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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-02-16 - Orange Coast Pilot---, . * * ••• * TUESDAY FEBRUARY 1n ~982 ·-Fraud c8se. figure ,-eleased _ from j8i1 • By DAVIDKUTZMANN OftMD.it•f't ... Suft The president of Golden Eagle Investment 'Co., suspected of s w i ndling more t han 1,000 investor:s out of their savings, wH a free man again today following :an unusual holiday court hearing to reduce his $2 million bail. Cen tral Orange County Municipal Court Judge Bobby Youngblood lowered Ralph McDonald's bail to $250 ,000 M onday as more · tha n 50 investors who support McDonald clapped and cheered. He posted the lowered bail Monday night and was released from Orange County Jail. Wh en he was arrested last week by Orange County Sheriff's Department investigators who raided his El Toro office . McDonald· was alleged to have masterminded the largest fraud SOGGY SENOOFF Passcn~ei's bound for Oakl and stand in the rain as rhe~· h<>ard an Air Cal plane at .John Wa~·m· ' in Orange Co unty history. More than $800,000 in cash was seized in the raid. . The defendant's lawyer, Paul Mast, argued that the charges against ·McDonald "don't seem to have great merit" and at most he was guilty of technical securities law violations. Deputy District Attorney Thomas Buck . however . maintained that $8 million in investors ' f un ds Is sti l l unaccounted for and t hat no evid e n ce was fou nd t h at Mc Donald had invested any of his clients' money in real estate loans as he had claimed Buck said investors were promised interest payments of between 15 percent and 20 percent per mo.nth on their money. After Monday's court hearin~. .,..,, ~·--.., Gery .. -- Airport this morninj:! :\ few horro" t.><1 umhn .. •llas from airli ne staffL•rs. Buck said he was"'displeased" with the reduction in bail. Earlier. the prosecutor had told Judge Youngblood that authorities were concerned that Mc Donald would flee the country with the S8 million. Mast. a retired municipal court Judge. said the $8 million had been properly invested and would be accounted for In all. $11 million is reported to have been invested in Golden Eagle. Authorities s eize d about $825.000 in c as h a long with company records in the raid on the firm Both Mc Donald, a San Juan Capistrano resident. and Oa vid Higgin !>. 44. vice president of Golden Euglc. were arrested o n c h a r ge!> o f se lling unregistered !>ccunt1cs Biggins remain~ in Orange County Jail li e Y.a~ !>Cht•dul e d t o be a rr:.11gned t<Kl a} · Men_tal pa_tient surrenders. • in Santa Ana Escaped mental patient Roger Dale Stockham. who had eluded c apt u re ror fo u r months . s u r r e nde r ed Monday to a television news crew and law enforcement officials in Santa Ana . Stockham. 34, who had been described by au thorities as ··extremely dangerous,·· showed up at the Santa Ana office of the Orange Co unty Sh eriff's Department after s pending five days negotiating with offi<.1als on the terrns of his surrender. said Sgt. Bob Casey of the Santa Barbara Sheriff's Department. While free on bail on a charge- of child stealing, Stockham was arrested In connection with fires set at several Union Oil storage. tanks at Point Conception. He was convicted of felony child stealing, but at his arson trial. he was found legally insane and sentenced to Patton in February 1980 The Secret Service had also been kee p ing tabs on the escap~ mental patient because of an attcm11t 1n 1980 to send a l h r c a t e n 1 n g I e .t l e r t o then-President Jimmy Carter. They worked for Lisa • Casey. who was the primary law enfo r cement offici al involved in the negotiations with Stockham. told The Associated Press that the news team at KN BC televiston ·station in Los Angeles first contacted him on F e b . 10 about Stockham·s whereabouts. Stockham. who has a varied criminal record. escaped from Patton State Hospital in San Bernardino on Oct. 14. A convert to Islam. Stockham came to the public's attention in 1979 when he look his son from a Santa Barbara area foster home. new to Los Angeles in a rented plane and tried to hijack a jet to Iran. "On l"cb. I I. Stockham called me twice and we discussed the matt1•r of his surrender." Casey said. "lie did not want to be housed in Los Angeles County Jail and wuntcd 10 stay in the Santa Barbara County 1ail " "We struck a bargain," Casey said. "that he would be at the Orange Co unt y s h e riff 's department in Santa Ana at 12 · 30 p.m. and that I would b r i n g. h 1 m b a c k lo Sant a Barbara." Cnsey said. They traded spatulas, aprons and bus t rays fnr scrub brushes. hoses and chamois cloth at Saturday's car wash behihd the Big Yellow House restaurant in Costa Mesa. The occasion was to raise . money for one of their own - waitress Lisa Boyer, who was injured earlier this month when her parachute failed to open during a 12,500-foot fa ll. Ljsa continues to recover at Loma Linda University Medical Center where s he was taken after her miraculous survival from a sky diving accident Feb. 3. And while MediCal will pay for a part of her hospital bills. friends and fellow employees at the Costa Mesa restaurant held a f und-raising car was h Saturday to defray medical costs. "We raised more than $360 ... said Ron Booth. manager or the Big Yellow House. "We had to quit at 3 p.m. because we had to open for work." He said a steady stream or cars. trucks. vans and even mobile homes arrived in the rear parkin g lot -many brought in by people who had read news accounts of the 20 year-old sky diver's plight. "Some people paid more (than the .$2.50 charge> to have their cars washed," Booth s.aid. "A lot of people paid double and triple the amount. just to help Lisa out." . Li s a 's parachute malfunctioned during her 54tb JUmp. and her reserve chute only partially opened. She landed m a sludge pond at a sewage treatment plant near Perris Airport and suffered com press ed vertebrae and inte rnal injuries. . But the efforts of her friends, and complete strangers. wi ll ease the financial burden of her accident. Booth said. And how did the popul ar patient react to the successful car wash? "She was rea lly t hrilled," Booth said. "Just tickled." Light drizzle dampened the Orange Coast and most other areas of t h e county today. leaving streets a nd frt!eways slick but adding little to the season's rainfall total. A spokesman for the National Weather Service said there should be gradual clearing by tonight , wit h war m er tern perat ures predicted for Wednesday. T he spokesman said today's drizzle was caused by a 'low pressure system cover ing the Eastern Pacific, which has brought heavy rain into the Bay Area and the Western Sierras. Low temperatures tonight are expected to be In the 45 to 55-degree range. When the demand was refused. he took off in the rented plane. but crashlanded on the Palos Verdes peninsula. S tockham s urrendered to she riff's officers m the company of his third wife. Suzanne. whom he reportedly married at the beginning of the year. and Pete Noyes. execut ive ed itor at KNBC Casey said that Stockham had· been staying at a residence in Laguna J;Jcach. Disabled AirCal ' plane lands safely_ By FREDERICK SCHOE ME HL coming to a halt Of IM D.ity ~I ... Sutt Tearful Nancy hears 'druggies' An AirCal jetliner that made an emergency landing at Los Angeles International Airport Monday night earlier had struck and ripped off between 100 and 150 feet of lightning arrester wire stnmg between two high Mark Peterson. director of e ommun1 c ati o n s for th e Newport Beac h -based air carrier. said the night crew had\ <See AIRCAL, Page AZ> ) ST. P ETERS BJJ RG , Fla. (AP > -Only 'the na mes and races or the troubled teen-agers varied . Their decla r ations before a huge a udience that inc luded a -tearful Nancy Reagan were always the same: "I a m a druggie." For three hours Monday night, the first la d y sat In a hot auditorium crowded with 300 drug-prone adolescents and 600 anxious parents Involved in a _u_e_a lmen p a:o gxJl m cal l-ed Straight Inc. She listened to the songs they sang enthusiasUcally. She beard ·an unendin1 Utany or substances they once used to "1et hi,h." And 's h e w a t c h e d aa a microphone was passed rrom parent to parent, some scolding their children for setbacks. others ottertna pralle and love. • When the microphone finally 1ot to Mrs. Rea11n, her voice choked. "lly ~rt ll filled with to \ m any things," she told the teen-agers. "I am so proud of you and I love you. too." Tears welling in her eyes. she turned to the parents: "Being a pa re nt myself, I know bow painful it must be for you. There's notJ\ing as painful · f o r a pare nt a s h•v lnt s om e thlng happen to their c hildren and riothin1 as hurtful.'' Then a1ain to the younpterl: ~I-with-you-ell ttt. belt or luck and the most wonderful lives and [ lylow· you wm have it. l kn()w eve/yt.hlnl' will be just flne .'' Mrs. Reagan's two~ay tflp Oft behalf of dnal abtme prevlnllDn was concludinl today 111\er • stop in Dallu. , 'Monday ni1ht's p ro1rem wu an unutual experiesac:e. First, the children 11tn1tn1 rrom their aea&a ln fro,t of tbe auditorium while tbeh' parent.I waited °'-tilde; loud, loud singing: a cappeUa : with hands 1eals in one row before starting tension electrical 'transmission moving in unison; such songs as lhe next. s tandards localed four miles .. America" and "I'm On My east of Ontar io International Way." The true co"fesslons began. · Airport, where the plane had C'-lJdren who were new to the been desu·ned to la d Next, the counselors would 11 n · as k w h a l w as the m.o s t prog ram st1>0d up and recited None of the 117 passengers outrageous substance they bad the substances they had used -and rive crew members aboard ever used <roach killer~; the pol, acid. uppers, downers-. on flight 754·, which originated ln most outrageous place they and on -always ending with, "I SeaUJe and stopped In Oakland, found to hide drugs -cpa~ents' am a druggie." was injured when the Boeing 737 8111Nlil CllST lllTHI R · t:ha nce or measurable rain near zero tonight and We dnesday. I'' air a nd w a r pl 'e,.. We d n ts d a y . Tonight's lows 45 to 55. Wed nesday's highs 68 lo 75. (Details Page AJ >. INSIDf TIUY m a ttress>: how many had touched down at LAX at 9:22 introduced drugs to children Individually, they apologized p.m . with two separate braking The "sWNter girl" rdurM they babysat ror (about half>; for how they had lied to their mechanisms disabled. · · lo films. Longtime movie and so on. ------"--filH'l'~+P111-ilM\-·d;t-o-l-en . Th-ey---wM-ulane:.&.o~d-..... d ... o-w~n--a ..... __ _,,...'4..._...;.mour ~ IAno T mer r e n o unced t h e I r r or m e r estimated spee<l or 138 miles J>er .aPPfOfin;Q fl~•r ro on Girls were pitted a1ainsl thct "druggie" friends . 'They set hour and traveled the lensth of a TV's "li'olcon Creal .'" P.oge boys. The compelltion wu '° goals, usually a desire to be 12,000.root long runway before CIO. strong that one counselor rlnaJly more honest and open •lth l.belr ve'et'lng into an embankment and llDf I pleaded, "C'mon 1lrls. You can feelln1s and .to rebuild their top the 'IUY•·" All JOO of the family relatlonlhlpl. children franUcally wav9d their hands hl&h in the alr for a "I was a low·llfe dau1hler," cha.nee to reveal how outra..,... eoofaMd one litl, who ancMt they once had been. Str•Pl Inc. rufet must remain The n the parents were anonymoU1 ... , fltl real Md admitted. about that. My lon&-tenn .,.a ii Slowly and 1llenlly t.heJ tUed lo e arn Uae prtwllet• lo 10 ln one by r · muna all tbe home." She be4n to cry. I Vote drive bac~ed LOk ANGELES <AP> .:_About 350 people lu~ out in Eut Loe Ancele1 to hear 1ucce11ful wtlno performers sound the call for lncreued voter re1iltraUon. l'be e "'9\l wu~kl Monda,. '""'~ .. L..M.a.,. ... ....._.. ." ~ "' c.e.eec... •• C......._. CM CM!lo C4 c.. ..... , C4 .......... ., .......... ...... 1 ...., --· .. ROUGH L AN DING :\ Los Angell'!-> International .-\1rport olf1eial l''-allllnl'S thl· lilnding gt•ar ol an \1 rCal 7:37 that s lid orf a rumHl\ and into a sand~ embankme nt during an un~cht•cluled lanchng at the airport \lon d a~ night Tht• pl am· report eel I~· st ruck ,. I t -~-~ overhead pow~r 9im•s on .its original approach to Ontario Air&irt. '' h1 ch may han.• bel•n rcspons ibll' for ~ts' loss of brakes and l>O\n>r re\'ers al equipment. ~01 1.• dama ~t' tc~ .the e nginl' t•owh(lg :":o 1llll' "a:. report NI in 1un•<I m tht• m1sh:J1) CAPE CANAVERAL, •"IA . (AP) -Space Shuttle Columbia waa driven 3~ mlle1 to It• launch pad today aboard • transpOrtcsr-ctawler that Lnched ponderously alo111 a 1ravel roadway to the sea•lde launch complex. · ' The move took 61,-) hours and wao a key step In preparln1 the shuttle for lts thlrd mission, a 7-day QCbltal rtlght beginning March 22. The rollout ot the 184-root-hlgh 11 huttle assembly from the cavernous Vehicle A'sembly Building began at 1:21 a .m . PST aboard the 50-foot-high transporter. The journey ended at about 7:50 a.m . Technicians expected to spend two hours or more making sure the mobile laultther platform, on whl.ch the shuttle is anchored, was connected and ''hard ' down," or fastened securely, on, the pad. The transfe r, rive days ahead of schedule, began •O minutes before its 2 a .m . scheduled start to a void a storm front which was expected at Kennedy Space Center later in the day. The first half'of th~ move was carried out in darkness and then 'in scattered clouds and fog after daybreak. But the secon~ half was in bright sunshme, with the black and white orbiter, its silvery twin rocket boosters and mus lard-colored external lank silhouetted against a powder blue.sky. The s huttle and Its launch platform. we~hln1 more than 11.8 million J>9Uftd•, moved at leu than 1 mph toward the launch site. . ''It lakes a while to move those thinu -they're not light," Hess said. omclals said they hoped lo make all connections of tbe shuttle and its mobile launcher platform to the launch pad about eight hours after rolloul began. Astronauts Jack Lous (Jla and Charles Fullerton awaited the placement of the shuttle on its launch pa.d , where they will reheal'Se countdown procedures tor 33 hours this week Once at the pad, the Columbia will rest on the platform so it "touches metal to metal," Hess said. A rotating platform will move around the spacecraft. so technic ians can link fu el. electrical and communications lines from the Columbia to the ground. , The hookups will continue until Thursday, when Lousma and Fullerton will begin the simulated launch, Hess said. Lousma and Fullerton. who returned to Houston Spaoe Center on Saturdar for more training, will return to Kennedy Space Center for the countdown demons trat ion te s t , NASA spokesman Dick Young said. T h e astronauts will be awakened early. eat breakfast , suit up and enter the s huttle as if the mi ~sion were r eady to launch ln the test r un , which will end Friday. however, no propellants will have been placed in the tanks. Hess said. Pope urges respec~ ftE==;j,_u:-2olis..h_ rights · From Page A1 AIR CAL • • • ""o expectation " that the ,)anding at LAX would be "other fhan routiM... • "We can take· the rain if we have to. but we can 't have lightning," said Mark Hess, a K e n n e d y Sp a c e Ce n t.e r s pokesman. "Once it gets to the pad, it's OK. There's lighllling protection there '' O n Sunday . technicians completed installing explosive devices us~d to separate the Columbia's.solid rocket bOosters jus t before.the space ship begins . The 184'fooHall "stack" of the to reach orbit. On Monday the orbiter , its mustard-colored cr awler was moved.into place. external fuel lank and twin Lou ~ma and Fullerton rocket boostel"s--went uat~ com"ple tea fwo -m ake-believe door or the huke VAB at 1:50 ·missions without a hitch Friday - LAGOS. Nigeria !AP) Pope _ John Paul II told a group of P olis h compatriots today that both human rights and national nghts must be respected in their homeland, where martial law was 1mp()s ed Dec 13. Standing in the garde n of the Vatican's embassy in Lagos, the sunburned· pope greeted about 200 of Nigeria's 2,000-member Polish communitf lq what ~ become a regular fe:iture in liis 10 foreign trips. "I have h ved through the particularly d1ffie~lt events w h i c h ha v e a f "ct e d my.: country," the pontiff said in Polish. "The Poles have rights m relation to their neighbors. especially w1lh those nations which history has hnked with them " a clear reference to the Soviet Union · · 1 have s aid this to state authorities in Poland. as well as to leaders or other countries that the rights of nations and individuals must be respected. This 1s a heritage of many years . We did not learn this from th e Un i ted Nations ' declaration after World War II. We learned thi.s ccnturjes ago." The Polish workers, employed in Nigeria under government contracts, we re scanned by metal detectors and searched before thev were a ll owed to enter the ga.tes of the embassy About a dozen wore Solidarity buttons to show s upport for the in d e p e nd e n t trad e union sus pended whPn martial law was declared. But they said the Polbh•-Embassy in Lagos di scouraged them f r om organizing political activitie~. bringing banners or wearing the buttons during the papal visit. One Pole who w.asn't wearing a badge said he and others like him had complied because "we wanted toJleep our passports." Nigeran police, citlhi security eof'S"""li.. bas ~-... Solidarity banners d ufin1 the pope's previous stops in lbada!t aod ~una. J . • • Polls~ A}llpessapor WitQld .Juran~ today's meetln1 ahd read a message o( welcome to the pope. But Jurasz did not kneel when the pope blessed the crowd. nor did the envoy join in s inging the 1921 hy mn "~od 81ess Poland," whose original words ha ve recently bee n revised by defiant workers to read ··God Give Us Back Our · Free Country." The pope stood Silently as the crowd intoned the a ntt\em , then m e t eac h or the Poles. o.:casionally pausing to wipe pers piration from the brow of a child or to e mbrace_ a ~om an. Earlier. John Paul addressed a g ~o up of N I g er i an industrialists. businessmen and employers at Lagos' Holy Cross Cathedral. · • After four crowded days in tropical African heat. JSope John Paul ll has a bruise on his chest. lines around his eyes and about a pound less on his waistline. Newlyw edS fly high Pair tie knot on ch artered jetli~er SAN DI EGO I A P 1 As l'Xtra\'aganzas go . .lht• Wl0dding was a dillv. cvl'n b\' Southern California s tandards . Nt'wlywed s .Judith Fcfrmaggioni and Ed Gottlieb ti<.>d the knot where th<.'~· m et on a jetliner. For starh.·r~. (;olthl.'I) ehartercd a commercial 747 .1c t at a rcport~d Msl o f SI0 .000 for the in -air ceremon~· After \'O\\l'> wcrl' <.'X<"hangl•d al 11.000 fret. Ton~· M:.irtin s ang for the 132 (.!lll'l'>lS The wedding flight took off a nd landed at Lindbt>rgh Field . aftt•r making a 225 milt• circle over tht• lmpet'ial \'alley. 0.1ai and Occans1dt· Formaggioni. a !ipeciai r ducation teache r . and Gottlieb. a San Dit:go e ntrepreneur. met 41 .! y (•ars ago on a :"le" York-to-Los Angeles flig ht · After a wedding dinn«.'I' aboard a '.\tission Bay excurs ion boat. the jct setting cotaplt' departed for a one-month hone~·moon in Europe. "Well." ~aid Gottlieb. ··it's \'Xt>ensive But you only li ve once... · ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Claaalfled lldverthlint 7141142·1171 All other dtlpal'tlMnt• 142-4321 , i mmediately upon landing, ~owever. it ·became clear to the ~rew that the braking system of th e 1._nding gear and t he thrust reversers located in .the ~ef's two engines were di~abled. Peterson said. a.m. PST. One test. a simulated firing. The two systems are powered ~ith separate hydraulic !systems . he said . Both apparenUy were damated when h JetliAer, only two passengers .i ~ing a maximum , s ruck the ligh t ning ter wire. . Tile wi*His strung atop 1 '*edard.s support a 500,000 oil electt i al t ransmission lre, saJd Bob Hull, a Southern California Edison spokesman in Rosemead said. The length of wis:e remained ,~tached to the plane, Hull said. I he dangling wire, he said, omentarily contacted with a l2 5 O • 0 0 0 v o I t e 1 e c l r i c a l llransmi:;sion line s trung between standards 1.000 feet to ~h e west o r the Eti wanda Boulevard standar-Os in Ontario. 120 seized at cockfight McMINNVILLE, Tenn. <AP> -A bout 120 people were arrested at a cockfight when 25' -1:a w efl f ol'ce tb en t a gen ls surrounded a clnderblock arena and trapp,.e.d· the sp•ctatora inside, authorities said. All wer• charged with misdemeanors and released on bond, Warren County Sheriff Billy Delaney sajd Monday.. All those arrested Sunday were loaded into three school buses, taken to the National Guard Armory and charged with wit'ndsing a cockfight -a misdemeano,,r that carries a maximum p;enalty of a $1 ,000 Cine and an ll·month, 29·day jail sentence, Delanev s aid. '\ . I Interest rate fear sends stocks down NEW YORK <AP> -New fears of higher interest rates sent stock prices tumbling over a broad front in heavy trading today. Auto , ret a il . steel. oil , electronic and drug stock~ were nume ro us a mong the early declines. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial issues slumped 12.27 points to 821.54 in the first hour of trading. Loser s jumped ahead of gainers 5 to l on the . ew York Stock Exchange, with more than 1.000 stocks giving ground. And one New York bank raised its prime lepding rate today to 17 percent. Others were expected i.c> go to 16~ percent or 17. The rate ror most lenders is 16'~ percent. Concern that interest rates will move high~r was sparked Slain mi88ionary home for burial GUATEMALA CITY <AP> The body or s lain Roman Cathollc missionary James Alfred Miller' was· flown back to the United States On Monday for funeral.. services and burial, Catholic sources reported. The 37-year-old missionary. known here as Brother Santiago, was killed Saturday by ·four hooded gunmen as he was repairing a window at a boarding school where be taught w H uehuetenan.10. 16SJOile northwest" or Guatemala City. The killers drove away In a car, pollce aaid. Cuts c ritic ize d PHILADELPHIA CAP> President Reacan'a proposed tl.7 billion bud~ cut.a to llilher education will have a dev11t1Un1 effect on student.a and the.Ir schools. a 1roup of • collec~ and university presidents has cl•r1ed. by a $2.3 billion surge in the basic money supply reported Friday at a time when many analysts hoped to see a dedine. The Federal Reserve wants to keep money growth down to tight inflation. Hence, mo11ey's recent steep growth could force the central bank to furth er tighten credit conditions despitP th,e recession, sending rates higher. many analysts believe. During lhe New York Jewelry Show, N W. Ayers entertained • some of lhe buyers at a breakfast at the Plaza on behaH of thelr cllent, De Beers. Part of lhat early morning program was a style show ol women's la1hlon1 for spring and summer. • The season has a whole new look and shape. _Jabnc and gemstones set the jf'ace. True, Iha shimmery golds and slivers sparkled early In the flll MMOn, but added to the metalllca. the go.Id .nd altv., 1p1..n., we lhtpe Ind lebric. Fullness 1s the key, but a fullne11 lhat la mobile, that "'ovet with the body, a fullness that gets Its shaping from the flt of the shoulders and the flt under the erm1.- -Sbtpa are...caaual al.mo spor11w. Alch fabrics dlc111e the time and pl1c:e to wear ·p1r1 lc ular "fash i on •t•temanta." • Bright, beautiful and lew.1-toned are the colors. with rad the runtwey l.vorlte. ll'a re-entry and landing, took about an hour. Earlier. the two completed a 26-minute mock e m e rgency return to the s huttle 's launch sit e. Young said. The fuel cells of the solid rocket boosters and the auxiliary power units will be !estedJ.itfI, he s~id . Tot-who fell in pool dies An 18-month-old tot who apparently fell into SJ backyard jacuzzi las t Thurs day in lfuntington Beach died Sunday ,afternoon at the Children s lfospital in Orange. Randy Robinson. of 19381 Jerrily n n Lane. died from' injuries s uffered in t he rlear ~rowning la st Thurs da y ac-cor-ding to a spokesman for the Orange County Coroner's office. Paramedjcs treated Che child at the scene and took him to the hos pital. Ene r gy pact inke d MOSCOW· ! AP> -Iran's energy minis ter Ha sa n Ghafurifarad has said he has s igned n ew economic agreements with the Soviets but that he avoided bringing up the sensitive issue of Soviet troops in Afghanistan. "We want to have good re lations with all natio n s. e s peciall y o ur neighbors.'' 6hafurifarad told a Monday news conCerence. R EFLECTIVE Spal'l' S h u I l I <' C o I u m h i a. i s rt'fil-<'l <.'<I 1n t urn ha ...... in clunng :1 :l1 ·milt-tnp to laun<'h p;id Iran slashes oil price s b y $1 a barrel LONDON !AP ) -I ran, seeking lo increase OH exports to help finance its war witll_ Iraq, has cut its oil prices by SI a barrel for the third time thls year, industry sources s aid today The sources said the state-run company announced Monday it was reducing lranian light crude to $32.20 a barrei and S3b.30 a barrel for the main heavy crude. The reduction unde:rcuts the O r ganization o ( Petroleum Exp o rting Co untries · benchmark price of $34 a barrel. The move coincided with a statement hy OPEC's chairman. Ma na Said Otaiba of the United Arab Emirates. that the group wou ld collec tive ly reduce produ c ti o n to counter a world .... 1dc.• decline in petroleum r>rices · · Lowt•rtn~ production is the decisive and sole solution" to the 0 11 ~lut that 1s forcing prices d own . Ot aiba sa id i n an foterview publis hed today by the UAE newspaper al-Bayan. Otaiba s aid a time and place for an emerge n cy OPEC m eeting were being discussed. Captive c rowd s BOGOTA. Colombia <AP1 Left 1s t g u c r r i 11 a s 'h e ld congregations at gunpoint in five Rom an Catholi c c hurches .. delivering political speeches to them. Bogota newspapers said M'onday of the Sunday incidents. First Lady influence Its her favorite color as well as rich greens. blues and deep yellows Jewelry moves to the forefront as the 1mpor1an1 f1msh1ng touch to the fash100 picture t • Following the trend m colors, 1e welry des igners have c omb i ned gold with gemstones. not only emeralds. rubies end sapphires. but also garl'\el, topaz, lap1s, pendot. amelhyst and carnelian. tG name a few And designers have used lhe gold m aubtle Jones of green. pink. while and yellow Somellmes several tones of gold are used for one • piece. While the small button·type earring is atill fashionable. the trend is toward short dro --.--a"'"rr...,ncga. or .-m w more dimension. Examples are gold hodp1 often accented with Insert• of gems. peerls or tiny diamonds. It aoon<ls llkt a very ••citing spring end summer .. l ·I -· .· '"f" 9ri1. Oen . .la•et ...... fr eed fro.n ttrrortat kldnappera af\er a 42·day ordeal, ls relaxln1 ln Florida and vlaltln1 relatives. • Orange.Coat DAILY PILOT/Tuelday, February 16, 1982 8 A8, . ' s;:;;:::: ~ Site tit~dr villrierft ble? Doaler h ·under t11ht security durin1 hi• \'ltll to E1lln ABB-in the J'lortcle- Panbandle. The 1eaera'lt kidnapped by Red Br11-. Clark: Expansion of existing, airports should be weighed ---··---,,... I ----------BJ FaEDElllClt 8CHOEMElq. planned capaptles. injunction prevent1n1 county ., ........ THREE GENERATIONS _ Patty Hearst Shaw . right. and her husband. Bernie Shaw. ho ld their da ughter. Gillian. while Patty's mother . Cathe rine Hearst. looks on. Mrs Hearst recentl\· revealed that another woman caused thl' breakup of tier 40-year marrja~e tQ Randolph Hearst .. Jolumy Cash offers reward · .. Country mus ic singer Jolaany Cash is ofjering a $560 reward for information leading to the a-rrest and cbnviction of the robbers who broke into his Montego Bay hom e las t December· in Jamaica. The gunmen stole $50,000 in cash and jewelry and 175 pairs of shoeS which were to be donated to an orphanage. An advertisement signed by Cash offering the reward ----.-Two earl y Beatles recordings that have never been released will be put on s ale. possibly this year. an . official at EMI Records s aid. appeared in the newspaper in . Kingston. Ca~h. his wife June, their 11-year-old son John Carter, J o hn 's fr ie nd , 00•1 Caldwell, also 11, Cash 's sister. Reba Hancock, her husband. Chuck Hussey, and the C a s h f a mil y 's hou se ke e p e r . Edit h Montague,· were about to have dinner at their home Dec. 21 when· three gunmen burst into the home. another group, Gerry and the Pacemakers. The other song, "Leave My Kitten Alone" was originally intended for the Beatles' first . terrorists in Veropa on o.t. 17, wu rescued by M elite team of Italian police Jan. 28. ., Hia son, Scott, llvea In · nearby Shalimar. The man who came within a whisker of beln1 eleei.1 1overnor ln 19'74 ia back in Sacramento as a lobbyist, and seems-to have few · regrets abo'tlt .. bein1 an outsider looking in on aovernment. Former state Controller Ho.1toa li'lounoy, special 1sristant to USC President James !_wnber'ie, occupies a windowless office two blocks from the Capitol. Ironically , there 's a picture of former President Gerald Ford and Flournoy on the wall beside Floumoy's desk. Flournoy. the Republican nominee for governor in 19'74, blames Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon for his loss to Democratic Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. by leas than 200,000 votes. On e of the rc~ordings, "How Do You Do It" - which the Beatles decided not to issue because ttiey considered It lacked sales potential -l•ter became a No. 1 hit in Britain for a lbum, but wa~omitted. __ Both songs wece recorded LOBIY1ST Formt•r s tat<.' latt" in 1962 as the Beatles -C o n t r o I I e r H o u s t on t he late John Letulea, PHI F'lo urnoy. who came within McCarmey, Geor1e Hant.. a whisker of being eleete<t and Rl•to ·Stu r -were go\·emor in 1974 . is back in beginning to take off. Sacrumento a21 a 'tobb~·ist. Breezy weather due Coaaial NonftWftt wlftds 10 to 11 knofs end J to S·loot was tllfovgll Tu .. d•Y niglll. Elsewhere. 119111. ••rl•l>I• winds n19111 •"4 rnornl110 hours becomlflt -lo toUlhwftl I to t• knots T...W.y alt•r-. OM to lllree·loot westerly s•ells. Con1ld.,eble cloudlneu with 1001 too •nd df'lul1. Pertl•I clurlng TUHclav etlemoon. U.S. summary Windy re lnstorms IHhlO th• P.c:lfk __,. --..S.v w1'11• the Norlll•rn sletu IMlsUd In more modere1e-...eturn. H•••Y rein spre•d from W•ll1ln9ton ll•t• lo norlhern Cellfornle, -Ot .. w¥nlllt' • .,.. In effect tor Ille coast of Or•tof' -llOl'lhern Celltornla. t Tetn_.._ rose In tr. nortller" lletes. Nor1tl Oeltot. ref'Nllnect In - '""'' tu tlW GrNt lAl<H r9910n wermed lftto Jhe >01. S.ull Ste Mar ... Midi., r..c-»....,.....IN first •-•.-llnt r•edlnt ttlere slnc:e llefor'e Orlllmes. TIM ~ fled tneKlly c-y weether with 1e....,•ture1 In Ille .t0'1. •hlle the southern Atlenll< Coeat wermed into tll• 70s •nd southern FIOf'lda r•Klled ttle tot .. rly In IN.._._. - Miid 1em,.r•turu •Ml mostly < loucly lklH pr•v•ll•d 111 Ille so11thw"'· end l•mpereturu In _,.,.."' CellfomMI ,._ ,,. 6CIS Rein w•s forec•st •t•ln tor T11e1cl•Y •crou '"• Peclll< Nor1hw .. t e11d into lht pleleeu re9IOft, and t11uncler1torm1 w•r• eape<ted .c:rou Vie Giii! Coell tl•IH end onr Ille IGltlwrn Allentlc C•at. fhln also wH IOrecalt ovtr Ille otllo Valley Md Ille mlddle-Allenlk ........ wltfl M#ltflltw _,most of ,,. "•lns-h~. Temper el urn erounct Ille nellon -....Y r9'0ICI lnlfn • -of 11 In Minot, N.O .. to e "'°" -.. In F«t My.,1, Fla. California Rlftrt -· -maol ct<OWfteCI -H ••r•I llotoHI were ••ecu•l•d MeMey •IN --ol et IMst flft ••Po<lecl 1torn11 •l•mmell Into NertlMlr'll Cal ........ flood \l•ve. •"4 ju" ... ,.,,,, .,. -ncley. A llOlldey r•ttlfoo trip .,. ded "' dlltil., In IN ,_., l"lllb -In ,...,llCN c-ty ,...n • r8ft c .• ,,.., .... 11\ .... YCU>I boY'l ~ "' ,,. SWOiien ........ ol De« C.-, h -'"'' ~!Niii ,...,.., oon -•• ... n. of Y-City. j..mped "''° .... ''"" .. "'"'· ..... drowMd. wld -•"'' s.t. IArry G•ine1. tW Y id e 12.,,_., __ boy w .. 11111 mlnl119, bul the other t wo voutM. S--O.vld PM.e, --• rM<ued. • Gal,... Mid 11• c-hed -"• r•olng torrent" \lne. Ille storm 11e9<1n -lhat It "wH very stupid" logor•ft~ The st•t• Office ol Emer99ft(y Sefvk H \.ict If Old ,..,, Ull«t ... ., 1><oblem1 In tN San J-lft Oecta lev" system, •I IN•I until r...ofl from u... _,-*·°'''°'ms,_, Into lbe ~ l•I., lhil -" At least l lt • houses were eva<ualed ~ ... afternoon In llw •HlclenUal ,...,. V•Oo M<llOll Of San Fr•ncisco when • sm•ll mucalicle rumbled i:,,_ • ~ hlllJlcle - Into ,,.. bee!! ol ont ~.Tr.re wes "°,...'-.,_ In ~nu Cnu County, MvHte .... .... d•actlY ~1119 ..,., -lklft In I,,. J•n. M -...s. ,,,.,. •as eftly ,,,,_ lloolllnt ..,., • ,_ (eek""'"- Y ict S-IWl ll. lloyd Gr•y .. .._..... ... It -·1 lie.,, lns!Mlt r•play of J ..... ry," Gr•y -· Tiie J•nuary stoml c.llM<I $2111 million In property dam•o• •nd killed 31 peopl•. Ex tended f orecaat COftlklff*• c-ines.s through Weclnel4ey. L.oc•I lot end drlule during •• ,....... encl.._,,,,"' houn. LOWS el n• 52 lo ti. Hltfls TUftdey end W........., In Ille 60s. Clloltnce Of ,,,.._..,.. ctrlute 20 Percent. Temperatures Cairo C•rKM C-n!Wl9tn OUIMln FrenlllUl'I GeMve HelSlnl!I Hoflt l(Oflg Jen;salem Jo'llurt l(leY lima lllbon L-,,_..,rld Men II• Mtalco Clly Monlr"I MoK-1 NHWU IMWOelfll Nk osla °"° Perl• IUo A- s.ftJll8ft Seo ,allfo SI,,..._. SID<llhOlm Sydney T•loel TelA•lv Tot<vo T-IO VeM- Vleftn• Atntlerdtm All!eM ll•nglloll hirul ......... 01.0e.AL ... ,. CALIP'OtlNIA so 41 """" v.i ..... 11 ... 11n ...... .,,,. .. ., ll'AlrH " n Beli•rlflelcl J7 .. ..,.,_ • 11 == 36 30 81ytile = : CetellM 16 .. Eu..-e SI• lllclwt et rellt-.. flQIKtH 111 • '· -1..-CllltllilllllUlft•, 4 IMllHof .. ..., _______ ; ________ ....,._ __ ,,_Ila, ... ....., 2A '-"· -Cellter11l•·1M1111111 sterm• were 1 tfecked 1111 -.. ,.eclfk •" .. ' . · c....,-, UlllOfltoft MeMrMI lllee!M r.-. VeM- Mllf'tll C:-V 9ll4f t 1MM1 In SM "' _., le J-/Hlct Tilm Tlflller .. Ille • Hetlonel W••tll•r Service 111 •• 1 WIMI ... R.-...Clty. \, "Tiie leleat onu sh411ld IHI l lili1-. .. l7:.iii1' ... •=._ ___ .;;,.~i11ii-lilll-tllf..,._ et ._ .. t<rldtly," Tinker • • • -............................... _ .......... .., ~_...,,,..,..,.CM'\ -8-tl ...._ ....... ... 119'1IM ~to -If tNrl'I 8 ll&W Zllme Awt -"9 M19 .... 9flr _....,...... Seftt•Mlnlca t a • ' t • RIW" ,_ ._.._ tfle-"' .,_,.,. : : ~ ~ : -= 11, W llllY .. H4llll River_, S...1>119te-.ty • • Me.__ -........_ __ , 10 ... ~11 -.... • • •• •• ,a • W ,..._ ,_....,. -_ .. .,.....,1U111ec--.. ............. .., ... ......., h ...... J We're Listening ••• . ~ TODAY l :IU.M. lt:Me.111. 611' '"'"· t:W~m. .. "' ,. ~ .. " ., S7 ,, '2 " ,. u ,. .. . .. " " ., " S1 .. . .. " 77 SS .. .. .. Sol ,. Sol 62 " SI •I ~ n ,, " " ,.. .., S1 " S1 ff '5 .. S1 .. a .. "' ,. . H t6 tt n as n IS • 5,-D " n 1' 11 71 4S IS n " n 17 7J ., 7t St M .. . 77 S2 tt '' 16 7 ... 41 •• ,. t ta • It d 14 I ... • •• t.t • •• What do you llke •bout Ute Daily Piiot? What don't JOU like! "' Call the number below and ,_, -.,. will be rttclt'W, lranacrtbed and dellYered to IM app1111fl9'e ldMGr. .. ' The 11me M·hour anawerin( Mr'Ytct .-.y bt used to refOl'd l.t· tera to the editor on any topk .• ...._ e.tnbuton mutt Ille .... their name and telephone nvmber for vertncatloa. No drnlatioft call1, p&eue. Tell• what'• on your mind. Of .. ....,,....... In addition to John Wayne government from movtn1 ahetd The wo~k oJ • re1lobal airport Al rport In Ora nae County: with a plan _to expand John at u d y a r o up c p u Id be exlating Southern Calllorl\ja Wayne Airport t.o handle up to "extremely vutrierable'' to legal commercial airport.a Include Los 6.1 mllllon passengers by the challense If conslder:atlon ii pot Angeles International, Ontario end of the century. The facllltJ atven to expansion of existing lnlernaUonal , t>almdale serves about 2 .5 m l111on Southern California airports as International, Lon1-Jtea--ch passengers annuall)I. • opposed to n ew airport Airport, Bur bank Airport and OranaeCounty Superior Court con1trucUon. Palm Sprtnes Inter"'1tlonal. Judge Bruce Sumner ruled that That concern has been raised Clark araued In the letter that the county had failed to examine by Oran1e County Supervisor th ~ dee is iop to res peel h nd'M constraintB of existlna airporu ot er alt.ernallve.J to expa u,C J\alph Clark in a letter to Henry s h 0 u 1 d be rec 0 n s 1 de red , the airport. Wedaa, a Yorba Linda City SI il I Cl rk t-.a in · particularly because or the m ar Y. a sai~es 4:U Councilman and chalr:man of the th ( tte th · .ai-.i rt po 1 e i b 11 it y t h a t any e e r, e reg1ona ,...rpo southern California Association recommendation for 8 new study committee should not open of Governments' Aviation Work ·is k •-J 1 b JI " b airport would be the target of a.. 1 wor \41 ega e a en.e Y Program Committee. lawsuit. not considering alternatives, The SCAG committee for the To unders core that belief, such as expansion or existing past several years has been Clark noted recent leeal action airports. studyin1 potential sites for in which Newport Beach won an "An alternative needs to be location of a reeionat.. airport explored which allocates the tbat"would handle air passenger projected s h or tf a 11 s < i o demand expected to b e providing passenger service) 1enefated by..2000. La.WSW l set tled among existing airports," Clark Sites under consideration said . lncludeSantiagoCanyoneastof LOS ANGELES <A P > -The F i n a n o.,ial costs, noi s e Oran1e: Chino Hills north Qf Palm ~taurant has agreed to implications. traffic Impacts Yorba Linda; Camp Pendleton;~ its waiters and bus boys .. and a n y other relevant El Toro Marine Corps Air't'Y"S~.000 in back wages to settle.a criteria." Clark said, should be Station, and an area offs hore lawsuit that charged the posh studied, ~ Long Beach Harbor. eatery illegally deducted Ups The regional airport study One of the first actions of the from their salaries and didn't committee is scheduled to meet committee, Clark said, was "to pay minimum wages . Palm at 1 ·p.m. Thursday at SCAG respect" constraintB of existing owner Walter Ganzi Jr. owes offices in Los Angeles Clark's airporu, that is. to not consider another $97,000 in civil penalties 'letter is contained on the agenda expandlng them beyond their and court costs. for that meeting. .. ............... ~ ................. . Let Gibraltar Savin~ help_ you : tower your taxes. Cut your Federal taxable income by as much as $2,000 each year-up to $4,000 if your spouse works. Just open a Gibraltar"' IRA. Every dollar you deposit is deductible from your income on your Federal return and tax-deferred until retirement. Example: if you're a working couple in the 30 % ~ bracket and you deposit $4,CO>, you won't pay Federil taxes on the $4,000 until retire- ment so you'll save $1,200 in tax«5 now. It's like getting a special refund! Gibraltar features these high interest accounts for your IRA : lSo/o FixedRate. the Variable Rate and 30-month Certificates. ., Poswone taxes . tr Forget taxes altggether. You also put off until It's true. For the first time, retirement Federal inCOl'tlt! ··---youca·neam nigh.;.nsureo . taxes on the interest your interest and not owe a " IRA earns. The money you penny of tax on it -now are not giving to Uncle Sam or ever. Because taxes don't is earning compounded cut into the interest you interes.t _over the life of your earn, a new Gibraltar Tax- i RA. The graph ~low Free Certificate could give shows the dramatic differ-you the highest actual 'l ence between the growth of return you've ever rect>ived a taxable investment and on insured savings. The your tax-deferred IRA. current rate (thru Feb . 20) 3000000 BOOOQO 7cd>OOO 1 eooooo I 000000 eooooo Graph assumes 30% tax bracket with ann\lal 'deposits of $4,000 ta x- , deferred to the IRA -and $2,800 after-taxes to the taxable investment. Both accounts earn 14 % compounded semi-annually. is 10.22%. the yield is ·10.76 %. If you're in the 50% tax bracket, that translates into an equivalent taxable rate of: · 2l.52o/o Minimum $500. Interest penalty and Joss of Federal tax exemption for early withdrawal. No li'ustee Fee on new (RA's for.1982 tax-year. Free Interest-earning Checking with your account. lmllftllllLPl·-MRTDitW~ · Ymll UtUB. . I . I ... . . .. s Orange Cout QAIL y PILOTITuHday, February 19, 1982 • OVER THE WALL Fe minist demonstrators US(' a rope l adder to scale the iron fence outs ide l.he White House CIS a police officer :-lands h~·. Thl.• wom en fro m th<.' mi litant Shoppers fight at store sale CO HOES . N. Y. CAP I -Battalions of sale-crazed shoppers laid siege to a discount store 1n this aging texlile·mUl city, engaging other ba rgain·hunters in hand·to·hand combat after .th;(" doors opened fo r a Washington's birthday sale. · · n ·s total chaos. There's women fighting with l'uch other. women grabbing the same ha ndbags and belting each other ."· said Police Sgt. Jim \'oung, who was standing·duty at Cohoes Specialty Stores Ltd . on Monday .• The excitement was stirred by leather blouson 1ackets by Kenar for $79 ("nationally advertised at $290" I. Capraro dressses for $23 (down from $238), and Sl t Halston metallic handbags, once $150·$170. among other sale items. · Hundreds of women and a few men, looking out of place. began to queue up in the cold before dawn. By the end of the day bar gain hunters were expected to have doubled the population of th.is city of 19,000 north of Albany where the Hudson and Mohawk rivers meet Young said fi ve off.duty officers were hired ta back up the s tore's regular security force in patrolling the mammoth sale. Cohoes. which sells name·brand and designer clothes for men and women, normally offers a wide range of goods at prices 20 percent to 30 pe rcent lower than traditional retail, according to Ben Ames. the store's vice chairman. But prices reall y plummet on Washington's bi rthday. · ' Cody fllnd due ·to debt? Lawyer aay$ stepcousin owed cardinal $20 ,000 -~-......... Congr essional Union-. who had been . CHICAGO <AP> -Cardinal J o hn Cody'• 1tepcousin and llfele>na friend briefly opened a Joint bank account In their names becaUle she owed Cody abou\ 13>~ .. ~ want~ him to be able to 1et the money in cue she di~1 her lawyer says. Leonar~ Rine of Chlca10 said his client, Helen Dolan Wilson, opened the joint 1&vlnes account in Florida on AuJ. 2, 1912, with a bo ut $20,000. part of the proceeds from selling Mrs . Wilson'• winter home a few days earlier. "It's a long time ago, but she assumes she opened the account. In both their names just jn case she idled. She owed him about $20,000 at that time," Ring said, responding to a story published Sunday in th e C h icago • Sun·Times. The Sun·Times reported that during 1972, Cody and Mrs . Wilson shared a savings account a t · the' Boca Raton National Bani<. The ruw sp aper , previously has reported that Cody helped Mrs. Wilson buy the $100,000 winter hom e in 1969 in Boca Raton that she sold in 1972 ror s110.ooo. . The news paper said records of the account and Mrs . Wilson's other financial dealings with the bank were· subpoenaed by a grand jury in Chicago. Bank officials would not confirm or deny the report. Ring said h is client took · Cody's nam e off the account after a "week or two," then ~'bslituted her daughte r 's na m e. "She says she never told dt•mons tratin g for ratific ation of the proposed Equal Rights amendmt'nl. wer<.'- arr(•stcd after they dropped onto t hl' lawn. him <Cody> about it." Tbe remalnioa proceeds from the house sale, "about $80,000 or SJ00,000," were put ln a check.ln1 account later used by Mr•. Wllaon to buy a condominium, stock& and bonds, Rine said. Cody, 74, head of the nation's laraest R Qm a n Cath olic archdiocese, Is the s ubject of a federal probe t o determine whether he diverted tax-exempt churc h money for personal use. He has denied wrongdoing. An archdiocesan spokesman declined to comment on the Sun·Times report. Federal prosecutors have declined all comment on the inquiry while the matter ls before the grand jury. As a condition of a church's tax-exempt status. no part or its i n co m e may be used · for non·church purposes. Viotalions can Involve criminal penalties and tax liabilities. Cody 's lawyer , Donald Re uben. said . tile Sun· Times report apparently was intended t o "press ure " o ffi c i als investigating allega tions that $11,000 a warded COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. <AP) -A mechaqic who said a police s iren drt-n aged his h earing h as been award ed $11,000 in damages. A District Court jury found in favor of James A. Willy, 47, of Colorado Springs, who said the hearing loss affected his work as a race car mechanic and caused him personal trauma. the cardinul misua11ed church money. "When read sn the context of Mn Wilson's explanation," Reuben said, "It 1s not apparent wh y t h is story was ever publishe d u.l us to k eep pressur e o n in vestl sating authorities or to conUnue to intrude Into Inte rnal c hurch affairs ... -Tom Ray, a spokesman for the S un Tim es. s aid today the n e w s pape r ha s made it a practice not to comment on )ts s tori es on th e Cod y investigation. The Sun.Times reported that the average monthly balance in the Florida joint account was between $20,000 and $30,000. The newspaper reported In the fa ll that Cody told church associates he helped pay for the ho rn e from personal money saved over several years. • Ring said Cody loaned Mrs. Wilson $21 .000 for the house from money ke pt in a personal bank account in Kansas City, Mo Ring said much of the loan was later c ance le d and cons ide red a gift to he r Monsignor Francis Brackin told a meeting of the Diocesan P.r1esW ~enate las t Tuesday that Cody ·expetts lo retire on Dec 24 , t982," Cody 's 15th birthday It is customary for bishops to retire at that age. C od y w as .rece nt l y hospitalized for a heart ailment. U.S . Altor:ney Dan Webb has said the investigation of Cody's financial dealings would not be affected by his retire ment'. 1------Etttrl~--bevy ,-2-l·;--of-bttke-&rove--on-boft'V'--r--.,---- l s I and, spent the weekend at a former college .. roommate's house In nearby Waterford so she tould gel in line at 5.30 a .m . Last year. Ms Levy said, she got a S660 three·piece Oscar de la Renta suit for $29, and in the process ··1 got knocked down. But I'm back for more.·· Profits in the ·modern, 50,000·square -foot, two-levehtor~Jn the downtown s hopping area are based on ··volume and watching our expense st ructure. That's one of the reasons we're not in a high.priced mall." s aid Sanford Zimmerman. the store's chairman. "Making it wort h our while does not mean ma king a prof it," added Ma rge r y Lapp, <·oordina lor for advertising and promotion. "'Clearing out is important in this business loo. You don't want all that old merchandise lying around." ··Was hington's birthday ... the onl)( way I can describe it is . . madness," said Ms. Lapp. "P eople line their arms with Etienne Aigner purses and then s it on the floor and s tart bartering." ·Benefit draws 200 stars NEW YORK <AP) -The receipts aren't in, but the Actor's Fund of America hopes its "Night of 100 Stars" lit up the box office enough to gross $2 million for a nursing home for actors in New Je rsey.· · Radio City Music Hall had billed 100 stars ror the s how, but more than twice as many stroJled the stage during the 5"'1·hour s how Sunday night and early Monday. High points of t he evening-were Miss PIUY in a duel ,with Metropolitan Opera star Placido Domingo,· Harry Belafon\e slnaina ''Try to R e m embe r ," Dudley Moore on piano accompanying pop star Christopher Cron on the theme from "Arthur," and Sammy Davia Jr. s inging "Mr. Bojangles." ,... There was a "lover s or the silver screen segment" in which such celebrities as Farley Granger and Joan Collins, Bud Cort and Ruth GQL<12.o and Warren ·Beat and Diane Keaton s ro e<l beneath c ps o ms n wttch they costarred . Out.aide \he hall, hundreds of fans crowded behind police barricades to see th& celebrit.Let arrivinl ln the fleet of 60 Umoualnes hired for the occasion. · A red carpel was rolled four blocks up the Avenue of the Americas from Radio Clty to the New York Hilton to ease the ·•leps of tbe performers and their audience after the ab6w. Manyolthe stan -amon1 them Jose Ferrer, Be•trice Arthur. Altxla Smith, Alan Kine, Robert Preston; Larry Ha1man and Celate Holm - dccJlned rides ~the hotel and trod the carpet to the'"HiUoa. .,; ' ' each~all~ ro11nd-trip . ' coast to coast. Now you can g~ a great low price when you fly United to the East ~oast. Just make reservations on any flight that ~tops in Chicago o~ Denver w.ith a connecting flight to Boston. Baltimore, Philadelphia or Washington, D.C. No one offers a lower one-stop. coast-to-coast .fare all day long. .. The most convenient connectiom to the East. No matter what your business schedul~ is, you can save money when you fly United to the East Coast. Because only Uhited offers so many convenient one-stop flights eacYi day to major business centers in the East. Fares, restrictions and schedules subject to change. For reseivations, call your ~vel Agent. F.,..(:ode,YR3 Or call United at 537-7521. Partners in Travel with Westin Hotels. Dally one-stops to the East: • 6 to Boston • 5 to Washington, D.C. • 9 to Philadef phia • 3 to Baltimore • .; > • • ... . . .. Orange Cout OAJLY Plt't!>T/Tuetday. February 1e, 1982 s ~·t. • ~U ffiTIU · . . 1 • • . Textbooks loaD proposed f o~ private schools • 0. •. SAC RAM ENTO <AP ) - Church is church and state Is state and ne'er the books shall m eet. Thus ruled the state Supre me Court last summer in throwing out 11 $3.6·mllllon progra m under which state school textbooks were loaned lo private a nd parochial schools. A stat& senator this week seeks to c ha n ge the s tate Cons titution to allow such loans to private school~ on grounds · parents of children who attend those schools are taxpayers and he lp pay for the books. Other.wise, the Legislature has a relatively uneventful week sc h edule d , Mo nday wu • holiday for Georae Washlnst.Qn't birthday. &Ad neither houae met. Both the Senate and t he Assembly have floor sessions planned today. when leaders U)' they will finish the 3-monlh-old special sessl<>n called tD deal with the state's immediate rlsc_.1 \o r o g r a m s a n d t b e leapportlonment of t he Board of Equalization. . The houses normally meet in floor sessions on Mondays and Thursdays. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. called the Legislature back frorq its fall r ecess into s pecial session in November. 'The session then lasted only a week, but continued ln January parallel to the reaular se4slon. Only subjects included In the governor's proclamation cap be considered m the special aeaslon in this case fis~al bills and reapportionment. T he advantage t o s pecial sessions is that bllls passed by m ajority votes take effect 90 days after the end of the session instead of at the end of the year. Th~e s pecial session bills approved so far include two m eas ures to, c,ut w e lfare eligibility rules to conform to R eagah a dm i ni stration red.uclions aqd save $70 million a year. Also approved were a $180-mllllon bill t o require empl9yers to more quic kly pass on to the state the income tax.es withheld fr o m w ork er 's paychecks, and a measure to increase late tax penalties and have large stores pay sales tax money to the state a month early this summer. Still to be acted on today is a bill to make S83 million in cuts. mainly by shifting building fund a nd worker co m pensation money that hasn't yet been spent. · The Assem bly also must take a r i n a I v .o t e o n a re apporUonment plan fQr the Board of Equalization , a five -m ember state tax panel. The latest plan is the 15th to be offered since November. The textbook proposal, SCA40 ~Y Sen. Alan Robbins, D· Van ~uys , is before t he Senate Judiciao Committee today. Robbins, whose San Fernando •valley djstrict includes many private schools formed during the school busing controversy, intrpduced the m easure four days after the Supreme Court ruling last August. The court ruled unan\mously the s tate's t extbook loan program violat es s tate co n s titutional rul es o n separation of church and state by spanding public money lo aid r eligious schools. Robbins · pro posal wo uld change the stale Constitution to a llow su<!h textbook loans to private religious schools . It would have to be approved by the Legislature and by voters next November to take effect. Cuts would affect disabled students SACRAMENTO <AP l A additional s upport mon~y . state study recommends that varied widely across the state. community coll'eges ' budget On some campuses, students should be cut $6.3 million in with temporary problems such supplemental funds for special as broken legs and pregnancy classes and transportation for were counted as disabled. the disabled students. . report'said. 1 J But community college ""T h e report sa id t h e offl dals say that' would mean community colleges' $18 milhon'9 22,280 students could no longer ., a llocation for disabled s tudents attend 1>pecialized classes. s ho u ld 1>e r educed b y $6.a The Department of Finance million in money used for study . reported Monday by the home·lO·campus transportation Sacramehlo Union, sugge!\ted or instructional costs. community colleges that have Two s taff, members of the 1 special classes in st ate hospitals community college chancellor's a nd conva lescent homes should office, Ronald Oyste and Robert r~ceive ~nly the per.pupil basic Howard. replied to the report aid received for othe r classes t h a t providing services to · a nd not the supplem.enta.1 funds. potential students al hospila1s The rep or t s aid th e a nd convalescent homes "is com munity colleges expect to necessarily more costly" that enroll 49,998 disabled students the ba s i c reg u I a r c I ass next year. while the University a llocation. ' of California expected 1.2.36 and -Paul Ashr:". 41W:"'lt:::»ee:,..r.-:::::::::...::~;;::;;::=iliiil-.ait ~_._~_,,._._{'fie' C31Trornia State University Napa College, said the report ANTI-NUCLEAR DEMONSTRATORS MARCH A march to support a freC'ZC' on nuclC'ar arms attracted 275 in FrC'sno. The Valt•ntine·s nay ('\'enl f~tured S(•\'('l'al nlt'ssa gl'S ahout .,. ........ love· dhd peace. The protest was ordl•rt~· for th<.• most µa11 µccording lo officials. 4.669 "seems Lo place restrictions on The stud y also complained severel y di s abled p e r sons methods or identifying disabled looking for equal educational s t u d e n t s . t o q u a I i f y for opportunity." Major oil firms losing price war to independerit deal~rs REDDING <A P > :.. A'n h im , l a y i n g o ff wor k e rs , no-frills · independent station h onest .to-goodness gasoli~e watching already s lugg iab down the street. ~ price war has been going on gasoline sales roll over and play . And be<.'a use .Mars ia no's throughout most or California dead. bu s i ness h a s dropp e d off since the s tart of 1982 and in this Soon. Marsiano's station will s harply. the company intends to Northern California city, the be t he latest casually of the close the place for good in the .. m ajors" name brand oil gas-pricing war between major next couple of weeks. company stations -are losing oil companies and independe nts. "We're j ust not pumping badly lo no.fri lls independent The m ajors a re taking a e nough gas to meet the present gas war is going to eod. Consumers. of course, aren't complaining. nor s hould they. Such a price re versal at the. pum ps hasn't been seen for years. A global crude oil glut and s har p ly r e d uced cons umer dem,and for gasoline sparked the latest move by independent oil companies to chop prices. Whe n the price margin s uddenly looked ominous for m ajors, t hey, too. began rolling' back prices . While gas prices in the San J oaquin Valley have .dipptd to $1.07. a sur vey of 40 s tations in the Redding area show -the ave rage price of regular gas is $1.25 a gallon. In San Francisco. regular--gasoline is selling for • about the same with unleaded selling for about $1.29 a gallon. pumpers. beeting. as Marsiano can tell c 0 m P 8 n Y . 5 m in i m um J oe Marsiano. operator of you standards," he said. .. I a1·1y P1·111~ J oe's T exaco. knew it was To make any profit at all. f II c rt . . d d h d . t h coming. Other Re dding service Marsiano couldn't come close to Like most Redding dealers. rom a over a I ornta IS roun e Up eac ay In e st ations were closing ar . .::o:..:u:::..:n~d _ _;m:.::...:a:..:t..:.c.:::h.:.:in:..!g~g~a:..:s:........::p:..:r.:.ic~e:..:s~a:;..:l:........;.t:..:.he.::__h_e.·:..·s_w_o_n_d_e_r_i_n....;:g:...._w_h_e_re_t_h_e _ _._ __ ...;...:.. _ _.,. ________________ ~-------------~- "A nother Way to Your Rainbow's End" -uoubleYOiiTax.Advanl3ge at 1st Nationwide • Income Tax Preparation at Special Discounts . . You could save 15% ... 30% ... up to 50% on your inc0me tax preparation at 1st Nationwide Savings. Our Vari-Max IRA Gives. You l he Benefits of Both Long-Term and Short-Term Every year, thousands of Qualified custome~ have enjoyed substantial tax preparation discounts on their FedE\fal and California returns. T.his year. you can too! It's easy fo Qualify: discounts as high as 50% are based on your savings .on deposit with 1st Nationwide. 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The count\· contemplate where thetr· money Orand Jury is 'embarking on a ~oes. we 1u1pect they think. fir-.t Sl03.000 study In which It wlll of the folks dowp et cfty hall OT catalogue the special districts the school distrlct offl~ or the and ~lr aMivities a nd unalyze county courthpuse. how either complete or partial It is ·t·rue t .... t those consolidations co\lld occur. Such go.vernment agencies collect lots a stUdy is being welcomed. b~· of tax dollars. either clt~tl\'. or county sup~rvisors who are indirectly. . : paruc·utarl~·. conscious of how : But there js a valt array of s pecial district revenues are other ~ovemment a1~ies also declining. collecttne tunda -ajencies that I f co n s o 1 i d a t i o n s a r e sell water, treat setwage. coll~ct recommended -and it is a 1 tras h. abate mO&qµitoS. end light virtually certainty that there is stre,ets to name a few. There are room for duplicative functions to stores' of these so-clllled Special be combined -the re doubtless districts in the county. Some a~ wilt-be-some protest from the con~idered ind.S~ndent id that ' agencies involved. Let's facl' it. they are free from control of.city . all government agencies tend to or county goivernmel'\tS. O\hers. be \'ery prMect i v¢ of thci r the dependent distrtc.ts. ~re domains a nd verv defensi\'e a n s we r &\bl e to a hi g tie r about their cost -effectiveness. government authority. That attitude .· however. From time to ·ume. there s t)ouldn·t be permitted t o have been sug1estions .t"at an out weigh any money-sa ving overabundt.nce of tt.e1e special · ben~fits that ma~"'\be pinpointed distri.;ts ekist s and that whe n the ju1f"s analys is is consolidations should occur. completed. School mural debliie It is titled ··one World. One People," but the student·created tnural_at lrtine High SChooJ so far has beerr mir~ ·in coofliet. Thi s r eaction hat . b ee n ynhealthy. not onty for the mural but for the wa~ all of us are --. ...... ttrrg· · ~.~ it!a I' n ft om past mistakes. 11'e mUr$I is an ~fght·i>al\el artwork created :·t.»· ti students assigned the task of <tecorating . the campus. It was scheduled to adorn the librarv. Because of one panel that involves black.-white re ta lions. how&,ver. U1e mural may never find a p~rmanent home on campus. The focus or the mural is }ts center. where peol>le or sepat._te, rac-es circte the glo be. U~eir hands clasped. The artists"'lntent is clear : A cele b r a'tioft of brotherhood.· In a common technique for murals. the artists use other parts of theil· surface to offer chronologic stories of. how some ethnic n.oups suffe red before achieving the ideanied harmony. In the panel in qudtlon. a black ferson is shown ht agony and lames above three hood ed figures who re present white racism . Several parents and residents ~ some of them black · ~ obj~ted to the portrayal. ctaimtng it_ is s uggestive or racism and isn't t he sort of message the\' want their children sub}ected to: The Irvine Unified . School District's Board or 1:rustees decide<j last week to let residents look at the painting and comment to Principal Gar~· Norton. who will m a ke final judgment on whether to displu~· the mural. , . The mufal goes on dis play ~ednesday and Ttiul'sda~· from 3 to 8 p .m. in the auditorium. We think it important that residents view the work us showing a transitipn from bad times to better. Rather than to be · -M'en as painf uL we propose that viewers are 1'13eant to take pride in a vision which surmounts the terrible ads of ra<.'ism we know did take Qlace. · the student artists at t.he high school are asking us not to forget --and are s peaking up through their art for a futur<.' devoid of such occurrences. U .N. remin~r 012erdue New York Mayor Edward I. .. Koch's verbal attack on the Ul'ited Nations seemed ,.totally out or character. Here was a man whose ~ity · hosts the prestigiou worldWide body and also has· an economic: stake as a landlord. Here was a ·matt who has been feted by and in tam .feted many of the body'a_ dignttaties in his official and unofficial roles. Here was a man who had been relatively silent up to now. But here now was a· man who apparently could take it IJO longer. . • The United Nationt is a "ce!fSpool, .. he cha reed last eek. It is a "den ·of iniqutt~· .... totally without m9ralih: and u sense of justice... ' He dicln 't, but could ti ave also called il a den of fnequtt~-. There was , evien rrfo're : ··cowardice.·· ·:h ypocr isy.,. "economic blackmalr and pther rejoinders. · .. .• The last straw apparentl~· came during rec~nt U.N. de bate o n · resolutions ca lling (or sanctions against Israel cause it is annexing the GOian Heights. Granted. Koch's words were i n1e-fhperate·1 for a man in his position. but his c riticis m t-; understanda ble. ·Here is a body that has not seen fit to condemn the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the subsequent killin~s. including the apparent use of c·hemical weapons. but piousl~·' calls for sanctions against Israel because of a political act that cost ho lives and is. in fa"Ct. reversible . If the U.N. membership was shoclied by the mayor's outburst. perhaps it ls time they were reminded tbat ·many people s"are his-views and that the memben;' failure to even try to cope with the genuine <;rises in the ~rld does little to improve thelr cTedibillty. OplnlOM expressed ln the~ •""9 •re t-. ~ tM Oelly ftllot. Other views ... Pressed on tnls Pave art (ff~·ot t~1r au"'6ts and artists. Reader comment Is 1nv1t· td. Addrtu The Dally P\let, ft.O .... 1'60/Costa Mesa, CA 91'26. Phof\t-(714) ·~2-4121. ' . , ( L.M. Boyd/.~trayirag wive• forth all offaprlni la unfamUiar ~ .• , tM ....... tMlft, bom• to a woman 11 where her bablei are bona.'' . Q. Wllat'1 tbe "plutar" mean la . ''p(aMar" Watll? A. Sole ol the foot. Yid naatie, certaJnly, Uaat a solar- ,...,.. airplw hM to ft1 alMM ~dlulll1 -~ .. • c J.__ w -- > ' . Consumers now oil their own · WASHINGTON -The nation's consumers wW now have to protect themselves from shoddy and daneeroua merchandise, with precious little help from the federal government. Thanb to a 30 percent budtet cut, the Con.sumer Product Safety Commlaskm must rely on voluntary recall.a of unsafe products by the companies that put them on the market. And while "voluntarism" is a popular-catchword ol the Reagan adJ'.Qinistrallon, there la strong evidence that it just doesn't work ln this situation. What's really alarmin1 is that the ·commission itself is keepinl such evidence bidden from the public. Forced by budeet cuts to abdicate its lon1Ume responsibility to take legal action against manuf~cturers of unsafe goods. the commis5ion can't even identify dangerous products by name. Congress bas forbidden this elementary protection measure. BEaE•s A RECENT case in point:· Last December, the commission quietly voted to drop enforcement efforts against tl '? maker of a demonstrably unsafe plaything. Commissioner Sam Zagor:ia filed a dissenting opinion, in which he referred to "an actual dangerous toy, which I may not name. except aa 'Product X'." My associate Tony Capaccio, though, found that "Product X " was in fact an "Indoor Gym House" manufactured by Cr~ative Playthings of Harrisburg, Pa. · Two years ago, the epmmission and the company announced -in the usual press release -that about 400,000 of the wood-tnd·Masoojte "gyms" were being recalled. The action followed the death by strangulation of an 18-month-old girl and the asph yxiation of a 16-month-old boy, who was revived but suffered •1u11a11 irreversible brain damage. Both toddlers had gotten tlleit-heads stuck between tbe top step or the gym's ladder and the platform that led to it.S 30:tnch·high slide. • To the company's credit, it sent out numerous notice s to stores and child·care centers, offering to supply free repair kits 1or to replace the dangerous gyms with a newly designed model, which has a bigger s pace between ladder rung and platform, ·•greaUy reducing the likelihood of head entrapment. .. But a ''restricted" comQ'lissfon report \ noted la.st October that despite the good attempt, the company had cocrected only aome 49,000 gyms, or about 15 percent of those that may stilt be in use. In ottit!r words. there are at least 300,000 potentUlly dangerous gyms out there somewhere. • The report polnted out that the gym houses had been on the market since the 1960s, and thus were long gone from the "distribution chain" where they could be tracked down. And because the product sold. for S30 to $50, Za1oria pointed out in his dissent, it "!#as likely to be handed down in families with more than one child, or loaned to other famiijes when the product is oullJ'Own. ·• In other words, they were not. the kind of toy that would be routinely thrown away. Aaron Locker. an attorney for CreaUve PrayUUngs, said the recall of 15 percent "was in excess of what-the · commissioo usually gets." He also ~aid many or ~e .3QOJl()9 unrecJ).led gyms may no longer be In use. · • . BtJT AS TIME passes and the 1980 a nnouncement fades in memory, parents who inherit one of the gym s lides -or find one tucked away in Grandma's attic -wi.U have no clue to the potential danger involved. And Congress has forbidden the product safety commission to help anyone who might inquire on the strength of a vague recollection that some such product was de~lared unsafe. Given adequate funds , the com mission could i nitiate legal proceedin1s and probably obtain a. court·mandated r ecall. This would create a new wave of publicity. which could result in the recovery or hundreds more of the gym sets. -Notes on· haircµts, past and present How ma!\Y times have you had your hair cut? My hair is be&jnni.ng to curl in back and obviously I nave to go to the barber today. I don't. like golne to the barber. Havlns someone foolin1 around with my balr ian•t unpleasant, but when it's over I neveT look the way I'd hoped to look. I want to look ereat and I never do. One el the problems for most of us la , that we really look beat when we need a haircut the worst. When you have it cut off. it elves you a brand new, abom look lltat you don't want. Women who have Just too obviously come fr;om the hairdl'euer never look 1ood to me. I'd rather have them a little rumpled and windblown. ' I ALWAYS tell the barber the same thinl; '"'l>oD't take much olf." wblle be'• satPP*D.a away I think he's not tdiq eaouah olf, but the next morn.t.nc. after I've taken a abower, It always looks as tbouch be took too mucb. l'v' decided tbe reuon for WI la that when be combs it for tbe way be cut It, it toolta fine, but alter a D1 ... t'1sleepI10 back to combln1 it my 11ay and It doesn't look the same at all: It doeln't fit the haircut he 1ave me. Some ol the ...J!randa of hair that I put on the ri1ht of -Di') part. were cut to IO on the left of my part, aild vice versa. In s pi te o f quite a b it of dissatisfaction, most of WI are'loyal to a barber. Women are a little matt fickle. They get mad al their hairdresser every once in a while and move to another. Manny has been cutting my hair for AMIY 11110 about eilht years now and I wouldn't • think of goin1 to anyone else even thou1h I pass 10 barbe.rsbops to cet to his. "Manny" is an unlikely pme for a barber, but I'm comfortable With him even though I don't know bis last name. It takes a while to break in a new barber, and I suppose it takes even longer to break in a bairdr .. er. I ort1lnally went to llanny when my former ,.•barber 'retired, and I was apprehensive because there wu a sip in the window that said "Men's Hair Stylin1." I didn't want my hair "styled," I wanted it cut. I don't •ant to tell you how much it C01ts. It always coats more if the barbersbop clldma to style your hair instead of just Civinl you a haircut. . The firi\ barber I ever bad was Punctuation evolved slowIY f~ I t.orMd Ef! Rotde to~ Up otlwr '"*"8: -That a strallbt perpendkular line like tile number 1 was tbe only punctuation the ftnt prtntAn " BaaHab used; It WU snchaaU1 ·~ by only portrait Qf Wubin1to11 was ne1lected in the> painter's wotkslop unUl the Bolton At.beDaeum bought it frcfln bla.wtdow. >~ -That lite lar1est forest lD Europe la not in Germany, as I bad tboqbt, but In France: tbe Bois des r .,..., covertq over 1.5 mlllioa acres of woodland. <It was planted in the"l.llOI b1 .Nuolean UI to anchor tbe 1hlfUn1 1aada of the COH~.) . -Tiii& Great attt.ain did not allow tile DrtatlDI ol UM Bible in tbil COUDtl'1 for PO ,.an 'wtalle we wen ~; tb• ftl"ltelble lD &btlllb, print.I .... l wu bt t• after we WOil tbe War or lade,..a.ee. -Tbat until 1111, tbe de8tll .,..., WH OD tbe rr.cta statute boob for more tbu • dlff.,...t crtmee: bolb rruce _. lelliua .,. aboll1Nn, u. dtatla peaaltr. (8tl1lam'1 H\, ........... a ~--cftlM toe* plaee aa 1111..) -TMt tbe BrtUA ualt ol canw1 II t caUtd Ute • .,._.. •• bica .. ~ It ... Ute pound ...&• of ... ..,. ('1"19m. lltt ''paa.d .... -:1 f' -TIYll. Mmiral ruraiut -. .. · • mllllMs n W1Jii11 be•• f JWW olll named Kelly. Just as I don't know Manny's last name, I didn't know Mr. Kelly's first. l WU YOUD.I and be w.as jusL '.'..Mr-.Kelb':' Q.me •. .A..bair..cut cost 35 cents then and I hated «tttng one. I had to sit ·there in a line of chairs Saturday morning while the other kids were out pla~n1. There were always 6 few kids setting their hair cut Saturday and Mr. Kelly took us in order. We each moved up one chair when be flDiabed the kid be was worldn1 on. Eve!')' once in a while a grown man woWd come in Saturday morning and Mr. Kelly would put him ri&ht in the cbalr ahead of all of UI kids. It never occurred to me at the time tbat it wu wron1. In retrospect, I doubt that the adult was ICliQI to do anythina more important wWi the rest of bis Saturday mominl than I wu goio1 to do with mine. THE MOST interesting place I ever COt IQY hair cut WU in a tQ hotel barbenbop ln New York. They cllarted the same u evel')'ODe else but tbe . ....,., was very cla11y and they bad 20 barbers. Every time J went there to have my hair cut, Frank c.teUo1 the mob leader who was later ..-eel aown but 1unived to die a natural death, wu boldlq forth. He was baTlnl bis aboel shined, be wu cettina a lhan and havln1 bll nails done, all while the barber snipped li1truy at the hair on bis head. About the fourth tlrne I went there, I ·said to my barber, "Gee, it's a coincldedce, but every time I've come in here, ColteUo bu been here too.•• "He comes in here 9vt!l'J clay and 1tay1 all momlnl." Ute barber told cne. Everyoee who worked there liked Frank Costello. He waa a 1reat storyteller and a bl& tipper. Be nen · betan A)'ldc hello to me wttb a tq smile, so I kind Qf liked lllm too. We all bawe 'OW' 1ood pobltl and our bad points. Prank Co1tello waa a 1an11ter reaponalble for doaena ol murden and half tbe crime la Ule Uatt'4' States dunnc UM tMOa aad lllOI, but_ OD tbe other lumd, he WU 1oocl '9 IU barber. -· ~-poiseil over. papers Government ·publications face severe. budget cuts WASUJNGTON t AP) -No lonaer will employees In the Bureau of Land Management ortice In Cheyenne, Wyo., see t h e i,. p I c t u r e s l n a s t a rt yearbook . Nor will t h e Atriculture Department publish a recipe book for poor ·people t h at tel l s how t o stu ff hard-bolled eggs with crabmeat. For that matter, you won't be able to subscribe lo Dimensions, the magazine published by the National Bureau of Standards, to learn what's ne\\' in . the govemment.'s efforts to measure and weigh. Tbe ma41azine doesn 'l exist anymore. All three publications are casualties ot President Reagan's campaign to cut the budget When Reagan took ofrlce in J a nuary 1981, one of his first actions was to have the Office of Management and Budget order a halt to all new government film s and publications, and a survey of existing publications to see w h ic h mig h t b e abandoned as unnecessary. The deadline for finishing the survey is March 31, but the budget office concedes t hat because or the paperwork, that dare won't be met. W ith t h e onsla u ght .of Reagan's initial budget cuts, many government agencies responded 111 part by producing fewe r ·new s I et t er s and m agazines. Figures from Uncle Sam 's p r inter, t h e Governmen t Pr inting Office, prove that fewer publications are being churned out. But no one seems to know exactly what is being pr inted. J udith Morton of the GPO says the agency's inventory is aa,ut 20 ~000 titles , i n ~luding newsletters. Many publications are technical and have only lim ited appeal. About 80 percent of the GPO's customers are state and local gevernment-a and n o t w I t h s l a n d I n I , t h e com panies that do business w1th government is one of lht world's the federal government. .. • busiest pu b1 Is he rs . the The fo ul' m oat p o pultr Commerce Oepartme•t atone . publications amoni the publlc produces an estimated 1,000 deal with child care. The belt publications . So d'oes t h e Department of Health and seller Is "Infant Care,'' a Health Hum 'm Services. The ficure is a n d H u m a n S e r v l c I I l , 2 o (f f 0 r t h e 1 n t e.r 1 0 r Department booklet that setts Department. At the P entaeon, Cor $2.25 per ~opy. the lotal is still belna added up. Other popular titles are the Still, Reaaan ·claims to have th.ree.:volu m e ''Bac k yard made some proaress. In hls Mechanic," priced at $13.50; the State of the Union address last month, he said his effort to reduce federal regulation had Figures prove t h,a t few e r publications , are being chur.ned out . ''Dictionar y of Occupation Tiqes," at $13.50 a copy and the Pub Ii c H..e a Ith Service· s "Medicine at Sea" at $17. The GPO-also operates 27 bookstores around the country, most in federal office buildings, and wants to clpse all but four. to · save an estimated $1.2 million . A con gressional com mittee moved last week to · keep them open. at least until auditors can determine if they are losing or making money. T he GPO loses money on most of its publications because of over-printing and because they often sell for about two-thirds what a comm8)"cial publishing house would c harge ... Hoping to change that, the GPO has hired a marketing director to find ways to ma.ke more money. Reagan's. austerity campaign resulted in nearly 23,000 fewer pages in t he Federal Register, the daily publication of federal regulations and notices. Ms. Morton reported that in the fiscal year endlna Oct. 1, the GPO used 103.7 million pounds of paper, nearly 6 million pounds fewer lhaD In the previous 12 months. She predicted a similar decrease this year. Dimensions wH only one ot an unknown number of publications to die as a result of budget ·cuts last year. OMB officials cannot say how many have been abandoned, because the survey is still under way. Dimensions editor Jan Kosko lost her job, but most staffers for defunct publications moved Into other government positions. The OMB followed ils own directive by printing fewer copies of Reagtrn's new fiscal 1983 budget, and distributing fewer free copies to members of Congress and the media. The OM B printed 33,963 copies of the budget thi s year. com pared with 64 ,889 copies last year . and it gave away 16,963 copies compared with 41,899 last year. To save money, the OMS omi tted t he usual leather bindings for the two dozen volumes or the budget given to congressional leaders. .. . Orang• Coast OAl'-Y .PILOT/Tueisday, Fepruary 16, l.982 At .. ,. .......... HAIRDOS Tpese h1:1 irdos were among features at tht• Cnuf~s Dog Show in London. Models <Jrt' .lt'an Baker. 16. \)'Ith Javictra\'i..t Csipkeroszika. a llungunan Komodor. seen from front and bac:k Cigarette smoking • giveft new rap ... LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Cjgarette smoking may prevent exercise from reducing the levels of • , 6dollleter .. . . . . ·device -rejected WASlllNOfoN <M'> . ,The\ National Hjahwa~ Traft(c Safety · Administration. tru moved to I n,ulli(y a C~er Adtl)itlit1t~Uo1J. · prppoaal t ti•t wduld '-•vtft ·. required ·mechanisms on can to prevent odometers from being rolled back, an admMtstra~ official said. . · Diane Steed, a d e puty\ adlninistrator, said the intent of) the original proposal wu to halt~ the rolling back of odometers by;, professional oar thieves. But the administration 's. t-!ngrneers concluded that th~ devices "wouldn 't stop ~ professional for more than two minutes," Ms. Steed said. M s S t e e d s a i d t h e~ administration determined thaL "th~ cost and the benefits of the) devices just didn't add up," She ~stimated the cost of the devices' ai. less than several dollars" apiece. ·, A proposal to withdraw the , Cart er' plan, which was still) pending, w~s ~ublished in the, F ederal Regis ter. The public• has f>O days to comment before the public notice becomes' effective · 'RUFFELL'S ...._ UPHOLSTERY · ....... ,." -s... lfJJ H.UIO• ILVD. COST.A MIS.A -541·1 IU '1982 CARS and TRUCKS e har mful cholesterol in the body, according to the 1-----------11 prelimin'!!)' nndin s of a study by the University , -~ ....... -==~--..;;or't:outsvme. _ 1~========:::11M1i-=== '-~-="--"' E l h ~ -, ---l d 1'he -research indicates tobacco m ay Inhibit the ar . as nob e goa ;n m:n-presence or high-density cholesterol, a substance II II that helps removq other hal'mful kinds or cholesterol from the body, said Or . Bryant E l . h k h Stamford, director of the university's exercise . ng ts peer ta es job. as c airman of London sex shop p~ySiology laboratory. Exercise normally helps LONDON <AP > -The· sixth Earl Grey, peer or the realm and descend ant or a Pi:lme minister , is about to become ch airman or a sex s hop and girlie magazine firm -but he says he's not in it for the money. The Con egate com pany. . which has a nationwide chain of over 100 sex s hops, publishes girlie magazines and reportedJy does $18.2 million in business each year , said Grey will join as chairman later this year. Grey. 42, whose ancestor the second Earl Grey was prime minister from 1830 to 1834, was quoted in t he London Dally Telegraph on Monday as sayin&: "I am not in this for commercial reasons. I'm doing it for the sake of public interest as well as the company. P .S·. improves harbor 'I know this business ha$ a bad image," he said , "bul lhe sex industry is here to stay. I want to get involved in a public watchdog basis . . . to protect merqbers or the public." Grey also said , "I consider myself a highly moral person." The company advertised the post at an a nnual s alary of between $18,3>0 an<036,400. NAIROBI, Kenya (AP I -An American dredger has started work on a S48 million project that will allow U.S. aircraft carriers and other large ships to enter the harbor at the Indian 0cean port of Mombasa. The prime contractor is Great Lakes Dredge and Dry dock Co., of Chicago. The Urnted States has access to Mombasa and. airfields in this Western·leaning East African nation under an agreement announced by the State Department in June 1980. Stuart • SAVE the body produce high-density cholesterol, he said. University researchers said the portion of the S'1mple of 500 volun teers who smoked more t han a PJlCk Of cigarettes a day· for at least five years had "significantly" less higtl-density cholesterol than the non-smokers. Read all todays news everyday in the Dlilj Miit "WE.CARE" F'Oll .A&.L OF YOUR HEALTH HEEDS OPEN mu'1uu EVIMIH4':"WIBEHD 9:00 AM-9:00 ,M . ALL MAKES! 833 -0555 ' Aslc For Roy. LfAS( Srrtlk!ST. at HOWARD Chevrolet c-ol Dowe -0....0 s .. N~AT BEJ':CH ChoicePrimeRib Now $[00 of£ , ' Save $1 off the regqlar price of . ~Anderson's complete Prime Rib dinners. Our "346" vested s uit in a comfo rtable tro pical weight After dinner, satisfy your a~ for fUn in our lounge. There's music, dancing ind no cover charge. The savings last through March 7. fnafood comblnetloft llOl lndud~d) FOUNTAIN VALLEY, SANTA ANA, GARDEN GROVE, TORRANCE, £!RRITOS, LAKEWOOD, ANAHEIM ---'· ~ The businessman looking ' for a practical suit will app~ciate the aU-ytar wearability stripes on navy or brown. Coat, ves t and . . trousers. $280 , .. mAktSHtD Ill• 1 -~·~:Jk~ ~ , r®~ii!ii.~ ~ t'lltnt,bingifor rn . Womra :·•ous ~ 5.30 WliST ITH STRRl\T. LOS ANGEi.BS. CAI.IF. ' . PA~~fo ISLAND. tiw PORT BF.AC H. CALlf. -w.b ,....,... .,,,., t:..Ar',.,,,., t \ ) f . . ' \ • ~ 5 i \ ii 1• '." ~ ~ .\ { ;. \ I ~ ' • .. ~ ·~ t ' ' ~ ' f .. • ' ~· .. .. .. .. .... ... Orange Coaat bAILY PILOT/Tuelday, February 18, 1982 •/ . -. ' -- - · l\rery_Qne's after Y.2ur IRA dollars. Here's liow·mKeep m pullOO in the wrong direction . . Ask .New York Life. 1-800-847-4800 In New York State, call collect at (212) 696-0513. · We pay out even if you can't pay in. Once you start an I RA you \ expect to finish it~ Naturally. But what happens if you 're cannot outlive. Thats gu~anteed. Which leads us to another fact. Our parent company has been in business for 137-years. • Banks, brokers, mutual funds- ail can hel~ you take advantage of the new $2,000 tawbreak with an IRA plan. But the right IRA can m~ -even more to you : thousands of dollars extra at retirement. in an accident or become ill and are laid up for yea_rs? Or even permanently? If you have an IRA from a bank, broker, or mutual fund, it'd Q.e laid up, too. It would stop growing because • you would not be able to make the • required yearly payments. When you put money away for 10, 20, - or 30 years in an IRA. you want to Seems like you can't pick up a news- paper, open a magazine, or tum on television without someone shouting at you to take advantage of the new tax break offered by an individual retirement account (I RA). And you 're smart to listen. Because this is probably the big- gest opportunity to achieve financial security to come along in your lifetime. This year, and every year fro~ now on, you can squirrel away up to $2,000 in an.IRA-then take that money right off the top of your gross income when figuring your Federal income tax. Marri~ couples can save $2,250 . annualIY if one spouse works-up t<Y $4,000 if both work. And thats another $2,000 the tax man won't see now. Not only is this money sheltered from current taxes, but the interest or divi~nd it earns is, too. Of course. you will pay taxes when funds are withdr~wn. but you will probably be in a lower tax bracket. The results can be astounding. Your$2PGO~~ to more than1 $l,500,000~ · Suppose you are 25 and put $2,000 a year in.to an IRA until age 65, and it pays 12% interest You'd end up with considerably more than ~ 1,500.0001 , I 25 AGE cash to make your retirement a lot happier. Without the IRA tax break, you couldn't come close to this. In fact, with-the same yearly out-of-pocket cost, you'd end up with less ,,..., than $200,000 if you 're in the SOW, tax bracket. So it's no wonder you're ready to make your move. And when you read the following facts, there's no. question where your move will be: to New York Life. For not all IRAs are created equal. We start~ out at 13% 2 interest. It only makes sense: the more your money earns each 65 year, the ~ore you 11 have in the end. And this is one place our IRA flexible annuitiesJ shine. Right now, well pay 13%2 interest on your IRA if you choose a one-year guarante,ed rate. Or 12%, if you choose a 9Q..day guaranteed rate. . Of course, the economy may fluc- tuate over the years. So our interest rates may go up and down. But you . know they will always be competitive. . High yield is not all, either. ~But with an annuity, you can breathe easier. You can elect in advance to have us waive the premiums if you become disabled and can't work. That way, if you can't complete your I RA plan, it completes itself. And you end up with your full retirement fund. Not just part of it. Our IRA will last as long as you do, too. There still remains one more . stumbling block to a carefree retirement. Funds in many IRAs must be distributed over a fixed period of time. Again, an IRA annuity comes to the re5cue. It can be distributed over your .Jf fetime. Thus provide an income you know it11 be there when you call for it. So y<iu may want to think about this. New York Life has been in the business of keeping financial promises since 1845. Many families are collecting today on policies we issued before 1900. And many people who take out our policies today will be receiving benefits well towards the close of the 21st century. With New York Life, you know we won't take your money and forget you. When you think about the wisdom of IRAs , the many different sources, and the benefits of New York Life, there's only one thing to do. Call us toll-free at 1-800-84 7-4800. In New York State, call collect at (212) 696-0513. Qr mail the coupon. ~11 keep you from being·pulled in the wrong · dlrection. '~kme!' r~~~~~~~~~~~--~-1 P.O. Box 372, Madleon Sqaare St8lloa, New Y°"-N.Y. l 0158 I 0 New Yori< Ofe'$ IRA sounds good. ~~a~ York Ufe Agent calJ me. I (am) (am not) a New York Ufe pohcyowner. . I' 11 so, ITIY birth date Is ...,. • • · I Name Oty State 1Jp · I Telept!ooe -~---------~--~--~ ' 4 ' r ... . ~ . . " -, . Daily Pilai TUE'SOAY, f;E B. lb, 1982 CAVALCADE 8 2 STOCKS 85 T ELEVI SIO N . 8 6 .., a , D I Ann Lp,nders gets doum 0 ~~. to the bare· facts in her column on Rage B2 today . ~ • - 'Primitive,' classical join f orCes • in art wo.rld Equal billing obtaine d NEW YO RK <A P > The Me t ropolitan Museum of Art has at long last opooed its new. $18 m illion wing housing a vast a nd varied col lect io n of primitive art T h e n e w M 1chuel C . R oc k efell e r wing , 42,000 square feet of s pa<'e filled '"Y i t h t he art of Africa . the P a c i f i c i s I a rf'd s a n d P re-Co l u m bian an d Native AmerJca, brings under one roof the <'Oll ectio n of t he former Museum of Primitive Art and a s m all er number of works the Me tropolitan already owned, 7 ,000 objects in all In a sense. this permanent s tructural addition lo one of the world'~ great rc1>0s1lories of art. th e foremo s t in America, sym bolizes the acceptance of prim1t1ve art a~ being on an equal footing ''1th other great a rt · In fact . no ·onp at t h e Met ropohtan "ants to call 1t pr imitive ·any m o re T h e emphasis 1s on ··art as art." and "Primitive"' 1s JUSt part of the verna<'ular of the art his torians. a convenient label I n an elegant .. !i..f.Lt..es_oi galler ies, some modestly sized a nd low-ceilin,gt•d . the l<.irgest soaring up h kc <.1 great glass cathedral out of the m useum's original building. is a s plendid • 'selection of art works that not so long ago were thought to belong in naturnl h1i_,tory museums set a mid simulated "native" decor Nelson A Rockefeller. for one.· tho ug ht differently fie had g rown up with an enlightened appreciation of the esthetic value of prim1tivc art By the 1950s his O\\-ll c·ollcct1on had g rov. n so large that the decision was mad(' .to create a museum for rt. the ~1useum of Pnm1t1ve Art. the first such ins t1tut1on totally devoted to pnm1t1ve art T he formation of that museum in 1954 wa ~ a large s t ride forward 1n ~a1n1 n g wide r recognition of this tradition The Metropohtan Musc•u m formed its own Department of Primitive Art 1n 1969. and Rockefeller pledged the Mu se um o f Primitive Art ·s tollN·tion to the Metropolitan in thC' same year T he C'olleet1on's final home distances it fron1 its previous a ssociation wit h s pecialized fields. and evt'n avoids the use of the word pnm1t1vt' The new 1 . POLES OF NEW GUINEA -\fin.., poll·.., It 11111 '\l'" 1:11i1w;i t.!1'1 1'111.il tn111"1w.., 111 pn·p.ir:1t11111 l111 ••lll'lllll!.! 111 ~l ll'h:it•I (' Hnd.t·ll0lll·I' \\"111~ :11 \l 1·111q11d11.111 :\I 11sc•11rn of .\r t Tlw ii'inl' polt.•s. t•ad l :m l t·tft I .di. :irl' from c1•n•n10ni;il IHHl!'.l' 111 ,\..,ma t IH'oplt• a11d' \\l'l"l' c·ollt•<.·tc·d h~ Hnc·kl'l\·llt-r. 111· "a.., t r ;1\ 1·1!11!.! APWlre ...... IK ll\ eanol' :'\o\· lH. 19fi l · 111 :'\(.'\\' r.uirw;i ''he n h1.., hnat m ·1·rt 1irn<.•d ;ind h<.· dic·d 111 ~1i:1rk in ft.•..,tl•d .\\at ('I°" wing is na med for Mi chael C Rockefeller. the son of Nelson Rockefeller who died while on a collecting expedition in New Guinea Michael Rockefeller inherited his· father's love of al"t and special interest in primitive art In 1959 he became a t rustee of the Mu~eum of Pnm1t1ve Art In 1961 , less than a year after hi s graduation from llarvard. he"d gone to work as s ound man and s till. photo grapher for a documentary film unit~aking a film of the life and cult e-of the As mat people of New G inea Later in L<Hil he returned to New Guinea to collect A'Smat art for the New York museum A c<.inoe in which h(' was traveling overturned. and he and a companion were swept out to sea M ich<.iel decided to try to s w i m to s hore through th(' s h;i rk mfostcd v. ate rs He was never found Mo re than 1,500 works are on dis ph:1} in the new wi ng. They 1ndud1• ... r ulptures of wood , s tone. tl'rrJ cot la. precious and se~1prcc1ous s tones. a treasury o r gold <.inc~ silver . and textiles Tht•) comt.• from a rich diversity of t•ultural trad1t1ons. spanning 3,000 ~ t.·ar., three continents a nd man' islands Tht.•rc•'s been a t wo -fold evolution in attitudes leading to the re-cvahwtion of these works from trad1t 1ons d1ffei:cnt from our own Firs t. early this ccntur) t·amc· recognition they "t•r c of interest as a rt as well as ethnological specimens . T hen. 1n lall'r clt•cades has eome a less tonclt'st·t·rHling e nthusiasm for '-Ul'h \\11rk . an awan•nc•ss it cao s t a II d \~ 11 h II ll l q U U I 1 f I Cat 10 n a m o n g t ht: o I h <' r gr cat art trad1 t1 o ns re p rc!>ented i n m u s eum s !>Uc h as t h e Metropolitan The installation is designed to enhanc e lh~ pu rely esthe tic m e rit of t he wor ks , s ho wn wi t hout ethnog r a ph ic . references Douglas Newton. chairman or the museum's Department of Pr imitive Art. even discourages emphasis on the rela tions hips between these works and the works of modern Western artists. lt"s not desirable. he says, for v1s1tors to comment first on an African sculpture that ··it looks like a Picasso." But Newton ac know led ges that "people a rc more open to primit ive art now because modern artists have done so m uch to infl uence their eyes ·· He sa1s that it's difficult to pm down the effect of primitive art on modern artists, and that the period of direct influence was s hort ..: perhaps the decade from a bout 1910 to 1920. Before this century. interest s hown in the art of foreign traditions had been either for its value as plunder witness the Spanis h lust for A01en can gold or, later. for its value to scientific expeditions suc h as that of Capt. James Cook to the Pacific With colonial e"pansion. more na tive artwork found its way back to Europe . created a few small vogues as exotic ··c ur iosi t ies." a nd w a s eve ntually d e p osited in . e thnological museums wher e a n t hr o p o l ogis t s a n d a rchaeologists de bated its origin and functions. But it was the mode rn artists.' like Pic a sso. Ga ugui n and Matisse. in the fi rst two decades or this century who became lhe firs t collectors of it as art. They w ere in s pi re d by it t o experi m e n t , t o be no n represen t atio nal . n o n -d ecor ative In Newton's wo rds. '"primitive art gave them authority ror doing what they wanted lo do anyway ·· 2 towns clamp limits on vide o-g ames By T he Associated Press A town in Illinois a nd another in Massachuseits have cla mped limits on video-game playing by young people to stop the children from throwing away their lunch money a t amusement arcades or getting involved in drugs. T he new c ity l a ws cam e des pite a federal a ppeals court ru li n g that s t r u c k down a similar ordinance in Mesquite. Texas That case h as been appealed to the U .S Suprem e Court, which heard ar guments Nov 10 but has not ruled In Marlboro. Mass .. a central Massac husetts town of 31.000. the fear of drug traffic sparked the res trictions passed by the Ci ty Council. Mayor J oseph F'errecchia said '"There a re some pe riphe ral activities that go on involving t h e use o f substances not upp erm ost in the minds of pa re nts when they sent their kids out to these pl aces, .. he said of video gam e arcades. The regulations ban anyone under age )Ii trom p)aym k pin- ball or computer games after 10 p.m and before 3·30 p.m . on sc h oo l days . You t h s a re forbidden to play the games between.midnight and 7 a.m. on other days "We must no t a ll ow the d o wn l o w n t o b e co m.e a honky-tonk center." Ferrecchia said. Any new video gam e centers licensed by the city must be al least 1,500 feel from schools. pla ygrounds and public housing, a nd at least 300 feet from residential zones, the ordinance says. I n Brad ley, Ill:, a town of 12,000 about 40 miles southwest of Chicago. an ordinance bans children under 16 from playing com puter gam es in s hopping m all arcades . · The games, which usually cost 25 cents, are "enticing young p eople i nto ga mblin g a nd throwing away their lunch or school book money." said Mayor Kenneth Hayes. MASK OF IVORY -Mask from Bini or Niaeria is amonc exhibits in new wing of museum. The mask was carved from ivory in mid-s lxteen(h century and -worn on belt or a 'ruler as part of his regalia. MAJOR DEITY? -Pit><'{' t'l'om r<.'ntrat Mexico dates from son lo 300 B C. and rs t houJ!.hl to hl• :1 ma iol' deit ,. of the Olm ecs Dt.'ilil'S ~O\'l'l'nCd l iu.• wondl'l'S of the S,k~ I hundl'I' ancl I i~htn inµ T h ere are no video game. centers in Bradley. but two people h a ve expreaaed a n Inte r e s t I n o pe nln 1 the a m use m ent c e nte r a , c ltJ orr~clals said . "We don 't have to open a place to tempt them," Hayes ·said. • IU Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Tuelday, February 1e. 1982 .; • ·•ANN LANDERS •ERMA BOMBECK MUD UP CLO§ Sun reflects off. wet oil drilling · muds that are s pread for dr~·ing ut Am inoil's Rols a Chica s ite Dump is onl~· tcmporu r~· ~topping plan.· for tht• mud . which. when dricrl . i~ s h1ppl'd to bndfills t• I st•whl'l'l'. Weathering winter Have you ever seen the articles that try to make your winter tolerable by giving you indoor projects'? T hey tell us how important it is to be creative and to keep ourselves busy. EIMA BOMIECK AT .WIT'S END They mean well. but somehow J cannol imagine amusing m yself by rearranging books according to titles. reframing i}tctures. cooking a m eal over an ope n fire a nd eating by candlelight or bringing order to m y kitchen drawers. Winters do·n·t do 1l for me anvmore Oh. sure. I know what the poets sa~· about the alabaster-while countrvside and how ran we know the joy of s·prmg until the hairs in our nose h<.1ve thawed. I bought that too when I was 23 vears old . but fLlCl' it. Bunkie. at m~· age I can't afford to wait for the traffic hght to turn green. want to have my Sarah Coventry jewelry and m,· box of Italian c hocolates hidden behind 'the chicken innards in tht• fn.•czcr I have a choice of t hings I can have for dinner without ll'aving the ho use: .C'hili without beCJns. lus agna without cheese. s<1lad without lettuce. panc<1kl'!>. without syrup. or s tt•<1k and haked potatoes . without steak. I LIKE TO DEVOTE m~· winters to self-pity. TtDS IS THE WORST winter m the history of the earth. It has to be. Why else would my dryer be broken'! It overheats in the s umme r and stops in the winter That ·s Bombeck·s Law. rm trapped If I hadn't panicked and married a t the age of 22. I could be like that girl on Public Television v. ho s its on a hillside day in and da~· out recording the behavior of gorillas God. that must be wonderful. No meals to cook. ~o try ing to start the car :'>Jo schools clos ing because of snow. What could I no that's crcati ve·• Last year I rubbed my dr~· heels together to SN' 1f I could start a fire . I ('ould and did. Maybe I'll write to my congressman and ask him to introdun· a bill raising the age of menopause to comc1dc'-w1th senility. I probably won't li ve to see th~ pring. Or mu~·b<' I'll ,1ust step out on the porch. and check to ~et' if l can see my shadow. Mi gh~ iust us well make a list of who GOREN ON BRIDGE ' BY CHARLES H GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF Nor th-South vulnerable. South deals. NORTH + 103 li:'QJ8 •2 0 1.987 + K 10 WEST EAST +J98752 •Q• li:'AK li:1 10975 O 6H o A2 +Q6 +98H3 SOUTH + AK6 Ii:) 63 0 QJ103 + AJ52 The bidding: 8Htla Weit North Eut 1 0 1 + 2 Ii:' PUI S NT PUI Pua Pua Opening lead: Seven of •. Study the club suit in this hand. It ia a position that oc· cure frequently. What you are about to learn will earn you rich rewards over the years. Nortb'a bidding ia the aort that drives partnen to com· mit mayhem. He had nowhere near the valuea for a free bid at the two-level in a auit higher ranking than hi.a part· ner's. He should have simply responded two diamonds and waited to see whether his partner could move over that. We attach no blame to South for leaping to game. West led his fourth-best spade against thr ee no trump.· Declarer made t he techrticaJly correct play or holding up for one round. then won the spade continua· tion. By developing three dia· mond tricks, declarer could count seven top tricks. Ob- viously, he would not have ti!Jle to set up two heart t ricks, so he would have to count on the club suit for four tricks. A cursory glance at the diagram might make it look as if declarer needs a finesse to collect t hose tricks and that he can play either defender for the queen. Not so! To make four tricks in club11 declarer must find a favorable division in the suit. His problem is that he ls mi11ing all the Intermediate spots . H Eut haa the ~ueen BEDWETTER of clubs, declarer can never make more than three tricks in the suit -all East has to do is cover the ten or clubs when it 11 led from dummy, and declarer will inevitably have to concede the fourth round of the suit to one of the defenders no matter how the club suit is split. The only way to score four club tricks from this com· bination is to hope that West holds the queen of clubs guarded no more than twice. So at trick three declarer led· a low club to dummy's ten. He then cashed t he king of cluba. When the queen drpp· ped. declarer had tilne to knock out the .ace of diamonds to bring home a well-played game. How do you ehMee the beat opealq lead? Chari.et Gore• llu the u1wer. For a copy of "Wlanlac Ope.U., Leaclt," eead U .85 to "Gor.a·Load1," earo of dab aewt,.,..., P.O. BH Ut, Nerw .... N~.076'8.Make eltoeu pay.WO to New• ,.,.t..ou. I ! . Custom_ needs ~bedding DEAR ANN LANDERS : Regarding the letter from the wo man whose hus band sat around In lhe nude on weekends and was annoyed because she refused to join him. let me tell you about our household. I sl~rted sleeping, nude in college and continued through my working years. Then came marriage. Both my husband and I enjoyed sleeping au noturel it cut down on the laundry and the feeling of freedom was delightful. ll was a logical step from there to breakfast in the nude. during which time we enjoyed reading the morning paper. A son arrived first. then. two years later. a daughter. We continued our family • • HOROSCOPE BY SIDNEY OMARA Luck favors Sagittarius Wedne-sda~·. Ft•brua r~· 17 ARIES 11\tar<"h 21 Apnl 191 Qut•stwns are answt'rl'CI. \ ou makl' dbCIJ\'t•rit.•s . ad\'ance t·aust• :.ind l'l'l'l'I\ e nwuning{ul . Ion g dis t a rH'l' l'O mm u n 1 t LI lion TAl 'Rl'S t:\pnl 20-'.\la ~ 20 1 You rchouncl r1·om l'l'<:l'llt rnis('alculat1on .\cct>nl on finanti<..11 resour<:es of ont• close to ~·ou. GE~11~1 1 :'\hi\ 21-.Jurw 20 1 Domt.•stje-- ad1ustm'mt dorn1rwll's wh<.tl had bern oppo!>.ition facks into n·lm·tant c·ompli<.1n N• C'i\~('1-:R 1.1l1m· :!I .Juh ~21 : Tc..•rms arl' ~·lanf'1t•d ha~11 · routint• 1s mort• imporlanl t ha 11 onj!11ial1~· ant tC'i paled Homunc·t• is p~1rt of' c·x<·1t111 J! s<•t•1iano f('atunng C'hangt.·. Lt:O 1.J uh :n .\11 j.! 22 ' · You ('ould lit.•c·oml' lllC''l rH·a hh 10\·ol\ <•d St \'le 1s 1mpnntt.•<I. c·n·all\'t• ,:esourc·t•s arc mt1<"h in c..•,·iclc..•n<'<' Rt·lat1onship b intt•nsifit.•d \'IRGO 1 .\ug 23·St.•pt 2:! You'll get en•dit fH'C'\ ious l~ cknit'<I You complcll• l' ~ t.'l t• . r I nl .... h pr n tl' l' l <Ill d cl ea I \\ I t h aggn·s~l\·t.• 10\'t•ntl\ l' l>l'r .... nns .\rll's. L<•o . l.1hra. nalt\l'" 1'1µurt.· promint·ntl' UBR.\ 1St•pt 2:J Ot t 22 • Ht•lu t1\'l' at tt•mpb tu gl'l point al'rn~s b~ us ing stndt.•nt Lont•s :\l:11ntain ,·our own balanrl'. humor· Yo u'll gl't to 1'w:1rt of' mutlt.•rs . SCORPIO 1 Ckt :!:J-:":1n· 21 • · C~·ctc..• points to tonsohdat1011 . 1·ollt.'e t10n . .i nt'\\ undt•1·sta11<ling of n1lm•s. m<.1 ll'ri<.1I and spiritual lntuit h·t· flash aids in n.•sol\'ing dilc•mm:1 • S.\G ITT:\Rl;6'S 1:'\m 22 Dl•c· 21 1 Ell•mt•nts of t1m111g all(! lud: fan>r ~·m1r l'ff orts Pnpul;.1 tit~ 1 m· rt•aSl'S. 1udgmt·nt 1s on targl'l and ·'our pl'rsonal appc•;,ils bring <lt.•s ired r l'sults C':\PRICOR'.'i: •D<•<· :!2-.Ju n. 19 •: f''al'ts thut had bt•<.•n t•lu~t\'l' will ht.• made a\'<.1ilablc• \'1t•\\s art• \'t•rified. ~ou gain hackst<.1g<.• \re" und ~·ou'll nbt<ain stor~ hehind s ton t'l<.1ndt•st1m• ('onfen•nc·c..• is on agendu · :\ Q l'. \ R n · S 1 .J a n 2 0 · Ft.' h I R 1 Pt•rsonalit ~ i;p;.1rklt•s . mt.•mhl·rs of o ppositt• "l'X find .'·ou fascinating and makl' nn .... eC'rl'l or It l.un<1 r c.'mph<1sis on desirl's . ro m "'nc·l'. pcl\\ l' rs of per~ u :.is ion u n d fulfillmcmt of' aspirations P ISCES 1 Fl•b. 19-March 20 •. Family member t•n uld prm·t• instrumental in uid· ing ~·ou lo al'hic..•vt.' goal. Focus ·on raret•r. pn·sti~e . cpoperuµon in c·om u munit~· projt•ct. Yfcthods of home> improvement l'ommand major portion of srl'nario. g Allll WIOEIS nudity. sleeping. brcakfost . reading the paper and s howering together after tennis. Our children never seemed em barrassed a bout it. On the contrary. they were v<'r~· comfortable with us and t•ath othc•r This fall our son 1 age 181 wt•nt away to college. When he returned for lhe holidays he came to the breakfast t,Bble nude. as always. His sister. also nude. made onl~· o ne comment. "What a great tan' .. We love and respect ('ach other Bath c hildren have said th(' practice of family nudity has taken away some o f the c uriosity about sex and had a positive influence on their li ves. Now what do you think '. UN I N ll lBITED IN CHARLOTTE. N.C. DEAR CHAR: I can't imagine a less appetizing s ight, not to me ntion the repressed incestuous reellngs and other emotional garbage. My consultants have even stronger feelings about it. What you and your husband choose to do is fine a nd dandy with me. but a teen-age brother and sistc•r s hould not be eating bre akfast in the ra~ with their na ked parent~ -or one anotht•r. DEAR ANl'i LA'.\IOERS I have s ix grandchildren under 12 ~·l'ar~ of age Four of them soon will bt.• losing their baby teeth The other!.'' 111 t'\'l•ntuall ~ folio\\ When · my children were gr:owing up. t he Tooth Fairy left 25 cents and they we re t hrilled. but toda~· things ar(' different I have no idea what my grandchildren \\OUld CjlOSider a nice find . Can you guide. me·• SLIGHTLY OUT O F TOL1CH l '.'l" OHIO DEAR SLIG HTLV : Like ever yone else. the Tooth Fairy has be-en cfobbered by inOation. A survey conducted last year a t Northwes te rn University School o r De ntistry re\•eale d that some children received as much as S5 for a single bab~· tooth. The ave rage. however. was 66 cents. Fifteer;t years ago the average was 30 cents a tooth. If you want to be extremely gen erous. and can afford it. I'd say a c risp---$1 bill woul.d gl~dden the heart or an~ child.\ DEAR AN:'ll LANDERS Where is the line bet we<.'n ~1 Y 0 B and one's cn·ic dutv '' ·A multimillion dollar corporation 1" bilkin~ the municipal ",1tt.•1 ..,~ "ll·m out ol thousands of dollars l'\'l'f\ ,·car with an illegal connection A s mall plumbing contractor who could IO!>.l' h1~ businrss license was directed to make thl' bootleg connection S hould this giant C'orporat10n be permitted to bilk the public utilit.'· s~·st em. or should somN>nl' blow th<• whistle" Th(' little people who have no C'lnu t ha\'l' to pay for the servi cc l he v n •c·t.'i n .• Wh<.tt do ,·ou s ay'' TAXPA)'f~H . S<>MF:W ll ERF,. us·A. DEAR TAXPAYER: You 'd be pe rrormlng a public service by turning the crooks in. Do it. POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT HAVE VOU BEEN DOING ANYTHING WHICH I SMOULD, OR a SHOULD NOT, ~ KNOW ABOUT? ~ l IN ) Atl'i~ 9r'fllt1•"' All "IOl'it "'9•t•HO • Olll fnthl"f ~·"'f lyftd+Ult ~ SHUmRS CUSTOM QUALITY SHUTTERS ,_ Designed, Finished ~ Installed ____.. LET THEM HAVE A DRY BED " Wt're in stitchts " ••• .,. • ,., • '· lj '' • f .... GET READY FOR SPRING INVENTORY CLEARANCE RUG YARNS & SELECTED ITEMS 0%ott • Feb. 18 , 19, 20 EVERYTHING SO,% OFF . (7 14) WWWWlll~ 1t • -· l I t ' ........ .__ ... ... LA- ''Mow thin. ii ttwe ~ ...., 8Nrta? Socb? How~WI•?" Spu4'sadud as aphrodisiac· AMHERST, Mass . (AP) -Oysters, vita°'la E , ground rhinoceros born -all have been touted as aphrodisiacs. But potatoes? George Armelagos. professor of anthropolo&Y at the University of M assachusetta, says the English used to believe just that. ''When the potato was introduc:CS into Europe it was considered an aphrodisiat, •' professor Armelagos said. The plant's "tubere>us" shape had somethi91 to do with the ftOtlon, but there was further evidence. "After it became a major food.crop ill Ireland," he said, "the populatioa increased at a very rapid rate, and the Engtish took that as proof of the potato'.s aphrodisiac properties. Th«y were convinced that eating the potato was increasing the sexual activity of the Irish." Actually, he explained. the Irish had just s uffered through a series of famines and were finally jll&l better fed, so more children survived. As for he rish.. be a.aid, they-'liewed the fabled prowess of the potato u pure blanaey. "The Iris h wouldn't consider it an aph rodisiac," Artnelagos said. "One of the key elements in s uch folklore .is that tbe aphrodisiac cannot be in common use -it mmt be rare aitd expensive. "You could call snow an aphrodisiac and that might be accepted in some areas, but not in New England.'. ' Aid tax de~uctlble, TRJi:NTON, N .J . CAP> -New J ersey taxpa¥ers can help fund programs for the state's endangered apedea by checkine off a contribution o .. their state income tax fonm. "We're bopln1 people, 'Go wild for wildlife'," Hubbard S. Werblin, special projects coordi.naW for the Department of Envinemntal Protedioe said. Taxpayers cu mate contribuUooa Qf a , St or. $10 from their state mcome tax ret'U1ll l>y simply checking off a box on their fenns. lml llflCEI I J.OHNSON JACK PAUL JOHNSON. resident of Fountain Valley. Ca Passed 11wav on February 12. 1982 He was the vice president of the Far Best Co rporation ror 35 years. He was u member of the American Society or Lubrication Engineers and u member of the American Grease Institute. lie wo.is also u member or thl' Tun;i Club of Avalnn. Cu u:. well as past president of lfont· ington Harbour Anglers H~ w us a veterun or World War II. United States Air Force. ha\'lng served us a pilot and a radio operator He was also a pritc fighter and a lightweight contender for the Air Force lla\'IOR been a resident of Sou\hcrn Cahforma all his life he hud a reputation in the !.teel m etal working and the grease industries as tht' he!it in the nation lie is sun·1ved by his wire LeNc•lle of Fountain Vulll'\ Ca d aughter Tt'rri Moore of Huntington Beach. Ca and grandlloO Jeramy Services will he held on Wednesday. February 17. 1982 al S:30PM al Harbor Lawn !\1emorial Chllpel Scrvires under the d1recllon of H arbor Lawn·Mount OliVl' !\1ortuarv of Costa Meso.i . 540·5»i · HAWKINS 1\RTllUR P llAWK l!'iS. resident of Ncwµo1t Beach. C ;.i P ;.i ), s e <1 a w a ,. 11 t1 Februarv 12. 1982 Beloved son or . Babs Ainsworth Hawkins. o.ind the late John N H;.i\\k1ns. brother of Harn A Leslie. and Grant W Corby. sister Annelle Corb~ und nieec Rubhellr Corbv Loved b\' all fore\'l'I' Prl\'ate serv1res. MILLER CLARE C MILLER. resident of :-Jewport Beacti. Passed aw a~ on February 13. 1982 She was .o.i resident of this area since 1952 und u member of St. Joachim's CHt hollc Church She is survl\•ed by her husband R ichurd K . c hildren . Rirhard C of Texas. Karla ----------....... Rudeberk of Mill Vallt'y. 'AC...C Y•w MINOllAl,All Cemeterv Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1hc Vi ew Drive Newoort Beach 64:4·2700 Cu . Thomas 0 and Maura M both of New port Beo.ich. Ca . mother Mar·y Y Connell of Cornna dcl Mar. CH .. brother John H Connell of Newport Beach. Ca . sister Mary Ann Ford, of Il linois . and 3 erandchildren. Slumber Room visitation Monday. Datalietics plant used 99 PIOL IHllDlaMAN ii' ................ .,.-: For ·220 ectployeea of ITT'a l'ountaln Vallty·b .. HI Datanetlea C•tp .. the newa In Decembtr •11 bad. The parent corporatlon wu 1hutUa1 down tile Dat~netlca 1ub1ldlary , whlch manufactured computer -•yboatda al~ keyboa~ swkclMI. The divlalon wu detc:Tlbed by ITT ottlcla11 u "very unprofttafJle." . AU 23> l~al Datahetlca empto)'efl were laid ort. Now, two.itnoraths lat•r, a few t.rt1hler development.I have occurred in the wake of the DatanetlcJ shutdown: -Sevenl of the Datanetlcs pl'Oduct Un" have been acquired by other COlnpaJUet. Otte, baaed In Anaheim, has put some former Datanelics employees on its PllYroll al\d hopn to hire more ll sates incteue. -JTr'a Canfton Electrfc dlvlllon, a separate cempany based In the lar1e r.untaln Ylllley plant facin( the San,Dl•IO FrH~~ at Ward Street, wlll be exp&Mint 111to the forifter DataneUca building and will increase it.s workferce. The Anahe•m company, Arde11t Computer Parts, has acquired Datanetics' Toucbboard keyboard line, incorporating the DC 50 Hd DC 60 switches. Ardent will manufacture a.nd market these products and service fermer Datanetics customers. Manufacturift1 will take place at Ardent's Anaheim plant. ''As the product line Increases and sales grow. we do plan to coatact S"Ome of Datanelics· ex-employees about posaJble re·empl~yment ... said Ardent Vice President GU Helnt. • L . Wayne Oliver, president of ITT Cannon, said his company can P"t the now vacant Datanetics building to 1ood use as a M>me for a new commercial-lnduatrial p~ucts divtstOft. The Datanetics '-ullding is louted at 10840 Talbert Ave., just down the street from the ITT Cannon plant. -"Lolisticillly, it worked out perfectty,'' Oliver said. The new division will manufacture eleetrical connectors for trucks, heavy machinery and fa.rm vehicles. Oliver s!Md about 60 people will begift working in the former Datanetica building in Marca. but ttded-that the ~rkforce thae could eveatnlly "double or triple." The Cannon presideat said the Datanetics buildl.ng also, will house a porUOn oft.he company's micro-electronic line , which ia outcrowing its present space In Santa Ana. Oliver said a few former Datanetics employees will be hir-M tlunac thls expansion move and more may be called back_.ln....tu future. - Although t he Datanetlca divisk>n proved unprofitable, Oliver sakt the Cannon dlvilion just completed a s u-ccessful year. ''Even though the economy was light and we predict that it will continue to be Uiht in 1982, we see no reason why we should not be successful a1aln in Im," he saicl.,... Uale11 tile ecwomy takes a dramatic, unpredkted downtun, OUver tore.. no layofta this year tmeq Caaoa's ,,.. ,employees, of whom • wottr II FCM8atm •an.,. Camon recently completed tta fll'lt year ln the Fountain Valle)' pint that oHcta.ity wu MllJt for the BASP Corf. "It's an exC91Nnt fac:llit)'," Oliver 1aW. "If we had bad t• build a buUdl•I to ou own s pedficationl, tt ._ .. taave ~just Hite this. We have one of the best aeml·a'*ftlat.ed auembly and manufacturinl ltlMll ln tbe eeuntrf." Stanford f e01ale MBAs earn less STANFORD <AP) -w.nten with-Stanford University masters degreett earn less than their male courtterparu -and ex-peel to -despite similar academic records, a recent Stanford stud y shows. A study or those wbo earned Stanford MBAs in 1974 showed that while the wome n and men al first earned equal salar ie.s, four years later. women earned only 80 percent of What men miode. · As90Ciate Professor Myra H. Strober,. who conducted the study, said two major reasons seem to be that many of the \tomen had left the workforce and then returned and that women were in lower paying industries. The women alao e xpected less pay and prestige than did the me•. At graduation, the peak career pay expected by women was only 80 percent of that expttted by the men. AR<! by 1978, it.was only .to percent. About half the men said they ho~ to become owner, partner, president or chief executive officer of a company. But only a fourth of the women expressed that desire. Results of the study by Ms. Strober, director of the Center for Research on Wome n at Stanford, were included ln the new book. "Woll'len in ~he Workforce," edited by 'Phyltis A. Wallaee. Mercury Savings loses $8 million McCob4tcl MCHTUANI Laouna Beach 49-MM1 5 LaQuna Hills 76&-0933 February lS. 1982 rrom 12:00 noon to S:OOPM at Harbor Luwn Mortuary Chapel Muss of the Resurrection w 1 1 1 be 0 n T u e 8 d a y . High interest rates and the dnstic slowdown Februar y 1 a. 19s2 at in the real estate market contributed to llercury IO'l>OAM ut St Joach1m·s Savings loss of nearly $8 million for the catendar Catholic Church Final year 1981, accor1Hn1 to Leonard Shane. chairman interment 1tt Holy Sepulcher of the HunUnfton Beteh-bued savinp and loa~. Cemetery. Orange. Ca In Mercury's u1•udited alter-tea adjuate4 loss lieu or nowcrs the ram1lr for tbe year was $'1.1 mllUon, or tz.03 a share, request.5 donatlOf\S bt made compared wtth a profit of S2.I mllUon, or 75 ~nt.a, to t~e Sand.piper. Hoag for the f\lll year 19'0. For Ute feurth quarter of Hospital Services under the . 1_1 ... _ association posted a loss of 85 cents a San Juan Capistrano 495-1 776 "tAllCM LA~Mf. OUYI Mortuary• Cemetery Crematory .. 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mes. 540-5554 ,-- " .... c••~s m&.llOADWAT WOITUAaf t 10 Btoedw•y CottaMeH 642·9150 IAL1'1 .... 0M SM11M a nlTNLL WlfhCr'r1ff,"/t"" Gosl8 Met• e•e.-9311 ,_Cl..O'nml IMITMI' ...,.,......., e27~nSt HllntlnQ!on 8Hch 531-es.31 • d irec t ion or Harbor ;ioo •\LR: • Lawn.Mount Olive Mortuan share of Costa Mesa. S40·~ · PELTO; PAULINE HATFIELD PELTCS. resident or Costa Mesa, Ca. Paued away on Februuy I\. 1982. 8orn September 4, 190$ In South Carolina. Survived by her daughter Barbara Parisi or Muyhm4, dauahter Carolyn-- Med 11 n or Florida. son William C. Ollllllm. Jr. of Tu sco n. Al'lzonp , 1 erandchlldren and I · 1reat·1nndchlld. Funenl servlce1 will be held Oft Tuesda)'. Febnaary IS, 1m at 9:00AM at Pacillt Vkw MortuarJ CJ\apel wlth Interment at Pacmc View Memortal Park, Ncw~rt Beach . Pacltlt Vie.., Mortuary dltectou Pact ~old eave Ford 1581 million yearly DEAR90RN, llidl. (AP) -Ford Motor Co. could... san nearly SSll.2 mllUan a year_tn labor C!Oltl 11 1 retult of a t~t11tlvt paet readted with lll1t tJnlted Auto Workers union, based on estlrnat. and 1'81 prod--fiprt!I. Both Ford and the UAW have r~ to HY how rneh Ute uUon'a N._ a cannaker MOt.d to H•• from Ille tetaq,-lfftrd ructied late SI~. Bat ..... ,...-~ Sunday •Ull•ted the ,...._-... nqe from 11111mdredl of mlWoet of dollars t9 fl bUlloa.'1 TMt ....,.,.. to M more tp1elfte ._ ... flf tM lar11 '"9mber of variables to be eclDlt*red. ,• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, February 16, 1882 25 Available for Immediate Delivery! G reat selection of the <!ustom 42. 45 or 48-lnch conversion. Includes 8 inch color 1V, bar, separately controlled rear air-conditioning, power Chauffeur divider window ... PLUS many more features! BUY OR LEASE. ~ ROGER PENSKE (213) 868-9931 (714) 521-9624 CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST CADtLLAC DEALER WHERE rliE 9 AHO (Gl FREEWAYS MEET .. DOWNEY (FORMERLY 808 SPREEN CADILLAC) Sl,2tO,OOO C•Doww 91/Jo/e MyAAWitl .. Ownn Write \:fos1lflcd Ad •!HJ. Ou1ly Pilttl 1'0 tlox 1soo. l'oslu Ml'Nll, CA 92621 OttANOI COUNTY MUNICIP'AL cou•T H-J..-Cl<ll 011\lltt ••• , , ......... a .......... . N•w,.... ... ell, C...._.,.• •-PLAINTIFI' MAltC lit TOW OEFE N OA N TS J AME S 8A10GEMAN, NANCY 8RIOGEMAN •l'WI OOES I IO, IMlu.i"' : SUMMOfl' I'll.ST AMINDIO CASI NUM8llt HUt NOTICE! y.., ........... -. T,_ cwnmay~ ... ..,.., ... .....,. , ... , ~ _,.. -yell ..... wlll1l11 • MYa. .... Ille 1111«......,. Mtow • .. 1-_::====================================::::::::---J II vOu Wl\11 IO -k llW ~VIO Of ell •ttOrllev In'"" menu, you ,,.,Joo WE'RE A LOT MORI THAN . . A BELL ON YOUR WALL • t Behind the bell Behind the famous Seacoast slicker Behind all the state·of·the art protection devices we mei.~.and-•A!H&ll. Seacoast central station When an alarm goes bll on your property we gel lhe signal 1n a nearby 24·tiour·a·day central station ff me signal 1nd1cates fire burglary or noooup we call the police or lire oepartmenl Since our central station 15 UL trs-t-e-d , our ce.nLcaJ slalLOO customers can qualify for a sizable discount on their insurance And to increase our reach make response time e11en laster and improve ell 1c1 en c y we re computermng our stat.on But improvements aren t new to Seacoast We've been getting better for 21 years And today we re the leaders 1n the security business •n the narbor area with .·over 10;-0Q(rcustomers including a wrde rBT1ge-of big and small retail 1ndustr1a1 and commercial establishments To find out more about Seacoast central station write or come by our new fac1llt~ 2488 Newoort Blvd , Costa Mesa. lii\SEACOAST 2488 NEWPORT BOULEVARD \I ~RITY SYSTEMS !714l 642·3•90 \O promptly \O th•t your wrill•n ropon .. ll M\y, m•y be Ill.a on tlm• AYISO! U .... M NM .. _..._ II lrl-1 ....... _ .. Ir c•lr• U<I. ''" a11•••11cl• • "''"" '"" u•. '"'° .... *""'• * • 1111aa. u• 1e lnlormac""' 'I• •I-. S1 U tt•CI oewa M>11<lt1r •I conwjo oe un .. ~ en e\tt •'\.Unto, dllberla t11cer10 l11m•Olaume11te. O• HI• m•ner1. w ,.,_,,. H<rlt•. ti llay •fqun•, p"'9df Mr r•oi,trade • t~mPo I ro THE DEFENDANT .• Cl•ll comp111n1 ''" llleCI bY tlw plelntllt •9•1n>I you II ¥OU w1sn to IMl•l'WI 1111• 1aw,u11. ¥OU m•m w11'1"' lO O•Y• •It•• tlll\ tum~ I• wr •eO on you~ Ille Nit" th•' court • written response to 1111 Compt11nt l.tn1en you oo to YOU< dt•411.t1 will ~ t111trta on IJIPIK•~ ol Ille pl<llntitt, •n<I tfll\ cour1 m•v triter • IUOlll'Wnl •11t•n>1 you tor tr. • reue1 d•rn•no.O tn the como••ll'1. wMch couk9 rttul1 in o-rnt\hmtnt of w•11e• lakH\9 of money or pr_,,, or otrter r•ll•f ,....oue\t•d +n Ut,. como•••"' OA IE 0 O.Cemo.r 11 I'll! J P•terton c .. r, e, v L Dimeo ~'· LAW OFFICE$ OF MAllC It. TOW lrvuO ~.E14 ,,., o ... s ... ., "°""'" "-· N•w .. '1 ... <*.CA., ... (110 7S~MU Publo"...0 0.-Co .. 1 Di lly PllOI, Feb 1. 'I. I•. U. 11111 ~l.C SUP'Eltlott COUttT OF THE ST Att OF CAL,,OltNIA l'Ott THE COUNTY 01' O•ANGE 1eo Cl•lc c;e..u.r on ... w .. 1 h"'• AM, Cilltorllla •Z7t1 PLAINTIFF MEREDITH WIU . .S. OOlOAES YOUNGER, lndl•1Clu•I" W llt..S .AN O VOU N GER INVESTMENTS•• r~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiii:iiii~~ DEFENDANT HAL FREELAND. 8RUCE JON ES. lnCll•IOuals CALIFORN I A IMVESTM E,NT LEA!dHG COMPA'4V . INC ,• Corpor•tlon, .,.,.,-Doe• 1 '"'°""" lO, WESTERN THRIFT & LOAN ASSOCIATION Downey O!onge C OSIO Mesa l01ronce 8228 E. Rr9$1one 8lvd (21J) t2J.J201 Whlttlef 1111 F Kotello Ave 2000 HorOOI 81vCI t 8208 Pronie Ave (213) 532·3070 Glendale (714) 99MJOO (714) MS·JISJ 15756 lo Foroe (21J) t4l·0221 Torzono lOOQ Beocn 18724 Ventura BlvCI 4501 Poe Coosl Hwy (213) Hl·0200 C21J) 491·UOI 414 N Brand BlvCI (113) 240·5550 Asnts over 120 mil/Ion with more than a quarter of a century serving California. Available to California residents onlv. (Umlted offer) FICTITIOUS 8USINUS NAMI STATE MINT Tiit rollowln9 i>ert<>n\ ••• ClolnQ sin•i-'•s· C~NY~WOOOS APARTMENTS, S251 lO!o .tlll1ot 81•d. El Toro, C:t All ... CrMk WOO<h ComPiflv I• limited Partrwr\lllPI. llov E O•ly, Jr. anCI Mary Ellen O•IY Gtntral Parlnert, C/O Roy E Oily " ome>any. Corpor•lt w-8 1CIQ u. Ult• SJO. 1111 WHI 110111 Sir.el verlal'ld Plf'll. Killst\ .. 110 Thll llMltlntt• I• conctucted O• • 11 mlted l)lt1MFVllC> Roy E. Daly t. Co Mary Eli... Oely, Par1,,., TlllS lie-WH Iliff with IN County Cieri( of <><•~ County on J ...... ,., ••• 1'11:1.1 TMOMASWILU AL•wC..-...... • lt._t"""" Dr .. 511lt• .,. .._,.,. e.ci., ca . .,_ l'ltbtlllltel Ori1191 Cont O•lly P llOI fe9.2.t.lt.U.tta JIM2 PIU.U "ICTITIOUS auSIMIH NAMI STATIMINT Tiit tollowlng 111rso11S are dolno l>ullneuas: MIUIOM PlilllA APARTM ENTS, 17J1..fl!lllC"9115trftt,"fu\tln, C•. •HIO •01 a . Daly t. Com111ny. c.,.,.,ete Woodt a1d9 14, 5'illt AO. •111 W•nt 110.11 Slrtfl. Ollttltnel Par•. l<llllMIWIO Tllll IMnlMH II <Ofldutltd llY t ........ p.n ... rtN. !toy l . Oalyt. Co NIMV 111«1 Diiiy, Pen- Tlllt Nt.me!ll -.t lllW with Ille C.U11ty Clffti ot Or•-c-ty Jllllllllrf ... '*· TllOMUwtU.S •'--~-­....... 0...0r., ........ ............. c.. ..... ,.._..._ Or.,... C.tt Dally ltl ...... •. lt,,.'l, ,.., ,,, .. PVlllC MOTlCE l'ICTITIOUS 8USIHESS NAMl STATEMENT fh.-followlnq C>f'r\O~\ 4lrf' dolnQ busln•'' •\ SKA1E MANA G E M ENT PAOPEATIES. 1'01 Chrt\ L~n• An•h•lm, C• 'nllM Robert E Maurer, 115111 Sotn 81•• Mlo1on v~10. Ca n•<n Ao.,_'1 E 0\-ne ?•Sn Pa•l$0 Ori••. Minion Viejo, Ci 'n&IS G•relel P C,.,.ran '1<IO Hor• ... ~ Rold Or-Ca.nw.• Aobert K Elliott. 1sn Trff•ur• l•"4'. S&lltot Ane. Ct "270S Thh IMniMU ,, conCloCIH by • 9'1""'" P¥1Ret\11'9 c;.<tlel p Cwnan P~I Tiii\ \lal..,_1 was lllf!CI wlln ltw ~ounly C,.rk 01 ~·~ Counly Oii JtflUtr'Y 1' 11111 MA\.COl.M a DALY AnerM.,.ttY• ........ ,.,, ........... ..... ""' OHie• ... Jilt NtwP9f1 e.cll, Ce. '1MJ Plltlllsllecl 0r"9 (OHi Dally PllOI l'tb 1, •. i., 7) 1 .. 1 SU .. 2 NIUC tlTICE PUBLIC MOTlCC NS-t1601 STATIEMIHTOF WITliDttAWAL FAOM PARTNEllSMIP OPEllATIHO UNDER l'ICTITIOUS llUSINESS NAMIE TM U"°"r"~ ,..,.by \Iott\ t • > TM hc111IO\ft bu\lnl'\) na"'4J ot !hf P•rl,..r\l'!•P I\ PAN .ioMERIC~N EQUITIES UI TM lt<tll•ou• l>ul1"4'U n•- l•temtnl ot ,,.. P•r1ner\/\1p wo 111,.0 In or .. noe COul\ly CalllOrl\I• on ,_, 10 .. ,. ,,, TM P"IMll)il pl•<• 01 l>u\I,.. .. f ,,,. Pen,.."nlp I\ IO<flf<I ti tltt DuPont Orl•I' Sullfl 101 lrvln• •lllor nl• '211S 10 Tlw _,,.., wilNlr-•119 from he Ptrtnt<\lliO il ROBERT L 8ERG tsldl"9 •I II._. Corona l•,.. Costa M Ci Htornl• "ltlt Robert l l\iro Tiit\ \lat-I w" IUKI wlll'! Ille ou111Y Cito 01 Oren91 Cou111!.t alltornla Of\ J,,,,.wirv n 1"1 F1- PublllNCI OrMl9f C:oa" 0 •11• Pllo1, an. u, Ft b J, '· It. ,.., ., .. a U\(IU\1¥• SUMMONS CASI •UMalEtt JU1H NOTICE! y.., IWV't .... -· Tiie , ... ,., ...... _ ...... ""' .,... wltllewl ,..,, ..... _,.. -· yell ~ '"""'" ... y ...... -i.1 ...... 11 .. ...... II vou wisn IO -k llW ""•Ice Of Ml •Uor-ne-y fn ''"' nwtNr. vou 'loftO(;Jd do \O oromptly "° 1h•I your w r ftt•n r••Pons.e U •n• m•Y bit' fHeo on· lime AVISO! URN Iii sUe ..... ,...... II trl._. ,_.._ .. Ir ._.,.. U<I. 1111 •114lle11cl• • menH ~·• U<I. re11>011•e .. ..,,,. .. JI <llH. l• Ii lllfermacloll 'I•"-· So \hi.CS Cle~H \Oll<•I., ti con .. io Ot un a~ e<1 Kit •sunto • .,..,_,la tt•<erto 1nmed1•t•mt"ntr de ~'t• m•nt:r•, w rtsoueU• f'Krtt•, sl h•y ••ouna, oueor ser rf'Olttr•O. • t1emoo l TO THE DEFENDANT A <1•11 <.ompl•'"' "•' bt•n f;••O by ,,,. pl•lnlltl -·~· you II YOU WIS~ 10 c:teteno th•\ t•ws.ult1 you must. wHh•n a davs •tfff tr~h summon\ '' wrvea on i;ou. fll~ with thl\ court • ..,rlnen re\oonw tot~ compl•int Unt•ss you do \0,, your ~fMlft wlll bf' •ntert'd on • •DPllC•hon ot It\~ 0••1nhff and lhfs I co.irt m•\I ~nter a 1u<19m~1 •V•ln•t ;" vou tor In. reli~ aemande<I In llW <omo111n1 which could rt\ult •n • 0"""\'1m•nt of ••CJ~' ••••n9 o• mon•v or pro~rty ot ott'•' ttl••f t requ~lf!d on llW <ome>l••nl ' t O"'TEO M<lrch11, I .. ! LEE A BRANCH c i.r-1 8v J Door• • °"""Y MACl(EY & ALP'IEttT : IJ711 ttl"'"'* Oflve, : )t~I'·-· s si..rma11 Oil<•. ea•Henri• •uu I IJIJI "'.... l Publi•he<I °"-J;;OUl Ot•I• Pilot J•n a Feb ' • •• '1'"1 01 en SUltP'LUSP'ttOP'EltTYSALE ttEOUEST l'Ott 8105 FOtt THE SALE 0, SUltP'lUS P'ltOPlttTY COAST COMM UNITY COLLEGE OISTltlCT 1Jl"IU-A- C•\a Mna, Cat...,,.I• Purtuanl 10 Callfornl• Eouullon Code S«llon\ II~. 11••1, •nd 114!0, llOllct 11 IWl'ltby Qiven 1n.1 lfl• Co.st Community COii-0 1\lr•ct O! O•tf>9' County, Calllornl•, wlll rtt•l•t up 10, bul 110 liter lhan 11 ·00 • m . MonOay, M•rCll ! • 1"1 teal.O bkl• lor 1rw .. ,. or Ill U-C-'•' .. nten ,,., been o.<lare<l •urplu• to tf'te ne.Os Ol lht Oltlrl<I 8k1cllr>Q IMtructlon\ •l'WI blCI lorm• •rt 1va11at11• rrom in. PurcllHlno 0.p•rlnwnl •I tn. .tlovt IOO.-.n C•ll Mrt Perrin, 1114) SSt ·S1\0 tor •CldlllGnil lmormellon IV"'t<)llMAN E WATSO.. Seuei.ry, I eoaro Of T rvst"' P1,1bH•hfd Or-CoHI 0.lly Pilot, l'ebru•ry t, It 1"2 ~ MllC •lXl NM16n FICTITIOUS aOSIMISS MAMfi STATIMaMT The tooowlflo "'"'"" ••• dei119 llMIMf'IHIH. W0008AIOGE TOWHHOMES, 11100c;111..-,1r .. 1ne, c.11 tnu. warmlnotofl -.0...-1 C011'1941ny, e Calllornl• <'Olllor•llon, 11100 OHlett• Aw .. ""'"'•CA '211f E 0 . WarmlllQIOf'I Enln'''"' ~ I ""oroo••hd, • C alll••nta ~ corp0rallon, 11100 Gllltne, ll'vlM, CA "211' • t • Tiii• t>u.ilnu.i· 11 conclllt l•d lty • llmll.O PM111tn11111. Corlltr•llon NA""'' w~--..-1 -C~'Y "-. ' J-lt WW........ ~ ~ . C.,_tlklfl Ha- l! C) Wllff'lllf>Cll9'1 °' ,,.....,,.., ln<..-11'9 l!G W~ ~ Tllll ., .......... WM fllff wl"' ft. CllilltY C..._ .i Or ..... c:--, 9f\ J.,, ,., "', p--lt11llll•"" Of.,.. C->l Ollllr ,...._ , .... ,., u. ~111. ,. ... J • Orange Coast DAILY PILOTrruesday, February 161 1982 • ... ., .... Firµis announce ·promotions Dnld 8 . McKenale has been appointed director of ser vice and Rlcltard Donnelson service training m a nager of Fountain Vall ey-based Mitsubishi Motor Sales of America Inc. Oonnerson lives in Fountain Va lley. .. • Dan ft, Jakie has been named vice president of national sales, U.S. Sales and Service Division of California Computer Products Inc in Santa Ana. • PauJ L. Balalls has been elected chairman or the board and Michael G. Baum vice chairman of Newport Beach-based Newport Har bour Nationa l Bank. • • Nell Forman has been named manager of the Newport Beach office of North American Coin & Currency. He lives in Irvine. * Bob Sasaeen ha'S been named senior vice president. loun administration, at Heritage Bank, Or ange County's largest independent bank. • • Robert C. Bordwell has been appointed vice president and branch manager or the Newport Beach banking om ce of TokaJ Bank of California. • • I Wayne R. Weld has been elected chairm an or the board , president and chief executive officer and Robert A. Wells executive vice president and a director of Costa Mesa-based PrideMark Corp. The -company Is a national organization forme<j to fra nc hise independe nt in~urance agents a nd provide proprietary insur nce'products. • F rank Medeiros has been named assistant man ager or Capistrano National Bank's Irvine orrice:He lives in San Clemente. . COI\1l\1ERCEBANK FINANCIAL IDGfillGlflS %OF l98l1AI l.980 INCREASE AT DECEMBER Jl: ASSETS ,66,694 lXX> $37 .593.<XX> 771'~ ,Of.PO ITS S~H.272,000 $33.994.lOO 711·'c NET LOANS $42.722.(X(I $17 .376.000 146r'c SHAREHOLDERS' t:Qt II rvcu1 $ b.476.IMJO $ 3,(Xl7 .<XX> llS3 FOR THE YEAR! EARNINGS DEFORt: $ I ,074.000 s 631 .001 7<H INCOMF. TAXfS NET EARNINGS 5 'M.tXXJ .$ .H6.00J 60''r PER SHARt)' 1 71 $ .53 34':', (A) UNAUDITED' (8) lnclude<1 $2.932.<XMI r.11'-t.'d from thl' "'k ol 292.000 'ham of 1ht Bank\ common ~tock in Mid-1981. (C) Bru.cd un thl.' "cighu:d :.J\crage numbl.'r ol commo'n and common equ1 v.i- k·n1 ~hnn:' ou1111anding Juring 1981 (753J<41) and 19140 {636.495). retro- actiwly iH.lju~tcc.J for thl.' 5'"'i ~tock d1\ idl'nd in 19KI and 19KO and the 2 for I Mock ,plit of January 15. 191.<I . ' Barbara Dodson has been named manager of the Orange branch or Home Savings or America, 12Q ~Tustin Ave. ' • Jay W. Coleman has joined Huntington .. Collis II. Holladay J r. of Newport Beach has been elected 1982 president of the Associates or the California Institute of Technology. ,,,.,., ..... ~~eBan~ .. , .. ", You see • National Bank (in organizatiort) as executive vice president and chief operating officer. The bank ia scheduled for opening in early Ma rch in Its new building a t Bolsa Chica and Heil Avenue in Huntington Beach. Paul Niquette has been appoint ed vice president of engineering at the NAK ED MINI Division or lrvine·based Computer Autom ation Inc. C'OMMfR< I RA"" IHC1Hl"''\I Ol 1 ICl RI ColO,i\I Ol 11< I Rl 11 l>IM• 1.in ... """ i\\" "' 1i111 f"Mk(rfllu nrn.. a 190B 12111 1>111t· !'-1 1 ll.111111 & :-..1n1,, l\nJ I W) > C1"1.1 !'.fr--.; < "11]1>211 Ne"PNI lk."h (A Q21~1 BU<na 1':11~ CA 90621 10r.·1u111L 'rnmnM 11/MJl 11141 M~l.o;QjNI 17141 7\9·2711 • l~l'I ffll-llSSI * John P. Binaski has been appointed to Santa Ana -based Mafine National .Bank's "board or directors. He lives in Huntington Beach. * 'Richard A. Kertson has been named controller and Wendy Wilson m anager of investor relations of Orange-based Varco Oil Tools. IJiiiiiiiMifiMi8i1iRiirinil<iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil:.Ji~icli1Jcii~i~i11i"1i1iru.iuirtdii10ii$i100i.OOOiiiiiii~1 ~0~ClJ:"l silVer dollai: -------------,.------------.------------.-------=-----·-------------- -NOTICI TO CREDITOlll NOTICE OF MAltSt4Al'S SALi NOTICE TO COtlTltACTOltS OF IUL.f( TltANS,.Elt N•. 1116'2 CALLING ,.Olt llOS CS•U . 6101 .. 1'7 u .c .C.) PLAINTIFF El DORADO BANK. S<hOol Dlstrk t COAST COMMUNITY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEi.; to •Callfomla tOl'PG<allon. COLLEGE.DISTRICT creditors o r the within na med DEFENDANT JOHN RODEFFER, Bid Oeadllrw: It 00 A M of tM tllh tr an\leron tlWI a l>"lk transter 11 el al oay ol March, "12 allout to be -on petWMI proper1y By vlr1ue of an e0<U!kln IUutd on Place of ~Id Receipt. OFFICE OF i.erelnatt•«ln<roi.d J en .. ary I, "" by the Municipal H U : PURCHASING AGENT, MS TM name• -t>uslrwn addrtt• ot Court, Central Judlclat Dl•tr lct, MA R I AN PERR IN, COAST the 1nie.-1ransler0<s are County of Or .... State of Calltor..ia, COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT. TERRILL L BEASLEY and -• ·~·entered In , ....... of IJ70 ADAMS AVE . COSTA MESA, CA TERRY BEASLEY, 731 EU9tne Place, El DORADO BANK, a Catllornl• '162t Anahelm,C.\tMOQ <orpc>ra1klnnlud91'1*1t <re<llton•nd Prole<t Identification Nam•. The location In Calllorn1a of th• •oalnst JOHN RODEFFE'.R and ORAN'GE COAST CO LLEG E chief uecutl•e office or prlncl ... I ICATHY RODEFFER .. Judomenl BOOKSTORE FIKTURES AN O builneu olll<• 01 t he 1n1e ndeC1 debtor\, _,.,. • "" .,. .. ,M<1-~0Uui1i&un: amp •Q)\ 1t•n\fen>r1 ll SAME 11,CMJ.61 a<l...tly-on Wk! j"°9meftt Plat• PlaM a<e on Ille Ollite ol All other Dullneu l\amu and on the elate Oil '"-ltwan<.e or Hid Pttolcat Fac:11111 .. Pl...,,lnQ ITr•ll•r addrenes uuCI by the Intended e•e<ution, I rw .. 1 .. oed ._, all the Compted, Doo .. A or B. JI/NI Potter tr•n•ltrOll within thr" year• IHI rl91>t, lltle anCI lnterut of .. Id Director, Coast Community Colle9t IM\I so tar .S k-to IM lnlen-l~menl dttlCon In IM property In 01\tdct, tl70 Adami A••. Co\ta tranilerM>are NONE. t!I• County of Oranoe . St•t• ot Mew . CA'16lt T!le namH •nd bU1lnttl a<ldreu Of C•lllOl'nla,de\Crlt>eCla&foflow• NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ttwt the lnlendoeltranslerH• are. Lot 19 of Tract '350 ••per recor-t"8 abO-.na.....O S<'-1 01\l•l<t or MORTEZA E GHASEMI and In.Book 3'1 P-lS to 17, lnclu•l•e. of Ora,_ County, Cahlorn1a, a<ttno Dy MINOU N. GHASEMI, '7J1 t.UlwOOCI m luetleneci.n -· In lM office of and thrOUOll •h Go•ern1no Soard. Drive, AIWl'oe1m Hiii\, CA 971117 the County Re<Ol'dt< "' IM County of h • t • I n a 11 •' ' e I er 't d Io e' That tl'le pr-r1y ~r11nent hereto I• OranQe; APHo 4'.l-Jn.11 'DISTRICT,' ••II re<e•ve up to bUt docribe<I In 9frwra1 u All of the Morr commonly (nown •• J not tale< tlWln Ille above-•tattcl II""'· >lot k-ln·traoe. furniture, fl•turo, Rtmrock, City of Irvine, Covnty of •H ied bldslor Ille award of• contract equlpm..,t, QOOdwllf anet tr-n•-O<anoe, Stale ot CalllOl'fW• tor the•-pro1e<t ol a c.en.•ln dry CIH<"ftil 1>U1lneu anet NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tlWt Bid s •f\all be •e<•lved In the place 11 touted et. 1477S Jeffrey Ro..i, Unit on Tufldey, Merth 2nd. 1"1 et J:OO Identified •bove, -"'•II be Or>ene<I A, trvine,Catttoffla o'clock p.m. at County c;.,..nllovsor, a nCI Pubtl<lv reed a loud at th• The Duslrw" name u~ by the iald ~t J•-ee Boutevera, CFront of •bove·stateel time -piece. tran1feronatwlCllO<aUon i>; ARBOR Court-.•), City ol N-Port 8ffdl, There wlll De • U 0.00 depo•ll CLEANER~ C-ly of °""'Jt, State of CetitoNlla, 1 '""'Ire<! IOI' •«h wt of blCI do<"menll TIWt wlCI bUlk 1rM1ller ,, .,,,......, 10 wlll ull at pu111k a uc11on 10 u.11i.hfft to o u•r•ntu the return 1n oood I>• con1ummated at tl>e olllce of blcldtr, tOI' <asll In le'#fUI money o1 the c-ltlof\ ••t""' IO 0.Y• •11.er the lliCI BURROW ESCROW COMPANY, 1679 United SI~. •II the •loM. tltle •nCI ~':s';!~O d•t• CHECKS ONLY/NO E. Llncofn A .. , Oranot, Calltornla lnterut of w lcl IUOO<nent debton In Each Did m<lll conform and be 97 .. S on°' •Iler Marth S, 1"2. the above oetcrli.d pr-r1y, o• '° T!ll• bUlk lr•n•rer IS su1>1•<t to much thereof as may be neceswry to r .. ponsl¥ttoti..contre<tclo<u,,..nt•. California UnllOl'm Commerclel c -satisfy w iCI .. Kutlon, with ec<rved Ea<h !Md '11•11 be a<companle<I by Section"°' interest -cous the >e<urtty r ... rre<I to ln•IM contra<t The n;ome anet .,_.,,,of'"" person Dateel: .........,.Y 1. •-document$ -bY IN 11•1 of e>r_..d wltll ,._,, cta•m• may be llleel IJ H•rt>or Dlvlllon M1llcontre<tor1 BURROW ESCROW COMPANY, "" Don E RllH , The DISTRICT ,...,.~ IM rlollt to E Lincoln A .. • Or•~. CA n .. s. Mat'\NI, Oranoe County reje<t any°" all bid• or to waive any •nd t!le IHI dey IOI' 1111n9 cl•lm• lly Ger•ICI w N-lrre<Juler1tltt OI' lnformallhH on any any creelitOI' i!Wll be Marc!I 4. 1"1, 17001 la Pai Rd. Suite,... ~~r ~.~~11~1':,1 OC>l•ineo lrom whlc!I Is the ""'lrwn day belore the Minion Viejo, Ca. '17•" con•umnvtlon 1S4te WMt<llled above t1t41 9Sl-GJ1t the Director ol IM Dei>ar1ment ol Daleel FobnHlry I, 1"1 PubllsNd Or ... Coatl Dally Piiot, I nelultrl•I Reletlons the oen.ral MOr11tUt E Grww mi Feb •. 16, n, 1'12 UI~ prevalll119 rille Oil per diem •9*• lfl Ml-. N GIWMml IN locality In wN<I\ lhll WOl'k h to De Int-Tr..,\lerft\ -If' -perlOI'"*' tOI' eacll cratt OI' type Of Publi"*I Or-co .. t O.ily Pilot ~ ••M. workman neeeltd to eucute lhe FeD. i.. 1'11 1•1 .. 1 contr acl TMte ratfl are on Ille at the DISTRICT office loce teel at Coal! Community Colleoe Dl•trl<t. tl10 .\dam• "-· Coal• ,,,.. ... CA 97.,. Coote• may be otitelned on rt'Quell A <GOY ol 11\eM retH \IWll be 00\leel •I IM Job sit&. FICTITIOU5 aU5tNI S5 NAMCl STATClMClNT l'tCTITIOUS aUSINESS 1 he tottowlno per\Onl are C1oln9 bu•l,..n••· TUSTIN Pl..AZA APA RTMENTS, NAME STATEMENT Ill Hall Circl•, Tu•tln, C•lllornl• The tollow1no ,,..,..,n• ••• Clolnl! 976'0 l>U\I~• *' Tushn PMUI G-Y. <lo Roy E T HE J 0 H N B 0 Ht. s P •I• .. C-ny, COl'por•t• w-ORGANIZATION, t ... 1 Ma<ArthUr Bld9 14, S..lte $30, 1711 Wfll tloth , Bl•d ., Suite O S, lrvlrw. Calllornl• !>treet. Oye<I-Per1l, K•nw• .. 110. 9711S This bUtlntts I• conducted Dy • w es T e R N E l( E c u T I v E llmlted oennenl\lp. .!>E A RCH . INC . • Ce lttornl a RoyE.Oatyl.Co. ' (orpo<atlon, , ... , Mac:Ar1hUr Blvct . -., (lit<\ Daly Suite '1S, lrlflrw. California •171S PattnH · This bu•lne" h conclucleCI llY • Thi• sta-t wM llH!d with the '.'corporal-County Cler1lof Or_ C.,..ntyon J., WKtern E1ec:utlw 11, 1'83. Surcl'I, In' ,.._..., .. ,Welts Jol\n Bol\IS. A Law c:.r.w ...... PrKIClent .. N..._t c-Drtve Thll .-tatement was Ille<! with t!le Stlit. tJt ' County Clerk or Orenoe County on N•.._.rl a..dl, CA., ... Jenuary 12, 1"2 MALCOLM lo DALY A.-.,. .. u. .... _......._.,w4 FllUIH Pu1111.-0r•"9t Coa•t D•lly Piiot, Fetl.1, t , ''· 1912 S,.., ..... Offke ... 2110 New~ IMdl, c:.i-.... '*1 PllUC 9ITCE • 1'1116211,.....----------- PubttSlled Oranot Coast Dally Piiot, Jen. 26, FeD. 2, •. 1•. 1"1 423-«7 l'ICTITIOU5 aU51NESS ... NAME S'fATClMENT The follow I no pe r\on I• C1oln9 bUSlntUM' The ~ \Cl'leelule of per diem --· ll "*-"upon • ....., .. ,"9 ""' Of elof\t Cll '-" The rate for 1>o11oay ~l':e ~·;:,n.:;:,,.";:"k. "'111 •be at loll It •h•it be mandatorv upon the CONTRACTOR to whOm tloe contrkt 1' •••rd e d , anci upon any 1utlcontrec:tOI' under him, to INY not .... then -WICI \C)etlflecl r•IH to •II workme.\ emoioveo l>y !Mm In the u e<vtion Oil,,.. <onlract No bl-rn.\y wit!lc:lrew his Diel for a ~rlOd Oil ll•ty I.CH O.y• •lier the date w t IOI' t!le -nine of bldl A peyment bond anet • performance Dond wlfl De req11lreC1 prk>r to taecutlon or the con tract The payment Dond \IWll be on the form w t lor1h In the contract oocu..-t\.. ~1'98oard By N«man E Wal'°" Secretary, Board of T ruMM • Publilhed Orano-Coast Delly Piiot, FtD 9, 16, 1'1111 wo-t1 CERTIFIED SERVICES, t7IS?"------------ ,.ICTITIOUJaUSINES5 Senta lwbel, Fountain Valley, Ce NAME STATEMENT "1°'oe1e Palmer Witt, t11S1 S.nti' T,,• 1011owln9 person I• dolno lsabotl, F-taln V•ltef, Ca. 97708 • "''1":0 =~A T E A R TH MD v I NG Tiii$ l>u•lrws• ,, Con<lu<lllCI bY •n I SPECIALTIES. 24lO Ltttteton Place, lndMdual. •oita MeM, CA '2626 Date Witt -PETEfi GRENFELL deBRUYN Thi• sut-t ... fifed with tlw IUO Lltue'°" Pla<.e, Costa Mew, CA ·County Cterll of <>rt~ C°""'' 04' 126,.. January 1', 1-~ F laten Tiii• Duslne .. I• t on<lucted Dy an Publl~-c t Dall Piiot ndlvldual , ~.,,... oas Y ~er G deBruvn F•ll 2, 9, t•. 2>, 1"1 4"4-lt Thll statement ••• meo with the County Cieri! of OrenQe C°"nty on J.,, n. 1te1. ------------1'111MJ ,.ICTITIOUS aUSINISS Publl•hed Or ... Coast Dally Pllol, N.\Ma STATIMINT Ffl>, 1, t , 16, U , tm S>IM2 Tiie lollowlno perton• are CIOlno l>U•lnH•as DANCEWEAR ETC , lta1 Slure Perla, 1,.,1,., Ca. t17 IS ,.ICTITIOU' •USINaJS Joy LM Owen•. ,,,., Sterr• ~rla, Nit.Ma St ATIMCNT Irvine, Ca. 9711S T h• fottowlllO pe ,.on I• dolflO J •n P a trice Owe n 1 . II bUSIMH es· Golde__,., Irvine, Q '1114 THE COsMIC GARDIN, tn Urd Tllll butlneH 11 conducted by • .irff\,.....,..,, llM<I\. CA t1"3 91nerat ~P DOltEEN ANN GUNTHER, t1050 JoyO-.. Ocr#My A-• IOl, hllf-CA J_, Owerll to70'. • • • This "--WM llltd wllll t!le Thia ~· 11 conducteel by *" C""'"''I' Clerk of Or•noe c.,.....,., on lmll•lduet. Fet>ruarvl. t"2. ' • 0orwnG11<1"'*' . ,.tlMft Tiiis • ..,,..,. -ftlH wltll Ille Pubtl"*I OfWlt' Cot1• Dally Pl~ C-lllY Cle"' ol Or ..... C°"""Y on J _, !ti':.."· U, ~h 1, t, 1"1 P*"'1 ,.tCTITtOUS au5tNESS NAME S'fATIMINT Th e foltowln9 person h dol119 l>U•IM U ••: BOAT WORKS, 30I :Mth SlrHI, NewPO~ Bffch. Calllo•nla '2"'3 Ore9 Nu ry, JOI 14th Strut, Newpor1 8-dl, c.lllomfa t?"'3 Thi• to.dinfts h condllc:tecl Dy an lndivld ... I Gree Neary Tiiis Jtm ,.,...t wM llted wit" the C°"'nty Clerk of Oran0t C°"'nty on Jen ... ry 22, 1"2 .. 111ut Pubhshtcl Or.onvt Coa1t Oelly Piiot, Jen 2•. Feb. 1, t , t•, tta J~2 SUP'a1tt0• COUltT 0,. TMI STATI Ol'CALll'OtlNIA l'Olt THI COUNTY 01' OltANOa tn the Wtter of Ille 4J)ollcatlon or SON VAN TRAN Ho. A-11'00j OltOE R TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGEOF N'AME Whe.-as, t1)e Ptllllon Of Soll VM TRAN !las •n IHtd w1tll 1 ... Clerk of tllls court for en ord•r c1t•"Oln9 petltloMr't name from SON VAN TltAN toJ~ VAINO CHANEL. "· 1"2. IT IS HliltEaY 011011tli0 IPwlt ell per1on1 111t•rnted In H id melter .....r ....... "'" <*"'1 •• 10:30 ...... ,., ... , ~ l9J1C( J.tM2 In o.wi.-.t I to •'-,.., .. '"'*lllNd Or..,.. CMst Delly Ptlol, I------------why thll ,..lkatlon to< che119t of l'n . f ,"9, 11, n , ,., ,.,., name._...,..-. or-. l'ICTITIOU. •UllNIU IT IS FUltTHtlt OltOI RED -e l'ICnTIOUI aUSINlll llAMlllTAT•M•lfT Tiit loll•Wlftl l*UOll ll 41ot"' w.i-.. : DINGHY YAllO, 1" .>MM Str"t, C..t•MDM.C.."'17 I Fumlo Noeoll•ml, 712 JH 1111 w .. 1. C•'° -.... c.. ..,, 1 'flllt llWIM6• It (9flldu(tlMI 111¥ °" lndlY~ F .... ............ Tll .......... -lllM wlOI .. C_.y Ci.rti of Of.,._ ~y "' F..,..,,, t, .... ,..,, ,,_,.,.. °' ..... C.st OllllV ,..... M .t ,t,16.n..nm »NI NAMalTA'f•MaNT c.opy Of this_, to .._ U lde 11e The foll-lnQ Pf(lOl'll ••• dotn9 pultlh hed one• • wHll for four ""'1""' •t: wccou lw _11, orlor .to ,.,. •v of PltOP l ltTtt!S W l!ST HOME ... 141 l•Hr'lnQ t11 TIMI Delly Piiot, • 1.0AN, HI lfth Street, Newport ntw•t•llt' of .. ,,.,.1 ctrculatlOfl Bffcll, CM....,,.. t1M) ~lnff4 Ill tt1t ~of Or...... I PROP'lilfTllS WliS1', INC,. t Date: J~"· t"1 C•lllOrnla t.._etleft, M 2"11 '""'· ROHALO H P'lllNNElt Ntw~ llMcll, C.c'-"la ~ J·-ot Tlllt MIMtt It t0flduct*41 b'I' e . -Ille <O<'POO'etlell, LAW~-C-1 ........_,.. ... W..., Ill<. • ...... OIMI Jr, =:;,. Sl!llltl, A ......... Ww Ttt1• ........... -f'*I wltll tM C..,fllt'I' Ctefk ftf 0r0fttlt CW!lty e11 • .._..,._..._. J DI ......... ~ _,., ' .a. f"41 MWll' . '"" .. Pvlll..,_ Or .. o..te Oally P'llet, PvlllltNll Or-:: CMtl Dally Piiot JOfll1 It, flft. t , t, 16, t• ,...., Ill ... 2, '· 1~ tt, I UM: for their eyes for their teeth for their body The healthcare plalifor . .. .employees that actually ~rovides for their care. right down to their toes FHP isn't just an insurance company. It's a Health Maintenance Organization.with seven medical centers in the Los Angeles and Orange County area alone. Family Health Program provides the dentists. The doctors, including medical specialists. Emergency care. Hospitalization. Eye care. Preventa- tive care, including regular checkups. Even family counseling. W e don't just cover your employees' medical expenses. We also p ro- tect your employees' health by providing care to help keep them from getting sick in the first place. Head to toe. A FEOERALL v QUALlftEO HMO For more information on the-group health care pro- gram that gives you more than just insurance fQt your money, call (213) 429~2473, Ext. 513 or (714) 898,.3516, Ext. 513. C ttl2 ,HP i We see a --·--·-.. -.. ·-·--. 1400% return. • In May 1976. yuu cc 1ulJ have purcha~J chi., MS-65 Morgan from Hannl'., Tulving Rare Com Invest· men ts for a mock-st$ hl. Today. 51..i years later. we'll buy It back for S45 A tidy 1400°'0 return Granted. that kind of rare coi n apprectarion I.\ excq:monal, but thcrl'0 !'> a · ~iod deal of monev H1 be made in the mnrket a.; a whole. In fact . since opening our doors in 1976. not one of our clients' rare coin inve~cment portfol1<h ha:> t•,·er made less ch:m 1(\",. per year Noc une Quite an ach1ewnwnt. Wl' think you II a~n:e. while bullion, .. mcb C\'t:n real cs1a1c -remam exrrcrncly sof1. Not even money marker funJs or T-Bills offer that kinJ of annual return Thl' :-ecret. of coun.c. 1!-finding the right ccuns. And Hanne' Tulving is one of oruy 18 rcw1~nized silver dollar cxperc. in the w untry Our company off en. the :,erious invc:-tor a pro- fc~,ionally managed . pcr..c.inal rare crnn inve l- ment portfolio. complete with a 60-day moncyback p<.iltcy and.grade guarantee on each coin, Give us a call today. Or return the coupon below for a free information packet. And do it soon After all. at 14(J(l'~. ewer 51 z years. imagine what you're losin~ each J.1 y you delay ~ ·~ 44l'X' MacArthur Blvd um.• 320 Ncwpon Beach. CA 92660 1714) 851-8202 FREE INFORMATION PACKET ----4'----l MJI\"' I ~11.,------- I St~•t· I I I I .,,.,_ ri-w , I L - - --- -D_!~G _J ., •l I ,' .~ DRAllll CD~ .. 11EAE - ARE . . ~ Read all t~day's news-. every day ~ocat ,_county, state, national and ' international events come to ~our door?tep in the bright, light and lively Daily Pi lot. ®Keep an eye .on 81oeal government No other new spaper brings. you more news of your city counci I, planning commission, \ . sc hool and college districts and county government. ... ~ Laugh, ery or get· ~smart Advice from Ann Landers, humor from Erma Bombeck, interesting femures on people, opinions, ~ ......... informative columns and I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT fT uosday, Fobruary 16, 1982 • YDUUDliIDWll DAILY PAPll ~ To ~ee' up ~ith • ·all that's happening I • • • in your eommumty · . yoit: need the Daily Pilot •··every day I /i1lfollow your team "17/ The sports action at 15 Orange Coast tiigh schools, three community colleges, UC Irvine and Cal State ca·mpuses is regularly reported by the Daily Pilot sports staff. Keep up with nation- a lly ranked college and pro teams, too! ---- B Save money and . c!J shopping time Real values on items from apple- sauce to zippers are advertised ev ery day in the Dany Pilot . Because the ads are from firms in this. area, you save ti me, et-. fort and money. • • ~Enjoy y our Sunday ~Family Weekly, color comics, ) finance, the latest news and features about your commur.!ty, your mone y and you highlight the interes ting re~d i ng ~ ,Awo pa,Ckaged in your 1 c.,?f" -VS · .. Sunday Daily Pilot. Enough t o r ead - and enjoy . CijJ Tu11e i11 to the {/ latt.•st TV logs T he I ates t , most a cc u rate television guide is published each weekday in the Daily P.ilot. On Fridays, Pilot TV Log charts the tube in convenient, easy-to-find grids. comics brighten .-, I . I your world. ~ ~ . Get into the Daily Pilot D -· ·1 p·1 ~ -for only '4.00 per month. II J I DI -----------~~-~-~~~~~~-~-~~~~~-~~-~~----------, 642-4321 1 delivered Daily Pilot eve rt day. ~1 ·mm I •• : I 'd like to enjoy the comfo~t s of a home ..... 111111 ~u 1>o~1•1.1 I "'IO~I D I ~---...---' Enclosed is $4.00 for one month. · ... '"' •------~ .... I ~;HO,, .. ,,, I BUSINESS REPLY LABEL I . I """ .............. "•O\l••IU ...... ._.. I I Name ................................ 'J................ ..,. . ., .. '" ~, . ., • • ... .•. I I . . I I Address ...... : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Orange Coast Daily Pilot I : City .............................. P'hone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~::.~':esa , CA. 92626 : · I . I • I I I I Signature ............... : .................... ' ....... ·..• Cl RCULATION DE PT. I I I ) I ,,.,0111<•uM1Dlstrict ........•••••...... Rate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ I ·--------------~-----------------------------------~-------~ Complete the coupon ••• glue or taPe the prepaid label on an envelope for malllng, or call f>.42~321,. Ask' for Clreiulatlon. . -~ ------ !: I I I j I .. • .. Orengo Coast DAIL Y PILOT/TUH day, February 18, 1982 ~:::::::::::::::::::-----------~~~::-::~~--------------------------------------------------------..;..-----· QOltll• 01 01911 tlOfmy m91· ... - II I "I> \ 't -EVENM___.;. tcOO I =...-::NGE.a .•. ,.. (OIMOW! • •~ ~0..111 81\lj) (INOI 0.0. Ot Ket!MO~. llUC"-t d Ctenne Antt ,,,., lli11ury linllr •Jll)lodM on lbe high -a QIOUp OI MltlrlVtwe .,. "rMCved" t>v • •••oo. blacli emc>IY "9tMI Ht fl) a.tOVtl • • • 'Clllld 't Pl•y 11tn1 J•MM Ma.on. Rob· llfl P1114ton A dltllk.0 m-et II e CethOllC t>oy' a tellOOI IHICom .. IM lllCllm 01 an Wll-OtlynlOUI tnel;illlC· le>t PG 10:00 0 Qt! FLAMINOO AOAO S,.,., Ill $empt¥ •11nOUllGe$ hie 1ua~ In lh• Clarton bombing a1 lane and Sem'e wedding 8 0 Q) II) e NEWS 0 ®) HART TO HART -! THI WHCTrtHADOW THIJURMONS HAWAM f'IVf,.() •PMllAEPOAT !~!ANOINO '.°':~n~ And THE . WALL Eli Wal lath po rt ra\'-, a prosµt•rous JL"w1sh n H'rdw nt "ho" ill g11 to un~ l~n~ths to l'St·apl' llw W:1 r~'"' c;h<'tto in "Tlw \V;d l. .. all'l11g al H 1u11 1ght n11 KNXT 121 St•t• :-tor' hdm\ 1 he Hat11 bua1n1111 asao-GI••• dlloppeara du11ng a wOtklOQ tnp to an uohc Euroi;>41an chaleau () f!lj) C,AAMEH MCAAE IN CONCERT' AT TFIE PAI.ACE il= • * ''°' "ShOot TM Sun Down" ( 1980) Cllrlatoe>hllf Walken, M91go1 Kidder In 1836. lour dlSDat•te m••· llta UH an old map to -Cb f()( burled gold 'PG' CID OOOf'lNO AAOUHO WI'™ OONALO OUCK Prolenor Ludwig Von Otake u-nis nephew Donald as Iha S<Jbtect on another of his nulty lnves· tlgatlona Into human ~avlor. (JJMOVIE * * •,o; "Blew-Up" ( 19661 David Hamming•. Vaneaaa Redgrave. When a young Londoo pho1ograpf'ler has acme ol hla picture• blown -; up. he dlacov&t1 wnat llPP88fl lo be a murder (%)MOVIE • •.,.. "Second Hand Hearta" ( 19801 Robetl '• Blalce, Barbara Hams A Texas c:at·wUll auanaant ~· wall• up one m0tnlng 10 ~· find lhal he la married 10 a •• nlghlciub waltru.s with thr .. kid• 'PG' 1*3. WUCOME BACK. KOTTV' 9 l<CET NEWSBE.AT· CAL.IF~ CONGAEdioHAL AEPOAT -/._ Gil 9U81NU.9 REPORT ~ (l)(BNEWS . Q 8AAHEY MILLER @MOVIE • ~ ._. 'h "Heidi" jt979) A ( ,young girl 11 brought lrom ~ j her grandlat,,.,'a Alpine ,./... ~to nve In the city 7~9 CUNEWS '. 8 fl.:HEWS 1 8 HAPPY OAY8 AGAIN ·O A8CH£WS CfJ YOU ASKED FOR IT • Q) .M•A•S•H B.J. t>orrows S200 lrom • Charlea 10 tend to nit wife. • only to ha\19 Charlea take edvant.ge of him In varl· • ou1 ways. I JOtcEA'8 WILO OY£REASY "Patenll And Cnoldren Guest: Joel Grey (RIO e oea< CAVETT Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH ®) EHTERTAIHMEHT *TONIGHT • An lnt«View wtth Richard ... Oreyfuu (8 THE MOPPETS Gues1 Ruth Buuo TIME WAS: THE 19308 Olok Cavett 11•pl0tas the deceda of the Great Oepraulon. which aleo gave blrlh 10 radio. teweh •: Holtywood musicals and • the Jitterbug ©)THE WAY ITWAS "1964 Slenl ey Cup ' Toronto Maple Lea.a vs • Oetr<>lt A.O Wino• 1~ 8 2 OH THE TOWN ) Featured· a leger>dary -0: uketele playet and Amerl. ca'• highest paid dlac joc· key, learn the colorlul hll· tory of the lal end the leg· CHANNEL LISTINGS " 0 KNXT ((BSt ti) KNBC tN0C I 0 0 KTlA 'Ind) .. ID KABC I ABCI c Q KFMR ICR'>I • 0 KHJ TV tlnd ) 11 Qi) K(..S T I AEICI [ ID KTTV trnd I s ID KCOP TV 1 Ind I 0 f1} KCET (PBSI ~ m KOCE tPBSJ end• o f Maul'• Nepal eo..1: • 111a11 to a non- tOUtlll luau, a lleteophOn· le llelicopl&t ride I (8 FAMILY f'EUO LA~ & SHIRLEY &COMPANY Lanny and Squiggy are eetecl.O as cont88tant• on "TM Dating Game " D EYEOHLA. Faatu•ed a trip to the s.v. anlh Vatl nogntclub, e report on IM lawn's n-- •tt nightclubs that apeclal· ua In rock mu1lc; behind· tne-eoenet at "Dynasty " 1J CELEBRITY 8UU8EYE Q) M•A•&•H Tht peraonnel ol tne 4077th try to make e good lmpreaalon on • psychla· ttlSl when threatened with rUU>gnment Cl) TICTACOOUGH 8i) MAC-.eL / LEHRER REPORT GI HEWS Cl) P.M . MAGAZINE ®J YOU ASKED FOR IT (t)MOVIE ~ *'It "O.ary Of A T_,·Age Hltchhlk81" ( 19 79) Otel< Van Pallan, Charlene Ttl- ton A young ~lrl's ltfa os endangered when she accec>ll a rtcle from a atranger (.aJ H8A IASl<ET8AL.I. LOI Angeles Lalten vs S..llle SuperSonlca 7:'6 AN HOUA FOA LUNCH 8:00 I) Cl) THE WALL TM final eH0111 ot the J-••h people or the Wa•· saw Gnet10 to defend tnemaelvu againtl the. Nazt1 sent lo e•larm1na1e lhem are..chronlcied; Tom Conti, Ltaa Eichhorn and Ell Wl~ach llar 0 Q! FATMEFI MURPHY Howard F\Odman enrolls his unruly son at tne 0tpnanao• to spy on Mur- phy 0 IJ MOVIE • * e "Bobble Jo And The Outlaw" J1!H 61 Mer)oe Oor1ner, ~vnda Clll'l8< O ®J HAPPYOAY8 Rogar ask• Fon2le how to Change his Image with woman 0 0 MOVIE • • '"' "Wat8<meton Men" ( 1970) Godfrey Cam- bridge. E11elle Parsons A bigoted wnue men I• shock.O wt>an ,.,. wak• up one motnlng and dls- cO¥ars that 118 hU tur"9<1 bhtc:k 0) f'.M.MAGAZJHE Fr .. zlng the dead 10< l uture resurrection. a woman whose home furn- ishings and wardrobe were bought aecond-hand. Cnel -'Tell mak811 a ltnzar tor1e. Paula Nelson on now mar- ried women can establish credit Cl) PEARL The st0t1es ol three cou- ples residing In Hawaii In • 19• 1 are followed jusl prl· or to and dur1ng the attack on Pearl Har~•; Angie On TV l TV HBO (.1n• n1t1• tWOR ~y N "f !WT il'> 1fSPN tShQwtom•·J Soo11o11n1 1(,.nh·N1•w\ Nt twnrk1 Olcillnson, Robert Wagner, O.On11 Weev81 end Lasley Ann W•rren llar (Pan 1) f:D LIFE OH EARTH "lnvUlon Of TIMI Land" David All8'1bOtOUQh look• at ,,.,. lil'lC98IOU; Of emphl· blana, and 1hf! ctplure ol t coeracentll •• a lllh tnougnt to be extinct un111 1938 •• la rac0tded oo htm tor Iha llrll time o "1l) NOVA "The Video E•PIOSIOn The pasl, p1os41nt and luluro of Am811Can title••· sion are e.plored O QI) UP TO HOW Tne latest events. 1daas and newsmakers are para· died In • senes of comic sketches tS)MOVIE • • • ·Popeye · ( t980) Robin Wllll•m1, Shelley Duvall Wn11e searching for his lather, lhe aplnacn-eat· Ing eallor v1alte e quaint namlet where he plcks up a roundling and a alunny •-lhean 'PG' 0 SHERRY LEWIS! MAGIC fZ.)MOVIE • • • • 'The Late Show (1977) Art Carn&\' Lily Tomltn A Ma~ prl vate eye encountets black mall and murder wllen lie comes out of 1e11ran-11 10 locate • cat !*ong1ng lo an OHl>Mt tamale Client •:ao D @) LAVERHE & \ SHIAL.EV Carmine end tne girls relurn to MllwaukM for their 10-yaar nion ~OOI reunlOn O Q) AU.IHTHEFAMILY Gl0tle'1 2•·hour·•·dey job u a n-moth&t dooan'I leave much time tor '3flke • a:00 o a aRET MAvEAtCK MevetlCk la atalked by a COld·blOO<led killer .;,thO holds Brei rasponalble le>t the downfall ol his lelri.t D ltJ) THREE'S COMPAKV Jaclt wr•tlea witto hi• con- acierlC. wt.... 1'19 bait • .,,. • fellow Cl'9f 0 I=::'* Pl.AYHOUIE "S-Of Humor Come AIOng With Me" Estelle Pwsona pcw1re)'9 a r-11 widow determined 10 become lnvot\led In IM tupematurel O GI LR ON EARTH "Invasion Of The Land ' David Allenborough IOolll •• 11'19 anca.tor1 01 ampN- b•ant. and the cap1ure of a coelacanth •• • 1t1n thought to be extinct unlll 1938 -Is rec0tded on him le>t the fl•sl time o O{)MOVle • • • '• "Alice. Swee I Allee" 119871 Lind A Moller. Paula Sneppard Members ol an ltAllan-Amt1t1can lamoly are v1ct1mlzed by a psychottc murderer in thetr midst 'R' 0 MOVI£ * • • "The Competttton" ( 1980) R1enard 0.eyfuss. "' Amy Irving Two planlats at a Sen Frll/X4SCO music competttoon find lhat '"""' IOve lor lMM:h othf!t con· rtlc1s with tne;r prores11on- al ambotoons 'PG 9-.3CJ fJ ®) TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT Henry spends a 5*• wHI< end w.th Jackte end Sara ~MOVIE •'I' 'A N>gnt Full Ot Rein (1978) G1encar10 G1ann1n1 Candice S..Qlln Directed by Lina Wertmullftf A mac110 iournahst and a liberated photogr&pher reflect on the h>gll and low Accompanied by Clark I erry and h•• Big Bad Band Cermen McRae otters 13 01 ,.,., blQOMt hltl 1n a memorable hour oljau (R) $'MOVIE e e ·~ 'Cathllt1ne & Co ( t9731 Jane B1•k1n, Pa111e1< Dew-• A young O"' Ira- vela 10 P1111 to l>ocome a htgn fashion mOdOll but Mr pt8111 fall 1nrougn and ane c>pf!nl a 111gnty lucr9t1ve proa1yu11on buaoness 'R 1(>:30 II) IHOE.PEHOENT NETWORK NEWS "1l) AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE "Sense 01 Humor Come Along Wl1h Me" Estelle Par1011a portrays a recent widow determined 10 become involved 1n tne supernoturol O 11:00 I) 0 0 (()®)11• HEWS ' 0 SATURDAY NIGHT Holl Julian Bond Guast Tom We11t 0 l(OJAk Q) THE JEFF£RSONS llOnet and Jenny nave • baby g111 (Part 21 Cl) SAHFOAO AHO 80N fJi DICK CAVETT H MOVIE • • • Tne ld<>lmaket (1980) Ray Snark&y T ovan ~aldlhun A man1pylat1•e manager utes vartous ploys to catapvlt two 1een- ~· onto pop s1ng1ng stardom 'PG 0 MOVIE • "Hot legs ( 19801 Bar- bara 61115 Jessie St James An ambtt1ous adver1111ng axecu11v'e stops at no1n1ng to land 1 lucratlva ladies' hOSHlfY accoun1 11: 15 ll •MOVIE • • '/\ "Portnoy·s Com- plaint" ( 19121 Richard Benjamtn. Karen Black BaMd on tne novel by Phlllp Roth A young J-- ISh boy racoun11 hi• ollen hll1rlou1 and amorou1 edVWlturee 10 h11 psycn1a- 1r1a1 11:30 8 Cl) AUCE An Old Indian ~ lh&t a l>Oolll In Mal's d"-ens on top of a aacred Indian burt- al ground (R) D (BTONIGKT Holl Johnny Carson Guests Tony Randall the Smothers 8'othet1 D (!I A8C HEWS NIGHTUHE Q) AU IN THE FA.MIL Y All.et teern1ng that Mlkf' has -men a lettet of ctrt•· Cllm to Prastdent N1•on Arellle countera w.tn a let· 18' of praise Cl) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE fill KCET HEWSBEAT· CALIFORNIA CONGRESSIONAL REPORT '1!) CAP'TIONEO ABC NEWS C MOVIE Gamo~ Guls Play $ MOVIE • • '• ~otso {19801 Dom DeLu•se Arino Bancroll A portly compulsive ester hnds tha1 no1n1ng can d&mpen n1s dMlre for IOO<I unltl he falls on IO•e PG' OMOVIE • • • •' Sc art ace ( t 932) Paul Munt Geor99 Ratt A small·ltme hoodlum •1$11$ to lhe top or 1ne heap dur- •nq Pron1b•1ton -MIDNtGHT- 12:00 0 SHA HA HA Gueet Gary Bonds 0 ®) FANTASY ISLAND' A middle-aged man wants to ~ome o sw1ng1ng 'Wall' proves dismal • lllOVIe 8 7 FRED ROTH ENBERG A~ Televlal .. Wrltff NEW YORK "The Wall " on CBS tonight 18 p.m . on l<NXT. Channel 21 ts a movie in sea rch or a documentary The story of a band of Jewish resistors fighting lhe Nazis m the Warsaw Ghetto in the 1940s is unfailingly authentic tn its look but diJ mally lacking IO the dra matic aspects Of story line and character relationships. F ilmed in Poland in 1980, the sets of "The Wall" are so starkly real that viewers will almost ex.perience the claustrophobia of being locked in The mass herding scenes, depicting Jews befng rounded up and transported by cattle cars for .. resettlement,.. are movmg and painful. In fact. montages of Jews being mowed down by machine guns are inters persed too often, perhaps to tompensate for the individual dramatic stories having so litUe impact. The battle scenes on cobbled streets and in I tattered tenements a re equally genuine and 'in~lude World War It tanks, courtesy o( the Polish government. But. this reality of texture Is ~ot e119ugh to capture the full Oavor of John Hersey's nO\'el about the 1943 uprising because the soul of the rebellion -it.S people doesn't .arouse m uch passion or emotional involvement. Part of the problem is the movie's obtuse a pproach to the c haracters. throwing the m together without enough identificat ion lo help vitwers sort things out. T tle common core Is that the major characters Uve in the same building. Tom Conti, Tony Award wblner for his role In "Whose Life Is It Anyway? .. Mers as Dolek Berson, a profiteer who sells black market goods to hrs fellow Jews, while denying the growing devastation around him. Berson is Inte nt only on s urvival.' then ·o develops u !-.ot w1 conscience when he escapes from the ghetto to SC(' firsthand that Jt•ws ·supposedly b('in g rt•s<'lllt•d art• going dircttly to mass 1ncin('rat1on <·ump~ "The: Wall' ldt·ks a con~ohdat 1ng context. makrng tht• "hole• much weaker than the su m of its parts \'l•I tl docs havt• some enduring moments Jn nne un d 1·rst11l td ~cene. Ht'rson come~ to ·the r ealization that J t•ws are lc;;ivin g t o be slaughten·d. not n•st•ttlcd Another powerfu l scene tllu!-.lrates hllw the lust fo r s urvival can dehumanize mere mo rtals. Stefan, the J ewish policeman who needs scalps to save himself from the Nazis, asks h11> father to dte instead of him. When he refuse1>. St<•fan then takes Sym ka away against her will Unfort unately. there aren't enough of these qua lity scenes. so th<.' story of survival becomes a mere historical footnote. when 1t should have been a compelling human dram:i Actors,· produce rs wi111v age boosts NEW YORK <AP> Negotiators for actors a nd prod ucer s In the $2.3 billion radio and television com mercial industry reached tent~1Uvc agreement Monday on a contract that would Increase wages lS percent for television s pots and up lo 25 percent for radi9 Dick Moore. represenUn11 both side~ In mokin1 t he announcement,-said the pactwas 1 eacbed atter 28 hours of bargaining that extended beyond the F e b. 6 contract du dlihe. The contract was -· .. TUBE TOPPERS K!'J XT 11 ~ 00 "Thl' Wall l'h1·unu·.k '1 I I h l' r I n ;ti I' 11 n t " 0 I I Ill' J l' \\ I., h 1 t·:·.idt·11h ol 1 hl• War!-ta\\ c;hl'llO lo dt·h·111I l ht•msc•lvc•:-11~11msl lhl' \'u11 .... St•t• 11hol11 a l lt•l 1 K ( '() P «!' 8 IKI "P t .. 11 I S IOl'll':O. ol ll1tt'l' c·uuph•s 11\tllJ.: Ill ll;m a11 tn 1!11 1 'la 1 ~ t\111.!tt• l>it-ktns1111 and Ho lwrt W ;q.,:11<•i: f,:'\fH' e !I IHI ISrt'I ~l it\'l'l'l<'I-. l't ..,l a lkl'tl b~ ,1 kd l1•1· '.\l ;J\ l'I H'k <'OI d hlood t•d J..A IH 'f} IOOH ll111·t 111 l l~11·t 'l'lu· ll ar1 .... · hllSllll''iS :ISSO('l !d t• d 1..;,1pp1•;11· .... dunng a t n p lo l•:11 rop1· bacl\etor and a baaulllut 0111 IOOlte 1n10 th• future and -l\er own murdat (R) 0 MOVIE • • • Battle Benea1n The Eertn I 1968) Kerwin Math-•. V1v1an• Ventu,. The Cn!nese prepare to ettack AmetlC& by 1unnal· 1ng tnrovgn Earth and piac1ng nuclear -•s: 1 un<l&t tnajOI' U S Cllle Q) MIKE DOUGLAS Conost Mel T•lll• Gueall The Pleymatet. Qtetto. Ugly Mug winner• Cl) tOVE, AMERICAN STYLE "Love And Take M11 Along" Rav Ptckert lrl" to do • good deed. but •t bac1tl1ros "Love And The Bog Date" Biii •nd Hank vie for a dale w11h the Hme ~I on " game ahow t]!) FOCUS ON SOCIETY 12:06 1) CJ) Wl<RP IN CINCINNATI JOIJnny end Venu1 ••ibmll to an on-tne-a1r a1cono1 drinking H petlmant (R) 12:30 0 Cl! LAT£ NIGHT WITH OAV10 LETTERMAN GuMta autno• Tom Wolle vaudev1ll11 vetaren Cnu Cnue 0 MOVIE • • '> Rb1MM1nna McCoy· ( t9•91 Fuley G1ariger Joan E ••n• Tne to11a between two Ff\tlmbarl of reudong 1am111aa eventually reeults 1n • truce Cl) INOE.PEHOEHT HETWOfU< NEWS 12:40 I) MCCLOUD McCIOUd su1pec11 thal • ratormeo gangste• wno 11 runmng IO• public olllCf! Is 1nvol11o<I In the murder of a multC COndUCIOr (A) 1:000) MOVIE * • "The Man 1na1de" ( t97jl) James F1anelir.cut. Stpra"'e Powert A -Royal Clinadoan Mountll<I Police undercover agent 1nfll- lrates • maior c11m11 synd•· c•te •n Toronto Cl) MOVIE • * •·Jaws Ot Death" ( 19751 RIChatd Jaec~el . Jen1ter Bllhop An ecolo· gy-m1nded to~man tries 10 PrOlec1 grH t Wlllle aherkt from hunter• (t)MOVIE * * • ' Wnteh Way le Up? ( 19771 Rtefl8td Pryor lor>ette McKee A M • 11arve<l fruit p•clt.er 11 caught 1n a comK crostllre be~ his unlOn end the Mob and a hyPQCrttlCaJ pteacher finds nea•en 1n • lad•es cn0tr R H ST AHOINO ROOM OHLY An Evening Al The Mouhn Rouoe GN>•ge Ham11too nosr s an e•c~11ng evening lrom tne Moultn Rouge 1n P1111s leatunng lavllh cos- lu"'M pro11ocai1ve d•nc· ers and topnotch 1nt·B· 1tona1 vanety acts QMOVIE • •" Tne Outsider I t978) Slerltng H"yden. t.ra10 Wa&son A young 1deat1u travels to Nortn111n Ireland to join the struggle for 1nes.pen<1ance R' 11.>MOVIE * * • "Sw .. t Wotuam ' ( 19801 Sam Walerston. ~ny AQulter *"., ri.r u,..1n boyfriend IMVM her '°' an education In Iha U S an ~girl begin• • rocky romance wHh a raklah Scotaman 1:10 0 MOVIE • • \.\ "Pajama Par1r" ( t96,.) Tommy Kirk Annen• F~IO lftl HEWS 1:15($)MOVIE • • • • "Altered States" ( 1980) Wiiiiam Hurt, Blair Brown A Hatvard ~n­ tlal'a gen&llC 1tructura la altered wnen he conducls mlnd· .. pandlp g ••p&tl· men11 w1111 1so1111on tank• end powerful na1tuctnO· Q.__8'15 'A' 1:30 U IEHTERTAINMSNT TONIGHT An lntarvl-with Richard Oray1u11 OIHEWs 2:00 0 HEWS , (JO MOVIE *••'It "Allee Sweet Alica ( 19871 Linda Milllll' Paula Sl'leppard Members of en ltallen-Amencan family are VIC'lln'ltled by 8 P•yct\OtlC murderer 1n the<r m1dll 'R 2:251) NEWS 0 MOVIE • • • I Wanl You 11952) Dana Andrews Dorothy McGu11e 2:36 ( Z MASSAGE: THE TOUC.. OF LOVE The atep11 lnv<>lved 1n g•v· Ing end raveMng a mes- aage eta porlreyed 81 cou- plet demonstrata now to retu each •••a of tne • t>ody 2:400 N£W8 2:46 (¢)MOVIE • • • • "Sayonara 11957) Mt1lon Brando. Re<I Bultons An Amet1cen jet ace hH a i>ofonant aHAJt With lhe star performer or a lamed Japanese. acting company 2:50 Q) MOVIE .. • • "Who Wat Thal Ledy?" (19601 Tony Ct.1rl1S. Dean M8t11n 2:5' 1)1 MOVIE * * * 't, ' A Double Life" 1190 1 Ronald Colman Slgn4I HaMO 3:00 'S) SHOWT'IME'S HOUYWOOO Bill Hanft hoats 1 behind· the·~ IOOlt al tl'le s10- ,,.. and 11ar1 that make HOltywood glttter 3:06 (ZJ MOVIE • * • "StaVtsky·· ( 1912) Jean Paul Belmondo Cnartes Boyer A charming con man maneges to involve members of some 01 France's most e•ciuslve social ttrclel In a --of sc;am1 and bad. deals ' 3:30 ($)MOVIE • * "H,f! Amazing Adven- tures 01 Joe 90" Puppets A mag1c;al tnvent1011 enables a 9-ya11r-Old t>oy lo become a tpec.t41 agent JOHN DARLING 1 IHINK i HESE UITLE NEWS DOLL.5 AR.E.'CUTE.' for uw WC>f19 lnlelNOef\Oe Net-II 9MOVlll • • \t • T ha Sh1111ng" ( 1910) JacJI HIChOI~. 611e11ey Duvall Oh c:wo by Stentey llubtlclt A format ec.llooltMG:her hired •• • wltlt8t ca1a1ek.. tOt • retl'l()le, 8lld ~tlllly haunttol<I, Colorado hotel. It ll'IOWi>ound ,,..,. with hi• wile and clairvoyant young llOl1 R 4-.00 OJI MOVlt 6 • • "Popeye" ( 19$0) Aollln w 1111am1. Shali.y Ouvllll White -rc;111no for hll lather. the 1pin1tc:h ••I· Ing Hllot vltlt• • quelnl "-""lel wh«t he Oldlt up e fOundtlng and • alllnny I Wt!tlhf!erl 'PG' 4:25 8 MOVIE "Shep Comaa Hor11e" (1049) RobaM lowny Wvd11r•da11"• Dafll inev .Hot•h!• -MORNING- e:so <Cl ••''\ "S1or1e1 From A Flylng Trunk" ( 1978) Mur· ray Mel\lln, member• ol the Royal Bali.I Three Hen• Chlltllan Andet-.n Storr.a are brought to lite through ballet, Irv• acuon and ant· matlOn 71'0 g • • ' Htgh Country (1981) Timothy Bo1tom• Und• Purl An 88Ceped COOVICI and hla handi- capped glrllrland llM 10 11'19 mountalnt 'PG' 8:00 fC • * • "Snoot The Ptano Player" ( 1982) Cllarles Alna11our, Marie Oul>Ot• A woman con. vtncn ™" once-lamou1 musoclen boyfriend to attempt a comeback (Ii) •• "Thia II Elvie" ( 198 t) Oocumentory Fiim footage and dramatle ro- creellons ate ul&d to tell the atory of Etvt• Pretley's Ille andcer- S • ••''> 'On The Town"·( 1950) Gana K.tl~. Frank Sinatra A HIO ol satlors t.eam up with a t••• a11vet and an anthropolo· gist IO ftnd 9 beaultlul gtrl WlloH ptclura 11 dtspleyed 1n the subway 8:30 &;I • • • "Tna Competl· 1it>n ( 1980) RIChard Or~ luss Amy tn11ng Two pian- 11ts at a San Francisco mu-'t competition llnd that th91r love le>t each otnef conrflcll with lheor prola111ona1 •mb1t1on1 'PG' 9':30 II) e ·~ 'Wlndt OI The WH leland ( 1936) JOlln Wayne Phylllt Fr.... A stagecoach own8< races agafnila •Wirlo Obfiiln a valuable mall contract In Calllorn1a 10:00 H • • '• "Tne Marr Who Saw Tomorrow'" (19811 Documentary Narrated by Orson Welles Footaoe of events he predicted and dr amatlC re-creeuons or n11 Ille compr1se tn11 look al 1ne t7th·oentur5' French pnysicoan astrologer and mysltc. Michel dt1 No1tr•· Dame. known •• Noslr•· damus 'PG 1"$ * * "Mtllvtn And How- ard" ( t980) Paul l eMat. Jason Robards An otne,. ...... unknown oe• 11a1100 a11en<1an1 Cl8'ms to be 1he r>ghtlul "4Mr to Howara Hugne1' 1;>1l1ton dollar estate 'R 11:30 H • • * The Compett· tton I t9801 RtCl\erd Drey· russ, Amy Irving Two p1an- 1s1s at • San Fra.ncosco music compet1t1on fond 1net t,,..r love lor each othe< conlticts w1tn th8fr proreu1onal amb111on• 'PG' 0 • #I "White Water Sam" Keith LerN n A mountain man travels lhe No1thwest with his nusky searehtng lor the greal white water route south · ·o· 12:00 0 • • The l/ery Edge' ( t963) R1cnerd Todd 0) •••''The SUI· ~.,.. .. ( , ... , ""''-- oetllt, ~ WW.. A !Vt I•~ lfeolit 4-1 e bMd of ac:alphunMra to fegeln .. atolen "'" end Ir••~ N90to ...... • * • * ''Tiit 8'ne Of "8cfl9I Ceot'' ( IM IJ Angle ~. PeMtr Flncl\ A m lH lonary 10111 Ille ,..,,.Cl Of IM Ml ..... ~ ~ ~l>e IO lem91• tlOn (~ * * "Deya Of Fwy" Narreled by Vtncen1 Prtce. A look It taken 81 Ille lhlngl 11181 tltlMtett OtJt wOtldr from devNlallnO -uiqu.-.. to unbeilw· abt9 e#~."PG' (Z) ••• "8t•llleky'' ( t9721 "-'·~ 8-non· do. Char... 80)'9' A chermlng coo men rnan- llOM IO Involve mMlbara of -of Fr.,_'• ,,_, .. c:111e1ve IOdal Clrdee In • -• ol ac:amt and bad dMI• 1:00 Cl) ***·~"On The Town" ( 1950) 0..,. Kelly. Fr anlc Sinatra. A trio of aallot• t.-n up wltlt • 18111 d""9t and an anttwopolo- "'8t lo "'1d a bMullful girl ~ l*llW• la dllple)'ed tntM..,bway. 0 * • "" "...idl" ( 1979) A yaung glt1 la brought lrom h« Qfandlathet'I Alpine home to liw In the dty • 1:IO CC)*•* "Shoot Ttte Plan o Player" ( 111821 Ch811M Azna~r. M8<ie Oubola A women con- lltnQM he< --·-· mualclan boyfriend to au empt a comebaclc 2:00(%) * "Frland1"(19711 Sean Bury. AnlCee Allllna. 'A' 2:30 0 * * ~ "The H91d Way" ( t980) Petrldt McGoollan, L" Van Cleal. A hlted a188nln has to maka one m0te hll before he can ..... reHra 'R' 3:00 G • * ·~ "TM Family Jewell" ( 19&1 J«ry L-· 11. S.butlan Cabot. A 9. year-old ()(phwt via/U hat aA • unclee to decide wlllctt one llhe wan11 10 llw wtth. (t) * * ·~ "Stan.. From A Flylng Trunk" (19781 Mu,. ray Melvtn. membert of IM Royal 881191 ThrM Hans Cllrltlian Andart«t 11orlea are brought to Nie through ballel. 11,.. 8C11on and ani- mation f.fil * * "The Blacll Hole" ( 1979) Muimillan SchMI. Rober1 FortJer. Yvette Mlmoewc. ,.,.,. crfht ol a lututlltlc: ~ die-· covers another ll•H•I petcl\ed on IM edge of a formatloft wtliCll pulls ------ thing ,_,by Into • giant llold wr-a lime end apace oeue to 81llll 'PO' 3:30 (SJ • • "TM Amazing Adv8'1turea Of Joe 90" PupJ*• A maglCal lnVWI· lion enables a 9-yaar ·Old t>oy 10 become • apeciat agent for the World lrtlellt· genoe Natwort<. 4:00 0 '* * * "Picnic At Henglng Rock" (19751 Rachel Roberla, Oomlnlc Guard In lurn-ol-the-cen- 1ury Australla. three youn(r act>oolgirla wander _..,, trom a tchOol p6cnlc: and become Iott In 1M buel'I 'PQ' • • • "Child'• Play" (19721 James Muon. Rob- er1 Preston A dlal*ed mutet at • CathOllc bof• IChoOI becomM tM vlc11m of an anonrmoua m-.iac- le>t 'PG' 5:.30 fCl • • *'' "T _ .. I 19191 Nasl astla Klnlkl. Pettw Forth The daugllt9r al 1 poor Engll1h larmer !>«°'"" the v>ellm of ,.,., remuy·a asc>trelions and her own beauty. 'R' 5:48 C:tJ * • * "Popeye" ( 1980) Robin Wiiiiama. Sl\elley Ouv111 White Marching le>t hit lalh81, the lpinec:h...,t- 1ng aall0t vlS1l1 • quaint llamlet where he plck1 up a loundltng and a altlnny sweetheart 'PG' by Armstrong & B.atluk e vou· don't have to be crazy to live here ... but It helps. .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesday. February 16. 1982 J : Six openirigs mark weekend along collst ~ TOMTITtJ ~ .... ...., ........... Ir you tl1ur on catcblnt all the new 1how1 openln• 1Along the Or1mge Coatt \~Is week -1ood luck. No fewer than she theaters, lncludln1 all four local coJleaeis. will be unvelllna their latest wares. 1-'init out of the wlnas wlll be the latest Nell Simon comedy to hlt Orange County, "f Ouahl lo 8e in Pictures.j; openln1 tonlcht. Then come "Scaplno" at Oriln~e Coa1t Colle1e. "Poor Murde.-.,r'' at Golden Wes[ Colleae and "Curse of lb Starving Class" at UC Irvine. all bowfng In Thursday. Wrappln& up the week on Friday will be ,.Bleacher Bums" at the Newport Theater Arts Center and "Grease" at . saddleback College. llJIR, lalD! J ot.1 Barone, Bryar Freed and Faith Qua bilus head the cast of -----·----• ''Pictures ·~ a t the Harlequin, 3503 S. Ha rbor Blvd., just north of Costa Mesa. Tbe show about nn aspiring actress and her playwright father runs through March 28, with tickets at 979-5511. Alex Golson is directing "Scapino" for OCC in the Orama Lab, with performances Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m . for two weekends and a 2 p.m. matinee Feb. 28. Tickets can be reserved at 556·5527. "Poor Murderer" at Golden West focuses on an actor who commits murde r o n s t age . Performances are Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. through Feb. 27 in the Play box Theater. wit'h a matinee Feb. 28 al 2:30. Call 894-6070 for reservations. Sam She pard's "Curse of the Starving Class" will be given for three performances. Thursday through Saturday at 8 P·!JI · in the Little Theater ( H H 161 l al UC Irvine with Cha rles Steak directing. Reservations are available al 833-6617. "Bleacher Bums " is a local premiere at the Newport Theater Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Dr ive, Newport.Beach (675·3143>. Paul Di Lorenzo, Philip Lisa and Sorrell Wayne have joined the cast as replacements in .the baseball·Tiavored comedy, which runs Fridays and Satl.lrdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. through March 14. T he F ifties mus ical "Grease .. is the two·weekend attractiop at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo, directed by Patrick Fennell. Performances .. are Friday and Saturday and Feb. 25·26·27 at 8 p.m . and this Sunday and next at 3 THE PORT THEATRE .,/J·b.:'bll UGO TOONAlll (Slot ol, lo (999 Au• fol'-) • lr;l -oRJm:$-COUNTY' PREMIERE -~UtC•ltf c.,.., N ' rim•• plus "Cousin- Cousine" .(PG) ,, "['<lA-.TH .. vCORON AG~t MAR You\'e never been scared · 'tU )'OU've been scared in JfffaASS/C J -D ffOIUIOR MOVI~ or ALL Tll'lf. MU ,.lllAl .. ltNl'llll ftll __.ll1..4741_ ctlTA•U IAYI .. fO-•fl lt!Sld ldwlldl Wood!lllCllll 540 74U ~SI OUS ll TMO f ""•di~-~II HIO There's more to love than ... LOVE i...-llWI ...... 5'11111 Cini UA Qty~ 04 ISU _ 04 )tll ..run,_. wur••m• lPWft --•Y ~ UA llUll 570 1026 lt3 0548 -Oi ... ""' 637 OHO p.m. Call 131"'"5e for rtaervatlona. Wlndlnc up a four-week(nd rwi ror the P.Uaalon VltJo Playhouse ls the Nell Simon comedy •·come Blow Your Horn" at tho Forum 1'heater on Laauna 8eaoh's Festival of Art.I Grounds. Curtain Is 8:30 Friday and Saturday and reservations are being ll&ken at 830·9252. . Contlnulna their respective runs alona the coaislllne are: "8Qulh Paclftc" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente (492·99SO >. playing nightly except Mondays al varying times through April 11. · -"A Dellcate Balance" by the Irvine Community Theater at Turtle Rock Community Park, Sunnyhill Road ul Turtle Rock Orlve. Irvine (tic kets at the d oor>. running Fridays and Saturday• at 8 p.m. throuah March 6 wlth a mutlnee Sundoy at 2 p.m "Olvlslon Street" al the Newport 1farbor Actors Th •utor . 390 Monto Vista St.. Co1ta Mesa t63l ~llOI. on staae Thursday~ \hrough Saturdays ut 8 p.m .. Sundays at 2:30, th.rQ\&lh F eb. 28. . "Oear t'rl~nda" by ShOwose Productions at lhti Westminster Auditorium. 7571 Westmlnater Avo., Westminster (894·6786). playing Frtdl\ys and Saturdays at 8.30 through March 6 and· 2 p.m Mar ch 7 "Shd Mt No Flowe rs" at the San Clemente Community Theater. 202 Ave. Cubrillo, San C lemente <492·0465>. running Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m . and Sundays at 2 1> m. through Feb. 28. Living in the long shadow of a. legend By JACKIE flYMAN Auecl•• -· Wl'tttr LOS ANGELES -Followinfit in the wake of a living legend could be intimidating for a young actress -doubly so when she's under the watchful eye of yet another legendary woma n. But Tovah Felds huh. who has made a name for herself as a serious actress on the stage and in television's "Hol<><:aust" and "The Great Triangle Factory Fire... has only enthusiasm for .her expe rience in rehearsing "Another Part of the Forest," runnin~ Feb. 12 through March· 27 a t the Ahmanson Theater of the Los Angeles Music Center. In the play by Lillian Hellman. she plays Regina Hubbard. The same character. 20 years later. was portrayed by Eliiabeth Taylor earlier this season on Broadway and at the Ahmanson in Miss Hellman's "The Little Foxes." Not only will many in the audience -possibly including Miss Taylor -be comparing the two performances, but tbe distinguished playwright he r self has been an active partic ipant in rehearsals, giving critical notes to the actors and making some minor revisions in the script. "It is great being with Mi ss Hellman. a& Marga ret Mead says. just for your sense of continuity." said Miss Feldshuh pronounced Felt' ·shoo, her throaty voice contrasting with RESTAICJEO UMtlt 11 ,~,..., ec:romoenytnq Patent or Aau•t Gvero.an I AU. am AHO Ciil Fil.MS RECEIVC l'HE SE~ Of THE "'OTIOH l'tCfUAE COOE Of SELF AEOUl.J\TIOH March of dpDlmes SAVES BABIES PLEASE HELP FIGHT BIRTH DEFECTS N~~f 1~i~lit,Y At AH Six Cin~domes Ch1p,n&11 a. Santi Ana fwy $2.50 't1I 3:00 Unl•s Noted 11 ..o.MAT!Olt9 W:'ftf:~a;JO ~ E~Seats Mariel H•m•ntW•Y Kw.N.msT IRI 12:30 3:00 15:30 8:00 10:20 I ,_~ .g; I 1--1:11~ ,, .... _ ... .__ ~,_-­ THE 90M1EJI IR I 3:10 7:30 Who• Life 11 It AnvlRI 1:00 5:20 9:40 M IPG) d:O:::.ng '.I . 2· . ·15 lat Hour Only STADIUffi ~ 5cuzczn Driucz-ln coll 6l9 8770 ~ Revolut1onuy C1nll·F• Sound ....... ~~ ........... ' .,n .. -~ .. 1.,1 "'""" .............. " .,.. .. . ........ ,.1•-·•t"t•· .. .... -r• ............. ... MAKING LOVE IR) H1s1ory Of The World l(R) Jack ~1chol~n 80R R lRI Alt0 laying I Dmdi.._.IR M_o_r91n ~Fairchild $EDUCTION IR I BODY & SOUL I RI 011ve·tnS Open 6: 30 NIGHTLY Under 12FREEUnlffsNoted NOW PLAYING AU•IM OA•I IROft U"1111 MIUIC* Ill.Kl Anllltlm Dt1vt·ln Wtstblooll Edwards ytoodl>lldoe VleJO Tf,111 179 11150 530 4401 551 0655 830 6990 COITA MIU OMllll UA Clneinas 540·0694 UA City Cinema 834 3911 A liNnttlSAl..11110 itictUllE c._,.,....,. e 1 .. 1 tyll"#WltVll <•" ''~~ (~. 111·, 111~ ' 1~1 MA ~ • delicate features that look almost pixyish beneath a tweed v1sort:;d cap. "Here is this great America9 playwright in your midst rewriting t hings for your production, and she·s a person. she's there We don·t gel to work with Shakespeare." said the actress, who r e c e n ti y w o n c r i t i c a I a c c I a i m f o r ·h e r performances in the Bard's "RolJleo and Juliet," .. Measure for Measure" arid "Two Gentlemen of Verona" al S<.t n Diego's National Shakespeare Festival. *BARGAIN MATINEES * Monday thru Saturday All Ptrlormancea b•for• 5:00 PM (Eicctpl Spec:lll E11ppman11 and Holld1ys1 IA MlllA[JA MAil Mlrooo 01 t0H c10111 LA MIRADA WALK·IN 99,:2•00 ..WHOSE LIF'f IS fT ANYWAY?"fl .......... ""' ........ ,~ .. --•:•.-"lllDUC'TJON .. 1111 -· "''· -.... l!llcMMt. °"nlAIO llAlW ..at-"MAKINO LOVE" 1111 ,,.. .................... .... -___ ....._. .. oeo.oc c •con r..:>nn ~ 'TAPS"-,, ... I ti, Lt&. l..1 .. , .. _... .:::""~~=·.:.:-::.~~ -°"" ..... ____ _., . "REOS"-•t.11. •.:11 ..... YOUOO.l tt.AYI: TO N CAU'Y fO U'ttlC .. "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK"1 ----tt::m, ., .. ~ ........ -"CANNERY ROW .. -" .... a ... 1• ,..,_._ LAKEWOOD CENTER WALi< IN ,. __ ""'---?-"OH GOLDEN PONO" -•1:-91. I 11. ... 1" •• *" -c IOOn --"""°" .. TAPS"-,_.., .. ..,..._,...,.. • lAl<E'NOOD C ENTER SO UHI WAI • IN Al Del Nf-.o 211 6M·t211 ,..,_.._ --·--.""'~"· M ~ LOIT ARK" ••. e:a.-.,..-... ntt• LAGUNA f ocu11y or Cono1ewqod 21l/IJ1·9HO I \'OU _., MAW TO .. CllAZ'f TOUW- .. CANNERY ROW" -.................. , ... -0..-._._°"' ... """ ca:;:: 0: ... :~:..::i...--c =-=-- ··REOS" -·~• ....... --. OlmtLUO ..... __ ''MAKINO LOY£" 1111 , ..... .--M~4 9'tllll.. ..... t•• f A~NT-­--..... ---"CHA .. IOTS M FIRE .. '"' •• 19.I H .l.'4&,1•11 so . COAST WALK·IN So\lfn Coo11 H1wo, ol l 1000woy 494-1514 \'OU_., ..... TO --TO UW -••• "CANNERY ROW' --' TW·lMll 1'91,•M .....-~ ........... . ·--''TH£ ,._l!NCH LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN '1111 na~n. r1a.1>:A1 ~1:1a.•-.11a.a._4i1 ••• 1 JO ~iilll 1MPORTAN T NOTICE' CHILDREN UNOEll 12 f RU ! ...... " HtrCtOt UO W11MJ Mtft fftrw J11 6 lO • Sal hA Hell 6 00 , .. tW(,#1 !IQl.INO • rOUll AN W AAOIO IS 100ll 5"!MCJI ••I llO A"8 W ilAo-l WITlt ~ ACaSSOllY l'OSllOf --AM 'llllTAkl •AU~ OllVMllS QI Oii all ~ ANAH!IM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN fte•WOY •t Of lemon St 179·9150 --·~-_,,_ THE BODGEN S 1t11 ..... 'VENOM' t•I (>NI I SQV~I> ftUlNA PARK BUENA PARK ORIVE·IN lll\Cot" ••• Weit of ltnon 121·4Ci>70 &vi "'" ~Allk LINCOLN DRIVE·IN I 121•4070 1•1.1m1101 Son 0.ego lrwy 01 ltoo«"""' (io I MID A.I,... -...,,. OOUOLM GHOST STORY "'I ..... THE CHANGELING 1111 t11o1 11 SQUJllO _,..,.-, OI •lllO ~ 04J'f AU. TRUE CONFESSIONS 1111 ... ... RICH ANO FAMOUS' 1•1 C ~t I \OO!f!l I llOlllMATIOltt "-Mtt"°" l"OfllO UrltlN AU.l_N 'RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK"-..,.,. VICTORY IHI lltllOIAt4 oorrca.uo ... lW ;ACll- MAK I NG LOVE 1111 . ... .. 'HISTORY OF THE WORLO PARTONr1111 'l'~OAITA•I ""1""-..U ' OHOST STORY 1111 ...... THE SEDUCTION" 1111 Cllll Pl SOUND ' 962·2411 '"'" llYO so Of Goroen Gto-t "•-• 891·3693 •• !:. ti.,_._ .__ ______ __,, "OH OOLOEN PONO -I oe-c econ ._....,...,,,,,.. "'.. I TA~~'"' 'THE ELECTRIC HOflSEMAN" ~ "MODERN PROBLEMS" !'°I ----,c~'~ ....... ·lNSOOIOO,.......,,,... ~-,._ ___ :_1N~l-"~~-o ___ _ ··XMY~ 1111 --·~·--··stAIPES" 1111 ··THE BO~~NS" 1111 "STIR ~:MT t'IJ "VENOM" I'll ClllC 11 SOUt10 I A ><A8~A LA HABRA ORIVf IN , . .,_..,.,.. ··~"'""'"'"' ..... ,~ "ON OOLOEN PONO" IN! ...... --.... •IMC•_.. ' --"THE El.ECTAIC HOASEMAN",... • 171-1162 ._>?A, ... ,t ORANGE DRIVE·IH ---..... ~.-.,., ..... -··CANNE .. Y ..OW --"THE 0001 Of WAA" t'IJ ... "' ".. ... c ~ .. "- M 1SS10 N ORIVHN . .. .. . .. ... '' .. . WARNER ORl\lf IN SOf'ltO Al'IO f,_.. • S•o~e Cott•o• 558·7022 "ARTHU.." 1111 ...... ·SHAAKY'S MACHINE" 4'11 """' "IUSTIN' LOOH" l'll ---· .. THE 8~0UI" !1111 "'"' '90f11Dlflll1Nl" "9 --MA-PAfllA UO., .W.PA -·-· A•e •e11 OI .. OCll .... lllAJI f'ANT UTKlO tN QLOllO 147·JSt1 I f4.00 ... CAkOAO I . .. l I .. ,,. FSfJc .............. -.......-1 ..... INSURED TO $100,000 • . . Orange Coast DAILY Pll,OT/Tuesday. February 1j), 1982 . -· u I . "' ) . 1 .1 ,.,.I smile. e-J '-="· .· ... " . . --- . LI II , ? Yk:'ll call JOU by name.· ~that's a promise. Or JOU get a c1o1-.r, on the spot~ · · If you'ye had it up to here with unfriendly bank teller~ and indifferent bank offi cers. we should get together Because at Fidelity Federal. we not only believe yo . r~ entitled to the highest interest allowed by law, we bel1c"c you·re entitled to be treated I ike a person And that starts with some simple. o ld-fashioned name-calling Sowe prom1setocall every customer by name And lo mdke you feel welcome-with a smile. a ''hi.' and a "thanks All• that's guaranteed. Or we hand you a dollar. no questions asked To be honest. though. we don't expect to be handing out too many dollar bills. Becau se we ve got more than 700 of the nicest name-callers in the busi ness. Come hear for yourself. , At Fidelity Federal. we're on your side. • SAVINGS ANOLOAN ASSOCIATION Assets over $1.7 billion strong and growing. ~ eo...,,. ya.i tllrouchowt the 1tate. h1 Southeni Celtfonila ..• Az ... tGle11dora: I 173 cll\I Alosta • e.nn-•ri I SllOll Bellllowcr Blvd • lkveriy Hiits: 111n <i<1111h ~t'\t'rly Dme! •Bit .. .,, 4202S S.inJ.ilwuud Dr ·Blue l•y: 27121'> H1~h"' •v llW • 811ena Park·ll460 La Palmil A•rnuc C.-Del Mef: 1111 Bayside Drive • C.ta Mesa: 18,S Harbor Bl\d • C•lffrClty: 107114 ltflcr..on Blvd • Fulleno111 CIW North H.irbol Blvd • Cle11dale1 600 ~.,1111 lir.rn<I Bl\,I • lmne1 .U82 B • .trrdn<..i 1•,11~1•.-11 •Lacuna 8each: 110 ~1t'n1 t"\rt '>lr.·tl •Laite Forest· J\4 ti T,.buco ~ti • ~ leedl1 S25 E<m Ocean Blvd • Lo•t Beach EMii H67 Pac1ftc Co. I Htih-.ay •Newport leech: 1'11'1 V.t'•tchfl Om1' • Nonh Holt,wood1 6l'JO l..lurcl \..in~on Ul\o\J • Nonhr1d .. 1 1"4~ Plummer Str«:l" Palm Deten: 7l I\\ 11 i.:111.\.t\ · 11 • Placencia: JOI l ' >rbd I 1nd11 Blvd • ... Pedro1 29000 So ~slern Avenue • Sa11ca Aaa1 ~700 No Main St reel •Saal Beach1 I J320 ~l Be. h 91Yd • ShenN11 O.kt: 1447\ V~ntur• Bf,,I •Sta neon: 12000 Bt'ilCh Blvd •Torra ace: 14020 H•wthofne Bl• I • VAii N11}11 '"" \ lnr~ B1"'1 ·Wat Hollywood: &651 Beverly Blvd • ()petllllf Soo11 111 Atudlli, San Gabrfel Aftd La11111a Hlllt . . ~ .. . · ,· • -.--~- TUESDAY, FEB.16, 1992 . . . COMICS C4 ' .. ·'MAN ON. THE MOVE When Golden West College pl a~·s a .. bas ke tball gam e. you can bet 6-1 sophomore guard Truiett :·1-fatton will be in the thick of things. The Ma rina High I. ~~~raduate curr~ntly leads the Southern Cal Confe rence scoring race with a 20.2 points-pe r-game average. Ha tton is averaging better than 18 points pe r game on the over all season. As the Rustler playm aker ._ ne s pa rked GWC to a 13-2 non-conferen ce record the team ·s hest st art ever. Ha tton is · also the conference's top free throw s hooter . connectin~ on 90. 7 per cent. Jt's Tru(iett), he lets his shoot~g do the t~lking ~ CURT SEEDEN ~lite Oalty Pl ... Staff · Golden West College basketball coach Jim Greenfield refers to guard Truiett Hatton as his !:silent team leader." and it's true Hatton prefers • to let his shooting do the talking. ::. But tonight, when the Rustlers mee t Cypress , Cbllege in a Southe rn Cal Conference contest (7 :30 ), you can bet there's a part of Hatton that's ~reaming inside . You see Hattun has never played on a Golden West team that has defeated Cy pi:ess. Last year, ):>ecause he didn't carry enough acade mic units, Batton sat out the basketba ll campaign . It was last year that the Rustlerli did, indeed. pull off a ran! victor y over their a rch-rivals. "I'd really hke to beat Cypress -especially since they've already clinched the conference," Hatton says. "The only time I beat them was in •· GALA AFFAlfJ -Orange County-superstars -both past and present -were plentif uJ at the Orange County sports Hall of Fame banquet held Monday night at the Anaheim Convention Center. Those pictured here were just a fe w of the inductees. From left . .. the (Southern Cal Conference) All-star. game ... but it's not the same." "' flatton, a Ma rina High pr~uct who1lelped the Vikings earn the No. l rating in Orange County in his senior year , was just what Greenfield was- looking for when he m ade one of his area recruiting drives down the road a few years ago. Because of his size (6-1>, Hatton wasn't picked up by any four-year schools , even though he was the catalyst· behind Marina's 23·5 record a nd Sunset League championship. "He really fit into ou·r style of play," admits Greenfield ... He came in as a freshman and ·did a great job. He played in every game and never got hurt." , For good measure, Hatton averaged 15 points per game as a freshman. This year, Hatton not only leads the Rustle rs in scorin~. but ·he 's the No'. l scorer in Southe rn ..., ......... ca....~ Bo b H a mbJirr (bas ke tball 1, Shfrlef Babashoff <swjmming>. Podger Manager Tommy Lasorda. UC Irvine's Kevin Magee and Brig Ow ens ( footbal.I > were ul I honored. Cal Conference play with a 20.2 average in league and an 18.3 overall mark. While at Mar ina, Hatton shared the scoring duties with several players under Coach Steve Popovich's typic~Jly ba lanced attacks . At Golden West he o'nly shares the scoring wi th sophomore forward Darin Bowen. But it is Hatton \\(ho gets the team going. It was Hatto~ who sparked the Rustle rs to a 13-2 non-conference record. The only losses came at the hands of Riverside CC a team which up until last week was ranked No. I in the Southland. ··Our offense is mainly a fast break. The guard gets the' ball and brings it up as fast as he can," Hatton explains . Hatton's the first to admit the Rustlers' aren't· a one-man team . He points to GWC's dry spell at the beginning of the Southern Cal Conference in which the Rus tlers dropped their first three games. "The big pro blem then was the Christmas vaca tion," Hatton recalls . "We had a few guys go hom e for the holidays <Murp'1y Da vis and Art King) and they were fl ooded out. They couldn't get back here. \, "So we had som e pretty poor practices over the vacation. There just wasn't a whole lot you could' do. We didn't seem to be quite as intense goin~ into conference," Hatton adds . Adds Greenfield: "Both Truiett and Darin have to score for us to win. We've lost some games when they just didn't .Play well.'' Halton has fou'hd. the going especially tough. He proba bly knows more types of defenses than any one in the league. That's because conference <~ TRUIETT, PaJte,C2) Nostalgia, youth inter~gled Gurney, Babashof/1among inductees in Hall of F.ame By HOWARD L. HANDY Of t1M o.lty Pl ... StAlft • , ' It was a night for nostalgia and re-living fond 'lnemories of other ye-nrs. Yet ther e was clearly a mixture of youth and present day sports heroes that were intermingled with those from •he past. It all took place at the second annual Orange County Sports Hall of Fame banquet at Anaheim convention Center Monday night with nearly 800 in attendance. • There were seven Orange County s ports Cil?ures inducted in to the Hall of F~me along with numer ous ·s pecial a wa rds t o high sc hool, community college, college and professional athletes. There were humorous notes when Wilcox explained the absence of a tuxedo ,by stating he had to have his back to the renta1 agency at 6 o'clock that night. Or when Tom Seeberg and wife marched beh ind' the Long Beach Stale band into the con vention hall for the presentations on ,the 24th · annivarsa ry of .their marriage and she said: "We · weren't marching behind a band 24 years ago to night." Newport Beach's Dan Gurney and Founta,in Valley's Shirley Babas hoff were among ·the honoree wtto were inducted into the Hall of Fame. . Othe rs included gymnast Cathy Rigby, basketball star Bob Hamblin, fqotball hero Bric Owens and post-humously, Arky Vaughan of baseball fame and roriner s ports editor Ed~ie West. Members of last year's inductees who helped Lo honor the newest arrivals including Jim h'egosi, George Yardley and Mickey 'F1ynn. ~rp Atren, Brig's coach with the Washln1ton Redsk{ns honored his former player .while Dodier mana1er Tommy Lasorda, a Fullerton resident, was presented with a lifetime achtevement award to climax the evening. On hand t.o accept headliner awards that were given to county performers in baseball, football, basketball, special sporta and for t.oP co1che1 were a large group of present·dar stars: Jn baseball, Westminster'• David Harris was honor on the high school level: Yike Vanderbura of Orange Coast on the communlty col)eae lev.el; Mike Sodde rs of Arizona Stale and a former Orange Coast star on the college level; and Gary Carter of Montreal and a graduate of Sunny Hills H igh. on the pro level. . In football it was Mark 1'e mplelon of Foothill High ; Curl Arons ·of Saddleback and Jeff ~anchez o f Fullerton colleges; Dave Wilson of the University of Illinois ; and Pat Mc lna lly of Cincinnati's Bengals, . . In basketba ll it was Wayne Carlander of USC und a graduate of Ocean View High; Stan Davis of Cypress al the communitycollege level; Kevin Magee of t.JC Irvine on the university level; a nd Ann Meyers of the WBA and La Habra High on the. pro level. Special s ports awards went to Antony Emerson of Corona del Mar High in tennis; Jim Boehring of Saddle back College in track ; ,Sue Le wis of Cal State Fullerton in softball ; and Bruce Penhall of Balboa Island in motorcycle riding professionally. Coaches honored included Augie Garrido of Cal 'state Fullerton in bas eball; Ken Swearingen of Saddleback ·in football ; J ack Errion of Corona del Mar ttlgh in basketball; and ~en Lindgren of Long Beach Sta te in special sports•( water polo>. Astronaut Gerald Carr, a graduate of Santa Ana High, was presented with the ~itizenship award and said, ".This is a far-cry from the mud in the bottom of Santa Ana Bowl in 1949." Owens, looking every 'bit as fit as when he retired from the Redskins, was perhaps one of the most grateful. "I want to thank my father arid my family. When you honor me, you honor..iny family anti there were l2 of us. A lot oL .. people hav~ trouble rais ing two or three children but my pare nts raised 12." Good gu)' awards were also presented to sports publlcists Bruce Rimbo of Los Alamitos Raceiit Course and to Bill Shumard of the Los Angeles"Dod1ers . Letters we re read from Ram owner Geor1ia -Frontiere pralsin1 Wilcox for his cour11e and strencth and from President Ronald Rea1an. At . conclualon of the evenlnJ, color pictures or those in attendance were Oas~ on a s~reen ror all to see. Even after the last hurrah was echoed across the' ball. >t • • • • • ~· ( .. -==r w~r~ ap fast l Sugar. Ray dusts of/ Finch in three. after· cold start t ~ I ' RENO <AP> -Su1ar Ray th e bout atter the third 11econdt1meinlhe11econdroundf Leonard said he was cold In the knockdown. adding he thought But Lane said Finch was atlffi first round a11lnst ·Bruce Finch Lpne Hhould have ~topped It In control of his senses until the lifter the fi1ht was del~ed 10 after Finch went down tor the third knockdown. mln1itH due to televlalon technical pJ"Oblema. But ooce Leonard warmed up, he wu torrid, knocklna down the outclassed Finch three times bef9re the fight was stopped' at l : 50 of the third round. "1 came out a little cold, It took me about a round or two lo warm up," said Leonard alter be retained the undisputed welterweight boxlna champlonsll.fp of the world. ·11 warmed up for 20 minutes berore lhe light, but the~ I had to sett~ down when lt was delayed." , LEONARD, IN HIS first fight since winning the com blned title last· September against Thomas Hearns, lost the first round of Monday's bout on tbe cards of the three Jud&es. But he ~ command m1dway through the Jecond roupd when he unleashed three aavaae hooks. to the body followed by i right that sent Finch reeli1'g. Following Finch across the ring, Leonard threw a right that put Finch down for the ·first time, but the c hallenger struggled to his feet. Another flurry or punches put Finch down for the second time, but he ' FV, Oilers at llome,i • 1 every~ne else awaYJ Fountain Valley and Huntinston Beach ffllh schools drew home assignments for Saturday's opening round of the w o m en 's Cl F b a s k et b a 11 playoffs with all other Orange Coast area teams traveling to other sites. Fountain Valley's Barons, winners of the Sunaet League with a 16-7 record, will host Culver City, the third place team in the Ocean League with a l]-6 season record. Huntington Beach, 'under Coach JoaMe Kellogg, will host Compton, the runnerup in the Moore League. The Oilers finished second to Fountain Valley in the Sunset circuit and have a 16·8 record compared to 13·6 for the Tarbabes . · champion. Allison Hazeltlne, a 5· 11 senior is averaging 16.~ points a game and 10.3 rebounds : Liz Hirn, a 6-q sophomore center, is averaginfl 15. l and 8.2 rebounds while Kris N e lson, a 5·11 junior, la averaging 12.5 points and 9.!l rebounds. i . - COMPTON BOASTS a 13·~ record with 5-8 senior Violet Palmer averaging 14 .3 points: and 6.1 rebounds a game. Kalan( Savoy, a 5·8 junior, is hilling 8.~ points and grabbing 9 .0 rebounds per game. i '-Tustin. Estancia 's foe , waS: second in the Century League ~ No. 2 seeded Foothill 'in 3-A{ 1 action. : La Quinta ls 20-2 for the year ,; 'i ' winner of the Garden Grove!. League and No . 3 seeded in the; 1 playoffs. La Quinta is Corona det: ~ managed to get to his feet and last the final Jew seconds of the 'round. ' EDlSON, THE third place finisher with a 17-7 record. will play at No. 4 seeded San Gabriel "<21·3) in a first round game while Mater Dei travels to No. 2 seeded Inglewood (23·3> for its first round encounter in the 4-A division. Mar·~ first round opponent. FIN.AL BLOW -Challenger Bruce Finch·s knees buckle following the knockout punch b,i' champion Sugar Ray Leonard during ~. . I Angels to televise 36 games in .1982 The Angels, who will open their II 1982 baseball seasbn at Oakland, have announced the best television schedule in th.,club·s history.. · l'~ive garies with tbe Western Division champion A·s and five more with Eastern Division winner New York Yankees highlight a · 36-game slate for 1982. KTLA <Channel 51 will feature 11 different teams in the American League and as an added feature has an,11ounced ii. will televise six borne games including two with the Yankees. The Ange ls open their TV schedule Saturday. Mar. 20 with an exhibition game with the Milwaukee Brewers. , Four of the Ari gels· first six games will be televised in<!luding their opening day affair Tuesday, April 6, with the As. In all, seven of the Ange1is· first 14 2ames will be telecast. ANGE 13 1'11 TV KMlOUlE Sal .. March 10, Mllw•u-H ot Pelm Sc><'l"41" (1 p.m.I. Tues.. April•. otOe~lencl 11 3Sp m I, Wocl . Aprll 7,alO.llUncl !7'35p m.l ; Sat., Aprll 10, •I Mlrv.\Olo (II I~. m I, !tu!> .. Aprll 11.•I Mlrv.~ (II :IS a.m ); Fri. April 1', Ml,,....'iOtll el ............ 11:30 P'" I: _.,, Ap(ll It, el Seattle (I lS pm I. T.-. Al>f'll 20, •• Sellille 17:25 P.OI I; ~.May J. ol 80111..-e 111 a m I. MOn , INiy 10, et,,..,., YCIA (7 JO 'p.m l: Sat , May n . 01 Deln>ll lll·U em I Sun . Maf?>; 111 Detroit 11t:ll0 p.m.I, Fri , Jllf'fll •. &o<lon •I A"°""lm 17 >Op m.l : Se(. J-It. ol CNc- 111 . IS a ml, SUn , June n. 01 Chic-(ll·tt'«."'.11 n.uN :Jilne1'. Kensol City •I A..-lm 11 lO pm >. Fri .. July J, et lte,.., City U:H p.m.1; Sot .. July J, ot Ka"'4s CltY (S.lS p,tn.l, s..n .. July•. ol IC.enus Clly 111·>se.m.I. Frl.1 Juh t. New Yori< •I Anellelm 17:l0 p,m.I; Set .. July 17, et Cwvol•ncl (II OS. m >. s ..... Jul, II. •I , ....... _ lll:OS Lm.l; Fri .. July 23, el New Y0<k 15 p m I. S.I • July U . o1 -Yon CJ p.m,I; Sun , July 1S,"' New Yor-111 am >. IUH A4 •.et_,,_ ll:A p.m.1. Wed . •uo ' ., Se.Ille 11 l5 p"' ). 'Fr1 .• Aug 12, "' 0.k....., (7 25 P.m I. S.I . """' U , ., O.~l•ncl 0 :OJ p.m.l: SUn • AUQ IS. •t pe!ol-t :OS p,m I. Sot . Aug JI, Oe1roll el •-Im •7 p m .l : SM.1 A\11. tt. et 8otlon111 JOaml.Sun •uo 2',et8oston111:osem.1, FT ,.s.ilM l,at Mllw•u-H U:JO p.m I; Sat . $epl. •. •t Mllweuue U:Jll p.m.I; S...,,. S.IM. S, et Mllw•ukff (11 :300 m I Quote of the day Philadelphia first baseman Pete Rose, talking about former Reds' teammate George 'Fosler: "George is in )I ells$ (>f ti is <>wn he anct Philadelphia's Mike Sehmidt -as Car as hittl,na' )lQrne runs. But you have lo do other thin&S. You'bave lo knock a wall down occasionally. You have lo get your uniform dirty. I usecl to use three uniforms a day. George uses three a month." Raveling defends DiBiaso OAKLAND -Washington State m University ba$ketball Coach George Rarv~ling s a,YYhis friend Dick ' .DiBiaso, basketball coach at Stanford. has-been pressured out of hi s coaching job. ' ' ... . . the thfrd rQund of their title bout in Reno Monday. Leonard had Finch down three limes before the fight was halted Guerrero, Oodger.s come to terms • Outfielder Pedro Guenero bas '-I signed a one-yeJlr contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers, the defendi~ . world champions announced Monday ni1 t. Terms were not announced. 1Guerrer~ was · reportedty askibg far $295,000, wblle the Do<tgers· had offered S2SO,obo. Guerrero hit .300 during the 1981 season wil,h 12 home runs and 48 RBI ... Tr Philadelphia Phillies are expected ~o trade ·outfielder Bah MeBrlde \o the • Cl~veland Indian~ for left.banded relief pitcher ~ld •Monie, it was learned Monday.: The aeal was to be announced today ... Catcher Gary Carter officially signed an eight-year contract }¥ith the Montreal Expos Monday, reportedly ~aking him the second-highest:paid player in aseball. Again, no terms were revealed, but he contract was estimated to be worth $15 million ... Atlanta Braves left-handed relief pitcher Larry Bradford bas won his s•lary arbitration cue agaJnst the club. Bradford will gel $130,000 for 1982" The Braves had offered $90,000. Bradford "'.as 2-0 wiUi a 3.67 ERA in '81. I • Denver trio too· much for Utah · Du hlel. Alea En1U.b and KW m Vaadewe,i.e combined for 619 points · as Denver beat Utah, 14S·l3', in tbe- only NBA game Monday night. Vandeweghe scored 24 points, English bad 23 and lssel 22 ... Elsewhere In the news, C'al Stale Fullerton guard Leon Wood, wtio scored a total of 61 points m the Titans' two recent games, was named the PCAA's Player of the Week ... Oregon State guard Lester Coa.ner was named Ute Pac-lO's Player of the Week . He scored 20 points in !eliding the Beav~rs past Cal, 57-50, and he had 18 points, 16 rebounds. six assists 1 and six steals in leQiling OSU past Oregon, 94-51 ... Pepperdine 'uard Boot Boad was named ....Jtie WCAC's Player or the WeeJc after scoring a -1total of 39 points in the Wa ves two games last week. Toronto, Minnesota settle for a tie D•n Maloney deOected a shot ~ from the point by defenseman Fred ' Bolmistruck into the net at 8:~ or the . third periQd lo give Torqnto a 3·3 tie with Minnesota to highlight NHL action Monday night ... In ltte 'only other game played, Sam Smyl scored JUs 25th and 26th goals ol the season to lead V.ancouver to a 4;l victory over Chica~o . . . <?barges will be field against Jimmy Mann of Winnipeg Cor a fight In which the jaw of Pittsburgh's Paul Gardner was broken in a gam~ lab'\ month . TM Nl{L gave Mann a 10-ll?ame suspension because of the incident. · ' King wants Cooney examtned Don King, ~o.promoter of the ·• schedule d Mar. 15 h eavyweighf title fight between champion Larry Holmes and Gerry Cooney, asked Monday that Cooney be examined by "an objective, special team of doctors to determine the e1terit< "1d nature of. apy p()Ssible injury." Cooney halted his training Saturday on orders from his own personal J>hyslcian because of a reported fOf1l muscle m his right shoulder ... Tommy "Hurricane" Jackson, a heavyweight boxing cohlender who lost a bid for the world championship in 1957, died Sunday. He was SO. TelE!Yision, r~io · _ "Dick DiBiaso being force<\. out of coach.Ing spea"-' to tht! core of all eon.ge , atbletks," R•veling said s hortly after his Cougars de~llted Stanford 62-54 Friday [light in Pacific-10 Conference 'a.ction. "He stands for everlthing ~oUege athletics should stand (or. 'He stan~ for hilh academics, be doesn't cheat, and he gets the most out or his kids. He doun't abuse his ethics, yet he's pressured out." TV: No evetb scheduled. RADIO: e.-ketball -SeatUe al Lalcers, 7:20 p.m., KLA~ (570). ~· Anteaters on a -t1f1 . lrvine's J>aseball team cq~d" 't ,a ~lean sweep JD Las ,Vegas -Mo.,day-as the AnteaRrs defeated Nevada-Las Ve1at, 7-5, in 10 lnninp. ' The ·victory, UCl's foW'th la a row~ was the Aateaten' th.lrd.1lrai1ht against UNLV. On.. lbe community coUeae scene, Oran1e ~out. dropped kl flral •me of the .euon 11 So~thwestem cllnched the t)u-~Oiooahlp of t\t own t.ourl'ament wttb .a &-2 verdict ·called after elth~ .. inninp bec:auae of darlcneta. At Las Vesu. t)e Anteaters (J.1-l> tnUed.1 5·1, entertnc the~ of the t1veoth, A~.,._.,., ~ dOublt aDd foar 1tu1e1 bl u.. lnn•1 •med the deftclt~ JM)wevft"l · The blC .. wu auppfted by o'llftteldfr Rap Cummh'ijl, wM> deliver-'-a t .. .,., atngle. , - ... . JJCI put the1~me on ice ln the top of the lOlh as catcher Steve 8arn1td singled and came home on a hit·and·run trj.ple to rtaht by Jeft fielder S~ve Haworth. Jfa..VOrtt\ tben acored lnOment.s later on f s'crltlc~ ny by R91ph Gedlet to pve the ,A;n~eiteri ' a 6·4 cushf()rl.. t .. , IU1bt·~·re1lever Larry Hien toOt elite of' tbe real. Hl~q. wbo came on ln tbe 1eft'il'Ut, i>ilChed a ICO .... * lnNnp to record_. .. ft.rat wln of the )'~•· • At CIHlli vt•t•, the Pirate.a Wll:!l"en"t H fokUD.ae. Fcetluau Rtcll SorenMn. me\rm1 bU nl'lt start of tM year. couldn't •et pall t ... •econ• -J \ • I From Page C1 • TRUIETT ... FINCll CAME OUT swinging in the third round and landed perhaps his best punch of the brief fight, a right to the champion's head. But Leonard !hit Finch with a flurry of punches followed by a left hook that buckled the challenger's knees . Two left -r ight combinations later, Flnch was on the canvas for lhe third and final time of the night. Estancia's Eagles < 16·6) draw Tustin of the Century League away from home while,Corona del Mar is al La Quinta, the No. 3 seeded team in the 3-A di vision. Sea View League winner El Toro is at home to Cypress. ' opponents have been throwing them at him every game. : "It's been a little frustrating for him ." notes Greenfield, "Sometimes. he tries too hard, instead of just letting thing~ happen." ; Greenfield says he likes to see. 1 • •o.,~e I hurt an OPJ>9.Mlll th rest is history," Leonard said . "When be had me in·the comer in the second round. he made me realize he was serious. I had to get serious and take over." In the small sc;pools division, Academy League runnerup Newport :-(;hristian is at Holy Family while third place Liberty Christian of Huntington Beach is at First Lutheran. Hatton lake about 15 or 16 shots ("good shots"> per game.: Hatton and Bowen, in fact. account for about 40 per cent of the s hots the Rustlers take in a; game. Leonard said referee Mirfs Lane had no choice but to stop Lewis chosen best amateur Riverside Poly High, .with Cheryl Miller leading the way with a 37.0 scoring average and a 75·game win streak on the line, 9Vthe No. 1 seeded team in the 4-A playoffs. Esperanza of the Empire League is the top seeded team in the 3-A division while Mission Viejo is the top team in 2-A playoff action. Hatton, for one, feels the: Rustlers are back on the right: track. : "We·ve got all our problems! sorted o ut no w. Everybody: seems more confident now. w~ just came into the conference playing with no enthusiasm," he· admits. INDIANAPOLIS <AP) -Carl Lewis, 20, the world indoor record holder in the long jump al 28·1 , received the U .S. Amateur Athletic Union 's Sullivan Award Monday night as the nation's o utstanding amateur athlete for 1981. ESTANCIA DEFEATED Fountain Valley foe Culver -City in t he Beverly Hills tournament. 43·35 while Compton defeated Mater Dei, 40·37. during the regular season. ··The early losses were; tough:' adds Greenfield. "We: lost three close games and that ·s: I going to have a mental effect no: matter what happens later. You~ never look al the close ones you : 1 won just the close ones you · Lewis, a · sophomore at the University of Houston, received 'the award at the annual Sullivan banquet at the Indianapolis Convention Center. Fountain Valley's oppo· nent, Culver City, features two freshmen in the starting lineup, the two tallest pllfYers on the squad. One is Shari Netzel at 6-0 and the other Stacey Schipper at lost." The last time the Rustlers and. Chargers met was on Jan. 22! when Cypress scored a 75-67! decision at GWC. In that game.: Hatton hH his average with 1s· points. ! 6·1. • He was the first athlete since Jesse Owens in 1936 to win the long jump and the 100-meter dash in the NCAA • track and field meet, and he a lso was a double winner in those events in The Athletics Congress meet last year. Jacquie Shackleford. a 5-7 senior, is the leading scorer with a 20.0 average and '7.8 rebounds per game. He·s hoping for even bettert things tornghl. : "Cypress 1s just the opposite: of us. We like to run, they like to; pla y the half-court game.· They're big and physical. We've: come so close against them:· he says ,San Gabriel. E~son's first round foe. has won 30 straight league decisions and is 17·2 overal) as .the Pacific League SCYA ·'Midwillters' is over . Coin toss decides two class winners in exciting finish • By ALMON LOCKAIO:Y DallyP'lllC ....... W~ • The 1982 Southern Califos:-ni-. Ya-chting Association "Midwinters" is history. Los Angeles Yacht Club wound it up Monday with the third race of a three-day series for 39 boats in 'five classes. Th-e final r ace w.iu sai led over a windward·leeward course in a chilly southerly breeie, providing some or the closest races dlhing the three·day series. It was a light turnout for LA YC as one or the scheduled classes, the 6·meters. failed to show up on the starting line, a nCj the aging but still competitive Cal-40 Class turned.,out only four boab. ; Four classes of International Offshore Rule provided some keen competition with at least two cf asses winding up In a dead tie with the wiMers paving to be determined by the toss ,of a coin. , The most remarkable tie was in IOR Class A · with the 48-fool sloop Brisa correcting out to four digits with Green HunJ.arian. Brisa won it wilt\ the toss or a coin to maintain her standing aa ~ winner in tbe class. W\nnet in the Cal-40 Class was WillfWaw, ~kippered b.!t Ken Jl'roat, Alamitos Bay Yacht Glub, with1 nen Holt't Plfate II, LAYC. a1 close second. The IOR Class B winner was Red Shill, co-s kippered by Alex Goetz and Anne Kahle, LAYC: the winner iri Class C was Binao., Bert Gardner, Leng Beach Yacht Club, and the Class D 'Inning u Southwest•rn scored three runs on six hila durinl tbe first t•o rrama. Tralllna 1-0 after one, tlwl»lratea <U ~lied tbe acore on en ~poelte field triple to riaht by Tom Duci111 apd i aacrirlce ny by JUck Hopt~. Ducaan ai.o scored ln tht al&tb, on an error, to cut the a.ficit to 4-2, but that's u close as OCC would set the real of the 1ame. Ro• Her-..ln.J went tbil distance for Southwestern. TM '11ht·twld9f 1c1ttered three hits, 1truclc out three but alllo walked 10 batten. Th• Pirat.et ~ed up ieavtnc u men°" l:>U•- Ironlc&Jly, OCC also lost the cbamplonsblp ••me '8 lhlt touma•..-l • :rear •IO· • winner was Ruffian, Earl Dexter, Voyagers Yacht! Club. . I . ; Virtually all of the IOR boats will remain in, Fish Harbor fer the rest or the week for the start or; LA YC's Around Catalina Island race. the first of: the Whitney Trot)hy series. which gets under waytl next Satur<tay. v • Tl'CIClfly wlnnt<'s: IOR ·A llS) I B rit e , ChNte-Mtlne. LAYC, J J•ttlrMm, J•rry Sl,,_11. l BYC. ) E luslv•, Jolln Pocqul,., Cepo 8YC;. • C•le~lly, yvHlltm Ostermlll•r Jr .. BCYC; S. P•nelroton, Jolln Mocl.01Wlit. CYC. 10R·8 11'31 -1 R•CI $11111, Go•lr·Kellf •, '-"Y C t Flom1>uoyo111. Bornei"" onCI Steve Flom. L.aYC; ). S.Wll. Al..., Brown, ~ ' VYC. • .._M>US, MIU lt-Oy. : LAYC IOR C 110)-1 lllnt o, Berl ; Gordn•r. LllYC:· J Wompum. l RC<llOrd Compton. SBYC, J , ~Cll<lne Men, 11411 Lane. LllYC: ; IOA·D 111-1. Rulllan, Eert I De•ttr. VYC; 1 SUnoer. MO.• ' Wo!Mft, '-BYC; 3 'Oullew, S.ltt : Morrell, llCYC. • CMto ·•O 141-1 Wlfllwow. Ken ' Frosl, ABYC. , Plrol• "· a... Holt:~ lAYC. ; ' > • Basketball scores ~ ......... Arkonlfttl, TtaasA&M TS Ar•ollMf 5'.· SS. M<NMw SI. Sl loO T ••H Soulflm IOI, Soul.llOm U •t L.oinor-'1. Te!IOS-Arllt'914NI 7• If Tt-SI.,., Mor*•SlmmOfll II ..... CltmlOll 1', Furma111t Clt.-1 tl, ""'' 14 S. Mlt91HllllPI ... SW LoultlMe 7S Vl"91lllo ,., Ototf9o Teel! '1 MenMl,.1, ""91oc.1Wltl" d MoftNMS.. 11. 111111-H" 59vtll ....,111t '" w.c.-~ .. htl Carollfte 1' e. 111111o11 S4 WW !.-'-k lf8 L...U-• (I •ti JtcUOlllll ... ti, MM-.. Tn ·CllOI ........ 71, E SI to ~ Clnclnnall 17, Vlrtilnlo TKll •J OePelll U, Olllo U. 61 Ora-• .56, TulM SS eve"'""" u, 01t•......,• citv" Orel Robtnt 65, WIW W N-elll.e6j, Olll ...... 61 IMmDNs SL a .SL ..... ... s 1111...is ... w. Te .. , s..1• n .Cl lOyOle, Ill a. )(~le· ... loslOtl u. u. ~.a Holf Cro1U7, Hew N.._..,..t S4 lono U , New one-.. Novy e1, iw1i.n111Mt ti ... """~"· Ce1111M•1 PelWI 54. •1-5Gollll Cer9llM .. $1. JCIM'~ n. PN• .. -1' lhO St ~ .......... ""'-11 Cot~ ..... "' ''""° 54. s.a. use" TEMPE. <AP) -Junior guard Paul WUH1m1 ; scored 18 ~ bia 1ame·hleh 20 Point.I tn u.e HeODd i half as Ariaona State o~ned up a clOH contat In ! the JatG' 1oln1 and coasted to a 80-0 Paelfic·lO • 1 . · Coofermee basketball victory over Saiu&Mm Cal here Monday nl1ht. • ArllOMI St.ate, which also received 1tron1 1 , efforu from ... k>r cu•rd Lafayette Lner and fr~shman forward Biily Jordan ln the repmau.y \eleviaed 1a.me, 1napped a th'"·P•• ..... JJ streak wtdl the victory. • " '< .. .. ·'· I• I • ., I! I •' .. '· . , ' ~ > . NIA WeST••MCOM .. eaattee lteclfkott...., • L It«. .. S.•111• M •• .... LM!Mt M 17 ,.., \It P«tl•ncl 11 21 .sn IV. GoldenSU'9 21 l2 .UI ~ Ptloenl• ,. 12 .sa , s... 01-oo 14 • • 111 • ~Ol•IMlll 5-11 AntvNo n " .w Hovston 21 t2 .UI ' Oenve< 27 u .WO jYI Ul•h 18 » * 141'> O•llH .. SJ '21 " K•nw•Clly .. ,. no ""' eASTa•M COM Paa eMCI .... Dt ...... eoston ,. IJ .JJS """-~ ,. 14 710 "' NewJ9'WV 1S ,. ,4'0 I, WHlllft11\0n u 2S 490 12 ... ., Y0111 JJ 2t . .w 14V. C_ .. DI,...._ Mllw•llll• ,. .. .no Detroit 22 2t ~'31 141'> lncll•M u 2t .431 l•lot All•nl• 1t • • 404 Ull'> Clll~ 1t l1 •• " Ctevel•nd 11 ,. HO IS MellUY'•~-Denver 14$, Ul•ll IM T--'•0- S.•11 ... , LAMt't 8•11H al N-Yor .. ouston at Detroit P,_nla el Clllo90 K•nstt Clty et ~ WHlllft91on •I Porll- All•n .. et S.... Ole9D COLLEGE ~· 1. Vlrolnl• "71 JS-I 1,lt1 l . Nortll (MollM 111 10-2 t,llS l.O.PN m U.1 IMS 4.MIH-1 21·1 1,0JI s. 0r990f1 SI 11.J .. •• TulH IM ... 7 Iowa 1•1 747 I. Mlnnnota 17-4 ,,. t~ WKl Vlt91nla 2H .. I 10. Kentucky 17.5 "' 11. lclaho 11-1 UI 12. Mempftl~ SI. IM .. IJ. GeorQeto... 0 C. 20-S -14.WOeF-I IM MO • IS F<ettlO St. J0·2 Jl9 ... San Fr.n<IKO 21-4 m 11 Ark .. Yt 1•S .. 11. Kanwt St. IM I .. 19 Alabame .. 11·S 1• 20. lncll-""~ PCM lHIMrs sco•1No M•~e. UC lrvlM Waldron, P .. 111< Wood. CS Fulle,,on Gre90ry, L8 SI. Hocton. LB SI. Ancte•'°"· ucsB McNuly, s... Jose SI. Hloolns, Fresno s1. WhleldOn, UC I N ine CunnlnOf>am, U .. h $1. 0 PO f'T Tp A,._ 22 220 14' .. , ... n 1!1 1• ....o 20.0 u 1n ui 4911u 20 IJ7 .. DI IU U lj<I S2 170 IU 12 ICl '3 )4t IS.t lO 11' .0 JIO U..S JI 12' S1 lU IS.0 , 22 142 4J 327 14.t 21 101 11 m 1•.o • ~ ............. ~ Rebounding· Me9ff (UCI) U.t ._; A.-r-. IUCS81 11.0; C ... nlntMM IUSUI 10.2; Mc..,..y• (SJSI U ; ....i (CSf'I U l"lelcl Goel ~: H .... IUCll ..._, (120-1401; --IUCll SI.• (1'2·,4); McOoNld IUCll SI.) 1102-IHI. l'r• T- Percent-oe HOwenl IUOPI *2.6 1114 1; W-ICSFI 7".) llU.1'31. Gros. 1uc:.sa1 11.t IU·f71 An11h. -ICSFI 7 a ..,..; S.r99MW1 CUSUI 4 6, Leklerirlelmer IU<>f>I • 2 . T-~ S<orn'9· I. UC INIM, 76.2 -; L U-Sl•le •... 1. ~ I Fr""° Slaite, 44.6 evo ; 1 Sa" Jose Stale, 46.J. S<orl ... Mer9ln. 1. FrelftO s1e1e •• u .t ; J. UC l<Ylne, +t.l R-1 ... Me'91n. '· UC ,,..,,,., • 7 4; , s.n J-stM•. +J.J. " .... Throw "-re--1. P.c:Hk, 1J.4 IJ71.SISI; 2. UC !Nine. n.o (~). Flelcl o.-1 • Percent-(Off..,wl : I, UC Irvine, ,.,, 1"4-11 .. 1; 1. Fr-Slete, SO.I CSIMOlll. Fwlcl Goal P9rcent.Qe (Otf..,wl: 1. Fr- Slate. 44.• ,,....,,; 2 S." Jose St-. 4S.t 1440-ts11 UCI stetl•ttc9 0 ... f't• .... A .. Koln "'-21 240 , .. ,.. ... Rendy Wllleloon n 142 4J 327 "·' Ben Mc Don.id ,, 102 ,. uo 10.t Reiner Wulf ,, '° JI 111 ... Kevl" Fuller ,, SI ,. 1• u &ob TllOmtan ,. 2t 11 IS 4,0 JOl1n Barkey II 11 10 M ).I Le<>Mnl.,.,._., J1 ,, 1t .. ,.. Gr ant Taylor 12 • 12 • JO u Rick CIK<lo • 7 , 11 2.1 CYr11s Cronley • l 0 ' ... "';;:.~"" • 0 s s o.• n ... ,. 1,616 16..l Women'• t°l 20 cou.ao 1 Louki-Tecll (,.I , .. 1 I.DI 2 Sou!Nm C.I 161 IM '·* l c ... .,...., S..le I .. , I ... 4 Old Dominion l .. S 1,GIO s. RulQen 17-4 ... • TeQS ·2 .. J .. 1 No C•ollM Slate 21.J t'3 • Lone BNc:ll Si.te 11-4 ,.. ' Maryl....S 1•s m 10. o,...,., IM ,.. 11. Penns..te '°"' -12. VII-• 1W -u. T-IM Cit 14. Kentuclly 17 .. 41S U: Soulll c..-otlM IH llt1 " Me"*"sS .. le 21-4 ,.. 17. Arl_S .. le 1•s m ... MIBl•I""' 1 .. 2 211 ''· o.-oi. , ... hO 20. Auburn »> "' COl.LEGE WOMEN .. . S•'1 Otego IL M, UCI IO UC t•YIMI -Hemlnon 14, •uc--4, ., .. B•k•r 4, ~ 14, Gome& I. ".,.._" 4, ~IU, lloy 2, P..i111 J. Tawi.: 27 .. IJ M. SAN DlllOO ITAH -8-16, McGi.lt S, Por...-21. Overton 1', ._...._ t , VMdtt Poel 2. T-1: U 1._1U4. Halltlme: S... ~ S .. te, U.21. Tolel fouls: UC I Nine 14, S... 0 .... StMe 18. Fouled ovl: Hemlllon IUC lrvlMI. 0"'9rton 15-1 01eOo Sttttl. Hlah sdtoot WOnMn fl~ .. AP'UYO .. PS wt•C:....0.-........ , Cetll ......... ~. , ........... ,11:•1 c. .. 1 .... "'--'* .... y; ....... .. Nortll TorYl'K•; C"'-City .. ......... Y .... Yl ._,,.,. .. UI .-...y; L.,......_ .. SI. J ...... llAll...-dl; .............. .t S.111• a.rNr•; u 5Mrr• .. ,.,,._ • ....... s..o-ltl. l'eclfk • Geflr; VtMw• .. itey•f; -CM'd • .._ ....... x: • ........_ ., J. w . ...,,11; SIMI V....., .. e-: C_., 41t Mw11U• .... ••oc•; Arco~ll• 01 W••I Torr--ico; -Del e11.........,. et•MPUY...S --~._ ....... . l"'mK ---M .. ~ .. . ............. (1: .. VIiie I'-.t a ....-1111u; ..... Or .... .. •owlMICI; C91""""911t I,,...; ..... v .... . lte1M11e: ""' Lwll Olli._ M LAI lofMI •1to•cl• •I Tutlll1; Wll .. n IHeclwM9 Hel9fltll M "*'-V .. MIY: L-..c M A~. C-.. MM M LAI Qull'M; hnWIM '"ldtH rHtl •t Mont•Mllf; u,49" .. W•tnvt; ~·et LAUIWftlo; C"""9 .e a1 Two; A"-~ M c.Mro.I; Wlhl C.. Wl1111or et lllltMltll O•••tt Orov. °' , .. ltllll, • C"UPU'tOP" Wc..11 ...... W I It Cll0111f Giii .. w.11-· ..,..._.....,111• ,..vi...,.. ......... "•• ...... .. .... 1:111, Nwto .. ldM'rl ...... .. OtoMMe: CllilN llt ...,._: ~ • LAI "*91 0.., 41t...,.. Oil; .__.. ........ v .... . 0.. ... • Ylllll'llll 0..-• ~: ..._. ............... ~---· Q!Moo::: ' -v....., • ...., ... . ........... ,. ...... .. Ollt'IM: __ c.,....•......, MofttrNI ....... 8vfflllo ow.tlK. w ... ttwd UCl ..... 7~--1 uc1 .. ..,. •.,. • ~·• t ..... ~v..-Mt m -9-SU I S-.., ....... <'> ..... 111. MIC.a m 9M -.wd; ...._, C•• A ..-(1) ..... Oes.lllltlt. W-+4k11L L-<ei • l ..... 28-YINrr• IUC lrvlN), ,.......,, WC INIMl, ~!UC INlMl ; • It -.ii I UC lrvlne ). Mor ll11 IU N\.V); ""•-0.S..tls (UNLV>. Sutt (UNLV), -l'Ke(UNLVI. ~~. Ore .... CeMI ,,. ., ~ 1 I So!Atl_.n -120 Ott ...._. 14 I Soren .... ,.,...,0 m. ~It),,,._ (81 end l'vtUrlcll; H•rf'"'11 ..,. ......,.. W-H•rrlfl9. L~-. ti MMllW ... IS...-rnl; Je-Oo .... n IOCCI, ~ 1s-ni-...1 •. °'"e•M»eH c-.... UC trvllW 7, Hev-u• v ... J Arl-10, UC RI-side 8 Ari•-,...."· LeV•rN 0 UCLA 17, UC Sen 0 .... t ,...,, .... 14,C:..St ... ~7 USC 10, UC'-"•..._.. 4 C.I...., ........ ,.~.1 -en --.;~­ ~ .. or-..c....1 .,,...T,.... .... .... , ............... .,..... .... ...,. ""'· wNI ...... .,.,. ""' ..... ........ for oec,• "-": I. .._.. ....... MLTlllllOlta-._,,IFlo..,....._.._ 90ST091-WlllllW ""-·!Fla.,*'· 1.. ANGELS-............ ...._._ CHICAGO -s.r..u, IFI•., ...._. CU!Ylll.NllO-n.c-, NIL, ...._ .._ DllT..olT-~. f'lo.. Mw. t, IC.ANSA$ CITY -1'W1 ......... "10., aMr • MILWAUKEE -SW! City. AflL, ,__, 17. MINNPOTA-~, ........... 17. NaW YC>ltK -For1 U.. .... , ~. , •• 17. • OAICLAHO -"-'11. Am., Mwr. t. SIEATT\..t -~.Arla., ..... a. TEJCllS-........ e.dl.na. .... t. TO'tONTO-~ A9., ftW.17, ...... '--' ATLANTA -Wlflt ~M ....... ...£... ...-.u . CMICAM--.M1.,.-1e:• r111 CtNC1NNATl -T-. .. le. -.t, HOVITOll-C.., -.. .. Iii.: tt. DODOa•s -Ytre auo, #it.,. ........ :: .... MOllTtllAL -._. ... ...a; ..... , ..... IS. New V<Htic -• ..,........,.., ,..,, ...,, t. ~MILADl..L~IA -c:twf"""'"'• •1&, ....... . ~ITTMU!t0t4 _.,.,......, ~ .. *'> 1. IT. r.ours-a. .,......,,.. .... , .... t, SAN OUIOO-Y-. Art&.,,._, t. · "'" ~•eco-1c.et•11, . .,..., .... 27. • He's.a troubled man DENvEJt <AP> -~t.ek Plbak bu a lovel)' tamur· a thrtvln1 tennll c•m• that tublel tum to trave all over~e world and •m a 1lx·ftpre locome, and a enttal law career to fall back on when be q~tl t clrcuJt. / But delp6te t eH ap,.rent richtl, ,. LI • troubled·man. Ftbak LI Pollah, h~·cow.try·1top 1po and what bu happen d ln hi.I aatlve lan lHt ti.Jt WMU la dee ly dlllurbtnf to blm dJaturbln1. ln fact, that tt bu besun to affect h1I . play. aANKED dTH ln the world, Fibak -h1I nallle ta pronouneed Voy'·tek Fee'-blhk -lott four of h1I tlnt five matches 1lnce Ott. 13, when martial law wu declare4 Ip Poland. "I'm lryint to set It 1oln1 ataln," l"tbak Hid recenUy. "l haven't been able to concentraat.e .. well. You try to put any problems ln the back of your mind when you're on the court, but it affects you. When everytblns's come OK, you play better. But TENNIS I've been sort of depressed the laatt few weeks about what's been happenin1 in Poland." · Despite his sub-par play, hll reception by American teMil fans ·has been heartenJn1. "It's been an amazin1 reaction, people aeem very warm," he aaid. "They seem to 1enuinely care tor me because I a m • Pollah-person and because of what people ln Poland ar~ aolnt lhrouah." . FIBAK, zt, doesn't fit the usuai ·iocJC' stereotype. He speaks six laquaaes. attended law school for two years before decidinl to defer a law career for tennis, and is an avid art collector. Al would be expected, he's a bit more sensitive about issues affecting him and t.bose around him than· moat athletes. And even thoulh he professes to be "apolitical," he is profoundly affected by the r.estrictions-imposed-on hit family back in Poland. Fiba.k's wife and two children cul'l"enUy a.re residin1 in their second home ln Greenwich, Conn., but h1s other home is ln Poznan, Poland, where his parents, hls sister, his wife's parents and numetoua other relatives and friends remain . "This is a very difficult time," be said. "With communication bein1 shut off; we Just don"t know . everything that ls happenin1 back there. I would Ju&t like to be able to make a simple phone call to ask how Grandma -ts doing or ... k about the dos. But everybody ls cut off from the rest of the world. "We 've received one letter, from my fat)ler-in·law, but it was ·Censored. It was all cut up, and we probably only received about hall of· what was sent. But we probably r:ecoelved it only because of me. No letters are leavln1 Poland otherwise." .. iT m Bl8 celebrity slataa lJ\ Poland that may prompt Ftbak, who laat wu In Poland about 10 days before martial raw wu imposed, to retum to his homeland next month when the pro tennis circuit ii in Europe.· Leavinc Poland under the current restricUons ii virtually impossible for or41nary Poles, but Fibak thinks that would be no problem · 'hecau.ae of my reputation." Fibak is hopeful that the Polish situation will chance soon. "I'd just like to see normal lite reatored," be said. "Let children 10 back to school, workers 10 &ack to their jobs, Jet peopll' write letters and travel freely. Then a compromise could be worked out. "I'm not saytnc who is rftht, but this martial law must be lifted now. There's no-excuse to treat people this way.·· .. ..... PICTTfteW ..,.. ... •MM ITAftMa•T Tiie l•lle,.I .. --~-h M l•e WllMI••: • ".-oo•ESSIV •• v I A. TION 0 EV l!LO~MllNT ~!01 S.Hlo•, ::.... Clll ,.._,CA.,_.. .-1cHA.-D A. OAC>90tt Ill, mt S.evlnl, C.,_ .. ,,..,, CA ftUS. Tlll1 -......... It~-... ., ,,,., ....... 1. •tclllHWA.0.-..111 ... .. TllK .....,_ w•s lllM wltll ttoe :-'l' Cl&,,. tlf Or ..... Coun«y.., J... PIC'T1'*'9 eUSMte .. ~. 1'12. • •AMS ITA,.._lrl ,,.. Tll• ... ~ .... ,.,_, ." ctol ... ltu«lllSNd 0reflll C°"' D•l'f l'I~ IMltlMH ff: PICTIT..US 8UllMIH M.AMlllTATIMSNY ""· 2. '· "· 2l. 1'9S ,.,~ ' su.-,SIOI! Sl!"VICU AGENCY "ICTITIOVI 8Ult•ell +------------1 INC., • C40rnle ,.,_. .. Ion, 1610 MU!'8 ITATIMaMT ... -s.Me AN Avo .. Suite I, C-MeM. Tiie 1o11-•ne _..,., ere dolno -·rift••: Ill. G. & G. ~a.-s. 4il I!. 17'11 II .. Hit; C-.. -.S.. CA mr7. ....... Gr.nt ~. •t Amleff W•Y. "-1 8-dl, CA .... . GleWll H. ~. •1 A ..... Wey, .._..,, e.dl, CA'*"· Tllll 11\"l""t II <Oftdw<tel llY .......... ........ ll.G. ,._... ~ ................... 1 ... .. C.-1y C...... ot Or.,,.. ,c-cy., Tiie lollowlnt person 11 clell19 -·~ C.ilf • .,.,.,. _.flfflM: 1------------1 Llt le M. 8 uhler, 2MU S.My COAIT CLEANE.-s. t Wlftdf-, "ICTmou99UM••• C-.1!1 T-. CMH. n.al. lrvltW, CAtr11S. MMMll1'Aftl•9" • A11 .. le Anrelme, 7'0 M.,I• Ge110 Edward l'tc•erd, nu Tiie 1e11ow1.,. --• •" .,.. Ortve,•t"°"*,C•M.tUOt. u .. 1 ... llty. 1 ....... CA ft11S. .......,... n : J ..... AN&IMO, ,.., Morie Ot'l"'9, Tiiis MIMM Is eMw<• ... THI! AC>ltlAN CO¥~ANY, 101 e. •Ive,.._, C..H. '""9. < all '1tll Stroot, .... .0, ~ ...... Tiiis ....._, 11 c~tH t y e .............. c.ltfonHfti27 ,.,.,... .... G-. l'lckMCI Tiltt ........... -flled wtft1 ._ e. Me• AWIOft, 84 I\. Clelr Sum*5eNlcAl.,_.,,I~. C-ty C .. rtl Of Or ..... Cw nty Oft "'""CAI*...._~... LltloM.~ ..... s, 1._ Cltt'f L A«\Oft, Id SI. Cle l . ............ .. St,...,c.ma ...... ~..... Tiltot tt.--n-fllOlll""" -.. ._ ......... Or ..... Con1 Delly ~ .... Tlllt ~ ti~ _., e C.-ty CIHll Of OrMte C..-Y Oft ....... ,. ,._.,, ""· '· "· n , 11110K112, na w.a ..-rot .,_WI...._ OK. 11, IWI. •• M. M-11111 .. ,,_ Tiits ......... -fllOlll wt9' -~Or ... c .... o.lly ltuot. ,_..._Or ... C.... 0.lly P!Mt. , •. t, 1', n. Metal 2, tta m.a •JCTtTteflleutl••• llAMalTA~llt • Tiie IOll01'11t9 .. ,_ It Hl119 -........: · VAMAHO INTEltNA'10..AL. ,.._ ,,.,_ .. ltlwf Aft., ,_..Ill V•lley, eel",.,,. 0-.. IC. Y-, , ... ~M a1..,, ll'elllMlll Y .. leY, C.H.~ Tltlt .___ It cooWllt ...... .., ..... ~ .~K.'f-- Tlltl --.....-lllOlll wltll • CMty Cton: Of Or..-CWMy Oii ..... s • .-... ~ ~ ..... Or-. c.-e Delly ....... ,_ •. "· n , Mwttll t. tta ,.... ..... fmS 1111( c-ty c.ien .. ~-. c-v en ""· "· u, Mitt.!-_•:_!~ _ S'1MI ------------· J9111WY n. , ... "ICTITIOUI eu.t•U& ....ITAft•.,. TllO fott9elfle --· •" ...... ,._ __________ _. WllMf••: ,. MIDWAY AHOCIAHS, 7141 fll.l llfll N•rll•Y A•P11e, Mlclw•y City, 1------------C:..lfwftle ftliSS OAOC G. OCMIN, o-.. ,..._, 1841 H~ A-. MWwwy C"y· C..lfemlO ..... •O•EltT M. SMITH, Oen•r•• ..~. -M9lll 54PWt ...... 119, HllM ....... f\,~ .... ,,_ ................... (-!Hty •""~ __,,M.Smltll Tlltt tll.--t fl•""" U. c.uiity CIOl'll et o..-. c.-1Y Oii J-y 2', , ... . '""" ,....,.,.. or .... eont~1, .. ,.., Pw.2.t,1',U,11et •• _ -~ I • I J I 1. . . .· ' Orenge ¢out OAILY ptLOTtruHd1y1 ftbruary18, 1912 THE i,JUllL\' CIRCt8 ' by Bil Keane · "look! Daddy's wolkin' his soap." ~AR~.\D l:kE by Brad Anderson "So? ... I have bony knees!" DO YOU KNOW ANY· THIN6 AP>OUT HER FAMILY Htf,TORY. RANDALL? FROM WHAT l HEARD, Tlolf FATHER AMNOONED LINDA MAY AND HER MOTHER' THE MOTHER. AN Ul\IDlfr Tllll0015HED ACTRE!15. RAt&eO HE ' RATHER iMAN i:1)( VOOR 8REAKFAST fVERV PAV, GARF"IELD, l'VE P.EC1Cf>Et7 1'0 LET YOU SEP.VE VOORSELf · , / ACROSS 51 Lone effort 1 Seaboard 52 Goes first 6Cift ·54-ott 10 Thofoughlll'• Diverted 14 Enlhutlltm 58 Se wltnout 15 Engllth r!Yer 59 News story 16 Coatlet bird 61 ClrCUJ.. 17 Llluu -roustebout 11 OeHcecy 62 Compound 19 Claim ' suffix 20 8uty 63 Spirft lamp 22 Meeting• 64 Compolhlon 24 Glt'ntr 65 EllM ••. g. 2e EuinO of ee e.wrege ttnllont 67 MllMI 27 TrlCtlmen 31 Strength: DOWN Lat'. 1 Elting spot 32 Surf ducks 2 Algetll por1 33 ~ 3 Mine f\lnnel 23 Mow • 43 ~ 35 ProhlOltlon • 4 College club 25 Coroll• per1 ~ Linet'nll'I 38 Pree. JICll· 5 "f " ol "OT1" 27 Stigma 46 CUI doo#n IOl'I t.Jeguer 28 Shetllnd 47 8owllng 39 Cottegt t Eltulrlll 29 TMMCI prot>1em 40 ~Mir 8 MoYld • 30 YloWll ... OICtl of tht 41 Gtlln "di-~ NeeJit, etc. eOftllcl AHlral... -• 91\91*1": -U~ 4f ~ ·UScoreflll 2~ 3eTljMltlll 508out 10 Oounts(on) Ill• 63 flonllrd n Clf••ll•l!OI• a1 M•e • "°"" ss r,.,... tf Qlarnlng • tcwN '*" ,. Wfll*I• Pref .. ...... 40 Dr-. up 5J Coeart 21 "*"...,. 42 Secure tolerm IOUfld by Virgil Partch (VIP) I -v·I" "Please, George, sp1rt mt the pronuncl1tlon." · DE~~I S THE MENACE -\..., .. by Jim Davis MAVPJ€ TMAT WASN'T SOCH A GOOt7 U7EA by Ferd & Tom Johnson IT'S '5ol«i£0lJS, GORGEOUS ; 60ESS WMAT ... MY 6RANPFAntER ts FIFTY·EI~ VEAA5 OLD TODAY ... Tl'MBl;E" IEEDI ~.U.MI! Ml~P!l'M OH CO'llH'{ .OSl~ISS! SHOE 11M NOT SL~PY--­ l'LL GO T~ED AT MIDNIGHT OK--HERE'S A L IST OF CHORES>OU CANDO by Tom K Ryan I COLJL.P CARE L.ESS WHeReWEOO, by Jeff MacNelly by Ern ie Bushm1ller YA'w'N--·I THINK I'LL GOiO BED by Gus Amola by Tom Bat 1uk Fl'~kl' "l:\kt:RBEi\~ · Dear: Band Alumni, Nc:r;v is the time to consider the Westview Band Alumni Group'Life Insurance Plan . Not only does this plan offer yoi low rates with no need fbr a phJsi cal ... but it also saves you probate problems by naming the band as beneficiary ! DR. SMOCK HMM~ L-OOKS 1..1Ke -rHe PU'f Y NURSe GOOFE;O WHeN SHe PUT OU"T" iHe CHAR"T"S! I 1.E~VE. M'f ull)rt]ou> OPE.M AMO A O\JCK n 1ES IMtO M'i BEOROOM! W"A'f ON £.Aftf~ CO\JLO et MO~ RtOIC:~l.Of'S 1"14AN \.l)AKI~ \JP I.VII~ A OUCK IN 'IOOR ROOM ? by George Lemont THIS IS YeS'T"E:RPAY'S e>AseeA(...t.. " POOL...' \ ca.>LONT HELP IT. -\T's Nor ij\fFRULT! by Lynn Johnston · I RftAD lHE. DE5™UC.liONS ! I ... I \ !· 1 .. ... Mine l:laS rich history But Iron Mountain cited. as top polluter REDDlNO I AP > lron Mountain Mine wua ll11led l1tmona the l \4 worst pollutlon source In thfl Unltet.l States by the federal t<;nvlro nmental Protection Agency last year. i The mine, lO miles northwe11t or Redding, l!i bclnl( blnmod Cor pollullnlil the Sucrumento River whh metol ~olutlons ""oping from old tunnels. It started In the 1H60s us u .sold and silver mine, but by ·1901 , Jt was the 10th largest t'Opper mine In the world. A number or miners were killed In lta t-"'rly days, and thl'ee were killed In a tunnel blut In 1923. Joti C1tbltto, who worked at the mlne pick.In¥ Wllllte out of ore en route to the 11melter, r e members pulllna a human arm apd a stlll-runnlna pocket watch Crom the or.e after the 1923 accident. C1t bltto's father, an Italian Immigrant, worked two years In th~ mine before he could afford Al'WI~ ART TO ART .\c•t t'l')'.~ .h .. 1n St upll'ton hugs I lrnpu~.S&.u:.akl'1 Thomas 1T1p 1 ll';\lt•tll 11n Capitol 11 111 al'lt'I' C'onJ!n·..,~ annmmc·t•d th1· first natiom\ict1• :1rts ~om 1)(.'tition tor htt:h school sludt•nb, \\h1d1 tlH' :1C·t n·s ... ha~ bt·1·n push111i.: It \\tll he ht· Id unt ti :\1 ;i' JI Fate of skyjacker $25,000 question VANCO VER. Wash tAP> An attorney rrom Modesto With a--tas t e f o r adventure is launching a search ro r the body or 1971 skyjacker D R. Cooper Richard Tosaw. 56 , I!> orrenng a $25 .000 reward to a nyone who can produce the remains of the nation's most famous skyjacker The search 1s planned ror area forests this summer Cooper parachuted from a Northwest Boeing 727 jetliner Nov. 24. 1971, with s200.ooo he extorted from th1• utrlinP The Cahrorn1 un has rreatcd Research Pu hl!shln~ Co to market a boc5k on his qu1'Sl. The preferred till1· 1s ·'I Found D R Cooper," but Toi.aw said. "My Search fo r D.B Cooper" will have lo do 1f his sear ch is unsuccessful He has placed classified ads in Northwe!>l newspapers reading. "$25.000 reward fo1 ttu! finding a nd del!ven· to me of the hijacker D R Cooper. whether dead or alive. offer good until July 1, 1982 " Asked 1f he hacl $25,000 m the ban.k to offer as a rewa rd . Tosaw said, · I've J?Ol more than a million, actually" Tosaw 1s a long lime attorney there and a ohc-t1mt• FBI agent. believed to have extensive real estat e holdings. Tosaw said he ten. the FBI ln 1955 ror raw. but now has time to devote to mysteries like lhe Cooper case. .. I've always been interested in things .like th~t ." he said. ·'Things like treasure hunting. I think most people are." Tosaw said that news stories and a mo vie about Cooper , co in c idin g with the 10th anniversary of his jump, drew his interest Arter preliminary research. he said, ''f'm s ure he <Cooper > died m the attempt" _and thinks the body must be somewhere in the s urrounding hills "The odds ar c he 's still there." He has asked for the FBI file on Cooper.,.~ Ralph Himmelsbach. the FBI agent who worked longest on the Cooper case and now retired, said in November he believes Cooper probably l a nded somewhere in ttie Washougal River basin. He specul ates that a packet of the ransom money found in 1980 on a sandy beach west of Vancouver was probably ~ash ed duwn to the Columbia Ri ver in luter spri n~ noods to brlns Joe and hl• mother over from Italy In 1910. • Metal• and mineral• worth SI billion at today'• v1lue1 have been taken rrom tht mountain. ln the 1990a, the mine w11 sold to a British firm. The new owner be1an mlnlnt copper to wire the new electric power era. A smelter was built, 1 p1wnln1 a town of l ,800 . residents named for Lord Keawlck, mana1tn1 director, who came occasionally to Inspect, but never stayed. Ore was roasted over wood fires, then shoved Into the charcoal-fired smelter. Wood and charcoal c ame from surrounding forests -as Loni as they lasted. When they were 1one. Keawlck sent crews Into the Pit River Canyon to cut timber aJ'.ld float it down the river. An e lectric generating plant was built at Volta and after 1901 the ore was roasted and smelted by electricity. More than 1,000 .men worked in the mine and at the s melter, while most of the executives came from England. They found themselves in a hellis~ haze of sulfur fumes, surrounded by a blighted l andscape, with ove nllke summer temperatures. But the young men played cricket, dressed for dinner and wore white nannels when they dated ReddJng girls. The girls rode the ore trains from Keswick to the mine, where they took tea, picnicked and played tennis or danced with the Britishers. Meanwhile. fumes from the operation spread over the upper Sacramento Valley , killing o r c hards miles away , and rancher lawsuits forced the company to move its smelter to Martinet In 1906. State reports s how that between 1888 and 1965, the mine yielded 265,314 ounces or gold. 24 mill~~~es of s ilver, 313 mtrt dr ot copp'er, ·2.6 million pounds of sulfur, plus som e zinc and Iron. The mine was sold In 1967 to Stauffer Chemical Co., which ln turn sold It in 1976 to Iron Mountain Mines lnc .. a Sacramento firm. President Ted Arman immedJately l'bund himself ln a fight with Central Valley Water Quality Control Board over river pollution. An acldJc solution or copper, zinc a n d iron that will copper -plate a key rina in m inutes seeps out or the mine. Lett to now lnto the river, state blologlata say It kllls fish. Arman Insists it is not harmful and that lt existed before mining started. ,t State experts say the pollution can be removed if the water is run through existing concrete vats rilled with scrap iron. a system installed years ago by the British owners. On Nov. 16, a judge approved an agreement allowing the state to reactivate the val system and place a lien on the property if the company does not pay the cost. In the meantime. the property •is scheduled to be sold at public auction Feb.· 22 to satisfy a $12 .390 claim by OU Water Engineers of R edding for hydroelectric studies. A visit to the mine today is a sense -numbing experience. There is a Vl;\St open pit where thousands of .to ns or pyrite ore we re removed and there are several visible tunnel openings. many covered with rock. State experts say poisonous water still seeps from the burled tunnels. _This idea may get your goat Expert says food shortage nothing to kid. about TUCSON, Ariz (AP> This is nothing to kid about It .cnay even get your JCOal But enjoy those thick. juicy beef sirloin strips a nd T bone steaks while Y,ou can find and afford them ' Goat may be a staple m your diet 10 or 15 years from now. AU it's going to take, says an expert o n the b earded l'uminants , i s a s tead}', Inevitable decline in the world food supply. Hold on, you say . Goats? Those. cute, furry, fuzzy, goateed little critters ? The s tuff of "Bi lly·Goats Gruff?'' Thole ~nlmals muc h -mullgned In ltterature, associate d with lechery, gluttony, lasciviousness ttnd all that, reputed to eat •nythlng? Nol, you say. by your ~hin·whlskers? " Wh y not? H 's.already 'cons umed by many people in C>ther para of the world. Listen a minute to Clair E. 1:errlll, who makes so m e punc~t argumcnta. "AA we produce less meat from 1r1in, we'll need to take up hat alack." -"II meat 11 rationed, you won't be nearly 10 Cuasy BelJeve ~·· when that time comes, the nt~e O( be.t will be (ar, far MP•r Ulan il la now." "People eat any food on the basis of supply and, price. If theres plenty or it and it's cheap they eat all they can get That.;s the situation th~ U.S. is in l\Ow <with beef 1 and has been 1n smce World War 11. because of a surplus of ~rain." Terrill says it won't stay that way • The American grain surplus won 't fade overn ight. unless there Is a worldwide drought - which is possible. But world food production, which increased during the 1960s relative to jhe number of people, leveled off In the last d~cade and, Terrill predicts, will decrease In the 1980s as world populatton arows . Terrill , 71 , a retired staff sclentl!st who directed the 1tudy of goats and sheep ror the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural R esearch Servtce, w as in Tucson tor an lnternfltlonal conference on goat production . He says goats may btcome a primary Codd aource ln comln1 years u more marginal land comes Into use tor food pn>c.1ucllon. \Yhy7 Because coats -and ,heep -don't have to eat 1ratn. Goat.a, he say1, are 1croun11rt1 browsers eoters of brush ana 1rau 1necud·c hewen are hooves and horns ahead· of cattle when It comes to feeding costs. "They're pretty important in quite a few countries where meat production from graTn is not possible," says Terrill. "Much of the meat has to be produced from land t hat we wouldn't even use. In some countries, over half the meat consumed Is pr9cfuced by meat goats. In the United States it"s so different that It's difficult to assume." Terrill says high costs and s teady loss of farmland.lo urban sprawl will continue to shrink agricultural acreaae In this country. And that, he says, will contribute Inexorably to a dwindling surplu1 of grain. The number of farmer~. partlcularly rull·tlme . ta a h r1nkinf because of the economy.· Stauertn a Interest ratea for equipment, capital Improvement• and fertlllaer, and knockout energy co1ll - beat des the m11rortune, from the farmer'• peraptctive, of 1 bumper soybean and com crop tn 1981 that tran1late1 lnto d•preued prlcu -have com blned to lllbten the wrench. · • 1 t.h.lnk shffp and 1oata an the mo1t attracttve tbln1 1 , Orange Cout DAtLY P1LOT/l'U11CJ1y, February 18, 1112 Cutbacks study ,rn 1 -----------.......--~----.--- fu,nm .Up _4~,~~-:.~~ . B11cked with the ble11ln1 of the Oran1e Co~nty Board of Suptrvll0r1, the Grand Jury baa em barked on a s103,ooo 1tudf of poaaible money -1av n1 conaolldatlon or special districts that do everythlna from 11111 water to control moaqultoea. Supervisors have approved the jury's request for S67,000 In e xtra money to be added to $36,000 ln existing jury funds for hirlna the account1n1 firm o( Price Waterhouse to act as a con11ult1nt during the study. Results will be released sometime before the jury's term ends June 30, said Ron Rogers. an aide to boat d Chairman Druce Nestande. The 19·member panel Initially had proposed to study possible consolidation of the activities of . special districts that sell water <wholesale and retail I , provide trus h collection and treat sewllge. Jurors decided. however, to expand the study to include all special districls1 lncludlnll those considered "a ependent" on county government such as the Orange. County f'lood ·Control District. Cou n ty o frl c lals say information collected by the jury ln examining the districts will be useful regardless of whether any consoli dations uctually occur as a result of the investili(ation Planners OK condo project in Costa Mesa The Costa Mesa Planning Commission has approved the c o n's t r u c t i o n o· f 1 , 1 5 5 condominiums on land owned both by C.J . Segerstrom &·Sons and the Coast Co mmunity College District. Monday's approval was tpe first time a developer had applied ror a new.. ~rban center residential zoning permit that allows up to 50 units per acre. The plan approved by the commission calls for 41 units per acre with S6 percent or the area dJ'5i1nated as open space. · If approved by the Costa Mesa City Council March 15 the three-story project will be built on 28 acres bounded by Adams Avenue. Pine C reek Drive, VIiiage Way and properties with frontage alo ng Harbor Boulevard. 2 • ·s 6 7 8 D A I . L y p I L 0 T c Valley man ·heads unit of United Way Donald Young, a Fountain A Valley resident who works as controller or the Smith Tool Co. .in Irvine , has been elected chairman et the Fountain Valiey Board of Directors or the United Way of West Orange County. s The Fountain Valley board provides suppo rt and recommendations to the United Way areaw id e board of I directors. The United Way or West Orange County serves Huntington Beach , F ountain Valley, Westminster, Seal Beach f and Garden Grove. Other officers elecfed to µte Fountain Valley board were Charles Ardolino. associate dean I of Coast Ii ne Col l e"ge , vice chairman ; Bob Sampica, director of personnel for the E Fountain Valley School Dist.net, secretary; and Wayne Osborne, the ci~'s director of public works and parks. treasurer. D Also elected to the board were Melinda Byrd. Bill DeFraga, Helen Dille, Dave Hagen, Rose Kravitz and Dlddy Lammers. Tear gas use course topic A two-hour ni1hl course on using tear gas canisters for self-defense ls being offered at Sun View School In Huntington Beach Wednesday. ... A certification to carry tear 1aa and a cattister or tear 111 6 4 2 wlll be stven to those who pay • S23.95 fee and complete the course, says Sun View Principal • Robert Vouaa. The scboOI ls located at 7721 Juliette Low St., west or Beach Boulevard and south or Edln1er A venue. Reaervationa can be made by calllng 847·9643, Vo1.t1• Hid. ' On dean's mt Jan Ellaabtth F11er of Lacuna Beach ha• been named to the dean'• list tor the fall l•l H metter at Marymount Palol Verdet Collete In Rancho Paloe Verdea. Dean 11 1ht honor 1tudenta must •chteve a irade point avua11 of 8.5 or better. .... ..... .......... ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• INDEX ...... 1002 ·········~············· Te "IC' hur Ad. Call 642·5678 HOUSES FOa SAU lo1htr•I t\,H"~ '"'"' I K .. u .... f'•ht11,.,14 ,.,,,, .. ,, .. "".~". '•W"hl•• , .. j ''"' ,, ... ,.iu .... IJ,,n,. l'u 1 I •11 .. ,, t ·"9"1tf•t \4 I\ ''·"'"" k. "' .. '" ~ l ..rv•.~ .. "' 1 .... "".11.1. IAfj_fl41 ''•V· \li-"11 \ t I ~rk~:':·,·" ~-J .... t•)···· .... """" '"• .,. ..... .61 ~ ~\llfrrrlt 4~\111 .. "''"'"'"'hf \I.Ibo I II·..,,~•'"'' am mm ,, h 1111 hW 'o1lt ,.,.,,l'ttot "'" ltit '""" ~:;!~;\~.~~\"" l fl'fh1hH I 114' t ''l'h ~ ttftlnM '' 1.111't.111\tt1 , ... ~,.,.,, ...... ,,,..,h l't,jf'11•h'• \ ftjl• ..... 11 U•~~•lvl,..\lu•11I hw•on1 l1t.,.)i.rt\ I l111l~•lr1 .. l l'•o11111th 1 .... '"' , .... \h4hll•· Ill"~ l th ,., ~. I \l.h,lmn 1'-'"-•" u, .. 111 llf•~· ••••• , •• ,. l\\tt1,iit11uM\ l'i11j 11iUt..-""'1 .. t1 l't•"\• "-••h1 \ ... Ith•,_,~, • ... .ti • "l,1t1 t \t f •• 11. u .... ,.,, .. ,, \\ ..... ,, RENTALS .,,·~··· ... ,, ...•... , u .• ,... ... 111,;1111••··,, "111"1 • ........ 'u ...................... "'' "'"""'ott"•Jlii11• ·I 11 11••••"-11••• .. • u•f\ 1.-. .......... . ·~·11\1• ..... .. l""llt.t\1•11 ,, .... t.· \14• I•··•" I ,,.. . .. ~ ' t ...... ,. u .... i, t11 '" , .. 4' \1 ~ • .. ...... tit· •• ""'It ...... I ~' ,,. I \ ........ tt ... '. k+"'illl ·l·' " ,, .. ..,.._._, ••• luf'' tt ,.,, Uu , u ... '""' ... tt·••. 1 1 .. 1. ............ .. " ...... . k1 .. 111' " .... \lo llo•0llf• "" BUSINESS. INVEST MENT. FINANCE ..... ~ ............ , .... ' .... ""' \\ 111l1'tl '"'''"'""•Ii ••11••·'' ' '"t' ~"• "' \\ 1111 ,1 "'""''"'"''' \1111!11\"UlfHi . ''"''' ., .... , ..... ANNOUNCEMENTS, PERSONAlS & LOST & FOUND \...,.. .......... 1.1 I 11j,,,t 1 •• ,, , ...... ''"""' t ·••'"' ,,, ... '41..th ._' • 1~ I lwl., ft n.I sm1m ...... ' .. ,, .. EM'lOfMENT l PIEPUATIDN , ............. , ... .. f ........ , I I ............. , u' I MUCHANDISE ,, ..... . ,., •• u .. . ,._,., .. .... •·Ill • ..... , "" \~ I o I ' I \;;,~ :~: ~ .. 1., ..... .... M\1 .. 1• ......... ,,, • u ... II·••" I~ ·••I'• .. ,.1 I ...... I 01 .. 1 ••• \1 u t\11>•'. \11 • •ll\U+t 'I• \II\., 111111 ••, \\ 1 I \1111••11•1•••'!' ... 1 llflll• ''"""' 1111 h' , .... , .. , ,,, ...... ... "'""· \1 1.1.0 .. 'i(•• It••• 1 •• ~., ...., •• II· 'lot .... _ ... I h ,, ~: ·a~•hoo ll+t I ~1 I•" BOATS & MARINE fOUIPMEHT I i,.,.. ... J I"''" \lot-I"''" l\1_,4 '' .,,.,. I ·r• , ............ , , ...... ,(t1111,,J1;1 ' ::::: ~;~ .... ~ . t\o •. el .......... ""'' ...... \1.1,l' THNSPOITATION \1111111 ...... , ........... ,. .......... 1..11 "·••i.. II"'"' ",. •• t 1• l1 " • I "·•·• lh .... , ..... ..... ,. 11 .,. 1 t ti .. I• I hl•t ~ \uh °)I n•t •'.111 AUTOM081l£ (1111111 I \111 •• ,... • r.1 " M.. , ......... \, 1 ••• 't•ltt• fl.111 tt••I '""'" th II• 1•11••· \.ot• , ............ . '"''"'"'11111 .. AUTos: IMPORTED lnlh1-'t \.l,1 ""''".. ,,. , ... 11 \11•lu1 II+ ,,1,' 11\C" , ... , .. , ''"' 11 .. 1•.lfl t t"• '. 11'•111 1 J-'·•14! ,, ...... """''..,."~'' \4 u•loi \11•1111 '"'' 111, \tt.M '''" .......... .-••••• o11 .... ,.,.. k ......... . ..,._ .... )(.11., ... ~,. ,.4111 ....,, .... .. "" .. . r. .... ,.ai. ··~-'·'"' \"'h• AUTOS. NEW AllTOS, USEO , .. "' \!fl •I• It.," 1t:I • EQUAL HOUSING I .... ·~ OPPORTUNITY ..... :1~ .. ... ~'•Moffet: ' All rut utate ad I·\! ,. Vtrl l ltd In th I 1 ll.,,. ., nt'lr'1f:Cir II IUbJeCt 10 .. the eral F11r Houa .. 1n1 Act of 1968 which .. mallet II IUeaa t to ad ... . ve1111e "any prererenre. llmltat lon . or d II· 1~· crlmlnatlon baud on I•• rai.\. r olor. re1111on. II • 1 .... sex, or national ona1n, "' or an Intention to mo~e ''"'' 1;11 any such preference. I•• l!mltatlon . or d I I ~ ... ...... rnmlnatlon •1 11 :.ei .. Thia newspaper will not :11•• 'lnowln11ly accept an)' :·· .,,1 adHrt1sang for real ... estate which Is 1n vloh1· .. Uon orthe law ... . ~ .,.. mc>H: AdvtrtfHn :;-......... check .... ,, •d• :·· ~ =·= 1·:; I . . DAILY PILOT ........ , :::. I lt!Wlty for tltt first 1 :: lllcorrtct hturtlo11 :: ~· f '' ···-------... ::: Ho.et tors• •• • • •••••••••••••••••••••• t :::·......, 1002 •··· . .. .. ................. ... .. . ST•STO NEWPORT ICH! It's ii buri:;icn ' Sl2tl.OOO :·:. totul prtt't' 3 Hdrm 2 ::1,: buth. film1l) ruom. bm·k •. rm•µlun•. H l lot Hoom •' tu bwld Alh·~ u1·n·~~ ... ,, " .. ... .. ... 1'1111 Utl fll(.,.ffilll't' Ill formation. ~-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS $1 lt,500 TllMS THMS!! Ownt•r wonu out' Su111·r :I 1"1rm 2 hJth humt·.,. cth IASTSIDI llAUTY! Charmin• 3 Bdrm 2 bath honv In pmnf location. Great r1nant'ln11 terms available on this ont and. noquallfyln& Price 1148.500 Hurry. rall us for rompl•te dtt11l1 841-7171 tf-1¥&1 THE,llCl ISllGHT on thll 4 Bdrm, rent'~ an pool home on a qwet cul ~·sir In East11de Costa Men A beautiful back yard with covered patio and a rozy l1replare 1n the Hvln& room There 1s more ' Auu ma ble loans and an anxious seller Only $169,900 Call 979-6370 ALLSTATE REALTORS DREAM HOUSE WITH CHARM! You'll lo\ e 1t ht' re' (o}\«hSh tudor St) le (o\' el) trt'e hned strrl'I. pnde or CJ\\nl'rsh1p und .in auuma ble lo.in of 174.000 JI lo... 1ntereM r11tt• ~\ill pncl' on this 3 Bdrm 2 buth doll house IS S\04.000 C.ill 646 7)71 THE REAL ESTATERS IAYCHST HST VALUE An out~tund1nl! 3 H It 1·ui.u1m homt• .,.clh quJli ty. c•hJrm & t·Jrc• 111 l)l\'J~l' lhl' ml"I 1!1' 1•nm1nutin1t ~·r1·n1 h 1l1111ri. 11•.td It• ltt\ 1·h bnc·k 1111110 Ownl'r "'" 1•,1rf'.\' 1•11.tn·mt•I> fJ\nr.c hl1· rin .. nr1n1: ~.uoo 644·9060 . ... l.tr111• ll\lnl: Lcmll'i _______ _ .m·a nrc.l'k rirt•l)IJt I' I •OCEAN VIEW * Nori h ( oi-.1.1 \11•, .c GRl!..,T T~MSI bao:ain' 1.111 nu... ~ '"" • • I• ~-2313 t:u1•lh•nt tu... cnt1·r1•,1 . .. . .. ... ... . .. •I ... •. , " . .. .. , ... <ojU\ THEREAL ESTAT&:RS fcnJni ml!' 1 h1• ultcmJ ll•. mm.1nlK d1.11nwt Fn I J n ' :! h 1· .c u t 1 I u I f 111 jll,11 I'' ~I I'll I h ct.1or, .incl. hJ 111" 01111 I "'•'"' Wt•ltl tl1•1 t.. II\ t'I l1•tk' ~tn•Jm J111I 1•n•.tn \II'.,.. P ri\ah• H1•Jt'h 001\ 134~.tMMI en (.'nrnnJ . cM 0:'tlar, rail fi73·11~~11 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS :. OPEN HOUSE REALTY /. :;'. Try SIOtOGO clown & !--------1 T i\ I\ 0 \ E II '' i ' 1 PAY MENTS THE REAL ESTATERS :.: ,. e i \ l.1•.ase opt or 5 h •• rc•d ~ _ , t>qU1ty 2 Hr 2ba 1·omlt1 .. '. ' • }. SI 19.900 Ask for ~I ~~~\'l 675-17'71 ,.. .. . .. "' "' I. Starting a·New Business Accco rdl ng 10 California l11t1neu i nd Prol111lon1 Cocle (Ste , . 17900 10 171301 111 , p1r1on1 clOlng butlneu ::: under a llctlllout n1m1 • " mutt Ille 1 tlatemenl ; : with tht County Clerk : :, '"d have It publlthtd ,., lo11r tln111 In a ;:~ new1paper Mrwlnt the ,, •• • r t • I n w II I c II 1111 :::· ~•lnu1 111oc1ttd. • The tllttmtnt 11 req11lrtd by law and 11 ntcttuty In ptOttctlnt yo111 bu1lnt11 name. • .. · Mttt lltnU req11 lre proof of tltlnt to ot>tn ,.., COf'llNro.i ~ta. Tiit DAILY PILOT prowl4M ~II ftllftO end p11bllc1tlon Mnlet1. Wt lllYt et! '"' lltet•,ary lornrt "Ind melnteln • dally ltrY!ct IO tht Ortntt County Co11rthcw1t, llttltr 1top b y one ot our oon11tnlt 11I oUlctt or phont lllt LIOAL Oll'A"TMINT 142·43:11. lat. U2 tor lftOtt lnfortHtttft lt"l lonM. MISAYllDI Va rant •nd ready~ &n· JOY thlt 4 Bdrm. family room and f'ull d lnlnit room homt On a wtll lctpl quiet s tr~tt Sl'fa.150. 642-5200 J Pf TE ' BARRE Tl REALTY • ' .. ~ I • ,, ·~ ,, , 0 • I· " ·I , . •• 1411 W. l,.AY OPIH MON 1·5 W~t Bay bayfront. Slips tor 2 boats, remodeled 3 bdrm . 3 bath $1,200,000. Oceanfront. Jt.!tty views. Marine rm , 4 bdrm, 3 bath. 3700 sq. fl. Si.385.ot>O."' UDO ISLI HOMIS 191 VIA LIDO NOD S~T/SUM f .5 Prime Lido Nord bayrront. S bdrm. 5 bath, lge L.R. 2 boat slips $1,500,000. Remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath + large rec. rm .. beam ce1hngs. $420,000. UMOA ISLf U YNOMTS Lagoon view from 6 bdrm. 5 bath, playroom, dark rm . den $1.350,000! CARNATION COVE Spedacular bayfront view 4 bdrm, 4 b.at.h. 2 boat slips. Sl,900,000. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR J.l J B"Y'"'' Dr·•" ~4 B 6,'', 6161 .$AXER.UPPERS S 32 .-.s. co,.o ."O"VACANCI~ Far be1ow market For Ht·up call Rick an,rtj~_7141760-7292 VlfW TOWMHOMES Master suites View of Ocean & Night lights. Qliet Area. Parks. open spaces. $137 .000. >pnl F\n Hal or Pal Agts 151,9905,573.73119 _ YllY 'SriCIAL Charming . Z BR• home in nice ai;ea. Only 4 years old & has double garage central air & cozy fireplace. $104.90<;\ Made.ll.ne Cra wford 752·1414 (U2()) Save, Save, Save! 7569 ~A<iciB~ ... CAMYOM ·•OADMOOI ~ IXCLUSIVI sno.ooo fantastic Plan 4. 4 Bedrms, FamUy Rm w/fireplace, Formal Dining Rm , 2\<li Baths. l'}ewly decorated In sort pleasing colors. Beautiful new cptng & window CQverings. New Marble entry. • Lovely "'Pc>ol & spa. Spacious yard. Security system. • ' WISUY M. TA YLOI CO., HAL TORS 2111S.~HllalMd MIWPOIT Cen& M.I. 44~t I 0 ~lo look ror ~arage Gi\l\AGE SALE adi. IO No need lo \ra\'el 111lo\erl i.ales . you'll rind them the Daily Pilot brini: nght here U\ ClassH1ed ti.pp) result~. To Phl\'11 To place your garagt l yaur drav.1n~ t·11td. salead.ull642·S678 ~642:.S678Loda)' B8ALD IAY MOOllM Ocean View Home. Superb Modern St yling. Sharp, Clear, Clean Features. Many Special Attributes. Excellent Financing. Undoubtedly One Of The Best Priced Homes In Emerald Bay. $695.000. @ ·--........ 759-9100 1*2 Co.poi•• fltne MewportC..ter ()Illy 7 ~ old °" bHcll wMI spocloa 1-..2~.-.Sfflly~­ ,.-ir/..W.bcni1. owe ot 12%. For I 0 yHrs. ldMC•d to $615,000. •7J.6900 BALBOA IS. LOT + ~ .-.. 2ot s .. ,-.1,... ,.... tot + ....... -~ 1.-.c1 to SJ29,500. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC . RlAL EST A Tr YOU CAN STOP MOW · This beautAful 4 BR 3 BA home has it all -magnificent view, parquet 'floors, large custom designed family room. plus exceptional assumable financing. All this could be yours for only $299,950. Call now for further information on this fabulous new listing. • c:::::. . ' . ....,..., , 'I ll't j , LOOl...-FOI 4DUPUX7 719~rit.-l+I 12•4 St.Jtl 6otlrk-lt l 61511ft..l+l 510A•ocedt>-l +3 411 D•hli•·CHdOI -ybe? OHTHIWATB air~-down · seller will carry 80"4 AITD at l2'X. 4 bdrm. 2"2 baths. plus •much more. INCLUDES LAND! $335,000! ..... ..,Prop. IHhn *675-7060. Lo•tfvHo.t! 3 bdrm. ~ ba, waler. gardener inl'luded S795. 2 duld ok 644-2778 • Clean 2 Br I Ba . duplex tnrlsd gar . pr1 \•a 1e yard NO PETS S485 & $495. ~-6680 Nice clean 2 Br. l Ba enclsd garage. yard. new paint & carpet. No pets SS25 + serurity 2544 Orange. house D. 548·2778. Lg 4rm bungalow. pet util paid. TODAY S395 QC.RENTALS 750·3314 - E •• .. h I .. . tr . .. ~~~ Strvlct 01,.ctory Repttatntatlve 64"611,eatl22 . , . I ' 4h1 e..il 11n11e C t uillr'I. •••NI ..... , tiW1•a . th an••lli! · ...... Pao• ....................... ·-~-................ .. ............................................................ , .................................................... 1 ... ;-.i ................... . Ft. all YoU ated '° tnow ~ 6 alffm tlHn. CU8TOM OUD~NINO K•O Lindlnpe Malnt. IEAIONABLI Prtfnatlal Cart ol your 91'.UVING ACfOR~ QUAUjli ........, ileMIM aboulbultruptcy,rall Color bri•hteMn. wbt ~ld'l/Cornm'I• RttldtComm.Clean·uP PROMPT.FRIEEST. PolltHIOOI. Home. ,..ovt,Ncoco, .. ,~~y t ~~rill ~II~~~. "~1Uylloofliii'"' .'1~4JUJ.tlt2 crpt.t • 10 miA. bleach Cln·i.p 883-3mJ.X43 Lt llaulin&:5"41·Mf:' ALMOST!Vl!RY lap. ' bfa. 142--mt, -~-art.~.:.., ""'"'MHC ' -. neeHoawLMS ... :!.ICM_ ....,. Hall, liv/dln. rroJ SU: ' REPAIR NEEDED ,...... Law AUYwl. I Waijpeper contr1ctor t •••••••••••••••••••••• ava room ruo: couch c .... w~ nl'EORASSHOPPER OAVEMS..157 . .,. •• ,. ...... HOM· Vlla.Ut/tns.873·08!!_ Paifttln1. Uc3282AOO.C. s Pl .. . ,lN•HouE 110: ~ m. Ouar. tllrn ....... ••••••••••••••••• Completelawnmalnt. ------w ruun•o ... n yra Otry Gompf "al$0 .......... ~·.~~~· ... .. ~ lb\-•-"••• -....------rfUTIS/~• IMPROV.EMEN lS yra 1 lAteriora ban mantles DomlnlcM2·&51 8°''1Home lmprov. 0..tnll. llZ•lOtYI -M•••••••u••••• -Lowmin.80\ljoblOK. Addltlou' RtCDO~llQM ~ ::t.· Jio0101ork II bra rlea cab In cla LandK1plna Yd Clnupa ,.!llti MabK. lllHZSl al\:j TopQualty/leu. la ta PW ~y Rlchar1 Exptrt wa)lcoverin~ ln, Ffte tit. I.al. 141·1111 d I. ' ~-bookeaui skylltu' Treetr1rn Eiu1ertm1iot. H<*EJMplOVEMENT Prif.badatlotllome• Sillor.Ue. · 13 1"0 staJltUon. Ru.s P cts ----~~~N,oS-li am,poo cu1t moldin1 Refs: Jlm11Sl·0129 TtJtfloOn . Fendn1 (2U>at.-T "-Wlotalcua~1 ~·10 ~~wt A11i1nmeot SllJlt11h . 'a w ._c a al. Ill MS-a2 Pluabln II -.!!!!ftk '"' ..... ~~ -•0 •••11•••uuiueuH :-w ·"~ .Freeeat ... !_512 Mowina. 110, m . ae. w... •vrf~fll;,~~ 11lEBROOMIQUAD ,._.__, .... ~ ........._18-..a. **~l'LleHTS•• · c.,etf'Upll 1... n........11 HauJln" I Dvmpln1 • ..l!!!"!!:.. ,,., • -Quality· Reliable -n .--,_,..... Al l I••• Jntlall•d U • ........,.. 7711.uu lwf•r .,.,__ • tit • H d u~~··l 1 In .,.1'"12 25 yrt ...... uC. l,1 ••••u••1t••••••••••••• ... "' ' c. _ ~ .,.~ ••uuuueuuuuu u IJS.l20. 154 991)4, 9SS 009$ n I~ I an Y m I n ,__ e n · "' ·• ...._....., '"i!:._. R·'a. Color p• .. """""' PATCHING Ortal Prlcea, f.31·925$ ............. ••••••••• DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC Mart • Servtce roof repalr1 -. .... ""-"""1 ir.n -W.HALICOMSTI. ~Yr'1Speclal!Crpt 14--exp ""'·11"11"' ... & -1 palntin•i ,,.a .... nt"" 1~ e .lllMIUDlclt Reltucooe. lot/ext. so -... Cuttomllomes, -tram· ·~.clean~. Scotch ,_:·· ..... ~532' ". 9 Carden Main . Resld. •v •r " ....... ,. " N p 1~.a.2917 •-.....-u•~ $64 ~ Mt '3M I'm Small-MyJricea · ell. au _.., ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• ln1, remodel. ,..tncb Freet 9'12·8&» --· ---ComlJI lndust Clean· · · · an amall! Cd • NB. NealpalAlbet•texturea TILEINSTALLED doOn. allyUahu • patio ,,.__,../,.~__,,_ -Bldtiul UP* & '!'rte Trim .• Free SR CITIZEN DISC. Ex 'd.. Ren 17M477 All Kinda Guaranteed covers. 841·3852 -_...... ••t•••••••••••• •••••••• Eit. 6'1· 1088 SMALL/LG E REPAIRS Rd John ..0-1217 Ac It -................ ~ ...... ELECTRICIAN pnced JArANESF. Freustu1~ates. 541.5427 NELSONS PAJN'J'lNG Pl 0 • --1 .. ~!!". ! c.,..e., TR1lOllET~CONNSST ri&bt. free Mtlmate on CiARDENE.R ,_,.., Hm --d--I T hl&/Exl Reaid/Comm ........ !.............. Q.istomQtramleTilc • • •• •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• CONCl r. · R. lat llJ bs ..,... .. ,. rprs, •R • .._ a ACOUIMc ceUlD R f Prom~Mrv Freent PComlRQlrUts·F-in Strnts FJNEF'INISHWORK Lic.NID3 642-8482 ,,_Ct1~ 0 67·3.M <ft REASONABLE potng. rntl flt .up , •••••u•u••••••••••••• . . p . es. Dra.IDlelearedfrom llO · ' pl Set up & Serv ""' -. --F'r ~l 968 7989 d rk J •a PREP RER lied. Frt1•t. UT·2U7 Plumbin1Repairs uck rlS.1408 Re . ••"••s• Rem>delin t /Doorshuog R~ID CONCRETE+ UC. 'DE-LE--RIC-ee . . yr wr . re11. erry, EXPr. . A L.'.8.P''NTfNG ....__, M M"•"I033 .,.YraExp.Fr-Eat. _.!!:.__ ,,...,._,.. Rand 720-lJ&OCdM SllortcOurla Uc rz4067 CT JAN ~s.r.k -~--Enrolled to practice • IU ,.,__. ,,_. ""' ... A.,wt CHAJhPROFESSIONAL &b15t-19ie1147-101a ~:. le:~rk 6J~~~{~~e~ •••••••o••••••~•••••• ~ ~ore the tl~--~u11Uty QUALITY. REAS. A'J\M Pl,,UMBrNC & ReMOftlble W0tk. Guar. ·~ •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Ca!l)entry+Boat -........,._ ---T!wTnmltRemoval :::::w •••••••• .!t• ..... -.reu.coa .-~ ~uuan.e HEATING REPAIR ~4'2·'312 M.LSfATEPAVING docks . 25yrs. exp .-~ TO.t>9UALlTV llomrRepaira OUMPJOmi FEDERATED I?{J'/EXTPAJNTING REPLACE 64S.1688 IJ'"s.r.iu Stalroaliog ·Striping 645-3749 •11.•u••••••"•••·~··~· EleCfncal work at 700.91115or673,9043 &Small Moving Jobs Income Tax Service Quality work. Reas. ~ M --.. ••••••••h••••••••••••• R.epalrs.Comm./Rcsid. --Childcare, .Full Tame Reas.rales. 531·5055 ----· Call MIKES46·l3il 6.1H87Uora l Freeeat. Steve54H281 ...,.ny ••g•• •ExpertTreePrunln1• ld£:.!_397362 ~·am •••u Monday -Friday My CM -[--· -·----:-. ~ - -----. . BOCDANOVPAINTINO ....................... CommercialLandaeape TiredofPlain Walls?ln· Hom!,flHr. ' lednco~r Spec1aily! ••••••••••••••••••••••• a,1:.t.w• .. YOUl•CT _FAST·ACCURATE r--"·. ,...1 •-• Orivewa""' Parking Lot h •• I •-Clean ~welt dependa ~ v'" ,,_ In t I ta yra O.C. Top qualily. "-""'~~4":..!..,!.,_ .,.,rv1ces .,. ·-R """ crease t • "a ue "' 642·0162 b'-w' · . . ·TRACTOR. ideal for TODAY ' Yard/garage come .axserv ce-your _,_ .. _..,..., epa1rs, Sealcoating. Beauty or Your Home C'--'--~-t-• oc. e oany s1Ze Job SrMU access areas, 48.. ctn.up etc 1 ton truck. ~ b 1 t. 963-6821 Neal. St. lie. 334950. Oran Co 15 Tree Trimin&. clean ups, S & S Asphalt With 'The Richness of ---, _..,,Ko" .!,~1-2345• wide Kubota skiploader. _ 63· ·'""""" ... h ) 845-43191839-1886 ~e · area. . yrs Monlhy service free est. --""'U"'-c63l-4l9! Sobd Wood.496-6961 ••••••••••••••••••••,••• R~IDtCOMM 'L 1IND S30hr lns'd 642-5006 _...,_._J ~.,t~_!!_ -Mll•ry , QUALJTYINT/EXT expenence.Callfonnro. 646-7556 Tony's Tree A,,._ • .,. Lamln ... C bin PEP GIRLS clun1n11 20 yrs exp Do my own ~ Oemolltlon-Gradlng ........ •••••••••••11•• Uc'd. Reis. Fteeest. and rates. Serv __ i"""ce"-------;• W a.tcu 1 et~· service. Homes-Offices-....... k Ll"d A1.,..,8126 ~. Traosport.Aspbalt con· BRICKWORK : S-m1 ll • ....-1067 •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ood Sluns or Formica Apc.s 548-0663 -"" · " · '".,. ' ' · bl ~ t Cost ._. Trwt.,... ACCR~IVE LEGAL Units 6'5-6S2l/S49 1685 ' ----~c ......_ •••ea•••••••••••••••••••• crete &t tree removal. ~ ' w r • R f a Qualty Ptc. Low winter '-* ... /•--ir ••••••••••••••••••••••• o~-·ntatlon Law or-· · -,.__,,___,,, A----t ,_. o• ... _.,. rpentry Mason11 Soil pre9 & planting. •Ha, ne. es. -....... D""LJNQUENT~ fi"""''"i4 h .1; Custom Carpentry By -.--.on.._... ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• Rooting Plumbi~ ()pt!rated equip Comm 'I ~3175. ratea in effect. Honest. ••••••••••••••••••••••• i::. • ces, rs.~·!4~ "Jay". tFormica & ....................... Cari>et & Linoleum For Drywall Stucro Tile &Resid'l.642-7638 M ourSpeclalty! ~U1ble.Ml·M48 COMMllCIA.L JudicialForeclo.urea W-H.. Tile> 1142·8809 or Call JM ... Sn.._ . Home . Van & Motor Remodel J_.B. 646·~ General -h;uting &t mov-Clean. uick. dependa· PAINTER NEEDS =STllA.1 Harold F. McGrath Esq. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Answer Ad 11620 at RooFreeddesesdfig_n·1rreeest Homo·8-41·~~5D11ve GeneraiMointenance ing Tree work gar ble.We any sliejob. WORK!3Q.ynexp,inl/ DB.ING! Ml·l7 __ 7_1 __ _ nR.OMYOUICAR 642·43Q0_.!4_!u:s. , ma lions, ten.ant For the bes t. t ile & Repairs&Decorating cleanup Fr e~ esl .. ~631·~*. _ ext. Aooustlc ceiUngs. Turn lost or unused T ........ Instead of wax. 40 mo Cabinets. Counter to~. improvemekntd, •kn · linoleum floonng. r ail •Quality• Ra_1 640-5l44_ 714-842·4597 EXPERTBRJCKAND. DavisPainlin 847-5186 irpace into a workable••••••••••••••••••••••• wrty. 752-50071752-0892 Doors. Greenhouse win· sur.ance wor · et 5• Greg 675-4394. Wc'rl' ---·· -Ml---· s 11 j b ·ai _. --area-rooms dilc.ided , Reading It related skills. do Fi I h k patios lf'Ol)dofourwork ' llOMEIMl'ROVEMENT HA ULING student bas _.,u,,. ma o s ,..,.. drywall, drop ceilings & Credentialed. exp. car· PROF. POLISHING 7~ n s wor · 77~8067 Lie 313174 ---~ ·. REPAIR PLUM Bl NC lge truck Lowest rate repain. Frplc facings. ••••••••••••••••••••••• trim ca!l)entry-lo com· ing. SpeclaUzlng grades Serviceaqourhome ot --REMODELIA-DO.ONS ldWshtg lleat1ng, carpentry, Prompt.C.11759-1916. Refs.~1"'555,_760-107~ HAN~INC.SlO/ROLL pletion.CallTomorJerr llhr4.644-m& buslness.Rtdt675-034_!_ Ca rpentry Work & •-c~""'n'"'.Li,.'d •••••u•••••••••••••••• elec. tile Free est No -· J'hanlt1ou,_John,. LANDSCP/MASONRV Stripping-dl!conpaper 1.,. 2913 •933886 Rep~ir No J b T "' -.... -~ " )Ob too small 645·2811 · Vl.SAJMC 645 9325 a uul· or.. · -~-Wlildow Cle•lilt .. ,,...._. Sma Fr.~ r--1 o oo ~yrs. l_rw_ in.~·2719 •SP.ECIAL *. tta111+ .. 9 ""Con~'!'.,e~Lt1c .. ~ns09.14 . ... _, ~ ui --JACK o•· ALL TRA DES -i.!l/Vft .......... ~ UC PAPER HANGER • ......._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bob . 839-6297 Carden in g Co m PI . Ally chair hand-stnpped ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.;:-=---• ._...., "Let the Su h' e In" Ba~lt. our CM homes. 1 --· --- -dean up & free hauhnll or re glued' $19 75. A Call day or night. Want a REALL V CL EAN Custom Brick. Stone. Bonded It gUM No job ••••••••••••••••••••••• OJ ID yr&up,anytlme... Cus.tom spa dec.k.s. forusableiterns I Touch or Class In •Jack67S-3014• HOUSE?CallGihgham Block.Concrete.Stucco t.oosmallortool.arce. REPAJRSFORLESS Call~n.shlneWindow 642·8482, 646·575~-patios, Fr., doors Lie d _Mic~_l 64.l,6734 Leners, 111 W 17th St Masonry Ca rpentry-Tile Gi~~ Free est. 645·5123 . Refs. f'l:.~-~t 549-9492 Free est. TC?!!J..898-2728 Shingles, flat. 30 yrs. Clea.nine. Ltd. .541•1153 Babysitting Mon-Fri. JohnorRi~919·32l8 . . ~A2.C.M.642·7712 I Plumb Roof1ng-Remod ROBIN'SCLEANINC WALLPAPER ··-ex · Freeest:..!!!£125 ~Monthly Discount Newborn to 2 yrs. 6 to r-t ~ -l C~dening. Wanted I St ucco-Drywall 536-8700 Service 8 thorouohly MoftMJ All kinds. Free est. ~ber Roofing-all types •RESIDENTIAL • 5·30 SI/hr CM 642-2995 -,... _.,,,,.ct MOW111g, edging, raking, Gei•""-9 " ....................... Ill/roll. Lie. 330986 New·recover-decks. Avg 1 a~y SJO: avg 2 sty -·-.-· --·--· -_-•••••• .. •••••••••••••••sweeping . Free •••••••••••••••••••••••H cleanhouse. S40·IJl!S7 *.t.IUftYl ... A* Norm64S-0880_____ Lic~41180_2_.S48_·9734 __ ~.Chns_9S7·S381 Lied chtldcare. lov10g WeCareCrptCleaners estimates 1145-4372 or TREES ~" -,._ ".. ' -care & eompantonship. Sleamclean&uphols. 00_5737 · ....................... Top Quality. Special 'llfE-PAPERHANGER Homes,Apts&Comm.As rencedyd.556-3098 : Truckmountuntt ----·-, Topped/removed. elean HOMEREPAIRS IMMACULATE carein handllng.25yrs Prol .. qualitywork. ROOc!t~~tl'~:?? LDwasS7PNCleaning. Babysitting, my ome . Work uar_. _ 1145-371€ SEL_L !di~ 11ems "itn u ~.lawn rt;no~'. 751·3476 & Improvement. C...._ SenlcH exp. Competitive rates. Frf!e:sl: _ ~~~~7·4281 Roofing 714·~--·24_13_. ___ _ hot lunches. 0·4 yrs. Ha~ something to sell! Daily Pt lot Cias~thed Clm ified Ads, your one Reas Ref. Homes87!.91SSOffices Noovertime. 730·~~-..free ~t. __ ~-S29_2 Have something lo sell ? M·F. 545-l~C.M . Classified ads do 1t well. ~d. -• stl!\>Sho_p_pu~'lffenter Free est Tom 645-0704 Want Ad Help" 642 5678 Classified ads do It well . .. ll:QI Estate-the-Corriplete l)ron-Qe COOst-MofkerPfOce tto.n u..fwftiahed HoltHa U•fwcl*d tto.Mt Ullfwwi.._. ....... tw.illwd or Apartnnh F.nilshed Af* ...... u.tw.. Apa ta..ts U... ~= lm•hu.fln. .,a lw.ts u.tw.. A"fl-1-.111 ,,_IMM"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ JJOO ••••••••••••«If••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••:-•• .. •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• or &Jllfwlilllitcl JtOO .......... leocll 3240 ~ 3252 Mtwportleoch 3269 ....................... ...._...och 3769 Corw .. Mw JIZZ C:O.toMna 3124 IWll9••ecti ll40 Mt.,.,.leecti 316' ...................... .. •'••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CdM 2 bdrm. 2 ba. den. ·-......,. • • • .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ••• ••••••••••••••••••. 5r. .&WIND Exec 3brs.howhomew i Ni~l Country Club.lux· • frplc.gar,fTSOpermo OCEANFRONT 24'.4Br. Cute 2BR IBA. Frplc. 1lfEVICTORlAN: New· 2 bdrm. 1 ..... ba, S37S DELUXE SPACIOUS s;.A gar, pauo. SPA S600 ~ous 2 Br. 2 Ba. lake llffloMf 7~! wknds. e\·es Avail W111ler. W'feltly It o o d are a . $ 6 o o ly d:e<'or· 2 Br wtgar.. +sns dcJiosit. Gas pd. uno. 2 Br. 2 Ba. frpk 41 VILLAGE OC-R~ALS _750-3314 view rondo on golr Pier and slip ror large Crnh llf&Jll Monthly 673-71173. mo ye a r I y Br k r ~ crp~ fa drapes, bit· Nr Beach Bl It McFad· Ir& patio Adlts. SIOOO. New l&2 bdrm lullUry 2 Br. 3 Ba. Spa. J blk to fairway. All amenities. boat. Furnia bed six &W htwd 14z5 ~12 1n1. paUo. AdullS. Call den. nopet.aatJ..~94 _, 87~. apts 111 14 plus 1 Bdrm beach. 1975/mo. 1 yr lse. t1115 unfum S795 rum bedrooms. five baths ... :.!................ ~mo. 2 Br. 1 Ba . bltns. =~ ~~-:.~ 636-4~~0 Fllmished' Uofurn 1-2·3 Fantutk <kn frt vu • from $490. 2 tfrm from Ca11Afl 41SJ6.3815,_ ~566.aft5661·S&42_ dining room .aod den. pool. newly d~rated. ··--·--., ----Bd A 1 G. Upper2br,xtralgerm~. 1570. Townhouse (r~m ~ Tennis court s and WES CLIFF Mltlur. adults No peLs E~IDE rm._ P 5 ·-y m, l'tSC>_JrlJ M2·39l2 $640 + pools, tennis, --3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• years lease . $5500 do . Ground level &;T-KWY BR 8 CoetaMesaSt.$410/mo tenn~. volleyball. 9.eps to beach. 2 Br. 1 ' for cooking & beating ·~H.~'!"'I" 242 FOrtst 325S beaches. Short term or Exceptionally neat con· I ~O!· 764>-119!1 (9"1 I Br. lreyarlt. 220 Jacu~~. Sauna. pool, -· --· 1 waterfalls, ponds ! Gas ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAKE FOREST 2 story. 3 rront.h. Broker.631-7300. c..ftclous two bedrooms r:... p. 2 , I IA.kPvt lln.7600 640·7814 be.stetball. game room. Ba, frpk. lmmaruiate paid. From San Dleko Waterfront Broadmoor &den.Jbath.Onwater. ._ wtr. aho, enc p n11. ~----·'----__ ftmt Bch.84&--06l9 cond.~673_2507 Aoi IC'I.. d . N th -2bdrm. ·2ba, r~k. w~t-new boat dock ' Avail. Two baths Private I qliet Mature adults on· 1 br 1 ba apt jac pool ---=------·---.....: -. -~-r•WY nvt or on bar. dbl gar. shp avail. Feb. IJ.$925. 754.7900. New ocean view 2 Br. 2•,, patio. Lovely grounds & ty. Rtf Req. 675·3446. j c~rt o'looking tennb HUM TIM a T 0 M 2Br 2ba, ocean vu. frpk. Beac~ to McFadden p a L lo $1 t oo mo . -----Ba. Condo: Ga~ 645·2682 pool Adult complex. I 644-0997 era full sec So Coul Versailles. Pool $800. lhen "est on Mcfadden (714l67S..i17!_: .,.._Vieto 3267 &~.:--F.asy walk lo shops and . 2 B Ba Cl 1 Pla:i.aarea N~pels 147s GAIDBtS call!IM-t.m ro Seaw1nd Village. 3244 •••H•0·~·ES•••ro••R••R••E•N•;.••• Oreaofronl 2 bdrm. 2 ba. banks. S670 month I spec;oua 11uchos. one ber~ ch Y ~~~·i 1 053e.1~ unrurn. °Ca II Teri. ~:.'~':,'! :;:,:~ $72$/mo~ 3 Br 2 a.a l_7l!!_893-5l98 . .,... "' $850 mo. March thru Yearly lease. Broker, ooiwo bedtcSolhlCllrt «Clltmo.675-9006 S73-DI0,631.a22S ~·-••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bdrms. S675 Fenced 63l 7300 a -..,._ ---------Close to C.G. & San .,...n:11. upper. Newport 1\mhome. new 3 br, 3 ba. yardts & garages. Kids & •Jwie. 673-Ql28 · menlS FURNISHED' ---Mete 31Z4 BEAl1TlFUL2 Br. 2 Ba. Dieeo Frwy. Bakomea, Shores area. Enclsd pello, gar Park. pool, pet.s welcome 545 2000. BTFL 2B;:-2B; den. dbl I end UNFURNISHED. ....................... Mesa Verde I 100&q n. patios, pools, jacuuis. garage, balroey. Submit jac. S9'15/ioo. 833-90~!-~·no ree. gar. £rplc. wlk to bch La rg~ 2 BR 3 BA u P · j Oakwood also offers I .. 2 II. ] II. fplc. lndry. dlabwshr. 1 tennis It laundry rac. ooduldren & pets. University Park. 3BR. Ma-rt........ 3269 S9SO mo 73 0· 5945. gradedR '0 ~e"'Jl01.~jze:.· •Alt Utilities Plld Newly decor. Gas pd enclos_ed garage. 1575.1 4901 He i I . Bo Is a TSLMGM!__642·_1603 lloom 2BA ..,.,, S All rw--r-· -11 752-5111 race ec ar.. ' •tmmedlale en"I iar d /wasller, 3108G111Pe_r.64S_·_31_4_4. _. OUcall:leil.846-1323. """"' + ec. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S6:i01mo + util 642 3917 ~ ::=.a MEWPOIT CIEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4000 Amenties. 673 4141 or Harbor Ridge lease. 4 Br. Bayshores 2 Br. rum or -~ · · • Occuoency pool , bq Adu In. no 2bdrm, Iba w /yrd, $475. ------Luxury 3 bdrm. 212 bath Laguna Beach Motor Inn. llS7·20-10_Agt __ 3 Ba. D.R., FR . study, unlum. large liv. rm. 24 2co8drmt ·P~ Ba. ~~~u~h ·,RS~811nionllonln ~-~·S0'13. Childrenok; also I bdrm. ~:C: 1~;,n!n~np~t~t;;o condo. Wet bar. frpk , 98S No Pacific CoasL Turtle Rock 4 br. 21 2 ba highly upgraded, fab vu, hr. guarded gale, steps as au 1fV m ....... SUO w l y rd & I a r . paol, tennis. Custom Hwy, Laguna Beach. det. home. Walk to park, guard gate, pool/tenni~. to bay. To July S750. ~dull on1J.~~S-_l24l And Much More' S.1751,:~~~:M!l Ba. 545-~. pelt $450/mo. lst/last + crpts. drps. wallpaper. Daily, Wtekly, Kitchen 1¥>0i&tennis.Gardener S3200mo.Bobor 0ovie 213 1975 -5101 o r 2bdrmanddenNewport Foramonihorallfe .. Adults onl y, enrlsd Spac IBR ow . WI s2sc15ec:.&42·~--etc $896 mo E\•es & available. Low v.•inter incl s10001mo Avail. Koop!agp 59-1221 21Jlfln·0488. Bea ch Condo Nf'ar time MOdelsooen<1ai1v h hook Closet.s. Plsh rg.s . Pool. wtc.nds673-5820. rate.L494·~-Mar I 975 4622 evs & Hoag Hospital. $695 mo garage. was er -up. . Q . · · llGCA.MYOM ~~Terrace2br.2 ba. Av_aaia_tonce ~_-u31 9am to6omAdultson~ small yard. Callll(>r !,~1BB .lst&Dep. **MIW** 2bdnn,2ba,Crpk .pool.2 P-.1..ent nosmdklng or wkndsSS2·4136 O.GoH~ mu unit. $650/mo J im . no pets appt. ........... •WlllSAS• pvt. patios. ground drinl11ng, M over 40. Woodbridge rondo. 2 br, 3 Bdrms. 2,• Ba Pool .1,!il-1221.~·0?SO SO.COAST A.IU Oakwood TSL MGMT 642·1603 Mesa Verde. 2 br, new 1 Adltorientedapt level. l6SO + de~2 S28Slmo556-0637 end umt. encl. patio. Jac.'Ulli &Tennis. Newly 4 bdrm , r ba exec 28r.1 Ba. A C. pool. rec Spacious 2 Br, 1 Ba $395. erpt, drjla. paint. Quiet 2Bedroom Ru ti and Rd .. •I . Worlting fem . 25·40. ,, avail Mar 1 ~ N '"'""'rl Crest Condo r I gates no Garden Apartments Ba ... 25 L uea. Cul -de-uc-. No ._. .._.. u1 _,,., bik '-h N B unfurn · · · dec.VacantSl.200/MO e-rv ac1 . sec . 38r,I'\ .... aun-2blbfrom~o ,,.....,..,;...,.,.,.,.,._ _ "". .. .. 133-9186/W.!_010.}'ern W~ M. T~ Co. Many features.' Sl.000 pets SSJO PP. 968·3652 Newport ee.ch/No. rac., I. 5418·"'6 pelt. S47S. 491·lf36, paddle tennis cts Ve.rulllea pac. 2 br. 2 non-smkr. S275. 67S.1106 RENTALS Realtors 644-4910 rro. Call&3l·0460_ - -New l'Ondo. Irv. Lg 2 br. 880 Irvine 96S-l46S. balcorues or blryard ba, frplc. sec. gate, !ft. 4 2br, 1 ba $700 W. Npt. Nr beach. 2br I'• ba, frplc. pool 11ar. 1•1 '6rn1 IMMID OCCP!tCY! Eastside l'or Rent/Un~ carports dvlfte. $'750. ~7-j~ 2 br, 2 ba S900 house. frplc, patio, yrly association dues incl .1 <714164S-1104 ~:i!{~·~2 1~r be~ ::d furn. Two apts, 2 BR's all ul.il pd except elec 2 bdrm deluxe. yearly 2+Fam.Rm.2ba Sl250 IAYFIOMT S7SO/mo. +sec. dep, S675/mo Call a rter 6 NewportBeach/So. .11 d w/gar., n o k id s NopelS acroea from sand. Bal Jbr2ba Costa Mesa $1~"0 2 story, 4 + bdrms. 2 &IS-ta87. ~7~1 ______ 1700 16th St cei ne. auo ry room . $400/mo . lSt & last. Atlanta-Delaware, HB hs 'r' baths, firepla ce, (l>over aaieinl No pets. No last mo. $11-lll65 (~l•l SJ6.S4400 Pen.S750mo.7JC?::~1£-3br. 2ba Lag Bt: lOOO "'""'""US view. Pier and I I G C A M Y 0 M ,., ) "'•2 5113 rtnt. c.-t be h 3 bd 2 ~RaisorRlty 83J.8600 :lijtolOOpermo. Avail. CONDO MILUffS ,,,.. .... • TSL MGMT MH603 2 Br 1"2 Ba condo, pool, i:dU:iex.'Sasomo~~~r· 2 BR nice yard & trees. 1 Feb. 1. 3 Br. full gotr course Spacious four bedroom. • 3 Br. Condo nr s.c. I.a~. patio. baby .OK. 2br 2ba in 4-plex. $475.j I lease. ~H'98S anima l I child ok. ~ · •• · I three ba t h condo Pl S A p I spa nopeta.$500.Mgr.Drane W·d bk-up, prv patio • ..&...---'-"-'-'--~-View. ""Ml!, poo ·spa, I au. · · 00 • ' 6-42·1602, Marguerl•e lsd 645"•"• W ~-... T 1575/mo 1970 Maple Av. lease. $1300. 644-7424 "Guadehlpe" Mode prace. S750. I S40-9il& __..->-me gar. ·~ _ A'-""'" $11-3227 Btu. Near shopping and S49-3232or6'1·1460 DILUXEZll, llA wnHDOCI RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN <kean view 3 Br Condo. schools. SU95 mo. Vear l.Aret 2 br, 1 ba. new 1 11 b h f 1 Rut nice 2 Br 2 Ba Townhouse. sphl·llfel. 2 Annual lease. pool. ten· ly ~-Broker631·7300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• paint & drapes, dish· en":: 1'5 d e~ca 'r ar: ec: wtspa in mstr Ba . bit-in Br den. on golf course. nis. Agent Mr. Clark ..... Isa.ct 3I06 mellli8"8 Wiiber. gar, lndry fie, dlhwsher,blt·ins,smou kttch., Crpk. dbl car C S97• ,._ ... _ bd 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *Imo 645-9884 mar garage. + 2 additional 2~'2 Ba. A1 • view. ... Bhtr \.<UlllUU. 4 rm. 642-JBSO days. 645·3370 .... £....--1..a...d Yearly . Extremely· srn APAITMBn'S · • · alarm, balcony. Water otr ' ~ - -beths.11: :'th eves. _._:_ !. .. ~~.:::=... effi ciency unrurn for Beaulitul garden apts. 2 ~ 2 ':sltown~~;eao~: paid. $465. Before 8PM . ·It spaces. Sl300. l.Gg!Mlelldi 3241 . •BIGCANYON• ........... 3706 !!!!J!!!..female67S-6022 Pat.loa/decka. Spa, heal ~· mo. . &al-4614. rrJ~"°PMf,;:6670 ••h••••••••••••••••••• Canal Front, Newport 3BR 3BA View of ,--1-. ..t-07 paid. Adults, nopeu . orS2'1·7408. ' &....L... 31.... ------ oc1:.t.,..FIOMT Shores. 4 Br+. Lease or Colicours'e 11200 •1•bdrm•••••••••1•1••M••••h••i•t• -...0. --31 2BR.2 BA. $52S APT MANAGER ,,.,..,.. · "" Beaut. u11&raded lbdrm -" "' aption to buy. SlSOO/mo . · ' ava arc s ••••••••••••••••••••••• •W. Wilsoo 631-5583 Semi-retlrect couple for ••••••••••••••••••••••• condo wHreaiendous MOllLEHOMES I Tennis pool walk to 846-5792 thru June 19~h. Call OClAMFIOMT p PTS . I I C M plBoRolCondo, t"'nonn1'sC,reeak/". amenities. $5$0 /mo. ,.., ml or pvt bcb. 24 hr beach. Agent &46.1044 or 2 BR .2ba condo. 24 br 833-9057 (eves>. 673-6900 2 bdr~ath. new PINE BLUF A . Ul umt comp ex n . . .. ... 752 2319 d 5 0 7576 RCUnty, lots or coves & 645-22!05 secunly. Lee pool. spa. (hanne). paint ' carpel Yearly 2 Br. 2 Ba. No pets Maintenance exp. req. Adults, no pell. Like · ys · 4 · rocks, 2Br, adllS only, · S7SO/mo. 754,.114 Ext .._,......._ l707 leaseS'/6S.CallLmdaor Patio. view , frplc . 549-0433 new.MJS.Evs673·5003. eves. onliy·nodog.s. 4 to choose --c• .... YOM LSE 322 wkdys, or 493-62$5 Art 67•7080 jacuz:U. gar .. gas stove, 2BR, lBA. Garage, Yard. ~5406 Ste .. to beach, I Br. -,,_" / ~-..a-••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~ • •cc: 631 0'1 --ytarly 1325 mo from. S650to $1000, C7141 2BR McLain Condo. ev WtuKI:> ea .... ·lor yearly. Util In· -......... $425/mo. Deposit ._ .... _... ~.... • "·JIG "''"' Nu2& 38R. 2BA yearly. GI B 631 ...... _,.....__... --631·5903. ___ _ C99·:Bl6 SU2Sper mo . .,. erry Harbor View Homes c'd27thSl. ms., F'rplc, blt·ins, gar. park· STUNNlN ar1e 2 r. 2 ~ ••-•••••••••••••••••• ----- S....L..-e (}:ean Side of Highway. Guard Gated Area. Pool. P-.1. Ditrance. Pvt Bath. ~ + Utll. Must be Enipl, hHe r~fs . 499-4722 Eves. Newpon Bch, 2 sty ho"*. \"el)' lge room w patio. Non smkr S300 631· 7215 ---··· Furn CM HM $210 645-2435 or Call Answer 11111.~-~ Nwpt. Bch. house pri\'. non-smkr. rum. SJOCHmo, 631·7215 Newport apt lo empl lady. Light hsehld prh · P-.1. BR & BA. 549.4077 Avail March 1st Room. Bath. Garage . Pool.. KJtchen Pnv S48·llOSI 2BR. t•'IBA. frp k. View. 673-7761 or 764>-l397 Carmel 3 BR. Family 675·9394 ang Close to bay 11 Ba. garden apl .. pool 41 EASTSIDE ·OCIAH FIOMT S.Ca.•• 3176 ., New Carpet. Older Cot· rm. lllSO mo. 760-0607 Winter Rentals. V1 Blk fr ~an Brkr675-4912. rec. atta. $435. 710 W. 1 br, G sq ft, Tge yard. Moat elegant apartment •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• ta . 8 5Mo.675-0349 llicAMYOM SHH! clltetbroear Bch.1BRS4aa. 2BR ISIS. = tah.Sl. .548-4145 buildin1 in La1un1 SAMQ.IEMEKTE Qliet home for work1nl( penon. Fiim room in Costa •Mesa Not under ~ Y!•rs 548·.5804 . .. • ~rgewoocU glass3Br. Luxurloua three bch:frpk,pet$32S ' le .873-9325 Lat2b*a.2IHI E.slde fourp1tx1 2 Br 1 PALMMESAAPTS BeadLFinestlocatlooln Golfcounelhill view, 2 2v. Ba. fain. rm. 2 car bedrooms. Two baths. OC:-RENTALS 750-331! BAYFRONTAOEbeach. Bllf.lns. -flieplace. Ba. w/h'&>unaed. 1ar ue1Mes1Dr. town. Breathtaking bedroom apl. Bullt·lns, ...... ..._.. 41ff garage.Ocea n&Canyon Formal dining room. New'J'wnhome2 Br.2Ba (ller,l Br$7SO.Util pd. Adults reeommud:!i w/laundry hookup, 2 8r.Ullfum.$42$.2 Br. Ylewa.AJlblt·inl,heated urpet•. drapes. 2 ••• .. ••••••••••••••• .. , vtew.No peu.11095/mo. Richlydecorated inmut· 2~&.Carpet.s,drapes, Till 5.21 . 303 E . no pets. '625. Loca ~illts, 110 pell. S500. rum. '915. Adulla. Call pool. s ubt. 1ara1e. encloledcarports. laun-SIAL.AllMOTIL Slerr1 Mgmt. Co . ed tones. 3000 sq. ft. 2 car garag~. 1 mUe ater. l-371·2866. Db& Balbot.r75-8N2 752-2550 bt.rn~-. ~-elevator. Lease only. dry facility. Two adults. Wkly rtntali now avail. 641-mt. Jacvui off master rrom beach. Avail. S.1. . \BR . View or Ba y lr JiichelorAt Br Aptl All -''-"· 330 CUtr Dr. No pets. S450 mo/lease. SI05 ' up. Color TV ~ · I Oc bedroom. 3 car garage. •lmo.W /917.o218. Lllf-.... 3741 Orean. $500. 1st & Last. llduk,nopell .. Pool.°bbq DmlPeW JIU ....-. Avallable Immediately Phofttl In room. 1214 :;c 3~~;e~o:.:~tc1os/~~ szoso month. Yelily ..................... ,. Oep; ' encl1d 1ar11ea. ....................... Owner ('114~~1!'·. . Newport 8h4 . C.• ML!f-MeO lease. call u1.1100. ~~ ........ ~~!~ 1:.':l :~l~e.';~~:S: 67S.7&1a.e •. 111.m• s::z..'~~~~1 ~~ ~~r.~~ ... ~!~ NIC!.; ta~t~R~OMr ~~ ~· 2o:!:'vt:!'S.:0T::rie .~:,..HQW! '=~~~~:ud swn.•ZZ27 !i~·1~r~:t~t::r ~cfr'fo1!. :-=:,;~.::&.~~ a--~c~ .. :;cub1T:''~eciir:e:·:J~1:1 ~~::.~ :~:h:~,~:·~ '~IC't~l~---•t1tR-....-...8'"Bav yard 1t 1arap. Kldl 't6s:i1CM't.... J76t $3~0 Y I L w/pallo' yard. up orlO--··---.... lad prop•rty 2 bwlh.tv' dt.,poal+l•. 2"'0Ht'\lt wri· -rmllVfl"' a i pets welcome. 545·2000 •.... 1 .............. ,... " , r y ease. tblkoa • lthedHI WllrllrPllJ .... ~ ' i " ............ 1252 St.a/mo C.llSuzaMe noree. Want somethina xtra l 67$-31!.._ --w ry le 31w ll09l tW __ ,... •4t r,.. llt1 enclottd carports. all Oceanfront. Newport ....................... m-1445• nt • Br 2 Ra Dtnln& rm apeclal In a 2 Br. Small bachelor'. S337 ~~rp • No' p.ta' _ .... ~............. COUMTIYCLUI w,lllu. lallftdry facility ~~~15'. Norttlvltw 2 Br den. 2 ba. c-u--bo /Ocean Vu " . . • _....__.. ""' I t I I tll paid. •~ ..,..., • ' ... ,... "BR II a u1 t In unk inoffm apanlah wet l>ar, mlcro. a ir, .,......r ... r r · 2000 sq ft Newly re ·-ou-, wmp e e Y year y, u • ... adallt tea • up, -· • ' "• "' 11 Ll¥M 11Yle buUdm 2 d ll "-t lrp le , poo I .k e Y. 3BR,2ba. SUSS mo. 231 dt_eorated. S7SO/mo : fW'11? , Mo. 760-9117. blockfromotean. 2blE. •Huta.Mt.1647. Coed. Nr 8d1. le•l1 •c:M1on. llr2 bedroom ~· Notbl~Nno~ u ~ ............... .,.~!!.~ ••rdener. 1775 /mo . OceanVu.rlS..21S7 mtaa,MMMt OCF.ANrRONT I brtlll Balboa Blvd. 875-9582, QUlr?ADULTS .. 1.ral. .V...NohU.m-Dn. llU•tonlla••· . ..... M per mo:lt ...... ._ ... a.111 t 1·15, furn-USO, 11n· 1 75Um. ld\lr'l 1 Ir. ao.er. SMI. •mt "'-•SI• MMIOO AHllablt February. •.at.. · ·-w.an1 ar 8,;A'C.H°."SHOR""S" Weal I 1lsr JZ I furn·UU. wkdy1 1Larct 2 Br .. I .Ba . ltlml 1aM1ea•1. No o.a .. e pool1i•t a&ra r«> nl! Apt.. Coede C1ll ow1ttr C1 U l •• .:.. • ~ t ".,..0 4Br. ram rm~+ ~ttarJ,twv "H(;;i-;(>RRPT ... lll·ffU, evea/whdll S710fn>, Refrllt :ncld ...... LllW~!>APTI ..... _pr, IN, MIM, ,_.,VUlalfttala. ...... ...... .... alt .. rm.~1ledpool.new lwo.,_ftledo, lad•· J Bdrm. a . teaced 7Jtta7 -: ~~vap Wlkle• -~.111.-f. Mllr, •~-..... m.et.llrokr.:._ l .br. ••a; ocean. • ............ . .._ wtk lo bdl. t~ ~~,ff:"~~-Jani• ..,.... Kldt • 11llM lltUe ada really : · .. 4Ma J a. =.,• •· ...... .._ llR uw ... lfot· ••· lit• lltll ,_._... ... c• .. -· lftlkle ••a " I • wekoale. 54$--. _..' k ! J 0 ID l h t ...... ·-~ IM r11t -fl ... --~ •. Ml\ I • Dldllo ... s.c. I CC) C.. I .. I ,.. t"Oam. suoo mo. ~ ..... ~1•· eofet. U..•dl ot other 1'tO-... _................ ..... ....., 1 lie r.... Lrt ...,.Ee NUI, •a...Mna · ...... gt. tC. II f1ra. •l 1trt••· (JI.I) TM·Ma dft, or _,_,.. _...,_ pit Iii dail •rt• who tre NelrtM OC91B, lrC 2 It, ti.cl M '1 • ~. , "11 6 Ra --Gtif &n1l1 DeUJ aMt•••m. '"5 ••'-'· Yur(J la.L6dlttte1111 wltll a r t11hr 11 en el mHJ' 1multlu. a.-1· ' ••· • ..... -.iwJair.,..,1.1 .;:;,':tl!~r:_~ .................. 1 •• ,!ll'Mfutri!i. Dal' ............ at.me. Dl.llJ Pilot Cl111ltltd a.ilifted. Ca I our acl .. /ID. Dljt ta.17$1, ......... •· "-lltsld. II• ......... It Wttl _ Call affil. IH~IN·lltl ,,.. -Ml ., A4 .............. .. --------------..,.jl--~------~~~..t.-~~.-. •, .. .1 ' I .. . 0 Malel8·2$ 114 31th St NB. S73-210l, 873·3663 \ • • • .. Good Earnings • Super Trips Gnat Pm.. J , • IM APPIJAMCIS. CALL IM 9$7-1133 CIRCULATION I.Ady Ktnmort Wu tler & DEPARTMENT drytr. llOO Ea. Star8 "MJPlllt.' rn111. mo. Xlnt eonct --,,, .. ., ... ,~ht ·t'" Wlllr·• lat''"· 842 .. 321 ~-..~. ~11.:.'a~ ,. . l .. CO>l>IElL CHfVROLtT . . f \f I SCl>-1 200 I I • I Orange Coaat DAILY Pt&4'r1Tu .. day, February 16, 1982 ' ·~-~ RETURNS Lana Turner. longtime movie glamour girl. has a guest role in .. Falcon Crest. .. She was a little worried about being on camera agijin but product'rs were leased. Pravda hits Koch ·u.N~ talk MOSCOW (AP> -The Co01munist Part y newspa_2'r Pravda has accused New York Mayor Edward Koch of inciting Jewish terrorist a'ttacks o n U nited 1 • Nations diplomats in An effort to win "Zionist" support in his campaign for governor of New York.' Noting that Koch was "dis pleiised" with the U .N . General Assembly's resolution conde mning Is rael 's •nnexation of the Golan H eights, Pravda said, ''Koch actual l y provokes terroristic organizations operating in New York . . . for stepped -up a c tions agains t diplomats staying in New York." Last week. after the \J .N. resolution, Koch, who is considering running for governor this year, said he would like to add a biblical quote about hypocrisy to the Isaiah Wall near U. N . h e adquarters, which now carries a famous qoote about the beating s words into plowshares. "It is no wonder that Koch now seeks to curry favor with the Zionist lobby o f New York, hoping with their assistance to bec9me governor of the stale of New York ," Pravda s aid. Told about the Pravda story, Koch said in New York . "Is n 't that wonderful? They · re re~nutty '' Marine " sergeant cleared SAN DIEGO CAP) - The Mar ine Corps Re c ruit Depot has decided against a court -martial for Gunnery Sgt. Rudy . Rodriguez for allegedly kicking a recruit in the chest during a water safety course. Rodriguez, 33, was cleared twice by Marine investigators last year in the drowning Aug. 27 o f Pvt. Ranilal l Christian of Dallas. The e vidence presented at a pretrial investigation Feb. 4 failed to justify bringing the Corona, Calif., drill instructor to trial on charges. of kicking •nother recruit in the ,tater, Maj. Oen. W.G. f\1ce announced. : Five hou rs of ttstimony was presented 1¢ lhe hearine. J : In Washington , ~cretary of the Navy fohn Lehman ·had said b,e was reviewing 't v i d e n c e i n l "h e Q.hrlstlan drowning , 1"bich occurred the '~me day as the alleged ~c~lng. .. To .Plate.your "Fast Result" Service Directory ad .... Call Now 642-1671 .·. •' .. . SWeater girl's back (on TV) Lana Turner to appear on CBS television series 'Falcon Cr-est: ~ By 808 THOMAS A-1•9" ""'• Wltt9f HOLLYWOOD -Lana Turner recalls he r self·inqulry upon returnlng to films : "Oh dear Lord, will I re member how to act in front of a camera?" ·Te levision viewers can judge for th emse lv es Friday when the longstanding glamour girl makes a guest appearance on the CBS melodrama .. Falcon 's Crest." She pl ays the wealthy Jacqueline Perrault. mother of Robe rt Foxworth, who staees a mys terious return to the Callfomla wine country for a confrontation with the imperious Angie Cha nning Jane Wy man. Apparently the producers of "Falcon Crest" were pleas ed with Miss Turner's return ; they're already talking about bringin g her back perhaps as a semi-regular. "They're even s uggesting a series for me," she said happily . She has more Immediate hope for the TV appearance: "I would like it lo prove that I am not a recluse, that I am not retired, that I still look good and that I a m an active woman." Indeed, she seemed in excellent form as s he sat down for an interview in ner . Century City tower apartment. She is more slendec-Lhan in her sweater-girl days, and still Jl beauty at 61. The Lana Turner saga, among the {JlOllt legendary in Hollywood history. continues despite enough setbacks to terminate a normal earner. Her most recent struggle has· been to regain~e health, and she said that she has wo The flr1>t problem s he faced as drinking: "I drank, but I was never a slurring, fa111ng-down drunk. Drlnking neve r made me high or depressed . I simply use<tit asp ha~ I was pouring that junk Into my syhem without realizing what I was doing." Miss Turner said she quit alcohol two years, then went on an herb diet. After finishing a play in Houston in 1980, she developed a loss or equilibrium. After months of medical tests -"I even tried a hypnotist'· her weight had dropped to 95 pounds und docto(s &till couldn't diagnose her problem. Finally they decided that the herbs "had knocked my nervous system out of kilter ... Now she's on a normal diet and weighs in at 105. • ---. The reason for her doubts about acting in front of a camera: .. The last movie I did was in 1978. a picture called 'Witc h's Brew' with R·ichard Benjamin and Te ri Garr. It was a aood part, something different; I played the queen of the witches. I don't know lf the J>ictur~ was ever released. "In the meantime, I've done staee work. which is ertirely different from movies. I wasn' sure if I could go back." . Her fears mounted on the first day of s hooting, when s he tound h e rself c JI m bing a cliff in high heels on a Mall bu location. "Jane Wyman was smart; she wore her golf shoes," said Miss Turner. "But there I was, thinking, •What am I doing up here on a cliff, falling all over the place?' I didn't know m y head from my elbow I cleaned that one up." She resumed her old pace when the coi;npany returned to the studio. In fact, the confrontation scene between her a nd Mi ss W y man brought a s p ontan eou s o~atio n fro m th e hard-bitten crew. ""They applauded and whistled," Lana recalled wonderingly M tss Turner woll 'l be a ble to see .. Falcon Crest" on Friday. She'll be onstage in San Antonio with "Murder Among Friends." • Salem 'lat.HI 8 mo. "tlf.0.7 mg. nicOIN IV. per ciglmte bf FTC !Mthod. .. . . . ·• • -~·---~ --- L • Loren denies s plit NEW YORK <AP) Sophia Loren , who re cen \ly said her marriage left her feeling depraved, denies she and her hu s band are splitting. · · T h ·e ·v e r y conti}l uance o f our marriage is the bes t ans wer to all these c heap stories," Miss Lor e n s aid in an interivew published in the M arch iss u e of Ladies' Home Journal In a nother article M cCa ll 's magazine as ked Miss Loren. 47 . about rumors that she was involved with a French doctor and on the ver ge of a split with ~J· her husband Miss Loren replied. .. My hus band and I n ever discuss these things . H e wouldn 't ·understand .. <. b • , . I I ·. 4. -. .. • • • • • Ylll lllO. llllY PINI l U l ~~DAY F U:i HU A RY 1 " 1 lUi .' ORAN GE COllN 1 v < Al tr 1 >llNIA 2~ CEN TS Landing aid 'not in service' . ., for .AirCal jet By t 'aEDERICk SCHOEMEHL ot ... IH'ty .......... A navigational aid used by pilots in landing under adver$e weather conditions was not ln service &jonday night when an AirCal jetliner c lipped a Hghtnt ng arrestor wi re near Onle.rio International Airport. forcing an emergency landing 30 minutes later without brakes in Los Angeles. - James Holl!claw, chief of the Federal Aviation Admlnlstra· lion's facility in Ontario, con· firmed that the "glide slope" de- vice a t the airport that assists pilots hf malntaiping correct altitudes on landi!lg a pproaches has bee n out o( service ror about two weeks. H o lt sc law , citing an investigation being conducted by the National Transportation Mental patient surrenders in Santa Ana c While free on bail on a charge Safely Board. d eclined lo ..s peculate on whether a n operational glide slope would .have JU'evented the incident. A f ter s triking t h e s ma I I ·di a meter lightning arrestor wir~ ..:_ strung between high-tension line transmission standards 250 feet tall -the pilot of night 754 Cjt rrying 122 people canceled his landing at Ontario a nd fl ew on to Los Angeles International where an emergency landing was made . Neither lapding gear brakes nor t hrust reversers in the Boeing 737's two jets operated when the jetliner touched down at LAX. The -plane traveled the length of a 12,000 foot runway, then veered to the right, coming to rest in ·a dirt embankment. None of the passengers was \ injur~ T he pilot chose to land al LAX because or better landing instrumentation and longer runways than Ontario. said Mark Peterson, a spokesman for Newport Beach-based AirCal. Peterson said the night crew had no knowledge in advance of the LAX landing that braking systems, activated by hydraulic syst ems. would not operate. Emergency · equipment was I . ... ' s ummo ned to the runway trictly as a precauuon since the pilot had reported striking an obJect near Ontario, Peterson said The wir e struck by the aircraft was toeated about four ml1es east of Ontario Airport Holtsclaw said vnder a normal approach pattern, a Jet would be about 750 feet above the ground when cross ing the standards which suppo'rt hoes carrying 250,000 volts. Arter striking the wire, the pilot , who had not been identified, decided to cancel his landing at Ontario. Peterson said But before regaining altitude. a length of the lightning arrestor wire. estimated to be 100 lo 150 feet in length . contacted a 500 ,000-volt line located 1,000 feel to the west, s aid Bob !lull. a spo k esman for Sou thern California Edison (;ompany, own.er of the trans m ist~n facilities. . The lightning arrcsto~ wire later fell from the 'pllln'-"to the roo f of an Onta~10 area Mc rvyn's department stores warehouse. he s aid. Cr ews rcpairt'<i the lint' this morning- Escaped mental patient Roger Dale Stockham, who had eluded ca pture for fo ur mont hs. s urrendered Mo nda y to a television news crew and law enforcement officials in Santa Ana. of child stealing, Stockham was arrested in connection with fires set at several Union Oil storage tanks at Point Conception. He was convicted of fe lony child stealing. but at his arson trial, he was found legally insane and sentenc~ to Patton in February 1980. •19.111!11-~llJl!ll••lllllll!lll•••.., One pa sst>n gc r . J ames ' Hashny, of Oakland. where the µlane <;topped en 'l"~>ule rrom Seattle to On1.arw. i.a1d he saw "what appeared to be a flas h of light nr s parks"' when the power lines were struck Stockham , 34 , who had been desc ribed by aulborities as ··exlre.mely·d~ngerous," showed • up at the San ,a Ana offi ce of the Orange C unty S heriff's Department arter spending five days negotiating with offi~als on the terms of his surrender. said Sgt. Bob Casey of the Santa Barbara Sheriffs Department. Casey, who was the primary law enforcement official involved in the negotiations with Stockham. told The Associated • Press that the news team at KNBC television station in Los Angeles first contacted him on Feb. 10 about S tockham·s whereabouts. The Secret Ser vice had also been kee pin g tabs on the escwped me11tal patient because of a n attempt in 1980 to send a threatening letter t o then-President Jimmy Carter. "On Feb. 11 , Stockham called me twice and we discussed the matter of his surrender," ·CiJsey said. "He· did not want lo be housed in Los Angeles County jail and wanted to stay ln the Santa Barbara County jail." "We struck a bargain," Casey said. "that he would be at the 0 range County sherl-H's department in Santa Ana at 12:30 p.m. and that I would bring him back to Santa · Batbara," Casey said. Stockham. who has a varied c riminal .record. escaped from ~atton State Hos pita l in San Bernardino oil Oct. 14. A convert to Islam, Stockham came to the public's attention in 1979 when he took his son from a Santa Barbara area foster home, flew to Los Angeles In a rented plane and tried to hijack a jet lo Iran. Whe n the d e mand wa s refused, he took oft in the rented plane; but cras hlanded on the Palos Verdes peninsula. Stockham surrendered to sheriff's officers in the company of his third wife, Suzanne, whom he reportedly married at the beginning of the year, and Pete Noyes. executive editor at KNBC. Casey said that Stockham had been staying at a res idene«:. in Laguna Beach. A-OUGH LANDING A Los Angeles Inte rnational Airport official exami~es thl' landing gear of a n AirCal 737 tha t s lid o ff a runway and into a sandy embankment during an 'unscheduled la nding at thc airport Monday night. The plane reported!~· strul"k ..... .,........ overhead wires on its or iginal approach to On tario Airport. "hic h may have been respons ible for It~ loss o( brakes <Incl J>O\\ l't· rc•H•rsal t'qu1pmcnt :°'loh.' damagt• to the c~inc cowling ~o cmt• wa:-rl·porkd 111111rccl . . ~ in ht• mishap Mary Schmitz joins spouse as candidate The.y worked for Lisa Restaurant employees. aid injured sky diver 'IJ)ith fundraiser • Apparently guided by the old ru l e of t hum b that t wo candidates ate better than one, John and Mary Schmitz, both Corona del Mar Republicans, began the filing process Monday as candidates for U.S. Congress. While state Sen. John Scfunitz plunked down a $1 ,2 13.25 filing fee r equired of U.S . Senate ho pefuls, his wife, Mary, initiated the riling procedure for the 43rd District seat in the House of Representatives. Delly l'llet S!Mt-. They traded spatulas. aprons and bus tra~s for scrub brushes. hoses and c hamois cloth at Saturday's car wa~h behind the Big Yellow House restaurant in Costa Mesa. The occasion was l o raise money for one of their own waitress Lisa Boyer , who was injured earlier this month when her parachute failed to open during a 12.500-foot fall. Lisa continues to recover at Loma Linda Uni versity Medical Center where she was taken after her miraculous survival rrom a sky diving accident Feb. 3 And while Med1Cal will pay for a part of her hospital bills. friends and fellow employees at tht· Costa Mesa rl'staurant held a fund -rai s ing car was h Sa turday to defray medical C'OStS. • "We raised more than $360," said Ron Booth. manager of the Big Yellow House. "We-had to.; quit at 3 p.m. because we had to open for work · · lie s aid a steady stream of cars, trucks, vans and even mobile homes ar rived in the rear parking lot many brought in by people who had read news accounts of the 20 year-old sky diver's plight. ··some 3ple paid more <than the $2 50 ch rge) lo have their cars wash ... Booth said. ·•A lot of people paid double and triple the amount, JUSt to help Lisa out ·· L1 sa·s parachute malfunctioned during her 54th jump, and her reserve chute only partially o pene,d. She landed in a sludge pond at a sewage treatment. plant near P erris Airport and ·suffered com press ed vert.ebrae an d internal irpuries. But the efforts of her friends . and complete strangers. will ease the financial burden of her accident. Booth said. /\nd how did the popular patient react to the successful car wash" "She was really thrilled," Booth said. "Just tickled." The 43rd district includes Capistrano Beach, Dana Point; El Toro. Mission Viejo, San Clemente. San Juan Capistrano, Trabuco, Ortega. S1lverado and a handful of precincts in South Laguna. Election off ic ials say candtdates for the U.S. House of Representatives do not have lo Ii ve in tha t district. Mrs. Schm itz lives in Corona del Mar with her family. BOTH RUNNING State Sen. John Schmitz a nd hb wife. Marv. both filed as candid ates fo r Congress todav. Sc hmitz is in t he Sen ai'e race. while his wife is campaigning for a Houst:' seat. Nancy weeps over 'druggie$' • First lady moved by tales of troubled teens T he Schmitzes, according lo officials in the Orange County Registrar of Voter s Office. visited the office separately. The political couple, however, were not the only ones to take ad vantage of the opening day of the candidates' filing period in Orange County. A handful of c andidates seeking elec.Uve office also began the filing process Monda y that will culminate in the Nov. 2 general election. Other candidates who took outa filing papers Monday were: Paul Carpenter of Cypress, a Democrat seeking nomination for the U.S. Senate; Incumbent U.S . Rep. Robert Badham, R ·Newport Beac h seeking (See SCllM11'2, Pase ~%) ST. PETERSBURG . Ft'a . <AP > -Only the names and faces of the troubled teen-agers varied . Their d ecla r a t ions before a huge audience that incl uded a t earful Nancy Reagan were always the same: "f am a druggie." For three hours Monday night. the first lady sat in a hot a uditorium crowded with 300 drug-prone adolescen~ and 600 anxious parents involved in a treatment program called Straight Inc. She Listened to the songs they sang.enthusiastically. She heard . an unending litany of' substances they once used lo "get high." And s h e watched as a microphone was passed from parent to parent. some scoldillg Fraud case suspect hailed ·Out By DAVIDIUJTZMANN Central Oran1e County When he was arrested last or .. .....,,.....,. Municipal Court Judie Bobby week by .. Orange County Sherilf'a Tbe president of Golden Eal.le Youngblood lowered Ralph Department lnveatlgalors who Jnve1tment Co .• suspected of McDonald's bail lo $_250,000 raided Ms El Toro office, swindling more than 1,000 M4nctay ae more tllan 50 McDonald was alleged to have lovestora out of thelr uvinp, lnveatora who support McDonald • mastermif¥led the largest fraud was a free man aaaln today clapped and cheered. • In Oran1e County history. More followin1 an unusual bollday He potted the lowered baJI than $800,000 ln cash was seized eourt bearint to reduce bis S2 Mood_, nleht and was released "'th~ raid. million~ from Or~ County Jell. . {8ee BAJL,gce Al> their children for setbacks . others offering praise and love. When the microphone finally got to Mrs . Reagan , her voice choked . · "My heart is fi ll ed with so many things ." s he told the teen-agers. ") a m so proud or you and I love you, too." Tears welling in her eyes, she turned to ttfe par.ents; ... "Being a parent myself, I know how painful it must be for yoo. There's nothing as p,ainful fl> r a p a r e-n t a s tr a v in g som ething happen t o their c h ildre n a nd no th ing a s hurtful." Then again to the youngsters: ·•t wish you all the best of luck and the most wonderful lives and I ~now you wlU have it. I know everything will be just fine." M'rs. Reagan's two-day trip on behalf or drug abuse prevenUon was concluding today after a stpp In Dallas. Monday night's pro1ram was an unusual experience. Ftrst, the children. singing • from their seat. In front ol lhe_ auditorium while their parenta, waited outside ; loud , 1oud sin1ln1; a cappella ; wtt.b hands rnovin1 In unr : such aonp 11 ··Amt-flea" and "I'm On My• Way .. Next, the counselors would a s k what was t h e most outrageous substance they had ever used <roach killer>; the most outrageous place they round to hide drugs (parents" mattress>: how many had introduced drugs to children they babysat for (about half>: and so on. Girls were pitted against the boys. The competltiotl was so stron~that one ~oonselor finally pleaded, ··c·mon flrls. You can top the guys." All 300 of the children frantically waved their ha nds high In the air for a chance to reveal how outrageous they once had been. The n the pare nts were admitted. · Slowly and sUenUy they rued in one by one, filling au the •eats tn ooe row before starting lhc next. . . The true conresslons began. Children woo· were new lo lbe program stood up and recited the subltanctt they had~­ pol, acid, uppers, downers, on •nd on always endlQ1 with. ·•J am a druggie!' SCE said there wai. no service disruption to customers The FAA s<ud there was a 300-foot ceiling of clouds and vi sibility was about I 5 miles when the line "as c;truck by the aircrdft about 9 p m Ordeal ahead for kin of legionnaire By JEFF ADLER Of, ... D•llY l'llet St.fl Judy Lee's voit'<: er at' ks with e m otion a s s he de sc ribes Monday's memorial service in Costa Mesa for Randy, her 20 year -old son "ho died in Africa a reluctant member of the French Foreign Legion "My son is with tht• Lord. they, c an't hurl him an) longer. Mrs Lee says-. . But the ordeal and all of 1l'- angu1sh will not be over for Mrs Lee. her 11 -year old daugl'ller Mi c helle and o ther famtl) members until R:indy"s body 1s returned for burial 1n tht: L'ntted Sta t es b y th f' Fr enc h government. ··fi e will be buri<·d 1n the United Stales of America, not on any foreign soil: Mrs Lee says, her determination sho" 1ng in spite of her grief · That 1s the way It IS going LO be .. The Costa Mesa woman adds she wi ll. remain strong until the tussle over her son 's body is completed becaus(• ··he deserves the dignity of being buried at home.·· She points out that in a letter to his younger siste r . wtuch arrived three days before news or hi s death, he wrote that "his heart came back to Costa Mesa .. while he was imprisoned, Mrs. Lee says. Lee died Feb. 3 in a plane crash in DJibouti, Africa . along wilh 30 other French Foreign Legion paratroopers The French government has ·indicated it will lake between four and six months to return Lec·s r e mains because he enlisted in the legion using the name "Vawrence Leon " The Costa Mec;a man had e nlis ted in the Ll'g1on whil e visiting Pans in ordl'r to forget a failed romance and because • recruiters had held out the <See ORDEAL, Page A2l DRAIGI COAST WIATHI R t.;hance of measurable r ai n near zero tonight and Wednesday . Fair and warme r Wed n es d iry . Tonight's lows 45 to 55. Wednesday's hi ghs 68 to 75. (Details Page A3 > llS,Df TODAY The "aweater girl" return. to JUms. l.onghmt mome glamnur•queen Lona Turner .mu.appear in.a gust role on TV's "Ealcon Crest " Page CJO. 11111 ·-· ....-C:ll ., L.M...... M.. ...... ... ~ .•. Cl'rM-aa C......... CM c•k• C4 c---(4 ..._.._., N • ....._. M ......... 111 11 .. , ...... ,... .. t fj ... - I t ' • I • Ot•CQ! Coaat OAIL Y PILOT(!ueeday, February 1e:tm REFLE CT IV E Spat'l' Shuttle Columbi a i s r eflected 1n turn bas in <luring a 31 :o-milc• t r1 p lo launch pad From Page A 1 BAIL .. : The defendant's lawyer, Paul Mast . argued that Ure charg~ against McDonald "don't seem to have gr.eat merit" and at' most he was guilty o.f LechniCal securities law violations. Deputy Dis trict Attorne-y Thomas Buc k . however , maint-amed that $8 million in inv estors ' fund s i s s till una ccounted for and that no e vidence wa s found that McDonald had invested any of his clienL'\' money in r eal estate loans as he had clalm,i Buck said inJ'dt11r s we~e • promised interest payments or between 15 pe rc~L'\t hd 20 percent pe r mont.!J 6n thf ir money · After Monday's court hearin_g, Buck said he was "displeased" with the r eduction 1n bail. Earlier, the prosecutor had told Jud ge Youn g bl ood that authorities were concerned that M c Donald wo uld fl ee th e country with the S8 mt Ilion. Mas t . a retire~ municipal court judge, said the $8 million had been properly invested and would be accounted for . In all, $11 million ts reported to have been invested in Golden Eagle. Authorities seize d about $825 ,000 in cas h a long with company records ih the raid on the firm. Both Mc Donald, a San Juan Capistrano resident, and David Biggins. 44 . vice president of Golden Eagle. we re arrested o n char ges o f se lli n g unregistered securities. Biggins remains in Orange County Jail. He wa s s l::h e dul e d t o•be arraigned today From Page A1 SCHMITZ. • • re-election to his 40th District seat; Oran ge County Sheriff, Coroner Brad Gates of San Juan C apis trano. a ls o s eeki ng re-election ; and Orange County Clerk-Recorder Lee Branch· 'of• Irvine, another who will stand for re-election. A s pokeswoman for the regi s tr ar 's o ff i ce s aid candidates must file nomination papers, d e cla r alio n s of candidacy and pay a fili ng fee before the March/ 12 deadline. The filing perrod is extended t hrough March 17 in races· in which an incumbent chooses nlh to run. Captive cro.wds 'BOGOTA. Colo mbia <AP> Lefti s t g u erril l as held coperega~ons at gunpoint in fi ve Rom an Catho lic c hurc hes, delivering political speecheS' to them, Bogota newsp~perJ £aid Monday of the Sunday incidents. $/iuttk • I CA PE CANAVERAL, Fla. <AP> SpaH shuttle Columbia WU driven S~ miles to Ila launch pad today aboard a transport.er-crawler that inched po nderously1 along a 1r1vel roadw~ to the seaside launch complex. Sc> successful was the move - fl ve day& a head of shcedule tha• it prompted s pace a1ef!CY officials to rajse• the l>OISlbUlty of moving up the March 22 hurnch date for the shuttle's third mission. _ Gen. James Abrahamson, associate NASA admtolstrator, "has d!scussed the possibility" of an earlier launch date for the seven-day mission with Director Richard Smith of the KeMedy Space Center, shuttle operations di rector George Pa.ge told reporters. I . .Wy.cliff~ to stay in GuateIDala T he slaying of an American Roman ·Catholic missionary in Guatemala will not cause Huntington B eac h -based Wycliffe B\ble Translators to remove any of its pe rsonnel from that strife -torn Central American nation , a Wycliffe official said. "We 'r e awa re of the s ituation," said Bernie May , director or Wycliffe 's U.S . operations. "We won't take any undue risks . but we'r e m aintainin g operations as usua l.'' T.bc. ~TJcern was promp~ by the death ot brother James Alfred Miller, a me mber of the Ch'ristlan Brothers order who was teac!Nng at aq_ Indian I) o a r d i n .g s· c h o o I i n Mue bUdien•ft•O. · _.Milt ... ~:..."9.,.. -• -"":>o k d 1 ..,.,.,...,..., • ..,..~ ... ~ac . e Saturday by lour. hoode.d .guJlmert• as he worked outside the school. authorities said. No one immediately claimed re!fponsibility for the s laying. Guatemala has been wracked by a brutal political stru1gle between left and-righ£. "We 've had a few mino r incidents," e.xplained Wycliffe's May ....... Birt. Jao o•~·• btur,. ha-rmed (before ill Guatemala)." ..._ He~ P tWyclfk 11'Drtlr. ..... 1'ftn 'l'OtJl>ed . lrt ... ~ ..... - instance, a Wyc-lifCe .car: was stoten but was recovered after its e ngine failed and it was a bandoned by the \tlieves, he said. According to May, Wycliffe has 99 people in Guatemala and Honduras. working with · the approval of these governments. May said Wycliffe 's Central American representatives work in 39 languages with local Indian tribes . helping them develop a written languAge , teaching them to rea d a nd write : and translating the Bible into these native languages. He sa id W yc liff e representatives a re accustomed to working in nafaons wracked with civiJ disturbance. Wycliffe trans lator Ch et Bitterman was killed last year by Colombian terrorists who claimed Wycliffe was'"'a CIA front. Man kille d in Irvine cycle c ras h A 65-year-old Idaho man was killed Mondav afternoon when he was ejec t e d from a l"M>Lorcycle and struck by a car near the .separation of the San Diego and Santa Ana freeways in Irvine. ·Th e California Highway Patrol identified the man as Cecil Gordon Crosby, of New Meadows, Idaho. T he CHP said Crosby was attempting to move into the northbound lanes of the Santa Ana Freeway when he· co!Uded with a car dri•en by Stephen Trustin Galbraith . no age ayailable, of Oceanside. The impact threw Crosby into a thffic lane where he was s truck by another vehicle driven by Mary.AM Hill, 39. ot Canota Park .. tbe CHP said. Crosby was dragaed 13-f~ before. he'r~ar came to a stop. ORANGE COAST ~aily Pilat CIH•lfted edw9t99'ng 7f411U.a71 ~II other departme"'9 142-4121 . Thoma P. Haley " ,......., ... 0.1~0-.. RobertN.Wtilcf. ......... I~maa A. Murphl"-·' MIChMIP.Ha'WV ....-.c.- L. K~ Schultz ........ ~ ~enztt'111 N~erd Jr. ~Schulme.n ~ CNrieeH Looi .......... e=r..~ .. ylauiich pa ~ Page e mphasized thal tn earlier la.ancb wai. oolY "ln discussion 'Ind no decision bu beeo made.·· tte a11id •u ••h dee!l1lon would have to await m ajor launch pad tests and loadlnas of the external fuel tank and tbe orbiter Itself In the first fe w weeks of March. The 8~-hour-long move was a key step in pre paring the shuttle for Its third mission, a seven-day orbital flight. Thelrollout of the llWfoot-hiJh s hutl e ass e mbly from t.,e cavernous Vehicle Assembly Building began at 1 :21 a .m . PST aboard th e SO -f oot -high transport.er. The j9urney ended at about 7:50 a.m . Technicians expected to ~d two hours or more making sure the mobile launcher platform. l on which the sh4ttle is anchored .. waa connected i nd ''hard · down.'' or tutened securely, on th4 pad. · The transfe~. five days ahead of schedule. beaan 40 mlAutes betor.e Its 2 a.m. scheduled start to {lVOld a storm front which was expected at Kennedy Space Center later In the day. The tlrs"t half of the move was carried out in darkness and then in scattered clouds and fog after daybreak. 84t the second half was in bright sunshine , with the black a nd white orbiter", Its sUvery twin. rocket boosters and musiard-colored external tank silhouetted agains~ a powder blue sky. "We can take the ralo lf we h ave to, but we can 't have li ghtning," said Mark Hess. a Kennedy Space Ce nter spokesman. "Once it gets to the pad. it's OK. There's ll1htn"'1 protection there.'' The 184-foot-tall ''1tack" of the or bl tor. it• muata'rd·colored lxttrnal fuel •ank and twin rooet boostel'I went out the door of the huae VAB at I :so a.m . f'ST. The s huttle and Its launch plalform, wet1hin1 more than I t.8 million pounds, moved lft less than 1. mph toward the launch site. ·'It takes a while to move t hose things -they 're not light." Hess said . Offic1als sard the°Y hoped td' make all connections of the shuttle and its mobile launcher platform to the launch pad about eight hours arter rollout began. As tronauts Jack Lous ma and Charles Fullerton awaited the placement of the shutUe on its launch pad, wbert the1 will rehearse countcSown proctdurea for 33 houl'1 this week. Once at the pad, lbe Cofumbia will rest on the pl•tlorm so It "to uches metal to metal." Keu uld. A rotaUng phalfortn will move around the s pacecraft llO' 'technlc lana can link fuel. electJ'lcal and comm~~UOOJ lines from the ColumWa to the ground. The hookups will coqtlnue until Thur~day. when Lousma, and Fullerton will begin the simulated launch, Hess said. Lousma and Fullerton, who returned to H ouston Space Center on Saturday for more training , will return to Kennedy Space C~ter-ror the countdown de m ons tratio n t es t . NASA s pokes man Dick Young said . Drizzle to l e ave .tonight Light drizzle dampened the Orange Coast and mos t other areas of the county today. leaving streets and freeways s lick but adding little to the season's rainfall total. A spokesman for the National Weather Service said there should be gradual clearing by tonight , with warmer t e rn peratures predicted for Wednesday The spokesman !>"rid today's drizzle was caused by a low pressure system covering the Eas tern Pacific, which has broughl heavy rain into Lbe Bay Area and the Western Sierras. Low temperatures tonight are_ expected to be in the 45 to 55·degree range. accordinJ to """"., -• H1cri t h e w e a t h e r s e r v i c e . CRUISER COLLISION A Huntingto n Beach' police patrol -car was d a maged a t noon Monday when lt collided with a 1974 Hond a Wednesday 's high sho uld be Sigl were n ot s erious ly injured. traffit from 68 to 74 degr ees. up from officers said. Investig ators s aid Sigl failed to hi ghs In the mid-60s today. ·auto drive n by Eric J ohn Sigl. 17, of Fountain, Va ltey. the n jumped a curb a nd struc k a utility pole. T he officer. Brian Moore'. 41. and ~·ield lo the police car whilt> making a left turn from Beilch Boulevard onto '.'Jewman--"" Mos tl y f a i·r weather is ;\ve nue. predicted through Fri~a~, wi~h hea vv storms remaining tn Central and Northern California. ... '2D,~r00 sa~ shoppers cr~-a(e .'bedlam' COHOES. N.Y. CAP > -A Hudson and Mohawk rivers, a "They started pushing the Washington'sBirthday. department store reopened for few mil~ outside of Albany. counters toward us and women the second day or a sale today The shoppers. mostly women. were leaping on top. Finally we a(ter a n e stimat.ed 20,000 stampeded into the Cohoes just had to start tossing the bags shoppers created "bedlam" on Specialty Stores Lld. when the into the crowd to protect Wa s hington 's ~day . with doors opened at 9 a .m Monday ourselves." c lerks tossing ha-nol>ags to for the two-day sale. Cohoes sells name brand and protect themselves . ·'We were .all behil'\d glass d esigner clot.hes for men and Five off-duty poli ce officers counters with the handbags 1 women at prices 20 percent to 30 were hired to patrol Monday's a rranged behind us ," s aid Terry r percent lower than traditional c rowd whic h e qual e d .tbe Waddell.manager of one or the retail. says Ben Ames , the population of this old industrial store's departments. ··Then they s tore's vice chai rman . But cit v al the confluence of the let in thecrowd. It was bedlam. prices really plumme t on A two-page ad vertisement in a local paper Sunday boasted of ··buttery soft leather blouson jac ke ts by Kenar" fo r $79 • ( nationallv advertised at $290); "long dresses with jackets by Albert Capraro" for S23 ($238); ··fl a ls ton fa s h ion m etallic handbags" for $11 CS150 to $170>; "sweater jackets by Rafique" for help. Gunman fires · ~t Florida . plane, seized MIAMI (AP> A gunman fired several shots al two gate attendants and an Air Florida jetliner on the ground al Miami International Airport today, but no one was hurt and the man was quickl y taken into custody. police s aid. • The plane's crew had seen the m a n coming a nd s htJL the plane 's door befor e he could board. authorities said. The man pulled the gun and started shooting while he was in the passageway between the From Page A1 ORDEAL. • • promise or travcil to exotic lands and money. H o w e v e r , h e b ~c a m e disenchanted in the Legion and wanted to retul'tl home. He tried lo escape a t least once before his death and was imprisoned. MI'S. Lee described her son as an "extremely gifted " musician. to whom music m ea nt everything. And that was how he was remembered during a memorial service Monday at the Prince or Peace Lutheran Church ·in Costa Meaa -through music. Inters persed between songs performed by church members. ~and ~ead.ings Jrom ..the. Bibl~ Lee 9.'as r emembered as a "young man with a great enthusiasm for life." In fact, one former classmate of Lee's, Lance Hodges, now or Davis, Calif., said his lasting Impression of l,.ee always will be that of playtng the piano during high school. • Mra. Lee &aid, following the memorial ...-vice, that Uie hurt. a~ depression has now set in. &lergy aid 0 K' d WASHI NGTON <AP > - Prealda Re•••n hu allDed a resolution adcllils 1123 million to a federal fund to help the poor and elderly pay Uf'elr beaUn1 and other !Mrl1 ~1-· . departure gate and the plane; a Boeing 737 with 25 passengers and fi ve c r ew m e mbers preparing to leave for Key West. according to airline' spokeswoman Robin Cohn. Dad e C o unt y p ol i ce spokesman Dave Graveline said the man also fired oa officers. Ms. Cohn s aid the man, a Latin. held a one-way ticket on Air Flor ida's Flight 34 . Ms . Cohn said the gate agents thought he looked suspiclbus and called the cockpit. The crew During the New York Jewelry Shew, N. W. Ayers entertained some of the buyers 11 a breakfast at the.Plaza Of:behalf of their client, De Beers. Part of that early morning program was a style show of women's fashions for spri ng and summer The MaSOn h• • whole new look and shape. fabric and gemstones Mt the pace. True. the shimmery golds and 1l1Vers sparkled early In the fall aeuon. but added to the metallice. the gold end el~ splMhea. ate ~ape and fabric. FullneN Is the key. b11t • fullnete that 11 mot>I!«' that moves with the body, a fullness that gets Its shaping from the flt of the lhouldefa and' the fit under the arms. Shlpel are ce•u•I. almost • sportive. Rich fabrics dictate the time and place to weer · pertlculer "fa•hlon statementa." Brighi, baeutl ful and Jew.Honed .,.. the colors, wtth red tr. runmw11,y favorite. It'• s hut the door before the man could get there. He pulJed the ~un and s~ot ~t two agents when they tried to search him, she said . FBI agent Chris Mazzella said the agency was investigating. "We consider the concourse a r ea suffic ie ntly c lose to interference with an aircraft (o bring it within the jurisdiction oC the hijack statutes," Mazzella said. '"I don't know if we've got a hijacking (attempt), but we are investigating the incident." @ EiEM WISE It was not immediately knowq how the man was able to get th~ g un through the metal detectors at a security checkpoint. ··our gate agent tftought the passenger looked suspic ious as he was coming through the jetway, so he quickly bad the door of the aircraft shut," Ms . Cohn said . "Then he went to sear ch the passenger and the passenger drew a gun.'' An unknown number of shots were fired and the ageAls ran for help from airpart security .. Firsi Lady Influence It's her favorite color. as well ss rich gceens. b lues an d deep yellows. Jewel ry moves to ih e forefront as the important finishing touch to the fa.shloq• picture Following the trend in colors, jewelry des~ners have .co.m bJn.e.d gold· w i th gemstones: not only emeralds. rubles and MPphlres, but -also gernet, topaz, lapls, perldot, emethyst and carnelian. to name a few. And dtsl00.'1 have used the gold In subtle ton• of g...an. pink, wttl• and yellow. SomatimH several ton• of gold are uled for OM pie~. Whlla the •mell button-type Hrrlng Is atlll fuhtonable. the trend II Joward short drop eefflngs, or earrtnga with more dlmantlon. EJCamplea are gold Mery lerr. Cff1tfied a.tnolOll4st hoope often .cctn._., Y!llth AKLES H. BARR ~:,:.oema. pMrtt or tiny It IOUnde Ilka a Y8fY e>ceiting ..__..._._._._ 19rlng and eummer . f . I • - AP ........ TH .. EE OENEAATtONS Patty Hearst Sha,\·. right. and her husband. Bernie Shaw. hold their daughter. Gillian. while Pattv's mother. Catherine Hearst. looks on. Mrs . Hearst recCittlv revealed that another woman caused the breakup o(tier 4o:year marriage to Ran<Jo!pJl Hearst.. Johnny Cash offers reward Country music singer Jobney Cash is offering a $560 reward fol' ·nrormatioJl leadin_g~to the arrest and conv ctron of the robbers who broke into his Montego Bay hom e last December in Jamaica. The eunmen stole $50,000 in cash and jewelry and . '175 pairs of shoes which were to be donated to an orphanage. An advertisement signed by Cuh otcer~ng the reward T w o e ar 1 y 8 ea t 1e1 recordings 'that have never been released will be put on sale, possibly this year, an offiaial al EMI Records said. One of the recordings, "How Do You Do It" - which the B~atles decided not to issue because they considered it lacked sales potential -later became a No. l hit in Britain for . ' appeared in the newspaper in Kingston. Casb, his wife .Jme, tbelr 11-year-old son Johll Caner, John 's friend , 00•1 Caldwell, also 11 , Cash's sister, Reba Ha•cock, her husband, Chuck R•a.ey, and the Cash family 's h ousekeeper, Edith Montague, were about to have dinner at their home .• Dec. 21 wben three gunmen burst into the home. anotbergroup, Gerry and the Pacemakers. The other song, "Leave My Kitten Alone" was oritlnally intende<ifor the Beatles-r'lrst album, but was omiUed. Both songs were recorded late in 1962 as the Beatles - the late .Jolul LeluMMI, Paal McCartay, Geor1e Har,._ and Rl•I• Starr -were be&inning to take off. Bria. Gen. , .... .......,, freed ftom terrof'ht . lrtdnappert after 1 ••·day ordeal, la rel.xln1 ln rtoridJ and vWUn1 ritlatlv.1. Doal•r ii under t11ht MCUrily dwiftc blJ vlalt to Eattn Af'IS ht th• Florida Panhandle. The 1enenl, kJdnapped ~Y Red Brtaadet terroriata in Verona on Dec. 17, wu rescued by an elite team of ltalllll\ police Jan, 28. • Hts son, lceU, llvH ln nearby Shalimar. ~· ' The man who came wtutin a whisker of beln& ·elected eove.,.ar in 1914 La bae~ ln Sacramento as a lobbyist, and seem a.. to have le• regrets attout betna an o utsider looklne in on . 1<>vemment. Former 1tate ControUer HoHtOll Plouaey,. 'llptelal ,salatant to USC Preeident ames z.mw1e, occupies • windowless office two bl<*ks from the Capitol. lronicaily, ther•'s a picture of former President Gerald Fwd and Flournoy on the wall beside P'loutnoy'a desk. Flournoy, the Republien nominee for 1overnor ill "74, blames Ford's pard~a of~. Rldard Nlsoa for his loss to:. Democratic Gov. Edbuahd Brown Jr. by less than 200,000 votes. LOBBYIST Former state C o n t r o I I e 1· H o u s t o n Flournoy. who came within a whisker of being e lected ~wernor in 1974. is back in S;acr~mento us a lbbbyist. Fair Wednesday· Coaatal ClleM• OI --rein --------------tero tooMtM Md ~y. Felr ....,................... E •--..i-d Geffi.I -4S. lr1i.o>d SS. Coe.UI x~6~ 11'9fl ... lftlelld 7S. W*r ». EINwNre. -······~to 5-ol Jorec1m•t Nkeles ltl-__ , • ._ I to ,.,_ II kftOlt -a to S.loal ten I""*"" .-....> IOftltflt. lltM varle.,., •-nc• SOUlHE AN CAL I POii NIA IOVltlwnt ... 16 kl'lbts .n • .-•. COASTAL ANO MOUNlAIN Alll£AS Pertlel cl-1"0 this evenlno ow r _ v arlilbl• clo<Hll-eftCI felrly Mr111ern ••r\. warm tefn!ler&lures. ()«.nloftelly wllldy Iii IN .._i.lns. HlgN In .. ----------coest•I -v•ll•Y erHt In "'9 IOw 60t to low 10a. L.owS mos tty '1 to S1. U.S. summary McMM1u1n ,.._, llioM 1n 111e :iosMd -. In tlW :IOI to mid 40s. It.in -........... "° .. 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I .•• t GED , . ~ (:. -"" , .• Ou•w4"4 ~ ---=== LMV._ .. • MertsvlllO Little ltOdl SI 56 ·" ...,...,.., i.-tnllle SI • C>ellleftd -~·· ... S1 ""•luff Mlanil " 7S ... Ill.._.. City Miii#~ • " Seer.....,. _..,St.P ., IS s.tlllu HetlWllle S1 D .It Seti ..... NewO,.._ .. " .. Sllfl ,,__. ...-von S1 ,. Senta ...... Norfolll " SS .ol swtuon Ollla City " J7 aMltow ~"!t ., D ........ Q .. CeWllno PllllM!lftle SI .. lei<••~ P'-114• 75 u Ufllhecll PlttMvf'lll S4 4l M \MA .... l>Ueftd,Me ,. " Mont'Ovle l>tlMd,Ore ., • .31 M\.Wll- ltattld City .. • ....... ~ ·-SS 4S .ICI O!Ur .. Selll.M.• " J7 ·°' P&MI $twMla ...... " n .., ,......,.. St loult SJ " .OS Sell ... _ .. StP·T-., .. . 4' SMIJ- St SW Merle :w 11 s.nteAM ,___ ~ -.22 5Mte Crva TuetlMI 11 • T ..... ValleY Tuite '° '° CA .. AN Weelll"fltl .. JO ~=-.z-Wktllte 41 :w CALI .-0... IA ....... ---~ 7J -'2 Ott-• ••Y1M 11 -llloe!M E_..• • I ,. , .. ,....,.,.. ,.,._ .. ,. .u v°"'-L°"'~ .. S4 •1 -.. -.. • SI 9' :: SI 5' .. :116 us •1 51 .,. .. .. .. .. S\ l.M .. w " ,. .. S4 • .. w " 4S •S S1 12 62 .. " '2 • u S1 .. ,. 11 • .. • u w .. S1 .. .. S2 " ~-"° .• JO •t• ,. .. 41 • 42 • " 12 u. SJ • 14 ,, l.lllA ... 11'1 .. u ·~ .t1 PANAMl•KA• ~· " 12 ..,..... IS 12 .._... IS • ...... " II Orange~ ~AILY PJLOT/TUffday, February 18, 1982 .~ ................ __ ... ____ ...., ____________________________________ ........ ..,. ______ ~------~~ I . •.Clark: 'ExpaTJ.:sion of existing. airports should be weighed 91 PUDE&ICX SCHOEMEllL ............... ' The work of a re1ional airport study 1roup could be "extremely VUlnerable" to le1al cballence if consideration is not • l'i•tn to expanaion of exlaUng Sotathem California airports as ORPOSed to new airport . conatrucUon. 1t That concern has been railed by Orange County Supervisor 11,alpb Clark in a letter to Henry Wtdaa, a Yorba Linda City r Councilman and chairman or the Soutbem CalitornJil Association of Govemmen~· Aviation Work Pro1ram Committee. The SCAG committee for the , past aeveral years has been · ! studyin1 potential sites for location of a regional airport tliat would handle air passenger demand eJCpected to be 1enerated by 2000. . . Sites under consideration Include SanUa10 Canyon'east of Oranee; Chino Hills north of Yorba Unda; Camp Pendleton; El Toro Marine Corps Air • Station, and-an area offshore Long Beach Harbor. One of the first actions of the committee, Clark said, was "to · respect" constraints of existing 1" airports, that is, to not consider expandln1 them beyond their planned capacities. ln addition to J ohn Wayne Airport in Oranee County, existing Southern California commerclal airports include la Anteles International, Ontario International. Palmdale International , Loni Beach Airport, Burbank Airpert and Palm Springs International. Clark areued ln the letter that the declsiop to respect constraints of exisUn1 airports ·s h ould be reconsidered . particularly because or the p ossibility that any . r ecommendation for a new airport would be the target or a lawsuit. To underscore that belief. Clark noted recent legal action in which Newport Beach won an - Law8ui t 8ettled .. LOS ANGELES <AP > -The Palm Restaurant has agreed to pay its waiters and bus boys .$200,000 in back wages to setUe a lawsuit that charged \he posh eatery illegally deducted tips from their salaries and didn't pay minimum wages. Palm owner Walter Ganzi Jr. owes another $97,000 in civil penalties and court costs. Injunction preventtna county 1overnment from movtnl ahead with a plan to expand John Wayne Airport to handle up to 8.1 million pa11en1er1 by the end of the century. The faclllty serves about 2.S million passenaers annually. Orange County Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner ruled that the county had failed to exam~ other alternatives to expandin& the airport. Similarly. Clark su11ested in the letter, the reaional airport study committee should not open its work to legal challen1e by not. consi4ering alternatives\ such as expansion of existin& airports. "An alternative needs to be explored which allocates the pr oject e d s h o rtfalls (in providing passenger service l among ex.isling airports," Clark said . Financial c o s t s. noise implications. traffic impacts ··and any olher relevant criteria." Clark said, should be studieCi. The regional airport study coe'lmittee is scheduled to meet at 1 p.m. Thursday at SCAG offices in Los Angeles. Clark's !etter is contained on the agenda for that meeting. lilil ................ ~ ....... / .......... .. p Let Gibraltar Savin~ hel~ you: Lower your taxes. Cut your Federaj taxable income by as much as 52,000 eaah year -up to $4,000 if your spouse works. Just open a Qbraltar"' lRA. Every dollar you deposit is deductible from your income on your Federal retumand tax-deferred until retirement. Example: if you're a working couple in the 30% tax bracket and you deposit $4,000. you won't pay Federal taxes on the $4,000 \lntil retire- ment so you11 save $1,200 in taxes now. It's like getting a special refund! GibrJltar features these high interest accounts for your IRA: lSo/o FixedRate, the Variable Rate and JO-month Certificates . Poswone taxes. . - You also put off until retirement Federal income taxes on the interest your IRA earns. The money you are not giving toJ,Jncle Sam is earning compounded interest over the life of your IRA. The graph below shows the dramatic differ- ence between thegrowth of" a taxable investment and your tax-deferred IRA. $3 !o()(JOOO 3000000 7!o()(JOOO 7000000 I !o()(J000 I 000000 ~000 VAS S 10 IS 10 ~ lO :IS G raph.assurytes 30% tax bracket with annual deposits of $4,000 ta.x- deferred to the IRA-and $2,800 after-taxes to the taxable investment. Both accounts earn 14% compounded semi-annually. forget taxes altogether. It's true. For the first time. you can earn high. insured interest and not owe a penny of tax on it -now or ever. Because taxes don't cut into the interest you earn, a new Gibraltar Tax- Free Certificate could give you the highest actual return you've ever received on insured savings. The current rate (thru Feb. 20) is 10.22%, the' yield is 10.76%. lf you're in· the 50% tax bracket, that · translates into an equivalent taxable rate of: 21.52o/o Minimum $500. lnterest penalty and loss of Federal tax exemption for early withdrawal. California ·lllf llPllT cw-.. ,,, ' N:o liustee fee on new IRA's for 1982 tax-year, &ee Interest-earning Checking with your account. ''"'"" ~· 11 Cketelef«• 11 • Tilo <** aiid -loMI df'lute -, OMlll ..... es n -~CM...,,..e ... ywlH I' Have~ .. n • ,...... ty _...... _. ......... __ , ...... -........ -·--. TidB1 ... " ........... tentk• seys, -~ --·-... ._.... dr'IUlt loller.._.. .. •• """ .. La ....... Cl¥lc c..-Lee .... -:r-T--. ~llultt " ,......, "'I a.m~ .... S. Oie9t llM e troco HWlll:.,_ ,,. .., " te<AIMI ... •:""·"'· ::: .. _........ In .. tA ..... ,., ... ...... "'-.-., .. .., S1 ----t ;M-."I, ....... , .. I'll. .._,.,....,.,. "' .., S1 Tllo ..,_.. ~ .__.._ V::=-'1 ... ..., S1 ~ ........ ., ~.,,.-....... ~..., ... = S1 ,..,..~ 4:J1e,111. ........_, ..,,,. .... ,.., ..... '" ......... L..-. :l SS "'"' ... U:ttll•· ..,...,.,.._,. == c: SS " ................... _. ... JS ......... ''""-"" u Sa!IC ........ fltw ~ N ... ,. ....... 11;1•,_111. ... ............................... Ill .. ,._..... ... -tty ,. In ''t= . ........ S 1 u 11.111., ,, ••• c "4nltl w .., . ........ 1••·"'· .............. a.a. ....... T~a .... : Hllll: 4:'7 ••lft·I '--! thW "-"'·I ..... ~: ..._ ~ ......... t:• 1.111., _ .......... ......,._ ...... ..... ...., .... ·'!'· •. I I I : . • '1 . . . • • . i -1 I ·I . , . l .. . . ... .. \: . .. Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Tuelday, Febr.¥1ry 18, 1982 WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE The sig ns tell the storv as t wo trucks s low Iv ma ke their way through flooding cau~ b~: overflow of the Snoqualmie River Jlear Ou,·atl. Was h Fr~ighter alloired In burn itself out -KALAMA. Wash. (Ae> -A blazing-freighter as long as two football fields was left lo burn today on the Columbia River afte~someone cul it loose from a pier and it drifted out of reach of hoses. offi cials said. Three men were injured and three othe rs suffered smoke inhalation during lhe spectacular blaze. which fire crews reckoned left the grain freighter "probably a total loss" after burning for lwo days, the Coast Guard said. The fire on the fl-00-foot-long Protector Alpha began Sunday night. Reaganmeetswithwp ~ WASHINGTON <AP ) -President Reagan held a closed-door meeting with his top foreign policy advisers lo discuss developments in the troubled Centra l Ame rican region. • While House s pokesmen refused to say what was being discussed But Reagan told reporters on S unday he had been working on his speech regarding economic assistance in the Caribbean Bas in , and one Of those present at Monday's inte lligence brie fing was Thomas 0 . Enders. assistant secretary of state for inter·American affairs. \~ans fight Most.em rebel.s DAMASCUS. Syria (APl -The government's two·week attempt to put down a revolt by Moslem fundamenta lists was thwarted today by rebels fighting from ingeniously constructed hideouts that suggested the revolt was planned in advance. sources said. The well -placed Syrian sources said the a rmy was fighting from building to building. and in some cases from room to room. lo wipe out the Moslem Brotherhood rebels in the northern city of llam a . · Adors urge aid to Sal,vador WASHINGTON CAP> -The actors wh°'play Lou Grant, Dr. Johnny Fever and Pa Walton on televis ion attacked U.S. military aid to El Salvador and urged the public to help them send medical a id to the rebel forces there. They told a m?ws confet'ence Monday they were the vanguard of a movement "to stop another useless, wasteful. criminal tragedy like the Vietnam war." Later, posing outside the State Department. actor Ed Asner gave a Mexican doctor a check for $25,000 r aised by a Los Ahgeles-based group called Medical Aid for El Salvador. 'I: . U.S. t.o pu1 troops· onAqaba TEL AVIV, Israel (AP> -Commanders of the m ultinational force that is to monitor the Is raeli-Egyptian peace have agreed to station som e U.S. soldiers on the strategic Gulf of Aqaba is land of Tiran. Is rael had as ked the United Slates for guarantees that Tiran and the n'eighboring isfand or Senaflr would not be turned over to ·Saudi Arabia when Israel relinguis bes contn>l or them in ..A!!ril under the terms of the peace treaty with l!iypt. lsraeJi television said Monday. Lenno1''s killer 'anal,yzeq' MARCY-, N.Y. CAP> -Mark David Chapman, who pleaded guilty lo killing former Beatie John Lennon, is undergoin& tre.atment al the Centr..al New York Psychiatric Center here, authorities s ay. Chapman was transferred lo the state facility from the maximum-security Attica stale prison because omcials decided he needed psychiatric care, Martin Von Holden, center director. said. ·. Chapman is servin1 a sentence of 20 yean to Ufe after pleadint 1ullty lo shootln1 Lennon on Dec. 8. 1980, outside Lennon's New York City ·apartment. • Etfw4'a chi.ef vi.ail.a Arabs MANAMA lhhrain <AP>~ Etyplian President Hosnl Mubarak arrived In the ilrateglc Red Sea sultanate ol Oman today on hls firit visit to an Arab nation since becomlnt president, Oman radio reported. U... described the. tdp. .fa. ".a hlatoric nd iqp>rtant visit .. , ' ~viet freighter Sinks 15 bodies found; A tl antic si~e. ~ear capsized oil rig HALIFAX, Nova Scotia <AP> A Soviet frelahter sank lo SO -f o ot wave s in t'he s t orm-tossed No rth Atlantic today, and officials said four ~r fl ve people were resc ued but about l5 drowned and 18 were missing. , The frelabter sank between 2 a .m . and 3 a .m . some 240 naulicfl mil es e a s t of Newfoundland In an a rea 65 miles east of where the world's biggest oil rig capsized, leaving 84 workers missing and believed dead. Tfle 4,262-lon Soviet freighter, Mekhanik Tarasov, went down as two vessels tried Cor s everal hours lo assist the container s hip when it ran into trouble in lleavy seas. Officials s aid about 15 bodies had been recovc:red. A spokesman for the Halifax Search and Rellcue center said two life rafts had been spotted and a third was missing. "We don't know where it <the third raft) is . . . It could be on t h e s unken s hip ," the spokesman said. The Mekhanik Tarasov had d e v e lope~ a 45 -d egr ee list ove rnight in 40 knot winds, heavy seas and freezing spray. The 2,500-lon ToJbachik, a Soviet factory s hip, and the 444-lon trawler Sigurdfarid from the Faroe Islands were on the scene picking up bodies and searchlnt for more survivors. ln Moscow, the ministry In · char1e or the Sovl t .tommercial fleet said ll had no information on the ahip. The area lB fast.of the drtllt.na site l.n the Hibernia rield where the 1t.orm's huae waves cal)llzed the fl~ million oil rla Ocean Raoaer Monday morning. MobU OU Canada Ltd., which leased the Japanese·built rig from a Loulalana company. sajd the crew included 15 Americans, 52 Newfoundlanders. 16 men from other parts of Canada and one Briton. The company said th e nam es w o uld not be announcc"d until the famHlea were notified. It was the second hlaheat loll In the history of offshor e dr illing, exceeded only by the Joas of 123 men In the capelsing of the rig Alexander Klelland in the North Sea on March 27. 118). Only one body from the Ocean Ra nger crew was recovered. Sea rchlng ships and airc raft reported sighting three o( the rig's four lifeboats , with two bodies In one Of them , two or the 12 .l irera fts. and bodies in red·and-orange survival suits a nd debris In the water. Arts fund fleeced Souhd , light s how turn off? W ASHING:rfll)W (AP I Sen William Proxmire: 1!-1 giving his Golden Fleece of the Month Award for Fchruar~ to the Nationa l Endowment for the Arb for g1 \'ing a S7 .ooo gr a nt for a sound a nd light s how a t lhl· st<.1 lt• tap1tol in M adison. Wis . "The histor~· of this projett lkmons t rat l'S the m 111<1 I(·:-." and waste ful wa~·!-1 in which fNkral funds an· SJll'lll P rox mire said tod a\ Fields and scattered road wa~·!-1 in lowl<inds or the wt>ste rn µa rt of the s tatt• wt·n • repm·tl·d und e r w<it e r tod<i~ A Canadiab army Buffalo aircraft also was flying over the a rea and a Canadian Coast Guard vessel, the Sir Humphrey Gilbert, was on the way. The Wisconsin Dt•moc rat s<1 1d the purposl· of tht• l'\l'lll according lo its ~ponsors. wa~ to "turn \\'1sn>n!'-!111 -. -.tall· c <ipitol build ing into a geomt•trk <i ll~ lunl'd 111'-lrumt·nt which will bring to~elher and s<'ncl forth human .111<1 pla neti!l'Y em•rg it•s in a m essage o( worlll JH.·ac·t• .. "While attt•mpting to tune in uncl l11rn on . th1i-. pr111l·<·t h a s only t u rned off l he Amt·rkan ta\p<i~ l'I':-..·· :-.a id Prox mire. ··-~ • .. ·each~ alµI~ round-trip; coast to coast. , Now you 'Call get a great low price when you fl y Un ited 'to the East Coast. Just make reservations on any fligh't that stops in Chicago or Denver with a connecting flight to Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia or Washington. 0 .C. No one offers a lower one-stop. coast-to·coast .fare all day long. The most convenient connectiom totheEaSt. No matter what your business schedule is, you can save money when you fly United to the East Coast. Because only United offers so many. convenient one-stop flights each day to major business -centers in the-East. Fares, restrictions and schedules subject to change. For ·reservations, cAll your Travel ~ent. Or call United at 537-7521. Partners in Travel with Westin Hotels. Dally one-stops to the East: • 6 to Boston • 5 to Washington, D.C. • 9 to Philadefphia • 3 to Baltilnore · • . I , . . Orange Cout DAiLV PfLOTffuHd•i. February 18, 1982 H/F . .4& I . 2 st~te ··GM, plants ~IDse J Auto firm to shut doum South Gate, Fremont units • LOS ANGELES CAP > General Motors Corp. la closJn1 two California rectories and laying orr 5 ,050 e mployees lndefl.nltely as it st ru11les with bulging inve nto ries or unsold cars. The No. 1 automatser's South Gate plant In Los Ange les Cgunly will shut down April 2; ifs Fremont plant in Northern California wlll cease operation March 6, :s pokesman J ohn Pekarek said Monday. "There is just no estimate or when they will reopen. This is strictly a question or market demand," a GM spokesm an in De troit said A bout 2.550 So uth Gat e employees scheduled to return Monday arter a two-week layoff instead wer.e given another three-w,eek furlough. Pekarek said they'll be recalled ror rour weeks beginning March 8 until . the 44-year-old plant closes lnderinitely. s upply or Cavaliers and a six-month backlog of Cima rrons, Pekarek said. The Jo'remont plant, which once employed 6 000 workers, will operate one shift with 2.~ until March.5, Pekarek said. GM laid off about hair the 3,fOO hour ly workers in early Fe bruary aa sales or its mid·siie C hevro let Celebrity a nd Old~mobile Clera cars lagged. Mos t of the South Gate workers are expected to qualHy for G M 's s uppl e m e nt a l unemployme nt benefits. which pay 95 percent or a laid-off worker's w.ages until the money ru111 out , said United Auto Workers s pokes man He nry Gonzales. Nationwide, GM had 140,000 hourly workers on layoH last week wi~out a recall date . Spokesman Bruce MacDona ld said the company has reduced its salaried workforce by about 15,000 since the industry s lump began. A bout 13,000 white-collar workers are laid otr and J&bout l 2.000 Jobs have ooen cut throuah retire m ent and attrition, he ! said . The California clos4res wlll le a v e o n I y o ne G M .Plan l operating w'st or KarisH City: the Van Nuys facility northwest of Los Angeles. , It produces the Chevrolet I Cumaro Z28, which Motor Trend magazine named Its 1982 Car of the Year on Monday. ' ' The Ca m aro t o pped 11 nom anees ror best engineering. ·1 design and executio n or all new cars o n the m ar ket. The magazine, which has been making the awarJ since 1949, selected 1t after six test drivers • 11ut the vehicles through a 75· mile <.'ourse with various d,tving conditions. fThe other nominees were the Buick Ce ntury , C h evrol et Cuvaher, Chevrolet Celebrit y , Chrysler Le Baron, Dodge 400. Ford E sco rt , l..L_n col n Conti nental, Me r c ury LN7, Pontiac Firebird, and Pontiac 6000. CAR OF THE YEAR Robert St e mpel. general' manager of the Chevrole t ~otor Div ision of Gener al Motors. displa~·s Motpr Trend's 1982 Cur of th<' Year t rophy for thl' • A,W ........ Chevrolet Camaro Z28 in Los Angeles Editors of the magazine called the car ··possi bly . the best a utomobile en•r produced by Detroit ·· Those workers produced the Chevrolet Cavalier and Cadillac Cimarron, front -wheel drive subcompacts in the J -car line which GM hoped would counter sales or imports. The plant wa,s closed in March 1980 for a year of retooling for those models, which began rolling orr assembly lines last March. A second s hift was added last October but dropped in December. More bad iooather feared in ~rth The automaker has a 200·day Libertarians tap insurance salesman Harty chooses Marin County man. as its candi date in governor's race LONG BEACH <AP> The Libertaria n P a rty n a m ed a 'Marin Coun ty ins u ra n ce sa les m an its candidate for California governor at the close of its lhree·day convention. •Da n Dough e rt.v. 56. said !'tft>nday he would spend up to $250,000 on his campaign. The Kentfield resident heads a full slate of candidates nominated by 350 party d e legates and m e mbe r s whose prfnc ipal denominator is a n intense di staste for government re~ulation. Funeral arrangements were pending at the For~st Lawn Mortuary in G lendale . The mortuary said a m eeting ·with family repres entatives was sche duled today. Disab/,ed stuJ.enl funds to be cul? "per-pupil basic a id received for o ther classes and n o t the s upplemental funds . T h e r eport s a,id the community colleges expect to enroll 49,998 disabled students next year, while the University of California expects 1,236 and the California State University 4,669. found in the car were turned over t o 1n t e l11geoce investigators. He declined to further identiry the papers, but said they contained no political overtones. Alien camp probe so ught SACRAMENTO <AP > A Expl,os ivefound s tate s tudy s ug gests tha t EL CENTRO (AP) Calling com munity colleges should get i.nJNlTked car conditions "most a ppalling," $6.3 million less next year in Arizona Sen. Dennis DeConcini s upplemental funds for special SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -wants an investigation or the classes and transportation for Police detectives today were federal alien detention camp -···~aick Dietrich dies dis abled students. trying to determh'e who left 4CL near El Centro. -· "--·n rrimiinify··colTege"pffi'cnrrs· ... 1'<'trrrds-of . a po~rful . liqmd··· .. ···-tn· a letter to Attorney General s ay that would mean 22.180 ex plos ive in a ca r .parked William Fre nch Smith, the PALM SPRI NGS <AP> Noah Dietric h . the aide who helped Howard Hughes build his huge hnancaal empire but then split with the billionaire in an argument over a piece of the pie. has died al 92. students could no loqger attend be.neath the ~an Francisco end Arizona Democrat cr it1 c1zed s pecialized c l-asses. of the Bay Bridge. . living conditions in the camp, The Department of Finance There were no detonators m "particularly in terms of lack of study. reported Monday by the the car and police demolition medical care a nd la ck o f Sacramento Union. s uggested experts said there was nt:ver protection from the e lements " that community colleges that · a ny danger of t he explosive, Bob Maynes. DeCon ci n1 's have specia l classes in state called Tovex, would explode. press secretary, said an aide hospitals and convalescent Ac cordin~ to Officer Reno was left "in a stale of s hock" by homes should receive only the Rapa gnani, some "papers " a tour of the camp late last year. SAN FRANCISCO <AP-> Northern Californians pe lted with a series of gusty storms and b raced fo r a repeat of January's killer rains had a respite today from a punishing weather system stretching from Japan to San Francisco. "We've got a little break." said Tom T inker, meteorologist fo r the Natio nal Weath er Service. The next storm in the mid-Pacific will hit Northern C4L]ifornia Saturd ay; bufit's too early to predkt if it will drench the state wi th copious rain. ~Muds lides close-d several hiahways Monday. while minor flooding and rockslides blocked som e roadways in the San Francisco Bay area. Al least one d e a th wa s blam ed o n the we ather and one person was missing. About 6 112 inches o f r ain already has fallen in som e areas since the weekend. In Was hin gton s tate. Jneanwhll e . swol len rivers began lo recede Monday in the western part of the sctate. but flood warnings <.'onlinued for s everal rivers. Warnings of possible noods were is.ued for seve ral eastern r ivers, includmg the Walla Walla a nd Palouse An unknown numbe r of res a dents of Padfica. Cj!lif.. just south of San Francisco. treft their homes Monday because of the c hance of mudslides . Other ho m eo~n e rs s pread plastic s heets on the ground around their houses in an attempt to '"• d ra in off the rain " La s t month's mudslides in Padfi ca killed three children. In all , 31 !)(.'Opie died and pro~rty worth more than $280 million was damaged an the s torms th.at\ h it northern C alifornia begmning Jan 3 F ou rt crn people we r e evacuated from fi ve homes in San Francisco Monday when rocks and mud tumbled down ' frCl m . a h1lls1de behind t heir hou~es. Sa n ta Cr u z Co unt y . particularly hard-hit during last· month's s torm, has had only m i n or flooding a nd a fe w rockslldes. Sher iff's Lt. Lloyd , Gray said "Hopefully at won 't be an instant replay of J anuary." he r said. Phone service was inter· " rupte d to parts of southe rn Marin County by damage lo a , m a in trunk line. said Pacific}\ T e lepho ne s pokesm:tn K ~n -· Dunham Service was expected to return to normal today. A 32 yea'l"·old man drowned · Monday after Jumping into r a in ~wollen Deer Cr eek to res cue a boy who had been s w e pt away an a rafting accident He was identified as Don Morales The boy, Mike Davis Gentry. 14. was missing. " ...., ____________________________ ....,. ________________ ~------------------------------------------------, I, -, ' "A nother Way to Yo ur Rainbow's End" .. Double Your Tax Advantage .. Income Tax Preparation at Special Discounts. 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While you're at 1st Nationwide. ask about our rainbow of financial services-and let us help you plan. manage and conserve your money In your tug-of-war with taxes and inflation. ~ I I I I I • Annoal yield based Uf)Of'I dally com- poundrng of pnncipe& and interest, when left on dGPOSit tOf' a 365-day year Regulations "'®ire a substanr111 interest penalty for earty withdrawal Vari-Max IRA rate effective: 2/1~2/28/82 L----'~----.-----.J • NEWPORT BEACHr 3JOO Wut Cout Hlgh-.y near Newport Blvd.. 631·9205. 1111r r111t ... TUESDAY, FEB. 16, 1982 CAVALCADE 82 STOCKS BS TELEVISION 86 HllTllliTDI BEACH I f DUITAll VAlllY INCISION INTRIGUING -'.'Jo onl' said bl'ing a :-.cient1st would tx· t.'a!'>~ Rut Marlts Ayer . Tl'rt Williams. Wt.•nd~ Doolly Pl ... P-1.., 1.M Pe,,.. llolm. :'1:1kk1 Woodland and Am~· Rog<'t'S gi\'(.' ft!'>h a l ho rough tn!'> Pl' Cl ton . Curiosity coriies • in waves - Annual report shows Marine Institute shi_pshape after first year By JOHN NEEDHAM Of ''" Delly Pl ... SlaH Officials or the Orange County Marine Institute at Dana Point Harbor say they have two reasons to celebrate. First . the oceanographic studies center was a year old late last month. Arid second:-the fledgling facility is managing to pay its own way . Dr Stanley <.:um mmgs, a1rector ~1 the marine institute. said the amount of mo n ey bei n g ge ne rated throu g h educational and recreational programs 1s meeting ex~ctations. ··our charter says we have to pay our own way," Cummings s aid. "Our budget estimates show that we have turned the corner and a re now earning as much as we spend " The institute operates on a $250,000 annual budget. earned from fees and private donations . Work on the 3,900-square foot building was com- ple ted a ye ar ago al a cost of $600 ,000. The marme center served more than 30.000 Or a nge County students in kindergarten throug h community co llege las t yea r . according to Cummings The small structure houses offices. classrooms and laboratories and serves as a s hore learnmg base for various marine studies programs. Construction of the institute was financed with $400,000 in county money and $5(),000 each from Rancho Santiago. Coast. Saddleback and North Orange County Community College districts. Plans call for the building to be expanded to 40,1)()() square feel on the institute's three-acre county-owned site in the west basin of Dana Point Harbor. Cummings s aid the center won't be competing with Marineland and Sea World the m e park s that attract thousands of visitors each year. "Our prima r y e mphas is isn 't entertainment,·• Cummings said. "The major distinction between us and those ' POWERFUL PINCERS -Robb~ Dorris \\atches him loh..,kr \\lgg lt'~- parks is that they oHer a passive type of demonstration where people simply go and watch ... He said the programs al the center stress active 10volvemenl in the scientific process. leading to first-hand knowledge or the area's marine life. Cummings said the m ajor attraction at the institute and largest income # earner is the Pilgrim, a modenf replica and namesake of the sailing ship that a\Jthor Richard Henry Dana sailed on. The brig, owned by Marion Barich of Long Beach, was brought to Dana Point Harbor from a San Pedro boat yard last M1ly after a phased purchase agreement was reached. Cummings said the Dana Potnt Ocean Institute Foundation, the fund -raising arm of the marine education facility . has yet to come up with the $500,000 asking price to buy the !'j.hip. He said $20,000 had been paid so far to keep the Pilgri(}'l in Dana Point, $10,000 from the foundation and $10.000 from shop owners Of) the harbor. To date, the Pilgrim had earned about $55,000 for the institute.~ Cummings said the institute sponsors overnight slays on the ship ror young people. as well as family weekends, where those bunking onboard act as the crew. At least one couple have been m~rried in the stately square-rigged ship. Cummings said in s titute offi cials would be a s king Orange County Supervisors for $30,000, to be used to prepare a master plan for eventual expansion of the marine center Planned expansion would include ·more exhibits for the public. as well as res earch facilities. which would be manned by personnel from nearby universities and independent laboratories. "How much we are able to expand will depend on how much we can earn," Cummings said. "( am happy lo s ay we are at a point now whe re we are self-supporting ... Most popular at the institute this month, he added, are whale watch cruises which leave the marine center's dock several times a day. The vessel Sum Fun takes passengers 'Off the Dana Point shoreline to watch the southward migration _of_ California Gray Whales. MINI MANEWERS -..Microscope shows Tim Schultz and Paul Klclzo what can happen in a drop or lidepool ~·8f.er. CUTS OUTUNED -Instructor John Rogers gets institute .class sl-orted on dissection procedures for fish . ..... D Aun Landers gets -down .. n to the bare /acts in her . column on P.age 82 today. ~ Key ring 'key' to Hllntington shooting _ death Police said today an advertising key ring may have led three people to attempt a break -in at the Huntington 'leach home of a Los Angeles County's S~riff's deputy, an attempt th nded in the fatal shootmg of e member of the trio. Huntington Beach police Lt. M erle Schneb lin said inv~sligators found the key ring, which was used to promote a cleaning ser vice, inside the auto used by three people suspected of a burglary at the Gumm Drive home of Deputy Richard Orosco. 32. Wieder lauds • semor center in Huntington Orange County Supervisor Harriett Wieder has commended the Huntington Beach Seniors Recreation Center on reaching its seventh anniversary. The Board of Supervisors. at Mrs. Wieder's request. approved a re sol ution last week congratulating the cent.er on Its an ni versary, which was officially celebrated on Feb. 11. Located at 1706 Orange St., the seniors recreation center offers v~rious social. recreational and ~uman services to Huntington Beach senior citizens. Noted Mrs. Wieder. "It has taken the dedicated work of many individuals to build the vitality of the seniors center and its benefit to the community." Burglary prevention • meeting set The Huntington Beac h Neighbor h ood Wat ch organization will conduct a free burglary prevention meeting at 7 : 30 p.m . Wednesday at the · Murdy Community Center. 7000 Norma Drive. The meeting is particularly for res id e nts of the area bounded by Slat e r Avenue, Goldenwest Street. Heil Avenue and Newland Street. During the pas t two months. 44 home burglaries have been reported in this community. the crimie prevention organieation said. During the program, police detective Mike Relic will offer lips on how to prevent burglary. A film on home security also will be shown. Free literature. emergency .. phone number s t ic kers and Neighborhood Watch window stickers will be~ available. Schneblin said the key ring contained the address or Orosco's home. He said the cleaning service formerly operated out or that address before the deputy purchased the home. Schneblin said the owner or the cleaning service, whose name was withheld. told officers he has not used the promotional key chains for the past three years and did not know the source of the one found outside the deputy's home.' Pol ice now are trying to dete rmine whether the three people targeted Orosco's home for a burglary because they believed t he attached keys would allow them entrv. - The . keys do not fit the locks now at the home. officers said . Deput y Oro sc o told ' investigators he and his wife were awakened al 6 a .m. Sunday · by two men attempting to enter through a bedroom window. Orosco told police he got a revolver from a closet and chased the men into the back yard where the men refused his order lo halt. The deputy told police he fired three shots at the men arter they turned. he said, a nd pointed dark objects that appeared to be guns at him. One of the men was found dead on a sidewalk nearby with a bullet wound in the upper back, officers s aid. The other man and a woman were held by Orosco in their car until Huntington Beach officers arrived. A revolver was found in the car. police said. Police say they do not know if the gun was used in the attempted break-in. Jailed on suspicion of murder and burglary were Henry Santiago, 25 , and Patricia Leonard. 26, both residing at the same Anaheim address. The identity of the dead man. de scri bed as a 21 -year-old • l rans ien l who trved most recently in Anaheim . was still being wtlhheld by police today because of difficulty in locating his family. Mobile home workshop set Coastline College will sponsor a workshop on mobile homes from 7 to 10 p.m. Wednesday at the Finley Learning Center. 13521 Edwards St .. Westminster. The program will cover recent legislation related to mobile homes. product types. loans and purchase contracts. Registration fee is $9. More mformat.ion on the program can be obtained by calling Coastline. 963-0811 , ext. 256. Rer,,ters 'pay TV decision studied Huntington Beach officials are sc he duled to consider a n or~i n ance tonight forcing private apa rtm ent and condominium complexes to allow iMtallation of cable television. City officials say about 600 residents are denied cable television because they live in complexes where landowners -Bos shelters ·Valley topic refuse to allow installation or transmitting cables. The proposed ordinance would force lahdlords to open their gales to the cable system if a tenant wants the service. It also would ban landlords from levying a monthly fee to allow the cable lines inside the complexes, say city officials: Several landlords have requested a monthly fee from Dickinson Pac!lflc Cablesystems to a llow installation. Others have signed exclusive contracts with the "Z Channel" to not allow competitors in the tracts, a nd others have complained about alleged s hoddy ....... TheFountainValleyCbamber workmans hip by cable of Co'!lmerce will ask the City"' Installers, say city officials. Council to~ight to reconsider City Counci lman Don con struction of local bus MacAllister says' the ordinance s helters, whic.h would lnclude recoanlzes the cable systems as ads encouragmg residents to having similarities to a public shoj) in Fountain Valley. utlllty because It has open public The council meets at 8 p.m. in a c c e s s c h a n n e I s .f o r City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave. .c.ommUJ\Jty-orlenled broadcuta. In 1980 the council rejected a pla'n to build local bus snellers. The new proposal would designate the chamber as a co:sponsor with American Bus Shelter Company. A chamber spokesman said the or1anl11tion would have the right to approve all advertising placed at the s helters. DI c kl n ao n Pac Ifie has installed cables in Huntlncton Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster and St~nton Md presently has 17,000 Wibacribers lncludln1 10,000 in Huntinctoo Beach. .Dlckinaon 4Paclfic txec..Swa say they have been dftltd acce11 to 1ome apartment bulldlnp in all four cities. - • • • L 1, t Daitanetics pla.-.t used ar PHIL Mn>EaMAN e1 ................ For HO e mployees of ITT'a Fountain Valley·bate4 DataneUc1 Corp., t he news ln December 9u bd. The P9ftM corJOrallen wu 1hutttnc down the Datanetlu tu.,aidiuy , which manufactured computtr i.tYboarda and keyboard 1witchea. The dlvlaktn w6 · .,~ribed by ITr otfidals u "very unprofitable." ' All 21> lecal Datanttlcs flBployeea w.ere laid off. Now, two m onth s later, a few brl1hte r dewlopments have occurred In the wake of the Datanetics shutdown: -Several of the Datuetics product llnes have been acquft-ed by other companies. One, based in ...... ,..... " AnaheiM , tau put some former Datanetics "Now thM. 61 tMte ~ .... , 8f*t8'? 8oClbT · e mployees on lt.'1 pay roll and hopes to hire more if • Oil*',.,.. saleit increase. • I I I • -rrr·. Caimon Electric division, a ~·•rate 11111 • company N sed IA the large Fountain Valley plant , facing the San Dieao l"reeway at Ward Street, will •---•--•-••-•111111•' • "bt expandin& into the form~r Datanetlcs building AIM'IE'lll grundchfldren Sernces will ' and will in~r..sase its workforce. 8 AR BA RA L. E E be held on Wedne9da~-.' The A~h~lm company, Ardc_.ll Computer ABSHEAR. r es1~nt of F eb "'-i an 11 . 1982 at Parts, har.~~c~lred Datanetlcs· touchboard Newport Beach. Cu. P1111i.ed t :OOPM 11t Harbo1· L11wn keyboard U~~•ineorporaling the DC 50 and DC 60 away on Februarv 13. 1982 Mem orial Chapel with ' s witches.•» ent will manufacture ud market Ho~n April. 5. 1924 ·1n Oa~·ton. ! n t e r.Jlt e 11 t serv ices· these. pr~ s and service former Datanetics Oh10 .. She 1s survived b\' her 1mmt4lltely tollowlng custOlners husband William. S .. sons Services under the dlrect!on Manuiacturing will take place at Ardent·s Donald W Robert B «H11rborL.awn·Mol.lfll Ollve# , Gregory N . ·daught'er 'Gu.ii Mortuary or Costa Mesa Ana~eim ph1'l. . L .. parents Mr. and Mrs S4():SS$4. ~the product line mereases and sales a row: Mortim e r W. F 1 s h 0 r JetlNSON we do plan t o cont act some of Datanetlcs Capistrano Bcac.li . c11 • JACK PAUL JOllNSON. ex-emplQYees abou~ possible re-employment," brothers Charles Yr Fash or residettt or Fountain Val~y. said Ardent Vice Pres1dent Gil Heim. San ~lego. Ca. and Austin Ca P~s s ed ~"a Y ft n L. Wa)'lle Olivet, president of rM' Cannon. D Fish ~r D1tyton . Ohio. 4 February 12. 1982 He .~as s aid his company call put the no w vacant grandc~1tdren. J ustin N the vice pres!d t'n t of 0.t~netics building lo good use as a home for a Top a I 1 » n • M 1 c a h w FarBe11t €-Orpor11t1on fOf' 35 . 1 . d . 1 · · · Abs.hear. Sh a e Iv n T years Re was a member of new commerc1a -~ ust~1a p~ucts d1v111on. Abs h ear and ~a·r a J ahe American Society or The Datanebcs building ts located at 10840• Abshear. Mrs Ab!;li\'ar w;,w,; 1..ubricutlon E{lgllleers and a Talbert Ave .. j~ down ttle street from the ITT school secretary ro r 5 years member ,,pf the American, Cannon plaet. 1 Ill Lincoln lnterm<'di1te G .. ase rtislilule. lfe WllSo• "LogisU~lly , it wo rked out perfttlly," Oliver Sc hoot and s he was a also 11 member or the Tuna. said . wc~l -known genealogical Club or Avlllnn . Ca . as well The new division will manufacture electrical writer and. rc s~arc her a s or the Hunt1ngt<1~ connectors for trucks heavy m achinery and Funeral services will be held Harbour Anglers lie was a ' on Wedriesday. Februarv 17. veteran ,pr World War ti. farmv~icles : . . . 1982 at IO:OOAM at Pa.ciric United Stutes Air Force. . Oh~r said about~ peopt.e "'.VIII ~gm working View Mortuary Chapel with havmg served as a pilot and m the former Oalane t1cs building m Marc h but Rev. J ose ph Stephens a radio operator He \4'as added that t~ ~rkforce there could eventually ofhci~ling Interment at also a pnte fighter &nd 11 "dov_ble or triple." Pac 1f1c \'1ew Memorial lightweight contender for The Cannon president said the Data netics Park .. Ne ~port Be a ch the Air Force. Ha ving be-en, builciing also wUI house a portion of the company's P.acif1c View M·or tu ar~· a ~es 1dt>nt o.r Southern m icro-electronic line, which is outgrowing its directors Cahrorm11 !111 h~s hfe he had , present space in Santa Ana. • Orange Cout OAJLY PILOTrruosdoy, Fobruary 16, 1982 H /F •• ' I 25 Available . . for Immediate Deliver)tt G reat selection of the custom 42, 45 or 48-lnch conversion. Includes 8 inch color TY. bar, separately controlled rear air-conditioning, power Chauffeur divider window ... PLUS many more features! BOY OR-LEASE. ~atfikt' ROGER PENSKE (213) 86e-9931 (714) 521-9624 CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST CADILLAC DEALER WHERE THE 0 ANO (!S' FREEWAYS MEET IN DOWNEY (FORMERLY 808 SPREEN CADILLAC) $1 ,250,000 C .. Do._. 91/.,0/o MyAazlldl+ O" m·r Wntc Cla11!11fwd \ti •u.&J. UJllY Piiot 1'0 llox 1~1 Co:.t11 Ml'i.a. l'/\ iJ;e(Jti PUIUC llTICE O•ANOI COUlll'TY MUNICIPAL COUltT H..-Mr JW1<1a1 oi.ukt ••01 Jamll•••• lt11l•••t•. New-1 ... <"· ca11i-1a ,...,. PLAINTIFF MAllC R TOW OEFE NOA NIS J"'M ES 8RtOOEMAN, NANCY BRIDGEMAN ef>O DOES 1 10 1nc1utl•t lUMMONS FIAST AMINDl!O <;ASE HUMIE" • ..,. NOTICE I Yew ...... --· Tti. <twrl m1y W<la ... lfl'4 Y"' wit-I your llei"t ...... W1f1H .... ••~ wllllm • MYS. A•• "'-lft._malleft Ml•• 1-_:====================:-:============:::_~ U you wf~ to wek IM .O'll<• ot en •UOrt'ley In tnl~ matt•r YO\I ~houd Ob WE'RE A LOT M•E THAN A BELL ON YOUR •LL Behind the bell Behmd the famous Seacoast sticker Behind ell the s1a1e·of lhe art pro1ec11on de111ces we make and rn5tall is Seacoasl central s1a11on When an alarm goes 0 11 on vour property we gel tne signal 1n a nearb'r' 24·hour a day cen1ra1 station II 1he signal 1nd1calf"S f11e burglary or hoodup we call 1he polfce or lrre depc1rtmen1 S•nce our central s1a1oon •s UL listed our c.en trdt ">la11o n customers can quahfy lor a s11able d1scoun1 on their 1n&urance And to increase our reach make response ••me even taste• and _____ impro ve efl 1c1enc y we re •o promPllY '° tn•t your wrotten roponse •f •nY. mey bt flled on tom~ AVISOI U-llol U4M •ma..U .. El lrllHIMI _. et<~~ <..,Ira Uf ti ~ •wdfeftcla e m•,. .. ~"• Uf '"""N .. ...., ... • llUs. LH i. lftlermki...-11..,.. S1 Ulll!<I o .. ea \Ol1<1t1< •I conwto CH un •""9ado tfl e\I• ••unto, dtborlt ,..., .. ,to '""'•dl•t•mtnt•. oe t\t• m(tner• w rnpye\1• f\.C rit•. \I hfy •IQuna, p~ \.et reQ1\trao. • llemoo I TO !HE DEFENDANT e C1v1I tompl••n1 has llled by "'" Plttnllll •Q•1n~t you tt you •''" 10 deftnd IP\h •••\u•t. vou ""'"' w1Uun JO d.ay\ •tt•r ttu\ \um~ I\ ~rvtd on you tilt> ••tt\ tf'us court • •tttltn fH~• to lh• ( omot•1nl Unt•u yOY do \0 ~Out n ... teutt w1H bf> M t•rl'd on •oe>'*<-•U.an ot the ot•1n11H •nd \tu\ court M•Y 'l\lff • IUOQmertl •OilfMf YOU for 1"'9 ,.u_.t df~nota ii\ ,,,... compl•1n1 wn1t h coukf re-sutt tn CH'nts.nm~t ot -•oe' t•ktng of mot"W't or P'O~''" Of' o lhf"r '"''<'' rtQi.tt\led 1n '"" t ompl,t1nl o .. 1eoo .. um11tr lt 11191 } Pt'1f't\On C~o 8y v ~ °'""'" Oef>llly lAW OFFICES OF MARC A. TOW lruct G Helde", EIQ t>Ot Oowe StT•t, Four1hFlear, ALEXANDER a reputation tn the Steel 0 · · ~ f · • • J A C K t. E E Mt!lal Wo rkin!l and the liver ~a1a a ew fQ~m er _Data n et~cs ALEXANDER. resident or Greas" lndustric' as tht>· e mployees will be hired d-.nng th1S" expansion Irvine. Ca Passed. awuy on -best in the n;ition. lie is move and more m ay be u lled back in t he compu1er1z1ng our c;r~.on But 1mprovemen1s aren t new lo Seacoas1 We ve been ge11tng Ue11er tor 2 I years. And today we re the leaders on the securily buc;mess 1n lhe ttarbor area with over 10,000 customers mcludmg a wide range of b1q and small t1•ta1I 1ndus1r1al N••llt0r1 a..ch,C•nMO 11141 IU ·SUJ Publl\ht<I Or-Coa\I Dolly P1101 • February 13. 1982 Horn surnvl.>d b\' his wife LaNelLt·~ future. • August 25. 1943 in Gl.endale. of Fountain Valle~. C11.. Although the Datanetics divlsien provtd Ca ~urv1ve<I by h1& wire daughter Terri Moore of unprofitable, Oliver said tbe C8.Jlnon divl'Sion juat Pat~:cia. sons Steve 11nd Huntington -Beach. <.'11 and completed a S"OtcesSfut yeln". Chris Alexander. parents grandson J eram1.-Sl'rv1cci. "Even though the economy was Hiht and we Ja c k A I e x a nd c r o C will be held"on Wedr1Csda\· d ' h · ·11 l' h Escondido. Ca <tnd Shirley February 17. 1982 at 5 .30p~.f pre 1ct t at 1t WI continue to be 1i tin 1982, we Hardin or Mission VicJo. ca . at Harbor Lawn Memorial see . n~ reaso~ wby we should not be successfuJ and commercial estabhshments • ' -, To find out more about Seacoast central s1a11on w111e or coniP by our n~w fac111ty at 2488 New par1 Blvd Costa Mesa lii\sEACC>AST 2488 NEWPORT BOULEVARD \J ~RITT SYSTEMS 111•> 642-3490 FrD 1 ~ t4. 23, IQ91 ~H 12 0 NII.IC lll~E SU"E"IOtl COUAT OF THI STATE OF CALll'OANIA-f'OA THE COUNTY 01' OAAHGI 700 Clvk C-l.,. Orlw w .. 1 S•-AM. C.fllentia •7111 PLAI NTIFF MEREDITH WILLS OOlOAES YOUNGER 1nd1v1du•lt. Wl lLS AN O YOUN GER INVESTMENTS" and a sister Jill Saltarell or Chapel Sel'vi«'s under the again ID 1913, he said. Tustin.Ca Funeral scrv1ce:. direc-t1 on of H arbor Unles.a t he econom y tatea a dramatic, wall b~eld on Tul'Sday. Lawn·Mount Olivtt Mortuary' unpredict~ ,downturn, Oliver Joreaees no layoffs February 16, 11182 al 5:30PM or Costa Mesa. 540.5554 this year amoec CaaROll'I 4,000 employees, of ~~~~~~~~~~ii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijji~iiiiiii~~ DEFENDANT HAL FREELAND BRU CE JONES 1ndtv1duef\. CALIFORNIA INVEST MENT LEASI NG COMPANY, INC . 1 C:orpor•11on 1no-O-• t 11110UQfi' JO tn<l.,.s1vt at Pacifi c View Mortuary MILLER •, whem 900 wort ie Fountain Valley. C h ape I. P ac ific View CLARE C MILLER. Cannon recently cotnp1'1!ted Its first yeer ln the ~ortuary . Newpart l each resident or Newpart Beach. Fountai9 Valley ,&ant that wtatnalJy wu built for directors C a Passed awa ,. Oil h BASF"-· GORrNG Februury 13. 1982. She ·was a t e .. , ·~ .,. ,, .• v E Ro N t AG N Es resident or this are11 since Its a excellent fatiUty, Oliver sakl. U we GORl:'llG. resident or Corona 1952 and a member of St h ad . ~ad to _build a butldint to o ur own det Mar. Ca Pass~ away Joachim's Catholic <..'hurch spec1f.caUona, it w.Mlld baYe Ileen j\at like this. We on February 14 . t9ti She is She 1s su r\'i\'ed J>y her have one ol the best semi-automated UMtnbly and survived by her sons Roben h u_s b11 nd R 1c h a'd K manufacturing lines in tlle country." L. of Florida and Brian E. or children. Richard C. of Hawaii. duuf(hters Marlene Texas, Karla Rudebec\ or , ll ubbard and Sha ron Mill Viilley.Ca .. ThomasO s·ianf d f I Shpakoy,• both or Michi gan. 7 an~ Wlai.ira M both .~r • or erna e gra ndchild ren 11nd 1 Newport Beach.Ca . mother grcat·granddaughter Final Ma ry V Connell or Corona interment services ,.-111 •bc del Mar. Ca , brother ./&hn held at the family i-ot in H Con.nell. or Newport M ea do" Crest Ce~ter\'. Beach. Ca . sister Mi&ry Ann MBAs earn less Detroit, M1 ch1gan. The F ord or Illinois. and 3 STANFORD <AP> -Women wlth Stanford family requests in heu ol gra11dch!ld ren Slumber . . de I th th . rtowers donations be made Room \IS1tatton was held on University masters grees earn ess an eir M d F b 15 1982 m a le eot.W\tef1Jart.s -and expect to -despite to Sh erman GartLens . on uy. e ruar~ · s1'm1'lar "·cadem>a. records . a r·""ent Stanford study C orona d el M·ar. Ca from 12·00 noon to 5 OOPM ... "" '"'" Services under the di•ct1on at Harbor l,;rnn Mnrtuar~ shows . or II arbor Luwn-Mount OhH Ch a Pe I Mas' or the A &Wdy of those who e arned Stanford MBAs in Mortuan l)f Costa ~1esa Resurre«tion \411-. held on 1974 showed that while the women and men at hrst 540·5554 · Tuesday. Februar~ Ill. t9tt2 d t 1 · to ears later women llOOVE. at IO:OOAM at Sl J11;ich1m·s earne equa sa aries, ur Y · earned only 80 percent of what meft made. ALBERTA M. HOOVE R. Cathohc Chu r(•h Final Associate Profesaor Myra H. Streber, who resident or the Santa Ana interment \\US al Hoh area ror the pest JO ~ears s e p u l ch er c em e 1 er,:. conducted the study, said two major reasons seem P.assed awu} on Februury Orange: Ca , In t1 &u o f to be that many of the women had left the 1 s. ·t 982 s he was an rtowers the fam1I~ requests workforce and then returned and that woftlen were underwriter for Suren d0Rat1ons be ml1de to the Ip lowerpayi..gind~stries. Insurance for the ~ast 12 Sandp4pe1-. Hoag Hospital The women also expected less pay and years.· She is survived b~· Ser\'tcCS under the direction prestiae lbaa did the men. At graduation, the peak h er hus band Marvin or or Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive c areer pay expected by women was only 60 WESTERN THRIFT & LOAN ASSOCIATION Santa Ana . Ca . cfii6d rcn. Mortuarv of Costa Mesa percent of that expected by the men. And by 1978, Phillip of Chino. C" . James 540·5554 . l Downey 8228 E. Arestone 8"'d (21J) 923·3201 Whlttlef Olonoe Cosio Mesa Torrance 18208 P1a111e Ave (213) 532·3070 Glendale or Tustin. Ca. and ft.and~· ROZEN it was on y 40 percent. Hoover or s11nta Ana1 Ca . EL.LAB. ROZEN. resident About half the men said they hoped to become· 1111 F Ko1ella Ave 2000 Harbor BNd (714) 997-1300 (n4) 64S·31S3 s ist er Mary McCart•v of or Huntington Beach. Ca owner. partner, president or chief, executive c 0 n n e ct 1 cu 1 an d .5 Passed away on . Sund a). officer of a company. But only a fourth of the 15756 Lo Forge (21') 9'3·0221 lorzono long Beocn 18724 Ventura Blvd 450t Poe Coosl Hwy 414 N Blond Bllld (213) 240 ·5550 ------------. Febr~ury 14. 1962 in Kaiser women expressed that desire. Hospital, Bellflower . C~ • Resuats Of the study by Ms . Strober. director of (21') 111·0200 (213) 491·3301 Assets over 120 mll/lon with more than a quarter of 8 century serving California. rACIAC vtlW ,. ......,MM, .. K Cerre1erv Mortuary Chapel-Crema.tO'l'Y 3500 Pacific View Ot1ve Newp0rt Beach ~-2700 MsCOllllk:ll MOITU. .. S Laquna Beach 494-~1 5 Laquna Hills 76&-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 • HADOI U~llff. OUYI Mof1uarv •Cemetery Creme torv 1625 Gisler Av•. Cos1a Mesa 540-55~ .. ---· Born November 24 . 1907 in h C t f R h W t St f rd Chicago. Illinois She came t e ~n e r or . esearc en om.~n a an ot • to California in t9~2 from were melt.Nied tn the ,.ew book, Women In he Chicago, Illinois and ttved in Workforce," edited by Phyllis A. Wallace. Aval/able to California residents ontv. ~ltedolfer) Huntington Beach. Ca. in since 1976. She was Chief · Operator for Oenerat" M ury s •n Qynamics for 20 yeurs. 9he '-~re (J·Vl gs PICTITIOUSIUSIHISS b r ~ NAME STATEMENT w us a me m er o the Tiie 10110 .. 1.,9 per"°"'.,. do1n9 R e9urrecllof' Luther an ' l $8 • 11 • ,1~•u•s Church. Hunh~gton Beac11.. •ses .... l •on n•CtAL~<:,l~~dAP:~~~.~.N~: Ca and a member of tht> • •" &I .;, v• -· Oaughtcr11i.of N<>rway In ~·>..i • Attto CrHk Woo<t> company t~ Chicago. Minols. Survived • Hrgh interest rates and the drastic slowdown r Llmlltd Plr1M•\lllpl Rov E O•IY b.)· 2 sons. Gorddn R of ll'ift the real estate market eontributed to Me rcury ~r.,~~~.~';,!":~.0·~· g;~;·~ Huntington Beach. C~ and ;savings loss of nearly $8 million for the calendar com11.nv. Cot'111 ... 1~ wooos e1c19 " Rev. Lee B. Rozcn wit h the . S h . ull• nro. 1111 wot 110111 Stro1-Salem Lutheran Church. year 1981 . according to Leonard halte, c airman I ... 1.nc1 Park,t<anwu6110 ~hillier. a brother Ernesl '°'the Hulttht~ Bea~h-ba.sed savtn1s ~d loan. Tlllt bUSIMU I\ conduC l•d by • y or Chicago. llllnols. a Men:urt s •naudite4 alter-tax adjusted loss ttmtt•d=':~~yHo s t er.tlfluth Hummel of for the year fttas $7.8 mUUon, or $2.o.1 a share . MaryE11 ... oa1,,P.,.,_ ~Mia. 2 grandchildren. compared wltta 1 profit ol Sl.9 million, or 75 cents, • coTu~:, ~~~! ;~!n:i'!"c.:~~ t:: ~and April Roze.. both for the full year 1980. ht the fourth quarter of Jenvary ''· '"'· or Hu,atington Beach. C1. 1981 the ftlOCiation petted • loss or 65 cents a TMOMASWIEL'. Piil.iC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINESS HI.Ml STATEMENT Th• foUo••nQ ~r\on\ ar• domca buSIM'\\•I\ St<Alf MANA C.E M(Nl PROPERTIES 1901 C l\rl\ Lon• AnAh11m, C3 'l?'IO) Roi.rt E M•ur•r 1H8l S•n BIA\ Ml\\lon voe10 c • 'l'l•'n Robtrl E °'""""" 1&)1> "•"'° Or-iv~ M 1\\1on \/..-10 (I 41•1\ G•r•td P Curr<An f,1.tO Hor~'hof> Roect Or~. Ca '111>&• Robert K Elliott. t)t7 I "•hire l •~. S•nta An• C• •'10) Tiiis bu\l~u I\ condutltd bw • QtM•af P¥1ner>n1p ~•ICI P Cu""" Prt~~1 l llll 11al..,,..,I Wf\ 111~0 w1tll I~ County Cter' of Or1n0t: County on Janvery tt. I.., and rflmeroua nieces and " ' -~hewa. Service& will be s •re. :..~-===Of>.Sllff•ttt MALCOLM&OALY h Id W d A A"9rMY'M Lew F!Ut1• e on e n es..., a y , • ~ -..c., C• • ._ .,.. Ma<An• ._ .. ,,.,. February 11, 1182 at 2:00PM p--a c~._·d &ave Ford ' .. ""°"~ ~M91 (0.'1 Dally Piiot .... t offke ... tlll tn Trimty l:;utberan Churdl.. -.;;a .,... j r•' '·'·······1"' $..., N•w-1hM",C•.tl'6.J Po111on1, Ca •. with Pastor _.,. llTIC( Pub"'"'° Of•"llt ce1<1s1 oauy P1101 ruauc MOncE HS·•lll07 ST ATEMEHT OF WITHOAAWAL FAOM 'AllT ,.EllSH IP OPERATI NG UHOEll FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME fhfl-Un~"l()nf'<J ht'rt"bV <titlllfl\ 't' rtw flt titlou~ ova.11'11'\\ n.itm • of ti" Part,,..f\hlD I\ PAN AM[Al(AN EOU•TtfS fl) Trw. tlCUt•°"\ °"'Inf''\), name t•ltm~nt Of ow Pertnttrvup .,..., 1ueo tn OranQtt County (Alttornlt1 o n lob<!r to. "" Ill TM prin<ICMI plM• Of bU\o~'' I '~ Parttwr\hfD I\ ltlCAll!<I •I ,,., O~Pont Ort•t Su>I• 101 trvlne, .altfOf'nl• .,,1S (41 TI-. 1)¥1n.., w1lhd<Aw1n9 from ""P•f1-,,_1p " ROBER ! l BERG nldln9 al .,,_. Corona l •M Ccnla Me tMO Calllornla 'l?&?l> Roberl L B~ro Trlll •ltttm•nl .. ., 111..S wlln In• 011nt1 Cit" of Or•no• Count•. •llfo1nla on JM>uarv 11 ,_, PIMUI Publlll>H Or•nvr Coast Dally PllOt. an U, Rtb J, •. 14, 1"2 ., ... ,, .. I • L I d ... 581 ·11· I I'-l'•b.l,•.••.U."'1 Sa.4 .. , p:,r~~ H~~·e~l.nf'os~~~ • m• •on year y ,ICTITIOUi lUSIHIH PHUC llTICl offlcl1tlnc. Interment will be • . •AM& STATaMINT PICTITIOU1 IUSIHHS Tiie lollowlnQ peoon• ••• d01"9 T T In P o tnona C&meter y DEAR801lN, Mich. (AP> _ P'ord Motor Co. wJlntuH. l'ICT1T1ousaus1H1u HAME ST• u.11H • f'rleftda may call al TocW -u1-MISSI°" PLAZA APAAT¥EHTS, NAMIE STATIM8HT T "• followlno pe .. on 1' doln9 . ;o.a.,_.,. 'fOUtd .... nearJ7 .. 1.2 ~ & year in labor lU1 MltC,_11 51,...1, Tu\11n, C• '7..0 , Tll• tollowln9 l>tt\on' er• dOlno Du\IMn •1 lhln'Orill v1...,..I, ~mofla., !colts af'I retltdl of I tfttative pact te•Ched With • • -.oy e Defy°" Comp•ny t>uslnmH IAI SHERLOC t< HOL MES Ca .. today, Febhlllry 19. 1912 't"'-U I -~ W k i b d c;....-... ~ lllCIO 14 Sult• uo' G &AAWtG ~tEAPRISES ACADEMY OF ll'tVESTIGATIOH. (81 rrom 3:ooPM to l :OO PM and ne • l-Auto or ers un on, ase on .,,, w.1111., 11,... o-..;,_ P••• 1iw .. s1ou. Ai .... F-••1n v-'1••· cl. SHEAloct< HOlMES DETEcT1ve W --A , •timat.et MICl ltll ___._'-fl .. •ra IClftNt~IO • • .,,. Gf:NCY •nd ICI SH ell LOC K Oft ed·~IY. ebru•f')' l'T, . ,,,.,., __ ·-. Tiiis '"'''"-" ,, (Ofldu<l•d by a c; 8AAWIG l l'fTEAPAISES .• HOL ME!. INVESTIGATIO l'f. l•O 1982 rrom 8(00AM ta l2:00 Bo&b Ford and tbe UAW hive refused t6 say ttftefl ljMWl,,..._,..p Callfornla uirporellOfl. llW .. Slou• C•n1 ..... 1.1 wn . W•tt 1•. Tu•tln, C• noon. ln lieu ot llowen t~ • ._. mueh UMt ri1tion't Ko. 2 carmaker "°.r1 to .._, e oa1y & co Al""'· F-••n v.110. cA tt1oe 10s t a -I I 'I r ... q ,, e ',.i'\i. "---' t-tenta•lve accord r-"'c... l•t• ,,,..,.,. Eli.it O••Y Perlner Tlllt b11tlntn 11 (OflClu<fed by • Jo~n v Lt;IO<n U\17 w ... rnbly "' '"' " .. UVIU -• -n ., Tlllt tt•t-••• 111.0 wltll lht t orPOrt1IOfl Otlve, ••nl• Ane. Ce tllOl CODtfibutlOftl be !Ude to l uMI)', CIMll'IY Cieri! el o .. .,._ county G 81\ .. WIO ENtEAPAISfS Tllh Oll\1111\\ It <-ll<HG DY •n ~ e • u r r e t t 1 o •But aDlllJ•ta qudtiolMd Sunday su11ealed the J111uetytt. "" ;,::;:,~ ,,,..1.1c1u!~v "-~ Llltberan Churth, tU ~Yillll ..... ,.....·rrern .,.......,. ol •Ul.lona or tMOMAtwaLu ,,., Tiiis "•--· tllef •1111 1,,. T111s stttelftlftt •• 111..i w1t11 n.. H•mlJtoa, Hunt1.n1to,i. doll~ .. II Mllloe.'' ---r.tuled to be more ALAwC.,...... (1M1nlyCltnt1 0f.,.ecoi.ntyonJt111 ounly Cl•rll. Of Ou~o-Counly on 8eat h, Cia. tH4t, Todd l~C! bele..-t ef lite ta~ number ol nriablea :::.:.-'---~.':;;..~,. ,., ,.., "._. ..,uery:i. 1 .., • ,t1.,., dMlr·~!!!.I Chapel. Pomona. •'\o bt ccml•lfed. li'lllMI .... Orenp e .... D .. I., Pl P11l>lltn.d Dr•l'IOt CO.\I O•llY Piiot Pl!bfhl'lfCI Or•noo (;oe<jl 011111' PllOI ......... .....1,t.i., . .,,,... ,,, , .. , ...... n.ttn ••1..i ,."'·'1 .. u "" '..a .,. .. , SUMMONS CAH HUMIEA JUIU NOTICE! Yew M•t -...... TM cevrt may O.Clde .... ,.., "°" w•l-1 y ... r bei"9 ,_.,. tMleH f"' tH-41 wlllllfO JO <MY• 11,.-... '"'•rm•ll- belew Jt wou WISI\ '° wek uw .OV'<• Of •n •Hornf y tn thtS ""41Mr vou \IM>uut do \O ptomplty \O '""' •Our •rilten r•sponw. u •ny m•y be f1lttCI on' l1m# AVISO! Ull..S M ti ............. .. El 1rllHlnat _. O.C~lr c.,.1r• Uf \I• •udie1tc1 • .a meRel QUe Uf r.s ... ,.0 Htllre .. JI dla1 L• I• •"'•rmk--11- S• U\tf'G Cllew• \i0f1<1t., ef conw to °" on At>O<)idO "" t \tf •sunlo debf'rt• r)ilc.rrlo 1nmtctta1amctnte-. de-f'S~ m•n.-r4 \U ,.,~\I· f'K rtt•, \I h•~ elQun• e>ue<M W'f' rtq•\lrtld• • t1t mpo I TO l HE OEl'ENOANt A c1vlf como•••"' ""\ bt'ff" ft l.,.d by lfwt Pl•1nt1ft aqain~t YO\f ti YOU Wl\;r, to df!h•nd th•S laww 11. you m1.at wil,..•n JO day\ aitter u11, \ummo·ns I\ )t"rved on you Hie With th•\ court • wr•ll•n rt'\OOn\f' to trw compl•ir1t l""'"\\ yo"' do "° ,..our M •.uu will bf" "''~'"° on •PPhC•hon ot I~ o•••nlttt •"4 this coyr I mav ..,,.,.,, 6 '"'°°ment •0•1n\t vou •or thf ''"•' drm•ndtd '" ,,_. t ompta1nt. w htch could rfl'-Ull 1n Qltrn1\hml'n1 ot ·wi•o•s t•.,•no 0 1 monf'y Ot pro~rh or oth•r rt luu ,_.Qut\tfd 1n thr c.ompt•lnt OAIED MMclllJ.1 .. 1 LEE A BRANCH Cl•rk Bv J Ooc>r1 ~IY MACKEY & ALPERT 11101 111-..nlde Drlw, Slh Fl-. SMrmoft o.llJ, C.OllMtWI •1m UIJI tt1-Publl\1Wd Or6"9f CN\I Dilly Polot Jen 2', F~b 2 • .. t'll? •11 81 su""LUS PAO PE ATV SALi AIQUIST FO-. 8105 1'011 THI SA LE OF SU RP LU S PAOl'EATY COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE OIST"ttT ,,,.._~- C•ta Mna, C•lllenll• Pur \uant to C•llforn1a Edu<•hon Cod• !>«hons 11440 11.at, ""d 1100. nollco " llereb\I gl•en 11111 th• c.,.., Co,..m\lnlty Coll-Oistroct of Oren~ County C•lllomle. wlll reo lve up lo Dul po ltl•" tll<ln tt 00 • m -•• M.,cll 1 1"1 well!<! bids tor 1he ••i. ot 11IUMd C--r .. n'<h hM been dKl•ntd W fOIU\ 10 lhf' ne..is of the Distric t Bldd1nQ in~truc. ttOf\\ •f\O bid •orm' "'' •••Ila~~ from ow P"'''"•''"G 0.1>•ri-n111 tM•bO .. • -ros C•ll Mr\ Ptrrln 17t U H • Sl ~O lo• lddlllOMI '"'°""•llon IS NORMAN E WATSON S..:ret1rv. Board of Trust"'' Publl'lled Orenoe Co1n1 Detty Piiot February•. 16, I.., •l' ,, PUlltC NOTICE HMl•J> PICTITIOU$ 8USINESI NAM• STATIE MENT Tll• lollowlftq ~SOM .,. Mino 110t111tu .. W0008AIOGE TOWNHOMES, 11100 Giiien•, lrvlne. CA '7114. WermlnotOft Mlne99-c.m..,.Y, a Calltornia <Of'PGrellon, 1UOO Olllett• \ ..... , frvlne. CA fJ11f t I G. Wermlnot•" Eftt•rl'•lt•• lntorporehf, • Cattre111le corporetioft, 11100 OUiette. 1n11ne, CA ._ '211~ .... , Thi• Du1lneu ll conducttd l>Y • llmtt..i NJ1Mrllllp. COf'POrellonN•mt Warmlf191on Ma<ltQ9m..,1 C-Y J-P Wlf'f'llnoltn """°"" C«110ttllon H-E. G. warmlftOIOll Eft"""1Mt IMOfPOftltd E 0 . Warm"'910'\ ~ ""' ,.....,_, • ., lllM w1tt1 t11t (Ollnll' C1"'11 01 Or ..... CllMl'f Oft J1111 2', 1'11 ....... ftvbll•lled Qr ... C';Mtl Oelly """'- ftff '· i.,U.#tllf't"' ,. ~ Orange Coa t DAILY PILOi fruosday. Febru ry 16. 1982 NY E COMPO ITE TRAN ACTION 9UOUTION. INCl.UOI , ... ou ON t H& NIW YO••. MIO•Uf, ... ,.,1, -··· •ono ... Oll'aOlf •NO CINCINN•fl UOCll l l(CMAN00 ANO llNeTlll\' f MI NA•O ANO INUUllT s.1.,. Ille! 1111-. Nel ~''"' Nel S.1n N•• .. ,.~ ,..1 I> I -(IOW (f\O I> I. llCI• Clo .. C"9 I' t hcl• (!ow t l>Q l'·l l'ICh Clo,. 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" Mllolted 1·; I 2t .. i--~ ~· ~-IS JU ..._ "' l"olmll I _. 14 ' ~ a ut I i ~Ito _, 9' •ff, -"' ""* t ~ ...__ " ~'L' I, •• llllO )i -IA ll'etl II! JO IO 11 _. Support ...... I S 1114-\Ii -" ,t ~ ..... e· .' , 4 t I ,,_.., ~ l'i'leMfft ·'°10 9'UH"" tit ~ 1 ..,::~" ~9 fl -~ ··~ C ~ IOIA ,. .I .~ .• ~ y :1t M~-~ Ml! .. ll l.10t .... 'I) -~ •ft 1 t,\ ~~ 121ams NA I'll 11 IJ 1414 + \Ii O -._. -"IMt Jfl 1 7\h .. t*Mlil I ... II )1 II~ .. """' -"'; " -~'iiiioihillailli~lll A el 1 10 • 11-. + lo\ 10 I ' H 7J 11 " """"Ill : M .,.__ ... ...... . I t4 • 11o ffm1"1'. td...46 '1 "'°" • ~ .._ ,. _ . UTIDI ~------- Tht! (1vu m uJor U.S. autum•lu~n r e ported a 1 l'l'l'l'l'llL l>ah."s d l't'hnt· in the fl Nl 10 days of February l1 111n tht< l1kt• Pl'riod 11 y c\lr lljtO Total car ~Hiies fro m Ft•IJ I 111 Wt'rt ' I l:.!.27:1, rnrnpa re d w ith 136,034 In l'arly F t< ht uar·y l!J>!I 'l'l11s runks as the w o r s t s a les s howmg 111 the :.111111• pt·rtotl :1 1nc o 196 1 • l nlh'tt i\uto Workt-rlj P r es ide nt Oouglas l"ra5er ''"cl thl·11· "I :.i 1:o<Jd c·h:111c t• F o 1 d Mo to r Co w o rkers "rll 1 .1t1f\ .1 t1·111at1\<· C'1111tru('l desig n ed to cut labor c·o .,t :-. a111I ... Il l' l ho111rnn d :-. o f jobs. /\nother UAW 11fftt•1JI S1•1•rc•t1.1 r v 'l'rt'U!t ure r· H ay M a jeru s . s a id the u.r1111n mu\ 111w11 c·ont ra~·t talk :-. wrlh Ame rican M o \Or li ( t!l')I llllW I h.rt I Ill' UllllHI hU!t (1nished n e g o tiations \\1th Ford • '\mt•rir1UI'• .. ,.1.-ni SI '1 h11l111n mor e tha n normal 10 I>. 1 • t· p "' a r m 1 n .J a n u a q a cc o rd 1 n g t o t h e l!"' 1·rnm 1•111 .., C1•ntt.•1 for Env lt'onme nta l A s s essm e nt ~1·n·11•1•:-. 'l ht• ''ll<h :i!..11 i.1tlr 1buted m o re thun 300 d1•alh.., 111 1.1.,t 11111111h ., M'\l'rl' weathe r , with "many of l lh· 1:1talll1l'' 1h1· r l'!tu ll rJf expos ure to cold. ~··m·1 .tll~ 111 h11mt•., \\ 11 hnul heat o r an s talled c ars .. <".il1fllrni J 1101 "~r11f11·:1 ntl y u ffN·lc,ct by the s now, h a d 11'> "" 11 b<1d '!' 1·u 1 ht·r 111 .J .1nuary. with rains torms i1nd nHHl-.11111·' 1·,1u ... 1n~ an c'>l1m a te d $150 m illio n in tlJmoJ!t'" '" t. 11110 homc•l\ and bu. .. 1nesses f.t•n<'ral ~lolor'I s a1<I 1t will make productiol'l :>dlt'cllllP .11l j1J,lrn1..•11h Jl SIX Of llS 29 U S passenger •'ttr J lld l r udc ·'""'rnhl y p lants 1nc ludtng the 11•.,u111pt11111 111 1h n ·t· .. c.·1·1111d s hifts . the mde finite 'l11s111i.: •if l\\.o t'J I ,1,.,l'mbly p lants m Californi a· a t S1111t h <;:r11• .incl Frt~rn rmt t !tCC P a g e A4 1 -and the t 'l1rn1natu111 of .1 ..cN>11d s h1fl a t a light duty utility ll 1wk """t·mbll pli!nt r·:Hott Co. ( .s. \. p lan!t fo t•n courage Its d e a ier s 111 l'll1wn1:1. It• 11lfl·1 .i dr"t'i>unt 10 m o to ris ts who pay ,.,..,h f11r ~a .,11 ltn1· a nd <l11·scl fu e l Participating 1.;, \1111 d1•alt·r.., m l 'h 1a·n 1x wrll mit1<1t e the program I If.ii 111',L'lll'> 1111'> W l't'I\ STAii {~------ \\ , . .,,,., n i\lr linc•-1 ha .. introduced a low coa c h fare ••I S12•1 1•ad1 \\,1\ for t raH•l bel\H•cn Los A n geles . San ()11·1!11 111 !'>,111 Frane,.,c11 an<l W a shing t o n . D C • o n a 10 1111tl t rtJJ 111·1>.1..·L T ht' S251i round ·trip.farn 1s effective \\'t'llri••Mlil\ 1h1 ough M uy 31 l'r1l'iric (i a s and F.lrctrlc h a s p ostpo n e d 1111l1•l11u1t·h 11' p lan., to built! a SS billio n . coal.fire d po\\ t r plant nu.tr ('11lltn!tvillt! m Solano County l'<~&E f11':-l prn110:-f'rf h111ldin g the C o llins v 11Je plant in 1/11• m11I l'•iO!\ s u \ 1n g 11 would be comple te d by 1!1!1:1 \ 11.tl~ "" lit•lit·\ l price· dec lines, s purr e d i n p a rt b~ 11 11' l'l'l'l''>"l""· m ,1\ 1•on t1nue even beyond the 1·1·111111m1t· 11 1•L 111n \m t>n){ t h e price d r ops 1n l '..dd11rn1,1 JI 1• .11 rhm· I a r es J!8S p rices a nd ho m e p r IC' I.'" IARNINGS ~------- T ran:-.it•rr a E~J>loraliun ('orp. o f Newport B e a c h 11•po11i·tl ,J rwt 1,,..,., of SJ fi m11l111n , or 30 <'ents a s h a r e . 1111 I •'\ t'llUl'' 111 $;1 i mil h o n for t h e fiscal y ear e nde d (>1 I II Tl11' 11111111.11 1·., with nd tn<'o m e of SI m 1ll1on. or l'I 1·1·n1:-. cm l'l'\'l'llU<::-. o f S4 7 millio n for the like p1·r111d Ill 1!1811 "la lional Gypsum Co. o r D a lla s H \ '"'d u111• .11 ti l!iHI t·arnmg!<. by $6.4 millio n . or 40 c-1·111:-. .1 ... 11.111 • Tlw l!IHI net e a rnml;(:. w e r e r e v ised to s:ni H 1111 1111111, 111 S2 '1 I a .,h a n ·. fro m $32 '1 million, or $:• o I I• arn tn ~:-. l'nr 1~80 \H'rt.' $60 7 million , or S:i lih 11.tlla:-. b ased Oocutel C'orp. reported <1n 11w11""'' 111 IX p t·n ·1·n1 1n 11c t 10('om e fo r the y e ar 1•111l1•d l1t•1· :11 '''Si million, o r Sl.69 a s hare . fro m S•l 'i m1ll11m '" SJ J!I 111 tv8o R e venue s rose to $77 niill11111 .1 1, p1·11"1·nt 1m prn\c·m e nl from S53 3 m 1ll1o n I hl' )11f'\11111' \ • ,11 "!II ltl . II :ui ""' "" 1H'1c·1•:-. for 1 he 'if"<'Ond time m less tha n l\\t• \\1·1·k.., 11•1!111 11\J.! llll' 1111 t·1· of a b a r rel of 0 11 SI to s:1·1 .,., .. l'h1 l'hilip11irw s Ir." lx.·t·omc the 2lsl n a tio n to '!-(H111.,.11 .111 1•\h1bi t al 1 ht• 1982 W o rld's Fair in 1\110'' 1111· 1'1·1111 T he f:.111 . w hos e the m e u; e n e r i(y, run~ f111111 \la~ l lhrou~h Oct 3 1 Goltl, 111t>tals quotations Gold n~ Thr ,~.,ot·iah'd l'1t'"s St•lt•c·ll•rt w o rltl grrld J1r'1t'l 'S toda\' London : m orning faxing S376 25 London: ;_1ftt·rnoon f1xmg $.175 25 l'arlc;: $:473 l!l Frankfurt : S37>! 02 Zurich. I.alt• f1xtn~ S:l74 110. $377.00 asked lland) & Harman: 1onh ct ~uly quot e J $375 25 t:ng 1•lharil: 1only daily 11u o lt'> $375.25 t·:n~f'lhard : ronl\ d aily q uote > fabricate d S394 01 Metal.Ii NE\.\' YOHK i .\ J> 1 t11da~ Spot n o nr<>rrous meta l prices C:cmper 79 111 t't•nts a l>Ouncl. U.S des t inatio ns I.Nut 28·32 c·f'nts u po und . Zlnr 13 <'Cn ts a po und. dclsver1>d . Tin $7 1077 Ml't als W eck compcw le lb Aluminum 76 77 ('enls u pound, N.Y Mt>r('ury $375.()() p e r flas k Platinum S:lfifi.00 troy oz • N \' Hanel~ & H ttrman . $8.400 per troy o unce Gold , .. <>ins NEW YORK 1AP1 Prtces l a te 1-·riday o f gold ~oans. <'Om ptm '(J w ith Tl\,l,!rsday·s price Krul(NTand. l troy oz , $396.25, o(( J'; 20. Maple' lu f, I t r oy oi .• $396.25. off $2 oo. M.-x&can 50 JHl o, 1.2 troy oi .. $478.0C, off $2.00. Austrian 100 crown •. 9802 troy 01 .. $375.'75, otr a .so. Source. f>t:,Ull Perer a T-lJESDAY, FEB. 16, 1982 H /F CO MI CS C4 .; :·MAN ON THE MOVE When Golden West Co~ge pla~·s a ; basketball game. you can bet 6-1 sophomore guard Truiett ·:=Hatton · will be in ft.he thick of things. ·The Marina Hi gh ::gradµate currently leads the Southern Cal Conferenct' ::: scoring race with a 20.2 points·per-.game avera'ge. Hatton is averaging better than 18 points pe r game on the over-atl season. As the Rustler playmaker. he sparked GWC to a 13-2 non-conference record the team ·s best start ever . Hatton is also the conference·s top free throw shooter. connecting on 90.7 per cent. It's T1:"u ( iett), he lets his ·shooting do the talking 8y CURT SE EDEN Ol-tlle Daily Pll'°' S .... Golden West College basketball coach Jim Greenfield refers to guard Truiett Hatton as his ..,.-silent team leader," and it's true Hatton prefers to let his shooting do the talking. But tonight. when the Rustlers meet Cypress College in a Sout hern Cal Conference contest C7:30J. you can bet there's a part of Hatton that's screaming ins ide. You see, Hattun has never played on a Golden West team that has defeated Cypress. Last year. because he didn't carry e nough academic units. Hatton sat out the basketball campaign. It was last year that the Rustlers did. indeed. pull off a rare victory over their arch-rivals . .. l'd really like. to beat Cypress -especially since they've -alrea·ay clinched the conference." Hatton says. "The only time I beat them was in ' •· GALA AFFAIR -Orange County supers tars -both past and present -were plentiful at the Orange County SPorts Hall of Fame banquet held Monday night at the Anaheim ConvenUon Center. Those pictured here were just a few of the inductees. From left. t he <Southern Cal Conference) All·star game ... but it's not th·e sam e." Hatton, a Marina High product who helped the Vikings earn the No. l rating in Orange County in his · senior year, was just what Greenfield was loo king for when he made one of his area recruiting drives down the road a few years ago. Because of his size (6-1 >.Hatton wasn't picked up by any four.year schools, even though he was the catalyst behind Marina's 23-5 record and Sunset League championship. "He really fit into our style of play." admit"5 Greenfield. "He came in a s a freshman and did a great job. He pla'}'ed in every game and never got hurt. .. For good measure, Halton averaged 15 points per game as a freshman. This year, Hatton not only leads the Rustlers in scoring, but i.ict's the No. l scorer in Southern c 0 .,.., "-......... ai.M ..... Bob Hamblin (basketball t. Shfrl e~·­ Babasboff tswimming>. 'Dodger Manager Tommy Lasorda. UC Irvine's Kevin Magee and Brig. Owens I football 1 were all . honored. Cal Conference play with a 20.2 average in league and an 18.3 overall mark. While at Marina, Hatton shared the scori.ng duties with several players under Coach Steve Popovich's typically balanced attacks. At Golden West he only shares the scoring with sophomore forward Darin Bowen. But it is Hatton who gets the team going. It was Hatton wl)o sparked the Rustlers to a 13-2 .non-conference record. The only losses came at the hands or Ri\1erside CC -a team which up until last week was ranked No. 1 in the Southland. "Our offense is mainly a fast break. The guard gets the ball and brings it up as fast as he can," •. Hatton explains . Hatton's the first to admit the Rustle rs' aren't a one.man team. He points to GWC's dry spell at the beginning of the Southern Cal Conference in which the Rustlers dropped their first three games. "The big problem then was the Christmas vacation," Hatton recalls. "We had a few guys go home for the holjdays (Murphy Davis and Art King I and they were flooded out. They couldn't get back here. "So we had some pretty pc)or' practices over the vacation. There just wasn't a whole lot you could do. We didn't seem to be quite as intense going into conference ... Hatton adcfs, Adds Greenfield : "Both Truiett and Darin have to score for us to win. We 've lost some games when they just didn't play well ... Hatton has found the going especially tough. He probably knows more types of defenses than any one in the league. That's because conference <See TRUIETT, Pa~e C2> ' v .. Nostalgia, youth intermingled Gurney, Babashoff,among inductees in Hall of F.ame By HOWARD L. HANDY Ot I~ DMly f'llet Sa.ff It was a night for nostalgia and re-living fond memories of other years. Yet there was clearly a mixture or youth and present day sports he roes that were intermingled with those from the past. It all took place at the second annual Orange County Sports Hall of Fame banquet at Anaheim Convention Center Monday night with nearly 800 in attendance. There were seven Orange County sports figures inducted in to the Hall of Fame along with n1,1merous s pec ial awards to high school, community college, .college and professional · athletes. There were humorous notes when Wilcox explained the absence of a tuxedo by stating he . had to have his back to the rental agency at 6 • o'clot;k that night. Or when Tom Seeberg and wife marched behind the Long Beach State band into the convention hall for t.fle presentations on the 24th annlvarsary of their marriage and she said; "We weren't marching behind· a band· 24 years ago tonight." Newport Be ach's Dan. Gurney and ·Fountain Valley's Shirley Babashoff were .among the honoree who were inducted into the Hill of F-ame. ·Others included gymnast. Cathy Rigby, basketball star Bob Hamblin, football heTo Brig Owens and post-humously, Arky \4wihan of baseball. fame . anq former sports editor ~ddie West. Members of last year's inductees who helped tO honor the newest arrivals including Jim freao•l. George Yardley and Mickey Flynn. George Allen. Brig's coach with the Washin1ton Redskins . honored his former player while Dodier manager Tommy Lasorda, a Fullerton resident, was presented with a uretlme achievement award .t.o climax the evening. • On har\d to accept headliner awards that were given to county performers in baseball, footban, basketball, special sports and for top coaches were a large group of present-day stars. . Jn baseball, wesµntnster's David Harris was lionor bn the hl1h school level: Mike Vanderbur1 of Orange cOast on tht,. community collet! lev.el~ Mike Sodders of Arizona State and· a former Orange Coast star on the college leve l; and Gary Carter of Montreal and a graduate of Sunny Hills High, on the pro level. In football it was Mark Templeton of Foothill High; Curt Arons of Saddleback and Jeff Sanchez of Fullerton colleges : Dave Wilson of the University of Illino is: and Pat Mcinally of .. Cincinnati's Bengals. In basketball it was Wayne Carlander of USC and a graduate of Ocean Vi'ewHigh: Stan Davis of Cypress at the communitycollege level; Kevi'n Magee of UC Irvine on the university level : and Ann Meyers of the WBA and La Habra High on the pro level. S pec;ial s ports awards w~nl to Antony Emerson of Corona del Mar High in tennis: Jim Boehring of Saddleback College in track: ,Sue Lewis of Cal State Fullerton in softball: and Bruce Penhall of Balooa Island In motorcycle ·riding ·professionally. . Coaches honored included Augie Garrido of Cal Stale Fullerton in baseball: Ken Swearingen of Saddleback in football; Jack Errion of Corona del Mar Higb in basketball : and Ken Lindgren of Long Beach State in speci~I sports <water polo). Astronaut Gerald Carr, a graduate of Santa Ana liijh. was presented with the citizenship awara and·sald , "'Tbis is a rar cry from the·mud in the bottom or Santa Ana Bowl in 1949." Owens, looking every bit as fit as when he retired rrom the Redskins, was perhaps one of the most grateful. "·I want to thank my father and my family. When you honor me, you honor my family and there were.. 12 of us. A lot of people have trouble raising two or three children but my parents raised 12.' • Good guy awards were also presented to sports publicists Bruce. Rimbo or Los Al•mitos Race Course and to Bill Shumard of the Los Angeles Dod1ers. Letters were read from Ram ownel"' Geor1ia Frontiere praising Wilcox tor his couraae and strength and from President Ronald Reacan. At conclusion of the evenln1. color picl\lret of thole ln attendance were fiHhed OR a SCl'ffft for alJ to Ste. Even after the last hurrah was ec:hoed acron the hall. 1 NBA WHT•IUf COlt,&111 Mctl l'.-;"9' Ohtlelea w L li'CL oa ~·"'· )4 .. .. L ... trs )4 17 .. , \l't Portland ti ,, m SYi Goleltl\ Slal• ti u UI •lit Pl>Olnla ,. u S4t 1 S.1\01900 u ,. no 10 ~IOMei.., S.1'1 AlllOl\lo ,, 11 UJ HOUJIOI\ ti n UI , Denver JI u SC .!r: Ut•ll " u l4iO 0.11 .. 1• u )11 .. l(en•HClll' 1• •:M no l•Yi IASTl•H COH,E•IHCI • All.,tlc Olvki.. Cl' lltollOI\ ~ " 1U Pllll•Oele>lli. )4 .. 110 \l't N•w Jen•• u ,. 4'0 IJ We11ll1>9t011 ,. ,, 4'0 ,, NewYorll )l tt 40 14\'t c ... " .. 0 1.11i.. Mllw•u--. ~ 14 110 Oetroll ,, tt 431 14\'t lncll•n• 22 tt 431 1 • .,, All•ni. .. H 404 ., .... Chi<•90 1• 31 •• 11 Cl•••l•ncl II Ji "° 2S Denver 145~=:.·• kwe T..,..iot'•O•m" Su Ille •t LHen O•lln•I New Vor• Houston •I Oelrolt P!loel'i• u Chi<-K•nt•• Clly al O.nvtr WU lll"91on di Por11•1\CI All•nt• 41 S... Olt90 COLLEGE TotttO I Virgin!• CSll JS I 1,191 J. Nor1h C•rOlln. II I 10-J 1, llS J 0.PMll m " UI 1,01) 4 Mll_,,I 21·1 1,GJI S OregonSt II l 920 • TUIH 111-4 ... 1 to'#• .. ., 141 I Minne<ol• 11 • 1:M ' We\t Vtr91n1• 21 I Ml 10 l(entuOy 11 s .,. II ldal>o 21 1 "' IJ MemP111s SI ••• ... I> Georgetown D c 10-S -U W~k• For•\t 11 s ltO IS Frt\no St 20, m 16 S.n Frotn<l\CO ,, . 1n 11 Ar•M1W1$ 11-S ,.. II K•nwos St 11 s I., .. Alab<ltTWI 11 s 1• 10 lndlatw I• I 113 PCAA leaders SC09'1NG Mag~•. UC lrv1~ W•ICIUln. PM;ollc Wooo, CS Fuller1on Gregory, LB SI HOC19es, LB SI .t.ncterwn, ucse 0 "O J'T 'T' A"t 1'I 1'10 149 ,.. ,. • 12 111 131 4.40.20.0 JS 1.l'l !SJ •'1 "' 10 111 .. 331 , ••• Mc Nealy, s.n Jow SI Higgins, Fresno SI Whlotdoo. UC I rvone CuMIJ>gMm, Ul•l'ISI ,, .,, u 310 , .. n 143 43 :M• IS.• 10 l)S 60 JIO IH JI 12'1 SI llS IS.O n "' •l ni 1•' 11 IOI ti ttS 14.0 Olller l~YldOlel LA-" Rebounding M•~t CUCll IJ • .. g., Anderson IUCSBI 11 0, Cunn1ng!lem IUSUI 10.7, McNHly ISJSI •.S; NHI (CSF) U Field Go.I ""rctnt-H69H IUCll M.1 11'/0-J.OI, Whltldon IUCll SI • (10 ·1UI; Mc Ooto•lcl IUCll SI> 1102-llSI Fret Tlw'-Pernn~ How•rCI (UOPI 81 • 111•1. WOOCI ICSF) 7'.l 1153-tt:JI. Gr-IUCSBI 7t. 14~'1) An•sts INOOCI (CSF I 1 J ng., Bergeoon IUSUI 4 6 lt!Kllln"'l-r IUOP) • 1 T..,..._._.... koflng 1 UC lrvlnt, I• 1 tvg , 1 Ultrl !>tale .. 1 OoitftM I F.-Ste!• .... ilvg 1 !>•n Jose Sl•I• •• t Scorin9 M••gln I Fro)"O Sl•lt, • ll •. J UC '"'""· •• 3 RtbounC11ng Marvin I UC '"'""· • I. 1 s.n JOM Sl•lt 'J J Free Tl'lrow Percent-1 Paclfle, ll • tl7 .. SIS), 1 uc 1rv1ne no 1:Mt •u1 F1e1e1 Go.1 Percent-IOlltnM I I UC Irvine, 5' I , .... 11681; 1, Fr""'° Sl•le SO 1 U11·101•1 F"tfd Gotl Perten•-•Oe•enM) I FrHllO SttlP .. • 13'1&-8'1) 1 S..n JO\t St-. 0 • 1•.0.•Sll UCI statistics G ,.., ,.., "'' A"t K•Yln M-oN 1'I 1.0 ,., SI' 2U Randy Wl>ielCIOn n ,., .., 327 , .. Ben Mc Donald n 102 ,. 2'40 10. Rainer WI.Ill n 60 JI ISi .. K•'lin Fulhtr n SI 16 17'' u 800 T llOrnlon 11 ,. 11 IS •.O John BM~fY II 11 10 :M JI Leona rd Jot>n'°" 11 1• 1J .. l.O Gren! Taylor 11 01 • JO, 2 s Rick CltCC•O 8 1 ) 11 11 Curll\ Cross•~• I l 0 • 01 Mark Sp1ntr a 0 s s O.• Toi.11 11 ... Ml l,U• IU Women's top 20 COLLEOI Loul•l<lft• Teen 15'1 14.1 1,U. Southern C•I t•I 11-0 l,IM CIWlylWY St•lt 1 .. 1 1.-• Old l>c>m4nlon , .. , 1,010 s. Rutgers 11 • ... • 1 ••• , 1•.J .,, 1 Ho C•otln• St•t• • 11 l .., • Long Beach Sttlt tM 1 .. ' MilrylMICI ... s ,,. 10 or._ , ... ,.. II PtM Slillf ~ -12 Vlll.,_a lt.J 41$ ll Tenne1'trtt IW 419 .. KtntllCky 17. •U IS Soull'I CM011n.1 IW 3'7 1• M•mpt\ll Slalo 11.,j 1'0 II A ritoM Sl•tt 1 .. l 21• 11 M1HIH1POI )4-2 Jll . " Geor91A1 .... JIO 70 AubVm ~, 14' COLLEGE WO ME N S•n Diego St. 64, UCI eo UC ••VINI H.,,,llton 14, 8ucll• ..... 4, B•Ur 4, SlmPtOn I•. G-H I, R.no.11 4, Lewlll, Roy 2, P•nflll J. Tot••·· J7 6-lhO. • SAN OllGO STATE a. ... 1•, McGl- S, Porter 21, Overton It, lleblle 2, v-.. Poel 1. Totals: 2S 14-16 M. Hall ti-: S.n Ole9o Sttte, 3s.?t' Tolal IOUlt: UC,,...,,,.. 14, S.n Diego SI ... II, Fouled out H•mlllOI\ IUC lrvl,..), Overton (S.n Diego Sia~) Hlah school women ~11'4-A l'LAYOJ'J'S WIN c.r• a.-Wffl• ... Y Ctnlennlel el ukewooc:I • "1ra1•-s..,....,11:•1 Ct rrllO' •I Rlvenlde Poly, WH tlah el Nor11'1 Torr~. Culver City •t ,~ Y•llev; AINmbt• M L8 Pott . Lyn-"1 St JOHDll IL•-·•-1. Morningside •I S.nt• 8•r~re; U1 Slerr• •t FonteM; ui-al S... G-lel. Pt<lllc 111 Callr. Vffttur• M 9'ovel, Wiid C•rd wi.w. ., pi.,. II; EltalN-•• J . w. North; s1m1 v., .. ., •t a ....... Comlllon •t M••tl a et•• •••ell; Ar<•dl• e t Wot TOfUn<e; MllW Oel et I~. (IP >A l'LAYOP" wiwc..o_w.._..., lmmacv.._. ~at Pellft4Mle , .................. ,,11•1 VIII• P•rtl .. E-OllH; 90IM Or ..... el 9'owl•nd; C.llfoml• •t Indio; l'elO Venllt Ill Pomona; SM L'UIJ ~ e1 L• WM: EUt 11tl• et Tust111. Wiison 1Hac1- H•lflllt•I It Allte1-VeHo; Lol'llOoC eC Alafnany, C.,_ .. , -el UI OUIOI•; Buf'tOllllM l9'ld .. cre111 •I MOl'lttlMlio, Upltnf et W1ln111. ~· et LoultYlll•; Cyprus •I El Toro; 11,lla L-et Canlral; Wiid ~d w l11ntt •I Rl9M tll; Gerden Oro•• el ,, .. 111111. Clflt·APLAYOI'" WMCMfO-W ...... , Cllartotr OM et WwlllMfl. ,.,. .............. , 11:•1 Fvlltf'IOll at Mltoloft VlelO; Moe'ff•lt et ... lllt Cotll, H41rCO et ~llvff; 0_. .t OltncHlt; C..OlM ., $eY-; ,_ .. ., .. I.a HW., c;.r.., et ltO'tal Oeti; II ........ .. ~v .. ,.., 0Mt ........ Veltftelet Olellll t t II_,: "--I It .....,..J Wllf c..-W-ec ClllllOI ~-Valley et t-y Nlllt~ .,..-Oii~ .. Sowl!\ 14l11C; ... ,,..,. .... Oi,,, .. ,.........,.,...,...l•tArt.Mt NHL ~BILLCOMJ'E•EHCE Smytflit DtvtAlft • L T OP OA ,,_ Ed moo-)6 I) 11 l10 uo a C•l9•rv 21 ,, " 7:M ,,, .. SS V•.ll<OVW<' ,, ,. 12 10S 209 ,. '""'' 21 ,. n 205 10t ,. COior-13 JI> ' 11• ,., u Hen'KOlvklea Mlnntwte 23 II 17 10 207 6J SI Louis JS 21 s ,,. 243 SS Clllcego 11 19 10 ,,. 1n 11 Wlnn'P1'9 10 2S 11 11• 241 ll Toronto ll tt u ?17 165 .. Oetroll 16 JO II 19' 14S 43 WALl!S CON,E•ENCE Pattkll Olvla'°" NV l•l•nclers J7 ll 6 266 117 IQ PllllHelPl\I• ll 11 s U'J 221 •1 NV ll•ngers ,,, 21 ' 211 11• 6J Plltsbur9'1 l l 11 10 116 , .. S2 W••lllngton ,, 33 • no l•S ,, AclamsDlvkloll MonlrHI ll 11 ,, 161 16J 71 80SIOI\ .32 II • U3 "' n Buffalo lO II ' 110 "' •• Out bee ,, J1 10 ,,. 1 .. .. Hu11ord 16 16 I• "' 2ll .. _.,.,Sc ... Mll\,_..J, TorOlltoJ Vencouwr., Chic_ I TMl..,.-10-Wllll\lf)e9 .i OutbK Colo•-•tMontrul Plllsbvr9'1 It NV 1\1-r.$ 8ufl•lo ti St Louil H 1rllord •I CMg.orr NHL lead.ors I"'"""' ..... 141 G A "" Grellky, Edmonton 10 .. 15' Bouy, N'Y 1•1-rs •l st 101 P SIHllWY,OutbK JS .. .. Marul<,. W1\hlngtoo •• SI 97 S.••rd,Cllk~ 1' u ... Trottier. NV lslan<i.r> JI 5' '3 OIM•f,KI ... J7 St • • Smith, MrnMsol• 34 S3 11 T•y .. r,K• lO l.J a A-rson, Edmonton ti SJ IO Cotto, E-ton ,, S3 IO ~ . ' .. " c.:!:1: UCl ...... 7, t.nV-at UC Ir.,,.. 000 OIO 400 1 1 14 l N4v•da-LM v-100 toll 000 ~s 1i i Som•. Ruther t•I, IW•M 111. Hk ks 171 •"" 81rn.rd; Boever, Corelt!nt>racller 111 1nc1 DeS...tl• w H1Ch L -<oroent>racne-"" 28 v~,,. IUC lrvlnel, ln9leMrl IUC Irvine). H.....,.,,, IUC lrvl,,.1; 38-H~ll I UC lrvlnt l, M artin IU NLV I , HAs DeS...11• IUNLVI. Scoll IUNLVI PK<1 tUNLV) . community college ~-"'"' 6, o,.... C•• J Or1nge Cotti 010 001 t»-7 J I Soull'lwn t .. n 120 011 00--. u I Sorenson, s.ntoro 121. Nett .. • 161, Munton Ill and .,.,Sllerlch. Herring •ncl Llol'(I W Herring L-S«tn"°n 1B-Hvllwor1h ISoutl'lwe.eem>; 38-~n IOCCI. SIKty ( Soulh'"flt...,). OTHE9' sco•n Cal .... UC lrvl,,. 7, Nt•Mll·La> V991• S Arl1011• 10, UC lllvtr>lelt! a ArlrOl'le State 16, L.aVer,,. 0 UCLA 17, UC S.n Die9o I Pt-di,_. 14, C•I Sl•te NOr1Mld911 1 USC 10, UC S.nla Bart>.tra • Cal Poly Pomcne 1, California I c.mm..-.vce1 .... Soulhwettem 6, Or""Qt CoaSI' Sprt~ Train ing Sites Mejor-l•"OUO """!Mii \Pring 1r1111l119 situ. wltn o.tn OI first lull ~td -•outl for' H Ch 1..,.,: I ~LA .... BAL TIMOllE -Miami, Fl•., FeD.1•. 80STON -Wini .. H•-. Fl•, ~r 1 ANGELS-P.im Spring1, Feb. 1fo. CHICAGO-SM'-•. Fie., Fet> U CLEVELAND-Tue-.. Arlr , Felt 2' DETROIT -t.AUI-, Fl•., -r I KANSAS CITY -For1 Myen, Fl• , _, , MILWAUKEE -Sun City. ArlL, Feb. 11. MINNESOTA -Or._, Fie., Fe«>. 11. HEW VOAK -Fort Uuclenl•lt, Fl._, FR U. •' .... -OAKLAND-"'-I•. Arlr., -r. I. SEA T'TLE -T-. Arlr .. Fell 26. TEllAS -,.,,,_.., S.acll, Fl• .. -r 1 TORONTO -Dunedin. Fl._, Fett. JJ. ....... Le .... ATLANTA -West P•lm Be.ell, ...... FI0.14. CHICAGO -meM, Arlr., -termlMd. CINCINNATI -Ta,._, Fie., Mar.I. HOUSTON -Co<oe, Fl• •• Feb. 1'. DODGERS -Vero 8tacll, Fl•., llftdettrmlned. MONTREAL·-Wnt Plllm a.ec11, Fl•. ...... 25. I, NEW YOllK -St. ~·rs-g, Fl•., Mat. PHILADELPHIA -Ctearw•I.,, Fl• .• F•lt. H. PITTSBURGH -8rM91'ton, Fie., MM. t, ST. LOUIS-SI. ~l•t11urv. F•• .. Mar. I SAN DIEGO-Yum.. Arlt., Mat. 1, SAN FRANCISCO -Scotlsdelt , Arh . Ftll 21. Santa An"• MOtolOAY'S •I WLn m9 .. 1Mity_ d1'1 ol4 JMetMll ""ST •ACa .•YJ lurlOf\OS. PrlKICI Ollfla lMtCM,_,I It.to 5.40 4.10 Devon (Piftwyl JM UI TV'n"'9 wtllefs 10.~.,., uo AIM r...i: Mr. RNl(1or, °""9h• Mlle, l"t<Hlc """""· -·· lt.O, Gllrfi.Ht. AClll\o Ftollllll. Ho Clloy, Velefltlllt lew. n-: 1·1u1s. lttOWO ltACa. 6VI fur"'"9s. ..... n OWNft IMcCMfen> 10 40 S.40 >ID S...ny l\klgt 181«kl UO c.20 POf I"•-1511111 .. I • 10 Also rKNt WW• Wiii, TOvelly, 8uflllft Pllll, "'-'• ~. Double'"'""· Time: 1:11 tlS. U DAll..Y OOUBLa IMl !Mllf S.St tel.· TMlllO•ACa •• YJlur~. I tNtllWlll\F-(Plnuyl •.to 4.40 MO CUlll\lftilly l"'-1 t4100 1UIO WI So110 ,..._...,, 1.20 Al .. rtctd! H"""' Cell, ~ "-•· Time Vetw, tee Frotl<. I.Hy .llKll1 SiKt. 1 .. lly IC116Cllan, lflCrecllllla Hy,,,..,, ""11 w..,., • !IOU ltTM • A(a. T 111• mfl••· JlltlAfftvM t........,1 7.JO ,_ .. s.- C-lew 1""1 ll'lflC••I a• ue ~..._....,_, , ... Al• r1111 ........ Mall.~-. #I l..ytl9 • ._. Ftll, Mell 0 OtMI, ..... l -, ...... , ... ,, I' TM •ACa I .,_ mllH on l~rl '•111\ 1'tlu"*1 IA-nl .. • tt ... ltM llltlll Of ...... 101 .. 1 •• tO ,, .. Oemmttt 0..,.ltyl I 40 AIM rt(ff ......... lell Of A 0... .. ,.,.., ,....,,. Le -A"•·· o.....-. fltllll, Vel 0. llt1, tHlf lotl•U, Me"tt O.ller Tlfl\t 1 •Ult N ••ACT•, ....... '4 tit '° ttaTM •AC8.1 lllt mllH. wwr•911 «Dt•..__w1 tao a 40 t ao Net-o IC:.~I J 10 ).00 ll\V•\'t 11!1'1tWe IValaj\auettl ... Al•• re(•f Sir ~••• "-ttw110 Helttr•••lltr •flmlltr l•c• All It• c~;rn ~~•llOll 18" I NTN •ACI I 11 It Mii•' 11-l•r ll'lnoy) • 40 too C911r1 Conwlltl'IC• IOtllMuu•nl • • Club ~lnl"' (( .. !-'ti uo uo uo Al'9 rec.o Agll•. Ar ... ~•. J'lrtl, Hot Tr11ei..' lhrlt. I.Q I/) S.r. Al U 8XAC;TA (,,.7) !Ml .... 00. '1 fltCK ilX 1.-t+•t,U Peld ~},211 .0 with llv• WIMll\o 110.•~ hi• llOtWO U Pk-&IN GollMltetlOn fMllCI tl .. ,IO with "9 wlnnln91&c,~1'1J Cllv• l>or .. \) llOHTH IACI. I 111• •nll••· Woooleno l.td IPlnc•rl 1.00 •..a > 20 5"l1111tt1'109l•'hou•,,.vel '1.«J ),IQ • Ltmlll ~ tOutrr•I 4.00 A L•O ltACIOl 8 E•PIOded, 8 El Fa11i.tt1<0. A·M41j0r 5oort MONCO, R ... I •••••no, ...._,..., .. , SIK9"". $Mm't iroot A <oupltcl I -<OU!lftd Time. 1·•1 """" •ACI. One mue l(trltl< IOotl•-WV"I •.a 1 20 'to Olplom•ll< Tr\31 IHewlerl > ao 140 AM ... mv (McMtr(IVt) J 10 Al.o r•.o A,,_r v ..... , ... """ Mt11e. kleedO.-. Tim•: I JI U IXACTA IH I IMllCI MS SO All.-e .,, ... Misc. 'S ulllvBn a w ard winners 1'30 B-.Jonn,9011 1'31 e .. n1e ll«llnver. •II •round 1932 Jim 80lll'>Cl'I, ell·eround 1'33 Glenn CunnlngNm, 1,.0 1'34 8111 8onlllron, lr•O 1'3S LAw>on Lllll•, QOll 1'34 GleM MOrrls, 111 •round •'37 Don 8UOgt, 1ennl• 1938 0on LUil, trKk 1939 Joe Burll, rowing 1'40 Gt'OQ Rke. tr11<I 1'41-LHllo Ma<Mll<htll, l••ck , .. , Dl/lcl'I W•r,,,.rdom, POI• null 1 .. J Gii ~. lr•<k t .. • AM Curt It, twlmmirlo l,.S Ftll• "Ooc" BltncllAlrd, loollNll 1144 ArnOld TllClltr, lootlNlll , .. , J•• K.ily rowing lt41 SOI> Mtlh<H. •11.,.rounct 19•• Dkk Butt.on, 1'9ure \lltllnq ltSO F,..,, Wilt, 1r..:1< ttSI SOI> RkllAlrcb, oote ••ult 1'S1 Horace Ailwnftllu, lfa<k 1 1.,3 S.mmy LN, dlYl"9 IH4 Mel WhllllelCl, lrKk l•U Harri'°" Dillard Ir..:• 1956 P•trkl• McCormick, d .. lng ,.,, a--.. Morro•. Ir.Ck ltSI O leM 0.vl\. I rack 1~ Parrv o·er1~n. snot pul I"° R ... r JO!ln\on •II uound 1 .. 1 wnme Ruclolp/l. lrec• , .. , Jim 8Htty Ir.Ck 1"3 JO!ln .,.,,,.., POft v•ufl I.... Don Sclloll•nclf>• •w1mm ... o , .. s Bill 8•4Mlley, lNl\ltlb<lll '"" Jim Ryun, 1r1c• ~ 1 .. 1 llendy Millon \llOI ()UI 1961 Ofl>bfe -•••. ""mmlnq 1 .. • au1 T-.wr,de<•lhlon 1'10 JO!ln Klnwll• •w1mm1nq 1'11 Marl~'' •w1mm1n9 "n Fr.,.• '"""•r-t••ck 191) 8 111 W•llon, bUkttbilll 1974 RIO WOlll!luter. lr•t• 1'7l -Tim Sh-. iwlmmlng 1•16 Bruce Jtn,,.r. Oe<alhlorl 1917 Jot>n "'•btr, tw1mmlng 1911 Tracy Ceulklrll, •w1mmlng 1919 Kur1 Thom<H, gymnt,110 1'90 Eric Htldtn, \l>Hd sk•llng "II C•rl L-1•, tr.Ck anct It.Id 'Orange County Hall o f Fam e l•t .C-im c ... ...,,u.,, C•-1 H•NMJ'emel--. Dan Gurney, C•lhy Rigby, 51\lrlt Y 81~"'°"• Brig Owen~. Bob H-blln, Eddie Wesl and Arly V.ugl>n L1..-me AGIW--AW-Tommy 1..a-a.. Doelotr m~r. 5-tl "* .. ""*"Aw ..... B•M>~ll Hlqh Sc1-I D•vl<I M.,.,i. 1w .. 1mlM1er1. comm11n1ty Cotle9e -Mlle V•nderbu•9 !Orange Coull, Coll•ci• Ml•e Soda." IAr11on• Sl•l•I ProleU•On.11 GtfY Ctrter IMonlrHll. 8•tl elbilll H191'1 Scl'lool Wayne C•rl•noer IOcHrl Viewl Communlly College Sl•n O•vl\ lCyprtnl ; Colle~ Koon MtgM tUC lrv1Ml; Proltt•-411 Ann Meven IWomtn'\ B••ketbilll A•-••llonl Foo1b1ll H•ol'I Scl'loo1 M•r~ T•me>lf'ton tFooertlfl) Commt.tttlty Coll~ lh•> J•lf S.11<tw1 1Fulltr1on1 •ncl Curt Aron\ IS.ddl•IMO I COll09P Dtv• W•I-lllhnohl PtoltHlontl Pal Mein.Illy IC1n<1nn.1lll SP«••• SPOrn H19h SchOOI Antony Em•r\Of"I C(Of'O"• a~• M•r. t•ttnlU, Comm1>nlty Coll19t Jim Boel'lrl"9 1S1e101et>.4<k. lre<kl, Colle~ Sw Ltwl• CCel Slate Fullerton, '<lfllMlll, Am•ltur llotl ~I••• Scott llr..:11,) •nd Greg L()U9anl\ (d1'11n9) Profe\\1on41 8rutt PflnhArt lmotott ye 'era<: 1nq> Co•CfW\ a~~t)lll AUQlf' G•rrldO 1Cel Slo111e r u11tr1onl D••ktlD•ll Jae• Errlon !Corona CWI Mer H•gh), Footoa11 K~n ':>w r.tf1rt9~n IS•ddl~bM.k l SPP<••I Soor1' l(On L•ndorpn t lonQ 8t•th S1,t1• watfH POIOI Men's lourn ement (•I LA Ov!IM I J'nt9'-S"'91H H.,Old SOiomon cltl R-rt v.,.·, Hot, .. ,, •.J V annl(k N...n dtl Anctrtw Ptttl\Ol'I. 1 S, 6-J Sl'I-GllCklltll\ Clel Jot>n Flt111er•lcl. 1 .. , • I, M R•r -·def P•I o....,.. ... 1. • •, Ptttr R.,.,,.rt cltl G1llH Morreton, 1·S, .. 3 JOlln Lloyd d9f Devld Certer, U, .. J. Ml Tlllorry Tulut ... def Erik ISl trlllY. ~1. 7·S, •I, Mel Purcell otl R.,,,i>l'I Krlsl!Mn, .. >. • I Bob Luu def S.m Olammatva, ..0, • 1. e 111 Sc..,lon clef Jo'.n Aus""· .. , ... , : Peter Ellor clef P•l<•I Portn ... 1, M . 4-1 CPorlu wlllldrtwl, JOH Hl-ras clel Ttrry MOOr ... ,, .. ,, J.tt Borowiak dtf. Adrl•no P .... 11 •• , .. , M : Brad Glli..r1 clef. Freneltco GonH let, 4·6, 6.J, •·•; Tim M•yolle CMtf C•rlo• Klrmtyr, 6·1, .. J; Btrnlt Mitton clef Erik v.,. Diiien, , .. , 6-1; Jelmt Flllol INI i..rrv stetenlll, l-6, •·2 ... , Women's tournam e nt l•IH--..1 ''"'"-~ Wencly Twl\Oull del IC•tlly JMCMtn, M . 4 ••• •·O. Wtl\dy Wllllt def ROHlyn F•lrbenl, H , • J, .... M~y·s t ren ee ctlon s llAH t ALL •-k ........... 8AL TIMOAE ORIOLl!S 5'9n9' Ctl lllPUn Jr., lnlt.lcltf, •ncl Marti C-Y.,,.... $tlelb'l ... Oellet Wllll•ms. °"""' ... r" to .,._, .. r taftlracts, Sl.ATTLI MA•INEAS -$ ..... ~ Rewlt y, L•rrr Andetfon, Jerry Doll OINton, 1(.,-t hi encl 9'on MvMalm"I. J ltcl'lers, Joe SlmPM>n. 011lfl•lder; o ... '1ro••. utc Mr, •lld Jim l"tftley. tllJrll --...n. ---~ {llolllt ... lt. ...._IL ..... ATLANTA 8AAVl!S -A,_ecl uYt Larry 8rl0dfonl, pltcr.r, had WOft Ill• .. ......, al"bltrellon c-... IMt lfl• club. CH ICAGO cues -Slon•• ..... Htndtl'SOI\, oulfltlcltr; Ty W•ll•r, tlllrcl bHemlfl: llyM S.l\dbefo. outti.ldtr, ..- 1111 H•ftt, <el<lltr, to-narcontrKh, (IHCINHATI REOS -1'<Cl"lred WavM KrtnclllOI, lnlltlcler, from lelllm-to tom1t••tt tfl .. rlltt ct-•• ll'let wnt lll9VI ~tll•u to tr. Onot.t MOl'ITIUAL EllPOs -Slontd O••'I' Cener, tel<MI', to t11 t ltt>l·"lV c:ontrt<t IMWOfl , ... ""--· IT. LOUli CAAOIHALS -A"'10llflCM tfltt Temmv Herr, ~ llt"M•n, ""' ,, .............. .,Mt, .. , .... , . MOC••,. .............,u.e- OlTAOfT RIO WINOS .. ll•ellae l!ttc ,,.II, l.n ...,,._fr-Afl...-.11 .. IN Af'Nfke11H«My-........ .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Febluary 18, 1982 H IF .Poland turmoil affecting Fib~ H e'&a tr ouble d man DENVER CAP> WoJltk Flbak hll a lovely ramUy. a tbrlvln1 lennf.,s 1ame that enables hlm to travel all over the world and earn a ahc·flaure Income. and 11 potential law career to raU back on when he quits the circuit. But despite these apparent riches. Fibak Is a troubled man. Fibak is Polish , his country's lop sports hero. and what hu:; happened ln hll native land In the last she weeks ii' deeply dlsturblne to him -so disturblng. ln fact, that it has begun to affect his play. RANKED 18TH In the world, Fibak -his name is prOl')Ounced Voy'-lek Fee'-bah.k -lost four of h.is first five matches since Dec. 13 , when martial law was declared in Poland. .. I'm trying to get It going again," Flbak said re<.'ently •· r haven't been able to concentrate as well. You try to put any problems in the back or your mind when you"re on the court, but it affects you Whe n everything's going OK. you play better. But TEN NIS I've been sort of depressed the last re~ weeks a bout what's been happening in Poland." Despite his sub-par play. his reception by American tennis fans has been heartening. ··1t·s been an amazing reaction, people seem very warm," he s aid. "'They seem to genuinely care for m e because I am a Pofis h person and because or what people in Poland a re going through." F IBAK, Z9, doesn't fit the usual "jock" stereotype. He speaks six languages, attended law school for two years before deciding to defer a law career for tennis, and is an avid art collector. As would be expected, he's a bit more sens itive about issues affecting him and those around him than most athletes. And even though he professes to be ··a politic;al," he is profoundly affected by the restrictions imposed on his family back in Poland. Fibak's wife and two children currently are residing in the ir second home in Greenwich. Conn .. but his other home is in Poznan. Poland, where his parents, his s ister . his wife's parents and numerous other relatives and friends remain ··This is a very difricult tame." he said. "With communication being shut off. we just don't knpw everything that 1s ha ppening back there. I would just like to be able to make a simple phone call to a~k _how Grandma is doing or ask about the dog but everybl:Xly Ts CU( orr mm tM rest or Che world. UOP coach quitting? . STOCKTON CAP l University of Pacific basketball coach Dick Fichtner will resign today. athletic director Elkin "Ike" Isaac confirmed to the Stockton Record newspaper. ··1·m sure h~ is going to resign." Isaac said. ''He told me last night be is. He will give a statement today.·· Ficbtne~ when contacted. would not comment oo wfieUifffie plans to res ign • ,f"9rmer Ocean View Hi gh standout Je ff Andrade was recentty involved in a clash with Fichtner for com ments ~ made to newspapers about his dissatisfaction with UOP 's style of play. Fichtner reacted lo Andrade's comments by kicking him off the team. . Fichtner is in his third year at UOP and has a re1:ord of 37-43. This year 's tea-m ls '7-1~ with four regular season games remaining . They are in seventh place in the Pacific Coas t Athletic Association. f'HUC 1111( FICTITIOUS 8USIHESS NAME STATEMENT The lollowlng pe"°"' ut doing ou\ln•ss •s R G & G POWERS, •88 E lllh SI , = 'UI, Cosl• Me .... CA 91611 Rane111 Gr•nt PowPf\, llOI AITll90\ Way, Nel0Woor1 Buch, CA '2660 GIHll H Powers, IOI Amigo• W•• Newp0r1 S..Cl'I, CA .,..0 This builneu I• condutled DY l\USb•n.1 tnCI Wiit R G~ Tnls si.tement w•• llled with tl'le County Clerk of Oranqe Counly on FICTITIOUS 8USIHEU NAM(; STATEMENT Tl'le following person I\ doonQ 1>u•lnena• COAST CLEANER:> 8 Wlndllowor, Irvine, CA .,llS Gtl\t Edw1rd Pic kard ~313 Unl•ef\•I•. trvlnt, CA q271s T"h Dv•ll'tu 1\ conducted by an tt>dlvldlUll G4tne Pl(k•rd Tiiis st•i.nwnl was hlod with '"' County Clerk ot Or•n11e Counlv on Feb S 1""1 F112Se6 Publlsl\od Oranoe CN\I o~·· PlloC, Feb. I. l'IC 1'11l6Jl f<tD '• t•. n , Marth J, 1911 U1.f7 PutMll!led Oranot Co.st o.lly Piiot, Feb.•. 16 Jl, _re,.. 1. 1"1 w..i FICTITIOUS BUSINESS MAME ST A Tl ME HT Tiit lollowln9 Ptr\on .'• dolno busl,,.nn VAMANO INTERNATIONAL, lout Apacllt! RI ..... Ave Foul't•ln V•ll•r. C•lll 921CI. Oon•ld IC v.,...no, ll)MI AP..:,. River, F-ain V•llt y, C•lif 9110ll Tiii• buSIMS\ It conouc1ee1 by an lnclhrlduel. OoMlcl K. V _,i.no l.l\i. sta-w•t m.., wlll'I ,,... County Cltrfl of 0rllnQt Count• on Feb. S, ltC. '11UU PullllsMCI 0r-. Cout Oalty Piiot, F'ttl. '· 16, '3, Mirth J, 1911 S"'42 PllUC 1111( FICTITIOUS BU .. Hl'5 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Ht.Ml SfATIMEHT The followlno persons ••• dolno DvllntHM M IDWAY ASSOCIATES. 1141 H.,l'l•Y Averiue Midway Cltv • Cetlfornl• ~s GACK G OOEN, Gtnerl l Per1n.<, 7141 Herll•y A.......,., Mldwo City, ca111om1•mSS ROBEllT M SMITH, Gener•I P•r1ner, llMIO Mall\ Sir"'· Suitt 110, HunllnQlon a..c11. C•lllornl• ,,..._ Tiiis buslnen It lltlno cOl'lductoll by • i>tr1 ner1111p. ReGett M. SMltll Tiiis SI•'""*'' llltd witl'I '"'County Cltrll ol Ofenot COunly on Jan ... ry tt, 1911. ,.,..,., Pullll$11ed 0r41ftQ9 Co.st D•lly Piiot. Ftb. 2, t , 16, u .1t1t ~40-82 HAMI STATl!MIHT FICTITIOUS tVSINISS Tiit followlng peoon• •r• doln9 NAMI &TATIEMIHT buslnenes: Tiie tollowlng person I• doing LIFEPOWEll. IS101 Htnlo DI. busl ... nH: Weslmlnsttr,CA'1'8J $HC ASSOCIATES, 210 Avenia. M•ry Mevuml VltW-Hell, tSIOI Otl Mer, Sult• IA, S.rt Clt~nlt, Henley 0..., W"l"'I"""'. CA .,.., C•l llornl• mn M•rctlle Matwli"9, It ~Idol Cl. Cllrhllne C Henrie•, Jlttl NtWPOr1 8-h, CA '2t60 NallOfttl Perti O..lvt , L4IOl#'(I Nlgutl, Tiiis """""' I• (OndUCltd b• • C•lllornle.,.,, ""9r•I~_.,.., Tiiis llUtll\tsS I' COl\ducttd by • MMy VIMell·Heft llmlttf-1~ Tlli. ·lie-w.s 111..S with the Clw'ltllne C Henrlcll Cov"1y Clerk o4 Or-COUl\IV ti\ Tlllt ~ w• 111 .. """' ... fl'tll. '· 1•· CHnl'I' C..,,. Of Or•ft9e COullty Oii ,.,.. Jenu•rY tt, 1"2, P\itllltMd ~Mel Co.~ O.lly PO .. , 11111 .. "-"---'-· _t6._U._Moe_r_c11_t_._,_., ___ s_tWt_-1 Pultll.,_. Dl'MVI COtst Delly PllOI, \All new buelne•M• ualnt • flctltlou• n•me, mu1t bt law be retletei9d wtlh tfM CoulltJ Ct•k. The DAILY ltlLOT PfO\lldel tM tonM end tlNftt .... -., rot .., cuatomera. If you ar• etartlnt • nn. b"llne .. call th• DAIL v l'tLOT '°' lftfOfMdoft and fonnt. 1414321 -· I.It_. in J en 26, ,.... t, t, 16, t'92 JIU2 ,.C'fltlOU. au•l•lf• MAIM IU THWl .. l ,,,. ltllOwlnt ........... '°'"0 _,_," IU9'"1All.l l.tcl, toot Yi a.1 ... llllle202,~ a-11,(A~ M.,Ma JWtllM e tntll, Of All• Ave., H..,.,, l-.<11. (A ....a T~ C.-.!M t lt•ll, 4M Allte Ave, H-' llff<ll. CA~ Tiii• MIMi• It t -..ci.e 11¥ •" lllflvlfl* T •k •IL ~,, .... .. ,,. •• "~ ... Iii.cl with llle CWlll't Cteno Of Ora1199 (ovnty on ""· .. "" ,. .. , ... PuC>llWcl 0..,.._ CN\I OeU, Ptio. jll.O,t,1'.2l,MMC1121 1•J •t>fl l'ICTITIOUS tu•11taH HAMl ITATaM•NT Th• lollOwlno P<tr'°"' art dotnv bu•lntn•.t· CALiFOAHIA OIHf:l U AVICE, .. M•r'bof &Ivel • Co.I• Mt\e, CA ,,.,. 0ouOll\ J, Siemer, 1' Or•k•t 9ay Or., Cor-Oel Mar, CA '2•U Auou.i p.,1 Roni, ~1 w1,_, Or , Oren.-,CAfMt '"" buJJnen I\ conc:l11<1•C1 tty • oentrt l PM'tller"'lp Oouvl" J . s .. mtr Tiii& -• we\ 111., w11n '"' County CltrN ot Or•l\9" Counly on Ftff s lllC J'lltMI Publl\hed 0r.-. ~>I O•llr P1101 Fell 9. ''-11.iNCCl\l.1'111 llU2 PllllC NOTICE l'IC'TITIOU5 ~U$1HIU NAME STATEMENT T l'tt follow1no o-·r-son ., <1011,0 DvSlneu•• RAINBOW SPOllTING G000$. 13'1 E. 1s1 Sl<MI Tu•lln c111torn•• 926'0 9ruu S $w.ncull. 13'1 E ht Slrffl, Tustin Ca!ilOrnl• ,,.., Tiii\ buSlnets h conduc 1ee1 Dr •n lndi•ldull B•ll<• s ~WMIC\111 This sl•l-1 W.t\ "'" With tne County Cler• 01 Or•n~ Counly on Januery n , 1981 FlllUJ PuDllSNG OrM1911 ,.,.,, O•llY Polol, ........ ., ....... •OTICll 0, T•Ull•H' IAl.I Oft Menll It, 1'11 et I I • e "' P'w.t A-rl(en Tiiie l"-•"'t Cen>-Y, e C~ ~ .. *' n Ynni.., or SllC<HMI' 'fi<v"•t w Su1Ht111111•., Tt~lff. fl 111'4 <"'1tl" 0.0 el Tr1111 ·~"'"' .., 11.,._ A .1111\llWI\ •nd (.,•lyfl fl J--f •-lloL Vatrlll encl ''"'1111• L v .. r111, -rK«-laPJ•m•r •. '"' fol lfttlN,,_I flt' 0 1t, 111-um. ,.... ..... °"1ei.1 llett•ft OI Ort119t (...,,,., Ct11nl'l" t •lllorrila , •no 1>11r"'"" te Ill•• t w\e 111 -I<• Of o.lwll "'° llett!M IO S.11 lne•-t •t<WOt4 Oc- tl 1 .. 1 " 1n,1r-• ,,. mn. "' 11o•i. 1.,.,, 1>•g• ISO, or otllrl•I •t<ordt Of MIO C-v. wlll IH\49er and 1111rluen1 lO WIO Otto of Trull ...... public •Vlllon lor <•"'· ltwtwl m-y Of Ille UnllH St,alt6 OI Amerk 1, et llW meln flWtlf!(ttO ,,,.., ... ,.,.,.on T(Ue ln•v,.nct tam,.nv lo<tltf •I 114 E•" "''"' S4t•t, 111 '"" City ti Uni• Ant, Celllelfllle .... , ... , r19ftt, title •M •ot•r••I <onwy.ci 10 •I'd now 1'1tl4 llY II ulldt r ••Id O••d of T ""' In th• prooertv lllllfted In wld CovnlV •l'ld ''•'• •eecrlbfel" LOI , Of h<Kt No roeo •• '"°'"'" Ion . meJ •KO•Otd In 8-JM, ~~· ... 4' •l\f jO OI MIKell•,..OUl MeP\. record\ OI Orar19' ( ...,.ly ( elilOrl\IA Tiit Uta.i .-.,,, or OllWr tommol'I ou•on•tlon ot ••IO l)rOOtrty 10 i.. 4'21 S.atord C1rc1t1, I rvlne, C•lllornle Olrt'll°"' lo the •bo•• properly -v • *·"-b• r-•fll~ .. _ In wrl11"9 from lh<I -lklary wuntn 10 Ciao l;OM '"" ltrsl pu1>11<11ton 01 lhi\ no11ct S'1d H" w rll .,. med• wllllOUI CO'l•n•nl or w•fr•f\h ••Pr•tt or fmplled •• , to tltl,._ Po\Mt\•on or •IOCu mbunc .. to wll>h Ille une>•lcl b•l•n<• Ov-t on the note or note\ M<v•ed 1>¥ '41id Oee<f of T ru•• to "'" '14 lll 1f plu• llW IOllow1n9 nl•m•llKI C°"h ··~ M\Cf .OwM\(I' •I OW ltm• of ow ''"h•I out:M1<a1t011 of tnt' NOl1Ct OI S.le SIO 00 DATf.0 Ftoruar.;) , .. , FIR!>T AMERICAN I ITLE INSURANCE COMPANY 4 CaUtorni. Corp 0.... Or ..,.rOCI 4u111or11t0 Ofltcet II• EMI F lllh SI , !Mini• An•, (.A '2107 llUl l)&.3111 Publlsftocl Or•"9f CN\I D•ll¥ PllOI, Feb I• 23, Mar ). 1'81 61f>.11 J•n 14. Feb 7, q. 16, 1'191 >JM 11 -------------PUBLIC NOTICE PUIUC NOTICE HS-•111> "'CTITIOUS BU51HeU SUPElt109' COUllT NAME STATEMENT OJ'CALIF0 9'HIA T t>e followtng PerlOI\ 1$ doing COUNTY 0,0RAHGE bu\lntn •• , .. Cl•lc """'-Orlvt W0>I (Al LYNCH REAlTV, 18 1 h'IUI LVNCH REALTV COMPANV, 1(.1 Satlt.IAM,CAt'170J LVNCH REALTOR!>. •Rd 101 LVNCH MAii lllAOE 01' REAL ESTATE COMPANY ••0 Pt:llTIO"'ER TO"'G VAN Cenltn,.1ill Wty Su1lo "· Tutlln Ca NC.UV EN 91640 RESPONDENT MUI THI LE Lou1,. Jean L•berly Lynch. 1Jl17 SUMMOHSIJ'AMILV LAWI Wl'lemDly Or S<lnla An.1 C• 9JIO~ CASI: NUMBE II Olt»U Tnls. OU\U\e\\ I\ Conou<led by ... NOTICE I uMth,•du•• Yow "-•" bt9ft ...... TM <9Uf1 m•y Lou•>e L L 'ff'<h Cltcodo _,,.,, ye., wlli.vt ,..., .. ,,.9 Thi\ stat~• WM hlfld w 11n 11\e' ,.,.,4 ""'"' '(Ott ,.....,..,.. WIUUR • Counlv C~rk ol Or •n~ Counly on UY\ llt .. I ... ll\f.,.mt1ioft --January,, 1912. AYISOI ,.11,_ U\led ha 1i.o demaAdado El Pubh•hed 0r•"91' Co.•I D•ll• Plfol '"""""'' ..--.,.i, coftlra Ud. ~· F•D ) •. 16 13 lcie? •'1 n .... 11"4:1• t --que U•. ,._.,... 1--------------1 -lro do • otY.t L ... ~ 1..-,...cioft ........... PUIUC NOTICE U vou w.,n to iif'il• tht .OvKe-ot •n -------------'llllOrn"y In thOS M<tl~r. YOU ....... ., do FICTITIOUS BUSU~SS \0 P•Oml)(ly '° that your rnp0nw °' HAM[ STATEMENT PIUd1n9 If •ny, m•y I» l1led on lome T11~ to11ow1og PU•Ol\)-•r• ·e101rig S• V\lf'O °""'~•<•fir •I con>ero °" buslnes~ •s un •bc>Q.tdo en .st• ~. --., •• CENTER FOR RETIREMENT l>Ht•to inmee111l1mtnl•. Cl• •U• PROGRAMS, 1301 Oovt StrHI. Suitt m•ner•. '" r~e><w~I• o a1094c1on, '° .00 NewPOrt BHch, Calllornl• •2...0 ~:~.:;~un.t, P<Wd<t '"' •tQ•\l•ada • Renee Sllmmel, HOO P.,k, 1 TO THE RE!>PONDENT NewPOn 8ffCll. C•lllornl• n t.A SAS FIMnc111, Inc , ii C•lifornla The 1Ml1illonllr ..... hied <I Pl'llllon corPQrat ion, l)Qt Oo1tf' SlrH t, Svit• concernlno yOur rn•rr1~ u you tall .00, NewpOrt BH<h, C•llfornl• 91660 lo 111• • r_.,. w1lh1n JO Cl.IV• of 1111! ~-Stimmel d•tt 1,...1 lhli """mon' '' urvee1 on SAS Flnanc•••. Inc rou. YOU• default _, ""' •n•••ed """ Steven A. Sc.ott. th• <.ourt ma., f'nltr .a lud9mf'nt Pres~t con1•1ntr~q •nJunct1w or othitf" °'°'"' This st.I-I ••• Ille<! wit~ lhl concern1rig dhll\lon of property County Clerk ol Or•"9t Covnty on •POuWI -'· <Md <""IOCIY. Child JllnU•ry 11. ft9t, lUPllOr1. •ttorntr lets, (OJI\, end SU<l'I Pll"" 01n., re•ltf •• rn.y be t ••ntoct by trw Publl\hed Or•"llll Coast 0-4ly PiloC, court Tl'le 91rnlsnmen1 ot ••9I>. F ltklt\11 Of "-Y"' Pr-r1y, or ollWlt _•_b_,_. •_1_•._u_._,..,_...,.. ____ ,_,...,_1 ~~~:, •ulhOrlred 0<ocffdl"9• m•• •''° ... liTIC£ Oaltd Oc1-JO, l'ltl f<ICTITIOUS BUSINESS HAM61TAT«'°"HT The to11owln9 person " doing .lUSJr\ftS •S PllOGAESSIVE AVIATION DE VELOPMENT 1301 S"•v11w, :oron• dtl Mar. CA '2t1S RICHAAD A GADBOIS Ill UOI ie•voew, Coron. clef _., CA .,.U Tiii\ bu\IMU Is Condu<ltd by In nd1vidu.at RIC hard A c;.dbols 111 n ... >tatement wa. llled wlll'I '"" :oumy Clerk OI OrenQt County on J"" ~. 1981. ""'~ P1>bllsfleCI Or•"!lt Co.Ill D•llY Pliol, Feb J, '· 16, 13, 11'3 ~~1-12 J'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Tiie lellowln9 persons •re 001nq busjne-ss •\ THE ADRIAN COMPANV IOI E lltll-StrHI, No JOOD, Cool• Mow . Californi• "2U7 8 Mea Adrian, 843 SI Clalt Street, Cost• Mew , C•litornl• •1616 Lucy E. Adrien, 80 St Cla1r Streft, Cost• Mfosa, C•llforl\I• •>&16 Tl'lls bush-en I\ conduc ltd D• a gtner•l Pfl1,,..rsl'lop 8 M. Ad,.•n Tnls sla~ment "'" 111., w111> 111e (OUl\ly Clerk of Or<1n~ Counh on J ... u.rv n. "'' F1116U Pubhs,... OrAnQt Co.st D•ilr Pilot . J•n. 2', F .... 1 '· 1•, 1'111 lll-tJ PUIUC •TICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Th• totlow•no Df'r\on I\ 001no butll\U\ •• A LL AMERICAN BUSINESS DIREc;TOAY, ••tJ Ponderosa c;.,.,. MeM, CA '2.,7, • RICHARD JAMES STORV, lllJ Pondl!,_, Coste Me .. , CA "1t11 This buslnH> I• cOnducleCI by an 11\dlltldual. Rk.har«l,J. Slory Tiiis stet.menl wa> flled wll.ll 1r. Coul\ly Cl"'ttt o4 0,.nQt COUl\ty o6 J•t" 29, l'lt2. lfE A BRANCH Cl~r~ By NANCV WAGGOl<EA. Dtl>Vlr VAN OAO 6 LINTNElt, INC 11'1 W. 11th St , Sit 1U ~..U AM. CA ttJO. T•I: 17141 Wl·u.J PuDh•hed Orengo, Coost O•oly P110i Feb 1•. U. Maren 1 •. ,.., ,_ PUIUC NOTIE J'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Tnt ro11ow1nl1 ,,., SOM ar• e101n9 bus•ntH•> SURFSIDE SERVICES AGEN(Y INC oil C•llforn•• corporellon, 1&70 S.nl• An.1 ~Ave Su•I• I, Cosla Mow, Cahl •1b11 L1g1a 8\/tllH, 1~1S S•nd• Crto• El lorn (Ahl •7bJO Ano~10 Antf."lmo 1'J4S Mar•• Or.•~ Rt"f"'-,tdf' e,.,ut t11)09 John An1f'lmo. 7q,s Marla Or1¥t. RIV••>Ocle, C•h1 '1:1\()tl fht\ bv\1n~\' 1\ conductPd by a COfPOr•ti°" Surh10f Sfi.rv1c~~ A.gene.,.. In( L•O•• M Buhler Pr~"°"'' Tn1\ 1t•t~t *•.t fllf'd w•tn ~ Coul\lr Clerk of Oronge County on Dec JI 14111 "'~ PubhifleCI 0r.,. c ..... o ••• , P1Cot, F•b I•, 7l, Ma• 2 '· 1 .. 2 5611-11 PUBUC llllE ll'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT T n• 1011owll\q ""on• e re e101no ou'tn•s\4\ VILLAGE WEST ,llPAATME"TS, 1'410 Tustin \llllaQt WtY. Tu\11n CA '76'0 ROY E OAL Y & COMPANY Co•PM•I• WOOCI• 81C19 I• S1>1t• SlO, 1117 Wtsl llOlh Slre.i Overl•nd Per•. KenWi6'110 T "" bu•lnn• " conducted by • gene••• Ptr1Mrsl'l1p Ro,, E D•IV t. Co ,.,....., Ellen D•I• P8r1,..r T hit \t•le,,,_t WM filed Wll!I tlltt COIJllty l:lerl>. of Or•nQt Counly on Jlt'I. 11, 1911. P la.2 THOMAS WELLS Pvbll~lled Oranve Co.st Dally Plio., A L•w C•-llllOll Feb. 2, '· 16, U , t'lll'1 111.C , M New~~ Drive, Stoltt flt Hew,.,. a.di, CA n..e P1>bllslltd Or•l'Qe Co.J• 0•11~ Pllo•. Feb. 2. •. "· t3, ,.., SJ6..U FICTITIOUS tUSllHSS NAME STATaMINT f'VIUC MOllE 'T1'11t followlno perso" •• 001"0 ·-.,,..------------- buslntH H . "CTITIOUS B~llllSS LORETTt VAtfZETTI LTD., HAM&STAT£MEHT LORETT! VANZET"'rl, '" JStll Street Tiit tollow1n9 Ptnon h dolrig Str .. t. ,._, ... ell. CA n..i. ~Int SS., L09'ETTA JO ~LOii/i"· Jlt 11111 MOTIVAT1()N AS5o()CIATES. 4Ckl Stl""I, H.woort a..d\, CA~ Old Miii s..-, lrvlnt!. C•lllorftla tJ114 Tiiis bus!-b c--lrf .,. • B•rb<lr• Travlt Sloen «Mt Old 11\dlvilluaL Miii StrMI, ll"VIM, C•hf0<nl0 • '2t14 l.ontl.I Joll*'"" T"I' bull""* I• conducted bY .,. Thi• ~ ., .. llttcl wlll'I ti., llldlvloue4 Covl\lll c.rt. Of Or.,. CauM\r Oft J ., S..bar• T 51.,.,. 2', l .. J flllt S1ei-I ... fllell with Ille l't-.i COVIii¥ Cltrll ol O.•n.-Coul'lty on P\11111"-0r...,.. CM\I D-4ty Piiot. Jenv•rv 1', t• """ 2, •. 14, ~ 1'12 sn.i ........ P~ll\"°"' 0r""9t Coast Dlllly ~*• J111 2•. Ft41. t, t, 1•. I_, ..... .. ·- ·, u • * • '• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT !Tuesday. February 16, 1982 . , . . • SHuttle . ar.rives e.arly at launch pad REFLECTIVE S p are Shuttl e Co l u mhi a is reflertect in t u rn basin during <J 31 ~-m i l t• t rip to la unch pad . From Page A1 .BAIL ... The defendant's la wyer, Paul Mast. argued that the charges against McDonald "don't seem to have great m erit '• and at' most he was g.uiUy:.-OWeoorue&l- securities law viola tions. • Deputy District Attorney Th o m as Buc k , ho wever, maintained that $8 million in in vest o r &..:.. fund s i s s till unaccounted fo r and that no e vid e n c e was found th a t Mc Donald had invested any of• his cliehts' money in real estate ' loans as he had claimed. Buc k s aid inves tors were promisec.V"interest payments of between 15 percent and 20 p e r cent per m onth on their mo ney After Monday's court hearin~. Buck s aid he was "displeased" w ith l.h e reduction in bail. Earlier. the prosecutor had told . Jud ge· Y o un g bl ood that a uthorities we re concerned 'that Mc Don ald wo uld fl ee t he country with the $8 million Mast . a ret ired municipal court judge . said the $8 million had been prope rly invested and would be accounted for . In a11, $11 million is reported to have bec:n inves ted in Golden Eagle. Autho r ities sei zed a bo ut S825.000 an cash along with company records in the raid on the firm. Roth McDonald , a San .Juan CC1pistrano resident. and David Biggins. 44 . vice president of Golden E agle, were arrested o n c har ges o r s e llin g unregistered securities. Biggin s remains in Orange County JaiJ. H e w as sc h e d u l e d t o b e a rraigncCJ today From Page A 1 SCHMITZ. • • re·e lection to his 40th District seat : O'range County Sheriff, Coroner Brad Gales of San Juan Capis tr a no , a_l so seeking re-election ; and Orange County Clerk-Recorder Lee Branch of Irvine. another who will s tand for re-election. A s po k eswom a n fo r th e r e gi s trar 's o ff ice s aid candidates must file nomination p a pers. d ec l a rati o n s of candidacy a nd pay a filing fee before the Ma rch 12 deadline. The filin g period is ex.tended through March 17 in races in which an incumbent chooses not to run. Captive crowds BOGOTA. Colombia <AP> Lefti s t guerrilla s held congregations at gunpoint in:five Roman Catholic c hurches. delivering political speeches to ' them. Bogota newspapers said , ~onday. of the S1;1nda y incidents. ~ CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. <AP > -Space shuttle Columbia w~rlven 3""' miles to IU l ch pad to<lJy aboard a tr~u1 rter•crawler lb.at inched ponderou!lly along a aravel roadwuy to the seHide launch comblcx.. So successf\Jl waa the move five days ahead of shcedule - that lt prompted space agency officials to raise the possibility of moving up the March 22 launch date for the shuttle's third mission. Gen. James Abrahamson, associate NASA administrater, "has discussed the possibiUty" of an earlier launch date for the seven-d'ay mission with Director Richard Smith of the Kennedy Space Center, shuttle operations director George Page told reporters. Wycliffe to stay in GuateinaJa The slaying of an American Romatl Catholic missionary in Gu a temala wi ll not cause Huntington Beach-based Wycliffe Bible Translators to remove any of il-s personnel from that strife-tom Central America_n nation. a Wycliffe official said. '"We 're aware o f the s ituation," s aid Bernie May. di recto r ·of Wycliffe· s U.S . operations . "We won 't take any undu e ri s k s. but we 're maintaining operations as usual." The concern was 'prompted by 'the death of Brother James Alfred Miller, a member of the Christian Brothers order who was te·achin g at an Indian boarding schoo l in Huehuetenango. ·M.iller, 31 , was at.tacked Saturday by four hooded g_unmen as he worked outside the school. authorities said. No one immediately claimed responsibility for the slayinjl. Guatemala has been wraclCM by a brutal politic'a l struggle betw~ left and right. ·'We've had a few minor incidents," explained Wycliffe's May. "But n o o n e 's been harmed (before i n Guatemala)." He said one Wycliffe worker ha s been robbed. In another instance. a Wycliffe car was s tolen but was recovered after its engine failed and it was abandoned by the thieves, he s aid . According to May. Wycliffe has 99 people in Guatemala and Honduras.· working with the approval of these governments. May s aid Wycliffe's Central American representatives work in 39 languages with local Indian tribes. helping them develop a written language, teaching them to read and write, a nd trans lating the Bible into these native languages . He s aid Wycliff e representatives are accustomed to working in nations wra~ked with civil disturbance. Wy cliffe trans lator Chet Bitterman was killed last year by Colombian terrorists who claimed Wycliffe was a CIA front. Man killed in Irvine cycle crash A 65-year-old ldahQ man was killed Mondav afternoon when h e was e f ected from a motorcycle and struck by a car near the s eparation of the San Diego and Santa Ana freeways in Irvine. ·The Californi a Highway Patrol identified the man as Cecil Gordon Cros by, of New Meadows , Idaho. The CHP satd Crosby was attempting to move into the northbound lanes of the Santa An a Freeway when he collided with a car driven by Stephen. Trustin . Galbraith . no age available, of Oceanside. The impact threw Crosby into a traffic lane where he was struck by another vehicle driven by Mary Ann Hill, 39, of Canoga Park. the CHP said. Crosby was dragged 73 feet before her car c~me to a s_!op~ ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CtaHm.d edwMtelnt 114 ..... 2-9111 All ottMf ~l'tmeftt9 142-4321 Thomas P. Haley Publi• .... -0.r--~ Robert N. Weed ~ Thomas A. Murphine fcMor Michael P. Harvey M~oi.- l, Kay Schultz ~Of ...... Kennett) N. Goddard Jr ~DINdor Bernard Schulman . c-., Charles H. Loot• ~,..., I.Carol A. Moore 1.-yl.- ' ( Page emphasized that an earlier launch was ·only "In discuseion and no deci11ion has been made." He said any 1Juch decision would have to await major launc h pad tests and lo~dlngs of the external fuel tank and the orbiter ltselt ln Ute first few weeks of March. The 61/i-hour·long move was a key step in preparing the shuttle for its third mission, a seven-day orbital flight. 1'he rollout of the 184·foot-high s huttle assembly from the cavernous Vehicle Assembly Building began al 1 :21 a .m. PST aboard the 50-foot -hig h transporter. The journey ended at about 7:50 a.m . Technicians ex.peeled to spend two hours or more making sure the mobile launcher platform. on which the sh1.1ttle is anchored .. \ • wua connected and ''hardM down," or fastened securely, on the pad. · , The tr1uuifer, five daye ahead of schedule, began 'O minutes before il.s 2 u m scheduled start to a void a storm front which was e xperted at Kennedy Spuce Cente r later in the day. The first half of the move was carried out In darkness and then in scattered clouds and fog after daybreak. But the second half was in bright sunshine, wJth the black and white orbit!r, its silvery twlJ'I rocket boos ters and mustard-colored exte rnal tank s ilhouetted against a powder blue sky. "We can take the rain if we have to, but we can't have lightning," said Mark Hess, a Kenned y Spa ~e Center spokesm!ln. "Once it gets lo the • pad, tt's OK. There's lllCht.nllli protect\on there-.·· The Ul4'foot.tall "Rtack" of the orbltt!r, it11 mu11t1trd·colored extern al (uc,,l tank and twin rocket boosters went out the door of lhu huge VA B at I : 50 a .m . PST, T he shuttle and its launch platform, wel1hing more than 11.8 million pounds, moved 3l· less than 1 mph toward the launch site. "It takes a while to move those things they're not light," Hess said. Officials s aid they hoped to make all connections of the s huttle and its mobile launcher platform to the launch pad about eight hours after rollout began. Astror'lauts Jack Lousrria and Charles Fullertop awaited the placement of the shuttle on its -- ..... -_ __,0-..,Hlch . CRUISER COLLISION ·A Huntington Beach police patrol car was damaged at noon Monday -when it collide d wit h a 1974 Honda auto driven b~· Eric J ohn Sigl, 17. of Fountain V1:1lley . the n jumped a r urb and s truck a utility pole. The office r . Brian Moore. 41. and Sig l were not serio us ly injured . t,r a ff1<· o~ficers said. Imiestigators s aid Sigl failed to y ie ld to the poli'ce car while m a king a le f'l turn from Beach Bo ul evard onfo ~ewman Avenue. Jaunch pad, where they will rcheansto countdown procedures for 33 hours lhls week. Once at the pad, the Columb6a wlll rest on the platform so it "touches metnl io metal," Hess said. A rotating platform wlll move around the spacecraft so technicians can link fuel ,' electrical and communlcattons lines from the Columbia to tbc ground The hookups will continue until Thursday, when Lousma and FuJl erton will begin the simulated launch, Hess said. Lousma and Fullerton. who r e turned to Houston Space .Center on Saturday ror· more training, will return to Kennedy Space Cente r for the countdown d e mons tration tes t , NASA spokesman Dick Young said. .. Drizzle to Jeave .tonight Light drizzle dampened the Orange Coast and most oUler a r e a s of the county today, leaving streets and freeways s lick but adding little to the season's rainfall total. A spokesman for the National Weather Serv,ice said there should be gradual clearing by tpnight , with warmer lem pe ratures predicted for Wednesday. The spokesman slid today·s drizzle was caused by ·a low pressure s ystem covering the Eas tern Pacific. which has brought heavy rain into the Bay Area and the Western Sierras. Low temperatures tonight are ex.peeled to be in the 45 to 55-degree rarige. according to -l ~ w \!"a t h ·e r s e-r v-1-c-e :- Wednesday's high should be from 68 to 74 degrees. up from highs in the mid-60s _today. M o s t l y f.a i r we a t h e r is predicted through Friday. with he a vv s torms remaining in Central and Northern California. Fawcett-Majors marriage dissolved Judge rules $2.5 million LA hoµie of stars is community ~roperty LOS ANGELES <AP> -A judge dissolved . the glamorous Hollywood ]llarriage of Farrah Fawcett and Lee Majors today and ruJed that their $2.5 million home is community property. Howe ver , Superior Court Judge Harry Shafer said he still had not decided which of the partners will get to live in the house and buy out the other's interes t in i t. Both Miss Fawcett. who li ves there , and Majors. in whose name the deed was recorded, want it. Shafer said he would vis it the house ·at an unspecified time and "hope the Man Upstaifs gives me .the wisdom to do what's fair to two nice people ." He said his decision would be announced shortly after the visit. Majors, 41 , star of ABC-TV's "The Fall Guy" and "The Six. Million Dollar Man," purchased the hous e in his name for $198,000 May 1, 1973, although he was living with Miss Fawcett, star of the "Charlie's Angels" series. After the couple married later From Page A 1 ORDEAL. • • promise of travel to exotic lands and mohey. H ow e v e r . he b ec ame disenchanted in the Legion and wanted to return home. He tried to escape al least bnce before his death and was impriso.ned. · Mrs. Lee descrihed her son as an "extremely gifted'' musician, to whom music meant everything. And that was how he was remembered during a memorial service Monday at the Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Costa Mesa -thrnugh music. Interspersed between songs performed by church members. and readings from the Bible,• Lee was rem embered as a ·--young-man wt(1l ll greal enthusiasm for lire.'· ln fact, one former classmate of Lee's, Lance Hodges, now bf Davis. Calif., said his lasting impression of Lee always will be that of playing the piano during high school. 'Mrs. Lee said , following the memorial service, that the hurt. and. depression bas now set in. Energy aid 0 K' d WASHINGTON <AP > - Pre.sidenl Reagan bas s\ped a resolution adding $123 million to a federal tund to help the poor and elderly pay their beaUn.1 and other ener1~ bill~ · • that year, however. they began doublin_g Jhe floor space of the house from 5,000 to 10,000 square f e et and added other improvements at an estimated cost or $1.5 miltftin. Judge Shafer said this was the "most telling" point in the case. ''That 's not ju s t an improvement, or-even a massive overhaul," Shafer said. "'That's a new house." He said Majors was entitled to rece ive repayment of the $57 ,000 down payment he placed on the house before the couple married in 1973, but all equ~ty paid into the h o use s i n ce then is community property. S hafe r als o ruled that a i;ontracl Miss Fawcett had for production of an item o( jewelry based~on her fame is also a community property asset. She was paid $333 .000 under that contract. The j udge a ls o made a tentative ruling concerning her multimillion-contract with Faberge for promotion of a line of cosmetics based on her name. Al first . Sh afer told Miss During the New York Jewelry Show. N. W Ayers entertained some of the buyers at a breakfast at the Plaza on behalf of their chenl. De Beers. Part ol lhift early morning program was a style show of women's fashions f o r spri ng and summer. . The season has a whole new look and shape. fabric and gemstones set the pace. True, the shimmery golds and silvers sparkled early in lh~­ fall season, but added to the metallics, the gold and silver splashes, are shape and fabric. -Fullne"Ss· rs Tfle litey, "l)uf a fullness that Is moblle. that moves with th& be>dy, a fullness that gels its shaping from the fit of the shoulders and lhe flt under the arms, Shapes are casual, almost • aporUve. Rich fabrics dictate tha time and place to wear partlcular "fash i on statements." Bright, beautllul and jewel-toned are th& colors. with red 'he runaway favorite. It's • Fawcett he felt s he was entitled to all the profits, saying: ··1t's vours." But mome nts •later, afte r arguments by Majors· lawyer Harry Fain, the judge changed the ruling and said $287 ,500 of that contract should be consider ed co mmunity property, to which Majors would be entiUed to one half. He said, though, that the ruling was not final. Shafer said the case should be a warning to other couples in arranging their legal affairs. He noted that .no coupl e ever anticipates a divorce and was s ure Major and Miss Fawcett "would have resented it if anyone suggested that sometime in the future war clouds would in~rude into their idyllic life." He ca l led the case "bedeviling" in its complexity and said he regretted the couple couldn't work oul on their own the matter of who gets the house. "These a~e fine people. and I hope they can maintain some kind of contact," he said. Majors w~s absent. at work ' Mary Barr, c.r,1t1ed Gemo1091st • on his TV series, during today's ruling. But Miss Fawcett, 35, was present, wearing baggy brown pants and · an oversized jac ket with padded shoulders. However, she was unavailable to r e p o rte r s afte rward for comment on the ruling. Both sides insisted in closing argument s Friday that the house was theirs. "ll 's his house. He put the monev uo. He bought it. He owns it, .. Fain said. Mi ss Fawcett's lawyer. J e rome Goldberg, coun-tered that Miss Fawcett lives in it and deserves the house. "Miss Fawcett want s the house. She's got her blood, sweat and tears in it," he said. "This house is a feminine home -the c olors, t he wallpaper , t h e carpets. This house .js. Farrah Fawcett." - After leaving "Cha r lie's Angels" in 1977. Miss Fawcett broke into the movies with "Somebod y Killed H er Husband" but returned to TV for guest appearances in "Cha rlie's Angels ." First Lady influence It's her favorite color. as well as rich greens. b lues and deep yellows. Jewelry moves to the forefront as the important finishing touch to the tashlOI) picture. Following the trend 1n colors, jewelry designers have c o m bined gold with gemstones; not only emeralds, rubies and sapphires. but lllso garnet, topaz, lapis, perldot. amethyst and carnelian. to name a few. And designers have used the gold In subtle tones 01 -green. pint<, white and yellow. Sometimes several tones ot gold are used t<?r one place. While the small button·type earring Is still fashionable, the trend Is toward short drop earrings, or earrings with more dimension. Examples ere gold hoops often accented with inserts of gems. pearls or tiny dlamondS. It sounds like a very e11citlng spring and summer. ..... , ' I • lAIUIA BEACH /SOUTH-COAST Dilly Piiat TUESDAY, FEB. 16, 1982 -- CAVALCADE STOCKS IE LEVI SI ON • 82 BS 86 , . --------------~---- . --"""'I D Ann Landers gets dbum D to the bare /acts in her . column on P.age B2 . ' SycalllOi:e lli11s .reversal discounted By STEVE MITCHELL 01 lh DMIY "ll<lt Staff Le1~una Beach City Manager Ken Frank says an appeals court decision against the city on a housing plan for Sycamore llills is the least of the city's problemll . Late last week the state 4th Dis trict Court of Appeal in San Bert)ardino reversed an earlier S,Uperior Court rulin~ against a Lagunan who c·ha ll enged the city 's hou s ing e lement regarding a proposal for 300 townhomes in Sycamore Hills. That <·itizcn , John Gabriels, cha r ged th<! l'ity and the Ila y wood Uevelopment Com p a n y fail e d to include provis ions for aff ordabl e housing for the project. Frank s aid today Jhe city has several options regarding the la t est s etback . i ncluding THERE'S A CATCH TO THIS Thb h\Clsom c· appl'ars to ht• ~urf fishing in ..;olltudt• at :\11~11 Beath Park 1\111 ttwn· \\t·n· appealing the case to the state Supreme Court. .. Another (option) would be to simply process the.tract map for the project again with our new housing element," Frank said, adding he is leaning toward that option. J lie said the appeals court r.eversal was based on the fact the city's housing elem ent "does not discuss 'manufactured hou sing. We did not have that in the plan and the judge said we ha ve to include it." The simplest solution, he said. would be to reprocess the tract m ap, includtng discussion of affordable housing. But the city manager says the city faces an equally serious. if not more serious problem in the Raywood project. The city and the develope r have agreed to a land sale whereby Baywood would pay o.lty l"f ... ,,_.., cae,.... Stwr pll'nt~ ·of nlhn angkrs tr~·mg lht·11· luck along the Orangl· ('oasl s horl'llnl' ch1rinl! thl' four·da~· holida~· \\'l'l'kt•nd Development ineeis timetable Stlpervisors ratify sessions on proposed south county projects A timetable for public hearings that will dclerm ine the d evelopment future of 12.500 south Orange County acres inclMlng the Irvine Company's proposed "golf village" in Key· ring 'k.~y' in HBdeath Police s aid today an advertis ing key ring may have' led three people to attempt a break -in at the Huntington Beach home of a Los Angeles County's Sheriff's deputy, an attempt that ended in the fatal shooting of one m ember of the trio. Huntington Beach police Lt. M er le Sc hn e blin sai d investigators found the key ring, which was used to promote a cleaning service. inside the auto t1.'ied by q~ree people suspected of a burglary at the Gumm Drive home of Deputy Richard Orosco. 32. Schneblin said the key ring co ntained t h e address of Orosco's home . He said the c l eaning service fo rmerly l.agun<.1 Canyon . has been ratified bv the county Board of Supe rviso.rs · The ambitio11~ work schedule covor s a 14 month period . beginning Avril 2 1 when -operated out of that address before the deputy purchased the home. ,. Man arrested I • in burglary A Laguna Hills man was being held in Orange County Jail after a Laguna Beach police officer re portedly saw the suspect reaching inside a broken wlndo to a beauty shop. . Michael J. McCue, 19. was b eing held o n charges or com mercial burglary following the early morning bl"eak-ln lul weekend at a Broadway beauty shot> adjacent t9 the bus depot. O fficers uld the teen.ager. -DFFERl~G , Wind r>l.ays began to run away from lhem · ha voe with piece of b1 ead when confron{ed outside the Fletc ho 1· .Johnson r 3. of shop. He Is being held on $10,000 L aguna Beach tosses to ball. seagull at Aliso Beach Park. s upe·rvisors arc• scheduled to co n s ider a <ll-velopm e n t proposal for the relatively small I t8·acn• Santiago Ranch located north of El Toro. The last hearings on the developme nt proposals are scheduled for May 25. 1983. when the 1.250 aC're-Laguna Canyon project. and two other unrelated proposals . will fa ce board consideration. All of the hearin gs involved proposed amendme nts to the land use element of the county's General Plan, the document designed to guide development in unincorporated areas. Four of the proposals involve requests from the landowners invo l ve d to free their undevelope d la nds from so-callei:l agricultural preserve s tatus that has permitted tax benefits in return for keeping the lands in agricultural use. The golf village · 1ocation is included on that list . F.ollowing is a listing of the 10 proposals covered by the timetable and a brief description o f what d eve lopers are considering. Santiago Ranch, 118 acres. Deve lopers ar~ proposing 175 dwelling unit..5 on 76 acres; 10 acres for co mm e rcial Jury weighs Baetz' fate • An Orange County Superior Court jury was scheduled to begln deliberations today in the murder trial of Herbert Barclay Baetz, accused or poisoning his 87 -ye ar -old m other last Septembe r in h e r Balboa Peninsula home. The prosecution is seeking a first-degree murder conviction against Baetz while the defense contends that the 57-year-old che mist was merely carrying out his mother's wishes that he help her end her life. The j ury was to begin weighing Baeti's fate after hearing ins tructions from SuperM>r Court Judge Evereu W. Dickey this morning. development and 30 acres as open space. ; Coto de Caza. 4,929.acres, localed east of Mission Viejo in the Santa Ana Mo unt ains . Developers are proposing 5,347 units . plu s com m erc i al . "l"'ecreation and open s pace areas. Rancho Mi ssion Viejo. Pl a no Trabuco, 3,705 acr es located east of Mission Viejo. Developers are proposing 14.752 u n its , ·and commercial , industrial. recreation and open space uses. -Country Home Ranch. 113 acres located north of El Toro. Construction of 113 ho mes is proposed. Mort Herrmann property, 73 acres north of El Toro. Construction of 480 residential units is proposed. Saba Saba properly <Coal Can yon Stables J . 32 acres located near the Coal Canyon Road offramp of. the Riverside Free wa y . Onl y comme r c ial development is proposed. -V.P. Baker property, 589 acres in the El Toro area. Commercial . indus trial and open space areas are proposed. Ir.vine Company golf village. 1.250 acres in Laguna Canyon near E l Toro and Laguna Ca n yo n r oads . Development of 3,240 unit!f surrounding a golf course is proposed, along wiUv20 •acres or commercial use. Open s pace would .total 422 acres. Original plans by the company called for 1,465 dwelling units . -Ranc ho Mission Viejo, Talega portion, 896 acres east of San Clemente. Oevelopers are proposing 2,630 dwelling units along with co mme.rclal, industnal, recreation and open space uses. -Irvine Compa ny, Weir Canyon, 793 acres. Company is prol)CNlint' to place the land in a "natural resources reserve" SlatUA. ~ \ Laguna Beach $5.4 million for 62 acres of the larger . 552-acre Sycamore H!Vs parcel. Baywood would construct -ll,early 300 townhouses on the land . and the $5.4 million would go a long way toward paying off the nearly $7 million mortgage Laguna owes former owners of the land. "But the question now is. will' Baywood have the bucks to purchase the land." Frank said , adding the economic clim ate in the United States hais put a crimp in the project. • Earlier this month, the City I Council put Baywood on notice that the company has defaulted on its payments for the land. That means the city might begin shopping around for another developer to complet e the project. "That's the biggest problem we face now.'' Frank said. "The appeals court reversal s hould be easy to remedy." Council to mull transit fare hike City transit officials will ask revenues for transportation the Laguna Beach City Council programs. tonight to increase fares on the Brandt's short-range transit municip'11 bus line and cut out plan shows a $1 million budget one of the more unprofitable for next fiscal year. or which. evening runs, more than half would be used for The -council wifl meet in capital improvements, including coun.cil chambers.,_ 505--Eoust...-~~urchase of two replac.!me!_l.!-_ Ave .. beginning at 6 p.m. r Th!· new fare schedule, if Assistant City Manager Terry approved by the council, would Brandt bases his fa re increase see the basic fares raised from req uest on declining revenues tt}e c urrent 35 cents to 40 cents. from the city's transit system . Children and senior citizens He said the .fare box recovery over 65 years of age would still ratio has dec lined from 36 ride free. Twe nty-ride tickets percent in 1976/77 to 26 percent would be increased a dollar to in 1980/81. adding the last fare $8; the monthly pass would increase was .approved in the increase to $16 from the current summer of 1978. $14 and the s ummer canyon Jn additiont--he indicated there .transit p.ass wo_uJd b.e-rais~ to. m ay be reductions in federal $1 from the existing 75 cent fare. r . ' •Yoter signup deadline March 15 Lagunans who want to vote in the April 13 City Council election. must be registered to vote by March 15. ,. Residents ma~ register to vote at the City Cle rk's offi ce al City Hall, 505 Forest Ave. any time between 8 a .m. and 5 p .m . weekday.s,. For ihformation, call 497-3311. •Candidate~' forum planned Th e North Laguna Community Association will host the nine candidates for three seats on the Laguna Beach City Council Friday at a candidates' forum. The forum , which is open to L~una vot ers, willr be h e ld at 7 p .m . in t h e Unitarian Hall, 429 Cypress Drive. . Candidates will be asked a variety o f qu es tion s in c l uding building con versions. illegal rental units. and the im pact of future development in the Art Colony. A question a nd answer period will foll ow. •Free ~ aid due seniors Income tax deadline is drawing near, and senioF citizens in Laguna Beach can receive free tax assistance through the Senior Citizens· Club. The service is scheduled Mondays from 10 a .m. to 1 p.m . and Thursdays from 9 a".'m . to noon. For further information, call the club al 497-2441. •Art-A-Fair jurying scheduler Jurying for two and three dimensional art work will be held Marc h 14 for the summer Art-A-Fair. Artwork from prospective exhibitors must be delivered to the Boys Club at 1085 La g un a C anyo n Road between 8 and ~ a.m . Artists and crafts m en must pick up their examples between 4 and 6 p.m. the sam e day. Three pieces or work frOJTl e ach medium must be presented and the artwork must be framed, wired and ready to hang. Fees are $5 for the first medium and $3 for e ach additional medium. For more ipformation, call 494-4514. • 'Great Caruso,' to be screened "The Great Ca ruso " starring M•rlo Lanza, will be screened Friday for senior citizens in Laguna Beac h, and frer-tickets are available at the Senior Citizens ' Club of Laguna Beach. The show. co-sponsored by the club and Laguna Federal • Savings and Loan, will be seen at ~ p.m . at the South Coast Theater . •Dance fitnesi program slated A dance fitness program utilizing jazz dance movements. stretches, steps and t ransi tion s chor~graphed to music 1a under w,ay in Laguna Beach.· Jazze rcise classes are open to all Lagunans through the city's recreation department. The fee is $3 per Class tor the first thnie sessions, ~ per class fort.he ~maining five. Call · 497-3311 for more information. •Tennis lessom offered Tennis skills a little rusty? Or do you Just want to take up the sport? The Laguna Beach R ecreation Department is offering tennis lessons beginning March 8. Fot registration information, call the department at 4974311. ' IRVlll I Dally Piiat TUESDAY, FEB. 16, 198'2 CAVALCADE STOCKS . TELEVISION 82 BS 86 Ann Landers gets down to the bare tacts in her c~litmn on P.age 82 today. ~ills, Agran opi}ose El To~o airport proposal ~f.11~~£!~~!~.fREEN s tation would be a gains t _jnterviewtoday. oflrvlne's Northwoodarea. n orth eaat 1or Irvine city In an interview. "Tt\ls thing , . . environmental case law. The memo recommends that boundaries. c 1 . • Two Irvine City Coun cil "Our own review indicates th e Ci t y Co un cil hire a The memo also r ecommends _Proposa) seems to have rune m e m b c r s f ~ r m ~ 1 1 Y that commercial use of El Toro con s ultant to exumin e the that a consultant examine what He explained that a Joint use lives: .Every time that It seems r~co mmcnded to~ay that the would lead to wides pread and reasibihty of commercial airline will happen in the long term lo proposal has been ;tdvanced by thttt 1~ s put to s leep, yo~ pick ~P city_ try lo kill all. prop~s~ls devas t a ting e nvironmental use of Camp Pendleton instead the aar station and the Marine t he Orange County Grand Jury, the paper and YO\I see at •&Ill!'· calhng for comme~~1al or JOl~t c r f e ct s in I rv In e and of El Toro. The consultant would Corps he licopte r facility in the Ornnu County Blue Ribbon We thank a good de~~nse wall -·useofEI Toro MarioeCorps Air s urrounding commun1"t1'e ·" th 3lso loo k · t d Tustjn Co mmittee and Southe rn alsobeagoodoffense Station s, e a g r o u n · me mo states. transportation to a commercial Sills said an an interview this Ca l 1forn1a Assoc1at1on of Agran said that it may cost In a rraemo r eleased this "Our conclusion is that the airport at Camp Pendleton. m 0 r n i n g t h a t t h e Governments. about $40,000 to implement the morning. David Sills and Larry case law in effect acts as a legal The memo also recommends recommendations contained in ~h e City Council has a recommendations contained in Agran call for City Attorney prohibition of establishing an air th al the proposed Foothi II the memo are intended to once resolution against commercial the memo. Roge r Grable to prepare a legal facility that would adversely Freeway, which Is to be located and . for all put an end to the use but we think we have to The full Irvine City Council is pos ition paper explaining why arrcct tens oflhousands of Irvine Pa r a 11 e I to t h e San la Ana proposal to locttte a commercial develop a more sophisticated to consider the m emo during a com m c r c ial use o f the air residents," Agran said in an Freeway, ~ aligned well north airport at El Tw:o, which is just and detailed position," Sills said public meeting next Tuesday. May~r Under pressure over Assembly .race By GLENN SCOTT Ot llM Dally~-Mall Irvi ne Mayor David Sills ack no wledged today he has received pressure to drop a irnssi ble c halle nge to s tale Assemblym an Nolan Frizzclle in the June 8 Republican primary election. But Sills said the pressure has come from pa rty le aders he considers already in Frizzelle's camp. so at won't influence has dec1s1on on whether lo seek the 69lh-Distncl sea~-------... - Perhaps the most powerful of the ca ll e r s ha s b..een Assemblyman Robert Naylor of Me n lo Park. who recently took ~ over as the Assembly minority pa rty leader . Naylor has called Sills twice asking him not to run. THERE'S A CATCH TO THIS Tht~ l \\osnm e ap1wan, to he '-lll'f fishing in solitude al \l_1~n lkue h Park R111 thl'l'C -\H•n· 1>e11y~-..,~s~ plent~· or other <rn$?1ers trying thC'a r lur k along the Orangt· Coast short'lan<.' clur1ng I he four-chi\ hollct.a~ \\ C'C'kl'nct Development meets timetable Supervisors ratify sessions on proposed south c9unty projects A t im etable for public hearings that will determine the development ruture of 12,500 south Orange County acres including the Irvine Company's pro po sed "golf village" in Laguna Canyon has been ratified by the county Board of Supervisors. The ~mbit1ous work schedule cover? a 14 m onth period , b eg 1nnt-0 ~ April 2 1 when supervisors are scheduled to co n s i der a devel o pm e nt proposal for the relatively small 118-acrc Santiago Ranch located north of El Toro The las t h ea rings on the development propos als arc scheduled for May 25. 1983. when the 1,250 acre Laguna Canyo n proJect. an'1 two other unrelated proposals. wil l face board consideration All of the hearings involved proposed a m endmchls to the land use element of the county's General Plan. the document designed to guide development in unancorooraled areas . Four of the proposals involve requests from the landowners invo l ved to fr ee th e ir undeveloped 1an'1s fr o m so-called agricultural preserve s tat"-" that has permitted tax benefits in return for keeping the lands 1n agricultural use Th e golf vtllage location is inclu<le<l on that list Following is a lasti ng of the 10 p ro posa ls covered b y the timetable and a brief description of wh at dl'vcloper s a r e considering Santiago Rane:h . 118 acres . Developers arc proposing 175 dwell ing units on 76 acres. 10 acres f o r <.'ommerc ial developmen\ and 30 acres as open spa~ \.... Sycamore decision discounted By STEVE MITCHEl..L Ot tit• Dally Pl191 SUH Laguna Beach Ci ty Manager Ke n Prank says an a ppeals court decision against the city on a housing plan for Sycamore Hills is the least of the city's proble ms. Late last week the state 4th District Court of Appeal in San Beroarwno reversed an earlier Superior Court rulin~ a~ainst a Lagunan who challenged the c 1 t y · s h o u s i n ~ c I e m c n t, regarding a proposal for 300 townhomes in Sycamore Halls. That citizen. John Gabnels. • c h arged the c i t y a nd the Baywoo<1 Uevelopme nt Compan y fa iled t o includ e provis ions ror affordah le hous ing for the project Frank said today the city has several options r egarding the l ates t set back . inc luding appealing the case to the state Supreme Court Shops aid widow in Irvine slaying .. Another <option I would be to simply process the tract m ap for the project again with our new hous ing element... frank said. adding he is leaning toward that option. He said the apP,.cals court reversal was based on the fact the city's housing clement "does n o t dis cuss m a nufactured housing. We did not have that in the plan~nd the judge said we have to include it." The simplest solution, he said. Shop owners and e mployees at Camino Plaza in Irvine have donated more than $400 to a fund for the widow and five children o f P edro Alfaro. the s lain "" Go-cart did . just that Somebody got o ff with a go-c art from the Golden Getaway in Irvine Monday. A worker for the recreational vehicle business at 40 Traveland told police Investigators the $1 ,500 go·cart apparently was driven from the sales yard late In the m orning, · ccordln& tQ a police report. The blue v.ehicle with a yellow stripe and a 10 horsepower engine ls operated by a key, but members of the sales at.aft said they didn't know ll the key bMI been left ln the vehicle before It was alleJed to have bet!n atolen, the report said. Win c h el l 's D o nut H o use would be to reprocess the tract employee. m ap, including discussion of Holly Ac kman. o wne r of affordable housing. lrvirae Eye Care, said the. trust But the city manager sa ys the. fund was set up Friday at Merit city faces an equally serious, if Savings & Loan. 5392 Walnut not m<Jfe serious problem ln the Ave .. Irvine 92714, for Rosalba Baywood project. Alfaro and her c hildren: The city and the developer Pedro Alfaro of Garden Grove have agreed to a land sale was shot and killed early whereby Baywood would pay Thursday in an appare nt Laguna Beach SS.4 million for62 robberr at the Winchell';' Donut acres of \he larger. 552-acre Shop in the plaza at the in-Sycamore Hills parcel. tersection of Walnut Avenue and Bay wood would con struct Jeffrey Road. Police said today near ly 300 townhouses on the they have litlle lo go on in the land. arid the SS.4 million would slaying case. • go a long way toward paying off Mrs . Ackman said ·that she -. the nearly $7 million mortgage hopes the public will contribute Laguna owes former ownerS of to the fund for Mrs Alfaro and the land. her family. Carol Cantagallo, director of advertising for Winchell's, said the company would be donalin1 to the trust fund and "helpina the family in many ways." She decltned to provide exact details of how the company would help the family. .. But the question now Is. will Baywood have the bucks to purchase the land.'' Frank said, a dding the economic climate ln the United States has put a crimp in the project. Earlier this month, the City Council put Baywood on notice that the company has defaulted on Its payment.a ror the land. Coto de Caza. 4.929 acres. localed ea!>l of M1ss1on VieJO an the Santa Ana Moun tains Developers arc proposing 5,347 ~nit s, plus commer c i a l , rec r eation and o p e n s pace areas. Ran(' ho M 1:.sion VieJo. Plano Trabu co. 3.705 acres located east of ~ission Viejo De".'e lopers are proposin g 14.752 units, and co mmercial , industrial, recreation and open spa ce uses Country Home Ran~h . 113 acres located north of El Toro Construction or 113 homes is proposed Mort ller rmann property. 73 acres north of El T oro Constrµction o r 480 residential units is proposcct Saba Saba property (Coal Can yon Stables l. 32 a cres located near the Coal Canyon Road offramp of the Riverside F reewa y Onh comme rcial development is proposed V P Baker property. 589 a c r es in t he El Toro a rea. Co mmercial . indus trial and open s pace areas are proposed. · Irvine Compan y golf village. 1.250 acres in Laguna Can yon n e ar El Toro a nd L ag un a Canyon roa d s Development of 3 .240 units s urrounding a golf course is proposed. a long w1th 20 acres of com mercaal use. Open space would total 422 acres. Original plans by the company called for 1.46.5 dwelling units. Rancho Mission Viejo. Talega portion, 896 acres east of San Clemente. Develo pers are proposing· 2,630 dwelling units along with co mmet'clal. industr\al. recreation and open s pace uses . -Irvine Company, We ir Canyon. 793 ac~s . Company Is proposing to l>lace the land In a "n a tural resources reserve" status. El Toro Marin es warn of "noise' Noise from aircrart using the M arlnes' El Toro Air Station will be much louder than usual Wednesday and Thursday as night crews simulate landings on aircraft carriers. The noise wlll increaser from l 1 :30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. both days -and also on Feb. 24 -as 41.ltcraft Cl y lowi!!r and wider patterns than normal, a base spokesman s aid, he said. • Sills, however. said he has received more encourllgeme~ t h a n dis couragement He te rmed Naylor and the others _allies of frUzelle who belong to the "prot ect-the-Incumbent" Club. Frizzelle predicted last week after Sills filed a notice of intent to run that the Irvine mayor would e n co unt e r dis couragement from party leaders who don't want a fi ght in the p rimaries. He s aid m ajor f,inancial donors who contributed large sums to get him elected wouldn·t look kindly at an intramural t ug-of-war that would drain.. campaign funds better saved to battle a Democratic nominee But Sills said t od ay his explo ratory efforts to gain support have been promising. li e s poke Saturda y to the L i n co ln Cl ub , a group o f establis hed Republicans. and "ther e were no questions aimed at trying to persuade m e not to run ... fle s:lid . Calling proposals to improve transportation systems a "very s ubs tanlLve iss ue" in the ~election. Sills said he also has PRESSURED lr v 1n e Mavor David Sills savs he's bee·n pressured 10 dr·op his challenge to Assl'mblyma n '.'lo Ian 'Prizzellt>. talked to leade rs of the Orange Co unty Tran s p ortatio n Coa lition. a g r ou p o f the county's lar gest e mpl-oyei-s intent on passing legislation t.O c r eate better freeways and transit systems . The coalition. with members s uc h a s the Flu or Corp .. Beckman Instruments and Pacifi c Mutual Life Insurance , has n 't comm itte d it self lo supporting a candidate in the race . he said. Sills added that he ~xpects to decide whether to enter the race early next m onth. The 69th District inc ludes Irvine. Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley and part of Huntington Beach. • Irvine scouts seek volunteers Boy Scouts in Irvine are seeking additional adults to se r ve as vo luntee r com missioners. Adults, who have served sco uting in the past . #{e u rge d to appl y for the position. A commissioner provides guidance to scout troops and cub packs. and maintains lia iso n b et w ee n the individual s couting unit and Orange County Council. There are 13 boy scout troo ps and 16 cub packs located in Irvine and the area is rapidly growing. Interes ted adults are as ked to contac t Jim Seman. district commissioner , al 759-5817 or 838-3574. •· Saddle back schedules forum The v i c timization of elderly persons will be the s ubjec t of a community f o rum at Saddleback College's North Campus in Irvine April 16 from 9 :30 a .m . to 12:30 p.m. The forum 'is open to the public and is sponsored by th e D e partm e nt of Gerontology and the Emeritus Institute. The progr am wi ll include speaker-S from the California Department 09'-Aging, the State Departmtnt of Social Services and other agencies involved in work with the elderly. For further Inform atlon on the forum ca ll the Department of Gerontology at 831;4835. • Irvine school• seekiRR aides The Irvine United School District is recru1t1ng persons to work from two to five hours a day as instructional aides. Tbe workers would be- hlred lnlllaJly as substitutes but would be moved Into permanent positions as openings occur, otflclals said. Salary is $3.50 an hour for subslilut.es and starts at $4.34 ·an hour for re1ular 1pots. No experience is needed'. but aides must meet the district 's basic sk ills proficiency requirement of htah school araduetu. 1nterested penon1 can call lhe "dlstrtet'• Peraoanel Department •t W..-0. . .. I ., q ' .l. . • ~ ............. ----~-------------~~---i)---.. ...... ,__~;_, -=-----I -... DRlllil CllBT Dilly Pilat TUESDAY, F EB. 16, 1982 CAVALCADE STOCKS TELEVISION B2 0'5 86 .. Ann Landers gets doum ·to the bare /acts in her column on Rage 82 0 0 Residents, firm face leasehold-dispute deadline By STEVt; M ARBLE Of tll• Dally ~I ... $'-ft Working unde r a l O·d ay deadline. residents of the tiny community of Newport Shores and Signal Landma rk remained locked lfl a dispute today over t h e v al ue o f land t hat homeowners now lease from the firm. • The West Newport residents, who have banded togethe r as the Committee of 400, complain that Signal is trying to sell off its • leasehold land at highly inflated prices. Residents have been given Political pressure on Sills By GLENN SCOTT Of'" 0.11, ~ ... '"'" until .,.eb. 28 to ma ke up their She maintain~ thut lhe value members s ay, is u .copy of the said retired engineer Richard miniis whether to purchase their of her lot is only 11 fruction of Committee of 4,000, a group Keith "I'm not going to make leased l~nd or wait until 1984 Signal"s asking price r e presen ti ng h o m eo wners any rai;h move!>" when the •leases come up for The catch. she i.'ll1d, Is that ir leasing lund in Newport and Keith ~;rnl Signal ha!. asked . readjustment. residents wait , they'll be hit with Irvine from the Irvine Company him to pay Sl31 ,200 for a lot There a r e 320 fa m ilies in high lease fees an 1984 Mrs Qua nn said the two valut•d at SlS,000 five years ago Newport Shores affected by the O f f1c1al s f rom Si g n u I , a groups a re in communication .. tt·~ dl'ur to me what Signal offer. rormcr oil company whic h has with each other but are not 1 i. t r y 1 n g t o do .·· Ke 1th J e nny Quinn . a S ho r es only once before offered to sell offlcially hnkcd ~uggl•Stl'd 'They want to make r e s 1 d e n t a nd comm 1 t t ee its land in the Shores. insist they With JO days left before the ~omt• !-.ale~ now to establish high mem ber · describes the situat ion w i 11 n o t negotiate with purchase offer expires, residents pra tes so that when the leases ~~-~er neighborhood as "a Catch homeowners or the committee. of Newport Shor es descr ibe tnmc up for reudJU!itmcnt. they !hey also said that the asking what they say a rc feelings of t·un p111nt to thc'H' as proof of the She said that Signal. which prices on the lots are jus t that panic and ungcr. But some said high valut· ·· valued her property at $25,500 and do not represent "a fair th ey h ave d eve lo p e d a ' 111 l !J8•1, le a seholders in fi ve years ago, now wants her lo m arkt!t value .. ·•wait-and-see" a ltitude. Nl'wport Shores will be a~ked lo ·_p_a_y_S_.~~-·l_OO~fo_r_t_h_c_l_o_t~~ ~~~~T~h_e~C~o~m~m~i~t~t~e~e~o~f ~4~0~0~·~~-··~1~·m~J~u=s~t~g~o~1~nag_t=o~s~it~b~a~ck~,~··~~pay 6 1~rcen1 of lhe fair market ' value of their rented property. "Signitl fi gures there 'll be a ft·w 1d1ots out there that buy the land ." Keith said. Newport Shores reside nts now arc paying a flat lea~e 'ee or $23 a month Shores res ide nt E dwa r d Rugel. who 1s being offered his ll'aHd litn d for $127 ,000, mCJmtams that the "truth will come out in 1984 " .. Surt• I'd like to buy my land now,'· Hugel sa id , "but I don't fct•l backed in a corner yet. If Signal doesn't want to negotiate now. they' It have to m 1984 " Members of the Committee or 400 said t hey hope to receive word by mad-week whether S1gnCJI •~ w1lhng to extend the onr: month purchase offer and meeJ with committee members In at~ offer , S11tnal has s aid at will provide 13 percent fin ancing for st·vc·n years with a JO percent clown 't>aymenl Tht• financing wo uJld be amortized over 30 ~·cars. Wit h a 20 percent down pay ment. Signal !>aid 1t •~ walling to provide fananr1ng a t 12 percent Res1denLc; willing to "ay all cash for CJ land purchase would Irvine Mayor Da vid Sills acknowledged tod ay he has received pressur e to drop a posse ble ch allen ge to s tate Assembl yman Nolan Fi;izzelle in the June 8 Re publican primary · l>e given a 5 percent reduction in the cost of lht· land election .. But Sills said the pressure has com e from party le aders he considers already in Frizzelle's camp. so it won't influence his decision on whether to seek the iith 0Jstrict seat. Perhaps the most powerful of t h e cal l e r s h as b~e n 'Assem~man -Reber.t N-a.yfor-oi:- Menlo Park. who recently took over as the Assembly minority party leader. Naylor has called Sills twice asking him not to run. he said. Sills. however . said he has received more encouragement t h a n di scou ragement He termed Naylor and the others all ies of Frizzellc who belong to t he "protect-the-Incumbent" Club Frizzelle predicted .last ~week a ft er Sill~ fl ied a notice of intent to run t hat the Irvine mayor wo u l d e n cou nt e r discou ragemen t from party leaders who clon·t want a fight in the primaries. He said m ajor fina ncial donors who contributed large sums to get him elected wo4ldn't look kindly at an intramural t u g-of.war tha t woutl1 drain cam paign funds better saved to battle a Oemocraltc nominee But Sills s a id t od ay his explor a to ry e fforts t o gain s upport have been promising. He s po k e Saturda y to the Li n coln Cl ub , a g r o up of established Republicans. and "there were nn questions aimed al t rying to persuade me not to run:· he said Calling proposals to improve tr ansportation systems a "very substant ive i ssue" in the election. Si lts said he also has talked to leaders of the Orange County Tr a n spo r t ati o n Coalition . a g ro up of the county's largest e mployers intent on passing legislation lo cr eat e bette r free ways THERE'S A CATCH TO THIS T his twosoml' appl'ars to ht• surf fishi n~ 1n ~ol1tt1rll' al .\Ibo Bt>aC'h P ark B11t lht•n• \\l'rt' , Oelty1'11M P-1i>Y CMrtH St.Ir• pll•nt~ of nt hN .m glt•r!'> tr.dnJ,! lhl'll' lul'k along thl' Or.111g1· Coa:-.t ~hon•l 11w during I Ht• four d<I\ holirla\ \\t'l'kt·111I Development meets timetabl~ Su per visors r atify sessions on proposed sout h county projects A t 1 m e t a b 1 e f Ol" • p u b I i c hear ings that will determine the development future of 12,500 south Orange County acres including the Irvine Company's propos ed .. golf village .. 1n Laguna Canyon has been ratified by lhe county Board of Supervisors · The ambitious wor k schedule covers a 14 -m o nt h period. begi nni ng April 2 1 whe n s uper visors are scheduled to con s ider a d eve l op m e n t proposal for the relatively small _ l 18·acre Santiago Ranch localed no rth of Et Toro. The last hearings on the dcvt>lo pmen,! propos als a r e schcdul<•d for M.a.L_Z.'l, 1983. when the 1.250 at·rl' Laguna Canyon pr<>Jl'Cl. anlt t \.\o olhn unrelated propos :.il s, ""ii I fare board con!->1derat1on All of lhl• hc•ar111gs involved pro11osl•d anwndmt•nts to lhc land use t'll•ml•nt nf the county'!. Gener al l'ICJn . t he document designed to guide devr:lopmcnt in unincoq.>orat<.'d an•as Four of tht> proposals involve requests from the landowners involved t o free their undevel oped lan d s f rom N-M teachers plan vote on pay off er By JODI CADENHEAD 01 tlle O•oly Pl"" St.I" Saying ··a s trike 1s not 1 mm inent.' · union leaders for the Newport·Mesa Federation of Teachers ha\•e ~cheduled a n election Wednesd ay for its 850 mem b ers to vote o n the district's "last. best a nd final" pay raise offer of 6 percent. The recommendation of th<' t hree member fa<.'t finding panel called for a 4 percent salary increase for teachers retroachv<' from July l and a 9 percent increase effective Feb l for an annual pay raise of 6 5 percent. The union 1s S<'e king a 9 percent rai s e , but representatives said they would be willing to accept 6.5 percent. '>ll·C ailed agricultural preserve status that has permitted tax benefits in return for keeping thl' land~ in agricultural use T he golf village location iii 1nt"lt1dt•d on that list Following 1s a lis ting of th<.• JO propo!-.al ~ covered b y t h e t1mt•table .ind a brief description of \.\h at deve loper s a r e con~1denng. Santiago Ranch, 118 acres rh'vl'loper~ are proposing 175 d\.\t•tl1ng units on 76 acres ; 10 acr('S f or co mmercial <levl'lopment and 30 acres as opl•n space. Goto d<' Caza. 4,929 acres, locatl'cl c•ast of Mission Viejo in the Santa Ana Mountains D<'vclopcrc; arl' propos ing 5.347 unit s. plus commercial . r e<' r c· at 1 on u n d open space <lrl'H!-o Hane ho YI 1ss1on V1eJO. P lano Trubuco, 3.705 acr~s located east of Mission V1e10 • Ch a mbe r sla tes city breakfast Union leader Bill Cue said today that the union's executive board is scheduled to meet today to vote whether to recommend that its members either accept or reject the Newpor t -Mesa Unified School 01stract's offer. The rlistnct's offer made last week called for a 4 percent raise ret roactive from J uly I and an 8 percent increase retroactive from Feb I. for an annual pay raise of 6 µ<'rcent Ar son probe d in C o sta Mesa club blaze Ne wpo rt B e a c h c ity council me mbers and key city employees are expected to attend a "meet your city offic ials" breakfast Friday at the Registry Hotel. The 7:30 a .m. session is beinjC s pons ore d by the N e w p o r l Ha r b o r A r e'a Ch amber o f Com m erce. T ickets a re SIO To make reservations. call 644 ·821 1 The breakfast, ironically, is lo be held in the hotel's Costa Mesa Room. • N B stude nts make deall's list Eight Ne wport Beach residents were placed on lut s emester's dean's honor list at C al State Fullt!rton, achieving al least a 3.5 grade POint average. They are: Michael A. Albin, E rle C. Boss, Leslie A. H o rne, Gre1ory E. Kniesel, Brlaa K. Maravlch, Lisa C. P rice, Keltlil J. Sc:bnelder and Laura Wright. •Li~ Club li•t•donations The Costa Mesa Newport Harbor Lions Club has contributed more than $56 ,000 to various charities wlih proceeds from the annual Fish Fry. Some of the organiuUorw receiving donations recently Include: The 8o)IS Club of tbe Harbor Area. Girls Club of the Harbor Area , Orange Coast College Schola rships, YMCA and Hi Hopes . Others included the Costa Mesa Jrs. WofQens Club, So. California Association ror Blind Athletes, Estancia . Girls Basketball, Costa Mes a Westemett.s, YSP, Lionettes • Club and Y's Men Club. The Newport Mesa Federation of Teachers wall meet Wednesday at 3·30 p.m at Estancia I hgh School an Costa Mesa to vote either to accept or reject lhe district's offer oC..Jast week. ·'I would nol say that a strike is immi nen t ," Cue s aid, "because I'm not'·sure which way the teachers will vote." At a meeting last Wednesday attended by about 22 teachers on the union's building committee, the consensus was to accept the dis trict's offer . said Cue. If teachers reject the district' offer then "job action" would be ta ken by the union members, he said. In addition to the vote on the distr ict 's offer, teache rs will also be as ked Wednesday to consider a resolution demanding that the district complete salury negot iations fo r 1982·83 by ne xt September. R e presentati ves fro m the. district and the teachers' union turned to a Cact·findlng panel after teachers las t November rejected the district's 6 percent pay offer. Service s held for Newpor~'s -Marloe Glatts Private services have been h e ld for longtim e Newpor t Beach resident and civic activist M arloe H. GI alts . who died Fe b 4. Mrs. Glatts moved to Newport in the early 1940s and served as a volunteer nurse at the Santa Ana Army Ai r Base during World War II. She had been a member of the Assistance League of Newport Beach s ince 1952. She is survived by sons Ronald Othmer of Orange and Richa.rd Othmer or Corona del Mar. She also leaves a sister, Barbara Speaker or San Francisco. The famil y has urged memorial contrlbutions be di r e oied t o the A'slstance League's dental care program. I Arson inves tigators s1£ted through the blackened rubble or a Costa Mesa nightclub today searching for clues to determine the cause of a fire that gutted the Oeja Vu Monday morning. Police Lt. John Calnon said officer s are investigating the fi re thut broke o ut in th e nightclub at 2285 Newport Blvd. at 9 · 15 a m. as arson. Calnon said police are seeking a m an In his early 30s seen running fr om t he on e·story n ightclub mome nts a fte r the bl ale occ ur red . li e w as d escribed by witnesses a s hav ing m e d ium height and build, dark hair and wearing a plaid shirt. D a m age lo the c lub was estimated at $190.000. according to fi re officials. Administrative Batta hon Chief J im Richey sai<t burn patterns si mil a r to th ose l e ft b y fla mmable liquid were found In the carpet near th~ exit of the building. H o weve r , no container or fl ammdble liquid was found at the 11cenc. said 'Richey. • • P. R 0 M 0 TE D :'\ c \\ µ o r t police sergeant Jim CLJr:,on ha!-> bet'n promotl'cl to the rank of lit'utcnant ELEVATED Offic<>r Ernest · · Oob· · H arr i!'to n i!'t th e n<.•west Sl'q ?ea n t o n th e Newport police fo1 t'l' Two N e wport police m e n promote d Ten.year veteran J im Canon "as been promoted from sergeant to lieutenant of the Newpo rt B e a c h Police Department. and Officer Ernest •·Bob'' Harrison was made sergeant. Lieutenant Carson becomes w a tch commande r of the midnight lo 8 a.m . shift and Sergeant Harrison moves up to the post or field supervisor for the patrol division. according to Police Chief Charles Gross. Carson, who holds a master's degree in public administration from the Universi\y of Southern California. has been sergeant since 1976. A member of the dtp~rtmenl's hos uge neaotlatioa t eam , Harrllon be1ao with the department slx years a10. 1 ' • • • Ylll 11111111 llllY PAPER TUESDAY FE:BHUAB Y lti l'IH.' OH ANGE COUN r Y l. Al II OH NIA 15 CENl c.; Landing aid .'not in service' for AirCal jet By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL oftwOally .......... A navigational aid used by pilots in landing unde r adverse weather conditions was not in service Monday night when an Ai r Cal j e tl i n e r clippe d a lightning arrestor wir e near Ont ario Internationa l Airport. forcing a n emergency landing 30 minutes later without brakes in Los Angeles. James Holtsclaw, chief of the F ede ral Aviation Administra- tion's facility in Ontario. con- firmed that the ··glide slope" de- v i ce a t t h e ai rp o rt that assists pilots in m aintaining correct altitudes on landing a pproaches bas been out of service for about two weeks. H o l tsc law , ci tin g an investigation being conducted by t he National Tr a ,.,.;port ation Mental patient surrenders in. Santa Ana E scaped mental patient Roger Dale Stockham . who had eluded capture f or four m o nths, s ur rendered Mo nd ay to a television news crew and law e nforcement officials m Santa Ana. Stockham , 34. who had been descr ibed by authorities as "extre mely d11ngerous," showed up at the San p. Ana offi ce of the Qra n ge C u n t y S h e r i ff 's Department after spending five days negotiatir:ig with offi<.'lals on the te rms <Jf his s ur render, s aid Sgt. Bob Casey of the Santa Barbara Sheriff's Department. Casey, who was the primary l a w e n fo r cem e nt o ffi cial involved in t he negotiations with Stockham, told The Associated P ress that the news team al KN BC te levision station in Los Angeles first contacted him on F e b 10 a bout S t ockha m 's whereabouts. Stockham, who has a varied criminal record, esca e,ed from Patton State Hos~in San Bernardino on Oct. '14. A convert to Islam. Stockham came to the public's attention in 1979 wben he took his son from a Santa Bar bara area foster hom e, new to Los Angeles in a rented plane a nd tried lo hijack a jet to Iran. Wh e n t h e d e m a nd was r efused, he took off in t he rented plane, but crashlanded on the Palos Verdes penins ula Mary Schmit z • • While free on bail on a charge of child stealing, Stockh am was arrested in connection with fires set at several Union Oil storage tanks at Point Conception. He was convicted of felony child stealing, but at his a rson trial, he was found legally insane and sentenced to Patton in February 1980. . The ~cret Service had also b een keep i n g t abs o n the escaped mental patient because of an attempt in 1980 to send a t hr eaj e n i n g le t ter t o the n-President J im my Carter. '"On Feb. 11, Stockham called me twice and we discussed the matter or his surrender , .. Casey said. "He did not wa nt to be housed in Los Angeles County jail and wanted to stay in the San la Barbara County j a il." '"We struck a bargain ... Casey said, "that he would be at the Or11 nge Coun ty s h e riff's department in Sa nta Ana at 12:30 p.m . and that I would br in g h i m back· to Santa Barba ra," Casey said. S t ockha m s urre nde red to she riff's officers in the company of his third wife. sei~anne. whom he reportedly married at the beginning of the year. and Pete Noyes. e xecutive e ditor at KNBC. Casey sa id that Stoekham had been staying at a residence in La guna Beach. Sa fe t y Board, decline d to speculate on w h e th er a n operational glide s lope would have prevented the inc 1dent A f ter s tr1k1ng t he s m all diameter li&htn1n g a rrestor wire -str ung between h igh-tension line transmission standlirds 250 feet tall the pilot or flight 754 carrying 122 people canceled his land1}lg at Ontario and flew on to Los Angeles International where an emergency la nding was made. Neither landing gear brakes nor thrust reversers in the Boeing 737's two jets operated when the Jetliner touched down al LAX. The plline traveled the length of a 12,000 foot runway. then veered to the right, coming to rest in a dirt emba nkment. None of the passengers was ... 1n1ured. The pilot chose to la nd at LAX beC'ause of better l a nding 1nstru menta t1 o n a nd longe r runways than On tar io, said Ma r k Peterson, a spokesman for Newport Beach-based AirCal. Petel'l\on said the night crew had no knowledge in advance of the LAX landing tha t braking systems. activated by hydrauJic systems . would not ope rate. Emer gen cy equ ipment was ROU OH L ANDING A Los Angeles Internationa l Airport official exam ines thl' la nding gear of an A1rCal 737 th a t s lid off a r unway and into u s andy embankmen t during an unscheduled la nding at tht• a irport Monday night. The p lane reportedly !\truck Al'W ....... overhead wires o n its original· .ip proach to Ont ario Air port. w hich rrra~· h<1ve been responsible for its loss of brnkes an<t P'l''l'I' revt·r~al equ1pmt·nt Noll' d<tma~t· to tht• en ~inl' cowling No one \\as rt•pc>rt<'d in.111n•d in the mishap They worked Jor Lisa s ummoned to the runway strictly as a precaution since the pilot had reported s triking an object near Ontario, Peten.on said . Th e wire struck by t h e aircraft was ·located abQut fo~r miles east of Ontario Airport. Holtsclaw said under a normal approach pattern, a jet would bt! about 750 feel aJ>ove the ground whe n crossing the standards which support Imes carrying 250,000 volt!>. After striking the wire. the ·p i lo t , wbo h ad not been idenlirwd. decided to canceJ h1:. landing at Ontario, Peterson said But before regaining altitude. a length of the lightning arr<.'Stor wire, esl1mated Lo be 100 to 150 feet in length . contacted a 500 ,000-voll hnc locatl'd 1,000 feet lo the west, said Ooh II ull. a spo k esman fo r Southern Ca lifornia Edison Company , ow n er of Lhe trans m1 :.sion facilities · The l1ghtn1ng arrestor wire later fell from the plane to the roof o f a n Ontario area M ervyn·s depart ment stores warehouse. he sa id Crews repaired the line this morning One p a sse nger . Jam es Hashny, of Oakland . where the plane stopped en route from Seattle to Ontario. said he sa"' ""what appeared to be a rtash of light or sparks'" when the power Imes were slru(:k SC E Said there was no st>rv1l·e disruption to customers The FAA said there was a -300-foot c"eihng of cJouds 11nd visibility was about I 5 miles when the hn~ was struck b) the aircraft about 9 p m Ordeal ahead for k in of legionnaire By J E F F ADLE R Oft ... Delly l'li.t S~" Judy Lee's voice cr acks with e m otion as s h e desc ribes Monday's memorial service m Costa Mesa for Randy. her 20-year old son who died in Africa a reluctanl member of t he French Foreign Legion ""My son is with the Lord. they can't hurt him any longer.'· Mrs Lee says. JOIDS s p o u se Restaurant employees, aid injured sky diver with fundraiser But the ordeal and all or 1b a ngu1S'h will not be over for Mrs Lee, her 11-year-old daughter Michelle and other family members until Randy's body 1s returned for burial in the t'n1ted S t ates b y th e F'r l'n c h government. as c andida t e • Apparently guided by the old rul e o f t h u mb th at t wo candidates are better than one, J ohn and Mary Schmitz. both Corona del Mar Republicans, began the filing process Monday as candidates for U.S. Congress. While state Sen. J ohn Schmitz plunked down a Sl ,213.25 filing fee r equi red of U .S Senate hope ful s, his wire . Ma ry, initiated lhe filing procedure fo r the 43rd District seat in the House of Representati ves. The 43rd dis trict inc ludes Capistrano Be ach. Dana Point, El To ro, Mission Viejo, San Clemente, San J uan Capistrano. Traburo, Ortega, Silvera do and a handful of precincts in South Laguna. Dally,1'1 ... ,..., ~ Thcv traded spatulas. aprons and hu~ travs for scrub brullhes . hoses <tnd . c hamois doth at Salurday·s ear wash behind the Big Yello"' House restaurant tn Costa Mesa T he occas ion was to r aise money for one or their own waitress Lisa Doyer , who was U,)jurcd earlier this month when h"er parachute failed to open d uring a 12.SOO·f'>Ot fall Lisa continues lo recover al Lorn a Linda University M.edical Center where she was taken after her miraculous survival from a sky diving accident Feb. 3 And while Med1Cal will pay for a part of her hospital bills. fri<'ntb and fellow employees at th(• (.'osta Mesa res taurant held a fund rais ing c ar wa s h Saturd<i~ to defray medical costs ··we raised more than ~ ... sa id Ron Booth, manager of the Big Yellow House '"We h11d to quit at 3 p m. becau~ we had lo open for work .. lie said a steady stream of cars. tr ucks. vans and even mobile homes arrived in the rear parking lot m a n y brought in by people who had read news accounts of the 20 y~ar-old sky di ver 's plight. "Some people paid more 1than the S2 50 charge) to have their cars washed," Booth said. "A l~t of PL'<lple paid double a nd tripil' the amount, JUSt to help Lis a <>ut ' L1 sa·s pa r ac h ute m alfunctmned during her !'>4th jump, a nd her r eser ve chute onl y p a rtially o p e ned She la nded in a sludge pond at a sewa~e t~atment pla nt near P e r ris Airpor t a nq s uffered com pressed vertebr ae a n d inte rnal injuries. But the efforts of her friends, and com plete st rangers. will ease the financial burd~n of her accident. Booth said. And how d id th e po pula r patient react to the succe:1sful car wash?. "She was really t hrilled ," Booth sajd '"Just tickled .. El ectio n o ff icia l s say candidates for the U.S. Hol.lse of Representatives do not have to l ive i n t hat d istric t. Mrs . Schmitz lives in Corona del Mar with her family. BOTH RUNNING State Sen . John Schmitz a nd his wife. Marv both filed as can didates for Con gress todav. Sch m itz 1s in the Sena it race. while his wife is ca m paig ning for a House seat. R eagan assures Begin of help The Schmitzes, according to offi tials in the Orange County Registra r of Vot e r s Office, visited the office separately. Says the U.S. is committed to Israeli security The political couple, however, were not the only ones to take advantage of the opening day of the candidates' filing period in Orange County. A handful of candid ates s eeking elective office a ls o began t he filing pro ce ss Monday t h at wi ll culminate in the Nov. 2 general electi3n. Other candidates who took out filing papers 'Monday were: Paul Carpenter of Cy press, a De mocrat seeking nom ination fo r the U.S. Senate; Incumbent U.S._ Re p . R ob ert Badham, R-Newpor t Beac h seekin g <See sCllMrn, Pa1e A2) W ASH I NGTON (AP > - P r esident R eagan a ssured Prime Mi nister Me n achem Beg in tod ay t h at I s r ae l "remains America's friend and a lly." and said the United States is committed to assuring that t h e J ewis h state e njoys a militar y adva ntage In th e Middle East. ·'I am determined to see that I s r ae l 's qu a li ta ti ve technological edge Is maintained and am mindful -as well of your con ce rns with r es p ect to qua ntitative factors a nd their Impact upon Israel's security," Reagan said in a letter to Begin. The prt:sident. addressing. a crucial concern of Israel's, said ... . .. Fraud case suspect bailed out 8J DAVlDICUTZMANN Ce n tral O r anae Co unty When he was arrested last o1 .. ....,,....._. Municipal Court J udie Bobby week by Orange County Sheriff's · The president of Golden Ealle Youngblood lower e d Ralph Department investlgators who lnvettment Co., s us pected of McDonald's bail to '250,000 raided his El Toro office, 1windllng m or e t ha.n 1 000 Mo nday as m ore tha n 50 Mc Donald was alleged to ha ve lnvH tors out of their savhigs, investors who support McDonald m aslermiQded the largest fraud waa a free ma n aa•ln today clapped and cheered. ln Orange County history. More fotlowin1 an unus u al holiday He posted the lowered ball tha n $800,QOO ln cash wu seized court bearina to reduce his '2 Monday night and was released In th~ raid. million bail. rrom Oranae County J ail, <Se~ BAIL, Pace AU (\ -. . the United States has not made any new arms deal with Jordan. Defense Secr e t a r y Cas p a r Weinberger last week proposed t he sale of mobile Hawk missiles a nd F-16 fighte rs to Jordan. Begin responded with a letter to Reagan, being delivered today b y I s r ae l 's n e w a m bassador to Wash ington , wa rning that a ny U.S. a rms sale to.,Jordan could pose "one of lhe gravest potential dangers we ha ve faced ever s ince the rene wal of our state hood." S imil a r con ce rn s w e r e expressed by the Is rae li Knesset, or parliament. In his letter to the Is raeli leader , Reagan said: "The re has been no change regardin1 our military supply relationship with Jordan, and Sec r etary Weinberger brought me no new request "Any decision on future sales to Jordan or any other country in the resion wlll be made In the context of my adminlatraUon's tlrm commit ment to lsrael's security and the need to bring p eaca to the region," Re agan \vtole. Reaga n's letter aaid recent press report& "hive presented 1 incorrect a nd exaggerated commentary regard ing U.S. milit ary assista nce policies for the Middle East." T he letter did not m ention We in berger's pro posal, or Secreta ry of State Alexander M. Ha ig Jr.'s·reported objections to. such a sale. Abscam s olon given 3 .yea rs UNIONDALE. N.Y. <AP> - Se n Harrison A. Williams Jr .. the hJg hest ·rankjng public official caught in the Abscam p o liti c a l co rr u p tio n ln»11tstlgation .• was sentenced today to threi! years In prison and tine d $50,000 f on hJs brlbery.consplracy crime. T h e f i n e aga i n s t t h e 62-year -old Williama, a New J ersey De moc rat who fa ces debate in the Senate betiMtnJ F eb. 23 over his pouible expuJsion , was t he hlaheat meted ln Abscam sent,ncea. U .s. District Jud•e Georse C. Prau stayed impotlt.loo ol the sentente pendln1 a ppeal. "He will be buried 1n the United Slates of America. not on any foreign soil." Mrs I.cc says, her dete rmination showing 1n spite of her grief '"Thal IS the way 1t is going lo be · The Costa Mesa woman adds s tie will remain strong until the t ussle over her son's body is completed because "he deserves t he dignity of being buried at hom e ."' She points out that m a letter lo his younger s ister which arrived three days before news of his death. he wrote that "his heart came back to Costa Mesa" while he was imprisoned. Mrs. Lee says. Lee died Feb. 3 in <t pla ne crash in Djibouti. Africa. along with 30 other F rench f"ore1gn Legion paratroopers The Frendl gove rnment has indicated it will take between fo ur and six m onths to return Lee's remain s b eea u se he enlis ted in the legion using the name "Lawrence Leon " T he Costa Mesa m a n had e nlisted in the Legion while v1s1tmg Pans m order to forget a fai led romance and because recruiters had held out the CSee ORDEAi~. P age A2> ORAIHil COAST WIATHIR t:honce of measura ble rain near zero tonight and We dnesday . F a ir and w a r m e·r Wed n es d a y Ton ight's lows 45 to 55 Wednesday's hig hs 68 to 75. (Details Page AJ). 111101 TODAY The "nc.woter girl" returns to /1lms L.ongllme tnov1e glamour queen L.ano Turner will.appcor in a guest role on TV'• "/i'alcon Crest " P.age CJO 11111 ,,,.. . ._. ., L.M...... M . ....._ .... ~ AS c...... at C ..... ,._ CM c-lt• C4 C,.....,..,. C4 ._...fMk .. M ......... ... .............. ...., 4 ... l""9 •• ........ tMIMI ., AM Lc...-n at ...... ...1 .. .---. ... ...... '"'* .. ~:CJ ...... Cl.S MK•.._.... U • T .... ..._ 94 "....... ...., ---.u .......... M ... ' N DoW JOiies ·final OFF 2.47- CLOSING 831 .33 ~\\\ •"'\ Auto makers' sale decline NATION ~------- Tht• f1vt· m.iJor' ll. automakers r~orted a 7 p('t tf'lll s;1h•t-detltrw in the first 10 days of February from tht• hk1· rwn1><l a year ago Total car sales from l"l'li I 10 v.t·11· 112 273, rompared with 136,034 in early "'t•hruur~ W81 Tiu:-. r;rnk ... as the worst sales showing 111 the· =-••mi· 1wno<l Mnce 1961. .. l Jn1trcl Auto Worke rs President Douglas t<•raser satd lhut•" •• good ch::incc f''ord Motot Co workers \\ill nitah a l1;nt;1t1ve contracl designed to cut labor t'O">t :-. .111<.1 .,,1-.1 lhc>usands of Jobs. Anolhe.r UAW off1l'wl S1•1•rt>tJ1' Treasurer Ray Majerus, said the union 111a ~ 11pm1 t·onlract tulks with American Motors C'orp now that the union has finished negotiations \\ ll h 1"01 d '\nwriu rh l>J)t'nl SI 4 billion more than normal to k<'t'I' wu1 m 111 .lanuury, ·a ccording to the go\ l'r unwnr ... CcntN fur Environmental Assessment S1·1'1r1•s Ttw .. tuct-. Jh.o attributed m ore than 300 deaths to la:-.t numth s sevt•ri· weather, with ··many of I h<· fal<d1ttt•., thl' result or exposure to cold. genl·ralh 111 hnmt•' without heat or in s talled cars .. Caltfo1 nra 11ot 1>1~mf1l·..1111l r affel'led by the snow. had 11' "" n l111d we· al h<·r in January. with rainstorms and mi..cblHk' <'Ju:-.111~ an cstimated $150 million 1n 1:!:'1 m :lJ!l'~ lo r. 01'10 hc1nH:'!> and businesses l·.x>con C'o. (.; S.A. plan., l/) encourage its de:iier• Jll l'li11e111x tr> offer a discount ·to motorists who pay c·.ao.;h !or gasohnt• and diesel ruel. Participating i;, x 1111 d(o,11,·r-. in Ph11e111x will 1n11lale lhe program thJ l hcg1ni. lht~ \\c'l.'k Stiff ~,_-~_::>_ .......... _-_""".,..._·-_ _. Western '\irlinl'S h..is introduced a low coach fare of S129 l'J<:h \\a~ for travel between Los Angeles, San D iego or San Fr:tn('1sco and Washington, D.C .. o n a r11und trap lt('kct The $258 rcnmd trip fare is effective \\'l•dne~da' lhrough ~foy :u P acific Ga-. etnd F.ltctric has pos tponed 111dcfu11tdv tts plan<> to build a SS billion, coal-fi red pow<'r pl:•nt nc•ar· Colhnsv1lle in Solano County PG&E fir 'l proµo!>t'cl building the Collinsville plant in the muJ 1~70, saying 1t would be completed by 1993 Analysts believe price declines, spurred in part LI\ t h1.· rcct'M•ion. ma~ continue even beyond the t•t•onomH· 11pt11rn Among the price drops in C1Jltforn11-.1 11re a11'lane fares. gas prices a nd home ' IARNINGS ~....._ ___ ..... ~ Tran,inra Exploration Corp. of Newport Beach reported u nc>t loss or $1 6 million, or 30 cents a share, 011 rl'\'Pnu1·o.; uf SJ 7 million for the fiscal year ended Oc t :ll Tllllo. <.•om pares with nel income or $1 million. or W <'l'llh, 011 revenue!. of $4.7 million for the like pPriod in 1!)!«1 National Gypsum Co. of Dallas rt•\'l!'>l'd 11p\\Jrd 1981 l'ctrnin~s by $6.4 million. or 40 n•nls a sh.in· T he 1981 net earnings were revised to S:JI! 8 mill111n or S2 <11 a share, from $32.4 million. or S2 01 Earn1n~s fur 191:10 were $60.7 million, or SJ Hf\ llallas hao.;ed l>ocutel .Corp. reported an In<'• •·a~c of II! pl't tent in nct income for l~e year l'nclc·d D1·1 31 . to Si m1lhon, or $1 69 a share. from $·1 7 m1lli1m . or SI 39 in 1980. Revenues rose lo S77 mtllton. u i~ percent improvement from SSJ.3 million lht• pre\'IOUS V(';JI STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT UPS AND DOWNS AMERICAN LEADERS METALS N EW YORK (it.Pl m•t&I orkH 100.y C•llll•• l •·tl etnl\ • pound, U $ O.J""•llons Lead ~tents• _,,,.,_ IJ..e U '•"" • -.nd. oe11~recr Tl~ "IWn Mel•IS Week c-11• Ill A .. m..._ , .. ,, unit• OOU"CI. H Y Mer<WY WS.00 oer 1••~11. l'l•t""'-n ui._oo lroy 01 H V SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS .,, .... _ .. _.....,, SelK led wotld 901c1 orKn tocln L.-..: MOrftln9 fl•ln9 W• U ........,., •---ll•lf>oWS.U ..... ., pn, "· ,,, • .,...: '318,02. btk~: LA'-11•1"9 U14 00, S.111 ,GO ••It.cl MetUly a M-; (Ofll't fflly ~) U7~U .__., CtnlYNlf\' ~) UtU•, -~· ·~'' dollly ....,..) fWI< .... "194.01