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Page 10 text:
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SCPOC BMCS CRIGSBY SENIOR CHIEF PETTY OFFICER OF THE COMMAND MAA FORCE lL to R1 CHIEF MASTER AT ARMS MA1 TREINEN, GMGz SHELEKIS, BM2 CRODESKA, SGT MORROUGH, VBM1 BELL, BM2 ROBLEDO, OS1 GUMZ, CPL BOATMAN, SM2 WARD, CPL IACKSON, CPL HENDRICKSON
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Page 9 text:
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..., D- -.a..--,,...,- ,,... .,..,. f 1-.-F -.-ff v. -v-1 EXECUTIVE OFFICER Lieutenant Commander William D. Morris was born and raised in Louisville, Kentucky. He graduated from Bellarmine College and received his commission as an Ensign in 1967 through the OCS proram. Initial assignment was in USS BOXER ILPI-I 41 as a Deck Officer. Subsequent assignments include USS EL PASO ILKA-1171 Pre commissioning detail as Boat Group Commander, a tour of Recruiting at Naval Recruiting District, Columbus Ohio, Operations Officer in the fleet oiler USS CANISTEO IAO 99j, a brief tour in USS MONIESTER IFF 1097j, Chief Engineer in USS TOWERS IDDG 91. His most recent tour was at the Armed Forces Staff College in Norfolk, Virginia.
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Page 11 text:
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.TQ IS I r 11 , .. X -4 . P lun if an-ay ,a nl 3 'JE nf. Shan' t. ' 495513--2 ., gf, ,n .n'pf ,, - Putting San Dlego's economy i.iJ?1V1'Nt'L 'i ' this -si 1?-f :m ate . . . in perspective for you f5ectlon Xj S011 Di090. C0lil0rni8 25 Cents 5Parts - 128 Pages '15-. we 1' END OF THE LINE - Chargers' quarterback game. San Diego's dream of reaching the Super Dan FouLs is sacked by Oakland Raider defensive Bowl ended in a 34-27 defeat to Oakland fSports end Willie Jones during yesterday's AFC title coverage starts on D-ll. - Dan Tichonchuk photo G d sses fans in Charger blues By JEFF RISTINE city throughout the game provided a lousy game, said one dejected nmncsmwnm No newspaper could print it, no camera could televise it, no radio station could broadcast it. Nothing could capture the deep, pervasive gloom Charger fans car- ried along with their limp pompons and pennants as they filed out of San Diego .lack Murphy Stadium yester- day. Their beloved' Chargers had fallen, vanquished 34-27 by the hated Oak- land Raiders. The dark clouds that hung over the fitting, if unwanted, complement, A few raindrops were falling only minutes after the Raiders shattered the Chargers' Super Bowl hopes. They could have been tears. That was a heartbreaker, wasn't it ' said one woman wearing the uni- form of the afternoon. a blue-and- yellow T-shirt. I should have gave my ticket away, I should have gave my ticket away, exclaimed another pony- tailed fan, stomping away in anger I think the Chargers played a viewer as he stared out onto an empty field. Spell lousy with a capi- tal L. Beaten on the playing field, not all the fans were beaten so badly in spir- tt. Robert Rich of Hillcrest was stick- ing by his souvenir stand a full 45 minutes after the final play. The real faithful ones are still buying, he noted. The Raiders' hats really picked up toward the end. At the beginning of the game, they were sort of sneak- ing them in under their shirts. t'I love the Chargers, said Jim Lu ury car sales in high gear By MARTIN GERCHEN rniauus Busmexs wma While most Americans fretted about the recession last year, an increasing number of San Diegans plunked down lens of thousands of dollars in cash to buy exotic foreign sports cars. The Italian-made Ferrari - with an average price last year of 553,000 up from 543,000 in 1979 - posted an increase in sales of 35 percent over 1979, says David Rose, owner of Ferrari of San Diego. Lotus, made in England, sells for between 836,000 and 841,000 and sold better here last year than it did in 1979. says' Tom White, general manager of Automobile Mews. His 1980 sales were up 50 percent over the previous year, he said in an interview. And a Mercedes-Benz dealer said, lf there is one re- cession-proof business, it is selling luxury foreign cars. Most of the Ferrari and Lotus sales were for cash, said the men who run the dealerships. This transpired here during a year which saw Detroit post its worst sales record since 1961. . Sales of domestic new cars plunged 20.2 percent from 1979 to 6.5 million vehicles, compared with 8.2 millionin 1979. Six San Diego dealerships which sold U.S. cars closed their doors last year. At the same time, imports took an unprecedented 26.5 percent of the total U.S auto market. Their share in California at one point was up to 55 percent before falling back to about 28 percent. Behind the sales figures for slinky, expensive foreign cars here is the fact that about 40 percent of the U.S. population is insulated from inflation, economists have said. This group consists of single persons, married couplm with two paychecks, and, obviously, very well-off people like doctors and those who own businesses. While the average Ferrari sold here last year for 553000, some models went for as much as 8120,000, said Rose. He declined to say how many S120,000 models were sold here, explaining that the Italian automaker is sensi- tive to such publicity. And after posting a 35 percent increase in sales last year, Rose says 1981 seems to be registering an uptum in business. It takes about a month for us to close a deal because there are a lot of variables, but judging from the number of orders in the hopper, I would say there has been an- upturn so far this year. Ferraris have no options. They come with full leather interiors, electric windows, air conditioning and every- thing else you'd expect to find on a car costing around 553,000 One question Rose does not get concerns gas mileage, My customers really don't care about that. But some do want to make sure the car can go 300 to 400 miles at a stretch. See CARS A-4 'AI road open' in talks, Iran s ys From Till!! Win Servant The speaker of Iran's Parliament said today Hall roads are open to settling the hostage problem, and that he expects approval of two emergency bills intended to solve the crisis by Friday - four days before the inauguration of Ronald Reagan, who has warned he will conduct talks with a clean slate. In another action that could indi- cate progress, the prime ministers office today advised Iranian minis- tries. firms and individuals with cluims against the United States 4 r submit documents it substantiate :hir 'Vim' ffl .e 'I 1'- fi'nerrf 'ciaims comrrnttce wrvnin .50 days, according to the official Pars news agency. Parliament Speaker Hashemi Raf- sanjani told a news conference in Tehran, There is nothing important in these bills that would necessitate a no vote, However, it depends on the discussion and the elaborations in the Majlis tomorrow. Asked whether approval of the bills would lead to the release of the hostages by Friday, he said, I can't predict when the hostages will be re- leased but we have opened all roads for settling the hostage problem They will be released if our rights are met. Iranian Prime Minister Moham- mad Ali Rajar also hinted of a hos- tage release. saying in a state radio broadcast, According to available information, the issue is making ,J , .5 Mrsruicnem BEGIN . New Israeli elections urged progress, We are trying to approach it logically and doing our best to as Begin loses political edge ' , maintain the main line rn our rela- V gggonniggosggiggrfxzl., glstiggsgs tions with American imperialism. JERUSALEM tUPIl -- Israeli Rafi leader Yigal Hurvitz resigned eral-admission seats. At any rate, as long as we consid- Prime Minister Menachem Begin's as finance minister at yesterdays I ...rne Chargers were worth it! gee H057-,1GE5',1.l2 mgjorrtyd rn parflrgment collatpslad ilabinettsessiion,'paving,dthe tnay ' N be 46 to ay an most o egrns own a 1- t eu par ys ecrsion I ay. urvr 5 Iiolsfingsmlrifgrlniflner um r net called for new electrons in June. resigned after the Cabinet accepted - I -A U .Y 1, I . In . - , H I 0 n -i . - i. nr . rn -ii -Us-l v ,I .4 ent . . . . . an .., . ..,',...nl, ,.. . . . .... . I... 1 2- .. pnbtk d. th Sh I ,d. Rad.I t- l Jim Steiner. chief Weather Service meteorologist here, said 0.36 H1 .fl'U5U'3l10fl-I Beg: Sala? reieipingugnagdats vigxa..r:f:nr?nillinglg,r lit '..-hes had fallen at Lindbergh Field by 8 a.m. today, brin ing the San Diego S.Numbef.1' whether a for 'WW Cl0f'll0IlS- possible elecmma., 93 ' ' A 3 fre 'WMS el the' Qt log' San Dlegos Num' Begins majority of one in the 120- - ' ami bymis da ber .' said Victor Forston of El memnel' known wnnered awav Technically, thevCabine de Le nforcemen encie id th Odest m whifh Sl ed on' who spent three hours adorn' SAN JUAN Puerto Rico IAPJ A when the leaders of the Rafi faction Clde-to push-for 3 bln for P em atur , night did isru ' or cau any accidents FIS S0m9 010 Clothes Wllh Charger Tn M n l ld I ant I, , nn d d tp t th an -S three to dlssolveftself and set ' for Bu e moisture Sm 0 num r of bu r alarms around ans in blue-and-yellow glitter. , ne as 6 9 le ersi ed 0' mio hmm en 'dl feng? ml! wan- early elections, as sourc A to he C wr Said Sh 'S do fr Ser- J R e- The me fe 'hugh' it was 3 Wd ga 't lltillfnrZ'2C'2iI?.lp'Er?1'lZ'iinllg ETS? ill plhilu Vila. tai given Been Sod was B Pfefm ause oors to sw and th ind mak in rattle.ac t- 93 lill'Sm'l'IlB Sylvia Nankefms- y -g - pp d R ' . I k , -- P , . t Bc '-1 Could resign and his E a H' . , . . who . es her team will play in tl. .estroyed nine Jet fighters an cgrns .r and coalition goternmen t - ' 8 Sensll d no' damaged a lflth early todav at a base a narrow fir-59 marority. government 3 Caretaker ? tfa Recvc said there were about 60 percent more false alarms than See GLOOM, A-12 next to San Jnnn.s intnrnnnnnal nn- Snnnnna dose to Begin Said yesten tion while at tire game tra gpg 5031 las' mght- , I port. Damage was estimated at S45 day he uould favor early electrons if for Pafllffmenfs dlssolufl 3 See HAM' 'MZ See game :average on Page D-l, million. Ruta pullorl its three Knesset mem- new election date- -' Y rolatads l The Associ hi t of a ma 0 the Q of ress 'ce r Juan a few yrrr Sev 1 min rs ur 5 hi old ter th quic -planned r Vabrn t el in s c ession onto power il Not,-embe ing P ' 1 R E R e Air Nati al ard pl es for A - sand too no redi- , Labor Out' heading 5 rity ' umz Air Ba , a aid t bl ' arc rrsro But Cabi I Sec ry government at would fgc on. 0 I h h e ere set off- the ch e Wi - .-try 'aw ro d porte Q'The fidence mot S in Pay-Iiam . - :., who also laime onsibi mn the majo y in e Cabinet ' ' ' 0 onths killr wo s' r ' ' el because a . , to , a O O ant wounding 10 other servicemen of H rfr s pullout. dawn' r rfla ' rvrn -to track a, of tox c a terial have be r.co Pl rnil1S for abo rt a e Q U . 0 o e was h rl In the lat'2Sl 81- l'llAlll1'lll 1 NIM eg' l e questio f rid e nnnnnnnl ,nnnlnn Emma, of Sewers to ns Source Lately. gh.. wid' Soma mmpgalms had begin pxgrggf-rar. lack. which also damaged a pickup lrlretlrer Brrgxrr would tender his res- Classified Ads.. vD- C22 The Torrr-v Pines-area effort started a few days ago in ed to Put pressure on the city. truck. POIH' ' H150 found and defused lHn4ll 'fltl1'lnfll4'0ll7 UP at the meet' gomlcs 'HD-14 response to stepped-up health complaints from employ- WC have mid Ihvm lhHl PQOPIP WGN' gelllflg lil and bombs l W0 'h'?l' Planes- and 'Illl V rqsswfor ' B-6 ' were going home sick. snr- sara an we ten the any that searched I IM-Ita Arr Lines flight at 'W' lfilwf Polls fllvw Begins Ednomls' Alis-23 ces rn the Sorrento Valley - complaints that apparently were exaggerated on purpose to spur the city into action, Steve Pearson head of the city's industrial waste pro- gram, said the crly was told that toxic fumes apparently coming from sewers had caused nosebleeds, nausea and tomiiing However, there was some evidence that some of the vornphrrnts may have been purposely exaggerated in order to spur the c-ty to take more action to solve the problem. nobody's gotten sick, they will be less diligent rn getting rt solved. I have not had any of my tenants report any legiti- mate illnesses from rt, she conceded Dugan said rt sometimes takes city crews several days to respond to complaints about the odor that frequently lingers in the area - an awful smell, she said, similar to that of rotten eggs. ' See TOXIC A-I2 the intl-irrational airport where a bomb was reported aboard, but found nothing. They have taken us out of combat for the moment, said Lt. Gen, Orlan- do Llenza, adjutant general for the Puerto Rican National Guard, after viewing the wreckage at Munrz. We ' See BOMBS, A-I2 I.iltud rvorrlrl lose to rlre opposition Labor Party if electrons were held now Labor was pushing to get the election date moved up io March. Why should we wait? Labor chairman Shimon Peres said. He is the partyis choice to oppose Begin for prime minister in the next clec- tions now set for Nov. I7 Financial Pages ..,..... Horoscope ., ,. .- A-15 Ann Landers . .. C-2 Obituaries ,... .- A116 Scene ....... C-1 Sports ...... . . - D-1 Television ..... C-5 Theaters .... . .C-6,7 We-arher .... .- A-13
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