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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-02 - Orange Coast Pilota Community group prize goes to MV's By IBaaY REaTENSTEJN o1 .. ..., ......... PASADENA -It waa a diaappointJnc m.,or prlae abut.out for the Ora.nae County noat conttncent in the Urd Tournament of Ro.et parade here Friday. But for the Ol)e million, 40 1pectaton wbo braved a downpour to 1et here It waa a dellehtlt.ll day. The raln stopped juat before the parade started at 8:30 a.m. And although dark clouds rolled over the area durtne the 2~ hour-march, not another drop of rain fell. The ~rowd was smaller than usual but accord.in& to Rocky McAllater of the Pasadena .. Police Department arrest.a during the early morrun, hours Friday were high, ZSO. Many who attended .the parade waited out the. rain and arrived up to an hour later, McAlister said. Mi silon .Vlejoc._wilb ita ..,eeteeui•1' flor.i display, "Versailles," was 1otng for ita fourth Sweepstakes trophy in six years but settled for· first in community organizations. · The float, Jwith riders that included homecoming queens from five Sad.dleback Valley high schools, seemed a bit too formal for this parade, one of the t>est in recent years. Entitled "Friends and Nei1hbors," the parade made use of many aniiliated cartoon characters. There was also emphasis on California's "neiJhbors," Japan and Mexico. Avco Financial Services, headquartered ln 'Newport Beach, took first in a cateeory - financial and insurance. · The firm's "Perfect Harmony" entry bad Maria OIDomini~o and !Jurt Lancon fi1ure skating on a postage stamp·sized Ratch o( ice. They were a hit with the ctowd. SWEEPSTAKES WINNER -.::;;-Carousel animals. decorated with 30.000 · roses and carrying happiness to children every~·here. especiall~· _.., ........... LM .. ..,_ Poland. won top prize for Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks' float in 93rd Tournament of Roses para~e in Pasadena. The big crowd pleaser was ''Fun for Everyone" s~ed by the Ametjcan HOQda Motor Co., Inc. 'It bad riders in a movina roller coaster that maneuvered a 360-del(r~ loop <See ROSE, Page AZ> J ailuary begins ~ widl £old.· roa~ . By tile AaOd•led Presa Tbe third sDOwstor..m ln a week tlosed highways throughout the Rockies on Friday, one day after Color~do reported 103 avalanches. Rain and cold elsewhere disrua>ted three traditional New Year's parades, and at least eight deaths were blamed cm the weather. A separate soowstorm bit the upper Gre• Lakes area, icy weather lripped the Midwest, and raln fell on the West Coast aqd Northeastern states, while rain and fog shrouded the Gulf Coast. A television news helicopter made a forced landing Friday in a heavy storm while flying over tbe Rockies to cover a fatal airplane crash, strandlne four people on a snow bound mounta ns f de near The Continental Divide, officials sald. Pete Smith, a pilot for KMGH-TV in Denver, radloed that all four aboard -including a reporter, a photographer a.Gd Smith's wife -were not injured, KMGH assignment editor Unda Elledge said. Sheriff's deputlea JDd vof unt.eers sJSent about alx ~ searching for &be helicopter on snowshoes, snowmobiles and in a tracked snow vehicle but abandoned the effort for the night when the weather became loo severe, aald Jon WUUamson, Federal Aviation Administration duty officer in Denver. . Williamson said the hunt would resume at daybreak I lod•>'· I wearing wann clothes for their asalcnment coverine the fiery crash Thursday nllbl of a SUD Weat Airlines plane in Duranao. Four people were killed ana two young children survived the crash and were hospitalized in serious condition Friday. Jn Philadelphia, rain and high winds forced postponement of the Mummers Parade until Saturday. On Thursday. the Peach Bowl Parade \n Atlanta was canceled because or freezing temperatures, and six drum majorettes were treated at a hospital for exposure to the cold. Skiers were delighted by heavy snowfalls in California, . Colorado, Idaho and Utah, but snowdrifts, ice and avalanches closed highways and kept most or tl'relr favorite nsotts isolated Friday. Jn Idaho, hit Friday by the third snowstorm in a week, state police in Pocatello said road crews trying to clear highways were being overwhelmed by winds gusting to 37 mph. "We've got all our snowplows out but they just can'' keep up with it," a dispatcher· said. Pocatello had 13 inches ol snow, Boiae 11 in~hfi and the town of Malad reported 14 lnshes. On U.S. 20, the main route between Boise and Sun Valley, a section from Mountain Home to Fairfield was closed Thursday night due to reduced vlslbility from blowing snow. Snow fell on the Colorado Rockies for the thicd day. In addition lo Smith and bis I wife, Suzy Young, reporter Dan Man pj.nned Dennison and pbolo8J'apber Tim ~~~~~OD t"e helicopter, anderi rle ••· Zllep •aid all four were • · • ------mml!I ...... ~ ... m eras DIES AT '43 -Character actor Victor Buono. whose bulky figure dominated film and TV thrillers for 2<l years. was found dead Friday at his Apple Valley home. Eirst 19JJ2 " OC baby at St. Joseph " ' St. Ja.epb Hospital of Orange was reported as the birthplace or Oranae County's first baby or 1982. Zlyad Bahamdan came into th~ world at 12:02 a.m . N•w Year's Day, bis mother, Majida Babamdan said. The baby wu reported to be doing well Friday nighl. Mu. Babamdan and her husband, Saleh, are natives or Saudl Arabla now livine in Garden Grove. Qther New Year 's Day arrivals were reporteCI at area hospitals. Fountain Valley Community Hospital's first arrival of um was a eirl born at 1: 14 a.m. Friday to David and Amparo Saldana of Santa Ana. The child was sUll unnamed Friday nt1bt. At lie lrvi• Medical Center, the first 1112 arrival was Anthony Sanebiea. born at 2:a> a.m. Friday.\O Ema Md Antonio Sanches, allo of Santa Ana. ltuntlnct4'fl Jni.rcommuntty Hospital'& first 1982 baby dld nol come Into the world illlUl 2:55 p .m . Ft'tday. The cbltd waa Daniel SoriPO, born to Sam and !Patricia SOrimo "ol HWlUncton • Beae11. PALM SPRINGS <AP> -eliminating friction between the Presldeo!Reapn-.dectdMtte._;W.b~• HduiR and Cabl••l o~•rllaul :.Vhlte House forelp mem Wt tn U.. foretp policy pollcy·aperations, a move which area. could lead to the disinlpal ol Clark, Secretary of State nalio'n.al security advlser Altfxa.nckr M. Haig Jr., Def~e Richard V.1Allen and 1rea~ S"ecretary Caspar W . aulborily f«'r bis successor. a _ We~bercer and some IO other Hnlor White House official said guesla spent New Year's Eve at . Friday. a party on the 20().acre estate of It is c9nsidered likely that publisher Walter Annenberg at Deputy Secretary of State Rancho Mirage, near here. William P. Clark, one of the One senior White House most senior 0c'V em be ra ol c1K(icial, in a telephone interview Reagan's circle oT close political from Washington, said AJleo's friends, will be chosen to repfac:e replacement had been discussed A I J e o , w h o i s o n a n at the top levels of the White administrative leave of a~. House st.arr. It was felt among Clark had no experi1!nce m Reagan's most senior advisers foreign policy before moving to that if 1'.lten ls ousted, Clark Washington a year a,... would be the unanimous choke Nonetheless, his ascension to to rm an upgraded national assistant to the president for security adviser's post. national ~uri_ty affairs would The chanees apparently would be a maJor step toward involve l(ivinl( the national ' security adviser dired daily aceesw to Reapn -which A1Je_n ..?' did nGt have -and makinl tbar person the focal polnt of Wblt.e House foreign policy coordination. Rea1an returns to the nation's capital Sunday aflet' a weeklona California trip, and any decisions op such changes could be made nexl week. Allen was cleared Dec. 23 in a Justice Oepartmeo( investigation of the circumstances surroundinc $1,000 found in an office safe that Allen once had used. He said the money was given to him by representatives or a Japanese women 's magazine in/ connection with an interview conducted on Jan. 21. with flnt lady Nancy Reagan. But an lnternaJ White House ~ <See AU.EN, Page AZ> Polar Bears . br-r-r-ring in,New Year 0 '• •I . ! I II ") -\. ., . , :1 I ~ELCOME BARKED<' Front line of P~lar Bears-are set to jump into ocean. while.shaggy dog urges Marcy Keys. .,...,,.... .... ,.... 21, of Ontario to plunge into frigid water fgr ·traditional dip at Treasure Island. From PageA1 cmLLY w ATER RITU.AL BEARABLE • • • "It's 61 degrees." the thermometer B~ar shouts. 'That's way too hot," all the other Polar Bears shout back. It is tradition that no matter what the reading, it must be declared loo w'rm. That's the signal for the ice cube-bearing Bears. They advance to the surflfne and scatter ice cubes from pla.c;tic bags into the sea. Now all is ready for the mass I ineup of everybody from bikini -clad teen-agers to senior citizens for the 25th annual plunge. Nobody chickened out 01 Ure 509 members, Father Bear Balla estimated at»ut \00 actually ardved to brave "'file chilled briny deep. • During the rites. 'O·year-0ld Merico Zanella, who wears a cap with a fake fish stuck through il , served as ·'unofficial official" photographer to recora the hijinks for the Polar Bear Club archives. Marcy Keys, 21 , was a first-time novice Polar Bear Shivering a bit afterward. she said, "I'm thrilled I want to do it again ... Toni Leec h , k eepe r o f the thermometer, was a second·year Polar Bea r . After her frfgid dip, she announced. "I'm going to keep doing it until we lose our island." That sounded the only somber note to the traditional mass ocean dip . Treasure Island mobile home residents are locked in a long-standing struggle to keep the park froD) bejng converted into a condominium dexelopment. Many or the neat lit\le mobile homes above the beach, looking more like cottages surrounded by flowers, have stickers in the windows proclaiming, "Save Treasure Island." The stickers are kind of sun·faded blue now. • Fro m Page A 1 By 'EM A.Noclated Presa Special prlvileaes wUI be 1ranted to more than 2 mllllon Pollah 1'0rkera -from chemical lnduatry workers to teachers -· who perform dangeroua tuks or hold jobs that are mentally and physically taxing, the official PAP news agency report ed Friday. The asency quoted a Council of Mlnisters decree as sayine special prlvllegea would be accorded to those "who perform tasks hual'dous to health, work In conditions causing rapid physical exhaustion. run a hilh degree ol occut>atlonal risks and do wor k requir ing special physldl and mental eHiciepcy. •• The aiency dispatch, received In London, made no connect.Ion between the new privlleees and the govemmen.t's attempt to strengthen Poland's shaky economy. ·which has been further bruised by protests and strUtes since the imposition of martial law nearly three weeks aeo. The report said those who qualify for speoial privileges include: teachers; truck, bus, trail\ and troHey drive,tS; workers in lignite mines and in aluminum and cadmium processing plants: all chemical in(lustry workers who come Into contact with toxlc substances: light industry workers employed in asbestos processing, and printing indu~try workers exposed to the effect of lead and other harmful substances. In other oHicial reports Rriday, Warsaw Rbdio said Poland's former radio and television-chief will stand l{ial next week on corruption and mismanagement charges filed during a drive lo call to account those people deemed responsible for the nation's economic: and social crills. Pope John Paul 11, in a New Year'• messa1e Frtday, pr ayed for an end lo martial law in his homeland , te l line his countrymen In a speech from St. Peter's Square, "May the Lord save you trom violence, from the state of war and siege." He also said "workers have a ri&ht lo institute Independent unions." Newborn boy follnd dead • • 10 swtcase A sl1)a1J suitcase containing a deceased newborn baby was discovered Friday afternoon In a refuse bln in the industrial section of Huntington Beach, pohce reported. Police Sgt. Ed McErlain said a young man sifting through outdoor bins made the grisly disco.very at 4 p.m . when he pulled the suitcase out. of a large container near 15362 Electronic Lane. McErlain said the infant was a white male found with the umbilical cord still attached. He said no Identification was found in tbe suitcase with the baby. An autopsy was scheduled to determine how the baby had. d~d. Mc Erlain said police were seeking information from anyone who knows the identity of the baby or who saw the suitcase being placed in the bin. Information can be given to Huntington Beach police by ·calling g&0:8841. ::·MORE THAN'ONE MILLION· WATCH ROSE PARADE COLOR PAGEANTRY '•I • • • 1:1similar to ones found in several Southern ·11California amusement parks. The coaster stalled a number of times and it 1 ;Look It t\-1f dozen men a yank on a long rope to Elephants, owned by Circus Vargas and trained in Irvine, looked regal in their blankets of red carnations. They pulled a JO.foot tall .military band wagon, las~ entry in the parade. • ,1get it gomg again. Bu\ the float completed the .,~"4.i ·mlle route. • · Sweepstakes this. year went to the ·,. Another hit float. Burbank's "Feudin' Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks with · Friends,'' made itl only down the hill at the its colorf4l carousel animals on a float with . beginning of Colorado Boulevard before it more than 30,000 roses. The award is tops for failed .. It had to be pushed to the side where it the parade. i-was still set an b~ a(ter the parade bad ended. The Elka, two days prior to the parade, bad dedicated their entry to the children and citizens of Poland. Celebrities were popular. Singer Vikki Carr, actor Ricardo Montalban and Diane Deleeuw, silver medalist in the 1976 Winter Olympics. were among float riders. Jimmy Stewart, who said he wore long underwear, was grand marshal. ' Other highlights included a Portland, Ore .. The major winners * sw_._ ..,. .. , IM "tolU Serve Chlldrlfl Everyw,,.re:· Gre•41 f'rlH (most buutllul 'ommerclal entry) A•Oll P.-OOuch' ··seeutv ot lhe Orlen! ·• TIW,,.. Ma Odd l'•ff-• •ncl RebekaM. G•••"'er"• ,,...,, Bank ol Arner IC• ,_ ... ~" A••N Clly ol Arc.ell• Qooee9'• ,...,..,, -Qll)' .. 1.-kac". l'retl41••1't T••l'llY FT O * * HalleMI T,...,.., -Cllf of A-• l'le11eer'1 Tr•l'llY -City OI ..... ,.,..,.. .. Gr---.r1 ,,...., -City of Ol•lld•I• A1111I•......, Aw--Am4"1can Kollda -Co, In< """°"' ,,...., Union 011 Co. of C•llfornla J ..... t s.KMll Or.~r f'tl•<••• Awer41 -C:a llfornl• hl.-C-""""9nlii.a. .. ..... , •• ,, ..... ,. -cu, •• j· Guests set Boiles services CO\lple. Rich Bade and Joanne Summers. who were married amid "Flintstones" cbaraciers Ne1' Year's Eve atop the Hanna·Barbel'a fioat, "Good 'Ol Fashioned Friendship •· . A Dutch couple. Anne and Harm Berghuis, traveled from Apeldoorn to sit in a boat on a block of Ice on the same float featuring Ms. Deleeuw. Flo•·ht• l11ter11atle11al Tr•l'llY Tno Burballll • Dlrecten' ,,..,..,, -Farmers ' ,,,,.,,..nee. :forslww s f M d ! By The Auoclated Pnss set o ,r on ay I• Here are the scheduled guests for t he Sunday televis ion inteniew programs: -ABC, "This Week With David BPinkley," FBI Director William Webster. -CBS, "Face the Nation," Zbigniew Brzezinski, former President Carter 's national security adviser. -NBC, "Meet the Press," George F. Kennan, fbnner U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Unlon. Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. Monday for Clarence Harrison Hoiles, whose business a c u'men helped Freed om Newspapers rise to ils stature~ a 12-state group of 31 dailies with a circulation of more than 800.000. Family and friends are invited to the services at the Episcopal Church of U;le Messiah in Santa Ana, with burial at F irhaven · Memorial Cemetery. Hoiles. 76, was \he oldest son of the late Freedom Newspapers founder R.C. Hoiles. He was the chairman of the board when he died Thursday. The family reque~ted that in lieu of nowers. donations be sent to the critical or intensive care unit at St. Joseph Hospital in Orange or to ChiJdrens Hospital of Orange Count .' --'------ I· • I TRAPPED MOTORIST -Costa Mes a firefighters needed heavy Tescue equipment to free Baltazar V. Torres. who was pinned o.ltf .. ,... .... .__. ..... by a utility pole during an aut accident at 2300 Harbor Blvd• Friday. < e stor~. Page At. l OlllAN0tCOAIT lllily Pilll CIHttfted advertl9'ft9 714.IM!-5111 All other department. 142-4321 ALLEN • • • invettlf&tion, to determine w hett)er Allen viola ted t he 1(overnment'a ethics codes. has not been completed. Allen pl aced himself on admlnl.straUve leave of absence on Nov. 2f, but when the Justice :Department issued \a 't rt, t,e Jn•de ft ~ar he w ed Co return to ~White Ho b. Asked whether ht beli es be wUl cet hJ1 job back. Al eo told CBS New1 Friday: "1 vea't h ad any indieatlon to lbe contrary •.•• Tb\s la a dtclsioO tbat tbe prllideDl la to m~ .... •• 'NellMri.ncb , ....... .......,_.. .. _ • ...__.. ·~ .,...,,0 R•ncl McNally w .• _ AFTER · J· CHRISTMAS SALE . ON ALL CHRISTMAS GIFTS DECORATIONS & ORNAMENTS Right now is a terrific time to save on unique and collecti- ble Christmas items just in time for Christmas ... 1982! Roger's st;ll has a great selection of some of the most beautiful ornaments and deoorations ever. There are great handcrafted one-of-a-kind ornaments of wood, brass. feathers, silk and glass from all over the world. And ... a fine array of custom wreaths, door swags wall haRgings and centerpieces / '"' Ii+, created by Roger's flocist with ~ 4.'7 dried and fresh plants. The Gallery is always a showcase. of delightful discoveries in gifts and ac- cessories, but, just imagine how much excitement 112 off will add to your discoveries. Come in soon for a good selection at tremendous savings. Sale prices are effectlve thru January 7th. ROGER'S GARDENS WILL CLOSE AT 4 P.M NEW YEAR'S EVE. , . 2. i ,. %" ~ ~ _, .,;# ~ ~ ~ . --;;z =" '* ... -3;. • I ---'9·--- . .-.. . .,........ 1982 BIRTH Ten-pound. IO-ounce Erin Lynn Fish arrived literally without a moment to spare -one second after midnight on New Year 's Day in Falls Church. Va It was an especially big day for..,~ad . Kevin Fist\, wbo was a New Year's Day baby iri 19~. Erin and mother. Donna Fis h. were reported doin8 well. Stockman aids magazine's sales The Atlantic Monthly, a bulwar~ of intellectual journaJis m for 124 years, 1s suddenly riding a euphoric binge of publicity and sales. uumks to 11 rew cOmn'lerl\s o·y . David Stockman. The December issue carried a now-famous article in which bud.cet director Stockmab candidly criticized Reagan economic policy, and it became the biggest seller in Atlantic history. It gave the Atlantic hundreds or m entions in news.papers. magazines and network news s hows, and new subscription orders have rolled in ever since. ··we'll probably never get this kind of attention again," says Publisher Bruce Gray, who recently came to the Atlanti c fro 111 C B S Pu btiC"ations. However. cautions Editor William Wbllworth , "magazines that get hot also cool off. J would prefer sort of cooking along at a medfom Level and being paid attehtion to and respected rather than having an obligation to be ho t or sensational." Normally. the Allantie sells about 340,000 copies. But circulation director Roy Green says the December issue m1cy sell up to 460,000 . • l\tnet .._,._v and bit wltt wm m1r114d tn lutte, Mont. by Pl'Ol.Y' HP&Ht.d bJ half tb• world -10 they've accepted an lnvttatlon to 1pend part of their boner.moon thtr•. '1 l ve n1vtr beard of a bride who bun't IHD the town where •b• waa married." said Mary Molll .. , one of the people who set up the v iait . Semyonov, 25, will arrive Tuesd-.v, Mrs. Mplliah said. SemyQnov, 25, stepson of Sovi e t dissident Andrei Sakharov, an d Li a a Alexeyeva, 26. will arrive Tuesday, Mrs . Mollish said. "We'll probably meet them with the Butte High School band, and with my luck it will probably be 35 below zero," she said. "That's the problem with Butte , all people ever hear about is our cold weather " T he June 9 wedding was held in Montana because it is one of the few states to recognize proxy weddings. The bride-to-be was in the Soviet Union. T he couple had hoped the wedding would persuade Soviet.authorities lo let Miss Alexeyeva leave and join her hus band. But s he wasn't granted a visa until earller this month, after Sakharov and his wife staged a 17-day hunger strike. Country s inger J ohnny Pa ycheck, known for his somewh at scrutry attire, appeared in court in a three-piece, pin-striped suit to face morals charges. Natron a Coun ty Court Com missioner Duane Myres set Payc heck · s bond at SI0,000 on felony charges that alleged he took indecent liberties with a 12-year-old girl after a concert in Casper , Wyo . last April. Paycheck, 42. posted Sl,000 of the bail in cash, signed for the rest and left for a New Ye ar's Eve performance across the state in Evanston. Paycheck's attorney. Frank Chapman, said the sin&er. who gained fame with the song ·'Take This Job and Shove u:· is innocent and will fight the charges. P aycheck is accused of living with the gir l for two d ays. Her mother notified police in Ocl.ober because she said she "feared his power as a star" and bad received m ysterious threatening telephone calls. Chance of showers Smell <rett _,_., trom Point COfl<•PUOfl to Ille Me•lcen bo<CMr Extended Jo recast .. lo-• to,_,_, winds :io to Verl•bl• cloudlneu. Cll...ce 01 JO mph wtlll ~ to ll 1tno11 "''' snow•n -..S.y HIQll• In <OHi• •fffllftl. Comelintel -• ol 4 lo,, .. , ereu •O to U . 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Mailbox contribulon mutt Include ttMlr name and telephoae pumw for verlncauon No clrculatlon call , please. • Tell us what's on your mlnd. • Ora"Q1 Ct>ut OAILV PILOT/Saturday, January 2, 1982 A 'dream' inveStigatio~ Young OC detective helped crack sophisticated theft ring ~ By GLENN 9Qn"I' 0( .. Def~,.... ..... He'd. been up late the niaht before rememberln& the good tlm ea wlth tbe auya on hia former beat, ao J.M. Johnton wa• ready . t.o •lip out of the office. ·It was the end of hla flrst day as an lnvestlaator in the Orange County Sherllf De partment's south county s ubstation In Laguna Niguel. Just then the telephone rana and the sergeant told one of lhe1 office's old pros, Fred Collins, to c heck o ut a jewelry store robbery-hi Dana Point. Collins '1en. his desk, the one with the usual bottle of antacid on it, and was aJmost out the door when the sergeant yelled: "Hey, take the kid with you." And with that sornewhat lucky break, on Aug. 3, 19'79, Johnson, an Orange Coast res ident. became involved in a case he would call this week "the sort of investigation detectives dream about." The book is by no means closed on the case that began with what seemed at the time a routine robbery of custom rings from Loran's A Lady's World, a boutique and jewelry shop at 25062 Del Prado Ave. Today, however. investigators speculate the two persons who have since been convicted or the r ob b e r y were pa rt o r a sophisticated theft ring that has stolen as much as SlO million worth of cash and valuables. - Convicted ln •he case were Terrance Nikrasch, 45 , who i nv estigato r s desc ribe as a gray-haired m aster thief and expert locksmith, and hjs girlfriend, Susan Mendez. a petite 28-year-old beauty. ·'They are not the type of people who kick down a door when they can pick a lock," saJd ttrt .34-year-old J ohnson "They are very sophisticated crooks." According to a worker in the jewelry store, one or the pair kept her busy while the other quietly look the rings from a display.~aid J ohnson Johnson reme mbers the following events like t his : The description or t he pair was broadcast over the sheriff's radio frequency. An astute clerk in the Dana Point Harbor Patrol ,• otlice remem~red Ut•t only a day before, a couple m1tchln1 ihelr description had been Issued a permJt for cueat 1llp for their boat. She gave Collins and Johnson the San Juan Capistrano address the couple had left. The two detectlves spent that night staking out the house on Via de Agua. Officers for the Harbor Patrol staked out the boat. ''They . are not the type of people who kick doum . a door when they can pick a lock.~ The next day, as the boat began to leave the harbor, the couple were arrested on suspicion of robbing the store. A search warrant was obtained and Collins and Johnson, by then aided by another investigator, Dave Mann, found a cache of interesting materials inside the house. They discovered all sorts of l ock s mithing devices : schematic drawings of locks, key code books, key-making machines and metal blanks to produce keys. There also were tools to extricate ge~. But the rings they were searching for weren't there. "We really weren't sure what the heck we had," observed Johnson But he said that over the next fe w weeks, mor e information came in -~ome tips and some from other law enforcement agencies -until they began to piece together how the couple was involved in what detectives now claim is the gypsy-like family of thieves who have struck all over the country. One tip about a separate burglary of the San Clemente Inn led the investigators to the fact that a piece of rock encased in clear plastic they'd seen in the house was a part or the Great Wall of China . It was part of a display or m e m orabilia of former-.. Pres ident Ri chard Nixon stolen earlier from the inn. The lnvestl1atoni fot anotbtr search warrant and went baett to claim lhe rock, aald JohfllOI\. Today, accordin, to Jolu'alotl, the FBJ and. Nevada authorlt.1,. are seektnc federal lndictmema against Nikraach, ·Miu Mencltts and other memb,ra of tbe family for a variety of char1es. Amona them la an alleaa~ that the members had opened safe deposit boxes in banks ud catalogued valuable jewelry lhey planned to steal, leavlna phoQy duplicates behind. Johnson said som e members or the c l an were expert locksmiths; others bad studied gemology Another aJlegation ls that they used keys and intricate devices to pull orr bogus jackpots totaling about $250,000 in L'3 Veg<ts "They've taken Vegas for a lot or money." Johnson contended. Throughout the lnvestigatioo, however. the rings missing from the first burglary never showed up until a plea bargain -was reached t his fall with Mi~ Mendez in which she was giv"1- a five-year suspended sentence · with two years of mandatory com munily service work every weekend. I.n exchange for noi goioe to prison. she handed over tbe rings, valued at $4 3,000 . J oh n s on s aid in vestigators wanted the rings because they represented' a big loss to store owner Betty Sloan He also s peculated that further action will be t aken against other members in the family, who number as many JS 19 But Johnson doesn't want too much or the credit. He says it b e longs t o many o f the investigators, especially Collins. who has been on disability leave for the last six months with stress-related problems. He said Collins, with his 23 years of experience, taught him a lot. "It's the biggest case of my car eer." said Johnson. "The experience I gained working with Investigator Collins is very, very valuable." New Year Sale Polo merchandise {or men. women, boys and girls . One fourth to one ha lf off. Begins January 2 through 14. Store hours: Monday through Fndoy 10 o.m.-9 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. and Sunday 12 noon-5 p.m . Visa • Mastercard • Amex , ROBERT R--11LLIFS' COMPAN Y SOUTH COA ST PLAZA SAKS WING. COSTA MESA, CA 71 4 641 -03 53 SACRAMENTO (AP) - Callfoml4 be•an the new year wlth a f amlltar eaat. of political peraoaallttea 1crambU~n for new Jobi ID a climate of iUcal unc•J'talnb> unmatched more than two decad•. , Tbett art wide-open races for 1overnor, th• U.S. Senate, slx other atatewlde offices and 145 ·1e1l1laUve and con1re11lonal 4eata, plus at least two intensely controveratal statewide ballot propoeittona and four to eight other atatewtde ballot measures. Most att.eotton ror the .Tune 8 primary ls focusln1 on Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s bld for • C,S. Senate seat; the.. prospect '1lat California might elect its . tlrst black governor if Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley '·u c c e e d.s B r o w n .• and controversial political activist Tom Hayden's bid for the state Legislature. The June ballot will also include a referendum on the P rtJ)Mnl Canal, a '5 billton plan that pita powerful and voeal lnten1t1 from Northern and Southern Callfomia afaJnat each other, and a maJor prleon c.on1truct.lon propo1al. • TtuJ 11182 eleetlon.s are lbaplni up aa the bitfHt ca.me of political muslcal cb-&Jra in California since the t9$os. But four pendtn1 reapportloomept lawsuits before the California Supreme Court mean that nobody today even knows where most of those chairs are 1otn1 to be. Tbe reapporUonment battle has been a len1thy, complex high-stakes power stru1gle t>etween Democrats. who control both houses of the California Legisla!ute, and Republicans. They organized a successful referendum campaign aimed at Memorial planned for Mrs. Lyman A memorial is to be established with the Nevada Lung Association for long-time Newport Beac h resident Vicginia Carolyn Lyman, who died Sunday at. her Reno home at age63. No funeral is scheduled. A 00-year resident of Newport Beach, Mrs. Lyman was a member and past treasurer of the Newport 8each Assistanc~ League and a member or the ;Irvine Coast Country Club. She skated in the Ice Follies and was a dancer with the Rube 'Wolfe Fashionettes at the 1 Paramount Theater in Los 1Angeles. She i$ s urvived by her husband, Roy of Reno; a daughter, Sharon Quinn of Reno ·and mother, Carolyn Larson of Los Angeles. She also leaves two grandchildren. Memorial contributions should be made to the. Nevada Lung Association, 75 Kirman Ave., Reno89502. blocklnl enactment of wbat they condemned u Democratic 1•rrYmander1 which could take aw&)' 10 or more GOP aeata in the Lectllatu,.. and CaUrornia'a coniresalonal dele1at1on. Democrats have sued to throw out the GOP referendums, and the bi1h court will hear oral araumenta on those aulta Jan. 11. At that tl~e. t.he court could order the 1982 state Senatef Asaembly and con1reulon1 elections hekl In the current districts, ln the new districts -· which are drastlcaUy different -or in districts the court draws itself. The last Ume a similar Issue came before the court 10 years ago, iL did au three. It allowed the 1972 legislative races to be held in old districts, ordered congressional races held in districts in a vetoed reapportionment plan and then drew its own plan to impose on 1974 races. Since California gained two congressional seats from the 1980 census, increasing its delegation from 43 to ~. the court api>f:ars to have the rewest options in that case. The· current boundaries would deprive California of two seats, and a federal law bans statewide election o f congressional candidates. "We don't have any hint what they are going to do, or how soon they are going to ruJe. We hope lt is soon," said Caren Daniels, .spokeswoman for California's top election officer, Secretary of State March Fong Eu. Pending Ule outcome of the reapportionment suits, Ms. Eu has ordered California's 58 county elections offices to start Aspirin repor~ed safe for kidney ~ HAPPY MEW YEAR CHICAGO ' (AP) -Rheumatoid arthritis sufferers who take large doses of aspirin over long periods of lime are no more subject to kidney disease than other people, a study says. Dr. Ronald Emkey, an author of the report in the Journal of the American Medical Association, said earlier studies indicated aspirin might be linked to kidney problems. But he said bis study shows that •·aspirin is probably sare as far as the kidney goes. There is no evidence long:range use -Of aspirin alone can cause kidney damage." Emkey said at least 5 million American adults ha¥e rheumatoid arthritis, which causes inflammation, pain and swelling of the joints. Aspirin relieves the swelling and inflammation, he preparln1 electlon1 material• for both the old and new dJatrlcta, an order which local olflolala complain add• a hu1e burdtA to both their work'oad and bud1eta. But the uncertainty Is already starttn& to dlarupt the electiOQ process. The law says candidates who want to collect voter st1naturea in lieu of pa)'lng flllnJ feea may circulate petitions between Jan. 1 and Feb. 25. But as a practical matter, they can't start unW the court tells them which districts they live In. The court's decision will have a major impact on individual political careers. For example, Hayden, the ' firebrand anti-war activist of the 1960s who had built a powerluJ Santa Monica·based political machine out of his Campai&n for Economic Democracy, hopes to run Cor the 44th Assembly District seat no\f held by Democrat Mel Levine. The way appears clear for Hayden because Levine plans to run for o n e of the new congressional seats which may . be either approved or eliminated the court's decision. Gray Davis, who resigned his seven.year post as the governor's chief of staff to run for an Assembly seat, is in a similar situation . He is cam,Palgning for the seat or Assemblyman Howard Berman, a P,OWerful figure in Los Angeles area politics whose plans to give up his Assembly seat are based on the hope of winning another newly created congressional seat. Hundreds <c)f less prominent politicians throughout California face similar dilemmas. SENATE BID -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is seeking a U.S. Senate seat. · EYES LEOISLATU~I - Controversial political activist Tom Hayden is bidding for a se~t in the state Leg1slalure. . ' Police -seek name of abiindOned baby Westminster police are trying of Garden Grove, was pulling to identify a week-old baby boy into a parking space at an office who was discovered in a building near the hospital cardboard box in the parking lot Tuesday afternoon when be of a medical office building. found the cardboard box Officer Roy Freeman said the containing the baby blocking his infant was kept for 24 hours at path. We s t min s t e r Co m m unity Freeman said the baby was Hospital and was d~ermlned to wrapped In crib sheets, with no be in good health. The baby then " note or identification. . was taken to the co1lnty's Albtrt . Rodriguez took the baby to a Sitton H<>me for abused ahd p b y s i c i a n , Dr . L a r r y abandoned children. Stoneburner. • Freeman said the baby is Freeman said anyone with Caucasian, 19 inches long._ six information on the infant stM>uld pounds, with blue eyes and ca ll Westmins ter police brown hair. detective Richard Bogenreif at He said Renay Rodriguez. 21, 898·3311, ext. 346. NATURAL OR WALNUT FINISH From Romania iiillil~ 19.99 WARM BROWN BAMBOO MATCHSTICK BLINDS From Taiwan A "carbonizing" burning process permanently and evenly deepens U\e natural tonn to a warm llght brown. 811nda are complete with wood bar and matching brown pull oorda and hardware. All 6' long 3'WIDE ~ said, ipcreasing the patie.Pts' ability to function. WALNUT FINISH BENTWOOD WITH STENCILED PLY SEAT From Romania 7.99 I Although aspirin is the best way to treat rheumatoid arthritis, Emkey said, some patients shun it because it is cheap and they think it's merely a pain pill. · "We're not giving it primarily as a pain medicine," the doctor said· in a telephone interview. "We're giving it so people ~an function better ... Most patients can get along extremely well on aspirin alone if they have to choose a single drug.·· The study focused on 46 patients who took ·aspirin for more than 10 years -some consuming up to~ aspirin tablets a day. Most of the patients ( had rheumatoid arthritis, and none showed signs ' of sedous kidney disease, the study said. None of the patients studied by Emkey took any other drug associated with ktdney damage. Em.key, chief of the rheumatology division at the Reading (Pa.) Hospital and Medical Center, aiid some doctors i(vont telling artbrttlc patients to take aspirin because they fear it may cause kidney problems, including bleeding and ulcers. Some studies of short.term aspirin use, he said, showed patients exper ienced some temporary kidney dysfunction. Other less conclusive studies, he said, have suggested aspirin alone is responsible for kidney disease. An editorial in the Journal said aspirin should be the drug of first choice in treating most rheumatoid arth ritis patients. It said the alternatives to aspirin 're new anti·inflammatory drugs that probably are more dangerous . ''Indeed, multiple reports of acute renal {allure baNe been noted in patients treated with these agents," the editorial said. It said more research was needed on the alternative drugs. Antique T~:~~ at the Huntinoto Center mall. Out . nding -collections frpm 50 dealers. Alio free evaluation clinic. 405 fwy and Beach Blvd .. H.B. 50°/o T•X · BRACKET?_ AKEAl00°A 'DEDUCTION· Donate your station wagon CK vori for the benefit of youth C.011 Jim or Dove Orange C.oost YMCA 642-9990 THE ATTENTION YOU NEED-WHEN YOU NEED ITMOST' A convenient •ltern•tlve to ho1pltel emergency room• fCH: ILLNESS INJURIES FRACTURES . Thorough, Profeaalonal & Personalized Care • ADULTS ANO CHILDREN No Appo!ntment Needed • Immediate Attentlon'Olven ONN: 1 DAYSAWEEK MS DAY9 A VIAR I A.M,•11 P.M. 36" x36" Slldes open to eo· long 114.81 ... MOLDED TEAK PLY SEAT WtTH BLACK BACK &LEGS From Romania 29.99 29.99 TEAK FINISH WITH VINYL From Singapore With loam~added brown or black vinyl. NATURAL PEEL t;'ATTAN LOUNGE CHAIR From Indonesia Beautifully atructured, lacquered lounge chair has four adjustable back positions and attached HARDWOOD a CANVAS FOLDING CHAIRS From Singapore DIRECTOR'S 'Naturar wood with brown, black or orange canvas. stlde-out front aectlon. The design ta broad and roomy, and measures •e• from NATURAL RATTAN LIGHT SHADE From Hong Kong Stunning shade to heng or flt over a lamp fixture. With wire· reinforced framing, plus 318" tight fixture fitting at top. 56" rattan chain 19" dla .• 11 • tall 17 .99 front to back. The seat IS 20" wide. 119.99 22.88 Netural wood with brown canvas or walnut finish wood with beige canvas. 29.99 LIGHT NATURAL RATTAN SEA CHESTS From lndoneala Sturdy, goo<t·looklng chests wlll hold linens or toya, or serve as coffee tabtea. 13• x 28" x 14" tall 54.95 17" x 32• x 18" tall 79.95 CLASSIC TO CONTEMPORARY NATURAL OILED TEAK NESTING OCCASIONAL TABLES From Hong Kong Handsome, versatile tables have natural teak veneer topa on tolld teak legs. 16Vt • to 22" tall 11· x 22· 34.88 15" )( 19" 29.88 13• >< us• 28.88 SLENDER OBLONG PARSONS oo· long 1•v.• wide ORIENTAL DESI ON 18" )( 18" 18" tall ·; 29.88 ) 20• x 20" 20· tall 33.88 28" tall 88.86 Natural frame with brown can>tas or walnut finish frame with beige canvas. 39.86 I ~ WOODS HOLi: ....... (AP~,ror • veterinarian, tt II tbe ulUniate fniltr DoHu ol 1ulfocatlnl what.. Ue atranded on a beacb. Tbey are so bulky they cannot M moved •nd to 1lck thoy cannot be eavtd.. SomtUinea t.bty Are ao bJ• they cannot even be ldUed. Thi.I stranae ritual of the 1ea bu been 1olnc on thtouthout hlatory. The tlant underwater mammals 1wtm onto the 1and and wait to ~le. No one know1 why, but theories ran1e trOm ear parasites to blind loyalty to a d)'ln1 leader. Mas• strandln1s happen around tM world. On · the East Coast, 1roups of whales or porpol.ses wlU commit what seems like 1ulclde about once every three years. " A specialized corps or v~erinarlana 1oes to their aid. But almost invariably, they can do little but put the anllJlals to death. "Effort• have been made to save these animals," aaya John Prescott, director of the New Enelan.i Aquarium ln Bolton. "Our success rate la· virtually zero the world around.•• A nortbwtet wind Wll blowlq uo.to 10 mpb that dl,Y. and HU were 30 feet hlah. Whal• come to the aurfact to br.athe ln ~ troulhl between tho wn~. but tbete wen full ol •Pf•>'·' To keep the 1pr1,Y dUt of "1elr brtUhlnC bole1, tbt whales bad• to swtn\ IDtO 'tbe "lbd, and tbll ieat thtm dJrecUy toward land. "1'hey may have been lrYtl\I to malataln orientation iato tbe wind and ahnply cam' atrOund becaUH It happened to be thert,11 Hid Lambertaen. Sick whales often come ubofe to dle. A• tile animal loses welcbt, it becomes leas buoyant. So the whale, afraid of drowninc, 1wim1 lnto tbe ahallowa where It can keep lta head out of water. HoweveT, no single theory explalns mass 1roundinga. Amon1 10me of t.M poasible causes: -Whales have a stron1 herd lnsUnct. If an old leader swims ashore to dle, the rest of the pack may follow. -Whales may swim lnto~baUow water to eat schools ol berrtn1 Of .quid, then become trapped when the tide loet out. -They may nee asroand to escape attacldnt · sharks. . Ot1ng4t Coaat DAJL V PILOT/Saturd•y, January 2, 1982 • ' IT 'the aquarium helps cOQrdlnate the New Eneland marine mammal strandin1 network, which oversees the rescue and care of these animals. When a whale goes ••roupd, the network contacts one of a half dozen veterinarians 'Who specialize in whales. Among them is Dr. Richard Lambertsen, who is a lso a whale biolo1iat at '-be Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. He bas spent a career looking at beached whales, Including the victims of New England's latest mass stranding last month. -Ear parultes ·may da1Dage .the whales' hearing, whlcb the anl.malS need for navtaatton. But all the explanations bloto1ist1 hav~ dreamed up over the years are just theories. "We're left with the same old enltma," BEACHED WHALES -Scientists Crom the United States and Mexico examine s perm wh ales ~ t hat beached themselves and di~d ~---·.1 near the town of Mulege, Baja California. in 1979 photo. No one knows why the giant sea ,. mammals swim onto sand and wait to die. \ "You can treat these animals following your best medical judgment and fall nonetheless," Lambertsen said. ''And generally_y~u do fall." No stranded animals have lived for very long after ooe of these events. Some might live for a month, but for some inexplicable reason, they go downhill and• die. And this is with intensive medical therapy." The last time he was called out was Dec. 6, when 24 pilot whales stranded themselves on Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard and Cape Cod be aches. The big air-breathing animala swam ashore during a snowstorm. first three large adults and then calves and juvtniles. . The biggest were 14 feet long and weighed 3,000 pounds. They lay passively, sometimes flipping their big tails or grunting and wbisWng among themselves. Because of the storm, the vets bad trouble flying to Nan.tucket, where most of the animals were stranded. By the time they arrived, the animals bad been out of water for several hours, and were having trouble breathing. Whales' lungs work fine in water. but they collapse under the animals' weipt when whales ar~ stranded on land. Despite the poor results of the past, the vets tried to save several whale!J. One 350-pound baby was carted to the airport and flown lo the Mystic Marineland Aquarium in Connecticut, where it later died. Another 1,200-pound whale got as far as the airport, but the plane and loading equipment were too small, so the animal was kiJled. A third whale was towed two miles out to sea by the Coast Guard, then released. The whale se ed to be swimming normall!L" but the next dd. the veterinariaD.s f0'1nd it bea"r"ed aaain, Ulla time in much worse shape. "That's another source of frustration," said Lambertsen. "You see something that looks like success and then find out that you may not have done that animal any good al all. You may have just prolonged its suffering." N antuckel bas been a common beaching spot for herds of pilot whales. In 1914, 187 of them swam aground. As bard as pilot whales are to deal with, beacbe'd sperm whales are worse. These animals can be 50 feel long and weigh 50 tons, so big t.bat they cannot even be put oot of their misery. Bullets will not kill them. In the latest case, Lambertseo theorizes that the whales were literally driven ashore by the storm. Lambertsen said. Fever • vaccine tests due LEMOORE Nc\VAL AIR STATION (AP> - Testing will belin 1n a third commudlty this month in the trial of an experimental vaccine to prevent valley fever. R e sults from the three-year examination a lso being conducted lo Bakersfield and Tucson will be needed before the vaccine c an be approved ror general use. A bout 600 military personnel and · civilians are being sought in tbe Lemoore area for vaccination with a compound developed by Dr. Hillel Levine at the Nav a l Bios cien ces Laboratory ln Berkeley. Military testing is scheduled to begin Jan. 11 with shots offered in the city of Lemoore two weeks later. The vaccine already bu been proved safe for humans . The eurrent tes t is lo d etermine whether the vaccine b effective for Pl"elC..efilion. Valley fever is Cibsed by an airborne spore carried in fungus. A r es urgence in the flu-like disease can be traced after windstorms in the San Joaquin Valley and much of the Southwest. 'While about half of the sufferers may never r e alize they have contracted the disease, it is sometimes fatal. LA murders decline . LOS ANGELES (AP> -Police . said there were 898 homicides in the city ort:os Ani~les tn 1981 , a drop oT . about 8.5 percent from the previous year. Cmdr. William Booth, chief spokesman for the department, said the drop came despite the fact the force had 300 fewer officers on patrol. He said, however , the police had increased its effort against street gangs. He s aid 898 h omicides were reported by Dec. 30, 1981, compared to 1,028 homicides in 1980. He said police arrested 65.5 _percent more homicide suspects i.n 1981 than the previous year. "We think the decrease ~an be attributed to our concentrat'ion of fo rces with the Com munity Resources Against Street Hoodlums <C RASH> stree t gang program," said Booth. The anti-g a ng program was expanded from one division in 1980 to four divisions last year. Antique Show •• YOU• caYSTAL c••••~' Huntington Ceoter ""'' todsy tlwu Jan. 10 DON'T WORRY. WE CAN RESTORE IT. HING YOUR'CHIPPIO GlASSES, MUGS, VASES STEMytAll, GOllm. OECANTllS POR FULL RUTOIATION TO THEIR OllGtNAl CONDm ON II DAYS ONLY ••• HUNT'IHGTON llAOt MAU (IN THI MAU) (ANnQUI SHOW) SAN DllOO fWY (•)AT MACH' II.VO: . _ ... ,,_, ........ y { --IULYAl9AY .. tm-} TEfJI -OOS'lrltll. CLEl\11EC. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~ • The "°°"""•• TMI ~ _,,M30 OJU,.100 ,_°"'s299eo_==.,_ RCA Colot'rrak 19" - UMOft COLOaTIAl-ffOW FOi A· MIW LOW PllCI CW OHL Y . s4&900 ;...YI! -FFll•llA aMO'l'I COMT'IOL COLOllTIAll JffO AT OUI L'OWl$1' PllCI IYB -wtlLI 1HIY LAST S4ggc>O RCA SllECTAVISION & HOUR RECORDERS AND VIDEO CAMERAS ICA 6 ... YMS llCOIDll S5J900 - Yff r?t -ICA'S YllY POPUUa 6 HI.. 14 DAY ,.C>elAM- MAIU llCOIDll WITH INC&AL 9fllCTS. palCll) A LOT USS THAM THI MEMIBSHIP . 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Ii '" ,., E;\ rll ,, • Prison flows ( Overcrowding, lack of funds _ escalate penal system problems 14\ By THOMAS D. ELIA& a low ()riortty in a state where even California prisons are overc~wd~<.. ~;t are strapped for money. One and outmoded. They are in by t em bo produced a hilh and gangs and plagued. by rinl es mona ev r •e p8ndlng prlson l)opulaUon, whUe guards ~ eupbem1stlcal ~ c d e otJi~r has denied prisons the means "correctional officers." · -o handle their new inmates. The blame for these 'flaws usuallYts Now thettl are sians that teaislators, thrown at tbe ·feet of the state at least, recognite these realities. The . Department or Corrections, which fate of next sprlng's prison ballot makes no bones about its probli!ms. proposition wHI indicat~ just hJ.W But is the department really willing the voters are to pay for the responsible? policies they've d~~ndcd. The most serious prison problems ___.. stem from the wave or new, violent Thomas Elias, 12 /ree-lante columnist .,,,,,'I ' convicts which began pouring into based in Santa M onica. analyzes Ca Ii for n i a' s 12 prisons and 24 North-South state politics. conservation camps in 1 7. THAT WAS-THE YE~ adopted deter~inate sentenc probation options away from j ges and setting definite prison terms for most crimes. Since the n , the prison population has risen from 24,000 lo more than 29,000, with the pro~pect of 44,000 inmat~s by 1987 al the current rate of growth. U .S.-Brazilian relationship rocky Even passing the $495 million prison construction bond issue on the June primary election ballot would not solve the ove~crowding problem, since it would provide just 11 ,000 new beds, still leaving the prisons about 9,000 short if convicts keep pouring in. It's not that more Californians are being convicted of c rimes . On a per-capita basis, they're not. But when·ever jails started to fill in the 1960s and 1970s, the prison doors would Open for many convicts: "When the prisons became crowded.·' says state prison director Ruth Rushen, "the parole board became lenient." BUT THAT'S NO longer possible. For 84 percel'lt of California prisoners, only .. good time" awarded for proper behavior in prison can bring early release. and even .those rewards are rigidly controlled by law. Coupled with the determinate sentences are much tougher penalties for the worst crimes More than 2,700 inmates are now serving life sentences, almost one·tenth of the state's prison J)opul ation. And 188 or them are serving without possibility of parole -a fi gure that increases by about three each month. "How do we motivate inmates towa!'d positive behavior when from thei r perspective they have ·nothing to gain' for the next 40 years or when they know they'll never be released?" asks Rushen. Added to these problems are the difficulties or prison personnel. who stay in their jobs for much s horter terms than any other category or state employee. SAYS RUSHEN : "People who work in prisons enco unter an austere, substand ard e nvironme nt which reflects general citizens' reluctance to provide more than basic amenities for inmates. Every time we talk about1;.i ir conditioning a prison , we he.ar talk about 'country clubs' for convicts, but correctional officers work there. too. .. Prison cell blocks are not designed to comfort the eye or spirit. And a lot of inmates would just as soon kill you as not. Yet the public belittles and puts down eeopte who work with prisoners ... It's clear the probiems of the prison system are largely t he result or two majoi: themes that have run through the recent politics of California· One is "law-and -order." with demands for tougher judges and hars her sente n ces. The other is government economy -and prisons are Despite Reagaf! efforts to smooth differences, position not strengthened; By PETER EISNER Auednod """'" Wt'IW• BRASILIA. Brazil The United States is searching for ways to improve its complicated relationship with Brazil. the South American giant that bas s truck an independent course in its efforts to i become a world economic power. D espite effort s by the R eagan administra tion to s mooth over differences that led to Brazil's 1978 cancellation of a joint military accord, 'the military-backed government here has given signals it remains dissatisfied in its relationship with its major trade and business partner . Officiall y, the Brazilian Foreign Minis try says it believes that while there are differences on specific points, the two nations enjoy .. complex, friendly relations." But Brazil is developing il5 potential as a major exporte r or rood and technology around the world, esj:\eciall y in La tin America. Africa ar\d the Mid die East. Its trade interests sometimes rivQl and challenge those or the United States. IN DIPLOMATIC affairs. Foreign Ministry officials repeatedly have decla red the United States cannot expect an "automatic alliance" between the countries. Beyond its relations with th e Brazilian government . the Unitec S t ates ma y have to deal with anti-Americamsm that appears to be growing among intellectuals and nat ionalis t -minded groups . Social critics here sometimes complain about a "cultural invasion'' of U.S. products, movies, televis ion and popular music. When former U.S. Secretary or Stale Henry A. Kissinger appeared at the University of Brasilia on Nov. 18, about 400 students burned an American flag and pinned Kissi~er inside a lecture hall. They pelted the building with eggs and tomatoes for two hours. shouting obscene slogans as well as "murdtter" and "Yank~ go home," Kissinger, who escap'ed unharmed in a police paddywagon, told reporters he hoped the incident did not signal the start of at:lti -U.S. protests in Latin America. President Reagan has sent a series of, high-level missions to Brazil to discuss differences over trade policy and Brazil 's dual s tatus as an underdeveloped , Third World country and as an industrialized power. -THE HrGHEST-RANKING visitor was Vice President George Bush, who was greeted with cool protocol despite his announcement o r a major concession that could lead to the U .S sale of enriched uranium to Brazil to fuel its first n_uclear power plant. The United States had balked at such sales to Bra:til because it refu~es to s ign the 'reaty on the nonprollleraUon of nuclear weapons and reserves the right lo build nuclear explosive devices for peaceful purposes. The 1978 military break was the acknowledged low point in relations a result or the Carter administration's criticism of Brazil°s ttuman rights record and U.S. opposition to a 1975 West German nuclear power plant deal. The deal promised to give Brazil access to technology that could permit construction or nuclear weapons. • T tro s e issues have faded in • importance since 1979, when fresident Joao Figueiredo's regime initiated. a serie s of liberalizing reforms . Meanwhile, the nuclear program was seriously delayed by cost overruns and changing priorities. CU RRENT MAJOR points of contention o n the Brazilian s ide include: -Complaints that the United States follows a restrictive import i>olicy with Brazil by maintaining protectionist tariffs on such products as textiles and shoes. -Rejection of President Reagan's support for so-called "graduation" of Brazil and some other Third World countries to a middle level of d evelopment. Brazil says the plan would penalize its development goals by cutting off international s ubsidies from agencies like the World BanJc and the International Monetary Fund. Brazil's recent cancellation of a 1946 civil aviation treaty with the United States. Brazilian officials hope to renegotiate an accord that will block the effects of U.S. airline deregulation here. Meanwhile. Brazil annoyed U..S. o fficial s by refus ing to partici· pate in boycotts of the Moscow Foreign Ministry and rejected Reagan New laws will 'pinch pocketbook ~ttol Newt S."'I<• SACR AME NTO Th e st ate Legis lature e nacted hundreds of measures in 1981. many of which will affect your pocketbook in one way or another. Many of those measures indirectly affect you. but others - raising fees, doling 6 out tax credits - will have a more o v1ous influence on your paycheck. such as: -Senate Bi ll 215 increases vehicle registration fees from $11 to $23, drivers license fees from $3.25 to $10 and truck weight fees by 50 percent. Increases, effective Jan. 1, 1983, excise taxes on gasoline and diesel fuel from 7 'cents per gallon to 9 cents per gallon. Authorizes counties to increase tbe motor vehicle fuel tax rate in 1 cent per gallon increments upon approval of the board of supervisors. specified city councils and voters. Revenue from SB 215 will go to counties, the State Highway Account, the Motor Vehicle Account, and the Trans port a tion Planning a nd Development Account. The measure was prompted by the poor condition or California roads and hi ghways. SENATE BILL 321 provides tax incentives to e mployers lo encourage ride -sharing. Allows personal and corporate income taxpayers lo claim a 20 percent non-refundable credit against the cost· of purctiasing, le~ing, or contracting company shutUe buses and car pooling vehicles. Allows employers to deduct as bus iness expenses operating costs incurred in activities which encourage ride·sharing or discourage commuter traffic. Senate Bill 690: Exempts from income taxation the capital gain r ecognized upon the sale of small business stocks if the stock has been held for more than three years. Previously. 65 percent of gains held between one and five years and 50 percent o(gains held for more than five years were subject to taxation. Also provides that 70 percent of the gain .. reco~nized upon the sale o f a non·productive asset held between one and five years is subject to taxation. Untler prior tax, 65 percent of such gains' were taxed. -SENATE BILL 152: Allows a city redevelopment agency to levy, through a local ordinaoce, a sales a nd use tax of up to 1 percent. but not in excess of the rate levied by its city. Limited to redevelopment agencies whose board is composed or the entire membership of the city council in which the agency is located. -Senate 1Bill 180: Increases the maximum amount you can file for in s mall claims court from $750 to $1,500 and increases fili ng fees from $2 to $6 for reguh11' usage or to $12 for heavy usage. Also requires that lar.ge small claims divisions conduct at least one night or 'Saturday session per month to improve access for citizens. High school seniors haven't changed -Senate Bill 1089: Increases the minimum State Teachers' Retirement System <STRS> ~nsion from $16 per month per year of service to $18 per month per year of service for members (and beneficiaries) who retired prior to Jan. L, 1982. Those who retire thereafter would receive SlO per month per year of service. ' By KAREN CLARK Karen Clark, news editor of the Hanford Sentinel, attended high school cla3aes /or 'two weeb. CORCORAN (AP> -If there's one thing I learned by becoming a high school senior again, it's that young j people really haven't changed. They may listen to different I musicians and weaf different kinds of clothes, but they still love to give : teachers a hard time and•they continue to worry about what "everybody'' thinks. But there are some differences. Studen'8 lodky seem to be les1 active pollttcaUY. than many of my classmates I in the early 1970S. AttbouQb we missed 1 the turmoil of the lMOJ, a sizable ' number ot my fellow students still were I t.ryjn~ tD ;ave the world in spite of 1 Richard M. Nixon. • . • 8'11' ~DAY, J found that student& are m<n Interested in maktna UM: best bomecom.ins noat than in helping 11ve thewbal•. It'• not•~ they are mlndleaa people with e,e1 turned forever lnward, but more that th•>' are belnl molded b)' a school aystem that bas returned to the bHlct. No more liberal educauon throuJb wbl~h •htdenta are encoura1ed to dl1cun~and learn to belp cllfn•e I : c urrent events. Educators are reacting lo a nationwide backlash of citizens saying their c hildren can't read or write, so why do they need to worry about Reagan's budget cuts? Of course, it's har;d to form a clear picture of what students are like today after only t~o weeks. But I do know that tbe enthusiasm generated during homecoming we~ was not reminiscent of my high school homecoming in which ·many students still t-hought the events. trivial and irrelevant. ri g idly en forc e d by sc ho ol administrators is a part of the students' inclination to get along. STUDENTS HAVE learned lo work within the syst em . particularly the se nidrs wh o h av e ·11 years of experience. For every rule, they know one way lo get around it, and it lakes them about one week each semester to figure out how far they can go with each teacher. No one I talked with said he or sbe hated Corcoran High, although some said they wished they lived in a biaaer I T WA S A N ·I N f' EC T l. 0 U S town where there would be cnore things otmospbere at Corcoran Hieh. and I to do. found mysolf er\joylng the activities as But really, things don't see~ to have much a.'l the students. ·ch anged. Other lhlngs were different too. Students still will huddle around a <;omirig from a high school <Mt. book with a backing so broken that it Whitney in Visalia} where there were opens automatically to the pages where n o b I a c k s . a m i n or i t f o t explJcll sex scene~ are described. Me>dcan·Ametieaos and m03Uy Analo.. Students still dress like eacb other 1 was struck by the larce number of because only the most secure want to Mexlcan·Americana at Co~oran -62 rlsk standing oot tmd beinc labeled percenl of the 11lu.dent body. • "different." 1t was an lnterettlne experience Sludcnt.s still don't see the relevance knowlna lhat I was lo the minority for · of history classes, 'becau!le bow is the llnt time In my school life, but lt lmowinf lb.at stuff ever coma to•« you really did not becotn.e an iuue. a Job'? It's such a small school (only 595 And students sUll Uke lo have a good stud~ntA> that the youn1 people Mem to lime -no matter where the)' co to have teamed how to set at«aa, Lf cmlY. achool, or llbw larae tbe toWn LI, or bow ror the aix bOoUrt t.hey are la tehool. llnrl Ute ndes may ~. Of coune, a strict dlicfl>lln.e cOde U-1 aomith.lne th•t will nie•er chanae. ... ' -SENATE BILL 347: Increases the minimum weekly disability insur1mce < DI > benefit from $30 to $50 and the maximum weekly benefit from $154 to $175. Raises lhe ceiling on wages s ubject to the DI tax· fro01 $14,900 to $17 ,000. Also ch~ges the computation used to determine the arnount sell·insured eml>loyees must pay to cover potential unpaid claims. -Assembly Bill 1135 : Ex.tends dis ability insurance coverage to domestic workers whose emplo)'ers pay at least $750 ln wages during a calendar quarter. -Senate Bill 631: Authorises the Commission for Teacher Preparation and Licensing to levy a fee ot u,p to $40 ror tbe Issuance and renewal or teac bin1 and •ervice credtntlala. t urrent l•w limlll the fte to $30, which is the amount currently char1ed by the commitsion. -Senate BUI 805: lncreaHS trom ~ to $4S the ree chareed for ·a perioll to operate an ot.at-of ·•L&\e commtrci'll vehicle ~ CaUloml•. Providee &hat iuch permits wll) tie wllld for four •con1ecutlve d.~. OM I• ltiaD \hat pro~ under 'W'ftnl law. " -Seate BUI 18D; Requlf'4ill,aJWen to purd'Lale a ta.so at•mp ill 8d4idOn to !Utt ncwar tlshlftf. Uceme, in order to take 1UiPtd &ui rocn lnlarid watert of the atilte. ' administration concerns that t he presence of Cuban troops in the West African nation of Angola represents \ threat to that country, with which Brazil shares a Portuguese colonial heritage. THE NEW U.S. a mbassador to Brazil. Anthony Motley, a former Alaska businessman, said the United States seeks a comprehensive way or dealing with its relations with Brazil. ·'My understanding is -based on my ron versations with President Reagan - that we're not going to let any one or these issues tilt the wheelbarrow." Motley toJd The A~iated P1esn1..;rn ~ ... interview. "The United States is not going to conduct single-issue politics in its relationship with Brazil." The U.S. interest in maintaining strong ties with Brazil involves both sec urity concerns and economic realities. U.S. military analysts say Brazil is a linch pin in South Atlantic security plans. although both nations play down the need for a new joint military accord or a comprehensive South Atlantic defense treaty one that would have to include Argentin~ South Africa. "BRAZIL IS ESSENTIAL to our security and we are equally so to theirs," retired Lt. Gen. Vernon Walt e r s, a fr e que nt R eaga n administration envoy here, said in a recent report. .. We sf'mply cannot ignore the past close al iance between . Brazil and ourselves. We must find a way lo bring it up to dale ... U .S officia l s her e s a y mi-litary-exc~ge programs and other contacts are actually ·increasing, despite diplomatic and trade Issues and the lack of a joint accord. ··Military relations probably have been one of our strongest links." Motley said. noting that many Brazilian military officers received some ad·· vanced training in the United States. ··That's certainl y true of the upper echelon. Obvious ly, we'd like to continue to nurture it. They would too.·· Brazi l also is rising as a world economic power d espit e chronic domestic finan cial problems. The natiot'l of .J.23 million people is now the world's 10th largest market economy with a gross national product, all its good and services, of about $225 billion last year -approaching that or Canada. Brazil's total trade this year is expected to reach more than $45 billion -about 20 percent of which will be with the United States. BUT BRAZIL IS plagued by a near-r ecess io n economy , with tnple·digit inflation and a constanUy devaluing cruzeiro currency. It has taken ste p s to reverse multi·billion·dollar trade and balance of payments deficits, but a slbwdown in ·the economy has left tens of thousands of industrial workers laid off. The nation has yet to deaJ with the estimated one third of its population:-· at ~ast 40 million people -who subsist on less than the legal mini.num monthJy wage of about $90 a mont'1. One analyst said strong rel ..ationJ bet ween Braz.if and the United State$ will be of major importance to the South American country as it struggles with development problems. "We have many problems, but one gel$ the idea th.at in"10 to 15 yea~. our aevelopment plans will work," said Joao Cabral , chairman of Jhe Department of History at the Universit) of Brasilia. He added, bowe~r. that thf nation has a crucial need for continued u .$. ewnomic and political support. ..There ls no reason to ~ there wlll be any anti·Americanlsm bere," he sald ... But ii U.S. relali°"" ao sour, Brailllan ckvelopment won't wark. •• lllJl'llt 'the commen& )a.le'>! lh D•ll)' Piiot aftkl to i!'{orm and atlmulate readers, bY ptettftt· Inc a varid)' o( C!Omtntnt•r'1 oo toptca or Jnterttt and •ltnlftcance frorQ Inform tel ol>- scrven and •••men. ~. . . f!:o~ts with a bting Happy new year to all my frlenda ! Thanks for all your support and Uncle Len e~ 1982 to herald in a whole new batch or contributors to the drawin& contest. Thlnp have been a bit slow around Uncle Len's desk. No doubt many of my pals bave cone on vacation or just haven't had time to send in entries, what with all lhe new toys and stuff to play with. But it's time to get back to wort and start sending in more subm~· slons to the column. Uncle en can get m•abty loneso e at this time of the year. d I'd hate to think that some of my best friends ve getting a Uttle tired of the weekly contest. , Uncle Len is going to try his be~t to think up some interesting pictures to draw this year. I won't let any of my buddies down. I oromise. And Uncle Len's promise is worth its weight io . jelly beans (my favorite delight). . Bow many of you watched the Rose Parade on TV yesterday? Maybe some of you drove up to Pasadena to see the colorful · event. Uncle Len thought it was one of the best ever. FIRST PLACE WINNER Ntna Lozano of Costa Mesa It's too bad I .can 't reproduce color illustrations in the column. I imagine some of the entries would have been quite spectacular. Out e\ten in black and white, you'd have to agree that Nina Lozano's drawing titled "Sunniness Is happiness" was a pretty good ROse Parade Ooat contender. The 12·year-old Costa Mesa youngster took first place this week and the $5 prize. Merry Christmas and happy new year to you too, Nina. Taking second pl11ce with a "Save the Whal es" float drawing was Cristy Reyenga of Green Valley Late . The 14-year-old gets the $2 prize. Uncle Len didn't kllPw that the Daily Pilot circulafes in Green Valley Lake. For that matter. - where is Green Valley Lake? Is It near Duluth, Minn.? HonQrable mentions go to Jenny Casey, 9, of Huntington Beach for her float of a unicorn and Erin Warmington, 8, of Newport Beach for a flQwery entry. SECOND PLACE WINNER Cristy Reyenga of Green Valley Lake Uncle Len realizes that the Rose Parade float pictures must have been pretty tough lo draw. But I never said the contests are going to be easy. I'd like to think of it as a challenge -one that most of my friends can handle with a little elbow grease. Next week I'd like lo see some pictures of what all my friends did on their Christmas vacations from school. If you wen"l to the mountains, draw a ni.ce scenic picture. Jr you visited a park, ·you can show some or tbe neat things you d.id there. Maybe some of you visited Disneyland, Knoll's Berry Farm or Magic Mountain. Did an~y go skiing? I hope so. If you idn 't go anywhere, you 're going to have a pretty rough time contributing lo the contest since I already have plenty of blank pieces of paper in lhe office. Please send pa{)8r with some\hing on ft, or else l might think that you visited a fog bank. Send your entries lo Uncte Ceo, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. Calif. 92626. Try to mail your entries by Monday so that they get to m e by Wednesday. Remember to use a piece ol paper 4 inches square and draw with black ink only. Fine point p e ns work best. l 've been getting -.ome entries that are pretty mushy. Also iqclude your l\.•me, addr'ess and age with each entry. You ca A write any additional Information describln'g , the picture on a separate pte-te of-paper. See you ii:ext week. . \ Near-suicide ends happily .. Orange Collt OAJLY PILOT/Saturday, January 2, 11982 Deity ..... .._.,. ........... PERFECT POSE -Skater Aimee Kravette, 21, or Costa Mesa displays her elegant form on the ice at a recent boli<lay penormance at the lee Capades Chalet in Costa Mesa. ' Yes; you can go home Young people find security and com/ ort with parents By CAROL DEEGAN NEW YORK <AP > -The empty nest is experiencing a new phenomenon -the "home-ing pigeon." "What parental prosperity could not reverse in the '60s and early '70s grown children's flight from tb_e family -the high cost of living turned around in the mld·705,'' says Phyllis Feuerstein. co·author of "The Not·So-Empty Nest:" "The birds who new from the nest flocked home in droves large enough to be noticed," she saidr-. . Ms. Feutrstein, a reporter for a s uburban Chicago newspaper, defines "home-ing. pi1eon" {la a grown. child 'Who resumes living with his or her parents after a separation. She said the reasons milht be economic. The child has lost an apartment, a job, a roommate or a spouse. Or the child decides to return home until he or she gets married or gets the first job after graduation from college. Or a ·chlld may decide lo return home while going back to school for more education. Ms . Feuerstein said emotional reasons might also be Involved. A child, for example, wbo is unfutrilled or undecided may decide to return home for a time "to get his act together." ··First of all, the child may not have been ready to leave home in the first place,'' she said. "Eighteen is DQ magic number. "Second of all, they're children of affluent or comfortable parents. They've aotten used to certain comforts, their own room, regular meals, pocket money, brand-name clothes. And they go out there to work and they find their salaries are not going to stretch." In addition, she said, )'OU.DI people are postpontna marriage, and they are less Involved In flthtinC for social cbanae than young people were during the 19609 ~early 1&70s. • "I'm not wtting down (tryine • to aave) tbef Wbalea, I'm not puttm, dOwn '-the~envlronment. but it's not like stoppin1 a war to get yau out of the house, whether lt's a man, a cause or a career., ··r Udnk, abo, home ta a pntty lmpc>rtant place. If )'OU ba" a broke.-·marri11e1 you p back. II you can't bucltle dOWlt Ud study, tomellow. tbat atmo.pt;ere at home " I:::' tin' belp )'OU do ~HM e la a pr~ laiff .'' • :/ 111. Feuerstein anit her eo·•titltor, Carol Roberts, conducted tntemew1 ln etPt . ' states with '250 families and 23 professionals involved with family counseling. the education of. young people and ·financial management. Ms. Feuerstein said that only four sets or parents bad taken drastic measures to avoid housing a child. But, she said, only five families reported feeling completely content with the relationship resumed under one roof. . She said that when the children returned to the nest, they complained about a lack of nei&bborhoocLac.l.ivities _and a lack of privacy. while their parents complained about an increased noise level in the home and their children's slovenliness. She said arrangements should be made regarding laundry, transportation, m eals and expenses. and both parents and children should respect one another's values. Ms. F e uerstein sees the not-so·empty nest as a current trend in American society because or tight economic conditions but does not see a return to the day when 'Several generations lived permanently under the same roor "I lhink .one of the keystones in kee~ing the situation under control 'j.s that both parents and children should remember that the s1tuat1on is temporary ; lhat it should be as temporary as poss ible." she said . "The c hildre n should have the strength to go out there and get on with their.lives so.that their parents can get on with their lives." Ms Feuerstein, the mother of three childre n . nao the experience of a child's returning to the nest for a time. ''The simplest way to deal with the situation is lo refrain rrom making home too comfortable to leav~·· she said. "Eventually, ~e welcome mat will have to be waived to enable a grown child to gel on with the business of developing into an adult. It makes lfense for the parent to waive it before the rug gets pulled out from under both of them in the slippery course of living together " < I r .. Cilbe Table mve vour home a toudl Of ftame gralf\ teak Witt! ~ tovetv t>ookcases crafte<j Of ttle flnest veneer. And fOr a touctt Of practtcalltV, tne snetves are actjUStat)le' llCll DINI c:onstNC'9G w!Ol l'l!Md*'O PYC. A. 21Y1 .. x12Yi" x 76Y•". $149 val. ............ ~.89 a. 35'f,-·x12Y."x«>W". $109val... ........... ~ C. '55Y.'' x 12Y1" x 76Y•'. · $169 val ............. ~ TWOfartm Directors Chair auyonefOr .$22 ~s not 1nc~ ~~-~~;.s599 ' Teen set wttll ~case and llat'Clllng Dnaers TeakWOod teen bedroom set lnctucles platfonn bed, headboard JnO ~ unrt bV EM. $*>S value. .. smart ''*T.::r -frOlll ln---T•k r_ MUIU·use for TV stanCI or food servtce. Large easv· rotltng casters. . . .. IJTOMIORY tilllf'llllt"'--..W ,NEW YORK -~a Cbrtttle mlsbt ha" 1*tn ed -.more likely amuae -wbal lA1l•y·Anne Down wean ln "ll~r 11 Easy." Or by what tbe cbataeten aay tq oae another: "D~ tblnt. tbeae drup," the conataWe telll Luke Williama after 11111 Wayatlete'1 maid ta found dead In her room, "tbouab I aueu it'• Jutt rou6ne for you 1Ir, you belnl an American." .. Love your squad ear," WUllarna responds u tbe POllceman ~off. , The dialogue and 11111 Down'• costumes -apllt·sldrt, low-cut and backleas -notwlth1tand.ln1, it'a A1atha Christie lo temper and style -clvilUed and alow-movlng, with everyone but Williams and the conatable a prime suspect at one time or another. Bill Bixby ta Luke Williams, Miss Down plays Bridget Conway, and Olivia deHavilland, Helen Hayes and Timothy West co-star In t~hour, made-for-TV movie to be broadcast at 9 p.m. tonight, ch. 2. Bixby is known primarily as a televialon act.or -"The Incredible Hulk," "My Favorite Martian" while Miss Do't'n's experience ls largely oo the staae and ln theatrical motion pictures, lncluding "A LitUe Night Music" and "The Great Traln Robbery." The late Mrs. Christie bas been a notable presence on American TV in the last year or so. The Mobil Corp\ brought two Christie thrillers ac:rou the Mlantic for syndication last season, "Why Didn't They Ask Evans?" and "The Seven Dials Mystery." Both, though as true to author as possible, were almost excruclatinJly long -"Why Didn't They Aak 'Ht-Pn~, rHr I\ rr~r- .•. •· • .>•1: "'Chariots of l'W' is a wonda(ul film. It wUl thrlU you and ddlght you and very potlltibly eutt you t.o tun. A ~ fUm that will surprise you with lbJ bauty · • and magnlflcence of spirit." _...._,_~ "* * * * (llfghest ratlnS) -C~ of rw· llfb Ute .,,uu t.o • new hJgh • ., ---OMr-... -c...olf 'I • CHf1ST STORY 1 NOW PLAYING COITA Mlll Edwaid's Soulh Coas1 Plaia (7 14) S46 2111· COSTAMllA Edward's Cinema Centet 979.4141 El TOM • HANll Edw11d's Sadclltblek Otaoge MaH 581 SHO 837 0340 ll~i!GMYE I"° l'MSlS MX8'fO I WeStbfOOll fOll THIS OIGMUIOIT 530 4401 "On a scale of l to 10, 'Taps'is a perfed to: --C.11Fr....,,,.CltSTV WS~NC£1.£5----- ASK ANYONE WHO HAS SEEN 'TAPS' GEORGE C. SCOTT. TIMOl'HY HUTTON =----------=-TAPS ~ STEVE MARTIN In ·pennies FROm ReC~lln" starring BERNADETTE ~s ~-... -... John Befutftt N£1GH90RS IRI NI~ Orumt IRI CM P,JMll I ™:;.M ii\. ""*-&mlPG) Nine To Five lf'GI c:::::::==::=:=C: I Lull V.lctez' ZOOT SUIT I RI 8oultv.,d Nithtt IRI ~"' RAIDEM OF THE LOST ARK IPGI & Time Bandits IPGI Walt Disney's CtNDCRELLA IGI & Sw1u Family Rob1nM>n IGI :Jlll\~t.1 Mft., I + ~ AU. a e AHO Ill Fii.MS RECEIVE, nil SEAL~ THE MOTION PICTURE C00E Of SELF llEOUl.ATIOH IN CINEMA. #2 ••• 11t£ MURDEl Of ntE CEmJRY ..• 11IE scANIW. Of'111E CENllJR\' •.• 11E LOVE Afli\IR ()f' 11IE QMtJRY ... ANDlltE~ W.UJlsremNNJNG. ARJl.gatna chomPa1eau mo•le, add two more polnll, then book paaia1e. 5. 0... of the playera In "Murder .. Euy," the btt1t A•ath• ChrlaUe tale to aet the atar treatment, once ahared an apartment with a Martian and ta penqnallty with a hulk. Name him fortwo~ta. e. Lut year, movie audiences flocked to see iiwo ol tbe acrMD'• m0tt 1larnorout ladies.square off In a mo1t unladylike way. One la a blonde who bewltcbed HollywdOd in "Bell, Book and Candle.'- and the other'• wedclinl voWJ are as popular as her movie roles. Name them for three poinLlf each. And ror another pair or treya, name their two matinee-idol lead1n1 men, one or whom made it bil playln1 a leadln1 lady opposUe ' Marilyn Mcnroe and J'ack Lemmon. The other fellow is a "slant" who speclallzed lo "pillow talk." Oh yes, IOW' bonus points it you know the movie's t1tle. ANSWE&S: 1. Dame Mar1aret Rutherford; "Murder, She Said," "Murder at the Gallop," "Murder Most Foul" and ''Murder Ahoy." 2. "Witness for the Prosecution," Marlene Di~trlch, Charles Laughton, Tyrone Power. 3. "Ten Little Indians ." 4 . Lauren Bacall, Martin Balsam, Ingrid Bereman, Jacqueline Bisset, Sean Connery, John Giel1ud, Wendy Hiller, Anthony Perkitis, Vanessa Redgrave, Rachel Roberts, Richard W1c!muk. Michael York; "Murder on the Orient Express.'' 5. CheY1J has the ~ to make . this new year the funniest ever! .. ~ . ,. '>MAMll•C.c:.allY-<AN PflQOu llQl<l•A •O• "'""P•RO 1•1 .... OIEVY .CHASE MODERN PROBLEMS PAnl D'ARBANVlllE·MARY KAY PlACE -oovu"""1AA• ..tu(.AJI.,._ -lQABNEY COUMANl be<uhve Ptoduce< DOUGLAS C KtNf>IEY Produced by ALAN Glif1SMAN ond MICHAEL SHAM8EllG Wrotren bv l<EN SHAPIRO & TOM SHEROHMAN & ARTHUR SELlERS -,, _.. . ' ~~-- Bill Bixby. 6. Ktm Novak. Elizabeth Taylor ; Tony Curtla, Rock Hu<11oh , "The Mtrror Crack'd." SCORING; H you scored between 4.5 and 60, you know how to take a hint, 30 44, your problems are aolved; 15·30. you'rn a myalt>ry to a ll , 0·14 , you haven't a clue Wood will goes to probate court LOS ANGEU :s 'A P l Tht Will of Natalie Wood, who drowned a month ago of( Catalina""' Island, hai; been admitted to probate i~s Angeles Superior Cour t with nobody contesting it. Neither Mass Wood 's hu..,hand, Robert Wagner, who was named t'H1·utor or the will. nor any or lbe benef1c1an1:!> was pn·sent as the document was accepted Tuci;da~ IJy Commissioner Robert J . Blaylock · ,,The l'Xac•t amount r1f l\11ss Wood s estate has not bt.'en <11sl'loM~d ll1·r will dated April 17, 1980, names Wagner 1·Xt'l'Utnr. lc<1v1ng him cars, household rurn1 .. h111g.. 11:11ntings jewelry and pcr'>onal cffrt'ts Monday thru Saturday All Per,orrndnces before 5 00 PM (f1cep1 Special Engagements ~nd Holiday~) ,,,. IA MllADA MAU LA MIRADA WAlK·IN Gl'OtKit C SC.01 t • UW f'o "'UMOll TAPS ,,... •l>O )00 ''°f °' ll t\ nc.u•, o ._ ... , ... ~ _,. ,.r o., • 9'of •• l'. ,, .. •••""'•• 0-............. ,. .... I • .,.....o ... , ..... , ... ,., ..... ,,. .. ,., RE D'> ,,..., ,, jf • 1 • y, •4'1l fl6l•Wtth '-Alt.•"'- 118SfNCE Of MllLICE "'" ~OI JJI ~ .. t ot tilt LAKEWOOD CENTER WALIC·IN e\ffl f • t YtieQLDS Mt SHARKEY S MACHl,..E •• n•>t\1•1uu• CM:O•Gl < M;On • •wotw• ~"°" TAPS ,.., >d1,.tHt._,,~ LAKEWOOD CENIER SOUTH WALIC·IN ... ~ ......... .,_....., .. CHAAIOfS Of fl RE •PO• , .. ,, ... " ... "" ~~UNA 1•01 t1 W N' tft , .. 1•T• ~ ,....,. lh"""'" O•" .all"«.-0-.0 N(IG'HBORS "'' •1M.111'4 .. lftl,.t1U '""'' •t•..ot...O& .... SHllRKY S MllCHINE r•i •OCI lJI Ill l"Jll 10 0 •o~v"Y "' Co"d'••OOO 213/531·9580 J f'EOS ,..,, 1111 • ,. •• .:t o..•••lf~t lACM QAf fOf' 'OOJ DA• a .,-.,..,.IUflltC(a ".AJot"'.,.. •UfltD • •-"'IDI AU.IN RlllDUIS OF lHE LOST AAK tJ M )ti \ll I M 1ttt ,..._Ill •Ol(lll 'l(AlifOM AICLO¥f Mf ... (ti 1"-1 CIWTVlt• r RAGTIME •"°I ..... , .. ". I JA(• \.l...0111 ••I"-f'U M.A~V BUDDY BUDDY 1111 UM t .O • N t•.IM 11M South Coo11 MIWoy so . COAST WALK·IN 01 l rooowoy j . 494-1514 . MMt••, ...... j,. SHAAl(Y S MACHIN£ • > ,, ... , , .... '"• au.u .. , OAMAnaiOf'O , z.,e,1jh,~!! .. '.: ~ PACIFIC THEATll(S OltlYI IN S'lllA' Mf(lS SUf' • t • t \I(.• "fttw 't(l O.U et HAR80R BLVD ORIVi IN' ORANGl OlllYE IN , •• ''J ,.. S•l"'• "'• 'uttOAt •~ti ll'U.1" .. -. n &t t.ltA~I • ~f&~lf ''"":.\&.. """ .. ,~, •t\ Mi .... '"', "' ><'~·•o I . • "If' ·• ·' ·• '4 • • ., ><A(loQ AHAHUM ANAHEIM DRIVl•IH •r•••OY ~I QI ~•l"'Or· \I 179·9850 -a Ul,.11-.0NO K •flC1 r TIO .. HEAYY METAL '" .... OA AGONSLAYER ,,,., IUlNA PARK BUENA PARK DtUV£·1N l•f"l<Of"' A•e «•\IO' I ,t 821·4070 BUENA rARK LINCOLN DRIVl·IH , .... ,.. ~· . lA HOllA lA HABRA ORIVl·IN .............. "'"' ,.. .. , 171-1862 L ... ""' .. , ......... ~·u.. ••"-° 118<\ENCf OF MALICE !POI PlU' STIR C RAZV ••1 lARlAN THE APE MAN 101 ,..,, SO FINE 1•1 ""• A CHllNGE C1F SEASONS 1•1 ,,,..,"at ' scan '"'°""" MVnoti TAPS 1""1 •UIS THE CANNONBALL RUN ,,.... ftt' HtitF ..,.., COMf fO 1'1:U tMt tM,.l GHOST STORY ro "'"' THE CHllNGELING 101 C.MIV• CM.ARO• MODERN PROBLEMS ,,.. ..... NINE TO FIVE 1•1 • I ~o 1111 tl So ,, v..i•Ct ,. ·•t' ffHWOr 891·3693 WAJIM N •&A TI 9 ... .U.Cll MltMOt...IOlll lllEOS '"°' .... I.IP IN SMOKE 1111 ... II )U .. "I ....... ~ •o•o. CAAi• AU.CW RAIDERS or l HE LOST ARK .... , ... POPEYE '"°' C •f I \OtJ~O ---- .K,M"4 lf\VS."4 •DAN AtcfltOfO NEIGHBORS 11•1 "'-"' CHEllP DECTECllVl - OllllNGf ORANGE DIHVIH N Sonia Ano •fW't •Sia'• Co .. ;• 558•7022 eijjtfltl-"' I Sl1A,RKEY S MACHINE 1•1 ,.,. ,..~, "°°"'~ ~ '° "~ W1 -• f'<rlOHH_ ... _ .. -.._ ... , ANY WHICH WAY YOIJ c;AH I ------·'"'Ot. tMlf•~~_ .. _. __ _ '.>4frf I IA .. t 41>1<..lRA~ MISSION DDIVf·IN tll!ITllU-• SHARKY $ MAC..INI -~ "' ANY WHICH WA,Y YOU CAN hr the third Um• ln a row. Mas Fraley · <Flavhaa Max.hD\11) and BarMia Delea• (T. D. Teu> art co-cb1mplon1 of the Trivia Bowl. Both notched teoret ol 10 polnta, u did Ed Se~•erltr who llntahed Just one point off the pace to lay Jolnt cJatm to 1up~macy ln Trivia Bowl XXIV. 'rho 0.er UM Hll1 o ... led all contenders wltb 10~. ..... --------.] Tbil wrape lt up for 'lml IY [l the current competltJon, and once .,atn we clean the slates and atart off aaain with Trivia Bowl XXV. U you've entertained the idea of trylna your luck, now'a the time. Herewith, the firat 10 questions. 1. Yewell Tompkins scratched bis atven name and came up wfth what mo~er for ahowbls? 2. Wbat is the Inscription on •Broom Hilda's bloomersJn the comic strip? 3. In the TV series "The Beverly HillbllUes," what was the name of Jed Clampett's bound dot? • 4. Name the big city mayor who moved brteny into a slum bouslng project. ~. In "Quo Vadi.a," Peter Ustinov plaMed to rebuild Rome and rename it what? 8. What was Sam Jaffe's prison job in the movie "The Asphalt Jungle?" 7. Jay Berwanger was the first person in sports to do what? 8. In what play would you find Milo Tindle? 9. In the movie "Ordinary People," what was Ca) the play Donald Sutherland and Mary Tyler Moore aUel)ded and Cb) the song they s ang around the piano? "THE FINEST AMERICAN MOVIE OF 1981 :· "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST :' STEVE MAr?nN 1n COSTA MHl ll TORO MUMTlltQTotl IUCH OUIHlf • Ctoema Cente< Sadckbacll Onema Ctnedome 979 4141 581 5880 848 0388 634 2553 COSTA MESl So\Jth Coast Plaza Town Center (714) 751 4184 [!!9 ... ~ ....... !!O!liiiAo•..,..,l BIS'I' PIC'i'lJDE . OF THI YEAR -New Todt rum Clttlcs Awmd -Nallonal loard of ReYlew Award . . *I • . . " Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Saturday. January 2, 1982 TftlVIA 90Wl XXIV 'iNAL STANDINGS ,.. ..._.,,..,.. . IM t.•T,_...._..., "'-ID lt.' ...... CJI '4 IM\ u.•fte .... 11> 0¥1 t• tt. aid!..,_ Ill ~ Ml II. 'o.Ama... Cll M " . -...,., ,....,.. -............ • IUH•-- 10. Don headed south for a UtUe buUdo11tn1. btJt wound up doln& a lltUe cherry picldn& too ln what movie? Laat Week'• Amwen 1. Busby Berkeley (name chanae> 2. "T:r,apper John, M.D." <Titanic> a. Joe PaJooka (comic strip) 4. George M. Cohan and Bob Hope <Medal of Honor) S. "The Locomotion" (rhythm and soul) 6. ''You're in the Picture" (Gleason quiz: show) 7. Miami Dolphins <youneest team) 8. "Angel Street" C Bella Mannincham> 9. <a > Dennis, (b) Cable Car Cleaners <"High Anxiety"> . 10. "Star Trek -The Motion Picture" (movie riddle> (Send your an.nuers to Tit/VIA, clo the Daily Pilot, 80% JS«>, Coata Mem 92626. All entries mun bt rteeivtd by Wtdntadoy, otherwue hall the player's '4&t score t.otll bt awarded) TIIE MURDFR Of 11iE C»mJRV .•. lHESCAND\L OfntE CF.NnJK\' ... ntE LOW AFFAIR Of ntE CENTURY •.• AND THE CENruRY WAS Jl5T BEc.INNING. fAGTIM~ DINO 0( tAURlNlll~ Pllf Sf NTS A Mil~ f~~ fltM .RAGllMI 11!~ ~MISfXIY Mu~RMOYIOll~ [t~hit~ MmH ~ •••u~~ 5-~ MOW! tUtlR from IM'bel Rag11111e· ~ 11 DOCIORO# ~OO!Jcal ~™Ill IK lMJ911S IPGJ.:.~~~~~~.!_~~ NOW PLAYING , MIC oum MAU ...... P'lAU UA Ctn emu 0rMgt 137.0340 Illa Sft.5339 cnngtSS4-3911 .. •919Mel UICI IA a.Ill EDWAJIOI WOONIUOGl Nlwpol1llelc:llt731350 Wtllmlnltef 893 0546 1tv11e (714) SSI otSS EDWUll IOUT• COAIT P'WA TOWll C:OTtll ClllOl&I Costa Misa (714) 751 ·4184 r=::.-=~::::.:.:=· .... ) ::::=-..=, GHOST STORY -------- FIND YOUR NAME WIN 4 TICKETS WORTH S 18 SAT • .IAN. 2 tluJa SUN • .IAN. 10 Hundreds of Sports & Vocation Displays RVs & Accessories • Fishing Oinics • Canoing • Travel Film Festival • HOURS: 2-10 pm Daily Noon;10 pm Sat. Noon-6 pm Sun . • O.rly Stage Show .Featuring IOU.a WILLilD "The Boxing Kangaroo" • MMDI CMOO*I COOB • For Wo C .. "'·HOO 9 Winners In Today's Classifieds! IT'S EASY! Find your name and address in today's classi fied section. then call 642-5678 Ext. 272 day. so check the classifieds in the . . . I to claim your tickets. Winners each D ily Pilat A ftar.studded eelebntlon of lddl. C09l1ll9 and ..,., See miracles In the making as courageous children. their families and doctors wage a heroic war of hope against childhood's deadliest killers. D D PRE-CHRISTMAS SPECIAL LAY·A WAY 'AT THIS LOW-LOW PRICE . ODYSS t Y.2 Electrotllc TV G-.wl .. Alplaa M-.rlc Keyboa~ Model 7600 Model 5266 FREE DELIVERY MAGNAVOX I 25" COLOR CONSOLE TV Mew ·12 Modet STAR SYSTEM · 1osc• •L c .... ...., ...... ect • a..atee_,,.oa. CHECK FOR OUR LOW PRICES '=-='!"· .. · MAGNAVOX eueoORF . 1211 BLACK & WHITE SWIVB. w ALL MOUNT PORT ABLE a I • I 'Reg. *42.95 . ~--~ 1- ' • Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT/SatUrdWi. January 2, 1812. . . ... ..,.,. •lt "teddltl'ell"(1~7) ~ A¥try, L.ytVMt ..... ertt. A lend GOmPMY "* 10 , .... renahen' rentt. (l)MOYll *IA ''TM WOttllflO CMrtt" t n-glttt llftd no Job 100 119'd lo handle Ind wlll do -=: morwy. 'A' ••• ,,....._ .. ,A, le .. (%) MOYll * * * *' "TM Elephefll Man" 11880) John Hut1, Anttiony Hot*-"-A ptlytl- cdy IMf°"'*' young mwi llnd9 • home with die doc> '°' wflo reec:iueo 11111'1 from .... M I c:trclll lideatlow attrKtlon. 'PO' t;OOl ....... ....aTIA THAT8CAT CllNI Mlf'f/('( TBNTAUC VllWPOIHf ON NUTNnON I QUI PAM.. U.8.A.' Ml!ALTHMAT ~ MOYIE • * "HIWI< The Slays" C1HI) JIQk PllatlOe. JoM Terry. All adYenlurCMn young rnW1 .,.., IN Ml of • band of ~ to llghl 1\11 avll unc:ll, the ovetlofd woo klllad 1111 tither end .. hOIOlflO .,, ~forrWMom l:Jlf I flEW8 uo ICIDIWON.D l ~PATCH NCl&iiiEM ~N8TOAY • INMOUT I INFNTY P:ACTO«'f OWT8190N 0-1-11 tt>a 1mwal Uni- ~ ol Wl9cc>naln-Stout Haule Oul*ll OW-eniOY • gollrmel 1pec:lecul1r fUlurlng 14 COUrMI and luting -1y 9 hourS (RI Cl> VOICECW ABNCULTUAE I rra votJA 1C 181NAS OR. INUOOI f.8 MOVIE * * ~ "Little Miu MIW'lter" ( 1980) Wille< Matthau. Julll ~ BMed on the Oltnot\ Runyon lllOfY A gruff, atlngy 1~ bode· 11·1 Mii ltl turned around when hi eccep\9 • 8-yMr· okl rnopp9I u • mertler l0t • r.clng ~t 'PO' Cl) TM.OOY: THAEJ! ClA88IC TALU Thi magic of deymltlOn btlngt tlv• c:hilOren' I lt<>- rlet IO life -"Rip Ven Win· Ille," "Thi Litt le Prince" end "Mwtln Thi Cobbler " (j)M<ME * * * "Pet1'1 Dragon" (1177) Heter\ Reddy. SMI- iey Wlnten. With the help Of 8 Chubby oi-i dragon '*'*' Ellloct. .,, orphln ~ from hie nMty loa1er family end together .,,. two of them Jllld '°' Maille. 'G' 7:008~ 111&10• I a nt1 fUNTSTONd 1 IMGIUJelllAAM1 (!l~NCH/ 8000llYDOO l ~GOUAn4 MOVDIN~ • YOGA R>llt HEAL TH ()) IHTEJWATIONA1.. HOUR 7:IO 8 MAN.0 AND THE tfAoc MOW! MACHINE 1188MUAF8 I DA. INUGGl..E.8 ~VIV ANDGOUAn4 NEWI • UNDEI lllTANDINO HUMAN mtAYIOR t;OO I Cl) PONW THIE NF'L&olAH • 9 FONZ I LAVllllNE &IMN.1\' G MOYIE ,. ·~"Abbott And Co.llllO I.oat In Aluke" (1952) Mii· zl Gl'a.t, Tom e...11 • MOVE • •'h "T8" Men Riding" ( 1955) Randofph Sc:otl, Oorodw Malone. l ~ .. kAQ( MATINEE AT TM! MJOlJ (C)MCM! •• "Thi l.8dy v.,.,_ .. (1979) Ell1of1 OOUld. Cyt>lll 8heph«d. Al\ lnnocant -end·~-­ .,, -ewept ""° • deedly ..ponege ~ •boerd • EUtopMfl ••PNllll tfeln ~ tlvouOfl .,,.._ Mui Oetrneny. "PG' Cl)MOYll * *'A "Z.. To' 8iilty'' c 1978) OWNr\ t.k:IOeWI. Deni. HlchrMft. A flll6. dll--oed dMltold ,,., Medlrlg l'llOfMy for tllmOl!y pey!Mfl1S. .. '**' .. repa11111lfl9 • MMl4I -oalltelnlnQ • dUd beefy .. pwt of .. ""' pettnerlhle> .. • 1 .. yMr-o'd Olf1. ''°' 1:aO. (I) TMZA°Jl I LONI ~ ealCID..,.. flOW9l "°"" • MfM1"0L (JD ..... WktbillCI< .. WI n. ...... """ ewdl N19 .. "Welk On~ ... ''Do You Know 1N Wfl/ To ten B!WA"E -"Saturday Ntaht Live" guest hOet Lauren Hutton (right> listens to waininfs of SNL repertory company member Joe Piscopo during a Jungle safari parody to be aired at 11 : 30 tonight on KNBC (4). JoM?" encl "t Kno'llll I II Never Love Thll W•'t ~ .. to her ctedlt per. tonne her PGCl&alw ~ ll'om IN "81 end sw-t. .. I LAeT ""T"9 WJU) LIAYI rr 'TO llAVM 0 GOU>m GOLD I THUNDAM I WJ.AAU!GM TOM ANNOUNCE> OMOVE * ·~ "A Ohelllngl FOf Robin Hood" 11"8) Barrie 'lngllem, "-"'" Hlt'ff« Robin Hood end 11111 band ol mlt1Y IMf'I ... out 10 dethrone • Mlf·ec>POlntld d1ct110t • wno ,... Mlz.ed power-the_.._ ... 1=-=y OlmAND MAMET 8 MOVE • • "Funny car aunvn.r" Jim Dunn. A rnW1 peck1 up hie ·~ end lrlYllt 1111 -""' United Stwl• trying IO win 1 dreg r*Clng dlvlllon ~ wllh hill~lel ll.nn'fCM • CHURCff IH TME ~ • THI! GUn'AA WTTH AW.t8ltCK NOAD CH)MOYIE * * "Xanadu" (1980) O.- Y11 Newtor>...J<>hn. G- l<elly. A young ena... • ~-end•-11- menlll mllllon•I~• join roroee to 09lt' up • huQI rollet-dleco pmice. 'PG' ~ 8 (I) NFl FOOTMLL T11t11paBey~1et • o.tlM Cowboye II IPA.CE STAM I SHANANA 9 8Uf'UW"NEND8 • CM CAAi cbfTRAL • MOYIE *'~ "Tlwel T-SleW9" 1 t93tl Jo11n w~. caroie Llndlt. • TMll 9'.l> HOUll .~ ...... "Ofenge County EconomlC Outlook'' Jim Cooper end hie guMll dlaQ.a lhl lutur• of Ofenge County IQOOomlcl end epec:ullt• Ott the llnlll'IOlll pic1Ul'I '°' 11182 (C)MOVIE * * ·~ "The Herd Wey" (IMO) Peltlck ~. Lee VM CM! A hAd _...,., hM to mlk• - more hit i.f«• I'll cen rltlr9 'R' (l)MOYIE ••• ~ "Beklg Tiier•" (1979) P9ter Sellen. Mel- vyn Oouglel. A ..,.. minded. rid~ men. wtlOll Ottty llllowlldga of lh• oulald• world 11 tlvOUOh IWY\tlon, geln• 1rem1ndout teme and power by ..,,.....,ttnol't oon- Ylnelng tycoon• end pOlttl-a-that hi ... garlll.ta 'PG' 10:10. MllERICA'8 TOP nH I ~N!MCWW WOOOCARV'Bfl WONC8HOP • PC>RT1WT8 .. PASTEL 11:00 8 DARY I IP&D'f • TARM 89 WHl(8ID ~ ''Thi Revenge Of Rid C~' An-9111C young boy upeetl the rekH'lllk· Ing ed'*M of IWO lfleC>t cmVnl6I wno one. kid-• ~hlm.(R) II WLD, WLDWOMJ> CWAle&ALI I IOULTfWM 8HOW ti'( PIOt'li oooeaNG llEOCAH I:::. IJCAM IMYUNE • W'4 ··Ster Tftlll -The' Motion PlertUfe" ( 1171) Wiiiem SMlnlr. Leonerd Nlll'loy. Thi ·~ -mand1< of the U.S.8 Entetpflal ~hit otd cr.w end 8M• off on 1 mlallon to find the myatarl- -_... rMflOl\8lbll for the dlattuc110n of """*. OUI ~IOn ltwehipa. 'O' tl:tO I IUu.WNCl.E o~ IMND9TNC I -.o. WIU)~ ~~ C009Cllh • ADVllf""8 .. Altf wrTH JUul HNWI · Aclr9ll end .,, io-A* Hama gu6dla ~ Oii a tow of Iha NtllloNll Otllfy of M In WllllhlnOlon. D.C. (C)"°"9 • •• "Ubtl'' (11M) OIMa d• M•Ylll•nd, Dlrll .,......,...,.....,... to~ .. -~ {1') on'.,.c., en z~TV HBO (Cl (Clnem.ul CWOA) NV , ~.V~. al (Wfl$) lll*ed boll ... hla -when he ..tt11 trouble .~ ...... CB>t.o .... ~.JllMJNtf Hulbllnd-trn6-wlfa comlce .J(ftty 8tllllr end ,.,_ MMre Int~ 1111 ITIOll- .... epedllle end IPO't• .....,.. coming lo Home 8o• Oflkle In~· -AFTERNOON....;.. 12:00 II lYBft WHIM Location: Broollllde Win· ~· OuMtl, Cellfomla. • LOSr .. a..ACE .MCMI •• ~ .. Thi °"'Y GwM In Tow11" (1981) W•rr•11 Beatty. ~ Taylor • AZ»M-11 • QUILTING ''Crazy Qulltl'' • Hoa.~l'DBB ®MOYIE * * ~ "Little Miii ~., .. ( 19llO) Welter Mettllau, Julie Andt-. Buld on the Damon Runyon story. A gnAI, 1tlngy 19308 boOll· 11'1 llfl la turned lfoun(I I ""'*'hi~. 8-yMr· okl rnopp91 .. • marker '°' 1 rdlg bit. 'PG' ~ ***14 "BeinQ There" ( 1879) Peter Selletl. Mel- vyn Oouglu. A llmC)lia- mlndld. ~eolel man. wtloll Ottty k~ of the out1ld1 world 11 lhtougll tellYlalon, galN tramendou• l•m• end power by U1""'41tl11gl'f con- Ylnclng lyCOON end polltl- cllne 11\et he .. • genlua. 'PG' 12:a0.~7 • 1t 14 "Moflawk" ( 1958) Scio4t Br.ty. Rita Olm -~11 • THI! '"6TO SHOW "Acioentuete Thi ~ llw'' Jon 64*1 ~ Ille ctienliCall Pf-of bl1ck-1nd-whll• lllm d9IJ al a pil IQ and dlmon- 11 r •I•• the procedure •lap-by-mp. Sil HOME GAN>EHE.A 0 ICJD8WOfll.D Futurld: e0< ... rMC>O"_,,""~.-.nl Ar>Oy Fllnber" lnter'Ylew9 Todd 8ridgM of ''Dlflerlnt Strok•": • t~-old ch•mplorl l>OWI' bo•I r-lelmarA01d. CJ) TM.OGY: TMMa Q.Al8eC TAU.I Thi INQIC ol ~lion bt1ngl tlwM dltldten ., ate>- ,... 10 lite -"Alp Ven Win- kle," "Thi UUte PYtncle" end "M8'11n Thi CobOler " 1:00. ntm MUM9TIM Grllndela lnaiatl ltll1 he I• hall ~ of IN lemil'(I clMpldaMcl houM. • MOYIE *'*~ "HIWdeaM" (1971) CU11t Walller, St1fen11 Powl9-• MOYIE 1t 1t1.4 "A Boy Ten F ... Te ... C1M5) ~ G. ~. Ferp MoQlj. lend. • "°"""""8 .. ,A8TB.9 "NatM8on" ID WN1'1NG FOR A MMON "Thi~" 9 ..O••ON CMJ80E Anlmallel. The IOll ~ -of • lhlpwredl In the '"" -My -Ille ~10_..,.,,. on en llolalld 1roc** llUnd. 1:IO 11 wrTH YOU a .... ·ea fl-11'00P tf(NA "Aneton'ty 0t A Votceno" An ll'ltlmlltlONll tMrn of g4101og1a1a l1udlaa Ml. St. .......,. In 11t1 aftor1 to -'*-~ .. lled' to more eoo.irete ~ dtctfone of eruptfone In lhe future (A)Q • WNT1NCl FOR A MMON "The,...,..,. Elally" ~="~ ••·-n.~v...,.. .. (1171) Olott Goutd. c..,. ~-"" lnlloclent men end • .,..,.,.. -mn---.itlntO•~ ~~.--ct·• ~..,,... "* lf!MllllO throuQfl in-- ..... Qemwny. 'PO' .... •• .. ,._,no-'' (ftnt David Nl,...f\, Toalllro M!Mle. A Mor Of ttll ~ ,........, ... .,.,.. a1t111 Ca __ ,..... .................. out ,,..., ...... ...,...,. ....... .....,.., ..... .... ... ""°""' ......... ~'(1173) ..., '°'*'· ~ ~ .. •• NllL. flOOT'MU. ...... ~ .. .... DelllfW •••WAtltW • Cl) ( !SPt.I) "'-' ..,., ..... tfte (J) CSflowtlmel • JIMUtM • (Glilll• ..... Netwttti.> _ ................. ....... ~ ....... ~ -:=-, •• ..._T ..... "C ... I ..-.~ ....... ~ .............. ....... ...., .,..,_.. ....., ................ _ ,.._WTIUl....,llo •· ._. "' ... lllrOllW'• -... &:"~ .......... ._1tlOUI. ~ ""'"' ··~ T..,,. jolrl ttll 0.- 1 ~---CW.WM .....,... ........ °" ............. U..Mltta """' _, loott Hslftlltof'. ·;..,. ••• "'nlollhie .......... ...... ~I(--.... ®-:=--• * * "IMidl MoYM" (1N0t JoM ........ DaWt Mof-. A rw DOme1 to ttll pGup al ,....,. .. M Osllllsltd bef llWIY ltold the .11~ to IMklnO ..... --- --· dt.-n Of ~IQ • ~.,.. ... boll~. ...... ~.'PO' Cl)MOYll ..... ,..,... .. ,1. Natella Wood, 11111 lorwwl. A fWOllC'ld wlM dloldea 1o~lfldrob ..., '•banll. t:1t(I) *** "Nine To ~" (1NO) J-Fondl. Dolly Penon. TiltM WOf11.1n9 -,..,., 80llrWI tNlr llllt>IUoMIOn by • mall ~bola.'PO' l:IO. QI I...,..,. llt.AND .HOWTH9~WAI WON • MOYll **** "TOftl Jonea" (1983) Albert Finney. ~ Yortl. • C'8T•ION ca.a. al Ule aNlll9I IJnl.. vertlly of W1ieconaln-81out Haute Culalne Dinn« enjoy • gourmel ~ecut., leaturlng t4 COWM1 end IMttllQ ~ 9 houre. (R) .... MOY9 "Tiie Tlvee MulkM-1" ,..,.,. .. .MCMI ... "The ..... ., Of Bal- lanltM" ( 1963) Errol Flynn, 8e1trle1 Cempl>ell. I AVINUIE• PE.MOHN.. ANAHC4E AND MONEY WJt'tGBmrT .. .....,.,, lneurancie'. &:ao8 MOYIE ·~ "The Deeper'lldol" ( tH9) Vlncle Edwerd1. Jlldc Petence. W"8n a young men qull• hi• lettw'1 outlaw gang to llYI • ,....::teD61 ..... he l'lndl hlmMlf In • bloody con- frontetlOn wftfl 1111 QltlO ~ ..... • MUNDOMAL -~ANANCE AND MONEY Q,w,oaRNT ''Horr>o ineur-·· (C)MOYll ·~ "SIMI" ( INO) L11 Major'a. Jennlleo-O'Ne& A beaullful women le .-... Id by 8 tOUQh cionalructlOn for-In runNllg Ille comoany ehe lnherita after her fath«'I ~I. "aocldental" dealh. 'PO' gMCMI * ** "A F-In Thi C«Md" CtNT) MO/ °'11· 11111, Petrtcla NMI. A der91- lc1 o-ffom • )1111 Qall 10 nettonel reoogMlon an IM •lrenoth Of .. humor llnd mulllcal ...,,.., .4:00.TO•~ KOJAK . ......,.. • HUMAHIT8 Tl4llQJQH nt1 MTI "Sc11lptur1: M••nlng Through Body'• Form" (I) WClNla WOMAN 9 INTIRTM .. IT nMWIB< lntervtewl with Jiii St JoM. Debbie Reynolde. Sammy De"'8 Jr.. T Ot'fO/ Or1lllldo end Joel Grey. (H)MOYll • * "ltlnedu" ( 1980) ()Ii.. vi. NeWlon...John, 0- l(ely A young llrtlsl, e llMwnly ~and. Mntl- mental mllllOnelr• join tore. to open up • huge roller-dleClo pei.. 'PO' {l)MCMI • •~ "l.aro To Slaty'' 11178) Der'9ll lilclC3M\, DlnlM Nick-. A mid- ~ dl\lorclCI men. needing money for eilmqny peymlllte. II llC*S wttll ~a111r•no • Mafle car ciontelnlng • IS-' body .. pwtafllia-~ Mtfl 1 1~-old girt 'PO' 4:aO. IOCCeR MADIE .. QIN&AHY .._ Y-11 C-,,._ World Cup M-81- • HUMANl19 ~THIMTI • '8oulptwr« Moat Dlfllcltlt Of,.,,. .. 4:31 CI> MOYll * * • "A Uttll AorMnol" (1179) LM#'OnCI OIMer, Dlerll i.-. All oldatly OGr'I .,.. folna two young ~ ~ In tow on • mod dlllll ICf'oel "" Europeen oonGnent with lhe ctlll- dren'I .,.,.nt8 end tM polce In hOt purwult. 1'0' 1:00. Mil. ..V.W ANO ...... l ... ,AL.L 8TMTMC • 8'0flT8 'It: ..,..........,,,.. ~ ~~:at:•• --... .. .. me,jor ~~ol1M1. eMCMI ··~ .. ,..,., Uofl''(1 .. ) Mal Aids. UWorl HuttOll .• M.....,,.,...tott.-. ... ~ ... wortdllf~ "6llOnll tootW. E~ -Olis ... ,,,.... .,_.. .,_ London'• "°Wiii .... .....,,. In .... nu6oill ~ ......... ffOfll • --by .. ................. ("> I ....... " .:.aWILK "A .--Of ...,,, W• ,. ............ (alMCMI *** ,,,.Wertd'I .... I _. MNlte" tttn> JoM .................. *'" .... ,._ ...... ._.. "".Nit ..... ... ._... .... .-..... ------·--- M •. • KNXT 8 8 :00 -"Bonnie and the Fran.kllnl." Joe Namath Joln1 Bonnie for a muslcaJ special <JI her llfe. KCOP e 8:00 -"Let the Chlld~n Live." Michael Landon co-ho1t1 star-studded tribute to the children of St. Jude Children•• Research Hospital. KNXT 8 9:00 -"Murder ·ls Euy." Made·for·TV movie premiere stars Bill Bixby and Leslle·Anne Down. See story on Page Bl. KHJ e 10:00 -"Taming of the Shrew." Eliza6eth Taylor and Richard Burton star ln film version of Shakespeare's play. •thletil.·o· uoe .wwmaMOOM Tod IUl"pr1MI ~ wl1ll ~ glftl from hie fnc9ml tu l'llurll, Ind then 1MtN tl\lt ma IRS le 001r'Q to eudlt 1111n an ere ....,i Into • dledl'y ~ OllC* aboetd • fw~ • .,,,.. .,..,, Ir~ through pt-Ir Hui°""*'~· 'PQ' (IJ)Ol.VWW> 1:t0. DANal NVI" Celat>tlly judgla: Ann Jllll- 111'1, TOl'lllYIY Laiorde, Jim 8••tfC>fd. 0.-t: Debt• • OHCI UflON A cuaa.c "Tiie L1athettlockln9 , ...... ..,..~ ~ Ille Huron l .. t of bt.-y bul luma ~ • c"- IO~ I momber of the trtbo. CP.,. 21 CRI Q (I) WILOOMI Ma<. J(OTTIR 0 aPORT'l '11: GeOMa "'*"1'0H 8CMl'900K 0-ge Plimpton ••• • IO«* bw;lt ... lhe majOr eponlng _.. of 1911 lllCludlng ,,,. ,,._ y-·· Dey bowl ~ the win.- ,., Otymoica. the NBA C1W1mplo111Hp, 1111 Wond 8er1ee end the New Yottt Marathon (C)MCMI • • ·~ ''The Herd Woy" ( 1NO) Patrick Mc:Gootlln • .... Ven C-... A hirlcl __.,. ,_ to melrl Otll m«• 1111 l)ellore he cen r91lre. 'R' f'MCl)MCMI * * * ~ "a.Ing There" I 19791 ,...., Sellerl. Mel- vyn DouglM. A ~ minded, mid~"""· .._ °""'t lcnowtldge of lhe oul1ld1 world 11 through llleWllon, geln8 ,,............. • .. 111 -..... «'* • ~ by Ullw411fngl'f --Ylnclng tycoona end pollll- dalw !Mt hi ... geniua. 'PG' -EvatltG- ~1E--- * *'4 "Coftel, Tu Or Me" ( 1173) ~ VIMn- tlha. Jotvl ~. A young ••-•rd-)111 ~ her .,,.. ltudlnl huabMd "' ~ end '* medlceHtudent 111»- bat'IS In CallfomlL eONm.v~ A famlCI Ft9ndl ~ clrGpa In Clfl Ottaly'• C8l'nP efter Mad Jodi, .. .,,._., by .,. ..,.,. ~ eltcrafl. lllOote It down. • MDVII • • • ''Tiii Commend'' c 1954) Guy Medlaon, JOOf\ Wiidon. A _, llnelly ,..... the ~Ion of ~ .. owllll'tNp. • ntlCWQNQ .... :11111 Jim 0... and prlndpal denc:wa trom London'• AoVel 8e119t !*form In thll ""'** llll'ltM'f lldllC>ted from • telry tell by 1111 Brothen Gfllnm. CR) • MA'YW&ATntl MJOlJ Feetvrld: "Cooking Up Trouble'" C1M5) •tarring 8ilty GAlber1 end SMmp Howwd, • 19441 ehot1; • 1945 OltlOOn~ end CMpter 8 of ''Loet City Of Tl'te Jun. gll" (1ed) lltemng Uonll Ar.II end ,__... Heyden a.a.we CB>H90.-N< ~ JNilUNI('( ~comlea Jttny Sllllar end Anni ~ llltroduel 1111 - .... lfl)ldell and epoftl -t• coming to Horne Box Offtol In Jenuery. .MOYll *** "tnlfdl MOYel" (1te0) John Savage. o.vld Mor-. A -lo the ~ of ragulen 111 .,, Omlclsnd bar ,,.., hold Iha k~ lo ~ "" blnln-cllt'• dnlam of blQomlng • pro blel!.ct>.il player I ... n ·::. INT-.r~ TMIWBK 1 ! ,,,..,.... """ Jll 8t. Jofln. Debt* ~ ~ Da1111 Jr.. T~ E _,Joa! Oro,. WHIM WIMYOUt ..,._WAIMOC .. CONC9WT The _..,_ wtttl 8'ldl hlte •"Wall Oii ~ ... "Do You KMW Tiie w.., To 8on JoM?" ancf "I Know l'I Nevier LOW This Wey Afl*l'' '° ,_ CNdlt per-'°""' -pGplllar ..,,. frolll IN pMl Md pttiMnt. (Z>MOVta '* * * * "Ttll llapMnt ....... (1llO) Johll )4url. AltlltlJlft ..__A~ Ollr dlltonMd llOWlt !Mn ............ dooo ...... ,...... .. "°"' ... • • olroua lldsellOW ...,.....,...'°. ,.. •IMMl4 ""-··~ue.·· .CMa1MI ... WIW .IWIW9Dlfll ....,,. .... ·-I LOOKATU8 OOU.IM M8KET'IALl UCLA YI W••hlngton State I TO• ANHOlJNOB> aocc:a MADI! .. OllWANY Hew Y0tk Colmoe YI. World Cup All-Ster11 (I) OllM:~..W "'°"118' 0 TAUC CW THt! TOWN (llntl~ Ouut: Linda LJMn. ®MOVIS * • • ''Thi Worleh OtMt· Mt Athlete" (1973) Jotln AmOa. J-*"... Vln-oant. A ClOtlCll wllO It 11111- lng • run ol bed luck r.wm. IO hla rooca In Afri- ca end ~ • 8llPI' ••"'*'•· ·o· ._, 8 Cl) eotNEAHD THE ~ 8oM11 Fret*Un la )olnld by MtcMll .... end Joe Nlr'nlth b • ~ ce61- btltion of her .... end CM-. ···~-·--~.·· -·~ ..... WMOML.1..-..EM Ouut9: ArMt; Wlltl-. the Oell Ridge eoy.. 8 9 ~AU. NIGHT OrltcMn tNnkl lM1 the , IC*tlle llU gone out ot her marrllgl and 11111• drMtlc ICllon to erouee Gordon. eooume MIGTMLL LM Vegoa YI. San Ollgo •••l~FOR LR J08aClll ~ hoa1e U. ~tr/ on the WOftl being done In~ .,_ of TtWd World coun- tttaa by mldlcll doo10f'I end-- • ~lMSCHtU>MN LNI Mldwal LandOtl end Dlllne Canova hOll • .w-ttudd- ICI tribute lo the ohldnln of St. JuOe CN!d<en'1 ReNwdl Hoec>ftel 'Ind tll* .mwe ~ con- C* and otbor ~ gufftl Include Denny TllcMMa. Sid c-. Elle f'ltzolre6d, T OIT'/ Ort.ndo end Helen Aldd'f. • OOYurt "May9 L0tdl Of Thi Jun. gll'' Aamalnl of IM dlUIC M9'f*'I CIMllullon deep In the junglle of c.itt.i ~-...,...,.o (a:JMCMI • • • "Thi 8luea 8rotfl- _.. (1980) John 9llulhl. Oen Ayllroyd. Two '*- linglr'8 rnult ciontend with .,. ~ polioe, tt>a CIA, ~Null end Iha U.S. ArJ'frY to put logettllr a blnllflt OGnC*1 IO ,..._ (iii:..:=' parieh. 'R' * * * "Nini To Fl\loe" (1980) ,,_ Fonda. Oo4ly Parlor>. Thr• wortclng -rebel agalnlt their' ~ by • mela cheuvtnlat boM. ·PO' UO. 0 MAl<INGA ~ Dennie ... chit , .... apart end le unable to CllD«* • 0.0.t ..... wMn Na wife ..._him. • 8flOlln9 ... m XA "'DalaMll 8quelll Ollllalc'' 1:11 (%) "°"" *** "Nini To Flw" (1N0) ,,_ Fond•. Dolly Penon. Three -"lnO --relbfti agalnlt tMir ~ by • mall cMuvlnlet bOla. 'PO' ... Cl) MCWll .. ......, .. &..y" (Pr9m-"'-> .. lllxby. Llllly- Anfll Dawn. Alt Am.teen ~ In England undllUk• en ~ lion Into "" ,,..,,,_ of In 8'dlr1y llldy wtio hod con- ftded to lllm .,_ lo lhl lder""Y of.~. -~VN.J.11 ....... CMt ... prin09al In • CllW"Y -Ming pl9Clf•byAote~. •OLDW~T Dae 0-. ~ lor lhe """-. . ..., ....... tor tell tor •~"'1· end I ....... ~ wflO -quit .. ........, by .. *"Y .,_,, Q eoo.•-~ utCt' ••• .,...~ .. "" "~ "A Dll'I ...._ .. A llleMilll .,,...,.., ..... ...,,. .. ... ...., ... ... ...... .... flllllHl!d'• (Clwt~ ,......_, .....~In.~ Mledtl' ... ..,_, .... ,. ....... 1:.N.MI * •• "'-" (1.., OIM9 .. Ho¥lllet1d, Dirk ........ ,. .... ........ . ......... ~ ............ -.......... Me,, .... .• * ......... ........ .,.. "' ,.....,. .. Ill ~ IMr ,,.., llold "" ~ to """" .. '*'°"" dw'a._..of,111 :ii•• .., ................ ~.·N' ' .... UIWll &CUM iiM II lad to llllle"8 ttlM .... IDi8hl .. ol under ,_, ...... • TWIUGIHT .,._ Two _...,,.. pt0m0t"9 llNI .,_.. ... llgflW aan'I ""°' .. opponent In the ~*IHYLLI...., ... 1.___,.. ... NC>Wf ir..twld.: M ,,..,.._with 14 ,..,.... "°"81'• tM2 o.c. PledletlorlL I r,ANTAIY Ill.AND A ~ OOllPa try to fll lnCIMf out Of • tlgflt-lllllCI mllonllrl. end • ..... IMdl -meell thl 1eott•1 ~ DutClll- man.Q • MOVll • '* e "T lll'fllnO Of The Stnw'' (1117) ~ T~, Alollltd lurton. SNll.....,... ~rucihlo Md KalNl'tM JMtctl wtll ln •be*Oftht-ln t~Hllfy. • AUeTlf OfTY LMrT8 "~ Murphy And Ed ~·· (I) "AT COUJNt· THI ..~ Volun.._. lfom the eudJ. -r*"POf'ld comiclllly to hypno111 1ugg11llon1 INlde to !Mm by thll entertainer OMOYIE • • * '* "Thi EllC>l\ant Men" (tHO) Jolln Hurt, Anthony Hoplllne. A ptlysl- cally cMfonnld young mea flnde • home llWflh IN doe-'°' wllO r-..d him from Ille .. • clrcul lidlahow enrectlon •PG' 10:t01 NEWI THIHIAnf MOTHIM IN OOHCSn' Pwc:y end Jimmy HMtll pwt«m -.ctlonl from l1lllr elbum "In Motion" In · • 1178 CX>l"*1 UIC*I 111 Ohio Stll11 UnlYlrWty (RI (O)MOVll • •14 "Splllna" ( t881) Franll Lengeita. LMllV· Anne Down A rul'"- bllCk mer1111 entlQulllM ring lllllftClll lo atoP en Egn>totogitl trom dillcOY· erlng thl .....,MbOU1• ot • prlc*aU at.we 11'11 was permltr.d 10 vleW 'PO' ~ .. --,•.,. •• "Er-'-d" (1978) Jotlri Nenca, Chlrlolt• SI-'. After gl¥tng birth to • moneler of • Cfllld, • ..-dyoungwornan..._ 1111 baby tor Ille felh« to , .... elof'9 In whlt- lllllhlon he~ , 1lllO ••• ()) 9 Qi) NEWS • AMeNCA'I TOP T9f • w•A•e·w A merrild nurM wtlO had e lltloua , ... ,lontltllp with .... eye when .... ..,.. end die)'-. In tM atM• Ill uaiOr*' to 1111 40n1t1. ID 80UND8TAOE "Thi Temp41Uona" Thi Temptatfone mill myllvn Wld blllM with denllng ol\cnOgfeotly .. tNy alng • medley ot ltS 811-tltne ~1.CR!O ** ''HIWk •Thl ~·· (1N1) Jedi Plllencil, JolV\ Terry. An ed-\lutOUI ~ """ ..... '"' aid ' of • Mnd ot wwr1or1 to llgtlt Na ~ uncle, ttll -10td wflo k'"-S Ilia ..... llnd ,. holding .,, ebbeafor-CB>MOYll * •14 "uttle Miel Merl!«" ( 19llO) Weller Matthau. Julll Andr-. B..cl Ott 1111 Democ\ Runyon ltOty A gruff. 111ngy 1930a bOOtt· le'• Mte le turned around ""'*' hi ~ • 8-)'Mf· okl ~ ... "*11« lor I reclng bll. 'PG' (I) llZAMI )M John ~ ellowl you t'*1ga etr9nglr tNll truth, lerger than .... end unfW than enythlng you've - -'"~~prw­ enl•tlonl !tom thl sr-- tlml ptune llbfery. 11:ao8 MNWIY~ llamoby II 1*911 ey en In-~ cot119eny to lnveetlgall ..... daeftl of • lamed tlm ldltOt. 8 QI 8ATIJN)AY NIGHT uva Holl: Leuren Hulton. OuMi: Rick Jamea. (RI • MOVll ••• "For Wtaft Thi .... Tola" C1"3) lngltd 8erg- 1Mn. O.y Cooper. A ll""IP of Ss*lilll toyelllte lndon~-to llkJW up • l:lltdg9 during IN 8'**" Q\111 War .• I:=.-- • •Jrt "Paper Lion" (ttea) Alon Akla. t..a&nn Hutton. Alt erNlllA' tn.. to flt 11111'1- _. Into IN ~ of Pf<>- ~footbell. •• MDVII ••• "Tlw Bll9IYI Ptm- pet114ll" ( 1960) OaYld NM6. ~ L""ton . M Ef\Ol(litl ~. •e ~ *°' ............. frencll Ml1tocrecy In ~ tfllgullOt!M. (I) MOV9 9 .... ,..,.,, Nib ~ (J)MOYll * 1t.,. "Th• For.mvl•" ( 1N0) MarlOtl. llf ando. Gocw1e c. 8cot1. W1lle Iii¥ 1111t1 *9 tllO rftUf'def of • aanne 11, • ......,.,_ OCIP ~. --~ ll!voMllO .,,. ....... ..... of • ..._... .... ..,,... ~fie OI 00!'4)Dllill. 'A' ttMe MCMI * ·~ "TMJ Olfne To CorM•" (1tlt) Qety OIMlplr, ... .....,..,.,. """" "'.,. btlcOfMI llWOMd .... ......... '°"'°"""" ...... ....... ........................ ~ -(J)--• ..... n. ...... • (ms) ..... ,...... Wsr· ""' ·a-~ "' _..., ........ ... • -·MCMI * *. ''Joa l(ldcf' ( .. 111 Cllflt .....,_., "°"" .... on, A llllflt lltenglt • ...... by • ~ lend-°"'* to l/adl down • 911"1 of~~ '*" 1llflO llew llwmdld .. tertllort 0 MOYll •• "A Utlt9 Oemo'' C1t711 ld Nelllfl. ~ BMat. A fr~ men ..,... .... ... ..,_, °' s=llM'•'*" *" "lN "'*''°" Of ~.. • l'Ol"IG ..... ~ by ""' ..., ~ bend. """' to • ,_fine of WOttl •ftet 8hl II lllCluold :J. r:=* INflUCtor. 'A' **~ "OMM tot~" C tHO) a.tit MldW, The ~ Thie lllrn '900l'd of ..... ·.~~­menoae at lhe ........,. CMo Audltottum i. Fal:IN- ~ IMO .... ""-Ivett. ty of ~ ffom -.. atlll'ldal'dt 10 rook ~. punciualld by • --of rlA/l/tCtry ~ 'R' 1:00 8 9'0CK COHCMT Gl!Mtt; Slevle ~1. Tom P9lt'f end lhl H-1bteek· ... Rll;tt J-end lhl Slone aty Bend. • INDEI B IO&f1' NPWOMHIW8 QI ewNIHO AT Tie ~ Hoell· Sllield1 end Y erlllil F .. tut'ICI oornlcl: Johnny Dark. Gery Muledeer. Gaor~ Millet (C'MOVIE 1t * ~ "Thi Herd Wey" ( IHO) Pet1'Q McGoohln, L .. Van Cleet A hlted UUNlnhallomlk•- m«• hit before ~ can retire 'R' CH)MCMI • • 14 "The Qut1ld1r" ( 1178) SlerMng Heyden. Crlllg w--. A young ldMllet llaw61 to Nor1Nm lrtlland lo )oln the etruggll IOt II ldee>etldenc>e. 'R' 1:30. llCMf • * 14 ''Tiii 8uming Hille". (1967) Tab ~ter, Nelelle Wood. TWO young lowrl ,,.. an \INICnlC)Uloue cattle berOtl in • ~t· llgllt '°'~ .. ., MOYIE *. ~ ··o.r DMd OlllWI'' (1972J AgrlM Moorllllld, Wiii Geer Wl'lln •women ··-~~~in~~ dMan'I rube the ten'or that w!M IOllOW. 11 lemlly ITlllllb«I -ching fOt I hldOlfl .,_. .,. ays. temat~ mufderld Cl)MOWE * * *'A "Being Th«e" (1979) P.w Sell«e. ....... vyn Oouglu A almpie- mlnded, mlddll-egld man, whOM oNy knowledge Of th• out1IO• world 11 through tellllllion. geln• 1r1mendou1 l1m1 end power by unwlttlngly con- Ylndng tycOOn9 end poltll- ~ thal I'll ... genlul. 'PG' 1:a& Cl) MOVIE * * * "Nini To Ftve" c 19'0) ~ Fonda. Dolly Parton Thrll worlllng _, rebel egainst !heir IUbjugetlon by • ,,.... c:NluWllat boM. 'PG' ~-MOYIE "A f ouctl Of The Sun" (1958) Frankll H-d. °*""" Priol. 2:301;-..... 9 A8CNMI ~MOYIE • • • "Ubol'' I 19591 OIMa de HeYlllend, Ditti· Bogerdl. A man ettempta 10 prove hi has '*"' Mbltld bl.ti rllinl hit cae when h• hH rrouble retMmber'lng dlleils uwow * * "Dlatlnol" 'R' ~-MOYE ** • "Mery Of Scotland" ( 1934) Katherine Hept>um. Fredric Merch. Queen Mary of Scollend 11 blhlldlCI eff• .,,. daftea lhe rule of her coutln. Eliz· ablttt I of England S:11CH)H90~ PMVIEW: JA».JAlfV Huebend·eM·wlle cornlCI Jftny Stiller end Anne ~ lntroducie the mov- i.. epeclele and eoort• event• comfn9 to Home 8o• Oflkle In January a:aoe MOVIE • * • "Mlracll In Thi Rlln" Ct954) Jww Wymln, Vmn Jotinlon A )'OUllQ aolo- dler and • lonely woman lel kl loYI 0ttty IO bl ...,._ • ,._, by Wit a:ao (%) MCMi * *** "The Ellpt\enl ...,, .. (1980) John HI.wt, Altthony Hoplllnt. A pllyll- cally cMfonnld yout19 men flrtdl • hOl'M with "'* doc-'°' wllO '-* him !tom Ille .. 1 clroua ~ etll9Cl1on 'PO• IM CID lllCMa • • "8rfflllng Oleu .. ( 1980) Hull O'Connor. Ph4I Oenietl A Brillah ~ Poe> stM •• llteltyte um- tNtaty luc:I• lo tragedy. 'PO' "Uif• MOYIE ·~ Thi 8uttlr Sew" Ciiso> H9flrY Mlllleon. Edwerd Algby • 4«) (!) m.•_ll!Pl!! 1M John 8yrllr --)'O'I tllingl ........... ttlOll """'· """ then .... Md --then anyltllltiQ )'O'f °'4 --"°" In ... 81'°°'9 .,,... tntatloM ~ ... .._._ ,._...,... . ..,, .MOYll ··~ "SertllM (1N0) .... till Mljl, fueadty Wtilcl. A IWlptlily fftlttled Merlll ~---apuf'Nd by .. ~~ lnto~~r ~ .... .. ! :;::,. fl'"M WU> ~ "It ... " (1MO) L" ....,,.., Mllllfllr 0' .... A , ._...._ ...... . ... by._..,.--""*" ---1n·~ the ........ lntlorll ... -................. . "• Jj -· eaMI\. 'PO' (J)MTOO. I -T"9 .. "'"'°,.' (I)--'If *** "Is ·:.•;4.' _ .. ~ ... ....,,, .. "9 ............ ~ ..... ~ltrefli ... --~---10 llypnoal• "'tt11t10111 ·~--Drlil'lf .....A&111'9 .. ,..~··-­....... In ........ ........ ........... lliy .... , ....... T ... sent m the u.s. • old you know at Pf9 aged 15 Of ewer that 1• """'°"~come bek>• th• ar• nvtne ~n •" n poverty Mne1 ~ -tt\at older wome" Otd you . w'ne _.ctor of poor er• the ta.test r.; peopM In the u. tounder and .. .-r M~'"'· teM• hOW we can of th• GraY ... ,.:~nt sttuatton '" h "• our P c an • ..-c1(LY e1a9aztne. FAMlLY .,..r. ... -------------- li OJ 0 I OJ E 0 r. D OJ E IV z "' I Ii ~ ~ OJ ... ~ ~ < g --CL >---s i; . . OJ c: 0 r. a. > -u I . c u .· OJ ~ :::> -IV c OI Vl ... Clo w 0 z 0 ... j ::> u ~ u OJ -:::> 0 ·a::: -v ... -Ill 0 i ~ • li a :; ~ •• . rs news, variety to loyal-listeners . \. . Radio station o ••~ waltlne with an ax, or whether ST LOUIS <AP> In the-••• of the easy-hsleruna format, °" .. radio station ln St. Lows hu ·demonstrated a n unean ny abllity to brlng soJld loforwtaUoa they were w•ihn& to bail us out." Another successrul move was KMOX's early bld Cor control of local •ror ll covera1e -• iamb e that paid off handsomely u ~elevls lon Plc:'Tlnaua eu1uee .. 1tAMe 1TAT••1tT Tll• tot1owl111 peraa11 I• del111 .....,_ .. : STALLION ovel'LANO IC9'AP'EI', 712 YWILl .. 11 A,,.,, .. , ..... It. ........ e..tll.CA .... L AftG "'· LAOWIO, lt1tt ll ....... ,_., ~16111 VM"'1, CA tmt. . Tiii• ..,_. I• ~ ... .., 61\ ltldMdloM. I.AHO"' LADWIG T1"s _...... -fl ... wlUI .. C:-.ty Clwtl ef ~ .... c.o-ty ... OK. 16, ltl\. .. ,,... "'"l>llllltd Oreft'll eo.st Oally l'llOt, OK. It,•· IWI, Jt11.l. t, 1112 ~I "'ICTITIOUS 8 UllNISS MAMeSTAYaMeNT Tlla lollowl110 perso11 Is doing 111111 ... ~ COAST SHllET METAL, INC., 7JI w 17111 Sllwt. Coste"'"-· Ga 92627 Coad ShHI Metel. Inc. Ca C.lllorrll• ccwporelloft). 731 w. ""' Str~ Ollte Mae, Ce.. 9m1 Tltla,b\lllMH Is '°'*'<led •Y e < ....... lllall. COAST SH&ET METAL O.vld o. °""*"· "-ldtm Tiiis ~I -flied wit/I 11W eo..My Clef11 of Or.,.. County °" l>Ktmller .. IWI •. 1'17ml Putlltl!Wd 0r.,,.. C.oest O.(ly Piiot OK. It, 2' "'1, JAf\o t, t. 1WI SttMI l'ICTITIOUS e us•N•H MAM• STATI MINT T .. IOllOWl"ll _._, •rw doll'IQ llWIMUas; (Al SUNGROWTH SAFE. 181 $U NGllOWTI4 X. 1110 Paoelllc eo..t H~y.-~9Mcll.Ce.~ GleM L Ooettww1, 7222 Seas.or Illy Dtl,,., Hurte"'9fon 9Mch, Ga . .,... .._~. Q. Scflley, M'1 HerbOr Key Circle. H_..,tlnQton lleach,· Ca '1641 • Tlllt IMltlflhs 11 c-..ctect by • ..... ,.,~­~SU.lev GllM.l..~ Tl\11 ............... lflecl with Ille Cou11ty Clerk Of OtllftOe Cou11ty Oii ~··'"' fl17'72t P\Mltllld Or .. C:O.SC Dally Pl IOI OK. 1', Jll. 1111. Jen. 1, t , 1"2 WtJ~l FICTITIOUS e USINIUS MAMI ST.ilnMEWT "CTITIOU$ IUSINl!SS NAME STATIMINT The follo101tn11 perlon\ •r• ootn9 l>ldlnH!H NEW AG 11, DOBBS TECH at II MEDI NET I.TD. PRODVCTIVtlY I.TD., SOFTWAR£, e1 Al ltl.l. IBM SOFT, et-Rllltl.I, HOLl.YWOOD LTD , •6&1 MacJ\rlhiJr lllvd., •th Floor. Newport 8Hth, Catttornta '1660 J C P•ll•r'°" & A•.o<tal•• I 11 cor por•ltd, • ca111orn1a c-r•llon. "67 MMAr1hur 8,.d • 41h Floor, Newport Beach, Calltornl• '1660 TM1 l>uslneu Ii conducted by ' llml .. d pWtner>hlp J <:'PATTERSON & ASSOCIATES INC Jc Patt ......... c....,......, ot -Board This st••-• .. ,, lll•d with '"" County Clerk of Or•"9'1 County on O.cember 30, 1'191. F17•716 Publl\hld Orange COHI D•llY Polo! Jen 2. '·"·fl. 1112 )60W1 ruuc MOTICf NOTICE Of< flUeLIC HIAl'ING ell'ORI THE flLAMNING COMMIUIOH OF THE CITY Of< "'°'1NTAtlt YALl.IY HOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tl\al on W~Y. J-•Y u. l'WI, at 1·30 pm In lhe City Council Cha "'bus. 10200 Sla ler Avenu•. Fount1ln Valley, the Plann1n9 Commlulonwlll hOtd • P\ll>llc i..1r1n9 on the foOowlnv ltemt CONDITIOMM. U .. fllaMIT NO. J4I PetltlOll Wbmlttacs tty Or1n91 Coast 8uuly Supply Comc><111Y 10 conduct the retall w1e of beeuty suppfles •I 105UEUl•A-COMOITIOMAL U51 fll U .. IT NO SO Tlte fol1owln11 perton It dolnQ IMnlnHIH SEA-HORSE $Al.OH, ISolll AO.mt Pelltlon Wllm!lllCI 1>y E••lyn Ha\l>un Ave.iue, S\illa ft. Coste Mete, CA to operate aoqlQuor store •1 17431 mu ' 8,,_hU"' Street, Sult• " TONI REGINA HICKMAN, e11 7th. ~:!f OITIONAL UH •lllMIT .. o SttMI, 164"0, CA '1Uo. p t I" b I ll Tltls .,...,_ It c;~ l>Y i n • .. on au m tted ey Nfl,.or lndlYldlMI. 0.velopmem '-nt to cons1ruc1 TM 11-V-KklllNln offices on the proi>••ly situated o.n.. O•n•r•llY •IOll9 tM tollth side ol ThlS .,iatltf'nlnt • .._ lllflCI with ..,. wu~r ft.~ lldJll'fnt 10 tn. -•• CQ1111ty clerlo of 0<'•1199 Covflly on edOt of t11t --An• Alver Thi• OK ) "'1 Prck1er1y ~ In llle Clly"s M 1 ' • • fltT711l lnduslrlal -Is fur!Nr 10e11tlll.O •• P\111111Nd Or".,.. COHI Delly Pllo( Asseswo'J PMOI ... 1~11-47 •nd J .... 2. t, 16, t>, lfl2 I02.aJ ~:-:~·.~cit~~ flUMIT NO ,.,. PetlUon submltl•d l>y Nelworl< O.vel~ ~Y lo construcl fllCTtTIOUS eUSINISS NAMI'. STATEMENT The lollowln9 perun I\ dol119 tluSll'ltiSM ..., ofllcts C"1 U'le prop-rly situa ted o•nerally et-... S.Wlh .. d. of Warner Ave111H oie\lerly of the function ol War11er Aunu• with Wlntersburo Aven.. This prooerty 11tu11e<1 111 Ille M·1 Industrial '""" I• further 1.,,,,..ttied at A•wuor"• Parcel No ••• 421-46 and compt1>0> l H ac-.1 PYRAMID EXCHANGOflS, 1m Hw"'mlngblrd, eo.ta Me ... CA""'•· NJ\lfCY J5ANE CASSVllE, 1792 Humml!IGllllrd, Costa Mesa, CA nt.16, Titlt -'""' Is COtldutllCI l>y en llldlvldual. N...cyJ .. neCas...O. CONOITIOllAL USI flERMIT NO $0 I T"ll lt...,._1 •at flllCI With tl>e County Cl•rll of OranQe County on Dec :JO, 1'tl Petltlotl SUl)mltled by B•uc• O JY•Mln I to l<ttP Ille restaurant 11 1076 Me9nolla Sll"ff1 ooen :M "O'"' • <1av 1'17'111 NOTICI! OF PREflAllATION OF Pvbllthed Or-Coa•t Dally Piiot. :::a~~·l~~.c~:..~~:= willl an J an. 1• '· "· JJ, l"2 S.IMt H terlU 1·1 notice ,, ner•DY Q•Y.,. fllCTITIOUS 8USINESS WAMI STATEM•NT The foll-11111 --· ere dol"9 ,.,,,,.. .... SOFTECH el•RI, SOFTECH el·SI, lt67 MacArthur Blvd., 4th Floor, •••PGtt llaedl. Catllomla '2616 J . C. Pelterso11 & Auocle tu, "corpprahd, a Calllornla oipore~ *1 Mtc.Artfwr Bl•d., •lh 'loor, N•-.Or1 •••<h. Celllornla '2MO GlkhrlSI Sonw.,.. ~etlon. a :e 111ornla corpora llol'I. ••U McAl"ittur lllvd., •II\ Flocw', N-por1 leech, C»lltoml•ftt60 Thia busl,,.u 11 conducted l>y • • lml-pwt--.llltl. J C. P ATTERSOH & ASSOCIATES, INC J C. Pettersbn, Cl\alrmatt of IN &~rd This ltlie-nt wei Hied wm. the :OV11ty Cl•rll4' O<'anoe County Ofl >ecembef :IO, ltll. F17'111 PW!..., OrMIVI Coeit Dally Piiot. ••n. 2. t, 16, n. 1112 Mt•t ll>el baMcl °" u. 1n1ti.1 Stuo,.,. • N•oa1••e Dec•arat•on ,, .. l>unr prepared The ~vlr~l•I Impact Review CommlttH w111 consld•r approval of the N-llve DKla••••on on Frlday,J-ryl, l'WI THESE M.ATTl!llS are De1n9 prOCHMd poirwant lo 11'9 Pl•nn1119 Lews of the Stalf of C•llforn1a Go""""*'' Olde, •s.ooo •• -·· and the Fountain Valley Munlcli>el c- Tllle 21 THOSE DESIRING TO !Hiiiy In fevor or In -111on lo h prooosali wlll be 9wen an ~ty lo do 10 at the public llearln9 II f urlhu 1 l11format1011 Is dHlred. vou may conta<I Ille Plannine. 1>e9ar1ment II '63-4311 and ref..-to er.. above tttmt CLINTOtot SHERROD. Secretary Ptennltio CcommlHlon Publlv.I Or.noa Coasl Daoly Piiot, Jen l 1• 11"1 to lltteners lots of Ustelleta. KMOX is the nation's No. l st ation in s hare of Hstentnc audience, a spot It has generall)' maintained the last 20 years. Nearly one. in four people la tbe St. Louis area tune in to "The Voice or St. Lows" every week, according to c urrent ratirtgs. And more people listen exclusively to KMOX than to the next f our loca l stations qOmbined, the ratings show. .. People t~ll us it's a part of their lire," says Robert Hyland, the station's general manaaer since 1955 "They'd give up many things before they'd give us up," Although it has bad many emulators, KMOX says 1t still 1s the only station m the country that uses a Ct>ur·way format or news. talk, spo r ts a nd cntertamment. "We try to explain things to our hstcners a nd we try to brJ.Dg c;sues to hfe through lbe dialogue process." Hyland says. When President Reagan was shot , KMOX scrapp e d its n ormal programming and advertising for 13 hours to go Ii ve with Its correspondents, medkal authorities and other experts o,ought out by the station Russ struck by "1vh i te ligh tning' MOSCOW 1 AP> Just as the go\ ernment tries to put a cork on 1:tlcohol consumption comes word t h at Muscovites a re relying less on black Russians and more on samogon That's what moonshine 1s called bel"ftnd the Iron Curtai.n. White lightning has been around the Soviet l'nioo for a long t1m<'. but now that legal brc" s are going up in price, mooni.h1ne is gelling more popular , the local folks say Statistics are always hard to come bv h<'re, but Moscow residents sa} lhere's lots more proof A gallon of 45 proof vodka purchased from the state costs about $71 50 But a mooMbiner can make his own 00-proof stuff for about $10 a gallon. minus tbe cost of the still ··Aside from the price, lhe best thlng about samogon is it doesn't give you a hangover," one Mus covite says Sut p e rhaps res ide nts s houldn't avoid i?Overnment liquor altogether W-e s tern !'st1mates say 12 percent of thel RO\ ernmc·nt income is from ..il.cohol taxes and that money ts ust·d to huhsid1ze food . So, goes the lo<.'al joke here, lht-more )OU drink , the t hl•aper you cat · ALUMNUS -Jack Buck, play-by -play announcer for CBS Radio, is a former personality on St. Louis' KMOX radio st ation which has developed the talents of many young broadcasters. itself. Lost advertising alone cost nearly $10,000. KMOX provokes responses from all over the country, but especlalJy from locaJ listeners. Hyland says his activities in more t han 8 0 civic orgaru.zatioos, coupled with the st ation 's constant on-the-air dialogue with the public, help him to know what people are inter ested in hearing. "Yf e always have our hand on the pulse." he says. KMOX pioneered the listener call-in type program in the early l 950s. when tele is ion was beginrting to make serious inroads into the radio audience . "We were laughed at, at first," says Hyland, aJso a vice president of the parent CBS network. "CBS didn't believe in it either .. We never ~ew w h e lher tt\e n etwork was • brou1ht a new nre for many • professional teams. KMOX today is tbe only major radio slat.ion that broadcasts up to 350 sporting events Uve every 1ear -Mly a q uarter of its programming -for a virtual stranglehold bf local baseball , football, sOC?cer and hockey And it does it all with a relaxed sense of humor. ''The Blues are going left to right on your radio dial," iokes Gus Kyle in opening bis hockey program Kyle is the same announcer who once tolq his audience that an angry player threw a "puck of pails" on the ice. Over lbe years, KMOX has attracted a nd developed the tal e nt s o f many you n g broadcasters. many of them now p rominent in the industry Re x Davis, for instance , recently completed 50 years behind the microphone. Other nationally known personalities include J ack Buck, who does the play-by-play for CBS · Radio's "Monday Night Football," and Dan Ke lly, who did C BS's National Hockey League game of the week until the network dropped the sport in the earl:, 1970s. Its IS-member news staff has won nearly ever y a wa rd In sight And many broadcast Journalists interned at KM OX under its highly respected news director, John Angehdes Hyland, who regularly works 16-hour days, de m ands hard work and long hours from his 110 staff members Those who don't produce usually don't stay long. "Once they come to us, they get the fever -it's like someone putting on a Yankee uniform," says Hyland. "There's a lot or pride in working for an operation lilte this ... Londoner may find quiet in new home LONDON (AP) -A BriUsh designer has decided to move out ot his four-bedroom house in west London to a more quiet neighborhood -in the middle of a 20-acre.£emetery. · · I t j u s t c • u.g b t m y imagination," Joseph Farchy said of tus Victorian chapel ln an out -o f -u se ce meter y In Richmond on Thames. "My friends teU me I shall be living at the dead' center of Richmond," he quipped, noting he will have very quiet neighbors. "I think it will be very peaceful there." Farchy put in a bid for lbe Gothic-st y le c h a pel after ~ con servationists successrully ca m paigned to save it The muntcipality wanted to demolish the building because of its disrepair. He got 1t for $59,062 and estimates he will have to s pend up t o $56 ,700 m o r e converting it into a two-bedroom house ··1 must admit I am a bit perplexed about 1t, .. be said "At first I looked on it as a lovely open space s urrounded by trees But there are the gravestonPS or course." On second thought, he notes. that won't be so bad ··1 th.ink it could be quite run for the children to play hide and seek there " NEXT SEMESTER ~j aily Pilat Classifieds TAKE A 25,000 MILE FIELD TRIP ··Jt 's a real good academic program and I probably studied haT'W than I did at school." \u\\"i "-·~· ·\t\"i\ (\J "" ~ p.svc t1'1\'lt co" \~1\'> ('\C· \) \\et\\ e\;~:~:~~ '\~ - ' ' Only two calls from the Register. Sold It in the Pilot the first day! ' ' ~~~1 @ 642-5678 charge it ~-by phone From South Laguna & North County calf 540· 1220 toll-free. Join the 12,000 other college stu- dents from over 500 colleges and universities who have experienced this fully accredited university pro- gram. The spring '82 semester sails on March 4th for the around the world tour. For More Information call (714) m~sto Semester At Sea P.O. Box 1527, Orange, Cafff. 92M8 As Heard On KEZV AM/FM., KWIZ AM/FM ~ In u -~·Lw:·dr•m•tb• U*t eomee,., ·about tbe~blllt1. of nuclear war. fh•• Nlpponun ~l J!llfU•t Jk ...... l•t~ moab are •cbed to trek Ulroqla or...,. CouQty. aexl ~ .... bold 'ri,u. at the Su ()not,.. , Nuclear a.tr.uni Station Ud the Seal 8eacb ·Na val W..,.,.. StaUc>ti. .. Aceordl.._ to Cbarllt HUf~abaua a 1pote1mao for tlat Unltari_.. Uatve111•b1t Service Olmmlttee lD A.nataeiln, tbe iDODb 1fill bellln thilli' tNk New Ye,...•1 !>.,:ta S8 l>MIO aaa artiw ln 0...-CoCmty Oil ·--where they will •taa-a vT1ll from 11 a.m. to noan at 1'be mateb,. oae of flv. btln1 ~1atld thro~ the Unltid St.-, wu lnWatM by the .~ at the WorJd Wldt ANembiy ot ,R•Uliou Peace Worfltn for GeuraJ and Nudear Diaarrnament held lo Ja~ lutAgrU. ,,, The poup comtn1 to Orl.D(t County lt followlq a route from San Dleso to Seattle called1be Nuclear Free Paciftc !toUte. San<>nctre. • Hllf~ aald the monks will be jalned :'bere-by ;tfi~eral supporters from locai reUaloua . and peace·or-1am11aUona. llilftnbaua aald the five n:M>Gkl expeet to bt ln Se9Ule by March J. and, from there, wtll Unlt up with other marchers to meet in New York City tn May to draw atcentloo to the United Nations SecoacJ Special Seaslon oo Dlaarma-• ment set-101 Jane. FoUoWint the viliJ at San Onolre, be 1a1cs lb• mQnb will trek throucb San Clemente, Sall Juan Capistrano, Dana Point and LqUQ.a Beach on Monday. In Laeuna, be said, they will be Joined by members of the La1una Beach Alliance for Survival. ~ .. "AU tb1ncs New and Wondiiful" is theme of a luncheon aet for Jan. 12 at El Adobe Restaurant, San Juan Capistrano. The luncheon ia sponaored by &be Saddleback Comriu.ulities Christian Women's ·Club, a non-denominational, noo·membershlp 9r1aniiation which also sponsors weekly Yriendshlp Bible Coffees. Luncheon reservations are due by Jan. 8 .. nd can be made by calllng 768-6715 or 492-6542. Later, they will be transported by car to St. Michael and All Aneels Church in Corona del Mar where they will spend the nilht. On Tuesday, the spokesman aald, the monb plan tQ walk through Newport Beach and Cotta Mesa to Santa Ana where they will spend the night with peace workera. And, on Wednesday, they wUJ pass throulh • Westminster and Garden Grove on their way to the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station where they are to be joined at 4:30 p.m. by members of the Orange County InierJaith Peace Coalition for a sunset vigil at the station's main eate. · . ORANGE COASTi MESA BIBLE CHAPEL ·' 1734 0. IJ' A••lf.:11• M~ ,..... ...... ,,.... / ... t ,w...,..10:00 ' , ......... SpHkJ • .. I I Srttce • 6e00 ............. s,..... w. .. ~ ..... 7:30,... .... ~ .... , ..... J ..... T.,.-: IOOI °'ACTS ti•~~wi · IJtHH ......... , ... ,..,.. . '"You've tried the rest,. NOW try the BEST!" .... Dr.1111•11 c..-..... Miw ,__.~Is a ;Er *" ...... ,,,..,,=:r.-.~~ ....................... I t:Jt A.M. .+ · •youCnAn YOW D1ST1MY"" IOllCliM ..... Shli.Mewport.._. , .... t _ ..... ''t'OR AH "' ........ TIOMAL MEaMGE OIAl '--1 .,_... ...... ~ Mlllk .... 1Ma.ll64tU • hurcnof St. Matthew by the Sea · (Trllditlonel Epieoopal) . Christmas Eve Eucharist 9 p.m. HOL y COMMUNION. Each Sundar • 9:00 AM (Book ol O:>tmlDtl Prayer • 1928 MERTZ HALL of Community Congf911•tlon•I Church 811 He#ottope., Corona d•I Mar nt. le'I., . .._ HtMftW -lJl.7U3 ST • .IOllH · T .... ICOf'AL CHllKH .. COSTA MUA .., ..... o....p•- WNalyCt '• 10:00 Heir-....... 10:oo s-.y ScMol . 'Nureery c.r. ; ... -.. •. c...1 ... 't I l,Ylur• 14t-lll7 CHRISTIAN SCIEMCE . CHURCHES llAAHCHIS OI' THE lolOTHEll CHUfW:lH THI 'lflST ~ ~ CHlllST 90EHTIST IN llOSTON MAS9ACHUSETT9 11GOD11 J_.,l, 1912 c .... ...__Ant c~.,, Clirht. Sci ...... Ziii ...... , .. Dr .. c:..te ....._ c ..... '-"" w-1 -10:00 A.M. ........... neo ...... , .... ,........,., ............ w. w ... 7-~ '""' -t -t:Jt '""' tn• ..;..Ant ca.rcll .f diiW, S,ai-.a11 ......................... w..e .. 4161 tt# M• IMlw Y•t C..... a S..., w..1-IMt A.M. Q4L.D CAM PflC!llDID AT IUNDAY tJJMCC , It lk'u ...C. :_ ...... a..-d _, Clirht. SclaucM •a°""' u n -·· .._. ai...11& ..... ..., _ .... Mi&. ~;;· if:i::~:..*& ...... ant.-~ .......... ~ ............. _ , .. A.M. ........ _ ......... ... ..... ,.. .._._..,..au•"' Cllrtat. Schtl• .......................... ~ ......... _ ..... , .... AM. ............... '* . .-. .. W.-tA.M.·IP.M. ,._,_ J.f P.M. 0.C..,.....T ........ ---11::IOAM.,..,.,_ ... .,.. .... _'"••.a.re. .. a.tat. Sch .. ,, .. ,..,..., ... c--.. .... c ...... ...., w..t-.... A.M. II s .:.-•• ~ ... TI. C...t Mwyw C.. WID. TllTIMOMT t AilleS -. I P.M. ALL CHUlami "".,. c:orclillly _..,to-llW-~ --llW _..,.. ol .... A-.OAoolN aM t..........., AT~ smtYICIS WESTMllSTll LUTHERAN OUlOI ., .. , ..... _ IMnt to S. ~'"7· & W··~ •O •I .. , ... , ..... , -WOltStW smmclS -•.Jt& lt:OtA.M. AU. SMR'S AllGUCAN EPISOJPAI. atmOf Ace Alt ..... IHI .... -'C-...,. • 1~ Bushard,.fountoin Volley 963-3801 · 11Y.s1a1•lw • ....,.,1m HOI. f Co.i M6" .. ~ • .. · .... --: ............. : . lilt i..Jl. ,woa ... NAY'llA:t«MCH SCHOOl ••••.••• f: ti A..M, woa.-NAY• a SllMOH ............. -. t 1:0t A.M. • ... ~All AYAILAILI I , ...... ....,,,A.M. ,..... • ,_.....,fill A.M. S..11Toplc ..... Jnt i"f:lllJi fO:JOA'X' •W11Gfa.eltMew" ..... ~ ..... ....... CHCllCH OF ...... ous sc .. ~c• Member of the United Church of Rellglou~"°' .~'AUOllUTl4112Dll&MfSTMIT,HU"1'_.,0N CA. ... ,,.. ... CU.TV'I DIPLOMAnC Corr .. poedtat Robert Pierpoint l1 to ~ f :IO fiit .. 8\.lnd11 at Lquna Nituel li'd Of &be United atu.re6 ot Cbrtlt, ~121 Nlau-J ao.d. HJt taJJt la pa1t ot,Uie church 1 ComaumltJ l'Ol'Um • Serlet. Ticket1 are ti each for .. neral admluloo and .. eaeb fOI' 1tudent. and MGJor clU1ena. 0 TBE TUaNING Point" la the title of the aermoo to be ctvea by the Rev. Richard Oreeo at the 7:30 a .m. Sunday aervtce at San Clemente Pr~b)1ertan Church, llt Av .. EltreUL ST. CECEUA Catholic Church, Tustin, will boat t.be Aonbociabe Spiritual Pro1ram bealnnlaa W~1. 01..,.. are scheduled for • to U :IO J .m. OD •ltht CODltCIHIH Wednada11. Penou lDtel"eltM la 1t*91lnf Mary ln 1crlp_ture re lnvtted to au.ead. ror Information, caU LOrtalne Rob at 664-IMI. TBS NEWPO&T llA&llOa unJt of Cburcb Womea United will celebrate Annual Da1 at t :ao a .m Friday at Newport C.... United 11.thadlat Chw4. llart11erlte ad $tA Mql&ia &Ui-RC)jd, IN~ ·B .. eb. A l.-Cbton wtU foHow. l'or liitt'fildou due bJ llODllq eaU Adele Baine• at 5'1·7171. The Rev. L1dla Sarandall ot &.. Andrew Presbyterian Cburcb la to be t.be Juncheob speaker. . Keep an eye on local government in the ,_, ~ '>AN :::.,lM• N r~ LI\ : • A ... ,.. 'i lJ• l l ,h • ~· . South Coast · Community Church · Huntington Center ITllll today thtu Jain. 10 C Services 8 :30 A.M . & 10: 15 A.M . . GrCJll..a del .Mar High School, 2101 Eastbluff Dr., Corona deb Mar " DARE TO DREAM" Jlm..,..S,.aklq c..Ja&: Jaali llcDMrelt for into\: cau u..1350· · · .. "'·nm.no...,. .. ,..~, ....... :· CHDffiECTORY JOMMM.lllYMOLDS MAMAlll'A ... ~ tC... . . HAaaOI ctmSnAM CHUICH ,..._ flla.tlll z••• '"'-• .... ..,... 64W711 Attend '!be Church of VourChoice "~~pnoutl1 C onqr~tlllfiom1I C liurd1 3262 llOAD ST .. ~ llAat 642-2740 5-c.., Ser.ice -I O:JO A.M. ... ''ICrl!PI..-THI HEART• A _... •1•1frMI THI UMITID t.mMODIST CHUICH &11U.. ...., ...... MITMCDS'f a.KM 19th St. & HlfbcW BIYd ·c.-..w...NI . w ........... Chet1ea 0. C11Wtt. Minister C&i1 Mm NOrtfl timA .... UML'm.........sTCMURCH w.,.....ac:a..11·.....,.. l:ft·IMIA.M. Dr.W.-1.teNI MIWPOST C9flll UM'19 MllMODtlT ................ c:.-..... 64W741 WOR8HiP & CHURCH 8CHOOl-t:30 A.M. Rev.Ken~ .,. ~To .. _........ .., n.a...~L"v11 Pl~S . . 7tJt &! __ .................... :;utws QM c.. ................. a... ••11 .......................... a.- AIC II \' 645-UU PMSIYlBtlAN OIUIOt Of THE CO\IBWfT JIM,..,,..., U.. C.... ...__ 517.JJ40 ~1'-~'911ar .. Sunday Wonhip a ChurCh School 8:30 & 10·00A1.4 Child care Available Ca at.,, ......... Clas fJt .............. .... .ff4-1111 Rev. Arthur J "Tankersley Rev Eldon H Thies Rev. Cr8ig Williama Christian Educmion Hour 9:~10:00 AM Worship -10: 15 AM llUICllllY CAM~ AT·AU. llllVICll . CHUICH OF CtelST 217 w. w.... c:..te ...... 645-Jltl We're A Going Glowing GroWing Church SUteA Y S•YICIS 18LI STUDY t A.M. WO.SHIP 10 ~& 6 P..M. -.,. Fro.t Of Chcl"a Foe•'" la.JO:... > r .. n-i....._.-D ... C..ttlCllli......_, ·m HAllOll~ ....... S.....s..ts.. ,,,.., ....... ~llP.M. t n a Q Q Q Q n a •Pint ,,.., "' .::::... s.rnc. J!Jt , Jif. Rabbi Bernard.,, King Jamboree & Eastblufl Or. Music: Me Shlkler Newport Beld'i. callf. Educator: Nancy Levin ,_ .. ,. • n9 644-7211 "' Yilllor8 ...... ~EM E SHA~9!ative) ¥ · Rabbi Hershel Brooks . S 17 Weit Hamllton, Costa Men, CelH. 92627 C714t Hl·lZ'2 n:i .... tma n1 m tKAllAT SIR'1CB Mtl U llwW .............. ... MIWt'OIT .. YltO ....... F1mlty S.tvl«*-1at Fddlyof Mon~ p.m . Rallgloua School. Adult Ed., Youth Groups, Singles KM>balat Shlibbet, lar.t Friday of month 1:00 P.M. 1011 c .... _..._.,..,. ..... , •• u ....... 1 64'"''" . ..u.._ • .:....a,. c..... ............ __ • __ Looh11,, F"r A C.MI. Clrrisl-Ct11ll'(t1I C l1u rtf17 .MA~i1NUE~;CH~1RCH R1111 Ort/1rn1I, l'r""hl~ 9.00 .tm, Wonh1p and Sund1y Sch<lol (0 tooth Rr.tdtl lO:JS am, 81bw Cl~uea (Chikl,Pn & Aduha) Bison Art1111t 111 /n111l1k,. 8011fn•nnl Pl101w 640-6010 FJ ·;t1(or1nnlrrm "And •~r:#te of Cod, which 1.hpn~ all <on'IPfehtn· 1k>n, •h•I Au.rd your ~"'' ·~ your mind• In Chri1t J.ttu• " PhlJippl.\n• 4:7 COMICS CLASSIFIED ~I . P.aterno interested in becoming. a. Ratriot? I C7 CB See.P,age C2. 'Ilr..~jan. bo~se gets saij;dled What's .inside Penn State rides USC -and Allen -to win .Fiesta Bowl . • San Diego meets Miami, and Dallas faces Tampa Bay as the countdown toward Super Bowl XVI continues. C2. · • ' By aooEa CAaLSON °' ................. TEMPE -At least Southern Cal's Trojans didn't put thelr fans throu1h an emotion wringer -no stral~ on the weak of heart Friday, just the cold reallt that Penn. State wu the superior team at the llt Fiesta Bowl before 71,053 on the Arizona State University campus. It was a l1·yard dash by junior tailback Curt Warner ac~s his left .aide, the second stralfbt • year Warner scored on his rlJ'St carry in the Fiesta Bowl. plays, at leaat not for the TroJana, who experienced their first bowl loa after alx 1traJ1ht wins. i • Columnist Bud Tucker gives c his rosy viewpoint of the Rose i Bowl. C3 . ' i "The defensive end was expecUna the play tc go inside and our wideout just cut him down," explained the two·tlme offens(ve player of the game. "And 1 just went in," he added. THE ftOJANS' only hopes for a comeback seemed to be ln the second quarter when freshman quarterback Sean Salisbury entered after sophomore left.hander John Muur went down • Clemson quiets the critics s • It was 26·10 throush three quarters and lt ended that -.iay, ~ut it didn't take that lon1 for the tread to become fact. · "We were just bedeviled by them," said USC Coach John Robin.son. "J can't recall a team which AN OMINOUS aian for the Trojans; but the trend dld!l't really becom,e evident until the second quarter had elapsed and the Nlttany Lions were boasting a 17-7 lead. with an injury. ' and proves it is No. 1 once and for all. C4. ' s • Salisbury hit 62.5 percent of bis "8Set (5 of 8 for '19 yards) in a brief •p1t.n. But Rbbin.aon went back to Mu\U' when the third quarter be1an. "John (Masur) la our starter and when be' a well we 10 with bim," aald Robinson. Did Salisbury ever ~nter Robinson's mind a•aln during the second half? "No," said Robinlon. "Maz~·· our starter and did a good job." • Dan Marino's touchdown . l made so many mistakes early as we did. Except for two field soal mines at medium range by the usually reliable Brian Franco arid a goalKne stand by USC's Byron Darby and Jack De l Rio which stopped quarterback Todd Blackledge inches short as time r'an out, it easily could have been 30-7 at that poiilt. pass in the flnaJ moments made it t "WE JUST didn't handle it or play wi intensity. They played us off our feet, We didn't bl~k very well, run very well or tackle very well.'' a very sweet Sugar Bowl for Pitt. ' . C4. . \ ~ It took tbe Trojans four seconds to give the ball away in the first quarter <a Marcus Aile fumble) and it took the Nittany Lions of Pe • USC's only score was a 20-yard return with an Wllh Mazur at the helm the Trojam' game was the customary bandoff to Allen and the Nitta.ny Uons were ready, holding the Heisman Trophy wiMer to 85 yards on 30 carries. • Texas has the Bear snarling as the Longhorns rally to beat the ' Interception by linebacker Chip Banks. "We aren't getting any big plays," complained Robinson at halftime. As the game wore on it became evident there weren't goins to be any bi& During the flrat half it was a ume of <See TROJANS, Page Ct> Crimson Tide. CS. , State 11 seconds to respond with their first to~chdown. ~ ........... .., Clllftlt~ • Waahlngton run.nlng back Jacque Robinson (left) and flanker Paul Skansl had themselves quite a day during Rose Bowl game Frtday. Husltjes paint Iowa a Rosy pictrire ' Washington gives Hawkeyes.a good old fashion Rose Bowl end-kic.king, 28-0 . . . By -ED ZINTEL O{ .. Ollfr .......... PASADENA -Just picture it: Haden Fry takes bis football team back to the Rose Bowl in 1983 and the Iowa Hawkeyes get revenge over the W asbington HuaJdes with a stunning 2&-0 win. Fry, upon retirement, comes out wilh bis Iona awaited belt·seU~r. "You Must Be Burned Bef~e You Learn." ,weu, it's a bit tn the mtdwest, particul•ly in 'Iowa Clty .• Naturally, it's a disUJer in the state of WubinJton. FaY AND GETl'ING burned, in hi• own uaaae of the terms, are synonymous today, jud1in1 by the outcome of the 1982 Rose Bowl, won Friday by Washington. 28-0. But Fry, as be tells us in the book, learn• to deal with the realities of football, as do bis playen. It wu be who announced the week prior to the 1982 Roe4! Bowl that the 1ame ls not a ''life-and-death struggle." Aa the book moves on, Fry beeomea a bit a true llle prophet. tn the openin& ch..,W, Fry tell• bis pJayen before the '12 aame that you don't-have to win the same, Just live your beat effort." The Hawlleyes atve thelr beat effort and they lOM. So it ii UW another aucceu story lJ built, helJnnlQI OD the football field. l'or now however, unUl the book comes out. h; and lcnra wUJ llve wtth a lea~ ·pper1eace detivered Friday bJ Wlllldnltoa and Coacb Don Jama, wbo JUll mlebt be ready to com• out with hie own 1ueceu book ril&bt now - that la, if pro football lan't ln bit hlture, wblclil, hi IMiltl, ii aot. Defense. It was exactly that -for Washington, which rendered Iowa defenseless. "What you just witnessed was an old-fashioned end-kickinl•" said Fry before t.be Ulhta and cameras in the post·1ame intervlew· room. Pry waa u loyal to bi.I own honesty and frankness after the 1ame as be was for the two weeks the Hawkeyea spent here prior to it. "We tboutht we'd wln ll today," be continued. "You na't blame lt Olli dlstracilam or the extra currlculan. W aa~ Jua& put It to us in every area of tbe fame ... lncludtn1 cCJachlns. Tbey were lmprflllin on offense and d'va1tat1n1 on defense. That was our worH 1•m• but the Huaktea.were the reuon wby.'1 On tbe other Dia ol the coaddlij coin, Jam .. wu allo loyal to bim.telf, wblch '-· in a .ont, liiodelt. There iwere a lot of little indicators before and during the 68tb Rose Bowl 'eame which pointed toward the flna1 result. - By drawing from the lmasination somewhat. ;tiere were indicators like We thought we'd ~in today. Washington just put it to us in every area of the game . . . including coaching. -low• Colldl H•rcten Fry the weather. It rained on New Year's Eve-in Southern California, albeit, a SPOradic lilht drlule. It was, despite the 85-desree, dry weather at aame time, a good al1n for the Huskies who are accustomed to playin1 ln ankle·hi1b mud in their hometown of Seattle. Then, just a few seconds ~fore .ktckoft, a luminous black cloud .,.,keel ODt U.e sun from the Rost; Bowl, wbere a sellout crowd of 105.6ll aal . .. The indlcatora 1ave way to the same, w~lch , even in tbe wildest ima1inations ~most of lb• WUblllston pla)'ers dkl they tb1nt wouJd llappea, weet almoet all ~elr way. following a 56-yard punt by Iowa's All-American, Reggie Roby. However a ,50-yard field goal attempt by Chuck Nelson 'sailed wide right. · "When the game got gom,, 1 thought for sure it would be decided by the kieking," Partridge a former standout at Golden West College, said afterward. · '[ was nervous, and I sensed that Iowa was, too. JAMES, WHO joked to tbe media that he introduced himself to bim after the tame, brousht in frtsbman taUback Jacques Robinson in the second quarter to replace sophomore Ron Jackson. t . ~ Penn State: had right ' for1nula By ROGER CAR~N °' .. ~ ........ TEMPE -Stop Marcus Allen and you stop the Trojans. That formula isn't too revealing -it's been the toaJ of every team that's met USC during the past two years and Friday the goal was met. Peno State's Nittany LloM stopped Allen and the results came only too naturally -the TTojans were stopped. "MARCUS ALLEN was wearing a lot of different jerseys today," \aid All·American guard Sean Farrell o'f Penn State. "Our defense won this game, they came through." Linebacker Chet Parlavecchio said the two·time All-American was. everything he expf!cted, but addl?d : "He just ran Into a real tough defense. "We did it with a lot of finesse up front. We don't have tbe personnel to line up and plafi hard ball, but some of OUl'l linebackers have matured as lb~ season progressed and we feelt like some of us are playing tbd t>rand." The Heisman Trophy winne~r'! was limited to only 85 yards 30 carries as Penn St"t recorded ita 26-10 Fiesta Bowt victory. r I '' •••• o;.!b ' MARCUS MUFFS IT L:SC 's Marcus Allen fumbles the ball in the first quarter of the Fiesta Bowl. Th.e CumbJe ~,...., ________________________ """'!l~ .. . j • J' ,, ;. •f ff I I ., ! , tl : J Georgia gives 0 K ; Malavasi to stay From AP dispatcbn Rams owner Georgia Fr<?ntiere 18JS Coach Ray )hlavasi will be back at the helm of the National Football .League learn for the 1982 season despite the chaffs worst showlog 1n 16 years. .. I give my complete support to Ray Malavasi as head ~cb of the Los Angeles Rams," she said in a statement. "And I also have complete confidence in his 1982 plans for the team, which we believe will bring back winning football to aJI Rams fans." The Rams s uffered through a 5·11 season, the worst since 1965 for the team. prompting s peculation that Malavasi might be replaced. The Los Angeles Herald Examiner reported results 1titALAVAS1 of a reader survey Thursday in which 79 percent, or 5,476 of 6,925 callers, voted in favoP. of replacing the coach. Frontiere made no comment about that, or the team's poor showing, and Malavasi was unavailable for comment during the holi<tays. However he had said earlier· "I'm looking forward to coming back next year I know I'm a , good football coach. I know we'll have a good !I ' drart, and I'm looking forward to a good year ." · ... I ·l: , ">' I • Quote of the day Dave Collins, aware of the New York Yankees' turmoil under owner George Steinbrenner, after signing a free agent contract with the Yank's: .. If we lose eight or nine games in a row, I'm not going to jump into the same elevator with him (Steinbrenner).'' 76ers surge past Portland, 120·105 J ulius Enlng ignited a m P h,iladelpbia surge in the se~ond period and the 76ers rolled lo a 120-105 victory over Portland lo highlight NBA action Friday night. Philadelphia, 23-6, placed seven players in double figures and hit SS percent of its s hots from the field. Erving led the attack with 22 points. Elsewhere, ... Warrior forward Larry Smith snatched 18 rebounds as Golden Stale trounced Kansas City, 12.5-93. .. Al'~ led to a Penn State touchdown ... hort h after the initial kickoff Cotton Bowl. CBS extend pact DALLAS -The Cotton Bowl Athletic Association and CBS Sports announced Friday• an extension or a [i] long-term agreement that wtll eive CBS the broadcast rights for the Cotton Bowl game througb New Year's Day 1985. , The 1982 Cotton Bowl game between Alabama and Texas marked the 25th consecutive CBS broadcast or the annual football classic. John Scovell, president of the CBAA, said, "The agreement ensures that the Cotton Bowl will remain the second highest-pay10g or all the postseason bowl games and will continue to enable us to attract the nation's finest teams to Dallas each New Year 's Day " Has South Carolina coach resigned?· COL UMBIA, S .C . -The m University of South Ca rolina announced Friday that Pam Parsons, whose Lady Gamecocks basketbalf t.eam is undefeated and second-ranked ..on lite nation, has resigned for health reasons. But Parsons, in a telephone call to the Associated Press. denied she bad resigned and said she~s in perfect health. The~I Sports Information De'J)artmenf -- issued a news release slating Parsons had submitted a letter of resignation and USC President James Holderman confirmed the announcement. "The acting athletic director has a letter from her," Holderman said. Parsons, who said s he first learned of her resignation from friends who h.eard 1l on the news, said she had no idea why the university .had made the announcement. "I wish I knew," she said. In a prepared statement. Parlions said, "I unders tand I have resigned. I have not resigned nor have I authorized anyone to say I have resigned and I am 1n perfect health.'' Parsons, who has led USC teams to 101 wins and 43 losses in more than four seasons, turned in a letter of resignation Thursday. university officials said. · Nell's Briquette wms La Brea Stakes Nell's Briquette outsprinted her • rivals' Friday to win the $67.150 La Brea Stakes at Santa Anita. Jockey Chril'I Mccarron brought the winner in 2th lengths ahead of Bah Hoc:kburo. Bee A &out came in to show. Nell's Briquette paid $7.40, $4.80 and $3.40, and took in the $40,150 winner's share. Bah Hockburn returned $'9.60 and $5.40. Bee A Scout paid $3.40 ... J ay Haas shot a 6-under-par 66 to take the third round lead in the Spalding Invitational golf tournament Three strokes back at 201 was Rick Acton Right-hander Steve Crawford. 23, who was 0-5 last season for the Bostf)n Rt'd Sox, will be lost to the team for at least half the 1982 season after s urgery to remove a bone chip in his right elbow . . . Alter Colombian runners • finlstled first. second and fourth in the St. Silvester. International Footrace in Sao Paulo, Brazil shortly aft.er midnight Friday morning, they criticized the violence a nd organization of the • race and said they would likely not return. Cowboys intimidate Bucs? games in Texas Stadium and 17 in a row if you count the playoffs. Los Angeles defeated Dallas al Texas Stadium in a 1979 playoff. The Cowboys were solid eight-point favorites • over the Bucs. The winner plays 'the San Francisco-New York Giants survivor In the NFC litle game the next week. Bue quarterback Doug Williams will be testing On TV today channel 2 at 10 a.m. FORMULA. • • I passins iiame returned to !ta very conservative approach when Maaur returned In the third quarter a nd the pressure WH 00 88ain. "Give Penn State the credit," added AJlen. ·'That was a ereut defense. Tbe field was slippery C from overnight and morning raln l but that wasn't what s topped us.'' The Nlttany Lions went after Allen like fresh meat and he showed the effec t s o f it aft erward. with the usual assortment of bruises, blood and scrapes But It was no worse physically for Allen than on many other occasions. "OKLAHOMA HITS hard," he said. "UCLA hits hard, a lot of teams hit hard." he added, as he broke 10lo a chuckle ''YOU know, a lot Of people made a big thing out of me making yardage. Really, you know, all we wanted to do was just win." ~lien entered on the heels of a season which found him ripping the opposition for 200 yards or m ore e ight times Allen averaged 5 81 yards bn 403 carries and sco r ed 23 touchdowns (22 on the ground>. His 2,342 yards in 1981 stands as an NCAA record. · Hut there were no Marcus Allen touchdowns Friday. Only Chip Banks' 20·yard return with an interception atld a 47-yard fie ld goal by Steve Jordan averted a shutout. · "LOTS OF TIMES we moved the ball well . " said Allen ... But mos t of the game was either· a penalty or a fumble or we jU&l didn 'l get nothing.'· The TroJan star was dumped for losses six times and held to gains or two yards or less on eight other occasions. "A lot or those were stunts and -they jus t · hit me in tbe backfield." said All_fn "But t hey didn't do anythifll unmual, nothing we hadn 't practiced for .. So, it 1s over for Allen and his senior teammates. C alled everything from Captain Marvel to Superman. Marc us Allen proved lo be only human on a day when human efforts were not enough to offset P e nn Slate 's d e f e n si ve determination. D-esplU!'"the loss Allen hasn't lost his sense of humor. As he walked toward the s h o we r s h e turned to a frustrated Roy Fosler and said. "It's OK Roy. it'll (the pros> get physical pretty soon.·· CdM captures Cotton regatta Mike Pinckney and bis two-man crew from Corona del Ma r High School won the Cotton Bowl regatta in Fort Worth, Texas with a low score of 251fi points in 28 races. The three-day regatta is symbolic or the intcrscholasllc sailing championsh ip a nd is sailed each year on Lake Worth as a sidebar to the Collon Bowl football game. This year's regatta was sailed in Sanlana·20 sloops. Crewing for Pinckney were Pete Newbury and Martin Williamson. No press11re oil. DOiphins They've been through it all season MlAMl <AP> The playoff road la one sudden-death eame after' another Win and you stay alive. LoR and kiss the year good -bye . It's the kind of pressure that can wreck some teams. But the way the Miami Dolphins see it, they lived throuah that pressure enough during the regular season lo mak e today 's American co·nference divisional playoff against the San Dlego Chargers just another life-or-death pme. "A couple of times durmg the season, we hit periods when we weren't playing nearly as well as we were capable or playina." said defensive end Ve rn Den Herde r, an 11-year veteran with the •. Dolphlns and the only link on the defensive unit lo Miami's Super Bowl teams of the early 1970s DEN H E R DER referred s pecifically lo a 31-28 victory over Baltimore, a 28-28 tie with the New York Jets and a 31·21 loss to Buffalo in one stretch, and a 30·27 overtime victory at la.nd and a 33·17 loss to aklan on successive Sundays later in the year. "Al either of those points the whole sea son could've gope downhill," Den Herder said. '·But I th,ink each player Patriots • interest Paterno? PHILADELPHIA CA P l Penn State football Coach Joe Paterno has encouraged friends lo tell the New England' Patriots he's interested in the head coaching spot there, according to a published report. ' According to an unidentified soln"ce quoted Friday by The Philadelphia Inquirer. "Paterno's people have let it be known that he wants to sit down after the Fiesta bowl game and discuss terms of him'coming to New England.'' Paterno, mentioned as one or the candidates to replace fired Patriots' Coach Ron Erhardt, had refused comment on the ~alter before Friday's Fiesta B~wl , in which his seventh-ranked Nlttany Lions beat No. 8 Southern California. 26-10. Erhardt was fired after a dis mal 2·14 season. ··He is very well-known and very highly respected up here." the source said or P ate rno. "He'd be a guy who would certainly eliminate the big problem or a dropoff 10 season ticket sales. I would think what th e Patriots want to do is determine how s incere his interest is.'' Paterno had reportedly been close lo taking the coaching Job with the Patriots 10 1973. He turned down the job at tbe last minute, the source told. The Inquirer. and used the offer to gel a better contract at Penn State mdlvldually took it upon him.self not to &iv~ up. And we turned ourselves around, wori the last four ballgames. So ln that respect I thJnk we learned a lot about ourselves right there " "With Coach Don Shula," said nose tackle Bob Baumhower. On TV today channel 4 at 2 who pJays next to Den Herder, "every game's a pressure came. We've been through a lot of pressure situations the last four games. We were in a must-win situation all four times and we went into those games with the attitude that if we lost we'd be out of the playoffs. "The only difference between those games and tbe playoffs themselves is that if you lose from now on, you don't have another game to follow it. But I think we've got guys who are intelligent enough to know wt) at 's on the line without letting the ptessure gel to them.·· • • VOU T R Y to d evelop consistency more than anvlhin.R else," Den Herder sa.id. "It isn't a situation where you ~ay to yourself, 'OK, I'm going to be this .high for this week and next week I'm goin~ to be this much higher .' It doesn't happen that way. You just go out and try to do your JOb the best you can each week " Besides. he s aid, the defense went through an emotional peak in the game against Kansas City, the 17-7 victory which 1ave Miami a · playoff ber th, then played with equal intensity the following week, the 16-6 victory ( over Buffalo whkh secured the AFC EasL title. As good as Miami's defense has been this year, allowing a conference-low 275 points, that's how bad San Diego's defense h'ts been. The Chargers gave up 390 points, second only to Baltimore. "S ure, we 'v e had some problems," Chargers Coach Doo Coryell admitted. "But we're gettinll better. In our last game we held Oakland to 10 points. That was an improvement. We want to keep improving." And linebacke r Woodrow Lowe said: "It's time we get some credit. We're tired of hearing bad things about our defense We want to begin a level of consistency here. It's long overdue." Nate r side lined with knee i.njury SAN DIEGO CAP) -The San DieBQ.._ Clippers said Thursday that veteran center Swen Nater is likely Jost ror the rest of the Natiom1l Basketball Association season with a knee injury Nater, who turns 32 in two weeks. will probably need s urgery to correct the problem. The 6-11 Nater underwent s urgery after last season for calcium de posits in the knee, but has not responded. , "ll would take a miracle" for Na ter to return, according to coach Paul Silas. College football JOHNSON & SON P resents ... COLLEGE BOWL ROUNDUP lndep.ndenc:e Bowl 10.C. 12 11t .._,,._,, u I Garden State Bowl CO.C.1>11ta ... 11......._.N J.I Holiday Bowl (Dlc. lt81 s... °""' evu •• WHNnvton SI." Cellfornl• Bowl CDK.ltllt,_1 lot-21,SMl~SI tl Tanaert'ne Bowl 10...1f .. 0r1-. ''*' Mluowl "· $olll'-'" Mlulu llll'I 11 Siu.Grey Game CO.C.U aU~..,..,_-,.Ai.1 e1u111,Garv• !kin Bowl CO.C.K .. R .. aMI O~l•'*N 40, Hoonlon ,. Ubettv Bowl cp.c. • ei Me"'9fll11 Olllo St. II, No""• H9ff of Fame Bowl 10.." • !MMN ..... ,., Alo,I M...._._..tt,IC-t Peach Bowl COi<. JI at AUofttal Wnl \lf ..... 111 2'. Floo'lcla • Bluebonnet Bowl CO.C.11 llt _,.,., MlcfllOM 13, UCLA 14 Cotton Bowl 1-.1 .. o.11n1 1tHl14,Af-U Fiesta Bowl (Jell.' .. -··· PtM St 2' USC 10 , ROH Bowl IJ•·'"'"·-· W111llf\CllOI' 79, 1-• 0 Orange Bowl CJ•. I 11t Ml-C. "•.I Clemt.oft22,N---IS Sugar Bowl CJa.1.wtMNOfWoMI "'" t•. o.twio. E .. t-Weat Shrine Game C,,_tot P ... Altll loll All.s1ari VI V\IHI All·Slaf'I, ,,,.,,,... 2•1-. Hula Bowt (Ja.t .......... 1 Etsl All-s!Ms .,._ Wtsl All-stan, CJWllMI r et•itm. ' Senior Bowt ~ ......... ~ s... AtM\tn. • Pete the "Greek" NFL's Picks Of The Week SATUltDAY HaffoMIC.fwc.-. .,... °"" T~a., ~Ctfwcw• ...... o ..... =lv _......._ __ ,, ... ' PASADENA -lo Iowa, the corn la as h11h H a linebacker'• eye, but they apparenUy do not arow Items which can play olfenalve football. The 1912 Iowa team ls ooly partly ln contrast to Bia Ten teams which have come West to lose ln the ROie Bowl. Tbe Hawkeyes were blown out, 28.0, by the Waahln1ton Huakles Friday but lt was not neceturUy a matter of a lack of offensive concept which haa been peculiar to past Bil Ten teams. With this Iowa side, it was more a lack of offensive people. I mean, the Hawkeyes tried lhincs. One of them waa a reverse which involved several men and concluded with the receiver of a forward pass pitching out to a trailing halfback. This thing was so dramatic it does not even have a name. It worked perfectly for Iowa .. It gained nine yards. The Hawkeyes passed from punt formation and picked up sufficient yardage for a first down. A guy 29 yards away from the play was called for holding. conn - SPORTS COLUMNIST BUD TUCKER Sucb was the story ot the Hawkeye offense which once took them as far as the Washln1ton 32 yard line. There may also have been some si1nitlcance in the coaching in the 68th renewal or this New Year's Day commotion. Hayden Fry, who coaches Iowa, had said, "We have a very good offensive football team. We have some guys who can make the big play." Don James of Washington had allowed, "both teams figure to play well defensively and I wouldn't look ror a high-scoring game." Whereupon James, whose team bad been much mallaned as t\aving neither an offensive Orange Co'8t DAILY PILOT/Saturday, January 2, 1982 concept. or a lineup to Optra~ ooe, 1mokln1. u the 11ytn1 1oe1. • Jall),I had a quarterback named Steve Pelluer thJIOw the football all over Pasadena for 15 ,omplet.looa ln Z9 attempta &Dd HZ yli'da. Then too, James let loote aa offemlve and 1omewhat aecret weapon called a Jacqu• JloblMon, which 11 a freshman taUback. l\oblnaon, who say1 he pronouncea hla nrat aall)e wlth a "soft J," carried the ball 20 Umea for 142 yards and two touchdowns. ThJs earned him the title of tbe 1ame'1 most valuable player. If there is censorship in the state of Iowa, the Hawkeyea' statistics will be banned. It is probably kindest to simply say that the lowa team waa best In an encounter entitled the Beef Bowl, which ls a contest ataged at a Los An&elea restaurant to determine which of the two Rose Bowl teams have the mOlt robust appetites. Further in the area of Wuhln1ton'1 Don James dlaplaylng destrable traits of a coach, he had bls adversary. Fry, down late Sn the 1ame and I I I I ' be did the commendable thlna. He kicked hlm.~ That 11. be dldn'l kick. Waablnaton w a leadlq,· 1.M>, followln1 a touchdown late ln e fourUa quart.et and Jam es had b1a quarter PHI f(W a tlWO-polnl converaJon. It la alao part of 1ood coachln1 that e wlnnlna coach ls kind to tbe 101er ln the s>09t·1a dial<>jUe. .. :O:l'ayecl well," said Don James. ''lowa ta!a very football team." "We 1ot burned badly today," said Hayd., Fry. "We played very badly. l waa surprisedi we played so badly. I lbou1ht we would win football 1ame and my playen lbou&ht we w win the football eame. But we didn't execute we didn't 1ener~e any momentum. "I promise you this, we'll 4o a whole Jot better the next Ume we come out here to play.'' The last time the Iowa Hawkeyes came obt here to play ln the Rose Bowl was In 1959. ' The schedule gives Iowa 23 years to develop an offense. .. From Page C1 ROSY. • • ~ other split back combinations and tried all sorts of different plays like a double reverse and a fake punt. . However, much lo the admitted amazement of most or the Huskies, Iowa stuck to its basic trap-play offense In the second half, even after faJlipg behind, 21.0 midway through t&e fourth quarter In the end. Washinilton cad.e up smellinj rosy. playing ne~r flawless footbaJI . Tbe Huskies had jttst one interception, while ·I owa quarterback Gordy t Bohannon thr e w thre e interceptions and the Ha~lceyes fumbled twice. DOES THIS m ean t hat Washington ( 10·2> now deserves lo be ranked amoog the top five teams in the country? "l don't think we're in the top five but in the top ten, I would say." sald James. And what about 8-4 Iowa? Well , Fry has next year to think about and. should he ever get back to the Rose Bowl and get his revenge, perhaps the book. "We'll be back," be said. "We did some great things to get here and we learned . . . we learn~ an awful lot." Deity ............. , c--. MarT Canada rips Switzerland Iowa's Jim Frazier trips up Washington wide receiver Anthony ·Allen after he caught a pass during first half Rose Bowl action. MINNEAPOLIS <A P > Pierre Rioux scored two go$ and had one assist and Mark Habscheid added t wo more goals to lead Team Qanada to an 11 ·1 victory over Teatn Switzerland in the International Hockey Federation junior tournament Friday night. HUSKIE DUDE -Wa $hington tight end Willie Rosborough, a 6·'1l. 235-pound junior. hauls in a pass from quarterback Steve Pelluer a uring action in Friday's Rose Bowl game. Jowa linebacker Mel Cole makes the tacikle. Rustlers, J)ucs in action tonight Golden West Colle1e, weU while lanky forward Art KiDC rested after nearly two week.I boasts a 13.1 scortnc cUp. without a 1ame, puu lta 12-a San Diego' Mesa, domlnai.t ba,ketball record on the Une by rreshmen, doea have aome ' tonlcbl when lbe Rustlers hOlt ex perlence .in 6· 1 1uard San J>lego Mesa at 7: 30. J o n a t b a n B a u a l e y • 6 . 5 awing man Dante Mlller. occ ia• aWJ trytnc to find the rltbt combination of playera to pull itself out of a slump. Sophomore Jim Baldwin, a fl_. forward, played the first f{ve sames for the Pirates before Cotton pickin' CBS DALLAS <AP> -Television viewers in the South and Southeast, including Alabama, missed the windup to Texas' 14-12 upset over Alabama in the Cotton Bowl New Year's Day. A CBS·TV spokesman blamed the loss of what be said was about 20 seconds of Alabama's dr ive for a potential game-winning field goal on a telephone company. <AT&T longJines) mistake. J ay Rosenstein of CBS-TV sa id viewers in Alabama, Florida, Arkansas, Mississippi , Georgia and South Carolina were affected, but a spokesman for AT&T Loot; Lines Dept. in New York said a larger area may have been arrected , involving "about 25 stations.'' Rosenstein said , "Someone misread an order and pulled a phone patch. CBS television news will include the final plays of the game for those who missed it in those six states." Wayne Dubois, the telephone company spokesman said, "CBS ordered service from 2 to S p.m. and wanted it on a regionalized bas is so they could insert commercials. "Our control people in New York got a call from CBS at 4: 50 that the game was running late and wanted lo expand their service that they were getting from us. We attempted to help them, but by t hat time we discovered that the facilities were a lready assigned to another customer starting at S p.m. College basketball I! T-St.at~sSI 1" IOf Ida .. l$U lteftlutlty .. <>-vi• Wake"°'"* al <>-vi• TICll H-'°" 8-tlsl at HW LoUltlana ·-· M Solllll ~IN J-INcll-. et Vlr .... la Pretri. View •I Mc .... SI v~ a1 MlMlullllll St. ltet1Nclly St. et .... °"""' H. Caf'OllN AA T et T--SI. H.C.~• at $o11t11 Alebema HI! 1.oulS'-•ISWl.oultlana SIMia al s..tll l"lorlda Teut Sou1Mr11 al~ U WHI V ....... la M VI ...... TKll ,..._.. Arll-t at Teut TKll Arlll-SI. et Pan Amet'k.., TeH1rArl .... el Herdl,...Slmmona OkleMml at Tul .. Afteelo SL al SMU $ .......... Awtlll et Teus A&M TutMw•T-S..AMoni. .... An11yetl-St. fir-ta. Pa. et 8elllll*'e 011 ..... St.MO....-O-...~et ...... ,. .... -......... et Lafe.,._ I.ye..,._ et L.INlll • ,...,_.....,....LlftllltaMU. c.... .... Syr_ c.._..,_-;-• ComeoetSt. • .. elleft ~· .. o-.M-H91., C-llt~IC9 IMIM et T-sC' Pnolc .... lltS-Hall ~ .. St.~W'• The Canadians, now 6.0, can clin c h their first amateur championship in 20 years with.a victory over Czechoslovakia ln Rochester Saturday night. Switzerland fell to 0·6 in tbe tournament. The Canadians scored foor goals in the first period and stretched the lead to 7-1 after two periods. Switzerland scored their lone goal early in ttie second period wJtl!n Peter Moser connected on a power play. The Canadians, who finishcsd seventh in I as t ye ans tournament, could take their first international amateur title since taking the 1971 world seni0r hockey championships. : ---- OUTSTANDINC VALUE St MEW ltl2 VW , 9UAHTUM WAGON' 4 Do«. Options Include t cloth 11ets, radial ti,.. j and motel (Stk. 3079) 1 (003503) \ List Price SI 1,301 . Dhcomt SIJIO ~ SALIPllCI s9 I 2 sc•occo Coupe. 5 apeed tranamlNion. metallic paint. rear window wi per/wHher. alloy wh....,._..,~ an<I morel (Stk. 3235) ' (01?7M) SAU NICI . 5 10 69 Oran1e Coast, meanwhile, sopboO'lOre forward Daye White travels to East Los An1elea and sophomore guard Andre auffertnc a broken nose. Sur1ery ,....------.,.,...,---------.-~-------------­ h aa slowed down the time Colle1e for another 7:30 battle. Clark. The 1ames mark the final Oran1e Cout, meanwhile, will non·conlerence conteata ror both tackle the bot and cold Hualdet teams before they open leque of Eaat Loi Ancelet. play next week. Coach Jim McFarland'• Eut Coach Jim Greenfield'• LA squad bad pltked up RuatJen haven't seen a:n11ame victor1es ovtr bithly-touled actlon alnce Dec. 1t whn they Cerritoe. and El Camino tbl1 dow* Fresno CC 78-73 to win ye,r, but loat to such foes at tbe Sequoias Tournament in CQUeie QI Marin and Glendale. VlaaUa. ~ In addlUon, the Rusklet hive Truiett Hatto• pacH the dNpped a pair: of iamea to; Mt. Gold• Wiit attaek wtt.b a 17.0 $.Jn Antoolo. avera1t. DarteD Bowen carries Wayne Aubert p1ce1 the a te.s a.erqe Into the 1ame, Husky attack alon1 wltti , .. schedule for bis return. ~~~~~~~!!!!'!!!'I "I'd be lylnc lf l said we don't oil11 Baldwtn;• saya, OCC Coach Tandy Glllla. ''He's a very strong player on the boards, and we r:e.Uy mill his atrenltb. •• GIW. adda: "We'll haV4; to eet tbin1a totet.Mr thia """ lf we want to be ready for coilfe~ play. "We have to accept tlte fact that n don't hne much board strenltb at the moment and we'll have to db our beit to play bard, smart baak~ball." .~ I. I •Orange Cout DAILY PltOT/Saturday, January 2, 1882 WILDCAT AJAY -Clemson's wide receiver Frank Magwood takes in a pass as Nebraska's safety Jeff Krejci looks on ,.,. ......... during second quarter action in the Orange Bowl. Tliere's no doubt Clemson is No. 1 after beating Nebraska . - KlAM1 (AP) -Stlfle tbt corny ••11 about th• backwood.I a1rlcwtural school tucked away ln the nonheut comer of South Carolina. Pack away the 1UJy Une that lt Clem.on put artificial turf ln it.a 1tadium the homecomln1 Q\liffn would have no place to araae. Clemson University no tonier i• Silo Tech. Instead, the Clemson n1ers are the kine• of colle1e football, Just hours away from beina crowned u national champions for the 1981 season. "A&E WE No. 1? I've been waiting on that," Coach Danny Ford said u be stood out.side the tumultuous Clemson dresalng room following Friday ni1ht's 22·15 Oranie Bowl victory over fourth-ranked Nebraska. "Are we the best team in the country? We're the only team to beat the No. 2 team <Georgia), the No. 8 team <North Carolina> and the No. 4 team (Nebraska). There ain't no one else in America that did that this year." North Carolina was ranked eighth when it lost to Clemson, and defendine national champion Geor1ia, which fell to the Tigers 13.3 in September, ~as ranked second prior to Friday night's 24-20 Sugar Bowl loss to Pitt. Top·rated Clemson took advantage of two Nebraska rumbles in the first half. scorini • on Donald !•webuUte's •l·yard field goal and Cliff Austin's 2-yard run, and went on to almost certainly natl down the first national championship in the school's 86·year football history. "IT WAS A great seaaon for\!$ -one that we might not ever experience anytime soon," said Ford, who complete<,1 his-third season as Clemson's coach and who, at 33, is still one or the youngest head coaches in -the country.• reco1nltlon aa a major 1rld power. . Nebruka's Bl1 El1ht kinl• fint1hed 9-3 and helped brine about their own downfall by cou1hina up the footbaU at their 29· and 27.yard lines In the first halC, while also being socked with 54 yards in penalties - includine two for holding, two clips and a pass interference call. Nebraska had been the 11 major bowls since Clemsotra last appearance in one -a 7--0 loss to ~U in the Sugar Bowl 23 years ago. But the Ti1era were never awed by the Cornhuskers' tradition, wbJch includes a pair or national crowns THE TIGERS' rugeed defense, ranked eighth best nationally , shut down Nebraska's explosive attack. It put the clamps on the Cornhuskers e~cept for a 25·yard option pass from Mike Rozier to Anthony Steels that capped a 69-yard first.period drive, and Roger Craig's 26·yard run with 9: 15 left to play. .The impressive victory chmaxed,_a rags-to-r iches saea in which t;le~son stormed from being unranked until the third week of the season and eventually became the seventh team to be voted No. 1. How sweet it is for Pitt, · 24-20 The tenacious Tigers, an opportunistic team all year, capped a Cinderella 12--0 season as the nation's most improved club.in it.a typical unspectacular fashion -a stubborn defense and just enough offensive punch. They scored on three field eoals by lgwebuike, Austin 's touchdown sweep and a 13-yard scoring pass from Homer Jordan to Perry Tuttle. Nebraska Coach Tom Osborne called the setback "probably the most disapftPintlng loss 'I've never bad. We had a chance to Nebraska's first turnover came on the game's third play, when l)o'seguard William Devane pressured quarterback Mark Mauer into-a low pitchout to Craig. The Cornhusker tailback was hit by linebacker Danny Triplett ,and Devane recovered the ensuing fumble at the Nebraska 29. Seven plays later, Jgwebuike gave Clemson a J-0 lead. . _Marino's pass to Brown with 35 seconds left spoils Georgia's Sugar Bowl take it ·all. We had it In our hands and we let it slip away. NEW ORLEANS CAP) -Dan Marino said he thought "I threw it too far." He didn't . Instead, tight end John Brown raced under it in tbe end zone ror a 33.yard touchdown reception with 35 seconds remaining that gave loth·ranked Pittst6urgh a 24-20 victory over No. 2 Georgia in the Sugar Bowl football game Friday night. MA&INO, NAMED the most valuable player in the aame, said the play wasn't designed to go to Brown, that Pltt merely wanted to get fi r's t -down ya rd age on the fourth-and-5 situation. "I nner imagined they wouhl blitz," Marino said. "I euesa they thoQgbt we would run." Brown said, "The reellne - once you realize what you did - -'comes as soon as you touch it." Brown said he saw a swarm of teammates heading his way and '"'I wanted to run. I panicked under that pile . Claustrophobia." The Marino-Brown combo, which struck for another score earlier in the final quarter, produced the game-winning play at the end of an 80-yard drive. GEORGIA HAD hoped to use a victory over Pittsburgh to JJuccessfully defend its 1980 national championship, but that went out the window with the Sugar Bowl and would not have mattered anyway, since tOJHanked Clemson completed a perfect season by beating Nebraska 22-15 in the Orange Bowl. Coach Vince Dooley or Georgia called Marino ·'truly a 8f~t. great quarterback. The tight end (Brown) made a l(J'eat play, and Marino made a great . . "They have a great football play. But l don't think we can play any better. We pl!~ow:._ ... __ hearts out to the bltt~r en . ' - Evere.tt s field goal and cut team. They certainly deserve to .· ~-C?.eo.rl(!~;~.~~~!..m.J:J~!,d_!o~~-~·-.:.-·beN•.1~~ . The tall quart~rback moved Clemso.n pulled away from a Nebraska moved ahead 7·3 five minute s later . The touchdown came when Rozier took a pitchout from Mauer and lofted a pass to Steels, who got behind defensive backs Terry Kinard and Anthony Rose in the end zone. Marino, who completed 28 of 41 passes for 281 yard5, brought the. Panthers back lo the rma.1· four minutes after Georgia bad taken a 20-17 advantage midway through the final quarter. Marino, who finished with th..ee touchdown passes in the game, hit Brown on a 6-yarder early in the ftnaJ quarter and connected with AU·Americao Julius Dawkins from 30 yanls ln the third period. IT WAS the 11th victory in 12 games for the Panthers, who used • swannin& defense to bold Georgta All-Amer1tt tailback Herschel WalkeT under 100 yards rushing for the first time in 14 games. Walker, who scored two touchdowns on runs of elgbt and 10 ~arda, wu limited to only 8' yards on 25 carries as he wu stalked constantly by Pitt tackle Dave Puzzuoli. Georgia, tbe defending national champion, got its other TD on a 6-yard pass from Buck Belue to Clarence Kay with 8:31 lert in the game. The Bulldogs finished with a 10-2 record. Pitt's other score came in the second quarter, a 41-yard field goal by Snuffy Everett. GEORGIA APPEARED to have the victory, in hand when Pitt failed on a fourth-down fue punt gamble at thidrteld with only 5:29 left to play, but tbe Bulldogs failed to move and were forced to punt with Pitt laking over at its 20 with 3:46 remaining. Marino also had an 18-yard pass to halfback Bryan Thomas. and an eieht-yard run in the game-winning drive. The winning touchdown came on a pass ri1ht down the middle u Brown made the catch in the end zone without breaking stride. Georgia's go.ahead march earlier in the quarter featured a 23-yard scamper by Belue and a 24-yard run by Walker on which be ran over All-American lineb4cker Sal Sunseri. • WALKER ALSO turned v. tackle-breaking effort to set up Georgia's first touchdown when he hauled in a short pass at tbe Pitt 40 and completed a 31-yard run to the 15 on which he broke through four defenders. ,Georgia's first score came on a 5l·Yard drive after Clarence Kay recovered Tom Flynn's fumble on a punt return. The Bulldogs also capitalized on a rumble r~overy for their • second touchdown when Eddie Weaver recovered a fumbled pitch out by Thomas at the Pitt 10. Marino connected on five or six short passes for 16 yards in the drive that ended with the Panthers 80 yards with the 12·7 balttime lead .an~ sewed up thtrd-quarter kickoff by ~e best .se~ 10 !ls 86-y47ar completing three passes for 48 history with 1-0 points in the third yards. quart,,-. Pitt's touchdown drive early in the fourth quarter covered only 23 yards arter Michael Woods recovered a rumbl~ .by Walker. Thomas had three straieht runs to the six from where Marino rolled to his left and hit Brown in the .end zone. The Panthers caught Georgia's rushing defense orr guard throughout the game, as Thomas hammered out 129 yards oo 2S carries and fullback Wayne Di Bartol a contributed another68. The game drew a crowd of 77 ,224 into the Louisiana Superdome. JORDAN'S TD pass to Tuttle capped a 75·yard march in which the elusive junior completed all four pass attempts for 48 yards. Jgwebuike, the Nigerian transfer student who also kicked a 37·yard fi"eld goal in the first quarter, closed out the Tigers' scoring with one from 36 yards following Billy Davis' 47-yard punt return to the Nebraska 22. With more than 20,000 of its frenzied orange-clad rans in the .crowd of 72,748, Clemson's Atlantic Coast Conference champs finally notched the victory thaC seems certain to ensure the natl1>nal respect they have lon_g. yearyied ror, plus Ballesteros takes lead SUN CITY, Bophuthatswana (AP> -Seve Ballesteros or Spain ripped the back nine in 5-under·par 31 and extended his lead to 3 strokes Friday in the world's richest golf tournament. B u t t h e C o r n h u s Ir tr s ' advantage was s hort-Ii ed. Nebraska safety Jeff Kreijci was called for pass interference, helping put the ball into position for Egwebuike's second field goal. Thal sliced the score to 1·6 and Clemson went ahead to stay with 3 :56 left in the first half. Defensive end Joe Glel')n shook Nebraska fullback Phil Bates I o o s e from th e b al I and linebacker Jeff Davis recovered at the Comhuskers' Z7. Seven plays later, Austin took a pilchout around right end and scored without a hand being laid OD him. "A very lucky round," shrugged the young Spaniard after he posted his •-under-par 68 for a 137 total at the halfway point or the Sl million Sun City Gold Challenge. • Jack Nicklaus and Johnny Miller shared second at 140 in this event that offers $500,000 to the winner. Nl-:klaus had a '70 for the seeol)d straight round and Miller shot 68 in the 91>-degree beat of aJi African summer day. 1979 CADILLAC SEVILLE Equipped with all of the°Cadillac power assist options, leather seatine area & Cad lilac wire wheel covers. ( 1AKZ762). ~ -•10,995. . Cadtlloc V~ ~edion ~Agreement A~ Lee Trevino and Gary Player, the only other participant.a in the elite invitational field, dropped well back. Trevino shot 74 and was 7 behind at 144, par for two rounds over the 7,693-yard Gary Player Country Club course, which adjoins this spectacular resort complex. ..aa......,..,.,..,.,...,_.A.~-r..• ........ Kll-~juu~~.::::iW'Q. I • • ~ ... .. • ~ • • ""' Player tralled the field at 77·147, but had considerable consolation lo the fact that the last· lace finisher will receive $100 000. : N~ 12600 Harbor Blvd. ILL A, Costa Mesa ~ (714) 540-1860 ON DISPLAY Award Win~ing Model Home Direct from the Dodger Stadium Show ' ,9'J<IVEY~ PLUS 23 New MODEL HOMES Many of them ready now for occupancy 6 FumW.ecl Moclela Now Selling Sac:rl6ced as Seaton aosc-Out New 0 % Interest Financing Buy now end bat high lntilral ratu with our lll*tel O' 1n.-pi.n. Vou CNfT\ ~ h<lfM In Jull 6 yMl'll Miit Ivey Ranch Mia center for ct.t.lll.) The Awwd Wlnnlnt Show Hom.I New modclal ar... tllnnll Go1ft Poo111 Spe •.• It'• el ttMre with more on ..,_ wev •the cta.t'• ~. eM>1·to·bi.iv countrv c:hlb. ' Tllke ~ 10 to~ Kubic Roed °""'f'P· Then Wow Verner R* to th'e beaudul entry. , ..... -mocWi open~ ....... ....,. r Or~ COut DAIL V PILOT/Saturday. J1nuary 2. 1982 Tezcis continues its mastery against . OALLAS (AP> -In THU Coach Fred Aktra' rtnt meeUn1 wlth Alabtma'• letendary Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant, lt waa Akera who 111nbled and won In the 4et.h Cotton Bowl Claulc New Year'• Oa.,y. Quarterback Robert Brewer bolted 30 y1rd1 for a fourth period toucbdown, then drove the atxtb-ranked Lohfborns ao yar:.ds for Terry Orr'a a.ya.rd 1cortn1 run lrr Texas• 14·12 victory over the third.rated Crimson Tide. , 12.t-12 . . labama with Cotton Bowl unn • Intercepted a Lewla pldl on the Texu I-yard lint with 1:47to10. PUNTEll JORN GOODSON then took a deliberate safety with 48 MConda to to 10 tho Longhorns wouldn't have to r11ll eetli~ a kick blocked. Alabama then 1ot tht ball back wtU. ta aecoods Lo play on Ila own 41 on tM free kick after the safely. But Lewis waa trapped twice tryln1 to pass and time ran out on the Crimson Tide. The loa raised Texas• record to 10.1-1 BOULDER, Colo. (AP> -Derek Slnsleton who wu the lead.ins rusher at the Uruvenlty Oi Colol'ado when he waa atrlcken with menln,Jtlt ~ before a football 11ame a1'1nat Iowa St.le, dled Friday 1n Loi Anaelea, lh• unJveralty aald. · Sln&Jeton, who waa 19, bad been releued ln early November from the Ama, Iowa, bolpltal where be bad been treated for 12 daya .. He WU ho.pitallzed a1aln at the Unlvenity ol Callfonua at Loa An1elea Medical ~r while vllllln1 family over Tbank1glvtn1, the university aaJd In news releue. 8VT 11' WAs Akers who bad to make the vhaJ decision or whether to punt out of tbe Texas end zone in the llnal minute or take a saf~ty and 1lve ' Alabama a chance to win by a field 801\l. and denied Alabama's attempt the SNARLING SEAR - estabUsh a new NCAA bowl record for A l a b a m a · s 8 e a r seven consecutive victories In seven Bryant didn't have years. It also kept Alabama Coach Paul much to say after the "Bear" 'Bryant from addlng tb~"316lh Crimson Tide lost. victory to his record for college head l4-12. coaches. ------...,...,=--- His condition worsened u he ~eveioped adu respiratory distress syndrome, a condltlon l wblcb the tunas atop fUllcUon1n1. and be died • 7:02 a.m. Friday at the .UCLA hospital, th university said. "Everyone at the University of Colorado a~ the Boulder community sbares in hls family's sorrow," said football Coach Chuck Fairbanks, · Akers opted for the safety and the strategy checkmated the old master Bryant, who was goinl( for an NCAA record seventh consecullve bowl victory and his 316th collegiate triumph. The victory kept aUve Texas' jinx over Alabama, which has yet to ~l the Longhorns. "I thought it was the best thine to do <take the safety), I wanted them as far away from our goal as we could possibly get them," said Akers. ''The eiiht seconds that punter John Goodson wasted running around in the end zone seemed like an eternity.·' AKERS SAID, "THIS is the greatest victory of my coaching career ... You will not find a classier man and program than Bear Bryant and Alabama.'' · On Brewer. Akers said "I think he showed what a great competitor and operator he is." Bryant said of Texas taking the safety: "Well, it worked. Then at the end our kids were so tired -or something -they were running around there with 11 seconds left without snapping the ball. We have worked on that before. We should have been able to get that play off in five seconds. "They whipped us bad In the fourth quarter." Bryant added, "I don't think there is a Texas whammy on Alabama . . . their players and coaches beat us, not a whammy." BREWER, STARTING only his fourth game of tbe season for the Longhorns, scored his touchdown on a quarterback draw with 10:22 lO go in the game. After an Alabama punt, Brewer ignited the Lonehorns to a touchdown in 11 plays covering 80 yards. He completed a third-down pass of 37 yards to Ught end Lawrence Sampleton to keep the drive alive and coMected on three other passes, including a 10-yarder to Donnie Little, to set up the game-winning touchdown. Alabama led 10 -0 on a 6-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Waller Lewis to Jesse Bendross and Peter Kim's 24-yard field goaJ. Alabama's Joey Jones returned Texas' kickoff a Cotton Bowl-record 61 yards after the second Longhorn touchdown, but William Graham ---NFL playoffs top today's TV1 I -.•.. There's basketball, too But it kept alive Texas' streak of never having lost to the Crirmon Tlde. who finished the year at 9·2·\. Texas Is now 7-0-1 against the Southeast Conference Crimson Tide. THE LOSS SHOT down AJabama's outside chance for a shot at the national championship. A sellout crowd of 73,243 watched the frenzied affair in 50-degree weather. Alabama charged up and down the fi eld In the first half but could only post one touchdown. Starting quarterback Alan Gray fumbled away to Texas tackle Ralph Darnell on the Longhorn 15 to end one promising Alabama drive. After a scoreless first quarter, Alabama stormed 82 yards in 7 plays behind backup quarterback Lewis. LEWIS SCRAMBLED for 17 yards and halfback Joe Carter dashed 14 yards before Lewis whipped a 37-yard completion to tight end Bart Krout on the Longhorn 12. On third and 4 from the Texas 6, Lewis rolled to his right. dodged a tackler, and floated a touchdown pass lO Bendross, who was wide open after defender Graham fell down. O..T•adl By HOWARD L. HANDY Of !tie DMly ~ S'9ff The struggle toward Super Bowl XVI finds all eight contending clubs competing this weekend with two games today and t~o more Sunday. Today's presentations find division winners Tampa Bay and Dallas colliding at Irving, Texas <Channel 2, 10 a.m.) followed by two American Conference winners, San Diego at Miami (Channel 4. 2 p.m.). Is -Sl11H1 (" Tllrau'lf .. ...._ ForA5m .. h Gm .... The home teams are favored in all four games this weekend. Dallas is a 7'h-polnt pick over Tampa Bay while Miami is a 3-point choice over San Diego. In addition, UCLA opens the Pacific-10 flag chase at Washington State (Channels. 7:30 p.m.) and Nevada-Las Vegas is at home to San Diego State <Channel 9. 8 p.m.> in a non·conferenc:e outing. Following are the top sports events on TV today. Ratings are: 1 ./ ./.; excellent; ./././worth watching; ' ' fair; ./ forget it . S 10 a.m., Ch•nnel 2 ./ ./ ./ ./ NFC PLAYOFF: Tampa Bay at Dallas. Announcers: Vin Scully and Hank Str;1m. Cowboy Coach Tom Landry doesn't agree with Sa""9ForYa.! 3/16"X4"X8' CLEAR RUF-SAWN lREDWOOD R . OVERALLS $2 ~5 COVEUJJ FT. SALE $1389 Y2 "X3'' AND S"X RANDOM LENGTHS HAIDWOOD UMFIMSHID-TOMGUI & GROOYI ALDERWALL $3s1AL69 PANELING $~~ covas 32 • FT. Jayha~k back dies LAWRENCE, Kan . CAP> -Chris Emerson, a University of KanHas football player from Mes.a , Ariz., who was held out of competition this stason, died early Friday at a Lawrence hos pital. uni versily officials said. Sid Wilson , Kansas sports information director , said the 19-year-old fullback was taken to Lawren ce Me morial Hos pital Thursday night· after complaining of chest pains and shortness of breath. Wilson quoted hospital officials as saying Emerson died about 1 am . o f pulmonary embolus. ''Derek was a truty·outatanding youn1 man m •• every respect,'' be said. "His infectious amlle a~ \lOSltive attitude on life and athletic• was ~ tnsplratloo to all of us. " • .~ LEASE A 1981 TIME IS RUNNING OUT! LEASE OR IUYI In Newpon Bwh , .Roy Carver BMW I 540 JAMBOREE RD •• NEWPORT CENTER NEWPORT BEACH. CA. 92660 714-640-6444 FINAL SESSION STADS SUM.. JAM. J • .. • ... • . . . . .. '• MIKEMAYNFS ORANGE COAST BASEBAIL SCHOOL '. FOR INFORMATION CALL \ ) (714) 531-1224 (714) 751-0568 -~-. .· • ~ 0·c>..,;s 14-18~ LEASI• ... 'I .• ~ 0 .. .... ... the oddsmakers that his team should be 7•h-point favorites. "When you get to the round of eight, anybody can win," he says. "Tampa Bay is a better team than the one we played last year." Coach John McKay of the Buccaneers says: "We're not the favorites, we understahd that. We shouldn't be. It doesn't hurt to be a little bit of an underdog, as long as you don't turn out to be a complete doO." ................................................ THI CASH FLOW ALTERNATIVE We Lease ~II Makes, Models And Trucks ... " ~ 2 p.m., Channel 4 .,/ ./ ./ .,/ AFC FOOTBALL: San Diego at Miami. Announcers: Don Criqui and John Brodie. The Dolphins won their fjnal game of the regular season to give Coach Don Shula hi s sixth conference championship in 12 years white San Diego knocked off defending Super Bowl champion Oattland In its flnale. The Dolphins depend on the strong arm of quarterback David Woodley. The Chargers have Dan Fouts at quarterback with Chuck Muncie and John Cappelletti at running back to spark their ottense. Miami Is favored by 3 points. 6 7:30 p.m., Ch•nnel 5 . .,/ ./ ./ COLLEGE BASKETBALL : UCLA at Washington State. Announcers: Joe Buttitta and Bill Walton. Although they are lnellglble for the conference. championship, the 16th-ranked Bruins still figure to be a domi~nt force In the Paclfic-10. The Bruins won their fifth straight by downing Maryland, 90-S7 Tuesday night. [-) 8 p .m., Channel 9 .,/ .,/ .,/ COLLEGE BASKETBALL: San 01990 St. at Nevada-Las Vegas ll . "" Announcers: Chick Heern and Ralph Reacle>U1. The Runnln' Rebel~ got off to a slow start this season but appear to hive the momet'ltum going for , them now. They won their own Holiday Classic four-team tournament this week and wlll f.ce the Aztecs In a non<onference battle tonight. OTHaR Tl!LEYISION 9:3o a.m. (2) -NFL TODAY -W\th Brent MUSbur'9tr. 1:3Qp.m. (4) -NFL '11-Wlth BryantGumtlet. S p.m. (2) -NFL REVIEW AND PREVllW. (7) -SPORTS '11 -Writer George Pllmi)ton l'tvlews outstanding sporting events of 19'1, ll')(ludlng SUper Bowl "J<V; the Leonard-H,ams fight; Bobby Unser's controversial Indy SOO win; end tM strlk•shOrteMd baseball season. 1:30 r·m· CSO) -SPORTS AMERICA -The Northeas Ope" squ.sh tourn.ment from Rochester. N.Y. ,.!_p.m. ( 11) -COLL.GE BASKeTMLL -USC ft w.shtnoton, tape detay. · RADIO Football -TemSN Bey et Dallas, KN X ( 1070); Sen O.teaoat MllMI, KHX (1010). BWttbell -t.ono 8"ch State et Mlnnetota, 6 '·"'·• KLON * f'M); UCLA et Wa-lnoton Stele, • 7:30 p.m.1 kMPC (110); USC at WashfngMn, 7:3$ p.m., t<OAY (1-). Hockey -Celglr,y et Kl.-, 6:JO p.m., KPRZ (1150). ~"X6"X8' RUF-SAWN TOM&Ul6MOOYE R SEQUOlA $5~ SALE REDWOOD SIDING 01mG114DI covas 31112 sq. FT. 4'X4'X~" Reg. SALE WHITE OAK . $59.95 ~3149 BUT04ER BLOCK PARQUErl' &UAT FOil TAK.I TOPS & FUltMITUU 7 /16"X4" COVERS J,7.3 SQ. FT. SIERRA GROOVE REDWOOD R~. $32.95 .. • ... .. 1982 CAVALIER nPE 10 ... O s 15558 4-spd., type 10, PS . sd'brt m1rro~. • H.O. cooling. buckel seats & morel Stk. 12007 lnitlal value $7965 00 . .. • · cap. reduction $300.00; total of Mo. payments $8233 68. 1n1tial cash re- • quirenwnt $837 91 . end of term .a 19i2'CEllii1n .. SEoA1 c1L .. ... • .. e! • • • Sn,24 LOADED! NC, PS .. P.B., stereo . lilt wheel, defoOger and morel Stk. 12043. lnrtlal value $10,582.00: end of term value $6007.76; tot.I pay· 'Mo." manta $11.561 76; Initial cUh ,. quirementa $414 87. ,.. Ta. 0.A.C./41 Mo. HO CAP. UDUCTION 1982 "SlO"· PICKUP $16790 • ~J v~. 1600 1b. pay toed • tong DeO. custom ec:cent stripes & morel Stk. 2093. .. SA v .. s,~ Initial . Mo. value incl MTE tu $7974.lt5i end of term value $3934.22! totai of payment• S8069.20; initial ouh requlref1'14tnts '540.90. 1RCt. Ta. O.A.C.j.AI Mo. NO CAP. ~noM ASK ABOUT VAL" LEASE OUR ' Ii I PLAN! ~· . ; .... .. i' '• • •i .... 'J . ~ 't H • ·~ ~fl I ir. .. .. ·, ----..... --------- ROIEBOWL W11hl119ton 21, Iowa o ~.,.0-Nn WH,.l"ll(OI' 0 II 0 IS -M low• 0 0 0 0 -0 WASH -Robl-I run IH•IMn lll<llJ WASH Cooy I '"" (peu 1•11••11 WASH -Robl-3' run csu1111 -· Pellutrl WASH Cowell 3 run CNelMn kltkl A -105,411 T_,.Slatl111U ·--· Flrsl-22 I• Ru>Ns -v•na SI ·2l3 4"' Passino yena 1"2 M Return y...OS " '' p .. ,.. 1~29-1 10.214 Punls 7.J6 ~' Fumbles IOSI 0.0 ,., Penalll" v•ttl• )-H .. ,, Time ot Poswulon 33:01 24·ft l!lflwlWet Statl1tk• RUSHING -Wulllnoton, Roblnton 10·1'2, Coby •·U, Pellaur S·"''""' U. Je<kM>f'I ~1A, HlnCll J.12, 0.Seo J.S, J• ..... 1·3, c•wen I 3. Allon HI, 10'#•, Gre._. 13-IO, 81att her 12·2•. 8ohennon 10 « Groo•n ).minus s Long 2-11, E. Pllllllps 2·• PASSING Wa•11 l1101on. Pelle1.1r 1~1'·1·1'2. •-•. Botl•n,_, • U·2·33. Gal<ti ... ,.1.st RECEIVING WeshlflOIOll. All.., Hot, sun,1 .,..., Rot1>orouo11 1-10, O.Feo 2.1, Jacllton 1-2, 0.11....-l·mlnus I. Iowa, 8rOWll .. s2, 81•1c'-' t 1, E. Pf\ltllOt Ml, All 1-4. . FIESTA BOWL Penn St. 26, USC 10 Sura Illy°""'"•" Penn Sl•te 1 10 t O ?• SoulnunC...I 1 o l 0-10 PSU w.,,., 11 t~ I Franc:o kick) USC 8anu JO lnlaruollon return IJordM k•tlll PSU -~.rlly S1 p .. s lrom 81.t<kl.oge I Fr •nco kklil PSU FG Franco ll PSU Wa1M1 Jt run (Franco kick) use -FG Jo..CMln JI PSU S.lely I P•1tanro111111oc1u"1 ounll A II OS3 Tum 5u ll•llcs PSU Fl,.ldown 10 R"Sllel-Y6rd• SI 111 PH>tng Yetd\ llS R•lurn v•rd• II Pesses 11 l•·l P"nts • SI F .. mblas to" 3-l P111alll .. ·yerds I 70 f lme ol Posuulon 1'I •• llMll~I St•lullo use " '140 JOl • , .. n .J S-40 )) 1 4. JO •• RUSHING Pon11 Slal•, Warner ~us Meade f·.O Wolllams 10·14 Soulllern Californla Alie" 30 IS Spencer l " ~CK•nue 1 l PASSING -P ... n Stele. Bl•c••eooe II 14·2 11S So .. 1"9r11 Calllorn•a. M.,ur l1·2l-U·12l. S.ll>Oury W-1·19 RECEIVING Ponrt Stal• K Jat lt>Oll >-SS. WarMr 3 10, ICab 1 0 , C.••"IY ' SJ Souther" ~lll0<nla, Allon S 39. WM• •IS. Simmon• ).St SUGAR BOWL Pitt 24, Georgie 20 ken.,. 0-rten Piii 0 J 1 u -24 C.-91• 0 I t 7 20 G• -Welll9r I run I 8 ... ler kl<k) Pitt -FG Ewaftt1 41 Pitt -O.wtil'f' JO pa11 frOfTI Marino C Ew9retHkk) Ga -Walker 10 run (kick l•lladl Pitt -Brown t oeu trom Merino I Ewrett kl<ll) G• -Key •-t !rem &.lua I Sutler k~k) Pitt -8r-n lJ P•n lrom MArlno 1Ev9rett kldt) •-n,m TNmS~s Finl-27 11 "u~-., • ...a 4 ... ,..,., Peul119 ,.,.,. HI 13 Return yat<h JS SI P9SMI 1~1-l t-1~2 Seeks by 2-4 I I Punts 2-4S ~ F1.1mbiH -lfti S.J M Panallln 'f•ttl• u.,. S.JS Time of Pouau Ion Jt H JJ >4 IMI•-· Stetlltl<t RUSHING PllUllurgl>, f-s JS.Ut, 01ee,.101a ti..t Georgia, Welhr ts-.4 Ball.le 7-41 P"'SSI NG Plll1b .. ro11. Marino ~l-J·2'1 Gaorvia a. .... l·tS.J-41] RECEIVING Pllhl>.,rgll, 0 18 arlola ...... D•wlllns ._,,,Brown M2. TllOm .... SI Gaoroia, W•tkar ).53 COTTON BOWL THH 14, Al1bema 12 Sc ... byO...r'l•n 411•1Mma l•••s Ala U I 0 )-IJ 0 0 0 u u ~ou 4 peu trom Lewh !Kim 1110) Ata -FG Kim l• Tu -B•-•rlOrun !AllotQre1<1c1tl Tu -Orr I run ( All99ra kltltl Ala -s.tely IGoodton downed ball In eno zone) 41 -13143 Team stell1Uu Ala F1,.1-. 1S Rusl\91-yara. •• 143 Penl11g .,.,..,. t'4 Return vatd\ l Panes 9-1).I P~ll S.4S Fumt>n-lotl 1-1 Penallln·yMd!i l·S TH 11 SJ.ISi :IOI /" IMIYl-1 Statlt11<1 RUSHING Alabama, Lawis 1'·79, Carter -· F-n S.tS Te•as, Clark 1 M, JOMI l .. j7 PASSING -Al-ma, Lawis 7-U ·l-122, Gray 1-1422 hos Brewer tJ.Jl-0.:IOI Clarl<0.1~ RECEIVING Alabllma a.n.trou ._,._ Tnes, Lime 1 '1 OAAffOEBOWl CltJnlOn 22, Nebr111Ca 15 ttentJO..r11HS ClemlOn Netlfelile Cl...,-FG l~floa" •• 10 0 -21 1001.1-11 Neb -su.11 U ...u from R01t.r ( Selt>el II kill Clem -l'G lowaClulka 21 Clem -~!ti 2 r1111 toe• falladJ Cle"' -Tullle IJ PHI from Jo<Uan I Piulllnt lokkl C'-"1-FG 1 ....... lkeM Nab -Craig 2' run Cr•lo run A -12.1• First_, .. usllff-y•t$ PMS1"9y- .. et1Wfty-....... s.u • .,. ........ 1'11mbte1-- P .... itlft-y-TllMol~ c ......... 11 1J SJ.ISS 41-ttJ 13' Q CJ .. IMJ-1 .. 174 1-12 M .... ~ >-0 ).2 7.57 H4 t2:1227:• rMCelilD •AC .. ON lftllt ,,... .... 0 . ,.,,,,,.,, "·!! ... ...,.,,.,.,...~ _ __,,.,_.,.CIW ..... <A~I .... Loi Al•mllo1 TNUltSDAV'S 1.ATI alSULTS l'IPTN aACI. J.SO Yerh C•ll Me Nkk (Crffoerl 4 tO l.IO 1,IO Waywerd 8wss ITrHWte) >.20 2.IO Joa CH CCNwarl uo Time; llll Alto raceo. Purnay, L•oanot Rocllet, TretlflLTlny 8a Rab, 'Wakame Whenltso•ar t2 IAACTA IMI N IO &14 00 "XTN aACI. f10 Y9rdi Salurctey WMrlot 1Creaoa•J17 00 'IO S.IO Roc,al Mooe! (LKUy) 3 C) l.00 Ski Liii ( BrooU) , .. Time ... 17 /4110 rec.a l\ullan Rocloal, KoneQIHI, Savannan s Rambler, Ima Wlnriln Polley, 011ly Go R•v Sl!VINTH RACE 400 vardt E• Ta H . .eoeyl Mldland N•llw ITraewral Lets Do II lo It (MllCllalll T ltne 10.Sl 110 HlO 400 11 00 t0.00 •.IO U EXACT" C•ll N ld &15' 20 Allo receo E•IMO•lva N•llve, El Rey Burner Hnvy DoOll w_,en Salls Toully HOI H PICK SIX l•-1-1 7 • 6) IHIO J2.,'41 40 with one wlM lno llCkat lllve llOrHs) '1 Pick SI• peld U.1.20 wttll 2' wlMlng Udlab (lour...,,._, EIGHTH .. ACI!. )lO vardt Counl Htr Ftr\I IMolcllatll "60 '00 4 40 MOlng MPmcw~ CH•rO 160 3 «I Prla. of O.vol ILet"-*YI 2 IO Time It 23 6\liO rac.-d E•r1hGV•k• Joue, Mona1crs Rocket Bany's Luo . COlllH141 Jal. Flag RIM!r, Ftekle In L6~ Flult•r bV Too NINTH RACE 400va•d• General r. IL.-<kev I Tosnt So ICNw11 Plstot Bulllt !Fre.ton) Time 2011 U10 780 4«1 1160 420 6 JO AIM> rececl COCle ol 1119 Wut -.urrv On Now. Shes Go• Gu\to F-orev•r Truckln Native Sparll~ U EXACTA 1'"11 INl'd WI 60 TENTH "ACE. lSO yards Gartat1<1St-n•(Cre-rl 10 '° •.00 3.IO G<!neral BrO'#n I NICodemU\I 2 60 J,tO Tiie Kruo.,ano IAO.lrl 4 20 Time 1834 Atse reced Counter Move Easier Said UncontHtad """'"" Pan Sh•me<e. Toub HOI To11ly U EXACTA 1~71 oe•d \It 10 Attenoance s.111 '°alDAV'S aeMILTS (Utll 94,,........ ..... ,,.,._ .. -u..> '°'"ST IUICl. J.lO Y•rO\ Allll\ P04ky IW•rd) 7 00 4 tO 3 00 Go Cebllllwo IC.erdca•I I IO S.IO RuO.ck I Mltchelll 2.IO Alto re<eo A Oevll Ot A Time, Mi.a Haiard Counly, F .. t M)Ckey, Bye Bye Bad .. lna, Lolw Style. Oonlu J~I t.ovll, Pl\enlomRoouo Time: It.CS U I XACT A 11· 101 oekl s.2.00 Sl!CottO aM:I. GI yerdl Ool Roio. ( P.,llntJ It tO 1-tO t.JO Buttel P~ !Bard) •.40 Ml Hello St.er (ClrdOH) SAO Alto reced: str-ry Cucice1<e, a.u tm•oe. Hev• a.ttle. My Mii ,.,,., o.-t Rocket, Ydy ReltWltl!l, IClutsfft PoUle. Time: 29:M. TMtaO~.-y-rc~~ ....... ~(Hert) f.Hy C ......... (819¥1"") ... &.JI 2.11 UI 2M ... Alto recad: Thlnll SI•. I.Ml 81eclo a.., KlotY• Rabete, ":'.C R0tk ... SolM IC .... C°fi'~, ::::;,-:-· YPIY S-."".,.· U IXACTA ,,_., pekH1'.IO. l'OU RTH "ACE ..0 y- -.1 Torque ll'rvdevl I 00 • ... J.10 Tau Chi"'" IE-ardsl ) IO , .. MIOfily J., ("°"9111 4AI Alto rilCtd; T ..... No Oouot, All Re\' .... Nut To lie Rkh Time t2 1' U EXACTA lt-91 oeld Ut 00 "'"™ aACI. 400 ye<O\ PH•mOftt.sB"""y CAClelrl 7.10 S.00 3.00 Tlllnll A.Mite (0..rdom) 10 IO tlO Do< Heel I ""9ar l S.IO Al•o r •cad A"nllt L a rry, C••Y S._rsld-.. N-t-Jr E .. y Lady Bar Costly Charm. VedO Rellroad W•1c11 f tma· JO.SJ U IXACTA ,._,. pekl 01 tO SIXTH aACll,.l10yerd1 8rl9111 Poli<y llerdo,.t s oo 3 00 J «> A·PIHCIV1 Trucll,la IC ... llaJ l.00 J tO f'l<ll.la Jeck fPatllnel J :IO Also reced· A Culno C reek Two. 8adawl,,, Or-eouv, 4\rubld, c-O•n A-!AlUD!ed. Time •.71 SEVENTHRACE -yard!i L•vovar Chllrtt. l 4'rm1t-' It.JO 10 JO •.40 Little Vlvvt Go (IACUYI 32 IO 1100 lntr"ld _,!AO.Ir) 100 "''•o reud: M"'Y l(ld!I Troublt, Town POiiey, Lltl!e TurnC>lar, Thats Raney, Eesy S.Nls. flme· JO.SJ. U EXACT" Cl-41 oeld "" fO U l"ICK SIX 1...._..J.71 oeld Sl,M «I wit" U wlmlftg tkkelS lllw llor•tl. $2 PIO Sia C9M01etlon peld Ut M with 2• winning lk lell (lour.__, llONTit RAC£ 170 y.,-<h Por 01.19 (Wllf'd) 10 10 4.40 c.eo O•ndy Duck CCllawall 11 20 1.20 Star lnwttmenl ( P.,une) • J.40 4'1so rec.4: W-rflll Rocll,et, Mella A Bid, l'lelot. 211eny, JOMOO, Hai•nllVft'91'11. Time 4121. NUtTN •t.el • ..Oyards SI• h (~· •IO l 60 3.00 UH·ErlN l'llfttl car-•) 3 eo 4.00 UH· Tiie 8clmO IWerdl • 00 4.IO Allo reced Nellva Gypsy, ~ Oei>ot, LOtse Soul OH~ lor MCO<MI. Tl-:22.12. $2 IXACTA !WI oeld$17MI U IXACTA IMI peld U4 20 Santa Anita l"alOAY'l alSULTS , .... .,..,..,, .... .-a,..,_.1,.1 ,..ST !UICI. 4tur~ 'l Swlrett.e !..,_) 70 00 23.C) IJA l'ortv W•ttt<Btedl.I !LOO Ull Ducllels Tlfte CMcC...ronl •-• Time: 1;1~ Alto rec•d: 8elllrhl•, lmo1an1y1ulf, llunlln Ptlll, M•rllel Ho1tau, Anlle't l'rlnou. '411tut•llr Good, Hello Hawlntta. EN P~ACTICINO, WOA...C. OCC:AS\ONAl...t..Y ON EN8UP.1NG ,..,..,._.,.. you MA\N,.AIN PAll'TTY MUCH 'THE SAMIL AMOUNT Ofll ' a~IP PP.&•&UAIE INTO THI£ \ FO\..l.OW-,.MAOUOH Ae 'IOU A,.._.ao tN TMIE ~C\o<8WINO. "-Y'I HeMy Cllblllel Tlftlt 11 ... l,IS. IUM r~ecl 0tNv 0. ltwM OM .... a-, Ow OIW. Den, JellrntY AIWM N OAl~V OOU"-1 It SI .-Mi., .... TMl•O llACa. • '"''°"91 .. ttMWtlll ...... IA...,lltNlll 1' IO II to .. JO LMe AWot•le (McHar0119) • :IO uo ......... Gem 11111111•1 uo Tlmt1 1:1a.i1s Al .. ttnd· Roerlnt Jel, l'l"t -lne, All 111<11111.,,., Rad VOie-, "•IH IO G.......,, O~'t c:-1, 0-.. _.., Tl.,.I ,04) •'fN a AC I . t lwlefllt '°eACY I 0 IMc.H...-1 t 40 • 00 ,_ .. "9¥• .,_Con.it•) IO IO S 40 '-"el tilt ltlMll I Pl11tayl J.40 Time: 1: IJ 4/S Alat r•od. H Two Oh, Crntm.-one C:OUnttH, AollalMrHs, Roya Curle, P......,.. Aolo. '°''™ "ACll. I 111• m lt.• Allll1.1r-IGuarr•I tJ 00 5.40 •IO Tllre• a111 co.1-..seyel 4 JO .. oo Oo90 IVe ..... _aJ • 00 Time I 471/S Alto r.UO Ralw a Kid, Perry CM>ln, Golden \T••-. Prior Aooro~el, Maater J-. OIMitoatad Qpller U IXACTA ( .. 11 peld "41.SO SIXTH "ACI!. •\11 l1.1r1oft9& Talaprlty (Mc:Her-) 11 00 7 .Oo S.00 Pall .. lr ICaslMladlll • 00 >JO CMnca to RUtl CLillNm> s.eo Time 1 203/S Alto recad Fl•I oio. ,,. Imp, L_.e. &Old PeUM, Enlerara SlllEHTH ltACE. •tlMIDnO\ Lari• I PlnUyl 11 00 • 00 1.0 Cn..o ~-l!iMem•katl 2 IO 2.«I Homa Toro> 300 Time 14/S Aho reced· Anaoamu, F•tlurlno, Pa<"4tna, So,.,.. Bebe lJ •XACTA IH I t>ald "4 M> U ~It 51X IS.1+ .. ~S) paid \19 ... 40 wllll lli'wlMing ll<k•Cs (llwa hot1M) U Pi<lo SI• conSOlaCIOI> INllO Ult.IC> wllll 121 I wln11lno lick.els (!our '-M•I '1 Pick Sb Kr ate II pool peld \!St 00 wlln llvt wlMlng llck•h (tllr" norsas ano • .cratclll !EIGHTH RACI. 1 lurl0"9• Noll'> 8rlquettt IM<Carronl 1 00 4 IO 3.«I 8annoOburn ISll>llle) 9 to S.«I Bff a Scout ILlpMmJ 3.«I Time t 2HIS Atso r•ced Outl•w Wom•n, H•llve Ptundar 8alle1omane f V Sari>. Rosle Doon NINTH llACE. I 111• moles Fabulous Reason I Ga II II-) Stlngl1191y (Guarr•t Calab0ft9a IV•IMt..e••I Time. l.~71/S 3310 1) 10 •·«> U IO 6.IO J.O Atso rece<I MulllQan Slew, 8rlo111-11. fu\C•n 1<nl9n1. Con\er••ClonlSI, Slft96_.e River U E XACTA 13-&J o.t•d llt2 SO Att•.-nc• 16,646 NHL CAM1"91LLCON'°lalNCI SfftytM Dl•lslell W LT G'° GA ..... Edrnonton Vanc:ouvw Cel Cal911<V ICl .. 1 Colorado Uttt211~St 13 " I 137 143 )4 n ,. 1 1so m n IJ JI l ls.I 115 2' • n • 1oc 111 1• Hwrl1 Dlwlsl• St Louil Mlnnes«a c111ceeo WI 11111 t11t9 TorOlllO 0.lrell .. 17 4 "' 153 C) U II 12 1J1 Ill «I 14 ,. • ,.. 1'1 17 ll II I 140 111 3' 11 17 9 IU 111 ll 10 22 • 121 ,., • WALQ <:Oft .. lalNCI l"llb1GOMIM9 NV 1"'9ndWl ll II S Ito 131 41 l"tlll....,• n II 1 1.U ta 45 I'll~ 1' U t 1'3 ICJ • NV ....... , U 17 5 Ut 1• lS w Mlltrltll°" 10 u , lJt i.o n ................. Meftt,...I ID I • m ....... 12 ti',. 141ffelo • ti • •• Oue9K It U S IC ~ IO It. 1a ut. --lncl.-ct ,....,...tarea ......... ~ ... T ...... 1._ c .... ,., .. ..... llllffe IO M °""'9C Nva...,..o11-. .... 1 Cllk ... "1 HY Isl.,,_,, loltoft•~ Han--•t Plt1U1ur91\ Ml,_. .. Toroflto V.,<_ et W..,.."9fon Plllledlll!Na at SL Louis Del'°" •• Goto<edo Austrattan Open , .. ,......,,..., CIW,.....,...Sl ..... , .... Ill e t17 .. ttl,A ,,, " Henk Pli..tw def Kim Werwl<k, ._,, '"4, t •. t 3; St••• Denton dal Slltomo GllO\Caln, 6-l, U , 1•. 6..0 Sun City Challenge latS-Clty, ..,.._tlW-l Sewa 8•11--,....._,,, Jack Nklll-10.70-t«I JOflflny Miii• 72..._140 Lff Tre\'ffto 10·74-IM Gar., Pie.,.. 11>-n-111 COl.OaAOO Ar•,....._... -41 ~.I 111<11 -; OOWder, l'Kkell ,..,.. A..-" ......... -" depth; t In( ... new; IHKllMl.,_.,,wllldHCllN. A .... ,._....._ -3'c19t>ltl; J lnch91,_; peclllld_.... ••tttt-•11. -JI dePtll; ' lndle• -; oowd9r. 11«lllld' powder ... ,._ .. -41 deptll; J lnclle1 ,_; ,._...,, ....... ~. .. _ c.--.... ; t ..... -· --., ....... ~. •wt .... -sa MCltll; , inCMI -· ....... P«k.0......, . lf'IK ......... -4'~;TMW;......,, 114Klo .. ,...,, RI 8,....,,_-11.,..,..,; o new;~ --.,, .. , ~ .> • NBA WHTlaN COM .. lalMCI "' l"ecllkDlwllleot w L Pct. 01 Lell•n ,, 1 114 Seattle II 10 E '"' Golden S~ia •I " • P-nla 17 ,, • .... ti.,.., " IJ UJ 7 s.no•-I JI tSO ISV. ~., ...... w L Pct. GI San Antonio " ' .,, Denver " IS ..., s .... Hou a Ion 12 II 400 I IUllWICll'( II ,, M7 • Ulah 10 " MS tv. Oallu j,_12 241 12\'o l!ASTlaN CC*'°lalNCll "'t&MtkDI ........ w L PcL o• Pllll•clelillMa 1l • m BotlOll 11 1 ,,. I NewVorll 15 1j !iOO ..... w, .. ,.lnvtoo> It 1• ,,. '°"' MewJarwy II II m ll c-ralDl•ltl• Mllwa11kM JI ,,, lndlane .. " m 5\f> Oelroil I) ,, .,,, 1 .... Allan!a n ,. 42' . .,, Cllkego n II 400 t\.<t , ...... net • n 107 IS .. ,.......Sc_ Pllll~e 120, Por11-IOS , Golden St.U 11.S, IC-City tJ T ........ 10.- Haw JarMy at AllWll• We1ll"'91on et llldlena ·~::::'r~W.'!:'S · ~-Oen•ar et S.. Antonio Mllw-•atCllk-P111ie.1111>1eat Ut.el\ Seettla .. Plooeftlll Ho...lloft .. S.. Ola9o oe11e1 ••Go!-. s1 ... NBA E11t AU·1t1r votH Tiie lettit tot.ell as of T .. ldey In tlla vollno lor s!Mllng POsillons lor Illa Enlam :onlarence In IN 1"1 NBA All-ttar .--. to be played .. Illa 8yrna Me-wlend~ ,. ... In East R-rlord. N J Oft s..ndey, .1•n l\ IASTlaNCOtol••alMCI ,,__ Jullu1 IEntfftg, Pllll-lpllla, Ul,I», L•rry Bird, Boll.Oft. 117.th. J°"n 0.-, Alla,,la, n .7M; o.tl R_,,.,t.kl, Atlenta. n,2•; -·· 11o1too1. sum ~ D•rrtl Oewtl .... PNle0tl9N•. l21,30f. Artl• GMmere, CftlUOO, ... ISi; Tr• Rolllns, Atlen1•, Jt,'17; 8oO L.enlar. MllwOl.lllH, ,.,177; .. _, P.,.,1111, Boston, '9,• o..No lslafl '-• o.troll, 111,m _R ..... T ... ul, Olk.ep, i•,'°'5; H•la ArClllti.ld, l••lofl, t7,07J; Me1,1rlce Cllaakt, Plllladelofll•, n ,7U. Rlcllay Sol>erl, Cltk-U,SU. COLLEGE SoCal Colleae 110, Nortttl1nd 74 •o•TMLA..& -l'r•nsev •. Groh 4, Wllll•rns 14, Mich 4. OI_, II, Pltlel •• Gulla C, OHll a, Onw I. Toi.all· 31 0.0 14 S.C:ALC«.L.101 -R-n• 10, CM-t, Porr .. 21, MllntnMft 4, Pt1.1lmar J, R-• 10, Rocha ... Corsi It, Wiiton I R-lcll • Tolall '7 1 .. 11110. Hallll-SoC.el Colleve. S1 • Total fouls Nortlll-t•. SoCel Collave tO Fowled OU1. Wllllams CNor1111,nc11 ; Tecllnlcel IOlll· C~h Biel 1Nor1111.,..,J College rating• NCAA bllllSION 11 1. Cat Poly !St.OJ Ill •• l60 7..0 ,. J Vlr9l11la Union 3 WrltfllSt. 4 N or1.11 Oeloou M 111 10.1 121 S C•IS11Mor'l"'ld091 • Se<rd HMrt, C-.. 7 teemucll.v ~Y., I Ol1lrklol ~ • AlbMY St. o.. 10.Netlr~ M 13 t-1 n 7.0 ,. 7.J .. 1..0 ... .. , tO 4.1 SS 1..0 S2 •.O lO S.0 '5 s.o .. II Monmoutll, N .J. 12. Md·B•Hlmore 13. Cllayney SI. Pe. u 59< 1""'9kl. Mas. U Cl•rloft St. P•. UCI 1tatla1lc:a IC h In MAlllll9 .. -., Wll4.iCIDft a.., McOoNtkl Rainer Wulf lk>l>Tllorl'llOfl L90llerd Jalwtton teawln F1.1ttar Granl Taylor Jonn eer1tev Rl<k Clecclo M•rlo 5'1fnll C1.1rtl1 Croaslrt Teuh • l"O " P'n ,..,. II IU M ll4 11.l 11 12 14 ltO MA 11 SI :IO 13' ltA 11 ll " ., ... 10 11 12 41 4.1 II JO I 47 4.l 11 11 lltU t II t M U 10 • 10 21 2.1 s s I 11 2.2 SOJJG.4 4 I 0 t U 11 19$ '" Ill .... ~•Y tran1act1on1 MOCK•V ........ ... ...., ........ COLO .. AOO ROCKIES -P\lr<llasecl U. contreclt of Ke•ln M••wall end Jim Dobson. forw•rda, from tlla Mlnnuot• North StAln. VANCOVVEA CAHUCKS -Att ....... Jerry lllltler, IPn!lllrd, to 0•11., of ""' Ce11tr•t Hlek•'i lM41W. "ec:•ll .. GetY l..W\11, cell, .... ff .... Dell• . COU.1•• SOUTH CAaOt.lNA -A-llCecl ... ~~11.iof Dal• I-. •llllttMt,_...11 Cot(ll, '° ... may 10111 T••u A&M .. dtlenalw• coordln.etcw. A1111•1.1MM Ille rHl111atlet1 tf "•"' "enOfll, women'• lllt11Mi1N41 c-.11. HOW SWEET IT IS P<.•nn State •split <.'Ocl l.r<."gg Garnt~ teap~· into-ttw nrms of tl'ammatl' ~Tik<.· :\1<.•acll· al't<.-r catching <.1 Todd Blackll'dgc bomb fo1 il tou('hd<m n a~ainst L'S(" in Fu.•st a BO\d Thur'>d<t~ The :'1:111 ~111~ 1.1011-.; roll<.•d to a 26· 10 '1eton From Page C1 TROJANS BL-TZED • •• • poor field position and mistakes for the Trojans. USC began on its 20, 20, 20, 9, 3, 21 and 30. and the Penn State 46. What the Trojans got out of it developed into two Jost fumbles. two interceptions and four punts. Still, USC was within range of Penn Stale in the fourth quarter despite trailing by 16 The Trojans marched for one o{ the few times. moving from their 13 It wasn't a fluke. Both teams were healthy and I think we could have beaten anyone today. -Joe P•terno to the Penn Stale 9-yard line before Mazur was sacked twice to take the TroJans out of contention. "I thought the game slipped away when we didn't score at that point," said Robinson. •·Penn State did exactly what we thought they'd do," said Mazur. "It just wasn't ou r day. I can't explain why we were ineffective." WHEN THE final stats were totaled, the Nittany Lions had rambfed for 393 yards running and passing, 131 more than use. Blackled&e completed 11 of 24 for 175 yards and the Penn State receivers constantly had the USC comerbacks beaten The big pass play of the day was a 52-yard strike from Blackledge to Gregg Garrity with 2:15 spent in the second period, snapping a 7.7 game and pushing the Easterners into command for good The play culminated the 70-yard march as Blackledge uncorked his deep pass and as Garrity caught it, defensive back Joey Browner went down. Warner was running well with Penn State's ability to strike through the air complementing him, while Allen , the Trojans' only hope, was being stacked up because of the lack of a deep aeriaJ attack. THE ONLY deep threat was Sallabury and he s~nt most of tbe game, as be did durin1 most or the sea.son, on the 11delines. Althou1h the Trojans had ataved otr what would have been , a crlppllng blow by boldin1 Penn State inches away at the end of the second period, it didn't take the Nlttany [Jons lOQI to put it out of reach In the tblrd quarter. Warner ran the final 21 yards on a pitChout around his riaht slde to complete an 80-yard march and with Just 2:42 cooe ln the second half lt was 2•· 1 and the l'rc>Jans were obvloualy ln deep t""-lble. '!It wu Just a baalc pttcb and I tMhit them to tbe etdtllnes, •· aai• Wamer. "That first one (the 17-yard dub in the nm quarter> came ao qulu I had lO • get 1t out or my mind " IT WAS A GAME or penalties and mistakes -but in lhe final analysis the Trojans lost possession by rumbles and interceptions only one more than Penn State and each team was socked with seven penalties. Those stats evened eut -the difference was USC's inability to put up an offensive thrust with any meat to it. Each entered with a 9·2 record, each was nationally ranked. But it was Penn State which came with a point to prove and that intangible proved lethal to Trojan hopes "It seemed everywhere we w e nt," said Penn State linebacker Chet Parlavecchio, .. we had something lo prove. "BUT WE CAME in here feeling we're the No . I team In the country. Hey, I'm tired of <weak> schedules backing teams into the national championship " Parlavecchio's coach , Joe Paterno, concurred. "I said it before this game as played that the winner should be No. 1 We beat a great team today and it wa s ver y convincing. ''ll wasn't a fluke. Both teams were healthy and I think we could have beaten anyone today. "We knew the most physical team takes over games and we had not played anyone stronger or more durable than ourselves. We felt comfortable if It came down Lo the final minutes we would win." ·' l thought we had to pass effectively early," said Robinson . ."'and we didn't do it.·· Was Penn State's third touchdown C24·7) at the outset of the third quarter the turning point? Robinson said no. "We didn't die, our defense kept playing hard. But Penn State had the optimum field position to attack us." All·American guard Ray Foster, his hulking 6 -4, 265-pound frame still drif P~ with s weat in the Tro ans dressing quarters, summed up his teammates' perspective as well as any when he said. "We just came up a loser." Vanguards roll, 110-74 Southern California College romped to its seventh strai&ht victory behlnd 28 points by Rick Porras Thursday nl1htt as the Vanguards toppled visiting Northland College of Wiacionain, 110-74. SOCal College rolled to a S'7..a8 halftime lead beb.ind the play ol Porras and Dave Coral, who scored 19 points for th• 1ame. Coral Wll playlDI hie Clr1l 1ame for the Van1uard1. He's a tran,rer from BJola. sec ia now 9·2 for th• atMOD and reaume. p~at Tuesday nllht. halUnl LaVeme. "Couldn't we give it a -good drink of water and leave it up for a couple more days?" "Princess. I don't need 1 goalie." Mi\RMt\Dl:KE . by Brad Anderson Hank Ketchum .. "What about your New Year's resolution to get home at a decent hour?" Jt:DGE P ..\RKER .. ---m:l~~St*;;;;'5~51CnK AA;;N;i)"(INCJ.Hu;•:tlt Wi:cc>N6' 5t-IE CALLED F~M 5PENCER <;000 MO~IN6 5AM' 00 TO WQAA• ~IC'4il °' FARMS. HAS MEN THERE 51NCE FM· ' LINOA MAY OREE~ THIRTY ..• AND FEElfi (;f(EAT' ~lD eE~ YOl' MAKE THAT DfCl5'0N, LET ME ~ TEU YOU AeOUT A cAu .. Flii.OM ~' I • CAU.fO 0~16HT Llt\E YOU TO JOIN ___ .......,. ANO EARLY.' ~FOR WNQt. C":Jf'.fAT! I ~!(;KT IF YOO' RE FREE! .IU6T"(:>O IT.' 13 .. -Frome'' .. .,.. t70M• .c-cri .... .,.. •a.mic.i . db 10Tledup 71 Gemtllrlg 9'lnt fORTOHAff LV I I'M &UC~ A 6WELL FELLOW I HAV£NT TlfE MEAR'f TO DENV MV5ELF ANVTMING I IX'H1T UNOWT'AHP HOW YOU 81~DS STAV WAAM IN lME WIMTEfC ... Orange Coat DAILY PfLOT/Saturday. January 2, 1982 Cf TlJM•LE•EEDI SIGNAL-INe OUR AVVMCE SC0011' by Tom K. Ryan v /· :z "' ............ -1912 SHOE I SURE . TOLD THEM HOW AWFUL ~ y TURN ON TV--- THAT'LL CHEER YOU UP n-4EY WERE ,.__ _ __. . 14-141!:~~~ .tT~J:D A~OT~Ef< WlltJN KU: o...t ~r by Gus Arriola 'IE.~, -il!h! t tt:.>JCNJ I YOU~ 61\/E UP P.A~U:6 ~A 6PE.1.J.f ~f:IE' ~ ~ Pft..E;AMS Ao . Gt:TTllJ0- 10 YO.Jf • ..,.....,....,..._ __ .. ~~H Ft'NKl' •tN9'EaBEAN by Tom Bat1uk 1Hl.S NEXT A.DA"f O'.WTRIN5 ~ n£Q AAE ~IN& 1H€ ~ 600.)L. QUE.EN 10 ~ ! ANO HEK CCORT ! A\tbouih l h~e sent ~ '\rl'l\tat\Of\S fl'ZU 800 8 mcN\e, t bas come t.o Jn"f ~ 'iO" h'cWe re4el' re5lXJnded. by Kevin Fagan ~\so, tbtre \s a rumor on, ~e\l... lt.'s 'fOOr ~around college, life. tl\at 'IOIJ &e c.1Jrrent\~ ~ dat.\~ that f Vl"f\'i weatherman on chanre\ l 13. • 1 ... I by George Lemont exceP-r NOW OUR MON"T'"HL.Y e>ANANA e1L.L. is oveR Ftve HUNc:>ReP e>UCKS.' Just TWO MAIN PARTS for 0111 MW-easiest llCMt em! Note the llM hnes. t11rnbtclt. 1ntefest- tlloott OM or two Qlkn loll& or ~ lllMs.. Send, SM! Prtnttd Plltem 9463: Misses Sizes 8, 10. 12. 14. 16. 18. 20. Slli 12 (bust 34) f•lles 24 yards 60.inch labrie. SIM U.11 lw .ti,....,.. W.50ttwlldl ..... ... =.~ ....... s.4- ,.... .... 412. l>eltr .... ~ %12·1-~h."" '"' "' 11111 '"" MllE. AOOllSS. ZIP, iti 114 mu llUll•I. Wor~n1W01111n1Looksmatt,be 4llllrt. dms for less-ww a w1fd. robe with our NEW FALl-WINTEll PAmRN CATALOG Coupon b Free $2 patttfn 1nsidt-you1 cholet! Send S 1 50 AU CWT IOOllS •• SZ.00 9Cll l ~11 Diis -a.tti. :m= =QI· lJO. ...... SimJl.5' Books and Catalol-add sec , uch IOI PoStJce and handhna Jumper or Dress! Orang41 Coat DAILY PILOT/8awrch1y. January 2, 1182 ... - Officials pTay for lots of rain this winter MIAMI (AP> -In ·a 1tate where natural di1a1ttr 11 uaoelated wltb 1udden·•triklni tiurricanea, what could prove '-9 tMt Florid.a'• 'WOflt dry 1pell h .. bffn bulktini. day by day, for 11 monU.. Aa 1111 o..,e to an eod, water offlelal1 were prayln1 for a •OHY lvlnter t.o offaet a lack cl water that eoulct brin1 ma,Joc problelDI next year. lllam.l hasn't bad a 1l1nitlcant ralbfall llnce Nov. 11 -Just .JJ loch . Lake Okoocboboe , aoutbem Florida'• backup water 1upply, la at an all-time low, 3.3 feet 'below normal. Tbe Apal~cblcola River ln tho Panhandle ii ao low that bar1os, exeopt for one sha llow paddlewbeol, haven't moved up the river alnce summer. · "What we're lookinl for la a really I08IY, outy, wet, rainy winter," said Jim Whalen, a •Pokeaman for tho Southwest Florida Water Manaaoment District. It includes Tampa, St. Pelersbqr1 and other resort cfUea wb~re winter resident.a put extra demand on low water , reserves. u ...... PUBLISHER POSES -Robert It. Brown, editor and publisher of Soldier of Fortune magUine, is pictured with three members of the Laos Uberation Army at a .base camp in Laos. T~ appears on the cover of the current issue of Soldier of Fortul\'emagizlne.: $100,000 offered. to communist defector BOULDER, Colo. CAP) -If you are a communist pilot wi..Uing to fiy to the West from Afghanistan, Laos or Cambodia with a cargo of deadly biolo1ical weapons -Robert K. Brown has a deal for you. In the January issue of Soldier or Fortune, Brown, the magazine's 49-year-~d editor and publisher, is offering a $100,000 r.eward. payable in gold or any other currency, to a willing defector. Brown says it's bis way of 1ett.i.DI the United Nations to "admit that communist forces have employed lethal chemical and·or bloloaicaJ weapons" in Southeast Asia. The bounty is just the lat~t of the controversial magaaine'a forays on the dark side o r advocacy journalis m. Two years ago, Soldier of Fortune offered $1(),000 for informa\ion leading to the capture of deposed Ugandan 'President Jdi Amin. It also started an "Afghan Freedom Fighters Fund" for the anti-Soviet resistance in that country. "We see ourselves as more than journalist.$,," s aid Brown, twisting the tiger's--tooth hanging from bis neck. "We do more than simply report what occurs. We get involved. We want to help the West in any way we can." Brown makes no bones about wbich'side he's on. His magazine is unabas hedly devoted to "the proressionaJ adventurer," a phrase jcritics translate as armed mercenari,es. Soldier of Fortune bas been targeted by a Colorado citiuns lfOUP for allegedly violating federal law by ille1ally recruiting merc~naries lo fight in foreign countries -an offense punishable by a $1,000 fine, a 3-year prison term or both. But the Justice Department said It investigated the char1e and could find nothing wrong. ··Unsubstantiated allegations balderdash!" say;s Brown. "I don't agree with the law agaln.st ~rulting mercenaries, but I'm not going lo violate it and get free room and board at prison." Yet Brown doesn't deny having 'distributed information on bow to join a foreign force -such as that of the Sultan of Oman or the Rhodesian security forces -nor havina referred numerous Inquiries about "mere" employment to known , recruiters in the United States and abroad. "I'm of the theory that, well, better dead than red," be says in admittlng sympathy for a variety of mercenary causes. "Ono man's terrorist -or mercenary -is another man's freedom fighter." Advertisement.I in the masasine tout the latest ln do-it-yoQnelf pJastlc exploalves, automatic weapom and Italian stilettos. Invitations to "high-risk employment" and from individuals who claim they'll do "anyt.b.lq for the ritht price" tlll the clasliftecf JleCllon. ''Those ad, appear in otber publications," 1ay1 Brown , 1hru11in1biamuscular1bouldeii. He says Soldier Of Fon.me bu rejedted adl from neo-N.si aroaPI and the lriab )\epubllcan Army. A typical ma1uiae cover featurea a pbotosrapb of buman atulll, la tb1I caae tbo1e of Cambodian commwmta. Brown's leathery face wrink.I lnto a ~ untie: "TMJ were oa tbe wron,s aide... . Tbe eo•er of tbe current l11ue featurw Brown bimaelt, cir 111td lJJ comlaat fMIPMS ... ......._ • the Laotian lUdlcape wttb a °'1DIM a11awt rtfle ln b1i bandl. BeblM t.lm l&Uilnc · ,rltb rl011 at tbe =:~.:.· Uaree aDtl•COllUQaiet lt ..... tDwoft. ODoeab••••....._8.liilir of r--.1111trlla.ml."Ai .. • ........ 1111 ···==. .. s: ~·,........°' . • them in their 20s and 30s, male, of above-average Income , and gun-owners. "We're obviously lookinJ al the macho male," says Brown, who has a rugged look with gray, closely cropped hair and a broad moustache that still bolds a hint of re<t. Sitting ift an omce cluttered with badges, boolcs and posters, attestlJ11 to bis extensive paramilitary and military background, Brown ls al ease fielding questions, ht.rt a trifle embarrassed when bis mother, who lives in town, interrupts the interview t.o place a bag of chocolate chip cooties on bis cluttered desk. His magazine -for . all its· "We want to help . . . . anytJXLy we can." fascination with "uns and violence -is apparently taken Aeriously by some.· The official Soviet news asency Tass criticized it for "openly patroniziha hired assassins and their recruiUna agents," while a radio station in Botswana hinted that the magazine was somehow behind the recent tailed coup attempt in the Seychelles Islands. Brown dismisses the Seychelles allegation ... lf it bad been us," he says, "we wouldn't have failed." In the meantime, the magazine says it has obtained three samples of deadly toxins al a Tbai refugee camp and tumed them over to Rep. Jim Leach, R-lowa, who aave them t.o the Defense Department for tesUna. Brown claims the toxins were dropped by a Soviet bomber in April. The United Nations was interested, but found the evidence ·'inconclusive.'' Nevertheless, earlier this month, "I'm of the theory . . better qead than red." the U.S. House unanlmoualy passed an amendment to the 1982 Foreip Aid Bill introduced by Leach that condemns the uae of biochemical weapons by Soviet-backed Communist forces in lndochlna and Af1hanlstan. ··Without tbe involvement and concern of croups Jike So&clier of Fortune, J'in convinced thl1 lane 1tUI would be overlooked," Leacb saW. from his Washington of.nee. "ID euonce, they're dolnc wh'at the CIA should bave been doing. "I've never overly identlfted with the maaazlne'S )M!i:Uli&r orientation,•• be added. "But my bat's off to them tn UU. cue. Tbey;re really I'* one 1lde of U.. American system. • F o'nnula-fed preemie._ eyed ·'I don 'l see any panic situation developing," said Whalen, biat added Uaat nolhlng less tbaD a "surplus rain" thla winter will crack the dry spell. , Normal rainfall won't be adequate t.o· replenilh weUfields, state ofticJala say. Ironlcally, Florida bas one ol the natioo'1 largest fresh-water supplies, with some 10,000 miles of rivers and streams, 7,000 lakes, and sprtnis that produce seven billion gallon.a a day - pl us a porous underlyin1 found.-tiqn~~tlmated to bold 1.()0 times Uie amount of waler in Hoover Pam;s Lake Mead. However, while most of the water ls in rural sections of north Florida, the vast majority of people in the nation's fast.est-growing state. are on the southern coasts. The state's population bas almost doubled since tbe drought of 1971, considered the worst in Florida blst.ory. Tbe water supply hasn't. ''Our backup system is at an aU-Ume record low for lhia time of year," said John Wodraska, assistant direct.or of the South Florida Water Manaeement District, which includes the populous southeast coast. "The possibillty is for the most serious drought in the history of Florida." " Residents saw the effects of droupt this put year. Sinkholes opened up acl'OIS central Florida, including one ln Winter Park that (Ulped a home and several sporb cars. Thousands of fisb died as water dlaappeared from s~ of the st. Johns River. Wudfires raged through dried-out forests, brush and muck. ............ DAY EVERGLADES -Lake Okeechobee in Florida is al an all time low, 3.3 feet below normal, and conditions such as existed in May 1981 will be seen again throughout the Everglades unless the state gets rain. Farmers reported multimillion-dollar losses, and faced the new year with lower levels in ponds and c4nals needed for irrigating crops and watering cattle. RestrictioM such as limited lawn~sprinkling were ordered or recommended in three of the state's water management districts. Residents of 10 counties oo the northeast Florida coast are still living under a 6-month-old order to 'teduca lawll sprietrl~. showers. laundries. or other ovepaJJ water UH by 15 percent. If the 1982 ratnfall doesn't return to normal, the effeet.t . could be traumatic : severe losses for the tourilm and agriculture industries that are the state's top two money-makers, dead wildlife, burned-out parks, ruined sport -flshi~c . water-use restrictions, fires worse than those or 1981, undrinkable water for south Florida. Experts say a drouebt can probably be avoided if the 1.982 rainfall returns lo normal. "If you cry 'wolf' -if we start saying ·water shortage, water shortage' now ," said Noel Risnychok, a National Weather Service meteorologist, "then wben indeed there may be happen to be. one, people will say, 'We had to conserve water wben it wasn't necessary '·~" Risnychok said that wh the rain gau1e at the Illa i International Airport shows a deficit for the year of 7.9 lnchea, in nearby Fort Lauderdale, rainfall ia about 10 inc.bes above normal. Orchid man's name known far and-wide "II you go over a 40-year period', you'U see that seven or eight inches ls not terribly abnormal. U we were down lSor 20 inches it would meet our definition of drought for the year." However, water-management officials are worried about depleted reservoirs that would hold the key to s urviving a major drought. South Florida bas entered its annual dry season, which normally lasts from about November t.o May. However ln 1981 , the rainy season started late, not until June. WARREN GROVE, N.J . <AP) -Bill Smith got a midnight call several months ago from Chicago. The caller s aid someone there bad heard of Smith, and that be might want to deal. The caller said he bad "scored" tbroueh an "African connection" and could let Smith have some of the goods on an upcoming trip to tbe Jersey Shore. The price sounded good to Smith, and the deal went down. · Such ii the drama of dealing in the often secret and exotic world ol the orchid. The intrigue ls especially appropriate for A. William Smith, who discovered his profession in a storybook fashion. A chUd genius swayed by the beat ceneration, Smith made bis fint major career decision by tu.rntnc down a scholarship to an Ivy Leaiue colleae because he thousht it would be too restrictive. Ile attended Swarthmore Collet• in Pennsylvania, and f!'aduated trom Glassboro St.ate CoUece before be moved lnto a 101 cabln deep ln the Pine1aodl Qf N•w Jersey near!)' 20 years ago. Ht tried bil bad at 4rtwork and other craft• and i tarted 1row1n1 ve1efablea for bis family.1'ben be met an old man ...,. tbe WOoda who told b1m about ao..r. -and lei\ bim 1pellbcMaract wlth an e11ay • orehJdl: ,.. • SIDIU., 41, built a 1reaboule that was expulded leto two mucb lar1er P'M ... OUIH on the bOrder of tbt PtHlaada core rtllC>OO ~ ~oat remote and ~~~-of U.e nst GI llirf, plMI iilid ...... 8111 Smith bad ••foud tdidel ... Ail ..., webld lottr'I tl'Oll •tu •11 • HawaU Md .. ~ ............ ... . ... •' !' .,., ,.,.. . th 1 f'1l lade~ ....... "" .. "I_. wold frhlil DD'* llMI tMi 8Dll. nowt.a Uall I Last summer, Gov. Bob Graham authorized the use ol state funds t.o seed clouds for 45 days over the Kissimmee Baaln that serves south and central Florida. Wodraska said much more rain is needed to replenish Lake Okeechobee. "If we have a late rainy season like we did last year, we'll ha'\te a problem," be sald. "If we have a normal year, we'll be OK." Second light doubles town's total FARMINGTON, Maine (AP) -Local officials are bemoanlnc a move that strikes at the heart of smaU-t.owu America. The state is plannlna t.o double tbe number of traffic alpall lD this town overnlJht. Instead of one lilht, Fuminat.on will bave two. "t.bate to see it come,'' said To"1i Musqer Alan Gove. "l think one's plenty.'' There has been a U1bt at Broadway and Kam 1lnce at ltut the lM>a. But DOW, U.S. l aad other hl1hwaya in tbl• t'f anklln County toft of 10,000 p•ople are bearlDI . ever-lncreallnl loada ol traftk from toun.ts headlne to tM Su1arloaf and Saddl•b•ck moantalnl aDd other neldoli ... way ... ''Tb"e tramc ~ laa" determlMd that lt'• •Mded." 00Yt llld OI tM l1lbt deillDld CLASSIFIED ~!!~M · s.u.5111 • IMDflf UU a.w.i ~:. ~ D,..,.. e=:t'!,, ==-==-=eta:, ... ....... s.11 ...... ==--.-. .... IOI. mm ~--::. .. ~":'Sala ...... ~ ~~ i=.":k.0::.:: ~ .. =<; ~ .... ,., .. ,". ...... l!lter\..ft«t ~c:.~ ... °"'"** ..... :::r=t-co.... .... c::,=:c- t Hit 11".a Meller. All real tatate ad. vtrtlud In tbia ~II aobjtd. to the rederal rair "°'*'· Inc Act ol 1118 •hich n t ea lt IUe,al to ad- vstlae ''any prefertnce, llmltatlon, or di•· cJimiAatiee baaed on race, color, rell&ion, :: aa._ or natlooaJ ori1in, •• or an lnteat.loo to make :: any 1ueb preference, J• llmltatlon1 or dis· :.: crfmimt.lon. • I• -•• 1'bia newspaper will not : bowinaly accept any -advertlslng for real : .tale 1Rlc.b la ln viol•· -ticm ol tbe l.n. = 1;::=~=~~~;;;;;; IJfAlS =~ 1• 9llOIS: A .. _...,. -...... 1.iol = ~Old ...... 0 a -""· -~=r! -0 = ... ., J9 -r ---=--~ : ,.. .TM =~ = MIL PILOT•-• 411>1:.,_ = ~ ,.. .... firlt .,.. '"''"' 1.111 -IKorrtd f 11trtlo• ==-·~ -~ ---= _,. =-~ = i-------· v .. -....... -............ = tors. &~.:..·.. ~ ...................... . ............. -,_....., =..... 1002 =::..... -••••••••••••••••••••••• ... --....... c:...ao. llSMSS, !WEST· I New ~too to 2JSOO sq. ft. Bl, fllCAMCE w/beach & main bay • =~.::; :: vie•s. E1ten.si~e -·:r.:,:, •u cuatom upfrades m tile =-~ : •oak. 325 ,000 t o :=::.::;.-:: : ~.000. MooriJlf avail. ._DtDITS. ,. 0.-Wf!!!'-1·5 PBSllAlS & 1115 W. ~.~ .. LISl&rMt I mmsor ·5519 ..__.. ~· r:;:-_ I = YACAMT ~~ 11111 IMTHE ILUFFS Sone1Cholle• !: FanlUtic terms-owner ~..... SflYIC[S "'"' will carry at 13.5~ or wiU cmsider lease op- -Uon! Highly uparaded Trina model. Oak plank· Ina and wood abutters. l:: New carpet! Only ,.. Sl48,llOO. Call 67s.8550 i fttiil1 5 J,7!!'!,~'!!~ Br : condo. Li nda , act = 631-12116 --"" .. ----5 New Pririe Dress -------·-Mn... --. .• lflMf:<illl, --....... ---Cll•ttt< - -..s.i --....o.... -____ .,... ----... -TUllSltlT A TIOll ::: ' , ... .... "" tt• 1111 -... -.. ---•11 ---,,. "" -llJI '"' rne 1111 flJI tTll -JIJJ ----~-' ,,. '18 :: 'flCf ,,. """ -,,. --= .. --trll 9257 ~~,. ...... "" ICZ!I -._,,._' 2·10 L., 1ff ,.,.i_ 11f~ marketplace~ the Orange Coast M CAMYOM CUSTOM " • . Median· incorM of Daily Pilot fomllU• ·. tzce~ $34,000 a year. Your ad rnclW1 .. the count11'1 mo1t affluent buring ·cw- di1nce. ........... w. ...................... REAl ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE ff.ft A 1ML dCHnlCT'Util. llAUTY Luxuricu Georgian Colonial on best eolf course View Site! Be.aut dulp. Abunaant ~arble & crystal & finest f am rm, billlard rm, ei,; baths. $2,l.S0,000. Call for color brochure & tinancing. Land Included. UJMOST .... ACYl I BR. 2 BA • pt HolaH Cadni the se ... bollt " A. Low Int. ~TD. Va· CO.. Wint US. •• TO COIOMA D& MAI. South oC highway. Two story. Two bedroom dollhouse In front. One bedroom unit in rear. Two car garage. $299,500. cant.•.•· iidnn, fouale by owner." 4'4-7111 ~ Twtlerock. Xlllt tlA~wlll Hillie ll~ck I .E. Ca'T7 paper. ll~ to ...-u - 16I1 WISTCUFF DI.. M.1. 01·7300 WISLIY M. TAYLOI CO .. llALTOIS Jll ls.i~ ... ·--Newly remodeled 8 bdnn1~ 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patlo5. Beam ceUlnp. X1nt value at $420,000. move.Job traaa er. .-in Ews: ('11AJl5HM91. NO Two bdrm• +-ocean AGENTS. vi~. Well maint~lned. P11Y ACY· PWS WW. this 4 Br, f eaced in. JIClOI home on• quiet cul-de-11c in Eaatalde Costa Iii•. A beaUUl\LI back Jani. fiitll COYertd patio • • c:my II.replace In Ule llvlnf r~. There'• are. Alsumable lou.a and Ill anxious seller. Only 1169,900. Ca II: mmo. JILLSrti . REALl • JUSTUSTID Baa~~~~!' on fee l anr:°' luume 1125,000 lit at t~~. 4 I.vie bdrms otua family room. E1celJent loca· tlon! Hurry. call~ THE REAL ESTATERS Ute& 1001( Wf!U 2 Br 2"41 Ba condo w/ireat amenities & ti· ~ finande1. Gree AIOe, agt 1•1221 COSTA MESA STAITB Only Sl25.000!, Aaswne 111.000 In loans at SIS2 moathly. Owner will carry. Family roorn with coiy fireplace! 3 larte bdrms. Sparkling ccndltJon! Hurry, call l73-l5i50 THE :REAL ES TATERS ME\WOIT H6TS Tur down, plans for 30110 eq ft lilouse lnc I uded. Sll0,000. Linda. agt 131-1.& JIEDIOOM STARTER-<>oty 1130,000! Woods aad streama surround this charming Costa Men garden home ntck»ed patio. 3 car prage! Sparkling pool. '1exiblet.erma. Just full· eel.Call~ THE REAL ESTATE RS A NAPPY &PIOVllOUS MEWYUI FROM BR~E•VICKIE BU>MGREN GOOD PROPERTIES NEWPORT BEACH to.moo M-IW-"Ol-IT-CIMTll. M.l; 644-4910 --~-=------~• Motivated owner 11 re· JUl'i'LEIOCK ad1 to move up!! Fa11-~ ON, eqUity ab.are, lit time ~en. 3 bd., 1 ba ... ClllY ... 000. prin. only Call 131~ Kathy a1nt. .... n·~ LADY uns '''""'-i CA.,_.TIOM COYI Spectacular harbor vlew from 4 bdrpi, 4 bath bayfront. z boat slips. S"l,<M,000. 8Y OWNER taltic buy I! S br. 2 ba, Plan 8. Move· ~ ..... U In condltloa. Close to 4'7-1 7'1 p 0 eo .. 2011 ./I Mike the moa (Qr your <'.cita ..... effarta. •~11~ ·r"" pat• pool. Auumable ·------• flnandnl. 7~· 1324 You a.re the wlnntt ol Co Illa PI et • o ff c f IM(iUSH four free tickets tl lUO) M'£•t: ruldeatlal, . TUDOI valuetothe l"9111111'P~tal, Invest· CbarmlA& b.ome on a ~ , • ..._ mtm..SWt.-Newr .. r.tr ~S..12to4 ZSIWllbotr Falls. . SpacloGI Turllerock Twnhme. ! Br, den F/R w/frplc. owe al below market rate. $295,000. Ph! 631-1899. 552-1800 A#. re¥erte 1i1 eoldweU banker with resideotial real estate 1ervicee last ll.ne la lie. lovely tree-Ii.Deel street, _..IV Sito rilht! Call Dan WaJlen· and pride of ownership ANAHEIM W !W}IU·T22 • WIST IAY AYI. Remdled, ~e new 3 bdrm.· 3 bath bayfront. Sfips for 2 lge boats. $1,'200,000. nelabborbood. 3 Bdrm, CONVENTION Iara walk ID ~1<>1$, 2 CENTER Jan. 2·10 bath, Hnny breakfast To dalm Uellet.a. call noolt, domed cellin1ed 6 I z 2 livln1 room, Iota or 42 ·5 78 • ut. 7 · charm. Only Sl04,900. ncteu must be claimed •nn by January 8, 19112 .. *** fi4Mtd:t . HELP!! .J.-11-•.11-1111.1111.1-llfll.lll!~~ lnveawr'a · seller needs L .J_1,..,.1ft.a I mortgage relief. New ~ V'f"" • vn , townhome • your's for SI0,000. clo1 in g co1t1 and <lwml.nJ3 BR Condo, 2 brokerage fee only. stories, end unit.:. pool • 535-9311 spa Call Ruth or :>teve A - , -t, ,f$,Wl,I~\ LLITATE I ~ 7'4-411-6990 --A~TORS WTSIDE PATIO HOME A separate home on 1maH fol. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, brick fireplace . ~private and clean. Owner will help finance. Sl39,SOO. Call now, 84&-7171 ti~li\1"1_ MULTIPLI CHOICE! Low Doww ,~ .. , Mo Doww P.r-.tt OrY•TtlUal NEWPORT BEACH sharp z story townhouse. 3 bdr m, 2.,., bath. fireplace, patio plus zs· BOAT SUP! SELLER WI L L LISTEN ! 128S,OOO! .... ..,,,..,. ........ •675-7060• OW.AMXIOUS Beautiful, immaculate, nicely la.ndscai>ed 4 Br borne 011 cur-de-uc. lediladSI00,000 5ploolJS rooms. View o1 ~·y~• ·~s . 11111 ..,_from proper: a1r •~ • £y . Owner·aasl1led IYOWNH ftnandng. Only 1139,500. Otean View i515]oo Cattaow.m.SJ7o -. ~41:o~:L ALLSTATE 1 ~~~~;~~% -OfferexpiruJan 31 REAL TORS 1 25 Bodes• Bay NO LEA.5EHOLD WOR· RJ ES: Lease h 11 been rmqotiat.ed and is fixed for 25 yrs. Totally re- newed Irvine Terrace J Bdrm 3 Ba home ·with family room . $349,500. cou °" mw'°"1 MAI.TOM lltlLC.......,. . c--..... 171·55 11 ,._,need to travel all o•er town to look for 1arage Mies ... you 'U find them rtlbt here in Cla111fied. To place your :1,arage Hie ad. call W-8. Call owoer 7947'J7 • COIOMA tHMLAMDS HEWUmMa 2 Bdrm and den view home with add on poten· tial. OwMt-will nnantt. eo,00000 ftt land Call for ' t.me nt. IEST IOWL llT ,,..,. $10,000 down. no loan Pl'Oblema, fut escrow. 3 bR + ram rm. 2 ba. Aak-lnl 1134..SOO. Call last. SUrfline Realty 6U-6ClllO OOLF COURSE FROM ••JIDIMS WOODlllDGE IAY ••W $109 900! Jl.9tatt111toU-ebayor Yea, lt'a lrue. Tb11 BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR l ~ . ' ' l . ·. ~ t '"' ~lb1 R&OOOO ocean in Balboa. Nicely beal.tiful, well located 3 decorated 1 bdrm .. 2 Bdrm condo will let you Custom l omes • bomelitea on private El Niguel goU coune. The last rema In Ing new homes from ... 500 to a .ooo Sita a11o emt from szeo.ooo to 1275,000. 'Ibis could be your lut chance roe a new cuato¢ overlooking t b e fairways, Special flnanclnl. Call •MU bath condo with private ,,._ ........ M_ 10'2• C.-.. M.r IOU live in fabulous Wood· suodeck. 1299.500 Try ~ --., bri"'" r ..... , 1 ..., """' lease-option. .. ... ••••••••••••••-•• ............ ••••••••••• ...,.e or Gill)' 1 .... ,..,., ZUSTOWATH i-m------•I Call for deta.i.11' your 17141 '7J.4400 • Adorable duplex that SW9 IUYI penrmaJ inspection ,,,,......... --..... ,,. lot. ::":..'"~ .:::.::'."~~ [~i]""°"~rldtc HARBOR lltn view. Owner aulat· bath with remodeled j Ruhl ed financing. $299,500. kitcben aod new paint. ... _,. ~ ... ..' Convenient central loc•· SSl-3000 lion. CalHordeuila. ~ _arra~u f'll•J,lr~lw A Division ol 642-5200 ~-' BEACHFRONI llarbor Investment Co. (!} c:or.. .. w .. 1022 ~~.; ..... !!!~ 1 'I CIR "CONDO" ....................... ~· ~000 hi Price · . ~ the nod! Look iapon R&IM~ · CM aban> 1 B ,...,,,_ · the ocean from tbas llYIME TEii. bome oo R·Z kit w/n~ !!!!!•l!!!!!!!•!!mm!!!~I elelant 2 BR. 2 BA unit FtXB nd A: 1 car garage. Call witli 4reat usumable Below market tr owe CUrt 111 ap631-121116. OPIM HOUSE WAL.HUT 59 "A" fl.nancing. SUper huge ~ .;J:.·r!/I:~~ 11Y SIS,000 DH! =~!.:~~%5~~ eest 1oc~ '1«>.ooo. =C!~=~·n1Y GrgAltle1!f1•1221 Sharp 3 Bd coado nr. So. •.500· Owner Bkr t.erma. Call Bill 631·0884 I!!!~~~~~~ •••-Ml.a. Cout Plan. Only SftOQl1 644~ or646-SOll8 C--....PO•.a.•y ,._ --.. SU.S.octO. Ai\. Pa trick 1""!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ _.., _ ._ New elqant 4 Br Vic· 'l'moft. 1•1221 4'/o.THAT'S All I"' Panonmic ocean Yiew1 torlan partial vu, It takes t.o get you into PltCBU,OW-tram thla 2 or 3 bdrm, ownr/coatractor finan. l h 11 co i Y 2 Br I $1 72.000 ~bath home. Some ol avail 1575,000. tawnbouae . wi~ bar " Comparable property the amenatJes illclude 3 JASllJNE ra1n "K ·full private pauo. M~utes lo bM aold ror S179,900. For fireplaces, sour met _., -. -bu~. 1!.5'1, interest. •L.:n. pnce "'OU &et a pre· kilc:hen, farepit and spa . octllD Y1L I • dea1 2 ba llP•DONON"M .. ~ -..ia. .... , condo. Pool, tenm, sec. 3 Br. l Ba. •·-e van! ~ miwn locaUon oo a ma. A real beauty. $.165,000. Own. ftn. <>Pewa Sat/Sun ...... 1 ------• jor irtenbelt, 4 bdmu, WHITIWATll. U-4. llCW't'Uwolaf · "5.0llO · · · · Nl-0'193, Alt. MISA VBDE 2..; ba. extensive u11· and city lights views M0-1$15f121.SLS_ OCEANVIEW2Br.2Ba. Jbdrm,2bath,frplc,dbl grades. low ma rnt. from this 2 b4nn ud cleck, yard, sec gate. •garaee. A·l cond . laodKapmg. Short walk den home. Deck on 2 $ll5K. Owner 1-630-9440. IJ34,500, Owner will IS· l.O pool, park aod· play. levels and yard for OUl· llYMtalACE ......... Sunoy, llght·a·brl1ht a DeW OG the ma rt et with brick Croat, aide and rear patio•. bani-ood parquet noor· Ing tbrouabeut. Xlnt l«atkla · less than 100 pacea from 11.000.000 homes. Reallstically priced at 1365,000 with combination ol U I UIDI · ble and owner fulanclng. Call now 644-7211 STOP!t Take time te relax and shop at home . It's aim· pie with Dally Pilot Clualfied Ada. And If you have aomethlna lo sell, call a friendly Cluslfied Ad-Visor at 642-Slll 142-B8. slstlnfuwlcing. ground door llvlnt. Euellent FIEE OCW VU '°' Mcc.c1t.1t1tr. starter~. ted ':iT·c~t~ ..__ ._ .. ~ . I , .. "lt ,, . 000 , ....... ..,...."""'"""·your 1 ~~ · · for closing costs .od 1....._. •--L. 1040 n EMllALDIAY bn*era1e fee only. The --.• ..._. '1~~/..t A jewel ol a home in this viewlsfree.912.-9311 ••••••••••••··~··•••••• " I')' lovely private area. A. I Sl.2.100 bto'• this 4 Br; TCUUy remodeled with LL f''r :'TE I best area. shake rf 11000 e-8600 new family kitchen. new '1 I!! ldia' mitt Nds a httle bathrooms and ocean paint · but what a~ ,'iewdttb You'll fall in '" SEAi.TORS 'rry 112,soo dn Bkr -.s23CAMPVS~fRVhtE love with this one $10,000 DOWN, l1BOO mo. 848-0708 $487,SOO. :.;~.k~~211a ba 1;1111nn D L..Jllllo•a 1041 ~ ... a , .................... •••• ..,=:::a: .. .. OWNElt ANXIOUS! Uni· 3 b d m • 1 "41 b a OCEANFRONT Modular ·~--que Mesa Verde home Townbouaei many up· Type Homes. 24 hr .bu oodlea or charm! grades inc uding shut-aerurlly. ~ mi pvt bch Lovely formal dinln& ten. Auumable loan. 2 + f.ishlng pier Cedar room, family room, and miles to the Ocean. Cottage type redwood beautiful • ntiq ue ' F.OOO.Ca11Jim96Z·8149 1 deck. pool.' guarded ~. Sits ca large 4'/o.THAT"S AU gate. adlts only. No corner lot. Covered It ,_.. to ... . to doo..:.lll1900. 4fi.3116 patio Owner will con· .-ea g.,. you lD 171 4149~1 177 lider·asal.sling in rtnanc· th I 1 co i y 2 8 r . Lose something valu•· in&:. Sl.87.500. Call ror ap-t.ownbouse with bar: Ir ble! Pia~ an ad In our polntmeot today! llriHtepatio.Minuteato Lost and ,Found col ·.-=~-"-'-'-.;...;~.....-...­m.m> beach. 13.5% Interest. umm. Tbat s where peo- TARBW., Rt:ALTORS A&alt~l6. p&e look when they've -fOWld an Item ol value. 1---=-----------..-.... ......... -.. S T A R GAZEK~ .. i,-;;.;...;.;..;..;-..;..,.~~~(~Y •l'Ol.LAN~-~~--1 H8lm.D DlfAQflD HOME Price of ownership shows in this spacious 3 BR home on large lot. Close to schools, pool & teo acre OW. SAYS .. MOVI Ir And drops price $9500 on th.is 4 Bdrm in Turtlerock. Assumable loan and owner will carry with low down. Fee NEW BUSINESSMEN Contact the DAILY P1LOT tor lntorm1t1o n regarding th• county requirement• fof ullng a Flotltlou.s BullnHa Name. · park. Formal dining plus lg f am rm. Owner will help fmance. A low $169,500 Anne Ttemey 551·8700 LOYll.Y POOL & YllWI For lease, 3 . BR, ram rm, Harbor View HillJ, I $1,600/mo. Helen Wood 644-6200 ! , land now at $199,500. 142-4321 EXT. m j r HDRDSCDPI Sunday, January 3 ARI~ (March 21 ·April 19): You gain access to information which previously had been obscured or hidden. Circumstances favor your efforts; timing, judgment will be accurate. Focus on personality, charisma, wearing apparel and ,__ ___ _ ability tQ put forth original concepts. TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ): You receive news through grapevine concerning added responsjllity, more authority anct a possible promot on. Emph asis on institutions , orgaoiza oos, hospitals and resorts. Newspapers tell history GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Wish comes true, optimism prevails and good news received concerning relative who is ill. You'll reach more Yearbooks, old papers yield nuggets from past people,projectswillbecompletedandyou'llberid FAIRFIELD. Iowa (AP> -yearbooks. mind you , but of burden which was not your own to carry in History books don't tuch that speciaJ ones. first place. the New York Weekly Sun once From the pages of one, a CA_NCER I June 21 -July 22): Be direct, turned down the president of the scowling Richard Nixon stares independent and insist on getting to heart of United States when he asked for out next to an essay he wrote matters. ':_ou~ll be expect~_l;? ~~c~~t ~t:~d!_l'~~iP. a~. f_r~~ _subsc;i:iptiop. s~.ring )le'''" calle(l ~'"{ne,rica 's Progress r~e: -Empna ... ~~oil'~c .. -u~, .. iftJ~uut:nc~ .. -was-Maaong·gooo money and I{i Depende n ce on the oragmaJily and romance. could afford to pay. Constitution :· LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Follow through on Nor do Uae y t ell young In another, a youthful Elv1s hunch; you'll learn through teaching process. By American,s that when signers of Presley wishes a friend well. sharing knowledge, you m ake significant gaiJts. the Declaration of Independence "That's the m ost valuable you'll ri&e above petty a!lrioyances and displays of staked their lives and fortunes one," Day said. ·· r heard that it Jealousy on part of assoCJales. on a new nation they also were sold once for S8.000 " VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept 22 >: Focus on pestered by horseflies from a Othersinruscollectionanclude versatility, holiday ~pirit, travel taJ~ and humor. nearby livery stable. Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan. know, he says, are things like the New York Weekly Sun's r es p on se to Ruthedord B Hayes' req u<.•st for a free s ubscription to the newspaper for lhe White House. Hayes, the nation 's 19th president, took offi ce in 1877 after a dis puted elert1on that was d ecid e d by a special commission appointed b y Con gress The comm1ss1on's partisan dec1s1on clouded the Republican's term l'tCTITIOUt aut1Mln MAMaSTATIMI'" Tiie letttwlll• .. ,..,. " M iii. ..,,,,. ... II ~ J CNOINI lllNO ANO 01'1111.0li'Ml .. T IMO~,, .. , C6'te NW ... ca. nw • llottf L Wfll .. ,. t111 MOunlelll \ltew A"','!'-Lind.A C'A ., ... Tiii• ..,.1,_, 11 c-...1 ... ..,. ... ll>Olv .... I ~l Wellen Tlllt .. ~ "'" Iii...! with , ... Ce11nty Cl•rll Of 0. •nv• ('~ "'" De~l .. ,,., PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS e U\INES\ NAME STAT£MU<T l'ICTl"l'IOW atnt•Ht tiAMllTAT11MaltT The foileWllll "r\Oft It M lllt ~ ....... VtotO OollTA HllVIC£1, U.t llottollOrt L-. H\llltlflllOll .. .Cll, Ce 11 .... ld•••d Loo Murpl\y, ,, .. , llO• ~O<>rl I.MW li""H"VlOll .. f dl C. ., .... "'" ...,.,,_, " ·-"'' .. .., ..i '""'"' .... ' ldw•rcl l "'°"""'" f nl\ \IAt."*'I ,.., 111'4 ,.llh Ille ~ °""'1 Ctor~ ol 0t""99 County on O.oMCler •• "" '1711N7 ir•yt.1t1,, ..... , ,,,, •t-1\qt Co.a\' O•llv PUot ht-• t11 J;. lt,,lfjl Id'' 1 v , .. , UOl .. 1 PUBLIC MOTlCE TN lollowonQ ~"un· ••· duonv l'ICTITIOUS eUSl .. EH bu,,,,. ... , NAM£ STATIMEkT l(l;J MORTC.Av l 1oso1 ~w.. 1 '" •· 110 .. "9 "''>Or» •re oolnQ Fount••n Valttv, (•hto,.,,,. fiUCMt ..,..,,.,, .. ,. ,, Joov Cot•.,n t, •• -.1 ~.,, 1•t11 • '' hk•NTON UAO w 1 no, p u" Huot ,, ., ' ,.. ll ,. .. , ti. "' J r \ ' M ( N f 4i t b > u A o ce111or~• ,._ "'v 1 \I Mf No ~ •, URO MC. 1d1 K•thf''t"l" «.,,or1 1 1 • ,., , ,,.. RO "'"'-< ,, v rtO a 8 t t 1 OSHIC" (1rch-t our·•• ., ,.LltflliUtHGRAHAM f9J ... £ Ce lllorno•'710I \•" .. ,.. .. ,,,.,..flM(JLEUM 1101 EU"n R.c."""I t:trvo••I t\U (J'lUiU'J • u "" .. ~' C.•nt4" Cit•••. Suitt 100 Clrt.1•, F~nt.a1n V•ll.-y, l 411hlft1111 1 ''•1"'' '•"1"''""° V}ltS 97/0I H•H••d l t '•h•m. Ntl CN\t Thll bu'\lnit~\ '" tntH.Jvttf'IO tJf " H•«J"tlilllli't l tt4u'\,. f\e•<h C•life>ttM• 9'"''•' p.Mtrw.-..n.p .-,, lll Joo.,< 1,, ...... ~ J•n '6 hnnton M D '''' L•' fhl\ •t•t~t ...,., :,,.-d WIO\ ,,.._ f h' W S '!MM• A~ (•ltfMftl• •71°' Count, ( ,.,._ ~Or ln9fi c.~unh (~ ll~fl•lo f YV1llram\, M D JJJ W 10. t'll ~ulOM ",.,,. l auo ""-''"" < a11tor1u• ~711• Publl\hfi<I Or<''9" \Ott'' U•1t, ~1t,.1 ~c t7 t9 7• 1Qt1 J.., 1 '"' :.~'l• PUBLIC NOTICE ---~-------· l'ICT ITIOUS eUStNES~ NAME STAT£MENT f P'tt ~f?W of thf' bu\t""'" I 4 M•\" l r"\1~ l:h.11i,1r1 .. \\ ., tond uctttd bV • ,,.., ... ,,.,~,.,....,,n,,.. •••• ,.,110 f: (,,.,...,,. '"'' '""''" .. "' ••'\. hlf'd -;.,,h ... t, < '"' ~ to• 01 •nfJ4! (ownty on I.JI • .,,,,_ ~~ 4'1tl • '"'''~~ Or~l"'Jt' (o.tst O•ilY Piiot, I .., 11 t1it lb 1.._.1 J•n 1 191'1 S414-11 l(llevrot .. •oc•t•<l •t .. ! ....... ,. '"".. ftUBLIC NOTICE Attnuit •n 'Wfo'\ttt11n~1tr (A 'fl,.• •\ "tftf)y "f'Ot\tt,.f>d b~ ff'lf" lo ICJtlf1nQ ----------- 1)('0'°"\ ~tCTtllOUS IUSIHliSS LA MESA fl\/ (.f Nlll< «iAMEHATEMENT f N C OA:AN C,E • r •ti,orrt ., Tri 11 'tll'•r\Q o~r ~on '' do10Q (Of00flfl°"' f4ll w.,,,.,I ,,, .. , .. , A ......... " •• hu ,. .. ,,,._ .. , We•lmonsl., CA '7 ... l "' " I I I< f ">E l'IVIC"'= ~ S~I l P'll\ DU\tnt"\'\ \ no~< h·O o, ~ t Ottor•tH>n John w ( ,,, "'"' •flf t •f>• utwP v '" p, ... u:H'nl Thi~ \l•l~nt ..,.,.\ •1lt"<J ••tn ,,.... (ounh Cl!'t• vt u,..n~ '0un1y on O.c u '"' LWUJI Publl\.htd 0-•"9t (W \I 0 • ' t--' ~( .. ,. '"" J"" 7 ~ '"" \S01 •• 't~I'-r • •••t Hunltnigton 8••<h 11 ::::•: ;:.: t~•h' S~1 S.l•lr1' Cn ,,,. Hur11H"'1tH1 be'~,., C.•lifOf'n'• ltH141f fn1\ 0.1\i,.,..•\.\ I\ {_Oftd\Kft(I by .,, ncu,, ctu-tl Milt, J'>/ff\f" ~ •• \.t, rti.., ''•'"'""""' w.,, htN w1tf\ lht ur '' ,., • ·I Or•r"9P tounty on l..i"" •"'it • r 0 t -"'II You . become '!lore a~are of body 1m~ge, co~ld But these are snippets of James Dean, Johnny Carson, con~ader exercise or diet program. Y_ou 11 receive history, and Walter Day thinks Charlton Heston and Mickey In the 1877 issue of the Sun, the editors imperiously responded to , ___ ,,,_B_l_IC_NO_TIC_E __ _ Hayes· request by pointing out that lhe pres ident earned ~ood money , P •bl ''~'° ""dr\9"" 1 v.ast O••IY Pilot, ,. i 1' 11> 1~1 Jtm 1 1"7 S3'WI ~at1.s factory re;;ponse concerning mo~ey they s hould be part of the Mantle They all s howed early inquiry. lessons young people learn m s igns that they were something LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22 ): Maintain low school. special, said Day, who plans to profile, be discreet. check legal papers. You'll "'It's a whole different point of sell some of the yearboolts at an ·'This certainly ought to put him above writing begging letters around the counlr)," the news paper said. commentmg · As long as w e ha ve a fraudulent president we must expect of him things that no elected pres ide nt would ever think of ·· learn who opposes you, who is on your side and view," he said. auction. what you showd do about it. While for some the past is Day peddles the newspapers SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 I. Your powers or dead, for Day history is a living, -his first love -to colJectors perception are heightened. You see through sham breathing thing. It exists on the and newspaper buffs. but .)us and pseudo friendship. Accent on basic Issues. yellowed pages of the 7 million real goal Is' to make people dialogue with dependents and special attention to newspapers he.'s collected. And realize there is a lot more to hobb>es. pets: he plans to make a li ving at it. history than is told ip the history SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 211" Focus on Day has collected about books home, children, rapprochement with recalcitrant 300,000 news papers in two tiny The problem, he says. is that family member. You locale item that had been rooms in a former coUege history books create myths. The same issue reported the "fierce or brutal expression' on the face of a Sioux Indian warrior named Crazy Horse as he s urrendered at Fort i..ram1e. lost, missing or stolen. Status quo is shaken, you dorm itory . T.here, a mid the remembering things as people make necessary change and will be happier as mosty smell or old paper and want to remember them He'd result. Journalism legends. he conducts like children to get a dose of CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19>: Perspective his busmess. The rest of has reality by reading what undergoes transformation. Situations. people you collection is scattered around accounts of the time had to say have taken for granted acl l?i manner contrary to the country "mostly in friends' "The textbooks are j ust a These little things hold the key to hts fascination with the past, Day said While most people remember the signing of the Declaration or Independence as s olemn and d1 g n1f1 cd , a newspaper at'count attributed to Thomas Jefferson offered a different perspective. usual pattern. Temporary conrmement enables basements," he s aid. synthesis of all these points of you to revise, review and gain second wmd Along with newspapers, Day view,·• he says "Very few have AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb 18>: Relative may has gathered s tacks of old any new 1nformatJon." attempt to intimidat e, coerce and shift yearbook!> Not 1ust any old Someofthingspeopleoughtto responsibility to you for errors. Stand tall, make * * * * * * known the fact that you are not without allies . PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 >: Financial dilemma is close to solution Know it, refuse to brood. Credit will be extended Individual you admire will seek your counsel. Reach beyond current expectations. Big bus deficit seen OAKLAND (AP) -AC Transit, which serves 250,000 passengers a day, is projecting a $13.3 million deficit over the next 18 months, according to a report to board members. AC General Manager Robert Nisbet reported that the deficit should be eliminat ed through increased operating efficiency, cuts in service and a delay in some non-operating expenses. Board members decided at the meeting to require an extra 25 cents a tjder for bus transfers. ______ ....,.., New trash plan! tALn IHGHO~ SMfnt I TUTHILL WHTCUH' CHAl"lL 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 64&-9371 '111CI llOTHIH SMITHS' MOITUdY 627 Main St ~nhnQton &=ach 536-6539 'ACIFIC YllW ....otlM.,Altl c.n.tery MOftuarv Ct1ap4tl-cternatorv 3500 Pec111c \llew Drive Newoon Be11ch 644·2700 Nc.COl..al MOITUAlllS L9Qun1 Beach 494-9415 Lequna H11t1 ' 7&8-0933 San Ju.n Cao1strano 49tHn6 -r-- LOS ANGELES CAP> -The City Council has voted to seek a state grant to run a proposed mandatory tra s h separation program in We5' Los An1eles like t h e plan scrapped by former Mayor Sam Yorty after a campaign pledge ill 196L Ye.arbo.oks o.ffer "Jefferson wa~ laughmg and telling the s tory with great glee," Day said "It was a very hot day and everyone was runnirag around with their shirts • t • t 1 • off or open They ~1gned that In Ima e g l mpses documentandgotoutofthere .. Not only lhat, but ·there was FAIRf'lELD, Iowa (AP> - In Walter Day's collection or yearbooks are some prophetic notes and some ironic ones about famous Americans. There's a note in tbe Commerce, Okla .. yearbook of 1949 that s ays, "Mickey· They're great pals. he and rus baseball jacket." Mickey? Mickey Mantle, who went on to star with the New York Yankees. · Actor James Dean woo farpe for his portrayal of a tortured, driven character in many roles. · But the junior class play in which he had a role at Fairmont <Ind.I High was "Our Hearts Were Young and Gay." Dean also was on the basketball team. "It's not surprising that the Norfolk, Neb., yearbook of UM3 found a young Johnny Carson a member of the Thespians. He wrote a humorous monologue tor the yearbook which belad "I John Carson , being of sound ·mind and body," but lb~ urbane Canon was also a member of the youth 4-H club. Elvis Presley was pict..-ed • a livery stable next door and• onlyonceiohisyearbook,buthe s warms of ho rseflies were scribbled "Best luck to a swell coming in and biting people guy" to a friend whose name J efferson was convinced that isn 't preserved . And the helped launch the country No rebellious Elvis was a member, one paid much attention to what of all groups, the Reserve Army t hey were signing · · Training Corps. He also joined For D..ay 's busmess "Wh en lhe-biolo~ club. History was News." cui.tomers Ronald Reagan was all over request newspapers from the hls 1927 Dixon, Ill., 'school day they were born or a special yearbook. day in history and for $25 Day •·Dutch, tbe lightest but will provide at not a copy, but fastest guard on the team, With the real thin~ Dut~h rt!fum.lng to the squad, The New York HeraJd of Oct. ttungs IOQk good for Dixon ln 13, 1903, carried a small s pt>rts 1927," the yearbook noted. item announcing the completiCJn Day has also got a scowling of a new base ball <'vent. Richard Nixon staring, right something called a ··World next to an essay he wrote catted • Se r I e s . · · Now A m e r i can .. America's Progress -Its new~papers devote pages to the D e p e o d e n c e o n t h e games. . ConslitutU>n. '' Nixon went to And newspapers around the Whittier High ln Whittier, Calif. world carried an item in 1923 Charlton Heston also showed that referred to a disturbance at up in one of the books, from a beer hall in Munich. Germany. Evanston Townsh ip High in · Some even mentioned by name a Evanston, Ill. Even then he was participant who eventually was a handsome fellow. ~·sentenced to jail. '' l 'm very impressed by He was. Adolf Hitler. While in America's famous people," Day prison, he wrote Mein Kampf, •said. "'J:hey 1'11 ahowed a lot or h I s st r al e g y f o r w or I d me(tle llS younasters." domination · Wofnen's ·high he.els sexy Foot doctor·says the shoes just drive men wild l'ICTITIOUS llU\INE.\S NAME STAT£M£HT Tn.e fOllO•tnQ ~' 10"\ • r d ""'' I bu•l~~;l\E ENTERPRIS~~ I ![1 M.U Att•nl4 Suit .. 191 ..;uril ~U'"'' 11 .. c11 C. ~ }h•ron •t'lintttf' Jfo,\I~ 110t'il L.t•Wf't U~ ... Ul'\llf'qt ~ 6'-•l"' C... .,.,.. ~oria10 Jo"t 71Qt l Le.>>u•• Y .... t4<1nt10"11on Be.ch C. 92~6 T"b bu'lnin\ t\ tondui: t,..<1 by .,, lr>dlvl-1 Shlron J•\\u• T"I' '1•ten-.n1 w • .• _.., N '"' ,,,... Co...,,tv C.·•'" of ' J• < nv"'! • Ooct.,,.,..r II l'it ruauc NOTICE P'ICTo TIOUS I UStlOE SS NAME STAT(M(Nl PUBLIC NOTICE Fl(llTIOUS IUSIHESS NAME. \TATE ME.HT In,. fo1tnw i11q ""'''oo tt do1nQ llu\\nf'\\ .1-. f) [r l 1111£ l YPI NC SERVICE. •~\O W•'"'"' A••"'-'" Suitt JOOA t ounte·n ...... , (• '2X. An,•• ~ kO\IT'·~'I •Hl01' !t.Nrrow l"ttnt,H f °"""Ul1n Va0•Y. C'1 .,,. t "" ~'""' 1~ cOf'duci.d bf •n 1ndt'f ·dU•I All•••~ """""~'· t "'•\ 1.fi11t.,,... nt ••\ fit.cl wUh trw Covnh C "'" r,t Or4ln9' Cft"tY Of\ 'i" rn b---• 10 ,._. PUlllC MOW "CTITIOUS e U5tNl.H OCAMC ST ATEMENT lht' ' 110 ... nq Pf"t\On It dOlnQ t~v\•n~'\ i't\ T "'' r o110 ... ,,q lw\11'\4'\\ .\ "''1''... t.0'\1 A ,,,,.f-C,A BRAKE & E CO ... OMY "' I '.l~Vl(I &LlrNMlNf ,, JfO(fW\ttr (O\I• __..,.._ .. A'1?U' )10) South 8r•\t• \.• '• An,._ (" "' LLIAM "ENRY LAMSO N 9110. ., Ant•QU4 \ •''f--Hunt1nqton a..cri · f'r~d,.,., .. k, 111 \•h\I• 11n1 • ~ ,.~ South 8r1,ter1 ~t \,..,,,,. "'" ,1 "11~ .,,, , °"''''" .. '' , , <onau< t•O tt, •n ff\f\ r;,u,.~, .. , .. ' '"' ,,.,, ¥ -4' ., ... , ..... , IN:li\l•Oual IY II,,.,.,., H ldiM\Of'\ Ftf'!l»tH . fj ~.,,,' I h.1• '' ''""""•,,_ .. ~ fH.0 •Hf\ UW Thh ,, ... ,,,...,.., ...., .. , '' ..cJ • '"' our•.-•~'" ·• '"..,~ Cowntv on (<>Unh (ltf"'-ol "Jt"IQ'f'" lO\ol" 1 Ofl h•• 1 \ t•t Ot<•mbn 10 '""' 1'11- l'lllOIO PuhtoV""' c>M>Oo• Co.t\t DAiiy Pllol. PubU~hed Of.,..Qlt (u.\I U•fty f1•ltit 0"'" 1~ 16 1'Ml jAn 2, t , 1W1 WI0 .. 1 D!< 11, 19. ,. 1'1111 JM I l'I«, ~I I "1 ------------ PUBLIC MOTlCE PUILIC MO~[. . ~ICTITIOUS eUSl .. EH Fo(TITICWS BUSINESS • NAMf SlllTE.,_IHT NAME.STATEMENT ,,,, •olltiw1nq pf'rW)f't\ .,. do•no fP,f' to11ow1no ""''·""' "r" 01~1";-, n•i\1,.. ... , c1\ bu\o~~" ., ~ ' ~ '"'OU'>fRtAL PAINTING. C AS HOTEL tO,.,SULIANT~ ltO\l<o•nlut•\ 11.......,Patk Cll•10 4!90 M•<Arl~ur lih 1 ~·~ .o l<OllERT l EE l'IOBE.llTS. U 71 NtwPonts.M<h C •lit0trua~!'e.ti<! fh1ct ('fl>f'~' CA~ F ••d Coooon\ 611) I~ ''M P 4 UI El,WARO KHICHl. •SJ• Anllhcc•m HtllS ~hlOtrUclf 00601 a.1~• C.vP'•U (.A QlO Ptitlr Sl'M'W 11lH luutl.-t'lu• Tf\I\ bu\lnr.s I\ COf'U:h1<1•d •• • &rt•. C aflJOtnht fl1&11 jUt'f"f"f•I Pfttlrwnho Thi' b.J\1(\(t\\ ,.., 1 c,,tith.t< 1-n n.,. An PotM-rt l-~f' Aotaerti unmcorQCHatfO •U'b..hUW'l Qlt~1 U\.,u P•YI t tc.ruC)hl • o.trtnt-'"''o 1 ~1\ 1tat""""'nt ...,., fltfid wU" '"" Pelt Y>•.. c.o~nly C.lwr• or O•enQlt County en Thi\ \lAf~nt .,..11~ II .a .,..,,.1\ ft Ou l• '"' County Cl~ ..... ot OrA"'Q( \ vvnl_, ",..,, I Publ•\rwtl 0.MtQlt Co .. I ~ty l'llol. O•c~ml>"• JQ. •'Ill F 170• t Ou 19 16 °''' J"" 1 ' 1"1 S.OHll P~blt\PW<I: Otttnq. \. •'4\f OJll'f •"•tot J•n t I IS 17 1'11'1 '60011 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC Mm:E · l'tCTlflOUS •U51NeU OCAMl STATEMINT T II• l<>ll••lnt penon la 4fol11t ou,1,,.u ai lllEllC EHTEAPAl5E.S,.2ns - DOVllSHOIES IDC.HOME Med. style rourtyard Pool, jacuui. Overlooks bay. Galuy Dr Formal din, rm, 2 fl'l>ICS 16195,000 fee. &U-2510/646-4148 WTILUFF CONDO Sparious 4 Bdrm . A BEAUTY. Lrg ratio w/wetbar! Cal for TERMS! Owner will fmance. Patrick Tenore, MIWPOIT H&TS IOREATBUYSI CAPE COD w/senu· baJ w ! 4 Br + pool, U.ttalll COUNTRY COTTAGE w/lr( lot 6 ucell. flnliodq. '2$0.000. T'IU·LEVELapenslve 4 Ir hocnt. 1 boute from CM Dr. S&aptrb ttnrul n~E RODGERS 714 641--0763 292S Collqe Ave COiia Meta, CA" Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Saturday, JanUllY 2, 1982 •• '. i.----lillllllml~0••••B11ps a .· 1lawtui t' I -. . ~.._., ... ....................... ....................... ;;,.;;,i. .............. e;,,;;,,,,,............ ... ........... ••••••••••••••• ............... ......:.--;r.;~ ................................ . AOOllUIVI le111 a..llllltlt•Jft. E.M • .,. .. 6 C~ec• -•mnovaarr .ICllN'l IACKI leldy •AIC llOVlHG·llp., All ..... :mt•nt ld!ExtPiMteftll '111ZLNST~IJ.,!O .... I .......... ol· CRAI UNOVATJNO , u •• _. ' •• ( I ff ........... et for udat, ltftdtet, '"'· '°" '**· Qllllc•. -1'tlt ' coa1plett. Lo9 Holclly ··-AU liadl Gu.arutttd ................. • ... ,,... llTLl•CI Kano Bdil11. urpeat1'7, ...... •tliltat •.••• ~MMee.ID·OUI ft'teeet.Refa.•11111 ......... tu-me Ref•_ Jolm!p lMT *..... c.,.ti.m.. _ . ...,,.1. *•We. rr. Ill No truk. Tau• JOU, ftA&VlHGCOLL.10& Pl ... " 'I 1Ntlrtlct · ~ ............... , _.... ................ • *W ~tao ... 11. Ml-1111 Slt'll nvDIN'l'I MOVINO ~ ................ _ ... ! ............. , _ .................. . ........ Cll MDI, I W10Utc.,tCltU111 -................ II nll ' I a>.Ue. f'l'lJl-OI. RAHOINOSlO/ROLL DrMlac&ureclfromllO •ExpertTrttPrunlq• 1"1allf,WU-. ...t1Na6.... ll.a'l'llClAN-prtetd lllid.UjoM,1'e/aal ........ ••••••••••ttH• 1-'ICl.9'1"'2'7 Qultr. Alto atrippJo1. Plwnblai llepaJn CommlrtlalLaodKlpt ..... MW!• 1'Ntk110ah11lt ~ fnt 11&.l•te Oii Qtalllt1.aper,lic'd. WMllallALLYa.IAH WATCHUIOIOWI treetilt.le«t"5-1115 Jt•eet.lll11"2-tm 9aW9 91S7 .... lafMt tare_.., 12 -Wwtpar. Ml-fi! .......... ujMI. Dlt'el·....,,. llJUll?ClllQlapam ITARVJMO ACTORS UC.•APDRANOEI l>Wlwuber dilpot1l1,•------~~.~Cottall•1. ·~· .... ~•cluo. Uc:--.i m.-lill1;1•0nftlwa.AU out.,,_tll.W.SlD MOVIJllG COMPANY IDllW61uar. No job toelt&I a iaueell. rt• ••DPllT•• Jtbr-1·-Oolor V'f•a-._..1 nt Eledric ou IP.tcl1lt1. 4'olle. =r.• lmlU. Call JM:alN'Sa.EANING Piil ai Cutlld Lowest loo IGllll ot too Jarse. pal.red « replaced. 11 TmSllYICI 1 , *"' ;;a i:~&-ftn....._~~ ~.~~~i Aas .llWDl ~-~Utoroullly .... ~•Allo'ft. 111c Jteeeet.Tco1•21• mf!P!!·Jtma1.-•• .,wuo•• ...... ........ u••••• .. av1'room fi.ao: co:;b :i . .t.... ••••••"'-' ..___, .._'1 '"'" e?MIS3 .·,...INC.. "'•A'tfM•s r•lt ******* '~~~to •ir SW; dtr •. Gun. eUm. .. •• -.................. Mable Dtl)IJh WotnlO ,...... _ .................................. !....... . rup ex.ea petodor Crptrepalr 1 I l141UJWOODrLOOU wll.l clean your bOUM, ... .-.. -.................. '---...,C-. rrnp•IY 114/115-tla · Do · k ....................... It•~ cleued Ir t5/br. C.11 . •re•. n.~1Rlcb1rd -~ ~~ .............._ 15 Jrt up. wor 1lllS 'waud.. le ttldy fot tbe Ml·Ji91 _ U 11 ,J Beautify your otnct or MAMAetMINY ......... •••••••••••••• _. • Reft. 131.0101 i...u..-1-...1 --. c, . yn "' PIUo "/llllb pOtted or Onalt Co area 15 yn TYPING ....................... Noate.m/NoShampoo ~/rea»ved, cltu ==='= Ua1 f ba&IPYlocalcuatomera. h.analDI plaota. GrHn experien«:eaurorlnfo. PROOFREADING lllWICI &SOM SlalDSpeclall.lt. F11t p.llnrtaoV,'11l·U'1I ...... _ ................. , 'nUilkfO!!, GlMlO VelvetIDmton. udrat•. Traoalatin& Eo1Jlah, .... If..... BuildenSl.nce19'7 .Freeeat.m-tm o...macwanted ....................... BIUCJCWORI: Smell c.es.P... %1MZ14373nl•·f79.72M t6MllJ French, Spanish -••••••••••••••u• Addl&icml ·remodtllnl Steam Clean for lbe Mowiq,""11l1,rakia1, Blul,cleuup,CC)Ocl'tt. t::· Ntwpor\t Coat• 15 yn QP. Uc. 46N1 ....... "--' Reporl1, Correspon· ...... prof. Mnlce oo Docn, wlndowa, P•!.lo HalidQsl Best ratea for 1 wt t p Io I . Free ~!..IL Du.JI!!.~-· eu, trvloe. Reh. a.w:s.s. lu. a.ta. CoJor _ ••• :.~-;r.9; ......... ......,,..,..,. deoce, ma11U1Cript.s, re· 111a 1pplca. Steve'• coven. Free est. Reu. tlae bli datta l Call elthmtet. MS·.S72 or ~aa.aerv._.,_ f75.n1S. apt.KMfllDtsk PLASTER PATCHJNG ....................... IW1ltl. EJperitneed. ac· ..:.;ii:c:.:..:· Serv=-=~· 541-ts=::.:.14:...-~ Uc. t31CIN2 Mf..,2110 MMm t6-STIT. DUMP JOBS Maaoaty our ieeelaJty. W ·B PAINTING Ratueco.. Jot/tst, 30 CuatolD build Inc. re· ante, rclitble. w u......t.14,111CftM<lt·TI. c-lt" It _,..Senlcft H•llllcmDJJoba Cltan. qwdr o.peoda· SPICIAUINT/EXT yn Neat.Palll~zrn modtlla1. ~int., r•· u-.au ........---""~ -, .. ,. t CalUl~Nl-1111 ble.WtdoaQ bejobl • -· pain, hauhnc Steve ...................... CU.tom bomea rram-...................... _.................... • dry!all. Larry~ Neetpatcbet6wtures ml10I -.WC ..... AUSI'ATEPAVING Ina. remod, Preocb TH<*PSON'S Tue Trlmmln1 • RAUUNG6DUllP itOl·JllCN• IHl'/EXTPAlNTING Fntttl. ltl-14Jt ...................... . Sealco•Un1, Slrlpin1. doon, lkylllhta • patJo C04CllET!CONSTll. Removal at Reuooablt JOS.•Uorllud.J, ADTypesMUOIU')' Uc'd. llefa. P'reeeat. ..... •RESIDENTIAL• Repaln. Comm/RH. coven.•31152 Uc. t3S3S3 MZ·IC Price1. BallliDI, Odd Ml.aaT Vay reu, lie, boaded.. ..... l087•• ........ ri .. ••••••••••• Ave 1 sty $30, 1v1 2 sty 13173112.MS-alll BOBTSTEINBRONER C~lm Jobi., Clean · UPI . -• ...... ••youa .t.et BDbMl-'1&S0/51S-ISOI , AEPAJllSPOR LESS ~.OllU~7.f388 _.;;.;;;;;;..;.;;;=..::..=..==---~ • ~ aW,fJMOU __.._.. -. Im Small-My pricH ForClwifiedAd Shln1les, nat. 30 yr1. Driveways, parkln1 lot GEN'LCONTRACTOR *9D'per1q th TODAY I Yard/11ra1e ..... are amaU! CdM, NB • ACTION exp. f\'eeeat 770.2725 Prof. W'mdow Cleanlnc. repaln, aealcoatlna. Uc. #3llttl3 ~ lkidl•BJoct. ns-902'7 H•lu-de-~, ete. 1 ton tnxk. ....................... Irv. E:lp'd. Rcllm.MTI Call a n....J. F t "· 1 , Free est., qual . .erv. SlrS Aaphalt. '31·'1H ,._ • ....................... @ .Gl·1M3 <Jtlln) tA,.1 u-..va..a.a.* G L M p •-••-· Dally Pilot ~lD&. a1 oerv ce. 'l)·Rat 67~-GIMI Uc. ~ • Drywtl G..ailfalmalnuce _,,._.. . llQlllll a ... .._ l).VJSOR ,.....Reta. FreeFAt. Peoplewbooeed le M k h . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Repaln•Deeoratiol HAUUNG Top Quality. Spec:lal o.t.wcidt.Uctmt71 A 0.·81582 sbouJd l h~tb e!.i!-6,o~ s ~:&~fi' nNEnNISHYiORK DRYWAIJ../ACOUSTIC ~tz•Ryl40-U4' Q.ackcleaa~yd care in haodUn1. 2S yn Im. P'reeeat. 731-1281 MZ-Sll •AllSOMLYI ServtC:~~~ktb! PUotctf..inm& ..... Y Remodelln1/Dci0rahun& Mynap. Fully llc'd' ,..._.,....... ... • ... ....,1 Fr-.est. KrilGl-0953, exp. Compettthe flat.et, W .......... u-• , ..... ., ....,8 All •-...... DAILY PILOT ~~~~eil~n ... ~. ~~=i 7J0.1JIOCdlll iolured. $Si·~ '-'-_.A... ....,._, 1Uck1Sl..ca6 NocwertJ 1Jsa -nunc1P1 .,.,..._, _ _ _ __ ,,_ • ......, !! .. ~.~~.~:::.:, ........... ~ . ...; ~·•••ts.,... --...... 4200 .,_.. 4310 >n.t Whlftll 4HO ~•,_. uoo ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... !!~ ~~~ ..... !!!~ •••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... -..Ir~ ............................................. . ColhlMtta JIJ4 Lagi.oleocli 3141 Ml portleedt 316i Beach, 2 BR 2 Ba, ....................... w-.... L Am•hra Babyaltter, full lime. CUDrT/ ••• .. ••••••0•••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••H•••••••••••• .. u• on caoa.I, 1 bll to bch. an1e lo Coron1 del · -~nu-. Wt bave several open· Mon th.ru Fri for 3 mo In· COLLECTIOMS 1Br.1 Ba. Adult Condo 1 br studio, orr.strtet Yrly. 2U 32nd Slreet. With or monthly . M.ar.'56/mo. SPACIFOI fftllMA lftf to&• for experienced rant. Coata Moe Growing Marine elec· near S.C. Plaza. Pool. prkg, im-to-mo, immed. Newport. lBR, Large ZD-•'1M '17o.GM7 UASI UUIW IUN Medwlical uaemblers FMtltdeloc. Me-3800 lronlcs manulactunng 'R:8· om. $425/mo. M. occ. a bib lo beach. Li Rm Frpl .UtU\ v_......_ ..... 4150 COSTA MIS.A AIE FIE£ (or • luer mf& firm. comNln\I needt person Hill 759 9100 eves v · c, ..-mo. •-~--,_..., .,. .:_ · · PIO. 851-1345 ~'1919f t :-r Soldering and Ugbt shop _,_.meed in credit le v•~ ...:;;.;;.;.;...;~='------_____ or_a~e_p_. _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Elltaide llesa "° I ......,... .. . 1 BR. view, fplc, decks, OCEANJ'BONT 2 •'Br per MZ-2221ta.1771 oOne 1.500 1q rt unit. f'.,I. expa-prtlerred. · c.,latrmo colleclions Wt deal with -~ JIU a<llts, oo ...... ti7'1 mo. l ..... Z be · A-11 .,,_ W '"' ,· m>. -Two llOO ...,. ft unita. N I! We are a division of aver 1,000 accounts. both -.--~-~ Dplx .. "''-'"·to .. _a'"b. y=.,.;.w_..wm. •.ee ... y ----·~ .... -.... 64• rr671 ...,, .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dys 855·8193; evs .. uiuu.J• ""'.. ~ v•r .. _.__ ---Two J700 1q ft unll1. ,,. Jcbnaoo • JobnlOD and Jeeta et.Ir)' in domutic & overseas. 2 BR. 2 BA, dishwuber, ~ Pltlo.'700mo.e73-J7211 No Tahoe ccmdo B' 5 .......... ~ ............ •Avall.Jul.•3$-311'14 u 1uch offer an U · Santaesr:a~yping , Would consider retiree no pel1, nu carpets, Sml Studio, nr Maio F.utbl1tf 2 Br. 2~ Ba min to Norths . 4 :..SO lfl7We1tdUf. N.B. Wut ft. •C11l 8'2·UU. Au1trallan Shephec;d. ceUent betltfil pacll:ace. iborthand, well or· who wouJd Uke to re· avail Jan. call Roger Beach. Gd ll:itch $400 enebd gu .. pool, frplc wk Ti 1157 a:r· I finwlal lnlt. 7000..f. Waadwortbsc OK. male, 2 yn, tri·Colored. Send resumes or apply pnized, good telephone main active. Newport 8S7-1200 Ut.aliocl.494-3064 l6\IO/mo.~S2.118. Fu . ~ t. I I di 'llt.floor.Acent54HG.12. ...... 4550 weari111 Hospit1I ID st: Laa.It~ .El~1f sll:illl. banking uper :e•dl ana. Pleal' id· SlOOFREERENT 2Br 2Ba frplc garage rn ea a . n an ~•"'"'E .._ .... •••••••••••••• 831·1030 Optics lnc., ~ a e necesary. Cotllact Bart reu re1ume re· 2Br.1Ba.tndldgarage tla:rpwt•ocli Jl6' cbetobeach... WeilaSandplperVlllu. ~VII• Ganie for renl OD f'ound ·Goldl Dbracelet Aviador, San Juan Ludenma11 '98·1801 ~ rtranees to· PO Box • yard. Lot.I of grass. •••11••••••••••u•••••• 6'75-49l2 ~ sums Balboa Pm. next to Pun ........ Victona/Plt'""'n· Capiatrano (off Aero 31113 Del Ob~o Sao 1308 Newport Bt1cb, .,,., _.,. Bl ' • Coz cotta S L k IN ...,... '""' Puerto> Calif 92M3 ~~~ntern : YBSAIWS ,..&,,, l~ ':i. ~ ak~: tafA6E Zcm (10Wx20~'), $lSO tla. CM 541.7495 art EOEM/F/H JuanCapiltrano. -'-------PAii NEWPOIJ Bacbe&or, pool, 1pa, gal· 6 ar ca1inot. Slp1 8 1 PUZA rm.173-ZNU?S.3'30 """'8pm....__._____ Delnry Drinr Z. Br. Apt. Near ocean, APllJIEllJS .... rit ouso/ .,.,_, ........ 1 5550 "'-I ~ Stance or Bulineaa C·l, Lott. Cat, H1ma layan Alaht. M•1911r B>c*k__. Ovtr 21. goOd dnvmg rt· view, cluo, balcony. no secu y. ~ mo, fl'!..,..... .... · ,..,.... uxury wuce apace lJOOaq fl. SllOIDcl. ut.ds. ('-•hair) Vk: l&th a. Will t.nin ror lhtt poci· Ctlic;-'iianager Nice cord. bring MVR. Costa garage. AV1il. now lst.lllut. S200 aec. Dr ..... ._ ... _ 4300 In Irvine'• bualest Ha-• .. --lion. Varied hours a. Men Bluepnnl., 1690 Cripe 631-5171 or Bill "'__. center! Euy Frwy ac· 443 111&1wu ID, C.111. 'l'llltin, CM REWARD. WorklDI Conditions fiSl-0252. • COU ..... Y c.LUI 646-sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• oea. Avail. now ! Call ~71.M Heart.broken ramily day1 required. Helen Good Houn & Fringe P\acenua. C.M OCW4YIEW I uv"1sa..l.I!!." GAYIOOMMAn rordetaila ..._,._ I ~.760-7188 Grace Chocolates. Bendit•. Xlnt Pay. Deliver L.A. Times to Ftmn Dana Point moat "91N S.Qe•lh 3176 OONTACT:Lar1tatG1y 551·12~1· 64• ... tJO ~:-·"' LostmaleKeftbondmix, 586-1&50, Lagu.na Hills WriteResumetoPOBox homes in H.B & C.M. 14EWPOIT ... •••••••••••••••••••• Male/Female Service In • .,... ,._.. Mill. 1112. Laguna Beach, Ca 3·6am, $400·~SO/mo scenic bhlf, Ulle new' NICE·2B.r .. l~Ba , So. Cal . G .R .C . •DILUXIOfflCISt , .......... ••••••••••"lite colored. HB. area. AS&Sl'ANT MANAGER 92652. Attn. June Nep· + boou.s. Dependable Be the rtrst occupant! IEACH beamed c~, lndry, (213)1S0-3CMO. FromlroomtoHOOaq. ...... -..i7or994-1314. 2daysperweetinadult tune. car,~lor964·4982 ~it~lc~ l~it:; .!1d~~: An ldutt community on !!pets._,· !v10•11 Jan6· $450 3BR2~BA. H.B. S22S/mo fl. From$1.l.5uq. ft. No OpJI lullf SOOS J.2..ZS beaut. Ion&· apartment, beach area. -="'""------- h B .. B S .... ...,...,., I d ..,oo d leue reqllirecl. Adj. • ........... ~··•••••••• haired brn • oraoae cat, 213/582-1.573. IOOIUCEEPEI .,..... Anist.t lllnyforthebestvitw! t e ac .. ay. pee-Cl.EAN2B Ba d utl · P · •• ep .• , __ , __ 2172 Du· I.061NG LEASE, quit· CKaruS48·1866 Part.time leading to Challenging Position 9825 to t8'75. Adults, no tacular Spa, 7 swim· . r, l • ln ry , emU•·21JU ...., ..... -llAM. tJnabuai.oea,1elllngout I•-------rull-tlme. F /C book· Available ro r ex · Pell. Day1 643·0212, llliJlipoob,81lghtedlen· garage,nopet.s,$450mo. Mother• aon need to poat.Ca .133-3ZZ3. AU. 1~plln and fix· -..~Mb An'IMTIOM: keeper ror mortgage perienced, Ma ture, WkndstlSl-6441. nil ~· bike lraila, 52710 •bare Dlct 3BR 3BA '"" S1'lllT tunsmclud.ln&: Lo1t Dec aet b n r Ambiliou1 boys and brokerage ID Newport Energetic Assistant IWla:cl•leocliJl4C putting green . .._ 40ff bome in CDM. Frplc, COSTAMISA DillQJ cuea, waJUna ~Bl• Wllloo. girtalO.layeanold,to Buch, growth op. Top Ply "ror Right ·-••••••••• .. ••••••• .. Ba chelors, l and 2 -••••••• .. •••••••••••• d/w, 1ar. 1ardener, Zcirlroomoftleeaultes. room cbalra, Beauty • lbChoteCollar. wtrit one or two tv.en· portuoity, salary com· Person. 4 days. Non· Laree 3 bdrm, a balh, bedrooma apartments, LacunaBeacbllotorlnn, a..t•Depead.Avall. AJC plealyofprkc.Util Satoe balrdlyer1 and t5l·WT7 in111 a week getting menaurale wilh U · Smkr.644-0595 frpk, patio, garage. and townhouses rrom 915 No. Pacific Coaat now. pOO + ~ tiUI. lnd.'A..u:DOW Call bydrauUc chain, mlr· FOUND . Au1lrali1n new1paper aubacrip·I perience. Non·smoker Xlnt'l7S.ln22 SS40tDSlOOOpermonth Hwy, Laguna Beach. 17S.3113 Dy1 '44·4H5 Ree&cecimies · ITW'JOO ron,abelveaandplanta. Sltpl. 'wrd,2puppies,Old tions. Transportation preferred. Call Katie. ~Hy~t · · OnJamboreeAt Daily Weekly Kitchen e'l'9 Allo.mde-= ahampoo En'11ahSbeei>doC loo& and conslanl adult M0-9350 1or2 Sat a mo. Costa FUrnisbed • Unfurn 1·2·3 Sao Je>aquin Hills Road ar".:. .. le ~ winter . Stare 2 ofc IUite ill pre-__.. .,_,_ • .:... ...., ed Do j Pooct' I 1-rvi1ioo provided. --------Mesa. 641·3272 Bdrm. Apts. Gym, (714)&44-1900 --~~ Promontory Polnt·ll, llleiomairportarea.17$ ... umi _... -..r xe. e, cillsto5:30PM,ukfor CASHIEI J acllui. Sau.n a. pool. ' • ._. -_.., *' Ju. 2 dctaill all Call Dl..f154 • Lab mis • mcire. lrvi:ne tennis volleyball P«> FEE. Apt. 6 Coodo Balbol Inn. llO • up ll*mJ2ba apt. $DS + \'! lllloo ft. ror c after11-... Anlm1l Care Center Andrea, "2·4321, ut. HOUSIWARISAUS .,..... baket~ came room' 1'91l&ls. V'illaRentall. week}1. Kitcbennette, uW..17MSM/'11H507 l51Cll. Verde * * • I ™-'™ Kl ~ J'~d~ar:.P~~ amt. Bch.0MMl&l9 17$-el2 Broker. oceanfront. 87$-17'° NB. 8t&l'I to Bdl, 11/F. • "-ft. llaa AOllMCIC&.Alll Sheep doc found, Irvine <Westc11rr> NB ............... Dynamic, good with pe<>- ple Well utablished. buay crown and bndge Irvine office. Excellent cueer opportunity for mo ti YI t ed person Salary open. Evenings 79-1574, days 559-Sl 11 ,~.J ADUl T .J~ LIVING • l '1"' '"'° .,u • 0tJ..nht!, ' 880 ' • Pool & Ate Aoo111 • w• °"' l i!IOSUD</'O • JoO 10 8cKll & Snop> Set I Glln SEA ENVIRONMENT ,.,. 1, t1AM1i l'"'~ H ft ... ic..--r Near Huntingt io n Harbour. aBR.~. 846-4360 ~. 2 Br Iba, klda oil, patio/car. $405. 17401 Keelaon. Nr Beach/ Sat.er. 9112·3837 3 Br. 2 Ba. New paint, carpet. enclsd caraae. , $525/mo 848·1511 or lMUl53. 2Br2ba, frplc, patio. Encl ~. laund facil ~/DK>. 9112.41132 WALK TO BEACH. Bachelor, 1tove • ietrt1e. Ou • water peld. fl!5/ml>. 538-7'71. Ocelnfroo.l lor WiAter Lake Forest. All bouae JN5 to alar IBR Apt. -.. . I deal, vie. S..A. Ave • AUI'OMOTIVE Rentals Furn11bed • priv. W/D. Lake. pool, ID!L@0.175-10'1 54M1ZI -~o:!:ta Z2ndSC.l2/30MWl84 r.tsCaDrialtt•• Codihi1Waffns1 unf\n. Broker. &75-dl2 lmnia.. All aW pd. SZIO. Fem. lbr 2 br apt. nr IA YFROMT You 1tt tbe winner ol 5350 Allfll •tr . EYpu lmmed operunl! EASI'BLUFF lbr., pool, lJt • 1ut. 511-4031 occ. C.M. Ref a. Im· Prime offtce 7SO-N40 fow free tldretl (llJ.00) ... •••••••••••••••••••• ~ve5 dxpenen~e Br~ loutJoo. Ca II ~etatta,ainaleadult, Profeuional m•le/ mediately. 12$0 Incl. · · vakletotbe NEEDCREDIT! 1 ... q"''""' ay wee · ~77609·11AM nopd.a@O/mo. 6'4-4767 female l8lf\lrn II room alill. 5'0.S2ll ext. • a.ta Maa. 250 aq .. n. s,.rtl. Yee..._ Gd V'lU or Muter Card Salary commensuuteto .C-mlOll/Aide with ba ' kJtcb priv. <D!ntl!z> Aile. Sl'15/mo. UW. tn· ..en 5'ew witb no credit Check experience. Call Greg nee&.! \'or elderly lady Lovely Newport bome Wuted female room· ~~ W. ltth. St. ANAHEIM GUARANTEED. Wrllt ~J!:~r!!-~r· at s daYI per wk. Corona by Corona del Mar R1 aate to ab1tt 3 bdrm, 3 . CONVENTION to DPL. PO Box 4775· j 4tMHO . de I Mar. Live in . .,..... ,.._.Office Want a change~ Start the New Year right w1lh an tstebllsbed , pl.ea$ant. modern group pradlce. Musi have ft· cent dental experienre. Newport Center Dental Group, fl0. ll.22. OCEAN VIEW delWte 2 Br. 2 Ba deck, yard, brick frplc . gar., SECUR . GATE . •1111>. or leue opt. Adultl, Sllntet e1urrs on Pacirtc Ave. C M. lG-IMO. 6'2-8808. l with larte loft. • extra deck. 7~14,759--1°'2. School. Pool iv all. S250 ba coodo In Newport Colla Mesa office witb CENTER Jan. 2· 10 Laa Vep!, Nv. 119108 Sat/SUD ~r. Local refs mo, util incl'd. SlOO dep. Betldl.. S215 + uUI. Con· OC)eaD view. Reception To claim Uckete, call GIAJeOPIMIMG 1·1 -------• req. Call 213/799·6201 7~ tadLoucirRandy.8-5at ~A+al2l~cead-,1!4t 11q 842·~878. ext. 272. ISCottTS Banting collect.. Room&.Ba. Prestigious m•> 523..oellO, arttr s "· v imme .. ey. nctetamustbeclaimed IRV99 ... -.......... 1 p.a.-.a.1.t..~ -------- $mpermo 851 tlOOO byJ 8 ,_ m;a•---"-·-·• cnnK~M addressw/pool,j1c.ten· (71')~ • • IDIW)' • .._.... 1 L" d & UMDBWI ~.".'T' nis.S3(I0.644-7667 -.. "-.. ant-• ... ~ mo. I. 1 ...... STIHT · * * * FVl~~m1,1e~!c .. w1nlth.th"' Gord"Llz, 900 Bayside .. .,. """' ,.,.., "" ,. u. -" ... VERY BUSY loan office Dr. Newport Beach ~um w/rull bath. view, Mature resp female non· 3100 sq.ft. for lease. Mllit I a. Trwt best in local Newport Beach ---~--- nr OC Airport, pref. iunoter. 548-1887 Plenty of parklag. ~ 0.-5035 · 'ff-0207 Savings le Loan, is seek· COST block lo WealcliU. •-••••••••••••••-••••· -----...-------. ing experienced loan ACCOUMTIMG cu.tom interior de.alp. "-....._Ml.,.~ I packageu • un · New Cost Accounting Ready to move I.a I Com· -~., -· derwriten for conven· Positioo is Open ror Ex· pmtive ratea, call Rob, ~ types of real nt..&e -•• •••••••••••••••.. tiona1 real estate loans. pandin& Luer Mfgr Co. m.-mvcstmeotulnce l.Mt. SdlMk & Salary commensurate Job Colt.In& Background Qllt.om e:iecutive office, S,.~Ml .. la lalla,._ 7005 with experience. Ex-Prderred or College aaq. ft. Pvt batb witb WT'Dt ....................... cdJll!nt frowth potential Level Won lD Account· aboftr. Balboa Pfllin. '4J.2171 54M61 I SSl.IO WEEK. Chrbtian witb anresa~~~ com-ing. p!Orm.8'2-41Z3. ...._._ ............ ~ J>re.8eboCll. 320 E. 18th pany.Pleaaecllllforap. We are a Div111on or --e I ~ !I.. ea.t. Mesa. Specill pointment: JOHNSON • JOHNSON 2.::::. +bathroom ~~Yn-.i. Procram·Nl-54ZS Ma.DeooyParilia •Offer an excellent .__ -...~ _,,, -.,_,.... W........__. 7 I 00 71~ Brnefits Packaae Call _._, ._...._. OWNER-NON OWNE.R Hl1p -MIWPOIT IAUOA er Apply 1t Laumann DIETARY SERV SUPERVISOR • Need«! ror conv hosp. Cert. pref Xlnt salary and benefits incl in SIU'al>« and skit pay. Apply Beverly Manor. 3'0Victona. Costa Mesa DllYIRS WANTED F.arty morn.in& home de· livery LA. TIM ES- lrvl.ne &. Newport attH . 1450. + mo Ca 11 : 546-4235 So. ar-e...tw 1thru4 wlits -·••••••••••••••• SA YIM5S I LOAM Electro Optics Inc. 33052 Spaee ... .n ill atylab M«Dobbl,BrClker A~;!TANJ-T~ UOOlrvineAve.,NB I CalleAviador San Juan yoor old stuff Jor lawaliteforcompat.lble 711)C'l NMOll ....... _.nee. lllY · E.0.E. II.IF Capistrano. EOE . new goodiea with a '-~ •~.• ...._ --fice.S.0-1.a? l~!!~!!!!!!~i:M~/F~/H===;;;;;;;;=~Cl:::asifi~·~ied~d~,..~ .. ....,~8~ ;.t••;;;;,~;i;t, Earo lit. oa Balboa ti -----------a ....... _..!..- Hl'Vlce, jamtorial and lallDd tl'Ult deed.I. Over ' ACCOUMTIM6 much m>re. Call Corrine 50'1t equity ._Short OC' Iona A 1 row ln 1 Me wpo rt (!14) 1$14555 tenn.. *5e00minimlllll. ·~ investment nnn .-w-n .... ...,. m1r bal., tmmedJat• open· ._, 'ninl 675-JIU 1111 for a AIR ' A/P ,.....,. clert. General journal, SS*lM necllllve of-caab dl.lbunement, data &. amm h'om City Wl~ow bu tU for Input. Sal. comm. with 11111. AD ...teem ••.U.· TD a/Re Loins. lOK up. ap. Call: 75UOTO, EOE Ille, 'optkm.al'. From 225 No credit. I No penahy. il!!!!!!!!l!!!!!m!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! aqJ\. ap, It re,uopable DellDlloD Aaaoc. 673-7311 A/C retuelel' pvt A/C ' reat~. No 1'1•H It· a!rti.ne up. preferred. '4red.Calll'7NOCl:I . '•••~-•/ Allo tow A/C • variom Pw 111•1/ dutlu. Salary com· Lelltl,... amarat.ew/a..p.Callf. ..... _................ ht. mu Airport Way 'Ill•••-• llM So.,&.ll&aAna. -•••••••••••••••• AIDIS Altf wtto.a to ecddeot rw actlYt rtt.lre-meot ilmMDi tnitt. bone 6 uamultJ. Very ldrl. ca OGWaweat bet. ,._.., s:•ll:IODm, llllt/01rfleld. Tat*. "'*_.. .tr. aJ.U Dac.-. u:• AM. Call N!!po!l Btach. •ua ~ . C..... Ill ....._. All AU(. 7:IO _.............. 10 4. Wtllktmd Pll 5'11\. 1fttta -..a OriHn/ ,1:• to u :a Newport .-... leil&I Aalta Dal· VIia. -Hllari•. NI. ~-, .... ~ ,.;.._~ .. =:..:lllt=='~~--::~-....•.•........•..• ... . :, . ~ . ~ . . 'Newspaper C<irfiers tor routes - in HU.ntington BeaCh, Fountain Valley & Newport Beach . ELECTRONICS SALISPllSOM Experienced electronic ~ent aaletperaon n edfir elect ronic mla, reptompany. Very pleaaant ortlte. Com mlsalon bull. Pleue callforappt. 714-894 7257 Exec led. admlft auist " conlldant ln Newport Ceotr. Lon~ hrs, hard wort ' ch lenaing ror some one u~aually bright " slull • If this isn't you, plea:se call yo ur sma rtest, un- challenged . undtr· utillaed friend " tell them about this ad Co mpensation t o $24,000.+ benefits H you're the best, please reply in conridence lo Mr Charles. P.O. Box l!IXX), CdM 9262S Extaltn A growin~rt in· vestment firm has an immediate opening for Extt. Secreta.ry. Word processing & d1ct exp. a IDl.lll. No 1horthaod nff. Sal. comm. with exp. Call: 752.oo10, EOE fll.TlmSteck Younc. eneraeUc person needed.JJ\W have some retail exp. Pleuant sur· roundings & benefits. Pleue appty in person. Apropos, 29 f ashion Isle. N 8. or call · 644-26S2 Hctel/Restauranl Currently has the rouow ing po11lloos available for part-time help: lortttldtr Cools .. ,'"°" . Ho111e Maoeaer . 8'eetvlu, Tuoa In Shelter. 142·2311 MUIANCI Uceoaed marine un denrrittt Fraser Yacht 1~87H2SZ. MUUMCI Experte11ced JCtOUllU •nlltut ror com. attlal lhles with m.jor laaurance brbktra~e flJ"lll Jn Newport Bue . Salery com'menaurate wilh exPtrience. For , IJll!tcall. (714~-SllZ. JOB L?m>l\MATION OYer 1000compules U.S. Employment Guide 19.00. Call G-25%-0979 OP.m Opeo7dal! Kennel p e r so n , we1Uan. 7am-2pm. *-5486. SCRAM·lETS ANSWERS Twn D,sl Spt FshrSed '67 32' Luhrs F.G auto. i\DF, F'ATHO, RADAR , • AM. FM . VHF. CB. Stereo Lewco batt system , Bow pulpit & plank. trim tabs Power windlass, refr1g du.al controls. Bimini top & enc. outriggers swim step. Mono Lo hrs Perkins 160's MUC H MUCH new Mech Last iUl"\ey 37,SOO Sale price $2 7,SOO N WP T MOORING AV .!\ IL s.3&-8S74 UTllODY WOltK UptoSO"'n off your body sbope!t1mate! 53&-9832 .,...._yow MOMy! Mec•lllc'• Soecial '75 Pmlo V6 J.tost or body and all engine. in side parts and uphol. seats. etc in good shape' Good glass . doors hatrhbark. rear, enR. radiator. new trans. whls & llres Part out or repair Call for mrorma Lion art 6 pm or wknds ~5844 ----4 Transam Wheels Star Patttm "' Beaut) nms 15_!!' 2' S'IS all 646 6519 WEIUY a.EAMCilS AMOTIUCKS COHMRL CHEVROLET ·~ 11.ri .. r 111,,1 ""1\\1~,, SU-1200 HIGHIUYER Top dollars for SPorb CaNl. Bugs. Ca mpt>ri. 914's, Audi'• AstrocU/C MGR JfMM.UIHO VOUCSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd HUNTINGTON BEA< II _142-2000 WENES> YOUIEXOTIC &llfTISH CARS 1q 3100W Co•st Hw> Nrwport Beach 642-94<lS WANTED! Late model Toyotas and Volvos Ca ll u ~ 'roDA !l! Top Dollar Paid f'orYourtar' JOHMSON & SOH ~ercsry 2626 Harbor Bl\ cf ea.ta Mesa _540 S6J() i-ttm1om pnce~ paid for an) used < ar 1fon1gn or domesur 1 1 n good c0od1t1on See L's First ' ATl.ASCHIYs&.la.ft.YMOUTH 2129 Hatt>or Blvd., Coat. Meu. Tel. 548-1934. 3 bloctca eouth of S8n oi.go Freew11y off Hert>or Blvd. Complete 1body shop. Sales. Sefvlce. P.u. Service o.ut. open Monday thru Friday 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. and t A.M. to 5 P .M. on.S.tur•. llepnt" wbtte with ,.ed leather. Sliver Shadow 42,0DO ml. '4'1.500. M4·11C'7 r ':'O.,j>.,jf l t>4 ~ 'p • ! I ) ·~ . MATCH THE NUMIERS ON THE . MAP WITH THE NUMlllS IM fHE IOXES • MIWPOaT DATSUN -Dow Strwt. Newport BMch. Tel. ~1300. At the trfqle of JambOf'ee, MacArthur & Briatol behind Yic-tott. ltltlOn. S.111, s.tvic:., Lealng I P--. Aeet ~ counts to tM pubflc. ·-, '• IOI LON•PB POMl'IAC 13800 BMch Blvd .• w..trnm.ir. T•. 81112~1. Orange County'• otdelt Mcf largett Pontlec dulet'shlp. 8'111a,' Sefv~.Pwta. · SM. CHlftOLll' D> South Co.t HfghWay LAguna~ -a..,.. ........ ..,,..,,. SALES HOURS: Mon.-frt, •1. Slit. N . Sun. HM .... 1131 ' . 1464117 SANTA AMA DATSUN 2001 E. 17th St,..t, SMta "'1wa. Tet. 5el-7811. Your Original Oedl~ted O.taun ~· COSTA MISA DATSUN 2945 Htwbor Blvd .. Costa Meu. Tel. 54CMM10. Serving Cringe C<MHlty for 11 ~-1 Mlle So. 405. SUMSIT .OU, INC. (Horne of Wlhle the Whele). 5440 Gwen GrOY9 Blvd., w.tmlfllW. Tej. ~10. n . • ll ~· -MAI« PIOTO lMCOLM tBCUIY Service Md Pam Oepanrnent ~ open 7 days a -~~ 7:30 ~.M. !O 1:30 P.M. MIH73D.