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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-12-31 - Orange Coast PilotIUllGI l:Ull -. * • • • * • YOUR HIMITll.11 UllY PAPIR f ' l• • " THURSDAY. DECEMBER 11 1981 OR ANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS WET'S WONDERFUL -Cloudy skies didn't bother Ste ve Walden of Huntington Beach who found the water conditions ~ ............ "'•klleN lt.-.W ide al for wind-surfing off the beach in Wes t Newport dur ing a break in t he rain s howers Tuesd ay a fte rnoon . Parade participants watch sky Rose gala has county cast praying they will keep dry By JEallY HERTENSTEIN Ot-~"-IUfl Ten ele phants, a Newport Beach-based financial firm, 200 high school students from Saddle bac k Valley , Marine bandsmen stationed in El Toro and a Salvation Army band group in Santa Ana have more in common than living in Orange County. Their paths may never cross but all will be participants in the 93rd Tournament of Roses parade scheduled to unfold at 8:30 a.m. New Year's Day in Pasadena. And like several hundred Orange coast residents attending the parade a s s pectators, the county participants were hoping today they wouldD't get wet. Latest weather forecast for Pasadena calls for chance ol a few lipt showers toni1ht and tbrou1b midday Friday. Temperature at parade time ia expected to be ln the &Os. Should it rain bard toni1ht addint to rainfalls of Tuesday and Wednesday, it could mean headaches for thon plannln1 to. park at the Rose Bowl in Arroyo Seco. * * * Coast due • more ram llote rain is predicted for tbe Oran1e Cout ton1tht and early FrUlay, laatinr at least atil midday or early afternoon New Year'• Day, aecordlnt to UM Natioaal Weather Service ln Loa Alli••· A .. tber service 1poll .... aald •9 major ralnfall 11 ................. lalM'IDm.t ...., ... lboahl dampn molt ol ' ........,. calilGnla ~ tbe ......... .............. te ....... .. e Qll1r1 IO be la Ille .. to ....................... de1r••• o••r•li\t; Tbe 1pok .. maa 1ald motorl1t1 tra••ll•I Dortla ea• t•pect ..... ..... • .. put of .... ...... ) ' Rocky McAlister, Pas adena police spokesman, said 24,000 parking spaces around the bowl could be lost because of rain. What should you do if planning to drive to the parade or game and parking is out around the bowl? Police say drivers going to the game only can park cars at the poli ce station, 142 N. Arroyo Parkway and for 85 cents round trip take a Southern California Rapid Transit District bus to the bowl. Other downtown Pasadena parking spots for those going to the game and with roundtrip RTD buses available can be found at Walnut Street and Pars ons Avenue, Fair Oaks Avenue and Holly Street, each jus t off the 210 Freeway. If you are driving to the parade from the Oran1e Coast and aren't headed for a friend's driveway or reserved parking, be prepared for a long walk. Most space for recreational vehicles had already been taken by today but McAJiater said a few spots mi1ht be available al ~rookside Park adjacent to the bowl. The park 11 just off Holly Street from the Ventura Freeway.. Route 134. Fee for parkint an RV at Brookaide is $10 with no hookups available. · There la some RV parldq on sJde streeta off tbe main parade -route, Colorado Boulevard. Sbortest and euieat drive to Pasadena from the Orange Coast la lntentate 5 to 57, 57 to 210 and west on 210 to P11adena. Thoee loinl to the 11me ODly or who want to trapple for a 1pot to see the parade near Oran1e Gron and Colorado boulevardl Where mOlt ol tbe televiallon camera are loca&ed, a tonier but more di.red r-. la lnteratate 5 to tbe Gleaclale Freeway ·< Route 2) to tbe Ventura Freeway (lM) exltinf at Llnda Vllta A¥etHM to lbe bowl . Tbe eatlmated but '8lwa11 dl1puted par• attellduee II al*WllDbel.lmllUaa. ~ If you art one of tlaoH ..................... ror watetwa....'.O.. parade 4IDd 6 ... cha nce at -finding curbsid e seating is near its end along Sierra Madre Boulevard after it turns off Colorado. You can exit the 210 at Altadena Drive. Co-ordinators . a Garden Grove bus firm. will have buses lea ving for the game onl y at 10 a.m. from South Coast Plaza Hotel, Costa Mesa, the Registry Hotel in Irvine and Newporter Inn i n N e wp o r t Be a c h . Roundtrip bus ticket is $20. A spokesman said Wednesday tickets were still available and reservations could be made by calling 891-7600 until 11 o'clock tonight. An Ana heim tour agency, Valen, said Wednesday a few parade pack ages including roundtrip bus fa re and reserved grands tand seating for the parade remained. Cost is $46. Buses will leave at 7 and 7:45 a .m . Friday fro m 1648 S. Clem entine near the Grand Hotel in Anaheim. A spokesman (See PARADE, Page A!) GRANO MARSHAL Jimmy Stewart wil l lead the 93rd To u r n ament o f R o ses p arade. Californians /ace utility rate hikes SAN FRANCISCO CAP> - Californians will face sharply Increased utility bills soon. The stale Public Utility CommiSslon on Wednesday approved a $809.4 milllon rate Increase for Pacific Gas & Electric Co., which translates into an aver11e monthly increase ol •. 03 fo( more than 9 million cmtomen In Northern and CeQtral California, olflclals Hid. Southern California Edison al10 won approval of a rate Increase ol 13.t percent for the flrtt four monthe ol lta. Thal Increase mean.a S171. 7 milllon more In revenue for the company and an ave,.1e of $1 .H more on cu1tom~rs· montbly bl111, 11Jd tomp~ny •Poll---D•ve BarrGa • ~ 'T ... for San Diep Gas & Electric custome rs were $144.6 million in electric rates and $21.6 million in gas rates. SDG&E sought an increase of $283 million. PUC President John Bryson practically 1polo1i1ed for one rate bike during a ne wa conference before the public meetlng began. •'The amount or Increase ls far more than PG&E ratepayers will flnd euy to pay," he said. "We approve this Increase today because we would not be meeting our le1al responalbillUea lf we were to do 1nythln1 else." He said the PUC was bound by stale and federal lawa "which require investor-owned utilltlea to provide adequate and reliable service al rates tbat are Just and reas_oaable. ·; SearCh pressed; near Catalina for boater By PIUL SNEIDERMAN Ot*o•r,,....SUft A U.S. Coast Guard rescue team continued its search today f o r a 32-yea r -o ld boater wh ose sailing vessel washed ashore on Catalina Island with a life raft missing and no one aboa rd. Coast Guard s pokeswoman Lori Raimey said tbe boater, whose name was withheld, had set out from Newport Beach on a solo trip to the island. She said the 25-foot sailboat ran aground about 2 miles from Av alon and was discove r ed about 8 a.m. Wednesday. "We're looking for a man in a yellow life raft," Miss Raimey s aid. "A ma n in the water <without the ra ft> probably wouldn't ha ve survived this long." She said the search was halted at 8; 15 p.m . Wednesday because of darkness but was resumin1 this morning. P a rticipating in the searcb were two 80-fool Coast Guard cutte rs, including the Point Divide from Newport Beach, plus a he li copte r from Loa Angeles. Miss Raime y s aid searcb coordinators were using a computer to help d etermint where the prevailing current.t might have taken the missinl raft. • As the search resumed today the ocean waves were al 2-to-4 feet, with vis1b1li ty al 7 to lt miles 4 crash survivors 'llever gave up' SALJDA, Colo. CAP> -Four survivors of a Christmas Eve plane crash read the Bible as they huddled in the snowbound fuselage for five days , and just after they read about why God lets m a n suffer, a r escuer walked up to the plane, one survivor said. "ll was remarkable. We never gave up hope. Never ," said Steve Smart of Dallas. The arrival of the searcher at the crash site on a mountain ridge began a daring rescue that saved four of the five people who were fl ying from Texas for a ski weekend in As pen when the sing le-engine Piper Cherokee crashed. Shipwrecked ·trio rebuff rescue offer HONOLULU IAP) -A father and two daughters shipwrecked and marooned on a Pacific atoll for three weeks have r ebuffed an offer of passage home from a yachtsman, t he Coast Guard said . "The Harrisons have declined that offer. They want an aircraft to pick them up," Mark Sclre1 a Coast Gua rd s pokes man in Honolulu said Wednesday. "Mr. J ohn Harrison said h.is youngest d a u ghte r was so traumatized by the recent sailing trip she doesn't want to get in a sailboat." Harrison and his daughters, Micki, 20, and Kristen, l3, were caught in a typhoon Dec. 6 aboard their 40-foot trimaran Sisyphus. Buffeted by 40-foot waves. the boat was dismast.ed. Their emergency radio beacon was detected by a commercial jet, which relayed the message lo the Coast Guard. A C-130 aircraft dropped a radia and fuel .to lhe ship Dec. 8, enabling the Slsyph1JS to make the 60 miles to Palmyra atoll, a tiny Island 1,100 miles south of Honolulu. Since the n, Harrison, an indu1trlal deslsner from Vancouver, British Columbia, and bls dauchten have survived on canned food 11lva1ed from the trimaran and nsh. crabs and coconut.I. Another man whose boat ls moored at the privately-owned island, Ray Landrum , baa helped then contact relatives u1ln1 abort wave radio. The Coast Guard reacue center ln Honolulu contacted Landrum on Tueaday nltht, lnlormlnl him that Lawl"eDte <See A'IOa..L; Pa•• Al) *f ,• The pilot, Gary Meeks, walked a w a y fro m t h e wrec kage Christm as Eve to search for help and hasn't been found. S mart. the last of the four rescued. was brought down from the 11,600-foot-high crash site Wednesday. He was carried through deep s now for several miles by toboggan. and then m oved by s no wmo bile and four-wheel drive vehi cle. ··I enjoy snowmobiling, but not qui te like this," he said. The other survivors -Meeks' wife. Patricia Meeks of Dallas, and her two step-sons, Gary Meeks Jr .. 18 , a nd Darren Meeks. 15 -were airlifted from the crash site late Tuesday night by helicopter. Smart had stayed behind witJt -rescuers Tuesday night because a utho ri t i e s f e ared a• approach.ing winter storm would strand the helicopter during the time needed to get Smart Ola board. O uts id e t he fu se lage~ hurricane-force winds stirred Uf b l i nd ing s no w a nd the temperature. with the wind·C~ factor , was estimated to feel lik' minus 60 degrees. I All four survivors were tU:d t o Salida Hospital , wbert doctors said Mrs. Meeks was m stable condition suffering from a fracture of the spine. Smart, 31\ a business associate of M~ and the two youths suffere4 frostbite and exhaustion. I "The guys who came and 1at us are miracle workers," sal• Mrs. Meeks. "I don't think the# were supposed to do what they (See RESCUE, Page A!) DRAIGI COAST llATlll l Considera ble cloudiness i' through New Year's Day. RJlin likely tonight and L1 Friday until midday or early afternoon. Highs 58 to 63. Overnight lows 50 lo • 55. a 111101 TODAY ~ Th e ideo of kupi•f dn mlmt dri~ from ~ behind tM wh.al °" NftO Year's E~ bSI gWtftg CMnl rides Ital spread. PO{le AIO. 11111 ·-~CJ ....... ..., ~c.. CJ ~ Al ~ CJ C ....... Cl-ti c-tl• • c_.. .. = .......... ....... AM ....... ... .. .......... CJ 1 .. • Coalt OAtLY PILOT/Thurade~. December 31 , 1981 -ELEPHANTS STAR -Thirteen elephants, including 10 that !~ave been training in Irvine, will pull the parade's final ';j-romPageA1 entry, a 30-foot tall float. called "The American Eagle Mechanical Military Band Wa~on ... POST PARADE AREA PARADE MOUNTAIN ~· _.. ..... -----~~-o --" _.......--. ••• urged anyone interested to call 635-1408 to tearn availability of tickets. Anyone wt>o can make it to the Long Beach Transit omces by 5 p.m . today can reserve a $10.50 roundtrip bus seat for the game only . The transit firm is at 1300 Gardenia Ave ., telephQ,pe ""'113·591-8753. lt can be reached by taking ·"!therry Avenue exit off the 405 ·~reeway, going south to Anaheim Street, turning right on ''~naheim and right on Gardenia. .o~uses will leave at 11 a.m ~~riday from Sears parking lot, 1~th Street and Long Beach ... "' < > < • "' a: < ... - OAANC.C GROVC .. ... ... > > < c NAR CAUFO~NIA Yl(fO U h'l ,,~ Sl ILY P tOLOAA SI ! ~ L .. ... lllVOi < « UCL WAii ... < .. z .:> ... ... • % ... z .. 'ASOUAL "' 10Jsoulevard. la•i. Now about those elephants. ROUTES TO PARADE, GAME Map depicts Ventura Freeway I 134 1 a pproachin g Pasadena from the west or can travel east to Pasadena by taking Interstate 5 to Route 57 to 210. >Clt\tc . 1of T he pa c h y d e rm s . an ~stimated 30 tons worth, will parade route and a pproaches to Pasade na Orange Coast residents can take Interstate s. to the Glendale Freeway I Koute 21 to the pull the final float called "The 111~merican Eagle Mechanical "''Military Hand Wagon." The 'frl_t1oat. at nearly 30 feet high, rtl 1tallest ever in a Rose parade. is ir,~ponsored by the CasaBlanca rl Fan Co. The elphants belong to Circus ""Vargas and have been in ''1 ~training at Lion Country Safari 1 1 n Irvine. Rex Williams, who has been u'1.'Putting the animals through v' their paces and nursing one, e-i1H attie, back to health after , •'dental surgery, says the parade ~11isn't the longest he has marched 1 elephants. srr: "We once did a circus in ~ Coleman. Texas, which was a ~~1-mile walk from train to tent," 'll;~aid Williams. a circus showman for 39 years. l'lt•i The elephants will wear 111 ,blankets of carnations and hn Will~ams hopes they won't eat 11:.the flowers before passing the '(ll'TV cameras :Jlf· The s tudents have been working in s hifts on the Mission Viejo float entry. "Vers ailles." Mlssion Viejo is defending its Sweepstakes trophy. the top prize it has won three of five years. Homecoming queens riding the float will be Cathy Teske. Mission Viejo High School; Deanna Kl ein , Capistrano Valley: Debbie Reza, LaRuna HUls ; Monica Osborn. El Toro and Ali Abbriano, Silverado. They will wear French gowns on a float that features pink roses, gladiolus petals, salmon roses, ofrhids and carnations. The Marine Corps band has been practicing at the Marine Corps Air StaUon, El Toro. The t02-member band includes Marines stationed at El Toro, Camp Pendleton and San Dieco and is directed by Chief Wanant Officer Terry W. Earnest. :Married 83 times, ·'·~man called 'cheat'. PANAMA CITY , Fla. (APJ - A man believed to have been married at least 83 limes has b ee n arrested after a confrontation with two people who said be cheated them, authorities said. 1nl Giovanni Vigliotto, 52, was , 11 being held today without bond on llto<a ch.arge of federal parole ~t lviolation, Ray County sheriff's 1fHorficials said. dftl A woman. identified as Sharon '(}C lark, 44, of Indiana, told tll'Sheriff's deputies that she and .... wigliotto were married in !>'Stlndiana in June, but that \'>mVigliotto ran off with $100,000 of -her assets, sheriff's Sgt. Paul Vecker sald. She and an unidentified male companion said they had been searching Cor Vigliotto "in several Florida cities for several weeks." Becker said. Vecker said the companion, ,who ~ dej>uties that~ Vigliott.o ~orrqwed ·'3,200 before be • disappeared, slashed the tires of Vigliott.o's van Tuesday to keep him from leaving a shopping center parking lot. Vigliotto also has been accused by a Mesa, Ariz., woman or disposing or her assets after they were married. The woman, not identified by police, said she sold her house and placed the proceeds in a joint checkinl account, Mesa police said. When she returned ftom a brief trip to California, her $36,500 bank account had been pl11ndered, her furniture had ' been shipped out of 'state, her credit cards were burdened with $3,000 in debts and her new husband was gone. police said. Mesa police Capt. C.A. Miedowicz said a wanted poster di s tributed by f e deral authorities said Vigliotto was believed to have married at least 82 other women. Mledowicz said he did not know where the women were living. Florida authorities said a check through the National C rime Information Center computer revealed a warrant issued for Vigliotto's arrest by the U.S. Parole Commission on April 30, 1980. The federal warrant revealed VlglioUo was on parole for conviction of "larceny by deception" in Manalapan, N.J . Manalapan Police Ch ief Thomas Wallace s aid the original complaint was turned ovet to the FBJ after a local woman was bi l ked and abandoned by Vigliotto "in the Carolinas." ··He gave her a first-class honeymoon -everything was • firs t -class.·· Wallace said . "Then. a month later, the bills started coming In and he was gone." The arrest wa r ranl s aid Vigliotto was born in either Italy or New York Ci ty on April 3. 1929 -or 1936. It listed a few or his aliases as Rick Calandra, Gerald Wayne Leon or Michael R. Riano and said he has used the surname '· J ipp" with several first names. ORAN~COAIT Daily Pilat CIH l m.cl ad .. rtlalng 714,f42·517' All other department• 141-4321 MAIN OFFICE m Wtet 8ey St., C0tt• -.,., CA, M•ll ...._: ._ ,,_, c.t• ,._,CA .... ,.,.,, ..... ,., or.. C.et ............. ~· Ne Mwt ttllfle\, lllutir ..... t, Mt~ltl .,..._WM- vtr11,. ........ lllt9lfl may M r..-,Ced wllMlll _ ................ <.,.,,..,.._,, The Santa Ana band and timbrelists. directed by Ed Freeman. will make up the la rgest contingent of the 100-member Salvation Army band. Members of the bandsmen and timbrelists live in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Fountain Valley, Irvine, Huntington Beach and other Orange County cities. Avco Financial Services, headquarter ed in Newport Beach, has entitled this year's entry, "Perfect Harmony." It features a 36-fool crewboat. a frozen lake, waterfall and butterflies. The rowers will be Cynthia Comparan, John Westergren, Kelly Hurley, Valerit1 Gilb and Debbie B e ndur . Maria DiDominico and Burt Lancon will be ice skaters on the noat of mums, tulips, orchids and roses. Actor James Stewart is grand From PageA1 ATOLL • • • Friend of Scottsdale . Ariz. was sailing to Palmyra. Friend volunteered to take the Harrisons to Honolulu in his 33-foot sloop tt;ie Friendly. But Landrum told Coast Guard radio operators that Harrison declined the offer, Scire said. "We don't know ii Friend has been told yet." The Coast Guard spokesman said a ham radio operator was to contact Friend on Wednesday, and presumably would tell him of the Harrisons' decision. · "He's just sailing around the South Pacific," said Scire of Friend. "Whether he goes to Christmas Island. Fanning or Palmyra doesn't matter to him." Scire sa id Harrison complained through Landrum that his oldest daughter was suffering from a headache and body chills. The Coast Guard checked with a Honolulu ~r and recommended lhal she rest and take aspirin. "He's not drowning, he's not starving, he's on dry land," Scire said. "We're out of the picture as far as a rescue goes. We are not allowed to compete with private industry when it's available .. Scire s aid a Honolulu pilot volunteered lo get the Harrlsons, at an estimated cost or $13,000. "Wh y s h ould th e U.S . government spend $100,000 to s end a military plane down there when he could have got off the Island on that boat essentially for free?" Scire said. Harrison has reportedly offered to pay for passage off the island, but his former wife has said his prornise of payment ha s not been su fricient euarantee to the U .S. or CanadJan governments or to private operators. Harrison rePortedly put out to sea last lall to avoid collection agents, an unidentified San Francisco sailor who was biri!d by Harrison to sell the bOat to Hawaii told the San Francisco Chronicle. Harri~ owed *2',000 on the '95.000 boat when he aaUed ll to San Francisco f rom Brltlab Columbta, said Mike Ro1er1, vice president of consumer attvlc:ea for the Bank of Brttiah Columbia. • ·'Tb• loan 11 1trlou1l1 ln arrea,.., .. he ••Id . • marshal of the "Friends and Neighbors" parade which will have 60 floats, 22 bands and 26 equestrian units. If you don't want to fight the c rowds and traff ic you can always be one of the l2S miUion people worldwide expected to watch the parade on television. It's being televised on channels 2, 4, 5 and 11. From PageA1 RESCUE • • • did . They flew in some hellacious weather." Smart wept during the rescue. "I've been holding it back for six days," he said. "I had two kids on the plane with me and l couldn't let them down.·· He said the survivors "had just been reading the passage in the Book of Job as to why God lets us s uffe r when a rescuer walked up to the door of the plane." libya, Saudis resume d iplo macy TRI POLI , Libya (AP1 - Libya and Saudi Arabia today agreed to resume diplomatic relations severed a year ago, Libya's official JANA news agency said. ln a joint statement issued in Tripoli and Riyadh, the two governments s aid the decision reflected a desire to avoid "a useless rupture of the Arab unity" and to press for a unified Arab action "against the common enemy," JANA said. Polish. plan to revamp c • society seen By The Aaaocla&ed Prus • Poland's martial law chief. Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelekl, Is expected to unveil a program ln early January tbal "would amount to a new model for 1ocial, political ~d economic life in Poland,'' ti governroent rt cial was quoted as sayfna ln :~n~ensored diapa&lch Crom But e report, which reached the Wes on Wednesday night, said pol tical observers in Warsaw ~e skeptical that any poUUcal s lion put forth by Jaruielslti c Q._ wln wide public s upport. \. The observers hid the martial law regime faced a fundamental dilemma : How to c reate a cli mat e of n a tional reconciliation al the same time as it maintains sufficient control to prevent unrest. The uncensored reports quoted sources in Warsaw as saying J aru:r.elslti set up at least three panels h ea d e d by t op Communist Party leaders to revamp the country's social, economic and political programs. One panel reportedly proposed scrapping the tattered Polish United Workers Party -the Com munist Party -and replacing it with a new party incorporating Roman Catholk Church and Solidarity union representatives The Communist Party has been reported in disarray since martial law was declared Dec. 13. But Kazimierz Barcikowski, a Politburo member and party sec r e tary, told the party newspaper Trybuna Ludu that "the place of the party is the sa m e as always: among the people." He said that martial law ·'does not create any empty political space. Despondent father threatens suicide DES MOINES, Iowa (AP> - Authorities raced to discover the identity of a n anonymous le tter-write r who described h imself as a 36 year -old unemployed father and said he would commit sui cide today so his family could collect welfare in the new year Meanwhile. Iowans moved by his letter lo a newspaper offered to help with promises of cash. clothing and jobs ·'There is a job for you somewhere," promised Colleen Shearer, director of the state unemployment agency. and her s t aff began s ifting through records in sea r c h of t h e letter·writer's identity The Y ou nker s department-store chain offered .a job for the man and clothing and toys for his children, and an offer of $50 came from Bill Tate of Eagle Grove, who will lose his job In June when the packing plant where he works is shut down. The Iowa Di vision of Criminal Inv estigation provided a handwriting e"pe rt to look through job applications and compa r e them wilh the handwritten letter to lhe Des Moines Register A police officer was assigned to the search and the Polk County attorney's offi ce s ent two i nves tigators. A veterans' group in Des Moines joined in the search for the letter-writer, who said he was a veteran. The letter s aid the man's family is ineligible for Aid to Dependent Children because he is able-bodied and lives at home. "On Jan. 1. 1982, 'my wife and two girls will become eligible for AOC," the letter said. "I will no longer be living in the home. Forgive me, Polk County. for the expense of my burial. "May God forgive me." The 1981 Iowa Legislature ch anged the requirements for Aid to Dependent Children and re moved two-pare nt families from eli~ibility. While noting that the Des Moines Register and its sister newspaper, the Tribune, had no wa y of vouch ing fo r t h e authenticity of th e no t e, R egister Edito r Mi chae l G artner responded i n a front-page letter. ··scores o f thousands of Iowans read your letter in this morning's Registe r," Gartner said in his response. printed Wednesday afternoon in the Tribune. "They want to help you. "They don't know who you ar e. and neither do l But I do know this: There is a JOb waiting for you. And clothes for your famil y. And Christmas gifts for yo ur little girls . There is medical care if you need it. There is hope. Ther e is life." The man 's l etter wa s published on the editorial page o f Wedne s day morning's Register. and Gartner said the note was turned over to Polk County Attorney Dan Johnston. The letter told despairingly of hundreds of people on welfare and said some were pawning radios and watches "just to get a fe w dollars to buy gas to job-hunt some more.·· ll said P resident Reagan was making things "impossible" for him. "The hurt in my little girls' faces because Santa forgot them this year. the thought of another Jobless year. no way to pay the rent next week, I'm sorry, J can't deal with it anymore." the letter said. The writer said he had two choices: rob someone or a store. or use a gun on himself. "God knows I have thought about the first, but l cannot kno wingly bring pain t Q- someone else because of my actions." the author said -~ ......... SNAPPY SALUTE -West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt jokingly thumbs his nose at his wife. Hannelore. prior to a special address he made for German television. Schmidt jokingly thumbs his nose at his wife. Hanne lore. and intends to remain in Florida until J anuary 4. R ock group leader cite d J ohn GU Moore, the lead singer of the Trlurnpb rock group, was charged with a fire code violation after a co n cert at Ci ncinnati Gardens . Police Sgt. Mlke Howard said the singer urged the Newlyweds Curtis and Lisa Sliwa say they're ready to move in among the rals and cockroaches, if the St. Louis Housing Authority wiJI make an apartment in the Vaughn Housing Project available to them. "We can't get the time of da y fr om t h e h ousin g author ity,·· s aid Sliwa, G h islaine Rainea u got rousing applause when she par aded in the evening gown competition at the Miss France Pageant -in her army uniform. T he 22-year-old infantry corporal. one of 49 women in audience or 4,500 people to ignite cigarette lighters instead or applaud after the show. · Howard quoted Moore as t e lling the audience. "Everybody get out your Bic and light up the sky." founder of the Guardia• Angels, a group of youths who go on anli·crime patrols in a number of cities. The Sliwas say the Vaughn project i s the most crime·ridden in the nation and say they'll live there six months to try lo help c lean it up. the Miss France contest, got personal approval from her commanding officer to wear her uniform in the event. But s he did not make into the fi n a ls , a nd 16-year ·o ld S abrina Be lleva l , a schoolgirl from the Riviera. was named Miss France. Grecor1 and M.aarlee a1... will 1wln1 tocetber a1aln o n Broadway on Sunday l n the mu1tcal "Sophlstac•ted LadlH," a collection of Dake Elllll1&eo 1on1a. Tbe two pe r f o rmed to1ether for 26 years before •olo1 lb ir separate ways in lt7S. "Work ln a to1ether all those years put a real slrain on our relallon1hlp u brothers,·· Gre1ory Hines said. "We get alona much better as men now. and doln1 a number together ls real 1i>ecial. It's so rare for us that it feels like nothln1 else. T here's a sense of ma1lc, and it's very emotional." . , A real estate firm won a l awsuit again s t author Truman Capote, accusing the a uthor or reneging on a contract to buy a home on M arco I s land off the southwest Florida coast. Collie r Circuit Judge Charles Carlton granted a $1 3,000 j udgment to A.G. Ennis Realty Inc., rinding that Capote lost the suit by d efault, the Miami Herald reported. The judgment followed unsuccessful attempts by the real estate firm and ils law ye r lo l ocate the bes t·sellina ..a,wtl\or, whose last knowrllradress is listed as 870 UN Plaza in New York. LOSES SUIT Truman Capote lost a $13.000 judgment to a real estate firm b~· default. Capote was accused of reneging on a contract to bu~· a ho me on Marco Is land off t ht' Florida coast Rain likely tonight Coast a l WHl•rly wlncb IOCally lo 10 w.nou willl l 10 l tool wind weve• lllh eve11i119 OUWnolM ..-Uy 119"1 -variable llltOUOQh tonltM tKlt wesl•rly 10 lo 1e ""°" 1n etternoon. Westerly swell l to) Ifft u<f'Ol loca1110s1001 HH outer •• ,.,. ~Uy CI04.ldY tllrouoll loniQlll Wllll IOUI '°' A , ... 119"1 s-..s ...... 1 ..... 1 .... 19111 U.S. summary A snow\tonn w•s c•ntered over tf'w Rooy Mounlelns on WeOnnO•v. soreaotno h••vv 'now acrois mounl•ln ~loM ol Colorado •lld ul.,.Olnt lnto Ille Norti..rn Pl•'"• In IOellO, blfndlflt .iorm• 1•11 • Inches of """" In BolM, Ille~·· s110wlell in more 111.tn JO ye•"· Up lo l fffl of •now fell In Ille mou11taln1, •"•'• ~eidl of motorl\ts were 11randed. Tiie ~II lor • ml1~119 sJ<ltr In Color-WIK CAiied off beceuM of lh• snow A•Huers t,ucceeded ln brlnQlnt out Ille fourth ktrvlvor ol • Cllrtslm•• Eve pl-cratll In Ille movntelns. Rain was reported In mucll ol south centrel a no 1oulll••Sl•rn Tuas •lonQ ... '"''r•I Gulf COHI and in ltor1ll Florida •nd -.,... Cellforl'ia Wlnlar slorm wernlnos wer e IHltleO lor ncw111west.rn WyomlnQ and Ille Color-mwn1a lns SILi•' wete cte•r from N•w En11land IMOUVll Ille mid·Atlantlc Cont reo•on. enO Ille Ollio and T-valleys to Hllern Kanw1 and Hllltf'nOl<tllllOme Ski.t _,. ~'11y cl-y to t.'-Y over Ille rffl of Ille nation T•-~ arouncl Ille nation at mldd•y -Y rM199'1 from I• deft•H ~ 1..-0 In Hane. MonL, lo e1 clefren In Fort Myers, Fla Tiie National Wulller Service lertcalt tor t•CIO ulMcl for rein from central FIOrlele aM Ille cenlr•I Gulf C_. lo llW -r Greel l.akH alld tlleW..C••· S.-WM llf'9Cllctlel ...,..,. Ille -r MIUIH!ppl V.....,, ..... .,, M<I~ of Ille ...,.,_,. Greet l.lll<H -.,_ llOf111ern !>IM ..... Ctoudv sllltt were upected over Ille Nonllern Plains encl ,.,..,.,. M<lioM of Ille C•nlrel Plaint fornia (Ofttld«•lll• <'-In.is lllroutfl New Veer•s O•v I\ forecast tor Seut!Mrft C.lllornle Pl'Ol»llllity ef .-an h IO petunl tonltf\t. New Y••r'• CEw. end e«iy ,..w v-·· ,..,,.,.,,.,. S-r• el\011141 ~rlday, wl91 paf1lal ,...,. ..... c .... 11nut11 mikl ftlef\ll -COOi day• Hioht IMw VMr't Eve -H_,, VH r't 0.., In Or-C-IY w"' r~ 1reml01o w . Low.•1on. Hltifls ~ CleYI lfl lftlllM "alleys •Ill .. "' ......... lowt ~ ... .., ........ ...., .......... .- Mount.Ins wlll be ..-11y c-y "' •-Y lhrou911 FrlOay momlnoa, wllll OCCHloNI drlui. « 119"1 Sf>O-r\, Snow level ""' 7,000 ffft .... avi.r sllowe.. llt.elY toniq!!t wlOI ""'•• CIHrl119 Frldlly Winds 15 lo JO"'"" H 19111 mosuy » •o •. 1-s In Ille 1°' Ch•"c• of thower1 ti'\ d•Mrh 1on19111. WHterly winds to JO mpll al Hmn bOtll day• Nonllern deM•I Mo~s n to •1, ,.,..,. «110 so. ~rn Oe~rt lllQM In Ille .ol. lowt Ill Ille 40t W ICM""9.0 nl9ht -"'°' l\lftt IOt In Central Velley Rain ll•e•Y to \prell<I ""-' Nonllern -C.mral Calllornia ,_., Extended forecast Consider-ClouOIMSs Saturday and SalU<day nltlll wltll chance of show•"· S.-l,.vel in mountain\ S,SOO IHI. Ci.artnQ 5'iftela1. with l•ir WHlller -.., • ., H~ 111 C-1•1 ••••s SI 10 U Lows >I tt •I Mounl•ln ~ lli911s lt to lt Lowt II to 14, Smog Tiit Air Oue llly Manaoement District predicts 0000 •Ir q uality for everyone in Ille Sololtfl C-e lr OMln IOCley Tt. AQMO auftNd Poll"'llon Slan<1en1 lncln C PSll raflntS et 42 ror all r-oi-, Tempe r atur es Al~ny AlbuQ.,. Amarillo A-vni. All ... 1• Atte11tc Cl\' 8eHI,..... 8 rlrmlnclllm llolM ....... •llff•lo CNrlstnWV c ... ., ...... Chka90 C1ncl11netl JO " SS ,. " ,, 41 20 47 JJ ,. M • 20 SA 1' 21 It . "' . " 4 u •S II 2' oft .. 14 Cltvelancl Col1o1mbul 0•1·1'1 Wtll Denver Oulutll El PHO l'elrbenll.t Hertford Honolukl Holnt ... JKhft~ IC.ans City LHV .... Llttlt AO<k Loulsvlli. Mampftll Miami Mpls-St.P Nelllvilte' Newon.-.._vtr11 Hortolk Ollla Cltv Om•h• OrtenClo Pt\11 ........ "-'• P1tt-..i ptlaftd,Me ptlellcl,O... 11- Ak lltMN Salt~• Seattle SILwls SIP·T- StS .. Merle , ...... w~ WkllllAt '-' ... = 8-'ll ..... .... lllm• t 4 • ..,. .. ~. , • ,. ... ~ t 4 It s...o-..~ t 4 II Oln-IOr~rtMY Llttlec,._, U 1J CALl~llNIA M JO APO It V elley •> 63 ,, 15 8•11trSllelO •l ,,, S4 11 8•ntow .. 1' u .,. a .. umon1 s. o .. JO e19 eear ,,.. ,, .JO ·ll 81"'°1> s• • ,. ,. 81ytlle 70 41 IO U C•lellne .. .0 SO .. Eu,._a SI 46 SS • FreSfte Sl • d 1S ~·~ SI SO n •1 LOftt a .. c11 w u 4J 24 Los Angeles •1 SO 4.4 1• M.erysvlli. SS SI S2 24 Mollr0¥1a •> '7 1' IS -ttbello •l .. U -o! Mof'lle,.y SS 42 •47 JI Mt WllSOI\ 41 • SS .. Needles M .. • ,. .... Po,, 8Hcf\ ., .. J7 JI O•I-st SO •• to Onterlo S6 • » 10 P•lm Springs •S 4' 71 6C PtMdeM St 4' • ll P .. 011-,. 41 '1 64 Riverside ,.. • JS 1• Aed Bluff •• 4S M 17 A.OW-City 1' U •1 J2 Sa<r-,.. • • '7 S.llne• S6 4' 4 t 24 San ....,_..no S6 46 U Jt s.tl Gabri.I U 47 • JI San Ole90 •2 st • 13 San l'ranclK• SS U 70 '1 San Jose St SI n n Sant• Ana n n so 27 Santa 8"'11tr• ., ,. ,. M Sent• Monica '1 :n t4 24 Stockston .0 • TellOe Valley M lt Torrence w SO y..,,.... " .. Tides TOOAY ........... "'" llltl\ I :Cit...... ,,. Frltl tow , J:JO a.m. u ..... Mn 2 J ' t t J t J .... w w w w ~ .... ll'tfl 1111'•·"'· ., 5e<Oftll -•:• p,m. O.J Suft ,, .. •:•a.IOI. T--y ... ,, • f'P m ...... ,.,. .. ., '·"' ....... ""' 10:!1• "'· ,_....,, We're Listening.· •• What do you like about the Daily Pilot! Wbat don't ~ou U'e? Call the number below and your meua1e· wlll be recorded. transcribed and dellvertd to Uw appropriate editor. The same It-hour anawerinc Hl'Vlce m.ay be uHd to record let· ters to the editor on any ~c. Mailbox contributor• qu11t lnehlde thelr name and telephon. number for verification. No c.lrculaUon calls, pleue. • Tell ua wha\'1 on your mlnd. r Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday. December 31 , 1981 s ATTACK ON PESTS The 350.000·square foot General Aviation Flight Center building at J ohn Wayne Airport in Orange County is o.ltr-........ ..., .....,.. buttoned down and sprayed for termites by pest control company Highway. focus sought Transportation should be top issue , Roosevelt says James Roosevelt of Newport Beach believes Orange County's road and freeway congestion s hould be seized upon by candidates as a prime campaign issue. If candidates don't raise the iss ue. Roosevelt s uggested Wednesday that he will. Roosevelt, the newest member of th e Orange Cou nt y Transportation Commission, said the public board rormed to coordinate efforts to improve road and rail systems should get involved "educating" political candidates of the county 's need for better services. Roosevelt called a press conference Tues day at the county Hall or Administration in Santa Ana to explain his plan. A former congressman and the son of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, he said examinations of state voting records show that the county's state legislators have not always supported funding for tra nsportation improvements. "If you look at the voting records in the assembl y," he said, "you can see we need to do a better job forming a liaison with them." Roosevelt didn't mention specific legislators who have voted against bills favored by th e local transportation commission , but h e said Asse mbl ywo m a n Marian Bergeson. R·Newport Beach, has been "generall y in support Scout panel picks board Newport Beach r e~i de nt Richard B. Smith has been elected president of the Orange County Boy Scout Council. The chairman of Am West. Inc. in T ustin s ucceeds Wallace Merryman. chairman of Av co Financial Services. The new vice presidents for 1982 include Ralph Clock, Irvine, president of Clock Construction; Peter Kremer. Newport Beach. president of the Irvine Co.: Ed Laird, Fountain Valley , president of Chemical Resource. Also Bill Lightcap, Corona del Mar, executive vice· president of ARC America . Dr. Frank Rubino. Capistrano Beach, a physician. OellyP .... 1'9ff- TAAFFIC TALK -J a mes Roosevelt. newest member of county Tra ns portation Com mission. wants Orange County highway problems to be m ajor issue. of what the commission is trying to do." ll is no secret, however. that the transportation financing biU passed this year b y the legislature, SB215, received positive votes from only two of the county's six assemblymen: Mrs. Bergeson and Chet Wray, D. Westminster. Richard Robinson. 0 -Garden Grove, missed the vote for medical reasons although he was known as a s upporter . Nolan Frizzelle, R·Huntington Beach, John Lewis, R·Orante. and Ross Johnson, R·Fullerton, voted against its passage . The bill, sponsored by Sen. J ohn Foran, D·San Francisco, raises state taxes on motor fuels from seven to nine cents per gallon, increases several motor vehicle fees a nd allows local governments to seek special tax 1 nc r e as es at the polls for transportation projects. It goes into effect in J anuary 1983. R oosevelt s ugges t e d that commissioners could hold informal luncheons after the primary election in June with political candidates to discUH transportation, possibly with follow up meetings. Roosevelt believes the com mission needs to direct more public attention to traffic proble ms. He proposed that spokesmen should go to high schools "° recuit soon ·to·be·vollng seniors as s upporters f or rnajor trans portation improvements. And he s a id commissioners must do better at convincing state transportation officials that projects such as renovation of the Santa Ana Freeway are critical to the region's economic health. The California Transportation Commission will be deciding ln the next few years how to spend an estimated $80 million a year in federal interstate highway funds. Roosevelt said the Santa Ana Freeway through Oranre County is in dire need or $300 million to $400 million in major improvements. "We 're trying to bring tbat forcibly to their attention." he said Most offices closing for New Year's Day If you're thinking of visiting City Hall, or the post office, or the bank, or putting out t he trash for pickup Friday, forget it. A cheek of government offices and businesses along the Orange Coast shows most everyone is taking New Year's Day off. All City Halls will be closed, and there will be no mail service or trash pickup on that day. Those r esidents in Costa M esa, Newport Beach, Huntington Beach, Ir vine and Laguna Beach who usually r eceive r efuse service on Fridays should put lhe1r cans out fo r Saturday pickup . Fountain Valley has no resi- dential trash pickup on Fridays. Regular postal counter service and mail delivery will resume on Saturday . Our furniture spedacnlar ~ontinoes Drexel and Heritage Winter Could yo u ask for more? Choose from o ur entire selection o f uphol- stery by Qrexel• and Heritage• at tempting reductions. Save on selected bedroom, dining room and occasional furn iture. Be earty -and be delighted with truly spe- cial values 1 H.J.GAf\RETf fURNll1J~E PAOF ESSIONAL HOUlllt: flllM\. etwu Tiwte. 11 e.m. to IP·"'· 221 S HAllOl I U D. l'fTERIOA DESIGNERS '"· 10 a.M. tot P·111• tet. 10 8·"'· to l ;IO P·"'· COSTA MHA 646-027' ., S Orange Coast DAILY PILOT (Thursday, December 31. 1981 WINS LAWSUIT -D o nn a Ru s h o r Canajoharie, N. Y .. was awarded $4 million by a state Supre me Court jury in her suit against Sears, Roebuck and Company . In 1973, her younger sister died and she recei ved burns over 64 percent of her body after a ·~-....­tent sold by Sears caught fire. Donna. on a ho l iday break from Brockport State University, where s he is a junior. relaxes al home with her fatht!r. Lloyd "Tom" Rush and her mother. Linda. :{(remlin fears new Pole regime May bring unw anted dom i nation over the Communist Party ,. )toscow <AP> -Kremlin lead ers fear that Poland's rJ»rtial law regi me, which c ,l aims it took p o w er t e mporarily, may bring ~wanted domination of the olish army over the · mmunist Party, Soviet and es tern sources say. J Such a situation would reject ~oviet-style communis m. in hic h the party dominates s ciety. It would a lso make land the first such nation in e Eastern bloc in which the m munists do not control the vernment. "In a sense, it was a coup d etat." said one Soviet source ho has proved reliable in e plaining Soviet thinking. The source s aid Kre mlin I aders agreed Polish Premier en . Wojciech Jaruzelski's d claration or ma rtial law Dec. 1 was the only solution to the s ruggle be tween Poland's r ling Communists and the i dependent Solidarity union. J ruielski promised to end artial law when order was r stored. "The Kremlin is resigned to l e fact that martial law rule as the only way out or the s tuation," the Soviet source s id. But Western dis plomatic s urces say Kremlin leaders orry because J aruzelski's ling military council has spended not only activities or lidarily. but apparently aJso t e Communist Party, which by o lis h law plays a "leading le " in society. A major party purge also is portedJy under way. Several a rty members. at least four vernors and 77 mayors have een sacked. Martial law uthorilies seem to be using llilary command structures, ot regiooaJ party organizations. run the country. ·'Soviet leaders must be sking themselves·, is J aruzelski RUFFELL'S urHOLSTERY ..... I 'st .... -. I U J HAHOI IUD. COST"-MISA -541·1 IH NI• ANAlYllS more loyal to the army or to the party"." said one Western diplomat. 'J a ruzelski heads the Polish United Workers Com munist Party. But he is also defense minister, army commander-in-chief a nd a career mi litary man. The forces he leads are respected by Poles as defenders of their tradition and history. When he announced the crackdown, Jaruzelski said he was doing so .. as a soldier " Des pit e assertions b y Pres ident Reagan that the Kre mlin was behind im position o f martial law, Soviet and Eastern European sources in Moscow believe it was largely a Polis h decision . So m e diplomats see Jaruzelski's crackdown, as a way to satisfy Kremlin leaders by neutralizing So lid a rity, appeal to Polis h nationalism by avoiding a Soviet invasion and gai n popular support by reducing Communist authority. "This means that when the crisis has passed, Poland may be left with a pluralistic system . . but the final arbiter will be the army.·· the Soviet source said. Diplomatic sour ces found evidence or tension between Poland's martial law rulers and the Communists in an article Tuesday b y the Soviet Com mun ist Party paper Pravda. which said restoration and strengthening of the Polish party is "among the tasks that must be accomplished." Soviet and Eastern European sou rces in Moscow say t he Kremli n wants the Polish party purged of those who are inactive and corrupt, c ulling the membership of 3 million in half. They say that the party enjoyed little support in Poland before military rule and must purge itself to maintain power Diplomatic sources say that after Solidarity was for med in August 1980. the Com munists we re pers istently forced to compromise and seemed unable to manage the count ry. The par t y wa s bla m e d fo r mismanagement and corruption and clandestine pubhc opinion polls showed it would easily lose power if free e lections were held. Un i o ns lose majority of shop v otes WASHINGTON (AP> - Un ions lost more than half the collective bargaining elections supervised by the N,ational Labor Relations Board in fiscal year 1980, the agency said. The NLRB, which adm inisters federal labor laws. said in its annual report that unions won 45. 7 percent of the 8, 198 elections hel d among half a m illion workers in the year ending last Sept 30. ' "ll was the sixth straight year unions lost more elections than they won," the agency said .. But it was the first fiscal year in nine that labor organizations· per centage of voter victories increased." ln the previous fiscal year. eligible workers voted for union representation in 45 percent or the elections , the report said. In one recent case. the United Steelworkers of America lost a bid lo become the bargaining unit for some ~s.ooo employees '>f du Pont Chemical Co. The NLRB also said a record number or cases -57.300 we re brought before the agency in fiscal 1980, the latest year ror which figures were available FIND YOUR NAME WIN 4 TICKETS WORTH $18 Hundreds of Sports & Vocation Displays RVs & Accessories • Fishing.Clinics • Comping • Travel Film Festival • HOURS: 2-10 pm Dally Noon-10 pm Sat. Noon-a pm Sun. • Daily Si.ge Stlow FHluring IOU.II WIU.AlD "The Boxing Kangaroo · • Or • lot of cash? Then call claaalfled. Thoae thing• taking up •SMIC• In your hc>me, Item• you heVerl't uNd In eg ... mey ti. f uat whet aomeon• elM needt . So gtYe ut.• SAT. ~AN. I t• SUN. ~AN. te • call ... 11'• ,_.Y to uM clualft9d to get VOUf hend9 on eomeoath. .ms= 9 Winners In Today's Classifiedsl IT'S EASY! Find your name and address In today's classified MCtion. then call 64'2-5678 Ext. 272 to claim your Uekets. Winners each ..... ..._. day. 90 check the classifieds In the . ~I .... , Handgun ban fought NRA to challenge law before the U.S . Supreme Cour.t C HI C AGO (AP ) f'ederal-court approval of a law orderin5C residents or a small town to tur n In their handguna "clearly marks a turnln1 point in the campaign for handgun control," says a leader of the national gun-control forces. Mike Beard. chairman of the Na lion a l Coa lition to Ban Handguns, said a judge's ruling here Tuesday "is a symbolic message that is being sent to pu blic officials that they can do so m ething about handgun problems." However, the National Rifle Association, which spent $15,000 fighting the law, said it expected the case to go to the U.S. Supreme Court, where the organization predicted it would be struck down At the center or the issue is Morton Grove, Ill .. population 24,000, a s uburb 15 miles northwest or Chicago. The village board more than six months ago passed t h e ordinance 4·2, giving the town perhaps America's toughest anti-gun measure The law says that residents convicted of possessing guns face up to six months in jail and a fine of up to $500. Three court challenges were filed and consolidated into one, whi ch U.S . Dis tric t Judge Bernard Decker threw out. Decker ruJed that neither the U.S . Constitution nor the Illinois constitution stand in the way of the law. ' The 1886 U.S Supreme Court decision Presser vs. Illinois, Decker s aid. held that 2nd Accomplices · r e porte d in pope s hooting NEW YORK (APJ -ABC News s aid Wednesday that I tali an authorities now believe convicted gunman Mehmet Ali Agca had two accomplices at the sc ene of th e a ttempt e d assassination or Pope John PauJ II last May. ltaltan author ities have previously said they beheved the shooting was the result of a conspiracy. The ABC report said a man photographed standing next lo Agca at the time of the shooting has been identified as Oemer Ay . a Turkish terrorist and an associate or Agca. who 1s aJso Turk1~h. ABC said Italian authorities are investigating a third man who was seen by Lowell Newton, a tourist m St. Peter's Square on the day of the shooting. Newton 1s editorial direct~( WX YZ in Detroit, a television station owned and operated by ABC Newton said he saw a man run out or the crowd after the shooting with a gun in his right hand The ABC r eport add ed, "Turkish author ities a nd t he American FBJ are investigating the possibility" that the man was a member "of a Libyan rut squad sent lo America lo kill Pres ident" Reagan. U PHOLDS BAN -U.S Di strict ,Judge Bernard M. Decker upheld the nation's toughest gun control law by ruling that the vill age of Morton Grove, Ill.. did not vio late stat e or federal constitutions when it banned the sale and possession of handguns. Amendment guarantees of the right to bear arms apply onJy to laws passed by Congress. He said the state Const itution allows citizens to bear arms but grants localitaes the right to impose restrictions. Decker had ordered the law s uspended while the case wu being heard and lilted the 1tay after issuing his ruling. The village said It may wait until appeals are exhausted before enfor cing the measure. B ot h sides ar1 u e d longst anding positions before Decker: gun-control advocates said the 2nd Amendment was e nacted so the newly united slates could form militias; pro -gu n for ces said the amendment applies lo everyone. But Decker said there was no point for him to rule on the merils of those arguments since the 1886 case spelled out the Constitution's position. The ruling "is going lo be good for everyone in this country," said Neil Cashman, the Mort.on Grove trustee who proposed the measure. "I'm sure hundreds" of municipalities ··are going to follow suit." Martin Ashman. the village lawyer, called it a "Jandmark decision" and said if other towns across the country do the same thing "there could be a lot of American lives saved ... " John Aquilino. an NRA spokesman in Washington. said Decker "essentially ruled in favor or a minority element" and "the NRA will not rest unt we are assured this erroneous opinion . is reversed." Alan Gottlieb, who heads the pro-gun Second Amendm ent Foundation in Bellevue .. Wash., which financed two or the lawsuits challenging the law, called the ruling "a national disgrace " Teens appealing manslaughter ruling PITTSFIELD. Mass. <A P ) - A judge has ruled that seven Lenox teen-agers can remain free whHe appealing invol untary man:;laughter convictions in the d row·lings of two teen -agers from c rival town. The seven, all June gr aduates of Lenox Memorial High School, were sentenced to 2Y.., years in Berkshire County House or Co rrection after a j u ry convicted them or two counts or involuntary manslabghter and one count or assault and baUery. The charges stemmed from a lakeside brawl in whkh two Lee teen-agers died. Appeals Court Justice John Gr eaney said the seven can remain free because there was ··a like lihood of su ccess of appeal." He said the appeaJs should be consoli dated into one case and should be heard by September 1982. Al a hearing Monday. defense attorneys argued the seven s hould remain free pending appeals. Greaney said some of the arguments were frivolous. but those about admissibility or the teen-agers' statements and other trial testimoay might be grounds for appeal. He said the youth• must po6t a $5,000 surely bond or make other bond arrangements. according to Susan Mellen. an assistant clerk with the state appeals Year-End to court in Boston They must aJso report monthly The seven were sentenced by Superior Court J udge Williams Si mons, but he allowed them to remain free on personal recognizance until Jan. 5 so attorneys could argue before Greaney Daniel Ford. an assistant district attorney who prosecuted the teen-agers in a 17-day trial in November. opposed the delay in carrying out the sentence. The bodies of Richard Ret.tel, 18, and Barry Griffin. 19, were found m a 1971 white Cadillac pulled out or Laurel Lake on June 5 Ford sa id the car plunged into the water after the defendants jumped Retzel and Griffin to av e nge another beating Convicted were Peter Bianco, Joseph Burke. Robert Walker, Bruce Kern. Mark Hinman, Todd Terpak and Steven Pirelli. Quak es hit A laska PALMER. Alaska (API - Two earthquakes within 13· minutes of each other rocked the Fairb a nk s a r ea ear ly Wednesday, the Alaska Tsunami Warning System reported T her e were no r eports or injury or damage from the quakes. centered about 20 miles southwest of Fairbanks. Our storewide clearance of Fall fashions. Saue on day and evening dresses, classic and contemporary sponswear. suits. coats. knits. lingerie. Joungewear. shoes and accessories. JOHN HOGAN 7 uke adl•anrage of tlwse sovlngs with n .111 Optl1 ma/ char~w ACC<>Unt. Appl~/ In any Jc>hll liO~}Qll Ste)(('. L<J .Jollu: 7636 Girard. 454·71 21~ Fashion Vulle~: 2Hl ·7 100 Fashion ls/ancl. Nc>wf)<>(' Center: 644·7100 .. -. -------·---- ~UffiU~· Gypsy moth pests up Santa Barbara County officials considering spraying SANTA BARBARA (AP> - County official.a are con1iderln1 aerlal sprayinc of pesticides to battle a polenUally devutallnJ IYPSY moth population -the lar1:e;st eetation ln the state. A of 41 moths have been tra ed this year, a tenfold increase from 1980, said Ron Gilman, the county's assistant acrlcultural commissioner, wblcb bas prompted state and federal experts to conclude that the Santa Barbara area does indeed have "an infestation." Gilman also said the county bas not decided what approach to use on the problem -aerial or ground attack. Unless the state steps in, he said, the county Board of Supervisors probably wtll make the final decision on how to combat the moth In ita calerplllar ataae. The motbs' e11s will bat.ch in about two months, said Gilman, so county decision makers won't race a sudden choice like Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. did with the Mediterranean fruit fly. Where as the medfly ls attracted to fruit, the gypsy moth feeds on most forms of veeetation. Oilman sald the pest this year defoliated 11 million acres in the East , an1 area m ore than one-tenth ttie size of California. If the gypsy moth becomes permanent'y established in Santa Barbara, said Santa Barbara County Agricultural Reburial of Indian remains halted LOS ANGELES (AP> Aeling at the request of an archaeologists group, a judge has ordered the state to stop the reburial of Indian remains and relies uncovered in the 1930s. Superior Court Judge John L. Cole also ordered the state to develop a program for handling the remains that will take "into consideration the needs and desires of native Americans." Cole further a sked for an environmental impa ct statement on the program and set a Feb. 4 hearing to check on the progress of the program. The order halts plans for 17 burials of artifacts and bones sch eduled for January at undisclosed locations in the Sierra Nevada foothills . Two of the 33 state collections were buried last IJlOnth. Cole's ruling came in response to a Dec. 9 civil suit by the American Co mmittee for the Preservation of Archeological Collections. The archaeologis ts arg ed that the reburial of the 71 s keletal remains and 10, assorted artifacts w ··anti-intellectual research contrary to the eth ics archaeological scholarship," well. But Indian groups protest that the burials violated lndi n cultural and religious belie s . They sought to have the remains already buried disinterred. .~ .......... "CLASSIFIED" ANNIVERSARY -Al and Suzanne Maas. who stand in the backyard of their Saratoga home. are celebrating their first wedding anniversary1 after meeting through a classified advertisement. They are expecting a baby in February. ... "'tint,... .. ,..,, ...... """ K.-.y~~----­" -... llMllM ,.... ....... ..,. 9"' I 1'111 llMil lWt flttn ,., ,.,,Cl\aM c.... "" ""' fOf CMMll1ffe41 Wllilt/ ..,. Mttt Cut-."'* ell tHlit*t ..... ta on., ,.,.,.,J~ lO 1m GM for -.. ti .......... Mlllll K......,~~.1111t1tt1H1el ... 1 I ... Celt ...... ltftt .....-. !* .... . .,.. ..... ,...., llfllil ... '"'" ,., ~ c.-i,.....,,., ....... .... , ...... Clas!Mlf lllfl .. .,... nMtultata ()1111 tq!llH J111pir 10 1917 "'"'""' Y1tJ.il'9f'ldpellne ltUlilM c...--~Ill SMlltlll c,w.,.. Commissioner Graydon Hall, ''Property owners would need to apply pesticides each year to protect their trees; the watershed of the Santa Ynes m ountain range would be endangered by defoliation of c hapar ral plants , and quarantines on the movement of plant material (including nursery stock) from the area would be imposed to prevent the spread of gypsy moths to other areas of California." The greatest concentration of gypsy moths has been in the heavily wooded residential area of Montecito, but one also was trapped in the middle or the city of Santa Barbara. Currently, the moths are dormant, hidden in egg clusters that resemble light brown felt specked with gray dots, which are the eggs themselves. When the eggs hatch in a few months, caterpillars will eme rge. Nocturnal at first. the two-inch caterpillars each feed 24 hour s a da y in the mid-s ummer stage. They will eat anything, said Gilman, and a single caterpillar can devour one square foot of foliage in a day. The immediate t:hreat ends when the caterpillars spin their cocoons and, five or six weeks later, emerge as moths. According to Hall , the pes ticides that have been effective against the gypsy moth include Carbary!, known commercially a s Sevin , Trichlorfon. known as Dylox, and Acephate , known as Orthene. Man to he conunitted in burning· RIVERSIDE <AP) -A man who allegedly burned his baby daughter to death trying to exorcise demons from his house, will be committed to a state hospital until he is found competent to stand trial, a judge baa ruled. Superior Court Judge John H. Hews ordered Jimmy Doyle Meeks placed in Patton State Hospital on Tuesday after psychiatrists determined Meeks S.l!ffers delusions and does not un'derstand the seriousness of the charges against him. The 24 -year-old janitor is charged with murdering 5-month-old Alicia Meeks, who suffered fatal burns from a furnace grate in the family home and felony child abuse for burn injuries to his 2~-year-old son , Alan . who has since recovered from his burns. Meeks' son was treated at a hospitaJ for burns and released to the custody of bi s grandparents and mother, who was at work when her daughter died. Following his arrest on Oct. 31, Meeks told police he had laid his daughter. who he claimed was a "devil's helper," on the furnace grate, which he called "the gateway to hell." Meeks claimed he was trying to drive evil spirits from his house on Indiana Avenue. Cl arence He watt, a deputy public defender representing Meeks. said state hospital officials will evaluate Meeks' condition every six months to d etermine whether he is mentally fit to stand trial on the charges. - ---... -~ • =--== ---- ----------------- Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/Thurtday, December 31 , 1881 SNAPPY SALUTE -Birger F. Westergard returns a salute after receiving uniform for Christmas in front of Oxnard convalescent ....... hospital. Westergard wanted a uniform ln which he could be buried. Oldest Marine gets yuk wish ·' 96-year-old veteran receives dress blue uniform " OXNARD <APJ -A 96 ·year-old man who officials say is the oldest living retired Marine got his Christmas wish : a uniform to show friends and in which to be buried. With the help of top Marine offi cials and the civilian Marine Corps League, Birger F . Westergard received a dress blue uniform during a ceremony outside bis Oxnard convalescent hospital. It bears a stair sergeant's insignia and bas five four-year service stripes on the s leeve. Westergard enlisted in 1907 and served 20 years in posts throughout the world, then was recalled during World War II. He retired as a staff sergeant. Then, on Dec. 1, Westergard wrote to Gen. R.H. Barrow, the Marine Corps commandant, asking ror a uniform. Barrow·s sta ff in Was hington, D.C. checked Westergard's military records and found he is the oldest living retired Marine, officials said. The Marine public affairs office in Los Angeles was asked to follow up. · · 1 came out here and talked to Mr. Westergard and found he is a very fine gentleman," said Maj. Pat Coulter. head of the Los Angeles office. "I then contacted the commandant and suggested we do all we could for him ." Coulter said that because the Marine Corps should not set a precedent of giving uniforms to r etired personnel, the Marine Corps League was asked to provide the uniform, and di~ Coulter presented it wi about 25 residents of Ma Acres Health Care and seven Marine sergeants on hand. A t1 the conclusion of tb ceremony. the Marines saluted and Westergard snapped a return sa lute from hia wheelchair. · "I 'm going to be buried in UU. · uniform," he said afterwerd. "I'm proud to wear it." Follow your team in .. ~ the Daily Pilat Fblo ~ Ralph I.auren New Year Sale I Polo merchandise for men , women. boys and girls. One fourth to one half off. Begins January 2 through 14. Store hours: Monday through Fnday 10 a.m .-9 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m.· 6 p.m. and Sunday 12 noon -S p.m. Visa • Mastercard • Amex R O BERT ~ILLIFS' COMPANY SOUTH COAST PLAZA SAKS WING. COSTA MESA. CA 714 641 -0353 ---------~·.----~--....... ...----·~.:?. Orange 9oaat DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, December 31, 1981 ............. MAID OF COTTON -Jann Teresa Carl, University of Missouri coed, reigns as the 1982 Maid of Cotton. Miss Carl, 21, of Moline, Ill., was chosen from a field of 36 at Memphis , Tenn .. to succeed Karie Ross of Oklahoma. Cops seize illegal reptile-skin items BEVERLY HILLS (AP> -,Raids on. a Neiman-Marcus department store and six shops on posh Rodeo Drive netted what an official termed the largest seizure of illegal crocodile skin and reptilian items in state history. The district attorney's office is studying whether to me misdemeanor charges or illegally aeJling items made from endangered reptiles, said Deputy District Attorney John Lynch. The raids were conducted Dec. 18 and 21 by 'the district attorney's oflicf> and state department of Fish and Game agents, s&d DFG game warden Louise P. Fiorillo. The seized clothing, shoes and accessories were valued at more than $58,000. she said. "Monetarily spealting, the recent raids r esult- ed in the largest reptile skin seizure in the state . thus far," Ms. Fiorillo said. In addition to the Neiman-Marcus on Wilshire Boulevard. raided stores were: Hermes, Giorgio's, Lanvin of Paris, La Bagagerie, Lina Lee and Bally of Switzerland. The largest seizure was from Neiman-Marcus, where $16,SSO worth of shoes, handbags and other items were confiscated. A search warrant for the raids was issued by Municipal Judge Michael T. Sauer, alter Ms. Fiorillo had experts inspect the merchandise in the stores, according to a court alfidavit. Sale or importation or reptilian items are punishable by fines, county jail terms, or both. Lynch said he would decide what action to take within 10 days. Pandas increasing PEKING CAP> -China's giant-panda popula· tion has stopped declining as scientists find ways to save the prized "living fossil " from extinction, the official Xinhua news agency said. Xinhua did not give an estimate for the number of pandas living in China -mostly in the southwest bamboo forests of Sichuan province. But last year China's Forestry Minis try estimated that more than 1,000 remained. Tile big drop was in 1975-76, when 138 pandas died of starvation because of a scarcity of bamboo. If you don't wa~f to drink That's our business COSTA MESA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Call 642-2734 Alcoholis·m ·Recovery Services 301 Victoria Street Costa Mesa, CA 92627 Appr:o~~-~or Medicare ¥outh knowledge of music, art declines · Scores on tests of.aptitude in both areas down from 1971-72, studies show BJTM~PNM American cblldrea todaJ lmoW Ma about mualc and eouldw art 1.., Important than t tudentl ln the earty 1910., aceordine to a pair ol f9dera.I 1tucll•. Oa tbe bricbter 11de, t.be 1tucUe1 eaUUed "Art and YOUDI Americana lt74·7t," and "Mu1lc lt11·7t " releued by tbe National Aueument ot Educatlonu Prosr... 1aid tbat tbree·quarten qt the 1tudent1 aurvered have po1ltlve atlltudea toward mualc, and mon atudeata •Ced 9 ud 13 vlalt art IDUMWDI tban clld y~ten lJa tbe mld·'?Oa. Roy H. Forbee, director ol NaUona.I A11e11me_nt, pointed out that the flnd.lnp come at a time wbea many public acboola strapped for tu.nets have been cuttln1 back on music and art Pl"OCJ"ama. "Aa a aoelety, we value art and a>u1lc and place Importance on them. Yet we provide very lltUe opportunity for 1tudent.a to reeelve a formal, structured education ln either area .. ., " Forbes aald. More than 95,000 atudenta aced t , U and 17 across the country participated in the latest art and music studies conducted In the 1978-79 school year by National Aaaeaament, a Denver-based acency funded by the Department ol Education which conducts periodic s urveys of students' academic pro tress. The music s urvey , which compared the lat.eat sample group with youngsters queried In 1971·72, found that knowledge of music history and style is not widespread, and does not necessarily increase with ace. On exercises deslaned to We opened the National Home Center Newa and. lo and behold. we read tbla price comparlaon. We alway• thought we were the lowest overall, but who knew we were tbe loweat priced on ao many items. (No. National Lumber baa nothing to do with National Home Center. A lot of people like the word "National") The date was Nov. 6. 1981. thoH were the prices that day, and ... you were there? teat that knowledge, 9·year-oldt scored an averase of $8 percent. 13-year-olds 1cored 36 percent and l7·year·olds scored 39 percent. T he scores on overall music achievement were down about 3.3 percent tor 9-year-olds compared with children teated in 1971-72, 2.5 percent lower for 17-year-olds, and about unchanged tor 13-year-oJds. Girls scored slightly better than boys on music questions at all three ages. Geographically, students living In the Southeut or attending schools in disadvantaged urban areas scored lower than the real of the naUon. But nearly all teen-asers -90 percent at age 13 and 98 percent at age 17 -said they listen to music. And 84 percent of 9·year-olds said they had some music instruclion during the 1978-79 school year. Among the llndln11 In the art aaaeasment, which compared 1978-79 students with a survey taken 1n the 1974-75 school year, teens •led 13 and 17 Indicated by their responses that they attach leas Importance to the arts aod are leas apt to like abstract or non-traditional art styles. Overall art scores dropped 2.2 percent amon1 13-year-olds and 1.9 percent among 17-year-olds. ·'The majority of students do not appear to design or draw particularly well,·· the study concluded, adding that despite the rather mediocre art perlormance by U.S. students, most have had the chance to study art at school. More than 90 percent or students 1n each age group attended schools where art instruction was ottered . Gl\IE~~ SGUE55ES rLL6o OF~ "fl.4E8oARP Wint eA~L'1 Arieet::.tCNJ PREc;t~NT5" BILL ~--- Reproduced from National Home Center News Magazine. These prices were In effect Nov. 6, 1981 and are not In effect now. Appe1r1nce Pine 1.19 $ 0.84 s 1.23 s 1.98 (SU4l s 1.39 1x4-6 ft . s 1x4-8 ft . 1.69 1.12 1.82 2.64 ~1 .92 1.85 1x8-6 ft . 2.59 (1 .99) 1.62 2.80 3.90 2.90 2.79 1 x8-8 ft . 3.49 2.16 3.75 5.20 3.75 Particle board (4.99) 4x8x1h" 7.99 5.97 4.47 7.49 NA NA 4X8X¥•" 10.99 7.97 6.47 10.99 11 .99 NA 4x8XW' NA 6.97 5.47 9.49 9.99 7.99 9.99 8.49 Drywall 4x8x1h'' 3.99 3.99 4.99 4.99 4.59 Malibu 6-llght set 119.99 (84.99) 126 .99 (89.97) 129.95 124.99 129.99 wttll timer wtout timer water Pill Shower Massage wall m11nt #SM-2U 21 .99 21 .97 23.95 27.99 21 .99 hand held #SM3UV S4.99 31 .97 39.95 39.99 33.99 Peerless faucet #9120 34.99 31 .99 32.95 34.99 29.99 Ortho Liquid Sevin 16 oz. 5.99 5.97 6.49 5.99 6.49 Scott's Turf Builder 2,000 s . ft. 9.99 8.99 7.77 9.55 8.99 8.99 Private label paint, 1 gal . 11 .99 9.77 11 .95 (1 .9n 11 .99 14.99 Mclosk Tu 111 stain, 1 t. 8.49 5.89 NA 6.49 NA Black I Decker 71/4" clrc. saw 59.99 44 .97 NA 49.99 (39.99) 49.99 BID UI ... #7504 16.99 13 .88 14.95 17.99 17.99 BID R drill #7127 24.99 23 .97 24.95 21 .99 24.99 BID VSR drill #7190 39.99 (34.99) 33 .97 33.95 39.99 34.99 Stanley hammer, 16 oz. NA 11 .99 NA 13.99 15.99 Stanley 12' Powertock 6.99 8.99 8.49 out of stock !:I: measure 8.99 DI on 21" 8 t. hand saw 19.99 16 .99 21.95 19.99 19.99 Rain Dance car wax, 14 oz . 5.99 out of stock 7.99 NA paste 7.49 Champion spark llugs (8) out of saoc:k 9.88 10.49 9.99 out of stock Prestone Winter/ ummer II antifreeze 1 al. 4.79 4.69 5.79 5.•9 NA Kidde fire extln ulsher 18.99 13.97 12.97 16.99 12.99 •11111 ·~ """' •11111 --Him -TOTAL· 371.D 311.al m.11 •. •.••. u m.11 111.11 NATIONAL LUMBER'S PRICES "Welt, If It Isn't the old Gang of Onel" Patie nts u se pot therapy SACRAM ENTO <AP> -Abo ut l ,000 Californians are using marijuana to lessen the side e ffects of chemotherapy for cancer, but the number is fewer t han expected, the author or the 1979 law that authorized it said. Sen . Robert Presley, D-River side , said Wednesday preliminary analysis showed that one-third or the patients reported significant reduction of side effects. a third reported some improvement, and the rest dropped out for var ying reasons. The state's Research Advisory Panel, which oversees the program. said 320 cancer doctors have signed for t he program in 22 counties, but only about half have made use of it. ·'The panel people tell me that some doctors may have signed up so as to be eligible for the pr ogram if the first res ults are s ignificant enough," Presley said. The panel, attached to the state attorney general's office, signs up doctors and cont rols the m a rijuana cigarettes and caps ules or THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, which are received from the federal government. Presley said fewer· patients than first expected may be using the drug because: -Doctors may be awaiting more conclusive results. -Family and peer pressures may force some patients to drop out or not take part. -Marijuana is not proving to be the cure·all it was touted to be. -Some doctors and patients may not be willing to go through the necessary red tape. -Other experimental drugs are competing with marijuana. PresleJ said the panel is varying dosage ao~ schedules and has designed a new regimen in an attempt to increase effectiveness. "The panel's experts say that. unfortunately, the worst patients a re not helped as much as are the less severe cases," Presley s aid. "Part or the reason is apparently that the really sick patients cannot keep the capsules down. The panel is attempting to allow ror more cigarette form use for these." Music fund vetoe d ALBANY, NY <APJ -Gov. Hugh Carey has announced he has vetoed legislation to establish a "musjcal instrument revolving fund" to aliow sym phonies to borrow money for costly instru· men ts. The revolving fund would have provided state loans, with interest rates between 3 percent and 10 percent. to orchestras in the slate. The governor said he feared the legislation mig ht be unconstitutional. even though he rec ognized "the high cost of musical instruments is a very real concern for the symphonic orchestras." He said it was unconstitutional for state funds to be used "as a loan or gift to private persons." L ,M.Boyd in~~r:;:; Daily PHDi NO DEALER SALES AD STARTS THURS. UllliLAZED RED QUARRY TILE PAYERS &"d"Tll.E GNat for the patio. (La1t d0y to think about taxe1. I think enryone 1hould pay h11 lncome tax with a 1m.lle. J tried but they wanted c:aah.) nUIDMASTER BALLCOCK 3~400~ Don•tya)••' hate when ya bean the terlet runnln' ID the middM of the Dlght and ya hen'• to haul yow bon .. out of the 1ac:k to 1hake the handle. REATILITOR 36" ~ ZERO .... f.11',JA ,..., •• •fA,, .... ' .. y- CLEABlllCE FIREPLACE 199!! I can't thlAk of cmyt.hbag that iMI• better than to warm yowMU lD &oat of a ft.replace OD a c:old winter night. <Tocmtr too4.S..1) TITO POBTDLE BEATERS Wood tone beaten wltblnatant glow l400 1497 ribbonelement1. WATT IPRT-10 Therm-0.Diol thermostat 1Wltc:h. and hideaway handlH. Limited quantitle1. llfTERMA nc TIMERS SUPER COP YARWLE TIMER 5~~18 Start the coffM ID the morning betore you •••n get out of bed with one and fake the burglars out with another oo• turning on llght1. 00 EVEREADY C OR D BATTERIES 15! n.n••LE DOOR STOP 9t NO, IT'S BARE ROOT ROSES! E••ry time I look at the word banroot I kMp IMlng ba:Ntoot. Well. I gu.eH ln a way they are barefoot 'cauM their rool1 aren't c:o•eNCI. (No? Well. what d o you want from me anyway?) ~>;:.M ............ 159 No. l NOif-PATENT 2 3 7 Pick from Chrysler Imperial. Peace, QuMn Ellaabeth and mor.. • •..... No. 1 PATENT 3 69 Cbolce of ling Croeby. Double 0.Ught. Mlat• Uacoln and others. • ••• , •• IEW! JOBE'S ROSES OR IZll.EU, CAMELLIAS, • RBODODEllDRON FERmm:R SPIKES. Put one appUc:atlon of theM guya aroundyowOowen I 99 and you'll get more bloom•. Oneappllcatlonlaatlforthe PA.I OF 10 wbole MCllOD. ~ CBICON YITIMDI B-1 1 Ju.t trcmap lanted a bunch of bedding plant a and uMd th la etuft. It' I gNat 'CCUM lt kMpl 'em from going lnto ahoc:k and promot" root d•••lopment. 99cQT. GEBIWll'S REDWOOD TUB 5~~. Make1 a great planter or be a Uttle ln"9nt1Ye and make a bot tub tor your c:ata or for '°"'pet c:hlcbn. McCULLOCH 16" POWER MIC 310 lilS CHiii SAW 13997 Haa a 2.1 cu. LD. engine for power plu• automatic and manual oUlDg. cmti-Ylbratioa •yatem. and w1aporol.lDd c:bcd.n brake/ band quard. MDYILLE FIREGLISS m FIBERGLASS SBlllliLES Good •tuft and they guarantee It for 20 para eo why would you want to get cmy ~eh.Ing ... ? UIDED SBOP PL !WOOD ... U" ••7 7W ... ¥." 11 77 bl ~---e1c1e aac1 ro.aola -tM other. (Jlhata P'&t ....... ti.at'• roueta toward tM..,...~•waU eoyou .... -..toaoollatlt.) RUBBERMllD 32 GILLON ROUGBlfECK 11~! You know what kind of a beating thoae garbage cana can get. Well. thl• one fight• bac:k. You c:an 1malh It. hit lt, or kick It (bey. too violent. cool It.) GLID33liALLOM TRASH BAGS I COUNT I~~ UMIL. Don't gel mad juet gel the tra1b out on time for the IGDitary englnMr1 to pick It up. (What did you think I'd 1ay. garbage men?) SCRIBER BAn'ERY CHARGERS 612AMPDUAL RATE Rec:hargH 12 •olt batteries. 2 amp rate dHlgned tor motorc:ydH. #BHP-12 OR lOAMPMANUAL. Rec:hargH moat 6or12 •olt batteriH to full c:harge ln 2-6 houn. #C6612 Charge I Remind• me of Teddy Rooaenlt at the San Juan Hill battle. YOUR CHOICE I SHELL FIRE 81 ICE ILL SEASON MOTOR OIL 10W/40WT. 93c QT. I don't know about thl1 National Lumber I? They're pretty allppery. Now we know bow they get that way. What a dl1playl WD-40 I 2 7 9 0Z. For aqueak1. aqueal1. and 8CJUGWk1 ••• Ju1t gtH It a •quirt and It'll lOOMD up hingM. wheel1. loc:b. Uahlng tackle, and mo .... BIRSB STORAGE SIELYDlli 30 .. WxtO"H.xl2"D a ''Wx11'1bl2'1> U'"Wwft''lbll"D 2 I -~ ONGt for tb. ~or utUlty room to atore tlalapoo .• ltwdyU.lftl with metal bracea for ....... '. . ( : J .'1 •I ' ) l ·. ·' 1 ' .j .f J • ' Aa * •. Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIT'huraday, December 31 , 1911 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 6Jfi&~wdl and~~~ • • • • • alt of~ al Ute • • • • ~~ fffJild ~~~ 0 • a o a • •• • • •• • • • . . ·~,. ..... . . v. • • • • • . . ~ • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • "°~~~~ and '111/,~WIAA/.1-P/I/. • Daily Pilat , -EVENltG~ t 1-t) eu.IHC)llN8T aOwl. VCL.Avt.MI(~ l:OO ID. NEWt CHAALJm•a ANCMUI THEMUfJNTa 0'*11' P-1 Biiiey • HAWAII flW.-4 A p1yd\OllC lnlpw erl481>- getl the llVM of molorttla u lie tw .. et c.,a lrom 1 hl11910e bunlilr ove<!Ooi(l"Q • "'I~ hlghw1y ·~~~--------------........................ a•s•s ...... t~z•z•i~tllll .. "' .. IE&ll'""""'~l!l!!!ll!!llllll '-"° 1 Kfno Henry II I.e. Ill~ dMltlOn -~ WCOMllOt .. he CIOn• i.mplat .. hla 11ormy mat· ,.. 10 the &trong-.tllecl EIMnor Of Aqultllinl 'P()' tO:GO.Cll ........ A worn.an ptlgf\ent with he< MYllllh CflllO slgoa fOf • 11wt11U110t1 prooedvfe to be peffOt"*' lolfowlno the baby'• birth. then Clalma .tie Oldn'I ltnow -.t efll wMligNng llf.c•..::a Q.OMUP "~ Mylhe letllOd The Mlfeo .. " C0trffPOOdaflt Jlm l.alirle tookl II the _., liluatton In Jltj)tt> wnlch contrll>Yt.O 10 111 r~ potl•Wat gtOWlh Dul le now thrMlel\lnv IO 111><1 enn1ne 11 eu.a.~ "Tha Litt Crop" The ~-to-hNO c:oofrontt-uon ~ Cellf0tnl• O•O--• llnd ~· h .. many polllblt con- qu.n~• for Ama<IOa'a foodauppty Orange Co8&t DAILY PILOTfrhufecfay. December 31 , 1981 ~· TUBE TOPPERS KA8C 8 7•30 "The Tan11shc<l St ar " A look al t ccn -agl' prostitutio n an Hollywood. KNBC I) 8 00 "King Orun~c Jamboree Purude " New Year's t;vc event is held 1n M1am1 for 48th year KOC E A 10 : oo "T h l' l>anc ing Princesses .. Royal Ballet pe rforms in mus ical fantasy adapkd from ti fairy talc. KHJ CJ 11 :00 "Tribute t o Guy Lom bardo ... The m trn. has family a nd home are profiled. Boyt. o.orge Joo.•. Don Wtlllame, and Joe Sun at• IMlurecl In •Ill ... .,.11\0 of 1001 ... tomplng mvlle 11:41 C8J ON L.OCA TION the days 01 vaudev1tte with 1lapa11ck comedy and elaboflt• dance numlMltt 1:20 D MOVIE JMIH Cole YCllHl09' QM'O laav" • 11811 of eMC>tled Dank•. pllin<lll•CI •I•• ~endOMO bod ... In ltl •al.• U Iha OUI· laWI f lOe IOWlfCI their llllet llllO'*dOwn 'A' (f)MOVll • *°"' "Thi le Steps" ( 19tt } JOhn M1t11. 01vtd W11ner A m11n ~ the QUll•)' ot t>oth the poliol ano • Ncr.C group OI IOlllgn llQ9"18 opetaflng In E tlQland whit\ he 11 tr emed for • atr ""118' • rf'KJ(der 'PG JMD MOVll * e A "lt'a A 0111" (tta.4) w C Flelcla. 8at>y I.Moy A groc...y etore owner ln"9r 111 an OtlflQI plen tetlort a:a• MOW * * o,; "M1g1c Town ( 1947) J.,,,•• Stewart, J-Wyman A am111, ~ut town UndefOO" • ch~ fOf the WOtM lttlr being publlGl.l.O .. •n •~emple to 011111 towne •:OI (JO ltlOYIE • • •'II ·suparman aneu T11omp1an, M.,. Power• An ao""n1111er "'*" fhe MOtat r-ie reglclnl OI Alr!U In I hydrOQ«l-lllMd l>ettoon to u•reh tor a m1H lno ... '"°' .. CC)**'/\ 'Hotel P.,IOI. IO" (IHI) Gin• LOllOb<IQI· d1. A .. c Gu111n .. 1 A r rencih Lo1111rio attempts to atrlflOI I ,_llngfUI tryel In I llOCel wHh hltl nelgnbO<'• "" .. •• *It "Sc>Ke Mov .. ( 19711 Oocuman111y MllM bV Mike Oldtteld ll:OO •• * ·~ "G*l\l*-' Merry Btun•tU•" 119$5) Ji n• Ruuett. Jeanne Crain T-.,_ bulllnHt _,... 1n P11la 11terno1 "°"' to •MP r-tn1ar1111ng wtth lhetr Cat--%)••• A l 111 .. Romane•" ( 19791 l au ,_ °""* Otane L- 12:30 9 • * "The Reveng1 Of T"• Myateron• From Mara'' Captain Scl r .. t • llll'HQS~ "' Ola( CA\1£TT GUMt Cf\WIM Pl«~ CJ) C88NEWI ~.=.eNIEWS ROCKIN' Dick Clark will salute the New Year with "New Year's Rockin' Eve '82" al 11 : 30 tonight on KABC ( 7 l ID THEOAHCM ll'MICQllt Jim Oale llnd pr~t d~ lrorn London'• Royll Biiiet ~orm In Ihle mvllGll lentMy IOIC)ted lrom • llllry 1818 by lhe B<oth«s Gtlfnm (R) "Don Ricalll And Htl WIN Ovys" &r.-Baum Way· f111d FI0-1 and Midi,.._, Jackie Walllfleld. JoMny Yune and PUOQy )O'f1 Don Rtclilff In thl• ~ormance 11~ llve •I the Slhltl Holel • 11> e "Poppy' ( t93Sl W C Fteldt Rochelle Hud· son A down l nd·ou1 l>Ym 11ia. 10 prove thet rua daughtlr 1t an helrest 1:308 NEWt 8 MOVIE • • •11o "Per lee I Friday" ( 1970} Uraul• Andreu , Stani.y Baker An ... .,., ant bank maniiger per· llUedH a -•11hy coupl• 10 help him rob h•• bank ( 1971) <:nrtetC>P'll< Reeve, MlrQOI Kidder Miid· m_.ed reporter Cllrk Kent dona hi• r.a cape Ind u-hit aol)llmuman ~· 10 lhwar1 an eroh Crlmlnal'• ptol to dMtroy the Well CoHt Wtlh a g11n111r111quue 'PG ~· d.ap into IPICI to atop the deadly Mple<ont from dMlrO'(lng EM1h G' 1:00 . • • • "The S-t" Voyaga Ot Sinbed" (1951) Kerwin Mtlhewt. Kathryn Grallt A prtnoMa dwat1ed by a maglClan t spell It aided by Srnt>.O * *'~ "Atk Any Giff ( 1959) Shlrley M&c:Ll lM, Oavld Niven Job and hus· band-hunting OOC<1py the Utne OI I g1tl newly lrttved In New York City Uf} REMEMBER WHEN ... "The lmiige Makers" OIGk Cavett reviews 200 ~·· of Americ.,, commerc•al· tam •• from the early c<>lo· nlal pe<k>d throug" today's s~ billion ln<Sutl ry (S)MOVIE * • • • "Adam's Alt>' ( 1949) Spencer Tracy. Kat,,ertne Hepburn A murder 1r1a1 creates "•woe In '"e mam1g11 ot a wom •n l•wyer end her hua· banO. an ess111ant <11Slr1CI attor"4ty &.'06 CZ J MOVIE * • • "Tiie ldolmali11 (1980) Rey S"arkoy. Tovah Feldlhuh A manlpulaUve manager uses var1ous ployl to catapult two ,_,. llOM• tnto pop s•no•no stardom. 'PG 8:30 G) I LOVE LUCY Lucy appoonll "ersett IS Ricky s agent fl:) KCET NEWSBEAT ~ BUSINESS REPOAl CJ) NEWS eaplore 1 melhOCI 01 giving blflh undetwlllr. • took into a worry cNnlC wn.<• mem1>1rah1p...itllHla you to have someone else do your worry1ng D FAMfl y FtUO D LAVERNE & SHIAl.EY &COMPANY L•-M'• IUl-mlnule dlll lor Slllr .. y't New Y11r'a Eve party doesn't worll out fJ IHSIOHT 'The Tarnished Star" A look at teen-age prostltu· lion In HOltywoc><I G) M0 A0 8'H Hawl\eye ano B J a ett0<11 10 be nice 10 Frank back· fife ..meo they 1nv11e him 10 )04n ,,...,r poker game and he cleans them out g) TIC TAC DOUGH tll) MACtEl. I LEHRER REPORT m CINOERRA881T CJ) P.M. MAGAZINE BetlOrSChke's mlraculou1 comebaCIL @) YOU ABKEO FOR IT Featured ''How To tgtoo In Alaska and "S1><dermen Ot Hong Kong H INSIDE THE NFL Hos11 Lan Dawson and Nock Buonocon11 present h1ghl1gh1S o t crttrcal game6, analys11 and pre- oict1on1 of upcoming d1v1. s.onal contests an the NFL ®J BA.ANEY MILLER Barney ts ordertl<I to lay off three ol his men as New York S<Jtters a hnanc1a1 cu· ... 0 MOVIE 1:00 8 MAGNUM, P.I. • • ·~ 'Spoce Movie ' (1979) Documenl"Y Muarc by M ike Oldlleld Archival 11tm footage chrOnleles Ille triumphs ot the US SP&C• progr11m. tocvs•no on me dramatic Apollo t t moon landing 'G' 7:00 II C88 NEWS 0 NBC NEWS 1J HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Marton lranatorms Leather fuscadero •nto s lovaly young tedy tor a military t>all U A8CNEW8 G) THEJEFFE~ George gets a peek 1n10 the future II) JOKER'S WILD &\) OVEREASY Guest• 111u mus1c11ns Marton &nd Jimmy McP1rlland tR) :;: m MACNEIL I lEHREl' REPORT (J) TIC TAC OOUGH @) E.NTERT AIHMEHT lOHIGHT An 1n1erv-wnn Jill St John ttf H80 SNEAK PREV1£W: JANUARY Hu1ba.nd-and·w1fe com.cs Jerry Stiller and Ann8 Meara 1ntroc:tuee the mov· les. 5')8Clall And Spor1 S events com1nq 10 Home Box Office 1n Jonuary (())MOVI£ • 11> "Mlddle·AQ8 Crazy j 1980) Anl\·Margret. Bruce Dern A Texas developer's SUCC1$8IUI job end beaUll· fut wile manage to dr!Yll him 1n10 • mid-Ille crtsls 'R' 7:30 II 2 ON THE T~ Featured 1 took at the Ku Klu• Klan 1n Ca11torn1a, CHANNEL LISTINGS f) KNXT IC.BSI 0 C!) KNBC (N IKI l 0 l<TLA (Ind l H ID KABC t A£1(1 c 0 KFM 8 <C ASI • ('.) l<HJ TV I Incl ) 11 a:> IC(ST I ASC} p ID K TTV !Ind I s Cl) l<COP· TV t Ind I 0 8i) KCET (PBSI 8 llil KOCE <PBSI A bu<ldy 01 Magnum'• from hit Navy days St.Id· oenty d-and the ott~ ve<dlCI IS lhlt h8 was a VIC· ttm of .t drug overdose (R} 0 Qt KING ORAHOE JAMBOREE PARADE Cover11ge of the •8th annual New Year's Eve event trom M1am1 Flor>da 0 MOVIE • • ·~ The Horn Btmors At M1dn1ght' 1194S/ Jack Benny Al<!•.s Smith A no1-so-911ted trumpet play- er 1mag1nes h1msell u Oabt1el w1m a horn fJ@) MOAK ANO MINDY Morie takn Mindy s p1aoe on a TV newscast and del,.eu h•$ own hand· picked inside scoops (R} 0 UPfTNS IHTEAHA TIONAL HEWS REVIEW1N1 W COUNTRY TOP 20 Q) MOVIE • <t • Mysteries From Beyond The Triangle • 119771 Documentary Rese&reliers probe the mys11fy1ng phenomenon ot strange drsappearances 1n tr•e 'Oev•I s Trtang .. EJl) WANAOl 18 OOH£ Methods of re-c:reahng the hves 01 SOO people, lulled on a !ltngle day r>early rive centuries ago •n South Dakota. 1<e e•amlned m SNEAK PREVIEWS Rogef Eben end Gene SISkel review "Tap1" and Hear1bef!PS 1C MOVIE * • ·~ · Silent Scream" ( 1980) Rebecca Bakllf\Q Yvonne OeCatlo Several college students take rooms 1n a toreboc:tlng old On TV 2 TV ~mo t(.1n._.mt)YI tWOR I NY N ( tWTUS1 l fSPNI C!.howl1ml'I SPOll•qhl IC.tlt>lr NPw" Nf'twort..1 ~J Daily Pilat Classifieds \l)\\'i $If-• .;\f\'I\ f\!l9ef\ '1\l't>('{' cof\G 91f> ... c. \) \\ef\\ \ e\~c\T·~.,_ceo~ \\0 9y ~Q'.l\~ V· ' ' Only two calla from • the Register. Sold It In the Piiot th• flrat deyl ' ' ~~~1 @ 642-5678 charge It~-by phone From South Leguna & North County call 540.1220 toll-free .. ...., ... houN -· I gtllly and Iliff unllOIYed muro.r wu cornmllltd yeall 1tarller ·R' ($)MOVIE e e ''I "Liii .. M1•1 Matket' ( 1980) Watt11 Mltlhlu. Jutte Andrews BIMd on the OlmOn Runyon lte>ty A gruff, Stingy 1930s bOOll· le'• Ille Is turned around wherl he flCCIPll • S-yeat· 06d tnOPe>ei u • mlll'lilr lot a reolng bet 'PG DMOVIE • * "Froin Noon TIU ThrH" ( 19771 Ch1rl1J1 Bronson, ./flt Ireland A driller 11 recruited Into • •lg·l"I) robbery geng l..'06 ( t) MOVIE e • * 11\ "The Man WhO Fell To Eatlh" ( 1976} Oavtd Bowte. Cendy Ctarll A rack lllf from an al..,, planet, on an Interplane- tary MlrCh tor Wlllf for 1111 people. l>eComft an eaplolled mltllonalra on E111" 'A' 8:$0 fJ ®) 8E8T OF THE WEST' Sam 1ntt11rates an outlaw hideout to Cry 10 prove P1t· ke< Tiiiman tnnooent of c•tt.. rulthng c"11ges (Plf1 2)(R) Eli) SNEAK PREVIEWS Roget Eben arid Gena SISkel rev-Taps and Hear11>1e9s .. I!) POA'TMIT8 IN PABTEL.8 (H'MOVIE * * ·~ "Littla MIU Matk8f" 11980) Watter M•tthau, Julle Andr-s BaMd on the Damon Runyon llory A gr ult. SI IOQY 1930s l>OOI<· ... , bte Is tun>ecl around w'-1 he accepts a 6·yelf· old moppet u a merker tor a rec1ng be1 'PG' !OJ BAIEFl.Y MAN 8:00 0 IB MOVIE • • ''> Srlver Bear1 ( 1978} M ichael C11ne. Cybill Shephero Ao accounting geooua work•ng for a Las Vegu ayndlCata in a Swr&s ba.nk ~ involved In an lnlrleate plot lo swindle sor... of the world 1 top 11nane11r1 fJ ~ 8AANEY MIU.ER LUQ8r's 1mpendfn9 reflre- menl has Iha 1onety lflspec:tor contemplltiftQ • mail-order ortoe from 111• F11r East (RIO 0 YOU AS.cm FOA IT FHture<I "Playing Teg With Koala Bears and "World'• Fastest Typist Eli) MR.JAZZ;A POATAAIT OF 8IU. Y TAYLOR Mr. Billy Taylor, one of the •orld a g reatest 1au lmpreuarlQs, v-potnl& on currant lilms m MA8TERPtECE TliEATAE ' EOW1td And Mrs Simp- son Both Winston CllurChlll and Mrs Simp- son adYIMI the King not 10 abdleate uni~ he -whal meaaore OI supp0t1 he will rece<ve (Pan 710 CO'MOYIE CS.~ THE JOAH IWlM OOMEDYHOUA This evlftinO of unique entettalnmanl llature1 aou11 puppet-Barday Shaw lll1d , ,... T roptc;an• Oanoef• .MOYIE * • "New Year's Evil" ( 10&0) Ro% Kelly, Kip N!Wn The diec iC)Clteoy II I pur\k rod! Club receives I 1er199 of phone clllll prom· laing thet aornaone wlM be murdered In hlr honor every hOUr t>eiw.n 11 00 and midnight on New Year'aEve 'R' 10:11 lH)OHLOCA~ The Slalh Annull Young Comedian• Show" Tom and Oicll Smo4hll • are )Olned by ........ talented comedy ~· ., the Roxy In Loa A~ for an ev.n1ng of run. 1o:30. IND99CJEHT NETWOMNEWS SI THE 8U.NT AIWY fZ'MOYIE • * "Er-1lee<I 1197&) John Nance, Charloll• St-en Aller giving blnh to a monster 01 a child, a .nllrd ~no women IMves the baby lor the father' 10 raise 11one an whateve< lllhton he cnoos. 11.00 8 DD CJ) ltl a HEW8 D SAT\JAOAY NIGHT 0 A TN9lJT'E TO OUY LOMllAADO "Guy Lombatdo· ShOukl Auk! Acqualnle~" Tiie man. hlS farnlly Ind hOme • _., u few k,_ him through llNy year1 OI "lhe •-test mualc this t.oe of h8even " • TO 8E ANNOUNCED II) SANFORD AHO 80H f'red And Lamont aublll· lute for a friend tn a nightcklb Act 8D DO< CAVETT Gues1 Charles Pierce G> IH8IDE W~TON IO'MOVtE * • • "No Nukes" 11980) JICI< eon B<owne. C.oat>y. SllllS & NHh F001age ol I aeries of anll•nuclear po.- Ir cono9'1s "8ld In New York City during Septem- ber, 1979. IMhKlng the Oooble Brother'•, Carly Simon. J-Teytor and 8ruoe Spr1ng11_.. 19 com- piled In this doeumentary 'PG' C $1 MADAME IN MANHA TT AH Wayland Flowers and Mldame 111 jolned by Henny Youngm1n In this evening of nsque hum<>< 11:$0 1J (J) HAPf"V NEW YEAR. AMENCA Host Donny Osmond and l et Brown and H11 Band of Renmorn. Mlekey Ollt.y and tlle POlnter Sisters are arnO<IQ Iha ent111a1nera -"'Cl c.ieb< It e New Year' S Eve from a variety of loca· lions ICrOU Ame<tca D IB TONtGHT 12:00 D SHA NA NA Oueet· Chubby Chaoker GMOW • • •..\ "Zet>rl Force" ( 1975) Miki Lane Rlet\81d )( Sllttwy Former -· !>era of a U S m1t11ary unit lelle the &lclHS they ... ,ned In Vleinam and a1>91y them lothlatr .. 11 • CONTEMPOAARY HUl TM ll8tJU "Diet And W11ghl ContrOI tC MOW • * * "No Nukes ( 1980} Jackson Browne Croaby. Slllla & Naeh FOOllOI of I -181 OI anh·nucleaf pow- er Concerti held In N- York Clly dur1ng Seotem· b8f. 1979, leatuuno 11>1 Ooob.. Brotllers. Car1y Simon. James Tsylor and Brue» Sprtng&t->. 11 c;om. f)lled In thta doe4irnellllty 'PG' ( S) GAll.AGHER: AH UNCEH90MD Evu.o The come<11111 pet'lorms • aerie• of one-11nera and comic vignettes llJMOVE • • * · Allered Stal .... ( 1980) Wllflam Hurl. Blalr Brown A scien1111 con- ducts tla.,,. ••pe<tmerua 1.pon 111mee11 wt>icn ge1 out of conlrOI 'R' 12-.30 D QI TOMORROW Guests S1ng1r Edie Rtlt>- 1>411. B<11llh comeo1an Oava Allen (Al D MOVIE ,. *'I> 'The Ok1-Futuon6d Way ' ( 1034) W C Fields, Judith Allen A troupe ol 1etors becomes lltllled et eluding the law 1n each town In Whtch they pet· form II) INDUEHOEHT NETWOM< NEWS SI MOW 'l .. V1slteur1 Du SO•r' 1JIO . MOVIE • • • Anatomy Ot A Murdw' 119S9l James Sl-81'1, Ben Guzara A tm•ll·town lltorney o.t9ndt en Army llluteo- ent wflO 11 eccused of 11111· 1ng a man auspoctea ot ettlcillng hr1 •lie • MOY1E: • * ''t "Inn Ot The l'ngh1· ened People" 11972} Joan Cofllna, James Booth Embtll8fed over lhe brutal mu<det of their young d&ught9' e couple set oul to give her k1tter a stow btJt h()rrlbfe latte Of lhew Vilt\· gHnce ~= • * • · Altered States' ( 1980) Wiiiiam Hun Bta11 Brown A scien1111 con- duc;la bUar re ••pet 1men1s upon hlmMlt whlCh get out of control R (~)MOVIE • * • "Nine To Five" ( 1980) J- Fond a. Dolly Panon. Three working -rebel against their ""bJUO•llOn by • mate Chauvinist bosa 'PG 1:1& (HJ 8UALE8QUE U.8.A. Rob8f1 Alda and Lee Me<· edith I<>'" host Red But· ton• tor a col«M sak.tta 10 D MADAME 1H MANHATTAN Weyland Flowers ano MtlOame Ill IO<ned by H111ny Youngman In l"•s evening of rtaque humor 1:46(¢1MOW • • ,. •,. 'Woodstock ( 1970} Oc1Cum8f11ary M1ny of the top muSICal group• 01 me lal• ·ooa perform 11 the famous roel< concan held 1n S.thet. N-York, 1n 11169 t ZIMOVIE • • China 9 Liberty 37" ( 1980) Warren 0 11es Fabio T11St1 A stubborn IOM (, formerly a gun- hghl8t, Slltgell 8 Ofle·mln battle aga1n11 a ra11roao company wanting 10 make tra.c:ks 1ero11 hos te<rltory 'R' 2:00D ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT An lnterVl{tW wuh Jill St Jonn ~HEWS 2:0& II MOVIE • * •., 'Tiie Miracle 01 l he a.Ill' 11948} Fred MIC· Murray, Alida Valla A haro- 1>01led Hollywood press agent accomp1n1es the oead body of an actress to her home town and llnds himself a witness to a m1r- 1C .. 2".300 NEWS g) MOVIE • * "Tomb 01 The Living OetlO" ( 1970) JOlln Aatlley, Angelique Pl!Utohn A remote 1aland 1s rumorec to be lhe dwelling ptoca 01 a ghu11y gr-eteatu<I, the b ra1nch1ld ol • deranged scrent111 0JOAHRIVEM COMEOYHOUA This even.no of unlQU8 entertainment teatures .Oull pu~teer Barclay Shaw and Ille Tropteana Oanc:Ms 2:~1HJ ~PRYOR 1H CONCERT The well-known com.o11t> llhOOIS pointed bar be al almost 1very 1ns111u11on 1mag1nab4e In this uncen· sored no-hOldS·barreo conoe<I per-tormance 2:50D MOVIE * * ·~ "M1tllon Dollar l egs" 11932} W C Flel<ls Jack Oak111 A mylhtcal kingdom finds 11s _.llh dw1ncmno and decldft 10 concentreta on tis Otymplc; team an an eff0t1 lo ,., .. money 3:00 0 NEWS LSJ IHOWTIME't HOU.YWOOO 3:30 ( $ J MOVIE • • * 'Chap11r Two ( 19791 J-C..n M1r- sfll Meson Soon alllf his wile's death, a wrttlf llnds himself relucnantly l1ttlng 1n love again 'PG 0MOVIE • • • The l ong Riders" ( 1980) Jamea and SllC'( Keach David Ind Klllh Carradine The Jesse f 'riday•• D~yf l•fl' .HovlP• &:00 D • *'. "Tiu .. Ano Gus ( 1933} W C Fletoa, AhlOn Sklpwor1h Two gamblers preltnd lo 1>11 w11althy in en attempt to get money from 1 hlor ntece C • • •,, S1Mlnt Scream 11980) Rat>ecca Balding Yvonne OeCaflo 5· 15 l 11> • * ' TIMI IOOlm•~· fH ( 19801 Ray Snart..ey, Tovah Fetdshuh 5:30 0•• Tw1n8ed1" ( 1114 2} Joan Bennett. George Brent A e>enevo· lenl girl m11ries a lasH1lk· •no singer 8:30 'H • * '1 ·Snowball Expr11s 119721 Ou n Jones Nancy 04son A N..., York accoun11nt tr•· vets west 10 the Rockl8s 1n an 11temp1 10 mooern12e a d•lalJ'dateo ski resort he 1n11eruec o 1:00 0 •• '. l'iugo Tne HIP· po f 1978) Voices of Burt Ives, Paul Lynde A ponk n1ppopo1amu1 takes an 11dventurous trip ICCom· pan1ed by a 1111te blKk boy PG 7:30 C • • • • Love Ano Oeeth t 19751 Woooy Allen. Diane Keaton 1:00 $ • '1 * Boyi' NIQht Out f 1962) 1(1m NOv&ll James Gatnor 8:30 1ij; • • "Blood Run" T etly Savalas 0 '1 • From Naor> Till Three' ( 19771 CharlH Bronson. Jiii Ireland A drtlt8f 11 recru1tld 1n10 a rag-tag IOb!*y glng 8:00 CC)• a "Ote Laughing" ( 1980) Robby Benson Charles Ourn1ng A aongwrlling cab Orl\llf is a1de<I by a 1man monkey In proving h1msetl innocent Of a muroer charge PG 9:30 I;) • * "Tiie Sword Of Monte Cueto' ( 195 I) Ga()(ge M ontgomery. Pau- la Corday A b8aut1ful woman and her hero swordsman d1Sp4ay t""" audac:11y by crossing a wtCM.ed tyrent .., •• ·eo-y Bomb· lhetl' ( 19461 Bowety Boys Sheldon LIOnard Photo- gr aplls •mph<:ata the Boys tn a big bank robbery 10:00(HI •••"Nine To Five" ( t980t Jane Fonda, Dotty Parton rs *,, • Chaplet Two ( 1979} James Cu n Ma" sna Meson Soar> •II• his wrte s d681h, a writer hods h1mMll re1uc11n11y fatung tn love again PG· 10:30 II) * ·~ ICtng 01 The Pecos ( 193&) John Wayne. Muuet Eva.ns A young lawyer, whose par- ents -e murdMed by a ruthleaa catt .. baton, I>'• pares himself carefully tor an 09lfl confrontation with the kllllr 11:00 0 *'A "flight Of The LOii 8eltoon" 119601 Mar· fl!) • * • 'The American· •HliOtl 01 Emlly" ( 1064) Jem11 Garner Julll An<I•-• Romance grOWI befW_, a Brtlllll war wld• ow and a noo-herOIC ottl· ce< assigneo to pr C>YtOa hit supertors Wllh the tuxurlll Ol home IC • • "Death C11 On The Freeway· $ * • • Boyl Night Out ( 1962) Kim Novak. James Garner When a •"•P•l1 young co-ed undenakes a su research pro,ect. she finds tour buSlnelllnetl mora than wtll•ng to leaM an apar1· ment 10 aid her 1n her study 2:00 0 • * • A Chal'9nge For Robin HOOO 11968} Bar11e lngnam, Jame• Hayter Aol>ln Hooo and his bind Of merry men set out 10 dethr0"4t a Mii· appointed d1c1a1or who has se<ze<I po-over the serta z • • • • 10 R1ll1ng1on Place ( 197 1} R1cherd Attenborough, John Hurt A young Br1t1Sh couple tall victim Co a ktndly netgllbor who offers 10 help them OUI ol • serlOUI predlCI- rnent 2:'° H • • • 'n Tiie Ch1n1 Synarome ( 1979) Jacll Lemmon Jane Fonda MIOhael OouQlls An aml>I· hous l elevlllOO reporter persuades a OOtlSCoenC41· $1!1Cklfl tl<\<I'-10 aid her 1n her' ettorts to break a ma,or story on an llC(;I· dent 111 a nuei.ar pOwlf plant 'PG 3:300 *'• ~•na Ag&1ns1 The Son Ot H.,. cute1" (1965f R1cnaro Her· r1son, Losa Gaston• A Su on waruor leads l ht oppretl6d people ot Rome 1n10 open rebelllon a()8tn61 a powe<rut tyrant S * • * • l(r1mer Va Kramer ( 19791 Dusti,. Hollman, M.,..,.1 Streep 4:00 C * A• 1 Utlle Orbtl The Aatro Dog An1ma1ec A can•ne space tr•v-and his two human l114tt>OI experience many 8l1Clt•no IOvenlu<n 0 • • "Your19 And Free' Enc L11son, I A S11ln z • • Tiie Hum111 Fac- tor ( 1979) NICOi W1t11am son. De<ek Jacobt 5:30 C • • • * Love And Oeath I 19751 Woody Allen, Otane Keeton A noted cow110 1n me Rus· 51an Army eventually mar- , .. s his true love whO oraws him 1n10 a plot 1nvolv.ng an a111mpt on Ille tite Of emperOf Napoleon PG g • • • 'P8te's Oregon" ( 1977) Heten Raddy. Shel· 1ey Wmlers Wllh lhe help ot a chubby gr-. dragon nemed EHIOll, an orphan 8KIP8S from "" naaty lost1r tam•ly and taoether the two 01 them head for M11"41 'G' • • •, "Cerny ( 1980) Jodie Foller. Gary Busey An adventurous young woman 1orns a carnrval troupe Ind le¥na •bout the hldderl emo tion& and lruatrallons behind the surf-ha~s ol the performers 'R' Holl Johnny Ceraon Queal• Lance Burlon. Playboy P11yma1es 8 (!§) oecK aAAK'S NEW YEAR'S AOa<IN' EVE JOHN DARLING by Annstrong & Batluk Dick Clerk hosll a New Year'• Ev• cetebr11ton lrom Times Squ111 tn New York City HEY,E~/IT5 MIDNIGHT!! ANOIHE:R NEW YE/>.PS EVE. ... W>STEO! 9-.30 8 TWIUOHT ZOHE ApprenllCe angel Caven- der hll • hlfd tlml ..,,,. Ing hll wings 8 [1 TIJO Elaine Uk& Alex 10 be her compantorl on I European vecallon (A) O I;) IUU.8EYE (C)MOVIE ,, •,, • "The Lron 1n w1r .. 11r" ( 111&7) Pet., O'ToOle. Katherin. Hept>Yrn, Eng- • AOOtOES Wlllte Is assigned to rlOe wtlh an Olde< offlc41< 111d white on patrOI, the men 11 kHled. • • KCET NEWMEAT '9 CAPTIONEDA8C ..we • T\UA OCMfTWY MUSIC Ft8TIYAl. Roy Clatk, Jim S11fford, Met Tllll•, The Oak Ridge - llWPowf BEACH AMERICAN LEGION NEW YW'S EYE PARTY! ~ '-*•~......._ ...... _.,...,._,w .... $ ...... f!!"~ .... , •. ,. AV----,...•·= .... ....., • Live Big Band Music • Open Bar • Excellent Buffet • Favors OPEN AT 7 p .M. • Limited Seating American Legion on the Bay 215 1Sth St., NewPort Beach For Reservations Call 67J.1070 JANUARY SALE SA VIMGS FttOM So-to to 7°"o ott MOIL D11 tlflc & .... orted U'lk;Axtwt1&L ... ....... _.._....,,_,...... .... ....... .......... w.., ... !Wtt4"9 ........ _ .. •......,To_.. ...... •.tM aalactl.-flf .. ....................... _ .. _.,... ...... BIClalC -mllm m • ..,,. Ur.et, c.... ..._ • ..._ .... t ......,, · .... , 64'-~737/t4Wlt4 "'· Orango Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Oecember 31. 1981 Old problems still remain as year e ruls Orange County winds up tlie yea r w it h m a n y or it s lo n gsta ndi n g p r oble m s s till unsolved -and a few ne w ones added. The J o hn Wa y ne Air po rt battle goes on , with new airlines s eeking access u n de r fede r a l regulations a nd neighbor s still complaining about j et noise and thre ate ning lawsuits . County supervisors continue to try to wo.rk out an equit able access plan for t he a irlines a nd hope to move ah ead with pla ns to upg rade passen g e r fa cilities at t he a irport -in t he face o f ongoing oppos i ti o n t o a n y exp ansion. Attempts to locate a s ite for a n e w r egio na l a irpo rt lo serve g rowing county ne ed s. along with on e for priva t e a ir c r aft. bog d o wn a nd rise ag ain, so Car without success. * * * T he county's once-booming housing marke t virtua ll y ground to a halt toward the end of 1981, with residential cons truction at a standstill and r esales or existing h o m e s s h arpl y h i t b y h ig h m ortgage interes t rates. Renta l apartme nts became s ca r ce a s h en's t eet h as deve lopers and owne rs turne d the ir a tte ntion to condominium s a s t he only alternative to cost ly single -fa mily r esid e n ces. But pr o p o se d conv e r s i o n s o f a partm ents to condo miniu m s brou ght p rotests fro m renters a nd p le a s for help to m any c ity govern m e n t s . A l so h it b y cha nges in the housing ma rket we re mobile home r esidents. n ow finding thems elves on la nd that h ad become too v a luable for m ode rate -rental use. A s torm bro ke in the Newport B each -Irvine a r ea as 25-year co nt ractual adjus tme nts on Irvine Company lea sehold lands rolled a round a nd residents wer e sh ock ed b y incr eases in t heir lease paym ents based on c urre nt la nd values . Througho ut t he count y. the s ear ch for "a Cford able hous ing " w as simil arl y bl oc k e d b y es ca lating land ~osts . * * * For a t im e, the years-long d e bate over the fate of Uppe r N e wpo r t Bay. c lo gged with th ousands or tons of sedim ent over m a ny winter s. seemed close to solution with th e allocation of st a te funds to s tart the clean up jo b. But this cam e too late for a ct ion in 1981 and must b<.' put ov e r until after s till anothe r r a iny season. One long -st an ding Ne wpo rt Bay proble m . however , did re a ch a h a ppy conclus ion . T he a ncient Coas t Highwa y bridge over the bay a t la st was r e pla ced a nd there was da ncing on the ne w. wide structure a s t h e c ity of Ne wport Beach cele bra ted its 75th birthday . Only weeks later , there was a 10th bir thda y party for t he a lmost brand-new c it y of lrvme. which in a decade ha s g rown to house 62,000 people an t he ~tale's fir s t c o mpl e t e l y p l a n n e d community. * * * As t h e R egio na l Coast a l Co mmi s s io n s w e nt o ut o f bus iness a nd t urned over their tas ks to the state comm ission. d e b a t e over future coa s t a l developments continued to wax hot a nd b eavy . The Ir v ine Compa ny won st at e commission a pproval of its latest plan for d e velopment of the coasta l property betwee n Corona I • d t!l Mar and Laguna Beach with 2,000 dwelling units. ne w roads and acres of ope n s p uce. Approved by county !,U~r v i sors but s till t o f ace t h t• co mm ission a r e pla n s f or de ve lopme')t of the Bolsa Ch ica in Huntington B~ac h with 5,700 h o m es a nd a m a n n a . wi th a 600-a cre sa lt m a rsh reserve for wildlife. Jn Newport Beach. approval oC plans (or major expansion of N e w po rt Cente r c r e a t e d a n uproar that will Cind the issue appe a rin g a s a vote r referendum in the next election * * * lt was a n espe cially d iffic ult year for school districts. hit by financ ia l cons traints ever y where and by declining e nrollment in many areas. The Huntington Beach High School Dist rict was forced to lav orr 100 t eachers a nd cut $3 2 million from its budget. In tht· !\lewport·Mesa Dis trict. schoob were closed a nd pla ns made to c lose s till mo re Ma n y e le m e ntary schools wer e fo r ced to dro p mus ic. fo r e ign la n g u age a nd o ther n o n -basic c lassl'S. a n d som e d is tricts trie d to solve th e ir pro ble ms b~ cha rg ing fees for sports a nd other ~xtrac urric ular act1vitie College districts. a ttemptlong to m eet sta l e lim it a t ions 1n fin a n c in g. a n n o un ce d forthcoming cuts in d ozens of course offerin~s * * * Th e ce n s u s f o und th e county's popula tion had soared 36 pe r cent in t h e d ecade. reaching a h igh of 1.931.570 Adding to the count was the infl ux or re fugees. mostly of Indochinese origin, no w n um be nng som e 50.000 in t he county t he m ost of a ny a rea in the t.:nitt'd States. Providing for t hese n e w residents. an d battling the feder a l government fo r con ti nued he lp in their r esettlement . be c a m e a m ajor co n s ide ration f o r coun t y government. T h e county also becam e e mbroiled in a d e bate with the UC Irvine Medic al ce nte r over pay m ent of so me S8 million in d is puted bills fo r the med ica l care of ind ig e n ts anothe r pro blem yet to be solved . * * * The impact of Propos ition 13 t ax losses continued to be fe lt in m a ny areas of public ·e r vicc. but the re we re those w ho found their own answe rs Jn the Newport-Mesa school d is trict . p a r e nts p ut togethe r their own afte r -school progr a m. rep la c inJil courses c ut from t he c ur r i c ulum b y o f f er in g e n r i c h m e nt c l asses o n :.i no n profit fe e basis . An d 1n L ag un a Beach . lifeguards wh o learne d t h ere would be no m oney to build their n ew headquarters, tac kled the job on a do-it-yourself basis. raising money for mate rials with special events a nd rounding up volunteer labor to complete the job. O n a ~r a nd er scale. co rpor ate a n d indi v idual contributions that will bring the county . a full-scale music and per forming a rts cent e r topped t he S20 million m a rk. rt may not have been the best of years a long the O r a nge Coast. but confidence in the count y 's fut ure seems undim inis hed. and fe\\. if give n the c hoice. wo uld wa nt lo be anywhe re e lse. Opin i0.1s expressed in the space above are those of the Oallv Pi lot. Other views ex· pressed oo tt11s page Me those ot their au1nors and artists. Reader comment 1s inv•t· ed. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O Bolf 1~(>0. Costa MeSd, CA 92626 Phone 1714') 6'1·4321. L.M. Bo yd/ Lukeu:arm lovers The husband and wife loved each other greatly during the engagement. and that love grew more intense unt.11 they 'd been m a rried about three years. Then it diminished. Swiftly. lventuaJly, it leveled off, but the level was none too high. Pretty low. (n tact. Maybe this isn't typical of all married couples. but it was typical of ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat · Uie 32 pairs studied by scholars al Buffalo's Rosary Hill CClllege. These lukewar m lovers continued to like eac h o ther , h o w eve r . T h e r esearchers concluded sadly that lovi ng is more fragile tha n li king. Four out of five mothers cradle their infanL~ In the left :srm Thomas P. Haley Publlliher .Thomas A. MUrptilne- E d ltor B•rNra Kreiblch Editorial P•g@ Editor Pol~nd: Perhaps next time? NEW YORK -The most important film in America this holiday season is playing in only one theater, on the East Sid e of Manhattan. "Man of Iron." which won the Grand Prize at the 1981 Cannes Film Festiv al, is too slow. too long and ploddingly melodramatic. But you will cry tears of sorrow. of rage and hope ··Man of Iron" is Poli sh, the work of Poland's most fa mous director. Andrzej WaJda It is the story of the rise of Solidarity. ln rad . the man of the title . a s hipyard worker in Gdansk, appears to be loosely based oo Lech Walesa I that identity is blurred a bit because Walesa appears in the film both as an actor and in news clips). THE SWPBUILDER'S father, once a hero worker of lhe sta te, was killed in the Gdansk food riots of 1970. The son. a s tudent who refused to join striking wo rk ers the n , becomes a worlte r hims elf and a free-union organizer. He is o ur witness to t he triumph or Solidarity last year -the tempora ry victory that led to "renewal" in Poland. So, we the SO people who wat ched the movie Sunday night at the 68th Street Playhouse we feel. as much as see. what Poland was like before the tanks rolled into the s treets. The nation was ali ve with hope in t he film. People thought they had won at last. The fil m, after all , was made and shown in their country Now. all that suddenly appears to be ove r. But it is not. and it never will be. The line that recurs t hrough "Man of Iron." spoken in diffe rent forms by diffe rent characters. could be roughly translated as: "We will win. We have to win lf not this time. next time." The film ends with the victory of Solidarity. But 1t was not to be this time There will. however. be a next ~· ----------------------~ ~~~ 1·i . RICHARD 111111 time and a next and a next until there is a final victory. Poland is a cursed co untry In l831 , whe n Alexis d e Tocque ville tra veled through t he United States b e fo r e wri t i ng "De m ocr acy 1n America," he was invited to a great rally at Faneuil Hall in Boston lt was. h e w as s u r pris ed to le a rn . a d e m onstration t o s up po r t r e bels fighting for Polis h independence He wondered, In leu e rs home. what good all this would do the Poles Would they ever know that the citizens of Boston had sent the fl ag of the city? T hat rebellion continues a tter 150 year s It is our bless ing. the good fo rtun e o f A m e r ica n s. t ha t our ancestors fought the great fight and we we re able to hold their vi ctory because of America 's geographical isolation and a bundant natur al resource s . It 1s Poland's curse. and the glory of m any of her men and women , that its struggle continues. N o w . a f ter a r evoluti o n 1n communications. the Poles know at least that many fl ags fly for them and that the winds of history are at their I.Jack:. One of the effects of the reat•h the: pl'rvas 1ve ness. or modern commun1t·ut1ons 1s t h at P o lis h authotitu.•:. and their Russians masters do not huve the tnidjtional option of simply o;l<1ughtl'ring rebe ls. The whole world 1s w;itch1ng and the Russians a lmost tl'rt'11n ly, (•a nnot arrord the p ol i t ical and eeono m1 c JHiCl' or reverting to hom1c1dal Stallnism So. as terribl e as the day's news 1s, it Is better than 1t w;is 1n the 19th century in the 1930s . and 1n the 1950s and 1960!> in fl ung<H} and Czechos lovak1 ll Te levision, like 1t or not. is the best weapon the v.orld ha !. yet dev1se<l agains t forcrhlt' repression of large num ber.., of pl'Oplf.· T H E T I M ES a a ll I i t t I t• m o re civilized. but the) art d:.ingere>u::. The world t:n:.is of my l1feti m£>. I think . wil l com e wht·n "renev.al" hit::. the Soviet Union And 1l v.111 and 1l 1s almost terrifying to c·1ms1dcr how the old men who run Hus!.1a "'111 rea<'l to threats to lhetr absolute r>owt:r ThC' re<ll ··window or vulnernb1lil\' for lhe world will be the l1ml' 1n "'h1ch tht-people of the Soviet Union ag1t.itedly move toward the kind of demo<'ran· that has temporaril;r hl'l'fl <'rushed 1n Poland The furC'P~ that C:lre driving the world nov. and loosing both unions and tanks 1n Poland Jre what give · Man of Iron '' a power that a film like "Reds·· can onl) 1m1tate One of our telev1s1on networks can show us what i\ means to be PoLish and what 1l means to be American b~ buying the n ghts to that film <lnd !>ho" 1ng 11 to more than 50 people on AAth Street in New York It was a great year for paranoia It's time once again for that exciting media event, The Story of the Year. The year began on a festive note with the inaugur ation of Mr. Reagan as President. Mr . Reagan pledged to "turn this country around." He did. When he took offi ce. everyone was worried sick about ruinous inflation. But in less than tw e l ve mont h s. t h a nks t o h is m onume nta l effor ts. eve ryone was worried sick about a ruinous depression Inst ead. SO IT WASN'T really a great year for the economy or fo r e~onomists either , pa rticular ly David St ockman, who became the victim of an unscrupulous reporter who printed what he s aid. Wh at he s aid was t hat supply side economics wouldn't work, lbe tax cuts were a sop to the greedy rich and no one in the administration knew what was going on anyway. But the President refu sed lo fire him because he had confidence in his judgment. It was a bad year for struggling entities : Du Pont s wa llowed Conoco, Sears gobbled down Dean Whitler and Coldwell Banker and the medlty badly chewed up Jerry Brown. Marr iage had its ups and downs. Congressm an John J enrette and his ve r y estrange d wife. Rita , .ga ve infidelity a bad name. On lbe other Ass assins not Contrary Opiniotu: Wh y would Pre side nt Ru1an cha racterize the assassination ol Sadat as "cowardly" when it was anytbln1 b u t t ha t -d a s tard ly , base . IYlllY Hlllll . treacherous, but surely not ''cowardly" when t.he attackers are ready to 1\ve up their lives In the atlempL -We wHl not be a m at.ore speclea until moral heroes •~ 1lven at leul a tenth of lbe admiration bestowed upon· ph ys ical heroes. who are often a cue or a r rested deve lopment. C It may take more coura1e to face a.lradam than to court physical· denier.> -Tbe trouble with "lalaa·falre" ls tbat while llleraJly It merely muns "l f"llVf> lhln11111 alone.'' In eC!onomlc • • h a nd , some ete r n al verities we re maintained as Elizabeth Taylor left her sixth husband And in Greece, scientists at the Aegean Univers ity successfully prove d that disco music induces homosexuality in laboratory mice. No pressing need has yet been discovered ---i ART lllPPI :S • in marri a ge, unfor t una tely, for hom osexual mice . Speaking of sex, it was a banner year for the Mor al Majority. Due to the Moral Majority's threats of a boycott, sex all but disappeared from tel«:vision screens and the leading characters were forced to shoot, stab. crus h or otherwise exterminate each ot.her with their clothes on. The Moral Majority also defeated a bill to legaliie adulter y in our nation's capit al, which would certainly ha ve taken the fun out of it. And at year's end this dedicated group was working on prohibiting the publication of Playboy In Braille, thus s paring America's blind from being offended by full frontal nudity. So much for sex. Y o uth b ro k e o u t a ll over. Eleven-year-Old Tam ara Jones ber.ame 'cowardly' practice It is too orten translated by its adhe rents as "Devil t ake the hindmost." -The lsraelis who objected to the playing or Wagner 's music ln their country are as stupid and provincial as the Germans who banned J ewish compose rs during t he Nazi regime ; which only proves that In psytthology. u In physics, act!on and reaction are equal. -I can't believe that lbt untold bllllons we spend for "detente" are j ua tlfled whe n w e recruit the Ill-educated' to ha ndle weapons ot 1ncreasln& soph18tlc:1lion, wt.ft) we lose so many ot our mos l experien ced officers to the private sector , and Invest s uch large 1um1 tn .. advanced" weapom ayalem.s" 10 prone to failure. -Not only Is the "ll• detector" tat wron1 about one.·thlrd of the Ume, but Ironically lt la mOlt lnae(Ul'tle wllb truthful and eonacienUoua aubJec:ta. and wHb 1oclopatha who cao convfnce lbt m aelvea tbey a re belnt truthf'ul when they are •fln1. " n modt•I Jnd Time magazine offi cially pruclll1mcd Brooke Shi el ds ·'the l<>0k of thl' 'R<h · M 1ss Shi elds took her dulll':. s<.'r1<1usl ~ Smoking kll ls." she told u congressional subcommittee. "If you're k11l c.•d. \OU0 \'e lost a very important part of ~our life .. So much for youth ALSO BREAKING out were strikes. inc luding those by th e air tra ffi c controllers. t he Sakha r ovs a nd Solidarity Quickly crushed was the strike by the air traffi c controllers Abroad. Amt'"ru:an policy was not without suece:.s. The :,uccess came wh en Colonel Khadafy sent two planes Lo alta<'k the United States Sixth Fleet Tht' Unitl'd States Sixth Fleet won. As for fort·1~n afra1rs. General Haig said wl' mus t d isting uis h between authoritarian e1 n~ totali tarian regimes or , respect1vel>. fri endly bad guys and unfrie ndl y ba d g u ys A S t a t e Departml'nt spokesman said European d t!m o ns t rat1 ons a gainst nuc l e a r wea pons wer due to "Protestant an gs t .. M r R eagan b l ame d communism The E uropeans said they didn't want to get killed In June. Mr Reagan announC'f'd that we did, too, have a foreign policy He didn't say wh at it was. It was a great year for paranoia, though We had Libyan hit squads . wind ows of vulne rabi lity, a nd a guerrilla. or perhaps a gor illa, rugb up in the White House who was after General Haig. There was even some f ee ling t ha t an yone who was n 't pa r anoid was crazy AS THE YEAR dre w to a close, however, there was hope for the future. Nouvelle cuisine was on its wa:t out, which was good news tor the hunfry And a lower-echelon bureaucrat at the Department of Agric ulture was working on a boon lo the poor thul was sure to win the adrninlstration·s wholehe•rted approval designer food stamps . CllllYlll I've had It with Bln10, loq borlq games, unrepaired dlsplay board ...a dim hall. Fun?• l'm·aotnc back \0 my t n1tUna. GRAN ._, .. _..,.. ....... ., ............ -_.,....,,..._. .. ...,.. .... _,,,r ... ,... ...,, ............ ~ 0.11., ~ ,, . . ... ' BIG MEMORY -A South African fire ant dramatizes the s ize of a device called the 64-K random access m e mory, which is built by Western Electric in Alle ntown, Pa. ............. Despite its sm all size. the me mory conta ins 152.000 tiny compone nts, such as transis tors. lt s tores and gives access to more than 64.000 bits of data instantaneously. He seeks governorship Obledo '90 percent sure' he will run in 1982 primary By THOMAS D. ELIAS Mario Obledo says he wants to be California's next governor. The highest-ranking Hispanic bureaucrat in Califor nia history, Obledo hasn't definitely decided to tun in next year 's Democratic primary, but he's 90 percent sure he will. And if he does, Obledo says, "I will win it. I sincerely mean that." Obledo's reasoning and hls rhetoric sound remarkably like tho se of anothe r recent candidate, one who faded back into obscurity after his efforts achieved litUe. LIKE OBLEDO, Benjamin Fernandez sought to capitalize on what he believed to be a new, highe r level of His panic consciousness. And like Obledo, he wasn't trying for an obscure office. Fernandez. a suburban Los Angeles millionaire and a consultant to banks and savings and loan associations. ran for pr es ident i n th e e arl y Republican primaries or 1911>. Analyzing New Hampshire, where he figured he needed just 7 percent of the GOP vote to beco m e a viable candidate, Fernandez said in 1979: "More • than 70 percent of the voters there are of Latin or igin, either French Canadian or Latin. Most are Roman Catholic. As soon as they hear my name, they'll vote for me ." Fernandez got less than 2 percent of the vote there . Now comes Obledo, noting that 988.000 person s with S panis h s urn a m es were registered California voters in 1980, though only about 640.000 of them actually voted. Obledo, Gov. Brown·s Health and Welfare secretar y for seven years, predicts that having a Hispanic in the gubernatorial race will greatly increase Latino voter turnout. "We will have registered 1.3 million His panics by next June,·· he claimed. "I would hope that I would carry the overwhelming majority of th at vote." AT THIS EARLY stage, O bl e d o talks bravely, as Fernandez did. In one recent interview. Obledo predicted that he could beat Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley next June by winning the Hispanic vote and picking up 300,000 other votes from persons familiar with his work in state government. C AN D I DAT E ? -Mari t Obledo figures if he runs for governor he will win. ·'That would give me 1.1 m ill ion votes and if I get them, I'll be sitting in the governor's chair," he said. Obledo thinks the primary would be the hard part, calling the Novembe r e rection a · "cakewalk" because he believes "the Reagan administration is going to be in very deep trouble by then:· Fernandez also talked bravely at a similar point. But Hi spanic voter s never turned out in large numbers for him Obledo thinks they wou''' next year. For one thing, be~ause Fernandez was Republican, he had no backing from major La tino figures like farm workers union leader Cesar Chavez and Obledo himself. 0 b l edo wou ld h ave s uch support if he ran. "If a Hispanic runs as a Republican he won't get Hispanic s upport." he said. "The Republicans are the party of the rich ... SO THERE'S UTl'LE doubt he would be somewhat more formidable than Fernandez. But like Fernandez. he suffers from a lack of name recognition - while about 80 percent of California voters know of Tom Bradley, fewer than 10 percent have heard of Mario Obledo. B e tting s urges on space alie n s ' SAN DIEGO CAP> -A British b ookmaking company says heavy betting from San Diego County has dropped odds from 500-to-1 lo 100-to-1 against an extraterrestrial landing within 12 months. About $10,000 has b een wagered recently. most of it from followers or a San Diego area mystic, according to a spokeswoman for Ladbroke and Co. Ltd. "We've taken so much money in the last couple of weeks that the odds have gone way down," Bernice Kerr of the London betting houae toJd The San Diego Union in a telephone interview. Under terms of the bet, the bookmaker wUI pay off "Ir altem from outer 1pace land or crash on earth, alive or dead," within 12 months from the date lbe wqer ll accepted. Kerr aaJd the 1ur1e of bet.a • came from follow •rt of : IO·ftar·old Rutb i-rormae, co·fo•ndtr of Uae Uaarlus Educ1Uon1I roundatloo in nearby El Cajon . Ladbroke's routinely handles chancy bets, which range from the discovery of the Loch Ness monster to the chances of Lady Diana giving birth to a boy or girl. Kerr said many of the beUors indicated that Norman predicted a visit from interplanet a ry cre atures this week. In E l Cajon . Norman's secretary. Dorothy Ellerman, 75, said the mystic was "not available" for comment. But Ellerman said Norman h11 never predic:Wod •n exact date for a landing from outer a,,_ce. Jn 1973, Norman, known loully u "Spacqhip Rut.hie," purchased a hllltop near San Dle10 fOf $50,000 to ·serve u a landing field for a flee t of spaceabipe. Claimtne that ahe has 1plrttuaJ communlcadon with bt1her creatures, she baa been r.rtdlcUq the arriwal of belQP rom othe~ world• sine. tm. CAUJDlllA FOCUS That reality means the new Hispanic hope would face the s a m e kind of uphill battle Fernandez did. And he'd probably suffer the sam e fate . a showing far w orse t h a n hi s opti m istic thinking now deems possible. But even that might be a plus for Obledo, whose e thni c cons ciousness is quite high. For if he could stir political interest in large numbers of Latinos wpo have been alienated from Anglo politicians, he says he would feel he'd accomplished something important. Thomas Elias. a free -lance columnist based in Santa Monica. analyzes north-south state polmcs Neul§le tter schednled in Valley Fountain Vall ey's city newsletter, whlch was canceled then revived by the City Council this year. is scheduled ror distribution this week. The newsletter contains city i nformation and parks and recreation class schedules. It will be distributed to homes in Thursday's Pennysaver packets, city officials said. Additional copies will be available a t the Fountain Valley Library, City Hall, the Fountain Valley Recreation Center and the Chamber of Comme rce office. Quarterly publication of the cit y newsletter was begun in 1970. But during budget review sessions last s um m e r . the co uncil vot e d t o s us pend publication because of limited city funds. As a result, the fa ll 1981 newsletter was not printed. Mayor Ben Nielsen, however. was able to line up corporate s ponsors to pick up most of the publication expenses. and the council voted to r evive the newsletter. Greenb e lt members to honor D illey Membe r s of t h e Laguna Greenbelt will meet Jan. 12 for a dinner party to honor the me mory of founder Jim Dilley. The dinner will be at the Cottage Restaurant, 308 North Coast Highway, from ~:30 to 9 p .m . f eaturing g o u r m et Hungarian, Greek. Italian and French dishes with wine. A donation of $10 is requested and the public is invited. For reser v ations, call Barbara S tuart at 494·4861 or Patti Obslund, 49M775. Square dancing c l888 scheduled Saddleback Co llege 's Emeritus lnaUtute will orrer a betlnnin1 square dancln1 clus starting Jan. 18 at the Turtle Roc k Community Center In Irvine. The clan m eets from 7 p.m. to t p .m. Mondlt,)'1. Restatratloa is currently under way on the SaddJeback Colle1e South Campus in Mluioa Viejo and the North C•mpua ID trvlne. For mon lnf~auon call 831-4135. 3 2 2 & Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{l"hureday. December 31 , 1981 1' 11 Sharp road to ric hes Mail order catalog sales hit $35 million SAN F HANCISCO <AP J Richard Thalheimer s miled, snapped his fingers and the light went on courtesy of on~ of the gadgets to be found thumbing t hrough The Sharper Image mail order catalog that's made him rich. When Thulheime r .. 33. calls himself a marketing genius. it's hard to argue . The switch is one or 170 items available through Thalhe1mer's catalog business. started in 1977 with first.year sales of $250,000 SaJes tut S35 million this year "It's fun. but it's useful ," Thalheimer said about the sound-actuated l ight switch se ll i ng f o r $34 a s a burglar-stopper. And if that doesn't stop them. try a su1t of Spanish armor for $2 ,450, or another new item a light-weight bullet-proof ve11t that Thalheimer says will stop a 45-caliber bullet at point·blank range. Most of ThaJheimer's items, however, are functional and many are electronic like a runner's watch that gives you an instant pulse readout You can also buy a pillow that looks hke a BMW automobile, a cor dl ess t elephone or an executive chuir modeled after a scat found in imported sports cars. With an average salt' of $160. T halheimer targeted a specific market businessmen between the ages of 25 and 50 with "upscale 1ncomt'!> .. between $25,000 •md $40 ,000 This recession-proof slice of the m arket partly accounts for the vitality of The Sharper Image, he says. Sales more than doubled in Lhe past year. while Thalheimer said othe r mail o rder businesses grew 15 percent. Thalheimer was u Hastings Law School graduate who decide he didn't want to spend 30 years as a lawyer before heading a successful business "I wanted to have a successful business in five years.·· he said. After peddling typewriter ribbons door-to-door in San Francisco's financial district, Thalheimer hit on the idea that blossomed into T he Sharper Image. He placed a S200 ad for a $29 stop watch in a runner's magazine, an investment that returned a S500 profit This year 's advertising budget was S6 million. T h e S harp er Image . Thalhei m e r says, works by selling products to hi gh salaried men who are too busy to take the time to shop The mail order business catered to women until T ha lheimer cam e along. He realized working women don't ha\•e tame to s hoµ for their hus bands Thalhei mer k(•eps the Af'WI ....... SUITS HIM H1<'11:1rd 'l'haltw1nwr ol S:111 Frannsc·o po..,t·:-. \\1th .1 :-.lllf ol ,1r11111r rnw ol till' man' 1''Wt 1c· and lunc·t111n<JI .irl 1l'll·-. ht· :-.t•ll.., I h11111gh ttw rn;.111 !06-employee operation simple, using has tastes as a guide. tracking down products, wr1t1ng Lhe adl> and even unswering the phont!l> Not onJ~ does. he offer a refund on any product, you c•an callltoll free to complain "I'm a marketing genius ... Thalheimer said .. , m ay not be the grt'atest runner in lhe world, or greatest at something <!lse But I have a fantas tic· feeling for looking at a product and saying this won 't sell or this will sell. And I know how to sell it " Early in 1982. Thalheimer plan!> to advertise on cable TV. a mechum he said had not been effecti ve for othe r catalog companies Thalheimer said sales could reach SIOO milhon to Sl50 million within a rew years if the local experiment works and is implemented nationwide C ourt upholds fe e s o n sex bus inesse s WASHINGTON 1AP1 The U .S Supreme Court has allowed the city of M 1not. N . D • to l'har~e businesses S300 annually for t'ach maehlne exhibiting sexually explicit materials and lo restrict adult entertammenl cenll'rl> to areas zoned ·heavy industrial " The JUStices, c1t1ng the lack or a "i.ubstant1a l federal question ... let ~tand a ruling that the c·1t,·s ordina n ces are constitutional Central Avl·nuc News Inc and its c·C1ntrolling shareholder. Donald G G1t1t>lson. challenged the la"i. Central Avenut·. which opened 1n October 1979. sells sexually ex plicit books and magazines. and displays sexually explicit motion pictures 10 1nd1v1dual booths . On July 18, the North Dakota Supreme Court ruled that lhe restncltons are constitutional Central Avenue claimed that the licensing fee. used to fund the enforcement or an unrelated obscenity statute, amounted to an unconstitutional "prior restraint .. on free speech The zoning restrictions also barred bus inesses se lling sexually explicit materials from being localed less than 1,250 feet from any church. school or r esidential district Princess piqued at press Diaw 'showing strain' over constant media. attention LONDON <AP > Prince Cha rles a nd Princess Diana, unaware o f the h i dd e n p hotographer, hugged a nd k issed on the lawn outsid e Highgrove. their country home in Gloucestershire, and there was the picture on the front pages of The Sun and The Daily Star. Princess Diana. expecting a baby next June. got a craving for fruit gum candies. Unaware of the hidden photographer , she drove down to the local village shop and bought some. and there was the picture 1n The Daily Mirror. It is long-lens snooping like this that led Queen Ehza beth 11 recently to s ummon Britis h newspaper editors and heads of television and radio news and Press Association. the British domes tic ne ws agency , to Buckingham Palace to request a halt. The queen's press secretary. Mi chael Shea. told the news c hi efs t ha t intrus i ve photographic coverage of the private life of t he 20-year-old prin cess a nd the con stant presence of photographers made her feel she "could not go out or her front door without being photographed." "We expected that following the honeymoon, press attention would wane somewhat, but It has in no way abated,.. Shea added. "The Princess of Wales feels totally beleaguered . "She has coped extremely well, she has come through with flying colors. But now the people who love her and care for her are anxious at the reaction it is having." Shea said the r e were no worries about Diana's health but that she WH showing "great strain" because of the constant presence or pho t ogr aphers recordln1 her private life. Be fore her m arriage to Charin tut July 29, the earl's d1u1hter was 1 kindergarten teacher and Just another face In the London crowd. Her only previous experience of preaa attenUon WU wben 1MWI leaked •he wu datlf'\1 Charles. For a • UPSET Princess Diana is ask ing photograph ers to keep their dist;mrl' few mad weeks. photographers camped outside her apartment and dogged her ever y step. causing her on one occasion to burst into tears and fl ee Shea particularly asked that her right to privacy should be respected at HJghgrove and at Sandringham, the queen's estate in Norfolk where sh e and Charles will spend Christmas Afterwards the news chiefs met the queen. The fiercest pursuers of the roya ls are London 's five national circulation t a bloids, currenUy locked in a ferocious battle for circulation that could see one or more disappear. Off-guard pictures or royalty sell pap~rs but so m e newspapers promised to comply. The Daily Mirror said It waa "a falr request at thla time" and that lt would respect It . The Dally Express promlted not to Intrude on the princess's private lire. The DaJly MaJJ said It would rttpeci_bet dulre for privac)' But "The Sun and The OaJb' Slar said nothing and The Times of London noted that Kelvin MacKenzie. editor or The Sun , w as significa ntly the only London newspaper editor not to attend lhe Buckingham Palace meeting. The Daily Star, which printed its pictures of Charles and Diana hugging and kissing under the huge headline , "The Lovebirds, .. bought it from freelance photographer Andy Kyle. Kyle said he took the pictures from th e roa d outsid e H ig hgr ove, where passing motorists could see the royal group Ky le said the group, which incl uded Char les · brother Andrew and Diana's sister Sara h and her hus band Neil McCorquodale, was aware of the photographers before Charles and Diana began kissing and , cuddling. The palace denied the p arty was aw are o f the photographers' presence. But Kyle added that he and colleagues were often forced into taking what he termed "unoHici at·· pictures of the royals. The Times said Kyle. whose clients include magaiines such as Paris Match of France and Bunte of West German.y, could expect to earn up to 13,780 ror the pictures. T he Buckingham Palace request is only the second such in 25 years. But there have been many previous rows over what the royals see ~ press intrusion into their private li ves. In 1956, lhe palace asked e dito r s to rein In thei r photographers after some of them ambus hed 8-year-old Prl n ee Charles at Cheam School The editors complied ln 1964, tbe British Press Council condemned off-cuard pic tures taken by Ra)' a.llilario and otMr pbotocrapben ot the queen and her sister Princess Mar1aret , They were photocraphed at plcnlca and w•ter sktlnc 1l Sunnlnchlll Park. A forester found two ot the pho t o1rapber1 hi~den In unt .e rgrowlh , Oran e Coaat DAIL V PILOT/Thursday, December 31 , 1981 1 Lush-lift idea spreads Many cities eye free rides for drunks New Year's Eve By TM Aaieela&ed p,_. Drunb oo New Year's Eve cu 1et a frff rkl• home in a patrol car ln several cit1•, or a frH funeral ln Florida, but they won't be coddled in Evan1vU1e, Ind. "We'll 1lve 'em a ride rl1bt to jaU," aald Ins pector Richard Tenbar1e of t.be EvauvUJe Police Department. However. 1ince that approach could create a aerloua cell 1bortase wben the holiday apirlll 1tart n owinc. many police departmenta have decided instead to live the lush a lift. In Nubvllle, Tenn., some folks plarulln1 to 1et smashed already have called the Davidaon County aherlfra olflce trying to make reservatlou to 1et picked up. "We told them we'll juat have to watt and see," sajd Linda Sowell, the sheriff's secretary. The idea or keepin1 drunken drivers from gettin1 behind the wheel oo New Year'a Eve by givin1 them rides bas spread this year to ciUes larce and small, from Palatka, Fla., to Kaliapell, Mont., to Laauna Beach, with the tranaportaUon to be furnished by law enforcement aaenciea, volunteer organizations, automobile clubs, bus companies, citizens band radio clubs, newspapers and even a brewery. In Richmond, Va., the reveler who bu one loo many can dial 222-MUCH and be fetched by a student volunteer from Vir,UUa Commonwealth Unlveriity. In Tucson, Aris., the county prosecutor's otlice will pick up drunks betweeil 11 p.m. and 4 a.m. in the third year or its Project Salude. "Drunk drivers are all potential killers," said Pima County --Attome.y St6v~ Neely. ''We-hope party-goers will use lbe service rather than tum their cars into deadly weapons." Underscor ing the consequences of driving while intoxicated is an orrer from Robert G. Neel, owner of the Woodlawn Memorial Park in Orlando, Fla. Anyone who calls, gives bis name, and says he intends to drink and drive on New Year's Eve -or ride with someone who ia drinking -will be guaranteed a $3,000 funeral at no charge if he is killed. Neel, who says he is a teetotaler, came up with the idea at a cemetery convention a rew years a10, along with two other funeral directors from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Montreal. "We were sitting around," Neel recalls, "and somebody said, 'We're in the death business. Why not do something to save lives?' So we came up with this." The methods of getting drunks home safely will vary from city to city. In Louisville, Ky., party-goers can dial ror a "MADD Cab" in a project sponsored by Mothers Against Drunk Driving. "No questions will be asked," said police Sgt. Carl Yates. In Milwa ukee, the Pabst Brewing Co. is picking up the tab for all city bus rides from 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. in a program started by the state in 1977 but dropped last year because or a short.age or .funds. Ridership on New Year's Eve increased from 10,000 in 1977 to 26,200 last year. No fares will be collected on buses in Omaha, Neb. alter 9 p.m. Four American Automobile Association branches in Albany, N.Y., and surrounding communities have contracted with 15 taxi · companies to provide free rides rrom 8 p.m. to early Friday morning. In rural Washington County in western Maryland, where taxi service is not readily Wild mushroom • • warning given SACRAM ENTO <A1» -State health orricials have warned Californians not to pick or eat wild mushrooms, whic)l have killed three persons and sickened at least nine others this month. Mushrooms, many of them poisonous, are flourishing in Northern California because of early rains and mild temperatures, said Dr. Ronald Roberto of the Health Services Department's Infectious Disease Section. He said current heavy rains in Southern California will also bring out an abundance of wild mus hrooms. Two men from Marin County and one from Santa Cruz died earlie r this month from mushroom poisoning, all after eating the ~ailed Deathcap mushroom, Amanita phalloides, the department said. About 100 of the 2,000 known species of mushrooms-can be pofsonous, and ·even botanists can be confused, Roberto said. He said home owners might want to rake and dispose of mushrooms growing on their lawns, to avoid poisoning children or pets. Symptoms of Deathcap poisoning start six to 24 hours after eating and include severe abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, rapid heart action, 'reduced blood pressure and extreme thirst. Anyone who has eaten a wild mushroom of questionable identification should take syrup of Ipecac as soon as possible and call a doctor, officials said. NEXT SEMESTER TAKE A 25,000 MILE FIELD TRIP ··ff s a real good academic program and I probably studitd harder than I did at school." Join the 12,000 other college stu· dents from over 500 col~ges and univerlities who have experienced thu fully accredited univa.Uy pro- gram. The lpring '82 semester 1ail.t on March 4th for the around the world t~r. '°' .... lnfonnatton c.11 (114) n1....o S.meater At Sea P.O .... 1117, Oraftle, C.. . ._. Al HHrd on K!ZY AM/'M. KWtZ AM/FM available, rides wiU be tumllhed b)' police, CB radio operators and members ot tbe Lion. Club ln OperatJon PAT <Pr-event a Tra1edy>. The Grand Rapids Presa in Grand Rapids, Mlcb., and tbe Dally Inter Lake in KaU1peU, Mont., will pick up the tab for taxi ridtt in their cities, and lo Vlr1inla, the Tidewater Council on Alcohollam wtll provide volunteer driven to plck up drµ.nka in Norfolk, Vlr~a Beach, Chesapeake and Portamouth. Poeey County Sheriff Carl Dick ln South Bend, Ind., said hia whole department -"all seven of us" -will be available to take revelers home. "But if they don't caU . and we catch 'em, they go to jail," he said. ........ ............ 124.95 ............ 164.95 Large blade acr~wdrlver with relchel hMd for ....... y hel10-a• ling. 3 bill~.·~· ......... ,11.,. ~ rnec:Nnle'a pljefs Ml with Ninety p6Ulic c:Me. Ideal tor home or WOftlahop. A9g: 23.95 14sa A9g.1UI lilldup I plaxy a.&axy llaaNight le • do-It· •II flHllhghl. FeaturH torch, signal light and fluhef. The only fluttltghl tor Vo"' Cat "2203. Reg 14.75. 1llllden nll I trl11 For t1fY well or WOOdWoftc. Scrub- beble Low Luatre ftnlah. Euy to 13• ct.an up with just water. Reg. 15.99 TRIES ITAO! - Donny Os mond, 24, who has been a TV performer since age ~. wilt make his Bro a dway stage debut ln the title role of "Little Johnny J o n es '' in mid· February. 1• YOU• C•Y•TAL ......... , DON'T WOllY. WI CAN RESTORE IT. MING YOUI CHtPHD GLAISU. MUGS, VASES STIMWAll, GOlllTI. DICANTHS FO• fULl UITOltATION TO THiii OlttOINAL CONDITION 11 DAY•ONLY ••• HUNT1NOTOH llACH MAU (IN THI MAU) (ANTIQUI SHOW) 1AN Dtt00 PWY (•)AT llACH ll VO. ... Miit,,.. , ......... y { --IWYAl9AY .. nl-} -, I 'ITfJIJ&: C)llYITA\~ Cl.~L\llEt=. TRU-VALUE LAUNDRY DETERGENT 1111 up ye1t tnullln ... and your IHv ... laWn debrla, traah and morel PllCUge of 25 349 32 ~ aa. linef9. I ht• ......... 20 Lb. Box S7.99 u..11....,.1a S.V. on Ev«Ndy EnergtLer bal· lltriM. They're en«gized fOf long IN .• PKUge of 2 C's Of 2 o·· 1 aa Reg. 2.59. IAVEn-t -..ef2 a baby in the Bar I l CO!w.lllelit 3 apMd Bur'll of 2211 Po.er h9nd miller. Almond or Avocado. #3-78, il':l-12. Bar Baby sink with > c hrome-plated fau cet assembly. PVC plastic sink. Fire-engine r ed, Buttercup yellow Reg. 39.95 2488 Reg. 28.99. bath b~t ...... Ete nt, HIY to lnatall Price Pfl ater faucet 2495 1843-190. Reg. 31 .95 ' i • make yourself a ~ master mechanic 1 True Val1,1e 's Muter .• Mechanic propane torch / kit. #MM555 89 I Reg 12.99 5 ·~· -....... Daily Pilat · THURSDAY. DEC. 31 , 1981 BUSINESS 86 COMICS 88 ENTERTAINMENT 89 Marina's Vikings captured a basketball tournament title. 82. 0 0 ~ All-CIF bonanza! Nine. area players named to Division I team By ROGER CARLSON Ot-. Delly~, .... Nine Orange Coast area athletes. including three from Edison High and three from Marina High, have been chosen to the AJJ.CIF Division J football team by the First Interstate Bank athletic foundation board. Among the cream of the blue chip list ere Edison's Dave Geroux, Rick DiBernardo and Ken Major; Marina's Ken Laszlo, Jeff Frandsen and Ron Malerstein; Fountain Valley's Rod Emery ; and Brian Lopker and Kennedy Pola of Mater Dei. LOS ALTOS HIGH'S remarkable pus-catch combination of quarterback Blake Smith and DiBernardo, a repeat choice at linebacker, needed no vote. Neither did Geroux. the 216-pound blockbuster runner. receiver Steve Lauter share Player or the Year honors. Smith threw 30 touchdown passes and Lauter was on the end of 19 or them. Among the nine area players -two were by acclamation with no vote taken. Di Bernardo, a repeat choice at linebacker, needed no vote. Neither did ~rowc, the 216·pound blockbuster runner. Di Bernardo. a basketball star in his own right, l ed Edison's defensive assault a t middle linebacker and his 6·4. 218·pound figure created an imposing sight. WITH SPEED, RANGE and a reputation as a very hard·hilter, DiBernardo Is being coveted by Notr e Dame. USC a nd ma ny other major universities. He was the Daily Pilot's choice as the Sunset League and Orange County defensive player or the year. Geroux averaged 7.S yards a carry out of the tailback slot, and was also a lethal blocker when s tationed at fullback. He rushed for 13 touchdowns and is also being recruited by many major coUeges, including USC and Oklahom a. Also earning a spot from Edi son is quarterback Ken Major, who compiled one or the more phenomenal records in recent years for a quarterback. AS A TWO· VEAR starter be engineered the Chargers to a 24·1 record. The 6-4, 200-pounder completed 136 of 214 passes for 1,823 yards and 18 touchdowns. Of those 214 attempts, only four were intercepted. His completion ratio was 63.5 percent for a team which put its No. 1 ranking on the line every week, finally coming up short in the first round of the CJF Big Five Conference playoffs. Laszlo. the veer quarterback out of Marina, who emerged on the scene after missing his junior season because of a broken neck (swimming pool accident), keyed the Vikings to an 11·2 record. Dt••• .. .uaoo MA1.E.llSTE.IN LAU LO LASZLO WAS ALSO a premier defensive back and was so named on a s quad laden with offensive talent A 6·0, 165-pound senior. Laszlo was the Daily Pilot's choice as MVP in the Sunset League. Laszlo"s chief aerial target was Frandsen, a 5·10, 155-pound senior who latched on to 43 passes for l.119 yards -a 26.0 yards per catch ratio. Frandsen scored 13 touchdowns -his longest coming from 91. 79, 72 and 67 yards out. Marina's third entry -Malerstein -provided the core of defense at tackle A 6-0, 200·pounder, he was the coaches' choice as Sunset League defensive player of the year THE VIKINGS' DEFENSE was one of the more heralded In the CJ F Southern Section, holding eight opponents to seven points or less. Emery is the lone selection from Fountain Valley after tight end Greg Bolin lost out by the narrowest or margins. Emery, a 5·9, 170·pound senior, scored 25 touchdowns. running for 1,349 yards on 219 carries. Considered a "pretty" runner with his fluid·like moves, Emery also packed a punch. Among his touchdown runs were dashes of 75, 71 , 56, 49, 46, 39, 32 and 23 yards and as a receiver he caught 28 passes for 352 yards. NEW YEAR'S TREAT Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Allen will lead USC against Penn St ate in the Fies ta Bowl Friday. Allen rushed for 2.342 yards during the reJ?ular season. averaging 213 per game. He set 10 NCAA records and tied another while leading the Trojans to a 9·2 record He passed for 1.664 yards and 18 touchdowns, completing 79 of 153 with only 8 interceptions. Jn addition, he ran for 9 touchdowns, carrying the ball 117 times for 601 yards. A first team All·Orange County back, Emery led Fountain Valley to an 8-4 overall record. Lopker. -a 6·3, 230-pound senior offensive guard, was the leader in the Mater Dei ground (See ALL-CIF, Page 84) • ID a maze of talent Boyer lost It hasn't discouraged the tight end from playing. at USC, however By ROGER CARLSON Of-~-, .... TEMPE -The University or Southern California and Penn State collide here at the Fiesta Bowl on New Year's Day -that means Reisman Trophy winner Marcus Allen against Coach J oe Paterno and his Nittany Lions to mos t, the pride or the West against the East's perennial top dog. Despite the classic matchup on the Arizona Slate campus, it's a step down for each. When you're not going to the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day it's pretty obvious you're not the Pac-10 champion. AND IF VOU'llE a Penn State fan, if you're not headed south ror the Sugar Bowl, Cotton Bowl or Orange Bowl, well, you didn't quite make it all the way. Each is 9·2 ln a season which found college football without a true superpower. What this ls for each Is a reward for a decent season and one last chance to prove it.self. Class teams hardly need to prove themselves, but that's always the case, • • probably becawie no one ever convinces everyone. So lt is the case for individuals -and the Trojans' Mark 8oyer, a 6-4, 228-pound sophomore, billed ror stardom as a prep while at Edison Hich, but still somewhat lost In t.be maze ot talent at USC. BOYEa IS THE No. 2 V-back, the ti1ht end who runs motion down the Une of acrimmace. either as an extra blocker for Allen or as a decoy. seldom as anylhin1 else. And. the Trojans seem to be goi.Dg ahy from t.be ploy, utinl the V-baclt lea than in the put. Boyer, in 11 games for the Trojans, cau1ht two p11se1 durlna the seaton, hardly enou&b n•wa to fill a acrapbook, That each completion waa for a touchdown (.,.al•t Tennenee and Orep State) belpl. bet lbat'a not a lot ol aetloo ror IQ10M. He II also oa t.be llekl wben t.be TroJ-llne ..., to accept the ldckolf, ud lt was Boyer wbo amotbered Stanford'• lut.ditda oa1kle klclloff to pr ... rve a vlctorJ. &Mil, th8t'• not·~ of action. 0 1""&XP&TSD" play more." admlll Boyer ... But it's something that I have to work that much harder to improve. There is a lot of competition here ·' So what does a talent like Boyer do while the Trojans are preparing for the Nittany Lions? The same as any other game. "My role is simple," says Boyer. "H someone goes down at either position (wide receiver John Kamana or tight end Fred Cornwell> I'm in." With still two years of duty ahead of '/ expected to play more. But it's something I have to work that much harder to improve. There is a lot of competition here.' him, Boyer says nothing has transpired at USC that wasn't entirely unexpected. "It's been about what I expected It to be -real hard. There is a lot of competition and a lot of work.·· ONE OF THE aspects of playing at USC that has really been a bonus is the Big Coach, himself, John Robinson. "He goes out or his way to make you feel like you're needed. A lot of head coaches never have contact with their players at all," says Boyer. "But l\obinson gets right in there, ln the huddles, calling the plays, he really cet.s Into It and he's more into this year than lut." Robinson ls that type of person. When you ask the USC mentor about lndlviduals, reaardless of who tt Is, Mr. Helsman or Mr. Bench, Roblnaon always has a poaiUve mp()Dle. tr the game was a bummer he'll look you rt1ht int.be eye and tell you what was good about tt. THl.8 ONE 11.A&DLY rates as a bummft' -aD4 Boyer HY• th• Trojans are meatally ready. ·•we're looklnt at thla u a claHlc matcb-..p," aaya ~ one-Ume qvarterback. "Two too coaches, two top teams. '1 "I • With two losses one might suspect the T rojans could develop a confidence problem, but Boyer says no way. "It's tough to win every week, lo be up for every game. We haven't lost any confidence. Yo u 'r e going to lose sometimes and you learn a lot, for sure. It· s very painful when you lose." THE TROJANS' only blemishes were losses to Arizona and Washington, each considered a major upset. Every Ume ther e was a Big Game -Oklahoma, Notre Dame, Stanford, UCLA, etc., it was USC coming away with the honors. "I think this game is going to be a pounding-out," says Boyer. "They're aood and we're good. It's going to be a yard here, a yard there. It's liable to be a low·scoring game. like 14·7." · The Trojans have been here since the day after Christmas and they've stayed in tune with the holidays. "Robinson likes to find a line between being very intense and having some fun," says Boyer. "It's very relaxed. Nobody is jumping up and down. You just go out and play and do your best -and have some run doing It ... STI LL Tf'YING -USC's Mark Boyer. a graduate of Edison High, is the No. 2 V ·bac k in the T r ojans' offensive scheme . Miller's g oal siops Kings ALL EYES, of course, will be oo AJten, the brilliant USC tailback, the fourth DENVER IAP> -Colorado Heisman Trophy winner at USC in the put winger Bobby Miller baUed the 16 years (Mike Garrett in 19'$, O.J . puck pas l Lo s Angel es Simpson in 1968 and Charles White In 1m goaltender Mario Lessard with preceded hlm). -16 seconds left in lhe second "The whole team took some pride ln the period and the Rockies held on Reisman," says Boyer. "If you're tor a 3·2 National Hockey blocklftl for a IUY with a Heilman It'• a League victory over the Kiqs great feeling. here Wednesday niChl. Soccer ga me& reeet All games in the final round or the H untlncton Beach H l th soccer tournament were postponed WedMtday due to inclement weather. The contests , lnc&udlDI the cha rnplonsblp affair between Huntiqt.on Beach and Marina, were rescheduled for SalW'day. TM Olien and Vlkinp will,.. at 7 p. m. Miller, stationed In lbe crease, culded a waiJt·higb pass from defenseman Joel Quennevllle lAto the near corner for hls ninth coal ot the aeaaon. Rockies wtncer Brent Ashton, wbo llfur«l ln every Colol'ado acore, ,aao had an assist on Lhe «oal. Colorado, t-23·6 but 6-1·2 •Ince lhrallall Jobn•ton beume eoacb Nov . 30, won a franc~ord fourth 1trat1ht home1ame. Middies give O S U good fig ht MEMPHIS. Tenn. <API - Jimmy Gayle. Ohio State's No. 2 tailback. has a bone to pick with the oddsmakers for the Liberty Bowl. The Big Ten football co-champions. favored by 14 points, narrowly staved off a Navy raJly to win the postseason classic 31·28 Wednesday night. "Actually," said Gayle, "we were the underdogs because of everything that was written about the game. That helped Navy." Gayle's touchdown runs of one and two yards earned him the honor as Ohio State's t op offensive player in the game. His last score put the Buckeyes ahead to stay 24·20 late in the third quarter. T he Buckeyes, 9·3, shattered a four.game bowl losing streak without much help from their prin ci pal w ea pon , Art Schlichter. Starting his 48lh strai1ht college gam e, the Buckeyes' senior quarterback mana1ed only 1 I completions in 211 tries ror l~ yards, althoucb he did throw touchdown passes ol 50 and 9 yards to Gary Williama and Ce d ric Anderson , respectively. Schlichter was ln teara afterward, saying: "I was a little otf tonight. I have play«! good and we lost. I waa poor-and now we win.'' tn fa ct , Navy sophomore quarterback M1tto Paanue.1!11 a Hunllnaton Beacb Hllh lana Golden West Colleae product, outdueled bis more heralded opponent. Pa1nanelll, dffplte . aurrertna a head Injury, hit 1• of • 21 p&Slel I« 201 yarda ud two touehdownt, each for -. Jani · '<See LIBBaTY. P.,ae UJ I . Ila Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thuraday, December 31 . 1981 ~~--------------....; _________________ .,~·------------------------... · A,. ....... HOLIDAY MOOD -UCLA Coach Terrv Donahue. whose te am will meet Mi ch1g<.1n tonight in the Bluebonnet Bowl. m ake::. a point to· his s pecial teams during drills in the Hous ton Astrodome. UCLA enter s the game as a 31 ;:-point underdog. ·Ramsey takes I good and had UCtA QB used to pressure HOUSTON <AP > -Cr itics of UC LA qua rterback Tom Ramsey may have trouble getting messages to the junior whose winter addresses keep changing. "I'll just keep going to the Bluebonnet Bowl or the Rose Bowl or whatever." Ramsey s aid. "When you play quarte rback, you are subject to a lot of criticism but you are subject to the good stuff too No ligament damage to Magee's finger UC Irvine basketball fans will be m· luappy to know that there is no a pparent ligament damage to the ring finger on the left hand of the Anteaters' All ·Amerlcan forward Kevin Magee Magee returned home Wednesday and was examined lute in the day for possible ligament damage but doctors who checked the sprained finger feel there is no such injury. X-rays were taken in Milwaukee before the te am returne d home from the Milwaukee Classic with a third-place finis h. MAGii ''There appears to be no l ig ame nt damage ," a university spokesman said f o llowing We dnes day 's examination. "ll as now just a matter of lime until the swelling goes down and he will be able lo return to the court. .. The school official indicated it would be a daily situation concerning the return of the All-American who was leading the nation in scoring before going to Milwaukee. The Anteaters have onJy one game in the nE'x t 14 days, that with Drury Colle ge Wednesday night. This one figures to be an easy outing for ~he squad and Magee 1s not expected to play. ft 1s hoped he will return in time for the PCAA opener with Cal State< Fullerton) on Jan 14 Magee hurt the finger during the second half of UC I's game with East Tennessee Stale UCI won, 11·15. Quote of the day Dick Motta, coac h of the Dall as Mavericks, in a rem ark lo offi cials when Magic Johnson of the Lakers asked for a ne w ball during a ga me in Dallas. "He's s upposed to get rid of coaches , not basketballs " Gervin hits 42 In San Antonio win Geor1e Genia poured lo 42 m points and San Antonio outscored Houston 10·• In the flnaJ rour minutes Wednesday nl&ht to defeat the RockeL'J 109-104 ln a arudaie batUe between NISA Midwest Olvislon rivals . 1t was the second strultehl night Gervin hit more than 40 points and sent the "Iceman" over 18,000 points tor his nlnu-year career ... Els.,where In the NBA, Larry Bird and Nate Archibald combined ror •3 points as Roston blew pa,;l Utah. 121·11 0 . Power forward L en "Truck" 'ltobloaoa poured In ll 1ame-h ig h 30 point s , including a alam dunk wUh a minute left to g.ive Phoenix a 113· l 12 win over Portland .... .,.. . . . !Waurlce Lucaa scored ouv1"' 20 points, Including the clinching ba11ket in overtime, to give the New Yor k Knlcks a 110-108 victory over Cleveland . . . Guard Larry D~w scored a career ·hlgh 27 points and handed out 10 assi.sts to power Kansu City to a 120·116 victory over Denver . . . Brian Winters came off the bench to score 15 or his 29 points in the final quarter to help Milwaukee to a 107-103 win over Washington . . , Michael Brooks scored 21 points as lbe San Diego Clippers broke a nine-game losint streak by beating Atlanta 94·91 . . . Ray Wllllam1 scored 25 points and lames BaUey added 22 to lead New Jersey to a 130·119 win over Detroit . . Reserve guard Andrew Tooey's 18-fool jumper with 20 Se<!Onds lert broke a 99-99 tie and helped Philadelphia beat Seattle, 102-99. Gretzky scores five for Edrronton Wayne Gretzky, the Edmonton Oilers' sensational center, scored fi ve goals Wednesday night, giving him SO goals in 39 games in the National Hockey League this year, to pace the Oiler s to a 7-5 win over Philadelphia ... Elsewhere in lhe NHL, Kellh Acton scored one goal and assisted on three others as Montreal defeated Chicago, 6·3 ... A late goal by Don Marcotte helped Boston to a 4·2 victory over Calgary . . The line of pterre Larouche, Doug Sulllman and Dan Bourbouals collected 10 points to lead Hartford to a 6-1 victory over Winnipeg. Larouche had two goals and two assists, Sulliman two goals and one assist and Bourbonnais added a goal and two assists . . . Mike Crombeen scored twice as St. Louis built a four-goal lead, then held on to defeat Toronto 6-4 despite a three-goal performance by Terry Martin . Pat Boulette and Bob SI m pson scored two goals each to lead Pitts burgh to a 6·2 win over Washington .. Don Maloney, who had set up two goals earlier in the game. scored on a backhander with 3: 14 to play. giving the New York Rangers a 6-4 victory over the New York Islanders James get.s extra incentive: a raise Don Jam", coaeh of U.. ll.oN Bowl-bound Waahlnston Hualdet , wlll bt liven a pay ralM and a one.year exteo.alon oa hi• contract, • unlver lty olflclal 11y• Although delalla of ti.. asreement have not been completed . Jamu will have a new five -year contract on Ju. I. Mike Ludt, unlver11ity athletic director. uld Tue11day. "I huve met with Oon and we've pretty weU put it together We just haven't had a chance to f1n111h it up." Ludc said. He said he expec~ to have the •areemenl signed before the 2 p.m. 1tart of Frlda.y's game ugainsl Iowa In Pua.den•. James was given a one.year exten1lon on his contract last season. when the Huskies went to the Rose Bowl. James' present contract reportedly pay• ham an annual salary of about $82,000 with radio and television agreements for Husky football boosting his income to more then $100,000 Ali stands up for boxing promoter Former he a vyweight boxing • cham Ion Mubammad All said outs ide court Wednesday he is certain promoter Harold ao.a Rossfielda Smith is Innocent or embezzUn& $21.3 mlllion from Wells Fargo Bank ... World champions Sc.U Hamilton and Shella Vouag Ocbowlca have been named the 1981 U.S. Amateur Athletes of the Year by the U.S. Olympic Committee ... Sebastian Coe and Steve Ovett, who defied government pressure and won gold medals ror Britain at the Moscow Olympic Games, were oHicially forgiven and awarded Member of the Order of the British Empire medals . Television, radio Following are the top SPorts events on TV tonight. Ratings are: ./ -1 ./ / excellent; " / ./ worth watching; 1 I fair; ./forget It. 5 p.m .. Ch•nnel 9 ./ ./ ./ ./ BLUEBONNET BOWL: UCLA vs. M ichigan. Announcer"$: Ray Scott and Lee Corso. The opPQrtunistic UCLA offense, capltaliiing on 44 opPQnent turnovers, scored 27 or more points in seven games. The Bruins finished the season with a 7·3·1 record while M ichigan was 8-3 . A ll-American wide receiver Anthony Carter and running back. Butch Woolfolk. combine to give Michigan one of the country's top offenses. averaging 5_9 yards a play. Tom Ramsey is the Bruin quarterback while Kevin Nelson Is the leading rusher for UCLA. Michigan is favored by 3'h points. RADIO Football Bluebonnet Bowl, UCLA vs. Michigan, 5 p.m ., KMPC <710). ; so you take it all in s tride." Ramsey, who carried the brunt of cnticism for the bad times in UCLA's 7-3·1 season, figures post -season appearances mean he must be doing something right. Marina downs Foothill to win tourney title Despite a seas on when he t hrew 15 f On TV tonight channel 9 at 5 Edison, Huntington Beach post victories ; Costa Mesa, Estancia both lose tinter~eptions . an~ 15 touchdo~ pa~ses, R amsey 1goes 10to tonight s battle agamsl Michigan in the •Bluebonnet Bowl with his confidence intact. Marina High School's Vikings captured rirst place m the Marina-Edison Elks tournament with a 46-45 victory over Foothill High Wednesday night to hi g hlight Orange Coast area women 's bas ketball action Costa Mesa, however , r an into a cold night at the free throw line and lost to Pius X High in the fin a ls of the Estancia Lions Club tournament, 52 40. I "[ just t ry to maintain a high level of 1confid9"ce," Ramsey said "It's (interceptions) 1just something to write about. I don't like talking ,about the interceptions as much as the touchdown passes." 1 ~here is pl enty ~f evidence to give Ramsey confidence. Ramsey 1s the No. 11-ranked passer in the nation, completing 59.5 percent of his passes. He hit 122 passes in the regular season. the second ,best effort ever by a Bruin quarterback. "I guess it was our turn to win ," Marina Coac h Mike Thornton said afte r the victory. "We 've lost some close ones in the past and I g uess it was our turn to win one tonight." . ~ut the subject of those interceptions keeps aris ing. The Vikings were down by three points going into the final period before Yvette Howard grabbed two offensive re bounds and put them up for s cores . "We then went up by as much as five points toward the end of the game but couldn't hold the edge." Thornton added. "Michelle Ar mstrong hil rour free throws in the last 12 seconds to help. We didn't get behind but every time we'd score, they'd com e down and make one " ''He h ad a tendency to t hrow more 1in\.erceptions than in the past, and I think that would be pointed to for a few games we were not .fortunate enough lo win ," Coach Terry Donahue said. "Tom is aware of the fact that he needs to cut down on his interception rate." ' Ra msey led the Bruins lo a 6-0 start last season before a slump cost him his job in the finaJ game. The Vikings held a three-point lead near end o( lbe game a nd let Foothill score the final basket without a foul. · ''When you go 6-0, you can't do anything 'wrong, all the things people were writing about us was unbelievable," Ramsey said . "Then you lose a game and the roof falls in." Edison's Chargers scored a 55-36 victory over Burroughs High or Ridgecrest for third place. In other action : Huntington Beach 56, Fountain Valley 50 f• Ramsey got his job back this season and helped lead a late-season surge. The Oilers used some last minute heroics to come from be hind and defeat the Barons in overtime. for fifth place in the Marina· Edison Elks tourney. , "f'U admit to a few bad throws on my part but l didn't have the best of luck either when passes @re ricocheting and bouncing through the air." p{amsey said. "I could name five off the bat that rwent of( of people but they all add up to that 15 Huntington Beach trailed most of the gam e until the final quarter when the Oilers had a 19-6 edge Lo tie the count at 50-50 total." Ramsey says he'll have to pass effectively for the Bruins to beat Michigan. Kerri Carr hit two free throws with 15 seconds of regulation remaining to send the game into overtime. She was 4 for 4 in the fourth stanza and 2 Citrus tops OCC Saddleback toppled by Oxnard It '.¥a~n ·t a big night for Orange Coast area basketball t eams Wednesday evening. Orange Coast lost to Citrus in the finals of the Alan Hancock touroame nt , 68 ·56 , and Saddleback fell to Oxnard In the consolation finals of the Santa Ana tournament. Orange Coast College had a horrendous shooting night from the floor in its second straight loss to Citrus. The Pirates hJt only 35 percent while Citrus was canning 60 percent and lhal was t the difference between the two .. lea.ms. In the first half. OCC was up by seven points 20-13 ind appeared headed for a bett.el' finish. Instead, In the next 5~ minutes, they hit a dry spell while Citrus picked up 12 points t o ao i.D front 25·20. occ missed Alb88take81ead PE BBLE BEACH CAP) Club Jll'O Jim Albus of Locust Valley, N.Y .• jumped ahead of some top tourin• pros by aboolinl' a 8·under·par 65 to take I.be fl.rli.rounct lead w~ ln tbe 8p•1dlnf LnvitaUoeal Pro-Am 10U touma_menl, • Album. 41. playtni In one ol the IMt.....,. ol Ule day, bad alne9 91 32,13 ' 10 straight field goal attempts in this period Last week the Pirates lost to Citrus for the first time this seaso n . 75 -63 , I n a non-conference outing. C h'ris Beas ley and Greg Krohnfeldt were ·hamed to the all-tourname nt team . For Beasley. it ma rked the fourth successive tournament in which he has been selected for the all·tourney squad. He was the le adin g r e bounder for the Pirates with 11 while Ronnie Calhoun had nine assists . Oxnard 87, Saddleback 59 The Gauchos fell behind in lhe early foln1 and were never able to catch up. They did get to 57-5' with $:26 left to play but Citrus came on lo score lhe next two baskets and the end was in sight for lhe Gauchos. Georae Turner paced the Saddleback scorlng w ith 22 poln&.s iocludin1 9 of 17 from lht floor . H e 1110 was th e re bounding leadu with live despite bis 6-2 beifht. Oxnard put It away In the first ha lf with a SS percent shooting averqe and du plte the fact the Gaucbm c.me wtthln tbree m tb.e late 1ta1'•· ac tually bad q~lte 1 few other opportuniUes &o Lio but couldn't _.. ••• lbe shots. From Page 8 1 LIBERTY. • • to tight end Greg Papajohn. The las t came with eight s e c o nd s left The same com bi nation clicked for two extra points, but the rally died when Ohio Stale recovered the foll owing on-side kickoff G e or ge We l s h. Navy 's winnlngest coach ever who Is heading for the University of Virginia next week, said: "I'm a little disappointed we couldn't do it. I wanted the upset. I don't think there's such a thing as a moral victory." Tailback Eddie Meyers. the game's Most Valuable Player wit h 117 yar d s rushing , conceded Navy's underdog status aroused the Midshipmen. ·' l think that we proved lo everyone that although you're an underdog on pa~r. paper does not meuure the will, the power, the strength ot a man's hear t, hia ability to come back, his desire to win," Meyers said. Navy, wlndin1 up 7 ..... 1 alter Its third bowl appearance in lour seasons was its own worst enemy. Four major Midshipmen error& led to three touchdowns and one field 1oal for Ohio State, which built 10-0 and 31-20 leads. The Mids hipmen's al1ylna power did not 1urprlH Earle Bruce, Oltlo State's C!Oteh. .... .. They came back 1tron1," Bruce said. .. That•1 what you upttt ~ Na¥y. lt'1 l'i&t to tel •bowl wtn. " for 2 in the overtime period. Carr also scored a fie ld goaJ in the extra session and Betty Mendoza added a pair of charity tosses. but fell behind in each of the two middle periods to trail 42-32 going into the fourth stanza "This was a real good win for us." Coach Joanne Kellogg said. "We came from so far Rowland 47. Estancia 45 After s tarting in front and being tied al halftime. the Eagles fell behind by two in the third period and lost by-the same margin. WOMEN'S BASKETBALL behind after getting into early foul trouble. We had two players foul out in the fourth quarter." "The game was tied toward the end and we had a chance to win," Coach Joe Wolfe said. "ll was very close all the way but we missed a couple or easy shots and that w~s the ball game. Huntington Beach and Marina each placed two players on the all-tournament team while Edison and Fountain Valley had one each. Plus X 52, Costa Mesa 40 The Mustangs lost the decision at the free throw line where they were only able to connect on 4 of 19 attempts. "I feel we are a litlle bit shaky right now although we are gelling better. We're just not polished yet and we're undisciplined in our last two games. We have to work on that part or our game before league starts but l feel we'll be r eady. We'll work out today and Saturday." "We started three sophomores and I believe the pressure of the chr.mplonship game made them tense." Coach Paul Kahn said. "Not hitting al l he free throw line hurt us but that has lo be the pressure. The Eagles hit only 3 of 13 atte mpts from the free throw line and lost by two. In three losses this year against fi ve victories. the Eagles have been defe ated by 2, 2 and 3 points. . "Instead of going out and playing our regular game. we were loo tense. I was real pleased with the way they played in the entire tournament." Amy Hathcock was the scoring leader for lhe Eagles with 12 followed closely by Debbie Hughes with 11 Hughes also had 18 rebounds and Hathcock 16 Costa Mesa is now 5·2 for the season. Nora Seager hit 12 points for the Mustangs and had 19 rebounds. S he was named to the all -tournament team. Costa Mesa took the lead in the first quarter In other games in the two women 's tournaments, El Toro took the consolation corwnin the Marina-Edison tourney with a 60·56 victory over Loara while La Quinta won third place honors in the Estancia tourney with a 75-12 triumph over Santiago College football COLLEGE BOWL ROUNDUP Independence Bowl 10.C. lletl'Men-1, La.I h ••• A&M Jl. Oki-• St . ,. Garden State Bowl 10.C. UM~-~. NJ I le,,.,._1',Wlw:.ontlnll Hotlday Bowl IOK.,.etS-~I 8 YU JI, We~"91CN1 SI ,. Callfornl• Bowl 10.C.ltet,,_I Tottclo21 ~JoMSI U T•noertne Bowl 10.C-,, .. °" .... · ,. •. 1 Ml-• It, So.Allern MIU IUl"4 II 81u•Gray O•m• 10.C. Utl MM.,.._r,, AMI.I 8t11• 1I. Gtry t Sun Bowl 10.C. ,. .. II l"tMI OttMI-.cl,_.,., ,. OatOf Bowl 10.C .... J---·-· MOrlll C•ollna )I, ,..,_..,,u '7 Liberty Bowl co.c.•ei-....•• Oflt• St.''·......,. Hall of tr•me Bowl C-.11•atrwllr•"'· AMI.I Mhshth1•I Stet• 11·4·01 •• W.811tH ,...,.. .. ~ .. ,., ..... Peaeh Bowl tOK. ll tt Al-I.el WHI Vlrvlnl• 11-J.01 •• Flo•IO. 11·..0I c .......... 1 .. _ Bluebonnet Bowl 10.C JIMM_l..,I UClA H·l 11 •• Mltlll9en II J·OI C""nn•I •al j p,m Corton Bowl t.U.. 1 M Oellnl Alt0."'411• 1 II '" Tt ~ .. l •·t II C""llMI '•I II a m Fleata Bowl (.Jtot. '., ,_1•1 use '"'--0' vs """" s111t cf.2--01, Cl\ann•t Aoae Bowl (Jell, 1 .. ,._, Iowa ll·l ·OI o w .. 11ln9ton It J OI, Cl\aM~I •et 2 II m Ofange Bowl 1""-I M Ml-I, f'lt .I M•••••'• l"f-41 °' Ctem•Oft t 11-1, Cll•flntl • et ~ p m Sugar aowl t'9. 1 .. -one-• GN re t• 1"1..01 •l Plll\burQl'I O•t.O), Eaal•WHt ~rlne Game (Hfl. 'et ..... A"91 EHi All-t..,_. "t WHI All-ti•"• C ... NW! ,.,,,_ HulaBowt .............. , e .. 1 .... ,..,.. V'-w..1 AtH1eo. c~ JOHNSON & SON Presents ... Pete the ''Greek" NFL's Pick8 Of The Week SATUIDAY N-"..tCa,_~ Dale OTW T~a., ~.c ....... ...... Oftr =·~ S.. Pt• chco ..... .... , ....... ..,,.,tc..c..._ ... Ct.clmMH e\'W ..... New Parts Department Hours Now Open 8:00 am· l:OO ·pm Saturdays l Y~X•l.N7•C APRl•CONTINBNTAL• MARK Vl • LINCOLN•COtJGAf<•XR7•ZEP1fYR L I :\ 0 L N 1616 Harbor 8-le•ard. ... .. ---~ -. N oata Mesa R y I \ ... ' ALL· TOURNEY -Brad Guess lleftl and Craig Rou se of U nl versit~· High . along with teammate Randy M eyers were namt>d to the Canyon all·tournament team ! Uni can't stop i Riorda~ 72-66 I Trojans' Gu ess scores 27 By RICHARD DUNN Of .... Detty"-' .... Brad Guess's 27 points wasn't enough as the University Trojans lost their bid for a tournament championship Wednesday night to Riordan High or San Francisco, 72-66, in the Canyon bas ketball tournament at Canyon High. Guess, who had 74 points in the tournament, blocked two shots in the third quarter to raise his tournament high to 21. Riordan guard Kent Williams was the key figure in the Crusaders' success, as he dumped orr fi ve assists, giving him a total or 17 for the tournament. Williams was named MVP, scoring 18 points in the championship game, and pouring in 11 or 13 fi eld goal attempts in the entire tournament. Jerry Ross was the leading scorer for the Crusaders as he tossed in 24. University had trouble fighting the Crusaders' I Cull-court press, as they turned the ball over 19 limes . I "We didn't attack their press," said Trojan I coach Jeff Cunningha m . "We turned the ball over l, too many times under pressure." Though the Trojans' ball handling was erratic , I they maintained a steady beat with Riordan. The I Trojans stayed afloat until 1:23 remained in the I fourth quarter , when Riordan pulled off 6 straight l points. all on free throws. I I "We were still in the game even though we com mitted so many turnovers," Cunningham said. "We played a ver y good team. They were exceptionally quick." Down by a 52-44 deficit going into the fourth quarter, University got into foul trouble and Riordan tossed in 12 points on free throws alone. Guess fouled out with 2:03 left. which iced the ch ampionship for the Crusaders. Guess, Craig Rouse and Randy Meyers all made All-Tournament for the Trojans. Riordan's 6-2 center, Ross. l)ad no trouble working around Guess. Ross' quick moves to the basket proved he could play with the much taller Guess (6·7 ). *' * * * * * AU-tourney team Dave Rogers (Cypress J, Ron Conners (Canyon >. Tom Miley (Canyon>. Dennis Kidd <Los Amigos), Don Grable <Los Amigos), Brad Guess (University ), Cr aig Rouse (University), Randy Meyers <University J. J erry Ross <Riordan >. Bill Avalos <Ri ordan J. MVP -Kent Williams ( Ri ordanl. Edison wins title, Woodbridge rolls CARSON CITY. Nev. -Richard Ch ang scored 26 points and Mark Goudge hit 18 and received most valuable player honors as Edison I handed Reno a 65-56 defeat in the fin ;i . or the Capital Classic tournament at Cai ~v n City Wednesday nj ght. "Reno has a s hort but well disciplined team and we shot very poorly in t he early goiM " Edison coach Barry Leigh said. ''At halftime we changed things aud went fuU -court pressing defense and that changed lite tempo of the game for us. Reno doesn't have the talent to go with us and their slow-down tempo helped them to a 26-20 halftime lead. "Mark <Goudge) played a nice game for us. He made a couple of moves to help turn the ball game around." In addition lo Goudge being named MVP, Chang and Rick DiBernardo both were na med to the all·tournament team. Edison, despite a cold first half, finished the game by hitting 61 percent of its shots from the floor to improve the season record to 11-1. Rebounding was even for both clubs with Peter Binaski gr abbing 10 ror the Chargers . Jeff Stephens had s ix ass ists lo lead M1 that department. Woodbridge 53, Oak Park 41 AGOURA -Woodbridge High improved its season record to 10·1 with a !)3-41 win over host Oak Park High . "Basically, we got ahead in the final quarter and went to a s talJ and forced them to foul. We made 13 of 17 points in the final quarter at the free throw line," Coach Bill Shannon said. The coach also praised the rebounding of Anthony Radovcich and David Wise along with the scoring of Mark Borsuk and Tom BorsuJt and. Mark Foringer. Borsuk hi t 18 and Forin1er 13 for Woodbrid1e. Woodbrid1e will play at Laguna Beach on Wednesday and at Magnolia High on Friday In lls next games.: ' I •,t.N :-,~µ!NI! (_ /\ 1 I 1 ,._ /I.• ""•''(I {I• I ! f •••II I I l. Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThursday, December 31 , 1981 •a Mftter ·Dei finds out who's best M onarchs learn the hard way as Lakewood wins Orange tournament, 62-49 By EDZJNTEL °' .. .,..., .......... For most coaches, it would have taken quite a bit of couraae to admit, but Mater Oei High b ask etball coach Bill Aluaoder had this confession to make arter his team lost lbe Orange Optimist Invitational c bamplonshlp itame Wednesday night to Lakewood, 62_.9: "They were just a better team than us." In fact, lt took four nichts of playing and some 26 total tournament games at Chapman College, for Lakewood to officially prove what everyone knew all along, that lt was the best team in the 16-team tournament. Lakewood ( 13-0) blew open a close game In the third quarter. by scoring nine straieht points after building a 37.33 lead. Forwards Todd Murphy and Dwayne Corbett dominated the inside game, scoring 16 and 18 points. respectively, and guard Berry Barn~s kept the defense honest on the outside by pouring m 13. Corbett was named the tournament's most valuable player and Murphy was named to the all-tournament team . Ml!_ler Oei's only substantial scoring threat came 1n the form of sophomore center Matt Beeuwsaert who scored 22 points. He, along with teammates Chris Jackson and Ron Tarbell were named all-tournament. Lakewood got off to a 7-0 lead but a basket by 1-·--·--· --. AU-to urney team K\•n l:Jurdllle\ c l'<1i;t11 Me•,,J I. llr11rn lJallurcl 1 Footh1ll1. Tim Osgood cServ1tl.'1. 1.>011 Tti.,ma~ tSant&Chm1>. Byron l:Jall cNewpor; llurbori. Mlk\• Kell} cOrange1. Ed Prangt.> 10run~1·1. Kl·O llartl•f 1 Fountuin Valley I. Murk Vint'ent cOrunge1. ltnn Tarbell r Mater 0.•11 . Milli Bt:t>aui."' lll'r1 1 M Jh ·r Dell . Chris Jac·kson c Muter IJl'H, Totlcl Murph~ t Lakt•wo<>dl, Mark Nlel!mn 1Luk<•\\1KI(!1 Mo:.t vuluablc pla~ er u ... a' rtt· ('11rl11·lt c Lakl•wood 1 Mater Dei's Gary Jaeger made it 14-12. Lakewood, near the end or the first quarter. The game was tied, 23-23 early in the second quarter, but then Lakewood scored eight straight to take a lead the Lancers would not relinquish. "We seemed tired in the second half," said Alexander. "We just pooped out I guess arter playing about 10 games in two weeks." Mater Dei is now 9·5. In other tournament action: Orange 57, Costa Meaa 47 The Panthers won third place with a balanced scoring attack and a solid man-to-man defense that gave the Mustang shooters fits all night Cosl11 Mesa slurted the aame 1hootln1 poorly, connecting on just 6-of-23 shots and al hall. Oran1e held a comfortable 26·12 lead. Costa Mesa's leading scorer, forward Ken Bardsley. was held to just Sill points ln the fl rat half. lie Clnl11hed with 15 points t o lead the Mustangs tn scoring, but lt watn't enouch. Servlte 70, Newpor1 H•rbor 45 The Friari1 won fifth place H the Sailor• couldn't find the basket in the flrat quarter and trail ed, 11 2. Newport made JUSt l·of.16 attempts In the quarter and it was an uphill strugcte after that. Servile was led by guard Tim Osgood's lS points and 13 and 12 points, respectively, from Andy Marusich and Steve Beuerlein. Byron Ball led the Sailors with 15 points and ..-as named to the all-tournam~t team. Fountain Valley 57, Santa Cl•ra 55 {OT) It was wild a nd close throughout but the Barons held o n to win t h e con solation championshjp over a very good 1-A school. J eff Hughes sank two free throws with less than a minute to play in overtime that proved to be the difference Hughes was the leading scorer in the game with 23 points and he got help from forward Ken Harter who added 15. eS\r Fron1 .. . , .. ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 31 , 198 1 4!. > . NBA -.STC•N COii'• •••ca '•lf6cOfVllM w L l'cl. Loo A,,..._ ,. I n• '-•"'• II 10 .., "-111• 11 1J * o.1e111t11s .. " .. II .S71 Por11eM ,. It .lPI oa ..... • ..... ..... ~11 0 .. 911 , JI uo ,, .... --.01v111e11 ~,, A11t0fll0 " • ..,. Oe11v•r ,. 0 ·* fvt HOllllOll 12 11 -• ICeftWIClly II 11 ,,, 11"1 Ulell 10 " .MS ...... Dell•• 1 11 ,., 1'111 llo.STlaN CON'llllNC& A~Olw19 .... PMllOelpflle n • 7" .... Oii u 1 lff .... N-Yoo " IS JOO I We"'ln9'0ft 1J •• .,,. 10 How Je,...y ,, II J7t It .... ~elOlv"6ell Mllw11111l .. ,. • n• , .... _ .. H ill s .... 0.11011 I) II 03 11"1 Atlellle 12 " .,. ..... Chic-J.11 11 -..... Ctevetend • n .J07 11 •••• ....,,.Sc.,... New J e•sey 1:111. 0e1ro11 1 It S.ft 01e9D t i, Atle11te ti ~~l':w!u-:1'~ ii~ ~::::r.::.~ 103 Sen A"*""° IOt, H-IO<I UM ttenMSClty 120, ~ 11' Botloft Ill. UIMI I 10 PllOellla 1\3, Por11end 111 Pllllec9llpfli• 102, SHiii•" T ........ tG- N o 9*mH sctwd\lled COMMUNITY COLLEGE Citrus M. Orange CoHt 56 OltANOI COAST !i.H tt y 7>, Alley I T t<tolutltldl •· G. Krohftleldl e. C•tllOun 6, M•r•et l, Be..,..,111 l Tol•I" 141·10 Sot. CITltUS Fell• It P•r-or 14, Mor •••• 17, Newmwr l, Ku>o f, Cotey 10 Tot•h u , .. ,, ... H•llllm« Cllr1n. :J0.1• Totel la\11\ Or-Co.\I 1•. Cllr1n 11, Fouled out Tl•ome• !Or-Co .. 11 Oxnard 87. Saddleback 59 OXNAaO G GM!Uoft 7, He>v•IOll u , Gottteltt 10. Perry S. F11ll•r 11 Devi'°" 1 ICelly u. Tef'llv • Tot•I• lO 1 1ot1 SAOOLl8ACIC -Hiii 11 Reid t Wli"lt .W.I 13, Reed J. Turner 21, Doy .. I Tol•I• n IS-'O ff H•lll~ OsNrd, •S-lt T olet louh 0•11ard 13, S.aotab<t<k 11 FOUied out Doyle IS.Odleb<IO I HIGH SCHOOL Ftn. Valley 57, Santa Clara 55 SANTA CLAltA -Bock IS, Well•Ct tJ, Torr" 7. T~ 1•, Cvlll no•l<ll 4, OeJtlU\ I, Pe11,. 7 Tot•ls 12 ll·lt S5 'OUllTAIN V"LLEY >ilrter 11 H\19ttes u. K051Y t . W"lt•IWllr I, Vlll•nuev~ ;; B•own l . Jecot>\ •. Kllbo O lole tt l• tu k-eyo.. ... " Sanle C.let• 11 10 ll IS • U Founteln Vtlley 11 u " 1 •-s1 Tot•I -•• s ... 1• Clere 1•. Founi.tn Velley II, Fouled O\ll Je<OO\ 1 Fo..nt•ln V•llo l . t oo 1s.n11 c1er1 1 TecMlcet lo..ts. lleO IS."'1 Cte ra l Serv"e 70, Newport Harbor 45 S&ltYITI -~ IS, Cll•poell o, Merut lcll 13, Beuorleln 12, K••llme11 t. Jottlll •. Ev-•. 0 ..0.."'"• o. Buo<llt .. l. ~~;I~: :j .. 'ii-ro.' •. S.•lon o. l 91Jpete t. N&W~T M••ao• -Bell "· ~· •• LIM r •, Sc~t 2, ... llt l .. r •. Foll! •. Selby •. Br-1, Gvltten-.r 1 E'!Vl•ncl • Tot els le ~tot O Sc-eyo-n." Sof'vlle II JO l1 17 70 Mewll0(1 H-, IS 12 l~J U Tolel lovll Sen.lie 11, N-'1 >i.,._ Oranoe 57, Costa MeH 47 OaA-f" Kelty U , lllncenl U, Pret191 It, W•tttn l , Pletee •. O...rtt l . tCoolwlffe o, Miine 7, Beverd o Tot•lt 23 • It JI COi TA Ml IA -J F ielCH 0, BerchfO IS Ah..._..., •• PtllCllowtlll •. P•tmlltede .,: Streyer 4, E-•.Cook 0 Tolel\' 11 S·•O o sc-ttv ~" Orenoe 1a 10 1• 11 S1 Coti. ""-I • IS ~1 Total touh 0r.._ u. (051• """' .. 11 Fouled 0111 J Field\ IC0'1• MU•I Petmlll-1 Cott• Mew l litkewood 82. Mater Del 49 L.Attewooc> -M"'l>lty " c-n 11, P-•. ll«r>H 13, Nie ...... l l Wlllltm\Oll l O'Brien •. OlkOll 0, BlaLH I Totel\ 17 .. ,. ., "'"'''" 011 ~ ... n n . Je<Oor• 10, J -J. C-l , Terbtlf I, Ftelcler O. Per•1tlns 2, IM....,, o. N-nt o, Souu 7, ""-9•11-t 0 Total>; It 11·71 •t ~ ... o...-n LellewOOd u 17 17 u •1 M•ltr Otl 11 11 17 u- Totel fouls. u.tl•-17, Metff Del "· Foult O OUI I B•rnu IL••••Ooctl . Ttcllnlcel louts Meter Ool ....,<"· Riordan 72, Unlver1lty 85 •tOltOAN -Gve rrero t Aon 7• JollnSOft 11, Willl•m• II, "••los' 1 AH ro J Tolet1 • 1 .. 2' 77 UN IYlaSITY Gutn 11, Aou .. It ""-"" •. Stotrolf 7, R11c1111t J CllcM t Totels 17 II te•S So re ..., 0-"9N Alord.., I) II 1• N-77 Ulllftftlfy 1• 1' I• ll -•S Tot•• i.uts A-den ••. v,.,.,.,,ay 11. l'ouledOUll' Gvt~ IUnlvtr\llvl Woodtwtdge 53, Oak Park 41 WOOMIUOGI -Forl"91r IJ, llon~ 1e, lledowkll •. A-•• WI• I . Mori-J T ... •11· ltlS-20 53. OAIC ~MK -A0<1W '· Ste tn t, Mennh>Q " I, WtlCll 6, Wll-lllt t . Totels: 1• IJ.11 0 Sunll\'OMNn WOO<lllrlOgo I• 10 U 11-s.J ._ Oell P¥11 • 20 If ~1 Tolel toul• ~169" tt. 0... P•rto '•· 1' Foulff ooA· lklrlct t-169"1. Morl•no IWOOCl"'ldoool. A<Ki.. (OU P•rkl, Stein 10.• Pen). Edi.on 65, Reno 58 IDI..,_ -~·. c;....,.. 11, (llet>Q l6 BINtll •, lllllenwordo t T04ett JIU U •••o -~ •. We9lt11 • Futw n S.w ... 11, ~ 12. S-llovk~ 1 T04elt · " .•. ,, "'· k-11¥0...-... E~IMft 10 11 11 1)-41 ·-• lO 11 ,,_,. Tot•I foult: Edlton I•. A-t , l e<llflk el louL C ...... IEdlt0nl. HIGH SCHOOL WOMEN M9tlna 41, Foothlll 45 l'OOTIH"--811.0 .. u 1, Je""Y Owr 7, O..rt IS, l)eWll1' 14, Jiit Otw I. Totelt. JO J-7 0 . MAltlNA Le nt• a, Mo wero 1 11, A rmtJr-10, CorM tt 10. Lon •. A-r-4,~..._.o. Ttl(ets .... , ... ~ ... ~ """''" " • 1J ·-MerlM • It ' I ..... Tete4 '9111t' ~II U, M.erlne • Hvnt. .. ec:h N , Ftn. Valley 50 MU•T•••To• a1AC:M -Cu r ... ' cer-.a t. '-' 1. ~•• •· 1vc11et1 ti. CUM: ........ IJ, T-0 Telel•: W , .. ,. .. ,OUlt'TAIN YAU.CV -..,..,. t , 9-11 ' t.l"llc......it1,Ar .... 4,0111-9t,O.• .. n. "veedWftlOt o, wtllttwom o. T04e11: ti . ,~, .. k_..,0..Nn Cott• M.W I? 10 10 ·-Ph11 X 11 It 1~ 10-Q Toi .. ..,.,., Pl"' X It, Gttlt l'Mw 17, Fou!H WI <ier<le ICOli. -WI Rowland 47, Eatancla 45 &•TANC:IA lbvtl\I t. CtrO.nler • Mowt•11G •· M.KMllll•n I. Cllrlttm.., i" HellKo<k ll. Muoi-II Tot el• JI J-1> •) ' ltOWLAMO Goltrato to. G•etlly 10. ll•OOllt •, CIWl,.y 1, Scotto O. Toi•'' It !Me ., konttvO......., Etlencl• 11 I 10 IS-45 Aowtenct I 11 11 1~ Tot•• fouh: E•lt11Clt ... AOwl•llO IJ, Fouledoul -1-IE•leMl•I AM· ..... -Te•m V lr9 lnle Gonre le' I AowltllG I . 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KlfteO.-!~I e.• Al .. rtoCH: •-II-, (,...It Wortfly, K-. ~ 11\'lflce, l'leu ~ •• ""'-" T..,_., ~Aro U•, " .. T.-.cb T-.· ,.,...,,, ~ ..... ~en.. 1 Color-."'"'°" 1J !Lorimer, Mlll.,l, '9. l Lot AftQele•. T •ylOf U t OIOflfte, L Muronv>. ,. OI ,.....,.... L. M""'"'· LA. ~i l~j A~. Cot, 14 SS, Mk lltltltl, Col, --~·'* J. Cotor-, Cit/II• 7 '""''°"· Fotltrl, J;SO • LO\ ,.,..., Fo• 11 (L Murf)ftVI 14 S• S Col<><-. Miiier t 10-nnevllte AiMonl, It 4' Ptnelllt' JOfl•nuft, LA 1 13, 8-LA J ll Ovennewollt . Col t St, Smltl'I, LA, IJ XI TMN ,.. ....... NO<le "-Hy 8o1e-. LA, 11 0 Sl\Oh on _, LO\ A"Ofl•\ tl 11 11 ,. Co!or.00»1 u C.oell"" l..O\ A"Ofl••. L•u•rd C-·-· Rttc11 A e,3tt. LIBERTY BOWL Ohio State 31 , Navy 28 k_...,O..."-" Olllo 'it•te H•VY OSU FG Aflle 3S 10 1 I I • I )I 7t OSU Wltll•m' !O peu lrom S<lltl<llltr , ... , ... lll<kl ...... P-J-I P•U lrom Peon• .. 111 II'•"' lie~) N .. y FC. l'enr •I OS\I G•yle 1 run I "'h• ooo I N••Y FG Fell< n "•VY °''°" :zo bl00.0 "'"'l return IFeht lll<kl osu J G., .. , , ........ , ..... l<lll OSV ~ t CNU l•om S<hll<httr , ... , ... •1<•1 Ne•v P-IOfln I pen !rem p_.,,.111 I P•P•lolln ~' lrom P_,.1111 A 4J,216 T-Slalln k t DIV ... ..., .. ,, FI rll OOWl\s Au~~' yerlh Peut'!V y.,CI\ Ae•ur-n y erch PH,., H -17) ~7$ Punts Fumbt~ POll•llltt lff ,., 0 :zo ll·U I U-,..1 •·33 ~ll lost 1 I J.1 v••O• • ,. 1-JO 1-Y-ILt ...... RUSHING Ofl1a St Sl>HIU• 11 tt, J GOI• IJ.41. 8•-• 4 II N6YY --· 30-117, J tclt.on l S Y•IOt• I 1. (IOUW 1 1 P ASSING 01110 St . S<,,l•C"1ef ll·lt·I "' Nt•Y. Pegnelltlll ,. 17.1.201 "'"' 1-1-4>-3', McC.llum 0.1+0 ' AECEIVING 0...0 St , "-''°" ) SI, Frenll ).Jl6, Wittie"" 1-AI Nny P9fl•tonn •·•I, ,.._..,.,. J.IS, Wolltr 1 SO M<Cellum 1 O . Yt-l ·J7 Australian Open , ............. , TlllN•-S ....... >it nll PtKter def G"lllermo VIies, ._,. a..i. •·•. ICtm W-k ll def ,,,_11 Deni, W , t.3. M ; J-ICrlell IMt. Cllrlt Ltwb. 1·S, 1·S. 3-A, t-41, .,_., ~' McNamete def. PW! K•Oll•, I ..... 2 • ._,, •-41, ._l. Slot Oelllaft OM. Jofln ..... •-r, .. 1. 4-4, 7-A, I S, 1-41; S"tomo Gtkkslotln 0.1 Aoo F •••to • ._,,._,. t-l. M•rto EOmonchOll -Cllll Ltl<Mr, ._,, M ,6-3. Deep Ml hhlng MOltltO aAY I Ytre't UNl .. 1 -O el\O .. ~: 1 rocll <M, SI fed ••• coo, tO;J rod ""'""'. ,.. .... . AYll.AIAVt ..... S...Ul .. 1 -.t~· t ll"O <•. ,,, "" rocil coo, u yell-bht, •1• r0<11 <OO, .. mecu ret. tANTA 8AlllAltA 101 •11ot•r>: U wlllt• tff lleM, 41 cellco ban, 1 ....o Oft•, s llflt <Cid, J cow coo. •1 reo roc:k coo, toe roe~ 11111. J m«llont. MAlllNA OIL ltlY -•I •ne t•n· r ;,:o;:::l :::'° """" JOO me<ktrtt, i llellbut, tAN 'IDltO l l'ortt 0 ' Celli -1JO •"Otlf't· n w_,•11. n.s u•tc• """ • wlllt• tot• lwlM. e Mftll N ll, l 11•1111111., J bonito, S4 I roo u ct --- ------. \. 49ers rip Boise St. UCSB cuts down Lumberjacks, 78-70 •·rom AP dis p a t c h es BOISE. Idaho Guard Cru1g Hodges aunncd In 27 polnl:J Wcdnl'sday niteht and Dino Gregory uddcd 20 as 1..,ng »each Stale beat Boise State 85·'73 in u nonconference basketball game game uaalnst Eastern, twice bulldlna 12-polnt leads with hot oulaide 1booUn1 T he Spartan.a <'Onnc<"led on elttht of their first nine aboll. . The 49crs jump~d off to a quick 1·0 lead but Boise State went on a 16· 7 streak behind 6·9 cente r Jim Maldonadd to take the lead 11t 16·14 DePeul 55, Northern 1mnol1 48 noise held its last lead at 37 36 with about ri ve minutes tett 111 the half, but l.ong Beach took ud v untagt! of four straight Boise turnovers for a 50·43 halftime lead and never trolled again ROCKFORD, JU. -Te rry Cummings scored 25 polnU, 17 ln the second h air, lo pace t"1g htb ranked De Paul to a 55·46 victory over Northern llllnols. Maldonado hit only four or 12 shots from the fie ld but made 13 of 15 free throws for 21 po1nL~. He also had 13 rebounds . Guard Terry Lee had 18 and s ub forward Derek Ander!ion added 14 for Boise. ,Cummjngs, a g .. 9 Jun1or forward. fir~ In seven of t!lght attempts from the field in the second half in addltion lo canning three of !our free throw alle mpts lo help the Blue Demons stave otf late ltusk1es rallies Iowa 60, Dr•k• 49 Long Bea<'h moved to 3-6 and Boise Stal~ dropped to 5·6 l()WA CITY Freshmen Michael Payne and UCSB 78, No. Arizona 70 . FLAGSTAFF, Arix. -J unior g uard Marlo G s ines scored seven points in overtim e here Wednesday night lo lead Cal·Santa Bar bara to a 78 70 victory over Northern Arizona in a non-conference game Todd Berkenpas scor ed half of Iowa 's Point• as the No. 10-r anked Hawkeyes survived a rusty return from the Christmas break to defeat Drake 60-49. T he Bulldogs nipp ed at I owa 's heels throughout much of the game and at t imes led by as much as five points The G<tu<:hos and Lumberjacks were lied at 64-64 at the end of regulation play Gam es hit five of six free throws and a layup as the Gau<"hos o uts<"ored lh<' Lumberjacks 14 6 1n the extra period Basketball scores Idaho St. 74, Utah St. 70 Co!l!1e LOGAN, Utah -Reserve guard Jackie Fleury scored 12 of his game-high 17 points in the,second half lo lead Idaho St at~ to 3 74 70 w in over Utah State in a non-conference game. C•lllO•,..• 71, Cel Stale Nof'tlvldoit u UC Devh U , Cllepmt11 '1 SI M.,,.,, C•I ,. Cll•mlna<M, li•well S7 SI Mety'" ru PeflHfctln. I•. St Mery'>. Tu M S•n F•..,.IKo SI un, (,at B9f>ll\I Center Dale Wilkinson hit 16 points, while starting guards Terry Goddard and Robert Tate added 13 and 10 points for ISU, now 9·2-USU. 2·8, was led by Michael McCullough with 16 Scotl Harries added 12 and Leo Cunningham had 11 .. Hew•ll•Ptclll< ••. A..it•~ SS Hewell H1lo/O, leylo< M ••o let LO"O 8ee<ll St I S. eo.M St 73 UI. S.mAI B•l»re 71 Ho ArltON 10 San Jose St. 74, Eastern Montana 73 (:olo•-SI u. 1n01 .... SI St IO•llO SI 7•, UI ... SI 10 ~ AtUM .. ",K.,,ISI •t RILLINGS. Mont -Jonathan Brown sank two free throw~ with 50 seconds lert, then blo<"ked a s hot by Eas tern Montana's Ron Os borne in the final seconds . to lift San Jose Stale to a 54 53 Vll'tory in the title game of the KOA Classic M-1 '>I L OVIS ... 81/1 ltr f1 VelCNr•lto 71, Cent Ml(llla.n 71 Do P•ul I~, N llllnol1 '6 IOW• tO, Or••A •• San Jose dominated the first 13 minutes of the t<an"' SI '1. S llllnoh U f U0'7 lt•Yk>r. Of>IO 71 From Page 81 ALl.,-CIF. • • S-11 4•• B t rm t riof'l•m '• Tenn Chell._ )0 Bethu~ C:-m•n tl ltnn .. ..-'>t It E••I Ce<ollN .. Geo<9t M•--.. M•OOlt ,...., •• Oolroll •7 Iott 011Qv.Y>t l>l w 119n1u< .. y •1 assault. wh1rh rnt'luded Pola's 1,233 yards and 9 louchdown:-. En t C•nt\t~ •~. F etr1flt!k:I 11 ion• 101 CCHY ~ '>vrecliM .. USIU II Pola, whc1 douhled at linebacker. was p1<-ked on defense Stlon H•ll It Flortd.11 Soutn.rn 77 '>I Jo~·· II, 8\IOMll !II C.&'0•04' W~lnQIOll •S. To-SI 1>• Offe nse Pos. Player, school TE Lou Davita. Sl Francis WR Steve Lauter, Los Altos WR Andy Stankiewicz. St Paul WR-Jeff Frandsen, Marina T Enc Rogers, Colton T Don Jl1l1. Bishop Amat G Ph1lhp Grider. Colton G -Brian Lopker, Mate r ~l c Ron Brogdon. F'onlana B Blake Smith, Los Altos 8 -Dave Geroux, Edison 8 -Ken Major, Edison B Pernell Taylor. Bishop Amat B Alex Espinosa. St Paul 8 -Rod E mery, fountain Va lley B Randy 'olbrunn. Fontana K Andre Guardi, Los Altl)S Defense DL Ron Brown, Bishop Amal DL Cliff Heidrich, St. Paul DL Jeff Imes. St Frant'is Dlr-Ron Male rstein, Marina DL J ohn Fouls. Loyola LB-Rkk DiBernardo, Edison LB Tom Prukop, St. Joh n Bosco LB-Kennedy Pola, Ma le r Del LB Mike Gelfand. Fontana LB Kurt Vedder. Crespi DB Detrino Mendoza. Colton DB-Keo Laszlo, Marina DB Jose Pina, St Paul DB Griffoni ln inc l.11vnl;1 DR Steve Rahon. Servi.ti.' P Hank Monda<'a. St Pa ul Hl. Wt. Yr. 6·3 210 Sr 6-1 195 Sr. 5-8 165 Sr. 5-10 1'5 Sr. 6-4 250 Sr 6·3 250 Sr 6-4 255 Sr 6·1 215 Sr. 6-4 200 Sr. 6·0 170 Sr 6·0 216 Sr. 6-4 200 Sr . 5-11 180 Sr 6 2 175 Sr 5.9 170 Sr. 5-10 180 Sr fl J 180 .Jr 6-4 200 Sr 5-10 185 Sr . 5-10 205 Jr. 6-U ZOO Sr. 6-0 215 Sr fi·4 218 Sr. 6·3 230 Sr. 6-1 ZIS Sr . 6-0 185 Sr. 6· 1 195 Sr 5·10 156 Sr. 6-0 165 Sr. 5 11 165 "r 5 7 145 ">: ti I 100 ~1 6·2 200 Sr. TOVUIAMINT'S i....c 1eu1< New ~11co $1 Fordn.m •• 'ttrsu M•r \l'lell 6) ~ .. I ltotrdl llec""r .. CIHtk G•oroeiow-n n. N•~r• 4,. • '"'" C olumg,• ._ Ulen S1 I 1'11•01 E•MtYllle Hel,._y Cleuk E ••"ivu•• n Nrtvrr•• St SI tt1r1U • E 1111r"'" .. r.~,\ff Tech t7 11n1ra• Get ...... , Vir91nlA Tt<f\ 10') Ji1<lf'°"v1U• ll rt1r\U Tt••• Te<" M Boston Cott 11 tlh•rc:U lllc- Virqinl • j 1, J•mt~ M •Ot\.On •• 1t1r,U II• Common-11th S'I Ai<llmonO n t1h1rdl C-1k wt--1Ct.uk Conne<ll<llt H ~ Florkla ll) llor\11 t •S•Hf" .. ~t 8on•vtin1ur• ·~ '"''"' Alltr ........ 11.u .... 1 l •"•Clll .. "'"'to1>t •1 ,,.,,,, 0 At,ft•l'\yf" n M lddl t>Dury •• Huro llld1111nat N•t._.I Cleu k Ml\..ClluWlh ... Nevy .. 111•"1 Prow104'nc:f' SJ Horthwe\t~rn S1 t tf'Htd) 11•1-CleHk RIC• H Notln C•rotina SI 47 ""'" Sf'! F1<1ftC1\<0 M Wl<hll• SI 7• llh1rdl >iew•ll U, M1tlllo-n S!•lt •I 1111111) (•I Sl•lt I Futtertonl .-Br tdl•y •7 twv•nth) 0.yt• ht¥He11eoYI On1o<> 91. Ftorio. '>1 It lllrsll N C Cllertallt 10 Hol•I•• 60 llhlfOI ~--.. Cl•nk N re .. , SI lo HE Lou"•.,.• IJ t•lr'u "'corn SI U SE 1.0111\le'I• U tlhirfH 1tOa (.l•uk '\•,.. J~• ~• "' E Mo11t4"• ~l nr t (•f'' ,,,,,ill llhlrOI Co·Players of the Year Altosl. Smith. Lauter <Los ~lie Clank '>aft Cllt<Jo• ~1 ''· femot•._ '""" 8~•Cn1 r rlcwlOA 11 fllllrO) College basketball S aturday's games w.tc UCLA el WHllll\QIOll SI use ., W•thl"910ft Arlrone el 0,..9Dll "rlrone S1 el OnlQon SI Cel •I S...,.lord UC s ... i. B-r• el St Mery't AIHll•AftC--at Fr..,,., SI Sen DlevoSt .•• UNLV Nortllleftd. Wit ., P-n!I~ . ...... U of Sell 0'-90 •t Nor1Mrn AtllO<le Cal Poly ISlOI el llof-. St UTEPettYU Gon1-., l«NftO C•rroll, -•I -tarw ll•tperetto •I -a ... SI N.-IM•l<O el Ulell Mi.wott Alf l'~t •I,...,,.,, Ohio Witt ..... •I Cent Mlcltl9•n ~-St et0.PM11 Oeftl-MI AVon '"'"'' .. Ol\lo !ol C•""41etl e1111 ·CIW Ctrci. Md,.f , ~el Cle•tlltncl SI Ml•ml at Oeyton E. llllflOIU I lllCllene 51 E ICt nMh et N •-• l'lorld.ll "&Mel E Ml<lllQ•" Mo ·I t Louh el E vano•lll• ......... " •t ~ llllflol> LOftl 9Mcll SI e'I MIMUOla MerQVlt'° et LOyote, 111 Nolro Qel'lle el Mllto..rt Ntw-.tkoSt e'I Wkhll•St ( .. Itel .. Olllo U CCHY .C T-....... Clt"'MllM _C_IMSI Olllle ti( l.w11"41M At1wmet4T- ve Cem--"" ••At•. e1 .... 1nQNim Mltllll .. MA'*'"' ,._.,,. °""'°"" E lt--. SI. el IMmonts SI Florto.t et LSU teentwcllv •' C..-Oi• Wake F.,,.., ., GeorQl• ft<" Hout-Baptl\I ., HW LOUl\lan• ·-· •• Soulll C••OllM J•mH Mt<ll\Oll •t V•r9'n1• PrelrloV~w ti Ml.NeeM St ' v •110.•11111 ., Mlnlnlpfll SI 1Cen1 .. o v St •I New Ori .. ,., N Caroline A& T ltt T-•-SI M C.·CIWlrlotlt •I Soulll "tab<tma NE L11111"-•I SW 1.,0..i,1•11• S-e ltt Soutll Ftorlcle T ... , Scklt"'"' el Soul Mm U Wo\I Vlr9lnl• •t lllr9111le Tt<ll --... ,-.11"'' e l TtlUI\ Tech AfllellWSSI el Pt11 Am«rtu n THO "•llnqtoll•I Herdl"-Stmmons Ollle-atT\llw ""~10 SI •t SMV Stt llfWft F AVltlfl et T •••• "'M T .,,.,,.•I Tt11••·5an "ntontt I HI """Y•llont SI, ......... P• .•• B•ttlmort Gl•u lloro St. el Dtl•••r• Georoo Me-. •IN•-•• Ntw H•"'P'lllr• •• Lel•vell• L YCem1"9 el \.eflltfl l'lotlde Souttlffft e1 L-l•land U C•llltkn•tSyn<.,.. Cotvmllle .i SI. JOM'I Co....it et $1. ,,_.,..., R_,_.,ttel ~OWf'I Hely Cr9M •I"'°"~• Me .... elT-SI PflftCetoll et SHoro Hell M•nlm•O. et SI ,.., .... Sunday'• gamet Ari.-St ... ar....., Or•l ll~tel H-.11 M11rtt y SI ... W, ttent110y ·~ ........ ,,_ 0.0.. Cl-k Wllllem i -Y ... Do t-._. 111 .. 11 Ouu n, """""' 711.,lrctl c...,c.-r.,cie.k So<1IMrn Ule n IS. Cra remonl >M lllf'11 Fresno Pec111, 11. 0<<1-•I st llhlrdl C omnwnlty colleo- TOultNAM&NTS S...AM Cy9ro1" tO DI• .. 1ui.111 ff lllr'ltl S•"I• -•u 11, Et C•mlno 7• lthlfcll O •n •rO ti Sedctlab •<• St f<OftSOl•Oont "-· Cltrut ... Or-C:O.•t S6111"1) LA ll•ttey 71, H-0<-•• lllllrctl o-n G1tnoe10 1 Ar t,.,...1 •2. Cerrito\ •' IOI) Cll"tl Alvef\ldeG, 0.....-1 n llhlrctl lraOt l •<h •1, Vtnture s• •<onso••ltonl ,. . ......, LO"O 8eec11 ... P•~rw 7• lllrstl M t S•" Antonio ••, C.•nyon •l flhlrOI G lo nO•lt I S. P e tom•r 11 1<onso••honl s-o...-- Gronmant U . ~ l•.,•10Ml •1 lot I lllr'lll Alo Honcto t1 8 0 or\llt ld SJ """"' •moe•l•I V•ll•Y 77 '><oil~••• t ""'°"•I 7• ICOllSOl•llOlll "'~~-· Comotontt, EH i LA ,. Ml .,.., Jtelnlo u. WHI LA 62 High school TOOllNAMENT$ o....., LO-t1 Moll~ 0.1 .. t l1r\t1 Qr tn91 S1 Cotte Mew 41 llhtrOI !)ervue 10 "'••oort Harbor •l (11flhl Founl•lll Velley "· \ent• c1 ... SS loll IConto••honl 9'..c>ll ..... B•••,. "'"'"'"'·so '""" L•llUN >illl' 41 Ml'"°" Voeto .. 11111rctl P•cHlu 19, M -lm )7 llhorOI E•PetolN\U ... H""llf1111on !leech JI ICOflMll•llonl c....,... R1ord•n IS•n l='r•l't(t\CO) 11. UnlvtrlllV U 111"11 LO\ Ami~ 0 Cyprou • lllllrdl l:•nvon tl, Bo•u C.r•nOo 61 t conso••llonl C.-Clly Eo1wn 6), A-Sot lllr'lll Att<I I A-I SI \en J..-. Bre nha,.. SJ lllllnl> A•Qllfllt st (U \On (th 4S 1ton.0••1-1 CM,.. C:l•••monl ll hn (ltMfl\lt t7 ""'" Demi.,. .. ~·• M I 111•01 CtrrllO\ IO VP'-SS 11111111 Bon II•.,, CNno,. I Con\Ol•llonl s-1-Tu1lln Sl Serll•fOO SO Cllr\11 El Dor-IO, Ke_., IS lllllrctl Butn• P•rk SS We1tmln1t•r •• HOnM)l•ftOnJ VIII• 1'•'11 Sent• ,..,,. U , SI Joflll B<tMo 41 lllr•ll Le Hebre lfn. Notre Dame ISOl ll Compton I). Bl"'°IJ -lllO"'HY t i lconsolellonl High Khool women TOUltNAMI Nn --.. .... M •rtne ... Footllltt 0 lflr\11 EOl\Oft S), 8uno•IOfl\ )t I (hl•OI >iun11not°" Buell S• "°""'•l" lltttn )O totl t111th1 Et Toro llO. LO.•• 16 f<..,,..,letlo111 •• ._1. Plu' I< )J, Cotl• ~ 40 lllrsll Lt Ovlnt• 7), Senll-11 (1'tlrdl A a wl•nd O , E•l•n<I• •S l<Oftsolel"'"l OUTSTANDING VALUES I ./CHECK THESE OUT! 5645 FACTORY RBA Tl OHAU VW DllSll. PICICUPS , 11•11 0NL.YI ~ ltll vw DIES& PICKUP LX. ,.., ______ ' _.,~,- (11UI(Off1 IOI l.91 --... Our o-.nt - .,., ........ -914$. -----5525 FACTOllY RBATI OMAL&. VW DtlS&CARS ,,.., '°"Y) IXAMPU: ltll YW DIU&LUllTL 'ollt~---4 ...,_,_ " F~= FISH ARE BITING -lee shanties have sprung up on Monona Bay in Madison. Wiscons in as well as on other Madison lakes as the word ------------- ., ............ s pread rapidly that blue gills. crappies and pe r c h were biting. -_._ ........ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday. December 31, t981 ' Ila ·: NUll'lll MMtn• NOTICE Ofl D IATH Ofl "1CTm°'1n1111Hu MAMe IT ATIMallT MOTICITOC .. OITO.. MADOLYN c ,ENLAND Ttoe lttlewlllt "'*" ........ . ~:_:~~-=:.~ AND Ofl , .. TITION TO bw1111 ...... •DMINISTE• ""ST .. TI HUOHU NOR I H COU NTY Nelle• II lltr••Y ,.Oft •• '"• ... " ~ ... ·~·•TE•, ,_ C-e .......... ~~~e,·~:~~:'.:."c.'\~::1 :i HO. AU1St4. ~1• tto, N .... _, ... , ... c..1110.111• c•""'"""· ,,..,,,,,."· ...... T o • I I h e I r s . ..,..., b f I I I .di I H""'" lllWt llNM\, I C..11 ... nle ~ ..._ 11 ,... v1e o.ettt1 ene c ar IS, er ors .. .,.,.1 ~'"''"''"· Two c:.r-.c• ctt, •' -~ •"'"· c-•Y " and contlnQent creditors of 111., •• "'''• uo. N ..... ,, , .. , ... ~:T:;r.=~:""~'~:= Medolyn c. Penland end C•Hter11l1tJJMO rsons ho ml b. L ....... View lft .. •lrnent C., I CAMl'l.IN Hd Lii CAMl'l.IN, Pl W Y Ct lltornle tlfltrtl pertnertNp, ..01 Tr911 ... ,_, ""'-...,..,..., ..., ... othtrwlM Interested In the w"'"'" •••ct . •ult• 110 ..... ,.Y i;: ,:,...,. ~c::.;..,'Tt::: wllt and/or estate: H•~·~i~~~.:::?:•, ... o.., .. e1 t1y • c.utaMi. A petition has bttn filed • ....,,., .. ,_.,,1, Tiie "'...,..., " 111 .,_,,.. 11 by Crocker N1tlonal Bank w1111..,w .. ...,,... Jr ... r .... "' ..,. ..... All Melli "' In the Superior Court o f P•n-. , .... """"'" ~' ..,, .... wm ol 11111 Ceff•• "'°' .... lllHI Orange County requesting Tllh .Ul-C ... tlled wltft , ... __ ,, .. THI COf'l'eE "1001.••. th1t Crocker National c-iy ci .. k Of D<•nte c°""1Y en ....__ C ef O.C,embtr I, "" 1ect1 .. ••,...via..,......_, itv Bank be appoi nted as HUll'H•Dua.11111.L••. :.:.~.~ .. Cl-Y of or.,., personal representative to cuUOH & HAltDt"n PIC1'1TIOUt.UlfllSll MAM9nATIMeNT Tiit ltt-i... ,_,_, ert ...... ....1 ........ MI OO• T•CHHO'-OOY, LIMITIO, t .. f.A 1'1-U• ·-· Cotte MIN, C:A taul ltlHllNOTON AHOCIATai, INC., • ~ ~9tltfl. , .... l'leo11llt A-. C .. \e MeM, CA .,.,, Tiiis llualllMI 11 <-"'"" •Y • Umlltdpe,.._lllle ltEH$1NOTON AUOCIATIS, INC • ...., ...... n . ,, ........ Tlllt ....._,.WM ti ....... lfle Ceu11ly Cltrll Of Or-Gtwflt\' °"' Dec."· 1"1 . OAVIDMMILAVT A..,... .. uw .......... .,....., .... 1• ........ ...... (.\ .... "'"'" l'lltlllllted Or.,._ CaeM Delly l'lle4, De< JI, 1•1, J.,. I, 14, ?t, 1"2 S.21•1 Tio • hi• tr.,,tier wlll U ldmlnlster the e St•te Of :~==~ ...... '"'"'"'INllll°""' .. "'1,,.'"""'' Madolyn C . Penland -~~-~··-.,s.i-1• 01 J e.,wery, 1M2 •' 10'00 a.m. et --------Or•ver Ete•-,.,_..euOf', ...... (under the Independent .... ..,,.._,c:.tlfef>N••-NaJCllTll ..-". 11 tMOD •ttktltld ••••·· . 11 Administration of E s tates 11u1111.,... °'..,.. '°"" 0•11~1;~~ ------------"' T-.C:•llftNll8 A ct>. The petition Is set for o.c 10.11. H,J1. 1tt1 mo..1 ,.....,., ,_!~_;~:~ •=~· " 111• cia•m• " hearlno In Dept. No . 3 at 1-__.....__________ "~~~!::::::' so h r •• I• anown 10 '"• 700 Civic Center Drive, NllJC •TICE Tile 1011 ... 1119 "''°"• .,. cto1111 T,..._ ... ,_, ei1 IMI-Mnwt ,.,. West in the City of Santa 11v11nan ... ~;:~,,,=: .. ~:::~:!.°' '°' Ana, 'callfornia on Jan. 13, n•raMeNTo" c on• MES• 01vE1..o,.us. o ..... ~· II. "" J -1982 at 9:30 a .m . WITNDUWAL ,.OM ~~~~.=.:::· Ito, Htw-1 Cem1111111. IF YOU OBJECT to the , .. ~=~::i~rc~iT~~!'"0 John o 0•0onne11. 1ao1 Dev• ':;'~= granting Of the petition, I USINllS NAMI Stru l, Sulle 1.0, Newport ltecil, hould Ith T,,. ioltowlnt .,....,., hH "'"""•••n C•lllornl• 92* OltOVlltllCllOWCOltPC>ttAT!Off YOU S e e r appear 0 a qener•t pertner from 11,1 Terence W 8r19hom, IJOI Oeve , .... ........._ ......... '" at the hearing and s tate P••1.,.,.111p oocre11"' 11110., lh• s1re11. su11• 1.0. Nt•Pl•t 11 .. c11. ·~=t~ your objections or file 11e1111,,.., ._.nto .,.,.,. o1 HUNTER ee11torn1enwo ltten objections with the & voss. 1-.00 Felrchllcs Ori••. Suite Jemo E w11111n1, 1>01 Oo•• Publltllect 0r-. , .... Delly "'°'· wr h I 100, Irvine, Colllornl• n 1u Slreti. Sult• I ... NewpOrt aeecll, Ole. '1, 1''1 ~I. COUrt before the ear nQ. Tio• llclllloll• Dutfn .. \ "a me CelllornltftMO PICTITIOU. IUllHaH MAMa n ATIMaHT Tiit ltllOWlftl peUOft h dol119 -'""'"· AHGELl'ISH OECO._, U l t O•k•le A•t nw•. CD •I• M•••· Calltor111e..- ltobtrt Cerroll Simo"" J212 O•llol• Aven11e. COtl• Meta , Celltornle ,.,_ Thi• t>utl""' 11 conctucted .,,, .., Ind Iv ldllal 11_,. c s1..-. Tlllt flAI...,_ •• llttd •ltil -Ceunty Cle•-o4 Or•-C'"'"'"' on Dec..,._, .. "" Your appearance may be 11oi.men1 for,,. pennervtlp ••• 111ec1 .,.,, .,,,,."-· ••1 Dove Str••. In p erson or by your on June u . .,,. 1n the county of Suitt 7to, --1 Beach, c alltetllla attorney. 0 •;:;:r.,.,.,... -Ne,,,. ..,d Aoctreu ot ~h 1>v•lne11 " condllcteo by •· I F Y 0 U A R E A '"-PerW>n WlthO•••lnt veneral P¥1.Mn1Wp. C R E O I TO R or a H v1cToA suCHEA. JR . 1..00 JG1W1 0 .o·o..-i1 t • t edit Of t.. f"elrchlld Drive Sult• 100, Irvine, Tlllt A.•-1 WM Ill .. •Ith Ille con tngen Cr Or .,e Calllornl•'77IJ County Cit•-o4 0re"9f COW"IY "" deceased , you must file ,.111,.. D•cein11er11 '"' your cla im w ith the c ourt H-• veu ''1'11S o r p res en t i t t o t h e Any .. t..aw Pu1111-0r-. Coett Dally Piiot, personal representative , ... =~-~~~ ,.. Ot< J'· '"'·J"' 1• 14· 21• 1112 ,._., app°'nted by the court uJ.1 .. 1 w ith in four m onth s from Pu1>11.,.., 0r.-. Coe•I Dally Pilot, the date o f first issua nce o.c "· 1" 3'· '"'· J.,. '· ,.., s-Mi MJC•TIC£ JI "~C~~!:~:::r T 11• 1J 11owl119 P•"•" is tlolftt b111l11•"•• I I Retarded child 'aids marriage' ",.' P11llll-Or ..... CMtt O•llY l'llot, Dec. JI, letl,J-1, 14,JI, 1"25121•1 of letters as provided In Section 700 of the Probate Code of California. The time for filing c laims w ill not expire prior to fo ur months from the date of the hearing not iced above. PIC'ftTtOUUUStHISI YOU MAY EXAMINE l'ICTITIOUS IVSINEU NAMI nATll"llNT T lie lollowlnt per~nl ••• OotftO llutl"•" •• HESTEA IHTEANATIONA I.. STAMP CO .. 21011 C•ll• Ootodo, Sen Jvon Capls•r-. CA n•IS CAMEO HOUSE OF f"I NE PHOTOGRAPHY 170 WtstCllll O•ht, Newport Bu ell, C•lllor.,I• nwo R-rt J Wttl>.~. 217' 58nta A,,. A••-· C•ta -· Calllonole nu7 Thi• --It <ondvcted l>V en lnctlvlO.,.I COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Having a retarded chjld doesn't harm a marriage and may even help it, according lo a study by two Ohio State University researchers. Randy WiJliams, a counselor with the Ohio Bureau or Vocational Rehabilitation, and Patrick McKenry, an assistant professor or family and human deve lopme nt, questioned 30 parents of normal children and 30 parents of retarded children about their marriages. They rated both groups in four areas of marital adjustment: Closeness of spouses. amount of agreement between spouses, overall satisfaction in marriage and expression of affection. Williams said that taken as a group, parents of retarded children and parents of normal children varied only slightly in their marital adjustment. But differences surfaced when fathers were studied separately, he said. Overall, fathers of retarded sons scored the highest on the adjustment s cales, Williams said. They scored higher than fathers of retarded daughters or mothers with retarded children of either sex. he added. The study also indicated that fathe rs or retarded sons are better adjusted in marriage than fathers with normal children. "The husband may seek support from the wife. and this could strengthen the marriage," Williams said. ..Or the stress that i$ put on a family when pare ntal exp ectations for normal family life are not met may pull the couples together." Also. McKenry suggested, "the presence of a retarded child could restrict the father and mother fro m 3ocial activities. and this may pull them closer together " Mos t prev iou s studies indicated that a retarded child was a negative factor in a marriage, but the Ohio State researchers said those studies may have lacked a control group or may have been based on impressionistic observations. Liability ruled • drinking case in SACRAMENTO (AP> -A state appeals court says anyone wbo serves liquor to a mentally retarded or deranged person. with reason to know of the dangers involved. can be sued for injuries the drinker causes. The unanimous three·member panel of the 3rd District Court of Appeal said a drinker with an "exceptional mental or physical condition" can provide a narrow exception to a state law designed to protect tavern owners and social hosts from liability. The 1978 law said servers of alcohol cannot be sued for injuries caused by adults who drink the alcohol, even if the servers have reason to know 1111H 11mc11 CLEMENT HOOKER JORMEA CLE MENT . J OSEP H PERRY the drinkers are already drunk and plan to drive. But the court said the law does not neceuarlly cover aU drinkers. The court ruled in the case of Doris Cantor. who said she was injured in an attack by a mentally handicapped man. Her suit said the attacker, idenWied only as Edward M., had been served alc~lic beverages by neighbors, Michael and Laureen Anderson, who allegedly knew of bis disability. Ms. Cantor alleged that after drinking, Edward fell Into a seizure, lost consciousness. and later became violent. attacking her when she tried to help him. She sued the AndersonB for her injuries. The ruling by Justice Coleman Blease revived her suit, which had been dismissed by a Superior Court judge, but said she must prove that the Andersons not only knew of Edward's disability but also knew or should have known the effect that liquor would have on rum because of his disability. CPl'11S19 HOT ICE 0, T•USTEl'S SALi TS No.tt-OOIS On Je-y 22. 1..,, et ,. U O'clOck • m , FrlOay, et lllo lront entrence tc. '"• old Of~ C011ntv court-.. IOC •••d on S...t• Ant Blvd., .,., • ..., SY<•more St. •nd ar-ev. 59flt• ..... c.111 P9tJ: 1111:( NOTICI TO CONTltACTOltS CALLING l'Olt llOS SC H OOL O I ST AI CT HUNTINGTON BEACH UNION HIGH SCHOOL OISTIUCT 810 DEADLINE 1110 NO. 47' l :OO P.M , Monday, J......,ry 11. 1._, 810 NO _,·?JD PM . -.v, J•nuery II, ,.., .,...ITATHl"'T the file k ept b y the court. Tfl• 1e11-111e "'"•" " do'"' If you are inte rested in the -'-•: estate, you may f ile a c & I. INTE1tNAT10 NAL. u request with the court to _._..,.. t!Wlt, COi"-"'-mu . . 1 • f c..,... .--. Jr .. 11 -11ec1ove1, rec eive s p eeta nottee o 1rv1nt,C811fWNeml4 the Invento ry o f estate ,,.!~:..,.......,,... " <-"° t>y "' a ssets and of the petitions, CllVlaJ_., Jr accounts and reports d es· '"'-~ wn 111tc1 w1111 IM crlbed in section 1200.S of ceuntY Cllf'll.,. o.._ cownty on the Cal if o rnia Pro bate O.C•m-•. '"' ""112 Code. 1>v1111_0r..,..cou1oe11yPl10t, Jack Lopln; Block , Otc. "· ••. J ... 7. '"· 11· 1..,SUM1. Brickner, Lopln & Feder, H.....sl LaOA'-NOTICE ITATI Of' CAl.ll'OltNIA Ol'l'ICIEOl'ITATIWIO• MaAl.TM l'l..AHNIMO AHO HVILOH11a11T Al'P\.ICA TIOll l'Olt Inc., Attorney a t Law, 1226 N. Broadway, Santa Ana, CA 92701 . 11..e.lltllect Or-, .. ,, D•llY Piiot, o.c. JO,"·'"'· J ... •· ,.., s.u .. 1 Cltrn,,CAT• 01' H&aD l'ICTITIOUS •USINIU Notice ,, ller•l>y ,,,, ... 11\el ,... NAMI STATIMENT Ottke o4 sc.ttwldt Heallll Pl-l"9 Tiie followlno perlOnt •re doing end o .... _.. .... , re<elvtd , ... !Mnlntt• ft ...._,,. ... ,ocotlonCtl tor C:.rtllk •I• GltAFICO IVPE .. , w Oltfl o4 Nttd In eccerdaMe with Section Q1 "'"' Colla Mew eo1ifornlo t:iU7 -al tJI tlle Htenll -S.ltty C-P~llY A ._;lk.I, nJt Cothtrl,. .... r~ -1-tlflln9 l ... t lO. A Pleu Coli. MHll, Coilfornle •1'?7 ......,k~wllll>eheld lft !MtrH weyne R Henor lk s ?H• e l • lime •ftd dale 11111 to be Ce tllerlne Pl•<• Colle ·M .. •. -tct. Celllorn1afl671 Port -Col>velftcent HotplUOi, Tllh ........... " COllClu<led by ... U70 N._..,, llooM•••d. Coll• Mew, llldlvklu-4 CA "627. ,..k atlon No t l·UO The .... ly A ....... k U -•lion Df 11 t*llltd nvrtin9 btcb Tiils s1•rnent wt1 111~ wllll lllo Cott '21.•1. Couftly Cl•rll o4 Ounve County on JOMllfl 0. E-Novem-11, '"' CNeot, OMslan of l'tl,.... ClrtMIC41t o4 N-Pul>illlWCI 0r8"9t C.oest Delly Piiot P111141"'9d Orontll CM.st Delly Piiot Dec 10 17 JA JI 1'11 Sl61•i Dec. JI, 1•1 S.W-.1 --·-·-·-·-·------- l'ICTITIOUI eUSINUS "~'=:!~':4!~:!•:::s NAMEITATIMaHT Tiit follow1no person h ooon9 TM tol-1"9 ~tont •rt oolnt l>vtlneu os. !llAlneun. THE Sll..VEAAOO COMPAN Y, c ANO c AOVEA TISI NG o~w1111-o. ,inoltw,C. n1u ASSOCIATES, SM N C:0.11 Hlllflwey, Ste ve n Eerl 8011f11m , <th Levvn• lle<t<il, C.lllOrnletJUI Wllllwew or., lrvlne, c.. '7114 l(tnnelll M11rrev Curto, S.. N. Tiiis l>Uilllft• It <ond11<ted "' •n Co•tt Hl9ll••v. Leoun• 8eu11, flldl•lekMll Celllornl• '2tS1 Stllven E 8onllem Gtorqlon• Curto. s .. N Cout Tllh ,, .. _, wos llied wotll tht H'911way. i......,... Beech, Celltor11le Cownty Clerk o• Orentt (Ollnly on tltSI Oecemlltr I, 1'91 T 1\1' bvllMu Is conctvctect "' • l'tn111 ttM••I __...,,,P Pul>llr.hlel Orenoe Coest Oallr Piiot 1(-.fh -..y Curto DI< 10, 11, 2•. JI, 1'91 J.:111-tl This si.....,..,t wn flied with ltoe 1 ___________ _ County Clerll ot Orentt Cownty on OKemlltrl, 1•1 ~t777tt 1~----------- Publl-Or111191 C:0.11 Dally Piiot, OK to, 11. l•, :tl, 1'11 UJl-ll1 l'ICTITIOUS 8USIHIEU NAMI STATIMINT T lie lollowlnv ptrlOftl are doln9 l>Ullntl\H . PICTmout eul4••n ......ITATIIMINT HUAHINE l, 190S2 Smlley Ort,,., -Oranoe. c..lltornle ,,... Tiie lol-lftt ..,_, ere dol"9 -•-111: C•I MITRA CUSTOM MADE ALTEltAT!OfeS I•> MITltA CUITOM MADE eOUTIOUE, 1611 lr vl11e •-. ~ MIM. ColttanW• n.11 Mitre I'. Amlrtlitlltrl, IUO ltvlllt Ave-•. Newport llaecll, COllter"'8 ... Fr-•nd SllMI L Ciotti. 1'°51 Smllt't Orlve, o..,.., CalHornl• t:i..t It-rt F. 8'>d K•tlll_, A Welton, 1i SMdcton, Ir vine, Celllornl• '271• Mt" 0. -Ttr,.., M. Or.,,.or. 111 Norlll Ht.-, Or-. Celllorftla '1 ... Fr-Ciolli Tlllt stat-1 ••I lllect wlCll 1ht COllftly Clt<k of Oranoe C.,..,nty on HAAOLO E HESTEA, 11071 Calle Oor•oo, Sen Jue" Cepllt•ano, CA .,.,s. J EA" HESTER ?7011 Cellt Ooredo, S." Ju•n Copl>t••"o· CA .,.,~. Thll bu>IMU ,, 'ondll<ltd Dy ... tndlVIOUOI H•toto E Hnttr Tllil Sl•l-nt WH flltd with lht County Clerk 01 O••noo C011n1Y on 0.< u ..... l'llMJJ Publlllled Or-c ... 11 Oolly Piiot, Dae 11, ?•. l •. 1'91, J8" 1. Ito? ~-..1 ,__,. J Welker Tlllt ttei..._1 ,.., tlled with - Couftty Cler .. ot 0r•"9t Cowniy on , Oectmbtr 2', 1•1 ''1'M4 l'ubllllltd °'-Coell OaUy Piiot, Otc J I.'"'· J"' 1, 14, JI, 1"2 S""'41 l'ICTITIOUS ausiHeu NAMltTATE .... NT T II• iollowlft9 Pl"on h dol"'O bullfteUU E M Pt41LATELIC, I.. TO. JIO u PUtuC •TIC£ Perlt Pl~•. COil• Mew, Collforllla -------------I ~1~:~r:::.::; ms. N-..i IH<ll. l'ICTl1'10US 8USINISS Ed9ar P Mlftt r, J10 1..0 Perle HAMI STATEMENT Pl•<•, C•I• NWM, C.oilternlt •1'?1 Tiie follo•lno P•"o" I• ool"o Tl\I• ~~ I• cOftduclld "' en ""''"•U tl lndlvlduol iNT EANATIONA L EXCHA"GE Eaoar p Miner CO . OIS V•r•"o Pleu . lrvlfte Thll lll-1 wn llltcl wltll h C•lllor"I• '2115 C011nty Clerll DI Or•-C...11ty on ._,, Aonalcl J Cal". O U lleronc Oecemller 1', '"I Pleo , Irvine, Celllornl••VIS 1'17'UJ Tiii• bw>lntts I• <Ond"'ltd Dy on Pul>ll"*' Or ..... Coa•I O•llY Piiot, 1l\Cli¥1du•• OK >t, 1•1, J.,.. 1. u. ''· 1• ss•..et AonalO J Caln ll\1> JU-nl ,. .. tiled "'1111 Ille County Cle,,. OI Or•"" ~ovnty Oft Oectmt>er 11. 1'91 1-------------- "'"'" Pu1111.-Or-Coell Delly Piiot, Oe< ti, 14, '1 19'1, J eft 1. Itel S41CMI NIUC MOTtE l'ICTITIOUS eUSINIU HAMI STATIMINT T II• IOllOwlnQ Pt •ton It dOlftf buslneu .. JJG ASSOCIATES, MOO Edlnttr Avenve, •ll_0.4. MunUn91on leech. Celllon•la "'47 J ucllth June Giiden, MOO Edlnoor Avenue, • Zl04, Hufttln9ton Bttch. Collloml8 '2W1 Tllll _..,.n II concl11<ted II• en lndlvld11al Judi"' Jwnt GllOe11 Tiiis JU-I wet filed with Ille county Clerk 01 Or•noe County on Oecom• JD, '"' 1'17'70 PUl>Hr.hlel Orentt CoeJI O•llY Piiot, Dec JI, 1'91, J.,, I .... ?I. 1"2 ,.,...., l'ICTITIOUS BUSI NISS NAME STATEMENT TP\e toUowtnro person' •r• Clotno lill'l~l:•: IM 181 "ESTHETIC INTE AIOAS ICI AESTHETIC DESI G NS (0 1 ACTION INNOVATION MOllVATION l'<lO BlrCll St , Suitt Ill, No-•I Beech, Ct '7..0 Mtl O•lol•. ,, •• , AllH P e•k h l•IH , El Toro. Ca '7•JD Sllennon Dal9lt, n•,. All lO Pe rt Ell•t", El Toro, Ca. '7UO Tiii\ -r>H• I> cond11<tt<1 Dy •n lndlvklllll CHu>l>and & Wllel S"--0.10•• Thi• >t•emant wet llled wotil Ille County Clerk of Ore"tt Counly on Oectmbtr I, "" , ,,,,,. Pu1>11.-0r"'9t c .. >1 Dally Piiot FICTITlOUS eUMNIU NAMI STATaMaNT T "• lollowl"9 Hrto11 It dolftt l>vtlnoue1 SRC VENTURE PAATH£1tS. J?ll Woodltnd Plau, s.Me Ana, CA '2101 STEVEN A RAIAGO. J711 W-lend Piece, Sante Ane, CA tt701 Tllh butln•u II <onctucltd ..., en lncllvlduol S-RR ...... Thlt >l•-1 ,..,. tlltcl •1111 Ille COllnty Cltrk of 0r•"9t Cownly "" Dec ?e. '"' l'llNJ Publl.-Or-Coest Delly Piiot, Dec l1, 1tll, J8" I u. 21, 1'9:? ssn-.. 1 STATaMINT 01' AaANDOHMINl Ol'USI 01' l'ICTITIOUS •USl"IU llAMI Tht loltowlnt Ptftoll lies -Ille UM Of lht ik ill'°'8 l>Utifteu neme MA I N PIPE & SUPPLY COMPANY, 1t1• E. M<F-. Sellt• ""•· Cetllornia '7~ Tiit Fl<llllOU\ llutl11eu Nemt rtterred IO el>ove wes tHtd I" Or-c -ty on Mal'cll u, 1m • JOHN IWO HOVEL.LO, 11 HO Glldsl-Cl"'·· F01111lllft Vt ll•Y. Callrornle '110t Tlllt _.,,..,.wet <-led 11¥.,. lndlvldlla• John I-Novello Tiiis ll•t-1 w•l illed wltfl "" C01111ly C•tr' of Or•nve Covnty on Otumbtr,.,ltl1 ·-1111 Pultll....., Or..,.. Coe,ll Delly l'llot, Ott. )I, 1 .. 1, Jen 1, 14, 11, 1"2 S6,...I 'ICTITIOUS e u•tNIU NAMISTATlllilallT Tile 1011ow1nv pertont ••• Ciel"• l>V.lllttl .. resident of Costa Mesa. Ca H OOK E R . res ident of Cost a Passed away December 27, M esa, C a Passed away 1981. He was a r esident here December 29. 1981. He 1s ror the last 7 years. having survived by his daughters, attended a local a ccounting H elen Remington , C o s ta college. H e is s urvived by Mesa. Ca .. Marion Thomas. his p a r ents Mr and M rs Del Mar, Ca . and .Maxine Clem e nt Z. Clement of the Johnson, Mission Viejo, Ca . Mars hall I slands . aunt F inal in terment s ervices Pierra Patrick. 5 sisters and wtll be held at t h e family 4 brothers. Services will be plot a t Enid C emetery, held Thursday l OOPM al Enid. Oklaho ma B altz H arbor Lawn Memorial Bergeron.Smith & Tuthill C h a p e l Final interm ent W e s tcliff Chapel Mo rtuary services will be held at the f o rwarding direc tors F & W It ECONVE VANCE COAPOAATION, e Ce lllorftle <GrP«•llon, •• TNSt• or S-Ututtd Trutlt l . under Ille d"d ot trust u e<uled 1>Y MARK A. BANTl..E ANO KAREN 1... BANTLE, HUS8ANO ANO WIFE, AS JOINT TENANTS, ,.,tin called TrU1tor, recO<'dtd A119. ?I, '"° at lllsl.-1 NO. USll, Ill 8-Ulll, Pa91 •tt. 01 Olllclel Recordt ot Or..,.. C4'1ftty, Calllomlt, wlll Mii et P<o<IDllC evctlon lo"" 11'9hfft blddt< !or <•tfl. ""'-"' lewf\11 _.,. ot , ... United SttlH at Ille llmt Of 1ti.. the PL.ACE OF 1110 AECflPT HUNTI NGTON BEACH UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT EDUCATION CENTE R, 11JUI Vor_l_n Avenue . Boerd A-.., Hunllf•9ton Beech, CA ~ P AOJECT IOENTlf"ICATION NAME 810 NO. n• Roof Aenovello<! . Foun1e1n va11•v HIQfl Sc'-1 '"°""' ... I••. 4 llt<ll.y ltftOll, '"''"'· ~"''~ l'tnm De< 10, "· 1', JI.·~· SUI .. , P11bllll'llO Orell9t C:O.li Dally Piiot. fl-------=-----~'""· P~R PICl(LE, !UIS Sprl119d Huftllft9lon aeacll, Marshall Islands M e m oria l 646·9371. Park, M ajuro Services KLINGER under the d1recllon o f I E D J ·WI L L I A M Harbor Lawn.Mount Ohve. KLING ER. res ide n t o f S40·5S54. C o r o n a d e I M a r • C a ·~ Survived by his wife Ma1·y l.U.nlHGHOl't SMl'n4 & TVTHtU WUTCLt,. CHArtt. 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 646-9371 rtHCI MOTHIH SMITHS' WOITUAa'f 627 Mein St Hunhnoton &ach S36-6539 ,,ACIRC YJIW ....,., ... , ... Cematery Mortuarv Ch1pel·Crema1orv 3500 Pac1f1c View D11ve NewOOfl Beech 644-2700 Ann. 3 daughters Deborah, T eresa, Marilyn, and h is son W illia m Klinger. Jr . mothe r Grace; broU1ers Robert J and John P also s urvive H is first wife. G ertrud e Nan Klinger, preceded him in death in 1975 M a s s ot C h ristian Burial w ill b e Thurs day , Decem ber 3 1, 1981. a t IO:OOAM a l St Joachim's C atho lic C hurch , 1964 Orange Ave .. Costa M esa, Ce . Inte rme nt Immediately following al Good Shepherd Cem ete r y In l ieu of flowers , famil> requests contributions to th.: Servile High ~hool 8ultdln1 Fund. 1900 W La Palma Anaheim . Ca . Balt1 Bergeron·Smllh & Tuthill Wes l clitf Chapel Mortuary forwarding di rec t ors 646·9371. MOBLEY LO I S PATRICIA MOBLEY, res ident of the: area for lhe paat 30 ydr• after moving here Crom San Bernardino, C a . PuHd away on December 28, Itel Sbe la turvlvect by her bus bend Benjamin M obley . Jr .. aon James, dau1hte1 Judy Ann Vanes. Cott a Men, Ca , a fandcblldren 2 alaters en 2 brotbert. lftleretl CClftVt'l'H '° --loeid by Mid,,_ ...... Mid -ol '""'In Illa pr_.ty tll11aled In wid Count• •lld State, dHc.r._ u : Lot tool Trett No. '141 ~­lft 8004! S1t P .... ?I to JI, lnclutl•t ol miscell•-n\8PS. In tlM office el lllo COUflty Aec-ot Hid C-'Y· EXCEPT THEREFROM ell oll, .... m lnerela end other llydrocarl>on 11<14"11Mft lylftt .. _ • """' Of JOO IHI wllllowl..,. r'9'1t lott1ter u-tllt t11rl•ce or tloe .....,flee• ol Mid 1- .00ve a IMCIC'I o4 500 leet, •• .. ,...,..,. 111 l11•t"""9"b ef reconr Tiit "'"' '*'"" t11d/or •Iller commo" dHl•n•tltll, If eny It s---1H lo"' um Wlillemtbllrt ceurt. 11 Toro, CAt?6'0 Said 1tle wlll t>e meclt wltllOut .,,,.,,.Illy ., lo 111i.. _ .... ...., ~ tncumbranot, lor ttoe P•irpow 01 P8Ylllt 1119 MlteMleM --•Y lolol o.td ln<hlellllo .. '" -··-el Ille INI ... and Of lllo lrlftQ Crta-by ......... --IM<•-· •1111 l11ternl _._ ttoertlll, and Ille """'° porlnC ... I -1111.,...1 Of Ille H•hl --~ Mltl deed, If.wit '11,4l!I. tS. 011941: o.c.meer U, 1'11 l'.AW, ltt!CONVEVANCI 101 $, ltr-., $ullt 124 l'l«tMlt, (A flt10 (1141......,1 .. _..,_ •r: CIVt..lne Oraeenev '"""' ..... Olflc., ...,.. .... Or .... (Mel Dally PINC, O.C. JI. 1'11 • .J ... 1, 14, t• »NI Prayer MrVicea will be held • "•"'-'tt..,c.-ni. Oft Thunday, Dece.mber II. KANO, HV'CMCUN & "°""°""u1 WI •on.as 11111 at LO:OOAJI •l Harbor ................. c ••• ,,. ....... .. lal l90Al~AY wwn lilemortal CbaJ)ef with A~ ....... ~ .., •4t" ........., laterment lmtntclll.ltlf ~1':":..'::::".:::.=• .. ':J no'~.. f0Uowla1. Senittt w.der ... , ""' '""'· C.•tt ...... C.. Meta tbe dlrectloa of Harbor c......_ ..,. fl>tt50 -r a Lawn·llount Oltve llonuan .._....Or __ _ ~---------,.. .J of Colla flfelL 540.$$54. OK.II. "91 1110 NO ..., Root A9ftO•atlo<'I · Wfnle.,bolr9 H'91> ScllOOI PLACE PLANS ARE ON Ftl..E Melntenanct, Ope re llonl e nd Conttru<llon, Room 321, Hllfttln9ton Btt<ll Union Hl9h Sc-I Ohlrl<t Education Center. 102St Yootow" Avenue, H""11n91on a.ac11. CA t?M6. PllOM 1114l~Ell1 J70 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal Tllll ..,_._ It c-ctecl lty a OtM••• ,..,,-... .... llllltreAml......-i Tlllt .....,_ •• mact wlltl Ille c-ty Clertl o4 Or-c-tv .., OK-tt. 1•1. ,.,,.., l"wllll-Or .... c-Delly l'tlet, Oec.14,)1, "'1,J ... 7. 14, ,.., ~· Ill• above·n•..,.., S<llOOI 0111r1c1 01 PICTITIOU. eusoiass Ore.,._ County, Celltorn~. <t<ll"9 l>Y MAllMSTATaMellT ~~dr :~~~~. •:l r<;;~·;~';! :~~d~ Tiie toll aw Int ""'" •• do Int T' I t Mlftftl •: ~1~:~c~ ~ ~::! .. ~0i1.!:. THE 5"UTTl..t! COMPANY, .. Mllff b4cll for lhe ewerdof • contrect Wealml11111r, "J ", S.1111 Ana, CA tor IM tllOYe pn>J«I. ftl't.1 114" ~I be rtctl-In 1M tlkt PATltlCIA M COlteAltl, U• .... tlfltct -· ..... JMH a. --Ce<ll l'iac., C .... -·CA '2627. end p11blltly read alo11d et Ille TM• _,_. Is CO<Od..clff W 911 ll>O•-i.ttd tlnle -ptac.e. llldlv~. Ee<ll l>ld ..,.,,, conlerm end 1>e ,_,ICleM.~I Oec. 10, 11, 1', JI, 1 .. 1 SM-el ,ICTtTIOUI eUSINllS NAMalTATIMEHT Tile tollowl119 pe"on h doing bUtlntH 111: RANCHO VIEJO OE CARRILLO, 11141 Sii,,_. Clrci., Irvine, Ce. ttlU Edw-0 L-lleell, lttl VeClll £11cllan1rea.1, NtwPOri Bte<tl, C• .,.,. Tiiis -netl It CDnd..Cltd by ell INllvltlwtl. £-d 0 l..Oilr1MICll Tlllt ft--Wt\ Hied wllll I ... C:ownty Clerll Df Ot•n .. County on OK•m-1,t'91 ""''-PublllllM Or ..... Coe•I Delly Piiot Ot<. 10, 11, 14, Jl, "'' S)c1•1 ,_,1,,. to IM contract docwmentt. Tiii• ....,_ wn tiled wllll "" Ekll llld 9Nll a. ace-ltd 1ty C°"'"'• Cllf'll o4 0< ..... C-'Y "' --_,._---.,.------Ille M<Wflff reterred to 111 llM contrect Dec IS, ttll. PICTtTIOUI eu11Na1S ctoc:u""!lll -.,,, lllo 1111 Df pr--Plttal ...... ITATaMllMT WbCOllll'eclDr'-PWOll-Or ... Cont Delly I'll«. Tiit ltlltwl11e ""'" I\ dtlftt Tiit DISTRICT ,_,,,... 1M rloflt le Dec. 11, ~II, 1'91, J-7. t• Wl1•t ~ft: rel.Cl -or •II~ or, ••• 1 .. •"Y 1------------•1..ACI( MOUNTAIN MINING lrr .. 111Ar1ti.\ or lntlor-lllle\ lft My .... 1111( INVllTMl:NT, ,_ H8r-e1v•, lllda er Ill 1111 bidlllflt, • P·1, C-. M9M. CA.,._, T&& OIST"ICT ~-d9W 1~ ·~ 1------------P:ltANlt IOWAltO •AllTOH, IOSI ,_ '" .,.. m ·-~ PICTl'ftOUI MISINaU Ywl-CW.Clt, ,,._._ Meta1CA-..-9'fltlll .,.,,.iu,,. ••II Of per diam __ __, .. II.Tl ...... , -· -• ._ .... , In "" IO<ellly 1n •llkll 11111 -•• -T1111 ~· la c...wttH •Y • won l•to bt~l'llldt«eec11cr•t1 Tiie 1•11••111• "'"~ 1' ••111• 1i.o.1tiM....,.....,.. or '"' Of -11..-. MMtd to euc11le llulllllt• ": ,.,_I ..,_ Ille t ontr«t. T ..... rate• ere 911 tlle et ltlVEll PAltlt A$$0CIATI•, tH 1Mt ....._.. -II ... -lfle Ille OIST111'1' effke le<-et tOUt l!att •llltf M-', C:-ta MeM. Ce. C-ly Ci.<11 ef o.._ C~y Oii Yorttowfl ·-· H1111U ..... 9"(11, "'~. It. OltACI OIVILOPMl:Hf O.C. tt, t•t. Pt-CA ..,.. C ..... 1'118y lie ..ul-Oft I •-,._....A <-ef V.. retn "'9ll "8 C:OltPOllATION I• C1llfar11 ~l .... Or .... CwMOallyl'IMI _,._ et IN JM .i1e. TIM ""'eolflt -tw•tlelll. tU btt ...._ 11'"'-DK JI 1'91 J-1 u 21 t• UIHi KllHwle 91 ,.r flam •89H It .._. C:.IA Mtle, C..,... • ' ' ' ' ' ~ t _.....,.My 9' •ltM Ill .....,.. Tlllt MlllM' I\ <tHIKIM ~y • Tiie lltt l9f llollMy tll4I -rtlmt Ctr!*tlllfl. -.& ..a werk 111011 "'•I l•ut ,,,.,. •llf w .... OltACl.Ot!VtLOl'MINT ..., ___________ _ CO.,OM TION _....,, e Cll...,..~ .. I• ll'ICTrTOVIMlllMI• It tMll M ........ ,.,.., """Ille ey1 er~1t.Mtt1tfl, MAIMttATIMllMT COHTltACTOll te 9""" IM <41111rec1 Viet,,..._ TM .......... ,_,_ .,.. H411t I• •••••••• •11• 11••11 l llY Tiii• ~ •• llleO wtll ... Ml-M: 8Wtt11tr-CW ...-fllftl, "' "1 Mil C ~ ef Or '*"°' IOUTH COAST LIAllNO CO .. '"8 INll IN .... 9'11(111H r•a te ... :~ .. ,., ""' ' ... ,., 0... ""'"" -....... ~ -11-........,... "' ..,,. 111 "' • • ''m" 9-11.~-.. •-"'*' .... C.-ed. .IAMlt I . 0091lO'n Jlt, Me,...,.. M. ~II. • .. llll&IO, ... .._..,,..,wlffl*..,lll•Mter • ..,_,..'-tn>Nle,~tl'14 • ........ II~'°".,. Cd ) won•"" ,_,....C..Dr. o.tw L. ~. llltl ....._. .. 11111t..CIWlM ....... ef..... ...... ~lrclt, H4iM1 .... 1 ....... C81"9nllt A"""""""._. tlld • ..,.._..,~. c.a....-. CA.. .... •en• wlll •• r•••lred "ler te ,,,.., .... ~ ... c.11 o.lty ...... Tiii• _..... It ,_, .. •Y • nec11t1•11 et tll• <tlltrut. T111 OM t tt M.11 "" f#t.fl .,._.,,._.,. ,.,lllllM ............ "' ... """ l9t • ' • • • ,_.,_... ........ lwtll l11 ... ceMrKt---. TMI ......... -fl• wl1ll 9le ev1~c. ..... .,, call ~l-H11 c-•• a.rt1" 0r..,.. ~'"' ~--••11enc:e, . • _....,U, 1'91 ~-~I'll Piii ...... ,... ,.,.. ,.....,.. or .... °"""°""'~ 'f WOt'tl for J". ........er.,. a....._...,.._ DK1tl,ltll,J ... 1,1m ,,..., -.U,M,J1,N1,J .. 1,ftll~I .. HS~ NOTICE 01' T•USTll'S SALi TS.NO H~Ftn On J •1111arv U, Ito?, •I 10 a.m , HUNT & FENSTERMAKEA, A Proleulone t CorPO••Uon, n duly •-lnted Tt\dlM u,...r •net pvnuant to 0e..i o4 Tnnt "'ordld Oc-r JO, 1'91, •• 111u. No. In -1•12 . .,.... 47S, ol Ofllc181 Re<~ 111 CM offk• ot tllt COvftty Atcordtrl ol Orente Cov11ty, Sllft of Coilfoml•, .. tcuted Collter GA 1..EW BINGAMAN, 11'3' Htrll•ee Clr<le, Downey, Cllltornle ttn41 0-0.. L..,..., I 1'3' Htrll ... Clrcte, o-nrt. Collton.I• '°'" Tiii• !Mnlnen It c-wclect 1>y • ,. ...... partnentlip. a ..... L.e 1,..._. Tl'olt t~I ... ili.d wltll ..... Ceu111Y Clerk of Ote .... County on Oectml>er "· '"' .. ,,.. P11lllllMCI Or-Col .. Oally l'llOI, Oec. Jt, 1•1.J..,, 7, 14, JI. tta SJtMI bY Steven A. S.v'91t ------------WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHES"f lllOOEA f"OR CASH tpeyable 11 """ o4 '°'' 111 1aw1u1 -y ot tllo U11lltc1 $111 .. 1 ti 1..-y "CTITIOUS eUMMlll ol ltoe Offktto4 Hunt & l'enttermolltr. I NAM• STATaMaMT A Prol1ulon11 Corooratlon, 00 T lie tellowl119 ••'"" 11 ee1111 : Newport Centtr Drive, $1111• ?11, Wtllltun. · Nt•port lletch, CelllOtftl• ft*, all SANDCASTLE GIFTS, N'.I-' rlt ilt, tllll -lnt•t•ett cOllveytel to Swift C...,,, ~ IM<JI, CA'°**' ; tf141now.....,twllunOerwldO-o4 L E Cl..AlllE e "ll l H CI!, ! Trust 111 "" Pl'-"\' .11 ...... In Mid NO.t-Swllt c_,, ,.._, -"·CA ; COWllfy tf'll SC.le dttcrlllld 8S I.DI 1J tte6J ! ol Tr<t<I Ho tt• '"Pff m• r·tc....-Tllll -la CtfldloctM ..., .. ; In 1>0011,lt , .... 41 ~ O ot lndlv~ • MllCtll-""-Ill tllo Off I<• of the LE CLAIRE I . PlllNCE t cou11ty...c:.-rottt1t1c_1., Tiits ......,_. -"'" wttli .. ! Tiit ttrt1t ectdnh •net otller Ceulll'I' Clll"ll ot Or ..... C-'Y "' I cemmot1 ""'-''°"· II M Y. of tlM OH,"· 1"1. • •••I 11r-rty ducrllltct 11>eve I• Pl.,,., : ,,,,..,_ 11 111: 2tl1 Arnold A-. l'Wll ...... Or .... C-Deily 1'11111. Cetta Met.I, Gelllof'nlo ttl2t.. OH. JI, t•1, J..,, I, 14, 21. t• U1M1 ! tll• 11<lllllMtlltd Trutttt dltclalml •1 • '"' llMl!lty ,., -lllCON't(IMU .. I -· -• Ille tlrMI ...,.,..., Md MMr cemmon ' J..-.. ,_ • IM1l911tll0ft, II-,~ lltl .. 111. ,,_1 __ --.. ... Sold Mk wlN Ill-· 11111 wttlleut -· ,,._.,_ .. can 11a111 er wtrr9111y, o...-.11 •r .... STAft ... WT j l"'ltfltd, ~ 1111t. ~•loft, w TM '91-1"1 ,..,_, ere "'"' , ."' ...... """' 'llt~ ..... (,,.,.... ..,.,_ ... , : .,. • ._ ...... Trvtlte 9lld .. tlle A v .. c I v E I. 0 , M I " 1 I INMICl'l.=:x..M4d OMOf Ttv1I. .. COM I' AN V. H 11 MHAfl""' , "' IM trtllCi.et -· et ........... ..._, e..11. ~ , IM Mte(IJ NCW'9111 .., ..... 09" 9' ..... ' Tnttl ta 111111: AJ.•,to w1tt1 111te....i ...... CllllMfY, t• Vie T-.U, i .__ .,_ J-•• , .. 1 .. '"' -.... c ....... (.el"'""8...,, • -........... "' ......... ,.1,.... Vl<t•r ""•· .... WUtlllr• I , ... , .,.. My --.. 811 •-' ...... v.,.. ......... .,.,..,, ""' .. I " "' .... 11 .... .i -'""' Of .... (111 ....... d wltlllflllf"'" ll're• "'"'''· 111M v1cterr n-~.,,,., tald OeiN flf levteY•r•, ttfl ''"'· '"'"' 1 Trot lleret•l•r• .. Hwl•f •nf Mell...-...~tMa , ... 1...,... .. "°" ,..., ..,_ • Wf1'tltfl .,_.~ I c.c1ere1• ••...,..., OM!Md"" """ ...,.. -..., """ .. t ..... .,.. • Wf'"9ll ....iea " Oetwll Cav11ty c .. ,k " Ore"99 c ... ,,. MW llK*" .. Se4I TM 11Mer1l11 ... -~~ ""- cewloM "" •1tt fl/ OtfHlt ..,. --•• IK. 11.c11e11 .. "'" "'"' _.,... '" ... ......,. .. "" I C"lllY wMl't Ille l"MI ~ It M •• ,........ .I tac•• ..,_..._ I ........ ~ ........ ~--=--:J ............ c:... ............ -o.te· °".....,,,,"" .... ,.. .... ._c...,.,n, ....... ,.......o--.c \D•u °""JI, ""'·JM.), , .. '"* ,...... OM.., .. n. ""· ,,_ '· ........... ...... . ' .. . ' .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 31 . 1981 PICTITIOUI M.llllllH •AMa STAT11Ma•T ,,.. lollewlflt N rMM .... dol ... 11u.i-... LEASELINE, UM ........,, a1vo • Coll• -... c:.l""""• *" $0\lltl CoMI CM lAfl ..... Inc .. • Celllornla c.,.,.,eclon, HM .._PG<' ll11cl., C•te Mew, c.lllorlW• ti.27 Tiiis buslnes• Is cO<ld<lctM llY • ,.,pot•tloft Soutll Coe•• Car L_.,,., Inc. ~ Tiiis -was fli.d wltll Ille '°""'Y ci.n Of o.._ c-•v on O.<em-22. '"'· "'"'" P""""*' Orenoe eo.11 Dally Piiot, Oe<. 24, JI, 1 .. 1,Jeo1, 7. I•, 1ta H,.._t l'IC1'1TIOUI aUMlllU llAMSnATIMa:•T Tll• lo1towl119 .,.,,.,. h 001119 _1,..ues: All(IOO FEDERATION OF C.t.LI FORNI A, P.O. lloll iot.2, Cosla Mue, Ce llfor11la nn1; 10) • .t. Cle.,brooll l.alle. Costa Me u , CeHlornla.._. • l'ICTITIOUI 8UMNlll No\M41 STATIMallT Tiit lollowlf\9 HtMHU ••• dol"9 MIM»•t: SUNOAV SEMINARS WITH MONA COATES. 111 F Rl .. ,.lde Drive, New110r1 k•cll. Celll•r11I• .,... Sllerry I'~ 2Qt7 Com~• RNd, N~ ..._,,, C.llforllle nM11 Mon. COMh, aot02 llrOOlllMlnl, Hi.nl"'9t&wl 9-11, Celllwftle 9»46 Tiiis llusl!lna I• c-ctecl by t 0-... , •• _,_11\141. $fttfryPw-. Tlllt IC6-I ••> 111.0 wltll ,,,. CO<l"tY Clerll of Ot~ '-"'Y on OeutMet 12. ... , ""' .. ' P"bllllled Or ..... Coooo1 Dally Piiot. o.<. J•, lt. t•t.Jen, 1. t•, ltn HtU I 50°/o "TAX BRACKET? AKEAl00°A DEDUCTION Donate your sf at ion wagon or van for the benefit of youth Coll Jim or Dove Orange Coost YMCA 642-9990 l'ICTITIOUI auMNIU MAMa ITATlll1WlllT Tiie tollowl119 perSMt• ere dol"9 ~~===========~ lknlMts •• MACGURN ENTERPRISES, :UO 091• Str .. t, Colla -sa. Celllof'ftla t2627 Call 642-5678. Put • few words to work for ou . llWAllOf HIADOUllllS .9 .. . ~ ' ' Sii ull fracl uret and other head lnjurle1 Med not be aertoua. It 11 oo!y when the brain la In · volved that ruJ trouble occun. For the brain le cont1lned within the rlild cavity of the 1kull. There la no room for ex· panaion of an lr\lury, Uke what bappent when a cut cautes the hand or foot to swell. Anyone rendered un · conscious by • head·blow requires a physician's Immediate attention. Persistent headarhe, dl zzlnes1, e xcessive fatigue, or vomiting are warning symptoms or a pou lble con cussion Take care of your brain. YOUR DOCTOR CAN "PHONE US when you need a medicine Pi(lk up your pre!>criptlon ii shopping nearby. or we will deliver promptly without extra charge A great many people entrust U!i with their prescri ptlons. ,AH UOOf'HAIMACY PneOelwry )11....,..._. .............. MJ-lut I ' D .. lcl A. 0-,., IOS •A Cle.,_ '--· COIU MHA, C.lllomla tit» Tiiis bldlness Is c-ll(led by a11 lnclMch1et. Fos..,. ll<vc. "'-<...,-11, no OVte Str .. t. C•te ~. Gallfomle t»1 Sllaron '-" ~II"'"· uo Ot l• Str .. I, G.illomla ~ Tiiis .,.,.1,..., Is conducted Dy• 1---------------'!..li--!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!~~====~~ DeMrel P«1~p Foslltr M4KOllf'll O.vlel~ Tiiis ste-wes lllecl wltll Ille Co""'' Clerll ol Ora119e Co""'Y Tiils stellfmefll •• lllecl wttll Vie Covtlly Clarll Of Ora._ County on o.omllef 22. '"'· ono.ce~n. '"' 1'11'MI P"llll"*' Or ... CoeJI D•lly Piiot, 1'11'• o.c t•.ll.1"1,J .. 1, u. •"2 nn .. , p.,1111.-Or .... CM•I O•lly Piiot. Dec. 2•, ll, 1•1, J en. 7. 1•, 1"2 511MI PUIUC llT1CE "CTITIOUS aUSINIU N.t.MIE STATEMENT Tiie lollowl110 r>erlMI• are clOlftO lklslneues EXECUT IVE MARK ETING CONCEPTS, l<IM' Et Toro A ..... lit. Fovntalft Vell•Y. Calllornl• '270I Gery I. Hulcl •ncl DI•"• A. H••kl, ICliMt El Toro A"enue, Fountaln llal1ty, Calllorftla t270I Tiiis Dvslne» Is condloclt<l by .,. lncllwlcl ... I 01-A HHIO Tiiis ~,,,_, WM '""' wllll -c o .. 11ty Clerk of Ore._ Cov11ty °" 0.<em-IS, '"' '"""" P"bli-Or•noe toast D•lly Piiot. Dec. 11, 2•. '1, 1•1, J.,., 1, 11112 S41M I PVIUC llT1CE ,-ICTITIOUS aUSINHS N.t.ME ST ATIMENT TPle lollowl"O Ptrson h dOlftQ bllslnessas. CARRIAGE SADDLE RY, 1st.I Old Ntwporl Bo.,lew•rd, CoSI• Mou. Celltornla mv l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIU NAMl ITATEMl!NT T lie 1011011rln9 per\Oft IS dOlftO b\ISl!lffSH" IAI ENERG Y RESOURCES I N TERNA.Tl0N4'1. CO M PANY IERICOI 181 ARAB CONSULTING ENGINEERS IACE I CCI 011. TRADING INTERNATIONAL COM P ANY COTICOI, 1111 Ce111or ,..,.,. .... Suite 52•. Huntlnvton Beec:ll, C•lllornla t2"'1 M•9dl R Hanna. ~,, M••- Clrclo, H<lnllft91on Bea<n. C•11tor111a tJ,M7 Tiiis business I\ c-..ct4!d by •" lndlvlOual """9c1IR H"""a Tiiis sl .. tmtftl ••• filed with Ille c o .. nly Cle rk of Ora-C°""'Y ol\ Novemb« 1J, lt'1 l't16tt7 Publl-Or ..... Co.st Dally Pilot. Dec. 11, 2•. ll. IMI. J•" 1. , .. , ~ "CTITIOUS auSINCU N-IESTATIMENT Tllo tollowl"O perton h doing b"''""' •• ' YOU CAN BORROW ON YOUR PROPERTY TODAY Rapid funding of equity loans secured by corporate or personal real estate. Interest rotes are highly competitive and often below market. We guarantee fast action with early commitment and funding. Contact Mr. Tony Rubino, Senior Loon Officer • CDMMUNlTY REsouRCES ,. ...... , F INANCIAL ~ CoRrt)RATJON 25200 Lo Paz Rd. Suite 111 Laguna Hills California 92653 (714) 859-8561 Sllawn M<C•rly, ISl4 NewPGrt Bo.,ltw•rd, Costa ~·•· Colllorftla '1627 CA RI. TON U NLIMITE D, l)t~=============-r============-=~ Rocll11ter. Co.ta -u. Calllornlal , Tiiis ......... U °' COftclucl4!d DY .,. lnclivlcl ... I 51\ewn Mc Ca r1y TPlls Stal-I was lllecl wllll Ille Cou111y Cltrk or Or-Couftty on 0.< IS,"" ,-17..,. PubllSllecl Ore1\91 Co .. I D•llv PllO!. Dec 11 14, JI. IWI, J.,._ 1, 1"'1 ,_.,, .. , FICTITIOUS IUSINUS NIIMI ST.t.TllMENT Tiie tollowl"O Pt"o" 11 clol"O ~•nnias CALIFORNIA FOREIGN PARTS, 11S W 11111 Strut, Cosio Mt ... Calllornl• mv c riar1u w""'••"''· stt• E Brtco, Oranoe. CelllMn•• ., ... TPlh butlMU Is C-ll(IM by ... illdlvldual Owrlts wu.n..-11.1 Tiiis , .. ..,,_, Wt\ fllacl wlltl Ille c-ty Cieri< of Or•-Covnty on Oecemi.r a. tWI ,.,nnt Pullll-OrM>Ve Co.st Oa llv PllOI, Dec 10, 11, i.. JI,'"' un .. 1 l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIEU NAMIE ITATIE-NT Tiie lollowl"9 p1rso11 h dolllQ llv•lllffSes. l •I J-C MEDICAL ID) CCC HEMOOl.t.LYSIS Ccl ><. lCJS F..c:llsle Str .. 1, Cotta~. CalllOrTll• ~ Robert Emery McConnell, J4J F..Cllsl• Street, Casi•-· C.llfornle .,.,. Tiii• INslneu Is <-IM er, .,, lllCllv'-1. R~! M<C-11 Tiits , .. ....._. Wfl fllacl ... 1111 - COVllh Cterll of Or•-'-"IY °" Decomw 12. '"'· l't1'Mll Pvblw..cl °'"""' Coest Dally Pli.4, Oec.U ,Jl. l .. t.J.,., 7, 1•, l•t Ul7 .. I "CTITIOUS aUSINIES.S NAMI STA.TIMENT Tiie lollowln9 persons •r• dol"9 bllslneHM' HARRIS DESIGNS. 11tlS-8 Sily Park 81.0.. Irvine. C.oltlorftla 97114 R. Danttl Harris. Jr. encl Nancy M. Harris, »Jll 111.,11wat1r Clrc11, H1tn1ln91on 8N<ll. c.111om1a.,... Tith lluslnM• Is c-vcltd by •" llldlvld ... I. R. Deni .. Herrls, Jr Nancy M. H•nla Tiiis ... ........,. WM flled wllll Ille County Cltrll of Ora-CO~lftly °" Ot<•m•• a. '"' 111nm Pvbll-Or-CO.SI o.lly llllO!, Ot<. 10, 11, 1•, JI, ltll ~I lllCTITtOVI autt•IU NAMlllTATIEMa•T Tiie ftllewl111 parson la deln• ~-: CHRIS JONES COA ST ELECTRIC, '"9 .t. So. l'•lrvltw Str .. t, ._.AM, cai~. t1* Cll!'ll....,. Alltft J-. 2Nt A So. l'elrv ....... , $eMa .t.M, Cell ....... la .,,.. Tlllt ~ It C-... llY M .,., ......... (JwlllqlN A J- Tllft ........... -fl ... •ltfl tM c-•' CIMI flf °'Mee c~ .n ~12.1.,. "''"* ...,..,"""or.,.. CMtC o.11, 111-. OK. "· a1, .'!"-'..JM. 1, "'·-'• u..-1 . . ~nout ev11••11 UMlllTAT'IE,._NT Tll•• 1 .. 1 .. lnt .,.,, ... It .. Ill• •-•M! ltHAt.a IAl.11 AND LILUINO, .., w .. t .... o-...... c:.llfwlll• ... ,, AMt .. ._ et-Jr., .. lt11ftr A••11ve, New"rt lttu1, c:.a'""111e ..... Tlllt ......_ ... ~ ... .., M ..... ..._.. ,,.,..,J.~ Tlll1 .......... -tl ... ~­C-IY~ .. Ofelltlt~tll ~----"""' ........ Or-. OllNI ~Hit. Olt-... Q. ...... ~ .... 1 tt•n Rlc11e rd • Ce rllo,., •O•lo> J..,,,1 .... Corone otl Mar, C•ll10r11I• .,.,s Tlllt l>USlnM• " c-11<i.G bY a" lncllvlcl.,.1 RlcllardA. Cerl- Tlll• ... -WM llltcl wllll ,,,. County Cltril of Or•-C°""h on Otcembtt IS. IWI """'' p., ... ,.,..., Or-Cont D•lly Piiot, Ot<. 11, >•.JI. 1•1. Jen. 7. 1WU41WI ,-ICTITIOUS aUSINIU llAMIE STATEMENT Tiie lollowl119 Hrlon h dolft9 11\0tlntts •• HEH ASSOCIATES, 1~ Or- Ave""'· S"lt• A. Coste Mesa. caillor"ia mv Niies Eastoft HoCll<"''· 2"S. Ort119t Av e""•· S"ltt A, CHI• MeU. Celllornla 9)6l1 Tiiis -Ines• I• ,_, ... ll'W •n lncllvlcl.,.1 HllH E H°'*''" Tiiis Sit ........ w .. flied wllPI Ille c°""'' c i.r1< o1 Or-'°""" °" Dec. IS,'"' 1'11- Put>lls!led Or ..... '°"' O•llY Piiot, De< 11. U . 31. t•1, Jen. 1. 1"'1 S.~I l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIESS N-E ST.t.TIMENT Tiit totlowlllQ "'''°"' are ool"O .,.. .......... , ARC HITECTURAi. OEVEl.OPMl[NT SERlltCES. Jiil A.lrw•y A•t,,.,., 81tlld111Q E. Cost• Mesa.CA'2Ut THOMAS P LOUSEN, t•Otl HamOtfl '--· Hunll"91on Baecll. CA ·-· JAi( BICACI, )U E. Ullcl scr .. 1, Co.~ IMY. CA '1617. DUAHE P BUTLER, JUI "'"'~'"·Coste M4tw. CA mi. Tiiis l>u\lness h conducted bv • 91 ... , •• _,,,."""' T-1P 1.0uwn Tiiis 5'Altemen1 was lllacl wltll ,,,. Cov"h Cler~ of Or•noe cou"IY on Dec. IS. "'' 1'17 ... PubllSllecl er.,. Coe•I Dally Piiot. DK. 11, 1•. JI. 1 .. 1. Jen. 7, 1"12 MU .. 1 °' .... ~., .... ,., c.wt, C:..trel 1• Clvk CMW Ori" W•• S-. Mii, C..ltfenala tl7tl PLAINTl~F SHAHIN·VAZIAI TARSHIZ OEl'ENDANT HA S ROUl.AH.l(ANI MIMMC*t CAU NUMalll, 0-111711 llOTICll Y• ..... '-..._ Tiie , .. ,, ....,. .......... t -........ .,_ ................... ..... wHllltl• .. ,._RMd .. I ......... ... ...... If you .. ,,. • -· llW ..,,,., ...... atlOrMy In tfll• ...... ,, '°" ~ • M prorn0tly "' ,,,.t your wrln•n re-w. II eny, Mey lie Iliad M 11-AVISOI U.... llt ._.,_, t .. II tr.._.. ...... --<eMre Ud. •I• ••dlHcle • "'•••• ~·· Ud. ................. L .... ele ....__.__ ...... 51 UltM .. _ MlklW ti ceo1•i-• ......... tft ... -...... 1• ll•etrlo 111-'l•l•m•lltt , dt ••I• -r•. "' ,._._ t'Krlte, ti ,,., •lellM, .,_.... -,... • ., ............ ,. I. TO THI OCll'INO.t.HT: A cMI cern111al111 llH 11te11 me• •• 111e lllallltlff ........ ....,, If ~ •1111 .. _._,. WI .....it, .,... ""*• wlllllft • Ny• f/fttr Wt -It ..,....., ell ........ "' 1111• ~· • •rl -,....... ............ ,... u ...... ..., .. ... -......... ll lltMler'ICl911 '"'~ .. -~.--·"'· cwn ~ ...., • •.-.r-t ... IMI "" f9f IM ,.. ... ~ 111 t .. <•lftPltl11t, iWlllCll < ............ 111 fUllh llment ., ...... t•llll •• _., ... ~~· ........ , ,., ... ,__!ft _< .......... DATIO;~t.•• Ull A. aRA'f(;M, QM .. l "°"INI CICCONI, .... ~~.x...... •• L.8 ""' ............. ...... ...... CA-~:....-. ... ~ °' .. c.tl Ddlly Pliet o.c. , .. ,,. i4. ,,, "" SJ7'M1 l'ICTITIOUI auMNl!SS N-1 STATIMINT Tri~ lollowl11• P•rso" I' dol119 111111...uas: JEFFREY ENTERPRISES. IU.., T~. a-1..-, C.1-f>l•t1t,. J effrey L M.,.n . I 13.., To9ar, ···-·-· Cetltomla .. . Tllb """"'"' It ,_.,. .... by "" lftcllv~ .wff,...,l..M.,.n Tiiis ~ wes fllecl w1111 Ille Covftty Cterll of Cl<'~ COllnly °" Ot<ember J, IWI 1'17TJ1t Put111"'9d Or.,. C..st Dally P olol, O.c. 17, 1•. lt. '"'· Jen 1. "" S.Sl .. 1 l'ICTITIOUS aUSINllU NAMI! STATIMENT Tiie lollowl"9 person h doift9 11u.1,.. .. ., I.VOHS INDUSTRIES, .SI Birch St , S\lllt 01, Nt"'ll0<1 Bo.ell, CA '7WO. JOHN J. LYONS. UOO Felrvlo"'. u.201. Cool• -... CA .,.,. TPllS boillMSt ll <-.Clecl by .,. l""lvod .. al. J-J L"°"> Tllis st ... ,,_, wM llltcl willl Ille Cou"IY Clen of Or•-c ... ntv on Dec 15 ••• , ,.11MJ1 Publlllled Or-Cooost D•llv Piiot, 0.< 11, 14. JI, t•t, J.,., 1, Ital SA71 .. 1 c,.un• llOTICI Of' T91UfTll'S SALE TRUSTORS MllOrtcl F. s .. rkll T.S. No. ah• Ort J-V U, "92, et t· IS A.M TITLE SERVICES, INC. as d"IY •-'11ltcl Trv1M ~and llVnutlll to Ottcl of Tnm -Set*mw J, ltlO, ts lllS1. Ne.,._.., 111 -IJ711, ..... 11'S, of Oltk .. 1 Re<treb lfl IN olflct Of Ille c ... nty Recorder ol 0r•"99 C-ty. Stele of C•lllo,,.la WILL SELL AT PVBLIC A.UCTION TO HIGHEST 81DDER FOR CASH (p•yablt et 11,... Of Mle lft lawf"I mo11ey of -United St.tell et Ille 1ro11t 111treft<e to Ille olcl Oreno- C.Umy ~. ioc .. .o on S...t• Ana 11...ieverd • .,.._ h<•mort Street •ncl ••INMl••Y. S.111• A11e, Celllo""8 en rltft(. 1111t -lftterHI con,..yecl to -,_ llelcl by II .,....., UICI ~ of Trvol Ill Ille pr-r1y sll.,attd 111 u1c1 Cou,.ty •1141 St•te deKrlbed .. : 1."4 142 Of Trect No. S711, Ill Ille City Of trvlN, ~ OI ~9'19t. St8'o Of c.11..,,,.. .. ..., ,,... rectrtlM 111 ..... 214, p .... " .. 11 fftclvsl ..... MIKt l'-"'--If\ CM Oltl<e of ,,,. c--, Rtotonlilr of M+cl c-,. Tit• s treet •••r•u •"d olller .. ,..m.., *"tMtltft, II eny, of .,,. r••I ,,,.,..,ty descrlMd allOvt 11 purpor1M lo lie: 4244 S.lil>tl Roecl. .......... ~. TIM •• ....... TNIM dl1Klelrn1 _, llHllMy .., ~ lftt~ of -''"'" ...,_ -.... -~.lf-,t'-' ...... 111. s. ...... will .. ""'*· -•ltftovl , .... n.11t tr •• ,, ... ,., ••• .., ... ., lf'!llll .... ,......'" .. ·-*'· ... _.,,,...,_... .... , ... , ........ ..,. pr!MIMI -tf IM ,....,,, teeur .. .., .... 0... Of ,,,,.., •llfl IMtf"t9t IMAel\, M ............ lft IHI -hi, .-.--.. .. -.~--... .... 0..."' ,,_, ....... ...,.... - ......... .. tM """"'" -.. -t..-ac.....,_.,.-o...efTr-. TlHI t.U.I •-.. ttlt llflfflf ... ~ ................ lt<WM .,. , .. ........,.. .......... ,..._ .. ,,,.. .... ~··"· ..... n ... •11• ~~" ..... ,._ .. -"'"l•I ~ ...................... .. ..,.,,..... n. i.tllk.,., ~ .... 0..-.. Trut t ll•••t••••• •••cut•• tlld ...... ,.. --.............. _, .... o.< ....... "' Dllleult ... ~ lllf t•I•, 8fld • wrllt911 Metk• .. Oefe1tl1 ilfl9 &!eetltll .... 11. TM ~...-,_. .... Netk••flf 0.fe.ltt ............ ltll .. .. _... ..... c-.,~ ... ,.... ~ ........ . O...·~J,H11 TtTL&MltVICH. IMC ..... ,,,.. •AeMeMll*•INW., ·-.......... CA ... , '": ""' ....,,. ~~ ......,..o-.,...c....,... ..... o.c. "·" "·"" • ....... l'ICTITIOUS aUMNEU MAMIE ITATKMIENT Tiie lollowl119 .,.,,_, ere doino t>u~tl\ffS •S~ F TI. l.ITHO, IUO Grove, Ane1M1m, Caltl-• '*' Allt " C>won T-te. I EfttrMt East. trvlfte. c .. llorfli• tVU O•MY 1.¥0\I Ffftton, 1711 lowe, COil• -. Celltorftla .,.,. ~eymond 0 . Ulllam, 5171 Via Safttane. Y-L'-. C•lllontl• Tiiis 11\!SilltU I• ConclllCtecl lly " 09"''·'~ AltenO T.,.... ~Temp• AftD.,WY•lft fact Tlllt st•-wn lllacl wltll Ille Cov,.ty Cler' ot Ora-C011nty °" Oeum-12. , .. , ""'* P"t>llsheG Or ..... (OHi 0.lly PllOI. O.c. u. JI.""· Jen 7, ••. 1m u1 .... 1 Clltt NOTICI TO ALL llERIONS WNO NAVI Cl.AIMS AGAINST JOHii 01110091V ITIWA91T AND/091 ITIWA91T MOllTOAOIE COMllA•Y 01' l'INA.l D.t.TIE TO MA.Ill Al'· lll.ICATION l'Ott l'AVMl•T l'flOM THI 91EAL EITATI RICOVE91Y l'UllD NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lfWll Ille Rt•I E..W Education. Rtwtrcll •ncl Rec-v ,,_ provides tor PH· ment to ...,._ wllo ,,..,. obl•lned llna l lllclan*•h 11981n1t llcertMd reel esl•1• llroller• or ..,.._,_,~ Tiie 1""9rnenl ,,_lie on,,_ of••-. clect ll, mlsrepresanletlon or co11 version of lrvlt l\lndl -"'"'' lie NMd on a tr-tiofl tor wllkn • ,.., Hl•lt ll'tftM Is ._.ired. Tiie pro- visions retatlnv to Ille Rec....,.y F"'1CI 011 bl -111 Callfonlla Buslntu al\CI PrOltuloM c-stottlons 1001 1o lo.J. Tiie a..-!NI rn.y lie !Wiid lrom Ille Re<-V Fund to ...., -clal· meftl 11 llmfled lo "0,000 per ••-· lion. F....-mott, tlle -• lftal mey lie .,.id out to ell clalm.,.t• Is llmllod to '20,000 per ll<tntH lor treftS•<llOftS o<c.,rrl119 prior to J aft\lery I, ttU; ~.ooo per llce,,_ tor tre11UCllons ••~1"9 piece •lier J .,.uery 1. 1'75, -prior 1o J.,..,.,,. '· IWO; -$100,000 lor tr•llM<11ont occ1trrln9 llltrta llor. Tiie <l•lm• ... 11111 tM Aec-ry ,......, -to Ille ec:llvlllts of rMt estele lk-• J- G re 9ory Stewart e nd SI•••" Mor1 .... '-'·Inc., epP9ar 1111. .. ty 1o ••~ Ille mawlm""1 llelllllty Of Ill• Rtco ... ry Fvncl. Tllerelo .... Illa R••• E•l•t• ComrnlHI-• ... , ,.. ques'9d .._ c-1 '° join ell ~I claims 80liMI Ille R......,., F..,.. llltt Mt ec:tiofl, .o w..t tflt c-1 c.,. ,.. tef'll'llne wflkll ctalmt trt v•tkl - .......... -.... 11 ..... , ......... Aeco,..ry l'llM M10lltl -_.. lltvlfltlv .. ldclelrnt. Y•u ""Y lie enllllff te as•n t <t•lm ... 11111 Ille R~overy l'Ufld lleC.euM OI • tWI "'9te trMa.KI .... er ,..I ff--,,_, .... lf\'Wet\llflt reel .,._ lk•-• J-Oreet"'I' Stew•rl .,..,., S-ert MA>rt1- C~. lftc. II yw wltll .. --o <l•lm ....,.. tflt ..__,,, """"·.,.., "'"" flle .... _ell ti. RMI Es .... c_,,..,..._._.. .--...... Ct .. .- c.mtl•tnt fllH 111Y tM Rt•I ...... CommltlloMr lft lt.N. Ou elQZ ><•'- ttc v ................. c._..., ............... A ....... ~,.., Ceut1 .... c 115 on. ... ..., ~Ylott wlftl tllt ,.....,_, wt "'111 In ..... MW ............. IMIC.--· ,..,.. 1901 ... MIOt, ......... lfljlft ..,. '·,..,..,"""' .... et\ ew11c .. '"" fOr N¥tNllt ,,.,,. ... lttte,.y I'.,,.. I" llW ..-1 Kt .... In wNclt .,_ I~._.....""',...,..,....._ lie ... __ ......_, ... ,..., .. ... ~ .... --....,. .. ........... c-....... -.r ..... .., -II M ........ H. t•, Dwltty Al• t-v o-............ ft ... ..,.. ...... If .,.., ... , .. --• Clel"' ... l ... t tM lt.C.,,t~Y ...... .. ................ ,..I_ 11c-.-wi Of'ttiW\' ._.,, llft1 .....,. ..__~,IM., -Wiii M .......... flew9 ...... ,._ •ltllt •• •11'1' ···-"' ''•"' tllt ..__., ................... .. MN tic:-., .,,,.....,......,.... ...... ............... ~ .. -......._.....,.._. "OlltAlD ... no. °'9lltY AttlrNY ~·· _ ................. , ..... LM ......... ~--...........on..C.... o.tty ...... o.c. "· ~,,. IWt,J ... .J,,. ~ NEW QUARTERS -Mitsubishi Motor Sales or America will be l ocated in building OeltT ...... ~ ...... ., 11..-K•O'~ • foreground. next to ITT Cannon Electric· Mitsubishi quarters to open Fountain Valley-based firm plans 100 dealerships Newly incorporated Mitsubishi Motor Sales of America will open its headquarters in Fountain Valley during January, with plans to establish 100 ne w deale r s hips nationwide for its line of J apanese·madc cars and pickups. The firm . wholly owned by lhe Mitsubishi Motors Corp of Japan, will occupy two floors. approximately 38,000 square fe~t. in the Fountain Valley Plaza. 10540 Talbert Ave. The company says it plans to employ 125 to 150 people. Tom Wick, a Mitsubishi spokesman, said the company will continue to supply Chrysler with J apanese cars and trucks to be sold as the Dodge Colt, Plymouth Champ and Arrow pickup. The new Fountain Valley·based company, however, will prepare to sell its cars and pickups under the Mitsubishi nameplate beginning in OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS MUTUAL FUND October 1982. the start of the 1983 model year. Wick said. : The company will set up a nationwide network I of dealerships for sales, parts and serv1('e of these l vehicles. I Wick said the company hopes to sell 30.000 I cars and 10.000 pickups during the 1983 model year. R L. Stallsmith was appointed vice president. 1 sales. and Robert L. Morgan named staff vice ' president. marketing ser vice, of M1tsub1sh1 Motors I this week. Prior to his resignallon last week, Stallsmith was general sales manager for Nissan Motor Corp I US A., Carson Morgan was previously senior vice president a nd marketing m a nager of The Marketing Services Companies, Birmingham, Mich. I I 1 ) • 5 • I • 9 10 11 11 I) " ~ • 1S ... 6J) 468 l,111 ).Jll 34 ,. Jl,()41 JOO " II " :IO 11 u 2l ,. 15 ,. N•-Eftl~y AFldl.1 ~ttertF ldl.Wld Au•omoc BU"!'Qtri ~·~Q ~vii &.KO JMll wt NtttE""" OcnRsEG Vatew DD<Ull s Ga Bel Fib D•onou Estban MoCJol "" N..Wrld PrOQSI. Btar<t o °'""' Ge.w1E" Hmt!dF lnTotl u" UPS L<KI •• IJ' > ... 1'J , l t.!Wj ' . ) Pct VP JO I Up 18• Up 1• I Up U 5 Up 1l I UP 11 I Up 11 i Up ll • UP 1e a Up I• 7 • 1 !'" • 1· .. ... •'~ ) ' 1 • ) 1 , ... •'. .. •• t • 7' • l ... • l • ,. . . ) , l ' • s s ) .... ~ .. ... ... .. 4. UP U ) , Up I< J .. Up u J Up 14 J 1'• llp •l • VP IJ J ' Up 11 S .; ~~ :n ' VI> 17 \ ~ ~~ gs • Uo t1 I ) Uo 11 t ~ uo 11' ... UP II I OOWHS I.HI • ''i. o.f'•11s 1 l , l • )~ . 1 l 1 1 l 1 , l .. l)\e s }'I , , J>. s • 5'. H• l'• ,,,., Slo. l ) • o" 11 s , Ott l ) .... Off II S • Oft u 1 I. ()ff " ' 011 II 1 , Ott 11 1 '• ()ft tt, '• 0 11 11 I ~ g:: :6: I l Oii 9 I I Ofl 9 I • 001 • I .; g:: : : ' Oii • 1 > Oii 8 I '• 8'' • ] '• II I 0 I II I 0 " ()ti • 0 I. Oft 1 I 011 11 '· Off 1) • ,. 117 • 1111 NL 1000 10 t) .. " u •• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. December 31 . 1981 s 87 ~----------------------------------~-----..------------------------------------------~ ~----------------------. NYSE (:OM.POSITE TRANSACTION OVOl AflOHS IH(LVOI 'llAOl•O" fM ..... 'rOllll, MIOWl\T, l'ilCl•I(, ..... •ono .. DI ••OIT ""o (1 .. CllOIAfl uocw lllCMANOU ANO lllf'OllTIO l 'I' Hll NA\0 ANO IN\flNI l • New GM Auto •"10 have slumped so badly, runnln1 1l lhe slowest pace since 1959, that General Motors 1s resortln(l to a sweepataken promotion for the fil'$t lime In 11.S history You know how it l8 when you pick up a S unday newspaper these day~ lt't> likely to be stuffed wit..h cents-off coupons for dog food, cereal. coffee. toothpaste and what·havt!-you. Well. on Jan 10 the world's largei.t auto maker will Join this cacophony of "please buy me" voice& On lhat day GM will drop 41 million advert.Ising insert.'S lnto the Sunday editions of 257 newspapers. It's come to that. GM is going to scrap ..tith the cigarette and tampon producers for a share of your expenditures lif you have any money left ) This will not be a cents-off. or even a dollar s o ff . promotfon, nor will it b e one o f those two-for one offers ("buy a Cadillac and w e'll throw in a Chevy" J It will be a ~r :J ------------~', ~ )., , llllll IUllllTZ,'9 sweepstakes in which GM will gave away more than 1,300 prizes to people who come up with the lucky numbers Each of lhe inserts w11l have a coupon that you can take to your locaJ Chevrolet, Buick. Pontiac, Oldsmobile or Cadillac dealer to see If the number matches any of Lhe winning numbers already posted. H you don't get a match, you can then drop your coupon in a box to be eLigible for a drawing that will award all uncollected prizes. And say, while you're a t the showroom. why not take a test drive in a GM car" If you do, you get a free Rand McNally Road Atlas (even if you don't buy). GM will be introducing some new cars that week -A-body intermediates and F -body sport. coupes. The top 15 prizes in the sweepstakes are -would you believe" new GM cars (you were expecting Toyotas'! /. GM will give away three Chevy Celebrities. three Pontiac 6000s, three Olds Cutlass Cieras. three Buick Centuries. one Chevy Camaro Z-28, one Pontiac Trans Am and one Cadillac Cimarron And lhe runnerup prizes are ; 25 RCA video cassette recorders, 100 Zenith color TV sets, 200 Atari computers and 1,000 Polaroid Pronto cameras. The entire promotion is setting GM back $4.5 m1lhon. The company figures it's worth it if it can attract throngs of people to the showrooms to check whether they are sweepstakes winners. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES AMERICAN LEADERS Nernt 1 Mc~lll pl , \lendo Co J ClllmMno • \lorNdO fnc S Wurui- t ·-~ I Heel \ I NevP I • AmAlrln wt 10 Am SL Flo II PSvCol l.~f ll Unl1r00.C11 • I] •"OlflU 14 c;.n,i ., pl U No.VneoAI ••a-e,,., 11 Hf-,., AID GOLD COINS Pel Uo IJ I UCI IJ l Up 111 Up 10 I Up I 1 Up I 8 Up 11 Up 11 UP t 4 Up I' Up •I Up I 1 UP • 0 Up I 0 Up • 0 Up St Up S • Pel Ott • s Off I I Oii • ' Ott •• Ott • s Oii •• ()fl • J g:I • ) I S • Oii s. Ott S• Oii s. ()fr so Oii •• ()fl 4 I Oii • I Off • s NEW Y0111( (API PrlU\ late fUftdey or oold coin\ compa•t<I with Mnndey'' orlo · • .....,.,_.,.,.h..0•1 1s Ma.te-. I lroyor , M U U , up SI 7) M .. ic. so --I , troY 01., \jOl.SO, .... "ts. .... _..... ... ..-.., upU JS Source o.aa . ....,..,. NEW VOAIC(API Fln•I Oow Jonfl ••O• tor -Otc JO noo" °"" "... LI# c-a.. >0 Incl .... 'l'I 174' h 10 4• 173 10 • 4 8l 10 Tm 17S 119 •• 0. 374 16 J11 44 • I •J IS Ull IOQ (12 10' '1 IOI SI 10Q }ol • 0 1t u SI" lols n lol• .. l44 OI ,_, 01 • • n l ndu• l l'M 100 Tran 1 010.000 u '"' • 'II) llOO U SI' s 1SS 000 WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORI( !AP1 ~ .l<I WHA I "-"'~ k DO Toon 1120 661 Sii ·-• Jl NEW VOAIC 1AP1 Oec >O METALS Too•r ,.. .IOS 1IO 111 7 n "'rt• .,.J~ '81 .... .. ,. 1) )() p,,..., d~ J'IO I~ I SCI b ,, Cepper ''"°'a• c•"" • oowno IJ S ~\linlllOM LtM ]ICtnl\loounel 1111c •1-4o cent•• oouno, d~l•v•rfel 'rl11 c-Metals w,... compo<11• lb Atw"''-l•llctnU. DOUncl ,. y Mtr<wy IAOO 00 OU !It"" ,.11t1-.'°001ro•ol N V SILVER ··~· Ntw Y0<• '4 n OOwn 1 r•n!\ GOLD QUOTATIONS lyT ... A_ ..... ,.,..., Stlt<litel -Id 9010 orKn w-..so.. L-· "-"'no 1111119 "" H. up ll >S L-: e1i...._ 1i.1119 \~I jO, up U jO ....... M00.41, olf n ... ........... , .,.. 03 uo" 07 hrkll: 1•1• 11••"'1 UtS 00 bfCI up U 00 Utt.OOeY<ed H11111y & H••-• (only <1•11• Quoltl '1'1 SO. upU SO ............ : ,.,,.., .,., • ., -··· \J't1 so .... Uj0 1....-: tonty o.uv Qll01•1 ••1>•~01.o ~17 Jl,1;pU~ SYMBOLS =:.::;. = ':'..': '::t':i..-"" ---onlMIMl <Ml'o'I) Of Mfn•·wtn"'91 OKl1r1IH>rt S~••• 0t t•lfft -... _,,_It nOI -'V"•""" • _..., ... _.....,'" l!w tono-nQ •oot-.-Ailo e.idrw 0t el'U .. b-A_,...,".I rallt phA HOC\ -°""l-tnOOl•- 0.Clar.o Of p11d 1n Oft Ct Ch"U , 1 "'°""''• ~ Of' pe,d atw ttOC .. 01•.o.nd Of $pit 1.4> ,.....,_,_ --·--"'"° __ .. _ .. _,,_,"'IJ ·~- (llf peiJO .,.. ,.., WI eccvm1.1•11,.. twut •th -tn .,.,.,. ~ ··""' t-Otidlr.o Ot ~ .. .,~ .:.!c':".:-.r:;::-= Clllllf't~ onn~OI t • ""'''.°"''°".._ ... ~ 0t •• .. "ON• • E • -Otv..c:llllnO at"2 -"''"'' ,.5-•n lull ckMAllM •d·When o''''•Dv••O ,.,.. Wtwl"I --...,,,_W•I" w1Jf9,ntl ,._ W1t"C)Wt ....,.....,. --, l ""'° Tho ~ o! 1 •lot• •• • """"""' OI -~ eemtt gll deft...0 t>f dtYt0t"'O IN I.MM' ,,._, -i.o-lfllO ........ I>""' r----~--._,.'"'!'"'P' __ _......,. ............ _... ......................................... 191 .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. Otctmber 31 . 1981 . . Tll£ F.4•1tt" CIRCl:8 BIGG£0RG£ by Vlrg 11 Partch (VIP) by Bil Keane "What part of the fish do we get fish sticks "What happened to your mustache?" · from?" by Brad Anderson . "Will you stop being the life of the party?!" Jl.DGE PARKER A6E HA& 'ltXJ MEAN TO TEU. ME NOTHIN6 ' THAT LINDA MAY EIREER'& TO DO WITH A DRUNK ? I READ OOME· ~IMC:1 A WHERE THAT &HE JU&T DRUNK' TURNED EIC:IHTEEN A COUPL.E WEEK& Al:JO I ' .. CONGMTUL.ATIONS I JON. YOOP. C.AT HA~ J~T MADE OIETINC::r MWICAL Ml5TO~V ACROSS 1 PrOYOlle 5 Malctl -· Tty 9 Indian at ate 14 Fruit 15 E'ngllell Comc>OMt 18 l.lrlat 17 8lowlnO up 19U'l- 20~ 21 Ravllgl 23 Neturll 24 Perfumed 27 Around 29 Ofllct wOttl. •• k>rlt!Ort 31 Big hit 3iMMdow 3 7 Slrln!1" 39 HIPPY eong 40Cfwmln 42SIMlll 44 '°"" plf1 4SEndM¥0rl 47FlettoM 4tPtonoufl IQ-toudfy ULOWIF N TrMll .. ,,., ..... ... ,,_...~ -·'----( Pref. MC111v11 •tand 85Small ""°""' 87 Ancleltor 70Thor~ ,.,. 71 BrMttllng IOUnd 72 8'lldel 73 Sollnl 74 Fttld 75 Profound DOWN 1 EJec1• 2 Pollonoul 3 Stlowmtn . 4 Sllcktn 5 Ooltf\jl IHumtttc Pf911• 7 Miii Hl1Nt-_, ... I ComrTllllOld te ~ t TM NW 30 icy 10 US4A 32 At for netM grMPlnG ' ' y'"*' Olty )3 .,... 12 s..eeop M WipltM 11 COl*wy • ......, ... -~ l'lfrfMN ........ ,....,,.....,.,. 410fs1•illll I SEEN l'JD& LIM 14 AND 15 COME IN HERE WITH FAKE 10 CARD5 TRYINC:1 TO CON ME INTO (;!VIN(; THE DRINK'----------- M£'S SOH'EP.ING FROM 50GAP. WrTM DP.AWAL ••• .,_._ .ew.-11oc1y <61 fixed lflC* 51 Hul*lb 53 Mede tun of 55 Atrlaen t-.,._.,._.,_ 57 Pfltty 581 ......... loft ...................... +- $1Pollrd IOA~ ., Menly 13 ly "'°""' ..... __ ...._ . .., ........ Hank Ketchum I by Harold Le Doux T..CE Tlf.OV6LE I& EVEN THEl!t PAAENlb DON'T KNOW THEY'RE AlCOHOl..IC5 UNTIL THEY (;ET IN TROUOLE ••• ANO &fl.IEVE ME, LINDA MAY 6REER'S (:;l()MHA GET IN A LOT Of lROUOl.E I by Ferd & Tom Johnson J;>oY-· IHEY MUST ""I H,AV~ HAD To WoRk ' OVERTIME N HER. PEANl:T8 I CALLED ™E OLYMPIC COMMITTEE .. THERE'S NO EVENT CALLED ~TME DO~ILL SUPPER DISM '' HONESTY ISTHE BEST POLICY GORDO Ft:NK l' WINKER BEAN ~'5 NOTHIN6 ~ 81.tt\S <,()(.) OUT LIKE 6EJN6 IN BED WrTH 1HE FW 00 ~ 'JEAR5 EVE. WHILE 1H€ WHOLE u.m.D lb FM1l.>IN6 . -~ . THE THIEF COMES TO GRIEF AUNT FRITZI ISSO SNEAKY-- I'VE JU.5T LAIN IN 8ED lHt CA»n.E E.t.ellNG ~ caw\IC. 800tC& #40 c.uqyw1N6 TV. 1'1'1~ Ntlil 'tE.At(~ E.'4E, ~£., ~M ... I ~·r Wf.'40"4 ! ~O 'bl L.1"-E 1"141f4\( •.. i>f.0°'11' Wtfil. ~1 ,, If' f by Charles M. Schulz . by Ernie Bushm1ller --SHE FILLED THEJAA WITH CHINESE F'ORTUNE COOKIES I e:.~ .. ER.. •1::::::::::::::::=:::::;;;t.J;;::;t..l=I,~~~ by Gus Arriola by Kevin Fagan "°'Mb i> 'fllt ~ SfOft ~'i E.l.Uf~ll ~?! ~·s~1~ rx-''C::CXX1 AMO Ettff.AfA1NMEMT"?! by Lynn Johnston WHAT-NO Q ffiESENT8. , . I ~AC .. - fDolly may quit film business By aoa THOMAS A-..... ~W,._ HOLLYWOOD -"Now don't you do a wrlteup on thla outfit!" Dolly Parton called to a reporter vl1ltln1 the sel of "The Beat Little Whorehouse in Texas." "This'll 1et me In real 1 trouble back home!" , In fact, the outtlt would be bard to describe, ' even It she allowed. "Skimpy" comes to mind. ! "Revealln1" seems accurate. Whal it was was a •mall-order piece of lingerie with which Miss Mona I planned to turn on Sheriff Ed Earl <Burt Reynolds). a prime patron of her comfort station : in LaGrange, Tex. I Colin Higgins <"Foul Play," "9 to 5" > was I directing one of the flnal scenes ol "Whorehouse." , which has been filming at Universal Studios - 'I locations in Halletsville and Pflugerville, Tex. - for the past four months. Afterward Dolly wrapped 'herself in a fiJmy negli1ee and walked to the : mammoth motor home wldcb has sheltered her l during the long filming. : "I'll admit I had some misgivings about the j title of the movie," she remarked. "After all, my I granddaddy was a preacher, and I'm a spiritual ; person myself. I didn't want to do anything that I might be considered offensive. Then I saw the play i ·~-! A UN IVER AL PIC1URE REIJS (PGI A1 12:30 4:30 8:30 No ECIClnOmV ~ No"- ~ESFlllmil HEAVDl lPGI 1:00 3:15 5:30 7:45 10:00 lc::::::::r::==: I •WEOF llAUCE U•G) 12:15 2:•5 5:15 c::==7:=4===510=:=10==~ SHAIUCY"S ~NE IRI 12.JO J:OO S:lDl.0010:20 NO~MATWIO RMDEMOFntE UIST """(PG) Al lt:OO 2::1> 5:00 7: :I> 9:56 ,._.., 1 c '"'' ... t-1 toSAt lm m~(" ""-John B•ludu I NEIGI_,.. (R) fl-------~--, NIC9 DrHrns (RI I IS $'@ 9'MI I c~~Min ,..,.AM IPG I Nine To Ftn (PG) c::z::::::::c:: I lul1 V1ldn' ZOOTSUIT lRI Boul9vard N19hts (RI c=====C: RAIOERS OF THE LOST ARit IPGI & Tune B•ndiu (PGI Oriv•·•ns Op11n 6: 30 NIGHTLY Und9<12FREEUnl•n No19d POWERFUL "An especially styhsh performance enor- mously powerful and glamorous -Detro11 News THRILLER "A high rolling thriller It 1s a compelltng and enter1a1nmg yarn ·· -Boston Herald FRIGHTENING "The CHINA SYNDROME of Wall Street a real and frightening eye opener ·· -Associated Press J.\NE KRIS ~D\ KRl~Tf>FFERSO~ ROLL<J\IER •• and I reaUzed it was Just a foot·Stompln' aood time. "I said I'd do the picture If the script was rewritten to e11 tabll1b more of a relJtlonshlp between Miss Mona and Sheriff Earl. It would give me a chance to write son1s and to sln& io a plcture -I didn't sing a bit ln '9 to s.' thou1h I was proud to have been able to do the title son1. "The character of Miss Mona ls more llke me I get a chance to dress up the way I like, with ~he crazy wigs and the wild clothes and everythin1 juiced up (a gesture toward her bosom). l Uke having freedom of speech ln the movie, beln' able lo talk the way I talk." - Even though Dolly made a sensational debut in "9 to S" and is likely to coo.solidate a movie career wilh "Whorehouse," she said "thi.s may be my last film.·· Why? "Well, it's hard to make compromises. and that's what you've gotta do in this business. I don't want to lose my values. The only way I would do another picture was if 1 could maintain control or the project. That way. I could be sure of workin' wilh people I wanted to work with. On a picture you're dealin' with so many people and bendln' so much that yo1,1 lose control.•· "On a scale of 1 to, 10, 'Taps'is a perfect 10." t •• ,yr .•• 11 •• t-ss rv Lll'. 1NGH£' - GEORGE C. SCOTT TIMOTHY HUTTON TAPS •O ,:111Mw~ .. ~I ~-sE.ii Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 31 , 111!f1 •• NOW PLAYING AMC OtUleGI MALL MA• lltU rLAU UA ct•Uu Oranoe 1137 0340 81ea 529 53311 Westm1ns1e1 ~3 05411 • EDWA"DI LIDO Ml·WAY JI DlllH·t• UA CITY CllllMA Nlwl>Ol1llexh1173 8350 Westmtns1111 891 3693 Oranoe 63431111 fi'"A(70t .. ;-;r;tt..., • ..-, .,. • "~,.,,,, .... , .. ..., I "° , .... , Acccnto L"°toi~, l!\ool'~"-~'M~• '0" ft+ta CNOAQ(a( .. T A COMEDY FOR NEW YEAR'S. REMEMBER THEM? .. SUCH A DEUGHT ••• THE mEAL MOVIE TO CHASE AWAY HOUDAY DOLDRUMS." -Shella Benaoa L.A . TIJlllES .. A mDDY 8TYUSH ROMANTIC COJllEDY ." -Kevin Thomaa, LOS ANGELES TUllES "A SOPHISTICATED ROlllP! A BUBBUftG RONANTIC VIS ... OF A WORLD RULED BY THE HEART' I UKE THIS our· -.JlmBrowa, IUOIC·TY t J-0 • 3 4S 6 00 • 8 15 • I 0 30 1ow..-0111twrou Newport Buch 6U 0760 IDWARDI Cl•lllAWHT Westm1ns1e1 891 3935 lDWARDI YIUO TWt• Cl...,.1 M1Sst011 vieio 830 &990 Oianoe &34 2~~J UA MOYIH •AC:lftC • Blea 990 4022 Ml-WAY H DIHH·ll wes1m.ns1e. 891 3693 NO, ...... ~mo'°",,...._._ .. , ~~~· ..... It\·---~-- -:::; ........ --........... ~.;: ....... ~has .the "°-"., to malce ttMs Hol~ Season the tun.wst C¥erl A ~.,.,-.M&f111'1..,,. tiftEISMAN P•OOVCT10h • 4 111.(r..i S"1AP1I() J ~ Y. CHEVYOtASE MODERN f>Ro&.eMs PAnt OARBANVlllE·MARY KAY Pl.ACf ..... D • I.,......... "' ... ·r· -~BNEY COl.fMANI E••Cutt•e Prodvc•r DOUGLAS C KENNE~ Prodvc9d by AlAN C,AEISMAN ond Ml(HA(l ~AM8(11C, w,,11.n bv l(EN SHAPIRO & ICM SHEAOHMAN & AlllHUA SfLLEllS WELCOME TO EDWARDS CINEMAS NEWFST ADDITION ••• EDWARDS SOUTH COAST PLAZA TOWN CENTER CINEMAS OFFICE SOIJTB ~OAST PLAZA TOWN ~ENTER ~INEMAS · 751-4184 .. .. .. . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. December 31. 1981 ldness opened doors for her .. .. , 808 THOMAS ......... ~ HOLLYWOOD -"I'm 1lad I did ll ," ya Perale Khambatta, who sacrificed her haJr r "Star Trek, The Motion Picture" and appears to have 1uttered because of It. The Calcutta·born beauty once aaaln has a lull ad of luxuriant black-brown hair, and her career movin1 along nicely, thank you. Slnce "Star relit," she appeared in "Ni1bl Hawks" with Ivester Stallone and is now playing the only male role In a new science fiction exlravaganza, Megalorce," which Hal Needham ("Smokey and e Bandit") Is directing for Golden Harvest. bat's the Hong Kong-based company of Raymond how , for whom N e edham m fl d e th e oneymaking "Cannonball Run." After a lengthy location in the Nevada desert, egalorce" was filming In Raleigh Studio, a ntal lot in Hollywood. Scattered about the studio ere remnants of the $1 million worth of battle hicles invented for the movie -rocket-firing otorcycles, computerized armored cars , etc. ega!orce, you see, is a unique battle-for·hire ganizalion that fights anti·democratic forces ywhere in the world. The commander of Megaforce is dashing arry Bostwick , la te of "The Pira t es of enzance." Edwa rd Mulhare is the British-trained mmander of the army of the beleaguered nation Sardoun. Persis Khambatta is daughter of the esident and a major in the field forces. During a break in filming, Miss Khambatta lked a bout her seven months of baldness and *BARGAIN MATINEES* Monday thru Saturday All PerlormancH before 5:00 PM (Elctll Specill £nga91me11ts 1nd Holicl1ysl l A M lllAOA lo4A" Mirodo ot llo 1ecron1 LA MIRADA WALl<·IN 994'·2•00 -C.-·-~ "TAn" ·-------·---"lllAIDElll9 OF THIE LOST AlllK" -----------+---'-...;.;.:.;••=:M.-Ul,t•ll _°"_,__.., .... "'"' ·-___ ,__ -----·- -0., .......... ----I "NIEIOHIK>ftS" lllr ·;~!~~= ............... -.11: •. •- ·---·MU•NUI "A•UNCI OF MALICE" -... -.._ ___ _ LAKEWOOD CENTER WALl<·IN ---· "SHAii! klE 'f"I lllACHtNE .. I'll tltl9,..-.~lt11.Mta -c. _..._"""°" "TAN"- --· "~KY'S MACfflNE" 1111 .... -.-. ........ faculty 01 Condlewooo 213/531·9510 "REDS" <Nr ·---fll*STIOOO ~ ,_ IACM o•• -""''Mn,,, __ , --·-...-"AAIDElllS 01" THIE LOST AlllK" l __ .__,,_ J 11'.M, IOI, r-· '°"" -·--------, LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WALll IN ~AI DelArno 21J/6U-t211 -----"CHAIUOTI M l'lM",.. ,,,,_ ... ,_ ..... LAGUNA so . COAST WALK·IN ---· "IHAlllkY'I lllACHtNIE" 11t1 "'19,t:AI, ,.,..._ "lllAOTl•"-••·'••'-'•Jtt __ ...... _ ... """" "•UDOY •uoor"' ..,... .... ._ __ _ lout" Coott Hlwoy 01 trooCIWoy 494-1514 ~ l llUI .... • OA1t A.,.,_,'f'O ·~ ~ e,lj ~ t:'!!: ,.'!: -........ , .... 6 15 , .. , .. 4:00 •-·•· ... ~645 IMPORTANT NOT1Cl! C1411 OREN UNOER 12 FREE! """' ... W><Nt 11°" llff• fro 5 30• SOI S.o "411 4 •30rll CM-fl SOl.o•'fQUI U!I CM~ 1$ ~ ~ 1J tC Ull CAii llAOIO WITM IGMflOll ACCt~ f'OSll10N -lllllC ""' IQllT*I I·~ CM-fl _.., .. Oii ,.. - ..... ,. ... ,,.. ANAHEIM DRIV(·IN 11 ... oy ti Ol lomoll SI 17t-tl50 ·----.w:no.. I HEAVY Mf:TAL ,., I DAAGON~YElll' '"' • .: 1 CINE fl SOUIOO 6Lf "'4A r A gt BUENA PARK DRIVE IN LIM-A .. Weal ol llnO" 121-4070 6•ot .. A PA~J LINCOLN DRIVE·IN so" 0..90 lnotv a l trao~"'"'' (kl) '62·2411 ""t v ·~ ',. ~ "' Hl·WAY 39 ORIV( lrt ,."' ...... • liM.L•,.,.. "A8SEN<.:E OF MALICE" (.-0) -"STIR CAAZY'' 1111 TARZAN THE AP£ MAN t•I ,._ SO l"INIE 1•1 - A CHANGE 01" SEASONS C•Nt ''~" -c. ~--""'"* "TAN"--''THE CANNON•AU lllUN" IHf fl4R ... --TO nu. ... TAU "GHOST STOAY" .., -"THE CHANOIEUNO" 1111 CMmn-• "lllOOllllN "'°911•" .. -"NtNE TO FIVE" 11t1 C•Nt !I SOllttO atoc" llVO So OI G.iroen Glcwe ,,_, 191·3691 , . , lllL.l'9 I .......... n'W ... MCS~ "ITlllJP£9°' ,.1 REDS ,_ -I· .... "ITIR ~" 1111 'UP IN SMOKE .. '"', CM·fl $OUltO I <:llOl "IOllllO..;;_ __ ---•f0•--1111 --·----.. :::. ro-..._.. flll 'AAIDE"e M THI LOST AAIC" --"Tiii-":.-."" l' "l'ONYF' ... Cllll ft S011110 Cllll ·fl 1011100 " ,,.11i.,1. LA HABRA lJO:l\/E IN ---·-·-··-~··1111 -,_. _ • ....., _ t .... ..,. "~~ OECTICTlVf" tNt 871-1162 . . .. ,,..,. ORANGE Ol/IV( IN ~"""'.-Y • Ito .. <;01 .. 09 151·7022 _,_. 'I HAllllCY'I MM:MINI .,. -IOfll ANY ....CH WAY'°" CAN' '"' wbat "Star Trek" has done for her. · • tt opened the door ror me proresslonall y, gave mt Immediate recognition," she remarked. "Even if producers don't remember my name, they rerogniie me as 'the girl who shaved her head for 'Star Trek.' I'm glad I did it. "l enjoyed those months of being bald. lt was u unique and sensual reeling to stand in the shower anct have the waler run over my head." She claims she Is 21 -"J 've never grown up." She is not among lhe performers returning for "Star Trek II," and she's glad. "I've done that. The others an 'Star Trek' have had trouble with being typed, and I don't want that to happen to me." THE PORT THEATRE t1 1 I l>/b() EVERY MONDAY ALL SEATS $2.00 "Humor and eroticism in a tender and entertaining work~ .,_. M.-l1n Nl:ll H.lltlo. flMI' THE llOllJAYS AIE A Tm TO SH MaY, ....S, SANTI CUUS Am 'UllOIS OF THE LOST Alll'I AIWIMOINI l'l:llU NOW PLAYING •IOWAllOS SOUTll eoasr 'l AlA lOWAllOS ,, .. I .. J , v.. .. rou•naut W&LUT at I 1 I 11 '\ 'ti• 1 ft t~ I I 1,1 •Ctt•DOllll "'""'' • l?WA~~~orl!."ollUOGI $UDIUll OlllYl IW 0-~ .....,. CIJtli!iE!!!!!i• lOWAllOI SAOOUIACll Nl·WAT ll OlllWl·IW u IQtt ~fllt 11940 ">¥· !1f1 .. , •• I"' • ACADCllY .... .,.,, YO<.lr card will aom11 you ano a guest to any performance • A SPECIAL MOTION PICTURE EXPERIENCE ...AND THE CRITICS AGREE. "UNLIKE ANYTHING YOU'VE EVER SEEN BEFORE ... Full of surprises and loaded wlth lmagl .. nation and talent. Steve Martin Is so wonderful'.' "Pennies FRom Heaven" Mt1tlO V.lllM'llN ~"f I>-" 1' .. 1>91111 llOSS ~llON STEVE MARTIN "PENNIES FOOM HEA~N'' -BERNADETTE PETERS JESSICA HAAPER ~RNEL BAGNEl?IS JOHN MCMARTIN onc1 CHRISTOPHER WAI.KEN o. 1om ~U ~~ _:::t;:!:::-. OUH5POfltQ • -..-......... ............ c-..., .. llOWICJ MCC<•.u-.. NOll1' ICA'ft • Hfllll(l!I flOSS HlR9llll rlOS$ l·""-~~·~-IOQ .. (;~-· ..... I NOW PLAYING COSTA MHA U TORO IMITttelTON IUCN CNWIGI Crnema Center Sacldleback Crnema Cmedome 97941•1 5815880 848 0388 634 2553 MERRY HAPPY JOLLY BUDDY MERRY HAPPY JOLLY BUDDY .wx LEMMON ................. ~ . ...., ·~· .................... JACI< l EMMON WAllER M.AntiAU Bl.ODY Bl.()()Y PAULA PRENTISS KLAUS l\INSKI • ALAIN BERNHEIM •• ... • .... -• ,, Bill Y WILDER and I Al DIAMOND • • , JAY WESTON R .. ,,_... 0 ~. BIUY WILDtR #!\_ •. --..:. ... :-'...!~ ~ ~ MGM v ....,.,..._ COSTA MESA Edward·~ Bristol 540 74'4 NOW PLAYING ll TORO COSTA MESA Edwaid's Cinema Center 979 4141 Edward's Saddlebaek 581 5880 GAltOEN GROfl WtSlbtook 530 4401 ORANGE Orange Mall 637 0340 I :. '=° e:::. I For complete ad copy and art services advertisers all along the Orange Coast re ly on Daily Pilat Piil 11111111· llllYFBI WA ROLLOVER co.MT AT IAGOI DAat ''IUOOY, ...,,._ ... SAllLEUCI PLAZA ,~c:... ,Ao 581 -5880 GHOST STORY FRED Ma\IYN AST AIRE DOUGLAS DOUGLAS JOHN FAIRBANKS. JR. HOUSEMAN DAllY 1:•, J:tl.t.•. 1:11 10:•AT~ ednds NEWPORT .:-::;.~ 144-17&1 I ___ P' _____ _ .._ ___________ ....,. ________ ...._~--~---------~-..-..------~ Daily Pilat THURSDAY, DEC. 31 , 1981 CAVALCADE C2 CLASSIFIED C6 • Erma Bambeck sells.a clinker. C2 Schweiker of HHS lives in the center of storm Embattled secretary has big share of controversy WASHJNGTON <AP> -On bis f ir s t day as the nation's secretary of health and human services, Richard S. S<'hweiker was escorting his 86-year-old fat h er on a tour of th e headquarters of the $250 bilUon agency. In the hangar-sized lobby of the Hubert H . Humphrey Building, Malcolm A. Schweiker scrutinized the plaques and portraits of the 11 men and two women who preceded bis son at the helm of what used to be HEW, then observed: "Now, son, there's one thing I want you to re member. The average length of tenure here ls 18 months, and three years is a record." In case his father 's advice did not sink in, Schweiker has had ample opportunity since then to learn why new portr aits go up so frequently in the lobby. He bas been at the center of storms over t h e R eagan his work on behalf of diabetes research). says he understands why controversies swirl around him. "Not only do we spend the most money of any department, but we h ave th e most c ontrovers i a l issues. Sex education is one part of it, abortion is another, s moking. We've got the toughest issues," says Schweiker. Schweiker says he knew from the outset that Socia l Security reform would be his toughest task. "You've got 36 million people getting benefits and 118 million people paying taxes. No matter what you change it's going to affect either the 36 million or the 118 million so it's a no -win situation," he says. "You always get shot at. To some extent, my experience in 1976 was a good training ground for this job," says Schweiker, recalling his three-week stint as Rumors float that he is not ttwtg for Reagan's cabinet, but he denies it vigorously and says he hopes to serve four years . administration 's s uccessful effort to trim the welfare rolls and its audacious but abortive attempts lo overha ul Social Security. He has been in the middle of assorted tempests over his stand on sex education. his choice of a top deputy with past ties to an anti -Semiti c grou p , bis department's decision to sack teen star Brooke Shields as the star of its anti-smoking ads, his ha ndling of the White House I Conference on Aging, and even bis posing for charity for a society magazine cover . Rumors float periodically pa .r o u n d th e' c a p it a I t b at Schwe iker Is n ot long for Reagan 's Cabinet. He denied It vigorously and says he hopes to serve four years and break the record for longevity. Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., a friend, says, "Considering he's got the most unmanage able political shop in the world, he's d one wonders . I bear no criticisms of that s hop and a lot or compliments about how he's handling it." Robe rt Carleson , a White House aide believed to have de sign s o n s u cceeding S chweiker , s ays : "I have always thought the secretary of HEW or HHS is maybe one of the toughest jobs in government. It's especially tough at a time when budgets are being cut ... I think Dick Schweiker is doing a really good job." Schweiker is presiding over what he call s "the people's department" at a time when the "Not only do we spend the most money of .any department, but we have the most contro - versial issues " , he Jays. political mandate is not lo expand Social Security or chum out new health, welfare and social service programs, but to scrimp and save on the existinl ones and tum over as many of its do-gooder func tions as possible to the states. Still ahead, and sure to be controversial, lies Schwelker'a pet project: a bid to revamp Medicare and MedJcaid and to bold down all health care cost.a by makinc physicians, hospitals, lna urera and patients more cost-conscious. Legislation la on the drawin1 board• within Scbwelker'a department that could force workers to pay more of their medieal bWI themaelvet and put a lid cm tbe tu-free 1tatu1 ol bealtb IDlunDce 1rtn1e beDellta. O ~o p t I o n • a d e r conaidll an ls expertmentlnc with .-111 ... for llediean, ao the .,......, • mWloa ..... or disabled beneflelarl•• eould 1hop around fW Uaelr lauJth tn1uranee ratlaer than Ja1t aadiq dleit' bcl9pl&aJ bllla to t.be 1ovel'IUDlllt. Schweiker, 55 , who conceatrlUd aa bultb .... u a HllMor (and .,.. dubbed ''tbe patro«a •;at ~ UM pancNu" for Ronald Reagan's running mate in the only race Reagan ever lost. The h ast il y ar range d marriage b et w ee n the conservative Californian and the liberal Pennsylvanian who was a darling of big labor and an occupant of Richard Nixon 's enemies list failed to breaJt loose any votes at the Republican convention in Kansas City and the incumbent. Gerald R. Ford, squeaked through. While it catapulted Schweiker onto the nationaJ political scene and gave him a permanent entree into the Reagan camp, the episode also left Schwei ker wlth a r e putation as an opportunist, a politician ready to perform a 180-degree ideological turn at the drop or a hat. Schweiker a nd his aides contend that's a bad rap. They argue that liberals overlooked the conservative side of his Senate record in which he voted against abortion and forced school busin g. E ven be fore R eaga n ca m e courti n g , Schweiker says he had begun to turn against free-booting liberal programs and to embrace the tenets of fis(\al conservatism. Schweiker views Reagan's popularity as president and bis success at moving s weeping budge t and tax cuts though Congress as a vindication of what they tried to do together in 1976. "It's sort of ironic that now Re agan is obviously doing a great job as president, he's well received and viewed as an effective administrator, and yet people were riding me out of town o n a rail a nd tar-and-feathe ring me back then," he says. "I was the leader in the change in the way the Eastern establishment looked at Reagan. Because I looked al him in what they perceived was the wrong way, they took it out on me.'' Libe rals today qu est ion whethe r Schwe iker sets the policy for his department, or merely carries out orders from the White House. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D·Mass .• who worked closely on health Issues with Schweiker in the Senate, believes this ls "a trying time for Secretary Schweiker . . . I think aJI of us have seen up here that the principal tune ls being played d own a t OM B (OU ice of Management and Budget) by David Stockman. He's tbe engine that's drivin g this whole train." K e nn edy d oes credit Schweiker with helpin1 cushion the National Institutes of Health and other hea lth pro1rama against budget cut.a. Schwelker says be found It "really bard'' to protect the $3.8 bi Ilion NIH bud1et from Stockman'a axe. "I bad to aave that place three Umea." However, NIH may not escape UDICltbed. It Wll tar1eted a.toaa with mmt domestic procrama for a 12 percent cut in ftacal 1112 in Rea1an'1 1econd round of •uta. Sebwelker says be aho balked at Stockman'• ort1tnal •Ullestion tllat 40 HHS health and IOda1 welfare Pto1ram1 be coeverted into a aln1l• block 1rant to ltatel. ''I didn't accept that. I feJt that wu W1"0QI and . . . really dealtned more •• a way of killlnt off some of lb• programs," he says. "I argued successfully to incr ease the blocks to four and ultimately It came out or Congress to seven." Schweiker . spe aking before Reagan's call for the 12 percent cuts, said, "I was fortunate we really didn't have to cut out any bas ic health programs in the budget process. We trimmed them back substantially -25 percent -and we consolidated but we reall y didn't have to cut them out per se. I thank the onl y real adjustment l made on the health side was lo try to look for J more effective, erricient way to deliver the services, and I accept the block grant thing." Schweiker says his a mbition is to become know n a s ·'the wellness secretary" and to give a new impetus to efforts to keep people healthy instead of just treating them after they become sick. He plans to reshuffle some of the research money within NIH's 11 institutes to "create a center on preventive health care research .. I don't think the focus has been sharp enough at NIH on preventive health care." Schweiker was so active as a senator in winning federal funds for diabetes research that he says some people make the mistaken assumption he or his family were diabetics. It was lo promote a charity ball for the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation that Schweiker posed for the cover of The Washington Dossier magazine an white tie and tails with his wife, Claire, before a lavish banquet table. The magazine came out the same day Schweiker signed a rule limiting welfare families to owning no more than $1.000 in assets. other than a car . a home. pots. pans and other essential items. O n e pundit wrote in The Washington Post that Schweiker looked "like a robber-baron in a Thomas Nast cartoon." Schweiker responded , ·Tm uaed to criticism, but I didn't expect to get it for helping a children·s diabetes charity." But he also told his wife not to ask him lo pose for any more society magazines. Friends found the fuss ironic. for the Schweikers are known more as homebodies than as social butt e rflie s . Las t December they turned down an invitation to dine with the president-elect and Mrs. Reagan lo attend a daughter 's high school beauty pageant. She won. THE RUNNER Ri chard Schweike r. secr etary of Health and Human Services. jogs the Mall near the Capitol. He is a great ........ believer in exercise and says he wants to be r em embered as the wellness secretar y. AD mM RUCICUI -Richard Schweiker and wife Claire pQlled in opulent settina on cover or a w1shington ma1alne on same day ...... Schweiker sianed a rule limltina assets welfare rammes could own. The ad and atory inside caused a contrQ,versy. ' Machine gun sales now OK in Illinois CHICAGO <AP) -lllinoas residents will be allowed to buy machine guns effective Jan. 1, in part because a machine-gun m a nufacturer t hreatened to move ne xt door if the state didn't rescind its ban. • Illinois joins 35 other stat.es that allow private possession of the weapons, under leeislatioD sponsored by s tate Rep. Bea Polk. T h e news paper Molin~ Republican said he introduced the measure at the request of the Springfield Armory lo Geneseo, which threatened ti) move to Indiana if the ban against private ownership wu not lifted. , The bill passed the Illinoil Ho u se and Sen ate a nd wa~ signed into law Sept. 16 by GoY. James R. Thompson. • "All my law does is say that if you have a feder al permit, you can have one in Illinois," said Polk. "It simply brings state law into conformity with federal law." T he m easu r e was little publicised. · ''I find it hard to believe that the intention of the bW wu to allow that machine, 1un1 be made widely available to the public," said James Zatel, director or the state Departm~ of Law Enforcement. "I doD t believe the General Asaema.i, lntended that." . But even tbouab Polk bu ulj that was exactly Illa latent, Za1el has uked federal 11111 local authoritiea to bold up• IUD registration ,.,.... ~. bft II aatlafied tbe law ll Mt ....., misinterpreted. I Llke the resldenta bl the_... ltatM, thole bere wW l&ill .. to eompty with feder.a ndm • maeJUne..sun ownenlalp. ' J•mea L. Br., ... of tMt Bureau of Alcohol, Tobaeeo ... J'lrearm, aaid a federal ... permit lt n eeded for t acqulsition of such we-.o-. B r owa said re&i•tl'•tlea fl machin e auna date1 t.P Prohlbttioa and ................. ''"' act. \ . I~ . ' Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 31, 1981 •ANN LANDERS •ERMA BOMBECK •HERB CAEN • arning h~rd way deprives teen of youth DEAlil ANN LANDERS: T his is for ·s traineCl Marriage, .. the stepmother who s having a hard time with her husband's 4-year-old da ug hter : I beg of you to ha ng n t.here for her s ake . She will tha nk you ate r . Please stop that child before s he uins her life. When I was 13, my parents a llowed m e to date a 19-year-old boy. The kids at ch ool thought it was terrible. I soon had he r eputation of a tramp so I behaved ike one . By the time I was 16 I was out of 'Con trol. I became so wi ld my parents idn't know what to do with m e. so they ave up and said l would have to learn the ard way since I refused lo listen to them. Shortly before my 16th birthda y I ran a way from ho me. I we nt to New York City JUST THE TICKET The wish of Kimberly • McConnell of Davenport, Iowa. to see the , University of Iowa play in the Rose Bowl New Year 's Day will now come true since and found a dumpy furnished room . whi ch was all 1 could afford. It was infested with roaches and rats. l was a fraid I would be raped by all the cree py men in the place because the door had a lousy lock that didn't work half the time . I worked nights in a bar. It was a crummy place where the onl y women who cam e in were hookers . At a ti me when I should have been enjoying life and having a wonderful time, I was alone, hungry. stoned every night and scared to death. Five months of that li fe was all I could take . I swallowed my pride. called home and asked Mom if I could come ba ck. She sa id. "We 'll com e a nd get you." By that time I was an emotional wreck I messed up fro m uppers and downers an\i hooked on pot a lthough peo le s av .............. tickets to the game we re donated by an Iowa City man. The 11 -ye ar ·old is suffering from viral encepha litis . With her in Los Angeles is her nurse. Gr eg Wike . Review budget ,Friday, January t ~ ~R IES CM a r . 2 l ·Apr . 19 1 : •• e om munic a t io n r eceived from o ne itemporarily confined to home or hospital. 'Plans will be clarified. you'll know where ,you stand with s pecia l person. . . ~ · ..WRUS <Apr. 20-May 20 >: Spotlight ~o n ·d omesti c relationships . home ~nvirdnment a nd g ifts whi c h aid in ~eautifying s urroundings. Libra, Scorpio l4nd .~er Taurus figure prominently. GEMINI <May 21-June 20l : Welcome c ha nce for r espite : professiona l s uperior r elays m essage which creates a ura of optimism . Terms will be de fin ed : you'll see people as they a re . not merely as you wish they might exis t. CANCER (June 2 1-Jul y 22 1· Relationship intensifies -pla ns are under w ay for travel, long·range project. What had been a m atter of speculation becomes . an a ctuality. .,,,,,, BY PHIL INTERLANOI • HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA LEO 1 J uly 23-Aug. 22 1: Emphasis on budget revie w. financial prospects a nd decision enabling you to break with past a nd t a ke cold plunge into future. You'll get accoonting and a n over a ll view of fina ncial potential. VIRGO <Au g. 23·Sept. 221: Emphasis on ne w s t a rts, produc ti ve contacts . partne rships and ma rital status . Focus a lso on originality . inde pe ndence and decision leading to fresh concept. LJQRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: By sticking to routine, you p a ve way for m ajor move and real progress. Focus on dependents . tasks at hand and pe ts . Answer to dile mma is obta ined through an intuitive flash . SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21 I : Good lunar aspect coincides wi t h intensified rela tionship. specula tive venture. attention to children and sweeping c ha nges. Social a ffair brightens a tmosphe r e . provides r enewed optimis m and enables you to broaden horizons. .. S~GITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 211: Temporary cpnfinement or restriction will prove Of ultimate benefit. Accent on home. s ecurity, routine, basic procedtn'es -and a financial accounting. CAPRICORN C Dec. 22-J an. 191 : The new year be1ins with greater freedom of thought, aetion. Vou'U express. ideas. communicate with relatives and verify directions. Me mber or opposite sex encout;aMeS creative endeavors . AQtJARIUS <Jan. 2C>-Feb. 18>: Impact or holiday gin is felt for first time. Cycle near peak -family lies emphasized and some of your vie ws will be vindicated . .. PISCES <Feb. 19-Mar. 20 >: Puzzle pietes fall into place . Sense of perception ts helghtenect. Judgment is accurate, you make valuable contacts. you imprint style. Gifts of apparel will now come In handy. ') ' pot isn't addictive. <It was for me. 1 Luckily I straightened out my life . thanks to my forg iving parents a nd some wonderful couns e lors. But there arc still time s whe n 1 cr y for t he fun and youth thal we re lost to m e fore vt'r Don't let this happen to your c hild HOPE YOU LI STEN DEAR HOPE : \'our s tory is an" errecllve testimonial lo what can happen · when parents lose control and give up. I hate to sound like a broken re cord but I'll say It one more time. Discipline is ~ s pecial kind of love. Kids don't want e verythJng they ask for. Sometimes they are just testing . Set up the guidelines e arly. Be fair but firm. They need to know someone older and wiser is In charge to protect them against their wild impulses and immature judgment. That Is what pa rents are supposed to do. Don't abandon vour responsibility. CONFIDENTIAL to Please Explain to Birmingham . Dunderhe ad: I don't know wh y il i s that the longer you s ave something the sooner you will need it arter it is destroyed. But I can tell you -it IS true. It happens all thP time. Clinging to clunker Editor 's Not e f :rma Hombeck is cm vacation I/ere 1s a rt>prmt of one of her most r equested columns I don"t know hem a car kncm ~ whrn you· re ready to sell 1t but 11 k now~. We bought a four whc(•I drivt• about St'\'l'n years ago a nd there is nothing ~·ou can sa v to ml' t hat "ill convintc ml· that C'<J r did.n't understand l'\'ery word wt• said . A lot of m<.1 rr ia gl·~ t>et wecn nt•\\ C'a r~ a nd owner'i are m ade in hN1ve n. ~l ayb<.• t ha t's why Wl' couldn't gl't parh T h<.· honevmoon last<.·d cxattlv thrt•e hour~ Then' t he li ght knob ft'l l off in our hand. th<.• r ear windO\\ \\l'nl down a utomatically and sta yed there. and thl' floor bu rnt our feet up We didn't talk trade ·m in front of lhl· car for c.1lmost a \'l•<.1r Then one cla\' m v hus band said ... M ~y be w<.· should t n.ide 1n this clinker whil e 11 1s still running ... WE CLIMBED IN THE CAR and thl· motor refu sed lo turn O\'Cr After we boug ht I he ne " batte ry. \H' fi g ured we might as wt'll US<.' up o ur in\'est menl. So "<.' hung in then· until s even months later \\hen m~ hus b .. nd sa id . "As long as wt•vc got the ongin al tires. \\t' might as well turn 1t in ... At that precisl· mom ent. the left r ear t ire expi red With four new tires. the car bought itse lf <mother ~·car of reside ncy It was not f IMA IOMlfCIC AT WIT'S ENO rt·a d~ to let u:-. go T he lea:-.L little thing rould set 1t off Ont' day I j ust got out of my -.Hit· of the t'ar in a parking lot and rt•m a rkt•d >Ahat a good-lcx1kmg C'o mpat'I ""~ parkt'd nt·xt to u~ Our ('ar would not go into l't'Vl'f'Sl' :.rnd Wl' had to have 1t towed to -i garage \\here the~ dul ~ recordl'd on cnar bal l. "Stu bhornn<.·~s S65 ·· WE ~EVER K~EW WHY THE trans m1 :-.sion \\'ent out sudden I\· the \\a\· it did We had b<.•en '·cr y discreet in plac,-ing th<.• ad for the t'ar in tht• pap<.•r, being very earcful never to me ntion it "1thin hearing dis tant<.' But bv the 11m<.· the firsl caller inquired as to when they could see the c:ar and \\'(' told them th<.'\ could ,·iew it from a rac:k at Ed 's garnge. the~· backed off Whe n w<.· d<.·cided to trade the C'a r i n. "t• pretended "e we n • going to the groC'er~ -.tore Tht'n. at the la~t minute. we turned 11110 lht· c·ar lot T he s alesman said he had nt•\'er s<.'l'll a car with the motor off and the t•m erg<.•nc·~ brake on roll uphi ll to ..,mash 11110 a guard rail before I cannot b(•lie ve ht• was that nain • Lad's pen mighty Lette r of t he da y comes from J a mie Cornwell. age 11, of Sunnyvale. who writes . "Question : What do you call an inept state leader? Answer: A Governurd." What a fine la d is J a mie. al r ead y s ho w ing disrespect for a uthority and getting his na me in the papers ... Business index down: Execs of that sha ky old nat'I chain a re being offered 18 months' saJary to leave right now. Clerks a re jumping ship. The e nd is fairly near ... Business inde x -up: Ari and Sandra Kurtzig, who own ASK Computers in P a lo Alto (the name derives from their initials l. a re the "mystery couple" who paid $1.225 million for tha t F rench·style chateau in Atherton sold a t a uction. The spread goes nicely with their new Ferrari . . Pat Short's latest message on the marquee of his Sukker 's Likkers on Polk: "If Someone Reaches Out and Touches You. Sue the Phone Co." .. BLEAGH: Here it was dark. damp a nd depressing, a nd in comes this cheery note fr o m Phil Howe , aboard h i s yacht Redhawk, out of Sa usalito, now in the South Pacific: Tonga as always is a most e n c h a nti ng ki ngd o m so m ewh e re between Shangri·la and Dogpatch. Last week we sailed to a n isolated volca nic island called Tofua that looked like the island where King Kon~ lived. WOAK8 ON ADORl!U -President Reaslan ltoka up for photographers Wednesday in his hotel suite in Los Angeles where h WM l ~ MERB CAEN OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO Acros s from T ofu a is the d es e rted island of Kao (cow ). which rises like a gia nt green Hershey's Kiss out of the wa rm waters of the South Pacific. On to Bora Bora . Oh shuddup ELSA P REMINGER has what may be the best id ea vet for Bob Arnes on 's s culpture of George Moscone. "Put it in Dan White's cell" ... Certain grumpy wa ite r s and waitresses call ed th e conve nta o n ee rin g d e rm a t ologists "skinflints." whic h is a pretty fair pun but rather rude . FACES IN PLACES: Karl Malden a t Helga Howie 's in Maiden Lane , using, yes . his Ame rican Express Card. At Maxwe ll 's Plum, Will Roger s Jr. having a reasonably ecle ctic lunc h gazpacho. cherrystone c la ms. eggs Be nedict washed down with a pina colada. He . too. is doing an AmEx TV commercial be cause "I've got the name. I m ight as we ll have the game." u-.... working on the "State of the Union" address he'll deliver to Congress when be returns from his Callfomia vacation. Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 31 , 1981 -·--·=-_ .. ,. , . a ' ,. ................................. ~ ... ---.......................................................................... .._ ........................ ,..~ ............ ~ ...................................... ~ ............ ....... ~HAPPY HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ALL HAPPY llEW YEAR! 2000 W. BALBOA BL. NEWPORT BEACH ' 675-1171 • Greetings To All Our Friends JOYM ••••• PIACI OM IMTM AU't .... ,. Happy rrrif"u New Year ~~JJ.• .OM ~ .we1 eeaoove STREET. NEWPORT BEACH. (714) 833-1300 ............................................ Happy N·ew Year F<MCTAIM V AWY Firefi9'1ers Paramedics & ·--And Blessings F rom all the firefighters at the: · COSTA MESA FIREMAN'S ~IATION GREETINGS OF THE SEASON ... We wiah you 1 hoHd1y leatOa filled with joy ind • newyuro( 1ood health "happineu. n.. ................ Alonl Wltlt Tiie Staff eXlelldl tlillr wlsMs of• HltPPY New YNr 541-1151 .•n•t"nlw •~ CJit ' rrom all of U$ HAPPY NEW YEAR at the -~· hft.-.111· ~ ~ ~ ),' •-\"'-" -''-' ~ -~ :.. •''"'"\ __ ---:_~I PEDAL PUSHER 2809 A. Newport Blvd. Newport .. ach 175-2570 LIVIMGSTOM atAL TT 6078 Warner Huntington Beech 147·2'ZZ 141·0247 aul lBeiJ' Wishing Y• an Award Wiiing Halday MOACI TaOPHY I IMGRAVIM& CO. 170 E. 17th Street Costa Mesa. 9'l627 646-3141 ALLSTATE REALTORS 1121 MeM ..... Dr ... c .......... f7f.IJ70 HAPPY TIME TO WISH _, OLD FRIENDS A HAPPY NEW YURt -·we CC>lMICa, MOITUilJIS . ' l I I J ! J : J . ........... .. ...... . , I J '• 7 ..... IJ . s..a..c ;' P rm 4H-ln6 May the New Year be filled with joy for you and your family. Nap ,..rty M1111t, Inc. lnM•t" .. ....... ..., 964-2566 or 973-2971 THE LOONEY BALLOON RESTAURANT HUPY MIW YIAIS TO ALL oua cuno11• 1 ........ 741'#. ltlaLCM NEWYEAR fllOM ICMAIDM.~"· D.D.S. IMC. • zoor.111..-. Cot .. M4tM 549-9671 WE AT LUSK REALTY Wish you and yours the best this holiday season. 67~3411 trol'tl the gang at Mother's Mother's Market i Kitchen 225 E 17th St . 3900 M ichelson Dr .. Irvine We wish you & yours every joy! Allied Eledric 'utMicfA. 2Z'l Virtori 9 Costa M•a 6-46-3737 J J • 0 Dale's RY Sales 15092 Harvard Av ·····: ..... t • 2333 N. Broadwuy Santa A.nu tlMIOl o"-·nu8.~&~•·- MA Y THE NEW YEAR BRING WORLD PEACE YMCA 2300 University Drive Newport Beach 92627 MZ·"90 HAPPY HOLIDAYS! SMnCocnt Reol Estot. 8 Ima Loma Newport Beach 646-0686 All of us at Mat1no VW·lsuzu extend our warmes1 wishes lor a hapoy holiday season1 Ma, Yow Hol.,• h Neel W1tll Lon Alld Lnglit« RE/MAX HAVE A HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON W• tincerely with oil of y•u o very hoppy h.lidoyl COSTA MESA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ZHOH_._.a,s ... D Cotta~Ni '79-0536 ·~rf91 ... ~ ........ ~ ... ,..... ... ""',,... ..... i-._,... ............................... ,,...,.. ............... ... DeAn16 Bayside Village 300 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach 673-1331 j GOOD LUC~ Season's Greeting& From. all of U.t at 701 E. Isl Street ' Tustin 730-5500 .ORGAN EXCHANGE 24276 Laguna Hills Mall THE HARBOR :..SHOPPING CENTER H OLIDAYS! !300 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mrsa Toka• Bank Bu1lcJin9 •·For all sizes of boat slips'' 642-4644 All 1}( us JI Turnt'r ,\,,O<'lale'. l{('altor:.. e~tend our Wdrmi:st v.1\ht'' ror a happ) holiday 't'a-..lfl Laguna Beach 497·3965 Laguna Hiiis 95t·3965 MAY THE NEW YEAR BRING WORLD PEACE HARBOR TRAVEL 3416 Via Lido N.8. 675-1311 . . to all our customers & friends Gin9ham Girl lfor • ,....., ''"" lleeMJ Prom thl· f:mplo) ('('So( lhl' Advanced Health Center 1300 Bri!>t<>I Strt•1•t N B . CA 92660 Love. peace and happiness - our wish to all lor the coming year Balboa lay Prop. RealtoM 675-7060 RUTH'S ANTIQUES 504112 So. Bayfront Balboa Island 675-0433 Happy Holidays trom all your friends at RalelCJh HIU1 Hospi!als Newport Beach '---~ ------------ Orenge Co .. t DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 31 , 1981 HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS! ?NO Grace Lane Unit A Costa Meta/54t·t9ZZ GOOD WI. HES f'OR ALL. ._.,.,.....,_..,.~~ ...... ~,.._,._, ... ~..,_..,..,..,... ....... ~ .................................. .,.._,_... .......... M~~-·--~._. ..................... ~.-.·~~---....~ ,.JJOf'f''I rJew 'YelU' Happy New Year Wt •lsh twrr)OIW jo) and thHn """ and throu1hout llH- TM ttaff of rmr T......, s.nas wishes yo. a nry Prospet"O'IS & Happy .... v ... 1 ~VICHW HAPPY NEW YEAR! f.O all our customers & friends. Dickerson's Glaas Co. 124 Roenester St .. Costa Mesa The happ1e"t 11! holuhi~:. to vou a II & lllJ r t>t--.t wt:.hl':. for J 't•n ftn<' :'-11.'w Vear · MACHAB·IRVINE aEALTY COMPANY Happy New Year Heritage Bat* 721 Ho. &cld Anaheim 851-4100 May we wish to all a joyous holiday season ............ 411 s .... :.:1 .... ) ..... 673-1070 I I M~y the new yNr bnng success to you to all our friends ! "let The Sunahms In" 'NEWYEAR I GREETINGS PYRAMID FENCE COMPANY 776 W. 16• St. Cost•M.H 541-t66Z From the Merchants at THE FOX CJJMIAlf'f REALTORS 1400 .............. Mt. ltJ .. _,...._..'4CMHI lest WI*' for llleHol•., SealOlt! 1.c. 1:eo.1eu1tors JC_,.. .... Dr .. Stt. IOI .............. , ... "" DON1 FORGET • IN 1•2! --~ Rina in 'the Ntw Year with Joy &c Peace Bring in your almost new clothing and your (riendahip I b)' eon1lrnment CllAIUE'S CLOSD 2011 Mew,.,..._ c.M. 611·1411 • ·' .. r .. f ;. • .. ,, ~ .. • Orange Coast DAILY PILOTIThutaday, December 31 , 1981 3841 Rirch St Newi><>rt Beach 7Sl·4705 RADCLIFF HALL 121 S. Citron. Anaheim 635-7892 FAIRMONT PRIVATE SCHOOL 1557 W. Mable, Anaheim 774-1052 l The marketplace on the Orange Coast .. 642-5678 M ed1011 mcome oj Daily Pilot families exceeds $34 .000 a year. Your ad reaches the county's most affluent tJUying au· dience ----- CLASSIFIED INDEX Au<._ """""' 11)11 IH111Wt ~.~.~, ....... !~~~ ....... ~,~~ ........ ~~.~-~ ........ ~!~~ ....... :!~!!!.~.~ ....... : ~~~ ........ -••••••••••••••• • ••••••• ' • 00 D .. I 002 el I 002 G---t I 002 ,.___. I 002 lwktl"-~---l'''•" t •h t•' 6 c-.. .... ,,. .. , , ... ""° • • .. CHMr..i 1002 ~ 100£" •a•r• I 2 .... , ~.., -:: ·••········•··········• ......................•..........••.••........ ····•··•·•·········•·························· ...•...................••..••.•••......•...... ...... Te Platt Y•r U, Cal •"r"' tf' ro-i H11l'WlWf c . .,.,,.~Jc 642-5678 IMS£S Fiii SALE l«I !Gal ''°' .. ,. llD 11111 10 ::1· .... , .... ::1 !Gill , .. ., .... .. ,. '"' lfl!O , ... .... ..... ""' llllfl l.IOO I)» ''°" ... '"" ,,,. '" .... -II nt• -l<IJO -~ -,,.,,, -nao JU» Dll 1Q --"°" U2S '* -JT ---40lol .... 11)11 ..... •ol!O " U>t ·-""" . .,. ·~ WA - ---40Goo•h Jt .... 'l LunW• MM' ... ftft) Mt\('tll•~t ,.,...,...,~ ... "' .... " .. \Hal lllillWtlUO Of"litt f.,,. • tAIHP p, .. c=~~e~ _,..,<.oo•b SI.or« ""'• .. rM l•r j°:6r..,..tt1t~, lUtM BOATS & MAllll( lDUlrMEllT l.onH•I Ao•h ........ y,, "' &W..'8t111'1rt.q.• "°""'"',..,_,, 11io .. , M""' fll.rur ... b..,... ........ ._. ... O..h fllo•\'""""'"~· 8cw.I• .... ..,.,f TIAllSP'OllATIOll 4frTt'•" c.,,.,,. ~lt JttN Df'nn<l •n =::~-~Sc-oaten• M4lor Hm' S..'-' M1~t n .. k·n ,,...,., l::~~f~!':'~.," ~rfl AJ!TOMOlltC AM.tqllfh l°l•.UH i. lKrf'....._ \ f'•ac'" ~..:..~~~~-" rrwcu ,_ <\wl• IA"l.lo ., .\w(otWHCHf AUTOS. IMPOtllD l.......n•I ""• flwtrWM .... , ..... ·"·"'· '""' \•Pf'I ~ ...... ll•\.-Wlll tf'fhf . ,., ,..,., .. , . ., .... , J•tlM'n ~., .... fl!~,-. ~-••idol .,,nf"lf •"• .... 'll(;H ...... ., ...... . ,...., .. . ""'~·~ Kf'fthl-I K.,.lj, M •)" ...... ..... SW. ... ..,. ro,w1. ,, ..... "' \lfth••n• \•tlhlf l,ffM'l•I ,,nwt•I .... , .... '-•4d•• WIS, IP Alfl,IS, M ilOO l'•,_.,,, )l>J fliP\""'1 I.bl UlO mo --'-onf:WWftt•I l.4't\rit,. ..... :: ---....... ,,•ous ' -.. cy-••s ..._ .. c •• fert -v"'~ ~ruu r11111•"' r--wbeo you aee lhis 3 -Be11.t1ru1. 1mm1cul1te. With lhia 4 Br. fenced in, Bdrm + den house. :: nicely iandKaoed 4 Br pool home on a quiet cul· y 'U t.o 1 •19 ' home on cuf-de·SI<' de-sac in Elstside Costa . ou want ee co~y :;: 1 Spac·iousroom.s. View of Mesa. A beautiful back in front of the big :: I eoU course from proper·' yard, With covered patio rlreplace. Only 20'k · down and take advan· ::l ty. ~woer· ass ts led • 1 cozy fireplace in the t.a&e ot ID effective ute .., EQUAL HOUSING flnanc111g.Only S139,500 livine room There's of 121 ~ Priced 11 : O?POAT_UN!TY C..Uoow,979·5370 more! Assumable loans .... ~..,.;.. 7513,,.1 :: ~ -and ID anxlou.s seller. --· · .. : ,...._.1Motkt : LLSTATE ~l;,~169,900. C.a.11 ; All real estate ad· _ . ..,10 newspaper is subject to I,.. UMDEI 1001 vertased i n thi s REALTORS _ ALLS.,."TE 'llJ.a> the FedeuJ Fair Hous· WSE Of'TIOM : mg Art or 1968 which $10000 REALTORS Wf!U -makes it illegal lo ad· Owming 3•BR Condo, 2 • 2 Br 2.,., 81. condo ;: venise "IDY preference, stories end unit pool • Have somelhio1 you w/p-eal 1men!lles •ex· ::l li mitation. or dis· speCaURuthorSteve wlnt to selJ ! Cl1uified cellmt f111anc1111. Greg cnmlnation based on @ ~~ ads do it well. 642-5478. Aide, yt 758·1221 ,110 race, color, relieion. SEA COVE ·, -- -==-=----CC7 .,,. sex. or 111liooal origin, PK>l'EITIES Ul.4JW>4.A.LL>VZl---.. =-~:: or 1n intention to mike 71 ~ ,,_31 ,,,990 ~ !l: any such preference. •"V .., ·;,~. ~~>,~'Wit ttlt It mi ta ti on. or dis· l4 ~ ~ :: crimlnalioo." OMTHIWA.TB ••• This newap1pe.r will not :: koowi.o&lY accept 1oy 3K down • aeller will C.rJ ~ AJTD II ~. 4 '*1D. 2~ batltl plua llRb more INCLUDES .w advertlslo& for rut ::; state wbicb ii In viol•· :! liao.ot the l1w. LANDISDS.• ..... ..,~ Fer • A.d ilt w_.•, Wortd . -, ............... , •• .,, I Soft, Soft Soft' ~ ~ A.dtll'tlaan *671-7160• n, · = ..... *'*.... I "" .., ..t = • Jnt out 1bout lbe hjlb· :;~ 11 • n. ell'linc real est.Ile sales "" ,...o••y :_0 , • career opportunities ~: -r. --· w ll h TH E R E A L ~~ Wlllty fw tM flFlt ESTATERS. Liceosio1 :~~ hlcorrtct IHtrtlH scbool fees completely :r.:o ..,. rdimdab&e to school or = your choice. Eltleosive ~;~ sales lrai.oine. For in· !'~ formation, call 7Sl-tl91 ''" .._.. fw S-. NO DN 'ty share lit ~! 0 "••••••• •• • • • • • • • • •" b0 eqw 3 bd l 0ba ~ I 002 ume IO'ers, . , . , :l~ only 94,000. prin only ~'.!,'. ...................... , CaU631-4045 Kathy agot. tltl flW rl.\ "101 mo. ., ,, - "'°' -.... •U •11 ---l9lO --- A NAPPY &PIOSPEIOUS MIWYUI FROM BRUCE• VICK IE BLOMGREN GOOD PROPERTIES NEWPORT BEACH 6'3--0200 DAILY PlLOT lE. AGENTS Mike t.he most for your elloru. 90%/1~ split. Compl ete orr1ce services : residential. commercial. Invest· inent. Start New year otr right! Call Dan Wallen· line.~7221 I For Pinf·Sizad Set SlmClS ....,"lt't °'''"•> -~r . -PeoplewboneedPeople ~ Th1t 's what the SERVICEDIRECTORY ~ifi Realtors OIPlOYMEWT & PWAIATIOll SttlMtit IMlrwt ... "*••"4•d· Htlpllo"4N 11&r MllCMAllllSl 4fttt4"'1 llJ.6 """_.. ..,. IMptO•' '--•• ,..~., .. ., ""'<"'' ......... ......... "' ..-..... t'ttmuwt,. Puftl.• r~'""'" \,.,. _,,, Pw .U. -.... M T -;Al 116) 1111: -_, WI• ""'' isallaboull Get GREEN cash for WHITE elephants with 1 Classified Ad Call 642·56'78 Selling anything with a Daily Pilot ClasJified Ad tS a simple matter ... Just call 642·5678. _ 12'/i°/o AHA.MCIHG •.. ! * SIU.El DESPIRA TE • Spacious Rancho San Joaquin Townhome w/panoramic golf course view! Featuring 2 Br /den & wet bar, fplc, etc. Call 759·1501 or 752· 7373. 12°/o PINA.MCIMGl!I • WA.TllPIONT HOMI • Detached 3 br. w /Comm unity tennis & pool ! Owner will carry lST TD . Only $230,000. Call 759-1501 or 752· 7373. ..-olT llACH OMCI 1'7tS. ...... Orht 1714171,f.llOI 1714t712·7JU ~ lalkerBiea ' 1111 htltl HA.1101 11oe1 SMA.SHIMG H .. SfMGTOM With outstanding d ecor . Over 3100 sq . f t . assumable loan. Night light view. $275,000 Darlene Herman 752-1414 BAI.BOA ISUIJ OPPOITUNITY Dnllc ............ -..... ., .... 2 -... iiw. s, ...... ,. ... 4 - 11..,.. ._.,._ SZtS.000. Hlrt'S JUI! lbOut !ht pretlltlt dim 10 t11p M110 no-Tuds lramt 1 ndl111t detplr V'd °"' I Sllllll llh1SIOll CllMOle A IOlt llow hes tJlt1I *"' wit Pllt ''"'tad Pattem 9071: MISMS ---.....,,~--· 30 YEAR AXED RATE 13%% LOANS GAIDIH PARK VILLAGE: 2 & 3 Bdrm Townhomes contain every deluxe am enity you've always wanted ... jacuzzi. trash compactors. auto gar. drs , micro·wave and a New En gland environment that will dazzle yo_u. Furnished models open daily except New Year's day from 10:30 til dusk. -From $137.950. Fairview Rd at A \'Ocado. Costa Mesa. Broker Co-operation " G.P.V Ofc. CdM Ofc 541-2239 675-2311 SEE YOUR ADIN PRINT IN 24 HOURS Place your Dail y Pilot cla ssifi ed ad before 5:30 p.m. and it will run in the next da y's issue. The Daily Pilot is the only afternoon Orange County newspaper to .off er you this 24·hour se rvice. Stop by our offi ce or ca ll 642 -56 78 and a friendl y ad·visor will help you place your ad . You can charge your ad or use BankAmericard or Master Charge. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 Dalebout Bay &Beach Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COME WITH US ... TO IAYCREST. Custom buil t four bedroom hom e Kitchen and f amtly room recent I) upgraded with beam ceilings and skyligh~. Family room has parquet floors. wood panehng and wet bar with refrigerator. S360.000 FEE 1617 WESTCUFF DR., M.I. 631-7300 --...-:... ------------------------ 1 n..u..«.ax.•.A.ax.•x .. ax.-'c.a.x..&-~ Tiie fastest draw in the ISELL tdle items with a West. a Datl)' Pilot D11ly Pilot Classified Classified Ad 642·5678. Ad. STAR GA'ZEK•'• ~;.;;;.....;"'"'-r--B· C.t~Y ~ POLL•io:--..-----t k r-o..i, ,.,, .. 4, Goo• J:. V .tue,d1"f '• '"• S'•" To °'""'°P 4'1'\f'\'4Qt for T~..,,,d4, --· "'"""""" "9 10 ,.,_., of-.• l odooc !>"" •'9" -1 ... , ),.Qf#' I• • •tt+wdet ,._ ... ,.~..,. ''°""'(' •O' ,, . ...,.. ,,_ .. u~ ...... .a .... •Go )Ho lt&•1 .... "'°'" .. _, ....... ...... 4JO.•·• ··-.... " ... , .. ., .... .. ........ ., . ..,.,. .. " .... tJt•'' ... .. ~,.,.. ., .... 1{,t't ·.,t •if·~· t-> .. , • t)f""9"t h'o "SS.. .. \ ltC...• " ..._ "''°"'....,.c ,. ..... '°'""" """"~~ ~·­~'·°""""" u .... ~~r.o-• ,.._ ,., ..... \7•h ~­~~"""""' ICC- S&IC & RNlt I c;...., ....... IJ ,.,,. ...... ~''°""""' •Ot ,,_,.,.,... .. ·-•w.t ... ~ eor~.-. tt}I ( ~un1I CONFINEMENT C P E I 0 E T H C A C ~ E T L C L V L S P E S N H C C R A 0 R A I Q 0 I E I I H R H H H I H R I L T 0 U N E H H A E T H W I K L R T 0 H A A A S W C B J A N I P C T E N C E C R B U L A I U B N E Y U 0 S E K H P A U 0 0 R C K P I T H T W T T U H Y N A H S C 0 N I R N C D I Z E P 0 X T T l L E T 0 S H P H T N V D R S A I C I 0 R Q S 0 N E A E Y U I L I W H A A R A E I U T D U 0 C I 0 T R D E L J T T X R H I A H Y R H C P P 8 0 A Z I I I P Y Y T R M D Y A RM A 0 B O(C 0 II f I H E M EH TIO K 1 1 C A H B N I K C Z A J H A E R A H L B 0 A P I E 0 K I A I H C A R C E R ; ....... ~. yp, doMI Of ...... Find ..ti Ind boa It In. ~ ..... tilty l~t I~ lmp~t OunntiM lOll'OmlW V•lbla " Prilon ~ Jell " CllebOGll ~ Lockup Hi!llOUll '=~~~, s~~4llA-~£~s· :::: -----1-4 ~ Ci..T I POU.AN •·~ ""'-"• ol .... '°"' icrolftbled -ch t... • ..,,.,.,.,_tl"'l)lo -d• I ,~ I Et l 111 I I s H p 0 c I '1 _ I I I I' _ 1 I Z E R U A I ' Man1 people 11111 10 then ~ I I I I ~. ol1n11. I llavt a etazy M IQhl)Or • • • • • • WflO 111\a to 1111 p111111 ll'IOl'I walta lor en .-.. I TIRWllY I .. , ... ,-r-1...._1-....1-t • ~~ :-~~.:, ~ .__.__ ............................. ~ .,.. ............... Na l ~ i ~·~st;i~~t'm ~ I' r I' I' r r I ·~~sr!.=tumu I I I I I I I ~ICIAMUnA. .. 1110 M11 11• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 31 , 1981 s. s oa success u ara. e sa e. Garage sales, yard sales. rummage sales, street sales ... no matter what you call them, the idea is the same -TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER NEED INTO CASH. When you get tired of fighting your way into a crowded attic or garage, or when you need a little extra cash, have a garage sale! So get into the act, clean out those unwanted items, and make money doing it! It's fun, it's profitable, and following these 10 steps will make it simple. Decide on dates. Look at a calendar and set the dates and times of your II sale. Weekends are usually good, but many successful sales have been held in the evening, just after work. Check the weather forecast in the paper, and watch for any other large event that may attract potential buyers away, such as fairs or community events. Have your sale run at least two days -some people may not be able to come on any single day. What to sell. Everything! That is, everything you haven't used in the II last year. If an item has antique value, or is brand-new, or has unusual value, be sure to ask a healthy price for it. Get a pad of paper and search your whole house. Look everywhere, and list everything. fwoniture. This is your main attraction and your best source of income. Be sure to place furniture where it can be seen from the street. Price · furniture low enough to beat auctions and secondhand sales (check the classifieds for compartsons), but high enough so you can come down a little when someone shows interest. Rockinq chairs, chest of drawers, tables and chairs are all very successful at garage sales, so feature them in your ad. AntiqHs. Smaller antiques should be grouped, and kept close at hand where you can watch and talk about them. Nostalgia items are very popular - display them well. ClothinCJ. Make sure clothing is clean , and mark the price way down. Put as many things as possible on hangers. Separate kid's things by age. Display adult clothing by sex and age group. Low prices are a nmt on clothes except for unusual items, which should be tagged with an explanation (like, "han~embroidered flowers, dress worn by Mae West)." Applianc~s. These wi II sell for a fair price only if they work. No one will take your word for it. Have an extension cord so they can be tested, or better yet, have radios playing, old TV sets turned ori etc. Make sure buyers understand they are sold "as is". Plants. These usually go fast, but keep them out of direct sunlight. A good idea is to name your plants before the sale (Spider Lady, Cousin Jasper, Maggie), and write a line or two on the name card about how to care for them. Write your ad. ' I ·Here is a suggested ad: ''Garage Sale -desks, II Bentwood rocking chair, toys, infants' clothing, 1922 Victrola in original cabinet, many gadgets, lots of unusual items, rock collection, plants. Refreshments, 8 a.m . to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. 1234 South Anystreet, Yourtown. Just west of Main and 2nd." Use this sample ad as a guide. Be sure to list unusual items. Be as specific as possible. Give directions If . needed. Don't use abbreviations -many people won't bother to decipher them. CAUTION: Don't advertise anything you don't really have. Every item in the ad must be on hand at the start of the sale. Where to advertise. Place your ad where it will be seen by people who live in the area -most people shop close to home. The II Daily Pilot is read by 88,000 adults in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Irvine, Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley-guaranteeing you wide exposure. And with the Pilot, you're not paying for waste circulation in Los Angeles or Anaheim. Plan to run your ad 3 times or more, and start it a few days before the sale so bargain hunters can have plenty of notice. Make a sign. To help make your sale successful, make a few signs II from cardboard and letter with a magic marker. A good ·sign size is 14" x 22". Placing your sign. The morning of the sale, but not before, place your • signs. Be sure and add your address and any directional arrows. This should be done about a half hour before the sale starts. Place your sign where it can oe seen from both sides of the street by passing cars and pedestrians. CAUTION : Some towns have laws that restrict the placement and duration of garage sale signs. Please check with your town's planning department or clerk. . Marking prices. Mark prices where they can be seen clearly. Office II supply stores have varoius sizes and colors of stickers that work well, or you can use masking tape. However you mark them, make prices low. Garage sales are ·for bargain hunters. Remember, whatever you can't sell you'll have to drag back in the house and store again for another year. Serving refreshments. This doesn't have to cost much, and creates a friendly II atmosphere. It also encourages people to stay longer and perhaps buy more. You could even charge for expensive items like donuts, or the kids could go in business for the day, with a lemonade stand. Display. Make sure everything can be seen . Have card tables or II boards used as shelves between two chairs. Don't cause people to bend over unless you can't help it. Use one table as a desk where you can see everything and take money. Use only one cash box (tin cans or boxe~ work fine) and make sure someone is appointed "cashier" at all times. Arrange beforehand for a friend who can help answer questions. relief for lunch, etc. Check your neighbors and friends. llSee if any want to join your sale. This will give you someone to share expenses with and increase interest 6 4 2 5 6 7 8. In your sale. If others join you, be sure to include this in • your ad (example: "three-family sale," "neighborhood Daily Pilat_.._ ___ __..sa1e·_·~ Gro-up sa-les a-re a lo .... t mor-e tun,-too ... 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA. Open 8-5:30 Monday thru Friday, Saturday 8-noon._ GOOD LUCK WITH YOUR GARAGE SAL.El MAY IT BE SUCCESSFUL AND FUNI 2 s • II -( • 5 ' c I I c I t j • • • • =t . Oflngt Cout DAIL y PILOT/Thurtday. Otcemblr 31 ' 1981 __________ .... __________ ..,.. ____ ..;... __ ... ____________________ ...., __________ ,__ ________ ...,. ________ ....,.,__ __ ~----...------------~ a ............ ,_Wt • ......... ....... .... · OlllrM•.. ...... ...... da••~ ...._.,.,_ .. ~,~ Af .._ ......... ~ Afat 1•...n ftfeam•.._ . ~., ..... ~ ............ ..; ••••••••••••••• , ••• !~ ........................................ i •••• , ....................... ....................... ...................... • ......................................... ._... ................. ~ l1•tl 1111, tw11 c.i..-. 1124 '-Im.._. 1041 C1m• Wt/ Ps::A•Ytllr UJ4 Msartllecti J2' c.MW... 1724 C..MIM JIJ C .. MIM -•4 ••••••••••••••1•• ..... ,. •••••••••••••••••• .. •• _................... •1!.••n•••••u••••••••• er..tl ti -·•• .. •••••••••••• •••• r................. . ............................................ i'Sid:'•-;9•;.•••;;•••• LlltAIUHOMU I PresU1e pool f amlly home. Maln channel view from beautUul tradition • bdrm, s bath. $1,495,000. Wade la1oon view from spectacular architectural dtslgn 6 bdrm, S bath, playroom, darl room & d en . Sl,350,000. WO 11&1 HOMIS Featured on Homes Tours lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm, 3 bath home , newly redecorated. $475,000. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios . Beam ceilings. Xlnt value at $420,000. C.A.INAllOM COYI Spectacular harbor view from 4 bdrm. 4 bath bayfront. 2 boat s lips. $2,050,000. WIST IAY A YI. Remodeled, like new 3 bdrm, 3 bath bayfront. Slips for 2 lge boats. s1.~.ooo. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR \-l I"' r r!• lJr •' "'• ~~ f),1) ()101 M6 000 ,.I Price ocEANnoNT Modular ... ~~~~;; .............. 5 llr.1\t •· apilt-levtl, J a Bdr, 'family room. 2 Newly decor. I Br. dpla, ~lcU 2 Br, l Ba."": c.,.peu Lndry: Pa~: ~CM 1h1" t Br Type Homo, 24 hr. 2 lou In Pil.letrffl l1wn. CU'..,.,,, Ndtc, pool Bl, blt·lnl. 1an1e. va· 1tp. bYJ"· Quht ..!'; ll,\ Ba.~ .!'!un Adlta. No Peta ~so lloall Oft R 1 lot w /rau acic:urity. !,\ ml pvt bch ROie HlU. Yem Part, riv I•. Ho p el 1 cut.• ~d ult over SS ~ ac. -·.-m.JllOO + fiahlq pier Cedar Wh ittler ulued at /mo.•tm. JACO'is llALn No 541. oat mJNNlNC larae t • 2 2 81 Ba M v de ~ct:'ep~ri· ~rut!dawrdoodtd '44Si~~S.S,~~Hll for I' M __ .... J24t ~ M4 IS ti M rt.i. .. 3~40 ~21181ow· OlltarhdcSnt Apt ·~r 1 No. chii:re:r or . . • ....................... rJlllW'I""-• ' ., • .."""" . .... -4 rate, adlta only No C rdll Lui. 2 Br. Z~ Ba. Pool, ........ : ........... , .. TIU! VlCTORIAN . New· .' . __ , .. 3Br~81 lartt_J~rdA 800 4tUll8 ~111rti.f 1600 apa. ltnnla. aecurltf Newport Beach . VIII• H.L tFIMIST ly dtcor 2 Br w/11r .. t c::"e.'arden apt 2 .-..;;o.;.;,;""'""'...-'MI ·Ms ••rt•.ai 106' ....................... p&e.Wa11l tobtach.art5 Balboa lBrlba.UllSOsq Spaniab£tt1teLivio1! new crpta,drrape:t.blt· E . Id l•da11e.qwt1 OCEAN VlEW 2 Br. 2 81 ....................... , .._ "•rtJ J ••· fl. top nr Temflr vu Beaullful part· like sur lnl. patio Adult• Call uta 5'&J_0:,1t•. no ~ ~ard. aec 1ate. .amuusna..1a..1 ................ •••••••llllbtoC)(UD Eleaantz privacy. llOO mo+ aM roundln11. Terraced bdw~l·SPM.U&·4120 · · 1111111\. Owne.r l.Q0.9440, ei..~~ 8 n..-ibo IMCOMI Br. Family Rm ' Den. • P.P. t72 11l1 Iv ma pool, Sunlen I•• bbq, "1 "C" Virtoria 70 WTSIDI ·-· ._....,.. 4 r 'W/ out 950MO Pluabcrpta 2..... aprarkllna fountains l bdrm pool ldry bal room 6 OCEAN VU, PIOPllTY ea Cedar 6 alau iuo-* • • Spar I ou s room 1 WISllAUVllJ.Ael cpu d;,. Stove · rn& -IH••IAl-,•,•A•s•T•Sl•Dl-•l catm POOL, SPA' SPICIAUST dtclt dbl car'pr v ~V-'• Separate d1111n1 area lmmed. occupancy. avlii wtr ·111 pd ·l37s Guebo.Beautlfulhomt iarait fully rrta int 173tNewportHllllW Walk lo c losets , Adult only complex 1~£·00· · 6PUX with many nlce up Se*'l rrom S.lt unlta. yard.Multi oopeta In Newport Buch bomellke kitchen ' Pool,1pa.l1undryroom. MS-2'10I OM. y IV!'. DOWN sradtt. Only $429.000. TenDI available t.o allit quire It sir 11th, St. You are the wmner of cabioett. Walk to Hunt· patloa or decks No pets Owner will finance to Patrick Tenore, •at YoWneedl. ~ rour free llcketa ($18.00> lngtcnCenter. Garages aull. a.-w c.-. qualified buyer. Well • • valuetothe l Bdrm rum.148S Bach l360 Pool and 1p1 In old located, 1ood lootin1 8 • '8R. Ba•~. Pool, tennl• s,.,t.. ¥ ..._ 1 Br l405-54lS Coruia del Mar l bdrm. uruu + 4 car gara•e + 'Play1round. Kid• Ok. ~IV~-AduJtl, no pell. 2 Br. S475·S485 Ckean view. Alao 2 and 3 • No pet a. 117 S mo. --• UUUUet Free! TSL Mgmt. 64S·8122 .._._ Mu""l ll« ample parting. Below 11 • 5"'l·Z545641-lll05 ANAHEIM """"' .,,.,._, " linw11roea. ~. N '-b 3bd b CONVENTION '•QUlN'TAHERMOSA NEWBREEDAPTS ~ide3Br 28a.frplc . CtlT.., OCEANfltOMT r udC • rm. 2 a, CENTER Jan 2-lO ....n BACH. lBR wt LOFT likerww ts2S '44-72 Ir 114 641 0'763 ~. Gardentr incl. No To claim tickets, ull 16211 Partside Ln, l bllt rrom l350 Frplc. rec PROPERTY HOUSE IYOWMEI 292SC:olle1eAve peta.IGIUI. 642.5871, ul 212. W.olBuch,3blksS of room,pool,jacUJzt,IH Mi3850 842.1010 .... Lw61HeffMl1 lbW Kukui Dr. Huntinaton Beach You are tbe winner or four rree Uckets <Sll.OO> v all.le t.o I.be Sports.Yee..._ cmdlYSllow ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Jan. 2·10 To claim tickets, call 642 ·S678 , ext 272. New cuat. bit 2 sty, Costa Mesa. CA, Ti""'"'· t .. 6 1 1 d Edlnaer •water paid. Adulu. no --'-""----'-~..;..;;.;.. French Normandy 3 BR • * * ..... """' mua ""'c a mt 147-5441 pe.ta. 393 Hamilton, CM Easuade 2 Br l Ba Near •den home. Can be ...._.,..K.C... by Januaryl,lN2 86-4411. schools . no pt-ts Ut -ooo OWC 1111 ----------1 19381 Brook.burst at. Sp. * * * Wlf'Ji1.ETREE APTS S42S/mo 6316155 511 ._., • .. -.. v•wy lBRrum ,gym.sauna. • 2 Br Condo nr S C · Seubott. 613·&578 ""~ "" 26 Harbor View Monaco 2 B I d Ta SIMthr HunUneton Beach 3 br, 2 bi, gardener. new jacurn, volley ba~I. Plau. S.A Pool, Spa, r enc 1 &arage DOVBSHOllS Ne•r new 4·plex. 2 You are the winner or c t 025.644-4728 ~~ball ' tennis ~ ~ Adults. no ~~L9:;1~sfi~mo EXIC. HOMI bdrm. 2 bath each unit four frff tickets <118 001 BLUFFS 3 bdrm. 3 ba, 37 ... su 14600,, .4911 Med. style courtyard. with fireplace, enclosed value to the fam rm Pvt spa. Sl,OOO a.,.. •.ca. -LA!"9f 2 ... Pool. jacuui. Overlooks palJO, earage. 9~% 1.st. Sporf1. VecaKoli iro644.2300 eo••••••••••••oo••••oo• 2 Br ga rd&Jl pt Pvt Fireplace. aar. xlnt bay. Galaay Dr. Formal PoJ cash r&ow Now cmdlV SMw OCEAN VIEW paUo. gar, l.undry. No Atta. Brand new cpl. din. rm, 2frplcs •s.ooo llS9.SOO. Bill Grundy. ANAHEIM Newport adult townhouse Fireplace, garage, ut1I pets I sml child ok $4.SO, drpl. p1111l. No pets SS2S fee. Rltr 67~161. CONVENTION w/ pvt spa, 2 BR + den , pd, yard 494·6176 __ S46-991SO rm. 962-8149 • __ 6'2_·2.S_l0~/~&46-48_48 __ Owner will carry 12%, s CEN'TERJan.210 ma:AJ0~=~ t:~01n~~r ... ..,,tie.ct. 376' Bachelor S32S/mo . 2864 IMSTAMTIH! years on 6 new homes To claim tickets. call 64G-032'7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l..asalle CM MSO/mo. 2 Br 1 Ba Apt MEWPOITHllGHTS with SU .000 dwn 642·5678, ext 272 EANFRONT 2 &4Br 957·2740 art6 lsmall childOK.Small 3 Bdrm home, fireplace ..... 67 .... ~--5500'""'-------1 nckets must be claimed 2 Br 2 ba condo Im AvaJI. Wlnt.er Weekly I PALM MESA APTS yard. carpets, drapes double 1arage, choice by January 8. 1982 maculate. Sl200 /mo. Mon 67J.7873 l!i61 Mesa Or Th.is one won't l11t. \I :--I I· 1 \ ~YLOR CO IU :\I rot\S ·,11111 1!1·11 ~ """"'muat bo <lafo"d by January 8, 1982 * *. . Sl0,000 DOWN. 11900 mo. ocean vu. 3 BR 2\<'a ba cmdo. 213·582·4164 locaticn. Near CUrt and .... i----*-*-* lSt~t~S~;;unly re· Want something xlra l Br W\fum S360 1 Br TSLMgmt. &tZ-1603 Broad.Sl87,SOO. .. ..................... 3BR3Ba.rptc,den,sun qua special 1n a 2 Br fWTIS400.2 Br unrurn Br Well decorated. lof McC...., lttr. ..._..,.,..llttd deck, dbl gar. ltltns, NEWPORT HEIGHTS. 3 Townhouse. completely $42S Adults only Call pool, oU street parking 541-7729 ••••••••••••••••••••••• D/W. Kids & pets OK. BR 1 Ba, fplc, lge yard, rum? ·Mo 760-9117 M . S46-9860. 2 males rrom beach !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Ms aport leedl 316' . 96G-S618 _ $118S. 646-1220 -IALJOA IAT CLUI 2 Br Townhouse No pets $475/mo. 714/642-3957. •••••••••0 •••u••.••••• 4 bdrm townhouse 1"1 Broadmore Seavlew 2 Mature adults only --------1uoo ISLE chummg 4 ba 1 S'"""'·. Br. 3 Ba. vi'ew Luxury Exec Apt *'""-/mo. 1 .. w 18th. St 1 br, w/carport , du N"l'IW-ITCllST . . enc patio, secunty. _, ., Oc $950 __, .,., h h I d ,...,,"" bdrm._2'-'bath,lresun-80010979-6519 $1700tmo 4Br2...,Ba .I ean view. trno 646-900'1 was er. aun r y , Ckean view 3 bdrm con· l\Y patio. completely up· story Sl.00/mo Guard 1)42..lSJZ ----$360 I mo +sec u r i I y OM ... CAMYOM 60LF COUISI llMAMT "VHSAIWS .. -IXCLUSIYI Spectacular Deane H o m es "Versailles" located on larger lot or all Deane Homes. Beautiful golf cou r se view ! Profess ionally landscaped yard w/mature trees in a private park·like setting including a lovely large pool and nuge spa + an attractive gazebo. Gated front courtyard entry with fountain . Marble floor in fo ye r with glittering chandelier. 4 Bdrms. den. formal dining room & 4•h baths. $950,000 including the land. WISLEY M. TA YlOI CO., HAL TOltS 2111S. ..... H•load .. ~w•'POl,,,.IT" CIM'Tll. M.1. 644-4' I 0 A HOMI for YOU 111'12 JBR Zba, low dn. VA Sl.29,900 67S.1771 do on private court graded. 11700 mo. Year· Nice 3 BR, 2 BA. corner gate. pool & tennis Im· * * " ..;;.548-~5393=------0wner will furnish new ly. Bill Grundy, 67S-6161 lot, renced yard, 2 car media le ava1lab1lily l.J. KilJALA Spacious 2 Br 2"2 Ba carpet 119S.OOO. Flnanc·, gar, nr shpp center & 644-5403 28Sl Serang Pl Towohome. Eastside ino a ail able x.lnt schools. ~/mo. I Cost M p · d bk -... v . , ...... .,,...,..Wd 3 Br 2 Ba Beautiful a esa auo. rarage, W/ . , ....................... sl ltlast, refs. 848 9397 c 0 n d . n ea r b a Y. You are the wanner or 141, poo . spa Upgraded 1 ... 1.t.d 3206 ~-Sl49S/mo Avail now four free tickets tS18 00) int. M11$tSee $7SO/mo. ....................... tt.taw 3242 79Hm valuetothe TSL MgmL 642-6103 Bllboa Island Waterfront ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lovely Westcllrr 3 Br 2 Ba Sports. Vocatloll O-,.. 3126 3 Br. 2 Ba. Yearly ren· SHAit IM PIOFfT home + sml ofhce. Btfl cad IV Sllow ••••••••••••••••••••••• tal.1975. Mo. 770·0347 Lease luxury 2 Br 2 Ba yard $107S 646 6789 or YEA .. ·AOUND FUN: ANAHE IM 2 BR, 2 BA. dishwasher. ,..._,......_ 3207 Condo across from 631-2l77 Soc1a1Ac11vr11esO• CCOENTNVERENJTan'0.2N.10 no pets. nu carpets. --------beach SL500 /mo 5or~ •ec1C>1 •F1eeSunoay avail Jan call Roger --------••••••••••••••••••••••• · ' SEAVIEW, 4 br. 2'' ba. B1unct• • BBO s • To claim tickets, call WE ......... LLY Sew twnhome 2 BR. 2 ba rebale 840-2268. + r nn best ocean view P111tes •Plus mo•e 642 '678 l 27 2 _85_7--·~"-------- --2 car. lg pat.ao. decks nm )244 pool /le0omstsec Sl.800. GREAT RECREATION Tick·~ miist ~claimed SlOO FREE RENT ......_. •oc• I 040 tha ·r AfUID 1 d llSO. orl650. 499-4820 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (213) 430-3629 reiwi . F•eell!SS()(l> by January 8. l9S2 2 Br I Ba. enclsd garage ;:;,;oo•i,;~··thi;•:·a;;• lhl! 1rr:~~.~~8~1~~aal earo.dllMw 3222 1\tmhome, new 3 br. 3 ba. 3 Br 2 Ba. or 2 Br 2 Ba 1pro & p10 shop» 2 * * * ~a~ ~eof.a~~~· best area. shake rf. SlOOO r~raphic ~latlve lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• pello. gar Park, pool. Den Commly pool $795 HtaUl'I Ouos •Sauna ...,, 'n<4 or ~9230. ~rt Harbor •· 0 .C Elegant 1 BR home with JIC.187S/mo. &13·90S7 PROPERTY HOUSE • Hydromauage • Pocific .....,......,. 'UV" ~r mkt Nds a litlle ,~ .. ...., ca 1 b ' Sw1mm1ng • Goll N i-.int . but what a buy. choice bay front proper spectacu ar •Y ocean New condo, 2 BR. 2 BA. 642·38SO 642-1010 01 .. 1ng Range Ttn"OCt Aots 2· Br Apt. ear ocean, Try Sl2.SOO dn Bllr lY will skyrocket Call va ew -2n~ .BR over Patio. Nr Park & Pool. 3 Br. 2 Ba or 2 Br 2 Ba BEAVTIRJl APTS 66S PARK ORI~ E CM view. clean, balcony. 848-0?UI John Cam.pbell ror appl yg;r~-ts!~~t~~~2623 Noa s 6].S·9646eve_s_ Den Steps lo beach. Srngles 1 & 2 Bed Bachelor and one bdrm garage Avail. now to see thlS brand new d . evs 675_1250 lfKTALS rrplc. f195/mo. room~• Furn1sneo aplS. All adults and no -'-66 __ 1_.<rzs2~-· -----~!!!!!!~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!! '%1JlirSaE~i~TBUY listing ol fabulous bay • -----IBr,lba S650 PROPERTY HOUSE &Untum1sl'led•AOull pets Pool, BBQ and OCEAHVllW 4 Bdrm. best area, ran-ocunvucstmhome and CCMltoMtso 3224 2Br.lba $700 642-3850 642-1010 ~~;:i1•0NP~:~~s.,; laund!yroom From Dana Point most RESIOENTlAl REAL ESTATE SERVICES IAUOA IA TFllOMT Pier , slip, fee la nd. Newly constructed 3 BR . 21h baths. 2 Fireplaces. This fin e property is blocks away Crom old Ba lboa. :Security system, sprinklers. lg. deck and glorious views make this a wonderful home . $995.000. r IN NEWPORT CENTER 'I 644-9060 . tutic home. Just 115,000 YoU be lhe Judge of this ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br, I'• ba S650 E:x.qias1te 2 Br p · le 9 10 b AUSIDE COMFORT S<'eruc bluff, like ne~" down. Asking Sl2S,900 t97S.OOO pnce which in· 4 Bdr executive home 3Br.2b8 sooorurn huge yard. Ne~~~ri I L.arge lBr upstairs Wllh Be lhe first occupant! Bkr848-0709 eludes a large parcel of w/pool a. sp~ .. Family LeRa1sorRlly 83J.8600 Hei ts 64S·909S Oakwood cathedral ceilings . Only 4 units, 2 Br land. rm. formal dining. 2"1 ------. -Getdef't Apartment• ......... d b I r I wtrrplc. & 2 Br Widen. '""-1044 IOGllSIEALn Ba Excellent condition Orangelree Con do 2 C111J1-New..-BMchN. , .......... e arony. rp c. Hl.l""'rorthebestview! ....................... 675-23 I ll2llO incl gardener a. Bdrms . on stream .,.,,. ..... d 3425 eeo";;';.~e i.1181"' dshwshr & carport $475 .. , * *ft8lfJIC I pool service. 7Sl·3L91 or S.'>75/rno Adults only ••••••••••••••••••••••• (71') 645.1104 rm. t6ZS to 161S. Adults. no UIUY ~Agt.Avail Dec Rec. fac1l SSI 4196, TOWNHOUSE end unjt. Spacaousbach withpallo ~~~~1~U·02l2 . '1LLA IALIOA 30. &51·1311 hke new 2BR 2BA. din· NewPQft BMch s. s:ll5 rm Adulu. no pets. _.( l(DIM'JION 1100 16111 Sa •Do••••' 1s1"' 2550 Harla. S49·2447. .......,._-~a.. 3140 r""' "" CS.orl.eeM) Clo&etoSCPlaza.Green· Woodbridge Eslale 1ng, lg patio, balcony. (714)642·S113 ·-...,.--~ Single family detached 3 Young people · Pool your brook home. 3 BR. 2 BA , Home 4BR. 21,BA. ram AIC. rrpl, selr·clean I br. i., ba w/shwr, utils ••••••u•••••••••••••oo Bdrm home in fabulous resources Ideal l wo bv, din. ram rm . enc I rm. din rm. frplc, patios. oven, drapes. Ser gale. I _ pd, SJ60. adult only. no ~ 3 bdrm. 2 balh. Woodbridge. Great bedroom villa ror your yard.2cargar .. 18SO/mo 1 la~e! Pool a. Tennis I J>O?I. clubhse, sauna,. llGCAMYOM pets S99 Hamilton. ll C. frplc. patio. garage terms available. Take first home. Fresh as a . 1 SlSOOdep 992 ~rnation , Pnvaleges. SIOOO Mo Ql.iet. nr Fwys '670 No Delighllul 2 bdrm. 2 ba CM 64S-1l84 Xlnt! 67S.91J2. advantage. daisy Opens t o 641Mil40 __ ~L121.~·6188 __ 1 pet.s77S.2580,751-0'196 condo Partially rurn 2 br. Iba, frplc . rerng. tunushed &Unfum 1·2·3 \\bod bridge.. Oagstone patio 1148,000 13 BR. 1 BA. ram room . Beaut. Turtlerock 4 BR 38r 2'nba Nwpt Terrace Secunty gate l8SO + sec MIO incl utals. no pets Bd rm. Apt s Gym. assumable at t 2'k din. room den rp 2 car Jba. 3 car gar. 2100 sq fl <Ando. Highly upgraded rm to mo 759.1594 443 Hamilton #A. C M. Jacuu1. Sauna, pool. Rtilltj 1...e&se _opt1on is availa· gar.16151~ .. ist '+sec. Gardener andasscx· pd w,tsmall patio. slove.,48r 2&stepslobeach 645-7184 tennis , volley ball. SSl ·JOOO ble.PricedalS249,SOO 'avail Jan 1st Debbie Need quality renter dishwasher. washer & llSO 2&-1•,& 610JoannSt basketball. game room . ctttBarnnn Pl<•).lniM t " R I ~ wfgood rers. Rate & dryer Co~munlly pool. PRoPERTY HOUSE No children Pet OK Hunt. Bch. 846-0619 Cote ea ty c l Property 2 Br I Ba lenm ne ot 752·5740 sauna & Jac No pels. ' 642.3850 642-1010 631-2626 3 Br condo lD Hlng Coot'l Sbdnn,forsalebyowner & Investment house in high tram~ ~leoc.11 3241 1650trm No lease Avaal l --Adlls Quiel lg I Br Pvt patio w/storage 1\utlerock Xlnl rm, will 640-S777 area ot Westside Costa ....................... Jan l 631·1317 ror appt ~ lliwlllh Stovetrer S33S. 31 1 W sOhKed. n"o cpealrpos !!2S/Kmidos cany paper. Ready to Mesa. Terrific for Anti· OCEANFRONT Modular tosee I ._._ .... d Wilson631·2177 *"' mo ve· job trans r er. 752.2un. 8-S M tF Eves: 17141851.0499 NO que Shop, Accounting Type Homes . 24 yr ~ CCMldoa ............... ••••••••• t Br Unique 2 s tory AGENTS HAllOl llDfWE ar.ce. Law Office. etc Stt"Urily 12 m1 pvt bch Pool and spa 10 old ..... ..._.. 3106 separate house. well de· · Lowest price! 2 BR Con Xlnt parkin,. Will dis + fishing pier Cedar c.orona del Mar. 1 bdrm, ....................... coraled. sun deck. pool PllCs1'f2 L.~r·.. ia~·~~64~:.Ssa1e ~:~:'."°: i:'cig tft s~;: ~ct:~e P~~· :~~~~ ~~~.~~':fl ands ~~~a3 ~~1~n:a ~=~~I~ ~~~~ree: P!~~~~g r~~i~ Spacious 4BR 2,,BA . eluding lhe y ard gate. adlts only No T wt rent.a1.-rs1mo 770-0347 beach S3 7S l mo 1'0 ADULT j 'f6. LIVING • I & 1811 P1t<0 AOIS • 01lllU Sllf•> & 880\ • Poo1 t. Rtt Rov ... ~in.:.dr;!'i11K.~.ei~~ ram rm, pool 2242 ~~~~o 548 5442 . dogs. 1-'rom sm mo o.;...:.:•d 3SJS ....,., .. _.. ll071 7141642-l957. this low price you get a Heather NB . S262.000 499-31116 --•••••••••••••••••••••••I••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ....,B.llU * * * C.-.. W. IOJJ premium location on a w/10% Down ' Own /agt COND0·3Br. 212Ba , lg Coiy House IEOMIOF Bay Vu. 2 BR. 1 BA. gar ~-u *II II..... ••-••••••• .. •••••••••• major greenbelt. 4 ~ ma s le r bdrm . Close to Beach THE LUCKY FfW no pets, adults. '600/mo i. APAltTMEMTS • G••Oftl I il\CllC.P•"Cl • JoO 10 Boe• A s~ODI Ste t G11n =Heron I llVllJE-1. bdrms. 2'rl ba .. ex-wlbalcony, dbl garage, (21.'l)S40-39S3 R . C t M . I wlt9'79-6371/hm673..s276 I Beautiful landscaped "'" 'al tensive upgrades. low wtopier. frplc. centra 2BR Hse Walk lo Bch ent in os a esa s p I & S H1.111tin(ton Beach FfXEI ma int landscaping. A HAPPY vac. S7SOmo. 2182 Maple S y d G NEWEST gated 20 OCEAMFIOMT 'I garden apts oo . pa SEA ENVIRONM ENT You IJ"t the winner of Below markM • owe Short walk to pool. pule &:PIOSPBOUS uos. Ron 919-5370 or K:':ts t Pets o: r ;fs~ Townhome VILLAGE Yearly lease unrum 2 ~~red r ar k Ing rvouraluefreet.otbtlecllets <111.00) lit TD at 10%, S y~! 4 and play~round. • MEW YEAI 11194-20!6 497·311981494·2576 COMMUNlTY. 2 & 3 Br. ~· 2 Ba , bltns. New l BR . nope s. so s ~f. I~ t11\M ll TO~ ... B '*'' 4,00 Bdrm /pool r I d • FROM BR 2B p K'd -:-:=::1 2\'J Ba lfi00.1800sq rt.or pallll ·carpel . drapes. ~Yee..... w . tt an . BRUC:E6VICKIE 3 ' A, am rm. 1 5 a.,.....,.. 3252 pure luxury Garages, llSO rm Call Linda or 2BR.l'-'•BA SSOO 911IV511ow Gf'g Alt.le, •at 759'1221 BLOMGREN ~;1:~sf~!!'!'s~. ....................... hydro· tubs 1n master Art. Agt 67S.7060 161 E.18th. 642·0856 Near Hun t in gt 1 on ANAHEIM 434 llGOMIA I GOOD PROPERTI ES 644-1836 Exec. 4br. 3ba. fam rm. 31 suite. rorma 1 dining Li I Br. yrly. w/guage, 131 E 18th, 646·6816 Harbour. 28R. SS2S. CONVENTION New elecant 4 Br Vic· NEWPORT BEACH · car gar. view. nr ocean. rooms, wood burning steps to beach $42.s , 846-4360 CENTERJao.2-10 tori1n partial YU , 643-0200 2Br.Newcarpet.freshly Sl<BS.974-3420. fireplaces , macro·wave 64S-S862 • ..., n1e111· Spac. 2 Br lba. kids ok. To claim Uckets, call awnr/coatractor rinan. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II!! painted, 11ra1e. yard & NIGUEL SHORES·3Br. ovens, ren.ced patios & I •vi!Sl patio/gar S40S 17401 842·5871. eat. 272 . ...:•;;...v.;:;;ail;;;.;.""'957;;..;..;;.,51i.;.OOO~. ___ patlo. SSOOSt/moOpe. 1984 "A" 2Ba, garage, heh & pool. I ya:ds. Pnvate elegant .r 2ba, across rrom ten· FAMILY APTS. Ket Ison. Nr Beach I ncbU mutt be clalmed ·-------·1 Anaheim . n daily S8SO mo 492·6700 or I liVUJ.& only. lS minutes NS crts SSOO/mo rum Sparkling clean large Sater. 962.JS37 byJanuaryl.lM2 llYMTIRIACE CAIS110ATS7 8-S. 661.~ , from Fuh1on Island. 7 avail.67S-Ol2A aptsfodamilles w/lor2 * * * 4 _u. Fii 't52! CAMMDa·lllVltft &Aper work space and 4 BR. pool, serv & grdnr minutes lo S.C. Plaza or ""''' WIO leocll 3111 children Nr parlt Heat T 2 BR. 2 BA. rplc, --lots ol parking in low ind. '95C> mo. 11450 sec . .....,... .. .ca. 3269 O.C.Airport. Just east of 1....................... pa.111. Nopels w . adults/no pets Sunny. light-n-brigbl maioten1nce rear. At· dep. 645-7088 ....................... Newpo.rt Blvd & so. of Nice 2 bdrm duplex, rear 2 BR 2 BA SS2S Ml6 Lst + stt. 646-6423 • 1IHM St00,000 SPYGLASS IYOWMll Ckean View '575.000 lbrl•"' ba. 4100aq ft soorHPORTMODEL OWNEll FINANCING IQGHLY UPGRADED 0 ff er aplrel J 111. 31 ZS Bodeta Bay Call oner TSM737 ArtblttcU cuatom ..... .t llyl ptl, I fplc 'a, I Ba, So. of llwy . .,.,... lJ~IUJI t1()Mfl ........ ~ YOllCMOICI 4 .... v.-.-.u I .............. t · .... Qdt .. I J ': I . ;, . . --? IDd new on tbe market If.cit I 041 tractive3 Bdrm. den. 2112 Nice clean 2 Br. 1 Ba. LUXUIYIAYFIOMT San Diego Frwy. Start-unit, small yo rd. 5475 I 398W. Wilson 631·5583 l Br. w/loCt. l'' Ba. frplc, with brick front, aide •••••••u•u••••••••••• bath home with many ., ed d 3 Br 2 Ba ~"th bo l u mi at SlOOO a month. Mo ...,., CN>I! pool, garage $47S. Laun and r ear patios . MOITHIMD custnm features. Plws. r enc yar •garage, . · ·'"' 1 5 P 631·5439. 2473 Orange .................. Sparkl.mg clean2Br. I~• dry racll. nr shopping twdwood parquet noor· Two bdrms + ocean rrore than S garages ::. ~Jr~::~J0J!~ :;:~:tie~.0S.,5C: M'l. Ave., Costa Mesa -de4 Mw 3122 Ba $490. ~enced, ut1ls 847-0956 in1 tbrouchout. Xlnt viewl. WeU maintained. Sl7S.OOO. "E" SS25 +securit y. Broku67S..sll2. ~-'-'--"'-"--.;;..;.-""'u.tw.-"""'--l-6-0-0 ···~·;,0•0CEAN.'M~;t ~~~~~~o:et~'."811 3_8r...; . ..;..2;..;;....,Ba_._N_e_w_p-a1-n-t. location · lesa than 100 M«ivated QWner ill re· 642-5200 S48-zr78 .....,....--carpet I d paces from Sl .000,000 ady to roove up !! Fan· , ••••••••••u••••••••••• charming in old Corona, 1960Wallace 8'2·490S • enc s garage homes. Reallatically tattlcbuyl! Mal. Verde 4 Br. 2 Ba. THl....,..S Olronldel Mar -Dix lge 2 Br. 2 Ba frplc, ocean SS25/mo . 848 lSll or priced at 1315.000 with 1 _ .... I.I trplc, lrg yard, nr sch ls. Spadoul 4 bdrm 3 bath 2Br Zba, r71c · no pe.ts. v 1 e w r r om de c k _Mi---'-953-"".----- combinatlon oC uauma· _,......491•17,1 Childr en welcome . fam.homt.New0palnt6 SISO inc all ulal .xllmo. Ca ll Anthony llf:8tiBAU ~INdl 3141 ble and owner ftnandog. f&.'50/m>. 988-2741. carpet. Move in ready l·9'2-&'il0 days 642·S7S7 · eves & APAITMEMTS -.................. . Oill now COMT94POIAIY 3 BR, 3 BA, pool ten ma, SUOO ptt m>oth. Ast. wkrida 63l-6830. Beautiful garden apls eao V~w. Deluxe 1 • t ' 6~7211 d. 1 twnhme Lori ~. 'lfl lwlh ,..tlt.d PECTACULAR OCEAN Patios/decks Pool a. Br. Apts. Newly derorat· • Pancnmlc ocean views "4.1e:·or67S.MSS_· ....................... Ii CITY LIGHTS VIEW Spa, heat paid Adults. ec;t. refrige. dishwasher, • ~ fnJm tbit 2 or 3 bdrm, OWNER'S PRIDE! This l!ltlbollllead Wattrfroot .... ..._.. 3706 From every room, large d11pos1l, heated pool, 2i,; beth home. Some of beautiful Mesa Woods flepnt view condo. 3 BR 3 Br. 2 n-. Year re"'· -··················· 1 Br. t63Slmo. Anlhonv ~Bi:u IUU elevator. subter. prkng. I.be amenities Include 3 family home bas POOL 21,; ba l yr old l'79S mo .. .. / ~oH _,, Call 81113 flreplacea. gourmet appeal I Formal dlnlng ~114 · · tal. "15. Mo. 77M.'M7. 1614.1 l'f'."!'Y days ca.II 642·S7S7. wknd s ZBR l~ BA IS05 Uf. 494· IUUI eam....e location Ina tu. z blotkl rrom •hop· pins. J bdrmt. ind 2 batlla lo each unit. rtreplaCH, uparate ...., ... porcbtl, bit. n. carpeta and drapes. ~7 ~old. Owoen "'" boucbt elae1wbere. att.OIO 12~"1 flnanc· lftll kltdMn, firepit and 1p1. room. family room, N. &.ff""1t. 1 bdrm gar 131-CJO Z250Vangnrd 540-9126 l BR. view. central heal. Arealbeauty.831$,000. fireplace. 4 bedrooms. ._...Co* Oc ":~S 1 apt, view, patio. parll· R. ZBA Condo. Stps to EOmo. WHnl WATll 2"11 baths. NI c' ly 2 bdrm. 1~ ba, fpc gar. ean · 0 I t v ew, Ing. From J an l S · kh. Ftpk. F.ncl Gar Qean 2 Br 1 Ba. laundry 494.9314 Uld dty Uabta v. lewa I andac a ped. V try tmomo. 54145&1 4bdnn, ram rm, 3 ca.r 7 14 . 613 . 5 S ti or Adult.a. *>Omo760-8290 rac No pets. l38S Mo Br unfurn Victona tram Wt 2 bdrm a.od private rear yard. Lou •(lean 1 bdrm duplex aar. '22GO/mo . Eves: 213-21'7-129 t..cee. hel 27l·B E. 16th Pl Beath. Frplc, dech. dtn borne. Deck oo 2 of brick work around lbe <rfSlpkiq. Quiet. SSSo: 79HI07. ...., .... J707 bcb A~aU~P~llk to 644~. ocean view. newly re· lt¥tll and yard for out· cool, blue POOL' NopN .... 3'74 Spac 3 BR 21-t ba, very •-••••• .............. 1.1th11t +d;p e1i'.01~· Weatalde Costa Mesa, ~. S1$0frno. Call door Uv1a1. Excellent t_lW0~~ must •et! 2 br2~a....1.coado.view, =~;of,:i.'~~ ~.2_!!1 2•81B.1f1rpbol1c, 28 R. lBA. Frplc . 2 dpla.up1tain,2Br.1B1. days•5*orm.D41. ! ltarter home. P'retbly "'° ••r-Ut 9li0. rat/Johll ~l440 , _ _, BA S ~nlral heat, teCrig ft U&\lftl 2 bdrm apt ==and carpeted. TARBELL, REALTORS .... 1fl0,Ml·mt Harbor VU ho 4 BR mo.MS-e6. =~.,J~~~'i11j:~j atove, encloled garage. ontht<kean in Boat Ca · ••W IAT OllarM ..... . 1 • 2BR '!'15a0uen5. st'5N•o 2 BA. ra.m. ::~· suoo'. • • '12. ISSO/Luse. One =.et :.:r~~~~ ~ ::r~~.'e!.":~ .. b~:i • 1..--1 of a home le thll -................ , up + • ec. 1 v a I I. J 1 n 1 g t b '7 ... 7t Schwe ickert 842-8235. no.a ,_, .. _ ;~private area . .._......_, Children or 0011. MM1.S7f190.lll2 MIN l7J4 Ens,64$-914411\ r.v$~k~ ~veil ~1!1~1 l7t4U7M4M tJIJIUNnt Tol&ll1 remodeled wft.ll ..,.. 1 ltO eGtll3 rt Ha•bta 3 br •••••-••••• .. ••••••••1,. ..................... _ llJ4 2BR rtdttorated O\aplea 714·7S2 5040, <1·51 or ~ ... ftmllJkt\dlee,MW --•••H••••n•• Vifolr,priv yard,&at,2br nD brdw'd fire' c•••11010 ---llftll W/lin&lt CH .,.lfSZ ' balllrooma and ocean ocr.AHnoNT Modular l bt. tns. Adlta ft1>k .0 drht b ui ~--1-···•••••••••••••••• &!!!It. poo. 551'*1 -· ---• vilwdlcu You'UfaUIJl Type Homes. 24 hr S.-1721 E••Ml-475Z a.•~ u .. ..J. ALLU'J'1UTIESPAIO NEWLYDEOOR. .., .... MOW! l bdrm, Octan View. 2 ' teeUrity ~ml pvt bcll 1 1UURWa1--· Com,art t>.fort you I Br. Pl pd. encl sar "'"-bib Beach IUO.JTt IA Ion wltb lbl• OH. + flllllfti pier. Cedar ,_,... UH •CAMTOM .... ,. c .. tom •••••• d1'ir ...... pool. Adulta 1Mtt I Ir. ~•l'IJOrt, pool Brn SL (11Pptrf l2Ut --C!OUap type redwood : ....................... 0 d t ruture1: Pool. IBQ. M2>50D. • la\llldry. Adlalll. no .. .,..,.. I • ••k, poo[,' 11ardtd I ~ 4 Ir ~ '7-Fl~. -·: :.:.:;,:. cov'rcl 1•n1•. nr-Hr 1 a. Apt =--~.:: :u.::lt lbrlitldio. off.itrett 1 4\llMldllla ate, id.Its oalf. No .. .,..., faria.:i,. YI • rm o... Home mso ro111de wltla pluah NtwtJ ~ 011 pd · prq, •·IA>tn1. lt11•• 1 •·••1t view. · •· .__.....,, Aduk h · wl pr., pool, dahwr. 2Br.2• M'ftflpt. 1lr. Ott.. t Mb to beaca-. ' ~'"...., ,aat.t I ..... pvt ya .... peUo. ...... ,,... .. 1 ~llllaMlt.No"'8. AMa.IGllJa ;;:: Adda."° pell .,.. I 1'11d ~·,.la ...... ..:r· Ou pd .. ,.,..,... .... ,.,.. a•.'I::. ~-.. ••""'8•~e 16Cf. M. -.. IJk, dMI. • ~=::~i-= -=-al~~= ,._ I ~Wb ._, Iii pd., llU. .. llw -~ • .. • ... -•·~ ., re111ti~-~.... DAILYPILOT f ... ;.:r.-.=1 ... ~ c1 ... med D • IH·llU; ... ~ MAR•OR --ml!~---·....... c.,..... c ...... ._ .... ,.. ... I' ...... . .. .., ,... n "• TMS..t FALL ::.·b··~······c·M••h···--···· ··n··N··r.··n··N·1·s···w·00°R••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ::."::..•:••••••••··~···· ··c··1..··:.••••••·P··1··t·1 ••••• ;::b•••••h•••••d•••••••,••• ...................... . -119,t.oor ome1,l • H K CAMAAHUMO Gardenma Wanttd Hau.l,c~aniap,cooc~te __ .. ,,our 1pec11lty .1111un . a n n ,,.. wu er, 1spou1, MTlllPIOPU SP£CIAl yr•141. al\Ytlmt RcmodttlnatOoon hun1 Cr• ill;cilil.....-.. Ce. Mowtna. fd&lna. rallln&. tt:tmval. Dump Truell. cie.n, quick, depend•· CUit. work L1c 1362478 to1ltu ' faucets. rt Pro wotk. all trtn Call l,167 !42·1C,&4e·Sl~ Ranctym121&0CdM lhatar Bld:"'cutom s wuplns . Free ch crv.14.2>7W ~.Wtdo•J\Yaiiejob! ~eiL.._lli11211 pajred f1T ,..placed 11 now!m437Mhn _ a.. !!l lnlant ta~ 1.1nder 1% mo ~llnt/txl 2$~ra ttllmates 645 0'72 or o •fUPJOBS 1--~211CW_!_ __ AU PaJnUna· l.nl 5'50 cat J!!.tytr ~831.eM4 • ,..... Q\lllicy, room addition&. v• I .._ ___ ..... --l'aAU.youp y myhomrln Cost1Mc11. Ct RENOVA ING (Jr'd.l.arr)'Wtndell. ~m:___ 6 SmaU Movln1Job1 ........ ts.10 Neat 6 l'Ompete. "+riJM•111• .. I" ••IJIPllT•* fora Sllu'&.11 IMO ~~ _ t2U)r.ll·&S4l --..s.r.1c.. Ca.llMIKE6"·13tl •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• ~eeell.Refa.ISl 1292_ •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• lOd~ad Blbyalt iJ1 my ho~ On c.,.tS.-.lce 1118)9'4-1"8__ ••••••••••••••••••••••• HAUUN06 DUMP-•ABC MOVINO·Ellp., ,.,.. NOPan llll~YICI In • New Yu111 Eve Mua ....................... Drywtl rrec Trlm m ln& ' JOll8,ullfor R1ndy. ~low r•te•. Quick. ••••••••••••••••••••••• MAHA61MIHT ...... J zt •• DAJ&.Y Verde ~m1 WtC..reCrptCleaner111 ..... •••••••••••••••••• Renv>val at Reasonable Ml-IU7 !. u.IHtYlce.~,ouo liANGlNC $10/ROl~L Oran~e Co lrTI 15 yrs •• * * •• * Pl.OT Babya1tllng My Home Steam clean It uphola. DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC Pricea H1ulln1. Odd YOUI ACT t A-1 MOVING• Quallty. Al&0 stripping. captrienre Call foq11fo IW!!!!!lll!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!~ •VICI V1ctor11 Strtet CM Tnlcll mo1mt un1t l4 yru ap.fullyllc'd ' J o bs , Clean .ups . TODAY! Yard/11raae Top Quality Speclll f)-eeea!__Scott W·~-1ndratet. ~s.rriu DlllCTOIY ~a.~rT~ Won ur. ~37~ lnlund. W.5549 7t0-Ma5,673·90'3 ckl,111>, etc. 1 lon truck. care 1.n bandllni. 2S yrs UC. PAPERHANGF.R t6l-tll1 ...................... . 00 IT NOW! t t:k ..... , Sham,poo .. steam clun .,........ Senk .._.. ~ . M• <Z• hrs J u p Competitive rates. Bondfd ' 11uat No Job I .... ,,..,.,. TV PINC A*FerS-.-. ••••••••••••••••••••••• c.olor briahteners, wbl •• ••••• "•• ::.::::: ............ , OHN'S BACK! Ready Noovertlme. 7_30 IJS3 tOO 1mall or too larae ··-••••••••••••••••••••• PROOFREA£DIN1G h Y D ilo Piiot "-'• lO nu'n bl "h ...... •• •••••• Fr t T -..... 28 Tr1n1l1l nc n1 II our •v For allyouneedtoknow ....... ea, Carpenlry ·Masonry for haulin~. Efficient, STARVlNCCOLLEGt: eus '!91..!!-_.... 1·uslom buildin". r~ 1 · r-. DI ..... b u-•J, "v/dlt'. r .... s•• .. · E.M. De1l11n ., Check n-A-1 " " Fr en,. h s p 1n 1 w h _.. .. 1N r..,...ory about ank ruptry, call ...... v., roomu ,:.. .,,:·-...... :h p 1 c ll 1 1 I n 1 / s H nuusm& Plumbin& rua. atu ent w ae snn F.NTS MOV ING .... & , .. C.re roodelln&. maint , r~ ' · • · RepreHDtallve _714/83S·9182_ • •• -. ,,,_ "'TL/PC B II Drywall ·Stucco·Tile truck. Than k you, CC Uc. tTl.24 '36. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pair haullno Steve Reporh . Corru11on M~U71 xt 122 SlO. chr ~. Guar elim. "' 1 ' v e Y ften»del J a &4&-9990 7st-l9'16 · " dence. manusrnpt11. re • • 111i.,.. pet odor. Crpt ~p•ir lbrdilon. Ms.3'701 . . . -h1ured. &U·8427 ' ...._, ,._. C•,.. 873-81~ --swnes Ex~neneed, »c !!!!!!!!!lm!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!~I ....................... IS yrs up. Do work 9edrical General M•mt11nance ~ULJNG WA'n::ll USO ROW BeauUly your office or .... curate reliable *"'•ct l.,.ar GllWICI & SOH m ell Rers. S31·0101 ....................... 1Wpilrs6 Decor1t1n& Fr Quictc~4ri11 .:ft ~ ,... patto w/lush potted or ....................... ."•496-0338• • -•••••••••••••••••••• 8111.a--s n · 1cu7 Ste Sh ELECTRICIAN pnced •Quality • Ray MG-5144 eees • · · ....................... hanging plant1 Green ,.. _ .... C .u:-c .._ -Prompt, prof Hrvlce on ........ UllC'.•D I le .... No am/No ampoo Rick 631.ol65 >w p1intln11 by Richard Velvet lnten ors ..,_ :e-'1•-.. ~ c~ major •pplcs Steve's nuwllons reroodehn' StalnSpeciaU1t Fast rigtll, free ~stimale on HC*EIMPROVEMENT I _.._ ., •""3 71' ""9 7286 Spec11llzing m shake & ...._.... .._., lc.Serv 548 8514 Doon, wlndows. patio Fret est 83!1-l582 lar~oumall job1 Repatr·Maintenance l l'Cle-9 Sinor Lie, ms. 13 yn of 213:!2~ I_ ··-· _ ahinsle rools ••••••••••••=::j"i,••••• ---- -rovers Free est Reas · · Uc. IJ396621 673-0359 Healing. ca rpeotry . ••••••••••••••••••••••• happy local customer~. .__19-.a F U te. ., ... _..1 •RESID.£1 .. • A • .._.........,. · Stum Clean ror the elec, lile. Free est No WantaREALLYCLEAN I Thank you. 631-4410 ~1 -r-' t,44e~ ma. _.,.,,,_""!L Av11sty S30; avg2 sly _,..,_. ~~ 5'9-2l70 Holidays ! Bnt rates for Elect nc our Specialty. ..,.).. too small. ""<·2811 HOUSE! Call Gingham -••p~·:;:_•E•R••p•~•TC•••H•l•N•G••• REPAIRS FOR LESS . "'"'·95_7·8388 ••••••••••••••••••••••• u.-u•• ir h bl d t 1 c II Clean Quick' dependa· ""' ,,_ ,._,,__,~ U'\i>I " ""u"' Onveways, parking lot -~ CONSTI. l e . g a es· 11 ble We Do Any Size Job! CM. Girl Free est. 645·5lZI .,,. .,..._ Ll • Restuccos Int/ext 30 ShinRles, flat 30 yrs Prof Window Cleaning repairs, se;a coaling """" "~~. •6312000 lb1dalljobs,lge1sml ROB!NSCLEA IN Ebndfd lru Reta Color yrsNeat.Paul545·29'17 ..... ~H-"·--~-Freer.st.,qual.serv I ""·tom ho ..... c fr am 646-4733 , N G I '"' )'I'll exp. c. • l · "" Fr .... ""l 770.27'"' S4tS Asphalt. 631 41911 ~.:....remod , Fre nch C.-..t/COKNh ,,._....._.. Quallty.exper,lir'd .. ~c_:.:-~lh~~7 ex°"rt.963~l1 Dicll _ Nealp1tlrhe!lflexturcs ~1111. Fast Service' ~L. !1_~·0941 Lie uuun, skylights & patio ....................... wwng _..Q!!!.l.Jl!M·t798 •OC<U"""""" .,...,......., :.::L=.: Xlnt Refs Free £st AUSTATEPAVINC COV~36S2 - -ntOMPSON'S ··c~-.:;;:t:t~~~~·c·e... • .... , . - -L-J·BPAINTING ~ttt~ lfl:!O-' ·--!!l!!!~!L---1 ·--------Sealcoatin&. StnpinR. CUST'OM QUALITY CONCRETECONSTR R••'id/Comm tlndus Hw•oodAoort ....................... SPECIAL! INT/EXT. lnl/Ext Plastering Repairs. Com m Res AddJtlOOS & Remodehng Li~. •S93383 6'2·8482 cie':n.ups & TreeTn.:n "tiAit"owoo·orLOORS .. BRICK WORK Sma II llrI!a_ll_,_Larry 64.!_9383 Low Hohday Rates UW13S2. ~-8181 Total Seryice: CftUrRETE ~1816. eves 1\.46.4947 Beautifully cleaned & Jobs, Newport, Costa lNT{EXT PAINT ING Freeesl. 645·8258 ._........._ fromDes1gnloF1nish , .'::""'/:r sq ft• -' --waxed.Be ready for lhe Meaa. Irvine Refs lJrd Refs Freeesl ~ ...... -,. M• B TUES holldays!• ........ 1 _ ~:ms. ••_f-46-_ 1067•• ......., u••••••••••••••••• • •• o ~C! & ock. 675·90%7 d _ ~ _.. •••••••••••••••••••• ••• AGG RESSIVE lega l ~ Topped/reroove •clean SELL idle items with a AlJTypet Muonry I'm Small My prices DrainsclearedrromSIO rtpl"!Sentallon. law of _,._,.AL ~c-ta.e Have something to sell? lawn rmov 7Sl·3476 Daily Pilot Classified Very reu, be, bonded are small! CdM, NB & Plumbing Repairs fices,at hrs.545·M22 I.Jc •349892 170·6554 Class1fledadsdo1~ll. tlass1f1edAds ~56 8 Ad. Bob541-7650/536·9906_ lrv._Ex~ Ron67~12._ Free~MUt 642903L ...................... •Expert Tree Prunmg • Commercial Landscape Services i57 8388 Make your s hopping easier by using lhe Daily To place your message before the reading pubhc, phone Daily Pl lot Clw1ried, '4.2-5678 .fi!<Jt Cl~ Ads._ W!!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!ll•••!!!!! AfalMC•hu.fwa. IOOft9 4000 •--tosa.ar. 4300 Offlceatwtal 4400 Moirhpjri. TfWt t • c-8h/ &.o.t&Fo.d UOC &.o.t&Fo.d 5300 t :':,,_... HllpW.e.d 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dtidi SOJ5 ,_.1rn¥/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ap..._ ...................... . Ml iportleoc• 3169 p r 1 1 / Wanted female room 2 olfices -+ bathroom & ....................... Lott&,..... Australian Shepherd. Found · Puppy, nr Santa ....................... AlTJ'OMOTIVIC • ....................... ro cssiona ma e male to share 3 bdrm, 3 storage. 375 ft $280/mo .................. M~ ....................... male. 2 yrs, tn colored, Ana & Cabrillo CM ~& P.t.C ft..-a PAii NEWPORT remalh leb unf_umk lgh room ba condo in Newport ~l'MS.~·3803. _,..SINCE EAR-.LY 1 • c-ah SI 001 wearing Hospital ID ~cn_h!~·1393_ ..._._ 7005 •-.aDrf .. tr WI a "' itc pnv ''-a"h. ~ + ut1·1. Con -6311000 "' d P•rs an t~) "al -• Lo I N h ..... ~ ....... So. ~ c~ I.st .......... Trust Deeds •••••••••••• ••• • • • • • • • • ~ ---r oun ..-I . ' . ••••••••• •• • •• • • • •• • • • • "' t t' e COUNT'IY CLUI b vCorone Y ewpod 1 rlM omH~ tact Lou or Randy. 8 5 al Cn m ·'WNE ... R ... ·NON OWNER SC:IAM-1.flS r--" Gold I o bracelrl black /brown 1oran11e. 13190 WEEK. Chrisltan u omo ave expen nee UVl""G .>' a e ar 1 (71.) •23.0890 after • .......,ce ava1 in sly sh v """"' H 1 8 h n..... School E Slh preferred. S day week " School Pool avail. $250 ~ " • " laws11tefor compallble 1Lhru 4unit.s =-I Mark V1cloria 1Placen untin g on eac · ,.,.,. 320 · I Sal.arycommensurateto Hachelors, 1&2 bedroom rm. uul incl'd SIOO dep \2!:'>64.s.-4221! tmanl. Includes recep. Pet.er Dobbs. Broker ••WEIS l•a. CM 548 74!15 alt 968·3046 -Sl Costa Mesa Speclll expenence. Call Greg apt.s & townhouses 7ID-8242 Npt Oceanfront $23.5 mo ll on 1st. an 5 wer1 n g 7aHil2'7 ~16 ~ I 6j>m Lost male Keeshond mix. ~..!>.&!'am. 640-5423 Dunkhnt Parts Dept al From~SIQ90 644·1900 Room & Ba Prestigious Malure respfemalenon· service, Jlmlonal and1 Onole Cho!J!l Lo:.l l'at Himalayan I lite colored H B area. JoblWmhd., 7075 SanClemente Ford. "'-lex, upstairs 2 Br. l h,.,. ___ ~tonnl, 1'a". ter1· srmk~. 548·1667 much more Call Cornne .,._ B lb Azure Wintry (Iona hair'i Vic 16lh & Ill:!. 6817 or~-1314 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 491-6990 ~ auw=> ~ """' ' · I ... m l6~ on a oa ANSWER Twt';n CM REWARD Found 12·~ beaol lon° Ba, rrplc, garage N~ar NS. $300. 6'4·7667 _ Distinguished gentle· 17io 95l·l:S5S_ --Island trust deeds. Over Ma_ny people talk 10 I Hearl.broken ra mi I)' haired bm • orana"' cai. * * * u do shopping area f600 Lge nn wtfull bath, view. man.hrererences, former MEWPOIT 1 50'7.,eqlAly Short or long their plants J havt.> a I ua ,,.,... 760·7188 l'M area ... :7866 .,, llOSIMAIY KECIC Brimg year lease Adults. no nr OC Airport. prer tear er s hare your "841MSUU lenn f5000min1mum. crazy neighbor who ~-..!.-. --''"" 3025Samoa Pl Capkfr.o pets Mu st have ref s mature M $250 85l·1910 home C.M or H.B. Eves, Spacious executive or. .. ..... :z. llltr talks to his plants and I Found. 12126. var or 2600 ht 9'°"111 5150 Costa Mesa Hat1 .... D r ive b y fil4 '2 --~· --642-SOIS fi f I 67lr.'t' then wails ror 11n blk Orange Ave CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• You11retbew1nner ot seeisex-r secrelarym ClubbouseAve 494-6303.:Hohts,Mohft 4100 Resp Femtoshr 2bdrm ~;,1~~ic~~~v~l~ ~& ANSWER. I Pomeranian rmle NE£D CREOIT' rourfreeltckets (Sl8001 Santa Ana. Typing, NO FEE! Apl & Condo ••••••••••••••••••••••• CM apt pool/jacuni ble, 'optional' From 225 , ------~-4879 Get Visa or Master Ca rd Yaluctolhe shorthand , well or reruls. Villa Rentals 5141 UK MOTB. move in AS AP Bob. SQ rt up. al reosonablel • * • Leif & Fo.d SlOOj FOUND -Male dog h~; with no rredit Chel·k Sporil. VecaticMt garuz.ed. good telephone 675-4912 Broker Wk ly rentals now avail 64.!..!_~or 75'·1789 _ rentals No lease re M.f. SAMPSON ••••••••••••••••••••••• blktbrwn. lrvint> & '20t h, I GUARANTEED. Write .ct av Sitow skills. banking ex per Oceanfront for Wanler SIOS & up Color TV CdM,2br,lba.frplc,M 1.11redCall673·J002 Z790CibolaA ve I EIS CM 645 0913 , lO DPL. PO Box 4775, ANAHEIM ll nettSSary Contact Bart Rentals. Furnished & ,. Phones '" room ~274 24·21! to shr w/same. by -----I Costa Mesa 548-4723 I ~Vet.as. N~ 89106 CONVENTION Ludenma n 496·8601 . ~!!_>ker 67~:~912_ ~~~rl Bl vd ( M J3!1 I~~ 2715 MEWPOIT You are the winner of FOUND ADS Found mixed Shep F. ~ OPE:HIMG CENTER Jan 2·10 31873 Del Ob1sbo San l::ASTBLUf'F lbr . pool. j --.---Lag Niguel "ated comm Execullve Suites has or four free tickets tSlll OOl ARE FIE[ bm & lan, maxed Rel ESC-TS To claim ticktts. call Juan Capistrano t...lir.1tft • a. 'C"7 hous fices available nr 0 C value lo lhe ""' 64 2 5 6 7 8 ex l 2 7 2 qliet area. single adult. I .........., "".--m; e. P"t enl & ba . 2 Al rt r '365 tr 11 c...... V .-1.1-M, rust & beige ; Ter· EXTIAC>aDIMAIE · nopets~.mo 644·4767 R.eas Weekly Rates rms. non straight. 1275 rpo · rom w u · .......... •-&alt npoo M. while. m1xtd Formerly Linda & Tlcket.smustbe claimed St • Kilchenelles·Phones + • 2 utils 496 3774 service available Ca II ...t IV Sltow I: Shep M. a oldish brn Vi"k•'s Bac·L ~ith lhe by January 8· 1982 Brepsflo lbe beach 2 °' 3 "Z" Channel Mov1ell -- ---'W!W for I month free ANAHEIM 64~5671 .. , " w '* * * Banking PJt.QCJt.CiY/ . rpl~. year() Im Sandpiper 1967 Newport Mult responsible person Li.sa833-9976. CONVENTION ~·3856_ _ -besl maculate S650 & fl75 Bl Costa Mesa645-9137 toshr pvt ocean canyon C.M 345 Cl + bath, Cl-:NTERJan.2 10 !Losl 12·27 diamond l6t·0207 67J.2:5(YJ -vu home. Lag Bch storage avail S2SO/mo To claim lirkets. rail t4HDH&.r7 sapplure ring Burrums. OCEAN VIEW delux~ 2 l.Jveon Npt Bch S'90twk. SJ50_mo ~ves~-6072 ~3345 ~·3803 642·5678. ext 272 ,,WellmUl Sub. ~ward. •f-Lofc•~s B 2 Ba d k d PUie Knot Mold 6302 W Female roomrruite want· ---· ---'"-L.-.. m ... 1 ... clai~d Help yoursclrlo a ~!1q196uesl1ons asked "" -• ~ r. ec · > ar · Bayf ti "~'""' ..... '"' ...... Heaping selection ur I ....,.. F:srorts & Models brir k frplt•. gar . ~NB 64S-o.140 ed. Blwn ages 25 35 ron byJanuary8,J982 I Qualil'iedHOJ>Cfub ----64H7982Ahr SE C U R G A T F. Yearly~n the bearh. Share 3 Br house. Must • * * , SEU.. idle Items w1lh a • llllO/mo. or lease opt. Hotel rooms. kitr henctte ~ke children, I child OK CXfice space, 2SO sq rt •---m,lhe O~ll. y ! ILOT. I Dail)' Pilot Classified Ve.a MC Adults, Sunset Bluffs on & bath 12*1 up monthly Ca!!_art4. 714 /548 S8L2 S400 per mo 1st and lul Want Ad Hel ' 642·5678 tf F.l.P ~ANTf.I> AL>S Ad. _ f~~.~~~c ~, tJ~;ec()~~a ~1~~·:: ~hB~~a~~~r'~r:~w~ll ;;~~~hn-675·9007.1 eeee.e-eeeeeeeeeeiee••••••••••• I with larl(e tort & l'Xlra Newport Be a c h ad uh O\ er 30 S37 5 llmilleu a..ta1 4450j ' . • dec.k. 1 S9·04!1,_! 59 · 1042 673-4,~ 1 6CH&)2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 8-DAY WEEK SPECIAL ~et 2 Br. I Ba garage, G.tt .._ 4150 lean pror f lo share StoreorOHlce. l350sQ n. I • • palJO. pool. Adults. no ••••••••••••••••••••••• rum J BR Condo w M~ Verde Area • pets. $.'JOO. 1801 "H'' •~th Special care ror sperial Jaruzz1 in Blurrs Im med S45 4123 , e 8 Days 3 lines • 8 Dollars Sl. 642·7340. elderly ladies Pleasant avail, S3SO 'mo. no last, X.lnl shop loc oo Bal ho; I • • -----home atmosphere b~ nex Bus 557·3200 re~ Pen . all fOO( & auto lrar-I It s easy to place your 8-0ay Week Class1f 1ed by mall and 11 • KW~-m dedtcat ed geriatric: 7~<!i72_ _ fi<' to lhe Balboa Ferry . 1 e costs 1ust $8 -that s only a dollar a day• To oualtly for this -·r ~~~ 751 1058 art 5 or f. rhild ok. shr lu~ 4 hr puses in rronl Great 1 ff • t399Shannon ..... "'3 con<1 p 1 1 t place ror book store. art e s pec1a o er you must be a non-commercial user offering Costa Mesa --4200 SZ75 ~~ii ~;~;~>·; e ,. shop. ort1ce. etc S600 e merchandise tor sale up to $800 per ad a nd the price must e You are the "'inner or S.-r l..tals -67~ .,.,.~ 673 3930 I four rree t1rkets <Sis OO> ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~~ ... ~_ -· - -be 1n your ad The cost stays the same w hether your ad e valuetolhe ~Beach. 2 BR 2 Ba. f..°T!.t 050 a.wriala..tal 4500 I • needs eight days selling ttme or 1us1 one e Sports. VocoffOft on can al. I blll lo bch ••••••••••••• ••••• ••••• • •cHVS.Ow Wk ly or monthl y ••;r·;;;·:~··c~;~~;··d;j IHDUSTllJ.l • ANAHEIM 213·~4184 Mar SM1mo 5'ACIF<>lt e Use one word 1n e ach bOx About 4 words make one CONVENTION VocaKo.•...ws 4250 770 Q3.IJ LlASI e ctass1f1ed line or type Minimum ad 1s 3 lines Please print • CENTER Jan 2·10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••lllhll 44001 COSTJ.MISA • plainly • To claim tickets rail OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br •••••••••••••••••••••• •Ont 1500 sq Cl un1l. 642·5678, ext 272 Avail Winter Weekly/ 1617 Weslcliff. NB Wanl •'l'wo 1900 sq rt units • r ------------------------------, • Tickets must be claimed _Monthly 673·7873 _ financial inst 70005 f.1 ·'l'wo 3700 sq n units • by January 8, 1982 Palm Springs area \Mon 1st. floor. A ent 5'1·503L •Avail Jan I •35 -38' sq I • ---*-'*-'* lerey CC> condo J BR 2 -UTIVE rt •Call 642 4463 • • 3Br 28a.Stepslobcach Ba . furn wtatn um EXEC I WoodworkinL_OK • $750/roo ut1lsincld. Golf , tennis. Daily. SUITES 5torelp 4550 • PROPERTY HOUSE wedtly & monthly rates tN ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • 642-~ 642 IOIQ. avail 714 -558 800 I HEIJTJ.GE a rage for rent on S I 00 Balboa Island Waterfront 9-5PM, ask for Mark Pl.Ali Balboa Pen. next lo f'u n • • • 3 Br 2 Ba. Yearly ren· No Tahoe condo. 4 Br. 5 New luxury office space Zone tl0\IJ'a20"'1'), SlSO • 10 60 • lal. 5/mo 770-0347. min to Northstar ~ 1n Irvi n e's busiest ITl>.673-2!M3,673-3930 • ---wk. Tom 857-1668 _ renter! Easy Fr wy 11c-Storage or Business C 1. • • I Br,yearlyrental,sleps f'urn Rental. Indian cess Avail now! Call 1100 n .....,.,. I t i 13 20 to bell. Garage parkinl( . llQ • _,inc . u 1 s • • • $440/roo 673 3958 Wells Sandpiper Villas rordeu1ls 4'3 Hamilton •D. C M Peninsul~ 1 Br Iba apt 64().55411 __ 551·123 1 640.423~ M>71.M • 15.80 • Utll pd. Yearly S42Stmo. Palm Desert 2Br, a\•a1l •DB.UXE OFACES • • 67~1642 wk or mo fl600tmo Xlnt From 1roomto1400 sq .....,.,11 .. nt/ e Add $2.60 for H eh addltlonel llne for 8 times Balboa Bay Club, 2 BR. loc. 714t673-88Zl ft From $1.15 a sq ft. No ,..._. • • C leas .. required •dj ••••••••••••••••••••••• m> lo mo lo members. ...,.,,, C " " · • n CIV\ 640-9605 (Palm Springs). 2 bdrm, Atrporter lnn 2172 Du· ....... • .;;;;· 215 32nd Slreel. 2 ba comp (um Rent or ~l Call AM.833-322.3. ..~!.'.~!? .... ?!.~! • Publish m y ad for 8 d ays s t art ing • Newport 1eR. Large sell.lilS-OlOS 171H STIHT LOSING LEASE. quit· C las s ification e Uv Rm Frplc. S450 mo 1o..11U•o..a 'Mlti •s COSTA MESA t111g business, selling out • 2U-S4S-79&1forappl ""CO...Do 2oc3 roomofficesultes. AU. aupplies and fix· N ame • l ~ 2 be 2 Br 3 Ba furn wknd , A1C. plenty o( prkg. Uh l Lures including : • • k h W .. 1., 1 mo 0 w n e r mcl. Avail now C1ll Display cases. wailing • A ddress [)pix 2 bloc s lo beac " , w n--•-A-· 675 6700 h i B • Patio.S700 mo.6733728 7~141G nec11.ouuvm1cs · room ca rs. eauty • -------------------------Sh 2 ol .l I p e Salon hairdryers and c· F.astbhlf 2 Br. 2•, Ba Cozy cottage, S Lake ~ ~SID e n ~s bydn ullc chairs, mlr· e tty Zip Phone e encbd gar. pool, frplr Ta.hoe. 1"1 mi. to sluing sOgious aifl)C>rt area. 11 rors,shetves and plant.I l6'50/m> 64().5296 "nr casinos. Sips 8 =i~For detllls Cl Also,make·up,shampoo • Chec k o r M.O. e n c lose d 0 • lni ht. 631·~ · and hair product.I • 2ct.!t::b1~~~ .. garage .... tosa.. 4 100 600 sq n Mesa Verde Call 631-975'or • C harge m y ad to: 675-4912 ....................... atta ~lZI after6, 898-6809 • • s.a-• 1116 3~~~~:~·",~o:~'e";'. a•YFRO .... T • • • e 0 ~ # Exp. e ....................... •71174960-2615 " " ... , .. leffll L • NI CE · 2 Br . I '' 8 a • -----Primt office. 790-MCO. 2212 Miner St. • • d 'li I d Mother & son need to O # E • beame Cel ngs. n 1o share nice 3BR 38A Colt.a Mesa. 250 sq. ft. Costa Mesa • xp. ----no pets. Avail Jan 6 S4 home in COM Frpk. siite. 1175/mo. Ulils In· You •~ the winner of • 111>.413-%710 d/ d cld. 779 91 19th. St ffU Cl'fttick~ CS18.00l • L------------------------------w, gar gar ener. Q.EAN·2Br. I Ba . lndry, Hooestlr Depend. Avail. ~HJl28 valuttothe • r------·--WE 'LL PAY THE P O S T AGE --------·-----• 1wqe.nopets,S450 mn now SJOO -+ I,; 11t1I. Cost.a Mesa office with ~Yee..... : • -.:110 675·3113 Dys 64"4965 ocean view. Reception mdlY S..w • : I NO POST AGE 1 'f lwah,.,..,llMd eves. ~A:al~ f~=cU~eli co":v~J:roN • : 11111 NCCCS$ARY : • •&Mu•llMd ltOO Retired or working clean .._._ r mo.151-1000 CENTER J an 2·10 I If MAILED I • •• -.•••ooo•••••• •••• • ..... n u n y... to shr 3 ....., • i I ... '__, '"'· To claim tlcketa, call IN THC • S E • W I .._. D br, 2 ba apt, c M .. tor 1.11•s-11T 272 o __ " " li .... l .... int.a•part r•nt •• · 842·5'78 , u t. · • U"'llEOS TA TC~ ~zi.S ;> " 3100 aq.rt for leue. T\dlett m'* be claimed I o " " o • New ~!!'l!!i1~1tury a11r to sbr 2sR. La1un1 ~l:t{ ro ~~~~c~·, r~ b)' Januaz !· :-2 •• ! BUS INESS REPLY LABE L ; e llll&lt apta 1n 14 plans I Beach Hae Musi Be ~Interior design. I Fl llST c1.ass PEiiam 140 u COSTA MU • c•u ,0111el4 • Rdrm from S490.2bdrm Nut• Resp 1375 mo. ~ady tomove ln!Com· PAl'n9WAMTID • g ; from $$70, Townhoust• lit ' Last + Dtp Call pt(itive rates. c•ll Rob. J\f\ft salon. OWUnd· JC llOSTAOE W'-l 8{ PA() Bv AOOA(S.SH 6 • rrorn "40 t t:.°''· ten-4'4-44Z7 ---GJ.-O ID& OIJllOrtalty. 8""11 • i Orange Co11t Dally Piiot m e ~ ;::t~:n·, rbn::.! rocc. "t.~J bR•f~~\~~ = n.~b:.:'~~:.. ::: :::J~1n:::. • : ' 11·1y Pl.Iii i • 1n1 paid From San mediately 12$0 Incl. lboftr. Balboll Pt,nin. 71NZ.11or2U/•ICllO , • a. 6 Dlelo Frwy drive North llllll. 540-3233 ut. 2U im.W>CS... Mal ._ ,,... ~ • u 1 • :.arw': !:. =~~::::~ > '¥.,........ ..J.-11n1 • l • 10 Suwlnd Vllla1e Roommate••nttd.open· Ground floor office ......... "••••••••••••, • I lox 15'0 I -.St•. :nlftded. to thr (um. s br froalinc Newport Blvd. Wiii' ... Ce. ' • I 330 W, lay St. • .._ .... ._., ·~· .~~;· ·L••· ~ ne.,:.!:'t~•'";: ::,:_:i~::;.i. • '1 Co1t1 Me1a, CA 92121 I • ................... , ... M/F. J 1BR 81 I boa t.-, *11Pb, wood 'm I 8 p ,.. • • , I • ............ ., Pw I •I• hra. .... , be ..., ,... ·=... .,.. llltTll =i.!".=:-t•. ~:.-U""·-:a~-=-ao.. 171 ••••••• -···-···~ _ _. .......... , •••••••. HtlpW..ted 7100 . .......••.••...•...... Jt.CCNTS PAY AIU ClEU 'The Jolly Roger Inc has an A P clencal pos1l1on ror an 1ndustriou~ in I div1dual Gen'I ofr and1 or arcnt'g expr prer. 10 I key expr. Xlnl bnrts & ~mg cond Apply 1n person at: The Jolly Roger lnr 17042 Gillette Av Irvine _ ~·0331 ACCOU NTANT Tax knowledge ner Busy or f 1 ce 540-1287 A C ;erueler P\1 A C & f airline exp preferred. Abo tow A C & vanous duties Salary rom· men.surale w1exp <:ahr. Jet. 19511 Airport Wa) So .. Santa Ana AIOF.S For active retirement commun ity Ver} pleasant 3. JO. II JOprn. weekends onl) 631 3555 N~n Bea r'l__ Aides I Wtekend AM Shirt 7 30 lo 4 Weekend PM Shirt. 3 :Kl to 11 30 Newport Villa. 4000 H1lana NB UMDBWal'TB VERY BUSY loan orflce 111 local Newpon Beach Savings ., Loan, is seek· ing experienced loan pac ka gers & un- derwnlen for conven· tional real estate loans Salary romme u urate with uperience. Ex· rellenl growth potetllal wilb aggressive com- pany Please call tor ap· pointment . M.!I Denny Parislw il4 -64$ 6505 MEWPOIT IALIOA SAV~&LOJ.H llOOlrvlneAve .NB £OE. M F lbokkeeper Office Manager Nice Working Cond1t1ons Good Hours & Fringe Benefits Xlnl Pay. Write Resume to PO Box ~. Laguna Beach. Ca ~ Alln June Nep t~~ lool:lleeper Creal Things needs a great person ror book· keeping services morn· ings 5 days 1 week Please Ca ll Sharon 751-0!>10 ~~Sl6...!_ - - A.11 i11511WHs -1 CAIEB We have several open I OfPOITUt4ITT lngs for experienced 1 Are YOU loolung for a M«hanical assemblers j company where you can ror a laser mfg firm build an excellent Soldering and light shop rl.llW't'' It you are. we e1tper preferred would bke lo talk to you We are a division or P r e s s r o o m Johnsoo & Johnson and Supervisor Foreman. as such ofrer an ex-req11res 5 years Web Of cellenl benefit parka~e fset exper Apply 1660 Send resumes or apply Placentia, Costa Mesa at Laumann Electro CASHltl.JP..._ ~~d~~~. s3:2 r:!1~ Dtl•ert ar.n . Capistrano torr Ae ro Apply in person Well~ Puerto) Super Martel 3347 f, EOE M/F/H ~Hwy,CdM I ~lSTANTMANAG ER CAS .... ' 2 days per week in adult HOUSIWAll SALES I apartment. bearh area F\111 or p1time. Apply 213/581-1573. _ Crown Hardware, 1024 lrvme (Weslclitr.>.mL_ ATTINTIOM: l COOl-rM A.mbltious boys and Gord Uz, 900 Bayside girts lC).U years old. to Dr N...wnnrt Beach wtM't one or two even· --:::.c:..i::::--·- 1ngs a week. gelling newspaper subscn p· lions Transportation and ronstanl adult supervision provided Cal13toS·30PM. ask for Andrea, 64.2-4J2l. u t. 34.J COOKS Ellper1enced dinner cook. good pay & bener1ts. App ly 1n per10n, Jolly Roger, 400 S. Coast Hwy . Laauna ~..!tlL --- MOTICI how Daily Pilot Clau 'lo nttd Lo traYel all over 1rled ads displ11 their town to I~ for garage messages with lea1b1llty 5ales you II find them and impact• Our ads li «ht here In Classified. we are proud to 511. re'. To pla« )'our «&rage ally 1et m.alls Phone $!.le ·~4ft.5§!J_. -~·5618 ................... lailyPil ' . :. ~ ~:xper n~!~!~.~~~pt~ tu • : htndle let') arrounl" for C>r•"Jlt Cu.at • r. IJaily fl1l11t S11lar\. c:omm1~~1on :and ' t)tce.ll•nl ben~f1b. (irm•1h oppun11e1\l'" • .: for pcorimn with cal'\'l•r .imbhkinl St•nct ..: flnmnt.1 ,. ,....,,.,,~.hi w.,. ... ........_, IJf\ " ;8o1J MO. Cotta Mn a CA ,._ Nu pllofte .. calls. pltue. An t:q ul Opper· • f ;ll!.Ml !:"!1!!1!! j ~. ORANGE COAST DAILY Pl.Of j, • mw.IAYIT~TA~~ •, ..... l~ "fM"" I .......... ............. 9'·········~·· .. . . . . _, 1 Cit Orange Co11t DAILY ptLOT/Thursday, Oec1mbtr 31, 1981 Ma.... JIM twaw..w 7100tW,W..W 11ootw,w.w )I ...... 11H .... • HI tHO Cflce...... ... :1••/ ... W.-.4 '"' ..................... M.T. ..................................... ,... ....................... ... ................... -··················· ....................... , , b .. 1011 S.1 41'1 't ....................... .. C191T/ 5 ~/flllllt 1 SICllTMllS Sean rtrrl1. cvatom Ian& llw medium firm ...... ,................ ....................... WI~ YOUI ~S A creative Human Resources ruuume.M.d\'PM • Wort temporary Job• ..... dbldoor,D cuft. ~1Wdbed4 rltan ha:• 1 QUkt U,'':.1~, R:o:u~~J' OOODUSIDCj,11 Orowtni lllarint eltt· Mana~er wUI have the opportunity to ~hrloatart Good en· clOlewhome. · .m..ldO Sl7I UKJ NIW. &Ade arm MUST SELL 648.2815 Anyt1Unaron11dertd. tranln miulfnturina establish a resulls·orlented de part· 1 POie IUoo with •crow1 ·1 y•~J,!!_FnT~~ .._,,_ HJ ~. DUUn8J 10~811•. ~!!.· ~~"'tt~•nl.••!._,c~:.'{:,· @tn. am tbn11"0 t'08IPiMlY Meda PfrtOO menl aimed at meeting employees' n1 omp1ny a •~IA r.-, :::r.:::•••••••••••H• ,_ J a ...,., -.IW ,.. • • ~ ~wlndrrtd1 tt1 ~ needs. Skills 1~ merit compensation, ~wn·t::i!~t.G·~ for ~· 12~T -1-* • * 56J.'IB,S.W.lrfllS'7'3) ~::-:~'r~ndd~°!11: 4 r~~~~~J!,o .. nd · co0ett_.. e ea w tn benents, organlialienal behavior and ~ y. • .. pm. YP 0•· 11¥ MOITOM a-S. IOH crtdeft1u tme11t and ,...,_ Eactlltnt cond • le ~tr 1,0001cc01.1nl1, both . . · ld b h l f I ~ff-min. booikHpln&, fll. -..... ---") ,...11 Ste , . r 080 don1tlt • ovtraeu communicat1on wou e e p u . P\e phoile rnlrfter In&, bUlilla. Non ·amll:r llNf!.lmSt. • ...................... -..... veorwn IOI WoWd cwldtr retlrff Progressive, dynamic company needs NMntial. tOAM to4 PM c.M. '151·1\25. c.t.a II•• f\lm. Raellld llern1 • da Ol•l m.cna 75f.311'12 who would Ulle 10 re a take.charge, humunislic leader. s clays. Phone an~r 4 Service Station Allen· rc:,,::=e:~:N.t, ~~!trtAM. "-'Ortl-1090 FOXIMOPf.D. BLUt:, main active. Newport Please send resume and salary re· PM.151•*2 dant. P\111 Ttme . Days . •• to• ... -................. ..i b ••••••••••••••••••••••• forsale BeHb area. Pleaae id· Experl ed ~ v .. ue '°" .--w-. _.uu 1by ••· Aatique Sm Upriaht __ '!!!:...~ drtu rtaumt " re· quirements to: llC.nOMIST '°c · s,.tl. ,_..._ lq, car "at • olller Pluo. Bout Cond ! 12 3.'50 Lo Mt Xlnt Cond ftrUCtl lo. P.O Boa Box 1002 Full time Mon·frt , SERVICE STATION AT· .... , 5Mw blbJ Item, cbalr1 6 Tuned. Stool. SlSO l5(JO &C:r.=port Buch, Daily Pilot . =nra:i~~lem:::~ !~~~t~f~t:~ #~N ~~nr&1:11S:y~~~. or :!~1111r 7' Auatrian 631·1093 .._. ....... j Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 1n1 public llequl rea lrvine, NB. CENTER Ju. i.10 Sat f.5 Grand. Beaut. butternut '19 ~zulu Enduro. n1:w. -~vn•tr &ood spellinc 6 ~en Stodtu•Cltft To claim tJcktll. call Set~M.Gener1ICoa. ·teM.eG 642.JMO ~mi · MUST SELL O¥trZl.&oOddrMn1rt· manahlp. No typ101 . Weneedfulltimtclerb 8U·Sl71, ul. 272 . tnetor, toolJ 6 Mlle. 646-l02211'11_>m/evL totd. brint MVR, Costa Cfneral Labor MAID phone eap. preferred, t 0 w 0 r 11 1 n 0 u r I Tlcbtl m111t be claimed Wldln1 equip. ehutterail 3.'50 Kaw11. Big Hom, '475. Mesa Bluepr1nl. lHO Golr St or• II t P /T . P1trt /time. Experience full company benefits stockroom . Prefer or· by January I, 1182 mbTon, llblt 11w1 1kl SJIALLUPRIGHT 90 Kawasaki, S19S 90 Placentia C.M. ~vate Country Club. 11ttrerred. N.B. &42·3030 Apply: Pennyuver, 1e&O ganhed self uarten * • * nn, mlJc. baraware ·.,:;::ro~~~r~eLn~h JUwaukJ 536·341!_ Dtllvery penon wanted II : 644·$404, B.OOam· Man ag e r I C It r k PlaetntiaAve ,C.M. who enjoy paperwork, Schwinn s apd rrwacr, • w. 17th St. Ill, CM T\lned 6 In aood condi Q.3SO Honda, gd rond, Ftr POiit.ion. must have 1· m Tues.Sat Hallmark cards & girts. controlllna parts dla· red, llmolt new l suo. l'1Mm Uon. flll. can 675-0898 SS2S 400 K11wu11k1 , aooddrlvlna ~rd HOSTESS u ref 640-1373 ac.rfJYrtST lribution. Shlpplna/ re· sa.IMlK.aml ...... IOH1 eveal&weekenda. need11 work , SI 95 can. M0·7990 Gorda Liz, 900 Boyside Models, actors, Film Aaalst with receptionist celvlng. Minimum 2·3 a.a.a....._.. IOJ ........ ••••••••••••••• s.16-3410 __ Deliver LA Times to Dr. Ne rt Beach atras. Xlnt opp. new du l I es T y p Ing ~nprelerrtd. __,, tborouabbttd Marc, I ~...... lff4 MU.st Sell' '76 Kawl6ak1, homes 10 H.B. & C.M ( a c es I t y p e s (SS W p M ) . (i 11 n,,, e are a division of "•••••n••••••••••••• r;:· LovelY Oilpoaltlon. -...,. run• ad S4S01b•t s e ... Most ..... osnss .. , .... _._ , JohnlOl'l d 11.aftw 25 /!t 1 ••••••••••••••••• -~. • ...... • ~ · am, ... OO·S4SO/mo 1n ~7880. aeneral oHlce Good .... .....,, an nv ' I nnina Jumpln&. Woman'• Rlpcurl wet olr 646·!807 + bonus. Dependable Needed5daysperweek, N d 1 3-rompany benefits a. ad· u surh offer ID ex· Redwood bl ecklna, plOO.IU-5077 car s.M41l or964-4982 evenings. Apply in u~ 11 e·~art ~me vancement. Call for ctllent benefit p1cta1e. 4-JO' tona: atao redwood Nt,nlltocn,nt-10, Uke 1980 Honda 7SO Cu8tom penon, Jolly Roger, 400 11.30, 11·7. 3.~7 .30 ~~ appl Merrill LynC'h Stncl resumes or ipply fencln1 Lowe1t price new! . •1120 6700 nu S2200 0....Aukt.t S. Coast Hwy , L11gun11 sm COC'lv. hoep near Relocation Frankie. at Laalim1nn Electro 1uar. Jim or Keo HCISIJIOILIASI Nonlca lki boots, 7''"1N. IM8S618afi<·r6pm Ch1llenglng Position Beach. FairGmds.~9-3061 7SZ.0707. Opu~ Inc, 33052 CAiie an 1111 146-MIS. Owner would Uh lo $40. Oberme ye r fur 8931'90day_s. _ Available for ex Nunnng E.D E F Avlador. San Juan leue hia lhotouihbred apreslklbooU 125 B'kt perlenced. Mat II re. Hotel/Restaurant LVH CHAIGE . . MI Capi1trano. (off Aero c-1'9.. horse'° an eaperienctd radl . 63Hm . I """""y,...14 9170 Energetic Assistant CUrrently hall the f~llow ll-7 Relief. Conv Hosp Puerto>. ........ IOl rider. Lona 6 abort ....................... . Top Pay for Right lng positions available Nwpt Bch Rehab Restaurant Waitress. EOEM/F/H ...................... t.erm. Pvt party. Eves, ............. TIMTTIAIL.11 Person. 4 days. Non forpan·tame help d a Y s and n 111 ht s , ..... 110 Kathy 642.-CM.S; Richard ler 1095 U.ke new, SACRIFICE ~-.. -,,.. ,,....., oriented. nurse: dedil·at George'sCamelol. S ........ 1 .... ft-., till'" __ ,,O .... ••••••••••••••••••• ...,,STSELL.997·8679 ~nu ...... .....,., ed & Wlth sm iles. Con· 673.3233 ~ Com lete outfit, .. -11 • mv ........ tart M SI 642804 P/timt 3·11 shift & new Ml-8995 LOSING LEASE, quit· Fastsale!Terry20'.xlnt O..W HrtitW•t Cool! : rs one. -·--4 ROOFERS.All types, 7 .tilds Will train · IP ••I• a~.L. 1065 lii\i bulln~. selling out C'Ond, sell coot, livable, l or 2 Sat a mo. Costa a.reno. Nursing yrs expernffded. Must 6'2·3013 DAlllOOM -ALL suppli.es and rue .~or~6.8166 Mesa. 641.J272 MUltSIS AIDl be resp & dependable Complete pboto1raphlc ..... •:,:.::::.:.•••••••••• tins lncludma. --~ Contact . Jan Flood. Experience pre(erred. Call Mike. 642·7222 TWX OPllATOI dk nn. . '7~1405 Stain! '"'st"'-:'9 W t Display cases. waiting Alllo Sertlu, Parts it 497--44'1'1 EOE 3-11 &c11·7. Conv Hosp Sttles Good typist for TWX C4llh IOlS leu. ~. e':and Nee:: room chaira. Buuty &AcuuoriH 9400 ~..... Ith ,._HOUSEKEEPER r Nwpt 8th. Bnng your ..... 1 t M ~chine. Willuain. Ex· .. •••••••••••••••••••• ""'llinBo u. rr ..,_ Saloo hairdryers and ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'7" ... pe.,.. or happy fare & join us! M -• • ~ed •-cell opportunity 6 com· ~ a .... o · ... ~. hydraulic chairs, mlr· pJe Well established, elderly lady; mobile Fret-rnJr med., dental alure, ~xpenenc .,. 1 · Ci ll l Blue Point Siamese, M. ••8411.-.:S• • ron,ahelves and plants ATTIMTIOM busy crown and bridge home. 3 hrs. SJ 50/hr & lire ins. Call Mrs career minded wom~n pany benefits. 1 Black F. Both Fixed. Abo, rmke·up, shampoo MG Irvine office. Eacellent ~9408 Slone, 642.8044. ror mall sales & ~ss1s· Elaa, 5.56-3880 Shota. 540-2500, ext 352. aime..1 CMftt & and hair products. OWMEIS career opportunity ror Hou se M a n a g e7 Part time monitor want· lant manaser pos1t1on Eves 9C·21627 s.-nc.. 107 CalJ 6.11·97~ or TONN EAU COVER mo tivated pers.on . SuperviH Teens in Must have good retail TYPISTl9.,..lf'T Pfnlam. e month Male ... •••••••••••••••••••• ~r6.llll8-e809 FltsMG's .. 71 .. 81 Sall1)' open Everungs Sheller ed for University cla.ss. I background Sa lacy + t -'!. S17S. z Adult Female. SSO * •fUIS• * 7Sl-9S14, days 5S9-5lll 642.2331 dayhomeamaweekke' eoxreeslltendtefotr commission and com ~f~ogc~o?>;e:~Pr ea. 546-8115 Save Sl.000 or more on 5tof"e Axtw.1 Mari~~~~'17~ed· 1~! msg DIETARY SERV r u " · pany benehls Please Glass noor cases, wall Call (llOS) 486 8813 Friendly phone voice. n.-. 104 Fine Fun abown In your "'!!!~~~~~~~!!II SUPERVISOR IMSUIANCE · apply 1n person: 2 aood benefits. Ca ll ......, own home bv Darrell unit, office unit . etc -= Neededforconv hosp. Experienced accounts Apropos, 29 fashion Dana5'9-l757 •-•••••••••••••••• ~.1411~17.Call Malit o((er. Take Cert. pref Xlnt salary assistant for com PAITTlME Isle N B or call 1 ' KEfl!llQllD P\apl. AKC. ~MforA 'l Delivery in January and benefits iorl 1n mercaaJ llnes with maJor ~9pm. Expanding youth 644·2652. --I W.AITUSSE~ ?:::: ~p ~t·pp~Y ~ KJRK JEWELERS 2300 surance and sick pay. insurance brokerage eounsehng firm has Sales , FUii time, eapenenced Zl3/tr7·lMS•IU m. tillcel••--1010 Harbor Bl Costa Mesta Apply ~Yerly Manor, firm in Newport Beaeh. openings for 3.5 sharp LADIES' SHOES cnly. evenings, apply in ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~MIS 340Victoria,Costa Mesa Salary commensurate outgOlllg mature people Ac~g appllcalions. j person. Jolly Roger. 400 SHIH TZU PUl>I. AKC. 'f:i~~~e~lin~':!!t 1',lello. D•VBS WAMTID ,:1th c~i~~;;:>~!.ss~or to motivate amb1l1ous full & Pl /lime Apply 10 S C.oast Hwy .. Laguna l250and::i:honly AU. supplies and fix· NR. 5"rto 1091 Ea tu I l().1J yr olds.Call2-5pm. penon; Cathy Jean. s 1 Beach. turesincludinc: ...................... . . r., morning home de· 1 IMSUIAMCE ~al .. ext. 343. Ask for fashion Island, N.B WAJTllSS Ch1mplon Line! AKC ....,_ 1 . in BeautiluJ Color TV , 2 yr hvery. L.A. T IM ES. /UlW" Gol ..... n n .. ....:ever Pup ...... pay cases, wait g 1 ,..... d 1. Irvine &r Newport areas Licensed marine un SALES Experienced in dinner. """ nan · room chairs. Beauty wm Y· rrte e ivery SOO. + mo Ca 11 . derwnter. Fraser Yarhl Orange Co's leading cocktails. F /T Ben ~I~ ~:!on.~~~1,r~1i Salon hairdryers and 48.646-1786 __ St&C35 lnsurance,675·5262 "-tic1Mhrtr k Browns Restaurant. Most Appre"i"at•d hydralllic chairs. mir IMh&..._.. D~psMOM'J! Mitd•c'1 So«lal '75 Pinto V6. l.tost or I boqy and all engine. Ill side parts and uphol, seats, etc 111 good shape' Good glass. doors. hatchback, rear, eng . radiator. new trans. wtl1s • tires Part oul or repair Call for mrorma uon aft 6 pm or wknds 900-5844 __ ~ custom nngma er as 31106 Coast Hw". So • ~ hel d t .. .._. ~SA......... ca......a. . Ken n e I p e rs 0 n .otcw looking for high prod UC · , Ouistmas Gift! 499·3901 rors, s ves an pin..... ...,..,.. .. ... ~ .,_.. ......-. I weekdays. 7am ·2pm tonux a esive coatings r 1 1 La wia. ___ _ Al.9o, 11111ke·up, shampoo •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• .. ~for Salt lyrmm.exper.Salary 494~ and sealents l537 mg proess1ona saes WIWNGTOWORK' A.KC lnsh Setter Pup· llldlwrprodurt.s. .._,... 9010- c:ommensurate with ex· I -Monrovia. NB pel"50fl PMu!l\t have r2ryrs L I K E G R E A ;r pies. Show & Pet Avail Cal1631·97~or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••,•M•PO•••R•T••A•N••T•••••• per. 10-6:30. 40 hrs Mor:•hlsh expr. osi ion ° ers Shots. IJ2S to 1350. aft.er6,•M08 La"una Hiiis Mr • _ _., __ u.:_ rLUMIEllS benefits. tor comm & REWARDS ? 5111-1722 • • • NCYJ'ICETO • ..._ v...-salary C0 l Mr Con SailChevro1 ... 1·s1001i·1ng Firewood "2 box ·. -waOI"-READERS AND Dreyfus, 768·3784, Laser mfg firm seeks and drainmen wanted ~I · " · · "' DOXIE I&,; yr. female typewriter Slt5, otr ..., • 7~93Sl. machinists for pro for busy Costa Mesa l.l'UCC fora[>J>t ~9·1424_ ~1:tp~e ;f!~~ ~e~ bu all ihots. reddish deK SlOO; cbr 165: files 2012Hlghland Dr TteD~~~~l~f~~ems 11111111 ... mi•----•I totypel light production shop Must have own Sales and lllSuran« benefits brown,otrer. 642-4015 8 ; &oil clubs SllO; ba& Newport Beach ad\•ert1sed by \leh1cle ELECTRONICS Min 5 yrs ex per '" pre-t.n.ICll. ~hand tools All PIOHSSIOt4AL and are willing lo train Lhau Apao pup~ies M IF. sz:s. chin1lt't1old/whitt You are the winner or dealers m the veh1rle e.t.11!1t•~sou cision machining using re~eren ces will be TILIPHOHISALIS lherlghtpersonforthls ""'C __._ g d'"n blli .~ r~!rttthtkliets<Sl800l "lass1r·ed ··d,·ert1sing Ex~:d"!iectr:Oic milling machine, lathe venf1ed. Excellent ~ay Proven oil closers only sales position. Call Frell ';Jl S '~12. MZ·77li Parking boxes for sale. v.....-to e ~olum~ d~s not in-gnnder, etc Apply 3.13 East 17th t 11 $100,000 yrly potential c:1 Tonv today to riod out d J B · di Spoth. VecelliCMI 1 d t bl romponent salesperson We are a d1v1s1on or 3C.o&ta Mesa7~·6882 Upto25'k comm paid mo r / 494 ·1131 or YI oe nn ey 25rperbox. mdlVSltow e u e any app1ra e needed for electronic Johnson & Johnson and . MOW IS THE TIMI wkly Qua.hfied wnle-in 546-9!167 ,,,_, • ...,..._ 833..Q336 ANAHEIM taxes. bC'ense. lransfer ~~sr~t~Trf:~.Y ioe:J. as such ofrer an ex· ror JOb seekers 10 check leads: Plush Nwpt Bch Setter/ Retriever, rem, 7 WANTED. Rose Bowl CONVENTION ~:;;0~1:1~n~~lu~~;:~~~· WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOIUSED CAIS AUHMAGMOM POHTIAC/SUIAIU 24a> Harbor Ulvd COSTA MESA 549-000 549-1457 WEIUY a.EANCARS AND TRUCKS COHMRL CHEVROLET .'X."'""'"'' 11 •• .i ''"l\\H .:-\ 546-1200 HIGHIUTEI Top dollars for Sporh Cars, Bugs, Camper~. 914's. Audi's Asldor l!1C MGR JIMMAllHO YOUSWAGEH 18711 Beach Bhd HUNTINGTON BEACH -14J.2000 WEM&D YOUIEXOTIC &llmSHCAIS 1~4 -JJOO~W C.oast Hwy Newport Beach _64H40:=-5 __ WANTED! Late model Toyotas and Voh ·o s Call o s TO AY!!' rnibion basis. Please cellenl benefit package the Daily Pilot Help location. Major lncen· \ W__,, ...__..-... mo. Penonality + Tickets. 71'·646· 7343. C~ER.Jan 2·10 j trol device <'ertiricattons calJ forappt. ?l4-llS4.7257 Ca II or a PP I Y at Wanted classification. rr live P.lua: new car. wv._,~__,, ~7411 ~.Happy New To claim tickets, call or dealer documentan· '"' .. ..._ 11,, Laakmann Electro Op the job you want is not Hawanan vacation. yrly Need slitlled operator W°ll'e Foa Terrier pups, 4 Year! 642·5678 , ext 272 preparauon charges un· c .. i.wew ••• EVALOHI 147 21st St. !IC Costa Meu You are the wmner or four free tickets ($18.00) value t.o the Sports. V ocotiolt mdlV Sltow ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Jan. 2· 10 To claim tickets. call 642·5678, ext 272 T\ckets must be claimed by January 8. 1982 ••• Exec. sect. adman assist Ir confidant an Newport Centr. Long hrs, hard woct • challenging ror someone unusually brif!it ' ali1lled. If this 1sn t you, please call your smartest, un· challenged. under· utilized friend & tell them about this ad Compensation to 124,000. + benefits. If you're the best, please reply in confidence ,to Mr Charles. P 0 . Box 2(0), CdM 92625 FU Q.EIKJF..T 114 t4!M·BOM .... CLEU Electronic dlatri butors needs mature person for filing dept. Excellent op portunily • Company benefits. CalJ. Elsa. 5.56-3880 Food Menaier Manqer, Food Service Background a must! Reuonable Hours. Fr· lnCe BenefitJ, Nice Sur· roundings. Pay Xlnt Write Resume to PO Box 182, Laguna Beach. Ca s:atm. Attn. June Nep· tune. M-n..Stoc• YIJU!>I: energetic person neeaea.. Muat hlVe some rellil exp. Ple111nt sur· roundlnp • benefits. P\eaM apply ln persoo. Apropos, 29 Fashion h ie. N.8 or call. 644-Jm Oewra1 Help lklt.ty Errands. Help In Office • Home Oc· t•lon•l Travel, Hours F1eaib6e Must h1Ve own car Be Re!lable •G-2744 General Ofll~ -==·· II, __ .._. s.a.c.,111r-s.c11m1• ,,.._ lltatlofta 1valla· Ml 10 dloow from. Wiii -"' ow buy olflre ... ,.,. Ttmporery , .. m ... •Hd•1 ..... rrw.,.NP•. Cell MHJ ''''" !' tics Inc, 33052 Calle there you might con· bonuaes. Ken Brown, with alnt command or nthl KC POO ATARJ 'lOGames. $270, nctets mu.st be claimed less otherwise sperifaed I ,... •O·HO>., S4o.,07 Aviador . San Juan sider offering you 6'13-GIZ.. grammar (ormatung. rm tiiZ>~ea. A.ekforDouc. byJanuary8,1982 byl.headvertiser Capistrano. !Off Aero services with an id In Will traln on Burroughs ~5100or7&0-2646 * * '* ,.___. -- 95 - 1 o' Puerto) (714l 493-6624 t be J 0 b wanted s ... ,... Redactron Ftr noon to Doxie Miniatures AKC ------. -------_ I EOEM /F H catrcory. P!!oMH2=5171 Part liaw for plant 8 PM Resumes to: 18012 reg Ma I es. UOO Wdd. eq111p. one llO cu. fl. IMh. Poww 904 ..................... .. Top Dollar Paid EXECUTIVE SECRETARY BIG 8 CPA FIRM LOCATED IN FASHION ISLAND Big 8 CPA firm located in Fashion Island is seeking a professional secretary . Typing 75 wpm. shorthand 100 wpm, capable of working independently. well organized and versatile. Competitive starting salary and excellent benefits. CALL FOi APPOINTMENT 17141 640-9200 EXT.247 EQUAL OPPOOTUNITY EMPLOYER <t -__ CO_> __ > > WANTED < {--.... cos----> > It.Oft. Aflemoons and Sky Pan Circle. Irvine. FaNles ~. ~9-0373 oxy. cyl. S75. 60 cu. fl. -••••••••••••••••••••• .o.oryys ~ __._ ...... _ e· arre ' --1 acet. cyl. S75. one 40 cu y.o." -ucnoHS RHTM-I --· ,.,.,. u 92714 Atten tio n . UKC <PR > Amtri<'an ll. "B" Prestollte tank _.,.., COHSUMH For Your Car' JOHMSOH & SOM U..C . ..Wtf'Cwy 2626 Harbor Bh d' Buur. eu.33112 UM> j Bll'bara. FAE mo Puppies. Sl50. Donate your boat •nnUI!. & 1 11: .. S1 ... ,,_ I SICllTAIT I &»3498 ISO. ~U4'. De.adllne De.c 31Jt -"""" ~ "• ----'~.::...;;;:;.;:._ __ Custom 300 Gallon Salt Call Loll rree for info SBVICE for LAWYER Good Ma 'I lit M Lhasa Apso puppy Water Aquarium I 1-800/592·5909 Allmakesandmodels I skills required, but not ••••••••••••••••••••••• AKC champ lines. Complete w/cablnet, Below any fleet Pnre legaleapr. Mr Myers. ,.W .. 1 1005 shots/papers. S250 . filter syste m uv * * • pl~ A FREE TANK Of 640-8510 _ •••••••••••••••••••••••' 551-8322 SttriU1er. Decorations a. filADTS IMOOES GAS on any nev. car we Calta Me~a ~0-5630 Prem ium pnce> paid for an) used car 1rore1gn or domest1r I 1 n good condll1on s.cn+.ry / • • • Golden Retriever Pups . F\ah Must Stt! 973-0838 ' 2ll82 Wallace •C sell OffiuM~ PATU"8T AKC Outstanding ,.. I CostaMesa CALLNOW for Tustin Mfg Rep, 285 Broadway Pedi ree $300. 493·6861 ·s.s Pepsi Michine. Work You are the winner or 675-91SJNB 835·6636SA Cost M . W d . 11· F four rree tickets 1Sl8 00> JEEPS CARS PICKL' PS Nours flexible 20 30 a ~a r ""'° Y• 1045 mg. I nn mg oun· valueiothe See Us first! hours per week Ex You are the winner o ••••••••••••••••••••••• lain 6 COUI Boa. $300 c-rrom S35 Available at rellenl opportunity fo r four free tickets UIB OOl )""'r fnendly 2 yr camel 080. 973-01311. 9-4PM ~ • ., Yoc.tlow local Go"'' Auctions homemaker w1lh valuetothe Afghan needs room to Beautiful 7 .. Blue Fox mdlVSltow For Directory call secretanal skills want Sports. YocoticMI n.adreetolovinghome . Searl. Uke New. Only ANAHEIM SUrplusData Center mg to get back into bust md IV Sltow 4116-3774 Sl.50. 1l4-636-7279 CONVENTION 415.JJO. 7~ __ ne55world ANAHEIM CENTER Jan. 2 10 J M Associates CONVENTION Free to good home. AKC l.oftl•11•1 To claim tickets , c1 ll 1 ·90WPAOGONTMLSAELME!NS 544-1662 CENTER Jan 2·t0 Samoyed M. 1',, yrs old. Helium Bouquets de· 1 642·5678. ext 272 " ----To claim tickets, call gooddisp SJ6...(2S7 livered. Perfect for Tictas must be claimed v.·agon . Grand Saran. 642-5678, eat. 272. F'reetoGoodHome.Com· ev'""' Occasion. Great! byJanuaryS.1982 1 everyoplionavailable.a MnlUY ~11118 ll.11 b•r 111\d \ 11~( ,t \k , I ol1l ll:l.IO •RCmAlllS• Acct. Pay.Ana. SlS,000 T60Lire Ins. Sl8.000 T70 Dict. R.E. Sl9,200. Exp. C.onsult11nt Ours l..11 Reinders Agy, Inc 402l> Birch£,,f64EOE Newport/833·8190/Free Have you read toda y's Classified Ads? If not you're missing the besi bar ams in town ! b. 1 T _., mu.st see he 480ZBW ..... T\cketsmust beclalmed 1nat on e rr1 er· forNewYears! • * • I USED CARS&TRUCKS byJanuaryB,1982 Scbnauier.6mo old 673--4419 _....._.__.../ ~~APRICE WAGON. COMEIN OR * '* * Excellent walch dog. Antlqu'" Babv Grand ~ 90501' I CALL FOR great with kids. Call .. , -.....-loaded, beautiful dark , 1.938 Rockarolla juke·~. 548-J879 Plano, w/ eltt. player .... •••••••••••••••••••• brwn with saddle in-1 Fl& APPIAISAL barber chairs. piano. Ampico. Also antique Custom 42 rt yacht tenor Only 19.800m1les. Cormier DeL1llo many more 978-9172 cabmd for rolls. SSSOO. C r u i s e s . w h a I e ser 120703. ~ CHEVIOLET 1.925GrebeRadio ~ witching, parties. etc '79 MALIBU WAGON, I 18211 BEACH BLVD Batt operated. Perr Beautiful Mans l8K beslrata646-4005 extra nice mad size HUNTINGTON BEACH rood. ISOO. Boatswatn's yellow gold Rolex. Pres. _...._Sllpl/ wagon. has all the op· 147-'017 or ' t b 6 b d ..,000 --. lions LlC'084WFK SS495 whistle. sterling silver wa c an -· Docb 9070' ___ 549·ll3 I 00.642-9840 rirmm.3'7~ ....... • ·, SAJLCHEYIOLET •ft• ... ·~nrrany Lamp * * I BUY * * UI:. I BOATSUPs FOR.RENT• 900So Coast Hwy I POISCHES no_..... _,_ ... N 8CH .. . . Laguna Beach w ~E Wired,ISOO. Good \lied Furniture 6 W_..., 1081 ~· · 20 25 · 30 · 494·1131 ~6·9967 A"' D 645-1608/548·6390 Appliances-OR I will ............ ••••••••••• 3S 642-4144ll·SPM -----f'.:m-.... ----~n :-, Bea~.irul Antique While aellorSEU.for You Slipuvall1ble. up to 59' ,,,,.,,,.,.,, Jf f} ~"<.~ Cradle. Great for Baby MASTaSAUCTIOM WAMTIO CdM uu '9 fl Ca ll CliMkt 9520 • , U or Deco Pie« $220. 646 1616, lll-t6JI I 1/i .. wi.-,tr Peggy Patt 1 son ....................... ·-~--;-.. ~'.:,.111."' K 962·3282 AlrCi .. "Mr 714/llM·2473 wkdys 8·5 PllTTIEST u.·~c,...,. . .,_,n» lartNr'i CW.. I IUY FUIMITUU 5J6.tllJ pm. '57 T·lllD Les 957-8133 tLaporlu........L.0 IMTOW"I Student needs sml gd New leather upholstery. w n-_., trans ear imrtlediately Re·chromed fixtures. 211 IOfu. New. •· Lov· WANT E D · U a t d Ott, wtt1month646 .. QSSJ IUT ~! ~!tOOO 61J·8!Mll _ Hyd~aulic. Exrellent m@a~A~RV:r.;;~ awimeuc wuher. Will INh...,... 9090 (OCXIUKZ) condition. Sl200 -· s-Y &c> to $100 for one In ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• THEODORE 640-2888eves KING INNERSPRING IOOd nanain1 condition. 1 _______ _ Aflpl-.c" IOID EXTRA FIRM mattms Ptione~5mevenlnp. llJ STOIA~( •••H•••••••n••••••••• ~ never .. ~d j :oni: WANTED 2 to 4 R78·1S a HARBOR AREA -1 aac . .,._ e · eve Uled Urea in cood condi· Monthly boat Ir RV APPUANCESERVICE llHO qllffn 11• wortb lion, alao motorcycle 1torag• for any 6itt. 24 WetM(y u.edapplianca ... c&th onlY.12ll del. Jacket slu a..o. Call hr UtU rlly . f rte -WuelJ recond .. 1uar. UwallY home, 754·7350 MMIS launchln1 6 washing ROBINS FORD 10b0 HllAOOR Bl VO (0'1A Ml SA M1 0010 Tnidm tHO ...... c..+.d ••••••••••••••••••••••• 970$ ••••••••••••••••••••••• MfWIUSID IJ.fA IOMEOs! 'Newspaper Carriers tor routes apPlianres. 549.3077 Kin&Sbie BeauUrest Mat·....,....:..:;;....;=------privileges. Newport 1 IUY AflftJAHCIS tr:~.::~• Spnna•. lwl1www• IOIJ ~e~~~r~~~a'!°'t!. Les 957 .. W SI ............... •••t•••• 144-eiSlO For Sale. coctt11l table, Vlbnpbolle. a tpdt. 3 oc· ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. Rehic: Croat free, dean, 30''. x 80" X ~" 11111 tave1, Id C09d. 9500/btl. F works 1ood. $150. =~old b11t, sns. -..nbndx 1..;;.~-...;;;;..;;l.3;;.t,..;;.$48.;;;_;-4485;.;;;;,.;;. ___ ....;;.=.;..;;..o.;'-------101BS0N Les PIUl sun Wuher, dean. worlis Lae 101ld ma ho11ny dard, mint 1 Brown ,.. .. ,..lilllf... t 1 .. 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '81 FORD F·l50 P/U 302 Vl Auto. Trans ' 0 0 . PS. PB. Ing whl bHe. d111l tanlia, ahde win dow. step bumper, AM. Radial lim. 18K m1. l owner MUST SELL! HSOO. IX483001 PP MS-1219S Orange County's oldest & leading dealership B e for e yo u buy anywhtre. COITI(' in &r Sff us & the GTV6 2 :; &c the Sc>ider Veloee' IEACH IMPOITS 811 Dove Strtet, N 8 75J.Oto0 in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley & Newport Beach • Good Earnings CALL CIRCULATION • Super Trips ~AATM~NJ • Great Prfzts "llily Pilat 642-.4321 • 1ood. SllS. 541·1513, desk. Nd1 refln $100. w/dtrk trim, sos."' "' ~ '1SHCll aft5 or wbdl. ., ...... ,-.sea .. •••••••••••••••••••• .. .__ o-Ptd. Miuln1 Eng. Dryer, au, clean, worh Twin extra Ions m•l· Ofllella 1 4 • 17$.Call Eve. 1ood. .S. S48-8SlS or tnu, bos spri':,. and ... If ... I $47·11113 ~ bid framea. @ . IMl ..!£! ................ i--P\lt~h-M"""-oPed...-;.-. R_u_n_1_1_d_. P'ridJe. Green Sldt by JQaa Sl• Boll Sprins • • * * Newtirel••beeli s.oo, I elde. SZ2S. Good Cond. • 1 ttreu, Uo ta. ~SAMPSON ...._ 751·9322 Frame. 12$. r1nta1tlc ii.Cibola A FtOIUrw Relri1, SUS Cond. 142. uoe wtidy1. a.ta Ill Yt. llrwerw/mlrror. '50 aft«&Plll. Yoa .,. the :'i!ner ot i---"-IG.::;_;,•14.;.:::U"----e .,_ID Clln foe dlnln1 fGur fne tJckltl ($11.00) L-.. table, llO ta, Ullt onlJ. , ..... to&bl i"..._ Is dryer '11/u , •15l2orMMl9» ~ ...... •Pl,_. trl, IU '' -11 -n hlmac9 Is a 111 Q et aol II t ... ... •-t tl I, tllCt ttl ,. ... alJM I w1t1r btater SSO/u . e.d Pl~ld faablon ~"::v-ftM --..... -dble ""'" ..... •VI"' btd •: ....... tnm CINTDJu.a.tt OAIAOE SAL! adl lo wltnf "9: t aaU.H To dai• UH.U, eaU lbt Dall1 Pl.lot '"'"' .._. .... ..,. •lrrtn Hl·HTI, ~at . na. _,,,....,,To plact ~~J:=~ ,,... ..... clai•d ,.o., clra•l•• card, ,.... ......,. .,,_,,_ ,.__.,.!!l!JI ......... * * * Tiit ....... , Ct ... o....c.- DllLY PllDT QASSlfllD ADS • 196!1'Chev a,, lOn pick up. Long bed $950 Will throw 1n campe r m.mo ,_ 9511 ....................... '11 GMC SURft:R VAN v.a. 111tomattr tran1 . power !disc) brakes, hllh·blck bucket sulA, ralMd whit• letter tires • m111, custom paint. tarptt PH~lln«. port ho6ea • more. (lt1H11•1 <PUUT) UOt. ~RobW. Dir . Harber ll•d • Coata Meu. U2·00l0 or MNIU. it ~ Vu. Auto, Lo & O... lat. AC. I'll, •-W71 i. tlatbor 8h•d . C M -_6_lJ:!J 70 9711 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltlJMODB.S ... MOWlll ror lM bnt deals 1n SoutMm C1 htorn11 Come~U1 Tod1)'! SADDl.BACI ..w .. • .,...,,l. PkW7 ..... v .. A=WftlfU at 4tMMt a-. • • ~Harbor B~vd. eo.taMet1 714/541-6410 ATLASCHRYSLIR.ft.YMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tel. 546-1934. 3 bloeksl aouth or San Diego Freeway otr Hatt>or Blvd. Complei. 1 body shop. Sales. Service. Parts. Sefvlce Dept. open Monday thru Friday 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. on Saturday . • llACH l~S 848 Dove Street. Newport Bech. Tel. 7S2-0900. Call ut, we're the specialltta for Alfa Romeo. Peugeot, Saab & MaMratl . • THIODORIROllHSFOID Modem tales, HrVlce, parts, body, pelnt l tire depts. Competitive rates on 1 .... & deity rent.ia. 2080 Harbor Blvd., Costa M .... 642-0010or 540-8211. • JOHHSOM & SOM UMCOl.M ..aCUIY 2e2e Hart>or Blvd., Coata MeM. Tel. 540-5630: 57 Yews of trlitndly family "rvlce -Orange County's oles.st Lin·· COl~ury dNlershlp. • SOUTH COAST DOOel 2-Harbor Blvd .. Costa MeM. Tel. 540-0330. RV Mrvlct l tPeCllllsta, ~.uetom van conYWSionl. • HIWPOU NOITS 3100 W. Cout Highway, Newport a .. ~h . Tel. '42·9406i540-17k The,emw1~. ... "' . ·Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT(Thureday, December 31. 1981 Cll tt74 MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street. Newport Buch. Tel. 833-1300. Al the triangle of Jamboree, Mec:Arthur & Bristol behind Vic· torta Statlon. Sales, S.rvic:e.Lea.sing & Pwta. Aeet di. couna to the public. • NAIHSCADILLAC 2600 H1rt>or Blvd., Co1ta Mesa. Tel. 540-9100. Orange County's Largest Cadillac dealer. Sal". Servica. Leas· Ing. • DAVID J. P .. LUPS IUICk"'°"'1AC-MADA Sales • Service • Leulng 24888 Alicia P.ntw~ Laguna Hills 837·2400 • CHICI( IVHSON POISC...AUDl-YW 415 E. Co•t Hwy .. Newport Beach. 673-0900. The only dNlef'thlp In Orange County with these thrff grNt matces under one roofl ' • ALAM MA•HOH POMrlAC.SUIAaU 2480 Herbor Blvd .. Coata MeM. Tel. !Mt-4300. Sal•,. 81rvtct. LMtlng. :·Mr. Goodwfanch." • G 0 IOI LONGPRE roNTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster Tel. 892·6651 Orange County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Sales, Service. Parts UNIVERSITY HONDA 2850 H11bor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-96-40 1 Mile South 405 Freeway. Sales. service. pa/'15 & leasing. • SANT A ANA DATSUN 2001 E. 17th Street. Sal\ ta AnL Tel 558·7811 Your· Original Dedlc~ted Datsun Dealer • MIRACLE MAZDA We've movedl Our new location is 1425 Baker Street. C:O... Mee&. Tel. 545-3334. Stop by & visit our bfend new Mc>wroom and ... why we're the ti Mazda dealer tn Southern Callfornla. Sales. s.rvim, Parts and Leasing . AMNmMMAD>A "Gair o.c. .......... ... ""'" .... Lee c...· 801 S. Anaheim Blvd., AnWI"' 958-1820. Just north of Senta Ana Frwy. on ~m Bllld. Call us firatl "WE ARE HARO TO FIN~UT WORTH IT!" • SAPP' !'rCI IMW 29402 Marguente Wy .. Avery Pllwy. I ll It We offer what no , .... company or bank can. 1. Ultra-modern Mrvict dept. for tat CIMt alter sale 1Mr¥1ce; 2. '•ctory auth. facilities & body 1hop: 3. IHmlnatlon of the middlemen -teasing dealer dl*t 131·to40 495-4849 COST A MESA DATSUN 28<15 Hart>or Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel ~0.6410 Serving Orange County for 16 years 1 Mile So. 405 SUNSET FORD, IMC. (Home of Wllhe the Whale~ s.40 Garden Grove Blvd .. Westminster. Tel. ~10 • RAMk PROTO UMCOlM-MHCURY Service and Parts Department always open 7 days a .week 7:30 A.M. to 6:30 P.M 848-n39. 0 CONNILL CHlftOUT .2928 Harbor Blvd .. Coate Meu. Over 20 years Nrvlng Orange County! Sales. teaing, Ml'Vloe. Call 5.e-1200: apec:lal parts line: 546·9400; bOdy shop line; 754"'°400. • ROY CAIVll IOU.S IOYCMMW 1640 JamborM Road, Newport BMch. ~.Sal•, Service, Parts And L .. elng. • MM~. IMC. 730 W. 19th It., Coete ._.. 642-1M4 S.. time, energy & fruetr•tlon. Otll ut ror all or yaur leMlng Meda. We leMe all m9k" and moct.lt of Olll't, tn.ic*a & vane. • u 2 2 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/fhurlday, December 31, 1981 ••• s Eqlllpped with: • Factory Air Cond. • Automatic Trans. • Power Steering • Power Oise Brakes • White Sidewall Tires • Low Mileage • Choice of 4 Cyl. or 6 Cyl. • Front Wheel Drive • AM Radio • Deluxe Wheel Covers . OR sns Down Plus EXAMPLE: SER. #111714 . Tax, Lie ... & Doc-••lsy Fff • Body Side Moldings CHOOSE FROM 2 DOOR COU PE OR 5 DOOR HATCHBACK SAU PllCI 16491.11 ....... k & Dec.,_, SttUI De..$ Ht.ti ... SID.It l.N.Y ..... !fim'lt _. SH he•• :: tw • ..... ef SIUUI ..._ ,.,_..._:., ...... S14UJ~1:twM ...... PHtMf :!:1!·A.l.A. IUrll.. ,.,.... ..... Slt.J17.7t •.... ...-. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! 22 222 • 2--0utlook '82-An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursd ay, December 31, 1981 ---- \ Board of ~ealtors, Inc., wishes to· thank the foil owing individuals and businesses who donated to this year's Parallle dics Fund-raiser: lnterioT Designery Myjnt Condition Barbara Young, Bailey• Kathie Bnmn, Baileys Pacific Decorating Hufttington Beach Sewmg Center Huntington Floral Gardena Huntington l..oMs Huntington Valley Hobby & Craft Fir&t Cabin C~rs Kentucky F~d Chicken Dolores Brown, Avon lady, Jon's Colfee Shop Phyllis Cyr Dance Academy Novello Furniture Larry's Ca~t Mart Viking Fumilure West(air Jewelers Marty'• Bootery Gino Perry . Sculpture Hou.se Vittorios Any Old Tirru Donuts Pacific City Bank, Goldenwed Fountain Valley Lighting Scandinavian Pa.try Huntington Beach Inn Sea Mist Hair Fcuhiom Commercial Office Equipment Fountain Volley Floriat F o1mtain of Flowers California Cowboy Facial & Nails Red Lobster Liftdborg Racquet Club 'Shear Personalitr~• Huntington MIUic Anaheim Patio & F'ireme Mr. & Mrs. C.A. Nuttall Hair Care Gallery of Clocks Bob's Union Statton, Bol.aa Chica Clarkl SheU Service, Magnolia Pasha Liquor Shanghai Spring Gardens Jeannette Waggoner Nailsmith Turner Winery Wally's Pharmacy David Scott Matteo Hair Dengn Hot Dog Bldg. Co. King's Racquetball Mr. & Mra. W. Joe Roy Seaclif/ Florilt A·l Lawnmowrr Service Venus De Milo Mr. & Mrs. Schnitzer Carolyn'• of Calif. Nature Cutten Beach CycLeTY Real Estate By Mc Vay Gilbano's Ddicate1Sen. Fountam Valley M urie Ct r Augoshno's West Orange PublUhing Co Huntington Beach Mary Monloya, Nall Racket Family Fllneu Center Western Mutual Escrow Gold Connection · Neal'& Planl Exchange Ocean Sports Orange Caa&t Title Mercury Savings 3-Star Nurttry We1tem Time Jewelers Allstate R.ealtors -Kannenberg MC1Z Mobil Westminlter Nurst'T!j Erhibttion Bakery South Shores Insurance T -Shirt1 R Ua . Union 76 ·Gaspar Farace Luigi and Co. Haircutters Erecutive Park Escrow South C001t.f>Lant Erchange Auto World The Cookie Jar. Crown Lecuing Weatem Cruise Line Carriage Trade Dinner Club Personaliz.ed Products Escrow Concepts Gem Trouel The DonulttTY JPM.Co., Printing Divi.W>n lren · Touchstone Nickel Arcade Frito.Lay, Inc. Alpha Bero Stewart Title Ben F'TankUn Press Del Taco Bo11s Markel Erecutive Realton Get Framed 7-Up BottUng Co Thriftimart American Title Hobie Newport Catalina Cruises Rolph's Market Mtilti-Li&tlMcGraw-Hill Dennil Produce Town and Country Travel Lucky Market Hallmark Eacrow South Weit Carpet Cleaner ZOOM Camera Amencan Home Escrow Tnnity Leasing Far West Savrngs & Loan Sun11y'1 Restaurant Huntington Escrow Red Carpet Realtors · S. Commons Bon Amie Alberlson'a, Golden~st Treeco Eacrow Terra Escrow Old World Coffee Mill David Jonea Jewelers Bill's Camera Richard Dunham & Assoc Ice Cream Man Farmer Bros. Coffee Machine De R~ve Title l11111rcmce Trust Great Earth L..A. Rams Huntington Harbour Flomt Coast Financial Consulting Take 2 lnata-Print Piua Foctory T.urk Temute T -Shirts, Etc. Antique and Cla.tsic Car Showroom Cro1srood.s Restaurcmt t ren ·Star Best Travel Pizza Coout cc·s Steak HoWJe Rafferty & I.Loyd Travel Travel Mariner Real Estate Valley Center Drugs Farmers l11111rance Lal VeQCU Fun Bus Home Federal Savings and Loan Studio One Bank of Orange County Chippendale'•. Los Angeles Bill Medley, Medley's Restaurant Francou Restaurant California Land Title D~yland De Lucio Tile Huntington VaUey Schwmn Chicago Title Knott'& 8ttT'1I Farm South Coa.1t Bank Escrow Shear Dynamic• City of lluntmgton Beach Crazy Horse Steak House Escrow Encounters Danber Drugi Col Counties Title UA TWln Ci11ema& Buzz Chambers, Pnmary WiUn11$ and Associates Orange County Escrow See '• Candy Shopl Financial StTV1.Ces Celia Baker. Gad Hutton. City Attorney Smart and F'tnal Tiempo Esc;row Apez E1erow Ray's E:rterminating Mane Calendar's Amino1I • Briarwood Escrow Realty World . BeachBlde Straw Hat Pizza Huntington Harbour Beach and Holley Escrow CentuTJI 21 · Emery Z Pizw Racquet Cll'b Allstate Realtors -Miller/Moore Church of Religiou$ Science Wendy's Hamburgers Seaclilf Bakery Colonial Real Estate Nori Campbell Rainbow Dispo&al . (B . ... thanks to those listed above, and to the many other Realtors and their friends, this year's fund -raiser met its goal! $12,600 was given to · Paramedics for additional equipment and training. Congratulations to everyone who worked to make t h is s uc h an outstanding success . .(?EALTOR' .... EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY -Oulloott '82-An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday, December 31, 1981-3 • ·L. At a GTE Phone Mart we can handle all your telephone needs -from the ordinary to the downright unusual -under one convenient roof. If you need a SNOOPY & WOODSTOCK Phone for an insecure executive or an Executive Telephone for a precocious kid, we can help. We have telephones in . every conceiv- able color to match your outer surround- ings and phones in all kinds of styles to match your innermost self. And one of the nicest things about pick- ing up a new phone at the GTE Phone Mart is Jhat you can take them home ~ with you, and, usually, plug them right in. If your phone is on the fritz and you lease from GTE you can even AZUSA FcohiU Shopp.ng Cet"Cer IEUllOMR Mesia Center COVINA (SH Wesl C.0...na) CUCAMOHQA (SH Rancho) DOWNEY Stonewood Shopp.ng Center HUNTINITON lf.ACH Hunt1ngt011 Center get your phone fixed here, usually in the same day. If you want to arrange for telephone service, pay your bill in person, or simply have some questions answered, the GTE Phone Mart is the place to do any or all of those things. -I So why not stop by your local GTE Phone Mart. You'll be amazed how much you can accom - plish with one, simple person-to-person call. HUHTMTON llACH SOUTH lOlai Adams~ MOMON 41? So Myrtle MOLANDS SANTA MONICA Redlands Mall 1~1 61h SI lMEWOOD Lakewood Center Mall LAMHTI F\itnte Hills Mall LONllEACH Tile Marllet Place MARINA V1U1 Martna Shopping Center MOHTctMt Montclair Plaza NOVATO, 14~Granl Avenue PW..MSPNHIS Sunnse Square Shopping Center PMOMMA Panorama City Mall RANCHO CUCMOHIA 'flCB Basehne Rd. ROWNQ HILLS £STAID SOUTH IAY The Vtlla8e Shopping Center Del Afro Fash'°" Square UNTA IMIMA ntOUSAND OAllS Loreto Plaza Janss Mall SAN IOtfWtDINO WEST COVINA Central Cily Mall Fash ion Plua SANTA JMRIA WOT LOS AHelW Town Cenlef 1066 Gayley ~ WHrmlR Whtttvoood Shopp.ng Center l • ' r } ,'> ,.e e •-Outlook '82-An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday, December 31, 1981 Elections to decide fate of Newport Center By STEVE MARBLE ( For Newport Beach, 1982 will be a year of decisions. It will be a year of elections, a year of deciding whether Newport should continue to grow and a year in wh,ch the city's first referendum will be held. By contrast, 1981 in Newport Beach was a year of debate. It also was the year the city celebrated its 75th birthda y ; an occasion commemorated with a parade, dedications and a new seven-lane Upper Newport Bay brid~e. The issue of the year was the Irvine Company's $123 million project to expand Newport Center. The plan, approved by the City Council in late summer, would have brought a new hotel, new office towers and several new restaurants lo the center . Citizens objected and began a referendum drive lo put the development project on a ballot so that voters could make the final decision. The construction.and opening of a new seven-lane Upper Newport Bay bridge marked the celebration of Newport Beach's 15th birthday during 1981. The drive was successful and it appears the question will be put to voters this June in conjunction with the slate primary election. The election not only will be vital in determining what does or does not happen at the circular shopping and professional center, ll could hav e a maj or i mpact on November's city council election. DEMONSTRATOR CLEARANCE 1981 Mercury Lynx SAVE Sl,500 This fuel Aavlng Lynx Is bcautlfully equipped with a luminum whccht, air conditioning, lttfia(~C rock, powe r steering, powe r brokeH, Htcreo--und more! •ot 135. Ma.nufacturcr'H Ruggcstcc1 retail price 38, 122. Our Rlllc price ••·•••· TOil 8AYE •1 .... 1 ,J 0 H N S 0 N & S 0 N Four council seats will be up for grabs. The council posts now are he ld by Mayor Jackie Heather, Evelyn Hart. Paul Hummel and Don Strauss. Heather and Hart s upported development at the center while Strauss and Hummel did not. It is not yet known whether all or any of the four wiU seek re-election. Another controversial issue which has involved the Irvine company is Offl~ials predict continued student enrollment decline By JODI CADENHEAD Continuing declines in student enrollments and income caused the closure of two more schools last year in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. One of those, Rea Middle School, has been leased by the city or Costa Mesa for use by non-profit public service organizations serving the city. The other, Corona del Mar Elementat:Y School in Newport Bea ch1 was leased by The University of Southern California following closure io June. TrU$tees wrestlinc wilb a bucl1et $2.7 million lower than the pnmous year, approved the layoff of 50 the matter of leasehold property. Many homeowners in Newport lease their land from the Irvine Company. The leases, put together in the 1940s and 50s, call for periodic readjustments. Hundreds of the leases are to be readjus ted in the coming years . And that means annual fees lo homeowners will skyrocket, in some cases increasing as much as 6,000 percent. Already a citizens group has been formed to protest such increases. The group bas threatened to file a class action s uit against the development firm. Another lawsuit which now is in the courts, is the city's suit against the county for approving a new master plan for John Wayne Airport. The city contends the master plan is inadequate. The city once again bas set aside a $250,000 war chest to battle airport growth and noise. Also, a city airport coordinator is belng added to the city staff. His role will be to coordinate lbe fight against the airport. Work crews finished up their job on two Newport Beach bridles in 1981. The 50-year~ld Balboa Island bridae was rebuilt witb wider sidewalks and the lon1-awaited seven lane Upper Newport Bay brid1e wu opened last Sep&ember. persons. Many were teachers, The largest step in years toward health wo_rkers , nur.ses and cleaningupthe UpperNewport Bay coUMeJors. was reached in late 1981. For a Pbyaieal education requirements while il appeared the whole project for bl&b school atudenta were was to go down the drain. reduced from three to two years . due to budget and pro&ram cuta. City officials with the help of Many elective proiumi were A••emblywoman Marian Ber&Mon eliminated from hilh icbool and and Orange County Supervlaor middle scbool levels. Thomas Riley have secUttd 14 o· tri t otfi ·11 _.,.....,._,,. mlWoa ln state and local f\IDCll, ,_. L I N c ti c 1c1 s are P·~~ ... _ pro,•-. set to bedin .m ......... O L N M E R C U another 1,000 drop tn edtollmellt ha VJllS 1'<M a _.., M0-"8Q 1982 after fi1urea sho•ed 1,100 aprlnt. R y ~==~~~~~~~~-~-~~~S!!i!~~,.,_,~~ ..... ~c~7~14~l~ ... ~:::= ... -~~ :3 .~ .......,,.., tw 11 ft , =*' 11reaaaa,. ---. ---~~IR- -Outlook '82-An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, ThurSday, December JI, 1981-S • When you hire the best, you don't put them in ordinary surroundings. You put them In an environment that Inspires their best. And at Fluor, we have such an en· vlronment, for both the mind and the body. As a professional, you'll appreciate working with the finest people in the field of energy. People who have built the major energy de- velopment and refinement facilities of the world, from Alaska to the Far East to the North Seas. People who have taken synfuels from theory to practice and. who have ex· tended synfuel technology literally years be- yond the competition. But you'll also appreciate the surroundings. You'd be hard pressed to match them any- where on earth. Fluor's headquarters weren't built to emulate anyone. They were designed around the needs and desires of the profes- sionals that inhabit them -functionally, beautifully. In all, more than 100 acres de- signed to make business a pleasure. Come explore our faclllties and opportunities. Clerical •Clerk Typists •Secretaries/ Stenographers Engineering •Sr. Control Systems/ Instrumentation •Electrical • N DE Mechanical •Process Analyzer •Process Instrumentation Instructor Computer Services •Assoc. Systems Analysts •Systems Analysts •Documentation Analyst •System Programmer •DASO Specialist •Word Processors '''FLUOR The Global Energy Machine. Designing •Sr. & Principal Piping •Sr. & Principal Electrical •Control Systems Designers (CAD) Successful candidates will find that Fluor offers competitive salaries and an extraord· lnary benefits package that includes profit sharing plan, commuter services and vanpool programs, Federal Credit Union, in-house banking facilities. a new recreation facility and continuing education programs In addi· tion to medical, dental. accident and life insurance. Investigate the place that ENA called "The Global Energy Machine:· Fluor. We're who the world turns to for energy. For .consideration on these and other posi· lions, please send resume to Roberta Anderson, Dept. OPS. An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H/V FLUOR ENGINEERS & CONSTRUCTORS, INC. 3333 Michelson Drive, Irvine, CA 92730 l ( I ... b--Outlook '82 An Advertising Supplement to the DAIL V PI LOT, Thursday, December 31, 1981 Coastline reduces class sch9dule Saddleback to begin 1982 with space shortage By PWL SNEIDERMAN A state-imposed growth ceiling is expected to have some dampening effect in 1982 on the surging enrollment at Coastline Community College. Founded in 1976, the college had about 34,000 students enrolled in credit classes during fall 1981 and perhaps another 15,000 attending non -credit w o rk s h op s and community service lectures. Coastline has no formal campus but offers classes in about 150 locations from Newport Beach to Seal Beach and as far north as Garden Grove. These class locations include community centers, high schools, churches and office buildings. Because the s tate has limited community college growth to 2 pe rcent, Coastline will reduce its Spring 1982 schedule by about 300 classes to help keep its enrollment within the state guidelines. Coastline President Be rnard Luskin predicts the college again will ha ve almost 34,000 students enrolled ln credil courses for the fall 1982 semester. He anticipates fees that can be charged legally by the colJege will increase in 1982 because or rising expenus. The college can charge fees ror materials and for non-credit community service courses. Coastline has been awarded a channel on the cable television system that serves Huntington Beac h , Fountai n Valley and Westmins ter. Luskin said the college in 1982 will expand its offering of televised courses lo cable customers in these cities. Different cable companies serve Newport Beach and Seal Beach Luskin said the college hopes to reach similar agreements with these compan1es. Construction will begin in 1982 on a $5 million four-story headquarters for Coa s tline . The college administration now occupies rented office space in Fountain Valley. Com ple•on is expected in spring 1983. Among the n e w vocational courses Coastline is expected to o ff e r in 1982 are e n e rg y management and robotics (the de s ign and u se or robots in industrial settings). The college now leases five closed elementary schools as "learning centers." Luskin said these class sites have been extremely popular but said it is unlikely any additional schools will be leased In 1982 Bv JOHN NEEDHAM The Saddleback Community College District will begin 1982 with a severe shortage of classroom s pace at its South Campus in M 1ssion Viejo. The district might receive $2 million under emergency legislation that is expected to be introduced in the Stale Assembly in January to enable the college t o begin cons truction on a $9 millio n, 50,000-s qu are foot c lassroom building. But district officials say in light of current state budget constraints, they are far from optimistic that the legislation will be passed. Fluor offers largest state apprenticeship The college, whic h operates campuses in bottr Mission Viejo and I rvine, has been growing in enrollment at a rate of about 15 percent a year for the past three years . The college district's $38 million annual budget, wb.icb has remained essentially the same for the past two years, has been strained as a result of the enrollment increases. Fluor Corporation has announced designer positions for energy industry projects. The international engineering and construction firm's long-established training program is now the largest private-sector apprenticeship in the state. As fulltime employees, apprentices receive training in piping, civil, structural, or control systems design. Completion of a challenging f ou r -year program earns accreditation by California's Department of Industrial Relations, Division of Apprenticeship Standards. The apprenticeship bas industrywide recognition. In addition, Saddlebaclt Community College bas assiened unit value to lbe Fluor trainin1. Completion of apprenticeship and 18 units of classes at Saddleback will earn an A.A. degree in design California Sliding Garage Doors A NEW CONCEPT • Polyester panels • Aluminum frame • Panels slide in any direction. & lock on 2 sides • No hardware Of springs to break • Maintenance-free • Custom-made to your style • Automatic openers available YEAR END Inventory Special up to 550°0 off on optional items ... c.... ;smJfNG 1 GARAGE DOORS 557-4641 technology. Men and women in the design field must unders tand the information on their drawings. Conceptual designs are prepared from engineering specifications, as well as the designer's knowledge of codes, economics, s afety of operation, maint e nance, and construction. Remex introduces computer product College officials are now seeking wa ys to generate i n co me independent of state and federal allotments, wbich have been cut back. One option being considered is to lease an unused 20-acre parcel on the South Campus in Mission Viejo to a private developer. The lease would be long term (50 years) and a mix of commercial structures and office buildings would be constructed. In order to save money, the A new computer peripheral is district also bas cut about 300 having an impact on the future of classes from its spring schedule, the small computer market. And mea ning more students will be this impact is good n ews for competing for a seat in more countians seeking upper-level crowded classrooms . employment. Despite financiaJ constraints, the The Remex Division of Ex-Cell-O district pla ns to purchase an Corporation, with manufacturing additional 40 acres of land from the facilities in Irvine and Anaheim, Irvine Co. in 1982 for its North has introduced to the computer Campus in Irvine . industry a s~ floppy disk drive The purchase will conclude a called PICO which has a unique phased purchase agreement with design. This product is a small size, the Irvine Company that was low cost rotating memory used to worked out when the North Campus input, output and store data from a was dedicated in 1978. The $1.ll s mall computer or intelligent million land deal for the 40 acres terminal such as might be used by a will bring the college in Irvine up to small business. its planned size of 100 acres. The Remex PICO slimline drive In January the d istrict will is only 2V• inc hes high and it dedicate a new $538 ,000 increases data storage by recording library-classroom building at the on 96 tracks rather than 48 like the North Campus, which is nearly tew other low profile noppy disk completed. The building wiU houae d r i v es o n th e m a r k et . a 10,000·book library and four Demand for the new product is classrooms. causing a major ramp up in The Saddleback Community capability •l the company's College District serves more tban manufacturing plant.a. More than 20 30,000 student.a on both campuses, key managerial and engineering rou1bly 6,000 at the Irvine campus positions are soucbt to spearhead and 24,000 at the Mission Viejo the new PICO project campus. Cleanup of upper bay to take place in early spring Frem Pase• Thi cleanup Job will eonalsl ol a partial dn!dtinc of tbe bay and a deepenlnc of the bay's main waterway, San Diero Creek. to slow the now ol 1llL A major dluppoiotment to Newport dty ludera t.b1I year wu the state Coattal Commlulon reJeet.lon ol the elt"Y'• local eoutal plan. Newport, like all California coastal cities, must prepare an acceptable coastal plan ln Of'der' to c•t permit authority bac:-(tom tbe eoutal commlulon. The city bas spent more ~ three years workin1 OD the document and lntencb to lift the plan another try sometime U. l• J -Outlook '82-An Advertislno Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday, OKember 31, 1981 -7 Building proiects complete city d~velopment By JODI CADENHEAD Historians might look back on 1981 as t he year Costa Mesa completed plans to fill nearly the last vacant acre or land in the city with s k yscr apers and office buildings. At the forefront of a mbitious projects is the construction of the $59 million Orange County Music Center. Backers of the twin-theater complex localed in Town Center near . Bristol Street and the San Diego Freeway have raised $20 million toward the construction and endowment of the Costa Mesa theater. When completed, the 3,200-seal theater will be only the second in the world to have an acoustical sound system capable of offering theater , op e r a , b a llet and symphony productions. In othe r Cos ta Me s a news, Ira nian immigrant Ali Roushan continued to dominate the news and irritate city hall after erecting two more towering steel sculptures at his indus tri al complex along Superior Avenue . However , a Superior Court judge in December ordered him to take down two or his sculptures or face a $500 fine and five days in jail. Other entrepreneurs were hard al work changing the face of the city. I n 1981 developers took out permits for more than $50 million worth of commercial and industrial construction. By the end or the year nearly 1.6 million square feet of the 2. 75 million square feet of office space for Town Center were built. Plans for the construction of two six-story office buildings in the Bristol Plaza moved ahead with approva l by the p l anning com mission. Pacific Federal Savings officials readied its move into the nearly completed headquarters at 19th Street and Newport Boulevard, at the old McNally High School site. And Pacific Federal continued with plans to acqu ire nearby property for a modern shopping area bordered by Newport and Harbor boulevards, Park Avenue and 19th Street. The Neighborhood Community Center was completed. Across town, construction on the $5.5 million Southern California Automobile Club's headquarters neared completion at Sunflower and Fairview Road Permits were issued last year on the construction of 198 single-family hom es, including the development of the recently completed 189-house Wimbledon tract near Fairview and Sunflower. When all the already approved residential projects are completed only three percent of the total 3,i.>o acres zoned for residential use in the city will be left vacant , according to City Senior Planner Perry Valentine. When all commercial projects approved are completed, only 2.S percent of the 930 acres will be left undeveloped in the city, Valentine said. rhe new Automobile Club of Southern Califorma building, go- ing up on the comer of Sunflower. and F.air view, ia one of the major construction projects underway in Co1ta Me1a. The building is being buiU.at.a cost of $5.5 million. THANKYOUORANGECOUN FOR 22 YEARS OF CHEVROLET SALES AND SERVICE AND WE WOULD LIKE TO WISH EVERYONE A HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON! CONNELL CHEVROLET UEP THAT GREAT GM FEEUNG WITH GINUINE GM PARTS. S e rving Costa Meaa /or22 yea rs. 2828 Harbor Blvd., 546-1200 Sales 0,...7 Days A Week MONDAY~FRIDAY 8 30 AM. to9P.M. SAT. 1:30 A.M. to 6 P .M • SUN 10 A.M to 5 P.M [!iltjW:!•ll·: ... , ..... Jill Ser•lce Imel P..tsl MbNDA Y 1 AM. to I P.M. TUESDAY-FRIDAY 1 A.M. to 5;30 P.M. I I 8--0Utl<><* '82-An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY Pl LOT, Thur sday, December 31 , 1981 Two additional communities considered in '82 By RICHARD GREEN Growth and growth-related issues continued to dominate Irvine this past year and more of the same seems to be on l.he horizon ror 1982. Boosting the city's population to 75,000 by the end of 1981 was continuing residential development in the Northwood, Woodbridge and Turtle Rock areas of the city. On the agenda for Irvine City Council consideration in early 1982 are two more residential villages which are to flank Woodbridge on the east and west. When completely developed, they are to add a total of 40 ,000 new residents to the city. Irvine is expected to have 200,000 residents by 2010. Debate already bas started on some of the potential ingredients of these two villages known as Village 12 and Village 14. Village 12 is bounded by Sand Canyon Avenue, Jeffrey Road. the San Diego Freeway and Irvine Center Drive. In addition to adult-oriented housing, the Irvine Company has identified sites for a future civic center and hospital in the proposed village. In the Nov . 3 election, Irvine voters passed an advisory measure in support of a' new civic center lo replace facilities at 17200 Jamboree Road. City officials envision the formation or a joi nt -powe rs authority to issue tax-free bonds to finance the construction of the civic center. The Irvine Unified School District and the Irvine Ranch Water District have indicated they 'd lik e eventually to locate offices in the new civic center, and consequently are interested in participating in a joint-powers authority. Village 14 is to be bounded by Culver Drive, the San Die go Freeway. San Diego Creek Channel and Irvine Center Drive. Irvine City Council members have said that before the Irvine Company can build this villaie. it must solve traffic problems in the -area. Much of the land for Village 14 is now in agriculture crops and Village 12 includes c rops a nd orange groves. The Irvine Co. won a minor battle in mid-1981 when its representatives persuaded the Irvine City Council lo have the city staff simultaneously process initial plans for both villages. . . . ' :. DATSUN 4 REASONS TO BUY A DATSUN! Al first, Irvine city director of Community Development Larry Hogle balked at the request ror simultaneous processing, saying the city didn't have the manpower to review both prosposals at the same time. Because or opposition from the lrvi ne Company. however. Irvine city officials decided to begin processing plans ror both villages with b. view toward bringing zoning requests for them before the Ci ty Cou ncil in early 1982. Irvine schools face higher enrollment, financial woes Cutbacks in stale and federal aid to education became major issues in the Irvine Unified School District last year. Those sa me problems a r e expected in 1982, though recent elections may help improve the situation. Buff White with 3.S58 votes and John Flynn with 2,066 votes won the Nov. 3 election for the trustee seats of Fred Gahm and Frank Hurd, neither seeking re-election. White and Flynn finished al the top of a fi..eld of nine candidates whose names appeared on the ballot. Both s u pported th e Irvi ne Education Foundation, a non-profit organization formed in 1981 to raise money for the financially strapped district. To put the 1981 financial outlook for the school district into an optimistic perspective. Irvine administrators pointed out that in many ways the school district was better off than others in the Orange Coast area For one thing. the school district continues lo grow in student population. This means school officials m ay look forward lo opening new schools instead of fadng shrinking school districts wh ere school closures would be needed. Also. many or the teachers in the Irvine Unified School District have yet to reach the top pay scale as is the case in many of the older school districts PEoPL£ T11BN TO CLA881F1ED BEC.UJBE TREY &NOW ttl'BEB PEOPLE ABE p:t,t ,,.... ~lllnll evttVlhlnlf rrom mot~cln 10 plane. II '1 lhr nlhJn: o( people lo dlll<'•rdold hobble11 and take up nrw ones. for l•mllles to move and l(row And tht' po911H1lon1 tha1 onct Mrvf'd !hrm well oul11V<" their u11dulnnos That's Rood nrw• (t)f voo when ('hanit~ In vour llfr nttn&IUUC a ptjrt'ha.W or IWO Chttk rla~lllffl- 11 may makf' th<W chanitn a 111111" mon-alfonl•t>lr 1 -- -ou\1oolc"•12.::_An Advertlslh(a°Supplement to the DAI( Y PILOT, Thursday, December 31, 1911-9 NEWYEAR= NEW CAREER • I .. •• •• What could be a better way to start the New Year than by exploring the exciting opportunities CNOllable at REMEXI We are a recognized leader In the design and manufacture of ftexlble disk drives and paper tape 'Peripherals used In the computer Industry. 1982 promises to be our brightest year ever, and we haYe openings In the foHowtng areas for those people who want to be part of our success: • INGltaRING • TICMNICAL SUPPORT • QUAIJ1Y AllUIANCI • INIPICTION • MANUFACTURING/TllT INGINHRING • IAL8 • U&D SUPPORT • ENGltBRING TICHNICIANI • ADMINllTRATM/CllRICAL Arl outstanding compensation package accompanies tKJCh position, plus our expk>slYe growth o8ers unllmlted advance- ment posslbNttteslll For more Information, either call, apply In person or send your '91Ume to: / c , REMEX0M~ON , Ex.C...O COfP()fOlton 1733 Mon Sh9et, P.O. BOK C19533 IMne, CcA>mla 92714 .(714)117....c) I I I f 10--0utlook '82-An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday, December 31, 1981 For Help Without Time Off From Work ... CALL NOW. (714) 975-0700 Advanced Health Center 1300 Brietol Street North • Newport Beach, CA 9'l660 VIEWPOINT "Do you expect to be better off at the end of 1982 than you are now?'' llutb Overly "No. Because of inflation. They cut taxes but other things are rising, so I would say I don't see any financial Improvement at all because they're making up for laxes in other ways. The federal government is cutting , but the state is having lo raise, so the c_itizen is no better than when they first cut laxes. Everything is going up. Frankly, I see no enlf tn it " Dan Hewitt "l hope so. Business is picking up a little bit. ll's better than last year, so hopefully it wi ll be even better next year." A••eUe Ganer "I'm a Christian and I believe in the Lord. So, whatever bappena, wlll happen for the best. I juat hope tbin11 set better. Thia country would be better off If we bet ow elderly before we let anybody else in this country. They were here first." Steve Kopman and his daughter Summer ··For me yes. bec ause of a promotion. For everyone else, I'm not so sure. I don't think people in my field (fast food service) have anything to worry about. At least Reagan's making us all better off with his tax program." Barbara Gormley "No. I think the economy will look too bad. In 1983 it may look better, but this mess didn't happen ove rnight and there are no fast cures. Hard limes in 1982 may do us some good. We've been living high on the hog for so long. We've got to learn some real values again." • Cary Gruer "Yes. The picture looks pretty good for jobs in Southern California. Now. I'm not talking about Detroit. Orange County is different. We're som e what protected from a worsening economy. Retail stores are down 20 to 30 percent in saJes, but if you know how lo work, you'll make it. Even a salesman can make a fortune during a depression. · · 1 · m a salesman and l just lost a SS0 ,000 sale because the clients would r ather wait to see if the ecomony improves by the Spring. All this means is that I'll have to work a lot harder. Of course, it wou ld be a lot eas ier if the economy was in bet[er shape." Dee Currier "Not really. I'll be about the same. I'm a nurse and nurses don't get paid any better than tbey did yesterday and they won't get paid any better tomorrow. I was almost making the same this year that I did last year. But spiritually and emotionally, I know I'll be better ofr." -OutlOOk '82-An AdvertJsing Supp~nt to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday, December 31, 1981-11 government wastes SO cents. We s hould definitely cut back the military budget." Biii GUple "l expect to be about the same because 1 don't want to make any money. I just want enough where I can get out and play golf. Older people don't need money except to eat. We're in a pre-war situation and if war starts UP. next year, which I think it wall , then the economy will get better." Floran&e Ibanez "I' 11 be better off, but I think the economy will be screwed up. Jn terms of Reaganomics, cutbacks on socia l welfare, the crisis with Social Security and the possibility or war in El Salvador or in the Middle East, this country will be going through a lot of crises. For myself, I'm optimistic, ~ut this country's in for bad times." NO LONGER CAN WE TAKE WATER FOR GRANTED ... IT'S BECOMING HARDER TO GET. USING ONLY WHAT YOU NEED WILL MAKE A DIFFERENCE NOW AND IN THE FUTURE! YOUR WATER DISTRICT REMINDS YOU THAT: SAVING WATER SAVES ENERGY SAVES $DO LLARS$ FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL OUR PUBLIC INFORMATION DEPARTMENT AT 631-1200 Your Independent Wate:-A g~ncy BOARD OF DIRECTORS HENRY $. PANIAN President THOMAS ·e. NELSON. 0 .0 . Vice Pr .. ldent MARIO DURANTE WARREN E. BOOTH H. JACK HALL Olr.ctot Dll'Ktor Ol'9cior 1965 Placentia Avenue • Costa Meea. California 92627 ._. I • #- . ) . .... Residents seek annexation of 1,051 acres By STEVE MITCHEll Laguna Beach residents can look forward to the possibility or a new pack in town, a new lifeguard headquarters, and maybe even 1,050 acres of new city land in 1982. And, townfolks can look back on a year in which the city came closer to resolving the dilemma over Sycamore Hills. City officials a lso made big strides in r evising t he city's General Plan and completing a Local Coastal Plan. Al\fi a new emergency fire access road linking two hillside communities was completed -leaving residents in Arch Beach Heights breathing a little easier. In terms of progress during 1981 , the on-again, off.again Sycamore Hills land purchase issue appears to be back on track. The city still has to come up with about $7 million to pay off the mortgage for the 522-acre parcel between Laguna Canyon and El Toro roads. But a deal whereby a Newport Beach development firm would pay Laguna Beach $5.4 million for a 62-acre portion near Leis ure World for townhouses appears a lot closer to becoming reality than at the beginning of 1981. And the City Council and the Festival of Arts board of directors a r e serious ly discussing the possibility or moving the festival and its successful P ageant of the Masters out to Sycamore Hills. T h at would bring even more money into city coffers and might relieve some of the traffic problems suffered by Lagunans eacti festival season. Were the festival to move out to t he canyon, the city could expect to realize between $1 and $4 million from sale of about 50 acres to the festival. The new year will a lso see Laguna Beach continue its efforts to annex a portion of South Laguna, a dding a nother 1,050 acres of seaside real estate to the city. The request comes from some residents of South Laguna who live between the city limits and Aliso Creek. The resid ents, mos tly mobile home dwellers at Treasure Island Mobile Home Park, are seeking the annexation in an effort to stop a developer's proposal to move the mobile homes out and construct a time·sharing condominium project. Other South Lagunans are also P. ~ --(!J DREAM MACHINE! It catches your eye. Not just once. but ogoin and ogaln And something deep Inside you soys. "This Is the car I want." Eldorado. 1982. One of the world's best engineered cars, Eld0<ado hos ·1s years of front-wheel-drive experience behtn~ It. Plus four· wheel disc b rakes ond four-wheel Independent suspension. Buy or lease. see us soon. lest of a11 ... 1r1 .a Cadlllac • NABERS 12600 Harqor Bl vd .. · Costa Mesa CADILLAC (71 4) 540·9100 • (2f3) ss7-a266 s upporting the annexation move in hopes other developments in the seaside village are reduced or eliminated. Opponents of annexation include large propert y owner s and developers who do not want to see Laauna Beach council me mbers have 3 hand in the future or their properties . The new year should also see more art in public places in Laguna Beach, with recent approval of a piece called ··canyon Chess a.nd Checkers" slated for installation at See Paice 18 School fundraisers set goal By JOHN NEEDHAM The Laguna Beach Unified School District continues to be assailed on three fronts by e<:onomic restraints that h ave prompted budget slashing, the closure or a school and efforts to raise private funds. The small, once wealthy school dis trict is being hit ha rd by the e ffects or Proposit ion 13, the Serrano-Priest State Supreme Court decision and continuing declines in enrollment. In the past three years, more than Sl .5 million has been cut rrom the dis trict 's budget. In May the majority or school trustees voted to close AJiso Elementary School in So uth Lagun a to save th e financially-pressed dis trict money. Schoolpower, the rundraising arm of the Laguna Beach Education Foundation, has set a goal of raising $450,000 in private funds dur ing the 1982·83 school year. enough to wipe out the district's expected budget deficit. Beginning this month. three new trustees will begin se r ving fou r -year terms following their election to the school board Nov. 3. Elected we re Carl Schwarz, a college professor , Jan Vickers. a school director, and Dan Daniels. a businessman. Each of the newly elected board members have pledged to help develop more creative methods to raise money for the school district. T h ey will be r e pla c in g incu mbents Mary ly n Pauley, Michael Sagar and Willian Kentle. See Page 18 NUMBER 1 And With PRIDE! At EIMrlorl, .. tNI .. he-.. a lot to~ proud ot w.·,. tna l•r~t and mott upetlencect In oor field and ovr pride extend• to oor ootatandl~ team ol emplov-n wtio lla119 contnt>ute<I "''" many talant1 to l\alp ua rff<:h tna topl Dua to oor reputahon In the 'lll'Ofldw.da man•t. -ara al-Y• in ... rc;h of quality lndlv1dual1 to join our winning tHm Our conatant growth hH c;rH•d aJ<Cellent PfOmoUonal and advancament polantl81 fOf our amp!Oye• .. tor many. 1N1 hu led to tnair tong 11eocl8'\on wllll us WI el10 take pnda In tna ••lantlwa benefll• pacllage wt'llch -offar. • P.CUO• which 11 not ju1l llmllad lo Illa and madlcal ln1uranoe but wtlic;h encompa-12 peld llolldeys, Chrl1tmu Wffll ahllfdown. peid lk!k IMwa. peld ,,.cation etter one._..,, c;ompeny paid ptn1lon plen, a credit union. en on-111• cet.iwte and frW pertllng. IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO JOIN A COMPANY YOU CAN BE PROUD OF ... COME TO EMERSON! To IMm 1bout our current openings CALL US TODAYI (714) 841-5240 !menon Electric Co. '"dwtrt81 Contrott Dfw191on 3300 I . Standard St. ( Ad/•c•nt to the Newport Fwy) E~ Op~unlty EmsM<>v-r WFIH Oulloo6\ '82-An Adver1 lsing Supplement to the DAIL Y PILOT. Thursday, December 31, 1981--13 Development,elections center of '82 debates By PATRIC9' KENNEDY Huntington Beach may have one of its most controversial elections in years if a proposed city charter rev ision concerning the city attorney's offi ce is put before voters this April. The future of the deteriorating downtown shopping area also may finally be approved after 12 years ,, fruitless planning proposals. A committee of former mayors formed by the city council last year has recommended that voters be asked to eliminate elections for city attorney. city clerk and city treasurer . Those positions would be appointed by City Council members if voters go along wi th the proposal. The r ecomme ndation a lso s uggests that the city create the elective position or mayor, to serve two-year terms. Presently, t he m ayorship is a cere monial position that usually is held for one year by alternating City Council members. Ruth Finley is now the mayor. · This April, four or the seven council seats and the city attorney's job are up for election. City Attorney Gail Hutton is expected t o run fo r a nothe r four.year term but if the charter rev i sio n r ecomme ndation is accepted, voters will be asked to eliminate her job. It's unclear if the winner of the city attorney election would be able to serve the four-year term if the proposal to eliminate the job is also approved by voters It probably would be settled in court. Councilmembers Ruth Bailey, Don MacAllister, Bob Mandie and John Thomas are up for re-election. Other council members are Ruth Finley, Ron Pattinson and Jack Ke lly Past pro posals for high.rise development in the downtown shopping area near Main Street and Pacific Coast Highway have been rejected, mainly because large numbers of residents have fought against high.intensity development. However . many of the old brick structures in the downtown area we re built in the 1920s and 1930s and have b een condemned as ha zards in the e vent of an earthquake. The buildings are given Citirens Thrift & Loan ~55%= Than Any Ban k Or Savings & Loan On Pwbook Ao:Ol.U'lts ITS NO PROBLEM TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT WITH US - Just bring in your passbook, and we'll make all the arrangements to transfer your funds from any bank or savings and loan in California. NO MINIMUM• NO TERM• NO PENAllY FREESEIMC~ ThrMl·By-Mail • n.t Deed c.oDection • Notary SeMcc • American Ezpral 'n.elm Cheques A~ilable 10Califomia Residents Only CONVENIENT HOURS: n•1t•12ens Mo~Jay-Friday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. '- Situr~y 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Ttlift&l.oan Assodation In dw ~ .,,_ Shopping CtTltcr Cul\cr Dri\lf and Walnut Awnut In 1""'1t 714/559-4000 three years to be brought up to i;afetv codes or be de molished. T he stale Coastal Commission also has mandated that a Local Coastal Plan ( LCP > be developed by the cilv for the coastal zone that includes the downtown shopping area. City plans thus far indicate building heights or six stories in the d o wnt own section with the possibility of taller structures if several landowners consolidate and form large parcels of property. A group of about 15 people called Citizens for Reasonable Coastal D evelopme nt i s gathe ring signatures to put an initiative on the Nove mber ballot to restrict building in the coastal zone to no more than three stories. Although it appears the Coastal Co mmission officia ls have no objections with the city's building pl a n s f o r <t.ownto wn , th e co mmissione'Ps d o ob ject to development plans on a stretch of lowland east of Pacific Coast Highway between Beach Boulevard and the Santa Ana River Coastal comm1ssi0ners say this land is a natural wetlands habitat for fi sh and birds that should be preser ved and restored . On a 4·3 vote, City Council m ember s ha d proposed to put commercial development on the coastal land. Because coas tal commissioners rejected this idea , city officials have proposed leaving that part of the city's nine·mile-long coast as an unplanned zone, so the rest of the L C P c an b e approved b y C'>mmissioners and development plans can proceed . The Bolsa Chica marsh south of Warner A venue also could be a Coastal Commission controver sy this year. It's s urrounded by Huntington Beach but is in unincorporated Orange County territory. County planners are considering a boat marina. housing and marsh preservation project for the 1,600 acre parcel. Tentatively identified by state officials as a natura l wetla nds, development proposals in the Bolsa Chi ca wi ll a lso probably face o p pos ition fr o m Coa s tal Commission officials. • SerYICe (Incl. RVS) •Leasing (all makes) •Parts •Body Shop •vans •PUS & 4X4S •custom van conversions ... .---"".:=====-----= ------.... :..._ U-OUtlook '82-An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday, December 31 , 1981 .. 1982 brings elections and financial • issues By PHIL SNEIDEllMAN City Council elections and financiaJ issues are expeoted to be the dominant concerns in Fountain Valley during 1982. The council was able lo balance the city's $10.6 million 1981·82 budget by selling surplus land and equipment. eliminating jobs, raising recreation fees and reducing services such as tree ·trimming and street sweeping. During 1981. the council discussed the prospect or creating assessment districts to collect funds from property owners to pay for local streellighting and median maintenance. The assessment plan was dropped when the 1981-82 budget was balanced, but it may resurface if fund s run short in the 1982-83 budget. Several Fountain Valley residents aJready have gotten an early jump in campaigns for the City Council. The election will be held April 13 for three council seats. Mayor Ben Nielsen has indicated he will seek re·election. Veteran Councilman Al Ho llinden has s aid he will not. Councilman Eugene Van Dask has said he is undecided. In recent weeks three well·known F o untain Valley residents have conducted campaign kick-off parties; former Fountain Valley School Di s trict trus tee Betty Mignanelli, Planning Commissioner Fred Voss and Dan Morton, who is active in the Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce. A new city manage r , Howard Stephens. will be at the helm during 1982. Stephens is a familiar face at City Hall. however, where be has been chief finance officer since 1968. lo th e co ming month s . discussions are e xpected to continue on whether a new poUce station should be constructed in the city. with the existing facility to be transformed into a senior citizen center. A city plan for development of a second 18·hole gotr course at county-owned Mile Square Park is likely to come before the Orange County Board or Supervisors in 1982. Elsewhere in th e city. construction will continue on a new $7 million l wo·story addition lo Fountain Valley Community H o s pit a I • 'w hi c h h as g a in e d attention as the county's busiest WE'RE HARD · TO FIND AND EASY TO DEAL! HOME · OF THE AFFORDABLE ASE PLAN!! ONLY '12 GlC CUSTOM l Dl.HATC .. ACIC ti • ...,_,.,,... •--ou: ...... J Or • .--... -elWll ~ i-••1 -°" i.-...... _ .. ~ ----~..._r-....., ,,_,._ ............... -.. lllOlml I llAH l'\NI o;..., ..... -·· ....,.... 1t1•a.. ID!ol~ ........ ,. _ .AMOMTH .aullel•IR8Zdll 6015. ANAHEIM ILYD. 956-1120 trauma center A 40-unit condominium hotel complex is on the drawing boards for the Los Caballeros Racquet and Sports Club. The city also may attempt to encourage development of more sales lax -produ ci ng retail busi nesses or hotels on vacant land near the Santa Ana River. West county schools to face continued fall in enrollment By PIDL SNEIDERMAN The three elementary school districts serving Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley will continue striving to maintain educational quality in 1982 whiJe coping with declining enrollment and limited funds. School closures will be considered during 1982 in the Fountair. Valley School Distri ct . but none is contemplated in the Ocean View or Huntington Beach City school districts. The 23-school Ocean View district, with a $27 million budget. is viewed as being in better financiaJ health than some of its neighbors. Ocean View. ser ving northern Huntington Beach. realized a $3.l million windfall in 1980 from the sale of district property al Warner A venue and Beach Boulevard. The interest generated by this money is being used for m ainlenance of school buildings. The district's current enrollment is 10,400. Trustees have taken the position that all schools will be kept open as long a s they are "educationaJly sound .. and have the support or their community. But some Ocean View schools now have rewer than 250 students. Such schools are operated with a m inimum or administrative support. (For example. the school principaJ also may be required to handle some teaching duties.) Fountain Valley School Dis trict trustees in early 1981 decided lo See Page 18 Experience working for you '{'? Bu1ld1ng success for 11s cltentele through an __ ._ ~ ';{~..I' organization offering professional and f. comprehensive real estate service s has made Corporate Realty one of the top five commercial brokerage firms 1n Orange County. ~))':~ You are 1n good company . .. ''lt---:::c__~.'~-·r-Y'· Let Corporate Realty's expenence ,.,., ....... {;pll~- benef 1t you. as 1t has done for J\ such leading companies as J, 'R Honey~ell. Inc . Aiit s Chalmers. ~l Ralston Purina Company. General Electric. 3M, Greyhound Corporatt0n, North America" Van Lines, Owens·llltn0ts. Computer Automalton, Massachusetts Mutual ufe Insurance Company, and Air Ca1tfom1a CORPORATE REALTY •1( • • ,,. ~ ' .. I 4 ~ -.. ' •, • I , ' • • •" • f ~ , 1 9 • 1 I •"'"' • 1 , Outlook '82 An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT. ThurSday, December 31 , 1981--15 • • UCI expects increase 1n contracts and grants The University of California at Irvine expects to have a little more or everything in 1982 -more research, students and facilities. Optimism for the new year is based on a record-setting 1981 for the campus. It is a guarded optimism, however, tempered with the knowledge that state budget cuts may limit some of the university's programs. Whatever the effect of these cuts may be, it can do little to deter the momentum established at UCI last year as the campus, at age 16, continued to build its reputation for both educational and research excellence. In 1981, this reputation resulted in greater research funding , enrollment and construction than ever before at the university. Contracts and grants for UCI research studies increased 100 percent in the 1980-81 fiscal year with 408 awards totaling $54 million. , This included receipt of a five-year, $21. 7 million grant from the United States Air Force for the Toxic Hazards Research Unit. Even when this grant is prorated over its five -year period, UCI had an increase in funding of 37 percent. Other major studies funded last year were research into the use of laser beams to treat cancer. fundamental structure of the physical universe, the effect or economic change on public health and the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae project that is collecting and storing on computers every word of ancient Greek text for use by scholars worldwide. The goal at UCI is to obtain 10 percent more in contracts and grants in 1981·82. While some fede ral agencies are reducing support for continuing research projects, it is hoped that increased private funding will help the campus to reach this goal. A major private grant of $500,000 from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation already has been received for theoretical ~studies in the cognitive sciences. Enrollment at UCI at the start of the 1981-82 year increased eight percent to 11 ,057 students, the largest increase in the nine·campus University of California system. University officials estimate enrollment will keep pace with this new level in 1982-83. The construction boom at UCI in 1981 largely was the result of the university's version of "creative financing." Last year, $60 million in construction projects were under way . soon to begin or just completed, including the new UCI Medical Center Tower. Only a fourth of construction was funded by the state. Other funding came from such sources as private gifts, loans, revenue bonds and student body fees. A number or these projects wilJ be completed in 1982, including 100 faculty apartment units, 300 student apartment units, phase one of the Unviersity Club/Conference Center and phase two of the University Center. Construction should begin on two other facilities -the social There's a Home Financing Method That's Right For You I You found the home you want to buy, but you can't find Of aff0<d a conventlonal level-payment mort- gage loon. Here's how to select the rtght financing ottemOtlve. ecomne the ottemottves carefully and ask questions. If you're offered a 1oon· with a ftexlble Interest rate. make sure you know how often and by how much the rate con change. 'Niii the change affect your monthly payments. or will the payments remain constant while the loon bal- ance changes? Can the seller pro- vide port of the financing? What- ever home-financing method you select. be sure you and your att0<- HIWPOIT HAllO~COSTA MISA IOAID 01 l lALTOl$9 ~'-~~~_Blvd. Newport Beach &•6·1671 ney review oil the provisions bef0<e you sign the papers. Fa help In choosing both the right home and the right financing. wOl1< with a real estate professional. Se· lect a broker~ Is a REALTOR-- a membef of the NATIONAL ASSO- CtATION OF REALTORS•. The Nattonal Association sponsors a creative financing educational program ta REALTORS• that Is benefiting home· buyers and sellers alK<e. Explore the ftnanclng opportunities that are open to you even In todoYs tight economy. Coll a REALTOR• today. ecology building and the UCIMC library module, funding for which was budgeted in 1981 but caught the state's freeze on capital projects. Several new programs were established at UCI last year for the benefit of its expanding student body. A bachelor of music degree was approved by the UC Board of Regents as were new degrees in the Graduate School of Management. One of the programs scheduled to begin in 1982 is an undergraduate concentration in management. Coordinating these academic programs at UCI is Dr. William Lillyman the new vice chancellor for academic affairs, who in particular t · year will examine undergraduate studies focusing on retention and acaCJemic preparation problems including tutorial programs, academic advising and learning skills Issues. ........... y .... There's .a construction boom on,. at UCI with $60 million in construction projects under way . One of the construction projects is the longr<1waited University Club/Conference Center pictured.above. The building will be completed during 1982. ' .. INTRODUCING THE TRIMMEST CONTINENTAL EVER FASHIONED YET ONE OF THE FINEST RIDll' JG CONTINENTALS EVER BUILT LEASE A LINCOLN Toke advantage of lower down payment, lower monthly payment~ and IOI advantages where applicab le. CALL TAD GARNSEY 848-7739 TRUE OR FALSE? You're ""1!, both statements a.re true. The term REAL TOR9 is not a synonym for "real estate brokef" or "ager(' but rather a feder'aly registered trademar1< Vt'tlich identifies a real es&ate professiOnal who is a member of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REAL TORS9 and bound by ks sSt1ct Code of Ethics. The fact is. not all th06e slowed to use 1he REAL rooe mark are real estate brokers-some are salespersons. counselors, appraisers, property managers or~ involved as professionals in the real estate busrless. And some real estate brOkers aren~ 8Yef'I members. ~a real estate professional. go with the to exoelel I08 and ~ standt"ds c:A professJOnal conduct LOok for a RfAL~ a member of tbe NATIONAL ASSOOATION OF AEALTORS9 .,._..., ....................... ··-· ......................... 0 ............. '.#1 Area to survive recession with modest growth in '82 B)' KEITH TUBE& Orange -county's economy will continue to grow in 1982 and throughout the decade, but not at the rapid rate it experienced during the 1970s, according to two recent forecasts. Dr. Michael Salkin, discussing Bank of America's fi rst major Orange County economic forecast, said modest growth of between 1 percent and 2 percent will occur next year, with that rate increasing to perhaps 3 percent in 1983. Dr. James Doti , director of Chapman College Center for Economic Research, said the center 's fourth annual forecast predicted slow but steady recovery from the current recession. However, Salkin said the county will avoid the recession altogether. "Orange County will not enter the recession in the technical sense of the word -it will be avoided in this area,'' Salkin said. "However, rates of economic growth will not parallel the rapid developmental stages of the 19'705 and in some cases will begin slowing.·· Both s tudies predicted an increase in the employment sector. The Chapman foreca s t is predicting employment growth to increase slowly lo an annual percentage rate of 4.8 percent by the fourth quarter of 1982. That would be up from the 2.2 perce.nl growth experienced ln the fourth quarter of 1981. T be increase translates into an average of 32,000 new jobs being added to the Orange County economy in the coming year. Bank of America is predicting an io'Crease of between 40,000 and 48.000 new jobs in the county next year. represenung about 15 percent of all ne w jobs expected in C alifo rnia . The coun ty 's unemployment rate, said Salkin, may rise to 6 percent fro m 5 percent next year. Statewide, the bank sees an unemployment rate or between 8 percent and 81h percent in 1982. Personal i ncom e g ro wth is expected to rise next year , according to both reports. Chapman's forecast states that, •'After adjusting for inflation, the average annual percentage rate of growth in real personal income is expected to increase slowly from a low of 6.2 percent in the fourth quarter or 1981 lo 7 percent at the end of 1982. •· B of A predicts that county median income levels will outpace inflation, with the aver age household earning nearly $39,000. The price of housing is expected to rise, too. Next year, the average house in Orange County will cost in excess of $143,000, B of A believes. But the report also predicts a slowing rate of appreciation which, combined with the increase in personal income. s hould make h ousing m o re affordable . Residential building permit issuances, both forecasts say, will also rise next year. HQusing and transportation. Salkin said, will be the major restraints on the county's growth, but the local economy will continue to grow wbile these problems are being resolved. "Orange County still remains one of the most desirable places in the world to live and for businesses to locate.',' Salkin concluded. 0.C. housing industry handicapped by economy By GLENN SlxnT Recent economic s lowdowns based at least partly on high interest rates have taken a toll on Orange County's once-prosperous housing iDdustry. Although many experts predict that the high demand for homes in job-rich Orange County will eventually restore a healthier housing industry, residential construction at present remains at a low level. In September, the lut month in which statistics are available from the Comtruction lndutry lteseal'(h Board, 281 building permits for residential unit& were issued In the county. tn the same month laal year, 1,321 permits were issued -to percent more than this year. Year·long statistics don't paint quite such a bleak picture, however. More permits have been issued lhia )'ear throu&b September -8,392 - t.hao duriag the first nine months in 1980, when 7,764 wereiuued. Private builders, though, are quick to point out lbat volumes in bolb a.> aod 1181 have been the level they'd like -uid nowbere cloee to the demand. A relleetJoa of Uae iaterett of bometMo-en to move lnto tbe cowaty ii the fact that th . ft!i'JQ~.'1'~ •• n home in the county remains more than SO percent above the national average, according to analysta at Security Pacific National Bank. From 1980 t.o 1985, bank analysts project that 42,000 persons will move to Orange County annually, keeping it one of the three fastest growinc counties in the state. That pressure also props up housing prices, creating an associated set of problems for both workers and employers. In a rece nt repor t, Security Pacific analysts noted that while more residents are moving into Orange County fr.om Los Angeles County, more local residents also are moving out to Riverside and San Bemard.ino counties. "It ls widely believed that many of those moving out of the county have done so in search of more moderately priced housing," the analysts wrote In their booklet. "Economic Issues in the Eighties." Leaders of the county's business and buUder'a aasociallons each have recently luued reports in whlc h t h ey call for more 1overnment encoura1ement ror bllber~ bouliac proJeda. llemben of the Chamber of Commerce and Bulldina Industry s..ttaaJt • : .. , , • , . .. • .. , . -OutlOOk '82-An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday, December 31, 1981-17 Cou·nty transit system top priority for OCTD By NANCY HEWITr Jn 1982, the oCficials at OCTD will be looking down a long stretch of highway en route lo getting the first leg of a county mass transit system operational by the end of this decade. According to James Reicher t, OCTD's general manager, the mass transit system will more than likely be of a light rail origin and it will run along the Santa Ana corridor where the burden of the county's traffic and congestion lie. The decision lo locate the mass transit system through the Santa Ana corridor came as a result of a transportation analysis done durini the 70's. Reichert said the Santa Ana corridor. the area through which the Santa Ana Freeway runs, was determined to have the greatest need, especially with the county's population and business growth expected to boom along this area during the later part or this century. In addition to the mass transit system, two lanes will be added to the Santa Ana Freeway. Reichert said a system that wouJd properly meet transportation needs throughout the county would cost nearly $200 billion. The system planned for the Santa Ana corridor alone wiJI cost approximately $2 billion, $65 million of which OCTD now has. During the coming year , OCTD will be heavil y involved in the concept design of the new mass transportation system. Among the questions octD will be answering about the system in 1982 are: What will be the best route? Wh at type or system wiJJ be best? Where will the stations be localed? Reichert said the answers to these questions would be OCTD's most significant accomplishments for 1982. One of the major transacUon.s expected to take place in 1982 is the purchase of 6.9 miles of abandooed former Pacific Electric Railroad riiht-of-way for the new syst~m. The P.E. ri1ht-of-way runs from Santa Ana throucb Garden Grove to Staaton. Altbouch the system's line will be JO to 25 miles lo lenctb, purcbaae of tbia abandoned riibt-«·••·Y could allow a future book·up wUb a Lo8 Angeles system. However, Reichert said OCTD is not cun"eDtty pressed to obtain this boolr·up poaiblUtf. ·'Ninety petten of the tnps that end in Orange County begin in Oran1e County, so we're not too interested in the Los Angeles connection," Reichert said. Reichert said it is not OCTD'a intent to get rid of the automobile with the new mass transportation system. ·'That is not the Ufes tyle in OranJe County," be said. "Hopefully, instead of two or three can, there will be one car and families will mate use or this higher capacity system." Althouab OCTD ofliclala are c~rrentiy on schedule in 1ettln1 the system in working order for Its rmt passqer by the end of the decade, they will be meeting their fint stop sip ln 1182. OCTD's opera Un,. budtet for( the 1•1-G ftacal Je&r ii pro~ to lncreaae from 29 mlllloe to l'f.t mllllon ind white OCTD ba d ex~ to receive 22 pertMeltft'9t8 budget from the fe d e ral government, Reichert said that figure is now at about 14 percent. It is also estimated that rederal subsidies wiJI drop to nothing over the next four years. Reichert said. He said to offset this loss, OCTD will need an increase In state and local funds, and will also need to increase rares whlle cutting back on service. However, state assistance, which will account for 1.8 percent of OCTD's revenue during thls fiscal year , is aJso expected to be nil within four years. Dan Griset, an OCTD board member, told the Senate Transportation Committee in a late October speech. So the biggest problem facing OCTD during the coming year will be determining bow to get the additional money needed to 1et the mass transit syste m operational by the end of the decace while facing revenue cuts al the same time. Reichert said so me of the pos sibilities for extra revenue include a gasoline or sales lax to be approved through the voters and possibly some joint funding with the business communlty. Despite the bleak fina ncial outlook, Reichert is optimistic OCTD can have a modest expansion with a reasonable rare increase to have the mass transit system ready by 1989. Golden West will attempt to control growth By P IUL SNEIDER"lAN Gol de n We s t College i n Huntington Beach, which has enjoyed steady enrollment growth in recent years, is expected to reach a holding pattern during 1982. "We think there will be more totud ents in 1982 who want our services than we're actually going to be able to serve. for the first lime in our history," predicted Golden West President Lee Stevens. H e said t he demand fo r commu nity college vocational training and undergraduate courses will conllnue because of tbe st.ate of the economy and because or a financial pinc h In the state's tour-year colleges. Stevens ooted that the slate has agreed to fund community colleges such as Golden West for only about 2 percent growth. To balance a large enrollment jump in fall 1981, the colleie wUt eliminate about 200 classes in the spring semester in an attempt to control growth. About 20,000 are expected to attend Golden West In the spring. A new parking fee Is expected to be charged to students during the spring. Also, fees will be charged for 40 non-credit adult recreation and educaUon courses that previously have been offered frtt al Golden West. New career training prorrama that may be lnlliated at Golden West during 19112 lpclude tbote for computer m lcroproceulng enilneertni technlelau, chemical tecbitJCla.qs an~~r .. ~1el•ht. 1and m6i'lal'MI •iSM..W.U.!•u 1,iTYT'f11 •jiO • I've got a lot af f CORVETTES. "Nice ones, too! And They're all for sale!'' Always a fine selection of good used Corvettes and often a good selection of new Corvettes. WI LEASE COIVETTES, OTHER CHEVYS, OTHER MAKES! ... , ~at srut 61 f eeli111 Ii~ pnuine &I Parts! (1 /2-mJle south ot alrp or1; b~lnd Victoria Station RHlauranl) ~··································· The Laguna Bank N.A. 305 Foreet Avenue Laguna Bee ch, CA 9285 1 (7 14) 494-8474 WE'RE OPEN The Laguna Bank. N .A . Is open for business and we want the opportunity to earn yours. Come in and let us show you our beautiful facility. And w hile you're here, let us explain the many ways we can serve your banking needs in an efficient and personal manner. As know ledgeab le community bankers w e . understand the Importance o f the Ind ividual, and we recognize the ne ed for flexible personal service. E. W . SulHvan Ill President and Chtef Executtve Officer P.a. We.,.. P-.e.c:t to lnfonn you that w e now h•v• off lltt9et parking . ~l'JU.C -·-- '. ' .. •'1 18--0utlook '82-An Advertising Suppfement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday, December 31, 1981 Laguna Beach will see changes in 1982 Western schools feel budget crunch From Pase 1% Main Beach Park. into the development. They've raised more than $6,000 toward the $15,000 cost of construction materials, and have rounded up a bunch of local carpenters , plumb ers and electricians who will do the work for free. From Page 14 postpone for one year a decision on two possible school closures. The sculpture, made of old tile by artist Marlo Bartels, is a functional art piece and will be used by checker and chess players under the s ha de of a small grove or eucalyptus trees. School fundraisers set goal A new school closure advisory committee was appointed. This group has been instructed t.o study declining enrollment trends through 1985. School officials have indicated as many as four closures may be required during this period. The artwork wu endorsed by the council after much controversy about art being placed in Main Beach Park. .. Another addition that might get its start in Main Beach Park next year is a lifeguard headquarters atop the old sewer treatment plant at the north end of the park. What's unique about that one-story project is that lifeguards intend to build the structure without a cent of taxpayers money going From Paae 1% However, there isn't much the newly seated school board can do about continuing declines ln enrollment. Money sent from the state is based on average daily attendance. The fewer the students, the less money. Nor can they change the income cutting effects of Proposition 13 and Serano-Priest, which are now accompanied by federal cuts in financial aid and inflation. Dislrict officials say the result has been only a 4.5 percent increase in revenue to Laguna since 1976, d espite an inflation rate of 40 percent. The combination of money woes h as forced the layoff of several district employees and kept teacher pay raises to a minimum. The district is depending heavily on Schoolpower, a private, non-profit organization pledged to raising private income for Laguna's schools. -The trustees also are expected in 1982 lo conside r a possible reorganization of the present grade di vision. Except for Oka and Bushard schools, which bave been divided as an elementary and a junior high in a pilot program, the district's schools all operate oo a K-8 basis. Board members are expected to discuss whether a formal middle school system should be created. Slug9ish economy hurts housing industry Enrollment in the 11-scbool district is about 7 ,800. The district bas a new superintendent, William Fisher, who was hired in mid-Ulll. The Huntington Beach City School District, serving the sout hern portion of the city, closed three schools in 1981. From Page 11 • Msociation advocated scr apping a controversial ''incJusionary housing program" which requires builders in unincorporated parts of the county to include 25 percent housing for low-and medium.income families withi n each major subdivision. A ltbougb that program is intended to ensure that employees can afford to remain living in the hme county where they work, the builders h ave res i s t e d the mandates, claiming they could better supply such housing without the controls. Some consumer activists, qieanwbile, have argued the program doesn 't guarantee U~at moderately-priced unita will remain affordable because no resale control.a are reg_u.ired. Among innovative atfempt.s fo solve the double-edged problem of bigh demand and high prices, some development companies are trying to plan subdivisions in which "affordable" residential complexes are built near major commercial and industrial sites. The developers of those sites, such as the Whiting THE PLACE FOR: •Sales • Senice • Parts •Discount Prices 957-1966 C!C 300 I SO. MAIN SANT~~t~CA. MOUlll. MOM ,_. • ... IATWDAY Ml·I Ra nch east of El Toro, say they want to give top priority t.o housing people employed at the nearby work sites. Other proposals a re to market new h omes throug h major employers who couJd then sell them with mortgage rates below m arket prices -to thei r employees. Most analys.ts agree, however. that getting into a new home in Orange County soon will be an expensive and perhaps uncommon proposition. District officials say the focus now is on improving the educational program with no additional school closures expected in 1981. The lO·school district bas about 7 ,ooo students and a $15 million budget. Trus tees approved lease arrangements for two of the three closed schools, but by the end of 1981 were still debating whether to lease LeBard School lo an outside party or to convert it to a new district headquarters. LIDO REALTY WOULD LIKE TO INTRODUCE OUR HIGHLY PROFESSIONAL STAFF OUR PERSONALTZED SERVICE TO YOU from <left to right) Sharon O'Brien, Charlie Hormann, Vlrgtnla O'Brien, Carol Mulvey, Gloria Da Ros. Holly Love, Linda Jacobs, Claudette Taylor, Barbara Chambers Bill Merrell : Caeoood row) Darrell FiHlns. Vince Healy, Bob Newell, Phyllis Hayden, Lowell Stark. Roter Brown. Not shown In picture, Anne Dennis, Wyvonne Gill, 8111 Rude and Edee Stem. Bill Merrell OW' manaier here at Lido Realty reel• that Newport Beach real esut.e is lhe best Investment that anyone can purchase and he predicts a fantastic 1982. UDO REALTY division of Redhill 2277 VIA LIDO. NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA 673-7300 , Outlook '82-An Advertislno Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday.December 31, 1981--19 Take the SOUTHERN SAVINGS ROUTE YOU ARE FREEWAY CLOSE TO 5 OUTSTANDING AUTO DEALERSHIPS BUI(]( • PONTIAC • MAZDA SALH • SBVICI • IODY SHOP • LIASIM6 We extend our very best wishes to all for a happiJ and prosperous 1982 24888 ALIC IA Pk WY 8 3 7 2 4 0 0 LAGUHA Hill S • SAN DIEGO LAGUNA BEACH 0 BARWICK DATSUN E) DAVID J. PHILLIPS. BUICK, PONTIAC, MAZDA Q SAIL CHEVROLET 0 ALLEN OLDS-CADILLAC-OMC 8 SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS ·SHOP & COMPARE IN SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO DANA POINT 0 ~ IWMllAIE#OWI ~ THE ALL HEW 1982 Al.SOAUM ... DAft.Y 528e THI 1912 -i--~. 1201·· • 1n•·· ra \) 6JJtd't • Th~ I ltimntc l UOl MA•GUfllTI "W' Ml\\ION Vlf 10 ...... "'"' ..... w . •·•: c..... la. ·~· Sales • Leasing AND Service After The 11SAIL11 "C'•~•'• got It all ••• tor 19•" 900 So. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach 494-1 131 or 546-996 7 Hows: Moa..fri. 9:00..7:00, Sat. t:00..5:00, S...I 0:00-4:00 .a. The new lu•ury epofta car Plus Cadillac , Oldsmobile , new GMC Trucks SAVE NOW, low Interest, low prices 0.. 32 )'NI'S of ..me. to So. c.Nfofftla (714)831-0800•(714)495-0800 21332 <:.-nine> c.piatl'MO, ~ ....... fJ'=--'-------'---- I 1· I .. ~G--Outlook '82-An Advertising Supptement to the DAILY PILOT, Thursday, December 31, 1981 Bauer Motors-Orange County's leading Brituh car dealership says TOBOASTOF EXCELLENCE IS EASY. TO GUARANTEE IT IS EXTRAORDINARY. ANNOUNCING A 24 MONTH, 36,000 MILE WARRANIY FOR THE 1982 JAGUAR. The value inherent 1n Jaguars magniftcent and a separate electronic fuel enrichment Serles Ill sedan goes far beyond the car's system for quick starts on cold days The sculptural beauty. or its quickness of re-result is a new level of rehab1hty 1n a power sponse and fluid handling Jaguar's excel· plant already famous for 11s smoothness Jenee is mqre than alevel of luxury seldom, quickness and strength if ever. equalled For this 1s the finest. A superb engine needs an environment strongest and most reltable Jaguar ever that matches its potential Jaguar's bal· built. and to back up this bold claim Jaguar ance. handling and control systems are guarantees the car with the longest war-1uslly famous The steering is precise an ranty they have ever offered. For 24 months advanced power assisted rack and p1rnon or 36.000 miles. whichever comes hrst. system The feel .for the road is firm but Jaguar will repair or replace virtually any never harsh. the result of fully independent part of the car which prOYes defective suspension on an tour wheels rhe braking Yet an e)(traordinary warranty is only one 1s sure and positive because Jaguar puts aspect of the Jaguar's excellence Drive power disc brakes on all tour wheels The the car. Feel its smoothness. its Vl'J1d re-sum of this superb engineering 1s a silky sponse. The engine is Jaguar's soph1sh-comb1na11on of smoolhness and control cated double overhead cam six There 1s that is. we reel unequalled 1n any other ~l~ctrO!_'tC 1gn1t~on. electronic fuel in,ectton luxury sedan And Jaguar luxury defines the concepl The dashboard is veneered in hand pol- ished burl walnut The seats are faced 1n supple leather Thoughtful electronic con - veniences surround you There is a new four speaker stereophonic AMtFM radio with scan tuner and casselle Cruise con- trol maintains your speed A self regulating air cond1honrng and healing system main- tains your preferred 1empera1ure automat- ically All lh1s is standard equ1pmen1 And 11 is all guaranteed The only items not covered by !he new warranty are the Pirelli ttres. which are war- ranted by P1rel1t Come 1n and dnve the best of all Jaguars. We'll give you the details of this neN hm1ted warranty ~ee Ua For Beat Price, Beet Trade Allowance 6! Be8t After Sale8 Service. , • • • • • DUIBI COAST YIUR HDllTDWI DAllY PAPIR THURSDAY DECEMBER 31 1981 ORANGE COUNTY. CA LIFORNIA 25 CENTS Sea search pressed for missing Coast J:>oater By PHIL SNEIDERMAN and ALMON LOCKABEY Ot .. 0 ......... 1 .... A U.S. Coast Guard rescue team continued Its search today for a 32-year-old Laguna Niguel man who disappeared during a sailing trip from Newport Beach to Catalina lsland. Newport Beach police Sgt. d{en Thompson said the missing man, Dean Tyler Jenks, set out for the island Tuesday afternoon alone aboard an lslaoder-30 Mark III sloop owned by bis business partner Miles Metcalf of Newport Beach. U .S . Coast Guard s pokeswoman Lori Ramey said the sailboat was discovered was hed aground Wednesday morning two miles west of Av a Ion with no one aboard and the life raft missing. WET'S WONDERFUL -Cloudy skies didn't bother Steve Walden of Huntington Beac h who found the water conditions Miss Ramey said the boater was due back in Newport Harbor at 6 p.m. Tuesday. Search efforts were halted al 8: 15 p.m. Wednesday because of darkness but were resumed this morning. P arlicipating in the search were two 80-foot Coast Guard cutters, including the Point Divide from Newport Beach, a nd two helicopters from Los Angel~ and San Diego "We're looking for a man In a yellow life raft," Miss Ramey said. "A man In the water without the raft> probably wouldn't have survived this long." Miss Ramey said the search coordinators were using a computer to help d etermine where the prevailin~ currents IMltr ................. ~ ........ ideal for wind-surfing off the beach in West Newport during a break m the rai'n s howers Tuesday afternoon Parade participants watch sky R ose gala has Orange County cast praying t hey will keep dry By JERRY HERTENSTEIN Of ... o.lt~ l'ti.I Slaff Ten e lephants, a Newport Beach-based financial firm, 200 high school students from Saddleback Valley , Marine bandsmen stationed in El Toro and a Salvation Army band group in Santa Ana have more in common than living in Orange County. Their paths may never cross but all will be participants in the 93rd Tournament of Roses parade scheduled lo unfold at 8:30 a.m. New Year's Day in Pasadena. And like several hundred Orange coast residents attending the parade as s p ectators, th e county participants were hoping today they wouldn't get wet. Latest weather forecas t for Pasadena calls for chance ol a few light showers tonight and through midday Friday. Temperature at parade time is expected to be in the 60s. Should il rain hard tonight adding to rainfalls of Tuesday and Wednesday, it could mean headacbes for those planning to park at the Rose Bowl in Arroyo Seco. Rocky Mc Alister, Pasadena police spokesman, said 24,000 parking spaces around the bowl Westminst er .. oops probe pipe blas t Westminster police are i nvu&igatlng a pipe bomb explosioa that occurred at. 9:51 p .m . Wednesday bebind • ahopptna and office plaaa at Mal Bol .. Ave. · The exploaion caused oo, lnjurlet and did only minor danaaae to the bulldln1, Offtcer Ro1 Freeman aaid. He 1ald tbe bomb expjoded near • naturallu met.er, whicb wH dama1e and required replaeemaal. 'fM Id WU not t1nlted. ... Mid. No modft for UM bomblq hu 11t been determined, police •fkl· could be lost because of rain. What should you do if planning to drive lo the parade or game and parking is out around the bowl? Police say drivers going lo the game only can park cars al the police station, 142 N. Arroyo Parkway and for 85 cents round trip take a Southern California Rapid Transit District bus to the bowl. Other downtown Pasadena parking spots for those going lo the game and with roundlrip RTO buses available can be found at Walnut Street and Parsons Avenue. Fair Oaks A venue and Holly Street, each just off the 210 Freeway. If you are driving lo the parade from the Orange Coast and aren't headed for a friend's driveway or reserved parking, be prepared for a long walk. Most space for recreational vehicles had already been taken by today but McAlister said a few spots might. be available at Brookside Park adjacent to the bowl. The park is just ort Holly Street from the Ventura Freeway, Roule 134. Fee for parking an RV al Brookside is $10 wilh no hookups available. • There is some RV parking on side streets off the main parade route, Colorado Boulevard. Shortest and easiest drive to Pasadena Crom the Orange Coast is Interstate 5 lo 57, 57 to 210 and west oo 210 to Pasadena. Those eoinl to the game only or who want lo grapple for a spot to see the parade near Oran1e Grove and Colorado boulevards where most of the televlaion cameras are localed, ~on1er but more direct route la Interstate 5 to the Glendale Freeway (Route 2) lo the Ventura Freeway < 184) exilinC al Linda Vitt.a Avenue lo the bowl. , The estimated but alway• disputed pande attendance LI expected to be 1.5 mUHon. If you are one of those lut-mlnute P40Ple, a Sood tp0t for wa,cbln1 the parade and obance at findln& curbalde aeaUnt la near it. nd aloal Sierra Madre BouJenrd after tt tum• olf Colorado. You cu exit lht 210 at Alladena Drive. Co·ordlnatou, • Garden GRAND MARSHAL Jimmy Stewart will lead the 93rd Tourname nt o f Roses parade. Grove bus firm, will have buses leaving for the game only at 10 a.m. from South Coast Plua Hotel. Costa Mesa. the Registry Hotel in Irvine and Newporter Inn in Newport Beach . Roundtrip bus ticket ia $20. A spokesman said Wednesday ticket.a were still available and reservations could be made by calUng 891-7600 until 11 o'clock tonight. An Anaheim tour a1ency, Valen, said Wednesday a few parade packa1es including roundtrip bus rare and reserved grandstand seatln1 for the parade remained. Cott ii tte. Buses wUI leave at 7 and 7:~ a . m . Friday from 1948 S. Clementine near the Grand Hotel in Anaheim. A 1poke1man ur1ed &Q)'OO• interested to call 135·1408 to learn avaUablHty ~ tickets. Anyone who can make lt lo the Loni Beach Transit olflca by 5 p.m . today can retene a '10.50 rowtdtrip .,_seat roi. tbe same Oftl)'. The tranall nnn ls at 1300 Gardenia Ave., telephone 211·581"1$3. ll can be reached by takmg Cherry Avenue exit off the 405 Freeway, going south to Anaheim Street, turning right on Anaheim and right on Gardenia Buses will leave at 11 a .m . Friday from Sears parking lot, 5th Street and Long Beach Boulevard. Now about those elephants, etc. The pach y derm s, an estimated 30 tons worth, will pull the final float called "The .\merican Eagle Mechanical Military Hand Wagon.' The rloat, at nearly 30 feet high, tallest ever in a Rose parade, is sponsored by the CasaBlanca Fan Co. The elephants belong to Circus Vargas and have been in training at Uon Country Safari in Irvine. Rex Williams. who has been putting the animals through their paces and nursing one. Hattie. back to health after dental surgery. says the parade iso"t the longest he has marched elephants. "We once did a circus in Coleman, Texas, wbich was a 21-mile walk from train to tent," said Will ia m s, a circ u s showman for 39 years. The elephants will wear blankets of carnations and Williams hopes they won't eat the flowers before passing the TV cameras. The students have been working in shll'ts on the Mission Viejo noal entry, "Versailles." Mission Viejo is defending its Sweepstakes trophy, the top prize It has won three of five years. Homecoming queens ridina the Ooal will be Cathy Teske, Mission Viejo Htlh School; Deanna Klein , Capiltrano Valley: Debbie Reaa, ~a Hilla· Monica Oaborn, El Toro and All Abbrl&no, Silverado. They wUJ wear French town• on a float that features pink roses, ~adiolus pet.all, 1afmoo roses, orchids and camat.tona. Tbe Marine Corpe band baa been pracUcln1 at lhe llarine Corps Air StaUoa, El Toro. The 102-member band lnclude1 M arlne1 alaUoned al El Toro. Camp Peadletoo and San Dieco (Sff PA.MDI, Pap Al) ~ might have taken the missing raft. Coast Guard Petty Officer Richard Woods said the search area extended from the Oceanside area to Long Beach, 10 miles from shore. He said the beached sailboat had s uffered little hull damage and was being taken to Avalon today for inspection by its owner The boat was discovered wtth sails down and its a utomatic pilot on. set for Avalon. Coast Guard officials declined to speculate on why Jenks might have left the sailboat and setout in the raft. As the search resumed today: th e ocean wav es were two-to-four feet , visibility at 7-10 miles. Baby 'debuts' Test-tube inf ant meets public .. NORFOLK , Va . CAP> - Elizabeth Jordan Carr, the first U.S .·born "lest-tube baby," yawned a little and slept through much or her introduction to the public today. Her parents. Judith and Roger Carr of Westminster , Mass., Surv i v ors t e ll tale of o r d e al SALIDA, Colo. <API -Four survivors of a Christmas Eve plane crash read the Bible as they huddled in the snowbound fu selage for five days, and just after they read about why God lets man s urfer, a rescuer walked up to the plane, one survivor said. ··1t was remarkable. We never gave up hope. Ne ver," said Steve Smart of Dallas. The arrival of the searcher at the crash site on a mountain ridge began a daring rescue that saved four of the five people who were flying from Texas for a ski weekend in Aspen when the slngle-engine Pipe r Cherokee crashed. The pilot, Gary Meeks, walked away from the wreckage Christmas Eve tQ search for help and hasn"l been found. Sm 1rt, the last of the four rescued, was brought down from the 11 ,600-foot·high cr ash site Wednesday . He was carried through deep c;now for several miles by toboggan, and then mov ed by snowmobile and four-wheel drive vehicle. "I enjoy snowmobiling, but not quite like this," he said. The other survivors -Meeks" wife, Patricia Meeks of Dallas, and her two step-sons, Gary Meeks Jr .. 18, and Darren Meeks, 15 -were airlifted from the crash site late Tuesday night by helicopter. Smart had stayed behind with rescuers Tuesday night because authoritie s feared an approaching winter storm would strand the helicopter during the tame needed to get Smart on board. Outside th e fu selage , hurricane-force winds stirred up <See RESCUE, Page AZ) agreed to Elizabeth's appearance at Norfolk General Hos p ital . wh ere s he was deli~ered Monday by Caesaread, section Carr said one reason the couple decided to "go public" was to s how other infertile people there is hope for a child. Mrs . Carr's Fallopian tubes had to be surgically removed, and the couple could not have had a child of their own by normal m eans ·'There are no words that can adequately express our th~· to everyone who made i~ possible to be blessed wit~ Elizabeth," said Carr. , Mrs Carr said s he is no~ overly concerned about lhe> attention focused on Elizabeth). adding. ··This sort of birth i~ going to be fairly routine in th~ future. She'll be one of th< crowd." " Of Elizabeth"s birth , Car recalled : '"I wa s jus overwhelmed I remember giving Dr <Georgeanna> Jone/ a big hug."" • Ors Howard and Georgeanna Jones are directors of lhe iQ vitro fe rtilizatio n clinic at Eastern Virginia Medical School. Elizabeth was conceived at their clinic in April, and five women tre.aled at the clinic are also pregnant. Asked whether they have any religious convictions about the birth. Mrs . Carr said: "God's a little bit involved, too." The Carrs said they had made no decision whether to try in vitro fertilization again. '·We'll take Elizabeth fot now, .. said Mrs. Carr. On We dnes day, hospitd spokeswoman Karen Corrigan, said of Elizabeth, "She's ea~ and sleeping. And wetting. She'~ acting JUSt fike a normal baby." In vit ro f e rtilization is designed lo help women whose Fallopian tubes. the place wher4! CSee TEST-TUBE, Page AZ> Poli resigns BULLETIN WA S HI NGTON CAP) Robert E. Poli resigned today aa president of the ProressiollaJ A.lr Traffi c Controller• Organization, which be led • a strike t h at prompted tile government w fire 11,5" of lb me mbe rs and remove tile union's certification. Calif orniam face utility rate hike s . SAN FRANCISCO CAP> - Californians will face sharply increased utility bills soon. The stale Public Utility Commission on Wednesday approved a $909.4 million rate increase for Pacific Gas & Electric Co., which translates into an average monthly increase of $9.03 for more than 9 million customers in Northern and Central California, officials said. Southern California Edison ~ also won approval of a rale increase or 13.2 percent for the first four months of 1982. That increase means $171.7 miJlion more in revenue for the company and an average of $5 .82 more on customers' monthly bills, said company spokesman Dave Barron. The lncreues ror San Dieco Gas & Electric customers were SlAA.6 mllUoo in electric rates and $21.6 million ln su rat.es. SDG6 E sou1hl an Increase o1 SZ83 mUlJon. PUC Preaiden' John Bryson practically apolotiled for one rate hike dur(n1 a news conference tMrore the public meetinc becan. ·'The amount of tncreue ta far more than PG•£ ratepayers will ftnd eaay lo pay," be said. "We approve lhll lncreaH today because we would not be meeting o ur legal responsibilities if we were to do anythin~ else.·· He said the PUC was bound by slate and federal laws "wtucb require investor-owned utilitieS to provide adequate and reliable service at rates that are just and reasonable ... DRAllil COAST llATlll Considerable cloudine~s through New Year's Day. Rain likely tonight and Friday until midday or early afternoon. Hi11hs 58 to 63. Overnight lows 50 to 55. llSIDI TODAY The fdco o/ kophtg drunkm drfutt• /rom getttt.g behind the wheel o" NN Yeor'• Eve ~ ~ them rfdei ltoa fP"md. POlf AIO. INDll ••••• Orange Coast DAILY PILOTIThuraday, December 31 . 1981 -onight's no time to drink and drive 8Y JOHN NEEDHAM OtttleOeltr ........ Al the atroke or mtdnlpl, motorltta cautbt drtvln1 Wider c lnfiuence or alcohol wUl race e hnahest penalties ever nacted In tbe state. In addition, local law · n rorcem e nt acenctea say batrola will be out in force fonla h t to catch drunken ~driven. who almost certainly ill spend time tn Jall and lose elr licemes under new laws. The California Hl 1hway atrol headquarters in Santa na wiU have as many es 28 nits on the roads from this evening through 6 a .m . Friday, said Officer Larry Kleasner. ($ee related story. Page AlO). Under the department's "nux l mum deployment" acheduleAvery available officer will be on duty from 8 p.m . to 6 a .m .• he utd. addln&, "II they're eoln• to drink, we're 101n1 to cet Lbtm ... Poaalble ralns m ay add a dan1erous dimension to law enrorctm•mt problems tonight by lncreattnll the posalbillty of accident.a, he Hid. Oranae County Sheriff's Depal'\ment Ll. Wyatt Hart aald his agef\cy will have no special enforcement plans in effect. However , he Hid, "We'll have a lot of can out.•· He added lbat suspected drunken drivers won't be r acing deputi es with a benevolent hoUday altitude. "If you drink amd drive and get caught," Hart s aid, "lhere MOUNI AIN ... > ... ., > ... GROVf SI won't be anr, ol UHal 'Happy New Year' sturt. • The aberlrf'a department provldH law enforcement protection for unincorporated a reas of the county and with cities which contract ror the servi ce, such as Sun Juan Capistrano and Stanton. 1-"ountaln Valley police will have their "Deuce Patrol" out on city streets throughout the night to crf!ck down on intoxicated drivers Six motorcycle patrol olllcers have been assigned "Deuce Patrol" duty to comb the nine·square·mile city. Newport Beach police will have six extr a patrol cans patrolling city streets in what is being call e d the annual • BLVll .... > • OCL MAR ... > • SI .... .... r :. "' bl\/Og ... " !!. c 0 ! ~ ... ' a: (J[\ MAR ... ... "' <:> ... .... z ... ~ " a: v; SAN c ... ••SQUAL "' ,fl : CAUrOllNIA bl VO ~IL_.6.Q~!l==:J:f:.::::::t:::i~==:::t=t:I:t::t:::::::::::o:i:::::::;:lt:::=::=:::=:====:::=::::::'.:::::::::::t:======::::t=:iLt::::::.J...~......::::::::.I 11,_0UTES TO PARADE, GAME Map depicts i"~arade route and approaches to Pasadena :. range Coast residents can take Interstate 5, ia o the Glendale Freeway 1 Houle 2> to the V c n t u r a Free w a ~· 1 1 3 4 1 a p pro a c h i n g Pasadena from the west or can travel east to Pasadena by taking Interstate 5 to Route 57 to 210 1~f rom Page A 1 ~:PARADE FACED WITH RAIN ... 1111 ~i>:and is directed by Chief Warrant ,i;Orficer Terry W. Earnest The Santa Ana band and :Mfimbrelists, directed by Ed ; .. freeman. will make up the ·>1l argest c ontingent of t he lOO ·m embe r Salvation Army tttband. Members of the bandsmen n-'3nd timbrelists live in Costa "'!Mesa. Newport Beach, Fountain 'HValley, Ir vine, Huntington .llBcach and other Orange County 2"cities. an ah Avco Financial Services. headquartered in Newport Beach, has entitled this year's entry, "Perfect Harmony ." It reatures a 36-root crewboat. a frozen lake, waterfall and butterflies. The rowers will be Cynthia Com paran. John Weslergren, Kelly Hurley, Valerie Gilb and Debbie Bendur . M aria DlDominico and Burt Lancon will be ice skaters on the noat or mums. tulips, orchids and roses. Actor James Stewart is grand marshal of the .. Friends and Neighbors" parade which will have 60 floats. 22 bands and 26 equestrian units. If you don't want to fight the crowds and traffic you can always be one of the 125 million people worldwide expected to watch the parade on television. It's being televised on channels 2. 4, 5 and 11. ~Marooned trio refuse rescue rtrShipwrecked father. and daughters rebuff boat ride lfl ~," HONOLULU <AP > -A father , 'and two daughters shipwrecked ,\:~and marooned on a Pacific atoll _,,for three weeks have rebuffed 0;an ofrer o( passage home from a w yac htsman, the Coast Guard said. J.u "The Harrisons have declined ,,,,1that offer. They want an aircraft to pick them up," Mark Scire. a Coast Guard spokesman in Honolulu said Wednesday. "Mr. John Harrison said his youngest daughter was so traum atized by the r ecent sailing trip she doesn't want to get in a sailboat." Harrison and his daughters. Micki, 20. and Kristen. 13, were 't! ~11 From Page A1 ·~ ~1·RESCUE ... ti t.'..\, I i n d i n g s n o w a n d t h e ·temperature, with the wind-chill !i"factor. was estimated to reel like 111•minus 60 degrees. caught in a typhoon Dec. 6 aboard their 40.root trimaran Sisyphus. Buffeted by 40-foot waves. lhe boat was dismasted. Their emergency radio beacon was detected by a commercial Jet. which relayed the message to the Coast Guard. A C·l30 aircraft dropped a r adio and ruel to the ship Dec. 8, e nabling the Sisyphus to make the 60 miles to Palmyra atoll, a tiny island 1,100 miles south or Honolulu. Sin ce then , Harrison. an industrial designe r from Vancouver , Br itish Columbia, and his daughters have survived on canned rood salvaged from the trimaran and fish. crabs and coconuts. Another m an whose boat is moored at the privately-owned island. Ray Landrum. has helped then contact relatives using short wave radio. The Coast Guard rescue center in Honolulu contacted Landrum on Tuesday night . informing him that Lawrence Friend of Scottsdale, Ariz was saili ng to Palmyra Friend volunteered to take lhe Harrisons to Honolulu in his 33.root sloop the Friendly But Landrum told Coast Guard radio operator s that Harrison declined the oHer} Scire said. "We don't know h Friend has been told yet." The Coast Guard spokesman said a ham radio operator was to contact Friend on Wednesday, and presumably would tell him or the Harrisons' decision. "He's just sailing a round the South Pacifi c." said Scire of Friend. "Whether he goes to Christmas Island, Fanning or Palmyra doesn't matter to him .. Scire s aid Harrison complained through Landrum that his oldest daughter was suffering Crom a headache and body chiJls. The Coast Guard checked with a Honolulu doctor and recommended that she rest and take aspirin All four survivors were taken • to Salida Hospital, where doctors said Mrs. Meeks was in table condition suffering from a ' fracture of lhe s pine. Smart. 33. a business associate of Meeks. a nd the two youths s urrered frostbite and exhaustion. Married 83 times, man called 'cheat' "The guys who came and got us are miracle workers." said Mrs . Meeks. "I don'l think lbey were supposed to do what they did . They fl e w in some hellacious weather." Sm art wept during the rescue. "I've been holding il back ror six days," he said . "l had two kjds on tbe plane with me and I c.-ouldn't let lbem down." He said the survivors "had just been readina the passage in the Book or Job as to why God lets us s urre r . . . when a rescuer walked up to the door of 1 the plane." PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP) - A m an believed to have been married at least 83 times has bee n arrested after a confrontation with two people who said he cheated them. authorities said. Giovanni Vigliotto. 52, was being held today without bond on a charge of federal parole violation, Ray County sheriff's officials said. A woman, identified as Sharon Clark, 44 , of Indiana. told sherirf's deputies that she and Vig l iollo were married in Indiana in June. but that ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Ctauln.d advertl1tn9 714/t42·5a71 All other departmentl 142-4321 Thomet P. Haley ---~-CHiii~.,,_ Robert N. Wftfid ---Thomas A Murptitne 1- Mlch .. I P. HllfWY .......... ~ L. Kay SChutt1 ~-0..--Kennett\ N. Goddard Jr c~c..-~ !kN,itmen Ch"* H. l009 .......... =~ MAIN OFFICE Ill Wett ~SC., C.ta -.a. CA. .-..11...,_ ... •IMO, C•i. ~wi. CA . ...a C._.,ltlM "'1 Of'MOO C-'4 ~ltlliftt C ......... Nt M .. n.rlK, IUU111f"t119"t, ~I~ ti ... ... ,,1 .......... -.... -.... ,~ .. ....,..,. ..-Ci.tl9Mfti~ef<•'t'ltlM-. ' Vigliotto ran orr with $100,000 of her assets, sheriffs Sgt. Paul Vecker said. She and an unidentified male companion said they had been searching for Vigliotto "in several Florida cities for several weeks." Becker said. Vecker said t he companion. who told deputies that Vigliotto bo rrowed $3 ,200 b efor e he disappeared, slashed the tires or Vigliotto's van Tuesday to keep him from leaving a shopping center parking lot. Vigliotto also has been accused by a Mesa , Ariz .. woma n of disposing or her assets arter they were married. The woman, not identified by police. said she sold her house and placed the proceeds in a Joint checking account. Mesa ~lice said . When she returned from a brier trip to Callfornia. her $36,500 bank account had been plundered , her rurnlture had been shipped out of stale, her credit cards were burdened w1lh $3,000 In d ebts and her new husband wu gone, police said. Meu police Capt. C .A Mledowtci Hid 1 wanted poster distributed by r e de ral 1uthorttle1 uJd \iillllotto was belteved to have married al Jea.t. a other wo111tn. ' ' "Kollday Roundup" of drunken drivers. L•auna Beach police are orterlns a "Tipsy Taxi" service for mlldly Intoxicated clly r esidents who decide they shouldn 't be drivint( However, officers wurn that lhe service i1m 't available to drivers once they have been caught driving under the influence, and they will probably spend some time In the city jail. Irvine and Huntington Beach police also will be manning extra patrols, whose primary purpose is to catch inebriated drivers "We won't be offering coffee or a ride home," one Huntington Beach officer said. "We 'll be taking them straight to jail." Poles due reva01p prograID By The Associated Press Poland's martial law chief, Gen Wojc1ech J aruzelski, is expected to unveil a program in early January that "would amount to a new model for social, political and economic REACTION MIXED TO SANCTIONS -A4 life in Poland." a government official was quoted as saying in an uncensored dispatch from Poland. But the report. which reached the West on Wednesday night, said political observers in Warsaw were skeptical that any political solution put forth by Jaruzelski can win wide public support. The observers s aid the martial law regime faced a fundamental dilemma . How to create a c l imate o f national reconciliation at the same lime as it maintains s uHicient control to prevent unrest. The uncensored reports quoted sources in Warsaw as saying Jaruzelski set up at least three panels h eaded by top Com munist Party leaders to revamp the country's social. eco n omic and political programs. One panel reportedly proposed sci apping the tattered Polish United Workers Party -t he Com munist Party -and replacing it with a new party incorporating Roman Catholic Church and Solidar ity union representatives . The Communist Party has been reported in disarray since martial law was declared Dec. 13. But Kaz1m1erz Barcikowski. a Politburo member and party secretar y, told the part y news paper Trybuna Ludu that "the place or the party is the same as always: among the people." He said that martial law ·'does not create any empty political space. No one can fulfill the mission of the party for the party " The Soviet TV news program Vremya reported Wednesday n ight that the Polish party "retains its leading role." and that the "military council is acting through members of the party and servicemen in the army. U nder the oew drunken driving laws lhal take effect at m i dn laht , th_, mlnlmum mand oto ry 1rn ntence for a non.injury offense 111 •8 hours In jal l or a go.day li c ense suspension. Second ofrender11 receive a .minimum mcandutory sentence of 10 days in jail, a fine. and a one.year license suspension. For the third offense. the minimum o drunken driver can receive ls 2Q days in jail, in addition to a fine and lhree years without a license. Jn addition, the ne w laws prevent a drunken driver rrom having prior offenses stricken rr om his record Even If a drunken driving al'J'est is plea bar gained down to reckless driving, 11ubsequenl offenses will be treated us a second drunken driving conviction. Tht State Supreme Court has also rejected a claim that all vehicular homicides must be tried as manslaughter, clearing ·the way for second-degree murder charges to be flied in such cases Persons found to huve a blood alcohol level of 10 percent or hif(her will be deemed legally drunk, whereas in the past that level was only a presumption of intoxication. OHicer Bud Rooks of the Calirornia Hi ghwa y Patrol's Capistrano headquarters said that · ant0~t of alcohol equals about five ounces or alcohol. or five mixed drinks. .............. BORED OR TIRED? Newborn bab~· Elizabeth Carr, first test·tube baby born 1n the L'nit~d States. y<rnn~ as she Joins mom Mrs. Judith Carr ;.ind dad Roger fo r ne"s c-onference today al Norfolk c;encnil Hospital in Norfolk. \'a From Page A1 TEST-TUBE BABY. • • fertilization normally occurs. a re missing or blocked A mature egg is r emoved Crom the mother and rertilized with the rather's s perm in a small glass dish. The embryo is transferred to the mother's uterus . and if tt implants itself. the pregnancy proceeds. Elizabeth is the first baby conceived through in vitro fertilization to be born in the United States The process was pioneered by Ors. Ro bert Edwards and Patrick Steptoe in En g land . where the first "tt•st tube' baby was born in July 1978. Surplus cheese due in Orange County About 20,000 pounds of s urplus cheese is expected to reach Orange Count y's n e edy res idents n ext w e ek, local orricials said today. The cheese was supposedly en route to Orange County today from a federally operated warehouse in Modesto It was stockpiled there by the federal government until President Ron a ld Reagan agreed last week to re l eas e it f or noncommercial distribution to the poor. Once 1t arrives by truck. 1t will be stored al the Community De velopme nt Council's food bank. a rerngerated warehouse near the Westminster Mall, until the cheese can be distributed to man~ of the 65 non ·profil agencies s erved by the food bank The CDC is a non·profit organization designated by the state to operate a program of distributing surplus rood - usually from grocery stores -to agencies serving the needy , ............ SNAPPY SALUTE -West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt jokingly thumbs his nose at his wife. Hannelore. prior to a special address he made for German televisioo. He intends lo remain in Florida for a vacation until January 4. Rock group leader cited John GU Moore, the lead singer of the Triumph rock group, was charged with a fire code violation after a c oncert at Cinc innati Gardens. Police Sgt. Mike Howard s aid the s inger urged the Newlyweds Curtis and Lisa Sliwa say they're ready to move in among the rats and cockroaches, if the St. Louis Housing Authority will make an apartment in the Vaughn Housing Project available to them. "We can't get the time or da y fro m th e hous ing authority," said Sliwa, Ghislaine Raineau got rousing applause when she paraded in the evening gown competition at the Mi ss France Pageant -in her army uniform. The 22-year-old infantry corporal, one or 49 women in audience of 4,500 people lo ignite cigarette lighters instead or applaud after the show. Howard quoted Moore as telling the audience, "Everybody get out your Bic J~d light up the sky.'.' founder or the G11ardlan Angels, a group of youths who go on anti-crime patrols in a number of cities . The Sliwas say the Vaughn project i s th e most crime-ridden in the nation and say they'll live there six months to try to help clean it up. the Miss France contest, got personal approval from her command.ifig officer to wear her uniform in the event. But s he did not make into the f inals, and 16-year-old Sabrina Be lle v a l , a schoolgirl from the Riviera, was named Mis5 France. Gre1orr and •••rice Hlae• wll 1wln1 to1etber a1aln on Broadway 'n Sunday in lhe mualcal "Sopht1Ucated Ladlea,'' a coJlectlon or OUe BWa,._ 1on11. Tbt two performed to1ether for 26 yeara before 1oln1 their separate ways in 1913. "Working together all those years pul a real strain on our r elationship 11 brothers,'• Gregory Hines said. "We get alon1 much better as men now. and dolna a. number together ii real special. It's so rare for m that it feel! like nothing else. There's a sense of ma1ic. and ll's very emotional." A real estate firm won a lawsuit against author Traman Capote, accusin1 the author of rene1in1 on a contract to buy a home on Marco lsland off the southwest Florida coast. Collier Circuit Judge Charles Carlton granted a $13,000 judgment to A.G. Ennis Realty Inc., finding that Capote lost the suit by default, the Miami Herald reported. The judgment followed unsuccessful attempts by the real estate firm and its lawyer to locate the best·selling author, whose last known address is listed as 870 UN Plaza in New York. LOSES SUIT Truman C apote lost a StJ.000 judgment to a real estate firm by default. Capote was accused or reneging on a contract to buy a home on Marco lsland off the Florida coast Rain likely tonight Coastal Considerable cl-IMU 111rou9" N.,. Ye.,.s O.y Rain lllltly tonlQll>I and Friday """' midday or urly after noon. Prob•blllty of ,.1n cM<rHsinO to loCI pen:enl lale tonlQll>t and Frldly. Coa•tel IOw SO toni9fll, 1n1ano U Coastal 1119" M 10ft19111, Inland •·> Waler St. Extended forecast SOUTHERN CALI FORNIA COASTAL Al'ID MOUNTAIN Altl.U -Con\ _ _.. <-NU s.tvr.My and Sat11tCS.y nleftl wftll <l\etl<• of sllowers. Snow level In mountain\ S!OO fftf CINl'l"9 Sundey, wltll fair wntller -.., Hlvhs In c-taf area\ SI lo 6S Low\ )4 to 41. ""°"""'in,.._, fli9M a to» L-• 11 to14. · EIJewtwre, 119111 variable wino• nl9hl •nel "*'"'"9 hOUn becomlnQ wot lo'°"'""'•" 10 10 15 kllOIJ -----------•fter,,_ ano evenlnQ$ tll<OU911 New Ve•r's 0.y. W.•erty •-ti 1 to l IMt but 4 to 6 loot -• ..,,.., outer weten. Consider-. cloudlneu ""OU9'1 New Vear'\ Day. Rain likely ton l9llt tfldlnQ from the "°"" durlnv tlW d•Y Friday. U.S~ summary HHVY ,,_ • ., • ...._ • .., from the Ro<klft to Ille Grw•t Pi.in• t~y u winter ltorm war11ln9• •••• poal.cl lor most Of Ille ._, Great ~ ... Wa1cllet -• l•wed f0< Horthem llllnol1, sowtllern •o-r Nllclll9an, non•••"' 1....,._ -nort""'"' Ol\to. Rain _..i1"9d over Ille Gylf c ... ~t et ~•••Y tftower\ spread over SOYlll•HI T••as and IOYlll•ut Loultl-. Snow was fore<nt to Sl>f'Hd from tlle Paclfl< ~t and nortllern ltocll.ln acrou Ille 110r11\ern •nd Great ~ Ralf\ WM UPKled to lie IU-• ._IN Paclll< Coast, ovar llW Gulf Cont -Into Ille Olllo Volley •!>Cl mld·All•ntlc coutal ........ Cle• llllft -•fore< Ht over Htrome nort,_,,, New E,..iallll - tlle -Plolns.. Tem_ot_ •round Ille nation early lode'!' ,......, from 16 be,_ aro In Havro, NIOnl,. to 71 In Fort L--... Key Wftt allll Miami, ..... Califor.nia "'"'°"' vtttton coml119 In urly IOftl9M to stoM out• -4 et IN How v .. ,., Doy ,_.... Is • -l'eclfk .wrm.,........ "'84~1trlu tty to ...... .... ..,. ..... •IOnt c-- 10111•••,_ at tea1t ""'" Frldar mornl"41. "Mo•• lllOn llhly It m•y •ncl llofor• llle .,.,aoe 1tart1 at I . JO a.m,." MN Hot,_... We_ S.,,,ke ........ ,.,.,., a..ei. "Bvt ......... llO •• , .. --,,.i. ™• 11 • -,,...,,,, .... _,,,., 1 ... -t"-l lvlt9°"11t-rel11." T"IW ....... Mntce ptWtcted a .. ""_. c.Mfla., ,..,, __. ._ , .. 011Ure lot A•IH m.tr-llt•ft -· '°""...,.... ""Wiii .... y-·· '""" ..... IY 1111f11a, Wednndoy. lllt 11r11vlovt """' llH dre11,.• '"' 111,ll•• of rain en Lot All .. ••• 1,...,,,...._, Alr'llWt-. llMl·lllOI ----Wt"""""' ......... ""' .... ........... .. Smng Tiie Air Quality Nl•naeement District preoltb OC10C1 •Ir Q ... llty '°' .,,.,.,_ '" .,. '°""' Co.st •Ir beMft today Tiw AONID ••loned Pollutklft StancYrd •-• IPSll ratif19s ot 41 f O< a ti •eel<>ns Temperatures Albeny AillUQue Amorlllo An<~­A_,,11 .. All•n .. All•ntc Cty Beltlmoro BlrmtnQIWrl BlsmerO llolw llo\ton lrownnl .. 811fl•lo Cherl1tnSC Cllart1tnWY Clley...,.. Clll<-.O Cincinnati Clevel•nel Cotllm...,_ Ool·FIW1fl HI LA l'cll JO • SS JI M • s ·2 •• ,. 04 ,. a 3' :HI • JO s.e • .s1 l -17 OS 27 s ,. 24 60 St .01 21 21 .. 4J JO 4l J4 ~ 11 " ,. ,. ,. 31 17 l4 .. SJ •S Denver DHMolfws Oet .... t °""'"' El l'HO Fairlie'*• Hartfwd He .. ,.. H-YIY KOV\loft 1-.pll\ JKllllflvl .. J-ff Kant City L.KV..-Lltt .. Rec:ll LOYltvll .. Mempfllt Miami Nlli•----. ... s..P NnlWllle .... °'.._ .._veni Norfolll Otlto City Ofnofla Or1ande Pflll ..... ..._..1. Pitt,_. P11aM,M9 Pfll!M,ON R-.MIClty R- NOlA U' 0••' e.I (..,..•••u s.c n 3' l4 2l 11 t• u .. 46 .Jg.,, Rlcllmond '' 22 Seit Lake 4J JI 2' S.attM le l4 ·• St L°"'' 60 l7 St p . hln!MI 70 65 StSte M.,le 22 17 , U ,. tl 22 ~ It u s. 41 lJ • Spoll •M JS 16 TYIW 50 11 W•sfllnqln ,. 1t U w k lllt• u 14 JS St ... CALl'°'9NIA !~ ~ Ballenlleld St tel Blytlle • Euritll• !!S2 2' ~s: ... 4J .OILMA,...._ 1' 71 · 11 iiMrysvll .. : ~: .u_,._,., •1 • .01 ::-'...':. : :: UJP_R..._ l 7 U R ... Bluff 50 43 ltHwood City 31 15 S41crem-o 71 .. s.11 .... • » s-Di.., '1 J7 S-F r~llco J.S 21 S-ta B-a M 4 Stocllton 4• _ _ Tllermal • " ·•• Ulli.11 u 1 ·°'aan-• ,, ... ..., "' Lo ""'" M S4 70 m s. 0 61 •S S7 41 62 ,. " so u"' M m ,. S4 ,. ,. ,. so " SJ ,. . ,. ,. 04 u ,. ·" JS so 07 u ... ·" ., ... " so ,. m .. ,. $4 J2 _,_ ____________________ Bl"'- " . • -SUI Ill ~!!:" ..... ,,. f RIP Et.~ mi-iililiiiill_.tt ___________ 5en B•rlMlf'<flno S...J-lafttaA ... .. .. ·'* M U ... ., '1 " 62 ... u " . 6S • " ..... " .. ff Sl .01 .. ~ ' ' M 1·2 1·2 H M M l•I t ....... T..._ " " " " " " • .. • .. i. . . .. . TaflMVallr( Tide a TOOAY ., S2 •• ,.. SK.,d... P•tDAY •• 11.m . U Flf'st llltfl 1: • a.m, l.9 Pl~t I.. 611t a.111. 2.t SocAlfld flltll It In 11,111, 4.1 So< .... ,.. 7:*711.m . o.t l4lft rtwt t:• a 111 FrtMy, 1111t1 •~SS II•"'• --.... to:• .. 111.. "-"'" a.111.Fr-.. We re Listening ••• Wlu( ct0 )'OU Ilk~ about LM Datly PtloU Wb~t doa't you Ub? Call tM number below md ,._, .....,., •• will be recorded, lran1crfbed and dellver..t t.otlle appropriate editor. 1'he ••me M·hour antwerinl Mniff may M uHd to f'ffOnt let· teri t6 lhe editor on any lpple. llailbox eontribu\on mutt lHlude \Mir name and teJephofle number ror verlneaUoa No drcutatlian uUl,pleae. · • 1'•11 •what'• on your mlad. · ? c ::a ii. Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThu,..day, December 31 , 1981 H/F ATTACK ON PESTS The 350.000·square foot General Aviation Flight Center building at John Wayne Airport in Orange County is ~--_,...., ....... buttoned down and sprayed for termites by pest control company. Highway focus sought Transportation should be top issue, Roosevelt says James Roosevelt of Newport Beach believes Orange County's road and freeway congestion s hould be s eize d upon by candidates as a prime campaign issue. If candidates don't raise the issue, RoOSf·velt s uggested Wednesday that he will. Roosevelt, the newest member of the Orange Co unty Trans portation Commission. s aid the public board formed to coordinate efforts to improve road and rail systems should gel \nvolved "educating" political candidates of the county's need for better services. Roosevelt called a press confere nce Tuesda y at the county Hall of Administration in Santa Ana to explain his plan. A former congressman and the son of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, he said examinations of stale voting records show that the county's state legislators have not always s upported funding for transportation improvements. .. If you look at the voling records in the assembly," he said, "you can see we need lo do a better job forming a liaison with them." Roosevelt dido 't mention s pecifi c legislators who have voted against bills favored by th e lo c al tran s portation commission , but h e said Asse mbl y woman Marian Bergeson, R-Newporl Beach. has been "generally in support Scout panel picks board Newport Beach resident Richard B. Smith has been elected president of the Orange County Boy Seoul Council. The chairman of Am West, Inc. in Tustin succeeds Wallace Merryman, chairman of Avco Financial Services. The new vice presidents for 1982 include Ralph Clock, Irvine, president of Clock Construction; Peter Kremer. Newport Beach, president of the Irvine Co.; Ed Laird , Fountain Valley , president of Chemical Resource. Also Bill Lightcap, Corona del Mar, executive vice-president of A R C America, Dr . Frank Rubino, Capistrano Beach, a physician. 0 ... , ...... , .... - TAAFFIC TALK -James Roosevelt. newest membe r of county Trans portation Commission. wants Orange County highway problems to be major issue. or what the commission ls trying to do." ll is no secret, however, that the transportation financing bill pas sed thi s year by the legis lature, SB215, received positive votes from only two or the county's six assemblymen: Mrs. Bergeson and Chet Wray, D-W estrninsler . Richard Robinson, D·Garden Grove, missed the vole for m edical reasons although he was known as a supporter Nolan Frizzelle, R·Huntington Beach. John Lewis, R·Orange; and Ross Johnson, R-Fullertoo, voted against its passage. The bill, sponsored by Sen. J ohn Foran, 0 -San francisco, raises state taxes on motor fuels from seven to nine cents per gallon. increases several mot.or vehicle fees and allows local governments to seek s pecial tax increases at the polls for transportation projects. It goes into effect in January 1983. Roosevelt s ugges ted that com missioners could hold informal luncheons after the primary election in June with political candidates to discuss transportation, possibly with follow up meetings. Roosevelt believes the commission needs to direct more public attention to traffic problems. He proposed that s pokesmen should go to high schools to recuit soon-lo·be-voting seniors a s s upporters for major transportation improvements And he said commissioner s must do better at convincing s tale transportation officials that projects s uch as renovation of the Santa Ana Freeway are critical to the region's economic health. The California Transportation Commission will be deciding in the next few years how to spend an estimated $80 million a year in federal interstate highway funds. Roosevelt said the Santa Ana Freeway through Orange County is in dire need of $300 million to $400 million in major improvements. "We're trying to bring that forcibly lo Uieir attention." he said. Most office s c losing for New Y e ar's Day If you're thinking of visiting City Hall, or the post office, or the bank, or pulling out the trash for pickup Friday. forget it. A check or government offices and business es along the Orange Coast shows most everyone is taking New Year's Day off. All City Halls will be closed, and there will be no mail service or trash pickup on that day. Those residents in Costa M esa. N e wport Beach . Huntington Beach, Irvine and Laguna Beach who usually recei ve refuse service on Fridays should put their cans out for Saturday pickup. Fountain Valley has no resl· denlial trash pickup on Fridays. Regular postal counter service and mail delivery will resume on Saturday . Our furniture spedacular continues Drexel and Heritage Winter Could you ask for more? Choose from our entire selection of uphol· stery by Drexel• and Heritage• at tempting reductions. Save on selected bedroom, dining room and occasional furniture. Be early -and be delighted with truly spe- dal values I H.J.GAl\f{ETf fU~Nl~~E PAOfESStONAl HOU"I: Melt • ...,_, n-.. 10 e.M ... I'·"'· U 11 HARIOI I LYD tflllTEAIOA 0£St0,..!A$ ,,., 10•·"'· .. 1 , .... IM. 10 •·"'· .. l :IO ,,,.., COSTA MISA 64Mi71 .. H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thursday. December 31 . 1981 APWI,...,.._ FLYING HIGH A young ··hot dog" s kier executes a rty ing split during a run down the Blue Hills ski slope in Canton. Mass.. on Wednesday as cold weather kept snow on tht• s lopes. Elsewhere in the East fr igid v. eat he r pre va iled and mor e snow was forecast. ~ti-crime member ~lied by officer ) 1NEWARK, N.J. <AP> -A member of the Guardian Angels volunteer anti·crime group was sl}ot to death by a police officer o~ts ide a hous ing project , ~thorities said today. ; There were conflicting ~counts of e vents leading up to e fatal s hooting of Fra nk elvi n , 27 , al 11 p .m ednesday as he walked outside a senior citizens building with a roup of Angels. ineflu shots ·ability ruled DENVER CAP> -A fede ral udge has recommended the ovemment be held liable for all erious illnesses ari.sing Crom h e s wine f lu s hots it dministered fi ve years ago, not st the one nerve disorder it has television station who was,at St. Peter's Square as a tourist the day of the shooting. 4 R ed Brigade t.errorists held ROME <APJ Police in the northern Italian city of Padua ar rested four s uspected Red Brigades terrorists a t a road block set up in the hunt for the urban guerrilla kidnappers of U S . Brig Gen J a m es L Dozier. authorilles said today. Poli ce did not identify the four arrested Wednesday night and would not say whether they were suspected of involvement in the Dec. 17 kidnappi ng o f the American NATO general OVERTHROWN Pr l'sldl•nt Hill a Limann ·~ government 1n tht' West AfrlC':.in ~l titl' ot Chana hL1s l>C'en uvPrth1'm' 11 h~ lht· arm~ 'We'll stand together' British Prime Minister assures Poland of solidarity. By The1 A1u1oda&.ed Pre11 Britis h Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said In a Ne w Year message today lhat the West will "stand together" over Poland. Wes t German Chanc ellor Helmut Schmidt condemned the crackdown In Pola nd but cast doubt on the effectiveness or U.S. sanctions against lhe Kremlin. The Soviet Communist Party newspaper Pravda kept up lhe attack on President Reagan's s anctions. declaring: "Without any grounds. contrary to facts, the preside nt of the United States as cribes to the Soviet Union responsibility for the introduction of martial law in Poland." Mrs. Thatcher said in her broad cast m essage: "We in Europe and the United States a re the free democratic world. The whole of the Russian tactic 1s to try and divide us. They must never succeed. ··Poland wa nts peace with freedom. It wants the very thing wt-have which we do not always value enough . We will stand together." Mrs. Thatcher . who supported the U.S. boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics after Soviet inte rvention i n Afghanistan, we nt on: "The whole of the eastern bloc ha ve had e nough of th e oppressiveness of communism and now the oppressiveness of military rule. They saw a spark o f f reedom e m e rging in Solidarity. But it is crushed out under the communist yoke. ·'Communism and freedom cannot exist side by side We in * * * tbe West know that, and we In the West will stick together." Foreign mlnhtera from Britain and the nine other European Co m mon Mark et countries meet In Bruuels Monday, followed a week later by a meeting or the 15 NATO foreign ministers, to consider the Polish crisis and lbe U.S. call for sanctions against the Soviet Union for its role In Poland. However, West Germany and other European atues do not accept the U.S. view that the Soviets were responsible for the Dec. 13 declaration of martiaJ law in Poland and subsequent crackdown. Chancellor Schmidt compared the crisis in Poland lo a shadow "which has darkened the sky over Eastern Europe," but he cast doubt on the effectiveness of U.S. sanctions against the Soviet Union. Schmidt, in a New Year's address reeorded Wednesday in Florida where he is vacationing, said Reagan's s anctions were "an expression of deep concern, also of anger," but not likely to be "world-changing." Jn Bo nn , West G e rm a n Foreign Minister Hans· Dietrich Genscher said he told Polish De puty Prim e Mini s ter Mieczyslaw Rakowski that West Germany wanted P ol and's military regime lo stop ttte ma rtial law crackdown, free political prisoners and resume negotiations with the Solidarity union and Ro m an Catho li c Church. Ra kowski talked with West German officials for four hours * * * We dnc11day In un apparent attempt to convince them that Poland's mihtary repression is no t lis drastic as Weste rn nations contend. Ci e nscher did not mention possible sanctions and Rakowski declined to comment. Rakowski , the first high-ranking Pole to travel abroad since th e crackdown was announced Dec. 13, was scheduled to return to Poland later today. Bonn has the most to lose from joining in U .S sanctions against Poland or the Soviet Union. Sponsor shot by refugee? BILLINGS, Mont. CAP) -A woman and her male friend apparently were shot to death by the Vi e tnamese refu eee s he sponsored in the United States, and the refugee turned the gun on himself, police s aid. The thre e bodi es were discovered in the woman's house here Wednesday by a neighbor, and lhe s mall·caliber handgun used in the s hootings was found inside, Police Chief Gene Kiser said. Ki lled were Lees1a Chandler. 30, and Joseph Leroy Kemph, 39, Kiser said , and the man Mrs. C handl e r s pon sor e d fo r residence in the United States, Ngoc Van Nguyan, 29. of Long Is land, N Y Kiser said no m otive was establis hed and autopsies would be performed toda y. Reagan caution.s Polish people WASHI NGTON <APJ -U.S. act ions 1n res po nse to the crackdown an Poland should not prompt that nation's people to ··sta rt manning the barricades." says President Reagan The people of Poland should not "get t h e b e li e f that , som ehow. they were going to be a ided " if they atte mpted a revolution. Reagan said io an inter view broadcast by NBC W e dn e s da y ni g ht. H e e mphasized that in opposing martial law in Poland he does not want to do anything that mi~ht c ause ··the kind or violence·· tha t occurred in Hungary in 1956. · "The re ·s a lways be en a suspicion." he added. "that lhe tal k of th a t kind led the Hungarians years ago lo take lo the streets with little more lhan sl1C'ks and stones and against Soviet tanks. We didn't want a repeat of that." T he State Department said Wednesday that the Soviet Union has begun Jamming the Voi ce of America 's Po li sh·language broadcasts to P o l a nd , v 1o lat1n g three inter n a tional agree ments . Spokesman Alan Rom berg said the jamming had been carried out sporadically since Monday. Th e Britis h Br oad casting Corp .. mwanwhile. said today th a t its P o li s h -l a nguage broadcasts also are being jammed by Soviet transmitters "somewhere near Moscow." Se n. William Armstrong said Wednesday he supports the trade e mbargo ag ainst the Soviet Union and will s eek hearings on whether s uch a ban should be made permanent. The Colorado Republican said he would a s k for he arings, probably the Senate Banking Committee, shortly a fter the second sessio n of the 97th Congress conv£>nes on Jan. 25. State Department s pokesman Hom berg, meanwhile, dismissed as ··rid1culou!>" allegations by the Soviet news agency Tass that the economic sanctions are a renewed U S effo rt to "step again on the path of threats and blackmail ·· Romberg a lso offer ed an official response lo Tuesday·s statement by a spokesm an for Pola nd·s mili ta ry council that the nation remains in a "state of war · · 1t 1s a startling s pectacle to !lee a s t ate pro fessing to r e present the working class decla ring a state of wa r against its own workers." Ro mberg said. Suit dismissed SALT LAKE CITY <AP> -A fed eral Judge. declaring the issue dead , has dis missed a lawsuit opposing the basing or M X nuclear missiles in Utah and Nevada. dmitted the shots caused. The recommendation by U S. 1s t r i c t Judg e S h e r m a n inesilver was tacked on to a Escaped killers evade dragnet CENT ERVILLE. Nev <AP 1 Two escaped killers eluded a police dragnet and may have fl e d this rural area afte r bre aking out of a near by slate prison, authorities s ay Armed forces overthrow Ghana in coup uling Wednesday that a woman ho develop e d t r a nsve rse yelilis after a s wine flu shot be omp e n s ated b y th e overnmenl. wo accomplices ·n pope attack? NEW YORK CAP> -Italian uthorities bel ieve Turkish unman Mehmet Ali Agca, had wo accomplices when he tried o assassinate Pope J ohn Paul I, ABC News reports. A man photographed standing ext to Agca at the time of the hooting in St. Peter 's Square as been identified as Oemer y, a Turkish terroris t a nd an ssociate of Agca. the network aid Wednesday. The second lleged accomplice. ABC s aid, as a man photographed by owell Newton, the editorial !rector of an ABC·owned RUFFELL'S Ul'HOLSTERY la .. •11 .. er-4~ I nz HAllOI IUD. C05TA,MISA-541-1 IH eed A Littl cash? Or a lot of cash? Th.n call ct ... lfled. Tho•• thing• taking up t~lnyour ho~. It~• you h~n'tuHd ln ages,maybetuat whM eorneone Two other inmates. who cr ashed a prison stallon wagon through gates of the Northern Nevada Correctional Center late Tuesday, we r e r ecapt ured Wednesday. Soviet parents awarood custody C HICAGO <AP J -The pa r ents of a Soviet boy who re fused to leave the United Stales with them ha ve won a c us tod y s uit he re , but the youth's rate is far from being decided because of appeals and a n o ther, p oss ibl y m o r e important, lawsuit. Walter Polovchak, 14, became a permanent U.S. resident after a juvenile court granted custody lo the state of Illinois. ABIDJAN. Ivory Coa!>l c AP 1 J e rry J Rawl i ngs, a 34-ycar-old forme r air force lie utenant, staged his second coup in two years in the West Af r i ca n nati on o f Gha na . toppling the civilian government of Pres ident Hilla Limann, Accra radio reported today The radio. monitored in the neighboring I vo r y Coast , reported heavy firing early in th e morning a r ound Burma Barracks, the central m1hlary 1 camp in Accr a, the capital or G h a n a Th e r e w e r e n o immediate reports or casualties a nd n o ind e p e nd e nt confirmation that Rawlings had taken power In the broadcast , Rawlings appealed to Ghanaians not to harm Limann. whom Rawlings as k e d t o r e m a in in hi s pres idential quarters. ·'I am pre p ared at this FIND YOUR NAME WIN 4 TICKETS WORTH S 18 Hundreds of Sports & Vocation Displays RVs & Accessories• Fishing Clinics • Comping • Travel Film Festival • HOURS: 2·10 pm Dally Noon-10 pm Sat Noon-8 pm Sun. • Dally _St999 Show Featuring llLLllWlLL.AID "The Boxing Kangaroo" • • ., .. need•. So give UI a SAT. MN. 2 tla"9 SUN • .IAN. ta .-w.c .. Ht.atoo call .•. lt't ... Y to uM c1attlfled to get your handt on tomeoaah· .•u 9 Winners In Today's Classifieds! IT'S EASYI Find your name and address in today's ctasslfled section. then call 642·5678 Ext. 272 to claim ycur tickets. Winners each ..... ..._. day, eo check the ctasalfieda In the 9lllllJ rml moment to face a firing squad 1f what I've tried lo do for lhe second time in my life does not meet with the approval of Ghanaians:· Rawlings said. "I'm not he re lo impose myself, far from it." Rawlings said. "We ask for nothing more than prope r democracy ~, after two years of nothing but repression. "We are asking for nothing more than the right to assert lhe dignity of humanity," he said. "Fe llow citizens. it is up to you to decide." lie called on all soldiers, officers and policemen retired ~JH•· Year-End to or dismissed Sept. 24. 1979, the date of return to civilian r ul e. to report to their barracks . Rawlings also said that other countries should "stay out of our attempt to rid this country or corruption." It was the fifth military coup 1n the country Our srorewide clearance of Fall fashions. Save on day and evening dresses, classic and contemporary sportswear. suits, coots, knits, lingerie, Jo ungewear. shoes and accessories. JOHN HOG.AN roke aclt 1urnoge o/ thrse S<Jt.1ln9s tvlrh o JH < >ptl<>nCll Cllor~w Account. Apply In any John Hogan smre. La Jo lla: 7636 Gtrar<I. 4 5 4 ·7121 . Foshlon Valley: 2 91 ·7 100 Fashion Island. Neu1pon ~;enter: 644· 1100 ·------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, December 31 , 1981 H/F Tax speedup, aid cuts proposed Brown hopes to off set expected $2 billion budget deficit for 1982!"83 LOS ANGELES (AP> -Gov, Edmund G. Brown Jr. hopes to offset an anticipated 12 billlon budget deficit next nscal year with accelerated tax colleclionJ and a $1 billion cut in aid to local government and Medi-Cal recipients. Brown also said he would ask the Legislature to eliminate an oil company tax deduction and end state financing of the Public Utilities Commission by handing the bill to the utility companies. Th e governor outl ined proposals Wednesday for grappling with California's worsening fiscal straits in a talk wltb report.era alter taping an interview with television station KNBC to be aired SU1l4ay. Although Brown ha s previously s uggested cutting state aid lo counties and cities, he pinpointed a $4$0 million target for the rirst t ime Wednesday. A speed-up in property tax collection could bring the state $480 million, Brown s aid, by reducing the time it takes the state to levy higtaer taxes once property is sold or built on. Proposition 13 doesn't restrict such Increases, but it now takes local governments as long as a year to begin collecting the higher rate. Brown's proposal would cut that lag in half, said Cl Hford L. Allen by. assistant state director of llnance, but county s upervisora and ·the Legjslature both must approve Brown said he expected oil company opposition to his suggestion that oil companies lose their state tax deduction offsetting the federal windfall oil profits tax. a proposal that could generate S80 million. If oil companies succeed in billing the measure as a lax increase. as he predicted, It could force approval b y two-thirds or the Le1islature rather than a simple majority. Proposition l3 requires broader a pproval for tax increases. Brown has already endorsed legislation for quicker collection or business' payroll withholding taxes, increasing state revenue by $200 million. He said California coufd also reap a one-time unquantified windfall if businesses submitted their sales taxes one month earlier Brown said his Medi-c al cutback proposals would include "sharp cutbacks" in payments to doctors, hospitals and nursing homes Rain spells trouble for SF stadium Candlestick parking lot under 8 inches of water as game set Sunday ..,...... , CHEESE LINE Fresno area residents line up around the block for 2.500 pound:, or frt>t' rederal surplus clleese distributed Wednesday for the rirsl time at Valley Social Services in Fresno. By The Aasociated Press An approaching Pacific storm is expected to bring more rain tonight and New Year's Day, spelling more trouble for an already drenched Candlesti ck Park, where the San Francisco 49ers and New York Giants meet Sunday in a playoff game. The National Weath er Service, In one of lhe wettest Decembers in years, reports there will be a c hance of showers through the weekend. Sierra ski resorts are looking forw ard to a s now-blanketed New Year, with the snow level dropping to 2,000 feet. The Candlestick parking lot was already under 8 inches of water W e dnesday . Rapidly deteriorating field conditions becauseofheavyrainscouldmake the field become a quagmire as a resultofpoordrainage. Most or t he rainfall has concentrated north of San Francisco. The Marin Municipal Wat er Di str i ct says its reservoirs are at 97 percent or capacity -the most water the district has had available in 10 years. Weather Service s pokesman Tom Tinker said some clearing is predicted for Friday before the next assault. Ski resorts were reveling in new snow, with some reporting Tram mishap settlement told Relat_ives of victims to receive nearly $5.5 million SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - Relatives of four persons who were fatally crushed in a tram accident at Squaw Valley will receive nearly $5.5 million under court settlements made this week, attorneys said. A girl who was orphaned when her parents died in the tragedy at the Sierra Nevada ski resort in April, 1978, will receive Sl.85 million over 28 years, her attorney, James Downing, said Wednesday. And two women whose husbands died will receive $1.9 million and $1.6 million apiece. The girl, Deanna Wisniewski, was 7 when her parents, Dean and Georgina of Alameda, died in the accident in which 30 persons were injured. A cable on an aerial tramway jumped its track and cut through the roof of the ill-fated car. A state report blamed the accident on high winds and sudden drops in barometric pressure during a fierce snowstorm. Purna Merchant, whose hus band, Depak, was killed. will receive $1.65 million over some 40 years, Downing said. Depak was an Indian national who worked in Stanford. Patricia Hinckle of Milpitas will be paid $1 .945 million for the death of her husband, Lawrence. according to her attorney . Albert Abramson. Plastic pipe ha~ard claimed LOS ANGELES (AP > Distribution of a new nationwide building code was postponed after the California Consumer Affairs Department sued over proposed use of plastic pipe. The consumer agency claimed in its suit the longterm use of the pipes may be linked to birth defects and cancer. At a hearing before Superior Co urt Judge Leon Savitch on Wednesday. the International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials <IAPMO > agreed to withhold distribution of its 1982 Uniform Building Code until after a hearing on the questions raised on Jan. 20. The code, which serves as a guide to local building departments, endorses use of plastic pipe. Because of IAPMO 's agreement not to send out its books. Judge Savitch declined to issue the r estraining order sought by the consumer agency. Bes ides seeking a halt to sending out the codes. the suit sought to require the plumbing association to post a warning wherever the code is made ·vailable to the public. Vtilit:y customers due $6 million SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The s tat e Publi c Ut ilities Commission has ordered Pacific Telephone to return $6 million to its customers. PUC spokesman Gene Raleigh said Wednesday that the funds are part or commission orders dating from 1980 that the t e lephone company deemed undelivera ble for various reasons. He said the refund will be distributed among all customers and will be worth "about a nickel" on each telephone bill. Judge rejects bid to stop cuts SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A bid to stop federal cuts in benefits to ne arly 73 ,000 California families has been rejected by a federal judge. U.S. District Judge Thelton Henderson on Wednesday denied the class action lawsuit brought by the California Coalition of ·w e I fare Rights a nd two individual recipients of Aid to Families with De pendent Children, the progr am slashed by the Reagan administration. The cutbacks were scheduled to begin Oct. 1, but court action has blocked them. In two hours of arguments on Tuesday, the welfare advocates accused the federal government or dodging a required public he a ring b e for e iss uing regulations to implement the budget cuts. "Before a bureaucracy makes a fundamental decision which affects people's lives, the people must have an opportunity to comment," said Eric Gold, an attorney with t he Al a meda County Legal Aid Society. Reagans vacation in Palm Springs · PALM SPRINGS <AP) -The Polis h crisis, which followed P resident Reagan on his vacation trip lo Los Angeles this week, is not far behind him at this desert resort. Reagan. h ere for a New Year 's Eve party at the home of publisher Walter Annenberg, is expected to confer. perhaps today. with Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr., who also is spending several vacation days here. But other than the meeting with Haig and some work on the State of the Union address he wil l give Jan. 26, Reagan has little official business on his schedule for the next couple of days Deputy Wh ite House press secretary Larry Speakes said Reagan will "be kept updated on the Polish situation." up to 18 inches during the last week and offering s kiing conditions dram atically improved over those of last year . "We have a total depth or 6~ feet at the higher elevations. Last year at this time we had 18 inches," said Sally Eggen of Squaw Valley. "It's beautiful. We 've just had two days of storm and it's clearing now and we're hopeful of nice we ather over the weekend." The Sonoma County Water Agency , mea nwhil e. has measured 22.63 in ches of rain since July 1 at Santa Ros a Junior College -compared with 6.9 inches at the same time last year. The state flood control bureau in Sacramento reported that the upper Sacramento River reached flood stage and the Smith River on the North Coast r ose t o warning stag e Wednesday, but that neither was in danger of over-running its banks. ''Right now. the river levels (in Northern California> are mainl y h o lding ," s ud spokesman Bill Helms Monterey shark hunter arrested M ON TEREY (AP > - Monterey Bay's great shark hunt was s uddenly quashed W e dn esday when self.proclaimed s hark hunter D"avid Fisse was arrested in connection with a concealed weapon and hospitalized for psychiatric observation, police said. Fisse, whose boat had been declared unsafe and ordered into harbor by the Coast Guard earlier in the day. was under obser vation at Community Hos pital i n Mo nterey. s aid police Watch Commander Ken Brown. The 37-year-old San Bruno man , who had been more successful at finding pubUcitX than sharks, was on his way te S.._ television interview at • bollt launch west of Fisherman·-., Wharf when a police offi~rl stopped to ask him about UM;) shotgtlh he was carryine. said Jeff Ri c hmond of KNTV-Monterey, who was on the scene. After arguing loudly with the . officer. Richmond said, ntae started to reach toward t.be bactt pocket, where there was a 9mm pistol. "The cop said, 'Don't dO that·." Richmond said, and Fisse replied, ·You can have it' ... Fblo ~ Ralph Lauren New Year Sale , ' , Polo merchandise (or men. women, boys and girls. One fourth to one half off. Begins January 2 through 14. Store hours: Monday through Friday 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. and Sunday 12 noon-5 p.m. Visa • Mastercard • Amex ROBERT R--11Lllffi' COMPANY SOUTH COAST PLAZA SAKS WING, COSTA MESA, CA 714 641-0353 .. • FISH AR E BITING -Ice s hanties have s prung up on Monona Bay in Madison . Wisconsin as well as on other Madison lakes as the word A,. ........ s pread rapidly tha t blue gills. crappies and perch were biting. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT(T'huraday, December 31 , 1981 H t r .. ..,... NOTICI 0 " oaATH 0" .. onc1roc••••TM• MADOLYN c. PeNLAND O"I UUlT ..... I• c11u.•ttt•WUC.C.1 ANO 0, PeTITION TO Hello h 11erny t lYe11 te th• ADMINISTER •STATE «••••t•r1 ., ANTMON V o NO •111s14 CA•~INTI• e11• CATHlltlNI '"' ' c A11,.•11T1•. Tr.,.,,.,.,., ...... T o • I I h • I r s • MIMN .--11 ,.... vie o.ne. btneflcl•rltt, c reditors c11y •• ""'"" ... 11• '"""' " and c:ontlnvent creditors of e:;::.:c;_-:-,.,,.i:;:~:,_,.~ Madolyn C. Penland Ind CAM,.LIN .... LS• CAM"t.'"· par sons who may be Trelllft-. -.. ....... -otherwise Interested In tht ~.~~ C:,~-c~•,:.:,~:= wlll and/or estate: c e111ot111&. A petition has been flied T"' ~ • .,. .,_...,.. i. by C rocker National Bank .. ac''"° "' .....,., 91 Alt '*" "' In the Superior Court of tr .... ll1n ....... _..,._, .... .... wlll of tllll CoflH Sllele ........... Orange County requesting •-11 .. THll co~••• PIDOL••. that C rocker Natio nal ••olH •t,.. vi. °'*19. CllY et Bank be appointed as ~t~:'!.1=:-~ c _, .. 0r.,..., personal representative to Th• h t• tru•••• •"' "•administer the estate of cor.111111.,,.... on °' et .. r ttw 1"" •o M a cl o I y n C . Pen I a n d of Jenu•ry, lttt •t 10:00 • "'· •I ( o •• ,,., EiC•-cer~eu..... ...... uncler the Independent ecldr•u 11 n.. ,. • .., .... e111d ... 11 Administration of E states Toro, ce11tor111e Ac t). The petit ion Is set for J~r~~:,' ,:.;'.• 10 111• <lt lm• '' hearing In Dept. No. 3 at so fer •• I• ll11••ft to th• 700 Civ ic Center Drive, !;:~~:.;.:1~~.:,.~ •:WA est.Cln1itfhe Ci it y oJf. San1t3a t1>epestt_y .. ,...,..1,,.s-. na, a orn a o n an. • O•t••: l>ectfllller 11, ••• J•"'" 1982 at 9:30 a .m . ,.......... . IF YOU OBJECT t o the ';!:!,= granting of the petition, OltOVlllt llKltOW CO .. 'OUTION you Should either appe ar tJM11tet.....,••.1111MtN at the hearing and s ta te •J~~ your o b jectio n s or f ile ,.u1111.,,., 0r.,.. coett o .. 1y "''°t· writte n objections w it h the o.c. Jt, , .. , u.»tt. court before the h earing. ,ICTITIOUI I UllNIU NAMll STATllMINT Tiie lollowl110 perao11 I• •olno ""'lnoues: ANGELFISH DECOR. JUt 01llote A•e1111e, Cos•• ¥•••, Celllor-nut ltollert Carroll 5lmo111. J17t Oellole Ave11ue, Coate M•'•• Callto<ftla nut Tllh W\l....U I• <-led 11y .,. lndlv-1 R...,, C. Sl...-1 Your appearance mav be In person or b y your a ttorney. IF YOU ARE A C REDIT OR or a contingent cred itor ot the deceased, you must file vour c laim with the court or present i t to the personal r e presentative appointed by the court w ithin four months from the date of fir s t Issuance "ICTITIWI •UMNllM NAM81TATl .... NT , ... 1ellow1111 ""·"· ore ••1111 IMKIMUH: HUOHlt NOltTH COUNTY /iUO(IATll. Twt CWeott• fl'luo. Witt UO, ........, .. e<ll, Celllerftla .,,... H.,.,_. 1...,.tl~h. e (.elltornlo .. ,..,., pettllerllllp, rwo Cor-et• ....... tvltt uo .............. "'. C.tll•rftle nteO l ...... View lnvtt""-1 Ge ,• Celllernle ....-rel Ottl,,.nhlp, ..01 Wlltlll•• 81vd., l11llt 110, e.varly Hllh, Catl10t1U'Ott0 Tllh .,., •• ,,. .. II condu<led llY • _,91 ,.,_....,. Witt..,,, W H...,_, Jr . "er1Nt' Tllli S .. lemtnl Wft flleCI Wllll Ille COll"IY Clork ot o.-..... G-•Y ... o.c ...... , ...... NU .. ITllkll•, Mt I.I.alt, CA•l.IOtt & a8AltOIUY A t..ewl> ........ llKl•lllt ........... c.r,.r..._ -~ai..-.s..t•1• _ _, ...... ~ .... 'ICTITIOUt•lllfNI• NAMltT•TSMlll'T ,. ... , .. ,_!tit,.,_,~· ... "' '""'"" ... MIOOlt T ICHNOLOOY , LIMITID, ltitill f'le<...tle A-. c ........... CA"'27. ICINllNOTON AUOCl•Tll. INC,, e Del-. ,.,._et.ltll, 1 .. SA '""""' A-. C•I• Mt\41, CA mn. Tiiis IMdlM11 11 CeMu<-ty e llmlltd~ ICINllNOTON •llOCIATlll, INC . ....,. ··"· ,.,ftWIMC TlllJ ....._,.. -ltted wltll -c ... 111y Cteftl et Or ..... C.....ty .., De<,., •• ,. DAVID MAOILA'n' "......., .. '--... .......... ~ ........ .._,._...._CA .... . ., .... ,.ul>lllMf Or.,,.. c-1 Oelly ,.,~ Otc 11, t•t, JOft, 7, 14, 11, 1"2 M27 .. t ~.,,,,. Pulltll/Wil Or-Cool! Oelly Pilot, t-------------v 0.< 10, 11. 14, St,"" UTO-t t PICTITl== .. NllU ITAfllMl!NTO, WITNO•AWAI. ~•OM l'AltTNllltlMI,. O,.ll.ATtMO UNDl!lt PICTITIOUI 8UllNllU MANlll Tiie lollowillO --hes withdrawn U • Otneral partner trotn Ille partnership operatlno under Ill• ll<tlllou~ lluil,,.., ,..,.,,. of HUNTER & VOSS. t-F•lrchllo Orlve. Suite 100, lrvl11e, C..llf0tnla '211J T II• ll<lltlou• llu•lneu neme ............ ,for ... part ... ,.111 .. w•• llled en Jun• 27, lt1' '" the County ol Or•llO• Full ... ,.,,. -Name -AdclrHi Of Ille Per>Oll WltllOrewlno H VICTOR SUCHE R, JR , lt.00 FelrchllO Orlve Suite 100, l••IM, C'llllfornl•"71J M-•Va.1 "'"' ., l..A• Flt71tt ,_ ,eff'cl!IW ~. -· ,. ,,.,.,..,co.mu US.t .. I PuDllllWil Or-Coo•I Ooily Piiot, 0t< 17, 14, JI, Itel. J .,, 1. 1"1 ~t-11 M~ STATllMllNT Tiie lollowlno ""'°"' ar• .. 1111 1>vs1 ...... , COSTA MESA OEVELOPEltS, IJOt 0ove Street. Suite ,Ml, .. _ _, leach, Cetltwnlo..,... JoM 0 O'OonMll, UOI O.ve SlrHI. Suite 7.0, NewPOrt Bu~ll. C•tllornla '1t60 Terence W 8r..,,..,,, tJOI Oo.,. Street, Suite 760. N•wPOrl lee<ll, Calllorftle t2iilO Jamff E We1tllno. tJOt Oov• Street, Suite 760, NewPOrt Beech, C el1tor11le t2tlO ••••• •nmtrono. not Dove Strett, Sult. 7t0, ~ a-c11. Cell~• ._ Tl\11 1>v1IM11 11 <on4'Ktecl lly • O•Mr•I p0<111er"'lp, JoflnO.O'Oorvwll Tiiis flot.nwnt •M llled with .,,. County Cit•~ of Or•noc C°""" .., ~·"'-"·'"' •t7'et PubllllWil 0r0ftge Coell Delly Piiot, Oec. JI,, .. ,, Je<1 7. 14, 11, 1"2 ~· Thia sto..._.t w• llled wllll -Coullty Clerll of Orange COUftlY .., of letters a s provided in 1~---------­'°'CTITIOUI BUllMI U MAMIE STAT8MCMT Otcem-II, '"' T "" tJ llowlftO P•"o" h eo1110 lllnlftet/et Paper notes Poles' plight ,.,,., PublllNd ~ Cooll Oolly ,. ..... Otc. JI,, .. ,, J.,,. 1. ••. '1. 1"2s.JJ .. t. Sect lon 700 of the Probate Code of Ca lifornia .. The time for filing claims will not expire p rior to four months from the date of the hearing not iced above. FICTITIOUS auStNISS MAME STATll¥1lMT Th• lollowlft9 per'l<)ni ••• Ool"O bu,•nHSH HESTER INTERNATIONAi. STAMP CO , 27071 C.lle Dor-. S•n Ju•n Caplst•-. CA '26H CA MEO HOUSE OF F INE PHOTOGRAPH Y, 110 WUt<llll Orlve, N.,.•POrl BH ch, Cellfor,.le .,..., . R_, J Welker, 211' S...te AM Ave ...... C~ -.a, Collfomle t'1617 Tiii• lluMnes• •• <-...C:tH lly en 111dl•lduel. From AP dlspakb es B rttala's top-selling daily news paper, the Sun, urge d readers today to place a lighted candle in their windows 10 minutes before midnight on New Year's Eve "to remember the appalling plight of the PoUsh people." The London tabloid, with circulation, took up President Americans to light candle s Christmas. a 4 millio n daily Reagan's caJI for for Poland over * * Employees of the $7 million Maxwell's P lum, a lavis hly decorated Saa Fraaclsco restaurant patterned loosely on the original Maxwell's Plum in New York, have voted overwhelmingly for union representatio n . In the e lection Wednesday sponsored by the National Labor R e lations Board, workers voted 183 to 26 to affiliate with Local 2 o f the Hotel and Restaurant Employees and Bartenders U nion. • * Two firefighters a nd three police officers were suspended after it was learned they w e re involved in running a bookmaking operation out of the fire department headquarte r s, Hermosa Beach officials s aid. DEATHS ELSEWHERE WALNtrr C REEK I API -John Bell Condliffe, an interna tion al expert 1n m ooetary pohcy and trade relations. died Dec 23 on h is 90th birthday He was former c hairman or lhe economics deparlment al UC-Berkeley SAN FRANCISCO I AP 1 -Huf.II A. MacKjnnon, 90. an internationally known composer o r religious music, died Dec. 25. •ATH 1mc11 RALEIGU. N <.: I AP ' Co l Wiiiiam Tho mas J oytler , 90 . former c h airman o f the North Carolina Board of Elections and the H 11i!h"'ll) Co mm1 i.s 1on d1t>d Wedn esda) EVANSTON. Ill 1AP1 Dr Jottn Llodasy, 82, a prominent Unive rs ity o f C hicago ear surgeon. die d Sunday MOBLEY 1981 at 10.00AM at llarbOr L 0 I S P A T R I C I A Lawn Memorial C hapel with MO BLEY. resident or the interment 1mmed1ately area for the past 30 years. following Ser vices under arter m oving here from San t h e d1rect1on o f lla rbor Bernardin o .-C a . P assed L aw n .M ou nt 0 I i v e away on December 28. 1981 Mo rtuary of Costa Me s a S he is survived by h er 540·5554 hus band BenJamin Mobley, ABOUNADER Jr., son James. daughter RALPH ABOUNADER. Judy Ann Yanez of Costa resident o f Buena P ark, Ca Mesa, Ca .• 3 grandl'hlldren. for 10 years a fte r moving 2 sist ers a~d 2 brothers. here from Los Angeles. Ca. Prayer services were held He was a 40 year member or on Thursday , December 31, the Inglewood Lodge #1492 ~iiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiOiiilillliiOs;;;;;iillOi--.~ BPO E . He is s urvived by his d aughter G r ace DeCurr , grendcllild ren, Larry R . and Dennis V. DeCurr a ll o f Buena P ark. Ca . Recitation or the Rosar y and Mass or the Resurrection will be held on Friday, January l , 1982 at 7 :30PM a t Our Lady of M ount Lebanon Catholic C hurch. Committal Ser vices will be he ld on Saturday, January 2. 1982 al 11 ·00AM at Holy Cross Cem etery. Los Angeles, Ca. Services ces under the direction or Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive M ortuary o r Cost a Mesa 540-5554 . IM.R I BG>UOM SMIT'H I TUTHILL WISTCUff CHArtl. 427 E 1711"1 St Costa Mesa 646-9371 ,..Cl laOntaS IMrTMS' MOITUAIY 627 Main St HuntonO'On Bt:ach 53fH;539 .PACMCY11W ..-.otnA&,PMI CemttefY Mortuary Chaoel-Crematory 3l500 Pac1f1c Vi.w Drove Newl)Of1 Beacn 6'4-2700 MICO&Mlell MOITUAns &.aQuna 8eac~ •94-~15 l8Quna Hills 78&-0933 Sen Juan C.p1strano 495-1n 6 KUNG ER <ED I WI L LIAM KLINGER . r esident o f Corona d e l Mar , Ca Survived by his wife, Mary Ann, 3 daughters Deborah, Teresa, Marilyn and his son Wiiliam Kllnaer. Jr., mother Grace. brothers Robert J and John P. also survive. Hla flrsl wtre, Gertrude Nan Klln1er preceded him In death In 1975. Mau or C hrl.tllan Burial held o n Thursday, December 31, lHl at IO:OOAM at St Joechlm'a Catholic Church , tte• Orante Ave., Coata Meaa. Ca . lntument lmmtdlately fd1lowed at Oood~C~ey.ln Ueu ot f'fowtn, the ramlly WI mon-i reqlM9Ca contribullona to lt•• .._ kt"vlw HlO School Bulldlna la&.19GA9WAY P'und ''°' w. La PallH. ..,....: Anabeim. Ca . Bath 1 tO lldlalt~ Ber1eron·Smith fr Tuthill c,..-.. WHtdUf OaaP*J MoriHft ..._..__.'°'_..'.'.aa.-...._._.,.,. or• a rd In 1 d I rectora • ~L YOU MAY EXAMINE Fire Eng ineer Mic key Tague, who allegedly ran the operation, u sed the c ivil defense phone in the Ore stat.ion adjacent to the potlce dep a rtment and C ity H.U to take bets, said City Manager Greg M eyer. That phone bypasses the city operator. '=~!::~":.:' the file kept by the ~ourt. The followlftO person Is doln• f.f VOU are tnterested tn the """"" .. ,. estate you mav file a c & i.. •NTERNAT 10NA1.. " request with the court to Whit«-. '"'""· CetlfOn'll• t n u , ''°"" ,,_, Jr .. •• W111te<1ouct, r eceive special notice o f 1rv1 .... c.1Hor111ett1u the Invento ry of e s tate ,,;1~1:0!:''""' •~ <-..Cted 11Y .,. assets and of the petitions, HA ROLO E HESTER, 27011 C•llt Dorado. San Juan Caphtrano CA '2'7S JEAN HESTER, 11071 Calle Oo••do, San Juan Co l\lrano, CA t2t7S Tiii\ 11u11,,.., " conouc:ted lly an lndlvldu•I Romrt J. WelU r Tiii\ ,._.....,, •ft llltd wl"' Ille County Cieri! of Orange County on Oeumber 1', t•t ,,,..... Publl"9d 0r-. Coast Dolly Piiot, Dt<. J1. 1 .. 1. J., 7, u , Jt, ttll s-.1 * * c.1ov11J_., Jr acc ounts an(S rePorts des -H••ofd E Heuer Tiii• stow ...... 1 w•• llled wilh tllt County Cler-01 Orenoe County on Otc. ts, t"1 Continued storm w e ather was blamed for a Tiil• ,....,._,. _, 111ec1 w1111 t11t c r ibe d in Section 1200.5 o f countv Clerll of Oranoo County on the C alifornia Pro bate s mall rock s lide and the potential for a larger one on IUgbway lzt i n Tuolum.e Count y . Otcem-». t•t ,.,.,.. Code. ~t7MU Pulllllhtel Or-CoeSl Oally Piiot, 0tc 11, 14, lt. t .. t. Jan 7, ttll SQe.ft '1CTmous BUSINIU MAMIE STAT8-NT "The pro blem is not with the roadway but the Publl-Or .... Coast Oelly "''°'· J a c k L 0 p I n ; B I 0 c k • Ot< "· 1•1, J., 1• 14· 2•. tt11SUMt. B rick ner, Lopln & Feder, Tl•• lellowlno pe,.011 Is dolno bu••neu .. PUCll .. ~ 1.llGAL NOTICll Inc., Attorney at Law, 1226 H. Broadway, Santa Ana, CA 91701. Plll>lllNd Or-Coast 0 .. 1, PllOt. Ot<. JO.>•. 1t11, Je<1. •· ,.., sen .. • -------------1 E. M. ~11.ATELIC, LTO., J10 l..A l'UIUC llTlCE Perle Ploce, GOit.ii MHo. Cellforftl• ------------r:.~!.;,:.-~~ ms . ..._,, 8M<ll, PtCTtTIOUS BUllMllSS Edoer P. MIMr. >70 L• Perle MAMll STATl!MllNT Place, Coate-, Collfornl• m21 unce rtainty of when s ome 20,000 tons of loos e rock poised 500 feet above the road will come down," said Harvey Smith a CaWorala Department of Trans portation mainte nance s uperintendent. n A'Tll 0, CAl.IHltNIA O''°'CI! CWSTATllWIOE HEAL TM 1-------.,.--------,.LAMNINO ANO OllVl!l.Ol'MllMT rwa11t .. ,_ A~CATIOM '°It CllltTt•ICATI! 0' NlllO "CTITIOUI BUllNl!SS Hollo It llerelly otven Illa! the MAMIE STATl!Ml.MT Oflk• al Slftfwlde H••tth PIONllllO The followlno per'l<>nt ••e Oolno end O.v.1_.,1 "°' re<elvH Ille llullnAIS es Th• followlno per\0'1 '' c101no Tiii• _..,.., Is c-..ct..i bY .,. l>Vllneu H . llldlvlduol INTERNATIONAL EXCHAN GE EdeW P. ¥-. CO . OH vereno Pia<•. lrvlne, This -• "'" """' wlttl Ille C•llfornla t?TIS County Citrll of Or•-County on Mr. ltOMIO J Coln. 0 1) V•r•11< Oe<em-tt. , ... Place. 1n1:11e. C•llfomle tv u '11ftl.J •• Tllh -'""' " conducted llY en Pv1111"'911 Or-. COMI Oally Piiot, A Oash fire in a circus tent in llo me killed a fotlOWl"O ..CkotlonUI '°' ~lfkale GflAFICO TYPE ltl W 11th lndl•IOUOI Ot< JI,, .. ,. JOft. 7, ••• 21. ,.., u•u t Ronald J C••n c r ocodile, an ostric h , two large s nakes and a number of monkeys, police reported. of N-lit ec-.e wltll Stet'°" G1 Str"t Colto -c.e1itornte •»11 alld 431 Of "1t HMI"' and Safety G°* p,),ly A. ~lkl. 'l'JJt Catl•ri11e ond ,..,, .. ..,,. _,.lnl"9 ,,,.,...,, A Place Colla Mesa Collfornle •»17 """'k -l"Owlll llelleld ln llle-Wayne R 'Hencirlk• 123' el • lime •nCI delo still to b• Catherine Piece. Cotta 0Mou. Thi• "·-· We$ "'"" Wit" .... County Clerk ol Oran0t County on Otomllor 11. t•t 1--------------f!oUce said the animals w ere burned in their c ages when the fire s pread fro m the main tent to a huge tr ailer h o us ing t h e animals. -n<od Cetlfornla~V Port MHo COllvalescent HOSC1ll•I, Tllh -Inell '' Cor!Cluc:lecl lly an U70 N•wporl Boulevard. Col'ta -WI, lndlvldWI ~'7"71 Pulltl\ftOCI 0.-Coe\! Delly Piiot. Oe< 17, t•. JI '"' Jen 7. '"1 S..7MI "CTITIOUS BUllNEU NAME STATSMllNT Tll• lollow•no perso11 11 dolno b<lSlll•UH: • • C• '2•27. "-P!k•tJon No. ll·IJO. The ...;.ly A. H-•kks SltC VIHTURE ,.AltTNE1'S, 2711 WOOdland r>teu, 5erlle ...... CA '2107 STEVEN R RABAGO, )71 1 WOOdland Pto<e. Santo A1te, CA '2107. After ho urs of s tudying what looked like a iMIClltlOft of 12 tlllllecl nurslno bedt Tiii' 11*"*11 WM liled with Ille Cott U0.•1 County Clerll of Ore~ County °" bomb. experts s us picious of a device found in a s uitcase at Saa Francisco la&ernaU•al Airport hadn't figured out what it was, t he FBI said. ~DIO. IEIOlloenof Novem-u, l .. t • "~· v' ,.,,,., CertHk•I• ot N-PuDllslwd Oranoe CCMll 0.lly Piiot PulltllNd Or-coast Oally Piiot OK 10 17 14 JI 1•1 SJ67 .. i ,.CTITIOUI BUSI MISS NANlll STATEMllMT T lie tollowl"O pe,.on IS dolftQ DUillWSSti Tiiis llusir>Hs Is c-ucted by en lndlwlduol. s-R.Raoooo And when they do d ecide, "we probably will not comment on whether it was a bomb," s aid FBI s pokesman Tom Anderson. OK ,,,t .. t S~I --·--·-·-·-·-------JJG ASSOCIATES, MOO Eolnoer Avenue, • 1204. Hunlln91on Beach, C•lllornla 9»47 Judltll J-Gltele<>, IMOO Edlnocr Avtnue. •1104, Hunttnoton BH<ll. Cellfomlo.,..7 Thi• ... ..._.. •• flltd wllll Ille l County Clerlt of Or•11ge County .., Oec. 2'.1 .. 1 ,11tNJ PullllShed Or .... Coe,11 Delly PllOI, Otc Jt, , .. ,, J., 1. 14, n, ,., un .. , An airport worke r routinely checking lockers in t h e central terminal noticed a s atchel with wires protruding from it. ~ICTITIOUS auStNHS ~~c:!~~!:~::::.:s M.aME STATEMl!NT The tollo•lno person h e101no Tiie 10110w1no IM""'" ••• Clolno ...,,,,,.0 as DU\iN UM THE SILVERAOO COMPANY, Tllh -IMU I• <ONIUC:t.., llY an lndlvlduel PVlli 1111( * • c ANO c AOVE RT ISING os.w1111 ... wor .1n1:ne.Co.t11U Juell"' J._.,. Giiden The new year will arrive a half-hour early in Singapore and n e ighboring W est M alaysia . ASSOCIATES, 561 N Coast HIOfl•O . Sltveft E•rl 80ftllam 41S6 Laoun• llff<'ll. c.tltorftl• •»St w1111.., ... Or •• ,,,,,,,., c a. n11• Ktn11eth Murr•• Cwrto, SM N Tiils "'1MM'\• Is conoucted by an Thll -I WM llltd wl"' 11"9 Cou111r Cieri< OI Or•-County on Otumtie< ». 1•1 STATl.MllNT O~ AU MOOftMllNT O• USll 01' "CTITIOUS 8UStN•U MANlll T"" lollOWino .....-has •llOl-..a Ille USO of Ille lklltlovl .,._.,,..., ...,,,.. Officials in Kuala IAampa.r took the lead this m o nth in announcing that peninsular M alaysia or west Malaysia would move its clocks ahead to matc h the time in east Mal aysia . S abala and S a rawak and Nortb Borneo are the east Malaysian states separated from the peninsula by the Soalll Cblaa Sea. Co•ft Highway, l aou"• lt•<h, lnGl•iduel Cel•forftle m s1 sttwen E. 8o-Georol"'• Cu'1o. Stt ... Coest Tlllt ,. .. _, ,. .. filed wllh tllt Hlollwey, ~ Beech, C•lllornla CouftlY Cieri< of 0••"9t C-ty on mst Dt<•m-" "" Thh llu\IMU Is condu<ltCI Dy • '""" ge11era1 f>O(tlle,..hlp Pu1>1111wd <>ranoe coast Delly PllOt K--'h M\irf•Y Cur'IO Dt< 10, 17, 14, lt. ,... SJ11 .. t This s .. t_t wes flled with the ------------Covnty Cl-of Or•noc Count' on Otcem-I, IWl. Ftmn Pullll-Or-,.,.,, Oally Piiot, Ot< JI, 1•1. Jan 7, 14, 11, l'IG S.29-tt 'ICTIT10US BUSINISS MAME STATEMl!MY T "• touowino "''°"' •re 001"9 llull,.UH MAIM PIPE & SU PP LY COMPANY, lt16 £. M<F-. ~ AN, Colllamlo '1705 Tiit Fictitious 8u1l11u• N•m• rtltrrH to ebo.,. wat filed in Or91190 COUlttY °" Mottll 1l. 1'71. • JOHN IWO NOVIELl.0, llS40 Gladsl-Clrtlt. Founlalft V•llO C•llf0<nla'27Cll NU i.TIE c,.,. 1111t NOTICE 0, TltUITl!E'S SAi.i! T .S. No. 11~15 0.. J-V 22, 1"1, •I t : IS o'tlO<ll a.m .. Friday, at Ille front tntra11<e t~ llte old Orange County Court.....,., located°" s.n .. AM Blvd.. -Svc•more St and Broadway, Seftl• Ana, CaUf F . & W RECONVEYANC E CORPORATION, a Cetllornta t~etloft, 9' Trllll" or SulKtttu-Trustee, Uftdtr tll• o .. e ol trust UKUled by MARK A &ANTLE ANO KAR EN l . &ANTLE, HUSBAND ANO WIFE, AS JOINT TENANTS, htr•l11 <•llH Tr111tor. racor-Auo. 11, ttlO at 111•1""""" No. 33511. Ill 8-lr7tl, Pot• •tt. ol 0 111<1•1 Reto,.d• of Or•noc c-ty, C.llloml•. •Ill NII •• public euc:tlOll to the lllotW1t lllclcliff tor car.II . pay.,.. !ft lewf\11 -Y ot Ille United StoflH ot -llme of sole, Ille 1 ....... , ,_.,.. to --...... by H id trutltt -sold -ol trvsl 111 the pr_.-ty sttu.iees 111 sold Ceunty elld Stai.. dH<rllleCI es: 1.ot .o of Trect No. tt4t _.. '" lloM m Peon 11 to JI, 111ekltl.,. of 11111eet1-m.pt, In tM office ol Ille C-ty ltecordtr Of 19141 COlll\ly. EX Cf PT THEREFROM ell Oii, O"• 111lnerel1 end otl'ler hydrocerb011 SU4)11•-lyfllt ..... ~ of ,.,. IMI wltlloul.,.., rlfM lo.....,.,_... IN wrtec• w Ille wbwrttc• of teld 19"CI ..,.., •• ....,. of -IMI •• , .,, ... teed tn tnsl,,,_tt of recore. Tiie '''"' .-reu •Mlot otllor common dul1ftatlen, If t ft\I 11 -eorltdtellt: 2S7JJ wtlllemMluri C-1, II Toro, CA tttJO Se id H ie •Ill lie medt wlfll•vl werr•lllY H to title, -HMI! 01 •nci1111ereMH, tar the '"'°'"'° ef peylftl "" ............ _..,... "' .... 0... IMluCliftO "'9 ... ltftd HlltMt of the tru1 ... flfMI et Ille trvatt crHlff by t<tkl .............. " ~·-· •1111 l11t•rHI etlwMIM ll••,.•lft, efld the -141 erln<IJM -,, ... ,...., ot IN ..... ,., _......,"' ............ .. ttl,412.t~ OotoCl:~U.I_, l'.&W. ltl!CONVIYAMCE PIU ll1ll *"1Ca .. A'"""' T-.-1'018U. A~ IC MVa9'Mll tNMll Te.,.,. It*¥ c:i--· ICAlltO, MVO«UN & \'OUHO-NUI .,. ......... -0:111rt1MM .. ,.-......--· c... -Wft" Off MUI .. ,_ & wt• C.-utl ..., f'U ti -.....-.C ........ 9' 111 We tl ttft ltrHI, C•••• .... . c.eMlfW. ~ar....oa...OMtt Dec.Iii .... ....,.. ~'""' ------------CAI A IM . 18 1 AEST~ETIC INTE RIORS, 1(1 AESTHETIC OESIG NS, CO i ACTIO N INNOVATION MOTIVATION . :I* Bl•<h SI , S..lle 111. Ne-I Bte<ll, Ce t?MO Pllli 1111( MOTICll TOCC*TltACTOltS CALLING ,Olt atDS SCHOOL DIST RI CT Pulllllhed Or-Coast Delly Piiot, 0.<. 10, 17, 14, ll, , .. , »JI.Al HUNTINGTON BEACH UNION HIGH ,ICTITIOUS IUIOlllU SCHOOL DISTRICT ~ ITATllMllNT BID OEAOl.INE . 810 NO Ht ·l ·OO lite fOl ... "'9 Pfftofll are <1<11"9 PM , Monday. J,,,...ry 11, 1"7 _._ .. , 8 10 NO. _, 1 JO p M , -•y, (e l MITRA CUST0¥ MADE January 11, ltll Al.TEltATIOHS (b) MITltA CUSTOM PLACE OF 810 RECEIPT · MAOE BOUTIOUf, 10J lrvln• HUNTINGTON BEACH UNION HIGH A ... -.c. .. llMW.c.lltor11lanu? SCHOOL DISTRICT EDUCATION Mitre "· Allllroll•ll•••. tU O CENTER. 102.St Yorkt-n Av-. lrvl1t• A ... nve, N•weort •••ch, B CA C•ll-.0 ftMO :!:d R_.,, HU11H1t910n e.ch, Sllollln ltecljol, 4 Roclly KftOll, PROJECT IOENTIFICATION ln11,..,c.ltfomlo'271S NAM E 810 HO 47' Roof R-v•llon Tiiis WtllleH " C-<IH by • ,.CTITIOUS BUSIMt:U NANlll STATllMEMT . Tllf tollowinv per'l<>n• ar• doing llu\lftffSat HUAHINE J, l«>Sl Smiley Ori¥O, 0••"9•· GalifOl'nl• ,,.., F•-end Sharl l . Cion i, 1«n1 Srnlley Orht , Ore1199, Calitorftla ti..• ROO.rt F -Kathi_, 14 Welson. IS Sfttr._,, lrvlN, C.lltomla t77U M•rti. D. -Terry M O•-•r. 173 North Ha!"'40e0d, Or.,,1111, Calllornte .,... Fr-CloUI This slat-I w9' Ille<! wolh Ille County Clerk ol Oren .. County on Otc•llllM< •• 1ttt. Mel O•IOle. 17"6 Alllo Perk Est•tu , El Toro. Ce mlO Sho,._ 0.IOI•. 1l4't Ali'I<> Perk EUatft, El Toro. c.. '2~ Tllh "'111nA11 IS <OnOut tecl lly an lndl•ldual IH-& Wllel si--o.1o1e fllh st•,,,...t .... llled •Ith Ille '°""" CltR of Or•noc Counly Oft OKemllff I., .. , Fl1T716 Pvbll'1'oed Orange Cool! O•lly Piiot ,1111J1 Ot< 10, 11, 24, JI, t~t Sl37 .. t Pvlltl-Oranoe coast Oelly Pliot. !'-------=------ OK 10, 17.1•.lt, , .. , SM-et . Fountain V.,tn Hloh Sc:-1 09M••I,... .,., llfllo, 810 HO ..0 . Roof R-vallon Mltrellml.........,I _.,. -Wlntertlluf'VHIQh ScMol Thll .......... •• tlled wltll ... ,._ .,.,~ NIMm PLACE l'LANS ARE ON FILE. County Clef'tt of°"-COUltty on NOTICIO,T•USTllll'SSALI Melnleftence , Opuallons end Oe<am-1?, IWl. "CTtTIOUSBUSIMllSS TS NO H&F tt2 Conttrw<UOll, Room 321, Hunlll•Olon .,,._, MANIE STATll¥1lNT On J..,...ry U t'IG el tO e m •••<h Union Hloll S<llOol Olitrl<I ,....,_0r.,..c ... 1 o.i•,Pltec, The lollowt110 person Is Clolno HUNT & FEN$TEA¥AKEfl." Educetlon Center, 101St Yorlll-n Dec. 24• JI,""· JOft. 7, 14• 1* ~1 ll<IMMU .. , Proleulo11el CorPOratlon, es Cluly Avenue, HIA"lll"Olon Beacll, CA '1.... lt .. NC110 VIEJO OE CARRILLO. •-lntH Tnd-u ... elld purw•11t Pllolle: (714) _.,,,,. E•t m . '9.1 1911l 11941 Sil~ Circle, lr•I,,., Ce '1714 to OMd of '""' racor09d Oc-• JO, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tllal E••enl 0 l._.....h. 1'11 Yacht ""· as IMt No. '" -1•12. -tlte abO~ Sc:-1 Olatrk t of Ell<lleMr.n, Ne•POrt Buch, C•. 47S, of Olfklel Aacorcb In Ille olfke of Orenoe C-'V, Cellf.,.,le, acting lly •tCTITIOUS •UMNllSI '26a. Ille Co1111ty ltecorders ol Ore noe Tlllt bolillltss was c-..Cted lly "' lndlvlduol Joflnl_N_llo Tiii• Ital,-•OI llled wllll 11\o Couftly Clert. OI Ora11ge Counly °" Otc•m-1', '"'· 'MIU'.7 Pulllllhed Orange CMst Oelly PllOI. Ot< Jt. tWl, Jan.'· 14, 11. t"2 ,.,..,, "CTITIOUI BUSINEIS MAMIE STATllMllNT Tiie 1011-•nv _...,, •ro dol110 l>uslneuos; P U¥PIEfl PI CK LE. IUIS Sp rlnodele, Huntlnoton •••<II . C•lllONl!e...-GAlt'I' LEW BI NGAMAN, 11'7' Herlt• .. Circle, OowMY. Celllor'ftt• 90741 0-OU. i...andon, t tftt Herlt- Clr<it. 0-.-.0. Celltoml• '0241 Thi• DullllftS IS <ollduc:tM lly e ........ pert~p. o.,.,1..e1.......,. Thll 1to..,._t w~ llltd wttll "- Cou11ty Cter'll of Ore1199 c-ty .., Deul'lllM< 2', , .. , ~,,.... PullllSheel Or .... t oHt Delly PtlOt, Ot<. 31, t•t, JOft. 7, 14, 11, 1• SftWI end tllrougll 10 Goverlllng Bo••d. NAMe STATllM9NT Tiiis bullriets 11 condu<ttCI D\I en County, Sle19 of Collfomlo. eKe<ut.d here111efler r elerr•d to es Tiie lollowlllt ,.,,..,. 1' dolno lftdlvl-1. lly Slev.,.A Sov.... ·------------~'~!.~c.r:.::. "'t~ --•-l••,.~•1•1.!°!'. llvtl~e~UTTl.E ,.,.,..,.AHY, ,_ E-.i 0 l.otlf'lbeell Will SELL AT PUBl.IC AUCTION ·-• ,.._ .,._. ,,.. --.. _ "' ... ~ Tlllt stMetnenl WM flled with the TO HIGHEST 8100ER FOR CASH M•,..lllOllerllle•••rdofo <ontract Wtllt11l111!9r, "J", ~ta Ant , C• COUlll\I Cter'll of 0.-•noe County on (N yeble et tlmt of sol• In 1ewlul ,.------------ tortheellOWpr'Oj«t. ma. Oec:•lllW .. 1•1. ..._y of IN United States> et lo«>by •KTtTIOUl•UlfNllU 81dt .,,.., lie r.celYtd Ill .,,. 1»4•<• PATltlCIA M. C01t8Altt, ,,. '1mt1 ofllltOlfkttofHllllC& ..... tttrmetcer, NAMll:STATSMllNT lwntltltd .-.... -Wll lie ..,....o Cect1 ,.i.c.,C-.¥ose,CAfttt7. ,.u1111-0r.,_ Coast O.,ty PllOt A Profusion•• Corpor•llon, uo Tiit lollowl111 11H1rlo11 It N ino a11CI publl<ly rttd eloud •I Ill• Tiii• ..,.._, 11 ~-llY .,. DK 10. 17, >4. JI,,_, U.7 .. 1 Newport Ctnter Orlvt. S..lte 211, llvtlntH": e ......... tftldtlmteMp!eCO. llldl.,,.._. Ne"-1 llM<ll, Cell!Of'"le '"'9, •II SANDCASTLE GIFTS. N•.e-Eacll llkl ""Ill COftlOrm •11d lie "lltrklO M.. ~t ~ '9flC( r19M, tlllt end 1111-11 cllflvtytcl to Swltt Cwn,.........., IMdl, CA '"61.. ""4\tlW to tllt comrKI docll .... llli. Tiii• ........... -llltd ..... "" •"4 -...... ..., II UftCler M141 0.. °' L I c I. A I It I • . p" I .. c £ • lach Did "'911 lie eccom~nto<I by CWllty Clffll of 0.-a,,._ c ... 11t, ., -Trv1t 111 t111 """"1"f 111 ... lff In Mid NIA-s-1 C-1, .....,._. llMdl. C. tlle M<wlty ttlt•rtel '°'"the contr.cl De<. IS,,.,_ •~ IUst••u ,..,111, ..,. 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I -~~ ""· eet1CI wltl M r-e,ulr•• e~ler le e>-.. C.. DMIY '1111 ......... It c~led '' • c.""41 .... -.UC.. fl ~ __. ..... 6 .. H t olle11 er tll• c111trect , Tiie OK.ti" M.I\."" ......, .,.._..,_._..,. 1i.ctl9tl• ..... .,......,.,. .. 1!~;]~,·=~~~~,·~· ~ ............... fef'lft... • • • ............. (. .... , ............ ,..,~ .. ...,,._ ..... , ... ,............. Ttlll ---............... . :t=",,._,., C.11 141-H71. c-tT °"'"Or-..~• ..,_.,, •• 0-.,.,, *"'"· ""a ... --... Deel• •• '""" ==="'. •'CW.. °"" r wcw• --· ~ .... ~ "·"" ,.,...._.~c:.11 Dett""" .,....,.. .., ,..,, ....... Or-. c.-Mir....._ -c... Dllllr......, ......... .._ O.C. I\,""· J-.1, ,_ .,..., DIC. f1, M. 11, tWf, Jiii. 1, "* .-., OM. tl1 9'11,Ja l , 1-, ,_I ....... OM; M. M. ... . . , Orange Coast OAILY PILOT(Thurwday. December 31 , 1981 N 87 -----------------------------------------------------------, NYSE COMPOSl,.fE TRAN ACTION OUOUllON• •N(~UOI r••o•• ON, .. , NIW YOatl, Mtowan . "A( I Pt(, ..... IOUOtt OIHOtT ••o (IN(INNAft •'OC" laCNAN•U AMO attllO•TIO l 'f Tl41 NAlO ANO INUINlf Dow Jones Final UP 1.90 CLOSING 875.00 New GM Auto sales hav" slumped so badly, running at the slowest pace since 1959, that General Motors ls resorting to a sweepstakes promotion for the firs t time in Its history. You know how it is when you pick up a Sunday newspaper these days. It's likely to be stutred with cents -orr coupons .for dog food , cereal. coffee, toothpaste and what-bave ·you. Well, on Jan. 10 the world's largest auto maker will join this cacophony of "please buy me" voices. On that day GM will drop 41 milUon advertising inserts into the Sunday editions of 257 newspapers. It's come to that. GM is going to scrap with the cigarette and tampon producers for a share of your expenditures (if you have any money left) This wi U not be a cenls-ofr, or even a ~ d o 1 1 a r s · o 1 f . \r. promollon. nor will it '{ e» be one of th ose ---------~' "'' two -for-one offers ll(JIN llllNIJZ*'.'i\ (''buy a Cadillac and ~ we 'll throw in a ----------..;;a.-.:; Chevy"). It will be a sweepstakes in which GM will give away more than 1,300 prizes to people who come up with the lucky numbers. Each of the inserts will have a coupon that you can talce to your local Chevrolet, Buick, PonUac, Oldsmobile or Cadillac dealer to see if the number matches any of the winning numbers already posted. If you don't get a match. you can then drop your coupon an a box to be eligible for a drawing that will award all uncollected prizes. And say, while you're at the showroom. why not take a test drive in a GM car., 1f you do, you get a free Rand McNally Road Atlas <even il you don't buy). GM will be introducing some new cars that week -A-body intermediates and F-body s port coupes. The top 15 prizes in the sweepstakes are -would you believe? -new GM cars (you were expecting Toyotas?) C M will give away three Chev)' Celebrities, three Pontiac 6000s, three Olds CuUass Cieras, three Buick Centuries, one Chevy Camaro Z·28 one Pontiac Trans Am and one Cadillac Cim~rron. And the runnerup prizes are: 25 RCA video cassette recorders. 100 Zenith color TV sets, 200 Atari computers and 1,000 Polaroid Pronto cameras. The entire promotion is setting GM back $4.5 million. The company figures it's worth 1t if it can attract throngs of people to the showrooms to cb~ck whether they are sweepstakes winners. GM is looting (or at least 5 percent of the coupons to be "redee med" -that is, entered in the s weepstaku. That would bring something like 2 million people !nto showrooms. Jus t because they're looking for pnzes does n't mean you can't try to sell them cars. Much has been written and broadcast recently about the plight of the U.S. auto makers, wi~h Invidious comparisons drawn between th.ear productivity and that of Japanese car comparues. The most devastating of these reports must be the one that ran in Forbes maguine. In the Nov. 23 issue Forbes reporter Allan Slo~ told how workers at GM's roller-bearing plant in Clark, N.J . bought the facility after the company decided at was too inefficient. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS NEW YOl!K 11"'1 -The -... -., - --"°" ...,.. b~ ·-.. -_,_ --....... .,,. _____ _ -.. _ol CNneo •~------tr-.o-1:r--..-.... 'lftd .... ~ ChOl\IJ•f t•• I"• OI~ _ ... __ .~pr--..... ............ NEW YOAK IN'J -S.-. ,_ ~ ~ - -... " ....... -· oci ... -:..-~ -1ted1n9 n•l-llV ol ....,,.. ._ ~~uOll I t~:l '1~ ,, .. -;, . ~. :I: J~ . ·': _, r • • '}~ • •I P•lont .1 l'°' ~~:· : th MflALS C•t11••• ,..., II unh •. POlll\d cietiln•tion. L.eM »·>' c...U • ~ lllK .,_.. cenh • _....i, deliv•••d Tiii ti.,._ llMUI\ W"k c-11• Ill ...... -1 .. ,,< .... ••POU"CI.,. y M..-cwy SollS.00 "'fie,_ ~._,..,_UM '° troy 01 • N Y SILVER Mel\Cly a M.,,.,_, '1 J'° "'troy ouno GOLD QUOTATIONS .,.,.. .... _ .......... , ~N<i.o -td OOld prl'*' tod•Y L ........ rnomtl\O ti Kl"O '* 00, UO U tel ~ .... ., SolOJ ll ..... ~ .. ,, __ :c;1o...i "•"'' a ".,..,.,., .,.,,, d•llv ouott ...OUO.uoM 50 11•••'11( ••11•••1 la••· UOJ 00, ,_,..""" SYMBOLS ... Dally Piiat THURSDAY, DEC. 31, 1981 Erma Bombeck sells. a clinker. C2 CAVALCADE C2 111111 £1111 CLASSIFIED C6 Footballer sues for $5 million • in school flap By PATRICK KENNEDY Ol .. IHMyNltiUff A football player is sumg the Huntington Beach Union High School District tor $5 million because school officials declared him ineli&lble to play football at Edison High School. J e tr Washington, a senior defensive halfback, is seeking payment ror damages he said he suffered. He also wants to be declared e ligible for the ,,.. remaining basketball and track seasons at Edison, said his attorney Stephen Berger. An Orange County Superior Court judge has previously rejected Washington's bid for a preliminary injunction voiding the district disqualification. Washington formerly attended Huntington Beach High School. He transferred to Edison last year during the 1980 football season when he and his father rented an apartment in the Edison attendance area. He was then declared eligible for sports at Edison and played football, basketball and track. But last June, district officials declared him ineligible at Edison because he and his father moved back to the Huntington Beach Hi&h School attendance area. District officials said he could attend Edison but not play sports there for one year. They said if Washington went back to Huntington Beach High, he could play sports at that school be c au se he lived in its attendance area. A ttomey Berger contends that in the past, district orricials have followed the California Interscholastic Federation rules that allow a student to remain eligible even if he moves to another area. Berger says publi c ity surrounding the large number or A CLOSE CALL Christie Worthington and h er dog Koby relax at home in Newport _., ..... -.., .... ~­ Beach after they were saved from sinking in the mud flats of lJpper Newport Ra~· Teen: 'I was terrif~d' Rescued Newport girl tells fear of drowning A 13-year-old Newport Beach girl who was rescued after sinking lo her armpits in the mud flats of Upper Newport Bay said she reared she would drown in the incoming tide before she could be pulled free by rescuers. ·'I was terrifie d ," said Christie Worthington. "Before it got dark I could turn my head and see the tide coming in. After 1t got dark, I was afraid I might die. I just kept sinking." An eil!hth izrade student at Mesa homeowners protest decision By JODI CADENHEAD Of tlM o.lly " ... Sa.ft North Co s ta M esa homeowners have protested a decision by the City Council not to challenge an appellate court ruling invalidating a 1978 initlativ~ that rezoned 68 acres near South Coast Plaza. Jon Paradis, an attorney and vice -pr eside nt of the homeowners association, urged the city in a letter dated Dee. 29 to seek a final decision from the state Supreme Court. "It's too bad they didn't write tbat letter before," said Mayor Saddle back seeks singe~ Sadcllebatk College's North Campqa ln Irvine bu openings for 1tncen wishing to join the umpua't Oollece Choru1. Tht Colle1e Cboru1 ls a non·audiU~ lf'OUP wbicb ls °"" to men and women with variou1 amounta of mualcal abUlty. TIM lfOUP la under the direction of Julee Wyma and perform• worlt1 from tb• choraJ-orcheltral repertoire, as well • folk and popu.la.r choral music. Tbe chorw bu 15 members. Rebearaah are Tueadaya be1lllllbll tbe week of Jan. 11. IT'Om 1 p.m. to 10 p.m . at \he campus. For an lnt.ervlew, calJ 651-llOO, extemioo ut. ' Arlene Schafer. "It would be something to consider. But there was nothing to consider al the time. The people hadn't been responding in any way.·· Mrs . Schafer said the city council could still decide to appeal the case lo the state Supreme Court. "We have the ability lo reconsider if we want." She said the letter will be discussed by council members next Monday. ' Until the letter, no comments have been received from hom eowners regarding the appellate court decision declaring invalid the initiative that rezoned 68 acres from medium density use lo sin1le family residential. The 4th District Court or Appeal declared the Initiative discriminated a1alnst the developen. The city had until Jan. 11 to decide whether OJ' not to appeal the cue coocemin1 UH ol the land owned by the Amel land development comp1ny and the South Ooaat Plaaa. Tbe cue had been Ued up In the ~ since 1978 when Amel chaU~ed the lnlllat.lve and loat In Orante County Superior Court. The Court of Appeal •u bsequently invalidated t he ordinance. But the state Supreme Court overtunaed the de<:lalon in lllO. The cue wae then returned to the appellate court for further conslckraUon. • Kaiser Middle School in Costa Mesa. Christie said s he ran about 230 feel out into the mud flats Tuesday because she thought her pet Doberman Koby was caught in the mud. "He was just lying down, but I thought he was stuck so I ran out to him as quick as I could. But when I s topped I s tarted sinkin~.·· She said she was able lo stop sinking by lying on her side and "sliding around in the mud.·· But when her dog jumped up to chase some birds. she said s he made the mistake of s tanding up and grabbing his collar. Holding on to Koby's collar, the 13-year-old slowly started sinking. "The mud was closing around my legs. I could feel sticks and things in the mud . ll was awful." The rescue involved 13 firem e n , the city police helicopter crew and a harbor department rescue boat. The helicopter crew dropped a line to her and she wrapped it under her arms. The line was then dropped lo firemen who pulled the slender girl through the mud. Al fir:llt she refused to go. ''l was con med about Koby. but they s they would get him out, too," she said. The girl was given emergency treatment by paramedics and taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital whore she was treated and released. The dog was hauled out by a fireman. Chrislle's body temperature had dropped to 93 de1rees, when she reached the hospital, s!M said, But warm, dry clothlna and hot soup brou1ht her back to normal. However. her 6 · year-old Doberman autr..-. from arthrilia 'and wu Ukln1 H easy Wednesday. ''We're both a Utlle scratched up and eore, '' 1be .. Id. -811 PATltlCIC K~NNEOY ~ transfer s tudent s playing football at Edison resulted in the district t rustees taking "capricious and arbitr ary" action against Washington. "We don 't believe they properly rouowed or applied the eligibility rules," Berger said. .. H e <Wa s hington ) wa s unquestionably eligible and p layed sports at Edison . Everyone before Chis case> would have been eligible under the circumstances. even if they moved to another area," he contends. .. Jeff can never regain the rear of football experience that ne lost, but we hope to get tum declared eligible tor the rest ol the basketball and track season," Berger said. A hearing in Orange County Superior Court on Washington's request for payment for alleged damages and for reinstatement of sports eligibility is scheduled t e ntatively for Jan . 14, according to court officials. School Board President Brian Lake declined comment today on the pending lawsuit. Ba sic ally, district rules state that a student who is granted an intra-district transfer from one school lo anothe r will be inel1g1ble ror sports for one year.~ However, If a student movea' into another school's attendanc area. he doesn 't need district~ approval of a transfer and t..1 immediately eligible for sports. •' District officials have stated that Was hington was required t fill out an intra·djstrict transfe request lo continue at Edi after he and his father mov back to the Huntington Beac Hi gh School area. They lived i the Edison area for less than on year , district officials say. Berger disputes lhi interpretation of the transfet rules. Apology suggestion hit Statement about Schmi tz comment called inappropriate By STEVE MITCHELL Of llM o.Hy pt1e1 Staff State Senate Re publican I eader Willi am Campbell's s uggestion that Sen . John Sch mitz apologize for his comments about abortion rights groups have been termed inappropriate by several local GOP leaders and legislators. Campbell announced earlier this week that Schmitz' religious and sexual statements against pro-abortion forces at recent hearings were "outrageous" and "appalling" and called for the Corona del Mar lawmaker lo apologize. Schmitz repeatedly has staled he will not apologize for bis two.page newsletter in which he termed abortion r ights advocates as "bulldykes," "queers," "les bians," and called feminist attorney Gloria Allred a "s lick but c h lawyeress." Schmitz' contr over sia l newsletter. released last week, was in response to what he termed .. an attack or the bu lldykes," d u ring h is Constitutional Amendments Committee hearings on his proposal that would ban abortions. ''Let's remember how many people voled to take <Schmitz' l posts a way," she said of the Rules Committee vote Monday. ·'Three Democrats in the Senate. A vote of a very few people -people who obviously would not be Schmitz' backers." Mrs. Lundberg was referring to the 3-0 vote to s trip Schmitz of his committee posts. The three inc luded Democrats David Roberti , Barry Keene and Nicholas Petris. Republican committee member Ray Johnson abstained on two votes and opposed dumping Schmitz from the Status of Women panel. The seeond Republican on the Rules Committee, William Craven, did not attend the closed-door session Monday. ''I think everyone should go back to a neutral corner and take another look at it," Mrs. Lundberg said. ··Most people think it was the entire Senate that did this. but it was three Democrats." Assemblyman John Lewis of Orange echoed Mrs. Lundberg's analysis. "Campbell has gone too far and has largely blown out of proportion Schmitz' comments. ··His comments were ones wou14 not make,·· Lewis sa.id "but too much has been made oft it. I don't believe Schmitz is a;. ra c is t or anli·Semitic o~ anything like that.·· , The Republican legislator saic\- he believes Campbell "is justt jumping on the medi.- bandwagon." ~ A s p o k es man fo , Assemblyman Nolan Frizz.elle' . office in Huntington Beach,. quoted the lawmaker as sayin( h e · · a p p I a u d s S c h m i t z ·, courage " , Frizzelle s aid h e wa• dismayed at what he terms an overr eacfion 'by the Sena] Rules Committee and b Campbell, the aide related. _ As for issuing an apology those he lambasted in the. news lette r. Frizze lle's aide quoted tne assemblyman as saying, "It's a fact of life that lots of those tes tifying <at hearings) are not treated with the courtesy and respect due them. "If every legislator up there apologized to the groups they offend, then an apology wouJd be in line." Republican leader Campbell said Tuesday he supported the move by Democrats on the Senate Rules Committee who st r ipp ed Sc hmitz or hi s chairmanship on the amendment s panel , a vice·chairmanship on a second committee, and removal from the advisory Commission on the Status of Women. Saddleback given funding priority Campbell s aid, "I can stale with a certainty that (Schmitz'> remarks are an anathema to the principles and the very substance or our party ... But the chairman of the Republican Central Committee of Orange County and two local Republican assembl ymen disagree with Campbell 's remarks and say Schmitz owes no one an apology. Lois Lundberg, who heads the county's GOP committee, said, "I think perhaps Campbell was a little hard on Sen. Schmitz. His criticism was blown so far out of proportion. The State Community College B<'ard of Governors has listed as a top priority on its list of projects for state funding the construction of an $8.l million c las sroo m building at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. The list is sent annually to the state Department of Finance for review and possible inclusion in the governor's proposed budget. which is then submitted to the Legislature. Construction of the classroom building was approved last June but was taken out of the budget during last-minute negotiations in the Legislature. Also included in the 1983 .. wish list " is a request for a nother $9.8 RAIN ON WAY? Storm clouds ofr the Orange Coast herald expected raln beading for shore. possibly for New Year's Day. 1'M- ' million for projects al bolb Saddleback campuses in Mission Viejo and Irvine. · Most of that amount would be used for better access to campus f acilities for handic·apped students A total of Sl million al s o is proposed for eight energy.saving projects for the two college sit es operated by the dislrirt. However. college officials say they are not optimistic that the college district will receive full funding for all the projects it wants Tradit ionall y the li st submitted by the Community College Board of Governors is for more money than stale lawmakers are willing to spend. • II 2 ...... ~~----_..., • .,..__..._~.., .... ....,..._'"-"~s•• ........ •~•~~s~·i ...... ~.~• .. a .......... al!lllmlll•&"&l& .. 1&111 .. 11111111111112111111111111111111111 \ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, December 31 , 1981 ----------------------------------------------------------, N .,. NY E COMPOSITE TRANSACTION OUOTAllON, llil(LUO• TaAOI ~ O• fflll ..... \'Oall, MIOWI n . '"('''< , •• IOSTON. O• UOIT &MO (INCINN&ft uoc. lllCM&NOU .,.o ••-o•no '' TMI llAlO &NO ... ,, ... IT Dow Jones Final UP 1.90 CLOSING 875.00 New GM Auto sales have slumped so badly, runnine at the s lowest pace since 19:59, that GeneraJ Motors is resorting lo a sweepstakes promotion for the first time in Its hjstory. You know how it ill when you pick up a Sunday newspaper these days. lt'is likely to be stuffed with cents-off coupons for dog food , cereal, cotree, toothpaste and what-have-you. Well . on Jan. 10 the world's largest auto maker will join this cacophony of "please buy me" voices. On that day GM wUI drop 4 t million advertising Inserts into the Sunday editions of 257 newspapers It's come to that. GM ls going to scrap with the cigurette and tampon producers ror a share or your expenditures <if you have any money ten> This will not be a cents-off. or even a ~ d o I I a r s -o r f , \'- promotion. nor will it '/ ~ be o ne o r those ---------~·, "-1 ~ ~~~~0~·c:Jrn~~r=~~ 1n111 1a1111n''lir we'll throw i o a Chevy"). It will be a sweepstakes in which GM will give away more than 1,300 priies to people who come up with the lucky numbers. Each or the Inserts will have a coupon that you can take to your local Chevrolet, Buick, Pontiac, Oldsmobile or Cadillac dealer to see if the number matches any or the winning numbers already posted. If you don 't get a match, you can then drop your coupon in a box to be ehgible for a drawing that will award all uncollected priies. And say, while you're al the showroom, why not take a test drive in a GM car ? lf you do, you get a free Rand McNally Road Atlas (even if you don't buy ). GM will be introducing some new cars that week -A-body intermediates and F-body sport coupes. The top 15 prizes in the sweepstalces are -would you believe? -new GM cars (you were expecting Toyotas?I . GM will give away three Chevy Celebrities, three Pontiac 6000s, three Olds Cutlass Cieras, three Buick Centuries. one Chevy Camaro Z-28, one Pontiac Trans Am and one Cadillac Cimarron. And the runnerup prues are: 25 RCA video cassette recorders, 100 Zenith color TV sets, 200 Atari computers and 1,000 Polaroid Pronto cameras The entire promotion is setting GM bacll: "·S million. The company figures it's worth it il it can attract throngs or people to the showrooms to chnck whether they are sweepstalces wiMers. GM is loo.king for at least S percent of the coupons to be "redeemed" -that is, entered in the sweepslakes. That would bring something like 2 million people into showrooms. Just because they're looting for prizes doesn't mean you can't try to sell them cars. Much has been written and broadcast recently about the plight or the U.S. auto makers, with invidious comparisons drawn between th.e ar productivity and that of Japanese car companies. The most devastating of these reports must be the one that ran in Forbes magazine. In the Nov. 23 issue Forbes reporter Allan Slo~ told how workers al GM 's roller·bearing plant an Cla rk, N.J , bought the facility after the company decided it was loo inefficient. UPS AND DOWNS NEW~ IN'l -TM •-"O '* .,_,... -.,~ ..... b-.-... ----.... 1111 ... ___ .. _ ....... ,.,_°'"...,. __ °'_ No -•tcllftO lliiow 12 ... -.... ,..., .,.._._ chaft9H If• ,,.. .. ...._ -.. ~-nvP'--~· -"'°9 METALS C••••r 1''-II <•nU • POuftCI VS <1etlln•1-. ~M 12.).I<-•-"' l lM O-" c....u • POUNS, _, ..... o Tlll ,7.1*-•I• w._, ~II• ID AhlM'-1._11 <eftlS • _.nd. H Y _,..,\Ali 00 Clef ... " "•t-\»6SOtro-ror HY SILVER Me"4Y l Mtrm .... '' 150 ptr troy o..nu GOLD QUOTATIONS .,, .... _ ..... ~ ..... S.le<liecl-OtlCI Pfl<H IOCHY ~: ln0ml"9 ll•lftO ~ 00. l/D U t0 '••ltr ~.•,up U .... ,, _ _,.,..,_ M•••T 6 fll•rM•A ..,,, d•ll• q11ol• ...,, ~.1111 ... » 111.,.i.11< "'"'"•' •··~: •·o~ oo. • uncl\e"9td SYMBOLS