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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-04 - Orange Coast Pilot,, . . MONDAY JANUARY -l 1qa:;> SPEEDY -This is the envelope that t he , Postal Service plans to use for its new electronic mail ser vice that will allow busin esses to have t heir com putcrued .............. m essages to cons umers delivered with regular m a il , bypassing traditional mail handling. Electronic mail begins Service to. allow large .mailers to bypass usual handling WASIDNGTON CAP> -The Postal Service, ignoring Justice Department opposition, today began an electronic mail service businesses can use t o have computerized bi lls a nd messages delivered with regular mail. The Electronic Computer Originated Mail ser vice will allow large-volume mailers lo b ypass t raditional ha ndUng m ethods in which a letter is sorted by various postal clerks before being delivered. U nder t h e se rvice, a company's computer will send a message via a communications common carrier -such as long-distance telephone -to one of 25 specially equipped post offices around the country Ther e, the message wi ll be printed on paper , p ut 1n a dis tincti ve b lue -and-w hite E-COM envelope and deli vered with regular m ail. Postmaster General William F . Bo lger, a nnouncing t he $er vice today, called it "the latest step in a progre.ssion of technologies we have used lo transport the mail" and said the result would be more efficient handling or computer-generated messages. The service is for companies ''We believe we have :proceeded fully within the law." t h a t send 200 or more computer-originated messaees at one time. The Postal Service promises delivery within two business days. The Justice Department asked for a restraining order to block the service New Year's Eve, but a federal court refused. The d e p-a rtme nt contended the E -CO M i;ervice threatens to diver t taxpayers ' money to subsidize the service. Pot shipmerits Taken into Harbour Nine members of a n alleged drug smuggling ring who used Huntington Harbour to bring in Colo.mbian ma rijuana were arrested by Los Angeles police ~unday and 5,000 pounds of pot vah,ted at $15 million were confiscated, according to law enforcement authorities. Los Angeles police Lt. Ken Welty s aid th e a ll eged smuggJers brought the pol into Huntington Harbour aboard four 30-lo ~Coot inboard boats. The boats then were loaded onto trailers a nd t a k e n t o a warehouse in Los Angeles, he said. · Sunday, the six month police and Coast Guard investigation cu.lminated in the arrest of six Colombians a nd three Am- ericans a t t he ·warehouse near the Santa Fe Avenue exit of the Santa Monica Freeway, Welty said. The boats also were confiscated. Coa st Guard petty officer Richard Woods said today ocean waters are being scanned for the mother ship. ~ "We don 't think any Huntington Harbour residents were involved," Welty said. "It just seems they needed a pJace to bring in the boat, and chose Huntington Beach." He said police have warrants out for other suspects, Including some Los Angeles businessmen. He described the alleeed smugglers as part of "a major drug ring, that also operates on the East Coast." I Babies -not harmed in hospital bliize Eight newborn babies were 1afely evacuated from the maternity ward eunery al UC Irvine Medical Center when lire broke ·out in a Linen closet, autborltles said. None of the bable• was harmed in the blue tbat waa detected 8:30 p.m. ~Jd bUt fire Capt. Bill Slm .. lu two nurae1 suffered smoke iabalatton and were elven emers-cy tnatment. M Ike Deblleux, bo1pltal admlnJatrator on call, said !•rt" carried the babi• to safety, and stair member Bruce Sunrise pushed a laundry cart with burning dirty linen lo a concrete stairwell landln1 where lt burne(itaelf out. s•mpldna laid the ftre'a 'ca'* at the h91P'al in Oran1e wu ltil1 ·not known thiJ momlnc. . "We have some lDY..U,a&Grl who are IOini out today and work their way down tbrouO tbe aoUed linen,'' Slmpklnl ula. Water from•=_..... syatem leaked ._ .. noor of tbe c&olet ud dam...S .... equt,>ment ln a labaratory .,.. below, DebUeux aaid.l Bolger said he was pleased that the court refused lo approve the delay. "We welcome a full bearing on the merits of our case. We believe we have proceeded fully within the law in obtaining approval to start tbia aervice." he said. E ·COM is tbe Postal Semee's lar geat effort to barneaa computer technology lo move the mail. Tbe service is deaiped for first-class mail sent by businesses, which comprises the largest port.loo of mail volume. The Postal Service expects a first-year volume of at leut 20 million pieces,. said' Karen Uemoto, director of E-COM operatioos. Eventually, up to 500 million pieces of mail per year could move through the service, she said. That still woullt be less than 1 percent of the 60 billion pieces of first-class mail the sen-ice handled last year. So far, 123 companies asked for Postal Service certilication (See MA.IL, Page AZ> Blizzard, tornadoes, rains strike - By The Auoclated Preas A blizzard surged into the Roc kies today with 85-mph winds,. while cities ln the Midwest were clobbered with foot-deep s now, and freezing rains and flood warnings closed schools in the Northeast. One person was killed and there were numerous lnjuries in a dozen tornadoes that hit the South late Sunday. A plane crash today in heavy Cog near the Fort Wayne, Ind., airport killed one woman and injured two others, bringing the total of weather-related deaths to 31 since New Year's Eve. The· National Weather Service issued fiub-fiood warninp in the suburbe of New York City, meanint fioodlne waa immlDent In Westchester County of New York and at least four counties in neilbborlni New Jersey. A number of school• In suburban New York· City were closed because of icy roads. Freeainc rain also closed hundreds of acboola acfo11 ,., upstate New York, we1 em Masaachuuetta and New Hampshire. Up to 2 feet of new anow fell In the mountain• of Oreaon and into Idaho where many ro.da and •cbooll were clo.ed. •• * • • * I Cl r . ,. ( ORANGE COUN TY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS 0 I Sea hunt ca:riceled ~ Another boatman feared dead II By STEVE MARBLE CM .. Dlllty ..... IUff An air and boat search for a 57-year-old Newport Beach yachtsman reportedly swept off his 39-foot sailboat Saturday off Catalina Island has been suspended, U.S. Coast Guard officials said today. The disappearance of Jerry Hamilton, an auto dealer from Newport Beach, marked the second time in the past week that a Newport boater has vanished off the Catalina coastline. Efforts to locate N~wport businessman Dean Tyler Jenks, a Laguna Niguel resident, were call~ off Thursday. Authorities involved in the searches reported they "presume" both men are dead. Harbor offlclals in Avalon said eale force winds were present al the time and that waves were running five lo six feet. Coast Guard authorities said Hamilton was wearing a yellow !ife jacket, but no protective clothing. . .!!The probability of someone surviving in 56-degree waler for very Ion~ is slim," one Coast Guard spokesman suggested. The unidentified woman, officials said. radioed for help after the incident and was euided to shore by patrol officers. . 1 Coast Guard spokesmen._. boats and a 1ln1le helieopUI' conducted a 100-aquare:mU' search of the area north,,. ol A valonHarbor with no au~- ln the other incident, potae, officers in Newpdrt Beaeb wen preparing today to study tbe 30-foot sailboat found w..W aground on a beach fut welk just west of Avalon. Jenks, a Newport stockb'::I was last seen aboard the v Tuesday when he set out for ._. island. The boat was discover" Wednesday with its uila dowa and its engine stiU runniot. Despite early reports to tbe <See SEARCH, Pa1e AJ) SNOWBOUND -Traffic on Route 50 at South Lake Tahoe wa.s backe~ up as holiday ........ travelers tried to beat a second weekend s torm in the a rea. Northern California shivers Sier~a ~torms extend to lowlands, peril highways By Tbe Auoctated Presa flooding, according to a National A chilly, windy weekend or Weather Service spokesman. storms in the Sierra Nevada and But by early today, no Northern rare lowland snows touc:hlng California rivers were reported suburban areas of California led near the fiood stage. the way ror roads icing aloo• the Several motorists on the Pacific Coast and heavy wi.Dda. normall-y temperate San Snow fell on mountains around Francisco peninsula bad to San Francisco Bay both abandon cars in the snow on Saturday and Sunday nights, hilly roads and walk to abelter, disrupting some motorista oo icy said Gary Martin, a spokesman roads but enchanting residents for the state Division of who romped in hillside parks. Forestry. The warmer storm expected Snow and ice forced closure of to follow the weekend of snow Interstate S north of Redcllq. and ice threatened a upid thaw Chains were required over the and runo(( that could cause main Sierra highways and on * * * * * * Mor.e rain f orectlst for Coast tonight will be respooatble for today'' ' ud Tuesday'• rain lD Ora.nae County. · ~ . ' Ahhou1b no small craft adYilClri• bad been bolated u of tbt1 mornlna, the weather . service uld the warnlnc• may be tn tfteet by tonlpt. Wl.nda of from 10 to 20 Dots are expeeted thlaeYflDlDC. · • The Oranae County Sheri.If'• Department Harbor Patrol said tbe aea wu 1mootb today In .Newport Harbor aDd tbat no ru.lall bed been repoNd anee SaturdaJ . Tb• weather aervlce aald toDA~• temperatu'" 1hould cllp tM bllb -wtUt tbe mWCWJ cm T\MldQ rtalq tD IT 'de ..... .' • 1 LIO&. ral• aad 1a0Jt are predletld ... tlllema•t•liiill!.,.... 1aowlall doWll to l,MO feet ......... State Route 29 in the low-J.11Di ·Napa Valley from VaJlejO to State Route 20 near Clear (..Me;-, Sunday's storm dropped ,._ on the Northern California C011111J and promised snow fO { elevations u low as 1,000 •• said Clarence Blrb, a speddrt for the National Weat~er Service in Eureka. l Rain drenched fans at tbe .... Francisco <Hera' N~UoaaJ Football Leacue playfolf vidorJ over the New York -GiUIU at Cand.lestick Park. <See SIEaBA, Pase .U> ".. llllGI ClllT IUIB.-·. 1 • Chance of rain 10 r berceot tont1bt aad ~ "fi'ueaday. Toni1ht'1 lowt •· i ,to SS. IDgbs Tuesday SI at beaches, 82 inland. Detalla J • PageA3. .. I IMllll TllAY A ..,... of ffkbrcldaa .... I Sacramnto I• ••r•'•• ~ ·~J)ldtcM of Uw • .._ • reatorouo .. o/ a.e •••••. • Capitol. Sft PQos Bl. ·~1111 \ J J a t ?. <! l I v. •) Orange Cout DAILY PILOT~onday, January 4', 1182 '1 ftltAimtlaW Prell Pol•ll Premltr WoJclecb ~ mtetlna today with w._. s..;;;;aa diplomata ln ..... , WU tXJ*l41d to U'l\l9 ~l•.laat the WHt•rn alllea JOlDlnl the United Statea ln an economic 1quee1e on hi• martial law....Sme. ID 81waela Italian Forettn Mlalater Emilio Colombo told \ht• olace Common Market cowtterp,na tOClay tbtit lbey 1bould be Unlfted and end au but direct food aa1i1tance to tbe Pullah P4IOPle uatu J aruelakJ produce1 •uarantee1 tbe · 'repre11ion" of Poland'• martial law will be lifted. "Wit.bout thla unity we wlll conUrm two very 1rave facts," Colombo said, "the indirect acceptance of the Pollab , . .......... STUCK -This tugboat remains frozen for the winter in the Lake Michigan harbor at Kewaunee. Wis . From Page'A1 SIERRA BLANKETED. • • "It does look quite moist," Birks said. Since the storm was likely lo brJng some.what warmer t peratures than the cold that prevailed over much of the weekend; there was a possibility ot OoodS if aoo• melted onto well-soaked ground, be said . Snow drifts closed State Highway 9, said a d1spatcher for the California Highway Patrol. The road winds tbroucb the Santa Cruz Mountains and leads lo the 'Lick Observatory on 4,209-foot high Mount Hamilton east of San Jose. Southerly wi nds will pick up strength and be at gale rorce in the mountain s today. the National Weather Service said. Skiers rang in the New Year by enjoying the best snowfall or the season. "Everything's open ... but we expect the storm to cbanlle ' * * * From Page A1 all th.at,·· said the Truckee dispatcher who did not want to be identified. Interstate S, from north of Mountain Gate to the Oregon. border, was opened briefly to traffic, but suow whipped by strong winds blinded motorista and the road was closed again Sunday evening, said Cheryl Blanchard, a dispatcher for the Shasta County Sheriff 's Department. The weekend's rtrst storm picked up cold air and moisture over the Gulf of Alaska, arrived on New Year's Eve Day and left 'Californians shivering, wet, and in some cases, encnanted by several feel or while powder, an ideal topping for ski slopes. The mercury dipped lowest in California Sunday al Truckee - • degrees below zero, the weather service said. .-* * SNOW HITS AGAIN ... With a root or fresh snow falling in southern Wlsconsin on top of several inches on the ground, most roads and the interstate highway system were tlrtually im.pauable, s.late police said. Heavy snow also spread Youngster, 4, shoots seU LOS ANGELES CAP> -A 4-year-old boy was in stable condit.lon today at Valley Re~etving Hos pital after accidentally shooting himself in tbestomaeh. Todd Daley, of Van Nuys, was inj~red when he reached into a dr8Aer drawer in bla mother's room and shot bllMelf with a handsun. said poUc:e s,t. Jlm. Tbompeoa. Tbe IUD diacbaraeCl •hen Ute y outh 1rabbed ft' 1aod abot himself tbrouab tbe abdomen, be said, across northern Missouri and Iowa. Still another blizzard bit the Colorado Rockies, where heavy snow since late December bas built 6th feet deep in places and touched o ff hundreds of avalanches. Residents were told to brace for winds gusting to 100 mph. Boulder registered 85 mph gusts. Jn eastern Maine, 20 ,000 people spent the weekend in 10-d egree weather without electricity after a snowstorm. Power was restored to all but the most isolal'ed homes late Sunday and early today, utility officials said. Snow was coming down al the rate ol 2 inches a.n hour today in Columbia, Mo. Kansas City and Kirksville, Mo., got 8 inches of snow Sunday and Topeka, Kans., received 6 inches. Thousan d s of ldabo schoolchildren welt told to stay home today as many roads were t snowpacked and treacberowa.· Boise struuJed out from under a foot of snow -ita heaviest In 33 years. MAIN OfflC:I • • W ... 9e\l St., C-. Mele, CA • ........... , .. _,! .... ~ ..... CA. ... repreuion and the dlvialon ot the West." A teit ol bi.a statement, fon dell very at tbe closed door • mfftlng, wu releued lo the pre11. J aruaelskl, bead of tbe mllltary councll now rulinl Poland, ordered martial law Dec. 13 in what be called an alternative to civil war. The re1lme moved swiftly to eatablhb ordel' la the workplaces, pla1Ued by attikes sin ce tbe independent trade union Solidarity wu eatabllabed in Au1ust 1980 and be1ao demandlnc liberalization and reforms. Radio Warsaw said all factories, adminiat.rative ofti~es and put.Ile transport in the capital were operating normally today, the first work day of the new year. Broadcasts ~nitored in London also said m~_t s~nyots reopened "after 20 days' holiday." Un censored reports from. Poland said 20 closed factories and industrial plants were to reopen today following attempta to purge unionists who led strikes in defiance of martial law. There were no immediate reports on labor conditions outside the capital today. Among planta the government hoped to gel working again were the big Lenin s hipyard in• Gdansk, where Solidarity was born in the summer of 1980, and the Pafawag railroad car factory in Wroclaw. a center of labor unrest. It was the third attempt to reopen the shipyard. Western response to Reagan's trade sanctions against Poland and the Soviets has been cool, although the allies have protes t e d the military crackdown and s uspension o( civil liberties. Reagan claims the Soviets were the chief in s t ig ators behind the declaration of m artial law and must be punished. The allies have expressed concern that suspending officially sponsored aid to Poland and imposing other s anctions would jeopardize East-West relations and make Poland more reliant on the Soviet Union. Martial law authorities have cut normal communications in Poland and sharply restricted Wes tern news a'gencies. All dispatches are censored and independent reports must be assembled lro~ dlplomats, exiles, travelers and other sources. From PageA1 MAIL .•• to use E-COM, Powell said. These include such tarse firms as Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith, Inc.; Shell OU Co. and General Tire and Rubber Co. Five telecommunications carriers signed agreemellts with the Postal Service to provide the link between companies' computers and t h e Postal Service. Businesses that want lo use E-COM are required to pay a $50 annual fee plus 26 centa for the first page and five cents for the second page of a message. They wiU have to pay the common carrier separately. The Postal Service expects that to add between a penny and a dime to the cost of each transmission. While this is more than the 20-cent rate for a first-class letter, E·COM relieves business mailers of printing the messages and putt.in& lhem into envelopes. One major way of us ing 'E-COM will be sending the same message to many people, such as In the recall of a product or a n otice of a s'tockbo~ders' m eeting. However, separate messages can be sent to individual addresses or individual inserts can be put into m essages se nt to many addresses. Barking dogs alert 3 in fire CINCINNATI CAP> -A gunman escaped with $10,573 from ~& office in Riverfront1 Stadium just before batrume Sund•y of the American• Football Conference playoff came detween the Buffalo Bills• and the Cinclnnatl Ben1ats, police slid. · Offlctr Robert Glaameyer1 aald th• a male s uspect wu beln• IC>Qlbt in the robbery. The mbney wu believed to h lfve been taken from a pro1ram concessionaire. · KKK \ hee RALEJ~C. (AP) -! Uniformed police and plalnclotbel-. UDed the route aa about JO robed ku Klux ltlanamen marehed to tbe It* Capitol, but no trouble wa1· reponed. Tb• Klumaea aald Sunday tbey were 1Hkla1 commuU!tiea of UM ....... °'I a wtilt• ma• coa•letN of flrebombln• a black·owaH .... ,..,... ' .,, ........ CHINA ICERS -Against the backdrop or the Imperial Drum Tower. a young Chinese couple skate on an ice rink in Peking's Rear Lake. Admission is about four cents and it is virtually the only winter sport in Peking. Millionare looking for-work Lottery payoff works against him in interviews PITI'SBURGH CAP> -Like many other unemployed people trying to track down work, Paul Smolak resolved lo find a job - even though he's a millionaire, sel to receive $50,000 every July for the next 20 years courtesy of the Pennsylvania Lottery. "I 'v e b een l oo k i ng everywhere. But you know things are off when some places will lake applications for one hour once a week," said Smolak, 31, wbo was laid off indefinitely in Augus t fr o m hi s job delivering beer. "I'm not a brain surgeon or anything, but I've had two.years of college," he s aid in an interview Sunday. "All I want is to make a living and be in a retirement fund." Smolak, who lives with his parents in Creighton , just northeast of Pittsburgh, was laid olf six weeks after coming up a big winne r in the lottery . Although he had worked al the distributor for about five years, he had the least seniority. ·•I fell bad about it (the layoff)," he said. "I've been laid off at aJI the companies I've been with. I've always been the last in and the first out." The lotter y payoff was a stroke of good luc k. S molak admits, but it occasion a ll y worked against him during job interviews. "Some of lhem know (about the winnings), and some of them don't," he said. "Some of the places I've gone, people look at me kind of funny." Smola.le, who is single. never considered an early retirement, even after he won July 10. "Hey, I'm 31 , what was 1 going to do?" he asked. Since hi s first payoff, Smolak h as traveled to e astern Pennsylvani a and Washington, D.C., taking along his parents and older s ister . He's also bought some clothes and is considering buying a house. But 'that's been the extent of his s pending. Smol ak, -who-rec'eives une mployment bellefits, said be s pends most ·or bis lime knocking on doors in search of work i n s outhwest Pennsylvania, an area reeling from num e rou s s t eel industry.related layoffs . ' -'. ·'I · m not going to lose ' anything or starve," he said. ·"But inactivity isn't any good for you, either." Despite his more than four m o nth hi atus from work, Smola.le realizes he's better off than the next unemployed fellow down the line. • I 'Tm thankful. There's a lot of basic pressures that people have, and a lot of that is ofr," be sa id . "But I 've got new pressures -taxes, investments. ' people waiting for me to do so mething s tupid , in investments or in my personal life." Huntington traf ~ic f8tals tie '79 Dl3rk Atlanta jury choice near end ATLANTA CAP) -Screening or prospective jurors for the mu r d er trial of Wayne B. Williams neared an end today as e i g ht m o re juro r s were qualified. I A teen.age mo·ped operator became Huntington Beach's last traUic fatality of 1981 when he collided Thurs day with a tractor-trailer rig, police said. From Page A1 SEARCH. • • · contrary, the boat's life raft was still aboard the beached vessel. Newport police said the man's disappearance is a mystery, but added that there's no indication that "anything sus picious " happened. ~ Hamilton's disappearance was the fourth mis hap off Catalina in a month. In addition to Jenks, actress Natalie Wood was found floating in a lagoon ofr the island on, Nov. 29 and a 73·year-old man fell overboard seven miles off the island on Ott. 17. The youth. Ronald Scott Thoma s, 16 , o f 1 8778 Heavenwood Circle, Huntington Beach, was the 28th person in 1981 to die of traffic-r elated injuries in the city, offi cers said . The figure l ied the record number of local traffic deaths set in 1979. The num ber of fat alities dropped to 14 in 1980. Williams, a 23·year-old black free.lance photographer, is charged with killing Nathaniel Cat er, 27, and Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, two of 28 young blacks whose slayings terrorized the city over 22 months. No one . has been charged in the other In Thursday's accident, police ) deaths. said the youth was southbound o n Beach Boulevard n ear Garfield Avenue at 10:20 a.m. in th e curb l a ne , balancing packages as he rode in the rain. police said._ Officer s said the youth s kidded into the s ide of a tractor-traile r rig making a right tum into a shopping center and fell beneath the wheels of the truck. He was pronounced dead at the scene. ~~,,... Mammoth: Barge burning GALVESTON, Texas CAP> - Two s mall explosions s hot flames 50 feet ln the air and gave ne w life today to a s moldering fire on a barge that hit a drawbridge, a Coast Guard o fficial sai d . The barge, carrying a toxic and corrosive che mical. ran into a drawbridge wh ich had not been raised, Whiling said. Snow S1111mit: pocUc1 powctw. 4JOOd ...., } Sun Valley 161·· ...... ,, .. MW ...w: · " · ldallt ....... ••cellet .... Park City Utalt l6r ...... 14" MW ...w: ........ c ......... Vail, Colorado: 14~ 1 .. ~MOW; • .Jackson ....... •""-' .... H .. .... 172'" ...... ll ..... ..;.; • ..... ft JV.: ........ Hcelellt ..... •~..... Colorado· 36'" ..._ 1 .... ·.,,,., -,.....,.., • ....... xa ....... Tahoe: r .. Waiting ~ th:eir -life 'Help me get to America ,' Polish refugee pleads • TRAISKIRCHEN, Auatrla CAP> "Help me 1et to America.'' pleaded Tekla Toporoaka, a Pol11h woman crammed with 2,000 other refuaeea lnto t~ia ' 1raffitl-1pla1hed transit camp outaide VleMa. That wu all the elderly Mra. Toporoak.a had to aay to a · teport.er who.recently vlaited the cam p. Her spirits appeared broken after months of waiting lo this crowded barracks. Her friend Wanda Poleska, aayln1 Catbollc prayers on her metal bunk across the dingy and drafty hall, wanted to know why she and Mn. Toporoska -both 60 -apparently were not wanted in America. After four months in Austria, "I still haven't been to the embassy," she said. Even those lucky enough to be asked for an interview with U.S. officials "wait for mor e than two montha." It seemed lo Mrs. Poleaka that only youn1 men got the lon1-awaited papers to 10 to the United States. Most of the 33,000 ornclally re1t1tered Polish refu1ees who entered Austria ln 1981 said they wanted to go lo America, Canada or Australia. .,But All three countries 'have fixed immigration quotas, and th&y are at the end of a long tine. Life Is not comfortable in the Traiski.rchen camp, a collection of battered buildings that once served as an imperial barracks. As camp director Karl Radek says, life here "can never be a good time" because tbat mllbt cause the refugees to lose their motivation to move on. Mrs . Toporoska and Mrs. Poleska are crowded into a cavernous room with 200 other ill-clad refugees -from many Eastern Europe countries as Poor nations slip in inflation battle . WASHI NGTON CAP) - Inflation ls easing in t~e world's richest nations, but it is becoming more of a problem for poor countries, where It now averages more than 36 percent a year, the International Monetary Fund bas reported. In a s urvey of i.ts 145 members, the global lending organization said inflation among the 2 1 wealthiest countries has edged down from an average rate of 12.6 percent in mid·l980 to rtl~l percent last summer. By contrast, the average annual inflation rate of 115 poor, oil-importing nations that belong to the IMF surged from 31.7 percent in mid-1980 lo 36.S pe.rcent last summer, the IMF said. Inflation among the nine oil-exporters that belong to the I MF also worsened over the pas~ year, rising from an average annual rate of 12.4 percent in mid·1980 to 16.2 percent in mid-1981. The IMF , based in Washington, makes loans to distressed nations to m a,intain a stable international financial system . Except for China. Yugoslavia and Romania, communist countries are not members. Among all IMF members, inflation averaged 14.8 percent in 1981, down slightly from 15.1 percent in 1980. The peak global inflation rate was l&.1 percent in 1974, when oil-exporting nations first increased their prices sharply. The highest inflation rat.es - a bove 100 percent -are in Israel, Brazil, Argentina and Ghana, where prices are doubling from one year to the next. The lowest inflation rate is in Japan, where ·prices have been rising by less than 5 percent a year. The IMF said wealthy nations have been able to bring inflation down with high interest rate policies re str icting the availability of credit. But the high interest rates also triggered recessions as demand for consumer goods declined. Numerous private economists also attribute the decline in inflation in the industrialized countries to a drop in oil prices s p awne d oy conservation measures that have led lo an oversupply. well u Atrica and Aaia. "l am old, and J cannot be in my country,'' aald Mra. Poletka. "I 4eft my whole family in Poland. My cblldren, ther are married, have children.' She beaantoaob. Why did. they leave? ·•communism la 1ood In pictures,'' aaid a 52-year.old -nrarr wbo would five only hls last name, Yachlnowsld. ·'But what b appens is different. It's not practical. Work, work and tomorrow will be. tood," be snorted. "That's gone on for 37 years ... "Commun.lats are not good for people," said Mrs. Poleaka. People have no say in communism." Antonia Biedaba, who fled Wroclaw LS months ago and bas waited to join her son in America, declared she is · • anli·communist.'' "I am Catholic," she proclaimed. "Real Poles are Catholic." She denounced the Soviets at length. "The only people who help us are Americans, ·French, Germans," she shouted, t he curlers in her hair shaking as she warm~ to her topic. · "This," she t ugged at a flower-print dressing gown, "came from Germany. Poles have nothing from Poland. All to Russia ... " Frustrations at camp roubne, the cultural dilferences among the 2,000.plus refugees of more than a dozen nationalities and the incomprehension of the bureaucracies they must deal with often erupt in violence. Policemen oversee the noon meal handouts, for example. Officials report there are sometimes "terrible sceaes," but won't elaborate. Food is handed out in tin pots. Supper comes in brown paper bags. There are no plates. As for the nourishment itself, an Afghan named Wbaed said, "If you go to the pig farm, they eat better than this." Everywhere in the camp there is noise from radios and crying children. Broken windows make for drafty stairway~. Until martial law was imposed in Poland Dec. 13, Austrians were visibly losing patience with their Polish guests, many neeing in search of a better economic lot. Get out the raincoats 'Co astQ-l Ille •now-•mothered Colorado Aockln Temperaturu dropped to H ~r"' -uro In Grand Forlls. N 0 ., encl 4 ln<lle• of rain ov~niQlll In Gr-. Miu., uuwd ...,.,.,. llOodlng, but police reporte4 no major Pf0bl9m\ Winch ~Uy '°'1111 to soutlleast ----------ins ,,,.., I knots l»<omlng toutll to ..,..111wm11ou1111s11 ... ._,sou111 Cali~omia .. to sout'-sl 10 to 20 knots lonlgl\t. ;/ ' Wttt.rly 1-1 I lo 3 '9*t. Ctouay A II S4)(Hdlng MIUlhward lodly \~•• wltll rain spreading soutllward contl~ulng tllro\191! Tuesday with ~ during the day 1nd continuing locally '-"" amounu .. Snow above llv ... •• tonight. l.000 '"' '°"9flng to about s.soo fMt C!!m ----------Tuuday. Warming trend. Gusty ~ • ....,,,, •I~ be91nnlng today shlftlftg ~ ~ 'U S ~· TUil"ldav u ...... s. .... ,..,,. o.c1.-41.41 . . summ ary ~ ___ === ... .........., •OAA. U I D••• •• <••••••• Holldly storms lflal 11.llled at IHsl Extemled ----------------------------------------Denver " II i.' APCl!e Yat~Ll"'OIUOA 21 people lPf....:I a trMCllerou1 layer 0..Mol...s ,, 1 .. 1' of WIOW...., Ice KrOH ,,,. Nor1flenl forecast Detroit 40 ~ 02 laller1tlelcl S4 J3 1tatn on Sunday, lorna-s and Oulutll 1 ·• .02 I ant-St J3 lflundltr~ lalNcl Ille Sou-11 EI Pno 41 ll .a IHIM'Mfll SI u and 20,0CIO _.. _. f.n Witt.It F:tJ:N<s ·t •ti IQ ... lffr. 37 ·I alKtrklty In ~M _,_, In SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Ha tford 42 16 a1w. J7 11 Maine. COASTAL AHO MOUNTAIN AREAS Helena JO ~ llyU.. S1 M Oflk!M Yid -man Wat 11.lllM -Wed11e1Mfay lllrou911 Friday Honolulu 12 M •• C.lallna ff ., and 11 .....,.. lnfurecl In a ,.,.._. con•lder.iit. c1ouc11-. COOj •nd Houston IO 11 Eur.II.a .. ,. ll\at tou<Nd down near ..._.on, In locally wlftdll wit.II -locll of rein lndftaplfS 41 J7 IS .... "'° " " NSt-<entral MIBIH"'91. Tiie twl~•r uc•pt -In ,......IM ""°""' Ja<ltWIYlll IO ,. LIUA,.,_ ,. • oouged a Mt.II 12 mllft '-and one Friday. In ~I lftd •lilly•-. Juneau " 1 Lont8Mdl •1 • mile wide, -••no -r tr"' •nd llltlls ~tly '" .... Jillll .... IOwS • to Kans City n IS II LosA .... " ,. 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Aome, Ga., rap0rted •.s Alll•vllle 4S J3 1.:U Omalla II 0 .Ot Red-City St J7 lncllel of rain In a 24-llour period. Atlanta 43 • 1.11 Onalldd .. .. Sacramento 45 12 S.varal nerth Geortl• town1 had Atlante City '1 n Piii!"""" .. 2' S.llnu .. » mon ,...., J lncllM, wlltl 10me roael 8altlmore 37 26 ,14 Plloenla n M .IS San •• .._... .. St • _,,_ ,.....,.,__, Blrml"911m SI SJ t.tt P"lsbvt9" 40 n SanOlllll'lel St II llsmarc1< 0 ·It .~ PtlanO,Me. u It In Tannen••. • Mempllls SanOteeo Ml .. for«Hler ,..,,.,._ 60 mpti winch as lolM 31 I .01 -Piiand, Ore 42 .. . '4 San I' rancllco .. 42 lltavy tllllfldlrstorms and wlnd1 lot ton » 11 Rapid City 11 s SMJ .... SI • .01 IMlff•ted Ille ..... 8rownsvlll ,, SS A-n • Santa AN Ml • Stat• Polka In Ylr91nla Yid J7 cars Buffalo 40 31 Salt Lalla n I 11 Sant• 8"11era S4 12 plled·up on fot·•llrouded Alton Cllarlltn SC SS 47 .ts Seattle .. 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Tell us what's on your illllM. 7• .. .. 11 •• .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 4, 1982 ARTIFICIAL SHELL This mud turtle, about 13 inches long, has a shell made from fiberglass at an animal hospital a nd polished al an auto body shop. A motorist. lhe~econd AP ........ driver to hit the reptile, rushed it bleeding to Lutz Animal Hospital in Luti. Fla .. where the repairs were made. Space politics certainty Organized space policy needed_, professor says --AUSTIN, Texas <AP> -As earthlings venture into outer space, they'll take along with them an invi s ible but inescapable cargo -politics, says an assistant professor at the Vniversity of Texas. Nathan Goldman is preparing his students for what he sees as a brave new world outside the earth's atmosphere with an innovative course called "The Politics of Outer Space." The 31-year-old Goldman first taught the course in the spring of 1981. It attracted about 28> students. He's teaching the course again this year. and enrollment is up to about 360 students ready to study space politics as a legitimate science. "The whole world is being drawn into an international web of interdependence, .. Goldman said in an interview, .. and it's being re-emphasized. by space. There are half a dozen treaties and a lot of agreements that create a body or law for space." Goldman said his course outline starts with current policy toward space , cover s the increa s in g e ffort s of countries other than the United States and Soviet Union to get there. and then goes into his projections for the future. "The first: part of the course 1s really an American government course"' that describes the agencies, interest groups and processes of the U S. space program, Goldman said. Private industry is wed to the idea of capitalism in outer space, he said, and that creates a need for a coherent national space policy. ·'Space is becoming an important policy area, an integral part of national and international power," he said. "Right now everything's sort of hit and miss. There's no organized space policy. no over.arching goals." Once Goldman convinces his students that it's only a matter of time before "space politics" becomes a common subject, he moves on to ever y science fiction buff's favorite subject - the future. Emphasizing the caveat "if things continue as they are now," Goldman predicted, "the Russians will have a permanent space station by the mid-to-late '80s. And I believe the Russians will be on Mars by the year 2000. Where we will be, there's no way to know, because we don't have a policy." Al a conference called ,"A Case for Mars" earlier this year , Goldman said, he learned that a manned landing on Mars is not that far·fetche4. Haig 'banished' in language abuse SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich. (AP > -.. First time ever ," •'revenue enhancement," and Secretary of State Alexander Haig are among the ··b a nis hments'' from the English language proclaimed by the Unicorn Huhters of Lake Superior State College. The group, which annually bans words and phrases for ove ruse, mis use or general uselessness, Issued this year's banishments after receiving 2.000 nominating letters from as far away as Paris and Tokyo, according to archivist W.T . Rabe. In its New Year's Dishonour List of Words Banished from the Queen's English, the Unicorn Hunters ordered Haig to "speak only classical Latin for a probationary period of six months." "Haig's misuse and abuse of the language is chronic, perhaps i r r e versible,·' said Peter Thomas, senior herald of the Uni corn Hunters . ''There seemed a period when he might have been in remission, but he has now broken out again. Even a simple ·getting old' becomes ·maturation' in Haig la11guage." The Unicorn Hunters said they banished "first time ever" and its cohort "all-time record" because "It is only a matter of time until they are united into a single monster of redundancy and inaccuracy. .. R evenue e nhancement" made the list as an undesirable euph emis m b ec ause it is "simply a tax increase." Also banned were ·•off-sourcing" as a synonym for importing, "repository" as a euphemis m for dump. and "sit on it" because it is "one of the stupidest phrases in the English language." One member or the Reagan administration, Secret ary of Commerce Malcolm Baldrige, was s ingled out for special honors for his efforts to e liminate sloppy and bureaucratic language. Th e Unicorn Hunters proclaimed Baldrige the firtt "Knight Sans Pareil of the Unicom Quest'' and dubbed him Sir Malcolm of Potomac. The Unicorn Hunters admit that th e ir proclamations banishing the use of objectionable words may not always be observed by othen by ··at least we make a lot of people feel guilty," Rabe said. spiny top-sidar with ragisbzn2d enti-alip aokl. ~(go~@]J~OO 44 Ra.shlon Island•~ Beadl•714.1N4·5010 IOOJ \Wraiwood Stud.•~ V~•213/479-7727 j Orange Co11t DAIL V PILOT/Monday, January 4, 1982 Syria moves hard I against t e rroris t s DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Ba.cbed·wire bnrlcadea bave sealed off atreeta near 1overnment buUdln11 ud tbe homea of top offlclala here, while security police 1uard moat maJqr lntenecUona. The unprecedented security measures were introduced to prevent fresh acts of terror in the wake of a car-bomb blul Nov. 29 which ltllled u many u 200 people in a residential area of Damucus. ~resident Hales Assad baa accused the underground Moslem Brotherhood of carryln1 Tbe wave of bombln11 be1an • laat AUJ. lf1 when a truck with electric cojOJ>any markin1s was parked outside the Prime Ministry bulldin1 and then exploded at the Ume the Cabinet bad been scheduled to hold its weekly meetln1. Other tarceta included a barracks of Soviet advisers and the ·Syrian Air Force building. More than 25 people were killed in the blasts. • Reagan on spot .f • 1 gram part of sanctions W ASHINOTON (AP) - Pfesldent Rea1an would have to reverse himaeU on a campaitn pledae and a presidential Order should he decide to stiften economic sanctions againat the Soviet Union by blockin1 or curtailinl the biggest item on Moscow's shopping list. That's American grain. As a candidate, Reaaan denounced the partial 1ratn embargo Jimmy Carter imposed two years ago today because of the Soviet move into Afehanisfan. He promised to Ult it and, as president, he did. IEll lllAlYlll maintain that one or the 1rounds on which Reagan criticized the Carter embargo has been altered by the tightening of sanctions on othe r forms of trade. Candidate Reagan said farmers were beint forced lo bear a special burden and argued that if there were to be export sanctions they should be spread across the board. "The M os lem Brot herhood .as an organization is finished in Syria." These bombinas coincided with a si milar wave of explosions in Lebanon where Syria 's army ha s a peacekeeping mandate from the Arab League. More than 200 people, including some Syrian soldiers, have been killed since last September in Lebanon. "" ...... The sanctions Reagan has ordered because of the military clampdown in Poland do not affect agricultural products, which represent by far the la rgest share of U.S. exports to the Soviet Union. Farm products m ake up about 70 percent of American sales and almost all of that is grain. Still , agriculture is where the business is. There's more to take away there. • out the bombing as part of its 2ir.t -year campaign to oust the Socialist Baath Party leadership and create an Islamic republic. Hundreds of government supporters and even larger. numbers of urban 1uerrillas have been killed in terror attacks and government reprisals. Information Minister Ahmed lskandar Ahmed claimed in a talk with reporters in Damascus recently that the underground organiution had been wiped out in Syria but that individuals continued to operate with the help of neighboring Jordan and Israel. ·'The Moslem Brotherhood as an organization is finished in Syria," Iskandar said. ''But this does not stop instances of individuals coming from outside or even hiding · inside Syria to make explosions or sabotage and our security measures are addressed to this problem." 'President named VISALIA (AP) -Califonda Citrus Mutual bas appointed Joel Nellen president-1eneral JDana1er, effective Feb. 1. Nelsen, 35, ii chief exec:utive officer of the Frffb Produce Council in Loa Anceles. Iskandar claimed Jordan was allowing Moslem Brotherhood members to ''inriltrate" into Syria and that Israel also had a hand in h e lp ing the fundamentalists tr y to destabili~e the Syrian regime. "We firmly believe that the trail of killing that has taken place in Syria has a close relationship with our enemy. Nobody has an interest in weakening Syria except Israel and its allies," Jskandar added. A Western diplomat, who declined to be identified, said, "Nobody thinks this will be the end of the bombings and it ls certainly likely that there will be more." But he said it was doubtful that car bombs alone could bring down Assad 's government. A Palestinian official, who declined to be named , s ugges ted, however , that if lNlderground oppo n ents continued to challenge the government by carrying out terror attacks "Syria might be forced to tcy and focus attention outside" its border. If sufficiently threatened from within, be said, Syria might c hallenge the Israelis with military m oves in south Lebanon, especially in view of the tensions that arose over Israel's annexation last month of S)'ria's Golan Heights. The Brotherhoo d itself remains inaccessible, with most of its better-k.nown leaders in exile in Europe and its operations shrouded in secrecy since Syria's government laat year' made membership in the organization punishable by death. LESSON lN LOVE -Bum victim Miguel Angel, 11, gets an embrace from his tutor. Helen Swanson, in Miami. Swanson meets once a week with Angel, teaching him love. Angel was badly disfigured in a fiery explosion five years ago in Bogota, Colombia, that killed hi s younger brother and caused his parents such trauma that they n early abandoned him. Boy w ith n'o I a ce l ives behind mask NORTH MIAMI , Fla. (AP) - ms classmates call him the Masked Marvel or the Kid in the Iron Mask. For Miguel Angel, the mask he wears covers a face burned off in a terrifying instant five years ago. And it holds out promise for the future of t he 11-year-old native of Bogota, Colombia. Miguel was brought to the United States two years ago with the help of an uncle, Ricardo Angel, a Miami taxi driver. His parents had come lo America earlier to pave the way for his a rri val , determined to get better medical treatment for his burned face. His mother. Amanda, said the boy was burned when he lit a match to dry out papers he had used to ·soak up a spilled gallon of gasoline. After a stay in a hospital, Miguel was left with relatives in Colombia . They sent him. without his parent's knowledge, to an orphanage in the Andes for maimed, burned and deformed children, where he spent three years. Doctors there attempted skin grafts from his back which left his face even more deformed than before. Dr. Felix Freshwater. a Miami plastic surgeon, heard of Miguel 's case. After seeing photographs of the boy, he was furious at the botched surgery the Colombians had performed. Aghast and intrigued , Freshwater accepted the challenge or rebuilding Miguel's face. And he ordered a mask for him . The mask , made of nylon-like Lycra, has holes for eyes, nostrils and eah>, and fits tightly lo the skull. Its purpose is medical, but also psychological. The transformation of Miguel's face has only begun. Work has just started on rebuilding his cheeks. The entire project could take five years, Freshwater says. But Miguel, a fifth -grader al North Miami's Natural Bridge Elementary School. has already rejoiced at the progress. This month, when each pupil was asked by the teacher to write what he liked best a bout himself, Miguel wrote: ··I like my face because it is beautiful." N~T SEMESTER TAKE A JANUARY SALE 25,000 MILE FIELD TRIP SAYl~SNOM 500/o to 700fo Olt MOtlE. But in a hint of possible action on that front if he decides further sanctions are in order, Reagan ordered postponement of negotiations on a new Soviet grain sales agreement to replace the one expiring next September. "We will watch e vents in Poland closely in coming days and weeks," Reagan said. "Further s teps may be necessary, and J will be prepared to Laite them." Should those steps involve grain, there 'll be some explaining lo do. When Carter imposed the partial grain embargo, Reagan said it was the wrong thing to do. Later, he said, it had not served to punish the Soviet Union, only t he farmer. "I've never thought that it s hould b e part o f o ur diplomacy," Reagan said in Davenport, Iowa, on Jan. 7, 1980, three days after Carter ordered the embargo. "I don't believe our farmers should be made to pay a special price." "It actually hurt the American farmer more than it hurt the Soviet Union," he said later in the campaign. And still later: "Jimm y Ca rter 's grain embargo, which has hobbled American farmers for months now, bas bad virtually no impact on the Soviet Union." The administration could •·Ir s a real good academic program and I probab~y studied harder than I did at school." Dwlffc Ir ltllflorted ~Rxtwea&L-.s Al ""'9 -Mltctecl tr.. ....... ttodl. ....... , hlMWMdL.w.y_...,. .. _.. __ .. Semi-Annual CHANDY ADAMS .............. e kw. To__.. .. ...t •.n.4 .. ct.._ of .... ..... .... ...... .. ..... ..... ,_ .. ,.... ..... CMWl .. •~t . BECIRIC -Lltl'ml mYlc .... Stnet,C....W.. Reagan lifte d the Carter embargo April 24, saying his action should not be read in Moscow as a sign of tolerance for aggression. He s aid his administration has made that point and "our position now cannot be mistaken.'' . Whatever the imp;lct of the embargo on the Soviet economy, as soon as it was lifted, they started buying again. U.S. trade with the Soviet Union nearly doubled in 1981, largely because the grain embargo was ended. Grain exports totaled about $1.S billion during the first nine months of the year, compared with $821 million in 1980 exports that weren't affected by the partial embargo. The Soviet Union may not have hurt for lack of U.S. grain, but the Soviets certainly want to bu y it. They will be able to purchase up to 23 million tons of wheat, corn and other grains during the year that ends next Sept. 30. That's when the current grain sales agreement expires, and neeotiations were to have opened th>s month on a new one. That Reagan postponed those talks could be seen as a warning signal but in itself is hardly a sanction against Moscow. The effect or the agreement is to set minimum and maximum limits on grain sales. Without a new agreement, and absent any sort of e mbargo, the Soviets would be just like any . other foreign customer and could buy as much grain as they could get U.S. companies to sell them. That probably wouldn't feel much like punishment to them at all. SALE STARTS TUES., J AM. 5th ·SHOE • Join the 12,000 other college stu- dents from over 500 colleges and universities wfw have experienced thi3 .fully accredited univermy pro- gram. The spring '82 semester sails on March 4th for the around the world tour. , ............. , . .....,, ..... 646-~73!/646-1194 UP 10 Yl OFF and MORE I For More Information Call (114) n1-t590 Semester At Sea P.O. llox 1527, Or•nee. Celtf.12911 As Heard On KEZY AM/FM, KWIZ AM/FM •r I I If you don 't w a rif: i ·to drink ... . . l . I ·. That's our· business . ' MEMORIAL ' HOSP.ITAL Call 642·2734 ' I"". I ' _.• I Alcoholt~ ~~Miy WVicet · IO't Vktorla Sbwt .' . COile Mel-9, CA 92627 '' ~~-~~-~ OCTDwill planyour bus ·triJ!for 0~ · No matt.er where .you want to go ~Orange County, we'll make it e~y for you to get there on an OCTD bus. Ju.et call us at 636-RIDE. We'll t.ell you the exact routes and timee. And if _you need llChedulee and Ride Guides, we'll eend them free. ~give ua a call. You116nd the bua ia youreaay·to-Wle ticket to work, 1ehool, ~-~~shopping and entertainment in -~County. FLORSHEIM . BAI.LY, BRUNO MAGI.I , JOYCE PENALJO AMAL Fl SELBY AND OTHERS ' Cll KTm snus • 1101 .. Sl'ZIS AU. SA1 IS fllMAL ' • ~TifilU~· F·r.olit-runne~ II mystery Bradley hasn't aaid what he would do. as governor SACRAMENTO (AP> -~m Bradley hasn't revealed muct~ about what he would do 11 Callfornla •s next governor~ b~ 10 lar that hasn't hurt the Lc>e Angeles mayor's commandlne lead ln the polls. He la a 4·1 favorite over hil gearest foe for the Democratic homlnation for 1ovemor 1" June and a 21-pe rcentaee•polnt favorite ln the eeneral election over the strongest Republican. Those impressive fi1ures In\ the latest Mervin Field poll -r confirmed in an independent Los Angeles Times potl -could be .misJeading, because eady polls measure little mo re tban a candidate's name recocnition a nd a general voter impression. Bradley's position on a dozen potentially volatile Issues is not known to most voters. However, it Is an undisputed f ac t th a t Br.a dl ey ha s established himself firmly as the man to beat ln 1982, when he may become tbe nation's first black governor since the R estoration e lections in the South after the Civil War. Asked what his goals would be as governor, Bradley tells voters and r eporters to look al bis 8"'2-year record as mayor. But that record is hard to assess. There have been no great innovations or changes, and no disasters either. He kept the lid on a potentially volatile city. LEADS IN POLL -Mayor Tom BradJey of Los Angeles is a 4-1 favorite over his n e ar es t fo e for th e De m ocratic nom ination for go vernor . That view is shared by many observers, but it gives tittle hint of what Bradley would do as eoyernor. "On aoclal i11ues, I mllbt be called a procr•••lve or moderate, bu& I don't thiQt that adequately deloribea me." Tb1t'1 the 11me way Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. u.ed to be described. But there ii a world of difference -both in 1tyle IDd substance -between the twb. Brown teDda to mix obJec:tlvee ol the far riot a.nd th-far left in bis brand ol eomeuut poliUea. Brown goes for the ftuby, the atartllnt, the controversial. He wins headllnea. Bradley miHI id~ Just left of center.twith those Juat rilbt ot center. He leeks conaenaua, not confrontation. His campai&n sloean winning hil third term last &prine was, "He doesn't make a lot of noise, be eets thirtea done." Bradley describes himself as ·'low-keyed -not see kine headlines." Other descriptions of Bradley appearing repeatedly throughout bis years as mayor have been "restrained.._" ''cautious," "conservative," ··elus ive,•· ·•s ecretive,•· ''diffident" and "dull." ''For all my life, I have been one who served as kind of a mediator," Bradley says, "one who works with all kinds of diverse interests trying to brin& them together. "That kind of be hind-the-scenes approach work s well for me . It accomplishes the job. • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Mondoy, January 4, 1P82 ............. LOADING UP -S harp-s hooting teams from All four wt•rt• rt>captun.•d over th(' New Nevada State P rison prepare for a manhunt Yf;!ar·!'t \H'l'kl•n<l to r ecapture two of four esca~d murderer~ __ Suicide try brings lawsuit Asked tus major achievement as mayor, Bradley replies: "I'm very proud of the fact that in Los Angeles, a very large and co mplicated and di verse city, we have been a bl e to enjoy peace ahd harmony among the man y racial and ethnic and religious groups that live within our city. That's an eight-year Bradley describes himself as a "mediator " rather than as an advocate. 'He says he is "too complex an individual for a simple label" such as liberal or conservative: But be continues to define himself as part of each -a man of the political middle. ''I simply go about my FAIRFIELD, Calif. CAP) -Intermediate School offlctal:. place their son tn a private business and do D\Y job. I can't Sa y in g th at i m p ro p er told the parents in October 19*> school. the suit says. be bo th e red about tiow somebody perceives me,': be psychological testing led to their that they had administered a fu ll Three months later, the brief ·'People will say, for example, that I'm a fiscal conservative bec ause I m anage money," Bradley said in a r ecent inte rvi e w , noting be bas bala nced his city budget without a t a x i n c r e a. s e fo r e i g ht consecutive years. added. son 's s uicide atte mpt, the range of psychological tests to !>ays. the teen·ager tried to iinents of a disturbed teen-ager their son, then 14, but actually co mmit suicide because or b:is But Bradley's re cord as have. filed a $150,000 lawsuit had given him only a few of the 1na bal1ly to cope with t he mayor, and the principal thing against their local school tests. pre~i.ures or the new school. he offers as a candidate for district. The school's conclusions -Subsequent tests showed he had ' putod. That's a considerable accomplishment." .1overnor, is a carefully booed The personal injury suit, riled that the boy had no learning em o t 1 on a I p r o b I e m•s a nd image of r es traint and in Solano Supe r ipr Court, d i sa bi lities but l ac ked . lt'ar ning disabilities, the suit mod~raru~·o=n=.======::::::===========c =h=a==r=g=e=s===t =h=a==t ==G==r =a=n=g::::..:e===m==o=ti=v=a=ti=on====l=ed==th=e==-p_a_rents to s:ta=t=e=s==::::::;::========::::::::=--o::==; Doll case nding OK'd Court nixes. appeal in attemp eamurder SACRAMENTO (AP ) -An appeals court has uphe ld the attem pted murder conviction of a Stockton' farmer in the shooting of a long-time acquaintance who had been sent two dolls with toothpicks through their hearts. George Biagi Sr., then 60, was convicted in June 1980 after a trial in which his wife testified that he had bought and fixed up the dolls and · dictated the threatening not.es to her. According to records in the 3rd Di str ict Court of Ap peats, Francis Young, a grain broker from the San Joaquin County town of Thornton, was wounded by a shotgun fired• through his car window in February 1978. Young said he had recognized Biagi driving up behind him. The. court said the two men bad fallen out after a 1974 grain deal and Biagi had sued Young in early 1975. In March 1976, the court said, Young got a package in the mail _containing a (\oil with a painted heart and blood, and a toothpick through th e ~ea~t. The package also contained an unsigned meaaa1e saying Young must pay more than $19,000 within five days to ''tbe farmer that you owe," or "I will fiU you full of holes." Young, wbo turned tbe pactace over to posW autbortUes, found a similar doU Ui a packate on bis dr iveway in DecembeT 1911, tbe court said. This time the note said, "Your time is up because you did not pay:· In bis appeal, Biagi contended the trial court should have excluded the dolls and notes as evidence, because they were received more than a year befor-e the shooting and were highly prejudicial to his case. But the court, in a decision last week by Presiding Justice Robert Pugli a, said the dolls and notes were re levant to the issue of Blagl's motive, and that the jury could decide how much importance to give the evidence in light of the lapse of time before the shooting. Puglia also noted that the Superior Court judge bad found that the relevancy of the evidence outweighed its prejudicial character. 2 cleared in lot split 7 face trial ~n alleged illegal sc.heme PLACERVILLE (AP) -A judge s a id the charges against tbein has dismissed charges against two amounted to no more than guilt by men and bound seven others over for association. trial in oonnection with an alleged Those bound over for trial on the UlegaJ lot-splitting scheme on more judge's finding of probable cause are than 10,000 acres of land in California M'llrk Weiner of Applega~. Arthur and Idaho. -· Rondoni of Foresthill, Richard PlacervUle J ustice Court Judge Brown of Grass Valley, Jamea Street Lloyd Hamilton made the rulings last of Davis, Douglas Balmaln of week after a 3lf.a-week preliminary Auburn, and Waller Saunders Jr. and hearing. The men were indicted In Ri chard Berry, both of Idaho. February by the El Dorado County Their arraignment is scheduled in Grand Jury. Superior Court Jan. 18. ' Th ey were c h a r ged with subdividing land illegally without The men's lawyer, Davld Welner, reg.istering it with the California said afterward that they had been D e putment oC Re al E'ltate . bound over on "the thinnest threads Prosecutors say t he lot-spllttine of evidence," and predicted that lasted three or rour years and when the full story was tolce"tbere'U covered 12 to lS northern and central be no question that these were California ~ties. and portions of le1itimate transactions." Idaho. Nearly 1,000 pieces of evi4'•ce Hamilton dismlued charges were presented at tbe bearlng. a1atn1t Tbomaa van Noord, a Hamilton said reacbJn1 a deelllon Cameron Park law>:-,.& and Ronald was like "trying to put a Jl11aw -Clleocellor of Fores~l. The Judie puuJe together ln frocat of a fan." ;i;;ii19i .. jjliiiiiiji!iiiiliiii===;:CCM;;:;:~~.CT;:;:Ott:'l~COll===M~ •• ===== ..... I .,..,.~ r' .• _11~~.!. 1L-.i.I i ) ..... ,... '-t f'~t t" .. ' ' • ~ , /\ • , r1 1 • 1 ~ I .._ _____ _ SFAs Semi-Annual Mens Furnishings Even_t! • Shown be/~ /eh: our exclusive oxford cloth button-downs -spec1allv pricf'd at I'> 'IU t>at h Cotton and pol~ <'~l<'f Not shown: our exclusive cotton dress !>htrls -)pec1al/~ prtced at 18 90 <·ac h And exclusive dress shtrts-specially priced at 14 90 Polye:.tf'r and tOll•m • ShoWn, lrom top r;ght wool and nylon over-the-calf socks-regularly 5 ]t; the pair nm~ I for 12 l.JIJ Burlington acr;/ic athletic socks-regularly J.50 the pair no~' b /or /6 9< J Acrylic crewsocks, regularly 2 50 the pair, now 6 for 1U <JIJ Uni>"'~ l1h dll. • Drawstring cotton pa/amas-regularly 18 50 1hp µJu 110\\ 14 c;o Plaid cotton flannel pa1amas -originally '17 so no"" 14 <Jn ., '" \/ Not shown: terry kimono robe-regularly 57 50. now42.40 Corron anrl m1lnn •Pima cotton boxer shorts-regularly '9; now 7 20 Sizes JO ro 44 Corton brief,. ref!11/,Jrt\ J 1m 1111 now J for '8. Sizes 30 to 42. V-necked cotton T-shirts-regularly J for '12. now J for 9 90 < flit rm ,f<'f.'\ t''•'H • athletic shirts-regularly J for '10, no""' J tor 1R '111·' ' t• 1 'I •Baily's dress slip-ons-originally '120; now89.90. S17es 9 to 12N, 7 ro ll M. Ow t'H /11,1w '"'"''" moccasm-or1ginal/y '90; now '>9 90 Both. in blacJ.. or brrn .. n /1·,Hhl•r • Cotton stnn~ /..nit 'h"t'. 19 lJI j 1w Ii \ '', \I •In Men's Furnishings, the Men'!> Store-whew IH' an· all thl' 1h111g~ 11111 J11 • O"OUNDl!D -Daniel Goodwin. a stunt man who calls himself "Spider-Dan" and climbs tall buildings in a c;ostume that looks a lot like that of comic book hero • "Spider Man," has been ordered to change his act. Marvel Comics filed suit Oct. 6. . l ---- ·Re~uge· for bald· eagles threatened Big Bear Valley development boom may end 'Winter pilgrimage of nation's .. symbol BIG BEAR CAP) -One ol the bt11eat myatertet for Califoml,a blrdwatcben 11 what attracta about 35 bald ea,les to the Bil Bear Valley every winter where tbey perch in plnetops and forage for waterfowl. Tb~ annual pilgrim••• makes. Bl( Bear tbe second moat popular bald ea1le refuae In the state, but ·con•ervatlonlsta are worried that the bald ea1lea may end the mystery by not coming to Big Bear any1'iore. The valley is experiencln1 a major buildtng boom, and three of the bald eagle's four principal ha bit a ts in the area are threatened by development. '· U deveJopmenta 10 tnio these three sites, we're 1oln1 to see the loss or a number of birds and we couJd be eliminating the baJd eagle here altogether," said Tim Krantz, a private environmental consultant in the valley. Some builders are trytna to preaerve the tall, lakeside trees wlth open branches that the ea1lea need for percbln1 and rooat1n1. Tbo birds, which bad adjusted somewhat to humanity, will let an observer come aa ~l~ae u 25 yards and lffm to be u atroni as ever thte year, aay conaervatJoniats. But they worry that next year tliln11 will be different. One coodomlnlum project is already under way near an eagle habitat. Mother is on the drawtna boards and ready to 10. Housing tracts"continue to take thejr toll of lbe older trees neceuary for the eagles' e~lstence . With Its buge wingspan, the bald ea1le needs room to get lnto and out of perch sites. It can't fly throuC"h tightly·branched younger trees. The bird's 7-foot wingspan ... curies a body wel1ht of only 8 pounds. A. U.S. Forest Service bald ••ale preserve hat been aet aside on the north abore of Bl1 Bear Lake. About 10,000 of the endantered species remain in North America. MOit of them live lo Alaska and Cabada. ~ In the Bis Bear Valley the eagles perch at four primary locations: Ea1le Point and Stansfield Cutoff on the south shore near Big Bear City, Grout Bay on U.S. Forest Service property near Fawnskln on the north shore, and all around Baldwin Lake, in the hills east of Big Bear Lake. Both the south shore sites and Baldwin Lake are the areas where eagle habitats are threatened. ''These birds are entirely depe ndent on the water and tbeae areu are criticaJ for the blrd'a survival ID Bl• Bear Valley," said Krantz. Krantz, a member qJ "Nature Conservancy, said ne1ottaUona wltb Big Bear Properties, developer of the two south abore sltea, resulted ln dedlcaUona of land intended to preserve the ea1le habitat. "Our plan is to 10 wltb an extremely lo'Y density with a considerable setback rrom the lake for the eagles to do their fi1hin1," •ald Jack Wem, tbe development company'• project mana1er at Eaale Point. "We don't want a altuaUon when tbe entire lake becomes completely I surrounded by develapment.'' He aa&d more dedJcatlona are planned for the 300-acre Stansfield Cutoff atte. The Nature Conservancy bu ' f urcbued 100 acres of lakefrodt and at Baldwin Lake to preserve bald ea1le perchlnl and roosUr.i1sltes. Junk mail to tal1 2 00 pou nd1 PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - Betty Wilkinson knows exactJy how much junk mail her household got in 1981 -200 pounds. The 57-year-old keypunch operator said she collected enough "occupant-resident" junk mail to fill four 30·1allon plastic tr1:9h bags. "We called the mailman lo yesterday," she said. "He just laughed and laughed.·' t rtEWPOJU Bf.ACH: 3300 Wut Coeat Hlghft1 ne• N~ Blvd •• 631·9205. \ Orange Coast OAILV PfLOT/Monday, January•. 1982 .... Ainish: farmers fight power line . Plan to string wires over fields called threat to rural way of life MIDDLEFIELD, Oblcf<AP> -croaa fields and tbread tbrou1h Hostetler of Temple University feed. Some nelgbbort would loee Tbe horse and bull)' la atandlna groves of treH from whlch testified at the hearlnas. their sugar trees, he aald. Some r.roudJy In the path of prosreu Amlah farmers and other mlRhtmoveaway. n 'his corner of Ohio, where resident.a make maple syrup, a Typical Js Crist Miller• 51, 8 ' ti we can keep the city away People are te11tn1 the uUllty major product here. soft.spoken father or eight who from us, we can survive," Mlller still lives ln the white farmhouse id ''8 t lf th lty contlnu-companlea to 10 atrin1 thelr sa · u e c ""° electric lines someplace else. "The land squeeae la on for the where be wu born. It sits on a to move in, we're aoing to be Amish," explained Charles country road ln this rural are• forced to move." In a heated dispute over a White, a Ure dealer who ls east of Cleveland. Cleveland Electric expects to power transmission line, the chairman of the Middlefield Miller and his fellow Amish win approve! to build the line people of this community-with Chamber of Commerce and the live very much a s their even though the judge who motal support from the Committee to P.reserve Our ancestors dld more than 100 heard the tes timony has governor -are rallying around Community. "The fabric of years ago. recommended against It. a group of Amish farmers who Amish llfe is stewardship of the There are no wires in sight. •·w e think the administrative feel their lflay of life is being land. If he loses the land, be The onl y c ars be long t o law judge made a lot of threatened. loseshiswayoflife." passersby. mistakes in fact and in law," It's ''the most discussed and Whether, the line will be built Miller and his neighbors get Cleveland Electric spokesman cussed power line in the state of is up to the Ohio Power Siting around in horse-drawn buggies Lee Bailey said. Ohio," according to the Board, which has heard six or on foot. Horses pull their The utilities argue it would be Cleveland Eleetric llluminatln& weeks of testimony. A vole is plows. They make their own unconstitutional to have to move Co., which with the help of Ohio expected Jan. 11. clothes, raise large families and or cancel the power line because Edison Co. plans to stretch a The Amish , a group of leave school after the eighth of the objections of a religious . .~..._... 345,000-volt line from a nuclear Christians whose ancestors fled grade . group. PREFERS HORSEPOWER -An Amish farmer rides into power plant on Lake Ert~ to a r e ligious p e r s ecution in Miller says the power line "To be looking at the Amish town in the treditional way neal'Middlefield, Ohio. The sect power substation 150 •Iles Switzerland in the 181Jt century, would go through one of his group's religion as a matter of does not use electricity or automobiles and is resisting plans away, have a spiritual attachment to fields, near a pond and through law would be in vi olation of the The problem is, the line would their Ian~. Ami&h expelj. Job.n a marshy patch where geese First Amendment,'~ailey sald. __ fo_r_a_po_w_e_r _li_n_e _ov_e_r_t_h_e i_r _la_n_d_. ___ -------- Citizens Reaches Across America .. Io BCcolne 1st Nationwide. 1st Nationwide Savings is just what our name says: America's first, nationwide savings association. 1st Nationwide gives you st~ength, security and service-with a coast-to-coast network of 136 offices ... with over seven billion dollars in assets. 1st Nationwide spans the big cities and small towns of America. We span the years as well ... with a 97-year heritage of financial stability. 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It's our "get acquainted" gift for you . . 1sr NATIONWIDE SAVINGS A Federal Savings and Loan Association j I I Orange Coa1t OAJLV PILOT/Monday, .Jan\,lary 4, 1882 reserve maneuver ll$ 'liigh tax price Althou&b the Oranae County oard of Supervisors recently r ceived much attenUon for ~odifytna terms for canceling rlcultural preserve contracts, t e acUon wasn't as significant 118 it seemed •. T The real deciSion w~ made earlier by members of the state ~egislature who passed a bill enabling the modifications to be ~acted. That bill, sponsored by ichard Robinson, D-Garden rove, a llow.s landowner s . to neel pr~eFve contracts durmg , the first five months of this year ( 19tt2> without living up to the s tring e nt cancellation requirements set last year by the s tate Supreme Court. The co urt ruled that preserves can be rem oved from 10-year contracts only when the action is ove rwhelmingly in the public interest. Because the court ruling gave developers and sympathetic local governments little room for lnterpr~tation, t he L'gislature waa lobbied to pass a bill making cancellations easier. Robinson called his a compromise proposal. In Ora nge County. large landowners such as the Irvine· Company and Rancho Mission Vie~o. which own most land now registered as preserves under the Williamso~ Act, are expected to make use of the five·month ·'window'· to c ance l som e contracts. The WUJiamson Act was intended tO stop urban sprawl by providing much lower tax rates for ·undeveloped land set aside in p r e s e r v e s . T h e .s t a t e Legislature's latest move - implemented by the supervisors -gives landowners a chance to more easily remove ·their land from preserve status. But they must act qllickly. and be willing to pay a price for their speculation in much stiffer taxes. Death benefit Cuts I Under a little-publicized provision in the R e agan i' dministration's budget cutting lan. widows and children of U.S. ervicemen will be having their' ocial Security death benefits rastically redijced .. Beginning in August 1983. others of children whose athers died or were killed while erforming military duties will eceive payments only until their hildren reach age 16, rather an the current standard of 18. I n addition .. payments to their children who attend college will be cut completely. Currently Social Security benefits extend ,until children enrolled in college reach 22. Under the cuts, those payments will end ,at age 18. Social Security death benefits presently range downward from about $250 a month. paid SEfparately to widows who haven't remarried and eac h of their cJ>ildren. Payments are based on the father's former income. and -.. t hus---his deduction for Social Security. About 100 widows in Orange and San Diego counties._ have formed a11 or ganization called Survivors of Sacrifice, or SOS, to protest the cuts. Though the women say they are upset over the cuts in their own benefits, they add they are es pecially angered that their children will not be receiving assis tance for the ir college education. , They maintain the move is damaging their children's career c hoi ces, a nd d ec r y the government's· r e n eging on promised benefits in the event their husbands died while serving their country. Clearly a promise was made b y the ,government to th e servicemen that their f amities would receive Social Security payments in the event of their death. 1 • Bowing to public pressure, Pres.ident Reagan recentl y restored the minimum payment• under Social Security to tbe eld erly· after the provision had been cut from the program. Jt seems only just that the f amities of .. military men who · died in the tine of duty should afso continue lo receive their be nefits . Ii • 'Root~' harder to find Amateur genealogists are the latest to feel the impact of federal cost-cutting moves. Until now, citizens seeking to trace their family trees have been able to c h eck out microfilmed Census Bureau records at their local libraries. The records contain names abd addresses of everyone listed · by the census between 1790 and 1900. And libra'l>ies in the Southwest could reques t a particular microfilm by state, county or date from the National Archives regional branch in the Chet Holified Building <better ·known as the ziggurat) in Laguna Niguel. The microfilm service for libraries was transferred ta the archives branch at Fort Worth, • Tex., last year, but the complete ce n s l.l's reco rds s till 'are maintained in Laguna Niguel. Now the federal government has decided to save $250,000 and eliminate 17 jobs by ending the lending service for libraries. So genealogists will have to trek to the record centers to view the film -or buy it at $15 a roll. For Orange Countians the Laguna Niguel record center at 24000 Avila Road is the closest s pot _to track down those ancestors. But officials advise that a r e a.s on a b l e a m o u n t o f background info rmation on names, dates and locations is needed to help find the right records. That in hand, they will be glad to help. •, Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on this page are those ot their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvit· ed . Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo1t 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phol'le (714) 642-4321 . L.M. Boyd/ Snakeproof pa.,W 011 fil~ in the U.S. Patent ontce, too, is a desi;n for snakeproof trousers. A worthy item, no doubt. But it bun't caqht on. Nett.her bave parakMt dJapen,. also rellttend there. NOi' tbe ct1~:.Th.C:qe tbat cou1bs. What I ftnd c. thoulb. is why one lnveaUon 1D perUcular bun't ao&d wll. ltl patent delertbel it •• an antl·barkin1 device wblcb caweu yelp&q doca bJ p1a,ua, beck to them· their own barkln1 at frequencies too bllb for people to bear. Qaim ii lt shutl them rt&llt up. In our Love and War man'• ftle on kinlq ii tbe dictum ol an etiquette e"Xpert wbo iDliata you alwAJS keep your eye1 opea durtq a IOCial ldu. Remember that. To doM :rour .,.. .. iiJPi1at at such a greeting turna the Utt.le cour:tesy into too 1i1nificant a moment, and that wouldn't do, It'• 11toni1hinc, true~ tbat th• heart ol a '70.year-old ct~ bu pumped so vitoroualY for IO ...... But [s ft DOt allo utonlablq tUt t.bl Hiil• bevt bu been at ....i for about 40yeanT Q: Qulcll:, Louie, name the only continent Where the poilonoul makes . outnumber the harmleu snakes. A. Auetralla. Q. I know the cb~ ls ~ futelt mammal at IO mlln an bour or thereabout&. but what's tbe aloweat? A. The sloth. At about a tenth ot a mile u hour oo the l)'OWld. ~ai...-~•••cwe_...., • ._'"_...._ Terrorist problems· growing WASHINGTON -Libyan dictator Moammar Khada.fy has vehemently denied that he sent a '"bit squad" into this country to assassinate President Re agan, but U.S. iDtelligence agencies have evidence linking Khadafy's (reely _ dispensed petrodollars to the t~rrorist gang that kidnapped American Army Gen. James Dozier. So far, there is ,no direct link between Dozier's kidnapping by the Italian Red Brigades and Khada fy's terrorist campaign against U.S. officials in this country and a broad. But Khadafy bas lavished l}lillions of Libya's oil dollars bn terroris~ groups like the Popular Front for the. Liberation of Palestine ( PFLP). the moribund Baa der-Meinhof Gang in West Germany, the Irish Republican Army -, and the Red Brigades. Khadafy has provided these outlaw groups with money, weapons and training. Our intelligence agencies are convinced of that. EVER SINCE the seizure of American hostages in Tehran more than two years ago, U.S. intellige-gce agencies and the ' State Department have intensified their i'1Vestigations Of international terroTism, in hopes of figuring out some way to control it. My sources tell me that Four Bottom is thinkina ot beefing up lhe Sped-1 Office for Combating Terrorism, wJUcb bas been somewhat less than effective in.,,. the past. Meanwhile , the little·publicized Air Force Office of Special Investigations <OSI) -which pinpointed the Ayatollah Khomeini as a major t hreat to the shah G --Jl-Cl_l_ND-IR-SO-N -~ • of I r an yea r s be fore othe r U .S . intelligence agencies tumbled to that possibility -has taken the lead in studying the increasingly important war against anti·American terrorists. Here are some highlights from a recent, secret OSI report, reviewed by my associate Lucette Lagnado: -For most terrorist groups, like the Palestinians and the Italian Red Brigades. Americans constitute a favorite target . (The report was issued before Gen. Dozier's kidnapping.) ·'The perceived representation of evil within the U.S. business. diplomatic, mHitary and assistance communities located abroad is essentially lbe same for today's terrorists," the OSI report warns, adding that earlier tactics of protes t .rallies, posters and the occasional Molotov cocktail "have escalate4 ... to disruption, destruction $nd death.'' -Although lbe terrorist groups have a wide range of political viewpoints, the secret repor.t notes, they feel a "revolutionary kins hip" in their hostility towa rd "imperialism" in general a nd the United States i n particular. .: ·It is this ingredient . : . which unites groups ... as diverse as the PFLP, the Japanese Red Army, the Red Briga~. Official Irish Republican Army and the like,'' the OSI report sayg. -Today's terrorist groups have become more street -smart and less individually oriented. the OSI experts warn. Recognizin_g the vulnerability that attaches to ftl entification with a particular leader, the groups have become more loosely str uctured and autonomous. They have realized lbat "personality cults are not conducive to oper ational security nor to decisive action when the opportunity presents itself." -A nNAL alarming note in the OSJ report indicates that the terrorist groups have become less ideologically "pure." They now welcome hardened criminals into their ranks, evidently willing to forgo revolutionary zeal for the practical rewards of professionaJ expertise. For modern terrorists, the Air Force experts warn, "nothin,g is too extreme, nothing is unattainable." Calif Ornia faces big election year This is tbe ti me for newspaper pundits to forecast the year ahead. While most do it with tongue in cheek. realizing that their readers will not remember the predictions which fai l to com·e to pass, their efforts are based upon a certain amount of knowledge and experience. In this they differ from the "seer s .. who claim mystic or psychic powers. For Californian~ the year will be politically exciting as candidates vie for all statewide offices as well as the legislative and congressional seats. The election year will be highlighted by the fact that candidates will be running for governor and U.S. Senator in the same election, an event which occurs only about once each decade. NORMALLY, a skidding economy accompanied by mass unemployment would work against the party in power nationally. But despite the optimism which was held for Ronald Reagan·s economic program having become a disappointment with predictions that the so-called recession . will get worse during the forthcoming year, the public still seems to look with hope to Reagan. That being the case the issues in California's elections will center on law and order aod on remedying the gross mismanagement or Medi·Cal ai\d other state programs which have occurred under the nrown administration. Therefore 1t is predicted that .Attorney General George Deukmejian will win the nomination for governor and will be elected in November along with a mild sweep for the Republicans IARl WATERS wh o will recApture some of the statewide offices as well as gain a few seats in the Legislature and i~ the state's congressional delegation. Incredible as it may seem for one who has proved to be s uch a disaster as governor, Jerry BroWn appears to be headed for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate. Only a miracle can boost one of his Democratic challengers to victory. But, Brown's nomination will not cinch his election. The Republican most likely to emerge with that party's nomination for the Senate is San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson. However, if a ll of those who have announced plans to r un for the nomination actually file, the incumbent Sam Hayakawa could easily win out. Regardless of whom Uie Republicans nominate, Jerry Brown's miserable record as governor, highlighted by such monumental goofs as the Medfly fiasco, will ensure his defeat in November. Despite the Democratic efforts to foreclose the Republicans with their highhanded and unfair reapportionment plans. there will be more than a few s urprises in the legislative and congressional uces as the voters, disenchanted with their performances, will turn out of office some incumbents who have come' to the belief that they hold office by divine right. THE ANTIPl\THY to iocumb4!nts bu been increasing among the voters~and the · s liding economy, continuing inflation and unhealthy rises in un employm e nt will m a-ke the anti-incumbent feeling stronger for it is always greater during periods of bard times. It ean also be predicted that the &orig overdue cutbacks in spending by the s tate and local governments will commence this year . For, with decreased revenues and stiff resistance to tax increases, the state no longer has the m on ey to maintain its own programs. let alone band over billions Ito s uccor local governments and' the schools. Power often nioderates leaders' views One thing that the public does not seem to know, and that politicians themselves scarcely seem aware of, is that the assumption of office and high authority makes you less or what you , were like when you were running, and more like your opponent. All responsible leadership moves more towJJ'd the center when it is in IYlllY 111111 that it wasn't going to make much difference which ooe or them won. If Goldwater got it, he· would fipd his fervor cooled by the realities of power, and it Johnson were elected be would move us i nto' Vietnam just a9 surely as- be accused his opponent of wanting to escalate the wat . And, of course, Johnson did exactly that, so much adopting his rival's 1>9siUon that it drove hlm out of the Whit-e House. Kennedy wa.a lar less a 1 "ti beraJ" president than be professed to be, while Eisenhower was not nearly as uns wervingly conservative as his backers had hoped. Only Nixon moved more ln the direcUon of his campaifn po•er, and away from the extremer threats -which proved, to my mind, positions enunciated in the heat of that he was not a resl>Q~aibh~ leader of batUe. 1bia is why' aealota are almost his party. alw•ys d isappointed wben their candidates begin to enact their polities. IT 18 WORTH recallina that sreat Reacan la now dl11ppolntin1 hia conurva·tlvea like Bismarck ln rlJbt-wlq sul)fOl'te .... who acouae him Germany and Disraeli In Britain -and of abancloa1na some of bit priaclpl11 ln not thelr liberal opponenu ....-were t.be order to ••ua•e the eleetonte; and tnaU•aton of social and eeonomlc while u.y are correet ln percelvba1 , reforms aucb as early unemployment Ulla, tbeJ are fooU.b for not bavtna lnauranc. and SQClal security, often to anUclpaa.d meb moderaUoo once be the constema\ion of Lbetr ad.her.ntl. was ln oftlce. Con.t.rarlwiae, "llbera)s" llke FDR and When Goldwater and Johmoa wert. ' Truman were responsible for the flllallDI lt out In lMI. I tol( both b a r b a r o '1 t t 1' t er n m e n t o L m1 ,)!~al and conservative frteada -Jat>&De1e-A&nericau and the sratwaout bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Only fanatics, llke the old m• in ·Ira n. move further into extremlam when they obtain power; the greet masa or political le ade rs temper their -t"hetoric and tailor their policies toward mOderation, tor this is the only way they can maintain their equilibrium. It is no accident when Reqan fires an Army general for sayinf much of what Reagan himaeU said while a candidate. lncorralstenl? No -consistent with the way campalpen conduct themselves after the votea have vaulted them into office. Jobn 8dunlta ud Gloria ~ -wlaat a beautllul couple tMy'd mike.,......_, belt ud all! • DEAa PAT DUNN: SIMe lut 'Muell I · ltan beea &rytq &o 1~ Ute ......_ I ordered from ""* ldlU-.. I aeat fol' two blouet aad reeelved UM wroa1 cGlol'a aad ebft. I aeat Uae• back aad recehed aaotlter laeerrect es8aa1e. I fluUy kept OM of UM bloaae1, bat returaed ~e otlaer oae for eseltaqe. No&lala& llaa llappt111!1 •ce &lie• evea U..p I've called aad .-rtttee maay tlmea. I hope you cu laelp. . I C •. T., Newport Beacll~ First Editions promises to have the blouse you ordered mailed to you immediately. Hopefully, this will take care of the problem. If there is another mlxup, let AYS know. I Loat stock Cf!rtif icatea DEAR PAT DUf'llN: I Ualu J Jane mlaplaced a coaple of a&ock certlllca&ea. Wllat cu I do to eatabllab &Ila& I owa tllem If I can't prodllce tllem! J. J., ea.ta Meaa If the certificates were issued to you by a transfer agent, contact that firm. If the company issue<f the certificates directly to you, you are entitled to a new certificate. However, before issuing a new certificate to replace the missing one, corporations usually · require the owner of the lost certificate to satisfy 1everal requirements. The owner must set forth, in an affidavit, all the facts surrounding the loss. An indemnity bond must be posted to protect the corporation against the possibility that the lost certificate may be presented later by an innocent purchaser for value (the owner of the lost certificate, in most instances, pays for the indemnity bond ). The request for a•J new certificate must be made before the company receives notice that the missing certificate has been acquired by another bona fide purchaser. As you can see, this can ~e a burdensome, and perhaps costly procedure. This is wh y stock certificates should always be kept in a safety deposit box. Report winnings DEA& PAT DUNN: I .,_ a mknwue ovea ... a dlalawaalaer oa a teleTidDa 1a•e allow. I mdentud tlley are tuable, bid ltow allloald &Ida be 1111o .. H •Y f9Mra1 tu ret•111T K.C.,C..adelMu Super Perm Sale! As seen in Vogue. Curl up with a perfect perm. •40 for •25 Sam4'011 & '=:Delilah SALE OF FURS ·EXPERIENCED '\Al' (' ' Q Some of the most fabulous furs os I\~ I J• seen on TV and 1n the ~ovies ore · W. now tlere for your selection Wt DUY YOU TO DlfFUtHTIATt ntE MEW OMES FROM THE IUSAUS. TM ,.,vest ~t1on of luxury fur• •• hew. ..., ehown. \ lnchM:Mng deelgnef tun Md ONE Of A KIND .-ci.te. lmeqine buying a fine fur SIOie for under s 100.. a-flnlr mini< jaoket that was only worn once or !Wice or a mink ooal that was a prize on a TV giveaway show. They're all here fOf your selection now. If you know furs, you can buy a family htlrloom IOf a lrao11on of its value. Never before, f'lfMlf egain will so many valuable IUrs be • ottered al euch rldlcUIOus priees. It mekes leflSe to buy a fine rental °' l#lClalrned fuf. Some ""' labeled ''used" he~ onfy been lrled on, worn '"8 then mo.t fUfrters' new stock. F1tlt come, lint MMe! be*. A ernaN de90llt will hold your layaway Marriott Hotel a Tennie Club 1 -Nlmport C1111ii Dr • ...... CA.- lf ,ou wiD a priM bt _, e •&Mt, ca.• 1bow, door prbe, etc., tile'* mantt ..... of tbe Item mult be bacladld ID JOUI' tae-., accordlq to tbe IDtenW .. , .. leniee. Tbla la reported on Form UNO UDdlr' ,.cdilr income." nae Item Uould tie ldeatltled • ''prize won,'' and described briefly. · Depoait rulea final DEAR READERS: The Depository. lnst1tutiona Dereeulatlon Committee baa adopted a tlqal rule e1tabli1hln1 a new IRA/Keolh time deposit cateaory. Tbe new category, effective Dec. 1, bu the followtn1 features: -A minimum maturity 9' 1 \\ years and no regulated interest rate ceilln1 (each institution can setita own rate). -Additional deposits may be added at any time without extendlq tbe maturity ot any or all of the account tunds. For example, a consumer with a three-year account could add money at six montba, 15 moot.bl, or two years and still be able "to close th& aeeount when the original tbree·year period ended. -Banks, savings and loana, and credit unions can establish their own time categories and their own method of computing interest, but wbatever-time~rlod or method is used must be apecifted for the consumer in the deposit agreement. -Early withdrawal penalties may be waived at the· institution's discretion for trailSfers within the same lnatituUon from any IRA/Keogh Jccount in existence on or before Dec. t, 1981 to the new IRA/Keogh· deposit category. -Early withdrawal without penalty will be allowed for IRA/Keogh depositors who are 59Y.i or older, or disabled. · Details are included on page 53395 of the Oct. 29 Federal Re,u;ter. • '·Got a problem? Then write to Pat \.. l Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting • the answers and actiorl you need to • solve inequities in government and ,... business. Mail ycrur questjons to-Pal ~ I Dunn. At Your Service, OTange Cocut Daily Piwt. P.O Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. As many letters as possible will be answered. but phoned inquiries or letters not including the reader's full name. address and business hours' phoM number cannot ~ consi4ered. This column appears daily er· cept Sundays." Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 4, 1982 I 1 -........... TRAINING CANINES . -Dogs go through training as part of an intensive 10-week course at the Department of Defense Dog Center at Lackland Air Force Jtase, San Antonio~ Tex.as. The center recruits and trains dogs for the Air Force, Navy, Marines and Army. Also the Secret Service,. FBI,~ Federal Aviation Administration, Drug Enforcement and other government agencies. Early sexual bl~om aids boys ' STANFORD (AP> -Early sexual m.aturlty A maturing boy is seen as approaching! may help boys succeed in life -but it also can adulthood, Dornbusch said, but as women mature, trap girls into a "girlfriend" stereotype -a "to some extent their maturation is viewed as r Stanford University study shows. ~ putting them into the girlfriend category, not as an A two-year study, baaed on 6,000 adolescent.in independent adult who will make contributions on! the National Health Examination Survey, showed her own le".el.'' that boys benefit from raised expectations when ...------'-----.---------- they are early to mature sexually, said sociology professor Sanford Dornbusch. ''Whatever their age when interviewed, all the boys who were early maturers were regarded by themselves, their parents and their teachers as more '1kely to go on to higher education and to be Antique Sho successful," said J . Merrill Carlsmith, a W , pSychology professor involved in the study. Huntington Cent" I come see us at our Even among those with identical scores on mall today fhru Jan. 10 new addrltaa intelligence tests, Dombusct\ said, •·Males who are 1-----------.tl :l.1 ;J::-•' . . , slow to sexually mature perceive themselves as · FAIMllS •SllMCE poor in academic realms and have lower ;i., educational expectations, and their parents agree C•ll 642-5678. 441 ow..._,.,..,..&. with them. So there is a real plus for the early Put • few words .._,.,. 1HcJi. CA maturers... to work for ou. 31·7 o_ . Only at Fidelity Federal: • High Money llarllet Interest • Absolutely no fees on your IRA or Keogh • Free 5-1/4% Checlllng Account • VISA Card with no fees That's the Fidelity Fed IRAdvantage. Open your IRA or Keogh at Fidelity Federal. and we guarantee to pay the highest 30-Month Certificate rate tor the tull.18 month- term of your account. You can choose a fixed or variable rate plan. And your account is fully insured by the FSLIC. Your IRA contributions, up to $2000 FOR ANY WAGE EARNER ($15,000 tor Keogh), are tax deductible, while all interest earned is tax-deferred. And 11 yo\,lr IRA or Keogh balance is $1000 or more, we'll give you The Grand Award. It's a complete package ot tree banking services, including free 5Y4% Interest Checking with no minimum balance and no monthly service charges. Plus a VISA Card with no annual or monthly fee. overdraft prot~ction, and a. $200 Check Guarantee Card for quali1ying customers. The IRAdYantage. No bank, ICIYl.ng• and loan, brokerage, houM, or Insurance company can offer you more. And It's yours only at fidelity hderal.' Fl SAVINGS AND t.OAN ASSOCIATION Aa1et1 o••r $1.7!>Wion1ti:ong and growing. ~ ,- - ..· I •I t 1 , } ~ ,, "1 ' OfUc•• to 1ene you UU'o110Jlout tM 1tate. Ill So\ltllem CaWomia .•. AnlCl/QleDdora: 1173 East Alosta 335-1206 • leWlower: 15908 BelUlower Blvd. 925-962 l • .... llf llWI: 380 South Beverly Drive 553-3000 • •19 heir: 42025 Sandalwood Drive ( 714) 666-761& • Blue Jt.rt: 27226Hl9hway189 (714)'337-2421 •lueufark:8460 La Palma Avenue (714) 527-7100 •Coroner Del Mm: 1111 Baysld• Drive (714) 760-8611 • Coata Me1a: less Hatbor Blvd (714) 645-4420 • CUlftr Ctt1: 10784 Jetterson Blvd 559-7220 • hll•rton: 911 North Harbor . · BlVd. (714)879-7440 • QleDdale:600 North Brand BlVd. 956-7100• lntll•:4482 BarrancaParkway(714)559-7007 • Lcrpnaleach: 310 Glenneyre Street (714~~!5()(,· Lab roreat: 25431 Trabuco Road (114) 768·2946 •Long hclcll: 625 East Ocean Blvd. 436-3271 • Loa9leacla lat: 5767 ComtHJahway597-8869 • .. wport leacll: 1616 WestclW Drive (714) 642-4000 • Nortll lolltwood: 6550 Launtl Canyon Blvd. 985-2600 • •ordmdve: 19450 Aummer street 993-6700 • fcdm Deaert: '3·1&6Highway111(114)340-4624 • Placeatla: 201 B. Yotba Llnda BM:l (714~-8700 • lcm '9dro: 29000 So. Western Awnue 832-7602 •Santa Aaa: 2700 Na. Matn .... 1 Sb'Mt (714) 547·960& •IHI•••~ 13820 Beach BM1698-7626 •llemcm OUb: 144?'6 Ventura 81Vd. 788·2420•ltcmtoa:12000 BeachB1Yd.(~891-171l •OptameaoqalDAlcacUa,ICla8ulMlmaclLap-.amma•'tommc.:24020Hawthome8lvd,378-9374 • Vcm M1119: l Vlctory BlYd. 791..t&46 •Welt Bolltwoocl: 8663 8-verly Blvd. 667-4141 _ --~~--- Orang• Co11t DAIL V ptLOTJMonday, January •. 1982 Princess Cruise to Acapulco for two plus $1500 in BankAmerica Travelers Cheques Sony Betamax SL-5000 Video Ca ssette Recprder Zenith l'JI' Color Television c Sign up now for your Individual Retirement Account~ at Bank of America. While you're there, enter our IRA PLUS Nest Egg Sweepstakes. You could win $50,000 in cash. Or a Princess Cruise to Mexico. Or a Sony Video €ossette Recorder. Or one of over 1,000 other prizes. WHY IRA Pl.US? A lot of financial institutions offer IRA~ accounts, but only Bank of America offers IRA PLUS. With IRA PLUS you get a choice of high interest investments. An example of one of our investment options: 0 Current Yc ' 14 • 50 0 Annual Rate 18 Mon1hs TMm Rote is sobiect to change but is fixed at time of account opening for the term of the inveitment. Minimum deposit $500. Sutntontiol interest penolty for eorly withdrowol. NO FEES Unlike many IRA accounts, an IRA PLUS investment at Bank of America is fr~ You'll pay no set-up or mainte- nance fees for IRA PLUS, so your earnings potential won't be reduced. And you'll have the added security of knowing your retirement funds are protected by the safety of California's largest financial institution. FREE CONSUMER REPORT Stop by any Bank of America branch and sign uf'lor the IRA PLUS Nest '"With c:enoin eJCwptiona, withdtawah made befoN age 59V2 en .ubfect ~ ta.c p11DffliH. **Ship it lritlth Nglttry. Prize does not co...-items of ti per10n0I nature. 01112 MHK Of' AMERICA NT&SA • ME~A FOtC. I • ----· IRA+ s H Egg Sweepstakes. While you're there, we'll give you our consumer report, "Understanding Individual Re- tirement Accounts:' It's yours free for the asking. WIN$50,000 That's the Grand Prize, $50,000 in cash. And it could be yours, so enter now. Imagine what a help that would be for your retirement Nest Egg. ·· The Grand Prize drawing will be held in April. WIN A CRUISE A luxurious Princess Cruise to Acapulco for two . Seven enchanted days in the sunny tropics. Includes First Class stateroom, all meals and enter- tainment aboard ship. Plus $1, 500 in BankAmerica Travelers Cheques. Monthly drawings will be held .._ January, February and March, and three trips will be g iven away~* MORE PRIZES In addition to the Princess Cruises, we'll also be giving away over 1, 000 prizes in the drawings: 15 Sonx Betamax Video Cassette Recorders, each with 24 blank tapes. 30 Zenith 19" Color Televisions. 45 Kodak Colorburst 250 Instant Cameras. 75 General Electric AM/FM Radio Cas- sette Player /Recorders. Plus 900 deluxe pictorial books, "T~ Beauty of California:' Stop by your neigh- borhood Bank of America branch and enter today; the sweepstakes ends April 15, 19$2. S •¥1f ... nnfromJonuary4, 1982toApril 1S, 1982. ,.,... mutt i. 11 ,_...~older to...-or win. Vou need not be o ... of~ customer, not Of*' on account to en-•••plf._, S.. detofh ond official """at any lank of Ametlca btan&h. Kodak Colorburst 250 Instant Camera General Electric AM/FM Radio Cossette Player/Recorder ' Deluxe Pictorial IOolc, "The Beauty of Califomia" ) ' I ~ ) ·~ ., I i I l ~ r 1 J l I • • . . ~ .. ' l . • ~ ~ I 1 , • I A l • l MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1912 Jacqueline Onassis didn't floss without Erma Bombeck CAVALCADE STOCKS TELEVISION · knowiri,g it ... 82 -~pitol r <eOpens -after $~8 ~ori restoration Celebration marks completion of project · SACRAMENTO (AP) - California's 112-year-old state Capitol reopens today. for the Lelialature and public with a $SOO ,OOO celebration of Callfomla'a put, preeeat and future. The week of .celebrations marks completion of what ofllciala claim la the lar1eat biatoric restoration project ever undertakflll. Tbe project bas woo enthusiastic praise as sn "architecturaf masterpiece" .and Jlbarp criticism for it.a hilh coat in a period of spending cutbacks. The Capitol restoration gala Includes a aiant cake, a rlbbon~cutting ceremony aad reconvening of the first legislative session in-the bu.llcllq since renovations and restoration started in 1975. TbQSe events will be followed by six days of parties, parades, fireworks , dramatic and musical tributes and a black-tie formal ball. About half the 1ala week events are open free to .the ceneral public, and gala sponsors expect 50,000 to 100,000 persons to visit the Capitol during the week. Four other events, including. the formal ball, are open to the public at $8 to $30 per ticket, and there are five by-invitation receptions, including a black-tie dinner under the dramauc·ally restored dome for persons who paid $1,250 to $5,000 each to be gala sponsors. The gala spans a wide ranee of cultural interests, from a laser light show to living b.latory skita, with music rancinc from • "Star Wars" to the 1930s awt.nc of "Les Brown '1 Band of Renown" al the formal Saturday -n~ght ball. The .restoration project - which wu completed at nearly double the cost and time originally estimated -bas sparked . political, fiscal and historic controversy. Even the gala celebration, although financed entirely with !private funds, has trigsered· .~ontroversy as the opulence of the gala and the building il celebrates is compared with state budget cuts in welfare, beallb, education and other programs. The restoration project wu · proposed in 1972, after a series ol e ngineering and architectural studies all agreed that the· Capitol was structurally unsafe and could collapse in an earthquake. · Originally il was budgeted at $35.6 million, and was to take three years -from 1973 through 1976. But it toot thr• yean Just to reaolv~ tbe queaUon of wbat kind of restoration should be undertaken, and another 5~ years to complete the work, at a coat of $68 mUlton, plua an additional $3 mUllon to refurbish a newer adjolnin1 wins that houaea legislative offices. The renovation project involved two diaUncUy different -and ·often coafllctln1 - objectives, said former state architect Jo'1n. Worsley, who overaaw the entire project. One was to make the four-story Capitol safe in cue ol an earthquake. BuUt between 1860 and 187,, tbe entire 11tructure.-all the wQ from U.. cellar to the top of the sold dome 238 feet above the cwaentooe - was built of brick without reinforcing eteel. Worsley said muc& of the mortar between the brick was gEne, and a century of wear, 0 casional neclect and r modeling projed.a had further weakened the structure. The other goal wu biatoric restoration. In many cues that meant copying photographs and sketches of 75 to 100 years ago to reconstruct decorative plaster and woodwork that bad been removed generations aso. The bull ding' s complex patterns of hand-laid.floor Wea in the major hallways were all photographed close-up, removed, numbered and replaced exacUy u they were before remodeling . Old photographs were studied and old layers of paint were analyzed to reproduce the original colors. 1 "One of the things that made it. difricult to. do the atructural work was meeting the needs of restoration," Worsley said. "If we didn't have to put reinforced concrete in; it would have been a cinob to just clean it up and do a cosmetic restoration. And if we hadn't been coocerned with preaerviag the exact details of the bulld.ing, just reinforcing it wowd have been DO problem. But eacb coat i:nade the other more difflcutt." To do both, the thick brick walls behind the Capitol's granite exterior were removed section-by-section and replaced wilb reinforced concrete of the exact same dimensions. Original window and door culnp were then refinished and put back in the new waus. > A steel scaffoldin1 that surrounded the exterior of the -building for several years wa:; not there just for painters. Its real purpose was to bold the Capitol together lrom the outside while the interior structural walls, from cellar to the roof, were 8"' removed and replaced. The restoration also involved undoing mucb of the remodeling of the past 112 years. RESTORED ROTUNDA -A workman looks over the railing of the second floor balcony of the restored rotunda in the Capitol at Sacramento. Broad, elegant polished-wood stairways which bad been removed in 1906 to .make more office space have been recon s tructed . Clumsy mezzanines-which bad been FINISHED PRODUCT -Visitors pass by a fountain in front or the Capitol recently after the building underwent a $68 million restoration project. squeezed into high-celling rooms to gain floor space have been eliminated. Fireplaces which had been removed or sealed in walls decades ago were rebuilt, but for decorative purposes only, as the new walls contain all the utility channels of modern buildings, including heat, air conditioning and wiring for an ex t ensive computer data system. Design and architectural critic John Dreyfuss of the Los Angeles Times described the restoration as an engineering and architectural triumph. "The reborn Capitol is worth celebrating,•' Dreyfuss wrote, voicing an often-repeated view among visitors lo the Capitol. "Technically and aesthetically, it is an arc h itectural masterpiece.'' However, the completed project is n ot an exact reproduction of any single date in the building's past. Restoration to 1869, when the Capitol was first occupied, or 1874, when the. original phase of construction was completed was rejected because the original building was rather spartan with plain wood floors and little decorative work. Most of the elegant paint.int. woodwork and plaster sculpture was added in the 1890s. But u early as 1906, remodeling projects started to undo that work, squeezing new offices for a growing state government into the Capitol. Most of the building is restored to its appearance · around 1900, althou1h a fourth noor added in 1906 is tetaioed, with modiflcations. The Senate and Assembl1 chambers, the elega n·~ showpieces of the restored building, will once again be the day-to-da.y workina chambers ol the atate LeliJlature. Tbe working offices of !Assembly Speaker WUUe Bro~J Senate President pro tem DaVUJ • Roberti and their at.Cf• are alaQ 'in the restored Capltol, alOlll · wltb nlne le1lslative.-bearlfts . 'rooms. --> • I But the orllhtal offleea tJ!. the 11o•ernor, attorney 1eneral, treuurer and secretary ol at.ate are rtlt.Ored only for mUMUID lpUJ'POHI, u P9ft of tbe publie ,~• ot tbe buildin1. Tb• actual ' 'Olllee1 for thoM offlelall are m otl:er ltate bdildinlfl or, ta t.be case of the governor. in an adjoining newer wing of the Capitol. Some of the restoration also involves a bit of playfulness by some of the 3,000 craftsmen who restored the building. The painted flowers in the r estored governor's office include the painting of one small 1and Queen Isabella of Spain which was located in lhe rotunda of the Capitol from 1883 until it was moved at the start of the restoration in 1975 lo the lobby of a state building a block away. Columbus and Queen Isabella have no direct connectiOI\, with California's history. The statue ''Technically . and . aesthetically, it is. an architectural masterpiece.'' Medfly , and lhe plaster sculpture work in the ceiling of the Assem bly c hambers includes one smalJ gargoyle with bis tongue out and fingers in bis ears, mocking the la wmakers below. A still-unresolved dispute involves a nine-ton life-size statue or Christopher Columbus * * * only ended up in the Capitol because its original buyer failed to pay for il and an early Sacramento banker bou1bt it and gave it to the slate .• Worsley opposes returning the statue to the Capitol, where be says it doesn't fit and only blocks the public's view of the· dome from the rotunda. * * * Capitol reopening week festive SACRAMENTO (AP) -Here are highlights of the planned gala to celebrate the reopeninc · or the restored California state · Capitol. All events are free and o oeo to the public unleu otherwise noted: T.-, • p.m. -lllltc.,tlclft •"" Leelll•tun i-IN creftJIMfl MIO WOftced Oft proj«f.,8y ~. ... T ..... Y ••• 1'11 • ..S p.m. -~ .,.., -_... toun. 11 •. I'll. -LMno H......, '---· ..._.... CM!nW.. r---·· ~--Ml*cln.,,.lllltllnd.lllt..,... 1:U ,.m. -U.lng H._,., ,..._.. ~ c~ ........, ••• .., ... ""'· -c.ltel.,.., ----....... 11 e.111. -. Uvlflt Hl1'°'1' ......,.., A-*V c~ W'tt-~ In tN llll_..,.1111.-..; 'I It '-"" -Llvtnt "....,., peeMftt. ~ ~ ?;• '""' -a..kal UIMI. -·-0-...... ,., .. tiff MMcllefll ~ .. S.Ci$1M ... IJINillell' wllll flllll M4I leMr lltltH ..... ._,.....,.~C ..... Tklletl•·tlt. T1illNllY ••. 111.s ..... -~---­....... 11 e.111 -U~ HllWY ........ ,.__ cllem"'"' N--Mlllklfllllt II--.~. h U '·"'' -U.1111 HllW\f .......... ~ ~ • '·"'· -~· -.c....... .. ....... , llwfQtlell. 7:at p.m. -cie.kel L'9fltl. Seer...,... Comm\Hllly center. Tklleft ... ,10. "'*' . • e.m .. s p.m. -c..,ttol....,. rw 111•-tM '°""· . 1•~• e.m. -1111 ............ .-<lei ...... . ,.,_, .......-n. .., ..... Offt< .......... . .... ,.__.,~., ...... ....... MMft-Mullc ...... lllt.-id.1111 ...... l :IJ p.m, -LIWll H....,., , ........ A-*'f c'Mmwa. ..._ ~ 1:•11.m.-Oale~~- . .cttr lld "-· MIU! o.,._. MIN, ~ M11tti "-'!, S-f'r-IKO ,.............., ... LM ·-..... Seer••·-C-ity llleMW. TrcuttPt. I I j I t • Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 4, 1882 , •ANN LANDERS •ERMA BOMBECK . •DR. STEINCROHN ........ MIDIA BARRAGE -Week·old Elizabeth or microphones at news conference in Carr. America's first test tube baby, seem5' Norfolk, Va. The child was born last Monday to be holding her hands up ag~nst the cluster at Norfolk General Hospital. I Let Smokenders I I I I help you k.-P It! I I I I a111~!;·~~~d::rl~eq~~:~~~~?,:i~tt~~~~~nyo !~Y~~~~e~~~ s~~i~~~f ~~~~=~!~~1~~~~:r~f~r~ne~~!~~t~~~;:r,e~~1;~:S1:P~~ 11 I shock Jreatment I What's special about Smokenders 1s that you get to keep on smoking while you learn to quit. And without gaining I weight. either! Sound too good to tie true' Not on your life. It's a fact that thanks to Smokenders. hundreds of thousands of I people just like you have already learned to put their cigarettes oul for good. I So even 1f you don't btheve you can ever quit. 11 won't hurt to hear what we have to say. Just come to one of the 1 1 - Smokenders meetings below Leave your willpower at home. but bring your cigarettes and your New Year's Resolution to I quit smoking This year it's really going to happen I I MONDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY I I J1n. 4 or 11 Jan. 6 or 13 J111. 7 or 14 I I I I Buw Pin 7:30 PM Long Buch 7:31 PM Ntwl*t 8adl 7:31 PM I HOLIDAY INN HYATI HOUSE MARRIOTI HOTEL I I 7CXX> Beach Blvd. 6400 E. eacifie Coast Hwy 000 Newport Center Drive 'I I (Fwy. #91. I Beach Blvd. Exit) DEAR READERS: Recently 10meooe wrote and ulted If it is good m~en to inquire, "How many acres do you have?'' I responded, "What do I know about acres - me ln my Chlca10 apartment? I need help froin you landowners out there. How about it?•• I I received some enlightening responses which I happily share with you. FROM NORTH DAKOTA: Tell the rancher ID Moaterey It'• nobody'• bu•~s bow muy acres lie llH or ltow many laead of caUle lie ruu, etUaer. 'l'lae bHt auwer to a question like that la "not encM1llt." LlNCOLN, NEB.: Anyone who asks for numbers ("How many acres?") is really trying to figure out your net worth. We country people would never ask a city person, "How many squar~ feet in your home?" Same thing. UTAH RANCHER: "How maay acres .. brou«b& back memories of our early days In MlDDe:Mta wlaen we rallecl rabbits. The town's.Mr. Big Mouth asked me laow many people I employed. HU question took me by surprise, and I foollsbly told lalm. Not satilfled, be then asked, "Allcl ltow maay rabblU do yoa have! .. I bad galaed control of mylelr by &bat Ume alld replied, "I clea't kaow. I haven't cOtlllted ID tlle last Zt minutes." lie 1ot the message and was never nosy with me after that. FROM MISSOURI : Your question, "Is it rude to ask how many acres are in a person's property?" reminded me of my favorite joke. It's about the Kentucky fellow who attended a £armer's convention. A wealthy Texan who spent much of his time bragging about his huge holdings nailed a Kentucky farmer and asked how many acres tie owned. The answer was. .. Pretty close to 200. I reckon." "That 's nothing ," \he Texan interrupted. ··1 can get in my truck and drive until dusk and still not find the end of my land. "Yep," the Kentucky farmer agreed. "I used to have a truck like that." -THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER DEAR DAUGID'ER: Thanks for tbe knee.slapper. Here's another point of view: DEAR1 ANN LANDERS: I do not consider th'e question, "How many acres do you have?" in poor taste. I come from a farm cqmmunity and know this is often the only way you can differentiate among the person with three acres of lawn and a horse, the part-time farmer with 40 acres and a tractor, and the bread-and·butter, i.ooo-acre farmer with machinery a mile long. rt's the same as asking, "Which insurance company do you work for? .. A better question would be, "'What kind of operation do you have?'' As any farmer can testify, the number of acres has nothing to do with his net worth. More often, it's an indication or his degree ot · indebtedness. -INITIATED IN CASPER, WYO. CONFIDENTIAL to Frustrated Researcher: Yes, I can belp. Here It Is, signed by Pastor Martha Nlemoller In Germany ID INS: "la Germany the Nazis came for the Communlats, and I did not speak up because I was not a Communist. Then' tbey came for the Jews, and I dJd not speak up because I was Dot a Jew. Then they came for the trade un.ioaists. and I did not speak up because I was not a trade unionist. 'lben they came for tbe Catholics. and I diet not speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for ME. By that time there was no one to speak up for anyone." Di&cover how to be date bait without falling hook, Une and s1nker. Ann Landers' book~t . .. Dating Do's and Dorft6," will help you be . more potstd and sure of yourself on dates. Send 50 cents along with a long. stamped. self-addre&sed envelope with your request to Ann Landers. P.O. Bo:r 11995 Cmcago. IU 60611 . I. . s-o.-..""' 1171 ,.., llfll i '---------cup ANO SAVE AS A REMl•DER OF DATE. TIME AID UICATIOtl·--------' Now's the time to join ·a Holiday Spa Health Club, while you can still take advantage of better time than now to give Holiday Spa a tty. So stop by today for a free guest tour. Media blitz addicting our 1981 rates. · Plus 1/ 2 off on a short introductory course, and dis- counts on all our other mem- berships. )bu'll get all of this year's facilities, for last year's prices. With separate, individually specialized facilities and pro- grams for men and women, available every day. There's no ~-­lleallll Clilb .for Men mnd Women l~on course not available" at ·lbrrance or .West Lo!! Angeles clubs. Costa Me sa 2300 Harbor Blvd., (Behind Thrifty Drugl. 1714) 549-3368 · Mlaaion Viejo 24401 Alicia Pkwy. at San Diego Freeway, (71~). 770-0822 Oranae 622 East Katella Ave., West of Tustin Ave., 1714) 639-2441 'westminster 6757 -We~tminster Ave., at Golden West, (714~ 894·3387 ~)HHlth It Uonni. l·.,..,.. 0( Am.,l<a 11181 lI 1V !00100! AVM A.NV OUR 1981 RATES LOOK GREAT Last week, I began shivering uncontrollably. My mouth became dry. I could not·concentrate. My nerves were like a cavity exposed to an ice cube. Then I realized why. I had gone through an entire day without seeing Brooke Shields. The withdrawal symptoms were predictable. It brought back memories or an. overdose of Farrah Fawcett in 1978, and or 1979, when I picked up a magazine that did not have John Travolta on it and I couldn't stop crying. EVERY YEAR, THE media blitz is on someone and we are saturated with all there is to know about him. In some instances, the depth or the person deserve9 no longer than 15 minutes, yet week in and week out they create a supply or facts for which there is no demand. For eight months once I followed closely the dating habits of Princess Caroline of Monaco. I knew what time Caroline got up in the morning, who she was with, what they did and what they were charged with. I should have known so much about my own daughter. At one time, I kept-pace with every move of Jacqueline Onassis. She didn't floss wit.bout--my knowing about it. Then it was Marie Osmond who dominated my life and las\ year, the face that made pork a four·letter word: Miss Piggy. For awhile, I didn't think I could .I' • . -~. - flMA IOMIKI AT WIT'S END survive Miss Piggy. She had her own TV show, wrote books. guested on talk shows, appeared on the cover of nme and every other majo~ublication while her likeness was reproduced on glasses, pillows. sheets. cocktail napkins, toothbrushes, stationery, posters, T ·shirts, ashtrays. banks, bookends, beach towels and bumper stickers. I was a full·grown woman who couldn't face the morning news wit.bout coffee from a mug with a pig in a blonde wig, for God•s sake. I know more about Brooke than any person has a right to know. People have entered a marriage knowing a lot less. I thought a long time before we planned a trip to South America for a vacation. What if they had never heard or Brooke Shields? How could I handle 10 . no·dimple-no-Calvin·Klein days? OVER RIO, MY PALMS began to sweat .and itch. 1 needed a drink of water.• I fell lightheaded. Then I saw a man next to · ime thumbing a Portuguese newspaper. I ,saw a small face surrounded by fat hair 1and said out loud, "Thanks. I needed that." : I could make it through the night now. Side effect of Pill T r611 lu111 · OR. PETER J. STEI~ ' the combination of eatroam and obesity increue the cbancet for cbolelterol la tbe bile fonliin& .._. Prepaat WOIM9 are. a1ao at a bi.Iller rlat for plWanel. MUda hl1b• than that ol men In the ame .,. .aroup. .. . . J:strocen level may alllo be tied ln with the reuon women may have chronic b•r.atitla mon often. And women who dr nk exce11iv.!!lY are more llke&J to 1uatam liver dailqe. Of mune, ~ dae to mm• *-not _..... .. MJl linolrid. ,......,. __ .......... ...................... attaelll, Ilk '9UI' dDeW II ,_ .... ' 1om1 otbtr t~" of eontraeeptlve '° tl'.••nt 1ucb .eompllcaUou a1 llMr ...... ·~ . I ' ~I l •J "J mill '11 already_." ~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~-' a.; ~---....... -----------------~ :; PllSOIAUTJ Q.&A. BY MARILYN ANO HY GARONER .. Ii .. ·jl _______________ _ ~Billie Jean to 'tell all' b Q: We UdU the coa.ra1eoa BlWe Jean Klnf dHerves a 1reat deal of credit for 0 ataldag her career and character by not t' dol•I wllat too many other well·knowu 11 per...uates do -try to eoaceal mistakes they've made. Don't you lblnk she ouglat to 1• write a book about ber We? -M.L., ,, Plttabargh. ... .. 'A: That's exactly what Viking decided . when they assigned Frank Denford of ., Sports Illustrated to collaborate with the ., controversial t~nnis champion on a 1 "tell-all" autobiography, including her affair with a girlfriend. The pub Usher expects the book to roll off the presses next summer. · Q: What ls tbe real age of Danielle Brlaeboia. Carroll O'Connor's "co-star" <lf . she gets tbat klnd of lofty bllllng) oa r "Arclde Bua.ker's Place.?" 13? 141 18? Zl? I'm coefused! -Roa Levy, Forest Bllls, 1 N.Y. A: The bright youngster will celebrate her 13th birthday June 28. And while she sometimes acts and speaks like a grownup, it's part of tfle' business of make·belleve, plus ~perience going b'ck tp wbeii,she was iftt"tbe thotua of the NlY~,Opera at age S! She's not spoiled or big-beaded - _ just a product of the age we're living in. The kind of kid you'd be proud to call your own. POTSHOTS • BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT -~~ATCH -OUT FO~ CHILDREN/ • S0"'1EDAY TH£Y'LL 'l"AKE OVER TME WORLD. , \CllAlllS . MCCAii PaCk~ing tests taste --- SAN FRAN~ISCO -"I find It a rather lugubrious Ctiablis, a bit on the tinny side." You may fmd one of that army of wine "critics" coming up with this, or some similar bit of wisdom, one of these days. This is because a subsidiary of Joseph Schlitz Brewing Co., the Geyser Peak Winery, of Geyserville, Calif. is moving into the wine market. They are now aelllng 6.3 ounce cans of Chablis. The company plans to follow with six packs of Rose Burgundy and other wines. Fine old vintages, or not so fine or so old, in tins? The critics will go mad with joy, at the abuse they can hurl. I find wine crtt;cs another excrescence on the soul of civilization. I find no reason for their existence at all. THE WHOLE MATTER of wine drinking is simple as sin to me. You have a palate and wine has a taste. If your palate likes the taste of the wine it matters not what. the label on the bottle says, or th~ country it comes from. If Americans understood this, wine critics would disappear in a trice, if not sooner. That day, I'm afraid, is far away. · Americans are terribly insecure in matters of taste. They seem to think that somebody "with taste" should guide them in what they eat, wtiat they drink, what movies to s~ and which to avoid, etc. etc. These critics, especially the wine guides. have developed a language of their own. which was beautifully parodied by James Thurber several decades ago. "It is a naive domestic Burgundy without any . breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption." I OFTEN BUY A WINE that comes in cases of four gallons and costs $14 in North Beach. I gave a couple of cases of same to a friend at Lake Tahoe. She gave a dinner for some of the most distinguished wine -bibbers in San Francisco and other parts. It was served in carafes and had nothing to identify it . There wasn't a word said against it, and much that was said for it. Palate met taste, and agreed. About Joe Schlitz' idea of cans, though. I h~ve some reservations. Beer in ·tins has a different, and inferior, taste to the stuff in the botUe. My favorite tipple is Rainier Ale in bottles. Tbe same stuff in tins i,s CJDoth• s'lbstance .altotether. which my palate on tire whole rejects. Wine has been sold in tins before. In 1964, according to San Francisco's Wine Institute, a French producer offered canned Beaujolais. It failed, according to an Institute .spokesman, because it was, yes, 11too tinny." THE FRENCH IMPORT used steel cans. Maybe Schlitz has managed to work out the technology of tinning beverages containing alcohol. Or maybe it is just trying for the Ripple trade. Geyser Peak points out that it is not trying to seJI to the c-arriage trade. but to back·packers . picnickers and various drinkers who might not wish to open a whole bottle for .. a single serving. The test marketing that is being done by Geyser Peak's sales manager, Lee Wiegandt. has been decidedly saflsf actory. ·,Time Scorpio ally Tuesday, January 5 ARIF.s <March 21-April 19): You could ' find key to riches. Combination of numerical and lunar cycle highlights finances, payments, collections and a windfall. · -- TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You could be competing in a race. Focus on competition, challenge, talent, creativity. initiative and a fresh start. Member of opposite sex falls head-over-httls and is none too discreet about it. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Focus on restrictions, inhibitions, possible visit to hospital. Older f amUy member needs encouragement. wouJct thrive on affection and 'longs for your touch. CA NC E R ( J \Jin e 21 · J u l y 2 2 ) : Celebration is on agenda; aura of holiday apirit prevails. Lunar emphasis on hopes, wishes, romance and renewed conft~nce. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Obstacles will· serve as challenges -stubborn associates will make concessions. Key now is persistence,· faith and · willin1ne11 to rebuild on a more suitable structure. Vl&GO <Aua. 23-Sept. 22): .tmpbuis on activity coanected wftb communicattoa, travel, ·pubUeMna and a spiritaal search. Gemini~ariua and another Virgo fi1ure tly. UlaA (Sept. a-Oct. 22>: Spot1J1bt on home, doineltle environment, ftqancla) 1tait111 of one clon to yqu, tncludtn1 partner or mate. You 1aln access to llOIOKOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA Information previously considered top secret. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov . 21 > : Play waiting game. Legal procedures require definition, clarification. See others in realistic light, take nothing for granted. :t'ime is _on ,Your side SAGITl'ARIUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21): By accepting added responsibility, you pave way for uJtim•te progresl and increased income potential. Persons in poeiUons of authority express confidence and some seek yot\r opinions, counsel. . CAP&ICORN <Dec. 22.Jan . 19>: Personal magnetism soars; people are attracted to you, timing improves and element of luck is present. Be ready for change, travel, variety -member of. opposite sex aids in definite move towards goals. _ . AQUA .. V8 (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): You may be drawn In two. dlrections 1lmultuieou.ly. Relative want.a you to adhere to eatablisbed routine. You feel, ,however. that new m~ are required. .PllCl8 <hb. 19-Karch 20): Short.trip could 16'f0lve family IP•mber who mat• emerpney eall. You INl'ft by teeobiq, your views are vtndlcated and money ·problem la relOlved. r CELEBRATION PLUNOE -Seventy-year.old Spartaco Bandini dives into the river Tiber .......... from the Garibaldi Bridge in Rome to ce lebrate New Year's Day . II A ILlIONM FOR UST $}66.66 A MONTH WJ.th 1st Nationwide Savings New IRA Account It's hard to believe that you can be a millionaire when you retire by contributing only $2.000 a year to an Individual Retirement Account. But it's absolutely true. That's the miracle of compounding, the miracle of 1st Nationwide's new IRA account. Think of it. A million dollars-within your grasp. This is no ordinary savings account. This is no ordinary IRA account. This is a brand new IRA account-availabte to everybody employed. even those already enrolled in a pension plan. Now. you can contribute up to $2 .ooo pre-tax dollars per year ($4.000 tof you and working spouse). Years to Wortt 8% 12% 16% 5 s 12.793 s 14.539 s 16.575 10 3 1.878 41 ,029 53.458 15 60,349 89,293 135,529 20 102.819 177,227 318,148 25 166,176 337,436 724,503 30 260,688 629.328 1,628.704 35 40 1.677 1,161 ,137 3,640,688 40 612,000 2.130,061 8, 117,655 This ChMt 1U11s11ates pojeetecl IJ'OWth ol your retwement ICCOUlll asSUlllinO a SlnQle a1n.1• contrlbu!l<>n ol 12.CXXJ oo the 111sc buSlness dlY of eadl year Catculatloos •e maoe on the basis of the annu• 111terest rile indiclleel oompoullOed dally on an average year ol 365 25 no lnelllOe teap years) Since lnte1esc rates are vartable ii/Id cannot be predietecl. there 1s no guarantee that the POUnt ll'otected wj1t 1n tact lie the ill!IOUllt avaHlble In ,our accounc when ,ou retire There is a subs!Jn!W oetli!IY lot earl~ wl!IO•al Vari-Mu• IRA ... onty at 1st Nationwide. Are rates going up? Are rates going down? Are long term or short term rates better?~ith 1st Nationwide's Vari-Max• IRA you don't have to answer those questions. 1st Nafronwide takes the worry, the guess- wori< out of your retirement plans. Each month Vari-Max~ys you the higher of either the 6-month T-Bm certificate rate or the 2)4-year Money Market certificate rate. With Vari-Max~ you stay with the economy and your retirement is safe from inflation. Now ... You Need 1st Nationwide'& Tax Preparation ServiCe More Than Ever! A Fedettl Savings Ind L.oan Association Formerly operating as Citizens Savings 8nd Loan An >elltion ~ BeACH: 3300 Wut ~t Hlghw.y nur rtewpol't Blvd .. 631·9205 • l I I I I I .: I· ' I I I I . I I I I I , Or1ng1 Cont DAILY PtLOT,Mondmy, JanullY 4, 1812 I by Virgil Partch (VIP) 1-'f "I h1te Mond1ys." . Mi\RMADl:KE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum ,.,._a.z. "Is this the bone you've been looking for?" 1-t . . MOON Ml'LLINS ~A MA , AREN'T VOU CUTE! ~ERE, ~AVE. SOME FOO~ IT WoNIT~ So B,AC>,, !<,AYO ... by Harold ~e Doux OIO ~ NOT REAU.Y! 11' SAY SOVNO 5HE 500NOEO CON· A. 7 ~O ... LIKE AN EXECl!TIONER! PUNIJTI by CharlH M. Schulz -------. SHOE I KNOW THE ANSWER! THE ANSWER LIES Wl1'MIH ™E MEAAT ~All MANKIND! ~ Lll<E ~ ~i 8E »I( OITSOMG ,...._ ~.~ ... NANC\' GORDO . '/O.J "° KEeP llJ ~IC)toJ, L.Of'E'.t, 6POflT'{ FOJ.O ~ll<l' wm~ lME ~ l..ITT~ AU.l~TQK! 1-4-St 1-r's TIME FOR YOUR BATM I TMINI( t'M IN 1WE ~6 801l.DIN6 ! by Tom K. Ryan by Ernie Bushmiller YOU LOSE by Gus Arriola by Tom Battuk Fl'NK l' •INKER•EAN QUfT COMPlAl~I~ I LJOIE.5! AFTER All, WE'VE. FINAU.9 AND BfblDe> ... THE CAFET~IA I~ A LDT WARMER 1kAN lME Gl..Xt\ ! GOT' A PU(.£ 10 PRA<:7lC.E AU. 10 ~UJE5 f i f , i BRABBLE WAl"rtsR! :t CAN',.-GE!,.-,.-HE! SPOON OLYT" OF MY tsSPf'E!590! 11s UKf. A 'J~(IA>M ... 11' , .. ~ ~u. 'fOOR m 1.i'I C.IC,AR~t SO? IF YA WAN,.-eP .AMl!!RICAN COFFl!!E! I YA SHOc.H .. PA ASt<E!c::> FOR AME!RICAN COFFee / by Kevin Fagan 1.'M. SONNA <SO HOMe ANP &RE!At<. E!VE!RY PAVARO"r,.-1 AL-eUM :t OWN! 'I .,,, .. • I . r. I I • 11EAE ARE Read all today's news, every day Local, county, state, national and international events come to 'iOUr - doorstep in the bright, .---. light and lively Daily Pi lot. . (ill Keep an eye on ~oeal government No other newspaper brings . you more news of your cit~ council , planning commission, -~ · school and college districts and county government. ~Laugh, ery or get ~smart -Advice from Ann Landers, humor from Erma Bombeck, interesting I features on people, opinions, ~~ informative columns and I comics brighten -, I I your world. ~ ~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January•. 1982 TO keep up .with ~ all that's happening in your eo~unity you .Deed·the Dally .Pilot ···every day / REASOrlS Wl1Y. • • tn.f ollow your team "-rJ The sports action at 15 Oranqe Coast High schools, three 'ommunity colleges, UC Irvine and Cal St~te campuses' is regularly· reported by the · Daily Pilot sports staff. Keep up with nation- a 11 y ranked college and pro teams, too! ~-..I B Save ~one! and () shopping time Real values on items from apple- sauce to zippersc are advertised every day in the Daily Pilot. Because the ads are from firms in this area, you save time, ef- fort and money. ~Enjoy your Sunday ~Family Weekly, color comics, finance, the latest news and features .about your community, your money and you highlight the interesting re. ading 0>~ packaged in your ~bP Sunday Daily Pilot. FAMlt..'( ~ Enough to read -wC€kl '-' and enjoy. Ui}'Tune in to the· U latest TV logs The latest,, most accurate television guide is published · each weekday in the Daily Pilot. On Fridays, Pilot TV Log charts the tube in convenient, easy-t~~ find grids. Get into the Daily Pilot D ·1 p·1 4'. , for only •4.00 per •onth. II J 111 · ------~----~~-~-~!~~~~-~-~~~~~-~~-~~---~----~-. / ' 642-4321 : I'd like to enjoy the comforts of a home ·•·· 1111 . 1 : delivered Daily Pilot every day. [ ';fJ'Iii : .~ .. .__ ... ._ .... Enclosed is $4 .00 for one monttl . .. u,.,,~0r;,uu __ _. ... _11111111_, I BEL " I ..• " (.L"""Q"-0 ~· (O\fA.a\A <•'-"°""''" I Name ..................................... '.............. -'"°'"".'"°''40DIWWt I . . 1 Address ...................•........•..........•........ Orano-Coast Dally PllOt Bo.1560 I I City ..•..............•...•........ Phone ...•.•.•....... Costa Mesa, .ca. t2'26 L I : Signature ............. ; .................... : ...•....... CI RCULATION DEPT. I -• I u• .. 0tt«11te10istrlct •......... '# ••••••• Rate ............... . I · · I --~---------~---------------------------~---------------·-· Complete the c~ . • . glue or tape the prepaid label on •n env•lope for malling, or c•ll 642""321. Ask for Clrcul•tton. . . j J ! I I •• I J I . I I I I ! . I • I I ~ I ' .-~·-. ... , ....... OHAMa'8 MlllL.a I TMAIUM HUNT TMIMUPNTa o...: ....... ..._. • HAWAII~ 1 ...... '90fn' DQ(QAWfT ~ .... AIONIM NICNIM TWOMNIST TMI MCnC A won. a woiv.tne and a poW ti.oV ara -terad by two Elklmo ct\11- chn during their elNggla lor aurWill In Iha An:tle I ClfQa.(Pa112) (J)MO'llE * * * ''Wtr; Would I U.?" (tNO) TrMI Wllll-. UM Eldlhom. A~· liar uc>Mt• !tie 1tatU8 quo with hie tWfuMI to conform. , 'PG' .MOVW ••l4 "Snowbell &pr-" (11172) Dean.,_, Nanc:y Olaon. A Naw York accountant travala -• to Ola Aoallal In 1111 attempt to modafnlff a dllapldatad •• '-',..., w.ttac1. ·o· e:IOl IULLIEYE 11.0WWC'f' I KcaT NEWllll!AT •••1181WT QINIW8 9 llAMIY MIUBI 7:00 I CM Nl!WI NICN!WS HAPPY DAYS AGAIN 8 A8CNIWI 0 YOU Altcm FOR IT Featured: "Belgium'• Nead Boy Hero" and "WOf'ld'e Only Wild Boar Ctrcue.." • THE JIFRNONI I JC>Qlr& wlli> OYE,.EAIY "Haelth C.a" GUMt: Ulll- an 0111\. (R) 0 Gil MACNlll /LEMMA ~ CJ) TIC TAC DOUGH 9 ENTIRTAMien' TONGHT Alt Interview with Wertdy O'WlNlamt ol tha Plum•t· Ice. Qt THE MUP9£TI Gu.t: Deborah Harry. CID TIME WAS: THE 19308 Olcti c. .... n holt• a un1qua journal of Iha peos>la, ~ and -1$ which made hlltory In the "Roar· ~=-·" *** "Ralntr .. Counly" ( 1115 7) Eliubath Taylor. Mon1gomary Clift. Dumg Iha CMI War, a cap!Mtlng Southern belle .. ci.tar-. mtnad to ~ Iha man of lier .~ regardta. ol Iha~ 7:IO 8 2 ON THE TOWN Featured: • prollla ol llCt,_ Suaan St. ~: a vtelt with Jf#lry -cac>Mn. member of the vtc:torlou• U.S. Boomerang TeMI; 1 ctoaar look ••·Bat.\• s~ tama lncorp()f'..f 1(8,AMILYFBJO lA~&IHR..EY &COMPAHV Franll and Edna get mar- '*'· • EYEONLA. I MATCHGAME u•A•a•H A rumor tflat ma 40n1t1 11 going to "bug-out" . Ortno• Coaat DAILY PILOT/Mondmy, January ... 1812 WtTHOUT MAKkU' -Pb~llp An1Um plays the tra1lc'ally deformed John Merrick wltbput makeup in "The Elephant Man' at 9 tonight on KABC (7 ). lleCOf.-vo9aly ...... 8*' until" II bellalil9d tn.t the antn CNneee army le lltt.ckfne Iha c:emp. ( .:ii.. TIC TN; DOUGH • MMMl.. I LIMmt MIORT • MO'lll * * • ~ "Julia" ( 1977) Jana Fonda, VanaHa Aedgr...... Wrllar Ulllan Helman II dr-Into tM main ttwu.1 of wwtlma raeistanoa eftor11 when her ~ cblldbood friend IMQharhelp. CJ) ...... MAGAllHI A prollla of ~ &i... Saint~: Japan'• 130-:r.Mlattraln. ('!:::.MUD ltOR IT * * "Slaee>lnO car Mur- der" ( tllM) Simona S9- norat. YvH Montand. Occupant$ of a tram cocn- pertmant are taroat-for dMth at tM llarwSe of a darangadklller CilMOVW • • • "tO FUiiington Place" (11171) Rldlard Attanborougll, John Hur1. A )'()Ung 8'1tllh coupe ... lliCtlm to a klirlelly nalghbor wtlo otter. IO help UWn OUI of a ~ pr9dk:a- rnant. t:OO 8 (J) llNVATW ......,.... Judy anaelt• Into Cllptaln L-1•' quarter• for a cowtad bath In the camp'• ontt llettllUb. D 8 um.I HOUK ON TMEPMRE WNle on • fNIOMlng tr1p wway f1om home, Charlal and J-encounter • llaroa dog .no ~ 10 hat• CNirlaa .. rnudl .. "-.adoraa J-. 0 • .-.DOCTOR Hugh O'Brian aN1 Kat'- rina Justlea etar In the sto- ry of • doctOf' who WC>f'tl• In the Alriean bu.ti In order to r9Q81n hit confldel-an. •• ,. past • 8 9 THATS INCllll>9..E ~= an art~ by tOf'lllldo en-. 10 put • racotdlng ~ In the peth of • 11orm; • bllnd- foldad FNnefl drtvw'e unu- _,.. stunt; • legally bind panon Identifying pleylng • car di. G oot•RM llAle<ETMLL "Pac 10" USC vs. Wutt- tngton State • ...... MAGAZIN! A p.-ollla of act,_ SuNn Saint J-; ~·· 130-mpfl BllllaC tr 111'1, CNlf T .. prec>ar .. a moneo, ..Wtg lllh dl9h; Paula Nal9on on Iha beat monthl 10 lhoCI wlaaty. • MCNtl • • "The Flrec:huer9" • ( 1170) Chad Everett, Anfanatta Comar. An INl.!r.,_ agent In-ti. 09taa • --ol euapl-doul ,.,.. all of wtllc:tt ._,. occ:urracl In Iha - ~· .GNAT ~ "Big 8~" Sally Kaller· man atart In an adaptation of a OorOlhy P81118f ltlor1 ttory a.bCMlt a lhOwf OOf'n model 1n tt1a 11120s wno oi-up ,..., party lite _, ,....,,. unflllpplly to her former way of ttvlng. (fl) CH> CHER .. CONCERT An ataborata nightclub performance from the Spotting Club In Monte Carlo .. pr-•• ........ .. a ftlm montage ot CtMlf'• • aar1Y ~ with SonnyBono. (l)WHAT8 IW AM8ICA .QMAT LAOIUCW COUNTRY MUlaC Lynn Ander.on, Donna Fargo and LKy J o.tton -IMturad In 11111 ~· t8')9 parformanoa from the MGM Grand Hotel In Reno. l:IO I Cl) r.-TWO cw U8 ALL .. THE ,Nt&.Y Arc.Na ...,.. for ,. fllmlly'• ~ when ha laarne Iha plUmbar wortllng In toll ~ la a convict on luf- ~ from prlton. •t:OO 8 CJ) M• A •a•H Klinger 19 etrldlan with a _. te¥er and no ona c;ari -to find allhar Iha c.uM or Iha CUf9 D QJMOYIE "The Kid From Nownere" (Premt.ra) Su .. n Saint J-. Loretta Swlt. TM troubled llYaa of a rttardad )'OUllOltar and IMa mother are g;....,. a MW ~ whan ,.,. -glaa are c:hannalad Into Iha Spaclal Otymplca g-. • THE 11181' OF FNIENDI P9tar or-. Carol lynlay and Alex Cord .,., In • ~ adaptation of Emaat Hamlogway'• 11ory lboUt • lrlangla of ._.. wno !Ma • ratt down the traac:haroua Colorado Riv- er 8 9 THE 8B'HAHT MAN Ptlllle> Attgttm and ~em Conway ra-craata tlMllr Broadway portrayall of grotaequaly datormad Engtllhrnart John Memck, alao known U Iha "Ela- phlnt Man:· and Or Fra6- ar1<* T,_, lha eurgaon wtlo look him under hie cwa. • M!IW GM'P'IN Guaate: St-Allen. Linda Evan•. Qlorla Gaynor, MM!a McCartney. (C)MOYIE .,.., ~ CMnon, ~ ~ .,, l&elle. A rvne-1 ...... and.~ lrucll• ~ catti. _.M ..... .._,.IM ..,,... ,,. • 11414 oroa. OOUlll/y .-.. 'PO' ... (I) ..,... QAU.I Conl'M ,.eclltat'• new ......... Uni out 10 tie OM of Ctwtlift lonnat flttf"and•. Jane ~ ~O .... ) •• JACK '-ONDON ~ wtWAM DIVAHI T,.,. ~fa of ,,.,. c.tlf0fn41t1 81.1thor II traced from hll youtn to hit untlmefy deMJ\ .. IN age Of 40 In a docu- drlll'le tttrrlng William Deotane. ®lllOYll **'A "The Nude BomD" ( ttlOI Don Adenla, 8yMa Krlet ... 8acrat agent Max· ... 8"'ar1 ,_ hit moll ~ adwnMy In an ardlYlllall\ who plant to '-1Ch milallM tNt wlll dlaroba t,.,. entire human population. ·PQ· (%)MOVll • • " •Jock' Pataraon" ( 1976) Jack Ttlompton, Jaci111 Weaver Whlla attlllld.lng an Auatrellan unl-.t\y, • lormar loot· ~ tter turned a1actrlc1an ldvancaa hlmMll through alfllll'I wtth a ~'*" pro- leaaor and • 11ct1 nympho- maniac. 'R' 10:00 8 CJ) LOU GIWIT Whla Lou trlae to cope with the unexpected breakup ol a taam ot reporter•. Rota! Ml• out to r~te a lamed tau group l'°'••t~.W#S llCAn8 Comedian Rc>Oer1 Kleon jol111 Wayland Flower• and MAdlima 10< an axplotatlon of all kinda ol rldlculoua and Mrlou• eacreta (R) Gil MOW * * * "The Amerteanlu- Uon 01 Emily" ( 1111>4) Jam•• Garner. Julia Andr-. Romance growe bat......, a Brltllh wer wld· ow and a non-h«ok: om-°" aaaignad to P<Olllde hi• tuperlor• wnh Iha lu•urles of home 10:30 • INOEP£HOENT NETWOAt< NEWS ©)M<ME • * 'h "The Godsend" (11190) Cy<t Hayman, Mal· COlm Stoddard The trou- ble II )Ult baglnr\lng for a rural Engll9h oouple wharl a myetllfk>Us woman drops by. g'-Dirth to 1111 albino baby OI" llnd d!Mppaere, laaving•tna. Intent behind. 'R' 11:00eD8CJ)111 a! NEWS • COUlGE 8A8KET8All UCLA vs. WUhlngton I PAUL HOGAN THE JEFf£A80N8 • 8ANfoAo AHO 80H !~CAV£TT • * • • "Love And Daath" ( 11175) Woody Allan, Olarte Keaton A noted coward In Iha Rus- alan Army ._..1ually mar- rlaa 1111 true love, wtlO drawt him into • plot lnvoMng _, lllamc>I on Iha life ol arnparor Nao<>*>n ·PO· (l)WOMINO Barry Boatwlck. Ellean Brannan and J-Taylor are among Iha many star• ... turad on Ihle apadal. baad on hundred• or lntantlawl OOO(h;Ctad by joufnalllt I Mlttlor Studs Terkel. l\tMOYIE • * • "Mountain Man" (1980) Charlton Heaton • Brian Keith Two fur trappara enjoy Iha ,, ... dom of Iha wtldernnl 1tt Iha IMI few ~ Defore Iha encfoacllmant oW;Mll· utlon.'R' ~ t I: t5 (%)MOVIE ·CHANNEL LISTINGS **"Road G-" (111811 Stacy KMCh, Jamie L .. Our11&. An --.trlc lfu<:tl· ar. a ~Jlul tlltehhlller and • peychopattole klllar tr....allng the uma route we p19y1r1g u--for llfa llNldMUI. 'PO' •*~"The laat Romantic lover'' ( 11178) Dayle Had· don, Fernando Ray A lunlonabla New York City mllg&Zlna editor 1.00. • law llUfPl'IMI aw81tlnQ he< arrlval In Perla for the 1119- lng of the "ultimate" male ~cont .. l 'R' 8 KNXT (CBS> CD> On-T\I 9 KNBC (NBC) (%) Z·TV T • KTL.A (Ind.) (II) HBO e KABC (ABC> a:> <Cinemaxl • KFMB (CBS) (!J (WOR) NY., N.Y. C) KHJ-TV (Ind.) Ill> !WTBS) • KCST (ABC> (IJ C£5PNI • KTTV (Ind.) CJ) ( Showtlma) I. • KCOP·TV Clnd.I • 5'1otllght .• KCET (P8Sl • (C.l>le News Network) • KOCE (PBS) Cl)MOVW •• •• "RHurractto11" ( 1990) Ellan 9ur9tyn, Sam Shepard. Atter a naar letal 91.tto llCcidant, a woman nnc1e that Iha nae the abili- ty to heal ot,...,. but II par· NCU1ad bacauM of her rwfuul to claim a dMna ' lnlluanca 'PG' CIUOYll * * "Coat To <Coat" '1~. CJ) QUINCY Quincy II aeked to loo« Into the dealt\ of • young labor laadar Iha! WU Offi· dally termed a eulelde bUI ~ to ba • mordar (R) D a! TM£ eE.ST cw CAA80H Guaate.. Tony Randall, Joe Namath, Si.ptlanla Fara- cy. (R) TUBE TOPPER~ KOCE 8 7:30 -"Julla ... Jane Fonda plays 'Uillan Hellman 1n a;tocy about how she was drawn into lnvolvemeht with the 1930s EurQpean resistance movcmeol. 'XTLAe8:00 "Bush Doctor." After a tragic past, a doctor works in the Af rlcan bush to regain his confidence See story on Page 87. KABC fl 9:00 -"The Elephant Man." Philip Anglim and Kevin Conway re-create ttwir Broad.way roles in story of a grotesquely def ~rmed Englishman John Merrick. Photo at left and story below. KOCE 9 and KCET 8 9:30 ··Jack London With WUJiam Devane." The life or the Califor~la author is traced. 8 9MO..we NIGHT1JNS I edT ~ OROUC*> THE 000 OOUPU Otcet' o-pairs ol raltlng money tor • n..-b4'd Wiien ha burnt a hole In F•lht' 1. • AOOf(IEI Terry trMll to find out why an Old Irland laundlad • M«nlngly lerlMiaaa auack on • poltCe olflcar • KCET NEWMEAT G CAPT10HED A11C NEWS (JJ) ON LOCATION ''l'ha Sixth Annual Young Comedian• Snow" Tom and Otdt Smother• .,. folMd by _ .. llilantad comedy -· 81 the Roxy In Loe AnQ81ft tor an avaninoollun -- t2!00 8 ..ow • • "The Dallas Cowboy ~"(tll711)J­ Saymour, Laraine Staphen1 tJ MOVIE * • "Vanilhlng Africa" ( 111701 Narrated by M8Mn Mtller m Mll<E DOUGLAS Coholl: Dorn DaLulaa. Guests George Hamilton. Ann Ham~ton S~lng, John Schnelder, Teddy Pendergraas. Staphanle MIHs. fl) IT'S EWAYBOOY'8 8U81NE88 "Oletribution Syttern" @ TME AOCKFON> Fii.ES ©)MOVIE * * "Mlddla-Aga Crazy" (tll80) Ann-Mergrat, Bruce Dam A TaJIU Clavalopar't ..-elul l<>b and baautl- lul wile managa 10 drive him into • mid-Ill• onti• 'R' 12:30 a a TOMOAROW GUflls· David Brenner, heart transplant ~ Dr Ctlril111an Barn11d (R) II> IHOEPEHOEHT NETWOAK NEWS ~MO\llE * *'II "C1tharlna & Co " (11173) Jana Blrkin. Patrlctc Daw-•· A young g1tl tra· valt to Peri• to become a hlQll lasl\ion modal Dul ,..., p1ana fall through ano Iha opat'8 a highly IUC:tallve proatltutlon ~ 'A' Cl)MOYIE * * * "Why Would I lie?" (19801 Treat Wllllamt, u .. Eichhorn A compul9lva liar upsets Iha llllUI quo with hit rafulal to contorm PO' •2:40 e w BAHACE>< Banacak 11 hlrao to find • large c:omoany'111ock cer- lillcata platts lhat myetarl- oull)' d1111Ppearad end ate .._,Oal to an lrnc>andlng Du .. ,,... deal (R) 12:45 (.%) MOVIE * * * "II To 5" ( 11>80) Jana Fonda. Dolly Perton Three worlelng WOl'l,len rebel agaln1t tlWl+r aubju- gallon~ • mlia ciheuvtnl11 boaa. 'PG' 1:008 MOW • * "Olt Along Uttia Ooo- glaa" (1937) Gana Autry, Judith Allan. A oowtloy matehal wlte with Iha prll· 1y young daughlar of a l>lnll• ·=OUT ..... "-30-" (11159) Jedi Wa«>b. Wiiiem Contad. A mantglng editor f)Ulll all dapartmanll tdgatrtar to iS:out *•'II "Th• Octagon" ( 1980) Clluck Norrla, Laa Van Cl .. t. A waalthy young woman tlfrn a retired martial art• cham· pion to protect her from terrorists trained by the ·= Nlnjaoult 'R' * * ~ "Th• Formula" ( 1980) Marlon Brando, GaOf'ge C 8oolt Whtie llNeatlgatlng the murder ol a collaagYa, a vaiaran cop uncovara a conaplracy lnvoMng Iha eu~ of • eynthatic tual formula b}' the oil compenlal 'R' 2::00 D EHTERT AIHMENT TONIGkT An lntarviaw with Wendy O'WIHi111ns ol 11'19 Plaamat- lcl Q!HEWS 2=11 88 NEWS ~MOYIE * * "Slaaplng C11 MUI· dar" I 1966) Simone Slg- "orat. Yvu Montand. Occupant• ot a train com- partment ara target• for death at Iha handt ol a deranged killer 2:30 NEWS WHATIUPAMEAICA ' 2';36 MOW • * "The Human Factor" (111711) NICol WIHlamaon. Derail Jacobi A Brttllh lntaHlganca agent la torn bal-toyatty to hll country and obliglttOnl 1-.rd the Communist Party. 'R' 2:'68 MOVIE * * * "The log 01 The Slack Peart" ( 11175) Ralph Bellamy. Kial Martin A ttodtbrolt• Mte-out to r-a auokan tr___., altar hit dying grandtathar taffa him Whir• to find 11 3.1)() CID MOVIE • * "Braaklifg Glau" (1980) Ha.al O'Connor, Phil Oanlall. A Brlttah punk P09 star'• lffeetyla ulti- mately lead• to tregady 'PG' D ROD STEY(ART Rock mu11c·1 reigning male MK symbol 1tar1 In this concert, taped ...... , Iha Forum In Loe Anoalaa. singing many of l\la hit M>- glal 1a1 wait aa c:ut• lfom aoma ol hie album• 3:30 00 SHOWTWtilE'8 HOU.YWOOO 4:00 ( C) MOVIE flt *''I-"Newafronl" 8111 ~Elephant Man' about triumph, says actor Without makeup of deformities, soul of John Merrick can be seen ' 81 .JERRY BUCK the research l did and from the pictures I saw, performance as "Mac~th" is due for showing •n....,.._.,,.. it was obvious he could ool speak clearly. This on the ABC arts network on cable television. : LOS ANGELES -Pblllp Angllm says the was a play about a human being trapped in a, "I've been putting off getting into films," sjage version of "The Elephant Man" la done body that did not work. Ria spirit was trying to said Angllm. "I think it's finally time. What \Mt.bout makeup so that the audience can see the escape. The voice was partly based on ttls really helped me make the decision was . rban inside strunnna to be free of bis 1rote1Cfue speech dilftcuJty and partly it bad an explosive working on 'The Elephant Man' for ABC. It was liiody . quality to show bis splrlt trying to escape. I such a happy and creative experience for me. I • Anglim, who starred in the Tony also played b1m wltb bia lell ar°* bisslde. • sort of shifted my thinking about the movie ~ward-winning Broadway play, b= bla business. I'm now ready to make the leap." * terpretat.ion to the home screen at t bt ln "THE Pl.A YW&l~BT wanted nothing . Angllm, who was born and raised ln San e premiere presentation Of ABC'i 0 Theatre of different. No different voice, no dtrrerent Francisco, said he wanted to ~ a veterinarian . e Month" series. The show airs on KABC (7). moves .. After ti became a success be a1reed it until a teacher persuaded him to appear In a , . was a good idea." · hi1b school play. The play was "No Exit," by ~• BE NOO' ONLY created the rol• of lobD Aqlim said he adopted the voice and the Jean Paul Sartre. urlck ln "'lbe Elephant lllan/' but =tbe Immobile arm beeaute wit.bout the makeup, the "We didn't have a clue to what we wer~ erlcan rlehll to the play then . tn audience needed a frame o/ reference. playing," he said, "but I thought it was 1rand. 1taad, and first at.aced it wl~ produeer "It's really a play about bow human drive Arter that I did a lot of plays and was 'Hamlet' &aymond Crlnkley in a church oa lllanbatt.an'a and reaWency can overcome affilcUon. It's when I was 17. Then I got into summer stock Saat Side. "The Elephant lllan" becam• 1aeb • about trtwnpb. But you have to establish that . and science went by the wayside." ltot ticket that it was soon on Broadwa1. there la iromethln1 to overcome. I alwaYf felt . Kevin Cceway al.so ~ bit oftOaa1 that wit.bout the makeup you were aeein1 inalde. • iole u Dr. Frederick Trev•, the 10'llll Sllililb You were Mel.Qi the IOul of Jobn Merrick. R b C J • 1ur1eoa Who lo9k Merrick under bll care. ''At the aame tlme," Aqlim Hid, "you 0 ert 0 p marrle8 : Penny Fuller, who wu lD th• Loi Aaplea were Mein.I the outaide, the ltr\tftle. And I .toductloo, plays llln. Xeadal, tbe aetr..t wbo think lf you•,. tAcumbel'ed 11' makeup it's t.efrieadl Merrick. It wu lbe wbo mede blm • dltflcull to 1« ac?OU.'' ~1.ar flpre ln London IOciet1 m tbe la_te JIOCn. ANGU• &KBNTLY moYed from New York to Loi Aqe~1 where be it talkln1 with producers about mann1 hi• movle debut. "Tbe Elepbut Jiu" allo ii OH ol the few televllioa appgruca for the actor. wboH uperimce laal been moetly cm tM Ila ... a. did play CbarlH Ad••• ID "Tb• Ad••• atromdea'1 ud AM& T ..... ta· ·~·1 f'amlllH, '' bot.la oa putillc TV. '1l1 BEVi:RLY HILLS (AP> -Robert Culp, who stars ln the ABC televl1ion aerie\ "G~atest American Hero." bas married wrlttr Cancllce Faulkner at the Be.-erly Hills bom• of bll manager. It waa t.he f\flh marrlac• for Culpl 61, a writer, dir.ctor and actor, who 1tar'Nd w th 8lU Cosby In tile ht\ aertes "I Spy" In the 19IOI. Calp and 1111• f'aulkner .,... married at the bOIM ol ht. manq:rakt Rl.lliN Slttna. on New Year'• Eve. fri.endl . Hun•. Olw'a ~· Twoftwl-~ attempt to adf' MCI! Cit'-out In • -tor .. Aultrallln ,,... ~Ill tN'40t 'PO' (l)MOYll •• ._. "UltlaMIM Mar4ttt'' J tHO) Walter Matthe!I. Jiiiie """*-· ..._. on Ille Demon Runyon alory A grutl, tllnQy tt30a booa· lt't Mfa II Wl'nad Wound wharl ha acioaptt. 1-yMr· old ITIOPtwl M • marker for at= IMll. 'PG' .OOIJNrTY ~.o 4:IO Cil MCMI * * .. . Jock' P""9rt0n .. ( 1875) Jedi ff!Omp90n, Jacki Waavar. Whllt attending an Auttrllllan unlwnl.ly, a former foot- ball 11111' Nrnad alacttlclan ~ hltnMll llltougll .,,..,. with • baal.ltlful pro- ,_ W>d a rldl nympfloo m11nltlci 'R' Tewadaw'• Da11tl•~ Mo"I~• a!80 ~ * * * "The Fo•" (IHI) Sandy Dannie, Keir Dullea. 8aead on the atory by D.H ~ The relatlonahlp be'-' two laablan tover• reactlM a ultk:al f)Olnt Wiien a hand· -llf angat appaare " lhalr rernola Canldltn . .,,., • .., • * • "Bowery Bueti· arooa" (tlMT) Huntz Hal. Leo Oorcey. Whan Iha owner of Iha malt lhoCI II accuMd ol murdw. the Bowery Boyt Ml out to ltnd Iha real cutprlt 10:'.00 CH> • • • •;, "Doctor Zhiva- go" (11165) Omar Sharff. Geraldine Cheplln Two lover• struggle amldat Iha spirit and paealone ol the Rutelan RavOlullon (I) * * • "The Elac1r'°" ~ .. 1•9711) Robw1 RadfOf'd, Jane Fonda A LU Vega cowt>oy etMlt a s t 2 rTVllion thorough brad horM to .. .,,. him from hit eKploitatllla owner•. 'PO' 10:30 ti) * 'h "Tiie T11M Beyond" ( tll34) John Wayne, Verna Hlllla A cowt>oy JOurnayt to Iha Northweet territory In -ctt ol a gold mine and ' mlMing Qirl •• (C) • • "The 'Ledy van- llhas" ( 1117111 Ellloll GOUid, Cyt>ill Sttac>haf d An Inno- cent man and • b9eutlful woman ara swept Into • dalOly ~ cepar •board a European axprHI train 11avellng througll pr•war Nui Gar- many 'PG' 0 • • ·~ "Salem'• lot" 11117111 DaVld Soul, J- Maaon Based on Iha noY9I Dy S1apnan King A auc- oaaatul WJltar raturne to his boyhoOd homa where fie MIS out lo lle>p a --61 bizarre attad<a on the townspeople by alnlater vampu .. 11:00 tJ * * "A Swingln' Sum- mar" (11165) J-Stacy, WlMlam A. Walllnan .k 12::00 m * * * * "Cl11zan Kana" (11>41) 011on Waites. JOMf)h Conan .., • * "Thr .. Stllors And A Girf' (1Q53) Jane Powell, Gordon MacRM. lZJ **"LIO The LUI" ( 11170) Matcetlo Mutrolen- nl, Biiiie Whlt ... w 12:30(C) * * * * "Thillon In Winter" ( t987) Pater O'Toola. Kathar'ona Hat>- DU<n England't King Hen- ry II I-_, agonalng dac&Sion OV«. his eucc.- eor u he contemplates his 11ormy marriage to Iha 11rong-wllled ElaetlOf ol A<1<tttelne ·~· ...... "lpaoa MO'M'' ' ( 1t1tl Oooumantary .... by .... ~ Arollhtal fllm foot ... dwOllcllll that~of 111t u,• ee>ace PfOClf'M'I, loouelng Of'I Iha dnllNltlc • Apollo t 1 moon 1anc11nf. ·o· 1• CIJ *. * "Boyl' .. Out" I tte2) Kim NOvak. JMIM Gerner ~ a •"•P•ly young eo·•d ~·-'-"' pi:otaal. aha l1nda lout ~ """• than wlltlng to IMM an ..,.,.. mant to aid ""' 111 '* tlYdy 1• CB> ..... "Utllt ...... .. .,..,.. fttlOj Waller MattlMIU, .Mia Andi'-. ••Nd on tile Oa.mon Runyon atQfV. A gnM, 1111\- ty ll30a .,.,...... ... .. IUtNd l'Ol#ld ...__ ha ~.~-*mop­ ""' M a l'DM• lor a rK.-~ bel. 'PG' t: 11 (,Z) •• 14 "The L.aat AofrlllfltlG L.o\IW'' ( 19'8) o.yta Heddon. Fatnando ~A,..,.,. ....... Ybrtt aty ~ editor ftnOa•-~ ........ Ing har arYWal In Parfa for the 11aotng of tllt "ul1~ ma.... male l>Mu!V con-•••.·A' S.1)()(C) **' .. "Oot And The Kangaroo" ( 1971) Animal· ad OlrllCtad by Y orarn Qrou. A young glrl beC<Wnea IOat In Iha A~ trallan butt\ and le befrlanded by a kangaroo who glvaa Mr • Ifft In 11• poUc;h ·o· e • • • "Coal Miner'• Oauglltar" ( 1e80) Silly Spacek, Tommy la• Jonea. 8aMd on Loretta Lynn'• au1obioglaplly A young gilt trom • poor tamlly In rwat Kantudty marrMll a much older loc8I llOy wflo .,._, ,..., riaa 10 atardom on Iha mu* lnduttry. 'PO' 3:30 a • • • "Brlgt\arn Young" (11140) Tyron• Power. Linda 011~1 A ~ leads the Mormon paoc>1a across the l1ontl4lt to Iha -· peac:alul lar>d now called Salt Lake City a;45(Z) ***"II To5"(1N0) Jana Fonda. Oolly Panon ThrH working woman rabal against tlMllr au bju· gallon Dy • mate chauvln41t bo1S 'PG' ~ ~ * * "Hawlt The Slayer" (11181) Jack Paianc», John T wry Alt edvanturous young man anllat• the aid of a band ol warriors 10 ltghl hit 9'/il unc:la, the av.lord wtlO klllad htS lather and it holding an ab~ for ran- '°'" CS) * ..... "L•llla Mlaa Marker" (11180) Watt• M1t1heu, Julie An<11awe. BtMd on Iha Demon Runyon 1tory. A gruff, attn. gy 11>30t boolloa's kta II tumid aro..w>d wnan ha .accepta. 6-yea<-old mop- pet u a marker for a rec- ~bee. 'PG' 5!80 (8) * * * "The World'a Greatest Athlete" ( 11173) JOhn Amoe, Jan-Mlehael V-1 A coach wtlo II hl'llng a run o( bed luCli return• to his 1pot• In Afri- ca and ~!tcOVan a MIP8f athlete. ·G· g •••• "2001 A Space Ody1MY" (111681 Kllf Oullef. Oary locll· wood "51r0ri.u1a aarlt to fond ,,.. al>an ~tetllgancle rM90ftS>ble tor a puzzling lunar monolith must con- tend with en on-board computer lhat ,. trying to tea control ol thalr vasaal. 5:36 (Z) * * * '"' "The Elaph1nt M1111" ( 11180) JoM H<ltt, Anthony Hopk Ins A ctadl- ca ted ptty11c1an tak•• under hiS wing • h<>mbly deformed man whOM Nte IHI than had bMn lf>l'\I In cheep freak eah1bltlon1 'PG' by Armstrong & Batluk 'tt>U KNOW, CHARL.tE ... IHA1'S "TME l=IR5T IOUPEE OF Y~ "THAT I"vE REALLY UKEP! ~ lllyPllal Classifieds \\)''1 ~ff .. .,\l\'l ·9•1' ~rot'\ co1\(\. ' --'~ ~ \e1'\ ~ •'~f\"'i.,.c•~yp. \ \~'\;. ~~\.~ . '' Onlytwo:C.latrom • th• Regleter. Sold It In the Piiot th• ilrtt ~· r' ,. ~~tI@642-5678 charge It~-by phone From South Laguna I North County caH 540-1220 toll-frH. •' I I t Orange Co.st DAtLY PILOT/Monday, ;January 4, 1982 But trite, flimsy movi~ on. KTLA tonight gets in the UXJU of gorgeous photography of. animals, ldridacapes 9Y raaD aonIBNBS&G ..,.,..... .... NSW YOU -"8\&lh Doctor" 11 a film wortb ....., without tbe IOWMt. Shot lo leeaya, lt'a a.beaudlu.l A.Mean travelope, a National Geo1r.:e.~ of wlldllfe, landscape and bnatll ace.net of 1un1eta and 1Wlrile:1. .But wt the aound on, lt'i juat a trite, tu.may movie that aeta ln the way of 1or1eous pbo~=·aln at 8 tool&bt on KTLA Cl\. 5. You can't blame tbe networks this STARS -Hugh O'Brian stars in "Bush Doctor." Antique Show. Huntlnaton Center lnltl IOdlv thru Jan. 10 MOVIE RATINGS FOR MRENTS AND ~PEOPLE AU. D Ill NlfD • 1'"-MI AECElllE 1"I KA&.°' THI lilOT10N l'CTUM CODI C» MLF MCWl.ATOI, ~DFllOll HEAYEll lPGI Showwat 7:15 9:20 NEIGl•WIRI Showwat 7:00 9:00 NoP .... John Belulhi NEm•DMOO Nice Or~ IRI, .,,, - Ot'MHM Ooet\ 1:30 NIGHTLY Undef12FAEEUnlwNoted ... ~.... .., ...... tllla1new year the tunnlHt nert thpe. Thia 11 one or Liberty Mutual'• pertodlc foray• lnto TV. The insurance company buya a project, hapdl tt to producer Robert Halml of "Nurte" and then sells It to a oaUonwlde 1yndlcate of 1tatJOD1. Theft Liberty Mutual 1eta to sound dl1oifted in 1hc mlnutea ot commercial• durtna the one-bour broadcut on 100 1tationa next week. The movie opens with a bulload of African children 1lnlin1 on their way to school. Al nature's flnest roam the bush around them, the viewer l5 struck by the vlaual excitement of Africa, an differept than the experience of American ehild.ren, whose concept of animals is the houa~and·aarden variety. · IN A NO&MAL nelwork movie of two hours, the story can wander awhUe, but not bere. Almost immediately, the bua overturns. Besides the injuries infiicted by the accident, some children are manaled by lions, aomethln1 we're spared seetna. - There's a need for immediate medical attention, but not enough doctors. The call goes out to a vacationing American doctor, Robert Marshall. It's Hugh O'Brian, ol' Wyatt Earp, But instead of a six-shooter, he's equipped wlth a snarl and a smirk. Tbroulh the tedious first-grade technique of constant flashbacks, the message becomes clear that Dr. Marshall suffered a traum,a. A . brilliant reconstructive surgeon, be was not able to help bis daughter after she went through the windshield ln a car crash. • ' IN THE FLASHBACKS, we're not spared the unnecessary, gory details, nor do we mi~s Marshall's aeony al the operaUng table. AU of which bas soured Marshall on the practice of medicine, and he snidely resists enlistment attempts by the American mission doctor, James Stone, nicely played by Jack Hedley. Stone eventually persuades him by suegesUng lbe plane supposed to Oy him to bis next watering hole could be grounded by red tape. ' Marshall ls bitter and pouts like a small child, but a precocious one. He turns out to be a crackerjack surgeon. O'Brian seems lo be going through the motions and his deadbeat cynicism is just I I NOW PLAYING .__mu ...... ftAZA •an a.111 ~13703-40 .. 52»»!1 OrqtUHt11 ·--Lm Ile.Ill ............. 11• ....., lllcll t7»3SO w...... '"~" .,_ 171') m oess --.-n CMIT Pl.AU RR caTD ctmlMI Colll MeM (714) 751 4114 r=..-=..::=:.-:.=---i==• ... I =--=---I Nobody leans on Sharky's Machine. .............. •• ~5ZE ~-~, .... ··~· ~ apoken wordl, and not very convtaellla. la contrut to tbll' downer ta Katbertoe ;J..UC. u Sam, the medical ualltant wbo ii Jo~ lD IMr ' dedication to beln1 ln Africa and dalal more than punchlna a clock. ~~~ WAlL~A NOW PLAYING .., . •lftAMI llWPOllT utWllDI YIEJO TWll • CIMllOMI Ntwport 8ac11 844 0780 M1SS<On VleiO 830 5990 Orange 534 2553 qwun c...a WllT ua MOflH WllS1llWISler 191 3!136 &u HO 4022 *BARGAIN MATINEES• Monday thru l1turday All Performances before 5:~PM (Enept Spedll Enp .. 1111nt1 IM Htlld1r1) ., .... ~~ ... ;~c;o-·) _,_ . .__ -c emn ·-.--·•RAID£RIOFTHILOSTARK" "TAPS" -.... ---·--... ·---·MU.• ...... ··ABSENCE Of MALICE" .._ ..... :a1.~-.-- LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK·IN --· SHARKEY S MACHINE" .. I .............. , ... -C. -TT•'-'"" 1111m111 -TAPS'~" ·----~···=-1••• LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAll( IN fOQJllly Al Del Amo 211/614-9211 __ ..,. __ ·CHARIOTS Of FIRE" - t , .......... ~." ''· I I IHe,Ul.-t-.----·-·-"NEIOHllORS" .. , ••.Jt.•:M .............. .. ---· 'SHARKY'I flllAatlNt!" 1111 ......... a:..••• faculty ol Conc:llewood -213/5,1·9580 --·--......... "ftAtOERS &,_T~OIT ARt<" 1~ ... , ... ~ .... __ .. .,. .... ._ ·euoov euoov· .. , .................... - --Soult! Cootl Nlwoy J ol llloodwoy 494-1514 -·--· SHARICY'8 MACHINE 4111 ...... , ..... ---·-·-"nelahbors" 1111 -··--- .... 816 , ...... f);00 \-·~· ..... 8 46 IMPORTANT NOT ICE' Cltll nRDI U1fOlR 12 fRll! """' , .. w11 ... 111 .. 10,. '" 6 30. s.1 So• "'" 4 30r111 C!Hf.fl SCIJNO • YOIJll AM CM flAOIO IS YOUll Slf#DI If NO AM CM ""°'° WITl4 ~ .a:lSIGn l'OSllDi _.,...AM IOllT..U 1•.U. ~ llllM-llS .. Oii Ml !Wiii ANAHllM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN fr••'l'OY ti ot lemon s1 11t·tll0 ........ --~ HEAVY METAL 1111 -·ORAGOJCSl.AY£R" - Clllf fl IOUllO &lit NA PAii~ BUENA PARK DRIVE IN Uncoln A" Weil 011non .21-4070 ~ i•~A P.A"l LINCOLN DRIVE·IN OM-A•• .... 00 lno* 121-•010 'fi.lllJ•"• ~ ............. ~, ..... 'ABSENCE OF MM.IC!" IPOI -·STIR CRAZY'' ... Clllt " IOUllO ·TARZAN THI!*'". MAN Ille "'" SOFINE f!lt-"A CHANGE Of MASONS. "" Clllth~ -CemTT•-""'11111 ··ups· --"TH£ CANNONBALL RUN'" - , • ._ __ toMA.nsr- '"OHOIT STOtrr' 111 -··Tttf CHANQl[UNQ" ... --· •·fllOOll'N ""°9t.Oa" - Ion ~ fowy 01 "°9_...,.., (lo) ,. -"NINITUFM"llll f61•24'1 · ClllHI SOUNO -· .. ~.~;f J -..... ---''" __ __ 'STAINS'"'' '1fll~ - STIR ~ .-1 "~IN lfllC>eta" ,.. QM " IOUllO C:..·rt -___ ,_ .. ·-... __ ....... ._---- -• 'MIC>efll <WT .. LMT .,. .• °"-___ ,.,___ I --·---"=---... '''°"Ya" -Cllll fl toulCI Cllll·,. .... A ~.lflliA LA HABRA Dll1VI IN ---·-~­"NllOHeC>fll" 1111 -...,.. .. -ft ...., -a...,.., .,. ... C:HIAP OICTICTIVt!'· - 17MIU - .... , .1 O~ANGE DRIVI IN loNo ...... ,,.., .,_~ IH·702i .. l., I •, ' • ~ ... M ISSION [H11VI IN . ----· "IMAltlCY'l~NI .. 1111 ilNY WMIOM WAY~ CM'' .. . I 20 MENTHOL CIGARffiES .. Salem 4 SMOOTH LOW TAR 100s llllJPllll MONDAY, JAN. <t,'1912 . CLASSIFIED Johnny Miller collects golf's biggest prize ever, $500 ,000. See C2 . 49ers ·triumph in mud SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The San Francisco 49era, after another winning roll in their Candlestick Park mud, are one step away from the National Football Leacue'a gaudiest bash -the Super Bowl. They got by the New York Giants 38-24 Sunday, following a pattern which seems standard in this season's playoffs . . "We knew other teams had blown big leads, and we didn't want to let that happen to us. We've been in a lot of preuure games this year," said .... quarterback . .J~ M<>nta.fl.a, who ' bad the first 300-yard paaaing day of his three-year NFL career but settled for 28 yards ill thesecondhalf. The Dallas Cowboys, 45-14 loser on Candlestick's slow turf early in the season, will be back next Sunday to face the Gers in the Na lion al Conference championship game. The winner goes oo to play the AFC champ, the Cincinnati Bengata or San Diego Chargers, in Super Bowl XVI on Jan. 24. "Dallas has a lot of respect for our club," said San Francisco Coach Bill Walsh. He added, "The homefield advanta1e is a distinct advantage for us." However, Giants Coach Ray Perkins said, "Dallas will win. 1 They are a better football team. I That's nothing against the Oen, but the Cowboys have been in this situation before and they I are a more experienced team." San Francisco, 13·3 in , the regular season, had_ils ·--·, highest-scoring day slnce the victory over DalJas in eliminating the Giants, an NFC. wild-card play-off team. The 49ers' defense, ranked second tn· I • .,..........,. t he NFL this season, bad a 1 Freddie Solomon (right) just misses touchdown reception whUe San Francisco's Keena Turner. celebrate• missed 11eld-goal attempt. -generally rough time and allowed three touchdown puses by young ScoU Brunner. . L J~ 'K d' h --Q. • The 49ers he~ a 24.7 lead after u~ers a-reeme y ouperson1cs ~~:~~$o:Jr..!r!r~~~ At · b / bi iddl · t d by. S · b s lopped at San Francisco's ter six-game. a sence' return 0 g man in the m . e is gree e 'a onic oom 4-yard line on a third-period drive which could have tied the By CURT SEEDEN Of .. Delly~5WI INGLEWOOD -You know the Los Angeles Lakers are in trouble when Kareem Abdul-J a bbar returns to the starting lineup a fter a six-game absence and his team falls behind by as many as 16 points in the first half. You kru>w the Lakers are in trouble when they have to work for the last shot of the firs\ half in order to pull within 10 points of the Seattle SuperSorucs. And, you .know the Lakers, indeed, are in t.rouble when they s hoot a miserable .440 from the floor in the first half and toss in a total of 13 turnovers for good measure. It all added up, needless to say, to a 110·90 Seattle victory over the Lakers before a sellout crowd of 17,505 fans at the Forum Sunday night. What's this? The Lakers go six games without Jabbar while he recuperates from an ankle injury, winning all six in the process. And Kareem returns 1and the Lakers promptly get blown off the court?• That's exactly what happened, but you can't convince Laker Coach Pat Riiey or the ~nics, that it was Jabbar who was the underlining factor behind the Lakers' first loss Jn their last seven games. "It's unjustifiable to Kareem . Remebember, we won nine in a row earlier with him," Riley pointed out, Indeed, the outcome Sunday night was more than a Laker loss. It was truly a Sonic victory. run. This is what we wanted to do." score. "De fensively , w e had breakdowns several times," said rookie comerback Ronnie Lott, but he contributed two interceptions, one for a late, game-clinching touchdown. Seattle, coming off its worst defeat of the year (a 120-97 setback to Phoenix Saturday night), out-everythinged the Lakers in the first h alf, and in particular, the first quarter when forward Lonnie Shelton and guard Gus Williams sparked the Sonics lo a 36·20 advantage. "They played us as well as they could tonight," admitted Riley, who despite being unaccustomed to defeats, took the loss graciously. ·'They took our breaks away tonight. We only converted four or our 18 breaks." As a team, the Lakers shot just .410 from the field, a far cry from their 53.1 average during the six-game winning streak or six-game Jabbarless streak. 1The 49ers also recovered two New York fumbles and held Rob Carpenter, coming off a 161-yard effort in the playoff victory ove.r Philade lphia, to 61 yards rushing. "We want to dictate the tempo of the game," noted Sonics Coach Le n Wilkens . "You must take the running game away from a team that wants to Still, the 7·2 center managed to lead his team with 26 points, 16 rebounds and three blocked shots. ·•When we played the 49ers earlier thls year, we made a lot of mistakes. We tried n_ot to So why didn't the Lakers make it seven straight? <See SONICS, Page C3) <See 4tERS, Page C3) Bengals change their stripes CINCIN~ATI CAP> -For the first time in his Johnson er ed 1 yard into the end ione for the Once a doormat, Cincinnati one ;P from Super Bowl 11 -year career, Cincinnati Bengals' quarterback other. Keo Anderson knows how it feels to win in the Ferguson, ho failed to complete a pus in the playoffs. first quarter, connected with wide reeeiver Jerry "The feeling is kind of beyond description," Buller on a 54-yard pass play to set up Joe Cribbs' Anderson said, wearing a broad smile after he 1-yard touchdown run just before the half and tossed the winning touchdown pass in Cincinnati's narrow the gap. 28·21 victory Sunday over the Buffalo Bllls. The teams traded touchdowns in the seeond Anderson completed 14 of 21 passes for 192 half. Buffalo lost Cribbs to a knee injury on a yards against a stubborn Buffalo defense to put the 44-yard touchdown burst that tied the game 14·14. Bengals in the American Conference title 1ame for Alexander's 2().yard run put ClDcinnati ahead: the first lime in the 14-year hlstory of the 21·14, 6ut Butler grabbed a 21-yl'hl touchdown franchise. It was the first playoff victory for pass to tie the score just eight seconds into the Cincinnati in four tries. fourth quarter. Anderson found Colllnsworth alone Although lt marked a milestone for the down the middle on Cincinnati's next possession franchise founded by Paul Brown before the 1968 for the go-ahead touchdown. season, the Bengals celebrated their club-record "13th victory of the season witb little fanfare. "These guys just sort of show up and say, 'We are goin1 to win this game.' No one panics or worries," said All· Pro rookie receiver Cris Collinswort.h, whoee 11-yard touchdown catch in the fourth quarter snapped a 21·21 tie. "We feel like we can do whatever ll takes to wln.' • The Bills, who held on to beat the New York Jets ln the AFC wtld card 1ame, were driving toward a tying touchdown with three minutes to play wfitn a delay of game penalty nullified an apparent first down inside the Ben1a11' 2().yard line. Joe Ferguson's fourth-down paaa to wide receiver Lou Piccone was wiped out by the penalty, and Fersuaon overthrew RoJand Hooks ln the end aone to kill the Billi' laat aertou threat. "It's hard to accept because lt WP a miltake ·.that shouldn't have happened," Fertuaon aaid of the delay penalty that put the ball back on the Bengals' 25-yard line. · Buffalo Coach Chuck Knox wun't 1ure of the reason for the penalty, but he downplayed lta importance. "Tbat didn't COil U1tMfootball1•me," Knox 1ai4, "'Ibey moved tM football oe .as. TIMJ broke on top 14-0. We came Mck, .... a nm at tMm anet lied tt up. But we wwe bellliMI U. wbale came." Clndaatl lcond oo lta Int two poe1111'°"9, drlvina G Md .. Janll. aa.i'I• Ala_,.. bolted 4 Jardl,.. tMprit t.oueWDwia Uid fulJbee' .... NFL playoff sch~ule CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Saturday's games) Natloaal Collference Dallas 38, Tampa Bay O American Coalereace San Dieg2 41J Miami 38 (ot) (M11Gay'1 1amee) NatJoaal Coalerace San Francisco 38, NY Giants 24 ·American Conlere11c:e Cincinnati 28, Buffalo 21 CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS (Stuaday) National CoalereHe Dallas at San Francisco <Channel 2 at 1 :~ p.m .> Amerlcaa CoalereMe San Dieso at Cincinnati < Chiiiniil i at 10 a .m.) CleDl8on's· Ford ·wants no Rlayoffs Fro• AP dUpatcllea GREENVILLE, ·s.c . -With • colle1e footbalr s national •9• champion.ship firmly in h1I rup, Clemson Coach Danny For waa reluctant Sunday to discuss the meritl of bavln.a a playoff to determine the NCAA Division l ·A champ. Clemson captured the national championablp after finishln& the reautar season 11·0 and beating then-No. 4 Nebraska 22-lS in tbe Orange Bowl Friday night. Penn State Coach Joe Paterno said Saturday he thought a series of playoffs should determine tbe National Collegiate Athletic Association championship, not a voting system. He said after his team's "°"° Fiesta Bowl victory over Southern California that "we reel we can probably beat any team in the country right now" and -said the Nitt-any Lions deseHed--to win the championship. Told of Paterno's comment, Ford smiled, ''The best way to do il is to go undefe4ted." F01'd said he didn't know much about a possible college playoff system except ''it would be an awful long season." Ford, members of the Clemson athletic staff and their families left warm, sunny Miami by charter plane Sunday to arrive at the Greenville-Spartanburg Jetport in cold, rainy weather. Eocd walked quickly from the plane tbrQUgb a light rain carefully clutching a blanket-wrapped bundle in his arms. As be reached the protection of the terminal, he was asked if he was carrying oranges, like many of the others getting off the plane. Quote of the day John McKay, noling'that his Tampa Bay Buccaneers would be in the playoffs at Dallas one day after an old friend, Bear Bryant, takes Alabama against Texas in the Cotton Bowl: ''-Bear and' I are in the same town . I don't think it's big enough for both of us." - · Ni.ggeta have too much EngU1h The Denver Nu11et., 1parked by 11 ' II polntl from Alex Ba ..... and 2S trom KW Vaadewe a.., held ott a M.Uwaukee comebecf and woo m.m ~Y to snap the Bucke' flv1-1ame National 811ketball AlaoclaUon wlnnlnc streak. After trallln1 87"'5 at halftime, tbe Nuc1et1 1bot it a 68 percent cUp ln lb~ th1rd quarter and led 106·91 with less tban a mbwte. to.play ln the perlod. Milwaukee pl.ayed without center 8M Laaler, aldellned with a aore rlcbt knee ... Two three·polnt baalteta by KelYlll aaaaey and 001 by II• Pa.... tn tb• flnaJ minute of re1ulatlon helped Portland defeat Kan••• Clt.)' UT·lll In ov-rtlme. Trallln1 lO'l~lOO wU.b 1:02 remalalna, the BlaMrt were able to launch seven three·polat fleld·1oa1 attempta ln the laat 80 aeeooda. Ramey'• lut tbree·polnter came from 21 !eet wltb OM aecood ·to 10 to send tbe 1ame into overtime at 111·111 ... Golden State Coach Al At&lea moved into alxtb place on tbe all·UIDe llat ol winning coaches and filth on the acUve one after picking up hl11 ~ win ln a Warriors' u9,100 vict-0ry over-DaU~-Saturday. Boutette stings former mates Pat Bou&e&te 4cored two 101111 u · Sunday and led the Pittsburth Penguins to a 6-4 National Hoc.key League victory over his former teammates, the HarUord Whalen. Hartford's Blalae S&ou1btoa collected three 1oal1 in a losing cause . . . Rookie Noraaad LeYellle netted the winning 1oal and added a pair of assists to_ lead Boston to an 8-5 triumph over Winnipeg. With the score tied 5·5, Leveille. directed center Tom Fercaa• pass into the corne of Ute net at 19:33 oL the second period to put the Bruins ahead to stay . . . GU Perreaalt snapped a 2-2 tie with bis 13th goal of the season in the thiril period to 1lift Buffalo to a 3-2 victory lover Montreal. Montreal's •ounn• Larry lloblmoD had tied the score only 42 seconds before Perreault's goal with a shot from close range . . . Deale Sevard•s 40-foot wrist sbot with three seeond.s left gave Chicago a 4-3 win over Detroit in a -came the Red Wings bad led, 3.1.... . . Dedll Maruk scored once and set up Klke GartHr'a short-handed tally, pacina Washln.rton to a •·3 vicCory over the New York Rangers. Manak has scored 14 poiJlts ln bis last eight games and leads the Capitals With 28 goals and 62 points. Haas starts new year right PEBBLE BEACH -Jay Haas of II Charlotte. N.C., started off \he 1982 golf year Sunday by winning the ' Spaulding Invitational Pro-Am golf toumamen\,. Haas, a two-time winner on· the tour last year, carded a final round tbree.uoder.par 89.on the par 72 Pebble Beach course to bold off a late challenge by second place finisher Bobby Clampett-of Carmel Valley. Miller hits jiickpot Golf's biggest paycheck awarded SUN CITY, Bopbuthatswana (AP) -Johnny Miller toot a look at the biggdt prize in the history of golf, a $500,000 check, and offered a weary smile. "Doing it this way is pretty close to earning it," Miller said after he'd struggled over seven hours and 27 boles Sunday -the last nine a sudden death playoff with Seve Ballesteros -before winning the Sun City Golf Challenge, the game's first $1 million event. "I've got a little confessio.n to make," he said. "When we were coming up to that last hole, I was hoping they'd come out and call it all even and split the money. "Nobody deserved to lose that playoff." But Ballesteros, a 24-year-old Spaniard who had led or shared Ediso~ Mesa vie in tuneup Edison High's Chargers put their 11-1 record and No. l Orange County ranking on the line tonight at Costa Mesa High in non-league basketball as each · tunes up for league play. Tipoff is at 7:30. Edison ha s won two tournaments and finished second at the San Dimas Tournament of Champions, while Costa Mesa, 5-2 for the season, boasts the San Clemente tournament crown among its endeavors. Edison relies on the 1-2 punch of Richard Chang and Rick DiBemanlo, while the catalyst of the Muiltangs' attack is Ken Bardsley. ........... • • the lead all the way, eventually lost it, 3-ptting for a holey from 50 f~t. while Miller m8de a routine par. Ballesteros missed a 4-foot second putt which would have extended the playoff to another hole, and .another day. With darkness creepine-. over the . green hills ringing the Gary Player Co untry Club Course, officials had decided that if the outcome was not determined on the ninth playoff hole, play would be called for the day. But Ballesteros' miss from;r48 inches settled it, and cost him $340,000. the difference betw the winner's check and ttie $160,000 he r eceived for second place. . "I congratulate Johnny on bis excellent golf," Ballesteros said. "But next ti.Jne I beat him." They shared the lead most of the way and finished the regular 72 holes at 277. 11 ·under·par 'On the 7,693 -yard course at a sprawling resort SO!'J1e 100 miles from Johannesburg. Each had a closing 71. Then they went to the playoff, begil\f\ing oo the par-3, 16th hole. And it very nearly ended there. Miller hit to about 4 feet but faced a difficult, breaking pull. Ballesteros responded with a magnificent shot that missed being an ace by 6 inches. Both made birdies. Then they reeled orr a string of seven consecutive pars In one of the game's great shootouts before Ballesteros finally made the mistake that let Miller ~laim the half-million dollar prize. Jack Nickl.Pus just missed makine It a t hree-man playoff. FOR LESS THAN 2' PER DAYI ii protects your ....._ ..... ..._, and cw lglinst burglars! It reatlY womt It'• the de- Cll warning on the door that kffps the burglars ffWIY ••• .t ....... ,, .. , .. How BIG PAYDAY -Johnny Miller, who won the Sun City Golf Challenge Sunday after I winning a playoff with Seve Ballesteros. collected the biggest prize in the history of golf. $.500,000. Coast, GWC, Saddleback eye openers All three area community college basketball teams get down to to the real business this week with the opening of conference action. Golden West and Saddleback draw home assignments, while Orange Coast is on the road for its South Coast Conference opener. O range Coast travels to Fullerton to meet 1he Hornets Wednesday. Here's how the week shapes up: Tu.aday IOUTMl.aM CA~COMP•a .. fCI. LA ~etGoldltlWell, 7:10p.m, Wednetday IOUTM ~ CHl'l.MU h 0••"99 Coett afl'lllleMofl.1:•p.m. Mlsafe*COlllP•••MC• Cllrvt et Sacldletlec"-7:• p.m. Frtday MMnWa• cAa. C:0..Pl.al.NCa Ootwft Wtllet S-. Meftke CC, 7:a1ut1. letutday IOVTM COAST cotf Pl.ll•NCI. Soeft~AMet0.. ..... ~71ap.1t1. MISSION CCMIPl.••MCI SNdl8llCll et Rlwn141t, 7:ap.m. do burgln know there ta an alarm 1yatem? If• the decal warning on doora and wlndowa thlt dater potentiaJ buf'Qaar.. but the price of a CUltOm burglar 81..m IYltem could coat you hundredl or even thoulande of dollara. For onty SI YoU can hllve the ume proteo- Clon """" our ... •a I Hh "'ml• .,. .,.._ .._ we P I Play It •fe -keep your __ ..,,~insurance agents and . brokers Sll'OPll'tY llfe from lntruden before It'• too ..... Ordw YoUr 2 decall tOday. Send •& Chic* or~ order to: Insurance co.ta riilng? ~ Conlact 111 for compeUUn quot• Ol'I Property, UabUUy, DUfkutt Producu UabUlty, Commercial Aulo, O~ Ure and Mtdleal u wtU u Worker'• OompenpUon lnsunnce. Doraett wants a shot at 48er• \ DAJ..LA.S :._ Moet Dallu players ~ O were pUjllq for tbt Ntw York Olanta to deleat lbe San P'rucllco 4111"1 Sunday to decide tb• Cowboys' National Cont ereoce cbamplonthlp opponent, but not • tailback Tony Donett. • 'Tbe 49era bumWated ua earlier ln the year and we ow.e them one,'' aaid Dot'Mtt, The Cowboys crushed Tampa Bay .. o Saturday to Mt up the NFC lbowdown witb San Franclaco, whlcb ousted New York, 31.24 Sunday. Some Cowboy• were puWnc for tbe Glutl beeaUJe tb'9 NJ'<: UUe 1am• would have betD played ln Dallu next Sunday. San Franelaeo whipped tbe Cowboys 45-14 on Oct,. 11, so a 41er victory aeadl Dallu traveUna to California. "J f\MU ID09t ol ua would pnter the Glaata wln.nina for tbe home Qeld aclVIDtlle," Hid quarterback Danny White, wbo oomblned with Tony Hlll on a IO-yard touchdown pua play. Irish aides reportedly fired The South Bend Trlbunt b11 1. r~rted tbat Notre Dame Ulbtut 1 football coaches Toa Ba~ and I BW Meyers have been fired, but a unlven spokesman 4eclined to comment about the newapaper story. ''There have been a lot of rumora about a shakeup of Coach Gerry Paul'• stall, but we're not 1oin1 to comment on ·rumors," said ao1er Valdllerrt, Irish u1i1tant athletic director and 1port1 information director. Notre Dame was S-6 lut seuon ... lllaad Wlalrl pulled away from favorite Sllaaeklte in the bomealretcb to wtn lbe Malibu Stakes under Lalftt Placay Sunday at Santa Anita. The Malibu is tbe 7-furlong fint le1 in the Strub Series for 4-year-olda and it was run on a Jleavy ttacL..ln 1:26 _ ~ Mark Jlall, w.ho played guard on the Univ.e~)'_ of Mlnneaota basketball team for three years, will don a Gopher uniform a1aln this week, thanks to a ruling by a federal Judge. Hall becan)e ineligible for play \\1th &ae~en team when he was not admitted lnto a egree-1raot.lng program by the university as required under conference rules. . . The U.S. Navy team won the National Four-Man Bobsled Championship Sunday on the mile-long Mount Van Hoevenberg bobsled run. Television, radio Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratinos are: ' " ' ' excellent; / ' " worth watching; " ./fair; ' forget it. A_ 8 p .m., Channel 9 ./ ./ ./ COLLEGE BASKETBALL: use at Washington $!ate. .. Announcen: Mike Walden and Pete Newell. OTHER TELEVISION 11 p.m . (S) -COLLEGE BASKETBALL - UCLA at Washington. Taped. RADIO Basketball -UCLA at Washington, 7: 30 p .m ., KMPC (710); USC at Washington State, 8 p.m ., KOAY (1S80). Saddleback hot at the foul line Showing a dead-eye marumansbip at the free-throw line, Saddleback Colleee's basketball team posted a 96-85 victory over Santa Ana in the Gauchos' final tuneup before opening Mission Conference action this week. Saddlef>ack missed only one charity shot in 23 attempts, and bit 10 straight down the stretch to defeat the boet Dons for the second time this season. The Gauchos will take a 10-6 record into Wednesday's conference opener at home against Citrus, also l~. George Turner had 22 of his game·high 32 points in the first half, reachirtg his average by the intermission. Before fouling out with 6: 13 to play, the 6-2 sophomore guard netted 12 of 17 field goal: tries, snatched seven rebounds and was credited with five steals. As a team, Saddleback was 37 of 51 from the floor for a blazing 73 percent, a team high this season. Center Rick Doyle scored all 17 of hla points in lbe .second half while pulling down six rebounds. Teammates Rick Reid (14) and 11ark HUI (12) also scored in double figures. · TV foOtliftll .. l>litz is oxeli. It was. a long weekend 8y WILL GUIULEY U ..... C'M I JI Ill llllliona ol people returned to tbe dJ'Udlery o1 •very-day exlatence today -countenance• 1t11ed, eyes lookln1 like a road map, atr mumblln1 ln ton1uea of tbe devlla, apewin• atr an•e words aucb at "blita," "•bot·1un:S '"power J" and "Oh, them D9U11." Dqn't be alarmed. They haven't beta mesmerised , by an lnvukla from outer apace. They're auttering a common American malady for thl11 time of year -'~grldlroo TVitla." It'• contagious, and can be catastrophic. It'• been known to break up happy boulebolda, aenct d.iatrauebt mothers to lnatltutiona, make ldda nm away from home and otherwise turn normaJ, peace·loving indlviduala into ravinl, 1tormin1 maniacs. MOSTLY, AND fortunately, t.boqh, It I«* away after about 24 hours even without tald.n1 two aspirin and going to bed. It so happens that this year, because New r -+ . ----l :coMMENTA.RY ... Year's Day fell on a Friday, we _et such a b,o±e~a~-~ exposur~ to"llie1nfecUon ln sUcti a shori apace time that recovery in most cues did not come so easily. Look at what we were subjected to: New Year's Eve: Three college bowl 1amea, the Hall of Fame at Birmingham, Ala.; the Peach al Atlanta; the Bluebonnet at Houston. New Year's Day: Five more college bowls, all of major significance, the Fiesta at Tempe, Ariz.; the Orange at Miami, the Sugar al New Orleans, the Cottdn al Dallas and the Role at Puadena. THIS WAS FOLLOWED by two N atlonal Football League games on Saturday and two more on Sunday. Thus, an almost non-stop run on the big tube from late Thursday through Sunday afternoon - 72 hours of almost solid plunging, paasint, kicking and body b\llDping, not to mention second.guessing -with hardly time for more than quick snack.a oo a paper plate washed down by bandy six·pack.s of beer. The most beautiful words in lbe English language -"Dinner's On" went crassly unheeded. Poor mom, could you blame her for going out of her head? Now it's Monday and (h.ings have moderated somewhat. Mom can lune in on "The Guidint Li&ht," "Search for Tomorrow," "General Hospital" or 1 whatever happens to be her favorite soap opera. The kids can go back to their potato chips and cartoon favorites, "Bugs Bunny," "Tom and Jerry," ''Popeye," or you name it. BUT PO_Oll POP. He'll hardly 1et the glassiness removed from his eyes before be'• back in his favorite chair again, cheerio& for bis favorite team in the NFL league champion.ship games Sunday and girding for the piece de resistance two weeks later -the Super Bowl. tte has one .consolation. All the hoopla of the coJlele bowls is over, so now be can devote himself entirely to the equally passionate but less fremied pursujt of an accepted national pro champion. The colleges, which generate more enthusiasm than the pros. haven't worked out a scheme to do likewise. Some think this is good. Others tbint it is bad. We think it's good. Let the pros do it their way. Let the colleges continue in the aged bowl tradition, which doesn't always produce an accepted champion but gives us a year-end of wild madness with people running around with their forefin·gers stuck: in the air like a Chicken LltUe, screaming "We're No. 1." That's the interesting facet or the college: game. It is largely regional with fire-eatint hometown rooters . With some 200 colleges, ·it would be difficult lo fashion a practical championship playoff under any circumstances. No playoff could ever provide the fanfare, pageantry, competitl veness and n'allon-wlde exposure of the bowl~. Loni live the bowls! COLI.EOE BOW'' .tOUNDUP tstd-g•adt:' .. 9owl CDIL .... ......_&A.I Puc*lowe (DIL'1•a....• .... v ............. JOHNSON a SON Preseats ... TH .. A&M .. Ok..._...lt. M Qordeft .... 8owt CDIL ta• ..... a • 1 ... -..1.1 r-aWteGIM .. tt Holld9yltOWI co-.11• .. DM991 avu.., ..... ...,,_M.• c.ltiornle ..... CDILlt•"'-1 T..._fl, SlllJ-. a. IS , ..... 1ow1 CDIL1f•.,..._..._, Ml.-t "'.......,,. ........ 0 -....anyGo CDIL••U1 1 •1 lji.1-.) 1•~t1,o.r;~ ' .... .... ....... 1 ...... 1*................. . -.w.,,... .... I .......... 1fl ....., • · ..... , IUI ..... ._. ( ... 81u1•on.Wf.11owt CDILlt•......_) Mk f119M II, UCLA W • Cotloft Bowl , ... , ......... TeUl\4,.~11 Aeeta.0.. .... , .......... , "'-SLat.UICM Roeelowl , ... , ........ , w......._.,,_, e>r.,.. Bowl , ... , ........ ~, c .................... u (,J. :11.=-...,..., .......... ~. . .............. .... __ ,, ..... .... . , ....... ft. ..... .-......... aw-· .,...... -1 ......... . .............. , ..... AIH9n""' ... ~ OllNIMll ' ... ''!'"" Pete the "Greek" PETER PICKS THE :1982 . LINCOLN NTINENt'AL l!OA COMFORT ND QUAtlTY. . .. New Parts Department Hourit Now ~n 8:00am·1:00-i»m S.tiirclay. ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. January 4, 1982 . . Charger mania strikes City of San Diego goes wild over team's victory SAN DIEGO (AP) ...:_ Charier maoia gripped San Dieto u fans touted the NaUooal Football Leat\M team they routed a1x week.I 110. An eatlm•ted 8,000 exultln1 fan1, from toddlers to oldtlmerab flooded . ~n Die1o·Jack Murphy Stadium for t e 2:30 a.m. return or the Cbar1en after Saturday's pulsating 41·38 overtime victory over Miami. llDOrilll police orders. the adoring throng swarmed around the teom buses to cheer, chant anctcon,ratulate the players. Amon1 the title-starved fans was Dave Terwilli1er, 20, who arrived, a steeping ba1 in hand, minutes alter the game ended. He set up camp ln front of the ticket office, which ·doesn't open until Monday to purchase two of the 2,500 general admission seat.a that were possibly to be .sold. WITHIN 31 MINUTES, the ticket line bad grown to 20 and the first motorhome arrived a abort time later, prepared for a Jong wait. Throughout San Diego, bar business was booming as overjoyed fans turned out to celebrate the heart-stopping victory. A 6·S team in mid-November, the Chargers, 11·6, now stand one t/ictory away Crom their first Super Bowl in the club's 21-year history. San Diego's only pro football championship came in 1963 when the C~argers demolished Buffalo M-10 for the American Football League crown. "Pontiac <Mich.) here we come," a celebrant screamed above.the glorious din at TGI Friday's, a busy nightspot near Hotel Circle In Mission Valley. A WEDDING RECEPTION for Fhillip Folse and Susan Griffin came to a standstill as guests surrounded a small television set to view the wild finish. "I told him I wasn't going to have the reception unless there was a TV there to watch the game," said the briae. At the San Diego County Jail, where 787 inmates watched the game on color television, thunderous roa·rs poured from the cells. "No incidents, but the bui~ding lilted back and forth a few times," said Lt. Ted Bear, a jailer president of San Die10 Gas le Electric, a 1taUon employee aald. THE POWEa OUTAGE forced one Charter fan Into a quick new 1ame plan. Cloyd McConnau1hey of suburban Kenalqtoo and b1a family wakhed the game ouukte ~ lporlna wind and a cold rain -after hooking up hla TV to a car battery. In San Diego Bay, sailors huddled around a television on the Navy destroyer Callahan a.Gd "screamed and shouted" when )Joli Benlnebke kicked the game·wlnnlnl field gQfl! sald 2l)d Cius Petty Officer Dan Jackson, 23, of New London, Ohio. "Most of the guys consider San Dle10 their adopted home.•• . A spokesperson at Grossmont Hospital reported two women were injured 1n separate accidents related to post-game celebration.a. Ont suffered a dislocated shoulder "wbUe cbeerin•"· and another dis located a finger durloa the excitement, the spokesman said. Iowa coach Fry . undergoes tests PASADENA (A P) -Iowa football Coach Hayden Fry, who became ill near-~~ of this team's preparations for the Rose Bowl last week, underwent tests .today at University Hospitals ln Iowa City. . George Wine, Iowa's sports information dir.ector, said Sunday he was toJd by the team physician, Dr. John Albright, that Fry's Illness was ··close to pneumonia." Wme said Fry will undergo a series of tests which will determine whetl'ler he should be admitted to the hospital or be allowed to rec\lPerate at home. TIED UP -Laker guard Eddie Jordan tries to weave through traffic while being pressured by Fred Brown 'of {Ile-Sonics. . Two death threats were called into a San Diego television station during the game One was directed to the switchboard operator at KCST-TV after the Chargers blew a 24·0 lead. Another caller. angry when a power outage blacked out several sections of the city. threatened to shoot the At fi1"11t. it was believed Fry bad nothing more serious than the Ou. He developed chills and a fe ver last Wednesday and skipped the final official functions leading up to the 68th Rose Bowl game against Washington on New Year's Day . From Page Cl SONICS STIFLE LAKERS. • • Purse doubled l"ry was treated at a Pasadena hospital on New Year's Eve, but returned to bis hotel that night and coached the team the following day In the Rose Bowl. Iowa lost 28-0 and following bis post-game press conference, Fry returned immediately to his room. "It was simply a matter of Seattle playing as well as they've played in a long lime. Tonight they played as hard as they've played in awhile. They took us out of everything we / wanted to do with their size," Riley reasoned. One thing the Lakers wanted ,......to do was use Magic Johnson as a power forward -a ploy Johnson said later just didn't work. "I'm just not a good player with my back to the basket. I'm not a power forward. I just hope the other guys can take over , some of the scoring when I'm not involved. But I'm OK as long as we win," Magic said. On Jabbar's presence: "I think everything will be all straightened out by our next game. Tonight we just didn't play that well," Magic added. * LAtt•• DtltaaL• -Suftday 11'9111's .....,. 1tre119t-tr. Lakin' lttlr~ ,...._ 111 ~BA ettenda11c•. Coml119 11110 Illa .. -. att•nclanca wn up tt percent to an • .,,..._ ol U,qo2 c...-n compared to 11 • .u latt .,._ attar It lloma O•!"••· .. •ll•y•1 tour io.'" slnca t.Mlftl -n -coecll.....,. -admlnluancl 11¥ S.. oi.go and Go1oa11 SIMe -IWIC• llY Illa SollkL .• SjlMlil119 ol the Mllout cr-d, ..-1 of It latt wltll 1:'1 r.malnlftl In IN COlllHI wllfl ,,. Softies allatld, '°"'°·TM,_ -a SOiiie slam CIUnll manageO to dHtroy tN 11411. •net It toot a l'OtVm mal11wnanc:• er-,_rty IO mlnut" to put • ,.. -Oii tr. llauat ... S.•111• CO.Ch ""'-ta now In 1111 11111 -es Sa•IU•'• llHd COllCll. An.r compUlftO • 121-125 record wllfl IN Sonia lie~ ,,.. -1m. Wllkon1 ll9ft $NtU. t. Portlaftd .... ,.._.,,.... to tM Sonk• two Y9¥S ,...,, Sine• How. JO. "'11. , Wllkl111 !\es spark.ad tM Softies 1111o •lnlllftt nearly '° ... re-I of U.lr ....... . • • Tiie L•k•ra' .... 1., K4UI .... ,.._r l•rwanll ... McAae played ...... ,,....,..., .......... Wltll two ..... ( 1 .. , "°"" .. llotcl), two ,.......... -...... _.. _ llloclUNI "'°'· , FromPageC1 DENVER CA P) -The purse will be doubled to $250,000 and two-lime champion Gene Mayer wiU be on hand to defend his United Bank Tennis Classic crown in the 12th annual tournament Feb 1·7, officials said. Mayer, who picked up $25,000 for each of his two previous triumphs, will be bidding for a $50,000 first prize this year. The runnerup will take home $25,000. The winning doubles team will share $15,000, which also ls twice the purse offered last year. The second-place duo will split a doubled purse of $9,000. 49ERS WIN. • • today, and we stUJ made too many," said Jonny Perkins, who caught two of Bnmner's touchdown passes. The 49ers will be forced onto a neutral, artificial surface field and indoor one, the Pontiac, Mich., Silverdome, if the team wins its first copference title and goes to the Super Bowl. "We're startin_s to Jove that sloppy mess that everybody's been knocking. It's been pretty good lo us," said San Francisco offensive tackle Keith Fahnborst. The Candlestick fooling was better than expected, and rain amounted to only light sprinkles until late in the second half when the Bay Area was hit by its latest strong storm. Both team~ offenses came up with big plays frequently. "I 'thought it was going to be a defensive struggle," admitted Fahnhorst. Montana passed for 276 yards in the first half, hitting tight end Charle Young on an early 8-yard touchdown pass and later connecting with Freddie Solomon on a 58-yard scoring play. Another long Montana pass, 39 yards to Dwight Clark, set up a touchdown as the 49ers scored three times in the opening 41ylz minutes of the second quarter. r Viewers miss finish COLUMBIA, Mo. <AP> -As the San Diego Chargers were winning their National Football League playoff 'ga!Jle in overtime Saturday night, a Columbia televis(on station was losing its battle to keep from switching to a college basketball game. Viewers of KOMU-TV•missed the fmal five minutes of the Chargers' game with the Miami Dolphins -the same five minutes in which Rolf Benirschke of San Diego kicked a game-winning field goal to give the Chargers a 41·38 victory. All' ..... "We had to gel respect from ~r.def"1sive backs, and that's wby we went Jong. 'they were playing a · lot of zo~e defense, and we were guessing right," ~~d Montana. "Montana did some tbinas people didn't expect. He threw deep, and some people had said he can't throw deep," said New York's Brunner, who delivered the two longest touchdown passe.s of his budding NFL career, 72 yard.a \o Earnest Gray and 59 to Johnny Perkins, in the playoff Joss. ATTAWAY -Cincinnati Bengals intercepting a pass in the first cornerback Ken Riley holds the half of Sunday's AFC playoff ball. up and is congratulated by game. Bale In the,...,, hoapite/lty of the '8bulou• Orl#ltl Me,,...,,.,.,, by Mn.ttlOClf bHutiful girlr. C0t,,. In TODAY/ The 38 points was the most scored against the Giants this shson, and receiver Perkins disagreed with bis coach about the Cowboya-49ers title matchup. "The 49ers have a beUuva ballclub. I think we'll be watching them in the Super Bowl," he said. Special teammate Rick Razzano after Now on Display!. f MltcaW~llWTH'I aAU '-... ~v ,............ . I TllA'tMlOMT MllYICH, llK. .. ...,....,.., .... .-w .. , ..... 1 ... dlltctw.M ...... tr .... !WILL MU. AT !'UM.IC AUC'TICJM TO THa HIOt4alT tlDOell ~ ~ (.., ..... tlrilo ...... .. , ...... _., of .. UllttM ..... , •II rllM. '*' .,.. fiMlf'oat _...,,. ... _ ...... _,, .. llMlr .... DtM OfTNltli!.,_~ ..... -dnerl!llW: TltUITO•: WARNell YOVHll 11141 JOAN YOUNIS, ~ .. .... tlNt,ICCARY: Al.1.ITATa JAVI NGI 'ANO LOAN AllO C IAT IOH, o C.lfwnlo '~°' .... • lle< ..... *t' ti, 1f1'1••11114f ..... IUltt In MW 111t• "90 Ht .. Offlclol .._.,_. Ill 11te effka .. t11a ll•corw • Or...-C-tyi U&f ... of I~ -.Crlllll IM IOl ... lflt ,,._.,.y, ..... , .. ,, 'f Ml ""'1loll " IOI 41 ot Nowfat1 Halelltt, Ill N City of ~ MoM, Covnly of °'9ne1, ....... ~ ......... .,, . ,,_ ,_.. ,,, ..... 1• ..... G .. ~1-...... 111 tlw effk.e et IN C~ty ............ .. Hid Oref199 C·Ollllty, -..CrCll04ll .- t.CIOwl' • I ••tl11nl119 al e pal11t a11 Illa nert.WtUtrly tine •f Hid ltl, ...,tllwffterty U .00 fOet frOl'll * -I ,,...,.,.ly ~ Of told IM; tllo11u MlllMHl•rly ISS.00 IHI Hr•llel wltll Ille ~Y 11,,. of Mid lot, -.ca ~y 112.JI , ............. wltl\ .,,. ---lOrly llne ol Mid lot;,_ ~y 0 .00 feet ll•r•ll•I witll Ille nortNo~y tlllo of Mid lot; "'""° IOUlllwffllrty 7-JO feet paf'Ollel wllfl 111e non_., NM of Mid lot, llle11ce nor111-11erly 110.00 '"' perallel Wltli lfte ~fiy llno of ••lo IOI 10 • point Ill Ill• --y '"'°Of Ulcl lol; .-. nort!>eo~y 1«1.0I leot •I ... M10 nor111••tterty Uno lo Illa point of beelnlllflo. • EXCEPTll•1tOYtMfflffly IOOt•I llleroof. Panel 1: An••-tor 111Qt'-•NI evr-ovor Illa --•mny 20.00 IMt of Illa tout'--ly 17U7 ... I ol IN nortllWft..,.ly I SS.00 feel tf lot t3 Of Newport Htigflts In ttw City of CClftA MoH, COUnty of Or-. $1Atff ol C•lllornle, ai -map ...:.-In llOO' 4, -&3 ol Mltctll•N-Mep•, 111 Ille office ol tlla c-ty recorder of Yid c-.ty. EXCEPT tll•I 110rtlon lncluctod within wlcl P.,atl 1. ALSO EXCEPT INI portion lyllle toulllWff .... ly of --WMIKIY 110.00 fM1 of IN SOUl-119rly 112.57 , .. , ot UICI ioc. TAKING A SEAT USC's Dwight Anderson finds himself on the floor after chasing a loose ball against the University of Washington Saturday night. Ander~on and Af' ......... his teammates were down and out later after suffe ring 73-72 overtime setback . Trojans meet Was hington State tonight. 101 OQte St., CO&U MeY, CA ft'26, ''(If • 11rMI ~ or c-Oetl9na1lon h tl>own allo"•· no ••rr•nty 11 gl.,en al lo 111 comptelaness °' correct11oU1." TM !Mnefkiery llftdlr UICI OMd of TN.st, by , .. _. of • Dn«ll or cl9f..,lf In 1111 ollllQ•llons soc11r•d IMreby, llartlofore •---Otllv-to Ille undorll91\ed • wr lll•n Ducks off to fast (2-0) st8rt Docl•ratlon of o.t...it -Oon\end IOI' S.le, -written nolk• ol l>rN<t. •nd of election lo c•11•• Ill• uncM1'"9nec1 lo •II Mid ,.,_.,y to ut11ly n ld obllgallon" •nd llleruller tlla .,,_,Si9fwd c.uMd Yid notk.e ol brMCll -of elecllon lo be AKOr'Clacl ~ 10, 1•1 H lnllr No. 12161> Ill -14214 -ltU, ol Mid Offki•I RKordL .A Oregon hands Sun Devils second straight P.ac-10 loss or .... c:..ey ,,,,..,.._I C-1 -JWldM Ol*kt ...,,,..._.IWI. 1'.0.a.UM N~9Mclt,C. ..... IM1 PLAINTIFF: INTERNATIONAL BAY CLUBS, INC., d/b/• 8ALllOA BAY CLUB. S.ICI Wle will be...-. ""1 wltl'lollt coven•nt Of w•rr.nty, ••Pf'"H• Of Implied, r..,.rel"'9 1"1e, PDUHSlon. EUGENE. Ore. CAP> John G.r.tlig poured in a career-high 25 points, 18 in the first half, and Oregon hit 12 free throws in the final six minutes to bury visiting Arizona Slate 82-65 Sunday qigbt in Pacific 10 Con fe rence basketball. Greig he lped the Ducks forge a s even·point lead at halrtime, 44-37, and teammate Barry Walker ted Oregon with nine points in the second half. 54-51, with 9 ~11 remaining behind two baskets apiece from Paul Williams and Lafayette Lever. Following an Oregon timeout. the Ducks ripped off six straight points to take command 60-51. The margin continued to grow through the final minutes as Oregon's defense smothered the Arizon a State offen se and Walker steer ed the Ducks' fast break Arizona State committed its seventh foul to put Oregon in the pe nalty situation with 7 :01 re maining and Walker bit five free throws down the stretch to finish with 11 points. Lever led Arizona State with 23 points and Williams added 14. Oregon had a 41-29 rebound advantage and hit 57 percent from the field , compared with 42 percent for the Sun Devils. COVNTV SANITATION DISTRICT NO 11, ol Or.,_, County, CA J. Wayno SylvHler, Secretery Publlthacl Or-Co1111 D•ily Pilot, Jen 4, 11. tte 11M2 DEFENDAHT· JOHN L. NAGEL SUMMOtlt fllHIU CAS•NUMa•R....n Publlshecl Or-. COHl Delly Piiot NOTIC•I Y• ......... --. Tiie DK. 14, 11, a, 1"1, J ... 4, 1"2 S411 .. I C-1 _, ._._ ..... , ,_ ,.._ ,_ ................ ,..,...... wt .... .,... ...... ........_._ ..... NOTICI! Ofl TRUSTEE'S SALE AVllOI ~ ........... I C C • ---...... ---------1 LMa Ne.-117 IE! ...._. _..me*' ~· u•. NOTICE OF DEATH OF T.S. Ne.Ml*J • •I• ... 1 .. c1a • .., .... o• U41. M E R E o I T H F·. TRANS<OAST SER111cEs. 1Nc ... ,__.. --. • • .i.L u• a. duly •-'nwel TT1ntM u-r t.,. ~-...... .,. H UMPHREY AN 0 0 F toll-Ing Cllnallled -of trvst WILL If you Wltll • _., tM .,.,k• Of 4111 or •n<umbr•n<••. to P•Y Ille romai nlr>e prlnclp•I a11m ot Ille note Ctl Mtured by wld Ooed of t Tni1I, wltli in..,.ffl .. In Yid note pro..i-. --..c-. II any,,.,,,,., the lerma ol wld 0..0 of Trust, Ion. Cl\erget -ellPl"HS of tho TNSIM arwl of IM lrUSts Ci'Uled .., wlo Deed ol Trlllt. S.ld Yle wlll be Mid on Friday, J.,...ry ti, ttc et 1,00 P.M et Ille Cllapm•n A"en11t entrance lo Ille Cl,,lc Center Bulldlng, JllO E.ost ~ A-In Illa City of Or-. CA Al Ille tltne of the lnCliel publlcatJo.. of t1111 notlat. u. totlll emount of IN unp•ld lMll•nct ol IM ot11i9eU.011 .. , .. ,..,by .......... dnefl--•I trutt and Utll'll•t•d COlll, 1111en••1. •nel ad.,e11 caa Is The victory improve d the Ducks ' r ecord lo 2·0 in tbe Pac-10 and 7-4 overall Arizona State dropped to 0-2 In league play and 5·6 for the season. p ET IT I 0 N T 0 ULLATl'\llLICAUCTIONTOTHE ~-ltlls-.-...... P B h ADMIN.STER ESTATE HIGHEST l.IDDER FOii CA$Ji PJ'OmllllY so lMt yo11r wrltlH •11 • • • • fpaylble at llmo of s.le In tawflll ..._.,.,lf_,....,ybetlledo..ti-. rm JOID8 1ronng am NO. A111641. moneyoflfteU-~esl •llrltlllt. SIU--ldkllM•I, ....... •ttO,Jtl .... To ____ lnQ llld, Y4U .....,c.ell (JM) m.-. D•le Oec-11, 1•1 Tr~ Senokft, Inc. 11 Yid T i'VStee ll is the first time Oregon has won its first two conference gam es since the 1976 77 season. After trailing by nine points early in the second half, the Sun Devils rallied to within three, BIRMINGHAM, Ala. CAP> - Former UCLA starter Cliff Pruitt says be plans to enroll at the Univers ity of Alabama in BirminghaOIPMonday t.o play for the-Blazers basketball team. Pruitt, a 6-7 forward who was 1 ~reckless wins regatta Capistrano Bay Yacht Club Sands (Dana Point Yacht Club). kicked off the 1982 yachting and third was Bang Bane season in Orange County with its Max well , Ka thy Ad a ms on New Year's Regatta Sunday. CDPYC). Tbe overall 1n Class A winner was Wreckless. co-s kippered by Don and Ann Becker of the host club Second overall in Class A was Desperado, Greg Winners in other classes: Cl•n 8 -1. Mootly Bii.it, Miile HlntCWI CC.-8YCI; 1. -IClki, Akll Reff C~po BYC); J Going Left, st.,,. Fr•nt• IOPYCI. Non Sp"-k« C!Hs -I.Condo<. Wiiiie Lurk (un•tl«l'ledl , Z L.onto R.,_, Brl•n ....,_ Cun•fllll•Udl. 3. Reel Hol, Joe Pert<Mlll CC. BYCI College basketball Tonight'• g•mH .... use•• was111119ton st UCLA ot Wnhingtoll UC Davis •I ~·Clar• SE Louis!.,• at U ol S•n OleQO L•mar •I rr..no SI. Arlrona el Or-SI Roo ... UT EPel Ul•fl New MoJ<lco•I BYU -~ JA<Uonvlllt at Al• 8irmlnQ!>om 8•itlmore •I MemP>ls St Weil C.rolln.t •I D•vld'lon Florloa St. 11 Louil~lll• SI. L~ el c;.orgl• SI How•rel ot 01d Dominion VMI •I -\NII NE Loulslet1• ,, Mc NHW St Nl(lloll1 St •I NW Loul>len• w1111..., & ,,..,., •I Nor111 c .. o1111e S MlulsllPC>I •I North Ccrollne SI Soulll CtnMINi •t Ak-SI. Xevler .. ScMn Al•llOIN Wis ~ 8ey •I Soulll Flo,.._ bit Fk>tldl Soulllenl .. lloslOll u Lycomi"9 et Bucknell C•11hlus '1 Yennont Col .. to ot Cornell FordlWirt'lelY ... Hof1tr1 .i -1•1 Notre Oenw •I Le Solle St. Frondi, P-. •I Loyola, Md. Utk••tlNlne Piii •i T ......... Pro.,iellnc• el Seton H•ll ~ B11llor •I Boll SI. arad'°" .. lftdl-St Tu!-ot Clnd-11 Drlkt et llllnals St: 1. ICenlucl!y .. W. 1111,..1• UNLVoll(-$1, I MldclleT--•I 11.,,ler,OhlO SyrKlde •I Otllo $1. USIU •I Wld\lle SL ~ Soutl\woster"n .t ll•Ylof' Crelgllton et T11IY Rlce•t-on w. hus SI .• , N-Me•l<O SI. N. Teus SI. •I Pen Amert<•n T .. a.-ArllnQton at Tu ... s.n Antonio TOURNAM8NTS HATTllt CLASSIC Stetson"'· Mor'ellead SI. Ctnt""'ry .... New Orie- Tue9d~g•mH ca• s~ IL.Al •Loyola. Col. C•I Stoto FUiierton 11 ,...,,.,,,i,,. Wllllwortll ot GonU99 S.n J-SI •t USF ~ Tn•• A&M et TCU TeutT.O-atT-Mo.•RotlO et~ It. ... T-.~ at "-111(111 .. SL I!. T-M. et,...,_,, Herdl~sin-at Metter WHaM 111 lAuiblOllO Ttcl! Buffalo SL at N.C.0Wllmhiote11 ICenlvclly S.. at 5MlllWrft llllffelO 9l. .. SW LAll!tl..-e T.-'St. at Notftl1'. SI. . ... RPI et Army ··~ ot OeniMlllfl flotrlllNat ,..~ • ......,.._at Ulllllll ..._ ......... 1 ..... 0-lllle•SL"°'tt't ................. , '** A&M• 111.<Clllc~Clrc .. T o a It he 1 rs . 1111. •Nl ln-•<-vedto-now 1111......,.. .. --'°· ....,1. b l beneficiaries. creditors lleldl>'Yl1 -wldO.OofTrv1t l11 11uer10 lnme411•t•ment•. "Ht• a s tarter the final alf of lbe ast ,.,. proi-tv ~,., cs.t<rlbed: meMr• • ., ,_ .. "'" .. • •I ...., f UCLA d d out f and contingent c reditors of TAUSTOR· WARNER YOUNIS •NI • ..,,..,,..,..._1'991 .. r-•t'-- T. 0. S«vlu C-y ...... season or • roppe 0 Meredith F. Humphrey JOAN YOVNIS,...,._,endwlf• I. TO THE DEFENDANT: A clvll the Bruins' program last week. and persons wno may be &ENEF1c1ARY · ALLSTATE comp1•111t ,, .. _,,med 11y ,.,. By Sllarrl O.Pletro AISK-Secretery He was in town on Friday, and s Av 1 N GS AN o LO AN As so ,..._tiff aealMt .,..,. 11 "°" •Kii 10 Otherwise interested in the CIATION,•talllomlac._etioll o.tMd Wt '-'ult,"°" mU!lt, wltl\ln One City Bou .. vard Wnt 0r .... CA'7* (714)~ indicated Saturday hiS decision will and/or estate: A.corded,,.., 1>. 1m .. 111w . No. • ctay•.,. ~· .-•• ,.,_ was made. A n<>titlon has been filed fll" ln-111MpogtS20o10flklal Oft you, Ille wtltl 1Ntcour1. wrln.n P11t>lltl'lod Orengo C.,.1t D•lly Piiot, Oec: 21, 1•1. J., 4, ltc ~S4-11 · .,~ Records In ,,,_ offke ol Ille Rec...-. ,._ .. to IN ~elnt. Ullle .. 'fOll .. I . m enjoying my visit to by Kathleen J . Humphrey ol o .... County; Yid -ol lrusl Clo ... your cl9f .. 11 wlll IM entered on Birmingham," be told The in the Superior. Court of det<ril>fti...1<>11-1n9""_..iy: 9PP4katlOll of u. p1a1n1lff, anc1 111b Birmingham News Saturday. "I Orange County rt>questing ~:;~·~'°"of 1oi 63 of NNpor1 :,"to~~...!:=:,-:•;:: like all the people that I have t h a t K a t h I e e n J . Height .. In ,,,. City of Costa -· compl•lnl, •Ille" could roull In ·met so far, and I'm looking Humphrey be appointed a s county of 0renoe. St.ate of cau...w.. 1ernts11men1 ot ••GO•. tehlng 01 PUauc NOTICE personal representative to ., •hO•n on•"'--"""' lft boo1t 4, money or pr-rty or other rellef forward to playing for coach administer the estate of peve u o1M11ee11~~111 e. r-.ci.-tac11nt1wcomp••n1 (Gene) Bartow at UAB next offlttof1N<-1Y~ot .u1c1 D•led:Ho_..._1,1"1 NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION of perton•I property remalnl111 of\ 1 ""<•leel P"ml,... of hll"rner leNint CCCI•> year." • ~~~eedrit~:-ln~~~~~~~~ o•::~e1~~:·'!';'<:io::::,~~. ~i.':TEASON, Pruitt appeared in all UCLA Administration of Estates norll'lwulerly !Int or Hid tot, By: R. ELLIOTT, NOTICE ii lloret>y' elven ..... Oft S.lurel•y, J.,...ry 9, 1"2, •I 10:00 A.M. ol 1721 Wfttm!Mter A-. In G•relen Grove, o.-..,.. c:owity, - undlnJgMd wlff tell al P ... lc AUC11o11 lfte per-,......ny left by E,.,...... .v-. • b d MllltllwHterly U.00 IOet from ttw mo.I 0eciu1y games h 1 s fr es man an Act). The petition is set for nor111er1y cor'lltt of u1c1 lot; -. TMOMASJ.O'ttH'•· 1Nc. sophomore years, including both hearing In Dept. No. 3 at ....,,11ee-1y 1u.oo toet iierec1e1 •"" l'.O .... ..., N C A A H · 700 CI · C t 0 I tl'le 11ort11o11terly line of Mid tctt; ma.._.........,, s.... -appe11ran.ces . is VIC e n er r ve. 111ence •ou111w .. 1er1y 1n.se f .. , ,_...._ca.tutt . problems ..at UCLA began last West. In the City of Santa .,.,.11.1w!lfl 111e -111 .. atert., 11,,. T....._: .. ,. Seid .......,,., c-of ·-· ! summer when he played in four Ana, Californlil on Jan. 27, u id 1o1. l"9ftCO --Y u. ...,...._er-. c.oest o.11., Piiot 1982. IHI parallel wltll IN nor1hffs.lerty o.c. 14, n. a 1'11. JOll. 4, ttl1 S41MI IMdS, •-'"'9tft, elarm r.ilO, f COOlert, l .. biet, l•mp, S pedM boaH, fall, tof•, 1 <11•1,.s, d~, lelotltlone. < ... mlt(. llOl'llL games in a summer league in 11ne 01 Yid tot;-. ~rt Los Anoeles. IF YOU OBJECT to the 7.SO f .. 1 p.,.11e1 w1t11':......'t...".".~=-:;:.....=:.=-------._ granting of the petition, non11wes1M1y 11,,. of Mid tot; -• .._ ------------~you should either appear nor111WH1w1y 110.00 teet pe.re11e1 • ~ ._,_ Said euctiort wm be m.-_..,_ to .,,,. provllloM ol MCtlo.. 1• of -CMICoda. OUTSTANDING VALUES! NIW IH2 VW QUANTUM WAc.c>H 4 Door. Options Include cloth llM1S. radial ti"'8 and morel 1Sttt 3079) {00350:V Utt rrtce $11,305 Dhc...tSIJIO SALIPllCI 599 1912 SCllOCCO Coupe . 5 •P••d tr•n•mlAlon. metallic paint. rear window wlper/wHher. alloy wheela, atereo ~• and morel (StK. 3235) (017795) SAU Plttcl 5 10 695 tllo ~.,,., nne .. N4d 194 to •1-------------at the hearifl9 and state pe1n1 in .,,. _,,, ,..,. o1 Mid '""1C8 W tWHllfTtOlll your objec t ions or flle 101. 111eftco nor1_,w1y 1o10.oe 1eo1 TOL.aMllf'tlOCl'tlRTY written obfections with the •lone seld norltlwoo(terty llne 10 111e •OlllO.IM t bef th h · point of 1>t9'nn1t>9, NOTICE. IS HUleaY OIVllN "'91 our ore e earing. EXCEPT --lerly 100 l•l tfle FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL Your appearance may be ,,,.reo1 DISTRICT'-411Klef'9tltMteelowfftt: in person or by your P•rou. Tiie f'I••.,, Sc-• •t• .. ., .. , ttorney An .. ~ tor ln9l"eu •net eves• 1outac1 et "1SWerllef A-9ft41 h · o.,., the -ui. .. terly 10.!ID '"t ol the F-Mll Valley 5cMol motltl~• Deted l4~.1"1. L•Nllorct. ......,, iS...oier ""Westin....., Aft. ~ c;,...,., CA ftW4 • Pul>lllMd OrMVt C-Deity Pllo4, Die 11.1 ... ,J .. 4, Im SJ1MI I F Y 0 U A R E A 1011lllWHterly HS.07 IHI ol Ill• ,,_, IOcRl4I et 11•11 alltlw"' Sttffl, I C R E 0 I T 0 R o r a n«tll•fftMIY moo teet ol tot 63 of F911malll v111ey, c.alfomlo, .,.,., wrn ------------ ontlngent creditor of tti.. Nawpor1H0'9111•1n .,,. City of eos .. -be ,....... ow1,,. tlw 101t_1.,. tun~~couirr e ceased, you must flle Mu•. c;o1111ty of Oranoa, Sl•t• of 11aurs ot t.,. ""'• ot delivery of 0,, •• ·-••• Colllomla. H per ,.,,... recorOod In pouonlo.. for 1<t1001 c11t1rool'll -~ .. your claim with the court 1>oo1<4,peoeaofMt1«1t•neousMe1>1. pur,_: . cou1CTYO,~• or present it to the in111eolf1ceo11,..cOU111¥recoroerof Pl•,,•n sc11001 •t•u ore•: 1t10vtcc.w0rt ..... I t ti wldcounty, WodnoM11y, 4:JO PM I••:• l'M, .... · persona represen a ve ~xCEPT tll•I ooruon 1nch1d•C1 Frtooy, 4:JO PM to a:ao ,M, AM S-AM,C..ttM appointed by th\.. COUrt willll111MdPar«1 1. Soturdey, t:OO AM to 1:00 PM; Mid llUIRRtAO•Ot' within four months from ALSO EXC6Pf ltlol portion ,., .... ,...,,, .. ,n Vllley ~ l'llUltl.....,.. oo~ETIT10t4ER : ICH0_!-"H0NG the date of first iSSUanCe soulllWHlerly of Ille nortll-tterly ,_: ~ -......... Y. l:4S ltllS...ONDENT: TRANG MAI of letters as provided In 110·00 '"' 01 ""'..,.,,,,_sterty 112·n PM••:uPM: DOAN JNI ol Hhl IOI. , -,,,_ le IMM tatd faclllllfl IU~ IPAMtL y I.AW) Section 700 of the Probate 101011es1..cosi.Mo ... CA~. _.r.,,.--,~.,. ... Code of California. The "C" • str•t eeldrett or,_~" tllo RHOllltlOfl of tM aoerd •f . CAMN\HM••o-.....a time for filing claims will e1u111n•1lon Is 111ow11 01>0"•· no Trvst••ot .. ........,Vanrtk-y,_....,.~'n.~-. w•rr•nty ii olv1n et lo 119 Dlattkt,R..Ulolllf-rll_.1. _.. ....... ,_...... ...... not expire prior to four complelellKs or corroc:tMUI.'' Tiie Tiie minimum 11our1y lean~ --.,.. ~':.... 11 months from the date of ....,.11c1art lll'IW Mid Oea4.,. Tnat. ""mMI. • 11w 1•c 1eMo1 .,...,, ,_... ...... .._ *• ...._ the he•ri"" noticed above •Y , .. ..,,.,._,,or.._.,,._ •11...t ..... .., ...... _..., AVtlOI • .. "" · 0111111110111 ucured tllor•llY, "'-".Ml ltllMI 14Att .,..., • "' U•t•• 111o ,, ............ 11 YOU MAY EXAMINE 1tentoton neclll!M on11*""'""1e .._ rw-•"-lllW'I.., pa "r ,.,..... ...,.__, W: • the flle kept by the court. ttw .,.,... "9MCI • wtlltefl DoclaroUott ••r; , .. ,.t.111 veico sc11uc ....._ .. • _ _. '::'~ If you are Interested In the of Dof...it -~ 1er s.1e. -,.... .. ......,_. ,_: ezus '9f 11ew ....,.. .. •-. a.. 11 .... --. f 11 wtlt•11 lllltlcle Of llrMdloftd of ofo<lloft ..., -• ..., ...... ., .. "' .. y. ... ...... state, you may e a to ceu•.,. .. -11.,.cs • _.. ..._ Tllo "''"c"':"' 11,.,.,1, 1.... 11 ._,..•_..._..WC•., .. request with the court to pr-rty 1o totl•fY ..w 4*11eet...._, ~ • • '• ,...... •11 ....,,,., "' ......... Y9ll.....,. receive special notice of .,,. ~ 111e 111•,..._ c.-ct .... ,..... 11¥ .. c.i-r l'Tk• .. ~ .. ..,. .,W, ,._._ .. the Inventory of estate ui• ... t1co9f11rOact1eflllof •1t<tto11• 1,.. • ...,..._...""__.11 ..,. ,...._ .. ..., _,.,._.,....., be Rec.-Seplel'l\tlet 10, 1•1 OI ,,,.,, .. Mdl ICMOf yiMr. SI u.-...... """"" al _la __ assets and of the petitions, IMtr.No.1:111ua11t.,...1014,...11u, N• -.. .... 1111e11 •.,......,..,......,... .. .-....,... ...,.... accounts and reports olMklOttklalll~ lie•"'",.... ...... waor In tttla 111.,0,10 111_.111•-t• · .. .-•• SOid .... '*'"Ill INlll, 11111 w~ ,....N, _.._..sMl4lle11a..WCtleil -• w ,_. 1 .-..... • scribed In Section 1200.S co1ra11a11t ., w1rre11ty. oxprou " ~ °"'..,...... 111 .......,,.,,..,. n.e •11a, •• ...... ., ,......... a of the Callfornla PrObate tl'lljlli., ~ 1101,--....., .....-. ......... ...-. u-,. • Cod• . tllCVlfttlr..c ....... ., h ~ ... IOf " ....... I• IHM sal• I TO TM .. RIESf'OMDeNT· · ~ ft prlftclpet """ of 1M ,,.._"(\) 10(\lfM .....,.,.., "'-' .. l'Kollfff -. Ille • Tiit ,...._ Me ..._. ~ ........ W f 111 am 5 , (I e C , l>'Y .. kl Oled ot Tn;et, wltll l,,._1 M ........ tMc»f .ii .. Dl*kt .. lb __,.,.... ,_-_... .... If,_ .... Attorney at Law, one City 111aotdMttllf'OY1c1et1,~-.1t4111y, ..,._...., • 11111 o.a .......... , .... ,....... ....... ·~., .. .' v• West 5"1te 1900 lll!Wrlllatw'IM .. M141Do04la1Trlllt, ,_...lllYaliey,Cal....W...,..M .......... _ .. _...._ "°' "J. '" r 1"'· c...,..._ Olld n-• of t111 l ..... ttwllt:•PM•,,_..11,1--______ .....,..._. Oran1e, CA 92661; tel. TnKt .. .,...., IM 1,,... <,__.., Tiie ...--,.,......,. ....._.., 1.~. ·-·-· (114) tJ7·1141. Mid QM of Trwt lolf M49 wit! W 'Mell I.di..., .......... eMff IM tllo COIW1 _, Oll .. r o I~ PWlltlled C>rOllll Coelt Dolly PllM, MMI Ofl 'rlMy, J-., It. , .. ot rw.,lrM tt O~ .. """' ot .._ ~=':':~~:..or .. ~~~ J I • tt t• t t• l'.M. ol tfle ~ A-wflldl Mt ............ Mell ...,.._. • Oii. '' ' _11t'2 "'lllr•-•INCIYk~tvthllftl, 11¥4lllt ...... 1_,0fwtllc:llC .. 11fli. = :;.:~= .olO l!HI 0...-A~ Ill lfle CllY 111 .. tffkwot• Ot*lt1. '* .. MaY .. ., ........... ofOro1191,CA. u .. ...,......, .. ....._....,.. .... ..x 1911( Al llllt""" Of ... !Ntllll ... ~1111 .......... 11111111 "9M fw ... CMf1, Ti. ~ of ...... 11----------------4 at flla Mdclo. .. ....,-......... of.. ...l11e, A•Y ••nH wlla llH ..::-.::.=er~· W -""'•Id .._,011<0 tf tllt Mfl .. llOlll ....,.. ........... a "''""' llN "9llllt. ""' *'....., ... ""',....................... ' ............. -_..... .. 1..-.et Alld •tW t..... .......... I ltHt ftw ,.raM tM llteMe ~~~· 01141 o•w-H l.t ....... ,, ... To Ill&. Ti .-.... Clll'a A. • ' ............ .,.... .... *-. n.. .... ., ,,... -. .._ • ...,.I utt1t1.ie.-.. dlltltrlfll111•1n .. •...., lrto19MllMM80ATa. Doto ........., ll, !tit ....... .._ ..... .. M ..:lt.twa • ,,_ ... ~-. .............. ...... rrafClll9. ' -~.::-~ -r= .. ,:::;. --... =-... -' ~..... C , ,..\':. '"' ,.,.. ....... ....,, .... ,......... ~ ~ c......., .... -....._...... ...~·-.-."·""· ...... 11,.-..-.4. . -=--a..--.: f'U9H I ,r~~ 0.. .... .... ~ ... Cllll °""..... ,......... ... ca.. °""'""1i~---l!ll~ .. ~:lltJ•~ o.c ... ,. •• c.,.. ..., ....... ,.,,... - ' . !- , . ... . ,. NFL NFC"-AYOFFS 4hre, Olanta 24 "-llTOMfWt 1 J 7-M S... l'rMCIKO 1 11 0 14-a s F -Young • POU from MOnl•M IWersc:lllng lll<kl ~ l NY -Grey 11 peM frwn ··-· (0..Wlo kl<kl SF -l'G Wertc:hlng tt SI' -SolOmon 5' peu from Mont- e worscllme lll<kl SF-Pellon U l'\lft IWorsc:lll119 111<111 NY -FGO-lo41 HY -Portilns Jt peu from BrvnMr I Denolo kk kl SF -Ring 3 rvn (Wlt'1Chtng kl<k) 5 I'-Lott 20 Interception return IW•nchlng klckl NY Perkin• 11 p.,1 trom Brunner I Dene lo kl<lll A -Sl,ll!IO T-Steti1t1c1 NYO FlrtlO-II Ru.n.1 -yereb n..s Peul119 yereb 211 Return yer«b ?t Pos .. 1 1 .. JM Seclls by ).16 Punts ._.. Fum1>1n-lo5t Ml Time of ""-alon U :G ................. le. IP a U :W.115 -w »-31-1 2-t ,.., 1.f.165 M:ll RUSHING --York, c..._ •• , 11-41, Brlgllt t-S, Perry N , Br-2·ml-2. Sm\ Fren<IKO, C-r 1·H . Peltoft 1·'2. Rine 10.2', ~ t-12, Ee1loy 4-t, Clen 14, 0 ... 11 1 ... Mon1-).minus t. PASSING -Now Yor k, Brunner 16·J7·2-2'0 Sen Frenchco , Montone 10-l 1-l-»1. RECEIVING -How Yorll, ..... Ills 7-1?1, Grey S.111. Cerpentor S.11, Y"""9 2·1S, Mistler Ml. Sen Francisco, Solofno11 .. 101, <:fork j-10., P-2•a , YOUf19 i-22. w1i- , 2·21, R..,_, 1-11, EllloU M , RlllO 1·m'- 4. AFC PLAYOFFS Bengals 28, ·ams 21 kww!lT~ 0 1 7-21 Clnclnnetl t4 o 7 7-a Cln-Alo-r 4 run I Breech kl<kl •Clfl -~I run CBreocll kick) lluf -Crlblls I run IMlk•Me~r kl<kl Bui -Crlblls 44 run IMlk•Me~r kick) Cln -Alo.-20 run I BrM<ll kl<kl Bui Buller 21 r>eU lrom FerguSOft (Miko-Meyer klCk) Cln -Colllntworll'I 16 poss from,............, C Brooch kick) A -SJ,4JO ... First-I 2t Ruthe• -yereb 2a.tM Pe1slng yerdl 202 Return yereb I Pes .. 1 IS.Jl-2 Seck1 by .f.U Pvnts ).-42 FumbhK -loll 0.0 P ... e1u .. -Y•nn .. ~ , TCme Of ~Ion 11: 1' ........... ....._. Clll n JM• 1 .. 0 14-21~ 0.0 4'S M M4 Jl:(t RUSHING -..,,,.lo, Crlilm IMO, ...-s •·>O. LHk• ).12, Br-n 1·2. Clnclnnell, Aloundor 114l, J -11-4.S, A"*"-2·1S, A Griffin 1-<4 PASSI NG -Bullelo, For1u1on U ·ll·2-202 Clnclnnell, Anderton 1•21-1'2 RECEIVING -Buflelo, lull., ..... Lowis ).a , er_,,.r ).tJ, Loell• 2-1• • .._. 2·1S, Jessie 1·11 Clnclnnetl, Rott ._71, Johnson ).23, Colll..-111 2·24, kroldor 1-4. Curll• 1-22. Aleunder 1-10. COLLEGE How top 20 tared "J 1. Clernscn C1244) beet Hebrellt&·ISln <><•1111• Bowl. .. 2. G90fVI• 110.2-01 lost lo Pltllbuf9h 2-4-20 ' In Suger 8-1. 3. Al-me 1•2·11 lost to Tu e• 16-12 In Cotton Bowl. 4, Hebrellt• (9-J-o) lotl to ClomSOft 22-IS In Oren9t Bowl S. Sou1hern MOllWICllll (10.1-01 did - pley. 6. Teket (10.1·11 beet Alebeme 14-12 Ill CottDll low!. I 1. Penn Stele c 10.2-01 beet Soutlwr11 C.llfonll•»-10 ... Fies....... . L I. Southern C.llfomle (..,_.) lolt lo Pofll'i •Stele 2 .. 10 Ill Flelte Bowl. I • Mleml, Fie. 1•2-411 did not ple'f. I 10, PllUWr'llll CIM-41) .... , ~ 24-20 JnS-r low!. 11. Horth eer.t .... CIC>-2-411 beet A....,_ ll-27 In G-... Bowl. 12. Wesflin9t0f> CI0.2-411 llNI lowe »O In Ro .. eowt. I 1J. ·-· C-....Ol tosl lo Weslll"""" ..... ROMBOWI 14. Brlehom Youn1 C1 1·2·0l bHt Welhlf1910n 5'. •• 111 Hotldey 8owl. U. Ohio keto 19-HI beet Novy Jt-21 Ill Llbort'r lowl. 1'. Mk fllOM 19-H I bNt UCLA D-14 Ill B~Bowt. 17. Arlmna SC.. (,..2-Gl did not ploy. t 11. ~ Ml .. lteW C9-t·ll lost to Mluour1 1•111n ~no Bowl. It. UCLA C1.+t) Iott lo Michl .... D-14 Ill 8tuebof\Mt Bowl. 20. wes11l119t011 Stet• (l.•l-11 Iott to I ar19llem_! -..111Ho1'41ey 1-' -witntaAnlta IUMOAY'S ••MILT'S ......... ,_ .. , .. _...._. "HT •ACI. 6 lurtonp. Super SIM Vlnceflt 041¥-1M s.• a.. , .. uo _ ............. ~~-+---~~---~.~---'-------.----------...;;._ ______________________________ ....,~----~- ' .. SCORE80ARD AIM r-: "'-'IOe't Natlw, OftlMtlc, I WerH-1~11-. t 1 Time: 1:iu 1s. HCOMD llAC•. OM mite. lee Rldle (C..._.l UO J.00 t.41 Nowa<OyeMty (Gwffe) UO 1M P,..._.(...,_) I ... AIM r-4: Met..-... H-'I. Dr••" C:.Stle. Tim.: 1:0 2/S. U DAILY DOUIL• (.f.11 peld tl.00. ntl•D llACa. • lur1on9t. Glove MM COll,,er•I 1.40 UO J.11 •~uflftyC-CGwrr•I 1.00 ._. Attempt ISlbllle) J.IO Atao rKe<t: M1191< Broeckett, •·l'i.tt Seek, tnsplroct A9eln, S ic'• Fre11ctoy, Frlendl'r 1<1no. Sllollt~. H•llllff. Time: t:IS. ~U•TM •ACa. 11/1611tllot. ~ TOflVO 0Mcer IMc:H•rpl S.00 J.00 U9 Glemor-Daisi (Velolll~I J.40 01 ProUdly W. Hell (Toro) 4 ... · AllO rK9d: &.-Merkel, Greuy, ore, susen. Jennle111"'"'8. Time~ t:St. Pt PTH llACa. 611'> lurl01191. Alrrollno I Pierce> 10.40 4.00 uo Ster R-C~> 4.40 J.» Toller-CHMrls) J.» • AllO rK9d: Alweys A Chen<e, No Sflrl ... Notebl• ..... Fr1....Sl'I Una AIM. Time: 1:1' 1/S. U a>CACTA 1a.11 peld $116.JO. SIX TH ltACI ...... lurloflgs. RembleOftJoM CB'rmotl fl.40 .._. J.JO S-en C Pinu'fl uo uo BllMJHllKC........,I J.00 AllO r&ed: klnte Oewn, SllCll N ,,.._y. Pel riot Joo, IC. Flow. Time: 1:22 VS. SllYlllfTH llACI. Ono 11tllo. Cerry AT-(McM.,,...I tO 10 BluSll Wlttl Pride CPlnceyl CoffM -C"-"1 uo uo 2.40 u o J.20 • Alao rec.ct: 'Windy o.c., Roby "°'°· Buoyent LMI. Teyene, Keel l llofl. Time: 1:04/S. U ll XACTA C2 .. I peld SSl.fO U .. lat SIX 11+7 ... tl peld S11.11UO wltfl so,,... wlnlllno tickets h i• "°"41tl. S2 Pl<k SI• <OflSOlellOf> peld S1'2.40 wlttl 171 wlnnln1 tkklis Cllw ...., .. ,. $2 Piek 511 scretcll consolellon peld SDt.• wltll 114 wlnnl111 llcketS (lour"°''"· -scretdl). ' IE IOHTM ltACa. 7 lurlonet. lslendWhlrtcPln<•YI 7 . .0 JM UO ShellOkl" (Hewteyl ,,40 UO It's Tho Ono (Guerre) J.00 Alao iecod: Rock Sofll'I, Merl'• e.oti., Lord Tretldy. Stencherry, Hoede>wn't Dey. Time: 1::116. AP ....... 1......., lo. KNMfltdl r•u-. TlleMet 14 ·~ . T.KreMI_.. 16 ~ ,. ..,.... s ... _ 1 1::: : ·OlmlllllM J I COLLIGe WOMEN ,. t1 n w 11 14 IS 7 2 S..4 J.1 ... u u u 1.6 A.1 o.7 I How top 20 fared H-.. TtiP 20 _,, *'1'1• fOl'ff 1Mt _.. 1. ~Tedi 111-411 did Mt ploy. '~':"'*' c:.rol .... <NI beet St.__.._ J. Old o.Nnloll 1._u ..., not-. .... 4. S.Vlllent cailfonN (N) .. -pC.y. ,,~,~~ ..... ,.... (M) Met ........... 6. llu"""1 (Ml did Mt pMl'r. 1. Nertll Cerot111e Stet• Ct·ll b••I Appeleclli9" ,..._, l•Jt. •· c11e.,...,s.... cs-2141141-pc..,. '· o-vie <•2> l•t .. KMtuc:11.,. n ... 10. 0 ..... (7-1) .... , Or.ice, .... ,,. II. St.,_ F. AMetlft CMI .id Mt ploy. tt. llllnol1 (10.t) beet Montctelr State, 11-n; ••ttolt. JOllll't. ... n. tJ. ~ ,,..,, Iott to Do .. ..,,. 'MO. 14. ~CH) .... UCLA, lt-14; -.i °'*•· ~,. ... u. CeMrMa Cft.I) --,...,_ I 16. kenwcay O·Jl Net l'lortde, '1-41; lle•t Ge«ll-. u-•. 1 17.~llMe(lt·llllMIW.-SU.. 10J.1t; .... ~--YCMIL 102• 11. PeM lteto UM) lleet Dlttrlet of Cotumlll-. 7$41; llOet Felrflold, ..,.,., -.i • Ofllo Stlto, ,..._ It. T-(Mldld-.... y. 20. K--. .. (9-2> tot1 to An-. ...D. NINTN ltACa. '"" mll••· Splnou IYllleNuetel -ls .. r Lllggett ISMMtte) Doren .. c--1 t Pinc••> ..... 3.40 1.40 J.40 uo 2.40 Senor Also rec:oct: •·knl9ht Of Gold, PeJero, Teli-, Gummo Joo. Time: 1:!7. BAD DAY -Buffalo quarterback Joe Ferguson reflects on his afternoon Sunday at Riverfront Stadium after his Bills were beaten by the Bengals, 28-21, and eliminated from the AFC playoffs. SS ll XACT A U· 11 peid .SO.GO. Atte-:33,.U. Loe Alamltoe Bt•ndlna• <'Ttlrwllll J-ll JOOCllYI Hert C.rctou er...., TrNSUA p..,,_ We!'ll Mite.Mil ~key 11,_. Bwd Sch¥•- Stolnmlller Herrl1 ·~ c-Eklns Hert Rotllbtum Je<kson Sto41os Gl••H .._, ........ TllAINa•S Jl4M5SS7 ~ • 4t S1 m 4t 22 2' m » • • aesva1t '" '2:5 2' 2A ,. u 21 2' 1• 2IO ,, 14 SI 11 ts 1' ,. 16 ,. It •• ,.. 1stlllll ... 2IU SS 41 SJ ,. " " 10 1U 11 t 1' 1411 IS 17 11 140 IS t4 1J .. 12 IS t .. 10 11 11 6S 10 11 10 0 10 7 7 ,, 10 • • SS tO S 6 H"'-CAMP9aLL COii Pa•aNCll ,.,..,..,.,, ..... W L T " ' 7 14 •• 12 " ' tJ 21 4 ' 1'4 • ...... Dtwtt6m OP_. .. m t5' SJ 1G 14'f • 1U 111 D "' 1• • 11S lltl M ~ > . uaen Se•lll• Golden SC.le ,,_1. Portl- S.11019911 SenAn-Den.,er H111nton !Unset City Ulell Dell•• NBA ..__DMINm W L Plrt OB 24 • .75' " 11 .m 4 11 12 ·'°° s 11 n AOO s 17 11 .5'1 • 7 22 .2(1 1SV. iw.w...ot ....... JO t .MO ,, " .414 • 1J II .A1t I II • .JS,$ lO lO JO .m """ 1 D .mt~ IASTa•N eote~••IMCll A-....COI...._ PlllleclolPhle t4 • eost., n 1 How York 1' IS Wethington 1J 16 How Jersey 11 " ~., °'"'slell Mllweull.• Inell ON Atlenle Detroit Cl>tceeo Clove!- 22 t 1' IS 1J " u ,. 12 " • 24 ._...k_ Suttlo 110, uan" o......., 1a. MllweukM 122 Port1-1f7,k-Clly 116 Coll T ........ 19-Ho .. .._K_led ,,......,..o- Clowtencl 411 Atlente "'-"'•el Inell ... .IOO .767 I .S1' IV. .441 10YJ .• 7 13 .710 S1' 6 .441 • .41' ' .•7 IO .200 ISV. ., ....... St. Louil Ollc.ect Wlnnl"8 Torome Detroit IS ti ti IU 111141'9 IS IS t 11t UltlU.S II 11 t 1'4 11 tJ • 133 • Hew Jerwy et WOSIWnotOf> G Ptlll-..... eet OotrcMt 40 How Y-et Mltw-.. " Don...., et Oll<eeo J4 Sen AMonlO 411 ,..,,._ >I kenusCltvet s.n Olo90 a Hous.., et Goldtn St ... Sonics 110. Laker• 90 WAUS CONPll•aNCa "*tell DIYltle9 NY 111........ 22 11 S 1'5 Pllll ... "*'9 2> II t t• ll'lttNIW!lf\ II IS • 1• 1J4 .. tit-41 ,. 42 llATTLa -si.n... u; Welker 4, Sfflmo It, Hllll~Hk I, Wllllelftt 27, Donelct.rt 7, Brown I, Yr~ 2, Tolbert •. Keiser 4. Totelt• 4617·1' 110. NY R..-..n 16 1t S 140 tS1 S1 , .. " Wetl\lngton 12 2A J 1411 Boltoft 8ulfelo Mentrffl Quellec Hertford .......Dhrttim n '° , 21 11 • 20 10 ' 20 IS J 10 • ' .....,..IC-. t'2 ~ 1S4 IS 100 '" 1• 171 1• 114 LOS A ... •LaS -~ t, Wll"-tA, • Abchll·Jelll»r 2', eoo,ier S, Hl•on 1 .. Br-SI 2, Rembl• O, Jorden 4, McAdoo t , IO L.Mld~O,McO..O. Totelt: .t2 .. ltto. .. lc.-ty~ 41, Suttle » '2 to '2-110 It LOI A1190lot 20 2t a 1~ to Tllree-i)Olnt goals -WlllC.ms. Fouled out -none. Totel fouls -S.•111• 11, LO• A11191ot ti. A -17,9M. College ICOrH SUNDAY'S aaSULTS Or-a. Ari-St.,, Hewell 00, Orel Romrtl 11 C ...... I .... 82. !"Kiiie Unlwnlty SJ W. k..,tucky 71, MuNey SI. J4 COMMUNITY COLLEGE Saddlebactc ML Santa Ana 15 IADDUllACX -T-». Groftcl 6, H Ill 12, WIM11o9111 •. Doyle 11, F lllCher t Rold I 4. Total$: J7 2HJ "-' SANTA ANA -Wotl It, Welker 4, P•ttal'toft. 14. 8-tk119r 11. w-.1""°" '· AerOf> 12, Guste"ll 6. Totell: M 17·2' IS. Helftlme: ~slleck, ~ T otel foub: Seddfebecll 2J. Seftte Ano 36; Fou141d out~ T-CSedellobecJI), Wllflletlll C Sectdlebeckl. Tocllnlcet: Sectdlobeck bon<ll. Communttv colleae atats GOLHMWHT11>J) HOltOfl B-•n 0 ........ u ., 11.1 PlttAurllfl •, Haortford 4 Buff•lo s. """"''"' t wn11.....-n4,NYlt ........ J Chic ... 4, Detroit J 8ostonl.~S How too 20 ferecs tctno How the Top l'wenty loemt In Tiie =:s IS tn IU 14 114 tJ.1 14 171 1U IS 127 I.A '-n s.s T.......,,._ V~ .. MY lllenden. .,....,.,._ • .... .. """9de4 .. WHH"lllft et OUlllec e..ton .. ~ Ml ....... el St. l..Ouft ti ., ... J 14 .... 10 44 4.4 AU'oCUltd ,.,..,. C9fleft bi•ttttbell 0011 hortoert l•O<ltflls-k: 1. Nortll Cerollne IMI ~ PoM State M'rlol s..so. ot; b90C Sent• Cl•• c1.,n. R•¥1• 2 • u 4 • u '/ I NAIL Indoor AMIHICAM CON'••INCll c-trwDMt&m w 4 4 4 ....... 0 ....... "' ~t. o• 2 ... , J .571 4 MIO Tor-o MOlltreet Jec:ll-llto c ....... 4 1 ..., 4 •• S71 l s .an 1 s ,., "ACIPIC COtlPl•aNCIE ....... Ol¥1s ... l J 500 > 4 m ' s 167 ..._DMU. s 2 714 , 2 600 s 4 .s~ ....._"_ Chi<-11, Jeckton,,llle 6 Tempe Bey J. Tulse 4 ~·­MOflt ... ll, Jec:kMlftvlllo 1 Tor0f>to6,C-SJ Edmonton 11, Sen J-4 Suttle s. Sen 0'-90 4 T ...... tO.-v..,c...,,... .. ""'110fld T_...,.10-t Tulse411Counos Tempe 8ey et Jeckton,,lllo Australlan Open tetn .. • w> ~PlMI Jol\en ICrteti def Stew 0...tOfl, 6-2, 1-4, • .. 1. M ( Krlft wl111 -..,ooo; Doflton .... ·sn.0001. ~ ...... M•rll £dn1oodiGI Kim Werwl<-dol H- Pflt4or·.Jotln 5-1, 6-J. 7-4 (Ed__, efld Werwk k win 112,000 •ecll; Pflll•r end s-t .win M.OOOuclll. lndlan Chemplonahlps ....... 0.....) -• ....... PIMI S.lhl -def. Hendel lel, 7-4, •-> . ._7, 6-4 ._.. ........... 1 .. 1 Anu "-•1• *' Hemr41the A""9 Reo, ' •M ,6-l. I Netlonal Colleglate.CIHslc • t .. •-•Mk' ... I -............. , ... ... Moree! l'reomen CUCLAJ clot. Scott o. .. 1s CStenford), 1-4, .. 2; Rondy Hermon CSMUI clot. Men Dlckton !Clemson>. 6-4, •·2 ...... •• s-m.i.1~ L'rnn Lewi• !UCLA) clot. LI .. S.suno !Trinity), M , 7-J; Louise Allon CTrlnltyl clef. Kele Gompert IStenlord), 6-1, 6-J, Wffkend transac:tlone NOCICllY ....._NedleYLNIMe oueeec HOflOIOUES -A-.c:O<I IN ! rwttnm.N., Doon Telefou•. forwe<d ST. LOUIS ILUES -Aulened 8111 ' S.Wert, .. .,.,,...,., lo Seit Ulke City 91 • tM C.tr• Hoclley L.oeguo couao1 SOUTH CAllOLINA -Homed Robert Mer-cum 411Netk director -tl_.i lllm to 0 th,.._,....COlltrlKI 0INll\• Miu CHafltenl •mllOfW JlfWI I.....,> ue.: Golw .... ~ 2. Wlclllte Stele Cf..21 bHt Cll Steto ~~= Full-70-47; lca1 to H«1f) CMol,... li.te, • Bredloy :;:: ~.to USF l.f.14; beet New Me~lco McGee 1 2 U . W1m1ng: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous ro Your Heahh. 8 mg. ''U(', 0.8 mg. nico1ine IY. I* ciprlna by FTC mMhad. • I , I Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Mondw. January •• 1982 .. .. ·:.· BREAKTHROUGH Ireland's Eamonn Coghlan, seen setting the world indoor record of 3: 50.6 last year in San Diego, head s the mile field in the 23rd annual Sunkist Invita tional Friday night, Jan. 22, at the Los Ange l es Sports Arena . Challenging Coghlan wiU be World Cup champion Or.· Thomas Wessinghage of West Germany, South Africa's Sidney Maree and-Kenya's Mike Boit. .... ., Ferragamo wants another shot .. Quarterback determined to prove himself in Canada TORONTO CAP) -Vince Ferragamo's pride bas been hurt and he's determined t-0 prove to r ·Montreal Alouettes' rans be belongs as a startin1 quarterback in the Canadian Football League. "I've never been a loser before but the fans in "H Canada, and especially in MonlreaJ, think or me 1 that way," Ferragamo said Jast week in a telephone interview from his home LO California. "I have to change that." The highest-paid player in CFL history $450,000 a y~ for four ye.ars -bad been expected to lead the AJouettes into the Grey Cup last season after starrinf, with the Rams. ~· , 1 But he ound it hard to adapt to the CFL. ;1 threw 25 interceptions and was put on the reserve list late ,in the season as · .. Montreal barely made the East , Division playoffs with a 3·13 .•• record. "I've had relapse f what happened in the middle of the night many times since the end l. or the season," Ferraeamo ir. said . "I've relived a lot of r.1. things '"·' "It usualJy hits the worst just after games, but in this .. uuoAMO ,,;-case it continued until now. One of lbe good things '' about footba ll is that you have next week's game to make up for what you did wrong. •• ·"But I didn't get 'the opportunity. So I'm ~ looking at it as if I have next year. Personal pride will be part of my motivation in Montreal next n • year ." .,. And he said he definitely plans to be back 1n 111 .... ... (• McCoaMICll MO•TU.UIES Laguna Beacn '94-9415 Laguna Hill<; 768-0933 T !JP backs vie San Juan Cap1!:>l1Jno 495·1776 I in Senior Bowl Boat safety course 11 · HAAIOI LAW~MT. OLIVE Monuary • Cemetery Crematory Registration for a free 13-week boat safety course. offered by the MOBILE. Ala. (AP) -Tbe'1'Wllling backs for B a I b oa Powe r the 33rd annual Senior Bowl will include Squadron, will be held representatives of Southern Mississippi, Baylor. Jan. 11 at the Newport VMJ and Mi ssouri when the teams take to the field Harbor Yacht Club. 1625 G1sle1 AvP Costa Mesa -540-5554 rtHCI llOTHHS 18.L .. OADW A Y MOITUAlY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 IALTZ IHGllOH) 5MfT'H & TUTHILL WlSTCUFF CHA'll 427 E" 171" SI Costa Mesa 846-9371 Jan. 16. The course is designed Nine of 10 running back ~Iota have been filled lo cover all aspect-4 of for the annual contest, and a 10th runner bas been sm all boat handling, •invited. , safety and equipment 1 George Peoples oL .Auburn, Sammy Winder of requirements and rules Southern Mississippi. Dennis Gentry of Baylor, of the sea. Barry Redden of Richmond and FJoyd Allen or The course Is open to VMI are in lhe lineup for the South. anyone over the age of Bob Meyer or Mlssour'" ~ggie Brown of .12 . Registration will Oregon, Del R.odeers Of Utah, ~nd Joe Morris or beeln at 6:15 p.m. The Syricuse will play for the North team. Phil Bates yacht club is located at of Nebraska has been 1-vited to join the North 120 W. Bay Ave. after bis team pJays in the Orange liowl, ofticlals .said. • .T . ka, v· h d . With Morris as lbe leader wfth t ;299 yards and rtpUC IDCeDt ODOr.e Allen -second at 3,569, the 10 runnina backs have put a combined 131h mHe.s of rushing yal"da1• on the ~ during their cn eers. 1 Hill>ecker gaina honor I Susan Habeckerof IA Verne CoUe1e wu named to the Dhislon Ill AJA W womeca'• All· American volleyball ~am tbia week aller ber team eaptund tbe DI.WO. &ounaameot. )labeebr, a tr.a.ate ol Matif O!ll; JM _. Oran1e Cout Collete. WH et1•••~ie ·u.e all·touument t.eam at CODel..._ '11 , .. weekeiad'a toumamtDt when La Verne won Ill three atraiahl 11mes over Linfleld, Ore10D Collete. NEW YORK U~P > -Forwards Kelly Tripucka of the Detroit P1'tom and Jay Vincen~ ol the l>aUas Maverick• TueM111 were named winners of the NBA Roollle ollhe lloatla award for December. It was the second comeeuthe mOGtb e.eb player bu woo the award. Tri~ka. wbo toot Id~-... ol mon pl1ytnc tlme due to lnjuriea by teamm._ lllu Tbomu .... John Lana. avera.1~1.1·~ .ad four .... pet • .,........, ..... Pl•11D1 u ....... flf •'t t ~ Vblcea&. wllo lllliJ ....... I llftlll' teammate Maril Apin'e ,._...a IMJne lD bla rtlbt foot oCl Dec. t , •YWllM 21.1 pG6atl ID Ml ellbt stuta. D A I L y p I L 0 T EQUAL HOU8INQ I OPPORTUNITY l Nt1t ,,,tMeicr. All real estate ad· verliaed In lbi a newtpaper II aubject to the federal Fair Hout· Inc Act al 1JM which nkea lt Ult1al to ad· Yertiae "any preference. llmllallon, or dla· crtmlnatloo baaed on race, color, reU1lon, 1e1, er naUonal ori1ln. or ao lnuoUon lo make \\ I ~I I '1 \ TAYLOR CO. HI :\I. l I 11{~ '>I Ill,. I ~Hfi . -CAMYOH CUSTOM A IEAL AICHITICTUUL IEAUTY Luxurious Georgian Colonial on best golf course View Site! Beaut design. AbWldant marble & crystal & finest fam rm, billiard rm, 61h baths. $2,150,00>. Call for color brochure & financing. Land included wuUY M. TAYLOI CO .. REALTORS 2111 S.. ..... H1'11 Rood MEWPOn cana M.I. 644-49 I 0 any such preference,~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ limitation, or dis-r- crlmlnation." 11us newspaper will not koowinJIY accept any advertising for real esta~ which is m viola. Uonoltbelaw. ~IFIED INDEX J1lllllY•ktll 642-5671 lllOIS . ~ ....... ,. .... .. dliocll .... .... ... ,.,., .. ,,.,, IE:wo I.., n. DAILY PllOT_....., ................ ...--...,. HOUSH FOi SAU IMJ-llM Onta llALISTATI t:IM·JtM UHTAU ) ...... ,. IUStMESS. INmTMB4T ~I Mlf·MH AMIOJMCIMIHTS "" LOST I fOUMO UM P'llSOMAU UM HH1CI DlllCTOIY .... SCMOOLSI IMSTaUCTIOH "" JOIS WANTID 7175 HBIWAHTED 71M liaCHAHDISI ...... ,. Fl&TOYOU 1'4S IOAn&MAD4E ~ ..... ttfO TUHSPOIT A TIOH ~ .... , ... AUTOMOM.IS '"'·"74 Dalebout Bay &Beach . Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COME WITH US. . .TO CORONA DEL MAR. South of highway T\\o :.tory T\\o bedroom dollhouse 111 front One bedroom unit in rear. Two ('<tr ~Ae $299,500 . I 6 I 7 WESTCUFf DR.. M.I . 631 -7300 alOIS: Act.trli1en ...,dteckteMirads cWy .ct reporl .,... ron 6-dlahty. TN DAILY PILOT os._s ...., for .... first lacorrect iaHrtlo• Olly. "-"forW. ••••••••••••••••••••••• GIMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PllV ACY rLUS Withlhls4 Br. fenred in. pool home on a qwel rul· de-sac in Easlsade Coi.la Mesa. A Mautaful bark yard, with covered patio & a toty f1replare in the hvmg room There's 1n>~' Assumable loans I and an an1uous l>eller Only $169,900 Call !119-53'70 ~LLSTATE $93,500 13.6% Ter!Tl!:>' j\;oquahf~1111t 4. fan1as11c .ifford.ihlt' home walh pm a1 y l'm ered enlfl. lorma I II\ 111g room, added f3 m1h r 0 0 m \lo I I ~. b r I I k fireplace 3 bui.:1' bdrm' 2 baths. \'er)' pn,· •H• rr ar yard Pra1·t· unh $126.500 &«Vi 171 THE REAL ESTATE RS RedlcedSI00,000 SPYGlASS IYOWHER Orean V1e11o $57~.0oo 6 br 4 , ba 410Chq fl SOlll'HPORT MOUU OWNER FINAN<.:.J''H.i IUGHLY l 'PGRAnf':U Offt>rt''lpare• Jar I' 25 Bodel(a ~~ C.ill o-.'!!er i59 0737 ,__~~~~~~ REALTOf\S A HAPPY &,.OSPBOUS HEWYUI fROM RRl!l'E& VICI\ Ir BLOM GR~~:-, GOOD PROPER1'1 ~' "'f:WPORT BF \I 11 6430200 Rain-Storm Coats L*i ForAD.;fn? 129 Lark~pur 3 • I 719 Marguente J • .1 609 11')~Jt :I 615lns3+:l 510 Aviwado 3 • 3 4 11 Dab Ii ti l' 0 n •I. ~ • ma~h<'' Coll for l11fo No need to travel all over I COLE OF NEWPORT town to look for garage REALTORS sales ... you'll find them z51s L ceni Mwr , right hue m Class1f1ed I c ...... "•' .... To place four garage 975.5511 sa!f ad. cal 642·5678 _ ,-~~~~11111!!!!-• BALBOA ISLAND OPPORTUNITY D"11tk price Ndlcffoa on this adorable 2 ........... ~ .ct ftnishad - ill ..-r locatlolL $295,000. POIHSULA BAYFRONT -FEE Lo"9' & tpoclom with forenr VU 11.ar yocM dilb. 2-shwy 5 bed. + potlo & r.•wry. ASRIMlblt ioaft of $900,000. 1,550,000. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC ., RtAL EST ATE Sift. Rm1.i•. PltllJOfl\I M...,..,..,..,. M36 W COMI ~ llS Manne Aw NMior1 Beech IW>M IWnd 611-14" '7Uttl D_.. D DITACHID Ho.. Price of ownership-shows in this spacious 3 BR home on large lot. Close to scbools:sl a ten acre · part. Formal · plus le fam rm. Owner will bep ~.A low '1•.soo Anne ntmey 551.:rroo '. -Wide lagoon view from spectacular i.rehitectural desi1n 8 bdrm , 5 bath, playroom, dark room & den. si.~.ooo. CAIMATIOM ~OYI Spectacular harbor view from 4 bdrm, 4 bath bayfront. 2 boat slips . S2.~.ooo. WIST IAY AYL Remodeled, like new 3 bdrm, 3 bath bayfront. Slips for 2 lge ·boats. $1,200,000. BI LL GRUNDY, REALTOR JI 1 .,, V'"j, lJr ,, 1'1i ~ bl', f}l()I llEDIOOM-COSTA MESA STAITER ••• Only $130,000! Woods and streams surround this charming Costa Meaa &arden home . F.nclosed patio 3 car garqe! Sparkling pool. F1mble terms Just list- ed. Call 673-8S50 STARTER Only 112S,OOO! Assume 181,000 In loans at $832 monthly. Owner will carry. Family room with cozy fireplace! 3 laree bdrms. Sparkbng cooditioo ! Hurry, call 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATERS THE REAL. ESTATERS I I .... ~ -- RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES Owta SAYS "MOVE IT" And drops price $9500 on this 4 Bdrm -in Turtlerock. Assum able loan and owner will carry with low down. Fee land now at $199,500. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 . ... llE llGUI l'lllS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE ... ..,. LA* l9UCTIOH Individual Home -Lrc s BR -Sep Mstr Suite -Good Flr Plan -View City Utes -G~at Ntilhborhood - School, Park Close By -Fast F.scrow -Reduced To 1232,500. A r.Joy Of' Newport'' l.Jatin1 . . --.. THE REAL ESTATERS Walker & lee Reel fstat11 '~9 IS 0 I HElP!! lnveswr's -seller needs mortgage relief. New townhome · your's for closing costs and brokerage fee only . 536-9311 I HERITAGE Rf l\l TOH:-. A ' Sl0.000 DOWN, $1900 mo. LL STA TE· _.;;;==·=;~=·-·=' ;;...:;~a=194;;_2t,;_b• REALTORS E.SIDE CHAIMU Priced to sell now ! -----•--1 Compl. remodeled , 1 of a YOUIEMDOF kind + financina. 1HE UIMIOW! 645-SOIS Kathy, act. Sumiund yourself with a rainbow of color from January through December and watch flowers bloom every month from this im· maculate 3 bed room home in one or Corona del Mar's finest areas. We JUUanlee yo u am. mediate satisraction. tJn NIGEL IJAILEY & ASSOCIATES ' Orange Coat DAILY PtLOTJMonoay, January 4, lW~ RVM* •I ·1 .. . " I --------------- ..., Cle•'•' ....................... •RESIDENTIAL• Avg l sty $.10; avg 2 aty $4.S. C2iri.t 957-8388 Roofing. Fast Service! Xlnt Rd's. Frff Est. 494·9582 '. __ _..;;...;...::=_._ __ 1 Prd. Window Cleanini. •AllS OM&. Y! flteeest .. qual. terv. All'!'ypes. 6'H463 Ty·Rae . 675-0HI ., ............. -Al •=•••......_ · · ........ " .._ 4000 tose-. 4100 ...... I.ti -050 t.o.t&f.omd uoo twpw.w 1100 HtfpW..hcl noo HttpW-..tH 1100 ~·;,i;;;·········" ,,..................... . ...... , ......... "iin .............................. --. . .-................................................................................................................................. . 3124 llwllatf•IHdl J14alt .. 181t1Hdt 316 Proreuional male/ Female. Non·amkr. Age X1nt al'® toe. on Balboa ACCOUNTANT·Tait "'CCAt....-a. A.5SlSTANT M~AG,ER ••••··~··•••••••••••••• ... ••••••••••••••••••• resnale unf11.m lg room »-30.t200lncluW.1at& Pen.,allfoot&autotraf. knowledge nee. Biuyof· A ~·-2~perweekmadult ~llde Coata lleaa, • UDO VIEW Gorg. 2 BR, with ba " kitcb priv Last. April. 6'4-6512. fie to the Balboa Ferry fOQNO ADS fice. 540-1287 ABe 1..r..0~1 n1 N ewp,.ort apartment. beach area . ....,...., ~tain, 2Br, lBa. fp,adb, Lovely Ne rt hob After6Pll,631·912l puses in front. Great AIDES . ~"" rvest:;eft arm ""213.--....MZ-~15='13""'·..;_· ----5 ."!~:\%!1! <>cea!:~~.~~ BA ~~ool~!.~'.:O ~r-~0·A~ ::OT. = f:;~ !~~~e·~ ME FREE ~:m ~~~ei t:~r~n:r~ ~~ ~~:jt 0~r 1-------- peta. S450 mo. 5411.5442 ~. 2 car &ar, fpl, yr-m>, ii.ii incl'd. $100 dep. Patio. View. $250. mo.m.2N3,673-3ll30 call·. pleasant. 3:00.U:30pm. caabdiabuneme:.'J'a~~ Ambti~~ and 1i0-5829. • • ''2 BR'"'° •ots ly. S1200 I mo . NB ~ V!)d,y!,631-0US • I I Wa..w. 4500 ... 4,.5671 weekends ooJy, 631·3555 input. Sal. comm. with girls 10.13 yean old, to • o.~w.. .. 4 880 5 MZ-3"3 Room 6 Ba. Prestiglou.s Bvt Rm w/Pvt Entra11ce ....................... • .,. Newport Beach. exp.Call: 7~0. EOE won one or two even· AVAL MOW! • Poor' Rte Room 1 Br. yearly rental, steps addtt.U w/pool, jac, ten· 'Ba. HB $250. Util Pd. IMDUSTIJAL Aides Inga a week. getting ~~:-~.c~~.~! : ;:~%"~:,s~·~~s to bcb. Garaae parking. nia.pl0.644-7667 536-0'19' VACIFOI ,.. .... , 5350 Weeken4 AM Shift. 7:30 A/C refueler pvt A/C " newspaper su bacrip· pet.a SUS+ S'265d It s ~ "40/mo. 673-3858 f.4erm w/full bath, view, I._... LEAsl · ....................... to4. Weekend PM Shift. airline exp. preferred. tiona. Transportation !UlW epos · Nr, Hot& Hosp. Lis.ht t. nr OC Airport, pref.: ,_.., 4150 COSTAMISA NEEDCREDIT? 3:30 to 11:30. Newport Abo tow A/C &r various and constant adult .19th. St. 5411"°'92· , aay, 2 Bll 2ba, dining mature If, f250. 851-1910 ....................... -one 1500 IQ ft unit. GEt V°1S1 or Master Card VWa .. 4000 Hilaria. NB. duties . Salary com · supervision provided. • 2Br.2Ba.newerapt.alr, rm. lalllld bkupe, gar, u..a..a.. U..&J.. 4100 Garage in Corbna del -Two l900 sq ft units. with no cl'edit Check 642-51161. mensuratew/exp.Calif. ~3to5:30PM ,aslt for garage. Adults, no pets. @5/mo. 642·8129 ~ -Mar ~/mo -Two 3700 sq ft units. GUARANTEED. Write A 1161 Jet. 19511 Aif1)0rt Way rea, 642-4321, ext. f!S.6'5-4837. Balboa C ......... ,............. . 77~7 A all J 1 35 38< to DPL. PO Box 4775, 4.lallrl So SantaAna 3'3 •2Br.1Ba.MesaVerde imto:!to1:e,it!~'. -~MOT&.1 , Storw~ ft~ •Catt .6.42~446;~ LuVegu,Nv.89106 We have several open· " . ~,•. ------9'!1!1!!!! ~.J.~~;'n or N&;~~i.l:!~ion $Ui00.M).ll05 Ji;' ~u-;.-~:v~: EutaideCoata-M~ $40 WoodWOltingOK. GWl>OPIMIMG ~:l!!~Jx:S~~~bfe~~ 111·11 P1•111 .................... .. _.___.._..-....-..;'-=:,;...:.._--846-4380 3 ..... 2INI Phona in room. 2274 permo.M2-ZZ2'7M2·91'TI ..... 4550 ISCOITS for a laser mtg firm. • WTSIDI c....A 2 B '1b kids ot [)pix 2 bk>cltl to beach. Newport Blvd. CM. ---•~ 4400 ...... ••••••••••••••••• EXTIAOIDIMAIE Soldering and ligbl shop .. . Ad-• .-... -. ' j :, 1 bdrm, pool, ldry, bal, -.. r a, • Patio.S700mo.613-J7a 667W ~-Garage for rent OD F I LI d & experpreferred. vertlSI! Sales I cpts, dlpa. Stove, fri& patJo/gar. $405. 17401 -•••••••••• .. •• .. ••••••• Balboa Pen next to Fun or mer Y 0 a We· are a division or ~ , . , nail. Wtr, gu pd. $375. Keelson. Nr Beach/ Yearly, oc~an view, 2 BR ._,A Pl.A.Cl? 1817 Westclifr. N.B. Want 7a)f) (IO\lt'XzoW) $1SO Vicki's Back with the Johnson It JohnlOll and : Exper. newspaper disp ay salesperson to 145 E.18th. Slater. 962-3837 1Ba,2patiol ll50.. . Beu. Weekly Rates financial inst. 7000l.f. ftll). 87S-2M3, m -a93o best. as such offer an ex· : .~die k.ey accounts for Orang.e Coast • 64H7C:W NEW 2 BR, 2 BA, Cele. MU'11Dor84f.318t KitcbelleUea-Pbooes lit.floor.Acent541·5032. 669-0207 cellent benefit package. r. Daily Pilot. s.alary. commission .a.nd • d d It f t Newport Bets 2 BR 1 Ba "Z" Channel Mo I l•l11Nf111nst/ Send resumes or apply ; excellent ben.ef1ls. Growth oppartunJlles '-YC--. sa:·iJ+u~ ~s. no kitchen. $400 mo'. c..-......,1987N,!!!rt EXECUTIVE~ '':::::=' at: Laaltmann Electro .~ for person with career a~blt1ons. Send I Pool and spa in old · · .....,_, ·-a·-_......,.~ --r-SUITES ,, n..: 1 .....,.., "'-ll .-i.: comnlPJP rrsume •o :MarJJ.Y-endPI PO ' C«ooadel 1 Br w/loft l~ Ba r 1 ......,,.,.,or_. ..-Bl.Coltallesa645·9137 .......................171e111 .,,...ca nc., _...... ....... e r. ~x 1560. C.:osta Mesa CA. 921525:No phone ' Mar. I bdrm. pcd · $4 .Lrp c, Eut.bhlf 2 Br 2~ Ba u Npt Bcb *' k IN ........ •••••••••••0 .. •••••••• Avi~dor. San Juan ': ,calls. please. An Equal Oppor· =~m'm.:andl dry ·{~~~ s~oppti~~ enclldaar., pc)o&, frplc: ~~ ..... ~w HllfTACH Opp11 .... tr 5005 ~-~~)rano (otr Aero:;~ .~uni!}'E~e!~r!!· I ;• 8"7-0856 @fO/mo.~. PCB,NB~ Pl.Ali ... •••••••••••••••••••• --7005 .J 2 Br. enclsd saraaee . 2Br 2Ba frpk y IM th b Newluxuryofficespace U>SING LEASE. quit· ....................... EOE M/F/H • Adults,nopets.~/mo. 3 Br. 2 Ba. New p.amt, aoietotieach .• cuace. ear~. 00 e beac • in Irvine's busiest t.ingbuainess.sellingout $31.90 WEEK. Christian Selling anything with a ; ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT : T13W. Wilaoo. 91-4889. carpet, enclsd garage. . Hatel l'OOClll, kitchenette Clelller' Easy Frwy 8C· AU. sup. plies and fix-Pre-School. 320 E. 18th Daily Pilot Classified Ad ~ 330 w. BAY ST.,. COSTA M~I ~A. 92626 : $525/mo. 848-1511 or m-4112 • bMh. '280 up month;b' ceu Avail now' Call tures including. St. Costa Mesa. Special is a simple matter . . . . • .,. EOUAL OPPOATU•otv EMn.uVER .:J IMSTAMTIM! 842-&1. -•ulS · + •teearit.J depol1t. ._,i,..._ .. _ · · "'-' · ·r Program.646-5423 j· ... call""' ~s. .~· .. -·-.···········-· ·········· ......... -...... $f.50/mo 2 Br 1 Ba Apt .. ._.. __ -ZIOI W Oceanfront ,,. _......,, . .,,..,.ay cues, wallng -_... .,........,, ~ lsimlldutct.OK.Smati MAlltBSWALI Bachelor,llOOL.spa.1at-Newport Beach '. 111-1231 64M230 room rb~irs, Beauty ••·· •••.••••••••• -................... . yard, carpets, drapes. 3 Br. Townhouse Apt. ed seewfty. "50/mo, IJM1M. Salon ~airdryers a~d 'Ibiaonewon'tlast Yard. sinile fl double lit. 1alt.. • aec. Dr. ....,.IC)llRC:IS• hydraulic chairs, m1r-· • 'ISLlllJDt. 00·1603 car llrlCe, near a.a.at. Cripe D1-S171 or llW ... ..._ 4110 ft'OmlroomtoI400aq. nn.twveundplanta. • 8-DAY WEEK SPECIAL • -------------"-=-~"'' ffartlour Children OK 11111u11uu .......... ft. FramSl.1.Saaq. ft . No AJao. make-up, shampoo 2 Br. Well-del:orated, MCMB77 · · 'la:'W-BDCONMY-.,_... Cu'e f.or-Qedal Jeue reqllincl. AdJ-andhalrproduets. • • pool, olf street parking. · . Llrrlt -2 .._ 2 ..... tildlltJ ...... Pleaaant AJrport« Inn. 2112 Du· Call63I·!n54or • 8 D s 3 Lines • 8 Dollars• 2 miles from beach. Large ~leanlbdrm,lba. D/W. -· -............... pllere. by paat.CallAll.833-3223. after6,888-6809 I . ay • ¥15/mo. 7WMZ--3957. \'i mile from ocean. ¥..... cmpdr...!tfl>=· dedicated aerlatrlc • Spacious 2 Br 2~ 8 Adults only. No pets. $1a • ~ ........ : --. ?SH• aft s or lnNstmT •WISIO~ * It's easy to place your 8:0ay Week Class1f1ed by mail, and 1t e Tonbome Eastsid!· $375&-2382 ~· • ' ....._ COSTAMISA Over 200 establi~bed •c· e costs 1ust $8 -that's only a dollar a day! To Qualify for this Patio, prage, w/d hit: L..gimltecll 3141 3 Br 2 81 w/Ofta n ..._.... 42M ~~3=:~-i~i =~"!"h~hU:.~ ~~ e special offer. you must be a non-commercial user 9ffering • ~·pool, spa. Upgraded ....................... ...u. lmmtd. 17511.0 ....................... 'ltd.' Avail~ no:_ C:i1 days · smau down · will merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad. and the pnce must e int. Must see. $7~/mo. 1 BR, view, central beat, lie m.1115 ._. Beadl, I IR z Ba, Rellcwomlcs 6'15-6700 rinance . immediate • • TSLMpt. '42-e100 tsSOmo. · . . cm cma1, i blk to bcb. cash flow Call Al • be 1n your ad The cost stays the same whether your ad SPACIOUS 2 bdrm, 2 ba 494-9384 Partly furn. bachelor, Wkly or monthly . Sbare 2 of.c aulte in pre· Ragaui (213) 7C:W-2068 needs eight days selling time o r 1ust one. e upper Bh·ins close to Nmth Laguna 2 bdrm apt ~all lmmed. $400 mo ZJJ..SMllt ltiakm aupo.rt area. 375 -• everyUung 00 pet! $C50 an the~ean in boat Ca· yrty. ~ blk to beach. v___.._ ............... 4210 1q. ft. For detaJla call Mmigr) t. Trnt • ..-. .... 1 ... ;. t4 ·tbld .m.3355 ·--151-GIS. Dtidi 5035 e Use one word 1n each box About 4 words make one ...... .,..,. wv nym. nea uru g. -•••••••••••••••••••• • 2 Br.Adult.s,nopets,new--~facilities, unlt baa Av~l lmmed. Vaulted OC&\NP'BONT2•4 Br. eoo IQ. ft. Ilea Verde ....................... • class1f1ed line of type Minimum ad IS 3 lines, Please print . ly• dee. stove/refrige, pnv deck. Avail 2/1/f/2. Ceiling. Stps to Bc_h. Avail. Winter. Weekly/ area. Sdller~ Co. plainly • enCJpatio. "50. 9'19-44lO. S 8 5 0 mo . Ca. l 1 Garage Door opetator. Monthly. 673-787l. 54.5-4123 Al.I types of real estate • SffA!\P28drm,enclgar, ~:~·5040, {9-5) o, ~,:SR· $595 yrly. No Tahoe coodo. 4 Br. 5 BAYFRONT inv~~=~9. • r------------------------------, • patio, bltns, $425 mo. llU to Northatar. $450 ..,--_,, • Cell 540-11S8 or aft 6, 1 bdrm, Ocean View, 2 S.Ch1Hh 317 wk. Tom857-1868 Primeolfice. 7fi0.i440. 211dTDs • I I 549-W76uUorLinda bl.ts Beach. $450. 271 La -•••••••••••••••••• Fu R t 1 1 d i Calta Mesa, 250 sq. ft. 642"2171 545-061 I • I I • Brea St. (upper) ;t3> NICE· 2 Br. 1 ~ Ba • I rn en ~ · n 10 sl.ite. $175/mo. UUls in· • L&e bach apt, good S79.l6eves. beamed ceiliJlgs, lndry,. WellsSandp1perVillas. Id 779 w ltth St ......,...,. ... ....._ • I I locale. Pvt patio. Adults. 1 br studio. off-street oopeta. Avail Jan 6. $450 ~ ~Im. . • . . SINCE EARLY 1911\ I I • $!116.ISIW.lllthSt,C.M. prtg . d tm.483-2710 •Ccny cottaie S. Laite llt'2ncl TrustDeeds • S 00 2 .bdrm garden apt, pvt occ. ':b:S~~ '~e':h: Q.EAN-2Br, lBa, lndry. Tahoe, l~ ml. to skiing I. 17• STIHT OWNER-NON OWNER • 11 I. I • pa&, garagei la11ndry. .l5l·l34S garqe,nopet.s,$450mo. • or. culnos. Sips 8. 3100 sq.fl. for lease. lthru4units I • No pets, 1 sm child ot. .,..2710 • tllO/DipL 831·5550 Plenty of parking. \It Peter Dobbs, Broker • I 1 O IO I $650.546-9850. 1 BR. view, fplc, decks. block to Weatcliff. 7eMl27 646·6016 ' • &Side Triplex, 2 bdrm. adltaDys' 8no55~l·tS4253 ,· emov,· W. t I 1hr lit ~~~.~ .. !?~ ~tointerlori ~escip. Widow has US for • '! 13.2.0 I • new carpet!, laundry, -..s " ; .. ~~·~; .. si:e•;hi.; 3BR 2~BA, H.B. $225/mo ;;;" 'f ve nil a~· TD's/Re Loans. lOK up. • l I adults, no pets .. $.W) 353 M Rm. BA, Privacy. $2.40. utll. pd. $100 dep. m.:·r• es, ca o • ~-.~.~.~~al73llyl. I· 15.IO I • Woodland. 673-36oo. s:~c~~ua~0·Jt~h. ~ GaryeAvail. 549-3232 •mo•2J615 o.tom execuUve office. ,,,_,.; v•..-• I I e Izc 3BR, 2BA. Ca rpet, Utilincl.49'-3CM4 ..__~ ... ..._............. NB. SteP1 to Bcb, M/F. 400.,, ft Pvt bath with e I Add $2.60 for each addttlonelllne for 8 time• I Drapes. Nr Schools . ......--.._...._ li-25 to sbr 3BR Apt. ..,. · •• 1• IWlh/ • Kids OK . No Pets . HuportlHdt Jl6t ..... ,. ........ .Jto 3tth5t:P50.675-10tl ~mo· .. ~'!!: Penin. fw d /-• I I 557.atn ....................... ....................... ......, · ~. Lolt & ,..... I e P1&Dlf UnllmlJ S E A W I N D Fem. sbr 2 br apt, nr Lovely office on Lido -•••••••••••••••n•• i. I WICOMJOIT ,.. "'"" ·occ. C.M. Refs. Im· Pen. prof. decor. ready '•••1-• II '• I Publish my ad for 8 days starting I • Lr I 1 BR AP t COUMTIYCLUI VILLAGE mediately. $250 Incl. tomovein,850aqft.re· ............ •••••••••• J I Dowmtain. W/Pauo • UYM New 11r.2 bdrm luxury ~3233 ext. 288 as.m.a>Owtdy! Asv wttne.u to accident •• 1 Classification e Yard. Frplc, DW. Pool. Bachelota. tlr.2 bedroom adult apts in 14 plans. l -iavolviq truck, bone ll I e $11. Carport. No Peta. aptalst.onboules. Bdrmlrom$490,2 bdrm Wanted female room· ~~~ &lrl onGoldenwest bet. e Name I MuK, Only. ~. 2650 From-.u~ooo ...... ,_ from $570, Townhouse mite to share 3 bdrm, 3 ..,,.ce ava In sty ab Elll1/Garfield, Tues. • I • 91r1a 59-2"7 ~!! .... UNY ,_ ba condo in Newport law suite lot compaUble ~ _ .. 11.,. •11 Call Add . m FEEi A 6 Cood ! U-UIU -+ PoOla. ten· Beach. -+ utll Con-t«iant. Includes recep· ~. _.., : .... n . ress I • 1'1G.1BRclplll. In a quiet rentals vwptilen II o nil, waterfalfa, ponds! Lou Rand tlonht, auweri ng ICH7a • 91ftcow1·for 000 smkr m..128rot~ . Gas for cooking Is beat· ~) S:..fllfitJ. ~~a~ service, janitorial and sc••lll •EJS • City Zip Phone I • ~'::'rel. 854-W · · ing paid, From San imachmore.CaUCorrine __,.,.,, I mh.5t Oreanfront for Winter Diego Frwy drive North (!14)845-4Z28 IUfWrH • Check or M 0 enclosed D • ... ,..., ll26 ~a.::.~~J' :nee,::::~:=~~= ~~~:a::.:: (714)951-35.\5 WWUl.J . . : •: ....................... s amo1ter 541-1867 MIWPOIT AeeUc -Exen-• Gharge my ad to: zlJl. 2 BA, dilhwaaber. DSl'BL11n' lbr., pool, to eawind Vi,Jlaie. · ,...MA Heave-Summer -·• I e ;.r~aa.0~aua7:i!; :'~p;o,s.!:f.:.:~~ <nt,.,sia 4000 '::!!.0~.~=; '=1':n!:~'!:1ec~ M1 ~'~!11comes e 0 ~ # Exp. I •· I ··-Stesis to the beach. z 61 _ .................... teacher abare your Hall.Allaenicesavail&· riOt OQt and tells JOU • o'. I • •r&EERENT Br. frplca, yearb'. Im· i..,.aatacblloCorlnD, bomeC.M.orB.B.Evea, ble,'~'.l'rom'25 wr.tbethlnb.HetlYS # E I. .... Ba lid aculate. 9850 • rn5. • No. Pactflc coast ICMDll. eq.ft. up, at reaaooable mlocloa bis words • xp. I 6.1;~ i!: oi';::f.~ 8'13.2501. ~1· L1•ua Beach. 14 Ntpel aated comm. reatal1. No lea1e re· nkee it tultJ' If h~ • · • -~ .. GBl•Lantern. OCEAN vtn deluxe 2 ~. w.-.,, IOtdwn hue, pvt tat.• b1, 2 @r!d.Callt'7WOG:r ewrbutoEATTHEll. • L------------------------------'1 !!!!!or•mo. Br. J Bl. deck, yard, IYailable. Low wiateJI nm, n-.atraiibt. '275 <lftcelaCDll,2Dd1t.ory Auatrallan Shepherd, j. r······-·· WE 'LL PAY THE POSTAGE·····-:···----, • >i•. Apt. Near ocean, brick frplc ., ear., 1*1.-... + "uWa . .m4 walk •· tuy accen, lnale, J yn, trl·coloftd, 1 • ....,, cltH, tlalcoay, SIC U ll. GA TI . Balboa la. "° a 1'P l"emale to lhll"I apt at carpets, dr1pe1, paoel-weart11 Hospital ID. • I 111111 NO POSTAGE ' • • -~· Avail. now. •tmo. or leue opt. --~itcbennttte, Prom.PamUlll/mo. ••1q.ft.. Gl·lOIO ,, • I . NECESSARY : • 1 ~YllW =·~·~·~~: = ,..::':o... N.aant':..a.w .._.::_/AUlll· '&~~)~:~a~~·:. l . . . ffl=~~~D : ·~ .... -1.-...,.-. prty, W/D~1ti pool, tblrtbautilultaomtw/ ta• 1C1 ft, "'5/mo, CM. REWARD .• ! ~· • . ~f ~ mo11 i • 1.arp laft 6 atra .t..11. All at11 .... adult oor .IO SIU. __,,W Jle1rtbrob1 family. • ! UNITfD STATES v • rr.:. ik.t ~':1 ~ 11N11t.:••• ••1..t. __. MIWPOIT ~· BUSINESS REPLY LABEL · .. > • e-• .. tu,1 1,, ..... ••··~·----.a..,...rto•n ·_.,.._ ... ., .. _.._Mii •e •• I Ir w/c1ee. ~.rr'-. "H'' u: ,.. Clllllbll. uw.. *• kl. L:.'111'!-..0ondolm •. d/ n. IYIUlblt ar o.c. Loat Dec 2ttb SI r ft FllUT ClAUl'llJMIHtO U,CO\TA#jlUA. CAllfO.-NIA i • ,. .. ._. ftftl a.t4 · •rmo. tat aat. -i.. • AlllOrt.li'om'39w/f\l11 N9wJort 81 • Wilton. ie "' -19 -Mdl, 10 ..... llf•m• . .aHI· ~ ]tll/a», DO ldl, ..tee 1vailablt. Cell v.lii. SllbCbcJte Collar. ~ P()STAOI Wll IE P4C IV ACCIAESSEE • ~Dar• .., .. au. ••.111 ..... aobe.ei.. R•u fuo room ·n. ... •·-rea. •for l ....-'"9. Ill.ten 1• < Orang1Co11tD1llyPllot e aWl!!•<MU. •• . .W.lllcld. w/jri..C. ..U•llft • !PE · UJa..,., <lillr...., dot foud· I• " llgy Plat '! ?<51111 •41 ..t:.PDTYS:. bl. a.ti Clllll& 8'ffe· r, dlld. _.,*la.' br I .. ...,, ric. I .A. Ave • • • • ii., .. ....___......... To ........... hr .............. ttc.1 ........ /It ...... I • I I ~ ........... ....._ ........... •9Ml!Pe7 cm.. .. It ft. I.oat· P1p•J· Gre7 i• ~r.~ ,., •••. ::;:.,;.=~ Tt:.j:.~•~; ~:=:.t'A~ .=-r.:=. =:t:rv:= • ~ · 1o11• • 11i•111ceMt • • ............... -.. • ....... ,. • l&ntt. •im~ • now.llj•. '• IWlll, aU a lrHI, -.: 191111 t-ll9& n: llilll --.-..; 1 CetlllllU CAlllll • ..... j Ill --..... ... .. llHIUIUlllHU ...... Clllll ....... ,_, • 1 ...... , .. ,.,.,,... • •. Ir.... . .......... car..:Mti flll .... ... .... 1111t11 •ra t.., a -..-. Ql'ar. ca.._ l . . J -------- WISPllSOM ~eel tleeu.Jc ::r:-' ........ l'IOD lot tledroale m1,.,., .. , •. Very pleualt olflce. Com· mbaloo b111t. Plt11e ta11f,..appt. 1w-.m1 • I ~-O~ COllt ONLY PILOT/Mondey, January•. 1112 ._. JIM .W 71 W.W 71 ... .W . ........... _ ... , ................. ·-·-··· ...... __ ............ ..... ... ~·~.r~= M'="M.i.~ .. t..r•=.~:: ••llUY•• ~ .. ; .. ~:;:;;~i·;; .... ,---,. c .. I t 1 •• I • ... ... IO IW't. OoM.. ·c:g~~!!!t!•!!!W!!..~I Ootd wd Plaid.,. • ....:. Id COid. .. ,..... ,. ..... • ---· .. 117 ...... _... P'O"· mYJClftATION AT· =•--01 I wW UMlrlludt na.- .._..,, p Is• ~~~~:liJ~C:: Tltfl>ANr. P/Umt. Ap. ~~no.. GlllON IAI hw SU.I· '72• Lo Ml. lllat C.Ond- •• +••II w ............ •·II at ~1 lll:r llMlll ILauo. lTtb • , .. • a..aJ•t •t dard, mlatl Browe -•• -· • •• ,_ .. • "" ve lr?i-,Nl.16 *'"" r •• w/dark trim. t4H. &JM• ....,,.._ ~fwa1eec1 i... ..,, nr. ..... wtz•...,••f!.uTfll ';f:',~"aaaatd. •.~11tt•.•:: ""'1'/llc;Fr IO IClfa. Nn. • Lov· •lt•.•5111 ... I t I y~ CA> bu.I· .. att .... llffpert. .-..-.a• •H• • • • or pre· part • • Oelnt'•C.melot. w ror Nctpt. p!. FAC'l'ORY•7-t7• ..._1.=~tocatttr --•na/eve IGtnt/ 10& productloa. ll:I0.11·'1l S:•T:• ~1 fn.ml .... ,_..,,.. l uo 1uN•RSPRINO ..,..... •11nt1P1fla ........... , .. .,\;..... ...r ·-,~ p • VOtt, Kin n ... with DIW 40 •alt Kawa INIHon 547~ cw. •dWWac llliac NtGndl ..... l ~ buttlta. Call EXTRA rDlll mauraa 11111111n.•u1tltJI. Atk· • ltawuaiJ. sin. 90 ..._ m1eldot, la&M, AllW.M••llF ~Mt-1'15'1 aet, oever utedi worth la&•· Da 7SZ.m7. ev Kawauki,f!O.US.1410 utadat, tte. 11 Mwt, eapertuced i. ¥•1Nr1 Au't ... w . tl4I de . Never f75<m7 tie.,. a dlvltloo of LfMCHAI• ~ mlDded woma-. for Animal Cllnlc ID uaed qlaeea u. worth -...;.;.;;-=,---~---,-... -1.,...... TNHI 9170 Jalluoe • ,.._ aad 11·7 Wei, Coov. Koep. fGr ntaU ea.lea ' ault· lbiduloa Beath Part •· cllb oaly.1. •11 dtl . ...._ _..,_. _ ................... . u tUC!h ofter aa H · Nwpt Bell. aebab. tam manacer poeltJoa ttme.6 ret rTed U!!!!U,yboma,15'•7350 ...................... ICAllP Travel Trailer 4*lilllt blntftt pack .... ort.W Dlll'Mr. dldic•t. llult It.a•• lood rtt11i me. =::., .. e . Kina&iieBe utl UI t· Antique:: Uprl1ht All fJber,ra11, llcht Call or !PPl1 at ..S6wltb111W•.Con· bacqrouod. Salary+ t • e!i ~~rn·: Plano. iut Cood ! ....,..llOlbt Factory ~I l•-•-•-•ml '•Mm•• EllC$ro Op. tad: Mr:! .... fO:!O!' com••eatoG aod com-W,\Pl'Rr.8SfYiAJTJ:R @:' 87>5tl5 r '· Tuned. Stool. $750. dlNd. Call toll fre. '9tlC I 11 Crlfll1 M1•111 lilliilll tlca lac, ,JIOSI Calle..._ PM1 beneflll. PIHH W/Car for Wicker · lfT-!172 1.-.•..a for free w..-· Plfl..U. ,......,, ap.•• Avlador, Sao Jun Ml.,,,,·-apply ID penon, 2 B11ket Lunch 8erv. I Pecu Cbn ror diotn1 Rll'e claNlc 7' Auttrian cdorbtocbve. =A*-U,...,,.''s'!'"w~•. ~~= ... -.•ctatY.at:.· = ~~~fir~m~urt ~~ C.plmano. (Oft Aero r.:a---~p;rrtd, Apropo1, H FaabloD t :»l:IOPll, Mon·Frl. table, tDOea. tub ooly. GrMd. Beaut. butternut SAVEBJGBUCKSI!!. ·-·-. ...., -~ i::.11 .... _... _ P\Mrto). (114) •ta-ea. s.U'i'u·T, Coov. Hotp. ..,.B.orcall: Ea111 Jl50·fl75 Wkly •1s12ors..-oo ·reu.MZ·-."2·1MO 11MTTIAJUI commeaeuratet.o , _ _..._,_ •-f fl>Ell/F/H .._. ........ """'·• "OU ..... 1152. ~be Neat, Peraooa· 0...-Ntl bed att. '75 ,,.,_ ~ SACRIFICE~ aperlf8Ce, Call Or~ ~-~w. 1ordor .. _.--. _... , s.u..r..s -•Eatr1eUc.t7t..o747 or trade for Queen. SMALLUPRIGHT """"'_..., .A. ~ ..... ,, .... Deft c···-~ """' ...... ,, w MAID .. PP>' fac.. )oia QI Aft lOAlll for Appoint· CDM. PIANO.CONSOLE MUSTSELL.lf'7·11'79 •,, s:a:..*'rtrd'. · MGDN=SAUS ~ll~~ =N.i~Cz~=e ~j;'.~i:~ =Tc! B!it!!~~~ 1DH1L 1-.0111 Model. with beach . .._s.rMe.,_.. ... 4'Mttl r• er f/Ua. Appty : Sal. comm. wltll esp. -~-Jr . oorta•ur ••------•Olk DiniD& Mt/4 cbn, 'r..t Is 111 &ood coodi· I An .... , t40f,'. 0.... Hardwa,. lOM Call 1510010 EOE 11alnt Is Sec 1uard ' 1w1mwear atore. !1· W ... f1Nat1llll1 new BJ Johna. 1600, tica S7W. CaU 67~ _ ... -.......... ... -=~·~~::~:.:on:: lnlae(WelttJltt)NI. : • ' cceb., 40 br wt, eau•------pertweprettrred, •PP· H..-. tklUed operator S.729,53711(3173) ..,,. .... eedt. pt faat. Coata 11ua ~Service Aeeda fl.ICL=T btt. M. Ilea tbru Fri. PAl'fTM (y; 129 Marine Ate. with xlnt. command of NEVER USED: Sola Is ATTIMT'IOM ~ FArilllid91oc --hod Won ... 1~m4MliiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilJ Mpm. !xpaodiq yout!a lalboelalaad. 1rammar formattln&. Jov:eaeat $300, slau 'u ...... lff ... · en . .., n•1 1, couaaell•I firm bu Salel Will train on Burrouahl dinette 1225, Qo bdrm :?.................... ~-S '." .. -.. ... ----1111 ~~.1t!.!t~iit~: _P'llOd_M_aoa_cer____ ~T"*" .-. for S.5 tharp LADllS'SMOIS Redactron. F/f noon lo $540 Mattresae1/Boll ·Woman'1 Rlpcurl wet T<WNEAUCOVER • .., lWtlor Blvd. SA Maoaaer. Food Service Caner-~Y ror ...._ mature people ~ appUcaUou, I PM. Reaumra lo: 18012 ~. Qo $130. full llO,: alt. CWU>m. az t-10. Ute ru. MG'a, '71· '81 ,1J. C .. IJtl-flNNTfclr !flt· . Bactaround a must! muqer traineet wit.b to Qiotfvate ambitiou. f\ilJ 'ptJUme. Apply In sty Park Circle, Irvine, twin $10. MORE ~! new!•· •1120 Nev•llled, S7S •• Mlttt... Relacmble Hours. ll'r· cm~ tbe futett 1row· »llyroldl. Call2-Spm. -: Cat.by Jean, 1 ~~?1-~a· Attention : 'rnM8>1 Ncldica Ki booU, 7'r\N, llariaGH7'7 lvuns.g aeebaperMCretuyla a.rieal. Good typlat. in&eBet>tflll.NiceSUr· ln1 retail clothlo1 MH.1Zl.ut.S'3.Aakfor -~ .. ._.. Santa Ana. Typlaa. ~=~tpartol roundinaa. Pay Xlnt. cbalu. Excellent op· AQdrea. Palllhloullland,N.B. · Green sofa, ucellent $40. Obermeyer fur • , aborthand, well or· ~------~•ch · WritelteswnetoPOBoll . pcrtunity for tht hl&llly.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Salealluatemenl cond $30; old fashion apreutlbooU,SZS. Bike hllMtytlFw..y! ·~ 'l palaed. &ood ta&eptt•• .-.P.--0 1-resume m. Lai\ID.I Beach. C4 modvai.cs, 10&1 ortenl.ecl •v SZ4.to0 +It Mii a.... bed~ shortt. poatt~~~ rack · ll3HZZ3 ta. d1:1i11'1 S..CW -.., .1· Hilla, baattnc H,.r to · · o ll 1H1, llB'5Z. Attn. .June Nep. individual. Retail or f'IM CaUfoni.a Court 1ttUn1 ~·••nn••••••••••••••• _,; an aque ....... Slor"e .... ..t '75 Pinto VI. lifoet ot~· . ...aary. Cootact ler\ l!!!p!t•acbtalU. tune. manacement UJ>er IUAT• craUoaa ln Oran~• ......... IOOS w/tray S70; 2 antique ..-• 1095 body and all enalne, iis;. L d ~H t•Ol b I I 1 E I I ..-. N......a-p .... p e •H••••••••••••••••Hu beveled ed&e mlrror1 ,.,_ d h .. ueamao .. • ; COOl....fM ... ....___a ........ L epu . xce eot ,, ~ w ia8ocll lljkbo _..&$1.S;mab•Dunca •••••••••••••••••••••••1-partaan up o •. --31173 Del Obit .. Sa• e.rd' Ua. IOO Bayalde , _ _. employ" beaeflta ln· 'lbt Daily Pilot bu an faratpervllioDflTralA· aro • u ~· ll, fbyfetableSlOO&«-tMO LOSING LEASE, quit· ...u,etcin1ood1Jta~ l' JUDCa""1rw. Dr.N!wpert .. acb Youq,eneraetlcperaon elude: medical, life, l.mmediateopentnafora ·iftl. tun or Part·time. barber cba~~91~~ano, SatlrSUn eves t1Qabuaines1,1ema1out Good 11111. doora:,a !!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•m!!l -------.............. .-_ ....... .._ __ 1 needed. Jlu.stbavuome dental Insurance, PBX Operator. El· WOI Ttaln. Xlnt Career IQ!ln,ymore. • AU. 1uppUea and fix· batcllbact, rear, enc: •• COST retallexp. Pleuant aur· penaioa plan and more. perienced prefernd but or Supplement. Call Mr ....._SltowlS. Refrig SlOO: waterbed tans including: radiator. new trans.w Blnkiq ACCOUMrl•• rowadinga Is benefit a. Apply at tbe oeamt wlll train. Excellent 09" Wanihun. 714·5t7·t'771 today 'throu&h Jan 10. $150 comp; cheat of Display cues, waltln& wbil Ir tires. Part out Olt .,.. 1 .. Nn Col A Un Plate apply In persoo, .a&a'S OUTPOST portuotty . .Company S·u a.. ft'ee adnmaloo. Hunt· drawers w /ma tcbin1 room cbaln, Beauty repair. Call for lnforma.;:. •..... t ecowa C Apl'Opot, H Puhlon KOE Benefita. FOi appolat· -• inllon Center MaJJ 4o:'i mimlr and nleht stand Salon nalrdryen and tioo aft 6 pm or wknd$,.. lmDdlate ~II tor PtaatUca ii 0peD for Ex· Ilk N.B. or call: meat for lni.nlew call: Oraace Co'• leadln1 Freeway ' Beach Blvd. $!50; coffee table S3S : hydraulie chairs, mir· ._. ;) Tellen. 111 traJ•· ==..~~~ _ '":21652 Maaaie.r /Clerk ea.an,Extm. cuatom rltlJ:ater la H.B. bookeue SIS; 2 BF ron,abelvesandplant.a. ,,.. We're aa Eqval P· Pref or Colle1e Central office wort ln Hallmlit cards• CU'lt OIAa•ICOAST ....., for . ~roduc· Allliq Tiff La Goodrich AP Radials Allo, make-up.shampoo AlloefwS. ~ • ca~.~=·:r lAV'el "°"In Accouot· Newport Beacb. ~mall exp.pnf.MO-m3 • DAl.YPl.OT illl profeuloo ulea ;.red·~ mp w/20,000 ml ldl $50. andbal.rprod~t.a. ._ ................. -;-l lllllllY In .._ olfi~ well establiahed. DOW. Bay& ptl'ICll. Kat bave 2 yrs MS-s1a j541.Qso 541-5"5 Call&ll-9754 or IMPORTANT Nm peraoa to: HO We are a DMaJon of Aeue send resume to llarteUn& c:c.t.llaa npr. Poeltloo offen ---'""-'--"'-'------.-New ethnic loot sofa, after&,__,. NOTICE TO · J N1.'°rt Center Dr.. J<llN80N " .JOHNSON P.O. Boll 1981, Newport , ... w-&..... !'4aalE~eruity =-·ea'if :r~rco:. =~ c1:!1:4~:r ~~; !~· ~ '~ .. ~~g. s-. '°" RADEADVERERSTlSANERDS ,,, BANKOPAll!RlCA •Offer an excellent Btacb921163. la.ll,.ufttrH ! ~ trareU De Pl $220 -.uuwnewv • ..--....................... " ""'!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l llmlftta Pacta1e. cau Geoenllldp MUllf'EllDIT . ___ or_.af2l_._54t-_1_424_1 ~~o ece. . HV Home. Remodelin& 1'11 Upri&bt Piano ., adTh_!.Pedriceb of itbJ~m,iv. -= or Apply at Laumann MslyEtrands Help in -PIUt••S S 11 .. ..._ aale.C.OUCbandloveseat er trade !or used car. v.., .. 1s. Y ve .c1't •. t.lkiDI !JectroOpticslDc.3305Z Office' Ho,;.e. Oc·-fttlllrr and drainmea wanted Part time for plant ....,..,cwr WO; lg glass top coffee ~78'10aft6Rm. dealers m the ve.h•.ck'.r S9IOITIU.a CalleAviador. San Juan calliaaal Travel, Hours ,.,.~ for busy Costa lleu ltore. Afternoons and New leather upholstery. table'85. 79M839 clualfied advertlll~&c GoodapotlnDuaPoint Caj>htraao EOE a .............. PO~ abop. Mutt bave own -.L-.a... --B'--R .. d fl TY...... columm does not Uh fcrlDdlridultobandte Ill/PIH "· • ~~i;"'w":bi:aveown ••NIN tnltkudbandtoola.AU ;::.,.-.;;i1M"rre e-curome llt~[ea . ....,.s. 8055 llR,.,_ 1091 elude any applicabt(• 11~ duties, balaac· references will be =r,T:1;u:llce ent .............................................. tuea, license, transfer" 1qmlaewaceouu. ct.9ff / •Z74' OP£ll vertfted. ~cellent pay. SALIS RZP for Hw at· ~28 P'llrn. Hsebld Item• Ir Beauflfal Color 1V, 2 yr feea Cloance chargu:S PROVIDENCE COUICnOMS-; Gml!ralLabor $14400 Alllll:YIDEa1tl7t.b8'.I toroey computer --';..;.;..;=;..;;e...;..ves=---1 Misc.$2toSSO. wmty. Ftee delivery. fesforalrpollutioocoo· FEDERAL ar.wlac Marine elec· G~IC Stora1e P /T , 3Co.&alleaa1S4.-t aervjte, full or part· .... me" IOIO 67~2S46after9All. p.!.W.t786 troldevlcecertificatlonsr SAVINGS traillla manafaeturinc pnv~te Country. Club. •t • ='=oe ~-.. , time, comm + exp. Send •n•••••••••••••••••••• Hanes 1060 ._ & W.W er dealer documentaryJ Call-..Wllaunea _ need.I ___ Call .. ~. l .30am· PttYear rr-Reaume to: Brad HARBOR AREA ~charges Ulk EOE 11/P /B ~ a creii1ti l .J!Jpm, T\lea. ·Sat. noexperienee neceuary Nellon. Receivable Data APPUANCESE.RVICE .. bor••••••t•b••ed•••11........ 1 .. ,.... lell ot.benriae apecifiedi _ ........ -..--...... ....... --..._-i Clllledlm.Wdealw'ltla HelpdanKennela,lloo 714/!6+1473 mlllltial.10AMto4PK, ,.,..,_, W.U. Karine WeblqUMdappllanc• 'OllCu r . ·~~· 6 ....................... bythudvertiaer. •ea .. __,-----• CMrl.••ccouatt. botb tbur Fri, UM to lPll, ~AL S ... ....,_ aftft' .f -.. mo Pullmn Ln. -We RU recond., cuar. ~· .Lov.ely Dispoaihon. lolh. '°""' 9040 -""'-~=--~----- PACICA4111( dome1Ut • overaeaa. near oc Ai rport. WfOflRCI R":c·~~lONIST. o.tallaa,C!.m . appliuc!!. 549-3077 •. ;J.nJumping ........................ ~ ......... !~.'.~ t UtellWllTll Would COllllder retiree Celestial Kennels Pedlatrltt uper mabn,rap.peraoefor SICllTAIY ~dee. Green Side by lln .. old.s.Mtl0'5 l'l~ff fOl BOAJS WASOMSALI! :: ~~:.ell = =~~~J. S6?~0STISS :::.U7~•~=~ =:=:..e;;: !:fo.L::J,!.~·bu~o~ ;r.aF ~ Cond. m•••c:;.:;::•uun WU IJUnl ::.::i~~~a!"dE:a~:'n~'. [ Savtnp ft Loan, 11 aeek· dreu rtHIDe Is rt· Gorda ·LU, 900 Bayside mltypiq. S-S raume ID&·SSWPll, .-_ao..04 llplapr. llr. Myen. Frost.flee Reine. S12S Stalnl Steel w te every opt.ion available, .a IAI uper1enced loam f.-..ct9 to: P.O. Boll Dr. Newport Beacb to 811 no 1101 t /o Dally tdtf••1-..wr. Xbal MNSlO Drwr •~mirror, S50 lea. ~. Bra~ ~e!: CL AS s I c I I ' Bay 111111t see. Uc.480ZBW; -•j pactaaeu 6 un · lJOI Newpor1 Beach, Hotel/Reat.auraot PUotDOW.•yst.,PO ........, paaitioa lnlae S1a•1/ 1427415 StillinBox.'r\off.$22:5. O\iser. Must sell, will $1115. derwriten for coaven· Calli._, c:am.Qybutbefollow· loll J.511 Cotta Meu ... t.o ...... lln. OflceM•llll Sean refri&. custom uMll-8995•• w . re-cond eng. Boat "19 CAPRICE WAGON.-(. t:iCDal real estate Iqua. illa politiou allable -Wener, tODlroller for Tulia llf& Rep lll>del. dbl door, Z3 cu ft. in &ood cond. Eves.. loaded .. beautilul dark Salary co11uneuarate MvtryDtf•w ..__ .... _ .. !!. i--11[111111!11111111111!!!1!!!1!!~•1-*--........ -----a-n nexible 20 sci br!,p.3$.tn-300 Jewtlry 8070 531-19111 brwn witll saddle 1n-< wit.b esperltace. Ell· O.trZl, &oOd driviac re-,.. ..-.-...--.... • •ICM-.. r-=~====~·1 · . . "••••••••••••••••••••• ' t.erior. Only U IOO miles ; __., ....... _ .. --•I I ·-· .. -•_... a.o.n per wuk. Ell· WMl!tr Ir dryer S75/ea, .. 2.45 CT RUBY . Ap· 1.5' Boston Whaler, 70bp -.·-.--. , • -.. -... ..--1 Clm'd. brWic lllVR. Colla .. , .... Part/ti•• pealtl•• ... ..,.,,.n ~ opportu.it for Pl r1111e 175 gas E · d Ilk """' ..,, ... -' '! wit.h ;e:::•ive com· Mna llleprhit, 11110 RF __ .. _ .. ,_ f• 11 ...... , __ , •-~ •~-.. '1 , _11 1 ·• al iniledatMIOO. W'Lllaell vaoru e . e new. "7t MALIBU WAGON.• "l ......, c-•••ora-•----•-cu ,.__ ··-... ~ _. -J'Oll _._.. aomemater watb ...., urnace' 30 I fcr::t....,,..!.~8688 S.S.900. days. 546·3814. •lltra aa·c· mt'd ·sa'z•' ~at: .UI' r ~ .•. ...~ ,... • 1• -.... B. I IT A G E ~ akllls want· water beater $50/H . ~~ evea,IS7.Q215 ~ w~ au the op"(' lla.DenQyParbia Detiftl" L.A. Times t.o ..---llotpltal la Newport JNVESTll&JllT wlll iletoptbedrlntobuti· 59-1C8 Cllil 1 t&ffh& INh.a..t/ dolll UdllNWFIC $.549S n~ ._.In R.I. Ir C.M. "--~ , '1ood Inell. Approa. It teacla '°' erHtlu -..w. .__.... IOJO s.-.kft 1079 .... ·.c..-A• ~ 1 Mam, S4M-S4SO/mo. -.-: .. u • lloeu/wetlt. No e11· fi•••ela1; 1111 Ill· J . II Aaaoclates -,-. ....................... a.ttr 9050 -.,."•vwa ~ MIWPOIT IALIOA + bout. Dependable ..,...,.,,. !01 ,._. ........,. CaU .,. __ • la•eat« de· H..im -·•••••••••••··~··•• •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• lllOSo. Coast Hwy ; ""'' 1• PIR f ...--1--Schwinn 5 apd cna, aer. ••MS•• Custom 42 ft yatht. 1 • ... -•Beach :.,,. SA .... S & LOAM car1s.Malorfl4...4IC BvvS a EE or -. o I I ltls e I relht1 red. almost new. SI.SO. Save Sl,000 or ~re on Cr u i 5 e 5 , w ha 1 e .._..w-546.996~ UOOlntneAve.,Nll DllllllA.11ht... elderl1 lad1; mobile Mdcal leckOfftftAa-Esper. Wion re-•tlClll'AlllS• m.wstK.attn f\nef)inabowomyou. r Wlllcbing, parties, etc. • E.O.E. · Ml ChaJlen1in1 Poaltloa lam. S bn, $1.51~. 1l1tut E11perieaced. Clhe 19' ~. T1lia A«t.. hy 115 ......_ ................. 10JS own home by Darrell beatrates646-4005 ~•'411/ 1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1 Aullable for U · ..... o.taMesa...... Iii• -1 opptJ for T Wt::· ,OOO. ___,_.. Saunders. 848-4017. C.11 ClilllCs 9120 -::~t~~~V.elc~~ ~~,~~~rcd ,A:r.tt~~t LI ~·~· ,.,. 'I'* old -~f for ~ ,r::;:-,e~i 1i~i!1~~=· -.;;;·2·5:;; .... ::::Aep't HIO ~.~ ........ !!~~ ...... ;;mu~· .. ·~~· MS.5544Dorotby Top Pay for Ri&bt ~:': ~ D~ u:· aew 1oodlea wltb a Ylllee,-.-U.MndenAn,Joc. Red.wood 2x6 3ectlnc. 1 ....... :'!!~!' .......... '79 Crealoc :n. Lo•ded. 'S7T·lllD i.: ~ ~· 4 da11. Noa· ~17~ ac t Qwilledad. MJ,H!!_ .-BlrdtF.at'MEOE H> Ian(; also redwood LOSING LEASE quit ~!lee. Jne. Loran C. '"TOWMI t• <Wfice Mana1er. Nice .MM95 u.••.ao.u-I Newport/llUlto/ll'ree fencing. Lowest price tingbusineu,selllngou~ 8ett BIO' of '&2. Ed Cox llST~ ... Workin& Condltlbna. .......,_1ll1t •~ EXECUTIVE 1uar. Jim or Ken AU. supplies and fix· ertr.914.euo ~1 r> Good Houri ' Ftlnae 1 or 2 Sat a mo. r.osta Experienced accounts an,ytime,646-9885. t.uresinrlucfang: INh. Sllpt/ <~KZ> : ~ Beaefita. Xlnt Pay. 11 ... Ml.zm assistant for com· SICllTAllES Cllh 8035 Dtsplay cases, wailing ~ 9070 THEODORE Write Rau.me to PO 8o1 .,..... merdal lines with major SECRETARY Work temporary jobs •••••••••••••••••• .. •••• room chairs, Beauty ••••••••••••••••••••••• m, Lapoa Beach,NCa'. .,_.._.. firminaurlnanNc!~rtok::!c'h~ doaetobome. l Blue Point Siamese, M. ,.Salon hairdryers and BOAT SUPS FOR RENT 111152. Attn 'u.ne -n.-.-i --rood 'th ,.,_,.... VICKI HESTON 1 Black F. Both Fixed. nydraulic cbalrs. mir· Npt. BCH. 20" 25'. 30'. · " •r' ~-c. I '" peo. Salary com-•oaurate '~IATES _.. nd I u bee r:,-e11 t bll b-" ...... Shots.·5'0-2SOO, ext 352. rors ..... eJvesa pants. 35'~9-SP •. · · ... u • 1 ""'• with e~rience. For ~ Abo h ROBINS FORD . ' '>'AR~OR e~;::J (<,'·!.\ ¥1 \A t>~'i ,)QlO ------ ,. 1. • I t IOCGm• a'OW'll ud bridge !fftcall: (714)644·5522. BIG 8 CPA FIRM Eves, 962-2627 . ti;ialte·up. s ampoo SIJpuvailable. up lo S9'. Part·Ume leadi•I to lniDI afftce. Eaullent l~OIY Penia.m. 1 month Male, andhairprodlK'ts. CdM area. • ft. Call career opportunity for "" _.. • ....,. .w a <ltUU'Mli.I 1•• ... MD Sucnlsy I 1175. 2 Adult Female. $50 Call 631 ·1754 or P e I I y P a t t i s o n . '35 Cbev. Pvt Pt)'. ~.: • ., full-time. P /C book· motivated peraon. CUii LOC,A,.,'" r.A~ ~ ....,......., ea.*'~ afters,-... 714f95S.2473 wkdy1 l·S "::l::a::r111m:.~~ Salary open. Eveninp Temporary uaicnment. 11ort1ace company In °'91 1040 F irewood S2 box . _pm. ______ _ Beacb, crowtb •P· '13Ml14,da71S.5111 1 week January 2Stb Big 8 CPA firm located in Newport Buch hu ....................... typewriter Slt$; off. Mlw-ftw.t. Trw:lll 956~~ _, ... , tal• .. -· """' tbna 30t.h. Houn, I am to Fashion Island is seeking a optSliat for Hcretary -~ram Pu A "C desk $100; tbr SSS; mes ·r-...................... J!1 :;;;;:ate .;tlb";;'. ,,_,Office 10am.6amto2:SOpm, ~rofeSSiODal secretary, widlcoodorpnlutional Q.;;"'·w .. r,·p;t· •:eoUdubl$110;bag Da,wk,monthl46..o651 'llFORDF·J.SOP/U.'Jlfl~ .....i N .. w-..a.. .... ? ...... llust be available for 4 *'111, eye for accuracy 1 h 0 wp llrep. u t .p t y 115. chioa let &Old/white Up to 40' boat. Private. \II. Auto. Trans 6 0 .D--l"""ence. on·llDOaer -1 ~-e ~ .. , hour trainllic clua in ypm' g 75 Wpm, Shorthand 100 ' . detall . • ' 950 53&-GO littl Balbo I I d 10 PS. PB Ins wbl baK 3 preferred.. Call: Kat.it, IMNewYearriClatwit.b previouawtet.Applylo wpm, capable Of working Ab~ c~pe witsh 21J/•M3'5aft6pm. pactin, boxes for sale. min~tooce:O ~Mon· dual tUb, slide wa~. •mo n u tab lh bed ' pencn. J .C. Penney, 3C ed d I v e r I e j o b SIDH TZU pups, AKC, 25cperboll. t.h.lyS7~1285. dow, atep bumper. AM. r.iplewt.ooeedpeopte ==.::;: ~~ca&.~-:1~~rt independently, well organ~ ~·!~~~Jt: moand::,~bOGJy. 833-0336 ...... ...,. 9090 ::=.~·s~Ks~1L°L~ lboillltalwaytcbecktM om dtlrtal experience.• . . . . .and venatile. Competitive I I I d ,... I L' :-. AKC ATABI'lt.lllGamu.1210J -···················· 16500. Utf.8300) p • s..rieeDirectoey lnlM Newport Center Dental t rt• g Jar and excellent O reqU re ' DOD· "uamp OD tne: ' Alltfot""'•• 1-------·I DAILY PILOT GfWIP l40-UZ2. S a In Sa Y smoker, aalary open. Golden Retriever Pup· e«>-siGO:ileo.2'46 llJ $JMlf'( M.S-1211 M -.....;;;=~'-=------t-=.;;&.ol,•.--.=""----benefits. Call: Katie, MO-mo. ~ Just Beautiful! . · UIUHI • a-ev Va ton pick u~r. ·PenooaliUa!! A Weid. equip. one 80 cu. ft. Monthly boat Ir RV Loni bed. 1950. Wi9j' fl CAU,, POI APPOIMTMB4T --------•I Moat Appreciated oxy. cyl. '75, IO cu. fl. 5t«11e for any size, 14 throw Iii camper'. 1• Seentulal Ovtttmat Gift! .,..,1 a~ cr,l ST5'te>!1e 40 cu. hr u cur It y . free rn.m> J (714) 640d200 ~mM hTeMHe. ~ ,:,_1~toUte tank lau11~hin1 ' wuhing 'II ford Pt.Up. Ne,:; 1• EXT. 247 ASM•lt81T Seu«/Retrtever fem 7 • · prlv1le1u. Newport tirea. shell. clean, ve~ ·'-mo. Ptnoaallty + • o.toal 300 Gallon Sal.t IMlel. 1131 Back Bay aood con d . S15 Ol ,. EOUALOPPORTUHITYEMPlOYER 1 of our apecial 141-T41l Water Aq.uari~um . Dr. Newport Buth. m,_H B I~ Deed.I Complete w /cab1net, 6"4il0 y 9S7 ' i' =~['(Spa n~.b~I) Wire For Terrier pupa. 4 filter 111tem. UV • 1 1,'. lll>Dtbl, AKC, $3llO ta. 5'erilbtr Decorations• 11 ,....... ••••••••n•••••••••••llllt · Typln1 at 40 (714)GMZ:M Fisb. lluitSee! 973-0838. I I lmtl99 "11 GMC SURFER VAt;., +. M •"••••··~••••••••••••• V.a, automatic tran~.: Dollie lllniatura. AKC . ttltuf.t.... 9~40 =dlac> brake,.!;;; Ae.e CCJlltact KELLY re1. M1le1, $300 . 55Pelllillacblne. Work· ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• buckd aeaar.o 1 . SERVICES about thlt hmalet, pG.54M173 ~ W/driUinl Foun· M~Ped. lli11la1 Eaa. bite letter ti~ .Sodmlemporary U · UKC (PB) Amerlcu tai11 6 Caln Box. *300 '1$.CallEvea · 6 map, C\lltom pain S ifi~·Olrt'" l!llklmo~•.$150. OBO.m..11.MPM 547.JOOa cupet pantU01. po 1 ____________ 18tautlfw '1" Blue Foll "17 Pach Moped. lbtu ad. ldtl Is more. (111421111 M Lhua Apeo puppf. Scarf. Like New. Only NewUN•wbeebMIO. <POUT I SHte_ ••,.. v 1c •5 AltC ch ID p. llo 11. fUl-'714..amt S4f.4m n..a.. loWaa. Dtr .. '" b t / sue """--'-' ... ,_.. Bari.or Blvd ... Co-" I O• paper,. • ~1uwufH(HW. '1'7~h moped, oal7 ..... 142·0010 GA llCT-MAMCIAL m.-a •cb.lne $125. Uv rm 1.• mi. I* coad 0.. clrt ftawial plu· Golden Retrt-.er Pupe. l!ap,pkt ..... ~im "75. or JO. Call : -.Ml.--ml=·---~• .. cimc.. IOOd typiDC AKC. Out1taodln1 Newport Beach Teaala ~ 14 ml•l·bu, lt pa~ 6 atctaphae, 1ood P!llp!!. po!. m..1 O•it mem. llOO. tac. ._ ltDlda lipmt II tollfl, n1. "1>•trtlnlil btatflt1/ 117 ,, old •_...,,.._ "R'' _1 • Tninree. ,.11134 ·llilll -..11 ...... u .. ~--• •er, lo ml. ITS·UOI _, LidDVWac• area .--• ......,e ~ .• .__,,. -· !1!91 1 tJ ......... 11•11150'. TC.. To,. saotosuo. ft1 f'bt.8lap \o Detroit wt Miii 1400/()10 '11 -Dod Sh f· Callw.ttm.llTS Pete Boarded. ' J• W . '150. Phooe 1'7·11M • C t .set. 1* v ~--m.a14 t 1 H om .... tr or ,1• •ck ••Cltn AIC lrttll Setler Pup· tllC=• 'J:irt" ttH ~.::!'· j 1: W. Mid ..U ttm tltrb IPMI. Sbotl. XlDt quality. ... • _ ............ ,..... 1 rt El• 1 a at to •ork l• oar a..a•blt.111"122. .._ ...... " ...... '11 ....... RM,,... 6 w/t.eepaklu T ........ Phftr or• GI OW. r. Ptwa. 17r looU 1tnt ... OIO. ..... ltd ' ACJ =IMd atlf •t:=• UC. rr .. to Good WA111'8 MUST SIU 14t·llll •••1 l1tru, j, ~:. ... : ..... ,.. 1v.••'-'IW ... ..... .. . I ,. _. MIC0J9#11 HCl ... CllH al ••• 2·1 IJ6ltlU ............. -i---r. Lat a.aid mtflo(HJ = lbtlllilll eitM; ~.·~ ... ti ,"*. .IWI rtftll .... WAl'IT I : Ut•d OIO -. .::::--............... ., ...... -... ••..:ill •! n · ,_ llUa ..., •t· flllr•n••• a. ..... ililf ..... ='-11--~ -···--·~-· .. -·. I ·-"ff'!!le=~ ~-·· I 7 ...... .,,, 1111, -...... =-····· ..... .. la • .... _,HI '•i•ve11, t H ............. ~ ---:;-:rCE.....•.,..Al~ ... lli .... tnm, ... ....., ... -::z:r--.1~-~ ... .-~w Serious Inquiry Qoly): A*forJobn.llMH165 ~- ~ I· lllHj Pilat · .................. · ~ =~-: Beach WEIUY ;-USEDCARS&TRUCKS l'o.. COMP-I N OR : CALL FOR • RH APPRAISAL C'-Cormier DeLlllo .. CHEYIOLET 182U BEACH BLVD. • Hl'N'IlNGTON BEACH 147-6087 or 549-lllt 0 COMMELL CHEVROLET ·'-"!I 1( I• f f4 ' f', : \ \~ ~ I S4t>-1 l00 tHHIU,.a ToP doUan for Sports Can. Bugs, Camper s, 914's, Audi's Asldor U/C MGR JIMMAllMO YOUSWAGEM 18711 Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH 142-2000 WIMIB YOUltUOTIC Ir lllTISH CAIS A TL.AS CHRYSLa.ft. YMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd .. Costa-Mesa. Tel. 546-1934. 3 blockl south ol San Diego Freeway off Hatt>or Blvd. Complete 1b0dy shop Sal•• Service Pwts Service O.pt. open Monday thru Friday 7·30 A.M to 5·30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to 5 P M on Saturday HACH~S 848 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Tel. 752-0900. Call ua, we're the spec1ah11ts 10< Alla Romeo. Peugeot. ·Saab & Maseratl THEODOREROllMSFOltD Modern sales, service, perts, body, pelnt & tire cfepts. Competitive rates on lease & dally renta11. 2060 H1tbor Blvd . Cost1t Mesa 642-0010 or640-8211. Q JOHMSOM & SOM LINCOLN ..aCUIY 2628 t1arbor Blvd .. Co1ta Mesa. Jet. $40.5630. 67 Year• of rriendly (amily Mrvlce -Orange County'• old"t Lin· coin-Mercury dealerlhlp. SOUTH COAST DOMI 2888 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meta. Tel. !M0-0330. RV MtVlc. 9')9Cl1il1t1. ~.ustoin. van con~~ MATCH THE MUMIERS ON THE MU WITH THE NUMIERS IN THE IOXES •• MEWrORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street Newport Beech. Tel. 833-1300. At the triangle of Jamboree, MacArthur & Brlstol behind Vic- toria Station. Salee. Servlc.,Leaslng & Parts. A.et di. ooum. to the public. • MAlllS CADI LAC 2600 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mala. Tel. 540-9100. 0~ County's Largest Cadlllac dealer. Sal-. 8-fvlce. L._. Ing. • DA. YID J. rHILLlrS IUICIC.flOHTIA.c..MAZDA Sales • SeNloe • Leulng 24888 Allele Pnw.y Lllgu~ HHls 837-2400 •. CHICk IVMSOM POUCHl-AllOl-YW 415 E Coa11 Hwy .. Newport BMch. 87~. The only . dNlerlhlp In Orange County with thlee th,.. great makn under one roofl • • ALAM MA.MOH l'CMIQC.SWAIU 2480 Harbor Blvd .. Cotta Mala. Tet. &48 4300. a.let, 8ervfc:e, LeMlng.:·Mr. GoodwNllCh." · • IOI LOM6PM PONTIAC '3900 Buch BIVd., W•tmlnlllr. Tet. ~1. Orange County'• ~ and" larQefl Pontiac c»alenhip. aar.,· Servi.Cl!., Parts. SM CHlftOLD too 8outfl eo.t Highway ~a.::~ .... ,..,- SALES HOURS: Mon.-Frl t-7, Siil. N , Sun. 1M 484-1 t31 54&9987 • SANTA AMA DA11UM 2001 E. 17th Street, ~ Alt& Tel. 5151-7811. Your Original Oedl~t.d Da'*tn ~· MllACUMAIDA W.'ve ~I our new looellalt ta 1425....., Snet, · eo.ea Meal. Tat. 546 3334. 8tap bra~ our braid new lhoMoom end ... why ... ,..,. t1 tMlda ...... In . loutNrn Cellfomla. SalM, 8eNtce. P.-and Leaaing. AMAHmM MAIDA "OllrO.C. .......... ... ........... .._c..- IO'I 8. Anlhefm Blvd., AnlNlm ... 1'20. Juet nontl of ltn'8 Ana Frwy. on Anlfwlim IMI. c.J UI flretl 'WI ARE HAAO TO FN>-eUTWORTH ITI" COSTA MISA DATSUN aM6 Halt>or Blvd .• ~ ~ Tel. S4(H.410. Serving Orange County for 18 yeera. ' Mlle So. 405. •• SUHSIT FOU. IMC. (Home of Wlllle the Whale~ 5440 Garden Grove Blvd .. Weetmlnater. Tel. 836-4010. • PIAt« rllOTO UMCOLM-MllCUIY 8-fvlc. w Part• Department alw.ys open 7 daye a .~ 7:30 ~M. !O 9:30 P.M. 848-1731l .~ IOY CAIYB IOU.S IOYCNMW '1540 Jamboree Road, Newport a.ctl. '404444. 8flee, 81Moe, Par1a And LNling. I" !' I c ntfi:O h r±' ,.. • . ' $ . I " 3· • ,, .. II MONl>AY JANllAHY ·1 l<JH~' OHANGl l.OlJN 1 < < Ai IH>HNIA 2!> Cf NT S .. searCh for . Newport, ·bOater suspended: ., 81 STl:VB MAULE °' ............. An air and boat search for ~ 57-year·old=ew ort Beach yacbtaman y 1wept olf b.la »foot a boat Sat(arday off Catalina Island bu been suspended, U.S. Coast Guard officlala nJd today. Tbe diaappearance of Jerry Hamilton, an auto dealer from Newport Beach, marked the second Ume in the put ~ that a Newport boater baa vanlabed off tbe Catalina coaaWne. Efforts to locate Newport businessman Dean Tyler Jenta, a Laguna Niauel resident, were called off Thursday. Authorities Involved In the searches reported they "presume" both men are de..S. Harboroffidala in A\i&lonaald . . Rain, U?inds close roads in .... northern state By Tl.e Auoelated Presa . The second violent Pacific storm in less than a week battered Northern California toda.y, closing the main commuter highway from Sonoma to San Francisco, triagering mudslides along coastal roads and plunaing the city of Reddini into darkness. U.S. 101 at the Marin-Sonoma County line was closed southbound because of two feet of standing water, and fiooding coupled with winds gusting up to 40 mph snarled mornina rush-hour traffic on bridies clogged with motorists inching into San Francisco. Sheets of driving rain blinded motorists on the Golden Gate Bridge while high winds on the Bay and Penins ula bridges buffeted cars in atop-and-go traffic. Flooding also closed some schools in San Rafael in Marin County. The Hawaiian storm, blowing in on the heels of a colder cousin from the Gulf of Alaska, dumped 6~ inches of rain In 12 hours in Sonoma County, •~ inches in San Rafael, three inches in the <See RAIN, Paae A!) * * * * * * Mor.e rain f orec8st for Coast tonight Only four days old, 1182 baa ao far been the year of the galoshes. And the National Weather Senice reported today that more rainfall is on the way. The chances are nearly 100 percent that rainfall will be drumming on Orange Coast roofs tonight. Wind of 15 to 25 miles per hour also is expected. According to a weather service spokesman, the showers will be heavy at times through Tuesday and continue on Wednesday, when partial clearing is expected. Fair weather is predicted by Thursday, but forecasters said this morning it is bard to tell whether more rain will be falling by Friday or the weekend. A low-pressure storm system that bas been dumping rain on * * * Nortbem and CeatraJ C...,... wlll be respoulble for todaJ'• and Tuesday's rain la Or ... Couaty. . Altbou1b DO email eraft advlaories had bem IMUtecl •fll thll mornln1. the weatlaer service aald U.. warnl.ao mQ be in effect by tonllbt ....... fll from 10 to 20 mota are expeeted tbla evenm,. Tbe Ora.nee County Sberifl"a Department Harbor Patrol IUd the sea was smooth today in Newport Harbor and that no rainfall bad been reported aince Saturday. The weather service said tonight's temperatures should dip into the high 40s with the mercury on Tuesday rising to 57 degrees. · Light rain and snow are· predicted for the mountains with snowfall down to 5,500 Ceet. * * * Weather wreaks havoc in East By Tltie Aaaoclated Presa A blizzard surged into the Rockies today with 85-mpb winds, while cities in the Midwest were clobbered with foot-deep snow, and freezing rains and Oood warnings closed schools in the Northeast. One person was killed and there were numerous injuries in a dozen tornadoes that hit the South late Sunday. A plane crash today in heavy fog near REUTED STORY, PHOTO-M the Fort Wayne, Ind., airPort killed one woman and injured two otbe.ra, brinain1 the total fll weather-related deaths to 31 since New Year's Eve. The National Weather Service luued nuh·fiood warnlnp iD tbe 1ubur'b9 of New York City, meantnc Ooodin& was Imminent in W estcbelter County of New York md at leut four ~ties fn nelCbbotiDI New Jersey. A number of 1ebool1 In nburbm New York roc:L •ere cao.ed because of icy . P'reetlnf rain 1110 closed bundrecla of aoboola across upstate New York, western II a11aebuaett1 and New Hampeblre. Up to 2 feet ot ... 1110W tell la Ute IDODtalD8 of Of..-_. lllto ldabo ...... .., ,.... udleboolawwe-.... ........... HOrw fll oftlHe iDd ,....... ... .... .,.. ...-tbl ....... ..., fll WlaeoM&a aa a ... r·bll...,.. eloao• r•••• •• f••t •• ......... eo9Jd .... ~ . t Milwaukee officials said city buses would remain parked unUl further notice and government offices were closed. With a foot of fresh snow faJling in southern Wlacoru1in on top of several Inches on the ground, moat roads and the interstate highway system were virtually impauable, state police said. Heavy snow also spread across northern Missouri and. Iowa. Still another bliuard bit the Colorado Rocll:iea, •here heavy snow since late December bas built 6~ feet deep in places and touched off bundreda of avalanches. Resldenta were told to brace for wlndl 1u.tlD1 ,tQ.100 mph. Boulder repalerea 15 mpb gusts. , In eastern Kaine, 20,000 people spent the weekend lo lO·degree weather without electridty after a mowstorm. Power wu restared to all but tbe m09t isolated bomea late Sunday and early today, utlllty offielala said. Snow wu comlnf down at the rate of 2 iDctt..'an hour today la ColumbUI, llo. g_.. City and IUR1~ Ko .• 10t I iHbel fll IDOW SuDdl)' 'IDd Topeka, Kau., nealffd t IDeMI. Tllou1and1 of ldabei 1cbook*lklr9 wwe told to NJ homo toct.J • mu1 roedl were llOwpllCked Ud tl'HCheNUI.• ... llnlalod -from ..... • 1Wto1...,-1ta M8YM1tm . , .... • aale force winds were pr~t at the Ume and. that waves were runnlnc five to six feet. Coast Guard authorities said Hamilton was wearing a yellow life jacket, but no protective '!lotblnc. ''The probability of someone survlvina in 56-degree water for very long is slim," one Coast Guard spokesman suggested. The unidentified woman, officials said, raclloed tor belp after the inc\cfent and waa guided to shore by patrol officers. Coast Guard sJ>9.keamen aald boats and a alnale helicopter conducted a lOO·aquare·mlle search of the area northwest ol Avalon Harbor with no auccesa, In the other incident, police officers in Newport Be.acb were preparing today to study the 30-foot sailboat round waahed acround Oil a bet~h lpt week dlaappearance ls a )nyatery. w just westol Avalon. -added that tbere·a no IMic..._, Jen.kl, a Newport stockbroker, that "anytblna auaplcloua' waa last seen aboard the veuel happened. :- Tuesday when be set out fM the Hamilton's diaappearanc. waf. island. the fourth mishap off Catalina ~ The boat waa discovered .... , a month. n Wedneeday with It.a aalll down In addition to Jenb, adnllf and lta eDline ltlll nmn.ln&. 1Nata1Je Wood was found ftoetia;' Despite early report.a to the lD a lqoon off the island oa Newt' contrary, tbe boat's life raft wu 29 and a 73-year-old man fell1 still aboard the beached veaael. overboard seven miles o(t tW' Newport police aald the man's island oo Dec. 17. t' THREE-VEHICLE ACCIDENT -A tow truck begins to move morning. No one was seriously injured in the accident wreckage from a three-vehicle accident on the southbound involving Toyota (foreground>. truck hauling sand and a Santa Ana Fr~eway just north of Jeffrey Road this Kenworth cab, upper left. ~~~~~~...:-~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-::;~~~~~~~-..,~~~~~~~~-. Crash causes traffic woes onfr.eeway Rush-hour traffic along busy Santa Ana Freeway In Irvine was reduced to a snail's pace this morning after a spectacular three-vehicle accident. Nobody sufferedseriousinjury. The chain of events leading to the 8 a. m. smashup on southbound Santa Ana Freeway just north of Jeffrey Road, began when a Kenworth t,fuck cab driven by Gregory Dick of Sunland swerved out or the slow lane and onto the right shoulder and back into the lane, said California Highway Patrolofficersontbescene. Officers said a truck hauling sand, which was driven by Robert Derosier of Ontario, went out of control and nipped over onto a Toyota when Derosier swerved to avoidDick'scab. Although the Toyota was demolished and its driver, St.even Young, 22, of Ontario, and two unidentified passengers had to be cut out or the car. they were all listed in good condition in Tustin Community Hospital this morning. Officers said that truck drivers Dick and Desrosier didn't require hospltallzation following the accident. Suspect fire hits loun~e · Arson la the suspected cause of a fire that did an uttmated $30,000 dama1e to .Xemlmtl'a coclrtall lounge ·and restaurant In Huntfoaton Beach Su.nd1y nisbt, fire lnve1t11ators Hid today. H~ ~ach fin Captain Ro1er lbmer said tbe hl•e orlliDated ln tJae bar area fll tlte buatnell Ill llOll Brook.bunt St., wtateb wu doled 1t t,be dme. Roemer ••Id a P•HlDI motori1t 1aw 1moke 1t U :tt p.m. u4 telephoaed Ule ftn •epanm.t. No hajuri• wwe r.,.... la dae lnetMt. ~ Harbour used for pot cargo I I t l I Police confiscate $15 million worth of marijuana • I By PATRICK KENNEDY Of .. D9lty ........... Los Angeles police say they've broken a major drua smunllng ring that allegedly brought 5,000 pounds of Colombian marijuana valued at $15 million into Huntington Harbour. Related photo, Page A,S. · Los Angeles Police Lt. Kea Welty said today that nine suspects -six Colombians and three Americans from Loa Angeles -were arrested at a Los Angeles warehouse Sunday. The pot and four boats were confiscated, be said. Welty said the Illicit s hipments were loaded oato four 30 to 35-foot Inboard boats in offshore waters and broucbt into Huntington Harbour. From there, the boats were put on trailers and taken to the warehouse near the Santa Fe A venue exit of the Santa Monica Freeway, be said. Welty said the arrests culminated a six -month investigation by police, Coast Guard and customs offlclala. He said fwtber arresta are pending. ''We don 't think any Huntington Harbour residents are involved," Welty said. "It appean they chose to enter at Huntinaton Harbour because it was more secluded than Long Beach." Coast Guard petty officer Richard Woods said ocean waters are beinl scanned today for the mother ship that : originally contained the~· cargo. . Welty described the all smugglers as part of "a ~ drug ring, including smu.,._. activity on the East Cout~" Welty said tbe marijuana unloaded inside the war by the suspects and put hlU vans. He also said the four boatl bad "sophisticated electl'Ollif monitoring devices." ,,. · Arrested Sunday on ausptl of conspiring to smua1l marijuana were ColombJ Edward Rodriguez, 35, =~ Guaman, 30, Manuel C Lula Bravo, Jorge Raaso ..-. Julio Ardllla, all believed to be · Also booked on the aa Pickets demand ouster of Schmitz between 30 and 40. ~ charge were Joseph Peroni, John Peroni, 33, and Fe Diaz,~. all from Los An1eles. DRUCI CIAIT 11111 · Cb ance of raln ·loo lnercent tonight aad Tuesday. Too.lgbt'i Iowa a . ,to 55. Hi&bs Tuesct.y !II at beaches, 82 inland. Detalll . Members ol the Loe Anaeles c6apt.er ol tbe Jewish Defense Leap say tbet will COllllnue weekend picketlnl at tbe Newport Beach bome of state Sen. John Scbmlta until be resiana or ta ousted from the Lealalature. Plcket·clutchln1 protuters aatbered Sunday morninl In front of Scbmlta' So11lua 1D11 bome, denounclna Ma remarb ln a recent preaa release a anU-SemWc. 1 RoulhJ)' • proteaten moiled in front oltbe Scbmltl' driveway for IO mtnut.ea, wavtnc placlldl read._ "Sdunlta la Sebeut.a" and "Dachau Ne.er AaalD." Group me•bera 11ld tlle1 were ... pmi1q to a Selunlta prH1 reteue .Utled "SeDator Sebmlt1 and bit Commltt•• Survive Attack of the Bulhlyt•." Tb• rel•••• lambaated oppoaeatl of Illa pro,..ed aaU·•bortton amead•at aM described one •Loa Anaeles audience u "a sea of bard, lewlab and <arauably) female faces.•• Scbmlta bu been atrlpped of . 'Pate A3. !t~=~~e poata for hla 111111 JllAY Preas JeCretary Brad Evans • aald Sebmlb WU very Irritated A --of e.Wbnlfioll ... ,by Sunday'• pleketlq. Sacromnto f• mor•tftf "He wu com1nf bome from •comp&dbt of Uw • .......... lllaaa wttb hb famil1 wbm be rutoratio11 ot tA• •talc HW • bune~ of radical types CapUol. s..,,. Bl. wavln1 threatentn1 1l1n1," llvauaald. He N&d Scbmlb bu refflved • "cowdl-" deatb tbreata mnee l' 1111 rel•umc bla atawmeat. ''Tbe ...... expeeta UaAI aort of bebaYlOr for taklDJ_ a courapGUI at.and aDd for t.elltal tbe trutb," NW Jhtana. . "U tM f.!elrtt'DI eantlaw," bl added, •we ma, Ill I M d our befl oat tMn ftir • ....-demoutraUOD. We ll••• our IU~tlj;'' ( ....... , .... Al) , .· . j'. I' ll' r I ., . 1. I i I I: I~ 1. I 1. r !'. t: ,. I· l. , .. • 1· ·' '· ~· •, •.: • Oran • Cout DAIL y PILOTJMond9y, January 4, 1•2 · . WAllllNOTON CAP> -N common carrier -..acb aa .. view, lportDt JUlldee loas-diltuee ta&epboa• -to one PU1a•t opl)Ollt1oa., tGday of l5 1peelall1 equipped poet • • IMctronlc mall aentoe olflc• around the countri. •••••ft can UH to t.avt Then. the ...... , will be mputerhed bllla and printed on paper, put ln a e11 ... 'dellvered with ref\llar dl1tinctlve blue-and·wbite all. E·COM envelope and delivered Tbt IClectroolc Computer wltb recular mall. l1lnated Mail Jervlce w11l Pott.muter General Willlam ow larse·volume mallen to· I'. Bolser. announcln1 the )'p111 tradltlon•l handllnf service today, called It "the ethodl In which a letter 11 lateat atep in a pro1reuton ot rted by various pc>1tal cleru tecbnoloetes we have used, to fore beiDC delivered. tran1port the mall" and said the Under tbe service, a· result would be more efficient lDpllQY'I computer"WiU tend a -bandllq" ol computer·1eoeralecJ 11 e via a commwllcadom · mesa es. ......... STUCK -This tugboat remains frozen for Ute winter in the Lake Michigan harbor at Kewaunee. Wis . • #om Page Al RAIN BATTERS NOl\TH. • • ~•kland Hills and more than an ~ch in San l'ra.ncJaco. More tb._n 20,000 Reddin& ~omes lost power at 7: 15 a.m. ·~hen the two main electrical . ,Unes from Keswick Dam failed. ~ overnight snowfall left more }.han eight inches on the city, lrnd snow sWl was coming down ~eavily as city workers tried to ,, Services '> 'Slated for Mr. Hutton :1 Memorial services for iilampton Hutton, a Los Angeles teounty Superior Court judge and Huntington Harbour resident for a17 years, are scheduled for 1Xuesday al 5:30 p.m. at the ~unlington Harbour Yacht Club, rB821 Warner Ave. Mr. Hutton died of a heart %ttaC?k last Monday. He was 70. t l A native Californian, Mr. 1tfullon was a Superior Court '<'!udge 13 years, serving in Los ~ngeles and Long Beach. He retired in 1981. --During Wofld War 11, Mr. Hutton rose from the rank of private to captain. Re served in orth Africa, Siclly and Italy. Be as wounded wh1Je aervtn1 with n anti-aircraft unit in Italy. In 1949, be received an norable discharge and shortly erealler founded AMVETS, an rganization for WW II eterans. • Mr. Hutton also belonged to· e U.S. Power Squadr.lll, the untington Harbour Yacht Club, nd was a member of the South ~•adena Planning Comml18ioo or 11 years prior to movtna to unliqtoo Beach. He also was member ol thf!'Lawyera Club. · He Is survived by his wife une; his slater, Lucile oi ancho Bernardo, and b1I som, amea of Hunllnllon Beach and oho ol Los An1eles. determine what caused the outa1e. Tbe Civil AU Patrol reported that a sin1le-en1lne Jllane carrying an Orinda family - Ronald J . Vaughn, 38, his wife Lee and their 11-year-old son, Donny -from Mammoth Lakes to Concord was lost over Tioga Pass in Yosemite National Park ·on Sunday. Maj. F.L. Beelby s aid a search would begin today if weather permits. The weather service issued a winter storm warnln1 for the northern half of the Siena Nevada, which went from an . average of 17 inches of snow a week ago to an average 9th feet today. Heavy ·snow and gale-force winds promised to make travel nearly impossible in the Sierra and across much of Nevada, with heavy snow falling from Reno lhrou~b Carson C]ilY. Snow ·an<l snow slides closed U .$. 50 al Echo Summit from Sacf3mento to the Nevada state line, as well as parts of Stal.e Routes 88 at Silver Lake and 20 near Nevada City. Snow and lee also forced closure of Interstate 5 north of Redding, and chains were required over the main Sierra highways and on SR 29 near Mount Helena. Snow drifts closed State Highway 9, said a dispatcher for the California Highway Patrol. The road winds' through the Santa Cruz Mountains and leads to the Lick Observatory on 4,209-foot bigb Mount Hamilton east of San Jose. Interstate 5 from North of Mountain Gate to the Oregon border was closed Sunday night when snow whipped by Itron& winds cul viaibtuty to aero, Shasta County sheriff's dispatcher Cberyl Blanchard a aid. 'l'be warmer storm followiq the weekend of snow and lee threatened a rapid tbaw that could' cause ll~odln1. tbe National Weather Service said. c1 .. -...edwet11e1ngn4'MMt1I Al.._ d1p111Me11ll 141-4111 . n. Hnice .. for companl• that aend 200 or more computer-orlalnated mtll•IN at one Ume. The Poatal Service promltea delivery wltbln two bualneu days. Tbe Justice Department uked for • r.U'afttin1 order to block tbe service New Year'• Eve, but I federal court refuaed. Tbe department conteJtded the E·COM Htvlce thfeatena to divert taxpayera' money to subaldlze the service. • Bolser said be wu pleased that the court refused to approve the delay. • "We welc1)ble a f\111 beartn1 . on lht merlta of our cue. Wt could move tlarcM&lh Ule Mrvte., believe we bave proceedM f\ally ahe aalcl. Tbat lt11l would M 1 .. within the law in obtalntn1 than l pereent ol the eo billion approval to •tart lbia 11rvlce," piecea of flrst·clH• mall the be aald . • aervlce bandied lut year. E·COM la the Postal Service'• So far, 123 companies asked lar1eat effort to barne11 for Po.t.al Service certiftcatioa computer technotoay to move The" include 1ueb lar1e firms the mall. The servtceJ• destped u Metrill Lynch Pierce Fenner for flret·claaa maO aent by fc Smith, I~.; Shell Oll Co. and bualneues, which comprllea the General Tire ud Rubblr Co. lar1eat portion of maU volume. Five telecommunications J. The Poltal Service expects a carriers' alped a1reements with nrst-year volume of .,!ll leut 20 tbe Postal Service to provide the million pieces, 111d Karen link between compaoiee' U emoto, director of E·COM com putera and the Postal operaUona. Eventually, up to 500 Servfoe. - million pieces of mall per year Bualnease:s that want to use E·COM are required to pay a S&C> annual fM plua JI cent.a for the ftrat pqe and ftve cent.a for the second pa&e of ~ .... ., •• They wlll bavt 'to pay the comll)OO · carrier separately. The ~ Service expects tbal to add between a penny and • dime to tile cOlt of each tranamJ11ion. While thll la more tbaA the 20-cent rate for ·a flrtt·claa• letter, E.COM relieves bualneas mailers of Printinl the meanaea and puttin1 them into eavelopee. One major way of ustne E·COM will be aenclfq the same measaee to many people. Stiff law cuts druiikeD driving arrests to drive' with a blood alcohol of the new law, said traffic By JODI CADENHEAD ofllleOellY ........... Police in Orange Coast cities attributed a new stiffer law agalnat drin.k.ing drivers for the red~ced number of arrests durine the holiday weekend. Since the new law went Into effect at midnight Jan. 1. police In Costa Mesa have arrested 10 people on suspicion of drunken drivine. •'Ten for a three-day period ia not many," said Costa Mesa traffic investigator, Lt. John Moquin. "Probably the new law basscaredpeople. •' Under Uie new law It is illegal content of 0.10 percent or about oflicer Dave Sens. five drinks. In the past 0.10 "Most were pretty upset that percent only presumed they got picked up after drunkenness and could be fought midnight," said Sena. "They're in court. going to be a little more careful Those found guilty of drunken now. Twenty is a little lower driving will face a mlnlmum. of than we expected." four days in jail wlth a flne from Since a new drunken driving $375 to $500. Drunken driven enfQrcement team started Dec. granted probation will still face 1, police in Newport Beach have either two days in jail and a $375 arrested 238 people on sus~icion flne or a 90-day suapenf on of of drunken driving, a 71 percent their driver's license and .. $375 increase over last year, Sens fine. said. Nearly all of the 20 people In Irvine police arrested only arrested in Ne\vport Beach after one person for driving while midnight Thursday were aware intoxicated. "It's too early to say If the law had any effect, u said Irvine police Sgt. Mike White. "By the end or the month we should get a gau1e on whether it's had any effect." While no fl&ures were avaUable, a spokes.man for the . Hun lington Be,_cb police department said that arrests for drunken driving were down from last year. A spokesman for the California Highway Patrol said that arrests for drunken drivers were down about 50 percent from last year's New Years Eve weekend. Dead baby found in bin said born alive Huntington Beach police have learned that a deceased baby found Friday in an industrial refuse bln was born alive and apparenUy healthy. Officers said today they still bad not identified the infant. Police Sgt. Ed McErlain said Holiday end sparks rush at OC airport The holiday season ended this weekend with a, rush of activity at John Wayne Airport, where most flights were filled to capacity with bomeward·bound travelers. ''It was a typically heavy holiday weekend," said AlrCal spokesman Mark Peterson, who n-oled that the Newport Beach-based airline added five extra flights Saturda)' and eight' Sunday to keep up wltb \he demand. The extra fii&bts were those "saved" by the airline from its average daily_ allotment granted by the Orange Co unty government. "We planned to offer th,ose extra flights when the demand is heaviest," be explained. In addition to capacity crowds, holiday weekends are hectic, Peterson said, because travelers are carrying more baggage than usual and because more unescorted children requiring special attenton are flying. A spokesman for Pacific Southwest Airlines said today its two daily flights from John Wayne were at near capacity tt\ls weekend. Public Relations Manager Margery Ctaig also noted that sick-outs called earlier in the week by PSA rtigbt attendants didn't affect the weekend flight schedule in Orange County. Only one flight from John Wayne was canceled -on New Year's Eve -because of a shortage of flight attendants, she said. From PageA1 SCHMITZ. • • Earl Krugel, a JDL board chairman, said the senator "singled out Jews" in his press release. "We didn't like his associating Jewish people with the abortion movement and homosexuality," be said. "Our reli&lon prohibits abortion except to save the mother's Ule. ''He lin&led out Jews," Krugel. continued, "That ia what the Naals did. Judaism la not monolithic." Evans said Sebmit1 views the JDL "as a sm .. l radical bunch" and Sunday's P,1cketing "as reminiscent of the street fi1htlnc in Berlin ln' the 1930I ... Members of I.he protest srouP weH qubted u 1ayln1 they plan to picket Schmll1' bonle next Sunday. Jewelry, 1lereo stolen in Laguna 8ur1lan entered a L&,una a.uh home t.broUCb a kltdMD 1 wlndow over tbe weekend, taklnt te1A20 lo JewtkY ud stereo equipment. Polle. u.ld tile lriU·lD wu NPOfted bJ W.,,._ Haddoek. Wbo Ii.es OD Hilk .... Drlft. 'I an autopsy performed by the Orange County Coroner's office revealed that the child apparenUy died of neglect. McErlain said there was no sign the baby died of ·suffocation, indicatlng the child was dead before it was placed in the suitcase. Also, there was no sign the child flad been beaten, he aald. The infant was discovered Friday afternoon by a young m•n s ifting through a bin outside 15362 Electronic Lane in an Industrial area or tile city near McFadden A venue and Springdale Street. Police said the man pulled a small suitcase from the bin and found the baby ripped inside. The child had been dead for 24 lo 48 hours before the discovery. police estimated. The Infant sWI bad an umbilical cord attached, Indicating the child was not born In a hospital, police said. The baby was described as a Caucasian male newborn. Police are continuing to seek information from anyone who knows the identity of the child or who saw the suitcase being placed in the bin. Information can be giv!?n to Huntington Beach police by calling 960-8841 or 536·5947. In another case involving an abandoned child, Westminster police say they still have no clues as to the identity of a live wee k -o ld infant left in a cardboard box out.side a medical office building last Tuesday. That child, described as blue-eyed Caucasian boy with brown hair , was taken to .Wes tmins ter Community Hospital, where he was found to be in good health.. The infant then was transferred to the county's Albert Silton Home ror a bused and abandoned children. Babies evacuated froln blaze Eight newborn babies were safely evacuated from the maternity ward nursery at UC Irvine Medical Center when fire broke out. in a linen closet, authorities said. None or the bablea was harmed in the blaze that was detected al 8:30 p.m. s~. but fire Capt. Bill Simpkins s&id two nurses suffered s moke inhalation and were given emergency treatment. Mike Deblieux, hos pital administrator on call, said nurses carried the babies to safely, and staff member ·Bruce Sunrise pushed a laundry cart with burning dirty linen lo a conc rete stairwell landing wh~re It burned ltself out. Simpkins said the fire's cause . at the hospial in Orange was still not known this morning. "We have some investigato~ Traffic toll 312 By The Associated Presa The holiday's traffic death toll climbed above 300 today as the New Year's weekend ended "1d many homebound travelers faced slick roads and snowy weather. As the holiday period ended, 312 deaths were reported nationwide. The counting period lasted from 6 p.m . local time Thursday ~midnight Sunday. who are going out today and work their way down through the soiled linen,'' Simpkins said. Water from a ceiling sprinkJer system leaked through the noor of the closet and damaged some equipment in a laboratory area below . Deblieux said. Huntington traffic fatals tie '79 mark A teen-age mo-ped operator became Huntington Beach's last traffic fatality of 1981 when he col llded Thurs day with a tractor-trailer rig, police said. The youth, Ronald Scott Thomas, 16, of 18778 Heavenwood Circle, HunUngton Beach, was the 28th person in 1981 to die of traffic.r elated injuries in the city, officers said. The figure lied the r ecord number of local traffic deaths set in 1979. The number of fatalities.dropped to 14 in U8>. In Thursday's accident, police said the youth was southbound on Beach Boulevard near Garfield Avenue at 10:20 a.m. in the curb lane, balancing packages as he rode in Ule rain, police said. O fflcers said the youth skidded into the side of a . tractor-trailer rig making a right turn into a shopplng center a nd fell beneath the wheels or the truck. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Grand jliry? Why not? / LAWTON, Okla. CAP> - Comanche County District Attorney Dick Tannery says he will ask that a grand jµry be called this week -even though there's nothing in particular to investigate. . "I per s onally believe we should have one every couple of years to keep up tbe people's faith in government,'' he said. "We haven't bad one slnce 1976 so I feel it's already past time tO have one." I I i 1 I l I I ! AP ..... # JUNK IT -Betty Wilkinson of Phoenix displays the 200 pounds of junk mail her household received in 1981. She says the stuff filled four 30-gallon heavy-duty plastic tras h bags. Slot hit for $385,000 jackpot A Canadian woman won $385,000 in a "Pot of Gold" progressi ve dollar s lot machine at the Las Vegas Hilton, a casino spokesman reported. Slalrley Marple, of Calgary, Alberta, had put $25 into the machine when she hit the jackpot, said Bruce Banke, director of advertising for Hilton. The Jefferaoa Starship , rock band's lead performer Paul Kantner, and CyaWa Bowman, th~ group's publicist, bad a baby boy, a spokesman for RCA Records said. . "She lined up four triple bars on the bottom line or the machine (to give her the jackpot)," be said. "But she had also lined up three plums on the ceoter line, which would have been $20. She thought that's bow much she bad won and she couldn't figure out what all the commotion was when the bells went off and people started running over." Witnessing the birth of the 5-pound, 6-ounce baby was Grace Stick. the mother of Kant.ner's first two children, according to Barbara Pepe of RCA. Pop m.ielu .._., ._. mar-rl•cl 1111 lonatlm• II r ltrlend. actre11 ·model •••• Ceellle, Boao•a' pubUct.t 1ald. About IO people att-.cl oaacll.Ulbt cer•IDOBJ led by mlnlater Gres A.a•arMa at A.apen (Colo .) DOD•dtDOmlnatiODal Prtaee of Peace Cbureb, aloaN Grall& laid. It WU tbe tblrd tmarrt.,. for ~i..!'' and itbe flnt tor lb. , II. Clla.Ml&y ._., tbe frOOm'a 12·YJ::-o!d dau1bter by bla aee marrtaae to Oler - Ill• partner ill an U-year mualeal collaboratlon -WM one of four brldeamalda, Grant Hid. The otbert were model Lia Treadwell, 'Mell11• Clark and A•• Parke. Actreu lllml a.a• wa1 maid ol honor. .. u .s. ·supreme Couri Justice Wllllaa B. ..._. ... ls back bome from a ~pttal where be WU treated foe a wltbdrawal reaction to a cut in the dolue of a dru1 be was taldna for back pain, a doctor.aays. Rehnquist , 57 , waa r-eleased from Geor1e Washington University Hospital in Waahinaton on Sunctay. He had suffered temporary "4faturbances In mental clarity" but le "in a clear mental state now," said hospital spokesman Dr. Dellllla O'Leary. The Supreme Court ia scheduled to reconvene Jan. 11, but a court spokesman, BarreU McGlll'll, said be did not know when Rehnquist would return to work. Katlaryn Jean Wlal&mlre b ecame Houston's first woman mayor, pled1ing fiscal responsibility i n dealing with the problems of the nation's fifth largest city. "I want to tell you bow proud I am to ~tand here today as the 48tb mayor of my hometown. I am eager to begin our work, and I am determined to do a good job for you," said the 35·year-old certified public accountant and former city controller. The mayor, who stressed her business backaround and fiscal conservatism during the campaign, swept into office Nov. 17 when ahe garnered 62 percent or the vote in a nonpartisan runoff e lection against Harris County Sberift lack Beard. I ~\' California ~oa1tQ.f C"91\a of rain IO ~.,t to11'911t 8N T......,. toff&e) low 55, llllancl 41. COestal 11 .... M, ..,._61. W-S7. E lsewhera, winds south to 1outh•Ht 10 to 20 ltnob tOlllOht. Wuter1v swell 1 to J faet. Rein ICN'9Milll _....., -contl""lflo '°"""'· ---' ---- Up to two IMhH ol rain was eape<ted ....._,.and T""4ey .._ SoulMt'll <:allfot'llla'I COHt, and - was predicted In the mountains around L.os ... ,.. .... Tiie -i.wt wu llkely to drop lo ,5,000 teet by T..-y 'll(llh UP lo fOUf' lnchft .. pee ...... ""' ~ fr-lhe sou~lnv 1torrn that battered Northern Calllqrnla today, the National WNINr Strvke said. For9Cast.n said that IN Pac:ltk ....... . mN"rll, c--.cl off IN ()o'-COHI, l!Dl) !lad a HrlH of lrontal waves 1 ... ;s,_i:'°!'t':::"'h:':' ~~~ ~ ~ ,. -mtlon«y, pld.lftt 1.111 moldun owr ~h•••n "•'•.,. .. , 0'<1v4e4 "" tM IHI ttw'9t or .... cSeys ll9fore II .lmmIJ ---=== MOU us o. .. o1 <=tr• .,.... -lntasllore•ltfl llMvy ,..,.,.., iiiiiiii _________________ ...,. ____ iiiiiiii __ ..... ~I dlDWft '° 1.000 ..... Ill Pof'flOM Ill Nottlltm callfOnlla. Al"'°"lf' It turned a bit • .....,., today aftlr • dtlP clllll tlWflUlfl the -kelld, ~ lllroutll\ FrtUy ... aJUl9(lild .. remelfl wet .,,. <*" lft Souu-n~. Tlle ................. lllllelM Jk at Las~ ClYI< C....-ew'ly S1111de't. tlle first time that Md ,._.... ... _,., .,,,_ ~ .... last time ...... MllCll t. ""·......,It was *7. S11ftday'1 low, allo J7, ejlllf'MChecl .,,. Jllll. J rK--of J3 for LOI ...... IH Mt In tM. 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Ora• Cout OAJLY PILOT/Monday, January•. 1112 ARTIFICIAL SHELL -This mud turtle, about 13 inches long, has a s hell made from fiberglass at an animal hospital and polished at an auto body shop. A motorist, the.seco[\d A,. .... ~ ... driver to hit the reptile, rushed it bleeding t Lutz Animal Hospital in Lutz, li'la .. where th repairs were ,made. Space politics certainty ~ Organized policy needed, professor says AUSTIN, Texas <AP > -As earthlings venture into outer s pace, they'U take a long with them an invi si bl e but inescapable cargo -politics, says an assistant professor at the University of Texas. Na than Goldman is preparing his students for what he sees as a brave new world out.side the earth's atmosphere with an innovative course called "The Politics of Outer Space.·· The 31-year-old Goldman first taught the course in the spring of ·1981. It attracted about 280 students. He's teaching the course again this year, and enrollment is up to about 360 students ready to study space politics 81J a legitimate science. "The 'Nbol~. y.-orld is being drawn lnto·an mlematlooal web of interdependence," Goldman said in an interview, "and it's being re-emphasized by space. There are half a dozen treaties and a lot of agreements that create a body of law Jor space." Goldman said his course outline starts With current policy toward s pace, cover s the increasing e ffort s of countries other t han the United States and Soviet Union to get there, and then goes into his projections for the future . ''The first part of the course is really an American government course"' that describes the a,eocies, interest groups and processes of the U.S. s pace program, Goldman said. Private industry is wed to the idea of capitalis m in outer space, be said, and that creates ' a need for a coherent national space policy .. ·'Space ls b ecoming an i mportant policy area, an integral part of national and international power," he said . "Right now everything's sort of hll and m iss. There's no organized space policy, no over·archint goals." Once Goldman convinces bis - students that it's only a matter or time before "space politics" ·becomes a common subject, he moves on to every science fiction buff's favorite subject - the future. Emphasizing the caveat "if thin gs continue a s t hey are now," Goldman predicted, "the Russians will have a permanent space station by the mid·to-late '80s. And I believe the Ru.utans will be on Mars by the year 2000. · Where we wiU be, there's M- way to know, because we doo't have a policy." At a conference called "A Case for Mars" earlier this year , Goldman said, be learned that a manned landing on Mars is not that far.fetched. Haig 'banished' in language abuse SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich. (AP) -"Firs t· lime ever," "revenue enhan cement," and Secretar y of State Alexander Haig are among the ··banishments'' from the English language proclaimed by the Unicorn Hunters of Lake Superior State College. The group, which annually bans words and phrases for overuse, mis use or general uselessness, issued this year's banishments after receiving 2,000 nominating letters .from as far away as Paris and Tokyo, according to arch I vlst W. T. Rabe. · In its New Year's Dishonour L;st of Words Banished from the Queen's English, the Unicom Hunters ordered Haig to "speak only classical Latin for a probationary period of six months." "Haig's misuse and abuse of the language is chronic, perhaps i rreversible," said Peter Thomas, senior herald of the Uni corn Runt.era . "There seemed a period when be might have been in remission, but be has now broken out again. Even a si'llple •getting old' becomes 'maturation' in Halg language." The Unicom Huntera said they banished "first time ever" and its cohort "all·time record" because "It is only a matter of lime until they are united into a single monster of redundancy and inaccuracy. ••Revenue e nhancement" made the list as an undesirable e uphem ism because it is "simply a tax iocrease." Also banned were "off·sourciog" as a syno?,Ym for importing, "repository' as a euphemis m for dump, and "sit on it " because it is "one ol the stupidest phrases in the English language.'' One membel: of the Reagan ad ministration, Secretary of Commerce Malcolm Baldrige, was singled out for special h o no rs for bis efforts to e liminate s loppy and bureaucratic language . The Unicorn Hunters proclaimed Baldrige the fint "Knight Sans Pareil of the Unicom Quest" and dubbed him Sir Malcolm of Potomac. The Unicorn Hunters admit that their proclamations banishing the use of ·objectionable words may not always be observed by others by "at least we make a lot of people feel guilty," Rabe said. • Orange Coa1t !>~LY PILOT/Monday. January•. 1982 New Ghana regime fights 'corruption' ABIDJAN, Ivoey Cout <AP> -Gbana's new mll1tuy rulers bave declared '•a holy 9iar" on corru*°'1 and frozen unt bank accoun.ta ol the ousted clvtllq administration, Radio Acer' reported today from the Gbaoalan capital. If aaid Thursday's takeover ol President Hilla Llmann's government by a military junta led by retired air force Lt. Jerry J. Rawlings was "a revolution" not a coup. F Bl irwestigating 1,400 of/icial,s NEW YORK (AP) -The FBI has 1,400 public officials under investigation for possible corruption, bureau Director WOilam H. Webster, bas said. David Brinkley," said Sunday those under Investigation included appointed and elected officials OD all levels or government -local, stale and federal. .4noni&u aoug ht in Vegas blaze me111ber of the Red Brigades, the urban terrorist organization that kidnapped Dosier from his Verona apartment Dec. 17 Two of the others are said to be former members. New Egyptian cabinet seated CA l'RO , Eu·pt <AP) President Hosni Mubarak swore in his 'new cabinet today, including an economic minister expec:ted to re-examine policies of the late President Anwar Sadat. The 33-man. cabinet, led by Prime Minister Fuad Mohieddin, includes 12 new laces. Mubarak swore them in one· by -one during a brief ceremony at his Uruba Palace in Heliopolis, a Cairo suburb. Angels continue march in protest NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -About 50 Guardian Angels continued a 50-mile march to Trenton today to ask that a special prosecutor be named to investigate the slaying of one of their members by a police officer. Al'W ...... SNOW SHUFFLE -Diane Knight takes her children . Audrey, 7, and Garreth. 1, for walk Sunday during Kansas City. Mo .. snow flurries. It was snowing 2 inches an hour today in Kansas City · Easterit .tor11;ado ·kills man, damaged homes Under guard NEWTON, Miu. (AP> - National Guardsmen and volunteers stood watch today over dOlens Qt houaes dama1ed by a tornado that swept tbrou1h this eaa\eM Mlsslulppi town, killing a young man and inJurin1 at least 17 people. , "We are pulling security on the houses to prevent looting," National Guard Sgt. Maj. Gene Maske said Sunday. "We try to help one another. We're just trying to get them Utrou1h th~ night.·• In what little cleanup waa possible Sunday evening, volunteers moved trees that blocked the roads and checked homes to make sure everyone bad been evacuated. But continued rain and lightning kept th06e efforts at a minimum. About 30 National Guardsmen, mostly from the area, were on duty. "We canvassed the area, but we are still ~becking-" for victims said Leslie La.uderdale, Red Cross spokesman. "We haven't opened a shelter because we haven't needed one. Everyone has assured me that they had a place to stay tonight." He said the Red Cross was providing meals for victims as well as rescue workers at the scene. N'ewton County Sheriff Ed Cumberland said the tornado apparently touched down shortly after noon (PDT> with very Uttle warnlne, cuttlnl a swath about 12 mUet long and a mile wide. The winds blew down taU pine trees and power lines, forcin1 troopers to close Mlaslaslppl 503 and 15. 1 ''I couldn't see a thlnl and when I could everythinc was gone," said Winston Chapman, a Newton-area resident who was 1ettlng out or his car ~hen the twister bit. Highway Patrol s pokesman Ken Fairley said the twister touched down 'twice In a triangular area between Newton, Decatur and Hickory. Gregory Walker. 25, died of a blow to the bead, said Newton County Coroeer Earl J . Sharp. "We don't know whether a board blew into him or be blew into a board," he said. "His body was found out in the shrubber y. The house was completely gone. Everything else around was completely gone too." A hospital official said 12 people were brought in to the Newton Hospital. Three were admitted and three others were sent to a Meridian hospital. A.B. Cambel!, whose wife was among the injured , said he heard "wh~ sounded like a storm coming . ·'I got up to look out the window and about that time, the back wall blew over," he said. LAS VEGAS (AP) -Police are searching for one or two men suspected or setting 16 minor blazes at two hotels and an apartment complex. ;I'he Angels began their walk from Newark Sunday. Once in the slate capital, they were to be met by other members of the volunteer, aoti·crime patrol group from Trenton, Camden, Philadelphia and Baltimore. Job cutS delayNixon tapes Rabbit kill angers group, charges eyed No injuries or major damage were reported in any of the blues, which occurred within 90 minutes and a half-mile or each other Saturday night. All were eithe"r extinguished by automatic sprinklers or firefighters. General kidnap, attack linked? VERON A, Italy (A P > Police are looking for links between the kidnapping or U.S. Brig. Gen. James Dozier and an attack on a women's prison that freed four suspected terrorists. Police said ooe of the escapees Sunday is believed lo be a New controller ch ief elected KANSAS CITY. Mo. <AP> Gary Eads, Kansas City leader or the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization, has confirmed that he has been c ho s~n president of the decertified union. A formal announeemenl of the election was. scheduled to be made al a news conference later today in Eads' s uburban Overland Park, Kan .. office. He will succeed Robert E. Poli as president of the union. WA SHINGTON <AP> - Because of a cut in the NationaJ Archives budget, the complex task of getting thousands of hours of Richard Nixon's White House tapes ready tor public disclosure won't be finished until at l~ast 1987. says a top official on the project. Twelve of the 31 National Archives technicians involved in the project are being dismissed because of the budget reduction, meaning the job will take twice as long as had been anticipated. accorcling lo James Hastings, deputy director of the Nixon project. The tec~nicians have been cataloging both the tapes and the 40 million pages of written matter taken from the Nixon NEXT SEMESTER TAKE A JANUARY SALE 25,000 MILE FIELD TRIP SA YIMGS FttOM 500/o to 7CWo OR MOtlE. White House under an act ot Congress. Approximately 4,000 hours of the tapes have never been disclosed to the public. A 1974 law directed the archives, storehouse of the nation's records, to catalog the tapes artd papers and to make public first those dealing with ''presidential abuses of power." Until now, the public has had access to only a relative handful of Nixon tapes -the 31 introduced as evidence in the trials of Nixon aides H.R Haldeman. John D. Ehrlichman, John N. Mitchell , Robert C. Mardlan and John B Connally They are avai lable at t he archives to anyone who cares to hear them. After the law calling for the disclosure of all Watergate material found in the Nixon While House was passed, Nixon managed through suits to delay work on the materials until 1977. That year, the Supreme Court upheld the law and the project s tarted. · Ed ward Welden, deputy archivist, said the budget cuts would fall heaviest on "the newest projects, which naturally have the newest people" -and the Ni~on project is a prime example. "It 's a great loss of momentum," Welden said. "In effect, it's a generation of people getting zapped " BOISE, Ida ho (AP l -A spokesman for en animal protection group has said he is outraged by the inhumane action he saw at a weekend jack rabbit roundup in eastern Idaho. "I saw people standing about 15 fee t apart throwing live rabbits up and trying to hit them with baseball bats, sticks and ax handles," said Michael Bailey. spo ke s man for Fund for Animals. Bailey said S unda y he intended to file charges today against individuals he said he a saw mistreating the hares. SALE STARTS TUES., JAN. 5th "It's a real good academic program and I probably studied hardeT than I did ot school." Dwdk&l~.d UgM11tg Rxtw.s & L-.s ' All .._ .. Mtected .,._ ......... stock, ......... h lleld INlck. M9y -111..tted .. _.... Clf' .... I • kW. To._. Ille -• •sied wted19M .t .... ..._, W1 .W..W. to •lsff _. •-.. .,_ _..1tcorf"""9ct. Semi-Annual SHOE CHANDY ADAMS ........ - Join fhe 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 W01' ld tour. For More lnform•tion C.11 (714) n1-6590 .. Semester At Sea P.O. Box 1527, Or•nge, C.llf. t2l8I As Heard On KEZY AM/FM, KWIZ AM)FM ;If you ·don't want-. to drink- . • I -. ...... .. That's our· business . . COSTA MESA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Call 642·2.134 , . : ELECllllC -. L•Dm m vac1.n. Street. eom. w... (Acfw ........ , .... .......,,, Pha•• 646-3737 /646-8 I 94 ·oro..c ... .,.,.,..,. Lcry-cry P'I• OCTDwill plan your bus triJ! far_,....·, 0~ · No matter where you want to go i~ Orange County, we11 make it easy for you to get there on an OC'tQ bus. Just call us at 63&.Rl.DE. We'll tell you the exact routes afu:l times. And if you need echedules and Ride Guides, we'll 8'Dd them free. ~give ua a C.11. You'll find the bus is your easy·to-Ule ticket to work, echool, ~-111;::=? shopping and~nte · ent in Orange County. . 636 rJE ~-------· • UP 10 V3 OFF and MORE I FLORSHEIM BAI.LY, BRUNO MAGLI JOYCE PENALJO AMAL Fl SELBY A~D OTHERS • w: •• srna • lllOI .. sezn AU.SAIBMIAL ... ~ CHEESE RECIPIENTS Esmeraldo Verdusco. left , and Antonio Lopez hold ft\'l' pounds of c heese whic h their families rt•<·(>ived at the Salvation Army center in Ontario. The firs t shipment of ~urptvs cheese is being dis tributed to families in Southern California. ~~~~~ ~~~-'-'~..;..;...;.-'-'-'~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The National Park service bu U more days to acquire an hlltortc mountain rtd1~ wlth aiM1ctacuJar ocean views and to keep ,developers at bay. A deadllne passed last week that woWd have let the NPS purchase· Sweeney Ridae, 1,088 acres on the San Francisco Peninsula, for $9.6 mllllon. Some congres s men and conservatJonists say that's a bargaln price for the expanse, which civea views of San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean. But The Trust for Public Land, a conservation group, announced after the close of business Thurs day that the parcel would be offered for sale at that price for 45 more days. It was on Sweeney Ridge that the Spanish explorers led by Gaapiy-de Portola first saw San Francisco Bay, in 1769. Congress has appropriated $9.6 million to buy the ridge for inclusion in the Golden Gate National R ec rea~ion Area~ President Reagan approved the m easure earlier this month. Before Congress acted, a $1SO million housing development was planned for the ridge. Park service oUicials let Thursday's deadline to purchase the ridge ror that sum pass without action. 'Under terms of an option granted the Trust for Public Land by the par cel's owners, West Aspen of Oklahoma, the price for Sweeney Ridge was to rise Friday to $10.5 million, said Mike Nolan, a spokesman for TPL. Earlier, NPS director Russell E . Dickinson. t-0ld angry San Francisco a r ea congressmen that he wasn't s ure that the indepe ndent appraisals of Sweeney Ridge's market-value worth -$18.5 million to $27 million, according to TPL - were accurate. H/f POT BUST -Lew Ritter, Los Angele-; Pollet' Depart m e nt d ep uty ('h1 c f of !,pecial investigations. looks ovl'r somt• of th•· $1 5 million worth of marijuana reportedly found .... .,..... 111 iJ \\ arl'h11ust• ra tCkll I" nartotics officers Su11d:1\ in r .OS t\nl{t·lt·:-.. :'\ltnt• JJl'Ople \\Cl'e ar r<.•..,fc•d qft1('l'I"' 1.:,11d Journal tied to nie11tal health Illness rate related to lac k of personal writings? LOS ANGELES <APJ A U ni versity of Southern California Englis h professor thinks the fact that not so many people are crazy about keeping journal!' .anymore might have something to do with rising rates of mental illness. ·'A personal journ al 1s a wonderful way of keeping in touch with your thoughts and feelings,'' says Sherry Bank,s. "It helps people to take a closer look at their lives and to become more !>clf."a""are Shl' nC\tcs lhal th1· in~rght., Jll' :-.omet1mes ,.,o benefa •r,tl that p!>ycholog1~ts l>ftcn rctommend that their pat•ent!> kecp 1ou1 nal~ Ms Banks ha~ wc1rkt:d with psychotherapists 1n deHlopmg JOurnal-wrilmg \\Ork:.hop-; to bl' used ru. an adjunct to ther~py She currently l·ond ucts works hops fo r iht• A1qJC1rt Marina Counseling C<·nt•·r in Westchester "The profes!j1onJI -;tciff <1l the c·1•1111•1 bl·lu·v1•:-. tht ""orkshops ..111• pa111cularll. Ul>cful for d1l'111l> ""ho a r t.• ready to h·r n11n.1tc thc1 ap;.-. '>he said. .Journa l writing gives the C'ls 1·nts i.omNhing concrete to do m the>1r own to ht'lp deal with the11 r<·chngs, anrl 1t encourages lhcm lo take rc:.pons1bility for lhe11 <>'z'n mc·ntal health." she said Shi• also use~ JOurnal writing 1n hL·r frci.hman compos~.fQn l'l..is:-.c:. ..it LJSC -~~~~-==~--=======; .·Polish s anctions eyed SFA 5 Semi-Annual Mens Furnishings Event! West Germans urged to back Reagan move LO S ANGELES <APJ -A chanting. singing crowd or between 500 <ind fiOO people marched m front vf the Wl•..,l c;erman consulate to prote~t that country's faLlure to 1rnpose sanctions on Poland •·SupJ>Ort Rc·agan. not Brezhnev" and Long Live Soltrlanty" were among thP chants taken up by the nrdl'rly de>mo1i:-trators ·on Sunday along WLl:;h1n· Ooulevard, most or them frnm th1• Pnl1s h American Con~rPSs The demon..,trnt1on la.llted for about three hours but Polish American Congress spokesman Adam K1ernick said there was nu response from an51dt.> th<' C'on..,ul<1t(', which, "as believed to hp dost•d High voltage Line electrocutes ma11 LONG BEACH <A P > A weekend ooting to ny a m~el airplane ended in trage dy when a 19 -year -old Lakewood man was electrocuted while tryv1g to retrieve his small aircraft rrom high voltage power lines. Cory Thorpe was pronounced dead at Long Beach Community Hospital on Sunday less than two hours after he climbed a power pole in an attempt t o reach his remote controlled <'raft "He w11s fl ying a remote control balsawood glider whPn 1l got tangled up in the "ires He shinnied up about a 40-foot pole and either grabbed ahold of or touched a wire, and it electrocuted hi m ," s aid police Lt. Norman Benson. the driver. There had not seemed to be anything unusual about him. 'lie collected fares, made the right stops, .. said one rider. However, the man was not an RTD employee. He had m ade off with the empty buc; whire the driver was taking an end-0f-lhe·line rest break and began picking up passengers, issuing trans fers a nd collecting fares. James Gregory Skog, 27, of Canoga Park was arrested on Sunday and booked on suspicion of driving a \ t'hicle without t he owner's consent. A Laska airline acquisitiott stalled LOS ANGELES <AP) -The Civil Aeronautics Board has stalled acquisition of Wien Air Alaska by Eagle Internation al Corp., a company owned by Western Airlines chairman and chief executive Neil G. Ber gt. Bergt has said he hoped to merge the Alaska carrier with Western. Bergt's potentia l ownership of Eagle and an Alaska cargo carrier, Alaska International .Air, "raises significant concerns a bout the possible effects on competiti-9JHA the Alaska cargo 1ndustr-f'' sin ce West.em also carries cargo, the CAB , said. Bergt, who announced plans to • restructure loss-plagued Western after taking the new posts Dec. 8, was also ordered to seek CAB approval of what the board called his interlocking involvement with Western and several other alrllnea. Woman rescued Sdu th e rn California Edison employees were lowering Thorpe to the ground when police arrived at the s cene near Redondo Avenue and , Ocean Boulevard, Benson said. after 81WWCar mu hap , Author1lle!i tnc<I to revive Thorpe before rush m g h1 m to the hospital after apparently detecting some signs or IJCe, Benson said. Riders su1prised by drive~'s arrest LOS ANGELES (AP> -The 19 pllssengers on a rapid transit district bus were somewhat surprised when po1i~e cbarecd on board and arrested SPRJNGVILLE (AP) -A woman· from San Bem1lrdino County wul rescued after injuring her back wblle. riding a snowmobile 15 miles north of Springville in Tulare County. Sheriff's offic:en aaid Lennia Arlene Beeman, 32, of llea&one Md to be rescued Sunday beeaue ~ snow in the southern Siena Nevada. She was found by a Callforala Department of Forestr)' crew ud taken out by ambulance. - HAl'PY MIWYIU • Shown belo~ left: our exclusive oxford cloth button-downs -special/> pnccd at 7 S CJ() Path Cotton and rin 1 "''' ·r Not shown. our exclusive cotton dr~s shirts ~pec1ally pnced at llJ CJIJ <'drl1 And exclusive dre.s shirts-specfal/y priced at 14 90 Pol~e~11·r .1r1d C< tton •Shown, from top right wool and nylon over-the<alf soc/..<,-regular/~ 5 25 the p,w ntA\ 1 tc,1 I! 11r1 Burlington acrylic athletic sod.' -regµlarly l 50 thf' na1r nri.~ 1> tc1r ,,., <111 Acry/1ecrewsocks. regularly 2 SU rhe p.11r now f, form 9n 0m• ~i/f• T1r~ I r • Drawstring cotton pa1am,ls -regularly 18 t;C1 1ht• pa r ,..,, ' /9 'JIJ Plaid cotton flannel pa1ama~ -ongina/1-y .! 7 50 nm' I' CJO '> tu 'L Not shown terry kimono robe-regular/> 57 SO, no~" ./! <JO C uttr,r and 11. /u ·1 • Pima cotton boxer shorts-regularly '9; now 7 20 Si7es JO to 41 (on on bnef\ rett11I 1rl1 j for '111. now J for '8. Sizes JO to 42. V-necked cotton T-shirts -regularly I for 11! now 1 for 'I <.UJ ( tJlt<J'l :.k>t> .P/t•\\ athletic shtrt\-regu/arly J for 1 W. n1J~ I for 'IJ \1/<'' ' 10 \/ • Bal/y's dreu slip-ons-originally 1120; now 89.90 ~I/~ 9 to 1lf\J 7 to l!M Our PH lu-.1\1• 11 •tw/,1• moccasm-origmally 190. now S4 90 Roth m /1/ark 01 h1tJ1\ n '• ·.Hfil't • Cotton ~Iring knit \hlfl\ 14 ''",'<le.I• '> r1, XI •In Men's Furn1shing!i, the M<•n' Store where 1'\l' arc all clw 1h111J.'\ 1 u11 .1f!' • OraOQ9 Coat QAIL,Y PILOT/Monday, January 4, 1982 !.!§.~ .. f.Q.tJf.Q§!]~ ..... !~~~§.~.~l'!~S ~ Htr UICllA•OH &•O ••"9t•O ay TW• llAM» AllO lll"UtlT I • ilow tO choose a nursing home If the ae.,ao admlni5traUon aucceeda ln It.a • anno~ propoeala to relax or to repeal m~ ol the federal rules tbot eovern nursln1 bome standards, their services ud staff quallftcat:loDI, you -the alnady bewildered, even desperate, seeker ol t.bese faeUWea -wlll be even more at t.be mercy of the operat.oN. Tbtre ls no denying the poulbWtles, ll not probablUUea, or a ~vlvat of the acandala that once flmtared the enUre industry. The e<>onomlc background for revjval of abu11f's is close t o id eal. B'ullding construction is tn a deep depression; our population is aging ~ 1Y-[-111-,1-m-1£z rapidly; there is small incentive for newcomers to invest ln the industry in view of the modest retum (3 percent) on privately owned facilities and 80 percent are private; converting underutilized bospl(al.I Into nursing homes is a mere Band-Aid approach. Widespread belief that regulation bu become ove rregulation is the reason the president 11 requesting an easing or requirements that nursing homes must not employ people with communicable diseases 3nd must maintain a safe, sanitary environment. But while federal and state rules may overlap and overregulaUon may boomerang as well ·u be costly to all of us. you could find yourself • victim of deregulation. What can you do, t>n your own, to help find Ule best nursing home for a relative or close friend who cannot be cared for otherwise? -Start by compiling a list of facilities in your area. There are an estimated 25,000 homes in the United States. Make preliminary calls to the homes, outline your needs .· ask about participation in Medicare-Medicaid. -Visit and meet the owners or admlnistrators an'd tour the nu rsing home. Get time off from work to do this during the day, midweek. Don't talre anyone's word for anything. Ask to see each facility's licenses and certificates to check that they are current, and avoid those reluctant to produce them. Both the home and the -administrator should be state-llceiued, and certification by >t he Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals (JCAH> is advisable. -Establish tbat the nursing home you're considering bas fhe personnel and facilities to provide what's needed, keeping in mind that the more ser vices, the higher the cost. Ask about physicians, registe red and practical nurses, health-care aides, therapists, pbarmaciats, social wdrkers, activities coorainators, dieticians -and medical record bookkeepers. See and meet as many of these people as possible. -Discuss in detail what the costs will be, bow much the "extras" will run, and bow you and/or the patient will meet these expenses. If Medicare or Medicaid are involved -and more than 60 percent of all nursing home patients use this public assistance make s ure the facility has been given Its proper designation: Skilled Nursing Facility <SNF> for Medicare or Medicaid or Intermediate Care Facility (ICF> for Medicaid eligibility, and confirm that the home participates. -Tour the nursing home from the patient's viewpoint, not yours, and pay special attention lo relationships between staff members and residents. Don't be put off by helpless, pitiful patients. -Get a checklist of specifics to consider from the American Health Care Association, which represents more than half the nursing homes in the United States. Called "Thinking About a Nursing Home-?" the g°Uiie also includes a list of st.ate nursing home associations that can provide additional information. For a copy, send a postcard to AHCA, 1200 ~St., N.W., Washington. D.C. 20005. -Selecting the "right'' nursing home Is not the end. Expect the patient to be unhappy for at least six months. But once the routine has been set, the U.S. Census Bureau has found in its most recent ( 1976) survey that 90 percent or all nursing home resiaents are satisfied with their care and surroundings. Let's make sure deregulation doesn't tum back the clock to shameful abuse and scandal. 1Gold metals quotations 10old • By The Associated Press Selected world gold prices today: Londoe: morning flxing $399.00. l.oedoD: afternoon fixing ~.00. Puta: $404.00, up $0. 72. Fraalr:fut: $400.99. ZURICH: Late ~iog closed, ~.00, ~id $395.00 ~ed. Handy 6 Harman: (only daily quote) $.195.00, off S6.SO. E•gelbard: (only daily quote) closed, $395.00. Engel•ard: (only dally quote) fabricated closed, $414 .75. NEW YORK (AP) -Prices late Thursday of 1okl coins, compared with Wednesday's price. Krqerrud, 1 troy oz., $41•.so. wicltanted. •. ~pie teat 1 troy o.z.1 _$U8.50, unchancecl. MeXku 50 ~. 1.2 U'OV oz .. l505.75. uncb,1.QCed. Auatrtaa 100 crop, .9802 troy ot., $311.SO, unebuced. Source: Deak-Pe~ra • , NEW YORK (AP) Spot nontenoua metal prtC'tll I -.onda,y, • C.,.. ?MWl centa a PMM!, U.S. destinadODI • . ._.. 12-M ceota Lpound. ~· lt.e 42-44 cent.a a pound, dlUv.-.d. ,,_ f7.191 llet.ab Week~ lb. Aha.,_• 71-11 Cfllltl a PGUDCl, N. Y • • __, *'15.oo,. lluk . .......... ..... troJ OL, N.Y. r Up 7.52 Cloelng 882.57 If --the Reagan admlnlstratioo succeeds ln Ill announced propoaala to relax or to repeal m~y of the federal rules that govern nur1ln1 home standards, their services and staff qualifications, you -the already bewildered. even desperate, seeker ol these facilities -will be even more at the merey of the operators. There is no denying the possibilities, If not probabilities, or a revival or the scandals that once smeared the entire lndust,:Y. The eco nomi c background for ~ revival of abuses is c lo se lo ideal. Building •_:- ~::~t~~:si~n;°!,u~ lftVIA lllTll ~-, popu la ti on is agina .3-. rapidly; there is small incentive for newcomers to invest in the industry In view of the modest return (3 percen") on privately owned facilities and 80 percent are private; convert.ins underutilized hospjtall into nursing homes is a mere B~·Aid approach. . Widespread belief that regulation bu become overreeulation is the reason the president Is requesting an easing or requirementa that nunlne homes Dlust not employ people with communicable diseases and must maintain a safe, sanitary environment. But while federal and state rules may overlap and overregulation may boomerang as well as be costly to all or us, you could find yourself a victim of deregulation. What can you do, on your own, to help find the best nursing home for a relative or close friend who cannot be cared for otherwise? -Start by compiling a list of facilities in your area. There are an estimated 25,000 bomfl .in the Ulflted States. Make preliminary calls to the homes, outline your needs, ask about participation in Medicare-Medicaid. -Visit and meet the owners or administrators and tour the nursing home. Get time orr from wotk to do this during the day, midweek. Don't take anyone's word for anytb.lng. Ask to see each-facility's licenses and certificates to check that they are current, and avoid those reluctant to produce them. Both the home and the -administrator should be state-licensed, and certiricatioo by t he Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals (JCAH) is advisable . -Establish that the nursing home you're considering has. the personnel and facillUes to provide what's needed, keeping in mind that the more services, the hi&her the cost . Ask about phys icians , r egiste red and practical nurses, health-car e aides. therapists, pharmacists, social workers, activities coordinators, djeticians -and medical record bookkeepers. See and meet as many or these people as possible. -Discuss in detail what the costs will be, bow much the "extras" will run, and bow you and/or the patient will meet these expenses. Ir Medicare or Medicaid are involved -and more than 60 percent of all nursing home patients use this pubUc assiatance -make sure the facility has been Jiven its proper designation: Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF> for Medicare or Medicaid or Intermediate Care Facility <JCF) for Medicaid eligibility, and confirm that the home rtici ates. STOCKS IN THE SPORIGHT AMERICAN LEADEIS HEW YOftK IAP). s.aa.s. l 11.m. prl(e 'end .. dl9ftet of tM .... -eel I 1Amerk.. s.c& E~ I ~~"r!-lly .. ~ttlell f~ + HouOllTr 1 .. ,600 21 + 1 W•1111 •• , m,oao ,. + t:!;t:e• 111... 1W. ln~s ~;= ~ c Sol,9Cll IJ + II SJ.OGD I ;J ~ 9 lO,taO 1$411 AZl ltft 43.1911 ._ •••• METALS NEW YORK IAPI -SCIM-l'f'Wt tMYllll'lcM~. c:., .. , 7'~·11 cents • """'· u . OHtl,..tiOfl&. ..... D.)t~.,...,.... hie 42-4ol cenb. ~ .... _..... Tia $7."'9 MetMI W.... c..._IM IO. A....._,..nceM:s•--'· H.Y. Mwcwy t41J.OO"' flitM. .. ...._UM.lllroyoi., H.Y. GOLD QUOTATIONS ayT .. ......,..,,_ S.le<t• -.tel .... Pfl<ft-..,. ~:--f111M9$M .... U...: ....,_flld .. "'5M . .. ..-: ..... , ... 12. ~ ...... l ..... . rwtclll: LN 11•1,. <lolitd. UftM, PtUOUMd. MMfy & --1 (eftly Ally ..... $1ff.OO,eft9'.JO. .......... , IMly dally ..... , c ........ • ......,, (Mly .. u, .,..., _nu,.. <IMN 1S. • ·'