Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-01-17 - Orange Coast PilotTHI DRANGI COAST COUNTY IDITION .MONDA'. JANUARY •-:I 1983 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Two groups stage floating protest off HB About 50 prolt'Sters in six 111 St"ve n boa t.s bes an the ir St'l·und day of picketing today &t the construction site: of an ofbhore oil rig about 8 112 miles off thl' coast o f H untmgton Beach Union and Cl'kvrun Compuny officials said the protest was staged primarily b y tht· P tlt· Drivers Un10n of Wilmington because the flm1 tS using fort'1gn workers in tht' installation uf tht: ,_ - Ul\Ut'IWttll'r pu111u11 o f lht: platform But Jl'Wll>h lll'llVlliUI, at.'t.'Ordin~ to T ht' Al>i.Ot'llltt'd Prt-!iS, albo Jo1n1.-d the floa11ng p rolel>l Su11<.J.;1y bt·t·auSl' tht• oil rag l'on:-.truc t1on firm repor tedly 1s nwnt·d bv .. furrr.•·r N.n1 SS 11ff1n·1 Al Sw,111son, publu.: a ffairs managt'r uf Chevron USA Inc., sa1tl today that Hetc>rt'ma Man ne Contral·wrs of Holland won the _...,.._. -.,... ~ F ---~ Footprints in the sand l'Onlrac:l lu J>t'rtur111 pill' d11 v1ng wurk required lu 1nsu.ll p1hn1<11 in lht' st:a floor He said lhl.' firm employs Spanish p1k drivers "Tht.' uruon 1s trying UJ dn1w altenuon lo the unemploymt>nl' problt-m," he: said "The t:ompany sympath1ws but pill· driving is only about 2 pt:n:cnt of lhl' loud work mvolvt.O " Swanson :.aid work on about two-thirds of the $260 million A lone sandpiper wa nde~ a long the ·hore tn Laguna Beach , lea ving it!'I tracks in the wet a nd. t·ontra et was performed by <'<>mparneti 111 th(· Unit.eel Statet1 AtTurding to The As80(·11.1te cJ Prt:in, t h e Jewi!lh DefenH Leagut: said dut·umt>nts from Nazi hunter Simon W1esental 1nd1cated Hee r ema's o wcner. Plt'tt.•r Het>rema, was a mt.•mht!r uf th1· Nazi SS "Not only 1s ht' u Nau. but ht: ll> taking JUbs away fr om Americans," said JDL preside nt lrv Rubin. .. Mesa council readies cable TV plan By JODI CADENHEAD Of tM o..., Not llalfl C able telev1s1on 1s finally commg to Costa Mesa - The city council will review a cable t'Ommurucauons ordi.nant'E! to n ight that outlines a fancy shopping hst of regulations and m1111mum service requirements for prospective cable operators thmkmg about picking up the lucrative contract City officials ;ire asking for a s tandard 5 percent of the cable operator's gross r~tpts Assistant City Manager Allan Roeder said the ci ty wanted t.O delay 1nstallat1on o f the ~·omrnunaca tions system until residents could get the most technolog1cally advanced operauon available l rwluded in th(• long )1st 11f basic ser vices named in the o rdinance are 52 s tandard channels, two-way capabahty for t'Omrnunkauon between viewers and the studio. coverage of city council meetings and a fully equipped television studio in Costa Mesa. But 1mpat1ent telev1s1on watchers an the city shouldn't hold their breath waiting for home v1ewin~ o f the f lashy Mesa will link 17th Streets $2 million improve m e nt project will widen., r ealign roa<l A $2 2 million improvement plan to widen 17th S treet aod realign the road so it connects across Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa 1s under way By August motorists will Ix• able to travel on the new road. expected to improve east-wC'st c irc ulation L ike a coupll· of mismatched p uzzle pieces, the two unjoined sections o f 17th Street now dead-end at Newport Boulevard. Motorists must tr~el in a z.ig -z.ag pattern on Newport m order to cross 17th The n ew roadwav will bf' constructed between-Nl'wp1111 BouJevard and Fuller ton Avenue· south of the present 17th Stn'l't Businesses in tht• path of thf' clilrvmg road are t>xpected to tx· vacated next •:Jl onth and demolition w:ll b&-romplf!t.ed by March. offie1als said -.__ ~run: Mattcrn7 pubt1c S(>TVlct'S d1rf'ltor for thC' nty. 4'31ll ,disruptwn lf) motorists will bt• m1nimc1l since nlrt 17th Stret't. tht· S<'<'t1on tu the nurth. will remain open both dunn.I( and aflt:r eoru.t rul'tion T h £• B a m b o o T e r r a c 1• restaurant and Aw.;rd Motor-, are among the busmt.•S'>es that will bt· torn down for the n<'w llll1'tru1 t1on The dcr W1en('l'S('hnatwl. a new medical nffw<' anrl th<· Von's shoppinl( 1•entt>r will not t>f' afff'C'ted Followrn.I( c·on<;tru1·t1on 1111' -,1gnal at old 17th and Newport will be rl'moved and motorists wtll not bt> able tu make left turn!> onto Nt•wport from old 17th In add1t1un. 17th wall be widened frnm four to six lanc·s from Ne>wptrrt Boulevard to 180 fC'et l'ast of Fullerton Avenue Mattt:rn said the amprovt•ments wall lnt'rC'aS<' carrying c.-1pab1hty, from tht• eurrPnt 25.000 v('h1dt•s " day to 30,000 Acqu1s1t1on of proJ"'rtY fo. the proJe<.'l ha~ rost $1 7 million and t'flnstruction 1s estimated at $556. 000 ThC' county and thc> r 1ty have spht the t.'OSt of the pro)l:C'l. l'Onsiden-d a part of the Artc·rial 1 laghway r111ane111g Program f1rst -ume mo111es now being seen by their neighbors 1n nearby Cllies A cable operator will be chosen by August and hook up of the system citywide is not expected to be completed until 1985. In the meantime. city officials say they want to know what residents want from a c able system A public meeting will st.art at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Neighborhood Community Ct•nter. 1845 Park Ave Some of the sel"Vlces available indude-home bankmg. hook up nr S<'C'Unty systems. viewing of public agency mee tings or mon1tor1 ng o f bed -ridde n IJ<ltlents by hospitals Group W. Cahfornaa Cable Systems, United Cable, Tnbune and Colony Cablev1s1o n have C'xpressed an interest 1n setting up a cable communrcatio n s wslt:m m Costa Ml'Sa. -Roeder said Costa Mesa as one uf th<' few cities that has not a4'ked for advanc fees from the t•ablC' operators "Our intention 1s to not go into t h l• cable business f or lhP purpose of making revenues," said Roeder, "but for the purpose of providing service to the city" A 1 though the c1 t y has no intention of purchasing the cable system, 1t has the option to do so 15 years after the contract Is Signed Remedial courses cost $62 million S A C RAM ENTO (AP) Remedial cou raes at California• s public institu tions of higher learning cost about $62 million during the 1980-81 school year. a 1tat.e agency reports The California Postaecondary Education Com mission was expected to send the report to the U:.>gislature today Remedial courses for more than 50,000 deficient students in the slate's public four -year institutions cost the University of Cahfomia SJ 5 million. and the Callforn1a State U n iversity ----INDEX----- At Your Service A5 Ann Landers 82 Erma Bombeck 82 Movies 84 C.valcade 82 Nationa l News A:l Clulifled C4.-8 Public Noticee C4 Comics & Spori. C l-3 Cromword , & Dr Steincrohn 8 2 Death Notices C4 Stock Marketa B3 Editorial A6 Televbion 86 Entertainment B4 Theaten1 B4 Horo.oope 8 2 Weather A2 • ) system more than $7 m1ll1 on , the report says. ln addition to the course costs, the report says the University of CaJifornia spent $3 mi!Jaon and the Calrfomia State University spent $2 2 million for remedial support S('rvices during the same year. I t said UC's $6 .6 million Investme nt in rem edial work t't'presented a 40 percen t lncreue over two yeani earlier. Meanwhile, an the loc ally supported two-year community colleges, nearly half the atudents -400,000 of them --required remedial counes in EngUah and mat h ematics at a coat of $46 million. The report reoommenda at.epe to halt the remedial prograrna ln tht> four-year lnatltutlona over the next five years. It say1 the appropr iate place t for such remedial work is the community colleges, and that students requiring it should be di r ected to adult education courses The dire c t or o f the cormrussion, Patrick Callan, said the report documents "a massive systemwide breakdown for whic h both the public sch ools and higher education bear some reaporu1ibility." Callan added, "It took the stale 20 yea.rs to dlg ounelvea into this mess and the re are no cheap and easy ways out, In spite of the Impatience about the problem." Thi! report says that from l~ to 1979, the mean Sch olaatlc Aptitude Tea t 1corea f or freehmen enterins the Univenlty o f C al i f o rnia -the t o p one-et11hth o f the high IC'h ool sraduata -declined 61 polnt8 (lff REMEDIAL, Pa1e Al) C11n 1wr i;ulcJ tht• boats left Huntington HurllOur and San Pedro t•Jrly Sunday mornh.g On iHrlvul ul the· ri g , the JDL membt:rs yt'llt•cJ s logans whtl1:- un1on ml'rnbl·rio waved i.1gni. rt'ad1ng P Hrre;-Am~r 1c:an Workc·r~" '"l'h1•n ufu•r a whilt'. a group uf workt·rs elimbl'd ulJuurd tht• platfom1 and raised an American flag lht're," Connor said Ht· said Heerema workers maut• 1111 altt:mjJt lo interfere wnh the protest but returned to their ship. Ch1.tllenger I, docked alongside the rig, and remained there the rest o f the day F~rher this month, union11t. p1c-kt>iM-a Httrema pile barge ~t Lus Angt'les harbor. TheJ:y l'Ontt'nd l-lt;>en·rna 1s v1olaung a fl·dt.'ral appt'als cou r t ruling whll·h said US laws on foreign wurkers apply to worken on the U S out.er <:ontanentaJ shelf 123 'affordable' condos attract • 3,300 1n Niguel By STEVE MITCHELL 01 IM D .. ly Ptlot a1an M ore than 3 ,300 low and moderate-income wage e arners sh owed up in Laguna Niguel Saturday morning for a chance to owrr a beach front condomimum · at an affordable price Carrying lawn chairs, portable radios and ice chests, the crowd descended on the new Nigue l Bead1 Terra~e development, about 500 feet from Salt Creek Beach. to hsten as numbers were pulled Crom a lottery drum At the end of the four-hour d r awing, 123 lucky winners walked off with an opportunity lo purchase o n e and two-bedroom condomm1ums at prices between $65,000 and $85,500. F inanci ng o n t h e Cape Cod-style condominiums will be from 8 ¥. to 11 percent The proiect is being developed by the Carma-Sandling Group of Irvine lt will include 400 units on a 24-acre par1.:el on the ocean side o f Coast H ighway n ear Selva Road an Laguna ~iguel. Dennis Sund strom, executive v 11.·e pre s id e nt of the Carma-Sandling Group, said 123 un1L's were oflered Satur day to those earning less than $26,000 He said lotteries will be held nl.'Xt Saturday and Sunday for those hom e seekers ear ning bet ween $33,000 a nd $40,000. Chances to buy 58 ~ts will be handed out Saturday, and 105 urut.s will be in Sunday's lottery. Sundstrom said. He said more than 2,200 people will participate m the weekend auction. Saturday's lottery attracted a good-natur ed c rowd, which applauded as winn ers were a nnounced and chuckled and booed as a doctor's n ame was r~ad "There goes the ne ighborhood ," shouted one (See NIGUEL, Page A%) S lide vic tim Eric Be nson, 18, rests in Mission Community Hospital afte r ordeal in whic h rescuer was injured. Rescue attempt fall probed by Marines A 28-year-o ld Marine who fell 150 feet from a helicopter while trying to re9C\Je an Injured rock c limber re m ained In serioua condition today with broke n bones In hla legs and anklee. Navy corpsman Gale Kirk was hurt late Saturday during • rescue opera ti on ln Modjeaka Canyon where an Injured climber wu stranded, an Oranae Co unty F i r e D e partment spokeunan said. • Kirk reportedly waa b eing lowered from an El Toro Marine I Air Station helicopter to a ledlf where Eric Be nion. 18, wa• stranded ' Benson, fire authorities said. had been in~ earlier when a rock "the aiie of a television .et .. fe ll o n hi• leg, breakin1 the f e mur. Benion i• In atable condition today at MIHion <:.ommunt ty H0tpital. K I r k ' 1 f a 1 l I a u n d e ~· lnve1tlgatlon. aatd El T o ro 1pokesman sr.. Phillip WilltamlL He aaid ll 1 not clear what ~Wied the mllhap. , .\2 Orange Coast DAil Y Pll Ol 1Mrnu.1oy, January 17 1G83 ~ \ ~------S-w-~-s-HC-1 N-~-~-N-}-< A-P~-e-.~-1re.-?-. a-~-"~-~-m!-.-1x--m-~-th_a_w ~-~-~-?-co_?_rn_!_1cu-1~-d -o~-,Y-p-w-.O-rw·_?_'""-,?-d-.~-~-ot -~-,u-1&11y '"' Conti nued stories 0r.1 .. ~ ul •• 169 """"" pl•n In d•·luy ln 11u.dJuly'1 ('(.Ill ofl·llVlni thrdouah dlntenm:ddla.rltee,fpubllth•ly •Up~::~pan. u•kc··j on th~ CBS .. REMEDIAL CO.STL Y • • • llrl thl' vcr bul s1.•t·t1 un um.I :$0 p o ints on the motht>mallt'll sec t 10n Thrs wai.1 a sharper d ,. c I 1 11 c t h u 11 r t' ~ 1 i. t c r c d nullunuUy The r't!(X)rt adlb, "Not t'Vl'll tht• top one-eighth of all Callfnrn111 public high sch ool ~rad uutes NIGUEL. • • P"'-.tllCLpanL cegarJrng the_ w1nner"s app1tr1.•nt badge o f wealth K A. Sandi.mg. prt.•s1d .. 111 of the devel o pment isrou p , told a small gaThermg. "l don't care what any o ne say:. about affordable h ousing Takl• a look at all those people and tell me which one of them you w ouldn't want for a neighbor " Most of those paruc1paLmg m the lottery were d escribed as rruddle-aged, single and white He said those who w on an o ppor~un i ty t o purchase a condominium SalUrday s hould kl<-through escrow by April. the l'Xpected tune of l'Umplet1on fur the units. Ousted judge says he has • 'no regrets' t u d u y u "' .ii I a d 1· q u 11 t c I y prt•po.irl'<i fur 1 nu trwu lu t1w1 I 11 a lou1 Vl'llr 1•oll1·~t·" StlHknt!C Ki:.-t t•n·dll towar d tlwtr l><J('t .dau1 l'dh: J 1.·gret>S rrorn 1)0 pe1n•11 t ,if t ht• 1c mcdlul t'OUl"lil'S Ill wntm.g and math at th1 • U111vl'rs1ty uf Cal.fumla, the I l'IJOI I ~lid 111 the st.ate university system, nt•Jrly three-qu.utcrs o f those l'oUrses art> given tor credit - hc11f u f those t•rcd1ts counting toward bal'(.'alaurt•1ne degrees. ro.c:ur Soc11o1I S t-i'UI lty ('Ont't'dt• lllt'rl'Un' 10(1 1:10 expan1 on ol <·n o ne tht: ea • ter t e en-.-... :'I.I " thr-rt' 111 11onu-th111~ (111 olmor.t Sudul St"l·urlty c11vl·regt' w n~w t•ommll!llllon vow. ''Momlns New1" program today e•Vt'I yi•r w to d111hkc, ~Jlll th1•y llilY fl-tlnul t•111pluyul'li hc.·.cl11nh~ In .... h 11l>out the effect o ( Congre11 ( uu.• (S 1 • tiut, 1.111 lht• prc•tde1H nutt.-'u, e, ru. .. jna only pl-..... of the n!l(J~ th._. rt· I u r t u n t 11 u P fl or t o 1.,.,., · t.•t! re » tt•c. iitury · ugc O'Neil and other congre1111ional ,.--"' ~ .. ... Presid(•nt Reagan ttnd Hou1w A~) I d b kl th •-~ I$lVli~; -• ) N J In udd1l1nn lO U!;!Jll•ruunu • Hl9 ea •r« w•c• ac ng e pwn "If thf'y start tOCro th•T. 1r""1rr··-· Sp<.·u kt•r Thoma!I P < ' viii · r " n o • lx't'UUM-they saw lt u Lhe best I should ht!lp It paas Co11gn·5ll 1.>1l1111n in llt'W fl!Vl·nue11 und deul Lhut ('Ould be lltruck on Lht-unruvcl very rapidly 'm not Organ11otions rl'pre1u~nt1ng ))avlngs over the nt->et seven lSt.'t\llrllve issue 11 aylng that this particu!Mr retired people, g overnment yi·u.ni, t!Xpt'fl8 1uud thul, harring package hai; lo be pa.lied with w urkt·n and 11mu II bualneu iwvere ...conom1t· concJ1t1ona, the "Eal·h of Wl recogn1te11 that this every alnglt: word. every aingle already huvl' serv~ nutll'\l tht•y t•mnprurY11St.· al110 would hl'lp kt.'t!p ls u com,.,romlse solution ," dot an 1t e xacUy the &ame. It can't wlll try tu pressurt' Congress to tht• Social Sec:or11y riystcm 1n the Rt•ugan 11a1d "AJJ sul'h , it mc:ludes be. it's not legislauon But It's got c han~e or drop the packagl!, bluck for at lea:1t 50 years elemenUi which each of u11 C.'OUld to be paast:d eaaentially aa it now which w ould affec t nearly 11ll The pal'kagt• wa11 approvoo by not sup(X)rl 1! they were not part stands or 1t won't paaa at all." wxpaye rs and ret1reet1. some as the Sul'IBI S t•curity rt'form of a bipartisan compromLSe." " Eighty -two year -o ld R ep. l!arly as this summe r l'ommlu1on on a I :!-3 vot e Re publican econom ist Alan Claude Pepper, 0 -Fla . a It includes a s pt>e d -up In Saturday night following days of Greenspan, the comm1ss1on 's comm1ss1on member who8e scheduled increases 1n the payroll n~gouauons with White House l' ha arm an. 8& id. "A II o f us support was cn1cial, said Sunday tax. taxing benefits ra-elved by officials ~wall o w ed very hard and that he had not thought it would upper -and middle -In come Rt'aga n and O 'Neill. D-Miiss. awcptt-'d individual notions that (See WHO, Page AS) Wrong corpse brings suit b y oc -family By Tbe A11oclated Preaa A bereaved Garden Grove family is sumg a mortuary for allegedly putting the wrong body on display when a mother came to pay a last fareweU to h er dead son, an at torney says. Vera Durr of Garden Grqve says the horror o f seeing another FV housing aid weigh ed man's body at Mettler Mortuary compounded her grief -over her son, Joseph, who dled with two other sailors in an accident aboard t h e c ru i ser USS Bainbridge on Jan. 25, 1982. "When the. family opened the casket, they found the mortuary had the wrong sailor," attorney Neal Bahan said . "Th e real distress of it was th a t it convinced them the Navy had misidentified the men who died, and they thought he was s till alive." The Orange CoWlty Superior The_ F~untai~ Valley_ C~ty Court suit claims mortua r y Council will consider est.abhshmg officials were negligent and seeks an "Affordable Hou.sing" district unspecified damages for the . 1.n .. an area .. e~r.marked . .I.or ..... £aJnily.'8.emotjGfUll.dist:re911.--........ , ... c o n s t r u ~ t 1 o n o f . 1 6 4 Mortuary owner Don Dimond moderate-priced condominiums said he also was horrified by the S AN DIEGO (AP) -Lewis Wt'nzell. the former San Diego Municipal judge who resigned after a sex scandal, says he has "no regrets" and believes the ordeal "happened for the best " Vehicle out of control at its meeting Tuesday. mistake k>ut denied it was the The property is located west of mortuary's fault. Convicted in October. 1981. on five c ou nt s of sol1cit1ng pr06titution, Wenzell resigned his $57, 776-a -year job las t August after a recall measure qualified for the November elecuon. Now an attorney with an offi~ 1n Ocean Beach, Wenzell says, "I'm happier do ing what I'm dorng now that I ever was when I was a Municipal Court judge." Bunk bed s of Laura <.:azie r, 9 , and her siste r Lysia, 4, were flattt•nt>d when car driven by a ne ighbor, Jorge Lopez of 20 I 0 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Me!'ia , s truc k their house unday a ft ernoon. Luckily rhe girls were away st time o f aecide nt which i~ under inve"tigation by the California Highway Pa trol. the Santa Ana River, east of "The Navy handled all the Harbor Boulevard and north of 1nit1al preparations with a Heil Avenue. _ contract mortuary in San Diego," T h e I r v 1 n e · b a s e . d Dimond said, "and then s hipped Wilma-Shawntana par tner_sh1p the body to us a long with a Naval plans lo sell the condominiums escort. W e just r eceived the for $75,000 to $95,000 each. The wrong body company has agreed lo pay the Lt. Cmdr. KL. AhJwardt Jr., city $1,750 per condomiruum in s pokesman for the Naval We nzell's con v 1c t1 o n w as overturned because of errors by the tnal judge. The trial was held an Harbor Municipal Court m Newport Beach Once l.vns1der ed o n e of the s tate's bright young Jurists, Wenzel! told the San Diego Union in an interview published Sunday that he's not dwelling on the 19-month ordeal "I'm not saying by any stretch of the imagination that l"m glad 1t happened. That's simply not true It did happen But the way 11 was handled, Lhe way It came out, I'm satisfied He sai~ he bears no animosity o r bi tterness toward his prosecutors. "[ don't pretend to be a very relig10us person but somehow - there's some thought that 1t was preordained, though th:it's not my word -that it h appened for the best " park f~. Hospital San Diego, said naval 1 The 8 5-acre parcel earmarked officials could not be reached to fo r the condominiums is o n explain Lhe mishap. unincorporated l'Ounty land that However, AhJwardt said the IS bcrng annexed into Fountain contract mortuary, Humphrey Valley. Mortuary in National City. had ,ll'he city council meets at 8 p.m. handled the bodies of the three an Fountain Valley City Hall, sailors for preparation and 10200 Slater Ave shipping to their families. J ail d eath i nvest igate d Newport Beach police said they believe a jail Inmate who died in his ~II last week broke a bone 1n his leg after h e was arrested and lodged m the city jail. Police said it is hke ly James AJle n Tebbetts broke his thigh bone either in a fall or by jumping from the top of a bunk bed in his cell. The cause of death has not been determined by the Orange County Com er's office. A spokes- man said it will be mid-w eek before toxicological tests on Te bbetts' body are complete. Pohce. meanwhile, are seeking two jail inmates who spent a portion of the evening in a cell with Tebbetts, arrested last Tuesd ay on a trespassing complaint filed by his ex-wire. A third jail inmate who shared a cell ~ith Tebbetts was IOC4ted last week but was unable to shed any light on the incident, police said. Poll~ said Tebbetts reponedly was a diabetic and had a limp" from a childhood injury to his left ankle. Officers sa.id the man did not complain of any pain when he was arrested Crippling storm pounds N orth east ; Florida fa ces fros t By The Associated Pre11 The Northeast was digging out today from it s f irst majo r snowstorm of the season. which shut down d ozen s of school systems, knocked out power to 12,000 homes and caused at least eight deaths before pushing into Canada. Meanwhile. chilly weather an Flo rida today led t o frost warnings for the state's central citrus belt The Northeast storm. which swept into th e region Saturday and tapered off Sunday, dumped' up to two feel o f snow from northern P ennsylvania to Maine. Albany, N.Y., reported 26 inches, nearby Saratoga Springs got 27 inches. 22 in c hes Cell at Wilmington. Vt., and l? inches at Montpeher. Vt Fourteen inches fell in many parts o f northeastern Pennsylvania, and up to 9 inches was reported in northwestern New Jersey By late Sunday, the storm was pushing eastward out of Cloud s t o n o r thern Maine into N e w Brunswick. the weather service said. In Massachusetts, three days' warning was cr e dite d with limiting casualties throughout the state. and state o fficials waged a $2 5 millJon assault on icy roads to keep them clear for commuters today . "If you have to have a storm, there's no better time than the week e n d . whe n the few est people are disturbed by 1t," sard• William Pizza.no, spokesman for the' state Department of Public Works Schools in d o z e n s o f Massachusetts districts w ere c losed to ease traffic on roads glazed by temperatures in the teens early today The stonn caused frve dea ths 1n Co nn ec ticut , tw o in M assac·h us e t ts and one in Pennsylvania F'our o f the Connecticut deaths were from heart attacks suffered by p eo ple s h oveling s n o w Sundav. officials said A Cafth died 1n a tralf.ic accident alon g Route 254 in Thompson. In Boston , a man drowned when he was swept from a sea wall by a 30-foot wave whipped by northeasterly winds gusting to 45 mph. A second man died in a traffic accident on lnterstate 291 near Springfield. A woman was killed alter her car slid off a snow-slicked road in S latington. in n o rthe astern Pe nnsylvania. High winds and tree limbs snapping under heavy snow • along Orange Coast increase broke power lines, blacking out 4,200 customers in Rhode Island and nearly 8,000 in Connecticut at times. utility officials said. Extra beds were set up at Boston's Pine Street Inn for 600 people. Many minor accidents were reported on Vennont highways, but state police in Massachu.etta said there were only a few minor collisions on state roads. Ski resorts, which had been hurting from a snowless w inter, reported brisk business Sunday. ~\" t no w In 1ne mounu ln• of Ind ~ Tu.clmy In the mld-409 1..n•r1et1on S C •II 35 Houllon !>4 Tuesday January It! Snow~ 411 Pnoen1w n 511 not1he<n Nevllda and Ulah 10 -6 a •a• for•c••• In th• CharlMlon W v 27 17 lndl•n•poos 28 23 P11111>urgh 27 17 Scatter.O tnow flurries *et• mountain•. and the T•nachapl Charlolla, NC 45 Ill Jac-aon Min so n POtlllllld, Me 26 II loreca.al ror iar .. today lrom Ille r.noe mlQhl 1191 aome rein In lhe Cheyenne 42 15 JeckM>nvllle S4 ?5 POt11and, O<e 44 41 lower Greal l.Alles an<l Ille uppet afternoon Chieego 75 15 June..., 40 37 Prov~ 31 20 Ohio Vall ey 10 upp er New Lowa of 20 lo 25 tonight and Clncin,,.11 28 22 Kanan C11y 4 I 71 Raleigh 41 UI <.:oas tal England Rain end 1now were t»g111 of 48 10 68 Tu.day -• Clavto!an<I 22 11 l 91 Vegu 52 41 Rapid Clly " Ill expected 1ero11 the upper end aap•Cled In lhe O••n• V1lley Columbla. s c 411 21 Llllle Rock 61 3? Reno •3 32 cenlral Rockl•• lo P•rl• ol whklh mlgtll -eome anow on Coklmbu• 211 19 Loulellllle 37 211 RIChmund 40 25 lncre111ng cloudlneu end Nevllda. and rain wu predlel.O the neerby mounlllna and rain Oalla .. FI WOflll se 39 Lubbock 55 2• Sall Lak• 40 31 -rctly •llrTMf lor the coall•I Nor1hw•t1 1nd ov~ Snow wu aapec19d al Oa)'1on 211 17 Memphlt 46 29 S •n AnlOnlO 57 411 oa•lll lo• 48, 1n1and •I llOU1hern T .,._ .. 11,000 ..... Oe<l..., 42 17 Ml•ml 74 ~ SNrtle 45 41 CoHtal, lnl1nd hlgh1 In 1101 f•lnP•r•tur•• around Iha Fair and cold., w"ther wH 0.. MolnM 311 17 MllWtuk .. 23 17 Sllrawpon S4 31 Water 62.. n•tlon Mtly lhlt mo<nlng r~ lorecut In Iha CIMert w-. wnh Oetrott 24 HI Mplt·SI Paul 23 10 Sioux Falle 211 10 Noltti•• wt1'd9 12 10 22 knoll lrom 8 ~ zaro In S.011 la IOwa of 22 10 35 In the northern Out\IUI 11 00 N"hvllle 43 24 SI Louie 4() 2t -ouMr -tel .. ,.,, wl1h 3 Mane, Mlcfl., to II I In s... Diego ou•rtt 1nd 42 10 48 In th• El PllO 58 •3 New °''""' 62 30 St.P•te· Tampa 82 3e 10 &-foot .... '"'~°"r:' eout,,arn d•Mrta tonight, and F1l1bank1 07 .() t N-Yont 3• u SI St• Mlrle o• -11 Wlndl ~ llOU 1 IO high• In ,,,. mld-509 10 mtd-eot In Ferg<> 22 -02 Nortolll ., 211 Spollarwt 34 32 20 knotia T.-ta)' 1119 northern o...11 and mld-410ti Flagllatl 50 3• North Plalle 42 10 Syr11e;.11e 27 17 W1nda -.tatty tO to 20 knot• California to low 70• In 11141 110Ul'*11 "-1• Grfft Fell• 311 Ill Oklehom• Clly se 26 Tot*<• 45 2• over Inn« ••tare with on• to Tu.day. Her110<d 30 10 Omatle 33 10 TUC900 11 &4 3-f004 .-.,ty --· Ind 2·1oot 8Mctl-11* hu cooled off In H.._,,• 32 17 Orlando so 33 TulM ~ 28 .rtamooit wind wavee. Varl1ble Sourh•rn Calllornll, with HonQlulu II() 112 Phlladel""ll 34 20 Watl\lngton ·" Bogota .. ...,. tortl!IM beoomlng IOU1'*1y tenlpet81utM dropping blCk 10 Te111peral1tre~ Wletllle 411 21 SIOOlllon 87 411 111 6 10 10 lllnott TUffd1y Mo11ly •.. '* j~Rf RIPDRT T1*rnel T7 Cur-... CUSI°"*)' ........ but It.al didn't Vk.lah S3 Fl"eep0t1 10 " ~~ hlgfl cloud• Ourlng atop lhOH who crowd•d lh• NATION CALWO...A BNatow • eo o~· u 62 Iha day Tuu d•y with attght ~ ehot9I -Iha ...itand "' Le ea11 ... 11e1c1 84 ., llO Beat IS .. GuedMo\lpe ... .. County lll•gu11d1 r•~ort•d llafl09 .. 12 H1¥9M 10 IO ~ of rmln 1p1Mdlrlg In l'rom unu9U~ lat~ etowd• unda~ Albtny 211 21 8lytM 73 Cetallna 84 eo Kln091on ... 111 ltle north ... In tM di)' wh•n I • C vie Cent•r hlQ Al~uarqUI 52 311 EurMa 54 4t Long~ 17 " ,~ only M deQr.-Amer 110 51 14 Fraano st 40 M~ 70 68 AnchO<IQe !29 21 l.AllCM1• 112 .... Tides Moltly claar end cool•• 3t 21 ~~ .. It Mt. Wlloaon &I ,. .U.S. 1u111111ory. t8fT194i'llUI.. -· l xp9Ct9d In "'•~•ta l::tl:a ·-Newpon hlctl t1 .. ~I~ Ind fllr wt1h ""'"'• 40 25 ~ .... &3 Ont.no .. IS hlQll • Ind • hlQll All1ntlc City ,. ~ Mani~ " TODAY "aln tell ov•r 111• P1c111c Au1tln 56 40 Hu111inoton tlutt• I.a poor ,._,... 16 Pelm 8oftnoa IO II '-tel low 1111 P.111. -4., naar I war• fo1 tc1t1 fo r Hunt:ttOll ,.,., ,.llldeN NOi• -~lode)'.~ T=. 8al11mor1 :M II &Ml• "8 "'-~ 1•ll POOt ~ N u 11 47 to lflOW M It _.., eMI IOWtlild SI ar waathar but wllh a :'.?llO".,,, 31 23 !I :: ,.MO Aotliel 01 " ,.._..,. .. u ~· .............. --flurrW 1111Qf1t ~ of rlln ,_ Sent• 4' 2t 40ltl It. Newpon :t-a ... llulf &4 .. SM leiMl'OlllO .. A ,,,... Ngll 11:11Mll. u ~·---oftN 111-cti 30 °' 22nd It. .....,._., t-2 POOt ftadWOOlf Clly .. .. SMJoM .. 41 """ ... ....... L4 ........ Berl>etl ... Pfedleted tonight 8olM 31 u ""°" WedOe ' POOt e-•11er1eo IU ..,,.. Ma 71 11 ...... 10:11a.-. 4 1 ll'd T~ In IN _., and 8olton 33 n ~.~ l·I poor.4lllr lalNa T#loeV..., • M ................... IWil! 111!91 aoett.,ed -Ille lrMnnadl•le ... ~. wfler"a .,,. l lllC>)' Hollow. Lagulla 1·2 POOt•flllt , ... ,.... Nw ...... Md fl'Ofll Ille low~-~•Mto OfownevMle N ea lrOC*181 .. ~ :::~11go 10 .. == lutt •= l 1H '·"'·· tit•• 20 II 1•2 PG«·• H 47 .. 11 TUledllW ....... ......, .,.,J:!.of c~ 10 41 MCI hiOfll T'*Cl9)' In 11141 lvffelO 81111 c.n.nte I .. 11 IVtlfMOIOll H 11 t-ll POOt·flllf Santi ...,a .. 42 .......... 9:17 '·"'·· ,, .. ..,...,,. • Md Mr"*ll eo.. Trat,,_ ~ 11. SW911 dlnOllOtl Wei\ lllfmudll AtflOftl. TIM rain Gflanoed lo A OOld nloht wllll lowt II to 14 ~ •4 11 '·' poot..fllt ..,,.. Mltfl .. .. ~., ~ .... , ... ' \ ' ' --------.. "-' ..... •a&a& a WORLD 46 killed as jetliner crashes in ~now storm By The A11ocl1ted Pren ANKARA, Turkey -A Turk.iah Airlines jetliner with 67 people aboard crashed ln a snow storm at Ankara airport, 1plit in two and burst into flames. Authorities uid 46 passengers died, while 14 others and the crew of seven survived The Boeing 727, on a domestic flight SundAy night from Istanbul, struck the edge of the runway and broke into two 8c<:tlona, the semi-official Anatolia Newa , Agency reported. The rear se<:tion burst into flames on impact, the agency said. Airport officialB said high winds and heavy snow forced the aircraft off the runway, adding that m os t o f the· survivors were rescued from the front section of the craft. The co nditio ns of the survivors were not known. IRA rebels kill judge BELFAST. Northern Ireland -Guerrillas of the mainly Roman Catholic LRA say they gunned down a prominent Catholic judge outside a South Belfast church to punish him for serving "Britain's oppressive occupation machine.' "His religion was to us irrelevant," the Irish Republican Army said In a s tatement afte r Sunday's shooting, adding that County Court Judge William Doyle was "a token Catholic ... a key figur e i n Britain's o ppressive· occupation mat•hine " Walesa plans job appeal GDANSK, Poland -Lech. Walesa knelt in prayer today out.aide the main gate of the Lenin Shipyard and sald he would appeal to the courts to get back his electrician's pb inside the sprawling factory where Solidarity was born. away from the shipyard gates last Friday when he first tried to report for work. told reporters he was "waiting for an answer to my letter on res uming w o rk at the shipyard." He was referring to a pro test he sent the shipyard management after Walesa, who"waS'·tumed··· .. he was·refused .. · ~ :·NATION Dean 's wife chides Nixon LOS ANGELES -The Watergate scandal could have been prevented if Richard Nixon had talked more to his wife, says Mo Dean. who stood by husband John Dean during the 1973 scandal. "If Richard Nixon had gone home from the office at night, up to his own private quarters and said to Pat. 'Listen, I think (White House staff member) Gordon Liddy is going to break into the D e mocratic Nati o nal Comm1 t tee tomorrow , she would have beat on him." Dean's wife said. The beating would have been verbal, added Mo's husband, but he said he also believes First Lady Pat Nixon might have dissuaded her husband (S \ Nuke plant 'taints water ATHENS, Ala. -Five hundr e d gall ons of radioactive water a minute may have flowed into the Tennessee River from the Browns Ferry nuclear plant before a· leaking cooling system shut down, but public safety was not threatened. officials said. A s1te alert was declared at the Tennessee Valley Authority nucle ar power plant (the nation's largest) from 5:50 a.m . until 4: 17 p.m. (PST) Sunday, a spokesman said from the TVA 's Kn oxville , Tenn ., ht-d<lquarters. Wallace governor 4th time MONTGOMERY, Ala. - , George C. Wallace, who was elected to a fourth term as governor of Alabama by appealing to black voters, took the oath of office today on the spot where he stood 20 l STATE years ago and promised "segregation forever.'' Wa!Jace begins his fourth term with racist rhetoric a thing of the past, having long ago swapped such tactics for a direct appeal to black voters. Deukmejian policy blasted SACRAMENTO -Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, who narrowly lost h is gubernato rial bid to R epublican George Deukmejian in November, ha.a lashed out at the victor saying: "Isn't it time for him to start temng the truth to people?" Bradley, who received a standing ovation at the state Democratic convention Sunday , blasted Deu kmej1an 's pro p osed budget cuts and plans to carry half the state's estimated $1.6 billion deficit into the next fiscal year w ithout adding new taxes. Skiers jam Mammoth MAMMOTH LAKES - Swarms of earthquakes have subsided considerably in the put few dAys, acientiata say, and High S ierra resorts reported normal swanna of skiers despite concerns about volc~nic activity "It's alowed down a lot in the last f e w days." a spokesman said. Oranoe Coul DAILY PILOTIMond•y, J•nv-v 17, 1Na Postal Service assailed by Nader WASHINGTON (AP) Coruiumer adv~w Ralph Nader criu clzed th~ Ponal Sttrvlce today lncrt'1t.11lnai mall ratet and trlmmma .ervkes to th• public an~•ld the mail-1)'9iet'tl u on a path toward 11el!-destructlon. Nader noted that flnt-cla .. postage wa11 tlx cents In 1970, compared to the current 20 c..-ent.s. "And there haa been a remarkable aeries of service cutbacks at the aame time," he said. H e released a book, "The Postal Precipice" by Kathleen Conkey of Nader's Cen ter for Study of Reaponaive Law. _ They told reporters that the Postal Service can't be determined t o break vven flnanch1Uy and alve thci public the: mall ~rvloe h w•ntl at the Nme tJme. "The P<>11ta.l Servtce, unl ... It d~ aometAJ-na-·trrainattcany new , I• h eaded for 11elf-dtittrµctlon," he uld. Nader said private companies <..'OuJd 1-ke over dellver-y .ervke as a way of maklni new profit.I. The book aaya tax money waa uaed to aube!dlze the U.S. Mail for almott all of the two centuries since the system wu eatablilhed. For example, he aa.ld, thouaandl of money-loaing rural poet offices have been maintained u IM!rvlce to the conununity. _ However, since 1971 the mall , •acncy hH been dodlc:ated to publlclu..-d declJn.et ln 1ervioe," reduclna 9r ellmlnat.lni detlcu.1 Nader called for est.abU.hlnl -paid fdF by Con(lrete out of tax n" l!o n al or a• n I u tlo n o( revenue, it aaJd. CONUn\4:11'1 concerned about maill Nader, In a preface, rC!C&ll~ llt'rvice, and the book tlabol'lt.ecl ttun-wtum 1le wu-growlng up -~~.----R<> during the 1940s the Poet Ottlce He aald hi• propo1td Po11u,1 was a 1ymbol tor reliability, Office C<>n1umer Action Group•,,. punctuality and efficiency. w o uld be funded throuab ,;. "For three cent• you could voluntary contrlbution1 from,..,, aend a letter ln the mornina and citizens. C.0Jllre9 should require It would delivered ln your town the founding of the conaumeriw or dty that afternoon. For one grqup and should tell the PostaLo penny you could send a poet.card Service to eend letten twice a · to the moet remote areas of these year to all hou1eholda lnvltlna~ United Stat.el," Nader .aid. payment of annual dues. ' ; About the presept Postal The Po1tal Service had no Service, he said, "Regular and immedia~ comment on the book,"'! highly touted productivity gains which spokesman Dave McLMn1 "' a re a cc om pa n l e d Dy le aa aald was not shown to the aaency1"' Witness' death 'strange' 'JO 11t, , . • r: I . -t ~· FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (APf-41" -Convicted murderer Dr ~· •; J effrey MacDonald says he'll'{' suspicious about the death of a''~I· key witness in his bid for a new -· trial and criticized a coroner'/< 1· report saying the woman died of natural cauaes. However, the former Gree~-i~· Beret physician, serving thtee -• consecutive life sentences for the -~ • slayings of his pregnant wife ancil. two daughters, said the death of · Helena Stoeck.ley Davi• woul& not fiutt his cue.-----····---·-~·- The twisted wreckage of four cars lies at the bottom of a c ulvert in Antwerp, Ohio, after a bridge collapsed, killing five people. "We have her statements. We. u: have tape-recorded intervtews..Jt~ We have video tapes and we,1,:• have her psyc hological and'·~ psychiatric Interview and' proflle,'' MacDonald said in • · ~ telephone interview Jrom a •.>1 federal penitentiary at Bastrop,-~l. Texas. ..;1., 5 killed • Ill 4 cars topple into ditch in Ohio; sound 'like dynamite' ANTWERP, Ohio (AP) - Four cars drove off a collapsed bridge one after another, toppling Into a dry drainage ditch with a sou nd "just like dynamite" and leaving f ive people d ead and. four others injured, authorities said. The cars were left stacked on top of each other where they crashed about 9:30 p.rri. Sunday, while si.te and federal officials continued their investigation, the Ohio Highway Patrol said. "We believe the cars just went through the bridge, one by one, on top of each other," said Jerry Flau1'h. 42, Paulding County Chief Sheriff's deputy. Gertrude Rister, whoee house is about 50 yards from the cowity bridge, said she heard the cars topple off within a few minutes of each other and also heard cries for help. "Every time one went in, it sounded lik~ a big blast, just like dynamite," she said. Rister. 70. said she lives alone and that an unidentified 8rtdge Coll•pe• • Columbus OtlO KY. Scene of collapse. passerby stopped and ctalled police. "I was getting ready to call and a woman came to m y door," • Ri..Ster said. "She was driving by and she wanted to call, so I let her do the calling. She sald she had seen that the bridge was out and got out of her car and heard people acreaming and ealling for help." The bridge; about three miles east of Antwerp near the Ohio-Indiana border, was on County Road 18tr, a gelleraUy straight, black-topped, two-lane road. Antwerp is about 60 miles . aouthwest of Toledo. -- Highway Patrolman Daniel Hardeman said the 30-foot bridge may have crumbled before the cars drove onto it. ''.It's speculation right now," he said. "But they bell-eve that it had collapeed and the cars drove into it." All four cars toppled within a span of about l~ minutes. dropplna about 20 feet, Flaugh said. Three o f the cars were headed east and one west, and emergency crews had to use crowbars to pry open doors and windows to free the injured. Thousands march on King day By Tbe Auoclated Preas street had been named after a summed up the name change. Peaceful weekend marches black man," said 1mani Imara, a "It is a recognition of what this celebrated the birthday of slain woman selling K ing buttons. man has done for these United civil rights leader Martin Luther "Other people need to know States," he said. "It's not an King Jr., with memorials ln San 'what we have done." ethnic thing. Martin Luther Francisco and Oakland and a King went to the mountain top "All of that is admit t able«•' evidence. We would rather have• her, but I think we c.an proceed "' . . . We do have her statement& l and they're taken under oath '!: . . . basically her recollection and'' • her identification of the othei' assailant.a... . ,,, ' Attorneys for MacDonald ~; allege that Dav»., WU .part of a.If, drug-crazed hippie group that>% slaughtered MacDonald·a family in 1970 at MacDonald's . Fort Bragg home. Federalw- proeecutors have discounted Mn.11) Davis' testimony, in which she..,c- often said she could no\!U remember the night. · But MacDonald uid hi.._0 attorneys had discovered thei.i identities of thoee respon.lible tor_; the slayings. rj "We know the people who.,,, were in my house that night. We are on the roed to locatiJlg them,1 c and we are on the r qad to,, .. corroborating theil' presence in ' my house," he•aaid. , • ., "But I think it's moretiJ frightening than that. I thin}< for 1q a major witness in a triple)n homicide to tum up dead at age,1i1 30 and have the authorities say very casually that it ia a natur~· death, that's abeurd, and I think it has to make one think, 'What's going on.'" ·Oconee County (S.C.) COl"Onel)~ Theron Durham said Saturday that preliminary results from an..,; autopsy on Davis at the Medical,:~ University of South Carolina at,!-, Charleston showed she did not ,,. die as the result of any violence. ir MacDonald called the coroner'~!., report "a sx>litlcal statement fron\. J the prosecution.'' rally in Los Angeles to rename a Ed purvey, a black Shriner. for me and you.." street for King. .~~~..;.._~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~,;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-•"!, The Los Angeles observance Saturday became a forum to protest high unemployment and the Reagan administration's economic policies. The 5,000 marchers a''>o celebrated the renaming of Los Angeles' Santa Barbara AveY)Ut as Martin Luther King Boulevard in honor of Kmg's efforts to achieve social, polltkal and economic equality for blacks by peaceful means. "I got off the freeway with a sense of pride knowing that a our vuy own bru5hzd. JXJPhn µ~mt ... 9nzot styl mg- 1 : • • We'Te Listening ••• Whal d '1 "'lu hkf' about the I Pilot? What don't you lllre' Y-. top p::x:ka.~, f'la.p-O-.R.r watch pod.<cz.t, 'teck flap IXJCkcz.t and 'MLltJZ.d SlOO~ Call the nunu.-er at left and you. .ssage will be recorded, traNCribed and delivered to the appro.mate editor. 842·6086 The same 2A·hour answerinc service may be used lo record let· ters lo the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributoni must Include the ir name and telephone number for verification No cir culation calls. please. Tell us what's on your mind. ~ It a uolec:4 Q ...... ,, o' = ITL_~...,, m; .. ORANGE Co.4ST Daily Piiat L Key Schulta Vic:•""*" Giid ow-°' ~!MIO - 1.,,......M1 Ma ct.Mn C-oler ~, . ......, OitectOJ o4 ""°" .. "" tC lrC\llOlloftl .. .. VOL 19, NO. 17 . - / w.rna Lil.cz., a.asy can:z., durabl.<z. end snz.ot ~ iabu-~ color.5 1t Ka. len, nt!NY, pz.wt.<z.r, nz.d..)Ctl low and kiilty. 44 Fmhlon ltlond • fWtaport ~h • 714/Hf ·5(11() tom ~•twood Stud. • '4oWtwood Vrllagr • Zl3/ I08-32'13 44 Orang• Cout DAIL V PILOT/Monday, January 17, 1113 By ne A11oclated Prell Richard Orlm1haw'1 •7.5 mllllon aelUem~nt from a lawault 11alnat Ford Motor Co. can't buy back th e years he spent In -h<ll&»i.l ~ reco.v.uiPa from a 1912 Plnto--cTaah .=But t s reshaping his adult life. In th e year since t h e sett le ment was reac h e d, Grlmlhaw, now 23, of Anaheim has taken helicopter lessons , bo1.11ht new homes and cars for hlmlelf and his mother, produced a rock recording and made some investments. "I was glad for my mom, especially," said Grimshaw. One , of the first things he did when the setUement was reached was tell his mother to retire from two jobs she held to support her two 5° COPIES Via Ll4t OH llHr o ..... '"''' 3461 Via Lido 675-6U2 children and keep _up lnaurance fuel tank -ahc lnchet from t.M paymentl tor ht• mtidlcal bill.a. bumper -could explode on an He abo donated as0,000 to a impact of u llUlt u 20 mph, and local hOlphal burn unit. that the hazard could have been Grim.thaw was 13 when' a 1972 c.'Orrect.edM the inataUatlon of a .PJnto drtyen by a neigh~r. L1ty $10 device. ---- Cray, ilTIHi<r'on-~-.-'E.v ld J1crats o bn:hrd-ed-a.- near San Bernardino on May 28, confidential Ford memo aaylna 1972, an d was ati:uck from the company could uve a20.9 behind by a car going 3~ roph. million by delaying lnatallatlon The Plnto's fuel tank ruptured of the device by tour yean. and the car was engulfed In A judge reduced the award to names that killed Gray and left $6.6 milllon. Ford'• appealJO th~ Grimshaw with burns over 90 California Supreme Court wu percent of his bod y. He has set utde In September 1981 and undergone nearly 70 operations the company waa preparing to slnce then , tncludlng surgery to a ppeal to the U.S. Supreme rebuild hi.s nose and left ear . Court when the aettlement was In 1978, a jury awarded reached wt January. • Grimshaw $127.8 milllon. rrial -T.he settlement Included an testimony lndlcated Ford's own agreement'_that terma would not crash tests had shown the Pinto be diacloeed. But lt came to llaht l aat week, when one of Ortmahaw'1 attofMY.1, Art Hew1, confirmed hia client ~lved ae.e mJ Ulon plua intereet. -Whe.n -tn ..... eul~t cam throuah, Orimahfw wu work.Inc o r Sl .DO an hour at a government-1ub1ldlzed ltreet repair job for the city of Garden Grove. ''It wu like we were trapped all thoee yean with the lawauit 1oln1 on,'' Grimahaw recalled durln1 an Interview at the Anaheim Hilla home he boulht with 90IM of the money. "Then all of a 1udden it wu a chance to have freedom." Grtmahaw •YI. he'll never ·be Cree of the ph)'lical diafilur'ation from the buma. "The tint time Nex:t to Edwards Lido Cinema 1.acf ... , .,. ~,.,,_, --~ -:-: ~ --~ .,,.., .1,:::saa11o, 'Nlc8pezlo, uee COften r:kele, USE THE DAILY ~JLOT 11FAST RESULt11 SIRVICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call 642-5671 ht. JU Delicious Top Sir1om Steak and two large eggs Served with hashed brown potatoes and choice of toast. 1------NOTICE OF~---~ The County or Or'lng•, Envi ronmenta l 11.onaS"Wnt Agency viii c°"duct a ocoptna meeting to help determine the t oplca to bll covtrod In a euppl!M nta l envir°"- •ntal Imp.ct report tO bll pre parod for the propostd aarlcultur,l pruorve t "'1ce llatlon a long Laguna Canyon ~•d (~ parcele) and dlrtctly north to t~• boundary o f the City or Laguna !leach (2 parcel•). The mttttng1 are &cheduled to prnvldP Opl'Dr~un ltY for th• rubllc to ltarTt about tho "pr oject," t o 1dvlu th• Countv as 10 the re ulblllty of th~ project , and Ito anticipated envir.,nmental lmpacll. Tht County ohal 1 'O<>&ld•r a ll vrltten co-nu recelwd In ttoponu to th• «"plng n<>t let and at th• •coplna ~•t Ing In docldlna che I••~• that viii be covtrtd In th• 1upplt"-Wnta l EIR. failure t o partlclpate In th• acnplng pro<••• or t o c.,.,..,nt on the ocope and content or the envlton,..ntal dc0c.,,...nt shall ~· <~n,lderl'd a~reei:wnt vlth the project M•<rlptlon, lltt nf ;.o-.lble tli!l11fl<..int -nvlronc...ntal l"'P•<ll and oth~r scopfng -...t te-r5 'ntA1--.··!'f 11 t hJt nc>l I .. n .·' fch r ~nc l• r•celv•d An Initial Study (£nvl ron...ent•I ~"•"<own!) ha ~ •• ., • 'CPl"t ~ ·" the rropoat'd Agricultural Preaon:.rlon C4n •llALl nn •nd II I ~ .. ltt·Jo'1 th~t ~• Jtvelop ... nt unct.r the •J11:i•ting U'ntnc desi,pi11tSon on l l f pr r•rtitt• \./Sil t.f •'Y "i11··~ hr:i~ t on th• fC'l lowfng •nvfrcr.OPntal f•._ t ·r~· ~art • ... -.t..•r 1 bfO)CJlt:•l r .)Ur,,. aeethetlc•, land 1u, public s .. rvluf and h dlltl••-The lnlth. tud .r· o ther projec t lnfu.,..tlon h avallabl• f r lnopectlon at the Count>' Envlr ,. mental Managemnt Ag<Pnt v, [nvl rrnc.nul An•lvala Dlvl•lon, 12 Clvl C•nter Plata, Roo• 280, Santa Ana, CA. Wrltttn and/or tl•te,...nta fro& ony ln•ore1ted pen°"• o r group• rogardln& th• rropoul vii I b• r~c~lvord at t h• EIR acoplng ,..•ting fo r entrv Into th• official tr•n•crlrt. •rlttt n colll:'ll'nt • on envlron- •ntal c"ncerTta to be c Yl'red ln tlw flR vtll b• accepted unt'tl f t l>r.12,198 ). Co..-nt 1 and any qU4'ot l o>na on 1 he propoul •ho u Id be Hn t to M•. ~" tko Sherry, .- £~1A-'tnvl ronN nt•l Analy•I• Dlvl•l<>n, P.O. So• 4048, ~ant• An•, CA q2102-4048. Location/Time De.wter. , ~. ... --p ... "..~ .,. __ ,, ovr-wltefm 8 am Clart, Adld~' •ltd .. more1 they lhowed me what I looUd like, I felt Wee d~.·· "School wa1 probably lhe hardnt thin& to 10 thEf:i people Maft"I and Y°"'" mad, knowln1 why t ey're 1tartn1," Orlmahaw utd. "h bothered me for a while, until I adju1ted to It and 11ld 'Well, ahfne them, I've tot better dUnp to do'." . Grimahaw once ltudJed mu.Ac at Fullerton Coll•I•· Now he plans to return to learn audio en11neerln1. LHt year h e prod u ced a r ecord for a Hollywood band under a company he founded. He broke even on the ve nture and 11 currently plannin1 to build a reoora.uur atudio. ............... not• .... In .. .... 506 ForHt Avenue Lapa Beach, Calfornla •Rate sub1ecl to charige <Ully. Annual yield is for comp.ul~on c nly. Assumes reinvestment of prlnc1JNI ·~ mltrt!~I al samt" rate. Januery 27, 1983 1 -10 PM c.rea~ . federal ._.. • . mo s.t• -. c.,o.. "°'d ... •MIO(HllllllollM I ............. 301 M1111i1 ..... ~ ..... 34106 Dollltly ""' .. • ll lllt • 13611 [I Toro "°'4 ,_...Mir· 1011S Siii• Aile L'~~tJ~ """" 111111 • S C.,..11• Pl.t1• ..., ... • l~S II "91• Ao,, .. S. a...11 • •OO .,., ~o • llOI hil!th !I C•11, !teal ... ............ mn ClllllllO c.,mrallO ftt1lrlall • Ol lln111e1 It llllt Call t~IJ-free: for rates, (800) 552-8855; for Information, (800) 272~ ',, ' .. °'l"P Cwt DAILY PILOTIMonc!lr• J!!1u!fX 17, 111i "M• -Prospects .£0~ .Social Security reform look like this · WASHINGTON (AP) -Here i1 a brHkdown of the •U9 billion pect acreed upon b)' Ule White Hou1e, con1re11ion1l leadera and the Nat19n1l Cornmiu1on..M...Bocial~ 8.curit)'. Reform. • ex~ that lona·&erm def&dt aa Hid that the rttlremttnt ••• J.8 p.rctnt or lht .Da\lonal lhO\&&d lfldually be railed 1n the payroll. The •)'Item theoreUcally ct.cadtt ahead to wipe out the 'I 1>4tn.'ent 1n 198& and 7.18 per'C*\\ beneflw MM""t ~A UU-tor -= Dllay_{m' •ht mon\hl ~ ...... -- In 1988 and 1987. Thoee r•* 1in8l• reUr••• with adj~ July'• expected Tpercent could balance lta booka et\her by rematnlna defkit, but Democrata would not chanae· If"* lncomla, exclwi6ve of coet-of·UvinC lncrew In beneftta: But lN'Hd of ataytnc at 7.'18 Securtty, above f20,000 and for ••o billion, 0.27 percent. 'Maat rt percent, the tax would climb to couplet aboutf2D,OOO: pO bdlion, wou Id be cou pied .w Ith • 'i; 7.81 percent 1n 1988 and 1989. It 0.6 percent. The taxee would be Uberalliatton of Supplemental ~ h1vln1 •t.e trillion in reaerve iald taxe1 ahould be raiaed If nliltaM a •tM Fl?dt~ ~~~~~. t.q ~~t~iiilncoiiili;me~illlwl£le•1liTtfalllilrlle111r.,.u111et...;1:J';o;;. planned. 1n lOJO. The~ ~ fiiiii!i. ''-- r.11 ht 0 o w.....J2l'_ildJ nJ . I . 8 1M1CWArV 1n 2010 and beyond to percentqe polnta l01Jii 'J)9yroD d({li--' --. tax Qr by comparable benefit -Accelerate payroll tax The flnt fl8W'e la the amount of uvinp or new revenues that the change would brina into the Social Security trust funda from 1983 \hroulh 1~89. The 1eCOnd ftcw"e ia how much the-c~ would affect Social Security's lona-tenn deficit over 7~ years. cull. 1ncreuee durlna \he,.. of thil aaid the accelerated lncreaaes -Require Social Security eatimated 11 0 1011 for the ,.,. would coat a worker ,.,nln1 covet11e for 111 new federal 1ver11e Social Security The commiuion 11id the decade: '40 blllfon, 0.2 percent. 120,000 a year an averl8• of e workera hired in 1884 and beneflciary. centa ~ each week from 1984 beyond, ana for all employMI of -Uberallae w .. e crectita and : throuchl989. non-profit inatltutiona: UO other pl'ovialonl for widowl. let a ;1 changes approved by 1 12•1 The payroll tax, now 6. 7 f. rity would eliminate all but percent on the tlrat '30,700 of ma w~ would = to 7 percent 0.6 pen.-ent, or about one-third, next Jan. l 1nl of allying at of the long-term 1.8 percent .. 6.? percent. The amount of waaee 1ubject billion, 0.30 percent. Some 8~ divorced 1pou.e draw beneflta ,fi to J he . pay r o l l t • x r I• e percent of non-profit employeea reprdle8a of whether her fanner ,. Social Security'• trustees automatically .each year u are already oovered. apouae haa retired and other ilJ averace wagea rile. No changee -Ban withdrawal of 1tate an"d chanie• _ p_r_imarl ly affectln1 shortfall. Under current law, the tax Som! Republican membera then would. incre11e to 7 .06 were made in that. Social local employera from So~lal women: "°° million, adda 0.07 Security'• tru1tee1 have Security from the date the percent to the lone-term deficit. eatlmated in the put that by reform bill puaee Conan-: •3 1990, the payroll tax will be billion, no Iona-term lmpect. -Eliminate "windfall" ' levied on income up to '60.000. Local iovemmenta who have beneflta for civil aervanta and 1 11 WHO SUPPORTS THE COMPROMISE? ... From Page~2 be poesible to pt 1 aetUement that included no benefit cuta. -Make the •elf-employed filed the mandatory two-year others who •pend only a abort •., votes with Rep. BUI Archer, would fl1ht the C09t-of-llvln1 p 1 y th e c 0 m bi n e d notice of withdrawal would not time in the Social Security -· "It w11 a n evening of celebration for the elderly people of America, not only now, but hereafter . . . . " Pepper· said. "We've protected the future recipient as well as the present." R-Texaa, .and former Rep. Joe freeze, payroll tax hikn and employer-employee tax rate; be allowed out unJeea their two 1y1tem: '200 mllllon. 0.01 Waggoner, D-La., aai~. ''Thll la a taxation of beneflta. "We're now a total of 13:4 percent, years was up before the bill la percent. package of tax increues" that lookin1 for an alternative." inatead of the current 9 .35 pa.ed. . -lnterfund borrowin1. a would do nothina to reatore the Even before the commillion percent: $18 billion, 0.19 percent. _ Make the Treaaury pay back-uf "1tabllizer" to alter the public's confidence in the had. finished l.tl work,' 1be aelf-employed could deduct Social Security for credita due cost-o -llvina formula under . l)'Stem." ...-.... 1 ... ..a--• tiftn --It D .,._.._...,. .. repreeen ...... ._ one-half of the lull tax as a the military and to relmbune the certain adverae economic Sen. William L. Armstrong, R·Colo., who cast the di81enting Jim Hacking, a spokeaman bualnellpnen had aaid they woWd buainess expense from their trust funda for uncaahed checlu: conditions 1n 1990 or alterwarda, •· for the American Aalociation of work to o~poee an acceleration of income taxes. , $18 billion, negligible long-term no major short-term or lonl-tenn. t ~~~\ Retired Perso~ •. -aai~d~his~gro~u-p~-th~e-pa~yro~_·ta_x_.~~~·~~~~~-~T_a_x_ha~lf_o_f_Soc~i_aJ~Secprl~---=ty:...__e~f~fec:..:..:.;.t._,_~~~~~~~~~im--.:.pact_,...._·~~~~~~~~. ... '\ff. Pregnancy bookle t o u t By ATllOROWITZ or .... Deir ,.... '"'" DEAR READERS: Pr~gnancy can be more comfortable for women who heed the advice in "Natural Remedies for Pregnancy Diacomforts," a new publication of the state Department of Consumer Affa!rs. , The 32-page illustrated booklet tells how to prevent ana ease the 12 mos~ common discomforts of pregnancy through exercite, massage, diet and other natural alternatives to over-the-counter drugs, which may pose an· unnecessary risk for unborn babies. Fon. example, morning sickness is sometnnes treated with medicine containing . antihistamines _w,bjch_ cause birth defecta in.. animals. As an alternative, the booklet suggesta women treat nausea with soda water, fresh air and spearmint, raspberry leaf or peppermint ~Pregnant women also can prevent nausea by having milk or yogurt at night, getting out of bed slowly, eating hlgh- protein meala--with trult or...1ruit julces and avoidi9g greasy, fried or highly seasoned . foods. The booklet also offers remedies and preventions for fatigue, headache, stuffy noee, heartburn, leg cramps, constipation, backache. ditficulty sleeping, varicose veins and hemorrhoidl with special aections on warn-· i.l)g signal.a, nutrition and Kegel exercises. "Natural Remedle." wu originally-written by the Coalition for the Me<lical }Ughta of Women in San Frandaco. Consumer Affairs worked with the coalition to update, edit. and illustrate the booklet. for statewide releaae. Dl:up taken by_pregnanL.women aCfe£L_ the growth and development of the fetus. Over-the.counter drup 90ld in California are reqWred to carry a warning label aimilar to this: "Caution: If pregnant or nursing a baby, consult your physician or pharmacist before using this product." Free co~ies of the booklet are available by writing to 'Natural Remedies," Department or-consumer Affairs, P .O. Bmr-310, Sacramento 95802. ldentilying measles DEAR PAT: WW yoa please explalo tbe dlffereace betweea me11les aad rabella. WUt are tile symptom• of eacll, aad lrlllcll- one' it Germaa me11le1? C.S -ro--M .,~ta eaa Gennan measles is a mWeadlng term for rubella, which probably orilfnated l>ecause rubella was first identified by the medical profellion 1n Germany. Rubella UIWll.ly lasts about three days. rash often accoinpanies rubella but may be ao · faint that it goes unnoticed. An identifying characteristic of the disease, Is a painful swelling 1n the glands at the back of the neck and behind the ean. A slight fever also may be pretent. Thi. is a mild dlaease in . ~th children and adults, but aeverely ctanaerous to a presnant woman'• unborn child if she has the dl9eue 1n the early months of pregnancy. Vaccination againat rubella ii recommended at the ace of 15 months. • .• i -Go,-a-~--~em? Then wri;; kl • Pat Horowitz: Pat will cut red rape,' ptt.if16 the anawen and action ~ need to solve Jnequitie1 in t aitd bwinali. Ma1/ yocir-quesilona rowitz, At Your Service, Orange Cout Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1660, a.ea Meu, \ CA. 92826. YOU CAN LEARN TO CONTROL STRESS Strem means the temlon you feel from ...,....... at wk or "1th ,... fmllly. 8.,_ AIM means the way you rHpond to th ... ........... When you feel arudQUa or ar18fY, *- .,,_.. you. When your hetlith WOIWW, *- lutl JUU. • Yau am Imm to control ,.,...1ew1 ol "'-- 'llll'Gulb --dan Mid "**"',...mil ....... to ... ~ fnlD ~ .... Ind..--. lllWrn..__..,. w Ha.and~areu..-' • aa l.IMllvldual. Pl• ... call now for an .. ,.,, ... ................... 9. • ttT. ... ,....., ,... .... ' I I . LaY•A"·• #IOI.On.Ip (7 •>Tflotlll .• .. Rate oUF three flew accounts ~~~·_.:..__ag~~~inst _the com petition. :. ....... '-"' (Compare our rates to those where you bank!) Downqr Savings & Loan announces rates on today's popular new accounts that pay higher than most money-market mutual funds, and many other banks and savirigs and lo~s. . ' The Safe-Saver's Money-Market Package A fully-insured, high-yielding savings account combined with instant cash access for those few, special times. You 11 earn one of two very high rates,, depending on your balance.· - The Check-Writer's Money-Market Package · AfulJy-insunJ money-market account conveniently tied to your checking account. (Compare this to any uninsunJ SfliJM/J account I) . The Super NOW Moneysavers~ C hecking Account The new fully-insured checking account you've heard about that pays higher ~ates thafl-ever allowed before. (Unlimited check-writing and cimvenient Write Thru cheCks1) .. i -... - TODAY'S RATE r.-TODAY'S RATE TODAY'S RATE --- .. . 1155%* (for baJanca of 11°~%~ 125,000 and over) 11~~ ,,. • Plus, look at these extra benefits you1l receive with any of these accounts that no money-,!llarket fund can offer: D a minimum balance requirement for high yield of o~y $2,500 D no service charges on your checking ac- count (minimum balance may be required) [] check guarantee card on your checking · account (with qualification) G preferr'ed auto loan rates . I ~ D MasterCard ll™orVISA®-debitcardon your checking account with no annual fees (with qualification) D unlimited in-person or by-mail withdrawals D many other free, convenient services D your accounts insured to $100,000 by ·FSLIC . .,,.,.. .. ,..._....,.,.... ................. ._IUll.lf~ ... .._N.to0 ......... 111 .... ,.u,, .__..., .. ._..-,. , • I I· I "' Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 17. 1883 ·- NRC 'doublesp e ak' disservice t o coun~r==r~y-----=== Two w eek s ago the U .S . government's Nuclear Regulatory Commission released a re port on the safety of operations at the San On of re N uclea·r Generating Station. The evaluatio n covered. six areas of operation -and the judgment was that the safety record in five of these areas was only "minimally satisfactory." Last week the U .S . government's Nuclear Regulatory Commission released a re port on how well safety goals w ere being met at 15 nucl e ar plants throughou t the nation, including the San Onofre Nu c lear Generating Station. The judgment was that six of the 15 plants would nol meet the NRC's goals -but that San Onofre was one of the nine plants that DID mee t the standards. ls "minimally satis fac tory" good enough? Are s ix of the .... nation's nuclear power plants thus "unsatisfactory" in terms of safety? Does the NRC know what the NRC is doing? Does the public - have a right to be confused and concerned about the safety of nuclear power plants? The answer to only one of those questions is "yes" -and we don't have to tell you whkh one it is. As it turned out, on closer examination, there really was no ' conflict between the two reports. The first dealt only with the one- year ope r a ting r e cord of the 14-year-old Unit 1 reactor at San On of re, while the aecond examined the long-range risk assessment for operationa of the e ntire facility. But the issue here ia not whe ther the two reports were a ctually in conflict -It is that they APPEARED to be in conllict. And, on subjects a.s controversial as nuclear power, even the appearance of uncertainty on the part of the gove rnment is enough to ignite the emotional fires on both sides. Security was one of the areu at San Onofrt: given low marks in the first re port. If the confusion sparked by this situation triggers new protests or demonstrations the n security will continue to be a problem and the regulators will have defeated themselves. We are fortunate that most of the "Big Brother" predictions made by George Orwell in his book •' 1984" have not come to pass. But "doublespeak" is one that has . Government has developed obfuscation into a fine art and the San Onofre reports are merely the latest in a long string of masterpieces. This is a problem as perplexing to Americans in its own subtle way as the headline issues of milltary policy and budget deficits. And it is one that needs just as badly to be dealt with. College fees · valid It should be ne ws to no one that the state of California is in hot water, financially. When the voters expressed their opinion on the tax burden in the state via Proposition 13, the resu*-was far less revenue. The s tate managed for a while, but there is very little maneuvering room left for the new governor. It is in that context that Gov. Deukmejian proposed a $50 per full-time stude nt per s..uarter fee on California's state and local colleges. Since most students attend three quaners out of four, the yearly additional cost per student would be $150. Part-time stude nts. those Wiui· less than 6 ·units of course -wor,k, would pay $30 per quarter. In addition, UC Regents will consider this week a one-time-only surcharge that would add about $100 to the fees for the spring quarter. That s urc harge i s necessary to cover the guidelines for revenue and spending contained in Deukmejian's Jan. 3 ediet to reduce spendi-ng by --2-- percent in the current fiscal year. The bottom line of all these proposals would be that UCI students n ext year would have to come up with about $1,350 in fees for three quarters instead of the present $1.200. Community college students pay no tuition, but must often pay campus fees for parking, course materials and health services. Not surprisingly, students and administrators are vociferously opposed to the fee increases. Given a choice, no one ever wants to pay more. The problem is that there is no choice. A state laboring under the provisions of Proposition 13 can no longe r . afford to give all its residents a free university education. We sympathize with the s trangled taxpayers. and think it only fair that those who use the state's higher education system pay a modest price for doing so. Those who were already paying .$1.200 a ye.ai: . .ta_ UCL will probably be able to afford the 57 cents per <jay the extra fees would impose. Those in community colleges, where fees have been much lower, wJll...feel the increase more deeply. Nevertheless, it is difficult to find another state with such low prices for htgher education. California education is still a bargain. . . ·--· ·---Opinions expressed In the apace above are those of the Dally Piiot. Othet vlewa ~reued oo thla page are thote of their authors and artists. Reeder comment la Invited. Addreaa The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) &42....a21. L .M. Boy d/ Pathology skill Not only can a Quincy -type pathologist determine in an autopsy that the deceased was poisoned by arsenic. That doctor can oftentimes tell bow many doeee of anenic were given. Dr. Hamilton Smijh of Glaagow University examined aorne ha.in from the remaina of Napoleon Bonaparte, and said the emperor was administered a.nenic about 40 times between 1820 And 1821. Q. What'• the beat way to deal with a amartaleck cop when I know I'm in \be rtaht? A. keee your mouth shut and do ~bat you re told and Jet your lawyer take 1t from there. Such is the coldel\SUS of .everal veteran police reporten .queried in this matter. r It was~til Maurice Chevaher passed the age o f 70 that he said, wistfully, "Eventually. you learn that it's almost as healthy to have a woman on your mind as one on your knee." Things are picking up m Tanzania. There's one telephone for every 250 people now and one car for every 333. It'• the down-flowing sap o f the maple trfe that's tapped for syrup, not the up-flowing. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat ._.........,.., .... ,_ ............ . Olm .................. _ .. o.-.-.Oo\- T he meadowlark is not a sort of lark but a sort of blackbird. In Russia. you eat the salad first, never as a side dish. A 10:ftahel) crab ls only a 10ftahell crab for two days. Then ita shell hardens. The astrologer• outnumber the astronomers in this country by 20,000 to 2,000. Thoee savvy aouls who aerve the upper parts of the chicken wings for cocktail anacu have good reaaon. None other than the late Colonel Sanders himaelf cl.aimed that WU the sweetest part of the chicken. Q. What's the averaae aoU KU"e for amat.eun? A. Men. 101 \.i . Women. 111. Writes a doctor: "You uld the noee i. more aenaitive than the finaertlp, proven by the fact that when you touch your no.e with your finlertip, you feel the ~ via your nc.e before you feel lt ln the finaertjp. Of coune, the nme la ri'Weh clollet' '° the brain. You pt that m11 .,e tint. But the~ la not more ....attve than the ftneertip." Fiery hudgeteer oil warpath WASHINGTON -In the back.rooms of the White Howie, an undaunted Donna Quixote has been waging a one-woman war against the federal establlshment. Her name ls Annellae Andel'IOn, and she has tried to diamantle ju.st about every government agency that has come within her purview. She took aerioualy Ronald Reagan's campaign 1peecibe11 denouncing the evU.t of. big sovemment. Throuah her polltic:al zeal, Andel'llOn wound up as an ..oclate budget director. She mounted h.er swivel chair in the White HOU9e gomplex with all the ma~ty of a noble knight astride a charger and began tilting With the Waahlngton windmilla. AS A DEEP-DYED , determined libertarian, she believes devoutly that the less government interference in people's affairs the better. This is at odd.a with the creed of the bureaucrats who man the bastions of ~overnment. Those familiar with her views regarded her as a Trojan horse lodged inside the federal command post, it.self. Anderson. proved equal, alas more than equal, to the bureaucrats' apprehell$ions. She blocked a proposal that would have_required federal identification cards for every man, woman and child in the country -a bureaucratic dream that would employ more bureaucrats to keep a closer, benevolent watch upon the citizenry. But she galloped into the fray, assailing the idea as an intolerable intrusion on the privacy of free ~ricans. The victory and the glory were hers. Next she did battle-with he-Coast G uaird . She wanted to scuttle it altogether and shut down the Coast Guard Academy in New London, C.Onn. ll there were functlom that couldn't be el.iminated, she suggested, they could be distributed among the Navy, the Army and such private functionaries as could be hired on the free market. For an awful moment, she made some pr<>gre98 in the backrooma, and a cruel uncertainty clouded the air for the Coast · Guard careerists. But they rallied qWcldy -with the support of alumni and frlenda -and retCUed the venerable· service. Undismayed, Andel'llOn charged off ln another direction and usailed the creaky Jll:I 11111111 reasons are seriously flawed." -''There ia no evidence that relying on foreign shipping poees a significant risk to the United States in times of peace or war." -"There i. no buia for believing that non-U.S . flagships would not be available in an emergency." -''Economic jusU.fications for federal assistance to the merchant marine industries are weak." TH ESE DOGMATIC statements caused instant trauma in maritime circles. With the allocation of funds in jeopardy. the industry's powerful frle.nds in Waahington en£"ag-ed Anderaon in mortal rombat. • An interagency Cabinet Council headed by Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige issued Its own report, which buried Andel'llOn's work and replaced it with a new report, which solemnly U.S . mar itime indu stry -which declaredthatahealthymerchantmarine manages to stay afloat only through loan ls vital to U.S. security and, 'therefore, guaran tees and subsidies from the should continue to collect its subsidies. taypayers. ln a passing nod to the feisty Supporters of maritime su·osidies libertarian in the budget office, footnotes argued that an American merchan t to ~veral sections of the interagency marine was essential to our worldwide report said: "This section does not have military commitments. As·evidence, they the concurrence of the Office of pointed lO the Falkland Island.a conflict; Management and Budget." · the Br It ish c ommandeered 7 0 Footnote: 'lllere have been whitpers commercial ships, including the Queen that the embattle\d Annelise Andel'9on ia Elizabeth II, to transport men and weary of her tilts with windmllla and supplies Jo the South Atlantic.. that her WUliona about Ronald Reagan But the flag waving did not impress have been shattered by his political Anderson, who set forth her views in a penchant tor compromise. Whatever the comprehensive treatise intended for reason, she lntends to quit her post and offlcia.I eyes only, but intercepted by niy rejoin her husband, Martin, who worked associate Donald Goldberg. She made briefly for the White House before • these contentions: -----·-----~urning-to the Hoover Institute in -''Most of the major arguments California. Meanwhile, she has no advanced in support of assisting the U.S. conunent for pesky journalists the likes merchant marine for national security of us. Computer redistricting still unfair Reapportionment -that once-a- d~de political reshuffltna p~ thal redeflnes the boundaries of legislative and congressional districts -now , la complete. Or, as one particular lawmaker chose to phrase it, th~ "serving" ia, finished. The procedure was no le91 protracted, no more exciting, than it ever has been. Nor did it differ appreciably from reapportionments of prior yean in ita unfeeling destruction of politk.al careers by the mere swipe of an ink pen. WHAT SETS Reapportionment 1982 apart from others, though, la the computer. Technology has embraced the lawmaking process. During the waning daya of 1981, Democrats ln the statehou.ae ram.med through reapportionment plans for the state Senate .and Aaaembly, and for the state's congressional dbtricta. 'Ille flans had the unmiat.ahable brand Q the majority perty and were drawn in such • way that certain boundaries were not inc:enaed by wnat hapJ:ned to him that _ J!.ast ~af~<lfor •.. .el«\.Jlemc~ra11..-.h~edna awitcng partJea wb but were patently and obviously fl comes time to run again in 1984. For rldlculous. Republicans cried "foul .. and Johnaon, a 71-year-old party faithful, forced referendums. Last June, voters that Is not an easy threat tc;> make. repealed all three redistricting In the reapportiorunent bill, Johnson's lat Senatorial Di.atrict was changed so that it no longer includes his home, but does encompus the home ef 'Sen. John Doolittle, R-Sacramento. Doolittle, a freshman, wu reapportioned out of his district in the 1981 redistr1ctinc" attempt blUeprintl and sent legialat.on back to the drawing boards. Unable to conclude their work during the regular legislative aesaion, the polltidana were called back· into special aeasion by former Gov. F.dmund G. Brown Jr. RepubUcans still are unhappy with the plans. One veteran member of the Senate, Ray !qhnson, R-Chico, is so • and now has announced that he will be a candidate for the .eat in 1984. Johnaon ia faced with the choice of moving hia home « changing hia party affiliation.. He says that both considerations are pmaible. Johmon aald he wu prom18ed by GOP leaden that his home would remain in his district, and when the bill wu passed and aent along to the governor for hia signature, the measure had been chansed to eliminate the Johnson addtela from the lat District. .fohnlon cried that he had been "shafted" by the Republicans and "eerviced" by Doolittle. . ' Two kinds of violence T HE IRONIC sidelight tb the remapping procedure la that for the first Ume ever, 10phistlcated, atate-of·the·art oomput.P.r technology wu u8ed by both the Senate and the Aaernbly In an attempt to wed high-tech to pollt1cal prryma.n.derfnc. If anyone e~ the computer to make the reapportionment eJCercile more fair, thoup,j they wen: way out in lefi field. The ~ ~)' have been an approp~l.(te tool for provld.inc and inlel'pntlnC population data. but the ~ ltill WM controlled by people who hiad a ve.ted lnterwt ln th• w ay the Hnes e ventually were. drawn. No computer _... ueed to remove Ray Joh.man'• home from his diltrict. m111uil1 ' -Any group With the arropnce to term itle.lf "moral" needs to tie reminded that Jesut hlmlelf turned to a dlaiple and uked, "Why do you call me aood? 'nlere i. tlOt'WJ of us aood but our Father in heaven." -.A. k>n8 as we think that "aettina touah" wi\h criminals m•tn• more . prilons and loncer acntences. we wW l.lnd the altuatien tntnc1able; only when we~ that it mMN ..uw-and quidc~r lncattera~ wUl we besfn to eolve the problem. ,_ ~who enpcie in abaLrd « b.dc· eUorta lbnply lo 19\ their namea Into th e O ulnn•n Sook o f &cordl fail '° ~ tlM Harria Law of Nep~ Achlewment, namely: "If a thine 11n t worth dolnC. lt lln't worth doln1 w.n." -A "f.UW"e" ii not torneone who bll tried and ~ it .. IOllW who bM aiven up tr:YtM and .......... am-If lo failure: It ), not a condlClon, but an •ttltude. -When a toeMly 1iJ ln the llfOOW of rapkt c:han8t. we W. • w -.... imd •Y It 18 .. dilri_..Uftc." Wblll we llllllbt • well •Y that lt II ''ittn ......... (Al Whltehwt obler¥ed.. • .,,.. ... .... ~~----... .... ., Rather, It WM limply polltb . , . M ~. ' ; ll , ; • lllJPllll MONDAY't JAN. ,7, 1883 ) CAVALCADE , 82 ,. . . I Twenty-I ive million _ Americans will agree that hemorrhoid& are no i:NTERTAINMENT ----8• --1--··laughing matter. See-Page 82, -~~ TELEVISION 88 Networking gives WoIDell iµ~r.e · clQut When they gather, energy level 'incredible' By KAREN E. KLEIN Of IM DellJ Not S._., Some men think they're potlucks. Some ask what they do at their ERA meetings. Others juat want to know why they all sit around together and hate men. Women's reactions to the m o nthly meetings of \h.e Professional Women's Network of Orange C'ounty are quite different. "You come home higher than a kite. You don't want to go to sleep -you're all ready for · work, you're wired," said Diana Long. • "You've never seen so many powerful women in one room. The energy level ls Incredible. It gives you a big boost that lasts for the rest of the month," said Susan Linn. Linn and Long are both m embers of women's groups called networks -the business/ social clubs that alternately HThe network is a place their networks from support. The groups, which n\amber over 1 '76 in Oranae County according to Sandra Clark, who SJ>On80red a book on network.lng, prQmOte profe.saional IOcla1izing with a goal. Depending on which group you join. that goal can be either ma.king buainem contacts, developl.ng younelf on a penonal or profeafonal level or making a contribution to your community. • Clark includes women's 1ervice groups, like the Soroptimista. in her count. ·But the ne tworks which have sprung up in the laat few years and proven to be huge successes are the networks aimed at helping women establish professiQnal contacts with other women. Long and Smith formed the first successful network within the American Association of University Women, a group they both belong to, two yean ago. "There were gourmet groups . . . where you can brag and not feel bad about it." threaten men and make them and boo k review clubs but envious and provide women with nothing that would deal with cont.acts, friends and things their career women," Smith said. She mothers never taught them. came up with the idea of forming "Networking ls helping each an AAUW network after reading other to become more effective in an article on networklna'. ln the . the work-world -w.ith more March, 1980, issue of Working clout, more mone1, more know-Woman magazine. how,· more self-confidence," Their first meeting, ln October. w'rites Mary Scott Welch in her 1980, proved women were ready book, "Networking," published for some k ind of professional in 1980. organiz.at.lon. Around 80 women --The Professional Women's turned up for the planning 0 c meeting Smith and Lona held. Network of range oun4y, Since Ulen, the network has founded br Long, 31• and her '""'wn to include 250 memben u college roommate Sendra Smith, -~ 32, uses Welch's words to deflne of th' end of last year. what it calla "the ·spirit of The women who are involved networking." in networking are quick to point "We help goal-oriented women out that women have been h ir .. Lo networking on an informal bu.ii get ahead in t e careers, ng for yean; "We've been do'"'"" it said. But network have come to ..._.. be a lot more than job-finding for a long, long time," Clark said. bureaus, she said. And they're a "rm the purchasing agent ln long way away from coffee my family -I can get the ~t clatches where women swap oven cleaner, the beat piano ' recipes and talk about their teacher, I know where to find a bargain~" Clark said. . husbands' jobs. The other thing women in "The network is a place where networka are fond of pointing women can share their feelings out is that men have been and successes -where you can networking since th.e first hunter brag and not feel bad about it," asked advice of his neighbor beck Smith said. in the Stone Age. ~. Linn said, w .... o ..... me~n'--""'"Men have been aetworldng don't get a lot of strokes from for yean. Not on a formal basis, their companies. So thjy turn to but they conduct business on the • Diana Long and Sandra Smith are founders of a women's .._., network in Orange County. golf course and all sorts o f places." Clark said. "Men have had Lions Clubs and Ro tary Clubs all along,'! Smith said. Women have only recentlyTealized they are miaai.ng • out on the kind of friendabipe and contacts men form in clubs like \bese, she said. In lact, the term "networking" was coined aa a reference to the "old boy network" busin81men can tum to when they need jobs or lips. Businesswomen, on the other hand, had no means to meet other wome.n ln professions outside of their own until net.works came along, Smith said. "Our moms never ta\.(ght ua to Introduce ourselves and to ask questions," she said. "They were great if you needed to get a recipe or know how to serve dinner for 30, but they didn't teach us bow to et along in a business environment." There are a myriad of things women just don't l~am in achool but need to know to survive in business, LQ.ng said. "Boys pick up what their fathers do, ther, have their role-models built ln, ' she said. But most women haven't grown up with mothers who were career models for them. "Everyon e shares at the ~tings." Smith said. "Wettake from each, other. Some of the women ha'<re to learn to be team players -we're not competing for the same boyfriend.·· · A lot of women hav e Inferiority complexes when It comes to working with men , Long safd. "They're afraid to ask quest.Ions because they think It will make them look stupid. We share things like how to entertain.a male client and make sure the check doesn't get brought to the·man," she said. "We leach women how to be assert.Ive versus aggressive." Both Long and Smith are married and have children. They said. they hope to bring their dauahters up to ~ able to cope with the buainesa world as well aa domestic life. They are reluctant to call themselves feminists, they said, becauae the term has come to carry a negative connotation. "We're for people," Smith said, "equally." - The networks serve _,octal purposes as well as blfalneu needs, Long said. "It's nice to have friends on the same level aa you are." Smith has .bee~ on mateml~ leave for two months from her )ob as a branch manager of Home Federal Savings & Loan Asaodation. She knows all the women on her block who are homemakeB, she said, and she finds them all . very nice people. "But rd prefer to talk to their husbands about businea," ahe said. Linn, a aaleawoman, said she has met a lot of good friends -throug the es network-she ~ to. '"I'bey.!re o~ the ~ SIDS. ~ .It robs the cradle Lots of questions, but few a~swers By JOEL C. DON _ ¥ a result of lobbying within the Oftti. ~ "°' It.ff scientific communit1' From 1945 ., · . , . . ~ the. present, SIDS wen-1..k9m a 'And tlus woman s child died topic w h i c h th. e med i ca 1 in .!he ~h.t; because she overlaid community wasn't interested in It. Kin 3 9 to one which now gets a lot of -1 gs : l interest and retearch money " Since biblical times, "carelea" · mothers have endured the blame Johnson said phy1iclan1 of the sudden, unexplainable weren't ignoring the problem, death.a of their sleeping infants. but w ~re mystified after Other causes weren't suggested suUocation -th~ b:elieved ca~ -•--th babl all llnce the beginniilg of dvi.li.zatfon i'::~ t!t of :J~er y were -was ruled out in the The killer of. young children mid-19501. While researchers qht have remained an ~ pre.eel to .olve the puz.zlea of or the mother's lifelong guilt bad heart dlae~ and cancer, few not a Harvard patholo1lli, ln opted to punue the killer of an 1945, proposed the death• estimated 7,000 SIDS babies each pombly were the result of IOl'De year in the United Staies. unknown respiratory ailmenL Johnson, alon1 with UCI SUll, major research into the colleaaue Karl Hufbauer, medical problem didn't be1in tteently published a atudy on the unUl 1974, after a decade-Iona parent movement that eventually eUort b}' parents resulted tn an led to rmny question9, but few act of congreaa. The 1...-Uon answers, to thi• perplexina NQU1red the National IDIUtu• health dilemma. ot llealth to fund atUdl• ol ~b "Sudden infant Deaih death, more popularly known by Syndrome ia now beUeved to the somewhat cumberaome have a variety of cau... but one Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. of the major oontributon 19 poor UlUmately, the SIDS 1-w Mt a ~ drielopment in fetal precedent ln' ihe history of lite'," Johrwon ulcf. Releatthen IClence, beau.11e the lay public, al.o have su11e1ted bectertal ndbs than .ctentiatl, hid farced lnfecUon, aller11c reactlon1i ~on \hi9 medical m)'lller)'. • hor~o~al lmbalancea,. vira • '1&'1oonunon for other dl11•111 lnfec:don, fetal nutrtdon. ensyme W. ......-or polio fo.-there to irre1ularitiea and even atr be 110Werful lay aroupe whkh polluUon. ~ edd.IUonal ..-rch." said SlDS appe.n to occur fDOte UC. Irvine hlltodan Mlcbael P. often 11D0111 ~ who~. ,,.._... "Wba\ needs to be told use barblturatea, have poor aboat Sudden lnf anl Death 5£'f ar ..U• mrcnm. ..,_ ~II bow the·-Notl ~· Johnlon llld .... were the onet thlt took Id ti beUeve thne fecton ii9"111U.ttve ln oppoetdun to the and others may cauM brain riil Of the medk!aJ community. .,..... ln the feu. 1~ rned6ca1 ....mt OClL'Un In a n lated It u d y , be Investigated apparent SIDS deaths fro m records of "smother~" slave babies in the South durtn1 the 1850s and 1860s. At the time, it waa thought the high infant mortality rate among blacka was a result of careless mothers or thoee who didn't want their children to be slaves. The UCI historian fOCUled on bllbles that died between the ages of 2 and 4 montha, since infants under 1 month old generally die from diaeaaea unrelated to SI118. Slav• lived on a diet largely of pork and corn meal and, more important, were required to work in the flelda despite pretnancy, JohNOn said. · "Some llave mothers had their babies in the field," the IAauna Beach resident added. "They hid to work as hJrd presnant u when they weren't .,......_.l" lntel'fttinaly, after th• Ctvtl war , deatn rates for 2 to 4-month·old infanta of former a.laves dropped to current levell. Johnlon bel$eWI lmpc'OYed dJeta and WOl'kins oondiUoN played a role in what he oorw6dtn a ~ incidence of SIDS amona bl.ck a.laves. In the 1980., three major parent l1'CJUJll formed larp~ peer toun.una outie. f« eufferfnl tnmwlou& auDt fnilli the pue1Un1 ••1&h1 of thetr children. Dliiiat8ftecl wtttr tlR virtual abtenct of mtdltal research oa llJ)8, --~ .. took their ,...., ID W..,.111!11111.,._.-.- D.C. "Parenti ..._ .-an. I'll rm not~ ........ j!t c I 1 1 Mlclaael P. Johmon ii la.....-Of a killer • :!:tty,· w h y lan't medical ti~ more tQ flnd out wha\ d&cl -ldll my baby?'" iW r • IMCI. Allll tt.y want.d tg ~ Why l&'\le effort WM ~ lftiCle to learn •bout the =r:.=~== ~ l-lb• 1 YM'·. Coa•r•11 acted on that 5 •• •j calibei-as I am.'' she said. "I don't mean to aouNi anobbiah, but I'm sure if I went to a .ecretarie.' group I wouldn't have a whole lot in common with them." r. Outg~owths of the network 1 include working mothers groups, · j, w~ draw up recommendations , . , for child care centen ~nd -d -a babysitters, an a me.ntor DI proaram which matc.J,• more h: experienced buatne.women with o thoee just starting out in their •l careers. Networks are not a fad that ,., will die out in a couple of yean, ., Long said. But both she abd Smith said they hope hetworka will be around In the future for '.i different reasons than they exist toda . .. ~~ won't need ao much J help in their career in the next l , generation,'' Smith said. But the support and the friendahi~ will always be appealing. · "Thi.a is something luting -" .omethlng-Wt! will want w-have __..:;.._ - foreveJ'," Long said. -~ I Bl Oran • Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday, "POT~SBarr-·--- ev ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT lT'S JUST AS EASY TO 00 A THOUSAND IMP05Sl8LE THlNGS AS IT'IS TO 00 ONE. WIDllS DEAR ANN LANDERS: I need to know if my husband IS eex-crazy or just plain crazy. Divorce is out, ac> don't suggest it. l>itto counaeling. He won't go. We have been married 16 years. I have had five children and a few miacarrlagea. U we aren't having sex, we are araulng about it. Exa.qiple: When I was in the hospital with a heart condition -hooked up to a machine, mind you -my husband was all over me the minute the nune left the room. I told him to behave himaelf or I would rirflJ the call button and have him thrown out. I just found a notebook he has been keeping. On the cover he has written "SEX RlXX>RD." Thia nut baa recorded our sexual activities and I am ~.graded: Very Good -Good -Fair -·No In the last 11 months I aee we have had eex 96 limes. I was rated "very good" only 18 times. Thia burns me up. Please answer the question I asked at the beginning of the letter. What you say means a lot to me. -CULLMAN, ALA DEAR CULLMAN: AccordiDI to my com)Hlter, H times la 11 mo.th comes oet to two or tiree times a week, w~c• 10me wome. yeeld not conalder exceaalve. B•t uy mu wlto wottld crawl lla&o bed wtda a bosplta1J1ed wife -w•o l1 hooked up, yet -11 a real filbert. DEAR ANN: For the third time in four months my husband has gambled away his en tire two weeks' paycheck. (Bookies and poker.) I don't want to leave him. We have three swell kids. Tell .me what to d o before I go crazy. -EMMA IN CICERO, D...L. DEAR EMMA: Contact Gamblen Allonymou. Tlte C'blcago pltoae DDmber: 3U-1588. '1'1le aadonal beadq•arten addreu: P .0 . Boa l '1 l '13, Loa Angeles, Ca.llf. t'l817 . Pllone or write for tllelr Uteratare. Tbey do a terrific Job. How ro -and how m uch? Find out wfth Ann Landers' new booJclet. "How, What, and When to Tell Your Child About Sex." For your copy send 50 cents along with a long, $tamped, self-Mldretsed en velope to Ann Landers, P.O. &x 1199,, Chicago, m. 60611. QUfflllf By PHIL INTERLANDI of. LaQuna.Beac h .... .-.-; AMIRICAN OAll Enormous shipment of beautiful cla~lc American Oak furniture • S«retary Book Clses • Br1ss 8«ts • Sk»borlds • DrlSWS & CMsts • T1bles -All SizBS • Commodfs • Manti/ Clods ' (819) 327-9738 ,,_,.,, DMcounll w.-,,,. Classlfred adve~tlslng Is your best choa for help In setting the Items you no tonger need. It's quick and -tnexpemitve. • - -...GOlfll 011-lllDGI BY CHARLES H. GOA~~ ANO OMAR SHAAIF Q.J -!-• Soj1!.!!.t_yulner1!!!_!. perbap1. your hand 11 worth able, but dot• not do justice ~-tttr.e 1pMt.a. Sine. part.aer riaht cards few elem-club 1oa hol~ ----- •IUI OIUN OAIOU •Kl The blddtn1 haa proc"ded1 S.•~ W ellt Nert.la £a.M I <::i l • I 0 P ... 7 What do 1ou bid now? A.-You have mort than enou1h · tr14mp 1upport for partner, but rai1in1 hi• dia- mond 1ult la the aecond·be•t. choice. Your moat Ukel1 game 11 ln no trump-nine triclll are easier to make than 11. And with 1our tenact1, you should be declarer. ao bid two no trump now to protect your holdtn1. ~ .. ~ • ·b!I -I• 'Play ,- atrenrth you are In the 1lam &One -partner ated1 llttle t>.1lde1 the two red 1ct1 to Jive you rood play. Ex· perlenct 1bow1 that, when you 'have a powerful hand and partner haa opened the blddlnr. you do t>.et to make YOUl' move below t.he (lme level. Here. a cue-bid or two 1padt1 11 a 1tand-out. JOW' ~ il.&1141 1trenrth. We rffOmmend a jump ehlft of three diamond•. t:ven by a puttd hand tbat I• a one·round force and 1howa a tlL for partner'• 1ult lnt.o tht bar1aln. Q.4-A1 South, vulnerable, 1ou hold: +KU <:;1854 OA.1712 •ta Tht blddlq tw. ptoeffded: .-...~ .. ,~ ,R.:.-=:iW!Dlili': • ~ bave onl1 thrff trumpa, worth l&.a welpc. In ,.U: Nd albeit very JOOcl ones, we 1ult eeeoour1 boDOrt ebould would take the conatrvatlve t>. dlecounted. courM of ralaln1 only t.o two 1pade1. Q.1-Botb vulnerable, aa 8outb you bold: •llQTll 1;'8 OAll ·•A&MI The blddlnr hu proc.eded: S..... WNt Nerda Eu& I• P..-I• Pue Q.t-Aa South. vDlnerable, yol& bold: •KIMll <:II OJI •&lfll Tate btddlnr hu procHded: Nerda EMI S.... WNt 1 <::i Pue I• P .. INT Pue 1 Q.a-Neither vulnerable. H South 1ou hold: S... Wtlll Nwdi Eut , ... , ... 1., ... t ' What do 7ou bid now? What actloe do you t.Ut?.l A.-You have a mediocre · hand on thla auction, but It la unbalanced and one no trump la unlikely to be u-. beat ;•pot. Bid two clubt. Att.r partner baa abowa a minimum by rebiddJns. one no trump, a new auit by responder le no lonpr fore· Ing. So you can afford to probe for a t>.Uer apot with impunity-partner won't think that. you bold tbe world. •1 c::;i AMat <>KQJn •aa The blddJn1 ha• proceeded: What do you bid now? A.-We are 1ure that you dJd not make the dreadful mletake of blddln1 \wo diamonds. Since you are a pHaed hand, that la not fore· lnr. and partner mirhl pua -and we can't believe you would rather be playing In diamonds than apadea. It la •Imply a question of whether A,-You art In alam ter· rltOry, and abould advlM partner of It aa eoon u po.91- ble. We tend t.o trowa on a leap to four no trump t.o In· quire about acea-you won't tind out enourh t.o know whether or not you are ,1olng t.o be In a iood alam. We aur- re•t • jump abut. t:o four clubt. That way, partner will know whether be haa tbe S.9&1l Weet Nertla EM& PuePueJ c::;i p .. ' Q.Z -Both vulnerable, aa South you hold: What do you bid now? •A <:;111 OK87W •KQIOZ The biddln1 haa proceeded: Nwdl Eut S.~ I <> I• ? What do you bid now? M-ln term• of point couat, A.-We could forsfve almost anytbln1 except three beartal That la not even for~­ ln1, and In support of hearts your hand revalue1 to 1C points. Four bearta la atleept.-.you abould bid two apadea or Saying 'g~o«:flJye' to an era Here is a reprint of the best of Erma Bombeclc whJJe she la on v.cation. Aa I drove lnto Mother's driveway I aaw it atop a heap ol traab. The high cha.lr. Aa shiny u the day it came from the siore. Well, it wu about time. I mean, how long can you hang ont9 a baby chair and wait for a 42-year-old ~ughter to make medical history! Betd.des, all we ever did with it wu get our hipa stuck! (I remember when she got it. Tbe baby waa ju.at old enough to Iii-alone. To get-her at -table-- height took a l~man predaion drill team. Mother brought ln the kitchen chalr, Granddad got three World Book F.ncydopedial and five Life magazines, my hUlband got the pillow from the spa.re bed and I contiitiUti!ia a piece of plastic 4 by 6 feet. Then one day just before CbJiatmu, Grandma flaahed the new high chalr. "We'll keep it here at Grandma'1.': ahe said, fluhing her Jeane Dbton smile. "You never know when it will come ln handy.") It makes good eenae to get rid of it. Parked right in the middle of Mother's Mediterrmean, it looka aa out of place as a dentist's c.hair. Sentiment -never won you a center spread ln aetter Homes and Gardens. · (She waa right. It was one refill after another. No eooner did one outgrow the chair than there was another. Before King Kong ... that's what we called the first boy ... there u9ed to be a restraining belt and a feeding tray, and paint. Oh well.) It's the thing to d~>. It will certainly aive DOn 't laugh at DEAR DR. STEINCRORN: Hemorrulclt are •fJMe. I 111fferecl from daem for yean. At lut I Ila sugery to fhld relief. Wily do·IO muy make cract1 abo•t pU~T lt'a aot fany w•e• yoa llave diem. -Mr. G. DEAR MR. G.: Twenty-five million Americana will 8iJ'ee -nothing funny about hennorrhoida. Jokes abo ut Napoleon miaaing t he Battle of Waterloo, etc. Have you heard the one about the surgeon aayina, "If I had an enemy, I'd do a tonsillectomy -but be a ure to d o • hemorTboidec1omy as an encore on the aa.lne day." ~the aaylna goes, "Not fWU\y, McGee." What are hemorrhoida? Diatended, swollen, bulglng veina In the atta of the lower rectum. St.andln9 and titting for Jong periods prediapcwt as doee pttgnancy. Commonly found in truck driven, writers, alespet9Clllll. A diet low in fiber ii perha.- im rt.ant contributin cause. Conatl tion ~uces atr . ea may a r te. le who·require more fiber ln the diet to keep the .-toola bulky and '.:>ft ahould take bran cereal.I, wholemeal bread1, pea1, beans, fruit• and ve,etables. TakJ.na at 1-lt lix 1.atae •lueet of Uquidl Ja helpful; wat.er, loed tea. eoft ClrtNca, juices. GOod bowel hypene and resuJar bowel habCw are t9ential. Doo't ltra.ln. Moderat. exen:i.M help1. There are two typee of hernonholdl -lntema.l and external. The exwrnal UIU&lly diaappear ln a few da~ weeka, bu\ ~ to rtlCUr. lnwmal hemon" on,1nat.e ln the upper portion of the , anal canal.~ produce ltchlna, bumlna. 1ehln8 flMA IOMllCI AT WIT'S ENO Grandma a lot more room In her kitchen now th. the cba1r i8 &me· Besides, you ahouldn't hang onto th1np that someone ebe can u.e. Rlght? (It tha1 chair could only talk. How many blrthday milles have, been llluminated by candles from th.at. seat? InclUdlna the lousy cake l broiled. And Mother said why diCln't you make three layers and I cried.~ said I did. And by that time the kid hlld fed hall of It to the q .) • lt'a just a cba.b:. A lou8y piece of fum.lture lhat existed before llpatick. car keys, deep vo6ces, bia feet, dates and a plaintive, "Goah, Morn, there'• nothirur to. do at Grandma's. Can we leave after dinner?'· It was a symliol_ of an era of diaper bags and potty seat. and attained liver and b~u that abed all ove~Grandma'a sofa. It waa a Sunday at Grandma's where youth held forth and no one thoufht it would ever end. ran my fingers along the ruilp atrlpped of paint by llttle feet. How do you aay goodbye to an era? With a lump in your throat and tears in your eves. How else? heinorrhoids T f OUI Hf Al TH DR. PETER J. STEINCROHN -..and ilometirnes bright red blood In. t'he atooL Oa:astonal nareu.-can be treated at home with aitr. bat.he, suppositories and crea.nw. But lerioua auies can be treated in variou1 waya: by injection; cr yo1urgery; rubbe r -band treatment; or by hemorrhadec:tomy. For MRS. E .: One definition of nervou1 fatigue ia thatJ! ii "an exhaustion of ~. weartnesa from exertion ... ' But UWi iJioWd be idaea: ''It c.al"i ~ due to exa.ive drain on the emotions." Everyone haa experienced buay daya when almost feelinl one bit tired. Yet, on 80IDe aacceedlni ct.)' -when burdened with sudden bed news. or when concerned about someone or 1omethln1 - exhaustion ccxnee early and sta}"I late, e'Vel1 thouah one hun't worbd ha.rd. . . Dr. Stemc rohn welcomts questions f rom I readers. lie cannot answer all indi~uolly but will include those of general intere1t in hi• ,column. Send your que1tiona to him in care of tht Daily Pilot . P.O. Boz 1560. C<>1ta Mesa. Calf/. ntm. • 'Sanda~, Juury 11 ARIES (March 21-April 19): You pin acce19 to privileged information. Be !'Midy foe chanae. travel. variety, intemified relationahip. Communicate with lndlvidual confined to home« hospttal. You IOOl\ will be· on way to creating new policle., freeh contacta and lofty pla. T AURtJS (April 20-May 20): Friends aid in maklni domelltic adjuam.nt. SpoUiabt on home; appliancea, decoration and rerDodelina. Family member talks about plan.a which could Involve ultimate chanp of residence. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Orden from iop may lack subetance -keep optiona open. have altematlvee available and don't becuoe victim ol eel1-decept1on. Member ol opposite .ex con1ides lleCl"el, expremes confidence frl your abWtiel and openly talb about attraction. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Looa·ranae p1aN come into focua. Tr-avel ~ta can be rMde -empb.tllil ai.o on law, commumcatioo. pub1ilblna and education. Relationah.lp lntenaities, nothinc occun lialfway. Money and love dominate 8De1Wio. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Finiah rather than lnltlate project. Detal.1s unravel ln connectlon with rental fees, percent.age, intereat ratel and an Investment pn.>lrAID. Travel planl come lnto focua, apedal appearance could be arranaed in oonnec1ioo with media. VIRGO (Aue. 23-SepL 22); Review mntnctual obligation& It ii pomtble to obtain a new deal.' Focua • on independence, originality, wtJ.lincnem io pioneer a project. You'll pt to beu1 ol matt.en, you'll be deelina with Leo, Aquarius and another Vt.rao. LIBRA (Sept. 23:-0 c t. 22): Emphaaia on employment, health, ability to lnltill enthuli.Mm In cloee .-odatea. Follow throuch on hunch -share knowledge and leem by tMchlng. Individual who helped ln put la bllck on &"ene and hu your best intel9t at heart. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Favcrable moon aspect coincides with travel, education, abstract prlnclplea of Jaw and introduction to arcane subject&. Dlvenify, remain Oexlble, keep~ mind and be willina to lauih at·you.r own foibles. SAGl'M'AIUUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Learn more about property values. Plan ahMd in ccnnection ' with lleCW'ity, pomtble purct._ and money relatina to family member. You'll be uked to review, to fill In detaila and poaibly to auaest a rebuJldin& J>l'Oll'Uf!. . . -CAPlllCOllN (Dec. 22~Jan. liJ):-You bl'll!atr-- new pound -statua quo la ahaken, excitement revall.1, newa com~• f e . y. ytical, d1ICem motiva, ve frank di8cumon with member of oppolite teX. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Financial pmltlon improwe; pc 11 emi.om are worth more than orUinally anddp.atec:l. Harmony can be re1tored wtthin family circle. ·Emphuls on payment.I, ~tion of lmt-ar"tida What hid been elUlllve now ha>••• obtainable. PISCICS (Feb. 19-March 20): Lunar cycle hl8h -vUallly returna, you'll be enth\&.llutic lo connection with new acquaintance and project. Technlquea can be perfected, methods Will be streamlined. Focus on quality, behind .cenet activttlel and lnfonnaUon pnvioualY kept ll!Cftt. • Your Health U/Jelq N11/lon11/ BanA- Callforn11rl• .,. hiahh·COMClou•. and nowhere in the •t•te it hulth mof'C itnpomn1 than •Ions the °'•nee Gour, where 40 ma. ol tandy beuhea eet the ptiee for • n IChWI outdoor ltfettyle. Current thlt month will brine you the pewa. in(Ol'metloi\ i nd help you need to pllln your 1ctivit101 end leern how lo 1t1y heaJlhy ind happy. Articles on uetOM. welJht INfllltment, nulnhon i nd prt¥ttnl1Ye medicine will kffp you up to dete In thb he1hh>OJiented ,.fci, ' Look for Current Wedneaday, Ja1?uuy 19 • !! -=. -=- 11 pleased to announce the appointment of Gene Lesher, SlnlOr' Vici Pluldent, Bualneu Growth~ ~ent ••d I ' .... ...,. a 'l••Mn' 'an ttawl.w Au1mlll ••llrtll ,'tz 4¥ _, .... •'I 111r.v I For your compagy•s ltOWth ~ needs contlct Mr. Laher at (714) -..2929 durtna thl bUalnas daY or t.all the alt.er-houn busineu line, (800) 472"-&9 IJlalWMWllF.trJaSllat 1. J -·~ --_-_- • ' -.NYSE COMPO ITE .TRAN' QuOtAltO ... INCLUOt. ft.ADU ON floll NIW ¥0•11, AAllWIO, ttA("•C "'" IDtr~,OIUOlt AlllO CINC .. O•Atl UOCI lllCMANOI' ANO .. NIOIO I V'"' ltA\D A.NO llOtlllilf , Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Monday, J.nuary 17, 1113 Plant operation ·-lowest recorded WASHINGTON (AP) -The natlon '1 ma.nufacturent operated at jult 67.3 percent of their capacity ln Oeof:jnbtr, the lowest raie ever recorded, the Federal ~rve Board reported today .• The new o peratln1 rate w11 down 0.1 percentage point from November,~ the 10th decline ln 17 monthl. But t.ti. deer•-wu mna1Jer than thoee of recent montbt. raSllna hope that the downward trend mlaht be ~ m J ... uary. . A aeparate report i11ued Friday eald U.S . lnduatrial production decl1ned 0.1 percent In December, alllo the l~th decline ln 17 monthe. But econom1IU Mid production was almost 1Uttly Nina In January. And that would probably mean a January lncreue in factory uae, too, s1nte factoriea PrOdudna ~ good.a would likely be uaing more of thelr capacity. Irvine firm inks pact Western Digital Corp., Irvine, will provide a special software development system to TRW Inc., for uae with advanced military computers, according to an announcement by a TRW SPOkesman. Western Digital baa been attempting to 1treamline lta product and last week announced plan.a to trana!er marketing and manufacturing rights for a minicomputer to Texu lnatrumenta lnc. Western Digital lost more than $7 million lut year. OPEC sets special meet VIENNA, Aust.rfa (AP) -'The Orpnization of Petroleum Exporting Countries confirmed today that lt will hold an emergency meeting next Sunday to· r seek a production-sharing agreement that could avert a polSible price-cutting war. ' An OPEC spokesman at the group's headquarters here conlirmed the 13 oil mln.i.aten would meet Jan. 23 at Geneva, Switzerland. County man heads UAW By Tbe AHodated Presa A 47-year-old Fullerton man has been elected director of the United Auto Worker&! western region, replaclpg retired Ralph "Jerry" Whipple, a union '>spokesman said. Delegates at Saturday'• ·~ election in Los .Angel~chose Sn.Ice Lee by a 404-91 vote margin over Pete Beltran, preaident of the local re presenting Oenenlj'Ytot.on workers ln Van Nuys. _ Lee has been on the executive committee of tht! National Democratic Committee linoe 1976 and has a lifetime appointment as a UAW international representative, said union spokesman Tom Whelan. Printro'nix income down Printronix Inc ., Irvine, manufac turer o f minicomputer line printers, haa reported operating results for the third quarter ended Dec. 24. Earnings were $1,407,000, or 3$ centa per share, on sales of ll9,893,000. That compares wlth 'earnings of $1 ,410,000, or 37 cents. on sales of $17,709,000 for the corresponding period a year 8'{0. For the nine months ended Dec. 24 the company had net income of $4,267,000, or $1.09, on sales of ~8,()Qtl,000 compared with $3,567,000, or 93 cents and $45,~, respectively. for the corresponding period By Tbe A11oclated Pre11 Selected world gold prices today: Lcnntoa ·moming fbdng $494.50, up $11.25. London afternoon fixing $498.50, up $15.25. Paru afternoon ftxtng·$49S.33;-up-$10.78. Frank.fart fixing $494.50, up $9.47. Zarlcll late afternoon $496.25, bid, up $15.25: $497.25 asked. H-..ady & Harman only daily quote $498.50, up · $15.25. Eqelllard on!y daily quote $498.50, up $15.25. Eqellaard fabricated only dally quote $523.43, up $16.02. NY Comex gold spot month Fri. $488.50, up $0.20. Met.ah • ·NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonferrous metal prices today: Copper 78 ~-80 ~ cents a pound, U .S . destinations. Lead 22-24 centa a pound. . ZlDc 40 cents a pound, delivered: TID $6.2604 Metalt Week compoe1te1lb .• AlunlD•m 76 oenw a pound, N. Y. Mernry f36().00 per flask. Pladli•m $460.00-$465.00 merch. trov ounce, N.Y . i su.,e,. llmMlr 6 Barmu. •1.a.100 per troy ounce, de.Uy q"'°'-· I l J ·' .. . t • • I ' I !-. I I l f I . 1 J Oram Cout DAILY PtLOT/Monday, Januaty 11, 1913 .Little fus~ made today about 'Oh Calcutta' • --~;:;;;:.:;:;:::::C"':'=G--a, JAY uuaatm' ., .......... 'Oh Calcutta' pro~ucer Norman Kean Cable debate rages in Utah By MICHA.EL WHITE •1 111111•,.... .... SALT LAKE CITY -Jim Bunnell hall been called everythlna from amut merchant to aodlema. but be atill can't u'ndentand wh~ aome Utah reeidenta are disturbed. r Bunnell. regional marketing direct.or for Tele- Ccimmunkationa Inc., haa become a reluctant ao1dier ln a major 1epl and legialative battle over whether aome It-rated film• will be banned from the ' hou8eholda of cable televilion' aut.cribers in Utah. I "I have gotten calb in which people have accuaed me of belnt everythina from a 1mut peddler to aecular humanist," be aaid. "1 jult aee the whole thina 11 rldiculoua." But what Bunnell calla ridfculoua otherl vi~ I 11 a aerioua threat to home and f.amily. More than 60,000 Utah residenta have ll8ned a petition forcing ,1 the atate Legialature to oonalder an lnltiative that would ban up to 30 percent of the R-ra• .films 4 ahown on cable systeml. . "The Comtitution and Firlt Amendmentdo not guarantee to you the right to receive pornography or indecent material ln your home," Mid Lorraine McKay, preaident of the Utah Aaoclation of Women. which aupportl the lnltiative. Th e proposed law would prohibit cable companies from ahowtng films that portray explldt aexual conduct, erotic nudity or violence with erotic overtonel. John Hanner, author of the initiative and a fonnet' Califc;mlia lieutenant savemor, Mid the initiative would extend Federal Communications Com.miMlon J'Ulea on program coment to cable televiaion. ' Opponents. .. y that would be unconstitutidbal beaa\a cable movies are not broadcallt to the public I at larae• Legialatora who must consider the initiative within the next 60 days say lhe cable debate hall pnerated much int.en!st. In North 0,den, more than 75 families respcoded to the aty council'• requeat for donations to pay the costs of defending the city'• restrictive cable ordinance ln court. Some f.amillee, said Mayor Don Colvin, donated $1,000 to the cauae. Growing aupport for cable rettrictiona bu placed many legialaton in an awkward pomtion. "You vote ap1nst it. and it•s llb voUna apinst motherhood and apple pie," aid Senate Majority Leeder Kay Comaby, a Salt Lake Republican. The Cl)urch of Jesua Christ of Latter-day Sainta. wboee member1 make up 70 percent of the state'• population, hall not commented offidally on the lnltiative. But a ~t editorial in the Monnon publlcatlon "Church Newa" urged me~ben to remt the corruptlnc lnfluences of l.ndeoent movies and televiaion prog:ra.mming. . "The invUion-of C>Utrelaciion into many homes la now no longer a threat. It la a reality," the W1Slgned editorial said. "The sad thlna about it la that theme f.amilies sign up for it wtdi their eyes wide ooen, and invite the worldly into their homel.'r Cable operators aay such a law would ettectlvely prohibit aale of sut.criptiom to such cable movie channel.a u Home Box Office and Sbowtlme, which do not edit mm. befcn abowing them. While thia would not put Utah cable firms out of bulitnma. Bunnell aa1d it would ""°"8lY curtail revenues. Worse, he said, would be allowing ~t to control what people watch in their "JMticelly, it comee down to rnaldnc a choice of what to watch. Utah ll either go6nc to allow the t to tell them what the rfaht ~ ia OI' aotna f.o retain the rilht to make that aata. Tbe initiative marks the third attempt in u many .years to regulate cable \e)evialon statewide. Barmer argues the leaPslation la nee me,.,. to P.roWct children, who could be harmed by indecent" programming. He 11ld be ia not pem..,W by the cable operators' argument that pennta can control what their children aee by pu~ a lock-box on the televiaion, or limply by Dot .ubmibl.ng. , = .......... ... ~ .. ...... ~ .... ............... .YOUR FEET NEED A DOCTOR OF THBDl OWN! ,. N1:W YORK -'ti. lhow'1 authon include the late John I.Annon, Julee 1•lffer, Robert Jienton, the Olcar-~ writer of "Kramer n . Kramer,'' •nd Sam ~hepard, actor and-Ptlll\Hl'-wlnnln1 author of 11Buried Child." _ Tbe 1bow employ• Uve actora and five ICU'MMI. '?'My appear both clothed a.nd in their blt1hday .Ww. They 1pOOl 11X, llmu.lata It twre and thent, kid mate-IWapWia a.nd auch, l1nc and even comm.lt ballet while 1\&ri na.Ud. '1be ahow opened oft0 Broldway in June 1969 amid much publicity, controveray and crltlcat IJWnbllna. one carper even 11\llfed that lt 1',Svtt pomocraphy a b9d name." It ran until 1973, U\80 wu revived on 1Bn.dway in 1976. The show la "Ohl c.Jcutta!" A lot of ti. about lt way b9Ck when. Mention It now and the local raction.uaually la, "la that IUl1 around?'' Yee, 11ya beam1na producer Nonnan Kean. It's •till around, a $260,000 lnvatment that to date, by hla reckonlna, hu gr01aed '300 million .from performances here, in 150 other clUes and ln 16 countries. Still at the 5()()..1eat Edi.on Theater he owns. lt recently loaed lta 4,000th New York perfonoance. It'• had, lle aay•, about 28 ca\t cbanaea - approximately 100 actor1 and actl c 11e1 dofflnc. their . duda in the cauae of art -ln the 13 ~ years alnce it opened. "Oh! Calcutta!" waa born in the era of anything-goes perm111iveneM. All that ii aald to be over, the revoluUonarle1 now into corpoptlom, euburbia and mona.... . So what keepe \be ~ -once thou&ht ao wicked it waa raided by the~ equad-in San Frandaco -go1nc ln theee aedate timee? PrOducer Kean, a hearty, energetic native of Colorado Sprtno. Colo., thlnkl a minute. "I think lt'a partly becau.e of.my marketlnc," he aaya, referrm, to ~ aaareutve promotion campaian here and abroacI; a campaip thJt includes a playbill printed In nine foreign ..... LUXURY THEATRES ) W , .... ..._.._iecs•YS1.ll.._..,.. ..... ~ S lliijtjij•Xull61~ 2$5J f~;:,) S * FOR FOOi HCfTEmEflTI V11rtOur ... , ARCADE of GAMES • - . . · GANDHI 70MM ........ .._. ............ rm 'f'Ot ••OO ''"•coll. INh 11 "ow OMr /No,. ..... 1. Runninc Z.Oiabetea 8. Athlete'lfooc 4. Buniorls I. Com1/callutt1 e. Health and qlnc 7. m,rown toenails 8. Molts f , Pllritar Wll\ 10. Chlldren'• ffft ll. Hammcrtoet 12. Flit feet llfl7UH11 2\!:L~l l\.io!fa\!? Rlt• ftlNaiJ "1l/#NI. ,._ ,.,_,,_ IW,."1 ~ •t , .. ,...._ •6M. ~ lncludinCR Another bla ffitnc II word-of-mcAith. When you aee thll ahow, wh.lt.eYer you may Wnk Of It, ·JI\• next day oc that even.Ina you have a comnwnt to lflake about lt. "But Wa ,i.o my puai.ori for tb& lbow. lt't one of a kind lt never Will haODmnOin.'' - ''Ohl Calcutta!" wi.i d•vfHd by the late Kenneth Tynan, th' Brltllh drama crltJc and writer. ln • 1976 lntervieW, four yean t»fore hll death, Tynan explaJ.ned hll battle plan thll way: "You know, what we want.ecf to do then wu provide a ahow that would bridle the pp between the Zleafeld Folllet and a raunCht exhibition, ln a bordello -aomett,lnt that wu about MX, for intelUaent people, wlth no holda barred, but without t.rylna to ahock people. 'That wu the aim: To fill the pp between the raunchy and the rkilculoua." • "Ken aot all the authon.'' Keen 11ys. "He had thil 1dee to create aomet.hlna ln the theater that would be erotic, would be· titlllaUna. So he contacted the world'• areateat authora for contribution•.'; Enough material arrived for a three-hour ahow, he 11ys. The akit contributora lncluded Jean-Luc Godard, France'• "new wave" director-writer, and Tenne..ee WUJJ.ama. Alu, their atuff never got performed. "It wun't that it wu bad." Kean says. 0 1t'a just ~t we had to tom out material that either d.Jdn't work or didn't fit the running order of the ahow. Even parta of what Tynan wrote were ta.ed out." He'• thought of piecing t.oeether a aecond erotic revue from the dilcarded material, but, "I couldn't . make a new show out of it beaauae the material llmpl1-doesn't work." "Calcutta" currently ii playing Toronto 11 well 11 New York. He'• a1ao plannJng productiooa of it ln Brazil, Hawaii and LM Vepa later t.bil year. An officer of th e League of New York Theater1 and Producer1, general manaaer of off- Broadway'• recently shuttered Phoenix Theater, Kean hu produced or manapd acme 60 other at.age ventun& Such 11 "By Strouae.'' a revue with the muaic ' . * •ARQAIN MATIN•••* . ... ., ........... ,..., Aft hffonunc• ... tor• l:oct 'M I~.,_... &1111m1 Ii IM....._,., .._..T.,_..,l"N --------- "THe VIRDICT" 4111 ----- 1MGllA" ----~ LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK IN "TOOTllE" ----= LAKEWO OD C ENTER SOUTH ... ,. ,. '1'"0MA"------ ., .... ANAHE IM l•f/111 1 IN ..._ .... _ .. ~ .... Bdl Nt PARK '• ., " .... --.-· ..... HMOJO .. LIN COLN t•11 1111 '"' ~--··-llM070 ·. •. HJUNIAIN VAllf'r lh .. J I~ ............... -~ ....... , ''THE TOY" .-e1 -----....... " -----~ foc3~1y ot CollO .. •OOG 21J/ll1·9UO ..~. THa MOlML" -----~ ....... _ ---"IT'LL °t._~,!!G"""'"' ..... OOODeYF' ------ "11m WAUCIW' .. ------ .....,.,...,.,.....,... "NIGHT ...,.. ... --11 - .... ~ ....... "9HAM.EY'I MA~ .,. C:.·fl--............ ) .... .._ .. _ 191·Ufl "TOOi• -. -•••Oll8" ... -·l'llOUllO ..., "'!!!-'" ..., .. ....,...,..-.. ... _ .. ... - I " 'j ,1 ~"'\ ~ µ .. ' ... --·-81MMI ------- Cllll·lltoulll "THI ~.,.. ... "TNlaAM caY8TAL" --·"- 01--'ANGE I. I .. __ .,,..., .. ... c .... 1141111 of "AnnJe" cmnpcmr Cbati. 8trou1t. And Athol: Fuprd'a nsliwt Band a .Dlad.u A:nd .. Me ~ Beme," the mUlllcal about 9-le Smith, the blUltl stncer. And Vinftte c.arrou•a "Don't Bother Me, I Oul't Cope." kt "Ohl CQtuttal" remalna hll blgelt. lt'rnot alway.-•....ad-out 1bowr n•-•Y•· Patl'Onlp tendl to droop in the winter. 111 do think thent'• eomethlnl about nudity and cold weather that doel It. • "But we always pkk up in the ·~· nub minute the llW\ ~ we're ~ up thele.' -.. ~! ,. THE f-'MILt' c1ac~1 "Giv• me a high fiY1, Daddy." by Brad Ander_son ''from now on, have the paperl:10y drop off two newspapers!" •IG &IOaGE · -··-· by 'JlrgU Partch (VIP) MARIN£ ROOM "l hate Mondays." DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum t ~~ l ~ ; tt by Jim Davis J LOVE IT WMEN TNEV £HTElrrAIN 11\E. · .... PUN Tl TMIS 15 A Pi«FECT Wit( FOl 'itlll 10 LEMN 10 Sl(ATE, /MICIE ... 81l9E J ~MV~~~ ~ J»a.1£~~~ 1'QE~ 1UQ)E ~ ~?. .. WOW--IT SAYS HERE THAT LITTLE GIRLS-- -ARE MADE OF= SUGAR AND SPICE AND ·EVERYTHING NICE -ft:NKl' •INKEa8E-'N HOW10WINAI IASllTIALL • by Tom K. Ry1n MVO~ Alnrf 01\J A'MAP. by Kevin Fagan •-t 1\UMK t~ ~o~ 1'AA'f M.f()U_, .. • ; l .. l .. I .. I . I ' I I ' . •• =·=·~--O:r~·~ng~·~C:o=u~';O~A~IL~Y-P-IL~O~T~/-M_o_nd_•~Y~·-J•_n_u_•~.;...1_1_._1e_1_3 ______ ..:..~----------------------..;...-----------------------------------------::--------------1 'Frontline ' pro!Di ses a jour ney I-discovery ~ By TOM JORY • Al 1111• ...... _,..., NEW YORK -.Documentary fllmmak.lna for ~evildon can be a rlaky buainett. January, 11Tht Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Dece~on." ' We are belna very careful," J'ann1n1 •YI· "tr)'ina to work with people who know the ba11•nee and undentand the rt1pon1lbllltlt1 of 1ood 1oumallan. 1 apend a 8ood part of my time with lawyers, 1oma owr every 11erlpt, line b~ Une." that enraaed S.udt Arab&a'• royal family and lrked the Moblf Corp., one of PBS' aupporten. The be1t TV documentatlt1 often are f.c\ that ..,.. and dJa1DtJUe had bNn ...creeled ~uae no film record w..,avallable. tu1nlnc and otbera tnvolved In production of the film ..maintatoed lhetr work Wit 1upported b ~kinl reaearch. "We've alrMdy had a 1ult qaln.at ua, and we haven't had a program on the air yet," 11y1 David fanning, executive producer of "Frontline," • J>ublic BroadcuUng Service docume~l serlea IQbeduled to be launched toniaht on K (28) at $:00, wlth a 1ure-to-be-controver1lal fJlm on f&mblln8 and profesaional football. Jesaica Savitch, on iemporary leave from NBC News, ii anchor for "Front.lfue," which will Include, In its flnt 1euon, 26 hour-long productloni. The premlere pro1ram In the • l'rontllne" aeries II called "An Unauthoriled Hiltory of the NFL," and th<>uch 'Fanni.na 11)'1 the lawtuit w• filed in connection with another documentary ltill in production, publldty for the tint ahow promlles to reveal "a hiltory of hulhed-up ICUlclal" in the National Football League. -coint1rm'9l'la&ai.,...;:::J.:he.....,a1.&11A&-ol lbe Pesu..,..," e aovernment apendlng to ahow oft American weapo~ bro.dealt ln 1971, Md to a HOWie lnqulry into Cts.'j Newt' edltl.na procedwe9. More recently, Bill Moyen' "Pt0plt !.Ike U1" for CBS Newt, which looked at three famll1ee deeply attected'by President Rea1an'• bud&et c:uta, wu ....tied by aovemment offidalt. Fanning •r. an,ry reaction to a docwneruary la never toUah , and in the cue of. "Death of a Princell,'' wu not anUdpated. "Frontline" la an ambttJo\18 project modeled - after public TV'• "American Plaxhouae" .erie9 introduced a year 110. Like 'Playtioute.'' "Frontline" la adminlatered by ~ oonaort.lon of five . PBS 1tatlona -in thla cue, WBOH in Boeton, New . York'• WNET, KCTS in Seattle, WP81' ln Miami and Detroit'• WTVS. The Corporatlon for Public Broadcasting provided tS million to launch the aerln. and aubsequent 1upport waa obtained from public televlalon 1tatlon1 and the Chubb Group of "Our goal ls t o make c hallengln§ documentariee. hued on hard, tough reporting,' Fanning aaya. "and we have to be especially careful, t>ecauae we are up again.at such a litigious aocle~ the9e daya." The TV networka routinely face lawsuita eeeking millions of dollan in damages. One recent, and celebrated, example is Gen. William Westmoreland'• $120 milllon libel suit against CBS News stemming from a documentary broadcast in "An Unauthoriaed Hlltory of the NFL" wu not available for preview, and Fanning would not diacul8 the laW'luit, which he uJd wu an attempt to hamper "Fron\llne" reporter1 ln their effona to obtain certain ~o~tion. Fanning, a South African by birth who has produced public TV's "World" documentary eeries ainoe 1977, la no •transer to controver1y. He co- wrote and co-produced "Death of a Princem," a docudrama broadcut aa a "World" special in 1980 \Hl:\:l>:\Y EVINIHG 1:00 ID. NEWS CHARLIE'S ANGELS Poelng U ptoetltU1M. the Angele tr.ck• ktll« with a 0t• 911Ce f« blondea. 8 EIOHT 18 ENOUGH Tom'a alsl« hU a MCI' .. r~ for wantlnQ to 18'1• the Bradford• on • H1wallan vacation (Part I) , CJ) lldT OF MIOHIOHT SPEOIAL Hoel> H1l1n Reddy. Guettt: The BM 0..., Ofl· vie llewton-Jonn. Natalia Cole. Mlc;lcey Gllt.y, Rod Stewart. • THME'S COMPANY Jack Wlltltt to bring Chrl._ 1y'1 •-t high tchool friend home to mom, not knowing what her prof ... •Ion la. ti) HAWAII FIVE~ A computet that l'IU ~ fed with aaoneout Infor- mation thwart• McG•r· rett't murd« lnveetlgatlon. • OY!A!ASY GUM!; Wiiiard Scott (R) Q fD '98 LATENIOHT Hoet: o.nnll Whol9y. ' Cl) CM NEWS ltl MCNEWSQ a!Nee.NMI !=:Na 18 AIGHT ***"Julie" (1958) Oom Qev. Louie Jourdan. A _ ...__~ huaband when the dlKov· •• he killed ..., ,.,.. ~ bancl In order to marry '* 8:*>8) AUCE • 0tCK CAVETT Guett· Rob«t Moore (R) (()aiNEWS 0 BAAHEY MILLEA Barney utlgn• • Pf8'1y policewoman with • tooth~ to cheat out • <*11111 ac:c;uNd Of fOOllllQ around with • patient who wu under the lnftu.noe of lauQhlnQ gu. tD WOAU> Of' PEOPLE (BJ THE YEAR THAT WAS: 1112 Film dips, newa footage and original anlmttlon 111 UMct Jo c:hronlcle the moat memorable eY.ntt of the prftlou• YMf I al)M>CKOHlV .MOY!! •14 "Jutt Tall Me Tllllt• , You Low Me" ( 1971) Aob- "1 Hagyet, U.. Hartman. A newcomer to th• Hawaiian llland of MfUI falle In with • ~ ....tlO ti.al from hotel room• 'PO' 7:00 I CM NEWt NeCHEWt HAPPY DAYS AOAIH Fonzie lallt tor • woman wtlOM llfa C*ltaft around , the ctty't country dub Mt. • I :CAP NEWI Q Jea*8 ~ out of her coma: Euna win• Outcti from Corinne: Burt and Danny r_...,. blackmail jlhOtoe. i =·tCOMPAHY Jtdl mu.I come up with • tempot81')' wife to detaf hit bola'•~ daugl\· ter. 11 J()t(MI WILD ...... ~ Cl) , .... MACIAZJHI Moto«:ycla daredM Ell'al l(nllWI .,,..,.,_ few • ~: llnO«• ~ ~ • COllnlty nllialc ... IOC* ..... llllNTIM~ TONlllHT All .,...... with ....... Olbert. • OMNQICOUNTY TOOi\Y (ll)llOVll ···~ '"'*-'' (1Ma). ..... ~ ... -r AourH. A Blftlmor9 ._ II IN...,.,. for. quMtal KNXT anchorman Jeu Marlow explores Mexico's oil industry, p rofiles life in Mexico City, the tourist industry an~ prospects (or Mexico's future at 7 :30 on Channel 2. of young men _.. during the time wn.n the Pf'M- turM of MS\lltt!Ood ata lhrMtenlng 10. dilC>e<M them.'R' (%)MOYIE • • • "8re•Jclng Th• Sound 81rrler" (1952) Ralph Rlel\ardaOn. Ann Todd. Ari lnwn«lr IUften persona l tragedy and hwdtNp In hit ciu-1 to produc• • eupereonlc plane.- 7:80 II MEXICO: THE CMIS J"a Marlow explorff ~1eo·· oil lnduslry, pro- fllae Ille In Mexico City, the tourist lndUltry and pt09- pecte tor MexlCO ·a Mura. a a FAMILY F£UD 8 LAVIANE & SHIRLEY &COMPANY D EYEONL.A. FMtured: -Obie dancing: outlandlat'I mulca; John SchMld« and Tom Woe>et ol "Ouk• of Hazzard." 9 MADAMrS~' • WKAI' IN CIHCINNA Tl Andy'• u-glflfrlend, now • fa.move recording ttar. com-to town tor a -* of~. ' I TIC TAC DOUGH MACNllL I LB4MI' M.PORT ID SNEAK PMV1EWt HNI Gabl« eld Jeffrey Lyona dlacusa hOW they tudge a ITIO'M, wlUI _,.. from "Rod!y Ill." "Raldara Of Thi Loat Afk.n "Dinar .. and "Body Heat.'' (R) t1ll YOU AIK.ED FOA rt Futured. "Pde> Without A • Mallet" end "Strangeit Hot ell In The Worid." • WHArt UY UNI! <Ji) FMGGl.E ROCK The Fraeglla fOrm a ,_. cue petty to ~ their lrtend Wemble'Y. wtlo hM ~ caiptind by the giant '* i!ir..:::ACU8· Anlmeted. Snoopy. •trick· en with • bad c:eM of ~ ft J P"I· lo\l9, "'"' ew-v and Join• the j)lroua to b4I ,_ the poe>dl9 of hhl dreMIL (R) Q 8 UTTLI HOUSE: A NEW llEOINHIHO IMlah Ed'warda ttumbla onto a rot>t>ety and II mll- tallanty Identified .. • member of the lnfamoua Younger Bfothwt gang. Q , • MOV1I •• • • "Notortoue" (11M1l Cwy Onnt, "'9fld hfVman. All Amwtcan unct.c:ov. agent I*· .,.,,.. tM deuQht• of • trlffor to lnfl!trllt• • oano of .... IMng In loum - Amer1a9. 8 111 THAT'I ~ ,..,,,_,: • man ,..... __ by._ ....... ~ '° .-..: an """"" tor whO powera ->11*111 1n ,.,.. noma llY pec1111ng • .1 ... K~tlndl 0 Il l blu: • pit l>IJll d0g that 11 WI axpen wat91'1kler; aur- gaofll c:reate MW flnOarl from Pf•tlcally notfllnO. 1:=.HOGAN Miiiie daclclM ,... no long· er wantt IO rMnY 0enor. Mary, wlCtl two lkKta In Mr .... doubta her unity. • ,_..., MACIAZINI The Golder! Appia ,._lb; mot~daredfttl EWI --~ ~-. c:omebac:tl. • MOYll • • • ··T•atve Anory Men" (1957) Henly Fonda. LM J. CoOC>. A man holOt out ~ -11 t.llow Jurora. when they decide an accuMd tnuf deraf 't gullt belate he II provtn IMo- canL • nQfTLM (Premiere) •• Ari Uneuthof· !MCI Hla1ory Of Thi NFL" JM.ic. Savltctl r..,.... • hlatory of~ -dlll In the NFL and looka It t~ ralatlonahlp ~ pro football and fh• Aatlon'• legal and llteOal ·==n..· PLAY~ "()ppenMlm«" In 11M2, I Oppenheimer MlecU Loa Alamoa, New Meltlc:o tor · the ~ of the compound • ..,.,. he end other IClan- 1111• wlll CMrj out their '~·(Part 2lQ • COl.l..ma IAIKETMU. c.tlfomla GOiden 8-w • ..... $1aMerd catdlnal ~MOYll ••• ··T1111 8pOf1Jng Uf•" ( 1963) Richard Harrie. Radlll Roberti. A tue- caMlul rugby player loeM the kMI of • OOOcl woman aner taklnQ advantage of her CID MOVll * • 'h "The Man Who s .. Tomorrow" (1981) OOou· mantery. Narrated by Oreon Walle•. Footage of event• he precjlcrted and drame11c re-crNtlon• of hie Ute comptlM thhl look , at the 17th-c:9ntury Fr9f)Cll l)hytlclan, .. .,o1oger Md myatlc, Michel OI Noltr .. o-. llnown .. Noatf .. damua. 'f'O' (l)MOYll • • "COUt To cour (IMO)~ c.tlnon, "<lt>- af1 Bl••· A run•••Y houleWh Md • ac:tl!P9Y trucller heullng cattle OOMI to -t beoolM Ille t.wget of • wild ·-• country chMe. 'f'O' .MOVll • • * "Tti. Clncl""ltl Kid" (1H5) lte .. McOl.!Mn. ldwtrd G. .... INOn. A ,_.. _.._, .,_ eo .... IN 1111'1 of ... poei., Ill ...... "' 8*' .-ar~TH't' NCH TN lectie -..,.._. wMr'I ltantey ~ to apclfl80f Wiid Ill llld ltoot"8 '°' ,,..,,.,., .... lft .. _,,.,~. <!> OHAN.11'1 MGllL.I l(fte ~ 10il41111IOll) llWotwed "'91 -.. .. _,...lft ... ._. ... '::--.,, urrnton. ~,,. :,:':,.t:": .-.: .... ""' ....... .................... .. !i'A·~M --·-.......... ~--P.!!t .. make• .,., hero of • North KorMn pilot. (Rf~ D CltMOYll "Walt TIN Your Mother Gett Home" (Pramlare) Peul MlchNI Gluer, 0.. Wallace. A high tdlo9f football Coach beeomee I hou11hu1btnd for tht eummer when Ille wl,. tak" her llrtt )ob In 15 ~·· 8 Q'.I AM!RICAH MUSIC AWAN>I MIC 01vl1, Aretha Franklln and Mell... Maneheetaf ho11 the annual ceremony honoring perlorm8ft In l>OP"fOCll. eountry and _,. mullc (fr91" the SMM AudltOl'lum In Lot Angelae. Caltt.). D '°"THI LOY! cw A OHll.D • HlAL'N411AT •GMAr ~ "A Ring For T .......... " TM making of the eight· part pr-tlltlon of Rich- ard W1gn8f'• oper1t1c cyc1a, "The Ring or nw Nlt>elungt." la CSOCUmtnt• eo. ID fM>HTLM (Premiere) "Ari Unauthof· IDd Hlltory Of The NFL" .,..,.. 8a¥11Ch ,......., • hlttory of hUlhed-up IC&l\- dal In rile NFL Md lookt at 1 the ralatlonltllp bet- pro tootbell 1nd the nation'• ltgll and Illegal ~bllng lnduatri.. (g)~ * * ·'* "OuM1 F« Fire" (tll81) E.,.,elt McGiii, RM Dawn Chong. Trv• mem-t>tr' of I l)tahlltOl'lc tribe that llun't the knowledge fOf mllllng fir• era _,, In ... ,en of • ,_ f9U'Cl8 wn.n their contlnUoualy bl.ttnlng pll01 "'8 la -~ ~· • • ''Tiii OtloMn" (19U) RollDy Beneon. Barry Ml- laf. All unlllely frlenOlhlp dev~• t>etwMn two YOl#10 "'*"· deii>lt• -· moue oulturll dm.t-. 'PO' t'.IO I ~HA"1 :--*•~ ''Too Mudl, Too Soon·· ( 1959) Oorottfy Malone, &rol Rynn. Jonn Barrymore'• d1ughlar, Olene, tuftw• '-11><• dMplta being WMlthy _, fa.move. • M•A•t•H When Hawt11Y9'1 parent1 -notified thf,t he'• dMd, 1141 find• It no Mey 1Mt18f to •t•bllen tllet he'• alllia. CB) NOT Nlc:al•M.Y THINl!M Comedy tk .. dlM oomblM with dMllC' lllm and -footage In .,, offbeat, Mtlflc tak...off. 10:00 I Cl) CAe»e' & LACEY ...... JACd AND 9'0Y JllCllie Caln llld her ..,.. band "GY Kral parfOrrn orlgln•I compoaltlone, .now lunM Md blllade. ID IEHTWW · "The 8elllng 01 Terri Olbbe" Tiie -•d-~ country-twld-..wm q. 91' I• folloo#ed .. .,,. tliM IOI' a MCOnd hit lltlllm to 11111 her rlM to euper•ltlJr· dom. !=::"4HAH • * *'A "Gimme Shalt•" (1970) Rolllng Stonee, ~­ fereon Alrpl-. Thie docu· mentwy of the RoNtno Ston91' 19" American tour lncludM tcenet ol the rioting Md murder at an Altamont Spaedway frM eonc«t. • ®MOV!a • • "The Eitter!ftlnator" ( 19101 Chrlttophar 0-ge. 81m1ntha E90at. After hie WIJr buddy .. left parelyMCI 111 1 ,..., Yorll youth oang, • VllMMI wt daoldH to tell• Ill• rewnee by nNrderlng •tr... Ctimlnala ttwOUOfl gruHoma, 1or1uoue .,_..1" (l)MOYll *"' "In Pr.... Of Otder Women·· (1971) Tom l«9ftlll', ~ 8iadl. A ~ lolhatlO rtrnln-..,.. "' .... '*' "'tfN"llC con_... "°"' NI .. el -..... ,2 .......... tlon .. a~-~. "I cer1alnly wu not looking (or trouble," he uya. "And I did not eX1>9Qt the kind of reaponiie that the film got. "But we were cutttna into new territory. It wu not 'Behind Cloeed Doon'," he a&YJ, apparently re!errtna to an ABC minlaeriee ~hon\ "The Company," an lnalde·th~White novel by fonner prelidenUal aide John Er . Much of the crttidam of "Dea of a Prtnoe..," which was baaed on actual eventa, centered on the KNXT (2) 8:00 -"Life-is a Circus.- Charlie Brown." Snoopy, stricken with a bad case of puppy lqve, runs away and joins the circus to be near the poodle of his dreams. 1<.ABC (7) 9 :00 -"American Music Awards." Mac Davis, Aretha Franklin and Melissa Manchester host the annual ceremony honoring performers in pop- rock, country and soul music. lnaUrance compan1e1. : At least two other documdntarte1 have been:, tcheduled, "88 Seconda in G~naboro." from Jan.''. 24, on the 1979 kill1na of five Communist Worke,.. · ~member, tn North Carolina, and "In the Stu w of the ~pltol," from Jan. 31, on bard timee tn Waahington. n.c. A number of othen are in varloua at.ages of production. II«, 811 C<>eby Two lltlablt crootta attempt to mutaf the IJr1 ol the rlp-oH while being bleckmallad Into tlellllng ..... .,.1 c:ommunl- 'l'.J>CObtemt. 'PG' 1:M llJ MOVI! • ••'h "Penni.. From HHven" (1981) Stall• Martin, 8emeda1t• Petert. In the MldWMt during the Daprelllon, • theal mualc Ml•tm•n d11troy1 the 11¥tt of thOM around him becauM of hit unbridled Mlflthneu and hi• ballet that Ill• can b4I u It I• In eonga and movie mullell production numb8ft. 'R' 2:00 8 Cl) C88 NIWS NtGHTWATCH SOAPWOAU> 1:30 8NIWI ll()OAAPH'f ed Olracted by Yoram Gron . A young glrl b41ComM Iott In the Aut- 1 r all an buth and It b91rlandacl by • kangaroo who gl\'91 M< a llft In ltt poudl. D ~•"The lrlthman" ( t978} Mlchael Crajg. Robin ""'1n. A proud lrllh- man ret'b-10 yield to pr0gra11 when hit bull· nett U a tMll!llaf It tnrHtllned by motorized tran19Dr1at1on. 7:00 (!) * *°" "Hiid• Crane" ( 19~) JNn Simmon•. Guy Madlaon. A ~lvorced woman return• home to datafmlM wn.re en. may haw gone WYong. KNBC (4) 9:00 -"Wait Till Your Mother Geta Home." Paul Michael Glaser. Dee Wallace. A hiSh school football coach - oecomes a nousenual>iilaTQr lie summer- when his wife takes her first job in 15 years. I WIWAM~U .....,... -MOW t CD) * * 14 "The S.0-et Agent" 119311 JoM a .... gud, Madeltlne CvrOll. Two IC>lee pelf off M man and-..ttw1'rorder' .. Amelia E.wNwf•• • ~-F•40HI TM ~ llllenda call Ito~~.::::• " NI LATWNIGHT Hott: Oennla Whell9y. ~=""ING GOf.lf •'**'A "'our Friend'" (t911) Clalg Wuaon, Jodi Thelen. Thr• high ICflOOI buddlea take HParate road• to adulthood '"" graduation but continue to be united by MeodaNp and their ~ for tti. l8lria womM.'R' 11!IO . (I) ~JOHN. M.O. Tiie --et San Franct. oo General ttlfMlen to (IO Ofl ltrtke. (R) • D 8t-.. taT °" CAMON Hoet: Johnny Careon. ~~.-­bar• Mandt... Victoria PtlnQpel. ..kAa Mlganel JohntMI. IRI e &MCNIWI ~ G 'fOU AIKID '°" IT ~ "Polo Without A Malllll'' end "Str9119Mt M4*ll In The World.'' • MCWll • '** "TO? Hot To Han-dle'• ( 11Nl Cler1I Gal*, • MyrM LO)'. A r~af falll In ._ wttll ,.,.. rlllal'• oin- fttand ....... craetlng IWI own'*" acoope. I l'OQJI OH iOC'l'TY 7'00CW9 MOYll .,,. ''Evwythlng OOM Wiid" I tHO) Ch1rlla 8'welntr. Etilia Cool. HUI- ' blJrld.and-wlfe dtMa ltlop °"'""' o.ad9 to WOlil dlf. ,.,.,,. ahlftt 10 ral•t• ~ Maly to their petrone. •r.t0v. •• *" ••Monty Python A/Id The Holy Ofall" { 197 •I OrllNm CMpman. JolW'I a.-. King Mfluf and hl1 t>and ol llnlght• encounter glenta. rtddlara and • larocklu• rabbll In their -Ch f« the legend- ~cue>. 'f'O' 11:46 CH) MCMI •• \4i ""-"" Oofa" ( 1Ma) 8el'll ..... Wattflll 0.t"-A N9w ZMlander -•Ing llOlatlon from IOdety •tier 1111 ITl8rtlage dlllntegfat•. ~ • lonely hero "'*' caugtl1 In the l'ftldcll4I of • revotutlon. 1l:OO. 8'1"MrA1~ TONIGHT An lntaMtw wit~ Mall11a Glib«\ .• I ULMTWON> *' * "Ooc10r In Lovt" (*2> ...._. Cfalg, Vlr· ...,....._...A~ doCtOt ....,_., much to 1119 ........ tMINle.,, lflcur.ote '°"""*· i:AMINOAH ITYU "Low Md Tha v~·· A~_... ... ... their llJrlcllOtd ... wrnplr9. ''Low Anet Tiie M*a oi-..·· The meelC .. ""' °"' of .... and Audrtl(• er=.. ••• "Qa(llpoll'' (1N11 Mii O!Mon. ,.... LM. Two AuMNllln ....... .... OOllll-9W...,..,. '*'°'........ • up 10 fight In the Mlddll E.Mtern tnewe OUttng WOt1d Wfll 11.·PG' 1:tOI CC> MOYll •• "hinging cn-ield· ... , ' tl:tO D al LAT! NIGHT WITH .. DAW> IATTIMolAN Oueet: wry Lewta. (R) • TOM COTT\.a: U, CLOll (!) TOM OCITTL.a: "' a.Oii Gueet: Franc:MOO kawl· lo. • LOW. AMUllCAH ITYLI "Lov• -And Th• -Lo..,. Potion" POiiy rMOm to mag!Q to get Fftddy to Poe> the QUM11on. "Low And The Motel'' Ann and Woo-"'! arrange • motel ,.,..._ --. tt:AO . Cl) COWt.190 COlulftOo ln\Wtlgat• • rollbery-elaylng and ~ Mllti ....... _ and i-tl!U. thet IMd to bllck(ull and ,_der. (A) 1• 1 .. MJfJ!('f MCWll -* * "Thi Lett Angry Man" {117•) Pat Htngia, Lynn Cf/l1ln. A 1111 CM led Cloe:tor ~ to Nvoa tn. 1119 Of -Of ... llOocalum.a reaponelbla fOI' rvnnlng him out of the neighbor• hood. i=:'AMIR ....... ,~ .. (1 .. 9) ert- 111 OonleYy, Illa RllMI. A ,,.. oOllCltM plo1 by • women and her peramour 10 dfapOM of '* IMt>and vie.,, "ICCldent9f" Oaath blcllftrw lronlcmly tor the ~-· 111 INTIMM .. IT TONIQMT All ~ ... M""'8 Ollbelt. .MOYll It * * M '"The lh Of 8't. .,, .. (1979) ~ahMI CMpo "*'· Jonn a-. In the tlrlt C*ltury, • ~ .. faltaly Ol'oclalfned • fN8el.. ..... ~ ....... of • oraet r911g1oua ~ "*'t 'II"'* hit ...,,.._ 'A' (%)MOW • * • "Oalllpoll" (1N 1) Mal GlbaOn, Marll LM. ~ Two AultralllJrl loot raoww wtttt oonttaltlngly dlnlrent ~ llOf'I up to fight In ltla Mlddla bM9r'll • ttlMlre during Worid War I. 'PG' • t:ao D al N9C NIWI <>YIN•llHT I GIHI MnJf'f IO YOU THINK YOU CIOTT*M•D (D)MOYll ••• 14 "Ch•rlH And L'*9" (1971) 01111a1 C-' ~. OlftMte O.eln, A ----marriaOI .. -~~ • tMlr fllWIClll oondlllon dllaoov9' 9'Cfl °""' -wMI\ their '°""'* "" rod! bottom. t:M®M0¥9 • ...... NllM" f1t111 Ur* ltalr. -...nt ""' ""'-'· ,. "" .... w-tl•11on. fraternity and ~ ...... ...... a ,...... Ill • ..-.iy, ...,._.. .., ---IMllllon. .,_. tM(l:)MCMI **~"A fl'lloe Ot Tiw Ailllon" (1117)....,. ..... ***"' ""-nnlea from HNvan" (19111 Stave Mftltln, 8«nadette P9tata. In the MlcMM1 durlnQ IN Oepreulon, ...... mualc ui..man dn1roye th• W-of tlloM wound him ~ of Na unbridled MlfllMeM and hit ballef that 1119 cen b4I M It II In IOnga and mo-Ae ~ Pfod\ICUOn num"'8. 'R' 1:00 ~ =-H\Mf • * • "Br••klng The Sound Barrier" ( 1952) Rllph RletlardllOll, Ann • Todd. An lnYWttor tuHtfl par1onal lragedy and hardthlp In Illa quat 10 produce • auplrtonlc pl-. 8:15 CH> MQVI! * * * '-" "fOIUI frlendt" (11181) Craig w_,, Jodi Thelen. Thr .. high aChool buddle• Ilk• 199erata roed• to MSulthOOd •ft« 9faduatlon but continue 10 b4I united by lrlendtnlp and their low tor Ule -'#OITlll'l.'A' • 1:30 ~=20 ~eeond H•nd Heart•" ( tHO) Rober1 Blaka, Bf/Ibara Hanta. A T-CM-wuh allendlJrlt walcea up -morning 10 find ttlat he It married to • nightclub waltrMa with . ""-klda. •pQ· Ml(J)MOVI! • • "Falcon'• Oold" (1882) Jofln Marley. SJmon MacCot'klnd•. A ecoop. hungry jOUrnallst lottowa .,, f/ICllMOlogllt and hit daught• In their Narah tor • iaglndftly gold trMtUr• In the Melllc#I Junglil. 4:00 CJ) TCW O' THI MON•tea ~M0\1'11 • '* * '4 "WllOM Ula la It A,..,..,,, .. ( tN 11 Rldllrd °'ayfu••· JOl!n CeNI· ........ Par~ from the '** down In .,, eutomo- blla eocldanC. .. acutptor r"'**°*9 about hie Mt. before and efoquantly arguee for 1111 right to die 'R' 4:JO i ::;.WNl(U • • "Joaaph Andraws" (t9m Ann·Marvet. ,...., firth. A young mtn'a flaM. bo)'anl •Hair• of rom.,_ CllUM ICandal among the ltald end •t\lffy Englleh- men of the VlctOtlan erL 'R' T tw•dat1'• Daw•••e Mo.,1.-. '. 1.-00 (%) ••*'-'"four Frland1" ( 1910 Cr•IO· WHIOn, Jodi Thelen. TllfM nlgll ldlOOI buddlte take MPtf•te roed• to adUlthOod 8'181' llf'adU8tlon but oonttnue to be united by lrlelldlfllp Md their lo'l9 lot "" -women. .,_ • •.ao CD) • • "J.O. And TM Slit Flit Kief' I 1171) 8llnt Pldl· en1. Wiiie trawlln(I to ~ 1wO mualCllJrlt 110CMn9 10 INlllie It b10 In COYntry ""'*° .,. ..... ~_,.,.... .... •'N' uo CCI • • "eon.,... .. ~OUIM.~ .................. ......... .., to OllHllll ......... ® • ·~ "004 Md Tiie ~·· (11111 Ml!Ne· down an enemy aganL C%l • * "Thunder tn The City" (1937) E~ 0. Roblneon, Nigel 8tuce. A • blg·tlme AIMt1clJrl PfO-• moter arnv.. In London • laden with g~ and - bright adYlf1191ng ldMe. 7:IO * • * "EMI" ( llr7t) Kun RlllMll, Saeaorl Hub- lly. EMI PrM!ey ri.e from . poyet1y end Obacurlty lo tchlevt fl11"9 and IOl'1unt at • eul)Wttar mutlcal per- f0fm81'. • 1:00 ct) • • "Cannonball Rufi" ( 11181) 8ur1 Reynold•. Dom 0.LUIM. Varlova oddball character• com pet a In • •.I COUl·IO-COUt euto ,_, 'PG' (}D *** "Galllpoll" (1118t) Mal Olbaon. Mn LM. TWO AultrallM foot racw1 with conlrut ngly different perlonall!Jee algn up 10 fight In the Middle EH18fn tnea'ira during WOttd Wf/I II. 'PO' l:IO ••• ••Ruckut" (11180) OiR Benedlc1, Unda 81a1r. A llhelt-thoellad VletNm .,.. dlltutbl the ~ of • ematt A1ab41ma tO'#I\. 'PO' --"~ 'fVC(tM~-1--__!I OltlMy Colan\an. Arc:Na ~ A near-bantuupt TV 11at1on ct11Jr10M It• format to ... ra11g1ou1 progtam- mlng 'PO' ..00 tD • * \t "Letter Ol lntto- duCIJon" (1938) George MIKp!fty, Ann SheridWI. Alp Mplring llCtr-trlM to mua It without the help of her flf!IOUI tattler. CD) * * "Ouet For fOIUf" ( 111821 Mic• Preaton. ~ Ciiento. An ~trallan toy lmpc>f18f wtloea bualnttt'lt • on the llcld• le abandoned ~hltwtfa. tO:OO CCJ . *. "Bit• Tiie Ek.11- lef' (19751 a-Hactlman, Candie. a.gen. A frontier newapaper aponaora • r-agalnat time ICfOU the Wntern badland• . 'PO' ••• "' ''Acroat The Greet OMde" {1971) Rob-: ert Logen. .._thef .Ret· lr9)' Two orphaned Chll- drtn Ml out alotie ac:tOM the Rodly Mount.ma In order to ctlllm • '""' In 1 Oregon wNdl they ""*"· ad 'G' ().) *** ''TNV.LP.a" ( 1"3) Ebatlettl Taylor, RicNtd lur1on. Aa .,.._ eenoer• of • daleyed ftlgftt await talt.-ofl In the VIP lounge of t London air· pon, their ._ blCom9 curlouely In~ • ***'_."Time Ben- dite" (1tf1l Clalg Wll· nooll. 0.vld WfllMI. A young bOy II tallan on a trip through time by • band of dlllllnU11W -*"' b• outlaw• wtio haw r 11CMa11 • tim.warp m1P trom the Supr-&etng. 'PO' CZ> ••• "The All*'ICln Friend" (1977) Oennll lolopt)8f, BrUllO Oam.A young ~ pic1U( .. tramw II hired 10 ......._ ,....~. U:IO (D) •• * "Mr. Anet Mn. Smltll" ( 11M 1) Carota Lom- bard, 0.,. ~. A 90"'* Cllllclowl' Dy I ftuk• ftlft """ (M"1ata " ... ,a:oo r ...... """ °' Tiie Anflitil" (ltN) Rod....... . lrtln~.MllMll•M H •Contederatt ~ IOlll8•itou• .... .. USlm111-• .... 8f '*"'when he,..... ... hit tNt IOYlltlll .. .. me.._ man 9'W Ill. " llllJPllDI MONDAY, JAN. 17, 1883 tASSlfl fD cs Beasley finds his new rOle app ·ealing~ Chris Beasley Ex-OCC s tar supplyin.g lilt to ASU in reserve role •'71 • r By CURT SEEDEN Beesley, la the all-time No. 2 800rer in "It'• really the fint time I've ever had Of •t. Deity Not,..., Orange Coast College basketball annals. ·to come off the bench," admita Beaaley, a Chris Beasley spent ~ears playlng Hia 1,002-point total over two years ha.I third-team All-"CIF performer when he basketball at Orange i College -been bettered by only John Vallely played at Costa Mesa High. - earning scoring honors in the proceas -(1,538). "The last rew games since I've in preparation for that first blg gaine as a lie was lured t.o Arizona State not only-_ returned (from the injury) I've be.en lQ member of a four-year college team. for hls bdketball prowess but for his there at the end of the game. And that'• Wben he finally did make his grand ability on the pitching mound. important t.o me. I'm happy being ln entrance 'beforetfieno~crowcrn --Come-March-or-.April and barring---there;"-he-says-. - Arizona State, it took &asley just 10 injuries, Beasley wiU be out t.o make hi.a HeasJey seems t.o be making the most seconds to find his way back to the ~=ence known with the Sun Devil ·of his situation. He plays behind a pair of bench -limping. ball squad, u well. talented guards, Shawn Holiday .and "I went up for a rebound against For now, he's the first or second Byron Scott, 1he latter considered an Connecticut and came down on an player off the bench for the Sun Devils' All-American c!ahdidate. • opposing play~rs's foot. I really tore up basketball squad. His presence has been He's also playing for a team \Yhlch my ankle," he recalls. well felt. He acored all six ASU points in must cope with nationally ranked UCLA That was the Sun Devils' first home overtime in a victory over Texas Tech at each year. ~make matt.era worse, the game this season, and Beasley has been the Rainbow Claaaic in Hawaii. Sun Devils have had a tendency t.o fall on the slow mend eYer since. _ He also had 10 points in Arizona just short this season. "I'm averaging about 22 minutes per Stat.e's win over USC last week. ASU has dropped seven games this game and I'm happy with that so far. After two years of being the shooter, season. Among the defeats are a Once I start getting healthier I'll be the team leader and the key to his team's one-point setback to DePaul in overtime, better. All I know is my foot sure hurts succcess, Beasley seema.to be adjusting to one-point defeats to both Missouri and the day after a game." his role as a reserve . UCLA, a two-point loss to Providence and a three-point defeat at the handa of Kanaas State. The ankle injury forced Beasley to m1as half of the Sun Devila' gamee but ·not their victory over USC in which he ~red 10 poil\,ts. •• "I was pretty excited about beatJna . USC pretty handily. Most of my pointa came from tne oUli.ide. Heck, I'm not going t.o try to take It in against lho.e big guys." the 6-1, 188-pounder admits. "I think going to Orange Coast really helped me. If I had gone t.o a major college right out of high school, there I.a a pretty good possibility of sitting for a couple of years," he says. "This way, I was ready to come in and help out riRht away." Beasley al.eo figures t.o lend a helping ., hand to the Sun Devil baaeball aqUad, but he figures he'll miaa as many as 25 games because of his role as a reserve (See BEASLEY, Page CZ) ., Miaini, Cowboys ·eager for re01atches ... ·---... - . -__ ................. --··---····-···~ . ----·-----·--·------!-,_,... Dallas get s Reds kins afte r win IBVING, Texas (AP) -The Dallas Cowboys were wanted - by the Washington Redskins. and they got their wish. Dallas outlasted the Green Bay Packers 37-26 Sunday in a wild, free-wheeling battle to set up a Cowboy vs. Redskins shootout Saturday for the National Football C o nf e rence championship. Washington's only loss t"his year was 24-10 Dec. 5 -to the Cowboys. And how will Dallas Coach Tom Lan d..r y feel being ~µ rrou nde_d by a 11 those Redskins, not unlike his credit card? "It's for the championship, we'll go anywhere," Landry said, wblhing it was going to be as easy as swinging through the saloon doors of his commercial and leaving hi.a adversaries behind. "THE FIRST TIME we played . Washington it was a matter-of-fact game," Landry said. "We IDd them a lavor by beating them. If they had beaten us they would have gotten cocky." The Cowboys had t.o survive a pumped-up Packer team t.o make it to lhe i r 10th NFC championship game in 13 years. It took 14 points in 14 &eCOnds, thre e field goals by Rafael Septien, a fourth -quarter touchdown pass by Danny White, a 14-yard "receiver-t.o·receiver" pass, an 89-yard kick-off return by rookie Rod Hill, and three interceptions by D e nnis Thunnan t.o subdue the Pack. "It was a great game for the fans," said Landry. "Most people hadn't seen Green Bay play. They can play. But we made the plays we had t.o." -.,Pallas built a 20-7 halftime lead and most teams would have wandered t.o their dressing room in 1hock. Afte.r two Septien field goals. Green Bay took a 7-6 lead on a 6-}'a(d pass from Lynn Dickey t.o Jalnes Loft.on. •THEN DALLA~stru c k . Timmy Newsome scored on a 2 -yard run with 1: 18 left. rourieen aeconda later Thurman returned a Dickey pall 39 yards for a touchdown. Refusing to belly up. Green Bay'• Jan Stenerud kicked two tJeld aoaJa to another one for Septien after Hth'1 kickoff return. 1hen the Packen struck. ' Lofton duhed 71 yards for a tDuchdown on an end around t.o ~w the count t.o 23-19 in the low1b period after Hill blocked the extra poUa\. Stung, White took the Cowboys 80 yarda and flJpped a , _yard &'Orinl pus to tialtt end ~CGlble. or.en Biy retaliated on Mark Lee'• 22·yard lnteroeptJon return b a touchdown. ~ 1Andry dedde«f ~ .. ~. He ordered wlae .... "" Drew Pwwori to throw wide receiver Tony Hill. 'The lay covered 49 yard• and ullback Robert NewhouH ..... nea 1th• final yard for th• ame-cUnchtna touchdown at :22 to Ola7. Arnold Palmer misses a putt and Gil Morgan makes one in Sunday's final round of the LA Open. ~ -Palmer's charge falls short Morgan wins LA Op en, b ut th e 'King' gets the attention . By HOW ARD L. HANDY lt*ilel to the D.., ll'lot LOS ANGEL.ES -Time ran out for the King at the Glen Campbell Loe Angeles Open golf tournament Sunday as Gil Morgan won his tee0nd 1traight PGA tour victory with a final round 68 t.o outdistance the.field by two strokes. The King, Arnold Palmer, drew virtually all of the gallery attention during the day and at one point in the final round,.actually held the l~ after getting birdies on two of his firlt five holes. But Palmer aa.ld hi.a atrength failed him on the beck nine u he bo8eyed four holes and flniahed the day at '12, one-over-par and a 275 total that put hlm·ln a tie for 10th place. - . Mark McCumber, a virtual unknown arpong the leaden who flnilhed m a tie tor fourth place at the Crosby Southern lalt lalt year, played a 1te.dy round and wu Ued for tl\e lead or held lt alone for most of the day. But Morpn blJ'died the par-3 17th and thA teemed to unnerve the you.nc pro who three-putted the flnal hole. He flnilhed ln a tie for. leCOIMI wtth a bocey lnltMd ot wtnnlnc -=ond outriaht. Inti.ct of piddn8 up a check for 132,400 for undlaputed MCC>nd place, he htld to IMtle for a eplit and t2J.400, a dlff~ of f 10,000 I« tlM _.. ebol en the anal bole. H"e ~ whh Lmny Wadldnt and Olbby om.n. Morpn won tM.000. The ~ Palmer •tarted the day in champblithlp fMhion, flnllhln8 U.. flOnt nine at aa, ~under·pu ancf one ..,... behind Wadkinl who waa lMd&nl at the ~. #'- • "I felt very good out there today," Palmer said. "One thing, you have t.o feel strong t.o play thls game and I fel\ strong on the front nine. I played the nine very well except for the three-putt green at No. 6 and .my second 1hot on No. 9." Palmer, how..-er, started the back nine with three ttraight bogeys and that was the end of his challenge for all Intents and purpoees. "I rushed itie tee shot on No. 10 and It was a tre~endoua letdown. I never recovered," he added . ''My putting probably bothered me the qioat but I am reuonably encouraged with my 1arne rleht now and th.la tournament anewered aome question.a I had in my mind. My phytiieal condition helped my aolf. "I feel I have t.o be •trona throuahout a round and I wasn't u •trona aa I would like on the back nine. I aot too falt on my acond ahot on nine and on my drive at 10. I totally loat It on thoee two ahota. "Under the preeaure, l didn't hJt eome of the ahotl u crllp u I would Uke. The bottom line LI that 1 haven't been in thJa position for a lon1 time and now I'm looktn1 forward to playlna ln more toumamen&I. "If I hid 80u.tl ·a p>d 11art. on the beck niM, the ~te im,ht haw ha&>PeMd. Bu' U cbdn t. WWa .,... guct1n1. Ii could have beet\ dlff...._ "l WM ll'Unc to 8 point .... [ w.m't hJtttna the t.11 etlonl "'°"'lh to compete. The 1MI two W..U l have '8ken • new approach and hopefully, wUh • llUle Pl1IC:dct It W'l1I cmMt out rflht." -The crowd stara.d to dwutdle wh.n •• • Palmer fell from contention and there weren't. very fllAJ\Y on hand when Morgan and McCumber flniahed their round. The count for Sunday was 26,890 and most had left the courte when the final putt waa made . Morgan, a double winner for the first time in his career (he won at Tue.on in the year's first tournament) posted hi.I lixth tour victory. He bepn his career in 1973 and in 1976 played at Irvine Cout in the Crosby Southern. He had w<>n the LA Open prevtoualy in 1978. He wa1 tied with playlna partner McCumber after 16 boles, each at 13 under par. "I Uled a 1-tron on the pU'·3 17th hole and hJt It about 1~ feel from the pin," Morpn laid. ''Mark waa in the rt,ht frlnae about 30 feet away. Hit putt Upped the cup u lt had Oii No. 16 and I went ahMd of him there. "Mark played a tteedy round ioday but that three putt.,._ on 18 kind of made thinel Hider for nw." Morpn'• tee ahol at 18 went into the crowd but hit a lpeetator and ltoPDed. It could have been trouble ancf -1tven Mc:Cam~ new lite hid lt 80"8 throuah • the crowd. "With a am** Md at 18, I deaded to hit a little drtYet and I blocbd lt a lime b6t. I wu tryln, to 1•t it where I could two-putt and t M!Ped." Moraan'• triumph md.d a 4-Y of ca. pf tn which no fewer U'8I\ lS playwn bad a lhot at &alUna ovw the '-cl with a low-ecortnc round Of 14 or 15. . . Dolphins earn shot at Jets MIAMI (AP) -Miami Coach ; Don Shula wore a broad smile I and his eyes glowed in J anticipation of next Sunday's I American Conference championship game against the New York Jets. "Two teams from the AFC East . . . It should be aome kind I: of battle," Shula said Sunday after the Dolphins' top-ranked National Football League defense-shut down the San Diego Chargers' high-powered offenae I in a 34-13 wmlfinal victory:' "We all have a rt. deal of reepect for the Je1a, ' aid Shula.' ~club ~led New -Y.ork - twice durin1 the strike-shortened, nine-game regular aeaaon. "We didn't beat · them for four years, eo we know t what they are capable of doing t.o I us." The 8-3 Jets, who defeated the Los Angeles Ralaen 17-14 in the• other AFC semifinal on Saturday, and the 9-2 Dolphins will collide in the Qrange Bowl • The winner will· advance to; Su r Bowl XVII' in Pasadaut on . 30. f. "THE JETS have always been I tough on us," said Miami quarterback David Woodley,. alluding t.o New York's 1tring of • seven victories and one tie ' against the Dolphins from 1978-81. "We've been doing eome I goqd things against them thia 1· season and we'll need tot- continue." The Dolphins snapped the. eight-game winleslf streak with 1l 45-28 seuon-opening ·victory at I New York, and nipped the Jets 20-19 on Uwe von Schamann's last-minute field goal laat month. t Sunday's triumph aven,ed a t bitter 41-38 overtime lo. to the Chargers ln the AFC aemlflnals a year ago, and again left San Diego frustrated in its pursuit of the Super Bowl. "I still think thi1 ta a great , team and I'm proud to be a part t of it," aald quarterback Dan Fout.a, rejecting suggestions that the Charger• added to theit 1 reputation of not being able td . win "big" gamea. '1 wouldn't trade placea with anyone." • Fouta, however, did not try JQ f hide the Cruatration. "The olde( 1 you set. the disappointment ta a i little more," aa.ld Fouts, who hat · led the team into the pi.yotfa ia. ~ put four yean. I THE ttEYS Sundat! undoubtedly were Miami'• i ability to con\rol the football I offenelvely, and contain Foute, who averaaed a NFL·recotd 32&.9 yarc:ta per pme plllllnc thll ~. "If you can have productl,,. ball control -and th.at meua keeptn1 lt awa1 from tbelr oft.me &nd putdnl po&ntl ~P on the bo9rd -you can beet• ~ Uke San DMeot" .ad Shula.• • The Dolpblm held thew fw man U.... 40 mAnU• 1m•1d 413 yard• total offen1• and aUfled rouu, wbo•eosnpiea.d only 15 of 14,..... for 111 yard1, with rtw tntef'c.'eptlona. ,,. Charllll"I Uo " ....... two kJckoffl tliat • up 10 pab:ltl bl the .ciond quartitr. ould-be lifesaver skeptical of ·theory From AP dl1patcbes · MONTREAL -The Canadian m man who pulled Carroll Rosenbloom 4 • from the surf In an unsuccessful bid to prevent the owner of the Rama from drownJnR off Florida In 1979, Ls skept..lcal of a theory that Rosenbloom waa murdered. The murder theory is to be put forward in a program produced by WGBH, the Boston affiliate of the Public Broadcasting System, tonigtit. The program -an Investigation of alleged links between organized crime and the NFL - was screened for some U.S . -reporters last Thursday and suggests that Rosenbloom's drowning may have been a deliberate act by someone in the water wearing a wet auit. Raymond Tanguay, a 40-year-old malntenance man from nearby Pointe-Calumet, pulled the NFL club owner out of the water after hearing his screams. · Tanguay was interviewed for the program in December and acknowledged over the weekend that he spotted "a black object about five feet long and about 20 inches wide," about 30 yards from Rosenbloom as he ran into the water on April 2, 1979. But he added, "It might have been a man, It might have been a fish or a boat. I saw the object only briefly and then it entered a wave in a plunging motion." Flyers win ~ighth straight on road Brian Propp scored two goals in ri1 the first period and rookie goaltender ' Bob Froese posted his first National Hockey League shutout Sunday night, as Philadelphia outsk.ated the New York Rangers, 4-0. The Flyers tied an NHL record with .their ~ighth stra!Bht victory on the road . . . Kevin McCartlay convert a pair of power~play goals In a four-goal Vancouver first period and the Canucks held on to defeat Winnipeg, 6-4 . . . Al Sef:O~d '1 13th power-play goal of the season capped a three-goal spree in three minutes of the 8eCOnd period as Chicago nqtched a 4-2 vic:tory over Detroit. onica rupt to nap tr ak Oward 011 WUU1m1 notched 20 m ot h11 ~4 polntl in th NC.'Ond half 8unda)' nltih\ aa Sffttlo anapped an eieht•lll'M lciet"' llr'ffk by E.a1 n1 Kanau Chy. 111-98. After tralllna 48·42 at halftime. the Sonic• broke a 58·58 tie and outscored the Kln11 20·8 over the flnal 6 ~ mlnutc!e of lhe lhlrd per1od to take command . . . Jl'ivo froe throw• by Rickey Greem, two by Dauy Seuy" and one by Darell Grlfflta1 ln the .final 43 teconda of play helped Utah hold eff San Dteao. 110·111 • . . Jualor Brld1emaa unk a 20-loot jumper with 12 1econd1 left for the declaive polntll aa Milwaukee, tallyU\c from a 20-poln\ deflcJt In the teeond quarter, e<l1ed Golden State, 109-108. Sldaey Moacrlef t11Ued 3'4 polntll to lead the Bucka. Quote of the day "Wide receiver Lyu Swuua, who retired from P"° football after an Uluatrioua career with the Pittsbur~h Steelers: "l promlM!d myeelf l wouldn t play 'more than five yean. Then six came, then eeven , then eight, then nine. I never thought of mytelf as really being a football player. Playing football was a fluke fro_!!.1 the t.tart." -~uisville rallies to top DePaul ,. LOUISVILLE, Ky. -Rodney m McCray scored, 16 points and led an early second-hftlf rally, boosting No. 9 Louisvllle to a 63-58 victory over DePaul in a ndtionally t e lemed college bluketball game Sunday. AL season to o pe n April 4 The American League's 1983 season will open Monday, April 4 with three games, including an afternoon contest between the Kansas II City Royals and Baltimore Orioles. On the next night, the Ang'et. will open a series against the defending AL champion Milwaukee Brewers, a rematch of last year's Championship Series ... Grand National stx>ck car champion Darrell Waltrip haa been chosen Driver of the Year for - the second year in a ·row by the National Motorsporta Prest A..ociation . . . Alabama's Emmit Klag surged past Georgia's lleracllel }Va.Iker to win-. the men's invitational 60-yard dash in 6.17 aeconda at the Eastman Invitational Indoor track and field meet ln Johnaon City, Tenn. . . . Ethiopia's Halla Ebba won the 11th Houston Marathon, finiahinR the 26-mlle~ 385-yard race in 2:12.17, three seconds ahead 01 defending champion Benji Darden. Television, radio . TV: College Basketball -Stanford at Cal, S. p.m.. Cluumel 56. RADIO: No events scheduled. Midwinters aiming for goal Yachting event hoping to lure 1,000 entries this year Most weekend regattas between now and Feb. 19 are beamed toward the r;nassive Southern California Yachting Asaociation Midwinter Regatta -oetter known as the "Midwinters" -the ~yachting event that opens the Southern California yachting season in earnest. Invitations are out for the 1983 MJdwinters and SCYA officials are posting a goal of 1,000 boats which will be competing in pleasure ports from San Diego to Oxnard Feb. 19-21. Jim S~al of Lido Isle Yacht Club, Newport Beach, ts general chairman of this year's event. The Midwinters have been struggling toward the 1,000-entry list for three years. Last year 890 boats were involved, and in 1981 the entry list totaled 923. • Race courses will be set µp at Mission Bay (San Diego), ·Dana Point, Newport Beach, .Long Beach, BEASLEY • • • From Page C1 guard on the basketball team. ASU's 75-game baseball schedule kicks ,off March 12, which means Beasley will have some catching.up to do. Beasley missed his SOSShomore year of bueball at OCC because of a problem with the number. of- acadernic units he was taking (he wu one shy of being eligible to play). So, he spent the summer playing for the Pirates' Metro League team. Beasley has already been drafted by the Chicago White Sox. He didn't Ren. but he admita a major league career does interest him. And he won't be the flrat ex-CCX:. ex-ASU player to tum pro. Pitchers Don Smith and Mike Hogan, who split their college duties between OCC and ASU, have signed contracts and are playing in the minors for the Dodgers and Houston. res~tively. Former Coast standout• Chris Johnston, Donnie Hill, Kevin Romine and Mike Sodders, four more ex-Sun Devils, are in the minor league· systeJnS for Toronto, Oakland, Boston and Minnesota. For now, however Beasley will •tick to basketball and concentrate on a current nine-day trip which will take the Sun Devils to Waahlngton and then all the way to the Meadowlands in New Jersey for a game agairuJt Iona. "Our coach (Bob Welnhauer) is taking us back east mainly ao we can get a little expmure. This LI our only 1ame eut of Chicago," Beasley explains. And one1hlng that can't hurt Beasley I.a a little exposure. whether It's on the basketball court. or baaeball diamond. Kings he-Deviled·, 5-& EAST RUTHERFORD,•N.J . (AP) -Paul G.,ne and Brent Aahton 8COrN wtlh.ln 4'7 teOOIMla of eech other in the third pttiod to llt the New Jeraey Devt1I to a 3-3 J'faUonal Hockey Lftcue victory over the Loe Angeles K1np Sunday niChL With Loa ~lea~ a.2 on John Paul Kelly's ehor~handed 1oal_ ¥1ilted by Marcel Dionne ..,.1, tn dw third perioCI, the Devtla Ued. the K'lOR wben Gape d.flecied a lhot by Tepe Levo s-t the Kiftls' pbe, ~ Keena. " *• Gtlnl'• rut.ta .,.a of the .-on. Al 10-.11, A.htoa put the Dmla ahMd to stay wS. 1111 ll'Wftth pl of Ow ..... b-in• ... ' ~rebound of a •hot by teanunate O.ve • TM5er11 deJQ.c:I for abOUt eilht mlnu• midway · the ant period wheft ,.,.. .. Dlw "4rftlf. w t.e the ...-.,..,_ betnil hit an the ..... ..,. bJ 1 lllOt off•'t,M atidl of .. o.vu.· Ml• JC.ttcblft: I .BOATING Loa Angeles Harbor, King Harbor, Marina del Rey and Oxnard. This ls the 54th year of the Midwintere'Which started ln Loa Angeles Harbor. It was expanded to accommodate the explosive growth of sailing during the last decade. 1 Large entry lis ts are expected In the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet and Sabot Classes which race over counes aet up off Oxnard, King Harbor, Long Beach anaDAna Point to give boats reptered in these popular fleets a chance to race cloee to home. A new wr\nkle ln this year's Midwinters will be the fprrdltibn of a Small Boat Arbitrary class featurin1 boats fro m 13 to 24 feet -both catamaranl and centerboarden. Thia one is being arranged by the San Fernando Valley Yacht Clu6 on a coune set up outalde Mu:tna del Bey. Olllel•lll •••ed lly 84f••llre• Low Cook of Newport Beach waa installed as commander of the Balboa Power Squadron at the squadron'• 43rd annual meeting and dinner at Bahia Corin1hian Yacht Club. Balboa Power Squadron·is a uni\ of the United Sta-tea Power Squadrons, one of the foremost boating educaCiof\ organizations. Othet officen lnltalled were Lt. Cmdr. WWiam Mathews, executive officeJ"TLt. CrndT. Cha.rlel Lake, squadron education officer ; Lt. Cmdr. R. Keith Dinsmoor. adminiatrative officer; Lt. Crndr. R.L. taley, secretary, and Lt. Cmdr. J . Blandford Jr., treasurer. Installlng officer was District Lt. Cmdr. Paul McGuire. NBl'C lereed i. e••eel raees A windless Saturday forced ~llation of the inside claales competition in Newport. Harbor Yacht Club's Winter Series. Three clalles turned out Sunday for the large boats .ailing outside oounes. Largest class was the Etchella-22 with 12 boats. The winner was Spirit, with a trio of akippen. ick Madigan, Jim Buckingham and Scott Mason, NHYC; second was Rick Hawthorne, and third was Steve Davis, both from NHYC. Winner ln the give boat Santana-20 Class wu Jane Schock ln lhe l>eJavu, and th~ winner ln the Soling Claaa, alto with five entries, was Gaston Ortiz, Balboa YC. • Sea View busy this week Unbeaten CdM, Estancia lace danserou&-foet_I iJJisht ------ Becau1e of the n ce11f ty to aquecm 14 ~amc. tnto • -1x-wMk 1pan there 1 Sea View 1A11ue *ketbaU tonl&ht -atone with Wedneaday ..wl-Frlday JMch" _ thl.t week. Tonight'• venue calla for l!•tancla (4·0) at Co1ta MeH (1 ·3), Irvine (2-2) at Newport Harbor (2·2). Corona del Mar (4~9-) ft El Toro (2-2) and Saddleback (0-4) at Unlvenlty (1-3), each at 7;30. Eatancla and Corona del Mar are trying to protect unblemished record• u they gird for a showdown on Friday at Eatancia, but each faces an opponent capable of apringlng the upeet. Costa Mesa led all the way in smotherinl( Newport Harbor Friday Jpr iU first league victory and the Mustangs are perennially tough at home. Pacing Mesa are 6-3 Ted SUu and 6-2 Dave Palmblade, a pair which has shown more hot than cold tendencies. F.stancla enters after putUng together Its most impressive performance of the year agairut Irvine with five starters acoring In double figures for the second time•ln the last three games. Corona del Mar 's !fame revolves around All-CIF guard Mike Hess and the Sea Kings Dave Palmblade usually attac k a zone with perimeter &hooting. Such is probably the case tonight with El Toro boasting 6-10 junior: center Jeff Arnold, who has been rapidly coming into his own after a back-ipjury Gl-aharn one in front at Crosby Southern By HOWARD L. HANDY Jerry Heard, winner of five S.-W .. IM Deltr Not PGA tour events, and Jack Fleck, Tim Graham of Baton Rouge, winner of the 1955 U.S. Open, La. is the tint round leader ln are in the group at even-par 71. the ninth annual Crosby Graham ~is a grau.ate of Southern Golf to urnament at McNeese State University in Irvine Coast Country Club after Lake Charles, La. and plant on firing a round <>f 66 Sunday, playing the Asian circuit 5-under-par. beginning in February. He will Graham leads Mesa Verde CC try to get his card back again th1a club pro Art Schilling a nd year to compete on the PGA another young PGA tour pro tour. Mike Gove by a single stroke Gove attended Weber State _ when they entered today's final and joined the PGA tour in 1980 round of the 36-hole event. but has not won a tour event. ln "I played .the PGA tour laat. 1979 he wu.-.a membel:....of the year and my best finish was 19th U.S. Walker CUp team. at the Byron Nelson Clasaic in. Schilling, one of the top club Texas," Graham says. "I didn't prof.eaaionals in Southern make e~ money to keep my California and a consistent player card for thfa year, however, and on the Southern California PGA I'm playing the_N!ltional Go!!ers -circuit. said before tbuwO-da~ of ~ mi.r\l-tour. 36-hole. tourney started that he "l thought the course played felt he had a chance at winning. about nonnal Sunday. It wasn't He was two strokes under par on that easy and not that hard and ~ach nine Sunday. it's in excellent ah8pe and the ' greens are nioe. llowed h1m ln Deotmber' A.mlt}d ean ba • COW\ted tor at • leMt a dM.en polntl and~ and the Char1er1 have been _u~clalli)' toush at home, ex~lidln1"Eluandrtcra-fl-'1!--* deciaW>n. The re at of the week '1 achedule fOf' the area. WEDNESDAY -(Sunaet Leaaue) Fountain Valley at Edlaon Ocean Vlew at Hunitnaton ee.ch, Weltlnlntter at Marina; (Sea View ~) Unlvenity at Eltanda. Newport Harbor at Corona del Mar, O:llta Meu at Saddlebllck, El Toro at Irvine; (South Coast Lea1ue) Woodbridge at Laguna Beacb, M.l8akln Viejo at Dana Hllll, San (ilemente at Caplltrano Valle . - F RIDAY -(Sunset League) Ocean View at Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach at Marina, Edl1on at Westminster; (Sea View League) Corona del Mar at Estancia, Newport Harbor at University, Costa Mesa at El Toro, Saddleback at Irvine; (South Coaat League) Laguna Beach at Laguna Hilla , Woodbridge at San Clemente, Capistrano Valley at Dana Hilla. All of the abov.t are acheduled to begin at 7:30. FV slips into No. 2 spot' Fountain Valley High's Barona, co-leaden with Ocean View in the Sunaet League, have moved into the No. 2 slOt in the Daily Pilot's Top 10 for Orange County prep basketball following the demise of Servile Friday night. Servtte, last week's No. 2 squad, was derailed by No. 1 Mater ..Del, 60-55, and drop& to fourth, one notch a h ead of Huntington Beach and F.atancia. Key games th.la week: No. 9 Ocean View at No. 2 Fountain Valley and No. 10 Corona d~l Mar at No. p..Eetancia. both on Friday. . * .,.., ,... fop 10 °' .... C-'J ""--........ ~-r-...... ~ 1 Mater Del (Angelua) 18-2 2 Founlalrl Vellfrf (SunMt) 11-6 3. ~-VfllWf (South Coee1l 1s.2 " s.Mf• (Ang9M) 13-5 , 5, Huollngton 8Mctl (SUnMt) lo-5 -e. &tanete-(S.. VleWl -12-a-7 La Qulni. (G.,den Grow) IS-5 S. Kalella (~•I 10-3 11 Oc:ewl View (S<lnMll M 10. Corona 0411 t.lat (SM Vlft) 10-3 (tle)la Habra (Fr-avl 12-6 "There was a little wind th1a afternoon but it didn't bother too much." ' Orange Coast faces tough duo Graham had 29 putts during his round that started on the 10th hole. He had four birdie. and finiahed tha back side with a 32, then •tarted with birdies on the fint and second holes. His only bogey came on the 375-yard sixth bole. Schilllna fired a 33.34 u did Gove to flnlah In second place during the fint round with six golfers tied for the next spot at 68 including Bill Mun:hboo, Rafe Botta, Curtis Sifford, Bay Carru:o, Jeff Thomaen and Paul Wt.e. There are aix othen another stroke back at 69 with a total of 22 players breakinR par. Orange ~t College figures to encounter its toughest week of th e young South Coast Conference basketball season,· beginning Wednesday at Cerritos, while Golden\ West will have Its hands full, too. Coach Tandy Gillis' Pirates (2-2) travel to Cerritos wher'e the.Falcons (4-0, 18-2) are ranked No. 1 ln the state. The Pirates, 8-8 overall, travel tq Santa Ana Saturday where tJ\e 3-l Dons await. Golden West, a 62-60 winner over Mt. San Antonio Saturday, muat travel to Compton Wednesday where the hungry Tartan (0-4) pwait. NFL playoffs Conference Champlonahlp Game• Saturday'• Game NFC Championship -Dallas at Washington (Channel 2 at 10 a.m.) Sunday'• ~ame AFC Championship -New York Jets at Miami (Channel 4 at 10 a.m.) Suj,er Bowl XVII Sun., Jan. 30, Rose Bowl, 3 p.m. AFC vs. NFC champions for Vince Lombardi Trophy • Pro Bowl Sun., Feb. 8 ' .. AFC All-$tars vs. NFC All-stars at Honolulu -, T'1ings don't get any easier Saturday, when it's the Rustlers' tum to face Cerritos. In Pacific Coast Conference play, Saddleback (2-2, 6-8) will try to bounce back from a 70-63 loss to MiraCoata when the Gauchos entertain San Diego City College Wedne9day night. 1Nia ..... ca::::..c IOU1'H COUT c-•• Wedri II ••f f7l'O) Orange Cout 81 c.mtoa Golden W•I ec Compton ......,f7l'O) Orange CoMI .. a.rite Ana c.rrttoa n Goldart Weat ,AC9'1C COAaT C~Nea ..... ..,(NO) Sat1 Olego al Sllddle«lec* ....., $eddlebKtl al Sen Olego Meae JOHNSON & SON presents ... NFL .............. c-STAY TUNED ROUrt> TtltEE PICKS • A,C "-A YOf''a Ootpf\IM M, C~ 13 ._..,a-tel'. San OieO<> o 13 0 0-13 Ma..ml 1 20 o 7-34 Mia -MOOta 3 p&M from Woodley (von Scllamaan klel<) Mil -Frank•n 3 "'" (von S<:l\amann kick) • Mia -LM 8 PHI from Wood .. y (von SCl'lamann klelt) Mia -FG von Scnamann 24 SO -Joiner 211 p ... lrom Foutt (klek lllla.d) Mia -FG vori Scham~ 23 SO -Munela 1 "'" (BenlfActlka kid<) Mia -Woodley 1 ""' (von S<:l\amAIW'I klclll A -71,363 Team ftatlallc• ID ...... Flrtt down• 17 29 Aumaa·yard1 17-79 S&-114 Passing yard1 188 109 Return yard• 34 58 p-,5.34.5 18·23· 1 Sacita t>y 1· 18 :1-23 Punlt 4-4 1 3-<lO Fumblaa-loat 3-2 2· 1 PenalllM·ylfdl M2 6-70 nme of P-'<>n t9 14 40 48 ~ ltatlaltce .. RUSHING r San Diego. Muncie 11.e2. Brool<I :i-~. Cappallllll 1·5, Fouta 2·3. Miami, Franklin 23·!18, Na1nan 19·83, Woodley 3·14, Bennell 7-14, OrOIZ 1.11, Vigorito 1·2. Jenaan 2·mlnu1 8. PAS-5.JNG -San 01~0.. Fo.wll u;.34.s .191 Miami, Woodley 7·22·1·t95. Natl>an 1·1..0·20 -~EC~IVING .:... San Dll!QO. Muncie 8-63. C"-"dlar 2·311. Brook• 2·25. Siivan 2·21, Joiner 1·28. Wlnliow 1-111, Hallownan t·ll. Miami, Nathan 8·55, Hardy 3-45. C.lalo 2-69, Vlgortto 2·22. Harns 1-15 l • 1.e. MOOfll t-3 MISSED FIELD GOALS -Non. NFC PLAYOFFS Cowboy• 'ST, ltlldlwa 21 lcoN by o-twa Graen Bay 0 7 fl 13-28 C>allaa 8 t4 3 14--37 Dal -FG S.Ollatl 50 Dal -FG S.Ollan 24 GB -Lollon 8 pan from DlO ay (St-Wktclll Dal -,.._ 2 l'\ln (Sept*' klctcl Dal -Tl\urJNn 39 lntaroapllon ,.IU<n (5.ptlen kletcl GB -FG 81-ud 30 Oil -FO 5.ptlatl 24 08 -Lofton 71 run (kid< fallad) Dal -Co1bl1 .:r pua from Wnlta (S.Otlen klel<) OB -Lal 22 lnt1rcapt1on r11urn (Stanervel ltlelll Dal -~ 1 ""'(Slpllln kick) A -13,972 T-ltaeMtlcl ' Ga Afll dOwnt 21 ~yatd• f7-tsa Paalng yatdt ,308 Aetum yatdl 30 p._ 1g..30-3 Slct<t l>'t 1-8 Puntt •-42 Fumb191-lo91 4-2 Plnalllle-ywda 3-35 T1ml ol p~ 21.oe ..,.,..... ....... Oel 24 39·t09 2M 81 24-37· 1 4-2• 4-35 1·1 >l-30 3152 RUSHING -Ore.I e.y, Lofton 1·71, Rodger• 4r42, IVlty 7-24, Elll• 4·21. Dickey 1·0. Dallae, DorHll 27-H , NIWhouM 7-15, N--1·2, White 4-m1nu1 7 PASSINO -OrH n Bey, Dickey 19-36-3-332 o~. White 23-Je.. 1-225, p..,_, I· 14-49. RECEIVING -OrHn Bey, Lollon 5-109. Collryn 5·72, Ellle 5·70. Jlflar.on 2·40. t-v 1-25, Eppa 1· 18 Dalles T Hiii 7-142, Nawaom• 7-70. C-4-~, OorMll 3-9, °"C>'M 2·14 "-'-1-3 MISSED FIELD GOALS -Nona Playoff no-~1 .. Ntdet'a Qamae Wuhlngton (Vlklng1-Aad1kln11 Stadium ciapeclty 55,045. A1t1ndanca 54,59a. UnlOld tk:ltetl 0. No-11\owt 452 J.oa Angalll (Jel .. A4idaret Stadium cepeclly ?3,000 Alll'ld•nc1 90.037 Un90ldllcl1et10 Ho--.-.e.s1 (Reidar• 90ld ticket• tor _,. ...aiiy unulld encl not lltld In -ting caoectty) ~·ca.-A total of 4,36 I tlcl<lt hOldln did not eltand Illa dey'e Nellon•I Filotball ~o':yolf g-A O-Or-getne Miami (Cti1<Q1t•·Ooli>hln1t Stadium capacity 75,459 Allendenea 71,3113 Uneold lk:ltlll 0. Ho-allows 3,257. OaJlu (Packara-Cowt>oya) Stadium capacity M,081 Attendance el.972 UNOld tlcUt1 0. Ho-llhOws 1.104 , DMP ... fllhlnt Allrl LANDllfQ (......_. ._..)- •2 anglatt •• b•H, fl• bon110, 11• meek-t t5 roO. llstl. 39 ~. 3 1cu1p1n 1 1r1gg1rll• . 1 1argo 1 jacl<tmlll DAV11Y'I lOCICUI 1""''*1 .._.., -76 anglarl 12 bonito. I calleo b-. 328 mack9fel, 1oe roell cod. 23 eand baN DANA WHAllf -2t engtwe 7 baP. 12 mlCkarll. 52 roclt cod, 8 roclt n1h HAL M ACH -13 engllre 375 rocll' cod. 484 rock 11111. 8 11nd bu1. 12 ~. 39 wl>fll lleh, 1 blac:lt -nan. ( .... ) -115 ~ 35 bonito. 2 l\eld>ut, 400 meclt•ll. 5 Mnd -· 300 ""'"-croaker, 500 ci-flah .... ftl TUIN COWSMNCI ...... DMellft W L !'ct. <Ml Lain 211 I .7711 Pllolnb 25 15 .1125 5 Portland 24 15 .615 5',\ SNllll 24 15 .1115 r;•,. GOiden State 18 23 410 13',\ San OieO<> 10 30 2&0 20 MldwMIOIY!Mon Sen Anionic> 25 15 825 Kaneu City 21 ta .Ml 2'A OlnYW 19 21 475 8 Ulell 17 24 415 I',\ Ollllu 15 22 .405 '"' Houaton 5 32 135 18'>\ U ITlllN COWIMNCI A tlefttto Dl¥Woft PNledllC>hla 31 5 Mil Boa•on 28 9 .757 3'" New Jarwy 25 14 841 7'h Wuhlngton 17 19 .472 14 New York 13 24 351 18'h C~tr• OlvtlkNI MllwaukM 27 13 875 Ala.Rte 111 19 488 71'1 Oat.rOl1 19 21 475 I Chk:ego IS 24 351 12'-' Ind'-12 24 333 13 Clawland 8 30 187 19 I Uftdly'e '-" Mllweuk• 109, Golden Slel1 108 Ulell 1 IS, San Ollgo 111 s..1111111, Kan ... City 98 Tonleftt'• a-.. Cl\IQgo •I New Yori! .#lllallta 1Ulew JenlllY COLLEGE aTANDINQS PCAA Coftl W L ~Ide l» VIQll 4 0 ._ W L t4 0 13 2 11 3 I 8 1 1 5 9 10 4 7 8 Utan Stet• 3 1 Cal State Fu11«1on 2 1 Long 8Mdl St 2 2 San Joea St 2 2 Plclnc 2 2 Fraano SI 1 2 UC In/Ina 0 3 UC Sanla Btrbtra O 3 8 8 Pec:tftc:·10 Con-.nc. Cenl 8-UCLA 4 0 11 t Wunlnglon SI 3 0 11 2 USC 31 95 Arizona SI. 2 2 II 8 Stanford I 1 9 3 Celllornle 1 1 8 4 Wahington I 2 10 8 Oregon SI. 1 3 7 7 Oregon t 3 5 8 Arizona o 4 3 11 WMtCoeet AIMeUc Contwenoe C-' ---Sen I• Cler• 0 0 12 3 "9pplrdlna 0 0 10 8 SI Maty'1 0 0 7 7 LOyOll 0 0 7 II OcJnDoa 0 0 8 7 San Oleao ..0 0 I I PortlanO 0 0 8 10 WHt•m Athletic Confefenc• Cenl .__ W L W L ,.._ Mllllc:o 2 0 10 4 T-EIP-2 0 10 • Utefl 20 7 8 8r\gham Young 2 0 8 t Colorado SI 1 2 5 9 ~ 0 I 8 8 Sen OieO<> SI 0 2 t 4 H-ell 0 2 8 8 Air Foroa o 2 8 5 8cMlthwfft Confef~ Houaton Atttanua TCU SJ,IU TaxaaA&M Tou TICtl Beytor Taxaa Ra Cont ...... W l W L 4 0 13 2 3 0 13 0 3 1 12 a ~ 2 2 10 5 2 2 8 9 2 2 4 12 1 2 9 5 0 3 5 9 0 4 8 I Big T•n Con-.nc. Cont ._ W L W L MlnnMOll 3 1 10 3 lndlana 2 1 12 1 ~arn 2 1 11 2 IOWll 2 1 10 2 PU<due 2 2 11 3 Mlehlgan 2 2 11 3 ltllnola 2 2 11 3 Mlclllgan St 2 2 9 5 Ohio State 1 2 9 4 wtacon91n 0 4 15 I lllg Eight ConfeNnce Cenl .__ W L W L Kan.. 1 0 9 5 04<11/loma St 0 O 12 1 ""-"' 0 0 12 2 Otdanoma O 0 13 3 Nlb<aka 00 93 IOWllSt 0 0 I 5 KenSM 00 15 Colorado 0 J 10 J Mafof Independent• W L 10 2 11 3 11 3 9 3 11 4 II 3 10 4 7 4 • s 9 I 8 II I 8 9 7 I I 1 7 7 • 8 • I I 11 9 5 8 SCOREBOARD +--- c~'°°'" t.OUleYllll 83, O.Paul 5a All ·INtmlngNm 74, Jlclltonvllle 7' N Montana 87, Montana T.:h 51 IATUNIAY'I ~TS I COMI UC O•vla e.4, Sonoma St. 49 ttayward St. 113. San francltco St 8 t Humb04dt St. 47, Chico St. 48 8apllll 12, SE Loulalan1 62 E Kanluclty 7!1, Mor91111d 81 72 NC-Wllmlngotn 84. Wle . .Oraan Bay 82 (2 oO COMMUNITY cou.aa. South Coaet Confef~ Cot1*-0.-.. W L W L Cerrito• 4 0 18 2 Sa"la Anl 3 t 11 9 Ooldt<I WMI 2 2 10 10 Orange Coall 2 2 I I Fulla<lon 2 2 15 8 Mt Sen AntonlO 2 2 11 7 Cypr-1 S 10 t Compton o 4 5 12 ........ ,.. 0..-(7:JO) Orange Coul el Carl'llOI GOiden w .. 1 et Cotnc>ton Fulllt1on at Mt. San Anionic> Cypr-et Santa Ana Pec:lflc Coeat Contetenc. Conr.r-Overall W L W L San Ollgo MIM 3 I 13 I San Ollgo 3 1 14 4 Gronmont 3 1 15 8 SaddllblCll 2 2 8 I Imperial Vallly 2 2 11 I MlraCoate 2 2 I 10 SPutl!VIMlarn • • J 3 6 11 Plklmat 0 4• t 11 aenta Anlt• IUNOAY'I lllllULTI (17111 ...... , llllf~ -·11111 fNllT lllACI. 8'>\ fut a. Prompl Gal (04iYetM ) 8 3 80 3 20 Secret ;rf' !Plncavl 3 eo 3 oo 8-t Adtll afo-Ach) t 00 Alto race Larkan. Elocut1on1rV, DOOfl't Lady, Prim Dull, A1m1blull. si.111ta OHi. 1111 Happy. Young 81111, Aomora. Time· 118215 HCOND lllACI. 8'-' lvrlOnOt, Son ol • Dodo (Pncy) 4,40 3 40 2 80 Stand Pat (Kanaan) 18 IO t ,00 Right ThrMI (CHteneda) 10 20 Al•o raced. SpHcl Broker, loucky Purcl\11e, Fort MCCioud, Colman. Senior Sanetor. Carteclan. Ebony Bronze. Splfttlno, Alwaye 1 Cl\.._. Time 115 . a DAM. Y DOUeLll 14· 121 paid S 18.80 THllllD llACI. 8 lur10ng1. tl&bllla D'Eete (Amro)13.40 5.40 3.40 SI.I&)' Bobble IM«IA) 4.80 3.~ Toga (t.lphwn) 3 20 Aleo rlGld Naerly Forgotten. K- IO Win, Patch Petch Patch, Blond Bomber. ~ad AoOblty, Orona Biiia, VIQor't lad , ~-."Shatp Spirit 'time 1 3/5. llXTit RACI. Ona mlla ~ 8'00llflald (~12 I 40 9 80 8 00 llllchbum (Todd) 13 20 7 00 111 .. Mlltlnl (Pll'lllQ 4 40 Aleo r •o•d Tupon Donny CrulHew1y, Smart Trip. Wtn1ar10: Special Ouallly, M.: Adloa A TIMI' 2:00. II lllACTA (7·81 paid t•9&.oo. HYIN1l4 lllACI. Ona rnlll ~ Hrrcn l'*>non (81tr1 4.40 4 oo 3 oo 8.C Count (Grundy) 5 80 3 40 A-'• Gold (Pwllarl 3 20 AIM> raced lord Neutrino, Torpid• Knight. 8oclall ... &coting O<IVI, Oatra••· Random Wind TllM. 1.117 3/8 S1 llXACT~ (11·71 peld S52 20. l lOHTH llAC•. Ona mill pace. Gant .. MIH (Vlndgl\m)8 80 4,20 3.20 Aeg11.Quetll (Parker) 5..20 3 80 ZllCI (TaMlar) 8.80 4 110 raced EmpreM E•prau, Slnbella. Super Sue N . Potrenc1, Jovanna Almahunt. CalablUI. BerOOMa CMs. Time: 1·&1 415 II DACTA (4-e) paid S3e 10 NINTH llACL Ona mill p- MICk 0oug11 (Anden) 18.00 1.00 8.80 Bet Champ (Par1<wl 9.80 8.20 Smart KOiie (Kuebler) 10.40 Aleo rlGld. NallVI Hunter. Craig Del, Petul Onadln, Branding Iron, Maple Ftttz, Denali, Tlma Square Beron. Timi 1:57 415 II HACTA (3·15) paid 1211 40. H "ICK llX (1·7·7·1·4·3) paid 12.495.00 with 11v1n winning tlckall WaclMldeY'e 0-.. (7:JO) San Ollgo et Slddi.back San OllQO MIN II Oroetmonl MlraCoeta et Soutnwaetarn lm1>1rl11 Valla)' •t. Palomar O•......, 1nv1 horM1) 12 Piek Sia conaolallon ' ""'" llACI . 1 1118 mllaa paid S37 20 wllh 168 winning t1c1t111 Tarnpaet W119 (Proe) 18.20 7.80 5.20 (I h ) S2 p Aodtd FMlur4 (Vai.m Ila) 11 00 8 20 our oreu • lck Six 1cretcl\ AnllclpltlVI (Romaro} u · 1240 contolatlan paid S21.IO with three _.._.,_ ··-_AJ14.t~~lle..Sul!'llDI~~ winning tlck•ll (tM•• hor111, one A Righi l~I. Ruah lo P-. c'ounty ..... ,. .. .c(al(;ll)........ • ·•·• NHL CAMl'UU. CONRMNCI .... ,,_ DMellft Edmonton Cetgery Winnipeg VlnCOU¥« ...... Chlc9go Mlnnaaota SI LOUla O.troll T0<on10 W L T OI' QA l'te ze. 13 II 252 1841 80 18 22 1 1n 1es 43 18 22 5 178 192 4 1 15 21 9 183 173 39 15 23 8 153 191 36 ...,.,. DMeMfl 28 11 7 201 151 113 23 13 9 1IO 189 515 1!1 28 8 182 111 36 ti 24 12 t48 1911 34 10 24 I 154 192 28 S..I, &Ian Ka. Purple. Cout1 Caucaa. Tima 1 42 115 "'1'H RACI. 8'Jo ~ on lorl P~ tnapec1or (Toro)ll 40 5 20 4 20 OrMI Ea1tarn (McCarron) 8 00 4 IO Azullno (Lambert) 11 00 Alto rec.cl. Hay Rob, The C1pl1ln, An1war lo Muele. Oettroyer, Sh11Qblrlt, Mul1tar. Agli.tnonl. Time. I 13 315 .. H ACTA (10·3) Paid S208.50 lfXTH llACa. 8 lu<lonQ1. Olnlral Jimmy (Sllvl 4.00 3,00 2.80 Algal F.icc>n (~) 5 80 3 IO DanMchl IVllO¥tchl 3 80 Aleo raced Sii Rullall Run. T1au ComrT11<oa, Fanlll. 04<ubo, C>Vltoly. Time I 01 41& llYUllTH llACa. 1 1118 mil-. T .. 1 or Time (Plneayl 4.40 2.80 2.40 Elo.illYI (Mc<;atronl 2.80 2.80 WAUEI CONRMNC• o...,, Su1111 (Hawley! 2.80 l'lllrtdl °"""99ft Aleo raced sw111 Wtng. MontMlan1. Plllladelp/lll 21 12 8 197 137 82 AbOUI Sun• Jaullte. Ooldln ~ NV~ 24 t8 7 170 139 515 Time 1 42 )15 HY~ 22 II 5 1IO 158 49 .. HACTA (1·51paid131 00 Wlllhlngton 1t 15 11 171 184 49 Pittsburgh 12 27 I toM 212 30 h l'ICIC llX (12·9·8-10•2· 1) paid N9w JetMY 10 21 t 132 1M 29 12.808 00 '#llh 74 wtnnlng llcllatt (ala A.a-~ bor-1 12 ~-Sia conllOlatlO(I paid Bolton 21 10 7 t81 124 113 SS3 20 with 1.297 winning tlekltt 1....,. ~~!{!8'' 24 13 • 211 183 58 11or-1 • ..,.._ 22 't4 • 1n 145 sa au.iiac 19 20 • 1111 191 44 trtc»fTH iu.c•. 1 1118 m11a1 Hatttord 12 21 5 151 218 29 8-itlfVI oi.. 4.00 3.40 2.IO ._., •• ._.. HMdar Card 1"-ol 5 IO 3.20 New Jar-.y 5, IC ..... 3 Skllt\.ll ~ (PW-y) 2 10 PNlaclllpllla 4, PMw voni ~ o Al8o rec;ld· llllonglng. Honhem S~ ONoeoo •• Oeltdl 2 --Aglt.aled c...dy, MM! l.M AN\. Tlcllelld, V-t. Wlnnlpag 4 CWry I Tuna, Etolla Ov M•tln, Nan·a TeN9M'a 0-.. Dene« MIMMoll It 8oaton Time 1 41 115 SI Louil •• Toronto ""-H • Kl • NINTH llACI. I 1118 mllaa .,..y 9 '" ngt • Night LMQVI 35.80 16.20 7.40 t.~ A~., ~ 1. \ 1_3 <:1114 Time (McCerron) 5.IO 3.80 New JarMy 1 1 3_5 ~Want-(Hawt.v) 4 40 Pini ~ Aleo raced· MHtar Jono, Second 1 ...... .-..,, Pelrnar 1 (M.cMllan. ....u .... Cl\Mlnowaoa. O!lmpo. Franch TllNTM iu.c•. 0na m111 ~­All'IMtaa (Klllblar) 23 80 11.aG 4 80 Saint Andrew (Aftd¥eon) 5 80 3 oo Rid Rici\ (Merriam! 3 80 Aleo recld Aulumn Storm N. Recount N, Cocky1 Only 801. Teel Henery, ROMlend Brat, Scotc:fl Ooubll. ,.Ima: 1:50 415 .. •XACTA (2·31 paid SI0.70. Altendlll'COI: 12.C>:l4 LoeA,.._Open m Gii Moroan, 154.000 11~ m OlbtlY Qlltlert. W .400 u.e&-'1'2_. L.lnny Wlldltlna, '22,400 111-47-417·70 Merit Mceumber. $22,400 ~70 m a-g. ~. $12.000 72·'1M1·70 114 Joi llV'l\en, '9.712 AMy Horth, $9,712 Tom w.i.on. se.112 Amy Zoellet. te, 712 m J.C. $ne9d, f)',IOO Arnold Pelmlf, 17.IOO 11'1 Rly~OO c.irtle .... 700 l.M Tr.Mo, • 700 0-r "-· SS,700 Kalttl Far~,.'5,700 0-Utt • $5,700 11..--61.e1 7CM7-68-89 87-68.fi-70 64-1o-4MI· 71 aa..11..-.10 .......... 72 1o-14-10.. ea-12..-..1 87·7M7-&7 ea-11.-.... .,._.,....71 87 ... 11-ee-7 4 Croeby 8cMltMrn (el lrtlM C-t C-"Y C.) ••BT ll04JND 9eotl9a Tim Orllllll!1 34-3i-llS An 8cNlllng 33-34-11 Miki Qcw1 3344-17 Paul WIN 33·H-ll Biii MyrCllllOfl 311-33-88 Raia Boll• 34•34-88 Curtlt Sltlord 35·33-88 Ray C1rr11co 33·35-88 J•lf ThOmean 34·34-68 L0<an Roblt1• 34-35-89 JoMny Jacobi 35-34-89 VIC Wiik 32·3'1-89 811lnl McCINatar 34-35-4141 Twry 8m1M 34-35-89 8111 Plwot 34-315-811 Ernie George 35-35-10 8111 Q1rr111 34-34-70 Olnnlt Trbtter 38-34-70 Riek Ollpot 32·31-70 JOhn Cl\etlM 35·35-70 Mark Rl\oda 35·35-70 Curt Byrum 311-35-70 Mika Oonneld 3&-35-71 Jet ry Heald 34-3 7-71 Tommy Armour 111 36-35-71 JI/II Dtm 34-37-71 Jack Fllck Je-35-71 Moria Vart>rugga 34-37-71 L9try Blneon 31-36-71 Tom Anion 37·35-72 Lonni. Nlllean 37·35-72 Bob Bo4dt 36-38-72 Bob Kllln 36-34-72 Din Foremer1 35-37-72 OIVI MCKN11"1j 311-31-73 Howle Johnson 37·38-73 L~ Tan BrOICll 36-37-73 Blba Hlal<ay 37.:M-73 Pll!A Pumtt 36-37-73 De\ltd Ogttn 35-31-73 - Jedi Gwnw 37-31-73 OIVI Batblr 38-31-73 Tom Ta1um 3•31-74 Kip Putarbaugn 35-39-74 Jarry WIN . 36-31-74 Miiia RMN 37-37-74 ~8'-••--··---·-~1· Ru• Cochran 39-35-74 Catt CO<nar 36-31-74 Oreg F,_,rlctc 31-36-7 4 O.VI Sllllf 34-40-7 4 Keith KOiimeyer 31-39-75 Jan SonMvl 39-36-715 Skip Whittet 31-37-75 VIC Martin 37-38-75 Jim Patralle 37·~-75 Rlelt SprouM 36·37-76 Tom 810<ay 37·39-78 Allan A.-31-31-711 lob Pranoa 31-40-78 Mu Blyha 37-39-78 Nlelc Nelton 30-31-78 Doug Booth 34-42-78 Bob Wynn 37-39-78 Don Pow.t 37-40-n Jim Klglf 40-3 7 -77 Jimmy Clar11 31-311-77 Lon Jenney 38-40-71 Tom Lahman 41-37-71 Aun Bloom 3g..4()-79 Bflan LJndlty 4 1 -31-79 Todd Maana 42-45-17 ....0-AlllATSUfl KOMI .._ ..... r- 80-Tom AntorW4ar1tn Etlck_. (!Mg Canyon CC): Rale Bott .. Tom E..-(!Mg Canyon CCI. 81-Rly CWruco-J«'Y 1111perin: 811 MU<chlaon-Gay1otd l Hinton 82-Arl $cl\llllng·Mlc11NI Drucker: Rick Sprou11·Chuck Tomu, Tim Grlllllm-l'l'erpll Gordon. 83-0on Pow1r1·Wllll1m Belll\aua, Biii Plerol·Rlctlatd 8 Smith 84-Loran Roblrl•l'1.,.. l'wgo: Tom T11um·Roberl F. Alla n; John Ctull••·Norm P 11111a l1, 8le ln1 McCelll9tar-o.ld .....,...,. H -Et• o.ot~Tom Cu.y. Jan So11n1 vl·8 r11ce Code r. Ourlla S4flof~ Ogato, Tommy ArfftlNt Ill.Jim Ollnullue:-JKlr ~.0-09 Ryan, Jim Petrwte-Lou SenPI. Jlfnmy Ct.,,,..Jorln ~on Misc. • ,. t ernbtllln!I I · 10. 2......JroL_Ang..,a~l•=:•=r:;.....--1Cllo'"m'9f'lmH• .. n..,d'l• .. r ... C~•1114• .. b.,.o"'n•11ll.•._F_11_op_o_•_o. Simmer 14 (Holmae), 1tn'~ PintH1ae ._....,. -.,,., ,.,_.. Led --.al~--~,LllL--....Z.:IJJWIW1-----T1m1 142 H• Sutton, S3.7IO aa..12.-.. Noni 1.-d l'lt*I • IXACTA (11-11) paid 1418 51 3 Loa Angelle. Korab 2, 14-00 4 N9W • Allendanoe 42,042. .J«My, Marini 14 (L~. Anlonov\CI\). Hoffywood P-14,&0. P1nlltle1 -Marini, NJ, 3.51, IUNOAY'a M IULTa M1cLallen, LA, mtnor-m1Jor, 7:47: (114 of..,...._."--IMMlllt) Vautour. NJ, inaJ<>r, 7:47; Urmer. NJ, ,.T !UC.. ON mll9 peoa. 11:31: HOj)lllnl, LA. 19:31. \Ian Tudor (KUlbllt) 17.40 7.20 4.40 Tlllrd l'lt*I . Young MMllon (And4non) • 4.80 3 40 5 Loa Angelle. K.ity 3 (Olonnl). 1:25 Vulcen Boy (Crogl\enl 3 20 ~"I 8 New Jar11y, Qegna 5 (LIYO, Aleo raoeo 8ildgllwlmmW. Mlnlltar, ,- embeltlnf~ 10:04 (pc>) 7 ......... ...,. Trve Trtcle c. Triomar11, ~'*'·Thi Aahton 7 (C-on. Mwtnll, 10 51. 8 M-110 N, ,...,,.. Ohleol. Hew Jweay. Tambelllnl 1.t (l0tl1Mt, Timi 2 01 315 VII/IOU<), 19:5t P9naltlM -Wiiie, LA 11 D AG'JA *10-3) pelO-$-tOI ~ major, 2'0I: \llllJtour. NJ. major, 2 03; Kite'-. NJ, 5:48; Nleholl. lA. me!Of, 9:015: Antonovldl, NJ. major, 9.05, Kiiiy, LA. 9:17; Rutk0'#9ill, LA, m4nOMMIOf, 16:37: P.-, NJ, major. 15:37 Snot• on 0011 -Lot AngalH 13-8-7·21 ,.._ .J«My •2· 12·22. Goal!H -Lot Angllll. K11nt, IMl!oalll New JarMy, Rlacll. A -10, 347 WOl'Mft'a toumement ........ , , ..... Mwtine New a (U S ) def Sylvia Hanllta (Wall Q1rm.,1y). 1 ·3, 7·8 (Nl'lnltllov. wine 121.000: ........ Wini 114,000) Women'• tournement ( ............. , ........ ,..... 81111• JHn King (U.S.) dal. Sharon Welal! (U.8.), 8-4, M , M (Kl'1g wine 11,000) 0.-... P'IMI l<tng·Weltll (US ) def AoM C.uta IVS )-Wendy fumbul fAuatrdaj. a.2. • a.2 (K , W .. all epfit 17.000) i MCOMO llACI. Ona mile peoa Mr. H.M (Se>rlaoal 11.00 7.40 5 40 Fla.tly Frank (8i1111rgaon) 4.80 4 00 C•ntarbul'f t.ane (81Ciilord) I 80 Aleo rllCld. Sophl111Cetad laCIY. Bliek Aogut. Rldgamull, Andyl 'Hound. Sllv1rt Starlet, Qian Mldby, C'Mon HMlbllly TIIM 2"01 II H ACTA tll-1) pelCI 1121 20 n9IO llACI. 0... ..... ~ W1Ult'o (Kuetllerl 9.00 4.IO 3 40 C91>teln Klllghl !Baller~I 3 IO 3 00 .. ~·· •ot,..., (Croglllll) -6 40 AleoL.r.•cad Lii ~bn1r N, lrembt1 Scram°"', Moody eT..I N, Hemllh '*'· SOllerlllgn St1r A. Pinell Hll Time' 2 00 415 9:1 •XACTA (7·11paidS5t10. fOUfl\'14 IU<Cll. One mill~ T'lm'• Mat• (Klllbll() 11 40 4 eo 2 IO Mlon Chip ("'1chlll 1t eo 5 80 F .. man10 (Pwkar) 3 00 Al9o ~ Mc:Kanne. Nordll Tryu, MMlar Jolie, Privy Council N, AIM Gold. '1l'T'H llACI. Ona mlla ~ Llahtnln 8llm (Andr9nl 13 20 8.80 4.oo Full Pocket (Ball•) 3.80 2.IO SOii Eapldlllon (Mlllclllnd) 3 00 Aleo rec1d· Trlokel Chug1r. v:=· Dean Point, Bubb• Haby, rim.. 1,st 211. • UACTA (7-3) ptlO M!O 00. ,_. Ctldwal, *3.7IO Don Poolao>t. 1:3.7IO m Cr:YJ:*"-'• 2.430 J4m O<d, 2,4:1() 8ob~iwoe:·430 eo«> , sa,430 Rod Funtetti, S2, 430 Lon Hlnklt, $2,430 m 811 Kraa.1. St,744 Scott~. $1,744 Tony Siii. S 1,7 44 Gery KoCll, I 1,744 Denny Edwwdl, 11,744 ~AoM.$1,744 INoe Flellhet, S 1, 7 « Donnie Hlll!W'not)d, St,74-4 -Tom Punnt, 11,320 Ot"1lll ~1,320 £d F10r1. S1 ~ ......... ~ ., JwyHIM.'"2 ~·llt2 ~ Y~or Slt2. 8ot>by ~I Mt2 p~ 81ewert. Sff2 Hublr1 G-. 1"2 -Otn Pohl, 1727 PtMfJ~.S727 Miii• Mcou•io.r 1121 Lw Elder, 172 ,,.,,. eann.. $121 ,_.Fder,Snt Mor11ll Hetllelly, 1727 -INoe l.lttJtl•. Sl72 JOfln Mceomlth, M72 et.I Ta-Qluno, M 72 T~llftl,Sl72 Otty o. 1172 IM1·71-70 -.1o-a-10 ~MM7 n.e&-72-71 ea-7CJ.ee. 71 72·7MS.71 72~72 10·1 73 70.71·72-te 71,71-ee-ee ..... 73-70 87-72-70-70 88-71 ..... 70 ...... 70.71 7CMIMl7·73 71-e9 ..... 70 $9-73-71..e7 •7o-et-72 ... 7Ml9-73 U..-...73 73-el-72..ea 10.n.11.u 73-*70.70 70.71-70-10 71·71-8a-71 116-*73-73 7CMMl-71·74 72-70.72..ea 71-11.-.11 •rt-70.72 ..... 72.72 •10.10.13 11.-....13 12.-.....13 ... 73-"11·70 86-71·73-71 8a-71-72·72 .... 7a-e8-72 •72·7'"74 Weelcend'a 1nMeottor1e' HOCatlY ......................... DETROIT RED WINOS -Traded Miiie Klfton, Olfl!.•1 .to Iha Vanoou,.. Cen;,c1t1 IO< Ivan llOIOlrwY, Olfllar COl.LIOS INOIANA -Named Aon Corr•dln~ Herold ~ cw-Sllelmon. Gery Huft, OM Kritter, Ed O'Ntll Ind Jel1'f lkAlvan I IOotblill ~ • ~el.Wher~ a man belo~. • Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Healt~ . I I f i I f . I ~ J i t. t t I i ! ...I .. ., \' I , I I -- Oran • Coatt DAIL" PILOTIMond•)'. January 17' 1H3 • • Martin won't investigated MUC M>nCE MUC NOnct MOC NOt1C1 MUC M>TICI: MOC .... -..C mncr &-tHM MCmCI c:=I.~ •.• •4&.I PMITtTIOW IUIMN ..... WWW=··-•• .._,....,,,.._ NAlllll1AW IUNWOOUMOf' Noeaoe .. ...._ ....... NOT1CI or DEATH or YOU ·-.. -··UL-• ..-... ...... !.~ollowlnt.. perton• .,. ClolflO c-~~--lo•d .. fr-...-.. IM o:i g,..,.~ .. MARY It. YAN ZALINO&N -_. .. ·-.. .,....._ VVRH --COMllUtllOY c ...... OIWlet ...,... ... MAR y 9'ATH&RINE DllD °' TMlaT DaTIO..... co MIW'°"T JAz:z 'UTIVAl .. 0-. Ctr Df .... o,.,. .. County, CJ ......... ! I NOTJOI. 9'Yllil ... YAN ZALJNOEN AND or 1•1.U.UU VOU TMeACTIOM AMO MUllO HOHANQI lll leMIA-.CADt r......,. ...... ~ .... ,, .... ,, ... tr.., ......... .. P E T J T ' 0 N T 0 " To .. ~., TaC .. ',!MID .. ,"'!"!'!!'!: ••w•O•T JAZZ. ... ••w;oof .......... Ill ., ""';J.';:.!::r.-'· -.................... ,, ..... . "' -.. .. .. ..--JIUJ. IXOHANQI 14) HIW'OIU A. -.&.Ofl _, .. 011111•1911t of_., tr•1t1pen•lleft, •nlf Ml9fl otller ADMJN~ER ESTAT£NO. ••a.~.i.'' You N110 "" JAUW<>f'LO 101N1w,o.-r.JAZZ ....... i.t_ 0011 ... dl•tt 11ooa1-4 •t 1110 ,..... .. .._ .. ,..,.,...., ... DALLAS (AP) -rohh&a aatd," aald 0&1W A·llHH. ...."'"""''°" °' '"' NATUM CLUI, '"'(ti NIWltO"T JAZZ ..... , 0Hr4flllll •• Lfl•• I I Ad••H Aven::., Coe•• ...... OONIT"UC110 .. O' fHI P °' Tiii NOCllDINO A6AINIT l'llTIVAL, tfU I I htOI, hnll -...-. ... ,...._, L W , ~ .. .._ _., .... 'OLL.OWllllO ,,_OJIOT: TUlflN Local and federal 0 ceChlef Billy rtnce. To all hetr., bencflclariM, w.v::u '"°"'"°CONTACT A Ane,c.Mtonut2707 .• ., ...... T. OA .. LOI ...... ~ .......... ,......, AVINUI ,U .. ,.NQ ITATION. author1Ut1 •Y they wW . Federal •uthoritlet credltort and cont ln1ent On '•ll>fuer) •. -llH •I tt:OO D LI" 1100._ Lid , e21 Udo,.,. AL'A"O• DOH 1 ,.., • .,. .. tt, o6J'~i: &~~~ "otaot =·...!'r:=!..._a-a no & in v • • i l I• l • declined to comment credltol'9 of Mary K. Van •"' . ITANO,UD la11w101 c~:f~· =::~ '&::· • DM \.IHI COMMUNITY~ ..::9..-'*4tloe .• "' .-.. 11ll1Jgatfon.1 "that Dallaa apeclfkally on Martin , ZaHn1en, •k• Mary OOl"O"ATIOM. • c11uorn11 1 genera1pen-· · c.t..._"_ -A11Mnn•-.e11t Mil•• ._ 1119 e11y oi..;,, ,., °' C.0 Ibo f tball la d th ual1 d Kathetrine V.tA ~n ~ CorporetlonJ H dulr appointed Roben LeYy, 1 911*11 Plfll'll'. NOTMlll 'IM M¥e lllMft ~. wlttl the ltd 'Ottfl W•ua•a • ... Ooete Meu, O.momttl ""'* "'9 w YI 00 P yer but Ml ey UI Y O persona who may be Tru'1H uno., end pum11nt to oo 11111nahem, Studio Olly"'" n...wt,......-~,... Oondltlonlendlpn•LWf'M•_... llour ol 11:00 a.m .. JlllUlll'Y 31. H a r v e y M I r t i n not 1nve1 ti I a to the otherwlM lnw,...c.d Li\ the Deed ot Tru11 reciord«s .tun1 tt. Clllfornl• "'°' ._. ,.. IMlllt ...,. -... --tit .. ...,~ M...,.. "'ifft-.n.Mofl .._ ._. wta J»a purchased and uaed almple procurement or will and/ ttlt •• in11r. Ho. 31211. loOll lt.,nenM aa-u, • .,,.,., ,......, .......... ...,.. lllttwoflloeilfthettwcltlMilitAfl'lt CIC**' puMoly end'* lloud.,, oocaine. , .... of ~-•-e, al"""" SU"h A peU~ee\a~: been fUed t41 '1• '• 1•· 1'°2• of Ofllolill pettl'I«. I Moneoo, NewPor1 -..en, ...,l!li1M1n .....,., ' flf ~ OOl9ge ~-...-. ..... th• oouncll cllembere. hfled -.. ~. ,_.. " A1cord1. AONALD JOMl!I •nd CeltfOMll tzta If you WWI to ... Ille ld'ftCe Of -· bldci.r ..... -_. ... PfOOOMll ll\lll Al.-tM ... flf !fie The allegatlona were a c t I v I t 1 ea a r e by Robert Michael Stephens OOAOTHY LH JONH, Huebend Thll ~ 11conducteCIby 1 111 euorn•)' In lhl• "'•"''· )'Ou l>ld • 011hler'1 olleOtl, o.ttltted WOtll 11nc1 1119 11.m1 Clf IN bidder made in federal court misdemeanor• under In the S u perior Court of ind Wtl•. •• Jo1111 T1n1n11 ~· llmll9d P41t•-9htp. .novld do eo. Plomc>llV .o lhat yout 011.011. or bidder'• bond 1111d1 1>111noocts~1111rt11. last Week by .vow ... d federal law. Oranae County requettlnj 1ru11or1. tn the office of the County Mtonllf A. 011111, wrllttn fllPOIUI, It i ny, mey bl Pl)'lbll to IN order of ._ 0.... An)' bid reoelvid eff•r tll• "" • M i h el Recorder ot Orange County, ll•t• ca-a1 Pll'll'I« fli.d Of\ tknl OOmmunityT C<JleOe DtlllrtDt '°.!! acl'ledultd olo•lng 111111 for Illa drug dealer Danny Dalla• police did that Robert c ae of 01tlfornl1. Will. SELL AT flltl1ta1em1111tweeflledw1111t11e AVllo t'U•••ti "' illf• of "'*-lllllfllfftOUMllOl-reoelplefl*i!llNllN...unedto S h 1 d d Stephen• be appointed .. PUBLIC ~UCTION TO HIOHEST County Cieri! OI On1noe COul'lly Oii tl•MM4f•4f•. II trl~lllllll .II... lfwl M ,.,.... '~ OI .... "tlll bidder Ul=ned. "11111 N "* tone, w o P ea e acknowledge that they pel'80nal repreHntaUve to 1811DD~R .... P:OA1n .~.~ IP•Y•~~ ~ Jenuety 1. tH3 ......., .....,. u-. • •••,.. 1 blcl111 .. •,8'*11n'911 1~ .,_ blddltd tote 111siaJ\ll y Clf tt11 blddlt to guilty to conaplring lo lnveetlgated alleged use admlnliter the e1tate of rM"' ....... money"' i... ,.,..1 -•• u-.,..............,.. w en.er no "' propoH -IMlllllbldllr.....,_,lftpt°'* puticlpate ln a coc:ai, ne of cocaine by "Martin Mary K . Van Zallnaen, un11111 1111 .. 1 •t: Ille louth fror'lt Publl•h•d Or•no• Co111 Delly • • ..._ "-te ...,...,..,,., ... ConVeot "tlle ~II_..... to lime 1111rena. 10 Ille OrMOI Oounly Old Piiot, Jen. 10, 17, 24, 31. 1913 ..,., him. In the-' of,..,,. to.,.., A i.t of p19n1, 191CM1 "OY!flOM ring. three years ago on the Coeta Meea. CA. (under the co,.,11hou11, Clly of 81n1• Ane1 aoo..aa 81 U•l•d d1tH 9011011., ,1 Into IUOh oontf.llGt, ttw ptooeede of Ind~ too..• ,.,OYlllOne 'testifying ln the trial basis of leada provided lndePendent AdminitttaUon s1e11 of Cellforl'lla, Ill rlOlll, lttle tnG conH)o d• un ebog1do en ffl• ltle dllOlc .. be~."' 111 ._ to ttw ltalldard loecMoltlOI• ~ of four peop~ aocuaed of by an informant. of F.atatea A.ct). The petit.loo 1111-' .. 1 oonll9Yld 10 end now held rtalC NOTJC( • 1un1 •, d 1 b • r f • 111 c •r1 o *' ot • bond, ttw Ml """ ..,_, bl obtllMd •t 1ile offlol of tfl• d 1 1 S ll eet for hur~ ln Dept. by 11 under Aki Deed Of Trutt In the linmedltll8'Mllt• de •• l'lllMf.11, ~ forfeited to Mid OOltete DWclor ol P\ibllc laMoll, ""°"" ea mg coca ne, tone -----------1 No. 3 a• 700 Civic Cent•r propert)' tllu•led In llld Counly ":f~.T·~· IU ,~, • ..Cr111 .. hay llOUM. ..... .:....._. .............._ ............ ·'11. 7T '"' Ot1Ye, Coll• ...... said he and Martin Wied l'talC NOTICE • .. end 81e1e deterlbld •e: l>uedl w teoletrlldli • tlempo nv ........, "'llY ---,_ -ClltfOMI• upon • non-r~ the drug "two or three" Drive Wetl Santa Ana, CA Loi 13 ot Trec:t No. 4981, In th• The to1tow111g P«tana .,, doing 1 TO THE DEFENDANT· A oMI for• petlod for 'rt,.-,.<">~ peymen1 of 110.00. An ..UKIOl'l•I t 1me8 and that the • "'~l~o~:.~=· 92702 on February 2, Ul83 at g',.'~ H~t =n~IY S:: bu•'m e;:u T u R E w 0 R L D compleln1 hH bffn lll•d' ~h• .ner '"' d•t• Mt ttw oC**'O ~ ot 12.00 w111 .,. mecta If defensive end had paid Th• followlno pert0n 11 doing 9:30 a.m. rnep r.Cordecl In Book 1eo'. Pegee COMPUTEAB, lbl FUTURE FAIR, (cl ~e::\:11~~ ~. 1111,: ~Bo.rd Cf T""'-,........ Each ~ ":'.M bl m9de on the ~ ee: IF YOU OBJECl'. to the 49 end 50 of Mltoe11tneou1 Mept, In l'\ITURE FAIRE, (di FVTUN! FAA£. 11 deyt •lier thlt '""'"'one It Ille prM6lge of refectlnO W'f Md .. ProCIQMI '°""· tneetl P-t tf1rW011 for h ia ah are of the BREAKFAST IN BED. 4000 grantinl of the petluon, you the Office ollhe ~aunty Recofder of tt01 8o. Grenet Ave .. Ste. A, Senta MrVed on you, lite with 11111 coun • bide« to wtllYe In>'.,,_.,.... or p.7, provided In 1111 contr•ot cocaine. Perk Newport Aplt., No. 308, 1hould either appear at the Seid Couniy. Anl CA.1127011 wtltlan reeponM 10 the complelnt. ~~ma11u .. In II\)' bid ot In the doeumente. e nd 111111 t>• Sto •-ti'ft'ed f the Newport Beecn. Calltornl• 925e0. h 1 d t te our The elree1 •ddr•H end Olh., •D MICROTECHHOl..OOY INC., Ul'llMI "°" do to "°"' dlfllUlt 111111 -no-ecoo"'p•nl•d bw • certified or ne ""'" or Sylvlt T•lton, 4000 Ptrk ear nt an t a l common detlgn•tlon, II eny. of the 1101 SO. Orend Ave .. S11. A, Sente bl' entered on •PPllC1llon ot the NORMAN E. WATSON c:Mhllr'1 Gt-* iN ' bjd bond tor prosecution In a plea N-pon Apte .. No. 308, N-port obEtlon• or Ile wr tten r••I property dleecrlbld 1bov1 I• An• °CSA. 121011 p1.int11t, end Ihle court mey enllr • T'-"""Y·,.~d of not ... , th•n 10 percent of Ille bargain agreement under BMcll, Cetllornl• 92aeo ob ctlon1 with the court purported 10 b•: 1309 M.,ln1re Thi• bullMM le con<luc19d by • )udgtnent 111.,ntl you tor tl'le rllt« ,.~~...:........ ............ .,_,t of lM bid, rnlde peyebll to hi h h h Thi• oo.i.-i. conc1uc1ed by en be ore the hearing. Your Drive. Newpor1 Beecn, CA '3ee0. COfpo<eUon. Oeman6ld In ti'le oornp111n1, wnlcn -·"'-"'' ___., ....... _ ll'le Cot11 .._ 8lnttalY DllCtlct. w c o t er c arges lndMduel. . , a ma be In penon Thi underelgn•d Truet•• •D Mlctotectonotogy 1no. could rHult In g.,nlihmint 01 Publl1lled orange Cout D•llY No Pf~ ltllll be COfllldeted against him were Sytvt• Telton ppearance 'Y .iec111m1 eny ll•blllly tor eny Rlcn.,d J. Femum w-•••ll::ft ot -or ... ........,, Pttot, JM. 11, 24, tle3 S34-83 unl•H •coomp•nlect b)' euch · of bt your attorney. tnoorrtc1l'lffl ot thl 1tr .. 1 llddr-vice PrMldenl ...,....... ..~-, ,.....,........, let drori. He also said he Thie 11etemen1 w .. flied wtch lhl l y O U A R E A Ind 01...., common d-"'nallon 11 Thi• tleltmenl w•• tnecl wtlh lhe pr oth., re et requHlld In th• .,._IC MftTM>r cuti '• dleck, cuh or blddlr'• h 1 d f d 1 County Clerk of Orenge County on -v • oomplall'll '"-""'rw. bond. i a t o e er a Jen 8. 11&3. CREDITOR or a contingent .,,y, thown ...., .. n. . County Cleric of Orenga County on Deted: Aprll 19, 1911 ,,_...,. ... ---... No bid .n.-be conlld«ld Ul'IMlN authorities earlier that .,.._ creditor f the deceued you Seid 111• wlll b• medi, but Jen.'· 1983. LM A. 1t9"Ctl Cl«tt ....,,..,a .... _ .... n i. m.de on• bllNc fof'm twllllhed h h d Pubil•ll•d Ortnge Coell D•llY fll 0 ··-'th' th wlll'lout cov1n•nt or werrenty, ,_ Edtlh Tenl&n, D.c>utv Nollce 11 "--bY given thel Ille by the Colle ..._ 8enltwy Olltrlet Martin ad pure ase PllOI. Jen. 10. 11, 24• 31. 1163 must e your claim""' e DPf-or :mp1i.o, :ding 1111•, Publl•h•d Orenge CoHI Delly De&.ANCY, HUNT 6 80.,d ot TruetM• of Ille Coeel llnd It made 11'1 -d-wllh the and us~d cocaine in 159·83 court or pre1ent It to the ~on. or encum •noee, to Piiot, Jen. 10, 17, 24, 31, 1983 FINI~"' Communll)' College Dl1trlct ot provlelon• 01 the PropoHI Stone's home. personal representative P•Y lhl rem•ln~ prlnolPl1111Um or 182-fl 27111 Co.t Hwy 1208 Ortng1 County, O•llfornl•. wlll requlr-te. Marlin ca lled the P\lll.IC NOTICE appointed by the court ~~1';°1~1~~1.,::,~:,~ :~ Pllll.IC NOTIQ( Cofone.d411 M.,,CA92825 receive •Hied bid• up 10 11:00 Eachblddlrrnuett:::::r~= allegatloru a "lie" and 'ICTITIOUl IU ... H within four months from the provtded In Mid note, Id~. 11 lllCTmOUe WH Publl1h~J4b~!~;;~oe11 D•ll)' ~t:·F>~=~· =~i !:'3U: -;'.!"-=::-!,~;rector• ol tli~ m aintained he knew NAME ITATl•NT date of flrlt l11uance of eny. under Ille 1erme of Mid Deed N4MI eTATllmNT Pllo4 Jen 10 17 24 31 1~ college dlttrlct located a.t 1370 Co•te ..... Senti.,)' Oletrtci The fotlowlng P9flOM .,1 ooing letten u pt'OVided ln eect.lon ot Tru11 . l1e1, chergH end Thi followlng per1on 11 dotno ' · · ' · 21243 Ademe AYlnue , Co•I• Men, ,__ ltle rtgllt 10 retect 11"1 or eAt Stone only as a casual bull':c»o~ATIC FOOD SYSTEMS 700 01 the ~te Code 01 ~:~-::!,~': 1':'~:d ~.:!, '':, 1>u11==-~1c ILLUSIONS, ae t8 NIUC NOTICE ~':f!,:=t/~ ~'":w, ~ te, ~ Contractor INlt comc>IY wttn &L'quaintance. (Southern Cllltornll), 7H w. 111h California. The time for Ttutl, lor ,,,. •mounl , ... on.bl)' H•mllton. Huntington 8HOh, PURCHASE OF STATIONERY the ptovlllone Of Section 1710 lo "There's nothins here SI . U12, Coell M-. CA g2821. filing cla1ml will not expire Nllm•fed to ~SJ5e."4.22. Ctllfornla 12848 .. FK:TITIOU• IU..... SUPPLIES, COAST COMMUNITY 1780 lnclu•lv•. of th• C1llfornl1 to go on except what this-Donald John Peter•. aoeA E. prior to four montha from The blneflclwy undlt Mid Deed Ec:IWwd Hugh a.II, 9641 Ct'9vy --NAMS•TA~ -COLLEGE OISTRICT. labofCodl tfte~.uteand Oceentronl. 8albol, CA 92ee1 the date of the hearing ot Tru1t heretofOfe ••tcu1ed Md ChlM Drive, Runllng1on 8Hch Thi lollo•lno pereon la doing AH bid• ere to be In accordanoe ICele Of -O-~ by 1111 'iiiP;;;ii;:=iji;;i;t;i,.~ Abe JtM aoeA E Oceanrronl _ _...__. ...__ dellvefld lo the unclerelgned t. Celltomll 12'4e ~ M: wtlll the Bid Form IMtNctlOnl Md CoRI .... •-~ Ollllrlet wNc:t1 1 2ee . . .. .,__. a""1YC' written Oeclerelton of Defeult #14 P91rtdl Mwy ..... 9M1 ctleYY '. IN v E 8 TM ENT LE As E COl'l<ltllone end 8peall1c9.tlonl wlllClll .,. flled .;i;;:.-;~. AHl•t•nl llllll~ilU B•i~•·b~ .!' oonducted by• XQ\1 N .!..i_EXAMINE D•m•nd tor S•••; end • wrlllen Ch11• Prive Hunllnntnn OH.OF\ SERVICES. 17450 Ml. CffftatOClr. ere now1rl llllJ-.nd mey be 9eCUl'9d Bacreea.v .otMlcl ~ en41f191l generil pertnet'llllp. the file kept by the court. lf Nolle. or 0.feulr •mf Ellc11on 10 Ceflf6'inrti"12CRI ................ · · ' "FllU~\elll"VltreY:··cK 92l411': •••••. ~ ln fM omci of tlle PurGllung Agent IOf'Nlt P9neni. pr-lbed t'*-tor -- • ----------· Don Peter• ou are Interested In the Seti. The un<lerllgMd eauMc:I 11lcl Thie oo.i-le oonducted by en Paul A. beFebllt, 8711 81. ot Mid collegl dletrlet. for~ of Mid code Thi• , .. ,_, w11 filed wllh lhl Y file Mollee or Detaull and Election 10 lndMdu411. · Andr-. W•1mlneter, CA 12'83. Each bidder mull tubml1 with Ille o.11e1· JWNlfY 8 1"3 · BOWARD County Clef'1( of Orenge County on estate, you may a requett Seit 10 bl recorded l.n the oounty E. H. Bell .1N1 bull,_. le conducted b)' en bid • c11t1.t1r'1 clleck, c«Ufled BY ORDER Of fHE 80AAO G E R A L D D A L E Jen. 14, 1aa3 with the court to receive ""'*' the rMJ P'OC*tY II '°"'Id Thi• 1,1a1-1 -ftled w1111 Ille lnOM<k*. oheck. or 'bidder'• bond "'•d• OF DIMCTORS Of' THE 0 ARD Cle f20n'71 • p e c i al n 0 t l c e 0 f t he Diie: December 28. IN2. County Clerll of Orenge County Oii PllUI OeF•bill peyable 10 ..... Otdlr of .. COM! c 0 8 TA M Es A 8 ANITA Ry 1H W •resident of ta Publl1h1d Ortnge co .. 1 Delly lnvenM>r)' of estate and of Slend.,d SeMce Corp. Jenuety 8, 1983. Thi• •t•t-1 w .. flied wtlh the Community ColleOe Dletrk:1 9owd Ol8TRICT Mesa, Ca. Paued away on Piiot. Jen. 17, 24. 31. Feb. 1. 1983 tha petJUO"• .......... un•· and u Mid Trull" T ......___ .._ County Cleric of Or.nge County on of Trull-In "' emounl not INI Publl•hed Orenge Co•ll D•lly January 13, 1983. He wa1 304·83 '"' ·-· ---~ '° Mary McNwnere. ruet .. ""'..,_ Publlthed Or•ng• CoHI Delly Jen. 14, 1913. then five pe<aent 15"'1 ot the tum Piiot, Jan. 10 11. 11113 h f h A 1 TV -----------1 reporta de9cribed ln Section 21031 ·Ven1u1181vd. #1001 Piiot, Jen. 10, 11, 24. 31. 1983 ,..,_ bid .. • guarant .. ltlal the bidder ' 223-e3 ~~= ::ie ~!. 20 yen. P\lll.IC NOTICE 1200.5 of the California WOOdl1rtd Hiiie. CA 11384 18143 Publlthed Orenge CoHt Oelly wlll enter ll'llo lh1 propo .. d -----------...-· Probate <:ode (213) 340-4010 PllOI. Jen t7. 24. 31. Fib. 7. 1913 Contrect K Ille lllM It -clild 10 P'\aJC NOTICE He is survived by hla wife f'ICTITIOU8 IU ... H • MESERVE ·MUMPER 6 Publlttted Oreng• CoH t Delly . Pllll.IC NOTIC( 293-83 him. In the_, of t9llurl to.,,..,-~==~~~~~--Dorii, ION Doug of Santa NAME ITATl•NT ::1 Piiot, Jen. 10. 17. 24, tN3 lnlo IUCh contract, the prQOMd9 of ricnnoue-.. Ana, Ca. and o~er of Cleta The totlowlng &>eflOM .,.. oolng BuGBES 219-83 '1CTITIOUe IU ... H PUBUC NOTIC£ Ille c:Mck wtll bl lor11111d. as.In the , NMm ITATDmNT •>Y& bullneu .. : By: R*rt Meaerve ...-1TAn•NT -of• l>Ond, the tuH tum thereof The fOllowtng S*'IOflll.,. doing Mesa, Ca .• daughter Lori of COl>ITRACT OESION ASSOC. 51H eam,.. Dr. PUBUC NOTICE Th• lollowl"ii petlOl'll I• doing flC11T'IOU8 IU..... wlll b• IOrflllld 10 H id COlltQ• bullll.-•: Bodega, Ca., hi1 litter Suite ""'3. 3857 81rc:to St.~ ., buU-u: N.-ITATIMIN'T dlttrk:1. "'I THE J£WEL'D KITT£H, (8) Roxanne Fleming of Iowa, BMcfl, CA.92ee0 P.O. Bos ,910 .... mu HUNTI NO TON CARPET Th• lollowlng PtflOll It doing No bidder ~y wllhclrllW 1111 bid :THE JEWELLED KITTEN. 22e brothers Tom lloward of CHARLES WEST . 1715 W Newport Bud!, CA HMO NOTICI:. ~ aAU CLINIC, 1308 Ot1Yt St., Hutlllng1on ~ M: tor• perlOd fO< forty-five 145) deyl TueUn Avenue, N-port 8e9Ch, Gienmere SI. W. Co..tne. CA. 91190 (71t) 75l·ltt5 YOU AM .. WAULT UNOIR"A a.en, CA 92Me. OUICK-8UG REPAIR, 2087 eher the dett Mt fat the opening Cellfomll 92M3 Utah and Bob Howard of Thi• bu••-le conducteO by tn PubllShed Orange Cout Q 11 D 0, T" u I T DAT ID R. K. Anthony Alb1ny. 1308 Gtrden Ln. Colt• ...... Cellf, 92827 thereof. J ANET ROUSH ·CAMARAS, Iowa. Services will be held lndlvldual. Dally Pilo• Jan. 10. 11 17 ~Alrt .. 1•1. UNL.aM YOU Ollv• SI., Huntington BHCll. CA LARRY DEL SHAW. 519 Irvine The Boerd of TN91-fMtrVee 229 Tuetln Avenue. Hewpor1 a.ctl. on Monday. January 17. c,,., ... w .. 1 .. • • • T ••• ACTION TO '"OTICT 92848. Ave .. Newpor1 BMch Clilf 928&3 lhl prlvliege of rejeellng 11"1 end Ill C&flfomll 921e3 1983 1 OOPM h Thie 1t11en..,11 w .. flied with lhe 1983 IT II II Thie t>uat,_ le conducted by en Thlt buelnNI le eoncluctld by an bldt or 10 welve eny lrreQUl.,11Jet or Thie~ la conducted by en at : at t e County Clertl of Orenge County on 221 83 YOUll' Pll'OPlll'TY, AY · lndlvtdual lnOMOuel lntormalllill In eny bid or In the lndMdull Harbor Lawn Memorial Jen 8~983. ------------eot..D ~~f::-C: = t\. K. Alt>eny Lerry D. Shew blddl!IQ. Janet~ c-M Chapel with Dr. James ~ !'ta.IC NOTICE ~U..I 0 , TH• NOCllDtNO r111111111m1n1 wu flied w;1h 111e Thie .u1emen1 w .. ni.o wtlh tlle HORMAN E. WATSON Thll lt•t-twu llled wftfl the Forrest of the First Southern Pubillhld Oreng• COHI 0•11) -----------AQAINIT YOU, YOU •HOULD County Clerk of Orenge CCM\ly on County Cleric of Orenge County on Secretery, Soetd of County Clertl Of Orenge County on Baptist Church of Fountain Pilot. Jan 10. 11. 24. 31 . 19&3 CONTACT A LAWYlll Jin. 1:4. 1983. r,_1 Jen. 8, 1983. Tfl.111-. Cout Jen. 8, 1aa3. Valley offk:ia''""· Intennent 158-83 NOTICE OF DEATH OF On l'ebru.,y •. 1983, 11 n:oo -·-,.._ ComtnVnlty co11ege Dletrict ,_,.1 -'6 NO C£ MILDRED PEARL JONAS 1.111 .. p.,_ lnvMtmenl llnd Lo.n Publl1hed Orenge COHI Oeliy · Publl1h1d Oreng1 Coul Delly Publl•h.cf Or1ng1 CoHI Dilly P11bll1~ed Orenge Cout Delly services Immediately P\lll.JC TI AND OF PETITION TO Aeaoclellon ••duly eppolnted P1101J111.l7.24,31.~eb.1.19'3 Pllot,Jen.10.11,24.31,1~~ Pllol.JM.17.24,,913 Hot,Jtn.:10,11,24.it-.ttN -f~~in~~~~under ~•~H T~H~~~d~rw~M~;;~~~~~~~2~•=~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~;2;~~ the d irectlon of Harbor NAMe STATI_,.,. ADMINISTEJt ESTATE NO. Deed of Truet r-ded February Lawn -M ount 0 Ii v e The tol1owt11g j*'°'" ere oo111g A-111613. 21, 1Nt. • IM1r. No. 33335 bOo6i Mortuary of Costa Mesa. bull-11· To all heirs, benefidariea. 13983, peg1 15 18, of Ott10111 S40-55M. TAVA CO MPANY, 3 T•ylor. creditors and contlng~nt RecOfde, Qec;ulld O)': AEOINALO ROSENBAUM lrvlne. Celilornll 1271" edl f Mild ed p, I K. WYMAN end DIANA M. WYMAN, Plfry LarnOI. 3 Teylor, IMl'le, er tora o r ear hulblnd end wife .. joint tenanta MAX ROSENB.-.UM, a CalltOfnll 9271 4. Jonas and penons who may 11 trueto,., In the offic:e of the resident of Anaheim Ca Eert Perere. 14932 E"*)'WOOd be otherwise interested ln County Alclorder of Orlff99 County, Paaed away on Janua,'.y 14: RdTh~u~,;:':"~:0.CS by• the will atld/or es~te. =~~·L~ ~~N ';~LH~~~LE~1 1983. He la survived by his general partnerehlp. A petition h.u been filed BIDDER FOR CASH IP•Y•ble II wife Jean, daughter Lori Per1Y LMnbl by JacqueJ.ne Ma.rinO ln the lime of Mle In '""" man.)' of tn. Raskin, 1l1tera J:.idl\h Thie........,, wae tllec:I with 1he Superior Court of Orange United SlllH) 11: South front M d lb ~-11 d County Cler1c of Orenge County on c t I h t entrence to the Orenoe County Old an e aum, .,..te e an Jen. 14, t983. oun Y requeu ng ' a Courthou••· 21 t w. S•nl• An• Mildr~d R.Q..1~ ............. .....________ a211nn acqueline Marino be &MS •• City of sent. Ane. s.-11 Cf grandchildren, Jeffrey and PuJ>ll•h•d Or1ng• Co111 Oelly appointed a1 personal Ce1Kom1a.a11ngn1.111tellndlnt••t Kenneth. Services were held Piiot. Jan. 17. 24, 31. Ftb. 7, 1913 representative to admlnster conveyed to •nd now lleld by It on Sunday, January 16, 1983 _________ 29_8-83 __ 1 the est.ate of Mildred Pearl under 11.ld Qeed of Tru1t In the at 2:00PM at the Harbor NllJC.IOnC(._ Jonas(under the Independen1 ~°Tt!r. =::i.r:td County Lawn-Mount Olive Chapel. -----------1 AdmJni1tratlon of Eltate1 PAACEL 1: LOi 18 of frac:t MM, Services under the dittction Act). The petition I.a .et for In the Cltt oleo.ta Mele. Countx of of Harbor Lawn-Mount NOTICE OF DEATH OP h~ln De~No 3 at 700 Orenge, 8t.t• of Clllfornll. M per MELVIN A.. PIXLEY AND Cl . 'w mt1P recorded 1n look 4tl, Peoee Olive M ortuary of Co1ta 0 F p E T 1 T 1 0 N T 0 vie nter ve, eet, ln 47 10 50 lnclullve of M...._,OIO&il Meu. 540-5S5MITBS4. ADMINISTER ESTATE NO the City of Santa Ana, Macie. 1n the Office o1111e ~ · California on February 9, Aecorder of M6d County. MELVIN L . SMITH, A·lllSH. id . 1983 at 9:30 a.m. PARCEL 2: An Euement lot resident of Huntington To all he • benefidaria. IF YOU OBJECT to the klgrele. eor ... Md 911~ °;:' Beach. Ca. PUied away 00 creditors and contingent granting of the petition, you ::.~.~,::'°Ar~~. u: January 15, 1983. He wu a credit.ors of Melvin A. Pixley should either appear at the 8ecUon I ol th• Deolereuon of member of the Knifhta of and persona who may be hearin1 and state your Coven•nte, Condition• end o...l.1 ... , t"'__._. __ o South otherwille lntereSted In the ob'-tlon1 or file written AN1r1c;tlone -ded FlbrultY 1• .. ,~-......,._..,., will and/or estate ,~~ 1911 In IOOll 1255e, Page 1&19. Bend, Indiana and a 32nd titi hu ·been filed objecttona with the court Olflc;l•I Record• of Hid Or•nge De1ree Ma1o n . He ii Ape on . before the hearing. Your County. llW'Vived by hi.I aona Larry by La Ben.a L . Pixley m the appearance may be ln peraon Th• 1trHt eddre11 ind other and Bob, daughters Pal" Superior. Court of Oran1e or by your attorney common dlllgnltlon, If In)', of the Grap and Marlene Smith, County requesting thapolnt ~ IF Y 0 U A ·a E A ~>'.,!~;~~O:..~ brother Dever I, 1l1 teu Berta L. Pixley be ap CREDITOR or a cont.inaent CoRI Mele. CA t2t2t. Virginia Alt and Audra u penonal re&reaentativ creditor of the deceaad, you Tll• und•r•l~n•d Truet .. Smith, also survived by 6 to admlni.ater e estate of must file your claim with the dl•ol•lm• •ny I 1blr1ty for eny grandchildren. Services will Melvin A. Pixley (~er the court or present It to the ~ ~ ~-=-~ be held on Tueeday, January Independent Admlnistratlon personal r epresentative en)', ltlown IMreln. 18. 1983 at 3:00PM at the of Eltatea Act). The petition appointed by the court 81ld H I• wlll b• "'ad•, but Harbor Lawn Memor ial is aet for hewing Ln Dept. within four months from the without coV1n1nt or warflnty, Chapel with Rev. John N · 3 at 7oo Civic Center date of flnt issuance of ;:':.i! '":'*'· =~''":; Undvall offldating. Services e. West, In the City of letters aa provided ln eect.lon pey the ,..n11n1ng ~ eum of under the direction of Sa ta Ana, California on 700 of the probate code of the not• leCM'ecf b)' Nici Deed of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Feb 9, 1983 at 9:30 a.m. California. The time for Tr~lth lnter111 thereon. •• Mortuary of Coat.a Meu. Y U OBJECT to the tiling claima will not expire Pf In Mid not•, edvwQI, 11 ~-5554. granh una1 of i~ petition, you prior to four months from :;"·T= •:i;::,n:h~r;:'! ~ ------------1 • o uta et er appea r the date o( the hearln1 ~OftheTNll•llndofthe IA&.Tl-~094 tMl1M & TVTHIU WISlCLW CHANl. 427 E t7th St Costa Mesa M&-9371 ,ACIPIC .. W , ...,_,ttlAlP ... • Cenwtery Mortuary Chaeliel-Crematory 3500 P8CthC v-Onve Newport Beach 644-2700 at the hearing and state yo notJced 'above truet• c;ruted by H id Deed ol objections or file written YOU MA y EXAMINE ~ .~":. ~~~::-'•blV objectlona with the court the file kept by the court. If The benlftc:Wy ~ ea1c1 Deed before the he a r in I · you are Interested In the of TNlt hlretofor-e eucuted llnd Your appearance may be ~eat.ate, you may file• request delivered to Ill• underetgned • pel'llOn or ~ ~ auomey h h ~ Otclw•Uon of Oefautl end 1 F Y A R E · wit t e co~rt to receive o.mend for S•lt, end • wr111.,. CRED"""'R ""-a peclal n otice of t h e Hotloe of Oefeul1endEleQtlon10 ·• n.1 or a oon .... ,.~nt inventory of estate and of Sell. The und•nl1111ed c.ll9d Mid credJtor of the dece&led. you the petltJona, account.a and NotlOI of Defeulf end 1!*11on to must file your claim with reports dacrlbed ln Section ... to bl -ao In Ille oounty court or present lt to th 1200.5 of the California -=.: ~~1:.a~· penonal repreaentaUv Problite Code. P.aplll ll':~t 11nc1 appointed by the cour MARTIN I. SCHNEYER, 1.a.n AllOC ... TNlt" within four roonthl from th l~tl Dove st,...., Set ... ,. car1 '· ~ date of flrat l11uance o Newport l>eadl, CA tHft: :.~ =-IMI. letten • provided In (71') H1·17H. ~..._CA tcn12 700 of the problite code Publl1hed Onanfe Cout ca1,1563-eM>1~to0 California . The. time fo 0.Uv Pl.lot Jan 1 17 23 ,ul>ll•lled Oren" co .. 1 D•lly filing cla1ml wW not ex 1983 • · ' • • Piiot. J111. 10, 11, 2•. 11N prior to four monw f 833·83 llHi the date of the hHrln • P'\aJC llOT1Cl noUced above. YOU MAY EXAMIN the file kept by the (.l()UJ't. I ITA~ °' YllMDDl-ln you are lntereeted lo th °' =-=~ eat.ate, you may file a r.qu. Tll• to11ow1n1 penone n1ve wlth th• court to realv ..,__, IN.-tJA 1111e ~ I l tl I th IUlln.IH Nam• MlWltO"T 1pec e no ce 0 PEMINSUl.A "IAL TY. toto Inventory of lltat4 and o ~ 11 .. ~ hloi'I, CA the petltlona, accounta ttte3. ,.po111 ct..Tlbed In Sectl Tiie "ot1Uou1 Buelnffl Hlll'll 1200.5 of the Callfornl r•l•rr•d to •bove w11 flled In .Proba• Code °'"%!. ~,,,,.. 11, 1171. L&O ANDSalON 11 0t .• ...:..·CAaait~llU ...,_ MBIUV,S, MUMPBB flldlerdt.hnlll t.aleeafl BUG'BBI, llH C•••• .. W••*""'· CAiiiii .,.., New... .... "*' I=~-:: ....... n .... (7lf) '71Wttl. County ein of °'*'II ~ °" PubUthH Oranp Cou w.. 1•. ttu. ptcnnout ...... ..,._ITATltmNT 'flle ~ per-. .,. llUllMtl 11; WATTS MY LINE, au PrMkMll. Crt • Pl•c•ntt•. CA. tlt70 CAll'L O!NHA~O . au ,r1111neH, Crt1, P}1oen111 CA. IH10 Thll bullnlM le ~ by 1111 lndMduel. Oal'I OenMt'O T .... ttetllMnt -Med w1Vt .. ~ o.11 Cf er.,. ~on ...... ,... ·-·-.r-t"-:r:::=. •011 Ult ...... CA ,_ NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED ZONING CODE CHANGES NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Orange County Planning Commission wlll hold a public hearing to consider amending the Orange County Zoning Code by: · Standardizing and modernizing the language of the code for the purpose ctarlfylng the procedure In which fees are collected when processing zone change petitions. COMPLIANCE WIT'H· J:HE CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ACT: It was determined that the proposed amendment Is not a project and In accordance with Section 21080 (b) (8) of the Ca11fornla Environmental Quality Act Is exempt. ' Date of Hearing: January 31, 1983 Time of Hearing: 1:30 p.m., or as soon thereafter as possible. . LOCATION: Meeting Room, Hall of Administration. 10 Civic Center Plaza (corner of Broadway and Santa Ana 8lvd.), Santa Ana. • INVITATION All persona either favoring or opposing thiii proposals are Invited to present their vlewa bet.ore the Planning commlulon. FOR FURTHBR INFORMATION Persona are invtted to C.tl 80b Dninnan In the Planntng Code Section at (714) 834 l8IO or come to the oftloe located at 400 Civic Center ortve wcm, Aoom -aee. -..• Ma. CA 12102 4048. Pl•-refer to CA NO .. 82-2 (SUppl1ment). ~ PtJot. Jsn. ae. 1.7, u. '1.itltllftlf °'""' c-~ ... 2. fltlot, JM ,,, ,., 11, ~ '· , ... -.. , ... P""4llflHOr.,...COMt0. ~ • .Mn. 10, ,,,,.,.,,,.. ......................................... . ., ... ,, ,.. I .. ( • • ·" CL ASSIFIED· INDEX Tt Pllct Yw M, Cal 642-5678 _,,,,, ... •a.-cw--............... ___ _ ·-~ "'-·--··-._,.i-._, .... _,.....TA'> .. DftOYllEfT Kolp'W-.,...,,_ ·-- c.. .... .,.. ___ ·-···--MIO a-.... ~----·-... .... ... IOIO IOll IOIJ IOl4 tell• ••• ton .. .. 1100 GIJ 1214 ... Gii .. Gii euo ... nM 0--1 .... , ·-7010 a.-.1 .. .. 7011 ,.,,_ 7012 .. !WI 7014 S.-L'9ld 7011 """1nt lqulp 7011 liWnLJ8ww>t 70i0 ..... Dodia ?Oil ~:::::=-- -= ~-..:-.:. - ~ Walker & Lee • I ~ ~llltlH J\\ lk-a It' Tlw ttHir ketpl<H''' m1 th(' Orange Co~J . 642~5678 Orange Ooatt DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 17, 1113 «:f· 74r, of P'wple buytny real estali' houe read classified ads rn the past week. a notwuat study indicates. •1 . • 3 • ----=----=---=----~~--- - r.• Orange Co••• DAILY PILOT/Mond•v. J1nu1ry 11. 1883 . . lessi•n181 Servir:e Dired ' ,......-.-...---.-.-~-1Drpall · ~fa-16ftw;p,_le.,.1 ____ 1 .. l..,t1 .. lliiil1..,•----,1 __ 1,_ .. __ c1 ........ • .. ly.._ __ ""-"·•• .. •..._ ____ fandu le!I•/ Jltn•de! f,~~~ .. ~~~~~~o~:T!~P ~Jiii 11111111111 & S~~~~~~~SJOl>e =:~ ~~e~:ly 1*A•1.,M11 Yf2~· L~~~.:r~ .:.~:lh::,l,~~~ tor ~er:=, my ,ully llo'<I & rneured !•1~~'~':'~~~111 C•ll Mll<I! 048-1391 cleen houM . 540.01~7 °&:;..~ive"rr..:~· wallpaper 11111 you've NII nome. U0..6'3 contrectOf 532•5649 ·f L1wn m11n11Ao10111ttno HAULINO·OAADINO HouH cle1n1ng. rell1ble. No overtime 730-1303 been putting off Call Comple1e R9'>111ra. wall• & 'f f" .. 11m11e 041.eol6 <lemollllon, clean-up rel. Own tranep. Ae&t. STAAVINO COLl.lOe P atri ck t h 1~1~er 1.T.,.l .. lt._ _____ !"!'"'_ e.lllngt Small job ·=· Q1r<1enlng, Oleln•upt , Concrete & trte removal. YOLANDA e42.().i()O 8TUO£NT8 MOVINO Htn09'. 568-73 TILE INSTALLfD ll llll 12 i,. exp trimming '*'*"' wor1c Oulok MrV e.2•7131 uauu PUllTY co Lio. T124-431 Pl11ltr/ ...... All llln<I• Olltrtnl..S 17"41 662• 512 ... 5.1eo4. e42·~915 • HAULINO·t!U<ltnt WllO• c:i..n ~. o.... lneurtO 041-1427 PLASTER PATCHINO ~· John 14()..8217 llfftrltal L ... 0 Huck. ume lo rattt. nlntt1 ~ n.111 to Oodll· WATCH US OAOWI Re1tucco1. 1n1/111t. 30 Strvlct Dlr1etoJY j !•Utlttllt I I 81by1lttlng, 1~ hoUr ~tnt•Mltonry•tllOCk N11r Victoria/ nt rel• Wlll•·CUtt. work. Lie. $1 .84 per day Co111 M ... e42·141a '31t057 Rob J47·2113 Ca~f .. 1 •ul!I Ceraak The Th11'1 ALL you P•v l1IYI tlle TU IU IOI I C11>lf1111 & Cwpthtry 30 <l•l.•d Small jobt & repltrl hit prlctl ~~283 In t Free .. um111 ._.5-2003 C~IW Cart DAILY Cfrf!!l!J ChlldCatl . l.o.,.. ~ lf JI ~· ELR~IC~. /~.~~ ~Y~70ll~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~====~Y~rt~N;11;1~.~p;~~l~6;4~~~~:7~7~~~~~~~~~~~J p I rlghl. lrH H llm•I• on ... ., •• a HAUL-MOVE·AEMOVE ., ...... , .. Free ell Sieve 752·855e lttg• °' aman Job•. -Piii P&llTIM PILOT Remod./R991lr1. Lo r1111 cept1noe , FT P , CM D1ck1. 11101, fenctt. home. 846·8188 wkdye SERVICE DIRECTORY . Chrl1ll1n mother will care Lie. 39M21. 813,0358 Exp'<I In Ill home repalra. I'm lnturtO Feo.tated Tax 8tr'lllee by Richard Sinor l ie REMODELS/FACE LIFTS tor your chll<l In my C.M RMI No Job 100 em•N "3-5415 NORM Home/ottlot IPPlt. 2eoe44 14 rr• Of hlPP" Cuatom wood patlot-. home 557·8385 LIC'D ELECTRICIAN BRIAN &4l-3018 ' ltalllt 631·4871. loeal cut tCHMra. , <leekt & fenc.e, Ill ~ Looking t or xlnt ohlld Oval WOfk·Reu rat• _ r:.. ::r.:: hm repair FrH u t. care? Sl.50 hr. FULL Free Ml Tom 631-5072 MYLI MllJR, H llr n y> Ml·'HH IHI ... ,... Thatlk you, 631-4410 ....... . ITllllTI TID s.rvioe.. •>IP'd 157-111 , DO IT NOWI lit fer hltlr1 Your Diiiy Piiot Service Directory RepreMnt1t1v1 Randy 64 t.0822 TIME ONLY. Yard, lunch. RESID/COMM'L/IND. Exp'<l In I ll home rep1lra. Furneo.-pool·Wltlf hell OAADENINO SERVICE LOWEST AATE81 Prompt, ·2·.-.. -r·n---\!ooM~.-•• -.f-.-,-.- Door1 Add'nt Conver· 1n1ck1, 1ctllllll11, TLC. 20 yra. Do my own work. Comm'l/A11. 048-3011 Pruning, Clean-up•. neat prole11lon1l1. 16 " •; -Tattriat •lone'. All Bldg. 35 yrt. 2·3 yr•. 75't'2342 wkdyl Lie. 278041. Al 84&--8128 DUNHAM HOME .... lteln Commlr•ld. 048-7$&8 yra exp. 839-71'8 Quallly·tentlble "'" 1--M ... o·.-, ·eu-b-1jee1-.-.-l(-.-14- Rel1. Jerry 648-4413 IMPROVEMENT Cement removal/ bu1tlng, lalaltUatt 18T ~LASS PAINTING ATLAS PLUMBINO Day/ev• 18 & S12/hr. 4U·Hll, tit HI CARPENT~ SERVICE Cltaalat S.nictl flHr CJtaalat 83?-8530 e•tlo covert, trnl con1!r. HOME MAINTENANCE W1llp1per. Int/ext. Re· HEATING & WELDING Mr. Morgan e45-&178 Klich/bath Rtmodellng HouH eleanlng & bul l· I IF YOU WALi< ON IT · ***HOME REPAIR ery rt11. r1t11. Mike, WORK OUAA .• REAS. palre. Free Ill. 878·529' 241 hr eervl~ S45-188I F0tmlca top• & C1blnet1 neN, J1nltor111 Mrvlce. -cle1n ttl Wood, Ille, Repllrt/Remod No fob 644..0700 •ft 8PM 991.9955 P1lntlng/repelr1 • dre, REPAIAIREPIPE/REMOO IWldft Cltaalat A••lllHt/ ltaNtl Llc'd Ken 838-1451 Clll I~ prol ... lonll Jim carpet, etd. 832·4181 too 1ml. FHt H rvtce, IHll Cltaalat • la wlndowt replacecl. mlr-Low co1t. 21 hr ~ WE WASH WINDOWS CARPENTRY-MASONRY Framing, flnlah, remodel, 846-4800 free eet. Keith 848-4672 H!!J rore<I war<lr~be drt BRENT 850-1030 ' Fut . Profeulonlll OESIGN·DRAFTINU repair, etc. Llc'd. Call WE WILL TAl<E CARE farallut ltflaltlalat lOW RATES HlllEWOll 1eR1CKWORK: Small fob•. 548-7887, 648-500 ltaNtllat/ IQllr' O\lilliy w0f1t guarant..S DAVE 484·1003 P1lombo 9e2·8314 of your 1an11or111 & QUALITY FINISHING ALL TYPES REPAIRS WAITED Newport, Coat• M.... ULPll'I HlmM Repilr/remod-el.-Decke, Free Mllmate 841·7391 C • • f I IC • _ _. cl11nlng needl 55e·8470 & REPAIR. REAS. INSTAUATIONS HI h" Ill h I Irvine. Ref1. 875·3175 Low ratee. lie. 538-81188 Air ... / • r •• I ·~"' nnict Free Ill. Tom 546-2953 ODD JOBS TO FULL pe~or~:i I~ ,.,::i=:: BRIC.l<·STONE-BLOCK docu, l>Ollt•. lln<:411, o•r Air conditioning, relrlge-Shampoo & ate1m clean. Ceatracttra, Gtaeral HOME RENOVATIONS Experienced, depend•: Frplcl, pl1nter1, bbq't . INT/EXT PAINTING drt. etc. Alyn 875-8294 rttlon, heating. r1p1lr. Color brlghtenere, whl QUALITY REMODELING Gar•ealat 760·7051 anytime Chet ble, honttt. Intelligent. Free etl. Ref1. 848·0484 & WALLPAPERING ... flat ..... Law ...... ,., That Ill c:ontractort whO perform work over 1200 Including l abor and matll'lllt mutt be I~ MO. Unltcenlecl contrac- tora 1houl<I to 11111 In 11111r 1<1vertl1lng. Con· tractors •nd eonaumer1, contact Mary Grondle 11 (714) 559;.-ose with any • qu11tlon1. Contrector't State L.ICenM BOltd, 21 Civic Ctnter PIUI, 'Room 890, Santa An1, CA 92701. Rets. 545-004' erpt1 • 10 min bleach. P1tlos-Ad<ln'1·Dtc:k1 TllEll Cerpentry • MUOflry met1culou1, flexlble. I tm Evtrythlng In Muonry i.':.om :::!'~ r;::_.•:~·1 -----------,\ la It Hlll. llv/dln. rmt '16; IYQ KENNETH MICHALE Rooting • Plumbing I II. be. I . p II 0 n. Llo/bond1<1. Low, low·---------Hubef Roofing-Ill typea. II • room S7.50; couch StO, Lie. HM821 84&-3652 Topped/remo~. CIMn Orywill • Stuceo -Tiie 673-7012 alter 6 PM wtnter prte.e. 873-6387 15 yra e11p. I'm tmlll, my N-·rtcoller-dtch Driveways, Parking Lot cnr SS Guar. ellm. pet up, lawn r"'ov 7.5 t-3478 Rtmod. J.B. 848-8990 weekdays. All day S11ur· prlctt are 1m1111 Ron, Ltc U 11802. 548-9734 Repalra, SHleoallng. odor. Crpt repair 15 yrt Caatta .... wtrklat Landaceptng·Yd Clnupe JACK OF ALL TRADES day & Sundly llJal lll .. a 650-&477. &50-789e ROOFING REPAIRS S&S Asphlt 631°'199Llcl ~~rs ~~~f;: myaell N-cabinet•. cabinet ti-Tree trlm/remov-Malnt Ctll Jack anytime, Mini Bllndt. <1r1perlea. Nlf, PlllTill Sm1 11 Jobt OK. FrH Dan Hallberg Grt<llng I clng. bare. formic• Irrigation Jim 851.0129 Day or night. 875-3014 (714)171-7012 Why p1y re11111 I Mii & RESID/COMM/IND 1111m11ea. C111 Tom or & P1vlng Co. Res/comml NS~tl~as~~.~:.~~:i° coun1ertop1. 842--08111 Gardenlng-ln<lacpe m11n1, Har•• ... flHH Eltperl•noed. reliable and ~~·~~~nee 1988. Jim FRl:E EST. 660-7189 Chrck. 542·6392. Uc. 3971804 &42•1720 dry. Fr11 1t1. 839-1582 tree wprk comm/lnduat, HARDWOODt:LOOR thorough, loe11 flt.. c•ll ltcrtl&rial Semen l1b1lttia1 We Care Crpt Cleanert Dttr Baatl•t Chuck Nolir.1ln 842•2873 WAXINO ONLY Beverly e.-5•1284 1.llma ___ ,______ -•• ... M_r_ia .. 1_____ Secrettrlll Hrvlctt: IY· WILL SIT In my CM home.. .Slum Clffn~ UphOI. DOOBS GALOREll LAWN & YARD MAINT. Se.ndln111l1n Cr1fttm1n HOUSECLEANING I ·ABC MOVING-Flrthlng lnterlOf Oetlon ping, copy, etc. Fut anytime. fenced yard, Truck MounlOnlt SopplY"fMtlll~r -elesn-(.lpe. lna,-llc.'O. ~+Cutt. HM Pllntlng By Sel.ndl111vt1n ltldy Quiett, Clr9M Servlct. HANGING/STRlPPINo urvloe . 875-4458, meal•. r .... 548-2874 Wortl guar. 845-3718 Call Bob. &418-2923 ...,.. Free Ml. Devt "3·2503 546-0974 831-4170 exp'<I. 541·2171 We do pecking 552..0410 VIM·MC Scott 645-8325 700-6358 'for your camera .. . /• .. , ' , . . I\.~ • DOLLAR DAY 'DOUGH SAVERS .. 3 ··a-DAYS Sell your no-longer needed Items for cash. If It doesn't LINES sell, we'll run It another 3 days FREE. One Item per ad, must be priced. Sorry, no real estate or comme[~ :',:~ :~~~etana. CLASSIFIEDS 642 ~5678 m --- I HHI Ualarala~.. Arutaeata Oaf. Ap'18tat1, Oaf. Aput••••• Oaf. ~JU!•••••· Val. Aprtaeat1 Uaf. ;4 Apu1e .. t1, Vat I ~··•••~· UaJ. Apd.ea11; Ual. AfU!U9ta, laJ. lewrrt lucla utt Gtaeral 2'102 l&lM& lllaa• 27M Ce1t1 ••aa 2724 Cnta Mt1a 2724 Cnta ••11 2'12~ , ....... VltJt 1'117 lllulea Vl!Ji 271'1 lnprt IMcla Hit l!'!J!r1 .... , 271t 2BR $415 MO S20 di.. IUYfR..... I • ·-I Luxury 2 bdrm, 2 bl apt. NO FEEi Apt. & Condo 2 Br.+ o.n. 2 ea. fr~. Nleely lurn, 1 Br, lrplc, cou1nt to Sr "c 1tl•en1 -• l.T_, I ' a•~tfl'='=4 Frplc. 1m1ll y1r<1. $700 !!:? rent1J1 VIiia ~ntllt tk t o...--h •1~1 patio I Blk from beh 546-5704 ~ • L1tt1e 1s1e. pier. 3 atory 2 Br, 1'n Ba twnhte •--=--=all mo 851·8228 . lFfOllllLE HOlllll -676.4812ero11er ~~41°8"tt.59:&":; Near 36th & BalbOe Ulll deluu lrg 2Br, l rplc, Bullt-lns, 11und rm. car-lPUTlllm FOi FAMILIE• -pd SSSO unlll June 15 Wtnl Ad Help? S1600 mo. 675-3087 port. yard/b1lc Small BH1.1tltul gardtn apll Wutalde Skyluk Apll. • ,_ _ 2 Br. 2 B1. from $525 No _6_7_6-_5_9_54_. ____ _ 650-4468 6"2·58711 Yearly $775. 2 br. garage. Pet OK $600-$825/mo. P1t101/dtck1 Spa heai ' 1120 Cenllr St. 2 Br 2 ........ " I pett. Acro11 from N-· IAL:llA IUY ILll pttlo, W/0 2548 Orange Avt. . paid. No peta • Ba. newly <11cor1ted, MISSION VIEJO FAMILY VlLLAGE. 64 unlta. ~:s'.4~ Gott CourM. I Studio 'ept, new lllH, Classified works ,) for you when you wa nt to .. "'. t 675-8382 aft 7pm Call for appt 12 Bdrm. 1'1• Bl $560 910111 & refrlg. No pell. ,..__ c $1000/mo. You buy or TSL Mgmt 842· 1803 2 Bdrm. 2 Ba. S585 !!~3'-:2°· 1 Br. s375. wesUlde o( Cabot Rd. betweeOrn ..,,.., ~ow~ S550/mo. Bachelor Pen· rent my lurnr BBC mem· 2Br. near oay. no P•ta 2 8d, 1 Ba. redeeorated. 398 W Wllt0n 631·5583 ~ " V1Uey Parkw1y1, Ml.Alon Vie.)o, ange ty, thouN. VlfHlll". pool, berthlp req. 642·778& HI· beam celling, relrlg. 1ehedu.led IA:> open In April. 1g83, 1 I sundeck, yrly ss2s mo + gar. pool Child 01< No 2 Br. 1 Ba, upper, E/tlde. Frpl 2 Br. I Ba. patio. encl epa, secur ty g1t1. 111 *** * 2 BR n~ b• gar utll. Eve 873·5003 or pets S525/mo. 1389 Al No pe11 S•SOlmo gar. new drapea, c•rpet Complex hu 2 & J Bdrm for f8ml11es & ~=~~· no pett. Call . patio, $585. e31.3ee8: 875-7091 B1k1r 6'11·0783 &3l-8lSS & p11n1. Clole to ShoP-handiapped pel"90nS or low-to-modent.e income TSL Mgmt 642_18031875-8411 3 Br, $495 1'11 Bl Large 1 Br. adult, near ping S5~5tmo 55l-6l30 A ll apartments have carpet, dr1~1. 1tove, ------- Loveiy lrg uppe< 2 Br 1 B1 2 Br. $445 l B1 shops. pool. 111 utlls pd. 2 Br, 2 bt condo. air, pool ~fnger1tor, garti.ge dispoaal & aic conditioning. WlmR RllTlLS laa Cltatale 27'11 unit Vi-orSo Bl)' No Pool.Nopeta548-9558 18114 M onrov.l l . K i d• ok S550 m o Eligiblefltnilinmuatmtttfederalstandardlfor 3&4 Br.Clotetowatlf, 2 Br S485 earl n~ garage. Yrty STOO Pr mo 54._"3... -(213)860·9513. income & (•""''""' size. Tenant.a will pay 30'I of "-n a-u fUnll reuon.,.. • • Y y. ·~ & utiLAgt. 673-34741 2 Br ~/gar $470. Nu cpt, u-v ~ -·~, .'b~. Ill ~Ilea Broker decor,-poor, nr b each.-Is r·s "C" Oran ge. 1·N-ew-ly-dee-0-,.'"'\_1<1_1_B_r-.-& t Br. Condo, frplor micro, •l'IOOIM wwards rent. 875•4912. bu•. No petl. 4811-8277. la.... 63&-4120. l ·6PM Water 'Bachelor & loft 1pt. Pa-2 Cir flllr w/opener' I To request an appllc1uon write a post cud to •----..:-----Pl1atant, eunnf2 er t Ba, ••• i ••• t. 2707 pd llo, enclld'garagea, pOOI, apllt·levelbwaterl•ll & MISSION VIEJO FAMILY VILLAGE cart' of -• Ilk,. P 01 & .pl • r .. rlg •• gar1ge. no pelt •--------2 •• • I• spa, rec room. No pets · · 1 ' K M Co 6330 S. VI t.e Bl d 1450. 493-2710 2 Br. 2 S.. v.1y Mature. 1 II, ' • ' S485tmo 393 H1mll1on, SS75/mo 545-3115 o . anagerMnt " n cenS ~ Lt' ,. Newly decor Gu pd, Suite 302, Loa Anfeles, C.llf 90048 tale •U S lou 3 .. 2 .,_ / non tmkrs, no pelt teOO encl gu. dwshr. pool. 6"5-4411 •MESA VERDE 2 Br. I I name. return malllnc lodctrHs. names & ages of COUNTRY CLUB LIVING PK 1 tr. 1 ... w1 w + dep's 213/ 7~185. BBQ No pell 842·5073. 1 & 2 B<lrmt 1pf1 1v1ll. Ba Newly dec:of-. $495 famUy nwmben. Pleue indiaat.e If you dftire a IN NEWPORT BEACH carpett, rp c. pll~ ~ 257-9792 or (71 4 ) Pool, 1p1, laundry, QI· Nopet1 833-11874. handJCappedurut. Slnglu 1 & 2 Bdrm llove, <l /w S550 m 873·3986 $500. UllllllU plld, 2 rage No pelt $435/mo. ••MESA 'VERDE•• Ap1r1ments & TownhOu· _8_9_1_·1_84_4 ____ _ __ OC_EA_N_/B_A_Y_V_IE_W__ bdrm, 1 bl, S250 StcU· up . B.' 0 r. 8 e I 111 2 Br, 2 81. upper. Lndry ... •UNIQUE. 2 Br 2 81 wl 2 Br, t Ba. lrg •Pl upst. rlty. Call Beth 631-5230 645·5677 • rm, <l/w, lrple, gar Haat. ltac~ 2740 IHaal. ltac~ 2'140 From S5etl lrplc. Walk lo beaeti. w/patto Quiet & clHn. P E BLUFF APTS $575/mo 5'40·5448 • On Jamboree Rd at $575/mo. 486-7471. $735 mo, yrly, Incl utll for IN WlLUOI WHll UJllPtPU APTI 2 bdrm t'I\ bl twnhH San Joaquin Hiii• Rd. OCEANVIEW 2 1 du It a No p eta. 2 Br 2 Ba. Chlld ok. Pl· 758 W 19th. t8r. cpll, ct.en, .. LOVELY "LACE $425 + $375 d1p 011 ·~ 110t S tto~ \llew, trplc, ancled LU)(URY $395 mo. 382.. VJcton. .. .-· Avail Feb 1. 400. mff. 873...(1372 gar . gH 1tov1, dllll· 1 8r I Bl $465 mo. 642-3780 TO LIVE pd. Nr Freew1y 193-4194 2Br. 2B .. 1 tOO IQ ft Lo-(213) 785-1257 S295 Nice Bachelor, rup. w11her, 1p1, ln<lry rm 3 Br 2 Ba. S635 mo. :;:~~~s], & 2 Br llTllll lllT -front, <11111ppHancee. adult. No pets U1U1 peilcl sa5Q/mo I Mlnut• from bMcll Newly redone 2 Br._ 2 Ba. •Pool/'"1bbq *To blend with IMng ~~~~~2• pool S850 mo. AttL Fara/ VaJ. 2IOt 106 e_ B~ St Ap..... SPMC 631-'1107 Marble Pullmen Iopa lge ll•P·down llv. rm. •5 acr• of bMutltutty •Tennls+Spa+Pool .,.............., - - e.ytront Pvt t>Mcll. 1600 2 Bdrm Cott191. 0.C:MltM dr1P19 wllrplc, g•raee, •!drat. 1an<1ieaped iurroun· •Frean Sea Bremet Spacious 2 BT. & Den FHl/--1 1q ft. 2 BR 2ba. frplc, eutlkle Plutn wtw e&rpett a55o mo 841•4901 or ding• •Private P1t1oa waterfront Apt. All COSTA MEVery Nie• gar. S1100, cpl Of •Ingle, 2825 Elden, 831-1755 Welk In CIOtttt 831-2518 • Nr F~ & thopplng •t4 SpldOUt Plana emenltlu .. bo1t 111p Complex. 548-0130 Vic· I 714/873-2182 •---------Prlv111 Patio lttltl TtN-• •Quiet 1,.. •Oourmet tired kit· iv all. No pell. CALL IMll Manor, 8119 VlctOfll SPECIAL Gourmet Kitchen chene 7.,. """19 St, Colla M ... 2 Br 2b1, 1m111 apt. Nr C.rpor1 w/ttorage Decoretor pert9et, •P.. • No pet1; furn 1v•ll ""'"''" belch & b1y on Plf'lln Pt. MOVE IN ALLOWANCE s d BBQ ciou. 2 Br 2 'I\ Ba. New I Cl 14) Ml·lltl Furnltu<e upon reQuetl. 3Br, 2S., 2 hOu ... from SS2S/mo. 7141845-4282 ~J~ r'm~rpr~':~~· .!!f!; pa. ~~n':; C1p1 Cod ttyle, pool, 8011 Hollend Cr, HB 8~ :i;n1C::,1nj ,!U:::: l>Gtl, frplc. garage, $1000 .... , zttt BAY VIEW 2 8 r. t B1~1r pd ., ' lg I I loc 548-.. 830 JICUU:I. rec ., •• pr1Vat• 1 Btwn Sllter/Wamer lo Huntington' Ctnt91' 1 mo •• yrty IM. e42·3443 ................ ·---.---.-----• g • r • x n • no -----p1llo, balcony & large otl e..ch _ mtA"lt 0,1.-10 San O... •,2 ... Iba. 1......,, ••.,,./mo. ....._ - Wk 978-6371 or hm &31·8427. ..,.,. paper, <1r1p6ry a much WtllWI go Frwy. No pet1. • Nr Harbor HI. 855-6301 -·-ac>t W/D. gar IC> • p • t • Av 1 I I now . llW NW a-., garage. decorator w1ll· 1 '"' •• ... ....., -~ --• _5_7_3-8_2_76 ______ •-Ea-11-81-d-•• -,-v-1-11-11-ow-. -3-8-R ~ dtcOfllld t Br & ITl()(e. SlOOO/mo. Credit Spic. 1 a 2 br, lovely 1 BR from &540 I wkdy Rich 752-0581 Wkly ttntale 195 up . .--------------------. 2 81. dplx. Fple, patio, Been plut loft apt. Pillo, rel'• • mu1t. 9.5 call plnH & 1tre1m1, 110. C.naa ••I ••r 1'121 S675 mo. 6~7 ='~,=-~s...Ts: '841·2220 . •ft 5 01111 g1t11, entry by phon•. 2 BR from SS85 . Color TV, frH coffH , . ...... SEAWIND VILLAGE heated PoOI & 1tep1 to One of the ways homes are being bought and sold today Is with Blended Bate llor\gage A blended rate mortgage is a ne•" mortgage that cover8 an old mortgage and advances new runds The new mortgage Is used t.o pay otf the existing mortgage at a lower raLe lhan the current market rat.e The lender g1·ants the new rate somewhere beLween t.he old rate and the prevailing market rat.e The new monthly payment. Is larger t.h&n It was previously, but. not aa high as current rates would • require. Impact on buyer • Rec111ves a lower th&n m1rket rate • Can quality with a lower income • Lower monthly payrneni. Impact on aeller . • Attr~ potential buyer• • R.icelHI all fund• at cloeint Many lenders offer a blended rat.e mortgace aa u. produoee a higher ret.urn tiha.rl t.he old moricace. A real esiate prore .. 1onal can gutde a buyer to those properttea where thta 'fpe or mo:i«age la av&tlable. 383 H1mllton, 845-4411. 848-3375. fge rte 1r11 Incl. gym, 8AYFRONT, 1 BR. 1 BA. I Br. 1881 Mapl• Ave. t 1---------13•5 , 8d 1 Bl I pool & •P•· Free cable frig. '825/mo. 111, ltst person. $375/mo. Up•· Sit b h 1 1 ° · r, • poo · 1 t 11 2 f I I arp 1c e or un t . llund"'. adutte. no pet• nt 1 . ree mo1. S 1 0 0 d • P • Y r I Y tetra • .atove, ndry rm. ttove. water pd. $350 ..... 1·:hA ••• 1,u 7 848-6591 6'4-0128 Sierra Mgml 841·1324. N ..... 11... ~ o.u, '",.. ----------, mo. o pets. _.,. ""• 3 Br, 2 Ba home. Bltnt, Lge bachelor 1pt. w/klt. Two week• tree rent, Im· Ilk for Dave, Larry or 1 BR upetllra. '370/mo carpt/drapet, frple. W/ utll• pd, Wiik to bead\. med OCCP'J 2 & 3 BR. Pam Relt. required. no pell. I $850 / c II a 3 a o . 8 4 5 • 3 7 7 9 , $475 to '826. Comer Of wg• 2 BR 2 81, 2 tty 352 Vlctoril. 6'5-81&1 I ~::ot21. ~o . 1 840-8335, 848·871' Fairview & Ad1m1. Call I s•50 N t 557_..785 un t, ~ mo. o pt t . 1 Br. S380/mo. Pool, 2 Br 1 Bl. avaJI. Jan.,l . ·~ Dix new 3 BR condo. lplc, •------'-----C111 540·1158, 11k for 110111, refr'j;· lndry lac. ml from belCh. ~~'. 1;~,,:ti;~fo~os~;. FHI HIT Tl 2·1·11 2D;;•;~•~ry:::;' tor ~:a.~:~~'. 23 w . Bay. · 868-4218 312 TentnSt. 1 gat1guard,MC.1yt.2/t., ~~ ~~l~~JO : Feb Lrg 1 br, relrlge, renge, r 1· mo Lovely Unit by the Sea. 2 Br. 1Yt Bl. TownhouM, 754-1067 up+ $250 dip. 2308 w . pool, laundry. carport. 2 per90ne. 155 W. 11th 2 Br. 111111 pd, 1450/mo. Oceln view, epllt 1111, 2BR fr~. tennis, ape, g.,1ge, 8ach411M. partly furn .. yrty, o c e • n f 0 rn1 , N . e . 1Bt. up1111r1. gu1g1 & No pell $395/mo. fOf II-St. 949.9507 No pet1. prlv patio, Old« 1Vob1. gu, trptc. bal-near beach. $575/mo. •t b 1 k 1 0 b • 1 c h . 673-4l54 elec Incl. S580 mo. mllld time only 831 W. Cozy 1 er ended garage, p1ople pr1ferred. 3 43 cony. l aundry room, 2202 H111 Clrclt, '350/mo. 875-3148 1--------- 975-0578, 780-8515 19th St. 548-0492 luge patlc~. frplC'. ipa, C1brtllo. 546-8516 '850 Nope11. 752·2197 7141'M0-3745. Furn room w/bett.room S57S 2 br. 1 ba, bltlna, no Fl replace, pool, <llth· rec room $455/mo. No 2 er. 1·~ B• 810 J~nn R&H ln,,..tmtnll llllTIWI -1 a , Ver11llle1 bach. bdrm. prtv nr So. Cit Pllza, f9m Pool pall 3 87 W 81y s .. d I 1 s 11 • ..._ roomy. pool. Ja e. pref.$15wtt.·66f.17a7 pelt. · w11her. pvt p1t10. 11tr1 · t, "' u II pr• · ma Lu11 18r condo Avlll Im-2 Br, 1'"-Bi. bullt·lni. s • ... 5 / s a Agent 780-11889·8 I A 2 B 1560 648-0073 dog10K 545-8463 "' .... mo. an Y PVT. ENTRY. kit. ptlv., 5rg_ ~2'.';~n r. · · med. Poe>!, J~. llundry. g1r patio. new urpets & 8 .. 2·6149 furn, empl. non-tmkr. 57 ° New luxury Condo, walk S530, utllltltt p1ld. 2 HC. prk I' .495/mo. palnl. V1eant. Open Sii I"-K 2724 i-L-a-rg_a_2_B-r.-1-B-a-.-,-,0-v-e-& lo SC. Plue 1 Br. & den Bdrm, 1 Bl, $250 Seeu· 5t~724;_~37547,. ~}!._vned.t.or & Sun Ni pm, '800/mo. •S.)'fronl* S275, 493-3480 -•ta IH refrlge, newly <ltc:Orlted, lncludH washer, dryer, rlty Oall Beth 631·5230 • ., • .,,..,, 1 8 6 3 p 't t 1 woo <I . Room w/pvt bl & entry. Lrg 2 Bd. S.1111 celllngt, utll• lncld $546/mo,. frplc, eleg1nt trench 2 BA 1 Ba. ""'llo ept .. no 1 bdrm. flreplace, pool 545·2 t35 N/tmkr. Piii aultt. gar1 Linen furn. Non·lmkr. tot• of wood lhruoul. 851·8522. window•. top floor, pool ,.... 1 t tlO $480 H75/mo. 873•1521 bef. $250/mo & ,... utlt I.~· Hrv bu. $460 2258 1 view, tennl 1 courtt , pet1.Mll5. Pf'VlePtl · mo. Ilg 2Br Trl·plt1t, g111g1. 9pm Eaayl>Metl100M1.Aefa. M.pl •.• 73.••oa or 2 bdrm condo nr So Ctt 1wlmmln' poole, ap11, 045+8111Of162--0911 , 842·8807 1500 mo. 1209 Florid• u u-v St 1213) 48,_1~5 EHlbluff: 2 1peo. 1 Br 483-2042 S<Ca.1356 Plea. Poo11, 1p1, aec Hun1. c ubhl w/gym. Newer 2 Br. 2 Ba. No pet•. 1 Br 1 Bl. upstllra APT.. apta. Meow carpeta, pool, Btiut. CdM IAAt tlon. 2 1:11. no pell 2601 W. 3841 BelrSt.St.Alblnt. ••75/mo. 780·1411 or dllflwuher, private P•· "'-"·"•""""• ........ tra •~na •--1 •• b........ ...... "" S575/mo 2 Br 2 91 "~ (t bd 11) ,. "3 2 ... lo ·• ..,.,.,,. ,..,,,.....,.. • -·-"'"' w "g i ....... ,y .--· blkt •rom be1ch Pv' . . n • ..,..... rm time .,4 ... 4 , 842-7525 ~Of wkndr. I .... ~ .. Wlllf 2 br , 2 bl, blt·ln1. tent.,.... No peta. seoo b th/ Kl l'I townhouM. lrplc, patio, $475 8&1·2176 2Br. 1Be dpht, pvt patio. •Cllln t br, MacArthur pll<r 1 chlfd ok, no pelt. dtw1hr. ,,~ mlltt bN<:h. '825/mo. 044-4717. I en,r1nc1. tc g~~l~a~:rin:.7 or'' 111 Enjoy 1883 In I large lu· n1w <lrpt, frHh p1lnt, VIiiage, nr SC PIUI, S.A. ~U~ ~olee545•2000 N o pllt. UOO/mo. Sp1Cle>13 ept. 1 mNt from rs~5 im'o~ ~~or ~~lfl : TSL Mgmt 842·1803 xury 3 Br. Apt . Treat cloM lo •hopping, Nwpt flnnlt, pool, 1p1. No gen ' · 153&-8382• beach, no ~t1. 7~1775 e11/Wtlnde. Of befOfl 2:30, 842•8221 yourNll to 2 81. petlo. l Hgt• area. *575 mo. pelt. lmmtd. S4'5/mo. 3 Brm 2 81. dining rm. 042-2357. ..oom In Co•'• u•••· pool. No pett. '650/mo. 833..tt82 I 978-2380 Tena frptc. withing t1c11 .. ge. lul. luMar 1'141 •--------•" • -• ..... " YNl11• 845-3381, 876·5848. E'·• ... 2"'• T .. _.... rll•· 7781 Cypreu. 4 Br condO. 2~ b41. pool & l<ltotl. pmr. M ... ltudanl Baenetof 1 a 2 elf 1 ..... u.-upper .....,, 2 Br. E. 11th. ltple, patio, $875. S300 .. cur. Studio Condo. 8lt·ln1, t1nn11, no pelt, ref'•. pmf. '200. 549-"58 • ~p . I I IP~ OLIVE TAEE. 2180 Col· gar. $535, 120 29th. gu. no ptte. <l•po1lt ~-8842 •ft 5:30 Frpl, r.•lo. AerOll bctl s. 5 0 . 5 5 3 -8 2 2 2 : -~ •o -1 ................ •v · oo • 1P1• aun feoe, :ZBr 1'hb41 ltudlol. 6'8-0100, 84M218 S 2 O O S 4 7 5 f mo $ 4 t . 9 8 2 -4 8 1 4 , 739-8521 ~.'.!.....' ..:..::.:.... ;~_:-& rm. f)etl. lmmtd Oc> SS-25 & S535 Including Ill 631-4218 ON BEACH. 1BR:-t460.2 96'.ette ·-""" .. __. ..... ~ 8 ._. 0 wet.er, j"· pool. Call 2 Br· I B1. carp1t1. 8A .,,,...,,. SS25. v~1. · tllg Canyon Townhom•. utll H7·1MI eft 5Pf'n. • IChelof ... , .... 7"• d r. p. I . bu II tin I . I ........ , ,_ -· ...-...., ,..,_ .... 2 -a .... -------'--- ' Bdrm ......... _.,. -un ..... .... ·-·. ,_,, ehUdrtn OK, ••k for ':-.... ..... n•• VJ owner. .... ... . 2 bdrm U:O. $'40/mo. 2272 Mlple. p1lntt0, new cptt, S400 K 111 h , t 8 2 . 4 4 7 1 ; !!!~ _ ern111lt111. T1nnl1 ol , .... ._.. 845 Paul1rlno. ..a.lleh.-db 631·"27 mo. Incl 11111. A\1911 now. eA-98&3 North !nd. p1nor1m1c pool, 11c. S 1'00/mo. Is,..... -... TS M 764.ooe .-.;•uD"V Newtr 2 er., patio & 01o 882-3873 1 & 2 8, "'''"" ..... Una I oeten view. Wiik .orOll 844·2181 PIM Knoc Motel °" COMt L gml 1 app~ rage. Ho pet1. '476 mo. 2 tlr 1 81, Co.It Me... dripu '1 0:;p';j N~I atiwt to P¥I bMctl. 2 9fll LIDO 8AYFAONT: 2 llr 1 Hwy. Nllr lt1P9 to~· --.an B11utlluflu 11n<lac•ti•d 845-1677. $470/mo. Aobtrt Mllll· I pet• H0-2811. . 2 ... tptc, 10 'If Old IUll II• ..nay beaotl or .. 1 Wkly rM-. '46-0440 •--, CondO 2 ... 1 ... ...,_ ken 531 12M condo S1200·mo. Call V..:. y,11u e7~1to ... mTJ j11denapt1.POOll 1)9. .,., .,.,nt,-_. • • 2 8r, 214 81, 2 OM git, '97-2052eft&pm ' '7 fMatlMIMtalaMll •tlotldtek• No r:>et• I Ctl. Pie.It,'~ aecurtty. t. lttlehld lmrnad. oocu-Private quiet •tu<Mo 180 1 bf w/etove. f'9MO, pr11g, .r,_,;m_111_1m-.m_a1m;..i_&1111 2 Br. 1 Ba, lllJftdl'y rm. ; ~~ w. 81147&-= ~:;~:-A!:r';;~ "" '"'' n• pancy /m ll• bqh . deg Ocean \Itel# Olen· on Jlle11ln1ut1. auo. llQ llAfll OA•IN '0" pool._ c rp11. drepu. 2250 Venguetd mo, f10·300 I daye; BIG 2 Ir '410/rno. NMt llOO/mo 848-1371 Liii. n •Yr • & U p'I • n d 876-0812 aft epm, MNT: 1., I IOft. ''°"' '4004410/rno. • ..... 431• --• ~.... 0 H b A I WALi< TO B""•"H • 4. 5 •/ m 0 . p I u. ,,, delly ...... ,..,, 226' MIPM 5-<l<MHla .....,. v,.... •'""'vi 2~~ L.:0r:t. ~ tBr, frplc, OM ~r pd, cMpOelt~tt-18'7 .... nlfT l •j .. M.-0. Outftte def ~m~~·c,r~:r~~~:! ~~ '410-~= •en•1111 ......... :::.1~': 8t., no peta. ~ view~· r= ~-.,:.=-.:o·.~,~t ~ ~t!:"Ool. trom deck. W I/mo, 2 ectrm, 1,18 be. SM0 •tW•llll' A'1r11ttlva Hr, bellned '°et~· , IOrtt oono. Mts ~ & , .... 11p1 t , pwt...,..... 561 Jolnn 131 E. ISth, Mt-llll V celNnge. beloOny, 1430. 2 '"· ,~ bl. nett 1*d\, 4 •1 · wkndf enytll'l'lt otll '*""'· a ltffoK; Po01,; fa .... Ml• 1HI 111 l . 11th 142.otll New TownhOl'l'IU for 0 I . 8 41 I 4 Pm to fpto, ~· bnnl. ..._ MOO/lftO I If, "'""'""· Ill 111·1-tlo-. .... I l'I ... kit/mo. 2 It. 1"4 le rent 7 '°P"'-drpt. • Nt.oll 1 ""'9 ~· ,__ bWf\, Ver .. 111 .. ..._,, 1 e" a. I In upper unn, 111 bll•ln1, 1 ldrrn l4tO J I::~~ If: I 1 If t la. O-•· l400 414-Condo (lee). ,_., -. -l-..,..-...._---......,.---,-.,- oarport, lnOry rm, bal· 2 ednft, 1'A be M71 Fr to v1utted ""inte M'· ..... Dff 111. lut l. dtp~11t OMtfftlnt 1 Ir. """'"'· gtr. allO/lfto. 111 ... r c.cto. C.... ....... ;·::,: ~1 ... 0_:;:;_;_; :::lf:.·:ei~ C:O~~:i'~::=&:".;:: ··I :5· ~::. ~~~-n~·,.,=:: ?r:a::"·'"':::: 15555 Huntington Vlllege 113 29111, 2 Br 1 B•. front o<:Mn. Kltchtnl I Vlll. Lene. H.B. From Sin hOUlt $800 f' mo yrly. 885N.Cout~ Diego Frw~ north on 2 t 31433-050 Laguna B..ctl. 4M- Beien to cF1<1d1n. Lido Ille, lge 3 br, 2"" ba, IUUllmlll. wut on McFadden to trplc, eundeck, olrlum, 1 s.awtnd Vll':f:i car get. L.NN a 1200 mo. Wkly rent.ii now avail. en-6 ea. 173-0915 1105 & up. Color TV. 2 81. 2 Bl. cpl, drpe, pool, Phone• In room. 2274 2 er 2 Ba. aaoormo V«· Newport B lvd CM . ~ I> I lo ._ .J LOJTI b e h . u lllu penthouH w/ 846-7<M5. $475/mo. 5-47·4151 or ocean vu, ~y. tr~. o th b h h t I 1 lft 6 .. wllnd• 638· 7853. pool. 1p1, elubhoutt, n e ••e o e .. • • ,. ' -' MOftlhly boat =:.Ti•· arty ..... 1" "' ly, rr• ieunc.Mn' ...... , .. , .... .., Ir • ...... ,. ( OMNHL Hf•ROlf' 'I )~I> I 10(1 • TtpDlllr Pild '°'Your OWt n•n••• Ua nll llll::J. ......... Ooele..... MCMUO . ....... """- . I I ;1 -ii :; .. .. - I . i I I I '· • ATLAS CHIYSLll·PLYMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. 546-t934 3 block• south of San Diego Freeway off HarbOr Blvd Compteta body shop Sales Service. Parll. Service Dept open Monday lhru Fnday 7 30 A M to S·30 P.M and 8 A.M. to 5 P M on Saturday · •. e1ACH IMPORTS ~48 Dove Street. Newport Beach Tel. 752--0900 Catt us. we're the speclallats lor Alfa Romeo. Peugeot, Saab & ;:~aseratl ':: THIODOll IOllNS f OID •.Modern sales. service. par1s, body. paint & tire depta. Competitive rates oo lease & daily rentals 2060 Harbor ::S•vd , Costa Mesa. 841-0010 or 540-8211 · •. JOHNSON A SON LI NCOLN MllCUIY 2626 Harbor Blvd . Cotta Mesa. Tai 540-5630 57 Years of friendly family aervfce -Orange County's oldell Llncoll\-Mercury dealership 837-2400 NIWPPIT IMPOITI 3100 W Cout Highway. Newport Beach Tel. 842·9405/540-17114 fhe Ferrari. Jaguar, A1ton·Martln hwdquattett In Orange County • I . MATCH THE · NUMBERS ON' THE. CONNELL CHEVROLET • ')o H • • r-'V r ~4'>-1 200 !1mut H IS '81 Colony P811t, llke new, ell ••trH, tow blue book, 17850. 844 -4158. 4H-8032 MAP WITH THE NUMIERS IN .THE BOXES NIWPOIT DATSUN 888 Dove Street, Newport Beach. 1'11 833-1300. At the triangle of JambOree. MecArthur & Brtatol behind Victoria Station Sales. Servk:a. Leasing & Perta. Wa meke great deals• • NAallS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Btvd .. Costa Mesa, Tel. 540-9100. Orange County's Largest Cadlllac dealer. Sales. Service. Leallng. ' SADDLllACK aMW /SUaAIU 28402 Marguerll• Pkwy .. Avery Pkwy. exit • We offer what no bank or lea~ company can: t. E•pertt}' stalled. moat modern MNk:a & parta dept.; 2. One of the Southland'• most experienced sales & teasing atall; 3. Elimination of the middleman by teallng deafer direct. 831-2040 Minion Viejo 495-4949 • CHICK IVl•SON POISCHl·AUDl·VW 415 e. Coast Hwy .. Newport Beaeh. 873--0900. The only deaterahlp In Oraf198 County With these three great mallea under one roofl • ALAN MAONON PONTIAC-5UIAIU 2480 Harbor Blvd .. Cotta M .... Tai. 649-4300. Salea. Service, Leasing. "Mr Goodwrench " aoa LONGPll PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd., Wntmlnater. Tel. 892-665t. Orange County's oldest and largeat Pontiac dealershlp Selea. Service. Parts. • DICK MILLll FIAT/LANCIA "Probably the lowest prtc.d Aata In Southern California" (Located 1 mite north of Souttt Coaat Plaza near Main St. and Warner Ave. In Santa Anal 120 W Wafner, Santa Ana 557-2132 • SANT A ANA DATSUN 2001 E. 17th Street, Santa Ana. Tel. 558·7811 Your Ortglnat o.dleated Datfdoln Dealer. MllACLI MAZDA We've movedl Our new location II 1425 Baller Str .. t, Cotta Meta Tel 545-333~. Stop by & vfllt cx.r modern lhoWfoom and He why we're the • 1 Mazda dealer In Southern California. Sales. Service, Part• and Laatlng. • CO•Mt .. hLILLO CHIYaOLIT (Formatty Groth C•rotet) 18211 Beach Blvd .. Huntington hech New • UMd • Salet • L•utno • Parts • Service -Come by Md '" <>ut Huge tnventoryl M1'4Gl1 • 549.3331 CLAlllC AUTOMOatLll -TWNMtm"WWy, c-. M.u.-f9t. t&1-1tti~--11t-i "..IAOUARS OUR SPECIALTY" XK t20'at 1"40'af 150'tlXJ'1/f_-Typa S.... -Service -RattOfltlonl . Off Pttcentla • COSTA MISA DATSUN 2845 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-6410. Serving Orange County tor 16 yeara. t Mile So 405 SUNSIT fOID, INC. (Home ol Willie the Whale I. 54•0 ·Garden Grove Blvd .. WeSlmlnster. Tel. 836-4010. • o•ANGI COUNn VOL VO 10120 Garden Grove Blvd .. Garden Grove Tel. 530-9190. E•cluslvely Volvo to cover all your Volvo requirements. N~Uled•Sales•Leastng•Parts•Servtee-Body Shop Freeway ctoM In the heart of Orange County at Garden Grove Blvd & BrOOkhUi'st. CONNILL CHIVIOLIT 2828 Harbor Btvd., Costa tHM. Over 22 years Mrvlng Orange County Sales, leHlng, M rvlce. Call 5411-1200; ~lat parts line. 546-9400; body shop llf\8: 754--0400. 0 IOY CAIVll IOLLS aOYCl.aMw 1540 JamborM Road. Newport e.ecn. e.tO-M44. Salet, S.rvfee. Partt And l,l•llno ... • LONG HACH IMW - THI DRll~f CDAIJ CUil EllTlll MONDA'(. JANUARY 11. 1983 OHANGE COUN I Y CAL IJ·ORNIA 2S CENTS . . ,,, Gr.oups _protest oil rig off · Htintington coast About 50 protetten in alx or seven boatl beaan their aecond day of picketing today at the construction site of an offahore oll rig about 8 ~ miles off the coast of Huntington Beach. Union and Chevron Company officials said the protest wu staged primarily by the-Pile Drivers Union of Wilmington because the firm ia ualng foreign workers in the installation of the -- .._.___ - u.nde rwater portion o f the platform. · But Je~lah activlata, accordlna to The Associated Pre11, al10 joined the floating proteat Sunday because the oil rig construction firm reportedly la o~ned by a former Nnl SS officer. Al Swanson. public affairs manager of Chevron USA inc., said today that Heerema Maril\& Contractors of Holland won the ~· --- Footprints in the sand contraci to perform plle drtvfnl contract WH performed by work required to lnatall pillnp in companies In the United States. the ... fioor. Accordtna to The Auoclated He aald the firm employ• Preu, the Je-Wllh DefenH Spaniah plle drlvera. Leaaue aald document• from "The union la t.rylna to draw Nazi hunter Simon Wleaental attention \0 the unemployment Indicated Heerema'• owner, problem," he said. "The company Pteier Heerema, wu a member aympathizea but pile driving II of the Nazi SS. only about 2 percent of the total "Not only la he a Nazi, but he ii worlt involved:... --"ta k-hrg l ob• away f r--o m Swan10n said work on about Americana, ' said ~JDL president two-thirds of the $260 million Irv Rubin. ... _ A lone sandpiper wanders along the shore in Laguna Beach, leaving its tracks in the wet sand. Connor aald the boat• left Huntln.ton Harbour and San Pedro early Sunday l'ftOl'1'lir-a. On arrlva.( at the rl1, the JDL membera yelled 1Jo1ana while union membera waved 1lgns readlnf; "Hire American · Worken.' "Then after awhile, a group of workers climbed aboard the platlonn and .raised an American flag there," Connor lllid. He said Heerema workers made no attempt to Interfere with the protest but returned to their 1hlp, Challenger l, docked alonpide the rt1, and remained there \he rest of the day. Earlier thil month, unlonlats picketed a Heerema pile bar1e at Loa Angeles harbor. They contend Heerema la vlolatina a federal appeals court rulfn1 which said U.S. lawa on to.retp worken apply to worken on the U.S. outer continental shelf: .123 'affordable' condos attract 3,300 • in Niguel -By STEVE MITCHELL those home seekers earning Of'""'9 Deir Not 1ta1t between $33,000 and $40,000. More than 3,300 low and Chances to buy 58 units will be moderate-income wage earners hanaed out Saturday, and 105 showed up In Laguna Niguel units will be in Sunday's lottery, Saturday morning for a chance to SWldstrom said. own a beacbfront condominium He said more than 2,200 people at an affordable price. will participate in the weekend Carrying lawn chairs, portable auction. radioe and ice chesta, the crowd Saturday"s lottery attracted a descended on the new Niguel good-natured crowd, which Beach Terrace development, applauded-as 'winners were about 500 feet from Salt Creek announced and chuckled and Beach, to listen u numbers were. booed as a doctor's name wu pulled from a lottery drum. read. · At the end of the four-hour • ' T h e r e g o e s t h e drawing, 123 lucky winners neighborhood," shouted one walked off with an opportunity participant regarding the to p u r c has e o n e a n d winner's apparent badge of two-bedroom condominiums at wealth. prices between $65,000 and E.A. Sandling, preside.nt of the $85,500. development group, told a Financing on the Cape small gaThering, "I don't care Cod-style condominiums will be what any o ri e a a ya about from 8 ~ to 11 percent. affordable houaing. Take a look . The project is being developed at all thoee people and tell me by the Carma-Sandling Group of which one of them you wouldn't Irvine. It will include 400 units want for a neighbor.'' -==-ml~=-"="=--on a 24-acre pa.reel on the ocean·---·~oaLo thoee~pa~ ln slae of Co'a'ff""'Htgh~near the lottery we-re deieribed'-' .. =--- By STEVE MITCHELL Of'"-. 0.., PIM 8Uft A developer's reviled plans for purchase of a 62-acre chunk of Sycamore Hills would mean fewer apartments would be constructed in the project area. The new propoaal, put forth by David Michelson and his partners, also would mean less profit for the city of Laguna Beach. F.arlier this monih, M.ichelaon and his Sycamore Hills Venture group proposed paying $5.5 million to Laguna Beach in order to purchase land in Sycamore Hills to construct 1,600 apartment unit.a. The city council said it would · consider that propoNl, but the proposal met with lukewarm response -a\,.best. Michelson will return to council chambers Tuesday night with a new plan that would tee only 990' apartment units constructed on the parcel, which fronts El Toro Road near Leiaure World. H owever, Mich elson also propoeerl building 20,000 aquare feet of commercial offices and retail stores on the property in addition to the ape.rtmena And h1a revi8ed propou1 al.to suggests that the dtywou.ld only rece1ve $4 million for the land - instead pf the $5.5 offered for the right to develop 1,600 unita. Council members earlier this month had several concerns about M~chelaon's original propoeal. Foremost of their concerns was the density of the proposed development and the impact of 2,500 to 3,000 more peoe»ile on the area'• utilities and road~ays. The council also expre11ed concerns about the ratio of Waste agency calls it quits By STEVE MARBLE Of tM De11J f'tlo4 St.ff A joint-powers group formed seven years ago to facilitate cleaning up the lilt-clogged and contaminated Upper Newport Bay hu put itself out of business. The Newport-Irvine Waste Management Agency, which ·lost Newport Beach as a member in early 1980, has been considering calling It quita for two yea.rs. In recent months, the group's only agenda Item, b eyond disaolution, haa been settlement of a lawsuit with UC Irvine. The university aued NIWA two ytars ~go, arguing the joint-pQwera group owed it nearly $28,000 for a study on the condition of the bay. Members of NIWA responded with charges that the study was incomplete, inadequate and tardy. The two parties, said NIWA member Bob Collacott, have reac hed an out-of -court settle ment that ends the litigation. He did not reveal details of the settlement. He said the settlement cleared the way to diabanding NIWA. Cotlacott, an official with Orange C.Ounty's Environmental Management Agency, a,.ld NIWA has e11entially been -'ormant since Newport pulled out and (See WASTE, Page A%) -· parldna •I** per unit, and said the 810 apacea proposed by Michelaon's group would probably not be acceptable. . And they objected to the proposed three-story height of the apartment buildings, a height that woµ_!~ exceed Laguna'• 36-footJieiaot limlL . The new propoeal calla~or one ·parking apace for each bedroom in the 990-unit comple~ However, Michelaon proposes only 20 percent of the units be aet aside for low and moderate income seniors, wlth the remai.ninil 80 percent rented at market rates. The notion of commercial and retail space being made available on the project la a new factor in the proposal. City Manager Ken Frank said his plannera have not had an opportunity to thoroughly analyze Michelson 's second proposal. He will ask the council Tue9day night to state whether or not it ii seriously interested in the second propoaal before devoting more staff time fpr a complete atudy of the plan. The meeting begin.a at 6 p.m. in council chambers, 505 Forest Ave. Remedial courses cost $62 million · SACRAMENTO (AP) - Remedial counes at California's public inatitution1 of higher leaminl cost about $62 million during the 1980-81 achoo1 year, a flate a1ency reportl. The Califomla Poataecondary Education. Comml11lon waa expected to aend the ,,..port to the Legislature today. !lemedlal courses for 01ore than 50,000 defkient atudentl 1n the 1tate'1 public four-year lnstltutionl coet the Univenlty of Califom1a t3.~ million, and the California State University system more than $7 million, the report uys. In addition to the course eo1ta, the report aa)'9 the Univenity of . CallfomJa spent $3 m1Won and the Califomla State University spent $2.2 million for remedial support services during the same year. . It aaid UC'• $6.6 million Investment in =:lal work repraented a 40 t 1ncreue over two years earlier. Meanwhile, In the locally aupported two-year community couec-. nearly half the studenll ---.-..NDEX--- At Your Service M Ann Landerl B2 11'.rma Dombeck 82• M«Ma B4 . Cavabde B2 Na~_,,.ewt A3 C'l""fled C4~8 Public Notic9 C4 o.mm BO Sportl • Cl·3 en.wont BO Dr.Steincrohn B2 0-th Noticel • ~ Stock Marbtl &1 SditGrial Ae TelftWan Be llnWlainment JM ,,.. ... B4 ~ 82 W•t.ber A2 -400,000 of them -::::-~uired remedial counes in Eng.Uah and mathematic• at a cost of $46 mlWon. Carl Hartman, UC Irvine vice chancellor of academic aflairs, said more efforta muat be made to bolster high school courses. "I would like to see all thete (remedial) Pf'OIJ'UD8 stopped," he ·said. "The Univer1lty of California hu other th1nca to do. But you can't leave the students hiah and dry." llartmul_ aald the univel'lity la obligated to meet the neecb of any 1tudent ell1ible for attendance at any UC campua. He aald there are no ahort·term tolutionl to the poor pnparaUon of hllh school 1tudent1 f« the r1.,... of coU-.e work. The report recoenmendl 1tepe to halt the rwnedlaJ JX'OFl'IW in the to,.tr-yHr lntUtutJona over the next ftw ye.rs. It •Y. the ap~ta place for tueh Nmedl.al work la t.be community coD•I"• and that ltUdent1 requtrtnc it Mould be dlrttted to adult echacatlon aa1a1.-. The ct'6rector of the commillion, Pattick Callan, said the report docwnenta "a mallive syatemwlde breakdown for which both ,the public achoola and h1gber education beAr tlOme ~btlity'' Callan added, "It took the ltate 20 years to dig owwlvee into thla meas and there are no cheap and eaay way. ou\, in •plte of the Im tience about the problem.•• ~ report •Y9 that from 1968 to 1979, \he mean 8chola1tlc Aptitude Tut 1corea for freahrnen enterina the Univen&ty of California -the top one-elthth of the hi1h .cbool ar.ctua• -decl1ned 11 potni. on the verbal MCUon and · 30 poin\I on the mathematic• Hctlon. Thia wa1 a 1har~r decline than re1htered nationally • '11.e report addl, "Not evet1 the top ~th of all CaJlfom1a, public hllh eebool 1raduate1 today are all adequately ~ fm mautculatioft in a loui-·~ coUele·" Studenta ,.t CNdit toward t.blll' ........... ...._ '""' 80 percent of Che r91Dedtal ---6n wrtd~ and mitb Selva Ro.din Lacuna Niguel. middl .~ .1 ..... 1. Dennis Sundatrom, executive e-,..--.... .,._ and white. ~ice p r e_a i d e n t o f t h e He said those who won an ~ Grou~ Milt. 121 opponunity to purchHe a unita were ottered S.tw'dey '° c:OndomJnium Saturday .ahould thoee eaming le9a than $28,000. t. through escrow by April. the He aaid lotteries will be beid e1Cp!!Cted time of completion Coe next Saturday and Sunday for the unita. Slide victim Eric Benaon, 18., rests in Mi11ion Community Hoepital alter ordeal in which rescuer wa1 injured. ResCue atte:tiipt fal~ probed by Marines A 28-year-old Marine who fell 150 feet from a hellmptar' whlle U'YtN to re..-ue an. lnJW'ed rock climber remained In Hrio\11 condition today with broken bone. in hla.lep and anklel. ,Navy corpman Gale Kirk waa b&&rt late Saturday durin1 a reecue operatlon Jn Mod~ Canyon where an lnj&&red cUmber •• atnndecl. -ar.ne. C'o&&nty Ftre Departme..i ..... said. Kirk reportedJy wa1 beln1 lofted from an SI Two ...... Air StaUon helicopter to a )eda- whete Erle Benson, 18, wa1 stranded. Benson, fire authoriU. laid. had been ~ eerU. when a rock "the .. of a ~ •" fell on hi• l•I· brHktftl the femur. Benaon 11 In atable condition today at Mlt1lon Community Jlol&i'W. Kirk'• lall la under, lnvHtll•tlon , aald El Toro ft':':&,'t~'°!f.~ ceUMd the 71 l•P..a=.-~-~~ Cable TV law eyed . in Mesa Cable televlelon 11 finally coming to C.O.ta Mesa. The dty council will review a cable communJcaUona ordinance tonight that outUnea a fency shopping Uat of regulations and minimum service requirements for prospective cable operators thinking about plcklng up the lucrative contract. City offlclala are asking for a 1tandard 5 percent of the cable operator'• ltf08S receipts. .Ass15tant O ty Manager Allan Roeder said the city wanted to delay Installation of the communications system until residents could ge t the most technologically advan ced operation available. Included in the long list of basic services named In the ordinance ar~· 52 st andard channels, two-way capability for communication between viewers and the studio, coverage of city council meetings and a fully equipped television studio in Costa Mesa. A cable operator will be choeen by August and hook up of the system citywide is not expected to be completed until 1985. In the meantime, city officials say they want to know· what residents want from a cable system. A public meeting will start at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the ·Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave. WASTE. • • From Page A1 took over cleanup .chores. When it was formed in 1976, NIWA was put in charge of a federal program to first determine what was causing the silt and pollution in the Upper Newport Bay and, second, do ·something about it. Critics~ the group did little beyond snarling itseli in a lawsuit. Others said It did valuable roadwork which led to last s ummer's $4 million dredging project in the bay. Vehicle out of control Bunk beds of Lalra Cazier, 9, and her sister Lysia, 4, were flanened when car driven by a neighbor, Jorge Lopez of 2010 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa, struck their house 'Sunday afternoon. Luckily the·girls were away at time of accident which is under inv'ec;tigation by the California Highway Patrol. Mesa will Jirik 17th Streets curving road are expected to be signal at old 17th and Newport v a ca t e d n ex t mo n th a n d will be removed and motorist'.s Social Security ' . bai'lout critici_Zed ! WASHINGTON (AP) -Drafien of a f 180 bllUon plan to rete:Ut Social Security concede there l1 aomethln1 for almott everyone t.o dislike, but they •Y the reluctant 1upport ot Prealden t Rea1an and HouH Speaker Thomu P. O'Netll Jr. should help lt pa.m Co~. Organizations repreHntln1 retired people, government worker1 and· amall buaf ne11 already have aerved notice they wlll try to pretaW'e Conan-to change or drop the package, which would aff~t nearly all Uxpayera and retirees, aome u early as this summer. · It Include• a speed-up In scheduled incteaaett ln the payroll tax, taxing beneflta received by upper· and middle-in come retirees, a one-time alx-monm delay in this July'• coet--of-living lncreHe and an expanalon of Social Security coverage to new federal employees beginning in 1984. (See related 1t0ry, Page A6.) In addition to generating $169 blllion In new revenues a nd savings over the ne xt seven years, experts said that, barring severe ec:onomlc conditions, the comprorri1se also would help keep the Social Security system In the black for at least 50 years. The package was approved by the Social Security reform commission on a 12-3 vote SatW'day night following days of negotiations with White House officlals Reagan and O'Neill, D-Ma.ss., • who had communicated only i t.htoulh in~, publicly I endoraed the deal after the : COl'1\l1\1-lonvo~. 4 But u iM pre91a.nt noted, he, ! O'Neii and other conare19ional ~ leaders were b.cklnl the plan · , becawie they NW It U the bett • deal that could be at.ruck on the eenaltJve lllue. "Each of ua recopii.et that th.it la a compromlae aolution," Rea,an aald. "J.. 1uch, It Includes , element.a whJch each of ua could not support IJ they were not part of• b(pert.laan comp~." ." Republican economist Alan Greenspan, the commi11lon'a chairman, aald, "All o f us swallowed very hard a nd accepted lndividual notJona that we penonally did not actuauy support." Greenspan, uked on the CBS ''Morning News" program today about the effect of Congress puaina only pieces of the re1CUe plan, replied: "U they start to do that, It will unravel very rapidly. I'm not saying that this particular package hat to be palled with I every aincle word, every single dot ln it exactly the aame. It can't be, It's not leglalation. But it's got- to be paaeed e.entially as it now stands or It won't pass at all." Eighty-two year-old Rep. Claude Pepper, D -Fla., a commiaalon member whose support WU crucial, said Sunday that he had not thought it would (See WHO, Pase A5) Wrong corpse brings ! 'suit by OC I amily By Tile Alaoclated PreH A bereaved Garden Grove family ls suing a mortuary for allegedly putting the wrong body on display when a mother came ' to pay a last farewell to her dead son, an attorney says, mistake but denied it was the mortuary's fault. "Th e Navy handled all the initial preparations with a contract mortuary in San Diego," Dimond said, "and then shipped the body to ua along with a Naval escort. We just received the wrong body." · Lt. Q.ndr. KL. Ahlwardt Jr., s pokesman for the Naval Hospital San Diego, said naval ofticiab could not be reached to explain the mishap. Newport Beach dropped out of NIWA after the group began studying a controversial plan to install a silt-catching basin at the top of the bay. At the time, N e wport's . .r...e.p.r..e.u .n t.ali v e_ to .Nl WA -r com~ the basin would be enVU'Onmentally unsound. Ironically, Newport later was successful in landing state funds to build a 5eries of basins in the bay. The project was completed last summer. A $2.2 million improvement plan to widen 17th Street and realign the road so it connects ac.r.oas .Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa ~under way. By August motorists will be able to travel on the new road, expected to-improve east•weat circu lation. Like a couple of mismatched puule pieces, the two unjoined section.s of 17th Street now dead-end at Newport Boulevard. Motorists must travel in a zig-zag pattern on Newport in order to cross 17th. demolition will be completed by will not be able to make left March, oilicials shld. turns onto Newport "from old Bruce Mattern, public services 17th. director for the cit y;·i*id • In addition , J 7th will be disruption to motorists will be widened from four to six lanes minimal since old 17th Street, the from Newport Boulevard to 180 section to the north, will remain feet east of Fullerton Avenue. open both during -and a fte r Mattern said the improvements construction. will increase carrying capability, Vera ·Durr of G~den Grove says the horror of seeing another man's body at Mettler Mortuary compounded her-grief over her son, Joseph, who died with two other sailor s in an accident aboard the c rui ser USS Bainbrid$te on Jan. 25, 1982. "When the family opened the casket... they found the mortuary had tKe wrong-sailor," attorney Neal Bahan said. ''The real distress of it was that it convinced them the Navy had misidentified the men who died, and they thought he was still alive." However, Ahlwardt said the contract ruortuary, Humphrey ..- Mortuary in N'ational City, had hand.Jed the bodies of the ~ .. - sallora for prep.aration and ' shipping to their families. Newport Beach Councilwoioan Jackie Heather said NIW /'L's demise will not affect the city's ongoing efforts to study and clean up the bay. Collacott agreed but said that work in the bay has been very slow and has been aimed at only one of the bay's problems -silt. The new roadway will be constructed between Newport Boulevard and Fullerton Avenue south of the present 17th Street. Busin esses in the path of the T h e Ba m boo Te r r a e e from the current 25,000 vehicles restaurant and Award Motqrs a day to 30,000. are among the businesses that Acquisition or property for the will be tom down for the new project has cost $1.7' million and c o n s t r u c t i o n . T h e d e r construction is estimated at $556.· Wienerschniuel, a new medical 009. The county and the city office and the Von·~ shopping have split the cait o! the project, center will not be affected. considered a part of the ArteriaJ Following construction . the Highway Financing Program. The Orange County Superior Court s uit c laims m ortuary officials were negligent and seeks unspecified. damages for the · family's emotional distress. · Mortuary owner Don Dimond said he also was horrified by the Humphrey MortuAry Manager Budd King said he hadn't heard anything from the Navy about th e mix-up. lie d eclin e d comment. Durr, 26, a petty officer fir.:st class and eight-year member of the Navy, was asphyxiated by vapors le aking from an air conditioning compartment a~ the crui9er. . . Crippling storm pounds Northeast;.FlQrida faces frost ·! By Tile A11oclatecl Pre11 A new storm bore down on the West today while bitter winds and aome snow lingered in the Northeast whe r e weekend accumulations of almost three feet shut down schools, knocked out power' and caused at least ... iune deaths. As New England was digging out, a blast of arctic cold pushed temperatures into the mid-20s in northern Florida and frost and free-z.e warnings extended from the Panhandle to the Everglades. It was 19 degrees this morning in Tallaha ssee and 27 at Jacksonville. The stomi In the Northeast, which swept through Satui-day and Sunday, dumped up to two feet of sn ow from northern Pennsylvania to Maine, with 32 inc.hes falling in the mountains of Vermont. Albany, N.Y., reported 26 inches and nearby Saratoga Sprlnp got 27 inches. The we-athe-r-tod-ay w.a "getting wild in the West," said Parry Gordon of the S evere Storms Forecast Center In Kansas City, Mo. Snow was falling from south.em Idaho a(T(l8S northeQt Nevada and northern Utah into Colorado and frorn rlortheast Arizona Into northwest New Mexico. Snow also was scattered across the Dakotas through the Great Lakes region and the northern Appalachians into New 7.ealand. ~y late Sunday, the storm in the North east had pus h ed eastward out of northern Maine into Canada, the weather service said: Fourteen inches ~ell in many parts of n o rth eas t ern Pennsylvania, and up to nine inches was reported in northwestern Ne w Jersey. In Massachusetts, three days' warning was cr ed ited with limiting casualties throughout the s t ate, and state officials waged a $2.5 million assault on icy roads to keep them clear for commuters today. "U you have to have a storm, there's no better time than the weekend. wnen the fewest people are disturbed by it,•· aald William Plzzano. spokesman for the state De~ent of Public Works. . Schools in dozens of Massachusetts districts were closed to ease traffic on roads glazed by temperatures in the teens early today. The storm In the Northeast caused five deaths ln Connecticut , two i n M assachusetts. one in Pennsylvania, and one in New YQrk, a 7-yeu--old boy killed in a sledding accident. Four of the Connecticut deaths were from heart attacks suUered by p eople s hoveling snow Sunday. officials said. A fifth died in a traUio accident along IJo.ute 254 in Thonipeon.. ln ~stQil. a man drowned when he waa swept from a -.;a wall by a 30-foot wave whipped by northeasterly winds auating to 45 mph. A second man died in a trafllc accident on Interstate 291 near Springfield. A woman was killed after her car slid off a snow-slicked road in Slatington, in northeastern Pennsylv~ High winds and tree limbs snapping und6 heavy snow broke power lines, blacking out 4,200 customers in Rhode Ialand and nearly 8,000 in Connecticut at times, utility officiala said. Extra beds were 1et up at Boston's Pine Street Inn for 600 people: Many minor accident.a were , reported on Vennoot highways. but state police in Masaachuaetu said there were only a few minor • collisions on si.ate roads. Ski resorts, which had been hurting from a snowlesa winter, reported brisk business Sunday. ~In. Snow~ Cl~uds-t0-increase along Orange Co~st Tuesday. January l " 1,;nar1M1on. s.c 4t 35 Houaton l>4 •e Pnoenla 72 6t ,. Constnl lncreHlng cloudlneu end lllgflCly ...,.,., • CoHt•I low 48, Inla nd 4 1 COHiii, Inland lllghl In 801 w .. ea. NoilflAMI wlnde 12 10 22 knoll .,. °""' _. ....... wtttl 3 to I-foot -'"'OUO'I tonlahl. ..,_MOD ... ~ 10to 20 kftOtl T~. Wllldl ---1y 10 to 20 knotl (If« lflfMW _,.,. "'"" -10 a..tooc~ ..... _. 2-toot ..-..moon wCnc1 ---. Vltlebte ....... beoomlno~ 5 to 10 llno41 TUMdrt. Meetly ~~ l\lell aloude durlna 11t~f':i .. d1y with 1llghl c:llMoe of ,.,,_ 9'1'-*10 In "°"' t1W Mnt1 .... In IN dey. 1now In th• mount1fn1 ol l'IC)(1hem Nevede _, Utah. suu ... .o enow llurt!M -• torece9t tor llter todey trom IM ~ O<Nt Liii• and IN upper Ohio Valley lo upper Ne1111 E119land. A1ln and 111ow _,. expected ecl'ote Ille upper and central AocklH to p1rt1 ol N9veda. -i rein -predlcied IOf the coutll North-II Ind 10Uttiern T--Temperalurel arounct th• netlon eetty lhll rnomlnO rlflOld trom I below llWO In a.Ill Ste. M8f1e, Mletl., to t 1 In 8trl Diego • California and hlgN Tu.ctey In IN mld....0. to -601 w11 foreCHI In lh• mountalne. Met th• Tellacll•P' tlf!Ot mlgllt eet -rtln In the afternoon. LOWI of 20 to 26 tonlOlll Md hlQllt Cl( 48 to 6f T~ ,..,. expected In the 0Wen1 "Valley wNcll might ... -"'°" on ttle ,_-by mountllM -i r.it't O\'lfflNd. Snow .. ...,..., at 1.000 ..... Fllt~llld colder -Iller WU f0(9CMt In the o-1 -. wtltl 1ow9 of 22 to M In the nottt.n deHrl1 1nct 41 to 41 In th• aovt'""11 deNl11 tonlafll, end lllgfll In IN ....... 10 lrilcMOe In the nonMtn o-11 _. ..... to IOw 70l In IN '°""*fl deMttl ?Weday. Temperature3, NATION HI a.. . " ., u is ., 14 2t 21 • 21 41 H ,.. 20 .. 40 ~·~=:: ... " IO OI MU ~ n a N 10 11 II 11 .. ,. Clllrteeton, w.v. 27 17 lndlan•polll 211 23 Plttat>uroh 27 17 Clllf1ott• N.C. 46 19 Jiiek.ton. Miii. 50 22 Ponlencf, Me 25 11 ~ 42 15 JICkeon~lle S4 25 Ponllnd. ~ 44 4 I Clllcego 25 15 Ju.-40 37 Provldeoee 31 20 Cincinnati 211 22 K1nMI City • I 2 I Rllllgh 4 1 te Oevtlancl 22 1 t Lal Vegll 62 41 RIC>kl City 41 t8 C(llume)la. 8 C 49 21 Ultle Aoek 51 32 Reno 43 32 Columbul . . 25 19 LQUlt\11119 31 211 Alchmond 40 25 o.1119-Ft Wonh 5t 39 Lubbock 55 24 Seit Lek• 40 31 Ortton 2t 17 Mernplll• 45 29 Sen Anton4o 67 48 0.-42 17 Mi.ml 74 54 SMllle 46 41 Del Mo1n1t 3t 17 MilwtlYkM 23 17 SIW1MP0'1 54 31 Detroit 24 18 Mpllo-$1. PIUI 23 10 SIOu• fllle H 10 OUluttl 11 00 NtlllMlle 43 2• Si L°'* 40 ff ~ PMO U 43 Nftr OrlelM 52 IO SI Pet• Tempe 12 M l"~I 01 .Ol New YOfll 34 22 81 SI• Mtrle OI ·11 , 22 .02 Norl04k 41 " 8polttM .. u ,:::..,, 60 M Nonh Platte 42 10 SyfeciuM 27 17 O<NI flll SI 19 Okllhoml Cit)' &e 2S Tc:p91ta '5 24 Hamotd -1t OMlfla 33 II T"llCIOtl 71 .. He6IM 32 17 Of'8ndo tO 33 Tuitt 14 21 Hoft01u1W IO U "l!ledell>hll 34 20 WMfllneton II 22 WlcHI• .. u lllf llPllT -• fronts: COid -.. , . 61 .. n A • IO aa • 41 • M IO 17 .. 10 N ., . 17 .. II N r:.1 ..... . .. .... 71 ,, .... • .. • • ' ' .• ' • • UP 3.98 Plant operation lowest recorded WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation '• manufacture,.. operated at just 67.3 petQ?nt of thelr capacity In December, the lowest rate ever recorded the Federal Reserve Board reported today. ' The n e w operating rate was down 0.1 percentage point from November, marking the l~th decline in 17 montha. But the decreue wu smaller than those of recent months, raising hopes that the downward trend might be revel'led in January. . A .separate report laaued Friday said U.S. industrial production declined 0.1 percent in December alao .the.15th decline in 17 months. ,But economista said' production was almost surely riairig in January. And that would probably mean a January increase in factory use, too, $\Ce factories producing more goods woulc;t likely be ullng more of the~ capacity. Irvine firm inks pact Western Digital Corp., Irvine, will provide a s~ software df!velopment system to TRW Inc., for use with advanced military computers, according to an announcement by a TRW spokesman. Western Digital has been attempting to streamline lta product and last week announced plans to transfer m~~k eting a~d manufact,,uring rights for a minicomputer to Texas Instrumenta Inc. Western Digital lost more than $7 million last year. I AMERICAN LEADERS SYMBOLS Cl·-~l)o -II Hew~ 11'911 Un .... 01,,.,_.M nottCI, 181" Ot CllYIClef>OI n aMUll OllOuo_t __ aM<I Of! the latl 111a11e1ly Or H rn•·•P11111al OeCt•1e11on >oecoai or ••1t• Ot~ OI Cl•'ff1'911l• not le11Qt181ecl .. r~w ... IOenllt.9d ill the Oll0w11\0 fOOll>OIH 8-AllO t•lll OI e.i.trll l)aA-.i r•te Plitt 11oc1o O•vldt"CI c0 L1q111Clal11•t Clowl<lenO )ec;latecl 01 jl9ICI lfl pr_.sttlQ ta moll\118 -Otetareo °'J•ld ah« "°'" C11YIOen<I or IP~I 111> r lla 11111 )'Ml Ol...oend O<nillM, Mferr.cl Of no ~'-ta~.,, ti latt ~ -tono lr0~ecl or palCI ""-,..., Ill IC'-lrftlll•hW ~ Wllll dMd«><le 111 WIMl"I , METALS Nf.W YORK (AP) -Spot llOnl•rtcxit !Miii pno. loeley. c...., .1.,..eo .... '*'" • pound, u.e. dMltnaUOM. UM 22°24 -a pound. DM 40 c.ltt a pouNI, ~ed. Tiii M.2604 IMtel9 w.-~ ltl . .-....... Te c.ltt e J)OUNI. ,.,Y ...,_, t3e0.00 pet .... ..._.._ "460 OO.S4H.OO "*'" troy ~.H,Y, ., ,,. ft I a • ,,._ a...ct.cs -gold ~ toci.y: Lenden morning llxlno t•t•.SO, uci .,, 25 L_._ afternoon l\Jcllle t•H-SO, '"II 115.H . .,.,.. -----_..,~ ""'110.ra ""'*-' lbtlno ..... IO. up ... 41. ZWtafl late aft-14H.H bid, uP ~JS.HI ... tr.25 -.O. H•••1 a Hat••• only Clallr quot• 14l&.60, up S 15 25 . • ~ oNf Clally ~ '4tUO,. up tU'l. ........... lellrleat.CS Oflly Oally quote $623 43, up t 11 02.. NY C-~ QOIO 1C101 montll Frt ..... 5G, up S0.20. •