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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-20 - Orange Coast PilotDUllil ClllT .............. .,..,....._ LINING UP -Students trying to register for spring classes at Golden West College in Hunting ton Beach faced a long wait Monday. (( * • • * * * ' YllR. HllllDWI DAllY PIPll i , ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI A 25 CENTS Jet . crash tapeS found · No problems seen with flight recorders WASHINGTON (AP) -Two critical on-board recorders from the Air Florida jetliner that crashed into the Potomac River were recovered today ~ one inv estigator said after a preliminary check that "we don't anticipate any problems" with the devices. Both the flight data recorder a nd one recording cockpit conversations were rushed to a N alional Transportation Safety Board laboratory less than a mile from the crash site for examination. . Rudolph Kapustln, c hief investigator for the NTSB, said after a n initial phys ical examination that the flight data recorder was "in excellent s hape" and that the voice recorder appeared to be in aood condition, although the tape will have to be dried before It can be reviewed. "We don't anticipate any problems," he added. NTSB s p okes man Brad Dunbar said the recorders-"took like they just came from the s howroom." 1 Some preliminary information might be available later in the day from the voice recorder, he said. But the flight data r ecorder, he added, probably would not yield information for several days, because analyzing that data Is a more complex task. (See RECORDERS, Pa1e A2) Doctors re-a_ttac_h man's severed hand By DAVID KVTZllA.NN .............. A IUwnkle man was reported in fair coodition today at UC Irvine Medical Center in Orange after doctors there reattached bia severed left band during seven hours of sur1ery Monday nitbt and early Tuesday. A hospital spokeswoman said Santos Sanchez, 27, was resting com fortably in the facility's Ecorwmy in worst plunge since 1980 WA SHI NGTON <AP ) - Confirming the deep new recession , the government reported today that the nation's economy decfined In the· Tinal quarter or last year al the fastest rltte since the record quarterly downturn or spring 1980. The inflation-adjusted gross national product -the broadest m e a s ure o f the nation 's economic activity -declined at an annual rate or S.2 percent in the last three months or 1981, the Commerce Department said. It was the economy's worst showing since the plunge at a 9.9 percent rate at the deepest point of the 1980 recession. F o r a I I o r t ~ s·1 , inflation-adjusted or "real" GNP rose 1.9 percent, thanks mostly lo the robust gain of 8.6 percent at an annual rate in the first quarter at the alart of the Reagan administration. Real GNP declined 0.2 percent in 1980. Gross national product Is the retail value of all goods and ser vi ces produced by t he nation's economy. intensive care unit, . where be baa been since the e nd of surgery al 3 a. m. Tuesday. Sanchez, .a scrapyard worker , lost bis band when it became entangled In a wire c ultin1 machine Monday afternoon at a Riverside area iron and metal company. The band was severed at the wrist. Im mediately following the accident, Sanchez was given e m e rge ncy treatment at a Riverside Hospital. His hand was wrapped in sterile gauze, and then made moist with a saline solution and placed in a sterile bag. The bag was placed in ice. This procedure, doctors said, reduces the a mount of tissue, d e terioration that would normally occur in a severed hand. However, surgery ~ould not be p e rform ed on San c h e z . al RI ver s ide because a hand surgeon could not be located. UCl s pokesmen said that Sanchez was flown by helicopter to Anaheim Stadium, where be was picked up by an ambulance from the nearby univer sity medical center. Beginning at about 8 p.m. Monday UC I surgeons Ivan Turpin and Dwight Robertson began reattaching the severed hand, using a microscope where necessary because of the delicate nature of the operation. The doctors had to reattach s pliced nerves, tendons, blood vessels and bone. The condition of San chez' hand is now being closely m onitor ed in t he m e dical facility's intensive care wiil, where Sanchez is expected to remain for the next two to three days. ......... RECORDER FOUND Dive rs remove o ne of the critit:al onboard fli ght recorders from the Potomac River today. It was aboard the Air Florida jetline r that 'cras hed last Wedn~sday on take-off from National Airport . Irvine· school fire damage $200,000 Fire broke out early today at 10-m onth-old Sie rra Vista Mid die School in Irvine and caused $~00,000 in damage, authorities said-. Nobody was injured in the two -a la rm blaze t ha t was reported to the Orange County Fire Department at 3:2Q a.m .. according lo fi re Capt. Sherry Bunting. It was put out by 50 firefighters in two hours and 16 minutes, she said. Capt. Bunting said the' cause --or the fire remained unknown this morning. She said firefighters battling the blaze were hampered by two false ceilings in the building below the actual roof. ·'The first firefighting units to arrive saw fire on the roof but had trouble getting there from the inside of the building," said Capt. Bunting. · She said the fire appeared to have started in the attic areta ol the building. Dave Holms, principal of tbe school at 2 Liberty in north Irvine, said the charred build.inc contains the girls' locker room, home economics classes, an art class and a foreign language class. He s aid that the buildint won't be able lo be used for the rest ol the school year, meanln1 that cla sses normally held in the building will have to be moved to o th e r parts of tbe nine-building school that has 400 students. The early morning fire hasn't c han ged t o day 's sch ool schedule. he said. · Community colleges swamped QRlllil CUii IUTlll 1 Variable c louas Thursday. Gusty winds at tim es. Probability of • showers decreasing to 50 percent tonight and 20 1 p e r cent by Thunday _. morning. Highs ,56 to 63. Lows tonight 46 to 52. -Fe!JJer classes prompt signup crush at area schools • By PHIL SNEIDE RMAN °' .. .,...., "", .... Local community colleges which are offering fewer sprinf classes than they did in 1981, art reporting much heavier tham normal early r egistraliot turnouts. · College officials say student! may t>e si1ning up early tc assure themselves a place in thf classes still offered. They aa) students who resister late ma) find themselves closed out ol tbt courses or class Um4M the1 desire. The early enrollment rush al.lo may be a sign "of the atlll gr o wing p o pularit y ol tuition-free community collet• education, which tradltlonall1 becomes more attractive In times of tCOlllOmic bardabip, r.ampua apokesfnen aay. _. Evidence of this interest could be seen Monday in the long line or students stretching back from the registration area at Golden West College in Huntington Beach. Registration beaan 'last ''Now it -is turned around." Wednesday at Golden West. At mid-day Monday, the colle1e already had ent0Ued about 6,000 atude.nts, accordine to Don Randol , ·assistant to the preside nt for instructional operations. "In the put, atudenta have always asked ua wbal la the lut day they can resister," observed Randol. "Now it turned around, and the students wanted to know h6w early they could sign up for classes." Orange Coast College in Costa Mes a got an earlier jump on spring registration. beginning the process two weeks ago. Officials at that school said long lines similar to those at Golde n West appeared at· Orange Coast during the flrst ,days of registration. The lines at Orange Coast have tapered off, school officials report. But as of Friday .a fternoon , the college bad registered 16,413 students, . acco.rdlng to Wa yne Wolfe ,._ aasociate dean for admisalons and records. . Or.an ge Coast, with a n enrollment of nearly 35,000 in (lee COLI.SOBS, Pqe Al> INSIDE TDIAY . Whal'• mo .. .,.., Titre u· a lot. AA .........., ..,.._ CCIII. ha~ a wortderf1d or t.mbk ef/ect Oil 11our life, oae so-caUed ezpert belfevea. Page .U. 11011 AtY_ ....... Al ......... ~Al c..•... ...., c ......... ~ .. C-"• .. c~ .. Dedl ........ ..._... AM ....... , ., .... c .. .. a.. ... . .. ._ . ;•1111r u I~ • I .:. • Orange Cout DAILY PILOJN/ednetday, January 20. 1982 .. snow, h.ea~y rain hit -NortheFn Califo"1ia a, ftle Aa11d11 ... Prw A eold Alukan ltonD broulbt more ball, snow abd heavy ralD 1 ~ to Non.hero Callfonal1 today, ·• l caut ... mudllidel and el01lnc for a tbDe IUJor' blcbwayt. 'l'bouab tM NaUonal Weather r S.rvlce laid the atorm lacked t tb• lntenalty of the downpour two weekt .,o that led to 31 deatba, the weather h'ont Wt a blanket ot anow u low u 1,000 feet ~ the billa around the Saa- I. It I J J. ~(\ rranclaco Bay Area. . Parta of the Sierra Nevada received a root or more of anow, which caused the closure ot1 several mountain roads. Other roads and bithwaya in lhe mountallll _.,. pauable only with ebainl. The Weatb•r Service 11y1 mou anow w11 likely 11 a aecond wive of th• storm reacbel eoulal area• toftlcbt. Tb• llorm WU tJ&pected t.o end Thursday momina . lntenlate 5, a maJor West Coaat route llnlllna Canadian and M•xican borders, WH cloaecl fl'Oln Yreka to Weed ln Northern California overnJ1ht, bul was reopened with use of chains today. Hi1hway 299 was cloaed from Yreka to Arcata due to a slide aeven miles east of Willow Creek and travel advisories were i11uecl ror roadt above 1,500 ft« elevation elsewhere In Humboldt County. Hi1hw1y 11 was c losed al Saratoaa Summit while crews 1pre1d aand over an inch of snow, but the road w11 reopened today, accordlnl to San Mateo County sheriffs deputy Clyde Sellers. Ei&hl motorists bedded.ti*>wn at-the Calirornla Diviaton ol Forestry's Saratoga Summit Station after lour inches of snow made Hlchway 35 impassable, but that road was reopened later. Though about 30 families voluntarily lert their hillside APW.,.._ ,.., DEEP FREEZE -The building which housed bfl; Daly's Hotel in Holyoke, Mass .• is covered l rJ" with ice as a firefighter retrie ves lost equipment following the Tuesday morning fire which des troyed the building. o· ,,, homea ln P1ett1c1 south ot Sin the .Ilaria County 1beriff'1 otflet doeen't rain hard btrt," u1d Francllco, there were no formal nortlullaa J'ruc'9eo. 1herlff'1 Lt. Rober& G1ddlA1. evacu1tlona and no major lbe Nid eome areu had been ·'Heavy rain could e1uae problenu ln the hilly coutal tbreataned wttb floodin1 before havoc." areaa ot Santa Crua, Marin or tbe r• lel up' tbia tn0mln1. but Crewmen oe duty al t.be Air San Mateo counUes where the no added problem• were ' Force radar atadoa on Mount earliel' storm caused its worst expected. Tama1pa.1a lD Ilaria CowRJ laid dama1e. . Ou 1mall allde cloeed a lane there wu about 2 lntbea al anow On Jan. 4, the belabt ot the . of Hlahw1y 101 on the Waldo on the 1round tbl1 mornln1. 1 laat m_,or Northern California Grade t.o the north of the Golden Rangers on llount Dtablo, about storm, a mudslide awepl ~ne Gate Bridle where a allde ln the 20 mUee eul of San f'ranellco, Pacinca home off its found~Uon earlier ttorsn had kept two lanes reported up to 4 inches of anow. and deposited it on top of 1 ed w Monda .another home, trappin1 and cos un y. A televi.sioo ataUon in Sant.a killina three children under tons At Inverness in Marin County, Rosa, in the heart of Callfomla'a or mud and debris. otflciaJa used dynamite Tueaday wine country, reported about 2 "We have some minor alleles, to break up mud and toe Jams feet of a now around Its but nothing debiUlatin1," aald that blocked drainage channels. tran'lmlller atop Mount St. Karen Driscoll, a dispatcher for "We're crossinc our fin1en ll Helena. * * * * * * * * * ·East gets freezing drizzle Record highs burn off chills in nation's south • By Tiie Aaaoclated Pren , alass in the aummertime," as -and reduced visibility. Freezing drizzle and li1ht weather service spokesman put Trucks overturned on snow fell today along lhe middle il. Tennessee hlchwaya, people A l l a n ti c Coast in lo New Despite the warm weather in Sl>tDl the night at their offices England. . the South, forecasters said and hotels were booked MUd. Record high temperatures i.n another arctic blast could be "I'd say it waa the wont ice the South burned off the chill of expected later this week. conditions I've seen in 31 years a record cold week but left "The Siberian Express is just of law e nforcement," said Atlanta's huge airport socked in temporarily derailed," said Kingsport, Tenn., police chief with foc loday. Harold Gibson, the weather Ralph Deal. The death toU in almost two service's chief meteorologist in In Virginia, where most traffic weeks of severe cold across the New York City. sUd to a halt Tuesday. not even eastern United Stales climbed lo After a week in which parts of snowplows were sale. 303. Georgia and..A.tabama were hit Highway officials in Roanoke A s torm syst e m over with record 'hws, the 74-degree County said a truck with a p)ow California dumped heavy snow weather Tuesday set a record and spreader slid off Virginia on the Southwest and storms f or hi g b (em per at u r e in 116 on Windy Gap Mountain, fell developing over the Rocky'· Columbus, Ga., and tied a 200 feel down the mountain and Mountains threatened snowfalls record ln Birmingham, Ala. burned. in the Midwest. A thick layer of Visibility at Atlanta's huge "The driver got out before il new snow forced officials to Hartsfield Airport, normally one went over," assistant hi1hway close a highway in Oregon. nf the nation's busiest, was down engineer Henry Howard said. On the East COast, the sumn to "zero" late Tuesday night, "He went out the other door ... gave a parting s hot today, the Federal Aviation Thesnowpl«>wisatotallos.s." leaving a dusting of snow in New Administration said. A first lo Kingsport, Tenn., where 70 Y o r It , New J e rs e y a n d blanket of fog prevented most people spent the night ln the Connecticut and making roads planes from landing for 3YJ girls locker room following a slick. hours Tuesday morning, and a high school basketball game, Roads i n Virginia, West second blanket Tuesday night two police c ruiser s were Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, that was expected to last weU wrecked, including one that was Arkansas and Oklahoma were into the morning caused up to hit five limes. still slick with ice and littered 45-minute delays. Fog and freezing rain that left with smashups when warm air Tri-City Regional Airport in visibility at near zero i.n east.em moved in Tuesday and spread Tennessee's Sullivan County bad Oklahoma closed roads in the fog like condensation "on an icy to slow operations because of ice Tulsa area. * * * * * * * * * f.Twister hits Hacienda Heights; High winds rip Southland area "' '"~•1 Tiie Aaoetated Pnu · A winter storm that twisted l lij.nto a funnel cloud tore sections •Jd off a roof in Hacienda He:i&hta bq today. uprooting trees, breaking J• , a window that cut a boy and flinginc golf-ball -siled hailstones in nearby Bassett and Santa Barbara. Snow nurries closed a section or lnt.eratate s for more than five hours in the Tejon Pass through the Tehachapi Mountains as a long -expect~d low-pressure storm system moved in orr the •l ; central coast, bringing winds 0 ; t· From Page A 1 ,.,, .... ------'"-- gusting up to 40 mph. Jeff Ll(jan, 13, was cul by rtying 2.lasa when the twister toucbea down about l a.m. in Hacienda Hei&hta, lS miles east of downtown Loa An1eles, s heriff's deputies said. Tbe wind uprooted more than a dozen trees and lore away part of the roor of a house al Los Altos Drive in which Lujan was sleepinc. A large tree branch was blown lhrouch the window of the Lujans' bedroom, said Deputy Mike Portesi. but the boy was •ltl!CO LLE GE S OVERFWW. • • •iv•the fall semester, is one of the 1• largest community colleges in the slate. Coastline had an enrollment of "" ·30,000 i m the fall while Golden 1• We'st tiad about 23,000 students. 110• There have been no lines at J~·c o as ll in e Co 11 e g e , the Fountain· Valley-based school J'> that has no formal campus but "''offers classes al about 150 area "'"ilocations. , 11,.. The college uses registration "tit· by mail, and Coastline officials say postal carriers have had -their hands full since the signup period began Jan. 4. Coastline officials said Monday that spring registration ]is running almost 40 percent ,abe ad o f the tot a I for a comparable dale in 1981. About !12,000 students have signed up ~ror Coastline classes thus far, colJeee spokesmen said. 9 The spriq classes at Golden , West, Orange Coast and I •Coastline do not begin until Feb. . 21. I :, N ei~hborJ n~ Saddlebac;k I '*College, which has campuses m :1rvine and Miss ion Viejo, !started registration i n ~December. ~ Saddleback c lasses began ~Monday, with about 28,000 "students enrolled. Told ol the eAU"lY reeislratioo rush in progress al other community colleges,""SaddJeback Chancellor Robert Lombardi aaid, "That's exactly what happened here. Classes fllled up very quickly." · t.ombardi said Saddleback's spring enrollment will be near foat of the fall 1981 , despite the r eduction in class offerings. More students are crowding into available classes, ht: said. · S p o ke s m e n for ar ea community colleges said one factor responsible for the large early registration turnouts was the announcement of class reductions. Last semester college officials said they were trimming their list of spring classes to curb enrollment, bec ause of the limited state funds allocated for community college growth. Golden West a nd Orange Coast colleges each eliminled 200 classes. Coastline and Saddleback each cul 300 spring classes. College officials said students were aware of th.Se cuts, and many registered early to avoid being ~ closed out of particular courses. Officials al Orange Coast, Golden West and Coastline said the registration rush may taper off toward the end of the sign-up period. Regi s trat ion by appointment continues through Jan. 26. If it does not taper off. the colleges may be forced to curtail petitioning, a process by which a student enrolls in a class by obtainiQI a teacher's permission arter the semester begins. At Coastline, at least 30 percent of the s tudents traditionally sign up for a course simply by attending the first session. ORA ... COAST lllly Plllll CIHeffled edwertlllng 714.IM2·M71 AH otMr .,.,_.,... 142-4321 MAIN OP'fllCa ..... -.. ... c....-...cA. MIMI..._: .. 1 .. ,C-. ..... CA.-C..,,._ ,_Or ..... c-.t ~ ~ . ... -....... ...., .................. ., ..... ilus••* ,_. ~ ,.., • .._. tf9Clet-I ti .. a,yrT"-· • treated _by family members and did not require hospitalization. Authorities also reported a smaJI mudslide in the Carbon Canyon area of Orange County near Brea. It apparently caused no serious damage. "It just took a while to cet here," National Weather Service forecaster Bob Webster said of the storm predicted since Monday. · "We'U have s howers on and off through toda y until Thursday, but it 's a localized thing." From Page A1 RECORDER The recorders were pulled from the river seven days after the Boeing 737 c rashed on takeoff from National Airport. Investigators had hoped lo retrieve them when the plane's taiJ section was pulled from the river Monday, but they were not found. ,.,. The flight· data r ecorder makes a record of air speed, bearing, the plane's angle of flight or descent, and forces that push a plane uf> or down. The voice recorder records pilots· words and other cockpit sounds: The voice tape will be dried out al the NTSB facillly, less than a mile from the crash site, and then played for the pilots' · final conversations, ii any, and telltale background noises. The noises might indicate, for example, whelher the plane stalled or power was lost in one engine. The plane had no contact with the airport control tower durin1 its less than a minute of flight. Each recorder is equipped with a battery.powered signal transmitter that divers used in locating them on the muddy river bottom. Three bodies were recovered by the divers Tuesday. Officials believe 18 other victims are sWl missing and have raised the possibility that some bodies may never be found . Seventy-eight people were killed when the plane hit the 14th Street bridge, Including four motorists. l 0 stranded, back· safely MILUNOCKET, llaine <AP> -Ten skiers and mounlaip climbers stranded in state part· shelters by snow, bitter cold and hllh wlnda that made lt feel u ll it were eo below aero made It to safety on their own, adtbortti• 11id. The 10, tra_ppect alnce Monday Jn Baxter State Park tn reincM nortbem Maine, hiked or akMd to 1 rancera' station Tu.day aftel'DOOft, taid park naturllllt Gerald Merry.-None required medical attenUon. f A total of .64 inch of rain had fallen in downtown Los Anceles by 8 a.m., raising the season total to 4.47 inches compared to about one inch al the same time a year ago, said forecaster BeUe Reo. Normal at this lime is about 6YJ inches, abe said. Sudden blinding snow driven by 30-mph winds prompted the California Highway Patrol to close 46 miles of Interstate S Tuesday evening. ·'There was deep snow falling too fast for the snowplows to take care of,·· sa1d a spokesman * ~ * for the stale Oe par.tment of Transportation. He estimated that 2·3 inches of snow had fallen by morning. Interstate S was reopened shortly after 3 a .m . and remained open through the morning despite occasional snow flurries that begu anew at about 6. But at one point Tuesday night visibility was practically zero because of the swirling snow and . fog . CHP officers escorted convoys of 50 vehicles each through the * * * area for an hour or so after the highway was reopened. Inch·diameter hail was reported in Bassett, adjacent to La Puente , apd in San• Barbara. al 12:15 a.m ., Webster said. . Small craft warnings were issued south to the Mexican border for rough seas and winds reaching 40 mph. Thunderstorms packing winds to 35 mph dumped a half·incb of rain al Lo s Angele s International Airport by midnart. * * Coast • rain chances 50 percent Local rain and occasional heavy thundershowers last nieht and this morning are expected to decrease to SO percent probability tonight and 20 percent Thursday morning. small craft advisory for boaters. Winds presenUy are coming out of the southwest but will shift lo the northwest tonight and decrease by Thursday. weather omciats said. Occasional snow showers in local mountains above 3,500 reet resulted in a traveler's advisory. ·'There's occasional snow s howers, but it's not heavy enough to issue a winter storm warning," said a spokesman for the weather bureau." Visibility alone the Orange Coast is seven mi lea today. be said. High temperature today is predicted al 59 )degrees , , dropping to 47 degrees tonight. Warmer weather is predicted Thursday. Cold unstable air and gusty winds accompanied the storm that came out of ..the Gulf of Alaska. The Orange County Environmental Mana~emenl Agency reported 0.31 inch of rain by 8 a.m. today. It brings the total for the season to S.47 inches, compared lo 1.09 al this time last year. Subway train in sped or faulted Occasional gusts of wind up lo 30 miles per hour caused coastal officials today lo issue a W ASHJNGTON CAP) -The supervisor in charge of the subway train in last week's ratat de r ailment told omclals he failed lo inspect the train's front Additional Savings on Sport Coats All 40°/o OFF• SALE ENDS 'Saturday ~ . . January 23rd wheels to be sure il could back up safely, according to today's editions of The Washington Post. Three passengers were luted and 25 others were injured. A b _o 17th & Irvine Ave., Westcliff Plaza . Newport Beach, CA ~ 7 l • I r Af' ......... LIZA HONORED Entertainl'I' Liza Minnelli hugs :J('l or G r e gory Peck w ho p n •sented her wilh the Martha G r a ham Awa rd for E xt·t•llenn· in tht• .\rls at a dinner in Ne w York Sinatra poatpones Bowl concert Frank Sinalra h a s po s tponed hi s sold ·oul pre-Supe r Bowl conc e rt tonig ht because or a bout with the nu. The singe r 's a ttorneys informed prom ote rs that Sinatra would not be able lo appear at Joe Louis Arena , s aid Bruce Lahli, vi ce Michael Foot, leader of Britain's opposition Labor Pa rty, startled passengers a board a British Airways fli ght by taking to the public add r ess sys t e m and launctting into an impromptu monologue, t he Tele gr aph reported. Th e conser vative news - paper quoted a pa ssenger aboard the Oslo-to-London flig ht, a rch itect Desmond Nears-Crouch , as sa ying A civil suit inyolving the d eath of e vangelis t Oral Roberts' daughte r \'ii an a irplane cr as h has been settled out of court for $8.S mill io n, officials s a y in Oklahoma City. About $5.3 million wi ll go t o he r three c hild r e n, according to the settlement. which brought to an end a pres ident or the Olympia Slal ium Co r p ., w hi c h manages the arena. The concert was one or the e nte rtainme nt hig hlights sche duled for Super Bowl week in the Detroit a rea. T he Sinatr a concert was rescheduled for Feb. 3. Foot conducted a "garbled" p o l i t ical h a r a n g u e , de nounced Prime Minister • Margare t Thatcher a nd promised lo arrange more drinks for the passengers. ''It wa s v e r y e m - b a rr a ss in g ,'' N e a r s · Crouch was quoted as saying. Foot , con tacted at h is h o m e in Lo n do n 's Ha m pstead distr ict. would say only, "It was j ust a joke -some fun." suit that had been argued in Oklahoma County District Court since Oct . 17. The case arose out or a 1977 plane crash in Kansas that ki ll ed six people, including Rebecca Nash, 37. of Tulsa, Roberts' daughter. and her husband Marshall, a Tulsa banker. A c t o r .. 1 u t h o.r 1 n d folk·1lneer Tlaeodore Blkel haa been releaud from • Florida Hose_lt,•l·Orla "do. where lle was t>eln1 tleated a fte r collaps ing over the weekend, otflclals sajd. Orflelals said Blke l was undergoing treatme nt for exhaustion. S iket. 57, collapsed a t a c a s t p a rty follo wing a Saturday night perrormance In Orlando. Alle n ff . Neulurth prealc1ent and chairman ol Ga nnett Co. Inc.. and his wife of eight years, LGrl WlllOll, have been granted a divorce, the nationwide communicatio n s group announced. Neuhart and Ms . Wilson, a former Florida sl ate senator, were married Dec. 31. 1973, in a sunrise ceremony on the shore of Cocoa Beach, Fla. In a joint statement, they said: "We have obtained a d i vorce d ecr ee unde r Florida's no-fault la w. This was a very personal decision, r e ac h e d a ft e r a tri a l separation. All matters have been settled in a friendly ma nner and we as k our friends a nd associates to view this in that light." Sen ate Arme d Services Ch a irm a n John Towe r, R -Tex a s, put out a n announcement that. as "the o nl y e nlisted mil itar y r es e r vi s t in the U .S. Con g r ess," h e 'd b een p r omo t e d from C h ie f Boatswain's Mate to Senior Chier Petty Officer in the Naval Reser ve. Tower noted it was the s econd-highest r ank that enlisted personnel can hold and said, "I am grateful to the Navy." PROMOTED . Se n. .John Tower . R-T t'xas . has bl•t•n p ro moted to Senior Chief Pett,. Offl t l'r in the :'ll cl\ al R CSl'l'\'l' Showers possible S.es IMrH sl"Q to~ lo I IHI Wind• be<om"'9 -terly IS lo 1S '"'°" altern_. •net t W<>ll>Q Par11y clo..dy with t M Mce of \ihoWtr~ (ot1'•~109 tllrOUgfl toniQlll. U.S. summary Cold -uh< "'"""...o lo oiao.-lhe Nor11>eHI on T-y. sno• ftil lntermlllonlly lrom Nt•old• 10 IN Grut Llk.S, Ind tllert wu lroeilno r•ln In mucll of lht Mocldlt Atlantic ...... Tem oer•lur.s In the Norll>n•I w trt mo•llY In 1111 !te ns •I m I d• I t • r noon. •' u t It w •' unseHC>Nllly warm In \lie Soulll Rtadit>QS In ll'lt 60\ Incl 70$ r .. cl'ltd across 111 but lhe nortllWH tern .,.,, of ToH lhr1JU9h Ille cenlrll Gull Co.•I St.It\. Florl<IA Mid toutr.ern Georol1 Snow fell '" 0¥t• ol Nevao. •nd ld•ho, -lheA WU M:l lltred ligfll snow from •round Ukt S-rlor l,o Nebr1sk1 and nortllwU I in t o Montan•. FrfflinQ rein -some •now were reported lnlm -<tnlr11 Vlr9ln1a Into Oei.w••. Maryl•nd and OM1S of WH I Vlrolnl• TIM C.llfornl• cont QOI K•lltred sl>owers and there ... M:•llertd l -s 411 n>Ql>l on Ille .cl\ Wo\lorty wlnOs 1~H mph •I llme\ on lnl•ncl •• ii.vs HIQM In lM 50\, lows on lhe 40!< Mount•ln snow level J,000 IH I north, 4,1100 feel ,.,..UI Soulhewttl 10 nor'lllwHI wind\ U·4CI mph •I tlmH IOOay •ncl ThurMMy HiQM -II dO\ In tho )Os, IOW\ ti lo 21 Soulllw$ to ,,.,..,-...1 '""""' »H ml>ft In oewrts C.,.nce of .-On m•lnly In ,,.,..,,,.,n -rl\. Hi9"' In nor111ern dl!Wr1• 48 lo SS, lows In U'lt »s. Soulf>em _,, hiQhs In low '41\, •-•ln40s. T r•v•l•rs adwlM>rY tor 'f\Ow In nortr.wesl Cellto rnl• • .Sii••••. Sisk iyou mounl•ln• •nd S l1rr1 Nev•d• lllroUQll IO<lay. S<•lltrtd \!'lowers •I lll'nel 111rOU911 TllurMl•V Snow lt vt l ne.tr t.500 feel a lono Oregon -r. l,000 lttl in southern s ..... Extended forecast Fa ir wl111 a daily wM min9 lrtncl O.c rt11l119 W.ncl$ In mountains H IOfl 1empera1ures In ll'lt co.1111 areas in mld ·SOS lo mld-60s &ncl lows mostly J, 10 4S Highs In 1111 mounl•lns m ld·JO$ to mkl-40s •ncl io.... IS to JO. HIQll ttmperellH'H warml1>9 S lo I ~r"' by Suno.y but continued cold nfot>I\ wllll 100 1 frH~ll'IQ temoeral\lrts drlu le from northern Georol• to '°"1,, ..... , .. 1( .... .,,. Temperatures Skies-. ci.ar over N-E1>9lancl encl llM FIO<lda Penlftwla, encl II was' oener•ll' cloudy elsewllert eHI of NATION ll>e MIHIUltlsli River. .41tll•ny Tem""•lurH around Ille nahon •I All>uque m lddO T-y ranQed from • low Anchor- of ll beloW iero at Devil'• l.akt, A\llevlllt N.0 ., lo • 111911 Ol 81 al McAllen, All1nl1 r .. u . At11ntc Cl't S<•tlerecl .,_ •.s for«•" from Balllmort ll>e Pa<llk HorthwHI Into lhe Great BirmlnQllm Ba.In encl tl'lt norlllern Roc:k,.,s, 1• Blsmaro. well es from tM not'll'ltrn Pl•ln1 lo Boise the u-r GrHl laes 11a111. 80.lon 1$~ s• n 07 ·07 SJ JS .. 00 11 ,. 70 u I• ... 04 ·IJ )6 ,, 2l OI Bull•lo Charhln SC Ch.lr1nn wv Cheyenne Cllicaqo Clnclnn•lo c i.ve1anc1 Columbus D•l·FI Wlll O.nv•r Des Molnn Del roil El Puo F•lrbal\h t1•r1fprd Htlt n• Honolulu Hou•ton lnclMpllS Ja<kwwlle J.-au K•ns City LHV~ Liiiie flock l oulsvlll• Mtmplll\ Miami Mllwaukw Mpls·SI P NH llvllle New Orle- NewYork O•la Cltv 14 03 •• 47 41 ,. •O 10 10 °' )) 71 JI II J7 17 I) ,. so ,. )1 IS 2S 10 " ... ·11 -10 S7 1t IJ ~ 11 ,, IJ '6 )1 11 ,. 4,J , .. 40 ,. S4 00 SI J2 )6 ,. u )6 ,. 71 71 10 u 10 SI • ao u 74 u 70 77 Rain wu u oecled In Ille 01110 ll•ll•y~ wlUI sllioweu Alld.-Pou lllly t11under,.....1rs trom IM centre! GuH Co.Mt IOU.. T--. valley. SURf REPORT .......... ..., ............ --n ....................... 9Ndl ••r MM ..... A.. Mu IHr Zuma 4 t I I SW Sant. Monka J 4 t I I SW Newport i s IO 2 J NW Sen l>lt9DC_.y 4 6 IO t 4 SW Owt-.... l"llu..-y: Flif11Wt ln<N-lfl _. .... twtfl, wlltl IOC .. ty C'-Y-. We're Listening ••• Om•ll• Phlladpllla Phoenl• PlllSllurQll Piiand, Mt Pll•nO,Ore llaokl City Reno RICllmonct Sall Lah Statll• SI Louil SI P·TI"""" SI Ste MMie 5"°"1M Tucson WeslllnQtn Wic hita CAl tl'OltNtA Apple V•lley 8aktrSfleld B•rllo• Beaumont Big Bu r Blsllop 81ylht Cal•llna Culver ci1v Eureka Fresno LIM Hier Lono eeac11 Los A11911H Marysvll.._ - ''"'""" .. MoftlebellO Monler•Y Needles Newport BMCll Oakland Ontario Pa4m SprlnQl Pa- RlversiOI Rtcl 8tvf! RNwoocl City "-Sen ael'Mf'dlno SenOWlel SenO!qe Sen l'rM<ilc:O What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like ? Call the number below and your message will be recorded. transcribed and deli vered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answerin1 service may be used to record let- ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must Include their name and telephone number for ver1flcatlon. No circulation calls, please. Tell us what'ft on your mind. - ,. n ts u .4 SJ J4 t• ,. .u 0 JI 11 01 JS II ,. ti 41 14 H l5 )6 27 ,, ., "·11 JI 17 •> .. 12 ti 42 17 SS M St :n st .. S4 ., 41 u 4• ,. .. 48 .. ~ "° Q 41 • .. u 51 lS SI 47 60 .. .. ,. ., •1 •2 0 s~ ., .. ... st .. SI 0 51 u ., .. St ... u .. 0 lS 5' .,, JS ,, SS ,. 61 .., ., 5' 11 ... Orange Coast DAIL v_ PILOT .rNedneaday. January 20 , 1982 s ". Af'W....,.... SURPRISE LANDING Marines d n vt· onto Sa n Cll'ml•nte Is la nd ol'f Southern Califm·nia in t raek N i ~ m µh I h IOUS lirnd i ng \'t•h IC'll'(' dur ing ma .. 1or l'Xl'l'l'l!'>l ' lhat l'nded this wt·ek No notkc \\'as givl•n thl' 9.000 s ailors and 2.700 Ma rines before· dnll <k s ignt•d for po:-.sibll· C\'at·ual ion o f r\ mt•n<·a n:-f rom fort•iJ!n t ountry . Troops make surprise landing .. Sailors, Marines practice evacuation on SC Island Jo' the first such d rills orr the West Coast , the Navy says 9,000 s ailor s and 2,700 Ma rines successfull y staged a surprise exercise at San Clemente Island t o pra ct ice "evac uat i ng" Am ericans fr o m a fo reign country. "It was a magnificent effort on very short notice." said Capt. J ohn J . Higginson. commander of Amphibious Squadron 7. No word of it leaked out to news UCI lectures • o~ vanous topics set A series of lectu res a nd discussions on topics ranging from Aztec archaeology to the writings of Chicano wom en has been scheduled at UC Irvine for this month and next. Dr. Miguel Leon Por t illa , d irector of the Ins tit ute of Historica l R esearch a t t he National Uni versity of Mexico. will lecture on Aztec archaeology al 4 p.m. Fri day in Room 201 of the University Center. Nove list Jose Villa rreal, a professor o f Englis h a t the American School in Mexico City, will talk about His panic writers al 4 p.m. Feb. 4 in Room 101 or the University Cente r Ciriaco Gonzales. director of the Minority Biomedical Support P r ogra m of t h e Natio na l Institutes of Health. will speak at 4 p.m Feb. 11 in Room 101 or t he Unive r s i t y Ce nt e r on Hispani c medical research. W r i ter s E s t e l a Portillo-Trambley and Lorna Cer va ntes wi II co nd uct a n afternoon panel discussion at ( p .m . F e b 25 i n t h e Cross ·Cultural Cente r on the writings of Chicano women. For more information on the fr ee-to-t he -pu blic His pa nic speakers series ca ll 833-5588. Gem Talk By J.C. H UMPHRIES Cntified ,GemoloRiat. ACS CAGED MIN AS 11( Mo90k M1nrn9 Co Th e beautiful, blood-red rubi es of Blirma have long been among the mos t treasured or the world's gemstones. While the ruby is found in Thailand,' Cey l on , a nd e ven Nor th Car olina . it is the Burma specimens that are the most sought after. Ony the diamond is h a rder t han this tough beautv. For most of history, Burm.a has supplied not only the finest rubies , but the greatest quantity. Until just a few generations ago, Burma's Mogok Mines produced nearly all of the world's rubies from one group or dlggings owned by , one nrm. Because of the value • or the ruby. and its na rrowly restricted source in those days, Mogok's mine foremen went to extraordinary lengths to guard the supply. Workmen in the Mogok mines were searched ver y thoroughly as they lert work each day to be sure they weren't taking any rubl es . When miners beaan awallowfna flhe rubies, Mogok made lhem ·wear padlocked m esh cages around their heads as they 'worked. Tbe cages· became a ymbol of the r,uby m lnlna e Burma. media until Tuesday. The Marines stormed ashore Sunday as the aircraft carrier USS Ranger and eig ht cruisers, dest royers and s uppor t. ships waited and "rescued" 110 other leathernecks in civilian clothes representing a fi ctional U.S. ambassador, embassy officials and others. Comm a nd ing office rs or wars hips in Southern Ca lifornia and Hawaiian ports were alerted Jan. 7, but most of the sailors and Marines knew nothing until the operation was under way. As the full -scale callup began, the Navy ordered and stow&! hundreds of tons of supplies ; f ood a nd e qu i p ment . Combat-equipped Ma r ines and helicopte rs wer e sent lo the ships . The amphibious task group left San Diego and Long Beach 1 as t Wednesday aft e rnoon , Higginson said, adding "we beat the required s hort timetable for readiness to deploy. It went smoothly and quietly." Sunday's la nding was b y a m p h i b iou s c raft and h e licopters , simultaneously, with the Marines simulating the capture of both an airport and U.S. Embassy on separate sides of the island. T he ma ke-be lieve civilians pretended to be sick, injured and hysterical. They were evacuated to the new amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu, in her first m ajo r exer cise since being agsigned to Long Beach a year ago, and to the USS Cleveland for treatment by medica l teams. Col. J ohn I. Hopkins of Brooklyn, N.Y .. commander of t he 17th Mar ine Amphibious Unit, said the exercise proved U S . rorces c a n evacua te Am e ri cans s t r a nde d i n a gover n me nt co lla ps in g in terrorist attacks and insurgent fi ghting. H op~ins s a id t he four-day exercis e , sch ed uled to be followed with others . proved Marines and sailors "can do it fast and do it well." Third search fruitless (or missing loot in Mesa Uy JODI CADENHE AD Of Ille De61y "'91 Suff Police dug through· a muddy Cost a Mesa gravel pit Monday searching for stolen handguns. jewelry and cameras supposedly buried there by thieves. Costa Mes a po lice officer Philip McCormick said police in Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa received a tip la sl. week that stolen property was hidden near a tree house allegedly used by a band of youths who lived inside the makeshift s helter at the end of 19th Street ne a r Hillcrest Park. Huntingt o n Beach po lice &tetective Ray Ha ttabaugh said lhe believes the loot is still buried in the vici nity. "I t 's g ot to be in the mult i -t h o u s ands." s a i d Ha ttabaugh of the properly a ll egedly stole n Crom Costa Mesa and Hunt ington Beach homes. "We just can't find jt." Police bega n looking at the site last wl'ek after Huntington Beach offi cer s a rrest ed a transient, Martin Rooks , 18. H a ltabaugh said Rooks wa11 arrested in connection with a str ing of break-ins in Huntington Beach. He remains in Orang~ County J ail. Late r Costa Mes a police arrested David Anthony Ward, 19. al the tree hut. in connection with break-ins in Costa Mesa . Also identified as a transient, he re mains in county jail. Real feelipgs deserve real Qold. The besi g ift olwoys reflects your s1nceroiy Thot's why Korol Gold Jewelry 1s so perfect when you feel deeply obovf someone We 1n111ie you to see our collection of Korol gold bracelets, eorrongs, choins ond rings And to ler vs help yov choose the perfect piece IO echo your sentiments Aeol gold A silent expresso0n of how much you rflO(ln 11. MEM8ER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY 1823 NEWPORT BLVO , COSTA MESA 35 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION BankAmerlca!'d-M'MWr Charve PHONE &41-S401 .. (( I '1' ( --- s Orange Coa11 DAILY PtLOT/WtdnH~ay. January 20. 1982 . ~ffiUBffirn Reagan tf,ilk highlighted • I President's news conferen~e covered wide spectrum ' WASHINGTON <AP> -Here, -•• a .alDCe. are hi1hll1hta of !••ideat RH1an'a nation.ally oadeaat news conference eaday: . LAND Life ln Poland under martial hlw "ia at.ill deterioratln1" 'and, "9rte're DOt goin1 to wall forever fdr improvement," Reagan said, without detailing what steps he might take.· He s ald trade restrictions imposed by the . United States after the Poli.ah military took power "have had aa effect'' but "people are stlll l m pris oned . Ther e i s n o communication with Solidarity tflt between the military q ,vernmeot and the people." • Reasan said he had ··a lengthy lhmmunicalion '' from Pope '9hn Paul II, who is Polish, and e approves what we have ey evidence troduced ATLANTA (AP) -After two eeks of. testimony in Wayne 8. illiams ' murder trial ,· ro s e c utors h ave b e gun ntroduc ing the dis puted vidence that they s ay is a ornerstone of the ir case - icroscopic fibers found on the ies of the two victims, Today's first testimony was rom Herbert Pratt of E.I. du ont de Nemours & Co .. the first f several witnesses expected to es tify about the fibers. Stale crime lab microanalyst icbard Ernest took \he witness land late Monday to identify our packages of fibe r s and air s removed from Williams· ar with a special vacuum tool uring a June 3 search. done to far: .... And yet, we are not aoin1 to wait forever for improvement tn the situation there. We have t hose steps that we can take." THE ECONOMY "J 'm sure we will se~ an ups wing in the econon(y,'' in c lud l n~ r e duc e d unemployment, inflation and interest rates, Reagan sa id. He blamed r is ing un e mploym e nt on a "continuation of an increase that got under way in the last ·several months of 1980," before be took omce. On the positive side, "there are a million people more working than there were in 1980" and "the people today have a lower interest r ate than they had when we started and the inflation rate is slzably lowe r than it was wheR we took office.·· He s aid American bu s iness ·st-ands r e ady to r espon d t o his e c o n om ic incentives: "I think we're just see ing a little caution ." RACIAL DISCRIMINATION H e brande d the Internal Revenue Service announcement that it would no longer bar tax exemptions from private schools that p ra ct i ce ra c ial discrimination "a procedural ma tter" not a policy change "I initiated it." Reagan said of the reversal of an 11-year-old policy· against tax e xe mptions for di scriminator y schools . He noted that he has since asked Congress to reinstate the policy, making it federal policy and not just an executive order. De nying he i gn or es the interests or blacks, Reagan said, "l am for affirmative action. I am against quotas." MIDEAST Reagan said the question of \ ways Iha· Daily Pool · helps women I Sho p m on ey -saving values ad- ve rtised in the Daily Pilot. S Read how othe r Orange Coast resi- dents use. make and spend their money in the Featuring pages. S Get a good deal on used items or fin d reliable service people and other time~ and money-saving values in t he classified ads . 4 Save valua ble gasoline pl anning 'shopping t rips to local stores "advertising in the Dail y Pilot. I 'c lip money-s aving coup<>ns. • Organize your coup<>n savings with the Supermarket Shopper. each Wednes- ~ay and Sunday in the Daily Pilot. . ~ autonomy for the Palestinians Is ''t h e t o ugh est quest ion'' concerning U.S. policy In the Mideast. "We want to help if we can " a-s Israe l and Egypt attempt to revive talks on the Palestinian self.rule question prior to Israel's schedule d withdrawal from the Sinai by April 25. NEWS LEAKS "We need to protect national security and our a bility to conducl foreign policy,'' Reagan s aid, adding the issue of giving lie detecto r t ests to people s uspected of leaking information ·'will depend on the individual case." Reagan said "we·re not doing anything that is not in the law today and we will protect the constitutional rights of our citizens." ABORTION Reagan reiterated his position that "abortion is the taking of a human life" and said a provision in a California law that allowed abo rtions when rape vi ctims become pregnant. "was used as a g i g a ntic loophole and it lit e r a lly led to abortion on demand." DEFENSE SPENDI NG M o r e money i s n eeded because ·'we a re rebuilding something that has been allowed to deteriorate badly over the years." the president s aid. CHARITY Reagan said he believes in contributing a tenth of his income to charity, but not all of his contributions show up on the Income tax returns he makes public. He said he may release m o r e inform at io n o n hi s donations in the future, "But my conscience is clear with regard to what I have been giving." - READY FOR PROBE The tail section of tht• Air Florida jet that cr ashed into the Potoma<· River last wc<.'k i:-. pulled into a L'.S. Coast Guard _han gar on a lru<:k Tucsda~· Tht• .............. hangar 1s lol·atl·d al National Ai r port in Arlington. \'a Anolht•r plant! in t h l' hal·ki,:round 1s laking off from lhl• airport ou t~1dc• Washington. J) C Campaign ~pendirig rule upheld U.S. Supreme Court agrees on rights of committees WASHI NG..TON IAP> -An evenly di'vided U.S . Supreme Court has upheld a ruling giving ··un a utho r ized " po li tical committees the right to spend unlimited a mounts of money to back a presidential candidate whose offic ial campaign is financed from public funds. A $1 ,000 s pe nding limit imposed by Congress was struck down by a federal court in Wa s hington in 1980 a fte r Commo n C.ause. a c itizens advoca cy g r o up , a nd the Federal Election Commission ch allenged the m ul ti million dollar campaigning by three unauthorized co mmittees working for Ronald Reagan's election to the presidency. By a 4-4 vote. the high court l uesday upheld that ruling. I lo wever, under court rules the decision has no precedential impact on future cases. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor ·took no part in the decision or t he case. thus clearing the way for the 4-4 s plit. Among those who successrully challenged the SI .000 limit was Se n . Har r ison H. Schmitt, R·N.M. Under the Pres ide nti a l E lection Campaign Fund Act. t he n-candidat e Reagan had chosen publi c financing for hi s campaign and was granted $29.4 million. The presidential rund act effectively prohibits publicly r ina nced gene ra l e lection candidates from accepting any private contributions. However , the fed eral la w allowed unauthor ized political committees to raise and spend up to Sl.000 each to s upport a t party's presidential ticket. The Su pre me Court upheld the ruling that the ceiling violated political g r o ups' F ir st Am endment rights. • Casual Slacks ............... 22.90-24.90 Reg . 30.00-32.50. Corduroy. duck cloth. flannel. 7 Find money-saving yet tasty recipes in Wednesday's food pages. 8 Sell idle household items in the Da i- ly Pilot classified pages. Men's Suits ........ ~119-S249 Outerwear ................... 34.90-59.90 Reg . 37.50-85.00. Famous maker. Outstanding value 9 Check the Weekender sections for free or low-cost entertainment ideas for the family. le Rely on fi nancial advice by Sylvia Porter -one of the world's most read financial advisers -who provides un· derstandable, timely. interesting and to- the-p<>int information . Manage your money more efficiently today. Call 642·4321 to subscribe, :'Or, mail a check or money order for $4 .oo with the coupon below to the Daily Pilot Circulation Dept., 330 W. Bay Street, P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. ······--···~ Help me manage money better. .1 Send my Daily Pilot subscription. t~day. Encl~sed is lJlY check or · money order for $4.00 for one month :s subscription . I I sn.H'T-_-...;.,· ·1 C!fY----------ZIP PHONE~~~~~.~~-.. -..! llilJPillt -.......... . Reg . 175.00·335.00. Lightweight and year round weight suits in stripes, plaids, solids. Includes our most famous brand Sport Coats . . s79.s119 Reg. 125.00-185.00. 100o/o wo61 and wool blends in solids & patterns. Includes Harris Tweeds and our most famous brands. Minimum charge tor alterations. Dress Shirts ... _ ........... _ ... 3 for 45.00 Reg. 22.50·28.50. Long sleeve. Save up to 40.50. -· Velour Shirts ............. _ ........... 29.90 Reg. 45.00. ASSC>rted stripes. Famous Maker Jog Sult .......... 59.90 Reg. 80.00. Fleece lined. Snap·off hood. Sweater Collections ....... 22.90-69.90 Reg . 32.50-100.00. Includes Pendleton. Mandate Support Brief ............ 13.90 Reg. 17.50. Spandex support for a trim look Adic;tas Sport Shirt .............. _ .... 9.90 Reg. 19.95. Polyester. cotton knit CasuaLShoes_ .. __ .. _ ~~-..... ~ ....... 44.90 Reg. 55.00. Includes popular saddle. shoes. Bally Dress Shoes ....... _ . 94.90-99.90 Reg. to 140.00. Famous Bally quality. SAVE IN WOMEN'S DEPT. Sportswear Separates .... 1/3 to 1'2 off Long & Short Coats ............... 44.99 Reg:1so.oo. Sizes 8·18. • Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT!Nednesdey, Jenu'iry 20. 1982 ~tft~~- ·--------=-----.c,,__.......__J ·split-roll effort ready -9 un registration petition drive also approved SACRAMENTO (AP) - Ba ck~rs of two proposed lnltiallves to tax bu~Jneu property at a hlgh'er rate jlnd re1ister guns were given offlclaJ permission to seek signatures. Sectetary or Stat e March Fong Eu said the two backers could begin seekin1 voters' signatures to qualify their measures ror the November ballot. The property tax Initiative, which would change Proposition 13, would set up a "split roll" and have residential and bu sin ess property tax ed differe n tly. Since it is a proposed con s titutional amendment, the initiative needs 553, 790 signatures by April 29. The sponsors are Stephen Smith and Stephen Hopcrart of a group called Taxpayers for California. Smith said the' groups behind the Initiative lnclude AFL·CIO, California State Employees Association, American Association of Retired Peopl e a nd th e s tate Parent-Teacher Association. Proposition 13, adopted by voters in 1978. limited property tax to 1 percent of the 1975 value with annual in cre ases of 2 percent. New or sold property is reassessed at current market values. The proposed initiative wouJd keep that system for residential and farm property and cut In half the increased assessment for owner-occupi.ed residential prope rty that c han ges owners hip. The tax for business property would be raised from 1 percent to 1 and one-third percent and business property that is sold would be reassessed at full value. · , The gun registration proposal needs 346, 119 signatures by April 29 to make the November baUot. It ls the second attempt for gun control; an effort in 1976 failed to quallfy for the ballot. The measure would require owners of concealable firearms t o r egi s ter them with the attorney general by Nov. 2. 1983. It would also regulate sale and transfer of reglstered handguns by dealers and private persons. The measure also restricts the Legis lature from banning o wners h i p o r r e quiring registration of shotguns or nnes a nd forbids lawmakers from "ever passing any laws to take registered handguns away from law·abiding citizens." State lottety proce.eds ·would benefit schools SACRAMENTO CAP> -A state lottery with the proceeds earmarked for education has been proposed in the Legislature. Assemblyman Larry Kapiloff, D-Sap Diego, first said at a Capitol news conference he thought the lottery would raise $500 million lo $750 million a year for schools. After an aide showed him figures on the experience of other stales. Kapiloff scaled that down to $180 million to S260 million. The const itutional a me ndment proposed by Kapiloff on Tuesday would require a two-thirds vote of both houses to go on the November ballot. It would : -Limit prizes to 50 percent of the ticket sales. and administrative costs "to 15 percent, leaving 35 percent earmarked for schools. Stop the Leg is lature fro m cutting school appropriations below what was allocated in 1980-81 plus a cos t-of-living increase. -All oca t e the proceed s earm arked fo r schools lo all schools fro m k ind e r gart e n t hro ugh university graduate schools, based on the amount s pent per student on each levE;I in 1980-81 plus a cos t-of-li ving increase. Caltrans offers to buy LA rail station Pacific and Santa Fe railroads. .. SECRET DRI LL' An F ·l4 Tom(·at righter jet s land.s. poised on a catapult aboar<l thl' ca rrier SS Ra n~e r near. San Cle m e nte I s land during cxcr ('is(' off South e rn I ~ ... California. No notice was givell the 9. s ailors and 2.700 Marines who s taged a mo C\'ac.'uation nf Amen C'ans "fleeing .. a foreif{~ rountr~· 1A4-unno1I •\\ HARBOR BLVD OF CARS 1982 AOTO SHOW LOS ANGELES CAP> -The stale Department of Trans portation has offered to purchase Union Station In downtown Los Ange les from a railroad consortium and tum it into a regional hub for rail, bus and taxi ser.yices. Caltrans Director Adriana Gianturco said the offer was made this week to the Los Angeles Union Passenger Terminal, a company made up of Southern Pacific. Union Caltrans did not make public the amount of its offer , but the department has about $18 mHlion in federa l, s tate a nd local funds available to buy and develop the historic train depot, officials said. Caltrans has been considering taking over the site and maklna it into a central transportation depot for Los Angeles since early 19'79. THORSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY Officer pleads guilty to passing documents SAN DI EGO <AP I -Ens ign Stepherr A. Baba of Gaithersburg, Md ., in a surprise at hi s Navy court-martial, has pleaded guilty to sending secret electronics documents to a foreign power. Baba, 21, was accused of sending the secret material to the South African Embassy in Washington. D.C., where it was turned over to U.S. authorities. In addition, he pleaded guilty on Tuesday to attempted escape from the Metropolitan Correctional Center in San Diego, being absent without leave from his ship. assault on a m e m ber of the Shore P atrol and fraud against the Naval Feder al Credit Union. B a b a e nte r e d t h e pl ea at closed -door preliminaries to his actual trial. There was no immediate indication when he will be sentenced. ~.A11.-&.i1 ./ -r.-. w..~ lo-b/~. -5 JAN. 21st JAN. 22nd JAN. 23rd JAN. 24th · ~· SOU TH COAST PLAZA FEATURING: * AMC * J AGUA R * BUICK * JEEP * CA DILLAC * LINCOLN * CHEVROLET * MAZDA * CHRYSLER * MERCUR Y * DATSUN * OLDSMOBILE * DODGE ' * P LYMOUTH * F ORD * RENAULT * HONDA * T Ol:OTA * I MP E RIAL * VOLVO .. . • I Names a// ect lifestyles NEW YORK CAP> -Slicks and 6tones may break your bones. but the wrong name can land you in a ward for the criminally ins ane, a language expert says. "You will hf)ve a higher chance of being in an asylum or jail if you have an unusual name." warns Leonard R.N. Ashley of Brooklyn College. past president of the American Name Society. But if you are strong enough to overcome the stigma of a wrong name. you also have a higher chance of becoming a college president. a movie star or even a religious leader, says Ashley Ashley. who has a doctorate in psychology. studies names as "an aspect of human be havior." He writes articles for professional journals and is working on an anthology of British names. , He contends that the "way you perceive people depends on their name . Have you ever met an Episcopal priest named Buck?" ·And he believes an unusual name will have either a wonderful or a terrible effect on your life. The late Ima Hogg, daughter of Texas Gov J ames Hogg, overcame an unus ua l name to become a prominent Houston socia lite and philanthropist. Before she died m 1975. fictitious stories abounded about the existence of a sis ter oam.ed Ura. Then there are names like "Oral Roberts or Hubert Humphrey. If you stand up lo that, you can b ecome unique ins t ead of peculiar and can do very well." Ashley says. A sense of humor can help, a s in the case of Ma nila's archbishop -Cardinal Jaime Sin. The cardinal often tells in s peeches how he enjoys inviting people to "the house of Sin," his ~ official residence in a Manila "uM~""av s uburb. "When I was little. I suppose you could call me a 'Venial sin,' but after I die people will realize I was a 'Mortal Sin.' "he adds. Even ordinary names often imply something about their owne rs , "whethef it 1s true or not," says Ashley. "Everybody named Leonard wears glasses and is interested in the futures market.·· says Leonard As hley. "George means farmer in Greek But now it suggests someone who is a weak husband." "Christophe r s uggests intell ectuality and Katherine is determined and strong,'' he says. People's names. product names. place names a nd the names of objects all are scrutinized by the American Name Society, a group composed of linguists, psychologists a nd other people who study names. Its scholars have found that the origins of names often are clouded by assimilation. "Darren is an African name. But the Britis h saw the TV s how ·Bewitched' and thought it was an American name," Ashley says. Sheldon. Seymour and Sidney are cons idered Jewish names because they were commonly used by parents who wanted American·sounding names for their children, be says. Actually. the name Sheldon has English origins. while Seymour and Sidney are French. Famous people can popularize a name. But Ashley cautions parents against choosing a name that is too faddish. ''If you name your kid Farrah. 25 years from now everybody will know her age because the Farrah Fawcett phase was quick.'' Other name guidelines for parents include : -Pay attention to the initials. "When Arthur S. Sullivan grows up and gets a briefcase with his initials on it. he's going to be furious." -Watch for double meanings. "I once had a student named Warren Peace. He signed his name 'W. Peace" because he was embarrassed." -Choose names that offer a lot of nickna mes -such lS Margaret, which yields Maggy, Peggy, Margie -so the child has an option. -Keep "family heirloom" names. "If tbe name Is ugly, just give the kid an extra name or two." As for Leonard R.N. Ashley, call him Leonard or Tim. But don't ask what the R.N. stands for - he won't tell . . Chin.-divorces rise PEKING (AP> -China's divorce rate Is rialn1· sharply, wilh many marital splits blamed oa adultery by spouses corrupted by "Western 'bourpob . Mleolo1Y and Ufe 1t yles," the China Daily reported. · 1 In Sb•llaai, China 'a mo1t populous city, thefe ..,.. 17 pereent more dlvorce1 ln the firlt ball of tbl1 7ear tban ln January-June lt80, the t:n1lllb·IU1Uaae newspaper said. It nid one d11trlet listed 61.5 percent ol di¥Orces u ...wtlDC from "interference by a tblrd party.". . Elegant Esrape Treat yourself to hotel comfon and style in the European tradition. just 8 miles from Los Angeles amidst great museu rru.. gallenes and shops Penthouse dancing. dining, One furnishin~. personalu:ed service Call (213)577·1000 or your local Hilton Restrvation Serviet I SO ~ulh Los Robles ' IMSURED '° $100,000 • 11182 ws .. ·• BIG STARS At-ll'l'l'S L uurcn Dtu:ull put ~ ~11·m» around J~mcs Cu~nl·~. ll•ft. and his fri<.'nd Al Jla c·kl·t t at Nalionul Bourd of Review of .J\totion Piclur~s awards in "New York Citv. Miss B at•all t•CC('pll'd best at'lor award for Hem·v l•'ondu for his roh.1 tn ··on G(,ltl t•n Pond .. I Judg~ faces cl888es ter dI-unk dft:ving El. CAJON (Al'> Superior Court Judge Hugo Fish~r has been ordered toallend a year or driving classes ufler pleading guilty to drunken driving for the second time in nine months Tisher . 60, 3lso was fined $28.S in his appearance before Municipal Court Judge Elliabetb Riu s. A judge in San Oiego fined him $400 and put him on three years' probation after a similar plea last April. In addition lo three year.s' p r obation imposed by Judge Riggs, he was ordered not to drive within six hours of drinking alcohol. Fis her was arrested Thanksgiving Day in returning hom e from a friend's home in EJ Cajon. Fisher . a former state senator from Sun Oi ego, has been a Superior Court judge since 1966. The Californfa Commission on Judi c ial Performance recommended last month that he be censured for misconduct in his handling of the conservatorshlp of C arole McCune , widow of Phoenix millionaire Walker McCune. No itction has been taken by the .. s late Supreme Court. Man, ape• traitlJ aimilar DURHAM . N.C. CAP ) - S imilarities in the Immune system or man and African apes support the theoi-y that the s pecies s hared a common ancestor about 5 million yearS' a g o , D u k e U n ,i v e r s i l y resear chers say. 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Aau1a/eloadora: 1173 Eaat Aloata 335·1.206 •aounowori 16908 Bellflower Blvd. 925·9621 r ... orly a11111 380 South 8e~r1V Or1'.f116&1·3000' • ...... ,: 42156 Ilg Bear Blvd ( 714) 806· 76t 5 • aluo .ley: 27226 Highway 189 ( ?14) 33 7 ·2421 • ..... ~ MOO La PalmaAvenue C?lo() 527-?IOO•a....etlr llll 8ayslde Orlve(714) '100.8611 •C..tellOM:1855 Harbor819d (71 4)64$-4420 •CUlnlClly; 107M Jellerson Blvd. 559·7220 • hllertea: 911 Nodl'H llvd (714) 8?9·7440 ·•t••el•: 600 North Brand Blvd. 956·7100 • lmaoi 4482 Barranca Parkway (714) 559. 7007 • l.opna .... 310 Gtenneyre Street c 1 l ) ~4· 7606 •I.Ge htest: 2543 I Trabuco Road ( 71 4) 768-2946 • Leae ...... : 625 £011 OC90n Blvd ~36·3271 •Loaehoola,.1115767 PQcu1cCOCR1HtghwoyM7·&869 ............ ~: l5l5We1tcl111 Dr1Ye (71.t)642-4090 ·•ortll•ou,.....: 63$0La\lre1Canyon Blvd 916-2MIO • lleltbrt499o: 194~ Plummer Street 993-6700 ...... Do•rt: 73-155 Highway 111 (714) ~0,..624 • ftecon ... : 201 E YotbQ Lindo BIVd. (714) 524·8700 •Ian PMt0: 29000 S'o Western Avenue 832· ?502 • ..... Anai 27GO No. Main Street (714) 547·9605 • loal .... h 1 13820 ~I Booch Blvd. 598-7626 ........ Oall1: t4475 Ventura Blvd 788·2420 ·ltaalOn: 12000 Beach B\Vd (714) 801-171 I •'-"9•••: 24020 HawtborM Blvd 378·9374 ......... : 14545 Victory BIVd 781 -4545 •W.lt8oUywood:8653 8everlyBlvd 657-4t41 •0poftlntl00fttn~C..kft .. ..S•l•Ml .... •MllW9 ... ~ ...... --.. -· .......... -~ ............... _. ... ,....._ . ...... ..ts.J ~ .. , ... _.,....,._., p • _ ......._ __ ~ 81.2 million.sougli• -----for oceans Park job' • • RICHtiOND, Va. CAP) -budeet proposed by rormer Gov. Famed underwater explorer . J ohn Dalton, and Dalton left Jacques Cousteau haa asked the o n 1 y S 2 m i l I I o n I n Vwalnl~ General Assembly for unappropriated funds. Sl.2 miWon toward develop\l)ent Unless the legislators manage or a SZ2 million Cousteau Oceans to increase the amount of Center oq th e d o wntow •. una ppropriat e d money, the 'Waterfront In Norfolk. Co us t eau ve nture will be His cha nces of getting the competing for scar ce dollars appropriaUQD, however , appear with local projects throughout none too bright. the state. Cousteau. 69, received warm. The Norfolk project would be applause when h e appeared a n e d u c a t i o n a I a n d ____ _,,....__....._ ____ _ ------~- Orange Coast OAl'L Y PILOT!Wednesday, January 20. 1982 . . '"M_Qr.e severe we~ther 'p.redicted Forecaster claims worst of winter due in March DETROIT <AP> -With moet of the nation stlll reellne from record-selling cold. it's of llltle comfort that a forecaster who In 19'18 predicted this winter's severe weather says the worst is yet lo come. Joae'Ph F . Goodavage, a science writer and student of astr ometeorology, said in an interview publis hed In the Detroit Free Pres~ that March and the angular positions of the planets. ''I can say with some degree of confidence that March wlJl be the worst part of the winter ," Oooda\tage said in the story, "The winter wi ll continue with s ub-freezing te mperatures , alternating blizzards, heavy preclpltallon ... New England ik in for a deep rreeze, the likes of which it. has never seen." and the weather are affected by shirts an the oenter of gravity which in turn are caused by changes in planetary alignment. .. ·Survivors sought before st.ate legislators, but they e n t e r t a i n m e n t c e n t e r have lltUe cold cash to offer the e mphasizing what th e sea French sea captain. means now to mankind and what The Cousteau project isn't in it could mean for the future, the $13.1 billion 1982-84 slate Cousteau said. CHANCES SLIM Chances aren't bright that Jacques Cousteau can gel funding for park. -will 6ring even worse wintery weather. In a 1978 Free Press article, Goodavage predicted that the winter of 1981·82 would be one of the worst on record. Goodavage's methodology is based on sunspots, solar rtares Astrometeorology assumes that the plane ts and their terrestrial activity are all part or an Interactive, interdependent unit. On earth, for instance, the sc i e n ce th eo r izes that earthquakes, volcanic erupUons G UAl RA , Brazil CAP> - Rescue t e ams sear ch ed for survivors of a bridge collapse that plunged more than 40 s ightse~rs into the churning Parana River, but officials said Monday that they doubted any more would be found. Eight people were found alive after a suspension bridge below the Sele Quedas Falls coll apsed Sunday. / 'ftlll Ill '!".:,"llmlm Ci.fli!·- • llAKEUP ••• ,.._u-.>2 J I .-• ..,. .._. Ulll MASCARA . • u. . KEEP. 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M 95#-A$12 95 Addlttonal portraits avala.. fM purchase Deposit lbtal Package '1fl4ll deposit cheerfuly refunded. -----------------------I I I Clp this coupon and present It. along wfth tbe 95( deposit to our photographer to recetve YfXJr plush toy animal. • I I I THESE DAYS ONLY -JANUARY: WED THUR FRI 20 21 22 SAT SUN I 23 24 I I I I I I I I O.ily: 10 A.M. • 8 P.M. Sunday: 10 A.M. • 5 P.M. BEACH BOULEVARD. Westminster HARBOR BOULEVARD, Coata Mesa MAGNOLIA STREET, Huntington Beech CAMINO DE ESTRELLA. San Clemente One toy ....... per~ ~deposit per subject CK group. ,,.... not lnduded. Minon must be.~ by pmrem. I I I I I I I I ----------------------- • STORE HOURS: DAILY 10 AM TO 9 PM SOUTH COAST AT PLAZA "I COST A MESA . --en m---t•i:------tC: ,., • -C) .. c BAKER SI. NOT HIN& . HElD BACK ALL .SA ~ SUNFLOWER AV. FINAL NO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGES . ( ·10 U'( 14;1 •Jq 12 th .Jl .. t. Jd '" u 11 0 r. " ... ...... .t; ! u '11 • .. I • -... ~· Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Wednttday, J~nuiry 20, 1982 --~ .............................. ~ ................... .. Pt.nch "Well, do you want to start off tonight's argument with a real zJnger or shall I?" ,~~\ ~'"~ • Mutual help available DEAR READERS: For many human problems. there are no easy answers or solutions, but there is an alternative to coping alone. "Mutual-help groups," ranging from Alcoholics Anonymous to Parents Without Partners a nd the National Federation of the Blind, offer supportive environmentswherepeople can talk out their problems and learn new ways of dealing with them. • According to the National "Institutes of Mental Health, there are about half a million m utual-help groups in existence today. For an overview of what's available, plus information about what to expect from an organization of this sort, send for the free fact sheet. "Mutual Help Groups." Write to the Cons umer Information Cent er, Dept. 609K. Pueblo, Colo. 81009. And, when you order this fact sheet, you'll also receive a free copy of the "Consumer Information Catalog." Published ,quarterly by the Consumer Information Center of the U.S. General Services Administration, the catalog lists more than 200 free and low-cost publications of general consumer interest. Mobile lwme facts DEAR READERS: California mobile home residents have man)'._i mportanLrtgllls whicb are now compiled in a pamphlet just released by the slate Department of Housing and Community Development. "A Consumer's Guide to MobHehomes" answers questions about purchasing and living in a mobile home and mobile home park. It also reflects new laws effective Jan. 1. The pamphlet points out that once installed. 95 percent of all mobile homes won 't be m ove d again and that approximately 1 million Californi~ns now live in mobile homes. Some of the new laws discussed in the 24-page pamphlet include the following: -Mobile homes sold on or after July 1, 1980 ; those on a permanent foundation: or those with delinquent renewal fees are s ubject to local ,property tax. rather than vehicle license foes. -California cities and counties must allow mobile homes to be installed on lots zoned for single-family dwellings, if the homes meet federal construction and safety standards and are installed on permanent foundations.' -As of Jan. 1. mobile home park owners cannot charge extra fees for members of the mobile home dwellers' immediate family, or guests who stay fewer than 20 days in any month in the mobile home. -As of Jan. 1, dealers must make complete disclosures in the sales contract or deposit receipt. "A Consumer's Guide to Mobilehomes" includes information on many other rights, and state code sections are cited in the margin. The pamphlet also tells consumers whom to contact about problems with registration. a mobile home dealer, manufacturer or park owner. Copies of the free pamphlet can be ordered by writing: Mobilehome Pamphlet, Department of Housing and Community Development. P .O. Box 31, Sacramento 95801 . or by phoning (916) 323-9803 or (916 ) 445·3338. ----J • "Got a problem"' Then wnte to Pat '-"'I Dunn Pat will cut red tape. getting "'.J. the answers and octwn you need lo • solve 1nequ1t1es in government and n business. Mail yo-t.1r questwn$ to }'at Dunn. Al Your Sennce. Orange Coast Dail11 Pilot. P.O:.Boz. 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As many letters Cll possible will be ar13wered. but phoned inquiries or letters not including the reader's full name. address and business hours· phone numbe'I' cannot bi constdered This column appears doily ez• cept Sunday~ ... 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Vic Atiyeh ha s urged l awmakers to s las h money from the state budget, he asked them to set aside $2.3 million for a campaign to combat "the miserable image Oregon has with t he national business community." Speaking at a special s ession of the Legislatuue called to ba l ance Oregon 's budget . Atiy e h requested it declare a s tatewide economic emergency to provide assistance to counties because "we are on the edge of disaster." He said he wants lo add s taff to the Departm ent of Economic Development . ·a nd set up ·a ·council to mak e it easier for businesses t o ope n plants in Oregon. Oregon's economic woe s ref l ect it s dependence on the wood products indus try, Which has been hard hit by a national housing slump. James stamp nix ed KANSAS CITY. Mo CAP) -Crime does not pay -at least when it comes lo co m · m e m orating stamps issued by the U.S . Postal Service. A national c itizens' advisory committee ·has turned down suggestions that the lOOth anniversary of the death of Missouri outlaw J esse Jame s be co m - m e morated with a special s tamp , according to Ann Mills. a spokeswoman for the Stamp Division in Kansas City . . It had been s uggested the stamp bear a picture or James in his coffin, with the wording , "Crime Does Not Pay." The citizen s cpmmittee received letters advocating the stamp, along with others opposing a sta mr "honoring" a crimina . Ms. Mills said. The committee considered the idea. but "did not recommend a s t a mp," s he s aid , adding the committee wa s unlik e l y to reconsider the decision al Its next meeting March 19. James, who robbed trains and banks in the years following the Civil War, was shot lo death in St. Joseph on April 3, 1882- 'NI c·1.4ts1:c•1 -r '81 ZBPllIR ON SALE wrrn m 1SAD •191.91-. "--'Jt. IU.a DOWN PA''M g.vr, 11000 IO NOHTIILY PA\"Ml!Hnl Ol!l'UUW> ..ae& II llHJI) CA!UI PIUCll lll071JIO tlN0.1 '1>£.."' TA.'<. UC~ e llal IJUC'PHl._talJ 1,7.-11 . . : .lttll '\ , .. , ,\. ,0, I· I ;1 ,, ~I I C.llM2-H71. "" • , .. WOfdt IO wortl tor you. ---------~-...-, Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. January 20. 1982 Is 'History of Cocktail' another ·exaRlple of synthesized news ? BALT I MORE <AP> Le1enda~y newapaqerman H.L. Mencken never let the facts stand In the way ol a 1ood story. •nd • researcher thinks he's found another example of what Mencken called "the treat art of aynthesiiina news." John Baer, an economlca teach~r at Anne Arundel Communlt{. College and loqtime Mencken an, aays Lhe Baltimore PAI Of I aav••1.oo CUllOL KINDNESS journalist had a pench•nt for writing convincing hoax stories. He believes he's turned up a new one in "The Secret History of the Cocktail." printed on Dec. 13, 1908, In The Sunday Sun, or which Mencken wus editor at the time. "If I had to make a guess, it was all made up," Baer said Monday of the article, which pu.rporta to trace the derivation of the term cocktail as well as the history or mixed drinks. In hi11 me moir, "Newspaper Days,'' Mencken cxpluina how. as a cub reporter for the 8ultlmore Herald, he learned the art of ··n ews sy nll\esis " from an experienced -,.i val reporte r , Leander J . de Bekker of the Baltimore Americun. Mencken says de Bekker aske<t why they should "walk our legs orr tr>-inr to nnd out the name or a . . . 11lcvt.'Ciore kicked overboud by a mule " So, he made up a name and details, other reporter11 agreed to turn In the sa me "facts,'' und their papers printed the tale. The so-callecl history of the cocktail included a r e vi ew of bogus tructs on the subJect fro m a work c alled "Die Alkoholls mus," which traces m xe<fCJrlnlt to Che Mid(fle Aaes. to the account or a Scottish dllltlllcr und theoretician who cited u British Army regiment known for their plumed caps as· "thti c.·ocktalls. ·; H ow the coc ktuil actuMlly originated, lbe article contends, was simpler: a bartender mixed lt in 1846 to help settle the nerves ot a man who had just woo a duel. BPmCIALI SPECIAL I SPmCIALI -- 11111 ..... SPECIAL I IODYWAYIOI CUllYWAVlllT .fOR EVERYONE! CASCADE AUTOMATIC DISHWASlllNG D£TUCUT Gentle Form1111 IOI N1t11r1I Of Color T r11tld Heir y-._, 4.99 .. IUIU. KIT SAVEllOc (4%&U)ggc SAVEaoc TRONOLANE Antsthehc HemorrhOidal Suppos1to11es for immediate rehel ol pain, 1tch111g. 1.99 burmng IOI Of 10 SAVEeoc DRY IDEA IOUAI urn.PUIPllMT Goes on dry to llelp kffp yo11 dry. AD PPICES PREVAIL: WEDNE SD AY . JAN 20th THRU SATURDAY. 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V...0-..,. ......... ....., POUWTAtN YAU.ft -•elfl'tll l Wamet ' IMTA._ _ _,,_....._...,_ lfM Ml-Cul* Or.• ....... .. -"'· O~ang• Coaat.OAIL V PILOT/Wednesday, January 20. 1982 Jet rwise relief grounded by FAA In the thcatcl' of tlu• a hs11rd ratc gory . th(' p r it.l' tl11 s WN'" mus t surl'lv go to the Ft>dt•1·a l Aviution Aclm\rust rntio11 for 11 1' d edsion on 1w r tnissihh.• t:1kl•11ll standurns for kt~ dl•partmg .John Waynl' Ai1·1><>rt L ust Novl•mla•r . d11nng :1 s pec:iul visit to 01·11n gt· Count ~. a ranking FAA 11ff1t·1:1l lur polt l·~ mattl't's. ratt>g<>nl'a ll~· :-ta h •d t hat tht> exis ting t a kt>off prun•dun • woulct ht• mo<tif tl•d 111 1111 l'ff111·1 111 r e d u l' c n o i s l' c :\ p o s 11 r I' t 11 r es i cl l' n t ~ I 1 ,. I II ).! h l' II , •• I t h de parturC' palll'l'llS Thal ~•dmin1:-t rat or Do n11ld Segne1'. snid thl• Ill'\' a llowahh· thrust r ulba(·k alttlu<k \\'<111ld t:tll s omcwhc l'l' hl•t w<•t•n lt)(l and ltlO f el' t. Ry nll' n l 1 u n 111 i..: t h 11, ,. a I t 1 t u d es . S l' g 11 l' r ,. 1 r 1 11 :1 l 1 , a S S U I'<.' d (} I' :t I\ g l' l' II Ill\ t .\ government off1t·1ab tha t 1101:-t· r edu ction~ l'alll·d fo1· 111 th1· 11-m onlh old ai1•port 111:1stl'I' plan w o uld bf! achtl'\'c d ('u rrl'nt s tanda rds pr11h 1h11 po\\1•1 r ed u t•t ion s a t a lt it ttd l'' 111•1!1" 1 .000 fel'l . by lo\\ l't'1n g 1 h1· thr t>~ho ld :tl11t11 lh ·. JHl\\1·r cutbac ks l'an hl' m adl· :-011111·r thus lowering thl' a m n11 n1 111 11111,,• generate'<l on takt•off 'l'hl· l"AA ·, formal ordt•t' o n l h t• m :1tll•1• \\ II :-:1111\01111<' {'cl F n d a\ \clnrn11 str.1lor .J l.\'f)ll (ll•lni .., ..;:aid l h l· t 000 1'~1ot ~l a11tlanl would 11111 hl• t·h:rn._:,•d Sn mut·h tor wh.1t !-.l'J,!m•r h:11l t11 ~"~'' 111 No\ l'mlw r . 1\l'l'IH'd111 ..: to \\hat l'Olllll \ oft ida b ""' 1• l1•:t rrll'tl l111· F,\.~ f11.1:1 ll~ 1k1 ·1tll•d lh.11 lO\H'l'll\g tilt' <.'lll h:tt·k .dt 11111h-\\t111 ltl 1·11•a 11· 11\0l'l' \\lll'h 1111' p tl11h ;111111·0 p1l11l :- d11rr ng l al.1·1111'~ Thi• I'.\.\ ,,11d 11nlh111 g 1111\\ I'\ 1'1 .1h1111t .1 1·11tJ'l'h•1 :thh• hod~ 111 1'\ 1d1·111•1• I 111111 I h1· a1rl1111•, 1111111 p1l111 , .111tl 1111111 a 1 1· <' r .1 t I 111 :1 11 11 I ,, ,. I 11 r 1• 1 ' • 111 ct 11'.11111 '~ I h . I 1 Ip\\ I ' I • tit 1111 d I' JI 11 \\ I' I' I' 11 I ll . I I h ' 1 • , I II h I' .11·1·11mph-.lll'd ,,11t·h ~Ill I ,II\ II 111• l••l'1:t1fl1•1t llt.1I .I ;11 Hl 111111 1'1tlh.ll'h .ilt tl 11d 1• \\,I, II\ l'lt1'1'I ,II lh1• .111p111t lltlltl t:li!I \\ lh 'll ti \\,I" .lht llpl (\ I h .1t~;1•d 111 I 111111 11•1'1 h\ F \ \ 111 d1•1 U 1·.1,1111' 1111 I h1• 1'11.1111.!I' Ill'\,., \\ ,., ,. 1·1 .. dh 1·11 •:11 ~II 1111\\ ti ,1pp1'.ll ' I 1\1•11• \\ tll lw 1111 1'11.11\1:1• 111 1 lh' '''"' rn1: nit h.11·" pol11·~ .\11d I h.11 11w:111~ 1111' I h1• t11m· h1•11\~! I lw1•1• \\di h1• 1111 IH'\\ J1·1·l11•I I r11111 tl'I 1111IM' \'11u t'.lll th.1111-. lh1· ... \ \ 1111 lh.11 Skirting dress budget F irs t Laci ~ ~ant'~· Heagan :- press secretary ste ppt•d fo n , ant the othe r da,· lo defend lhl· t'ul't tha t he r boss has stepped out in some borrowed r lot hes . 111tlud 1ng some of the la test ha utl' t·outun· gow n s worth up to SI0.000. These fashionable t-n~l'mble~ were loaned to tht.• fi r~l lach b\ top desi gner~ l ike Ad olfo.· Riil Blass a nd J a m es G alano~ C r i t i c i s m f o l l o w ed t h l' dis l'losures from l hos l· who clai m e d ~r s Rt•a g an \\a s g aining person~d ~H·nl'fit I rom these loans Press Set•r e la n · S ht·1h1 TC1 tt• countered tha t tht; onh l)l'nt•fit w as to the fas hio n md ust n · and Mrs . Reagan got no be.nefil Bes ides. Mrs . Tate said . "t here 1~ an inordinatC' inte r est in what Mrs Reag-an Wl·ars .. With a ll due res peC't to :\I r~ Tall'. this 1s all plain n11n~en~t· Of course Mrs. Reagan bl·1wfits ll 's really nitt' lo step out wht•n you know ~·ou 'rl' garbed 1n tht· la t e s t h igh fa ~ h 111 11 . "hl·t ht· 1· you 're fem ale or m :..ilc:. fi r st lath o r plumber And w hethl'I on loan \II ,I L!tlt. ll d tll'' '"\I' 1111 1 lh' dol hm g hudg l'I .\ ll d \\ h ;I I a b 11 II I ll 11 ·11111rd1nall' 11111·1 l''I · 111 \\hat :\I r :-lh •.il!;111 \\1·.1r'' lnnrd1nutt· m l·~111~-. 1•\t·1·l·d 1 n i.: r1 •;"11n;1 hit· l1m1ts Tht•rt·' lll'\'l'r lwt•n ,111~ l1m1t lo 1nll'n·~l Ill what t hl' I 1r-.1 latltl'~ o l n11r land h :1n· \\Orn lh·-.:- Tru rn.in \\a~ kllil('kl·cl 111 'lllTil' 411 ~1 rtl'I'~ ;ind pr:11sc•d hy othvt·,· b t·t·au'l' :-hl· d1't''"l'd ra l ht•1· p l a 1 nl ~ .\net .J acq11el11ll· K e nru.·d~· l'Ollltln 'l Sll'p nut:-1c1l• fo1· a hrl'ath o l air without ha\'ing hl'I' o utfit a n a h z e cl I r o m t' o i ff u n · l o toenails Wt' s up posl' m the t.'nd. tht' gove rnment <tnal~sls will pon<lt.'r t h i s w e i g h t ~· q u e s t i on u n cf dete rmine whethel' or not Mrs Reagan must d erlal'e hl'r loaned gowns as a g ift and be nefit. Me anwhilt'. it's ni<'t' to han• 1>U r fit~t lad~-looking nirl· 'ind ~ o t1 c·ar\ ht•t on 1m l' lhinl! to r t•t•rtain I norcl111:1tl· or n11t pl·oplt• "111 talk aho111 11 The high f;OS~ of laws Among the thousand or more ne w laws p assed by the slate Legis l a ture ever y ~ear art• doze n s. s omet i m es hundreds. that pres ent cos tly e nforcement problems fo r local governments -with no s tate m o nev a llocated to help pay the bills . · Tha t 's why Orange County and 37 other counties have j oined forc es to file s uit 'agains t t he s tate in Sacr a m e nto S upe r ior Court. seeking to have 23 o f the costly laws r uled "invalid. un cons titutional or unenforceable." It 's not that the counties dis · approve of the law s. o r that they are seeking a ny s pecific a m ount of money from the s tate . They're simply trying to call attention to the problem a nd. if possible. dis courage the legis l ator s from passing more laws without m a k - ing some prov is ion to pay for them. Al the ve r y lea st. they would be grateful if the sta te 's financial seers could be m or e accu rate in estima ting the cost impact of new laws . For e xample . the cost of e n • forti n)'.! a 19'i8 m<•asure requ1n n g that st rc.i,· <'a ls b<· held fo r 72 hours bl'f iirt• bL·tn~ dt•st roy~ \\c.IS l0Stima tcd a t SOO.O(HJ <;tutcwrd c. In Contra Co~l:.i Cou nt ~ alone. that m easure costs S..58,000 a Yl'<ff And no one knows how much 1t wi ll co~t thl' counties to com ply \~ it h the new d runken cinving law t ha t m a ndates ti 48-hu ur Jail term fo r fi r s t o ffe n dl'rs. b ut 1l 's esti m ated it <.·o u ld run in to mill ions. Many of the 23 statult.'~ c·rted in the laws uit would be welcome a dci ilt0ns lo lhl' la'>' books. coun- t~ officials a gree But so would som e cash to imple m ent them And tha t a ppare n tly won't be fo rt hcoming fro m the stale Local governme nt s h ave been g rumbling about this situa - tio n for vear s. but their com - pla ints s eem to have falle n on deaf ears in Sacra me nto T h e law s ui t ro u tt• 1s ~o me\\h;H extrC'm C', b ut perha ps it's t he only wuy to tnjcC'l som e c·o mmon sense into thl' lawm a k - ing fever Akl~S~'rnlS IS n4[ Slti BHT 7 Jews • ID Poland scapegoats?· WA S HI NGTON -An ugly development is being monitored in the confidential cables from Poland. The military regime might be setting pp Poland's tiny J ewish population as scapegoats for the misery that is sweeping across that tragic land. The estimated 6,000 Jews remaining in Poland -mostly the elderly, pitiful s urvivors of the Nazi Holocaust - represent no threat to the regime . But they can be useful in the historic role of Jewis h m inorities in Europe -to d e fl ect attentio n fr o m c orrupt, repressive regimes during times or public discontent. THE EVIDENCE s o far i s inconclusive. But the Polish authorities appear to be playing the Machiavellian game of bl a ming Solidarity for the anti-Semitic attacks. thus discrediting lhe labor union. while at the s ame time suggesting that Solidarity is itself a nest of "Zionists .. Jus t 10 -days itfler martial law was imposed upon Po l a nd . lhe State Department cabled U.S. e mbassies in Wa r s aw and Vi enna lo wat ch for indi c ati o n s that the r e porte d anti-Semitic incidents were centrally coordinated. "We would appreciate your giving Polish publications and Warsaw radio broadcasts special scrutiny." Tbe Vienna embassy cabled back a report that anti-Semitic leaflets indeed have been circulating in Poland. The l e arlet s w e r e de sc ribe d a s inflammatory. One leaflet slyly tried to hit the Polish masses where they live. IL conta ined "a reference lo Jews not having to stand in line to receive seven pounds or Kosher meat a week." the embassy cabled. The pa thetic Jews in Poland are more likely G. -JIC-1-ll-l-IRS_D_I -~ to be found at the end of the food lines. but the report would cause resentment among a populace that has to sta nd in line for hours in hopes of getting its meager meat ration. The confidentia l diplomatic cables disclose lhat a ma jor distributor of anti-Semitic leaflets is the so-called "Grunwald Group " -a n ultranalionalisl , possibly neo-Nazi organization that surfaced last year as a counterforce to Solidarity Sources told m y associate Lucette Lagnado that the Grunwald Group was s et up with the approva l of the Communist authorities -not the first time Lenfo's disciples have set aside ideologic al purity for the sake of expediency. Anyway. it is obvious that its recent activities have the military regime's blessing. -Grunwald 's ant1-Scmit1c propaganda leaffets have been sent abroad bearing a Gdansk postmark. "in an a pparent effort lo discredit Solidarity," lhe cable from Vienna reported. (Gdansk was lhe birthplace of Solidarity). Since the declaration of martial law, the embassy cable noted, "this could not have been done because of censorship rules - without lhe connivance of hard-liners in the Politburo . " A S F 0 R T H E s o u r c tt-of the a nt i Semi tic poiso n . the Vi enna e mbassy cabled th a t th e leaflets ema nate from "a neo-Nazi movement in Sweden, which smuggled the leaflets into Poland ... The Slate Department investigation is being pursued primarily by the Human Ri g h ts Burea u unde r its ne wly appointed chief. Assistant Secretary of Sta~e El liott Abra ms T he d epartm ent's experts see no s igns yet that Po l a nd 's Jewis h C'O m munit y is in any physical danger. but they can't be certa in whether rt•s pect for world op1mon'would lead the Communist regi me to protect its Jews 1n the event of "spontaneous" outbursts i g n i l ed by the a nti-Semitic hate li ter atu re Jn its a tte mpt to paint Solid a rity as both a nti-Sem itic and J ewis h -d o min a t e d . the Pol ish gqvernment may have sown the wind - but it is Pola nd 's Jews who will reap the whirlwind Inmate labor could stretch funds <Today's column 1s wnllen by Mr. Waters' assoc1ale, Phtl JordiJnJ Calirornia 's prison system dollars could go twice as far if greater use were mad e of inmate labor. Assemblywoman Cathie Wri~ht believes. and she's aJI for I l The. blond k>r:m e r Simi Valley mayor. a feis t y fiscal and socia l conservative, is vice c hair of the lower house Criminal J ustice Committee, whic h held a mid· December hearing rnto the subject of inmate labor: Wright a l t im es chaired the hearing. If s he'd had any doubts before, what s he heard at tha t hearing made up hel" mind More. s he noted delightedly in an i nte r v i e w imme diately afte r it a djourned . she be l ie ves the other co mmittee m e mbers present. regardless of party. will agree with her. WHATEVER THEIR previous feelings on the matter . the rest of the s late's lawmaker s may ha ve little choice. lhe state's coffe rs are empty, but its citize ns are demanding ever tougher law-and-ord~r legis lation. In part as a result, according to a recent C rim inal Jus tice Committee starr report. the annual prison s ys tem budget, now $429 million. will be $1.3 billion by 1990. More, the system will need a dozen or so new prisons, coslinR an additional billion doll ars to build An impossi ble s i tuatio n ? No t necessa rily. One of those who appeared at the hearing was E.J . Estelle. head of tl\elexas prison system-:-what he had to s ay was an eye-opener for those present. Ca l ifornia . with a 23 5 million popula tion. has som e ·29.000 adult , flll llTfRS prisoners. Mainta ining them a nd the system holding the m costs taxpayers S38 per prisoner per day, SIJ,000 per year. Texas has a population or only 14.2 m illion. but its prison system holds more than 31,000 adults. The cost? Less than SlO per prisoner pe r day. less than SJ,600 per year . The differe nce? As Estelle spelled it out. inmate la bor. with Texas prisone rs constructing and m aintaining prison buildings, growing prison system food on prison farms. even running their own school system. In rf;lurn for their labor, Texas prisoners receive no money, only "good time" off thelr sentences. In Cal ifornia , "good lime " is autom a ti c and . acco rding t o CorrC'ct1on~ Dep<1rtment Director Ruth Rushen. who was a lso at the hearing, fewer than half California's prisoners ha¥e evC'n make-work JObs Wright s aid s he does n't believe California's per-prisoner costs can be brnughl to the Texas level. "but I think wl' Cf)uld s upport t wi ce a s man y inmate-. for the money we are spending now· h\ l'mulat1ng lhe Texas example. pulling prisoners to work "BlJT IF CALIFORNIA prisoners are lo be paid for their work." Wright strl'ssed. "I'd like to make sure none or the monC'y gels into their hands. That money should be used first of all to compensate their v1ct1ms, then lo take care of prisoners· families, and finally lo pay the state for their own room and board If there's any money left after that. let the prisoners have a ·draw' to pay for their cigarettes a nd candy bars .. Wright doesn't see such treatment as Dr a cone an ·'These pe<>ple are criminals -look a t the na tur e of the crimes they have committed ," s he explained. "A prison is n't supposed to be a country club. it's punishment "You want lo make s ure a person in prison doesn't ever want lo come back to prison," Cathie Wright added. Prolonged percussion debilitates legs In most sports that I know about. the exercise is beneficial for the lungs and legs go first. This is certainly true of the heart and the whole circulatory box ing, bas eball and tennis, by system, it is debllltuting to the legs. fa stest uvcraAe speed to get the longest wear fr1,m it. Opin,ions expressed in the space above a re those of the Daily 'Pflot. Other views ex· pressed on tnis page are those ot tne1r autnors and artist!.. Reader comment is 1nv1t· . ed. Address ·The Dally P1tot, P 0 . Box istro. C<ma AAesa, CA 92626. Piione (71 4) . 642·4321. admission of the athletes themselves. T his is why mos t PE,ysical fitness -Football-;-of -course. engenderr scnnmy--experti .. recommen . swun mlng as'Hw .Jogging is as unnatural a human uc tl vi t )'. as we ig ht·lifling, w.hic~ develops-the subs tance at the exl)ense of the structure. E very living creature came originally from the sea. and each species pays a price for its adaptation to land or air. The legs go first because they came last. and must be saved ror the lifelong task or keeping us upright. ... L.M. Bo yd/Fake jewelry . I I ! ' Q . Why is fake jewelry called "paste"? A . Among t he early lmltation makers were the Venetians. They poured molten glua into molds, then shaped it wblle It h.cl the conalsteocy of spqbetti. You know the Italian word fc)r spaghetti: pasta. . ORANGE COA"ST llilyPilat Call it fat, if it's still solid al 68 degrees F. Call it oil. if it's liquid al that temperature. Q . I claim Agatha Christie is the most trans late d of all English authors, right? . A. Next to Shakespeare, she ls. THomas P. Haley Publisher : Thomas A. Mu.,..ln• Editor Barbara Kreiblctt Editorial Page Editor . I I injuries that it hardly matters what ideal all-round e xercise, not walking or goes first. running: because In s wlmmin11. tht• legs Tbe last time I saw Bill Tilden play a move easily throuah the wat«-r and do tennis exhibition in Chical(O, be could not pe>und a hard surface. IYlllY 111111 ~ W> s till beat any opponent in the world -In one set. His strokes were still there, a lorig with the anticipation a nd the coordinaUoo -but the legs would not last past a doien 1ames . Why should this be so, when other partR of the body seem so much more vulnerable to Injury and decay? Appearances. however, are deceiving: the tee aeems to be sturdy and muscular, but anatomically lt ls a weakling appenda,ge, prone to clve way under proloncect percussion, such as rUAl\lng. The paradox teem• to be that while ' WHILE WALKING may do more good than hllrm. ln terms or the total bodily welfare. I cunnot believe that jogging Is anythlnK but a bonania tor the podiatris ts and the orthopedic s urgeons. Some medical spcclatlsts. Indeed, have already becun to warn the public of the probable peril" In JouinR as a daily routine. We are pre·emlnentty a nation of faddlsl.l , end a faddl1t 11 someone who thinks that lf tt la healthful to drink a quart of' water a day. ll ls four limes as healthful to Imbibe a ,atton a day. If walklns promote• health, they reason that J011ln1 does It futer and better. But they are confuslns a "maximum" wllh an "optimum." An auto may have a maximum speed of 100 mph, but lf you continually drive It that fut you will wear OU\ tbe engine . Its "optimum" speed may be 80 mph -wblcb la lbe ' CllllY Cll Dear Gloom)' Gus: I wlsh I had a buatneaa that hu aa much bMIDNa u tbe sipmaker who mat• .,.. far bank& &aY'lnt. "Nal wiadow, (or Dftt teller) pleue." .l.C.V. ........... RIGHT SOUND -Champion duck railer Mickey Saso of Modesto praC'tices on a four-in-one whistle that took 17 weeks .of trial and error to fashion. He has so ld 10.000 \vhistles in fi ve ;\·ears. He designed duck whistle WATERFORD (AP> -A duck call is a lollike a mousetrap. Someone iS always trying to make a better one. But champion caller Mickey Saso lh.foks he's finished with inventing for a while. The 37-year-old Modesto-man put 17 .weeks of full-time work into the design of a four-in-one whistle imitating pintails. widgeons, teals and quails. · The plastic whistle has seven pieces and is sold under the Wingsetter trademark. It supplements his inventory of duck and goose calls at his Waterford sporting supply store located on a road leading to several popular hunting lakes. "The first time I blew the whistle, it sounded so bad I almost cried," he admitted ... I redid some of the cuttings and changed the dimensions. Finally, by the fourth or firth time I got the right sound." The style he uses to create that sound is what brought Saso 26 major titles in California and Nevada in 11 years of calLing competition, Saso's description of his training sounds like the regimen followed by a symphony woodwind player. "You need to have good diaphragm control with the ability to hold your breath to carry out your call," he explained. "I use seven to 10 notes, starting high and ending low." Saso considers hand control at least hair of the task . He attempts to get just the right tone by forcing the sound of the whistle to echo off his hand. It is a technique that took years to dev~elop. "I s tarted out as a duck hunter when I was a kid back in 1955," he said. "I just kept pradicing my duck calls uniil I ~ame pretty good." Al his first contest in Sacramento in 1971, Saso was forced to cul his routine short because the -show emceed by_::_Outdoorsman" show host Bel Lange was running late. His initial failure turned out to be the start of a hunting companionsllri> and friendship with Lange that led Saso to the television show six times. Saso later won state titles and the Paciric Flyway competition. After years of using calls made by others. Saso began crafting his own to improve the sound. He started a mail-order business in his garage with 10,000 wooden and plastic calls of his own design. Saso began using wholesalers after an attempt at direct sales t(I sporting good s tores. He estimates that he has sold 50,000 duck calls nationally since 1976, most of them in th& past two years. But Saso said he is not preoceupied by the venture that he launched on a "wing and a prayer." He works 12 to 14 hours a day in his store. practices calling in his office but keeps duck bunting "my hobby and my second love, behind my family." Computerized Man jailed through error LOS ANGELES <AP> -Ronald Hamilton l.s still wondering about the apparent computer error that cost him two days in jail when he tried to pay a couple of old traffic tickets and was told he owed nearly $10,000. Hamilton, 'Z7, went to the police department's 77th Street Division at midnight Saturday in an attempt Lo pay off two tickets. He had received ·notice saying they had "gone to warrant" because be had not a peared in court. ---Th~ computer said Ha milton had been ticketed for backing across an intersection and, on another occasion, for speeding and driving an overloaded vehicle. The penally on the second charge showed up as te,562.50. Hamilton went directly to jail when he couldn't come up with the cash. Nearly two days later, Traffic Court commissioner Barry Kohn suspended or dlamiued all the traffic charaes -lnc:tudinc one C?.n an U1e1lble warrant -and told Hamilton be had spent enouah time in jail for the failure-to-appear warrants. / Allen Lott chief clerk ol the Municipal Court's traffic division, said a "data processing error" probably was Lo blame for lbe mixup. Hamilton, an unemployed truck driver, said be wasn't bitter about the experience, but lf anyone has an outstandin1 traffic ttc•et, he advised. "Take care of it." .. --- ..... f-• Orange Coast DAILY PILOTtNedneaday. January 20, 1982 411 . Soviets p~eparing ·mftnned spac~ station OMAHA, Neb. (AP ) -The Soviet Union could IOOO establish a manned apace 8taUoa f« .,yln1 on Earth, HY• the form•r We scienctl director for the NaUOAal AeronauUcs and Space Mminl•tration. Dr. <lw'I• A. Berry said that be baaed bh predicUon on bh knowledae of the Soviet space procrlJll. He Mid the Soviet apace ataUon · couJd be 1n orb t by the end ol March. ''The United States haa been on the around a Jo6c .Ume.'' h• 1ald. "The Ru11iana have been flylnc, flytna. flylnc and have had two atx-montb mi11iona." Berry, now prealdent of tbe National Foundation for Prevention ol Disease at Houston, Texas, said he baa maintained contact.I with Sc>vleta wbo were i nvolved ln space . pro1rama, lnelUdlnt one hlplevel source now In lhe United Nations. He worked on a joint proaram in the 19708. "I know the Soviet Union's 1oaJ la to establish an orbital apace 1taUoa manned by six to 10 astronaut.I," be said. "I think ll couJd come ln the first quarter of 1982." B.erry, who was in Omaha to address the Well.oesa Co~cll ol the Midlanda, said there are llolft~ant a dvantages ln a mannecl apace station compared with an 1mmannecl s py satellite. From a manned apace atatioD, tbe Sc>vlet.1 woWd have a sun.wane. capabWly far superior to umnaanect satellites. He said the Sc>vlet Union a1Jo could operate an lnlercoD1l.neataJ wea.POQt system from a manned aatel.llte. IVY'S LEAGUE Winter Sale Final Mark Down! 60% to 75% OFF ALL WINTfiR ITEMS f amous SAVE save on d \ug·_ zsoto name hr;~c h as J,4 , gag c ' Ventura. · FF skywa~: rtmann. 1/3 0 ·a nd '\\ aa\so f.ind v ou a\ reducuons & \adies ~~ec~usinc~s c a:e:moo\.h and , dbags in th t"\es and the hanven \eath.ers. r~P free mono· ' wo meta\hc \o<> . ., . ,, Ji f .. I : \ new . g gramm1n -.thintf must be told t.o Ever1;oon; for our 1982 ~-• ~0~. # 125 Fashion Island_; --. . _ ~ Newport Be~ab . 1.23 Fasruon Island, Newport Beach • (714) N0-5721 Store Hours -Tues., Wed., Sat. 10-8 p.m . Mon., Thur., Fri. 10-9 p.m., Suq. Noon-5 p.m . . . 759-9101 J -~ ------~. : .:.....- United gives a great price to C · andoiore! .onewa~ Night COach. And -now first-nm movies! No matter what your schedule, you can fly the friendly skies. The most nonstop widebodies going every day. Pick a time. Reserve your seat in advance if you like. Even enjoy a first-run movie on selected flights ($3 charge for headsets in Coach). All for a great low fare. Chicago is yours on United for as low as $109 one way, Night Coach . Seats are limited. Fares. restrictions and schedules subject to change. For reservations, call your Travel Agent. Or call United at 537-7521. Partners in Travel with Westin Hotels. ___ To Chicago Leave 7:40 a.m~ (L) 10:20 a.m~ (L) I: 10 p.m~ (L) 4 :40 p.m~ (L) 11 :30 p.m.t (0 ) 12: 15 a.m~t (lJ Arrive 1:30 p.m. 4:10 p.m. 7:05 p.m. 10:20 p.m. 5:00 a.m. 5:55a.m. L=Los Angeles O=Ontario 'Widcbocly t Night Cooch '· I I t' I . --- • Fa.re Code QN ... \ J _I Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wtdne1day. January 20. 1982 There is no cause and effect relation between the r j • proposed consent decree and the price of phone service. Scene: Toledo, Ohio An elderly woma n is exa mined by he r doctor .. who is twelve mites away. The monitor- ing device in her small a pa rtment is con- n ected to t-h e docto r's o ffice. In t>xtreme s itua tions. a portion of the devict> can actually adminis ter m edication. AJl on the doctors . ins truc tio n . All through the local telephone exch a n ge. Scene: Baltimore, Maryland A hus ba nd a nd wife s it befo re a tC'le \·is ion screen pressing buttons on a s m a U keyboard s imila r to a typewriter keyboard. They a rc ch ecking the ir ba nk b a la nce a nd paying the ir m onthly bills. Al l through the local telepho n e exch a nge. Scene: San Diego, California A woma n in a n o ffice g la n ces a t ... h er watch . p icks up the te lephone. keys I up he r h om e number. then presses four more button s. S he pauses . then presses four • more buttons. She pau ses. the n presses four butto n s aga in. In her home. the oven goes on and e egins cooking a roast. A pause. a n d then the air conditioning is turned o n in her ho m e. All through the local telephone exc:h a nge. These are scenes from the future. but not the very distant future. Tu make them a:nd oth er ben efits of the Information Age possible.th e Bell System agreed lo re- s truc turtng. Under ~he c urre nt tangle of restra ints and proposed regulation s tn the telecommunications Industry many tech- nological advances were h eld In check. , AmC'ri ca was in real d a n ger of losing its pos i- tio n as th<: world leader in telecom- m u nicatio ns. The restructu ring we agreed to w ill. as vou know. separate the local telepho n e c'om - p a nies from AT&T In this n ew arra ngem ent. your tele pho ne promises lo give you greater access to the bene fits of lh<· Info rma tio n Age. An electronic gateway to the world The local exchange. linked with other services. is a giant computer. more sophis ti - cated than mos t <'Ompulers on earth. Your te lt-pho nc can be tho ught or as a te rmina l conne('tingyou to this c:omputcr. The ('entrnl dt•ct ronic switching ma· chine in your lo('al exch a n ge is. in turn. <·onnected to lo ng dis ta n ce li nes. It is actually a .~atcway to the rest of the <"Oun try a n d the world . Access charges will help cover local costs The costs of tlie gateway arc a very importa nt part or the priC:(' you pay fo r te le- phon e service. C han res in who pa)'.S the.-;e_ costs a n d how the>' a re paid have b een u nder way fo r som e li me. In th e fu ture. n·!.!ula ti on~ w ill p rescribe cxact ly how mud1 of t h e long dis ta nce revenue will go back to th e local excha nge to hdp cover the costs of u s in~ the swit ches a nd lines th at g ive ac(·es~ to your 'h ome and offi ce. These "a<'ces~ ch a rges .. will be the sam e fo r a ll long dis ta nce compe titors. which is not thr cast' todav. And m ost im por· t<.l nt. t h esc cha rge~ will be. used to hdp pay th<:> cost o f local exch a n ge srrvi<'C. Access c hargt:'s wi ll no t br clecick d by AT &T o r o ther longpista nC'e com panies. Gov- ernment n:•:gula tor"> \\'ill dcdde h ow much the ac:cess charges s hould be. Thr-ir a im \\'ill be to keep locaJ telephone service affordablf' while keeping the na tio na l a nd local tt'lec:o111nn111 i· C<~l ions system lin a nC'iall y ~ound . The inflation factor Will local teleph on e rate~ ~o up in 1 he luturc·? Yt"s. But thl' propost>cl con sent d<'net~ wo11·1 be the m ajor facto r by a ny mean s. In fl a t ion and the ne('d to relate prices to costs in eCJc h service in todays competit ive environ- ment will be t he major faetor-s. AJthou g h the price of trkphone service has .~one up more s lowlv tha n almost a nything else in Amt'ric<.l. even lkll System technolo,gv can ·t ovt:rconw all the effects of infla tion . Greater economies of scale It is li kely tha t om·t' the tangle of rcgula · li o n a n d rrst ri('t io n is clea red a\\'a\'. the re will bt' a lot mo rt' uses fo r tha t g ia nt computer sy ·te rn called the local excha nge. The gateway will b e bus ier l ha n ever before. The hig h er volume s hot•ld produce m ore fees at the gate- way as well as more fees fo r u ing the "com - puter" for services within the local exC'h a nge. Econ omies o f scale can keep costs under con - trol a nd the refore keep p ri l'es fro m ris ing. ll will be up lo the regula to ry ag<'n cies to be s ure that the ·r econo mies of scale a re ref k rted in your phone b ill. Entering a new.age Th e end res ult of the restructurin~ o f AT&T will be to remove the ba rriers to new u ses of technolol{y. We a re on the t h resh old of a n ew a ge-th e Informa tion Af!.e. We believe it is in the public inte rest to see tha t the benefits of that new age come to America as quic kly a s possible. Tha ts why we agreed to separate the p a rts o f the company now. We want to h elp America into the future. 0 • Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, JAN. 20, 1982 A Newport constlltant says colors can a/ f ect office productivity. See Page 84 . 0 D CAVALCADE BUSINESS COMICS 82-3 84·5 BS ':UehFan black-market . flourlshe~, security tight POVERTY IN IRAN Houscwi ves in the Khoramshahr area near Tehran "ash their clothes in wretched conditions surrounded by ............. mud and garbage. Recer.t visitors indicate Tehran is crowded with refugees from the war with Iraq. Lesson: Don't ignore unrest U.S. became 'too comfortable' in its ties with Iran By BARRY SCHWEID A•-le• -•Writer W ASHJNGTON -If there is a lesson to be learned from Iran it is that ignor ing ·political and social unrest in a friendly country can hurt the United States if the unpopular regime is toppled. That is the consensus of four key U.S. actors in the hostage drama and the events leading up to the Iranian revolution that swept away Shah Mohammad Reia Pahlavi and brought Ayatollah Ruhollan Khomeini and other M o slem fundamentalists to power in Tehran. Warren Chri s topher , the principal U.S. negotiator in the h~iage crisis, says the United States "became mesmeriied with the idea that if we were able to deal with the shah we were able to understand all of Iran." Bruce Laingen , one of 52 Americans held hostage for 444 days , says the benefits the United States gained from its close_ ties to the shah should not be ignored. However. Laingen aays, "when you have a relationship in which your interests are being served you tend to become inadequately perceptive to c h a nge, you become too comfortable in that relationship." A year after the end of the bostace crisis, t.he United States -the "great Satan" to the Khomeini fundamentalists - and Iran are estr a nged, dlplomatically, politic ally and economically. The flow of Iranian oil has stopped. So ha.I the supply ol U.S. arms for Iran's armed forces. There la UtUe commerce between the two countries. In principle, the Reagan adminiltratlon hopes to normalbe relationa eventually, but la in no hurry. Iran seems unlntermted. In con,junct.lon with· the first annl.ersary ol the release ol lhe hostages, Christopher. Laingen. former Ambassador William Su Iii van and former Assistant Sec r e tary of St ate Harold Saunders . were asked by the Associated Press what lessons we re to be drawn from the crisis. And Frank Perez, who heads the antiterrorist office at the State Department, was asked how security has been improved s ince mobs attacked the U.S. embassies in Iran, a nd also in Libya and Pakistan. "In the '70s," Perez said. "we worried about a small terrorist attack . As a res ult of our llWI llllYlll e xpe riences in Tehran and Tripoli, we are now giving emphasis lo mob attacks -to impede and slow down the entry of mobs. to get our people out or into a s afe ha ven in the building." Twenty-five embassies have been surveyed for securUy. EventuatJy, another 100 will be assessed. Jn the m e antime, new procedures have been adopted. Fewer classified documents are kept in vulnerable embassies, a nd they can be des troyeJ quicker. Starrs have been trimmed. There are more bodyguards and armored cars. Seminars are held at the Foreign Service Institute he.re on how to cope with violence abroad. "We've taken a variety or measures since Tehran to reduce our vulnerability and to· increase the protection afforded to our missions a nd to our people," Perez said. A year after he negotiated freedom for the hostages, Christopher is practicing law, running a private foreign policy center and helpinc Mayor Tom Bradley of Los An1eles prepare ror the race for 1overnor o( CaJlf ornia. Looking back, Chris topher said in the years the United States supported the shah it yielded to all of his demands and trie d not to annoy him by looking deeper into the country. ''Tha t 's n ot a partis an comment," Chris topher s aid. "Although those s hortcomings s urfaced in the Nixon years, they flowed forward. By the time we perceived the problem in 1977 and 1978, my own view is that it was too late to rescue the s h a h s hort of military intervention, which would have been unwise or unsuccessful" The former deputy secretary of state said he "would apply the lesson around the world and make sure we are deaJtng with I country and not simply some mortal leader. We should keep our I in es ope n to people throughout the country, and if that risks some little annoyance for a ruler of the country. that's a risk we ought to be taking." Laingen, who was in charge of the Tehran embassy, says the United St"&te~ contributed to Iran's "scapegoat syndrome" by its massive presence in the country during the shah's rule. "The cost of getting too closely identiried with a regime and its figures is that the United States is seen as eq ually culpable with that leadership for perceived Ws," he said. Al the same time, Laingen, who helps run the U.S. Defense Institute here, said ''there is a question how much we can influence the leadership of another country, the extent lo which we can have an effect." Stressing that he was givtq his own views, and not U.S. policy, Laingen said be "would like to believe that If anyone learned any lessons from Iran it's some of Iran's nelchborlnt states, like Saudla Arabia. The leadership there must be conscious of ,the risks In modernhaUon. •· U.S. still depicted by Khomeini as 'Great Satan' BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -More than 1,600 urban Food ls retlooed, a black market guerrillas have been executed is flourishing, and security Is since Khomeini dismissed hts strincent in Tehran, the Iranian secular-minded president, capital of six million Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, last . inhabitants, the number swollen June. The Mujahedeen claim by refugees from the fighting many more executions have not zone in the war with Iraq. b e e n r e po r l ~ d b y l h e The spacious U.S. Embassy government. grounds , o nce clipped to Jails are burs ting with perfection, are overcrown with prisoners awaiting trial and weeds and untended. From the execution, travelers say. One distance, passersby can look Tehrani who recently visited a over the walls and spot an relative at Evin prison said he .occasional armed guard was told about 10,000 prisoners strolling on one of the walkways were held within its walls . leading to t he front of t he Islamic revolutionary courts in chancellery. Evin mete justice quickly by For. «4 days, the embassy carrying out executions within building was the prison for the 24 hours or sentencing, giving American hostages until they relatives little chance of seeing were freed a year ago. Toc'tay. the conde mned before they die, the United States is still depicted Iranian sources say. by the cle rgy-led government Khomeini has called on the 36 and Ayatollah Ruhollah million Iranians to report Khomeini as "the Great Satan." "counter-revolutionaries" to the Posters on buildings auth orities 1hrougtrout the city. and near T e a c h e r s entrances of major hotels h ave a s ked accuse the United Slates and their students "Zionism" for every Ill that has t 0 r e p 0 rt befallen Iran. conversations "We have crushed lhe Gre,at with th e ir Satan and united we can push pa r ents and out the Iraqis who were Inspired w h 0 v 1 s i t s by the Americans to attack us," their homes. one poster proclaims. One father Today's Tehran is crowded, CMOMai111 of two told a with an infiux of refugees from busi ness man who r ec ently the 16-month war with Iraq in visited Iran that his 7-year-old the south. Outwardly . life daughter was chastised by her doesn't seem to have changed teacher for failing to give daily gre atly s ince Khom e ini 's reports of what s he discussed revolution took over in 1979, with her parents. The man said according lo recent visitors to his 13-year·old son is afraid to the capital. talk to him. ' They say garbage details are Mothers have turned in sons to doing a belte.r job now and water local Is lamic r evolutionary fr om .the .n e arby Alburz_ ~ommille.s_Lcu: expressi-n-g ~ountains-sttl1--nms throlJgh th1! opposition to the government or Ju b.e s (open trench e s) o~ for belonging to urban guerrilla Vah·e-Asr (formerly Pahlavi g roups. accord ing to the a~d Mossadegh > to feed the state·run news media. giant e~m trees .on the longest T h e r e v o I u t i o n a r y avenue an the capital. committees conside r e d t he If one didn 't read t.he gua rdians ~nd upholders of government-controlled daily I s lamic ideals have been press, watch lelevi~i?n or listen accused of taking the law into to lhe radio, U.e Iraqi war would th e Ir own hand s a nd of hardly be notice.ab_le. Tehran is blackmailing wealthy Tehran ablaze with lights at night, in residents. contrast to the blackouts a year One Tehrani said that two ago, after the Iraqis invaded r e presentatives fr o m his southern Iran. . . n e i g h b o r h o o d I s I a m i c Shoppers ~o about their d~ly revolutionary committee visited business during ~he day d~gmg him at ho me r ecently a nd the choking traffic for ~h1ch the a c c u s e d h i m 0 f city Is renowned. ~adewalks ··anti -r e volutionary a nd hav~ become o~n aar bazaars anti-Islamic activities ." selhng e~erythmg. from fr~h He was warned that if he did fruit to .inexpensa.ve clothing not "contribute·· a significant from Asia: Amer1~an good~. amount of money known to be in once p~ommen~ly displayed an his bank account he would be the capataJ's chic boutiques, are · no longer found. Shoppers have a limited se le c tion , du e to tight government import controls and the lack of money to pay for them. The country is faced wilh a mont.bly $1.~ billion bill for food imports, which is placing s trains on decreasing ha rd currency reserves . Meat, chicken and eggs are in short supply. travelers report. Shoppers line up early each morning outside of stores with government-supplied ration coupons to buy their weekly share ol groceries. But the shops either run out quickly or some items never reach them. ''I haven't seen a chicken in two months, and '1 can 't afford to pay the prices on the black market," a father of two told a businessman who visited Tehran a month ago. The black market is flourishing and shoppers willing to pay the price can find almost anything. An egg that sells officially for about 13 cents brings triple the price on the black market. Rice and mutton, staples ol the Iranian diet, are also scarce. Many restaurants have closed, while others buy their supplies from the black market to stay in business. The urban guerrilla group, -Mujahede--en Khalq , wtrtch played a key role in !telping Khomeini gain power, has gone underground after spectacular su ccesses in assassin ating a number of government leaders. Security ln Tehran is tight, residents report. Visitors to government offices are searched thoroucbly. Even revoluUonary guards are frisked each time they re-enter the premises. Speed bumps have been laid out on streets leading to and frontlnt official residences and government .buildings in order to hamper the mobility of terrorists. Motorcycles, used in their getaways by antl·government euerrillaa, hav e been banned from Tehran's streets. arrested. He said he paid the money the next day. Khomeini, in an address lo the Hi gh Judicial C o un cil, a cknowledged lhe "wrongdoings of unauthorized persons" and urged judicial authorities "to speed up punishment of those who unJawfully arrest or insult individuals and·or confiscate their property illegally." The war with Iraq has put a stra in on the country's social fabric. Many parents, from working families particµlarly, have heeded Khomeini 's caJI to send their sons into batUe to become martyrs fo r Islam. Diplomats put Iran's war dead at 60,000. Iranian correspondents and photographers who visited the front recently reported they saw 14-year-old volunteers wiped out by Iraqi artillery fire. Most of lhe young voluntee r s, some sources said, were sent into . ba ttle a rte r o nly 15 days' training. Th e r o l e of .women is g radually be ing downgraded, reported an Iranian woman who recently returned to Europe a fte r vi siting her family in Tehran. Thousands or women have been dismissed from the civil services and those who remain a r e r equired to we ar head cove rings a cc ording to the Islamic Shiite code, she said. Restaurants and shops have b een ordei:.ed not to serve wo men cust om e r s who are improperly dressed. Unlike a year ago, very few women are now se~n in public f\ wiChout a heaascatf or chador:" ..,. the head-to-ankJe black covering favored by Shiite women. Entertainment is hard to find in the capital. There are no n ightclubs or discos. Private clubs have been closed. But some Tehranis still manage to organize small, discreet parties with trus ted frie nds where homemade vodka and wine are ser ved. foreign bus inessmen say. The preceding picture of daily life in Tehran was pieced togetMr mt~ Beirut bureau of The Associated Press from interviews with fareign travelers and Ira nians recently returned f rom Iran and through telephone conver sation& with Tehran resvlents. Al ni1ht, pedestflans and a utomobiles all but vanish. Floalinl eheckpolnll are lhrown up ln northern Tehran and at polnll ol exit from lbe capital in an effort to eateb lf\lerdllu. T!HRAN DEMONSTRATION -Shouting anti·U.S. slogans and cal'l'ying up errigy of ··Undc Sam ... l!'anian · demonstrate near former U.S. cmhuss\' in Tehran. America is s till blamed for ~ver~· problem that htts befallen Iran. · .. Orange Cput DAILY PILOT!Nedne1day, January 20, 1982 •ANN LANDERS •BOB GREE N E SNOW FUN -Ray Healy of Quincy, Mass., t a kes to the air with h is sled at the Furna ce Sammy Miller wishes to thank all his friends who attended his 75th Birthday Party on January 12 at Dillman's Restaurant in Balboa. All Gifts were deeply appreciated. ---------------• =-Looi! For The .. Yellow .. I I =-LOW COST I -~·~ I I VACCINATION I CLINIC I I By Pet Prewent~A-Cere I I I I :-':-."::' 1~~ Aebl•• ............ $3.15 ..... 11 I IM). Awlts •ec:cl,.•ted Distemper (D.H.L) $4.25 ..... :=~~·::.,~·~.:!: Pervo, Cal "3-lft-1 " 15.00 .... I ;-:1'~"Ln'tus Dot• "~n-1" ...... S7.00 ..... I ,.. CATI ••••• ,. I 11'\.aAM. I COSTA MESA SANT A AHA I s..w. -. 24. I HJ s ' ••. -. 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Girl needs help ; · OEAR ANN LANOERS : I am the m othe r of a 16-year -old boy who has always been open and above-board with m e . I hope you will not think I a m bragginJ'( when I say he is the kind of son most m others pray they will have. About three months a go a 15-yea,r -old girl began to tele phone J ack once or twice a week. He had never taken her out or shown any interest. Now the girl phones him every night . usua lly in the middle of supper. He is polite to her. but I know he is a lso e mbarrassed and annoyed . His responses •ere brief and he gets off tht.• phone as soon as possible. Yesterday J ack received an eight-page handwritten l~tter from this girl in the m ail. He showed it to me and said. "This kid is some kind of a nut. The things she describes in tha t letter never haµpened ... Whe n I re ad it 1 blus hed . Now I a m con cerned. I be lieve s he is mt•ntally ill Sha ll I speak with her mother who m I -know only sli ghtly'! Please a dvise a l om·t.•. NEED TO KNOW IN TENNESSEE DEAR TENNESSEE: By all me ans, telephone the girl's mothe r and ask if you can meet with her about a matter of importance. Tell her what you know a bout he r daughter's inability to sepa rate fact from rlction. If she tells you to mind your' own business, at least you will have the peace of mind that comes fro m knowing you tried to help. It is obvious that the girl could profit from some coc,nselinl!. Let's hop~ she gets it. DEAR ANN LANDERS : M,· hus band a nd I both have adult children b\' our previous marriages. Whenever I invite his d a ughter a nrl her family to dinner. s he savs. "I'll see ... I the n have to ask he r two or: three more times before I get a defintl t.• a nswer . It m akes m e reel as if I am begging. which I resent. Sometimes it ·s "Yes:· but more oft en it's "No" . . a nd alwa\'S at the las t minute. r' work an eight-hour JOb and like to prepare well in advance. S'o ever~·t h ing b j ust right. An extra fo ur people does mah a difference T he woman is 36 \'t.'ars old no kid. Ho\\ do· I deal with th.is irritat ing p r o b I e m ., l ' N 0 EL I G HT E D I N OE:'llVER DEAR DEN: You have allowe d ~·our s t e p da u g hter t o tra p y o u in t h e "wa it·and·Stt" s vndrome. You must now take positive steps to ext ricate ~·ourself from the victim role. a nd the sooner you do it the better ~·ou will feel about yourself. T he n e x t t i m e yo u in v it e ~· o u r s te pdaughte r a nd her f amlly to dinner say, "If it isn't possible to give me de finite ans we r no w. I will Invite yo a nother time ." If she doesn't give you firm "Yes," tell he r , "I u_nderstand-we'I m iss y ou ." T he n get off the ph osi prom ptly. You set yourse lf up for irritation tr letting her keep you on hold until s he f tt'ft like m a king p p he r mind. When sht- dis cove rs you can no longer be dangled - e nd of proble m. DEAR ANN: Recenllv. at a 1·afrte. m~· number was picked fi rst. '1 was. given thU;it prize. The next number drawn wo n second pr~ze . T he third number received fir! pn ze. · Ooesn·t it seem logical.to ~·ou that t fir st number drawn should be the winner or t h e f i r s t p r i z e ., M,. F M O*' MONT ICELLO f DEAR MONT: They St!lect the main prize winner last to add s uspense ~~ e xcitement to t he drawing. This is gOf!IJ s ho wma nship. ..,, Be satisfied with tht> third prize, T~f;l. Wha tever it is. it's more-t han you came ;JP with. .. , Tl1ere 1s a t>1y d1/fenmce hetween cold '!'Jf. cool. Ann Landers shows you how to play 1t c9~I w 1t11out f reezmy people out 111 her book{; . "Teen-Age Se.r -Ten Ways tu Coo/ It .. Send;~ 1 cents ar1d a long. self ·addressed. stampe'd en1:elope to Ann I.anders. P 0 Bur 1193~ Chicago. Ill 6061 I POT SHOTS B Y ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT .,., Ill ,, al IJ\ IN THE ·.t:. "'-;• NE)(T FEW WEEt<5, I HOPE TO DISCOVER. II WMAT WILL MAPPEN '• IN THE' NEXT FEW WEEKS.: ··~~ . 1, I !Ill The biological clock One reade r a cC'used me of m aking tht.• quotes up. Another reader wrote. "You ha\'e managed. with two columns. to obl itera tt.• a n~· respect I had built up for ~·ou over th(' ,·ears · A numbt.•1· of readers \'owed ne\·er lo look al my column again. The subject m atter'.' It was the recent pair of columns dealing wi th wom en who liked the ideu of giving up prom ising careers in exchange for husbands a nd families. The columns mad e the point tha t mon• and more women in their 20s and 30s a rl' becoming frustrated by business careers becaus e they h ad c hosen t o p urs ue business success and . in the process. hact not gotten married . The women I talked to said that. a s unmodern as it sounded. the~· 4would g ladly get rid of their good jobs if t hey could have a good husband instead . "WHY DON'T YOU t ell the other side of the story'!" working women asked me. .. Wha l a bout wo m e n who are happy working for a living? No one ever te lls that s tory.·· Whal nonsense. That story has been told to the point of boredom for the last 10 years . Of course s atisfied working women exist. But wha t intrigues me is not the women who responded that way but the wor king wom en who responded by sayinl-{ that yes. they are indeed noticing emotio ns within themselves that seriously quest ion whe ther a good career is worth giving up a tr aditiona l life a s housewife and mothe r . One of those women was Sarah W OuncA n. 29. who has a fine job as a publicist with a charitable organization. He r job entails responsibility and is full of cha llenges. It is t he kind of career that ma ny women s trive for. Here is wha t she had to sav : "I put ii\)a lot or blood. sweat and tears to get whe rl I a m today. And here I sit in m y orrice. counting down my rem a ining childbearing years . "I'm just wher e I planned to be 10 years ago. in terms or my career. I haye a hip apartment. a hip job. a hip dog. hip friends. And I'm panicking:· MS. DUNCAN SAID THAT she spe nds a lot of time wondering if she wouldn't be m ore s atis fied wi th a con ve ntiQnal marriage and ramily. rather tha n what other people consider a "good Job." She said she is positive that many other women in her position feel the same way. ··During the last 10 years of the women's movement . it was the right thing 808 GlffNf to .do to go for u ('areer and make your mark. whate \'C'I' wa~· ~·ou did 1t. ·· she s aid . .. A lot of women. including me. put a lot of energy into gt.'lting where they a re toda~· And I think a lot of us a re wondering whe ther we wasted a lot of valuable t ime . "Th(•rc·s a certai n age group m~ age group when women are \'er.~ g ung-ho about their careers ... she said .. But then you get lo a point where you realize that one insti nct women have is the nesting instinct It's a biological fact And..l can 'l he lp thinking that I'd be a good nester ... She said that fo r all of the support s he gets from books a nd magazines that tell he r how far wo men have come in the w~ force. she has a nagging doubt: · "MY JOB IS GOI NG WELL, my soci-I life is ~oing well. my apart ment loo great but rm an old maid a t 29." She reali zes that t he ver~· phrase "Old maid" sounds anachronistic · these times _ But s he is not sure just ho much of an anachronism it reall v is . "We're so new a t it." she· said ... age group is r eall y a test case. At no ti in histo ry have the re been so many s ing women li ving in little a partme nts getti up t o go to work every morning. Ours i!; t gene ration tha t is supposed to find out this is really right. I just wish we'd hur up and find it out:· Sometimes. she said. her emotio ns t I he r truths about herself that her inte lle t won 't. "I was invited to a ba by shower a re weeks ago." s he said . "I would ha enjoyed seeing a ll the people there. A the n it da wned on me that I would be t o nly single pe rson there. I would s wo men who had ha d bal>ies s ix or sev vears ago. a nd I'm still not married. · ··1 fe lt so ... a lmost inadequate . knew wha t would happen. I would go to l bubv showe r. a nd a ll the women wou say. ·S ara h . y our· j ob s oun ds interesting.' 'But maybe late r . a n er I le . they would say. ·Poor Sara h ...... S H E DIDN'T GO TO THE b a s hower . And she said that. as she thoua about it. s he realized tha t the ract growing olde r applies to women ln dirf e rent way than it a pplies to men. • f - Leo: Ruled by emotions T hursday, January 21 ARIES f Man·h 21 ·J\prll 191 : Ahst ra<'I values come into t'1H·11s : spiritu:.il (·on<.'<.•pl:- dominate µersonal M'Clli.Jl'lo Empha~•~ on c.·ommun i<.:ation . po ~~•ble journt·~. distus~wn ol spt'l'lal publitatwn and tlw O\'en·oming of' d1 s lam0l' and la11g11 :•a.!L' barrier:-Pi:-t<.•s i:-1n p1l'l111·l· TAURllS ( Apl'll 20 M<i ~ l O I lnvt:!s tmcnt even tual !~· will pa~ di\'idL·n1b. 1-10 but delays are lob<.• l'XPl'l'lcd. Othl•r 1wopll0 consult ~·ou eum·erning th<.·1r mo11t·~ and finunc.·ial pruspc<:ls You'll h;l\ l' d1ant•t.• lo prov<.• major point. JOUI HEALTH DR. PETER J. STEINCROHN .. :·r , _____ -------------- Non-sniokers \ruinerable? (iE~UN I 1:\h1\ l tJutu.• W 1 Thts t ~ .1 lt.•s t p<.•riod H·t.·l;t11on ;-h1p h :1 ... 111 •\\ bt•ginning or 1t 1~ 1'1111Shl·d (;o :-.lu\\ lw s~·mpathet 11.· hut a\·01d la·ing g 11l l11llt' Art<.'"· 1.t.•o. 1.1hra nall\'l'" pla~ 1mport.1111 rolt·~ Legal dotunH·nl n·qutl'l'" t•lo"t' sc·n1t111~ AC't ae<·ordrngl~ (.'AN(' E R 1 .J u n (' ~I J u I~ '.! 2 1 '.\: v '' a p p r n a C' h t o h a s 1 1 · " e n · 1 (' L' s h rt n g ... impnl\'cmen t. lndiv1<111als \\ho lt.•;111 on ~ ou should be given fol'h of' ltf1.· '.\fran~ ... top bt>i ng used h~· thost• ''ho l·ontinuouo.;I~ ta kl· with out givtng an~·thmg tn n ·turn •II· De D s . i... ar r .. te incrohn: I ff>e l frustrated . 1.EO !July 2:l·Aug 221 · Emntwn-.. tl·nd :-why shoold I be more likely to get lung to dominatl' fogH· m ·t•tTomt· lt.•mptat111n ~'incer when I have n't smoked a cigar.-tte to al'I on impulsr Spot light on 1111111111111 ~m y entire life'! I 've just heard that t•ven s pt.•t•11lation. i'11munt1c· 1m«>l\·1•nw11t and ou gh a wife has good habits. she's at thi' abil1t.' to makt• :1 hobb~ s hm\ 1Jrnfit ' e rcy of a husband who s mokPs. I call it Canl·t•r. Aqu<11"1an~ and anotlwr I.en fi gur•· second-hand c ance r . prnmi11L·ntl~ , . He sa ys. ''My fathl'r a nd grandfa the r \"IRGO 1 .\ug 2:1 Sl•pt ~'.! 1 Hl·morll·lin.l! wer e heavy s moke rs. They li\•ed to an old •ge. They never had lung can cer. \Vh,· prOll't'I prm ule-. morl' room. L!l\ l'" \nit I. Should f de prive m.VSt'lf Of s mokin11 With a opporlllnll~ lO l'X)lrt.'"" 11lt.•a ... Ill l"t"l'al I\ I ' " art1 s l1 l· m:innl'r :\l akt.• 111qu1rtl'" 1family history like that'!" ('Olll't.'t'lllng SJH't't<tl matt•rtal. t>l'OIH'rl, But I tell him that hl' now has mt· to ,·a lut.· and intt.·n· ... 1 rate' Tr:1n ... :tt•t1011 ''tll con s ide r. too. How about m~· exposure lo our s moke-filled house'! hl' t.·omplt.'tt.•cl ,-I ask him how he fel'ls about settinj.! LIBRA 1 St.•pt ~:J <>t·t 2~ Ht.•:td j m e up for lung cancer s imph because he bl'l\\l'l'n thl' 11111.·" "'""·' ... m :tll pr int I won't quit s moking so muc h in the house. Emphu~i~ on rl'lal1\t'"· ... hort lt'IJ "' :llltl He laughs it off. Calls it a sill~· theor~ -idea ... \\htt'h eun b<.• lran~lorrnc'll 1010 \ 1.11111· : and keeps on smokin~. Is there a n~·thing to eont·t'pls Aqu ~r111~. Sn1rp111. l.t•n pt·r~on-. • it'! -Mrs. 0 . f i g ll rt• p I' om i n t· n t I ~ You . 11 h ;1 ' 1 • I op port unit.' t 11 l'O t'l'l'l't p;1:-.t t'tT11r ... I J)~A!l MRS. () \\'ell. tllt'rt• '°' and SCORPIO t 0l'l ·1:1 '\;1" ·1 1' Id . I there 1sn t. l l a ll b<.•gan ;1lx1ut a 't'<Jr aJ,!o tn . -· -1 · I a J apanes e s tud,··reporl pubhs hl'<I Ill lhl' ''htt h had tw<.:n ~in th<· ... hi·lt ,,111 ht· I British Medical J~lUrnal rt.•al'ltva~ed \ ou II 11ht:11n 111•1·1·-..-.an ! This indieated that non·smokmg '' t\'l'" func_lmg. Sorn<.• l'hat1J,!l'" art• ."l'l't·~:-..11·~. 1>111 I of s moke rs had a n 111 C'reased n sk ... r dving ba s iy tc~ntt.•pt rt'ma 1 ~."· (,t.•m1111 \ 1rg11 of lung can cer Th is made worl<h~·idu, .. --.s;1g1ttanus pt•rs ons l1g11rt• tn ,t·t.·11 ar111 headlines and al~rt ed man~ \\l\"l'S ltkt.• · ./--SAGf'f'r:\RI l "S 1 :--Jo, '.!~ l k t· '.! l • : ~urself to the pote nt ta I danger ol II\ mg in Signif1l'ant a<ljustml·nt ot·1·111·, 1n rl'l:ll 1011 In ? aJhouse with a hus bC1nc1 who smak<.'d homt·. famil~· and ult tmatt• gn:il-.. Lunar • But s inee then ~tud1t•s b~ the .\ml'l'ltan <'~·dt.• high and '1111 II 111 :1k1· cnrrt·1·1 I Cancer Socie1~· l.'11e 1ted tonfhl·trng rl·-.111t... dt•t·1 ~10n Empha~,.., nn \\t'ant1~ .1pp:1n•I 7 The~· found no s ~gntf'it-ant inen·asl' 111 lung Pl'r ... onalit ~ ~i nd onJ,!m:tl '' ;i\ 111 t''l\pn·-.-.111g can cer deaths m non-s moking \\ t\'t·~ ol idl•a o.;. dt•st rt.·~ 5!'11.0kers . ('APRICOR~ •Dl·t.· ~2.1 :111 l!I • \111 1 As no r~sc·~rchl•rs havt.• n >nf1rmc·d till· lo<':l l l' \\hat had tH·t·n ""'' m1s,111g 111 J apanese find111~~. th<.· quesl11>n 1" -.1tll s tolt.•11 You·11 J.!<lln lwh1nd '-('t't11·-. 'll''' ;ind unan swe~ed '.':t•\"t•rth<'le ...... 1n1111t·t.·1\I . <.·ould ht• n ·npll'llt ol pn\tll'l!t'd -non·smok111g h~ stunckrs ma~ "11 ' lt.•r 111 inlorrnat1on l'an<.·t·r. l11-.c·1·-. \"1rgo p1•r-.on-. other wa~·s.. ~rig II n · prnmi ll('lltl~ Pt•nrn I nl l'hl nl'l 11 II\ I r ccetv(· man~'. l'O mplatnl s from t.·onf1nt•mt•nt i... t·om1ng to ;111 1•1111 non ·s mokers who sult(•r \\'hl'n t''l\IH>sl'd It>.· . . . » . sm oke in the hnml'. restauran b or other .\C~l :\Rll S .•.J.111 _o l·l'I> IH• \\"h ;il public p laces Ont• sa~· ...... :\1~ l'~t·~ ,,at t·r ..;o ~t·t•nH'<I 11111 ol rl'.11'11 1-. 1·l11-.1•r t h .111 muc h I ean't st'l' ·· .\r,olht•r ·· ,\f ll'r ,, on g tnall~ :mHt·1p;1lt'd l.un:ir l'rnpha-.1-. 1111 -bridge gam e with ... mol\111g µartnt•r-. l"m hop<.''· \\''ht.·"· Spl'l'lal .1l'h1t.•\ enw nh .ind ·' sure to com e down \\Ith a clt•\a~taltn~ ~lll'<'L':-~lul husirws~ q •11t11rt•. lfrl;il1n11-.lllp h eadache · · tnl t·n~t I it•:-a nd ~ 011 11 tw ltl:-.p1 n •d !I\ It'' t•d Undo ubted I~·. pat 1<.·nts who aln·ad~ one suffe r from h eart or lun g dis east.• ft•t•I P ISCES 1 F'eh IH ~larl'h 211 1 Fi111 ... 1t worse a fter beinJ,! ex posed to tohat·<·o rat twr than in itiall' pr11j t.·c·t You II 1111<1 s m oke. wa~ s of n:·<.1ch111g more pt.·oplt•. g;11ntng .1 It"s evident. Mr~ 0 . that 1n ont• wa\ or \\id er audit.•twt• an<l ... <.•n ... rng 1n1lst• ol puhlll· another 1ineluding infants ancl ehlldr·c·n 1 <:un•l'r ad ntnl'<.' in1hl-:tt t.•d , prnmut1011 dill' m a n y non-sm oking 1nnoc.·ents ;in• at tht• aml ~ou'll have opport11111l~ It> n•p:1 ~ 11111· m e rcy of ··innocent·· ~mokers. \\ho :11ded ~mt 111 pa~t GOREN ON BRIDGE BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF Both vulnerable. East deals. NORTH + K8753 li?A84 0 A542 + 10 WEST EAST +62 •A JIO li?KJS 'V 7 o KQJ 10 96 o 83 + Q4 + KJ98653 SOUTH +Q9' 'V Q109U2 0 7 + A72 The bidding: Ea1t S .. th We1t North P ... Pa11 3 O Pu1 P ... 3 li? PUI 4 ii? p ... p ... p ... Opening lead: _King of 0. When a' trump promotion succeeds. you might gel your name in a bridge column. When It fails, you could end up being the goat. Once Eut passed. West saw no game in t he hand. so he chose an opening preempt. South backed into the auc· tlon on minimum values because he knew that his partner had to have a good hand. and North could not resi1t goinr on to game. a 2 West led his top diamond. taken by the ace. Declarer came to hand with a diamond ruff and led a spade to the king and ace. East continued with the Jack or spades lo declarer's queen . After cashing t he ace of clubs and ruffing a club on the table, declarer led a diamond. East thought his tr ump had little use, so he l'\lffed in the hope that he could establish something in his partner's hand. Declarer overruffed. ruffed another club in dum my. then ruffed dummy's last diamond. This was the position: NORTH • 8 7 5 'V A 0 . .... WEST . - iv K J 5 O Q • SOUTH • 9 EAST • 10 'V - 0 -+ K J 9 '7 Q 10 6 0 -·-Wllh eighl tricks In the bank1 declarer now exiled with his spade. Since hi1 s ide ' 7 3322 a would score only two trump tricks if he ruffed. West discarded his diamond. East won the spade and wa forr ed to return a club. Declarer ruffed w1Lh Lhe six, and West wns caught in a smolher play. No matter whal he did. hl• could score only one trump trick. Note the difference if East had not squandered his trump. In the end position he could return his trump. and West would remain with the K·J of trumps over the IJ·IO. The defenders would win three of the last four tricks to set the contract one trick. Rultber b rid1e clab1 tltro.,a.out the coaatry UH the foar-4eaJ briclae format. Do they know IOIDethlq you don't? Chart.. Goren'• "Four·Deal Bridie" will teach you tlte 1tratep1 aad uctlt1 of thl1 fut·peeed at· U.a pme O..t pNYide• the care for ueadJq n1W..r1. F~ a copy ud a 1eerepad. eead 11.75 to "Gorea·FHr Deal," care of tliil1 •••paper, P.O. Boa 259, Ntrw .... N.J. 07648. Make clilffka payable i. New1· ,.,.,....., a t s ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesaay. January 20. 1982 ... •. LAKE FRIGID -M 1s t rises from Lake Mic h igan a s lhc c it~· of Chicago endures s ub-zero t<.•mpcraturus This mist 1s e<1uscd ..~ ......... by tht.· l'Xlreme diHcren('e between the water and :11r ll'mperalurt'~ THE VIDEO -oMp--=-~~ (; ll!L•; - -• r---y ! •!~ Al'ARI . ~vcTEM s = -• = ==-----_ .. _ ._. ~ ._.... ---- Turn your TV screen Into video fun for the whole lamllyl Play exciting. edu· catlonal. sophl1tlc1ted games at the touch of a dial. Reallstlc sound ellects ma!<). you feel a part ol the action on the screen. Choose from an assortment ol game program cartridges. #CX-2600 ~r!!~IDS ~ 2915.1 ~~,~~ -~ MISSILE COMMAND •EG. 24.95 CARTRIDGE 29..95 AD PRICES PREVAIL: WED., JAN. 20th THAU SAT., JAN. 23rd SHERMAN CLAY'S 1st ANNUAL PIANO&ORGAN . Merchandise Manageo orders 1mmedhtle 1nvenlory reductton• E1cellen1 selechon ot New •nd Used Many Trade·tnS ecquned durtng the ChrlslmH season II you have been thin~ing of buying a pumo or org1n. now Is the lime to come 1n and let us help you select the lighl lnslrument Perhaps II will turn out 10 be a ule ttem ~AT SUN NEW. USED. FLOOR DEMOS. ~·• 10 to6 e 12tO 5 RENT RETURNS. ONE·OF·A·KIND SPINET PIANOS AS LOW AS sgos A WEEK' m-.rno SPINET s 1169 ISOULm ACROSOtlC s 1709 .... STEINWAY s3779 .... ,llMU GRANO S9860 ·(.:...,11 1••h t •t.11 w .. ' •• ,, SI l/J 04 11,.,.,. ,,..,,...,., $111 IM &.~ ........ 'gu 00 AMll '+4• ... tt'.Mt $1J1~ 00 ~ft M'"""'' oon,..,.h r .. , • .,,, r.t111 •~o 011 4PR 1 1 ll'\ (.)1111,.,.tllt\J &lrf'ltt\1111' JIOO' S,)()?Q n7 Te"""A .. ot- --:::.~&a., .. ". -.,;-. I v:-... ~ ............. -------"" . -----·-~ -\.:• . •• llMBAUSm s1299 CONSOLE s5999 USEI KIMBAll U PLAY sggg SPINET s2110 ·· c.~,, '""''. 11 ............. 1 MINIC> 94 Onwn ~~nl .. te t4 ,,, ..... ~. $1'(100 Ami '"'•"'.O .. n2 oo eo "'°"'1111y P•""911•• ftn•n•.• Chg l~ 20 4PA t~ u"' Otlatrt<l r1ymen1 PHU "'!Ill u ~ SOUTH COAST PLAZA 545-0415 * ~ • p t en. • • • I f *(in ik spen' sivl not high in price: reason· able cost; classified advertising. · Daily Pilat ClatdleOMI 642-5678 ... • .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT Nledn•lday, January 20. 1982 Two savings fi.r01s agree to merger LOS ANGELES <AP> -Great Western Savln11 and Northern Caurornia Savlnas bave a1rffd ID principle to merae. officials of both savln8• inatuulions have Hid. Great West ern will acquire Northern CilUornla Savini• on a shart·for·Sbare basis, 1lvln1 Northern CaUrornla atockholders one share of Great Wea tern Flnanclal Corp.. the parent company of Great Western, for every share of Nort.hem Calllomla Savlnas they hold, officials of Great Western and Northern California Savinas aaid ln a joint announcement. Northern CaHrornla Savings shareholders thus traded stock worth $8.25 per share at Monday's closing for G W stock valued at $12 a share Monday. oeilY ,.litt ti.ft ...... ~ COLORFUL Mimi Sharun uf Newport Beach is a culor tonsultant lo bu:-i ncss ol'fit·c.·s in Orange County . AnAnswer ~ Page beeper Is like~ putting Ille phone in your pocket You·11 never· miss an tmportant phone call again• • World·s largest computenzed paging agent • Inexpensive-less than a dollar a day • Wtde·area coverage-t 5 000 square mites • Direct dial access • A location near you. plus field representahves at your t>eck and call • 24-tlour servtee We never sleep • Free unlmuted beeping. delivery and lull maintenance ()epanfront I.Jots • Quantity discounts • Call today for flterature and a tree demonstration' With Answer Page. you may be out of reach. but you II never be out of touch' ® 11~SWER ffi(jE . The final 30 ocean front ho mesitt!s. A walled and gated private residential communitv in San Clemente. Privah' b eac h and privah' Swim and 1cnnis Club. 731-7777 • 953-5782 C...• ""' t toO N ,,., OrutllltOt!'M-..,_. rw 4rtt-.t,qofk•NM"I'°" Interest only financing available 1714 1 498-~8:.W or Cl1:31 :l77-9470. ll'ICTITtOUS 8UMNISS NAME STATl--NT T lie loll owing per IOI\ Is doing butlMnes: PROOUCE CITY. 1)01 Horlll Grend A-. SM!• Ane, Calltornl• tt7tl. c1111ey Hone KonQ1 1tts Hor111 Cemlw'lclte, OBno-, Ollrornl• .-,..1. Tiiis lllN""I II conch.octe<I by •n lndlvi-: CINv"-Kono Tiiis rt•l-1 wes Ille<! witll ,,,. NOTlCIE CW COMl't.lnlC* P'ICTITIOUS aUSINIH _ c.tMIM... NAME STATEMENT Wftlr0611rld The lollowino persoM •r• dolno ,.., l'taoMN a.... blltlnen .,, C..OMHt,Co.tllU7 UPL.AHO PARTNERS, l6t San Mase Consolldaled W•'"' Olllrlct. Ml9uel Orlve. Sull• 100, Newport EnglnHrlnQ Dl•lt lOfl; Horll\/Sovlh 8 .. <11. C•tllornlo t1'60 Fffder -"'-11; EIS So!lt• Ane Mlcl\Ml I. Cohftl, 1'10 L""ard Rlv0t -Vietor!• A,,._ lo OCFCD L•ne, H._t 8 .. <11. Cellto.-nla 92'60 Fe lrvlew Cllo1WMI; Jellrey Renn• R-n D E .. I. •I El Oot-Lene. (<enlOCI penonl t7141 6>1·1100 HewPOn 114oK/\, Colilornle '2..0 Profe<I ducrlpll°" 01 Nature, OSl S•'"''' Comp•ny, 3200 ~. -9eNllClarlH. 8rlt101 Strffl. COlta Me .. , C•llrornl• Contlrucllofl ol MSO llne0t l•I of tttU County Cieri! ot Or•nve Cou1111 JO.lftCll dlernet.,. wetor t,.n..,..l•W-Tiii• buslMn I• ,..,,dUcled by • J•11v•ry 11, I..,. ,,_ plpellne lo Improve fire llow •"d oener•I pert,..,,,.· .-caw-pr-..r• •-rneiftl' 111 OSl s.n.1u c_, P11b11.-0r..,.. CoeSI Delly Piiot, n. lO<IU-lern pert of 1 .. Oltlrlct. TllofnM P. Lynell. J•n. U , 20, 27, Feb.>.,.., z.u.n. Tlle profocl wtll olt0 •II-• ..-.. \#Ice Pretlclmt ------------· elllcle11t · uu of weler swpplles Tiiis ,..,._ wos tlled wllll Ille -· -1 Ohtrlcl·wldt. Illus beMllttl1t9 the C11<1nly Clerll of Or-c-1, on r-.., 1111111-. efttlN DISlrlcl. J _.ry 11, 1"2 NOTICE 01' llfTIENTION TO IENOAOIE IN City ot CHI• Me ... Cow,.IY ot ~ ...... 1..s Ploc..,.i. A-. Cotto Mose. Colltorniet26f1. Revl-l'ltrlocl: J-ry •. 1"2 - F~ry II. ltl2. Da-·~1.1"2 llOY A. LIEIOWITZ .--. .. ~ ................ ,. TNI SALIE 01' ALCOMOUC e11v1•AGH IM.., • To Whom II Mey Cone"'"' Ken IC-. Subl•<I to I"'*'<• or Ille llc:enw ~ c.-...... ea. .. ~._..Or.,. C.-Dolly PllM. Jefl. I), •• v . ~ .. ·-20-G. •PPll•d tor, notice Is hereby gln n INI Publll"9d o-..,.. GMSI Delly Pitel Illa undersl9,.ed proposu to sell ~J_en_. 1_5_· '°-·-21• _1m ______ 2'Mll __ :."::f::C. :-::,et 1r. preml~. Plk£ 19lU MAU, Yu·Ter, 2t>O Wut Cont 1-------------nATaM91fT AUJIDllllM••TOI' USll CW 'ICTITIOUS _.. ........... Hltflway, ,.._,, e..ec.11, Calllornl• Pu"uanl lo 1uch lnlt1111..,,, the undersl9ned Is applyln9 10 Ille Oepartmenl ot Ale-lie Bever•o- Control for ''~• of en •le-I< beveraoe llCe<!W '°' llleM premise• H IOll-1: '1'1 .. OH SALE BEER & WINE (PUB EAT P\.I Publl"-d Or-Coesl Dally Piiot, Jen IJ, 20, 21, 1"2 24'·tt. ll'ICTITlOUS 8USIMH5 NAME STATEMENT Tiie lollowlng person h doln9 buSIM\SM INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT GROUP, 2110 Moifl $1,..1. Sul• Ito, Hvnllnvton Be.ch, Coll~nl• ,,._ l'ICTITIOUS euSl•ISS llAMIE STATIMIE•T Tll• tollowl119 pe"on h doing bul.IMUOI: TOPICALS INT ERNATIONAL, 1716 Sllylerll Une, HeWl)On tleo<ll, Colltorftlo- R-., M, Sutley, 1716 Sllyl•n L-. "'-' Beodl, Celrtornlo tJMO Tllh -'""' I• conduct.cl bY •n llldlvl-1 Rober1 M SUill'y Tiie 1o1-.e ---__,.d Ille USO of I ... Flclltlovt lullllflt N•-: MR. AA.AH'S JEWELltY & COIN, JSI U Mulrl•nd1 Minton Viejo, C•lltornle n.H Tll• Fl<llllous Buslntu Hamt referred to -v• wu Ille<! Ill Or•,... Counly on Mav I, 1,.1, F1611JS Alen l.OW't. lUJS Catlt Olono, El Toro, Cet11orn11 nuo This 11 .. ..-was lllOCI •1111 Ille Tiii\ -.,,.., ••• <ondu<tf<I "' .,, C11<1nly Cler1l of Or•noe C11<1nty on lndlvlduel Januery •. 1"2. AIOft Lowy " Thh tlaHmenl w.s 111.0 wltll Ille PvbllSMd 0-.,,ge Cont Dally Piiot. lcounty Cl.,k ot Ounoe Counly on JOft. 6, ll, 20, 11, 1"2 1 oeumbOf 11. 1•1 II' Hint Publl"*" Or~ Coftl Oolly Pilot, Glen J. Pl_.., 19'02 -!time 1-------------J•n 13, 20. 11. Feb. J, 1"2 24A.f1. L•M. Hunll1191on 9eo<ll, Cotllornla ~ Tllh llU\lneM 11 condlict.o b\' en lndlvld ... I GlenJ Pl ..... r Tiiis stat-I wM llled w1111 the• c-ty Cte<k of Or....,. Comnty on Jon...,ry 11. 1"2 11'1 ... Publlw.cl Or-GMll 0.lly Pilot, Jen. U, 10. t7, Feel. 1. "'' 207"'2. l'ICTITIOUS aUSINISS NAME ITAT•MIENT Tiie tollowl"9 s-rSOflS ar• dol119 lll/llMUOS! ION T~ TRADING L TO, 16( Newport Ceftler Orlve, Newport IH<ll. Coll!ofllle -Acllllle Hodded. • S.o Island Drive, N•wPOrt Be.ell, Cetllornl• "CTITIOUS eUSIMIEH NAME STATEMENT T II• tollowln9 P•rMOn 11 doing SIMUH: (A) ECONO MY OFFICE QUIPMEHT (B) SOUTH COAST FFICE EQUIPMENT. 9" Soulll rond A-. Soni• Ane, Ce llforftl• 70S Soulll C-Group, o Celllornl• orporetlofl. 809 SoulTI Grand, S.nte ne, Colllornle ttl'OS Tllh t>vslnen h conducl•d by • or_ .. ..., South Coost Group. J.C. D•tton, P~t Tllll sl•l-t was llt.., wllll lfle C11<1nly Cieri! ot Ou,... C-h on .JI. Itel. ,.."' Publl.-Or.,. Coest Oolly Piiot, Jen. 11, 20, 11, F.t>. 3, 1'12 2*42. l'ICTITIOUS eUSINISS NAMI STATE.MINT I'll• foll-lno persons •r• doino buSIMIS.S THE CHINA FACTORY, LTO . .ciclO B lrcll Sir•!, Sult• I 13, HewPOrl lee<h, Callloml• '2660 KEHAUO CORPORATION. o Celllornl• corpor•llon. •000 Blrcll Slrol, Suite 1 ll, H•wporl Buell, Colllor111a '2WO This business il '""®'tea by • llmlle<I pen~ K_,., Corporell°" G41yte E. Post, Pnsldtfll Tiiis ............. WM Ill.., wltll .... County Clert. ol Ora1199 County °" J...Vary 11, 1'12 ,,_ '7..o 1-~--~~~~~~~~ Dyne~. Lid., !00 H--· Center Orlve, Newport 1••<11, MUl'STEl>l.ER, MILLlll, CARLM* 6 a11A•DM..I Y A'--,._... ........ CellfwnleftMO Tllfs Ml,..• It con4\lc-by • ........ ,.._.....,. .t.clllllel-ledllocl Tiiis ............ wu llled wllll Ille covntv c 1.n of Or..,.. Co""tv 011 Jo-ry4. 1"2. ... .., • PutM I-OrM91 C.OOtl Oolly Pllol. J ell. 6. 13. 10, 11. 1"2 ICM-fl. ==-----£ . . NMtM l'ICTITIOUS eUSIMISS NAMa STAHMINT Tll• lollowln9 person Is doln9 bullntts•t: PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SERVICES, 1'1 S Tultln Avenue. p ............ eor,w ..... _ _..._.,,, .. ~,-N..,... a..dl, Co. ft- Pvbll-Or ..... Coofl Deily Ptklf, Jon. 13. 20, 11. Feb. 3. 1"2 1•1.fl Ora"9•. Collfornl•..,... --------------' Wotron F Bell, 1'16 R-1 Lene, Anellelm, Co411ornl• '1902 Tllh buS!Ms• ''conducted b' •" -------------h1dlvld...,I. w .. ronF ..,11 Tiiis Me..,_. Wft lllOCI wllll U.. C11<1nty Cieri! et Or0ft99 c-ty on Oe<.,..llw JI,'"'· l'I_. PUbl..,... Ort119t CoeM, Oelt, PllOI. Jefl. ,,\ ,., 11, ,, ... >.I.., ,,,.., 'ICTIT10US eUMNHS NAMIE ITATIEMIEMT The lollowlflt penon 11 1101119 ........ ~ .. : on OISTllllUTIMG, •SJ Horth 11m, ~ ..... c .. 11om1. "'°' Wll-H. 1( ...... 1. 22'S2 Vie Crur, lotwM ........ Colttorf\lo ._n Tllh Ml""t It tOfldUCI .. by •n lndMduol WllburH K ..... 11 Tiiis I..._, WM 111911 Wiii\ t .. c-IY Clef'll t4 Or ..... C-v tfl J~•.1"2 ,.., ... ...... lllflld Orenot Coetl Delly Plle4, Jon. 6, IJ, 20. 11. 1'12 101 .. t. NM mt AMaNDIO l'ICTITIOUS •USINISS NAME STAHMIENT Tl'Ht lollowlft9 perMtf>' ue dolftt IMnlMuas OESERT INVESTMENT~ IUS MeH y.,09 Orlve hSI, Suite 121. Cote• Mou, Colltonllo nn• Hoftlt 1Cot0. 711 Taylor Orlve, -lerey P-. CatHO<'nle t11S.O. T,__.-wl, , .. c;..,.,,,,,..._, Or Ive. Whittle<, Celllornla telloOI T•dUlll Hhlllno, 117 w ... Oe111nonl Ori,.•. Montebello, Colltwlllo_.., w ............ ,,.,.., 7o.t v ... 11.r ... Wey, a.-... P-, Calilorftl• •• LOii J•-· 21• Lo Enclna, Palm ~ ...... Collfwnia .,., Oorh A. M<C ollny , IU .. elltMM eMI., ..... Huy .. Cell-o t1•1 Wllllam Jolln...,, IUI Peine eoun, c...__.. Cell'-nl• "111 Jo-• A. J-•· cro Allt101e • ......_ 1m -v-Drive EeM, lit. m. c--· Celltwftle,.. a ......... o.c.......•1v_. •-.arc.-., c.i"9rnlo '100. H.-y ~. 100 E.I Clrcuto °"'"· P ........ c.....,.,,..,,lti Tiiis ~lneu 11 c-cled ., • ...-.1 _...""" J-A.J_., Tlllt MO....,_I was fli.e wllll - c-1• Clerk o1 Or-cou"t• .., Oe<e...-21. Itel. 1'1,_ p .......... Or ..... CoeSI OeUy Pitel, OK. JO, 1•1. J ... •, n, 20, 1 .. Hto7•1 "CTITIOUS euSINISS N-11 STATIMINT Tiie lollowln9 ""on I\ dol"g bu1'flfflaf ATHENA GRAPHICS, 2717·J CroOcly w..,, Soni. AftO. CA '2704 JANE HEIDER. 3601 VOii M-. S...lo Ane, CA '1707 11111 -·II ~-UC-by Oft ...... v lcklol. J-H-r Tiii\ --· WH llled Wiit! IM c-1y Cieri! ol O••llOe County on OK. 2', 1"1. 1'17'909 l'vbll"'" Or-C.OOtl Oolly Pile(, De<. 30. 1"1. J ... 6, U, 20, I.., -.e1 l'ICTITIOUS eUSINIH •AMllSTAT•Ma•T Tiie f•llowlllt --· are dOlftg _. ...... : LeeRU H IMAGES, IOU! e1r<11 .... Orlve, Hlilll""""' IMcll, CA.,... JOSE,. ... R . LoeRUH, IOU! e1rc......, O<ive • .,...,..,.....,. IMcll, CA.,.., A•LENE LeeRUN, IOUt elrc......, O<ive, H..,........., a..c11, CA.,... Tiiis .,..._, It (~ by M lftdlvllhoat. .,..,..L .. rWI Tllll ............ w-.fl ... •191 .. c_,., Cleft! ot Oro,.. c-tv .., Oe<.2'. 1•1 ~, .... ........... Or-c:oo.e Delly ,. ..... o.< ........ J ... 6, u. 20, 1"2 ,.~, l'ICTITIOUS eUMMIESS NAMS STATIMIEMT Tiie followlne --1 ere fol11t bu11nH• .. i OA G Al MOTORS , 2JSSI Commerc. Coftter Drive. s..<o E, L...-o Hlllt. CA ftUl. DAGAl S .H.M., • Colllorftle c.er...,ellafl. US.SI c.n-u C- Orlve, ,... E. ~ Hiii•. CA "'5>. This .......... , II c.--., • c...-.. .... DAGALi.HM. $4!10 MO•TAZAVI, ,........... Thlt • ....,_ -II ... wlltl ... c-ty ci.ni flf er..,.. c-tv .. Ok. 2'. 1'11 MICMA81. ... oe•uo. Ill(., ............. ...... c...-. ............ ........... CA ... T•.OMt,... ........ Of9lllt c-Dolly """'· Dec ••• '"'·, ..... , .... , • ..-.1 ....,., l'ICTl'hOUt MllMue ...... TAftMe•T T ...... ._.. ,..._, .,.. H4llf .......... : .... w .. o•T MAR I N• ENOINll•ING, 1tte WHI 11tll ..... c-. --·~"'" •DI De••lo • ..,0111 C•r• .. • oee-.......... T1111 ....._. I• ("'8Uttef • ., • ~ .... MM Oil 1140*'' c--. J.•. AlllMlll. ..,...... Tiltt ........... -............. C-'Y Cleft! .. OrM9t (-'Y e11 ~ .... ,.,_ ...... cir... c... OellY ........ DI<. .................. ~ • BUsiness sense colored? Newport consultant links office hues to productivity By JEFF PA&KER of._D ........ t .... You may like colors that don't Ukt1 you. accordlne to color and atmosphere consultant Mlml Sharon of Newport Beac'h. And when It corou to business. sales and productivity can go down and absenteeism up when the colors in offices and worklne a r eas are rubbing employees t.he wron1 way, she says. ''Colors In the environment have both an emolional 1and physical effect on the people around the m ," s h e said. "Sometimes a person's favorite color ls just the one that is debilitating him o r her and · leading lf> less productivity on the job and less comfort in the home. . ••A study was done recently in yellow. All his shirts were yellow, the l hMt8 were yellow, even our car. We've done away with tbe ahlrll and 1beeta and we'll be palnUng the car next. The color simply did him ln - left him weak and Ured. "We proved It with a simple muscle test. If Mort was lookin& at yellow, I could easily press his arm down when he held It out horizontally. U he were looking at a strengthening color -apricot say l couldn't press it down. We were 11urpcised how self·evident it was." Since then, Ms . Sharon has tested dozens of clients for color "My husband was weakened by the color yellow." varietles ol color, ao many hu.e and shades. It's Important to 1et the right one!. The dark earth tones that many people use for den1 and living rooms can be a little haurdous. Even good old white isn't a really good color for Interiors. alt.hou1h by far It's 'the most popular," she said. Ms. Sharon believes that ~ proper colors in an offlce or work area can Improve ne~ ;all facets or the company'l productivity and morale. "Whett time for redecorating comes,• when new areas are bein1 suit.eel for work, Is a great time to thi.nlt about colors and atmosphe~t You can ne ver get colors t.h•1 will affect everyone in the same way, but you can rind a sche~ t hat is most pleasing an( positive for most people," s.., said " 1l factory that was Ulumlnated with very pale light, almost .a bluish light. and they found that when the women looked In the mirrors of the bathroom, they looked ill. When you look Ill, you reel Ill and it made a great deal • of dicterence when the lighting was improved." Ms . Sharon -who will lecture on color and atmosphere at Orange Coast College this Friday and next 1n a two-part program -firsL became interested in the effects or color through studies in applied kinesiology. She read the works of two pioneers In the field of muscle function and how colors are Involved -Faber Blrren and Linda Clark and began looking for colors in her own home that might be s uspect. compatibility both in clothes and in the home and offi ce. Although generalizations don't do much good , s he says blacks and browns are o ften strength robbers and apricot and peach s hades favora bly a ffect most people. ·'Those dark. wood·paneled rooms are particularly hard on people," she said ... Legal offices often use wood panel -it's very elegant and proper -but very hard on people too. I know a Chilean woman, a dancer. who loves black and brown clothing. but they leave her weak. The darker her clothes, the more coffee she had to drink to keep going. Ms . Sharon's lecture serie,t will cover both business anct res idential color coordination;- and will show people simpi. tests for finding out what color.$ they are "allergic" to. • ·'Anyone with suspicions aboul a color should test themselves.of have an expert do the testing,': she said "When a person begi'}f to vibrate positive to a certaiJI color. they should use rt. wear it. work around it. And peo~~ s h o uldn 't b e afraid lt experiment until they find the right combinations. It takes l ; little courage." "l discovered in no time that m y husband, Mort. was terribly weakened by the color yellow," s he S<!id. "And he just loved OVER THE COUNTER MUTUAL FUND ·'Greens, some researchers have found, wi ll adversely affect people with bad livers. Soft reds ar~eralJy positive for most p~ople. There are so many NASO LISTINGS For more information on the color and atmosphere lectures:. call 556·5880 or 646·4265. • Fora-i~Ad ACTION c.u A OAIU "LOT AD-Yno. 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FMC pl J.ts .. • 2' • l'I ftldStt 2 J '" 22'-+ " Moro•n J "I 6 •.56 SJ RTE '° 7 Je •h TOlll'lm l 5' t ,. tS ~=ri =~ ~og :~ 1::~~ lb .~ I~ .. ~ ... ~ ::~1·: ~ 1~~ m:: ~ ::::.:~· 11 11:n '!"' ... ~::~:1:.J:. ·~ :~: ~ Factl l• u S\I, . . 1111.etllb 1 $1 11\li-" MorNor I .S2 • 11 ,,.. v. Rempe 1 IOt .... 111.'t .. TolEO ptt ,, I 13"o . Faire"" IO 3 112 ""'. ~ llrtln"ft 11.eo s • " ......... 14 MOlrOI• I 60 • 1'36 SJ IV. Rol>I Mil• SJ IS.. Jon~:~ JJ:,01 ·~ ~z: :-: Ftlrc pf ».O . 116 17lo .... 11<.S. 2.10... S6 u -\.'o MIF..el , .. 10 JS JOh ...... Rom.SI ' I J ...... '• Too OS ,. .,, ~:;~,,} l4 ri 1! l~ v: 1:::;~0, l~ i 1a #~..., M11n1ro 10e • ., 94 •• v. R•''"' '.., .,.,, 1'"• 1 r~'? !oo ..-! ,,0 ... ,.~ • 6.:1 ··~. 11' lnlrlk J .0 • 11 Jl • Vo ~ .... n,!..nv I - ' .•, •,·J~ •• ~ Ru.SB s IO I .. , ..... '. Towlt .. 1 11 .,.,., .,, " I Ahl 2 ~ ,.II( •• ' ' ~ " ROBelpU IJ 1°' 11 '> ToyRU 1 ll 200 D1')• '• F-rs "' 121 µt, • Ill 60 t 2 I V. MurpO IS • ole() , • .._, • ... RllRel ti• I IJ 1 '' nlCCI"' )112 ICIJ 2•' ... Fecl!Co \'>JD IS 201 ~ • '• llM 1 .. 1110.12 '1 -to MurryO 110 S I "'" ~ .... ArcnEq t h Sl o FOEIQ) 11 IW 59.,.._3 lnlFl•v I IJ "' It MulOm I 50t 11 IO{o • V. R..imn lO IS m II._ ~~p I :It ' s~ U°(! -°(1, FclMoQ 1.n 1 ,. ~ -... lnlHMV .. 11• 1'4-"' Mn••L 70 I .,,, ..... RH<• ,, ,. 0 '• TW .. , •01 s... It FeclNM " . •51 I • ,,_ lft114r pt S.16 . 11 11 -H-H -RrosB 1.SJ s .. ..... TWC pl t • IJI' "' Fe<SPI 1.10 1 16 26 ... -... tnlMln 2.60 s ,,.. n ..... NBD 1 OI • .. 131. .,, RricllCh .. s JS "'· T'fllC Pl 1 'Cl s. ""' ... FdSonl ' "' ... n v.. .. lt1tMlllt .... s .0 20'fo . "' NBI,, JI 119 11'. ' Rrp .. 1• 10 ••• .... TWC pl , .. ll 21'. .. .... ~.OSio '1~1'1 :1111, e-. '• :~:=~ 2.! ,f 615. ~: ~ NCH n 7 IS ""' RrpCp tO • II)) U'lt. Trenvn,.., • IS.. 20'" ... ~ ~ •• .. NCNB • • lSl ""' • RepFnS I 20 10 "11Jt\.o • 'I> Trt nlnc 2 11 19 IS'. '• FIOFln ,431 12 2 I,, lnlTT 2.61 • 1156 11~ ... • NCR 7 10 S U1 :l'l.io \\ RrpNV t 70 S 18 331> YJ Tr•n~<O 1 IO l'4 •1 '" FIOUnl l .IO • • 1S,.._Vt ITTpllC • · IS ...... Iii NL.Ind \ I ltltl JIV, 11/t RN'l'pl"3 13 1 ,_...., '• Trn.c pl J l1 11 •t i, Flcklt 1 6 41 1' • -. ITT llfO S • 6 --'Al NL l I 37 • 1006 11" + 1 RepSll 2• 1 " ».._ " TrenKn 101' I• S'lt. Flooi. .61 s ., 1SV. "" 1 .. 111· pt 2 u . 4 ~ ..... NVF ISr • 221 '"" ..... Reph • I .... 1 ... :141 I 1 so Fllmwy '21 •• Vo lnlTT pt •JD " 41 ..... Ntb1<8 I IS • ., .. )t ..... RshCol 31 6 JS 111: .,. ~~~:o~ 1: '!~: Flmwy pl . 1 • • " lntN1'111 2.12 s 1 .. d21 , ..... Nel<o , " ... ..\.,. ' Revco. ,. It SSI '"'" .,, TA Riiy 11 s IClo FnCPA S " .. 6 "21 I) 1'1 lnlfl41 Df ...... r20 M .. · Napeo :J1 U 1.0 17 Arvtrt JOI • :It 13''> • .. lr•nwy t 1011 ... Jlo,, \"t FnSiaM 1 ,., IU 4V• . lnlrpee 1,'° S 2 "°" • 14 NeplFd 80 12 112 1S.\<o • V. Rolon t ... I 4'lS )()I,, 1<t Trew Ir\ l ?I ! S?I ., v. Flnll"e<S ; 11 IS l"loGP I.to t 13 311'1 + V. Nat<O ... JI IS ""-, Vt R• In pl a• 21 1q Flrt51n . .0 • 631 121'1-~ !n1Wr 12 lO 10¥1 ... Na.hue ''° • t• .,..__ "• Rr:11am 60 I 10 IS • TrtCon J lie 47' ~·· t FIAll"' • J 1J """· . lllltlPw 1.6' • 3J " -.... NflCan I • 22 70'4 Runrd 1 QI I 0 13.\<o. " ~~!~1~' 2 so .~ l"'-FICllrt .80 • 1"'7 91'1-11. low•EI 1.1'2 I 70 I~ t " NCnvS1 1101> 10 I "''•, "• Ronin 1.IO • e<n « 11111 Tr .. lnO 40 7 IJ n i,;, fThas Is tht third o/ a IO·port urfea o" how to 1aW1 on yOllr 1981 income t-0% ... J • The Internal Revenue Service has accepted cosmetic facelift surgery as 11 medical expense - and IJ\ l981 , the Tax Court also handed down a ravorable ruling on lruatlng the eost of hair transplant opt1r atlons as a mecUcal expense. Under these clrcumsloinces, your own tax strategy IL.you had cosmetlc surgery last year seems clear . In thi11 cwse, a taxpayer underwent the s urgical transrer or s mall plugs of halr·bearlng tissue rrom part of his scalp to another part of his scalp for purt:ly cosmetic reasons. He claimed a medical expense deduction on th e bas is o f the ~-earlier decis ion on fa celirls. The court procedure or hair .. ':- trans plantation was n··· Plllll =t=.:;,, a n d e r la k e n (or illA , pure ly co s meli<' reasons. Back in 1955, the I RS ruled that the cost of an antiseptic diape r ser vice isn't deductible as a medical expense. But in a 1981 private letter ruling, the I RS allowed a rqedical deduction for the cost or dis posable diapers because they were related lo a physical illness. Here a child beyond the normal diaper age was totally incontinent because of brail'\ damage. He r physician said she would require diapers constantly and recommended paper diapers to minimize possible skin problems. Since the diapers helped alleviate the effects of the child's disease. their cost was a medical expense . In another 1981 Tax Court case, a university professor whose office·al·home failed to meet the tough tests for an office-a t·home deduction tried unsuccessfull y to get a medical expense deduction instead. She claimed that s he had to work al home because of her severe allergy lo tobacco. smoke, which s he couldn't always avoid at her university office. Since the room s he used a~ an office at home represented one·eighlh of the total square footage of the house. she deducted as a medical expense one ·eighlh of her maintenance expenses for the house. But the Tax Court pointed out that ·because the maintenance of he r house was an ordinary personal li ving expense to begin with, she could only claim a medical deduction to the extent that the cost of her office at home was increased due to her medical problem. This she failed lo do. and, therefore, she wasn't entitled lo any medical deduction for her office at home. For the millions of us who have some form of medical expense insuranc~. a 1981 I RS Technical .. FJICllk 1.20 1 .., .. ,,, .owllO 2.20 s JO ""' • Na1011t , '10 • ... 12'1'1 ..... Re Int"' 10 .. 37 \ F18 'h ' '"°' • S2 n.-" IO••l'S 2.c 1 0 ttv ...... NOIUpl 2 u 2 19'1< tr. y •. 1 lrlePC I n )I .. \lo ...... FICIJy J IQ_ •l'l •• _ lowtlb..1.M-4c 11 tt + 14 .... ll!"du,,~ 1 'JS" ltW~ !ii' R.e~M1 1.AO...i ~ ll '"' Trlcfttrc ~' 1 J Ill..-~ Firn&cp2,CM f IJ7 !214 .... lpeoCP IOIO 121 •14 .... NalFG uo s JO ,..,.. "" ~~~~cf'::: •• : 0j~ .. 11' lrl<O\ .. ' IOJ 12'1• .... F1Mlss .1' 11 :N 1314-V. lrvglll 3.CM • " •'h-'h NFG pl 2 lO .. 1 111<> " .. Rle .. IT t 80 , 24 II ~~~"s'h 1 ~ ~ )~ m:' :: ~e.. _Me_mg_ra ndu p provides a n if!!porl!~! ~i ---11,..,. wa m ing. I r your parr.cular me<lical expense 1s covered by your insurance and for some reason you do not claim reimbursement from the insurer, the I RS will bar you from a medical expense deduction for the unreimbursed expense. Here the taxpayers incurred substantial expenses for medicines and drugs that their insurance coverage would have F11Nlo J,. S 21 '2'11i + '1' llelr.Cp ,JDr 12 160 11 -V. Nl1Gyp I ... 1 l tl tft. .. RloGran I 20 • OS 32'4 • " lycoL, 10 s l'7 n-.. 1 ... FNS18" LlOI> ' lO n 1111 -J.-.J -N1Hom JO 7\oi RloGrpl 10 111 1.-.. • '• TyltrCp .SJ 1 I llYJ . Fil Pt 1't 3 -,,. JWT I l.'4 9 JS 22-" NMOCrr .. • UOO IV. ~. Rl1t4 , 10 tO 19 21"> '·• T ym''" IJ •S. dtJ'lr.-I .. Fs1P• WI . • ~ .. + 1·32 Jfftftl' IAO 11 J6 22~ + .... NMOEn' 40 I I t .. S 16\'t ->4 Rol>shw 1 "I I 70 111 1 \, _ U~ _ FIPaMt .0.. S XII 114 Jltwr l A 1 • '"--.. NMlne!> ,. 23 IC>'I. • "' Rol>tsn st JO J JSS 11"'-• "' U•L ti lo:JI U'loi .._ F1Un!t JI.CM tO 61 Ullli .. Jtfl'ltw .12 S S 9'1.-~ NPre•1 I •S. • l8 Jl\, ''• Robin\ 41 t .. 11 .. '" UGI t.• • 12 2S V. ~:~~!" ·~ ! ·~ l~"'=~ 1~tn'i~·i 1: ~ .... =~:ii~ 1 .. '!'°: ;~')• ~ RochG 17M> s " m. v. UMC 120. J60 12 • "' FltcllCI 2 • I J1\oo • JefC fl/I IUO • dO 7'\'I+ l'h lllt11S11 l S SS '11<.' .... :::~11 t~ : .: ~\I. : ~ 8::t.res t>t 4 1~ ~:z' ~ FISllFd\ 60 9 310 t2to-V. JetCpl 11 .. dO 61 + "'~•ITH • 9 Ho RROllMOl'lrlnH ),IO I• ,J1t s1111 .. 11~ UUNS!" '·J-• .!,. J~, ;• FlfttEn S1 II IS IOtli Jen: .. 1.1'.. U IJ .. .. N•lom I to J "4 21""-'I) • rv ..., ~ _ -~ • ~~zj~ 1.~7~ r. ~"' ~ =CllfUA 1 11 ll:t:111t ==~P>.!'1 u! • :i ~ V, Rollr Pl J.U 7 11 UfllNV H,. 4 l t0''t • ... reimbursed for 80 percent. Th.ey didn't file a claim FIHI pl 1.61 12 ..._ • 10. .-r S IS ,.._ • ~ Ht•P pf l,tO aCIO I~ ::::!:'c: .St J t;; ~ ~= ~~~t ~: ; :. !!.. t loi bec ause of the administrative burden, and instead ~~o"t~'. 1 ~!n J ~; ~ ~U ·• ~ -r: ~ ~ =·.:~tP: ~ ~ '*> :J1"" Ron'°" 11 u , ... · "" uncom r 20 • n 1110 '"' deducted the costs as unreimbursed medicine and drug expenses_ , ~ ~ Ro~• 90 • • II'> '• VnlOnC 1tt • 11 •~ ~~1~: 10~~ ~ ~· .... JonL.tn •:: ~ ~ ~~"'! ~ =~~td'~: :: ~~: ~ Ro•t>r W IO !IS 111 •• '· unEIK IS1 . m "'•• .... FlePL 1 1>' I ... 21l'o • Jetflll, 1 • • U... • N'I'!> pf J l1 14 U + 'I) R-•n 06 1 11'1 IJ•, " Un El pl •"I 11'00 111 th FleP• 'IO • llJ I,,.. .... )°"911 I ... • • ·~ " N'l'S plOJ 7) 1 ,..,., • Rowen pl? '4 " .., , ... UEI p ll I ''° .. ~ .... FlaStl s 10S .. II .... Jo,Ml•I C6 110l2~· Ne••ll ...,, ',.,__.,..RCCosllMI 37 .. ~. '•UnEIP1 2t3 2 ,,~ FlwG~n 10 11 D ll>-.. -IC-C -Nwllel n tO •• U4+ • .... ==~,!!16~ ,! ~~ ~~ ~ 8ne~IP~~ 1 ~ ; !: ' ''o "'"°' IO 10 .,. 11V. "' ICOI n J .. • Nrwml ' -• s" OJS.... ' FoolrC 720 I ',,~ '·!(OT '2J) ~ •• N•p.t,,_ tt•O m ......... =~!~~ l ~t~ ~ :~ .... ~ 8~~~:1 l ~t~1~ ~~; ,.~ FordM 1S7l 17>.. '"' ICL.M 16 I 3' -,... NllMP I M S J03 12\ •-~. For MIC 1 2• • "' JS•• '• IC mat1 ,. 'lOZ7 ·~ • Nl•MPI J 'Cl r100 ,. Ryoers' Oii> • ,,.. , • .,. • 'o Unlror1 s .,, ... ~. Fto ... I n " t \. IC&lttAI ... o s ,.. IS "' NleMpl •IS "10 )1'1i ... sc.. ii.~"~-IS • "' 8~i~i ~I • ": ~: • ~ FtHow. I Ol 12 ,,. ,. .... IC•!!9.. uo • Sit 20v., . ·~ )/! NN',•.Mpl,s..!! L·~ J11'~ •· ";~ SCM , s 101 1111)-'" u .. 9,,.., tO 1) • 10 ... The I RS SCfid that ll treals these expenses as having been reimbursed by the insurer in which case thev aren't deductible. because the taxpayers were enl.Ued lo be paid by their insurer and chose not to be. Because of failure to claim the. available i~urance. the medical expenses are not deductible. The message from this I RS memorandum is unmistakable : Be s ure to c laim any medical Insurance to which you may be entitled, even if it means doing paperwork vou would rather avoid. F~t'fllh .,_ 1 :141 13"' •~ IC&DnOOO • 11• ~ 9Sll ..,.. --~ S Foloml ., .JU s~ ..,, IC•ne.MI .• 1 • IJV. .. NICOii , .. , 16 ll .. -" S~Ttc ':~ ~ ·~ ;;v.. ;,,. 8~~~e1n' ~ H .t ,';'"· ~ F1111rP11 l' ~ 11 I•• IC•-11> • 10 I~ \it No«llA s U 9 921 1~-... SM!ne .C I• 11S J2 UflEnro 1 '2 s 12S 34''°-... FoaSIP 61 S • IOv. ._ ICC\liPL ! ... S ·JS ,,,_.' Vo NorfWn 1.0 • 141 SO'I> • "2 S'9da, 1 .U 13 IU IS _ .... Ulllllm 1 It s 411 11~ v. Fo•bro l tO U .0 n ... '• l(C L.f//12.20 SU~• 14 Norlln .. 'Cl "''-1,, $1911Sc SJ IS. ' ,,. Vlllll Pf 3'1 9 14 \~ FrplMc 60 I , .. , n• o ._ ICCPL pfl.D .. 1 II"'+ 14 Norllr n 2 20 S tS 013 '' SIQCIS_, . 11 ,.. Vlllll pl • U 2S :. Frlotrn "'° ' S9 111, • "-ICCSo 1 t IO JI~• "Al NorlO GI • S. ' -"'-Stftory JAO • 1" 2'~-'-UnlllnO tb 10 70 1'', • -Frvrlll t tO I J.12 ...... ~. l(enGE 1.12 s " !!'~· ~ NACNI nn SI.SU IV.. 5-Q) A4 I, .... ..,, .... Ufllllnn n I , 171•-h F.,q11• • .o. 21 10 I• l(e11N1> , .. ' 11 ~~ ~ NOA Phi ' 10 s II J~ Ito Sr.JoLP I :M s l ·~ "' F11<1• pf I 2S I I~• tn IC•flPL.1 t.20 6 to '''111 · · · • NE11•0 n• :Ml to 7J 17"": '-SPNI 1'.10 .. a1t 1-'I• 8t:Me~ 1 11 ; .~ ·~~· -G-G -IC&PL,,,, D · · 14 U • OJ\ Noel1UI t II 7 l>IS 9 • Vt StR P 2 J• S 1100 ,._ 111 U PkM S• I 1'-I GAF 8011 161 l•V• l(elylll > • 1~ ~ NlnOPS I SO 7 11S ti',.• 0,11 Stle".S . 11 S 1... U~FoS ~Ole 6J 111/o -ti G .. F Pl I 20 1'I ""' • ~ IC•:Jt I .... ' 1 NoSIPw 1 S6 • S8 74\\ 'f, SOllGs 1 ... • 1«1 1111> . U541r 12 J .0. 11 'I• GGACAl x, 1~10' 1,2111s ,3)"' •10 ~=II•• :~ ·: ·~ ·~.,,~ v. ~SSPPwP'p1.·.!! tl,!~ ~~"" SJ11111I .... .. ,,. ••111-..... U'"GYP\, '° 6 UI 2'"' v. •v > V. 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Wrlil!Y t ... I • ~ XlltA Ail b i ,,_., -"° 1-IN 1.a • Ill ~" ......................................................................................................... ...iWiiilllill .......... i111 ... ;1001¥i1;.. ................................................... ~ 'f'YrlbY •• .. •"+ \4t I • ' f ~ ~ t J s c ( ' i . ~ I l , ' . I ' ' J Orange Cont OA.ILV PILOTfNedne1day, January 20, 1982 NEWPO RT, R I. <AP > H cs rald P . Fahrtnaer, del~nse lawye r for wealthy 1ociaUte Claus C. von Bulow, 1 mlled warmly al the pro.pective juror and lowe~ his voice in quiet al9cerlty as he asked: "Mr. von Bu1ow ls a man of financial means; some mllhl say he's a rlcb man. Do you reHnt • rich peopJe?" That quullon was asked or each jury candJdate tn von Bulow's trial on char1es of twice trytnf to kill his heiress wife w1lb potentially l1UJ• lojectlona. Tbe answer invariably has been "No." But Fahrlncer, • velera.n New York City trial lawyer, worries that the financial gull separating von Bulow from the Newport County residents summoned to judge him could hurt bis client. '11 believe today there ill a lot or resentment tor the wealthy," he said afte r a week or jury selection. "I really believe It is harder for a rich man to get a fair trial today than a poor man. Twenty or 30 years ago, I think, the opposite was true ." He never takes his eyes off the race or a prospective juror. "You're mor e interested in how they answer than in what they say ..• You're watching how long they hes ita te before ans wering, how they move their hands. Do they narrow their e yes? Sometimes a race can be like a map." For more than a century, Newport residents have been s ha r ing t heir resort city with a glittering "summer colony" of the very rich. The two communities live side by side but rarely mix. Claus and Martha ''SuMy" von Buldw were leading members of that social set until December 1980, when she slipped into a coma from which s he is not expected to recover. Her condition, the sta te will try to prove, was caused by injections of ins ulin and barbiturates administered by her hus band. Mrs.• von Bulow suffers from hypoglycemia - low blood s ugar -and sucb injections would dangerously worsen her condition. Prosecutor Stephen R. Famiglietti said during questioning or jury candidates that he will a rgue von Bulow tried to murder his wife because he was in l~e witll another woma n and coveted the esta te he would inherit at his wife's death. Mrs. von Bulow, heiress to a Pittsburgh utilities fortune, is worth an estimated $35 million. None or the 21 people questioned by the defense and prosecution has had any social contact with the "summer colony." Each said he Qr s he had onJy a passing acqua inta nce with the charges against von Bulow, defusing fears that F ahringer had that pretrial publicity would make it hard to pick a jury. The prospective jurors' ties to the "summer colony" were at best secondhand, as their answe rs to the lawyers' questions show· -Dona ld Zuerc her , a photogra pher and housekeeping supervisor at a waterfront hotel, said he has an a~suaintan.ce wbn works as a butler for-rs . Ruge Auc hinc loss. the mothe r or J acqueline Kennedy Onassis . -Agnes Gr ay, a widow from nearby Tiverton, d escribed the "summer colony" as "people who enjoy sailing and m ansions and such." -Jane A. Cooney or Newport works as a cas hier al the gate of the Breakers. a mansion owned by the Preser vation Society and now open to public tours. She said she knew von Bulow by sight because he is on the society's board or directors, "but I ne ver met him:· 'concern' ,.,.,,,, Plltllllhld °'°"" CMll Oelly Pllol, Jon. 20, 21, Feb l , 10, 1'12 U1"1 lllCTITIOUI aUlfMIU M.IWllWllTATIMaMT Tllo 1011owlnt P•rton 11 dolnt !MKIMtt": '1IP.. GOLPJIN $lATE IUSIN ESS , PWlltllM OrMlte Coetl Oolly Piiot U.LIS, Jiii MKAnNI< 11¥0., Swlle J 20 21 ,. .... > 10 1.., au.ti 112, N•--' h«:ll, Collfomle tlMO 611· • ' ..., • ' · Giit O.felCO, ,.,I Me<Arlll11r Blvd., S11lle I°'· Hewporl Buell, C .. ltorflle tMeO llll• ~ h ,_,.., by ... lllCllwldlHll. lllCTITIOUI aUllMlll 0.... o.teleo MAMa tTATIMaMT ' Tlllt -· we$ fl'-0 wltll IN Tiie lollowlnt --• ore• d•lne Cwlltv Cler'-ol Oreftte County on ............. : J ...... ,y 11. 1'12. lllCTtnou• IMltfMIN MAMI IT A HMaltT llle loll-I ... "''-I oro .. I ... 1111••-•••: II Al PH H CA aT LI TO H MANAOl!MI Nl COMPANY, Jt .. COlo•.0. I.AM, C.Ole Mete. C.lllon1le tt•U Ovon l!ner9y Corporellon, • (0111011'10 C.or-.iloft. a1'0 (AIOt- L,_, c.l.e --... Cellto<nl• .__ lllh l111.i11ttt h C.Oftd\ICled llY e corporellon: ~ I!,..,,., GOfllO,.tlon llolpfl N C.Sl .. IOf', Vl<e Pt9'JOlftl Tllll tYl-1'11 WO\ flied wllll t~ Covnly c;1.,, 01 O•enoe c;o11nty on J ellllll•Y II, 1"1 PIH ll1ll ,,--------......,,......--. l'ICTITIOUI BUllN•H N_. ITATIM&NT Tiit lol .. wlnt ,.,..,.., ert lfOlnt ............. l e l INT ER NA TIO NA L TELEVISION (bl INTERNATIONAL If I OEO, Hl W 1'111 $1reel, Cotle Moo, C.olltornl• m 11 Allld M11uot111 IJSOI Lourlndo Wey, Son4o Ano, Co llorn1e ttJOS Jlldlth I.. MllM>lln, IJjOI lollrlnoo Wey, Senle AN. Celllornl• t11ti TlllJ tlllt!llM• h (-ll<IH Dy eri lllGlwld ... I J\ldlll'I I. Huu•lrl Thlt AOl-1 WM tlltd wllll IN CO<lnly Cltrl! of Or•-C°""ly Oft Jon11ory 11. 1t11 111111,. NOTICE OF DEATH 0 MARIE L . SCHWOAE AND OF PETITION T ADMINISTE'R ESTAT NO. A·t11113. To all h ei r s be nef iciar ies, cred lto and continge nt creditor's Ma r ie L. Schworer a persons who m ay otherwise Interested in t will and/or estate: SADDlEBACI( FINAN CI AL CEHTE~. 24012 C..lle ft la Plato. L .. -. Hlllt, COlllonlla "6S3 Pullll•l'led Oreft90 Coesl Delly Piiot, "'"" J•11 to. 21, Feo. J, 10, "., 111..., P\14111 ...... Ore119t Coetl Dolly Piiot, A petition has been fil by Thomas L. Schworer th e Super ior Court Orange county request i that Thornas L. Schwor be appointed as person r e p rese nt a t ive t SOCIALITE ON TRIAL Clute:-. C von Bulow. <:a lled a ··man of means." is r.u:lng tr ial on t·harge~ he killed his heiress w1ft• J.,.. 20, 21, Fa J. 10, ,.., SOI.fl G-90 L Artyroo, 50S N. l11tll11, ------------SOllt UO, s...to Afto. Colltomle tt70S U •l>On Pro119rlln ·S•ddteboc k. UOl7 Col .. ft II Plete, loqufle Hlllt, ------------C1lll0tflle t'M.S) Tllll tt.nlnen It <OflOll<1td bw 0 lllCTITIOUlaUllNIU • MAMl ITATIMINT 09,,.rel P«'IMnlllp. T llt IOllowlno pe-.on h do I no GeMge l, Af9yr01 blltlfleU M Tllll ~I WM lllecl wllll !fie H u M A H R E S O u R C E COUflty c1e..-Of <><•"9t c-•Y on CONSULTANTS, 12201 MelllN Lo .... J.,..,.,.., ll, 1"2. H1111l111Q10n 8M<ll, Colltornl• .,._.. LAW OlllltCll JomH Miiton Wollete, 21201 ~-:~.·~ Mellb11 Lene. H11nlln9lon 8u<ll. O•• --;:::z •. a"!-Collfornle .,_ 11• 111-COtll'CMtATIOtfl Tiii.i Ml!ttt .. h concllltl.0 by .,. MIWl'MT CIMT•• lndl ld...i -------------------------!" C~"9111. ...... w J,;,,... Mitton W•ll•u .... _.._.,~'*:.1111w Tllll ~I •ti lllecl wltll ltle Slwtgun hits 1'11111._ Or ..... c-Oollv Piiot COllftlY Clff~of Oro-COllflly on J.,., 10, t1, F• I, 10, HI> u,.C J_o,,, 11, I Fllll" I the targets NOllCE INVITING BIOS BIDITEMHO.Da NOTICE IS HEREBY GI VEN INI ATSION. N.J (AP > -When they break out M•l•d -·· '"111 .. ••0 1•.o "' Th • Clly of Cot l• Mt •• the s hotguns and the beer in this Pinelands way R.., ... 1_n1 AQen<Y. 10 •II The station, most of the locals put their money on Don oirecfor'-P.O Bo• 1*· C••• Me ... C•llfornlo .,.,.. on or _.. ftw "°"' Kleinschmidl's Wingmasler. ot 11 00 l.m, on FrlGay, J_r, 11, "It's not so much the shooter as the gun," said ;:1b1!~';.w~'711;:=~::!tt1~~ Don DiMaio, a m arks man at one or the PIC·8·Lilli .: ...... , Olll<t by lht proper Inn's recent weekl y turkey shoots. .n ...... nceCI II-Bldi wlll ... puClll<ty ---rHd elouO OI 11:00 •m . "You've got to put your money in the gun o••u-.1,.,.,.•-r••Prec11u11111,on first." Frld•v. Jen11o•v 22. 1'12, In ,,.,, Pllbll....,. Or.,. Coot Dolly Piiot, J.,., 20, 27, Fa l, 10, 1.., ~ FICTITIOUS BUSINISS NAMI STATEMINT T II• lollowl119 P••H" Is 001no bllslneues· GOLDEN STAT,E LOANS, Jtll Me<Ar-81Yd , S..lle 102. New-1 8t•<ll, (allfomle t2MO G11• Oelelco, lt31 MecArll'l11r Blvd , S11ltt 102, N•wPOrl Bu ell, Colllornle ""° Tllll ~I It cono..clt<I Dy .,. lndlw-. G\15 o.telco Tiiis ,....,._, wes fllecl wllh lllM (Ollftly Cle•k ol Ore._ Collnty on 111cTmous1u5tNISS administer the esta te NAMaSTATEMINT Sc d Tl'lt 1011ow1110 pe,.011 h 001na Marie L. hworer Cun t>Ywneu es· l h e I n d e p e n d e n ouALITY ENG1 NEE A•NG .. Adminlstratiori of Estat MANUFACTU~tNG. 1IU E Cotneole I I • f Awe,.... s.me Ano, Cellloml• ttlOS Act). T~e pet t on s set Aleundet M &rodl•Y. "'' hearing in Dept. No. 3 Sydnu D•lwt. Hu11111191on Beech, 700 Civic Center Oriv Celllornl• .,..,, · West. in the City of San Tllll _.,,." I• <Oflcl11<lecl bY •n A C I . f I 1n411v1ouo1 n a , a 1 o r n a o A.M ereo1e1 February 10, 1982 at 9: Thi> •IOI-I w• HleO wllll .,._ a .m . coun1, c .. r._ of Or•,... Co•inh on IF YOU OUJ ECT to t J•"11•" 11· '.., '1111,, granting of the petltio Publl•lled Or-Coest 0011.,. Piiot. you should either appe J•nto,'7,F••»J,10,i.., >1M'l at the tiearlng and sta Piil.iC .W your objections or fil written objections with th court before the hearin Your appearance may in person o r by you a ttorney. l'ICTlllOUI BUSINESS NAMESTATEMllfl The 1011ow1no Ptnons ••• oolnQ t>Ytlntt• es• NEW CREATIONS. 11'8 Monrovl• Str e•t. CO'll• Me,•, C•lllornl• m21 Ont 'W•y Leeti..r. If'<.,. C.•lllOtf!I• coroor•Uon, "'° Monro~~• Street, Cmla Me-so, C.•llfoml• '1'11 Tllll tlllll .... , I\ COndll<l•d by e corpor o llon. Ont W•y Lfffl'ler ._,.,lly Nolol Vlo PrHIOtnl llll• ~-•411 111.0 Wiii\ Ille Co..1111 Cletk of Orenoe County "" Je ..... rv It, 1"2. 1111101 Pvbllt!Wd °'°"" Coetl Delly Piiot, Target-shooting with a L2-gauge shotgun may ~~:!."c~":'::: ~~f~111 •. 1,~1·.:; be neither an art nor much or a science, but it is a 111rn 1s,.,1nv o• LABOR AN D decades-old tradition for those who gather here to :~~'o"v"'e~N:N:,00~::0~~1s0H,: compete for 30-inch pork loins, beef flletS and VARIOUS STRUCTURES WITHI N J._.,., 11, I..,. "'"'" Jen. 70, 21, Fa J, 10, 1.., l 1M2 I F YO U ARE C R EDITOR o r contingent creditor of ll'I deceased, you must fil your claim with the cou or p r esent it to tl'I per sona l r epresentat iv a ppointed by the cour within four months fro the date of first issuanc of letters as provi ded i Sec tion 700 of the Probat Code of California. Th time for filing claims wil not expire prior to fou months from the date o the hearing noticed above. P11blllNcl OrM19e Coe•t Delly Piiot, J.,.. 70. 21. Fa J, 10, I_, J02.f1 h. h h h h · THE CITYOFCOSTAMESA l ?-pound turkeys. w 1c gave t e s oots t etr AC1C1ui-1 Mt•°' 1119 ~·11u11on• Piil.iC •ttE name. • ........ -..._¥TM o.tk-• of 111e =-...;.:..;==--.....;;;;;=;;;;.....--=-- --( 0..7> • 'ngl Purchesl119 Aoenl, 17 Felr Drive, 1•1 any o un• mar smen are surpras 1. Y CM•• -. Co1tt0<nl•, B1e1• .,,..,1d NOTKI INVITING a1os Skilled with the SCatler -gunS, allhough there iS 11t rtlunwd lo I.._ etltnllon olll'le City Hollo Is "'reby olwen tll•t Ille I I t r h Cit•~ .. wllh•n Wld 11..,. llmll, 1n • Boord of T~ of '"' H""llntlOft a Ways an e emen 0 C ance. soled en•etoot oGenlllled 011 Ille 8Ht ll Union H19" Sc-Dlslrkf Wiii "There's lucky shells," said Di Maio ... You get OUUld• wllh fho Bid ll.,,., Numl>or •nd •t<•I•• -led bkh tor Pvrc:,.,_ ., h 11 th t . t h Id th hot t th . ' ,,.,. Openlnq Doi• L •• ' • I p II • t " • ' • 0 f c R T some s e s a JUS o es oge er. Eech bid .,.011 •c>e<••v .. ,11 .no c ... .,.11~,.Y St••lon• 1Me11n0 ., There are also lucky guns, like Kleinschmidl's •• .,, Item .. stl lor lh In .... t<lllOllOt .. ~llketlonunll .. ln llle W. t modi('ed rs·o ot goose gun -111co11on, ""Y • ..., •II uuptlon• oftl<• of '6ld 0111r1cL 1ngmas ,er • a · l Ve l n a to Ille >Pe<lllUllon• m\1\1 11t OHrly 81dt 11\oH lie <IHrly m.,'-eCI "CllT used by many of the competitors. lloteo 1n "-l>ld. '"" 1.11 .. re io w• contro11otte>1•Y St•llOfts, Bid No Even Bob Bauldauf, a security superintendent forth ony 11 ...... '" -Mlt<llk•llO<t$ 412"', -...... ... Allyn E R-lty. at McGuire Air Force Base, won the first time he ::;;11 "" -f., reie<llon °' -=~=~~·~•,:.. M:.;:"~;.!i"'~:.~::,~ competed. He was using KJeinschmidl's shotgun. Eech Old .,,.11 set 1or111 "" 1u11 1ttst Yorkt-• Awe .. H11r1111101on d ._ h I I nemes -rHIOMctt of •II Ptr)Oft• ... <JI, ~· ._, -received l'ICTITIOUI BUSINESS MAM& STATEMENT _ Tiie followino person• ••• Golnv ~Inns es. SELECT PROPERTIES. JllO H•rllo• Bo1111voro. Coll• M .. •. C•lltornlo 9161' VIOl10 Corp • C•lllO•ftl O corPOr•I-)1)0 H•.rllOr 8oulnerd, Cml• MeWo Co1tt0<n1• •1'1' fl'llt bvtlnen I\ condlltltd bt' • corpoullon Vtot10C0<p, ~f., A Vk>llo. Prttl ..... I llll\ .,.,_,,, ••• 111.0 •111'1 .... Counh Cle•._ ot Oran911 COll"IY on Jen11••Y 4, 1"2 YOU MAY EXAMIN E the I il e kept by the court ii you are interested in the estate, you may file a request with the court to receive special notice of t he inventory of estate assets and of the petitions. accounts and r e p o rts desl:rlbed in Sect ion 1200.~ F1.a>1 of lhe California Probat~ r>11bt1"*i 0r-eo." oe11v P•to•. Code. Jen •. u. 20, ll, 1"1 l)t.fJ Kleinschmi t , a DOWD lo t e oca s as .... N '11M ...... ~..,In .... pr--1. •I or before 2:00 p.m., Frld•Y. "K . Mart," spent more th an $1,000 on 11 111e l>td 1i11yoc.,_.o°". ,, ... , ... F.-n.•,.., i. ""· •t """c11 11 ..... _. R 0 bert N. 8 r 0 x 0 n, modl'f1'cat1"ons, and traded several up1raded n•m•• °'..,. offl<••s *"° 0 " tl9fl °" •••<• 111c1t '"'11 ""Pllblk•v --•"" _,,,. •""£ ~rttmMl on lleNff ot tt•tc-••tlon roed. ~ '"' Attorney at t..aw, 1301 11111 llTICIB Lipreading .~ · classes ·~ SKOLSICK weapons for better ones before he wound up with •llCI wtwtlltf "'°" 1"°" -officer EJ<ll Did lollell ,_... w111kt tot•, ______ ...... ...__ ____ Park Avenue, Balboa hiS Widely COVeled piece. "'"sl slvn II lltt bid " by 11 period of'° doys oiler Ill• dele FICTITIOUSIUSIHEU Island, California 92662 . PtrtntrSlllp or • tolnl venture, slole -lfledlof tM rKetpt of llkls. NAMC STATEMINT It lacks the intricate hand·looled Scrolling or the netMt--~ol •11 Cit,,.,., T,,. 9oer'd Of Tn.s--II be lllt Tl'lt lollowl119 e>er•on• ••• oolnQ 67S·S460 th Utors• guns and s f th h P••IMrs -tofflt ..,.,.,,.,., 11 tt1e _ ,.....,. "_ qu,o11.., of...........,, bu~nttsu Published Orange Coast 0 er compe • ome 0 e C arm bidder Is o '4lt Proprlelorslllp or ett.rM -,._....the r'9114 lo reje<I FLAGSTAFF PARTNERS. L.OT . ELIZABETH ELS IE I ed SKOLN ICK. resident of 8 at Tustin. Ca Passed away on January 18. 1982. She is survived h~ her dauithkrs Johanna Walluc·h of Santa Ana , Ca. and Ruth Gurc· or ~cw York. ~on Wilham or S unland . Ca anl1 i or the old double-barrel vi.rieties, but his wallet enOlh•r enllly lh•I dOO llllllneu eny or Ill IMds .... lo ••lvt eny ~·Cotto Aw-. S..lle C, s... J ... n Daily Pilot. Jan. l9, 20, 26. t ffed "th i f k t tl ts t hi kill nd the 11nder • fktlllo<n nomt, Ille bid snell lr,.tQl.ll.,lty-relfl. C.09lt1rono,CalllomletKIS 1982 334·8: S U Wl pr ze IC e S 3 ~S 0 S S a be In Ille reel Nmt ol ll'le blddtr wllll /ti Allyfl E. 11-ley, Hunte• Ener9y CorPOretlon, a ----------- l s:randch1ldren. ulso :-.11rv1 vecl bv 3 sisters. Scrnees \'111 ht• i held on Wedn<'Mla' .J<1nua n t 20. 1982 at lldr.hor l.,1,, n i Me m o r ial Chup~I at ~ 10:\>0AM Final inlerim•nt ~·, services will be heir! at Ceda r Park <'emeter ,. P a ra mus. N<'w J ~rsc~ Services und~r tht: rl1rC'ctill,_n i of Harbor La"'n ~fount Oli\tt• • Morl uarv or <.:11sta Mc>"l;a i MO·S554 . ; t ' . ~ I . ~ . c ·r ~ r t -Nentune Societv CRO&"TioH 9UfllAl. AT~ 646-7431 Our literature tells the complete story of our societv . ·w .. -...-,.~ c-..-. .-coaMICIC MOITU•••n Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768·0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 HAalOtl LAW.._MT. OLIVE Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 PtlllCI .. OTHUS ~MOAOWAY MOITU.aY• t fO BroadWay Costa Mesa 6-42-9150 IA&.TZIHGllO ... SMIT'4 & nnHt\.L WllTCUH CHA'll 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 646-9371 flmCt llOTNllS SNllMS' MOITU .. Y 627 Main St Huntington Be.ch S36~539 An eight week series fine·tuning or his weapon. • dHIQnollon ........... "-~ "08"' Purel\MlfteMoftoVotr Ctlltornl• torpor•llon. uo~• C•ll• •euc .11f'l . • 8 the la S of the Shoots any participant can llllt llcllllo11l nemtl", provided, P\ICMl-0.--Coo51 Doll)' Piiot, Avl•Gor,s..lttC,S-J ... nC<fOl\lr•no, rv llK Of Classes On lip reading y W ' l>Owtvt<, no ll<llliO\I< no-SNll 11t Jon 20. 21, 1"2 lJUJ Colllornl• tu7S -----------for the ha rd or hearing ask to use another's gun. And many reach for ...... unleU lhtrt It • current ------------R•IOl'I E. ""-l•n. Jr., JlCM'I Cell• MN 90792· J 9 Kleinschmidt's Remington, raising rears that the reQISl••llon wllh"'" Orenot CO<lnty _.,. ·-Avltdor,s..ileC S-JuenCool.irano adult will start an. 1 Recorder In cose of corporelloM, r-.A nK C•llfornl•'2•7~ NOTICE OF DEATH OF al lhe Weste rn Medical barrel and firing mechanisms will get "too hot" Ill(•...,. ,,.,. ....._ o1 -Prtt1<Mn1. -------------Thi• bllstnesi 1, cond11c1ed "' • P A U L E 0 W A R 0 Cente r S peech and during the 15 to 20 contests, each involving 16 s.cre10,,,.r, ..... ,..,r.ofld Moneoe• HOTICEOI' 11m11eo per1nerS1>1p. WALKER AN 0 0 F Tht OlrectOf\ ol lllt City ot C<KI• TRUSTEE'S SALE Hut1l•r Ene<11Y Corp Hearing Center in Santa shooters. M•M R-...ioomtn• Aoenc• ,, .. ,.,.., ......, .... ~'1aS1.. A•IOll E Piw1an, Jr . p E T I T I O N T 0 A "I don't mind though It makes me proud. And 11'1e rl9t11•0••1e<••n1or e11bld• Ts. 7 ,.., PrH-• ADMINISTER ESTATE na. OATEOJ·-·•ry ',I"' •E ••i .DE .... F ,I N•~c 1 •L T I I T h kl ·0 I also like outshooling people who are also using ::..-• ~ ~,. ~ ~ " "'' "•1emen• .... 111ec1 "'•n ,,. NO Attt746 e Wee y SeSSI ns P11bll....., ..,.""9t Coesl Delly Pllol, CORPORATION 0 dllly eppolnltcl County Cler~ OI Or.,~ CO<lnly on • • will take place Tuesdays my gun," s aid Kleinschmidt, 28. a manufacturing J•nuery 20, •"2 m.., Tt11•1 .. ...-11,. foti-11111 tttttri1>o<1 J•nuary 11. •"1 T o a I I h e i r s , r 30 8 30 . plant super visor from Medford. dffd Ol l~I Will SELL AT PUBLIC YATUANDNISSEN beneficiaries. c red i t or~ rom 6: to : p.m. tn 'd AUCTION TO THE HIG HEST •N.MoMStne\,S.lle l-and contingent creditorsol Classroom Four or the Som e refu se lo j oin the Kleinschm1 l PIU •Ta 8tOOER FOA OISH IPOy•l>le•f time S-UOAM,Cel ........ tm1 Paul Edward Walker anc t 100 1 N th bandwagon, preferring lo stick proudly with 01u1e1n1•w1111 ...,.yo11t>eun1teo ,.,,....111•1m.»o c e n e r ' 0 r . l" l'ICTITIOUS •USINEU S•••ul •II rlohl, 1111• •nG lntt•MI "'""' per s 0 n s w h 0 m ay b f Tustin Ave., Santa Ana. weapons that have passed through their ram1 1es NAMaSTATEMINT conwtwtcl to--MIG .... II \llldtr P11bllslled Or ... Coest D•llY Pllol, ther ise "nterested ··nth• r ' w, J•n 10, 17, Fe4>. >. 10, ,.., JS1·12 0 W I T he cou rse is f or or year·s. Th• 1011••'"' e>erion 1' c1oine ~1, .. ,1nD0-,,,,'!.. .. T::'-" .1" ,,.,. "'0''.,1' will a nd/or estate : D'M . I t $129 r I I b I bll\lnns n : BONO FINAN CIAL .... __ ,, individuals who have 1 a10 recent Y spen or a spec a arre INVESTMENTS, 1101 Birc h St•ff t. TRUSTOR J<>ttNw JUTTNER.en .....C .-ntE A petition has been fil~ hearing loss and wish lo extension. He a lso had the barrel s pecially FH.i Floor , Newport Such, unmef'ltcl"""' by Wendy Lee Wa lker i · h · d ·1 "choked," or nar rowed , as do m ost or the C••110•11••9*D BE NEF•c•ARY F1RsT FEOEAAL t he Supe rior Court o Imp rove t e Ir a 1 y Corl w. llGNI. Ho. ' LO Se'9M, SAVINGS ANO L.OAN ASSOCIATION l'ICTITIOUS auSINUS t • communicatio n, a nd shooters. ""'"°·c:..i11on110•211s oFSANTAMON1u..ac .... oo••ll.,. NAMESTATEMENl Orange County reQues in their friends and family "lf this dime I'm putting down the barrel goes r111, IMl!Oft• '' c-..ctt<I ..., .,. Rtcoro.d Decembe• 1•, 1t10 •• Tiie followlno person• ••• dolna tha t Wendy Lee Walker all the a down it's not choked right " said lndlwld..... Ins•• No 1l030 In llOOll •Jlls. -~ busin.9!~·~A LIFO RN tA ST ATE appointed as person members. w Y • • Clrl w a-o1 0111<1•• Recorcb in"" ottiu of 1,.,. re P r esen t a t i v e t S b. ts ed "11 Oi Maio. watching the dime Stop about tWO·lhirds Thlt sto..,_I wet lllOd wllll ltle AtcoroerofOronQeC.....lllY,••lddtto HO MESTE AD SEllVICE lbl u ,ec cover WI c"""'Y c1er11 of Orer199 COll~ly on 01 frll sf ontrlb" lh• 1011ow1n~ HOWLA ND ENTERPRISES. 2s10t a dminister the estate j nclude the ddinilion of of the way down. J_,.,1,,1.., prooerly· M•r911e•il•ParkWew.8·209,Mlulon P aul E dwa rd Wa l k e h · 1 But he went home empty·handed on a recent """" A por11on 01 Lot •> of Newpor1 v1e1o. Colltom••.,.., ( d th 1 d d e a r J ~ g O S S • "'*hNll qr.,.. eoott Dolly Piiot, H•IOll••· in fllt '°""''of 0r .. e1t. s1111, D•nte1O'Stfffl,109'1 Pewo 01me. u n er e n epen e c 0 m m u n i c a t i o n Sunday, a day when he just couldn't place enough Jllfl. 20, "·""-J, 10, 1.., 21...i of C•lilornl•, •• iNt• map recor<1eo 1,, Et Toro,ce111om••'™° Administration of Estat Problems e ncounte r ed of the pellets into the black center of the ta;get. , 11oo1o. •. 11419' a , M1sce11oneou• M•IK. 1(••11• O'Sfff<\, ~1 Powo oime, Ac t>. The petition is set f P I ed behi d the . ket r e abo t yards _.,. -In·~ ofll<.e ol ""'<-•Y •t<ordtr Of El Toro,Collloml•nt30 hearing ·n Dept No 3 with hearing loss, types O S n PIC enc U ~ "''~ '°'d covnly, dtscrllltd "' folio•• Thll -•Mu 1, c0flclu<1ec1 by •n 1 · . 0 r h earin g ai d s . away from the targets was a frequently changing ·-------------ta.9lnfllftt 01 lh• mosl Nortllerly, lncll•ldlltl. 700 Civic Center Oriv . f f . d lin e of shoot er s who paid $2 per contest . lllCTITIOUS•UllNISS comer ot wlo Lot U llttno . polnl 111 OonltlO'Slten West, in the City of Sant s uggestions or n en s NAMISTATIMIMT 111e sout11en1er1v 11ne 01 0 •• ,,9, Kon.yo·sieen Ana, Californi a on Feb. 1 and fa mily to ease Kl einschmidt and those uslng his gun won nearly Tll• rouowino ••"on 1, dolnt Awnw,es.-..,~idmop.ttwnc• Tiii• st•••"*'t wu 111eo •lln tt1e 1982 t 9 30 . t • half or the prizes OCfered that day. bllll""tH: So111ll SO deoren E•" elono Ille CO<lnly Cler-of <><•-Counly on a : a.m. c 0 m m u n I c a I 0 n ' OIAMOHO MUSIC PROD. LTD ' Hor111H~ly -y 01 sold lot u, Janu••v "· • .., 11111-· IF YOU OBJECT to th S e e d r e a d i n g The shoots are run by the imposing Russell ,_ 1 1 , • 10 1 1 1 1 ·-t i f th ti · p -j 76Jll Tlene (Ire.le, Miu.,.. .. Ve O, •~. H I lo lht lr11t PO n O Pvbllsllecl Or•not Coesl D•lly Pllol, gr a n ng 0 e pe tlO t h ·q s a d practice brothe rs, whose great.grandfather built the M co111or111otM1 1199111111,., •-• c.on1lflu1..., So11111 so 0 should e'the eC nl Ue n . FrMrltk Henty Coeles, 1'211 ..,_.,Ent •'°"9 \Old NO<'tl'le••l•rly Jen 10, 71. Fob J.10, 1'11 >4H1 y U I r appea S t a ff audiolog i s t a round the turn of the century. He also was a T••rr• c.irc••. Mtu io n v1•10, ....,..do,..,.., f•• 10 • POfn1• IMfltt i------------at the hearing and stat. Florence Ebeling who justice or the peace who held court in a room c.111orn1otM1 Sout11 t0c119renw..1 mH 1 .. f1oe PllUCllTll your objec tions or fil h t ght 11 ad'1·ng ·1n above the bar when Atslon was a thriving small Frec1r1e1o. H.coe•es point: llleflC• Nortn io oeo•"' west '° written objections witl'I t as au p re Tiiis -wes lllocl wllfl IN 1 .. 110 e poilll. ttwnte NOr11140 dPQrttt the area for three years, town. Now, however , only several houses, a gas covntv c1er11 of °'•"" cou111, °" eos• 1u.SJ , ... 10 "" ,,.,. ""'"' 01 l'ICT1T1ouseus1Nns court before the hearln WI.II conduct the course. station and the Pie-a-Lilli remain. Jon11•ry•.1"2 111 ""~:"'. c'no.e111~.P!..."::.' Sfr .. 1, Cot•• NAME nuoHNT Yo ur appearance may ------------Mo._ "''~ '~" The followlnQ penon• Ort dolno j n p erson Or b y YO Tuitio n Is $40 a nd _,.,. _, P11bt1sNc1 0r.,... co1111 O•llv P1101, Tiit 1>onet1<1ery llftder .. 10 Ottd ~I t>Ysl~~0s!~:CE FARMEASMARKET. attorney. e nrollment l·s 11·m1ted . Camels ..._ ... ,~ Jen 20.11.Ft11 1.10.1.a J.f0.12Tn1st,by .... "°"o1.11rM<11or oe1~. """' In 1i.. Obll90llons sec11reCI ll'lereby, 1140 Plecenlla Aytnut, Costa -... I F Y 0 U A R E F or informa tion call f'ICTITIOUS•UlfNIU _.,. ...-,,.,.,otore et1e<ut.O -0.11 .. r.o 10 ce111orn1em21 c R E o I T o R 0 r "a~•sTa-~•-T ~ "''~ ..,,,,. ...... 1111""-.._... o wrlnen ft··tor•llon Slellos N. Xeoo•a••llh. Ht 953-3328. d Tiie 1oi.;;1ne .. ;;;;;,_~It dOlnt -;;-Dtf;,lt~ 0....-f;ws•I•, ono Me9noll•, Coll• Mew, Celllo111lo COntingent Credit Or Of t • e:potte llUtl-•: lllCTITIOUlaUSO•H& wrlllOftflollC·eof tlrff<h-ol tlt<tlon '2'77 deU!aSed, YOU mu5t fi Bo k k o 4ccu Wl!LD, 114 wnt tttll •.-ITATUllUIT 10 c.ovw.,. ~to m 1 Aid warltY M Fo111011y. 1201 a your claim with the 'cou 0 mar s1rwt,c ... -...ce1!Mnl4o.,.,, Tll• 1011ewl11t .. , .... •• dOlne ,.,OP.,IY 10 sollsly S.tld ooi1eo11o111, c.,_yon,cos1eMeW,C••1tom1em21 or prese nt it to 1 PEKING (AP) ~ Wild Gleflfl WllllOm LllSll, Jr .. 1• s. ~11: 11f1f !Mrffftff tllo 11110lnlOMC1 ~Md TlllS bllllneu Is conO..cltd by • contest "I Love Books" will be the the me of the Ora nge County Public Libra ry's 10th annual bookmark des ign eon teat. Entry blank11 for children in kindergarte n through junior high school are available at any branch library. All children who e nter the contest wtll receive a spe cial • '1 Love Books" sticker. Also. the top design In each c at e gory will b e reproduced a s a book mark and winners will b e awarded certiflcat.es. t•ktr s..-. s..111 AM, Ca1'""'4• G"''" CAllTON STUDIO,,,... wold MCI<• .. weec:11..., o• ••ec:t10ft 10 oe,,.r•• POrt,..""411. persona I representatl camels. which are o n tt111 ca111111a or•w•. N••"'' tt0c11, .,. rtellf"dlld Ottoelff '· "" os 1n,1r w.,,.,M FOlllMY appointe d by the cou the verge of extinction, Tll•• ......_ '-c..-cw..,.., ca11~~ .. 1, 0,1"'_.· ,, ... ~~;,:;.~,!R':!~~· PoOt fll, of ,,!."~~Y ·~~ ~':,.::...,,,;~~Y ': within four months fro have b een fo und in ,.....,~W,Llllll,Jr. Catallllt Orlwt, No•,.rt Buell, SlldwtowlllOO,......,blltwll'-1 Je1111ory 1',l"2 the date of first ISSUan northwest China, the lllk ............. -lllod wtlll .. c.......... ,.weflOll\ or ••"°"''· •• ,., ... or 11111111 of letters as provided omctal Xinhua news c-ty Cleftl .. o..,.. Ctllllty ... TN•_.,_ 11 0·~--...... lmpll9Cl,"91'dlfoelltl0.-Jfft*l.or PllClllSMclOr ..... Con tD .. lyPl .. I, Section 700 of the Proba J_,.,, It, It ~...... e11tumllr_.., to PO 1119 r.,..111,,1119 Je11. 10. 21. "°"' J, 10, ,.., )1~ agency has reported. .,.... _._.L.Grlmft llff11<1,.i "'"' .. ""11111e -11••d by 11------------Code of California. T Wild camels, a taue·r, l'Wlltllld°""99""' oa11.,. PlfM, '"" .....,.... -lllH •"" .,. Mid°'" 11 Trvtt .• 1111 1111ortt1.., 111 PIU Illa time for flllng claims w thinner ancestor of the J ... to.27.tr•,,tt,i• 11141 ~~-:..~ °'°"" c_, :::.:"n::""W::· ... ~'o,1~:~~: not expire prior to fo d e s t ·c t 0 hump , -• _ ""' , .... c11arau al\d ••~tff 01 111t 11icmtc1U1•ut1••• months from the date om 1 w · ,.... .,._ ~ ..... 0r..., c .... Detty ....... T""1" .,.. o1 "" '""" crNttc1 11v .. ,.... tUTtlMaMT the hearing noticed abov camel, were found in 1------------Ja11.tt,,,,....._,,1t,tm wo1e O...of '"""· s.td '°''•Ill"' _ _!~~. 111t ...,._,.,..HI"' YOU MAY EXAMIN Dunhuang County in ITATIMIMT o,. WITMD•Awu 1i------------.... .,, ,....,.....,, ,,_,., 11, ,.., 01 ---- d ' ,..,. t ·ot 11 "'··at .,. O\oPf'flOfl An-cou"nous L•Mous1H• the rile kept by the cou Gansu Province an n •A•TNl•H11P of'••AT1•• '91191a '"'ra11Ce.to ... c1w1e c...1wlkll,.,,.., suv1c•.u0r ..... ...,,c.-•1 lfyouare lnterestedlnt the northeast part of u•oH ~----------*C: .. t~A-,lfti11t cuy ... r~= .. :Slftt~1C•.•"' .. 1 estate, you may file Sinkl•n1 Province T::~:=·:::.::.~ •1CTmouuu11•1M 04"1::.i-..... 1.,.11e1M11<•t• Cott..,.,,..__..1t OrMM...,, request with the court d urin1 a •urvey las t ., o ,.,,.,., 11ert11er 1rom "" ..__ nAnMeMT of ""' •tc., 1,. , .. ., -., ._ ..-... Mer.~'*' receive ss>ec;lal notice • Tiit loll owl119 119,.lfl It etlllt I I 111 ... ll tollOll T I .....,, I ...--.......... summer and autumn, '0'1"•rtt1111 ~••llnt 1111 .. , •11• ..,.,_ .. : ~11~!·::,::•"::c,:,-!...!!'..._.01 111 --• 'c..--.-•Y • the Inventory of esta fklll'-\MIN9 -., WALK IN w • s T .. " H w I I. 0 I N 0 ~ .... ... --·-,.,-~.:.._-............ assets and of the .... t ltlon Xlnhua said. It did not VAULTS •• ""' Cit-• c;1rc1e. COMPAHY,Dtl•.e"-"*'"-· l•lltl -.. cwb . ·-· --.--w..,. -say how many were ,,..,..,.,~m'4 0r.,..~.,... en• uw ... u• 11 11.t, u1.a•. To "'"""'·'""· accounts and r e por Tiit 11c1111 • ..-•11-.11110 1101u 11~ "'" Mco....111• m1 1, ....,,...,,. .. _..... •· -.... , ~~.. ,described In ~tlon 1200 '';~led. lid 1 h :=::.,.:i:,i;:::::,::: c.__, ~. 0r111t1t, cat"-!• "'0~~:::~;,, "" "'" .-:::;;; _ 11,.. .,1111 .. of the Callfomla Probe h e thwlck ucahmet II •• or...... ~ ........ I• CIMllt ... " .. s ~ A s I 0 • F I .. A N ( I ~ ,_,, ~ .. OfMta C-'Y Code. a ort, , I ·Ye ow ,. ... No-.,,. A4Nnt.• .. .,_. ,,,.. • ......_ oo"l'OAA'i. .... J_.,,..,.., l!d1•r A. Natlt• hair and smaller bumps ,...._WtNr_....1 ...,.'-.._... CIMYS<...-. ..... ,..,... •• ~ Attor1t•Y at Law H than the domestic cin~ .... ~~~=•'.._ e:!t:.:-::-.,,:. ... C.::,': ~=.~ ~~..:=:-..... Wut O~m,tc il1v• The contest lbrou•h Feb. 27. va riety, and is a tim14 0...11.a.e ,_.,,..,_ °'7'•~ ........ --.~--~ :_verlJ Ht;.fA tat r u n s a n d f a a t • r u n n I n I ..... ,.,.. °'"""' ~ o.i,:1: • ,......,.. °""It c.... o.1i:':'t=. ,._._ ar-. c.a" o.11, ttti.1 ,....... °'"""' c-.. oetty ...._ '.!-D"...!l ~J OIPll °""' animal, Xinhua 1ald. Jet0 tt. "· ....... "· •• uw. ,,.,., •· "· ~. , .. •• "Ml Je11 . .JO, "· ...._ » • ..... , ... "u, .._ •. 11 .. 1• *..,·~4. ._,. .. I I . SCR , offers a Clasl!Y but featherweight comedy By TOM TITUS °' ....... -.... ..... ThoH who uched their collecUvt1 eyebrows wben South CoHt Repertory chose "Anythln& Gc>ea" to clo.e ha 198().81 season may well be doing 10 acaln upon viewlng "The Play's the Thin&." the • Coate Mesa company's current mainstage offerln1. " It's cute, il's clever and, like most SCR shows, ll'a presented with more than a touch of class. But on a ma1nitude scale, It hardJy measures up to lt\e tare moet playgoers are used to viewing on Town Center Drive. Thls featherweight comedy by the Hungarian playwright Ferenc Molnar (trivially noted for inspiring the musical "Carousel" with his ' "Lillom"> ls elaborately packaged in one of Cliff Faulkner 's most Impressive settlngs and -• . .... • ' ., .. ~ directed with flair and 111111•11 flavor by Lee Shallal. What transpires onsta1e · · seems almost secondary. . . Molnar's account of an amorous misadventure in the 1920s on the Italian Riviera is a pleasant contrivance weighing more on style than substance. An indiscretion has been committed: the actors plot upon what to do to remedy it -and then they simply do it. If you're looking for last-act surprises, look elsewhere. Not that there lsn 't a good deal of run in the process. The third act consists chiefly Qf_jl Jtlll within the play that 1s written on virtually the spur of the moment to shore up a rocky romance -and this is where the bulk of the comedy lies. It's a welcome break from a ll the polite, Noel Cowardy humor which precedes it. The instigator and instant creator of the charade (who's a playwright by trade> embodies Molnar's tribute to authors in general and himself in parti~ular. Jonathan Farwell plays him as an omnipotent chap who resets his companion's world on its axis without ruffling a hair. Linda Thorson injects an engaging cuteness into her prima donna character, exemplifyi"g more than any onstage what the Twenties (in all probability) were all about. As her disillusioned swain, Nicholas Walker is properly giddy and naive. blessed with stage innocence. - The funniest of the cast is Robert Machray as the actor forced lo perform the phony play. and a collection of 10-dollar French names in the process; his frustration provides the only real yoks MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND c1neoome a Scrczczn Comp lczH Coll 634 2S S3 YOUNG PEOPLE Ille.,.._._ ol ... t•Mp •IO -,,.,,_ -... -'°""Y"' ...,.,.......,.-.. __ o~.,.~~ Cha a s tA F' ~ "I.I. AGES AOMlnt 0 0.-.. A..O-• REDS fPGI Ac 8:00 No~s-r,. ~ "ll MltS AOMITTl:O ,....,,.,a .. '*' .. s.._.,.., No,_ CHAIUOTSOF RREIPOI At 7:00 9:20 ~ llf.STRICTI:O u-17 ,-,. ac~yino ,_, °' _., a-o---·•~uo Shows llt 7:151:15 NoP-® HO ONE ut<OEA t 7 ...OMITTED tA.Qie llmft IN)' lfef')' tn 09t\alft ., .... ' ICEOf' IMLICE(PGI Shows at 7:001:20 "'-1. am AHO im Fii.Ms RECEIVE ™E SEAi. Of n.E MOTION PIC'IVRE COOE Of SELF REGUl.ATIOH rol lerskates • walker~ .oys ·w~s···· scooters*hot · rods•coupes• traile.rs•hard tops•convert- ibles•motor homes* lawn mowers* limos •corporat~ headquarters •garden carts Model A's•••• ", · If it's got wheels, you'll move It faster in a Daily Pilot classified ad.Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- viser will help you turn your wheels into cash. Timo_t~'W' Hutton TMSIPGI Cannonball Aun (PG) John Batushr NElml•DllS IRI Tim• S.ndlll (PG) Ne 2"" I c~~in ,.,.,an IPGI Nrne To FiYa IPGI f'"eh ·,· · RAIDEM Of' lltE LOST AllK IPGI 8r ~ull Gordol\ (~I 7 QOI MN GLOB• NOlllNAnONS IMllodlf't -BUTPICTUM WTDWTOA-._,___ WT .. •Kl-ACTOR-Mew..,. .. ........ WT .. •KT-ACTW-~ ... , .... ... NOWPLAYINO --mu --f'UIA """-.._..,, .. ,. 111111111111 °""91IS4 "11 ·-'9 ·--····· 11• I ....... 11111111171..SSO '1' 1 1 "J,0$4' !Mlt(714)Hl-OIS5 _ _..._. .... _..,._, 0.. .... (714) 7SI 4114 ~----·=---='"""! .. ,,__ ~~ ...... ·-~ . ,_,..._ I "T"I l'UY'S T"I '"'"°" A <-OV llY ,_ MolMr. "-'" •Y P. O • ....._,.., dlr.c .... lly L" hllM, wttlllt.., C:lll1 ..... .._, ~-11y ( ....... T-llftMll, tl.,..lftt llY c-Herwy, --.,1.,..1y ••<"4 ~" ... "·"'·· _....,. ................. ""--" ..... 14 by So .. 111 (M SI llej1Wt41ry. Ut fowl\ c.t\l•t Qflw. C•t• Meu, ••-vMi.M"1..a TMI CAIT S-T11<el.,... • • . • . • .. , , JOl\et~ F-11 l ..... S1 .............. ,, ............. ., .. L'-f-- "lllert ANln .••.• " ... , , . Nk ll04 .. W•lll.r "lmMy • • • • ..... ,, M«IW•Y -....... .. . .. .MkllMl•-J~ll <>-'nllKMI< . , ,. . . . .. , • , ...... -'-0.vlO Ke• .. • M•ll .... ,. ........... ., .. , ............. ~1111"''°" Le<Uyt . . • . . . •• •• . • •• • . A .. r1 (f'-, l ryM ·-- or the show. Michael Keenan a s Farwell's coll aborator Is used primarily 11s a sounding board, but the resona"nce of his voice makes his presence pleasurable. SC R'& resident company, a seemingly endangered species, is represented by John-David Keller as a buUer with 1t tongue-twisting moniker and John Ellington as a hy(¥traclive secretary to the villa's unseen owner. Keller, a Texan who speciali~es in playing foreign servants, adds . another scene-scavenging performance to his collection. "The Play's the Thing" is an enjoyable diversion. yet it's doubtful that the SCR company would have chosen such an unabashed piece of fluff in its early, image-making days. It may. however. prove one of the season's more popular offerings. Perforrnances _con!inue-nig.MJ~~ Mondays at 8 p.m. with 2 :30 matinees on weekends through Feb. 14 al the Fourth Step Theater. 655 ·Town Center Drive. Costa Mesa. • SPEAKING OF SCR, the company has announced the cast of ""The Fitness Game," the 14th annua l educational touring production. J ohn-David Keller departs from his duties at nig!tt lo direct the original musical play for children. The fi ve-member cast, all graduates of SCR ·s s umme r acti ng cons e r vator y. are Che r yl Cra btree, Robert Crow. Mark Oausak, Bryan Rasmussen and Patti Wojcik. The ensemble plays a variety of characters. including TV game show host s, anatomical pa rts, children and s ports heroes. The 45-minute show is available for tour anywhere and may be performed indoors or outs ide. Booking information is available at 957-2602. I. George C. Scott In "TAPS" <PG> II. Ill. "TIME BANDITS" (PG) .,..,. "HEARTBEEPS" "ARTHUR" Plua "ONLY WHEN I LAlJ.GH" (A) Chevv has the ,_,.,. to make this Holid.IMJ Suson the fumiest ew:rl ~OO~ClC1J ~IJO'l~ll.~0 lffi-:r-..... ~-~~~~~-- ~~ .c.s lhfls kit1~ ~ f()~()Af -N.c.s8 9 big~A(Jw. Orange Coast OAILY PILOT,Wednetday, January 20, 1982 BEST P.ICTURE OF THE YEAR -Ne• Ton rum OUk:I Award -Natkmal loard ~ leTiew Award 7 GOLDEN Gl.OBE NOMINATIONS WARREN BEAT1'Y DIANE KEATON WIA~N~8- AU Q~~~ l~' ~~:J Thie week you an ... REDS •I theM the•t'" : • IDWUH •WHIT UWUll WllJO TWI• • ClllOOlll Ntwpotl Beach 6U 0760 Missr0n voe,o 830 6990 Ofilll08 634 25S3 lDWAltOI ClllfMA WEIT UA MOYIH "°' .... '""''''" Wes1mtns1e1 891 393S B•H 990 4022 •oo• ... •-••• •ACAOEM'f Ml t.18lAS YOVI Cata ••If ~·t yOU MCI tov• QUt•tt to •"Y ~fOlfn6ne• M~y lttw~lild.4J'I al 1~4' tnMlf•a tNlilC.•ftcJ ~ *BARGAIN MATINllES • Monday thru Saturday All PertormancH before 5:00 PM (Elce,t Special Enptt111tt1ts IM Holidays) l-" 1.4,llADA "4 Act M11000 01 l o1ecroru LA MIRADA WALK·IN tt•·2•00 --c.-..·---00TA~""­n:a._ ... __ I . -----""RAIOl!l'll OFT .. LOST ARK"' . ---.... ............ ,,...,., .. ~,..._._._ ... ,' ,.,...~.::. .. : ..... , f --· ·---I __ .... ""lt(OS" =·----I ~--·-..·-­""A8MNCl Of MAUC:t"" -, ............ ..._ .... LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK·IN ---·--n» "Nl10H90RS"" 1111 ,. '"' .. -. ......... .. __ ...._,. •tt•.t:•··--------· ""IHARKY"I MACMINE"' ...i , ....... -.-.- foc:ully ot Condlewooo 213/531·9510 --· ""IHARKY'S MAQ41Nf"" 1111 .... tt::JI. a:..a:-. ,..,, 1---........ -...... --·-o...,-------··-------··1tms··----tl!a .a:-.-•M.---c ·_... -""""9 "TAPS" -·----··· LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAlll IN foc:"'V Al Del Amo 21J/6M-9211 -----""CHAltlOT'I"' l'tM" ..... ..... ___ ,. ... LAGUN,t. "-=-·• •. 1;11 --·--""RAIO«ltl Of T .. LOST ARK"" I .... .,.., ... -.- ----------··~-­.-.-..... ----.... -00EVIL9"M<00 ... •t:•----- SO. COAST WALK·IN South Coo11 Hlwoy ot lkOOOwoY 494-1514 --· ""~ltN~lMS"INI --·--..... -.................. -... ...._. __ ""ATUNTIC cnr· ... _ ,,... ... .. , ________ _ .... 8 1!> " ... 6:00 ·-· ....... 8:4!> IMPORTANT NOTIC(' Ctlll nREN UNDUl 12 fRU! """' •"4 ._,,.., 11110 I~•• flt !> 30. Sii s .. H•1 4·30,111 Clllt-11 SCU10 • YM 01 CNI MOCl 1$ 'IOllll 5l'lMCll f llO ~ CNI IWllll WllK OollOo .ansGl!l '95llOf --"" '°"AIU 1• AU Cllf.ll DIWl-MS l30 Oii M - "NA><f li.4 ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN """°" •• 01 l•mon SI 179-9110 ---..... _ ""EVIL~··1111 ""THE FINAL COHF\JCT'" 1111 CHol '' SOUllO 9Uf NA PAltl BUENA PARK OR IVf IN lt~o•n A..e ••• , of CftOrt 121·•070 l'i d ~NA. PA.k'll LINCOLN DRIVl·IN .to ......... . LA HABRA i~»! ii; "' ............. MU.., ... "ABSENCE OI' ~·· l"9 -""llllANIAC ~··.,. CUil fl SOUllO ., __ ""FANTA .... '"1111 -'"ll'flfTTY BMY" 1111 C•llt II WIUllO --· ""li!llOOeltN ,._,.. EMS"" 1Nt -""NINE TO '1vt" .,. ----... -..-.. u ""GHOST STMY°" "' -""ALTERED STATES"' 1111 .._. 00fANTAllD0'1t111 -""~aMY·· ... -c._,,._..,._ "TAn""INt ----• -• -a -""' "'THI: C:ANNONMU.. MIN" -171-1162 ---........ ORANGE DQl\I E IN • £' .. MISS IO N D QIVf IN . . •. " . . WARNER ('l.'1.f IN M~loA"Of....., a t-Coll ... 151·7022 ,..,._. __ "'IOUTMUN~T .. t111 -.. _. DIAM9T"'" I t f t ~ J ( ' • j ' ; , ' I '' I • I ' .Hwnotand ttOddtm in a tender and entenainint work~ :1 lot Logbook -lllly Piii Candid commntaf'Wa uclusiwtr in rtw -. .. I 0ttngt Cout DAILY PILOTtNtdnMd1y. J1nu1ry 20, 1982 TH£ fAMILt' CIRCl:M by Bil Keane "Could you play 'The Farmer in the Deli?' " .· " e .. by Brad Anderson "Hold it, you two ... l'LL set the thermostat!" ~.ll'DGE PARKER . . . BIG GEORGE by. Vrrgil Partch (VIP) "Help me send my kid through H1rv1rd Business School." DE~~IS THE ~E'.\i\CE Hank Ketchum F,~ PEANl'T8 I CAN'T SEEM TO WAKE HE~ UP, ~AM .. ME ?VOO W TMf10 TAKE MAlCIE'5 PLACE ON ™E SCHOOt. ~~Ol? TtMBLE•EED~ ves, If 15 ,, HOP-Af...ON6' FOPtU.ESKQWl1Z, ~~~~~ Cif1oN AN01H~R SHOE UPROARIOUS f LJrJ· Fll.-1...f:P 17fSfRf A~EN1VRf! .. YOU'RE CATCHING A COLD---GO SOAK '>'OUR FEET IN A MUSTARD FOOT BAT~ fl. ~ I ~~-I eooatiT A ~.............. PIECE.OF Af':l IN I BRIOGE~ • . , ~ -------WOW! DO I GET TO WEAA A 9EL. T ~" CAA'-Y A Sl6N ? I PO? .. . . . . .. --·· by Charles M. Schulz SLEEP WEU., LITTLE F~l~O •• by Jeff MacNelly by Ernie Bushm1ller I COULDN'T FIND THE MUSTARD---50 I USED MUSTARD PICKLES by Tom Batiuk 1 DIDN'T UU<. If Off ! by Lynn Johnston l ~EVBING­.. , ...... ~ ..... l'HmWHrft IKADOW I =~.£ (91 .... MOMIWI .c .... Ql+JCM.T'He aACK~AN>OI ClYU>N &ram Jliyulnglle aind FrMrtdl a..-IW In 1N1 advWl""9, ... In ~. of 1 lloty INn wtlo rllCUM 1 teopwd ~ ffom • tropi- cal poot. (Pwt 2) (l)MOW! ••• "Boys' NIQflt OUt" Ctt12) Kim NovA • .._ Gamer. When • ellapefy ~ eo-.d undlNik ... .. ,_Ch ptotac:I, ft ftndl tour bl*~ more then .-no to ..... "' ~ 10 aid her In ~atudy. t:ao. WILOOM( Ma<, l<OTTIR H'I the tlrlt day bP al ldlool end Gaba II ner- -voualy aweltlnO lather. hood. CPart ti I ICCe'T NNe1~:•M•llllllAAT ···-·~ ..... lame)' ~=whlfl 1111 llgllte '° out In the Pl'• olnct and. -peycH--.......... to in. 1•1~NIWI ,Nee.wt ·1=== M•A•e•H Hawkeye end Trapper attempt to retrllYI a Sl4>- pty of hydrocorllaona 1tolen by black-mark· ...... I JOl<Elr6 WILD OVUllAIY au.ti: '"" of the gotdar1 )'elr'I of radio Don and Loll Wlflon. (R)Q • MACNllL / LEHAEJll MPOflT (I) TlC TAC DOUGH . 9 "'1MTAINMENT ~ SOupy s.... 8flQliOM In _,.. pi. throwing on IN lrOnl 8""' of New Yortt'a ~Of Ana Arte. .THI MUfl1PEfl Oueat: Miiton 8ertl. Cl:).MCMI ··~ "OuMtin Ounw9rd" (1966) Aob1rt T~. Kay i<.ndli. King ~ XI ettempll to create a netlonel .... e out of • ~ del.-n. CB> MfADOWLAAK LIMON'I 9UCKET&M Humorow IMelrtc:a and proleulonal 1port1 tDCPlftill .,. lhoweMld by the on-1111-court bedllm craeted by Ille lkdet-•. CD>THfWAYll'WAI "1958 NFL chemplonelllp: Ba111more Colla VI. New YorkGlanta" 7:IO. 2 ON THI TOWN Featured: 111111 Sllb Cl1y: viii! llflnl mOYle actor Harold Lloyd'a l\OUM: ftnd out what 11'1 ftk• lo b4I aboard a mdlal IUl>f'M. r1nl. 8 YOUNG ft£0P\E8 IPfCIAL "Thi Skater" A drug lrweetigallon .. • local Ice rink deetrcye • young ........ lllJPfrelloM. • LAYPNI a. SHIN.EV .. 00/fllPNf'( ~II promoted to om- c:lal ..... et IM l>f-v. • EnONLA. Featured: a report on wtiy niarrled """ -attracted .. DEVOTED -Angela Howe plavs a devoted skater at 7: 30 tonight on "'The Skater ." airing on KNBC 14 1. to llngll women; IN lalllt on hOIM ~; • lootl" IM .. .,. Of iwetld fllml. • CILIMfTY llJUMft . ........ " My3INtloul ~--In the 4077111 -to car.. llrm 1M KoreM bslaf In an """"' world of demons and ancaetret aplflt1. I TIO TAC 00UCatt . 1 MACNlll / LIHAIA MJIORT • UW f1'0M THI MET "la Boheme" Tar ... Sir•· la, JoM Carreru 811d Renata SCOtto are fea- tured In Ille Met'a ,_ pro- duction of Giacomo Pucci- ni'• romenttc: tragedy; J-LIVlnl conduct• tlll Mltropollt811 ()per. Orcneetn end Cllorua. I P.M. MAGAZINE YOU All<ID fl10R rT FNA.Yl'BIO NM MIKET8AL.l Los Al'Ollee laklrl VI. New Jer-.y Neta CZ>MCMl •• "Improper Channlle" (198 t) Alan A1111n, Marlette Hartley. A _... of ml111n- dertlandlng1 c•~ a IOClal worker to 1U1P1C1 the 5-yeer~ daughter of • MC>Wlled eoupje In the Ylc:tlm of clllld et>wa. 'PO' l:OO 8 Wl<RP IN CINCINNATI Againat Ill• bitter judg- ment. Mr. Carlson ~'­to run radio spot• promot- ing "lootl-1116c•" pllll that • ippoeedly aid In weight rlduCtlon. 8 8 MAL P£OPl£ f'Mturld: • drive-In funeral parlor; 1 photographer who .. paid 10 ••• plc- turee of bathing .,..,...; an 12-yeer ~ blcycllat. • MOYIE •• * "Medlgan" (1M8) Alc:nard Wldmlrk. Henly Fonda. A New York deeec- 1""9 wl1h quesllol...,.. ..... lea """ Into tlOUb6a with lllaconw1 l11ton•. •• '"'9NAT8T u.muCAN.__, Rslptl acQUlr'll ... ebllty 10 -lneo .. "*""· and wtl8I Ill .... upeeea NM. • "°"" • ·~ "Where "-Hee • Gone" (llM) ._.. ....... wwd ...... o.te. Alt« • teen-ager kllla her mo111er•1 lover, lier divorced l*9r* ~ reunlle. ....... MAGAZJNI A "wardroOI doctor" wflo glVM advtca on _, dotti. ll\Opplng; "' .,,. • netJonal ""91Jldlt'CI -petition; Marla Shrtver -how apecllll effect• create a haunted houla; Or. Granlell on c;ompulalva r~ • * • "file FBI Slory" (19591 J-s 1-ar1, Vera Mllea. The workings of Ille FBI afllct one agenl and hil lamly. • UW FAOM THf MET "la~ .. Tar-Str .. 18. JoM Carr•• and Renata Scoc1o •• ,.._ lwld in Ille Mat's,_ pro- duction of Glecomo Pucci- ni'• romantic tragedy; J-Ll\IWll conducl.1 the Metropolltan Opera Orc:Nailre end Ctlor\ll. Cl> OM&. ROIMTI INCW. CB>~ *** "Chaacll And Chong'• N•1t1 Movie" C1tl0) RlcMrd .. ~ .. Mwln. ThofNlf Chong. Two po1111ad1 h•v• --lmllf adven-1ur.. white roaming Iha 11,..g of Loe Al'Ollee In ~ ol 1111 "perfac! ~~XVII John Byner lhowl )'OU thlnga ltranger ltlan truth. "'"" than 1111. and zanier Ulan M)'llllng )'OU'YI - ...,, In '"-snc:or• pf ... entetlona trom Iha Show· Urne 811.arre llbrery. • • EL!PHNIT PARTIS MlcllH I N11mltll and "*"berl of Ille PICfftc Ml Flapel1ory Company -IMtured In Ihle original production ot non-1t09 laughter end mualc. l:tO I THI TWO cw us AU IN THE FAMll Y Atcllil'• ~ lo get • promotion coat• him a lot more than he bar· ~~ *** "9 To 5" (1980) JerM Fonda. Dolly Pwton. Thr.. working women ratlel aeetn•t their eubju- gatlon by • rnell cllauvtnlll b01a. 'PO' l:OO 8 (I) MOVIE "Prime Sulpect" CPrem- lare) Miii• Farral, Tart Garr. A ~ married, apparently lew-al>ldlng di· ..,, blcomM the pf'lms euepect In • pOlloa hunt for •-murderer. •• T'He,ACTIOI I.ft A JepeneM 1t11d1nt ._,., ...... .,. .._ ........... and lndlttlll .. llM<a Jio IOoM•IUab • •• THmMLL.eAlr .................. .._....,.._...._ ---C.111)11 .............. ~ty lftter"euonal ;;'::".:... (J:)--* '1Cloc:Ae ,._. •• ,... ................... n. ,.... ... IAMefl ... ................... ·==-.._'". * *'41 ''TIM 'ormula" (1llO) Manon lrando, Oeof'll c. looet. Wtllle 111 ......... --°' a calllague, a ~ cop ~ • conspiracy lnllOMng IM euppieaaton of a ayntllatlo ""' lormull ~the oil compan ..... 'R' t:o8 CZl MOVl! **"Road G-"(1911) Stacy KllCll. Jemie L .. Curtil. An ecc;enlrlc INC:lt· er, a beautiful hllCllllilar end a peyc:hopltlllc: kNler treveflng "" -roul• are pleylng ~ 1or 1111 and daetll. 'PO' HO 8 8 LOW, llDNEY Sidney'• obnoldoue - boM blcomM lnVOIWd In "" pereonal ""· CD>MOYIE CHANNEL LISTINGS * * * * "~ti•'• WrJ" 11981) Jiff 8rldgel. John Heard. A -II)' handi- capped Vlei"'"' vateran .... 10 deer • cfola f) IC0NXT (CBS> It ICNBC INBCI 8 KTL A (f nd.l • KABC IABCI 0 ICFMB (CBSI I) l(HJ TV (Ind I e l(CST tABCI • t<TTV tlnd.J e KCOP·TV l tnd.); e KCET !P BS) e KOCE (Pp~1 0 On-TV l Z·TV H HBO e 1C1nem.l•) Ji !WORJ NV ,N V @ (WTBSI l IESPN> <S1 ( Showlime I • Si>ollighl e !Otbte News Network I lrtend wtlO ~ • -pact In a murder 111 wft. nealld, by MllllnlJ out Iha ,...,k ........ tO:OO •a OUN:Y A lelnale inlUl'anoa lmwtfo. gator ~ • cic.a frtend of Oufncy' I of l(Jllng Ille llorw '°' the .,,.,,.,. lii'ILvNIW8 8N80URO Aewf'•"loe.o"~ a ...,... vshlcia for Thella ...... choreogi eptly. CB>MOVll ........... , .. IOft .. , ( tNOI 111n luneyft, 8-.._.,.,, ,.,,.., . ,.., .... .,.. ........... "°"*' ll!*tllel ....... ... tr to hell Olftltt llllt II.,.,. ...,.... ..... Of'* ,.._.. to alleilrl • dMne ~·..a· _. • ._&IDINT NITWON< NIWI .... tot.MO ~• "lolero" prcwtdee • tPeCie1 Ylfllde kif Tllelle ..., ••• dlof9o9teptly. • 8AIW4 VAUGHAN IN CONCIRI a.-. VauQNr1'1 lnoom- patllble~ II._ ..... '"' (I) TOM JON9 MO MIMNANTON PerformlflO IOt Ille flrtl time lote'f*, Tom ~ Md SuMrl Amon esaute • Lat v .... _.._In Ihle 10-Mr..OV. *** "A~ And Hie Dot" (1t76) Oon Johneon, SWenne lenton. In II<*· Wond W• IV~.• boy and Ille telklnO dog .. outln~Of~ • 11:00 •• • <1> u a .... I MTUN)AY MCIHT l<OJAK The murder of I r..,._ putl Kolak on tM ltlll of Ille ~vlc11m . • THIJ!9••f11•EMOl4-- Tom'1 Ill ... bulll'9el ttlC> mey b4I hie 1 .. 1 II Helen flnde OUI wftO lle'I lrlvwl• lfig with. • IWWON> AHO ION Gr.cfy Ir... lo keep the S..ford ,_ ,, .. of Bible IM9Clngt end oroi-, • DQCCAYITT GuMt: comic IClor Ptlll SllV«l. (Plrt 1 ol 3) ~MOVIE * * "Ph0b11" ( 1980) PllUI MlchNI GlaNf'. SuNn Hogan. A O'CIUP of menlal patten" '" murd«ed according lo their lndlvldu- al tew9. 'R' .MOW * * "The Attic" ( 1979) came Snodgf-. Ray.,.... lend. A Nbrllflln .._ In the past with her memorlee of • IOYe who dbappewed. 'R' 11:80 9 Wl<AP 1H CIHCWATl Herb Tat lek 111rt1 Mlllng tna.anoa on Ille Job end ropea L.. Into buying ..iougn -• for llx men.JR) 9 8 THI IDT OF CAAIOH au..t1: Mc:LNll S._. son, Nllille Cole. Tom Oreeaen. Henry T. Smith. (R) "' ea A8CNEW9 MQtfT\JNE e THI 000 COUPl.E Fellx dlrectt • movie bUlll •ound o.c.r·. day-by- day ICIMt .... -~ The Rookie• have to ·~ Ille KCldenlal lfloo4lng of. "*'· I KCET WWlelAT CN'TlOtB MC .... i=.wt'ITl.cAN * *~ "U1* o.tlnga" (1NO) Telwm O'.._., l<tta- t, Mc:Mcftol. At - CM!p, two ~ glr1I ....-eo-wt1o .. be ..... I0 .... .,.. 1-r:_ .... 11• (II) "°"" * • "The tncredlbla ""1r*lnll w_.. .. 11t111 Llr T°"*I, a.tea Gro- din. A....,~ find• lleraell getting llfleller .. her uncon- osned hulblnd toob on. 'PO' 1t:OO. IHA NA NA Gwec: Tar-...... •O LOW90AT An Injured lennll ..., , .... 10< a cntlcal ~-. and a praetteal !Ollar pun. one loll• 100 m811y. (R) D MOYIE • • "TlmberJad l'' ( 1954) Sterling Hayden, v ... Ral91on. A young lumber· man vOWI ¥enOMll08 tor 1111 tether'• dletll. • Mtl<E DOUGlM Collott: N•lllle Cole . Gueell: Freddie Aomen, Fernenclel. John Mallon.. • rrt lVIRY90Cn"I ....... "Future Of .._,_ .. (I) WONDP WOMAN tt:Oe 9 MOYIE • • "Hooch" c 1978) Oii Gerwd. E/1tla Fox. nw. .,,..,. lloode Mt9mpt to oroena-• 09"0 of aou.... em IJIOOlllN!llrl tor IN New Yortt mob. (Al 12: 11 Cl) MOYIE **YI "Little MIN Martt«" PHO) Welt« Mettheu, Julle ~. llMd on Iha Demon ~ .eory. A gruff, IClngy t930a bod!· .... .. la tumid lrcuncl wMl'I Ill _,..,.. • 6-~- ofd mopp« .. • """'" tor a reclng bll. 'PO' ldl 8 8 TOMOMOW Gueeta: the Pointer S.. 11r1: Tom erauw: Rep . Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT/Wedoeaday, January 20, 1982 .. lUBE' TOPPERS. • KNBC 8 7:30 "The Skater . /\ drua inves tigation at un ice rink destroys 11 youn$it skater's asptrutaons See photo at left. KOC£ 9 7: 30 .. t u Boht:mt'. .. Metropolitan Opcrn ·s new production of Puccini's romantic tragedy . KTTV e 8:00 "P.M. Ma.:az1nt' ... A wardrobe doc tor gavel': advice on clothes shoppin~. KNXT. 9:00 "Prime Susl>ect .. MoviE' premiere sttirs Mike Fan~ I. St-~ sto r y below. ~ Doman (A-c.-1.). • "°"" * * ... "ftromlall, PnJmll. .... CtlMI ~ Mane- llelcl, Marie McDonald. Two ~ become .,.._. traugM wtlel'I one of the wl\IM becorr. ~ .,.., ... °""' fled ttted and felled. ...... IDINT NETWOM..wl ~MOYIE I **'*"A~ Of P ... lion" (1971) Ellan 8uralyn, ~ Mereoutl. A women wtlo kllled her c:Nldran and attempted euldda """ her ~ lift her mMtl "' ectr-wtlO dolan'I rMllzl whir• ICllng .,. end life blgll'8 in • OfMTI prlaon. .... (%)MOVll ***'A "ThON Llp1, Tiioee E)i91" I ttlOI Frank ~~O'Con­nor. A llamboytint IUf'nl'Mf lllodt actor, wtlO dr- of lroectway 1lardom, ... "'"~•I. llUgMltNdl prop boy and pnllftOtll Ille r~ with • dlOrul girl ..... 1:00. "°"" **~ "Good Dey For A H"'flng" (1969) Fred M1cM11rr1y. Magg la ~ When "' ..... . -~ ......... . llrak .... he .. ~ to find tha1 IM townapeo- pi. .,,..., 10 think of 1111 c:aptl¥a .. being ~ and ~ of llllCtl I crime. • MOVll **th "The Bettle Of The Vile Fiorita" (1M5) M-- ,_., O'Hara, Richard Todd. Thi Cllllchn of 811 .... lgld ~ connNe 10 reunis. tflllr perenta. ."°"" *. * "Th• HunW'' ( 1979) S..~.EIW9- Tecfl. Rslptl "Pape" Thor· -...... dangerOUI .... .. • ITIOdlm-dey bOUnty """"'· .... t:•• MOW! ** ... "Cellow" C197t) Yul ~. Aldlerd CfeMe. ""'---~·~ c:mn fOld ..... "* '° ..... 0..-of both 1111 lewlnan fNrld and a~ ltOun1y """"" • 1:111= * * * "Coet Miner'• Oeugllter'' (1tl0) 5-.y 8pacell, To1r11r1y Lee .ion.... 8.-d on L.oretU Lynn'1 autotllogr8'llf!J. A )Qll'll girl from • poor lllflly In rureT Kentuc*y "'8t1'll • lflUdl older local boy_..,.,....,. her n.. IO ltardom In the lnl'9lc lndllW)'. 'PG' t:OO. BfTIRT......,. TOMQHT Soupy ,.... 8flQliOM in . -pie throwing on the ffont 1tSiP1 of"New Yortt'I ~OfAMMe. 1=. lerry Bol1Wldl, EllMn er-and Jamee T~ -M'°"9 Iha rilM)' • .,. ...... In tNa ....... lleled on llundNda of .,. ..... conducted by ,...,,.... I ..,.,_ 8llldl T....._ t••-- t:IO. "°"" • • ..,,. ~ Of Her· Nae'' (tteO) ~ ........ llelcl, Mtcqy Hargilay. HlrOulel _., to exon- •• ...,.... Of • murder IOQ 'MllOl'I by finding Iha ,...,di•. • "°"" * * "Th• Gorgon" (1"6) CMelopfler L... Peter CueHng. A young men and .. .......,. llwwtlgll• • murdWa in wf'llcfi Ille vfe. ttme •e lumad 10 1100.. (l)~CHAPl.IH "Tiii ~urer" t:IO!= * "IOondllle F-" ( 1980) Jeff Ealt. Rod 81alglr. Thi young Jacll LOndOn lltl out to llek Na fortune dur· ~the Gold Aulll. 'PO' l;i40 .wt 2:AI "°"" **'~ "Spllin•" (1Ht) Frri Langelle, LIM)'· Anna Down. A rUthreM bflc* market 811llqult ... rtno ettemp«1 10 atop 811 Egyptologllt from cllco\'· ertng Iha~ of• • ~ llalUI llhl w• permitted lo ¥18. 'PG' 2:809 MOVIE **th "Thi Spy With Thi Cold Noae" C111MI Lau· ranee Hanoey, Oellall Lavi. • A dog ~ with • tranamltW _.... u a 1PY al1ier being ~ lo • Aue- lierl. ._.MOVE ** "Olslance'' ac2IO (Jj) MOVIE *** "9 To 5" CIMO) JerM Fonda, Dolly Perton. Tllr" worlllng women rebel aeetnat their aubjlr getlon by • mllla dllUYlnilt boM.'PO' Mee MOVIE • • ''8'ondll ...... Ths 8-'' Ctl39) Penny Sln- glleol\. Ar1hur la•. Blon- die rNeunderstandl when ft flndl • lnaplhot of lflOthlr -In Oeg-wood'a erma. ~-"°"" •'A .. ...., 23" (1961) Hl'Clll 8-#l'IOf'lt. Aletllrd T rlVll.. Miiia ~ a c:aM of llgllt·flxltle. • prtval• ~ uncovers two murdara . dO~MOYIE * * "Double TrCK.tble" (1987) Etvla Pr11l1y.- Annltla Dlty. A ~ Bnt· 1111 11111111 b1com11 attrlCled 10 a temoua American DOC> "'"*· eMOYli ** "New Yeer'1 E..,... CIMO) Aol Kelly. Kip .._,, The dllc jodley ... Pl"* rod! dub recel¥M a ..-of phone calla prom· lllng that ~ wfll be murdered In her honor .,.,., "°"' ~ 9:00 encl mldnfotll on N- Yeer'a Evia. 'R' ...... (l)MCMl • • "Improper CMnnela" Cttlt) MU'I Min. Mlriltte Hatttey. A _.. of mlaun- ~ ~ · IOClll -"• 10 euepect ... ~--deuoM• of • 1111 •..., coupe In the Ct1m of cJhlld -... 'PG' JOHN DARLING T••n-'••'• o.,,,, ... ••"'" .,.a:> •• " .. ~ .• Wortd" Ct171) Lany f*- ... Don MoMI. ...... 'The ..... ..,..·c1•n11nertct..,. "*'· Joflnny Doten. UO(I)••• "A~NtdHll Dot" (1975) Oon JolNon, ~ '*"°"· In poet• World W• IV cMIUtlan, 1 boy and hie telklnO dog .. OUI In ...,di ot g1r11. t;to (lj) * • * ''Thi World'I car..... Atlllltl'' ( tt71) JoM Alnoa, Jan.MldlMI VTnoent. A c:oectl ~ II hfloMt • run of Md II"* rewtne to Ille root• In Mrt- ca and~•""*' ea.-...·G' 7:IO ~ ** * "Ubll'' Ctllffl OfMa di HIVlllnd, Olrtt logltde. A man lftilmPtl 10 ptOV. lie ""' bllfl llOelad llut Nini 1111 -when 111 llH lrCK.tble r"'*"°"1llO deUll, '*'CJ) * * * "Ubel" ( 1968) OfMa de Hevflend, Olrtt logltda. A' rnen altllflpta 10 ptO¥a Ill Ilea bllfl llbeMcl llut Nini 1111 -when Ila 1111 trout>I• rlfNmblrino ~ .... • * • * "8° To &" 11980) Jena Fonda, Dolly Per1on . ThrM working women ratlel aoefnet their IUbju- getlon by • mall ct\luvlnlat bola. 'PO' l:IO CB> •• "fmc>roper Ctlan- ,,..... (IN t) Alan Artcln, Mariette Hartley. A _... of ml1und1re11ndlng1 ~ • IOClal worker to ~ that Ille 6-yeer·old daughter of • ...,., .. ed ~ .. the vlc11m of c:Nld --.·PG' ....... "High SoQetf' c 1956) Bowery Boyw, HunU Hal. An Inheritance 11 llmoll dlwwted unlll. ·Ille Boyl ,,_. Ille JonM feml- :t> *. * ... "Sc#f-- (1932) Paul Munl, George fW1. A lm .. ·Uml hood-- tum ,._ lo the top of Iha heap dunno PrOlllbltlon. • 10. CJ)*** "Ant Family" (1980) Gilda Redner, Bob N-llarl. The 11xually ~eelld deuoM• of the counlr(• ...,diet Pflal- danllal lwnlly oompllcatel her flltlllf'a etternpta to conduct the lffelr1 of elate. 'R' • • • * "Coal Mlner'1 Oaughlar" C 1990) SIM)' Sp1cak, Tommy L•• .ion... ~ on Lorena Lynn'1 autoblogreptly. A young gltt from a poor family In rural K-.WC*y manlM a mucti older local boy whO -.-. her , ... 10 atardorn In 1M mu1k: lndultty. 'PO' 10:IO •• * "Blues ...... 11934) John Wayne, EiM- nor Hunt. A cllaguiMd U.S. mar8hal c:onvll ioea a town not to yield. their gold-ncn lend to a l)rlMYrlng bind. 11:00~··· "No ........ CttlOI -**-.,_, ~Olby. s ... & ........ Footage of a _.. of enll- nudeet pow9r concar1a held In New Yortt City dur· Ing September, 1979, faaturlng Illa Ooobte lrotlllre, Cwly Simon, "-T~ and lruce 8pr:11g•1-1, II c:ompled In thla~.'PO' 11:t0 CB> * •• th "My Body- guard" ( 1979) Chris Maflepaace, Adam BaldWln. The -kid at • Chicago high 1cllool ,,,..... fl1ende """ tM acflOOI outc.t end togeth- er they llend up to the CN- 11 g8ng wtlldl fled per • MCUted them both. 'PG' 12:00 •• ··~"Belle Sterr" (1941) a.,. T~. Ran- dolph Scotl. A daring woman..._ her home to l>IColne the .... of "' outtew bind .. the cic.a of tn.CMIW91. e • • "lnapectcw Clou_ .. (1Mll A*1 Arkin, Fr .. ,.,._, Scoc· lend Yard .,.... tt19 aid of a bulfll>lng Frencfl datec- th!I 10 lotve • rollbety . •••"Sl,_~ln ,..,. .. ,,.... .. ---------............... ....... ....... . .....,_ .... .. r ... ~ .... .... , ...... ..... ........ A"""llll ... 'Jll!i ....... _ ............. ..... ....... ..... "-9:,f•'_...... .. tt:lt~• ... .,..... (tt71) ......... . .............. ., ................... ................ --------~-....... .. .. ., ........... D ... ,. ***"LM" ( .... ......... CMltl ....... A ... ........... ,,.. ....... '°~~ oa.--. .. .... r ........... , ........ f.,' 1:IO CB> • ''81ood ..,,.,.. ! > CttlOtT~ ...... --,....,A..._ ... ..... ""' .. """' ... ... .. . wtlo Wllllc Ill ...., llM .....,.,0 ...... 1:»(1)••\t' ....... "(11111 ,r.. l.lnglle. ~ .-.-Oowft, A t'*"- bleall "*'-... , ... ,......,...'° ... ., ~Ill-lrOfll ...... ertne .. ..__.a ... fll• Pftolle9 ........ -~to ... 'PO' ..... * ''The Ohoel Md Mtl.Mlit"Ctt4n,.._.._. rieon. V-"-· A '°"">'widow ..... a boOll ~ '* low tor ... .... of "' old -Clllt' tall\. ~··~"Duncan'• World" Cl979) l.arty T«*- M , Don Monti. A ~ I boy wtlo ~ ..... encountera ob1tac:le1 ..... dlllll18 .... ...,.. .. Ill im..IQIC• ... ~of an ....... •MIUl'9-. ·o· CB> •• "Improper CllM- ........ CtMtl Alan Artlln, ~Hert19r.A_... of 1r1l1undet1tandl"f• -• IOCill WOl'll• '° . ~that the~--~-of • ...,. .... ! . ~ .. the vtc:tllfl °' olllld -:I -.-·PO· -.,., ••••• "200t:A I !'"' Spece ~· ,,..., , I· l(e6r Dulee.· o.y '"°'*" I I t wooc1. Aetroneutt .... .. ; ·I find a.~ '111Wg1 ioe • .,, reepo1111bM Jor • ~ • , =::o-:~ l ·~1 COl'llpUler tllM 11 ttyllie to I .~ ... control of"'* ....... l:IO(l)••Y."~ledl To OZ'' C1972) ~ Vole.a of Ura ..,_., Paul Lynde. Dorothy rwtume to the Land of oa endencoun ... lhl....., of IM Wldled Wltdl of tfle W•. 1:11 (%) *. ''Tmproplr CflM. ,... (ttl1) ,.,. MM. Mart.tt. Hllrttey. A _... of 1r111underatenttlnt• '**' a eoc:lel ---.. IUtplCt the 6-YMF ..... ...,.., of a If I ... f --· ... )jtdllll ftldllt • ~ --.·..a· •:IO~ ••• 'A "Scat19m•' ( 1932) ,..,. Munl, a-ti Rift. A llMll-drM llOod- lum rtiaea IO lfle top Of tfle help dlllfnt Pt otllblUGri.. l:aO C8) * * * "The Wcwtd'a ~ ,.... .. (ttnt John MI09, Jen ,.,.... Vino.nt. A ooedl wt1o II lleWIO a ""' of bed rum ,._ to 1111.,..,.. In AM- oa and ~ a ..., ..... ·o· (I).** ''Coal...,.., Oeugllw' CtNO) ~ Spacefl. Toml'lt)' Lff ~.~on l.or'ICta Lynn.,. autOOlogi 8'llf!J .. A )Qll'll girl "'°"' • ..... f8lfllfy In nnl l<anM*y ""'"" • mudl older ... boy wtlo .,._.Ill(',.. to .......,, In the ""'* lnduMry. 'PO' Cl)··~ ''$ptllrut" ,, .. ,, Frri l.ang1191, L....,. Anne Down. A ~ bled! ll'llfMt ...... rtng ll1lmPl8 to ltop • ~11lllJlll1 "'°"' clllow-ertne ............. of. ~--­..,......, '° V-... 'PO' ' ' •• I • I ' c I • I j • I ' by Armstrong a·aatluk WE'VE FOUND 'TH.\T ~ ~ IT THE FOR'TY- THIRO 'G~ME OF "THE CENTURY' TO SE PL>-'YEO 50 FAR IN THl6 CEHTUf(Y/ Effects of TV news is movie's focus I ......... ,,.,. IU~CT -Teri Carr plaxs a television reporter In .. Prime Suspect. .. -.1rma toolght ··-KNXT 121. lh JERRY BUCK ... , ................. LOS ANGELES -Teri Garr stars as a television report.er whose newscasls shatter the life of a man questioned by police in a series of murders of young girls. The CBS .movie "Prime Suspect" tells of the etlect on the man and his family when he becomes the focus or media attention during the police lnvesU1aUon. Despite intense public pressure, the police are unabte to turn up any evidence linking bim to the crime -because he is iMoc:ent. The show airs at 9 toni1bt on KNXT (2). Mike Farrell stars as the accused man and Ve ronica Cartwright as his wife in the movie. written by Douglas Graham. who wrote the ,newspaper drama "Word ot' Honor." Noel Black directed the film for I'isch-Avnet Productions.· Al lnue in the movie l1 the report1n1 ol the name ol a suspect wbo hu not been booked or char1ed in a crime. "Ntwscasten do have a ll'IOral obU&atJon," Miss Garr said. "'J'hey have to; ll'lake declslona on what'• newsworthy and what's not. And lt happena so faat." The producers and Farrell have taken a 1tron1er stand. In ' statement, co-producer Jon Avnet said, "We hope this (Um becomH a memnlnlful ftrtt 1tep In lnstt1attn1 1 1ystem similar to what they have in England. where the press is restricted from revealing the identity of people brought in for police questioning until sufficient evidence is obtained for indictment." Farrell expressed aimllar views In a statement and said the public needs safe1uard1 to protect the rights or people qu.tioned by police. Prior to makln1 the film lul Au1ust. Miss Garr spent some lime with Cyntbla Allison, a reporter and weekend ~chor for KN BC, the Los Angeles station owned by NBC. ·'I picked Cynthia Alllaon because I felt I could study her/' the actress said. "She's blond and youn1 ano full of energy. She wu busy a lot, but she wu friendly and re8dy to talk." Miu Garr uld she was lookin1 ·for chara~tica that would help idenUly her as a televlaion newswoman. "I have to rely on human Instinct.a and feelin1s," she 1akl. She said Black, the director. told her be wanted the newscasi.r lO have a smae of humor. "He 1howed me 'Mr. Smith Goel lO Washlncton' 10 I could see the Jean Arthur role," lhe eald. "Even thouCh tbl1 ls a very serioul plclm'e he wanted ber to have that touch of ll&htneu." . Illas Garr and Farrell eventually Join forces in an attempt lO dear hll name. They are not eucceastul, but the furor doel not dte down until a • year laterwhen Ure real kllh!r tnrrm~. -. · She said she didn't think "Prime Suspect." h much in common with the theatrical feat "Absence or Malice." In that movie, a feeler attorney planls an lnvesU1aUve file wlte,. reporter can see it -and does. Her story hurt. man's reputation and has a tratic aide elf ''The reporter had a cholce ol whether or not look at the rue." Mias Garr aald of the movie .. When the script was sent 'to her, she saks thou1ht she was betng considered for the relt the wlte. She had played a lot ol wiv4!4 -Ric Drey(\laa' in "Cloee Encounten uf Ute Third KiDCI and John Denver's In "Oh God!" -and wUft really interested. She became lntri1ued when learned they wanted ber for the new1c:ast41r. Miss Garr was interviewed ta IMr motor·-M•ll: dre111nt room at Universal Studiol, when IM• waiUnl to be called for "Stlnc 11. ·• a MClll9I to Oscar·wlnninl movie of 1'11. Lat«, llttM 0 who plaY8 1 female con artist, did a1brief DCM1ri•I •c:ene for the film wlth Jackie Gleaoa Ui Kai-• Malden. · Slmullaneou.tl)t, sbt WU .. -::: ... OD a -Francia Ford Coppola's SZS m • From tbe Heart," In which lbe ltan with f'r'4*'111111 P'orrMt. Orange Coaat DAILY PlLOT!Nedneeday, January 20, 1982 ~ ll:O VE S NYC Elizabeth Taylor has 2tedged her · · toooove W,r New York" is for sa t. . ,, 'ctress' rµl, still .J,assable tr• ~fNEW YORK <AP) - De's fallen in and out tJf love during her seven. rparriag es. but Elizabeth Taylor still ~·s a_ thing for New 'fork, which solves a problem fo r orficials of \he Emplre State. h<When her separation from Virginia Sen. J ohn W1a r n er wa s an - llounced last mont~. lWficials at the New .}ork State Department. "'Oil Commerce worried ~bey would have to abange an "I Love New '•Y.ork " commercial in ""hich Miss Taylor _,ppears with a c tor i ckey Rooney. ·· In the ad, Rooney ads her to center stage :,. nd says, "The lady's o m Virginia ." Miss aylor then responds in 'j rich Southern accent: .':'But I loooove New fork!" ~The comme r cial 's lure was cast into ubt be~ause of Miss ;raylor 's separation lfrom the senator, and 1~me New York officials l'lbought they might have to dub in new dialogue. ~ But Nate! Matschulat, 1enior deputy 'tommissioner of the -.Je p a r t m e n t o f l mmerce and _direct~r the ad campaign, said commercial will be ~oadcasl as orginally ~1' o t. H e s a i d t h e .:.:_,ctions and words of ~e commercials have i een reconfirmed by oth R oo n ey and aylor." ~ . ' )tichi_pn ~eking kesidents ' ... h !T\ ETROIT<AP>-Gov. ,.W-illi•m Milliken has ... veiled a promotional tw;mp~gn to urge tourists &d busi.ness to "Say Yes CU-Mic.higan," in a bid to \ifl the state out of Enomic ills brought on the slump in the auto ustry. ~he campaign is patterned after the luccessful "I Love New ·rork" campaign and :ilM~n includes an upbeat "tVng . The state is :tKpected to appropriate •J!0.2 million this fiscal :l'tar for the eromotion. '!"11M llllken, antr~u.cing fiO telev1 s 1on • mmercials that show i eople e n gaging in :Jfarious activities in ~troit and at a ski resort Jo the state, forecast Jl.tchigan will gain $6 for $l!f ery $1 spent in the ~fort. . -4. .. ' ....., .... ... ...... rower Cl ea- "1"SACRAMENTO (AP) Ui The state farm labor llOard says an Imperial •#alley melon 1rower f.}Olated the United r,arm Workers' rl1hts "1th a unilateral wage crease. But the arply divided 1rlcultural Labor latlona Board refuses ·if' penall.e.N. A. Prtcola .?rQduce flnanclally. , " Don't iust sit I there small ·on ·.your fortune •••.. Look ·around your house and 9ara9e and you'll probably discover you have a mountain of oldies but 9oodies you could sell. Move that mountain. Call a friendly ad-visor at the Daily Pilot. Use the direct line. Thousands of ready-to-buy ad readers are shoppilKJ the ads in the Daily Pilot every day. Many are ea9er to buy iust what you have to sell. --Adver-tise in the -Orange Coast-Newsp-aJer • • with~~~ Classified Ad Line ~ 642-5678 I llllyPilat WEDNESDAY, JAN. 20, 1912 OUT OF THE KITCHEN SUPERMARKET SHOPPER SLIM GOURMET C2 C6 C11 HOLIDAY FEAST Celebrate Chinese New Year with a mC'morable A'leal of D~·nasty Beef on Green Cabbage. Art of Oriental c~oking By MARV JANE SCARCELW O.lly ...... ~-Ultw Years ago when Betty Ku shopped in supermarkets, other customers stopped her to ask advice about Chinese foods and how to cook them. "They wouJd s ay, 'What do you do with mung beans?' and 'What does stir-fry mean?· "she remembers. ''So about 10 years ago 1 began teaching classes in Chinese cooking. I'm always am a zed at the inte res t in Orientfll foods.'' Whal customers may not have known is that they were asking a real authority on Chin ese cooking. Mrs. Ku was born in mainland China and escaped with her fam ily to Taiwan when the Communists took ove r the country. She came to America as an exchange s tudent during her high scjM>ol years in the 1950s, stayini' to acquire a college degree in diet-a1Mh111trlttt>n. - She utilizes both parts of her backgr ound when ·teaching cooki n g for Coastlin e Community College. "So many people enroll in the class because t hey think of Chinese food as healthful and low in fats, but the first things they want to cook are egg rolls and fried won ton," she says. "There's ~e to the foods of China than what people read on a restaurant menu. "I put emph asis on meal planning a nd what d tah la suitable for whom.'' One semester or classes has just ended, and Mn. Ku will belin another the week of Feb. 1, teacblQI lfoaclay eveninp at Ediso. n Hlih in Huntin1ton Beach and Wednesday eveniftls at Newport Harbor Hilb i.n Newport Beach. almost entirely in my cooking." s he says. "Anyone can add soy s auce or MSG to bland dishes for more flavor, but people should retrain their tastes. In China. a truly fine cook doesn't use MSG. Whe n you have blended the right a mount of natural ingredients, the fl avor comes together.·• M rs . Ku teach es d ifferent types of reci pes from many regions of China and has noticed trends in recent years among students. .. Several years ago when I brought tofu for students to taste. they didn't like it," she remember s, "but now I get requests for recipes using it. Tofu is nutritious and a very good source of protein. .. And I've seen a tremendous interest in the hot, spicy dishes of inland C hina. Where l included only one recipe in past classes, -I'm now wondering if thr ee will be enough t his semes!~r." _ _ As part of the m eal planning, Mrs . Ku emphasizes contrasting flavor, texture and color, but not necessarily in one dish. "No one in Cbjna sits down to a meal of all hot dishes," she s ays. "If five items are served, two might be s pjcy and three s hould have a mild flavor ." Her classes also emphasize the difference in table manners between the two cultures. "In the Orient, it's quite all right to pick up a large piece or food , -such as fried shrimp or a long vegetable -with chopsticks and take a bile from it without cutting lt into s mall pieces. Amer icans wouldn't consider that polit.e, so I try to help them understand." Pork and shrimp .go to parties in a pocket ... ClO new According to the Chinese moon calendar, J anuary 2S marks the beginning of the year 4680 and the Year of the Dog. If you've already broken your New Year resolutions, you'U have a chance to s tart over when the world le.aves behind the old Year of the Rooster. The Chinese say the Dog will ravdr stron1 leadership but finances may be unsettled. . Chinese New Year is th~ biggest holiday in the Chinese Calendar, celebrated with feasts, fireworks, gift.giving and visiting, A New Year·s feast ·was a sumptuous dinner sure to be remembered. To create an American version of a Chinese New Year feast, serve an Oriental dinner that includes Dynasty Beef on Green Cabbage. OVNASTV BEEF ON GREEN CABBAGE 1 (4·6 servings) 1 pound ground beef (or pork) 1 can (8 ounces) water chestnuts, chopped fine 2 green onions, chopped fine 2 tablespoons minced fresh ginger 1 egg, lightly beaten 1112 teaspoons cornstarch 1 teaspoon sugar 1 i teaspoon salt Das h pepper (or to taste) 1 tablespoon sherry Oil for deep frying 1 m edium head green cabbage Cor two heads celery or Chinese cabbage. if available) 2 tablespoons cooking oil 1 cup chicken broth. hot 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1 ~cup chicken broth. cold Cherry tomatoes for garnish Combine meat, water chestnuts, green onions and ginger . Stir in egg, 1112 teaspoons cornstarch, sugar. salt, pepper and sherry; mix gently but thoroughly. Divide mixture into four parts ; s hape each part into a large m eatball. Heat oil in deep fryer or wok to 375 degrees. Using wire basket or strainer. lower meatballs into hot oil; deep fry until golden (about fi ve minutes). Drain on paper towels. Pour off oil, straining , , '- i .. and reserving for another use • Cut cabbage into 8 sections. Heat 2 tablespoons oil in largel skillet or wok placed over medium ·high heal. Add cabbage and cook . stirring constantly . until softened . Transfer to large casserole. lining bottom and sides. Place meatballs on cabbage. Pour hot chicken broth over. Simmer, covered, about one hour or until meaL-is thoroughly cooked. Using slotted s poon. arrange cabbage on serving platter; place m eatballs on top. Blend remaining cornstar ch and cold chicken broth; add to liquid remaining in casserole. Cook and stir over low · heat until thickened. Pour sauce over meatballs. and garnish with cherry tomatoes. Serve immediately. PEA POD-CUCUMBER SALAD (4 servings) · 2 tablespoons vegetable oil 2 cloves garlic, minced 1 ~ cup soy sauce "~ cup white vinegar 3 tablespoons sesam e oil 2 tablespoons ~rown sugar I Dash hot pepper s auce l package (6 ounces) frozen Chinese pea pods. thawed and I drained on paper towels 2 medium cucumbers, peeled, halved. seeded and cut into 14 inch sticks 1 small celery stalk, julienned j Heat oil in small skillet; add garli c and cook. stirring, until garlic is lightly browned. Add next five ingredients and mix well. Let cool. ·:-.. • One hour before ser ving, combine vegetables in large serving :,. bow I. Pour dressing over and toss thoroughly. Cover a nd ·· .. ~ .. refrigerate until ready to serve. :.: ............. ,.'-~ .to atay away from ... um 1lutamale < J!SG > The popularity of ,Oriental foods and the lnllux or reru1ees to the area hu made ingndleots easier to find in supermarkets, <See 'Cldaese.Cook,' pa1e CS>. FINE ART OF 911R f'RY -Betty Ku, who teaches Chinese cooking ror Coastline Colle&e. demonstrates use of the wok. ' j__--~~~-----------~----~~----~ .. Orange CoattUAIL'Y PILOT,¥/ednHday, January 20. 1982 .Saving mope' can add· up to a fmt~time job BJ •A&Y .JANE SCA&CEU.O or .. ..., .......... Every year about thla tlme, with Oettmber'a bllla pllln1 up IUtt 1nowdrlft1 around the old homestead, we hear about people who mue.f career out of ••vtnc money on food • with retuncJS·and coupons. Television cameraa pan two sbopplnc caru rilled to oyerOowln1 and move la for a cloaeup of the happy customer. "Look." s he sars. wavint a flatful of coupons, "I bou&ht $427 worth of groceries for only $3.44." Her cub reclater tape anakes all the way out the door, the cashier hu fainted and the store manager la weeping softly In the corner. "Isn't that wonderful," chimes ln the TV reporter accompanyin& her in the pillage and plunder of ·the grocery aisles, "to see what an averaae American housewife can do with just a little plannlng before she shops." Millions of viewers at home, sinking deeper into their easy chairs, are filled with guilt about what they could be doing to save money on food each week. , What most reports don't show is that the • woman's family had to build an extra room onto I the house to store the cases of food she bought in I ' t l ~$pieing up your {avo_rite_ ·recipe ·' •; In India, a true curry :is made by sauteeing the :mixture of exotic spices ·in clarHied butter !(ghee) before adding :other ingredients. gives more even distribution. : ltaliw often perfect :their spaghetti sauces in •the same way -adding h he basil, oregano and :o t h e r s e as on i n gs !directly to the oil and tcooklng very briefly. lbefore stirring in the ;tomatoes. Whal better example than salad dressings? Stir the seasonjngs into the oil and allow to stand for a few minutes to develop full flavor. Then add vinegar or lemon juice and fold gently but thoroughly into the crisp greens to coat each piece with seasoned dressing. Not all recipes give these instru c tion s . Often, recipes for cakes will tell you to "sift the flour. ciMamon, ground cloves, nutmeg . . . " • In many countries :famous ror spice cakes ;the spices are creamed dir ec tly into the ,shortening and sugar ~before adding the flour. : Adding spices to the :Shortening and oil in !recipes smooths and ~lends their flavors and This, however, does not always give as thorough a distribution of flavor. Next time you try your favorite recipe. follow that advice. -5JA&I l<IB2 WlIH QU •. ~, RESOLUTION AND BOOK I NEVER PAY RETAIL 1912 SECOND EDITION The only comprehensive guide to Discolllt Shopping in Orange County · b'f Sue lee nl Starr.Plulh~ 251 stores in 31 cities ll'e_on.,...010..,,l"llol.S... _,.,. 10,1~) $6.50 plus $1.15 postage, tax. and handling charge. $7 .65 ~-------------------• Please send me ........ copies of I NEVER PAY RETAIL. I Encl098d 1s a check for $ . . . . . . . . . . . I I Name ..........•.••.•.............• ····•··· I I Address .............................. . . . ..... . . I ~i!t9·c:h9Ci(P8Yiii>14t"io i .NEV£R.F»Al~eiAit.: and ·.n•h io : 369 E. 17th St.. Ste. 1~CS6800. Costa Mes&. Ca. I •, AutOOnic Japanese i---.11~ •!liiil----mood for ~ur pleasure .i Sushi bar •. Chef fr001 Japan •l Te~a ni Teriyaki .,.,. ~=~·~·· ...... ·~ the flret place to obtain the coupon• and rotunda. newapa.,.r food ;&etJona, p1M:ka111 and label•. MAalNATED MlJ8ffaOOM8 l poond freah mushroom.a Another three. closell and lbt paUo are alven over to storaae ol emply food containers on the off chance some manutacturer wlll olfer to redeem a boxtop, front panel or proof of purchase aeal. The family haa flled S300 ln doifood coupon1 bu~ owns a eanary, and the back bedrt>om bolda c~ can reduce-the 1taaerLn1 totala we all face at the cheekout stand, but mOlt of ua have Ume only for a haphuard atab at the 1ame. Beal coupon use la for Items and brand.a you were aotn1 to buy anyway or to try a new product. 1 bottle any flavor oil and vine1ar dressing, or • packa1e or the kind you mix together ~ Optlooal: chopped parsley or bell 11111111111•11 Another way to save money la cuttinc batk -on expensive but unnecd sary Item• aueh aa little Jara of marinated vecllablea aold in IOUl"met food aeeUona. pepper - Clean mushrooms and trim 1tem1 aa needed. If lar1e. cut Into halves or quart.en. Parboil ln a saucepan with just enough water to cover for a few minutes, drain the water (or save It for gravy aeasonln&> and put mushrooms into a non-metal covered container. Pour over dressing <should be just enouah to cover completely). Chopped parsley or bell pepper ia a nice addition for navor and color. Refrigerate for at least 24 hours before draining and serving. a 1rou of dlspoaable diapers, although the youngest child is away at colle1e. They look lmpreaslve on an hors d'oeuvres plate, dlaappear with depresaln1 apeed and should be bou1bt In lar1e quanUUea only by members of a Middle Eutem oU cartel. Their menus are deal1ned around whatever coupons are good that week. Last night they dlned on canned tamales with hamburger helper (without bamburpr, because it wasn't on special>. ud toailbt'a gourmet repast will be peanut butter, Chi.Dest noodles and green beans. You 1uessed it, tbey all were bought with couJ>()M. Many cooks don't realize how simple· marinated ve1etables are to make. Raw or parboiled vecetab .. s sit quietly ln the refri1erator soakln1 in your favorite oil and vlneaar dresain1 for 24 hours (or more) before aervlna. VAIUAnONS -The same technique applies to most other vegetables. Caulillower can be parboiled with a touch of lemon juice to maintain whiteness. Green beans and carrot 11licea can be parboiled before marlnatin1. Strips ot bell pepper and whole cherr;• tomatoes can be marinated raw, cutUng a amaH X into one end of the tomatoes for absorption of dresslnc. The other drawback la the time involved. Drain to serve, but save leftover drea1ln1 as a ma..tnade for meat.a. Most couples would have to tlip a eolo to see whicb ol them would quit work to stay home and clip couPOns. 1he loser would make a career out or folding, spindling and mutUlating The effort is amaJI, but the aavlnca are areal when compared with price stickers on the 1 little glass jars in stores. ; Here's the basic recipe with variations, but don't be afraid to add your own. Garage sales. yard sales, rummage sales, street sales ... no -matter what you call them, the id~a is the same -TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER NEED INTO CASH . When you get tired of fighting your way Into a crowded ·attic or garage, or when you need a little extra cash. have a garage sale! So get into the act, clean out thoee unwanted items, and make money doing it! It's fun, it's profitable, and following thele 10 steps will make tt simple. Decide on da• Look at a calendar -and set the dates and times of your • ~le. Weekends are usually good. but.~any successful sales have been held in the ewtning. just after wor~. Check the weather forecast In the paper, and watch for any other large event that may attract potential buyers away, such as fairs or community eventl. Have your sale run at least two days -some people may not be able to come on any single day. __y(hen Jtt..adv~. Place your ad where it will be seen by people who live in the area -most people sho"p close to home. The • Daily Pilot is read by 88,000 adults in Costa Mesa, • Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Irvine, Huntington Beach ahd Fountain Valley-guaranteeing you wide exposure. And with the Pilot, you 're not paying for waste circulation in Los Angeles or Anaheim. Plan to run your ad 3 times or more, and start it a few days before the sale so bargain h~nters can have plenty of notice. l What to sell. Everything! Tha! is. everything you hav~n·t us,c:t in the • last year. If an item has antique value, or is bran~new , or has unusual value, be sure to ask a healthy price for it. Get a pad of paper and search your whole house. 5 Make a· sign. To help make your sale successful, make a few signs • from cardboard and letter with a magic marker. A good sign size ts 14" x 22". Look everywhere, and list everything. ........... This is your main attraction and your best source of income. Be sure to place furniture where it can be seen from the s1reet. Price · furniture low enou9h to beat auctions and secondhand sales (check the classifieds for . comparisons). but high enough so you can come down a little when someone shows interest. RockinQ chairs, chest of drawers, tables and chairs are all very successful at garage sales. so feature them in your ad. ......._,. Smaller antiques should be grouped, and kept close at hand where you can watch and talk about them. Nostalgia items are very popular - display them well. ClothilMJ. Make sure clothing is clean , and mark the price way down. Put as many things as possible on hangers. Separate kid's things by age .. Display adult clothing by sex and age group. Low prices are a _. on clothe8 except for unusual items. which should be tagged With an explanation (like. "hand-embroidered flowers. dress worn by Mae West~" .Afpl•ces. These will sell for a fair price only if they work. No one will take your word for it. Hav' an extension cord so they can be tested, or better yet, have radios playing, old TV sets urned ori etc. Make sure buyers understand they are sold "as is". • "-h. These usually go fast. but keep them out of direct sunlight. A good idea is to name your plants before the sate (Spider Lady, Cousin Jasper, Maggie~ and write a line or two Of) the name card about how to care for them. 6 Placing your sign. The morntng of the sale, but not before1 place your signs. Be sure and add your address ana any • directional arrows. This should be done about a half hour before the sale s.t•rts. Pia~ your sign where it can be seen from both sides of the street by passing cars and pedestrians. CAUTION: Some towns have laws that restrict the placement and duration of garage sale signs. Please check with your town's planning department or clerk. 1 Marking prices. Mark pric:ee where they. can be seen clearty. Office • supply stores have varoius sizes and colors of stickers that work well, or you can use masking tape. However you mark them, .... prtces lew. Garage sales are for barqain hunters. Remember, whatever you can't sell you II have to drag back in the house and store again for another year . I Sening refrest.ments. This doesn't have to cost much, and creates a friendly • atmosphere. It also encourages people to stay longer and perhaps buy more. You could even charge for expensive Items like donUts, or the kids could go in . business for the day, with a lemonade stand. 9 .Displ_ay. J Wrl•te ,. OUr Gel . Make sure everything can be seen. Have card tables or • boards Ul8d as shelves between two chairs. Don't . cause people to bend OY8f' unless you can·~ help ih Ute · Here is a suggested ad: ~Gar9 ~!!._=.. ~sks -----·--one-tab!W 0 a1'e"tk where you CM ... everythrng and • SentwOOa rocking chair, t., lnfantl' clothing, 1922 take money. use only one cash box (tin cans or boxes Victrola in original cabinet. many oactgeta, Iota of work fine) end make sure eomeone ta appointed unusual items. rock collection, plants. Refreshments .. 8 "cast\ier" at all times. Nrangt beforehand for a friend a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday .nd 8'.ftMr. 1234 South who can help answer questions, retief for lunch, etc. AnyatrMt, Yourtown. Jult Wiit of Main and 2nd." · U.. thil Nmpi, ad u • guide. Be aure to Hat unu1ual lteme. Be u 1peciflc u poelibll. Give dlrectton1 If . needed. Don't ... a~manr D90Dle won't bother to decipher them. , Don't ICMft ... anything you don't really'*'· ..,.,... In the ad muat be on hand at the 8'lrt of the Mle: • 330 W. Bly St., Co1• M-. CA. Open 8-6:30 Monday thru Friday, Saturday I-noon .. Chee~ your nelgllbon and friends. •See If any want to jOln your lale. Thia wl II give you eomeon• to 1hare expen111 with and lncreue tntlrnt '· In yout .... If otherl join ~. be ..,... to include thil In' your ad (example: "th,..f8rNly ..... " "nelgh~rhood aa1e··~ Group uln are a IOt more fun, too. I aooo l:.UCK WITH YOUR CMllAO. sum , MAY rr • 8UCCD#UL AND NM .. \ , ·-- -· .... -- DEL I Hormel CROPPED BAM SUced to Order $2.401b. Mild LONGHORN STYLE COLBY CREESE $2.981b. Swiu-Type JARLSBERG CREESE Imported from Norway $3.491b. Freshly Made MACARONI SALAD 98~1b. CHECK our OUR SUPER SUN- DAY SANDWICH SPEC~! TUSTIN & NEWPORT ONLY 0 VI 9 I Irvine Ranch LARGE AA EGGS l Do7.en Reg. $1.09 7 5 ¢ --; Pepperidge Farm VERY THIN BREAD White, Wheat, and Rye 16 oz. Reg; 99~ Vie de France CROISSANTS Almond or Chocolate 2 oz. Reg. $1.15 Cappelo's PIZZA SAUCE 69¢ 95¢ We now have the entire erlslaal C. pelo line of products back ln stock. We a'8o have many new Items including their fine plrz.a sauce. Spread It on an fngllah muflln and add your favorite plrz.a topplnp and tout it for a few minutes. ln9tant plDa! Reg. $2.19 $I 69 25%oz. • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 20, 1982 -·--· f ! OF VALUES .__Ec1111on_v• _____ ____ EXtra Large Zutaoo or Bacon AVOCADOS $1 00 3 for • Irvine Ranch Grown CELERY Small Red or Green CABBAGE Med. Large 39~ 59~ 1be \ery Finest Wuahhigton RED DELICIOUS Local Grown \__~ 9~ lb. APPi.ES 39~ lb. SUNKIST NAVEL Package Table ORANG~ $1 on CARROTS 49J. 3 lbs for • ~ 2 for ._.,, ~· Health \8Uey ITALIAN SALAD Health \hlley WHOLEWHEAT PRETZEIS DRESSING 8 oz. Reg. $1.29 59 ~ 7 oz. Bag Reg. $1.29 99~ AJT9whead BRAN MUFFIN MIX 2 lb. Reg. $1.97 Sl.49 BACK TO NATURE CEREAis Almond, Apple/Date, Banana, Hooey Bran and Raisin Bran 22 az.._Reg. $2.09 $J.59 Hain lhrbJnado SUGAR 24 oz. Reg. $2.63 ~tbrae $1.99 PEANUT BU'ITER Raw CASHEWS BULK ONLY $2.591b. Thompson .. SEEDl.FSS RAISINS BULK ONLY 16 oz. Reg. $1.80 $1.19 CAROB COATED WALNIJTS BULK ONLY $4.191b. BONEl.ESS PORK ROAST $2.981b. STUFFED. CHICKEN BREAST $1.891b. BACON $1.491b. VEAL CUTLETS .S4.981b. Fresh GROUND VEAL $2.491b. SIDE OF BEEF $1.291b. ~ HINDQUARTER OF BEEF $5.00 OFF ANY SO LB PAK $10.00OFFANY100 LB PAK ) 1 I 1 TUSTIN & NEWPORT ONLY j S E A F 0 0 D ', ~ · ~1 LllTLE NECK ., CLAMS .. s·2.49.b. ~ CALAMARI STEAKS , .. $2.981b. ; . j .. -. . . COCKTAIL SHRIMP $3.981b .. It---..,...,..--,.,.----..,..------16 oz. Reg. $2.99 $1. 79 Routed TRAILMIX Salted or Unsalted BULK ONLY $2.291b. Homemade Irvine Ranch Farmers Markets 100% Natural " Sprouted Sesame ED'S--BREAD 24oz.Loaf $l.29 Homemade Irvine Ranch Farmers Markets Chocolate Coconut MA~AROONS 12 oz. Bag $2.19 Limit~ Reserved No Dealer Sales. Stort Hours: JO am to 6 pm. ~v~n Days IRVINE STORE Crunch_y (with or without aalt) and Smooth. Mede from IOO% '6llmda peuuta, freeb ro9*d and pound wblle botf S.nlelned Relieree 30.... Reg.$ 3.70 .,...,. Jlet.$ 7.06 90.... Jlet..$10.42 ·~...,. ... $&14._ Super One Dally llULTI VITAMIN A MINERAL 30.... Rea· 8 4.45 • S.71 80...,_ Rea. 8 8.18 8 I.II 901W:Je ... $11.92 811.11 ------ Where Tradition ia Country Freahneu. TUSTIN STORE MAHI-MAHI $2A91b. HALIBUT STEAKS $3.98tb. TUSTIN & NEWPORT ONIY Store Hours: 9 am to 9 pm. Sev~n Days 14002 Myford Road At Santa Ana Freeway 838-2851 13152 Newport Avenue At Irvine Boulevard 838-9570 COSTA MESA/NEWPORT STORE 2651 Irvine Avenue South of Mesa Drive 831-4404 Storr Hourr: 9 om to a pm. ~Days Orange C~t DAILY PILOT tNednnday, January 20, 1982 Sweeten up the new year '4lmond Creams are tr~itional Chi nese desser t - t1 'cblneH New Yur celebr1Uon ot New Yea; i,; cup wt.11fted flour boil. Cook 1 mlnute Us on Jaouary 25 thb wlth a banq ot festive 4 tab I ea po o n s lon1er. Remove from ear, accorclln1 lo the foods. cornstarch heat. Spread mixture h l n ea e L u n a r New York, a joyous ~ teupoon almond evenly in a 1reased ai,; Ca lendar. Ume ol 1amtly reunions extract by 4~ by 2~·inch loaf .,be Cblnese reckon and vacatloo• from 3 CUPI peanut oU pan. Cb.ill tborouthly. ltielr yean accord ln1 lo wor k, ls marked with 2 tablespoon• rlnely Cut cbllled cream into twelve. variable pbasea many special meals. around almonds l '14-lncb thick aticet. Coat ol tbe moon, accountin1 Serve these delilhtlul 8 I end e 11 Yo k 1 , w l t h re m a l n l n I 3 for the cban1in1 date of treats with afternoon tea water, 2 tablespoons tablespoons cornstarch. tie New Year holiday. or at dessert Ume. s u I a r. f Io u r , 1 Fry in shallow bot (375 8 ut t here ls one AL•OND Ca EAMS tablespoon cor nstarch degrees> oil until 1olden thclilion ln China which Maket alMMI& ..e dosea and almond extract In a brown. Drain on paper C~ver chan1es -the 3 eu yolks, sligblly _ small heavy saucepan. towels. Sprinkle with · beaten Cook over low heal, grqund a l monds and t1 : t cup waler stirring constantly, until remalnlng 2 tablespoons --... DESSERT TREAT C hin ese Almond ('r('ams al'c t'riSp outside und eueamy inside. Stir-fry methods 4 tablespoons su1ar mixture comes lo a full sugar. ~------~-=------------------------------------------------------------------------=--------------------- If you want to try Chinese cooking for a change of pace, consider stir -frying. A stir-fry dish can be cooked in minutes. The meat is tender a n d the vegetab l es are tender-crisp. The closest style to stir-frying in Western cooking is sauteing, yet it is not the sam e. With stir-frying, the food is kept in constant motion so that all parts of the dish come in contact wilh the hottest part ol the ~an and cook quickly and evenly. This is done by quickly and continuaUy sliding a spoon, spatula, or c hopstick down between the food and the pan and turning the food over on itself with a digging, tossing _and scra mbling motion. A wok is t he. best cooking vessel for stir-frying because the sloping sides a n d roun ded bottom help keep the food in motion. Not to worry if you don 't have a wok . Stir -frying can be done in a skillet. Some cooks feel that skillets are preferable to woks when cooking over electric units, because the heal is generated more evenly over the e ntire bottom of the skillet. With an electric range though, you may have to heat two units -one on high and one on medium I beat -so that you can move the pan from one to the other as needed. I The bolter the wok or -skillet.-the better. It is I almost imposs ible to burn the food if you work fast enough and I stir-toss repeatedly. For the energy conscious, stir-frying I may be just the cooking method. ln preparing meat and vegetable dishes on top of a gas or electric range, you may end up using 2-3 burne rs for about:.> to 40 minutes. Stir-frying uses high heat and initially requires more energy, but the cooking time averages abo u t 6 minutes. • But stir-frying th e same meat and vegetable dishes, you can save about SO percent of energy when co m pared with conventional range lop cooking. Not only is stir-frying an energy saver, it's a time and heat saver too. In stir-frying, a sauce ls used consisting of oil, seasonings such as 1arlic and ginger ; liquid such as water, broth, wine or soy sauce (or com bi n ations > a n d aometimes cornstarch for thickening. Stir-fry dishes may consist of meat, chicken, or seafood cut in small pieces and vegetables cut in similar -sized pieces. The uniformity of pieces 1ives a nice app~ar~ and let.a it all cook quickly and evenly. Also, bite-size pieces cu be picked up readily with cbopstJcka. A key r ole i n p re p aring food for 1tir-fr yln1 is i n the cutting. Clualc cuts lnclude: c hoppln 1, slicing, d l c ln 1 , c ub i n g , sbr ed4ia1, wed&lnl and mlnclftl. For tbln and even 11lcln1, use meal that is partialJ)' frolen and cut acrou tbe ll"min so that it wlll be tender. . Roll cuttin1 <or oblique cutilnl> expoteS the surf ace area on firm ve1et abl• llke carrota or a uccb i n l . Slice 4la1ona111 or alaotwlse after ucb quarter turn 10 t.bal a lar1• surf ace ca n be exp o se d \o beatlftl a navortn,. WHITE BREAD cenertc CANNED & PACKAGED SALTINE 55 CRACKERS C"Afllrtc 11 Ol. IOI • INSTANT OATIEAL C8mC. I llMITe .......................... . 2~.~ ................... 59 2A~!t~~ ............ &aaa..75 CAKE MIXES 68 ~lllMITe .......................... -. ~.~~ ........... : ... rua-.98 · ~~~.~~ ............... " .. ~.79 ~~~~-~~-~····· MOtCM 1.38 ~~-~.~~ .............. HOlCM.59 GE~~~--~~!.~'-~ ........ 1'0ZCM• 73 ~~.~~~ ......... nozJM 1.29 BOTnED 249 ~R 1101.ms. 12 P~ NOn -.turnable ltts. BLADECUT 99 ~~ROAS~~• TOP SIRLOIN '"258 STEAK ...... --=· PRODUCE BEAN '".29 SPROUTS LOoll COLDEN '".25 BANANAS -ICClllOlftlell NAVEL ... 2.9 ORANOES ....... , • GENERIC COFFEE All PurPQW cmo "°'"" 169 ~~~~.~~~~-~-•Ol~ 1.39 ~~~-~ .......... UOlCM•59 ~.~.~~~····· rn0t_.25 ~.~!!! ....... nouw •• 89 ~~ ......... 1102 -1.45 ~.~.~ ... : ....... ~-1.45 aJNG PEACHES Oll9tt. ..,...... GENERIC MAYONNAISE 1 Q9 ................................. nm JM • SALAD ORESSINC 99 -····························· .UOlJ.11111• ~ME~2!a.~~-~~~-· '"01~.27 2~~~ ............. lot CM 1.25 ~~-.~~! .................. 100l lll •88 ~~~--~-~~~ ..... 1000-1.29 ~~~ .. ~~~ .............. JOlJM 1.47 ~.~.~~ ............... UOlCM•39 ' ~--~~~.~~ .... 1UOlCM•42 WHOLE BEEF--139 BRISKET 90nltlss. lb. londlO '"'· 7-t lOS CROSS RIB .. 20s . ROAST ........ IOfldld leef OMll ..... " 129 ~WBERR'~°' '" 137 •• .-~ 16J01 CM.33 GENERIC PEAS .... , .............. . ~~~~-~'..~~~-. 11011n . 75 ~~~~~~~~~-~-• . . . 1'01 CAH~59 MANDARIN ORANGES ~ ..................... . UOl CM-.42 ~~-~-~-~~ ~~l_N~ .. ~011n 1.39 ~~~-~.~-~-~~••• ... 110l(AN1.09 ~~~~'~-_St:t<?~.~.~~.1~. '101 CM 1.49 SPAGHETTI SAUCE CREEN BEANS Generle. Cut DAIRY & FROZEN J10l JM 1.07 ~~~-~ -~~~-~~~··· ..•• '101 NG .69 ~.1~. ~~~--~~~~~ ... M .A4 CTll 1 :29 RIB eve-- RI.ET IOnNIS. IOndld ..., LARCE END RIB STEAK .... .... • ""'"::."'=.*..:::: :::~.::;., ~ ~=-rlW \ DISCOUNT SUPER~A RKE T S ·111e original dlacount supernwlttlll I -' ./ More than 100 different Items you use every day are priced to bring you con~MentlY greater savln~ than any national brand Every Item ts guaranteed for your sattsfactlon. or your money t>ack! lOOk for the bright yellow packag~ In our new Generic section• ~GETABLE " 0 ''" 169 DELJCATESSEN ITEMS GENERIC FRANKS CHUNK BOLOGNA ClNElnC. SLICED BOLOGNA a- 1601 "' 1.09 1'0l ~' 1.89 1601 PW' 1.35 HOUSEHOLD & PET DRY DOG FOOD aNEl!IC •••••.•.••••• FACIAL TISSUE PAPER TOWELS 1HllAG4.39 ~ :IQOC'f __ 49 nsnru .57 TOILET TISSUE cenenc. 1·Ply m~~ •• 69 ~~~WA_SH~R DE!ER~NJ019011 1.49 ~l~~r~TERGENT. . . noz an .59 ~2.c~.~-~.~.~o. o_E~E~GENJOl I0• 1.59 GENERIC BLEACH . (.Al •n • 6 9 .. <.Al'"" .99 FABRIC RINSE Co(Nl'ln(... • ••••• ~~~-~~~-~:~.. •• • <OCT eox 1.34 .. I LARGE EN[f '"197 RIB ROAST IOndldlMf BONB.ESS 199 ROUND STEAK NI Olt. IOndlll IMf lb PRODUCE LOOSE d19 CARROTS Tops In Vlt Mnln A FRESH ~.29 JICAMA A Salad Ofll9ht PINTO ~-25 BEANS ,,.,,, - I ' ..... Ora19 Cout DAILY PILOT,Wednesday, January 20. 1982 • • • Chinese cook stresses nutrition and taste Fre• Pa1eC1 •he says, and stir fry may work Ila way Into the American diet as taoos and plau have done. "You don't even need a 'wok to stir fry," she nys. "You can use a skillet or Dutch oven. 1 tell my s tude nts to improvise new dishes, because you don 't a lways have to follow the recipes."., She admits stir fry c an be a le ngthie r method bec ause or chopping and preparing Ingredients. She finds herself taking shortcuts in her home kitchen now that her children are away at college. "Chinese cooking ls more than frying," she declares. "Many recipes ca l l fo r s tea m ing chicken or fish, and our 'l azy man 's dis h' is prepared in a Corm of s tew i ng wh ic h trans lates a s ·r e d cooking.' "It's easy, flavorful and good with all types or m e ats , but restaurants don't serve much or it because it has to be done a day in advance." Red cooking Is popular during the Chinese new year, she says,. "because we don't want lo do much cooking the first three days. It's supposed to be a sign or how the whole year wi ll be." C ook s avoid t h e kitchen by preparin g red cooked dishes or cold salads, and sweets are kept as treats for drop-in guests during the holidays. The final course in a new yea r 's banque t probably would be a coo ke d f ish s e rve d whole on a platter. "ll sy mb o li z e s wh o l e n e ss or complete ness ,·' s he says. "The word for fish in Chinese is pronounced just like another word which means ·more or the s ame t o com e · When we end a lovely meal with the fish, it means we hope to have man y m o r e happ y occasions. Here are some recipes from Mrs. Ku for cooks who want to celebrate the Chinese new year. A beef dish' can simmer undisturbed on the back burner, the Peking Duck r ecipe r equires more effort and the last d ish is for a whole fish so the happy occasion will end with many more in the future. RED COOKED ANISE BEEF 1 pound bone less beer 2 stalks green onion 2 slices fresh ginger 1 large star anise 2 tabl espoons oil 'f.J cup soy sauce 1 tablespoon sherry '4 teaspoon pepper t tablespoon s ugar l cup water Cul beef into l ·inch cubes and green oni on into 1-inch lengths. Heal Fore ign flavors Bean sprouts are an ide a l v e ge table for w e i ght watche r s, a s ingl e s ervin g containing only about 30 calories. Bean sprouts are naturally low in sodium and can easlly be added to s alads. casseroles, sandwiches and omelets. Aromatic c umin. a member of the c arrot family, is an essential spice in most Mexic an food dishes popular in America. Cumin seeds are typically ground and added._to burritos. taco sauces, enchiladas and casseroles. . oll In a larae pan with a lld "stir fry 1ln1er. onlon and meat cube• until meat bro\fns. Add soy u uce, sherry, -pepper a nd sugar and continue cooking for a tew minutes. Add waler and anis e, cover pan and bring to a boll. Reduce heat to low and simmer for l hOOr or until m eat Is tender. NOTE : Ma y add carrots, potatoes and Daiken radishes during last 15 to 20 minutes or cooking. PEIUNG DVCK l duck (5 lo 8 pounds> 4 tablespoons honey v .. cup sherry ~ cub warm water 1 tablespoon vinegar Bollin& water Cle an the duck well and pour boilin1 water over It at least twice to help separate skin and meat. 2Ux honey , sherry, walrm water and vine gar together and soak duck in the mixture for 1 to 2 hou:r.s, wrning a few tig\es. · Remove duck from liquid, put on lar1• plate and leave uncovered ln refrlterator 24 hours or longer lo dry the duck. Cover win1tlpe and Je11 or the duck with foll lind line a roasting pan with foil. Roast duck In a preheated oven at 325 de1rees, breast side up. for 1 hour. Pour off excess grease. Turn over and roast another 45 minutes. During the las t 10 minutes or roasting, raise oven lo 425 degrees to brown and crltp the akin. Slice the duck. separallna •kln and m e at and placing at different end.I of servin1 platter. Serve hot with steamed bun or Chinese flour wrappers, sauce and green onions. SAUCE : Mix l cup Hoi s in s au c e , 1 tablespoon sesame oil and 'Al cup water until smooth. SWEET SOUll FISH <WHOLE) 1 'h pound whole fish , firm type l t.eHpoon ult ' ~ teupoon pepper 'I• cup corn starch or flour 1 green pepper cut In thin strips 1 currot cul In thin s li ce•' 2 $lalks gretin onion cut in 2-inch lengths 2 slices gi nge r , chopped ~ cup pineapple chunks, drained Oil for frying Clean fish. dry well and ma ke diago nal slashes across outside ot body. Sprinkle with c hunks Ind l~eA Rall and pepper. Heat oil on tona. Cook another in wok for deep frying, minute and pour ovr,~ coat fish body with dry trled fish. Serve hOt u cornstarch or flour and main dis h. ._ deep fry until golden SAVCE ~ b r o w n a n d c r i s p y . lh cup su&ar Remove, csntn and keep 6 t a b 1 e s po o ~ warm while making vinegar NJ sauce. (See below) ~cup water lo Remove all but about 'h cup cal.sup o) 1 tablespoon oil from J 'Al tablespOO'HJ wok, stir fry alnaer and cornstarch carrots a few minutes, 2 teaspoons sesa~ add green pepper and oil t sauce mixture and cook Mix together and aaS until mixture starts to to wok as described in thicken. Add pineapple recipe above. ~~~.;.....~~~~~~~ SHOPPlftG .AT NEAii 1 PROD<JCE .. f'Jl(C'ott ~ l()P(KF Crisp Carrots lll .19 ~QllCW1f;SEl'll.W\'lAR Oll~APAC. ... ft6.'IGC 39 Fresh Bean Sprouls 111 • ...,.~ ... I (Xl~AU\JIU 49 Minneola Tangerines l ll • AOOlCSl!OfOl"!°"'1 ~... 19 Sunworid Lemons W "' • t_rocl<IW'G~ 60ston Fem U1 .49 l• .29 r.A 3 99 FROZEN FOODS IO<>I l\At.-{UI ~ -CO'lfr. "'-"" 89 Vons Veget.al>leS • 1 l l.'11 r '" _ .. ,.,ro fl""' l 39 Westwood Ice Cream IOOJ1'<.f '°"' ) 49 Sara Lee Cheese Cake •Ol ""G -STQUlflll')·U.A" 2 59 Cuisine Glazed Chicken l)OlCIV!-TllCH V..Ul -99 Gnipefndt Juice • A· LOWER FOOD BILL. I WE.LL DOOBLE nlE DIFFERENCE OUR ()(JARNfTEE OF VONS LOW PRICES to COIWlnce you cl Vons comm~nt LO l<1'I prica. we.._ maldng this offer. If you can rind ~ prices ove111I thlt week et eny ocMf ~ Vons will PilY y<11.1 double the dll'erence. Just shop et Vons. &y 25 different llems worth $20 °' more. C'ompere pricu Ofl the urne leerN et any 04her ~ •f their toeal It lowef. briog your itemized Vons receipt and the ocMf IMIMt'• prices to Vons and we'ff pay you double the dllference in cash Vons-Low prict!$ you can be- lieve In. S<mSHD'tE KRIS" CRACKERS -.59 COORS J89 ~~~AN~-6P~CK CREST . J15 !~£>~~~J:E ll'\IT 4 &PK f Pvrmo ... cw.. llmU"J pric~ 2 19) LIMIT 2. IPutc:t.e -llmit ~ "'1c'e I ~I LIQUOR I ~l.ff[A er>-~ SUm Price Vodka •~mt• "'"""" "lCT~ Almeden Mt. Chablis t 1)1Jttll Scoresby Scotch ''°" -JC""U~Cf,~~ Ja<:k o.niels Whiskey ~ 6 99 3 49 1099 1249 899 5 99 D ELICATESSEN MEATS rAaL IU'C'i-(>oUO< Center Cut Beef Rout IAl!lL ~ 8'fl Ct!OO\ BondeSs Femiy Steaks L A.l!l.(.7't>G-llM f'OC)fJO Beel Cube Steaks f ..al.1\l'oQ lltU-«lnULSS lllCUCI Slrtoln Tip Stuks LI } 39 lll 229 UI 2 48 UI 2 59 ~~roc~OllUI 198 ~-~~ UI ]99 --~5GOlfOOSO/Jfr 149 Lamb Shoulder Rout UI CV"T£ll Olf -flll'SH 'llOH( l 6 9 Lamb Shoulder Chops te ~~e;,~. H.m U1 3 29 ~} 89 SL HVI Cf SEAt 000 GR O CERIES GRO CERIES "'><V'<r l'Cl n lt Gatorade Lemon/Lime .98 ,,.,.,. l -l*)AC"'< Stnlwbeny Presenies .99 16CIU!'O\..L a:n. t 'll ~t;i. ~.A~ Orttn oddess Dressing 119 l~OL t""-l!l(A&~QllH()I Vons Chill Buns .69 ~''"""' pbeJl's Pork & Beans .39 H 10/ l!OX-MI""' ungry Jack Potatoes 174 ~l\\$TO n'""'-'"'.......," Soup Mix .25 ~O/ CM-~c:J"O<l< OffU 5 9 Kan DogF • ~·°"'"' eonu ons Appte Cider 149 ~t~g "D" Detergent 129 II°'~' ..._,"' f unt s Tom•to Ketchup }1 7 ~~hBags .59 _/ HAPPY CHINESE NEW YEAR SET A SMART TABLE le! 1•J JI ,,, m lo ,, :ct • J) ·p la 0 ·d q ·O ·b •l j ·a 2 ,, I >I b ·2 Ill '') IJ .n 9 la IJ :~ la 8 d N IZ ·j 'll rn .. , ·o .1 II lg rt 'l d 8 n •'I . ') t(t ') ,, '') •a ·a ·rl I') •o 1q •:> 1q 798 } 59 )65 }25 165 ~.71'~h f1llels rn:&:dl'tr:.ks -le 1 89 UI 2 19 --~~--]49 -. 'i? YOUR OiOl('E. I 8 ~110~ U-01 19 Rice, a staple grain throughout the world, first was cultivated in India more than 6,000 years ago. However. rice wu not served in America uMi:I 1680--when the n~t ll\lpments were imported throu1h Charleston S. . j~'6f's -P\:aii'out"'" • 8 9 tft.._~-.... ~ ....... r.,.. .... ,,Olll,"'1111t ~l~t" ~'&,~1~11[[5( .99 t60Z !!/((; -l'IA~l\Al;'1[/\f N.lA Ponrs Pm. Crust .98 }25 DAIRY J>RUO(J(' JS FllOlCl'I Of'n.12;, lfP CO(ll\.CO . Alaskan 5Mmp l'\Ut ~h l ll 299 ... J49 . H ALT H L ULAU f"Y &.89-~"~~TJYoOUftl .45 Cq~E 247 VONS BAKERY MOICtro J45 KOllft~~ 00 0"1 2 19 ~Orange Juice Schick Super I Refit , .98 ~-~~ .83 :h.t~~~ }57 1q '.11 : , b -ta m ~c~ llUTT0-&01 .65 ~ik,no~-rtd:' .89 ~;;;~ l 37 18 .q P'lllCE.S r.PPl!CTM! THUM. niRC.1 wm. JM. 31 TO JM. 27, 1 '92. CALL (2 I J) ,79-1400 fOlt LOCAnor. Of' ITOM "'-NIOT YOU. l'IOT MJ. IT!M MO "'ltU 11'1 TMI N) !J'l'!C'1'M AT~ UM W. ITH IT., I'°° W, PICC> Ill.VO.. 1571 W. IO'nt IT., L0e MCmA. \. JI ALL LIQUID LAUNDRY DETERGENT 64-0Z. (rtel.S, .60 OFF) HUfttlfttlOfl•••c" Ht2 ldt•r & lpriftgtl.,. Co111••• 2.99 115 I . 11"' ltrfft •ftCI Ore"19'Ave . SN!MOONIDl.MWGM.W.UWUlrTAA.QQNf'TTID°"'-Y·"'°IT ITOMll °"'1'I I~ TO *>f'tlOtfT 1 l>"ft A W!l!K. CHARMIN ' DISHWASHER TUF 'N READY BATHROOM TISSUE ALL PAPER TOWELS •-ROU.PKO. Huftll""°" I H Cll 210l2 a .. c:ll atvd. .99 HUft:::riOft h Mll -Atll ftl• l •n '""' (\......,•M 32051 Camino c.,-..,.,.._, O.IC*epo 1.99 IMM 4730 1aneftU M . ....... •. ,.. ..... 9().CT, .80 Pouftt•n Vet~r 1U01 "•"*. ,...., Celll*.,.. leech Mll1 DoMftJ '•"' Dr. I YlctOfle NICE 'N SOf:T FACIAL TISSOE •. 70 Jo rtJ ,., POUMetn Y...Y 11"0M1 .. 111 .,,...... >t L ..... 1... J 0 4b le 1~1 Allet• '8mra1 & Moft _ Orange Coast DAILY PILOTtNednHday, January 20. 1982 Refunder rissemhles tool kit for efficiency ::~:r:::: ~.:~~.~ ~!r:t:r:~:i~~:~ ~~~f r:~~~1~E~~::1~ llPlllllllT IUPPf I ~·.~r:.,o.;:~:~ ,:~r~·· :.~·t;~~r~~~'[:ii ~ ~!~s sl.~f.~ ! ! "•d•n ban recently a totaJ value or $29.18. want. These letters are ELLJO'S $1 Coupon required refund form, refund or $1 , $2.SO or $5. 1ent me: Bonus I T h is otrer not av1&1lable : 0 , Q, ·u. Otre r . Recei ve a $1 one proof-of-purchase F o r St . se nd l he Gretchen Taft rrom doean'trequlre arorm: X, Y. z. Expires Dec. andSO cents for postaae l,1982. coupon on any Elllo's se al o r Univ e r s al r equired refund form Caltarau1ua, N.Y., NESTLE Initial 31 ,1982. and handlin1. ~pfres CURTISS Escalating Frozen Pizza. Send the Product Code symbol and any 20 wrappers wrote to tell me about Pendant Offer, Sutton These orrers r equire Sept. 30, 1982, or when Refund Ofter. Receive a required refund form from the bac:k of> any from full -s ize Milky Lbe Rel\&ndln1 Tool Klti Place Creations, 7 E . refund rormJS : supply Is exhausted. refund or $1, $2 or $3. and three Universal Gino's Pizza and a dated Way, Snickers, Three ibeuae1. 48th St., 6th Floor. New APPIAN WAY Free COMSOS Free Orrer. Se nd the r e quired Product Code symbols register receipt. There Mu s keteers. Mars , "WbenlsetUedownto York , N .Y . 10017 . CookbookOffer.Recelve R eceive a 7 -o un ce refund form and bag fromany combinaUon or is n o limit on th e Twix, Summit Bara, work on my refunding, R ece iv e a g o Id a cookbook c:ootainine package or Combos. corners from 16·ounce the following Ellio's number of refunds you M&M's Plain or Peanut bavin1 all my 'tools ' electroplated Initial on 22 1 recipes. Send the S end the r e qu i r ed Fun·Slze Baby Ruth pizzas : 16-ounce round, may request. Expires Chocolate Candies. Send to1ether saves me the an l8·1nch chain. Send requiredrefundform,10 r e fund form and the Blue Thick Chewy or six -slice pepper oni, June 30,1982. th e form and 40 tlm~ and effort of two complete wrappers box tops from regular net -weight state ments Fun-Size Butterfinger nin e -s li ce c h eese, wrappersforS2.SO; send 1ettlni up and down and from any 5-ounce Nestle Appian Way Pina or six fro m the fronts of three Re d Thick Crunchy . s i x · s Ii c e sa u sage. M I L K Y W A Y • t h e form and 6 O buntlna for them," she King Size Bars and $1. box tops from Thick 7 -o un ce Co mb o s Sendlhree proofs for$1, 2 1 -o un ce d e lu xe . S NI CKERS, THREE wrappers for$.5.Explres says. "My tool box Is a M a k ~. yo ur c h ec k Crust Appian Way Pizza packages. Expires July fiv e proofs for $2. or Expires March 31. 1982. MUSKETEERS, MARS. Dec. 31, 1982. laree. sturdy shoe box .. ~~--=~~~~~~~~~--=~~__:..:___:.~-=-~__:;__~_:..~~~;__~~.;;.._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- 1 n the box I keep scissors to cut refund forms out of magazines and coupons out of newspapers. "A smalJ utility knife comes in handy for cutting proo f s o r purcha se from cardboard boxes. I have l ·by -5-inch cards to request refunds if a form is not needed. A roll of transparent tape helps lo mend torn coupons, forms and proofs. · .. My refunding tool box also contain s packages of envelopes , post cards to send for refund forms. address la be ls and stamps . Having all of my tools bandy bas made refunding a lot easier.•· Colleen Schneider from Basmarc.lt, N.D ... ta as a tip for teachers : ••As a grade -s choo l teacher, I like to give my students s mall prizes for work done well and for "s pec ial occasions. ''I have found many of these prizes through refunding. These have included pencils. pens , T -shirts, book bags, mugs· and many other items that children can use and enjoy." Donatd Schmidt from Brillioo, Wis., bas some advice for manufacturers and their refund fullillm e nt houses : "Today I received another refund addres s e d t o 'M . Schmidt.' I didn't send for It, and I know that it m usl belong to one of the other Schmidts on our rural postal route. This is also a probJem for me, since othe r Schmidts receive my refunds. "Thi s happ e n s because some of the fulfillment companies use first. initials instead of fuU first names. Since there are s o man y Schmidts on the route and they have so many children. it isn't fair to expect the postman to figure this puzzle out. "I use my full first ~ name when I send for a refund, and I wish the co mpa nies wo uld d o likewise when they send it to me." _ Mrs. 8 .M . Loliber t, from Lewiston. Maine, des erves a s peci al award for resourcefulness. •·As my inventory of coupons and proofs of purchase grew. I felt that I n eeded a four -drawe r filing cabinet," she reports. "I didn't want to spend the money to buy one, so I did the next best thing. "I went to a store that sells them and asked for the empty box that a file cabinet comes in. Next I found four cartons that would fit u drawers. I made my own filing cabinet in four hours' time with colorfu I self-stick shelf lining. "It looks great and now stands in the kitchen between m y desk and the refrigerator.'• These and other readers who s e money-saving tips appear in this column receive a copy of my refunding magaaine. Tne N a t i o n a 1 Supermarket Shoppel'. Write to me in care of tbia newspaper. CUP'N' FIJ.E P &SFVND8 8Hpa, 8lueU ....... C-.11(ftle3) Clip out Ulil Ole and ieep lt wltb 1lmllar cash-off coupons - bevera1e refund offers with bev•aae coupons, for example. Start collecting tbe needed proofs cl purcbue wbUe lookiq for the required refund forma at the supermarket , in · aew1paper1 and ma1aalDa, and wllep &radl.. wltb friends. Offera may not be natlabll 1D all areu of th• eemtry. Allow 10 w..U to receive eaeb ntud. Ralphs Double Coupon Savings ~ii!> ---~if.I!> DoUble Coupon Double Coupon Present this coupon along with any one Manufacturers' "cents off" coupon and qet double the savings when you purchase the Item Not to include "retailer". "free" or "grocery purchase" coupons or exceed lhe value of the item, Excludes llquor. tobacco and llu1d milk products . Limit One Item Per Manufacturers' Coupon and Limit 4 Double Coupons per Customer Coupon Effective Jan. 21 thru Jan. 27 ... 1982 «HA --DOUb1e COuPon Presenl this coupon along with any one Manufacturers' "cents off" coupon and get double the sa•rngs when you purchase the item. Nol to include "retailer",· free" or "grocery purchase" coupons or exceed the value pl the item Excludes liquor. tobacco and lluld milk products. -limit One Item Per Manufacturers' Coupon and limit 4 Double Coupons per Customer Coupon Effective Jan. 21 thru Jan. 27, 1982 USDA • CHOICE • . . . ~ " ~ Present this coupon along with any one Manufacturers' "cents off" coupon and qel double the savings when you purchase the item. Not 10 include "retailer", "free" or "grocery purchase" coupons or exceed the value of the Item. Excludes liquor. tobacco and fluid milk products. Limit One Item Per Manufacturers' Coupon and ' Limit 4 Double Coupons per Customer Coupon Effective Jan. 21 thfu Jan. 27, 19'82 «Mn DoUble Coupon Present lhls coupon along with any one Manufacturers' ·cents off" coupon and get double the savings when you purchase the item Not to include "retailer ", "free" or "grocery purchase" coupons or exceed the value of the item Excludes liquor. tobacco and llu1d milk products Limit One Item Per Manufacturers' Coupon and Limit 4 Double Coupons per Customer Coupon Effective Jan. 21 thru Jan. 27, 1982 U.S.D.A. Choice Blade Cut U.S.D.A~Ctloice ' Beef Chuck USDA CHOICE onterey Jack or Sweet and Juicy Beef Limit 2 Per Customer Chuck Roast per lb. , 7-Bone Roast 39 Ralphs Ralphs Tangelos or Mild Cheddar Super Bread Tangerines 8 oz. pkg. 1 Y2 lb. loaf per lb. 09 .·I Frozen-Peas, Spinach, 8.2 oz.Tu be·Wi nterf re sh Fillet Pacific Fresh Red ·snapper per lb. Blue, Pepper, Onion or Herb Alouette Cheese 4 oz. pkg. 29 SiOke1v~s Cut Corn 10 oz. pkg. Ralphs-Chilled Apple or Orange -duice 1/3 qt. ctn. Prices Effective Jan. 21 thru Jan. 27, 1982 Copyr!Qht 1982 by Ralph• Grocery Company. All Right• ReHrved. We reHrve the right lo limit or refuH 11le1 to commercfel dealer~ or wholeHlere. s..1,,.. rel•te to prevloua wHk'• R•IP't• prioe, Of feet d1te prlo! to In· 111•1 prtce reduction exclu1lve of ldwrtlHd Of promotional prfc••· Real ·van Camp's Kraft Pork and Mayonnaise Beans 32 oz. jar 16 oz. can 29 Lay's or Ruffles Potato 80 Proof Popov Chips Vodka 8 oz. pkg. r Advertlaed Item• In thl• ed .,. the aame Dric:• °'lower In •II 1tore1. Prlc9• oth« thM adYertlMd price• m1y v1ry deS19ndlng upon lout comS19tltlon, coet fl1ctora or 0909raphlc loc•tlon. . Jn n• ST .. CISTA llSA ....... II.LS ... , ... .............. GelorRegular 9oz.Tube Colgate Toothpaste 39 Royal Mandarin Oranges per 1.b. ... , .... ....... • ..... i... aa.s cawa-.a ... • 1214 .... .,., ... , _ .... 17211:11-ST .. llltl . CISTA llSA 411 ll lMU, .... -• -.• •11111nm .. 1•• ma -.a1-.w•t1UY 11411 l HI• bi, •1wa srm .... ...,,N ... . J - • Stir-fry por k dish quickly The Mo Shu Pork pictured here le an oil example of 1 claaslc Chlneae favorite. 4 tablespoons peanut Cul pork allces Into a k i 11 et . A d d t h e very fine 11 tr l p s prepared pork mixture 3 e111. well beaten 1 ~ • Inch e a 1on1 : and ginger. Stir.fry until '4 teaspoon 1round com blne with sherry, pork be&ln..'J to turn color ginger soy sauce, corns tarch and a e par ate Int o MO SHU POaK 1 cup rtrmJy packed and s u1ar. Mix well and shreds . Add cabbage ...... f Mnl•I• shredded cabbage set aside. and water chestnuts. • "' pound boneless "" cup sliced water Heat 2 tablespoons oil Cook over high heat for pork k>ln, thinly sliced chestnuts In a laree skillet. Add 2 m In u t es , s ti r ring 1 lableapoon sherry "" c u p f I n e l y eges and scramble until co n s t ant I y . M I x I n 1 tablespoon soy chopped scallions very dry. Break eggs s c ram b I e d e I g s. Orange Coast DAILY PJLOT/Wedneaday. January 20, 1982 [ ELEGANT CLASSIC ~ 9 M o .s h u P o r k ')~ mukl'S a fast cl·cmomical dinner. . :> \W •IU i1ci sauce 1 teaspoon sesame Into s mall piec es ; scallions and sesame 1 • t e a s p o o n seed remove from skillet and seed. Stir and cook l '"' cornstarch Hot cooked rice set aside. minute. Serve with hot •;rl "' teaspoon sugar Soy sauce Heat remaining oil In rice and soy sauce. •0 ' ~~~~-=-~---'=-~~~---'~~~~~~~~~~~~--:1:--_::;_~~~~~~~;....._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:....::==:::....:.....=========-=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rt ,,. • "t. SAVE 25e -------------STORE COUPON I N ON ANY SIZE OR FLAVOR ~ 111 I H : .~ ,. . I , ... .-.. '--•"-'" _ _...,....., ..... ... ....... <....-.... ,. .. ... ... , ........ 4 ....... . .. ...-...,.._, .. ,..,....., ............. ~ ..... ~··~ -~-, .. r..~t11tt•tt·~ ......... r .. .,.,..,.....C..........._,tlft..,.. ""''*' ........ ~ ...... f._..~ ... t..t.-.•u'• .__....._.,.,,,\ C..1 .... c.. ... ,. c...ei. -,... .. ~-..................... ~~ .................. ~ • ..,9" .... .... ---......~ ............... ...... -~ ............ .._...« ...... .... ...... t ...... ,_., • ,.._., .... Qr• •O ... .., ......_ '~ ,.,.._..,_ .... 1111'< .... fl ............. .................. .----... __ _ ,._ • ._ GENERAL FOOOS CORPORATION ______________ ;m , 2Vbl'Ct OOO'C2 AND ONLY 4 TO 6 CALORIES A SERVING. Not one drop of oil. Not one. Just taste. taste. taste In KRAFT 100% Oil Free Italian and-Vinaigrette Dressings. ~ste traditional Italian spices and our elegant Vinaigrette's natural burgundy flavor. At last you can spice up your salads with- out weighing them down with oil. It'll only cost you 4 to 6 L~il~l\\\\'~-.__.J· calories a serving. And now it . ·~ will cost you 15¢ less! . (!'RAFT) ---------., s&iel.5¢ lO•MlfC~lllt c.M.1f0..·0ai-t•....., .. ..-........ -~ .......... -...-.-.. ,._..,...,._,......re,,...._...._~,.,...,....,......_ ............. e......... ................................ ~ .. .... OlHl.RAl.'.00'',H\ ""'"' ~"". ~ , ..... -........ ,.,,__~~ ... .,..w.f'll)it ......... ,,...,-=··--., .. ~ .........,~ ........... f..,_~,.~· n..r~.._."1"'111.,.,"°'°"""" .. ..,.. .. ,.,,.ft~.....,....,~.,-"'.,., ... .,,...,......,..,..,"" f1!19 lr0'1Qo••.........,. '""''~""'-9'•,111 -w-'-• ~ fO '"' OfA&..11111 ..., -· ~ ... .ct ~ -· ....... b,..........,. ...... """""""',,_.,,. ~ .,.. No Ci ,,.. .... At. (()IC)tfl(JlttS ..... .._....... .................. ,.., ... _...., .. ~" ........ &°"""""'"-~ ......... ., ....... 'W .... ,~ ...... Ill"...... I ......... .,.....,,... ....................... "' .. '•• . ...,,,. , .... ~ ............... ._~ ....... .,.~ ................ .. ..... Tc .. ,,,.....,,, c........., .................... _ ..... ~ ......... ~·~ .. --..... ¥ ... ~~~I ~,~ ........ ~·~-,..~qllliw;"~~-)4·,..........~,ll(Jr~..-bt'.:Yl tlit~·'" ..... ., .... oc-........... ~ .. ~ ~~ut-"I ......., ..... _.......(~ .. °"' I -~"Ol''~,,.....,,~ .. ood ........ ,.,, ..... f...,,........,., .......... :.~·"C..,.. ....... ~ ...... ,~ ~"'~1.-t•--....,.~,MIWlfDll«,..... ~Rt.•MtOCl ... Ot~iY.:'VlOef W_,TlO .-ocrt• • ~• '''° ~·"'w .... c~·'olt •'!if(..f.,,,..~ft oi.--o •V'l' I PAOCTER&GAMBLE-STQRECOUPON I 054975 I !!::~020· I -------------------------------I I I -I I I I I I I I I I "---111111 TO DEALER: FOf each coupon you accept as our authonzed agent. we Wiii pay you the lace value ol lh•s ooupon f)IYs 7c handling. provided you and )'OU' customer hive complied with the temis ol this ollef Ally other appllc:aliOn constrtutes fraud lnVOIOeS show"'9 your purchase ol suflotnt SICldl to OOV8f all coupons redeemed must be Shown on request \lold rl redeemed by Olll9f man retail customer. 11 pre>hbted. taxed 0t reslriC1ed CuSl()mer must pay sales t8JI Limit one coupon per customer For prompt payment send to Wetoh Foods Inc . PO Box 1120 Ar11ngton Heighta, '° IL 60006 • i Cash value 1120 ol 1C Oller ellllires Apr14 30 t982 - WELCH FOOOS INC. -STORE COUPON I 054975 108·t87 ·------------------------------!t"" ~Sl~! soc· ! I -~ I IAl9ogooG on GROUNO AOAST HIGH PO!NT) -•· lM'l OM~~ ~SI I ......................... , I T()fHf'~"f .. \l'JOl'to CJio..-1-· ... ,.., .. ,.,..~., .... ~ ........... _ ~--"'··~·.._. ......... ...,...,. ........... -4"'.,..., ... I ~ c,.,.......,~ ...... ..,......,... .,, ._ -_."""' .. . .¥,..fll~ff""""''~'-..-•••--.... --r ··~....,,,..__.",. ,..,_ .. .._f.,. ..... --. ....., .. ..... -.,.-,,_, ··-I '" '"" (lt.lttf• .. t•# ........ , ....... ·-...... ..,,.. ... _....,_,.,..... ,,._....""" .....,._ .............. ~-·\ """""'l(JllrllS I 1----.. .....,,...,.._.._""'• 1•,..tY"°"fl•_..l&tt,•-• ,..,.,.,AC,•""'"" '""~''"••,....•1" ..... ·"-t•• ,,._....,_f\1>10\ Qoo-I \~,..---.... ~-... ~W-9Aela-f .. •o~-..... "'4MI' .. I """""" ._, ·--~~\I''• o~• ... lllf~fll"(:· ....,..,,_,. • .....,..... ·-~ .......... ,._.. ....... .-.... fliltf....,,.~·-,., .... ~'""""" "• ,. ,..,..,~ .. l.,._ilf~-......... 0 °'~~ "'('411Q''ll)ltrf\""' ....... ~ .... --.~~., ........ , ............. 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Orange Coaat DAILY PILOTNVednesday, Janu1ry 20, 1982 Adaptable Chinese cuisine makes use of leftovers For . tho usand• of 1 cup bean sprouts cup willer fry 1 minute. Stir ln yea rs, fine Chl neae lr'a cup 11llced water 4 ounces lo meln or broth, corn syrup and cooks refined dishes and chestnuts r I n e e Ki n o o d I e • , soy sauce: bring to boll . c Q m b In at l o n s . "'4l cu p ba mboo cootced,drained R eatlr cornstarch tfthnlques and utensils shoots, cut In thin strips In large skillet or wok mixture: stir into pork Into one ol the create.st l cup chicken broth he a l corn o i I o v e r m i x t u re . S t I r r i n i of all cuisines. . v. cup li&ht corn m edium·hla h heat. Add constantly, bring to boil Eventually Chinese syrup mushrooms, snow peas over medium heat and VERSATILE Pork roast becomes a bonus meal or Pork Lo Mein served with 'hinese noodles • cooiint found a path to 3 tablespoons soy a nd onions : sUr fry 2 boil t minute. Stir in A mer I c a wh e r e sauce minutes. Add pork, bean noodles; toss to coat A m e r i c a n c o o k s , 2 tablespoons corn· sprouts, water chestnuts e v e n I y . M a k e s 4 enchanted with fine and st a r ch mixed with v. and bamboo shoots; stir servings. ancient cuisine, took lo ~.::.:.:..=......:..:.:::.:..:=-.....::..:.::::.........:..:..-=.~=.~~~~:..:...:!!!!....=~~'..:..-------============~~~~~~~=============------------ cooldn1 Chinese. Aa Ume went on, they ) ~:.•.0,r!:~ ti:~1;h~~~ "'--..... •..:.._Y4_o_u_Al_w_a..:..y._s_Sa_~_e_A_t_S_ta_t_e_r_B_r_os_. _.l __ ~_o_u.:....:...A:..:.l_w..:.a~y_s_S.:..a.:._v_e:.__A_t_:...S_ta_t_e_r_B_r_o_s_ . ..J!L.._Y4_o_u:_A....:l_w_a:.:::y....:s:....::S.:.a_v.:.e.:A.:.t:.....:S~ta:.:t:.:e:.r_B~ro.:..s.:.. . ....llliiL.._~( l nventin e new com binatio n s with purely Am e r ica n ingredients. Perhaps one of the t h ln1s th a t mo s t " intrigues Ame ricans about Chinese cooking is Its adaptability. The same deep, rich marinade here used on pork could also be used on London Broil, and the Must a rd Horseradish Sauce could be served with cold roast beef. The leftover pork sliced into Lo Mein, as in the following recipe, could be replaced wi th le ftover chic ke n or cooked shrimp. I t i s t h·i s s a m e adaptability that makes Chinese. dishes ceadily accept ingredients that n ev~r developed in China. The corn syrup, for i ns tance, is p ure l y American, born from America's own na tive corn. Yet its velvety texture and flavor make it a natural companion to the traditional soy sauce and broth t hat fl avor the Lo Mein. GLAZED ROAST PORK 't!I cup dark corn syrup 114 cup soy sauce ~ cup dry sherry I/• cup thinly sliced green onions 1-l~b&espoon miflced - fresh ginger 2 cloves garlic . ninced or pressed ~ teaspoon pepper 1 ( 2 pounds> bone· less pork roast In medium bowl stir together com syrup, soy sauce, s herry, green onions, ginger, gar lic and pepper. Add pork roast; tum to coat we ll. Cove r ; r efrigera te o v e rnig ht, tu r nin g occas ionally . Dra in ; rese r ve ma r in ade . Place pork on rack in foil-lined roasting pan. Roas t in 400-degrees oven 10 minutes. Reduce tem per a ture to 350 d e g rees . Con ti n u e roast i n g, brus h ing frequently with reserved marinade. about 1 hour and 15 minutes or until temperature on meat thermometer reaches 1 70 deg r ees . Cool slightly ; slice. Makes 4 to 6 servings. Cold Glazed Roa st Pork: Follow recipe for Glazed Roast P.ork. Cool s I 'i g h t I y : C o v e r ; refrigerate until cold. Cut in very thin slices. Ser ve with a Mustard H o r ser adis h Sauce (recipe follows>. MUSTARD HOESERADISH SAUCE 3 tablespoons dry mustard 2 .tablespoons corn oil 2 tablespoons water 1 ta bl es p oo n prepared horseradish 2 tablespoons corn· sta rch lh cup cool chicken broth lt!J c up r ice wine vi negar ~ c up light corn syrup In s mall bowl stir together mustard a nd corn oil until smooth. Gradually stir in wtater to form a smooth paste. Stir in horseradish. In 1-quart s a ucepan stir toge the r corns tarch, broth, vineear and corn syrup until smooth . Stir ring constantly, b r i n g to boll ove r medium heat and boiJ 1 minute. Graduallf stir into mustard unti well blended. Store covered in r efri1erator. Serve with Cold Glued Roast Pork. Makes about l Y.l cups. &OASTPO&& LO MEIN ' 2 tablespoons corn oil l c u p ellced muabrooma 1 cup IDOW peU I treen onions, cut ln l·lach pieC!a 1"' cupe coo ked rout ,.n llriPI YauAlwayssave ith Staten low , Pricesl BEEF LARGE END --• - H n II 17 -• •11 n • n Rib Roast When you 1/!op Sr11er Bro• took /01 our Stater Savers ,s11r., s. .. ,, 111t1tc:•t• ll•m1 w1tlc;llll• .. -g,..n • 1p..:111 r•'ln· porery dllCOUlll Oy lfle m•nul1ctur•15 We PHI lllH• n•ing1 on to S;,,..,.. -;au or luflller re<1ucino O<J' ~~~JI ~::;:_: '°;, 10,,~,:.·e~~.: ~==~ •t•m• Hell tnd •••'Y wee• STATUl-..OZ ~ROZEN OEFROSlEO a1u Slat lm llATS 11c SMOKED cm ma U Paltk auf l.AllOl 1110 SWll'T'I~ ..... um ..... u 11.11 •·ma B -9. -~-LIN .,~zu 11.ll ~ F•Yma .... HOffY IMA1 Oii l((fllBS . -..USSTmlY 1.ozu 11.ll 7~ !!l~ .. l• 11.11 .., LB • ma 4 YAllUETIU CONCaNTMTtD l.AUIHlflY Df:TIM8fT FRESH "~"ST!I!• LB 11 11 BEEF RIB MU fiAll«llf l• • Sp cm IGAST •111 lellOll NUIMAUl:llD l• • • llAST l• 12.H Sltmk SiiUlllAST •2 119 •3.. NOT TO UCUO tt'Mo fAT '"' ·" ._,., WI -lllf l• 12AI LB iWmw SELF lllSINQ llEOULAll 011 UNIUACHEO fl• 0 11 llEQUl.All 011 lllEAO PILLSBURY FLOUR 5-&.I iiii. I FREEZE .. . INST. MMMEO f'OTATOU HUNGRY J1c1 .z -·~. . ''"4' ... . MACAllONI I CHEESE KRAFT DINNER 1.21-0l Pfmt~A(tAJJ, atDzvtd7ftl4eStafaSavtA4 Fmca ==~~ I BRAN 9.S-OZ. OR BLUEBERRY 13.5-0Z MUFFINS lasscl =:-... Duncan Hines ... •7 ems. =:..n1•"'"' .. REGPK ....... Cl =: I • ""°' '1.19 FRESH · FROZEN __ ... ,._AfMl - .113c • 12 31 .ervlee ••II l• ......... _ .......... ..., • I Allll LI 1. I PITATI SAUi • 11 lllelD TO OllOlll .. 1. JACI ClllSE • IUCID10_. u 1.11 llAST l((f ... , .... .IC '-~ .. 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PLAIN •llnlk .,.. ~~;· him Cracbn £ .. ~:.1111s a_ Cn111 ~ .... llllllsa Orll e:· • •Ol'1J5 • "°' '1.15 • -'1 .. I ''°' '1.29 t ..... '1.13 t .. '1.29 Kick-Off Super Bowl Sunday With ~ ~ These Frozen Specials! I ~~ tJ ~ Jiies Eu 1111 ~~ '°'. Jms Pim &,.. ...... '1.29 Jiies Pim loll .::::= .... 99' Jms Pizza i:.."'t. _. '1.39 t • ::~ ~stst ~ -! • ...,,•u2 ______ ,... __ ..... ______ "°'_"'1___.1r Chef Boy Ar Dee .... 1s-oz 49• CHEF BOY AR DEE Cheese Pim .... :-.15318-oz •I.3• ...... ....................... , t ,.orSl.8 •OI sr Heinz Ketchup . 32-0Z ••.29 .... 1 "'~ .... ::t-•Q nw.. ....... . ... ,, .. .. l11cmt c.111 ........ . LAVER CAKES, 10.VAAIETIES Duncan Hines ...... .1s.s-oz 97• Clllf .., Ar ... =.-:;::. • "°' 75' Pim ~ ... i:.: ... ocr t a toOI '1• t • ••Al.,., "°'22' .... •1.- DeLUXf. AMERICAN Kraft Slices ............ 12-0Z •I.89 111111 liilllal -•t .... u • Hf'l.45 Cl I aa5 1 8 CH .. f111 Frr f . ., '1.14 llAVli - f'Mllalt .. IAYll.J ==~~TIAlU 40()I I ~--eQ 1 aa ., 1 111 s175 ~..-..____ ~~ f"FOR~~.l-•-=-~--~7 ______ r l You Always Sa ve At S tater Bros.. You Always Save At Stater.Bros. • IEECllllT STllAINEOMGl'I( 21c ANO Jiii«• 4.1.0l IA8Y FDS AMOflTlD f~YOlll (A I t~· I•~ 1•=- WllllESU1VE THEIUGHlTO lllillT OIU~C.-VSl SALUTO C()llllllllfflCIAL M AlEllSOlll wttOl.UAllllS I tTATmtAY-MYIY .. Mll•Yt ~---·----ft-............ _ ............ ~--.--... ,_, ......... ~ ........... ,..._..,_ ____ ...,. _ _.,..,,. ..... You Always Save At Stater Bros. I \ Alnionds add flavor to fi8h Vegetable protein extends nutritional value New Year 's reaolullons to lose we t1 ht , eat m ore nutrltloualy and save mon ey a r e e111y t o nfake. Fortunately they're also euy to keep if you practice the art of Chinese cookLn1. The Chinese are well known for their tight, healthful cuisine , featurlne plenty of fish, fresh vegetables, light spicy sauces and the quick cooking method called stir frying that brings out the very best flavor and texture of foods. The Chinese are also fond of using almonds, mixed Into their dishes or toasted and sprinkled on lop to add extra c runch , fl avor and r\ulrilion. 1 It's not surprising that " almonds are such an important part o r Chinese cuisine since I history lndlcatea they orl1lnated In ancient China. The Chinese look full advantage o f this delicious and verutile nut. By adding almonds to their meaJs, they could extend the meat or fish se rvings because a lmonds a r e rich in vegetable protein. VersaUle almonds fit into all kinds of healthy dishes -vegetarian sandwiches, e nlree salads, fruit compotes and homemade soups . You can count on almonds to make lighter eating a very satisfying experience. CANTON ALMOND FISH ~cup sllced almonds 3 t a bl es poons vegetable oil l~ teaspoons ground gi{lger 1 pound fresh or frozen, partially thawed, cod, halibut or haddock thu soy sauce with I llllela • tablupoon of the 3 tablespoons soy cornstarch. Brush on all sauce surfaces of flsh. Heat 1 2 tablespoons tabl espoon of the cornstarch remaining oil in the wok 1 I a r g e 1 re e n over medium-high beat. pepper, seeded and cut Quickly aaute flab on Into stripe both sides j ust unUI l ~ c ups thinly opaque. Transfer to sliced carrots serving dish and keep 1 ~ cups zucchini hot. Add remaining oil slices, Y•·lnch thick to wok. Add pepper, 6 green onions with carrots and zucchini. lops, c ut into 2·1nch Toss over high heat 3 pieces minutes. Add 'r!I c up 3 cups hot cooked water. cover and cook 3 brown rice minutes. Mean ti me, In 12·inch wok or combine ~ cup waler s killet over medium with the remaining soy heat loss almonds and 2 sauce, cornstarch and teaspoons or lbe oil until ginger. Reduce heat to a lmonds are lightly low and add soy mixture b r o w n e d , a b o u l 5 and green onions. Toss minutes. Stir in 'r!I gentlyjustuntll sauceis teaspoon of the ginger . slightly thickened, about Remove with slotted 2 minutes. Spoon over spoon to paper toweling fish . Sprinkle with to cool. Halve fi sh a lmonds. Serve with fillets ; pat dry with rice. paper toweling . Combine 1 tablespoon or Makes 6 servings . Hot cereals should do more than wannyouup. A breakfast that sticks t~ your ribs can also r:-- - --- - - - - - -, do somcthingJor the rest of your body. ~off Wbea'ena or Maypo With Wheatena, you get the unmatched I IU"' Oil .l! · · I bran and c Lr of a whole-arain cereal. A nd I ro THE c Ron:R "'" ... ""'"""'..i io "'' ... ""'' .,..11 •• '"'"'"I.mp•-,.. .. 1 .h.. I 0 UC e• C~PQ'I pro-.dfd ¥t:1W•.dthf'conwnwt h..•t compl..-Jwtththr t,.,, .. ,of lh11H"9rr \l1r ••II each servina of May po is fortified with essen· I .,..,i,.., .. -1 ... ,.,. '""""" ,.,, .. 1 ..... .,i...1• 1 ... tw...Jluic .,..,.t<lr<t th .. '""""" h•• I e ~" ~~ M . t'Oft\vnl"t •• th--tlftW of puhh.av nf thr bubd MKt" .. wd In"°""' tial vitamins and iron. I "'""ft'""Kh•"°''""" .. •'""'~"''..,.'"'""'"J"""'"'''0 "-''"""°"'"'""""'' I Yc 'II 6 d h ' · h "'"' .. hf. .hcMn upon 1rqUC"•I Thi, <uupon •~ l'M>n.tUltMblr. N)ftll•n,f,.,,..hl.r .. ~ rn11\ ftol ou n t ey re just as ric 1n taste as i.. .. ~.c...--,_...,-..i.-\A,,d...._..........,..'"°"·'-...-t. h __, , --- -Oftr .. IK't.db.·I. .. Cood...,J..,,US A c.,i, • .i...,1 lO< c ... """ .... u-i..i-..t r ~ey are m nutrition. J.,. .. ra....i1._,... ....... ...,.,..i1111,.ipa.1o .. r ... mi. ... p1-.,..11.,:.. • ...i...t '"""'' And the cost? Only about a nickel per c-nr. PO eo. 11>10. °"""' '-• \2714 LIMIT ON~ <O.. PO' Pl R PURCHAS~ C.OUPON GOOO OND ON PROOUC1 l'DICATFD '"' serving. I OTHER usu.ONSTITUTES FRAUD I Wit h IOc off the price, it'll be like getting two brea.ltfasts absolutely free.Wh~h we imag-1 STORE COUPON '40300 l.Olflf &2 I inc will make your heart feel nice and warm. L-___________ _J Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,Wedneaday, January 20. 1982 llie robust flavor that won the world now brings the world home to you. Now, with the ~urchase of Nescafe~ you can get Rand McNally s new World Atlas for just $7.99, less than half the retail cost~ A beauti· fully detailed volume from which to explore and learn. And while you pour through its pages, why not pour yourself a cup of Nescafe Regular or Decaffeinated Instant Coffee. Dn nk in the satisfaction of truly robust flavor. The distinc· tive taste that could only belong to the world's leading instan t coffee. The robust flavor that won the world . •Manufacturr(s hat price $16.95. C 1982 Th• !\r.tl• c ... 111< 112SS N Ct n1ral Par\ A•t Slcolut. Ill 60076 NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP Pleue allo-6 to 8 ,. .. kt for ttet1vin1 and protfflilll 10U• onlu Otltr ~ood whrR' ptOltibit~d. tutd <>< rHlnt'tt'jj by law Gnt>Ct ew1ly in US A Offrrtapun Ottemtwr 31. 1982- Clip this coupon and treat yourself to great savings on Nescate. r40·-------save40¢--=.~;, I on any size jar of Nescale<Jt Regular I I or Decaffeinated Instant Coffee. I I _ ~~1:c~:~ ~=~~·,r;~--; .. ~o:,~,,~ :1:~ ~.~:,,0,,"d':e~~~r;;,:~ :1~.',~n• I <r'9 )IQ(• ol ,...,chond•\41 to tOYer (O.,,~ .~....a ,...\i\l be ~ ... n Oft '~"'91t Jo.Av~• I() tQlrP"l ~ .o-o o• <OlitPD"'i '~.ned ~ '9dit-""'ot'°" ,.,..,... OfoCY • "°" ~ """"9" oio ... ,.. o, o•._ OoJt\.Olt CIJ9""C'41t\ I ~O,..filO"ffOf'l'\~0~-001'..,..."'P'~ I0•.0 •W•111tec10f" •VM •trf!Ow...., <--\)~ ...... , I "Wt.I tJO¥' ~y '°"" 'O• (~ '90"'""P'"'°"' -0.IA I OC)C fOl lllK~ MAtl ro fHI NISTU COM-•. tHC.. P'O IOX ·~. ll.M CITI ... c 21Hf I Ol'fet GOOO OHlY IN u'. llMtl ONLY ()Oji COUP'OH MAY fl llOHMIO P'U UHlfCSj Of I "OOUCT P'V.C:H"HO _ 0000 OfflT OH HUC.A,I' .NUANl CO"ll lf<;Ul.AI Oii 01(.AHllNATIO .AHT On!U VU I COHSTIT\/TUFUUD EXPIRES JUNE 30, 1982. 40ct I ~----------------------~ Save50¢ on new Kleenex Softiqy~ . . • l ! ~-:. • Try the soft5 facial~ you can~ OEALlll11' .. ,,.,,... ............ ·-11111 c~ to: ICIM«l.,tr.Clerl Cetl*Mlon. llo1 2, Cll ... -. low• Q1Jol. ,., etldl c.....,.. ,.., eccep! H °"' ......... _,_, '°" 111<• ••• PN• 1t ll•lldllflt clle• ,......_. '°" _... ,..., cv••-llev• c~""' wttll ,,.. e.rM• of W• Covpe<I. A..., ---COftilMllMe lreU41 lll•olc .. 1"4111fi"I -CllHe of l vfllcl .... '490 lO cew .. e11c_,....~-H-n...,.r..-..1 U!Nl One~p«,..rcll•H ........ " .. in.-1·--...·11 .......... -·~-r~.~C--M pe~ any .,iea tu lnw..,,.. °"., toM 36000 12 h ao3 ~ 111 IM to UllMH ••-IL Calll H iiie: lltO!ll ., ·-i el le. ICU:INH'. •M '°"10U« ere retll'4el9d .,_ .... , L of IC.....,.,..Q .... Corll~ .......... WI.._ .J ---------------------©~lark Corporation 1992 Orange Coast DAILY PILOTtNednHday, January 20. 1982 Oriental party fare exteRds warm welcome to guests Loni be fore we onions are soft. Add 11oy ce nter, overlapping If desire<.l, serve with d Ip Io m a l I ca 11 y sauce, g i ng e r and slightly , to form a a Sweet and Sour Sauce rec ocni1e d C hina , shrimp : cook 4 to s rectangle. Moisten ends pre pared by h~aling Apurlcan cooks had mlnules longer or until with egg mixture and together In a small reco&niJed t.be marvels all moisture evapor.Mtes . press with tines or fork sa u ce p a n : 'h c up of Chinese cuisine. Cool completely. to seal. Do not seal top apricot preserves, v. Bird's neat soup, Unfold l puff pastry seam. Chm. Repeat with c u~ c hutn ey. t sweet and sour r ibs, sheet and, on a lightly remaining pastry and tablespoon water and bean curii, the wok and IJoured board, roll to 12 filling. Place pockets on l "4.t teaspoons , vinegar. c hop s l I ck s are a Inch square. Cut into 4 ungreased·cookie sheel Stir constantly until hot familiar sight In many loch squares and put J/• a nd bake in preheated and bubbly. Serve warm American kitchens. cup filling in center of 425 degree oven for 10 to or cold. As with moat cuisines, each. Fold two opposite 12 m i nutes or until APPETIZERS Pork u11d shrimµ fiHing gol'~ lo a pt1rly in· a. pas tr~· ol'kel there are basic recipe sides (not corners) of puffed and golden Makes 18 pOckels and ideas that hav e a ,....L.a~s~t~r~y_s~q~u~a~r~e_.:.:to~w~a~r~d:........~br~o~w~n~·--------------~--c_u~p_s_a_u_ce_. ____________________________________________________________________________________ ~ common denominator. For instance, the American Id ea of cooking food in pastry turnovers is comparable to a Chinese idea or cooking something like a chicken rilling in rice paper or crabmeat in egg-roll wrappers For the coming holiday season, here's an adaptation of delicious Chinese Pork a nd Shrimp recipe , turning it I nto a deligbUully different party appetizer. The intriguing filling which is a combination or sauteed. strips of pork, tiny shrimp and scallions, flavored with soy sauce and ginger, Is encased in little pockets of reattter-light puff pastry. A busy hostess need have no qualms about making the pastry since the recipe calls for frozen puff pastry that co m es packaged in, convenient folded sheets. No-need for the usual pou n ding, ro ll ing, folding , turning and chilling that goes with making puff pastry from ~cratch. • Once the squares of pastry are cut, filled and folded. you jus t put them in the oven for a quick 10-12 minutes. The result is a lovely golden-crusted appetizer that will add another feather to your chef's cap. CIDNESE PORK AND SHRIMP POCKETS l pac kage ( 17 'I• o unces ) froze n purr pastry l pound pork cutlets, cut into julienne strips 'h cup green onions or scallions, sliced 2 tabl es po o n s vegetable oil 2 tables poons soy sauce l lh tea s p oo n s gro und ginge r o r 2 teaspoons grated fresh ginger root 10 ounces cooked baby shrimp, s he lled and deveined l egg yolk mixed with l tablespoon water Thaw purr p astry sheets for 20 minutes. In a l arge s killet, s aute pork and onions in hot oil for 2 to 3 minutes or until pork is brown and Cooking with class S H E RM AN GARDENS in Corona del Mar will offer food .Processor classes Jan.· 26 and Feb.2. Cost is $20 p er c l ass . and pre registration is required. A se ri es o f international dinner classes will begin March 2 al the gardens with an Ita lian menu. Cost is $20 per c l a ss , and pre r eg is trati o n is required. CaU 673~2261 for information. F ASSERO'S in Corona del Mar will host Miles Omel, executive c hef from La Cos ta Restaurant. in a class at 7 p.m. Thursday. Cost is $20. Call 673-2343 for informatiorr WILLIAMS-SONOMA in South Coast Plaza will begin an e ight·part basic cooking series Monday. Coat Is $160. Gerri Gilliland will instruct in Nouvelle Cuisine with a food processor Tuesday at the store. Call 751-1166 'f for information and registration: . Although wat e r c hestnuts have been successfully grown in 't h e United ·States, .virtually all water chestnuts consumed bere are imported., Water cbettnuta must be hand peel ed and American labor coats would make domestic )lrOduction problbitlvely expenlliv~. e f LB. Red·X Produce Prices f111~ .39 m Bean Sprouts ID ~ c·hr~; rar~~, . 69 19·01 tin ftllpe!OO .79 ~Red Grapes " Autt1N V .,ltbtl Felllft 4.99 !H Hanging Baskets ' ,.. Liquor a Wine Prices m m B! Hl'INI 4.99 Seagram 's Seven 7SO ... 161'1NI 4.97 Scoresby Scotch 1~0 ml Chtost••" 9r u Wint 3.29 Chateau La Salle l!IO ml . \ s36• 1.s-LTL C"ABllS ROSE OR RHINE .... WITH COUPON & SS PURCHASE. LIMIT ONE e e. 6 Ya.OZ. CAN . Red·X Grocery Prices Red·X Grocery Prices Oii 11111111 l"!uod ~Tomato Sauce l·u .21 m Clorox Bleach 118·01 .. 92 Clll bll 1111..-. ~ Fruit Cocktail 17 • ., .61 '1! .Bold-3 Detergent .... , 3.65 ~ Pkt ........... H! st;·;;t;;i Joo1.,mw ~ Dawn Detergent tt·tl 1.39 112·911 1 29 .. I (tn • ....._SlllMOrU .... .79 Swaftsoa s frozen Turkey Or B! Krispy Cr~kers 16·t/ !l! Chicken Pie ... , .45 ·-· ••• Health a Beauty Aids Dairy-Dell Prices 10·01 h r ~ Noxzema Skin Cream 2. 29 Anen.i fllnu m Esprit Yogurt .39 ~lll Vllrf SOO MG ~ Vitamin-C • .,kl, IHUI f1nwly rac• lllOllttfty ~ Jack Cheese ~: 2 .19 tOO·tl 1 95 Dll • Cold llltdtc1ne ~ Nyquil Jt1S1l111j0Cf Pvrrttld Or "~~'l 2.37 ~Drinking Water t:' .45 AVE ~: 30% WITH NO-FRILLS COST CUTTER PRODUCTS! ROCK 11noa PRKIS .. llUIS YOI llY 111511 lllAllKCT uscn HAS SfllCTfO AN ARRAY Of THE ITflllS YOU 9UY MOST ON EACH TRIP TO !Hf SIORE TO UAR THE COST CUT!lll l.Alfl COST CUllEll IS YOUR SYMIOl Of llOC• 1ono111 "''CfS fVEftYOAY YOU lllAY SAYE UP TO 30'Y. 0¥£11 NATIOHAl all.ANOS !Hf llG Olff£11ENC.f B(IWECN COST CUllfll NO·flllUS LAIUS IS CON· SISTfNT OUAltJY SAYE ON COST CUllfll l'!IOOUCTS CodCUtter Launcl17 Detergent 99! A T~~~to Sauce °fi F1;~ii' Cocktail °" i~;~r •·•l e.,. 11-•t tlft .19 .56 6 u .. , 1 49 ~k tl~I o ClllSISlllll •Aun A• SAllSfAClleB RARABlllll If YOU Allf AT All DISSATISFIED WITH COST CUHEll l'llOOUCTS llUUllll THE UNUSfO l'OllTIOll I PACltAGE TO lllAllll(T U SKfl fOI A llEfUllD If YOU AM UNAIU TO llfTUllN TO '!+If S TOllE SEND llEASON fOA OISSAllSfACTION NAiii£ AOOllESS A IOTH ENO fl.Ar$ Oii LAIH 10 THC OOGEll CO CONSUMER AFFAlllS Of PARTlllENT IOU VINE ST CINCINNATI OHIO 0101 CodCUtter iweet Peas 5~: 1.39 I~· l/f·07 .21 t i n .61 JANUARY WHITE SALE! Ar-.ii v.... l'tllltlf • B! Kitchen Towels II MllJ'I MllM ... OI S"I .. '-~ Pattern Blankets .. 2.49 ... 7.99 , ... ~ ...... ~ Pattern Blankets ~·-;jj6KACll9 9 -~ ~ llllMM lllft ltwtls Ot taRlay SltANI• S11t 3 99 ~ Pillows .. • 0111111• ~Face Towels H 1.69 NICH l"ftti.l M O Jiii It THllU lllfS JM 1' 1 .. 1 Ill tll ... lllY lllG*llt lllMIMO llO SAU lO IUlfllS Oii fOll lllSAl( Oii t•W~ UH ---------------1 ~--------------1 AHOllTEO ¥MlfllU .,_._. .... Cll-k Ml_lat • Cake £..ft 1 .• , Star-tust .ft I Mix ·~ eV'T 1 Tana~ • 1'7 I • "'VS 1•1 "" 11 .,,., ,.c "• c.... •"" .. --·u I• •vs u•1 .... ,,," c. ,.. -.,. • -:.J ft .. ~..-r.=< ---·. tflMa --... ft u.t ·-----It ........ ._ __ , -"'" .. "',,.., ltrlUM •• -.. ,..., I -iiiiiiilfi ---...... ~ "'"""' -. -" ·-"" -It "" ·-tiililWI .. " ,.. ~----•·a.an.scou....•••••• •·•-•••am.XCOUPON---- $ 8 ·8 LB. Red·X Meat Prices IHI llound m Sirlo in Tip Roast lb 1.98 lir91 Muly £ nd m Beef Rib Roast 1. 78 lb f •tun T hlWtO Shttd m Beef Liver .69 " Cen11r Cul m Smnked Ham Slices lb 1. 9.9 Service Seafood a Hot Dell ototo..C' at uo•u wti• u••<t u••oa6' ""°'Hull"' I .... 11euu1 Baked Ham 1mo 1.98 --.: ...., 4t ,,.. ...... -• ..., 0-. Old fHlllOlltd Potato Salad WM~ Id ,._,,.•~• •t4 ,..,, Ot .98 ID Fruh B! Rainbow Trout .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednt1day. Janu-ry 20, 1982 Cll BJ BAllML\ (UBllON8 Optional : 1 calories each. minced parsley With cold puta aal1d1 ta bleapoo n mh\ced llll 111110 aaowN RIC& 3 lable11poont1 1rowina ln popularity, panley MIDDLE·EASTERN· l u w . rat Creamy can riff aaJadt be far Combine and chill. STYLE SALAD C u c umber s at ad behind? G roast lamb: 1 teaspoon dried 2 tablespoons dressing _.Fact dl a, 'tdavo,ry l:~n~~~ ~l~~v!~~r~~ GaEEKalCE8ALAD <or J tablespoon rresh) goldenraisins Optional : 2 a.,asone co r ce d ealr ed . Mak•• alx 2 cup1 cold mintleaves quarter-cup tablespoonspine nuts mixtures are beglnnJnc aervinc•, 80 calorlea cooked plaiD brown rlce Pinch or around white wine Ln a ~ma LI to ah ow u P on each. 2 tableapoona cinnamon and nutmeg 1 onion , peeled, s tucepan, combine avant-carde restaurant minced onion or 1c1Jliorf Pinch of dried chopped raisins, wine, onion and menus and cold buffets. The followtna recipe is 2 to S table· oregano <or marjoram> 1 clove garlic, g a r 11 c . Simmer , Often these mixtures seasoqed simllarlly to spoons lemon juice 5 teaspoons pine minced covered, 15 minutes. are heavily larded with l he st u fr in g for 2 tableapoons nuts (pignoli) 1 and one-half Toss with rem ained o l l , ma k In I l hem Dolmades (green stulled olive liquid (from a Jar Gar 1 i c s a It, cups cooked brown rice ingredients. Makes six unnecessarily fattening. grape <leaves ) and or olives> pepper, to taste 4 tomatoes, s ervings, 95 calaties Howeve r . oil adds would be a delicious 2 leasfoons Combine and chill. chopped each (pine nuts add 15 .JIO•'fHLT l INCLUDIS: .. Doctor Ylelt with HtebUahed f emMy practice M.O., medication•, .,.raonaf dleh. Allergy T••dno With Slmple Blood Teata -Ho More Scratch Te1ta, Allergy Oe1enaltlutlon. Medi Cat, Medlcere, lnaurance No ContrKtt, No Hypnoete, No ... Hypno*'• 972-2273 MAJO" MEDICAL CE nothinc but calories to choice to serve with olive (or salad) oi Makes six servings, 85 4 tables poons calories per serving). salads, and larg e ,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-;..._~~~~~~~__:;..._~~~~~~~~-=-~--1..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- amounts aren't t'eally needed. Rice sa lad is particularly de licious and nutrious lf you use whole grain brown rice. Makin< rice into salad is an especially useful trick for recycling leftover rl~ UUQ aiiot er aay's side dish. You can seaso n leftover cold rice with the salad ingredients right after tonight's dinner and store it in the refrigerator . By tomorrow night, the rtavors will be thoroughJy blended. Rice salad, like all salads, is very versatile and the variety of ways you can make it is almost endless. ITALIAN RICE SALAD WITHOUVES 2 cups cold cooked plain brown rice 2 teaspoon s olive oiJ 3 tablespoons olive.-liqu.id (fr-0m jar o( olives) 2 tablespoons cider (or white) vinegar 6 Spanish green stuffed olives. thinly sliced 2 tablespoons mince d c h ives or scallions Garlic salt and pepper Pinch of dried oregano Chinese chicken January 25 is New Year's Day. It's true w e've already celebrated one New Year, but Monday is Chinese New Year. If you 'd like to welcome the coming Year of lhe Dog with your own celebration, center it around an Oriental-insptred feast. Chinese Chicken with Pea Pods is economical, ,eye -appea ling and delicious. CHINESE CHJCUN WITH PE~ PODS (4 Servings> l lfl pounds chicken 1 6-ounce package La Choy frozen pea pods 1 8 -ounce ca n ham boo shoots 1 8--0unce can water' chestnuts . 1 smaJI onion, fin~ly chopped 1 clove garlic. finely chopped 1 small sli ce fresh ginger, finely chopped, or ~ teaspoon powdered ginger 3 tablespoons soy sauce 1 tablespoon sherry If.a teaspoon sugar 1 teaspoon salt pinch pepper 1 tabl espoo n cornstarch oil 2 tablespoons waler 4 tatilespoons silad pinch saJt Bone chicken; cut into t hin strips . Dr ain bamboo shoots, Drain water chestnuts and slice thin. Thaw pea pods ; dry on paper towels. Mince onion, garlic and ging~. Combine aoy sauce, s h e rry , s u gar, 1 teaapooD salt and the ..__ P• p P•• f·or s a-u c e· mi x tu re . Blend cornatarch wtlb water. Heat 3 tablespoons oil and' pinch of saJt in large sit i ll et placed over medium bilh beat. Add onion, aatlic a nd 1in1er; cook and stir un111 1otden . Add cblclten; cook and stir until aolden. Remove cblclten and 1euonlnp to aervtq platter; keep "'warm. Add remainina oU to pan; .... blllnboo abootl aad water cbeatnut1, ltlrriDI one mibute. Add pea podl and cook one minute more. Return cblclten to pan; add HUH ....... ud cook one minute. Add cornatarcb; cook and atlr until tblelteaed. Serve immediately. We ·accept ALL CciUpons from other su~·~·mark~ts_!~ :=:::::=:=:=:=:!J~-COU ...... : 1.Eapired coupon' not accepted. 2. Continuity promotio1u & grocery purchoM coupon' not accepted. u.11_,...,.IC) IMllO~llbll950I 3. 0n1u monufocturert coupon• of S 1.00 or leu con be doubled. 4 Sub1titution of item• on manufocturer'l couponl prohibited WM01UAW1S. tc)MI .wt D9CS IOI AWAllAIU .. ~ COUNTY 'T f f ----~....:.'::t""•-by. low. S. Value of all iteml on retailer coupon determined by our lhelf price. 6. I we do not ltock the item lpe<i ied on other WI Aazsm-n•-•iorr-food market's coupon. we will •ubltitute on item of equivalent value. 7. liquor, tobacco & dairy produch excluded 8 Subject -.._ -10 limih imprinted on each coupon. 9 . Offer Good Jon. 21 -Jon. 27, 1982. U.S.D.A. Choice S..f. 8onel9$t Rib Cut SPENCER ROAST .. . . . ........ LB. 3.39 U.S.DA Ooce Beef. °"*" lor Baile« 8.8.Q. MEATY RIB BONES .............. LB. I .•9 U.S.0.A. Cl.ab Beef. 8aMN Rb Cut lor Broil« U .Q. ROLLED STEAKS .. . ................. LB. 2.89 U.S.0.A Chooc:e Beef. 8onelen Chudt Cut ROLLED SHOULDER CLOD ..... LB 2 .•9 BllFCHUCll 7BONEROAIT 1.29 lob<"'1t 2 09 IXCIDRlll .. .. . • 0..oe~ 0.y. •'9 !JM«M I ) or BAN ROLL·ON .... Toi» 100'1 BUFFERIN . . Ol-01 ~ WA V NASAL SPRA V .... 1.39 ............ 2.29 ............. 1 .29 1o1» 1,·,..,cop. 16"• 2 17 COMTREX ........................... :....... • ................................ fA e 79 CHUCK ROAST U.S.D.A. CHOl~l BEEF-ll.ADI CUT UMIT 2 PER FAMILY El Ron<ho RANCH STYLE BACON ....... LB 1.29 El Rancho, fresh I 2 9 PORK SAUSAGE . .. .... . .......... LB. • Bulk or Po"ies, Does Not bcMd 22% Fol LEAN GROUND BEEF ............. lB. 2. 19 '--Ground Beef, Daft Nol &ic.d 15% Fot CHOPPED STEAKS . .. .... ls 2.•9 LB. El Rancho Pot\, S.o,on1ng BRATWURST SAUSAGE l8 1.69 El Roncho, Sweet & Hot I 69 ITALIAN.SAUSAGE .... lB • U.S.D.A. Grode A Frozen·Defr~ TURKEY HINDQUARTERS ........ l8 .• S9 U S D.A. Cho10 &el Chuct.. Cut 9 O·BONE ROAST .. LB 1.6 FILLETOF I 89 FRllH OCEAN PIRCH .... -................... • Center Cut Silwtr·froren/O.fro•ted 3 99 SALMON STEAKS LB. • btro large. froren/Defrolted NORTHERN SCALLOPS LB. 7 • 99 1.25 01. Kroh .33 MACARONI & CHEESE 2·liter .99 DIET RITE• R.C. COLA 41 01 All Vo11et1e> JAN-U-WINE CHOW MEIN 2.29 5 0 1 Chun IC1n9 .7S CHOW ME-IN NOODLES . .S 0 1 . Chun Kin9 . SO¥ SAUCE. .SS DUNCAN Hlllll 99 CAKIMIXll e Fru h fillets ENGLISH SOLE fre>h. 8-01 Jar WESTERN OYSTERS 6 or floh .All Vo11t1rlH PETUNA CAT FOOD .. 11 01 Kellogg• All Vo11e1te> NUTRI GRAIN CEREAL. 1 I .Sor Chippie & Regular BELL BRAND CHIPS 2·l1ter COKE, TAB, SPRITE .. 6·Pock 12-01. Cons R.C. 100• QIET RITE ..... 12-01. Con ...... ,. CO•ll LB 3.99 ;A.1.69 • FC>f! I 1.19 1.29 1.39 l.S9 .39 ICE ORANGES •••• llXAI c m -. - mt1JS ()(TH£~ ·----"-~ ....... _10 0 .... 0,.-ly. 10 .. 5ocl TEA ............................. le•S LONG.GRAIN RICE ................ 3 .SS o,......ty. Slk.d ... I ea C.... Aut. v.., ...... 14 ••• lo• 7-01 Soliuro SUN BIRD MIXES .................... 3 100 I ... Oyne1ty I 01 Coft WATER CHESTNUTS ................... 9 . 29t ;1t11Hlft\!- 6 01. AHi. Varieties CHUllKlllG IGG•OLU ...... . .93 12 at. Chkhn, Shrimp CHUN KING CHOW MEIN........ I .•9 l2•.CIMiK~ SWEET & SOUR PORK ... . ..... ..... . I .II Stovffen, Meotboll ... 7.75 01. ITALIAN SANDWICH ................. I . 79 Welch's ... 12-0Z: 9 3 GRAPE JUICE ................................. . BAMBOO SHOOTS ·~:...... . ........ 9 Mor94.-ltlto 7, 75 or C°" COCONUT JUICE ........................ SS llJjl@l- 7.~ 01. Country Style CH lutterm~ •ILLl••Y 5 I 811CUITI .......... fOft 12-01. Deluae Choke Swlts ""-to CH I 69 KRAFT AMERICAN CHEESE ........ • I 12 01. Shofor Kothef • FRANKS OR KNOCKWURST ..... 1.89 6 01. Kroft Slbd NoMol ~Jodi Of MUENSTER CHEESE................... I .ff 1 ·lb. Sliced • 3 •9 HUGHES COOKED HAM ........... • E R Flo•orful .. Pon Reody .S 01. eo .S9 SALISBURY STEAKS .. . fA. U S.0.A Cho1<1r Beef Bonele" Rib Cut 2e89 BRAISING RIBS l8 E.R. Center Cut Mol1tu1e Added 2e•9 HAM SLICES lB frelh Youn9 Tender .89 SLICED BEEF LIVER LB. BOlllLlll PORK LEG ROAi FRESH EASTERN ARMOURS VERIBEST La. 1 ,5 ltr ., Vin Rose, Ch1onh, 1.89 Rhi...,a, eller ::.~.~ .2.19 ,._ ~ '°""°"' 1»-1 -· ... 2.98 GIN OR VODKA Johonn·Meister ... 7.SO.ml. 2 ff JOHANNISBERG RIESLING . .. .. ... .. . • EA .S9 . ..., ................ ...._... .... . ...... ~ ................ __. ......... ,......, ""' .... :r--..... "T·-..* I, • J •• AILY PILOTrNedneaday, January. 20, 1982 ·Chinese sauce flavors ~ecipes AmericalU ducover. joy of cookiJ16 in Oriental. •tyle All over Amerlc• tta.re an COOb wllb a 1rowlnt pa11lon. That pa11lon can be aummed up lo two words : Ct.Jneae cooklnt. Try tbe Oriental Sauce Mlx with one or au of the lugeiled Ultl. The s auce lt11lf can b e 1tored for 1oq periods, even h'OllD and uaed lo thick• ~ flavor any number of meat and ve1etab1e combinations. red pfpper Vt cup aoy Hue• ~ cup dark corn syrup v. cup elder vlne,ar 2 cupe cool bee or c hicken broth or boulllon ~ cup dry sherry In 1 ~.quart Jar place cornstarch, sinter, tarlic and pepper. Add soy sauce, corn syrup well before ualna .) tablespoon corn oil. Add l 1,11 cups Oriental MakH4cups. c hic ken; stir Cry 2 Sauce Mlx<aeereclpe> O&IENTA.L CHICKEN m I nut es . R e turn Cut beef dla1onally AND BlOCCOLI veeetables to sklllet. across 1rain Into very 3 tablespoons corn Stir In Oriental Sauce tbln slices, then cut into oil, divided Mix. Stirring constantly, 2·lnch atrlps. ln.1 lar1e a cupa broccoli brln1 t o boll over sk illet or wok neat 2 flowereta medium heat and boll 1 tablespoons ot the corn 4 areen onions, cut minute. Stir in cherry oil over medlum-hl1b In 1-lnch pieces (If.a cup) tomatoes until heated heat. Add snow peas, 2 chicken breasts, throu1h. Makes 4 lo 6 c e I er y and water boned, skinned, cut in servings. chestnuts; stir fry 1 lo 2 l·inch cubes ORIENTAL BEEF AND minutes. Remove from 11,11 cups Oriental SNOW PEAS skillet. Heat remalnin1 2 Sa.uce Mix (see recipe) 1 pound beef top tablespoons corn oil. O&IEN~A-L SAUCE \and vinegar. Cover ; shake well. Add broth and s herry. Cover: shake well . Shake welt before using. ~~ore4 covered in refrigerator t lo 2 weeks. (Sauce Mix m'ay be frozen. Freeze in ti1htly covered containen in 1 t,11 cup portions . T haw com letel n shake 1 cup cherry tomato round steak Add beef, one half at a halves 4 tablespoons corn time; stir fry 1 to 2 -, - MIX ~ cup co rn - starch 2 teupoona minced fresh ginler 1 clove 1arllc, minced « pressed '4 teupoon 1round In large skillet or wok oil, divided m inutes. Return all beef heat 2 tablespoons of lbe If.a pound snow peas a n d veg e t a b I e s t o c o r n o i I o v e r (2 cups) s killet. Add Oriental medium·hilh beat. Add 1 cup sliced celery ,Sauce Mix. SUrrin1 broccoli and green 1 can (8 ounces) constantly, bring to boil onions; stir fry 1 to 2 w a t e r chest n u ts , over medium heat and minutes. Remove from drained, sliced (about 1 boil 1 minute. Makes 4 to lkil t. H a llilllliiiiil) •••••••_s_s;_e_r_vin....::.gs_.-::=---:;----1 8lg~l.-Say•1 Try Our Special USDA Graded Choice Steaks & .Roasts ,With a·very fine trim -come in and have a cup of coffee (offer good thru 1 -2~2) ·usDA Graded Choice Rib Steaks USDA Graded Choice ................ 2. 98 lb. Spencer Steak USDA Graded Choice ................ 5.29 lb. Stanc9ing Rib Roast USDA Graded Choice ................ 2. 98 lb. ~· 0 cu ••. 19 ,,OE OF UEF... lb. •1• s•"'PS ~ .. ., YGRK 11 Kl .... 6 'Ti • W"<>le, bot&iless ..• q. at 1~ ••• No ckQ. row~ l'ICTITIOUS •USINEU l'ICTITIOUS a U51NEU ..once Of' NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT ANNUAL llU!tTINO l no tollowlno pe,.on I• 001110 Th• tollowlno pe,.on h ootn9 There .tll lie.,, -1 ,,_111111 or bu•lnweues: • bu•IMna•· tfle memlle"lllp of South Co••I Gourmet Rib Roast .................. 3. 9 8 lb. PAM ENTERPRISES, 1002 FLOWERS & COLLECTABLES. Medical Center Corporetlon on ~rllll9il secreterle1 Clrcie. Cos•• Moe. UOt W-rett. HunllnotOft le.ell. Tf\ll"O•Y. J-v •. l"2. •t J:Ot Celllornle m• Celllornle m. "·"'· In tlle A""1""1-of !toulft c-t WI ALSO FIATUal • Provimi Veal • Real McC.oy Products· • • Choice Lamb • Fr;esh Fish • Fawmer John Pork • Turkeys • Kosher Deli Items • Ducks •,Italian Deli Items Rabbit • Cornish Hens Free Steak and Meat Pka. Peme le Jo O•llon. 1002 8eth Lvnn For\lle y, ••Ot Medlcel Cent..-. 31112 Coe\I HlllftW•y, Secretarlet Ctr< I•. Colt• Mna. Wooocrut: Hunl1n91on Beech, Sooltll ~.CA 92'11 R991W•tlon Cetlfornla 92'2t Cellfornla m... llellln• at• JO P.m. ,..._ <--'Y Thl1 bullllffl 1' con0uc1eo 11y an Tiii• busrn.u Is conducted by en '°the tMet'"9 can beeln at J:OO p.m. lpolvldual. lndi•lclual. The --of .,,. ,.,..une *111 lie to Pamel• Jo Dalton Beth Lynn For1llay hear ,._,., on Die P<OQr-el tfte Tiii\ ·~t-t wM 111..0 wrtll the Tiii\ Stal-I w .. 111.0 wllll llW Medl<et Genter -elect Trull"'· County Cieri< of 0r•"9e County on County Cl~r~ ot Orenee County on ~~~:r'!.::,~ ~:, 0~,,:.~ 7,.~.;.;.!,.:.! January I, 1"2. 1'18"41 January 11, 1"7 1'1-tt cell t JU> -15.o. Put>ll"'" OranQe Coa~I Deily Pilo\. Pvblllhed Or-Coast Darty Pilot, ~· =- Jen tJ, 20. 21. Flt) 3. 1m. 2..,, J..., u. 20. 21, Feo 3. '"' "~ &oatd of,.,T""'"' Soultl COHI -k•I C.,.ter MJC •TIE fill.IC •ta Pu1111.-Or-Coa1t Deity Pltot, 1st Prize $150, 2nd Prize $100. 3rd Prit'e $50 · o.•tw ....... a Del . . ,.cT•T•ous•u5INn• .. ,cT•T•ou• •u••NEu 2000 ~ port IL.cl c t U-c ,&. NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT ....C llftC( Jan 20. 1"1 llJ.-? "•w IT .. 01 a ....... ~ Tiie follo•lno per.Oftl ue oolno T ne followlnQ Per\on Ii dolnQ -----------. W W._._ .... ~ 0 • (JI 4J 646..Jf28 bu'lntll•I. e>u~ines,•s· • 9"R;0119e iiiOH ~rl .-H..-.: I 0.6 M.C. PARTY PRODUCTIONS, m ALI.PORT •MPORTS NEWPORT 11i. ........... ~~ ... =="~:::1..1~=======~=~Peulerlno, Aoe. No H20I., Coste Mew, 8EACH, H ,. Unlve"llY Drive. l'ICTITIOUI 8'1tl•t1& •~STATaMll•T PROT•CT · YO•• YA&••D 110•••••1••• a ·1•v••·i'•-••r• • Electronic entry system • Engineered for maximum security • 24 Hour armed guard protection · SAFE SECURE CONVENIENT CONFIDENTIAL • Protection for your valuable possessions • Largest Safe Deposit Boxes in SPuthern California • 24 Hour Access • Tax Deductible • Insurance Savings . --- j . For further information and a free brochu·re please call (714) 760-8755 Celllornle~ Ne•porl Ila«,,, Ce1lton1le '2WO Paul Hubert Mo•bru(ker. SSS Stuart E Gra mwell. UH P ... larlno. A.pl. No H20I.. CO\le Mew, Untwe,.lly Orlve, Newp0rt Buell, C•lllornl• •2626 Celllornta '1!>60 Thome• Patrick Curren. 1011) Tiiis busmen Is condu<l..O lly an l onur Aonve, Gerden Grove. •ncll•ldual Cetlfornle '1MO St...,, E Grernwell Tiii• lluslneu I• <Oftdu<ltd lly • Tllll sl•l-1 w.s Ille<! with the oeneral P¥tntolliP ·ountv Clerk of OranQe County on Peul H. ~Iler Jenuary 11, 1111 Tiii\ ,,....,_, w .. riled with IM l't•n• Counly Cieri< ot Or•ll9* County on Publl•""" Or~Cout Oelly Pildt, De~•mller 14, "" 1'1'Ull Jen t3, 10, n , Feb 3, t"1 2»-42. Pvbh-0r.,. Coast Delly Piiot. Jen. U. 20, 21. Ftb. 3, 1911 2J1"2 ----------------l'ICTITtOUI a U51NESS NAME STATEMENT Tiie tollowlno pe"on I\ ootno The lel-i.o. --.,. ..iq ..,,1 ........ . P & W TaAOtNG, M Sen M....., Drive, Wte m. H-1 hecfl. C1' "*· PAULI NE L. IUTCHEa, 2tl .._.._, ..... lti-, CA t'H6!. L. MA•tE FOftOE. 11 -..1,. Dew, lrvllte, CA'211'. This llWIMU Is c.wllKtH ~y • _,.,_ ...... P..ilML.."9w-Tflls .__,. -,.,... ...... C-ty Cten el Or ..... C-., on Dec."·'"'· 1'1"'111 Pli~I ..... Or-C-Delly Piiot. Dec .•. 1.,,J ... 6.tJ.2t.'t• "'"~' NS-16371 bu1tn .. ui: NOTICE OF DEATH OF FASHION NAILS &-il(IN CARE. ----------- JEAN C. CRAWFORD 3413 N•wPOrl Bou1evero. Newp0rt COAITCOMMUIOTY eucll, Califomle'166.J cou.aoE 01STa1CT AND OF PETITION TO Bech-Kim T"' Lam, 120S Vklori1; NOTtCEMSALa ADMINISTER ESTATE 1tnu. ••.v..,ke.ceiltornla~t Of'PEll"*ALP~EaTY NO. A-111757. ,,,Jl~l:Ou~' Is conouct..O by en TOHIOMUTatDH• T 0 a I I h e ·1 r S , NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N that • B«ll·Klm Tho l •M M9r99aled bid\ wlll lie r..:.i...., for b eneficiaries. c r e ditors n 11 st•1emen1 was"'"" w1111 lh• w•• 10 ,,,. 111911Ht llldderCsl ot.,,. a nd C""tingent c r editors Of County Cler-of Or•119e Couni, on followl119 llMd ~I ...,,1<11 lie• "'' Jenuer, •. 1'82 l'lllll II d I d b Ill 8 d of Jean C . C rawfo rd and PubllstwoOr-Coe•IOallyPllot. T~!s~efl·~/;,! ..,,.:..,. ~o ,::rc.oast p e r son s who may b e Jan u .10.21.Fe111.1 .. 2 2Jt.t2. Commvnltr coueee Olstrlct: <U o th.e rwise inte rested in the s A 1 -L "o·A rs & s A 1L1 N G 11 d / t t P1k9C -~ EQUIPMENT, ELECT RICAL w I a n ores a e : EQUIPMENT. ANO ASSORTED A petition has been filed 1TEMs by Cynthia Jean Crawford "1CT•T•ousau51NEU S..••blds•11tee_....tenc1,..,k •• I S I C t f NAME STATEMENT rud el-f« W9<eteMd 11-t .. n the uper or our o Tl•• 1011-•ne person• ., .. dotne 11,1.., on '"" "'~ 1orm at •'::ao Orange County r equest ing llUslnosas: pm FrlOey Met<ll j 1911 In "" t h at CV nth i a Jean CONTACT COMMUNICATION. Olit~'1c:t Mminktratlon iullOI ... tJ70 Crawford be appointed as OSI Boar~welk Ori ... Hunlln9lon Ao ems Avenue, Co\te Meu, B••<ll, c..t•lornl• n.'9 Cellfornle. All blCb must be oellvered p e r s onal representative to Jo•• Per•••. o s1 eoe•d•a•k 10 1,,. office of.,,. Pvrcllaslnt ...,.,.1•1 adminis te r the est a te of Drive, Hunt1no1on e .. c,,. Celltornl• ,,,. eboveaddrflJiwl«totNtlmewt Jean C. Crawford, Irvine. ~:" ~nes• 1, <oncko<t..o llY en ~:,,/;:,.::,~1119 10 11e •t1e t111a ,..,. Calif9rnia, (under the 1nc11vlduet: Propose• form• end complete I r\ d e p e n d e n t .ioei Perm IMtructi-mav .,. o11te1neo •• the Administration of Estates Tiii• , ... ,_, .... 111"° ""11" ,,,. P1;rc11as1ne ~.._.of the OIJtrkt Act). The petition is set for Counly ci .. 11. of Or•ll9* County on al the -... Ndreu. For eOdltlOnef Jenuary '· l"2 ,. 1 1 n f o ' m a II o" o r I 11 • p • < II o n hearing in Dept. No. 3 a t Pu~llMd Or-c oast Delly Piiot ._intment. <•II o....., A. F.,.,,,., 700 Civic Center Drive • (Ju l ss.-S7S4 W e s t • San t a A n a , J..., •. u. 20' ». 1"' •s9-f2. ll<tt must be eccompenle• 11y • Califor n ia 92701 o n _.,._ CERTIFIED.CASHIER'SCHICKOR ..._ -·~ PERSONAL CHECK ,,,_ peyMle to F ebruary 10, 1982 a t 9: 30 .,,. c-• c-nunitv Col .... Dl•rlct. a .m . l'tCTITIOUlaUllNESS Ol'CHll.ln ... -Ml .. s-1~ IF YOU OBJEC T to the NAM• nAn""uT of ,,,. toe.• 111c1. ,.._, cheos .,.. ec'•~ .. ..,_ .. ..._,."' m .oo. grantlnQ of the petition , Th• lottowtn9 penon h doln9 o.t>Mtts"' wccnlful bldm•Csl wlll you Should e ither appear ~O~O .. ~USION SECRETARIA .,._.1 .. 10 ... ~Mle ... ke.OU.r af"' the hearing and. State SERVICE J02 Vlc ..... la 203·B CO\la d.PO>lt checks/or CH h Wiii lie Your ObJ·e c tions or fil e Mew ca1i1omta .,._ . • ,.,_ .,.., ""eo.ro"' Trust•'• ' . K<et>tence of 1'ltlfl lllOCll *"'"' •IN Written obj-tlons with t he Jove• Fuml1<o Hohu v. 302 lie on MM'CllU 1'12 "" Vklorle, 20:l-I, Coate-· Caluornle All ..,.,.._~~ -,_., court before the hearing. n•u •r• the ..._lblutv °' Pvrc11e ... cs1. Your a ppeara nce may be Tiiis buslness Is conduct..O by en •% HIH tea wlll lie ecldM te ell I n person or by your 1nc11•1-1 •"'°""" ...ias vetto ma11 wt" tu Joyce F. Hol••Y permit <erd KC-IHbld. attorney. Tftl\ SUI-I WH 111.0 with the All p..-r1y lllted ,_rein II offend I F Y 0 U A R E A County Cttrk of Orenee County on for ul• .. ., ts, ...,.. 1,_ .. -.,.1,_1 C R E 0 I T 0 R · 0 r a Jenvery 11 1"2 recourse -'"'' the District. The ti t d 't of the "1•1 Dtstr1c1 mekes no tv•r•M••· COn ngen ere I Or Pullll\tled Or-Coe1t Delly Pilot, warre nty, or repruentetron, deceased , you must file Jen, u, 20. 21. !<ff. 3, tta 210-a . Hpreued..,. 1m11oec1. wllfl ,..."'to your c laim with the court -cOftdllton of ,.,oi-tv er 111..-u et or present It t o the 1 Pia& 1911( ~·tor ... .-or -Ho Pe r sonal representative c1atm#l"wcOllllWffftoretl9wM<• ~ adfldlmell&.or nsc.lallM ........ app.olnt.ed. ..by the-cow ..,. • .,..... 111e"4I on 1a11u... .. "" ...-rtv .. w ith in four months from ...,... ITATtMS•T ,..,._. ..... Mtttfv .. ~ 111 e11 t ol fl t I T'll• 1•11••1111 ... , .... It ••Ill ,.,.-.ct•. No rohlt'llS ., ....... T'llo the da t. rs ssuance ....._. •: o111r1ct 1M11 not • ...._.. ... ,., of letters as provided In ov•""""vsr DEVl!LOPMa NT .,,. «<kllM °' ,,,...,., ~ ,,_ Section 700 of the Probate COMPANY, "' Ofter ~ ...... ,. IM'(MMof-1'JM ..... C d f C 'If I Th _,.,.e.dl,c.t~'*I Peymt111lnM1-iee,,,..wtt11111 0 e 0 8 Orn a . e Jetwt C. ~ry, MIS K-•-ten 'telt111der deYS ett~ Mtl<e Of tim e for filing claims will Orhre, c-• Mer, c emeni•• •••r•; ollCI 1,_ 11...,c,1 ''""' .,. not expir e prior to four .-is ,.,__ '""' tM Otterld 1ec111ty .. months from the date of ,....n:-..... --.... " ceM1Ktee1 "' °" Um• 01 M t peyme111. D-11 •• the hearlnQ noticed above. .-.. c. "*Y =:''.:' ;:,.'/',.:~~·'.:;:;.,: YOU MAY t:XAMINI! ""' ......._. -",.. •1111 t11e ._..11 .. Moteo9M ..._; .,._,1,; the flte kept by the court. ~~~.~ ~ ..... c-, • w111 •• 0 1111 .. , •• •••'•"" 11 If you are Interes ted in the P,,_ :i.:1~::.-=::: :;'.:":: est ate, you mav file a .... , .... ~c-tOe1••PIM4.11...i11 -'W1M.01•"<'-.. request with the court t o o.c. •· ""· JOll. •. "· 11· MLS....., rieM .. ,.....,._... __...,., .., receive speclat notice of ( Pia&~ ~ .. ::r-.:':':c=:!· _.11 the Inventory of estat~ ,.,..,. 1ecti.n 11-. .... , ........... - assets and of the petitions , Cett ....... a-.-.c.dl. accounts a nd reports '1CTinous•utt••ss 1s111101wNU .Wl'noN -... I *'--ti 1200 MAMCITATeMC•T S.C,.....v,IMNl•Tr,..... deSCr l......, n ,_... Of\ Tiie foflowlft9 ,..,..,. It delnt (Hit Co"'"'""ltY (etl ... of the Cellfornla Probate IM111tt• •: o tttrld Code (Al JOU.Y K .. IOMT PAH (I) ...,.., ..... Or .. CMlt o.tly""' • Mitt a MAM•LLI INVISTMINTS, J-ry 1t• •• ttm ,_.. OU l•t••11c1 Perllway, lr¥1ne, w mman & Wittman, I ce11'9nlla "'" 1-----------•i · ......... R Wittman .. , .. ._111, •111 ••rt•nce • • J / Petk•IY. lrW!t, Clllferllle •1714 A torMy at Lew, 1 711 Tiii• ....,._, 11 C1Muc1" ,Y •11 lrvlnt 81vd., Suitt I, lfldl"f.._: THtlftL.. C.llfoml• tHll. Tllll ... :..-::·· ..... •'"'"" (114) 7~-ISa. c-ty c'°" tt Of111191 ee.,..,, PubUlhtd Or•nr. Coast J~ 11, iw. ._11 IFYOU _...,a Nnlee to offer or _.to Mil. Dlact .. ad 'fa tlae Dall7 Pil.ot ~:;r-··· ,, 1 lo I fl .. , II , /I I Jl.. J 2081 Son Joi<! In Hille Ro8d, -port B11ch, Calif. ~ Delly Piiot, Jan. 1 1 20r 16, "'*""" 0r-. c-o.i~ NM, 1912 JOJ-82 JM tt,a.11,P•'-1* In ... ._ ____________ .>-_ ,. t a tr a a = n re ~~~~~---------.-~--~·~-·-·~·-•,......._.11119!11 ....... ,•••& ............ ~ ....................... .. I I Diiiy Piiat . WEDNESDAY, JAN. 20, 1992 C:LASSl'FI E D 06 Fountain Valley may have the toui/hest football schedule in Orange County next season. See D4 . -A ehip-of~the ·old block That's Natfianiel Crosby who hooked career toward golf ay HOWARD L. HANDY Of .. Oelly ...... ~ There's one thing for sure about the' life of Nathaniel Crosby, son of the late crooner, BinJ and wile Kathryn and that's: the fact that he will not follow in his famous father's footsteps as a singer. It isn't that Nathaniel has dltrerent views than his father or that he feels he must make It on his own. It's simply a case of not having the voice to sing. Nathaniel did inhetiLone..J.rait !tom h is fatner that will r e m ain with him t hroughout his life. He is an ardent golfer a nd bas already achieved greater success on the Un.ks than Bing did in his career that ironically ended on e golf course in Spain. _ Nathaniel, at age 20, defeated Fountain Valley's Brian Lindley in the fi nals of the U.S . Amat e ur cha mpionships in San Francisco in 1981 1 over 36 holes of match play. THE CROSBY SCION didn't forget his match play victim. "Br ian will play in the National Pro·am in Pebble B~ach in February," Nathaniel said recently. 'the youngest of t he three Crosby children, Nathaniel says of Lindley:, "He can flat ~ult. He looks so ~ood over a 6-foot putt, it s fantastic . Until the last three holes of our match, he was 12-for-12 on putts or 4 to 8 feet. . "He was driving me crazy with his steady putting. I was hitting the ball well In the morning round and I would have been happy to halve the 14th hole in the afternoon (he won it>. "I love m atch play, though, because you a re never out of af!Y match until it 's over." the University of Miami (Fla .) junior says. to take five years to finish.'' the political. science major says . He Is In his third year rt1ht now. . "I will be 22 when I graduate and then I will malle a decision. When I get to the point I know what course I want to pursue In life, then I 'll know about golf. "Golf is very Important and means a lot to me. It bas given me an opportunity to meet a lot of people and my father made a lot of friends through golf. - «"But right now I view It as just inother door that is open for me . My education comes first and I believe that's the way my father wanted it to be." YOUNG CROSBY gets a bout 3,000 invitations to play golr in a year and ad mits the number h as inc r eased tre m endously since he won the U.S. Amateur title. Bing was an ardent-golfer but not in a class with the pros as far as score is concerned. But he did love the game and was the founder of the National Pro·a m event at Pebble Beach where Nathaniel has taken over as tournament host. "I learned a lot from watching the way my Dad handled pressure," he says of Bing . "Not necessarily on the golf course but in everything he did. ·'I think most of the ltiings I learned from my father came from watching him. His style was modesty in pandling people and I would very much like to emulate him in thavesRe£1~" YOUNG CROSBY is looking forward to competing with the Miami golf team again this year but admits : "I was going to red -shirt this year but after I won the amateur title, I didn't want to let the colletie down and not play this coming season." · AP ........ While golf is an important part of his life and has been since he was 8, Nathaniel has his priorities well in hand and doesn't figure to even think about playing on the pro tour until he has graduated from college. "I DEFINITELY don't want lo be a gray haired man thinking I didn't learn as much as I could,'' he says. "I will definitely graduate from college. I figure ON RIGHT COURSE -Na_ptha niel Crosby. son of the late singer. Bing. is enjoyi ng great s uccess on t he links t hese days. He won the U.S. Amateur c hampionship last year with a victory over Fountain Valley's Brian Lindley. He qualified for fo ur professional tourna ments including the U.S. Open which will be played at Pebble Beach in June this year when he won the amateur title. He will play in four college tournaments this spring .in addition to playing on the Miami team, will go to England for the Br itish Amateur and will decide on others later. READY FOR ACTION -Lc>s--Angeles DodgerS" firs t basema Steve Garve~ shows he 's r eady to play as he limbers up by swinging a rew bats before ente ring the batting cage at Dodger Stadium r ecently. The Dodgers opened informa l wor kouts Monday. The World Cha mpions will leave for Vero Beach, Fla . Feb. 24. -McDonald rllay he the best kept_secret at UCI Coach Mulligan says the 6-8 forward could be better than Kevin Magee -if he wants to be Ben McDona ld may be the best kept secret on the UC Irvine basketball team. And, as far as Ben McDonald is concerned, that suits him just fine. UC IRVINE on e turno ver or less. the n I'd be happy." If it sounds lik~ McDonald expects a lot from himself it's because he does. ' . pass, McDonald is jusf'the opposite. Of course,· you can carry ~omething like that too far, too. McDonald isn't a publicity seeker. In fact he will usually go out or bis way to avoid the timetight. That's the way he is. JOHN SEYANO "I haven't been impressed with t,lle way I've played yet . But I'll s tart having games like that soon," he says. Although Mc Donald hasn't been impressed, NBA scouts have. More than one have come to a UCI game this year In averaging 11.4 point s while shooting 63 percent (68-108> from the floor , McDonald is only ta king an aver age of 7.7 shots a game. ·'I may be hurting the team, too, by doing that,.. admits McDonald of his low shot total. "But I don't know." "I told him next year that he would be on the cover of the m edia guide,·· recalls UCI Coach Bill Mulligan, "and he tells me. 'Coach, I don't want to be the star, l just want to be one of the guys on the team·.·· According to McDonald, he wants it to watch Magee, only to ask MuUigan bad enough. later about McDonald. Mc Donald grew up in t he Long Beach area and attended Long Beach Poly High . Unlike a ma jor ity or players, however, McDonald never developed an undisciplined, selfish style. He always played a team game, whether it was during games. dur ing practices or just s h ooting a t h is n e ig hbo rhood playground. McDonald is a coach's delight. He's an unselfish team player who has all the tools to be a superstar . "l want to be the best and I won't be "We're in Montana," says Mulligan, satisfied u nt i l I am the bes t ," "and I have us in a delay game so we McDonald answers forcefully. "It's just can work for the last shot. Anyway, I'm a perfectionist. I go home after every time Ben gets the baU Magee is every game and I tell my girlfriend that one·on-one underneath the bask~ and J don't think I played well at a ll. She Ben won't pass to him. "He has as much ability as I've ever coached," says Mulligan of his 6-8 power forward.· "He could potentia lly be better than Kevin Magee . . . I just don't know bow bad he wa nts it.'· always thinks I do." ''FinaHy, J call time out and ask him McDona ld 's criteria for a good why. 'Because you didn't say to do performance are high. that,' is what he tells me." · "If I play good defense," he explains,. To say 'tcDon4ld is a team player "g' '. 9-plus rebounds, pass off for six would be an understate ment. Whereas "It's reaJly tough for me to pla)' in s umme r ' leag ues (a trad itional s howcase fo r ind iv id ua l talents) because I'm just not like that," says SHUNS LIMELIGHT -. UC I rvi n e f o rward B e n Mc Do na ld doesn't wo rry about the lack of publicity he r eceives. ass1 :ts, get 18 points or mo_r_e _a_n_d_h_a_v_e ___ m_o_s_t..,J?_la_y~e_rs_look to shoot first and then <See UCI, Pace DZ> Denver gets 140; it's barely eTWugh DENVER <AP > -Wh e n Denver Nugget Coach Doug Moe says he was happy with the tempo of a basketball ga me, you can be sure it bad more baskets than an Easter egg hunt. The Nuggets, runaway leaders In scor ing in the National Basketball Association this season, poured in 140 points Tuesday night. But Denver's run-and-gun style has its price on tbe defensive end of the court and the Nu11ets needed every one of their baskets to beat the_ ~1.0s AngeJH Lasers Hc>:'l"'B. ''I like the te mpo we'r e playing at right now," said Moe. •'I gueu you could say this was a big one for us. When you're fightlnl for a playoff spot like we are, every 1ame ls big." .Alex Enallah, the game's hlth -acorer wiUa a poin ... m8de the final buket for Denver with 41 seconds left when his layup 1ave the Nuueta a 140-137 advantace. Jamaal Wilkes aconct with 27 seconds left for the Laken, and tben Denver dld somethin1 uncharacteristic, allowin1 the 24·second clock to expire without cettina a shot off. -"I dkln't want ua to shoot unU1 there wu two or three secondl left cm the clock, but J dida't want a 24·HCODd vtolatlO'!! either," said Moe. "1 n,und u we not wilb oae or two Meondl left, tbl aame would Just about • be over by the time the ball hit the rim a nd they grabbed a rebound." The Lakers got off one more s hot, but it wasn't a good one, with Magic J ohnson missing from three-point range at the last second. Los Angeles came from 19 points behind in the third period Super Bowl turnaround! to gr ab the lead at 135-134 when PONTIAC, Mi c h. <AP) Michael Cooper scored with 2:57 Because they have both been left. . t t I U'l th The Lakers' last lead came cons1s en os~rs un now, e when Norm Nixon hit a jumper S ~ n . Fr ~n c 1 sco. o..,-s and t-:55. -sut-13' seconas -li\ef.--Gtnc1nf!Bl Bengals-ronnr lnto Kiki vandeweghe ga ve the Sundays Suepr· Bowl as two of Nuggets a 138-137 edge. the '!lost anon¥mou~ teams in the h1story or thlS series. De.nve r us ually r elies ~n Their national expos ure has Endfth, Vandeweghe, David b een limite d at best and ThOlnpson and Dan lsael to Cin c innati line bac ke r J im carry most of the scoring l~ad, LeClalr knows why. but playmaker . Kenny fl!HS "Not many people like to look scored a career-high 27 polnCs. at 4.12 tellms on Monday ni1bt "They got the ball out to me football," saJd LeClair. and if they do that, I can do · Or 2·14 teams, either, for that something with it in the open matter. field," aaid Higgs . "Most of the The Denials were 4·12 three year I've been trying to set g\O'S years ago and repeated that up, but I love to shoot. Scorinl record lwo seasons ago. "Bad," bas never been a problem to admitted LeClair . "Really bad." me." T he 49ers, however, were Besides English and H11p, Denver had three other playen finish at 20 poi'nta or better - lssel wtth 2S1 Thompson 21 and Vandewe.me 20. Kareeni Abdul.Jabbar, Cooper'. and Johnloo led.the La.ken wtth 22 polnta each. worse at 2·14 In both of thole seasons. Lollng, it seemed had become hablt·formlng for bottt franchises. "It '1 hard to come In week afte r week and loee week after week," said LeClalr. "But loatn1 rs just like wlnp.lJ:i1. If you""atart Clee llJPD, Pap DI) ~eutral sites for playoffs? Only if Rozelle comes down with a case of frostbite It is a tribute to. the genius of National Football League comm~sioner Pete Rozelle that quite some time aco he arranced to have Super Bowl Xv1 played indoors at Pontiac, Mich. You aee, the year of our landlord 1982 turned ·out to be a time Rozelle would endure much heat a bo ut cold weather. The arctic episode in Cincinnati wherein the Ben1al1 froze out the San Diego Chargers or the championship or the AFC bu brought renewed demands that such crucial events be sta1ed at sites where reasonable conditions can be assured. This issue la belnl raised around the la.nd, the moet passionate cries cominc from San Diego. Naturally, one wooden if tbe outcome had been revened, would CincinnaU hue acreamed bloody murder that the AFC till= ab~ld have beep movea to Oie LOUsiana SUi e. ANYWAY, &OZELL£ WILL bear no further complalnta about the weather unless the snow removal problem is such that oo one can get to the Silverdome to stage Super Bowl XVI. As for movina important 1ames to neutral sites bleued with decent weather, Rozelle dances around tbe issue each time an event of consequence ls played under deplorable conditions. If be were honest, Roselle would admit be would much prefer to see crucial contests played wbere some of the artistry of tbe game could be )ll'eHl'Ved. Tbll would be one reuoa the Super Bowl bas never beett atqed in Bu,ff alo. For Roselle to move a title aame away from a town wboee team ia a priDclpaJ would result in much wrath comtnc down on tbe commluloner's office and tbe complaint would not be wlUtout aubataace. After alli tbe fai&M\al ol a team sutler the recutar aeuoa n lood weather and foul and probably deserve to wlt.n.. tbe decldln1 of a cbampionlhlp. Al IT WAS In Clnclnnatl, Roatlle was eoafrontecl by an lntereetiq ded91on. It was SPORTS COLUMNIST BUD TUCKER m e ntione d to the c ommissione r that the Bengals-Char gers thing should be postponed lest li ves be lost in a cli mate where the wind chill factor dropped the temper ature to 59 degrees be low zero. ln comemplating this decision, the reaction of 'the population or Cincinnati was the least of ~e.!.s-concema. Pet• wu~the wra'ut of the NBC television net.work which is a hell of a lot more important to the NFL than the emotions of any one city. Purely in the interests of gridiron culture and r efinement, it would seem sensible to play a conference championship game under condiUooa more desirable than In Cincinnati Jan. 10. But any move to have important 1ames played in, areas of ple asant climates wouldhave to be acroa ' the board, so to speak. That is to say, even if Loe Aftseles or Miami or San Diego were involved in the cbampiomblp came, they would have to·play away from home at the neutral site. You can imaae the reaction of the Dolphins, with a record good enouab tb live them the home field advantace. belq required to play in Seattle. IT WOULD SEEM, for tbe tJme beinl at leut, that warm weather teams will have to flnd wa11 and means of contendln1 with cold weatber al•dluma. To betln with, It mi1t1t have b.&,.d lb• Char1ers to travel to Obk> early ln the week. If notblq else, lhey could have llood around ln t.be cold 1etunc some idea of what wu ln •ton oe Sunday. ) 0 0 • I -·· • OrangeCoMt DAILY PILOT,Wednffday, January 20. 1982· li)liliiiiilii __ iiooiil .................. ______ molll"!.. ··~------------------------------.. There's foul play going on somewher~ LOS ANGELES -Followers of m Los Angeles City C0Ue1e basketball enjoy the aggressive style of pJay . exhibited by 6-6 forward Kevin Gaines. · Opl)OSing-coaches, on the other hand, find themselves In 1t quandary each time they come up against the sophomore standout. Take the recent Los Angeles CC-Rio 'Hondo game played here. Gaines, working hard underneath the basket as he always does, had already forced starting Rio Hondo center Lenny Cirter to the bench with three personal fouJs in the first four minutes. Next up--to try to guard Galnes was tbe Roadrunners' top scorer -Uikl Niko. But Niko didn't fare much better, collecting his third foul with 5:28 left in the Cirs t half. So, Rio Hondo Coach Bob Bland decided to put reserve forward Rick Lavin on Gaines. Like Gaines. La.Yin is a big, power forward who likes to be in the middle of the action. 'But in less than 31h minutes, Lavin was back-on the bench -and not by choice. He rouled out. Lavin picked up his first foul in less than a minute after coming in with 5:28 remaining. The call -a double fouJ against both Lavin and · Gaines for elbowing. . Still in his first minute, Lavin is caUed for a an offensive foul. Back down the court toward the Los Angeles CC basket, Gaines and Lavin are again tic.keled with a double fouJ for elbowing. That's three if you're counting. Los Angeles CC then inbounds the ball lo Gaines, and g_uess '!Vho fou!§ tUm? Thal's four. H's back down the court toward the Rio Hondo basket, and with 2:20 remaining, Lavin fouls out on an offensive elbowing call. Offensive elbowing? Now for the irony. The Roadrunners still defeated Los Angeles, 68·55. And, ·Gaines fouled out with seven m inutes left in the contest. Quote of the day Paul Westphal, veteran NBA guard, declaring that he was ins ulted by a .., Buffalo, Montreal end up tied . . . Man N•• bJaated bll tM ~ 1aa1 olt.M ...... at I :• oltMtllinl ' period, boolUn• MontreaJ Into • l·I U• with Buffalo to blabU1ht NHL action Tueaday n11ht. The t1e Jnapped a Hven·1ame wlnnlna atreak for the Sa.,,., EIMwhen, . . . Perry .....,... scored on an individual etrort midway Lhroulb the third period to break a tie and alve •St. Loula a 5-4 dtclalon .over Vancouver. The victory pulled the 81uea lbtb a llrat.-place t1e with Minnesota ln the Norris. Dlvlsioa . . . 8rlaa p,._, ac:ored on a power play wltb 12 :04 remalnln1 to lift PhUadelphla lrtto a J.I Ue with Que~. Sikma leads Seattle to narrow win laek 8lk•• scored 28 points, m lncludin1 a 10-footer with seven second.I remainlne. to atve Seattle a 91·91 victory over Cleveland to hi1.hli&bt NBA action Tuesday. The victory was the ei&hth straight for Seattle, wbUe Cleveland fell for the loth time in Its last 11 11mes. Elsewhere, Jolla 1 Drew scored 26 polnta and Eddie Mm• added 23 as AUanta foucbt off a ' ferocious Portland comeback and defeated the Trailblazers, 112-101 . . • Guard Deula Joluuoe led a balanced scoring .attack with 21 polnts and Phoenix used a stron1 second-quarter efrort to defeat San Antonio, 108-96 . . . .,_ny Bird scored 39 points and hit 18 or 24 shots from the field as Boston beat the New York Knicks, 111-107 . . . Houston's bjg' men, Moees llllaJOM and Elvia Hayes, combined for 48 points and 30 rebounds in leading the Rockets to a l.20· 112 stroll past Kansas City . . . Adriaa DHtley scored 42 points and Ricky Green added 24 -all irl U!e secon<LbaJr -1l.S Utah rolled to a 123·117 victory over Detroit . . . Artls Gilmore scored a game-high 27 points and grabbed 16 rebounds, and David Greenwood added 22 points to power · Chicago to a 110-100 win over Indiana. Schlichter receives a hefty payoff Olympia Gold BQwl officials Ill confirmed they pm a steep price to . Ohio Slat e quarte rback Art Schlichter to play in last week's all-star event in San Diego. Schlichter received two automobiles, one as1 an inducement to play and the other for being named the game's _most valt111ble player. Officials agreiia to-Schlichter's r terms only after BYU's Jim McMahon d e manded $10,000 for an appearance ... Thor Edgell, who attended Edison High and Fullerton College, has signed a contract with the Detroit Tigers, who made him the 19th pic k in the recent winter draft. EdgelJ, a right-handed pitcher, was ass igne d to the Tigers ' Macon, Geor gia Class A ....,., __ ·~---~ontnct-offer-ot S20Ct,OOO-per yut from ttie Hiliat ... Fr~Fagent 'outfielder Regoe Jackson is scbeduJed to make a decision today on.his future home. r Seattle SuperSonics: "I don't want to sound like I'm cry ing about getting $200,000, because I realize there are a lot of people in the world who are out or work. But I think in today's market, I'm worth more than that." Television. radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO : Basketball -New J er sey al Lakers, 7:20 p.m .. KLAC (570 ). Sea View logjam gets· busted CdM, El Toro stay afloat; Chargers, Vaqueros victorious The logjam atop the Sea View League standings became a little less crowded as the four teams tied for the lead played one another Tuesday to highl ight women's high school basketball action. When it was all over El Toro and Corona del Mar were the two schools left standing as the Charg~ crushed Costa Mesa, while the Sea Kings handJed Estancia. Irvine whipped Saddleback in another league matchup. Here's what happened: Coron• del M•r 50, Estencfa 39 The Sea Kings, S·l, got 17 points from Lisa Greenber~ and 11 more from teammate Cindy Kendall as they blew open a close game in the third quarter. The Sea Kings , who led by three at the half. improved t heir margin to eight. after three Basketball scores cce.r SoC•I COll9'R fl, PA<ifl< Chtllllen 73 .. , ... H•w•ll ff. Air Force 411 ......._. Arll•-70, ..,,'°'SI Rice ... Teat Tedi S7 Tea .. MM fl, SMU SS 0•. s.uei.m ec "'11.-1.Jttlt Roo, ............ ....... Oavt0ft6ll, Jeney City 54. •1 Vtl,_.,_,o_ .. Valtler ...... Trl.0 St .. .0 ... Falrtlel4 61, Army SI ,._,,Merrit 11, Olclllft-S'I L• Salle n. ,._ 7S L9"0 1-U. "• 54. Fr•"'b· H. Y. II M•llflat-74, Y ... •s Temple 11, Merl st 72 ,_ T•("'·~.,,F.,......,.TJ c.nt.,..,., 1i, NW L.oulsl.,,a 73 !( .......... ._.,..,,,,Ille 71. AIMeles ;,. A<llon .. Community coflege .~c:.ec.......e..c. Goldeft West 6'. Rio Hondo 62 c~ 11, S-• -.Ka u n oo East LA'°• LA HMtior 7' LA~ 75. LMA'*'*' CC 14 Htgn echool women S..V .... L...- COf'ON cllll M¥ 50, E-la Jf lrvlMW,~112' El Toro '5, Colte _... .. ..... L.Mtillt EdllOn .o. Wftlmlmte< :II S...CeeetL .... O•n• Hllh SS, .......... h«ll 0 ~ -jl&l!J~.ro . llllJ Piiat Classif·teds ~ ~ ·10 8~ Spyder. Neet9 minor eng\ne wo~· i..oolts nice. p.\). 51 · ~.()000. ''Sold first day to the first person that called .'~ g~tI@642-5678 charge It~-by phone From South L•guna I North County 0811 540· 1220 toll-frH. I quarters and_ the Eagles, 4-2, couldn't get close after that. Estancia was led in the scoring column by Chris Mac Millian, who tallied 20 polnts. El Toro 65."Coste Mesa 46 The Mus tangs were just overwhelmed by the spectacuJar performance of the Chargers' Robln WOMEN Holmes: who poured in 31 points, including 22 of the team's 31 in the fh·st half. El Toro is now S.-1 in league, while-Costa Mesa slips to 4·1. Nora Seager led the Mustangs with 12 points. Teammate Vicky Lamar added 10. ~ Irvine 54, Seddlebeck 29 The Vaqueros evened their league record to 3·3 behind the shooting of Kim Oden <17 points) and Lisa Slessman (12). The Vaqueros took an early first quarter lead and were never headed, eventually building a 21-poinl lead after three quarters. Edison 60, Westminster 28 The Chargers stayed unbeaten <3-0) in the Sunset League chase as Kim Tanabe scored 18 points, tutting nine of 11 shot attempts from the floor. ,. Dana Hiil• 55, Lagun• Beech 45 Trailing by as much as 14 points late in the second ball, the Artists got as close as four before rading in the end. Dana Hills evened its record at 2·2 with the ;ictory. Rancho San Joaq11111 Golf Course PRO SHOP SPECIALS DEXTER SHOES Suaoested Retail: -1'()00-7fPO LA MODE QUAUn ·CASHMEREl.ON SWEATERS Ltt Trevino Ranlnasaubs ....... .,,..., ,_ I ii ts•... 5319" ''""'. ·~ 11J.M ·. ·. Al s49ts ....... ,., ...... ,,,, .. - 111-1111 -- a a 0 3 3 -· ... WHITTIER -Darin Bowen, Trulett Hatton and Art KJne comblMd ror 51 pointa to lead Golden Wett Collete to a .... Southern Cal Conference basketball victory over hOlt JUo Hondo here Tuesday ni1ht. The· RuaUers, who Improved their conference record t.o 2·3 C 15·5 overall), led from the start. They built a 42·28 halftime advantaJe and then bad to bane on down the stretch as their poor second half ahootln' Ul per ce nt ) allowed the Roadrunners back ln the ball , 1ame. Actually, the Roadrunners, also 2-3, had a chance to tie the· score at the end. With GWC leadiq, 64-62, Rio Hondo bad the ball with 16 seconds remainin«i. Workin1 for the last shot, Lance Curtis tossed from 15 feet with three seconds to play but was wide of the mark. Bowen gathered in the rebound and was fouled. He sank both tosses for the final marein of victory. Bowen finis hed with a game-high 20 points for the Rustlers. Hatton had 18, while King added 13. For the Roadrunners, they were led by Bill Denton, who fin ish ed with 18 points . Teammate Uik1 Niko added 14. The Rustlers' next conference meeting will be at home against Cypress, which is undefeated and atop the Southern Cal Conference standings with a 5--0 record. Tipoff is scheduled for 1 :30 p.m. sec survives unusual day LA MIRADA -Brad Carson scored 20 pojnts and teammates Mark Roche and Rick Porras added 18 and 17, respectively, as Southern California Colle ge s urvived an unusual day lo defeat Pacific Christian. 81·73, in llb'n-confe reTice coflege basketball action Tuesday. As or 3 o 'clcok Tuesday afternoon, the Vanguards still didn't know where they were going to play Pacific Christian. SoCal offered Pa c ifi c Christian the use of its facility, but was refused. Finally, the game was played at Neff High, which was closed down by the school district this year. There were no locker room facilities, no showers and no training,· room. It was that kind or a day for SoCal. The Vanguards virtually led throughout the game but couJd never put Pacific Christian away until the waning moments. Newport Christian defeats Heritage Scott Kilpa trick scored 12 points and Brian Schreder added 10 to lead Newport Christian High to a 37·22 Academy League victory over Heritage Tuesday. The win improves Newport Christian's record to 2·2 in league, 5-8 overall. Heritage drops to 1-4 and 2·7. I LEADS RUSTLE~S - Forward Darin Bowen scored 20 points to Jead GWC past Rio Hondo, 66·62. From Page 01 UCI •.• Mc Donald. "I have to force myself t o play l i ke that <one-on-one.) "I don't even like playing al the park c lose to m y house because you rarely get anybody to play te,m ball. Everybody would rather go one-on-one." Mulligan, ln fact , wishes McDonaJd would do more of it - and he doesn't give the green light to too many players. "He still doesn 't have a complete green light. But we want him to 'do more things," says Mulligan. Strangely, in UCI's only loss this season to Arizona State, an experiment, in whrcn-Mulligan moved McDonald to point guard, was fingered as partially reponsible for the loss. Mulligan, at the time in dire need or someone to bring the ball up lbe court, turned to Ills sophomore, who he feels is his best athlete. to do the job. The m ove didn't work out as planned, however, and has since been put on the back burner with the emergence of Kevin Fuller. ·'I coulcUlave played-guard if I had a littJe more time at it," 2 2 22 loa'ln1. lt ... IN you fiDd way IO.e every week. And lf you a wlnnln1, you find we11 to every week. This year, wt ways to win." Wide receiver Isaac C like LeClalr a veteran of l ea n d aya i(l Clnclnna remembered tbem. "We had a problem," be 1 "We couldn't get it toaetber. was as ll the bottom had fat out. We couJdn't play with consistency." Unless , of course, y cons ider losing every we consistency. San Francisco ·tackle Ke· Fa hnhorst struggled through 49ers' 2·14 seasons. They I some scars. He rememberd t season's opening game aga D etroit in th e Ponti Silverdome, s ite of Sunda game .. "When J ran out on the field saw the Super Bowl sign in 'Cl>rner Of the Silverdome," said. "I thought to mys 'Wouldn't that be neat? Tog the Super Bowl.' But I di think we'd be there." That was understandable. 49ers were 6-10 last year, sa as the Bengals . When Fahnhorst trotted out the field fo r his team's fi Super Bowl workout this w he glanced up at the sign ag And h e s miled . Li ke t Bengals, the 49ers had f ways~win. What the Cincinnati and Francisco veterans remem most about the lean years is instability that s urrounded th teams. "We had talent but we w not getting mileage out or i Leclair said. :·w e needed so direction to turn this around." BengaJs Coa.cb Forrest Gr, provided it. In San Francisco, Fahnho re mem bered aJmost perpetu rebuilding. He played under fi coaches in his first five seaso Kings have to settle -for a tie insists McDonald, who made the I NGLEWOOD <AP ) _ R switch on three days notice. "It Aaron Broten scored with 2: was like I didn't know where I Was t.bal night. It was like 1 left to play after taking a p ·rrom be hind the net fro wasn't 'playing basketball. I was teamm·ate Dwight Foster to be in the Twilight Zone instead." the Colorado Rockies gain a Actually, it all worked out for NalionaJ Hockey League tie wi the better. Since the loss the Los Angeles Tuesday night. An~eaters have strung together The Rockies pulled to a n other ~ode st four-game one goal or the Kings at 6:26 · strea.k, making them 1~-1 overall the final period when Kev (2-0 m confe_rence> with. PC~ ..__My«well beat Kings goalie contests. a.gamst the UmYer.nty Ke ans from 10 feet to cut o f P ac1f1c a nd Utah State Kings' lead to 4-3. ' Thurs.day and Saturd ay , The Kings were le d respectively. defensman Larry Murphy, w "I'm reaJly not surprised at connected for two goals durin what we 'v e don e ," says four-goal outburst in the s McDonaJd. "We basicalJy have period. the same team from last year so The Rockies whose record we should be twice as good." their last nin~ games is o r cou r se, that's.. what · 0-7·2. jumped out to a lead l : McDonald expects of himself, into the first period on a 45-f too. shot by Da ve Cameron. "For a guy to come in like he Bob MacMillan gave Color did as a freshman and do a good a 2-0 lead with 2: 11 left in job, especially after the way opening period when he ~ some freshmen like Stuart Gray pass from Don Lever fr and others are playing this year, behind the net. you truly realize how good The Kings got their first g' McDonaJd is," says Mulligan.'· 2:38 into the second period "He's done more than anybody Alan Hangsle ben deflected expected he would." pass by Rockies goalie P Except McDonald. Myre. C.ollege basketb.all JOHNSON &: SO Presents ... ' INg Sky Conf=~· ._ W L P'Ct. W L Pct. I tNt1o 4 0 1.000 1 S 0 1.000 BolH St. 2 1 .6'7 t 1 .$62 NeY.·R-2 1 ... 7 t1 2 .715 l~SL 2 2 ·'°°II • .TD MoftlaN 2 .m I 7 .~ ~St. 2 .m • 11 .151 Wftltr St. J 2J9 10 7 .• N. Ari-t J .000 • 11 .tt6 ~ v ... y Conte,.~ ceiie .._ Bradley T111u llllftols St. Wl<llllJ SL HewMukoSI Cr9'91110t! s .1111....i. Oralle w. TeusSI. lndlena St W L ht. 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TMI "' ICM OMS A 0 WAIMNTT OH~~ Na •ll~OJ MQNl.t& i--ttm--nc;.,;aij~M.LlolfoOIWMIOl tN NOllllMl ,._,....CM Ull. CWWMO 'ml Wiil II~ wmt ,_,. ... MONnU AOMlMIHT OWIOt IAllO ON ~ llWNO PllCI R 'ftMI Of l'UllCMMI. STANLEY ASSORTED COLORS EIGllE El AMEL •or eeo l"'o <0tMrt whtrt brvshts con't reoch. ~ .. .,,._ loolt WYT01 •• USI IA. FUEL LINE GAS FILTERS KHP DtlT HOM J YOUI CAllUUTOtt '>"••Gloubody ~ ........ ~, .,,t.pect-on . :::t.3t1 ,..,. IACI '')' \ I SCREAMER ·· IMl•GINCY POCID OR NtSE SIZE SOlllC AtA~M Orange Co~t DAILY PilOT/Wednesday. January 20. 1982 •• 11 STYLES TO CHOOSl flOM DRESS -UP 1 •• YOUR CAR , .. lltduces '"'ol<e ond blow· by, .,;th noiiy eng;..,. 11.ducft oil "'i~. l 1 ~·. BARD AHL TOP OIL V Al VE LUBRICANT SAVE s40oo SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU S U N DAY Se habla espanol COSTA •SA Fll.LERTON GARDEN GROVE LA MIRADA SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER· 2946 BRISTOL St SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 549-1533 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. PHONE: 870·0700 10912 KATELLA AVf. l<ATELLA & EUCLID PHONE: 638·0863 14207 ROSECRANS AVE. 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 944·6437 PHONE! 547.7477 OPIN MON. THRU FRI. I A.M.·9 P.M./SAT. I A.M.-6 RM./SUN. 9 A.M.-5 P.M. 11 15221 BEACH BLVD. PHONE: 893·8544 ~ IM Orange Coat DAILY PILOT 1W•dne1day, January 20. 1982 • FV: toughest .football schedule • ID CIF. Marlaa ll11h'1 Vlklftl• VeAlured to HawaU 1 .. t ·------------~~-..­tau ln football ud EdboD Kilb follow• this year, tn add1Ucm to 1eheduUn1 8aDn1nc Hlab of San 'Pedro for an Anahelm Stadium abowdown of SQ,cath~~ SeetJon and Loi Ancelea city powera. But for sheer •treAatb ol ac:Wul•, you have to hand It to the Barom of Fountaln Valley. They either have no fear or don't know who to schedule ' PA!ftPOATS ROGER CARLSON ln order to preserve a decent record and/or aanity. say the Falcons didn't boDor Lbeir commitments Coach Mike lllllner and bia erew have put with lower level compeUlion. to1etber t.be ultimate oon-leaiue acbeduJe -st. The toutChett schedule in the CI" Southern Paul, Servile, Mater Dei, Foothill and Lone Beach Section? After atl, once the Barona are flnlsbed f oly. with that, they 10 into Sunset Lea1ue action and ii "It's just toulh findin& 1ames," aaya Milner, the rotation continues in the same format, they'll who will be starting his fourth year at the helm in open with-Edison in Week No. 8, then meet Marina two weeks later. ,September. "I haven't seen others' schedules," say11 "They're the only schools that will play us,'' Milner, "but this one's tou1h enou1h for me." he explains. "Others just laugh at us. It's the same The non-league sequence bas Mater Del at for Edison. Oran1e Coast College, followed by FootbUI, then "Really, I'm just tryin1 t.o nu the schedule." St. Paul at CerritOf Colle1e, a home assicnmenl A scheduling conflict for EJ Toro with rival, with Servile, then Long Beach Poly at OCC. Mission Viejo forced Fountain Valley out of its -came with EJ Toro and Lakewood, tired of losing,~ simply dropped lhe Barons. Santa Ana Valley, also a 1981 opponent ror Fountain Valley, was dropped by the Barons, who CENTER OF ATTENTION -San Francisco 49er quarterback J oe Montana is interviewed by reporters during a oe~~anf~ote thi~ * * * EDISON HIGH HAS three straight Saturday assignments lined up 1n non-league play. After the Chargers start early against Punabou of Hawaii, they'll duel El Dorado, Vista . ..!" ....... week in Detroit. The 49ers get together with Cincinnati Sunda~ in Super Bowl XVI . and Banntn1 on 1ucc .. 1lve Saturday nl1hta before taking a bye prior t.o Mater Del. * * * OCEAN VIEW HIGH'S basketball pro1ram will conUnue t.o be one ol the focal polnta this summer when the Seabawk1 play bolt t.o a 18-t.eam tournament (late July) ln a pre-tournament before the big one at Arizona State <formerly at Provo, Utah ) for the summer clrcult. * * * A SPalNG FOOTBALL coachinl clinic is scheduled 1t Saddleback CoUe1e, an ei1ht·weelt session slated to begin Thursday and running the followina seven Thursdays from 7.9 p.m. A one-time registration fee of $5 is required. and omong the speakers will be F.diaon Higb's BUI Workman, Marina's Dave Thompson. El Modena's Bob Lester, Foothill's Ted Mullen, Mission Viejo'• ,Bill Crow, El Toro's Bob Johnson and the Saddleback College staff. SaddJeback assistant coach Bill Cunerty is runnintC the show and it's beine presented at Room 304 behind the gym. It's open to anyone interested in football. * * * FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S Matt Stevens and Greg Bolin are busy looklnc things over at Washlnaton, Stanford, Artaona State and UCLA amon1 othert for their colle1e future. Bolin wu a standout U1ht ead who m All·CIF honora in Division 1 by the narrow• mariina, while Stevens, a quarterback with All·ClF credentials u a junior, ncu ... to laave quite a coUe1e future. • And, there's another Stevena on tbe Fountain Valley campus. He's Brett, a junior up from tM sophomore team and he's a quarterback, too. He'at be dueling Dale Frye, a senior, for the starter'~ role. * * * NOTES AND THINGS -La1una Beac Higb's volleyball pro1ram is beine taken ove totally <boys and girls> by aw A..._, who led th Artists to the boys' CJF 4·A title a year a10 ... Former Westminster High JV coach Jim Keatin is the new varsity coach at Ocean View, replacin BUI GI.._. . . . aoa Smelber of Servile Hllh wilJ be the North coach in the Oran1e County All·atar football game at OCC June 28. He'lll use hia o staff for assistants . . . Ttm Deveeey of Sunnyt Hills High klrned the offer down because o personal eommitmenta ... Tbe South coach, as reported earlier, is Bob Let&er of El Modena . Wes tminster High bas scheduled SerVite footbalJ for the 1983 non·league season. Uni's dynamic duo meet again Friday Plumer, Barrios head area entries in Sunkist Invitational track meet Po lly Plumer and T eresa Barrios are at it again, and this lime they're in some pretty respectable company. University Higb's dynamic duo or distance runners takes its act to the Los A.ngeles Sports Arena Friday night to compete in the Sunkist lnvitaticnal Track Meet, one of the premier track and field events for high school athletes in Southern California. P lume r a nd Barrios, both coming off strong cross country seasons and both recognized .as being among the top prep distance runners on the West Coast. will go head·to-head in the girls' seeded mile run, making that one or the featured events or the high sc hool portion of Friday 's meet. The race is scheduled to go off at 9:39 p.m., one of 45 events at both the high school and world class levels. Plumer, with a best o r 4 :46.7 , is the pre-r ace favorite. The Trojans also figure to be strong in the girls ' two·mile relay. with Laura Sauerwein, Judy McLaughlin . S usan Armentrout and Melissa Partin HB hearing on illegal recruiting requested The Sunset League has requested the Huntington Beach Union High School District t.o conduct an independent bearing regarding all charges of a recent undated and unsigned letter charging Edison High School with illegally recruiUng athletes and grade fixing. "Edison High requested it,''. says Marina Principal Dr. Paul CLASSIC AUTO INTERIOR • Interior Detailing Berger , who was the chairman of T uesday's hearing at the league meeting. "The Sunset League feels the best way to bandJe it Is through an independent investigator. ''The next step is for the superintendent (Jake Abbott) to pr esent the request to the Huntington Beach Union High School board on Tuesday night for their decision." • Antique Restoration 5'= .. SPICIAL: RegaJite Convertible LIA1'm . Windows '6S-for woa making up the squad that will go up against a tough nine-team field . Irvine and Fountain Valley are also entered. The ·boys' 60·yard das h should be another or the top prep events of the evening. Ocean View's Rex Brown. with a best of 10.63 in the 100. will be up against. among others. Kevin Willhite from Rancho Cordova Hi gh in Sacramento. Willhite is a versatile a thlete who is regarded as one of the nation's top college football prospects. Ar ea athletes will figure heavily in the boys' r-ated mile at 6 :43 p .m . Frederick Hesselvick (University), Mark Mc Master <Mater Oei), Gus Quinonez <Huntington Beach) and Mark Howard <Costa Mesa> are a ll entered. Mission Viejo's Steve Kerho is favored in the boys' 60·yard hurdles and will also be competing in the boys' 500, making him the only Orange County athlete entered in more than one individual event. Fountain Valley's Rod Emery is also entered in the 500. Other area athletes are: Leslie Pratt (Edison) and Vicki Kelly (Costa Mesa), girls' 880; Kyle Morton (Westminster) . • Or~inal Matchups ~ Meet cars. 3CM2 c-t Hwy., Dana Point (714) m.9121 "Start •dint •• fir '12" INIOll. MOW · c .............. ,,_ "-,,,.._ . JOAfiRllA~O F1 .. . COUltSE FRIE lESSOt'IS with PURCHASJ OF 12000 DISCO·JJMT RAM_&-···CARD ' f'reietit thit acf and·recehi9"3 Fr 1 Trevino 81111 ~n you enroi ~To lwol CA 5Jl·ll22t ' 7 7 7 7 ' RACQUETBALL · Plus 2 New ProcJNtnl 557-4401 N..tl.. Aerobics FllM11 & Conclltloel .. * MUTm110M COMTIOI. • • • MCUDI • HMelAU. * YOUIYIALL . * S~~ 1600AD~AYI. COSTA tlllA r 3722 722 302 2 a a 2 boys' 880; Robert Planta <Mater Dei l, boys' rated two·mile ; Tanya ·Ransom I El Toro>. girls' 500; Kim Oevitas <Edison ) and Claire Feit <Mater Dei ), girls' rated mile ; Bo b Erickson < Fountain Valley>. boys· seeded two.m ile and Ned Mosher (Fountain Valley> a nd Cyril Oblouk <Irvine). boys' seeded mile. Relay teams entered include: Mission Vidjo. boys. two.mile, and Costa Mesa and Corona del. Mar in sepirate sections or the boys' mile. Th·e meet begins at S p.m. with the women's high jump 1tnd is scheduled to run through '10: 17, c losing with the community ~ollege mile relay. LAS VEGAS <AP) -Former World ~oxing Association welterweight champion Thomas Hearns will m eet vete ran Marcos Geraldo Feb. 27 in a lO·round ·middle weight bout, promoten said . w. Sii IEPIRT \¥~ I --------- OUTSTANDI NG VALUES! ltl2YW OUANTUMW~GON !i ·spd. trans. air cond, · ~ette seats. radial tires end morel (Stk. :a9). (004796). a SOUTREaN CALIFOaNIA a.ow ... /laclael Ceedt&tou Snow Summit 18-36 pp/hp Snow Valley · 8·12 pp Goldmine 24 ·3S op CENTaAL CALIFORNIA June Mountain Mammoth Mountain China Peak Dodge Ridge S4·77 pow/pp 100 pow/pp 49-e& pow/pp 48· 72 pow /pp Ufta/clilaln FO 6C 4C FO ro ro FO ' NOaTHEaN CAUFOaNIA Mt. Reba 86-126 pow/pp 6C Sierra Ski Ranch 101 pow /pp FO Heavenly Valley 75 pow/pp 21L Tahoe Ski Bowl M·l.32 PP FO Northstar Sl·lJO pow/pp FO Ski Incline "6·58 pow /pp' FO Squa,, Valley . '8-132 PP 21L Ml. Roee 15-123 pow/pp FO Donner Ski Ranch 102·1"6 pow/pp lL Alpine Meadow• 90 pow/pp lOL Boreal 120·1"6 pow/pp 4L Conditions: hp -bardpack; pp -packed powder; pow - -pew4efo,. - - - - - - - Lifts/chairs: L -Ulla; C-chain; FO -f\all operation • -. a a a 0 on m ' \ Utt Mee SI Z.1»65 Dhumit $1470 I SALIPllCI 5 10595: scaa~co _ C'o u pe . 5 speed tranamlNlon. metallic paint, rear wlndo~. , wlper/wHh•r, all#Y . wheets. *'90 ~ and morel (Stk. 3235) I (017Cl. NICI: .. s·10 ·495, ,. i'\ n "· 11 ., II .... •• ,•I J, ,.. : ' ~· 11 ., ., r. (}. ll I • .. :~ 1• ,. .,. ,, I r. , n n G .l l i I I I ~ >· NU ... .,. .. CC*,.H .. c• .... Dtv ..... • L P«. u... 1t " .'11 SMttle ,. " ,., l"llMftla n .. .'22 Gelde11S1e• ti " ,,.. ~ JI " ·* S...DleeD 11 11 ... .... Div .... SMA111eftio u IJ ..... Deft~ 21 " .w .......... " 21 .4'2 K•-Clt't .. ts .3.ff Ulall u ,, .JSI 0.11 .. ' 1t .ta eASTa• .. COltf'elllNCI ....... l'NIMelphla W1J11"'9tlft -Yori! _J.,..,, A-....COlwlt ... W L Pict. ,, ' .163 26 12 .... " " .. " 21 .4'2 " n .•21 c-•o,,,iu. ,. u .... .. I • • • 16\IJ •\It 1 " " IS , 10'.'t ,. .... IJ Mllw-• Atllftt. llWli. ... Clll<l90 Detroit Cleveland 11 It .500 1 " JI ,..., "" 1• n .oo 10\.'J .. u .... 11 1 31 .... " ,_,..,,_ Otltl!V HO •. ui.en tJt Boston 111. How Yori! 101 All1111a 112, Portl-101 Saattle",C.....,_t1 ClllcetD 110, lfldlaM 100 Housloft 1211, K-Clly IU Utall ID. o.troll 117 .._... ..... s.. ._ .. ,. • T......-ao- H-JwllY 11 L.--. lftdlaMlt._ .-0111..,,, at Pllll.,.lpftl1 Seattle II WMlllllQIOll Mllw.,.• 11 Dalles Sin Dle9o 11 Golden St.te Nuaaet• 140, L•k•r• 139 LOS ANa~S -Ram .... 6, Wllkff It, AMul·J eMNir n , Nl•on 21; Joll11Mlft n , c-..r 22. McAdoo n. er-o • .>or-. 11. ~ s. Tot•ls,. ... IJ •. o a•Vlll-E~ a. V.,1411••9'• te, IHel U, H. 21, Dun11 •. ThomPMlll 11, Goftdrnk,k 6, Hordgin 5, McKl..,..y •. Rociw 0. TotalUl 11-20 140. ~.,o-..... LCK Anveles 31 40 ,.. J3 -,,, Denver JI 43 33 1t -140 Tllre......,.I _, -.>oro.11. To111 louts - lot ..,....., 14, o.nver 15 Tecllnkels - Gondrezk• • .-1.J111C1er A -u.tn. COUEGE SoCal 11, Pacttlc Chr. 73 soune1 ... 1 CAL COl.LIOI -Plul<Nr '· PorrM 11, coni 5, c..._. 20. Roelle 11. H--·· MorWftWll 4, R-4<k 2. Touts: ,. 1)-2011. .-ACJf'lL CIUUITIAN COLLIOI - rWlk•ll-t•. Chris.._ U, Duffy 10, Lalk I, Patrk k U, Rk ... rdtofl 2, Miiier t . T-ts: ll 1 .. 13. H•lftlme: ~n c11 Colle91, J1·U . Total fouls: 5oullle'n c11 Collete 1•. Pacific CJw1RIM D . Foulecl out: WHefleld I Pac Ille Cllrlsllanl. Mi iier I P a c Ille CllrlstlM l. Lelk IPacllk Cllrlllllftl. COllMUNITV COLLIGI Clo..._ W• 11, Rio Hondo a eoLM• WHT -..__ II, Devit 1, ...... •• .,_.. .. """ II. OWMM J. T ... lt: H~N'6. ......... _ ......... 0--11.~ t,A ...... 1.~t.J""'-•.Cwtl•t. T ... lt:•MU. HelftllM: ~ -.... d & T ... llWl:O......w..tl•,llle.._,.t•; ........ ...., Acl9fft.I Ill le -.1. CertH l lt .. H-). l«Mdhem Cel Cont•r•nc• ........ ._.. W L W L , ... ,.... s • ta s ,.,.,.~ • ' ,. 1 LASou--... J 2 t t I HI LM """'" J J It 10 Gelde11w..t , • , •• ltleH..... t J 11 t LMA .... i.cc ' • 1 tO LA H•rlllOr · 0 ~ 4 t• .. .....,..0-11:•1 Cypreu .t Goldell WHt R lo HOllllO et LA Hertior LOI Aneetff CC 11 S.1111 -10 LA SoutlNIHI at EIJI Lot A .... IH HeGtt SCHOOL NeWDOft Chf. 31, Herttea-32 Me91fMa -Tl4 •, O.Vrlea ti , Hllfore 2. Ale•wmr•. St. Clalrt. Touta: 1u.1012. ••W..ottT CM•llTIA .. -Howenl 6, l(lljMltrkll ti, Scllr'edltr IO, Ciiiey •. l(nlft 3. 'Tota la: 11M37. Sc_ .... o-Nn Her1t1oe • 10 • 12-.sz Hewpon Christian I t • t•-31 Total loui.: Herll•t• u . Newport Cllrlsll111 II; Fouled out: Aleunder ~ IHerltetel. HIGH SCHOOL CtF renldng• PM. T_,__ 1.LHewaodl11•1 1.e ..... ns.o - >. Slftla Moftlca C 12•3) •.c ,.....1i.21 S. LOft9 9aecll Poly Cl~) 6. Vertlufll Del 11._.I 1. MllllUft 1'4-ll L llolllftlHNIS (ICM) t.Oc-vtlw llH) 11.1.,.-...m .1 -I. It. a.n-e (IHI 2. Sift OOr9DftiO 111•> J,l.._..(1Ml •.H-115-tl S.C-•Merl•Jl 6.LosAltos(IS-41 7.lll~""'Vll~l I. •osco Tecll llMI t.Jolwl W.N-11~1 10. WHI Co.tlNI C 12•S) ,,. t. •re•-Otllldl Cl .. 21 1. La Sima 111· 11 3. lur"""'"' 111Ml •. Victor VllMy llWI 5. Sift C...._. 11._.l 6. Celllonlla 112~1 1. L...-Hiib 11»1 L IU9Nt11111·31 t.LIH .. 8'(1~1 IO. H191tes 110-11 1-A I. Sa11i. Cwa 111MI 2. Wllltt!KC"'1s11M 11 .. 1) J. 8•"'""9 , .,, •.St. JGMtlfl CINI S. CM'PI~ 11 .. 11 6. Perris (11~) 1.~(l~ll L T_.,... P-(1M ) •.c......,,...11 .... 1 IO. Ou-11~51 ....... ~ '1 ,. .. u SJ ., • 11 II " " ,. ., u ,, JI 2' JS tt " " 1S 62 .. SI u 21 " s " .. ,. ., S1 a J3 21 20 11 1mn. M, S.ddtebec:11 21 •• .., ... -se.a-.. u ........ 1, I(, 0... 11, Tr.-11 •, I!. a..i 6, ....... •, .._, •. Prueno, T01a1a1 H•1'M • IAOOLeaACI( -JellllMft •. Aual I, Mc:Olftllla II, MIKlllt .. 11, Hovell J, Terr-. I. T .. e la: II 1·2t 2'. aa.....,-...... lrvlN 12 II IS t•-4>1 S.odleMck I , • IO-lt T•tll leula: Irv .... 12, S-1-<k tt; FeulH .... ; McGlllftla ISMdlallec:kt, Aull ISICICllMIClll. Hovllll l~lll. Pruett llrvl1111 . El TOfO 15, Co•te M•H 41 •L TCMtO -Holme• JI, DeMi.n I. McGiii 2, Oewreeua J, Cl•rll 11, •alley o, Harris 0, -.-.iy 2, CMl-r •· 1(.,..., 2. EerteyO. T...._:2'1-ttU, COSTA MelA -Lua 1, Lam• 10, NM1 2, S. ... r 12, Garcia t , A .............. 11 J, M<A- 2, Price o. lllShHierOH I. Total•: 16 t•lt .. k _..,0..""9 El Toro 1' 12 I• ,..._., Costa Meal tO 1 t• ts-4 Toi.I IOula: El Toro 11, Coll• MIM 12; Fouled out: Garcia IColll Mewl • Edison IO, We•tmln1t•r 21 IOllCNI -Krupka 6, HOllll 12. Tret>I 11, T lftlh 1e, am ..... 2. uc111-2. °""" •. LO$aato2, Cltff3. Totels; 21 ..... WISTMINSTtEll -,.......,., •. Gutllr~ II, S<llle .... 1, Joftes 2, ..... '9cl 0. T-ll: 11 M 2t. ~..,o-.... " Edison 16 11 Is 11...c • Westmlntler • 10 1 1-21 T Olel touts: EdfsOll 10, ~Hlmlllster I . D•n• HUI• 55, Laguna Beach 45 OANA NfLU -Hoolll1eft 5. Erl-4, L•rton •. Mlall 12, H-n ti, lrlflll J, Cllrlsley S. Totels: 10 1$-21 U. u•u ... ••ACM -L-"· M<K-1. Kuyper 10, Smltll 6, Rotllllll •. J..,..._ o. Totals: 11 .. 1145. k-"a..""' D1111 Hiits 10 U 11 1'-U L19U111 BMc:ll t t I lt-45 Total fouls: 01111 Hiii& 11, L-lllCll U; Fouled out: Leeds ll l(IUlll IH<lll, Mc Keown CL111un• Be•clll. JOUDllton IL•oune llM<ll). Men'1 tourn•m•nt l•tO...,.ja. •reutl 5eaM II-s.._. Tltomll Kocll del. Pll D .... re. '"4, ... ; VIII Wlnllsh def. Alltel Glme1111, ... ,. 1·5; Mlftuel ~lftlff def, J evler Rntr-. '"'· ... J, PIOIO Arreye def. Piie< Fel(ll, 1·S, ... 1. •·l (Felt! wl....,,... bec-ol lftJury). 1 Women'• toumement l•ttMttle) Sec-•-11 ..... M•r11111 Havr•lllo.11 del. 1(1t11y Horvelll, •·•. •·'; Blrb•r• P oll•• d•I. P•m T•llU¥deft, •~. M ; l(lm SllWb def. Julie H1rrtntcor1. ..... '"4; RO! F•lr111ftk def. L.N Anl0fl09'lt ... ,. •·1: Vlr(llnla Rullcl def. Pel Medrldo, .. J. •·l, Sylvie H..,lk• def. H-S..kOVI , ... ,, '"1; W-y Tumllull cllll Aftft Klyomur• ...... '"'· ,....,.., LOUii def s.. Betker ... ,. W . Orange Coat OAtLV PILOTtWedne'<lay, January 20, 1982 ... Colleae...-n uc.,..l;OWllMMw 1 ' ....... . IC ....... IUCfl _,, Orey, M , M ; .... Mffta IUCfl Wf. 0.-1•1•111, M , ... ,, o.i.-CL)-.. .• .,....,._.,, ..... ;Me llllffn IUCll .... "-· U , M , '-1; N'-IUC.Jl ........... W , ... I; Kallf IUCfl etf. • l'IMatll\. ........ . ........ M.,lrt•M 'l'•t1 I UCl l ••I. Gr•Y·Dr .. «1<:, ........ t ; ICMllllll>~IWY IUCfl •et. O•l•• .. ·llau, t •I, 6·•: e111 •1•·l a rr1 11 0 IUCll ••I . ... ...................... . Lo•Alamlto• TUHOAY'S•HuLn , ................... ••arterlMte ..... , Pl•ITllACe.•y..... 4 Tr .... ~ICM-al 6.20 4.40 UO Tllt~l""--l 14 .• 7.111 Atore (HM't) 6 •• AIU flCN : A·Clll rlOllH •119, A<I Qul<llty, A·~ Sia, Klpa c.matot, ..... , Yo11ft9, Ollle 8 Olcll, Toula Hot Tollty. A-(OUjllM, Tlme:lo.S). U eXACTA IM I INkl •t0.00. le COMO •AC•. l10 ywds. P~Pltrkll lAdeirl IUO 1.JO UO WlllttlM llacMt CC..llllOI U0 4 00 Oii Mlto ICMdlNll UI AIM raud: Bet Y-Wiiiet, S..CklM 0111eer, ff-ure HUQ. Im• Wlftftlll Polky, v •111111 Fll4r. Time: 46.66. THl•OllAC•.ayerda. Me Clllrollle l.Adelr> 71.IO tt.20 t .20 Nev.., LMnll IHart) •.oo uo HnaftftlCB¥dl 6.40 Alto raud: Miio Nlunnle, SllreWd H Rkh, FlftCy Safi C..C"'1. Nesh Tl-, Go 8-Go. Mllll Pu, R1911mH. Time: JD.a. U eJtACTA Cl-101 INklUM6CI. f'OUllTM •ACI. 400yerdL P ..... lom I IMllcllelll "'° 1.60 I.to Sir Ll•ft Gem CWerd) t.IO 4.60 Trell11 ICardOul J.00 Alto raced: Elt<lloft Dey Too, w • .,..., .. llus, Klft .. Rkk, Clem-.. WoulllSt Ed OrlftO, No Jet Bues. Tlme:20 .... '2 ••ACTA IMI ,..., 1ui.oo f' I f'TM llACIE. 5JO Yerd•. Jolln Miio (Armltroftt) 11M 16.00 t.JO lu• An A<M IBlnll J... JAi Prl11ceC-IP.u!INI 1M Alto raced: Jell 0 Luck, z.-. 8umfftl Sun\/llM, T-n Aftd 81<k, ~tr-er TO<tto, llt Wltlll, Im Y-11oo9Mm111 Tfr111: 11.11. U eXACTA IH I pelcl $311.00. SfXTM ftACl. l'° ye<ds J-y ICre .... I 42.00 IUO 1.00 Oii My T .. Oii CClrdo .. l 11.00 LOO PrkMOfQwll llJK1'ey1 i.a Also rec:ed: Flutter By T-. llOMl<h Roc ket, Belle Our, Euy Allvll Ann, COftlftM J~ Bold Rllvtlln\. Fl19 RIMr. Time: 11."4. llVINTH llACI. 400 yerds, Tlllftll A Mite (Purdom) 1.40 4.40 4 • ..0 Cley s_.v-ICar-a ) ll.40 1A Kluacllk I Bard> 1.10 Alto raced: Matitruis Coclv. Miu Ciiio• Polley, Gollk1,,_, NIM HIN Fow1re1. MoMI-Le flue, ~ Merl!, Oree...,. Rell. Time: 20.44. U IXACTA IH I peld'11t.40. U PICK SIX CM ·1· .. J.t) peld .,.,a5.00 wllll MVlft wlMlnt llcllets (four "°''"" SJ Pk k Sia GaMollllorl peld Mt.to wllll 171 wlllll1"9 lkkll• I-........ , etOMnt •ACI. 110y- R-ll~ IWercll 6 20 4 40 JM Wello C Hertl s 10 100 Tiie T-CF,.yl •.to AIM rte .. I OelMy Duck, "91111y'°lt .. , MaktA ......... °"°"•Mrllacy.-. , ..... :-..... . ......... aaai .• ,., ... TllePlalllAiMltl l.• IAI t• Hltttll"I .... CCI~> • • JM A..J•AteCall ller4> lM .... , ... I Call •i.e. A·T-0 T-o,., Of .,...,, ...... y T ... •wt, 0• .... ........ l'aey .......... 1 ....... , ..... A-<ewMf. ""'•: tt,tll. P eXACTA l ... l ,_.. tllM, Te•nt •ACe. 4tO yerda. l!l lley9-1Har1l uo ...... K-CMIM ,.,_,, •A Mt K lt1 C'*'9f <Cnatiat' > 4M AIM raced: ,...1,,. 5-ltkle, Tiie ...,., My 0 141 0.1 NM<y, erlrllllllllH M..,, flecllum lec:k Jecll, Twke Ill Tiie -..C.. True V Ml fftl, Tlffte• 21.11 • eLeWelfTM •ACl. IOOyanla. T .. 0 119-lllc:keyl 1.00 S.20 4.JI Mia Cllk ICrNswl 10.. tM Clewet Mell IAdtlr) IOM Ahl rece•: G•llk•••wld<••· l •YH Oer11t111tw . ,l(lutalea Potale. O. T'-• Me11, Mr V.,_, S11owum ~el1y, WreftOI All .. d . Time; JOAJ. U I llACTA 110-1) .1>11d SIOUO. A lletldlllC•: 7 ,IJI. NHL CAM ... ILLCON~llleNce Edm0<tt011 C1l9ary V•n<ouver " .... CIMOredO SI l oul• MlllNMlte Chlceoo Wlnnl"9 TorOftlO Del roll , ............. ..... W L T Of' OA .._, 21 11 t Ut ltl ~ 11 20 10 "' 207 .. u n 10 '" 11• 40 u ,. 1 112 m :a 10 10 , 1n 21• 11 .. ....... 0,,, ...... 22 JO • 116 , ... 11 "14 IM U1 • 11 " ' 1'1 202 .., ,. 21 10 ,,, ,,.. 42 u 20 11 • '" 205 •1 U U I lS4 ltl M WALIS CC*f'llllNCI P*kllOM.i.. Plllld~I 2r U 2 I.. IU ti HY ISi~ U 12 6 ID 1'7 S6 NY R ..... ra 20 It 6 lM 116 46 Plt1Sbur9'1 " 1t 1 1n 111 .s W1\/lln91111 12 » 1 I.. ltl JI .-. ......... 8tlff1to ....... Qwlle< Mo111re11 H1111ord 11 II t ltt 140 t.J 26 " • 1• , •• 26 " • 211 "' ,. 22 II ti .. IM t6 10 2A 10 1•1 "' JO , .... ,..~ COIOrldD • K ..... 4 PlllJ1oelpN• 2, Quetw< 2 Bufl•IO 2, -..r1112 SI Louis 5, V911eouver 4 T......-•o-IMtonetP~ OU.be< at Hlr1fo<'cl HY isi..,.,..1tltY ~ Clloary .. TorOlllO Oelroll al CN'- WHlllftlllOll 11 WIMl- SI. Loul111 E-lon Mlnt11$C11111 Coloraoo Kl"9• 4, Aocklea 4 Sc_..,_ ~lnl PeriM 2 0 2 -• o • o-• t. Colorldo, c-on •. (Myre), 1•57; 2 .• Coloreoo, MecMlll•n U lleverl , 1:4'. Plll8111ff Le,,,,_, Col, 2:21; Ma•-· C04.•·H . T~l.LA,5:3' --~ 3. Lot All(ltlff. Hllftt!S'-2 CTurllbull), J::it; 4. LO! A .... IH. Murplly 12 CTerrleft, Foat, •: 56; 5 Los Anoeles. J1nM11 S (Hlft9S ...... Smlllll, S:22; 6. Lot A ........ Murplly u (Fo.. Mulvey!, 1S:OS PeMltln -l •r-<. COi. J·GI. C-0..,, Col, melor. 6:U, -..V. LA. rnejor, 6:lS; Nk04....,, co1. m!Mf..,..lor. n·os; H--"· LA. mlnor.,...jor, 11 OS nw. ....... J.. ( .... -......... ' (w..IMI), •1•; .. '919t .... .,._ I ff'eMM, MMMI, 1J1ta • ........,_._..i,.A.NI. ...... ....... -~ ...... , .. ""' ..,.....11 ... , ... 0..11" o.i.r•. 1111-. LM .,........ 1(-.A-t.ltl. Meft'eeocc:er M .... ICMOOL 0<1111 V._J, Ellf_, I D<Nft v...., ac.,lfte: Ourtlfft 2. Orr. Edlaonacorfftl: Gr-. F-llltl Vllley 4, Mat'l111 2 Fou11t•I" V•ll•Y scor1111: J e11H11 I, Ntuy9ft,$Mltll. · Marl•HClrlfto, K,,....,Gr-. WHl.......,2,H ............. 9Mclll WH ........... r KMlftl: V.W, o....,m- HU11tl ...... 9.cll 1C.or"'9: -· Women'• M>CC•r MIOMSCNOOL EdllOft •. Wfftmltltler I Edison uorl11g : W•lullk, Wl11kler, Hlr1ll110, 1(110tt. Hu11ll"910<t 811<113, Merin• I Hunt1n91on Be1c11 .corln9: Spencer 2, Rollft. M•rl111 acorl"t" Plt1&er I. o .... HJll\ •• L..-..... 0 Dlftl Hlllt acorlftl: Hel1men 3. Tllomet O . ' Tueadey'• trenuctlon• lAH•ALL a-k•L- CLl!VELANO INDIAHS -S(ftled Tr~y ~cllol•, -!elder. end 1ul1,... lllm to W•llrloo o4 ... Midwest Le-. W• ...... Re11 Prulll. catcller, lor Ille .,.,,_ o4 9lvlno him hi• un<ondlllon•I releaH. DETROIT TIGEllS -Welved 51•11 P.i. llllle ... r, for Ille _...,. o4 111•"'9 lllm Ills ltft<ondllloftel ,. ...... KANSA$ CITY llOYALS -Tr•-ICM Pllelpa, first 1>e.wm111, to llM MoftlrHI Eapos lwOrlftl Jae•-.. P•l<ller. MILWAUKEE BREWERS -Slvned - Yost. <ate,,... -.. lrouNlrcl etlcl Me,.,,,... (dwerft. outlJeldltil~ -Et.-.. OIPffte l ftd Rk llDfMll, DllC .. r~ MINNESOTA TWINS -S19Md Mklley watcller, outlle-. 10 1 ..,...yeer c1111recl . NetieMILe .... PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES -Hlmed T.AnY Sl1911 eat<ullve Htlslanl te Ille orf,1det1I PITTSBURGH PIRATES -Signed E- Cuet1, pllc,,.,., *"" Oout F.-1. outfielder. •ASKIT•AlL N.._.. ...... I A-lltt. CLEVELAND CAVALIERS -Acllwetlcl SGott W'*'-. ton.wd. W•,.IKI oo.. Ford, lorward. MILWAUKEE BUCKS -A<ll••IH JUftior 8rld .. men, tor••rd11uard. Pl1c"9 Mike Ev111s, (IUlrd, Oft Ille lnjurlO<I llSI COLLIE OE 0"10 STATE -N-Oomlllk C-• •ftd Fr.a p-aulslant ,_.,." COIClleS. PITTSBURGH -HlmiO<I S.r•fl110 "F-" Fer lo lleed ,_., COICll. TEXAS A~NI Fired Torn WllMltl, - looU....11 co1c11 N1mec1 J •<kl• Sllerrlll •llllellc direclor •tlcl llelO 10011>111 coecll At the Pilot, people make the diff er~nce. • • ' . people like these in our production departm~nt . Without production cr ews to assemble all the stories and photos like pieces of a puzzle. nf:wspapers would never make it to your doorstep That's why our production crews are so important to us. They assemble all the stories. photos and ads into a "m aster" newspaper on cardboard. then transform that into a plate ready for t he presses Working around the clock seven days a week under constant deadline pressure .. our production crews have to piece together as many as 96 pages in a da~ That requires teamwork. They might not get their bylines in the paper. but they take pride in thei r wor k, m aking sure every column. every picture. every ad and ever y h~adline is in place. Getting good people who enjoy their work may t ake longer and cost more. but at the Da il~· Pilot we know it ·s worth it because people do m ake a dlrrerence. "The Pilot has a nice atmosphere and the people are altooys friendly. It's like a home away from home. We're all like a family ... Bernice Kunar, Westminster As a typesetter, Bernice is responsible for typing copy to be fed into the computer that 9et.s t-- ·· r like the feeling of accomplishment You 're able to see the finished job. and know you·ve done something." Larry Morgan, Santa Ana Larry is the day shift composing leader responsible for putting all the pieces together on the "master" pages. '"We're all under a lot of pressure because of deadlines. but we all work together a.~ a team to try and help each other meet those deadlines ... Ter i Dunba r, Balboa Island As process camera operator, Teri "shoots" the "master:' pages and p1 oe eues tile ne1atives to make the plates for the presses. Daily Pilat .. Where ~pie make the differ~nce." 330 W. Bay St .. Costa Mesa 642"'321 NEWPORT BEACH* COSTA MESA* IRVINE * HUNTINGTON BEACH • FOUNTAIN VALLEY * LAGUNA BEACH ., •• ·~ • .. .. -- OrlnglCollt DAILY PtlOTNlldntldlV, JlftUllY 20, 1112 , INDEX TtPllCeY•M,Cll &42·5&71 mSESFllW 0-11 ==--1•· llfl -•I £;-· .. ~· . ... .... .. _ o.. ... Dttre ,.._Yalloy ............. =-··"'· :=r e;: ;! .EQUAL HOUSING = . QPPOATUNITV I :: Nil..,'1 Notlct: :· All real est ate ad· ..., vert is ed 1n th is :: newspaper Is subject to lf1' the Federal Fair l:l ous· :: ing Act or 1968 which 1• makes il Illegal to ad-:: veruse "any pr.ererent'e, ~ ie.'-C.IMW-.... _ .......... ==~. ~ .... Sale u.man ~~ :: :::..~.. . = ~"'~1,U • llOO ?-,-~~'1:C1' . {f: °"61Mo·U-W... IM =:-;.=-= limitation, or dis · t•ri mlnation based on rat'e, color. religion, sex. or nauonal origin. or an intention to make any such preference. limit at ion. or dis cnmmallon." • ..,, ......... ,, . 21• =.=-1,1,·;,k> = This newspaper will not ai-a.o-n • ._. -knowin~ly accept any t:':r~~-. = adver tising ror real o.io1si......., . -estate which is in vlola a-*·'"'"''·c'"" 1110 Uoo ol the law. :!!l::: ~='·. = 1---------.-.-.--1 IElHl.S ........ ht1111M4 • ....... u., ........... ......_hn0t UrJ . ,,_. 't..,P\ln ,,..., -·v•t T..,._h,,. ,.......u., .,,.... .. ,..,.. °"91e&•U•I A,i.hro ~v.hn. Alb~0t ll•I ._. -...... .............. C-llea!t• ..... Ht& .. Votllloel-llellllls .. $Mn• :;.;:-•• ::.,"---....................... 100·2· ...... tllt.. -1Gaerd ~ll~ol i '······················· !?~ -2 IR W /VIEW llSllS$. IMSJ. UNDER S I OOK MOfT FIAlftE Condo has everything ..._ •, *' you need + great ...._ =.. '°" ,. terms·5 min. to beach ==, :: .. Ast.le 759·1221 -,1oi-. . -_,...... -. . llartl-.TD'1 -• • AlllCEIEMTS, POSllAtS I LIST& FMI 121/JO/o LOAH ew""-·,....-•tti•-•lb ~= COIOHA DR MAl Ltp1Noi-SD Large duplex only 7 I:'.!!;.~ : years old in pnme lo1·a· Soc1a1a....• -lion 3 b<!nns in each 'l'UYfl' $4le unit plus r1 replares. SEnlCES ~arate garages. beam Soni«~ -ced.ings. bit. incs. the llPllYllOIT & works! ~19.000 owner PllPAIATIOM will fin ance ~·1th 20'. s.t.iart-l'OGll dov.TI. 121 •" interest. JollWaa\..S• .197$ Htll> ·--· ... f • llOI) MEICHAMllSE =.s """""" =M•1<n1la C...raa 6 tqwp-nl c.u . Dop n .... v .. "'""-Cot ... Salt Honn ..-Good> ~tlrJ IJ•-.. _, Mil<tla.-M1l<'tll_,Wu 1M M•ut&llllllrll""nu Ollln '""'6 i!41NP .... "-•Orulll Srwuoc .. ~Ii.Ms ~ .. ~ SUrt,R_,ut,llor ~'l:..o.111n.sweo llATS I MUIME ENPMOIT .. The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 Among pt:ople look1;1g /or a rntal. 10% read rt til eatate clasaifi«J ~. Ocean & jetty views. Marine room 4 t:>arm, 3 bath, 3700 sq.ft. $1,385,000. ' LIDO ISi.i HOMIS Ptime Lido Nord bayfront. 5 bdrm s bath. Lg. _L. R. 2 boat slips $1,500,000.' Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. rm. beam ceilings, $420,000. LINDA ISi.i IAYFIONTS Main channel view from ct bdrm. 5 bath home with pool $1,495,000. Lagoon view from 6 bdrm , 5 bath playroom. dark rm, den. $1,350,000! ' CAIMATIOM COYE Spectacular bayfront view 4 bd rm, 4 bath, 2 boat slips $2,050,000. SILL GRUNDY . Rf ALTO~ 1 I 'f • J 1 ! • • t. ~ r t1 I t ! ti 1 llG CANYON CUSTOM Elegance & dignity in this Majestic Colonial Mansion located on the 8th green of golf course. Top quality craftsmanshi p thruout with finest woods. abunda nce of impor ted marble, crown moldings, 6"2 baths . air cond., 3 wet bars + more . Luxurious mstr suite plus 4 other bedrms with private baths, banquet size DR, fam rm and billia rd rm. Call for appt to see or a colored brochure. $2,150,000 including the land. WISUY H. TAnOI CO .. UALTOIS 2111S. ........ H•a..I M"EW""...,'POl._IT_ CBml. M.1.. 644-49 I 0 F\nd out about the high-!•------- earning rea.I estate sales WE 8.IGAMCE l'areer opportunit ies in th is impecrabl e w 1th T H E R E A L ~-3 Br. ram rm e.5TATERS. L1censini,c wrtn bre·a th takloi: school fees completely rmuntain and city light refundabl.e to school or view. $549.000 Good your chotce Extensive terms sales training For in• formation, c1111751-6191 Bhlfs. Lease aption. 2 br, wide greenbelt. $139,500. Bkr, 644.0t:W. -·~· PWT s.11• HOti9 Darlin1 3 BR, 2 BA modernized beach house on prestigious Lido Iale. Southern patio, French doors, warm le~ livinc Ir dining rm . Owner will help with financing. $419,500 Tom Allinson/Terry Hanes 6'2-8m (N59) MIWPOIT llACH Delightful 3 BR custom buih pool bOme. Quiet back bay area. Lg aaswnab(e - subject to loan & sener financing. Home built for easy entertaining. Outstanding value at $205,000_ Suzanne Shuler 6;'2~ (N60) IXICUTIVI HOME in San Antonio Hts area cl Upland. Tri -level with I outstanding view 36SO sq rt. 3 BR 3ba, sauna. s.145.000. Good terms. Luc1Ue B Scott. Bkr. 714/981·2011 RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES w ••• w Elegam Plan '· 3 BR 6 Fam Rm. An ~unity to own the "model home ' with Juab carpets, oak parq~et n.oo~~e!J . wall covenngs, 81.i. ~&O<> br. gua.i'd gated security, t &. pools .. "90.000 with excellent owner financmg. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 HAllOl llDGE An eiiquislte oHering. Elegant & spacious 3 bdrm + family homt.>. I lt.>V home w/panoramat· \ISL3 o f harb o r , coastUne. ocean & mght lights. Prestige, rom fort. luxury & sN·urity Reducl'd, now $695,000 (Owner rinancin~l Agt. ~S560. l-.Ctd SI 00,00b SPYGLASS IYOWNER OC'ean View S575.000 Gbr/41,.; ba. 4100 sq ft SOUTHPORT MODEL OWNER FINANCING tDCHLY UPGRADED Offer expires Jan. 31 25 Bodega Bay Call owner 759.0737 lal.ool.ac.d 1006 IYOWHU ISLAND'S MOST CHARMING SGL RES . 3 bdrm + loft. French doors & windows. Finest CotfoMfto l024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWMEIW1U MISAVHDI · 'bdrm, 2 bath. frplc. dbl fa rage A·l cond 134,SOO. bwner will as sist in rinancin& . ~McC ... lltr. 541-772' . MOYIM'OMUP Give r ourseH Mesa Verde in '82. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba home w/ma ny extras on cul-de·sac. owe lrg 2nd T.D Full price $134,500 751·3191. AHAMCEAT 12% With W i down for 10 OWNU MOVING years. 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, Beautiful. 1mmat'ulate great cond1t1on w1.th &rucely landscaped 4 Br manyextras,AIC home on eul·de-sar. s..lttd for ~CIW qtn. Spacious rooms View or Enclosed patio. corner golf course from proper· lot with RV acress. Ask ty Owner assisted in~ $117,500. For an ap· Cafinancmg Only $139,500. pointment to see, call _JI now979·>J70. 540-lls l 1 LLSTA.TE $MILLION S appointments thruout. 214 Amethyst. Open Sat Al:AL ~for Sol• 12.5 Own tagt 673·8585 ~ TORS : HERITAGE . REALTORS • 41 Linda Isle· Newport 1111!._.!!!l!llill!!!~~l!!!!lllll!!~!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lll!!!!!!!!!!!!~ S-0.S (Some one smart J Be a c h C u s t o m lcAoof'.-wlo I 007 will snap up this 3 wat er front ho me . ••••••••••••••••••••••• SI 15,000 E.SIDE bedroom 21, bath Mesa pdced far belowmarket Beaut. 2l>drm . 2•,ba. 15".4 dwn payment,OWC Verde showplare for quid sale MAI ap Slllgle sll>ry Pemnsula balance. 2 Br I Ba. oak Sumptuous dining room praisal S4 4 milhon Pt home 's eller will firs. lrg yard, needs area, fam ily room. and Red.uced .to only Sl -li fi n11-n-e~ $4 17 080 some.....I.LC.-C.url 'F-W-0 f1r-e-pha ce"l!" million Seller will t•arry OwneriAgt: 675·5d4. Herberts II, agt 631-1266 Pr of cs s i o n a I I y :Ml year finanr1ng11t 10•; --\ landscaped ya rd is Room for 3 large) athts Corona clel Mor I 022 perfec:t for enjoying the lndoor1ootdoor pool spa ••••••••••••••••••••••• <'OOI ocean bret>zes Thill with retractable roor. DUPLEX home will plt>ase even Undeq:rou nd wine SO OF HWY the roost discnmmating l'ellar Separate guest Terms i\•ailable on this tiuyers. $229,500. Call for AND .maid's quarters. super clean t'harmer IMVESTORS ashowlng979-2390 Worlds ~st romant1l· Pnt'ed nght for qui i·k Will trade equity 1n TAR llALTOlS master ~u1te o\'erlook 5 u I e . Gr c JI A 8 11 e Mesa Verde 4 plex for .....,.. MO .... "Y DOW'"' 1 ng en t 1 re harbor 1S9-l22I ' rondo So or San Diego ""' rw: " Broker cons1derat1on F\4') Bill Kennedy. agt OWC w/Mo f'y...t1 To see c·all Rick. Bkr. 631·1266 3 br. 2 ba home Lge 7t4/(60-7292 anytime pool. Jae 213·597-6521 a . If you heve just filed your new Fictitious 8uline11 Nerne end heve not yet submitted It for publlcatJon, pleH• don't forget th1t the llmltatlon 11 ,30 d8y1 from mte of flllng. The DAILY P.I LOT wUI pu bll1h your 1t1tement for ~o:~o. Our clrcul1tion Includes the entire ·-or1nge CoHt area end 1eg.1-: notJcH appear In 111 edtion1. In order to submit your statement for pubHcatlon send epproprtate topy and 1 check to lH£ DAILY PILOT, P.O. Boa 1seo, . .eo1t1 .: Mesa, CA. 92621. We11 'do the , . rHt. For lnformetJon abo'fi '9qe'1 \ ~dvel'ttll'lfl plHH call 642-4321: , Ext. 332. . TELL MORE PEOPLE ABOUT YOUR For • Ad i. W-.'1 Wortcl Two Ways Wanner Jiffy-Wrap! 7052 t,A6uB~ - • ·- =·~~ !"-'...... .._..._We ."-et .. Wt O..IM•.. -.._.. ................ , Nwftu.ha 'rt I c........ ~ij1· c;;t;:!!!!•••:••••• .. • •••••••••••••0 •0 ••••• •••••••••••••··~·· ..... •u•••••••••••••••t.?•u .......... ••••••••••••• ......... •••••••••••••• •tf•••••••••-•••••_. u f ret•1il J4JI '-................ -... ::::' ....... !!!''-........ 104lt .. flrt._. INt' ~~~ •ioo llllellllmd UM It II __ .._. JJ40Ma ••rtlNdt JJ6t ............................ _. '211lZ"abat'Clftdo.llv "•••••••••••••••••••··--••••••••• .. ••• a ••••••n•n••••••••••••••• .. n••••••••••••••••• .. •••••••••••••••••••• allltoSo.Coa1tPla1a1 •••••••••••••••••••••• dlot rm. hat ••r. ~ .... ..... .... ov~~W~WG • GIMMICKS ~;·:~g·i;;.·bld;:•· ~8R ~rr··~~n °d •, BR-J e:. lp,l 2car ,ar. Bl"'• Condo. 3 Br ur. 1 br ~:'rit~";:°'·r::-,!~~ o·r'oott!;2 ",:;,~: 'r.':: ter,...,.nu. A• .. 1,u ·a!!.-Jira.,..._. Zbdrmlna~riteleu loc Thia beauty below IQ. ft. Ideal tor owner· 111m.ril9.?u. an ('fl(' d~~~L~&,5" mo. ~n. 1 b!';.!J.7then ~2fiq;~0r768-3784 . 'Pool',....,, •. Short or · " . ..,.., Y... Slat,JOO r ~• · u&C!r Xlnt SW Santa .r-::--..,. ,....,... .,.....,,..., lona·term rental. .. • or ... ,.y 10,000. Call marteot vahk luo doubt Ana· 1oc Paui Frankll ,.~ ..L.J. M JJ"J evtw/wkndl 760 0'53 -BR l Ba MacArthur J.l.200/ Ph •.a50 IPLAIMt owner:lS2·8840484.alS8. lhebftt buy ln Newport · · n _.....,,,._ • a StDUl'I aab-%b -'../ Big C1111yon lovely Dean VilJa&e SA. Wilk to$."'°· • HUGI .... pool and Btaeh. Lovell 21ty In· 752.:5111 ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• • '1, r~ I~ built Dover model 1 Cit Plan. 845·tot5; YlllAl&lll apa, 'l'ri·lev•l 4 Br JbUl STWA YUi eldii • BR 3 Ba + tam Loh fer S. 2 200 Z Bdrm, 2 bath condo. l oc11~~~A0if'°7so.3314 •ton'. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Din inti M2 4862 Laree Baci.tJtr. Nicely fMI rm, 2ur11r. •ake Wood ' glau, ()(ean ' rm, ell!f k ltch, rormal •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• block to beach. Washer. . Rm. or Den. I Approx bdrm, 2 i;, bl.fireplace, I u r 1111 h ed. II a DY over l1Z5 ,000 at r~n yon v u1 , very dining rm, adll play lliCHILVD dryer, refr1g, 2 car 2 Stor(, 4BR . H18A, IJB>aq Ill out.side unit. 11ara1e ind carport. nlt' 5-1.U WM/mo. $17UOO. Bkr. pnvate, lots ot decks, room. 2 fplt''a, <'Overtd Locrted11 8 • pr11ge. S873 mo . forma Din Rm , Fam $1500/mo. 644 ·~142 , Patl~1. extra r klna. ame let. . 751 tnalr suite w/jac., cor· patio. Ideally situ1ted dl n &Ulna Puk &tO---".ffi.~.IW8·2966 --758-ln06. VIEw ! Cil R o n alW~A SI.I' ii'ViiWTOWnlio 2 · .$3.U..4~.A)... ont.tnhaded.-.overttttd 11 i1 .zo oc!L..t. 1 · b . frtrlr.-vauo:-Nr Bea~hsrS Brl"'1 --a:imrort51·!_57.L_ brftba.• ...__ · • Muter aultea. Li"':~.. ~~:gt. 540·3866 & lot. Pler;ity ot RV par~· ~~: ~f.~0':ctrr r1~1 1115 Fashion lishind & <X:eun. ba, 2 c:;,r, 2 blks from Newport Hts .. fresh & Brace John100111s•1 dble enc 1.,. Deluu * MIW UST1"41 * Ing, Asluna 1275,000, IU bulldable and owner will S'1501 lea.se. 61_0·1177 beach. 50/mo. 968·91_!!_ rlean 3 BR, (pie, lge o__..._, 3525 t'Olllt. View ot Ocean' tm4MfnAllA ~...... IOSJ down OW~ bal at S1900 fin.nee. Full price l.rg 38R, 2''l8A. Fum 1,£. 3 IJR, 2 BA, rlose to yard. $850. 646·1220 ; UlfwW~ IAm.ti .. n nlpt li&htt. Quiet Area J y ft&..lf •n•••••••••••••••••••• mo Unbeheveabl~! C11ll $150.000. Rm . Deo, Din Rm, bch, med yd, 2. car ear, 642-5200 ••• .. ••n•••••••••••••• Puka, open apacea. r._. ow1•... •VlEWHOUSE• 6.1H21.Sevi,S46·588l. Frple, Patio.~ Blks fr l.P~...Lmo968-1560ev 4/S-Br 2Ba.Family rm., llOHIOF M .OllO.SUl,000.ffalor Jlr2t/21N1St1t,SOO 3br,2ba.Sl39.500.Super 0<-ean. Rent .Lease lnilt 3244 Oiningrm .. lblockfrom THILUCKYFIW -' PatBauerActae73·7300 675-1771 terma.Owner,495·5707. EASTBLUFF 1400640-1484_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• N.H High School. Rent in Costa Mesa's ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-N SlOOO /mo A& nt NEWEST tated 20 Balboa lslud Water· • ~OSUIE ......... yw.. 1067 ...-ue rly new 3 br, 3 WOODlllDGE u1.~ . e , ....,.. Pn ba. 2 frplc. bakony, ... ......... Townhome I LLAG E front 3 Br. 2 S.. Yearl)' ::: C. . location. 2 ...... ••••••••••••••••• me rul·de·sar, UP· microwave, bur. 2 t•ar 3 8d roodo. ground fir Spacious house w Ith COMMUNITY 2 & 3 Br. rental fmo.i70.0l47. • •+pool. l lot. Sub· 11raded Lusk. 3 Br. 3 8a. ga r . Garden c r urut. beaut deror, lrg swlmmlne pool 3 Br 2 21't Ba. 1600-lllOChq ft or br, 1 ba, bll·IDs, patio. mil your te.rms. Must TIM.EVIL/POOL Fam. Rm Den, pool. Sl250/mo patio area, $615/mo. No 81 Family rm frplc · + pure luxury. G:srages, pr. IMO/mo. yrb . No ~·m.lt'sa~auty.Just LDvely4bdrm,3bath& Den can easily ronvert sst~an Gpm p~ts . Cr aig /Su ian 2 ~dditional utili ty hydro·tubs 1n ma ster ~646-l3S7 •~W'bish7• ed LD •nd out. !~._a_ly MrodooJ~ SMa n to4th Br. BUILDERS ,. ............... ~-3224 &1.mll bdrm s Nice I Y suite, formal dining 2 bdrm"".=-1=b::<..a :...h-ou-s-e.-Y-r-ly- "A'· .. 1.32117 ..... uuo e 111 Is· -_... landscaped , auto rooms, 11.•ood burning l ~-DOWM \ H•1'• It • I 040 sion Viejo with spht· Eileen Art ukovlch. Bkr. E ._1...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• sprinJtlers. Sl.2SO/mo. 10. •rireplaces. m1rro wave f'eb 1 S575 mo. No gar ¥"79 .... oc level yard. Wa lk lo 640 4287 ~/-CostoMno c.1 Property 2 Br l Ba OVt'flS, reoced patios & 494~ IJ1/J%1MTHIST •••••n•••••••••••••••• schools $190000 • R·t lot, 3 units, bldr's house in high lrafrir clds gardener & pool yards. Pm•ate elegant .... , ..... Jll7 M09UAUFYIMGtl ~~~LlNG ·JUST -· ' ' permit.Sellorlradefor area of' Westside Costa Twnhome 3b lb ser vice. 640 1327· b\•ing only 15 minutes ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3bd 2b 1600 r · or 3 Bdrm BAY FRONT finished projet1 . Mesa. Ternr1r ror Anti 'new r, a, 6188· Office 759·6597 rrum f ashion Island. 7 oc-.. .L.--U9 rm. a, sq. t., wtwood floors. Corner LEASEHOLD or.z 4".,7 Sh A patio. gar. Park, pool. -Ul'W't'U"' remodeled kitchen, 1/yr lot. VA/FHA welcome. L~ •'t• __ que op, rrount1ng J!£.J975/mo. 83l·9057 minutes 10 SC.:. Plaza or Yearly lease unrum. 2 old carpet throughout , Bk.r!M9-0709 Exquisite 4 BR, 5 BA. &aldersllnveslors <Xfice, Law Ofrll·e. eh' llG CANYON 0.C.Airport. Jusl l'aSI or lidnn. 2 Ba. bltns. New $1.50,000. OWC AITD for . near Linda Isle. inrludes Coron d IM 20K f Xlnt parkmi: Will dis Woodbndge. 2 stry ' 2BR, L uxurious t h r e e Newport Blvd & so. or paint . carpet . drapes. 4/yrs at $1520 /mo ARTIST ABODE. I mi to pri vate dock. 60' on lhe R3 la he / ar d sql 1 <·uss remodeling to suit ~1''LHakA. Pool,SMpa, TLennis bedroom. two baths. San D1ei:o Frwy Start· llCICA mo Cal l L;"da or Demand E. Side area nr. bear~ 3 BrSu, 2 Ba SHOK, ma in bay. SS0.000. down. pvt wbne ~~ ~°'! r0<. :~ :: Approx. 900 sq rt ex· °' e. S675 o. ease. Rkhly decorated. Mull'<! mg Ill SIOOO a month. ;\;;' Agt 675. 7060 ... S.A. Country Club. Call ~ ouse n 1·5. 20612 & assume 1750.000 al Senous princ. only By rludlng I hr ya rd 758-0l~.1.975·7~ tones. 3000 square reel 631·5439 2473 Oran11e --:.:c..:..--- Jerr (Agt): (7 14 ) gretLn.,HB960-2183' \h111-", ..... -•• 1069 12'"642·9231 owner .... '·"""• S500 t mo '5485442. UMTALS Overlooks 10th tee or Aye.CoSla Mesa. S350 Utll Pd. lBR: """3116 rw r-" -NJ"~ 77().5629 oil ..,.90 th , :.i Duvlex. 417 E Bay Ave . .....,. · -•••••••••••••••••••••S.C.-.te 107,..;_,_..D .__. -~~ -2Br,1Ba S700 g course._, mon m .LUXF. end unit , like BalboaS47.1155 ?':0l90 $149 900 NEWPORTHGTS ....................... "'i:Oft '""·2400 4 BR. 2 BA. aclults no 21Jr.2Bn $850 Yearly lease. Call new 2 Br. 2 Ba rrpl. --·~ ~~~ollfJ>J S~A . 't Two fabulous u nils. MOTHIMG DOWH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~s :%:O~o~~~1~,J·6n~~r 3 Hr. 2 Ba S850 631-7:.JO, Realtor J?:~·in~~IX. l::.aen~~r~ yrf;'\:~~s r,~'~ef:t;: Spacious 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. Pool. Jacuztl, 3 Bdrm. great location. R·2, fan· ~ew large 3 br. Ol'ean Palm Springs $67. 700. 19th "•7:0899 Le Raisor Riiy ~ 8000_ a"-. 3-b~r-. 2• • ba, ~vor)' 7 "•80 751 0796 Adults no pets 673 8955 Beautiful area. si5.000 F1P. assumable loan. tastir fi nancing. Only view lllO./mo .. MS·~ll Tum Key Ten nis Condo · 1 ~ Ranrho Son Jo11qu1n, t•ln~an twnh~e .• P(1()I, J~O". pe_ls.:_l~· .... ' ~ -'-' · · · · dn. Asking 1240,000 CaU00·9161 Sl24,900. Rbt Milliken, OCIAMFIOMT on Golf Club Drive. 3BR I i BA. uu l'lll , \'1ew of golr course. 2 ' ., .)4 .. l>Mplex"u.fwn 3600 Br 2 Ba. ~751mo, 1st. Sl~/rnopymt.PP Agt. 714/32()..9544 or 568·3llJ wallpaper sk)lli:hts bdrm, den, 2 <'1tr gar ~S750.A _M4· 44Q_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• last&S200.dep req. ~7088 3bdnn MH. sac. $15.000. BKR. · sh111glt'dext frplc• 111 )d ~ 640-5324 _ WOW!! ?Br. IBa. l·pts, drps. gar. ___ 673·952=1=----1 r.Pf '~ HnusE '·.. , .. • •r-t 00 •• Rt ALTY / BR home in pnme lor Creat1 vt fiR anri ng avail. Sl.26,900 968-6138 . 1044 ~, ..•.................. r:;y $15,000 DN W/110/o VEIALL IMT. 1ymenls S853 pr mo I, PITI. 3 8d 1'1 townhome in Woodbridge. Vacant No qual.r y1 n g necessary Ideal for lsl lime buyer or investor Ownri Agt. Ken 559·9400 Dl'~·4368 terms. Approx S850 mo p ---dbl !ar S750 mo 731 0069 Woodbndge Chateau, 2 no p~ls Costa Mesa .. M• JtZ2 1 re nt. 4911 ·1360 and ALM SPRINGS 10x48 L 4BR Ex SI I br. 2 ba c•ondo, en··I Won't last! Newport ... .,..rm uu.7~ 493-93111 Rirk M H Awni ng 5• park rg el· } l' • Crest townhouse, newly ...,.,., ""' -••••••••••••••••••••••• ----Death Make orf<'r llomt In l'refcrrecl 1111r ,woodburn111gfrplc, redec.,3br.2•,b11 Walk EPTOOCEAN. Most IYOWMEI s.t.AM 1080 96J.OOl1i • Rl>s1den11al \n·11 l'M teruus. pool I blk from lo IJt•arh. tennis, pool. Af»GIN..tsfoll,,Ushtd charmtngmoldCorona, ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ---Brand New. t'arpt'ls. lakl' rror dCl'Or spa M1n1 <wean \l\'W ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br 2 Ba rrpl(', ocean Pri•locClfiM! tO'":down.2Br1Ba ron PnCityUtc* Drapes . & Pa1n1 ~mq9973142 _ .'\\'allf'eb.IS950mo.1 laltoaPeMIMlta 3707 \•1e w rrom dHk. 111 Newport Beat•b. 2308 do, like new, lsl fir ltX· . eHll'lenl'\ <'Ondu w11h I Through ou I E' 1· q . 1 Ch Id k ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ mo Call Anthony Clirr Dr Unique 2 bdrm, pallo. S90.000 lmmt•d I kll1·hrnetle $65 ,000 Room & W1nrtow J l'ar 2 Wbdaoclwtd ....,.h•I w ~1~<' _ 1 ren -" Winter. 1 room & RA SJOO da)s &12·5757, e\•es & l 12ba.largehv1nteand ocrupanc') 014nr SIO.CXX>dn 13'. inlonhal Gar.f'm<"edHu1·kYJrd rm, en,1ugh y up· 11 bl rrom ht'h, lndr> 11o'knds63Hi630. din ar.e<i. E.:s ceUent 67.S.~,.\51.JIMlS 1 or wiU lake partner I Gardenini: SH\ ll'e , 11,raded Single story BR,2BACul·dt'·Sa<· Lr~ 6739325 -=~---Bay. Lido, Pen , O<.·tan 6420071 Oranl(e Trel'. Walt•r fiull> shu tte red. Yrd. S82S mo Kids & 3 .... Zbatla View. Enough space lo C>tlNf-RHIEstot --· ---Pets SubJcl'I lo \p I f'lreplare Atnum Near Pet.s_OK.!!t~·i818 Srnall 1 Br rurn or Un· Old COM, View. 2 sun- bwld $420.000. MUST ................ ~ ...... ·~of C~ 2550 proq1I Im mefl 01·c· Sp9o7o•I and NI" n n Is EastbluHs 4 Br, family trurrp~s.Sdtor~•t!p,":erSr!,1:8'5l'. deeks . beams. rpc. hS975d. SEE! ~-Lt--nopttry Sl250 Mo9578971 "mo o 11l'ls rm.lgc.>yard 64251til or • w ~~ " A\all F't.>b 5 Ric ar !>4Q.51.3S 979-6881 -.-.-1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · !\.'120000 ~81~ 6750680 646-1850da, ---·-ForW. 1100 &OK TOT Westside. 2 llR, I R.\, --64().-072 ME.UlaART ••••••••••••••••••••••• * * Al d~t'd .:ar. fl•nrrtl bat•k l>l'lat•hcd Home 3BR. BLVF'FS 3 br. 2' i b3. Cotta Mtso 3724 1 e,·es. .:;nr-v OCEANF'RONT Modular yard. pal Ill. wush('r 2 RA w' I am rm In den, pool. good lol' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sva<·1ous S1ud10. Frplc. SHORES Type llomes, 24 hr IJOWN PAYMENT dr•c·r area. l'Jrpcled & Unm•rs11' Park $875 SIOOO. Agt GH li31iK, CASA DE ORO Ne14 ca~el No dogs, WATERFRONT st'l·unl)'. •, m1 l'\'I IH'h 7X.eross! 15 houst>s. all tfruped.nopel),$475 mo Plus SIOOO Se<·urily. ~:C!L:!:t ALL UTILITIESPAID S485_Util d. 760·9657 5 Br. pvt tennis & pool. + r1sh1ng pier Cedar run 11~ apt c·omplex. ~·~or no 5629 ~alk 10 Pool , Pu rk · BAI.HOA 1su : 2 Hr >·rl) ' Ve!')' small <·ozy buh/gsl walk to beach. $200,000 t•ottage type. rt'dwood Paiillve l'llSh flow Call u d-I 2 BR B Shuppin11 & Sl·hools s.wo New paint <·pl~ Compare btdore you room No kitch. 3 min Possible lease option. deck. pool . .iuarllrd fordt.'tails. ~%~.~~0sl'dg~~.n~ 67~·4141 0r 8S7·2640Agt 615·4000Rod,A&l rent Custom dl.'s1gn walk to Beach. Part R&IM~ J!Qi:.s.~900.499·3816 ~brJdge ~170.5629 ~ui>er..shurJ,1 c.ondo. J\JC.f _llG_CAMlOlit cov'rd ~arage , sur· fill·7WZ~---~-=--~ lo"lO"trol....... n~ .. 1111 -~ar. pool S6SO mo Cal ~an lfome 3.000 sq rt rounded with plush CostaMtso 3124 " " ..._.. nc. 9 br. 3 ba rondo. many G:iry S49 8815 overlooking golr l'Oursl' landscapmg. Adult h \' A Car1Mosen759·1221 gale, adlls only· No [Vlf kids or pels. $450/mo Walnul Square.3 Br2b~. reatures· Pool, BBQ . rum A\a1I Feb 6 $275. £abl!!!,3,_S8006418371l SSl·3000 ament11es. SllOO Dys •--~CICh 3248 J bdrm, 2'• ba formal in.eatitsbe 1 Nopels ••••••••••••••••••••••• DISPEi.ATE ! Ea stbluf r, S245,000. Newport 8e3rh De Ania 4t2tBarrHn Pb,, lnii.t 673 3335,!.''5 645 2439 ::-?::•••••••••••••••• dining rm. wrap around 1 Br rurn from $4~ me8'iJl.AIJ • Woodbridge 3Br 2ba, I 4bdrm 2•2ba lrg yrd bayfront Park Mini Br l\ome. 2Ba. rrplr, lg illl'rtac•ular mountain patio. ja<· Pcrlel'l <'ond 36.'iW Wilson. 642-1971 APARTMEMTS yr new. Low down . as-$311'.oOO assumable 13'; t'Ond '78 doubll' wide OW of State )d Good ltK· & qu1e1 sea \lew home. 3 br. 2': With immediate· Ol· sume loans Need rast tst.642·5161; 64Q..8107 Flreplac·e. bnrk patio Prop«ty 2600 area $700 mo 673 6210 ba. 3000 sq rt Sl200imo l'Uµam·} S2200 yearl> 0.C.Poillt 3726 Bea .. ~1irul lapndf~aSped aJ $60,()()() 8111 Grund' ••••••••••••••••••••••• d)).or673 24!1Je\eb .... ,,,, 99 lease 644~7315 ••••••••••••••••••••••• !laruo:n apts oo pa. sseoc. CESSREALTV CUSTOMDUPUX 675-6161 . c••"'s•MLUC·s ~~luuj 4 4252 ---ISuperolder I Br Villas. Co\ered parking. . -"" "". arp3br 2bu.pool Sl)a. 1 2 bd h Westl'l1H 3Br. r r+sml small & ro'\, I person. Adults,no.....,s 549-799 Great location with C-. o...1<11t"JCO I ean rm ouse. '" r N t t ' ~ '''" --'---man•· extras, sur h as I re•" """" t:h arm g 0 ~. i.:ar . Central Village Sm Ol' ew rp s pain no pets s:ih & S395 I BR S435·S«O dbrdge 48R 2Ba ; Pr rf1 1600 I bdrm <·Ondo. brand 1·arpel drape), new rd ., $750 h ~c~l!9c~l·2177 493C8XI 2BR I'• BA $500 ~TOe~~~~.rbs':20::·:'n ~~~~~tst.il~n:-s.;;a~a: .. :U~J. ............ , ~· p~r~'.k~~~~~o,r, ~1:~h:~ R c.;1~';, 1~1 ~:'t1~ ~ ll98~;~!M 2.57ton1 f\~R~~.Rv~~J.~~~r ._... ... CICh 3740 ~! ~ ~fs~· :_-:~ .•Q) + Str . note Agn1s 'a1·uum sys tt>m s , ~-a\'111 al $34,000 Tt"rm~ Sles rm 11 l."t ~ .. Orll'lt'r mdl Nil( Shrs pool, tennis $82~ mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 559·8476. wk SS9 111 l fireplace. sund~·k. and .._...,~, lt.ACH a\ ail 4945778 D11rrcll dep 556 i650 houM-3 Br 2ba, l'pls. I A"' &4.5-0295 H.1.'s FINEST ~EWLY DECOR muchmore High \IS1b1h1y C 3 drape:.. \ard Gale ..'..!Q.' --1 Br gas pd. enrl gar A Ml'STSEE " <Xe.Ill' 1ew 120 fl fron !ltd l:stoh IE Side d~pkx. I IJr I l>.i. I i:uJrd 1'\r vwl. tl'nnis. 3 Br 2 Ba. Townhoos(' Sparush Estate LI\ ins:' d washer. pool Adults ~ . jlll--------1 Owner's mo\·1n11 out or lage Useex1sttng bwld I &ct.cmcJt 2800 ~1 ~1N1' rh6171d3211711~1 bt'lll'h Adlts $850 lse Park Lido near Hou~ ~ouautnd1f1ulnopsarTk·hrkeas<'~rd &t25073_ •TVITllROCK• st ate. Assumable or tngof4000sq rt orbu1ld ••••••••••••••••••••••• .., .. , mo ow 1 Owner49936311 llosp S750 mo Adults .. er • Sl27tPBMO.. 14fi•1ll~1der allt>h·pesor rl~.~sS7ql~OOOOw63nelr7w300111 I EXCHAMGOI l?b<.:RrtNTS2\l':c; Bit 2 Bn EMERALD onl)MO·-'-~sr--~lrkf.'~!e?o~~~a~~· ~e.Ji~rl~~~h':: pd 1s all Y9U pay when you lllancmg or exr ange. .. '' "· · has olfi<·espafe ror rent ~ ... rs rmn "'1 u1> RAY I st), nr bearh, lo\' AL 3br w µur opt Sp a r 1 u u s r u om~ enrl ·gar . pool. dswhr' take over ex1s1tng Isl Don't miss this one. onl) Realtor GeneTnbolc.>I •50 3Jl-1 7 cfo~ ~ <'I > S I 2 0 O m o dbl gar. fnrd, IJCI ~% Separate d1n1n1t area Adults &12·5073 • •· • ·•-•4 T.O. Spacious 4 Br ex-S340.000 Call now ror 957·4027 rRRV' rem11dl<"fl J br 213 286 1471 ~·RENTALS 750·3314 Wa I k 1 n do H' 1 s . '----- ecutlve detached home rroredt.'tails 979·537o w blx1 & pa1111, ~OW homelike kttr hen & 2 Br 1 Ba Apt r l . r Id . A Ho SAH DIEGO Co. ._. ...... ..,.. 3252 I 3 B N Sh t·ab1n"'· Walk 10 Hun• Nc·wly deror. Gas pd. ea unng orma ming, LL$T'A TE OI ••J R 11 -• .,._.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• i' r pt ores . Si50 .-.,., • enrl gar . pool, dshwr, family room & rrplc. On· I,. • .C 0 ....................... OC RENT1\I.~ 750 3314 .lll'(' 4br lba ram rm 3 f'anlastic vu 2Br . S68.5 inl!lon Center Adults 642.5073_ 'ly S2 13.~00 FEE. 2670 • s-toF. HomftfwNshtd HARP' 2UH . 2':11\ i·urs:ar.',.1e14:.nr<X·ca'n. ·r amilyhm3Br .. sooo 1Bdrmrum.S485 'San Miguel Dr, Newport REAL TORS 4 At· pnmc comm '1 lanll. •••••••••••••••-.••••• Condo .:ASTSI DE Dlll St095 ~20. -lmma(•j\mhse3Br .$1215 Sp3 aBcr·1.ousl' ·2BBar .. $41 .,~a .. LSJ9aun5· Bearh 759 ·1501 or ---Sl4S million w r xri•pl CoroltadefMor 3122 i:ar, frpk, P:i1 141 $1iN5 ---Bayfmt/dock5Br SJ250 Adults.nopets • "" 752-7373. JUSTHDUCED l<•rms R Hafdahl , 642_~2-Plus Dl•n,Luxury Homr WaterfronlHomcs,lnl· L'llh ti1·,f'rcl" c1'1'fo£d~>Ql.~·9556 • 851 1425 ~23' ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • ~ Surruum.100.. by M eXll'lln TH'~ VICTOR! N; N --$20U,000 • . i C!p1iradt'<I 2Br Zhu. yarcf. Rerrod 2 hr. 1 ltu. c.ir ('our1\artl Very Nr B<·h 611-1400 LAQL'INT>\ HEH MOSA h.· de<"or 2 B~ ~lg~: Walker & Lee Real Estate Abandoned ~ Spnlass CottdOMiftilllftS/T OWlt· c· a rpo rl . n tJ do P l'rpls <Irµ~ t'vu11h· tJn I p,1 Area Pool. Tennis 62 p k d L blk Hill owe straight note. haMsn for sole 1700 S7~ ITXl A~ 673 1181 I~ _i'lu .P<'l~ s.~~ 1;;5 lNl97 l'ouns. S950 •• • H~igbls: 3-bdrm 2 ~ ~ e!~r~. ~ bl~s ~ or ~;,· ~':r.!~.& Add~l~:s·~~~f A · 64J-22All -t;;s·~;;W~;1;i"(:~~rl;; r;0•; .._,... •CICh 3148 Ml-sa \"erdl' lHR. 2H \ 493-0!6_7 _ ~~~~c &.f.~10 mu 251 Echngl'r between l·SPM. 636-4120 TRADEUPM-Salt' ey-O~~ 2'6-ft. •••••••••••••••••.•••••• li:...Blt-~,\\.;ulf{'b Mittio9¥itfcr 3267 147-S44l 661 "G"\jr1-0rl'l 1470 u.a.nlOR RIDGE ZBA Upi,:raded ('arpels 3bdrm. 2ba, ulll pd, xlnl Isl S150. &16 I~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bl urrs. Creal LOl' & I• --•-L 37,.8 "'" r ,.. TOWNHOME DELIGHTS Easy living is lbe only way to descnbe this beautHuJ 3 bdrm. 2 ba. townhome . Take over loam. F1repl.ace. c~nlral air cond1t1 o n1n g ; climate control, ex- tensive security system Easy rare landscaping. plus a magniricent view. 1299.000. "¥"' G . ' ort'an ,.u , rrplc• HOMESF'ORRENT i Decor! JBR . 2•iBA . .....,....-CIC" • I wtU lake your current real View $85,000 IOOO rm until Junl' 30 3 Bdrms S6SO f'enred I F am Rm . SI IO 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• eqlity in trade. J BR 3ba 714·~s.7 IOI. Mon f'ri dQ.l.~334 s&-9742 Luxury studio. spa. T\', + den 644 ·6 426 , 11-5 7!!-77G-~1,3·5PM ~ ' yards &garages Kids& !.~~59~ maid sen1ce. phont's. courtesy 10 brokers NORTH WNG BEACH Mewport •CICh 316' pets welcome lst mo + Udo lllt Sll5 wk 499 2227 V1rg1nia ••••••••••••••• •• •••• •• •••••••••••• •••••••.... ~: ~ 2000 Ai:ent, no 2 bdrm, 2 ba. yearl)' Si50 ~hw-pool CounlryClubEslates UDO ISLE rharmmi: 4 Beaut 4bdrm. 2ba. rJm 646·4996 .... ri .. CICh 3769 3 bdrm with separalt New3br,JbaCondo bdrm, 21' bath. lrl! sun· nn, rrplc. dbl i,:ar. fot·d t'-wport•ocll 326' E1B1;4r 3 br. 2•1 ba. on OCEANFRON·f92•&•:•9;• ram1lyroom and bath Luxury Dttorat.or ny pallo. romple1ely up· 'rd.' u $69~. 962·219-1 ••••••••••••••--.••••••• b I ' H h A\'ll'I W1ntAr WuAkl~ S399,500 with great Extras graded SliOO mo Year----ocir.a. green el. N r 11ot ~ ~~ financing! 6:U.Q680 From sm.ooo I~ Bill Grund),_ 6_75·6161_ ,..... Vallty 3234 EAN + School. Gar .. lndry area, Monthl 673 7873 (7141847 7066 OCEANfRONT 2Br I ••••••••••••••••••••••• CITY VUS new <'rpl. 151• last, ser Want somethinJ? xtra WESTCLIFF ---bath S800 mo Rita HOMEf'ORRENT Exc•ll 4 Bdrm. ran Rds . s950 C2 13 >.sper1al 1n a 2 Br lllcome flropttiy 2000 Writer, Agt. 752·57l0 4 Bdrm Tiburon Condo t ost u· ex er II v 1 n g 556· 1676, 1114H!I'!·~~1, To11o'llhouse. rompletel} ::1. L ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----Si25. Fenrcd )ard & $1600 ,rm Patrick. agt 2 Br 2 Ba Ba~ front. rum'S89S Mo 760-9117 oreas• K d & • --Two room, two bath INCOME i;:ara11e 1 5 pets comm. bearh. tennis. SHORTTERM rondo. Pool right outside PROPERTY ~~~e':1°r!'~~1~%·r :: welrome 151 mo +dep dorks. S2000 fTlQ Aflenl Bearh rentals. 2&3 your door. Owner will SPECIALIST Waterfront Homes Inc -~2000. ,\ enl, no fre 64().9900, 675-3767 bdrms. a' ail. by week or carry 2nd. Sl29,500 with 631-1400 Dix 2 br, 2 ba. rr111r. Newport Crest Coodo. rronlh. A 675·8UQ__ 1 S80,000 a ssuma ble Selt'<'t from 3.19 units. patio, enrl gar Good 3Br, some wiocn \•lew fin8ll<'ing al 12'1<. Lease Terms available to suit area. Comp I re · WXUIYIAYFIOMT Sll50-t900mo.6JHMJ!!!__ option available with _ _. Ca Mery Village Mobile furbished· s5oo mo 3 Br. 2 Ba with boat slip. End unit , 3 BR rond o, oKNV\ down at S700 per your n .. ~s. Home Park. 2 Br. 2ba, 5:46..J429_ --f\\•a1·1 now . Ma n " t""· · 1 ..,.,.,., pool, adlts, no pets. close , grea ~atlon near h oag •J •••••••••••••••••••••• LUSK REALTY 675 3411 NO LEASE mo. • • to shops & restaurants. ~ .. 11 324 amenities. $3500 Mo. Hosp .. comm pools. *cote, Realhl. · · ' S750 rm yrly incl util. ·--r• CIC l!rolm67H912. adlls only, $800 mo & Investment · 61:773·!6185801 or I ·525· 1648. s Blks to OC('an. Elegant 2 &Jboa Island Waterfront · _ -.513CMMDa:JRvM rJ'loWWnM ™'~ ;. "' Br. F'amily Rm & Den. 3 Br. 2 Ba Yearly ren· BRr 2lulA Condo. 1---------t 640-5777 ~ ~ EASTBLUFFSHOME SllSOMo. Plush rrpls, 2•2 ta! 98!10. Mo. 770-_0:M7. -Newport Terrace. Gar. REQUIRED 1048 • 7141641 ·0763 4 br, 21, ba. view. jar Ba. Cedar & glass. sun· SPYGLASS . Carpo r t & P at i o ••••••••••••••••••••••• lstTIMEOFflaED -2925College Ave SlJS9J!!>,_640·6169_ - -deck. •d bl C'ttr prv Onan & night view, 631-5800. 645·2199. or EANFRONT Modular SHARP! Westclirr. 3 Costa Mesa . CA 3 BR 3 Ba BluHs rondo. 11.arage, fully ma int 4bdrm, ram rm. 3 car 12l3l347-~4 Type Home s. 24 hr. bdrm, 2 ba ram1ly room, "" Sl150 Dottie Johnson. y~d. Adults. no pets In· gar S2200 imo Eves BR 3 Ba Blufrs condo. S«'lmty. •;mi pvt bch small orrire. vacant 7~1966-67 6000 qmre at S27 18th St 76().()607 Sl150. Dottie Johnson. Wa:tftzld FAMiL:vArts. Sparkling clean large aplS ror ram1lies w 11or2 children. Nr park Heal - paJd. No pel.S - 2 BR. 2 BA SS2$ - ll8W .:!f.J.!_son 631·5583 2 BR. 1 BA. new!)· dee, encl gar. adults only no .. 6U-l81c.c.9 ___ _ Westside Cosu Mesa. dplx. upstairs. 2Br. 1Ba Central heat. rerng &r stO\'e, enclosed garag~. Quiet & safe No kids rA pet.s. S450 mo 548·5442. nG-5629~-· ------2 Br enrlsd garage. Adults. no pets. S5251mo . mw Wilson.631·4889. 2 Br I Ba . downstai,_ 2248 Ca n ron Dr. 2 children Ok. No pets,_ ~1rm. Sierra Mgmt .9>..:..641·924 ---- Fireplare. pool. p\·t pa110. dishwasher, on E side. all in X·lrg 2 Br. garden apts From SSM. SSl-2841 + fishing pier. ~ar Beau. yd. Owner will APPU YALUY ____ s. __ ~~ 960-6331. --7~1966.-s'JS.6000 agt SPlldoul studios one and two bedroom 80lf1· menls, FURNISHED nd UNFUftNfSHEO. , _____ ...,-WI Cottage type, redwood c arry w I s m I do T SIMhr UOO lSLE rhrmg 4Br HOMES FOR RENT -2B R Condo . Adu ll .,.. ....... , Ok deck, pool, guarded $255,000. 646·6789, • 2•,ea, ~sunny patio, 3 Bdrms. 1675.s725 Com~tx.2BA.NrHoag EIC&.UStVE OakWOOd also otters Spartling rlean 2 Br. 1 ~ Ba M911. f'enced. utils paid.· Rern1te. 2 small rbildren OK. no pet.a, ·-t~c:.it.. . ate. adtOOlts !!'~16 No 6.11·2177 ~. :t:lh4~~~~xuni~ -~-'~675~~:/mo. Bill F e o c ed 'fa rd s ' 9ZNo o, ~Ji ~la Dep. Rare~y~.~~!bi3 ·~ .. !"., .... 11·hitd1 A.Al V pt•ftW' i..==-::::.=:=::.:.·..:::...,...;.;;....::=--1 HAllOlllKf with fireplace. enclosed --garages. Kids & pets -==•*::.:.·..:.=....:' =---1 '" ..... . . ._.. '1 IA'I A Lei Assume low 1215,000 1st patio. garage. 9~% Lst. wekofne. lsl mo + dtp. Harbor View Homes. 2 model, ruU deck + water 0oo'I ia1 a ASSlfllD Pos cash flow. Now HailMtu.tw.ftlttd ~2000.A fflt oofee. Br. Den. frpk. large view. l..ge 2 BR +den, •11.-on1n '-'AUHlt T.D. al 10.3~. OWC SLS9,500. Bill Grundy, ....................... 4BR Condo. 1•18A 1625 swimming pool, jacuni. rp1c. vaulted clgs 2 car Rea111Mo11 ·~ I + blda1lte. gent· large 2nd. 3 Bdrmh. Rltr,67c"161 ft..--...1 3202 ....... •·t. t h•t •. Dep. No 2 rar •arage. private gar. Lo\•ely decor ror l!Utlil :i i-: ' a-el short 3ba+den. View, n1g t . .rv -,,., "' l.'4U • • '""'st d'•"nm'nat'no 1 •Nt"n P •.. ..••••••••••••••••••••• p-·. 7""'l633-I o c at Ion • I n c Ids ""' ''" 1 1 " And Much More• O.c.IS.... .... °"' """" ,. ... Clll = IH1l iltante rom tennia &r Ughts and mountains. ..... _. r:i 1 le-vel. szooo mo lse. A~ 0 h I .... ~ 1~ •LS .,..,cl • glll'dtner, aerv ce. _ ..,17 beach. wnr as n· ..,....._, c.M. T•.....,. R"ll t"' r.A us1ve ~ B 2"' Ba pl, Av a I I . e b. 1 5 t . i..;..;:""'-.-.·-==------- dl.ded plans for custom ,jllex.Xlntflna.nce. Yearly·Weellly·Wlnter, 3a. tenrus, set. gate. !gl250~/rm~.J':!!'O~·o:M~7!.:.·--·~ll!!l'l'!l~'!ll'I ill *175 ooo Spec -sTO •••cM 2,3,4 Bdrms. Newport "'"' bea"h .. .,. Aft 5 ~ri..I! ' · ~·---675-0073/l MS·4123 Beach•Balboa. 7U. '" · ...,.,. Bluff a Condo. 3BI\. flarel•1d J400 MISSION REALTY 1~"'-=llt•-.• JACOIS IEALTY 2 BR 2 B 1 2111BA. New C111trPalnt. ........... -. •••• ••••••' cm GorteOUS 4 br Cletliled _ ~Pim . . a, c 9se to 2 car 01r. Frplc, -. la.. Balboa. Pror dee. ... 1 home. 1 blk rrom oeean .aATDUPi.IXlt. '""v SfhoOls, shops. rwy. SS2S Wkd.yl, 732·3at. Eves' Completely turn . 2 · on FEE land only Ml4'1o.1809WB•lboa MGIS. mo.Keilh,962·«71 Wlmda1 ... M:l8 bdnn.2ba.Uvrm din •.OOO.ll'10S.nMl1ut1 Blvo. Open Dally, 2-4. 67•-617" 4bdrm 2""b• 3100sqft ~=~=~m;;;.1rm. den. lam rm. Pool. Dr, Newport Buch. Ted Hubert Realtor. £ "JJO• gardener in~luded: • IAYflOMT spa. Beau view Ocean. 51501or7$2·7373. 752>0'777 .... ,.._ Close to schools, shop· 2 atOl")', 4 + bdrrns, 2 Bay, Ughls. Leaae SlSOO For a month. or 1 hie- "'-Modllt ope!\ dally .., lo 8pfn Adults trtv no pets ..... lwh/No. 880 INIM (II 191t1) (114) .... ,.,,. ~ ~al kt!I f; I t~t! Y owner fixer triplu •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ping, parll. $1195 d• bath1 . llreplatei permooroptlonto buy. i 1146.000•m lat al rn ~ Balboa Island Waterfront 770-9179, fV 840-6203 P1tOll' view. Pier ano {714) 547·4156 , t11apmt lllahllo. Needl caahMs.3340 1:..Br~~· ~~rn· JMw+D.. .Up.&mpermo.A".all.~·-·· 1~1:"iJi~ ....... llHl•l ... ltC-"'-I ·· 0 ' • Nice interior. ~ ml to hb.1. J4JI l'IU\MN1Q At .. lciuih cout'Pi:.11 Blyfl'OM, be•dl. 3 Br. 2 btldt. No1mollen I' ... , Ba. lU E. Bayfront. --1 llcwtty GHrdl, Poola, Balboa lalud. tUOO mo.-··- Hr.al Ir, t 1 t.. l = ~ U'·ro.~ wtnttr. tl400 annul. at~FYOURCRbrPTS wlt• lS'I. Down . ,fln.dmnl/411-3$71. '4v1 tb.lat.3 ll~ a..11n.1~a 1. bl. 2 M.Y1 !ll'Jino. hr .1 ....... Anl .. ble. • ...... WEI ba, ttM/IDO. Super ID "°""' M1111e· ft'11 IUUE t.d a ...,. . ..,... .... 711.am ~ .. ..,. 1 19&0 Wallace M2·.S z Br. Adult, beamed <'ril· 1113s, ffn·e bar. retn1e. lots d wood. No peta ' 2256 Maple St. MJl>/1116... 548-7351, 67S·lml. 3br. 2ba up~r •·Pleit ldulta, no pet1, S$S;:' lO.OC~ftK'la. W.1'U PUISH Z Br. 211 Ba. Twahlt .• lQO tq. n. ol laxury: rrplc. bli dS.1• a•c.~ yard, Ptt OK. Adul\I, 11mmo. .eJS~-. __ t!l:,'!ll NISIDI COMl!OtlT l.qt l IR..._.Wa; • •1. ,.uo. '-· 4/W pool •• ,., ~· ~ =, ..... ~ ..... . ...... , ... ~ If'· ........ AaE ·---- c...tJC..lr• ......... k' tN .. "-'-• /"11~tdl•lll1 ,.._ . , ...... Ila.* ~ -·~9iiO'Ni····· -................ .-.i. ·•·•••••-"••··········· ..... :, •......•.•.••...•..................... , ........ ;;i ...................... : •• -;r.-;;. ...... ~. fD.•:t•iiWMo ~tCONITll . .::.~1:, m:.i:d~n,t'•' TIBS Rep1lu, p1lnt1n1 , Eliperitn<'ed •Reliable ~al~~0fn!Y :ic~er1 ~LAS1EtRIN~ t •etmlNOotfabnn --..:.::::.u:i:~~-.i.-J MSi..&1111 MJ·MI ublattt. Harli wood TopHd/r.tmoved, e.a· ~ . Cbri•tlan, r~· Pe r10 n W 11 1 Do happy lotat euitonft~ 0 ~;.T" x · ~·,!lll!~t"~=;..::;:c:z. C.• .,. IOluticlu to wood pro-pert dean upa, lawaa re-e ·*2 Houle<-lunln . Ut-4~ ant ou 631 4410 --ucc111 -.... 10IP , ......... ==:............... , . novated. 151·S47t ............ HOUSEWORK DONE . -· -PWT•:R•STUCCO !."! ......... ,,,,,,, .. . •a & SOM aw.•ac.tamlc Tile ..,_. WHY NOT ONE OP ....................... ' By JAPAN •; S t: : C....P...._ ~ ~~:f~ml. TILE INSTALLED ' •duM ..,_1Mncett41 Plocn·Sbowtn·Tubl ;;1.;;;-., .............. 'nlE8ESTISlmroon.a HARDWOOD FLOORS Profmlooal.C.ll Yoehl, ~!2,."P· I.le 41$41 --~-AUKindlG1111aatetd " ladle ~-r.n1odeUn1 Calllll,)j!me17Hg DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC G t4U6M Bealllifullycluned 1131-Slm llUl-.-.. ln.s. Rers. Color M t Jobn-1117 '.\. &~1 Doon, wlado""a pallo. ClllWC.. Mynnp.P'Ullyllc'd' Gardea.lqwanled.byu· andwaxed 832·488! a.-T• ex rt_ea. II Dick ....................... CullomC.ramlcTlle i:._~~-t. u~· ....... •••••••••~•••• $32-5549 eer. hortlcullu rial. ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• t,re PAINTING Oraina cl~.arcd from UO Prompt NfV. """" ~ --no Ql1ld Care my me DaYWALLTAPlNG lpeeiallHI in plants ......................... E.XPER. PREPARER SP..:CIALI INT/EXT, PlumbUl.J Repaira Cfl~ klU·1'09 ROBTSfEINBRONER, alat ret1 liatanta .bni 4 Allltxturet6 acouallc ~•rd• n ma In l . Haul, cleanup. concrete Enrolled to J>ractlce ~w!!_l Lar 6'5,:.t31!;1 Freeett. KUI 64J.. U GEN'LCONTRACTOR xn .• c.i(.&45-eMI ftott.t Kevlnl7S·llOM ~· Ve1etable rerooval. OumpTrutk. before the IRS. Quality G.L. Man1un Painting ,.414...., M•.,••• Tret Str"• A*IJw..... c.,.. ID'Mff a.. , $erTlc t. ....._·S..lc 11, enlng, orcliids Ii Qlickaerv.842-7638_ atreu.coet.549·2418 Cust.work.Llc#362478 •••'•••h•••••••••••••• 1•;;;.·~e.r;;;;:,~~~·;• \ ! Yiiil)ll.J-Pilot 1.:JRONE.vf!.C?.KEEN ...... !.\ ...... ~ ....... !:'.;;;: .. , .... !! ...... ~: • .::,~gttc plants. ,SDUIMl.Mp JOI BSJ b U.... lnsC.UFrSTOee~tl.NT 7E3Xl·~ PIOPllT\' Commercial Landaeapt dL--!~ .,,. :.Jt,;;-:;-t-••••••••ii::M.-DMllA f..CbMk ma ov ng 0 1 •• .................... • I T MAHAGIMBn Services 957·dl ' ve 01111*Rem0cl na l.UU&c•• &fl p. c k 1_.11 n 'I s H X61?~jjjlVi1n( C111 MIKEM6"·l39 -YOCA CLASSES-EXPERTSERVli 0r8Jlge Co. area. lSy ra-.. 71t JU ml 1• .......,. ~ llTL/PCI Har vey 11j~. {I'm.Clean-up. HAUlJNG ,DUMP YogaCollegeorlndla WW RATES experience.Callfor lnfo. I•-.·.· .. ---•.•.-• ••••111•••1 -.f!':"J&r~Oflcfi'!'.,. Hardilon.545-1701. u n&.541·2'89 JOB.5,ukrorRandy, Melhod. lW 1558 NU.BROOK 545·1175 and rates. --·=.:w-1 .. , • L a oN .... ktrtclA ~Own Bualn~; -_141·8427 Mmll ~ ~El.SONSPAINTING ·--"""" _...._."" ........ ~ .. -•1 ~ ExpD.,.Won. .. ..................... ~~I i·~•c~p~n1. a.IANUPYOUl4CT ....................... Int/Ex! ~~id/Comm .... •tg ••4fJ.JJ20•• ~C:.,a:!'ketFi:p Uc.W 710.6™ 9'JAUTY ~JllCIAN.-priced Gt1ld. Pnll. ~rvi:e °!i TODAY ! Y1rd /g1r11e ~:~~K:e~o~i. scfo:tl~ t~~~ce::t~-~rs. ....................... ******* .-ia1...!.L..lllltmll:.•.Z!l!~~·-·c.,•· stir.(8 Hr1.req.1 taraeor'::.~~:::le OD Pries Sure to Please. Cln·:·.etc. ltontrutk. Mesa, Irvine. Reh PAll'II'ER NEEDS-J D.Hom Rerinlahing JAYETREECARE ....... ....................... Eves Uc !3111121 J e7sOOS9 •2i15bf7·9•WtE. · 1993 Uhrs 67S·317S. WORK-30 yrsex Int Antiques, kit. cabinets. Complete service and .............. ~~NI~f::~~~n 645·~• ~D/COMM ·~ ._... SenlcH Qli':C'~!~e d Custom Brick Masonry teit: Ac~~k celfings. !'lne.eaintlng. MS-08&4 stump grind in&. 10 yrs ptot. service ~11 Randy ~JJllOCdM 11 PEP GIRLS clea~1n1 ao yrs ex~. Do my own ....................... Free est. Kris Ji.~53 Comp!. yard construe· Davis _Plllnllng 847-5186 lw•lllCJ/l.,-r exp. Lie. Int. 640-9308 ~ apples. Steves CHAR RENOVATING ~~Mi !.,~s-Ofr1ces· work. Lie d. Al""°81.26 Lo~r0a8ph' icbl>esrocignuerr es. Rick 631.0865 · • l ion, pool decks ' Palnt111g·~theGame, .... C.•OM•••M••;;:C••1:•L•••" Expert shaping, thinning !!!!!!!!:•Seri. 541·8514 Comp\ int/ext & cust ~· --U C'D ELECTRICIAN • h en~ures. Local refs. redenen s the Name! ----"' 'stump removal. 7 yrs ~ cabinets. 2S yrs. 645.3149· Collluecton. &tMrtll Qual. work . Reu. rates ~~!:be~~:: 1~rtyo~~r~ ~~~~'b~{~!:a~~~~'. d~[~· 645-&12 Uc. 239534 642·0862 =STllAL exp. Ina. 875-2821 Mlff;.-................ CUSTOM ADDITIONS ....................... ~eeest. 831·5072 Tom phcltocraphy. 493-8745. Junk trash. 848·4984 Hart Masonry· Brick· Hae painting-coll. grad DIUMGI TypilcJ Senlce Driveways, parkfnf lot Kitchen re mod . . te-l~r TOP QUALITY " -----Block. Concrete. Rer 7 r Turn lost or unused ••••••••••••••••••••••• =• ~· ":S'.co~·~~g, Sky lites. Reh. B il1 All phases, lie, bonded, Electrical work at !~= ............. lgeu~~~. ~:1e~~\:t~~ Lie. 368294.646·1597 J!'r!~fs. i~~~tL;.~~ :~~cae r~~°m: d10:'U:~~ Typing. 100 wpm , neat ' M&AllibalU.11_.199 M6-az exper;..!!~(~\!.'e.)advice Reu. rites. 531·~ C.rpentry . Masonry Prompt C11117S9·1976. Mo¥illfj Mike Shill Painting Ar· drywall. dr"" ceilings & accurate. Low rates. 20 -" iall c Allen....._ .... ........__...........__ D ...J: p Th _.. J h ••••••••••••••••••••••• r d bl 3 1· L. . v y yrs up. 536 6345. WJITATf:PAVING e1ptt ze in ustom 497.s.322/49M863 ~--nuu111n1 · lumbini:. --~J..OU, J>.JL. •ABC MOVING Exp or a e ua aty 1c. trim carpentry-to com· IM7·1622(uU orGail) &e.lcoat1nJ . StriJ>inJ ~ntry. Bath & Kit . D'NS REMO •••••••n••••••t••••••• Drywall · Stucco . Tile TREE.5'/SlfRUR TRIM 1 prot. low rates. Quick'. Free F.st. ark. 645-4.290 pletioo. Call Tom or JeJr TYPING -Fast, ar· ~ Comm /Res1d Rermdel. 770-0236 Pl / · DELI NG •FRENCH DOORS• Retm4el J .B. 646·9990 Garage & Yd Clean ups careful service. S52·!MIO or 533-2890 at 661·2913 or 493·3886· curate. reas. Cassette lk ..-im ·64.S·818i r~ "--le• Pi'~· ,uSonsc'd. George 1~ pann .instilled. 6' Geatral Maintainance Free est. •51.8271 P--'--•~ tr~"·. 631 ~""'•eves. -..... _........ aucr ,557-6932. slideropemna S7SOcom· D-. . ., A-I MOVING ......... --.. -........ ', AICMfl "w:C.:::c••rp••l•C•l•e•a•n•e•r•su Addilio!ls. remodels. pl. (unpailltedl640-1065 ;~amty !RDecay~~~lSinlt --. ... , r T * Q Ii * ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WllldowC ..... . -...... ••••••••••••• .,._ · home improvemehl ..._ ...Jll._J ~ _ _.,..,. ........... •••••••••••••••• op . ua ty. Special HANGINGSIO/ROLL REPAIRS FORLESS ••••••••••••••••••••••• AGGRESSIVE legal ...... amclun,uph_ols. windows doors at . Nlilwtl...--llNIMJ HOM.EJMPROVEMENT Want•. REALLY CLEAN t•are I~ hand~ng 2S yrs ~sc. on paper. Strip· Shingll!s. rial. 30 yrs. "LettheSunshine ln" ~Uoo, law or. Truck mount unit d r i v e 'w a 5 P /";· ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Repair-Maintenance HOUSE? Call Gln1bam exp COf!1Pelillve rates .2!!!. ·Scott 645·9325 ex ·Free est. 770·2725 Call Sunshine Window · nc:..a.tn.545·8422 Wcrlguar. 645-3'116 ~rnbing , ~tc' Lie •SPECIAL• Heatl~g. carpentry. Girl.Freeeat.64S.S123 ~oovertime.73CHJS3 P...-a..Dval IEPAllSOMLY' Cleaning.Ltd. 548·8853 ........ Col~ri".,~tteenaemr·"lewahnt. 11. Ph960-0635 An.Y ch111·r hdands·s9tn7·5pped ~~'t~les,:~e !~h8N1o1 ROBWSCLE'ANING ~~~~~~~~~~2~ •••••••B•R•Y••A•N•·r···s....... AllTypes,646·~ •RESIDENTIAL• ........... _.......... .. . '" ,._ ..., or reg ue . 1 . . A . · '" · Service a thoroughly •0 . * * 80 R OF NG co Avg I sty SJO· avg 2 sty •&wait.. our"CM h 1 crp!J · 10 mm. bleach. '-"'?O'anOltl Toudi Of Class In· · clean house 540·0857 .c ·Lie. #TIZ4·436 Wallcovenng Removal BAL A O. 1 · · . Chris 957·W yr Au 'uytime.omes. Hall, liv/dln. rms SIS; ••••••••••••••••••••••• teriers. 711 W., 17th St. I bid alljobs, lge/sml ExnortJse Hou. sek .. :---p1n" WIAruTCsu,rHedU.S64Gl·R84027W.' All Types. 642· 1~3 ;tioensontrluycrtoo1·orn1ngre"ob.a"'t'e1tsh =---IZ:em, 646-s7se. ~ av~ room S7.SO; eo~ch COIPOIATIOMS 1A2. C.M. 642·7712 Quality, exper, lic'd ,... n ,. • ClearView Windows a9twaiWJ h 110. chr S.S. Guar. ebm 'PARTNERSHJ PS ....--Hiu -Dave 1-IM·9'1 8 SuPplies rurnished STARVING AGTORS "-hr /lepair 673-67~.._.6]3·8229 Xlnt service. free est. loeo.t~ my ome • nr pet odor. Crpt repair. Formed by Attorneys ,__,, -..-r Be • H Trustworth_x 957_8003 MOVING COMPANY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Huber Rooling·all lypes Ken 673·90l8 . .., u&. Lcyard., 15 yrs exp. Do work Reu.rates. SS7-S700 HelP,y.ounelftoa n 5 0:!'i!ntlmprovl'· Quality Work. Depend&· Fast & Carerul Lowl'St PLASTER PATCHJNG New·recover-derks. Barcain shoppers read · . illf myself. Refs. ~1·0101 Heapan11election of Servire All jobs big or ble. Refs Call Pam & Rates Law Allows M C Restuccos. Int ext 30 Uc •411802. 548·9734 t be Ii t t I e 1 d s i 0 '=y1lttin1. lic'd.1.. hot NoSteam/NoShampoo SELL idle items with a Qua.J.l.fied Hoperuts small. 964.5231 · BobDw1 ht 673-7012 Visa.~673·0853 ..YE'> Neat Paul 545.2977 SELL Idle Items with a Claasirled reaularly. tllea. Costa •en Slai.nSpedalisl. Fast Daily Pilot Classiried in the DAILY PILOT Clwir1ed Ads. )our one Fmd what you want in Neat patches & textures Daily Pilot Classified . And they find what w.-....or7S2-1102 .Freeest.839·1582 Ad HELPWANTEDADS WantAdResults 642·5678 st~ng_cenM _ DailyPilotClassirieds. ~!l.f. 19. 43l Ad ._they'relookin&for ""' ... , .... ..,.,..,',., j~~ ............. ~~.o.~ ~~! .... !~~~ !:a:;'!':!!'.~e:'!~! .. !~.s.~ ~~!~.~.~ .. !?.~~ ~~!~.~~.~ .. !?.~~ ~°l!.t 4350 1•111111~··~~"1, Bayfroot. rm & Ila . pool , MES> A PUCE? MAUI: l bdrm rurn tun Bil SlSO mo + utll . F 2bdrm 2ba apt Park ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ja1·uu1. sandy bl•a1·h. Re:is Weekly Rates •lo .. Be st s wt mm 1 n ~ between so & so yr\ old Nl'wpOrt. 1375 ~o . incl HntR Beach garage. $60 S300 mos.I0.80!l7 Kitchenettes-Phonl'S ~bt«ithS245wkly . Tl•nm~ HBS31HW53 ulll Call Paul 640.8937 mo Storage Only Ask 'Gatt'Cl An.·a Pool (.)(·ean "Z"Channel MO\tl'S li6lJll98 _ Mat r"'m 2Br 2,,ba ---forKeilh,962·4.il!__ .... ..__...,_~ ___ ...,.;...;... __________ ,.;:;,.;.. __ ~.;_;;;~!.;..:,_J S1d1• Hw~ S _La1tuna Sandp1per.1967Ncwport ~hot· Ski Co n du. twnhse. l\pt Hgts S300 F. :».is 3br, :Iba, rurn Wests1de2rargaragefor Af lw•t ~ l••••hl.Ww1L Af l••h.,.,..., ..,_1 t u.fwolL Rm . BA. P\1 f,nt. S29S Bl Costa Mt•\a64S9137 l'lorlhst<ir :l hdrm. Refs E\es&i6·7SS5 l.a1: Brh Olean Front i.toragespare. 0 ••••••••: .................................... u•u•••••••00•0 •0 • ...... ;:,~: ............ ~4~~~ l.~111 Rer S ..... rlftltals 4200 ~~eps 8 SKOO 14 kh F 23 t to share w llh ~~~ SJOO E' es 645-1693 ColteMeM 3124,Costaw.to 3124 ~°" Ne#pCN't•ad1 3869 · ....................... 1 l2!Fl . 'allll'. lari:e rurn apt 2 . -Offictl ... al 4400 .............................................. ~ 3142 ....................... RCIOlll&locrd 4050 Easter Summer. wcl.'kl~. Nu T.th()(' londo . .s Br 5 Ba N B $290 mo NB pror 1tentleman will ...................... . • 2 Br. Condo nr s c Easts1de 3 Br 2 Ba frµh• ••• ~............. L 2 .._, ....................... 1 Br . ~letP,:> .s Ualbua ~n. to ~o_rth~tar $.100 &Iii 3377 sha.re beuu ~ome w lady 1617 Westrliff. N B Want Plaza. S.A. Pool. spa, ~. , , :; uarded j?ate. t enn1s Bil ~n s r ire 2 ~:n lroww's Group Hlft Pl'._nmsula 615 06llO wk rom &Si 1668 Fem. non smkr. 3hr, 2ba O\l'r30 S37!> 160 0802 financial inst. 7000s.r. t.ennis. seoo. Adults, no P~OPERTY ll ~L SF. rourts. swim mini: pool. /\dulls ~o pet: $62S Sr Clt11ens l!S5 6221 acatia11 letltals 4250 R..tals to Sh•t 4300 duplex on BallJoa bland Re:.p Str M Rmmt to Shr lsl. floor Agent S4l·S032. pets. 1>12·38!!9 642 1010 tile roof. robble stone 675 8S42 645 :8323 Hottf Mottf 4100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $220 mo+ ut1I Call Al New 2BR. 2B/\ Condo EXECUTIVE .,*=-~=e.:Q:i.:r...!64::!.!.:l·li.!ll:!!.o~1Newly decorated JarJte ~ street. on channel adj a· 760,6a!6 · · · · •••••~••••••! ......... ., EANFRONt 2 & -t llJ Pror to Shr 2BH. 2BA I 1 so n or o u n· n i.' Irvine'. Wood bnclge. $275 S<>Plazo Area. Lg I BR Br with patio. pool. l'en to manna l'nl11ue -11#1.U .... I( MOTEL A\aJI Winter Wl.'c·kl) CdM Hsi.' I blk rr B1·h ,, G7J.7338. lm'l_utU~~24 SUITES CODd I I h garage. kills OK. no 2BRS8.50mo WESTCLIFF 2 Br. 1•, "~l_,.I Mnnthh 6737t!73 Prer 5585311. !17S·901U t'Shr3BR 2RA Bayfront IN ..'];}?"".spa. l' b se. IV>IS. 1595 mo 641 0763 738.5022 8.1 Townhousl'. Adults ""' y rentu s no..-. J\ a11 P 1 • C\l' Proress1onal rema le age Avt w1 t~t. 1 p S32S Pl HEIJT AGE setr""640-67S9 .c:.:c onl). no pets $600 mo $105 & up l'olor T\" ai~S~~n)!~area IMtJn 2S·40. non·smoker to Util Furn or unrurn 2Br. Adul ts, no pets. new· DmaPoiftt 3826 l"N 3144 1728 Bedrord Lane Phones in ruom '''>74 ll'r~~ n 1 1•11nl1u 3 RR 2 HOO'lt'. 2bdrm . 2 ha pool share bt'au Nt'wµurl 1173 1388 PLAZA ty dec. stove/rerng. enrl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·7S33 Nl'wport Bh rl (~I Ba . furn 14 Jtnum Jai• 300 )rd:. BE AC ll l~:arh l·ondo.SJOOmu _ !II~ luxury om re space ·0 .. 979·«1,Q _DL'PLEX Lari:e3bdrm. Woodbndge 2 BR.1'1 ----646-7445 ' Gull . lt•nn1 :. l)J tl~ $325 53651114 l'\l'~ 545.3975 Housematewanted,non 111 lrnne 's busiest 28xl8" hnng rm Some Ba. al'ross pool. Jar . .. .. FrClllf -wl't.-kl) & monthl~ ratl'~ 11171 0760da~s · • smoker. !>hare large 2 t•enter! Easy Frwy ac· 2 IR. golf course \'Jew ocean\lew RerE.'ntl)de tennis. SteH While. 28R.2BA Vr ly Rental. OaulfledAds.yourone· a\atl il l SS8 8001 Want ;\dResult.s 6425678 Ha\esomething to sell bdrm. 2 ba aµt ,... gar cess Avail now• Call MZ mo. Cluld OK. no corated. 2 car gar 973-0944 dys. 55 1·5045 Avail Now . S800 s in center 9·5PM ... askror Mark ----gassifiedads~oatwell I Near Ol'ean No San rordeta.ils ~~~~Ask for Bill S650 mo 495.1490 m 'wkncls s.59-lll82,After5PM. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Cll•!TX'nte $2i0 + '• ultl 551-1231 · 640-4230 .-.--'--==------3 bdrm. 2 ba. 2 car Aar. L..J-a •acll Jl41 1 • 2 bdrm yearly ren· • Call .~IC'k ~!16 5484 lea\ e •DB.UXE OFACES *' ' ~;~. ~~~·p:m~~·Qr:::;, firepl~re. pnvate yard ••••••••••••••••••••••• tals. 1425 to 1545 mo. • ll'll'~a.11~ 00 recorder -From 1 room to 1400 sq area: Cul-de-sar $415. SSOO jl;o1>ets . I Bdrm tort apl. Frplc. Close toocean.675·1642. • 8•DAY WEEK SPECIAL • Dana Pl. shr hse, will rt From S1.l..5asq.ft.~o al936,98S·l46S 493·1).167 stove. ref rig. dtw. 2 blks Beach 2 blocks. JBR 2ba. • l'OOS. rhild. arnil now lease r eluired. Adt. ~· r..$tside Pvt Lri.: lsft. Shary 3 br .exe': duplex. i,.:ean. lsttlast + •., ulil. rrplc. gar. S100 yrly, no • 3 lines 8 Doll8rl • 1!11183J 12:">7.496·~ Airporter nn. 2172 Du· Encl Gar Yrd Very bll·ms. end itar Small ~ roo.4.94·7222. .645-1682 • 8 Days Res(.lons1ble rvommate ~l.Call M.833-3223 I Clean. No Pets. s4zs Mo t•hild ok Nr P~ll & OCE.AM FIOMT Lovely ground rloor 2 ! • • wanted to sharr nl•W 2 546•4253 Mala~ .. SS2.S 730·6590 Most elegant apartment bdrm. 2 ba condo Com It s easy to plac e your 8·0ay Week Classified by matl. and 1t e bedrm apt 536-9691__ I· STIHT I. sxacious 1 Br · Garden 1 or 2 Br nrar cx·ean. budding i n La ~una munil)' pool. Newport I • costs JUSt $8 -that s only a dollar a day' T'O Qualify for this ~taturl' responsi ble 2~3crosoomT•or ... r1c~SsAwtes garage. clean Beach Finest location 1n Heigh!$ Area. S72S • • F'ema le. non smoker "' ... pt. Pool' rec All utils G6l IS3'7 tol4n BreJthtaking 646-412..! special offer YOU must be a non-commercial user offering • Newport Ot eanrronl AC. plenty of prkg. Ulll ·~~~if:;! 2BR2ba apts. Nev. cpts & '1ews All bll·ins. heated S.C'-* 31761 e merchandise fo r sale uo to SBOO per ad and the once must ~ 166i ~~-~a,:!1c~ow ~~6700 1958MapleA\le Apt5. drapes $450 mu l\o pool. subl garage ........................ ! be tn your ad The cost stays the same whether your ad • Attrat1l\e 30 )r Old M NEWBREE'D PTS. pets Dana Pat•1r1c Im· ele,ator Lea:.e only ::LEAN 2 Br I Ba laun • needs eight days selling time Or JUSt one &ru ttrart1\l' 30 yr ~e:' rt Mesa Verde DIC .. ' Loft. 1 Br & 493-i.>01 831·9370 ~ & up 330 CllH Dr dry. l"arage No µels • • old F to Shr Home IL --. -~ -ISl-Ul -~· 493·2710 Platon1t• NR :\rea SJ2.) S4S·4123 Ldt' frQm 1425. Frpk. twinc)tOR~ach 3140 Small studio Nr main 2B I' B· . ---1, e U Ab • 7146317828 B YFRO~T r« room. pool, jacuzzi .••••••••••••••••••••••• tx·h Good k I h Ul I r , a. garage. aun se one word tn each box out 4 words make one A f"'lll ~~s' water paid. MAR.IMERSWALK m<·l·s.125,49-l'.~:n 1 ~·~.1~74\ksb e ai·h . e class1 f1ed ltne of type Minimum ad is 3 lines Please print • ~~~1 ~f.·1~~~~Nw~!.~: fnrneolrlce.760·9440 ~ults, no pets. 393 2.&lB.r Iownhou.sc.Apt 2 ·RR AP,•RT-;.E",' T plainly e :urn. 2.5 BA Condo mllton, CM 545·44ir Yard. srni:le & double W--..rt •-h 3869 ., "' '' • '" f'P. P"I. Jal· M1k0 MEWPOIT PAI ... MES PTS ..... ..,... -ac \'1e14 ot ool( C'OUrS" an" • w v ' " Ext'<'uti\'e Suites has or ...,. A A tar itarage near Hunt •••••••••• • " ~ u • &I I 84 10 d.\S . 642·5978 1561 MesaDr Harbour Children OK • ••••••••••• htlb.. publt1· t e nn•~ r------------------------------, • fires avallable nr OC 2 Br. unfutn $425 ~~--PARK NEWPORT t'OUr\S right behind pro • I l'\~ Airix>rt. rromS36Sw foll • Adults only. Call btwn t>l'r t) 2 e n !'I os c ti • N"''Pl Reh family home. 2 sen·1re a\ a1lable Call ·r 9-T.5*9860. -!Br.ln_ple ,f[Ol)~Un .c~~l..c;;&,.~I. n1r~(!_fl S Launrlr ~ • I Sl~.s:Jaopermo llOl4 ror I month free 1t. new carpets drapes. UVI..--. r t o 1 .• 631 7215 ' · 833 9976 1 a 'HUGE Bedrooms. mini blinds Slall'r nv ari 1 > n ~ " unit • I • · usa_-=::.·=..:.,:.;_ ___ _ l • Gtound Floor. Fully Beach. $375 Water & Barhelors. 1&2 bedroom modern spanish style • FEMALE lo shr lbr 2ba I MO. FIH ~p~~e~a~i~'to~!~ gas pd i.11-7490 art 6 30 WO:~'"s~~e:44·1900 ~l~h3~·,.;n~:~!~s 0~~ • I • =:.,~:~~.J:::nd MewpariC..ttr ~ults No Pets. S385 PM NO FEE! Apl. & Condo mo A\' a I I ab I e • I 1.00 .I Female. non·smkr 3 f'irsl class full servire Mo. Apply Apl "E". 2bdrm. Iba duplex doll rentals. Villa Rentals February C;ill ownl'r aA I • bdrm. 2 ba dpx. 2 blks to ~fir;m~~·1~~!s in~~~~ BWilson64S-4477 house. back yrd . gar. 675·4912 Broker '714l 642·0l38. • 10.vv I Beach on Peninsula. new painl. crpts. drps . -------• 1 R.. ._.__..... • S'l25 1mo 644·7189 21>1.lba,openbeam ceil· $485 . 8171 Newman Oceanfront for Winter.-,mWMsrwnN-wv • 1320 S2.SOmo+ulll.lsl&lasl NEE D A BUS. AD · · 2273 M I N 59 0 Rentals. Furnished & oru.fwwishH 3900 • • mo rent. Call Su1i or ings. ape. 0 1 ·l&I Wlfum. Broker. 675·4912 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Beth 673·5046 DRESS? Answering & pets. $440. S4S·S00t $450 2 br. adults -S E 15 IO • mail service. ronferenre LA I.ANNE APTS Mgr: 77l l Elhs • o Quiet 2 Br. l Ba. gara!(e. A W I N O • . Help' Mother & son need room. Adj. OC Airport. 1838 Placentia. ·2 br. Owner: 673.311.s patio. pool Adults. no VILLAGE • hohslu· roommate. In· SIOO mo.114·833·0682. $420. iDCI. Ulll. Dys pets. $500 li.ll "H" l5lh • Add $2.60 for eech •ddhlonel llne for. ttmtt I rondo home M F Non NEWPORT OFFICE 848-88118; evs968-4078 3br. r r. 2'1ba. crpts. ~642·i340. New 1&2 bdrm luxury • I smkr S275 + util ...:..;::;...:;.;~ . ..;;.;..;;..;;..;"'-'..:..;.;:--1 drps. o r. dw. dbl gar UDO V.IF.W Gorg 2 BR, adult apts in 14 plans. 1 • 3f>1497_6 __ Pnme bayrront location One bedroom. rerrl g S6SO ~ 1021_:. S-17 8933 rp. adtt Bdrm from S490. 2 bdrm • • Rmrrt to shr Duplex HB ideal for law firm. in· Costa Mesa. S350~ 3 Br lux apt. mo\e in to $1000 mo67S ·63S9 from SS70. Townhouse p I hlk rr Heh Sl90 "'a•I surance or acct'g SI.SO 0341 after1:30 PM day 21, Ba . en cl -from l640 + pools. ten· • Ub Ii Sh my ad for 8 days Starttng • F b pr sq rt ind Janitor '''.Wtioc Woods garages. quiet cul de Balboa Island Waterfront rus, waterfalls. ponds! • e I ~8639 E~l'S 645-~ i:71tw.:.1ttt.St. sac Consider kids. ~lr·2 ~.~~t~rn· Gasforcooking &heat· e Classification ~:~.t 1~(f~~d~t.,00~:erb~ S20&S72sq ft 11 oo~r (J8thSUiWallaceAve) S67S l mo. 730 47"1 . ing paid. From San • female wanted to share sq. fl .. 397S Birch .. N.B .Mtnllles from the beach 581·5986 1 Bdnn apt. stove. rng, Diego Frwy drive North • Name with same beau furn 2 Agent S4l·S032 . .WXURY2BR · 1 BA 311 TOWNHOME ~~~5~12 ~?t"sinsula. ~mee..::1 ~ =~~=~~=~ • • bdrm. I ba apt Costa ~~~1.r;;;~ ~~tl!fi~ ,,Marblepullmantop Fencedyards1FRPLC Versailles 2bdrm. 2ba. to Seawind Vi llage. • Address • Mesa s:m mo Ut1I Pd Util.,janitor 975-1120 • I Decorator drapes 2 Ba. Enclsd Gar NEW rrplc. clubhouse. sec _(714)1193·5198. • C't • ~1·2160or 493 9560 I.is a ~21uabW/lV carpets MOMo ~..nn _gate.$7SO.ss7.1991_ Wl..,•lrH I Y Zip Phone GcrGllH Huntington Burh. 419 t:•'Walitfn closets -nr---A9h -• tor•e.t 4350 Main St. 380 sq fl . Private patios . Hr.Frwy.-dMal Huge 4 BR, 3 BA. beach f\Jm & unrum f bdrm • Check orM.O. enclosed 0 Sl.95/mo Sierra Mgmt .Gow'metkitchen 3. bdrm . 2 ,'-z ba . rloseduplex.yearlease. opt All util pd All • • ••• 0 •••••••••••••••••• Co 641·1324 f I r I & I Ch SliO slnl"ll' j!ar. sare & ·-'-~~---- .Panlly D/W, disposal 1rep are. am1 yroom. Isl as l. wate r amenities 846·0619 arge my ad to: secure 731 w 18th St Newport Beach. S04 N :£arport with storage wet bar. dble rar gar. lg garbage paid. S900 a' ail R ---4000 • • c M 6;3 mn Newport Blvd 350 sq rt .lpa/OutdoorGas BBQ sundeck SS mo 1st. Feb <213 >376·4509 or OOIM -to~ sq rt A,·a1l at 85< Laundry Wl SlOOSee 7781 Liber· (2131J96.!Ml86 ~g~:~···;M~···t.. • 0 ~ # Exp . • Offiul... 4400 I a sq. rt S1l'rra Mgml Adultstnopet.s ty.846-9088.84&·4115 ~ge lB_R. Utll pct. Spot· 98.5 No. ~~einc 0(;0~~i L • .. ..................... Co.641-1.324. .-- $500 Large 3 bdrm. 2 bath, le$$. QUiet. S4SO. 2421 E Hwy ... Laguna Beach. • • # .~CAU,141·4630 rrptc-. patio. garage. 16thSt.64S-4718 Dail.)'. Wedcly, Kitchen • 0 _____________ Exp. • .AID84 SITTING! Xlnt 1625. 675·9132. Steps lo beach. 1·3 Br, available. Low winter • , 1 bdml, ~am ceilings. 2 bdrm, l l'l ba, 1375 1·2Br.bothfrpks. S775& rates.494·$294 • L------------------------------+coTI wrnLTT MIPlltlo.Oaroptlonal. +S37S dePoSll. Gas pd. s5so per mo . Im · Balboa Inn. 190 & up • r---------WE'LL PAY THE POSTAGE··------------• 1\ ~;c~ce:~a~:. ~~n~a~~1~! 'n:c::~~ s';s~ul~t:~~7:·":". 2ba :C~~~1froo~1~~r.:~:,eue. e• ':: 1111 ! e 1. ~viii before. SJ.41194 duplex. bloc~ to beach. Room and bath. Fem. NO POSTAGE 1 • • JnVntnrnt (Qnrl\nt l. A RARE ONE ! 2 8r.1 Ba. garagt..7794 beam ceilings. lrg S3 00 /mo . M any • NECESSARY 1 .• ., flM.WS Newman. S450 Isl last balcony,yrly rental. amenities. 64.S-2439 eves. • ~· If MAILED : • IWle C.11. nr 17th St. 3 + dep. 642 ... :11. TSLM ml 642·1803 937·80'79dys IN THE 0 • l(.l 11. 1,,1c, Ir& dee) Dfluxe poolside xtra ~Hgt. s 2 B~ 1 Ba. Xln't nr Hoag. pvt ba • • .2 UNITED STATES .ij' • .......,._ cnnn •!8'°: ·ttMfl6' or-large .»r,...2 ba, bll.ns. PO~lclltn • .NOJ>tl. J400 .ent. NA s~r or kite. • l'&llf"UIU UHUI -~ ~ _ dswhr, l'<J mtles beach. rro. 644-67i.l1646-318f Swkll M6-1035 I BUSINESS REPLY LABEL It ...... MOWI ~u.!!!:,nopeta. S4SOmo. 3Br.2wi8a.Stepstobel acihl. Nice pleasant rm. lite •• UJ FtllSTClASSPEIHollTl\IO I) COSTA#ES.t..CAL IFOlll\llA ~ • Elcllllt,Oftlcl t.w 1 Br. Pool 4 laua· _._. :1<i nter. renta . ut s k.ltch prlv .. East Costa • 9 ._. • """'9 Adua.. no pet.a. Ml5 PROPERTY HOUSE Mell, yci f200. 548•5998 ,. POST AGE wu it£ PAIO ev A~ESSEE 6 e 500 to 200 square feet cl$olft. n1 w. .642·~ 642.1010 Udo lale·S275. Incl Some e f Oran-Collt Dally Piiot 1 Available for Lease ..... a.541~ · Priv. Mal e . busy • < •'"' • CaUW F Cote 2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo. pool, w/out1lde interests. I •1 p·1a1 m. · a·er. Tonhome frplc. 2 private ptJ.I01, 875-21!15§ l e II I I e f9f more information Iii •• llftlt com• • S-., ..._ lround level. 1150 + de· ~ m1tr bdrm w tba in I • 1 • "'9tr ·Mctrated. • "91 & lie "'9111 eatlt. 7»1713, SSl-4115. za. ell, priv entr • ~· • 1u•,.• 1ftals reetalJ la 2 BR, prhlle1ea, snst mo. • 1011580 : e 911 .. Jti, * ...... oe/., · • &nlllt 1 •If llltl or uarara, »N •MShfttPll • '• • ._.._._.., ' o. •Dk• _.,,.... t11di1J1"e•1.-nv Lie. lleeta roocn sass. e 330 W. lay St. 1 WWW11* ••l!:l~..11 ·~ .. ._, .... IJllC.1~.u UR In Pvt •trH« •bath. e Co1t1M1u,CAl2121 • e Msz;ttt .... l'Mtbhfl. Pool, Quiet. !ftiM IDID....... i • ...,,, Plellut areat lla11t ,.....,. wlllt ._. .• Adil. No·~·_,_ .. -.,. -i ....•....•..•..•.••.• ·-- • . .. NEWPORT BEACH . Prime loc on buay Pac Cst Hwy. Ideal for retail and/ or office use. 1.000 to3,000 sq fl avail. (714) 645·7100 Costa Mesa busy Nwpt Blvd. 8400 ft free stand· ing bldg, fully improved incl. crpt. Ideal retail or dfice. Rent Sl.C>5/sq Ct. 631-51140 an. 4. ................. 4500 111.-IC*IOH itAWY llW(f IOMfONf 1111111.f Place a HAPPY AD in l.lus column for only SJ.25. Call 642·5678 ·;m1y Pilat ............. ·····---~· ,: AMltisilkmtEuc. Immediate openm, ror advettitiaf aecowit executive to aell both wteklJ • dally : De'ftPlP!r adwrtiaADs to • wide variety or : retan acC9u11tt. Muat be aelr atarter, : w~ng to cSm!IOP. ae~ta in a pew • :. ~=..a....-. Deeded. Salary : piua t'OIDlll • leeefttl. Seed reeume to : Carol 011cm, Dally Pllot, P.O. Box IJIO, • Calta ..... CA-. No pbooe c.U. •ue. S:tum Clmlfm ..._, New pGlltilll opmllf IW • .;;;df;ln.ct diapla, ..-wn •• .,.. .. allUIUn.; 11111t be i.o..a ... ,.,.._ ti orpailallaa ·: a lmpl ...... ,..., ,,.net pro1r1m1. llDd ~ .. c.d Ollla. DallJ Pilot, r.o.1cs-.c.aa .... cA- . . ~-..... --~ ) ' MUSTSEU. ··ahocany double bed l41itb mattress. Moon ~ mirror on head· COMMHL CHEVROLET . ~ . ' \' r S4b-1200 -- n Ot •'• • •· 111111111• •Y PINI WlUNESOAY . JANUAHY 20, 1Y02 0 H AN G E c: () u N r y '·-· A l It 0 H NI A 2 ~ c EN rs ........... RECORDERS INTACT -Carol Roberts, chief of Laboratory Services for National Transportation Safety Board. displays flight recorder from fatal crash of Air Florida jetliner to Francis McAdams. McAdams is a board me mber of NTSB. Recorders found . . at air crash site WASIUNGTON (AP> -Two critical on-board recorders from the Air Florida jetliner that crashed into the Potomac River were rerovered today and one inve•tiaator said after a preliminary check that "we don't anticipate any problems" with the devices. Both the night data recorder and one recording cockpit conversations were rushed to a National Transportatioa Safety Board laboratory less .than a mile from the cra sh site for examination. Rudolph Kapustin, chief invesU1ator for the NTSB, said aft er an initial physical examination that the flight data recorder was ••in excellent shape" and that the voice recorder appeared to be in good condition, although the tape will The recorders were pulled from the river seven days after the Boein1 737 crashed on . $2.2 billion contracts let I • by Air Force WASIUNGTON <AP) -The Air Foree today awarded two contracts totaling more than $2.2 b i llion for full -scale development and production of the new 8-lB bomber. Much of the work is to be done in Southern California. , The contracts we nt lo Rockwell International Corp. 's North American Aircraft Operations. The awards were expected In the wake of the Reagan administration's decision to build 100 advanced B· lB bombers by 1986. takeoff from National Airport. Invesli1ators bad hoped to retrieve them when tbe plam'1 tall section WU pulled from tbe river Monday, but tbeJ w .. DGt found. The flight data recorder makes a record of a1r speed. bearing, the plane'• an&le ol flight or descent. and forces that push a plane up or down. Ecorwmy in worst plunge since 1980 WASHINGTON <AP > Confirming the deep new recession, the government reported today that the nation's economy declined in the fmal quarter of last year al the fastest rate since the record quarterly downturn or spring 1980 . The inflation-adjusted gross national product -the broadest meas ure of the nation's economic activity -declined at , an annual rate of 5.2 percent in the last three months of 1981, the Commerce Department said. rt was the economy's worst showing since the plunge at a 9.9 percent rate at the deepest point or the 1980 recession. For all o f 1981 , inflation-adjusted or "real" GNP rose 1.9 percent, thanks mostly to the robust gain of 8.6 percent at an annual rate in the first quarter at the start of the Reagan administration. Real GNP declined 0.2 percent in 1980. Gross national product is the retail value of all goods and services produced by the nation's economy. • 't Flight plans revised .. ,. --~ 1· County supervisors get .new policy for commercial airlines ~ A long-awaited, revised plan that would regulate which com m e rclal airlinea have permission to operate to and from John Wayne Airport has been submitted to the Orange County Board ot Supervisors. Under the plan, drafted by Supervisor Thomas Riley and the staff of Airport Manager Murry Cable, AirCal and Republic Airlines, the two dominant carriers in Orange County, would be forced to relinquish guarantees on night allocations they now hold. As those nights, or slots, as th ey are called , b ecome available for allocation, air carriers desiring lo begin or Man's hand re-attached at UCIMC By DAVID KUTZ MANN Of tlM o.-., ~ ..... A Riverside man remained in fair condition today al UC Irvine Medical Center in Orange after doctors reattached his severed left hand during seven hours of de licate micro-surgery. ..._. Dr. Ivan Turpin, one of two surgeons who restored the hand, said Santos Sanchez, 27, was resting comfortably in the hospital's intensive care unit. Sanchez has •been in t he intensive care ward since about 3 a.m. Tuesday, when Turpin and Dr. Dwight Roberson finished reattac hing the left band during the Monday night and Tuesday morning surgery. Sanchez, a scrapyard worker, Jost bll hand, when a blade in a wirecutti.nc machine sliced it off Monday afternoon at a Rivenide area iron and metal yard. Dr. Turpin said the band was cut cleanly at the wrist. Immediately following the accident, Sanchez was given emergency treatment al a Riverside hospital. His hand was wrapped in sterile gauze, officials said, then moistened with a saline solution and placed in a sterile bag. The bag was placed in ice, Dr. Turpin said. This procedure. he explained, reduces the a mount of tissue degeneration t hat would normally occur in a severed limb. Sanchez was eventually flown by helicopter from Riverside to Anaheim Stadium, where he was picked up by ambulance and taken to UC IMC , which "is designated by the state as a Class II trauma care facility. Beginning at about 8 p.m. Monday Turpin and Roberson began slowly reattaching the severed hand, using. s pecial microscope equipment whe n necessar y because o r t he deficate nature or the operation. The doctors had to mend sliced nerves, muscle, blood vessels and bone. Turpin, assistant professor of surgery at UCI , said the medical facility has the micro-surgical capability ne<-essary for quickly treating people with severed limbs The phys ician s aid t he medical center handles about six hand reattachments a year. Increase service to the Orange County market could seek them. The plan requJres, however, ·that any carrier seeking new flight allocations agree to fly new and quieter jets on a ll routes to and frolh Orange County. The plan would govern access to the airport by commercial carriers for a two.year period beginning April 1. Every three months, carriers would lose guarantees up lo 10 percent or their existing allocations. AirCal now operates a n average or 23.5 departures daily from the.airport; Republic, 11.5. Pacific South west Airlines, Frontier Airlines and Western Airlines eaeh operate two flights daily. A previously approved access plan. whi c h wou ld h ave permitted AirCal and Republic to maintain the ir existing allocations for a three-year period, was invalldated i n September by U.S. District Court Judge Terry Hatter. The judge agreed with coptentions of PSA and the U.S. De partment of Transportation that the plan unfairly benefited AirCal and Republic at the expense of carriers with lower flight allocation s or other airlines wanting to begin service to Orange County. The ability of air carriers to Oellf ............ ..,, Gery·- TEST-TUBE TREES UC Irvine Professor Emelitus Dr Ernest A. Ball displays test tubes C'ontaining redwood trees grown in a special cloning proce ~s h e dC'\'el op ed Four-foot-tall cloned redwood trees wt•n• pl<Hlll·d at L'CI Tuesda~·. Kids begin big job Start planting redwoods at UCI By &ICllARD GREEN Of .... Dally ....... ~ School -c hildre n began planting a 45-tree gr ove or cloned "super" redwood trees at UC Irvine Tuesday. Tbe trees will tower '200 feel above the Irvine Campus in 40 years. The planting ceremony was held in honor of research by UCI professor emeritus Dr. Ernest A. Ball, wbo has developed a process to clone coastal redwood trees. The cloning process allows for the production identical trees which contain only the best traits of preselected trees from Northern California's forests. T rees with these positive traits grow fa ster. contain more wood and hold the promise of dramatically increasing lumber harvests. Simpson Timber Go. executive Jim Rydelius said at fuesday's planting ceremony. Simpson is funding Dr. Ball's research UCl's redwood trees, planted in a canyon draw near Steinhaus Ha ll. will be the only cloned redwood trees in existence apart fr om clo n e d trees i n expe rimental forests in Humbold t and Del Norte cou n ties , sai d a UC I spokeswoman. " begin service in new market& has been 1reatly llberali&ff under the federal Alrllne Deregulation Act of 1111. No longer mu1t carrlera seek permlssioo of the federal Civil Aeronautics Board. T he county initially appealed the federal court decision. It decided to abandon the appeal and draft. a new plan after th• U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Ap~ refused to s tay the rultn1\ AirCal, however, ls contiDuiqi to pursue an ~ppeal of Its owrt. O ff i'1al s at the Newpolt Beach-based airline, which now serves five states in the wed, s ay a ny new plan will be financiaJly injurious. , NB man's drug firm ~case eyed A superior court jury be1an deliberations tod•y to decide if.a Newport Beach man is entttlC!id to up to $200 million in damaie a g a·i n s l l he Up j o b=e Pharmaceutical Co. : If the jury granted tbe Ml amount soucht by attorneys ff>f Eric Barkan, 23, it would be ~ l argest product liabllit.) judgment of its kind. · H owe v e r , i n c I o s i nw statements to the aeven·wo~. fiv e -man jury Tuesdai. attorneys for UpjobD denied an a ntibiotic dru1 marketed by their firm caused 1erious inte rnal Injuries cau1ln1 removal of Barkan's spleen an4 kidneys in 1979. Barkan, now a UC San Dieco s tudent, was 1 lv en t "". medication Llncocin for .an aai c onditiQn six years •&cl: Claremo nt lawyer Herbe'rt Hafif, who represents Barkan, told jurors Monday bta client deserved $200 mlllioo in punttive dam ages against UpJobn because the Micbl1an-bued firm knew that Its drug caused kidney damage. The $200 million f l sure represents the profit Upjobn bu made on the prescripU• drus s ince it was first marketed in the late 1960s. But Upjobn lawyer Robert Wrede asserted Tuesday no evidence bad been presented during six weeks of trial testimony in Oran1e County Superior Court to prove Lincocia had caused Barkan's injuries. Wrede said expert witnesses who testified for Upjobn could find no causal relationship between the Newport Beach man's physical problems and bis use of the drug. prescribed by his doctor in 1974. t The jury was told durin testimony that Barkan's fac and body became 1wollen only days aft.er takin& the ctru1. Haftf claimed that his client was in good health before u1in1 Lincocin. Ba rkan's physical problema culminated with removal ol bis kidneys and spleen in 1971. He .now must under10 constut dialysis treatments to purfll his' blood of impurities ucl ..-... Bi8hoP8 write WARSAW, Poland <AP> Poland's bishops bne smt a l etter to Gen . WoJciecla Jaruzelski, the nation'• leader, a fter discussing the "ver1 complicated aitu•tlon in tbe country," the offtcial PAP news agency said today. tt _...., Judges go for 'solidarity' llAlllC-~ Tlle announcement stressed that "speclal safeguards have been lmplemented by the Air Force to assure that coets for the B·lB Pf'Oll'am do nol exceed .the $20. 5 billion ceilin1 eatatWabed by Conaresa." One contract totalin1 $1.3 Fund-raiser to help re-elect-county incumbents held • Ball aMounced in ·1978 that he had developed a successful method of growing "test-tube" redwoods from a single piece or tissue. Applied commercially. the cloning process could create forests that contain 50 percent mo r e wood , said the UC I spokeswoman. Dr. Ball himself remained fairly quie t at Tuesday's ceremony, commenting that he didn 't want to m a ke any predictions on how helpful the cloning process will be to the timber industry unUI the process ·is fully prov_ed in 40 years. Var i able clo•ds Thursday. Guaty wtnda at times. Probabllit1 of showers ctecr.uiq to 50 percent tonll1lt ·and 20 percent by Thursday· morn1111. Hllbl .• to a . Lowa tonlabt 48 to 52. billion ranulres Rockwell to By F&BOE&ICll SCBOEMEHL -... '-., .. Dll9r ....... complete the D·lB desi1n. "Solldarlt .. b .. .. modify two of the orisinal B-ts Y u .... en on~ aow stored at Edward~a•ninl lD. Oranse County -to l'oree Bue and conduct a t Insur. e ·incumbent 1uperlor teat pracn.D court Judges-win re-election in A HeODd · eoatract for ... this year's judicial electrom. mlWoa prcMdea few buildiq tbe Several hundred persons ftnt ad¥aneed 8-18 aad buJlq turned oalTueeday n11bt at the lon1·lead ttem1 to be Stadium Club at Anabelm lDeorporDld ID lats aittraft. Staclium for wbat the Committee. ·Lonl-lemd llema include IUCb to Preaerve a Responalble m a hr la h a 1 ti t an I um , Judiciary termed "a tribute to apeclalhed electronic Orante County'• outstandln1 com11 • ne and otber parta tbat aupertor court judf.e•." Tbe Ute Air roree Hld must be event wu biWed u 'SoUdartty ordered well ID ed•utee to me.t Ntibt." produclioD ~ ..... TIM a.lB ia a =i: ...... All a IUl*'ior court Judlel GI t.H ..... ~wtratlan's are lilted as adviaer1 to t.be d l S com.mu., aeeorcllq to Frank pl•• for mo erala DI U. · Bubaro ill attorney and ad.Ive 1trate1tc audear atritln1 Demoeratle Party member ,,....., -. . serving as committee treasurer. Many of thoee judges, together with attorneys and prominent county residents, paJd $100 each to attend. Barbaro said preliminary eatimatea showed at least $54,000 wu contributed before the event wu an hour old. He aald fuada ·will be uaed for pro1rama to make the public aware of respomlbWties ol tbe Judiciary and for donaUons to campalsDI· ol incumbent Jude• rated quaHfted to tern by the Oran1e County Bar AMOCiaUon. A 1lmllar or1anhatlon 1upported lncumbmt ·Juda• at Harbor Municipal Court ln Newport Buch two 1ean qo. And ....._ 1ucb orpnlutlOD ia backlDc ~la tM •• Oranae CcaaQ Maletpal CGurt in Westminster this year. Io elections ln recent yean, many incumbent jud1es have faced opposition, particularly from deputy dlatrict attorneys runnin1 on law and order campal1n1. Thoae cballeqes, with a few exeeptlou, have been UDIUCceMfUI. However, Barbaro 1ald, committee memben believe It ls difficult for incumbent Juell• to raise the neeeuary funda to run an effective campal1n and communicate tbelr views to the votem. Tb• turnout, Barbaro aaid, ,"WU lncredible." · Asked ii be felt lacumbentl wCM&ld be wlnerable ln tbe June I election, be ul~L "Not an1more." BllbteeD Juqeeblpl will be deddedia tbe eleetlala. "By then 1 won't be around and you'll be an old man," be told a reporter. When Bau began his resear ch, forestry experts at Simpson surveyed one milUon redwood trees within Simpson forest.a and settled on the 200 best specimens for u.e by Ball. They 1at.bered branches from each of tbese prise t.reea and sent them to Ball 1ln his UC Irvine laboratory. Fro m tbue branc be1 be obtained tbe U..ue be UIM ln the cloaint process. :11m11 TlllY _·· Wflat'• a a ..,.., nwr. u a lot. Alt __, .... c. haa. a '°°"*'lwl O'f ...,.,..,. •fleet Oft •otar H/•, .. . IO·COllH eqert ,,. ...... . POQe M . 11111 ~~~= ...... :: c.-.... .. ·=~., i if:.! &'.Fl f l I I, • ' . ~' I' I I I' I 1 -- Orange Coeat DAILY PILOTNYedne1day, January 20, 1882 W COLD WAS IT? -It as so cold in Conrad, Iowa, hat the water level gauge n the c ity water towe r lalfunctioned and caused n overflow. Children have een warned to stay clear of he tQwer because of falling ice. New road pla~ lifts iii-ea hopes I, f. Orange County transp(>rtaUon officials are hoping CalTrans ~ireclor Adriana Gianturco's rtew $10.2 billion, five-year thnsportation plan finally will iHclude enough funds to begin d&nstruction on several county ateeway and mass transit ~rojects. .-Ms. Gianturco unveiled her tlan Thursday in Sacramento. If Oessed, it will be the state's targest ever. b It includes several projects, such as ext.ending the Corona del Mar Freeway to MacArthur Boulevard, that have been included in several earlier five -yea r plans update d aannually by Caltrans. 9 . b Also included is a proposal to .widen parts of Pacific Coast Highway from Huntington Beach to Newport Beach and to build an overpass to cross the ~ a n t a A n a F r e e·w a y at Broadway in Santa Ana. The new five-year plan is 41 percent larger · ttul..q the $7 million plan propo~ in 1980, which was. the last full plan ltffered by Ca ltrans. The tncreases are a result of the f)assage by the state Legislature tast year of a biU to increase s t .ate gasoline taxes. The increased state funds also can !be used to match federal grants, IJls. Gianturco said. (j ''Not a single dollar from the federal government will go ~nsued," she said at a news 't:onference Tuesday. n. Members and aides of the !Orange County Transportation Com mission lobbied for passage ~r the gas tax bill. t-They also are hoping some of ~e federal funds will be used for 1l major renovation of the Santa ~na Freeway, although that funding would have to come in bases over a number of years. Ms. Gianturco's plan includes 179 million for mass transit rojects, including $59 million or devel.c>J>'ment of a line rough central Orange County. be full cost of the local project expected lo be from eight to 10 'mes that amount. The Caltrans plab still must be pproved by the inaepeodent a lifornia Transportation om mission and the state egislature. ectricity c~t Long Be~ch LONG BEACH (AP) roblems witb a l~,000-volt istribution U... cut electricity o a bout 1,loo resident•. oodruff Com,munity Hospital nd Long Befcb Airport. uthem California Ecilaon Co. aid. The airport paasen1er rminal was dark for almoll-. o hours after the blacker bit t 8:50 p.m. Tu814ay. . I I .NeW stono batters Northern California • • • 81 Wi9 A1111i. ... Preel Parta ol the Slerra N•veda Coaat route llnllln& Canadlao Sara~ Swnmlt wblle crewa • A eGld AlllMM atorm brCJu&ht received a foot or more of snow, and Mulcao borders, waa apr• NDd over an Inch of mote MU. aow Md heavy rain which cauaed the cloau~-:L of, cloaed from Yreka to Weed in sno•, tM l'G9d ••reopened to Nortbern California today. several mountain roads. VU1tr Northern Catl!ornla overniatht: today, accordlfta to San Mateo ea..,.... aldllilder and elOllnl roads and hi1hways ln the but waa reopened wlth use ot CountJ aherlff'• ct.put.)' Clyde for a Uma ...,_. blebway1. mountalna were paaaable only chains today. Sellen. Tboulb tbe National Weather with chains. Highway 299 was closed from Elahl motoriat. bedded down Service aaAd the storm lacked The Weather Service says Yreka to Arcata due to a slide at lb• Callfoi:nia Division of tbe Int.mil)' or the downpour more snow was likely as a seven milet east or WlUow Creek Foreatrr'• Sarato1a Summit two weM8 .,o that led to 31 second w ave oi the storm and travel advisories were Statiop after four Inches of snow deaths, the -.au.er front left a reaches coastal areas tonight. issued for roads above 1,500 feet made Hipway 35 impassable, blanket ol mow u low ·u 1,000 The storm was expected to end elevation elsewhere In Humboldt but that road was reopeMd t..t on tbe hWI 8J'OUDd I.he San Thursday morning. County. later. l"r'ndaco Bay Area. Interstate ~. a major West HiJthway 17 was closed at Thouah about 30 families * • * * ~ * Storm 4eath toll climbs to 303 By Tiie Aaeela&ed Pren Freeain1 dri11le and light snow fell today along the middle Atlantic Coaat into New En1land. Record high temperatures in the south burned off the chill of a record cold week but left Atlanta's huge airport socked in with foe today. · The death toll in almost two weeks ol severe cold across 'the eastern United States climbed to 303. A storm system over California dumped heavy snow · oo the Southwest and storms developing over the Rocky Mountains threatened snowfalls in the Midwest. A thick layer of new snow forced ofricials to close a bigbway in Oregon. On the East Coast, the storm gave a parting shot today, leavin1 a dustine of snow in New York , New Jersey and Connecticut and making roads slick. fog like condensation "on an icy &lass in the s ummertime," as a weather service spokesman put it. Despite the warm weather in the South, forecast ers said another arctic blast could be expected later this week. ·'The Siberian Express is just temporarily ~er ailed." said Ha r old Gibson. the weather service's chief meteorologist in New York City. After a 'week in which parts of , Georgia and Alabama were bit with record lows, the 74-degree weather Tuesday set a record for high t e mperature in Columbus, Ga., and tied a record in Birmingham. Ala. voluntarily left their hilltkle homM ln Paclftea eoutb of Su Francisco. there were no formal ev acuatlona and no major ·problems lo U\e bUly coaatal areas ol Santa Cnaa, llarln or San Mateo counties where the earlier storm caused it.a wont daf.t)age. "We have some minor 1Udea, but nothinl debUltatin1." said Karen Driacoll, a diapa&eher for the Marin County aheritrs ottice ·north of San Franc,sco. Roads io Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee. Arkansas and Oklahoma were. still slick with ice and litteredl with smashups when warm air moved in Tuesday and spread Visibility at Atlanta's huge Hartsfield Airporj., normally one of the nation's busiest. was down to "zero" late Tuesday night, th e Fed e ral Aviation Administration said. A first blanket' of fog prevented most planes from landing for 3"~ hours Tuesday morning, and a second blanket Tuesday night that was expected to last well into the morning caused up to 45-minute deJays. DEEP FREEZE The building which housed Daly's Hotel in Holyoke, M ass .. is covered w ith ice as a firefighter retrieves los\ Ar ........ equipment following the Tuesday morning fire which destroyed the building. * * * * * * Funnel cloud rips up roof in Hacienda Heights By Tiie Asaocla&ed Preas A winter storm that twisted into a n.ne1 cloud tore sections off a roof in Hacienda Relthts today, "IJl'O(JtinJ trees, breatme a window that cut a boy and flin1ing 1olf·ball-shed· haUatones in nearby Bassett and Santa Barbara. Snow flurriel caa&ecs a aection of Intentate 5 for more than ftve houn In tbe TejoD Pua t.brouP the Tebdapl MCMIDtalDI u a lon1-ezpedecl low-pre11ure. ~l(1111l.,lllUlll..iMYed ~ ... central coast, brln~I wi* • gusting up to-40 mph. J e ff Lujan, 13, was cut by flying glass when the twister touchl!d down about 1 a.m. in Hacienda Heights. 15 miles east 9f downtown Los Angeles. sherlfrs deputies said. The wind uprooted more than a dozen trees and tore away part of the roof of a house at Los Altos Drive in which Lujan was aleeping. A large tree branch was blown tbrougb the window of the Luja111' bedroom, said Deputy lllte Port.esl. but the 'boy was .treated by family members anti did not require hospitalization. Authorities also reported a s mall mudslide in the Carbon Canyon area of Orange County near Brea. It apparently c~ no serious da mage. "It just took a while to get here," National Weather Service forecaster Bob Webster said of the storm predicted since Monday. "We'U have showers on and off t hrough "today until Thursday, but it's a localized thing." A total or .64 inch of rain had fallen in downtown Los Angeles by 8 a.m., raising the season total to 4.47 inches compared to F • ls l about one inch al the same time inn ca nee p am a year ago, said forecaster Bette ·' * * * Reo. Normal al this time is about 61f.t inches, she said . Sudden blinding snow driven by 30-mph winds prompted the California Highway Patrol to close 46 miles or Interstate 5 Tuesday evening. ·'There was deep snow faUing too fast for the snowplows to take care of," sa'id a spokesman for the state Department or Transportation. He estimated that 2·3 inches of snow had fallen ~Y mc:-ning. Interstate 5 was reopened s h o rtl y a! ter 3 a :m . and r e mained open through the morning despite occasional snow flurries that began anew at about 6. But at one point Tuesday night * * * visibility was practically zero because of the swirling snow and fog. CH P o·m cers escorted convoys of 50 vehicles each throu«ih the area for an hour or so after the highway was reopened. Incfi·diameter b ail was reported in Bassett, adjacent to La Puente , a nd in Santa. Barbara. at 12: 15 a .m., Webster said. Small craft warnings were issued south to the Mexican border for rough seas and winds reaching 40 mph. Thunderstorms packing winds to 35 mph dumped a ha1r-inch of r a i n a t Lo 5 ·A n g e I e s In ternational Airport by midnight. * * * to buy area company Local rain -to leave Thursday By KEITH TUBER o.lly ............... The future of American Educational Television Network Inc. of Irvine remains clouded now that Miller Technology & Communications Corp. has called off plans to a!=quire the financialJy troubled fitm. AETN said In a release Tuesday that "i t ha s s ubstantially exhausted its working capital and that it is seeking sources of funding or potential acquisition partners. The company said there can be no auurance that it wiU obtain the working capital it requires in order to co nti nue its operations." A·ETN and Pho e nix , Ariz.·based Miller Technologies bad entered into a teller of intent Dec. 22, 1981 whereby the local adult educational firm would merge into a subsidiary of Miller for an exchange of stock valued at approximately $2.5 mi1Uon. Tbe deal was subject to a number of conditions, including approval of both companies' boarda of directors. Miller's direct.ors rejected the proposal. •'It was really a technical deciaion," said Richard Krahl, Miller senior Ylce president. "The fact is we had signed a letter of intent to buy them, and -reviewed all those things you review after sl1ning such a letter. We just decided it was in the' beat lnter~sts of our share holders not lo continue with the acquisition. Thal 's just how ~e chips fall ." In addition to termination or the merger, Miller has aiso pulled out of a joint venture agreement between AVT Inc .. o n e of its wholly owned subsidiaries. and AETN for the prod u ction , marketing and distribution of a TV series called "Computer Lifestyle." A VT has retained all the rights to the series, and will continue with the project. Barry Rupp, acting presjdent of AETN since the resignation of Local rain a nd occasional thundershowers last night and this morning are expected to decrease to 50 percent probability tonight and 20 percent Thursday morning. Cold unstable air and gusty winds accompanied the storm that came out of the Gulf of Alaska. Officials of the Orange County Environmental Management Agency say the storm dropped 0.31 inch of rain in Santa Ana by 8 a.m. today. That brings the season's total in that cliy to 5.47 inches. compared to 1.09 at this time last year In Huntington Beach. amateur meteorologist J . Sherman Denny measured 0.14 inch of rainfall at 8 a.m. to bring the season's total there to 5.72 compared to 1.81 last year. "We got a shower from about 6 a .m. to 6:30 a.m. but it was jus t enough to wash off the roofs." Denny said. Coastal officials issued a small craft advisory for boaters today because of gusts of wind up to 30 miles-per -hour out of the southwest. Winds are expected to shift to the northwest tonight and decrease Thursday. Motorists are advised to drive carefully in the m ountains because of snow showers above :t,500 feet that hrnders visibil\ty. · "The snow s howers aren't heavy enough to issue a winter s torm warning ," said a s pokesman for the weather bureau. The temperature is expected to drop to 47 degrees tonight. Warmer temperatures In the low 60s are predicted for Thursday. Clare N. Thain Jan. 1, said the .---------------------------------------- firm "is s till an ope rating company looking for additional capital." '·You never know about acquisitions," Rupp said. "It was their decision. not ours. We're just actively looking for another partner. or someone else who can provide cash infusion." A ETN raised $4.9 million last yea r with its first public offering, but a good portion o) that was used to pay back prior liabilities. T~e lack or operating capital forced the firm to lay off 25 employees in November. more than a third of its staff. Poe ritual still enigma Additional Savings . on Sport Coats All 40°/o OFF• 0- - adz ==t'I -t> 0"ANGl COAST Daily Pilat CIHlllted edvert1•19 1141142·5111 AH olttef dllllmMftta 142-4321 BALTIMORE (AP) -The Identity of people who decorate Edgar Allan Poe's grave every year with roses and liquor remained a mystery today. SALE ENDS ~, ... ,...... ...... c... ..... ~ <U" 1..-, ......... 1.-,unter .... ~ " !Mii ..... ..-.. ........ ••• ' ...... ..........,. .. ' ' Jeff Jerome, a keeper of the Baltimore gravesile, ·maintained a vigil in the cemetery Monday night on the birthday of the master of the macabre. Jerome said he had been planning to stay all ntaht, hopina to crack the mystery, but bad left hls eecluded watchl.a1 post at 11 p,m. to 1et a bamburter. When be returned about an hour later. aomeone bad placed three roses and a half·ftlled bottle ol "expensive" French brandy at Poe's rrave. ~ontinuln1 a tradition that becan ln 19'9 . • I 1Satarday I January 23rd 17th & Irvine Ave., Westcliff Plaza, Newport Beach, CA ·~ A ....... LIZA HONORED Entertainer Liza Minnelli hugs actor Gregory Peck who presented her with the Martha Graham Award for Excellenc<.• in the Arts at a dinner in New York. Sinatra po•tpone• Bowl concert. F r an k Si n atra h as pos tponed his sold -out pre-Super Bowl concert tonight because of a bout with the flu. T he sin ger's attorneys informed promoters that Sinatra would not be able to appear at Joe Louis Arena, said Bruce Lahti , vice Michael Foot, leader of Britain's opposition Labor Party, startled passengers aboard a British Airways flight by taking to the public addres s sys t em a n d launching into an impromptu monologue, the Telegr aph reported. The conservative news- paper quoted a passenger aboard the Oslo-to-London , flight , architect Desmond Near s -Cr ouch, as saying A civil suit involving the death of evangelist Oral Rober ts' daughter in an airplane cras h has been settled out of court for $8.S million, officials say in Oklahoma City. About $5.3 million will go to h er three children, according to the settlement. which brought to an end a president of the Olympia Statium Corp ., which manages the arena. The concert was one of the entertainment highligh ts scheduled for Super Bowl week in the Detroit a rea. The Sinatra concert was rescheduled for Feb. 3. Fool conducted a "garbled'' politi ca l harangue . denounced Prime Minister Mar ga ret Thatcher a nd promised to arrange more drinks for the passengers. ·1 "lt w as very em - barrassing," Nea r s - Crouchwasquotedassaying. Foot. contacted at his h ome i n London 's Hampstead di strict , would say only, "It was just a joke -some fun." suit that had been argued in Ok)ahoma County District Court since Oct. 17. The case arose out of a 1977 plane crash in Kansas that killed six people, including Rebecca Nasla, 37, of Tulsa, Roberts' daughter. and her husband Marshall, a Tulsa banker. Actor ,, author and f olk·•ln1er Tlleodore 8l~•I hu been released from Florida Ho1pltal·Orlando, where t,e wu beln1 treated after t!Ollap1ln1 over the weekend, officlala said. Offlclal1 said Blkel waa under1oln1 treatment for exhaustion. Blkel, S7, collapsed at a cut party ro11owln1 a Saturday nitht performance In Orlando. ·Alie• H . Ne•laart la president and chairman ol Gan nett Co. Jnc., and his wlfe of eleht years, Lori Wllloa. have been granted a divorce, the nationwide communications group announced. Neuhart and Ms. Wilson, a former Florida state senator, were married Dec. 31, 1973, ln a sunrise ceremony on the shore of Cocoa Beach, Fla. Jn a joint statement, they said: "We have obtained a div o r ce d ecree unde r Florida's no-fault law. This was a very personal decision, reached after a trial separation. All matters have bee n settled in a friendly man ner and we ask our friends and associates to view th.is in that light.'' Senate Armed Services C hairman J ohn Tower, R -Texas, put out i n announcr.ment that, as "the o n I y 1.: n I i s le d m i I i t a r y reservis t in the U .S . Congr ess," he 'd been prom o t ed from Chief Boatswain's Mate to Senior Chief Petty Officer in the Naval Reserve. Tower noted it was the second-highest rank that enlisted personnel can hold and s~id, "I am grateful to the Navy." PROMOTED Sen . John Tower. R-Texas. has been promoted to Senior Chief Petty Officer in the Na\'al Reserve. Less chance of rain ·coastal Periods ol lllOWen •(Kl •M>l•t•d tllv-r~ CIKrMsl"9 I01119hl Verlabl• cloud> Tnursday Gu>IY winch •I tlmu Proll•bolily of sflowers cll<rHslng lo SO ~rcent lontolll -20 i>e<<enl by Tflur~y mom Ing. Coastal low 46 ton1911t. S6 hl9ll TllvrMl•v. Waters.. 'I 1n1a11d low n IO<'llont. u 111on Tllundey. EIMWllere. WM lnc:r .. sll'Q 10 s .. Int tnro.,.h tonlont onr 011l1r wet1rs. U.S. summary Fot -!>Mb of !tie East toda y H _...,.,,r mowd In on the llHls of record told, wfllle lle••Y •-•II -.1ec1 Or--Ille ""'"'-l A-Ill Ille middle Atlllfltl< si.tes -r• sll<k alter a frHZlnt rain, tllles we rt o•ntrally cle•r •crou Mln1,.1ot• and Ille F lorida ~. -Wttwm Sllles wen tloucty, After • -In wnlcn parts of Gecwtla -~ _,.. lllt ..... rec.,d iews, u. 1~ _,,,.r T11nday ut a record for hlon ...,,,., .......... Columbus, (>a, .. - ...... 1'9<...0 ... llrmlnltlaM. Ala. Storm 1y~tem• ,...,.loplft9 o.,.r Ille uutMm and centra l RoOy Moulllelns ---more .,_ In ltle-~-Sftew-~led later t11 t1M d•Y -mest ol IN -ern lfllrd of ""' nation, wm. rellllflOwets •10fl9 tN 1outll1r11 Peclfl< coast. Snow was lorecest from IN nort"9r11 plains across tlle norlllern natl ol 1n1 Mississippi ve111v. Sllow1rs -re predicted 111 tne u11tllern Olllo Vallwy Into tne -"'MtC. -ales-re ••Pl<llCI to lie""''"' Ill IN F!Wlde penlnwle. y..,..,.......,... early today r ...... lrom mt11111 26 detr•et 111 1"'9.-leMI FetlS. Minn., IO n lft l,_11tltllte-MtAlleft, Teus. California .., ........ "' .......... E x te nded Jo recast SOUTHERN C AllFORHIA COASTAL AHO MOUNTAIN AREAS -Fair wlel a deity warmtt19 t,...... o.<rHMl'Q wlftch Ill rnount.ein\ Hl!ll' twmperal\Kft 111 the co.ntal •rwH 111 mid~ tom~ -lows ~lly >J to 0 Hltf>S Ill lN ,,_t.llns mlO-JCB to mid--~ IS to JO Hltf\ temperetuns ... mine S to I ...., .. s by Sunday but <onttn....i «>Id 11'9111\ wltll IO<el trettll'Q lemtoer8'-. ~Temperatures . NATION Mt LA Pre. Albany IS ' Al...._ St ,.. Amarillo " 47 JO<ktll!tlle 7t JO Tucwn '3 .. A11cl10r ... • .J J-•u " ' Tutu 49 ,. AsMvllle " J2 Kens City • 21 Watlllllttll ,. u Altallle " • • CM usv..-,. ,. Wlclllta 0 • Allllfltc City " ,. Llttle Roc:ll 51 lS .Ot CM.ll"CMllllA Baltimore 20 20 .04 Loulsvllle 3' lJ Ballenlleld ,. .. B lrm ,,..,,,, 14 ,. .02 MefnPfllS SJ • Blyltle .. -a1smen:ll 2 ·U I Mlenlt 74 n BolM ,. " u Mllw..._ 2t 14 .. ,.._ 49 • 80Jloll 22 17 .CM Mptt-St.P u 2 Lllfl<a•-. S2 u 8row111vlle 12 n Natllvllle S7 " Los A....+K .0 • Bllftalo 27 20 ..... one-'° .s Mery1v111e " C2 c11em.111 sc ., " NewYor11 2' 24 01 Mefttt,..., ~ -. Ne.dies Cl\erl1t11WV 47 JS .M " .......... " " .• Oelll•lld .. - CNY-• tJ .CM Ollie City 70 u SI .. Clllcet0 >4 12 o-2J ' P_R ..... n 41 CIMIMetl n JO °"9 .... 7t SI Red llufl 4J J4 Ctevetalld J7 14 Piii ....... 2S u Rectwood CllV n 0 Colum!Ma J1 21 Plloetllx M " seer-• .. • Oet·l't W111 ,, M Plttlllwtfl .).4 24 OI SetlllH M St Oen.,.r JO 21 ""-·-,, 2 . s...o .... ., 53 OesMo!Ns n •• Pfl-.o... .. '1 ·: Sefl l'rencltco SI u Detroit 2S 4 Ratlid Ctty 14 4 · s.ntee.....,.. SI ff Oulutll IS ·IS .01 .. _ " " Se<lteMe<te ,. - El Peto SI .50 Rk--JS 2S 04 Se.c:t1'9ft so ., F•lrbelltls ·10 ·21 SeltU..e 41 " . Tllermel 70 .. Hertford " ' •• Seet11e 41 • l ent ow St • Helene 12 > .01 St Louis :16 24 ........ 4l u H-ulu 11 .. SIP·T-,. SI ·"'*' .... , . Houston ,, .. St Sle Mer'le 22 s M Cataline M JO 111c111ao1k ,, " 5"4<• ... ,, 16 • jMOOW.., .. ., 0 Ml.WI!-JS t1 .... _,...,, St • lllf RIPIRT Tide a We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number below and your message will be recorded. tnrnscribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour aruwerina aervlce may be used to record let- ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors muat Include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls. plebe. . Tell u11 what's on your mind. J \ \ --- ·" ·" .JI .47 •• .SJ .. .u AO .OS •• .5) Orange Cout DAILY PILOT,Wtdne1day, January 20, 1982 H/f APW ........ SURPRISE LANDING Marines drive onto San Clemente Island off Southern Californit..1 in tracked <Amphibious landing vehicles during major exercise that ended this week. No notice was given the 9.000 sailors and 2.700 Marines beforl' drill designed for possible evacuation of AmeriC'ans from foreign <'Oun tr~-. Troops make surprise landing Sailors , Marines pra ctice evacuation on SC Is land ln the first such drills off the West Coast, the Navy says 9,000 sailors and 2 ,700 Marines successfully staged a surprise exercise a t San Clemente Island to practice "evacuating" Americans from a foreign country. "It was a magnificent effort on very short notice," said Capt. John J. Higginson, com mander of Amphibious Squtdron 7. No word or it leaked out to news U CI lectures • OD Y arlOU8. topics set A series of lectures and discussions on topics ranging from A%tec archaeology to the writings of Chicano women has been scheduled at UC Irvine for this month and next. Dr. Miguel Leon· Portilla, director of the Ins titute of Historical Research at the National Universit)' of Mexico, will lecture on Aztec archaeology at 4 p.m. Friday in Room 201 of the University Center. Novelist Jose Villarreal. a professor of English at the American School in Mexico City, will talk about Hispanic writers at 4 p.m. Feb. 4 in Room 101 of the University Center . Ciriaco Gonzales. director of the Minority Biomedical Support Program of the National Institutes of Health, will speak at 4 p.m. Feb. 11 in Room 101 of the Un iver sity Ce nte r on Hispanic medical research Writer s E s tela Portillo-Tra mbley and Lo rna Cervantes will conduct an afternoon panel discussion at 1 p .m . Feb . 25 i n th e Cross-Cultural Center on the writings of Chicano women. For more information on the fre e -to-the-public Hispanic speakers series call 833-5588 .• Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Ctrtif~d Gemologitt. AGS "'"'·U~,., Ml of Mogok Mining Co The beautiful. blood-red rubies of Burma have long been '·among the most treasured or the world's gemstones. While ' the ruby is found in Thailand,' Cey l on . and even North Carolina, it is the Bur ma specimens t hat are the most sought after. Ony the diamond is harder than this tough beauty. For most of history, Burma has supplied not only t he fines t rubies. but the greatest quantity. UnUI just a few generations ago, Burma's Mogok Mines produced nearly all of the world's r ubies from one group of di11inga owned by one firm. Because of t.be value 1 or the ruby, and Its narrowly restricted source In those days, Mogok'a mine foremen went to ext raordinary lengths to guard the supply. Workmen In the Mogok mines were searched very thoroughly as they left work each day to be sure they ~ we ren't laking any rubles. ~'When miners began swallowiq be rubles, Motok m ade tbern wear padlocked mesh ca1ea around their heads as t hey worked. The cases became a ymbol of the ruby mlnin& media until Tuesday. The Ma rines stormed ashore Sunday as the aircraft carrier USS Ranger and eight cruisers. destroyer s and support ships waited and "rescued" 110 other leathernecks in civilian clothes representing a fictional U.S. ambassador, embassy officials and others. Commanding officers of warships in Southern California and Hawaiian ports were alerted Jan. 7, but most of the sailors and Marines knew nothing until the operation was under way. As the full-scale call up began, the Navy ordered and stowed hundreds of tons of s upplies, f ood a nd equipment. Combat-equipped Marines and llelicopters were se11t to t.he ships. · The amphibious task group left San Diego and Long Beach last Wednesday a ftern oon. Higginson said, adding "we beat the required short tim etable for readiness to deploy. It went smoothly and quietly." Sunday's landing was .by a mphibi ous c ra f t and helicopters, simult anee>ualy, with the Marines simulating the capture of both an airport and U.S. Embassy on separate sides of the island. The make-believe civilians pretended to be sick, injured and hysterical. They were evacuated to the new amphibious assault s hip USS Peleliu, in her ftnt major exercise since being agsigned to Long Beach a year ago. and lo the USS Cleveland for treatment by medical teams. Col. John I. Hopkins o f Brooklyn, N. Y., commander o( the 17th Marine Amphibious OOH. safd tfie exercise proved U :s . force s can evacuate Americans s tranded in a government collapsing in terrorist atta-cks and insurgent fighting. Hop~ins said the four-day e xerc ise, scheduled to be followed with others, proved Marines and sailors "can do it fast and do it well." Third search f ruitle8s for missing loot in Mesa By JODI CADENHEAD Of ttle Delly "let Staff Police dug through a muddy Costa Mesa gravel pit Monday searching for stolen handguns, jewelry and cameras s upposedly buried there by thieves. Costa Mesa police officer Philip McCormick said police in Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa received a tip last week that stolen property was hidden near a tree house allegedly used by a band of youths who lived inside the makeshift s helter at the end of 19th Street near Hillcrest Park. Huntington Beach p olice detective Ray Hattabaugh said he believes the loot is still buried in the vicinity. "It's got to be in the multi -thousands ," said Hattabaugh of the property allegedly s tolen from Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach hom es. "We just can't fi nd it." Police began looking at the site last week after Huntington Bea c h o Hicers arrested a transient, Marlin Rooks. 18. Hattabaugh said Rooks was arrested in connection with a s tring of break-ins in Huntington Beach. He remains in Orange County Jail. Later Costa Mesa police arrested David Anthony Ward, 19, at the tree hut, in connection with break-ins in Costa Mesa. Also identiried as a transient, he Temains in county jail. Recll feeli1195 ~rea19old Tt. bast gift olwoys refi.cts'yo~r sina,,,ty. Thol's why Karol Gold Jewelry 1s so perfect when you feel deeply obov• someone. We invite yov lo 5ee ovr collection of Korof gold bcootlets, eorrin~. chains ond rings And to let us help you choose the perfecl pte<le IO echo .,.ovr sentiments . ..,, gold. A.i1lent HpreMion of how muci'I .,.ov mean it. J. C.J./umplu.;.6 J.-1.,.6 MEMBER AMEAICAN GEM SOCIETY 1823 NEWPORT BlVO, COSTA MESA 36 m..a IN THE SAME LOCATION @ BankAm•ncard-Maeter Cha PHONE 141-M01 i I ' I I I 1 · Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedne1d1y, January ~o. 1982. I~Jffi~~(jJ~ , ~- Reqgan-ra11t highlighted • • ~resident,s news conference covered wide spectrum • P W ASHINGTON <AP) -Here, at a alance, are hllhllghta or t naldent Rea1an's nationally broadcast news conference 'lueaday: II IM)LAND Ile fn "'Poland under:lnartlal law •'is still deteriorating'· and, 'twe're not aoinc to wait forever for improvement," Rea1an said, ~thout detaillnl what steps he ight take . He said trade ~strictlons imposed by the . nited States after the-Polish Hilary took power "have had I effect" but •·people are still prisone d . There is n o mmunication with Solidarity between th e military vernment an~ the people." ~'Reagan !iaid he had "a lengthy bml1\unication" from P ope bbn Paul II. who is Polish, and '.:He approves what we have ey evidence . troduced ATLANTA <AP> -After two eeks or. testimony in Wayne B. illiam s' murd e r trial ,' rosec utors h a v e b egun ntr oduc ing the di s puted vide nce that they say is a orner stone of their ca se - 1croscopic fibers found on the dies or the two victims, Today's first testimony was rom Herbert Pratt of E.l. du ont de Nemours & Co .. the first f several witnesses expected to stify about the fibers. State crime lab microanalyst ichard Ernest took the witness tand late Monday to identify our packages of fibers and airs removed from Williams ' ar with a special vacuum tool uring a June 3 search. done ao far .... And yet . we are not 1oln1 to wait forever for Im provement in the s ituation there. We have those steps that we can take ." THE ECONOMY "l'm ·s ure we will see an ups wing in the economy," i n'c 1 u d i n g r e d u c e d une mployment, Inflation and interest rates, Reagan said. H e b l a m e d ri s ing un e mpl o ym e nt o n a "continu~tion of a n increase tbat got under way in the last several months or 1980," before he took office. On the· positive side , "there are a million people more working than there were In 1980" and .. the people today have a lower interest rate than they had when we started and the inflation rate is sizably lower than it was when we took o ffi ce." He said Am er ican b usiness s t ands ready to r espond t o h i s econ o m ic incentives; "I think we're just seeing a little caution." RACIAL DISCRIMINATION He branded the Inte rna l Revenue Service announcement that it would no longer bar tax exemptions from private schools t h a t pr ac ti c e r ac ial discr imination "a procedural matter" not a policy change. "I Initiated it." Reagan said of the revers al of an 11-year-old policy a gains t tax e xempttons fo r d iscrimina to r y s c hools . He noted that he has since as ked Congress to reinstate the policy, making it federal policy and not just an executive order. De ny ing . he igno res th e interests of blacks , Reagan said. "I a m for affirmative action. I am against quotas.'' MIDEAST Reagan said the quest ion or ways ~llieDailY Pilot· helps women· manage money better I Sho p money -saving values ad· vertised in the Daily Pilot. 2 Read how other Ora nge Coast resi· dents use. make a nd spend their money in the Featuring pages . S Get a good deal on used items or find reliable service people and other time-and money-saving values in the classified ads. 4 Sa ve valua ble gasoline planning 'shopping-lrips t-o local stores-'ad\rertising- in the Daily Pilot. ·· 5 Clip money-sa ving coupons. 6 Organize your coupon savings with the Superma rket Shopper. each Wednes· ~ay and Sunday in the Daily Pilot. autonomy for the Palestlnlana la "the tou1he1t ques tion " concerning U.S. policy In the Mideast. "We w,ant to help if we can" as Israel and Eopt attempt to revive talks on the Palestinian self-rule questiQn prior to Israel's sche duled withdrawal from the Sinai by Aprll 25. NEWS LEAKS "We need to protect national security a nd our a bility to conduct foreign policy ." Reagan said, addina the issue of giving lie detector t est s t o p eople suapectea or leaking information ''will depend on the individual case." Reagan said "we're not doing anything that is not in the law today and we will protect the constitutional r ights of our citizens." ABORTION Reagan reiterated his position tha t "abortion is the taking of a human life" and said a provision in a California law tha t allowed abortions when ra pe victims become pregnant, ··was used as a g igantic loophole a nd it lite r a lly led to a bortion on de m and."' DEFENSE SPENDING More m o ney i s n ee d e d because "we a r e re building something that has been allowed to deteriorate badl y over the years," the president sa id. CHARITY Reagan said he believes in contributing a t e n t h o f his income to charity. but not all or his contributions show up on the income lax returns he makes public. He said he may release m o r e informati o n o n his dona tions in the future, .. But my conscience is clear with regard to what I have been giving ... READY FOR PROBE T he tall sect ion or th<:' Air Florida jet that <.·r ashcd into the Poto1mu: .............. ha ngar is locatl'd at Na tiona l Airport in A rling t o n . V a . Anolh<.•r p l a n <.• in th t• baekgrnun<I 1:-; t aking off from the airport out ~ick Was,hi n~t on. 0 l' Ri vl'r l;.ist we<.•k is pulled into a l '.S. Coast Guard _hanga r on a truck Tuescta~ Thl• ) Campaign spending rule upheld ... U .S. Supreme Court agrees on rights of committees WASHI NGTON <AP > -An evenly divided U.S. Supreme Court has upheld a ruling giving ··un a utho rized "' p o litical committees the right to spend unlimited amounts of money to back a presidential candidate whose officia l campa ign is financed from public funds. A $1 ,000 s pe nding limit imposed by Congress was struck do wn by a fede ral court in Wa s hi ng t o n in 1980 a fte r Co mmon Cau s e . a c itizens advocacy g r o up . a nd the F edera l Election Com m ission challenged the multimill ion dollar campa igning by three unautho ri zed committees working for Ronald Reagan's election to the presidency. By a 4-4 vote. the high court ~.'uesday upheld that nlling. However, under court rules the decision has no precedential impact on future cases. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor took no part in the decision of the case. thus clearing the way for the 4.4 split. Among those who successfully cha llenged the $1.000 limit was Sen. Harrison H . Schmitt, R-N.M. Und er t h e P res id e ntial Election Campaign Fund Act, then ·candidate Reagan h ad chosen public financing for his ca mpaign and was gr anted S29.4 million. The presidential fund act e ffec tively prohibits publicly fin a n ced gene r a l e l ection candidates from accepting any private contributions. However , the fed era l law allowed unauthorized political committ~es lo raise and spend up to $1 ,000 each to support a party's pre sidential ticket. The Supreme Court upheld the ruling that the ceiling violated political g roups ' Firs t Ame ndment rights. ~ Casual Slacks ............... 22.90-24.90 Reg. 30.00·32.50. Corduroy. duck cloth. flannel. 7 Find money-saving yet tasty recipes in Wednesday's food pages. 8 Sell idle household items in the Da i - ly Pilot classified pages . Men's Suits : ....... ~119-S249 Outerwear ................... 34.90-59.90 Reg. 37.50·85.00. Famous maker. Outstanding value. • Check the Weekender sections for free or low·cost enterta inment ideas for the family. 10 Rely on fina nc ial advice by Sylvia Porte r -one of the world's most read financial advisers -who provides un- derstandable , timely. interest ing and to- the-point information. Manage your money more efficiently today. Call 642-4321 to s ubscribe, :or, mail a check or money order for s4.oo with the coupon below to the Daily Pilot Circulation Dept., 330 W. Bay Street.· P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. ········-··· lrffelp me manage money better. · I Send my Daily Pilot subscription. today. Enclosed is my check or · money order 'for $4.00 I for one month's subscription. I llilyl'illt -. . .. ....... Reg .175.00-335.00. Lightweight and year round weight suits in stripes. plaids. solids. Includes our most famous brand. Sport Coats ... s79.s119 Reg. 125.00-185.00. 1(¥)0/o wool and wool blends in solids & patterns. Includes Harris Tweeds and our most fa mo us brands. M1n1mum charge tor alterations Dress Shirts ................... 3 for 45.00 Reg:--22.5().28.50. Long-sleeve. Save up ta 40.50. Velour Shirts ................. .' ....... 29.90 ' Reg. 45.00. Assorted stripes. Famous Maker Jog Sult .......... 59.90 Reg. 80.00. Fleece lined. Snap-off hocx:f. Sweater Collections ....... 22.90-69.90 Reg. 32.50· 100.00. Includes Pendleton. Mandate Support Brief ............ 13.90 Reg. 17.50. Spandex suppert for a trim look. Adi. Sport Shirt ................... 9.90 Reg. 19.95. Pol yester. cotton knit. Casual Shoes .................... , ... 44.90 Reg. 55.00. Includes popular saddle shoes. Bally Dress Shoes ......... 94.90-99.90 Reg. to 140.00. Famous Bally quality. SAVE IN WOMENS-DEPT. Sportswear .Separates .... 1/3 to 1'2 off Long & Short Coat8 ............... 44.99 Reg. 150.00. Sizes 8-18. I J ~filU~ • Resignation sought Over work rules VENTURA (AP) -A county employee union ls dernandlni Gary Montgomery's resitn•lion /over the personnel mana1er's _ new list ol work rules, whlcb prohibit on-the-job napping, nail -1>0lts1rtng, tratr nyrtng and drug dealine throueh lnte r -ollice mail. \ Reports of the last offense among some 'ol the 800 workers ln Ventura County 's Public Social Services Derartment ''trlpped the tr geer," Montgomery aa1d. .. marijuana or any aubltanee or Item nol pertalnin1 to county business," the memo aaid. "Employees will not wash or dry their hair after reportinl for work." tre list a1w-tsansl'e~dllrl anything but county material.a on the job, desk-top cards.es and work-site ba bysltUna. Montgomery's dictum and the accompanying demand t hat employees sign a m emo acknowledging th e r ules outraged two unions, the Public Employees Association of Ventura County and Local 535 ol the Service Employees International . ~· ............. Orange Coat D~L Y PILOT Nledne1day, J1nu1ry 20, 1982 H/F --~ ........ J8Pan will import l ~!L~~!~ .. !~~l~w1au., J new aireemen t allowln1 from medfly-lnfnted areas, 1 California citrus fr uit to be more costly and daniero~ •h ipped to Japan at cold procaa, or keepln1 the frull ta temperatures to ward ofl cold 1tora1e lor. 16 days before Med iterranean f r u it fl y s h ipplo1, which ii a h o infestation bu met wlt.b mixed expenalve. ,8 ~1fi~~=· lrom state a1rtcuJtural .fa pan banned Imports ot citrus l rults d urlDI l aad "This is certalnly very 1ood summer'• medtly crlall aacf news," said California Farm subsequently required that all -Bureau presideottlenr,..-Vou on Cattfomta frutt ---not Just tboift" b e a r i n 1 of T u e s d a y • s from medfiy-lnfnted areu - a1reement. had to be luml1ated or 1el throu1h cold s tora1e befo,..· J a panese consuJs Shuji Kita shipment. ?l and K . Mishikawa said the , agreement came on the aeeond RecenUy, Japan a1reed~ day ol a three-day negotiaUna cold treatment before ahlp aeuion in Japan between was adequate for cltru Japanese agricultural officiala · h a r v a a t e d o u t a I d a n d a fl v e . me m b ~ r u . s . medfly.infetted areu. ; Department ol Agriculture team Tuesday's aareement • ....,, .. r: Alter a county supervisor's wile backed up the drug rumors, he had agency director James Isom develop rules a_gainst "bizarre things that are taking or have taken place in some of t.he agency facilities." The latter has requested Montgomery's removal and on T u es day won county s up e rvisor s ' appr oval lo investigate the ·tuation. SEARCH PLANNED -Actor Jackie Gleason has-.iannounced led by Assistant ~A1ricu. lture relri1erated shlppifta of all f Secretary ol Ma keting and cam e after American aJli lnspectionC.W. Mc lllanin. J a panese p lant quar aotin experts discussed data sbo The agreeme n t allows that medfly larvae are killedJ!i shipboard cold treatment to kill citrus is stored below 33.~ ofl medfly larvae as an degrees Fahrenheitlor 12 daya,',. "Employees wilt not use the brown mail to diStribute pills, that a national search will start next month to find a bov between the ages of 10 and 12 who is a look-alike of Gleason at that age to appear in his new film "The Toy." Bill to ban suit,s dies in comnlittee SA C RAMENTO (AP ) - Legislation lo ban s uits by women who blame their cancer on the anti-misc8J!iage drug DES, but don't know what brand their moij)ers took decades ago, has died in committee. SB228 by Sen . Ed ' Davis, R· Chats worth, got only two votes late Tuesday night in the nine-member Senate Judiciary Committee. Five members voted against it. The bill was sponsored by drug companies and other manufacturers. In a hearing that lasted more than two hours, the committee heard a plea from Justine McCabe, who blam ed complications in her pregnancy on the sihce-banned DES her mqlher took. &.ignpl.eada gai/Jy to paasing secrets SAN DIEGO (AP > -A 2~·yea r-old Navy ensign apolo· gt zed_ at a general cour t-martial after pleading ~uilty to passif\i s ecret. electronics documents to South Africa, and asked for "an o pportunity to g~t my Lile back together." '.'I deeply regret t h e embarrassment I have brought to the U.S. government, the Navy and my family," inai~n Stephen Anthony Gaith ersbu rg, ~d ., told a s ix-officer jury Tuesday after pleading guilty to espionage charges. "There's no excuse for what I've done." he sa.id. "As you decide my sentence, I ask you to give me an opportunity to get my life back together." At a news conference Tuesday, he called for a "back to basics" approach to public education, and claimed that Riles has been held "captive of pressure groups like the ACLU, the California Teachers Association, the National Education Association, the NAACP and a liberal establishment.'' Fonner Brown ai.de named health chief SACRAMENTO (AP} -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has appointed a former Assembly aide as director of the, state Departme nt of Mental Hea1th. t he announcement Tuelday said ~enneth J . Wa1staff, now a deputy director ol the stat& Health and Welfare Agency, will take over his new duties Feb. 1. W aptalf, 39, of Davis, was chief consultant to the Aasembl)t Health Committee and a budcet analyst for the Department of Finance before joining the Health a nd Welfare Agency. Wanty coroner 1Je1a official reprimand LOS ANGELd° CAP> -County Coroner Tnomas Noguchi 's hould "stic k to t he lads" in det ailing autopsy reports, county supervisors said in an official reprimand for his com men ts after the deaths ol actors Willia m Holden and Natalie Wood last November HARBOR BLVD OF CARS • 1982 A<JTC) SHOW THORSDAY, FRIDAY, SAliORDAY & SUNDAY JAN. 21st JAN. 22nd JAN. 23rd JAN. 24th · IA 8Chool off icia/, armounces candidacy SAC RAMENTO CAP) -Richard Ferraro, a conservative member of the Los Angeles school board, says he will run for state superintendent of public instruction. a post held by Wilson Riles. Ferraro, 57, a former teacher, is a 12-year veteran of the Los Angeles board. The 5-0 censure vote Tuesday accused the namboyant Noguchi of "sensationalis m," a charge the Screen Actors Guild has also levied. Noguchi s~ggested Holden was too drunk to get help for a head cut after ·h e f e ll in 'his Sa n ta Monica a partme nt. In Mi ss Wood 's accjdental drowning ofl Santa Catalina Island, he speculated about an argument between Miss Wood 's husband, Robert Wagner, and actor Christopher Walken. SOUTH COAST PLAZA ~I ~---~-,, ~ • .rl • ._ ./'fue. r.W.~ llHl/5u/t. -e .... ... * * * * * * * * * * FEATURING: • AMC • * J AGUAR B UICK * J E EP CADILLAC * LINCOLN CHEVROLET * MAZDA CHRYSLER * MERCURY DATSUN * OLDSMOBILE DODGE * PLYMOUTH ,FORD * RENAULT HONDA * TOYOTA IMP·ERIAL * VOLVO > I " llllJPlll WEDNESDAY, JAN. 20, 19'2 0 ~ lllTlllTll lllCl/flllTlll lllllY CAVALCADE COMICS TE LEVI SI.ON 82·3 Bit 89 A Newport consultant says colors can affect office productivity. See Page 84. 0 . Huntington Beach bucks trend, crime rate di~1 Thf crime rate in Hunttncton Beacll dropped 11 .3 percent during 1981, according to year-end figure• compiled by the city's police department. Homlcldes, burglary, auto theft and thefts valued at $3>0 or less all declined, the report Indicates. Minor increases were recorded in thefts valued over. T. Worthy' memorial rites held Memorial services were heJCl today for Thomas "Gus" Worthy, a son of Huntington Beach farming pioneers and a former chairman of the city planning.commission. Mr. Worthy was born in Huntington Beach in 1898. His parents, Jesse and Elva Worthy, bad moved from Arkansas to the coastal town and started farming lima beans on 90 acres near the southwest corner of Warner Avenue and Gothard Street. Mr. Worthy attended Ocean View Grammar School, but moved with his family to La Puente for a few years where he went to Covina High School. After high school. he enlisted in the Army during WWI, but the war ended before his 90-day training period was completed and he was discharged. Mr. Worthy moved back to Huntington Beach to help the family operate the bean farm. His family also purchased farm land in the Imperial Valley and for a time he supervised work there. However, for most of his life, he lived in Hu.ntington Beach. From 1960 to 1968, he was a city planning commissioner, serving as chairman for one year. Mr. Worthy died Sunday following a long illness. He was 83. He is survived by his widow Velda; his brothers Walter, ol. Roseville, Otto, of Valinda, and Merle. of Chino; bis sisters Lela Hawk , of Ir vine , Velda Thurman, of Chula Vista, and Pearl Pea.rce, of Grants Pass, Ore.; and numerous nephews and cousins. Norm Worthy, city director or parks and recreation, is Mr. Worthy's second cousin. Drowning • • V1cl1m identified The Orange County Coroner's office bas Identified the drowning victim who was found off Huntington Beach as Robert L. Christophersen, 33. A coroner's spokesman said today officials are seeking the public's help in locating the dead man's family. Cbristophersen had been living aboard the boat "Dutch Treat" orf Peter's Landing. Police said bis body was spotted noating face down in the 'ocean off Peter's Landing Monday afternoon. Lt. Merle Schneblin said no evidence of foul play was discovered and officers believe the man fell into the water and drowned accidentally. The coroner's spokesman said anyone with knowledge about the dead man's family is asked lo call the coroner's office, 834-4392. Mishap kil-s boy o~ trike A 4-year.old Huntington Beach boy was killed Tuesday when he rode his "Bil Wheela" tricycle down a driveway into tbe path of a car, police said. The boy, Juoo Alan Kelly, 732 Clay Ave., was rushed to Fountain VaUey Community , Hospital with musive head and chest i njuries. He was pronounced dead at 5:45 p.m ., offlcen aald. Police aald the accident occurred at 4:07 p.m. on Clay. Awenue ln front of the apartment bullcllDI where tbe boy llYed. PoUce said tbe driver ol tbe auto that stnaek blm wu not l.DjVtJd and WU D0t cited in tbe tndda. Tbe bo7 beeame tbe city's tblrd traffte death ol t•. $200 and in robberies. The most si1nllicant increase occurred in reported forcible raP.es -from S9 in 1.98Q to 88 ln 1981. ·attention of patrol oJficen and lnveati1atora to particular neighborhoods where a .crtme problem develops. He aaid many of tbe local rapes-have-been random attacks on young women who have accepted rides with strangen. Huntington Beach Police Cbld Earle Robitaille said he ls pleased with the overall drop in crime. He attributed the decrease in part to a policy of shifting the Re1ardlng lbe lncreue in rapea durin1 1981, Robitaille said, "I think lhia la going to be tbe case in all beach communities. Unleaa we see an end to the youni ladles blt~hlnl rides, I don't see that trend as coming down." Robitaille said be la moat pleased by the decreaae in bur1larin, whlcb account for 'ball the major crimes in the . city. HuoUncton Beach bad a 5.1 percent drop in burclaries, from 3,'48 in 1980 to 3,• In 1981. AERIAL PROTECTION -Fountain Vallev Mayor Ben Nielsen. left. and Fire Chief Richard Jorgensen take a turn behind Deify~ "'911..., ·~ ...... the wheel of a 1947 aerial l adder truck on loan to the citv while its ladder truck is being upgraded. Sight of new truck alarming - No confusing FV loaner with rest of fleet By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. Deify ...... SW! Fountain Valley residents may do a double-take when they catch sight of lbe tangerine-colored 35-year-old fire truck that will respond to locaJ calls in coming weeks. The 1947 Seagrave Ladder Truck is on loan from the Santa Ana College Fire Academy, where it Is used for training student firefighters. . The loaner vehicle is needed as a fill-in for the city's regular Ladder Truck 30, which is being overhauled. Truck 30, which will receive a new, more powerful engine and a new coat of red paint, wiU be out of service until March 30. Until its return, the city will rely on the 1947 Seagrave, which has been certllied by the state for use in front-line fare fi1htin1, Fountain Valley Fire Chief Richard Jorgensen said. "We definitely need the capability of aerial protection in this community," the chief said, "especially with all the wood- sbin(led roofs here." The truck is equipped for 7S.foot aerial capacity, enabling a firefighter to spray water down on a burning root. Jorgensen said Fountain Valley crews. a re now training on proper bandlln1 of the older truck, which bas no power steerinc or automatic transmission. Purchased after World War JI by the Santa Ana Fire Department, the truck wu recently retired from active duty and donated to the fire academy. The academy paints its vehicles orange to differentiate them from the equipment used by regular fire departments. • The city's other crime totals for 1981 include: -Homicide&: four, down from seven the previous' year. -Robberies: 211, up from 205 in 1980. -Tbefta over '200: 1,88', up 6.8 percent from 1980. -Aggravated Assaults: 280, a 13.6 percent decrease from 1980. -Auto Thefts: 696, an 18.3 percent drop. -Drug Violations: 468, a 19.3 percent drop. -Arson: .40, down 29.8 percent. -Vandalism: 1,450, down 2.5 percent. -Drunken Driving: 1,694 , down 20 percent. The property loss in Huntington Beach during 1981 attributed to robberies, thefts and burglaries totaled $8 .1 million, a 7.5 percent drop from 1980. The numbe r of arrests citywide dropped 33 percent in 1981 to 8,492. _,, · · Robitaille attributed this decrease to more selective emphasis by officers. "We're not spending nearly as much time now on civi l disturbances and drunltS' on the beach," the police chief said. "We're worried instead about the burglars, the rapists and the robbers. We're stressing quality over quantity or arrests ... For 1982, the chief promised more attention to driving violations in an effort to reduce local traffic death~ (28 in 1981 ) a nd injury accidents Cl,359 in 1981). He also vows to continue the hard-line s tance agains t law-breakers from outside the city who converge on the beach during the summer. CRIME REPORT -Police Chief Earle Robitaille reported an overall drop in crime in Huntington Beach. .. Every year at Easter and during the first weeks or summer, it's a test to see what position we'll take," Robitaille s aid ... We show them that Huntington Beach is not t~e place to have shoot-outs or to tear up the town." The police chief said he wiU continue to press city officials for an increase in the size of his department, with the aim of increasing the current ratio of 1.1 sworn officers per thousand residents to 1.5. • Family Service president cited Irvine res ide nt Mary Boyce has received the annual Family Service Award for her work as past president of the counseling organization. Also honored during the all,n ual Fam Hy Service Association dinner Jan. 13 in Costa Mesa were Bea Tbomas of Capistrano Beach and Billie B earman of Fountain Valley. for their first year of service on the board or directors. Installed as nel.¥ officers were: presidfnt lane Scllutb, Fullerton;· vice president lohn Klllefer, Corona del Ma r : treasurer Humberto Lopez, Santa Ana and secretary Billie Bearman. Dan Goldaer, Mark Branson, Me1 McCarthy, Charles Bowes and R•n Schiff were installed as new board members. • Boys Club to imtall officers A new board .of directors for tbe Boys Club of Yountain Valley will take office during an installation dinner slated Friday, Jan. 22 at Guy Fawkes Restaurant, 17171 Brookhurst St. Orange County Supervisor Rofer Stanton will install the new officer s: C harlie Rodri1ae1, president; ClUf Jackson, Frank Navarro, and Irene Mardini, vice pres idents; Larry Clark, treas urer and Roberta DeFrafa, secretary. Also during the program Frank Darllnf, president ol Advanced Tax Concept, will pres ent a S3.000 donation to the Boys Club for its 1982 operating expenses. The dinner, at 7:30 p .m .. w i 11 be preceded b y a cocktail hour at 6:30. Tickets are $10 per person. • Five students in 'Who'1 Who' ' I Four university students from Huntington Beach and one from Fountain Valley have been selected to the 1982 edition of "Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges, .. said an official of Cal State University of Long Beach. Lort Er-dmaa, lsaml Hara, Elisa~ Swift and Aatlloay Teag, all of Huntington Beach and llobe11 Neal of Fountain Valley were amonc 25 Cal State Long Beach st~dents ho nored in the annual directory this year. Students are selected based o n academic achievement, service to the community, leadership in extracurricular activities and future potential, said a university spokesman . The directory has been published yearly since 1934. Students are selected fpr the directory from more than l ,300 Institutions in all SO stales, tbe District of Co l u m bi a and s•e v er a I foreign nations. the spokesman said. 7 seeking city council seats in Fountain Valley A large field of candidates is t aking shape for Fountain Valley's April 13 City Council election, in which three seats will be at stake. Seven residents already have taken out nominaUon papers. An ei,itth person -former Clty Mana1er James Neaf - said· he la pondering a run for the council and expect• to announce his declalon by the end of tbe month. Candidates have until Feb. 9 to r eturn their nomination papers, wbJcb must contain the signatures of at least 20 registered Fountain Valley voters. Resident.a who already have taken out nomination papers are: -Betty Mi1nanelll, who recently concluded a four-year term on the f~taln Valley School District board of trustees. -Ben Nielsen, cu.rrent mayor •of Fou.ntaln Valley, who will seek a second council term. - Roy A. Rodgers, a truck conipany manager who has been active in the Green Valley Eatates Homeowners Aasoclatlon. -Fred Vo11 , a count.y employee and current member of tbe Fountain Valley Plannlnf Commission, who also has served as a Fountain Valley School District trustee. -Ken Holland, a lS·year resident who works as a teacher 1ln the Centralia School District. -Dan Morton, owner of Mort°"' Gem Investments, who has been active in the Fountain Valley Chamber o( Commere.. -Felix Rocha, a Pount.al11 Va Hey resident who ran unsuccessfully for a council seat in 1978. Former city mana1er Neal said he is conslderiot a run for council at the uritn1 of friends. He served as the city's top administrator for 11 years, stepping down Dee. 11, 1m. Last month he conc•uclld a eUnt as city manacer ol Stanton. Neal, 18, aaid he ii now •retl.red. \ ... Time ~ritical problem DETROIT <AP) -Time may be the most critical problem faciq the United Auto Workers and the nation's two lar1eat carmakers as they 1tru111e to reach an agreement on contract conceuion1, UAW leaden said. r-c••nera ro th-e-th\ w-.n Central Moton Corp. met late into the evenln.I Tueeda1, trytnc to beat a Saturct.y deadllne for an asreement. Both GM and Ford Motor Co., plagued by a 11le1 alump, say concesalom lrom lbe union are vtt.i to lbeir ftnanclal health. "We obviously dJdn't develop the kind ot procrea we needed to 10 aU nl1bt, but we're sUU willlna to come bac:k ln the momlq." aald UAW •PGt•man Doa Stillman. ··There ls 111fftcleat time to reacb a aettJement, but ......... we wtU or not. •• la a YefJ opal questioa, • • H/F .. !Thu t3 IM third o/ a JO part 6ene1 on how to aaue on 11our 1981 mco~ to;u1.) The Internal ~evenue Ser vice baa accepted cosmeUc facelift surgery as a medical expense - Hd in 1981, the Tax Court also handed down a favora ble ruling on treating t he cost of hair · transplant operations as a medlcaJ expense. Under these circumstances, your own tax strategy lf you had cosmetic surgery la l year seems clear. In thls case, a tupayer underwent the surgical transfer of smaU plugs or halr·bearlna Ussue from part of hJs scaJp to another part or his scalp for P1:1rely cosmetic reasons. He claimed a medical expense deduction on the bas is o f t.h e ~ earlier decis ion on lacelirts. The court procedure of hair •,. trans(llantation was n•1111 PllJll :t:.::;, "~ und e rtaken for ' I ' pure ly cosmetic r easons. Back in l!t55, the I RS ruled that the cost of an antiseptic diaper service isn't deductible as a . medical expense. But in a 1981 private letter ruling, the lRS allowed a medical deduction for the cost of disposable diapers because they we re related lo a physical illness. Here a child beyond the normal diaper age was totally incontinent because of brain dama~.r-;Her physician said she would require diapers'COnstanlly ~d recommende<i paper diaper& to minimize possible skin problems. Since the diapers hel ped alleviate the effects of the child's disease. their cost was a medical expense. ln another 1981 Tax Court case. a university professor whose office·at-home failed to meet the tough tests for an office·at·home deduction tried unsuccessfully to gel a medical expense deduction instead. She claimed that she had to work at home because of her severe allergy to tobacco smoke, wh i('b she couldn't always avoid at her university office. Since the room she used as an office at home represented one-eighth of the total square footage of the house. she deducted as a medical expense one-eighth of her maintenance expenses for the house. But the Tax Court pointed out that because the maintenance of her house was an ordinary personal living expense to begin with, she could only claim a medical deduction to the extent that the cost or her offi ce at home was increased due to her medical problem. This she failed to do. and. therefore. she wasn't enlllled to any medical deduction for her offi ce at home. For the millions of us who have some form of medical expense ins urance, a 1981 I RS Technical Advice Me mor andum provides a n important warning. If your particular medical expense is covered by your insura nce and for some reason you do not claim reimbursement from the insureit, the l RS will bar you from a medical expense deduction for the unream bu rsed expense. Here the taxpayers incurred s ubstantial expenses for medicines and drugs that their insurance coverage would have reimbursed for 80 percent. They didn't file a claim because of the administrati ve burden, and instead deducted the costs as unreimbursed medicine and drug expenses. The I RS said that it treats these expenses as having been reimbursed by the insurer -in which case they aren't deductible, because the taxpayers were entitled to be paid by their insurer and chose not to be. Because of failure to claim the available jnsurance, the medical expenses are not deductible. The message from this I RS memorandum is unmistakable: Be sure to claim any medical insurance to which you may be entitled, even if It means doing paperwork you would rather avoid. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YOAIC(4PI FllWll Oo.·J~ •"VL for T-v. Jan 19 ITOCICS H -°"" ".. I.-. <.... a. 10 Ind as1 .o 16f., ao.27 .. , .i-1.11 NEW YOAI( (.\Pl S.IH, Tues. l>l'k t t0 T rn l~ '2 Ul.07 WI 46 U 1 OJ-• •1 ~ !~ ~.~ ~ ri ;g: :n~ ~: ~n!: ~:: encl ,,., era,. ot I~ 11!1Hn ~I ecn-. N•w YMI< Stoo E.cn·~ IUUM, lradl119 IWlllONlly •• mort 01.., U I BM 1,041,:IOO 61 Enon • 1 ou • .ao lO PhlllpU'd .. S.000 ll!o\ Amer T t. T SS0,400 SI .. SICIOllCal • 0 7.IOO »'- Colum Pkl •7',400 i2"' Revlon O"l,SOO lOt'o B•n~o\mer •11,100 19 NelSeml 403,IOO 11 \9 Citicorp '97,600 10'> "' Ol9 ll1 1EQ J7S, 100 8311> • ._ 01.,,ey Vil M ,400 .,..., -t""i AtlRlchlld J.07,.al> .,._ -1 E Hi 1(-J UMO 70 1 .... Gen .Motors Jl4,000 >t"' -v. AMERICAN LEADERS u~w~ml RV~Ml lo•-·"9 11'1 show• the -YOtll SloO E•Ktwwlgt 1tocu and warranb 1ne1 n•ve 90ftt llCI Ille mo•I and down ,.,. moll C>ettd on perct11I ol <"-regard .. H of Yolllme for T-~ ~-S:.'f'i,..,' ~-:'~'?.:~:.:~~~~ dllltrenct .,.._ Ille p...,v_ closlf'O price elld TllHIN'l''i~• Heme LHI CllQ Pct 1 Colum Pkt •tVI • lOlo Up ff,1 1 0;illt1Co U~ • ..... Up t•.• J EmpOE plB • V. UP 14 > • F llmwy .SOpl • "" UP 10.3 S HorltonQ> 10~ I Up 10 I • EmnRtd 10~ • l't UP •.2 ~ ~frc~ :n~ i;: ~= : ~ • Tycol.b s ''"" • " Up '.• t0 •-r Ind II"" • "'-Up t.• \1 WellJlm !If I • Yt Up 6.7 1t O.lmar Pl.I ,,.... • ~ Up 6.J I> llo"!AIKO I .... • V. Up t .1 U OkleGE !If ''°" + "' UP LO 1~ Borman 2v. • .... Up s.• , 16 Eevlll.lt NI oow'.."l • "°' UP S.• H-I.tit Cha Pel, I N-pfA 11> --1l"-Ott 11.4 ' l"lftGPM't s ,, -1'-Off 12 .. J Tl ... Int 1~ -lllt Oii 1U 4 EIMOE Piil-J • -._ Ott 11.1 . s Mefttl wl '"' -111 °" .., • ....... INI 12~ -116 Oft •.> 1 EAL MO 1" -16 Ott t.7• I Ort11"1Y I~ -V. 15 U • t hkw Ind 1 -" tt 10 Vele~IW 1t'--l't 1 " lj • Ctr1I 17~ -'"' , • U IM J -\Ii Oft t:1 -Ii> 1; ~:::..~ ;.,': = ;~ g:: ;t ~:mm. m: = ::: ~ 6010 COINS NIW YOIUC (Al"> -l"rkft "'9 T""'9y pf .... ~M. ,_.. Wltll ........,., .. 1e •• ................................... ,. .......... inr ................ ,,, ................. ,...., ......... ... "·"· ....,... .. c.-..... trey .... Ull.1S. ........ 1 5-Q;O..· ..... Indus S,1".700 Tr.,, flMOO Utlls 7", 100 U SI~ 7,041,JOO WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK (.\Pl JMI It Prev Advanced fOQAy ~4 ~ Oecllntd ... .., Uncll•r>gfd 412 ... Tot•l I~ 1151 ·-New lllQI>\ • 10 Htw lows s• '5 W'1Al,.,..UOIO NEW YORot lo\PI Jan " p,.., lodty O.y AOvenctd ttJ 1• O.cllneo J:1' JIM Unchen(led 29' tit Totel lsMlft ,., m Ntw lllghS , l New low• :It Joo METALS Cet1t1•r 11"" 10 Ct nll • pound, U.S. dHtlnel...,.. ..... ~ (Miit • ....-. XIM •l.Uceflb • "°"""· deU ... red. Tia .7.W I Mei••• w..-c~lte 111. ,.,_....,.1 .. n cenh • l)Olllld. N Y Mwwry M20.00 per !IHI<. Pla"-u.4.00trovo~ .. N.Y. SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS 1....-.: mwnlftl lla .... '171,75. off U.M. ~: .._,_ ll•lflt WI.JO, off t·US l"erh: '110. ... off PAO. ,,......,., pn .... of! 16.05. l.rtcll1 LMP 11•1"1 U10.00, oft ..... !IN: U7J.OO-ed. • Hea•y & HUM•., Ol'lly 0.lly • .,.le U71.'°, off ti.JS. ......... : tlll'f deity q,ietl WI.JO, flff 1),1). ............ eflly delly .... IMrl<MH ~teO.ot.eflW.4'J SYMBOLS ......... -. ~w-tY"Wl ...... --...... -...... .. ...... ...... , ............ -....,,. .... ~._-.... ~ .. -.. .......:;".::::.:a= ...... ~---,...,._ ............ 11 .. ---. o.ot.W " ,_,. 111 '"°"'"' 1t -==., .... .,.,_ .............. .. ............ -.M; .......... ... .................................. . .... -..... "' ....... -... ----1;1---~ .. _1;1.,_.,.., ..... r: ..... ...... ....111 .. 1:1..-.1 ..... ..... .... ell_._ ...... --......................... _ ... l:IM.,._lllMI. ~ ---·--....... ..... _... ____ _ 'T.t: ... .... " .... "" ................... _ ....... .......... " ....... .. ~-...-.----,... .. ---· .. ' I I H/F Orange Cout DAJLY PILOT,viedneaday, January 20, 1982 f\Vealth triftl 'concern' I ; Lawyer queries juror candidates on 1J1Qf1e1J bias I I · NEWPORT, R .t. <AP> -Herald P . : Fahrlna•, deftna, lawyer tor wealthy aoclaUte : Claua C. von Bulow, 1mlled warmly a t the : proapecllve juror and lowered bis voice In quJet • aiacerity u he 111ked : : "Mr. von Bulow is a man ot flnanclal means; :.aome mith,!.HY he's M rich man. Do you resent , : rich peop,a. • That quesUon was asked or' each Jury candldat~ in von Bulow's trial on char1es of twice : tryln& lo kill hls heiress wile wllb potentially lethal ln,Jectiona . .The answer Invariably haa been "No." But Fahringe r, a veteran New York Clty trial • lawyer, worries that the financhd 1u1t separating • von Bulow from tbe Newport COWlty restaents summoned to judge him could hurt his cllent. "I believe today there is a lot ot resentment tor the wealthy." he said after a-week. of-jury selection. "I really believe it is harder for a rich man to get a fair trial today than a poor man. Twenty or 30 years ago, I think, the opposite was true."• He never takes his eyes off the race of a pros pedive juror. "You're more interested in how they answer than in what they s ay ... You're watching how long they hesitate before answering, how they f move their hands. Do they narrow their eyes? • Sometimes a face can be like a map." For more than a century. Newport residents have been sharing their resort city with a glittering ··summer colony" of the very rich. The two communities live side by side but rarely mix. . Claus and Martha "Sunny'' von Bulow were · leading. members of-that soeial set unttl·Decembe11 · 1980, when she slipped into a coma from which she is not expected to recover. Her condition, the state will try to prove. was caused by injections of insulin and barbiturates administered by her ·husband. Mrs .. von Bulow suffers from hypoglycemia -\2~ blood sugar -and s uch injections would dangerously worsen her condition. Prosecutor Stephen R. Famiglietti said during questioning of jury candidates that he will argue von BuJow tried to murder his wife because he was in love with another woman and coveted the estate he would inherit at his wife's death. Mrs. von Bulow. heiress to a Pittsburgh utilities fortune, is worth a n estimated $35 million. None of the 21 people questioned by the defense and prosecution has had any social contact with the "s umme r colony." Each s aid he or she had only a passing acquaintance with the charges against von Bulow. defus ing fears that Fahringer had that pretrial publicity would make it hard lo pick a jury. The prospective jurors' ties to the "summer colony" were at best secondhand. as their answers -lo the lawyers' questions show: -Donald Zuercher . a photographer and housekeeping s upervisor at a waterfront hotel. said he has an acquaintance who works as a butler for Mrs. H ugh Auchincloss. the mother of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. -Agnes Gray. a widow from nearby Tiverton, described the "summe r colony" as "people who enjoy sailing and mans ions and such." -Jane A. Cooney of Newport works as a • cashier at the gate of the Breakers. a mans ion owned by the Preservation Society and now open to public lours . She said she knew von Bulow by • sight because he is on the society's board of directors. "but I never m et him." ~111111mc11 ··-----------· ·: COOK E MARION S COOKE . resident of Costa Mesa. Ca Passed away on January 18. r l 982 at the age of 100 Private int~ment services will be heltJ al Arlington National Military Cemetery. Arlington . Virginia Forwardmg dierectors Baltz , Bergeron·Smilh & Tuthill Weslcliff Chapel Mortuary or Costa Mesa. 646-9371 GALLJN ~ EARLE GALLIN, resident ~or M isslon Viejo. Ca Passed : away on January 17. 1982 in •Denver. Co l o rad o , Ciraveside services will be : held on Thursday. January • 21. 1982 al ll OOA M a l : Harbor Lawn·Mount Olive ; Memorial Park. Services und er the d1rcct1on or Harbor I.awn Mount Olive Mortuary or "t'osta Mesa 540·5554 HAVES ROBERTA KATHRYN HAYES. aka BOBB I E EVERS. born on August 16. 1933 Died January I~. 1982 al 7 llPM al the ai;c nf 4R. She was a r eside nt of Newpon. Beach. Ca at the time of her death. She is survived by her children. Mary Rowe. Blaise Evers, Kathryn Van Loon, Michael Evers. Terry Evers. Buuy E vers . M a r ga ret Cruikshank, Sean Evers and Paul Evers . A Memorial Mass was said for her at the Ho ly Family Caltrnli c Cathederal. Orange, Ca. The 1 -;::;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:"1 family requests donations be • N ~nt Soc' t made to a Trust Fund being • ' ~Tiiune le fu set up by lhe family. call : Cflt TION BUR•ALAT Kathryn Van Loon t 2091 : 646-7 431 674-2995, <209> 674-8802 Ext • Our literature tells the 21 or Terry Evers f714 > . . complete story of our 730·5945 ror Trust Fund • # societt. details ...... --....-c:-.-. •. f McCOllMla MOITUAalH Lagun a Beach 494-9415 Laguna Hilts 768-0933 San Juan Cap1s1rano 495-1776 HAalOll LAWK--MT. OLIVE Mortuary• Ceme1ery Crema1 ory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 PllllCl .. OTHIH 1&£. MOADWAT ...ottTUilT 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 IALT1-6HOH SJiien'H A TVTHIU ..STCl..W CHAPll 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa &4&-9371 NIClllOl*aS IMITMI' WOITUAIY 827 Main St ~nt1ngt<>4' Buen 536-6539 f I SKOLNICK ELIZABETH ELSIE S KOLNICK. res ident of Tustin. Ca Passed away on January 18, 1982. She is survived by her daughters Johanna Wallach or Santa Ana , Ca. and Ruth Gure of New York. son William or Sunland , Ca . and 6 grandchildren. also survived by 3 sisters. Serv1ces will be he ld o n We dne s da y , January 20. 1982 al Harbor Lawn Memorial Chapel at lO:OOAM. Final interment services will be held al Cedar Park Ceme tery, Paramus. New Jersey . Serviees under the direction of Harbor Lawn·Moun\ Olive Mortuary of Costa Mesa . 540·SSS4 DEATHS nsEWHERE SAO PAULO. Bra,;U CAPI -Ell• llegllla CanaU.. da Costa, 37. one of Braall's most successful popular aln1en. died Tuesday. M£XJCO CITY <API -.IHa O'Gonnan, 78 one of llextco'• beat·known painter• and arcbl\ecta. died Mood~. TEL AVIV, Israel {API -~ Tn!pper, 71, who beaded a World War II Sovlet spy rlnit known as the "Red Orchestra," died Tuuday. SOCIALITE ON TRIAL Claus C. von Bulow. <'ailed a "man of means." is fal'ing trial on charges he killed his ht:.1rl!ss wif~ Son of Sam killer cult triggermanJ DANNEMORA, N.Y. (AP) -Convicted killer David R. Berkowitz, who claims he was the hit man for a killer cull, says he might help investigators look into his assertions if his father can be protected from reprisals. In a court-authorized deposition given Tuesday al Clinton state prison here in connection with a multi-million dollar civil liability case. Berkowitz claimed that about half of the cult's 20 members a re dead, either by suicide or by violent means. Berkowitz, serving a 315-years-to-life prison term for six murder convictions. has previously c laimed me mbership in a cult but never provided details. Thunderbirds probe openB LAS VEGAS. Nev. <AP> -A six·member investigative board began a meticulous search for the cause of a desert crash that lcilled four members of the Air Force Thunderbirds. The team is headed by Brig. Gen. Gerald D. Larson of the 4Slh Air Division, Pease Air Force Base. N.H. He arrived here Monday night just hours after the four sleek planes crashed at nearby Indian Springs auxiliary airfield. Meanwhile. Gov. Robert Ust ordered flags on all stale buildings In Southern Nevada to be flown al half starr until services are conducted for the pilots. 16usia angrily responda MOSCOW CAPJ -The Kremlin accused President Reagan today of making "crude and. g roundless" attacks on the Soviet Union and wa rned the NATO alli~s against imposing sanctions over the Polish crackdown. The accusation, by Radio Moscow. was in r espon se to Reagan 's news conference in Washington on Tuesday in whJch the president hinted at new sanctions against Moscow. Reagan told the news conference that life for the Polish people continues lo deteriorate under martial law, and "we're not going to wail forever ror improvement." Expl.osion cause noted SPENCER, Okla. (AP) -An explosion that killed five children and a teacher In an elementary .. school cafeteria was caused by a water heater that malfunctioned and built up a mighty head of steam a few hours after being repaired, officials said. Thirty.five were injured. A cook in the elementary school kitchen turned on a tap around lunchtime Tuesday, but the faucet on ly coughed s team, Oklahoma Clty-Hre department s pokesman Phil Cooksey said. The cook went to report the problem, he said, and minutes later an explosion ripped through the kitchen waJI, blowing olf part of 'the roof and raining glass. metal and concrete blocks on children in the cafeteria. JERUSALEM <AP) -U.S. diplomat Sol Linowitz, carrying a message from the Egyptian leadership to Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, began a round of private talka in Israel today on the stalled Palestinian autonomy negotiations. NOTICE OF DEATH OP MARIE L. SCHWORIR ANO OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. A~111113. To all heirs . beneficiaries, creditors and contingent creditor's of Marie L. Schworer and pecsons who may be otherwise Interested in the wlll and/or estate: A petition has been filed by Thomas L. Schworer in the Superior Court of Orange county requesting tha' Thomas L. Schworer be appainted as personal -----------.. 1r e pre sen t at I v e lo ~•cTmou,euau•Hs a inister the estate of NMlltE STATIMINT T111 1011ow1n11 P••,on 1, dolno Marie L. SChworer (under buJln•u ••: t h e I n d e p e n d e n I . QUALITY ENGI NEER ING .. Administration of Estates MANUFACTURING, llU E. Cet,_.i. ) T • •••-· ~ """· c.n ...... 1 • .,JO) Act . ™;petition is set for """'"de• "" 8r•dl1y , •111 hearing 1n Dept. No. 3 at Sydney Orlv1, Hu,.11n11to" B1ec11. 700 Civic Center [!)rive, C•lllornle .,._.7 ' W t · th C't f S t Tn•• bu\lness 1, <OftOuct.a ..., .,, es . in e 1 y o . an a 111c11v10u•• A n a . C a I i f o r n 1 a o n • M.Brec111y February 10, 1982 at 9:30 Tiiis •t•t-• w• 111oc1 wllfl -a m county Clerk of 0••1191 county on ·IF YOU OBJECT to the Jenu••Y 11, 1"2 "'"" granting of the petition, Pu1111~ 0r.ne. eo.11 Delly P11o1, you should either appear "'"" J•"· 20. n. Fe«>." •0• '"' JtM7 at the hearing and state Pul>ll-Or ..... Coetl Dally Piiot, J M.20.21.f'•>. 10.1t12 ,.., MJC •net your objections or file written objections with the NOTICEINVITING•IDS .-JC 1111( ,ICTlTIOUS•USINUS court before the hearing. -•IOITEMNO.W Tiie ,:::"T::.~:~·.~. doll\ll xour appearance may be NOTICE IS HEREBY G•llEN llMll ~ICTITIOUS IUilNIH bu•''"" Ii. NEW CREATIONS. 17lo0 In person 0 r by y OU r ~•ltd ~· wlll Ii. re<olvlCI b'f NAMISTATIMINT Monrovl1 Slreel. CoU• Mou , attorney. T 111 C 1 1 Y 0 1 C 0' 1 • M • '• T 111 follow lftll persOI\ I\ dolftll C•lllornl• '2611 I F Y 0 U A R E A R-v•'--A91ft<y, lo wll Tiii butll\Ht9': One W•y lAefMr, IM,. I C•lllOl'ftl• Dlre<lon, P.O Bo~ 1200, Colla r.1e... GOLOEN STATE LOANS. ,.,, COrPOrtllOI\ "'° Monro vl• SJrMI c R E 0 I T 0 R 0 r a C•lllornl1 '21lt, on or ti.lore ll>t "°"' MecArtllur Blvd., Suitt 102, N--1 Co\t• Mew. C.111ornl1 '1•17 • Contingent Creditor Of the 0111:00 •.m .. on Frloey, J....,••Y n. IH<ll.Celllomlet2MO Tiiis butlftff•" <OftOvct•d by• deceased you must file 1,.2, II si..11 i. 1111 ·~~blllly ol Gu• "-felco -,, ~-· ~ 111 <DtP«etlofl. I . • "th lheb~locl10.,.r lll•bi4totlleClly •""' ',. ~-~r ur OMWayLNll\ef' your C aim WI the Court Cl erk 'I 011101 by Ille proper ~!:'1~"~°'· Newport IHCll, -rlly Nolol 0 r prese nt it t 0 the IMOUft<ecl time Bick wlll ti. pul>lkly Tiii\ _,,,.U Is COftcluelltcl by el\ Tiii .. V~e~ I personal re presentative opened Mid reed••-at 11.00 •.m., llldlvktuel. 1 .. -1 wes I llCI wltll l"9 • t d h t or•u-•1>erut1erHpr..:11c.o011.on Guto.t•l<o c0,,,.1, c1er11 of Or•-c-•v °"' appo1n e by t e cour Fr1u,, Jaftuery n . 1'12, 1 .. 1111 111~ ..__ • ., 11..., ,.1.,. -J.,..,.,., 11, 1t12. within four months from CouMll ~"• Clly H•ll. n Fair C.U C "'"" th d t f fj t . Orlve, Coot• Mew. c.111om1., ror t11e J "'' ,:~of Or•-Couftly °" Put>ll-Ore1191 c°"' Deity Piiot, fel tat e o rs i~sduadnce turftls11 1n 11 01 LAB OR AND ... .,.,., • · J •o 27 F -o e ers as prov1 e in ~11111t •"· • . • • >. io. •-· >•>e S i EQUI PMENl TO DE MOLl~H. Publl_0r..,..eo.11 Oelly Plklt, ect on 700 of the Probate ~::.girsEsi~~~T~~~~o~~ .. ~: Je11.20.21,F•>.•o.1m '°'~ MJCllTICl Code of California. The THE CIT'rOF COST .. MESA. t ime for fil ing claims will Jo4d1tlone1 ... 1, oi 111e SP1Clfk•llons Piii.JC •11£ /1'1CT1nou' eu11N1ss not expire prior lo four mey be OOlalned 11 , ... Offlu of Ille NAMISTATIMENT months from the date of ,.. Pur<llHl"9 Ao-nt, 11 Felr Drive, • Tiie lollo•lftQ PtrlOft• er• doln9 the hearing noticed above Cott• l!Mw, C.lllomla, Blcls \llOuld NOTIC• INVITlltO e1os t>u•••u.. . be returTMcllo"'-•11..,llOftoltM Clty NOii<• h lleret>y t 1¥1ft 111•1 Ille SELECT PROPERT IES, 3130 YOU MAY EXAMINE Clerk, wlllllr1 wld lime llmll, '" • IMrd of T,_ ttll !fie Huntlft9\0ft H•rbor Bouleord. Coste Mu•, the file kept by the COUrt if ue110 envelo", ldentllltd on 111e leecll Unloft Hloll Sc-Dlllrl<t •Ill Celltornl• m» you a re interested in the outside wllll the Bkl Item Numi.r .,.., rKtlve -..! blci. lor Pure-or v lot lo Corp , • C•lllOrftl • . tne OpMlftQO.I• L••••t Purcll•s• 01 CRT co•PO••'""'· >•JO H•rttor eo..ievani, estate, you may Ille a Eec11 Old """" Jpe<lly eec11 enc1 COfttrol/OttPtey 54.etlofts "'"'"" or cos••-.... c.mornt•••:i. request with the court to eotery Item •• set tor111 •n 1111 _, 1ott....-<HketlortsM t11e1 .. 111e Tr.ls buslr>tts Is conclucteo by • receive specia l notice of -llkel~ Ally -all eac11>1lons lflk• of seld Dlllrlet. corporetlOft· . to, ... -lllClllOft• must ti. clllfly llds SMll lllt c ... rly ....,._., "ClllT VloltoC«p the inventory Of estate Slated lft 11>1 bid, •"" l•llure to Ml Cofttrol/Ol'l)ley Stetlor1\, 8111 Ho Pitter A. 11~10, Prn lclenl aSSetS and Of the petitions, 1or111 •"Y 1i.m '"IN -111ce11ons C ", .--'°Ally" E. R-1ey, Tiii• ,111.,,,.m .... 11i.o .. 1111 ,,.. accounts and r e ports """ "~tor ,.. .. ,._of ""' ~urc11ea"" Me,....r, H .... 11,..10" cour1h c1or11 ot o .. "911 c"""'"' on .. escr'ibed ·1n Sect'ion 1200 5 blcl. •••<II u-H'911 Sc-• Olstrl<I, J•l\uery ~ 1"2 u • Eec11 bid .., ... "'' 1or111 '"" 1u11 1ou1 vo ... 1owt1 Ave .. Hunt1n11ton · ,._,, of the California Probate names -rftldtlnc .. o1 •II .,.,_ •H<ll, CelHonlle ,.., -recafVecl Publltl!td ~ Coest D•llY Pltot. Code. end.,.,, ... lllWrest.<l In llw p.._.I. •I or IMlor• 2:00 p.m., Frlcley, J•n •. IJ, 10, 71, ,.., 1-..i II tllO lllcl Is 11y • ,.......,....,, 1111e l"9 F~ s. •• • .c wt11c11 lime -n•me• of t11t offk•n w11o c.,. •loft.., p&eco '"* Wiii .. llOAlll<ty _..... ...i R Obert N . B r o JC on , ... m.,..1on-.11otl111corPOretlOft ..... Nale •lll Attorney at Law, 1301 •ftcl •lletller mof'I tllen ·-Officer Eec:ll bid "'911 ...,..In vellO lor • p k A B I b must ••on . If 1111 bid 1• bY • •••lod •IM> d•Y• ••t•r 1111 dete FICTIT1°"seus1NEU ... a r venue, a oa per1Mr1111p °' • '°'"' wnture, .u.11 tt*lf1Hfllftt1eroc..,.of-. NAMSST•TIMINT Island, California 92662. Ille"•"'"-ecldresws o• •11 9fflffel Tiit a-.. ol TrvMMI -II be IN ..,. lollowlno "'''°"' ere oolno 675-5460 P•'',.." -lolnt Wfl,.,,.,, 11 -,. .. fUOgt tt111M ouet•tr °' _........,., 1>u11neu11 Published Orange Coast bl-r I•• sole proprleto,.lllp or ott.red--1'-•'9111tortlKI ·FLAGSTAFF PARTNERS, LDT., 0 'I P'I .,,otlltr tnllly tllet do" bullnH efty or ell bids •ftcl 10 welve eny >JCM9 Cellt A¥leclor, Suli. c., SeftJ\lell a1 Y I Ot, Jan. 19, 20, 26, uftder • fkllliou\ ne-. 11\e llld iNll lrt...,i¥1tyhreln. C,eplslr-.CellfomlefH7S 1982 334-82 ... In Ille ,...1 -of,,.. bidder •1111 "' """' E. R_...,, Hunter EMrOy CorPOr•tlon .• ---'----------• C!HltMtloft tol-lftQ •-"'9 "OBA ~ ~ Celllornla corPOf•llon, JJCMt C•ll• (Ille llcllllou• neme)"; pro.ldltcl, llu..,1_,. Or.,.. Coest Delly Piiot. Avle00r, Sull• c, s... JW/ft C.t94streno, Piil.JC ·~ llowever, fttl flcllllout neme 11\ell be Jet1. J0, 17, ltll ~ C•lllornle'261S -----------u ud u"''" 111ere It • current -----------R•IP" E Plwlln. Jr .. ~ Cell• M . re1111tratlon ..-1111 Ille 0.-COUtlCy -"" --Avl•OOr, Suite c. Saft Juen Cephlr•no. N 80792 Rec order. '" c-of corpor1110,,., ~ ••IK c1111om1.1 ttt1s NOTICE OF DEATH OF IMI~ Ille ne~ of the P'"lclenl, I'-----------Tlll1 bV•IMu " conctucled by • A U L E D W A R D S.Crot•ry, T,_....r, alld M1n4111'1r. NOTICE 0' llmlled pertner~lp. p Tiie Dire< ton ol llW Clly of COSt• T•Ui"T£1'$ SALE Hunter Eneroy c...P w A L K E R A N D 0 F Mo• R_...._._., A-y rowrvu i.--._,.. Relpfl E P11tl1n, Jr . p E T I T I 0 N T 0 . tlle rlo111 iore1e<1enyor e11 blcl• T.s. ... _,_, Pre-s1c1<on1 ADMINISTER ESTATE DATED. J-rv •. •tm s EA s I 0 E FI N AN c I. L TlllS •lite.,_, WIS lllf'<I with Ille Publl....., Or-Coesl Dally Piiot, CORPORATION H duly IPPOlnlld County Clerk ot 0••"91 Coun1y on NO . A 111746. J•nuery 20. 1"2 JS7 .. 2 TruJtee under Ille IOl-1"9 desert-Jenuerv , •. 11112. T 0 a I I h e i r s • -ol lnlllWILL SELL AT PUILIC YATUANDNISSIN beneficiaries. c reditors AUCTION TO THE HIG HEST •N.Mel!IS-,S. ... I.. d ' d't f l lODER FOR CASH (PIY•bl••t lime SH&e AM.~n711 an contingent ere I ors 0 of .. 1. 1" ...,...,. money 01 .,.. un111<1 ~ .... om llW742 Paul EdWard Walker and ,.cT1T1ou1 eu11••• s1e1es1 •II r19111, 11111 •no 1n1eros1 """' persons who may b e NAllM STAT•MeNT . con¥eylCI to -now llelcl by II -Publlllled Or-Coast Delly Pllol, OlherWiSe interested in the T llt lollo•ln9 P.,Hll h do Int seld o.... at T 1 1 1111 rt J.,., 20. ?7. F& l, 10, 1"2 JS2.C bUllnU• u : IOND FI NANCIAL llertlft•ftt•dltcr~·" "'-y will and/or estate: INVESTMENTS, J701 Birch SlrMI, TllUSTOR JOHN w. JUT lNER. •n PlaJC 1111( A petition has been filed ~~~.~~,:.·~· Newport Buen, ur>marrlecl,..... by Wendy Lee Walker in IENEFICIAR'Y: FIRST FEDERAL the Superior Court of Cerl w .............. L..e s. ....... SAVINGS .,.D LOAN ASSOCIATION ,ICTITtouSeUMNIU '"'"'-·CelffOml•mn OF SANTA:MONICA.•<-OT'PCll'•lfon. MAMSSTATIMINT Orange County requesting Tiii• ~ Is condUcttd bV °"' Recorded o.cemi.r 1•. 1tt0 •• Tll• 1o11owm11 POfton• ere dolno that Wendy Lee Walker be lftdlvldual. 1n11r. Ho. uo:JO In llDok 1•1s. -·~ buslneue1. p · led s personal CenW.lond ofOfllclelRKOl'ds lntrwolflceoftllt (el CALIFORNIA STATE ap Oln a Tiii• ........,. •• 111.a with tM Recorder at Orenve CounlY. ,..., 0et11 Ho ME s TE AD s E R v 1 c E 1 b 1 r e P r e S e n t a t I v e t O c-ty Cleft! ol Or-c-ty Oft 01 1rus1 describe' ,.,, 1onow1n~ HOWLAND ENTERPRISES. UIOI administer the estate of J~ll.t• fl'otltrtv. Mar9...nte P-'t Wwy, l ·tot, MllSlon p I Ed d W lk '111171 A portion ol Loi U ol Newporl Vlefo, Cetltomle..., a U War a er Pu1>1._qr_ Coest OellY PllOI. He19111s.1n 111e eou..1vo1 Or&'IQt, Stet• Denlel O'Slttft, 2°"1 Peteo Olm•, (under the Indepe ndent Jell. 20, 27, Fee.. l, IO, ltlG JIU3 of C•lllOl'nl•. ff per rnep re<Of'clld '" fl Toro, CelllOl'nle t2'lO Administration of Estates ....., •. peoe a . Misc .. •--M•Pl. itellly o-s ...... 20ltt P•.., O•m•. Act). The petition ls set for In the offl« af .,. county rtcOTCler ot El Toro, Cellfomle mlO h . Hid c~nty, dol<•I-.. follow" Tllll ""''""' I• C-uciltcl "" .,. earing in Dept. No. 3 at 1------------111911\nlno •• lhe most NO,.lllerlv, lftdlotldu.tl. 700 Civic Center Drive. 'ICTIT1ous•UllN1.SS comer tt11 Wld Lot ti lltlftQ • po1n1 '" Den1eio•si .. n West, in the City of Santa N-1 STATil-NT the Soulllullerly line of Oreno• Ke9\yO'S-A. C Iii I F b 10 Tiie lollowlnt person It dolnll • .,.,....,es "-non .. Id mep, tlleft<e Tllll tie-I wes lllM wllll ""' na, a Om a On e . , IMlllMHH! Soulll SO de9rees EHi elong 1111 County Clork of Or•r191 County °" 1982 at 9: JO a.m . DIAMOND MUSIC PROD. LTO .. Nort11ee11er1y lloundory of u ld Loi u, J•,.u•rv "· ,.., IF YOU OBJECT to the 26211 Tief'u Clrcle, MIHloft Vlofo, JU.JO IHI lo Ille lrue point ol '11tlm "ra nting Of the petition, cetlfornlef'Mt beQl""lftl, llllfl<• <Oftllftul"9 Soulll so Publlslllcl 0,..,.. Coest Delly Pltot, "' Fredrick Henry Coeles, 26211 det<HS Eesl etono Vld Hor1-lerly Jal\. JO, 21, Ft41. l , 10, 1"2 US-42 YOU Should either appear T1err1 c1rc1e, M1u 10,. 111e10. boufl4ery '°'"'to•"°'"'· IMfl<• at the hearing and state C•IHornleftMt South 40 -.,.os wes11u.n '"'to• Piil.iC llTICE your objec tions or file FrodriO H. Coetos pOlnl; tllln<e NOl'tll '°"'9r~ wut M> itt bJ t' 'th Tiii• su-1 wes flied wllll Ille IHI lo e pOln4, hftc1Nor1h 40"'9r-Wr en 0 ec IOnS WI the CNnty c .. ,,. o1 Or•noe countv on Ee11 1un '"' 1o t111 '"" "°'"' ot ,.ic,.1T1ous eustNE" court before the hearing. J•,.u•rv •. 1m 11t11...,1no. m Palme< 11 .... 1. c°'•• NAM& iTATIMENT Your appearance may be Ft Mate, ee11rorftlemv. The IOllowlno oe''°"' .,.. dolnv 1 b Publlllled Orenge Coe\t Delly PllOt, Tiie ti.Nflelery"""" Hid 0..d 91 buslneues: n per SOn Or Y YOU r Bookmark contest Jen. 20. 27, F'41. 3, 10, 1"2 TNlt, by,_ of. bfNCllOr Cltl!'!\' PRODUCE FARMERS MAllll(ET, attorney. ---'---------.,.__ _________ ___.... lft Ille obll .. 11-sec11rN lllereby, 2140 Pl-ti••-. C•I• MIM, I F Y 0 U A.RE A ,ICTlTIOUIMlttltHt • NaJC .a ller•lof-·-.,...,...., dlllwncl to C•llfornl•'1W c R E 0 I T 0 R 0 r a ltAMSITAT9 ..... T 1M undtrlltn" e wtlftltll OoclereUOft Stellos H. Xeeorerolt, HI Tiit fellewll\t .. ,,.,. 11 •Int ,_ of o.teUll el'd D9fNnd tor Sele, -Meonolle, Coste MIU, Celllornle Contingent Creditor Of the ,.,.._ .. : P1CT1TtOU1•u11 .. •• wrlllMnetl~t1-.c11eftdote1ec:uon nt11 deteased, you must flle "( Love Books" will 1occu WELO. 11• WHI 1tt11 IUIMSITA~"T 1e ~ .. -~to ..i1 Mid W•r•ev M. F•"'•"Y· uo1 • I I Ith th • ser.o11_c:...._,c........._...., TH , ....... 1 .. 1 ""-I• .. ,,., ....,_.., ..... 1.,r Mid *leetloM. c.,.....,.,c.uMete,calltoMl•mJ7 your cam w e court be the theme of the G...., WMtlef'll LI*, Jr •• i• s. ........... , -~------Cftl9d T1111 '-'"°" "cOll4luctot1 11r • or present it Jo the Orange County Public ... 9r serwt, s-AM, c:..1...,.... 0•111tc:Mt'fONITUOt0,•• MldNtkefllllr'MdleMet•tectleftto ..,...,.1,,.,_.._..,. personal representative Lib • tO•h I t1101 Cal•~•• °''"•• Ntw"rt ••~It. w ro<ordld Oc-., I . lt'1 .. IMtr. WefteyM. F_...., I t d b th l rary s ~ annua TM• IMIMee 1, c..-..CtM .,., .., ..,..,....... .... ""'"' ..... i.a. ""951, 01 Tiii• , .. ......,., ..... moe1 •'"' tM appo n e y e cour bookmark de s lg n ,......,.,.., MlcltMI uw11 or11Mt, att.• Mtk!Offklel .._.. c_1, cion o1 ar..,.. c-tv °"' within four months from contest. o. w, i.--. ''· C•••• .. • Dn••. N••"'' e .. c11. s.1e1 .... w111 • ~. 11111 w11'*'1 J_,., "· "'2. the date of first Issuance 'flttl .....,.,.. -,.... ..... ~-Uot•Mllt ....... , ... ..,, UIHftl ., '111Mil f I tt lded I ~~r Y b 1 an k s for c-tT c-. ot o..,.. c.uM'f .,. , ... .....,... .. ,..,._.. .., .,. 1111114 .... ,.....tllflt ..... ~.or ...,.".....,Or.,., .. ,. oe11y "'°" o e ers as prov n children in kindergarten J_., 11. ••. ....,...., ~tne--..nc:•. •• ,."'"" reme1n1ne Je11. 20. 21. ,..., a."·'"' ,,..., Section 700 of the Probate h "'"'' Mld•H .. ~ iw1ftCIM1 _. .. ..,.,.... _ _,,...., Code of California. The l rough junior high ............ DrMtrtc-it Deity....... TMI ......._.. -mM wtlfl .... Id o.Mel TNM,wlWll-•n In Pal 1911( time for filing Cfalms will s chool are aVaUable at ,~1111•21·"·,..'·11·'• ,... ~~~ 0r.,. c-w :'!,":C:-~·.::=~·~::;: not expire prior to four any branch library. 1 -• -.... '"'· c11e,.., lllftd .. ,..._ oi 1111 PecTmOUtaute••• months from the date of All chlldren-whu enter ......,., ••-" ........... °""" c...i Oe11, ~ Trvtt•.,.. • e. •Niii <,.....,..., .... ITATIMSllT the hearl"" ti,,_., bo ,.,., •· n,,., t, tt, tW .... o..e et Trwt. s.t• .... w111 • Tiie ...._... ..,._ ... ....,. ... no .. ...., a ve. lhe contest will receive ITAHMeu o, WITMD••wu ..... -.---------.,..d ... ~,,....,_,,,,, •• , ~ .. , YOU MAY EXAMINE a special • • 1 Love ,.. -• lllll t!• ,.I'll .... .i. ~A-cou•nou1 1..1Mou•••• the flle kept by the court. Books" sticker. Also, ~ •• , ....... ,P oit•llATt•• ~ "'''-•· .... ch•kCltflter 1tv1..i111. ,.,tv1ca. •0r .... '-· c--• If you are Interested In the UNOH ~ .. !!!!.,GMllmllflA-·"''!'°c"' Mef,c....,.ttm estate, you may file • the top design In each '1CT1T1ous •ut1 .. •11 NAMll -~ICTI"°"' euttN•• .. --....... ~ ~--"" ww.. '"'" • 1 c a t e 10 r y w 111 b e Tiie ... ....,... ...,._ • ..... _ .,.. ., • .,. ... T •• • t""" .... 111111e1 "*1ca'"" ~ "'" .. -....11 o.-.. ..,, request w th the court to •• • ..... ,., ,.,, •• , ,,_ tit• ,11• , .. 1_1,.. ,.,_ ,, •• ,,., • tMt 11141cit.•....,.,...... .. .,. ...... ~..., receive sPe<lal notlc• of retrod u c e d a a a -~•11er111111 ..er•ll•• ~, '"• ~~--.. ·~•-,: T • "N ..... • t. o' No """•" .. teM• ., tlle ._., ..... ,. Tiii• _.._. .. <...__. .., • the Inventor" of est•t• boo m k d • .,, ., flt..._ IMIMll-.. ef Wl'L• IN .. wc_,..,,. .. ~M<"lllM ..... ,.,_,.-., r ar an ... nn .. n ¥411..'Tt .. ,..,1 c-.-c1n1e, '""'..,,. ..._.., c.-. ·-· ~,.,.,... assets and of the petitions, w l 11 be aw a r d1e d lf'YIM,c.....,,.mu ~Al!"~~A-. '"• H•-•• •• "·'· m.I'. 'T• :c'·'.. accounts and reports tJ,l t Tiit llctlll•111 •••lnHI 11••• ... __ ..._.._ ....,,._.... .. _...,...,.. 'IW MeY ,.,... d I.._.. I ~-111 cer ca ea. ,.,....,....,.,.,.._....,_,... • ...,. LM M<DeMN, ,,., •· ~ .... 1,,.,..,....., • ,..... tscr""" n ~''°" 1200.S The con le at run 1 e11111•,.., 11."" 111 .. c:-.ey .. =-"-· °"""-Cellfwllle oee .. .....,., 11. •• "* ......_. -,. ... wt11t of '"' Cltlfomla Pf'ob9t• through Feb. 27. Of.,.... Tiii• ..... '' UlllNt ... "' ••A 11 o • '' """ c • "t. c--. c--" ~ c:--. Code. ,. . ~ . --, ..:==.:::,~"'"., .._. .............. L.McDIRIM c::::•:r•,:, ~~i::., At.te•,1 .. •r At . LNaU1 .. ••,1 "lualsled Ad• are lb~ o..... "· ...... ,.., c,._ , .............. _ 11,.. wt11t .......... ""9fY au..,..... ' • ••J answer to a ltaeceMfut Clrcle,IM!w,CMl,.,.,..."7tA (.-ty C'"'1 If Or ..... ~.,. OMCltf...._, ....... .-..:..... Wtll 0fY"9,IC •• ., •• , '=•or 1uct aalel It'• Olllllldrt..... ~• •· °' ..... c:e ...... ....,....._~.... le!:w!~' CA ...,,. _.,..., .... .,. 111fl..... ... ... It • ~• r WQ to tell more -.... •• • O••• C8"I.,...., ""'· j ........... or.., c.-Oeltf """· ,......... 0r.,... c.-o.11y ........,o...., a. o.. · Clell Del".....,, ~ J .... ,..n,,-.a,tt,1911 a-.. ...... tJ.,.,a.tt.•• .... ,,....~,n.~a.1• ..,.. --.-. ... ~....... ,,,...., .. ,..., ... ,• .... ,._., ___ 0 .. -·----~ lllllyPllt Fountain Valley may have the toughest football schedule in Orange County next season. See D4 . WEDNESDAY, JAN. 20, 1912 H /F C:LASSl'FI ED 06 A chip off th~ old block That's Nathaniel Crosby who hooked career toward golf By HOWARD L. HANDY Of ... Dally........... . There's one trung for sure about the life of N athanlel Crosby, son of the late crooner , Bing and wife J<athryn and that's- the fact that he will not follow in his famous father's footsteps as a singer. It isn't that Nathaniel has different views than bis father or that he feels he must make it on bis own. It's simply a case of not having the voice to sing. Nathaniel did inherit one trait from his f a the r that will r e main with him throughout his life. He is an ardent golfer and has already achieved greater success on the links than Bing did in his career that ironically ended on a golf course in Spain. Nathaniel, at age 20, defeated Fountain Valley's Brian Lindley in the finals of the U .S . Amateur championships in San l"!ancisco in 1981 over 36 holes or match play. THE CROSBY SCION didn't forget his match play victim. "Brian will play in the N atlonaJ Pro-am in Pebble Beaeh in February," Nathaniel said recently. The youngest of the three Crosby children, Nathaniel says of Lindley: "He can flat P-utt. He looks so ~ood over a 6-fool putt, it s fantastic. Until the last three _h.ole of our_m.alcll. ne._was ~oi:-.12 on putts of 4 to 8 feet. - "He was driving me crazy with his steady putting. I was hitting lhe ball well in the morning round and l would have been happy to halve the l4th hole in the afternoon (he won it). "I love match play. though, because you are never out or any match until it's over," the University of Miami <Fla.> junior says. to take five years to finish," t.be political. science major says. He is In his tblrd year rl1ht now. _ ·'I will be 22 when I graduate and then I will malle a decision. When I get to the point I know what course I want to pursue in life, then I'll know about 9olf. "Golf is very important and means a lot to me. It has given me an opportunity to meet a lot of people and my father made a lot of friends through golf. "But right now I view it as just another door that ls open for me. My education comes first and I belie'1e that's the way my father wanted it to be." YOUNG .CROSBY gets about 3,000 invitations lo play golf in a year and admits the number h as increased tremendously since he won the U.S. Amateur title. Bing was an ardent golfer but not in a class with the pros as far as score is concerned. But he did love the game and was the founder of the National Pro.am event at Pebble Beach where Nathaniel has taken over as tournament host. "I learned a lot Crom watching the way my Dad handled pressure,'' he says of Bing. "Not· necessarily on the golf course but in everything he did. ''I think most of the things I learned from my father came from watching him. His style was modesty in .handling people and I would very much like lo emulate • him in that respect." YOUNG CROSBY is looking forward to competing with the Miami golf team again this year but admits: "I was going to red-shirt this year but after I won the amateur title. 1 didn't want to let the college down and not play this coming season." .,,..,..... ( t J t r I While golf is an important part of his life and has been since he was 8, Nathaniel has his priorities well in hand and doesn't figure to even think about playing on the pro tour until he has graduated from coll ege. "I DEFINITELY don't want to be a gray .haired man thinking I didn't learn as m uch as I could," he says. "I will definitely graduate from college. I figure ON RIGHT COURSE -Nanthaniel Cros by. son of the late s inger. Bing. is enjoying great s uccess on the links these days. He won the U.S. Amateur championship last year with a victor y over Fountain Valley's Brian Lindley. He quaJified for four professional tournaments including the U.S. Open which will be played at Pebble Beach in June this year when he won the amateur title. He will play in four college tournaments this spring in addition to playing on the Miami team, will go to England for the British Amateur and will decide on others later. READY FOR ACTION -Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Steve Garvey shows he 's ready to play as he limbers up by swinging a few bats before entering the batting cage at Dodger Stadium recently. The Dodgers opened informal workouts Monday. The World Champions will leave for Vero Beach, Fla. Feb. 24. McDonald may he the best kept secret at UCI f t l Coach Mulligan says the 6-8 f ortvard could be better than Kevin Magee -if he tvants to be • pass, McDonald is just the opposite. Of ~ i Ben ~Donald may be the best kept secret on 1 the UC Irvine basketball team. And, as far as Ben McDonald is concerned, that suits him just rine. 8 McDonald isn't a publicity seeker. ln 0 fact he will usually go out or bis way lo ft avoid the limelight. That's the way be 0 is. UC IRVINE JOHN SEVANO one turnover or less, then I'd be happy." If It sounds like McDonald expects a lot from himself it's because he does. "I haven't been impressed with tJ'ie way I've played yet. But I'll start having games li.ke that soon," he says. course, you can carry something like that too far, too. In averagi ng 11.4 points while shooting 63 percent (68-108) from the floor, McDonald is only taking an average or 7.7 shots a game. e "I told him next year that he would be < on the cover of the media guide," Although McDonald hasn't been impressed. NBA scouts have. More than one have come to a UCI game this year According to McDonald, he wants it to watch Magee, only to ask Mulligan bad enough. later about McOomrtd. "I may be hurting the team, too, by doing that," admits McDonald of his low shot total. "But I don't know." McDonald grew up in the Long Beach area and attended Long Beach Poly High. Unlike a majority of players, however, McDonald never developed an undisciplined, selfish style. He always played a team game , whether it was during games. during practices or just s h ooting a l hi s neighborhood playground. • recalls UCI Coach Bill Mulligan, "and he tells me. 'Coach , l don't want to be e the star, I just want to be one or the b guys on the team'." [ McDonald is a coach's delight. He's a an unselfish team player who has all e the tools to be a superstar. "I want t6 be the best and I won't be "We're in Montana," says Mulligan, s atisfied until I am the best ," d I h · d 1 McOonaJd answers forcefully. "It's J·ust "an ave us m a e ay game so we can work ror the last sbot. Anyway. I'm a perfectionist. I go home after every time Ben gets the ball Magee is every game and I tell my girlfriend that one-on-one underneath the basket and I don't think l played well at all. She Ben won't pass to rum. ii "He bas as much ability as l've ever coached," says Mulligan of his 6-8 power forward. "He could potentially be better than Kevin Magee ... I just don't know how bad he wants it." always thinks I do." "Finally, l call time out and ask him McDonald's c riteria for a good why. 'Because you aidn't say to do performance are high. that,' is what he tells me.'' "If l play good defense," he explall)s,. To say McDon•ld is a team player "gl '· 9-plus rebounds. pass off for six would be an understatement. Whereas assi :ts, get 18 points or mo_re_and __ h_a_v_e __ __:;;;m.;..;o;.;;;s~t_..pl.;;..;a""y'""e""""rs;;_.;;.look lo shoot first and then ·'It's really tough for me to play in su mme r leagues (a traditional s howcase for individual talents) because I'm just not like that,'' says (See UCI, Page 02) SHUNS LIMELIGHT -UC Irvin e forward Ben McDonald does n't worry about the lack of publicity he receives. DeJWer get,s 140; : it's barely enoligh I DENVER <AP ) -When ti Denver Nugget Coach Doug Moe p says he was happy with the n tempo of a basketball game, you h can be sure it had more baskets • than an Easter egg hunt. L The Nuggets, runaway leaders in scoring in the National Bas ketball Association this s season, poured in 140 points o Tuesday night. But Denver's ft run-and-gun style has its price on the defensive end of the court and the Nuggets needed every e one of their baskets to beat the ~I Los Angeles Lakers 140-139. "I like the tempo we're d playing at right now," said Moe. "I guess you could say this wy a a big one for us. When you're U fighting for a playoff spot like ~ we are, every game Is bi&." 4 METS SIGN ... ~c~s BODLE. Ken Bodle, an All-Sunset Leaaue out.fielder last year at M ari.oa Hilb who was aet to play o · at Oran1e Coaat Collete lhil. " year, baa a1ped a contract with •I the Ne. York Meta. tc Bodle, a three-year vanity •I player at Marina, wu aiped for c an Wldiaeloaed bonua by Meta• 1cout Dean Joqewaard. He will • rePortr to tbe II eta' tralnJn1 ~ camp ln St. P11tenbur1, Fla. ln ,, llar~b. • Alex English, the game's high scorer with 28 points, made the final basket for Denver with 46 seconds left when bis layup gave the Nuuets a 140-137 advantage. Jamaal Wilkes scored with 27 seconds left for the Lakers, and then Denver did something uncharacteristic. allowing the 24·second clock to expire without getting a shot off. "I didn't want us to shoot until there was two or three seconds left on the clock, but I didn't want a 24-second violation, either," said Moe. "I figured ii we shot with one or two seconds lert, the game would just about be over by the Ume the ball bit the rim and they grabbed a rebound.'' The Lakers got off one more shot, but It wasn't a good one, with Magic Johnson miaain& from three-.eolnl anp_..aL t.be ast second. Los Angeles came from 19 points behi.Dd in the third period to arab the lead at 135· 134 when Michael Cooper scored with 2:57 left. The La.ken' las.t lead came when Norm Nlxoo h.lt a jumJ18r at 1 :55. But 13 seconds later, Klki Vandeweahe 1ave the Nu11et1 a 138-137 ed1e. Denver usually rellea on En1li1b, Vandewe•he, David • Thompson and Dan lsael to carry most of the scortn1 load, but playmaker Kenny JllH• scored a career-hl&h 27 polnu. Super Bowl turnaround! PONTIAC, Mlcb. (AP> Because they have both been consistent losers until now, the San Francisco. 4t!U'S and Cincinnati Bengals come Into Sunday's Suepr Bowl as two of the most anonymous teams in the history of this series. Their national exposure has been limited at best and Cincinnati linebacker Jim LeClair knows why. "Not many people like to look _aL4-U teama on Mondey nJ1ht football," said LeClair. · Or 2-14 teams, either. for that matter. The Bengals .were 4·12 three years ago and repeated that record two seasons ago. "Bad," admitted LeClair. "Really bad." The 4ters, however. were worse at 2·14 in both of thoae seasons. Lolins. lt seemed had ~ome hablt-formtna for bot.b · franchi.lell. ''lt'a hard to come in week after week and loee week after week," said LeClalr. "Butloalnc la Juat like winflJ;il-If 1ou atart CS.. IVPS&. , ... DI> Neutral sites for playoffs? Only if Rozelle comes down with a case of frostbite It is a tribute to the genius of Nitional Football League commissioner Pete Rozelle that quite some time ago he arranged to have Super Bowl XVI played indoon at Pontiac, Mich. - You see, the year of our landlord 1982 turned out lo be a time Ro1eUe would endure much beat about cold weather. The arctic episode in CinciMati wherein the Ben&als froze out the San Diego Chargers for the championship of the AFC has brought renewed demands that such crucial events be staged at sites where reasonable conditions can be assured. This issue is being railed around the land, the most passionate cries comina from San Diego. Naturally, one wooden Uthe outcome bad been reversed, would Clnclnn1ti have screamed bloody murder that the AFC title lhln& should have been moved to the Louaiana Superdome. ANYWAY. ROZELLE WILL bear no further complaints about the weather unless the snow removal problem is such that no one can get to the Silverdome to sta1e Super Bowl XVI. As for movtns important sames to neutral sites blessed wttb decent weather, Rozelle dances around the issue each time an event of connquence is played u-alln dfl)lorable conditions. II be were honest, Roaelle would admit he would much prefer to see crucl~ contests played where some of the artistry of the same could be preserved. This would be one reuon the Super Bowl bas never beell at.,ed in Buffa.lo. For Roselle to move a title 1ame away from a town wboM team la a prindpal would re1ult In much wrath comln1 down on the commiaaioner'a office and the complaint would not be wttl\C>Ut aubltance. After all, the faltbfW ~a team suffer the recular HUOn ln 1ood weather and foul and pro•ably de1erve to wlta.1 the deckllnl of a cbamp&onab.ip. Al IT WAS In Clnclnaatl, Roselle waa confronted by an lnl•l'fttlal decllto;n. It wa1 SPORTS COLUMNIST BUD TUCKER m en tioned to the commissioner that the Bengals-Chargers thing should be postponed lest lives be lost in a climate where the wind chill factor dropped the temperature to 59 decrees below zero. In com.emplating this decision, the react.ion of 't he population of Cincinnati was the least of Rozelle's concerns. Pete was riskinc the wrath of the NBC television network which is a bell of a lot more important to the NFL than the emotions of any one city. Purely in the Lnterests of gridiron culture and refinement, lt would seem sensible to play a conference championship game under conditions more desirable than in Cincinnati Jan. 10. But any move lo have important sames played in areas of pleasant climates would have to be acrou the board, so to speak. That Is to say. even if Los Anceles or lllami or San Diego were involved in the cbamplonablp game. they would have to play away from home at the neutral site. You can imace the reaction of the Dolphins, with a record 1ood enoucb to stve them the home field advantase, beint required lo play in Seattle. IT WOULD SEEM, for tM time belq at leut. that warm weather teams will ha" to find ways and means of contendlnt wltb cold weather stadiums. To be1tn wltb, tt mllbt bH• lMJped tlae Charters to travel to Ob.lo eartJ in UM ..-. If · nothlna else, they could have stood arouad ID tM cold lettinc aoine ldea ol wbat wu Ill It.on cm Sunday. j I • ' ~ t • --1 ---_____ ....--..._.._...._ ....... ......... .. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 20, 19'2 llllll lllCl/lllTI 1:1111 CAVALCADE BUSINESS COMICS 82-3 B~-5 88 A Newport consultant says colors can affect office productivity. See Page 84. After 2 -years, ~agttna O~ local coastal p~an ~ By STSVE MITCHELL Of ............ After doaena of meetin11. debates, public hearings, revisions and refinements, Laguna Beach council members Tue-aday approved a Local Coastal Plan that was two yeara in the making. In a split vote, the council authorized the city mana1er to forward th e completed CANDIDATE L agu na Bea c h Cit\' Cou n c i I man Kelly Boyd . ha s taken out papers to run in the April ta city election. Kelly Boyd will seek re-election L ag un a B e a c h C it y Councilma n Kelly Boyd has ta ken out paper5 to run in the April 13 city election, according to city officials. bringklg the numb.er of candida tes iA. the r \lCe.io six. ~ ~-..._.._ .. Boyd, who is finishing his first four.year term on the coWlCil, - took out candidacy pa pe rs today. Others who have ta ken out pape rs to run in the election include J on Gabriels , a city activist ; Dan Kenney, a director of pharmacy ser vices; Bobbie Minkin, homeowner association officer ; Ron Williams. a real estat e devel oper: and Bob Gentry , a un ivers i ty administrator . T hree City Council terms will expire this year, currently filled by William Wilcoxen, Howard Dawson and Boyd. Wilcoxen has a n n ounced he wo n 't seek -election, while Dawson has said it is "unlikely" he will run. Drowning • • victim identified The Orange County Coroner 's offi ce has id e ntified the drowning victim who was found off Huntington Beach as Robert L. Cbristophersen, 33. A coroner's spokesman said today officials are seeking the public's help in locating the dead ft\an 's family. Christopbersen had been living aboard the boat "Dutch Treat " o ff Peter's Landing. Police s aid his bod y was spotted floating face down in the ocean off Peter 's Landing Monday afternoon. Lt. Merle Schneblin said no e v idence of foul play was discovered and officers believe the man fell into the water and drowned accidentally. The coroner's spokesman sald anyone with knowledge about the dead man's family is asked to call the cbroner's office, 834·4392. in town, fell far short of the -committees" who helped expectations of two council formulate lhe plan. document to lhe state Coastal CommiulOD for Its review. U members. who fou1ht for a_ __ •_•_....e.._aumb.•r•-< ol ...-n&-W pr°'ed by~ state-panel, the document will serve aa a bl\Mprint foe future development ln Lacuna Beach, to be Uled lD conJunetlon with the city's 1eneral plan. delay lo approval unUl after the dwellint unlta) are far ·too April 13 City Council election. bi1h, • • llrs. Bellerue said, "especially in the blllaldes." Mayor Sally Bellerue anci She said aJ>l>roval abould eome Councilman Neil Fitapatrick alter the April eleetlooa lo wblcb opposed fmal approval of the the aeata held by BUI Wilcoxen, Local Coastal Plan. Mrs.' 'Howard Dawson and Kelly Boyd B e l l e rue s uggested t b e will be contested. But the plan, wlllch provides for a mui.mum development ol nearly 600 new homes on remainina vacant hillside land document should •'go back to the •'Let the new City Council Deify P• ""'9~ -~ ...... AERIAL PROTECTION -Fountain Valle,· the wheel of a 1947 aerial ladder trurk on Mayor Ben Nie lsen. left. and Fire Chier ~ loan to the city while its ladder t ruck is Richa rd Jorgensen take a turn behind being upgra ded . Sight of new truck alarming No confusing FV loaner with rest of fleet By PRIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. Deify "'"",..., Fountain Valley residents may do a double-take when they catch s11ht of the tangerine.colored 35-year-old fire truck that will respond to local calls in coming weeks. The 1947 Seagrave Ladder Truck is on loan from the Santa Ana College Fire Ac ademy, where it is used for training student firefighters. . The loaner vebjcle is needed as a fil.1-in for the city's regular Ladder Truck 30, which is being overhauled. Truck 30, which will receive a new, more powerful enlioe and a new coat of red paint, will be out of service until March 30. Until its return, the citr,;:l rely OD the 1947 Seagrave, which bas certified by the state for use in front-line fire fi1btin1, Fountain Valley Fi re Chief Richard Jorgensen said. "We definitely need the capability of aerial protection in this community." the chief said, "especially with all the wood· shin(led roofs here." The truck is equipped for 75-foot aerial capacity, enabling a firefighter to spray water down on a burning roof. Jorgensen said Fountain Valley crews, are now training on proper handling of the older truck, wbicb baa no power steering or automatic transmission. Purchased after World War U by the Santa Ana Fire Department, the truck wu recently retir ed lrorn active duty and donated to the fire academy. Tbe academy paints its vehicles oran1e to differentiate them from the equipment used by re1ular fire departments. s end this Into the <coasta l) commission," she saJd. "We're talkinl about 600 new units in the hillsides, and that doesn't include Arch Beach Helf bta and ( existin1 ) le1al bul dint sites,'' s he said. "You're talking about a tremendous growth ln this city, and I think the community should be able to S)>eak to it." But Co unc ilman Bo yd disagreed. I haven't spent the last two years on this so a new council majority can make major changes in this," he said. Wilcoxen was a bit stronger . "You want to throw it all out and start over again," h~ said. "I've spent hundreds of hours on it s ince I came to the council (last summer) and you want to tpss it all down the drain." · He termed a hillside density formula incorporated in the LCP as ·'a compromise formula, a dramatic downzoning," adding the document "does not prevent the City Council from adopting o th e r o rdin a n ces for no-growth." The hills ide dens ity formula included in the coastal plan calls ror a maximum or four uruls per acre on land that includes s lopes between zero and 5 percent. Pa!rsought in heists of 2 S&Ls Sheriff's deputies are looking for bandits who held up two s_avjn&s aruLloan offices -in the sout h county Monday. both escaping on fool with $3,300 in cash. A spokesman for the Orange County She riff's De partment s aid both men managed to elude d e puties f o ll o w i ng th e late·morning armed robberies, which the department believes were unrelated. The spokesman said the rirst occurred at 10 a.m. at Imperial Sa vings and LOan , 23507 El Toro Road in El Toro. He said a man about 45 years of age entered the loan office and pulled a revolver from bis waistband. Th e s po kesm a n said t he robber forced a n employee at gunpoint to hand over $1,500 in c a s h a nd then ran from the scene. The second robbery occurred at Fullerton Savings and Loan, located at 33621 Del Obispo in Da n a Point. a t 11 : 20 a .m . acco rding to the s herifC's spokesman. He said a m an in his mid-305 entered the ba nk and told a teller he had a gun in his coat poc ket, though no weapon was actually seen. The man then jumped into the telle r's area and stuffed $1,800 into his pockets. then fled on foot. No one was hurt in either robbery. Mishap kills boy on trike A 4-year-old Huntington Beach boy was killed Tuesday when he rode his "Big Wheels" tricycle down a driveway into the path of a car, police said. The boy, Jason Alan Kelly, 732 Clay Ave., was rushed to Fountain Valley Community Hospit.al with massive head and c hes t injuri es . He was pronounced dead at 5:45 p.m .• officers said. Police s aid the accident occurred at 4..:07 p.m. on Clay Avenue in front of the apartment building where the boy lived. Police said the driver of tbe auto that struck him was not injured and was not cited in tbe incident. The boy became the city's third traffic death of 1982. On lhe top eod of tbe scale, land that ls lo exceaa of 50 percent, or steeper, could only bulld one unit per 10 acres. And while tbat formula COfJ.)d mean an additional eoo or so homes on Laguna's hillsides, developers would have to contend with other restraints on their individ&Ull parcels. For ins tance, g e olo1ic hazards , wate r cours es, hydrology concerns and traffic considerations, amone others, would have to be considered in addition to the degree of slope. Co unc il m e mbers also made a few othe r changes to the document. They include: -R ejection of an Irvine Company proposal that would have changed the zoning on a three-quarter mile stretch on the west side of La guna Canyon Road from hillside management t o comme r cial and tourist corridor. They opted instead to Include that portion <between Big Bend a nd El Toro Road) in a future S pecific Plan for a larger portjon of Laguna Canyon Road. -.Designated Irvine Cove and the Rockl~ge area at the south end of town as "ecological reserves." NAMED CHIEF Police captain Neil Purcell became Laguna Beach's c hief of police Tuesday. Purcell new police chief of Laguna P olice Capt. Neil Purcell was named chief of police in Laguna Be ach Tuesday following the disability retirement Monday ol former chief Jon Sparks. S pa rks, who suffered a back injury in an automobile accident mor e than three years ago, requested disability retirement last November, saying recovery from back s urgery was not going as well as expec ted. City Manager Ken Frank said S parks' pape rwo rk for retire ment was completed this week, and the former chief will receive 50 percent of his top salary (averaged over three y ea r s> for an ''indefinite period." He said Sparks' retirement became effective at the c_lose ol business Monday, and that be appo inted Purcell to the top police po6l Tuesday morning. Frank announ c ed in December bis plans to elevate Purcell, a 13-year department veteran, to the posiUon of chief upon Sparks' retirement. At that time be cited PurceU's •performance as act.ina chief foe nearly a year as one of the reasons for hia seJecllon. As chief. Purcell wlU earn between $2,775 to $3,751 a month, • according lo Frank. South Coast Literacy Council aids county adults More than 13 p e rcent of Orange County's adults are unable to cope with everyday situations requiring the ability to read and write, accordinl to •tatistJcs compiled by the South Cout Uteracy Council. · For the past 12 years the •olunteer or1aniaaUon bu beeo· irYinl to push back that ftiure \y off erinl free inltnlctlon at its nine centers stretched from Irvine to San Clemente. Laguna Beach resident Onalee Carter, who has been teachlnl classes for the South Coast Literacy council 1lnce it wu founded lo 1970, 1ald there are adulta from 35 countrlee la-Uae area ~r'!ant to team Enlllab. Sbe 1mc1 the council UNI 1 method ol teachin1 developed sa years ago by Dr. Frank L1ubach, whlcb uses readily identifiable object.a to repretM!ftl the sounds of the alphabet. The method doean't require the lqtructor to 1peak their students' native laapa1e, abe .aatd, end teachers aren't usually ·people wltb a profHtional backlJ"OUDCI in adueatioa. · "Moat teaclfera have three students," Ms. Carter said, "unless the student ls illiterate, and then we have a one on one situation." Sbe said molt of the studentl wbo enroll ln the prosram are adults, and attend the cl .... alter apend1nt a full day in the work place. ' ''Thue people are bl1bly lmotlvated and truly want to learn.'' Ms. Carter· said.' She aaid there is no charge for the Instruction, and students pay only foe their books. In literature distributed by the literacy council. the Im~ of the cltJaenry knowtnr how to read and write in a democracy ia atreued. Ms. Carter said ~the pro.,-am ls open to anyone. Adults may start at any time add no pre·registration la reqWred. She said that world·wlde U.e council estimates that more tban eo million adults 1peakla1 Sl2 lan1ua1es have been lau1ht baalc literacy by Dr. LaubMla'a method. For lnformatioo, call 14t'J.1138. --~-----~-....... _........,.,.._"""'"'~.-.~--""'!'f._..,. .... ..,...,..,.. ..... ~,~= .. ~s•s•• ........ ~cQlll .... 111)1~11111!~~11111 .. llllll!lll!l~llllllllllllllllmllll~ .. 111111111111~ _ _._ ---------· ..., .... WEDN~SOAY, JAN. 20, 1982 CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION 82-3 88 89 _ ..... A Newport consultant says colors can af feet office productivity. See Page 84. .._, ·uc1 Medical 'Center boss blastS license • action Sy f'&BDBaJC& SCBOBMEllL o1 .. ..., ........ The director of the UC Irvine Medical Center ln Oranae says Lhat Or1.n1e Cpunty government o ffic ials h ave acted in dlscriminat'Ory fashion in invalidating the center's license for sterl.lbation and disposal of i nfes:tiou s waste at county-owned landfllls . County Health Department olficiall said Tuelday .mornlnl that the medical center's Ucenae permiltina preaaurlaed ateam sterilization of infectious waste was being suspended. Tbey claimed tbe medical center wu not following regulatlQns regardini on·slte handllnl ol the materials. Gonzalez conceded that there ·were ''a couple of glitches," but #stressed that corrective actJon has been taken. He said the medical center ii fully c•pable of co mplyin1 with county·lmposed requirement.a. Gomalea said it wu "unfair" for the county to "•inlle out" the medical center for punitive action. He pointed out that ln recent days four other Orange County hosr.itals .have been found in vio aUon of infectious w1ste treatment and dlapoaal re1ulationa. Nooe of the other four hospitala was sanctioned, however. Gonaalea said it wu poulble the punitive action was related to the onaolnl diapute between . the county and the university over provision of care for indi1enta at the medical cent.er. Und~ an aareement, care for f atJent.a for which the county ls inancially r esponsi ble ls provided at the medical center. Tbe two parties are fiehtin& o ver abOut S8 millloo in bills the county hu refused to pay. 'The medicaJ center director complained that county officials were unavailable to visit the medical center to conduct an inspection prerequisite to the Infectious waste treatment license being reinstated. containing untreated waste were being piled up in an UDMCure area. Gonzalez said an encJosure has been erected around tbe area and said a locked storai• s hed is now being us~ as the repository tor bags of waste 'awaiting treatment. William Gonzalez, in a telephone interview Tuesday afternoon, said s ubstitute procedures ordered b y the county would be costly and "demoralizing" lo the hospital staff. •~=====================================• County officials had faulted · t he medical center for not By suspending the license for on·sile treatment of the wast.es, tbe medical center had no alternative but to hire a private contractor to collect, treat and dispose of infectious wastes. S u c h material i n c ludes discarded dressings, syringes, lubing and oth er patient treatment supplies. _Dog piits bite on suspect Axel the police dog put the bite on a burglary suspect hiding in a trash can early today inside a · Carl's Jr. restaurant in Irvine. police said. ' Darrell Scott Ennis, l'fi, 15201 Vichy Circle, Irvine, was taken to Tustin Community Hospital for treatment of dog bites and then transported to Orange County J ail where he was booked on s u s pi ci on of commercial burglary. Axel and dog·handler officer Dave Kreyling, both employed b y t h e Tu s tin Po l i ce Department, were called by Irvine poUce after two officers on patrol saw somebody moving inside the restaurant, 4770 Irvine Blvd., at 2 a .m .. said Irvine police Sgt. Dick Bowman. Axel wait iruit.rueted to bark so that the burglery suspect would k now th e officers meant business, said Capt. Williams. When nobody came out, the dog was set rree. "The dog indicated there was · nobody in the kitchen or the ser vice counter area, but the dog indicated the r e was someone hiding in one of the tra s h can s ," said Capt . -Williams. "So the officers opened the trash can and the dog bit the suspect on the nose and the left a rm. The s uspect rece ive d four m oderate puncture wounds and several minor ones." Officers found a screwdriver wedged in a safe inside the restaurant. said Sgt. Bowman. Film society sets program at VC 1 Irvine The UC Irvine Film Society will present a program of films by directors Akira Kurosawa, Ingmar Bergman, Eric Rohme.r and others this month, February and March. The films will screen in double features Saturdays at 6:30 p.m. a nd 8: 15 p.m. in the Social Science Hall. Tickets will be available at the door for $2 genera l admission and $1 students. The program of films will s t a rt J a n . 30 with "The Importance of Being Ernest ,". by Anthony Asquith, a screen adaptation of the Oscar Wilde play about the unmannered mannerly, a nd the political thriller "The Nada Gang" by Claude Chabrol. The schedule also includes: -"Rebellion" by Kobayashi and "Dodes ka·den" by Aklra Kurosawa on F eb. 6. -"Simon of the Desert" by Luis Bunuel, "The Dove" by Ingmar Bergman and "The River and Death," by Bunuel on Feb. 13. -"Wild Strawberries" by Ingmar Bergman a nd "The ·Marquise of O" by Eric Rohmer on Feb. 20. For more information on the screenings call 833-6922. AERIAL PROTECTIO~ -Fountain Valle~· M ayor Ben Nielsen. left. and Fire Chief Richard Jorgensen take a turn behind Deity"",......., "ic.... " .... the wheel of a 1947 aerial ladder truck on loan to the city while its ladder truck is being upgraded. Sight of new truck alarming No confusing FV loaner with rest of flee~ By PHIL SNEIDERMAN OI .. o.My "9e IUfl Fountain Valley residents m ay do a double·take when they catch sight of the tangenne-<:<>lored 35·year-old fire truck that will respond to local calls in comin1 weeks. The 1947 Seagrave Ladder Truck is on loan from the Santa Ana College Fire Academy, where it Is used for training student firefighters. Tbe loaner vehicle Is needed as a fill·in for the city's re1ular Ladder Truck 30, which is being overhauled. Truck 30, which will receive a new, more powerful enctne and a new coal of red paint, will be out of service until March 30. UnW it.a return, the city will rely on the 1947 Seagrave, which has been certified by the state for use in front·line fire rl1hUn1. Fountain Valley Fire Chief Richard Jorgensen said. "We definitely need the capability of aerial protection in this community," the chief said, "especially with all the wood· sbing_led roofs here/' - The truck is equipped for 75-foot aerial capacity, enabling a firefighter lo spray water down on a burning roof. J orgensen said Fountain Valley crews, are now training on proper handllna of the older truck, which has no power steering or automatic transmission. Purchased after World War II by the Santa Ana Fire Department, the truck was recently retired from active duly and donated lo the fire academy. Tbe academy paints Its vehicles oranae to dlfferentiate them from the equipment used by re1war fire department.a. Airport purchase -proposal hit Rep. Robert Badham ,. R·Newport Beach, has attacked proposals by an Or an1e County 1overnment airport advisory committee that the Marine Corpe .Air· Stations at El Toro and Tustin be purchased and r e loc ated as part of developmerit of a re1ional air.port. "Purchue oflhese baaea ~ .. an lll·concelved idea and 1boulcf M rejected fortbwitlt," Badbam, a m ember of the House Armed Services Committee, said in letter sent Tuesday to Bruce Neatande, chairman of the Oranae County Board o f Superviaon. Tbe county's so-called "blue ribbon" reaional airport slte 1electlon committee propo1ed earlier llUa month that the two 11 arine f aclllties be purchued apd relocated. Relocation ol the buea, tbe committee mell).bers said , would l'educe airspace con1estlon should a realonal airport be constructed elsewhere in the. county. Further, the committee su11estect that the El Toro base· could serve as the site for a. re1ional airport If other sites proved unacceptable. ''Closlnl tbele mllitary buel would have a n•ere -· eveq disastrous ~effect on tbe nation'• abWty to defeod ttMlf.~·· Badham saJd. The COl\lfestm.an's co ment ec hoed statements m recenUy by Bri1aciier GeneraJ Richard Cooke, El Toro commanc:Una 1eneral. He said the suai..tect relocation was a $1 billion to $1 bllUon propolltion that would interfere with the lllariHI' mt.km. · Baclbam promlHd that "I wlll fltbl any move to close or relpeate these baae1." !l • having a fence surrounding an area in which infectious waste was being sterilized. Further. county officia ls said bags Orwf re to launch siren test Monday Week·lo ng te s tin g ·of 40 e m ergency sir ens will begin next Monday in communities within 10 miles or the San Onofre Nu c lear Generating Station sou th o f San C l emen t e , according to the Southern California Edison Co., operator a nd co·owner of the facility. The sirens are part of the planning for evacuation in the event of a nuclear emergency. Utility officia ls say the sirens are being tested to verify the operation and adequacy of the a lert system. Depending on the test results , adjustments or installation or additional sirens may be necessary. To inform local residents of the planned siren tests , Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric Co. are sending informational postcards lo area homes. The first day of testing on Jan. 25 will invof ve two sirens located at the San Onofre station. Sirens will be activated about three te five times for one to two minu'tes between the hours of 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., according to Edison spokesman Dave Barron. On Jan. 26 and 27 . individual s irens t.hroughout the entir emergency planning zone will ~ turned on for about 30 seconds. A second phase of testing, scheduled for J a n. 28, will activate groups of sirens for about 30 seconds simultaneously within individual communities. A final full-scale test with all 40 sirens oper a ting wl'fl be conducted Jan. 29 al 11 a.m. The sirens will be operated for about t hree to fi ve minutes . I Barron said each siren will generate a steady signal for .. attention or alert warning" as r e qu ired by the Federal Emerg ency Manage m e nt Agency. During the tests. readings will be taken of sound levels at locations throughout the area. Sirens must thereafter undergo sound testing once a year. ·'The siren sound is being implemented by the federal agency as a n•a u o nally recognized alert message.'' Barron s aid. Fire damage $200~000 at Sierra Vista school Fire broke QUt early today at the inside of the building," said lO ·month·old S ie r ra Vis ta Capt. Bunting. Middle School in Irvine and She said the fire appeared lo caus ed $200 ,000 in damage, ha ve started in the attic area of a uthorities said. t he build ing. Nobody was injured in the Dave Holms, principal of the two.alarm blaze that was school at 2 Liberty in north reported to the Orange County Irvine, said the charred building Fire Department at 3:20 a.m., contains the girls' locker room, according to fire Capt. Sherry home economics classes, an art un mg. was pul out by 50 class and a foreign language firefighters in two hours and 16 class. minutes, she said. d' Capt. Bunting said the cause He said that the buil mg won't be able to be used for the rest of of the fire remained unknown the school year, meaning that this mo~ng. . . classes normally held in the She said firefighters battling building will have lo be moved the blaze. ~ere h_ampered ~Y ~wo t o o t h e r P a r t s o f t h e false ceilings 10 the building · nine-building school that has 400 below the actual roof. students. ''The first firefighting units to The early morning fire hasn't arr ive saw fire on the roof but c hang e d today 's sc hoo l had trouble getting ther e rrom schedule. he said. ................. ..._ MOPPING UP -Orange County firemen survey damace to Sierra Vista Middle School in Irvine, bit by an ·early-morning, two-alatm blaze today . It took SO flrefllhters more Uran two hours to exttncuish tbe ftre. Dama1es were estimated at $200,000 in the 10..montb-okl · fac~lity. ' .. , __ .. _______ _ ' 1()qnge Cout DAILY PILOT,WednHday. January 20, 198~ ·~ B1 'ne.AJ1111i1 .... Prw A told AJaaao atorm brouebt more ball, IDOW and beny rain to Nort!Mm Callfornla toda1 .. ea&aaiDI mdlldel, temporarily elo•llll major hlahwaya a.nd dumplnt uow as low ·aa the 200-foot level ln aome areas. Thoueb the National Weather . huts around the San Franelaco Bar, aru. ' Flrst we get the floocb and now we get the snow. I can't bell eve ll," said officer Hank Durbtn of the CalUornla Hl&hway Patrol in Napa. snow, wl\lcb cauHd the elOlure of several mountain road.a. Other roada and hl1hw•y• in the mountulns were ·passable only wlth automobile chains. Crua County bad received 2.3 on Hllhway 101 ln three places incb• ol raln1 ud Felton had between Ukiah and Laytonville, recelved 2.2 !Deb•. An inch had and chains also were required fallen at Novato in Marin on Highway 29, whJch coanecu Cow.ty, md Saraiota south ol -Napa ud.t..ke cou.ntlel. Sa.n J'ranciaco he4 received 1.2 Interstate 5, a lftaJor Weat inches. Coast route linkinl Canadian · Service aaJd the storai lacked Ukiah received lts first snowfall in about seven yeara, according to local residents, and snow fell alone the south shore of Clear Lake in Lake Coupty. ••Lake County and Napa County both in the north areas are experiencing h eavy snowfall," Durbin aaid. "In some of the upper areas, it's almoat what they would conalder blizzard conditions.'' W6ather officials sald more and Mexican borders, waa snow 1-likely~ a second wave closed. from Yreka_..to Weed in of tbe storm reaches coutaJ Northm Caiifomla onmltbt. W COLD WAS IT? -It as so cold in Conrad, Iowa, that the water level gauge n the city water tower etrnalfunctioned and caused Olan overflow._ Children have ~Jbeen warnea to stay clear of "the tower because of falling ice. "New road plan lifts '( ~ea hopes ~ Orange County transp(>rtation officials are hoping CalTrans pirector Adriana Gianturco's 1Jew $10.2 billion, five.year vansportation plan finally will jnclude . enough funds to begin 1:onstruction on several county jreeway and mass transit 1>rojects. · b Ms. Gianturco unveiled her }i>Jan Thursday in Sacramento. U 'fassed, it will be the stat.e's J..argest ~ver. b It includes several projects, g;uch as extending the Corona del ~ar Freeway 'to MacArthur ~o ule~ard , that tla~e been 1included in several earlll!!r five .year plans updated l(lDD~ by Caltrans. !I Also inciuded is a proposal to ~1widen parts of Pacific Coast Highway from Huntington Beach to Newport Beach and to build an overpass to cross-the Santa Ana Freeway at Broadway in Santa Ana. The new five-y~ar plan is 41 percent .lareer tbao the t7 million plan proposed in 1•. which was the last full plan boffered by Callr ans. The xincreases are a result of the 6passage by the stale Legislature rtlasl year or a bill to increase state gasoline taxes. The increased state runds also can 'be used to match federal _grants, nMs. Gianturco said. - -~ ------- "Not a single dollar from the federal government will go ~nsued," she said at a news nconference Tuesday. n. Members and aides of the :Jf>range County Transportation Commission lobbied for passage ~f the gas tax bill. ~ They also are hoping some of J the federal funds will be used for °'a major renovation of the Santa ·'Ana Freeway, although that "'funding would have to come in _phases over a number of yean. ~ Ms. Giaoturco's plao ~ 179 million for mass transjt rojects, including $59 million or development of a line brough central Oranee County. be full cost of the local project a expected to be from eight to 10 imes that amount. The Caltrana plab still must be approved by the independent alifornia Transportation Commission and the state :Legislature. ectricity cut Long Beach LONG BEACH (AP) roblems with· a 12,000-volt lstributioo liDe cut electricity o a bout 1,000 realdents, oodruff Community eo.pttaJ nd Lona Beach Airport, uthem California l:dbon O>. aid. Tbe airport p•aen1er erminal waa dart for al.molt : wo hours after the blackout bit t8:50 p.m. Tueeday. the intensity Of the downpour two week.I qo that led to 31 deaths, mow felJ at low levels in Napa County and pUed up on the * * * Parts of the Sierra Nevada receivea a fool or more or new * * * Storm death toll climbs to 303 By TM .\uodaled Prea Freeaine drl11le and light snow fell today alone the middle Atlantic Coast into New En1land. · Record bfth temperatures in the South burned off the chill of a record cold week but left Atlanta's huge airport socked in with fog~today. The death toll in almost two weeks ol severe cold across the eastern United States climbed to 303. A storm system over California dumped heavy snow on the Southwest and stor~ developin1 over t he Rocky Mountains threatened snowfalls in the Midwest. A thick layer of new snow forced officials to close a hilbway in Oreeon. On the East Coast, the storm gave a parting shot today, leaving a dustinc of snow in New York , New Jersey and Connecticut and making roads slick. Roads in Vir1inia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas and Oklahoma were still slick with ice and littered with smashups when warm air moved in Tuesday and spread * * * fog like condensation "on an icy glass in the summertime," as a weather service spokesman put it. Despite the warm weather in the South, fo recasters said another arctic blast could be expected later this week. "The Siberian Express is just temporarily derailed," said Harold Gibson, the weather service's chief meleorologist in New York City . After a week in which parts of Georgia and Alabama were bit with record lows, the 74·degree weather .Tuesday set a record f"or high temperature in · Columbus, Ga., an~ tied a record in Birmingham, Ala. Visibility at Atlanta's huge Hartsfield Airport, normally one of the nation's busiest, was down to "zero" late Tuesday night, the F e d e ral Aviation Adminis tration said. A first blanket of fog prevented most planes from landing for 31h hours Tuesday morning, and a second blanket Tuesday night that was expected to last well into the morning caused up to 45·minute delays. * * * In the 2' hours ending at 8 a.m., east Bonnie Doon ln Santa areas toni1ht. The storm wu but waa re9pe1ted with UH ol expected to end T hursday chains tod•Y· morniq. Hi&hway 299 waa cJoaed from Chain controb were lmPOfltid Yreka to Arcala. OEEP FREEZE -The building which housed Daly's Hot.el in Holyoke, Mass.. is covered with ice a s a firefighter retrieves lost AP ........ equipment following the Tuesday morning fire wh.ich destroyed the building. Fun~el cloud rips up roof in Hacienda Heights By Tiiie A.uocla&ed PftU A winter storm that twisted into a funnel cloud tore sections off a roof in Hacienda Hei&bts today. uptooti.na trees, breaking a window that cut a boy and f li n I i n g '0 II. b a 11 . 5 he d' hailstones in nearby Bassett and Santa Barbara. Snow Ourries closed a section of lntentate 5 for more thu five hours ln the Tejoo Pua throUlb the Tehachapi llountaina u a lons -expected low-preu•re, storm sptna moved; ID off \be central coast, bringing winds gusting up to 40 mph. Jeff C..ujan, 13, was cut by flying glass when the •twist.er touched down about 1 a.m. in Hacienda Heights, 15 miles east of downtown Los Angeles, sheriffs deputJes said. Tbe wind uprooted more than a dozen trees and tore away part of the roof of a house at Los Altos Drive in which Lujan was sleeping. A large tree branch was blown through the window of the Lujaos' bed.room. said Deputy Mite Portesi, but the boy was treated by family members and did not require hospitalization. Reo. Normal at this time is visibility was practicaJly zero Authorities also r eported a about 61h inches, she said. because of the swirling snow and small mudslide in the Carbon Sudden blinding snow driven fog. Canyon area of Orange County by JO.mph winds prompted the CHP officers escorted convoys near Brea. It apparenUt caUied California Highway Patrol to of 50 vehicles each through the no serious damaee. close 46 miles or Intecstate 5 area for an bour or so after the "It just took a while to get Tuesday evening. highway was reopened. here," National Weather Service "There was deep snow faUing ln c ti-diameter hail was forecaster Bob Webster said of too fast for the snowplows to reported in Bassett, adjacent to the storm predicted since lake care of," s"d a spokesman La Puente, aJ')d in Santa. Monday. for the st~te pepartment of Barbara. at 12: 15 a.m., Webster "We'll have showers on and Transportation. said. of r through today u n ti I He estimated that 2-3 inches of Small craft warnings were Thursday, but it's a localized snow had faUen by morning. issued south to the Mexican thing." Inter state 5 was reopened border for rough seas and winds Atotalof .64inchofrainhad s hortly after 3 a .m . and reaching40mph. fallen in downtown Los Angeles remained open through the Thunderstorms packing winds by 8 a.m., raising the season morning despite occasional to 35 mph dumped a haJf·incb of total to 4.47 inches compared to s now flurries that benr> anew at r a i n a t L o s A n g e I es F • · ls l aboutoneinchatthesametime about6. International Airport by irm ca nee p am a year ago. said forecaster Bette But at one point Tuesday night midnight. . * * * * * * * * * to buy-:-area_compap_y_ ~~-rain to-~ve Thursday- B~E""TUBE• shareholders not to continue, · ........ .._ . with the acquisition. That's just The . future o~. American how the chips fall.'' Educational Television Network lnc. of Irvine remains clouded now that Miller Technology & Communications Corp . bas called off plans to acquire the financially troubled firm. A ETN said in a release Tuesday that "i t bas substantially exhausted its working capital and that it is seeking sources of funding or potential acquisition partners. The company said there can be no assurance that it will obtain the working capital it requires in order to co nt inue it s operations." AETN and Phoenix , Ariz.·bued Miller Technologies had entered into a letter of intent Dec. 22, 1•1 whereby the local adult educational firm wouJd mer1e into a subsldiary of ,Miller for an exchange of stock valued at approximately $2:5 million. Tbe deal was subject lo a number of conditions, includin& approval of botb companies' boards of directors. Miller's directon rejected the proposal. "It wu really a technical deeilklll." aald Richard Krahl, Mlller senior vice president. "The fact ii we had siped a letter ol intent to buy them, and revieweCl all thoae thinta you In addition to termination of the merger, Miller has also pulled out of a joint venture agreement between AVT lnc., one o f its wholly owned subsidiaries, and AETN for the production, marketing and distribution of a TV series called "Computer Lifestyle." A VT has r etained all the rights to the series, and will continue with the project. Barry Rupp, acting president of A ETN since the resignation of Clare N. Thain Jan. 1, said the firm "is still an operating company looking for additional capital." ··You never know about acquisitions," Rupp said. "It was their decision, not ours. We're just actively looking for another parlner, or someone e lse who can provide cash infusion." AETN raised $4.9 million last year with its first public offering, but a good portion of that was used to pay back prior liabilities. TR!e lack of operating capital forced the firm to lay off 25 employees In November, more than a third or its staff. · review after 1l1ntn1 such a 7 feared dead letter. We Just decided lt wu ln the best interests of our in mine blast Local rain a nd occasional thundershowers last night and this morning are expected to decrease to 50 per ce nt probability. t onight and 20 percent Thursday morning. Cold unstable air and gusty winds accompanied the storm that came out of the Gulf or Alaska. Officials of the Orange County Environmental Management Agencr say the storm dropped 0.31 inch of r ain in Santa Ana by 8 a.m. today. That brings the season's total in that city to 5.47 inches, compared lo 1.09 at this time last year. Jn Huntington Beach, amateur m et eorologis t J . S herman Denny measured 0.14 inch of r ainfall at 8 a .m. to bring the season's total there to 5.72 compared to 1.81 last year. "We got a shower from about 6 a.m . to 6:30 a.m. but it was just enough to wash off the roofs," Denny said. Coastal officials issued a small craft advisory for boaters today because of gusts of wind up to 30 miles·per·hourout of the southwest. Winds are e xpected to shift to the northwest tonight and decrease Thursday. Motorists are advised to drive carefully in the mountains because of snow showers above .J.500 feet that hinders visibility. .. The s now s howers aren·t heavy enough lo issue a winter s torm warning," said a s pokesman for the weather bureau. The temperature is expected to drop to 47 degrees tonight. Warmer temperatures in the low 60s are predicted for Thursday. _.o:.i..__ _ _,,......__'""',.. __ "'_· - -~Ti ·Additional Savings on Sport Coats All 40°/o .OFF' --· ... ---==----~~ -- -°' c1 .. eMec1edu.,.....11~ An otJMr ••111ft9MLM2~~ • I MINK BR~CH, Ky._(AeJ :- An eutem Kentucky eoai mine exploded today, trapptne seven men 700 f eet Inside, the Kentucky Mlnea and Minerals Department reported. iSALE ENos · A fire may be bumlng lnside the RFH Min.lng Co. Mine No. 1 in Floyd County, added a slate m inln1 office manaier in Martin. · One ol two'slate rescue teams entered the mine shortly after noon, aod the status of the fire wasn't available. It waan't known whetber anyone was lQjurtd, and tbe cause ol the exploskJn was dlt ilnown. / 1$aturday· January 23rd 17th & Irvine Ave., WestCUff Plam, Newport Beach, CA ~ T .. 111111 l:UIT ..., .... I WEDNESDAY, JAN. 20, , •• CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION 02-3 08· 09 • -A -Newport consu tant says co lo rs can affect office productivity. See Page 84. ~~~·~~d~l~~~iol~~~~~ ~~~~I ·~~~~~lb ~~~u~~.~-~~~~~~col c- .. ...,....... telephone interview Tuesday waa beint suspended. They county-lmpcNaed requirement.. however. The two parties are fithUnl The director of the UC Irvine afternoon. said substitute claimed the medical center wu Gonsales said it wu "unfair" Gonsalez said it was poulble over about S8 million lo bUla tbe Medical Center in Oran1e says procedures ordered by tbe not followln1 re1ulatiqns for the county to "slntle out" the punlUve action was related county hu refused to pay. that Oranae County government county would be costly and reaardint OD·slte bandllnt ol tbe tbe medical center for puniUve to the QD&oinl dispute between The medical center director off i cl a Is b ave acted in. "demorallainl" to tbe hospital materials. acUon. He pointed out that lo the coullly and the univenlty complained that county officials dis c riminatory fashion in staff. Gonaalea conceded that there recent days four other Oran,se ov.er proviaio.n ol care for w~e unavailable to visit the invalldalinl the center's license County Health Department ·were "a couple of 1lltcbes," but . County hospitals .have been indl&eola at the medical center. • medical center to c.onduct an for sleriliution and disposal of officials said Tuesday momin& stressed that corrective act.ion found ln violation of infectloua Unde.r an aveemenl, care for Inspection prerequisite to the l n f e c t i o us w as t e al that lbe medical center's license bas been taken. He said the waste treatment and dlapoul patient'.a for which the county ~ infectious waste treatment county-owned landfills. permitting pressurized steam medical center la fully capable reaulations. None of the ~r fina~cia lly responsible is license beinl reinstated. Cable TV 1 • nnsuse feared By PATIUCK KENNEDY O/ lllle Deity Nee Sa.ff Huntington Beach Mayor Ruth Finley has voiced fears that c a ble t elevision could be misused' to manipulate public opinion in "big brother" fashion. ·'Television is a powerful force," Mrs. Finley said. "We need clear-cut guidelines and controls early in its development so there aren't potential misuses down the line. "It scares the heck out of me ." Mrs . Fi n l ey s aid city governments could misuse the s y s tem to promote city programs in a one·sided fashion. She als o said city officials running for re-election could use televised City Council meetings for a campaign soapbox. "We need to make sure that everything is above board and that nothing even appears suspicious,'' Mrs. Finley said. -.-"There have to be assurances of --equal time for opposing views.·· ··• Huntlngton Beach. Fountain -Vailey, Westminster and Stanton are served by Dickinson Pacific Cable Systems. The c ompany , which offer s 36. channels, r eceived franchises from the cities involved. Several channels are available for broadcasts by community members. city government officials '1nd s chool district officials. Last week, the first City Coun cil meeting was broad c a s t l iv e to 10,000 Huntington Beach homes. Presently. the Public Cable Television Authority (PCT A), made up of elected officials from the four cities, oversees installation and operation of the cable system. · Huntington Beach Councilman Don MacAJlister, who sits on the CT-A , !1fyS it"'S uncle ar how-1 mu c h aut h o rit y ci t y governments have over the broadc as ts . Howe v er, he ,:iiscounts Mrs. Finley's fears or gov~rnment misuse. He said his major concern is possible future broadcasfs of porno~raphy. · '1 suppose there could be some misuse in the future but t here are very basic FCC rules and federal laws that oversee broadcasts," MacAllister said. •' l don't see the big brother thing happening unless those laws are rewritten," he said. But, MacAllister added, "it's scary when you look at raunchy pornography going on (over cable television ) in New York that nobody can get rid or.'' "We as council merqbers can't sit in censorship positions but I'd like to see fuidelines against pornography. ' He said the public access s tations will ins u r e a ll viewpoints an equal a nd fair presentation time. Ma cAlli s ter s a ys cable television wlll provide better com muni c ation betwe en government and citizens. Man flees home fire, cat credited Fire officials are credilinl a cat with belpln& save the life ol --a..Coata Mesa man who woke up to find bis apartment filled with 'smote. - Fire Qllef Jim Richey said th• animal apparently nudted Gary KillcoWna, age unknown, from bla sleep at 8 p.m. Tuesday. Damqe to tbe bedroom at 2011 Charle St. was eaUmated at $20,000. No other structures were damqed and no one wu injured. "He'• lucky be tot up when he dld " said Ricbey. Richey said the fire apparently was started b1 a amoldertna etpntte. '1'ben ...- no 1moke detector In tbe apartmmt, be said. AERIAL PROTECTION -Fountain Valley Mayor Ben Nielsen. l eft. and Fire Chief Richard Jor gensen t ak e a turn behind Deity "911 ,..,....., •ic...... ic ..... the wheel of a 1947 aerial ladder tru.ck on loan to the city while its ladder truck is bei ng upgraded. Sight of new truck alarming No confusing FV loaner with rest of flee~ By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of lille Delly NM !wt Fountain Valley residents may do a double·take when they catch sight of the tangerine-colored JS.year-old lire truck that will respond lo local calls in coming weeks. The 1947 Seagrave Ladder Truck is on loan from the Santa Ana College Fire Academy, where it is used for training student firefighters. . The loaner vehicle is needed as a ftll ·in for the city's regular Ladder Truck 30, which is being overhauled. Truck 30, which will receive a new, more powerful engine and a new coat of red paint, will be out of service until March 30. Until its return, the cit~ rely on tbe 1947 Seasrave, which has certlfied by the state for use in front-line fire fl&hUn1, Fountain Valley Fire Chief Richard J orgensen said. "We definitely need the capability of aerial protection in this community," lbe chief said, "especially wilb all tbe wood· s hing_led roofs here." The truck la equipped for 75-foot aerial capacity, enlbling a firefighter to spray waler down on a burnln1 roof. Jorgensen said Fountain Valley crews, are now trainin1 on proper handling of the older truck, which bas no power ateerint or automatic tranamlaaion. Purcbued after World War II by the Santa Ana Fire Department. tbe truck was recently retired from active duty and donated to tbe fire academy. The academy painu ita vehicles or8Jlle to differentiate . them from the equipment used by regular fire department.. Airport proposal criiicized Rep . Robe rt Badbam, R·Newport Beach, bas attacked proposals by an Orange County government airport advisory committee that the Marine Corps Air Statlona at El Toro and Tustin be purchased and relocated as part of development of a re1ional airPOrt. • .-PUrdlaA of Uifie baaea-ls ~ lll·concelved idea and should . be rejected fort.bwitb," Badbam, a member or the House Armed Services Committee, said in letter sent Tuesday to Bruce Neatande# cbalrman of the Board o .'Supervllon. The county's so-called "blue rlbbon" reatonal airport site selection committee propoHd earlier tb1I month that tbe two M arlne facWtles be purehued apd reAocated. - Relocation al.. the b.,., the commlUee ~rs said, ..ad 'reduce airspace congestion aboufd a re1ional airport be -constructed elsewhere in tbe coun(y. Further, tbe committee SUHested that the El Toro bale· could Hrve u tbe site for a re1lonal airport lf other lites proved unacceptable. "ClOlint these military buel would have a severe -ev• disastrous -effect on tbe nation'• ablllty to defend itMlf,"' hclbam said. Newport condo law to_ stir fireworks , A propos al lo r elax condominium con~ersion laws in Newport Beach is expected to produce a round of fireworks this week when it comes before the city's Planning Commission Thursday evening. The new law would permit owners of apartment complexes o( four units or le$S to convert t h e apartm e nt s t o condominiums. City officials calculate the law change could affect more than 7 ,000 apartm e nt renters in Newport Beach. . "Basically it will allow us to throw out those who can only afford to rent and replace them with people with more money," s u gge s ted Planning Co m missioneT' Allan Beek. Proponents or the new law argue the change should help produce a new s toc k of aUordable housing in Newport Beach. The average cost of a house in Newport now is calculated to be more than $250.000. City planners, in a staff report pr e pare d for Thurs da y's meeting, sugg est apartments converted into condominiums likely would be much cheaper t han the average Newport hous ing cost. But no figures have been revealed. Planners said the converted apartments would give renters a chance to become owners and to build up equity. The drawback, they said, is that the law change would af'ecl the areas or Newport Beach now inhabited by the city's lowest wage earners. They said it also would affect th e cheapest apartments in town. Planners have suggested that some guidelines be adopted by the· commission to prevent "the displacement of large numbers of persons or households at any one time." Current law in Newport Beach effectively bans converting apartments to condominiums by forcing owners to meet a tough list of conditions. There ha s not been a conversion in the beach city in rtiore than two years. Cops widen search for N ewpOrt thug Police have broadened their search for a man who broke into a Newport Beach home earlier this month, beat up a disabled worn an and made off with an antique pocket watch. The woman -62·year -old Alleen Welch -suffered a broke-ii jaw in five different places in the Jan. 9 beating and remains hospitalized , police report. Officers said t he woman , _crj ppl.ed. wilb-artbrit.U and confined lo a wheelchair. caught only a fl eeting glimpse or the man who robbed and beat her. T h e ass ail a nt has been described a s being i n his mid·20s, having dark hair and a chubby face. Polic e now h ave begun circ ulating drawings or the OC singers lwnored in opera contest Sangers from inland Orange County captured top honors in auditions by the Orange County District of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Western Re1ion at Newport Harbor High Scfiool last Saturday. Twenty-four singers were judged by former Mel s tar Herta Glaz; Hans Lampl, Cal Stale Long Beach professor of mu sic and conductor of the U ni ve r s it y S y mphony Orchestra; and Gary Campbell, facilities coordinator and' planner for the USC School of Performing Arts. Contestants were introduced by Joseph Gaudio. The vocalists were divided into two categories: career and apprentice. The career slneers have learned and performed at least one role, while t.boee in th9' apprentice group have yet to appear on sta1e in a complete role. Winners in the career 1fOUP w e r e.;-f irst, Anita Berry, Fullerton; Susan Dixon ol El Toro; Jamee Ard, of Santa Ana ; Celeste Tavera of Qrange; and. Mark Feiner, of Anaheim. Winners in the apprentice class were : firs t, Susan Mont&2m~ of Oran1e;~5Xai& Cantley of Fullerton i.. Donald Christenaeq of Fullerton;· anc1 ·Frank Strand of Hacien.da Helpu. , .- Mark Burroughs of Fullerton, won the Aluander Saundenon award. · Semlflnal auditions-wlll be held in February ln Loi Anples at use. 70-year-old gold watch in hopes that someone might point lbem in the direction of the criminal. The watch, according lo the police bulletin being circulated in Newport Beash. bas an open race with the initials DDG on its back in a scroU design. Police said they are unsure of the exact value of the antique watch. They are asking persons with any information lo contact Detective Mike Deladuranley at ~3762~ Mrs. Welch told officers she was sleeping in the living room o f her Clubhouse · Drive condominium -located off the entrance to Newport Center - when she heard a noise, woke up and saw a man standing over her. . T he woman said she started lo scream and was slugged in the face at least twice. She said the thug yelled "Shut up, shut your mouth," as he beat her. The woma n's 81-year ·old roommate , Alma Gordon, reportedly was a sleep in a bedroom of the condominium at the lime and was unaware of the incident. In addition lo the antique watch, police said the man grabbed Mrs . Welch's purse containing several credit cards and several pieces of jewelry. Brown cuts to cost N-M 1$1 million?· • The Newport Mesa Unified School District stands to IOH $1 m illion next year if propo.ed budget cuts of Gov. Edmund Bro wn Jr. are approved, accordin1 to school authorities. "We need another S2 mUUoo to furid"'-~urrent programs," said Superintendent John Nicoll. "We would resarcl a Sl million cut aa ·disaster. We will make every• effort to get bis decision ·reyersed.'' District spokeswoman Jean Harmon said Newport Mesa would be affected in tbe following ways ll the propoeed cuts take effect: -A "$750,000 reduction next year in general funds due to Brown's pn>posal to do away with a two percent increase 1ranted every year to 41atridl formerly eomtdend WHhllJ. -A $2!50,000 reduttlon next year from the state for deferred .mainjenance co.ta. . -A S130,000..S140,000 cut due to la 10 pettent reductioa lD lnUnet · lDeome received b1 tM dlltftet. - Orange co .. t DAILY PILOT /Wedne1day, January 20, 1982 y-.tAIVJAN.:scAaCELLo °' ................. Ever y year a bout thia Um•, with Dt1ce mber's bills pllln• up like snowdrifts uround the old homestead, we heat about people who make a career out of aavin& money on food • wlth refunds and coupons. Television cameras pan two ahoppln1 carts rilled to overflowina and move In for a closeup of the happy-customer. "Look," she says, wavln1 a fistful of coupons, "I bought $427 worth of eroceries for qnly $3.44. ·' trer cu~ regis!!_r tape snakes J ll lbf} "'.ay ..__..__,out tbe door , the cashier has fainted and the \ store 'tnanager ls weeping softly ln the corner . "Isn't that wonderful," chimes in the TV reporter accompanying her in the pillage and plunder of the grocery aisles, "lo see what an average American housewife tan do with just a little planning before she shops." Millions of viewers al home, sinking deeper into their easy chairs, are filled with 1ullt about what they could be doing to save money on food !' each week. · What most reports don't show is that the woman's family had to build an extra room onto• ' the house to store the cases of food she bou1ht in !Spicing up your l~av~i:it~ r.~cip~. r I~ India, a true curry g i v e s m o r e e v e n !is made by sauteeing the distribution. irri ixture or exotic spices What better example ii n c l a rified butter than salad dressings? i<ghee) befor-e adding Stir Uie seasonings into !other ingredients. the oil a nd a llow to l Italian's often 1)8fect stand for a few minutes ' their spaghetti sauces in tc>aevelop full ~avor. the same way -addi ng Then ~~d vinegar or the basil, oregano and lemon 1u1 ce a nd fold •o l h e r 5 e 8 s 0 n in gs ~enlly bu~ thoroughly fdirecUy to the oil and into the crisp_ greens. to ~cooking very br iefly. coal each p1~ce with ·befo re stirring in the seasoned dressing. ltomatoes. Not all recipes give . t h ese in structio ns . I In man y c.ountries Often, recipes for cakes 1famou~ for spice cakes will tell you to .. sift the lt.h.e spices ar.e creamed fl our, cinnamon, ground d 1 rec t.1 y 1 n l o th e cloves, nutmeg ..... shortemn~ and sugar This, however. does before adding the flour. not always g ive as ' Adding spices to the thorough a dlstribution bortening and oil in of fl avor. Next time you ecipes smooths and try your favorite recipe, lends their navors and follow that advice. ST ART 1982 WITH OUR RESOLUTION AND BOOK I NEVER PAY RETAIL 1912 SICOMD EDITION The only comprehensive guide to Discount Shopping in Orange County by Sue Lee aid Starr Pt111tips 251 stores in 31 cities ~.,.._Oft pooge 01 Oooi, P1tot S... Jiil 10 1112) $6.50 plus $1 .15 postage. tax. and handling charge. $7 .65 ~------------------­Pleasrsend me ' . . . ;-:" :uipies of I NEVEftl>AY REml. Enclosed is a checl\ for S . I I Name · I I Address. . ..•••.••..•..........••..•.....••.••.... I ~!ta ·ch9Ci<. P8}oa.b1e· io i ·..e'iER. ;;Af We·r Aii.'. ·•,;ci ·n,•·,i io ; 369 E. 1'7th St .. Ste. 1~56800. Coste Meu. Ca I ------ •· Authenic Japanese mood for your pleasure al Sushi bar •. Chef from Japan •1 Temiua a1d Teriyaki .. ,. ~::::;~5~,m I liMI ~--1 ...-• . can add_up to a frill-time job_-..-- the fi rst place to obl&ln the coupons and refundB. newspaper food sections. pack111es and labels. Coupons can reduce lbe 1ta11erln1 lotali we all face at the checkout slaod, but most of us buve lime only fur a haphaiard stab al the game. Best <;<>upon use Is for !term and brands you were going to buy anyway or to try a new vroducl. MA&INAT£0 MV8Hll00MS t pound fresh mushrooms Another three closets and the patio are given over to storage of timpty food contalnen on the off chance some manul1acturer will offer to redeem a boxlop, front panel or proof of l bottle any flavor oil and vine1ar drc11sing , or a package of the kind you mix together purctiase seal. . Oplloua l : chopped parsley or bell pepper The faro lly has filed $300 ln dogfood coupona but OWn5 a canary, and the back bedroom holds Another way to save money is culling back on expensive bu t unnecessary llema such as llllle jars of muinaled vegetables sold ln gourmet food sedlons. Clean mushrooms 1and trim stems as needed. 11111 Tll llTl:lll Tbey look Impressive on an hors d'oeuvres plale, .disappear with depressing speed and shauld tse bou•hl in large quantities only by members of• Middle Eastem oil cartel. It large, cut into halves or quarters. Parboil in a saucepan with just enough water to cover for a . few minutes, drain the water (or save it for - grjlvy seasoning> and put. mU8hHotns into a non-me tal covered conta ine r. Pour ove r dressing <should .be j ust enough' to cove r completely). Chopped parsley or bell pepper ls a grou oJ disposa ble d iapers, although the youngest child is away at colle1e . Their menus are designed around whatever coupons a re good tha t week. Many cooks don't realize how simple marinated vegetables are to make. Raw or parboiled vegetables sit quietly in lhe refr-igerator soaking in your favorite oil and vinegar dressing for 24 hours <or more) before serving. a nice addllion for fl avor and color. Refrigerate for al least 24 hours before draining and serving. Last night they dined on canned tamales with hamburger helper (without hambur1er, because it wasn't on special), and tonl1ht's gourmet repast will be peanut butter, Chinese noodles and green beans . You guessed it, they all were bought with coupons. The other drawback Is the time involved. Drain to serve, but save leftover dressing as a marinade Cor meats. VARIATIONS -The same technique applies to most other vegeta bles. Cauliflower can be parboiled with a touch of lemon juice to maintain whiteness. 01"een-beans and carr<ot 11lices can be parboiled before marlnatin1. Strips of bell pepper and whole cherr:• tomatoes can be marinated raw, cutting a small X into one end of the-tomatoes for a bsorption of dressing. Most couples would have to nip a coin to see which of them would quU work to slay honie and clip coupons. The loser would make a career out of folding, spindling and m~tilialing The effort is small, but the savings are great when compared with price stickers on the little glass jars in stores. Here's the basic recipe with variations, but don't be air aid to add your own. st•P-Sto a -success ul garage sa e. Garage sales, yard sales, rummage sales, street sales· ... no matter what you call them. the idea is the same -TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER NEED INTO CASH. When you get tired of fighting your way into a crowded ·attic or garage, or when you need a little e~tra cash. have a garage sale! ~ get into the act, clean out those unwanted items, and make money doing 1tt It's fun, it'J profitable. and following these 10 steps will make it simple. 1 Decide on dates. Look at a calendar and set the dates and times of your • sale. Weekends are usually good, but.many successful Sales have been held in the 8Y8ning, just after work. Check the weather forecast in the paper1 and watch for any other large event that may attract potential buyers away, such as fairs or community events. Have your sale run at least two days-some people may not be able to come o n any single day. 4 Where to advertise. Place your ad where it 'Mii be seen by people who live in the area -most people shOp close to home. The • Daily Pilot is read by 88,000 adults in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Irvine, Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley-guaranteeing you wide exposure. And with the Pilot, you're not paying for waste circulation in Los Angeles or Anaheim. Plan to run your ad 3 times or more, and start it a few days before the sale so bargain hµnters can have plenty of notice. Z What to sell. Everything! That is, everything you haven't used in the • last year. If an item has antique value, o r is brand~new. or has unusual value, be sure to ask a healthy price for it. Get a pad o f paper and search your whole ho use. S Make a sign. . To help make yo ur sale successful, make a few signs • from cardboard and letter with a mag ic marker. A good •sign size ts 14" x 22". Look everywhere, and list everything. Fwllitwe. l'h is 1s your main attraction and your best source of income. Be sure to place furniture where it can be seen from the street. Price · furniture low enough to beat auctions and seconctharrd sales (check the classifieds for comparisons). but high enough so you can come down a little when someone shows interest. RockinQ chairs. chest of drawers. tables and chairs are all very successful at garage sales, so teature..tbem.ln Y:PULad.._..-... _ • _ Antiques. Smaller" antiques should be gro uped, and kept c lose at hand where you can watch and talk about them. Nostalg ia items are very popular - display them well. Clothing. Make sure clothing is clean, and mark the price way down. Put as many things as possible on hangers. Separate kid's things by age. Display adult clothing by sex and age group. Low prices are a _. on clothes except for unusual items. which should be tagged witn an explanation (like. "hand-embroidered flowers . dress worn by Mae West)." AppliClftCes. These wi II sell for a fair price only if they w ork. No o ne will take your word for it. Have an extension cord so they can be tested, or better yet, have radios playing, old TV sets turned ori etc. Make sure buyers understand they are sold "as is". Plmh. These usually go fast, but keep them out of direct sunlight. A good idea is to name your plants before the sale (Spider Lady, Cousin Jasper, Maggie), and write a Hne or two on the name card about how to care for them. 6 Placing your siCJn. The morning of the.sale, but not before. ~laee-yettr -- signs. Be sure and add your address and any • directional arro ws. This should be done about a half hour before the sale starts. Place your sign where it can be seen from both sides of the street by passing cars and pedestrians. CAUTION : Some towns have laws that. r.-trict the placement and duration of garage sale signs. ~~ease check with your town's planning department or clerk. 1 Marking prices. Mark prices where they can be seen clearly. Office • supply stores have varoius sizes and colors of stickers that work well, or you can use masking tape. However you mark them, .-. prtas low. Garage sales are for bar~ain hunters. Remember, whatever you can't sell you II have to drag back in the house and store again for another year. I Serving refreshmenh. This doesn't have to cost much, and creates a friendly • atmosphere. It also encourages people to stay longer and perhaps buy more. You could even charge for expensive Items like donuts, or the kids could go in . business for the day, with a lemonade stand. J Write your acl · Here is a suggested a&. '"Garage Sale -desks. Bentwood rocking chair, toys, Infants' clothing. 1922 • Victrola in original cabinet, nwny Oadgets, lots of unusual items, rock collection, plants. Refreshments, 8 ' Display. Make sure everything can be ~n. Have card tables or • bo1rds used as shelves between two chairs. Don't cause people to bend over unless you can't help it. u,e one table as a desk where you can see everything and take money. Use only one cash box (tin cans or boxes work fine) and make sure someone ta appointed "cast\ier" at all times. Arrange beforehand for a friend who can help answer questions, relief for lunch, etc. • a.m. to 6 p.m . Saturday Wld Sunday. 1234 South Anyatreet, Yourtown. Just \Wit of Main and 2nd." · Uee this Hmpfe ad aa a guide. Be sure to t11t unuaual Items. Be u specific u pqeetble. Give dlr8Ctlon1 If needed. Don't UH abt>nwWiona-many people won't bother to decipher them. CAUTION; Don't advwtlte anyttllng fou don't realty have. Every Item In the 1d mutt be on hand at the start of the eate. . . Check your neiCJhbors and friends. •See If any want to join your sate. This will give you someone to share experw with and lncr•aae Interest · 6 4. 2 5 6 7 a· In your ute. If others join you. be au,. to Include this In' • your ad (example: "thre.famlty ..... " "neigh~rhood :lllll~ ll'illlt ................ sa.le.··~.G.ro•ump•sa•le•sa•re•a•lo•tmo .. ,.•fu~:.to•o• ... 330 W. Bay St., Cotta Meaa, CA. Open 8-5:30 Monday tt'lru Friday, Saturday 8-noon. , . 1) GOOD LUCK WITH YOUR GARAGE SAi.El llAY IT BE SUCCnsFUL AND FUNI .. • • Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/WednMd•y, J•nuary 20. 1982 N Dow dOr18S Final "=-0PF 1.53 CLOSING 145.18· f7'hil ii the third of o 10-porC serlea on how to '°~ on your 1981 Income ta:res.) The Internal Revenue Service has accepted cosmetie-flicelin surgery ~s a medi~al expense - and ln 1981, the Tax Court also handeds down a favorable ruling on treating the cost of hair transplant operations as a medical expense. Under these circumstances. your own tax strategy If you had cosmetic surgery last year seems clear. Jn this case, a taxpayer underwent the surgical transfer of sma ll plugs of-hajr'-bearfng tissue from part of his scalp to another part of his scalp for purely cosmetic reasons. He claimed a medical expense deduction on the ba sis of the ~ earlier decision on facelitts. The court procedure or hair ... ... ... ~~ds~~a~:~t~o~ ~~~ IYlVll PDITll ~ z purely cos m etic .::S..- reasons. Back in 1955. the IRS ruled that the cost of an antiseptic diaper ser vice isn't deductible as a medical expense. But in a 1981 private lett.er ruling, the I RS aJlowed a medical deduction for the cost of disposable diapers because they were related to a physical illness. Here a child beyond the normal diaper age was totally incontinent because or brain damage. Her physician said she would require diapers constantly and recommended paper diapers to minimize possible skin problems. Since th e diapers helped alleviate the effects of the child's disease. their cost was a medical expense. ln another 1981 Tax Court case, a university professor whose omce·at-home failed to meet the tough tests for an office-at-home deduction tried unsuccessfuJly lo get a medical expense deduction instead. She claimed that she had to work at home because of her severe allergy to tobacco s moke. which she couldn't always avoid at her university office. Since the room she used as an office at home represented one-eighth of the total square footage of the house, she deducted _as a medical expense one-eighth of her~""lJ'lalnrenan<!e expenses tor the house. But the Tax. Court pointed out that because the maintenance of her-house was an ordinary personal living expense to begin with, she could only claim a medical deduction to the extent that the cost of her office at home was increased due to her medical problem. This she failed to do, and, therefore. she wasn't entitled to any medical deduction for her office at home For the millions of us who have some form of medical expense insurance, a 1981 IRS Technical Advice Memorandum provides an important warning. If your particular medical expense is covered by your insurance and for some reason you do not claim reimbursement from the insurer, the l RS will bar you from a medical expense deduction for the unreimbursed expense. Here the taxpayers incurred substantial expenses for medicines and drugs that their insurance coverage would have reimbursed for 80 percent. They didn't fil e a claim because of the administrative burden. and instead deducted the costs as unreimbursed medicine and drug expenses. The IRS said that it treats these expenses as having been reimbursed by the insurer -in which case they aren't deductlb1e. because the taxpafers were entitled to be paid by their insurer and chose not to be. Because of failure to claim the available insurance, the medical expenses are not deductible. The message from this l RS memorandum is unmistakable: Be sure to c laim any medical insurance to which you may be entitled, even if it means doing paperwork y~ would rath!_I' avoid. __ _ $,TOCIS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS llM Teftdot s [•••. 'GIWnFlfl Pflllfell'ltl CouCola Mo«lll. ~Jm~I t~J..!"' NIT..:Oi ~"'""'*9 ' '~ UPS AND DOWNS • •I -" -" :.:,~ -1111 -~ -"" -1'11. --• \0) -1"' -h -.. -" ... 'rOllK W'J ---.. -...... -.... ~--... -----~---.~·--~-i;·· ' f '!:1! lb = r; "'·~· a·~ .ttt . . •YJ~ t I ~= ~ ='tt ,,~ I I ... _,,,_ " I02 ~.,. -1 ro Is ... --u T.:we1 u. • " t•su· Alrl M,)00 Wt --" METALS Nl!W YOltlt CAP) -Spol '*""''""" .... ••• ptl(911-,: C•llll•' 71'11·10 unu • peuntl, l•.s .. ., ...... '°"'. UM ».)ol '""°'a _..o. 111K 42"4> ,_. '*'"°· .... _.... TM tJ,Q:Jl Mete~ WMIL c...,._11a 1111. A ........ 7H7~a-.cl,N.Y. Mer<wy ...---lletll. .... .._.UM.OOtroy or., N. Y. SILVER ., t