
After eight years of litigation
\he courts finally aareed.
declaring the state's system for
financing schools, based upon
the assessed valuations of
property within the districts,
was violative of the constiluUon
In that it did not provide equal
amounts to be spent In the education of every child.
THE RULING ordered a
r evision wh ic h allow e d
ditrerences or no more than $100
per pupil and gave the stale
until this year to achieve the goal.
W it h t h e pas s age of
Proposition 13, limiting property
laxes. school fin an cing was
necessarily shifted .from the
local tax revenues to the state.
The result has been that the
s tate has now assum ed 80
percent of the costs for the-local
school operations.
But the Serrano lawyers
contend that the Legislature has
done little to eliminate the
uncon9'titutional inequities
which gave occasion lo the case.
In some instances, they claim.
the situation is worse now than it
was then, p'ointing to their
f11vorite target or Beverly ffills
which is currently said to be
spending $2,700 per pupil while
Baldwin Park has only Sl.400
per pupil. The lawyers say that
this proves the present scheme
of financing will not bring the
system into fuJI compliance in
the reasonably near future or
ever. They threaten to reopen
the Serrano case if action is not
taken by the Legislature this
year .
LEGISLATORS, Gov. Jerry
Brown, and state School Supt.
Wilson Ril es di s agree .
contending the state is now in
s ubstantial compliance. Riles
s ays anything more at this time
would lower the caliber or the
.····~~ ~tho.(....,A1 ...... ~ ....
fJk
-~ 'txjrr ~~ ME -f1f{ST, 1 ~~ m F1tJD ™E HEAD END.'
Mailbox
entire school system working
unnecessar y hards hips on
hundreds or thousands of school
children.
He pointed out that many of
the dislricls viewed as wealthy,
such as San Francisco, have all
or the problems that go with
poverty, minorities, non-English
s p e aking a nd c ultur a lly
de prived children.
The whole Issue might be
easily put lo rest by the state
t aking the flnal s tep. which
eventua ll y it will s urely be
compelled to do. and assume
total responsibility for school
financing. It would require only
sligntly more than a 20 percent
increase in'the prsent funding.
B UT THAT solution is bitterly
resisted by sc hool
administrators and teachers up
and down the slate. For they
know it would inescapably bring
abo ut un i f orm s a lari es
s ta tewid e for both th e
administrators and teachers as
well as all other employees_
While that probably would be
the most healthy thing to ever
happen an the public s<·hools. it
leaves the false concept of the
Serrano t•ase unchall enged. That
1s the ideµ that the spending of
equal amoun ts on each pupil will
insure equality of c•ducalion or is
even desirable
Under present financing cxtrc1
allowances are made to provide·
ro r the hanrli capped . the
und e r pri v il e g e d . th e
non-English speaking and even
the· gifted ECJ<•h ha \C SIJt'l'ial
n eeds over and above the
regular school proJ!ram Even
~uch things as thl· extra busing.
whether court mandated or or
geographic ncl·essit). increase
tht' per pupil <·osts in certain
districts
One· hundrc•d pc rC"cnl s tar e
fme1nri ng c1>ul d vastly improve
\ht.• prcst.•nl :-.ystt'm 1f the courts
w i 11 h u t' k a w a y f ni m t ht.'
mantlaU• of s p l'nding P11u al
;:amounts 11n Pal'h eh1ld
County needs efficient airport facility
To the Editor.
I was most pleased to read in
the Daily Pilot thal Supervisor
Ralph Clark is ask~ng the Board
of Supervisors to consider the
appropriateness of increasing
the number of daily commercial
nights out of the John Wayne
airport. The purpose of this let·
ter is not to re-hash past pro/con
ar guments, but to give the board
my wholehearted s upport for in-
creasing the number of daily
commercial flights. The airport
exists.
There is no valid alternative
site . The passenger count in·
creases year by year. This fact
in itself should suffice as ample
rationale for accommodating to
the needs and demands for air
travel of this county's popuJa-
taon. Or a nge County and its
cities, its industries and its peo·
ple need and require a first class
commercial air facility. This
damn thing has been studied to
death and if you stacked aJI the
impact reports on top of each
other you probably wouldn't be
able to see above it or around it.
FINALLV, I am a resident of
lhe city of ·Newport Beach. I
lived for four years in the Bluffs.
first leasing and then owning a
residence directly under the
flight path. When the planes
went over it was noisy and un·
comfortable but my family and I
accommodated to it because we
moved in there with the full
knowledge that we were in the
jet night path. If a survey would
be made todav. I'm willinll to bet that substantially all the res·
idents unde rneath that flight
path in the Bluffs and Dover
Shores have moved In there
post-jet.
It's amusing to read about the
complaints when I recall that we
sold our home on Vista Entrada
for a s ubstantial profit to
another resident on the same
street and the jets kept nying all
those years. Another cinch bet
would be on the substantial in·
crease in housine resale values
under the Newport Beach fii1bt
path.
Let's bu.lid a proper terminal
and sufficient parking structure
now!
KARL 0 . BERG HEER . ...,, ....... ~
To the EdJtor: ~
t invite you to look for a mo-
ment at the "liberal landslide,"
the "liberal mandate." Yes. J mean the eleetloa ot last No-
vember •.
I have before me the
CalUorala ftfUJ'el. aad It ii ln
Callfomla when U.at favorite
•on Ronald Reqan ii suPPGHd to have done ao well. He -cllcln't.
He 1ot • pereent of tboH elili·
ble to vote; the turnout. a ccord·
ing to the California Secr etary of
Slate, was the worst for any
presidential election year since
1912. when the omce began lak·
ing notes. A lack of bumper.
stickers revealed the situation;
almost no one voted for a nyone.
ON mE olher hand, two ex·
tra-politicaJ events played de-
cisive roles in s.etting up a situa-
tion where we had no one to vote
for . The man the millions
would have voled for, as sup-
porters and non-supporters
knew. was Teddy Kennedy. but
he was precisely the victim or
the two extra-political events:
Chappaquiddick, which was old
but not quite forgollen, and the
hostage seizure, ideally suited to
a l e mpori zing president in
charge.
Take away these two, or at
least the second . and we wouJd
have had a Kennedy nomination.
Let all the people vote their
prejudices just as they did vote,
let Reagan keep his 28 percent,
reshuffle the Anderson votes,
add the percentage points to
bring the turnout up at least to the
average for a presidential elec·
tion and this gives you what the
columnists and politicians would
call " a liberal landslide." lflhis is
a plausible reading of the out-
come then the new president is in
for a rude awakening.
DAVIDALAN MUNRO
Trafl•t1~drd
To the Editor:
We emphatically disagree
with the editorial of Jan. S en·
titled ''Fads Can Be CosUy,"
which paralleled the investment
of public funds for skate board·
ing to the use of taxpayer dollars
for bicycle trails. The opinion
was that the present use of bike
trails does not justify "aJI the
paving and curb cuts that we~
put in" and the writer ad·
moniahed councils to restrict ex·
penditures for single-use activity
facilities. -
This position contradict& an
April 8, 1975 Daily Pilot editorial
position which stated that "the
facts seem to polnt to the need
lor blkewaya ln California" and
quoted CHP accident 1tatiatk1
due to unreplated mixtures ol
bike and 1utomobUe traffic. In
addition a subsequent editorial
praJsed the completion of a ma-
jor portion of the San Die10
Creek/Peters Canyon WHb
mountalnl to the sea trail tor·
rldor.
IN ltft t.be lnlee eleetorate
ovenrbllmlal1Y voted fOf' a ti
·mllUon bond luue to f\and a model
community blb trail network.
'J'be latent WU tben and lJ DOW to
provide an alternaUYe mode o1
transportation. secondarily a
recreational amenity. and thirdly
a multi-use facility. The city
general plan . the s lat e of
California. and the federal gov-
ernment classify the bicycle as a
means of transportation. not a
toy
What h as developed is a
system of bike lanes and trails
used by bicyrlists of all ages and
trip categories. as well as run-
n e r s. r oll er s k a t e r s , an d
skateboarders. The lanes also
serve as bus loading areas and
emergency parking for stalled
vehicles, Curb cuts, by the way,
are mandated by the slate forhan·
dicapped and wheelchair access
and are onJy incidentally used by
some bicyclists.
Though use of the trails by
various categories or rider s
seem to fluctuate, one group
which consistently rides is
school -age childre n. From
elementary through high school
age they swarm to school on the
trails and pack the parking lots
with their two wheelers.
While other communities
might scramble in response to
soaring gasoline prices, Irvine
commuters will, due to advance
planning, be ready to switch
over, if necessary, lo the most
efficient means Qf transport&·
lion, the bicycle.
JUANITA MOE
Irvine Citizens Bicycle
Trails Committee
TOM GLENN
Irvine Transportation
Commission
aaelc8 .. I••
To the F.ditor:
This letter is a plea to re-
consider the plan to extend
University Drive through the
Back Bay Ecological Preserve
to Jamboree Road. To run a ma·
jor thoroughfare through an
ecological preserve would show
total disregard of the purpose of
the "preserve" in the first place.
Not only is the Back Bay en·
vironment unique to our over-
developed area, it is unique to
California in that its kind in
Itself is a vanishing "species."
AS A.N equestrian and lover ol
natural space, I have relished
the serenity of rtdlnt my bone
along the trails In the Back Bii)'
along with others who seek
escape from traffic, noise poUu·
tlon, and the hectic pace of dally
II vln1. Extendin1 University
Drive would put an end to tbla u
can and concrete would replaee
equeslrian trail• and aeenie'
beauty.
"Ualvnty Drive extealion,"
aa you say. "ii already OD tM
mape ol both ctUea, th•.,_.., It
mut 10 throuib to mm ~
maps read true " The U S ri~h
and Game Deµartmenl and I
say, .. Take 11 off the maps'" Let
the Back Bav Preserve be what
it was intended to be Surely you
must know that this area hap-
pens to be the last segment of
naturalness of such degree left
1n Costa Mesa and Newµort
Beach. It was intended to rt•-
m ain so when 1t was rightly sel
aside as a preserve of major im·
port a nee lo humans seeking
r espite as we ll as bi rds and
animals that rt'fu gc there.
JOYCE C. ZOHC ER
Airport rluH~r
To the Editor.
There have been many things
proposed for the John Wayne
Airport recently and many more
suggesUons will be made al the
public hearing before the Airport
Co mmission. However. none of
the questions have ever been
asked to any or the younger
generation. I am 17 years old and
as far as I know I will be living in
Newport Beach for the rest of my
life. I will be here for a lot longer
than the people who are making
the d ecisions.
MV POINT is. I understand that
the master plan calls for an in·
crease in the number or permit led
daily departures to SS from a cur·
rent level of 41. Wh y do they need
to make a major airport out of it
when they have LAX so near? The
main problem is the fact that it
will simply destroy Newport
Beach! Real estate will drop, land
will lose value. the air become
worse than it already is etc. Just
look what LAX has done for Los
Angeles. It isn't exactly prime
position around the airport within
10 miles. Do we want a $75 million
airport terminal or do we want to
preserve one area or nice beach.
clean water and fairly fresh air?
Also, if they want to grow now.
what says they aren't going to
want to grow more later when
most ol lbe older people are gone
and we are still here? I think that
it is bad enoueh the way it is now, I
can't ever look up into the sky and
not spot an airplane.
I think people should consider
these facts and do somethln1
about them. Newport Beach la a
clean, beautiful and fun city to be
in. Don'tdeslroylt!
SCOTT WENKE
...., .. ~~ .. ---. --. --._ ---... ._ -_. -... ._,~ ............. ...,_. .... I
' I
Area tensed
for drought
SACRAMENTO l AP> 8art' around ~t ii1t1
..., •• and low reHrvolr 1.,v.,111 are warrung
~California rti8 lderltcJ th•~)' ma hti 1n for
*"r ~ dr°"Chl In fin ye6ll'a
Ski raorta and •Ome farmt·o 1u .. 11lruc.Jy
~t&QI tlwlr \oeae11
1'8infaJJ ao far this sn8Qf\ 1b fu b••h•rut thl'
.... for th11 date tn 1976, lht' nr!jt yc1u of a two "*' drou1ht that t o t lht •lalt' hundrt'd or IUlbona ol dollars 111 lo.!>l r ropb, hvebl•wk lrt'l''I
fblll. wUdhff' and tour111t mn urw
NO C1T" aAN (>l'T of wa11•1 1n llf'/7, hul
emeraeecy mtasurh were 1ml)CL'IOO 1m•lud1n6' t1111
1n1 water at'rms tht-H1t·hmood S1i111 K uf~t-1 Ht11lgt•
to Mann Couruy north of ~a11 to'r1tnt011>1·0
Ramlall this t-ar ha1> been It-.. ~ th1tn ~ J>t'r
t'ent ol averaer. and returning tu n(lrrn a l ·v.111
take more th1to a bag '>torm al lh1 .. i>c11m 11111
Clark, deput.> r hlef of rlovd uveratroni. fur lhl· '>lalt
OepMrtment of Water Re!>ources. 1>a1d W e<lnei.day
Much of the ~ortht:ast 1s abo 1>ufferang from a
lac k ol ramfilll Earlier this month, tht Delaware
Raver Basin t:omm1:.s1on dtr lared a drought
emeuenC\ in Delaware, New Jt:r~ev . New York
and Pennsylvun1a Con:.er vat1t111 t:Hort-. have
begun m Conn~<'l1cut Last week, the M1i.b1Ss1pp1
River dropped to a rt:t•ord low level at Memphis
Tenn.
SO FAil, THE LACK of snow or ra111 tn
:'llorthern Califorma ha!> hit ski resorts hard and
caused difficullle!> for grain and livestock farmer-.
Some farmers have had to start 1rngat10n early
The Modesto lrrigat10n 1>1strir t started run
mng water through its canal~ on Jan 11 lhl•
earliest smce 1905
Water Master Doug Woodman of thl' King:.
River Water Association, which mana!{es Pine
Flat Reservoir east of Fresno, said th<' area has
had one inch of rain since Oct I Tht> normal a1·
cum ulatio~ ii eight inches
IN MID-JANUARY, there were only two 1nC'hes
of snow on Donne r Sum mit near the main pass
through the Sierra Nevada. com pared to a normal
50 inc hes.
The Heavenly Valley ski resort at Lake Tahoe
hasn't opened. Marketing director Brady Hodge
said the ground was bare at the bottom of the
slopes and there were only six to 10 inches of snow on
the upper slopes -not enough for " a quality ski t'X .
perience."
"This is the latest we've ever gone into a
season in 25 years." he said .
Some grain crops have been stunted by the
lack of rainfall. but fields under irrigation are pro·
gressing well. according to George Tucker Jr or
the Crop Reporting Ser vice.
3 jewelry stores
robbed; man dies
LOS ANGELES <AP> Within a fl'W hours.
three jewelry stores here were hit by robbers who
killed one man. critically wounded another. stru~
g led with a third and locked a salesman 1n a vault
who later convinced one suspect into surrcndenn~.
authorities said.
Oiran Odel. 39. died in his Wilshire Uoulevard
store after being shot in the face during an apparent
robbery, said police Lt. Glen Ackerman Odcl'~
partner . Kegam Toran, 33, received a gunshot
wound in the head. lie was listed in critical condition
today in the intensive care unit of the UCLA ~edie al
Center. •
Two men arrested Wednesday were booked for
investigation of murder They were identified as
J ohn 0 . Jones, 19. and Austin R. Willis. 18. both of Los
Angeles , said Ackerman.
SAN FRANCISCO I AP> A federal JUdge has
agreed to allow Bank of America to withhold the
tra nsfer of$91 million in interest on lranuin bank ac-
counts frozen afH•r the 5:!
Am e n c ans wcrt"sc1zcd ..-------~---.
I F'ormer Prcs1d t'nt
Jimmy Carter had or.
1ered· a fund trans fer '-----------'before leavin~ office ti>
!-tTA1'E
secure the hostages' release, but the Hank of
America said the inter est ra tes set were "1n great ex
cess" orthose it had agreed to pay originally .
An affidavit filed in U.S. District Court here said
$2.4 billion was in Bank of America accounts from
Iran.
Aro·e••' II••• IJ11rglarfs•d
MALIBU (AP) A transient was in custody to·
day after actress-e ntertainer
Connie Stevens returned to her
Malibu home and found $15,000
worth of property m issing and a
stranger sitting in a chair. a Los
Angeles County s heriff 's
spok esman said.
As the man sat in Miss
Stevens· chai r , s h e called
authorities. who later arrested
St acey E. Storm, 21 , inside her
home. said sheriff's deputy Jim
Platis. snvt:Ns
Storm was booked for investigation or burglary.
Pl a tis s aid.
€olllertda ••• ,,., r•b•
By The Associated Press
Rain is expected over most or North em and Cen-
tral California today, except for the central valley
area south of Merced, where there is only a chance of
rain, the National Weather Service says.
The rain, heavy at times, is expected lo give way
to colder weather and scattered clouds on Friday.
Snow wu expected above the 8,000 foot level in
the Sierra today, with the snow level falling to about
8,000 feet in the northern Sierra Friday ..
nm em•le~ •na•••~
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A former Paramount
Pictures employee convicted ol swindline the film
studio out ol "95,000 has been sentenced to four
vean instate Drilon. Freman G. Packard Jr., 38, who was round
1\lilty ol arud theft after a non-jury trtal lut Sep-
a.mbtr, •• HDteaced Wednelday by Superior
ludc•Gonlcm Rineer.
•
Gftlde11 a1111it•ersary .,..1 .. ,... ..
.\elor Pat o· Brien celebrated his 50th year of marriage to his wife
Eloise at a I .os Angeles restaurant Wednesday night. Helping with
tht• festivit1e~ were their children, ·rrom left, Mavourneen, Terence
and Bng1d. o · Brien. very popular in the 1930s. has been in over 70
ltlm s und sta rred in the TV series. "Harrigan and Son."
Thurtde.y. January 22, 1111 H/f
I Panelist replaced!
South Coast homing diapute grow1(
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Leaden ol "In smaller projects where it waal
the state Senate have stepped into a clearly presented that there waa no
djapute over tow-cost housinc and economic feaaibility to lnelude low-
replaced a former developer on the income houain1 I voted a1alnlt tt,"
South Coast Regional Coastal Com· he said, addin& that the requirement
mission. is a "manner of 1toppln1 project.a."
The Senate Rules Committee on Johoson said . he belon11 to lbe
Wednesday named a physician, Dr. Sierra Club, but environmental
John Hisserich, director o( regional groups and "no 1rowth" advocates'
activities at the Los Angeles County-had lobbied Senate President Pro
Un iversity of Southern California Tem David Roberti. 0-Los Aftleles,
Comprehensive Ca n cer Cente r to r eolace him .
School of Medicine .
Hisserich replaces Fred Johnson,
who bas been opposing Chairwoman
Ruth Galanter and the represen-
tative to the state Coastal Com·
-mission, Mel Nutter, in a dispute
over low-cost housing in coastal de·
velopments.
JOHNSON, WHO remained in of.
rice after his term expired Jan. 1.
predicted that the Rules Committee's
action would thwart efforts by some
com missioners to r epl ace Ms .
Galanter an·d Nutter.
He had said Monday he had enough
votes to remove Mrs. Galanter and
Nutter, who support the state com-
mission's guideline requiring some
low-to moderate-cost housing, or
payment of an in-lieu fee, for de·
veloping fi ve units or more.
Johnson, who described himself as
a "voice uf reason and moderation,"
said he supports such a requirement
only for large projects.
SIERRA CLVB president John.
Zierotd sauJ he wrote Roberti sayin1
that his group had become "dia-
e n c h ante d " wi t h Johnson 's
performance.
Roberti. chairman of the Rules
Co mmitt ee, is o n e o ( the
Legislature's strongest supporters of
low.cost housing in coastal develop-
ments.
Zierold said he did not know His-
serich. but predicted he wo uld
··probably be a very objective 1Tiember
of the commission."
Hisserich said in a telephone in-
terview that he was "really con·
cerned about maintaining access by
all income levels to the coastline.
"I am not formally a member of
any environmental organization. I'm
concerned about a balance of en-
vironmenta l issues with appropriate
kinds of growth."
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/'av /,, tlw
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MARY 8. ANDERSON
~J4 MAIN STRFFT
YOUR TOWN, CA 00000
12 0
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Friday ............... 9:30 AM to 6:00 PM
Saturday ............ 9:00 A/fc to 1 :00 PM
COWM~--1~1 9@ SAVll\IGS :.1:} 80 Feahlon lslond • 760-8551 ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION (comer of Newport Center DfM and Santa Rosa) ' . Pllebrd wu an .. ted ·tn December 1979 on ,
tllar1•MbWsedParamountoutof"95,000byform-1
.... a~ company, called "Scripts Unlimit· :.._-----------------------------------------------------Id,'' fcll'~Jiqtelnilion scripts.
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Finances call for
new school layoffs
NnUr~ ol ~ Ible l1yolf or reu•i•nment are. beinc
ma1ttod thJ month to mort' than 70 Newport-Mesa School
01 t Ml·t manaet-rnt>nt ofllc·lalJI and .administrators.
8) Ma) 1. the nt·~· 1t 1l11nments and d11mlssatls result·
ma from ~<'huol do!iu r•"fl brouaht on by decUnmg student
cnroltrm·nt hould be known TM number nf admlrut11r1at1ve job~ ~x pe<-'100 to actually
be «'Ut ran1r5 trom (h l'lo IO
nd an udm1nu1tnat ur with u ll'l.ll'hlnf' baekground who
11' la Hluff could 11:ik for ianil rl'c:c 1veu tc•uchmg ~>OSl
If h1~ll -.rhuol prmnpatl 'lh11uld lo c his post for tn
tan('\'. he'd n\Qkl-t&l>oul St5,(l<MJ .. ~ t•ur ll'Sl'I mu lop ltH.i.l'h1ng
J'.'1-"ll(nmt>nt
\nd It "nullJ 11w un l>urnptnt: 4 \ uu""'''I' tt:adH.~r from his
J<lh
\t4ttte·r., l'Uuld bt•t'llllH' t'\ ••n mored affi cult Whl'n the dis
\rll•\ rn 1\ t~ 1u t·ul .1buut 'Uother tt-tH'IHn~ po::.ts when t woor
,,, ton thr,~· .,f·ho,l b .H t-d o:;.t'\1 lwlor l' lll'Jtt September
U(flCl<.ll., .,,H lhl'\ rtlU~l lnfU <J l lc•a ::.t $5 01tlliOO from lhC
\'Uri t•nt ~1 na1 llao11buc.J~t:t to 11 1-:t't lo" N in come next y ear
.-:\ t'll ')(1 thl'' n ul t' th<tt Jb<.1u1 !JO pt'r<·1mt of ne xt year's
budi:t-t "1ll bt dt·\ ut~d tri J.Jt>rwt1nd 1·u::.ls , 1nl'lud1ng tostly
f nngt-bt'nt:fn J'<.t' m t n tl)
Th~ pt·r".londl traun1a of JClh lo::.::. o r n :ass1gnmen t t'an on
l} b~ c c..ihz(..-ci tJ.\ thoi.-t• unfortw1alcs affe~t cd
Hu t ::.l:hool offa c·1a ls .rnd tht' µubhc !lllke should be re-
minded th..tt tht-ant1c11rn1\.'d sµen"ding of 90 percent of in ·
n >n1 t' fnr per::.unne l 1::. about 15 percent more than the level
t hdl on<·t'" a::. tht' !'.lgn<.1 If or a school d1stric:t in trouble
We'rc ohvaous l ~ lookin~ al a s t·hool district in trouble
ri ~h t hl·n· an ourown homl'lowrH·o mmunity
Ho01e ban justified
Tht! Urangt! County Hoard of Supervisors has taken tht>
c·orrt't·t aetton tn extending for e ight months an ordinance
that vinua ll) pr~dudes residential development in the San·
t C1 Ana lle1ghts area impacted by noise from J ohn Wayne
Airport
The board r·t'c·ently t.•xtendee an urgency measure th<Jl
requires that the c:ount~ Pla nning Commission review any
res idential development proposal for its compliance wath
thecountvGeneral Plan
The plan provides that residential umts may not be con -
structed in are as in which noise e xceeds the 65 Community
~mse Equivalent l.evcl (CNEL). Much of S anta Ana
I kights falls within that zone.
The problem 10 the heights has been that zoning has not
het'n eons isl C'nl wil h the General Plan. Thus. residential de-
\'elopment has been a llowedtooccur.
And it i:-. µrecL-,eJy the f act that reside ntial development
ha~ <:ontmued in Santee Ana Heights that h as led l o many of
the hl'adat'h(;'S s upt•r viso rs have fared over the airport is ·
SUl'.
Some lkig h ts res idt>nls s ay the d evelopme nt
morntonum should t)<' broadened, so that no development
including <·ommt•rc·ial a nd similar uses -would be al
lowed .
Such an t>xpansum of the ordinance wasn't necessary.
While residential d e velopme nt in Santa Ana Heights 1s
definitely not dPsirable, oth er uses can -and should -be
permitted.
Road study essential
:'lit•v. port HP<1('h City council m e mbers agreed this
wc<.•k lo kl·L·p Ion~· planned. much-delayed Uni versit~·
l>rivt: on lht• rnad map in the city's proposed Local
Coast ;ti Plc1 n
In so ttmng . t oun(·1lmc n knocked down recently e rect-
l'd rnattbl<w ks lhat 1:ould h ave doom ed t h e thoroughfare ,
s<'l•n as lht• road lo ltnk Costa Mes a and Irvine around
I 'pp<•r Ncwpvrt Bay
The decis ion din not m o\'C l'niversity Drive -whic h
nt>w com es lo a df!ad e nd on either side of the bay -any
clos er toward comple tion. Rut It m a y give a s ignal of
t hings to comt:
Whilt• dty offidals in Costa Mesa and Irvine s upport
t·omplN in g the ro<.id , Newport leaders have been re luc-
tant to e ven discuss the s ubject.
Most recently . s tale Coasta l Commission p lanners
tril'd to pcrs u<1dP Newport c:ounc ilmen to give up on
C niversity a nd simµly erase 1t from the coastal plan's
road m aµ.
Commission planners cited en vironmental concerns
wit h the proposed road and argued it would come too
dose to the e m ·ironmcnta lly sens itive Upper Bay .
But as s everal Newport councilmen pointed out this
week. it 's a little hard to know if the road would pose sueh
dan~~rs if t he matter is never studied . And environmen -
tal studies on Universit\' haven't bee n done .
Keeping Univer s it)· on the road map was a good
m ove but it must be followed up. It's time for Newport.
Irvine and Costa Mesa to sit down and start the process
of determinin~ whether University ever will be.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are tt:ose of the Dai ly Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are tht'se of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot, Po
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd I Wives
ByL. M. BOYD
Many is the cily wife who
accuses her husband of not
working hard enough. of not
earning enough money, of not
helping her enough in dealing
with the youngsters. But the
farm wife who so accuses her
t
~ar
Gloon1y
Gus
Why does lhia country
spend hundreds of
thousands of dollars to
bring in people from
Asia and Cuba, and at
the same lime spend
hundreds of thousands to
keep our nel1hbon out?
KIP c;'""''J Oft c.-. ... ,. .... 11\llH •Y 1=rt •IMI ee llfl --"'• -·-••w :.::.r.'ti..-&:.~ .......
husband is a rarity. Our Love
and War man bas attempted
to explain the why of this dif
ference between city and
farm wives. And failed .
Ha lf the former priests
who get mar ried marry
loTmer nuns.
Just about every other day
in this country, another ·
bridge collapses. Happened a
week or so ago near my
place. A little bridge clearly
o nly strong enough for
haytrucks caved in when the
driver of a semi tanker
loaded with salt water
evidenUy failed to note the
obvious. Too bad. Pretty lit·
lie brid1e. It was one of
a bout 375,000 bridges na·
Uonwide more than 45 years
old.
Nomlneea for membenbip
tn tbe "My Name II • Poem"
Club -Bethlehem, Pa.,
chapter -include Jane
McLane and Dora Bohrer
pronOUMed Borah.
Earl \Vaten
School. financing unresolved
AlthOUJCh It is not likely that
any sl1nlflcanl changes in
school flnancln1 wUI come out of
the 1981 Le1ialature, pressures
u 1:1 being broucht to bear by the
!lawyers who jolted the entire
school flnancin& system back In
1968 with the oow famous "Ser·
rano" c:as.e. .
They had brouteht s uit against
a host uf stale officials in behalf
uf J11hn
S l'rru no. u
Uuldwan l'urk
JI U I' t' ll l W h O -
contcnde<l hi:-
""" was being ti l' n I l' d h i S
t·u11:.t1t uts<ma I
r q~ht ~ tv
t·q ual
t r l·atmcnl
h l' <· ,J u :.l' h e
li ved In a s<:hool district whi<:h
"u!> ~oo µoor tu prov1dl:' lht>
qua l1t ~ l'duc·at1on reC'('1ved by
:-.tudents in "n l'h " dislnt·ls
i\f\t'r l:'lght yc•ars of liti..:ation
•
the courts finally agreed
declaring the state's syste m ro;
financing schools. based upon
the assessed valuations of
property within the districts.
was violative of the constilution
in that il did not provide equal
a mounts to be sp ent in the
education of every child.
THE RULING ord e r ed a
r e visio n whi c h a 11 ow .. d
differences of no more than $100
per pupil and gave lhe slate
until lhis year to achieve the goal.
Wi th the pa ss ag e o f
Proposallun lS. li miting property
taxes. s c·hool financing was
necessarily shifted from the
local tax revenues to the st ate
The result hJs bC'e n that the
s t alt' has no" assumed 80
percent nf the costs for the (O('al
sch1111t npcrations
Hut the S rranv lawyers
contend lhat the Legis lature has
done little to e liminate the
unconstitutional inequities
which gave occasion to the case.
ln some instances. they claim.
the situation is worse now than it
was then . pointing to their
favorite. target. of Beverly Hills
which is currently said to be
spending $2,700 per pupil while
Ba ldwin Park h1:1s only $1.400
per pupil. The lawyers say that
this proves the present scheme
of financing will not bring the
system into full compliance in
the reasonably near future or
ever. They threaten to reopen
the Serrano case if action is not
taken by the Legislature lhil'I
year.
LEGlSLATORS, Gov J erry
Brown. and s tate S<:hool Supt.
Wil s on Ri le s di s ag r e e.
contending lhe state is now in
s ubstantial C'ompliance Riles
SiJ.VS anything more at this Lime
would lower the C'aliber or the
---c...,; -. -.:i:;
'DJl.l'T RtJ)M ME -fl~T. I Hf..VE 10 f1t-1D ~ HtAD END. '
Mailbox
entire school system working
unnecessur y h a rds hips on
hundreds of thousands of school
children.
He pointed out that many of
the districts viewed as wealthy,
such us San f'rancisco, have all
of th~ problems that go with
poverty, minorities. non-English
s p e akinJ( and c ulturally
depr ived children.
The whole is s ue might be
easily put to rest hy the slat<'
taking the final slep, which
t>ventually 1t wi ll sure ly be
co mµellcd to do. and assume
total rcsponsib1llty for school
fm andng It would require only
slightly more than a 20 p<'rccnt
inc·rca:.c m tht• prs t!nl funding
B UT THAT solutsun 1s bitterly
r cs 1 i>t cd b y s choo l
administrators and teachers up
and down the state For they
know 11 would incst apably bring
about uniform s a l aries
s I a t c w 1 d <· f 11 r b o t h t h e
ad m inistraturs and learh<'rS as
we ll as all other rmployccs
Whill' that prohably would be
the most ht•althy thing to cvN
happtm in the puhliC' st•hools. 1t
lt•avC's th<.• false eonc·ept of the
Serrano r asc unr h<A ll enged That
is the' idea that the spending of
t'q ual amounts on 1•a('h pupil will
1n s un• t·q uality nf c•duc·alirm or 1s
l'\'(•n <lt•s11·ahlt•.
l 'ndcr prt•sl•nt financing extra
<11lo" anl'c' :.in• madl• to provult• r or l ht' ha n ti 1 cup" c d . 1h1·
u n d <' r p r 1 v 1 I e ·g l' d . t h \'
non F.nglb h spcakm1f and ev1·n
lht• J,?1ftl'd 1-:at·h have spcernl
n c c d :. 11 ,. l' r a n d :i h o ' c t h l'
n •gulur school pro~ram Evt•n
'ur h things a:. the extra busing.
whl'ther c·ourt mandall'd or 11r
gcu~raph1t· 11c<:Css1ty. im·rease
lht• 1H·r pupil 1·0:.1:. in 1·ertain
cl1:.lnt•t:,
Ont• hundr1'd pcrc·C'nt <;t;11\'
f1n;.int 111g (·11ul<I \ astl.\ 1mpr11vc
lh\• JH'l':-.ent :-.y:.lt·m 1f lhl• l'OUrts
\\ 1 I I h at· k a w .1 ' fr'' rn l ht· m andut1• of ..,,,,:nd1ng t>qu<d
amrwnls on (•UC'h l'htld
Counfy needs efficient airport facility
To the Editor
l was most pleased to read in
the Dail) Pilot that Super visor
Ralph Clark is asking the Board
of Supervisors to consider the
appropriateness of increasing
the number of daily commercial
flights out of the John Wayne
airport. The purpose of thjs let-
ter is not to re·hash past pro/con
arguments . but to give the board
my wholehearted s upport for in-
cr easing the number of daily
C'Ommerl'ial nights . The airport
1.:xists
There is no valid alternative
site. The passenger count in·
creases year by yeu . This fact
in itself should s uffice as ample
rationale for accommodating to
the needs and demands for air
travel of this county's popula-
tion Or ange County and its
cities. its industries and its peo·
pie need and require a first class
com mercial air facility. This
damn thing has been studied to
death and if you stacked all the
imp~ct reports on top or eacr
other you probably wouldn't be
able to see above il or around it.
FINi\Ll.V, I am a resictent of
the <'ity of · Newport Beach. l
lived for four years in the Bluffs.
fi rsl leasing and lhen owning a
residence directly under the
flight path. When the planes
went over at was noisy and un-
comfortable but my family and I
accommodated to it because we
moved in there with the full
knowlc.'(fge that we were in the
jct flight path. If a survey would
be made todav. I'm willinl? to
bet that substantially all the res·
idents underneath that flight
path in the Bluffs and Dover
Shor es have moved in there
post-jet.
It 's amusing to read about the
complaints when I recall that we
sold our home on Vista Entrada
for a substantial profit lo
another resident on the same
street and the jets kept flying all
those years. Another cinch bet
would be on the substantial in-
crease in housing resale values
under the Newport Beach· flight
path.
Let's build a proper terminal
and sufficient parking structure
now!
KARL 0 . BERG HEER
AllNt1fed
To the Editor:
I'm personally affronted by
the number of Cout Community
C0Ue1e schedules that have ap-
peared lately. One from Oran1e
Coaat CoUeae, one trom Golden
well, and now tbll nemna'•
mall brinll me the Cout Com·
munlty Coll••• combined
aebedule for 'IJ, all at U. S.
poet••• paid, DOft·proftt and '°
forth, .a I Jmt wonder.
Thla ti deOvend to my poat of.
flee boa, to my r91ldeaee met to
m y business. I think it 's a terri·
ble waste of the taxpayers'
money I think your paper ought
to take a look at this and find out
how to save a few bucks in the
er a of Proposition 13
RILL BENTS
Prf nclpal'• rlrv
To the Editor :
The full page ad announcmg
lhal our s<·hool board will soon
be making "the mos t important
decision that will ever be made
in the education of your child"
has had a deeply saddening cf
feet on me. I am saddened, not
because or any possible school
c los ures or changes m grade
level organization. but because
so many people seem lo have
chosen to devote their time and
energy to such an inconsequcn·
tial part or their children's
education. The building in which
C'hildren receive their education
is probably the least important
part of that education. and yet
we have this tremendous con·
cern shown in the ad.
Where. I wonder . were the full
page ads when the primary
reading program was dropped
for lack of funds to support it?
Where. I wonder. were the full
page ads when nearly 100
teachers wer e laid off last year
because of lack of funds lo re·
hire them? Where. I wonder. are
the full page ads denouncin~ the
governor's latest budget pro-
posal which would cut our funds
even more? Where. I wonder .
a re the ru11 page ads be moaning
the fact that California -ranks in
the bottom third of the entire na-
tion in percent of per capita In·
come spent on education?
J a m further saddened to think
that the people taking out the ad
consider the neighborhood
school to be the "backbone of
our public educational system."
The backbone of our schools Is
good teachers and good books.
Whether these good teachers
work their magic across the
street or several miles away is
of no consequence. Whether
children arrive at thes e
teachers ' rooms on fool, on
bicycles, on a bus, or in a
Mercedes ia of no consequence.
The only thing that matters is
what happens between lbe atu·
dents and the teacher. Where It
happens la Irrelevant.
EQVAILV IR&ELEVANT ia
the "•rade level confiauration."
Under the 7.·12 plan the hilh
school would be divided into
what, for all practical purposea,
would be two separate 1cbooll.
Our eebool board la well aware
of tb• problem• faced by
eblldren ln tbe tranalUoa from
cblldbood to and tbrou1h
adoltetence. To emure U.at the traultioa would be u 1mooth u
po11lble, HYHtb and •l•btb
grade students would continue to
have t hei r own t eache r s.
counselors, and administrator!>
Every assistance now offered to
these students woul d continue to
be offered. This plan is nol, after
a ll. a wild innovation It 1s a
tried and proven plan which has
been and is being used in many
places throughout the nation and
our own state.
Our school board is en~aged in
the difficult task or trying lo use
your tax money as efficiently as
1>oss1ble
WILLIAM A. KAPPELE
PrinC'ipal. Corona del Mar
Elementary School
T~•a••arrr
To the Editor:
l 'd like to know who is rcspons1
ble for the outri~hl destruction of
trees on the west side of town.
Costa Mesa now has a look which
resembles the set for the movie
"Chain Saw Massacre:·
Whoever is responsible for
this butchering of n ature must
have been listening to Ronald
Reagan 's "trees caus e pollu-
tion ... They should be told the
s tatement is erroneous.
Maybe they'd be satisfied if
1 hey leveled every tr ee in the city.
TERENCE COAKLEY
8ark Baff ta•
To the Editor:
This letter is a ·plea to re-
cons ider the plan to extend
University Drive through the
Back Bay Ecological Preserve
to Jamboree Road. To run a ma·
jor thoroughfare through an
ecological preserve would show
total disregard of the purpose of
the "preserve" in the first place.
Not only is the Back Bay en·
viro11ment unique to our over·
developed area, it is unique to
California in that its kind in
itself is a vanishing "species."
AS AN equestrian and lover of
natural space, I have relished
the serenity of riding my horse
along the trails in the Back Bay
along with others who seek
escape from traffic. noise pollu-
tion, and the hectic pace of daily
living. Extending University
Drive would put an end to this as
cars and concrete would replace
equestrian trails and scenic
beauty.
''Univenity Drive extenalon,"
as you say, ''is already on the
. Quotes
"Polmd la llviq t.brOQlb a
very important nent, radio
traumlMiolr of tbe bolJ Mui
and God'• word." -Wanaw
...... .., ••lll1'awllll lll ID-
au1urat1a1 wHlllJ rell1loua
broadcaall la commaat1t
Poland .
map:. Of hoth t:1l1C•!-.. therefore. 1t
must go through to make the
maps n·ad lru1' · The · S Fish
and Garn<> OC'parlml'nt and I
s a~'. "Take 11 (If( the maps '" Let
the Rat•k Ha\ Preserve be what
1t was mtcnd.ed to be Surely you
must know lhat t his a rea ha11-
pens to he the last segment of
naturalnt•ss of su<·h degree left
1n Costa Mt•sa and Newport
Hcach ll was intended to re
main so whc-n 11 was rightly set
asid e as a preser ve of ma1or irn -
µortan n ' to humans s eeking
respite as well as birds and
animals lh:J t rcfu~e there
JOYCE C. ZOfHiEH
Airport rltolrr
To the Editor.
There have heen m a ny things
proposed for the John Wayne
Airport recently and many more
s uggestions will be made at the
public hearing before the Airport
Commission. However , none of
the questions have ever been
asked to a ny or the younger
generation. I am 17 years old and
as far as I know I will be li ving in
Newport Beach for the rest or my
life I wi ll be here for a lot longer
than lhe people who ar e making
the d ecisions.
MY POINT is. I understand that
the master plan calls for an in·
crease m the number of permitted
daily departures to 55 from a cur-
rent level of 41. Why do they need
to make a major airport out or it
when they have LAX so near? The
main problem is the fact that it
will simply destroy Newport
Beach! Real estate will drop. land
will lose value. the air become
worse than it already is etc. Just
look what LAX has done for Los
Angeles. It isn 't exactly prime
position around the airport wilhin
10 miles. Do we want a $75 million
airport t erminal or do we want to
preserve one area of nice beach.
clean water and fairly fresh air?
Also, if they want to grow now,
what says they aren't going to
want to grow more tater when
most of the older people are gone
and we are still here? J think that
It lsbadenou1hthewaylt lsnow, 1
can't ever look up Into the sky and
not spot an airplane.
I think people should consider
these f1cts and do aomelbing
about them. Newport Beach la a
clean, beautiful and fun city to be
in. Don'tdestroylt!
SCOTT WENKE
. • -• -... -....... T -J... ---_... - ---- --.. -... • ,. -• ~ -_.. -• ... • -• ..... ~ ... -...... -· "t..~ _ __.,...., __ • .. .....,. ~..., ...........
I •
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CALIFORNIA
Area tensed
/ordroughl
SACRAMt:N1'0 1 Al'I tu1r•· around at i.k1
1•0,.1 and aow rH"'rv1Jtr levcl11 arti wunmai
Northern CaUforn1i. reildenlJI the) m •y bt "' for
\IMlr t1«'0Dd drou1ht In flvr )'tillfli
Ski r~ and 1wrru· f1trn11·n. an.• lilrniuiy
tcMaatln& t.hf>Jr lot:r&f'¥
Rainfall 10 far l h1i. MllaMJI\ ·~ r11r l>.-t11m,I lht•
te&al f~ lhi date In IV7G, lht' f1r~t yc•r of 11 two
year drouaht thltl l'U.l tht' :.t i.t c hundredb ur
1aill1Clftj ol doll ari. 1n lvst l"tOp) h v1:'>llK'k, tree~.
fuh. W\ldhft-and tour111\ mcomt"
NO C'ITY aAN OlJT of w&1t!1 tn W77 but
t:meraenc> olt.'a)urc!'> wert-1mpob~: including IJll'
in& water •trO!\~ the: ftll'hmond ~w1 11.afael Brui_ge
to Mann Count) north of s.m Fra.rH.'lbCU
ttamfall 1h1 ... year hai. heen lt'!'>S than 20 per
l'ent oC .. sver .. ~e and relurrung to normal ··will
take more tha n " big ">torm at Hui. point."' Bill
Clark deput!> chief of flood Ol*r<SllOnb fur the state
Qepartm ent of Water Hei,ourc-e!., :.aid Wcdnesd&y
Much of the Nurthea!.t ,.,. &bu buffering from a
lack of rGJn!all Earlier th1i. month. the Delaware
River Ba s in Co mm1s!>1on dedared a drought
emer~enC\ in Dclawart', New Jers ev, New York
and Pennsylvania l'on!'>crvat1on efforti. have
begun an Connetllr ut Last week . lhe M 1ssi1>s1pµ1
River dropped to a record low level al Memphis,
Tenn
SO •'AR, THE I.ACK of snow or rain 1n
Northern Californiu has hit ski resorts hard and
caused ~ifficullies for grain and li vestock farmers
Some farmers havt: had lo start irrigation early
The Modesto Irrigat ion District started run
ning water through it'> canals on Jan. 11: the
earliest since 1905
Water Master Dou~ Woodman of the Kings
River Waler A~sociallon , which manages Pine
Flat Reservoir east of Fresno, said the area ha!>
had one inch of ram s int·e Oct l The normal <i<'
cumulation is eight inches.
IN MID-JANUARY, there were only two inche!.
of snow on Donner Summit near the main pas1>
through the Sierra Nevada, compared to a normal
50 inches.
The Heavenly Valley ski resort at Lake Tahoe
hasn't opened. Marketing director Brady Hodge
said the ground was bare at t he bottom of the
s lopes and there were onl~ six to 10 inches of snow on
the upper slopes not enough for "a qualit.v ski ex·
perience."
· ·Ttus is the latest we've ever gone into a
season in 25 years," he s aid.
Some grain crops have been stunted by the
lack of rainfall, but fields under irrigation are pro·
gressing well. according lo George Tucker Jr. of
the Crop Reporting Service.
3 jewelry stores
robbed; man dies
I:.OS ANGELES (AP 1 Within a few hours,
three jewelry stores here were hit b) robbers who
killed one m an .. critically wounded another. strug-
gled with a third and locked a salesman in a v~ult
who later convinced one s uspect into surrendering,
authorities said.
Oiran Odel, 39. died in his Wilshire Boulevard
store after being s hot in the face during an apr1aren1
robbery , said police Lt. Glen Ackerman. Odel's
partner, Kegam Toran. 3.1, received a gunshot
wound in the head . He was listed in critical condition
today in the intensive care unit of the UCLA Medi<•al
Center.
Two men arrested Wednesday wer e booked for
investigation of murder They were identified as
John O. J ones, 19. and Austin B. Willis, Ill, hoth of Los
Angeles. said Ackerman.
Banlc tdthllold• Iran l•nda
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A feder al Judge has
agreed to allow Bank of America to withhold the
transferof$91 million in interest on Iranian bank ac·
counts frozen after the 52
Americans were seized. ~~--------. I Former Pr esident
Ji mmy Carter had or
j e r ed a fund tran~fer '----------~ before leaving office to
secure the hostages' release. but the Bank of
Am erica said the interest rates set were ''in great ex·
cess' ·of those it had agreed to pay originally
An affidavit filed in U.S. District Court here said
$2.4 billion was in Rank of America accounts from
Iran.
Aet~•~ ho•r ll11rglarfzrd
MALIBU CAP ) -A transient was in custody to·
day after actress-entertainer
Connie Stevens returned to her
Malibu home and found $15,000
worth or property m issing a nd a
stranger sitting in a chair. a Los
Ang eles County s h e riff's
spokesman said.
As the man sat in Miss
Stevens' chai r , s he caJled
authorities, who later arrested
Stacey E . Storm. 21, inside her
home , said sheriff's d eputy Jim
Pia tis. nEYIEHs
Storm was booked for investigation of burglary.
Platissaid.
C.Ul•,..l••••P' r•I• 8 y Tlte A1110CI a&ecl Press
--Rain ia expected over most of Northern and een-
tral California today, except for the central valley
area south of Merced, where there is only a chance of
rain, the National Weather Service says.
The rain, heavy at Um ea, la expected to give way
to colder weather andacatteredcloudaon Friday.
, Snow waa expected above the 8,000 ~oot level in
the Sierra today, with the snow level falling to about :a,ooo feet In the nortbem Sierra Friday.
,,... .. ., .. .,ee ....... ~
LOS ANGELEs <AP) -A former Paramount 1 Ptetuna employee coevicted 9' swindliq the film
atudlo, out of ..-.ooo bas been 1entenced to four
vean In atate Dl'tlon. l'rmaa 0 . Packard Jr., •. who waa found
pllt1 ol .,..S tbeft after a non-Jury trial last Sep---dar':. Matmced Wednelday by Superior .hldleo.dal .......
1 ~ •• arrwted In Deeember 1m oa
(9ftlde11 t11111iuersory
Ador Pat 0 ' Hrien C'elebrated his 50th year of marriage to his wife
Eloisl' at a IAJs Angeles restaurant Wednesday night. Helping with
the frstivitiC!:> were their children, from left , Mavourneen. Terence
a nd Brigid. O 'Brien. very popular in the 1930s. has been in over 70
films and starred in lhe TV series, ··Harrigan and Son."
Thur9dey, Januwy 22, 1981 H/F
1-•
DAILY PILOT 0
P~nelist replaced!
South Coaat hawing dispute g~o~
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Leaders or "In smaller projects where it jj
the state Senate have stepped into a clearly presented that there wu
dispute over low-cost housin1 and economic feasibility to include l '
replaced a former developer on the income housing I voted •1ainst it.':
South Coast Regional Coastal Com · he said, adding that the requirement
mission. is a "manner o(stoppinl project.I." I
The Senate Rules Comr:n~ttee on J ohnson said he belon11 to the
Wednesday named a physician, Dr. Sierra Club but environmental
John Hisserich, director or regional groups and .:no growth" advocatei
activities at the Los Angeles County· had lobbied Senate President Pro
University of Southern California Tern David Roberti, D-Los An1eles,
Comprehensive Cancer Cente r toreolace him.
School of Medicine .
Hisserich replaces Fred Johnson,
who has been opposing Chlilrwoman
Ruth Galanter and the represen·
l alive to the sl ate Coastal Com·
mission, Mel Nutter, in a dispute
over low-cost housing in coastal de·
v~lopments.
JOHNSON, WHO re m ained in of-
fice after his term expired Jan. 1.
predicted that the Rules Committee's
action would thwart efforts by som e
com missioners to replace Ms .
Galanter and Nutter.
Jle had said Monday he had enough
votes to remove Mrs . Galanter and
Nutter. who support the state com -
mission's guideline requiring some
low 10 moderate.cost housing, or
payment of an in-lieu fee, for de·
vcloping five units or more .
Johnson, who described himself as
a ·'voice of reason a nd moderation,"
s aid he supports suc h a requirement
only for large projects.
SIERRA CLUB president John
Zierold said he wrote Roberti sayin•
that his group had become "dis,
enc h ant ed" with Johnson'•
performance.
Roberti, chairman of the Rules
Co mm ittee, is o ne o f the
Legislature's s trongest supporters of
low-cost housing in coas tal develo~
ments.
Zierold sajd he d id not know His-
se rich . but predicted he would
"probably be a very o bjective member
of the commission.''
llisserich said in a telephone in·
ter view that he was "r eally con.
cerned about maintaining access by
all rncome le vels to the coastline.
"I am not formally a member or
any environmental organization. I'm
concerned about a balance of en;
vironmental issues with appropriate
kinds of growth "
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We're very proud of our new building. Its architectural design is unique
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lobby. c ommuntty room and sale deposit vault area. It will be an elegant
experi ence And we'll have delicious retreshments and gifts for you.
Com<' 10 Columbia today!
THOMAS B. ANDERSON
MARY B. ANDERSON
1234 MAIN STREET
YOUR TOWN, CA 00000
1 20
rav le> tli1•
M drt of ------------------------$ _____ _
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COLUMBIA BAVINCIS
AND LOAN A•l90CIATIDl\f
h11 --------------1: 3 c c 0 7 0 • 7 t. •: 0 • c 0 • 2 3 t. 5 b ? a q 0 n• • 0
FREE CHARTER 5 V4 % CHECKING Be one of the
first to open a checking or savings account during our Grandest Opening.
Depending on the plan you choose. you may receive all your Columbia
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is all about.
AT COLOMBIA. YO<JR MONEY GROWS WITH FRIENDSHIP,
HELP AND CARE
f ull·range of free se rvices.
BORROW <JP TO
$ J MILLION If you plan to
buy. sell or refinance a single family
home. Columbia can now loan up to
SI million on first trust deeds. This
is a special program designed for the
needs of the Harbor Area community.
HOO RS:
Mon. thru Thurs •••• 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM
Friday ............... 9:30 AM to 6:00 PM
Saturday ............ 9:00 AM to 1 :00 PM
GOWMBIA
SAVINGS(\:)
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 80 F11Non ltllnd • 7fi0.855l
(comer ~ Mewpoft Center DrM and Santa Rou)
Il l
ell.,...M11111ledPar .. ouatou&of .... OOOb7form-1 11111 a ..... eompaa,, e.u.d .. Seftpg Unllmit·' .. -------""!"-" ____ ...._ ___ _...._.._ _____ ...,. ______ ~----------~---------~--~__, -r.··tar~telttWon~rtptl.
f
..... ~ .. , .. Tl'IOmaaP.Haley /Publlsher ThOmet K. .. v111Edttor
Orange CO.st D••I• P,10 1 Edit....--r'Hfl. .. e ........... T.h.ur·ad·•·Y·· .,._,,_uar·y-22···'·"-'-------·e.·r·tM-r•.K. •• r•.lb·l·ct\·/·E·d·lt·or·l···.p ..... _.E·d···.or·"!"·
Study essential
on road decision
Newport. Bu h Cat roum-ll members aareed this
v.eek to kt"t"'P lontl plarmed, mul·h delatyed Umv~rsaty
Orave on th<' road map in thtt r aty' proposed Local
01 t~d Phm . · In so doani. count'llme-n knorked down recent!)' erect·
t"CI ro.ciblOfk Haut rould huve doomt'd the thorouachtare.
t't'n as tht> road w hnk ( ·c~t• Me~w iand lrvln~ around
\ 'pJM>r Nf'wport Ru) Th~ dt"easaon dill 11ul mov~ nl\ t•rl!ll~ Oqvtt which
nnv. romt's to " d\lud t'ntl on e11 ht.'r bldl' of t bt> ba~ any
l er tawiir-d ('Omplt>\lon Hut 1t m.n ~Ive a 1gna l of
thtn~ to conw
Whtie c1h 0Hte 11tl In l'v~H' M t!'IU und lrvrnc u1>vort l'Ompl{11n~ tht' ro1td , 'll!WJ>Orl lt!adt!rll havt> been relul'
l.tnt to eHn <.hM.'Ub!it t ht· subJl'l'l
M{l:'ot rt·l·ent I) .,l ,.ll' C<1h!'tlal Comm1sMon plunnl!rS
trat'd to µt.>r..uadl' 1'1.!\\ l>fU1 t·ounc·1lml'n to g1 VI! up ~n l'n1\·t~1t ,rnd ... 1mJJh t>rastt 1t frnm the coa st a l plans
road maµ
Comnw.:o.wn pt,rnner <"lled ~n ir~nml'nlal conterns
"1th thl' µroµo:;.ed road and argued 1t would come too
l'los~ to tht" t-nv1ronme ntaJly sensitive Uppe r Bay .
Hut 11s ·e,•eral .Sewport t•ounl"ilmen pointed <?ut this
"eek it's "' htth:• hard to kno-w 1f the road would pose sµch
dangen. 1f the mdtter 1s never studied And e nvironmen-
' al tud1~~ un l 'niver s 1ty haven't been done
Kt>epmg t;niver:'lt~ on the road map wall a good
move but 1t must bl' followed up. It's time for Newport,
I n ·inc and Costa Ml':.,u to sit down a nd start the process
uf dett>rmmmg wht'lher L'nivcrs1ty ever will be.
Hollle ban justified
T he Orange County Board of Supervisors h as take n the
(·orreC'l <tction m extending for eight months an ordinance
that virtually precludes residentia l development in the San·
ta Ana Heig hts <i rea impacted by noise from J ohn Wayne
Airport.
T he board recently e xtended an urgency measure th at
requires that the county Planning Commiss ion r eview any
residential deve lopment proposal for its com pliance with
thecountyGeneral Pla n.
The pla n p rovides that residential units may not be con-
s tructed in a r eas in which noise exceeds the 65 Community
Noise Equivalent Level 1CNEL>. Much of Santa Ana
I I e ights falls within that zone.
T he problem in the heights has been that zoning h as not
been consistent with the Gener al Plan. Thus. residential de -
\'elopmenl has been a llowed t o occur
And it is precisely the fact that residential development
has continued in Santa Ana Heights that has led to many of
the headaches s upervisors have faced over the air port is·
sue.
Some Height s residents say the deve lopment
moratorium s ho uld be broadened, so that no development
including commercial and similar uses -would be a l·
lowed .
Such a n expansion of the ordinance wasn 't necessary.
While residential d evelopment in San ta Ana Heights 1s
definitely not desirable. other uses can -and should -be
permitted.
School layoffs
Notites of possible layoff or reassignment are being
mailt..'<i this month to m ore than 70 Newport-Mesa School
I >1 striet management officials and administrator s .
By May I , the new assignments and dismiss als result·
in~ from sch ool closures brought on by dec lining student
l'nrollment should be known.
The numhe r of admmistralivejobs expected to actually
tw cut ranges from five to 10.
And a ny administr ator with a teaching backgr ound who
1s I aid off <:ould ask for a nd receive a teaching post. rr a high school p r incipal should lose his post for in-
stance. he'd m ake about $15,000 a year less in a top teaching
as signment.
And it would m ean bumping a younger teacher from his
1ob.
!\'tatters could become even more difficult when th e dis-
1 n et moves to cut about 40other teaching posts when two or
c·ven three schools are closed before next September.
Officials say they must trim at least $5 million from the
l'urrent $SI.million budget to m eet lower income ne xt year.
Even so, t h ey note that about 90 per cent of n ext year ·s
bud£et will be devoted to personnel cost s. including costly
frin ge benefit paym ents.
The personal traum a of job loss or reassignment can on-
ly be realized by those unfortunates affected .
But school officials and the public a like s hould be re·
minded tha t the anticipated spending of 90 percent of in-
com e for personnel is about 15 percent more than the level
that once was the signal for a school district in trouble .
We're obvious ly looking at a school district in trouble
right her.ftin our own hometown community .
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Ptlot
Other vtews expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s invited Address The Daily Piiot. P 0
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321
Boyd I Wives
By L. M. BOYD
Many is the dty wife who
accuses her husband of not
working hard enough, of not
earning enough money, or not
helping her enough in dealing
with the youngsters. But the
farm wtle who so accuus her
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Why does this country
s p end hundreds or
thousands of dollan to
brine in people from
Alla and Cuba, and at
the same lime spend
hundreds ofthouaands to
keepow-nelghbon out?
' KIP ....,.., ... c-ttanw• ....... , ., ... ,. ....... .. .._...,,...~-· .. .. ............... -,.. ... . ..... -.o.11, .
hus band is a rarity. Our Love
a nd War man has attempted
to explain the why of this dif.
ference between city and
f•rm wives. And railed.
1 Half the former priests
who get married marry
fprmer nuns.
Just about every other day
in this country. anothe r
bridge collapses. Happened a
,week or so ago near my
;place. A little bridge clearly
'only s trong enou1h for
haytrucka caved in when the
driver of a semi tanker
loaded with salt water
evidently failed to note the I obvious. Too bad. Pretty lit-
' tie brld1e. It was one or
about 375,000 brldees na·
tionwide more than 45 yean
old.
Nominees for membenblp
ln the "lly Name 11 a. Poem"
Club -8etblebem1 Pa.,
cbapter -lnelude Jane
McLane and Dora Bohrer
pronounced Borah.
Earl Water-
School financing unresolved
Althouah It Is not likely that
an y ·1gnificant c han1es 1n
s{'hool nnancin• will com e out of
the l981 Legislature. pressures
are bein& brouaht to bear by the
lawyers who JOited the entire
school financing syste m back In
t968 with the now famous "Ser·
rano" c:ase.
Thl:'Y had brought s uit against
a hoM of state of(i elals in behalf
or ,J o hn
Se 1·r11no , :.i
Baldw111 Park
µar·cnl who
<·ontendcd his
son "as being
den1t•d hi s
t:o nsl1lul1onal
righh tu
e q u a I
tr l' a t m en l
b e c· a u !> c h t·
Ii ved in a school district which
was too poqr tu provide the
quality education received by
students tn "rich" districts
A flcr eight yt'ars of litigation
t h e courts fina lly agreed.
declaring the state's system for
financing schools, based upon
the assessed valuations or
property within the districts.
was violative of the constitution
in that it did not provide equ_aJ
amounts to be spent in the
edut•ation of every child.
THE R U LING order e d a
r e visio n whic h allowed
di fferences or no more than $100
per pupil and gave the stale
until this year to achieve the
~oa I.
W ·I t h l h e p a s s a g e o r
P roposition 13. limiting prflperty
taltes, school financing was
necessa rily shifted fro m the
local tax revenues to the state
The result .has bee n that the
~tale has now ass umed 80
percent of the costs for the local
·school operations.
nut t he Serrano lawyers
contend that the Legislature has
done little to eliminate the
unconstitutional i neq uities
which gave occasion to the case.
In some instances. they claim,
the situation is worse now than it
was then. poinUng to their
favorite target of Beverly Hills
which is currently said to be
spending $2,700 per pupil while
Baldwin Park bas only Sl.400
per pupil. The lawyers say that
this proves the present scheme
of financing will not bring the
system into full com,pliance in
the reasonably near future or
ever. They threaten to reopt'n
the Serrano case if act ion is not
taken by the Legislature this
year.
LEGISLATORS, Gov. Jerry
Brown. and state School Supt
W i l son R i l es di sag r ee ,
contending the state is now in
substantial compliance Riles
says anything more at this ti m1:
would lower the caliber of lhe
-~
'~'f ~~ME -fl~, I HAVE 10 f1NDWE HtAD END.'
Mailbox
entire school system workina
unnecessary h ardships on
hundreds Of thousands Of school
children.
He pointed out that many of
the districts viewed as wealthy.
s uch as San Francisco, have all
of the problems that go with
poverty, minorities. non-English
s p e a k i n g. a n d c u I t u r a II y
deprived children.
The whole issue might be
easily put lo rest by the stalt.>
laking the fi nal step, which
eventually it will s urely be
compelled to do, and assume
total responsibility for school
financin~. It would require only
sli ghll>' more than a 20 percent
increase in the prsent funding.
BUT THAT solution is bitterly
resi s ted hy s chool
udministrators and teachers up
and down the slate. For they
know it would inesc·apably bring
about u niform sa l aries
s tatewide ror both the
adm inislrators and teachers as
well as all other t'mpluyees.
While that probably would he
the most healthy thing to ever
happen in the pubhc schools, it
leaves the false concept of the
Serrano case unchallenged. Thal
1s the id ea that thl' s pending of
t'4 ua I a mounts on each pupil wi II
insure equalit) 1>f education or 1s
even desirabll'
l"nder present £inancing extra
allo~ ancc~ an· made lo provide
fo r t h t• h a n cl i c a p p e d . l h e
un d erpr1vilegl·d , th C'
non· English speak in~ and even
the girtt'd. Each have special
n e c d ~ 11 v c r <.1 n d a bu v l' t h c
regular school pro~ram Ev(•n
suC'h th1n~s as tht· extra busing,
whether ('(1urt m;mdated or uf
gt.'ngr;iphH' nN·t•ssn~ '. increa:.e
the per p11J1ll l'OSI ~ 1n n·rtain
di stri ct~
On(• hundrl'd pt'rcl·nt state
t1na1H·ini.: ('ould ,·aslly 1mprovr
th.-pn·s<.·nt sySll'rn 1r the l'ourt~ \\Ill lia<·k a\\a\ from lht•
mandatt• or spend ing equal
amounts on t•at·h d11lil
County needs efficient airport facility
To the Editor:
J was most pleased lo read in
the Daily Pilot that Supervisor
Ralph Clark is asking the Board
of Supervisors to consider the
appropriateness of inc reasing
the number of daily commercial
fli ghts out or the John Wayne
airport. The purpose or this let·
ter is not to re-hash past pro/con
arguments. but to give t he board
my wholehearted s upport for in·
creasing the number of daily
commercial flights: The airport
exists
There is no valid alternative
s ite. The •passenger count in·
creases year by year. This fact
in itself should suffice as ample
rationale for accommodating to
the needs and demands for air
travel of this county's popula-
tion . Orange County and its
cities. its industries and its peo·
pie need and require a first class
commercial air facility. This
damn thing has been studied to
death and if you stacked all the
impact reports on lop of each
other you probably wouldn't be
able to see above it or around it. .
FINALLY, I am a resident of
the city of -Newport Beach. I
lived for four years in the Bluffs.
first leasing and then owning a
residence directly under the
rtight path. When the planes
went over il was noisy and un-
comfortable but my family and I
accommodated to it because we
moved in there with the full
knowledge that we were in the
jet flight path. If a survey would
be made todav. I'm willinll to bet that substantially all the re~·
ldents underneath that flight
path in the Bluffs and Dover
Shores have moved in there
post-jet.
It's amusing to read about the
com plaints when I recall th al we
sold our home on Vista Entrada
for a s ubstantial profit to
another resident on the same
street and the jets kept flying all
those years. Another cinch bet
would be on the substantial In·
cr e ase in housing resale values
under the Newport Beach night
path.
Let's build a proper terminal
and sufficient parking structure
now!
KARL 0 . BERG HEER
AtlNtaied
To the Editor:
I· m personally affronted by
the number of Cout Community
College schedules that have ap-
peared lately. One from Orante
Coast CoUqe, one from Ooaden
We1t, and now tbil eveniq's
mall brtnp me the Cout Com·
munlty Colle1e combined
1cbedule fGr '11, all at U. S.
polta .. paid, DOD·proftt aad IO
forth .a r J\llt wonder . Tbb 11 deftv.-.d to my POil ol-
flce boa, to m1 ,..._ct and to
my business. I think it 's a terri·
ble waste of the taxpayers·
money. I think your paper ought
lo lake a look at this and find out
how lo save a few bucks in the
era of Proposition 13.
BILL BENTS
Prf nripal'• .,frv
To the Editor :
The full page ad announcing
that our school board will soon
be making ''the most important
decision that will ever be made
in the education of your child"
has had a deeply saddening ef·
feet on me. I am saddened. not
because of any possible school
closures or changes in grade
level organization. but because
so many people seem to have
chosen to devote their time and
energy to such an inconsequen·
tial part of their ch ildren 's
education. The building in which
children receive their education
is probably the least important
part of that education. and yet
we have this tremendous con-
cern shown in the ad.
Where. I wonder, were the full
page ads when t he primary
reading program was dropped
for lack of funds to support it?
Where. I wonder. were the full
page ads whe n n early 100
teachers were laid off last year
because of lack of funds to re-
hire them? Where, l wonder, are
the full page ads denouncing the
governor's latest budget pro·
posat which would cul our funds
even more? Where. I wonder,
are the full page ads bemoaning
the fact that California ranks in
the bottom third of the entire na-
tion in percent of per capita in-
come spent on education?
) am further saddened to think
that the people taking out the ad
con sider the neighborhood
school to be the "backbone of
our public educational system."
The backbone of our schools is
good teachers and good books.
Whether these good teachers
work their magic ac~ss the
street or several miles away is
of no consequence. Whether
c hildren arrive at these
teachers' rooms on loot, on
bicycles, on a bus. or in a
Mercedes is of no consequence.
The only thine that matters is
what happens between the slu·
dents and the teacher. Where it
happens is irrelevant.
EQUALLY 1aaELEVANT is
the "grade level configuration."
Under the 7-12 plan the hi1h
school would be divided into
what, for all practical purpolel,
would ~ two separate acbooll.
Our aebOol board i1 well aware
of the problems faced by
children ln the truaitlon from
cblldbood to and tbro111b
-adolneeMe. To ensure that the
tranatticm would be u 1moa&b u
po11lble, Hveatb and •l1lltb
grade students would continue to
have the ir own teacher s.
counselors. and administrators.
Every assistance now offered to
these students would continue to
be offered. This plan is not. after
all. a wild innovation. It 1s a
tried and proven plan which has
been and is being used in many
places throughout the nation and
our own stale.
. Our school board is t ngaged in
the diffoicull task or trying to use
your tax money as efficiently as
possible.
WILLIAM A. KAPPELE
Principal. Corona del Mar
Elementa ry School
Grading laac•
To the Editor:
A number of people associated
with the last City Council m ajori·
ly in Newport Beach worked very
hard to improve the city's grading
ordinance. An effort was made to
limit the lime of grading so lhal
none would be in progress during
the rainy season. Since grading on
very large projects lakes many
months, it was deemed inap-
propriatetoso limit grading.
NOW THAT m ajor grading is
under way on the Aeronutronic
property just as r ains are about to
begin. it will be interesting to note
whether the city will adequately
enforce its grading ordinance.
Certainly, in this case. it is far
better to plan ahead for t he
avoidance of a potential disaster
than it is to clean up afterward. If
silt from Aeronutronic gets into
Newport Bay, the public becomes
the loser along with the bay itseU.
The expense of preventing
erosion should be borne by those
doing the construction. The public
should not have to bear the costs
of cleaning more upland silt out of
the bay.
RAYE. WILLIAMS
8arlc ••• ta•
To the Editor:
This letter is a J>lea to re-
consider the plan to extend
University Drive through the
Back Bay Ecological Preserve
to Jamboree Road. To run a ma·
jor thoroughfare through an
ecological preserve would show
total disregard of the purpose of
the "preserve" in the first place.
Not only is the Back Bay tin-
vironment unique to our over·
developed area, it is uniq_ue to
California In that Its kind in
itself is a vanlshlna "species."
AS AN equestrian and lover of
natural space. I have relilbed
the serenity of ridin1 my bone
alon1 the tralb in the Back Ba1
alone with others wbo 1Mk
eacape from tramc, nolH poUu·
tioa, and the bedlc paee ol dallJ
llvin1. Bxtendln1 UalHnlty
Drive would put an md to t.1111 • can IDd ~,... would Npl8Ce
equestrian t rails a nd sccni<'
beauty
"'t:nivers1t y Drive extension."
as ~ou say. "'is already on the
maps or both cities. therefore, It
must go through to make the
maps read true ·· The li S. Fish
and Garn(' Department and I
say. · "T<.1ke 1t off the maps '" Let
I he Bark Ra.\ Preserve be what
it was intendt'd t11 be Surely you
must know thut this area hap·
pens to ht> the las t segment of
naturalness of such degree left
in Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach It was intended to re-
main so when it was rightly set
aside as a preserve of major im·
portam·c lo humans seeking
rt'spilc as well as birds and
animals that refuge there.
J OYCE C ZORGEH
Airport rltol<''
To the Editor :
There have been many things
proposed for the .John Wayne
Airport recently and many more
suggestions will be made al the
public hearing before the Airport
Commission. However, none of
the questions have ever been
asked to any of the younger
generation. I am 17 years old and
as far as I know I will be living in
Newport Beach for the rest of my
life. I will be here for a lot longer
than the people who a re making
the decisions.
MY POINT is. I understand that
the master plan calls for an in-
crease in the number of permitted
daily departures to 55 from a cur-
rent level of 41. Wh y do they need·
to make a major airport out of it
when they have LAX so near? The
main problem is the fact that il
will s imply destroy Newport
Beach! Real estate will drop, land
will lose value, the air become
worse than it a lready is etc. Just
look what LAX has done for Los
Angeles. It isn 'l exactly prime
position around the airport within
10 miles. Do we want a $75 million
airport terminal or do we want to
preserve one area of nice beach,
clean waler and fairly fresh air?
Also, if they want to 1row now.
what says they aren't goin1 to
want to grow more later when
most of the older people are gone
and we are still here? I think that
it is bad enough the way it Is now, I
can't ever look up Into the sky and
not spot an airplane.
I think people should consider
tbeae facts and do somethlne ·
about them. Newpart Beach la a
clean. beautUul and tun city to be
ln. Don'td•lr'O)'lt!
SCOTT WENK&
• • nit...,,..._._ ......... ...., .... ~~-----. ............... -.-~ CA-.~.' f Mtw; ._ ...... _ .. _. ........... .._. ..... _ .. ____ _ ........................ tltlll'llI--a
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•. .
~.~Ullll > Bud11ess -DMLY,.LOT
President's consistency eyed Hostage
kin due
.~ .....
.\brun C'oopet·To~tu M t:~d
ha bet'n namt'<.t t •11nn1t'rt 1al
lo&n officer of I.lo) dl'l H<1nk
l' a I I r 0 r n I ii :. ~ l' w IJ (J r I
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li each
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Murra!f WeidenfJawn
•• wiAae·pnce freeze without any
wu nlntc and in opposition to his
own 11hllosophy But Carter did
It in u whole~u1 .. WMY
l.U!>l Yl'Ur . for expmple, he
"tUld ht• had bulanced the budget,
l>ut thr cf•
Wt'l'k l'I later
l ' ~ (' r ' I) fl I'
1·11uld );l'l' 11
w11s un
lru l u nr t•ll
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prom1'>ed Lu
1·u1 111rl alt0n.
hut he <·<111
d l>n t·tl tnfl u
11on<1r\
'Jll'11d1ng ti(· instituted wage-
111·11•1• i.:u1dl'111ws. but after a year
hl' re!laXl-<I Uw wage standard.
111• bt'gan " 1ww economic pro·
gram JUSI w\'eks hdore the elee-
11on::.
1\nd lhl' n:sult ~eems to have
lw1•11 ;1 los~ or t·rl'dtbility and
publ11· 1·onf1dcnt:c, rnoted in the
fl•1·ltn~ that ir the boss didn't
h1•lt1·v .. 1r1 hr~ programs after a
Economy chairman selected
WASHINGTON t A I' I Pres ident Hcagan.
completing his Learn or key .-con<1mn· advrl'te rs, has
chosen Washington University µl"oft!>sor Murru
L Weidenbaum to be <·ha1rman of the prcsr<lent'-;
Council of Ec·onomic Adviser.,, The Was hrnJ!t1111
Post has reported
lht• N1x1111 adm1n1strut1<in as assistant seuetary of
I lit• treasury for t•1•11nornit• 1•oli1·) from 100!* to 1971
Crops do better
A Reagan admin1s lrat111n offiC'1al <·onfirmt•d
the selection of Weidcnbaum, an expert in bus in1•., ..
der egulation. the newspaper ~aid
WASHIN<:TON I A I-' I Thl' 1980 corn and soy
Weidenbcium . 53. was one of HeagJn '.,
economic advisers during the prel'trdenltcil earn
paign and headed a transition team on regulator
issues.
ht•an 1·roµl'I, shn vcled hv hot, dry weather. s t ill
turnl·tl r)ul lo hl• slightly h1ghl'r than Agr iculture
llt•1i<1 rtrnt-nt l'Xperts had previously thought.
Weide nbaum . a n economist with the old
Bureau of ~e Budget from 1949 to 1957, serve.9._i_n
In 1t.. annual review of farm production last
~ l'a r. thr· dcµartrnl•nt µut the corn har vest at
fi ,li'17 .500 hushels afll·r c·st1matrng it last month at
6.4f.l.000 Th<' l'IO\bt·an crop was put at 1,817,000
bushels.
Succeed in Business
without the Expense
Answer Network has a solution to high o verhead ir1d1 kill:;,
profit. With Answer Network's shared-overhead conc:0p1 y11u
will have available every o ffice service you nct•cJ 1nclud1no
your own phone number and answering s1•rvic~ all at a
fraction of the cost ol permanent rac11 1 1ie~ and s lci fl
These Services Now Available
Answering service
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24 hour dictation
Letters and typing
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Scheduling
Reminder serv1r;1!
Conference room'>
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Call 953.1234
Chapman College
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
AND MANAGEMENT
(714) 997-6684 .. Professional Leaming of Distmctton Wtthm a
Caring and Value-Centered Co mmunity"
OP EN HOUSE
M onday, Febr uary 2. 198 1
4:00 p. m. -7:00 p. m . -Reeves llall
Counseling-Registration
B.S.B.A. ACCOUNTING
ECONOMICS
FINANCE ANO REAi. ESTATE
MANA<; EM ENT
MANAGEMENT !'C'rn:-O.l'I-:
MI\ It K F.Tl N(;
B.A.
M.B.A.
ECONOMICS
MASTEH OF' BUSINESS ADMIN>STRATlON
Day and evening classes for all stud~nts
The Center fOt Economtc R•M•rch preMnt1;
Leonard W~il
President, Manufacturer's Bank
THlaD ANNVAL ORANGE COVNTY BUSINESS FORECAST CONFl-:RF.NCE
IMI QtJAltTE a LY AC1'1VITY
Frtday, Febntary 13, 1911 -1:30
Qap•u Cellese · Waltmar Tllealr• -----------------------------------"DI AN, llCllOOL OF •V81NESS AND MANAGEMENT
~APMAN COLLEGE, 331 N. GLAfSELL, ORANGE, CA. t2tM
PLEAS! SENtnn: INFORMATION ON:
0 8.A. or B.S.8.\. 0 M.B.A. Q CENTER FOR ECONOMJC RESEA RCH
NAME .................................•...............................
ADDRESS . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . • • . • . CITY . • . . ....•••......
...• PHONE ............. .
COLLECTORS
CORNER
Rue Coin• & Stamp•
GOLD & SILVER
Prlcea for 1-22-81
Oold CION 1641 00
I(' U'l'"f't11ld\
M 1tph t ""'' \00 C <1r•1f\H\
\() Pt•\w1
YU \•IVt'' f1ftU~
Stt••t Ct 1'14 t~
lluy s ...
U l l SO U •• SO
071.00 U .. 00
U41.00 041 00
\70) 00 \ltl.00 .. ,., .......
''•~ litrytef'Hncfa No• I" c .. tot cwrent quot••
(714) 556-6850
South Coaal Plaze VIiiage .. ......., ...... s ...
CA er ... f,.......,.. C:O.lt ll'la••> •
THERE MAY BE
NO I N CUR AB LE
By Ter~ISEgA.SE~
Grant.
R. Ph.
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'AH LIDO f'HAIMACY
Frtt D.tl•HJ
)51 Ho.,ttoUolld
M~.,,_,. .. och
642-ISIO r-·-,-, ----·-·-·1
I e I ,..
I
Starting
a New
Business
Acccord l n g to
Celltornle llualne11 end
Proleulona Code (Sec.
17900 lo 17130) All
pert ons doing IKltlneu
under e flctltloua name
mull Illa e stete,.,.nt
wllll Ill• County Cl•r-
end he11e It publlahed
lo u r ll maa I n •
newape!"r Mnlng lhe
•••• In which Ille butlnHa le loceleel.
Th• 1tate 111e nt It
required by lew encl la
neceu ary In pn>tedlng
your butln•H name. Motl bankt reciul re
llfOOI of """' to open
COll'lll'IOtCllal -ntl.
Tflo DAILY ft lLOT
llfOWldo• llottl lltlftf and
pullllcatloft ---•· Wo hne •• ltlo ltOCffNry
fOlll'll Ind ll'IOllltaln 8 dally ••••lea 10 1110
O r ant• Count y Coutt"-. l lltlot ...,
lly one o l au r
cionwonlont offlCOI 01
,11011 0 I lla l lOAl Dl,A,.~MMa1 .
111. 111 lat 111oro ................. ~.
few weeks then they ('Outdn't be
trusted al all.
Reagan comes into office with
h is econom ic goals cle,r . He
hopes lo cut spending, cut the
size of the bureaucr fCY . cut tax-
es, cut red tape a nd wasteful
regulations, spu r investments.
raise productivity.
Because he has stat ed his
views so distinctly, \he burden
on him to follow through or else
lose respect is now pr obably
greater than it ever was on
Carter Ills performance or lack
of it b mcasurcible.
AND SO, even before he took
the oath of office T u esday
speculation arose over whether
he m ight postpone goals that
months earlier he had so strong-
1 y espoused Ever yon e has
heard them that the closer he
got to the big Job the m ore re-
cilis t i c he was becoming, that he
would back off from his tax-cut
proposaJs, that he move slowly
rather than aggressively
His term has JUSt begun, and
the re are indications the public
~ant!> to give him every break.
but m a few m onths the ub1q
uitous IJ()lls will begin µic king
uµ the mood antJ the asscs~ment
•>f Lhe American pcoµlc
What will they think if Presi
d e nt RC'agun ha l'l n 't r e al ly
pushed for a major tax cul'! Will
they accept an explanation that
states that the nN:essity of in
<:reasrng tJl'fenst-spending pre·
dudes any tax c•ul now?
Or that reven ue tJ ecl1n es
because cif a ret·ess11H1 will lead
tu au "uncxpN·ledly' high
budget deficit'' Or that "we're
taking another look " at Lhe idea
of reducing the Educution and
Energy de pcirtments .,
Will the Amer ican people
reel duped? Will they lose con-
fidence in Reagan because ~e
seemed to be losing confidence
in his goals? Will they decline to
com mit themselves to a future
they cannot visualize?
U nfair q uestions perhaps,
especially when the m an has
been in office but hours, But the
popular liler~ture and the busi-
ness literatu~e is loaded with
refe rences to the inconsistencies
of the previous administration
and hopes tha t the Reagan one
will be different.
Consistency and c redibility
seem to be overriding issues.
and with the Reagan platform so
c learly stated there is little to
hide behind.
free trips. • ~
WASHINGTON CAP) --11ae
Civil Aer onautics Board ha
granted American Airlines •ap·
prov al to provide free roundtrip
tra nsportation to an y h01l91t
,ramily m embe r be tween any
city on its system and the pa6Dt
wher e the forme r hosta1es arrive
in the UrutedStates .
The CAB acted quickly after
the airline m1tde the requesl . •Jt
said it would give the s•me
authority to an y other airline
that applies.
Economy decreased
0.1 perceJ!-{in '80
WASlllNGTON <API The nation's eeonom y declined 0.1 per•
c·C'nt last year as a strong fourth quarter failed to malte up for
losses suffered in the recession earlier in the year , the government
reported today.
Preliminary figures show that .the real gross national product
. the total value of goods a nd services, after adjustme nt for infla .
lion rose at cin annual rate of 5 percent in the last three months
of the Y<'ar as retovery atcelerated . the Commerce Department
said
The real <;NP had risen al an annual rate of 2.4 percent in the
third quarter after !'lunging al a rate of nearly IO percent in the
scN>nd Quarter It rose 3 2 percent in 1979.
The department's broad-based inflation yardstick -the GNP i~phtil price deflator rose 9 percent for the year including a
final quarter annual rate increase of 11.2 percent , the government
said The rate rose 8.5 percent last year
Inflation-adjusted final sales rose 3 7 pereent m the fourth
quarter, <:ompared to 4 l percent m the third quarter. the depart-
mentsaid
f),·•·r Tht· f :ounh·r
HASD L!stinqs
MUTlJAL FlJN DS
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OFF 5.80
CLOSEM0.44
Blglalg ro•petlf t1'e
Airline engines
pick a dogfight
By MILTON MOSKOWIT'l
You may be surprised to team that airlines not only
select the planes they will fly but the engines that will
power their aircraft .
As 1980 drew to a close, United Technoloaies, a com·
pany you probablt never heard or. tried to make that point
as indelibly as they could by buying large spaces in lead·
ing newspapers to trumpet the selection or their new jet
engine by two airlines .
The ads were, in ef .
feet, saying to General
Electric: "We sure beat
you to a pulp in this
round."
Here's the sequence
of events in this high·
level corporate doglight :
Money
Tree
-Last Nov. 12 Delta Air Lines placed the largest or·
der in commercial airline history for 60 Boeing 757s. The
total price tag for the 60 jets will be In the neighborhood of
S3 billion.
-On Dec. 18 Delta told Boeing that it wanted these
jets powered by the new engine that has been developed by
Pratt & Whitney, the PW2037.
-On Dec. 22 United Technologies, the parent or Pratt
& Whitney, took two full pages in newspapers across the
country lo rub GE's nose in this verdict. Delta, said the ad.
"has made a wise choice."
-ON THE VERY next day . Dec. 23, United
Technologies bought another two paee.s for an advertise·
ment announcing that American Airlines bad already
selected the Pratt & Whitney engine for its new airliner,
even though it hadn't decided yet which plane it was going
lo order . •
It was a sweet triumph ror Pratt & Whitney. restoring
it to its accustomed position as the dominant force in the
aircraft engine market.
How did Pratt & Whitney lock up the Uelta an<J
American orders? By promis ing breathtaking s avings in
fuel economy. Pratt & Whitney 1s guaranteeing that its
new jet engine will save airlines $1 million a year in fuel
costs per plane. For Delta. when it takes possession of its
60 planes. that adds up to S60 million a year.
PRA'M' & WHITNEY MUST he pretty confident that it
c an deliver on this.
Pratt & Whitney's comeback marks another spec·
lac ular advance by Harry Gray, a hard-driving salesman
who arrived in Hartford, Conn .. in 1971. coming from
California's Litton Industries lo take the helm or a com -
pany then called United Aircraft.
Unjted Aircraft was not in r obust shape then, Its an·
nual saJes were about S2 billion, 1t ranked 37th on the
Fortune 500 list, it did more than half its business with the
Pentagon and its biggest unit. Pratt & Whitney, was run·
ning into problems with engines supplied to both the com·
merciaJ and military markets
IN NINE YEARS Gray has literally trans formed this
company.
He changed the name to United Technologies.
United Technologies is also n ot without friends in high
places. At the end of 1979 Harry Gray hired as his No. 2
m an Gen. Alexander M. Haig Jr .. selected by Ronald
Reagan to serve as secretary of state .
111 April 1980. when Haig was serving as president of
United Technologies, the United States launched its ill·
fated mission to Iran lo rescue the American hostages. The
r aid was called off after three of the Sikorsky Sea Stallion
helicopters broke down.
Sikorsky is another unit of United Technologies. a
company whose parts are better known than the whole,
which is why Harry Gray keeps running ads to spread the
word about the conglomerate he has created
.'ti ark• In Tllr
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