HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-16 - Orange Coast Pilota1GUNN1KmT .............. -..-.:.
Oran1• Count)'_ otflctal1 ~ma for a S2 blWOn pro81'•m
to lmpron tranapGrtation claim
a 14...U. rapid tras1t line from
Ani!lelm to lrvlnc wm the
euMilt component to finance. T"e' tblnlr 10 bect\lle tbe couau Ti'anltt District already
bu tawid abOut tsO million to be
used u tchin1 funds to meet
federal srant requirements for
#
the trault Une.
Tho S2 billion pro1ram 11
broken dOwn into f ou~paru : the ~ mlllloa rapid tranatt line, a
"1N mllllOci wideoln1 project for
the Santa Ana Freeway, a '872
mlllloa pacu1e to improve Am·
trait rail aervtce and S4t'1 mJlllon
to buy about 400 more buses.
The county couldn't scrape up
tbe !Doney to flDance any of the
component• by itself, but it
doesn't have to. Federal or stale
fundl are avallable tu some
form for each catt1ory.
But Oranfe County Isn't the
only covemment eyetnc at.ate
and feeler.al rnooeyba11. The
competition 11 ben to win
trana~tion ll'ti\ta.
Becaun of tbe •oney the
couaty bu stockpiled for the
rapJd trantlt. tbQUlh, it ta In a
1troo1 poirition to attract federal
IJ'aDta.
"FillJ!lCl&lly, we're probably
better equipped to 10 to
\Y11bin1ton than anyone elle
mlgbt be," bouted Al
HolU.nden, chairman of the coun-t)' Tranaportatlm Colhml .. tce. The county may be equlDPed,
but it wtU be a few rt1oat16~.Y.et
before ornclall are readY to ijy
ror a ~ant. The $2 blllfoa pro.
poaal WU just IJlllOQDCed and
the comm.Wion 111\'t •~beduled
to adopt a plan unW F•bruary.
UnW then, offtclala hope to
SPRUCE GOOSE MODEL MAY Fl.Y OVER wAnR BUT CAN BROTHERS GET fT OUT OF THEIR WORKROOM?
, D•rr.lt Md Mette Meyer epent 2,SOO houra •net Sl,000 to build magnfflcent flying machine
fioc.ase '.llOrtlt ft ga~de,r
' ............ . .
Can flight of l('tfghes' Blane be imitated?
81 ARTBUa a. VINSEL Of_OMty,.... .....
Wherever he is today. old Howard Hushes must smile
an enlamatic smile whenever the Meyer brothers fire up
their C>wn eleht•entine B-4 F1)'in& Boat, for they are
dreamers and doers too.
Tbeir mqnificlent Oyine machine -you mieht call it
Soo ol Spruce Gooee -ls a 1/20thscale model made from
Hu1he1' own oriatnal bluepriot.s and almost ready now for
ita maiden test flight.
One day soon, the entrepreneurs
from Orange will watch her 78·pound
airframe shudder with torque u the
roaring baby Goose starts to taxi,
perhaps over Prado Dam or Lake
Elsinore waters.
Hi.story is virtually certain lo re-
peat itself with a successful night by a
two-man crew operatiag separate radio
control systems for engines, wing flaps,
tail rudder and elevators, the Meyer's
VIN .. L. say.
l'HEY ARE BELIEVERS, LIKE Hughes, in what they
can build.
"I've always been intrigued with Howard Huehes and
his achtevements.'' says homebuilder Darrell Meyer, ~.
whose big brainchild to date represents 2.500 hours of
palnst.ating work.
Hi.a brother Merle, 43, an engineer and restaurateur,
and a few or their friends helped on the 10-month project
launched by publi5bed plans to dispose of the original
plane hangared in Lone Beach.
"l contacted Bill Berry, who has been in charge or the
Spruce Goose for Hughes for all these years," says Darrell
Meyer .of the B·4's original flieht engineer on its lone hop
over harbor waters.
"l told him I bad two dreams," says the elder Meyer.
"One wu the visit the real airplane. The other was to
build Its fl.Dest and most accurate, eophlsttcated model.''
Berry, who stood in the cabin behind the bold
billionaire on that hlatorlc November day ln INT when tbe
world's bi1teat aircrattnew despite the law of rravtty aad
the scoffs ot doubters, furnished orictnal pt.am.
Who knows, HH mi'ht have hanCsecs them over hlmaelf?
"We started construction In January. wortin1 Dllbta
and weekends," says Darrell Meyer, owner of Meyer Beal
Estate, whose days are devoted to Sun Country Homa lD
Sun City.
Engineerine skills lent by brother Merle, who is re-
novat.iQI the old Yorba Linda Railroad in Yorba Llnda as a
restaurant, helped immeasurably in their big labor of Jove.
GRADUALLY, THE SCALED-DOWN version of the
200·ton flying boat took shape in a v-acant suite that housed
SI ~It\\ SPl·:t -11\1 .
a defunct detective agency just down the mall from Dar· rell's office. ·'
"We used to build model airplanes when we were
kids," he saya. "We took a break for about 20 yean to
raise families. then we bad the dream or buildine the moet sophisticated model ortbe Spruce Goose.
"And we did. It took a lot of cases of beer to build
somethlng like this." the elder brother added, sbowln1 off
the plane to viewers lut weelr.
They say their families didn't see too much of them if
they weren't in on the job nights and w~enda too, but to-day they all share the pride of the accomplishment.
The model is in.sured for $1 million, a routine policy
that doesn't cover the miracle of ru1ht, nor a lot of other
intanif ble things on which no value can be placed.
(See MODEL, Pase AZ)
.Iran -rreply due • in days?
•• BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -
:: Iran wlll make a dectJloo soon
==on the U.S. reply to 1ran'1 terms
~-for ffleUlDC the ~ American i! 01ta1... poutbly "In two or
• three days•• an advlter to the
:: Iranian p~ime minister said cf Saturday. ...
A.lun.S Alili, deputy actviler
to Prime Mlnistet' Mohammad
All a.Jiit. Mid In an intemew
by telepbGoe with Beirut that a
series ot meetinca had been held
to dJJCuas the iH\le but that no
comments would be forthcominl
unW.,. dedaloD. was made ... .. ... -
·eo tage transfer
• w~jghed, ~ri says
"We are now studying the
American response. We have de·
ctded to make no comments un·
tll we reach a dectaion in the
next few days " .utzi said.
Asked how lont deliberationv mt1ht contlmae, be replied "in
two or three days." He said the
contents of the U.S. reply would
be made public after 1 1overn·
ment eoosem\11 wu reached.
Tbe U.S. reply waa d•llvered
to the lraiilam by Alatrian en·
voys Jut Wednesday after they
re tve4 lt In Al1l1ra froq.
Depilt..}' .~ Of State War\
ren ~r. }.t Iran'• re-
quest, Alpna 11 aetina u an in·
termedlary la the hostqe crtsla.
Iran'• iPN'U•ment, the MaJlii,
ruled two weekl aco that the
hotta1e1 ,.would be rel iMd U
the Unit.Cl Stites met four con·)
dltilon1 . pledced non-1
tnterrintlorl ln Iranian affilin;
releQed some • bllllon frozen
Jranlan UMtl in U.S. bana:
dropped 1awsulta acalmt lran and'~ the e<h 'ol the
late Stiu Moba111mld Reza
PalalaVt.'.'TM d!llAabda were nnt
1u11eated some ala weeks
earll• by Ayatollah RUbQU.ab
A
Khomeini, Iran'• revolutionary
leader.
Cbriatopber carried a pledle
of non-interference to Allien
but wu said to have tolcf the
Altertana the U.S. aovenunent
would ftnd ll legally dJfflcWt to
mfft tM Otber terma. ·
RadiO Tehran. in a report on
tbe Friday ol,itt meetlnl of the
Supreme Defense Councll, quot-
ed Rajal u aaJint, "From OW'
point of view. the bolt.al laue
11 cooaldmid tolved. The MaJlii
has announced lta ccmdltiC>Dt.
We have paued tbem on aad
DOW It la up to the U.S.A.~,..
act."
There wu no elaboraUon, but
RaJai hid aa!d bef'ote die United State, aubinltteil tta reJ)OftH that
America ~d have to accept
the M_,111' tondlt.lonl.
Iran'• Olftclal Pan neWI !f.•· cy qUoted 11reUable aourett • lo
Tehran u 11yln1 rutncttou
would be lifted that barrel ~ forel~n JoumaU1\I, lnchadlal
Amer,cana Ud Brltooa. froDl lrao. It HI~ U.• nttoa _!!! taken IO tbat rtpos:t#I l.V"llN
tO• r Iran'• war with Jr~.
~meet wtth huilc:lred.I of croups
and tboasanda of people to ex·
plain the alamAcance of their
propoeu.
Once the plan, or a modified
nraioa, la approv~, official.a
expect to embark°" a ~
pbaae -tbe creatioD GI specific
plana for the rapid transit JJne
and Ul accooipan.Jlna environ· mentaJlmpactreport.
Wben armed wUb those
1tudle1, officiala wlll 10 to
W11h1natca, D.C .. to seek chi
federal mcJMy. •
''You have to bave • PT'Olett
before you can compete," aaid
Tom Jenkin., execuUve director
for tbe transportation colli·
mt11loo. •"lben you have to eel
In there and awtng."
For that, th• commisalod
seems prepared. The com-
mlaaloo alane<l a on~)'ear lllS,000
..,...., <SeeTUNsn, Pa1eAZ)
Two eountks' r
1
forests . afire
LOS ANGELES (AP> -
Wlnda blowt.nR 40 miles per hour
in the mountaina and foothills
hampered firefighters in Los
An1eles and Ventura counties
Saturday as they fought a 1,500
acre blaze in An1eles National
Forest and 100-acre fir~Tu
jun1a Qm$'on and Hldden Hills.
One firefight.er was i.Qjured
when he was atruelt in the bead
with a ho9e line wtiile fi&btlne
the 1\Uunc• Canyon fire, and
some cabins were evacuated in
the Fish Canyon area in the path
of the weest fire, but no •true·
tures Were bunted anywhere.
The smaller (tre1 were put out
by Saturd11 afternOon and the
1,500 acre brush flh tn./.lnac-
ce11tble terTain ln des
National Forest above Aauaa
•H 60 percent contained by
mi~.
Loa Angele; County
fliefichten ·predicted it ~
be ~eteJy_:_C!Or\talned by~ monuraa. •r ~died dOwn
ovemltbt.
"One fliuik la burilln1 itself lnto a
creek. tbe oonh and nortbeut flab look real good and' the
west.em nant ls the oolf one
open,'' Loi AQ&da County o.r. ID·
f9rmatim -Officer Dick Friend
11Jd s.turdaynJalaL He aa!d ~
crews mid bulldottrs contlDuedto
work.tbrou81ttbeo1.iatontbe8re,
but air tankers were called off
because of lbe blab wtnda.
Helicopters stopped waler drops
at nightfall.
lCg indwttrial
blmse in U
under control
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
One hundred flrefi&bten battl·
int a major fire In several build·
tnga of an indutltrial complex
near the downfbwn section of the
city bad the blue under control
late Saturday eveoing,
authorities said. ·
It wu first thought that a
flrefl&bter was btjured, but that
report proved to be untrue, said
city fire spokesman Ted Aquaro.
''The fire started in a foundry,
spread throuCb the stora1e area
of the fouodry into a boxcar and
Into a rag company," Aquaro
said. ~
He said some of the"Dlat.erials
that fueled the blue at Grant
Foundry supply at the lntenec·
lion of 7tb Street and Santa Fe
Avenue Were balid cotton and
baled paper an4 rap.
J\ helicopter ~portedly wu
maklnt water "1ops Oh the fire.
PAaADl8.B LOST' -
Con1ld1rlp1 a vacation In
Jamaica bUt turned off by the
laland•a recent el•ctlon
boatllitlet? Don't wor~. Tbe natlvu bave started two
nonaJ prosram1 to m11te )'oUJ'
vtait the frHbdlle1t ever. Sta«
Writer Mldaael P•Aevlcb pro·
vldea tM aa&ll1 on Pace Q,
"We let some engines go, but
mainly because they weren't
any use in that terrain," Friend
said.
The fire began at 11 a .m. near
state Highway 39 in San Gabriel
Canyon and spread quickly
because of the high winds.
More than 50 county
firefiehters were on the seeoe,
aided by state and federal
firefieht.ers.
The Tujunea Canyon fire,
which broke out at 12:54 p.m.
bad threatened lbe 1.akeview
Terrace Sanitarium for a while,
but "tireft.bt.en protected it
and there were no evacuaticns,"
said ~s Anielea City Fire
Department 1polte1man Ted
Aquato. The ft.re was put out in
three hours, after burning 120 L
acres of crass. t.
A grass fire which burned 100 ~ acres north of the'" Ventura •
Fre~way in the Hidden Hills 1 area wu fquaht by unfta f'l'om
the city, county and Ventura f
County fire departments, _l Aquaro saJd.
The ftre wu reported at 12:53
p.m . and W CODtAined C 2:Zl
p.m . ·wttb the help of water
drops from helicopters, be said.
Small· boats
.~aged by
strong winds
Forty-mile-per-hour winds
whipped up small boats aloog
the shore Saturday, but caused
no dama1e. according lo the
Oran1e County Harbor Patrol.
S mall craft warnings are ex·
peeled to continue today with
gutta predicted up to 35 miles
per hour.,
The lateat storm from the
Santa Ana winds ls~ product of
hl1b pressW'e over the.desert and
low pressure areas along the
coast. Because the winds are blowing
northeast, Harbor Patrol of-
ficials said that the effects are
minimal along the Orange
Coast.
During the heaviest (
turbulence from 9 until shortly
after 10 p.m. Saturday night,
Harbor officials reported no
boat trouble.
~injured
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP)
-Actress June Lockhart auf.
fered l fractured hip when ~
car •be wu rldint in collided
with another car just outalde Of
San Anto,.lo Saturday night.
• BMOaABLB Ta IP
Realtor JJm Wood's lO·day
Oclyalft &CJ'Ola COUDley Started
when be DOUced a bus Jn Corona
dtl Mar beaded for New Voit •• ' and~ wben he crosSed the
llnub UDe of the m1rathoi\ ln
Manhattan. He tells of taldrif
tbt tram and bltchhUdna in a
diary that 1lao ducrlbu
fatcinaUnt ~pie he met en route. Paae A4;
DAKAR, Sene1al <AP> -A military-Jed coup bas toppled
the 1ovemmeot o( Guinea-Biasau, a West African nation that
1alned independence from Portuaal six years aao. Bllsau Radio
reported Saturday.
A broadcast monitored here quoted the ·'Council of the
Revolution" u aayiot it took control Friday in a revol:.atlon
"aimed at putting an end to all the injustices that the people of
Guinea-Bissau have always suffered." and installed as leader
Maj Joao Bernardo Vieira, prime minister of the toppled
government. .
Radio Conakry in nei«bboriug Guinea quoted a communi-
que from the council as saying Presldent Luis de Almedia
Gabral and several of his top associates had been arrested.
Ci viii an• aid i11 ht-lit•tJpfft" IW'flrtof1
MIAMI CAP) Dozens of civilian aircraft joined the Coast
Guard on Saturday in the third full day of a major search of a
news helicopter missing with three network technicians and the
pilot aboard, search coordinators said. . ..
.
• • •
"Material cost? It would be eully cloee to $5,000," aaya
Merle Meyer, wbo could almo.t be hia br'other's twin lD ap-
pearance and eertainlJ ln the devotion to the 1leek, sliver toy tbeyshatt.
"We assured Mr. Berry it would be the moat accurate
model," Darrell Meyer says of the replica which has
already tall:en its ftnt trophy for scare ed accuracy at a
major western at.ates ac:ale uaociation model meet.
A variety of tradlUonal and modem materlab went in-
to the miniature Spruce Goose, which ts covered overall
wttb fiberglass and resin and seems to 1leam with h~r own inner life.
"1be fuselage is built just lite a boat, with ptywood
bulkheads, planked with baba wood," aays the elder Meyer.
ABC cameraman Steve Standford said at least 28 c1v1han
aircraft, including single-and twin-engine airplanes and
helicopters, were fighting stormy skies and seas in the search,.
By Saturday afternoon, no trace of the~hellcopter or missing
men had been found.
MODEL PROPELLER GETS LOVING ATI'ENTION
Mer1e Meyer provided protect'• englneertnta
"111E WINGS ARE CONSTRUCfED offa styrofoam
core and sheeted with 1/16th lnch aircraft plywood to
achieve the structural strength necessary to control the torque and power."
Merle Meyer points out the eight .61 cubic inch K&B
engines, with separate Perry fuel pumpe, 1ener1te 11.2
horsepower fed by a gallon of gasoline the big blrd burns
in 10 minutes.
fro. Page ,\ I
TRANSIT DISTRICT SET TO VIE FOR FUNDS . • •
Tbe single wing component ls one whole piece that
bolts to and unbolts from the hollow fuselage for conve-
nient auto transportation in a cavernous box-like, custom-
built trailer.
How about achieving accurate aerodynamfcs in the
16-foot wing assembly? contract last month with lobbying
ftr.m , Jensen , Sanders and
McConnell to make sure the coun-
ty's interests are known.
In the case of the as-yet lUl·
specified type of rapid transit
line, the interests seem signifi-
cant.
Hollinden, a trimsportation
professor at UC Irvine, said the
transit line will create what the
county badly needs -a north-
south track through the county's
biegest business districts.
The track would tie the areas
to1ether and apur what he
describes as a "linear business
district," or perhaps Orange
County's own intercity
downtown.
Holllnden said the line could
change -the look along its edges,
where higher density zoning
would allow people who work ID
the area to live near the service.
Conversely, the shift of dens1·
ty to the linear downtown would
ease the pressure to build more
homes in suburban areas, which
be said-.P>Jy exacerbates exist
ing trafffc problems.
"That means people who live
in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa,
Irvine and Huntington Beach
will be able to continue the same
lifestyle they enjoy now," he
said.
In fa~. Hollinden thinp the
rapid transit costs could go
down a bit because developers
anxious to build high rise con·
dominiums miebt want to con
struct their own stations.
The mass transportation
system also bodes well for the
automobile. he claimed, because
1t makes more room on
freeways for the car to remain
as the, "dominant" form of
transportation.
Repairing the ~aota Ana
Freeway's washboard surface
will probably be lhe next project
to be funded, offit'ials say. Buy-
in~ buses comes next and im-proving rail service will prob-
ably be the toughest.
All three categorifs depend on
the amount of tax money re-
funded to the county through
separate funas.
Orange County officials, such
as Hollinden and Jenkins.
already have declared that the
projects can't be completed un-
CLOTHU AR! NIATLY STACKED, UPPER Ll!FT, AFTER ILAIT
MNKm:W Jim U1*1ft ohecka for cauM of explosion In Newport Dune•
DAI LY PILOT
t-hll-ld•..,
T-tAM ........ ..., .... , .. ,.,..,
Explosion demoliilhes
NB vOCation trai"ler
All that waa left waa tbe
kitchen sink.
That's what Newport Beach
Man killed
less the various funding is in·
creased.
Money to wtden the S~nta Ana
Freeway comes from f~ral in-
te11State funds Local govern-
ments must produce 7 percent of
the •costs, and the Highway Ad-
minist~tion pays the remaining
93 percent.
New buses would be
purchased with county's share
of refunded sales tax.
Hollinden said there are
several pos!libilities for raising
more tax revenue. from convinc·
ing state or federal governments
to increase gas and s ales taxes
to seeking authorization for a
local tax.
For example, a 1-cent in-
crease in gas tax Just in Orange
County would raise about S8
million. But that's relatively in-
significant compared to the $100
mi Ilion that could be raised
through a countyw1de 1-cenl an
crease on sales tax
The poss1b11ily looms that the
stale nught authonze counties to
place specific measures on the
ballot to finance particular pro-
Jects, Holllnden said
Although questio~ still exist,
Hollinden optimistically claims
that the financmg will be avatla-
blc because getting to work and
moving busmess products is a
necessity or modem life.
Serviceman killed
A Santa Mia-based Marine
Corps officer was killed Satur
day morning when be was ac·
cidentally thrown from a Jet
fighter plane during takeoff
from an Air Force base in
Texas
First Lt Peter Rabczewski.
26, was killed durins the accident
at the Sheperd AFB in Wichita
Falls Air Force officials refused
to comment on how the accident
occurred
A ear WIRE TECHNIQUE that carved it out of a
block Styrofoam to scale blueprint accuracy that amues
engineers who've examined iPwas devised by the brothers,
who liken it to cuttine butter with a warm knife.
The planes and curvature of the model's wings toward
the tips thus mimic the unique contours of the real Spruce
Goose'6 control surfaces as if they were cast in a
miniatute mold. •
"We've had some engineers come throuKh here and
ask: 'How the hell did you build this thine?," sa)'s Darrell
Meyer, who will serve as flight engineer on the big day next
month.
"We had a lot of help from our friends," he adds, not-
ing some contributed sophisticated-machined parts and
vacuum-formed components also made from the original
blueprints Hughes used.
Merle says it took Hughes Aircraft archivists quite
som~~time to find the B-4 plans buned in the company
vaults, then they had to be reduced to scale for the Meyer
mode1.
HE WILL BE IN CHARGE OF the ground crew of four
friends. as yet unselected, who will help position the
miniature Spruce Goose in the water, tum over the props
and fire the enfines.
His brother will operate four lateral forward-and-back
hand throttle power controls, each linked to two of the
models'. eight engines for takeoff, cruising and landing
speeds. Landing lights and the like have their own control
system aboard.
John Elliott, 45, of 19412 Olana Lane, Huntington
Beach, a flier of both real aircraft and radio control model
planes will pilot the big beauty with his radio box once
she's airborne.
Adherence to detail is so accurate that the three little
men in the B-4 's cabin are each 2.75 inches tall, scaled to
the personal physiques of Hughes, his co-pilot Dave Grant,
and Berry the flight engineer on that memorable Nov-
ember day 33 years ago
REAL REPORTERS WILL BE THERE -one Saturday
soon. but there is no little figure representing the NBC
newsman who was also aboard in the pass4ftger bold Nov.
2. 1947, when Hughes gave the Goose the juice and she
flew.
A lot of people dream of doing something like the
Meyer brothers, but they say dreams and flying machines
don't• get off the ground if people don't do something to
make them real.
"And they don't. That's the whole problem," says Dar·
rell Meyer. toying with a mechanical adJUStment while his
brother tinkers with something under a hatch in the
airship's wing.
"We did," he adds. his eyes alight behind his silver-
rimmed spectacles like a schoolboy's.
Don't get Wra,petl up
In Sid Pac~agas ••
we think you're smarter than that. Remember that you don't get something for nothing. If ski packages are such deals, when have you
ever seen them at regular price? Be aware that most manufacturers
make the same ski with different cosmetic topsheets In various
packages. we think you shOUld buy what you really want the first time.
Ask somebody whO knows. Ask Newport Ski Company.
, "
.,If .n. ,•
• antd to pinpoint ~umcu.lum
at.reo,U. a.nd ••ak.MIHI, bat tbeJ a1lo MfVO lo 1how the pl'OI•
,... of studmu la diffet t dil·
lrict.a, Khooll and •vn d u .
format." 11nm, a •ClC>re Of JOO la
perfect.
But Law said r
cbanJlnl the ~po
atid 'a new yard.IU
la t*9 parenta ca He the meaaure perform of third
lt'aders. lh that c ..... ICON ol
250 ls considered avera,e.
test retulte from their child'• 1cbool1 by contactln1 the
1cbooll. The new system otters more
accurate comparl90M, he aald,
10 all ol the iradee eventually
wlll be ch8llled to that system.
Until then, the ICOJ'e9 for the
elementary erades wt eeem u dlffe~ u , well, tbiril 1raden
and sixth anden.
Alexander Law, chief ot the
•l•e UnJfled, Caplatrano 1tate department's Office of
alfted, Pountaln VaUey · Pro1ram Analy1i1 and
Clementary and Ocean View 8eaeanjb, aald the atate'a cur·
•m~ d1atrlcU, atude:Dtl rent i.tiat procedure la coo·
cored in the top 20 to 2S per-aldered a model for other states
L and CCM.mties. nen ~la the 'Westmiaster While other tests have been Following are reports, in a
nutshell, of how students lo each
of the district.I in the Orange
Coast fared on the tests:
emmtary District, where the panned for cultural, ethnic and :if~)Qllipten ftlmhed with reapec:-lin1uistlc bides, be said
ble ICm'99 lo the top 30 to 40 California's test bu nt!'\'er been
ercept -but scored much cballenied.
1ber tban experts predicted. "Thia la the most accurate teat
The teats are liven annually to that everybody who baa re·
tudenta in the third, sixth and viewed it bas ever seen," said
sr9dee tbroulbout the state. Law during a recent swin1
total of 801,000 students take through Orange County.
Ca....,.._ Valfttd: The 12th
graders in this district showed
dra£atic increases over put yea • particularly in spelling,
whe they chalked up a 5. 7 per-
cent score improvement. In fact,
the ppeWne score was by far the
bes~ throughout Orange County
and wu much higher than pre-
dicted, according to the
soci.oloclc makeup of the area.
be series ol •minute exams. The results are from tests
b i c h c o v e r r e a d i n g • taken by students in the 1979-80
atbematics. written language, school year. For the sixth and
d lo some cases, spelling. 12th graders, the results are re-
Tbe tests actually are--de· ported in a "percent correct
.~
Bow distriets ranked
GRADE3 GRADE6 GRADE 12
~ :z: ;z
~ ;,:> ~ ~i ~ ~ Ei ~ ~ < ~ SCHOOL DISTRICT l:~ f: f: = ~~ -e ~e ~ -e -· ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ < ~ =~ < = = ca. :I ca. I! ell • ell [IJ
270 266 267 72.2 71.6 69.0 65.9
Going down t•e tu.he? ..; .
l.Dngest TV watchers get uvrst grath
It used to be that television researchers
were inclined to study such things as whether
violence on the tube could breed real life
violence.
But those hard-to-prove studies have
become less popular during the past few
years. Instead, researchers are trying to
snake connections that are easier to measure.
7hat 's one reason wby the folb who oversee the
:iatate'a annual student testing -called the
~allfornla Aalesament PJ'Oll'am -uked stu-
<lenta for the first time la.st year to list how
'much time they spend a day watching
televiakln . . ~ Thole answers then were compared with
~e student.I' scores to 1et an Idea if watching
tthe tube affects the studenta' performance in ~chool.
I
.lo,. The results, researchen say. are frllhten·
"We found a perfect linear relationahip
between watchlna TV and student achieve-
ment.'' said Aleunder Law, chief of the state
otftce of Prosram EvaJuaUon and Reaearch.
"We knew there would be IOIM relationship,
but we didn't know it would'be tbet perfect."
What tbe reauJta bolled do1'D to la students
who watch d aD average of one hour of
t.levt&icJn a day scored better than 1Wdenu who
Heraced two hours. Studenbl who didn't 1ee the
tube at all had the blpest averate scorea.
' Those who watched at leut five hours a day
•cored tho lowest.
For exampl., bl1b 1chool 1entora who
watcbCid leu than an hour ol TV a day a<:ored
an averace of 73 perceat ~ answers on th readlq ~ while .seniors wbo watched four to
five hOun • da)' •cored an •vera1e eo percent
COl'NC't.
11-relatiooablp wu true for alrnott atl stu-
dlirb, dspWt tbdr aoel~c backlfOUDCI
or their parenta' tduc:atton. 2'bl. Mt)! txa.pt!oa waa for udeftta with Umlled F.r1 1b alrUJt,
,,._. leatel attu.ally Improved ~ to'9ur Mui ill TV vlewtnl a. nl1bt.
l'or a.ote 1~u, Law • UJ' •x· r:.ute '° ~--J.ilb IM)ped ............. Milli.
ever. he =out tb8t even tor ttuden1.1 wtui Umlted , more tJiaD four bOUrt of
TV wateblnl w.. Oloclat.d wtlti d llDJJaa ......
Law said that the TV research was the most
comprehensive testing ever on the subject, so
other tests also will be conducted before re-
searchers can say without a doubt that TV
watching doe1S cause Jower achievement.
But, he said the results still bode poorly for
the students who tinker with their math
problems while keeping an eye on Laverne and Shirley.
Said Law .. Frankly, we were over·
whelmed by what we found "
No ,disruption
in Medicare
WASIUNGTON <AP) .e-.aonatd Reagan's
health task force fa seeking to dllpel the notion
that the president-elect mleht disrupt Medicaid
and Medicare provams.
But it Is recommending that Rea1an con-
alder a plan to replace the current Medicare
1y1tem with one lo which senior citizens would
be liven checks and told to find their own health Insurance.
"There should be no fear amo01 the public
that these programs will be diminished,"
declared Dr. Edward B. Walab, tiead of the task
force. "Rather, they wlU be improved "
WALSH AID Reaaan "wlll be more
f aatldloul In 1oina alter tbe ml1mana1ement
and waste and takina tho moue)' •ved there t.o
Improve tho ~uaUty and a1ao P'.IY attenUon to
acceultllUty.'
Walab, wbo La dtrector ol Project Hope, the
lnt.rnatlOa&l mWJcal ear. and ~ucatlon or·
1wutfon, al.IO aald the 1~~--klnt 1b0Wd
1tt up • pUot projeet to 11AUGW f••lbWty of
a youcber l)'lt•m for Mtdlcare.
lTNDBa SUCJI a 111::,~ beneficiarl.a
would lie"" ,ilven a ~c r a Ht 1um of
moqe,y WftJt wblcb to . puroHe tnaurance.
SboUldU lfOVt ltaalble, W.U!f.takt, UMt federal
1ovtrilllamt COu1d 1erap UM bWutkracy that
currfdly dtl with lledltare claltm .
• The sen!ora atayed in the top
10 perceot of the state with t.hcfr
1coru and were ln'the top lwo
percent in spelling. Third
araders stayed in the WP lJ pet.
cent, and slxlh eradora weft ln
the top 20 percent.
Scores tmpC'OflMI lii vlrtUaJly eve~y subJectand every arade.
P ID V1De1 Elemeatary:
Thlai..,lraders in tbia dlstrfct bad
a dlalbal year ln tbe reading
teat. ae.ulta were lower than the
1978-79 year. and the 273 score
ranked the dlltrict in the state's
bottom 2S percent for schools
with similar aociologic makeup.
Third graders also scored
worse than expected In math,
but fared better in written
languace (writing>. where stu·
denta were in the state's top 18
percent -or Mth percentile.
xth graders performe«t
ut as predicted, according to
he sociologic index, and
finished in all cases in the top 30
percent.
Baatla1toa Beach Elemea-
tal')': Students showed solid im-
provement in every test in this
district. There were no .great
surprises. although sixth
graders WJ!re below par lo spell·
ing. Third graders scored ln the
top 20 percent, and sixth graders'
were about 10 to 15 percentage
points back.
HanUagton Beach Union
Hlab: Seniors scored in the top
25 percent in th.is district. They
showed slight declines from last
year in reading and writing, but
equivalent gains in spelling and
math.
lrvlne Unified: Although
average scores for all grades
were in the top 20 percent and as
high as the 94th percentile, the
scores went down slightly from
last year's results In many in-
stances.
Scores for grades three and
six went down across the board
Only in 12th grade spelling and
writing did the scores go up. Stu-
dents scored above the norm for
similar districts in 12th grade
spelling.
La1ana Beach Unlned: This
district's marks were as im·
pressive as in the past, but they
weren't nearly as outstanding
when compared against other
districts with the same affluent
makeup.
The brightest spots were read·
ing and math for third graders,
where results were even higher
than predicted.
On the high school lev«l. slu·
dents finished in the top five per·
cent statewide in all four
categories -In the top two per-
cent in writing and math
In spelling, the Laguna seruors
finished in the bottom 25 percent
when compared with their con·
temporaries tn other affluent
districts.
Newport-MeH Uaified: Third
graders held on to their above·
<See STUDENT, Page AlOJ
O...y Pllet ltMI ~ PRESIDENTIAL ELECTOR
GOP Meretery But Dohr
Reagan,
C:Onnally
confer
LOS ANGELES (-\Pl -One
day after naming his first
White House aides, President-e 1 e c t Rona ld Reagan met
privately Saturday with former
Treasury Secretary John Con
nally while a committee of
el'onom1 c a d v1sers worked
nearby on Reagan's plan to cut
federal spending.
Edwin Meese Ill. newly ap
pointed cabinet-level counselor
to the mcommg administration,
said the luncheon meetmg with
Connally at Reagan 's Pacific
Palisades home should not be
taken as an indication that Con-
nally, who has served in both
Democratic and Republican
cabinets, would join the Reagan
administration .
"The governor has met with a
number or people since the elec-
tion seeking their advice He had
wanted to meet with John Con-
nally earlier and it wasn't possi·
ble to work out a mutually con·
venient lime until now," Meese
said.
Reagan and Connally posed
for photographs at Reagan's
tront door but shed little light on
the subject of t.beir meetin&.
Coonally sai<l the two would
discuas "whatever the president
(Reagan) wants to talk about."
While Reagan and Connally
met privately. a blue-ribbon
panel of 14 prominent
Republicpn economists, includ·
ing three former directors or the
federal O!fice of Management
and Budget, met for the second day at a federal office building
five miles from the Reagan
home.
Beyond all this, m the baek of
hi~ mind at least, he's nW'Sing
dreams that he may see his
name on the ballot some day.
But for the time being, the
young business man, active in
his family's Anaheim-based de-
cal business. enjoys helping
other polltician·s.
On Dec. 15, when he joins the
other 44 state electors. he'll be
casting his ballot ror president
elect Ronald Reagan
"Techn1cally you can vote for
whomever you want." he points
out. "but m California, where
1t 's a winner-take all state,
traditionally you follow the par-
ty slate "
Oohr, admitting he 's excited
about ruhbmg elbows with the
state's other electors, also was
excited with his sul'cess at age
26 in landing the state's GOP
secretary spot. Ht' says it was a
holly contested party bout.
When he heard there was to be
a vacancy in the secretarial
position, he went for it, sending
out mailers and knocking on
doors in Sacramento if only to
poke tus face in, so politicians
would recognize it when he
came to the voting.
San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson
nominated him for the post
while Newport Assemblywoman
Marion Bergeson seconded the
motion. He won with 65 percent
of the vote
Serving as an elector is only
one small slice of his politi~al
post. He says keeping an eye on
party finanlc helping influence
party affai and, in genel"al.
serving as a epubhcan booster
are the Jarg r duties of h.is of.
fice.
He comes up for re-elecUon
early next year
"I love politics," he sums up,
"it"s a great feelin~. especially
if you're a Republican."
c::::
r
,,
...
1!
.1
ll -r
h
'\ . .
~ ...
" " ~ • ;
t.
~
' !I
Jun Wood waa raso nat9d o
n th t th big, blutl and
. t Gleyho~nd that tOJ)ped
• dOWr1 th street from his Corona
, d8I Mar office re111v went to
,.., York. So one r cent dJtY he
stood on the curb in front of
Bernard's and --caught 1t, bound
for t New York Marathon.
Befora octyssey wa• over, he
had walked, run, thumt>ed
flown and ridden his way across
the country via bus, train, h1llbit-
1 1. ly limousine, taxi and the soles
of his Adidas. It all began on
~
II
11
v
I
I· ,,
11
.. ,, ,
l·
!I
t1 ,,
" 11
I.
l
,,
Ii
I
h.
11
IL
'>
SUNDAY, Oct. 11
I love lt. The bua seems cushy. comfortable,
smooth at least for now.
We &llde past a Jew runners at Scotchman's
Cove and I mention that I'm 1oin1 to New York
to run in a marathon. His face registen dis·
belief. "You live here and are 1oing to New
York just to run a race?"
At the Laguna Greyhound station two elder-
ly ladies come to words over who will sit in the
front seat. They get downright rel1ty. I relin-
quish my seat and defuse the confrontation. I'm
a peacemaker. A great beginnin,.
BUS RIDING IS OK so far. Al the stop in El
Centro I observe that no matter how different
people loot on the outside -T-shirts, facial hair,
sunalasses, sandals -it still hurts when they
say &oodbye ; fighting tears, misting eyes, re-
peating hugs, saying unnecessary words of ca'f'
tion and advice, like, .. call if you have a prob-
lem." and. "be careful."
The outside may have changed, but the in-
side still doesn't like to say goodbye -even for
just 10 days.
At 1 p.m. on a sunny stretch headed toward
Calexico, the bus, capacity of 43, only has six
people aboard. The road ia equally empty. So is
the surTOUDding landscape; strildn1~ but empty
-rather attractive and interestlna. The bus is
even quiet.
, Grethounding 1980 is really civil -or more
so than some recent airline experiences I've
had.
ACR~ ARIZONA THE bus is filled up -
approximately 36 or so. Yet there is very little'-
noise, no bathroom doors slamming, no one be-
ing rude to a stewardess, (no stewardess to be
rude to), no in-flight movie and accompanying
darkness. People seem to get along and have
respect and conversation for each other
Dinner 1s a 1950 care classic· clean, not a lot
of plastic, no packets of sugar and salt (real
shakers and chrome topped jars I, and it costs
lS.20. I leave a $1 tip. The service was excellent,
efficient and I can see why the bus stopped
there. They deserve it.
I'm in Phoenix at 9 p m and call home; it
reels good
The bus station!! have so rar been clean, the
operation smooth; the men and women wear
their uniforms with pride. The ri~ers seem to be
conforming and considerate and the buses are
new ·and well maintained.
"JONDA Y, Oct. 20
A windy 3 a m stop in L<>rdsburg, N.M An
ern.pty cafe, milk and good apple pie
After 24 hours on the bus and with another
36 to go until Memphis. I decide it's time to fly.
THE RIDE THROUGH urban-suburban El
Paso ls a bit depressing. The people boarding
the bus, all of them Mexican-Americans, have
pride and character, black lunch pails and gent-
ly worn fabric tote bags. They sit side by side,
occasionally exchanging pleasantries and smil-
ing. The races are strong, good· looking.
My first chance to meet the Mississippi
River. I walk aboard the Delta Queen hoping to
catch some sort of ride north, then catch a train
and so on. No dice. But the waterfront, Beal
Street and all, is interesting.
A walk ·lo the Greyhound terminal is easy.
Ticket to Nashville arranged, then a walk
around the block produces an offer to buy
"coke," ''hash," ''joints,'' etc. I decline
A TAVERN IN DOWNTOWN Nashville. 10
p.m Order a beer, get a bottle, period. The
jukebox is too loud to be able to hear a request
for a glass -besides, there are no gluses. The
black and white TV is on with no sound and a
barely distinguishable picture turned to Monday
Night Football. The place ls a mess.
Acrosa · the street is the Sam Davis Hotel
with 10 floors and a small dead palm tree
'DO YOU REALLY GO TO MANHATIAN?'
Jim Wood boarding bw an Coron• del Mar
wrapped in green crepe paper in the lobby. It's
my home for the ni1ht. It probably had ita day,
but I don't think that day luted very long.
TUESDAY, Oct. Zl
Sunrise rrom a Greyhound bus traveling the
Tennessee countryside. It looks a lot like Con-
necticut -similar ran colors, maybe pretlter.
In the cities there's not much evidence of
pride. Everything seems nmdown. Also not
much evidence of animosity between blacks and
whites. I! anything the blacks seem sharper.
more in CCllltrol, more alert than some of the in-
ner-city whites.
A sharp Yo.flli guy named Mike takes me to
bis home in 1ft1eon Forge, Tenn., then into
Ga)linbur&, (bdlne of Dolly Parton).
I attempt to 1et re.ervatiooa at the La
Conte l.odae, ftve miles up a trail ln the middle
of the Great Smokey Mountains. No luck. I hike
through town, bike out of town.
Mike ud Jan Chis live-in girl) meet me
again. We decide that I should chance it, walk
the five mila (starting at 4:15 p.m.> and hope
they won't tum me away.
It's a beautiful but tough five miles uphill in
less than two hoqn. I rehearse my approach all
the way up the trall, arrive aD\Olli the 1reyin1
log cabina just at dinner time, ask for the
manager and luck out.
WDNE8DAY, Oct. %2
The walk down ls beautiful. I refuse to rush
it -feel comfortable beln& alone, tatin& pie·
turea, aa)'in• aood ptorniJll, vlewinl dlatant
trees ln tbelr various colon and lookln& forward ...
to hitchhiJdnl.
Merc11ry moves down
Reading8 in 208, 30J mill much of U.S.
l/.S. S1111 _...,,
"''" fell '""""" ewer ti\• ...,,_,. Allellt~ CMM lttlft -w!Mly -tt.•tO .,_,, 41tmt>tMCI
IMllMrft Te .. • enll "'11 If the ml• 4111.nll ie-MI_..... v.i .. ,.
A ato•m •r•tem ''" ""•lotlff ewr Ari-.,.. ... •llll«lell 11 llrlft9 IOUllY ,_.,,.,I-to Ille metUfto
... lllHf~N-Mealco.. •
f f"ljM( .. SWnl ,,._ ...... ,.. trede41 tt e lnll*•I ... ..-. II
WH IHI ltetlH ~I JOO 11111 ..
.. 11111-111 .. lt Of NtW Orl .. n1, • -1119 elO!WIY tatew.,11
"'"'"'~~,.. .,.,. Old ecron IMCfl .. Vie lr!twltr tf IM ,_.,,,,
wWf ,...._ Ill IM 2111 efMI *-In
'"' ~.'--""·II •11 werm wldl re~ftOt In 1119 .0. lftd 10&. , T...,,.,.,_ r6f\99CI from • et
Ollltfl, *"'-; .... a 11.n M""'· .....
~l•ul• . c;oe.,., ""°•on ter 11u1..,.,
• I 'f Ml t!IHU WlllOi IS te ,,. tnP11
-w
,,
J
• Ila w-. u t1-1ear Rar'9r Area ml·
de•&, fouded tJalcaH. Bomet, be., a real
ettat.e firm, a. mt. Tldi II 1 partial dlarJ of a
JI-day trip Jut .. u. &Mt .,._.._. latat •••dert wWI .... etlJe1memit ., ... d1l&aaee naama,.
I've never seen so many new, four-door
Oldsmobile.. Also Bulcks, Chryslen~Llncoln•,
etc. "Bi. Car City."
Finally a dusty blue Olds station wagon
with New Mexico plates st.ope. I'm a bit aus-:-
picioua but climb into lta cluttered interior. The
hippie-lab couple arouse, then calm my suspi-
cions.
TBEY'aE FaOM BOUAND, speak &ood
En&llab, are touriDI the U.S. (for months on
end>. Started on. Greyhound but boucht this "boat of a car" in El Paso and have continued
on their way.
They're incredibly snellow, just seem to
float alone-No coofllct, no ursenclea.
Cherokee, N.C. is a tourist trap. Can't stand
it. Walk= it. Run IOIDe. Picked up by a hillbilly. B y understandable, but be COO·
vinces me that I'm beaded ln the WTODg direc:·
lion to get to Asheville, N.C.
TALES OF .. ROUGH Indians who
sodomized a while man. The l\IY liked to bled to
death, waa m the hospital two weeks. Another
couple from Georgia .wu ~ and the man
draggedbebindacarona rope 'tllbedied."
I'm glad the hillbilly came along.
He takes me to the "four-lane." In the mid-
dle of an open stretch be announces his home is
just over the bridge so I can get oft here.
Beautiful but lonely open stretch of• 'four-lane.''
1 walk down half a mile to a turnout and
stand in the sun, look al the passing river, listen
lo noisy birds or crickets. Over it all I hear a radio playing mountain music and men
laughing Three or four of them somewhere in
the bushes down by the river. They sound
drunk, lecherous. I think of the stories the
hillbilly just told me.
I think of the movie "Deliverance." I'd like
a ride. •
Picked up by a teacher livlnl ln Sylva, N .C .
Wetalkofb111malltownandbltclties.
Nat ride, a SO.ish woman who tmacb her
aum eomtanUy. Sbe wants to be a teacher. She •
takes me to Clyde, dumps me •Sain on the In-
terstate.
A frustrating but fasclnatinf two hou"'
looking for a ride to Spartanbu.re starts to tutil
frantic. Last traln from Spart.anbure leaves mt
11 :30 p.m. -I've got to be on it.
Finally a lift in a 10-year-old truck ~
trailer looldn& for a load of steel ·•off route 25. •
It's dark now but a full moon, a Carolina moon.
THE MOON DOESN'T help itie driver find
route 25 and be suddenly stops along the
freeway and says, "I suppose you want to get
off here. The slcn polnta to Spartan bur&.'·
It's cold, and my thumb is so stnall, and Urie
cars and trucks 10 by so fast, and the trucks are
so bi&. My whole body feela small aa the passing
trucks buffet me and actually scare me with their power.
One could hit me without breaking stride
and never know the difference.
nu CHECK: 8:3t. An hour has brou&ht
pl'Qbably 20,000 vehicles .past my thumb. I'm
full-on waving now. Not a frantic wave, but a
positive, friendly, help-me· I'm-a-really-nice·
guy·type-wave. I'm also two miles down route
26, only 58 more to Spartanburg.
Through a series of human appeals, both
direct and over the phone, by 10: 1_S I'm speeding
through the moonlit night headed toward '
Spartanburg in a purple '73 Plymouth Doster
drinking Millers High Life with Danny and
Adith (altaEditb)-andl'm$50poorer.
At 11:20, with the train due in at 11:30,
wave goodbye, breathe easy and call home.
THURSDAY, OCT. Z3
1 purchase a pullman ticket. Can't sleep
The swaying, groaning and creakin1 are too
mueh. Pretty exciting lo sleep next to the win-
dow. occuionally roll up the shade and gaze al
the passing scene. Classic. This is what I want-
ed to do. •
Tbe S\Dl comes up somewhere iD Vir&inia. •
<See caoss-coUNTtY, Page An>
B ME? ess executive who
'd? AnY bUSlll U falling tage. Enough sa1 .will find hirnse make informed
A cotrtPetitive ad~~s\>aper every ~~n't take long. T~eed facts.
doesn't re;d ~4inpetit1on, and1e1! marketplace, ~~hat affect y~u[e ~Y~o~\~!~h: it,~~~U:fiof~ ~;::~~~~~ :e~n~tt:~::~:~~ Pd~~n~g~~~°il!~l~\;on . And you ports on spen 1 ., . bus1ness.t ks up to date re mY and co~umrter nt advertising ...
today's 5 oc ' ent, the econo. Plus imp<>. a bits.
news. gove~:iucts and sd1'V'~Jtor local buDY~fy ~i1ot is one of the aboU~ new new trends an ttn business, the a1 to pick up ight down o When you get r ou can make.
best investments Y ?~••n• .. ' Wh•O In It tor you of -•rs on •~efY P aP...-
,,
A ..........
AALPH ZIEAAHN HOLDS DAUGHTER ANN
Dytng ded wed De~ .. Kiefer, girt'• mom
Father wins
Man gives daught,er futw-e
M~WAUKEE (AP> -Told lhat he would soon die
Ralph Zierahn married the mother of his 4-month-old
daughter in his hospital roo,m and tbus won his battle with authoriti~togivethe baby a "legalfather."
''Jt 's a shame I can't see her grow up,•· said Zierahn, his
~yes welling with tears as he cradled his baby.
. Zierahn, a 42 year-old German immigrant, has been con·
f11:1ed to the Veterans Administration Hospital since Oct. 3
with a chronic liver ailment. His doctors have said death
could come at any time.
COLOGNE, West Germany
<AP> -Pol>' John Pattl n on satufday~mt\ed .Prf·marttal
J aex, Cliwrce, ~ aboi't10ri ln a
me11a•eon family sanctity at the
betlnnlnl of his five-day vlslt to
Weit Germany.
Later, he praised the German
people for their lndustriouaneaa
ln rebUildlmr ftolb the ''ruins and
humlll•llons•• of World War II
and made reference ln a meeting
wlth West German Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt to the "painful"
East-Westdlv1sionof0ermany.
Sources said the pope disct¥Sed
the latest developments tn hb
native Poland with Schmidt dur·
int their private meeting at
Au1ustusburg Castle outside
Cologne
HIS MESSAGE ON family Lmi-
ty was delivered to a cheering
crowd of more than 120,000, many
of them parents with childnm in
tow, at an otltdoor Mass Ln pour-
ing rain and gusty winds.
''The takihg of unborn life is noi
a legitimate method of family
planning," the pope said.
It was the 60-year-old Polish-
born pontiff's first major ad~
on his West German trip. Local
church ofClcials had expected a
crowd of as many as a half million
to greet him in• this strongly
Roman Catholic city. But the
weather and national
television's broadcast oftbe Mass
kept many at home.
JOHN PAUL is the first pope in
198 years to visit Germany, the
birthplace of the Protestant
Reformation. Upon bis arrivaJ at
the airport here, be knelt and
kf11ed the sround, as h49 haa on hJa
. aevenprevtoustrlptouUldellaly,
and wuted no tline emphullins
the theme of Chrtatia.ruan.lty.
"Let all be one," h• said, quot·
ins the Goepel of St. John ln
measured, well-accented
GermaD. LVnd:UN Protntanta com•
prise about half the West German
Di.ssident 'threat' told
Crackdown urged, freer hand for FBI 8011ght
\
W,\SHINGTON (AP) -
President-el~ Ronald Rea1an
and the new Con1ress should take
a harder line a1a.Lnst domestic
radJcals, tncludiq revtvint COO·
sressionai internal security com·
mittees, an influential con-
servative raeatth group said
Saturday.
The House Internal Securit,y
Committee, formerly known as
the House Committee ,on Un·
American Actlvitles, was dis-
banded in 1975 and 'the Senate
Judiciary subcommittee on In-
ternal Security was abolished in
1978.
Intemal security committees
achieved wide prominence in the
early 19508 when the late Sen.
Joseph R. McCarthy. R-Wis .• con-
ducted hearings on alle1ed com-
munist lnf'tltration of the govern·
ment, labor unions and other
areas of American life.
The Heritage Foundation
called for the stepped-up ac-
tivities against diasidents u part
of a blueprint for conaervative
policies that was presented
Thursday to top officials of the
Reagan transition team, some of
whom have close connections
with the Washington-based four>-
dation.
·'The threat to the internal
security of the Republic is greater
today than at any time since
World War n," the Heritage re· port said in recom~ending
''presidential emphasis on the
nature of the threat ... the reali-
ly of subversion and emphasis on
the un-American nature of tnucb
so-called 'diasidence. ·'
BESIDES REVIVING at least
one internal security committee
ln Con,..esa, the conservative
group called for ending restric·
lions that ban mall openings by
the FBI, require prior approvaJ
from the president and attorney
1eneral before the FBI can COD·
duct brt",ak·ins, and only permit
Investigation of political groups
when they are sU'Spected of
criminal activity.
DUlllNG THE SIMPLE seven-minute ceremony, the
bearded Zierahn was unable to lift himself from his bed as he
slipped the ring on the finger of his bride, Denise Kiefer, 21.
Zierahn cried as he spoke or their baby. Ann Margaret.
·'What I want is for her to have a legal father," he said.
·'I was in intensive care." Zierahn said. "I was bleeding.
Things came to a head and they told me I don't have all that
much time anymore.'·
Boston threatened
by transit collapJe
"Many or the current restric·
lions on internal security func-
tions arose from legitimate but
often poorly informed concern for
the civil liberties of the citizen and
the responsibility of the govern-
ment," the report said. "While
these are legitimate concerns, It
is axiomatic that individual
liberties are secondary to the re-
quirement of national security
and internal civil order.••
'DIE REPORT ARGUED that
serious surveillance or dissident
groups. requires "such standard
, intelligence techniques as
wiretapping. mail covers
(monitoring where mail is sent),
informants, and at least oc-
casionally, illegal entries." The
Herita1e Foundation listed
among groups that should be put
under tighter surveillance com·
munist parties, radical and New
Left grou~. "anti-defense and
anti-nuclear lobbies," and white
racist groups like the Ku Klux
Klan .
"THE DOCTOR and Denise and I talked it over. This is
what I had to face. that it could be any time. lfl hemorrhage,
it's allover," Zierahnsaid.
Zierahn and Miss Kiefer met about two years ago and
were living together when Zierahn's condition worsened, said their lawyer, Thomas CaMon of the Legal Aid Society.
·'He wanted to get married before he died,·· Cannon said.
Zierahn is suffering from an incurable cancer-like dis-
ease. said Cannon. who said he did not know exactly what the
disease was. Zierahn's condition was unchanged Saturday,
although he refused sohd food, a nurse Uid.
ZIERAHN, WHO came to the United States 20 years ago,
was blocked by Milwaukee County authorities when he first
tried to obtain a marriage license. The authorities refused to
issue the license because Zierahn was married to a GehnJA
woman in 1964 and had no certificate of her death in 1978.
Cannon persuadeca r1rcuil Judge John E. McCormick to
order the county clerk to 1s:.ue the license Friday morning. At
first, the clerk's off:ce bal~ed because Zierahn had not taken
a blood test, but a lawyer for the county intervened to remove
the final obstacle.
BOSOON CAP) -The board
that oversees commuter buses
and trains in the Boston area
meets today amid warnings
that the system will go bankrupt
Monday and shut down -an in·
direct victim of a sweeping tax-
c uttlng measure passed by
voters earlier this month.
The advisory board of the
Massachusetts Bay Transit
Authority announced Saturday
that the meeting, originally
planned for Monday. bad been
advanced a day so it could con-
sider spending a $10 million re-
serve collected from rare in·
creases earlier this year.
"WE MOVED the meeting up
so people commuting on Monday morning will know whether
they will have a way of getting
home." said Philip Shapiro.
Athletie Condidoning A Injury Center
Ope~ November
3
PRE-GRAND OPENING SPECIAL
months
for
• No l•ltlatlo• F~
• No Time Restrletl-s
• No Colltra•ts
First Fitness Center to offer Lieensed
Physleal Therapists to evaluate and
reeomnaend indivi ..... ized pnJgrams.
FACILITIES OF•"ER:
* CaJlf. St. Lieeneed Pllysleal
' Tlleraplsts
* hokinetie1 4 t:yllex Teetin1
Centere
* Coed Na•tll•s Exerche
Equipment
* Flt•e88 Te.ting Center
* Free wetpa Bftbaw eea1er, illd..U..
Sqaaa Raeb a: Olympie 11.n.
* Body Compoehloa Te.ting.
Hydro.a.de WelplftW
•PulmooaryFunedonTMtiiig
* Complete Carcile T•~
lndudins Portable Telemetry
• Tbttapeatk He& T ..
chief budget analyst for the ad-
visory board.
·Members of the board represent the 79 cities and
towns that are served by the
system and must make up
operattng deficits from their
local budget.,.
• State Transportation
Secretary Barry Locke, who
serves as interim MBTA chief,
••id Sattqday th•t funds were
sufflclent to keep the system's
200 bus routes, 10 commuter rail
systems and four rapid elevated
and subway transit lines running
through Monday.
,,
'
s..,,..uec1
Kimberly Santos, the new
Miss World, was surprised
when she won crown .
replacing Gabriella Brum,
who renounced the honor
because of boyfriend's ob-
jections.
Discover
Peter's Landing
The report also said the nation's
internal security was threatened
by •'an e~anded presence of im·
migrants from unstable and
sometimes Marxist influenced
states whose number may include
foreian intelligence agents and
a1ents provocateurs.''
•
Grand Opening November 21-23
PETEr\'S LANDING .. by the sea ... the most unique warerfronr
shopping cenrer in Southern Cohforn10 is now celebranng irs
Gl\AND OPENING.
WIN big prizes on our Wheel Of Fortune!
SEE our 37 foot Chrisrmos rree rhor changes
color once every 60 seconds'
WIN o $500 Christmas Shopping Spree !
ENJOY our superb Christmas Enterrqlnmenr!
SHOP our Fabulous Waterfront 5flopsl
HOURS: Friday 12·9 p.m.
Saturday 12·8 p.m .
Sunday 12·5 p.m .
~,on rm;shed, fares ·up
.. z The party .. a over. 'lbe tree luneh ltand 11 dollnl =>~~· Tbe rich uncle wbo left die fortmi ii cOinlna baci
'1.tl> life. Santa Clam doela't Uft bUe ....,_..., ·
r; All ol which IWDI up U. ID"'OmelemeDt from tbe
'· ~.uiine people that thole bulmf.,.. fn>m Loa Anaelel
' • fo New York and several other SUtern dti• will ee.-e
on Jan. 1.
' ' It wu fun .tllle It ~t '115 ~way prtee taa .:on the LAX-JFK ticket made it • barDlll rare lnaeieCl In a ''lime when ever.ythbaa eJ1e wu · clfinlal out of price
'reach. Youcan1twalk~forl.Tcentaamue.
,~ It couldn't Jut, of coune. 'l'bl ~were eatt.na
-.each other alive with artlftclallJ low ,.,.. on thole
i selected flights. With fuel eosta claublina, then trtpllla, it
"Was only a matter of time until tlM!y tooi a more ~tie
'~llttitude toward tboeeticket costs.
" ' It's been done. Come Jan. 1, the 1tandard LAX-JFK
cJab will be $414 instead ot '195, 18.5 cents a Gille lnltead
,pf 8.7 cents.
In a way, the public ls beinl treated more fairly un-
der the new, increased fares: nte bar1ain prices never
dJid apply to fli1hts other than New York, Baltimore and a
couple more cities. Full-fare prices were bun1 on anyone
traveling to, say, Kf"•u City, New Orleans or Orlando.
There's been conjecture, ln fact, that ti.. ratea were
-jacked up to help teed the tltt~or tbe cut-fare routes.
' At any rate, you'll newr to New York foi;t.7 cent.a
a mile again. Climb aboard ore the year eada. .
f.
' .
1Herois01 surfaces twice
M. much as be tries to dilavow it, H~ Beach
Fire Captain Gene Saunden la a hero aaain.
Three years ago, Saunden crawled throu&h a narrow
.ftood control channel in lhmtlniton Beach to rescue two
\lnconscious boys. , •
With a lif ellne tied around h1I ankle and puahin1 an
oxygen tank in front of him. Saunden found and rescued
the boys who were near the brink of death.
. Last week, Saunden wu at lt •lain when he climbed
a tottering 125-foot oil derrick to reffue a worker who
·:wa9'iltjured in a partial fall. ·
· Saunders downplayed the rescue. But Ul9Clates aaid
·tie climbed the derrick at a rtak to bbmelf, fubiaaed.a
rescue knot around the ~urecl worker and lowered blm
to safety. ·
Other firemen reported to their 1uperton that Saun·
·4en was nearly knocked olf the derrick by the thruhin1
.. about of the semi·comdaul man.
· Sawwten la 1enutnety mod.at about the rescue. He
..says lt was nothln1 beyond the call of duty.
•·• 'nM>9e he saved know differently. • OptnlOf\I expreued In the .... above .. thOle of the 08tly ~Hot.
Other v1ew1 exprelNd on thll paCJll are thole of their 11Jthon Md
artists. Reader comment 11 Invited. Addr"' The Deity Piiot, P O
Box 1 seo. Coat• M .... CA 9288. Phone (71') 142·'321.
Boyd I Life jacketa
By LM. llOYD
Q. When did ocean·sotq
ships ftnt start carrytn1 life
pre1erver1 for all the
pa11enpr1?
A. After the klller hur·
ricane of 1137 wiped out 1
ew paddle-wheel 1te1mtr
alled the "Home" orr Cape
attera1, N.C ., drownlnl
bo'1t 90 peraon•. motUJ women and children. It wu
the 1ame storm Utat '~tliM
day1 e.rtier had Qmou.tlied
a 1etU.ment at Gat~ton In
the Republic Of Texu.
Q. ~ whala, which
are the larerr. the mat• or
lh• femalet'
, A. Of thoM with t.eelJ1, the
~ar
G~1ny,
Gua
malH. Of &hoH without
&Mth1 the baleen whalu, tM
fema1•.
Q. What'• the dtff•r•nee
betwffft Hollud and Th• Nnbel'lllldlf
A. Holland ti UM 01Qlt lm· p~tllOll Of" The
" .~DDlallollt.
Bob Greene
WESTERN HOSTILITY
toward the federal aovenuneat
haa iMreatecl alplftcantly while
Jimmy Carter has been pnai-
dent. Geor1la ii Jut another
Eaatem itate wben viewed from
the Rockies.
Because Westt=m states vote
later durtn1 the pl4mary elec-
tion aeuon, Certer never really
campaiped iA them in 197t or
1990 and ii woefully' l1norant al
their problems. When he wu at-
tacklnc new t•ral dama u "pork·berreJ proJecu." be was
threatenlnl the life blood al the
West -water.
When he, and other Eastern
politiciam, discussed beaUq oil
1ubaidln and imposed a na-
tional 55 mph 1peed· limit, thole
were seen u anti·WesterD in
Califomla and the. Southwest
and other places where Ion& dil-
tances mean hi&b-speed driviq.
Land. water, energy and peo.
pie, people movine west, are
going to be major issues i-.. ...,.,,..._ ..... least 10 years. And many peei..,._r;;:.J
already out West cheer eac
lime they see Ronnie Reagan
wearing a Stetson and looldns
over bis little spread in the
mountains.
Idios"yncrasies really not so crazy
Wbea JOU pt lilome from won
at aJtM. • ,_,.. Ila•• an mean-tl'Olta.WI bebk"' puttinl aR)our colDI face-ap CID tbe mptatand!
~ JOU ID to bed, do JG'U' ·
ahoes have to be on the fioor fac·
in& In preche·
ly the same
direction?
When you &et
Into the
ahower. do
you have to
say "budda-
b u d d a ·
budda "
bpfore 1tep-
pjn1 under the
Yialer? Cbaace1 are you have
tometldal like tbat ln your life.
You've cbablJ never told
AD1GM a lt; lt'• too embar-ranlal, 10 you t"P It aeeret.
A IOCIAL researcher named.
Judy Rel.er tbeorlald that ...
erJODe la beset wltb ldloeyn·
crul• « qulrb Ula~ fen an 114 So lbe lntervt more
• .Ua • people about it. Tbe ... 1ult ll a book called .. And I 'ftoUlbt I Wu Cra11 I'' publllbed bJ rtredt/81maa6 Sehaater.
lo tbe next Ume lou tblnk 1011 •re craay, eoaat •r Us-.
ballttl • aband bJ your f.OOW
Amtrk-: Te.....aon """-'· male, a : "I
take a lot of. wttamtaa ta tbe
moraln1. but I alwa11 have
them ta alpbablt}.cal order IC·
cordlDI to the letter of th•
•ltamta. I'll hH• .ttamta B-1
before I'll have vttamlD C, wbteb I'll haw Won vitamin D, wbleb
Georp Mlllr
l'U bavw Wore tM muhlple."
Teacher. female, 15: "lily
buabend cannot lit down to any
meal wltbout adJustint t.M liabt·
ln1. They're oo dimmers and lt
uaua!Jy tabs bJm between five
and 10 minutes to play around
with them. He11 1it down, atart
to eat, be11 decide that it'• too
brilht, 1et up, dim them, lit
down for a .tllle, then be may
feel that it's too dark ao be1l 1et
up a1atq to cban1e tbe in·
teoalty."
TEXTILS BUSINESS ex·
ttutlve, de, rz: "When ·I get
paid, it must be ln crllp, fresh ~llll. U it'• dlrty, 1 run from
teller to teller unW I 1et all new
bllll. Somettm.e I enn IO to
three banb lp oee day to set
new billl."
Advertl1ln1 coordinator,
female, ZI: "I have a full bed
but ln onler to fall uleep I ban
to be on the rilht aide. If I'm in
the mkldJe or on the left. 1 'll toa
ind turn and stay awake. The
only way I can 1et to 1leep ls if I
sleep oa the rilbt-hand aide."
Graduate ltudeat. female, ZZ:
"If I tum around to aay hello to
10mebod1, I have to lW"ll arouDd
tbe other way to unwind. Or, It
the telepbooe COrd twirla arouDd
m1 lea or boc1J, rather Ulan Jult
ltep out al It. I baft to untwirl
tbe otber way."
AllllTAN1' production
maaacer. female, 23: "Alter I
mall a letter, I have to open tbe
lid a1aln to make IUN tile letter
weat down the 11ot. It hun't tDt
1tuek yet, but I still have to
ebeclll."
Wrlttt/produeer, female, ZS:
"If the toUet paper is banslnl
off the inside of the roll, I just
cban1e it so t.bat it '1 banlinl off
the outside, otherwiae I won't
use it. This applies to all
bathrooms, public or private,
wherever I am."
Ill anagement consultant,
male, 33: "When I wake up in
the lllOl"Diq, I ata.rt counttn& to
100 and tell myself tllat when I
1et toflOO 111 &et up. I always
think I counted too quickly and
a tart over. I go throu1b this
about five or sis Umea before I
actually &et up."
Retail butcher, male, 40': ''Tbe
telemion must be on when I 10
to sleep and then it bums all
ni1ht lonl1 I abut it off when I
· wake up tn Ute mornln1. I've
tried to go to sleep without it, DO
can do!"
ADmNIS"l'UnvE uabt.ant.
male. 2~: "Wl\en I set un-
dreued. I fold each article of clotllinl oeatly before I throw
them in the hamper." •
Secretary, female, 21: "I have
to check tbe telephone each
n11ht before I 10 to 1leep to see
if it'• WOl'tdnl· ID cue i 1et a call, I don't want to mill It."
Male, 51: "I always lt1r or
1hake aomeWq lS Umn and I
tap off the uceu ftuldl from the
utemil lS tlmel. Even It what
l.'m atlrrifta II taaorousbly mixed
In three or four atiC'I, I •till C'Oft·
tlDUit aUrrtq to 11. If It Medi
more than 1J tt1n I then 10 on to ....
D~ bwnlllers, not caring pr~~
a&iaODltMmoat clrtn1, ,...,.. ,.~·pl• la tlae world; Tllelr
eoatlnaed 1~ for dae ldtu of oeool..-t ted prosram1 pnmia
that.
annuli ftoandal reportl becaUM
the'/ an eo meaMd up DO oae can
make IDJ .... out OI tbetn.
Mllllaal al dDl1an are mlu NMl~forarid uneaplainwtl;.
A 811CIHl'mJDYofHUD, by Dould t.mbo, U Pl rellilWW' and
I author "' ..... Clty,'r·-~me ...
that, for wbllt HUD,.., •Mal on buUdlDI OM mlllloa publle
bc>Ula.amltaf«tbtpoor. I\~
have 11i .. 1.1 mlUlota ,,or
ramlUa=oaah to10oU&Ud bU)'thetr • 01 COWM. Ulat would 'hay• eUml...,.. dMnMd rortho111UMM
of bure1ucratl now bu11 ad-
mlnl ~pl'Ofl'am .
'lbelhOl't ... of., point 11 •• .,., _.. to dump Ubtral
proarema. 1N-.dl0dumphaept; 1eu1~lq bure•ucrata. 11od
polllldlll!·
Security guard, female, 11:
"As soon as I sit down at my
desk, I open the top middle desk
drawer. I leave it open the mt.ire
time I sit there. For some rea-
son I feel terribly uncomfortable
lfit'scloled."
Textile wholesaler, male, 33:
"When I pick up my mail, if it
looks like one piece ii interest·
ing, say, a love note, or a check
from somebody wb0'1 past due,
I save that letter for last. When I
have time to savor it, then I
open It." ·
Consumer affairs manaser,
female, ~: "If I visit someone
in their home and there's more
than one entrance, I must leave
through the same door I came
ln. Under no circumstances wtU
I leave by a different doorway.
If I 10 in the front door, I IO out
the front door. If I 10 in tbe
back, I go out the back."
DRY-CLEANING preaaer,
male, 30: "If I'm ln my car and
I realise I 've for1otten
aomelhln&. I can't just back the
car up, even if there Isn't allJ
tralftc and I'm only a few feet
from m,y boUle. I bave to p all
the way around the bloct to
come back. If I io over the same
path, I feel Ute I'm not pro..
•reaal.n«."
Store mana1er, male, 51:
"When rm three or rour blockl
from rnY offtce, many timea, I'll
auddenlY tblnk, 'Did I lock tbe
door?' Althoulh I know I dkl,
there'• a compulllon to 1et off
the bua and IO back to cbed.
Thia ha happened to me teveral
tlme1, and l always feel 'tier/ sil-
ly bffauae the door bu always
been locked."
Bauer, male, 42: "I mmt
1tep otr the curb with my npt
fqot even if· I have to 1bift my
fMl."
Fubion biu1er. female, ID: ''I
llave to cheek the enUre ~ to
make aw. t.hlt all UM draftl'a,
clOMta, and wtndowa are
U1ht befon I'll io to aleep,
11rdlcu of hoW tired I may be.
If It'• op11t Just a Huie. I 't
be ablo to •IMP·•·
-~~=:rN'f h\":.U:-=-~y contalniU, k ~ be an •lnJltJ
tube '1t todlhpafte or a Jar, I
alwa11 put the cap tiack on
btf ore 1 diJCard It,"
So • ,. • there you have tl If
you~re one Of tb craay peOple,
you have tb aympalh1 of
myHll and all us otMr. ftOl'IUl
on , I'm llnllbed w1Ut the C:ol·
umn now. ao I can IO boml, M
tooa u I t..p Ult. ..ape bar OD
J lJ~MYeft,um!Wml•··
J
t. .. ,..-
--,
ro• DI P'AC'I' W1 1•ar'1 elt~tl~ W~Ue Dtltbtr a ....... ' ... a... .. on n die QOP an ua~ o~ to btcom• UWI na·
tioD •• iDUli'k; ""'. Obftoullt. lligu cut dMpl,y lato "tradltlonil eeaters of
Demoeratle Pai11 lt.nqth. Be
recelftd 1DOC'9 ~ from ..
wod:las clw ud from C;djOlte
YOten Uum .. 11.mm)' Carter,
ad .. -• tldrd Of u..1.-... ·me.
Only Blacb ud llbp ea
ch1•1 to tbelr tradltloaal
Detaoentk '°'9. l\:.M, ID addl· Uon, 18Mpn Md tM GOP lb.tt.-
teNCI tbl IOlld .outb -all bUl Oeorlla deiertecl Caner. I
· BUT TBS SLECTO•AL C91· le1e ~vote •attl1· over·atated
Rea11n'1 m.arpa of vlctol')' and.
the election illlbt maps oblcMi'.ed
Rea1u•1 raaor·...., majorlUesln nlDe stat# (leSltb02 percent).
Even more d.eeiPtlvely, the
I TMINI< I''lf f,QT 11'1& CcJRE',
IF WE CAN <SET ENOUGH t>oNO~S.
.,
fly .. sues.
What wu not expected were
tbe GOP ·Senate victort~ ln "
Alaba•• Geortaa. .a1d ·North
Carolld. l Coinbfaecf' "'6 tbeW
Florida win, Repa~UC-.r\S have
obl'ioul]y made beav1 ~dlf
into tbe iout&.
IN TDEE Oa four oth~r · tncta, loc1tl lasues on C 's
-negative ~attails appear o
have provided the margin of de·
feat for Democratic incumbents.
I 'r And in nine districts thde
waa ~ incumbent running d>r
AND 1'BE8E vtctoriea re-election. Perhaps, in a
proath• mote than doe1 llemocratlc year, DemocrlltS
.Reaua'J 1tnJna aoutbem ~-~l1bt have won. ButJt waa ~·
101 ·because the defeated Democratic year. Q
Demoent!c Senaton wen bard· Overall, ~ovember was a soud
ly ft~i.er.la, 'J1\e ~rn vtctory for tbe GOP. A vie!
GOP Senate vtctones w'~~ which offers Republicans a u muc&or moAon-party on opportunity to mate futu e ldeoloa. 1alns. 1
B1lt It la tbe 38 GOP victories 1But, if BepubUcans view tbe
in the Rome of1lepreseatatlws ' election as .a mandate and~r
wblcb·.pye u1 tile .best un .. : .la11Jdsllde; lf they test on thee
der1landlD1 of. the Impact .•• ~ , laurels; if tJaey do Qot work ha.rd
ldeoloa and party ln this elec· 1n the ne~ three y~a" to fiun
Uon -and the p;t,ept to wb.lcb ip thelr ta80 suppott base. then
otJaer fadon plqed a {Ole'., · · 984 could be ~ mu~b a dis~ Ill part, of course, it wu a o'r the GOP and Rellga.n as 1
conae"•tlve win. Thlrteti:n of w a 11 r or C a rte r a n d t e
the II defeated ~~rat. Could Democrats. !>
I "•· ,1• t( .~ • ~-''11'1q ~II t
Mailbox /Campaign reports· didn't credit UD5eUi8h 'f;fforts
)
t r
t
Tot.be l'Alt.or:
, P'oUowiq the Nov. t General
Election, several atorlea ap-peared in various newspapers
concernin1 my election to
Superior Court Offlce No. 8.
Generally speuln1, these re·
port. dealt with the relatlmy
lar1e majority (8'%) I received
and tbe ablence of any campalsn
effort on my bebaU. Tbeae re-
port., tboqh well-intentioned,
are in part mllleadinl and of con-
cem tomefortworeuona.
First, aJthoueb lt WU my de·
clatonnottosollcttor acceptdona·
llom ol money to my campaip,
that does not mean there was no
campaip effort. Money dooa-
Uona would have let my friends
and acquaintances off far too euily. I asked for and reeeived
sometbiq far more important,
their time and effort la contacttna the votep of Oranie County ln my
bebaU.
In view of their peat 1ucce11 ln
tb.11 repni, tt would be an inlult to
..... est tbat all of lh1I unaelflsh
EditGr'• Notebook
effort amounted to "no cam·
paip."
8BCOND1 to •uaaest tba( the
outcome or tbe election was a
spontaneous demonstration of
support for my candidacy la UD·
fair to my opponent, Rapar
· En1ebntaen. . One ol the ne1atlve aspects ol
tbe electkln wu tbe diaappohrt·
meat that· I know Jud1•
En1ebretaen felt. It 11 un·
fortunate there bad to be a ''win·
ner" and a "loser" in this race. I
have worked cloaely with Juqe
En1ebretlen ln tbe West Oraqe
County Munldpal Court for over
eipt years, and know him to be a
fine Judae and 1ood penon. He 11
an extremely competent, c."Ons· clentioul, and lndustrloua Judie
wbo would dO a fine Job ln the
Superior Court. I hope that tbroUb appotntment or eleetioa
be wl1I W--llven tbe opportunlty to
aervetbepeopleotOraqeCounty '
in that poettlon in tbefuture.
If thls la viewed as typical post .
election rbetorte, let me aMUJ'8
you I aalcl.euctly tbe same ttUna
aboat him prior to the election
when lllked about bll qualiftea-
•tson1.
JAMF.SL.8~
Judie WestOran1eCoUnty )lunldpal Court
Gt •a rtltaclaft-•r•lel.,
To tbe Editor:
Altbou'lla the anJdel1and
trauma al our srandlon'• IDd-napplaa ta not yet «>Ter, I tldDk lt
ll oalJ.n. snper that we lboald at
thll , ateDd our tbanb to
tbt Newport Beacb Police
Department for their un-
dentandln1 kindneu, u well u
tbelt an.-effort to locate our O'and8an. lalm 1Ucbar41lyan.
It WU about 1:45, OD tbe IDOrll·
lq pl Oct. II, when hil motber
,dl1eo•er•d our 1-year-oJd '1aDdlaD wa mJaatq from bla
crib. Aft« a CIUlck seardt ~ tbe
nelabborboocl, we called t .. e
police.
Wltbla mtam., a lllDDber ol oman Ud .mni1, and ....... eome tOlll ....,....,r dtat.ed tor !
fln••l111'int1J, etc., othn eon-duded a tnteml .. ......_.,,..
boae eearcb. When, b:r mid·
afterDoaa. our uancliloa ltil1 bed
not been found, every anilable
poUcemu -plm ... eral daeeD Exp._ Scouta and the police
bellcotUn IDade a tlllorou&b and
atemift IUl'dl of tlle lJpper
Ba:r, mder tbe penonal dlrec·
Uoa of Cbtef Grou.
I WM no:as, and tried to
npreu my iratlt\ade to UieM
floe men wbo wacf.t thrOUlb
mud and water ln a Hardl that
fomuwely wa fruttleu. Later
ln tbe after6oaa, the)' eoachacted
another boule-by-boule Maftb,
and tbat eveniq broqbt ta the
Sierra lllldre SearO and ReKue
Team wttb tbelr bloocf1M11unch, to
trJ and tJ:.aC! tbl babJ '• rout.elf be bad wanderidaway.
It t. dtfftcuJt to 1lnsJe out ln·
Improvements under way; please ·stand by
87TllOllA8UEVIL
It wm't all that bi.I a cbanae and chanees are JOU didn't • ._
Dottce It; bUt lut week the Dall:J Pilot made the flnt ln wbat wW be
a10111 U.of productlmprowmenta. WhJt we did wu abandaa a.loal·•tandlnl policy Of capltalll· lftl UM ftnt letter of each word ln beadllnel. Thus, a beadllne tbat
wouldbaveread. . . ,.
......... w1 ....
TelMnP-111
undertbenew1tytebecame ...
New........-:vlsora ..............
. ,
~·
divtduals bl., exeeJlent a \am Separate dJr~ccor'
effort, We are ll'ltefu1 to the en· To the F.ditor:
tire depar~ent, but ,lQ •~. Qn beb..U.pf tbe Relativ~ ~ partt~•••r, o -.l•J•••Pi :}ldeadsor-tneMentailyDiub
lldhenet, to Detectbes of Oranee County, I would like
llcl>Gaoulb and c.mpbeU. who thank you for your tecent
worked 10 closel.J ... witb our editorial ht support of men•l
daqbter. We ~ m~ul also be.a.Ith baying its own director,
to Community PtOitatda 'Olftcer (,.iber than Margaret Grier ~Richard Loni for bll lftli· log the dual rote of Men 1
pathetic help. Healtb Direqor and Director f
Llke most. Ne•port aeMb
residents. I have always been
aware we bad a police depart,
ment, became I aaw thelr cm,
motorcycles and hellcoptera
patrollini the city. But, I never
knew -until re'1 netd arOle -·
what a profea1onal department
we haft. It ll mc>re tban·equal to
any ln the country.
STUART W1LlJA,llS
H\lman Services. ·o Our or1anization feels vety
alrof\gly ttlat mental health
abould have its own director aod
thank you for doing tbe editort'dl
and suppor;tf,ig our stand on lfle
isi,ue. ·
' R~MONA SCHNEIDDl
Secretsrr , •
Twoe~..........,.-c __ , ... ,..,....
..., ,_ .......... Leften ........ ........ .. : ...................... ,,... c..--· CA tit». '--"'" , .. ,~_. , ... ..-iuu. .......................... ~-~.... ... Wl't'9n' -..... ..._ --e.. ~---_, ... .-... '" ....,...... ,clrc_....._
0
6
9
...
FOR EXAMPLE, the 19th century
style of holding the arms and wrist
st,Ul while the ringers do all the work
has been replaced by a new emphasis
Clq~es fill
too quickly
PHOENIX <AP> -Adult Asian·
Americans face up to a three·month
delay in getting into public school
English courses bere, school officials
haveaaid.
Consequently, the district Is asking
state officials for money to hire more
instructors to help meet the heavy·de·
mand fpr the "English as a second
language" adult courses.
"We could triple the number of
classrooms and teachers," said dlrec·
tor Linda Carpenter. whose program
now includes 450 such students in niaht
classes and 100 in day sessions.
·Presidents attuned to art
WILME'ITE. Ill. (AP) -If Thomas
Jefferson visited the White Houseloday,
he'd probably spend more time with Amy
Carter than with her dad when he dis·
covered he and Amy s hared a common in·
terest-playing the viohn.
Although Jefferson was perhaps the
most musical president, American Music
Conference resear ch shows that almost
every president has had some interest in
keeping America musical, whether as an
amateur musician or as an advocate of
the arts in this country.
JEFFERSON WAS certainly the first
president to inject music into the heart of·
America, although George Waahlngton.
who reportedly played flute and violin.
began the tradition of music in tbt White
House.
Jefferson was a skilled v1olimst who
o~e wrote. "Music .. is the favorite
assion of my soul," and he reported
1-iq no ~s tbJJlithree lPJ3 ~ <Cla,y
betottUie fttvolutfonary Wat
Believing that Europeans far sur-
passed Amencans in the appreciation
and 'understanding of music, Jefferson
formed a domestic orchestra of his own
by hiring only European workers who
played musical instruments for his Mon·
ti cello estate
OUR TIURD president liked best to
play with others, often 101ning in duets
with Patrick Henry and John Tyler,
father of president Tyler.
However, the senior Tyler wasn't as
musically romantic as his chief executive
son, John. Presidents Tyler and Jef-
rerson, legend has it, both won their
brides through their musical prowess.
Jefferson's rivals reportedly threw in
their "courting towels" after hearing
Tom and Martha playing together -he
on violin and cello and she on harpsichord
and piano
Tyler, stories say. stole the heart
of his second wife, Julia Gardiner, with
his original composition, "Sweet Lady,
Awake."
Even "Honest Abe" Lincoln had a few
songs up his sleeve He wrote an eight-
verse musical composition, ded1cated to
his sister's wedding, and although he had
no formal mus ic training, I.Jncoln's
harmonica-playing ability became a fac-
tor in his run for the presidency.
While Stephen A. Douglas campaigned
with a real band during the historical'Lin-
Po11sihlt1 •h~ first pr•·
siden•·mr~ pM"sldftlf dew•
wa• play•d "" Rlrhard
1'Vi.rmt a11d Spiro Apeee •
Both plar1 th~ pla110 ~II
a11d .,., e eflfnl klle1m1 lo
. treat Whit• Ho.,.• fl'l"I•
t. o a SOllfl or t.,o. •
coin-Douglas debates, the Great Eman-
cipator toted and touted his "little brass
band," to the delight of his followers and
to the irritation of his opponent
OF ALL THE musical presidents,
Harry S. Truman and Richard M. Nixon
were probably the most avid pianists.
Truman learned to play the piano as a
child and often joined in duets with his
daughter, Margaret
He entertained many a White House
guest with his piano playing, particularly
with his rendering or the "Missouri
Waltz," which he made famous.
Possibly the first president·vice presl·
dent duet was played by Richard Nixon
and Spiro Agnew. Both play the piano
well and were often known to treat White
House guests to a song or two
Each president brought his own
musical fondness to the nation's capital,
and to the entire country, sometimes
making history with music
•'Hail to the Chief'' was first played for
John Quincy Adamson July4, 1828.
Adams played the flute, and was
followed by such music-making presi
dents as Chester A. Arther (piano), War
ren G. Harding (trombone, clarinet and
other instruments), and Calvin "Silent
Cal" Coolidge and Qwight D. Eisenhower,
harmonica.
MUSIC HAS always been heard in the
White House, even during Ufe terms of
president.a whodldn 't plar instruments
Zachary Taylor, for instance, brought
music to the White JJ.ouse lawn with con-
certs every summet evening The first
opera heard in the White House was
Verdi's "La Traviata," performed for
James BUchanan in 18i8 .
President John F Kennedy's brief
term in office was a s mall renaissance for
support and patronage of all the arts.
The first full-scale ballet at the White
House -Debussy's "Afternoon of a
Faun" -was presented 10 the East Room
m tbespringofl961
911 service
• • in operation
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK (AP>
-The emergency 911 telephone service
has begun operation here, making
Yosemite the first national park in the
Westtoinauguratethesystem.
All 911 calls will go to an emergency dis-
patcher who then will alert rangers or
other emergency agencies, Park'
Superintendent Robert 0 Binnewies
said.
-GRBHOUND
AGENT ~est~nst~r
Your ne~ Greyhound agent -a member
of your community -has full details on
low energy saying Greyhound fares,.. fre-
"Quent ~hedulet, sc~nic routes, charter
buses ... Greyhound Package Express. :
tool Stop tn and say hello ... today!
......
Make an appointment for
a total beauty makeover
Perv>nalized beaucy mrts with a derailed
con-;ulrac1on and nouric;hing cond1Cionm,i:: ro add
'htn(. co ~·our hair Nexr, our skilled sryltm will cut
and sr\ le your hair ro be~r su1r your
fearures and lifestyle.
The finale 1s a makeup application. NI for S35
for an appointment, phone 7t4-n9·12, l, exr 260
H:urwork' Salon, Newport ~ach
Arlene Neathery, ac• 24
Started 1975
Robert Sprtn1er, a«• 88
Started 1978
What is your potential?
Desptr.e their obvious differ-
ences, Arlene and !ob have a lot
ln common. They had no sales
experience when they Joined us
four yeare ago. They value tb6 fact
t.bare 1a no oeUln& on their Income
P<Mntlal WUh us. Thq like the
Independence that oomee with a
career at Waddell f!I Reed. (You
set your own bours . . . your own
pace). or oouree, Arlene and Bob are
exceptional, and not everyone pro-
gresaes Ulla fa.st. However, here's
your opportunity to prove t.ha.t
you. Loo, are exceptional.
If you appreciate such
benefits as liberal commlaelol\I.
bonuses, group Insurance and
tncent.lve a wa.rd.8 like trips to
luxunous resort.a, you m~ be our
kind or peo11le. No sales experlencE Qt
required. We train you to sell our
broa.<1 range or 11nanc\at eervtces.
This could well be the oppor-
tunity you've' waited ror. So let U8
aha.re all the fact.a with you.
Grand Hotel 7 Freedman Way, Anaheim
7 :30 PM -11/11/IO Regal Rm. #1 & #2
730-0202 .------------------------------, I I I la, I wam to k:Gow more abom \hh ouwtu41D& I
I ~J. Pl&ue aupplJ ma with all Usa f.lca. I
I I I N&me ---1 I ~-I I Cll,1 --St.&111 Zip I
I Ttlepllon• N·,mber I I 1101 1 •Ylfte 11..-.. s..lte • I ~----------~~~~~~~~~-----------~
Save 25% to 30%
on custom drapes, top
treatments and bedspl'eads.
n--r-J/ 1 'o i I
• • I
' • i I . ' .
I l ' I I
i
l
l • I l
Save
25%
JCPenneya'
westem woven
wood co44ec tlOn
makes a (lt11m11hc
difference 1n yO<Jr
deco< Cl'IOOS• en array of
pettems an<l
sty lea
The JCPenney Custom Decorator Consullanl
helps y<XJ choose rrom sat111s slleer's
cpen weavetS textures and more in
pOlyesrer rayon acetate. collon. acryloc and
hnen Your custom drapeoes will be made
by !he JCPen'ney wor1\foom and PfOfeSS<On·
ally mlBlled by a JCPennev insi.ller
Save 25%
on our entire
line of custom
decorating carpet.
Call our cuatom cM<:cnting MMe8 todey
end one Of our •XJ*18 w• bMO ~
to your home ChooM from a Wide
venety of plu*'l end luxurious atylM end
colofa
DAI LY Pl LOT
AP ....
NEWS AHO AMERICAN POLICY VIEWS ARE 8ROAOCA8T DAILY FROM WASHINGTON, D.C.
Mary Bitterman, dlf'9Ct0f of V*-of AIMfk:a, watcM• maater control-room board
War of. words expands
Voice of Amen~a fights for irorld's ears
By PETER ARNETI'
WASHINGTON CAP) -America is re·
novatiqgjts communications weaponry in an in-
tensifying competition fof'the ears of the world.
Exotic tongues like Uzbeg and Azeri,
spoken by Islamic nationals in the Soviet Union,
are being added to the language arsenal of the
Voice of America that daily beams news and
policy views around the globe
MORE POWERFUL transmjtters are join-
ing the 100 already on station at home and
abroad to reach more of the estimated
worldwide audience of 400 million shortwave
radio llilteners.
"The Voice of Amenca should be heard in
every square inch of the earth," says John R.
Reinhardt, director of the U.S. International
Communications Agency <USICA>, the body
charged with the nation's "public: diplomacy"
effort. In addition to broadcuting. the effort in·
eludes educational and cultural exchanges.
But even as the Voice ·or America is
strengthened in its competltipn with the 122 na-
tional radios that crowd the airwaves, there are
worries that the other arms of America's public
diplomacy are withering.
"WE ARE A POOR fourth in the world to-
day after the French, the West Ge~mans and the
Soviets," says Alice Ilchman, associate director
of the USICA for educational and cultural af·
fairs.
"Thirty-five presidenu and prime ministers
currenUy in office came to America at some
time in their careers on our exchan1e pro-1ram.a. But because of funding problems, we
are in danger of losing contact with a whole
generation of new leaders."
The Voice of America is benefittina from in·
creased congressional interest in spreading the
U S. message abroad Nearly l quarte.r of the
half-billion-dollar budget for USICA is spent on
broadcasting, and money bas been appropriated
for new equipment.
"WE NEED IT BADLY," says director
M,ry Bitterman, whose staff works in a build·
ing at the foot of Capitol Hill on equipment that
was installed in the early 1950s. "I was very
troubled to find how antiquated it was."
Radip Moscow is VOA 's chief competitor,
broadcasting around 2,000 hours each week in 15
languages VOA broadcasts 885 hours in 39
languages. Other, friendlier competitors are the
British Broadcasting Corporation and West
Gerroany's Deutsche Welle.
VOA says it reaches about 80 million reg-
ular listeners around the globe, and it's
particularly pleued with Ua 16 houn of Chinese
and Enlllsh languaee broadcasts to China.
··A recent deleeate here told ua our au·
d1ence is in the milliou," Mrs. Bitten.nan says.
"Yo-., don't call on Chinese officials between 8
and 8 ·30 That's when they U.ten to the Voice of
America."
VOA BUTraESSED ITS credibility, says
Alan Baker, chief of the Near East and South
.Uia Division, "by our candid reportinl of the
Watergate affair After hearing ua report on it
for month.a, our listeners realized we were
honestly reportinl the diamanWng of our gov-
ernment."
A congressional charter In 1976 decreed that
VOA would serve as a "consistently reliable
Rather cabby
gets taxi back
CWCAGO (AP) -t-Cab driver Eu1ene
Phillips. who complained he was "bein& treated
Ute a maniac'' after taklnj CBS newsman Dan
Rather for a ride Monday, has received
permtul0otodrivehlscaba1ain.
Ph1Wps, wbo alle1edly refuaed to let the TV
penon.uty out of bl• cab Monday afternoon and
wb stopped by an off-dut)' corredions officer,
was told by the city Wednetday be can drtve his
cab until the citJ hold• a fonnaJ hearln& on the
matter. The Cl\Y denied PblW .. the uaeofhlt cab
J~u~ad ....... •-Y·._lliim"!.._ .... ~~lllllliliiiiliio!~iim...._ ... __ .,
y
and authoritative source of news," would
represent America and ''not any single segment
of American society.·· and present the policies
of the United States "clearly and effectively."
In addition to the news and a bit of
Americana, VOA also serves up news analyses
and commentaries that reflect tht: views of the
U.S. government
THESE ARE "ALMOST like a commercial
break for the government, suitably labeled,"
says News Director Bernard Kammensky.
News F.ditor John Scultz puts it this way: "Our
news reports are the engine, the commentaries
the freight we have to carry."
The commentaries are suggested by foreign
policy staffers guided by the State Department.
"My job is to be the resident authority on what
foreign policy is," says Kenneth Bache, of the
policy staff.
The commentaries can be as few as one a
week or up to t~o a day, and will probably be
-.used in all 39 language services.
Rep. Lionel Van Deerlin, D-Cat.fr .. com-
. plained earlier this year that the voices of
Moscow and Peking were louder in the ltfiddJe
East than America's and said, "this is a war of
words we can't afford to lose."
Soviet exile Alexander Solzhenitsyn has
complained that the Voice or America avoids
angering the Soviet leadership. "In their zeal to
preserve detente, they remove eve1')1hing from
their broadcast which mieht irritaie the Com·
m unists in power."
Reinhardt responds, "This country does not
• need and should not want a propaganda agency.
A MOTLEY CREW. Responsible for the transcribed destiny o{ many prominent
National and International personages in a large sector of Southern California.
Abba Neil Diamond Olivia Newton John Manhatten Transfer Boz Scaggs
Ht rb Alpert Ooob1e Brothers Michael Jackson Moody Blue. Paul Simori
8ff Gees Fleetwood Mac Earl Klugh Kenny Rankin Spyro Gyro
George Bt'nson Art Garfunkel Gordon Lightfoot Lou Rawls Barbra Slreisand
Glen Campbt'll George Harrison Kenny Loggins Helen Reddy Donna Summer
Carpenters Billy Joel Barry Manilew Linda Roneladl Dionne Warwick
Chri1lopher Cron Elton John Chuck Man1tione Diana Ross
I
i
..
ON A MIGHTY WA VE. Clockwise: Ed the Red, Pete the Pirate, Captain Jack, King
Neptune. These wild, disturbed Sea Monsters play havoc in the electronic waters on the ~
far horizon or your FM radio scanner. FM lattitude 108, just north of the Border. beyond :
the Spanish Main. Their careless exploitation of their prominent hostages will freeze the
Salt Wt\ler in your blood. Search them out on your FM Radio Scanner Code Key: FM
108. K-WAVE KWVE. Out of sight (Almost) The End (of the diaU.
..
1
We do not need to trim the tnrth. The po•er of
our ldeaa, the gTandeur of our accomplish· ments,speakforthems~~el~ves~~ .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'(/;11 (/Ir(/ 7/1111/f/*
Ji' c/)l,tY,t'/~llJ
Chu/J/mdd ..
/980
di Look dlt
d/.o[id.ay CxcitE.mE.nt 'Jc.atu 'tin9
Cffu._ 'J~cination_ o( Ch.'t~tr:za1. :7-'a..i.t
c::Nc.w 'Dc.coia.tion~ th'tou9hout tfu._ cMaff
* ~'a.nta d/nb.Ju cNovc.mb£t 28th
SOUTH COAST PLAZA ..
•
I _ ..
MO ICa 01' DBATH Oil PUBLIC NOTICE a 0 M I I! MA • I e, ______ _
ft " I L: ' ft s A ., D 0 " PICTITIOUS ._,.. ..... --, ft IT T ION T 0 AD -MAM9UATHNIMT MINI T•• •STATE NO. Th• tooow1nv ,.r_,s or• dolnv
A·t 11. . bull~·~·: H I 0 N 0 N E H 0 u II T a I I h e 1 r s • c1..EAN&11s. '° E 1"" St.. cotw bene clarles, creditors Moo, CA'2W and c t-nt cr9dltors of •1.., ....,,...., McKo. J132 °" ... I
Bonn • ._ A ..... c.uMt--.CAm» I Marie Phllllps of v-McKay, 2132 DrOlle Aw .. 1
H u n I n g to n 8 e a c h 1 Costa-.... CA '2Q Calif rnfa, and persons Thh IMllMU h condl.lcted ....
who y be othe lse In-e-••1 =~ov
terest In the wlfrancl/or r111, Al..._,t ""°' 111o11 wtth '"" estat • Co1>nly c~ Of Or ..... Col#lty ..... D
A petition has been filed Nowem-7•1*· ,,..,., esign nixed
by John 8 . Phillips In the PuD11.-<>r1n11t c-11 0o11v PllOI
Superior Cqurt of Orange Nov'· 16.u.».1te0 ~ LAS VEGAS (AP> -
county requesting that PUBUC N. OTICE A convention badoe de-John B. Phflllps be ap-• pointed as personal ----------slen featwinl a triple
representative to ad-'=~:::::,u lmaee of the Convention
mlnlst9f' tht estate of Bon· T11e 1o1-.ie ..,.., is e1o1119 11u11-Center dome was reject-
nle Marie Phllllps <under neua1 ed by the Laa Vegas the Independent Ad -PROFE.ss10NAL LEGAL Conven•:-_ ..... t.n-1to-SE1tv1cEs, 101 Rocllvl-, l~•IM ~ llUU ,,Mt ... ministration of Estates c.111orftlatt115 · Authority as beln& non-
Act>. The petition Is set for "'-'Yi J Ki__., io1 Roc11v1-. representative. Instead, hearing In Dept. No 3 at Irvine. Co11tomamu
• •
third Jl'aden •eN down from the )'tar before and ll\ICJ
the predlct-4 raq .. tor tbe 1da· trtct.
Seal 8eull l••••tHf: Third,....... In tbla dlattlct had
by far the ~t avera1• read·
ln1 aeon in tM county, but lhtlU
wu down from the eqwv&lent
score from the year befor..
• Nevertheleu, the score atlU
ranked the district ln the top two p.rcent ot the state -and a
al1nlflcant mueln above what
Hpertll predicted,
Scores we.-e equally lm-
preaalve for thlrd·crade writing
apd math (top 1 percent 1.
Scores for alxth sraders were aood, but not comparable wtt.h
the fOunaer set. The sixth
1raders' scores fell ln all four
cate1ories from the year before.
WestmlHter Elemeatar:r:
These students must have had
tbelt taters acratcblne their
beads in di.abellef after scorln1
above the aocioloetcal lndeJt ln
all of the -cate1ories for both
erades. The scores were ln the
top 40 percent, which was not re·
markable. But this was the
county's Ocily district ln which •JI ol the scores surpaaaed pre-
diction.a.
The students also improved
district scores from the year
before in each instance.
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI aUllN•ll
MAMll IT~T9MllMT The followlnQ ~ IA dolnt bliM·
MHel: NIKK Y'S PLANT CAAE, m9 , WeatmlnMr Bl..._, Wftlmlnstor. CA
tJ6G Nlcolelle Yvonne Wllta, •l71 ' Ktomotll Or., w.stmlnsllor, CA t2'll Tiiis l>WIMss la ~lied Dy on In-' dlvl41uol. Nlt°'"'9 V WllH This ... ..,._. was fllacl wltll U.
Count'I' Cieri! of D<'•neo C:-ty on
Hovemtler 13, 1W
Pt ....
Pllllfl-Or ..... C-st Dolly PtlOC
STARTING
A BUSINESS?
Rent • Poetal Boa To-•
CS.y, and you'll rec:elw
our 24 hr. Telephone
Me1uge Senlcel
631-1554
Mailbox We1tcllff
1825 Westchll Dm1e
Newport Beach. 92660 •
Glmmp. Curt,® Special 1s:gs
The ac•d-~alanced perm by Helene Curtis With
cond1t1ontng formulas Includes shampoo. cut
and styllng
Frosting, Special 19.88
Frost your hair with dramatic col"r strokes or
iubtle highlights. Our professional styltsts will
make your true colors shine Includes toner and
styling
~;;:-~~7~~~0N A(JCPenney
Specl• good IJ from NOY. 17"t FASHION ISlANO
thru Nov. 22nd. NEWPORT~
70 Civic C&nter Drive, ..,r1~1::-S ts 11e1,. c~..s t>t the authority selected a
West, In the City of Santa M9ryl J Ki--.,. deaien featurt.n1 a aiulle
Ana , Callfornla on Thh , .. _was hied wltll '"" domeblidte. ~e~~1~at1o:oo=i~~0r-~~Y""~~~~~~~~~~~~----------~~~~~~~=~~~---
a.m. ..,_ NOW AVAILABLE
Nov .••• u.a. Oec. 7, ,. 4»WI "'.-~-~~-~~--<i...
IF RU OBJECT to the Pu«>11u.o 0r-c-s1 o.11v Pitot Mini Office Rental gr an no Of the petftiOn, NOV '· l6. lJ, lO, • .., 4.4ll~ e.tvlCM fnctud•
YCM.t Id ~lther appear PUBLIC.NOTICE •Lae•--at th hearing and state _.,_......,
yourl,!>bJectlons or file l'tCTiriousauaiNns • !-... ~ 1 wrltt:r~ objections w ith the NAMa uATHlaNT :;;:;:......,.e;;;;;;.-
court before the heari~. Tiie lollowlftl perwnJ ore dolno ... ,.._.. ........
Your•appearance may be ou.i....... • ...._..,..,....
in ~ or by your at-JACI( HEWES .. ASSOCIATES ... "'· ---"""'t. ~· 000 C.OMIJUl Oriwe. Suitt SM, Newpor1 -.......... torn . &Hell, Co111orn1•'2MO 'ACT NOW, IPACI LIMITID I Y 0 U A R E A Ou1oner Floorono, Inc I• .,.,_...,.. __ H I
CR EOITOR or a cont-C•lllOrnl• corpoullon), 4500 CernpUS POITAL BOX Inge~ creditor of the de· g:1'1;:;n.~"~:i.o st&. NtwpOrl Buch •••• 17th It.
ceas4*d. you must file your Tiu• """"'m IS De1nQ conducted by lult• 21, Cotta M•••
clal"' w ith the court or .corpor•hon
presttnt it to the personal ~~.=s. "'·;:;;;;~~~~~~:;-=-~~:;-";";'~~~~~~~:=~~ repr~entaflVe appointed Tiii\ ll<llernenl WH foled wnh lM by t Court Within four Counlv Cler• ol Oranoe Co1>nty on
mon S from the date Of Novcmbef'J, l_, l'l*ll
first ssuance of letters as P..i.111MO 0r-Coo•t o.11v P1101 prov in Section 700 of No• 9, 1•.1J. JO, 1MO ..,,._.o
the Probate Code of PUBLIC NOTICE Call nla. The time for
fllln~ claims will not ex-I
plre )>rlor to four months "=C:::"~::S
from the date of the hear-The 1o11ow1119 pertons are ""'"V
ing opt iced above ou .. nu• as I YQU MA y EXAMINE JARACO ENGINEERING 15Mll
the tlle kept by the court. ~~;•m 51 H..nhnoton &Heh. c-.
Specializing in 2nd
Trust Deeds-Swing
Loans-& 1st Trust
Deeds over
$500,000
497-5733
If you are interested 1n the Rotier1 Porter c;.n1111n1 u151 I es ta tit, you may file a re-Edwum, w.tJ1m11'5ter CA n61J Mo"P11•
quest With the COUrt tO re-Jerry RIClwlrd Moll .. 211" &onff. and
185 Wave St.
Laguna Beach . . H1>nli"Q1on 8Hcn, CA.,._ B It
ce1v8 special notice of the rn11 1>u11neu .. conducted by • ~~~~-ro~cno~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ invel\tory of estate assets 0<0ner•1 par1nero111p --=---
and ;of the petitions, aC· Tllll ,'!.~::i '!::11;~ with tne · -----..,,,.........,.
C 0 U n t S a n d r e p 0 r t S County Cieri! of Oronoe County on
descr.bed in Section 1200 No••mt>e< '· 1MO
of t CallfDrnla Probate P14'1u Cod PuDhsNO Or.,,Gt Cooit Dolly Piiot • NOV 9, 16, 13, lO, IMO «l,_IO
Id C. Hensley Law
, 130I Wilshire Blvd., Dea•• Nea~s es, Ca. t0017 KAll90 PuC> u.d Or-Coast Dally Piiot JOE ttAReO. natlonelly known Nov I , 16, Zl, ltJIO '~ outhOr ol TN l.OIV Mon's W•v 10 lllChH,' -"TM Po-r ol Money p;;;;;;a;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;... __ ...,. Mo1M199menL" P••-..... yon Wed·
neldoy. _.,,.,... 11, "'° ollhll• be1nQ lnlor•tt-Dy KNXT Newt •I nos ....
~u In H<;ntlnglon Beoch, Co Born
and •••MCI In LO\ AnQelH. C•, ne al· tended Manual Arl1 HIO/I Sci-I •n<I o•t.0 ser..o In tht So<llh Ptc1llc dl.lr•nQ
World w., t I After ow w•r l\e worked I with Iha P~ P••v-. "'"1ch ,.., to ports 1n lf'f .. 111n "10Ws. such as I
~~~UH
' 648-7431 =• 1eet1t ....,.., anti •• ..,,.,.. ... -__ ,.. ... , ·~' ---c:.-•-....-...... e...-T111"svourFa1 encl Hollsollvy ~;;J;;;;;;;::====-:::: Hll Olhe< -... Inc•-. Cll•I pion I :.; .... ,,. .1 .. mwt<oto<I --y -' v11we"k-01 ThoS-rSpy. 'Htl 11 aurvt..O IPt "" #lie -I chlldr., 1 PACIAC VtlW ......,., ... , ...
fcen'etery Mortuary Chapel
F UM r •I Mrv.U. wll 1 De Nld on Sunooy
NO••-"· 1te0 at Ho'110r Le-Memor1•I O>ope1 at 1.00 PM wllll Or
~,UNDAIWE
ABOUT A SECOND
1RUST DIED LOAN 3'oo Fec1f1c View Drive
Newport Beacn
64'·2700
H4nry c-.-. o111ctelinv llnd "'° i
slllQe<I Jerry Miiier •ncl 0.nt NoOtl S.r•ICH under Ille dlrKllOfl of Har-
LeWft·-Ohw Mortuary o1 Cost .. Mew 54C>-S»4
s.tePTu UP JO •500,000
JACK SHEFTEL. re110Wlt Of Stint• • McCoaMICll MOITUl.allS
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hiiis
768·0933 ,:;an Juan Capistrano
I 495-1776
• H~ LAWH_..y. OLIYI
1Mortuary • C.matery
Cre,,..tory
16~ Gisler Ave
CostaMeN
540-5554
110 Broadway
Co.ta Mesa
642-1150
M&:rza .. •ao ..
N'TH. nmtlU.
1WH1C ... CMANL
421 E 17th St
Cotta Meta
84&-9371
Ano, C.O P-away on No_.,be, ")\ (. E , 'T" d L ~··1~11E:E~J·:~ .. !~~:: fl .) ~ewpor~ICEiueo11eyROKrER1uSnlNCEst:_ nc
CO. Or•Vftldt Mrvlcn wlll De "9141 on ""'• S<lnd•y -m-16, lteO ol J:OOPM (71.<111) 1£1\~ ® al the Poc1flc v-Me.-lol P•rll I flt UV"VUUV
cemetery, Hew-1 llHcll, CO. wlll\ 11-. ====================::: llol>l>I Rob9rt 6o•f"IO" offlcl•llnQ. _
Pa< Ille v---ydlrecton .
O'HAllt HENRY O'HAllt, o rnlclent ol El Toro, CO -tomwrty • reslclenl ot Coot• MMe, Co PoMe4 •"'•Y on No ... ember 14, 1'90 Prior to ret1rome1>t "" nod Dffn Illa pr09rl1tor of O'M•lr Wold•no In Coslll Mow, CO. ler 27
Yffrl ... II wrvlWd Dy 1111 wife Theim• • son Oenn11 ol El Toro, Co.
-l Qr-l>tj\lron. $itrVl<Ol Wiii M held on T....,...., Nowmoor 11, IMO ot
,,. c.._. of McCorrn "" Mof'tllory. uoun• Hlllt wltll pastor a;11 C .. ncy Offkl•llno 111....,._. wlll lot-•t lho Ill Toro Ctm•t•t'Y. Mccormic• Mortovry, ~ Hllll dlre<:lon
IAGUNA. llA.NOB
RETIREMENT llDl•ENCE
Private rooms in a quiet
garden atmosphere over-
1 o o king the Pacific
Ocean.
Attractively served meals
including special diets.
D a i I y· m a i d s er\' i c'e ,
phones, T.V. cable and
scheduled transportation
included.
2 i 30 S. Coast Highway
Laguna Beach, CA 92651
. (714) 494-9458' •
-GLAZED
CERAMIC TILE
• IDEAL FOR UTKI a llTCHEll!
PRE-PASTED
WALLPAPER
NISTI ....,
89!
-.
MARATHON MANIA ,
IT DO N'T MAKE any difference. The
.. complimentary" cup of coffee I'm entlUed
bec•UM ol .PUttbUiq • bedroom ticket has to
be o.rdered tbrou1b the "man ln the rears
wbat•a taJd.na cere of youn room."
.. OK. l'll_P.l•y. All conversation is conducted
~ •mlllnl faces -hla a little more smil-ln• tbAn mine. A stem back man in line behind me, very
well dressed, very strong, no-nonsense looking,
rece,lvea the same treatment. Even after stat·
lnc. in IJ)Oderate but firm tones, that be ls an employee of the railroad. We all get jived.
A CONVERSATION WITH H.L. Crittenden,
flagman, is interesting. Did the railroads or the late '309, '40s and early '50s get an undeserved
good image? Or were they really as gracious
and elegant as I want to believe?
H.L. says yes, they were elegant, its it's no illusion.
Does it upset him greatly?
Without changing the emotional tone or
tenor in his speech he replies, "Oh, you're talk-
ing about the niggers in the club car." Only the
word nigger is spoken softly and wlt'!Pa slight
change of cadence
HE GOES ON TO slate it's all government
work. "1bey," ''he," or "we" can't change it. It
is the only time on my journey through the
south that I hear the word nigger and then it is
said without malice.
Next stop: Washington, D.C I cajole my
way into the cab of the diesel-electnc, talk with
the fireman and engineer and ride a few miles
down track while they switch engines.
The diesel-electric generates 6,000
horsepower, gets up to 80 mph on the way to
Washington. Surprising that the engineer has no
control or idea which track the train takes -
"Exceeclng ltl I didn't even know there••••
Jotolng lmlt."
it's all controlled beyond tum He reacts to
lights and a few simple signals.
Back on the train for the five hour ride to
Pennsylvania Station in midtown Manhattan
WHAT A THRILL GETTING off with
nothing but a backpack, walking through the
station, out into the sun. the slight chill and the
definite shrill of New York.
I start walking In the direction of Manhat-tan I feel important upon sensing Marathon
Mania: posters, papers, runners. T-shirts,
Adidas bags. Even among the millions I pick up
on these few signals and it feels great.
SUNDAY, Oct. Z1
Fort Wadsworth. Staten Island, marshaling
for the start of the 11th annual New York City
Marathon. It's 7:30 and cold as hell' There are
12,000 runners and I don't know a soul. I enjoy the anonymity
Just sit and stare, shiver, read "Execu-
tioner's Song" (without interruption), walk,
short talks with guys from New Orleans,
Massachusetts, Long Island and then meet a
friend from two nights previous; a tall attorney
from Sioux Falls named Larry Piersal.
The stm comes out, the adrenalin comes ln.
we move to the Verrazzano Narrows Bridje and
"ba-loom" -we are off! It's a ball, I feel
ire at.
AL&EADY THERE ABE spectators. It's
sunny -I love it. Full of energy. Larry's rig.ht
with me -he loves it, too. Someone oe the
sidelines yelb, "Only 2S miles to to!"
I nm an outside lane to see all the faces.
They're white, i.nterestine, ruaed I loot up at
the buildings, then at the faces, and for ihe first
time put the two together TheM folks are
tou1h, resilient, their splrlt keeps them 1oln1 -
their lpirtt keeps me eotne.
In Brooklyn, a high school band plays
"Rocky." I'm stoked, what fun. Uncontrolled, I
raiae both flstl over mr bead.
*BODYGUARDS•
lmm.dlate ~•! Immediate A•aUabW&y !
Now available In your area at a momenta
notice. U violence la a pos1lbllity don't d•
peod on lud or leave your Ufe to fate
Anywhere. anytime 'irmed and belted
bod)'fU,ardl att at your •Ide to serve and protect.
CALL:
BACK'l'llACK VNLIMttED CO.
n4-M7·••
• •
Down Bedford Avenue, clouds tome ln,
l1JWt. ere bumpy. trowcb conti.Du..
I GI.AD-SLAP LITl'LE brown handa, take
an oranae 1Uce from an elderly hand, 1mlle
·when someone readinc my jerHy offers "Go
Corona deJ Mar."
At lO mUea I 1tart t.o feel my legs 1Wfeo. At Ute ball-way point (in Queens> a larae
crowd brtnp ine to lean with chant of "Go, co. ,o. •• Wbyf They doo 't know me, and tMy've
beeo doUlf it for over an hour now, for every-
91\e.
Over the windy Queenaboro Brid&e into a
bl1 crowd, down First Avenue, a fan bu
ruhlooed a cardboard aisn "Salazar wins In a: Ot, Gomez 2nd."
I have an hour to JlO. •
IN CENTRAL HAaLEM an overwei&ht,
80-l.sh man standing alone bellows, "You guys is
all winners, you guys ls all winners," while
clusters ol women relay the standard "Lookin'
good," and, "You can do It."
Soon the cries are "Four more miles, only
four more miles." I hurt a little. Entering Cen-
tral Park I hurt a lot, thinking about settlin& for
just finishlng.
Three miles, two bliles -•toundlng the cor-
ner in front of the Piasa I start to turn on, pass
a few, hear familiar voices, "Hey. Corona del Mar "
Another corner leads into the park. I'm
really moving now, passing as many as I can.
I HEAR NOISE, shouts, music, see
grandstands and hear the announcer saying,
"Look at those faces, feel the emotions. They
are in under 3th hours!"
Some ·people will
•
listen to Nathan Pritikin
as though their lives
depend on it.
~ ~-·
You can hear about the most talked about health' information pro·
gram from a Pritikin Counselor .
The meeting is free, but the results could be pricelc1ss.
The Prit.ikin Better Health Program invites you to a free introducto-
ry meett_ng and lecture, where you will learn how to prevent and
reduce nsk factors of heart disease, obesity, hypertension, and dia-
betes. You'll le~rn a~ut our satisfying food plan, e:.asy exercise pro-
gram and and hf~·hme support concept-all at co1~1venien~ enjoya-
ble, economical, once a week evening classes.
For a reservation at a free lecture near you, call now ~, 14-891-7507
Collect. for information, write to Pritikin 7411 Garden Grove ID,
Garden Grove. Calif. 92641. ·
IRVINE
Irvine Host Hotel
1717 E. Dyer Rd II rw,, et1 Dyw M S.aal
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Murdy Comm. Center
7000 Norma Dr
NEWPORT BEACH
•P'Y7 ""~-..... "'Nonna
Marnoll Hotel
HOO Newport Center Dr
SD f'wytoJa..-....w
People are cheering. Again I raise my fist
over my head, milking the moment for all it's
worth Wed. 11/lt, 7:• P.M. Wed_ 11/tt. 7::. P.M. t.o Senta •••"-'• Or s Thurs. 11/20, 7:30 P.M. It's strange to stop, my body seems to keep on running, •
I'm handed a medal and spot my wife Wen-
dy. She keeps kissing me, lcan'tk.iss back
I'm very happy
. ad1e lllaeli ~--..
Two Fantastic Gift Ideas lrou
Couldn't Have Given Last l'ear
eome In tor Your FREE C~~ ~~! Color TRS-SO Comp Full k tor full Information on
The New TRs-ao ·· Color <::omputer
-An Ideal Christmas Giift for the
Entire Family! Fun and E:ducation
Plus Real Computin,~g Power! s3· 99 • Easily ".ttaches to Any Coll1or' TV
·Vivid Color & Sound
4K Color Computer
Color Video Receiver Optional-Ext 1·a
An exciting, versallle personal computer that :; simple to
use' Just pop in an instant-loading Program F'ak ·~ and
you're ready to got Or learn to program 1t you1• self tor
vivid color and action sound in easy-to-learn l! ASIC
language. Over 200,000 TAS-80s are teachino and edu-
cating people just like you -and preparing kids for a
computer-oriented future. An expandable computer wrlh
available options that let it grow wrth you and )'Our
family! #26-3001
TRS-80 13·· Diagonal Color Video Receiver
#26-3010. $399
Ready-to-Run Program Paks
Chess. #26-3050 .
Quasar Commander· #26-3051
Personal Finance #26-3101
Music. #26-3151
Joystick Controllers #26-3008
"JWquwn Joys1>Cb •
39.95
39.95
39.95
29,95
Pair 24.95
Visit your nearby Radi~ s~:ams for business. educa-
TRS-60 computers an P ••---------------------------·,--.. tiOnal and personal uses.
New TRS-80 Pocket
Computer-
Number One on Any
Chrisbnas List!
~Only~49
A breakthrough-the tlrs1 pocket com-
puter that programs In BASICI Take It
with you wherever you v<>-on Ule job or
right at home. Write your own programs
In BASIC, or using the optional Caasetto
fntetfaoe, you can load pre·reeorded pro-
grams for a variety of uses. A large,
24-character llquld crystal disptay-fnakes
It easy to read. And it even retains pro-
grams aft.er the power hU been turned
off I Only 6 ounces light, 1Vax2o/.>e61/e"
smell. Case and battones lncfuded.
#2&-3501 CHARGE IT tMOST STORES)
Complete Your Pocket Computer Sy•tt?m ,
C.nette lnterfHe.
Save and load
programs. *26-3503, ~
' Mini..tte•.9 I ea ... tte Recorder.
Battery or AC powered.
#14·812, 79,95 Betttritl•Ulra
I Pocket Computer Sottwa;e
MaU'I orm. #26-3514 ... 14.9' Bualf\88a Finance.
Bualneaa StatlatJcs. #26·3517 .•...• t..
#26-3516 .... , .......• 19.95 Mk about others. •
........ u
' .. ~'" ' 'tt .... ,
',• t I
I <> •
•tn• ....
't .~
11 l l~f'
I J 1';
f ;» '• J
f .•
t'•J•,1
-.
' •• J
QCTD ph()nes linked ~o public
...
ton to call up a acbedule or a map on a video
&<:reen.
BY TB BAY -Walter Schlobc 1bm la a bappy
resident ol Aptos, a northern 1 ::aUfomia town
by Monterey Bay
lnto<..,et-W the "Ptele of llW 0.., ii .. -led by Mille l'MIO, •11t11or of llw ,,,. e<ttllon of lhe 'Who , Wllo ol l'en.oNll1ect Celltornl• lket'tM f'l•IH ·
•A wonted mother aaya her son didn't
•et off th bua at \tie rt•ht place. SM think• be pro1bably 11 11 on board, but lost. A check
provet her riaht.
A pack of rooters want to know how to 1et lo the atadlum ror the weekend football 1ame
They I t 1ome route 1u11ealiona and the
patbftndera aet off for the bus at.op
A businessman calls and aska for sua1es
lion• for Christmas &ifta ror bis workers. Ao
operator tells him about monthly PUHi and he buys one for each employee.
THECALLSCOME in all typesofvolces and
with all degrees of assertiveneu. And, with the
exceptiOJ\ of callers such u the lost gift-giver,
they want to know about riding the bus or join-
il'l& a carpool. To help Orange Coµnty's conservane com-
muter, the dlatrict has set up what officials call
their Wormatioo Center with. 27 full-and part-
tlme operators to anawer calls. A third of the operatora speak Spanish.
These operators handle more than 85,000
calls per month, and offictals claim Uiey can of.
fer fast service because of a semi-automated
system that prevents operators from leafin"
throu1b ~uses of maps to explain bus routes
INSTE.\D, THE OPERATORS work at a
computer terminal, where they can punch a but· ----------
The dlatrlct bas used tbe 1ystem since ma.
and General Manaaer James Reichert said it
ttaa increased efficiency by 35 percent
However, he aald the speed doesn't help much lf
caUers aren't ortanized before they dial the dla-
trtct's apeclaJ number: 836-7433 CRJDE).
Callers should say where they are and
where they want to ao,. and the time when they
plan to arrive or return.
"AlthoUlb this sounds almple, some c
aren't quJte sure of this intormaUoa ao tbe»e
calla will take a little tonier to handle," said
Reichert.
DEAF PEOPLE ALSO can tue the In-
formation Center because the district baa a
special teletype printer that reeelvea and sends
out slgnala to persons with similar devices at
the other end.
Operators provide information to bus riders
on other systems. too. Schedule information as
available for the Loni Beach. Transit Co., the
Southern California Rapid Transit District and
tbe t11guna Beach Munloipal ~ lines.
Although the district's bus system is geared
to handle thousands of riders, officiala still are
trying to get a carpool program rolllng.
Reichert said the goal of the program is to offer Oe11y....,....,....,..
immediate computer matchups for callers who CARPOOL MATCHING BY T£L!PHON£
want to share rides to work or school. Uncle Aelnh•rt t•k•• commut•r'• call -----------
• SHOl'J TODAY NOON TO 5 p.m. Downtown _closed; Del Amo 11 to 6 p.m .
.
'
§Jecial
1 5" 14K gold serpentine necklace, 18.99
A 1atching 7" 14K gold serpentine bracelet, 8.99
r -
'
SAVE 44%
14K GOLD
SPECTACULAR.
ONE DAY ONLY,
TOMORROW.
Now's the time to fill your treasure
chest with gold. 14K gold chains,
bracelets, charms, charm holders and
earrings st fantastic savings.
A dazzling sel8Ction of styles to
choose. Sorry, no mail or phone
orders. Quantities sra._ limited.
Fashion Jewelry, 142
~ Mlaf(Jfld to show del•ll
Bullock's South Coast Plaz , 3333 Bristol, S.M (714) 558·0811 . Shop Mon.-Fn. 10-9:30, Sat 1~8, Sun. 12·5.
Bullock's M/s$100 VieJO, Mission Viejo Mall, (7_14).~~5-3111. Shop Mon.·Frl 10-9, Sat. 1C>-8, Sun. 12·5 ..
<7 p . I • I
• f
\ -USC's national championship hopes .. shattered, 20-10 1Ut
l?
aCAUAION ............
LOS ANG -TMN are a lot ol cUchea
approprlate -Eltht II More 'Than how&Ja . . . That'• Incredible . . . Satufda1 ~Uve ..•
~· u the TrQJana 1tumbled around In the first lutll before a CollHum crowd ol ~.w.
It C'Ould be construed u laui,bable -since
USC wu very much •till in the eame with a 3.3
situation. Coach John RoblnSbn's Trojans en-
tered with a 7·0.1 record, ranked No. 2 in the na-
tion, bad buried Callfomia and humbled Stan·
ford on ill way to collisions with UCLA and
Notre OaQ>e.
nulllfted. t.tie play. Finally Eric Hipp came in to
try a fteld eoal.
But before he connected, he mana1ec1 a
pratfall u he tuned up for the kick in the middle
of the field. Even a dog made his wayward way
to the playing field.
defeat as a USC coach past the month of Oe· -
tober. He ia now 20·2 in that category -both
losses comln1 to Waahlneton.
But urday'1 20-10 Paclllc·lO football de·
• fat for the UnJvenJty of Southem California ,..
ally Jmt bolb ~Wll to the fQllowin1 facta:
1'be Trojans• clffam ol a national cbam·
plon1blp baa elfded. The 21-1ame unbeaten
ltreak la bia1ory. Newport Harbor Hltb product
GOrdon Adams bu played his tut 1ame for the
Trojam. And Waahlntton's Huskies are bound
for the Roee Bowl on New Year's Day followin&
a day Trojan falthful would Just as soon for1et.
Four interceptions and four lost fumbles
paved the way for the Hwakies, who took advan·
tate ol the situation with a pair of third quarter
touchdowns, then held on to clinch the con·
ference championship with a !>-1 record. Overall
the Huskies are 8-2.
An interception of an Adams• pass ln the
Huskies' end &00e killed one potential aeore, an
Adams' fumble went unharmed. a mlsup on a
bandolf found Adams and t.tllbact Mateus Al·
Jen colUcliM to t.belr own backfield and Adams
perfeded h1s left-handed passing, flipping one
mateabitt aerial to Hoby Brenner.
Brenner completed the comedy routine,
falline on bis face with no one between him and
the goal-line. The 10.yard gain went to the
Washinitoo four-yard line.
For a long time It seemed to be ju.st one big Another pus to Brenner wu good for a
touchdown -but wait a minute -a penalty
Bowl invitations out
Who plays · who?
From AP Dlapatches
The Georgia Bulldogs held
firm to their No. 1 ranking by
beating Auburn 31 -21 and
clinched a berth in the Sugar
Bowl Saturday, the day the
bowls began extending their in·
vit.ations.
Georgia's opponent will be the
sixth-ranked Fighting Irish or
Notre Dame, who defeated No. 5
Alabama 7·0 Saturday The
Sugar Bowl probably will de·
termine the national cham·
pionship.
Alabama, meanwhile, re-
portedly has accepted a Cotton
Bowl invitation Against 12th·
rated Baylor, the Southwest
Conference winner. with a 16-6
victory over Rice.
QUARTERBACK Buck Belue
scored one touchdown and
passed for another score for
~ Georgia. which won the South·
1 easterp Conference with ita 10th
consecutive victory and a 6-0 ~ league mark.
Conference clashes next
weekend wtll determine berths
In the l\OSe, Orange and Holiday I bow~. I Unranked Was hington, 8·2,
scored a stunning 20·10 upset
over second-ranked Southern ·
Cal, 7·1·1, Saturday and will
represent the Pacific 10 Con·
ference in the Rose Bowl
South Carolina held on to beat
Wake Forest 39-38 Saturday for
an 8·2 record.
NO. ll Brigham Young meets
Utah next Saturday for the
Western Athletic Conference
championship and the right to
represent the WAC in the Holi·
day Bowl against 18th-rated
Southern Methodist, which was
invited despite losing 14·0 .to
Texas Tech. BYU, 9·1, defeated
Colorado State 45·14.
The other ranked teams in ac·
lion this .weekend were 15th·
ranked North Carolina, which ac·
cepted a Bluebonnet Bowl invita·
lion against unranked Texas, and
No. 20 Florida, which has been in·
vited to the Tangerine Bowl
against unranked Maryland.
North C~lina whipped Virginia
26·3, ana Florida got by Kentucky
17·15
Bowl roundup
IND«f>•NDeNCI llOWL
~,.o.c.u
, ...... -1.L..a.1
Te•m' 10 be ennounc:ed
OA•Dl'M ITATI M>WL -.,.o.c.u IMl' ... ..._ .... ,N J I
Navy IT J) •• -15.-41
HOLIDAY 90WL ...... ,.Dec "
IAl-'*991
SMU 11-JI "' Bll(lllam Younv , ... ., or Uleh n Ju
"llSTAM>WL ....... ,.o.c.u
l.otT....-1
P•M Slat• It 11 "' MIChl~ 1 .. 11 ot Ohio Stet•" II •
HALL 0 .. 'AMI' .OWL
~y.O.C.17
l .......... ...._.A .... I
'••m' co be Mnounced
Llel'•TY eo'#L '-r.o.c.11 IM-......,T-.1 p.,,.,~ 11 JI vs ,,\l,,_.,.I 11 ))
SUN.OWL s.tw-My. o.c. J7 1 .......... ,, .. ,
M iu Sl• .. 1"11 "' IOter of O.lehom• 11-11 ot N•brHk• 1 .. 11
GATO• M>WL -.,.o.c.u
''" .1•0-•llle, ..... ) PlltlburQll i. 11 n . South CArollne (1-1)
eLUl'M>HNIT M>WL ._,,o.c.Jt
(eiH ....... ) North C.otlna , .. ,, ., r .. .., 1111
COTTOttM>WL
y,JM.I
OA!leal •••e>etne 1 .. 11 lor ,,.,,
O•AMGI' IOW\. ,__.,,., ... , , .. ..._)
F IOrlcM su .. , .. ll •• wlnMr of Oii.._,,.
"nor Nfllr•"'• , .. 11
•OSl90WL
J--.y.JM.t ,., .. ._.,
w .. n1na1on 1111 •• Mt<hloet> 1 .. 11 or Oflio Sl•I• It II
SUDA• M>Wl "-"-'·'-·' ....... on..,.,
Georo•• 11041 ws Notre D•me 19-0-ll
.. l'ACH M>'#l
....... ,., ... 2
latAU..tal
Virginie r.cn II 31 •• IHm 10 be 0.1.,,,..lned
But ii it seemed comical on the surface, re·
ality proved otherwise.
Adams went down for an ll·yard loss as
24l·pcxmd tackle Fletcher Jenkins drove him to
the turf and the result was tom knee ligaments,
which will require sur1ery.
Tbe handwriting came quickly in the third
quarter as Ray Horton returned a punt 73 yards
ror a Washington touchdown., then Tony
Caldwell intercepted at the USC 48 to set up
Tom Flick's 10-yard touchdown pass to Paul
Sk.anai.
After that thines just got progressively
wone. ·
"Credit should be given Wuhington," aa.id
Robinlon, who was experiencing only bis second
"It wu Just a day of extreme huatraUou fo
us, as thouah nothln1 went ri8Jlt. Our erron Jua
seemed repeUtlve and for every one on the field
there was a match by our coachin1,"
Robinson refuaed to slniJe out any part of
the debacle as a turning point, s&7in1: •'There
were no keys, you just keep p~ until the
end oftbe ,.me. And we ~·t mald.nt any u-I cuses" ~ . ~
He did, however, admit there wu a point
where he felt the game waa loet -that came :;
with 7:00 still remalnln1 aa the Trojans •. ,
threatened again, only to see Jenkins recover 0 an unforced Anthony Gibson fumble at the
Huskies' 17.
"I said, 'ob, oh,' to myself. But I had been .,
(See TROJANS, Page 8%)
., ......... WASHINGTON FULLBACK WILLIE ROSBOROUGH FUMBLES AS HE'S HIT BY USC DEFENDERS. NO. 7 OIUO STATE, 9·1, a 41·7
victor over Iowa, and lllh·
ranked Michigan, 8·2, which
beat No. 16 Purdue 26·0, meet
next Saturday to determine the
Big Ten representative in the
Rose Bowl. The loser of the Big
Ten has agreed to meet No. 9
Penn State, 9·1, which clobbered
Temple 50·7, in the Fiesta Bowl.
Parsons wins Times 500 battle
Fourth-ranked Nebraska. 9 1,
and 10th-rated Oklahoma, 7·2,
meet next weekend to determine
the Big Eight Conference's
Orange Bowl representative
against No. 3 Florida State.
which was idle Saturday The
loser of the Big Eight title con-
test probably will accept a Sun
Bowl invitation a&ainst 19th
ranted Mississippi State, 8-2,
which beat Louisiana State
55-31.
Nebraska blanked Iowa State as-o, end Oklahoma downed Mis-
souri 17·7, each to remain un-
defeated in the conference Mis·
aourt also accepted a bowl bid
Saturday, agreeing to m~t
Purdue, oow 7·3, in the Liberty
Bowl.
That leJt the eighth-ranked
Plttaburah Panthers, 9·1, who
beat Army 45-7, with an invita·
Uon to the Gator Bowl against
14th-ranked South Carolina.
Saturday's
f oOtban
~West
wam1not0n 20, use 10 LB State 28. Utah St. 27 Wash. St.31,C:.117
Oregon«>, OreQon St. 21
Rodd•
UCLA 23, Ariz. State 14
Kans.s 42, COlor.tdo 3
8VU 45, Colorado St. 14
Arizona 63, Pacific 35
S0State28~:P7
Not,. Dame 7, Alabama o
Gffr'Qla 31, Auburn 21 FIOf'lda 11, Kentucky 1S
Mlsalssfppl St. SS, LSU 31
So. Caro. , Wakt Forest 38
Midwest
Michigan 2.61 Purdue o
Ohio st:41, 1owa 7
NebraSM a5, Iowa St. O louttlwett
OkllhOmi 17, MISSOUrl'7
Arkariset '17, r .... At.M ,.
TtUJ Tech t•, SM\J 0 ~---511 TCU 26 ,,~Yklr to, Ric.I ... ,
1Ptnn St. SO, TtMPft 7 ~Ut4S1ArmV7 (CilQ9tlM....._ ....... ,
Bui, second,.year man Earnhardt takes NASC4R championship
By HOWARD L. BANDY
DI U. Delly P'li.t S-
Q NT ARIO -Benny Parsons
won the battle but Dale
Earnhardt won the war in an ex
citing NASCAR Grand NationaJ
stock car race at Ontario Motor
Speedway Saturday afternoon
before 41.200 wind-swept fans in
the Times 500.
The battle, of course, was the
race over 500 miles that saw
Parsons go two laps down at one
point, then come back to win, and
ca 11 lt an incredible victory.
Earnhardt, last year's rookie
of the year, captured the covet·
ed NASCAR Win~ton driving
championship in only bis second
year on the circuit. He and his
crew also won the season-long
Sears pit stop contest although
Cale Yarborough won
Saturday•s competition.
"WHEN YOU ARE lucky, you
are lucky,'' Paraooa said aft.er
the race. "I eot the 'first lap
back when Darrell (Waltrip) got
out or the groove and slipped in
tum four and I was able to pus
him.
•'the other one came while I
waa foHowing Earnhardt and the
yellow f1a& came out just aft.er
we went by the line."
But the biggest break ol all
came when be was runnin1 in
second place behlnd a •eemlnsly
smooth·nwrln1 Bobby Allllon.
Then the unexpected happened.
Allisoa. went !n for adclltiooal
fuel on lap 193, relinqui1biq the
le•d to P&rlOnl and eventually
the race u weU.
Parton•' victory WH bt1
tecond ln a row ln the Tim• 500
and makel him the only drlver
to accompliah tblt tete. Allilon
11 also a two-Ume winner of the
nent but had to 11ttle for foUrth place 88turdliy,
YAUOllO!!(i"1 lri a ttn>:w.&1 b1ttJe Witb l!M'Dlllrdt tot 4nYiniU.tl9.~\hlrd 1*il*I
.N•lli.BOnnettibut Do:t ™ ... In "froat fl Dale tO Oftrtu him rot theercnm.
"J was wondertn1 U
things would ever go our way to-jack and had three nut bolts that
day," Earnhardt said. "I want weren•t in place so he was
to thank the good Lord above black·flagged to make the cor
You can have everything going rection He lost valuable time
for you. but i( He isn't on your during the second pit stop
side, forget 1t " "If we hadn't hed that prob
category
Arter the dnvers and cars had
sorted themselves out at about
the 148-lap spot in the 200-lap
event, a real drag race de
veloped. At lap 170, there was
on ly 5/lOt.hs of a second separat
ing the top five cars
Yarborough, Earnhardt. Allison.
Bonnett and Parsons
To which Parsons added. "I lem. we would have been nght
say Amen to that there running with Benny at the
"That lut pit stop I made tovl"'end " the story for us today .. Jody Ridley or Chatsworth,
Earnhardt said He went in ior one of the few Cahforma drivers
ruel and thought his crew un·
derstood that changing tires
wasn't necessary Instead they
had the car on a jack and were
changing the right side rubber
when he was given the signal to pull out.
In dollll( so, he ran over the
Schroeder shar:p
~lated #ff)'1J
pagrB-1
on the NASCAR circuit. was
named rookie of the year .
replacing Earnhardt in this
THEN JUST as quickly. Al·
lison pulled in front and away
from the pack to lead. He m·
creased the margin to 6.7
seconds after what appeared to
be his last pit stop on lap 184.
But such wasn't the case and
when Parsons took over. he
moved to a 6.13 second lead at
the finish at an average speed of
Bruinsrebound,23-14
Johnson's 30-yard field goal with 5:51 remaill.lng in
the quarter.
The Bruins made It 10.0 just eight \econds
before halftlme. One play after recoverine a !um·
ble on the ABU 25, Schroeder avoided a Sun Devil
blitz and flred a 15-yard touchdown pass to ticht
end Tim Wrtahtman.
SCHaOEDER CAPPED a 72-yard SiX·pJay
Bruin drive 1:47 Into the third quarter w\th a a.
yard touchdown paas to Oanker WiWe Curran.
Alter Johnson's 37-yard field ioal attempt
went wide midway throup the period..1. .~•ltl
dlrecled ASU 80 yards In eltbt playe. ruuback
Gerald ft.lap ran 11 yards off rilht tackle for &.he
Sun Devil score with 5: 51 left.
ASU 1ambled on a fourtb·and-one situation at
the UCLA 21·yard line with 11:21 remalnillc in the
1ame but came up short.
UCLA took over and drove 79 yard on 11 plays
with freehman taltback Kevin Nellon scorine on a
U·yard run with Mven minutes left.
Arizona &ate cloeed oUt the ecortns '1.tb two
aeconda to play on Pa1el'• ~Jilrd touchdown
puatoflanbr Ron Wuhlnftan.
Schroeder, who had compl«*t JUlt U ot •
p11ae1 for 112 yatd.a and no touchdowns ntertaa
th• ••mt, ftnllbed with 1S7 yll"dl oo &ht comple· Uona In 18 attempt.a.
.J ,
131.936 mph The race took three
hours. 47 minutes and 38 seconds
to complete
The wind wasn't as much a
factor for the drivers as it was
ror the fans "It was pretty
rough," Parsons said 1'Wbat it
did was loosen the car up but
after we made adjustments, it
wasn't a problem anymore."
Parsons was asked if there
was any satisfaction in winning
two years in a row "Yes, J
would say there 1s. And besides
that, I was broke. Everything
just worked out our way."
Parsons picked up $2-4.~ for
the victory with Bonnett getting
$13 ,335 for second place and
Yarboroup $17,035 for third.
Blues prolong
Kings' slump
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Wayne
Babych scored the tiebreaking
goal with 11:25 left to pl., and
Bernie Federto added an ln·
1urance U.Uy with 3:14 remain·
int to lead the St. Louil Blues to
a S-3 Natiooal Hockey Leque
victory over the Los A.n.&elu
KJn1s Saturday Diabt. .
Babycli 1napped a 3-S
deadlock after betook apauhosn
Federko, beatln1 Kln1s' d•·
fenaeman Dave IAwi• and pile
Ron Grahame on a two-on-one
breakaway. Babych then aet up Federko
as the Blues' center rifled In a
lO·footer to enaure tJ\e victory
over the 1lumpln1 Klnp, whO
have droppid th1" of their lut
tour 11mee.
The Blues. U·6·3, inCNued
their Srnytho Dtvtalon Ont plact adYanta,• ove-r Vancouv.r to tour polnta.
LOe Alli Jt1, ll·S..1 leads tbt
Norrta .Olvtslon by ftve polnta
over ontnal. The IKlnca ba
Uid back from 1 ~l d Oclt to
tbe 1ame • aeCondl lnto final period
•
~utiful re tlqg place'
await.a boat racer Taylor
........... k ..
GLENBROOK. Ntv. -U aeueben tuft ftnd Iii the bod)' ~ lM Taylor, wtpM rocket boat ahat·
tered and aank ln aceni<! Lake Tahoe Thursday,
bt'll have a "beauWuJ r~• pl•c•," a boat crew
1pok•m.n 1ay1.
Dave SevenK>n said iaturday that dlven were waitln1
for toa and a low cloud cover to Utt before reaumln1 the
aearcb In an area where debril from the sleek craft already
had blelt recovered.:
"U'a cold and blowiOI and the lake II choppy," be said.
Several piece1 of UM Discovery 11 rocket boat were recovered
• lmmediately after the wnek and on Friday unUl rouah water
fofHd a 1alv8'e bar1e to put In.
" Still m.laainf waa the 18,000.bonepower rocket enpe and ao el foot cockpit aectloo In which Taylor was believed to
beatembed.
~ aa.id that If the salva1e barae'a sonar or un-
de~&ar camera aed floodllcht were unable to locate the
wrectace, ·•1 couldn't think of a more beautiful restln1 place tor Let. rm sure he'd enjoy the place."
The .earcb focuaed on an area 75 to 500 feet deep, a baU·
mlle offshore. Divers •Histed but couldn't 10 below 130 feet
wjthout 1,.Peclal gear. Severson said properly equipped ''hard·
b.ai" ctivera may be brouaht In.
While the boat was believed to have broken up lD rel·
attvely shallow water, crew members expressed rears that
the cockpit section might have slipped even deeper alon1 the
lake'• steeply sloping ledaes.
Lake Tahoe, one ol the deepest lakes in the w~rld, has a
maJdmum meaaured depth or 1.645 feet abd. avera1es 1,000
reel. The aubeurface temperature is a constant 32 degrees.
-----QMotr of thr day
Billy Packer or the NBC t.elecutinc crew for coUeee
basketball t.alki.n1 about how be doctored tranacripta
dwin& recruiting duties when be was an assistant coach
at Wake Forest: "I was good at cheating. I would have
been a creat head coach at an ouUaw school. Wu I
ashamed of It? Hell, no. I always thought the bottom
line waa that I could help them out."
1~·11 11hol nip• Portlaftd
Du lael tut a 20.root shot from the corner
with rour seconds lert Saturday night to give
Denver a 125-1.23 victory over Portland, extending
the Trailblazers' National Basketball Association
losing streak on the road to eight games . . . Otts Blrdaoml
scored 21 points and rookie Hawkeye MJgey added a
career·bigh 20, leading Kansas City to a 96-94 win over San
Diego .. Geor1e Gervin, despite resting on the bench most
of the second half with an injurpi ankle,
tossed in 25 points to lead San Antonio to a
121· 104 rout or Utah. The win upped the
Spurs' record to 14·5 . . . Elvin Ha yea
scored 34 points to lead Washington past Atlanta. The loss was the 10th in a row for
the Hawks . . Bobby Jones scored 19
points and Steve Mh had 18 as
Philadelphia. leading all the way, defeated
New Jersey. New Jersey's Mlke NewUa,
who didn't see fourth-quarter action, was
the game's high scorer with 21 points
mu. Mike GleaD scored a season.high 29 points,
Including f1~ in the final three Jrunutes, to lead New York to
a 100-95 victory over stru.c.chn~ Chicago Lloyd
Free scored 12 fourth quarter points as Golden State
won its 10th consecutive home game wttb a 119·108 win over
the first-place Phoenix Suns. Despite the loss, Phoenix held
on lo the Pacific Div1s1on lead with a 14-3 record. . Free
_ agent guard Ollver Mull has come to tem'ls with the ex
pans1on Dallas Maveri~ks and will join the club on Mon.
day. a team spokesman said Fred Brown scored six points
in overtime to lead Seattle past Houston, 143-139.
StMrr-•• Stalh,,orfh •ldefinrd
J
Pittsburgh Sl~ters wide receiver John [i]
Stallwortb=as ed on the injured reserve list •II• and Larry An rsoa was activated, the National
Football gue team announced Saturday. An·
derson has missed nine games with a leg injury suffered In
the season opener against Houston . . Denver Broncos
quarterback Craig Monon was hospitalized with the flu but
was expected to be well enough by today to play against the
New York Jets Morton was admitted lo St. Luke Hospital at
noon Saturday "as a precautionary measure" after coming
down with a touch of the nu, a Bronco spokesman said . . .
San Francisco has placed fullback Phil Frucl1 on the in
, JUred reserve list and reactivated wide receiver Jimmy
RobllllOll. Francis suffered a sprained knee last week .
Two key Kansas State football linemen were sidelined Satur·
day when the Wildcats hosted Oklahoma State. Defensive
tackle Mike Slmeta, out or Oceanside, and A•• Donaldao•
were suspended for d1sc1plinary reasons.
... iUl~r •park• ToroMlo mf'f•HV
Dareyl SIUJer scored a goal and had -an aaaisl Iii Saturday ruaht to become the second player in the '
Toronto Maple Leafs' history to exceed the 800
point mark and help his team to a 4·2 National
Hocket League win over Edmont.on ... Dwl1ht FN&er
scored two 1oal1 to lead &.ton to a 7·4 win over Plttabur1h.
Foster scored In the second period to anap a 4_. lie and then
added h.ia second 1oal at..1:09 tA the final period. . . Deula
Mank 1cored three 1oal1 to lead
Waabtneton to an 8·4 victory over
Hartford. K.,,ak Mt• w~ club rec:·
ord by acort.q at leaat -. jdat lD each
of hl1 Jut 10 .. m.. . .. New York'• lk'JU.........., and .... _, coatinued
their hot 1corin1 paces. u the ll~en
1nap5*1 the 10.&ame unbeaten 1treak of
Buffalo, 4·1 ... alck llae.._. 1cored
hi• 12th ioal of the ae•1on and 8111
8arkr collected hil "aooth career toal u
Philadelphia defeated Detroit, S·2
< ~~ . • MinnelOtl 1ot third period 10111 from
Al M1e.\dam1 a&e•• PaJM and Tom MeCa .... 1 to keep ill un-
1 Maten •trea.k at borne alive wltb a $-2 Yid.Ory over Cbica10
. • . ~e left wlnc 0..1 a.au hu 1uffered a broken Jaw
and wiJl be Iott to Wlnnlpe1 for three to ftve weeu Small
wu hit ln the face by a pucll lhat 1lanced ott • 1oaJ poat at a
workout Saturday.
IJO ...... _. .. l•lt~ P€AA tkw
'~~ar!'
is Irish
Chant, 7-0
81RMINGHAM Ala. (AP) •
Notre Dame 1UU bu Alabama'•
number .. and that number la
4-0.
''Four-and-ob, four·and-ob,"
the Notre Dame playen chanted
Saturday after defe1Un1
Alabama 7.0 Saturday and end·
lng the .Grimson Ttde'a quest for
an unprecedented third con·
secutive nalional championship.
''Sugar, SJ.ilar," they shouted aa
they entered their dre11ln1
room.
A few moments later, the
slxth·ranked Irish accepted an in·
vltation to meet top-rated
Geor~a in the Sugar Bowl on New
Year a Day
"TID8 MEANS we have a
chance to be the national cbam·
pion when we beat a team as
lood u Alabama," aald Phil
Carter\ whoee two.yard phm1e
In the ,llecood period, two plays
after a fumble recovery,
waatheonlytoucbdown.
. •
TROJANS.
HYlD1 lhat to myeell a.ll day,'• ad-•
mltt.edtbe'l'h>)ancoacb. •
Adam11 oo crut~ bUt wttb
bl• amazln1Jy undauntd at·
Utude, said: "It'• a tou1h way to
10 out, but that'• llfe."
Robinson lauded hi• fallen •
quarterback, tbe 1utty walk-on ·
who 10\llht and beat the odds to
become the Trojana' No. 1
quarterback.
"Gordon Adams 18 a man I ad·
mire very much. It's a sad way
for a man or his caliber to 10
out," said Roblnaon.
~ . Allen wu spectacular, nett.lna
216 yards on 30 carries (lnclud-
lna a 36-yard TD pass to Jeff
Simmons), u opposed to a mil·
erable day tor Adams, who bad
his worst aame aa a Trojan,
completing three of nine for 38
yard.I and one Interception.
While It became one of t.hoee
days that others are more ac·
customed to than the Trojans,
the Huskies were ecstatic -
they're going to the Rose Bowl
and not by backing in.
The triumph 1ave Notre Dame
an 8-0-1 record. Alabama auf.
rered Ila second setback In 10
11mea but accep~ a bld to the '"' wi,..,_. Cotton Bowl a1alnat Baylor. HANGING ON -Alabama's Major Ogilvie picks up short
''There are a lot of players
with moist eyes walking around
here now," said Flick. "We did
not want to back into the Rose
Bowl. We wanted to beat
Southern Cal and win the con-
ference title outright." And they
did.
It marked the third time in yardage early in the first quarter as Notre Dame's Scott But for USC, well. one sugges·
t1on was to file this one in the
obituanes Consider it done. eight years that a loss to Notre , Zettek hangs on to bring him down.
Dame knocked Alabama out of --------------~--------
a shot at the national cham·
pionship and it gave the Irish a
4 .o record against the Crimson
Tide In the epic serle11 between
two of college footbaU's aU·time
powers
·'This game baa been in the
back of our minds all year,"
said Notre Dame QB Blair Kiel.
"It wu a auper, fantasfjc game
between s r, fantastic teams
and we fortunate to come
out on to . "
CO DAN DEVINE said
No Dame's domination or
abama was "all coincidence.
'Dam lucky' would be the pro-
per term."
He said Saturday's game was
"what college football is all
a bout, a clean, hard·fought
game between two bunch~ or
super kids It's just as big a
thrill for us to play Alabama as
it is for Alabama to pJay Notre
Dame. To our kids, Alabama is
just as big a name as Notre
Dame is to Alabama."
Notre DamP had failed to
score less than a minute before
Carter's TD when freshman Kiel
fumbled a snap and Warren
Lyles recovered for Alabama at
the Ttde's one·yard line
BUT TWO PLAYS later,
Alabama quarterback Don
Jacobs botched a handoff to
fullback Billy Jackson and de·
rens1ve end Scott Zettek re·
covered for Notre Dame at the 4
Carter slammed twice over
right guard, picking up two
yards each hme and scoring
with 6 02 left in the second
quarter
"It 1s an understateme{lt to
say that the best team won,"
said Alabama Coach Bear
Bryant. "We are not used to
playing against a team that
strong We never established
anything offensively, they didn't
~el ua I would have liked to have
made them go more than four
yards for the touchdown, but I'm
not sure they wouldn 't have done
1t anyway "
l.B State
<nntes back
28-27!
From AP Dt1patcbea
Kevin Starkey tossed three
touchdown passes in the final
quarter to rally Long Beach
Slate to a 28·27 victory over
Utah State Saturday night as the
•&era won their first Pacific
CoHt Athletic Association foot
ball cbamptooabip 1lnce 1971.
With 1:55 remaining before
11,168 fans at Anaheim Stadium,
Starkey bit Henry Williams on a
2'·:r•rd pus Into the left comer
ol the end zone, to complete a
91·yard drive ln 11 plays. Ralph
Petr011lan kicked bla fourth con·
venlon of the game for the win·
nine potnt.
WREN THE •tER drive bad
boHed down at the Lona Beach
2'·yard line with five minutes remalnln.1, Paul Lee faked a p\Dll
OD towth down with five yards to
10, andran2'yarda.
Starkey, a aenlor who bu 19
1corln1 p&SHI for the aeuon,
al10 hit Ron Johruon for two
touchdowns -a 22-yard /lay
wltb 1': 19 remalnlna an an
18-yar'd p111 with 10;08 remain·
lOI• I Loni Beach'• record a. '7-3 In·
cludlns 5-0 tn the PCAA, with •
non·conference 11me remalnlq a1ata1t Drake. Utah State.,
PCAA co-cbamptoo In um and
aole chaml).lclri ln mt, now bu a
~& i'«otd aDd a. J lD the leape
with a c.-oftf erence 1ame remain·
tn1 at Joee State.
Do or die for Rams?
It's a must-win situation in Foxboro
By JOHN SEV A.NO Of""' 0.11, Pllet-
FOXBORO, Mass -Despite the fact this is only
week No 11 or the NFL season, what happens to the
Rams here today will be pivotal to the outcome of
their season
Coaches and players both agreed this past week
that the team will either sink or swim on the outcome
or this decision
The Rams desperately need a wm, espe~1ally after
their poor performance a~ainst Miami last Sunday
Are the players really lying down7 Is there too much
internal strife? Are the players' minds elsewhere?
THOSE QUESTIONS, and more, should be
answered today where the elements, and opposition,
aren 'tgomg to help matters any
ll 's cold. and chilly, and a little on the icy side here.
which 1s very s1m1lar to how the Rams have been
playing lately
The Patnots of New England, on the other hand, have been performing like a tropical heat wave.
The Pat11ots finall} appear to be livine up to the
potential that has been expected or them the past few
years Coach Ron Erhardt's squad is wtnning (7·3>.
and winning big ~
THE OFFENSE IS averaging 28 8 points per
game. wtuch ranks second in the NFL to Dallas <the
Rams arefourthat27 71
Quarterback Steve Grogan, playing on a pair of
gimpy kn~s. has been the sole engineer or this high·
nying sconng machine although he's got plenty or
firepower to work with
The running game is more than supportive with
Don Calhoun and Vagas Ferguson, the rookie out or
Notre Dame, manning the backfield
And the passing games rank with the best in the
league when you have quallly·caliber receivers lite
Harold Jackson, Stanley Morgan and tight end
Russ Fran els to throw to
THESE THREE SHOVLD give the Rams' secon·
dary the fits, and the team's vaunted nickel defense,
which has come under heavy scrutiny lately, should
be thoroughly tested. Defensive coach Bud Carson,
who was the focwi or the nickel attack this week,
claims it's still the best defense goine. "One game
doesn't mean anything,·' explained Carson or the
alignment which pulls Jack Reynalda out of the
game ln r a vor or a fifth defensive back.
"Our problems are not related to the defense,
believe me," he added. "l 'll put our nickel defense
stat·wise, against anybody's lnlhe NFL. Believe me'
I'd drownitifit wasn'tany good" '
THE RA.MS' DEFENSE leads the NFL in down ef·
riciency with es 34 4 percentage, meaning teams
raced with a third down situation are only successful
one-thirdofthelime
The statistic is misleading, though, when you take
into account the other two downs, especially second.
whichset?ms to be killing the Rams
"We're definitely not playing as well as we can
play." admitted Carson. ··I definitely reel the people
On ·r" 1 •1day
<'hannrl 2 al IOa.-.
who were out of camp early in the year hurt us <three of the four player holdouts were defensive.).
"I really don 't know what the problem is. Every
week we go mto a game I think we're going to be
great
"OUR BACKS ARE def1rutely against the wall.
however We're Just gomg to have to try to fight our
wa) out of 1t This 1s 1t This 1s the big one for us
We 'vegottohaveth1s one ..
If the Rams are to wm, th1·~ · • ... going to have to
shake some or the cobwebs out or their offense, too
The unit stagnated against Miami as Vince Fer·
raga mo and Co could only put one meaningless TD
on the board midway through theflnalquarter.
Wendell Tyler will start again, but just how efftt·
live he'll be ia another question.
At last check, Ferragamo had dropped to third in
the NFL among the quarterbacks with a 91.4 rating.
He had been lead mg the past couple of weeks until his
one TD, four interception performance against the
Dolphins brought his numbers down.
Indeed, it's becoming clear that the Rams are 10·
ing to need a unified errort If they are going to be con·
side red a serious threat this season.
If the Rams still hope (or a second straight Super
Bowl appearance. they're going to have to start play.
ingtheirSuper Bowl todav
NFL standings
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W LT Pct. PF PA.
Philadelphia 9 l O 900 268 135
Dallas 7 3 O 700 290 195
St.Louis 3 7 o 300 208 220
Washington 3 7 0 300 U8 208
NY Giants 2 8 0 200 158 299
Detroit
Minnesota
Green Bay
Tampa Bay
Chicago
Central
6 4 0 .600 210 188
5 5 0 .500 178 180
4 5 1 .450 lSS 204
4 5 l .450 174 200
4 6 0 .400 169 172
West
Atlanta 7 3 O .700 264 l89
Rama 6 4 0 600 277 214
San Francisco 3 7 O .300 213 293
New Orleans 0 10 O 000 168 310
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W LT Pct. PF PA.
New England 7 3 0 700 288 221
Buffalo 7 3 O 700 224 175
Baltimore S S 0 .500 221 211
Miami S 5 O .500 158 191
NY Jets 2 8 0 .200 176 243
Cleveland
Houston
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Oakland
San Diego
Denver
Kansas City
Seattle
Central
7 3 0 700 229 207
7 3 0 .700 195 178
6 4 0 .600 262 214
3 7 0 .300 142 187
West
7 3 0 .700 259 219
6 • 0 .600 285 204 s s 0 .500 180 198 s s 0 500 200 220
4 6 0 400 195 229
-·
'
·· County showdown
Area runners dolninate preliinB
a1 .tACll MINTSa ................
Tbe way lb• CIF cro11 counlr)t p,..limlnary
ro"ndl lbued up tu.relay at Saddleback Collea tt'• probably fittlna tbat ~ ftnalJ next WHk will
t>. beld oo the Orance County JWlior coll••• cam·
PUI. AU thlM of the first TOUQd team winners in the •·A division were from the county, ln fact all were
from t.be Or~e Cout area.
Costa Mesa, Univenity and improvin1 Foun·
taio Valley each woo heatl.
Ca.ta Mesa looks to have the lntide track for
the 1880 CIF •·A crown as the Scott La Crosse-Jed
team ran a total lime of 1: 19: 53. Fountain Valley
D
<Ba}S COlJNTRY
and Corona del Marhactidentical 1:21:07 clockinp
while University was right behind at 1:21 :38.
Overstreet scored
twice in tbe Uurd penod
on l ·Yard runs to 1ive
the Spartans a 19· 14
lead, and San Jose
ata~ed ahead . The
Spartans are 3-1 in con·
ference play a nd 7.3
While all the area teams were flehUn1 It out
for the No. 1 spot, the top individual Ume of the
day was turned in by Edison's Jon Butler.
Butler toured the three·miJe course in 14 :53.
He was the only runner to break the H ·minute bar. rier ~
La Crosse won bis beat in 15: 21 with teammate
Mark Howard in third position (15:40).
I overall; Fullerton is 1·3
in conference matches
and 5-8 for the season.
In Butler's heat, University's Brad Meyer led
the Trojans with a second·place finish in 15:38.
11 Willbite's NCAA record
pairs him with Stan·
ford's Darrin Helson.
Heat three saw Sean Gallagher and Jim
Hartford of Corona del Mar run one.two.
Gallagher finished in 15:25 with Hartford a few
yards back at 15:34.
Even with the one-two finish by the Sea Kings
it was Fountain Valley's Bob Erikson, Tom
The Titans dropped Strelow and Ned Moser that pulled off the sur·
lut week's game to Long prise·
Beach Stale, 20-10. The 1980 Sunset League champs totaled 84
points in outdistancing Dos Puelbos (88 points)
The 49ers, meanwhile, and Corona del Mar (110 points)
captured the PCA A Eriskson, Strelow and Moser all finished in the
crown with a come.from· top 10. Erikson ran 15:48 (fourth), Strelow ran
behind 28-27 victory over 15: 58 (ninth) and Moser rounded out the Baron
Utah State. · scoring with a 16 :04 (10th).
Col/,e~e football
W olverlries sizzle
From AP Dl1palchea
ANN ARBOR, Mich. It took a
game plan featuring six defensive
backs to shut down Purdue
quarterback Mark Herrmann, but it I worked to perfection for Michigan as
the Wolverines powered their way to a
26-0 Big Ten football victory over the
Boilermakers Saturday.
The victory set up a showdown for
~ the conference championship and a
'Rose Bowl berth wh e n the
Wolverines travel to Columbus for
t. tbe season finale with Ohio State next
Saturday.
Immediately after the game.
llicbl&an Athletic Director Don
Canham announced that the
Wolverines have been assured a
berth i.n the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe. I Ariz., if they fail to defeat Ohio State.
"The six back idea was (defensive
coordinator) Bill McCartney's,"
Coach Bo Schembechler said. "The
wa:t to sack him 1s to cover his re-
ceivers and have four active kids up front. We made him move arouno and
the coverage was the key. We made
him dump the ball.''
Georgia fOJU ,, NIJNrn
AUBURN. Ala. Buck Belue
scored one touchdown and passed for
another as top·ranked Georgia took
control with a controversial
touchdown at the end of the first half
and bolted into the Sugar Bowl with a
31·21 victory over Auburn
Belue tossed a one.yard touchdown
pass to Norris Brown as time expired
in the half after he had fumbled on
the previous play that began with
nine seconds remaining
Kcuu..,BeHffof
BOULDER, Colo -Former
Edi1on Rieb quarterback Frank
Seuere threw three touchdown
passes, two to David Verser, and
fretbmao tailback Kerwin Bell
another ex·Edison standout who ran
for more than 1$0 yards to lead Kanaa.s
to a '2--3 Bl.g Ei1ht conference football
victoryovertheColorado Buffaloes.
Tbe victory raised the Jayhawks'
record to 4-4·2 overall and 3·2· 1 in
lea1ue play and dropped Colorado to
1-9 and l·S.
Kansas scored midway lo the
.econd quarter when Bell, one of the
most proml1tn1 freshman runnin1
baeb ln the country, belted over
from the rilhl ltde and the game was
Deffr clole after that.
Bell set up bis I-yard scoring nm
wit.ti 50-yard burst earlier in the
series that put him over the 1,000-
yard llJ,8l'k for the year.
IOWA CITY, Iowa -Quarterback
Art !khlicbter completed 13 of 18
p_... for 1'5 yards, lncludlnl two
touc~ pasaes, and led seventh·
rukeCl Ohio State to a '1-7 Bii Ten
vfct017 over Iowa.
Ohio State ran its record to 9·1
overall and 7-0 in the league. while
Iowa fell to 3.7 and 3.4
Schlichter's scoring passes -a
39·yarder to split end Gary Williams
and a 23-yarder to tailback Calvin
Murray -both came in the first
quarter. He only had one pass in·
tercepted.
Oldaho111a K"i••
NORMAN, Okla. -Freshman
halfback Buster Rhymes scored on
runs ol five and 55 yards in bis start-
ing debut as lOtb·ranked Oklahoma
finally corralled Missouri
quarterback Phil Bradley with a
swarming defense and posted a
crucial 17-7 Big Eight victory over
the Tigers.
The triumph boosted Oklahoma's
overall record to 7 .. 2 and its Big Eight
record to 5-0 and set up a likely battle
for the conference championship
next week when the Sooners travel lo
Nebraska.
'Weflraska roll# on
AMES, Iowa -Jeff 4umn. given
excellent field position by a swarm·
ing Nebraska defense, ran for two
touchdowns and passed for another
as the No. 4 Cornhuskers over·
whelmed Iowa State 35·0 in a Big
Eight Conference game.
Nebraska, remainmg m contention
for the Big Eight tit.le and an Oran1e
Bowl berth, set up t'hree touchdowns
by recovering fumbles , and the
Cornhuskers got another score by
pouncing on a fumbled punt in the
end zone
The Vlctory lifted Nebraska to 9-1
on the year and 6·0 m the conference
heading into n e xt Saturday 's
showdown with Oklahoma Iowa
State, losing for the fifth straight
time. fell to 5-5 and 1·5
PIU twit• Ar..11
WEST POINT, N. Y . Rick
Trocano and Dan Marino each threw
in two touchdown passes to lead
eighth-ranked Pittsburgh to a 45-7
victory over Army and enhance the
Panthers' chances for a major bowl
appearance.
The Panthers, winning their fifth
straight, now have a 9·1 record ,
while Army dropped to 3·6·1.
Penn Stat~ ro•p•
PHILADELPHIA -Secood·string
quarterback Jeff Hosteller ran for
two to~bdowns and directed tour
other scoring drives as ninth·ranked
Penb St.ate beat Temple 50-7
Temple startled the three·
touchdown favored Nittany UoM by
takln& a 7..0 first quarter lead on a
one.yard touchdown run by Sherman
Myers, but it was all doW1lbiU for the
Owls, now 4-6, after that.
.
Mater Del won ltl beat In tilt J.A prellm1 evea
thouch Monarch Junior Bob Planta flDJ.sbed a di.:
appolntlnc 24th. Mitch Eddy plc~ed up tbe alack
witb his ninth place tinbh to lead the An1elU1
League champions.
Dave Howard of Dana Hilla ran ~:19 to wtn
his 3·A beat, however Dana Ril1I flnhhed seventh
in the team 1coring and did not qualify for the
finals.
The girls competition in the 4·A ranb l1 much
the same ~ the boys, as area teams won twc> of
the tht'ee races and ftnlsbed second In the third.
ToDrs Al.MADEN
VODKA DI SARONNO
I 75LrTER 75().MfLLILITER
649 1083
CASE OF 6 38 90 CASE OF 12 129.95
LIQUEURS
Amaretto Di Saronno. 1.• r ''
Drambuie. , 1n;
Gailiano. 111J1
idori Melon. , 11 )/
outhern Comf<>rt, 1 1c,t 111 P
ia Maria. 7"><l "'L
BLENDS
Hiram Walker Imperial, un .. R
Kessler, 7'HITlR
Seagrams 7 Crown ~ 15 LITER
BOURBONS Ancient Age, LITER
Early Times, un R
I
H.Walker Ten High, 1 75LITER
1.W.Harper, LtTlR
Jim Beam, 1 75 LITER
BOTT\.£
RETAIL
5.85
11 .32
11 05
9 75
13.17
10.98
6.03
10.53
12.22
6.60
6.69
10.45
8.10
11 .92
CASE
RETAIL
129.95
125.68
122.77
I 08.33
73.14
121.90
66.40
58.50
67.87
73.25
74.28
57.50
86.60
66.15
BRANDY AND COGNAC
Christian Bros .. 1 7"111H R
E£J,1LrnR
Courvoisier V.S .• 7'XJ "'L
Martel V.S.P., 7">ClML
CANADIANS
Black Velvet. 1 LITF R
Canadian Club, 1 1-;rnEr-
Canadian Mist. L IH i.·
Seagrams V.O .• 1 .,., L 1rr R
GIN Beefeaters. 1 ,.., 11J£1<
Gilbey's, 1 m R
Gordon's, 11TFR
Seagram's, 1 rfR
Tanqueray, 151 TER
RUMS
Bacardi Lt. ~ Dk., 15 UH R
Castillo Lt.~ Dk., LITER
Myers Jamican. 750"'\L
SCOTCH
Dewars White Label, 1 7!>-L ITI R
Chivas Regal, trrER
Cluny, 1151rir1<
J ~ B. I llf R
Johnnie Walker Blk .. uTcR
Lauders. 1 1s 11TFR
TEQUILA
12.29
7.02
12.79
12.05
6.70
15 79
fi 71
15 7q
16.98
598
3.86
5.96
17.98
11 .33
4.70
7.19
18.39
16.39
12.56
11 .47
15.71
12.15
68.21
78.00
141.95
133.83
74.35
87.65
74.52
87.65
94 29
65.20
65.06
66.20
99.87
6292
52.20
86.27
102.00
182.16
69.76
127.35
174.55
67.45
Cuervo White, 1 LITER 7.51
Don Emillo Wh.~ Gold, 1 1•>1 rrER 9.78
Sauza Gold, O<JART 8.07
83.34
54.06
89.67
VODKA
Crown Russe, LITER
Kamchatka, 1 15 LITER
Popov. 1 uTFR
Smirnoff, LITFR
Gllbey's Vodka, 1 75LITER
ROBERT
MONDAVI
TABL:E WINES
4.57
8.27
4.78
6.34
815
50.70
45.95
53.05
70.44
4525
SEBASTIAN I MTN.WINES
1 .~UTER
CHABLIS. RHINE OOROUNOY. ROSE
CASE OF 6 13.32
Irvine
SCORESBY CARQLANS flLBEYS
' GIN SCOTCH UOOEUR
I 75UTER 75().MILUUTER I 75-UTER
1018 994 943
~SEOF66105 CASE OF 1211925 CASEOF 6 56.54
BOTT1.E
CASE
RETAIL
5.42
10.48
10.23
9.03
12.19
10.16
5.58
9.75
11.32
6 .11
6.19
9.59
7.22
11.03
11.37
6.50
11.83
11.16
6.20
14.61
6.21
14.61
15.72
5.53
5.43
5.82
16.65
10.49
4.35
7.77
17.00
15.18
11.63
10.62
14.55
11.25
6.95
9.01
7.48
4.23
7.66
4.43
5.87
7.55
LIMITED TO SOWi.. YON t1AND
BOTT\.£
CHRISTIAN BROS. WINES RETAIL
Burgundy, 750-ML. . . . . . . .. 2. 13
Cabernet Sauvignon, 750-ML. 330
Chablis, 7SO·ML . 2.13
Chenii Blanc, 750-ML 2.9 t
Grey Riesling, 750-ML .. .... ... .. 2.63
Napa Rose. 750-ML. .. . 1 .94
Pinot Chardonnay, 750-ML •. •• • 3.61
Pinot Notr, 750-ML .. . . 3.49
BERINGER WINES
Chablis, 750-ML 2.02
Chenfn Blanc. 75().ML . •• • 2.67"
Bu dy 2.02 ') rgun , 750-ML
Cabernet Sauvignon, 750-ML . .. 4.13
Vin Rose, 1so.ML 2.02
Gamay Beaujolais, 750-ML.. •.. •.• 2.93
Grey Riesling, 1soML 2.67
Chardonnay, 750-ML 4.86
Zinfandel, 750-ML. .. 3.23
LANDMARK WINES
Chardonnay, 750·ML
Chenln Blanc, 750-ML
Johannlsberg RJesling, 150 ML
, Gewuntromlner, 750-ML
Pinot Noir, 750-ML
Cabernet Sauvignon, 1soML
GRANDCRO
Chenin Blanc. 1soML
Cabernet Sauvignon. 150 ML
Gewurztrominer, 1soML
PinotNoir Blanc, 1soML
Zlnfandel Tate Harv •• 150 ML
7.67
4.07
4.65
4.65
4 .07
6.05
4.73
7.34
6.04
4.73
7.56
CASE
RETAIL
23.12
36.00
23.12
31.60
28.60
21 .12
39.32
38.00
22.00
29.00
22.00
45.00
22.00
31 .90
29.00
53.00
3520
83.60
44.40
50.60
50.60
44.40
66.00
51 .65
80.02
65.84
51.65
82.39
HEINEKENS
BEER
LIGHT OR DARK
6·PACK
12-0<JNCE
AMS TEL
LIGHT BEER
386
CASE OF 24 15.02
WARM
1200NCE
6PACK 315
CASE OF 24 l 4.98
WARM
SPECIAL SELECTION WINES
Olardonnay. 1'° 1'\L. . ..
Cabernet Sauvlgnon, 750 ML
Pmot Nofr. 750 ML ....... .
Johannlsberg RJesUng, 150 ML ...
Olenfn Blanc, 7501'\L. ..
PEDRONCEW
Cabernet Sauvlgnon. 150 ML •
Zlnfandd, 7'°1"1L . . ... .. .. .
Johannlsbe19 Riesling, 750-ML
Gamay BeaU)Olals. 750l'\L ........ .
Chenk\ Blanc, 750ML . ... .. .. ..
2.67
2.07
2.07
2A1
1.67
3.03
2.39
2.85
2.11
2.52
3125
22.50
22.50
2625
18.13
33.00
26.00
31 .00
23.00
27.50
BOTT\.£
CASE I
RETAii. i
1.93 1 1 3.00
1.93
~:~i · 1.76
3.28
3.17 .1-.•
1.84
2.42
J.84
3.75
1.84
2.66
2.42
4.42
2.94
6.97
3.70
4.22
4.22
3.70
5.50 I
4.31
6.67
5.49 f
4.31 I 6.87
2.61
1.88
1.88
2.19
1.51
2.75
2.17 ,58
1.92
2.30
11
J:f'MvE
NOV 13
Tl$U NOV. 19 1980.
I.
I
""" POOTUL:&.i Ramot Hew "Viand • II I •c1r1: P.t ummtt•H •nd Tom Brooellhler
Tht R.wnt find tMmMlvn out OI flrJt piece In the N•
tloNI Conhrenc• West *hlle New •ft9llnd · df'Ol)ptd Into •
fir paw.e tit wt Buffalo'" tht·Amtrkan eont.~• east. eot tGlt ••t w.eund. The Rems had tMlr wont day .t home .me. moving to Anaheim Stacll"m against Miami whllt t PWOlts .. ,.. b .. ten by Houston MOnday nloht In tht
Astrr lf1 me. Thi Rems wllf Mftd Vlnee Ftrrapmo, Wendttl Trier and Cattten Bry1nt against ttw Patriots' Steve Groo.,
and •deft pesstno gerM.
-10 •·"'·• Ctlllnnel 4 ./ ./ ./ ./
NI'\: fOOTaALL: Cle'l91and at Pittm.Jf"Gh A~WI: Don Criqui and John Brodie
The Browns hope to retain 1 hold on first place In the
American Conferettct Ctntm OMsk>n with a victory ~ tM dlftndlng super eowt cfwNnpfon st .. a.n. Brien Sipe
direct.a the Cleveland attack Md 11 beeked by the r~nln9 of form., USC ~lsman Trophy winner Charles Whitt who KO~l~ touchdowns egalnst Baltlmore last Wfftl. TM
StMlefJ twive struggled but lest week farced two turnovers that
gew tr,.-n an earlyleld and eventual victory over Tampa Bay,
2.f-21.
~ ~ p.m., Ch•nnel 4 ./ ./ ./ ./
N,L FOOTBALL: Kansas City -t San Diego
Announcen: S.m Hover and Bob Trumpy
The Chargers dropped out of first place In the American
Conference West Division after loslng to Denver last weetc
while the Chiefs salvaged a last·mlnute, 31·30 win over Seattle.
Dan Fouts passed all over the fleld but could muster only one
touchdOwn throw for the Chargers. Steve Fuller marched the
Chiefs 91 yards In 11 plays for the winning touchdown In Seattle
wlth40secondsremalnlng. ltshouldbeanaerlalbattlebetween
the twoquarterbacks.
OTHER TELEVISION
9 :30 a.m. (2) -NFL TODAY -Segments Include a
feature on some of the top.young Q8s currently playing In the
NFC. Among them are Vince Ferragamo of the Rams, Danny
White of the Cowboys and Gary Danielson of the Lions. (4) -
NFL 'IO -Scheduled segments inlude a protlle of Georiae
Halas, owner and former coach of the Chicago Bears.
9:4S a.m. (34) -FUTBOL SOCCER -Mexico vs.
Canada. 11 a.m . (SO) -SOCCER MADI! IN GERMANY.
4 p.m. (7) -COLLJ:GE FOOTBALL 'IO -Hlghlilhts of
gamH pfayed this weekend. (9) -COLLEGE FOOTB LL -
The Washington Huskies vs. the USC Trojans. played Satur-
day at the Coliseum.
4:30 p.m. (7) -GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS -A
tribute to Pe9gY Fleming, the 1966 Olympic figure skating
champion.
6 p.m. (2) -PRO FOOTBALL WRAP.
11 p.m . (221 -NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL -A replay of
the 1'4otre Dame-Alabama game played Saturday In Birm-
ingham • Ala. RADIO
Football -Rams at New En<Jland, 10 a.m., KMPC (710);
Kansas City at San Diego, 1 p.m .• KSDO (1130).
Basketball -Dallas at Lakers, 6:SO p.m., KLAC (S70).
Hockey -KlnQS at Vancouver, 7:0S p.m., KOGO (600).
(The Dally Piiot Is not ~l>M for lat. c"HgtS. >
Seahiiwks
overco01e
LlSAI
JSy CRAIG RUSSELL
Of•Nlyll'tMelc.H
Junl.::Juarterback John Hei-nle p for 248 yards and two
touchdowns Saturday night to
lead the Ocean View High
Seahawks to a 28-22 victory over
the Grilftna of Los Alamitos.
Going into the game the
Seahawlts had a slim chance of
making the CIF playorts as the
Empire League's third place
representative. Ocean View
needed a victory and a Katella
victory over Cypress to create a
four way lie for third.
But Cypress dereated Katella.
19-13, to finish third all alone
Ocean View, 2·3 in league play,
finished in a tie for fourth with
Los Alamitos
But more importantly now.
Ocean View has a very respecta-
ble 6-4 overall record with vic-
tories over such teams as Estan-
cia, La Quinta, Costa Mesa and
Westminster. As a result. the
Seahawks could conceivably be
picked as one of two wild card
selections into the Cl F Southern
Conference playoffs That de·
cision will be made today.
And for three quarters last
night, the Seahawks made a
strong defense for such a selec·
lion. It was the first three
quarters that saw Ocean View
build a commanding, 28-8, lead
·-
·'We played our best football
of the year the first three
quarters," said Ocean View
Coach Ken Moats "The fourth
quarter was very sloppy so we
still haven't played a total
aame. Thal game is still ahead
of us I just hope that maybe we
get a chance to play that game."
Warner ff odfldon JOO
DB's Neal happy
with best payday
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Ol IM O.llJ ~I ... IU!ft
ONTARIO When you are
struggling and looking for a
sponsor, a payday of $3,725 looks
pretty good and Huntington
Beach's Jim Neal will take 1t
even though the For Sale sign is
still painted on the side of his
1980 Camaro.
Neal finished second to Joe
Ruttman in the Warner Hodgdon
100, a companion reature to the
Times 500 at Ontario Motor
Speedway Saturday on a wind·
swept track
The winds were so bad dunng
the early morning race that por-
Uoos of the track couldn't be
seen from the stands. They may
have caused a narrow miss on
the 38tb lap between Neal and
Dr. David Hill of Bakersfield
between tum$ three and rour
This is Neal's second year of
Grand American racing an stock
ca·rs and he won the cham-
pionship at Ascot Park this
season. His biggest payday
before Saturday was $1,000 ror
winning a race at Ascot.
Asked about the heavy winds
that gusted up to 40 knots, he
said: "They bothered us the first
couple of laps until we figured
them out and drove lower on the
track. The wind almost pushed
me into the wall in turn four one
time.
"I ran out of gas at turn two
another time, then the motor
came back on and I was able to
~ake it to the pits without stop·
ping."
Neal sold bis home ln Hunt
ington Beach to gel enough
money together to buy his race
car. The chassis is built by his
boss, Earl Owens of Owens
En1ineer Chassis.
Doug Irvine 's six -yard
touchdown run and Heinle's
82·yard scoring pass to Kevin
Stanley <actually a 20·yard pass
and 60-yard run> g&ve Ocean
View a 14-8 .halftime lead. But it
was the secopd half kick-off that
really swung fhe game to the
Seahawks.
Irvine took the short kick at
the 17·yard line and broke it
down the right sideline for an
83-yard return and a touchdown
Just like that the Seahawks led
21·8.
Then just a minute later. a
high snap on a Los Alamitos·
punt attempt 1ave Ocean View
the ball on the Griffin seven yard
line. But with a chance to blow
the aame wide open, the
Seahawks rumbled the ball back
to Los Alamitos on the very first
pl&)'
The Seaha~ks did score again
in the third qu~er, however. as
Heinle teamed p with stanley
a1ain -this me for 37-yards
and a touchdown.
That 1ave Ocean View a seem·
inaly comfortable 20-point lead
1oin1 into the final quarter Neal was draflin& HUI comin1
out of tum three when Hill's car
started apiMin&. Neal was able
to avoid a craab by backln1 off,
then moved ahead of Hill for
second place. It appeared they
mi1hthavetoucbed
Secret love tri~
"I think we barely touched or
_ it might have been the air
-between us that started him
spinntng," Neal said after the
race.
"I saw him slidln1 and I
backed off rtsht away. nsur1n1
he might be coming back toward
me. When he didn't, I went by
him.
''I talked with him a little
while ·a10 and he said hi• car
was nmninl a little loose. He
uked me why I didn't 10 un
derneath him and I told him I
couldn't see throuah the
windlble&d because of the dust.
Ht a1reed that he had the same
problem. There wasn't any
anlmoelty."
By AL LOCK.ABEY
0..,Nee ..............
Four yachts Cro9aed the finish
line Mazatlan Saturday ni1ht ln
one of the clOHlt flnl.ahea on rec·
ord in the ... mile Lot An&el•
t.oMuet••0 nce.
Fl.rat t.o ftnilb at 5:05 PST wu
Brad Herman'• Seertt Lov•. She
WH followed HCOnct. later b)'
Ra&Umt Hlled by th• Loni
Beach Yacht Club's syndicate ot
Dick Daniela, Eldon Hickman
and Bud Tretter. Plnl1hln1
within the tame bour WIN Bill
Walters• Nl,a.t Train, Ventura
Yacht Club and Morrtt Kirk'•
Hana Ho, Balboa Yacht Club.
The four boat. wen la •llht ot
each other aJmoet all tbt wa;
acroH the GuU of Calllomla u
they w re pushed by b1U1ter)'
winds, accompanied by rain and
ll1htenlng. .
Expected to finish by midnight
Saturday were Winterhawk.
W arrlor, Jet Slrea m and
p .......
Tbe dramatic chan1e ln the
tPMd ot the race started when the yachta sailed past Cabo San
LucH at tbe tip of Baja California
on a 10.knot westerly breeze in·
1tead of eocounterin1 the
customary lee at Cabo also.
Tbt wtnd increased about 15 knoll In the Gull Qf Calllomia
and Meeme stormy as the
yaehtl neared the fln11h Line.
Race chairman Don Wood
lj)OntOrtn• Loi Anaeles Yacht
Club aald tbe wind was aUll
brl•k at mldnl1bt and that most
of the other yachts in the 29-boat
Monarchs, Artists advance
11 the Art.l1t1 Improved thilr
recordtol7·10veralt
.. We were ln 1ood form
tont'1rt," noted La•una Beath
Coacb Mil:• Duncan. "But
tber ·a •WI JoU ol cood teama
left In the jlQOfft."
The Art1SU a... ranked No. 1 ln
tbt C·A. i>layof11 bind Mlra
Coita and Aviation. But with
Avtatloft'• kita to th Moalldt,
lb• A.rtiJtl •hOWd move up a
noteb,
Mater Del uatd the 1tron1 hlt·
tln• from l.4H Nlefdln1h1us and
Vtclll PoPp to deftat hlshly tout-.a Avl1tfon team.
lt wu tho nc:ond 1traldlt vie·
tory In th• playoff• (or the
Mo.sarch1 who downed Mon·
ttMIJolnt.Hopen r .
Mattr Dtl wa1 1cheduled to
play the Wion r ot the Na..pon
Hart>or-Santa Monica ••me,
wbUt Lai\.lna Be1ch facet \be
winner rA tM Sinta Fe· lntni
cl11b.
(
Football scores
Colle1e
Wtst
Washington 20, use 10
Washlng1on St. 31, Cal 17
Oregon«> Ore. St. 21 LB State 28. Utah St. 27 Fresno St. 21, Montana St. U
'-" D1eoo 10, SI 1Nir¥ • I C.l l11lrwr.,, 14, AIUM PKlll< J
Cluco $1 Jt.. lfl Sttlt, l
Pytel Souno n. ''" ,., ... , l Porll•nd SI. 4 , $ O••ol• Sf 11 I . On9on 4$, S Or..., O
l . WHnlnoton u . ""-'•· Colo '' Llnlield M, Lewoa & Cl•r• I
Oreoon Col M. t.l>I W•ti>•no1on io
OreocMI Te<1111, w wesn11>Q1on"
PM: Lull,.,.,, O. Willemelle I
wn11_,11,1•. Po1<1flc,O•• •
Rockies
UCLA 14, Ariz. St. 1A so State 28. UTEP 7
Kansas 42, Colorado 3
Air Force 2S, WyomlnQ 7
BYU 4S, Colorado St 14
Arizona 63, Paclfte 3S
Air Force 25, Wyoming 1
WHl«I' $1 Colo 11 So Vt.II 10
HevMt lleno 10. Mol>le<Wi 1
H Cotof'-U. N•«irtM• Om•lle 1
Colo Ml .... 1),N MutOtl\. 1a
H19nl•nch IJ
W Mo<>1..,.11,-..1.,..Tec110
Ad•m1 SI 20. Ill. L•wit J
S COIOt-0 , P•,,,..nd>e St IS
E4lst
Penn St. so. Temple 7 Pitt 4S, Army 7
Cornell 24, Columbia o
Harvard 28, Penn 17
Yale 2S, Princeton 13
Villanova 4S, Holy Cross
13
Boston Col. 27, Syracuse
16
Dartmouth 28, Brown 24
W. Virginia 24, Rutgers
1 s
Bvft•lo JI 1111°rt'<l 1•
C••r1on St 11 1<uu1own St ••
Corll•no St 21. M•r1•I ll
F •"monl St lO W•\I LtOtrly n Getty\l>Uf"O 17 Ur\lnul 11 11•
Hol>•rl ll R Pl tJ ....
Hot\tr• 2'. C.,.>t C.w ro ••
1on• lS ~nNll•n O
Jun••I• SI ~OU MM!•\On 0
L•l• ... ll• )I l(o~ "°"" 11 Len1011 O Norl,,.••wrn 19
M•1n•M•r1t1nw,u. W Conn t4
MA\\KhUWlt$. ti New H•mp\h•re 0
P1,mou111 SI I• Norw1tn I
R0<n•slf'f" • Union N Y l'O
S Conne<t•tut S. (•nt Cotuw<hc ut O
Spru101ic10 ll AltMny N 'f II
Towson St olO. C w Po•t 10
W-oner S. F0tCI,,....., IJ
W1<Jen•r ll Swuthmor~ • Jl11>rn~,,l •S u,,_.,. JI
B VO ..... JO. 8o\IO"I v ti
Con,orCI >A 01 .. 1 itld SI 11
D•••••r• JS. M.11t·-. 6
1no1•n• P• >• E SltOtidW>uro 11
L vcom1nq •S_ O•' it in"°" l'
Muhlf'nbtrg 24. Mor•..,••n 1J
We\11 ~ LM •· °""'Witewll. 0 C. 1 Wm P•l9noll "'• loetoft "911 U lr .. ••W, Ve ,.., C.U.t< U 11 P•uJ7,,. .,....,,,
c-uc\lltt, .,,..1w,,.•
Oel•••re Sl. M, Cent ti., Ollle 1' W Vl'111ftlt Tech 10, Oletwllle $C 0
Frnkln &Mef'Ulllst,~V•I O
LOO He""" 5t ti. IMNfl9MI Sl 1
Me Mamwt0.9'.....,MA.1
SI L•w"""9 21, C...,15'1H U
Ul•M, W. Ve. 11, W V• W•llfft u w Vlrtlnle St 11, Mwolwrct 1
SI. JoM'•, NY t•. llrOOlllfft Col 0
Monie lelr St ~ Gl•..-o SI u
South
Notre Dame 7, Alabama O
Georgia 31, Auburn 21
Maryland J.4, Clemson 7
Navv 19, Georgia Tech 8
N. Carolina 26, Virginia 3
N. Caro. St. 38, Duke 21
Florida 17, Kentucky lS
Miami, Fla. 24, Vandy 17
Virginia Tech 21. VMI 6
Ole Miss 20, Tennessee 6
Miss. St. SS, LSU 31
S. Carolina 39, Wk ForeS-t 38
Toledo 38, Marshall O
SW La. 27, La. Teeh. 9
Louisville 20. Cincinnati o
So. Miss. 33, Richmond 12
McNeese St ..20, Newbury
LaMar 3
Tulane 21, Memphis St. 16
A llMlny O• J Seven""" SI O
Graml>11"9 SI 24. S c .. ot1ne SI J MtCIClle T-IJ A_,on t re.,,, ..... SI n. N CMotlne A6 T "
Jl111lon ,..ay I) fe-'T«" 10
C•l-1 JI, 0.vldlon I)
E IC•nli1ov 1' E c .. oi,,.. "
Furmen u . W-d u , lie
C.eroo•r -11.c.1-o
J •mH Mecllto11 It. 5/ll_n_9 St
" J C Sm toll 10, Foe1i.v1lle SI 7
ill•t>•ma SI 11. Mt\'\o\\tl)flo V•I 11
F 1 V•11•v St 1S. F"k 0
Tn CMll•-21, Ill"'°'' SI It r enn M•rt1n •. Ottlla SI o VlrQlnta V°'on ... llvof\91\lone 0
Elon 11, L.-r Anyne 12
Lll>@rly 8a1>MI SI, H~Oft ln\I ••
Morenea<1 St Is, K..,.uoy SI 10
Rndlpn·Met"" "· Hmpdn-Syd IS Svonev 1s V•ro•n•• St 11, Mor-SI " T U\k9-22 Al•IMln-. Jl6M 20
N Al• ........ it. MtH•H-Cot 2l Floro~ A&.M ll. So.1111ern u 1
J•oson SI 2' N c Ct11lr•l 10
M•rt Miit JO. Hl"#09rt't 17
W C•rot,,.. lO E Tenne1'1e~ St 11
Alcorn St •· Pr•r .. V.ew 11
J•0""""1HeSI tl. TroYSI I
Morr!\ Brown tt S.lllune Cooltmn II
SE LOUOl• ..... l5. Ntt,,011\ St 10
Midwest
Michigan 26, Purdue O
Ohio St 41, Iowa 7
Mich. St. 30, Miflnesota 12
Indiana 26, Illinois 2•
Wisconsin 39, Nrthwstrn
19
Nebraska JS, Iowa St. O
Okla St 10, Kan. St. 0
SOuthW91t Oklahoma 17, MlssoYri 7
Arkansas 27, Tex. A&M
24
Texas Tech 14. SMU 0
Texas SI, TCU 26
Baylor 16, Rice 6
Tex. Ari. 36, Ark. St 14
Wichita St. 20, w Tex. St.
18
,...,e11no Joi, o.cn11.10
NW 0• I_,.,. 11. L,_.IOn 6
Ar-Pl,,. llkllt 31. Ill\~•
E. Ce.,lr .. V "·SW Oll1•"°"'4t I
NIE 0tt1-...lt. SEOlc••l'IOtnaO
Calll Jlrk JO, Hend \I I
S Ar• 11, A"' h<" I•
Tu A61 I•. -P •• ,... •
hi Lutn i. E --• 1
JUDlor College
...c..tc~.
Ml ~ Nlor..o n. s-t• Me 6
Ce<ril°' •• "'-' ) F11llert°" JI. SO Mew 1 '-"' ~ c.-...-· LA So111-1 .0. LA HMtoDr »
Golden Wet! ... ~It LA 1 .... -~· Sedell-k 1l, 1111-.-CC O
Pelorner ll. Soul-..-n• S.n ll•...,....011te1 U , C•VU. O .._.. ..... ~
ComC>lO"I U Al'll.._ Votll•1 •
tt•nc.oo lit,~ JI
Senta e.-. cc 11. w~ LA o
-··"-~· Pe..-C<: •.S. LA Vall•10
BO•rtl-11 LA Ple<ee 1•
T•l111, IEI CMn1no 14
~C-*-<•
Ml S•n J«•nlo 17, Mire C....1• •
Junior All·Amerle
candidate Pete
Campbell conUnu"
lead the UCJ offer1
with 49 goals. Otbe
leading scorers ar•
Manlredo Lespitr <JO!f
John Vargu (27>. MU1r
O'Brien (21), Miii•
Evans (181. Geor1e
Newland (181 and Da¥
Ritchie (16)
Baylor stop8
Rice, 16-6
HOUSJ'ON -WaJt.11'~
Abercrombie scor~ the •econd pby of
eame. Robert Bl
kicked field goals of 0,
and 33 yards and
ranked Baylor deft! Rice 16-t and woe l
. second SoutbWat
ference lltle in HY
ye an
Coach Grant T~l who led the Bean to
first title in 50 ':E:I 1974, also led Ba
charge into the d ,
room where they were
accept an invitation • 1
play in theCott.on Bowl
New Year's Day~
Sa~~~~e~~a!~ens ~j
the third quarter <following a scoreless first hal~
as he mtercepted a pass at the Riverside 27-ya;.f'
Special lo the Daily Pilot
After a s luggish first half. Saddleback
College's offonse woke up in the second lo score a
23-0 win over visiting R1vers1de City College Satur-
l!ay night as the Gauchos wrapped up their foUl"t.b
straight Mission Conference title
Saddleback now 4 I in eonference and 7·1
overall. will make 1ts fourth straight tnp to the
M 1sslon Bo" I where the Gauchos wllJ defend their
title there
Coach Ken Sweann~en 's club again got a v1c·
tory by way of its defense as the Gauchos forced
five second half turnovers lo set up short scoring
drives
line and returned it five yards t;
Five plays later, placeklcker Guy JobJuoD
booted a 30-yard field 1oal to get the Gaucboe •
the board. Johnson's kick tied a state record fOI' ·
most career field goals with 23, equaling the mart-.
set by Santa Monica's Jung Lee in 1979.
Late in the third quarter. Saddleback drove 48.
yards m nine plays with Scott McKenzie boltinli
over from the one-yard line for the Gauchos flrlf
touchdown ~ With Riverside unable to move the ball wi
much success on Saddleback's stingy derense,
Lmebacker Dave F.hlo\\-got things rolling in Gauchos maintained good field position lhroqbout
GWC whips
ELA, 48-7
Special to the Dally Pilot
Golden West College took advantage of eight
East Los Angeles turnovers and the Rustlers
rolled to an easy 48 7 Southern Cal Conference vic-
tory Saturday night at Orange Coast College .
The Rustlers uooed their conference record
to 3-0 1 to stay a half game behind first place
Santa Monica, which drew a bye this week.
Golden West scored the first time it 1ot its
hands on the ball. as the Rustlers moved 71 yards
in 10 plays with Mike Teregis scoring the first of
his two touchdowns from one yard out.
Shortly thereafter. Golden West agaift put
together a sconng drive, going 32 yards following a
short East LA punt with Teregis again going over ror
the touchdown from one yard away · For the rirst time in the laat three games,
the sophomore Teregis was held to under 100 yards
(41 yards on 17 carries> but he and the Rustlers
had done plenty of damage before the night was
over A heady Golden West defense caused four Eaat
LA fumbles and an equal number of Interceptions
two by comerback Terry Bachmeier.
East LA 's only touchdown was set up by a
comedy or errors. After Golden West's Jeff Karin
recovered a rumble at the East Loa Anaetes four-
yard line. Teregis fumbled on the first play, East
LA recovering A 56-yard run later by TPrence Henderson re-
sulted in a rumble, but East LA teammate Gary
Hearns picked the ball up at the Golden West
three-yard line and stumbled in for the touchdown.
In the a~ond half, Golden Weal was able to
substitute rrttly
With the loss, East Los An1eles dropped to 2-2
In conrerence and 2·6 on the season.
local One Day Tournaments
GIN RUMMY
PLAYERS
Phone 545-0421
~ 1o.;.l w~ 1-1
...... Statn Gn...., Al*
(cell 842• 5878) Put •few word• to work
' tor you In th id!iidQl(eil \
l ....
the rest or the evening.
The Saddleback defense, which leads the COD·
ference in rushing defense, held the normally po-1
tent Riverside running game -averaging 2!! 1 yards an outing into the game -to just l._
tempts for just SS yards and two interceptions. ~ i'
Early in the fourth quarter, Saddleback
linebacker Chris Healy recovered a fumble at th•
Riverside 11-yard line. I
After tailback Scott McKenzie ran twice for~
yards, quarterback John Hill scored from the one. 1 Saddieback's final touchdown came late in
game when freshman lineman Greg Oien .
covered a Riverside rumble on a bad pitch-out bl.
the end zone.
"We were extremely pleased lo have tbJll
win," Sweanngen said after the game. "This
what we were shooting for up until now."
.
c
------ma:
EABl.'5 ll'\1-1111G-•-___ ..._
St l~ 1•"fff
,..,.,.,_. f,....,. \•atit AT YOWf Ooclf
IC.,, Stt>u• "Mlf'H4 '°°"" Ar•1I
COSTA ..,.841•12ft ,.,.,,._._
lllllHIOll ~95-0401
-c.-~!Se• °""99 ,._, ., ,._ Jll1lwt I
Family Fun la 88.0Q .. ...-.~;m
and America'• Rolling AgalD!
Pack ~ dw la.mily and pf Get ..,41Y from II .ti
fOfl'C'Mrl DlKOWt A!Mriu'• 9rtatftt ~bar·
gain-the c:onwnl«nt. comtonable. ftMn'VY·eMcknt
r«rtOMnol orhld«. Thk i. dw grutat colilcdon
twr ol odllnt Miii RV's ~ 1lw latftf In RV ·
acc.-oriftl Come w. how Amfnc• '• rolll1tt ttt•lnl
• S.. ae RV tor ewwy budfdl ......... ~ ....... , ·'-·----~· .......... ~ .... tklat• ........ c~..-dr.t••
28th AA•u.. Mundactund Houllnt
• 11ac .... Uoo Velt.k:le Shciw
NOY. .. 16. DodgnStaClum M~·frl. NOOn-9p;a.
S.1, lOul\,·fp.m. Sun. JOa.m.·7p.m.
~ $100. Junlo' 6-16 SUS Undfr 6 f-.: ,_a..-.....,.. &bow°" Euttat
""" dlli fft18~ Pf'tMf'ICllClon of thit mcitt "'°*"' coi..,..ln~ ........ t .
H
t
~
f'
"J
•
,1~.COUIOI
0.W.'WMI .. 1Mt LA' ............ . , ' ... , Oel*tl... If I • 1-4
O.C-T ..... 1 tWl CO..f'I! lli<ll GW(-T.,_.1,,.1~ml!Klll
OWC•lll .. Hl'W\IOltmlll<.lll •1.A-..._,_,.,,_...l11e1'11•-IC.
.. WIUIOI
owe-~...-.J'"" 1111c11 '•""' owc-11NMtu,..,,10..mk1<kl owe -..,....., • .,_, lrom uP'IMt•
IO!Nnkl<A) owe -....., 1,_ 1o..m lliell I
Al~-UOOl•UINled) ------· •u P'lrt1 o-ina 10
~ ... -•113· ........ y.... 171 .. _ ll·»·•
.. llftb WI l'Vfll......... 1·4
~U..-y-IM01
-" ~,..,
111 .,., .. , .... ,
~ ,.., ................
llLA-Hen4'ft10ll, ..... ; Kt10•, r.Jt,
Nlat1"•ll. • t , l!dney 1 J, Stro1>9, J.O, Hettlll, 1-;J
GWC-T~t. ll·fl, Eltiall. 10-ll, Kot
Ike, J.H, .. et, •U. CAntoftf\le, .....
Al•llo, t-17, W19t1ln1, 1 "' !Coller, 1.11 , LflPl.,.le, l·I ..................
ELA-H..-,ton, .. ll>-l, ~. Martnall,
1-7 1, IJ. Gornel. S·I0-1, 7S
GWC Aiello, 11·17 I, Ill, LaPlanl, 1·1-0
lO
l.,......,..lllecelvi.,.
ELA-Kno•, J..JI, ~1119, 1·41, Valdtl,
l ·JJ, Ednly, l·U, 5lt0ft9, l ... 1.AFl*lla,
1-47.
GWC Gooel, 3·14 , Coppom. 3·2S,
e111a.,d, I IJ, Cenlolanle, 3·44, Rhode>.
1·11; Huntley, ,.,
S1ddlebeck 23, Riverside O seer..., o..n ....
RlverSldt 0 0 0 0 --0
Seddl~k 0 0 10 13 23 Sadd .,......,,. 30 FG
S--McKen1 .. 1 r""' CJoM.on llltkl
Stdd-HUI I"'" C.lohntlHI kick lalledl Sadd~ recovered fumble In -tone CJOll..-. lllekl
ActendMCa J,000 lttSllmatedl
o.-SU.•ttkt s Flrsl~ 16
RuSl>e~y.,ds S1102
PHS."9 varci. st
Panes • •·lt-0
Punll e 3'
FumbCH-l<Kl 1 1
PeNllltt-yarcb 4 40 , .......... , .. ," ...
Ill
IS '°'' .. SS s ·~7 .... s
.. 3
'11
S Hiii, ll·Sl, MCCut101111h 11 4 ..
M<Kerme, IWS, Nlchalt, Ill. ltollln•. :.-1.
Gall ...... I 1. S..CNI, H
R-RMcl 21 •. -· t-S, H•rdy ... 1, Je;lum, IC>-4, Herro1, 2·1, Lawis, J ... 1 , ................. ,..
$-Hill, .. lt-0, 51.
111-.J..,....,, ~IJ.-1, SS, H•rrts, 0-1-0, o ,...,,,._., 111ece1.,;,..
S laniett. 2·J1; Arona, ? u. l!ddo, t-S:
P•l11e. 1·2
R -C.tpen!M, 2·2J, Grant, 7 71. McGee,
1-11
HIGH SCHOOL
Ocean View 21, Lo• Alamltoa 22
0cHn V..... kere.., ~ If 1' 0-21
Lo1Alamllot O I O lf-27
OV Irvine• rtin ITultle klcll I
OV Stanley 12 PtM lrom ~1n1e (Tuttle
lllCkl
LA-FetT'llll 4"'" CHepolH rwn>
OV-lrvlnelJ KO relUl'n ITutlle 1l1Ckl
OV-Stanley JI ~s from Haorll• CTuttle
kick I
LA Hapo!H 1 r"" COIOoutlN kick I
LA-N ....... 1 run IOIOourHtll klCkl
Atl•ndan<e-l 100 C••ll,.,,..edl
TlmH 500 ,.,_,.,
F1~I M-1~ OI lhe L~ A1>941 .. S Tunet
jQO mil• NASCAR ,..,. '°' FGrano Nal!Orlfl
Sloe& cao o_. Iha 1 > mile Onurio MolM
Soeecl••Y OtHt, *'"' money won. t•l>I com pletedendw1,...r·sa0Hr-IPHO
1. llenny Parso•" '24, •. U. 1'71 Chevy, :IOO laps, IJl,gmp11
1 Nall Bonnell. lll,llS. 19H Marc, 100
3 Cale Varl)orougn, $17,0lS, 1971 O..v
200
4 Boooy Allt!IOfl, llO,'llS 1919 Ford, 200 s
s Due EarMarot, \ 10,llS, 1911 Cl>e• 200
o SPffdLao.'7,lOS. 1'11Chev, 19'1
1. Joe M111t~an. n.ons. 1977 ,,.... '" 9 Terry LabOnle, '8.01S, 1977 Chev, 198
9 John Anderson, SJ,J2S. 1911 Chev. t91
10 Buddy Am119ton, ,S,6SS, 1919 Ooc19t.
1'10
1 I Btll Schmt11, U,llS. 1911 Oldl, 196
11 Gttn J6He11. SJ,ISO, 1979 Cnev, 1'5
13 St.,, Barrell,~. 11S, 1917 Cho. 19•
14 J 0 . McOultoe, u ... s 1977 Che•. 19•
11 0•119 Marcos, SJ.660, 19/9 Chn 1'11
lo Tom c;.1e, SJ,•7S. 1979 Ford, 191
7. Cecll Gordon, n .2•S, 1971 Old• '" II. Jody Ridley, SJ.OH, .. ,. Mere, 119
19 AlekMcCray,U ,HO. 1'77 Buoo, tll
20 Don W•lerman, U .230. 1'77 Olds , ..
21 A1crv.,d Children ,2.610. 1917 ,,...
IU
l2HenrvJonn,\.SSO.197'Bulck, 111
1J Hlff'S.:hel McGroll ii SSO, 1977 C"-• 1st
~ > .
NBA
WESTElllN CONP'EllllNCE ~01w1.-w L P'cl. GI
San Anlonoo u s /JI
Ut•n 12 I W
K anses cuy 9 12 •29 •
Denver I 10 •12 •
Hou•lon • 9 .00 • O•llu J U 167 10•,
PKlllcOh-
P-nla 14 J 12•
l.Alltlfl 1J S /22 1' I
Gei<MnSlate 11 6 041 J
Saallle 9 10 .,4 •
San 01eoo o 12 llJ I'•
Porll•nd S 12 1'14 9
IASTElllM ~P'lllllENCI
A-l>lvh..,
W L P'cL GI
Phll-lpfM• 1S 3 Ill
New YOf'll 11 • ISO 1
~'"" HewJtrtev
It s .. , J·,
1 II .. I
WMl!lnvton 1 11 ....
C-.. l>fVIMll Mll•--111411•~
Cll1tat0
AUenl•
CltffltNI
O.tt011
u • I" 10 I SS. 4~
• 11 .JSl • s u .111 '"' S IS MO I0'-
4 14 .m iov,
....... Y'•"-Wtllllngton 100, Allenla •
Hew v-100. Cltwleno 95
Pllll....,,.• 1 IS, H-J•r•y tpe
S.n Antonio 121, Utah 104
0.nvet l?S. Ponltf\d 12'
Ken.at Ctly ,., S.n 0.19P '4
Golden Stare ttt, "'*'1111 tOI
s.a111e 143, Houslon 139, loo
T--··~ 0•11aUILe41M'I
Oetroltal New Jertey
ClllCA90 •1 Mllweul<•
Portland at "-<lb
NHL
BIUH 5, Kings 3
k#ell, .......
''"',._, .... 3 o 2-s
1 0 1-3
I SI Louis, L•PO<nl~ 1 ICurrte, OunlOP>
4 OS 2 SI Louil P•l•Y 10 1 .. n•ss•Slf<ll.
S 01 J U.. A1>941I•• Sommer 11 CO•°""" H•rr1\J, n 1" ,. ~ L0\.11\ Bro'olflltns.<ntdl• 1
I Federllo), IS 0 ) LOS A ...... , ... L Murpny
S !Unger Goldupl 19 •9 P•n•ll•••
l(lauen. SIL. 4 1S Wtll•. LA, t.S la. Korao
l A. 11 06 Cro-~SIL 11 00
S.CeMPttttod
None PeNlht\ l(or•o. LA maJor
J JS, Turnbull. SIL m•1or ) J) SI Lcxm
Btncn -..rved by Currit. J JS, Su lier, SIL
m1;or mfnor, I '11. Hoplun,, LA, major
minor, 8 22 Slewart, SIL, 11 16 Hopkins
LA, m•1or 11 16, Goldup. LA, 16 OS
Third Panoct
• LO\ Ang•le\, O.onne I• C Stmm•r
H1rr1') 0 JO 1 St lou1\ Baoyth 11
I Faderkol I JS I SI Louis Federko I
I 84bych Sullen 16 .,. Pen•nv P•l•y SIL, 4 14
Sf\Ob on ~I St Lou" 10 I fl 26 lo> Anoeltl 10 ... ll
C.o•l•e\ St Lewes L1ut Lo\ Anoe•~!.
Gralwm<r A 1' JS3
$.tl11,....y 'Scor ..
SI LOuo\S Kllll>l
Pnll~H;liltlpnti ' Ot>trotl /
W .. htnQIOll I H•rlloro •
Hew 'forll 11.l•..an 4 8ut1a10 1
80\lon 1. PtUSt>urQh •
rornonlo '. Edmon1C¥t l
M1nn•\Ot• S. Ch•<~ 1 ,
O•k Tree
SATURDAY'S RESULTS
IUrll 9f 25-My """-911btff m"tlngl
Flrll raco NHlly !ESlr•dl l IJ JO
o 60. • 60, Hygrounoer IC••l•neoal. 2S 00,
13 oo. P-1< 10.-lanoussayel, S 00
S,.(ond r•ce Foot Me Nev•r • P1rw •Y•
) 40. 2 IO, 2 .O. Forover At~ 1 Hawl•vl l 40
1 IO. Alec• ( (A\l•ned•t, l 60 11 Oeooy Dou
bit 11 11 paod \13 40
fhifd r•<• Cf'l1•r Ldtte Haw •
!Stloem•k•'i • 20 l 00. J 60 Hone no Nolor COltva reU • 60 J 10, Sc•roells Rn•ll
(CHlan<l<Mt o IO
Fourll• race Snell S1o<k IPonc'av• • 60
l •O. J 00, l•"'l)et1n1 1P1orc•I •IO J IO, w.,, ....... 1eas...-.1. • '°
PUBLIC NOTICE
-----
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITloUS IUSINESS
NAMll STATEMllNT
--~=~c NOTICE j
P'ICTITIOUS eultNEH etAMa STATlllUNT
T"e tollow1n<;1 person• are doing
butineua1
A L. WILLIAMS, 1011 Y0tb•
StrHI, S..lle !OS, T11•1l11, Ca111orn1a
tt ..
Neal L. Crot.6, 1.u lndtpelldence
A•en,.., lt_,.anos, Ca111orn1a "l1l
V Gefte Crou, 707:11 Sprindrtfl
Lane, HunllnQIOll leach C•hlornl•
'1U.
T"h butlneu 11 conduclod by •
11-ral paro-S1>1p
V Gene Cross
lhll tlatemenl wu lo14'd wolh 11\a
County Clerk of 0r•"99 C.ounly on Oc
T .... fol-"9 ow-. 15 d0l119 D<Jso.
Mi'M
N UTltl BIO LABORATORIES
l 6U W Mac.llttl!Ur 111...S., S..110 Jl1
Santa Ana, c;.t. '211M
Mic-I llarullc", -Marlon Way, COlleMotSa. CA 9?6V
It_,, Jucllw, '°'' Orth•d SI S.nta Ana tiejQl>I• CA '7004
This bininelS os con<kl,cl•O by •
general -'"9nll•P Mk-Barullch
Thh Slal..,_1 w•• ltled wolh lhe
County Clerk of Or•nllt County on
Novem1Mt6, 1'80 .. ,_
PICTITIOUS IUSINIUS I
N-.STATEMIHT
Th• lotJG••n9 pert.on\ •r• do1no
b41$t~I •s CAVANAUGH LANDSCAPE, JOS
Loy0la ltd Cotta Mesa CA 9'62•
Boll C......,.AUQll, 10S Lo,ol• Rd
Coll• Mew, CA '76111> Timothy James CavMu1<1gn )()11
K•llybroolo.e 1..11., Cost.I Mau. CA .,U•
MIC'-I P•ltoCk C..•aneugtl 1S20
Fairway 1..11, CosU Meta. CA 91•2o
Tr11s t>uslnos •• condu<led DV • ;e ... ral r»rtnenhlp
lloDC..vanauon
,_, "· 1'10 P'l411U Publl•had °"-COHI O•llr Ptlol
Thi' sUt-t was lilt<! wllh lhe I
County Clerk o! Or•n~ Counly on
Now mile< o 1980
.. , ..... 1 PubllShe<I Or«>91 co .. 1 Oaoly Pilot Publlthed °"-Coall D•lly PllOI, Nov. 9, "· 23, JO, 1980 44S3-IO
Nov i.. 13. JO. Dec I, 1'90 4SS7 to
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOUI IUSIMEH
HAME STAT•¥•NT
Tna lollowln; person• .,. <1011>9
bu>lnessas
O&M SALES COMPANY, llO
McCorm•CJ<. Sulla 109 Costa M<rsa
c.11101n1an.»
8elfl and a....,. inc .. • C<ll1lotn1a
c0t-•l-. UOMcCOfmlCk, S..1te 109,
Cott• Meta, C..htoml• '106
T"'' --,. conducted by • co•"
POf'•llOtl eat .. & lla<IQI\ Inc
.JolVt L. a.t ...
~-. Thl1 .-1-' ;oras llled •Ill\ Ille
Covnly Clark of Oraft99 Coullty on
Now,,,_IJ,19llO
PU.u.4
P'YIMlllWd Oranot Coe'll Dally Piiot,
Nov 1•. 2J. 30, De<. 1 1'90 4U...0
PUBLIC NOTICE ... ,_
l'ICTITIOUI aUllMEH
MAMll ITATUoUINT
• T"• fOl-lno_pet1on1 a re doing
IMitlnes1 •: lllANCHO CUCA M ONGA
8USIH•SS P'AlllK 0 & II , -041
M•'A rl .. ur 9oultverd, Su lie HO, ~ IHc:,., C.lllomta f2*
( 11 OAON COltP'OltATION, a
0.lewe'9COl'-.Clon, fO't MecArt""r
81¥0 .• Suctt 300, Ne•Port ltacll,
C•lllwnle ta.o
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINIUS
NANll STATEMENT
The 1011ow111g person• are do•ng
bulfn•\S es
COLLEGE ANO VISTA WAV AS· SOCIA TES. 1.m Halt Aven .... ,,.,,,.
Celltorn1a '171•
Rooert P Warm11191on. 1o.S9' Hale
Avenue. 1rv1ne C•hforn1a •21u
lllo;er O Darnell. 165'11 Halt
Av•ftU4. lrv1"4_ C..lifont1• t17U
P•l•r L Inman. IU•2 Hale
Avenuie _ lrv.ne C•flfMn•• 97714
Wiiham J Ponman IOS'n t<•I•
Avenu. Irvine. C•hfcw-n1• 927t•
Ollvtr N Crary. i.stl H•I•
Aven.,., Irvine, C.1tl«n1a '111•
Sl ... 1~ Ptnano"'11tt, I.St? Halo
A ve""9, Irv-C.lllon11 a '1114
Dave C Alderman, 16S9' 14•••
Awn .... 1nnne,c.111...-111a t171'
Tiii• l>U$tMSI IS CtndU<l•d Dy •
"ner•I pa""9<Sl>lp
Wllllam J Pittman
~•I Partner ,.,.,, ..
Publl-0r4'1199 Coast Da lly Ptlot,
Nov i.. U, lO. Dec: 1 1'90 4SU-t0
Nov 9 10, 23, lO, 1990 u !S eo 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATEMENT 01' AIANDONMEHT
OP' USIOI'
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINllU NAME
Th• totlO.tf"l9 oe'f'IOf'\t f'l•vt •~n
don.eo the uw Of ttw F1c1111ou\ Bu••
NO N•me
FASHION ONE HOUR
CLEAHl!AS l•S East t91n ~I , Co,u
Mew, CA'2621
fftie FKtH'°"" 8ul!nHi N•m• t•
lerred lo -wu hl4'd tn Or•n119
CounlYonMay 16 "" Clyde A M<;ICay llOI Clllt Or .
NowPOrt leacn. CA '11..0
Jonn H Fry .. , J•\MH'W C•tClf ,
CoslaMew CA'2U6
T"" 1>11 .. MIS .,., COl>du<led by • 1 119"9ra1 oartne""IP oros A M<;ocay
T"ls litt._1 ••• 111.0 with Iha
County Ctarll 01 Oran~ Co11n1Y on
Nowmlle< I, 19llO I "'"ti.I Published Ora1199 Coor Dally Pllol
Nov t, 10, U, lO 1'90 H IHIO
Business Money
$5,000-$250,000
'''"' , .. -"'",,,.. UitH ), 1 ... ) 211. '°· ~ flte••ttl. uo.
'·"· SurfM,.!IMC~111.i.oo u• Utti.K i.14 llPt<d..aOO U•uO•fHINlf.,.Jt
Sm" ,_. -sw.,.. ,.,...,....,,f I tO. ' JO.
4 tD, $1•1 Kn1t1 COl1Vtr1tl,, JI,, 11
$e.,.n111 rec• -sw..,.i. ,,.'"'"'' rAO. 4.4(), HO, GlistOM IUllll\ll"ll, 1o 41t, t ...
Soull\t•-1~1 •• 70 " ... ,. 1 .. 11 PtldlSJUO
U Pick $11t 0-7·1• IHI HIO •1.10Ull to 1 .. • lnnil>t !Jdieh llor l)Ot"" > '2 li'fcll Si•
'OllSOlat'°" Nkl ., ... ""'th l,>M WIMlllM
I llCUlt \llw-...>.
I 1111\11> ra(t -Sii D•rtetr 1011vart61,
70 00, 9.00, S.40, Clllt ro1e11re CShOtmtkerl, S 40, UO; ,._, ILlpl\aml, 3 40
Nlnlll r11a1 Hl9f1 Coun141 IGClllganl, '·"°• J.IO, UO; R11119lblltto (ValtlUutltl. HO. S 2Q; Cogency 15-tNlleO. UO \J
aucla 11>-fl oakl HS SO
Holtvwoocl Park SATUaOAY'l aHUl.TI ,.,,.. ......... ,............,.. .. _..,.,
,..,,., rec:t -llW<lslv. Cl..on90I, t•M.
1 . .0, S 20, Kaw•rlM Hljofttlly IAndtt.,.I.
•.IO •• oo. Veld.l's I.Ad IPtraglMI, 100 ll
.. ecla Cl· IOI oald \11110
SacOlld ract Andy s Mern>a CAlldertonl
U0,4 ..i, l.to. Commodity CW-IM'I, lt.00. s 60, Bye ..... v .. t>owf' IV•Utf\dlflfllamJ, HO
Thltd race Easl-Pr~t ILontaOI .
13 .0, 6.20. 4 40, llleuc:IW> Cllaketl. •to, J «I,
Br•noy -Of'y ISl>errenl, J 00 U ••atla II>-•~ pald..\161 00
Fourt" rat a -lye llye Atlll• IM ·
denonl. 1s oo. 1 oo. 4 20. Z.rruetl• ·u.onoo1.
• IO 4 20, Pine NMcllH c ky .. ul, J 00
Filth race Bal Champ ICra nel, 21 60
• 40 l IO, O..monl co.-r1. 2 .o. 1 JO.
G«omelrtc tMa .. rl • 20 s,.,,. r..:e Dente Ja~ (Detomtrl, u 20.
l IO 1 40, N-Hustle IAc•erm•"'· 7 '°· l 10. Sir Gr>Q C&ly .. ssl. ? . .cl.
Seventh r•t• Art1• the Sm•rt'(
ICrOllMnl, 110, 4 IO J 10. C0t0f\arl• ISNr
ren I 6 '° S 10. Sote Commanotr (Sft•w •
• 10 U ••acta IS •I oaod i141 ~ '1 Piek Su
IS S 1>-11 SI oa1d \J.71S 60 10 non. w1nnono;i
llck~I\ cuyip not\.f'\t u Pick~·• ton\ol•t1on
P••d ,,.,. MJ to •~ w1nn1no hCU!t\ <four
hors~\'
E 1ghth r•ct Hoedown H•nover
tl1qn11>1111 • 60. J 40 7 20 t1ro11n1 B1u1e
CO•nn1>1 6 60 3 BO Gerry Junior
t w11toem.i. • 40
Ninth r4Ct F' ttnc 1 B•rontH ( P•net 1,
I• 00. I 20, J IO, RrQ<OI G•teilt (Anclersonl,
J lO l 00. Monk•n• Ale COe'iOmerl, 1 IO U
t .. c la !J II P••d \IOI SO
T•nth race ~' rhe Knife ( A!Jb1nt.
) 10 4 00. I 40 Wv<l••m u.1gn1n1111. IS 00,
I 10 P°"'1don 1oc ... 01u1 ~, 10 U .. aci..
II Ml P••d UOt 00 AlttncMn<e 11.S44
Volleyb•ll
HIGH SCHOOL.
CIF 4-A Ptayelft
L•ouna llr•ll>dttl Paramount IS·I, 1s J
M•ler Dfoo a.! Awoahon IS 10 1 S 11
Grand Prix Tourntment
latWe .... ey, lft91AMI
Samlliftal Sl""" Jonn Mc.Enroe <Ml l<arold ~lomon, 6 3 o-
l Gent' M.ay•r clef Stan Smllh, .-0, •·•
Taipei Championships
la1 Ta._.i, Talwaal
SemlllMI~
Ivan Lendl dtl JOlln A11i11n, 6 >. •·'. llr""' Ttacher dt1 lt•meSll Krl.,.nan, .. 3, •·?.
UI IAlllTOH PAIHH•lllS, t
CCMl,.,nle Oefltral ... rfMf' ... p, tr•
Mt. CllH_, Clrtlt, ,ownY!ln Velley,
call'*nl• t21't . 1 1,.\l,f .,,,,."""''"'r-o1 l ~··~(~ Tllll tMltlMH I• Celld11Cled 11'1' e tellettl ptf'lntrt"l lL OAOH CIDAl'OIUITI~. e Otl_.,. co~• INll.
Loans & Lease Transactions
Preliminary Commitments
Within 48 Hours
Funding Within 5 Days
J "'"4GW""\ 4 P'X•titQl",Otl~
... ltllllltUUUHtCOVPON
ALIGNMENT
ONE YEAR POUC
.
HUNtlNOTO.. HACH .......... .,,;"'1(1 ., °'..,... ,,,.., "•
NIWPOllT1COITA MIU
i. f ''"'" J.,.rO·•~"'""' "'Or
SAN CllMENTE 9.·· 11\f I Ct ""'•
f'V'h H,. ~ft
O,!N DAILYt-1 ..
IATURDAY l·S
................. .,, ... T-• . .,_ ~ ... «Im
WaMlrtCll • Ma"' Id~ ,., M , JtlVI
A11ttl11 ...... T•~ *f s.111 Mtlllft •
.Hf\n WMll....,., W.t-t •
\I
Men'• croH country c;ou.aoa
PCAAO.. .......... " 1 .. s...,..1
' Tim Holmes CFrffllO Slate) JI 1S ?
Dan Harvey tS.n Josel, 31 2t l Jom
T rlplett CUC Santa Barllaral. ll ». 4. Oen
nts Hamblin CUC lrvtnel JI «I. S Clltll
Hamer tFr..,.., Slalal. JI.Sf. • Joe YOW't
IUC lrvonel. JI .~. 1 Dave c ... ;elotl CLll
Stale!. l2 11. I Cl>Mlal CllttllanMn IUC.
ltvtnel J1 13, ' Jell Venderffml IUC
lrv1nel. l2 IS 10 RicMrd ,,_,., (L8 Stattl
32 11 01her UC I llfll•hers IS Sieve
Ktrcht>off, 31 •. 17 S.m Walling. l2 41 JI
Rubin B.,ron, » S4
Te•m scor•f'Q t UC Irvine, .tJ 1 fre1ne>
Slale, SS, J UC S.nla llatbeta, 60, • Long
BHc" Sttt•. 102. s s... Jooe sia1e, '°' • U!An Sl•le, '" 1 C...I Stale Fullerton, 11S
HtGHSCHOOl. -CIF1'1tEL.IMS
1•1 ~Ck Call ... 1
Vanny
4A -tteu 1
I l• Crosse CCo•I• Meul, IS.21, l
Aevnolds <C•m•rillol. S 39, J Howard
!Co•la Me..,J, IS .0, • Orr CUpl•ndl, IS SO,
S Coa 1w 11son>. 1S,S3, • Wtlliamt
!Foolh•tt>. tS·.SS, 7. Nelson 1Soml V•lleJI.
IS M, I Herr•ra CCosl• Metal. IS S• 9
Ooetrlch IS.mi Vatteyl, lo 01 10. YounQ
!Palos VerdeO. 16 OJ, Parker t rut11n1
U 21, Qu•l1h.O•s•n 1nd1vtdll4tl
THm -hloers. 1 Cosl• Mew 61, 2 P••os VerdH. 71, 3 Camart110. at • !Hm1 V•lley, 119, S Footn111, 111, olfter e ru
s<l>OOIS o Newport Huoor 187 13 O<t•n
V·~-111
4A ·lllaca 7
Buller IEdosonl, 14 S3 l Meytr
1un1v•rStty) IS ll, l McOon••d C81.1r
rou11"s>. IS ••. • Grollolh ISo Torr•nc•>
IS SI; S Daily IV11la P•rkl IS SJ. o
Gr•ncle IVolla Part&>. IS SJ. I Mooro !So
Totrancel, IS S7 • Mu .... 11 'Tl>OU>411\0
O•kU. U St. 9 Soren\oen tV1ll• P•t11.1 t• 01 10 UUOKher t ThOUS•nO O•li.\J
"°' Te•m QW.t1t1ers 1 Untvers1ty st Cby
\firtu• ot d better hn1sn DY tli S1•lf"I KOfiAQ
man1 f T1-SA!'d Oos. St. J Viii• P•rk
IS. 4 So Torrence, 111, S B"rrQUlll>s, 116
otntr •,...• tt:•ms • EdtSOft. 111 ........ J
1 GallaQl>e< IConlna 0.1 Mari IS 1S 2
H.,llord !Corona d9tMarl, IS J4 J llowllft
(AolftnQ H1115•, U .0 • Erlkton (Foun111n
V•ltey) •S ": S 1<01v1oe10 ICr•••nl•
V•ll•y>. IS .SI • SIUP•• IOos PueDIC>ll,
IS ss. 1 c, • ...,. !LO\ Alam1losl, IS ss .•
W•ISn IC..-yonl. 1$ SS. 9 Sire low I Founl••n
Valley), 11 SI 10. Mowr tFount••n ValleYI.
'~ 04, V•••n IEI MOd•"•'· IS 01 and Tf\Omas IS.nu BarlMral IS 10 qu•ll!lad.,
tnd1w1d~t\.
Te•m qu•llflers 1 Foont•1n V•U•v. '4. l
Dos P.,.Olos, 88 J Corona dt!I Mar, 110, 4 Rolling Holts, IJo S Or...,119, 12.t
lA . Race I
1 Souia tWot'°" l<H I, tS u . 2 Harbell
CAeaonoo1, IS S2 l hrroquet CBu.na Park, IS S.J, • McCormick INOf'CO), u SJ;
S Gabe IS.nu Fel IS SI,• C..l CB_,.
Par111, 16:0.. 1 T11un011 l~l, tt:l111
I RolllH 1va1enc .. 1. 16 1?; f Eddy lAAater
Dell. It 14, IO. Br•1tCsanc .. .._1.1." is
Tum cw•1111ers. I Maur Del, 12 1
•
1'101(.o, ... ~ ._. ... , ... "''. ·,.f!IPle Q
Ir, 1411' .......... UO, ~!'!tr erte i.-• la11 Cltmlf\te, UI.
M.• Ille« a 1 H-11 (l>tM HI ISi, IJ 1t J, C-
mack 1511111" Hlllll. U u ::> Ohon
IHawl,....llel, tS •S1, 4 A"1tCe CG•""· IS J7 S OIOI-tu C-1, U .U : t
HHamtl\ 1e1 O.,.•dol '• 01; 1 11111!1
IWet1111U, " ll. f , Ft~t1 CPt-erl, 1• ,,, ' ICtn IHewtheClltl. l•.1'. 10. 5elllll~llltOer-1,1• u
THtn qllllltit", I, (I Oor• .. , $1, l
Ha#l"6ma, 111 J Walnut tU; 4 U Ctnada,
121, S ......,_, 11', 011\tr •rt• 1eam1 I.
D•n• Hiiis, llS.
JA. 111.te.e J
t. '"""'..,,, (Mira C.UI, U .Jt. 2 5ool IS.n Merlno,I, IS:U, J. Petti CAowltndl,
IS St, 4 Seawr191>1 IMJr41. C°'WI, 16. U; J.
Caden• loljk)nlttlfllol, t•: ... •· Ge"rlgn (LA
H•Dr•I. 16 20, 7 Gras .. , 1Montaoe11oj,
1~.11. I .Elliotc IAlllnttonl ••;13, t. OlOll IMlttlon Vlefol, It 14, fO Harrtn;l•n ISen
M•rlnol, 16 1'
l H m quell! .. ,. ' Mir• COSI•. 11, 7
Monteoe11o. 1'. 3 Miu.on v .. 10. 9'l. 4. Sen
Marino ... S Arroyo Grendt, US ·-•A · lllace 1
1 Manr1que1 tBurtwnltl 11 Ot 1 Ehten
IS•ntt ll«beral 11 06 J B•ll 1Newourv P•rlll 11 14 4 I.A Crout 1<.o.1a Mtwl .
ll If S Carpenter ISanla llarb.ara l 12 IS
• Wolle ICoJta Mewl, I? It. 1 1Co11y
((OSI• M9wl. 12 2' • J-• IN•wlMIY
P•tkl. 12 2' t ZtU !Costa MeYI 17 J9,
10 Slacfturdn• CNtwt>ury Parkl 12 Jt,
011n11cc-11101,11 s1.ou•1o11ec1 Te•m _ .. ,.... ' Cost• WW JI l
NeWl>Ufy Parlt, ft, J S.nla B•rlMra 14 •
Well To<r•f'O, 111 S ""ado• US 01 ... r •r•• te•rrtl • HvnltnQt<i" 9•«". t90 4A Rau l
t P1u"1lttt UJn1ven1tvJ 11 IS J 8•rr1oi.
<Un1ver\1tvt it .O. J Grtmw9' IW11~•
17 OI • M4/yt•r>CF001n1111, U 11 S Murpny
I Tnou,•nd o •• ,, 12 ,, 0 MOIQU•n
1Un1ver"''' 1l ll I Kirkhorq (Edo.oni
12 l• • S.uorwe1n 1Un1vers11y1 12 n ~
Unger !Fooll>olll 12.28 10 Nor••c
(Unnter\lf'l'L ll jQ l••m Qualtfiu-. 1
Unl•er>oly,2/, 2 Foolhtll,o8, J E<11>on,81 •
W115on. 114 . .s Tnouwnoous. 132
fA R•<el I
I H1Ulett ~S.UQu~• 11 )J, I Vdl«JOLl@'Yd
ll'ounl•ln V•ll•YI. ll 18, J Moller (Tu.ionJ
12 U, • Sl•ro> IOtun Votwl 12 U o
l(erby CFoonl••I> V•ll•YI. 12 JI. 1 Mason
1Bu•n•I 11 JI I Elmer IWUll•k"I ll JI
9 Fourneor tS.UC1u\I, 1l 39, 10 McGtoncn.y
IFounl•onV•lltYI 12 40
THm qu•ltloer\ I S..uqu• &S l Foun
t•1n 'l•llf't', /1 J Suen• 104 4 fu\(1n IU'f
S Coro"" diltl M,/jr. 110. Olr'lof'r' •rea t••m._. 1 O<t•n v .. w 102 fS1aros qu1llt1e\ tor (IF
tln•h With t\tr fOUrtn Ola<t f1ni\f'I
JA Race 1
I MC(le•ll•n t~•n M•r1not 11 OJ 1
L0\11• !S.0.-•• ll 11 l C.•rm11so 1 R.one1
Cll. 12 20 4 !>Nr IM1n1on V1e101 11 I.I I
V0tntttblt'OfS.nM•t1no10 12 36. o Gu1111eo
IB<twarly Holl•> 12 SO. 1 Dube IM•ler O..ol
tl ~1 8 tro,i1ng tS•n M•,.1no1 11 ~ 9
Ch•vir,ky t Norco1 U S 10 s,nr.oeu
l8utn• P•r._J IJ '
T••m qu•t1htf\ I S•n Mlrtno St l
M•ttr 0.t, II ) 8f'vf'rly H1U\ 'fl .. Nora>
1J• S R11)het11 llS
JA llaca 1
1 Butt• IArroyoGr•..-1 12 u l Z•-
CC.•Pulr•no V•tt•y• t? 2• J wn1tt
(Mir• Cos la I, 11 U 4 Ebontr t Bosnoo
Am•IJ 11 .. 2 S A1mef1l I RuO•OouaJ
U 49 • Furneu (Arroyo Gr1na.1 12 )1 I
NochOI\ CEI Doi'-• 11 .SI, I Mlldon-
IMfl•r 0.ol, 1l SI,' o .. ron tEI Oor•de>I.
17 St. 10 HMM! CAr1tn111on1 11 01
Te•m QIU4\llf1•rs t Mira Cost• ttl l Ar
ro,o Gr•noe, IJl, 3 C•P1Ur•no V•ll•¥ Wt •
l15hOP A,...t, Ill, S Arhnqlon, IS•
JA • ttace l 1 Spotll CAedondol, 11 SS. 1. Durand
ll.a11Un41 Beat .. I, 11 S9, J. Boolh tL•llYf'•
BHChl, 17 o.. • Aco,1a 1wa1nu11. 12 ~ s
P•rk"urll CBt~hOfl Mon111omeryl, 12 JI 6
G•rdner IM•onol•ll. 11 J9. 1 M•Ot
CW•lnuu, U ••. I D•Ck\on IL•9una
Bea<hl, 12 so. 9 Snum•n (8ru1. 11 S• 10
!'lore\ IWalnvtl, 12 s._ Moller IOownol.
12 11 qualtloecl lor lhe lon•IS ., .,. on
CllVfdU•I
Team /iua!Uiet\ ' Laguna Beach. S4 Cl>V
·v1r1 ... 1 ot 1b •lath scoring man I. 7 wa1oui.
S4, J R-.00, 12', 4 Bt"'°CI Mont-ry.
IS.. S lt'M Ut
·-
Just like Mom
Wke mother, like dauehter, like father, Uh aon
This old sayine could ~ used to deacribe the world ot baby
1 Cashio"§ today Whal Mom and Dad wear, the lltUe folk WHr.
'1 There a're qwlted vests, runnin1 sw\s, robea 1n~ over1U1 to~ the tn·
fanl set. Baby can wear tee shif'\S that have • me1111•. aon, feminine dresses, velvet jackets and dresses and 1 real rabbit Jacket.
'. The popular Western look also is 1v11lable for p{nt-slaed rowhands,
Land for \he big moment when babies are lntroduc.d to the world, there
are frothy heirloom christenln1 dresses.
• Louise Jertson, proprietor of Le Ma1asln, a shop for children at
South Coast Plaza, said people Uke to buy Ill ot these tiny clothes rcause "there's still a little kid in all of us."
She has been in the retail business for
many years but switched to children's
'cloth45 because it's a "sweeter buainess ...
[ "There's a happiness in the buying," she
F!idded. "Everyone smiles when they come ~ here "
.. . , ... • ). . , • ' r • .
i ~
Little boys will look
nice in white short
set with red and
white dotted shirt
and tmy bow tie.
Wme velvet dress has
crocheted lace trim
Going skiing? Wear a
French knit outfit for the
slopes. It's by Clayeau.
\ ...
By BAaBAaA MAYR -~ .......... An outcrowtb ol dst popularity of
CHu1I ent.rtaJnln1 at home bu been
the development of epecJal pMc., of
tumlture 111red towent makinf en· tertatntna tultr.
New oampl• Of 1taUonar, and
roll·ebout Mn abd Hrvera an ap.
pearln1 on tM market at an 1c-
c1ler11*9 raie. And, eeeorcUnt to re·
t1U1ra and lmerior datpen, 1ucb
tumlture ln a wide ranee of price
ran1t1 Is rlnd.lbt sreat a«epta.nce with famJUea who entertain a lot.
In fact, ban which were once con-
aldtred entirely inappropriate in a
llvlb1 room have come to the living
room to •tay. For example, Gail
Lewll, an Interior designer In New
York, commented that "all my
cHenta at.olutely demand bars for
their Uvin8 room. I have lectured
them and even insulted some by tell-
lne them that nobody puts bars that
look like bars in the living room.
BUT WHEN THEY are unob-
trusive -concealed in armoires or
part of a wall system -ban are a great help.
"Today," she continued, "there
are so many cabinets and bar units
available that it's easy to find
·Something suitable that is still in
good taste."
Others in the home-furnishings in·
dwitry agree. Bars are now a wanted
feature in a wall system, said a
furniture retailer with several stores
in the New York area. The ifficiency
and convenience of having a bar in a
wall system has helped to create de-
mand for other types of bars and serv-
ing units, added the retailer
BARS ARE NOW available con-
cealed in armoires, in console tables
and as etageres. In addition. despite
Ms Lewis' feeling that bars that look
like bars "are tacky," a large
number of them do end up in
American living rooms . And.
perhaps, even more are set up in
dens and basement family rooms.
A popular form of informaJ enter-
taining nowadays relies on a com-
bination of a bar-server and a large
cocktail table. Food is put out on the
cocktail table or a separate server;
Turnout disappointing
drtnb are at the bar; 1uesti help
tbem1,1v11, and dine at small
b ~ tablet, on lap trays, or olf
table. Sueb a dinner or
would not have Puaed uater cmce, but a more cuua.t at.
Utude toward entertalntns now makea it acceptable.
AL80 COMING in for lncreued
aalea and popularity are roU.aa.out
servers. Many are finlabed oolbotb
1ldes and have a concealed swfatt
t.bat ls impervioua to spilll.
Since they are on wbeela, the
servers can go Into the livin1 room,
or out to the porch, or to the df.ninl
room -wherever they are needed for a party.
With enclosed storage below the
plastic laminate surface IJlOst
possess, servers also provide CClllVe·
nl-:nt storage space for a variecy of china and serving pieces.
. WITH DINING rooms diaapPear·
mg, or becomin1 mere shadow.a of
their former selves as ells off the llv·
Ing room, servers have beeun ap-
pearing in living rooms and foyers
where they work well as a conso~ ta-ble, too.
Other ideas of useful party
furniture were enumerated by Ms. Lewis.
''I like to suggest the uae of
bunching tables instead of a larce
cocktail table in front of a sofa ill a
small living room." she said. "In
small homes. clients often want to
have a convertible sofa for ,..._
and a large cocktail table ls difflcuh
to move out of the way."
Stacking tables used as side tabla
next to lounge chairs or sofas are
also a good idea, she said. When not
needed, they nest and take up little
room. Then, when guests come, they
do triple duty as small cigarette tables.
The best solution to the problem of
fitting a room out for a variety of ac-
li vities is a wall system, said Ms.
Lewis. They come in a wide variety
of styles and sizes and can accom-
modate many storage and serving
functions In a small room, especial-
ly. wall systems are a lifesaver. she • said
500 f anllly niembers gather
SAN DIMAS, Calif. (AP) -The
rnout for the Escalera family reu
·on was disappointing this year.
wer than 500 showed up Last
r. there were 625.
But everybody enjoyed seeing the
ereat grandchildren or the great
grandparents. Especially, Juan
Escalera of nearby La Puente. He's
79. From hundreds of miles they
came recently, overcrowding Bonelli Park.
The women compared historical
notes. Velia Santillan of rmperial
said the records go back to Vicente
Escalera in the late 18th century,
whose wife Rafaela bore four
children before she died at the age of
ll5.
In 1905, at a lime when Cipnano
Escalero was working as a cowboy
near Leon in Guanajuato, pay waa 25
cents a day in Mexico but $2 ill the
United States. So his nine childreo in-
c I u ding Roman Escalero came through El Paso. Texas.
Eventually, they settled in the Im·
perial Valley, producing 71 childten,
289 grandchildren, 538 great.
grandchildren and 70 great -
great-grandchildren.
Among Roman's children was Juan.
"It was a good reunion," said Mrs.
Santillan's husband Antonio, despite
the disappointing turnout.
Foster care for mental patients Uents since the program began eight
years ago
In that time, the program has caught
the attention of mental health pro-
fessionals around the world, primarily
because the patients do well and
becauae the center spends 40 percent
less than it would if the patients were
sent to hospitals to recover.
themselves returning to hospitals again
and again as their dependence on the in·
stitutions grow, Brook says.
.. . .hospitals should be
sed only as a last
esort of su1c1dal and
sychot1c patients.
J-losp1tals reinforced
. crazy' behavior
patients ...
£DJTOR'S N(Yl'lt: -Mmtol brlOJcdownl
11 oot M unlU'UOI In tiff• too-much·~th·UI
rid But what 11 unu.ual ft ftlCCIHful trcat-
t Of tlw m111tollt1 iU Ot.ltft/U Of P'l/Chfotrlc
and lfmil.o' fnftUutM>nl A Cfnllr ht
ucr Im beni •lf•ctfwl with It• program o/
"fl PGl'-"t1 In Ordlna'l laomfl -V1Uh
pJul famllh1
For Clarence Tollard, a retired truck
driver, the joy of working as a sponsor
come1 when the life of ·'someone who is
so slck la turned around." One young
woman, sufferin1 from anorexia
nervosa, came to the Tollards weighine
15 pounds. "The doctors said if she lost
any more weltht, she'd die," Tollard
recall.a "It was just a delllht to have
her around, and to see this little rack of
1kln and bones develop into a pretty lit· tie tace."
THE PllOGllAll AT the Southwest
Denver Community Mental Health
Srrvlces ~nter Inc ls the brainchild of
Bryan Brook, a psychiatric social
•orker who decided that hospitals
ahould be used only aa a last resort for
aulcldal and p1ychotic patienll.
Hospitals reinforced "crasy" behavior
ln patlenta who became dependent on
tbe lnlUtuUone, Brook contends.
Moat ot the patlentl lo the Southwest
Denver prorram have never before auf.
fered peycbolel, nor have bed more
thanoneprevtouapaychotlcbreak.
They are patientl who, under tbe care
of elmo1t any other sn•ntaJ healt~
centet, would spend a '" weeb or months lo a p.1ych11&rlc hmpttal ward.
UnUte chronically 1cblsoi>hremc P•·
Utntl, IUtb .cutely l»Y.CbodC .-u-.
U1ually 1et''WtU and hturn to ttieir own
homtt, Jobi and famwu.
But patient.a ln other mental·M<b
treatment pro1ram1 often ftnd . -~
EIGlfl' YEARS aeo. the 37-year-old Brook influenced by the theories of Dr.
Paul Polak. then director of the
Southwest Center. decided to try to break
that cycle. He sent his first client to the
Tollards' home, and stumbled upon what
many mental health professionals say is
one of the most succesdul methods yet
developed for treating patients in severe
crisis.
"Not only do hospitals not work for
most patJerita, they creat more prpb-
lems," Brook asserts. "Patients ln
bospitala eet the message they are, in·
capable of handling their own Uvea.
They beatn to use the hospital aa • ~Pout, ao that when any little thibl Pl
wron1, the patients says, TU just 19 to
the botpltal for two or three moot&.'
It's like tatine a vacation."
r
TBEllR AllE other beoeftta for pa-· tients ln Brook's pro1ram, accordhlj to
researchers who have atud.led work
done at the Southwest Denver center.
The proaram 'a patlenta feel more
satl1fled wlth themaelve1 and their
treatment. and feel more certain ~at
the center'• 1tatt ta concerned and C!Om·
petent, acaordins to aeveral atudiea,
In an attempt to prove that the er:· aram la a viable altematlve to boa al
care, Dr Polak and MJchael Kir by,
director of reaoarch and protlTm
evaluattcG at the c nttr, U.ted '15 ~·· Uenta who came to tbe mental be th center for' help. For each pettent 1'6t to
1 ram UY epomor I amUy for t.reatailent,
another .,., nt to ort l:61an M l
Healtb Center, a elate PIJCbl le
(Seo• NTAL.Pa CIU
(
Mr. Sherwood, Miss Tucker
1 Sherwood-Tucker
Joumarie Tucker of Newport Beach and
Mark Sibenlr'Ood of Paloe Verdes bav~ announced
their .. ement
Thi bride-elect, dau1bter of Dr and Mrs.
Royal Tucker of Newport Beach, iraduated from
NewportHarborHi1h and USC.
Tbe future bride1room, son of Mr. and Mrs.
JOHpb Sherwood of Palos Verdes, also graduated
fro~USC.
The couple plan an Apnl weddlng at Com-
munity Presbyterian Church of Laguna Beach.
Gibbs-Mackin
Robert L. Gibbs of Irvine has taken
Marianne Mackin of North Tustin and Newport
Beach as his bride .in ceremonies at the
University United Methodist Church in Irvine.
The bride, daughter of Col. and Mrs. Joseph
W. Mackin of'North Tustin and Newport Beach,
&raduated from Foothill High School in Tustin
and Cal Poly, San Louis Obispo. She is a dieti·
cian with Santa Ana Tustin Community
Hospital.
The groom. son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C.
Gibbs of Irvine, also graduated from Foothill
and Cal Poly He is a licensed general contrac-
tor for Carlton Homes
The couple plans to live in Tustin after a
trip to Maui, Hawaii
Kelsey-McCarthy
Lisa McCarthy of Costa Mesa and John
Kelsey of Hermosa Beach were married in St.
James Episcopal Church
The bride, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Robert
H. McCarthy of Costa Mesa, graduated from •
Borosf!ope
Monday, Nov. 17
BySVDNEYOMARR
)
ARIF.8 (Mar. 21-Apr.19): You may be pulled
in two directions simultaneously -key is to in·
sist on directions, definitions and {>romises made
in writine. Cancer, Capricorn natives figure pro·
minently. You are on brink of important dis-
covery. Know It and keep the rait.h !
TAURUS <Apr 20-May 20>. Highlight flex-
ibility, accept party invitation, expand circle of
acquaintances. Give full play to intellectual
curiosity. You are likely to obtain answers to
questions. Be aware of it and proceed according-
ly. Gemini, Sagittarius nativ~lay key roles.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Adhere to game
plan. Goal is within reach -you will obtain fac.
lual data and gain greater sense of security.
Aquarius. Scorpio, Taurus persons figur,prom-
inently. Superiors may ask you to •ork-over
time. Accept added res pans i bilit v. CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Focus on com·
m\l.Dication. travel, public relations, ability to
perceive potential. Look beyond the immedlate-
member of opposite sex does care and you'll be
aware of it. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons
play important roles. Keep promise to one at dis-
tance.
LEO (July 23 Aug. 22) · Self-esteem 1s elev at·
ed; views are verified and decisions result in pro-
fit. Lifestyle subject to change; family situation
improves. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio nativeS"figure
prominently One close to you reveals hidden re·
sources. Win rather than force your way.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Avoid rushing to
judgment. Playing waiting game Study legal
rights and permissions Accent on public rela·
tions, partnership possibilities and marital
status. Pisces and another Virgo figure pro·
minently A' 'puzzling'· message will be clarified.
LIBRA (Sept. 23:oct. 22 1 Practical issues
dominate; perfect techniques, improve services
and display ability to get job done. Accent on
employment, resolutions concerning nutrition.
health and medical appointments. Capricorn,
Cancer persons play ke}L.Toles
sa>RPIO (Oct 23 -Nov. 21): Finish rather
than initia,te projects. Tie loose ends. Your
capabilitieiare more widely-recognized than you
mtibt imagine. Love is very much a part of your
penonal scenario. Aries, Libra natives figure
prominently. Agressive associate is "on your
stcSe."
SAGrrrA&WS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Fresh op-
portunity exista to establish "territorial rights."
Youns uaociate or family member shows way to
bYP$.U red tape and unnecessary expenses. Be re-
ceptive, perm.it ·•creative Juices" to now. Leo,
Aquariusnatlvea play Important roles.
C.APklOOllN CDec.22-Jan.19): Trip maybe
delayed -this will actually wort to your advan-
ta1e. Ml.Dor disappointment can be tramformed
into major vtctory. Focua on relatives, via its, via·
bl• coneepta and meaaa1es which aid in resolving
dilemma. Cancer and another Capricorn figure
promtnentty. ~ AQVAan18 (Jan. 20-Feb. 18); E ents of
timln1 and luck ride wttb you. Result ia and al au, special payments and collections. mini,
Satlttariua persons ftsure prominently. Be a
compariloD ahopper. Major aucceaa lndicated oa
''Uilrd &&tempt." You locate mlul°' article. c PllCES (Feb.19·Mar. 20): TlmlnJ, intuition
alld JUdfmeat blend l.nto 1ucc stu.l l>rc>cedure.
l'Ocluaon lnitJaUve, on1lnaUt¥, Independence aod
p GI> 1 project. You win tJuioUah penonal ap.
pearances -and appeal. Aquartua, Scorpio, Leo
a UveaflaureS>romloently. You meet a '"verytm·
ntpenon."
' lflflS/JlllflllflemeRtS
Mrs. McCormick Mr and Mrs. Kelsey
Harbor High School and UC Irvine. She is
employed by the Bank of Newport.
The groom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Byron
Kelsey ol Upland, is a graduate of East Lake
HiRh School in Eastlake, Ohio and UCLA. He
works tor the Pertee Computer Corp.
The couple plan to live In Herntosa Beach
following a honeymoon In Las Vegas.
McCormick-Herbert
Cynthia Herbert of Laguna Beach and James
M cConnick of Santa Ana became man and wife
during recent ceremonies at Community
Presbyterian Church of Laguna Beach.
The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gavin
Herbert of Laguna, graduated from USC.
JEANS ANO COIOS S2 ~ REGUlARI. Y TO US ...
87
The bridegroom. son of Mr. and Mrs. Dean
McCormick of Santa Ana, also graduated from use.
11-;;.=:-~ ~hfllliS
495-2933 <ontemporory fashions
The couple plan to live in Irvine after a cruise
in the Caribbean.
Beller-Fores man
Gay! Ann Foresman, formerly of Balboa
Island, and Sam Beller of Claremont have ex-
changed wedding vows at the Geneva
Presbyterian Church, Laguna Hills.
The bride. who now hves in Redlands, is
daughter of Dr and Mrs. Robert Reiff
Foresman, San J\lan Capistrano. She graduated
from Claremont High School and U.C. Davis, as
• well as Cal State, Long Beach graduate school.
She is employed by Kellog~ Food Co.
The groom, son of Dr and Mrs. Osman
Beller of Claremont, is a graduate of Claremont
High School and Cal Poly. Pomona. He works as
an accountant
... Mental help
(From Page 85)
hospital in Denver. The same staff members
treated both groups of patients.
Both groups were given a lest at discharge
and four months after discharge from treat·
ment. The scale measures a patient with
himself, his relationships, and therapy re-
ceived.
Other tests included a goal attainment lest
and a "self-disclosure."
Polak and Kirby found that al discharge the
mean score on questions of satisfaction with the
treatment was 16.6 for patients treated in
private homes and 16 for hospital patients. The
mean in the goal attainment test was 25.3 for
patients with sponsor families. compared-to 22.8
for patients treated in the hospital.
In the test showing the patient's ability to
relate to others after treatment, the inean was
41 6 for those in private homes. and 37.6 for
hospital patients
SIMILAR TESTS were given to staff mem-
bers and members of patients' families and no
significant differences showed up, Kirby says.
He adds that if all the testing had showed no
significant difference, the center's program still
would be attractive to health care professionals
because the private home program is less ex·
pensive. ·
·'We have to have a wide range of
possibilities available for the mentally ill," says
Dr. Brock Willet, of University Hospital and a
teacher at the Universith of Colorado Medical
Center. "It would be naive to think all patients
can be treated in alternative settings. But the
real problem 1s that there are not enough
alternatives available."
H ARBOR AREA ADULT
DAY CARE CENTER
Mi-"Y fllnl,.,..., I .....,.5 p.-.
A program for the elderly isolated due to
confusion memory failure. stroke or
depression and a supportive program for
families.
CALL C 714) 548-0144 4HW. IMSt.
C....*-CA.
-. ~~---.-.........
./) Newport's Favonte Drugstore
I
' For Feat Delivery · ~
i.s=..-,.R ·-
'\/IA ~ L iD0 D R U GS••· I ~ ~
3445 Via Udo -J
Newport Beactt
PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE
• Stdrtt Nov. 11, 1990
TOP BRANDS I 0 to 400/o OFF
• Blouses • Pants • Belts
• Skirts • Jumf)Suits • Lingerie
_,. CllTWICATIS AYAa.AM
INNER V.iSIONS
fOR a.antES
IOJW. IMM ..... ,
C.-Nele
(8uperi0r and 17tnl
Ben nd Def\nyt ............... w
op.-............
'41-llU
HUGE NEW INCOMING SHIPMENTS FORCE MAJOR
DISTRIBUTOR TO DISPOSE OF ALL IN-STOCK MERCHANDISE
MUST LIQUIDATE
THE WORLDS FINEST
OPEN ARM SEWING MACHINES
RICCO • ¥111111 • ELlll .
BERlllllA • SllllER • PFAFF
aaotHER • wHm · &
MORE
VACUUMS
The greatest values in home care appliances
HOOVER • EUREKA
PANASONIC • ROY AL
• SILVER KING
• SANATAIRE
•FILTER QUEEN
ALL MERCHANDISE IS BRAND NEW, FULLY GUARANTEED &
PRICED FOR IMMEDIATE DISPOSAL
EXAMPLES: SEWING MACHINES
l•IM ELIA S11CE1 llCCll Bill SllCEI 11•11c llCCAI ELIA
UST NEAR COMPARE UST NEAR LIST NEAR LIST OVER LIST NEAR LIST NEAR LIST NEAR LIST HEAR
600.00 AT450.00 50000 500.00 500.00 300.00 70000 850.00 100000 SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE
229 229 299 1&9 319 139 299 289 589
111111 mTB a •tm BCCll CAlllETS Tl FR All ES
UST NEAR UST OVER UST NEAR UST NEAR UST OVER UST LIST LISt
1000.00 100.00 1000.00 aoo.oo eoo.oo ~ • • SALE SALE SALE SALE SA.LE SALE SALE SALE
&79 299 549 119 229 299 219 199
EXAMP.LES: VACUUMS
LIST 159 SALE
59
•• maa 11111 MllEI Vi\11 w .. a 1111• 111111
UST NEAR UST OVER uSrOVER UST NEAR uSr NEAA UST OVER LIST OVER LIST NEAR LIST OVER 200.00 100.00 500.00 100.00 eoo.oo 300.oo 300.oo 200.oo 400.oo SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE
99 . 89 299 48 319 189 159 94 249
HURRY, SOME ARE LIMITED QUANTITIES
SUN., MON .. TUES. a WED.
#0 lllASOMA• W ORR~
ADDITIONAL DISCOUNTS ON FLOOR MODELS & OPEN STOCK ___ ... VICI PRICES INCLUDE DELIVERY
_,,,. 'rll• IDINwra. .. ••wt:• AU llAIC•• Ol'•arn•• MAOHI•••
'AMO ~AOUU,,._ Oftlrll Ml nrAll• Ol'• ... #0 ••
WATCH FOR
LA MIRADA
STORE TO
OPEN SOON
J
1For an industry that ls
o•ted to be a world
tltader and a pace·1etter
ln auto manufacturin1, I
cannot belh1ve the
~····of Toyota. ,J-'Tbla month they are
portinl to tbla country
· at l1 billed as the
nt talkinl car.'' Two
'Wiodela of their small
luxury paa1en1er lines
.lffll be equipped with a
1aeaker monitor of a
.Bf.>man'• voice which .,.au warn drivers to .Mtten their seat belta,
tPmove the lgniUon key
zAttd set the parking
oraka.
f.Are they serious?
erlcana wrote the
k on talll:in1 cars.
a no one told them
that eve17 Aaiertean car
bu been ~~r wtth a live tal 1y1tem
1lnce the ear wu tnnnt-
ed? They u1ed to be
called back·Hal drtYera
until they moved up to
the pa1aen1er'1 1lde.
Now they'recallecl a lot of
thln11.
When it comes to tell·
int a driver what to do,
no one does It better
than American women.
We learned it in the
back seat from our
mothen.
Even befo~ I learned
how to drive, l knew the
standard pre-i1nitlon
quiz: "15 your door abut
all the way?" "Do you
have it in park?" "We
sot enough ~as?" "Is the brake off?
1..ock doors, windows
bh
.. t' •• most burglars are not " ~ professionals ... You can
out-smart them by locking up ...
Ann "'••der•
Never a pend). cue. It's well worth the
4. Do not UH 1trtn1 on trouble. -A Pittaburp
a packaie. Strini ls an Bulk Mall Clerk
lnritatlon to tr•b, pull Dear B.M.C.: Tllaak
~theyeart,
realldiae that the couple
who drln1 totether IW'·
vlvea tosetber, women
have elriat.ed their role
to an art form.
There'• Creative Guptq. You won't 1•t
THAT-In a foreltn
model. It'• a Uttle .. ubtle
Intake of breath from
the PUMDIV when the
driver comes a little too
close to another car -or
the car ln froot of you
stops suddenly .
'there'• the Muffled
Prayer, wt)ere you cov-
er your face with both
bands and mumble,
"Oh. my God!" and
when the_ driver uks,
"What's the matter?"
you look pale and say,
"NothiDa."
The Active Non-
Driver la .strictly a
made-in-America con-
~ ~ . ..... 0 ......
cept where the woman
actu,Uy pushes an lm-
aa.tnaey brake pedal to
the Roor at every 1top
and her entire bodr does a com_plete 1wtve wtth
every Wle chance.
And, of cou.rae, 1tan-
dard equipment wlth
• •
' every American-made
talktn1 car ls the
"Evaluation" that
comes at the end of ev-
ery drive. No matter
how Ion& a driver has dri-
ven, he gets a verbal
scoreboard of near mis-
ses, yellow lights run,
speed ml1demeanors,
careleunea, and a pre·
diction on wbat 11 ln
store for him and what
chances must be made
if anyone ls ever to dri.e
with him .. ain.
I don't want to di•-
couraee Ja~·· talkln1
car before it opens its
mouth, but jua\ let me
say that' American car
manufacturers have a
stockpile of 137 million
talkin1 cars on their
roads . . . and no one
wanta them ... ln any
language.
ASpecial
c.olleCtion of
One-Of-A-Kind
BrldalGowns-
Uve Models
Inside Ferndales
at 3404 Westminster Ave •
. Friday, Nov. 21, 6:30 P.M.
Perndales:ASpedal Place •..
Offering Spedal Savings.
We will be open untll 9P.M.
for this special event
Call or stop by the store for
)Q.Jr complimentary Invitation.
3404 Wnt WfttmimW. Awniw
s...ea """· u111oma1 92703 (714) SJl-1871
ME.MBER NATIONAL BRIDAL SEfMCE
---------
(AP) Stopping most
,M.irglaries is really a
J¥1lple matter -just re·
.mem her to lock your
doors and windows.
Federal crime experts
i)Ote that most burglars
•re not professionals,
suggests, put nam ln the
window frames so the
windows can be opened,
but not far enough for
anyone to 1et throueh.
Copies of the booklet
are available without
charge by writing to the
Consumer Information
Center, Dept. 6SlH,
Pueblo, Colo., 81009.
Here are some other
suggestions from "You
Could Stop a Crime! "
HOW UTILE
THE COST
FORA
BEAUTIFUL
COMPLEXION ·HARBOR RIOCE CUSlOM HOMESITES.
ut rather people
responding to an op·
portunity. You can out·
smart them by locking
up, even when you go
out for just a minute.
• Blemish-free
complexion
• Perfectly
clean skin
•Firming &
toning
Ov,•1 ~ Vf""'!I on the ..i.1t1
C, If fl Jl'~'iOOfl IS fWOOf
Ill II 11 WOftls
o~
THE NEW govern·
ment booklet, "You
Could Stop a Crime."
recommends using dead-
bolt locks on doors. good
~olid ones with a bolt
that extends an inch or
more into the door
Jrame.
-IF YOU leave town,
stop delivery of mail
and newspapers or uk a
neighbor to collect them for you so they won't Open Tuee-Fri. MP m
pile up outside the door. Evenlnga~·:;3Po1ntment -
If it's too hot to close
the windows, the booklet
-When out of town ~ use automatic timers to Call 760-8560 ~ turn lights on and off in 25-49 East Bluff Or •
the house. These can be Newport Beach ~
purchased fo~r~a~bo~u~t'.__:$~1!0·~~~~§:~~~·~-~~~~~:.~~
Wm. Roberts Jewelers
Is Pleased
To Announce
The Appointn11nt
of
HERBERT H. FISOIEI
Gnllll •• G1 I 1111
In Ir r'tr er
AS
MANAGER
cl Newport
Mr. Fischer brings to Wm. ROberU Jeweleis
and you, our client, over 1!'{_ ye«irs of Jewelry
experience as a Gemolojiat and Designer. We
cordially invite you to-consult ht1 ex~lee In
the selection of fine gem.a, jewetrY and the
unlque.:aeslPtng of Jewelry for you, your
f amlly and your friendS. · .
Win. Roberts Jewelers
clNewport
LIDO VU..1.AOI
34U Vla Oporto •1
Ntwport BHcla, Cal 92663
OUR RNEST AND FINAL PHASE.
• The Final Phase of Harbor Ridge Custom Homesites.
A limited n~mber of the most desirable sites in this
exclusive community overlooking Newport Beach are now
available. One-sixth to nearly one-half acre of prime
residential land. Spectacular ocean and night-light views from
most homesites. And the dream of building your own home.
Distinctive and original.
Harbor Ridge has become one of Southern California's most
prestigious addresses. With an unparalleled style of living.
Private tennis courts. A 24-hour guarded gate. If you're
looking for room to dream your dream, look no further.
Harbor Ridge Custom Homesites
17 Harbor Ridge Drive_
Newport Beach, CA (714) 640-6776
From $500,000 to $1,500,000
I
Rf!al Estate .•
'on hold'
But p~tMpecltl for 1981
Newport inve8tor
featured speaker
John C. Lindley, president of
Investor /Developer Properties
of Newport Beach, will be the
featured speaker at Wed-
nesday's meeting of the
Southern California Chapter of
Certified Commercial Invest-
ment Members at the Marriott
Hc»tel in Newport Beach.
Bepmint at 8 a.m. with a
round table, followed by a
marketing session at 8:Jo a.m.,
the meetin& will officially get
wider way with Undley's talk at 16 a.m. Open to the public, there
will be a cbarae of $25 per
person which includes lunch.
"oart felt OI pi.t.d aDl.J ~ ..... .....,, Nld .• ,,.,..
tilt mmt part, tbey aaw WI
downturn eomln• well lD ad· va ct eiad limply put many ...,..
m•:r Pl'Qjeda Clll lee until tbe
ratH ~ame mo,. ,.•IO'n.a·
ble," lleP"'Y, taJd.
,.BOWSYBa. DUalNG \.b• ~It to U,., meveral developen
have become more .. ,.,. to bU;y
land -al.molt aQWbeN that
makei economic tenae,"
lle1ery obeened. '"Tbl.I 11 the
result ol tbe fad that tben'•
been little 1aQd acqulalUoa for in-
dustrial me •ce the ftnt ol the )'ear to aatilfy a peet·up demand
lo the uaer-lnveator market,
toaetber wltb market-wide an-
ticipation of lower interest rat.
In the next aenral weeks,"
Me1ery added.
Next year prom.lsea to be a
year in whicb several major
projects will be under way
in Oranae County. predicted
Me1ery. "Industrial bulldln11
will toar to more than f10 per
square foot in prime Oran1e
County locations, be suHeated.
Meanwhile, continued Inflation
will cause existing Industrial
properties to increase in value
by 20 o 30 percent a year.
A8 oaANGE COUNTY In-
dustrial real est.ate continues to
soar tia value, Meaery foresees
ouil)'inl areas, such as Ontario
...... Su Bemardlno and San
Dle10 .County beeomlD1 "bot
•pots" in real estate d•ftloP. .ment.
Land prtcee, tho coet of bous·
tn1. lncrea::f environment.al
restrictioal libor co.ta have
forced many lvl• wen, aucb
a1 manufacturer• and ~
wbole1aler1, to loo.k outalde
Oran,. County, lle1eey aald.
Reeently, tbey ban been look·
ln1 towards the Ontario. San
Bernardino and Rivenide areas
where land C08tl were f'rom 50 to
70 pereeat lea and hoaaina la ·up to 50 pereent leaa in co.t than in
Orance County.
IN IATB 1171, approllimately
8,000 acrea ol land were placed
Wlder development.al control in
the Ontario area, in antlcipatlon
of the new airport expa.uioo and
the need for new lnduatrlal
facilities.
Meaery reported that tn the
pa1t 12 months, land values have
soared from $2C),000 an acre to as
hiah a '100,000 as major de-
velopers have rushed into the
area.
"That sounds like an extreme-
ly hlth price for land," Mqery
admits. "But I've bad cues in
which I've opened escrows on
properties for which the price
seemed excessively high only to
have that price seem like a
areal value to days later," be
said. ·
Reildg tor Oeeupanrg
This addition to Koll Center Newport at 4400 MacArthur
Boulevard ln Newport Beach is complete and already 58
percent leased. The 134,000-square-foot cube is a nine-
story office building with two three-story entrance
courtyards. The building is in reflective solar bronze
glass surrounded by pedestrian plazas. These have sun-
ken seating areas shaded by trees and enhanced with
lawns. -.
FNMA offers home safeguards
Home owners wbo finance the
sale ol their bomes by taldnl
back first mort1a1ea from
buyers will be able to uae the
services of professional
mortaage lenders -and convert
the loans jo cash· if they wish -
under a new bome seller loan
profram announced ln Anaheim
by ibe Federal National
Mort1a1e Association.
Fannie Mae, the nation's
lar1est lingle investor in res·
ldential mort1a1es, said Its
new program will provide con-
sumer safeguards to both buyers
and sellers, while at the same
time offering a financial
back-atop to home 1ellen who
accl!pt purchase money
mortaaaes from buyers.
Previously, there bad been no
eatablilbed mechanism throUlb
which Individuals who make
1uch loam could sell them, tbua
converttna them to cash, should
that become desirable or
neceuary.
Under Fannie Mae's new pro-
.cram, a home seller can coo-
tract with an FNMA-approved
lender to perform the services
aasociated with ort1inatin1 the
loan and coUectina the monthly pay meat.a.
The mortgage would be
orlalnated uatna FNMA's stan-
dud morteage documents and
in accordance with FNMA's
credit and appraisal guidelines.
Announcine the proaram dur-
inl the annual convention of the
National Asaoclatlon of
Realtors, FNMA Chairman and
President Oakley Hunter ex-
plained that this "would provide
a111urance to both home sellers
and borrower-buyers that the
loans WeTe properly and soundly
transacted by experienced loan
orltlnatioaprofesalonala.
Once a loan was made, the
FNBrlA-approved lender would
collect monthly payments, make
Insurance and tax payments,
and handle other detaila entailed
in servicinl a mortgace. Prin-
cipal and interest payment•
would be forwarded to the seller,
as collected.
LOS ANGELES -Bo
aea1an'a land.allele victory
reflect t.be mood of eltll
1rowln1 weary qf oppresiln
aove...-&, •«0idln1 ~ Goldin, newlY elected ptet
of the Build1.na Industry
tlon ot Soutbem Callfomla
vice preiddent of the Callfi
Bulldina Industry Assoclatkla..
Goldin pointed out that a I..
cent anal,all prepared tiy t;.
Conatnactioo Industry Rese~
Boanl lDd.lcated that u mudrb
28 pel'Cellt bu been added to UM
cost of a home 1ince 1970 as •re-
1ult of the increased tilll9ott
takes to obtaln approval to I.al
projecta. a l ... ,
In 1970, It took four to lbl
months to process a proJKt,
while in 1.980 it takes betwrt and 32 montha. On a home •
ln1 for '100,000, the delay
add as much u $28,000 to
coat of the home. ui
"Housing ls becoming a rti·
tional issue," said Goldin, "til
people are becoming incr:;! ly aware o! the role ex
governmental regulation
played in driving up the pricel'it
new boualng aa well as boldililr down the supply of housine. · ~-0
"Perhaps the results of 1¥t
week's presidential election ¥fe
indications that the people Me
ahead of the politicians," s'ifd
Goldin, "in the desire to
tUminate unnece111ary regd-
tiona and take action that would
speed the production of more
housing and keep inflatioaary
pressure to a minimum." ' ..
)
State resales rise
Resale activity in tk
California bousina market ~
tinued its upward trend for tae
fifth cooaecutive month in _.
tember despite rllinl mortgap
rates, the California AssociaUID
of Realtors reports in its ._.
thly newsletter, California ~
Estate Trends. ~.,
IQ
• Newport Beach ... free spirit of the coast
. .. time dissolving into d ancing sands,
whitecaps, billowing sails ... a world away
fro m the world.
. I
Sandcastle -
a home for th~ free spirit in us all
' I
I
Your
Second Hotne
Should ·be in
Ne"'PQrt Beach
. -From $169,500
· 7 7 7 Avocado. on the oce.an side of Pacific Coast Hignway
acro11 ftom Fashion uland
(714) 67 3 .. 3271
•
SanJcasde, luxury
condominiums -within
walkieg distance of the
beach, the yacht clubs
and Balboa Island.
'
SeconJ Home Loans Av<1il.1hlc
• '1.JlllMIHED MODeL AVAJLABLI! AT ITMTFOAD RfDGe SERIES
5 new homes kft
•' Just 15 new homes remain for sale ~t Southfield Serles and StraUord
tfWtd1e. two nei1hborhoods In the
HAU.0 mu. section of La111Da Hills.
I AUIO Wlla la under development by
4 e Ehrlich Company In cooperation
" th Moreland Development Co. A
al of 170 StraUord Ridge homes
t ve alrt!ady been purchased, along 1 tb 90 Southfield Series homes,
presenting In excess of $35 million
ln new home sales.
.d. Of the available homes, two are
~·~ratford Ridge furnished models,
•r=two are Southfield Serles ~ bed models, located wilh1n the
·• odel home environment.
.,. !fomebuyers can choose from
fllogiree, four, or five bedroom noor ''1f'' II~, •Riguel f ootlailb ·
;i!t; --
plans that provide from 2,112 to 3,317
square feet of interior llvlna space.
The available homes are priced
from $175,900 to S28S 900, and com·
petitive conventional ffnanclng ls be4
int offered to qualified buyers. Oc·
cupanices are slated to begin in
December.
The models al Stratford Ridge and
Southfield Series are open every day
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. To reach Aliso
Hills from the San Diego Freeway .
take the La Paz Road exit west to
25131 Sandia Court.
For additional information about
Stratford Ridge and Southfield
Series, visit the community or
telephone 77~2852.
Homes open to visits
Preview sales continue at Falcon
Rill, a community of 88 residences
nestled into the coastal foothills or
La«una Niguel.
Offered by the Meister Company,
these homes encompass 29 acres
One and two-story floor plans have
n designed by lM Berkus Group
-rchitects of Santa Ana. Four unique
r plans provide a choice of living
angements which range from a
o-bedroom plus den model with
73-4 square feet of interior space to
2,480 square foot plan with three
drooms plus the option of a fourth
cl.room, den or retreat.
The grand opening or the model
tomplex is scheduled for this month.
nlsbed homes in the first phase will
ready for occupancy in late Nov-
mber.
To visit the new community, take
e San Diego Freeway to the La Paz
ad exit and proceed approximate-
three miles toward the coast and
f; oulton Parkway
Situated at the northeast comer of
a Paz and Moulton Parkway.
Falcon Hill's sales information
center is open daily from noon to 6
p.m., and on weekends from 10 am
to 6 p .m . For further information call
831-5380.
Human behavior
subject of talk
Gene Konstant, motivational
speaker and trainer. will address the
Apartment Assoc1at1on of Orange
County on the sub1ect of understandmg
human behavior at the Nov 24 meet
ing.
Beginning with a social hour at 6.30
p.m. the Wednesday evening meeting
will start at 7:45 p.m . and will be held
at the Inn at the Park in Anaheim
Konstant will be discussing how
apartment owners and managers can
learn to decode hidden meanings m
what people say and do as well as how
to solve and/or prevent problem s1tua
lions
fuoliday savings
ith Sandcw;tle
For its "Thank$giving special," Butler Hous·
Corp. is slicing $20,000 from the price of a lux·
two-bedroom condominium at Sandcastle, a
stigjous gate-guarded enclave of condoQliniums
thin walking distance of the ocean in Newport
leach.
From now until Thanksgiving, the Trinidad
el is availabele with the $20,000 discount
Uer has carved the original $189,950 down to
,9:50 for the Thanksgiving special -a savings
$20,000. There are, however, only four Trinidad
r plans offered with the 'lbanUgiving special.
Sandcastle homebuyers also have the conve·
nee of an on-site decorator center operated by
lorand Corporation as well as professional in·
or design consultation by award-winning in·
r designer, Lois Harding.
Settlement
fees .rigid
WASIDNGTON CAP> -Hom buJera mltbt
11ve lhouaanda of dollars by compartna prtcea for
settlement services ranglna from insurance to lea al
and broker's fees, just u they abop for favorable
mortaiaaeterma, utudy finds.
'Tbe costs for those services often to Un·
challenaed because of lack of competition, the find·
lnga~veal.
''With tbe exception of mortaqe lendlna. active
price competition tends not to exlat ln aettlement
service markets. Prices appear to be higher than
they would be if markets were more competitive,"
the study said.
THE STUDY BY THE coosultin& firm of Peat,
Marwick, Mitchel and Co. iaduetobedellvered tothe
Department of Housing and Utban Development
witbJn a week. A draft of the 25-page executive sum-
mary was obtained byTheAasoclated Preas.
The study is expected to play a major role in the
department's recommendations to Conaress for
tightening a law designed to protect consumers when
they buy hOmes. The recommendations are due ear·
ly next year.
The Real EState Selllemenl Procedures Act or
1974 was aimed at giving consumers more mforma
lion so that they can shop for the services required m
buying homes. Drafters of the law felt the added in·
formation would stimulate competition and hold
down prices.
THE CONSULTING COMPANY studied rec-
ords on 18,000 home .sales and providers of settle·
ment services in Boston, Denver, Los Angeles, St ..
Louis, Seattle, Washington, Jacksonville, Fla., and
San Antonio, Texas.
The study found that settlement charges, not in
c 1 uding fees to real estate agents, averaged S2,030, or
3.7 percent of the average sales price of $54,864.
When agents' fees were listed in the records, they
were S.8 percent of the sales price, or considerably
more than all other settlement costs combined.
The study also concluded, as have others, that
real estate agents in a given area almost always
charge tpe same percentage of the sales price, such
as 6 percent of the price. "This finding, when con
s1dered along with the long history of broker
organ.izatioos seeking to maintain a single com-
mission rate, strongly suggests that prevailing com
m1ss1on rates are not determined in a compet1t1ve
market setting," it said
THOSE WHO SELL TITLE insurance, provide
mortgage insurance and prepare legal documents
usually are not chosen by the home buyers who pay
their fees, the study said. Instead, they often obtain
their business through referrals from real estate
brokers, lenders and real estate lawyers. Their fees
vrobably would be lower ii they competed for
customers' business, instead of relying on referrals.
the study said.
The study said the 1974 law could be improved
by .
flayjng real estate agents distribute the H lJ D
booklet for home buyers It now 1s d1stnbuted by len
de rs, butthestudy found that by the time a t0nsumer
1s shopping for a loan he already has made many
choices, such as on an agent and on which house he
wantstobuy.
Including in the booklet mformat1on on re
g1onal real estate pracllces, wh.tch vary widely
-PROVIDING THE .. GOOD faith estimate" of
settlement charges before the consumer applies for
a loan. This could delay approval of the loan, but
would put the buyer m a better position to compare
for settlement services, the rep0rtsaid.
Encouraging buyers lo shop for a loan com
m1tment before shopping for a home This would
give the buyer a good idea of the size or the loan he
can get as he looks for a home
11 %% Interest
To viail Sandcastle, take the San Diego
eeway to MacArthur Boulevard, proceed toward ocean to Pacifi1; Coast Hllhway, then right one
k to Avocado and left to the development. The
corated models are open from 10 a.m. Wl 6 p.m.
To v1s1c models col~e Son Diego Frwy co Co~y-Coltfornio
off-romp then East on Coltfornio co projea. In the city of
Uy. For more information~ oall 67!-3271. Oceanside. Offered~ Seo View MorketiQ9
• 1577 SQ. t-1. TO 1963 SQ. FT.
,
!Yo payment
.S.WllfG
Immediate funding on E!QUltv In homes, units or commercial from communltv. Home Loan, Inc., a licensed broker. No payment swing Loan plans available.
7.14 /9SS-2602
\
·--...... ,_ .............. ! Doing BualneH
_ Under A
Flctltloua !
N•me7 ! . i
J,.;-J I ~I~ I
All new 111111-• wllne •
llctlt10111 name, mutt bf
18W be retl...,.d .tttl ltle
Co1111tr °""' TM OAILY flllO'f ~ tllo f0t11111
Md flllllt ....... J0t Allf cvttom•n. If row er•
1tart1111 • new b111lntH
UN I~ D.\ll't lllLO'f fOf
lnfOrtHtlon Md fOflftt
1142-4321
lal.ut ••t••-•••••OoU•o•oo•t•HHttt•t.n1•tlOooo•••
Compare our interest rate
with other conventional rates:
14% INTEREST RATE 8.6"
LOAN AMOUNT $65.000 $65,000
770.25
.IMHO MONTHLY PAYMENT• 504.41
0 2-3 Bedrooms
0 10% Down Payment
0 Swimming pool
Townhomr. from
S69,950
0 Spa Hl\\ \ 1
0 Two lighted tennis courts
0 Wood -burning fireplaces
0 Private 2-car garage
..
pre-wired for garage
door opener
0 Streams with waterfalls
and ~nds
D Fenced private yards
Office S.mtu A111t 1t11u U11v1
(, 1f1 '' ( 1Hfc,;r11,1
I ·H 8/4 /l,IJ I °' ....... ~ wcAs••••
•Pr.nc~tlO 111!4wes1, 911. APff
Haun: J I A M 5 P.M.
''Let your house
for its own 1ng!'
. -Bob Hope
Cal Fed's HmneoWner\ Equity Loan.
Easy.....,.
u
Perk up.
Inflation doesn't have to get you
down. It may have done you a favor.
It sen11 your home's value soaring and
created a valuable equity you can borrow
against with a Cal Fed Homeowner's
Equity Loan.
Borrow from $2,500 up to $50,000.
Or more. And for any reason: Remodel-
ing, redecorating. Pool, spa, patio. Solar
heating. Even a vacation. You name it.
The Homeowner's Equity Loan.
One of the easy money ways to finance at
Cal Fed, lending experts for over a half
century.
Phone for the f act.s now.
Youre bel1er olf 1n Cctl1lom111
CALIFORNIA FEDERAL
(714) 546-8.510 . (714) 826-96&}. (7141 400-3ll8
........
\
1'11.UAM a. l'IELDS ot lllaaion Viejo bas
be'9Q iWxled controller al!ld chief ftnanclal officer
for-EDetcY Efflclency Laboratories, Inc., and its
eubeldiary, HomeUte, Inc.
Fields will be responsible for the companies'
financial operations, aod will oversee accountin1
and allied matters, and will lnitlate forward plan-
nlnt in the l'inanclal areas. •
A certlfled pubUc accountant, Fields holds an
MBA from Northwestern University, and a
bachelors de,ree In economics and finance from
the University of Illinois.
WILLIAM DAWSON has been named sales
director for the J.M . Peters
Company headquartered in
Newport Beach. He will be
responsible for recruitment,
training and supervision of all
sales personnel.
Prior to joining the Peters
company, Dawson held similar
posltims with both Ponderosa
Homes of Irvine and Standard
Pacific Corporation of Costa
Mesa. Earlier he was a com-o•Wtc>M
mercial broker with Coldwell Banker for seven
years following his discharge from the United
States Navy with the rank of lieutenant.
A native of Sacramento, Dawson holds a
bachelor's degree from California State University
at Sacramento. and is a member of the
Homebuilders Council, the Building Industry As-
sociation and the Sales and Mar~eting Council.
PAT SCHEID has been named new home war-
ranty representative for Irvine Pacifi(\1 the
bomebuildlna division of the Irvine Company.
Scheid brings several years' experience to the
position, having served as a new home warranty
representative for two major developers in
Southern California before joinini Irvine Pacific.
In his new role, Scheid will serve homes during the
warranty period and conduct home buyer walk-
througbs.
Bom in Indiana and raised In Southern
California, be bolds a BS in Physical Education from San Diego State University.
TED VOSS of Newport Beach has been ap-
pointed vice president and real estate manaaer of
Commerce Bank in Newport
Beach.
Voss will head up the newly
formed real estate department
at CommerceBank. He will be
in charge of real estate Joan
origination and the administra·
tion of construction financing.
Voss bas been associated
with Union Bank in Los
Angeles. Security Pacific Na-
vou tional Bank in San Francisco,
Home Federal Savings and Loan of San Diego in
Cuppertino. and most recently with Imperial Bank
in Costa Mesa
KENNETH L. CARR of Costa Mesa has been
named an associate or McCulloch Architects, a de-
sign firm located at 260 Newport Center Drive,
Suite 330, in Newport Beach.
Carr, project design architect, recently
became licensed in California. A 1970 graduate
from Arizona State University, he earned a
Bachelor of Arts in Architecture degree, a five-
year program. His design backgrowid has been on
a variety of project types. For McCulloch
Architects, his design participation has included
the Costa Mesa Fire Station No 3, and the Pier-
pont Racquet Club in Ventura. as well as other as-
signments.
DON IULDRETH of Mission Viejo, vice pre-
sident/general manager of Mission Viejo Realty,
has been elected 1981 president or the Saddleback
Valley Board of Realtors.
Hildreth bas served on the board in numerous
capacities, most recently as second vice president
of the grievance committee.
He was the first recipient of
the distinguished "President's
Award" in 1979 and hon·ored as
Realtor of the Year in 1978.
Hildreth, who has 19 years
experience in the real estate
field, joined the Mission Viejo
Company in 1975. He ls actively
involved as a director with the
California Assocl a ti on of
Realtors and as a member of
the National Association of Realton..
CBEa VANSOEST has been appointed senior
bookkeeper for American National Housing
Corporation, an Irvine-bued bomebulldtna firm
with five new home developments cWTenll)' in pro1·
re11 ln Southern CaUfomta.
Van &>eat, 26, worked for several major com·
paniea and studied at Orange Cout Colle1e. She
lives ln Tustln and ll1ts her hobbies as teMis and
HllinJ.
R Wtor elect Wood
~ohn R. Wood, a Naples, Fla., realtor, bas
elided the 1881 president ot tb National AJ.. ~••Uoo ot Realtors at the 7lril •Mual convenuon or itbe nation'• lar11eat trade 111ocl1tton ln
Anaheim.
Wood wtU UIUm• offtc. Jan. l, IUceeedlnJ 1Jib Tt . .PrttChard of t;a G , Ill.
~
Firm ·offers tip
H w do you co about buyina a home?
'l1M question la an Important one because your
approach to home 1bopptni cao m an lbe dif • ftrnce ~ween~ purcbue OI •helter that you
can atford &Dd YQ).lt purch Of a hOme that LI en-
joyabl' ln llddltlon to affotjlablo. Too mani would·M bOme bUyers mike their
Hlectlon on price, alone. accordin1 to Harold
Wa1100, vice prufdent of sal• for Walker & Lee,
Inc.
~N, WHO HEAl>f' A aales operaUon t.tiat
1&1 ot 10mt 18,000 hpmet annually, does
not d mphul~ the Importance ot price when
1bopplftl for a home: He does, however, em-
pba1lr:e that the Uvabllity of the bouie, not to
mention related but often overlooked ~penaes
sud u utilities and maintenance, are as impor-
tant aa price' when it comes to flndin1 a house with
whJcb you'll be saUsfled.
N,t1hbotbood, appearance, the Ooorplans,
stora•e, the soundness of the house, maintenance,
utilities -these are among the Items on a
Pacesetter has
new finance plan
New home buyers, no matter what the price
ran1e. are always receptive lo innovative financ-ing plans. One of the most unique plans ever of-
fered by Pacesetter Homes, Inc., is attracting
many buyers to the exclusive Westcllff Grove
nelthborhood in Newport Beach.
"This unusual financing plan offers one hun-
dred percent financlng with no monthly payments
for nine months," explained Landon M. Exley, ex-
ecutive vice president of Pacesetter Homes.
"Astute home buyers will recognize the advantage
of this plan, as an out.standing opportunity to buy a
beautiful home in one of the areas most desirable
residential neighborhoods."
The homes at Westcliff Grove were designed
by the Berlru.5 Group architectural firm. Buyers
have a choice of plans ranemg in sue from 2,508 to
3,368 square feet with three or four bedrooms. Prices
begin at $.160,000 which includes ownership of the
land. The sales office and models are open daily
from noon lo 5:00 p.m. To reach Westcliff Grove
from Pacific Coast Highway, turn up the hill at
Dover Drive and follow Dover to Weslcliff. For
further information, call 646-~ or 546-8801
WA&.~N SAW THE nRBr step to take when
looklna for a bou1e ls to contact a rtal "tale
specialist in residential res.ie, such u Walker & Lee.
Second, he said, i• to define lM kind of
nei1hborhood ln which you want to Uve.
"There are a lot of eonsiderat1ona related to
neighborhoods that y:·u want to discuss with
your salesperson, sue as bow far you're willing to
commute to work, b w clOtSe you want to be to
parka and other reereatlonal facllltles," Wasson
said.
"After that, 0dJ1cuss a price ranae of housing
not just a top price -lrith the 1alesperaon.
Chances are tpat given Ulia information, the
salesperson 'Can find dwellings in at least half a
dozen neighborhoods that meet your specifica-
tion."
RULE-OF-THUMll TIPS on pi'udent
housebunting generally include warntn1s a1ainat
"falling in love" with the first house you see or the
first house for which the price is right. To these
Wasson adds another common-sense tip:
"Don't start looking at the individual houses
until you've driven through the neight~rhoods," be
said. "lt.-s important to keep in mind that you're
buying more than a house on a lot -you're 'buy-
ing' a J>art of a neighborhood."
Was.son suggests househuriter& pay special at-
tention to the general appearance of the
neighborhood ; the specific appearance of its
homes and landscaping; the vehicles parked along
the streets and in driveways; how the streets and
arteries are laid out, and the location of and ap-
pearance of shopping centers, schools and
churches.
THE NEXT STEP, HE said, is to pick out at
least two of the neighborhoods you've inspected
and lo look at the individual houses available for
sale
.,,_ llOVSS TBAT APPEA'U to
for tho p~t occupant.I mat not be pr.et!e
your hiOUiehold because no l"1> bomet •work •
actly the same way. The best house to bUy LI _.
that requira the leut cb1n1• ol your llvtn1 pllt· tems.0
Next on WaHon'• llat of •u11eatlon1
houaebuntera b to check out the COlldJUoo
mainteoaDce of the bouae.
Questions to uk, he HJd, include the as• ti
the house and, if lt 11 lets tban 10 yean old. lf lt ._
covered by-.> transferable bWlder warranty auelt
as HOW; when interiors and exteriori were lut
painted, and the degree of maintenance required
for the yard.
.. EVIEN SO SIMPLE A question u bow
outside of the windows are washed may be pe •
nent," Wasson said.
Utility costs are another source of coocera
that should not be overlooked, he said, ad~
that the home shopper ask the avera1e monWJ1
cos~for heating and air conditioning the house1iu
well as for water and other appllcllble fees.
Your salesperson, Wasson said, should be t4f!:
to help you compare such on-goinl costs with ·
of similar houses. .,1 After you have visited a few dwellln1s gou
may have found one that fits all your criteri&Jor
neighborhood, livability and costs, but wawm
cautions againstexpecti.ng a perfect match. ,,.
house you buy is usually picked after some wat-"THE CHANCES ARE AGAINST it~iJlhe
ment or these factors, which is why the home a
per's ability to visualize and his degree of ne .
ty is very important."
But, he added the chances are ireater ~at
you'll find your "dream house," when you look
beyond the price tag and work with a residential
resales specialist who helps you identify the ~-
tras" that mean the difference between flndin&
simply a house and finding a house that will be a
true home for your family
Everything for the good llfe Is In range of MacArthur vntagel You can wetk to fashionable shops and
gourmet restaurants, theatres, hotels and business complexes. drive 10 minutes to the famous beaches
and marinas of Newport . . or In the other direction, to John Wayne Orange County Airport, the University
of California, Irvine, or the Irvine Industrial Complex.
You wanted to llve where the action Is and we were right on target at MacArthur Village ... where
smart "Junior Executive" suites, one and two-bedroom condominiums are selling over three people a day!
Besides a super location and great homes filled with luxury features, you'll find a security gate entrance
and muttl-mllllQn dollar private recreation for your living pleasure I r l Lush Country Club Surroundings 0
Four Night-lighted Tennis Courts O Three Swimming Pools rJ Five Hot Swirl Spas 0 Volleyball Court and
Basketball Half-Court O Recreation Pavilion 0 Sun Decks r Single Story Homes with Patio or Deck 0 Air
Conditioning 0 Plush Carpeting and Custom Draperies Deluxe Kitchen with New Range, Oven.
Dishwasher O Mirrored Door Master Suite Wardrobes 0 Bu1tt·ln Wall Unit In Junior Executive Plan 0
. (9
tndlv ldual Covered Par1<1ng and Guest Par1<1ng
from $54,900
1000 MacArthur Boulevard/Santa An., CA 92707•(714)1557~
Developed by
1~-t' Al_1_"'°"'1 .. bf •ll ret>Otftll. INflllf'lltC-1 Iii ...
At -..... ~~let-.itt•dtl ..
AT 11IE M•E THIE, hOwever, the Depart·
ment C>f Rqt Estate ha• bffn quick to caution
.. llcenseee thlt a license la.reqUlred of any person
pbo soUclta the pahles to a real estate tranaacUon
or who enters into ne1otiaUons on bebaU of one of
• paJ1les to a transaction. If an unllcen.tJed
•'1~~ were compenaated by a ltc~ for aollctt· a or neeottatin& ln .. real property transaction.
tbe paymeJlt would constitute a violation of the
/,l.eal Eat.ate Law. , ~1 LUt year the Department received information
• rrom the federal Department of Housina and
UrbU Development with retard to the leeallt.y UD·
l4er the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act
, RJCSPA) ot the paylJ\ent of referral feta to UD· ,qJlceaaed~.
Tbe AUistant General CounSel of the Home onc8'e Branch of HUD, wbic:b ii reaponalble for
Mmtnl.,.atlon of RESPA, tiu auaeited tbat
.VD a the United States Department cl Juatice
Ider it a violation of Section 8 of RF.SP A. for
· 1 estate licensees to pay fees for referrala in re·
property transactions to persona who are not
Ucen.aees.
NEITHER BUD NOR THE Department of
.Justice, which bu the prosecutorial responslblllty
to enforce provlsion3 of RF.sPA, has thus far
declared that prosecutions will be brought based
uPe>n the payment of finders 'fees to unlicensed
penona. However, the correspondence from HUD
r
wlndicates that the possibility of prosecution cannot
be ignored.
SeeUoo S(a ) of RESPA provides that "No person
aball give and no person shall a ccept any fee,
kickback, or thing of value pursuant to any agree·
ment or un~erstanding, or al or otherwise, that
-~business incident to or part of a real estate settle-
' iA'ent service involvin g a federa lly re lated
tilortgaae loan shall be referred to any person."
EDITOR'S NOTE· RandoU McCardz. ii pr•lident of
tlW R«Jl E1taten; Iv allo ii aa otlthor, z.ctwer and a..
dnldor. Smd J10U1 commentl and qwrt6oM to RandJI
McCcml#, clo UW Doilfl PIJol, Pod Ofnc-Boz lSfO,
Calta II•, CA '2laf
.........c.:I~ county unit
seats officers
r Tbe Orange County Chapter ot the Build.lq ID· wstrJ Auoc:iation of Soutbem Calllof'1a J"eCeDtly
oetalled tta 1981 slate of offlceta durln1
eet'edllOldm held in· Anaheim at tbe Dianeyland .,__.,....,,_L
The oftlcen aelected were Frank E. Bu,bes, INsident ol Frank Hutbea Enterprises, Inc .• pres-. }~;~Allen, president of Citation BUUden,
fttlt W:e president; Karl Bercbeer, pnaident ol'
~ company, MC:ODCl Vice president:
Oland OS&oOd, president of J"ine Pacif~
.elop'Q)ent Company, treasurer; Bob Albertaon,
resident Of Villap Homes, aecretary. Peter Oebs,
resident ot Tbe "Wllllam Lyon Company, aerved
d.e lmtalllnt officer.
41'be 0ran1e County Chapter, incl~ more
an UO Oran•e County companlee as memben,
aelected u its theme for Its Ul81 proc:ram
''Tbe BoiuitnaCrlaii-CrouroacblOI. • •
Otbtt chapter boar4 mnberl for 1981 are:
Ike Buhfoira, Tlt;re Insur~, Company; Jim
am, Beam Developmen\; ,·Erik~· Anabelm BWa, InC.; Vic Cooper, Market es; Robert
de Almeida, The Plannlhi: Center; Chuck
DtamOIDd, Konwiaer Corporation; Robert Duff,
l'lnt American TiUe Insurance Company; Harriet
'Trilelle Harris, RldeeWood Development; Dous
feller, Gfeller Development; Mary· Ann Gould,
.,,, Arin GOWd and Company; Bruce~.
Bhod•, K~ and lfarrlnlWD; DoUlb Hoon,
Butler Housin1; and Bud Jackley, Soutllern
Callfonla Ediloo Company.
Abo lnchided are: Danny O'Sullivan, Walker
and Lee Real Eatate; Vlnce Petralia, The
McCarthy Company of Southern Callfomla;
o.otce Putnam, Pooderoaa Homes; Jim Smith,
I . W. Smith, Architect; Bayne Sparks,
Jlomefxo'era Guide; Don Steffensen, John D. Lusk
and Sen; Gordon Tippell, Taylor Woodrow Homeai Bryan Vaqban, Baum Electric Company; Pat
Walth, Southern California Gu Company; Blll
Watt, Baywood Development; Roser Werbel,
Roser Werbel, lnc.; and, Ron wen., VTN <>ranee
County.
Sermnar speaker
,1nd seen for OC offi
TM ~ Coaat1 om. 1MCe mm•~1tt1• ..... wtt.1aleA Uluth~ ... -rav.re· = ... .. to bt ..,.., but 'tll.il eo ......,. Diaaham, p-e11.
dell&ffdliNl~~GroUp. It UJ ._ bit tomeb1tt.k tral I, and
tlien aw' be dancln.1 in the alsles by 'tM tad,~dae )'Hr.
T,l)t )blorptlon of flew space •.-•percet. btkrw OM.lorecaat • ......... to1-t qnd,r JOJ,OGO~CJ\llA tm "'modth.1.J:lllaeemlncJy ''P99f'0
perform~ Ii, bOwever, on • par
with ttiei:ftl'lt ball Ol 1'79, aDClfat aod
away ""*111r'' compared to the 78, 100
· quarefeet monthly rale clocked in for
the end ol 1978. Prevlewlnc the future,
Dunham foresees a return to bl&her
absorption Jevelt ln the flnt quarter of
1981. ./\ , ' / ~ THESE AND MANY other flaurea
1i1nlficant to plannen and en·
trepreneura appear in tbe newly·
publl11ied survey .produc~d by DlUlh~) promlniot NewPort'Beacb·
baaed l"elearch flrmt which keeps
cloee tabi on the entrances and exitt of
Ora.nee COuaty office apace, u well as
many other commercial real estate
events.
Tbt det&lled 1tUdiq PrtPated bYthe
Newpeirt Ecooomlca Oro($ are rt·
lea.led every alx PlOJS\ha, ud Jt ii In·
ter •Una to note that ~am·• pre· ClicU<>n ot a 7 percent vac8DC?y 1-le
madeJe&rlythlS1eari1 a " tome"
figure, as that ts exactly ere it
atanda now. Tbe previous vacancy
nrceataaewue.a.
The tot.i inventory of vacant office
spat'e.;ln OrNe County hu advanced
from ;9'2,000 equare feet at~ end of
1979 to 1.2 ll'llllion by mld•year. -
M,anWblle, space-under comtructlon
ihcru.ed aliptly from 3.1 million
aquare feet at the end ot UJ79 to 3.2
million. On thUi bu ls, the total existing
and near future inventory advanced
from 4,0 million to4.4 million.
"SPACE PLANNED declined close
to 12 percent," Dunh•m s ays, "down to
4.7 million square feet in July from 5.3
million in December 1979. BUt, when
you consider that planned apace pre·
viously was In the U 1 to 1.5 million
square foot ranee, you must admit that
Or>aage County bas a healthy faith in
thefuture. '1
For the balance of 1980, it la expected
th al•• average monthly absol'ption will
advahce by 10 percent, but current
Family environment
Community parka and an extensive
networt ol bicycle trails are all part
of the family enviro~ment to be
found at Oakleaf, the three and four·
bedroom 1ln1le f am fly ,. reSJdential
community in the V,llla•e of
NortbwOoid in tmne., develoPed by
Pacesetter..Homea.
A two-acre parll site if curreotJy
Mlnt developed adjac~t to the
second phue of b,omea. The
laodscapid park wm have walkways
-and plcnlc tablet.
Since the recent openinl of Phue
IJ, sales activity baa )M9en hiab, ac·
,
cordiq to Landon M. Exley, ex·
tcutlve vice president of Pacesetter
Homes.
Oakleaf homes are available in one
and two-story designs with three or
tour bedrooms, two or 2~ bath.a,
family room and <Hnlng· room. Witb
1,531 to 2,130 square feet these homes
are priced from $119,995, with financ·
lill at 12lil percent available.
The Oakleaf aalea office and model homes are open dally from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m . To ruch the n .. develop.
ment, exit the Sant'.a Alla Freew~ at
Jeffrey Road. Go north on Jeffrey to
Bryan Avenue and left to modela.
The comparison of Tustin Acres' 11 'A% 30-year fixed rate (12%
coeutruct.dm U'elMll lJ .. la 1 vtntoeymorerap dJythan ·~~.
resultlni ln :a moderate vatancy rate
rbe to9.$percnt. Th "monJh•ot in· ventorY'' for completed space Will Hae
):'er11fJehtJy to7.0, whlle the ratlo'tof""
•Race under conaJ.tUctlon will d cline
to t•.s. Thus, the total Will re.maiii
virtually\Ulehanged from the mid· 1980
level ol21/1.
.. A look attheata1e of currenttrends
In the Orangt County office tpace
market 1'9vellb that it conUnues to ex-
tllblt very 1ubltanUal arowth com·
bined with reasoaable vacancy rates,"
1 ay1 Dunham, .. The near term
forecast . indicates only moderate
chanaea in the 1upply 'demand
balance." ·
OF THE TOTAL 1,204,830 square
feet abeorbed ln all of the councy by
mid-1980, Northwest Orange County
<Anaheim, Fullerton, Garden Grove)
w.-a real scen~·atealer with 426,870,
or 35.4 perc t, unusually hiih com·
pared to its single·d11it perfonnances
in 1978 and 1979. Central o,ance Coun·
ty <Santa Ana, Oranee, Tustin) <Hd
even better with 436, 770, but ita 38.3
percent share of the absorption was a
repeat performance of similar high
le vela in previous periods.
"I believe that the availablllty of
significant developments in both these
areas has obviously eontrlbµted to new
interest and the corresponding absorp·
lion o( space," is Dunham's assess·
mentoftheaituation.
·'The Newport Beach.' Costa Mesa
a rea has dropped to leu than 8 per.
cent, but this is because very few new
developments have been available in
that aector," continues Dunham.
"Likewise, the airport neighborhood
dropped sharply from 45 JiercentofUJe
total down to 14 percent. DuJ'in.g all of
1979, the airport area accounted for
almost one·half of all office apace
absorption."
ASORTOF"mirror"imageofthese
fiauree is provided in the breakdown of
inventory by aectora. Fluctuatins
vacancy rates are hl1heat in areas
farthest away from the central airport
A.P.R.), "11th today's typical 15112 % Interest rate-gives Tustin Acres·
buyers a $222 monthly savings-reduces their Income qualification by over
$700 a month.
Spacious condominium residences quality-built with lath and plaster walls, full Insulation
and woodburnlng fireplaces In some homes. Brand-new range/oven, dishwashec. plush
carpeting and color coordinated draperies included. Up to 1,200 sq ft. with 2 bedrooms or 2
bedrooms and den, 1112 and 2 baths. large enclosed patios'
Three lavish recreation centers feature swimming and wading pools, hot swirl spas and
pub-style clubhouse. surfounded by elegant landscaping with 100-year old oaks•
Experience a charming location in unique "Old Town" Tustin. which survives as a
quiet haven within a modern, prosperous city. Tree-lined streets. graceful mansions
and historic buildings add to the charm and almost everything you'll want and
need is within walking distance.
. . .J73,990
113/4 % 30-YEAR FIXED RATE FINANCING
{12%A.R.R.) ..
Hc:t4W Norill"9t or...,. eo.b
bow1 up w\Ul' v~ .r-._,~ "rce.t. lbe same • tM llOl!D 'f!.11' 1trlp r'W' :14cuaa &Ucti Id au Olema.. Tbenr,loWe.t,...otoalJ
~.a perce"t h In tlle "~•on
Beach. Alr~rt/Cona ll&i• a,
w)d)e UM~ Ofiqe 1ur roundlni Santa Au .hu the
averqe niure -lltdt °""., ....
ceot.
The tWTellt tOtal ol ~bow--..
bualt ia 3.2 million MU8n1Ml, 111119-..
J.or thare bel•t in Me:,..-~
Bead\! Aln>e>tt/Cc:lll& M•a at
1.9 million. Northw•tOr.anae~Y
aecounta for 127 ,000 alid.iCentt'al
Oran1e County 51f,OOO. Pl~~
lf'rough 1982 la conatructioa « ~
two million lri the ~rthweai. ovw J,J
mUUonlnCMtralOran1•COUOty.over
800,000 for the South Cout, ad a liWe
under 108,000 for Newport
Beach/ Ali'pOrt/CO.ta Mesa:
After 1912. planned conatructioo will
take a larae share of Ult Orqe ~
ty buildlna apotUcht vnth 'T.4 mll1lcm
feet, and the NortJnveat Onchadln•
Anaheim> plam to ~ the atar of tlM
sho.wwtth3.71mi1Uonlnortlceapaee.
Tbe Newport E conomic• GtOup
makes {ts 1urvey1 available to clleota
on a seml·annual bula, and the cur·
rent Offlce Space Market Survey COD·
tains information on the total ma,ket.
as well as a breakdown of apeclfica
within the market and each area. 'Ibey
can be obtained from the Newport
E conom,lca Group, 1100 Dove.
Newport 'Beach, CA 92860. Telephone
851--0892.
Home rate., up again
• 1
£orwre•• gets
_.critical eye
from realton
•
•'CONV£&8&LY," MID, "eome 38.7 pe,,.
ceDt appear aaU1fled witb tbe lndlvidual
Hrforma.ncea of tb lr co111re11man or con-
1re11woman. In otber worda, they like tbe
perfons••· but don't like the performance."
ID npcwtin1 the result.I ol tbe auney, Carlton ~that 12.2 percrent of, those ,..poadju aUJdly
qsapprove ol Coosreaa and Sl.7 ~'\'eiprelaed
atroftf dtupproval and 2.e pereent eltber don't mow or are uncertain about bow. C.opsnu la car-f)'ib" OD lta buslneu.
'More apecltlcally, only fciur tent.ha of one per.
cent ol those replyln1 believe Contras is doinl a «ood Job of fi1htln1 lnfiaUon," Carlson said,
'wJille an overwhelmlnl 68.5 percent staied strong dlaapproval."
TID8 STaONG DISAPPllOV AL, be continued,
also wu reflected In the responses to tbe question
on bow well Realtors believe Conaress la handling
issues dealing with employment, income and hous·
ln1.
"According to the survey, only 6 percent of the
respondent& showed any approval of Congress in
lta cleallnc with employment and income," Carlson
said, "wblle 89. 7 percent expressed mild or 'strone
diaapproval. As for housing, less than 1 percent
believe Congress as a whole is doing a good job
and 8.2 percent believe Congress is only adequate
in tbia area."
However, he added, 89.2 percent expressed
disapproval of the manner in which Congress bas
responded to housing-related issues.
"That ls certainly something that the Coneress
should take oote of," Carlson said.
WREN ASKED TO EVALUATE individual
performance, however, the realton appeared
more evenly divided. Only 9 percent expressed
atron« approval of their congressman or con·
eresswoman, while 29. 7 percent stated mild ap-
proval, 1:1 percent expressed mild disapproval, 26
percent strong disapproval and 8.2 percent were
uncertain.
"On the issues we addressed concerning the
Congress as a whole," Carlson said, "the respon·
denta lndicated more satisfaction with Individual
legislators than wltb Con&re$s. For instance, wblle
only two tenths of one percent believe Congress is
adequately flghtine inflation, 9 percent indicated
approval for individual legislators."
Carlson said the quarterly survey confirmed
his belief that Realtors are concerned with
Con1ress and watch it more closely than many
people in Washinaton would like to believe.
Reduced interest·
at Los Corrales
For a limited ume, the developers of Los Cor·
rales are offering a special reduced interest pro-
gram at this early-California style community of
176 aingle-family homes in San Juan Capistrano.
Buyers can finance the first two years of their
loan at 1~ percent, with interest at 13% percent
thereafter. Homeowners can refinance at any time
during the first two years of the program with no
prepayment penalties.
Construction is nearly complete at Los Cor·
rales. 'Ibe development is already 80 percent sold,
but a good selection of fioorplans is still available, in·
eluding five of the furnished and decorated sales
models.
Los Corrales is beln& built by Patrick Develop·
ment in joint venture with Genstar Housing
Partners. All of the homes display many special
touches and authentic details that reflect San Juan
Caplatrano's Spanish Herttqe. Genuine clay tile
roofs are used exclusively and walled entries,
1arden courtyards, decorative windows and
wrought lnio detailing are prevalent.
The homes of Los Corrales offer variety with
11 noor plans and 28 elevations. Home slaes range
from i.~ to 3.157 aquare feet and are priced from
$149,000 to SZM,500. The five models ran1e from
$205,000 .to $270,000. All homes are on minimum
1'000 square foot Jots, and many lota are much
lar1er. Located at the eastern end of San Juan Creek
Road, the community may be reached by takinl
th& San Die10 Freeway to the San Juan Creek
Road alt. Tum inland and follow the algns to the
model complex, which is open dally from 10 a.m.
to5 p.m.
Property managi
workShop pl<inned
"Nub ADd Bolta of fnJPerl>' Mana1ement," • I
one·da,y woruhop, Will be presated by Coutllne
Community Colle1e from 10 a.m. to ' p.m. 'Dwn·~ day, at the Newport·lleaa Boud, 401 N. Newport.
Blvd., NeWpqrt Matb.
et to be co••red lJa tbJt war~ tnclad• "SJ:ft ApartmeDt Maaa1ement," "Center
Manuement," ••1nduttrlal Property Manas•· 1 aaent7' "Lepl Al~." ud a dlacw1t0n with
panel memben. Dell,... for bOth tilt real estate proleatooal nd . people lftterested Jn pt(lpe~ m.ana1emeot,
Ute ~ wtll cover manapnMnt Of office
ballcUall, aputmenta, and c:ommettlal buUdlnp,
TM~ fee of N lnclud• hmc:b. Ad• va11ee ~uan U adYIMd by Nonmber u. .. .,..... Ill ililt door on • apaee.avallable bull. Jlail rtflatrauoe •ppUtallon and fee to lem'=j. P. 0 ._ 1ut Odlt.a Mt.a, CA ....
f'oli • .,., bdonnatiOD, CCIDllet worbbop l
...._Joe~ iJAl zm
This spacious master suite of the award-winning Baroness fioor
plan ol Mallorca, the Ml!sion Viejo Company's new condominium
project, was a bia drawing card when the homes opened recently.
The Baroness was the recipient of the 1980 Gold Nugget award for
outstanding floor plan.
A 114-acre p~el of prt11te Newport
Beach reslckntial property has been
purcbued by tbe J M. Peten Com-
pany from the Daon CorporatiOn.
According to James M. Peters,
prealdent of the prestigious Newport
Beach development fl.rm. tbe $35
million pw:chase price marb tbe
la1'1eat •tncJ• real estate transaction in the hlat.ory of the company.
Bounded by Bison Avenue, Jam-
boree Road, Ford R~ad and
MacArthur Boulevard, the projected
$130 mllllon development is belne
financed by Crocker National Bank
in San Francisco. The property la
scheduled to be developed over a
three-year period.
Upon completion, this eate-
guarded, private community will
conalsf of 300 luxury dwelling units.
These will include sophisticated at-
tached and large single family de·
tacbed homes, and custom estate
sbed lots. In addition, this premium
community will offer extensive
I
landacapo tr atm nu a t:U
aever&l recreat oo areas,
Inlttal development p~ I.ii
the coniltructlon of Ill\~ I"'""°' domlnturn uruu. deltaneo t>y
archJtectural firm of ,CRr • Yam~l and Partners. Cons
of these ocean-view condoaibijUml '*
schedulfJcl to belln ln early l•t Ydta-
. salee slated to beetn in the faU. •
Tb~ fJve·year-old J . M. Pet*s
Comi.y produced •95 housin1 Unltl total more than teo million for the
1979 f seal year, and was lJstW
amone the top 100 builder/develoPtki
in tbe naUon by Professional Bi.lildw Maiuine. '
. I For the present fiscal year, eodibC
in February 1981, the firm ~n-t1
Ucipates the completion of more t.i.n
400 dwelllng unita, with revenuea1ia
excess of $85 million. The J . JI.
Peters Company ia currently a.a.
volved lo projects in Orao1e, IM
Angeles, San Mateo, and San Diego
counties. • I I . I
$18millioll business ·park for Irviii~ i
w i ~l provtAe
recreational ,c.
Co~struclion of an $18 million
master planned business park is un-
derway In the Irvine Industrial
Complex. The park Is located at the
southwest comer of Red Hill A venue
and Main Street in Irvine, adjacent
to the San Diego and Newport
Freeways near the Orange County
Airport.
Shaw and Talbot and Koll, . Ud. of
Newport Beach Is developing the pro-
ject and The Koll Company ls the
general contractor.
THE PARK WILL be developed in
~
two phases, according to Don Shaw,
a managing partner. The first phase,
at a construction cost of $7.9 million,
will include eight multiple tenant of·
lice and light industrial buildines
totaling 100,000 square feet. Availa-
ble space will range from 1,500 to
11,600 square feet.
Three of the buildings, located
along Main Street, which a.re of wood
frame construction with a wood and
masonry exterior, are being de·
veloped for office use and will ac-
commodate interior development to
suit future ten an ta.
The remaining five multi-purpose
buildings are constructed of architec-
turally treated exterior walls and
mansard type"t'oof structures. Phase
I ls scheduled for completion by
December of 1980.
RICHARD PRICE Ii Associates of
Laguna Beach is providing the
landscape design for the entire site,
which includes extensive berming
that will create a more private en·
vironment ·. for tenants.
In addition, a Par Exercise Course
and associated jogging track is
er Boaslnc Corporation Presents:
p r e v e w
ortLi •
planned which
employees on-site
tivilies.
Teamed with the Kol! Company'1s
the architectural firm of Howard F .
Thompson & Associates of Irvine.
Thompson has worked with Koll in
lhe recent successful completion 4of
26 buildings in the Cypress Industrial
Center in Cypress and Phase I pla-
ning and architectural design of tile
130,000 square foot Koll Irvine Center
located at the northeast comer rd
Main and Cartwright, Irvine. '
.,
t
i ,
j
\
r ,
.. I
' )
Just 26 Units In A Charming New England Style Village
.
Where you live says so much about you ... at
Newport Knolls. discover a life style unsurpassed
for its choices, as quiet as a gentle ocean breeze,
as tfynemic as the roaring waves. Newport Knolls
.:.isn\ this the life youve been searching fort
Newport Knolls ... the charms of a small Cape
C.od village in one of Southern California's most
• prestigious areas. Newport Beach ... a state of
mlnd ... spectacular sunsets and superb shop·
ping, the good things In life summed up in one
magnificent sweep of place and time.
Luxury condominiums with yaur
choice of 7 distinctive floor plens
priced from •142.950.
(714) 646-9618
Ptfc 1 and termt •rftct1111 dete ol J'ub1tc11Jon Subj ct 10 prlOr ~·•• an °' a~r deadline Soles occutr1no 1ubMqucnt to th1t ~11 IN)'
re1uh In u.,.v111Abll1ty of any Of ell pttc. level&.
•
• •
c
' I.
i
'II
!
if
•"(
)
ii
I
.I
"QUALITY, NOT quantity" Of
space wW be tbe key. accord.ins
to Acid. Multipurpose functions
ror private interior llvinc spaces
will have to be refined so that
they are acceptable to
eopbisticated tastes.
To achieve these cbao1es,
there must be more lone. ranee
pla.nniq as well as a oeater
willingnen' by government
agencies to accept and, in fact,
demand and approve these types
or living arrangements and
f ista heating
cost reduced .. ,
: The c0odominium community of Harbour Vis· ~ in Huntington Beach offers a new economical
atlnl s~m which has proven to be one of the
roject's major selling points since it significU>:tlY
i'edaces bOmeowner's utility bills while providing
• higher degree of energy efficiency than the more
conventional gas or electric heating units.
Hydronlc heat1n1 -a comparatively new
•11tem which uses boiling water to P,roduce .hot
trater and comfort heating for all ffubour Vista
Cin1ta -is catching on with both builders and
bomebuyers. And those close to its evoluti<?n ~re matin& dramatic claims for the systetn, which m-
c;Jude cuttine homeowner energy bills by at least «> percent and simultaneously supplying an ins-
•t untrorm heal almost totally rree of the "wast-ed'' beat endemic to more traditional systems.
GEORGE GEARHART, co-partner of Utility
Pipine Deslgn, a Brea ~ that designed and
m.nufactured the hydroo1c system used at
Barbour Vista, recently expounded .the joys of
b~dronlcs. . ''I really believe hydronic heating is the home
1*ating wave of the future," said Gearhart. "The
.,,_tem operates on circulating bolled water -not
tteam -almilar in principle to a car radiator. One
6oller will beat up to 40 units at Harbour Vista,
and there'• only very light electrical and gas de· •an.eta on the system, one pilot light and a sm~ll
f.trlcal pump. The homeowner pays no m·
dual utility bill but instead a fair percentage of
produced energy. We've found that in a lem·
terate climate llke Southern California, the
bomeowner will save a minimum or 40 percent on
enercy bill."
As rar as Gearhart 1s concerned, the most at-
tnctive aspect of the hydronic system is its effi-8.~ncy.
11 'oTeEBE 18 NONE OF the wasted beat you
d in otlle( systems, no surplus or unused beat,
ause there's no combustion, no vents where
rty usually escapes. The circulating hydronic
tin& provides an unfluctuating steady source of medW.e )leat .
• Accordlna to Gearhart other benefits of the
c 1ystem are its low maintenance and
ptabillty.
"Slnc6 there are no furnaces, no water·
ten, there's less chance of something eoing ,..,._ ... It'• a simple system and most repain can
made ln 24 hours. There are fittines for air-
nclltlonlna units, and solar attachments can be
ade to the hydronic system without ~Y need for
rofit.''
aa~t!i float, be ....
Pl'(>ir-tDadein~
of tM pe...,...:i1114+ntln1 la•;
boWeYtm', '-** DOt IGreNe the Eliritoammatal Quallt)' AC:t ...
lDI repaled. .
SECAPl'UalNG the Saner
dUta la tbe rnmt Immediate re-
qalreQMQ&. pfrticuJarb ID terma
of low-and m!Xlerate·lncome
'Go.,ern•e•&'• atte•J1•• C• f»llt...i Ille
•-ewi ••Pltf b ...... t• e•e•e -_,.,.
t1r~e~•fl•g •.,lag r.ec..-. ,...,.. aild ,,. ,
loeN ol 810rtg•ge r•Cn.'
Roos CcaJJ.fornla), chairman ol
the State Sub-Committee on
Houatnc Production.
Author or a 1ucceasfully·
paued blll (AB·llSl) which
permits demity bonuse1 for low·
and moderate-income bouain1,
Roos is aware of the problems
involved ln creating reallatlc
provisions to meet California's
housing needs. However, he
warns UUlt there must be more
"give and take" from all facets
ol the public and private aectQr.
ONE OF THE builders' big-
ge1l challeD1es la to educate the
public, accordin1 to Roos. "The
real estate industry has done too
good or a job at selling suburbia.
It la no wonder that owners are
figbline density.''
From all of the years of pro-
moting large lots and large
houses, the real estate industry
bas created its own wont enemy
-the single-family homeowner.
To facWtate reallaUc aolutklm,
the industry must initiate a ma·
jor re-education program direct·
ed at explaining the rising costs
of housing and the need for
dramatic changes in densities
boutlna. Tenant tiabta ortanlU·
lion• are &oinl to be preuuriot
eovernment and the bullden to
provide affonlable bouainc.
And in the future, l\Ool CD·
visions a "new aoclal tonb'ed"
between the public and Pitvate
sector with the implementation
or plans for innovative aqd
futuriltJc New Town a, wbe
hilb den1lty from the vet
berlnninl will be the hula and
expectation of entirely new
bou1in1 opportuniU'H and
lltestylee.
"A home la more than a roof
overhead. It la a symbol of bav-
inl arrived . . . a way to freese
escalatinl houaln& coats ..• a
tax reductioa . • • and a safe
equity," dtecl Kenneth ~en
tbal, founder and mana1tn1
partner ol cme Of the country'• 25
top account1n1 firm•, Kenneth
Leventhal and Company.
KEFLECTING UPON thi1
statement made ln a recent
new1paper arUcle, Leventhal
sees the "liWe man's bonanaa"
undereoina a drutJc cban1e.
Rising land costs, 1kyrocketinl
housing prices, inflation and an
l;AL!STAte
upaarp ln lDtereti rates tlakerln1 ana maHlla1 by
•ro1raawe11 kUUn1 tbe 4?P· Federal and State IOY•nun.t portnlt1 for the avera1e lo an attempt to allmm tbe A61man to purchue hll own Pl'Obl m1. Graduated mori&ue
ti0m1. rate1 are on meel1aaf1iit..
"SbOrtaje aDd demand do not Mort Nritin1 P?Oll'amt .tml1U'
ectuarUY ptodue. 1upply," h to SB·te •rt also beln1 eGa·
wamecl. "Loot at FHnce and • ldered. ADOther ,P~al Ii a
Europe." Federal w dedueUoa or UC> to
In tenm ol tbe money marltet, •t,500 tOr boulfna Qd edue9doo
ht C'Oallden that lo01-term, ft:x. 101011 ,ac:counta. FortY ,._
ed•rate mort.-aea are as ••dead amorUuU011.1 and 90 perteat
u a cllDoeav,'' never to be Hen &Oam have Mio been 11111-...t.
a1alnbJtbteudofthel0'1. One ~Y II that there WW
.. Government'• attempts to bt • rtie In Prlvat. JlofiPa• eontiol tbe money 1uppl1 ta So-lnauranc..
ta1 to create an ever· Before tho 1990'1 ere ovw,
aceeleraUn1 1wlo1 between Levantbal does pr.diet tbat
bltb• and low1 of mort1a1e Federal toHromeot will ft·
• rate1," commented Leventhal. empt mon l'UUltJc amounts tor "Jh wtll be 1eeln1 a com· lnterHt Income includtn1
pn led UJne frame of not every mort1a1e1, cltlnl t11uref of
three to four years, but more $5,000 and St0,000.
Ute every twelve mOftthl, u re-"Market1n1 people Will ~ ..
cently witnessed. to become upertl tn •ovens·
TIOan inatitutlona will have t6 remain "swift oa thelr feet!'
to aumve, be noted. They can-
not eonthn.ae to borrow abort an4
lend loaa DOI' can tbey ~tlnue
to compete with Wall Street
without pass ·throu1h
mort•a1ee.
•1we eould uaume that lnfla.
tlon wlll be cur:ed," added
IAvefttbal. "But it la more likely
that in the oat four yean, no
matt.er what the leadenhlp, that
we won't balance the budcet. we won't ewe energy dependence,
the deflelt in the balance of
trade will· continue and double-
dllit inflation will remain with
UJI ...
How to operate in lb.la environ·
mentt Ulirc what be comiden
to be Out country's role model -
the United Kln&dom, Leventhal
believes that you 1bould set your
1oala for tunival hued upon
the way cmdttiou are &Oilq to
be, DOt on bow you woUld like
them to be.
· BE FORESEES substantial
ment ~ina.'' •t.atod Lev•· thal, 1'bO 1ee1 for~ tlnt halt
of the 80'• a patchwork of
tchem• aDd Band·Ald am"91't.
"IP YOlJ A&E Oeet ol toot
.you will be able to take advlll·
ta1e of the situation -capitalb-
lnt on pn>IJ"tDU as they come to
pus," be stated. "However, JOU
will n~ to be the 'fint la JOUr set• to Initiate a proaram before
the loophole is closecl or there ls
another chan.ae."
''If tou remain aeile,'' he C!>D·
eluded, "you will aurviv~. if DOt
prosper.'' ·
Seetna cb.anee as '• J>QSlUve re· •ult of 1rowth, W'a1 Beverly
Trupp, preaident of ColOr Deslp
Art, which apecialbea in model
interion. Chante to her la a
lent• Of oartnc. flne·t~. PQ· tna more att.eQtion to detail iDd
cootlnulq to do a &ood job.
(
1'TllE llORE WE cbaq8. the
more we alter tbinsi -tbe more
likely we are to eome back to
where we started," commented .... Trupp .•
·Classic.~n .. ~
off Cring
A n1.:\\' f11;,mung plan h ,\::, heen of ... ~~e soon-to-be clas ... 1c homes, w1ch
k h t-h A. a.A.~ amenities befirtmg the cltlss1c 1nri.ncJ ro ma c t 1:-one u t e fi •
Intl'>[ uurscanJing new home m· anc1ng Newport way of life.
3 & 4 beJnxm1 re::iiJences tm'l'stmcnt opportunities in · 5 000
From $360, 000 to $4 5, * yc.\rs. I
The Wc:.rcliff Grnvc "Classic Financing Plan" Call for complete detai s
offer:. 100% financing with no monthly payments Phone (714) 646--5092
Sales office and model homes open Jaily h 1r nme months.
It mc.1m an o pportunity to buy a prestigiollii from 11 a. m. to 5 P· m.
ht Hnl· in l 1ne nf rhe most prestigious areas in the
uiunrn.
\x.'1.:srd1ff Grove ,.., ,1 very rare offering of
r. .. '
..
.
ew Dlottgage ~el:ps firSt · lioDie B~yers .
NJ' a 10 percent rate. 1'bl
t1Danclu would pay t • H· malnder.•
' TBll ADVANTAGE to the
hoSQa ~ ii that bla monthli
P•Y.O'intl u. 1ubStantla1Jy ,. ..
duced. .t· . Tbe Mlvantaae to me fla~ t. that be reaps a ~rfflltaae ol
the prollt when the property b
told.
"It's called tlve a third ·
and take a third," explained
.IOHpb Lumpldn, a padner In
Lumpkla4Turner Realty In
Society membership
cuts funeral costs
· It loob like a six-pound box of
small rocb and pebbles with a
soft layer of fine lfl'&Y sand llnin8
tbebottom.
Actually, it's the cremated
remalnl of a woman wbc>ee ubea
will be scattered over the Paciftc
Oceantbls week.
Jerry de Michaella, director of
the Omesa Society in Irvine,
explaim tbat the nab and orsans
are completely dlsinte1rated
d\ll'iq the two and a half hour
process of crelilatlon and what
remains aretbe bones.
A NATIVE OF Boston, de
Mlcbaelia aot into the cremation
bualn .. after b1a father died
aevenyean •10.
Griel·ltrleken at the time, de
Mlchaelil qreed to 1pend aome
$10,000 oo funeral arran1emeata
and llDOtbez' $30,000 to erett a
mauo&eum. Jleallzina later that be bad been
under a p-eat deal of. emotional
atreaa. be decided tbat be bad
•uteda lotof money.
A nAr MONTHS later he left
the lnaurance bu1lne11 and
formed the Om11a Society~
Qlemben decide lD adv_.· to
for10 tbe tredldonal ""nae Of a burial. llambar• receive a ca Cl
~thefamtlytocremate
U.eir ramalna ancf a tree ll
plated m dlelr memol"J in the
Clnea.dNatJoulforeat. ll•mber-abl~l• 05 for IDdlvlduall and for f amWea.
C.t Of cremat1 t. '2SO for
llU m ber1 apd SJ50 for
llOIMnema..n.
MOit people nq1.1e1t that tbelr
remalm to be 1catterid at Ha,
llQI de MlcbMUi.
#uroaNIA law r14u.tr" die libel be ti!*ttered at .._ ...... lilUee out at te•· Alao, • ,..., :mem-. who Wdt tlO
Mlp U-. .,..... mut own their
~. of l'be moat u1u11ual .;.;: .... ,..Ulitl eame from a ._... .. MllO w..a.d two CJoM
_. '«10 Ull In. paw Md
Uer Jl.r ullt1 bet~•n
;.t Beaeli ... c.-uu
-,..... lier feiloitte ~lllldl ·=·· ... , .......... Cl>
Columbia, 8.C. ' ·.1
Lumpkin ••• amon• fo\11" 1pealler1 wbo • dl1cuued tbe
eqult=mort1a1e Jul week
at • held~ In eonjundioii
Wltb &be A.Jinual Convettticm
Of th• Natlooal A.11oclaUOft ol
Reelton. held at the CoDventibft
CenterinAnahelul.
"It (equity abU. mort1•1•> b
an outsrowtb of the old 1ltuaUoo
ln wbicb U.. father·in·law would helf. the younc couPle tet start-
ed, • uid lohn Peckham, preel·
dent ol the Data Realty Com· -.
panlesot BOttcin.
LVIU'IDN MID equity lbare
ftilaocl.na ii the ~t form OI
ucreatlve" flaanclnt now
1weeptq the country. He Nld
the cooeept ii attl'acfive to both
private lDdlvlduall and major
inveaton 1uch as pemloo tundl.
''T._.y are very entbmlaaUc
about it," be 1ald.
A word ol caUtton about equity
1bare ftnanctnc wu voiced by
Ebby Hal=, owner of Ebby
Halladay y in Dallu, Tu .
"It bu some buia.'' 1be aaJd.
"There Will have to be some
,JUidelinel." ..
Mr1. Halladay said
those pddellnet lboulcl lncluda aoma panmtee that tbe propeJ'·
ty for Whlci-the equl9._. lbare
mortt••• ii applied be •de· qaatel7 maintained ao that tbe
flnander wlll not lole potenUal
profit.
"So that the place doesn't turn
into duet in JO yean." 1be said.
PaneUata &creed that tba equi·
ty 1bare mort1qe 1bould tie
used only tor flrlt time home
buyers wbo don't have 1untclent
•sadld nao1crn bl
bwulnda' ol thoUludf, pema,.
mllllona, of first-Um~· buyers
could beneftt trom eqwty share
mort1a,tn8.
Peckham said that oae i'najor •
realty ftnn, Realty World, bu~
formed a~ pool of capttal
for uae in equify 1bare fh>ue· lnl. ""The tundS were snatetied
up ao fut tt would make 10UJ1
bead 1ptn," be aald.
Fine food fanciers find shops meet demands
By .JODI CADENHEAD Of .. _., .........
Tom Martin lifts a piece of pink, Qlilk-fed veal from the 1001
display cue of "eourmet meats.". "1bat's fresh, fio'Wn in every week from Wisconsin," be aan. A' manaaer of Delaney's GoW'JDet Market, M artln takes pride
in its thlckcutbeeflolnfllet mignon, porterhouse steak.a, New York
cuts and top sirloin.
What makes the store gourmet? "It's all the best you can buy.
How else can you classify it? •' Martin replies.
BY ALL ACCOUNTS, AJIEalCANS are developin1 a more
diacrlminatlnl palate as evidenced by the brisk business of local
1ourmf$sbops.
No fon1er will a quiet bambur&er. sandwiched even between a
seaameseed bun, satlsfythe t.astesofbuddinl epicures.
"Everything is always fresh," said a woman waitiDI lD line at
Delaney's. "I entertain a lot. And if I call them in the momin1. I
cancomebyat8andgetaroutalldoneancbliced."
That'1notallcustomenatDelaney'swil11et.
WHOLE MAINE LOBSTEU, RESH fro& lep, oysten,
lar1e shrimp, poached salmon surrounded by flower shaped eus
and duct and capons stuffed with wild rice.
Last year Delaney's sold 200prtme ribs and 700turten the day
before Christmas.
After tJirM years of selling gourmet meats and produce to the
public, Delaney's be&an catertne some of their fancy foods lut
Auauat. · . ·
A recent part~in e Roct forilO guests came with a 12·foot solid oat seafood stuffed with shrimp, oysters, poached
salmon and med of lobster. Dinner included a Ne-' York
steak followed by Ice cream topped with fresh peach and rupberry
sauce. The bill, St,000. ·
The wives of Robert Fluor,.,Joey Bishop and Buddy Et.en
ref>ortedly tbOP at the Newport Beach delicacy store.
PaJCES V AllY P&OM ri:a PO& a cooked and atuffedduckor
caponto$W.95forapoacbedanddecorated1almon.
Mutln lan1 ••)'Inf bow mueb bUliDIH the 1tore II dohla. But
)le does say that tb• are deftnitely plaMinl to expand by next
Jun .
Ctastomeracan walk lntotbe Arc~ Gourmet Sbop and pick up aboUleof P'r'encbwmeforlZ47.50. Rlcbardllc:Kee, manqeroltbe
Newport Beach atoN, teU. wine connoiueun that the Cbateau
Haut Brloa, im. ts a ''real eollector's item.•'
'"'Ibere Just 1sn 't any to be found," McKee says pplntinc to a
bottle ol 1958 Louis Martini carefully shielded behind a stua cue.
"The only way you can &et it ls at an auction or t.brouCb a private
collector." ,
LAST MONp McKEE PVT THE llOITLE of Martini out
near the cash ~~ter and told cuatomen that it would 10 to the
highest bidder. It Is waiting to be picked up, he says, by a customer
whooffered$12S. ·
What makes a bottle that will be gone in maybe less than an
hour, wortbupwardsto$250? ".It'stbearape,''says McKee.
For t.boee Joo1d.ng for lastin1 value, beblnd a fieetin8 perhaps
frivolous taste, McKee points to a bottle of 1971 Chateau Lallte
Rotti.chlld. "Three years ago that wu $35; today it's worth
$74 .50,"hesald.
Indeed many of the store's patrons are purchasing the
expensive bottles not to offer their friends, but to stock their wine
cellars.
BVT FOS THE BOST WHO WANTS TO SE&VE somethin&
special after dinnerthe Newport Beach store bu a bottle of Remy
MartinLoui.Xmcoenacprtcedat$295.
Asked who can aff01'd such bi&h prices durin& what's been
bllled u a receuiooary year, tbe mana1er says, "The recession
never reared lts ugly bead in Newport Beach.''
Newport Beach ll not alone in its &lut of 1ourmet sbo111. For
more than 10 yean cuatomen have been comin8 to Cotta Mesa's
Elwell Fanm1toretb buy 1oarmettro&enpoultry.
Ralf comisb 1ame hens stuffed witb appleaauce and almond
drelainl come li:1: to a packqe for $10.H . Boneless chicken lei
comes ltuffed with rice and mushrooms for85 cents.
8TUJ'PED O& UNSTVFFED THE GEESE, duck.a, c:e beu and chickens arrive dally from a proceuin& plant in ta
Ana.
Louise Clark, a clerk, says that many of the customers are
•
I
.
. 2"
!}j
3. w ,, 4
11
N
'WHEN IT'S BEST YOU CAN BUY, IT'S GOURMET'
O.lener'• Martin up evet,W...a'• atwep hfth ..
senior citizens l~ for slncle servinp that can be prepared just
bybeatina.
What mu• stuffed poultry 1ourmet?
"It's tbe little thlqs that the avera1e coot doean 't even ~ :
ofaddlng," said C1artr. "It's that little extra nip of aeuonin1.'
Lut year the Costa Mesa ltore sold 1,000 turke,. the day
before Ouistmal, au ready to be cooked andaerved. ·
"No canned fruit," says Earl Hustwlck of the lemon
<See FINE FOOD, Pase CZ)
..
I
I
' I· .
I
.
,,_ W4Y OF GIVING HY• money -
oa aal• tax and poet.as• u well ... on the
present Itself. And you doa't baw to betber
wit.b wrapptq. The amprile of i'eedvtna
such a clft often mah• It one~ tbe beat re-
membered. •
Wbt!ll you are makin& up your lift llat,
don't for1et the people wbo have belped you
with your couponln1 and refuDdiDI dwinl
the year.
AN EARLY GHT TO supermarket shop-
pers wu the Maxwell House "Double Sav-
ini• Certlficat.e'' recently Introduced by
General Foods. The certrftcate doubles the
value of any regular coupon for Maxwell
House instant coffee that is attacbed to It.
The shopper who showed me tbe
certificate combined it with a to-eenta-off
coupon. When her supermarket offered
double-value coupons, she saved $1.20 on a
JUOI eOff • • Otbet manufaetu"rs are likely to follow
enl oodl' l ad with tbelr own double·
"1 ~·
DEA& 8\1PSaMAUET SBOPf'£a -~ part ~ a murid OD Paptr Mate peal, I ...
e•lved a "•n.ooo You Can't Lou Ceahlt..Jree .. same carcl. t rubbed tbe prl1e
li>s wttb a coin and discovered l had won a $1
prbe. • \
On the back of the card were these ln· structJau: .. U a dollar mount appean, till in
your oame, addreaa and ZIP eode and mail it
.. •la tfaltlered mall, return receipt re·
quetteid." Wben I took my envelope ccotalnlq the
1ame card to the post omce, I learned that
~ues-my n prise would cost me .. for
the reslatratlon, 45 cents for the return re·
eeipt and 15 cent.a for posta1e. I •don't know
whether to be amused or horrified. -Un·
decided ln Arllnston Hetahta, m.
DEAa UNDECIDED -I called the
Paper Mate Divillon or Gillette concerning
your problem. It.a representatives quickly
confirmed that a prlntinl error wu made on
the came cards. The requirement for reg·
lstered mall had only. been lot.ended for the ss.ooo and $50,000 winners.
They uau.red me that all $1 winners can
1end in their same cards usln1 only a' !S-
cent at.a.mp. And to be certain there are no
losers In this .. You Can't Lose Cuhltakes,"
Uie com.,.,iy wlll refund the registration and
ret\lm·receipt costs to anyone who paid them
to receive the $1 prize.
-
I .
.
BejiDQlJ:tl J1n. l CaUtoi'nl1n1 WW bl able to
fam lntuelton their c~lWll accounts
Neiotiable Order wttbdrawal 1>r NOW ac· counta u they'" called, have been lD use ln
New·EnaJand for ti.e years.
MOit aaViap and loan lmtttuttou and com-
mercial banu wtll be ortertn• thla option under a number of dilferent plant. All Ofter 5.15 per-
cent interest, blit lbey dlft.r on minimum balao~ needed, Mrvtce chlfl 8nd beDefttt.
HOME FEDlaAL SA VING8 "1. San 1>le10
be1an alenlna up customers on. 13 to take ad·
vantaae of the NOW account.a conie Jan. t. Tbe
SlsL ts olfertni ao free checb and no aervlce
char1e for three mOftths to tboH wbo oten an account befo~ Jaa. l. ·
In addition, tbe "Chextra" account will be
off •red free to aenion over 82 wbo depoalt re·
tirement cbeeu directly Into the account.
Cuatomera with a minlmum balance of
$1,000 will nOl have to pay a aervlce cbU1e:
those with balances of $50().$1,000 wlll pay '3
and under $500 trill pay $5 a month. .
NOW ACCOUNT8 ASE betna vtewed by
economist.a u a step toward bridainl tbe 1ap
betweeq banks and aavlnp and loan flnm.
In a recent speech to local banken lD
Newport Beach Leonard Weil, presldesit of
Manufacturers Bank, predicted that ft.Danclal
institutions ln the 'llCll will become more alike lo
the services they offer. ,
Callfomia Federal Savlnp and Loan la of.
rerin1 NOW accounll under the name Interest
Bearing Checking Account. •
Customers wlth a savings account
balance of at least Sl,000, or a minimum
balance or '54)0 In the interest checkin1 account,
will not be char1ed a service char1e. Otherwise
the service char1e ls $4 a month.
SHOPPtNQ ADVICE
,,,.....~(;J
FINE FOOD •••
;
• ..
tarts, lemon pies, peacb tarta Ud strawberry t9! IOld at the Gourmet Pantry tn Lacuna '1 cb.
For 24 years the Laguna Beach shop bu 1
provided customers such delicacies u routed
pis, stuffed turkey, baked hams and bot '
pastrami.
Open five days a week from u to 3, U.e
Ocean Avenue store serves gourmet sandwiches
and $100 worth or chicken a day to cU1tomers
wbo often llne up at the door. Sales to dai&
already exceed last year's total.
·-------------------------------------Food has replaced cash u the most popular
Christmas gift for companies to 11ve
employees, according to a recent survey by the
Dartnell lnstitute of Business Research . .......... u.... IOL T ~one,. P.O eox s11•. !{..,.,..., Ill • ...01.
llec;et .... ·~· l9ClllY Mer. s-• Uftl~ P..-.Ct God9I fnim Ill* ,..... _.a. TIW -b al9I
•••II*' for 11 UPCI plvs S.US ~Dec. JI, 1-.
CAMPal!LL '>ffAalSC:O Mtill' Otsn.. ~. P.O.
... ""· Cll11t0fl, I-• Stm. lle«ll'I • 1-.... ~--. ,_.. Mell PIMb trom 9ftY nine C.••••tt'll
T_. 5'luP .-ell 111111 pWC-.<~ --tnim tlwM ..,_,. .. _. of MMbCO Prwniwn s.ltlM
Crec1<ers.EJ11MretJ..,.JO, lt11.
ESKIMO,.,_,_ P..-r'• ,.'"2.,. ~ """Olfef', P 0 loll_.. Ilk..,,_,,,, Ve. 22»1. Recehe e ,....,.__
-.............. .,.... 5e""' -pt'OCll........,_ f,_,
the ...... "-'~ E'*'llWI ~ P...-. E..ns ""'11 .. ,,.,,
INST NH FOLGl!ll'S R .... AU• Offer. P.O. Boa-. ~pl• Pllin, MIN\ S&MI. lle<.el .. • Rend McHllly ,_ 111 .. lefld.,.. ,,..,... -•from-~ I• of IMUM Fol~'• Coffee ClyWlh. Elqllres Dec. 31, 1'9Q.
KELLOGG'S 1.0. erec:etllt Otter. P 0 8oa •-. llroolllyft, N Y 11222, Re<.el .. • chitd'a tP DraceML ~nd proof~·~C--II ,,,_ the slclt peM!t of
h1tH KeltOOQ't Raisin llTll\ pac1<a9Ss. tncutuda e ,.._
of up to et{IM 111t1en for Ille Drecelct. Eq»r.s 5etlt. JO,
"''
KELLOGG'S P9ncll eoa Otter. po. 21 ... R•ll!nille,
N.c. um. ~,..•child'•'*"" bo• s.M 11 ... proof.
of._c,,._ Mel\ ,,_, My ClOMblrwtlkln of KelloOQ'I
Rice Krl ... , ~ ,.,.. ... Flellff. ,.,_ "-· s.,.., Corn~ S...., SfNCllt, C«oe Krl!IC>IM. l'...-d IUce
... ~ ..... bl*M$epl. J0.1•1
KLl!l!HEX TOWELS Recipe C..d Ofter, P 0 8oa
..,., SI.,...., MIM. S.SI .. Recel .. to ,...,_s-lKtl rwctoe
<l'ft Pl.,.• <M>ll for..,.~ -....... tine. TN o-ta
ellO IV .. ,_ fer -UPCI qtua " EllPl'ff llMr<n )1, '"'
Nl!STLE PMw.11 Offer, P 0 8o• J:21, tJIOnle. Wis.
SJD». llec.ef.,. 10 ..--111..s pel\Cllt SeftCI tour com·
!)I.Ce wr..,_n from •"Y of tlleM Nestle M"llfe Mn _,,. Ctuncll, Mllll O>ocolat•. '100,000. a.oco· tJ!e .
Alto -S1.l0 IO< POata9t -IWlndllnQ. -your checll peyallle to He•~ Pel\Cll Otter Spedty •.....,,.of llP lo 2A letters tor Ille penclls There I• no llmll an tne number of C*ICll Mts you mey order Eaplr .. O.C )t. ••••
HO NONSENSE Giit One Fr" Otter, P 0 8oa l'l~. !IMP .... Ptilln, MINI. UM Reul.. • pecka<Jt of No
NOftMftM I( .... HIQllS. Send "No NontenM Guarenlau" from .,,., low pack911ff of No NonMnM K,_ HIQM Ea·
"''" o.c. J1, 1•
Fr ... P~CI
OME~A PLAN. • •
from two tearful grandchildren wbo asked de
Michaelis lo give their grandfather their
favorite ring and key chain .
Before placing the body ln the oven or re·
tort, de Michaelis made sure that both it.ems
were placed in his hand.
CREMATION IS PERFORMED at Harbor
Lawn mortuary, although a new state law
makes it possible for cremation to be done
someplace other than a mortuary.
What kind of people join a cremation
society?
"Somebody who plans in advance and cares
about his family," said the funeral director.
SUCH EDIBLES AS BOXES of cbeeses
baskets of fruit, nuts, bama, turkeys and
speclalty meats were on the upeomlnt Sift D.t
of 45 pettent or manacen respoadin1 to a na-
tional poll.
Cab Sifts were reported planned by 25 per-
cent of the executives.
L--------------------~----------------All Omega Society ~rs write out their
cremation request to be kepf'pn file.
$50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SEOONDS
..... _. oaly ...,,_. ....... •C _ _... ...... _ ....
Lonlll• 1 •HH
·-· Ml-Uo· .. ..ec. '"' VlllH linon< tnq n .. t-d\
(114) 750·1515
AMl"ICAM MOMa MOlllTOMM 2)() ~••POr1 Centet 01 ... e
0••-0" P1111
"'41wonrl BHch
C1hfC>r,.,.
t2MO
·Hefti estate mailtiJ,, •••
By ROBEltT J. BRUSS
DEAR BOB: Ma real estate broker, I enjoyed
your recmt article about bow to select a good real
estate -cent. Althouib I don't like to compete fqr a listing, 1
admit you're right that sellers should talk to at
leut three agents before listing with one. But your
suggestlon.a left out ihe pro}>lem of agents who
"high~" a seller to get a listing. Many times
I've seen agents overestimate the sales price or
promise a seller an all-cash sale, just to get the
listing.
When the property doesn't sell, and the p{ice
or terms have to be drastically changed to make a
sale, it's the seller who suffers. You should wafll
bome selleri to list only with a reputable agent
who backs up his price estimate with facts, not
puffery1 Tyrol E.
DEAR TYROL: Tbaak yoa for the kind com·
mnta aDd Ole eaatloa aboat "lll&bbalUDI." Some
asea&. will take an overpriced U.tla1 ju& to 1et
tile ltldal. Later on, tbe a1eat trle9 to &et Ute aak·
ta& prtee dowa to a reaa011able level. ' • 1'11111 metW ued to worll. Bat ln &oday'• slow
llome Nie market, la most areas, If a bome re·
mala ...act for a lon1 ti.me bta:ren aad &lilelr a1ea'8 ac.e laMfelt la It. Tben sucb a bome often can
oal)' beeold at a dlltre11 price.
~ belt way to Mt &lie ulilll price for a
bo•• II for &be seller to la•l&e U.tbal preeeatatlou
fN• at .... , llu-ee active locaJ a1eata. A.aJ a1eat
wll• dona'& pre!.are a wrtuea ''compeUU•~ •erket ualytla,' 1howta1 reeat Hin prlee ud
.. r•• of tlaUar nearby bomn, aMa.14 be dls· ........
Ollly af&er talklnl to tHeral asea&a, aad c•ldal &Mir eUnt refe~. cH a eeller la·
telJJS...,. Ml U. HklDI prtee ud Hied U. best .,.., .. ••net Ult bome.
2nd ,_.,r19age re.-n• ....-.adrd /-
DEAR UN: Yoa caa mloell &be ecmm&y la you
llome wUboa& aeWD1. Create a aecoa4 mortsa1e
• It. '1"1111 ..nsace b'&Ma ..,.... • .a • pan
., , ...... PQ"•ellt -........ ~,..
waat19 llClijjilbe. Sellen_. .. ,._. • aB-aM
sale will~ accept ••Ill u efter.
To make ndt a pvdaue ofter eve11 .. tt at·
traetlve, "lem•ade" It. ftat meam •b lite ...,.
(&be lftOlld mortsa1e JCMI erea&e • yeu lllome)
with aometldag sweet ( .. eta u eulll).
A hteDcl of mi.ae receMb' le---*d su.•
casb pl• a SU,• created MCa.d mort1a1e oa
lier bome u do .. pa1me9& • a SUS.• apart-
ment bome. lier cost of crea&llll &Illa& see.d
mortp1e on ber lllome was $7. Yeunal es&a&e at·
tome)'. realty •cent, or nerew ellkel' cu ....,
yoa bow easy It It to do.
f-)
REAL 'f'
ESTATE. •
LET US SHOW YOU HOW TO APPRECIATE
YOUR CAR • • • INSTEAD OF
DEPRECIATING IT! INVESTMENT
SEMINAR
iiJVEMBBI 11/th
lt!DfESQAY
l:JOPM
MARRJOrr HOTS.
llEWl'OllT BEACH
l.lmD RESERVAll*S
110 COST tAU. 833·3880
CAI.I NOW AT 7~ 6581
SUM COAST LEMS~MG
Under new ownef"lhip
17777 Main St. • Suite O • Irvine
DI.A& 8081 Oar bome II worth more &baa
tlll.•. We owe about .. 7,000 oa tu monsase.
0.r tn.• equltf la dol•I aa abeolutely DO sood.
We wu& *° IO••bow UH part of tba&.eqGl.ty to ae· .,------...__.._ ___ ...._._ _____ 4•lrt ...... pn,.ny. Ba we doll'& wot to ..U 1.., .................................. 1·· -VISTAR
INVISTMENT CO.
CONSTRUCTION flMAMCIM•
•Reatdilndal up to 4 wilta no takeoUt commitment requlnd
•commercial Bulldlnl:I
" T•teout commJtmenl ~wnct aloq
with le..-
•up to '7~.ooo
Heti!WBank
211' CAMNI DflW IRVINE, CAl.lf'OM.IA •1 t$
CONT Mr --,«>HN80N , (714) 8334700
"
.. _. tllll& 11 tlrilt rtaat Udlll &o do •. Mat • ,.. ,......,,
LINN .
501) .. r<h S1reet ,_,.,.po" hoch CA 92660
1714 833 3680 ....................
TWO SINGLE GIRLS
Who HaVe Been Too Busy Worl<ing In Their ·
Careers To Meet Suitable Single Men
Would Each Like To Meet You,
If you are: \
A. Hard-working, aggr8saiv , preferilbty Htf.efnplOyed.
e. 25 to .a years old.
j
C. Attraetlve with high self1ateem.
Apply to P.O. Box 724, Oalty Pitot,
aso w. e v. c.M. e2e2e
W /ShOrt Note & PhOne 't.
•
]
•t
f r !
~ ..
ti
" c
~ • ~
"
I I
I
I I I
i
I
I
....... _ ...
i ....... MllUfCA#miat ..... ,.,,ii : ~i 1! ~rii£~~:.~ ·::: .. :. ~~··1ii ~
+ ~ ~= . . .. . . .. . ' r: ii ~ e -k.: .... ··:· .. :.. . . . ... I
116 • .. . "'
'i .. ~ 1~ Wall Street
+ I
"• -·~ · ~ nnt:im-iati· +1 ~ c
; ·I
I 11n I NEW voRK <AP> -As the SO&J'·
2M ! 1~ ing stock market attests. WaJJ St.reel • m i ~ and the nation's investors are expect-"' \i. • '~ ing big things from President-elect
Ronald Rearan.
In the past week. the Dow Jones in-
dustrial averaae ran up its bluest weekly aain in more than six years.
And prices in the bond martet.
driven lately by inflation to record or
near-record lows , also recorded a
strong advan~e.
The rallies were fed by talk that
Reagan's landslide victory on NOT. 4.
and tbe accompanying shift towarcl
Republican po~er in Conaress. mi&ht
lead to important policy ~han1es to
deal with the country's economic
woes.
MEllULL ·LYNCH, Wall Street's
bigcest investment rlrm, called the
electioo "a major turnina point In the
dlr.ction or the nation's aovero-
ment."
Skeptics In the financial commun.i-ty are quick to point out that no pres-
ident could do much about hi&b ln-
Oalioo and sluagish economic 1rowth
m lbe immediate future. But even
some ot them aclcnowled&e that they
are "optimistic for the Ion& term "
as a result of the election.
A suree of hope In the periOd
between a presidential elect.loo and
the lnau&uratlon the followin1 :.!"i January ii, ln fact. not euctly a rare ! 1 phenomenon In the markets.
! J The la.st time lhe Dow Jooes in-
... "'i dustrial averace surpassed 1.000 wu at tbe end of 1976, when President
~ Carter wu proarina to take otfiee •
:.:· ~ AND 111.1 AVERAGE reached lts
f 'i record cloatna hlth of t.OSl 70 on Jan. • 11, 1'73 after Richard Nixon •on re·
• election over Oeorce McGoveni.
• • • To Judae by tbt market'• ~uble· 1
qutnt ~ormance. al1 lht ~ pre-
-1 niUn1 at those timta were not i 't~ Mfilled. Still, many analyau aay
• ' they hive reuons lor billevln• there
• '~ f 1 JutttflcaUon for the enthusiasm
• 'Mii this time.
• ··" ''Tbe Jcif11cr ranit mpllcallOni of -: I tile RHfan vlctorJ are "cll1th1ctly : = potlUvt for the economy, ti\ ow C>f.i·
, :~ aloe," Mttrill Lynch dtclartd n all : semi·monlllly market letlei 1t; "We btlitv \My wlll ltid to an In·
+ "' creased emphuu on b1a1"*a ln•t· ~·c·· mtnt, lrtller j>rodlK'tJyily Md
-; (Dilation. Amon• tM key elt1ril«tll\I • •ID bl a MW roe.-on Lu Jdtcy ~ i' · aonrnmeet l.Pf!Mlin1."
! INVl81'0U SIUllD 1MW to
• Ml9*ftl'fOtq~~~ lM~tlO.......... . U.., .... lbl <•t'tff ft iide " ... "' ... . Aa· .. t--. tU, ~ Wt •u ........... ? ..... .... ..... , ,, ... ,...... ....
t;'t, I''" ~' ...
t•' .. ,,.
•9 .. . . .,.
·~· 1-C .... •
•;I! •• a:. bf r• .. ...
# ..
~
197' CADILLAC
smLl.I 1~1VMZI
56995
1980 ELDORADOS
I e
~IN STOC~
.,America 's Favorite
four-wheel drive luxury car.
Both are loaded with almost
all Cadillac options. Hurry!
1980 SEVILLES
61N STOCK ..
With all Cadillac
comfort and
convenience
options. This
one"s loaded
with two-tone
paint.
.
s
I 980 FLEHWOOD
BROUGHAM
The Cadillac of Cadillacs!
Only one left!
USID CAR SPICIALS
I t77 CADIU.AC
SIVIUI
(-471908)
·57995
I t7t CADILLAC smu.a DllSIL
(253XNSI
I t7t llUICI(
llYmA
le&1WRDI .
I e
I t7t cAolu.AC
B.l>OttADO DllS8.
(897WOU)
I
I
J .
. CAPICS SAY&. .... Hid let•a llaH
*>111.t.idq bapPeil to J.ac:a--blnc to bold ID· ter.t 09W .. lllllllllel'. cir.s..t two ......
ep1lodel aDd tbat .......... rOoai ~....,
around. ··w. ... able to .... ,.. fD =tllreatl to · ust IUlpldaD at a number of . Now we
; eoaJcl i.t J.a. 1et bla... ~ 1197..,. of tak1q ean of J.a ...... ..._
C"llled. ta the feeJbit WU t!Yll ....... m1IJtfPle
IUlpeeU wofted out belt. ·
.. Ph111:·~£HJ~~it liad to be 90Dl~ mm uppenea ._.,. ntlMI' t11u
a DOflaDed drtnlr or tam,...... Wttb tM --.; oflilacar;.. ·
CAPICB DBNIB8 TBS report1 tbat elrculated 1ut 1ummer that the ,..,,...., wu a
I . I
I I
I
I .""' II\' ....... " I · 1&~!.a:r-:a:n•=2=·=.,.:.:--:.if
t lllOUY.,...
llNIMT. ,Alff ....
MfMt'" ..
x-&lw • ... , ... in•
· TD~ Wli.L be~ e1tber wttbla tbe oU-rleb Swtu elan or eoDMOM dole.
11 eoameted to It. It will not be 9CJIDe anbowD brouabt tis from left fteld.
Ren are the cblef 1uapeeta: •
-Sul Ellen Swtna. J.a . '• wife. played by Linda Gray. J.a. maa. tt look like lbe wu
TV SUSPENSE
t -
• I
"lean, taut and powerful. One of the fiaest
films of 1980.·
-lim Brown, KNBC-TV
'"'Ml M9CM --) .... ~~'-··---. ... ......... ~\':.....,_
n &..-•"" --t tMI an. M fllf ....._tell ...
lla»~"lt&. ... ...........
NfYAft UNMM•lll tlltlllll............. .
.
"PIWAft.BEN.IAMtN" ...,.,_ (A) ... ,,._.",, . .... , •• 1 ...........
-~Hilt
~
SUNSET ON ENOLAND'8 LAAQE81' a.AKE
WlndenMN le 10 mllee long, :ZOO fHt dMp
FUt:L£D AT LEAST IA pa.rt by the media,
that :imate II one Of a beautiful, yet potentially
dan1erous Island where white Ylsiton often re·
ceive holtlllty in return for their travel dollars.
So the pace of Journeys to ~amalca It con·
slderabJy slower than the unreleotin1 rhythm of
itl lncti1enou1 re11ae music. Visitor-. spent
nearly $195 million in lt'llt, but the t.land'1 over·
all hotel oeeupancy rate it less than50percent.
A.a Jamaica's deputy director of tourtam for
nearly two yean, Mrs. Barbara Gloudon wants
to change that, but la blunt eoou&h to be re·
allatic about the situation, from both aides.
''U.S. travelers will have to leam that the
ttat of the world does not live Ute Americans,"
aald Mrs. Gloudon durin1 a recent •wine through
the OranaeCoutarea.
"TllE&E IS A NAIVETE that there should
be no problems <abroad). There ls no Shancra·
la. You can't buy paradise from a travel
brochure." '
She admltt.ed that her fellow countrymen -
95 percent of them black, many poor -must ·
share In the put blame, but Mrs. Gloudon
polnted to recent events that should mutually In·
crease everyone's enjoyment of Jamaica.
Firl'\, she said, there was the overwhelming
~;Mansion becomes hotel
ALt FLIGllT8 FROM Los Anaeles are
routed through Miami, then on to Monteao Bay;
a trip of about seven and a ball hours. Tbe least
expensive round·trlp paclcaie at present is a
$304 deal via Eastern. National and Western are
charging $356.
"We a re markelinf tourism differently,"
Mrs. Gloudon added. 'We do not import it
(foreign entertainers, etc.) an,vmore. Now we
are sa)'iflg, 'Eat our Jamaican food, see rnore of
tti'e life'. " • -
This has led to formation of a new "Meet
'the People" program in which a tourist. say, a rnuak fan, can meet up with a local realdent
who will ,Wde him to reccae clube in Kinaaton.
THE SAME HOLDS true for visitors who
enjoy surflng, scuba diving or back&ammon.
They can take eart in the pro«ram by contact·
BONANZ4
BE.4CHED
( CONSUMER ) ADVOCATES ,
In the DAILY PILOT
THE VOYAGERS CLUB
AND
NORWEGIAN CARIBBEAN
LINES
,. I)(! I
~111"c!1: Shipbuilding magnate's home a showplace
1uO l t1
Children digging in the sand near Oste nd ,
Belalum. found a plastic
art carton containing a
painting by the Belelan
artistJameaEnHr.
INVITE \'OU JO A SPEC/At
CRUISE NIGH'f TUESDA»
NOVEMBER J8. 19'«! t1 ll • • BySTANDELAPIANE
i: t>n LAKE WINDERMERgz Enaland -
Gray days of rain.and mi.st m the'Enalish
,.fJlakes Country. The season is winding down.
l1111'The'etiJ,nt hotels are closinl .. The modest )u ftOiBed aftd Breakfast" places renting out the r . ii>are room are putting away the guest linen. ~ 1 .-:JVindermere becomes 6,000 local people.
,J.1au During the lively summer you can get
1· ~ aalmost any range of prices. Backpackers go
~ 'OfOr farmhouse rooms at SB. A good bed and
• '0 bJ'eakfpstofbacon,eggsandporridge.
•·'"1 You can get one of Miller Howe's 13
rooms for $112 with John Tovey's dinners, I
' 1n•hink the most outstandin~ in En~land. I
' .sdon 't know of any three·star restaurant of
•Q France that's better or such a show.
1 : , ... Tovey's a blooming geqius. When the
' 1 l\ights dim and the presentation of dinner
1.(J>egins, it's theater I've never seen anything
I ijkeit.
1! • ••
1, • I WALKED DOWN TO THE Belsfield
Hotel and had a drink to the man who built it. ~lt9f'havenoplctureofH.W. Schneider. Esq. But
t 1 ·~1 see hiin as a portly, no-nonsense person
'' ~'1ith a dignified moustache.
, l i:: • He had never heard of income tax or af
,~moos. ·~u He'd made a fortune in shipbuilding and
in armaments. Schneider was "Vickers,"
r 1 the World War I machinegun.
''· •1~"' He built Belsfield as a home. Schneider
.:·' ,~ad no vision of hotels and souvenir shops at
., ,1'>'\Mindennere. •••
by Trust.houses Forte. It now has 76 rooins
going at $81 double, $7 for breakf aat. They've
preserved the Italian gilt and pamt. But
haven't quite shaken off the gloomy dlpity
Schneiderputintotheplace. Buttbeymay.
Sir Charles Forte, the English
millionaire, hf\! put Trusthouses Forte all
over the world. Schneider would have ap·
proved of him.
The "TSSY Esperance" is in the Win-
derme,.esteamboat m~. Us copper and
brass boilers are brilliantly polished. Its
paneled interior gleaming. Just as when H .S.
Schneider came to breakfast on the rich
silver service.
The palnUna. worth
more than $500,000, was
stolen from the town
muae~m lOyean earlier.
Fw Adktiln
Call a
Daily Pmt
AD-VISOI
'642-5618
TDDAT'S CIDSSIDID fUllLI
ACROSS 71 Harden• 128 Warned 18 Jewish 97 June bee-
72 Valley 130 Extend over monlh tr es
I Aegean 73 Luzot1 132 Prot10.m 19 SO<lar's kin 98 Growing Ol.IC
I al and natove 184 Stall in l'TKJd 20Deel.,.e 99 Chilean
6 T urklll'I land 75 Challa 136 Siikworm 27 FOOllah worl(.,a
J'l\4tnure 76 Equipment 137 Droope 29 Not*t: 0. . 101 HOid dew
11 Alrlc.n 11 &Hmele 141 Aver-oe 33 Mo.bcity 103 Sun god
aeapott trlt>Mman 142Vnaefa 35 Genn-lree 104 MIUIWI
16 Cogwheels 78 Grow dim 144 lrllh excle-38 FunctlOfl 107 Pour forth
21 Mollusk 79 Grin mat Ion )9 Frigid 108 Slide
genu1 81 Holy Ilg 146 Cut 41 OMslot1 110 Flah part
22 Lyrle muse 82 Allot 148 StrOlce 43 Rugged 111 Tranll'llltl
23 Roman otfl. 83 Tobacco 149 Neuter pro-crest 113 Arabian city
clal users "°"" 45 Eple poetry 114 Dlacot'd
24 Moroccan 85 Armadlllo 150 Greek letter 47 Cnpple goddess
city 88 Cisterns 151 Recotd•nos 49 Mature 116 Ecology
25 Concerning 88 Storiea 154 Winter white 508om agey
26 Sacred bull 89 Observe 156 -Deum 52 Himalayan 117 Behold
28 Portal parts 90 War god 157 Prying bar mot1kshood 119 Winged
30 Mllecf 1 son 91 Counte-159 Draw out 54 Autos 121 Landed
31 COl'dage n~ 160 l.andtclape 55 Endures propertlet
fib« 92 T09of the 162 Not now 58 Girders 123 Dlacolor
32 S.lng pit heed 164 Boehl: Slang 57 Citizens 125 Spat11i.
34 0on11eva: Fr. 93 Blaze 165 Fr9'gtlt 59 Stage tare 127 Amerlean
36~ 95 Plot \rudla 61 -Adelel biochemist
meuur• 96 Manutac-1&e Comfort• 63UppetCNlt 12tWuh91
37~hed: 1ured 187 R\.tb out 64 Storms lightly
2word1 97Wldow 66 Youtha 130~·
39F-. 100 BroadWey &7 Mht Ver.
40 Clfcle. Var. pan DOWN &9Conaumet 131 Meter's
421on4e ... 101 Tul 72 Ch.tlenge mete
gulf 102 Impel 1 Ortillk di. 74 MOl'lndln 133 Lyric poem
44 Rage 104 Oodlel lecl dye 1358rant
49 Ribbed fllb· 105Y .. ;Sp 2 Fr1grent 76ANIQM 131 Wire eerv.
tie 106 Oftw end -relln 78 Entertain 139 POtt ...
4TA.ddttlonel 107 ~11 3 Ctllneile 79EJCttauat 140 Cubie
48 Lamp 100 I love: Latin mite t!O Avoid mMeUr•
51 Fet 110 Ceyton 4 Egg1 S2 -Harl 142 oam·e mate
$3 Picture me.uutes 5 Grape jelly 94 Geotoglc-1 143 Gref)e Jule»
"9nlfer 111 Office C4PY SA~ dlv.:GtMn· 145 8t&Z11141n
55 Utetary 112 Helmpoe 1 C«t9lat1"'9 land ~t
pe)'IMnt 1138'm!M a Oldhor11e 85~ 147 Rod
58 Reiten 115 Build• 9 Br81n: P.I 81 High card 150 VlgOr
80 Grtvet mon-117 Take car• 10~ 88Mltblll 152Chlmlcel
key of. 2word1 11 Layaway 90 Ewen though prefix
62 Comrnendo 1111 Merchant 12 Big luN 91 Reeembtn 153 Hla: Fr.
65Dlgrede 120 FatJgue 13 Kind of cen-92 Poker win-155 S.tUe
&eUQuld 122 Row dy nlngt 151Hefo't "ahl"
meaaur .. 123 Feels 14 Holy plllCe 931oe 1e 1 COl\'IPeN
&e Pitching 124 -and 15 AllalCed 1M Hemllt.eg pt
ttyte ClaB 16Smlle 85 Budlet 181Ctll ....
70 Scale not• 12e Aeoord 17 Lug 96 Mimic ~·
7 P.M. 'rO 9 P.M.
AIRPORTEA INN . IRVINE Admission Free _.Seating Umtted ·
DR1ttr1JNG FOR fREE CRUISE FOR 2 ON "SS. NORW' If\' ..
HARBOR TRAYn-176-1111 RSVP TMY!I. HOlllZOMI '104ml
folEWPOATER TRAVEL Ht 0310 TRAYll. COUNTRY Of' IRVtMI 111·1121
Fly~ to Acapulco in January.
And see 5 sunny ports in one week.
January is the ideal time for a
carefree cruise. And theres
room for you-if you book now.
Your week begins with a 'Sat-
urday fli$ht to Acapulco where .
our ship is your hotel You11
have 24 hours to explore Mexicos
most popular resort. Take in
the night life. beaches, boutiques,
jewelry shops. Then sail Sun-
day at sunset to 4 more ports.
If you prefer; you can sail from
Los AnaeJes to Acapulco. Either
way, you11 visit more ports than
any Gther cruise line ofers in 7
days. And inJanuary we11 get
you off to a flying start with a
credit for an air ticket from the
L.A. Aig>ort. It covers the low-
eslapplkable airfare.
'&las on a ''Love &al."
You11 sail on the Pacific Princess,
the most modem, luxurious ship
going. Proudly British-registered
~ ......
Enjoy unmatched service. A~
winning cuisine. And the finest
entertainment afloat.
Third person C1'U~ fw,e .•
StartingJanuary, you can take
along a third person free in your
stateroom. (Free aJr does not
apply to third person.)
Saturday Ply • Crulsn
~ ""'~ • Ltil All,JrJn -~ Jin 3 .la 17 j.w\ 10 ~
Ja3l Ja.t24 I•
Othrr Acapulco c:nuea ckpw\ e'ltt)' Satl.W'day
~May23 .·
I
I
I '
I I i
1 '
I I
,1
Mom, two daughters
career bull riders
LONG BEACH (AP) -lt'1
not easy beln& a mother when
your little &irl ts face-ftnt ID the
dirt and 1,500 pounds of •teak
wltb tbe borm lt1ll attacbed ii
baneliqdown CID her.
It'• at times like tbls lu Ed-moocbon reaJ111lden her rodeo
career and the role model abe
provided for her aeveo cblldraa.
At U. daqbt.r'Dawn.lta la tbe
youn1est of tbe 12 top-ranted
bull riden oo tbe all-women'•
profeaJonal rodeo· circuit. Sbe
faces some touah competitors when abe pats her 110 pounds
atop a 1,300-pound Brahma and
they fly into tbe arena.
•O• JIOR EXAMPLE. At 17,
.Jan F.d.moodaop ta the oldest of
the top 12 bull riders.
And last year's world cbam·
pion ln women's bull ridln.s was
ToD..)'a Tucker -llra. ICd-
moncboa.'1 »1 "Old 41••_.,.. and Dawnita'• balf ... llt.r.
AU u.r. arew up on lan'• father'• nncb ln Garden Valley,
Idaho, where the family pro-
duced rodem. Wb1le tbelr cl.ad
don that, the klda ride rodem
across the comitry and in Ma-
lco, 1pendtn1 the school year in
Ponder, Texu, 30 miles north of
Fort Worth.
'•IT'S JUST A SPO&T to w ,"
shrugs Mrs. Edmondson, a
srandmotber-to-be wbo baa been
in pro rodeo 25 years. "All my
kid• ride. They &tart out OD
calves when they're 2 or 3, tbeQ
work their way up to steen and
bulls."
Mrs. Edmondson, Dawnlta
a'nd Tonya squared off wttb nine
other women for the 1110
Cowgirls' Rodeo A.asociaUoo Na·
tlonal Championship Finals
here.
Wbeti. lt wu over, Mn. Ed·
mondloiJ bad spUt 3rd and 4th
place ID the bard>ack b~ rid·
lna. tieln& with another woman
but sbarin1 tbe prise money.
Tonya split lst and 2nd lD bnmc
and bull ridiq and left the rodeo
with world ebampioublpe ln
both nmta, said rodeo public
relationl director Rlvoa Nilloa.
DAWNITA'8 BULL WA8 ao
feisty lt maabed tbe elabtb·
rrac1er•1 te1 aaainst the ctsate
. and ~ her 1k1-h11b about
two ~da out of the 1ate.
Tonya wu rtdine with a brobsl
band and WU ftuq to the dirt
before the aix·aecood qualifytq
time wu up, but held on tbe
J(HJ0/0 elleetl1'e
follo1'ing nlpt.
Mn. Edmondson opted not to ride the bulls because her three
broken ribl hurt and sbe waa
afraid further injury would
jeopantbe ber chances ln tbe
barebllek bronc ftnals.
Not tbat mllbape are anytbina
new tober.
"You're talldb' to the wreck ol
the rodeo cireult, boaeJ' •• lbe
smiled palnlul.ly.
BSR CHEEKBONE 18
broken, tbe result of an AUl\Wt
encounter with an a111ry bull.
Sile allo suffered broken ria., a
collapaecl luna, a broken col-
larbone and an injured back
when tbe bull stomped on ber.
Pain didn't stop ber from ty-
i na for third place ln the
weekead barebaci bronc cbam·
ploutdps, bowner. Too1a wu
umeid Wiit daampi°'1 ID Uaat event ilnd retained tier title bl
bUll i1dlDi u well.
Wben tbe day'• rodeol.nl ii o•er, ToQya ..,., "We 10 ~.
wub up, cbaqe our clotbea and
10 dandn1. TbeD we come bome
and 1et in a hot tub for a couple
of boun. Or a j•cuui if we can
ft.ad one."
Tbetr biaest fear in the ring
is foreadlotber.
WHEN BER MOTHER ta ln
the rtna. "I'm scared all the
time," D•wnita aays. "Especial-
ly after watchlna her get hurt in
rodeo .after rodeo.''
Mrs. Edmondson says her
stomach eomenaults when her
&irla are on top of one of tbe
snortinl beasts about to charge
from tbe cbute.
•'If tbey were scared, I
wouldn't allow it," 1be says.
"But aa Ion.a u they keep a
clear bead, tbel'e'• oot gotnc to
be any aerioul injury.
•'Sure, everytlme there's a
bull lome ln the rt.na. there's
dan1er." lbe admits. "They can
make strawberries out of you.."
•a& EDllONDSON plans to
live tbe aport UP "wben I 1et too old. lk& I haven't lotten there
yet."
Tonya Udnkl lbe'll probably
10 lnto aemi-i'edi'emeot onee lbe
marriet tlllt 7ear. but "if I have
kids, I'd let them do It if they
wanted to."
Dawalta ii a bit more skep-
tical.
"I'd hope there WOuld be bet-
ter tblnp for them to do,'' lbe
... tus.
TM fltwffnp wen presented to
tbe ADMrlcan Alaoci1tloo of
Blood Banlc1 meetla1 In Wu~.
CMV lnf«:tlou are eatlmat.ed
to iatruct..about u.soo, or 7.:5 Jiii'·
cent, ol thi snmature kafaau
bOra Hdl -,;.-;_in the Uillted Statea. 'l1le ·like Yinll CM
cauae INleumonla, b1p1titJ1,
lae.mOlntc aMmia •nd' otbet'
eoan,UcitiOM IDd poeatllJ'-.
contribUte IO de• .. ..ul ,.
t.rdatloia aDd ............
IT 11 OftSN true= froqa ._.... lnCKbierl ............. . ••a.tallltilOVff_ ...... ~~II !Mr,:;trr:lrt
Carl ~. oee Of Ull ,..
NUa.11
•
Hidden
..,.,. C*M'f . ~callT••. ----· l ~ _ I, 0 •r• •I'll .., .. 11111"'*" ~ 87Ulie...aaWPrw , .. _,,..._,.
The tame lnflatloa tb.at ""' ... Mn. 0:-.!-~ 1hrlnb '10W'. dollars boolta your ,.....,, • . '
tax blll. Jt'1 a problem known•.-. . .,.. '"o.:_•~ ..,. "tax bracket creep " hd tberi "'-~ ... , ' la · ''°Wlnl •&U>POrt tor a pioalble IN· ..o Mrt. °"""' K•ltll, ... .1.-:aolut!On t6at wOuJd link tp ~ C»tlltlt .... ~.
to the COit of UYiq. .... Md-..~-°""· IM.IWft
Tbe ffODOmJc 9acka1e pro-~ ..... 11--.n
POHd bY Rooald Requ du:rta; =·11t9111 lflMr&, ......, &Mltllei, o-the prt11tdentJ8.l campialp, ln· • • ........,. cludet aueb a plu. It'• called m.: ,., .--.. ic~ aM1111, ....,...,
d -~•--: -..Cll,tfl'I e-uuu. Mr. •IMI Mrt. "•'Pit H•lllerl•l.t,
You p,obabl)' suffer ftom tbe ""''•"1••·• diffue ol "bracket creep'' -~~-:''c""' 1.1""••· Hen lf ;,.ou'tt never beard tho *·.,..-... o.r-, WN!fleld. u.-
plir.-e befon. It· •trik• wbeii ._ ... tlrl ....._,
JOU let a ra!M. Y~'re eanUna Ml. N Mn.. .IMW fl•llll. Jt., San
more, but )'OV•re pUQed Into • ~.-=. ...... w. bl~ tu bracket._.~ JOU "oun~ NU8YTH•••
combl.M the lnereiaeil tu bite •· _-.. C:-... ':w. ,._...,. with UM cleereaaed value of 10UJ' va1...,,t1rt dollars and deduc:tioa.a due to ln-IN._.-... o.v1c1 -. .... c.r-
fiation, your purcbuln& power ::.~-:,... RICt\lnl c.1r_...., drone. . · 1m11e, t1rt -Mr. Incl Mn. SWwM SUtMl1•ftd,
Hlfflt"'91M 8Ncll, f111
VN'l'IL NOW, lawmaken have _.._" tried to deal with the pl"Oblem bJ :i •llCI Mn. IC.-.._, lrvlM,
periodic tu cuta, tailored to *. _. Mra. ic• "-«ce. "--'
cban•es lD tbe economy and 11Hct1.o•r1 Odllllr•
aimed at belplnc particularly Mr. •• -T ... .., T.-,ior. c:.or-bard-bit aroupe of people. ... Mw,...,
Du ri n I tbe camp a I 1n, =~.":.,. MrL Mtc.llH• "'"'"'· c:o.u /
however, Rea1an said there :'; •11111 Mra. W•YM Y•I. 1rv1M,
Should be a Cb&DI• in tbe tu Mr. HCI Mrt.. Cr•to C..rro, H11t1t·
1y1te.m ~ He promlled a cut ~ 1"''°" e.a..::_ 11 of 30 percent ln IDcllTidual tu Mr •• _. .... Herrv .._11, o-rates, spread over three years. Point. 1111
A't ... __ _. _..that ti .. _ ·-'d Mr. alld Mn,. Gr119""Mt O.r mOfll, wn:o _..."' me,~._ , ,._._,"v ..... ,..,
taxes 1bould be lndexed to end Mr. aftel .... 0-,,. """'· "-"" "bracket creep." a..cll, 11" Od9w n
Reasan baa not liven any de-*· •ncl Mn..-a.-. c..1e
tails of bow bla plan would work. ~~Mra. wiu iam .. _.. c.1e In general, however, indention Mew,..., systems link tu brackets, de-., . ...,. Mrt. Edwlrl ~. """'· ~._,,_...,
duction1 and exemptions to Mr. --.. Wln'efl 9Mtlft, c.i.
some standard measure ol lnfla· -· oor tton llke lbe Comumer Price :,; --.. M1«.e ll'TK~. ,,.,.,..,
Index. If tbe rm of ln.flatioa ta Mr._.-..~~""· c.u 12 percent, for example, tbe Meu,0111
•tandard deductiGD aoea up 12 IN. •nd ... -Dl'OUIMS. """'' ... ton llMCll.beot percent. You don't move into a Mr •• n11-.. Ted -..nm.,._, bi&her tu braetet unless your t•tn v.11ey,.,,.. CkalllWM earninp increue by more than IN. _, Mra. J-..,.....lfto, s..
the rate ol lnOattoa. .1-~-o1r1 Mr. aid MrL HMf'lloft Ma,.11, COiie
.. INDDATION SlllPLY re-
quires the iovemment to play
fair with tbe taxpayers," said
the Advisory CommiaaiOD OD In·
teraovemmental Relations, a
bipartisan oraanisatton
establlshed by Consreu in Ull58.
The Tu Foundation Inc., a re-
search 1roup In Waablniton,
D.C., lllued a report W. year
Oil lnflatkm'• effed °" diYldUal tues. The foundatioD baled ill
calculatiom OD an lnflatiOD rate
of 13.S peJU!llt -a little b.l.a'b8r
than tbe current rate.
The foundalklo fOUDd a family
of four with a $20,000 lncome
tbat i.ncreued by 14.S percent to
$22,900 would actually lose mo
ln purcbaaln& power. The
family'• bill for Social _Secu:rlty
and federal income ~es would
go up by $'180. After taxes, the
$22,900 lncome would •brink to
$22,120. And after inflation, it
would be wo.rtb only $18, 130.
ANOTHER RESEARCH
aroup, tbe Conference Board, re-
cently said that "bracket creep"
add.a 3 percent to 4 percent a
year to the midd.le·lncome real
tax burden of American.a.
"It can l>e arped that tbla re-
lentless creepin1 ii tuation
without autboriution, .. •aid Fa·
blan Linden, a spokesman for
the buatneu-spomored IJ'OUP.
"Bracket creep" provides a
bonua for tbe federal 1overn·
meat : Revenues Increase
without an.y cbanae in the law.
The Ccmareaional Bud.let Offtee
estimated ln September that
becaute al lnflatkm, the IOVenl·
ment will collect about S22
billion utra ln tax• in Im.
Church OKs
prayer. book
• • revisions
LONDON (AP) -Tbe Cburda
ol EnSland bu pubU1bed u
alternative prayer bOOt, ud
1a111e tndltloDallatil are llC:Cm-18' tbe Cbattb of all uafoqlya.
bl• tNlpua •tal.Dit t.he_ Poetr7
of the 111-:old Boot OI Com-
mon PrQW.
~ .Alternative Semce Boe*
1980, the me ol wbleh la not com-
ou laon. cbaa1•• .. thy•• to 1.,our,•i aDd tborUm .. Ii" U1
lb.la 411" to "II" w today."
uour ti"elpuNS .. becc>ma ''Our
1tn1," ana 11Fot nu.. 11 tbe
ldnrdom, the power and the
1lof1" becomH .. For tb•
klnidom. the r••r and tbe 11011 ant youra. • •
JDr, RGblcl Juper. dia °'-
:YM md Mtld at the UtUflicaJ
eomm...._ Whldl •cliOIMd tbl
book, dtfud•d It• lDodern
:Sa&Utb ad ~ 011t lM
..-Of Com.,. :Prayer ea .......... ., ... .,, .. ~ .................... ... .,-.., ,,,.._ uw • ·aeeo
etta"1• si" Iii die oW toe* -a ..... ....., ........... ......... ..d} .. ~L HO. 11ah 1IDI fl ............
-... ..,., M1. _, MrL Pwkll Dely, """'· lnoteto llMdl,..., Mr. •11111 Mn. DaNllcl ~. c.u ..........
l'f . .IOlll,.. .... TAL. ......
IN. •1111 MrL ~ Sml.ley, fl-. I.Mn v.u.r, olri OCll&w1
MK. IN flo1r'I. """"8y 0.vla, Hllllt· ~llMdl.olrl --. ..
Mr. -flo1r'I. M1CN1 IA V ...... HuMlllflltl IMdl. 91'1 ._ ..
Mr, -MrL ,_....., Tllktlt. Hli!ftt· ..... ...,.,.,,..
O&tl&lr'I
MK. -Mrt. Gery~-.,,,,,,., ...
OCllMrtl Mr. --I.wry...-..~ Val...,,lllt1 Od1Mr2S
Mr •tld Mra. Teny CT ........ C.le -. .,,.. O&tl&lrl1
"". -Mn. Wiiii.ti ""-· "-· 1tr1
TBS ftmUf A ROPB'l'llAT U ..... were
elected, the threat to eut off ... llllWoil
federal iranu to califond.a woaid ·~ .,. utted.
For the federal Clean Afr Act nqalrW Qaly
tbat states and reoons·aet to brlal ...... al alr
pollution ln line witb .~ Mt bJ c.o..rw.
The law dOelu't tell 1tates bOw to Kt; U. ~
Environmental Protee· ---SOUl'H,_...~-E-R_N __ Uon Afency laat done
CALIFORNIA tbat.
Focus . And juat becauH
ma.t GC.ber atatea have --------meekly fallen into line
and allowed imposition of annual lupeetioDI
doe1n't mean Califol'Dia necesurll1 lbust do tbe
aame thine, unless tbe EPA foreee1t to.
Hypnosis
aid to t
I Under Carter, there WU DO quation tbat the
EPA would act. It imposed a ban oa comtnaetion
of pollution-causing factorl• lut year. And tt baa
already publlabed in tbe Federal Rq1ater iu ln·
tentloo to embargo federal hilbway and awer
funds \Dltll California sets up an annual lmpectioa
police
NEW YORK (AP) r~
Hypnoai1 11 "arowbla ~~
like wildfire" u a ...,
technique in police 'Wort
and will soon be a
common tool for solvin&
white-collar crimes,
says tbe fcx.mder of tbe
New York Police ~
Department '1 hypna.ta
plan. ·
: BVT WHAT WILL TBB EPA"do under
Rea1an? No one can be 1ure wbat It milbt do,
slnce no one knows just yet wbo wl1l be~ It.
But there is no question tbat Rea1an ll
semitlve 4" the wants of Callfonda drt•ers, wbo
have always provided him with Im political bue.
When be waa aovernor, Beaaan nulled ln tbe
debate, be faced two sltuatlom almllar to today's.
Just after the Clean Air Act was peaed ln the
early 1.t'10s the EPA propoMld a ltltct ratlonlnl
plan for Cdfornia, one wblcb woakt haft cut drtv·
lna mileage to 90 percent tbroqbout tbe state.
Rea1an faced down the EPA OD tbat oae, H)'ine
the state would refuse to cooperate even if lt
meant Jail for bim.
A YU& OR so I.ATE&. tbe EPA mandated
"parting manaaement plans" wbicb would haYe
allowed unlimited drivln1, but forbedt paridq
moat cars in bulinesa areu.
.U be accurately recalled ln the pn-eleeUon
debate, Rea1an eventually cooYt.aeed eon,,.a to
scotch both ideal.
How likely ls be to allow ~ to foree a
new federal acbeme on a reluelaDt Cdfnla?
Tbls uncertainty now mu. puaqe of an an·
nual lmpectioo meuure durtna December'• brief
le&lslati•e aeuion far leu Uke1J than it would
have been if Carter had won.
But tbe adwc:ates of amwaJ lnlpedioe ha•e
one card left to play, "en tf a ...........,.na.d
EPA administrator revened btl -~·· ac-tlom. That ii the courts.
8TATE--ef'Pla.AL8 tidED '1"1118 fall to &et
the coarta to order the EPA to II.ft tu tllreat
•&•inst calilomia. But tbelr plea WM ftnalb' cle-
nied by U.S. Suprer;ne Comt .Justice WUBam H.
Rehnquist, the high coart'a 1 ...... ailhoeate ol
1tate'1 rigbta.
U a Reagan administration wen to beck down
oo the threats made by Carter appamteel, dean
air advocates would be certain to NaOrt to
lawaui,!a. Abdtbeoutcomethenlaooteuytopndiet.
For California, tben, the lte.,an Yictory
means more wcertainty ln the at.ate'• IMlt pnaa-
ing legislative and environmental d.llput.e.
But the Reagan victory also meam aomet.bl.n1
else to the state: No itne will be able UJ lonler to
say the federal Administration la iDMDalUve to or
lacks knowled&e of state ilsma, an aceuaation fre-
quenUy burled at Carter's iovernment.
r Elm ta a columftid baaed tit Saito llordca).
unit. I
Charles Dlgaeet, a
retired serae•:!u.!,old the annual conv of
tbe Asaociatt~to Advance Eth cal
Hypoosb that b ls
ta puticulariy valuable
ln white-collar c:a·sea
because it cc ~ver
information trom
co,nvenatloal beld lcma
•10. n
THE ftllB element as important ln 1ucb ., ....
becauae yun oftelll pau
between the crime and
the lndictm~ be ,.uld. ••In wblte·c8Jlar
crlme, you're aAno1t
alway• lookinf! for
1ometbin1 that
ao m eboct1 1a·td , •'
Dl1&ett 1aid. -« DIUett. wbo -reqen-...,dJ._
retlr~ al'te~an wttb tbe twee. ed
the city's b unit
In October 1978 after
taJdn1 several cdiaraea
to learn tbe tecba:lque.
J BB SAID lb.ft a typical 1es1loD would
Jut 1\11to3 houri~ be
conducted i~1 ~~e
preHDCe ol tbe deceeuve
on the cue and a friend
or rel•tlve of the subject, if req~.
Hypnosis raultdd In
lead• in 75 percent tOf the
casea in wblch it1 was
uaed, be •ald. and at last
count, approx.ima~ly 1
percent of the t'asea
were solved tbrouCh use
of the tedmlq~. .J
Puhlleatloas availaltle I
Starting. over at 27? ,
BJ IOYCE L KENNEDY
Dear JoJee: ra ZT. la I& ....... •
at.an a..., eareer'f 1 •• • , s • Ill ......,. ele...ta.rJ' e lie ,.,. •
.... ._ Clllese-leftl career. ~
•DJ q11d' , I ... &e .... ,. J
eup&ftllawlalald ... ,. .. .._.
pan.time. 1 a• ••...W. Ila" ewe
c•llchea ud e.--affenl • .... werUq.J__.llelp.
-S.A.S., Painesftlle, Obio
Ellbl new publlcatJona, abOat a
doaen pa1e1 eacb, wlll lntere1t
wameo who would llke to ao back to .......
AIUllA_. tll• publltatlon are
~tit cOl1lpl &Dd uahwatt:IM u a -.,·,o(........., tbe 1~.
tlou to laDcmlla lleer>Dlmodatklm for
the •pedal ..... ol returnen, tbe ID-
div ldual woman .•ill find tb•
material help(\11 ln tnolriDI wta.t la .. au.ble and bOw to dUl wltb tn.
1UbAlclM.
Part ol a Jaraer Hrlea. the DQblle.
tlOIJI wet'e deftlpped with fedlral ...
MarU fUDdl by tlMt WOllW!l'I
eD1rJ PrOjeCt: •
( C4REERS
5 ... Obtal DIDI • De•r••:
AlternatlH OptJona" la a lta.nd7
primer for uadentandins, DOD·
traditional approach• to C9ll•••
IUCb .. weekend cl..... an4 olf-
campUI leaminl· •. ··•An·Tlll• 8'1'VJ)Y-• ublaiDI
wl11 atudenta wbo can't 10 full~
to 1ehiool have =•ma ln'obblntn1 ftnaDdal aid. advanc.d •Wd.J
aad fladlni IOIDeoH to mind ...
tblldrm. " 1. ''JleCr7 Women IQ ~ Scbool" not. dlat 1cb0ol ~
ma1 npeneace trouble• r~alq
from adml11lona to fhldl•I feUoftblpa. • O
1. "SUppor\ S.rnces: fte..eDU'J
Womm Need them TCM>" i:dntl out
Uaat llke 10UDlel' 1tUdeifb, Ubn
.om IDQ Deed bioUllq, '~'-' or IUidliilt emp)oy1Dat Mril •
well aa medtul lnauranc •Hd tr~. I
JOIN
~
NEW
BUSINESSMEN
Contact the DAILY
PILOT for lnformeUon
regarding the cottnty
r•qulrementa for
ualng a Flctltloua
BualneuNa~.
842-432i
EXT. 332
Now You
Can
Sell
More
~ftb Dally Piiot
PENNY PINCHER
~s sun only 112.
3 lines for 2 days
onl~ Sl a day, 34c a
hne
Advertise one o r
more items valued
up to SIOO Each
add 111on•ll ltn~ 1s
on I\ 60c for the t" o da~ s Sorr~ no
commerc 1al ads
allo"ed Cha r ge
Your Penn\ Pincher
Ad or use ~our
Bank Amer1card
Visa or Mastercard
For more mformat1on
and to place your ad call
THE FASTEST GROWING
REAL ESTATE COMPANY
IN NEWPORT BEACH AND
RANCHO MIRAGE J
ith dramatic increases in sales volume at botb loca·
ions we're looking for aggressive, fllll·time high quali·
y real estate agents.
• COrporate Plaza, Newport Beach
Rancho Lot Palm8' Shopping Center, Rancho Mirage
e back our ~pie Witt\:
• A1greasive Marketing ~ama
• N~w ComJ>UteriZed f~ programs
• Creative Minaaement
~ • lo·HouM escrow service
• Pro~rty Management
• Generous Aaent Comm.lsalon Sp}.lta
CONVERSION 01<
180 "Wuts in prime upper back-bay
location. 11 and 2 bdrms.. large c~ubbouse and pool. Close to
employment and at an affordable
price. $11, 700,000 possibility of
exchange. ...
ROM THI
STOU
OCEANFRONT DUPLEX
Two 3 Bdrm units. Newly
redecorated. Creative terms
available. $550.000.
OPEN ON UDO SAT/SUN 1-5
213 Via Conlo•a A warm and welcoming 5 Bdrm
home. 45 ' patio. family rm.
fireplace. roof deck. $485,000.
200Q Weat Balboa Blvd.
Newport Beach 875-1711
CORONA DEL MAR
Large duplex with Bay and Ocean
Views just listed for sale. 3 bdrms.
& den owner's unit. plus 3 bdrm.
rental unit. both with views.
Attractive terms to qualified buyer.
Full price $389,500.
HY LINGO
REAL ESTATE?
~s an experienced real
estate professional you can
appreciate the advantages
on a good office location. At
LINGO REAL aTATE our
central office aites ln every ·
coastal city from Newport
Beach to san Clemente live
you and your cllen~a dJrect •'coastal conneetian' • to the
area'• Prime properties. Our
Newport Beach Office,
con venlenUy lo ted in .
Newport Center, Just
mJnytes to tbe 1ur
commUnlUee of Colta Me.a,
Irvb'ie and Santa Ana. As thta ~ynamlc company
coniliiues to pow and break
all aalea volume records ~
can becom a part Of ttiis
lmPortant team effort. Does
this IOurld like the type of
orQanlzation )'OU 'Ve been
looklftl foct If 10, contact
Noel JOtm.soti, ~·7020, for a
confidential interview. ' ...
•
. .
HARBOR RIDGE CREST
Lovely 3 bedroom. 2~ bath condo,
with LOFT and private courtyard
entry. View decks. Woodburning
fireplace. Upgraded carpeting
thruout. $479.000.
RCTaylorCo
6 40 -9900
REAL ESTATE
JASMINE CREEK
OCEAN VlEW
Spacious single level 3 Br 2 Ba.
Plan 3, has been totally upgraded
and ready for immed. occup. Less
than 2 yrs old Lush landscaping.
Enjoy comm pool. tennis and
privacy of guarded gate Offered at
$365.000. Fee Call Arhss Kirschmer
for details.
SAM CLEMENTE
OCEAN VIEW
Cozy, upgraded two-story. Four
Bdrms. f am rm. 2 f rplcs. and room
for spa. Offered at $122.900. Call
Jeri Hunt to see.
2043 Weatclff Drl••· W...206
.... ..,... .... '7141631-7600 •
macnab /.Irvine
realty
A IUSllDtAllY Ot'
THI ntYU~I COMl'ANY
NIW usnNG -IAYSHOllSI New coppe_r olumbln&! New roof!
New carpet! Ready for a new
family!! Great location. near
prl vate )beaches ln security gated
com•unity. 3BR. 2 bath. family &
djning rm. home w/large sunny
patio. Lg. assumable loan. S3'l5.000
leasehold. OPEN SUN. 12-4:30 2642
CIRCLE DR.
DOMA CHICHESTER 642-1235
RCTaylor Co
640 C)C)00
PRICE REDUCTION
6 UNITS IN THE BLUFFS
Large very private owner's home
plus 5 other units to lease. Owner's
unit (approx 2300 sq ft) has 4
bedrooms. 3 baths. living room.
dining room. Other units consist of
one 3 Bdrm and four 2 Br, 2~ Ba.
Each has two car enclosed garage.
Owner will consider AITD at gr-;,
Asking $769.500.
Barrett ~alty
~gister
60' OM THI IAY
With. pier for large boat. Beautiful
view, looking out over sandy beach.
Immaculate 3 Bdrm, den, dining
room with pool in enclosed patio.
New kitchen, high ceilings, top con·
dition. $&&.S,000 leasehold.
135 ..................... O,..S-1·1
CLIFF HAVB4
Spacious custom home plus view. 2
Bdrms. dining room and upstairs
sitting room with view. Lovely patio and gardens. $285,000.
225 .......... "' 0,.. -1-1
FllSH AND DllJCIOUS
Vacant Dover Shores. Ready for the
family with excellent tastes, wbo
want excellent neighborhood and
who need spacious 5 Bdrm home.
$389,500, price includes land.
1412 .wt~·:.. o,. s. ,_,
WOODlllDM TO~
Award wil)Jl.ing model with all the
refinement of fine decorating.
Spacious 3 Bdrms and larJ(e yard. As~umable loan . Reduce<I to
$159,000.
'' w. ,. ~ '"· 0,.. s.. ....
HAllOll Y11W HOMIS
One of the market's better buys in
this stylish community. 4 Bdrms,
fee land, on the greenbelt, near
community pool. ;
ftJO Pl C...,. Ml 0,.. s.t/S. 1..S
WISTCUflJ CHAaMll
AbOu.nds with warmth and style and
privacy. Beautifully decorated 3
Bdrm, light and alry. 1249.SOO.
1100 C...w•'.. 0,.. S.. l·I
ONN IN BAY8HORES a BR. Famlty room home. It'• re-
mod el e d • r o I ands ca P.e d &
replumbed. A CloU house. 1299,000.
See Lucy Rose At2551 VISTA DR ..
OllEN IN EAITBUJfF
3 BR. Family and Dininc rooms.
Across from park. $225,000. See
Elaine Fournier At 2838
BASSWOOD
OPEN IN TURTl.EROCK VISTA
Gorgeous view. 4 BR. FR .
Waldorf's finest model. Exceptional
decor. Private covered patio.
$299,000. See Barbara Ballmann at
12 VALLEY VIEW
OPEN IN THE BLUFFS
Lovely 4 BR. 3 B.A \\"Guadalupe".
Near pool 4'~ \\ \. .?Its. $219,500.
See Maggie~ .... n At 2124 VISTA
LAREDO
TRIMMING DOWN
Cut in size, but quality and value
prevail in Bluffs 2 bedroom, one
bath efficient home. Lovely green-
belt location. Sl45,000.
BAY8HORE DRIVE
Charm galore in this perfect 3 B.R. + den family home. Enjoy private
area with 2 sandy beaches. Swim-
ming & boating facilities. $t,50,000.
OCEANFRONT -LAGUNA
Elegance. Architectural integrity
and the beauty and excitement of
the ocean are combined in this 2
master suite home. From the
serene gardens to the roaring surf,
it's an experience, $1,700,000.
SURE ••. YOU'LL LOVE THIS Bright. fresh & c onveniently
located 4 BR. 2~ bath one story
POOL home in WestcUff. ft features
sloped beam ceilings. 2 fireplaces.
separate dining & family rooms.
$375,500.
UDO ISLE -POOL
Rich woods. imported tile & beam
ceilings. set the mood for this
spacious & light 6 bdrrns. 5 bath
~ome on 70' lot. Gourmet kitchen,
family room. formal dining room &
extended living room overlooking
s unny patios & pool. Attractive
financing. $825,000.
BACK BAY ESTATE
On prestigious Mesa Drive. 3 horse
E-Z care stable. Beautifully dec-
orated, including new gourmet
kitchen. Big dining area. Overnite
loft. 2 big bedrooms + cozy den.
.$335,000.
DRAMATIC BAYFRONT
With TWO boat slips. Unbelievable
bay view. Newer custom designed 4
BR. + Family and Dining Rooms.
Watch the sunsets on large inviting
patio. $1,895,000.
OCEAN a JETTY VIEW Lovely open California style home.
Gated entrance. 3 BR. charming
den & Fam. Rm. Lrg patio with
circular pool. Short walk to private
beach. Perfect lot for expansion.
$649,000 inl:Judfng the land in
Cameo Shores.
FINE UVINQ ON UDO 181.E
Beautifully decorated. Extra large
rooms & garden sun deck. 5 BR. 4
BA. Den & dining room. Priced to
sell at $472,500.
PERPe'TUAL VACATION
ON._,.NDAl&E
Luxuriously crafted 5 BR. on turn·
Ina basin with pier & aUp for large
yacht. 4 marble & brick ftreplacea, ·~ baths, paneled aen. Stunnin& master suite. lnvitln1 patios.
12,475,000.
PENINSULA UYFRQNJ1
Only home on the market in thla ex-
clusive bay location. OWiDlnl
Pier slip·" wide sandy beach. Large
lot behind with aouble 1araae.
$2,100,000.
I ..
Oftl JOIAY 1·5 ••.av,..,,,.._~.,..., •MAn NOMI a IMC0 .. 1171. ..
407 VI TA SUERTE, a premium , Prime East Calta K • location near
location overlookln1 ma••ive · 21st Ir Tustin Ave. You wU1 I0¥9 Uill
rreenbe}t &r near by 1parkllng J>OOJ, I charm.Ina deparate 2 Bdrm bOme of
Lovely decor in Popular tones & hues. ~wood siding on wide lot, plus two•
Kure ''Wrap.around'' patio. Ottered at I 2·Bdrm income units. A beautiful
122•. 750. . woodsy private patlo w /BBQ and buae
expansive spa. Quiet •. , ~aceful It JllltU-..-c.wta..._. I pi~haresque. Call for appointment. J ... I le; ........ SIM,000 •
2318 VISTA HOG"AR choice "end DCWll lll~WIW.•lf.oto
unit." Dramatic trl-leveJ home. Owner 'Will carry loan of 75% of
Adjacent to pool. Near neW condition. purchase price at 12Y.a% Interest!
Many UMJ'ades totally fresh & clean. Lovely Ivan Wells 4 · BR home with ' I pool & spa oo the view ltde. Fam rm,
,..., ..._ -4 ... J le formal diDina + bup atrium entry
2912 QUEDADA -spacious townhome, with skylight & travertine noor.· View
end unit on cul·de-sac street. EnUrely I of the bay, Newport Ctr U1bta &
decorated & available for immediate I mountains. A treat investment & move-in. 1'YOU OWN THE LAND." great financing. See today!
At $260.000 (owner will assist in 16JOMLAXY D& WjSm IJ:JO.I
financing>.
PECTACULAR BA YFRONT
This sophisticated 3-sty has been
thoughtfully restored to appeal to
the most discerning. The ground
level includes a dramatic entry.
living rm with frplc, bay view
dining. kitchen overlooking garden
patio. and 3 car garage. Four
bedroom suites. study. and laundry
occupy the 2nd floor. The mstr
suite. with its romantic greenhouse
spa is a Shangri-la -the entire 3rd
floor with unsurpassed vistas of bay
coastline and nostalgic pavillion.
The brick terrace and green lawn
descends to a large private pier and
float. $1,875,000. Fee. Please call
Polly Johnston for appt.
zoo w..tclft ..,.. ... we. 206
.... ,... .... 11141 '31-J600
HA.PPIMISS IS A ..,._
1 and for only $179,500. A beautifully.
well cared for 2 Bedroom & den.
Oversized closets & 2 baths. Workshop ore garage & room for everybody on
this 52 'xl30' lot. Light. bright &
happy. Come see it. $179,500.
MOUNl'AIN TOP HOMI
AUOWHIA.D-SMOW YAUIY
A beautiful award-winning home on
top of the world. Ski in the ~inter.
swim in the summer & enjoy this
Qutstanding 3 bedroom home for all
seasons. Only $96,500.
W1SL1Y M. TA YLOI CO.. llALTOaS
2111S.J11;? .......
NIWPOllT c;IMT9. M.L 644-49 I 0
VIEW VIEW VIEW
1601 .... S IOAD
Ol'9t SAT/SUNDAY 1-1
No expense spared in this
completely rebuilt home with 4
spacious Bdrm suites, fam rm,
formal din, breakfast ~t kitchen
to deliaht the most pamcular 3
f rplcs, 'brick patio, viewing decb,
3 car garage. Breatbtaldnl vtew1
.of bay, ocean and spectacular
sunsets. Too many ... amenWes to
list. Must be seen. $125,000 fee .
PA.UL SNPllO 6Jl-4JOO
Spectacular
8,000 sq. ft.
Mansion
HIGH ON A IDIL ON ALMOST i ACRE
M.t.GNIFICENTI It standl 8'one tn •wand ._ctilng for eiccellencll. This homt 1s the epitomt of grael· ne. in architecture. pllnning. Mttlng lfld g.-Wldlur Ind reflect.a uncoi11pnliilln"Q llOCCJil'1>fiahnwnt 1n
fine finlstung, quality and ~ woriuranahip. It It evident. under the ~ m::rutiny, that cost was MCOndary to the~ of psteaion
t".r,· Into • spectKul• "9nllon, through gllnt columns of •tone. ""911f1ulty hued togMtw by the ~ maaons. Open huge. hind Clfwd nhog9ny doorl frarred by an __,,.,,. ttlined g'-"1Urlll
1.-· high and 1"' wide, and welk mto • pel•lll entry hell 38' long. lined With t-.,y IOlld Olk aown
moulding. and Crowned with an elegant 18 light IOlld ~ chandallier
You'll enjoy a marwloul k1~f.-nily room with lpedacul• ~ from we1y com.. e_., corw.
nt«Ml9 you could dreem of. and ,,.,,., SoOd Olk cablneta. walls Ind ceiling ~ngly hand "*•
and flnlahed by hand to rW!rtblw fine fwnttura Tt.w la allO a_., apedal brldl fl,...._ • ~81Tic tlle
Ind brlcit bullHn barbecue, Ind two 1-V-blly windows.
The living room le 22'JC30' with flnaly flnflhed bMmad ceiling, crown l't'l>Utdlnga lfld. huge French wtn-
dowa and doors that open up• llWMPfl'IO PMOriure ot Niia. lky. llghls and rooftopa
Another apeclal tutin Is .. enonnoia 1ea9iiltlon room with • huge ltOf'9 flnip!ace, and -oaJn, 11¥8111 ot
Frwndl doorl and wlncbw "*'"'ng ,_anding vt.ws In nwny dfrectlof-. Undlr11Nth the rcraetlon
room, guwded by a Mlldlom9 hlndcawd mahogat!y door 11 • 20'JC30' billiard rooml#fne calw with
Nltlc WOOd ~ama and open to lmlglNlllw dllccJi 11ttog ldlea Ind \W.
The 1200 equare toot nwlllr ~ aite la the ultimate In comfort. prtvecy and ~. A f9Qlll
hidaaMy tor the me..,. Of th9 "*'lion The ~ _... t..wr. a receMCI. h9\ ClillnQ llCCllfrt8d
by 1n exqulalt• chandlll* The __.. N1Mn titting room h8a • ""'9IM tlOor-tO-OtJling ICone
tnplace on one ent1,. Wiii, and Of*ll out to a .,_.,lA, ~ outdOor ~ to ~to v. uniqu... ,_ ot this mo1t ~ bedroom. n.. .. two mammoth Mldlobes and two I~ ~
blithl, one with a Roman u end anohW Wltt11n I' "'" thowlr.
Other grest emenlt ... lnduda 3 l...ennax centnl air <10odlaor11ng ~ aeourtty ~ Touchplaa light•
Ing and Intercom, built-in vecuum. CulllQlw'! eoft watar. all bllittwooml With .....,..ntld poroetaln bowllt
and faucet1 by Sheri.~. and mwfl ..o~
~ ll\11 m&gnlflCenl e.US. ~ r'lllMd ,_ th9 top of a hill, M tht ~encl Of a~ roed Ind la.,,..
roundlJd by tome of ttw fl,_ f'llidlral In 0r,.. ~. The lit9 la atmo.t one ac:n with room ttrr
ttnnl• court.,,~ h~ H Is~ to Include l'ftllllMI wn>uO'-Iron g-. wHcti.,. ouerdld Cir• de.ct clrcutt?•rnera. ~ drt~ and~ ..,.columne 111 wound hi ~w.
I
..
' .,_USM ~y ISTA.111 °"9M SUN l-4:JO P.M. I
DIHWOOOt Que of the finest cwitOm homes on the golf
course! SBRS (each w/bath> formal dinin& family
rm. 4 fplcs. wine rm & study. Master. suite w/fplc and
wet bar. $2',000,000. Lynne Valentine &M-C200. (Q-34 >
HA.DY fOlt THI C ... STMAS PAIADI? This 2BR. 2 bath
condo w /4fJ' of w•ter frootage & spacious living &
dining areas wiU be your front row seat! $535.000 -a
great buy! Martha Macnab 642-8235. OPEN SAT/SUN
1·4:30 P.M. 1223 BAYSIDE DRIVE. <Q·M >
CUSTOM IA YflllOMT TOWNMOUSll 2 large terraces
view fabulous Newport Harbor 3BRS .. 3 baths, walk-in
bar French doors & windows. 2 marble fplcs. high
ceilings, nearly 3000 sq. ft. of classic elegance. $965.000
incl. land. Cathy Schweickert 642-8235. (Q-36)
•IGAMT IA.YRlOMT -COMPLITI NIYACY Corona del
Mar estate tucked away ii1 exclusive community
w/fabulous bay VIEW. Antique glass . Baldwin
hardware. Hardwood floors. 2 f pies. sun rm. formal
dining & all new kitchen. 3BRS & guest apt. $2.750.000
fee. B. Morphy/k , Gaston 642-8235. (Q·37 >.
SPICTA.CULAR OCIAMRONl'I Traditional 3BR, family
rm home w/expandable master suite. 50' on the cliff
overlooking the coastline. Sl.000,000. Lynne Valentine
644-6200. (Q-38)
I ST 11M1 OfRUD -Ute.A ISLE IA YROMT! 3BR, 3
bath. 1-story home in beautiful condition w/ma~y
custom features. 52'on the bay w/"U " sha ped shp.
Appt. only. $1,175.000. Dona Chichester 642-8235. <Q-39 >
411 NfACtB HOMI! Woodbridge Patio Home by
Broadmoor in choice location. Center atrium.
cathedral ceilings, assume loan or choose your own .
lender. Priced to sell at $159,900. Lorraine Reid
551·8700. (Q-40)
LUCm. W/Yl'IW! 3BR family rm home w/tntimate 1
master retreat. High ceilings, French doors lead to
atrium w/fountain. Serene & elegant in private
community w/pool & tennis. $750.000. Lynne Valentine
644-6200. <Q-.u >
IA.Snu.. STIAL! Looking for a genuine bargain
residence tn ill fine are~? 3BR. f amity rm born~
w/great potential for leisure living in a quiet family
neighborhood. Unbelievable pri~ at $169.000. Coby {
Ward 642-8235. CQ-42 > _
NI.AR SOUTH COAST PL.A2A! Charming 3BR home
w / lerge country kitchen & pvt yard. Somerfield
development -ONLY Sll7,000. Julie Van Wieren
752-1414. CQ-44 )
111.ATHT....._ LOCAnOM! Crashing surf & fabulous t
sunsets from this lg 4BR & family rm home. Walls of •
bookcases & built·ins. Courtyard entry. $945.000. I
Barbara Aune 64.~-8235. (Q-45 )
LOCA.TID IN DOYlll SHOllS! Delightful 4BR. dining &
family rm home. Pvt. study off master suite. Maids
rm indoor/outdocir patio living. Pool & s pa. Access to
pvt beach. $559,000. Lynne Valentine 644-6200. (Q . .\6>
A WI.,._ IN ~-l•NCH! Just right for growing
famiJy. 4BRS, lar.:e family rm w/fplc, located just off
greenbelt on bealitiful. tree lined cul -de-sac. ~
assumable financi.Jng w/owners help. $155.900 fee. Jim
O'Connor 551-8700. <Q·47 )
PIMINSULA. POIMTI' Fantastic location across from
beach & ocean! 28 RS. large patio and sundeck. guest
quarters. Comer lo1t. Access to private boat launch and
bay bea ch. $355.000 . Owner will carry 1st T D. Am y
Gaston 642-8235. <Q -48)
WOODlllMI 1.1.AStll 38R & den w I view of lake.
Available immediately at $900/mo. for 6 months and
$1000/mo. for next 6 months. Appt. only. Julie Van
Wieren 752-1414. (Q-49)
llACH DW\IX! Each unit h&S 2BRS. 2 baths. sun deck
and patio. GreJlt seasonal rental. 1 'block to beach.
$280,000. Berit 1'1itche ll 642-8235. (Q-50)
,IRPICTION PLUSI Charm'ing 3BR home in
Amberwood/Northwood. You'U enjoy landscaping d~ne
to perfection. Good •ssumable loan. $154.900. Lorrame
Jackson 551-8700. (Q .. l>l)
SIT .... UY •• .high atop Harbot Ridge & presenting
a view from every room. Exquisite French
Mediterranean estate! w/no detail overlooked ... the
finest woods, old world chandelier, beveled & leaded
'IJass, onyx & marble baths, ele1ant muter awte.
ele~ator, wine ceJJar, security pool & spa. S2.900,000.
Lynne Valentine 64f...'6:?00. CQ-52>
-Linoo
RUl&Wt
COROMA DEi. MAR
COMDOMIMIUM
L•x•ry Coro•• del Mar
co•do••••••· Priced fro•
SIH.SOO.
LOCA TIOM, LOCATION
Old C.... .. Mer. be.._.
iaYH .......... LJ .... 11
,.., coner lot. Offend at
$237,000. 0,.. ...... s.. 2·5.
521 & 521 112 Iris.
BALBOA ISLAND
COTTAGE
Two ledrOOfll. I lath c"-'
wftlt pidref #wee °" cOf"Mt' lot •
Seller wfl cOMidwr MCOlllimry fllt•c-.,. Offend at $229,000.
l"he'-1.
644-7020
NEWPORT IEACH ..... .,.. .... _ .... to
UapAnt
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
OPIHSUN 1·5
2515 IST AVE
.-1
Location offers view· l
: privacy, seclusion &
I parking. Terms offer
1 flexibility & seller's h~lp.
So act!! These two view 1 homes are a good buy at,
S56..5,000!
. '7 WlldcJoou ct.
, Newport Creal 2 bdr~ end unit. Close to tenrua
I & pool. Aaaumable loan•
1 It will oona1der ?? ? ? Now I
I tm.000. :
MAURYSTAUFFER •
SEAUONREALTY
673-5354
,
JASMI.-CIEH Tastefully upe;raded l sty.
Plan 3. w/spa. Great location. Ass.umable loan.
Won't last. $320.000.
SIAYIEW -Remodeled Port Royul w/pOOl and
spa, ocean & night light view. Superbly up-
graded 4 Bdrm detached home. $525,000.
TRMS. TYMS. TERMS University Park. Brand
new listing. 3 Bdrm 2112 bath. formal dining. lge
master suite. Fantastic assumHble 1st. OWC
2nd. $138.000
CUSTOM LOTS -Two l acre + lots w 'architec·
tural plans for 3800 + sq. ft. horn es. Rolling hills
& horse area. $173,000 each.
WOODlllll 81 -Superb 2 Bdrm/ A'Shford with
greenbelt location. Priced to show the owner
wants acUon fast. $151,500
A TOUCH °' WILLIAMSIUI• -Turtlerock .... Highlands 2 sty 4 Bdrm on view lot, w/shutters,
hardwd. Warm & tasteful. An exceptional piece
of property offered at $399,000. ' •
.IASMM CUB -Plantation shutters, air cod.,
3 Bdrm Plan 5, w/mini ocean view. Owner
w/carry lge contr. $349,900.
TUITl.mOCK HIGHLANDS -Natural beamed
wood ceilings, panellna, warm earthtones. A
lovely view. This 4 Bdrm Edinborough bu ever· ·
ything in~lud.ing xlnt financing. $389,000.
AFfOIO.AU HOUsts 'o-Hem it ii! SpttiOUI 2
Bdrm, 2 bath. fam. . [ ~it:y rooms. Bayside
Villa1e. pool, spa &t bea'-•· ll.ASl, 000. •
UDO ISLE
"A Toia Of Class"
Spacious 3 bdrm w/ttramatic
stairway to f amity room. 2 frplcs,
securltY. system. French doors.
gourmet kitchen. A must for you to
see. $425,000. Presented by Barbara
Chambers, ~.
UDO -THE
IMPOSSIBLE DREAM
Dreams don't last & neither do
dream houses. So see th.is one now.
Beautifully decorated with too
many amenities to cover here.
Presented by Grace Fisher. Agt.
CHANCE· OF A LIFETIME
ON UDO
This spacious 3 bdrm._ 2't'l bath
home is an entertainer's delight.
Ideal location with a large game
room with wet bar , bit-in
refrigerator & furniture included.
Circle this ad and phone right now!
Ask for Virginia O'Brien. Agt.
EXODUS ••••••
30 · Boat slip view. 2 + den. many
extras. New. $225.000. Huntingt.on
Harbour. For today's bargain.
t o m o r r o w ' s u n p a r a l l e. d
appreciation. Ask for Gloria
Sceberras. Agt.
"'"~_... ........ _ ...
... alllr .. Cali.owhrClfpDI fiuwal.
673-7300
3377 VIA LIDO. NEWPORT BEACH
LINDA ISU
4br. 41'2bath + maids qtr. Lrg.
FR .. formal dining. Beaut lite
decor. Room for 65 ' yacht.
Owner consider option. Sell at
Sl.100,000. Bob & Dovie Koop.
DOVER SHOltlS CUSTOM
2-3br. 4ba. formal dining.
bridge rm. 3 FP. Fab view.
Total sec. "Must to see"
$500.000. Bob & Dovie Koop.
OCIAH YllW DOYa
4br. 4ba. formal dining. Huge
FR. huge yard w/pool Fab.
ocean & nite lite view. Poss
option. $500.000. Ext. fin
assum. Bob & Dovie Koop.
WATBROMT NEWPOIT
Boat dock + 3br. 3ba home.
Huge master suite with lrg.
spa & bayview. Sell fast at
$S2SK. S274 1st T.D. at lllh<k
assum. Bob & Dovie Koop.
IA YRONT LIASI
2br, 2ba, fireplace. 3yrs old.
Fab view. $650. Bob & Dovie.
NIWPOIT + 4 UMITS
3bl), 2ba, FR, owner unit + 3-2.
2ba. Vr. shrp. $340K w/190K
assum at 11.5% inc. '21.300.
Bob le Dovie Koop.
CAI •o CMOllS LIASI
4br, 3ba, FR, pool. Ocean view.
3pri. beaches. Sl,900/mo. Bob
& Dovie Koop.
ASSUMI 10%-0WC L6.2te
Lake Forest beauUf ul lg. 3bd
home in the woods. Hiahly
upg~aded w /a·pa . Model
pel'f ect ! S225'.000 Patrick
Tenore.
IAITSIOI COSTA MISA
2 bedrOqm home. Owner will
finance, no quallfylng. Terms
to fit your budget. Call RObert
Millll<en.
IUHOOW.tlATH
ExecutiveClreaoo home on an.acre of
manicured grounds nestled beneath
the Tustin Hills. 4300 square feet,
electric security Sf$tem, 3
fireplaces, wet bar, ·has & hers walk~ln closets, sunken Roman tUb.
Many more amenities. Can be
purchased Cully furnished! Call
ONHSU" l·S
You've Arrived
at ...
LINDA ISLE
Newly remodeled Bayfront. The
only fee home on the market.
Extensive use of authentic
European antique woods and
stained glass windows. 4 Bdrm. 3'h
ba & maid's quarters. Exclusive
and by apt. only. $2.6 million.
IDINE
University Park. Excel end unit
Cardiff w/custom loft. Oversized lot
and close to pool. On the greenbelt.
This c harmer has excellent
assumable financing. Perfect
starter home or bachelor pad.
$158,900
15 Jordan East
Open Saturday 12-4
LIDO ISLE
Newly decorated 4 Bdrm with 4
baths. Includes pool and spa.
lmmar.ulate. lmmed. occupancy.
204 Via San Remo
Open Sun 12:30·4 :30
CORONA on MAR"
Fantastic ooean View. 4 Br charmer
w/uttimate privacy. $425.000.
2731 Pebble
Open Sunday 12 :30-4 :30
LAGUNA HILLS
Portofino mdl in Aliso Hills. 4
Bdrm. 21h baths. Pool and spa.
$247 ,500.
24841 Luna Bonita
Open Sat. 12-4
BIG CANYON
Custom home on golf course. 5
Bdrm, 4't'l ba. 6000 sq ft. View.
Security. $1.95 million.
BIG CANYON
2 Bdrm.s +den in wonderful end
\IDit. Excel finan. Priced to sell at
$300,000.
BIG CANYON
Popular Deauville Townhome ~th
pool and spa. Lovely canyon view.
3450 sq ft. All new cpt and paint.
Oversized lot Priced to sell at
$575.000. Excel financing avail.
LINDA ISLE
Charming waterfront home with
lots of wood & tile. Accomodates 75 ·
boat. $2. 75 million.
CAPISTRANO BCH.
M agniflcent new Country French 4
bdrm 4~ tba home. Ocean and
canyon views. 1889,000 •
26431 Pall.sades
Open Sat/Sun 11-4
JIWPORT HBGHTS Fixer upper. Family home with
pool and brick. Excel location.
$154,900.
---l::...
• DANA POINT
Spectacular views of Dana Point
Marina coastline from this
immaculate 3 Bdrm. 2 ba home.
Fully equipPe<I workahoP and 2nd
ltchen. F1anta1tic patio for
entertaining includes bar. bltln ,
BBQ and gas beaten. Excel owner
financln1 with 253 down. 1750.000.
~
· CATALINA ISWID
Ready to move into. FUmisbed 2
Bdrm condo with 1reat view.
Includes 6 passenger 1olf cart.
Ex.change ~Ible.
IODDAUY
3fd Ouatter ToP Producer
Newport Beach
IOI •YSOM ••IS IUSM 3rd Quarter Top Producer 3rd Quarter Tap Producer
Laguna Beacn Sol.Ith LaQuna
LIOMUD SCAIOLA
3rd Quarter Top Prod~r
Laguna Niguel
..--CMAWLA
3rd Ouerter Top Producer
Dana Point
PAUL YOOB JOI WOODS T~Y 60LD1M
3rd Quarter TOP Producer .3pec1al Achievement Award Special Projects Award
San Clemente South Laguna S5.500.000 Personal Volume
Investment Department
Here is Just a Small Sm1tple of Some Of The q.d" P.t opetfles Tliat. We Are Currently MarkeffncJ:
UMOISftUCTID OCIA.M YLWS
This wood and glass San Clemente ntS1dence features Ideal for entert•ning. this ocean vtew ..-side retreat
3 bedrooms. a oory family room and a welt-manicured has two master bedroom suites. a sitting room and
yard garden patio.
-$219,000
WA.LO• DISTAMCI TO DAMA HA.IW
Dramatic custom 3 BO. 3 BA home with vaulted oe11-
ings & view of ocean from Master bedroom Exoetlent
financing
$1 5t .t00
DAMA POINT FOUi.ft.ii
Spacious owners unit with 3 bedrooms and 3 additional
fmits with 2 bedrooms Low maintenance and always
rented
$325,000
I
OM.Y Sl6,000DOWM ..
Capistrano Beach 3 bedroom home on a QUl•t cul-<!•
aac Roomy wtth unique study off master bedroom
Seller motivated
SltJ,000
$217,500
*tATAWIWI
Ocean and whitewater views by day and city lights at
night Hlumtnate this 3 bedroom Laguna home with
good terms
$215,000
MATCHI 111 WAMCI Cont~~ bedroom profwrona11y dec:Ortted ,..
sldenoe neer Dana Point Mertna encl high IChoOI. M-
• sumable Fltlt T 0 of 193. 750 at 13 5~
Sl6t,OOO
---WHERE. ARE WE?---
• NEWPORT IEACH SOUTH' LAGUNA
644-7020. I '499·4551
$645,000
,.
... 1"t&ISI COAS1UMI "5TAS
NOrth L.IOUnai 4 bedroom. 3Yi bath executive f1m1ly
home wtth family room and pnvate drive
$430,tlO
MISSIOM .... .._A.MCI
Thia Mldion Viet<> 4 bedroom home has addlt1onal
fttnlly f90m. 2 fireplaces. luxurious grounds and nearby
golf c:ourte.
sno.ooo
.
C ... S Al&. DISIGte THISI
Just a short stroll to fable Victoria Beach these 2 and 3
bedroom homes are a real delight Accents inciude
stained glass and hardwood floors
$254.tsO•up
~LAG-UNA UftlAT
Completely remodeled 1n redwood and cedar this de·
hghtful 3 bedroom home has a family room huge yard
solar heal and charming 1urround1ngs
$419,000
LAGiUMA HIUS FAMILY HOME
This 5 bedroom home offers over s1.a.ooo in assuma
ble loans New carpeting and paint make this one really
shine
$206,900
MIW KITI ..._ HOMI
Owner will consider carry a 2nd on this 4 bedroom. 3
bath home With family room. bonus room and large lot
$25'.000
•
CO.. wn'H US. •• TO DO• IMO'" .Waterfront! Large
dOt't. Four bedrooms. Formal dininf room. Oversize
garage.· You own the land -not leasehold! Sumbit any
reasonable offer.
UMI-IM .. CAMYOM -McLain
Townhorne, El DOrado 3 bdrm, perfect
cond., $214,000. See Marilyn Rousselot at 58 Seq Island. ·
40f ~ ITAi I.AMI •••.•.•.•.•••.•••••••••... 1941.000 I
UMl9U1 .. OlD COltOMA -MAit -Handsome, large home, block to 1
beach, dramatic at 1549.900. See
Natalie Fogarty at 223 Narcissus.
THE 1~ NUMBER TO SEE
1 UMl9U1 IM IA YSHOUS -Remodeled '
2 bdrm home plus guest house. Sunny.
see it! $335 ,000. See Bert Reedy
(owner/alt> at 2512 Vista Dr.
COMI WITH US. •• TO OOYll Sl«>US. This huge FIVE ~room home is ideal for the large f amtly and for gracious entertaining. The ·restful UPPER BAY VIEW is enjoyed 1
throughout the living 8fe8 and espe-eially from the master
bedroom. Other rooms include formal dining room and
family room. Lovely POOL. You OWn the land! Ut419UI IN JASMIMI CU. -Quality
thrU-out 3 bdrm. Plan e. 1359.000. See
Mary Ann Anderson at 133 Jasmine
Creek Dr. Give address tO guard.
NEWPORT HILLS OFFICE
u10 SAM ..... ua D11Y1
C714t 71t·llOI
P' IXllLI TBMS
The sophisticated owner of this
property is flexible on terms! This
outstanding home features 4
bedrooms. parquet entry. 2 custom
patios. fireplace. family room.
greenhouse window. trench doors
and more! $136.950. owner will
carry 2nd or AITD.
1142 6Al.AXY DllVI •••••• SHOWN IY Awr ••.••• 1661.000
COMI Wll'H US. •• TO MMIOI YllW HIU.S. An exciting
FIVE bedroom ~ome. ~ly room. Three baths. Two
fireplaces. Three car 1ara1e. 1be extensive use of glus and
wood decking provides a restful view of the canyon and
mountains . . . where nature is close at hand -AND ON
DISPLAY.
I OJ4 SA»eCASTLI •••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••.•• SJJ0.000
J
COMI WITH US. .• TO IAYCllST. Just listed! Elegant five
bedroom home. Forsnal dining room. Family room.
Bea~tifully landscaped yard with large pool, including
sptt1al energy saving features. Exceptionally private and
quiet neighborhood. ..
llJJ Gi&.ltfWOOD LAMI •••••••••••.•••••••••••••••• SUl.000
COMI WITH US. .• TO IAYCUST. A great family home in an
excellent neighborhood. Four spacious bedrooms. Three
baths. Formal dining room and family room. Tasteful use of
mirrors and custom wallpaper. Large yard. Assumable first
trust deed. Substantial second trust deed available.
1107 SANnAGO DRIVI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SJH,000
COME ~ UL .. TO HAllOlt HlaHLAMDS. Exceptionally
well mamtamed four bedroom home in a "family oriented''
neighborhood. Family room. Den. Luxurious spa. An
entertainer 's back yard including fire pit and gas BBQ
1606 DOltOTHY LANI .....•...•.••••••...•.••.•..•• 12Jt.IOO
COME WITH US. . .TO WISTCUFf. An attractive three
bedroom home. Two baths. Neat family room. Like new
carpet. Large lot, 8Sx110. Sparkling pool, complete with
slide. <Pool fenced for children's safety>. Quick possession.
12t7~LAHI •.••....•••••••••...•••...••.• SZJ0.000
COME WITH US. •. TO WISTCUFf. Completely refurbished
two bedroom condo. Convenient to shops, banks and the
beaches. A rare find at this price.
1700 WESTCUFf DllYI #IS ..•. SHOWN IY APf'T •• SH,500
1617 WESTCUFF DR.', N.B.
UDOISU
Newly remodeled traditional style 3
bdrm, 2 bath home featuring large
recreation room & 2 patios. Living
room has attractve beam ceiling, fireplace & french doors leading onto
brick patio. New kitchen blt·in
appliances. Close to tennis courts.
salfdy beaches & clubhouse. Can be
sold fully furnished $420,000.
IAYW
We have several fine homes
with pier & slip
IALIOA PIMMSULA
Quality oceanfront triplex. 4 Bdrm, 2
bath each unit. Excellent income.
$1,300.000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
.... ' '1•'1 y ',1dt {1'1 .... 1 ,..~ " ,., ''J 1,161
BLUFFS CONDO
FEE LAMD
3 Bedro0m, 2Y.a Bath '1Q" Plan.
S~cious open liVing rooms, fol'JDlll
dmlng room and a bllU8"1 room.
Bea utitul greenbelt location close to
community pool. Owner: wtll
consider an AITD. 81247 ,soo.
IHCAMCHA
SUM>•Y t4 •
631-7300
IACKIAY VllW
Totally up1raded
b9ctbay home with pool
ad ape. s bedrooms, z" baths and owner will
finance al lnt.r•l wltb down. Call to vlew lb.la
lovely home. 55f.21MO.
•
SELECT
PROPERTIES
i ' I
UMl9UI IM MIW,OIT HllGHTS -'
Tudor. 4 bdrm, lge tam. rm .. full loan '
at 1314%. $189,500. See Bonnie
Barrington at 412 16th Pl. DllTY DAW6!
I · UMtqul 1M IA YCllST -4 bdrm. sio1le
I story, spacious.Just refurbished, 11%
loan, $269,SOO. See Marian Reedy at
Bring paintbrush and broom to save
$$$! Older 2 bedroom cottage on R·2
lot ! Zoning creates development
potentialLOnly $95.000!
2306 Francisco. 1
UMl9UI IN SPYGLASS HILL -
Fantastic view, subtle showpiece. 3
bdrm. warm interior. lush ldscpe.
$515,000. See Harriette Hammond af
21 Cambria.
UMl9U1 IM llG CANYON -Bordeaux.
2 ~rm. 3 ba. shutters. garden patios.
privacy, $439,500. See Vergilene Hull
j . at 34 Rue Fontainebleau.
U~IVUI: tiUMl:S ' I l
• •..0.Th'"WOOD• •
Spacious family home in
prestigious Woodbridge area.
Featuring 4 large bedrooms plus
den and jumbo bonus room. 2
fireplaces, family room with wet
bar, formal dining room. A!C and
much , much more . 911.~
ASSUMABLE iST TRUSf DEED
AND SELLER WILL CARRY 2ND
TRUST DEED.
HAAIC>a VIEW I .
I REAL TORS. 675-6000 I 2443 Ea•I CoHI Hlghw•y. Coron. del Mar
HOMIS
F~bulous SOMERSET model
features: 5 bedrooms. family room.
fireplace. large yard. and exciting
view of Big Canyon and a cul-de.sac
location.
• WE HAVE 4 I OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN
BAYFRONT
Private pier and float on famous
Harbor Island. 40 foot frontage.
Older traditional home .
Magnificent grounds and trees.
51 .780.000.
MUSn. DUSn.
VACANT!!
Seller transferred and facing two
payments ! Super upgrade
townhome featurang 2 bedrooms.
A l C and con ven1ent location'
$194.900 and submit all offers'
Walker Blee
Raal latata
MISA YllDI DIUGHT ,.
Three bedroom beauty with the most wanted features! Has lovely living
, room with hearty brick fireplace. Super clean and shiny, just .waiting for you .
to move lnto! Extra.large lot. $119.500. Hasten to see and call today! 540-1720
PAU. IM LOYI
With thia cheery three bedroom home. Popular Mesa Verde North model.
Features large master bedroom suite, buee kitchen/family room combo,
rich wood paneling. Completely air conditioned. Just. painted inaide. Rich
wood panelin& throughout. Nestled on cul·de-sac. $135,000, must see! 54().1720
IMYISTOllS DIUGHTI
Four Wlits on one lot! Great as rentals! Invest ln your future and call for
complete details. Owner will help with financing. Assumable loan. S296.000.
540-1720
• .... , STYLm
Four bedroom home is loaded with living apace! Has about 1800 sq. feet.
Includes formal dining room, family room. hearty brick fireplace in living
room. Super close to scJlOols. shope and beach! MoUvated owner may help
wlt.b financing. tll2,SOO. Take advantaae and call today. 54().1720
..... 'SPtCI.. ..
And eveeythlnf nice descrit>ei this delighUul three bedroom home! The
.owners tender Jovtn1 care sboWB thrOuah In every n k and craMie~ Just
painted lli.side and out! Surrounded by luscious fnilt trees. 1125.500. DOn't
mist out! Call 540.1720
SpHI•• 2W. a.. -....... ... at•·;or ................. .... ,...,..,.....c ... :mlliiiltt.r~ik<
owwa.Mrln•!lte4.MmJ illeL $249,500.
A MODB. fll/OUJ ,.,. ........ .., .... , .........
-~ ...... 2..., .. ..,& .. -.... ..., ••1' ....... W• to Cl I lly ,... & .......
Sltt.IOO. 6J)·l40t.
llEWPllT CfllDO R UIAMI w .......... ,. .......... ...
2 .... 2 ... ~ ~ ... '!" :1 o....•...,•• chJ----1111.lt. ........... ,~$124 .....
mt THE WATEl--¥11
Mlcely •or .. ed ZW. a.. c.ep.
A ........... ...._... a·.._
.. 12.75"-. ,,._. row le ALL ~ ectt.ttr. $300,000.
TOTAL VIEW WATER & -LIHIS
0.. of ............ ., •••1• ti » ..
,_. ... • VllW OF IAY. OCIAM &
•lg•t llg•t• I• Coro•• clel M•r.
ltpedaly ... 4 .... lilo-. wttla
frwlt ......... kw ......... lll'kll
md 9'•wrv. Clla r , 2 ..._ ,......
..... ,....., ,,...,...., w111 dra-•
$491.000. '
A WATDFRONT HOME W/SUP
Mew o• tile ••rll•t I• • prhet•
c IT I •• ,. Weed. bricll. ..... & ......
............ ~for .. J~ ......, ..__ '-99 & .,.. ..... ,._,
,._ ... ....., ...... Pttw• -"Y ....
yow ... ~ & IOAT alt. 0--
wfl ......... "" c ..... $550.000. ....
EXCEPTIONAL UDO BAYFRONT "'· .... ~~--·· .•. ,,. 2.....,a.-... WATll ........... 14Y ~ flf ti ,_tltlag _.,., _.
........... 0,.. ... •••d••• ,_
l•cl .. IYI.. ~ -wehr wltlt
flrtJIH« __, ..... ,., cea•••h ...... , ................. ... fl,..,._. md ........ ceclw cloMt. o ................... c ..... ..
.. c11mp ... -... ...... sns.ooo.
PRI• NEWPORT OCEANFRONT~
.. ... .,...,, • I I I ICI J ..........
..... C9I. J ... cM 11 ,-... 9Jlet
loc•tl• .. HM llACH. .. • ftM ,.......... .... Lsp,.... .....
for Htfff•l•la9. '•HlltllltlH for
up• If•• bMe4 to S64t.SOO.
POINSULA PT. BEAUTY!
Mo • .,... .....-4 .. fMt I 111.thd 3 .... , ......... s-.......
f••fwet laclede: tlaJ119le4 •xhrler •
•t•l•ed ...... ,1 .. t .. loe 1nffen.
•rlJI .... pu•h•I••< l•ltu:•kt
-Two A ••l.c"' ._..,:ru•,.. ..,_.. ............ z.....y-.-...,. .. ..,
& 0.... 0-.. wll .... ,.,... ....
c..ot doie etcr•w ..,. .W,. ltll.
, •••• ~ 631·1400. .
SWEEPING SHORECLIFF COINEI .................... .,., ..........
...... ~,111ihe1ot .... Jt.M.J
.................. fmly ....... ..
retlttlll• ...... -Off I tullf fW
ere.ti•• •..,.slMa watt. tMs .....
$Jl4.IOO fw, 6J I· 1400.
. EXCLUSIVE BAYSHORES Prll 11 ._ ... -. ..,....,_._,,. ... ....... .,... ..... _,.a .,,
....., ........ , .... JM.fwliill .................... 11••
IH'-OIO. Hl·l400.
EXTIAVACANT QUAL & CHARM ,., ........ ...,., .... -u. ...
•••-c . "' ..,.... • ...-. av. ...... ................ 'ttva."'-....... ·~, ............ .....
................... b •••
CO'I ................. .,. ....
flrepl•••· L••tl•c•p•4' lty 'l•n ••r .. 1. YI•• ,..... ..... , ••lte.
S6fl,OOO. 611-HOO. ~
. I
SHORES
$135,900!
Cltarmln1. up1raded , ~ home lD Newport ~ Doral a BR-2 BA. Dleairat.ed warmly. New , _,.. and wall paper. JUlll: Jia.d-woo•t last! can'*'· 1si. 100
.... ..,.. l
............ I
1 m. J bedroom 2 bath I
blme on an extra lar1e •
I lot ID a nei0borbo6d of
wide atreeta and tall !I v.-. Thia impeccable
.... .... all built-lns,
..U to wall carpeUn1.' cuatom draperlea and
priced well below com· s-nJ>le bomea at oo.ly
SlSS,850. Call 751·1111
•
SELi::Ct
PROPERTIES
LIT'SSWAP
Will trade my 1 acre,
CUltom view 4 Bd pool
and.ape home w /privacy
ror your Newport home.
Owner /Bkr . Norm · MdClnley 631-1266.
. $2
$100 ............
PENNY .
PINCHER
AD
HOUSES FOR . SALE
t ... OOM Lon
117 Lake Pi.Des. Irvine
752·1700 8,900 Sa 12-4 SU 1·4 ..................
1030 Bayside Coves. The Coves
642-8235 $295,000 Sun 1-4
J llDIOOM
227 Via Orvieto, Udo Isle, NB
673-7300 $350,oecJ' Sat/Sun 1-5
388 Broadway, CoSta Mesa
673-7300 $127,500 Sun 1·5
34 Rue Fontainebleau <Big c > NB
67~ $439,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
2512 Vista Dr (Baysbores > NB
675-6000 $335,000 Sun 1-5 * 30801 Coast Hwy, #46, Laguna Bch
495-1064 $119,500 Sun 1-5
608 Huntington, Huntington Beach
963·6767 $106,500 Sun 1·5
501 Irvine (Npt Hgts > NB
644-9990 $185,000 Sun 1-5
541 Thalia, Laguna Beach
497 -3331 $185.000 Sun 1·4:30
1184 Rutland Road #6, Westcliff
642-8235 $123,500 Sun 2-5
25 Bolivar, Newport Beach
631-1400 $39,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
2006 Barranca (Bluffs> NB
640-62.59 $148,000-L/H Sat/Sun 1-5
2515 1st Ave .. Corona del Mar
673-53M Sun 1·5
201 Apolena, Balboa Island
645-0303 $249,000 Sat/Sun 1·4
• • 1223 Bayside, Corona de1 Mar
642-8235 $53.5,000 Sat/Sun 1-4:30
Z M ,._ FAM ltM or D84
971 Bayside Cove W .• NB
631-1532 S749,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
· 225 Kings Place <Clfhvn) NB
642-5200 $285.000-fee Sat/Sun 1·5
19 Valley View, Turtlrk, Irv.
759-1501 $248,000 Sun 1-5
2502 Crestview Dr .. Newport Beach
546-2313 SZ79.950 Sun 1-4 :30
44 Whitewater, Jasmine Creek.
CdM
644-9060 $275,000-fee Sun 1-4
13 Sllkleaf. Woodbridge, Irvine
551-8700 $154,250 Sat/Sun 1-5
1907 Douglas, Santa Ana
673-7300 $117.000 Sun 1-5
z• ... INCOME
521 Jasmine, Corona del Mar
675·5726 Sat/Sun 1-4 .30
J llDIOOM
29 Snowberry (Deerfield> Irvine
752-0187 $123,900 Sat/SUD 1-5
653 Vista Bonita, Newport Beach
640-6972 S'l75,000 Sat ·Sun 12-5
58 Sea Island C Big Cyn) NB
675-6000 $214,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
4751 Wmvale (Calif Hms) Irvine
552-2000 $117.500 Sat/Sun 1·5
4862 Wm vale (Calif Hms) Irvine
552-2000 $115.000 Sat/Sun 1·5
14547 Oval (Walnut Sq.> Irvine
552-2000 $97,900 Sat/Sun 1·5
3244 Iowa St .. Mesa Verde. CM
963-8182 $109,500 Sun 1-5
2591 Bayshore Dr., Newport Beach
631-1400 $395,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
133 Jasmine Creek ( J asmn Ck> CdM
675-«>00 $359.000 Sun 1-5
2229 Wallace, Costa Mesa
540-1720 $110,000 Sun 1-5
3335 Maryland Cr., Costa Mesa
540-1720 $135.000 Sun 1·5
5592 Nevada, Huntington Beach
963-6767 $110,000 Sun 1-5
608 Venus, Huntington Beach
983-6767 Sun 1-5
••44a7W. Coast Hwy, NB
644-9990 $320,000 Sun 1-5
2012 San Remo (off Temple !Dils>
LB
494-8581 • $369,000 Sun 1-4 252 Cancha (Bluffs> NB
640-9900 $247,500 Sun 1-5
335 Flower. Costa Mesa
615-Mll $150.000 Sun J.-5
2207 Raleigh Ave., Costa Mesa
845-0.W $110,000 Sun 1-5
19792Cambrldge Ln., Hunt. Bch
963-2490 183,800 Sun 1-5
820 Vlotorin, Costa Mesa
548-1(86 193,000 Sat/SUn 12-4
8'08W. Oceanfront. Newport Beach
631·1t00 $649.000 Sat/Sun 1·5
• •16 .Balboa Coves, NeWJ>Ort Beach
631·1400 SSS0.000 Sun 1·5
•315 Villanova. COilege Park. CM
SU-0318 $128,900 Sun 1·5
• 1601 'Qonnie Doone. Corona del
Mar
6'4·7211 $330,000 Sat/SUn 12-4
123 Via Genoa, Ltdo Jele, NB
873-7300 '410.000 Sun 1·5
2932 Perla (Blufla) NB '
6'0·9800 1249.500 Sat/Sun 12-4
5772 Plnon <Dutchhaven Marina> HB
963·8377 •~.soo Sun 1·5 .21W.Pediol0, Mission Viejo
11~ at/Sun l·S ea¥..,...lrvlne
'llltUOO ftU.(00 1i.m
.
DIRECTORY . .., .... ~ ....... , ..... ,.. ............. c .... -.................... lhW ......
......... .,.._ ... ..,_.,wM•1 ........ ~D.a.YPILOTWIMfADLP*-................................ -w.-4 .... _. .................. c.ee.-.......... . LMS..,.•
2651 Crestview. Bayshores. NB
644·9060 $350,000 Sun 1-5
#1 Sandpebble. Irvine
752-1700 $259,900 Sa/S'l2:30-4:30
2551 Vista Dr., Bayshores. NB
642-7890 $299.000 Sun 1-5
1023 Bonnie Doone. Irv. Terr. CdM
644-9060 $615,000-Fee Sun 1·5
•1010-1016 E. Balboa Blvd .• Balboa
642-823.5 $1 ,200,000 & $1,300,000
Sat/Sun 1-4
•640 Cove St., Costa Mesa
979-S370 $113.500 Sat/Sun 12-4
J M .... FAM ltM _. Del
373 Newport Glen Crt (Cherry
Lk.)NB
642-8281 $347,000 Sat/Sun 10..5
21 Cambria <Spyglass> CdM
675-6000 SSlS.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
2021 Commodore Rd .. Npt Bch
644.9060 $259, 750 Sun 1-5
55 Jasmine Creek (Jasmn Ck) CdM
552-2000 $349.500 Sun 1-5
1740 Plaza del Norte, Bal Penin.
631-1266 $398.500 Sun 1·5
1352 Circle Way. North Laguna
213/796-3166 $525,000 Sun 1-4
1901 Yacht Camilla. Seaview, NB
644·1156 Sun 1-5
92 W. Yale Loop <Wdbrdge > Irvine
642-5200 $159.000 Sun l ·S
1500 Cornwall <Westcllff) NB
642-5200 $249.500 Sun 1·5 • * '* 13.5 Harbor Island Rd.. NB
642·5200 $845.000-L/H Sun 1·5
112 Vi.a Quito, Lido isle. NB
644-9990 $425.000 Sun 1·5
18902 Via M~ Turtlerock, Irv.
833-9293 $249,500 Sun 1-S
375 E. 23rd St., Newport Beach
979-5370 $184,900 Sun 1-5
29 Rue Grande Vallee. Big Canyon
642-8235 $550,000 Sun l ·5
#17 Point Sur, Spyglass Hill
644-6200 $519,000 Sun 1-5
2642 Circle Drive <Bayshores >NB
642-8235 $375,000-LH Sun 1-4:30
13 Silver Crescent <Trtlrk JDn> Irv
675·3411 $240,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
3003 Calle Frontera, San Clemente
963-8182 S279,000 Sun 1-5
320 Seaward. Shoreclilfs, NB
631-1400 $384,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
2113 Miramar, Penin. Pt. NB
631-1400 $465,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
17 Whitecap, Jasmine Creek. CdM
640..5357 $425,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
36 Farragut <Shaclow Run) Irv.
552-2000 $161,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
223 Via Ithaca. Lido Isle, NB
640·5357 $325,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
• 1207 Berkshire Ln. Westcliff. NB
631-7300 $230,000 Sun 1-4:30
2450 Marino. Bayshores. NB
644-9060 Sun 2-5
•1363 Galaxy Dr. Dover Shores. NB
631-7300 $495,000 Sun 1-4:30
•1472 Galaxy Dr, Dover Shores. NB
631-7300 $685,000 Sat/Sun 1-4 :30
912 Cercis Place, Newport Beach
642-8235 $169.000 Sat/Sun 1-4:30
• • •501 Gorham Dr .. Cameo Shores
644-6200 $935,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
4 llDaOOM
124 Via Lorca, Lido Isle. NB
675-1854 $495,000 Sat/SUn 10-4
4800 Cortland, Corona del Mar
675-4010 $298,500 Sun 1-5
29142 Paseo Lomita, Laguna Niguel
831-8440 $169,500 Sun 12-3
2145 College, Costa Mesa
540.1720 $112,500 Sun 1·5
1986 FlaminJoDr., Costa Mesa
540-1720 $169,900 Sun 1-5
8381 Tern, Huntington Beach
963-6767 $119,000 .Sunl-S
2437 Port Whitby, Newport Beach
8'0:,9900 1298,000 Sun l ·S
• 1715 Antigua. Newport Beach 642~ ssais.ooo SUn 2-5
•1131 Olarlesto,t. Costa Mesa
~t s1u.ooo sat1sun 12-.-m Narclasus <Old CdM> CdJil
675~ $549,900 S&t/SUn 1-5
376 E. 2'lnd St.-~ Newport ~acb M.2·8833 1285.000 Sun 1-~
2731 Biyahore <Bay!hores.> NB •
64'·98SO ~.OQO Sat/Sun 1
•204 ~·Sin Remo', Lido 1114:: NB
6'0-5'r77 , SUn U:~:30
218 :RubY,' llalboa Island. NB
Pl·nOO Stl5,000 Sat &In l'l5 '
223 Via 8an Lido Ille, NB
"11400 .. @t-.1-1
-
26431 Pali.sades. Capistrano Bch
640-5m $889.000 Sat/Sun 11-4
2731 Pebble. Corona del Mar
640-5777 $425.000
• •8 Collins Island, NB
631·1400 $1,100.000 Sat/Sun 1·5
4 • ,._ FAM IN w DIM
5062 Berean Lane. Irvine
995-2636 5175,000 Sat Sun 1-5
2306 Francisco CBaycrest) NB
675-6000 $269,500 Sun 1-5
124 Via Lorca, Lido Isle. NB
675-1854 $495,000 Sun 1:30-5
6 Sunburst (Trtlrk) Irvine
675--3411 $399,000 Sun 1-5
13 Rimrock (Trtlrk Hln > Irvine
675-3411 $389,000 Sun 1·5
4931 Loriann, Calif. Hms, Irvine
759-1501 $136,950 Sun 1-5
#4 Rimrock CTrtlrlc) Irvine
760-9333 $310,000 Sun 1-5
•3082 Madison, Costa Mesa
546-2313 $134,900 Sun 1-4
3108 Madeira (Mesa Verde) CM
546-2313 Sl37 ,500 Sun 11-3
2701 Cannary <Mesa Verde) CM
546-2313 $199,900 Sun 11-3
24 Choate, Irvine
540-3666 $205,900 Sun 1 :S
•1715Antigua Way. Bayshores
642..gm ~.000 Sun 2-5
15281 Moullns,
551-8700 $155.900 Sun 12-6
373 Newport Gien C1't(Cberry Lk.)
NB
642-8281 '247 ,ooo Sat/Sun 10-5
2851 Stromboli <Mesa Verde> CM
5'5-8081 Sat/Stan 1-5
411 El Modena. Nwpt Hghts, NB
673-9060 Sat/Stan 1-5
412 16th Place (Nwpt Rgt.s} CM
675-6000 8189.500 Sat &m 1-5
219 Via Nice, Lido Isle, NB
963-8182 $445,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1930 Pt. Carney <HVHms > NB
6'2-5200 $249.500 Sat iSun 1-5
9552 Hightide. Huntington Beach
963-1974 $199,500 Sat/Stm 1-5 * 2324 Prt . Durness (Sea wind
Comm) NB
644-7714 $289,QOO Sat 2-5/Sun 1-5
1615 Port Barmoutb <HVH> NB
640-5357 $299,000 Sat/SUn 1-5
22 Morro Bay <Spygls) CdM
760-93.13 $525,000 Sat/Sun l·S
• •4.26 Via Lido Nord. NB
631-1400 $895,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
2005 Yacht Vindex (Seavu) NB
640-6259 $430,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
• 1924 Holiday Rd, Baycrest, NB
631-7300 $310,000 Sat/Sun 1-4 :30
1978 Pt. Chelsea. Newport Beach
673-8550 $239.900 Sat/SWl 1·5
32 Drakes Bay <Spyglass> CdM
67J.8S50 $449,900 Sun 1-5
• •401 N. Star Ln, Dover Sbrs, NB
631-7300 ~.ooo Sat/Stm 1-4 :30
1307 Santiago Dr., Baycrest, NB
631-7300 $325,000 Sun 1-4:30
499 Broadway, Costa l.f esa
645-1466 $179.500 Sat 1-5/Sun 2·5
• 1072 Santiago, Dover Shores. NB
631-7300 $750,000 Sat/SUn 1-4:30
l«l Galaxy Dr., Dover Shores, NB
631-7300 $470,000 Sat/SUn 1-4:30
•1242 Somerset Ln., Westcliff. NB
631-7300 $460,000 Sat/St.In 1-4:30
1606 Dorothy Ln, Harbor Hinds, NB
631-7300 $239,500 Sun 1-4:30 * 17995 Gillman, UniyenJty Park
551-8700 $153,900 Sat/Sun 1·5
26 Birdsong, Woodbridge, Irv.
551-8700 $199,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
• 1801 Santi~ Baycrest
642-8235 ,500 Sat/SUD 1·5
928 Coronado <Mesa del Mar> CM
5*2680 $125,000 Sun 1 ..
•1820 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores>
NB
644"'910 $550.000 Sat/Stm 12 :30-5
I ... OOM .
2715 Lighthou•e Ln .. Newport
Beach
831-HOO '359.000 Sun 1·5 ..... ,,... ........ * •800 HarbOr .Jsland Dr. • NB
631·<nM $1,395,000 t/SUn 1·5
141.2 Antl«ua (Dover Shn> NB
8'2·5200· 'SM,SOOJ e Sat/St.ail l·S
NJ McCJean Dr., TUJtin
96H182 $M$,000 Sun l..S
1808 Pl. Kimberly (HVffma) NB w.aooo $322,500 savst:11r1-s
*1123 GlenWQOd La .• Ba~rat. NB
131·7* -.ooo &aw ao
20121 Rlverelde br .. Npt Bch
7$4-«U..2 $115,000 ' Sun 1·5
1142 Boiialre Way (BaycNSt> NB
769-9100 $211.500 Sun ·1.5
1627 Port Charles, HVH, NB
7SS.1501 $289,000 SW\ 1·5
1910Swan Dr. <Mes• Verde> CM
546-2313 $174,500 Sun 11·3
5 Deerwood. Big Canyon. NB
644-6200 $2.000.000 Sun 1-4:30
1518 Galaxy. Dover Shores
642-8235 ~.ooo Sun 12·4
1034 Sandcastle <Harbor Vu HI.a>
NB
631·7300 $330,000 Sun 1-4 :30
2735 Cibola <Mesa del Mar) CM
556-2600 1160.000 Sun 1-4
812 Harbor Island Dr .. Promontory
642-8235 Sl.250.000 Sat/Sun 12-4
*12 Trafalear. Harbor Ridge
. 6«-6200 52,900,000 Sat/Stin 1--4:30
CONDOMINIUMS
FOR SALE
t llDaOOM
10224 Disney Cir., Huntington Bch
640-5560 S71.000 Sun 1-5
Z ... OOM
•22 Arboles (RSJ) Irvine
759-9100 Sl95.000 Sat iSun 1·5
1001 Stevens #422, Santa Ana
963-6767 $90,000 Sun. 12-4
2511 W. Sunflower #E-4, Santa Ana
546-2313 $82.500 Sun 1-4
1228 Rutland Rd., Newport Beach
631-1400 $124,500 Sun 12-4 :30
14556 Oval Rd (Walnut Sq) Irvine
644-7211 $96,900 Sun 12·5
Z • ,.. FAM ltM w DIM
319 Bayview. Newport Beach
760-93.1.1 $198,900 Sat/Sun 1-5
J ... OOM
653 Vista Bonita, Newport Beach
640-G72 $2'15,000 Sat/Sun 12-5
1230 First St .• Imperial Beach
714-848-1511 All Day Sun •314 Avenida Cumbre (Bluffs> NB
759-9100 S'lt0,000 s.'t ·Sun 1·5
2511 W. Sunflower #A-4. 8'nta Ana
$46.2313 $98,950 Sun 1·5
2316 Vasta Ho1ar, Bluffs, NB
&C0-5560 S165,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
7 Odyessy Court, Newport Beach
673-7300 $175,000 Sun 1·5
J • .... PAM RN., DIM
18219 Bryce Ct, Fountain Valley
631-7300 $120,000 Sat/SUn 1-4 :30 ,
407 Vista Suerte, Bluffs. NB
640-5560 $224,750 Sat/Sun 1-5
•25 Bridgewood CWdbrg) Irvine
759·9100 $290,000 Sun l ·S
• ... OOM 2912 Quedada, Bluffs. NB
640-5560 $260,000 S$t •Sun 1-5
4 M .... FAM IM w D9t
19 Robin ct, Nwpt Crest. NB
673-7300 $215,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
DUPLEXES
FOR SALE 2•,..z• 204 30th St., Newport Beach
675-6670 $200,000 Sun 1-4
l ..... t.
521 & 521 'h Ins. Corona del Mar
644-7020 $237.000 Sun2-5
J ..... z.
619 Begonia, Corona del Mar
760-9333 $300,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
1 619 Marguerite, Corona del Mar
673-8550 $280,000 Sat/SUD 1-& , .... J.
510 Jasmine, Corona del Mar
673-8550 $345,000 Sat/Sun
TOWNHOUSES
FOR SALE
2 .... 00M
469' Heil, Huntfnetoo Beach
894.()663 $95,000
l ... OOM
2501 Sunflower #A3, Sinta Ana
540-3888 $108,900 Sun 1·5
I ' J
I
I
I ~
I
COSTA ..sA COteO. Charm.int 2 Br.
l Ba near OCC & So. Cout Plua. S98.000.
NOi& ttOMI. 3 Br, hilhly UP1raded
Plaza del Sol. Lr1. kitchen w/cbeery
brkfst area + sep. din. rm., prof.
landscp .. designer drapes • plush cpt. $208,500. .
DUPLD
On block to beaeh and elose to
ahopplq etc. ho bedroom each unit
at a fantuUc price Of D>Q,000. Open
Sunday l·f. 204 3oth St., Newp0rt
Beach.
JACOBS REALTY
.. .
nMES ARE TOU&H
It's becOmlna more dirrtcult to rind a
good deal In real estate but we did !
SUP.er clean property wfth 2 Bdrm
units, a mother-in-law quarters. near
new roof. and new paint In and out.
Huie low mtereSt assumable 1st T.D.
Owner will be very creative on
financlns. A Balboa Island winner.
ARTISTIC CIEA TION
I ILDll'I CLOSIOUT. Huge' Br home • ~~~~~~!!!!!!!!~~~~
w/form din rm. ram rm & bonus rm!
lma1ine, 4 fireplaces! Lush pror.
This is a on or a kind inve tment. A 3
year old duplex only one block from
the sand In Newport Beach. This
attractively designed property
features cathedral ceilings, a spacious
m'aster bedroom suite with fireplace. hardwood kitchen with Jenn.Air.
Superb bathroom tile selections. Plus
a 1 bedroom l bath rear unit. Owner
very anxious. Be creative and submit
your offers. Asking $350.000.
Jancbcaflng! Master suite w/atudy & cozy ireplacel Sprinklers.
microwave, etc. etc! Cannot be
duplicated at 1249.500.
D.~V!DSON P.C.~LTY IN C
• ll l( >l I ,, ... '
llST WA TERFltONT V AWE IN
NEWPORT IEACH
Three bedroom, 21h bath waterfront
townhome .w.ith boat slip for 35'
boat. Fully furnished. two blocks to
beach. ocean view, fee land: Only
$320.000. Open Sunday 1·5 at 4407 W.
Coast Hwy or call 760-083.5.
LIDO ISLE
New carpet and paint in this 3
bedroom home with den, large
kitchen. and Palos Verdes
fireplace. Owner will consider lease
option with low down payment.
Open Sunday from 1-5. 112 Via
Quito, $425,000. Call Ed Dillon at 760·0835 for details.
IAYSHORES ESTATI
If you would like a custom home
with French doors. wood-paned
windows, a bay window with seat,
handpainted tile, hardwood floors.
crown moldings, and extensive use
or used brick, this property is for
you. To see this unique 4 bedroom
home on ree land, call Bill or Dottie
at 7~M35 or come by the Open
House from 1-5 on Saturday and
Sunday at 2731 Bayshore.
IA YSIDE COVE
View or bar, boats, hills. Enjoy the
· comforts o home and the amenities
of this very special community near
the water. Two bedrooms. den 2~
baths. Large spacious rooms and
elegant decor. Owners will assist in
financing, con.sider trades. 1810,000
-contact Nancy lmbernino at
644·9990.
EASllWFF -LOCATION! Enjoy the amenities of the 'Bluffs
and the spaciousness of a bous, in
this 3 bedroom, highly upgraded,
well decorated home. Features an
open feeling and view. Seller to
'assist ln financing, fast poueuion.
$229,000. Contact Nancy lmbemino at 644-9990.
IUIDIHTIAL INCOMI .
Two 1 bedroom duplexes and three
horse stalls on ~ acre in Si.iita Ana
Heights. Assumable flnanctns -
great investment opportunity.
Contact Marlene Wilkinson for
detatla at 6'-4·9990.
.IAY ISLAND
Bay Island home with 5 bedrooms
and maid's quarters. Available
.lanuary-i tbrou1h April. 1981.
Contact LOwell at 760-0835.
INVISTNIMT
Prime 3 acre commercial comer In
northwe t Fresno. Only $555,000.
Call Marina Blffln at 6'4·999o
OPIM HOUSI "'"°AY I ·I
t OH6 POWlllNOIM llYll CIT,
llOUMrAIM VAWV
3 bedroom, 2~ bath Tiburon condo.
Much wood, bullt·lna, earthtones1 shutters, and mtnl·bllnds. Gooa
assumable 8'Aa%. Call broker.
.. 964-1422
-
1 * * * * * * H~ritage ·Collection Judge ror yourself! 3 Bdrm retreat
"La Famllla," 1450 sq. ft., is. one of '
the nicest on the market. Pre~um ~ot
with view. Central air, cov d pa~o.
Upgraded thruout. Beautiful! Quick
occupancy ror qualified buyer.
Monthly pymts $501 PITI. Owner/agt.
114.nNM• 114-t11-1 H4 .....
IMftSTC>aS DB.IGHT
Maximum leverage with $5.000 down.
2 Bdrm condo. Owner will carry
blance with agreeable terms and
payment. Gross income $5400. Asking
$76,900. CaJl 540·1151 for more details.
CHARMIMCi, DILIGHTN.
Large 4 Bdrm, 3 bath + 3 car garage.
beautiful pool and spa. brick BBQ.
•••••••••••••••.. Shows like a model. Offered at I $179,500. Call 540·ll51 -llDlll ILllRS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
ll4AVIMIDA C~ -...s
ONM SUM 14
Blutrs Best. Frea• & Sparkling Newly
Decorated Thr~ Bedroom End Unit Sunny
& Spacious Living Room Wath Wet Bar &
Fireplace Prime Location On Lar)fe
Greenbelt With Private Wrap Around Patio
Lease Option Possible S2to.OOO
251a...wOOD
WOOMIW
• OP1N SUM I ·I
Prime Lakefront Location Exclusive
Woodbridae Crossing. Upgraded Detached
Condo. Surrounded By Water. Grass Area &
Trees. Three Bedrooms & Family ~oom
Enclosed Patio & Deck With View. Beach &
Clubhouse. Pool. Tennis & Bake Trails A
Pleasure To Show. $290.000.
2ZAllOUS
l•MCHO SAM JOACiMM
OPIN SUM l·I
Lovely End Unit. Two·Level Townhouse Oh
Golf Course. Two Bedrooms. 212 Baths.
Step.Down Conversation Area With Wet
Bar Beautiful New Camel Color Carpel
Parquet Kitchen Floor & Entry Only
Sl9S.OOO
1742 IOMAIU WAY IAYClllT
OfJ9t SUM I ·I
Five Bedroom. Three Bath Home On Quiet
Cul·de-Sac In Newport Beach Two Brack
Fireplaces. RV Parkin&. PaUoe It Sun Deck.
Be Settled For Chriumaa. 1217 .soo
.. AMT In.a.All
Two Stories Of Excellence. Sunken Llvin1
Room With Fireplace fr Beamed Vaulted
Ceilln1s. Lar1e Family Room Wllh
Fireplace, Full Len1th Hearth Is Wet Bir.
Central Vacuum System • Huie Bonus Room With Bath. Seller Will Carry Larae ~ond 'J'ruat Deed. Pool Sized Lot. A•klna
1585.000. A "Joy Of Newport" Ll1Un1. ,..... .. ,..°"' Forty·Foot Fronta1t. Pier • Dock In
Exclualve Security Guarded Bay1hores
Community. Lovely Two.Room MHter Suite
With rlreplace. Plus P'our Bedrooms &
Donut Room• Den. Mep·Do~ LMn1 Room
With Ten·Foot Cellln11. Sptcloua Olntn1
Area WUh Wet Bar Truly Oor1eous View Of
11landJ • ChaMell. And An Extra Lar1e
Froot PalJo fr Deck. ll.650.000.
wmt WAf ,_. WI IM181r
One Of Ntwp0rt:. Motl Dl1Un1wshed HOmea
Sltuat On An Aore Of Ground With A
S"eepins P1noramlc Vlt" Of Ocean. l1hendJ Ir CoaltJlne. Stvtn Bedroom•. Family Room.
Galleria. Beautiful Pool It Deck Stparatt
Quaiun For Statt, 19hown By AppOlntment
Only. SU00.000
NIW MYflOMT umua
Oor1eou1 Modem Hom• With A Dtll1htful11
Dlatlnttlh Old WorJd lnrtrler. With
fmportlPd fuml1tNn11 ffandlomt Woodtn
Mantel1. ,Huie ·carud WOod" Bar. SU Many Sptclal AmenHIH, AJ.ttomatlc
Sprtnkltrt. Air 1Condltlon1n1. Stturlly
87uem P.rofe11lon•ll)' Dtco'8tPd It
Proreu onally L1n(l1dped Dotk Fqr
Flftf·l'Oot Boat f>rlva11 Beach, By A~men1 0nw. • .eoo ooo.
r .. 1Bt1• '2~ .... ........ ~
..wPORT HEIGHTS CHAlba
This remodeled homE' features added
master bdrm and family room. 3
fireplaces . hardwood floors. new
copper plumbing. new roof. RV access
and much. much more. Owner w1fl
help with the financing. Offered at
$189,900. Call 540·1151
ERITAGE
'
.
REALTORS
67S.SSI I
OPEHHOUSE
IASTSIOI-INrBTAIMRS DIUelT -l
..._.2 bath ho1M with ad«Md ..... ·==••• ..t S,.. A ......... '-· • $150,000. 0,.. ..... s.., ....
335 • Coste Mete -COLI OF NEWPORT llALTOIS
25111. Coast Hwy., C--. .. Mar
675-5511
t t.IO/o FtMAMCIHG ..._,.,_. I 006
Belter hurry, lhl1 2 .... , .. •••••••••••••••• Bdrm Irvin• condo won't
Lut. Prime area. 1reat
ftoandnl and offered at
only 113,900. 5'0.3866
LOUUICHTIL .. .......... ..........
.~ w..a1 ..... . ....._. 229 ............. 1
~ 1 __ 6:.:7~1-~J~H--l_..;.,.--1
TAXllATR
Plan. for 1111, b'O' this new Sproul duplea at 721
l Poluettla. S Bdrm,
lamllf, ·~ balh, 2 •tor>' home. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath in·
COtne mlt, 4 car 1ara1e.
pleauot view• ioo !
lll0.000. p .s. Stroll pul m Goldenrod, a qual.nt
new home. aseo.ooo.
<f4U>Ha dJ v11a,.
~ *GP-Nm
IUI I . CMet Hwy .. CdM ...........
BtauWul lt 4 8d eetate
w/anlc:\&hd ~ ac. lot.
PIO 000. Prln only . P1trlc1t Tenore. Ast. 111·1111
OflM SAT /SUM t z..• •
POOL AMO YllW
11YN ftllACI
A ClOSJ I Bdrm, formal
dloln• ·rm hotne with DOOi Ud h11hl1 expanda· ble vi4w of harbor and
ocaaa. " ... ll1tlft1 •t
CJDi1 -.ooo '"· 1601 ..... .,....
CAU.QUlCK
M4-7Jll
"1n .,,, ''
t :, I l ~ I '•
~ r t " ' • , 'I ,/I I• It )
OM• WILL CAllY
YOU--UUIHI
Aala• Av'a•
Nt• a bdrm, 2 bath I bame. A breeze from the
a..a.am.noo.
F'ORE'5T F
OLSON 1*ich. Leue opUon for! sale. AU for Beau, Ast.
··~-~ IAYNOMTCOMDO t~~~~~~~j
' 1 •• boat sllp on main
ebannel, 2 poola, J tea.nu ••RC!
RCTaylorCo
Pral.dent Home bu just
t..2 l._led. • Bdrm, 2
bllb, family room, larae HCIUded )'Ud. Im. maculate condition.
tarp aawnable loao. ~illc:Judl.01 land.
/llSTIUY w~sou••• Nb lltar'1 J.~ ''C" pa.a. lf•hl1 pahlted, ~air, Prtrid IMlow
COlllMtable.ulet. for lm·
mid: KtJa. .... 800
. Ctl~72tl
. .
~-·,,
~ 11• ----
don osPn
• LAGUNA BEACH ., ...
,ACtPIC
'AIADlU Dr9am by Uw aea in thia
lo\-tly 2 Bdrio. 2 bath. lamlly room home. Fao-tutt c ocean view
O.lrable end uoll with M• patio and covered
don osen
1 I ,,,t11J •,
LAG UN~
CA HY OH
.............
• !:'!':~ ......... ~!~.~·
s. Juan C.pq. s.ss.ooo. :z Br.28a.1480aq. fl. iyn.
old. .\Ct 5'1·5032.
OCIAMNOMT
MnttoMaicwla•
S,350 Sq. Fl Commercial
Bldg. 1 Blk to Pacllac
Ocean Sell $350.000
Lease $2,140 Month
Wftley H. T aytor Co.
Rtalton 644-491 0
SUPER INVESTMENT
TRIPLE NET, 10 YR
LEASE, building te·
modeled 1980. sum me
mo. Priced $195,000 Agt
646-4380; 642·4447
•l-1/Tow•-fortafe 1700
IOYrOldllfur
28 unite, •dult, owner
tlnan. Need qui ck1----------
eecrow. 8lverelde
$750,000. Owner/Bkr.
Norm McKJnJey &al·.1286
or~
Rltr.
..
~
I
IJ II . '
2
1.
d
I
r t
-:
2lr,Zba,crpt,drape1, yr
ly, t550. Daya 548·93'1,
.......................
StllinlDI lar1e l Br. Lovely 2 BR 1 Ba, almos!
p.rda apt. pool, rec new. $625. 760-1966 .
.,._ noW. llth. St. 875-«IOO. DotUe Johnson,
ql.
l Bl\ 1 bath, uU1 pd. QuJet ce.ta Mesa Jl24 oo pet.a. S295/mo t:aaOcllp SCl-1811 •••••••••••••••••••••••
. HIWL Y DICOI.
BldJtklr Apt. Fum., no
~1125/mo.
MWTIO
to M ••IHAJ740 .......................
H.1•1AMUT
~ l'atate LlvlD1 I Bt•utlful park-Uk• 1ur· ~oiindln11. Terraced
~YRINT?
At Quall Meadows adult condomiriium
in Tustin, you can own you[ own hOme
for rilorit.hly payment.a that may be
wer than your current ~t! A new
program providina a 22~% mort1a1e
reducUon n th first year la now
available to assist you an malilri1 a
solid investment 1ln your future.
Startin• at -~ and with financln1 s-rotrama for down _pa~ta as low
•• 5%. you can bUy a pea\ l bt, 1 i+'.
den. or 2 tid coadomlnlum home ln one
or Tu1tln'1 moat. pre1tl1lou1
nelpborihODdl. l>oD 't wute one more
clOJl&r I.ft reftt I C*U 5abdy •t -~ tor~ worrnauoo 8D4 dirKtlOOI to tMautllw QUAIL MEADOWS.
Pvt mt It bath for quiet
empl fem. Ute cooking,
refa. $185 mo. C.M.
MS-8502
START '81
RIGHT
........ Office •
.tU.M ..... v-.
Speool rotes 1f
leased by Dec I 5.
1980
200-I 200 Sq r1.
Up to I mo Free Rent
Wet Bors
Woterf ront Settings
&75-1662
Room-abr Ba wlth l. K lt c b • n • I • u n d r Y •--.-.e-h_3_b_r _b_m_e_t.o_a_h_r
1
·
non-amlu pref. ~ bdrm•
avail now Call Mort I sao-• daya, 494-58131
'
evts •
Prtmt comer toe. Up '° ~500 sq R. FUil servl'-'• 1-----.;._---1 modern, 1Ja11 bld •
'l"' , ~ . I 1 : I ' I 'I ' ) f ~
I
...... -!J.
NEWEXEC.SUtTESt
BESTO.C. LOCATION
Now You
llartlyn'a Cleanlna 6 Prtvat. party haa well
t•nance Co. for NCUnd 2Dd TD for aale
~. llldlacouot.175-1178.
NOVEMBER
ma;
SALE
C•n
Sell
For Private PaJjies Only
~
NOW th'°""' NOVEMla 30th
(NO REBATE '0A EARLY CAHCEL&.ATIOH8)
............... AM. .......
-
•
llNOL&T lleet 1lnotre, people·llkt You I Low
ht Call DATIL.IHI·
fNll&JO..al·D4•
T•• Natl-al ••re•• ef sa-•a .. a (N88) la
e•rr•••ly tfewel••••• •• ••••••••• ••••faet•rl•I re11ea1oe• faelllty ••le• wJll
••••••••• ••••••• ... ,., ....... •••••••le l•a,.nl-•ya--, alill ...._. earu wllll «:Aa.
C••••ter Al•e• Preee•• PlaaliJwa, a•• ••••• ,., .............. 8ya•-..... , ... u.,. .... .. .... .. ............. ......... .... .....
............ Te meet 1111• elul ....... W ... .. ••• .. •• ..... ••••la e;;:s•aer._, ..... ,._...e ..... ••••• ........ ' ..... lee, ..... .... ........ ....... ..• .. . ..... _ .....
c ..... , ..-•••-awallaM• Imel_..
• "-'-••••• Sele•d•t -6 1111a, 1a, 14
(1 ......... -~····•••) . c........ ,......... -
. 6 11119, Ja/14 O•• ..-•••••• avalla•I•)
0 • C••••••• Sel••ee/ •eella•leal E•ll11eer-GS 18
( ...... ,
• EleelN•la Ellit11eer -6S ta
(t•• "91tl-• avalla•le) . .
" llltl••••lal/Meella•leal
Eql•eer -6S 18
(faelllCIM ·····••)
, . ....,. = ... ....... .. .
714-759-4214
• iiiiiiill'? ® '
SECURITY
MCIFIC
BANK r.qu.a1 ()pportuDJtL ~-ll /J'/V~
...... c ............ •••St. kandnllOD Beach E.O.B.
BANKING
Are you a Wlfl-Qf'QPmed, C... Otleni.d
tndMduel and have tuld ta.nklng or
retated experience? tt IO, w. .,. lopkJng
• for youf .
We. offer an excellent ~. medical
lnauNnCM tnoludlng Dint.al, two WMkl
paid Yecatton after ••• montht
continuous .,,,pc°""'"t. ~ut wonting
In the beach area. Our Immediate
opentnoe .. :
~ ......
IWlsnLllTS
._, ID -4 ol a work· &aa mua1er, al10 I
1trU1u fot' oar pro· ..,...1 .. fall Hnlct
illla: a ...... ...a.,
.-.. pdwac .. ad· .._.. tnlDiU! b1 our
tn'flllal llJ .. atneton. 1 orw~7rorad· I••~· Pleue call ... 1111.
A Newport •••c h martPP banktq firm
bu ID O,PenlDI for • a.ti in tWr Penonoel ~.Thi.I la a
Potltlon rt·
.. ~£.-Nllr>' beDelltl. App ~director: telf ....... .
,~ .... ·":-;.~ .... !.!~ ~!~-... ~~!~.~ ~~ .... !.!~
";;am•I LOIAL Dul1au 11•91ALOMCI llQIEllAll D4*1D1 a•Rlf
• ......_ ....... llt•d• om. v .. ~ for_. Jm11•••MI•• •kil•r• .Pn. r-o.m .,,,._ •• -. ... -t1tw,.1•,p.Pi'eliir,, :~'Mt•~ Good 1ai.,,.,ta vlae ~·fnO-~~~~ \ra::t:t, W:~~ aa ~ ••t_, .. .,, !!!SL~;.:~~ .... ~bllloot•lliiMll :WO/mo •Obra. ';M·F ~'~&!,..p~' top e0d ADI ap ~ulred. Miut 1 am w...;.;._ tor a .....,... no,,._ • I.JAi ~. • bt ftUllDl la Entllah • -. -·-c • rnlture rtflDtebu Box 11580 ta M•a, Spubb a UJJablt of alone Wboun41tda • oitt •••• r Wt.Auel, Some -:Wxper. QA.... • • menepnaabusydepart• p&.e. to \'O Witb OWQ ...... _ '*' "rY· Will t.raln. To GEHO.At OFFICE lllelll. Xlnt compenuuon ~ ~.,.· .:.1:'Pln.I~ c:.
1
1
... IRib': ea.uoo. A1t for ... ""-N ... Ctr 1 n • Wneflta. See iMra. caufooal uolrloa·., ~~~~~~~=~I l\mplh'•IAu Lee. ~· t? a• rm _.., for application «r ,_,.-..., nr uetlnc 1eneral oltltt ap)lijlatmtnt for 10•
1
marJtetm1 for • 1Dan al GAIU>ENER WA.NT D c:Jork. Duties laclude la'vleW. No pbooo uJJi wtlt1. 6 poodle. NHCb ElpettlGC9d 1ardener It dlclllicatbl1, amil room llie.u6 OWDU'l.fta,$41·7548
a..ai lllfAI bucbman on La1una operatJon, coflH .rvom EOE -callMM'Js:taayt!CM
...... -· atu. C.e.ptlonal OP· dudei, etc. Plea .. call' •EVER.LY llANOR I ~ & Loera ~t.atJves for q
We •h utklal an m.t·.uv9!°:r1to;~: UaAnn!Mebtir.7st-1100. Qm=~t:!o.p~11 I ......... don 110,..•••• Broktra1e. ji81CAI,
,,,.,trial Cltrlr with flrfSMW Write Ad tee$ GflLFlllDAY i.. u.naH~I! • 1 yr. ~r. in elfftro-Liberal Comml11loa1. llC.rlONllT ::t:=~n:-_~~'!: Dally Ptlot, Boa 1~: l\etded h uaht 1 mechanical mft. en-R.E . Ltctu• Uq', a.y·..CUwaroup.N, -111t1~-.;-....---..... ~~-. ...... --~----w1 1 ... _..,ttnf, do"'u• ~aM•a,CA93A'T ~er. No aelllna or Jb&eu/CaahJtr,e•p,eve viraoment .-.q'd. Muat Ml.eao ~.Lau.r•.UT.aoo. --" '1mmicka,. muJt have INA. Apply ln peraon, be fa m I J la r w It hf _______ _._,
DIM ~ -~ eapoaur•i o.n.niwbor. P.,.t Ume. pleMant penonAUty and 8en Brown R•taurant 1111.SPEC taiderlnf ln· a. ,. ~\M:~ ft.lal IDd .llbtary cc»olto Oolt club tt.ora1•. Pvt. a!lfllt¥ to m1.-et aod talk suoe Cout Hwy South 1pedion •capable ot re· ...... Clerfl ~ 1; A;: :::!teaee. Lllht IYPln.I dub t44-MCN,eat. He topeople. Laa\ma. ' UJn1 blueprints u1ln1 Experienced tQ; n·
--....... 1n • a · · AA.Meo mtcrometer1 • caupera. ftW'D•RY/ •uraae. .. r111eau. • -.. _,. l-n deotral J'roat Office, TRANSMISSJONS MSc olfers you a food ~ " admlttlof. P'or amell ~•••AP Drhw _,. iffdtd 1 RACAL·DANA loatru· llcm·ft'I, M. Permanent Apply In j)erton. 1'745 .Hota aaJuy, exceJI. frln1el ,,...., Al'(I ~cblatrrc ffOSJ>lial ln
-·"'1 f•ll IN' Glll..i,i :P/i. ••ala :t ::-Uo IM., loca~ed ntar wltb ~n•flt1. typin1 NewportBJVd. CM. DC .... OMIST t benefita ll enjoyable ........ Dana Point. ·wt Qffer -.. .. •II ~IU4H.t • raa1• ouotyl sowprn, phone 11l1U1. .l')Jll U1De oppty avail•· work environment. &llll. beodlw, pleatiant ~ -• I A.l.rport, olfen an out· I Wttl O.C. YMCA. 1292 Girl f'rlday, l 1trl office, ble for upe;lenced Pleueapply at: Ao outatandlnf career nrk envlro1uoeQt • n.J a.•..,. I DllYQ.IANIRS: Llo'd , ttudlnt r•oefltak and Oarfltld Ave, H.B N.8. are~. typto1, boot· JteCeotJonut. Qualified ; Mmtw~laltt.1 ~y ta available 1alary commenaurate .. Jt ........ ~1... tpattw u. up. r tthne. R:'::na:L on pac .~•r.; an..-za teeptq, etc. Applf 3502 candfuie 1bould have. lMOlfonrovia, C.M. 'I wttb '1delit1 Federal, aj wttb ex.per. 49f.S7QZ, Ht. 4' -b"' -.dor ,.._, ... allk 6 pantl toe:· or epp.., Sou&bGretbvllle,S.A 1ood clerical 1r In ·• ec.aar E.0.E. leadin1 uvln11 and ..;m...;.._.---':__---...:.;..-•••e• •trou• ' .v. ' p l Od'j ~ . ... • tts"per'ICIUJ aldlls Thia J ' loan for a Lo• nl·--------__.. ¥04!' ,...,.. •tth 1 rJt ••• It me. . Rr•~ai-~--,.. ..... ..,c.... .u .. os . . Pacta1er/Secretary I •uubtd-co. Growth 1 ~aJaur;p .. '-::• DoCal 11 fNSi"RU~ ww..... F\111 Ir J>Art time. All ;~:'\:!e~ft~eu1:~ 1J N 8 TR UC TI 0 N A t. ElQ*iw. ln real eatate i t ... a.a.Illa. To I r ' !lllt \j IC .. W&M#l/Wallrwu full areaa. Uniform• furn'd. cJ • free meaJ per t AIDES Billn1ual Allan I loan pacta1tn.1 and/or! ~ICM.; •·c~IE.MPAllo '"1 ,,...,: e:r;i;,r•11
•• time• part Ume. Mu1t Alea 21 CIC' over, retJred ahlft. Apply lo penon. 1 lan1ua1ea. lthr/wlr . loan proce11lnf pre·1 TIAMSCI•• · a -arior • • &IC'l'IOtlC TIC j f)''41 IJ:t IU• havt at ltut 1yr. exper. ~.No eaper. nee. Mon. thrU Fri., tAY to $4.0S/br. Irvine Unified ,.,..._ T)'llfq • Ula ofj _..tt·i!~:.,a-:f 1 ~-...··bl 11.....9!1 ~·~ PltaH Olll for appt: '!!J>2J1: ~.,!1_2,1veraal t Noon,PeNOODel School Dlatrict. 29'11 '5-55wpma,.requlred. Nellonal medical re· • ...,.. -· """ ""''-=' tU·UH Mon .. Fr I. .-~on ''"''n ce, 1228 1 MAaaon HOTEL Alton Ave. An Equal OJ>· For more loformaUon, ference laboratory Jla• .,. •w~i•:c1.,~!!.!' • A•1r1011 1mi•lOpf:1,. t:INPM. W.llbSt.,SantaAne.Jn· IOONewportCtr Dr : portlmlty.Employer. I pleaae cau llr. Roni.an actttnc.career op· SM11 · , PN-WiOU. ._ • 11111 eo., P 01•r I I t.-vtew hrl: •·12 • 1-4. Newport Be ~h · 1 P.vey at (114) M2·4000, portuaJty available for ~·· o.t!~~1ic:'tect1 ac:aowM•MA•U ,, WlllA&.OHICI Mm·J'rl. F.QuaJOppEmp~rM /F ~ W•lwOnlcJMr , ext.a . Callfornla llceneed u ~DIAN ' Do 1°"' have • 1tron• HoUlewlYH wanted to I HAllSTYUST I Model home npr. Must I Medical Tec:hnoloatat.
lrDmedlat. opentn1 tor .............. ro11 1 l I w or II p a r t ti m • Top -..J , have portlollo. Collete FIDELITY I Candidate •bould bave a ~Beach retail atore ;;"""'~· flTo\'"con" tO:I0°l:IO, a day1/wk owr ... cO"m~t!:•~to t~k• HOUSJ!:CLEANERS 1rad. Irvine area .1 f 1 deiret and at leut 1 lfW otnce maintenance. Dettroaica ttada, tte: but lack 00: IWlablaw/mlnlmum ex. mm! ot 1 beautu~:'!e: To work for Janice'•' 879-a> 1 FEDERAL i year experience lo 1lIA
•perienced, reliable =riort Ar becllln1. r:;· Wiii train. Contact atorea ... ,·HUI evea,,~ed.Y Ann. Ptr. a.a,, J.AHITOllAL i S.. .... lild , ::=.thlnsommut·
with eye for de·: ........ , bl1Dyearold8ay l\mf1 Oru.ttr Irvine 540-IU7morntn1 .Frl.875-2514. 'Full time. Work tn; .._AMIL I C.platr-ano,:'be8:~::
-Permanent fuUUme 1 Cur....... ~row 11 eomeone you ~hUnion .m.auo. Hou.aecleanin1 service beautiful' Dana Point• NewportB .. ch I ...aoc.&etoOr •Coan· ~ with excellent :a~_ciulrea BSMI: 1or =t:'!!°~~m~rp;.t Oll:NBRALOFPICE 't~t~::,Tv.~~~~ :-.Tr: needaenersetJc1lrlafor
1
Harbor.$UOperbrplu.ai AnEqaaJOppotttanlty 1 tywWWif=thll. We
its. Call Jlm C)r I ~Eotequlvartlent P ""tn Uan. or .. t paclca 1 for Ml.lit enjoy phbne con· atarte; who wan ta Ptr or Ftr needs own , benefttl.ApplYTuestbru :~p1oyer oft• an al&ernat.ive to _..,,'"'5070. 4-.,yunexpe Hee "".... c 111' R taot worklnr with • lramp.Topmooey of· Frt.DanaPolntMarina tbaholpltalroutiDe_.. , I u1laffria1 plannhtt. ~ penon. a l '. · ~" det 1 wok "I 1omethln1 dtllerent. fered.8l?-411.38 Co, a.101 Dana Drive, ~ opportamlty to wort 1"1 coat Htlmaunc and er,sn.aas. 1 'td • 'j Dlpend1ble car a must. DanaPolnt. LUMCHHll.P LDaumquuoviroament 6 forecutintormanulac-typnf, pa vacaton, MOO+ per wk+ Up OUSECLEANlNG 1 ,.,.....v.a,atudenwor Sandrwumeto: · CUSTODIAL I tmi.q technlquea Mu1t ncaow o ... cu alclr pey • health lna. potential. Guaraateed SERVICES established I KENNEL I hardwortera plelr up -~ ... ..-...._MCI have 1ood wo~klnf New~:=s~cdrow ~tr. f~plyt 1: p:ra~n,t mln. tor rt1ht person. baa fWJ.u.;.. openint~1! H.an1. ~work. Morn·j cash for autatmat1, 001 CarolH.Whlte ........,., a.~ , lrnowled1e of product ~ lilied '1' ~?· "~troa l ,;: :n 1 RB. -C.11 . area. Allr for bard worktn1 women lno. » bra per wk. elEI*' DfftUU)' • .,Hl·f ffmnao ~
I tee bn lq u ea . W 111 1 Cltinl fOC' qua 0 •
1
~ """' · an· fer Wan-en, 951-o5:U. w/oppty for advance· Tralnalmlnimam wa1e .. ble ac:bedulilla for you. a.amn,11ao•i ,_..._ ~aodcoordinatel licer and Hcretary dolJ)hAve.,Cll.54e-5$70. I mmt So County area I Merit mcNase. llu1t j WClftto-lJbnperwkorl NlcboblmU&me h-.. 1chedulln1 of 1peclal ~have it.rooa follow. JWRSTYLIST -...-· · haveau&.o. 55'7.eGZO. , mare. We pay ... 00 per po Boatnn t:al1JLDERS EM • aatomerw requirements! 1n1 and handle ex· General Help, Caterin1, Immed. openin1 for -I h r . < n • w ) WortdW9yPottalC.ater
-p(}RJUll, a division of I or computer systems' chan1ea. Salary c~m-. Warehoua~, atart_lngl femaletoeuUrstyle ''hil HOUSEKEEPER, Full! ICIYPUHCH I W~I. 250 So. 1-A.Dplea,CalOOOt
... Wicka Corporation, manufacturin1. Salary mmsurate wttb ebllity, Nov. 24• a.aOam-1.aO, Ir her"a" hair. llu1t be time daya. Immediate I.nsuranee qency needs Br11tol at Redhlll. 4'C:t°' an lodividu.1 1 *22.000peryear.Takead ::.0.~~~forMr.I mineachday,646-1433 , ~dive Ir personab~e., opeoina, waiea negotia Dal.a Entry Processorlo· 11574117 F..Qual()pportw:Uty
d part-time, 5 eves I to tbe nearest ~late General off Ice F /T , Uceme Ir exper. req d.
1
. ble. 5.5i2-4ll07 or 894·9825 work directly under Dau I LYM/DAY SHIFT tmployer M/P ..... 5 .9py Mon Employment Office ·I DICSICIET•ay I Id r . .'f ToniG-9293 Procesain1 M1n11er.·1 J11na Frt.'Dutiea ln°chade · 001'00.1. 081.010. Ad paid ,,. wou pre er exp in : ' Housekeeper wanted I Experience helpful. Every other wlrnd off .
._, acrubbing end buf· I for by employer. ADMIH. ASST
1
. ranaoce, lltde typin1. ac· HARDWARE SALES Mon.·Frl. tAM·S·JOPM . Must type at least XloL fne medlcal lrden· tielCALOPffCI
._ window wHhiog TO $11,000 curacy & etaal impor· Apply lo person: Rion Tocareforlovely Balboa 55wpm Salary com.
1
t.11. Apply 1"5 Superior, Small loternal medlcloe
:ts.1'1eneral clean up IHGINIH To buay president of lant, ~ase cal l' Hardware, 1024 lrvtne Peninsula Home' & 31 m-:nsurate w /ex · N.B. practice located in wan. t • growing mr1 . and1 <714)752: . (WestcliffPlaza) N.B. school·•ge children penence. Paid company I Newport Beach hu ID :Structural design. service related business • . I Must speak English & benefits . Call Art. M hinllll lmmediat.eopenln1tora E ated applicants 1 Newport Beach A&E ofc. in Tullio, non,smoker. General l HELP WAHTB> I have xlnt references 963-(»41. ac I combination Medical 0 apply to the Store ' 3·5)'1'11.exper.675-6110 1 IU!Q~rea orga_nizati~nal l FIE£ We are .now accepting , call 873-7643 aft 6PM &IL A N D S C A P E ! PAIT TIM£ Tranacrlber/D1t1 Entry
• er. • abilities,. be initiative, JIAININCI applicallona for 1 full 00 knds I I Operator. The 1ueceuful
•.•• IUILDERS ee responsibilities. Send re-SllU.S ·A umE I ader ad dept. Telephone I HOUSBCEEPEI I Lloyds Landsc~pe ~o. ...... rnin!miJm ol lyr e?'per. •·• Enlin , and willingness to lake • . time position in our. re· _ w · FOREMAN 111..aalSTS I candidate will have a
t-.'I• _ / sume to Box 816, Daily I & counter sales. Re·, Im ed l op . g n custom. residential, high Local company needs ex in both ol these fields. •'' EMPOllUM y Pilot. PO Box 1560, Costa •H"TV7 quires good spelling, j' 1 '? 1~ e ::_ni:e 1h quality standards 2 yr perienced C Ir C bar Ir Knowled1e of medical
d1 El Toro, Ca RWABILIJY S Lookinl for local tem-manship. Must enjoy houaeteeper I lOP M I per mo. starting. Call for operator. Have to be ex· Pleuant atmosphere .
lf!l .KmRockfieldRd. 1Mesa,Cal92626. RNll. grammer, & pen a~anefore:":i ht s~fn rni.nexper Sl,050to$1350 checker ma chine/ terminology a mus.l.
.. 111~ Exec .. ecy Rapidly I porary usipments that meeting the public. App. 6All Good aal~ & fr. appt.6C6-7441 perienced with C Ir C xlnl. aalary Ir frin1e •!~ Equal Opportunity grow 1 n g com Put er will live you esperience ly Penaysa ver. 1660 ln&e ·benefits .:Ictaie I mtlla. Evenla1 hours benellta pacta1e. For
EmPoY• 111 /F /H/V ENGINEER peripheral co. in Irvine. and expo1ure to the pro-Placentia Ave. C.11. For Interview contect LEGAL SECRETARY SPll to lOPM, Monday more informaUoa • in·
lnternatl bus. exp. Ir reulonal world? We HOSPITAL Lu Slotten 714 641-1616. Hl1bly-1k!lled ~ _e~· thna Friday. ThlaJob will tervlew, contact Jane "111•-------i Wearelooktnl for people knowledge of German or haveahortand lonJ. term ..a.-.._ i E 0 E M/F penenced an plaintiff 1 bep.l Nov. 17tb to the Poley: 714·115·0110. '• wb:> esQc>y workini in a Freocb lan1ua1e pref aulpmenu 1v11lable ~Ass 1tant · · penon.aJ i.Qjwy. Salary end of the Year. Ex· E..O.E. M/F. : ,, ..
It 11•
l1ll!'
.11.-l
l\:.t''
OJ•I
utj
IDt.,
"'
Data
Entry
~er
1'1ia eat.ry leYel position
•lt,.im.mediately avalla· Mt. WW operate a Data
''Mclalon 1010 and /or
nen>ss.rtea 21. Prefer re· , :l&'hd 1choollng or
1 lrlinimum experience.
'~e offer a 1table work vtronment with an ex·
• •tllent ulary and
•lilblftta pecka1e, lnclud· llll company paid
l cal, IJle and Dental
• rancea, Pen1lon
Savlnp Plan with
'" Ultereat rate, 11 • bolidaye j)er year l week paid vacation
fmoatha. Thia poal·
m1at be filled Im· ~~lately. Pleue apply
.PERSONNEL
li1DS
•"111 TIUVIX. INC. .. t ................... ,...._...
t '• lllD Jledhill Ave. Oolt.a lleaa, CA 928218
Opp EmpJ¥r 111/F
..,,.. · DIUYaY
t;)Jatun man for local
~Tc~.:.~~
t•t 6 9roce11or
work for typeaett1n1 ~. Exp welcome·
amall group environ· Startint salary to $1400 No previoU5 office ex· EARN WHILE YOU HOUSE PARENTS open. O.C. Airport area ~eoced only. Call On· -..SS84GH
19
T ment using their Replyincoo.fidenceload perience necessary LEARN Cpl to relieve o n 97~. driatoday! 1•• •
tecbnolo1y bot b in no. 8CM Daily Pilot, P 0 Never a fee. Call today Nee~ed Im medaa~ely alterpate wknds In home CC'I MJI&: Delivery between Co.ta
hardware and sonware Boxl.580,Coata Mesa.Ca forape>OtDtment Openanp on al~ .s~s. for six D I D clients ~SecyTl"Me ~,._.., MeuaiLawnctale. lloo.
Involvement. 9':!1631. AIU&: Paid Stale cert1f1cal1on Duties Cooklne. clean ~60 Sat .. Mon. morn an g 557~ Nursing program everyl mg. tolletin1 Salery m.L•n:._ 10.12.30. Moa..,sat. •fl Our neweat, faat·moving Exec:ut.iveAssastant other weekend off, SlOO Ex f'd U lted '-.I \ Ii SPM. Apply 1660 Placen-
productlathelatestaddi· Author/Publisher seeks r-n.L1n:_ weekend differential Cen!b Ji>Pf: 546-~760 ~s.cr.t.ry Jfl\M'Of/Al!Vl'ltsoNNlL.SUMcis liaAve.,C.11. tioD to the MDS Tri vex Executive ANisllJf, exp '-.I \ Ii Prop-essive Rehabilita· r 1 y, Must 6e pJeuant ' or·
line ol plas·compatlble lo editin1 & research TIWOl!MYPfllSOHNfLSllMCIS Uon Hospital needs you Find what you want In ianized. M yn exp. in 372311rc19 s...... Mr1
lnUractive display 1ta· hdpful,mustbefast,ac now. Contact Mrs DatlyPiJotClasslfieds .,_tent law. ao.1oowpm MIWjMrf._. SHOPMAM Uom utlllzin1 the 3270 curate typi1t, prefer, J72311rchSfrfft Tutschelt RN, ADN. typiq,80sbrt.bad.$1,300 CarpeatryOC'dnftlntex·
I ll 837-11000 Your ( r 1 e n d s a n d Ir up DOE. Call Ann. pmtcce. FabricaUon Is commun ca ons pro· rably experience on Mlwportleoch EOE neighbors use Classified St<MI055, Coutal Person· u•-OIHOUSIM• .... comtnacllon of qwallty
tocol·mall.lne changes to wcrd procealn1 equip. BEVERLY MANOR when they ha v e ne1 Atency, 2'790 Harbor -•" aluminum door framea. ::~~!:!,;~r~w.:er• M '8's Call 642:<N'7Hor app'l. Convalescent Hospital something to sell Thc)'ll Bl., Cll acz.3030 F\.lllll me poaitlon In
Trlvex products provide UICUTIVI SELL ldJe itenu with a 2"52ViaF.strada tell you how well tl NEVERAFEE E.0.E. MANAGER cpl . plea1ant work et,
coat effective SICAITAIY DailyPilotClassiCiedAd. LagunaHUls workedf~i:_~em • <Retired) for relief DDphere.Call546-IM38.
altsuativee for users of Rapidly exS>andln1 men. ot m.lni-1tora1e Kodelln1. commel'cials. tJU type of On·Llne In· Newport Beach floanclal 11tea la Santa Ana . lllma, extru. Need new
teractlveTermlnel.s. firm bu an immediate THE ORA .... GE COUNTY JOI F•IR IS COMING.I (p/llme work). Call; facea. AJl a1ea/type1. WW writ. teal filana and need tor an executive " A Racer 752-12114, t to 4, 71..._951-0207. secretary. Excellent lloD·'lbun. 1---------perfonn reliab lity tests lldlla and ability to or· MOD£L.J need a woman !!' .. t~ritne1rraducrien1w idteh p.ni.ie •must. Al least 4 S,annred ly.,... 11: I "1 0..1h; t c.,..ai. .. °'"9p C1 tj. llan.ap.rW'" .. TED. MATURE (J.IOC'older) to model for ;;;.;... · :e::~~;.~~rr~~~ MONDAY AND TUESDAY NOV. 24th and 25th ADhT COUPLE to:':: ~'!J!t~=: ~naBSEEor escs eontactT.~'Zt::~~·~. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. ~18.:~:fc:ebo~J =h!~"!:N':
mlojmum or 5 yean Ame r i c a n H o m e AT THI area. Reaume • local capital inva&meo& nq.
experience. Mort1a1e Corporation. ... ................. c~ CIMTB ""· req. bp. pref. To Send compoelta or anap
•S..li. ,._ ..... .......... ,....
New po rt Beach · ~~ '°'",,_.. .. ¥"" apply,-.. aend com· to David Kartln, 117
114-75-1515. 100 W. llATB.LA AVE.. AMA.HEIM. CALIF. ~NRmetoadno.I n•.-•.a... Dr tF NB
DaUy Pilot, P .O. Box Da.__ '• ' . . DIC. SICalT AIY L510, eo.ta lleaa, CA.1---------
Healtb Care lllaaafe· FREE ADMISSIO..... aa. Need attractive " ment Co. lo Irvine hu A (""1111 enerpt.lc penoo to rm
multtple openlnl• for ~ .. SALIS our Tour Gulde PG9iUoa.
Executive S.cretarlea ODDty tor ambttioua ln· F\IU 6 parttlme, itlnt ~~ lin~r:!:~: Some of the job openings that these companies will be attempting to fill include: dl-v w /a• c e 11 a r'I campeaaaUoa.a. 4113_.
tlonaJ 1t111a. Th• 1uc· UNSKILLED: Production & electronic assemblers. :!~1~~Ji:.:!''tr:,ua~ llllbBullclr. ~candidate will be warehouee. shipping & receiving, etc. maUv.. teama. Need Salea Repreaen·
abletol'elpondtoa fHt· Peraonal Bu1lne11 tatjve for vae•Uoniro· •I .... PAID g~':.:'.;t~!~ SKILLED: Machine Tnldes, Bank Telters. Auto & Dleael llpit...-S. 1ram. Youn1 • n ·
Y•ltloe efhr 6 -ae!MniUaUv•. be depen· Mechanlca, lnspectora, etc,1 llwaer tbwluUc people wl an . , , ..-w•····· Slllf'.,...
dable •have lood com· Cuual wear ato.re need• aWGmobtle. No exp pee. munle.t.loo lkJlla. l•l•ey CLERICAL: Ctefb, T~ Secntteriea. etc. a 1 re11 1 v e 1 t 0 r • PiO to *1000 per w".k .
comm•n•urat• with aan&1e:r, exp only. For -..r7 KtkeB&allclr. I ~e~~.'i'!:. ~ TECHNICAL: Computer ()ptntora. Programmera. Draftsmen, Info (tt4)770.lm ut ror Newport Photo FublOnl t:ii\::~n Raalna: 08elgnera, Lab Tecttnlclans. etc. lllkiorBob. aeek1 new modeU01
116t4Ha.ttouppt. PROFESSIONAL: Englneera, Accountants. Flnanclal Analysts. rec..Callm.ms .
1E:::tc:e11ary. Mu at
ve olear driven
. l'\all tlm• lloo·
Able to Work OT Ir ......,.. 11 ucaaery. M1f11 H9Qtlablt. Co. la·
HNI btneflta. Houra To Joto • comcn1 th•l
·aoAM·IPll. Irvine ~~~t IA~~,~~ E.0.1£.. ll/F Adrninfattator9/M•n-ra, Sales Reps, etc. ' M19Hf AUDSTOI
DP•IHC• --.-llamla=&it l\ill time• part~'.#JPe.
'-r •lrport. Call for bit work atmoapbere, • ... • ......... •----__..~mi-~--.,.._;j pMue Mid r•ume wllh
~ 1~l_ar7 bl1tor1 to : t~c:Uve lemal• d•· PERSONNEL 1 wanted to -••• ...
I( ..... Ult'k food
local aupermarkeu.
hour'1 wort, part or . can nic>N·1100 .............
ILICfttetAM "---Cou SICUTAIY AllDlY to ctndr. SarJ,~• la commercial, 10• If Y.Ou are loOkln~ foe a JOb In the""'.,~ nty area. then thla la the• Our Dlr•ctor 01 land Hotel, Le1uH ~ ........... ,. 6 _ ..... r COD• •Place tO be, 0on t mfa ltflt Be "*'-If pteae bf1-...,. .. , pen Ot' pencil, BtM:h,. .-r-4471.
v-.n ..,..,_ ''1' ,.,.,,, llaJi&lfactUMI baa ID·--------"-tral.2J.MZZ.11tl, AppUClltk>ila wtll be accepted. Partial Hit of companies attending this hnmed. eeed tor •
year'a Job ~alr.mctudei: ' MCntar7 ww. s.s ,,. o1 DP•B4C• P'/f reeema~ .• Pftf rabb' NlrMI.._. O~Stoni Clerk witlale maa11faeturin1 •• 71~. PbmN'-0510 • enYirolu:Denl. Candidate ..,. •
mu1t be able t.6t)'pt 80+ We wtll tra D. I paid
wpm • abs. to UH a diet• ! holldap, be1lanln1 aa Ulllbone. ahortband 1lrUll aoaa • blred, biollll&a . would be a d flnJle plua. &11vlew Coanlac:eot
111 u at ha v • a b o v e Holpatal, I05' ThvrJn. a....,u wnericalallllla C.11 . Mn. rarrlill:
llbtable toua• a lOkt)'. eazm. E.O.IE.
~ bt able to tffec· N\ftlnt u.., cammuaJcale wlth CitllW all~ of peraMntl. • In ad4Jtloa to a Hry ..,.... Aa.
...-n1v1 11lary, wt ~N "1tf.
offer 1 ruu uaae of 1 ~ .... ..,., •tn• ~ 6 a h,ljl\ly COii\• .. Iii aoa. .. :a.JNd,
PMllll• work uvlro• ._.. •jYJll• C.·
..... , ...... contact ........ rm~
"' a 1h1tnce •J. 1'IUt., C .;J'e"'r • ...... ~..... .... ..
-Ml ana CM 'zoE •
PASTE-UP
EIQlerience preferred, or wUl train. Jl\J U time post·
tlon. Co. benefita. Apply
ID penon: 1660 Placentia
Ave.,C.11.
PASTEUP
~ tiOM penon needed ta boot pasteup Mon. le n.. No exp. nee. App.
If: Peonyuve!.t 1660 Placeatia Ave., C111
..
~w..-__;;.,_:.. _____ ,
' 1&.te l'wmal Dinlnl Rm •IJA Upbol. Chain $1000 1---"--_._ ___ _
l'll'1ll Very Clean 8'6-2971 Oraqe velvet cbr. 2 wht
upbol bar stools, new
.i ,,vRNlTURE-muat sell· •molter elec BBQ, much1---------1 n•aby araod paano, more TSl-9:523 I Mo¥ingSale laldeabed , 2 swivel · Ant quea, collecUblea. Dlnin& room table &
rockers, desk, much A1molt oew double bed dab, dr•aer, chests. cbalrs, sofa, dresser, '~· N.B. 131-2383. with matt, frame &t boll .tpm, camper •bell etc. mile. h ·S200 Sat 9-4,
qt sprtop $'IS ~-6397 17443 Santa Suzanna, 3900 Parkview #8A.
, ~ bousebold with ac-' · · F. V. 551-30IS ceNori ... Sat fl Sun, Antique walnut dreuer•---------•---------•
f:am ·5pm , 17932 witbw/3-way mirror" ara1e Sale : 28699AM-3PM Ult Dolphin ~. entut Ln, Sprinadale ma1chlnl dbl bed $400. Ctubbouae Rd C.M. S/S Terrace, CdM. See
T.u.t. H.B. -.znJ. ~J • IXJDe..a-UneS/S
.,.. All AbOard For Our
Christmas Gift Train I
~ Daily Pilot ad number wiU appear in your ad ...
we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you calt
in at your convenience during.: Office hours a
the resMnses to your ad ... For '09"e Jnformat on
and to place your ad call 642 .. 5678.
642-5678 DAl l'J ···~ a·r L. i ~ I •. ,
i
"7S Randa. XL 175. Like
new. 1300m I $675.
7U-411-2215.
"'15 Honda. XR 75. Like
new, 1eldom ridden
..,.n'"41Z-ZZ15.
7508Dada, SllOO 54t-4t1t eve..
:. . ": 4 j. 4 \
•' I • I
VW·POll8CltE AUDI
'78VW
COMVllTIIU
Mint cond, Jeu t
13,000 miles, alere much more. <•9825)
JIM 5&.IMOMS
IMPORTS
J.Vl'OHARBOR BLV
COSTA MESA
631.IZ76
COUGAR
17812
PER MOM. + TAX
LIAM
Orltln•I •••w $7 .. 1. Aes.d..al $2'00. Tol•I .,.vment t'l)72. License Ille You P<IY .. pe-ts of $1",07 ln<hHli"9 IH Totel 00.
ll~tlOft $11,111. Puf'<r.e.. OPllOll
IPA 44HWY. 28CITY EPA 19CITY 27HWY.
•NO DOWN PAYMENT
• FREE LOAN CARS DURING SERVICE
•FREE DETAIL EVERY 6 MONTHS
• FREE CREDIT CHECK
COMPETITORS'
i~ .$69.29
LJIT "'9C u1gu•••"*''""10
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
DATSUN 1981 PRICES
$6.1.39·
jjjQ!ijtf 310· ··$·5······3·······3······9"'''
Fre19h'. (S.. FNHl001754)
~roUST PRICE • • L jjjj)!i!~N-·210····$4 ....... 4 ...... 3 ........... .
Ftelght.1Set.7BU0417451 ~LJIT flN(:E • T 6
1981 DATSUN 510
lnl:iUOle c.111 Eml9llOn & Freilttl (Ser HlA 10200& 13)
SUOOEST'ED FACTORY UIT l'RICe
'.HECK YOUR CLOSEST DEALER LISTED HERE-GET THEIR PRICE IN
WRITING. THEN COME SEE THE VOLUME DISCOUNT DATSUN DEALER f! M•/JlNi ®lli ·~1 filJ : I NOW IS lffE 1111£
• TO 8UY YOUR
•YOUDOflT:.::,..CMDA': YOU MAY BE PAYING .TOO MUCH! DATSUN Ill
GAS GUZZLERS ACCEP'f&Dn:..
PAro .FOR OR lio7 BANK RATE ~ 16.99% • . CILll&ND ~ Olf .. '~ CMOtr :•I~~~~~~;_._,,,_ -...-~-OO~TOA!!"'!"TIUM.~~INC~'!""
OllUAlf DA lMM
fOOTllU OATIUN. INC
WOONOATSUM
Tll-VAl.lEYOATIUll.IMC
lOflO MAQ4 °" TIUll
l)OWNTOWN 1..A. WOTOAI
lolflElllM. DA Ttult. OllC
UHMIWl.C:rTT
OAT .... NC
. 71AISTA
'76 Pinto, auto trans,
$1850.
551-SHt.
77PIMTO
'77 Pinto Wa1on. Xlnt
cond, °" radl~ tl.ra, 33,000 ml, '2800, 03-2116
ev.
0..-1alet 9920 I Red in color. Must aee. '18 Pinto. auto, air, 4 cyl, •••••••••••••••••••••••I UIOlUML) clean, $2800.
499-3931 •CHIV.MU .. O ~5 M~L•U ¥6 .__ ..,,. A 9,60
SPOllT COUPl-l ~ ...... ••••••••••••••••• JM>G.,..OroYe Blvd. ..1-~-. AutomaUe traaa .• air Weetl', ..,. -...OlO , ~•-•n e o ad . a more ! YALIAMT
<Sir.-). 'IU'ord Falcon. t cylinder, automatic, OMLY $Sttl! '550 power ateerin1. air,
HOWAD CMwolet wa>s, w.u.s AM/PM tape, only 29,163
Doire•QcaallSta. 71.-.._u._ ... ._. milel. (i082ER>
NEWPORT BEACH ...,....,,,...._ f'llt4J5 llJ.0555 All 3 Granadu told with • ·
1---------1 l year 20,000 mlle war s-.tfford
7'CMIYY rantiea. (H3TMK . S440GardeoGroveBlvd . CHIVITTI 387SOA. llORKT) Westmtnst« 636-4010
~~=-rl~x~Grd· m. As llw As ESTATI! SALE· 1977 $3271 ('llt~K Plymouth Volare, tan, ~Avlllal>le --.w auto tnn1, air, 1ood COAST UMI s...t........ oond. 79-4173 wkdya for AUTO llOIRS SMOGardeo Grove Blvd. _lnf_o. ______ _
20.11Hatbor Blvd. W.tq:)lol*eJ' 636-40lO ,...._ • 9965
OOSTAllESA '1115 lluatao1, V-8, auto, Hl-4017 Ilda paint Ir minor mech "IOPOMTIAC
•••••••••••••••••••••••
---------1 S765 allo 'ts .Muatan1 Tram-Am w /ooly 7000 7t CMIVITTI 8CyJ.. It.la, bad trans, aa mOea. dynamite ori1lnal 4 cylloder, automatic, la $475. Call Ru11 car, loaded w/xtraa .
like new, muat see. bm-842·6153 or wrk (SMVZD)
(118SWSS) 857-lilOO S76tl
~s MMMAIJMO ....., 77LTDWAcaoM vousw;.•81 5-Mt'-d V-8, automatic, power 1171lBeacb81vd .
SMOGardellGroveBlvd. ateerisig, air, A11 /FM HUN11NGTONBEACH
Weatmtnster -..OlO tape, rack, cruise, 9 14z..ZOOO
puaeqer .c...!..DlY 35,584 --------
Sii! US RIST!
We bav• a lood aelectioo
of NElf. • USED
OlevroMU!
CON.,,. Ell
CHEVROLET
~ 11 • • I·
p.. I \ \I
miles. (47Siu.K) ·11T-A• lluat See! • -s-.t '-4 Powel-lleeriq, brua,
S640Garden Grove Blvd. windows. Power door
W.tmi.Dater 636-40lO lodal, rear window de· foger 11 llPG with 403 U.. tt45 VI. All /Fii 8 track. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '5300.
"1'9Cttitinen\al Town car. , ___ uu __ 4_1_1 __ _
Wblte wtwbt leath. lntr. '71 Faitla Stat1on w1 ---------• '500 mt. W ,000. Call all c 11_ Goodn, .. , ........ •••u s.cm pwr, nma .... e.
S46-I 200
' -1----------1 mllHI•· $800 080. w;.eoM 71 UMCOU. -.za
V-1, automaUc, power MAii V --------... ..-•• alr ~.a must 'et Gran Pris, Good ;;:-<i&sx)" ~· muat aee. n-..portat.toq, need Ut·
tlewortr. PIQTSl~ , Sl!',!,d '1.l!!J 'T1 Grand !Allan.a. XIDt cood. 30,QOo lDi. $3100
SMOGerdea Grove Blvd. 5640Gardla Grove Blvd. .,_ •sdo aft 5pm.
W•mJuter . aMOlO iW '!!.-~m~lo~·~~-~......:•~:!·~01~0 l.----'-----"'----..,.-,-1-"11 Trabl Am . Lo . ml, ;:.r.:iu•• 4 cyl, new '11 LlDe. towntar, UK, loeded w/1oocll•. SM it U,., I 1pd, 4511, UbMW,.,7115. tobellev•lt. Wlldya AfU, .->.•mt ..._au ~
~--...,,..,..-----..,.-~
1.
''A TIME TO PLANT, AND
A TIME TO PLUCK UP
TMAr WUlat 15 m.ANreo>' .
by Tom BatiUk
..
' t
nitrWhir_~~-·
-
..
PlUS-Craeker Jack t\elpS you
save up to SS on these great
MAML Christmas Toysl ·
'OFFICIAL
ENTRYlt'ORM I NO PURCHAU N!CESSAIV
I CRACKER JACIC CHRISTMAS TOY
GIVE·AWAY SWEEPSWCES I Mo•I to Creclr•r Joelr Chfl1""°9 fOf Ol~Aw9¥ lwMp1to11 .. I •.O.le•H•O W.e~. New'°" Ufft I ,..a .. enttr me In the SW..P'tak••.
I . ..,..,.. ---------.-~ .. ,,,
I ""°'~'---------1 C••• SlOfe -:ro--
1 ""°"9 No I
..__ .. _... ... ~ .. "" "'ii
________ ..... ____ _,,
·nen
YOORSElf
5-' ...................... '""" ........ ~ ........ 1IWk. .. y 10021 Wl'l~Utar ............. ~-e1111_..._
FOR DR. HALFDAN 'I MAHLER.
Oirec:tor-Gencral, Wodd Heakh Organtza-
tlon (U.N.) •
Wbm me the c:mw olMmdm-ID chi·
chn Ill deu •••• '10Ulltltle? How~
.,. am1c:tec1? -Aaale Clunlelewsld,
'limton, J:U.
• The main causes of avoidable
blindness In children In developJng
countries me Infectious and deficiency
diseases, the latter especially affect-
ing infants. It ls e1thnated that up
Tragedy of iM sight/as voung. to 100,000 survivors might be perma-nently blinded each year by Vitamin A
deficiency~ while an equal number
may die. As for Infectious diseases, the most lmpcrtant cause of prevent-
able blndness Is stiD trachoma, which aJso affects children. The tot!l.I number
ol persons affected Is uttmated at 500,000,000 with 2,000,000 blinded by It,
and another 8,000,000 with partial loss ol vision.
FOR MARIAN MCPAR'JlAND, star ol National Publk: •
Radio's Morlan McPortJand'• Plano Joa II
What go91 tlatoueh am~'• adnd u he« the p&ai..7 -H., .• Utt.le Rock. Arl.
• Would you beneve that the two Items head.lngmy list
of "th!ngs to think about" are alwavs the same -my
bank balance and my pl.le ol bills. That's oow. When I
started out, with a combo, I was concerned about our
tempo. The om ttme we pl&~. I was sure our beat Ol
Urning was wrong.
FOR AUllN ROSENFELD, Dtrecior, Office of Public Af·
fairs, Smithsonian Institution
Of the hunctr.dil of ah1blt9 et the Sm~ which
enr.ct the 1D01t .U.don? -N.W., 1WID F.U., Idaho
• Visitors molt often ark to see the Wright brothers'
"Kitty Hawk Flyer." used for the first ~ con·
trolled and sustained flight: Lindbergh's '"Splrtt ol Sl
LouJs"; the Hope Diamond In the National Museum ol
Natural H1stcxy; and the First ladles' HaD, featuring the
gowns ol the Presidents' wlYa.
FOR SUZANNE MrratEU.. v1cc president and dlr.c·
tor. Daltu CowboY$ Chetntadcn, Inc
Whet _.. 80IH of the ..._ ....... dudee of a ct...·
ladlr? 00.. n ttt ,.kl? -LO •• Muekoaw, ()Ida.
e Its the honor of the tttle thal can1a the ficha. Each
must be a fully. ·~ ttudent or homemaker tn
order eo quallfy. They are '"9'WBnteed" $15.00 pet
~With 11 hocne games during a season. Personal
appsaranc:es, state fairs, oc:cMIOMJ 1V a~noes.
etc., cany additional polib!lttla for revenue. •
FOR 1ltE •ASK" EDrrOR
Pam o..ba'• r-=-t raurk dull ...
maka IMr Wgulltyll wbaa alte~
her mouth .ct lea tllOt * QUI. Wlult
.tMM1t ott.. c:eWwtdee? -R.I., Mmot. N.D .
• Suzanne Somers: '"Going out for a
ntght on the town, leaving· my son
doing his homework. .. MarlJyn Sokol:
'Wearing the fur coat I saved for ages
tnget because I realy don't approve of
fur coats, and it wasn't worth all the ef-
fort." Jama Stewart: "I feel gullty The guilty pleas ore rn.
when 1 forget things. for Instance, the
day before you asked me d'ds, I forgot
my wedding anniversary." Carol Burnett: "Keeping people waiting. Which
means I'm always haW an hour early -and they're 30 minutes late!" Marie Os-
mond: .. Sleeping too long In the morning. I think of all the things I could have
done while l ~ snoozing, and J feel awful."
FOR GREGORY HARRISON, st.ar ol CBS-lV's
Troppa John, M.0.
Why .-e il04l eo aplmt teldDg ecMcc when It com• to
J'O'lr work? -P .D., Mont..,. c.Jlf,
• Because ol an experience I had with my first acting
coach. She felt I was wasting my time and energy work-
ing on a movie which took up aU my weekends for 18
months. She advised me l'd be a failure If I kept up the
paoe. Two years later, ln 1974, Jrm, The World'• Great·
at, was released. It launched my career .•
, FOR NAlAUE COLE. recon:fing star and daughter ol the
laa. Nat King Cole
rw bald,.. ting °'Mona lJM." OM of pour fmher't
..... Jdta, ... It'• sr ent from the ..,, he --a "·
Why? -S.D •• Pueblo. Colo.
• I t;w ft my own tnterpmatk>n because I could never
emulate him. I wouldn't h!lve the courage to. The point.
Is, fm not a cmbon oopy" my dad -I koow he
wouldn't want me to be. lna&ntaly, "Mqna Lisa" was
the ftrst. song I he.ard my father sing. I was five.
FOR .IOHN SCHUCK. .._ ol Broedw9y's AnNe
, Siace "°" recmt1!i _.. w•._ a to, COlllJ*W'• QU.
.. , ~t Anrd .......... ,om: .... Oft the
Yo•I• .... ..._? -P.D •• s.A.n. On.
• :rhey'.re ln good sMp8, more honest than they were
e d~ eeo. Their Pf'Ob'em b that 1V may be hurdtil.
When klctaj>ow ptol*nw, the b&ome Is always dumped
on the schOol or lade of faml)y unit -but the cu~ '9
the cJectronlC media. Kids lhouJd spend more time
making their own entertelnmcnt.
PRO AflD COO
Should the Time °"'9rea
Ji bi Seaba Be Umlted to
A Maximum Number of~?
. .
•
K,nny Ro9e1s: The Hottest
Sound In Countty music·
He'a had hi. lo•es, but nOU> with 11 gold allJcnU,
succas m an actor and a U1ffe who '1>el'"leoe8 In me,•
Kenny Rogers i. holdfns a winning hand.
A.. Jock Wehrne< types of music." Such a definition ~ deftnltely descrhs Rogers, whose
When the music industry bu~
ble bunt a yar or so ago,
with the one-two punch of a
recnlk>n and a gas lhort-
ege, concert ticket sales ¥1'8 b1mmed
boJ about 25 percent, leavtng even
supentar acts performing before
thou.sands of empty Mats Of simply
cutting thelr losses boJ canC.f-
lng tlow-Mlftng data.
Apparen~. the last people to hear
about the tidustrywide a1sls wei.
Kenny Rogers and his fan9 In 30 U.S.
cities. ln the mlddle of th.It economic
aunch, .Rogm -end hJs bed<up
pafonnen, Dottle Wat and The
Oalo1dge Boyt -played the htghest-
grOlllug comperable tour In country
rm.tac btltmy. This yar ~Rogers II~
Ing )uslM slrong.
~ bUrded, dghtly graying s1flOlr
actmJti he's not ture why the fant
keep cxirnlrig. 'Wei, I'm not a tpUt
.,_,, • he says. -. am a musk:ian, but
again, not a !JMl musldan. I am,
baslc.dy, an entertainer."
What at ftnt appan to be a Cyplca1
~ ~. Is, In fact. the
b6ctomh phlbq>hy ol a rnan who
~ the tann "entmtalna" hat
been weedy erocW In r«Jent years.
He~ '"To~anmlllll'tllti.erll
a pman whO enoomp1111a many
musk:al odysMy has can1ed , him
through almost every fonn of pof>ular
musk:.
The 10n of a Houseon ~
worker, the 42-year~ entatalner
came from a ~pool' ,famlly wHh
eight kids. Hil mother, LudlJe
Rogers, though proud of her son,
smiles and admits, "Kenny never
watted a day In his llfe. AD that boy
was ever lntm.-d In was tinging."
Grtmac:tng allghdy at hll mother's
staterMnt, Rogers 1ays, '1'hat's not
sbicdy true. I sold office tupplles for •
while beck tn Houston." He slb,
looklng very sertoua, before ftnaDy
laughlng and adding, "Of cowte, I
was ftred few taking long lund\ blab
to play my guitar."
While hit panmtl wondcnd ti their
~ would aver get "IQI' woik.
Rogm put tog8ther: a ~high·achool
band that fmolly .C~ auccas
after his graduatSon With the tingle,
.. Crazy Feeling," which he N·
members es "Probably the mott
obli::ure mlllton ... Ulng ~ ewr."
"Crazy f uln{' got Kenny• group
on Amcrkion Baridaand, and they
thought they had It made. "Unf~
tunal81y, we didn't hive a folloW·up
record, IO tM IJ'OUP tpll up," he
saya.
lit not usy betn9 a 19·yeat:old
JOdc ~_,•*'-'~-""TV com; haHetn, bu~. R~ kept tnoYtng. ,,...,,,.,, e.1,,..... .,..., Jn 1966 he JOfl1«S the -New ChltslY
.. • "1111&:1...:lr, ~ .. -
Minstrels and a year later left the folk
group with three fellow members and
formed a pop/rock group, the First
Edition.
Before long came "Just Dropped
Jn To Sa What Condition My Con-
dltk>n Was In," ""Tell lt All Brother,"
"Somethlng's Bumin'," and others,
Including the IOfl9 he atill u$8S for an
encore, "Ruby, Don't Take Your
Love 1 o Town."
When the Ant Edldon disbanded
ln 1972 ( .. No hard feelings; It just
didn't excite us anymore"), Rogers
began a country career which, he
believes, was only natuiaJ. He ex-
plains, '1 think my strength hat
always been the country ltory song;
lt'a Just that with IOngl Ilka 'Reuben
Jama' and 'Ruby' lt was packaged
as pop." ,
RecordSJ features the new song,
"Lady," whkh has been charging up
the charts lhls month.
Unli<e many d his peers, Kenny
Rogers ls actively Involved ln the
business of his career In spite of his
murderous schedule. Ken Kragen,
Rogers's manager dover a decade,
says, .. Everything is a joint effort.
1ltere aie no ma)or moves or dedslon
made without Kenny's approval."
Although there have been some
deep valleys along his roller coaster
career, Kenny dalms he has definitely
had fun ... If you don't enjoy the climb,
the mountaintop doesn't mean any-
thing. If you're a mountain dimber
and al you want to do Is get to the
top, you might as well let them drop
you olf on top with a heJicopter."
The record sales and awards
suggest this is the happiest time
In his career, and It is, but not
just for tho9e reasons. "I have
one of the best marriages In the
world, .. he states happily.
Kenny Is manied to Marianne Gor-
don of 1Vs Hee Haw. He remem-
bers, "I met her during my last slunp,
before 'Ludlle' hi. when I had literal-
ly nodling. ShCJ ~ me n>.aJliie SUC·
as 1s not the moa tmponant thing 1n
the worid; ~ someone to share
your ups and downs with is. Ironically,
once J adopted that philosophy, suc-
cess came."
They dated f« three years before
manylng three years l90 (He bas two
chlJdren boJ three pnMot.as marriages,
Carole, 21, and Kenneth RM, 16).
~he ilon the road roe> days a
year, Marianne says, .. He'• 1eldorn
awey f« more than two weeks at a
time, and when he ls, I frequently go
and Join htm."
Their favorite aong II "She Believes
In Me." Although her hwbend didn't
wrtte It, Marianne says, "That does
souftd Ilka our story, doesn't It?"·
Rogers Mwr 1ddJ hhMJI. He
knows whM goes up mUll come
down. 1'he music businal ls wry
cycb) ... be nom. "Wllhtn two yems
I won't be In the Top RYe anymore."
Where wll he be? Probably In front
of the 1V and movie c:arneras. The
ftnr two J<enhy Roger; tpeeklt did
wd In the rMlngst end hla third, a
made-for. TV m°"'9 beied on his
song, "The Gambler," became the
Number on. show for the w..t< and
the hJghac ratad 1V .movlll In two
~·Kenny haa. ~ corring up
for CBS 1atu thb mOnth called Kenny
Rogm' 1Ammc:o. And In the late
sptne, he wtD ~ ftlrntng • 1V
moYle calid ~ o/ Ute COYnty.
~~ dlat lhit vJtdl point ~ hll NOent ~ • to "lay a foundadon• fOf diat day. whln IM
ITIUllC dta. WheMver .. future bttrvi.
thoud\. Kenny Rogers doe.\' WU1Y ~nUh. ,, aDYIYe llQU\," ,. ~
lhln "9 ~ fOr • momn, _.,.
.nd 9dda, ... I hiiYe the ,_
....... t0do1.• .....
I 1 r , -
,. L ,' • ., I: '· l
l1·.111· .. I_ I jj!fi••_ ··:' .. :.l'J?I lf r lJ tr_. t Jl . · H . · r Ui"
r . lrt • : . rl l .. I( ·, .. "II f ' ~i . "l ri I ·11 . . ~
i lf f Ul'l 'J: f: · f tt}h .ills , · ''.rf J 1 I !lh}l l ~ l · e. 12 l!
~ft.ii.lf!IJ ... ,lJtff ·~·r . rJ!f}• l(. lfJ1Ur rl aff 0 :C . , I r f!• ·[11· l 1r1Jr 1 1 a:td J.. f 11-.
--~-.. . JJtd!•i;>.• ~~gnJ-.. j ~~ .. -""' ~~;Of,~' fdlHtJ: : J hi h tu tHhH F l r~ .;J .....
. . . -~ · &'~ I C5 i .
,,:-11111··:1•,'ia:" ·Jt ' .. r·rrrs:ti.d!r"e.~~d !f ra :D il~f~r!&Bbft;l~·;l~ . ~.~ ~ ·I ~il:hih~~gif!Hsl l1?i ;r;• ' .
·,IJ· J· , · •rl !., If · .. t . •l;&_ ~; I f 1tr . i 8 · J Jr l If\ -. ie., tl:nJ I :drl'··
4
• ·~·-.:·· :'~ •• -~-U rl. hlrLhrlit~ ll§ .p ~
...
'
-I
Gifts tO please
eve~.
At prices that
pteaseyOu!
Gifts that speak love ... speak taste ... and
speak tenderly to the meaning of Christmas.
And take note of the savings-they speak
eloquently about your keen judgement of
value. W:>uld the world's largest jeweler
offer you less? •
ZA'ES
The Diamond Store
ZALES CRIIDJr: ·
INCLUDING "'90-DAY PLAN-SAME AS CASH,.
Mum<:ud • VISA • American Express . fm1 8laieche • Dlnen Oub
~{ I t ~ I ~ i l' ~
ne World's Fmest
Miaiaaure •»Geld Pieee
.
SOLID 22KT. GOLD-$20
An Official Gold Issue of the Columbia Mint, Was~ington, D.C.
In Solid 22 Kamt Gold
You have a rare opportunity to possess the world's
first miniature $20.00 Gold Piece in solid 22 Karat
Gold. This piece is ininted in the same manner and
contains the same fineness cl pure gold ( .9()0 fine) as
the Saint-Gaudens $20.00 Gold Piece struck by the
U.S. Mint in 1908. Each Gold Piece in pure .900 fine
Pd will be minted fnm ~ved dies capturing
...._ even the most delicate detail cl the origin-1 Saint-
Gaudens $20.00 Gold Piece. Individually minted to
capture the full three-dimensiOn relief of this the
most beauti/Ul of all U.S. coiniEach brilliant pure
Pd miniature $20.00 Gold Piece is presented in a
specially desigited collector's case, accom~ed by a
serially numbered Certificate of Authenticity and a
bistOriCal account c1 the Saint-Oaudens' l'>Jd coinaae.
AVAILABLE FOR A UMITED TIME • This exquisitely minted solid 22 Karat
Gold (.900 fine) GOid ~is available
exclusively mm The Colilmbia Mint -
~ cl America's private minta .. W_.
~ D.C. The CUl'Mt special price
for thia Gold Piece ia now $20. DUe to
the. extreme flucti•tiom in tbe 1'0ild
market MNI « -u· this ~ can be .... ._,.
r"-.,-, r·--Alt', a..., P$•* eel mtyumil Deca••er 31, I!*>. ,...111•
~ ~ are mpd to order-JOUl'I 8ald l4 n
now W1iiJe the opportunity ii befoce ~ -•-~ ............. -
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
If for any reason you are not completely satisfied
with~ solid 22 KaratGold (.900fine) Gold Piece, :v.ou m8y return it within thirty (30) days for a full
mund. There is a strict limit cl five miniature Gold
Pieces per order. However, you are reminded to act
promptly to take advantage of the current special price
cl oDly $20. each as thU pri« can beguarante«l only
.until December Jl, 1980. ·
r---1 ·vAUOONLYUHTILDECEMBERa1,1880 ~---
S 878 ! . The Columbia Mint. Inc.
• • 905 SbJ t•tla SCNit N.W .. W• .... D.C. 20006 ~ .
l ~
p
I
"I
I
I a I 8111 )Ddcil .. .,. ••• ll••awt ......... --ar . I f o a-._ .... • __ to 1111 a Mmtm-a...q. a VISA
I a Amedca s...
I c.dNwba ·--......_--~~--------!""R•..,._--..~
I I
' ' ' IW.._•d11, ... _. ' ., • ._. I _, .. na-i. ..... ..,. I ·e 2 7Jp ' L~~!!!_ir-.-~_!8~•!0-~l~l~lr:JIO~~-O~-O!r-~..:...~1~2:;;;;;~====~"~ .-,u ..... ~...., . ....._ •.. "" -
)
l s ..
Sctn -.Antonia
Thanksglvln9
ROAST 1URKEY wrnt
TAMALE DRESSING
'~ (ltlkGL .. , .......... dlle
~·~-~-.. ~ ..... w .....
1 ......... SS 1.-....-
1 .... ...-,it "''.,.., t,l~tss••.-...... .
l'I' Jll ........ ~
.-dills
.....
1' .... ~ ...
l. Jll .... .,.. ....... ........
1(11-........ , ............. ...
.,_ ....... .....
t's on.
1. Tum ...... oNi>•ilrgl.,__olloll
end rsnow pachment wt...,.119 &om
ach ..-.. u.g Nibs tcniper, ecrape
off .. chit SP"Y from pmchment, O.·
cmd pactwnent. a. eo..ly chop ..... .Mi tum Into
.. bowl. lllong wlh chk SP"Y· s. In ....... mlll butts; .de! SPCl
pepper, c.my end ..... onk>nl. s.nl.
lllllltng owr medium hm unlll v¥"""' .. wtted • ._. 7 n*'um.
4. Tum WJ I D"" lnlD bowl wllh ..,._
la, Add c:Ma ..... c:omb> ...... .it
.-Ml T.--:0, Mil~ wllh lmge
c:oob1g IPOO". .
5 . ..,.,.,. b.WMy neck. heMt .-Ml gjllllts
from~end ......
6. fW b.dly body md neck c:avly with
.... da ... 11g. ao. bodvupes*'twth ....... n. .. ~ wllh cord. In-
.mt ............ ~~ C9Nlr lnlldc
~.....-. 7. Pllc:9 bllkey. breelt *5e up, on r-=k In
• llrve ~Pl"· Rubtldn ~ wlh ~ ol. Pllice .......... of loll
owr cnllrr1*d, pNlllnig I ~ to •·
a.a ....... end drumMlck ....
.. Ro.a. 3509 .. 4lh lo 5 boan. Fu
.... 45 .... of tcllllllng. Qll cord lo re-
.... drurnllldra; .....,,,. w .... --
wlh cb\>1*181 md c:onllrn• rolllllng urd
done. t. To .... b dou1n•, ..._.pat of
chmlldl lhcMlld .... wry llOl wMr\
..--bib .. er.-pte*icild baJ loll
md a pot holdlr. Dnlmllkk~ move
• md down md tMll ~ ID eocMt.
Melli thennorMI~ lhouJd ,....,
· 186"f. R9nCMt lllrd 6orn own, let mind
15am .... w..arv1n11o..m.~ .... .
••• ., ....... alra ............ tt
ruy be Wrecl. ~.ID a._. <• 11 •dllh ......... ....., ..
llbcM30nM*-mu.dl.-l ...... .
I I. When Vo'l 1""'9 ~ ID tbl own, meabllllll/,,_.,__.., hstnda-t.
Twn tbw .._ lnlD a 311. •""l>'A·
........ 1.---.1oMia, ld>
c:illllry. 1 I J l:Hlft ... '4 I I paion ....,_
peCOl'l'lll end} bey...,, tW lo bo9ng;
Nduce hilS .nd bol gdy. OOWNCI, b
451o 60 ...... munlll nedlend~ .. ~ ...... u.. ..... tirodl .lo
..... pen pwy f diilftd. u. ... melt
-~.a. ...... -.. -~-~~· ... . (conllnUed)
~~--t -1: :1 --=i:.-.-::::1 •. ,_,_ .• T.: -· .. ·-·-. -
••
fAMllY WEEKLY
COOKBOOK
(coritln'*1}
1UUCEY PAN.GRAVY
per, • delhd. 56' In .... lquld wavy
........... • ~ ....... color.
,..,.. ...., • a,,. WOllY
........... , ...... ... " .. -............ ~ ........... _
\t ........ -........... 1 ...... ..
l' JIH ..... .......
l' 1 1 ...... ta a
l' JUI .... .... ..............
l~ .... -0 ....
•• Cook wt poll. fl In ldtdiJ ldld ~ _. unal bk .... about 35
mtnum. Drain Md Cool. •
~ Whtr\ cool ~ to hll'4e, peel
Md rnilh .... potailcJtl.
a; rn 11r91 bowl. comtiN mMh9d -. P'• •. IUllil'e or-. Juice, lsowrt
..... buleir, IDllkj "** .. d Viln8la. .. \rit .. Md llfloolh •
•• CClt ... or..-In hll tnd Qllndv
holOw out tha ~. (tlle ~ ~ hi
cupa. Olaf9I et.bet. ambrOlla or fNI
punch.)
I. FW holCNied ~ heh.w Wlt'I IN
.... palllto,..,llllmh. ~ hlgt,\
Oat tape wllh m.alhmelowl.
6. Biii.a IQ prttl I 1 d 300'F. to 35()Gf, °'*' )Liit wd .......... llllt ·'° ..... ....,lo ......
Edlot'l nae.: Tm. lhort? Spoon IDlllhed
.... polllo ..... "° ...... s-..
, ..... lop .. ~end
.... for 45 ........ 350'F •
....
"~ .. 1cmn ... 11--.-... ,,, -•-4'.-3•n r.----. l 3 P f
• ..... (J.l.GL tlll)a:n ......... ...
l.P'Nhatown to~.°'-• 13 x 9 )( 2-h:h .,..
l. lij. lilrgabowt. ............. lb.,.
--with.~ tpC)Oll. a. Turn ..., Into Pl .... pin and
bMit 451o 50 "*'*'Of Until combl.ad
lillb dona wt.. • ioochpk;k It ln""9cl In ~ ...t .......... itch gaidert bn:Nit.
t. Cool 5 n*lum. O. lnClo IClU*W w.ct
...w w.rm. ~ or wldt butllr. For •
Sen ~ brillilkfMt ..,,. Wldl
illrlMeny Jl;ri -• ~Of a:awMecl ... .a .......
....... ._ ...............
~-.c1111"1I..._ ,., ...... ~ ......... ..... lJ er J .......... ...
\t~ ...... ,b ........ .
l. Cut olf ... ol .... : Plia In ,.... um.,.. pen '*t 1~ c:upt bOllr'8
..... RMum to~. CIOllMf -oooll lbtlUl 8 to 10 ialni*tl Oil ... JUlt allp .......
.. tt.n.t\111. In ..... fry .. pods Md
oNon ....... ~ ......... , .. . ""' ...... -....,.-.11 ...... ... °'*-.. .., .... n...-... --··••1•1 l.L.9.a,... ... --. .. ..... ...... ~ ........ .... °" ........ ,...
•• Drmn t..w; ... Alt pork and
c>ntom; "* wd. s..o,, wlh pepptr; -.-....m.
I. In llDll ..... In mebd bultm, *
......... ~ rneclum ... und -Pla_l brown. §prtNda Oil fop of ~
..... Noka61o8~
'
1-. .... ..:aa•efa11llll1a ........
·~ Cllllllt .... 1 t .. ' II I • .-. ~ 1
u I'' .,.~eaw ...
l ...... (ka. .. )1 , ... ......
le-. ........ .
·~~CIM--la.., ........ nh1 t .,_ .............
1. One day ehwl:· put a•lbmtes 8IMl
......... I treit...-.:D .. ..
...,
71.-..c..1 .. C111 .... l4ida .. It" ,_..._,... 1-... a « .C111•t~6:e
I c:..-I 0 ' .... allry la,.,__. ...... .
la..,. • ••
I t 111 fl• 11111 dealt 0......-. ... ..... ~ ....... ......
1. TOii ~ chunks wlh Im. ).dee.
• Add IWoQdo C:hunlca Wtd toes •
•• Add celay. JMC*ll, mayonM9e, la-..
toned. -and PIPS*-Mix glndy to ~.
3. Cowr Ind c:hlD. s.w a>ld, ~
!rm llllMng boWI "*' wlh lduCit ~.
..
. .
.... ,. ,,,nt .......
~ ... aM ....
1 ... a 1111~..., ............
CRAN11ERRY tan' SALAD
WllH C8EAll atEESE 8MJCE
~ ........ Hl'.-.d+--. ....... l .... (ha. Ills) a.-.....
lm.(16-..),....at 11., -• • •-->-• .... cs;.. ,
M" fcwea calories tban
butter or maqpu:fDe
Coak...,. aun..am .cs 9ll80rl
wllh IJ Thi~ ....... bull8r ,._,,"'a.. 8udl-*llallunlry ....._._tirtngacu .. ..-1n
fooct-wlhoul .. Cllb ...
.. ,
.... , I-· •;" 5 I 1 .... W
IA ~-_..
~ le8s cbolaitaol tban
bUttri-. Mex. fat m,e
~ltlcM--maM
~In baladl'GblOad
c:hl:t1111ia-...... El In
.. COl ........ ol. 1 d'IUlll. ..... ... mmwynwgw••'-'
a ... ot-"*dllll.
..__ ... ......,_ ..... ,=, ........
IJ 9 ....... 51 ....... ~-•puc 0 1:0t•• -....-& ........ .,.......,~_,-. ... Sb 0 ....... _
H( ....
IA' 5111 Ww , .... ._,.
O..'Mmm ,...... ,,,....._ ____ ......
l . kl mdum •....-n, .._ aanbmy
tmm, lllrmg and I t..041• iqmd,
I.. Sae.rt~ 7n cold .... md ..
... 7n bmlng ambmy JI*». Add lq-
uld a•llNray_.. and I& und blended .
Coats mcacb Jess tban
butter
Onefcuounce•ot eun. Buda .pdml .. ~ .. ...,,"'two
PoUndlot~ ruoc-.-.. ..................
• .,,, .... 1 z•' I d ...........
S. Stir In port wtne. Pour Into 10 ~
oa.ct ~ molds or *'unwd da-
.m Of' wine~? •. Rllfl•• und pmtlaly Mt. Add
--c:h.t?nua, • detnd, md Nfrige-
nlll und h .
I. Unmold 7ndMdulll molds md p'1ct
on o.wty liduce on ~ pltlm. top-
1*11 *"'• ........ Or ........... 9-. p'1ct 8n9/ lhNddild 1lttuc:e on ..... o1.-, md top wlh .....
6. 10 ....... ---= p'1ct a..rn m-. aam, c:*y ul, Wocc ; .... ..S
Tllbwo 7n blend. or toocl pwwww md
~undimooch. NataJO.Fufngs
monm PEAatES
la.(1 .. 11-.)dt9 ......... I!' J ..._ __ .....
l' 111 5 I ....... IJ,.,
I? SS 0 ........ .... 17 !' 5 Ii ...... Cl., __
11" Jdll-
L Drain~ ac.d 9'll\IP « u. In
punch or ?ced .... *· Pltic:a s*di
..... Qlt .. up, 7n • lhalaiw baking
.,... Dot'**"-wllh ......
I.. f1I cm-. wlh • lllde .-pbeny .00
fPP9 Jtly, htl and htl. s. ,. cf1ntmon md Al(llir ~ md
~ owr the piitdla.
4. HllLt 7n 300-F. Oll9'I and juk:e bub-
.... 7n Cl9llLr. ........ .. • 19c:olad.'1
grmlJh ........ ..,... _...,. pniay
addllol\ to .. 7ncMlml om 1l1D 1 .....
.......... 8 ....
PECAN PIE
1 ('Ntdl)-.-.... .... _ ....... _.,...
S' 0 s 1111..._•_I t ., .... '
1 ...........
"111 I I .... ....................
1. ~a.. to 400Gf ....... I*"
try ....
t.,. k9 '* ...... -.,cam.-. . ..... ... met ....... Yinded.
U.eltdlk--•-·-~--· . ..... or-..e.L
a. .. "',... -pour ....... ...., pm.y ... t. IWle 15 li*\Ulill, ..,... tum ~
.... II> 325Clf ......... IOr 25 It> 30
---~ ................ .
... ..... tliia .... coaL
I. Coal. S.W oaW _.. • ... wt1"41ed
~-...... ~ ...... .... ... ..... .... .
.. fwc•uedJ
. .
Nowintbe Bip:ToJbox .
..
LIGHTS
1.0WER(O 'TAR(, NtCOltNE
'
..
\
-·
•
•
•
~ANDCOOKSc
A Review Of
Whats Kew In ·the WOtld
Of ·Cookbooks
Rn Englishman, Alan Davkison,
has a new· offering this fol,
NonlJ AJlanlk s.afood, just a
little bit ddf e:rent from most
coo&cbooks. It's a 'COlllplae guide to
the ftsh and sheDftsh of the North
Adantlc with moni than 270 recipes
from 20 c:ounlrta. MIWlg Praa. New
York)
ready now.
6. Drain fish and lift with a llotted
lpfJtl.da to a warm .mng plansr. Pour
the hot sauce over and terw with hot,
butlie:red boded potatoea.
McDs 4 eervfn9t
• U. 1 cup sour red pitted chentes
pureed In blenda until smooeh.
. Mr. Devtd9on cxpBIN that the Ndps ..
of Russian ortgln, edlfl*d &om the
famous Ruman cookay bock. A Git To
Y°""9 Ho..-i•W.. by Elena lranoYna
~tint~ In 1861.
This II more than a cookbook, It II a
scholarly, Iden* resource book,
He>. Al manner of ..tood II Iden-
tified and c' F 'Red al to IPflCle9 and
family with a deftnttlve ftne cbawlng of
each and a 8:stlng of all the varied The Amerbn ~ lncklcMd In the fomgn names the ftsh b known by, ~ .. dMded Into four .-:tons:
along with a brief daatpdon of Nadhem New Er9and. Rhode bland to
general allshle liechnlqua. .. New hney, The Chatll*M reg!On, the
The mnalnder of the book II de--Caroan. end Georglll. From Idec\
voted to North Adantk: eeafood four, the ~ and Georgia, coma
req,a ~from aD the c:oun-this~~ .....
tries~ on the North Mantle. w. prellnt two 1WClpa for you.
COD wrnt CHERRY AND llED WINE SAUCE
t•.c.d1111-...
...... , Irk• .. ~
l c:-. dMrs)' ,...
It" run-.
\i4t c-. m.. M lllocll cw ........
l' th,, ...... 1.sa...e
• A .... ef:hr ROS I' I,.,.._ .....
1' tr ;auc:ioW-1~,.. ....
J. An.,.W.flDmlnllrga~add
ri6 ID ~ UNS. Hut to boang;
NdDcs ._ • ...ct _,. ~ lO
nhrla or undl ftlh .. Ju9' c:ooMd
~-llhlt~ I. Cook fie dMriy 1M9t gently In bUt11tr
for• ,_ "'*""-~ Thtn aadd "It
cup .., .eodc, ..... doua, cinnamon
...t ~lour lhM ~ haw blmdtd
~l~oold-•.
•• Hellc:t...,l!Mnto ..... ....
CCll ... illy unlll mfllctmw ....... -
cmwlO ..... ~tlllitW ..
""' for llbout 6 ........ eov.w.
4. Add ,.S wN ID ~ l8DCll Ind tftla .... but not qdt, bi.di ID ltw w.
I. I the 1111o qi wa.w. the~"
............ cl .. llUClt hMta beili
PIGPll~ ¥id•CAIMid, b llh .. be ,
FROGMORE "8llRDIP
CORN AND SAUSAGE-
..
• ...... ,..
11'11 besarprisi•19lt
11•'0Clll•, aean•t a rich.
Carnation• Velvetized• Evaporated Milk makes holiday pies
so good that folb will want your recipe. But don't stop there.
Add the Carnation velvet touch to all your sauces, gravies.
~roles. and <lessens. What a smooth way to get compliments!
For~ he_.., wri1e eo: ';ct;:~ Co.. Qqil.R-N'19P.O.Boa1'10
. Clmatl.a Pa•pld• Pie
, ...... 9-bM:k pie)
t.&iP&IJ ••... K-... ., ... c:1ovea
J ~ ctl .. c:awl plllDpkba J4 .......... ....
l aap...-l~ cape U W eam) •rttlJ--' ~ t111p1 .. -1t CARNATION• Enponted Mi.Ill
1 • HfDM riaa•moe 9-tada "8gle-erut uahebd
~ tenpoom p.pr pie .W
Co•bi•e e11e. •••pkla, •a1ar, .. it. ead spices. Gradually add
evaporated milk. Mb well. PMr U.to ubaliecl pie Deb. Bab ill hot
ovea (4%5°P.) 15 •i••te•; nd•ee ... •oderat.e .... , C350°P .) Hd «*I._ bdbic abost 4t mi:a .. w adl bile ia8ae.I -.renter
of pie co.. ..n deaa. Cool befote
11erving.
---~ ~· I I 'I I I
I I I
A FAffilL Y WEEKLY INFLATIOl'I 8EA1"ER
ma1n Dishes ~ IL_~
Fot Fout Undet ~
Here again Is our once·a·month
feature on low-cost famlly ,.
meals.
1. Brown porit steak.In hot oU on both
Iida. Reduce heat to low.
2. Piece ~ over porit; add
wattr. talt andtpeppcr. COYer sklDet and
cook at medium heat for approxlma1lely 1
hour. Check frequent)y to make 11.lN .,
me.at Is not sticking to pan. Add addi-
tional wa~ If desired.
S. Place porit steak on a warm serving
platter; top wtth uua1. Sprinkle with a ltt·
de chopped pan&ey. Moka 4 servings
Edith says, "This Is my own recipe. I buy
the pork steak on sale at 89 cents pa
pound."
APf"'Wdl'nc* eott: $4.90
Approoctmaf/e co.t per .ervlng: $1 .20
Edith reads F AMIL v WEE.KL v in the
Slate Journal, Lansing -East Lans-
ing, Mich.
PY HolidoDars
from
Continue to send In your
own budget-beater req,es. If we
pubash yours, you'D win $10. Recipes
must lncklde your name, address,
telephone number and the name of
the newspaper in which you read
fAMIL.VWEEJ<LV. Due to the volume ol
mail, we cannot answer krtters or
return recipes. In case ol similar
recipes, the one with the earliest
postmark will be used. AD recipes
become the property of F AMIL v •
WEE<L v. Send your recipe to: Budget
Beaters, Box 5120, Family Weekly,
FDR Station, New York, N.Y. 10150.
Thousands ot cash .. izes a refunds!
Two ways to win!·
From Mn. Theodore Smith of
Mllford, N.J .• comes a hearty lentil
hot dish.
LENTIL CASSEROLE
l'ritc:..-cky&.dtll
1 ....... -m
1-..--.~
1 C9(i..)toc=MIAS
lc9'h .. c1M• ....... ol
'rit t IJCGDllMt 1._ ....
1-----~ 'rit ....... ~
1. Cook lentils In lightly salted water or
stock until t11nder1 wtlJ take about 1 hour.
2. Strain lentlla and mesh, Mt Mete. ln
lerge llc1lliet, In hot oU, cook onions and
tomatoa f(W 7 mlnuta, breaking up wth
llPOO" u they cook. Add Nit and bey
leaf.
S. Tum J.ntils Into a large beklng dish or
Dulch own. Spreed tomato and onion
mbtture over J.ntlll. Spoon mashed
poeam. <>Wt aD and IPrinkle wtth ~
c.heae.
-°""""'--4. 8eke In pct,..llld 375'f. own for 30
to 40 "*'um or until bubbli/.
Maka 4 *> 6 MtV1n9e
APPoxi'"'*.collt: $8.86 Appnmmcii" COit ,_ _,,1ng: $.89
The Smlthl rad f AMIL V WEEKLY in
the &pr.a, Miiford, N.J.
·From a gardening cook, Edith R.
Webeler ol East Litnstng, Mich.,
coma a welcome pork lktlet dJah.
1 ..........
• .. , .. 1' D .. ol ........... ,, .. ................. 1 .... ,, .. ._,....
le..-di"• ...... It 'I qrrnrct.liJp••,...,
i ... ....
I 11 .... ...
"I IJlll .... w.dl .....
JI 'I $11 4 151.,..,llt .....
..
..
.
Do You Read
Small Ads Like This?
Al put of AD advatisi.aa do so to the addral below
test we will lend a pair of and receive a fuD refund.
genuine diamond stud There is a limit of one (I)
. earrings to every reader pair of diamond carrinas
al Family Wcetly who pa .W.ca. bUt if your re-
reads ud 1apolldt to qae1t is made before Dec.
dais printed DOCicc be-I. you may ' request a
f0te Midnigbt. Dec. 17,for IOCOadpair1'yc:ndt-ingan
die smn of SS plaa SI lllip-edditiMal SS plas SI sllip-
piD&. ....... ad imm-............. aDd iamr-
ucc. Ttic:rC ii DO furt.llc.r aDCC. No Rqaat will be~
moaetary oldiptioa.' a:pted ... dledma Meed
(&dl 4'•"'Nld oldie..... Dene; JUGI' .......,
is'& wouiae .25 ~ IOfta:t dlrd: .m-w ftturaed if
round diamond aDd will be ~ Ilda' tban
aooompaeiot ltJo.rC.ali-daomed-.. ftamec.._
fiC8le of Ant'w !IWJ to dais ari&imJ aotic:c wilb
dial dfcct.] Thia acha'-your nqacst; photocnpics
tiliDa tat is ~ Pad 1ri1I nOi be aa:cp&ed Saad
,· .... ..., .. ada ..,. ............ ..
,.,........_ UJ09witia witlaJQm" aamead.sda~
moredlaoaep1Wica1Nlaf to!.dDllATD Aamtma.
pllmc Id W Dow U dlil L1' M I 1 m• .......
i.roleet•• ii Wpfa1 to .W..C ' c T-. .,._
...... JOU willa to.. fG..15, Jin U1' ......
• 1mnJamami+JVll ~ ...,._,., .Y. 1HM. (Almlt
..
PEOPLE QUIZ /By John E. Glbaon
How much Should You .Tell a Friend?
more lcely to be based on sbnllar at·
tltudes and lme:resls and on "having
fun together ...
4. True. In studies of Interpersonal .
atbadk>n and ~ type c::on-
dudlld at Purdue Unlwlslty, It was
found that females peefeued males
who were slmllar to thanseJvea In per·
~ type, I.e., extrowrl women
peefea1ed extrowrt men. and 1ntrow:rt
women were most attracted to Intro-
vert men. On at.. odw hand, males'
preference fc. females was not af.
fected by their degree of 1W1
similarity of penonaaty. ..
1
A• reported in new• •IOria in rlM N•w York Tilna, IJ" .. ~ Pa.t, Cl&M:~o
Tri61UW, JIU..U H.,..U, EcolotJUt, r..i H.,...,., NftlD• .• ...•..................
ROACH PRUFE,J~o. I
in UNIVERSITY ·TESTS
In a report just released by the UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA and
published by the ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, eight
conunercial and test products that include a broad spectrum of insec-
ticides were tested against a product called •RoACH PRUPE.• The Univer-
sity concluded -Ow a/>trima unt:kr ftdd anuJiJion.s has shown tllat .we..
fmJIJerly a/1l>lied. tM RON:HPRUFE fomnda jmn1ida a degree of coclmJada
control tltat i$ US1llllly superior to all otlta rrgistered commm:lal "'anasvmer
/mJ<lltds.·
Alan Brite, who 30 years ago developed and lent his name to what is
now a standard household cleaner, Copper Brite, stated: .. Because
· roaches simply do not recognize ROAC.!f PRun as an insecticide, they do
not try to avoid it by scattering to other parts o( )'OW" residence astbeydo
with the other insecticides. Plus the electrostatically charged powder
sticks to their bodies. which they then carry bck:k into the walls spreading
among the other roaches. The result is you kill not only the roaches you
see, but also those biding and~ in your wa11s.•
I
0.,.,..., ~ 20A.Pf'l1
ROACH PRun is odorlesa, non-evaporating, non-staining and non-
flammable, It is ~ ~d With a tea9P0C>.n under kitchen apPliancr9
and other hidden areas. It can be ueed in homes, schools, hospitals, res·
tauranta, plus new COi1ltructi6n.. ·
Brite baa a~. howe\Fer. He says mo t retailers apparently think
it'• unprofitable to atock ROACH PRUFE on ~ 8belVes When the same
cuatomen wil come in qlill and qain to bUy the otbet msecticides. So
until they do, be'• deaded to tell his product direct to coosurnera.
ROACH PRun com $7. 95 plua95f for poetqe fOt. onei><Juhd can, add
ff> tax in Qilomia. One can coven ap to a 9-room relideftce, iJk11 one
can for baieinent and ,... to obtain the ~ eem a cbi!!ck or
money orderAo Copper Brite Inc., Dept. 93at 5147wett~l'IOCl BIYd., Loe~ CA 90016. Copiei ol tlM= U~ teal* are 1Vlillble by
eendin1 a eelf~ atamped envelope to Copper Brite, ~.
I>epL A. 0 c...-Mt Wt.. ..
.
Children ~O Sleepwalk:
Nothing to Wotty About
•
Amazing OrfhofJ'd_lc Br8akthroughl
My New_ "!Jvlng-SOles" Help
GIVE ALL YOUR SHOES
A CUSTOM MOLDED FIT!
,
..
It's said every dog has hS day, but
none can compare with that of
Woodle, a coa. mbt, and her owoa,
Rae Anne KnMer of CleveJand.
One day Rae Anne, Woodle and
Rae's &a;d, Ray Thcxnas, were out
hieing wt.. Ray decided to photo-
~the vt.w from atop a -.p cliff
neatby. At Rae Anne waited. Woodie began= and tugging, and Rae Anne IOlhedmg was wrong.
She ran over the top of. the hJll and
saw Ray lying face down, uncon-
ldous, In a lb'eam 80 feet below.
Suddenls;, Woodie )Imped tn after
him, ~ boch her hips but nudg-
ing RaV• face out of the water to brp
From an Appalachia theater protect Jn ~ Pa.a, Ky., to the
Metrapohm Opaa In New Yodc City, the National Endowment for the
Arts hat ~ spread culwe around ddl oounby for owr a decade.
Cwrendl) ceJlbratlng Its 15th annlYenary, the Arts Endowment has
granted some $837
mdllon for 8111 profJaf1W
in .. 50 stata lira Its
aeation by ~ In
1965.
-We dalnltilty couldn't
do the klnde of things we
do here without the En·
dowment's help,", saya
Carolyn Pano&lcy, pral-
dent ol the Las V1g1111
(N.M.) Arts Council. "For
Instance, this year we at-
traceed 2,000 residents to
our. Peopa.'1 Slrelt Faire
on one day -fully one-
eighth of the town's total Ole: A ,,,. taa of mtitfadtl In San Al*>nb.
P<>P!J)atlon." The alOCal II llmiJar In a &arga city .. San Antcnlo. "'The EndcJw.
mmt ~ us aeate an artl coundl lo lobby the city for funds," ..,,.
Bob Canon, aecutlw dlNdor of the counc:tl -Since then,, the city has ln-
aewd Its contrbatlon to the arts from $400,000 to S2 m9on. We can
now brtng In talent from MUico for the International Mariachi Con-
ference, and we've brought the Jaffrey BaJlet here for the flnt tlrde."
may actually ~~~
hyaata, according to a Neent report
In Medlcol Worid Necn.
On. Cary Suter and Robert Cohen
ol the MedJcal CoUega of Virginia
hooked up 46 .. cplleptlcs" In·
lmlenousil,t and told them they wae
getting a drug that pra1apts ldzures. If
one a.ued, the two newologlats
said, the patient would git another
drug to stop tt. Actualy, only simple
saJI water was Infused in boch c:ateS.
~. 41 of the 46 reeded to
the-.fab drug by going Into .azures,
~ t1st1 showed they were not
ocgaNcaly hued. And al the attac:ks
ended when the doc:ton said the anti-
setzur. drugs were being Infused.
A numba of the patients said they
~ fhs prob&em WU linked to
*-· Some are now controlled by
~.butaf.wdhaveet·
tac:b during times of .....
Top Of The Morning
~ breakfast II Ol'\8 of MWn
health rtlkl that lncreue your chances
of an early death, according to a new
10-year ~ by UCLA's Centm for
Hedh Sdencm. Death rates wee
40-pm:ent higher for men and 20-
patle1d hWm for women who .. nnla;
or torndma" a• breakfast, com-
pared to daly brealcfast eaten.
-~"'Pm
BIR11tDAYS (Sun . .frt., Scorplq;
Sat., ~ ~ -8urgai
Mer.dJd'l 72 . ..-, Tom Se.ave
36: t..nn Hutton 36; Gordon 1.Wlt-
foot 42; ROck Hudion 5.5. Tuieday
-'. .. Eugene Ormandy 81; Btenda
Vaccaro 41. Wedll•• -Dick Cawu44; Jodie F<*r 18. Tb..._
-Mltalr CoaM 72; Olde Smolhe
41; E8lll P-n 63. fitdl, -
Galdil ~ 35; Marlo ThamM 'ST • ....., _ RObllt VaudW\ 48; ~
~ PIO' 56; ea. Jein Kq ~.
·Take .·any --'6fof§1
WITH
MEMBERSHIP
•f!llM • 111.• llGI s ..... --·-._._......_ 1111NMl .... llSI ..... 7 ~-... ~ .................................... = ... ... ....... _ ..... ~ ......... _ . ..,. ...... a.... ................. .. .. ........... -· --~.... ....... . ... ,,.. ...a.. .... .......... -. ......... eMa
How the SCience Fiction Book Club Works:
II to ue b'I the dMI IPtdfted, w. 8lc>W you ..... 10 dlYI tor mel<m your
deClllOn. •~do not QM .. tonn tn lme lD N1pond
.. 10dlvl9"dNCetwtn "IWllltlCIS.lldb1,you
mey ...., •• °"' .......
Ma,... ~Nld-.Oftl.4S1t11.,_or Min r' ~-co_mq,._ Yoe.tfMJ rwtgn t1f1 ........... ·--·-•D'8•~ ..... OMd .. llJ'J I .-. ..... llor'llJSUI.
c:..rs n1• ·-----~ .......... •r--Jlll ...... A _,.....,.,..... =z• "°....., ............
• 2 ,. ..
• ---------------------, TRIAL. MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
c.........._.a~aie.RO. ._me ...................
't'lll, rd .. to ~ N aut>-«> rm ~ dledl or
monr/ ordW tor ti 00 (hra 1t tor ~::,i:a111 :IC y .-0-tionm. .... tor ~twldlng). ~ ,,._..
,,.,.,..,...,_, ~ undlr l'9 terma oudned It lhe llfl I .. '° buy tour llWlr9 ........ <• ~ c;a., prae) ~ .. oon*10 .,,_~I llWJ C8nClf m, ,,..,,._. --~--ti'CI-..... ..._ .................... _
.1
IEND llllV l!LICT10NI It nN nP1! Z9Y 1U OFMCONJeHOOae_.. .. c:Mdl _~
o•bdtC....,... o,_. ...... o,..c ..... 0----
lllY MAIN •lllCAL IN1'IMIT .. (dledl-~
(But lamaMwrt ne todlOC* trom11111~
or..,~2 o..._ ... , 0~1
O COUlllry $inO l'MI lapel) a .Ma 4 (no l'MI ...,_,
! ...,. ...... "Rri.'ii,;i;'''''''"'j;iW'''"' ........... "'~'ii,;i;'''''""''
...........................................................................
~ ......... : ..................................................................... ..
... .. ... ... .. . . .. .. ..... . .. .. ........ .... .. . .. ... . . . . .. . .a, Clll9 ............... .
1111111.._A......_, (Qrd•)OftS om -
N'O. ""°' ........... ,__."-:IO ..... ""......,__, ~,_.,... ..... .....,._.,..,..,
~ IT8IU I ---~-------~-----~----~
....... == ............... Ort . S t ....... .. .......... ,p 5 L
§l ............. ., ............................................................. . ...... ...... ..... .....
OR-IF YOU PREFER A TRIAL MEMBERSHIP
-SEf: Sf..'ECIAL OFFER ON PRECEDING PACE • •JU I , I 8xlU L-------------------------_.. __ _.._.....__.
OR
WHERE ELSE CAN YOU GET . , •
THIS MUCH MUSIC ·FOR A PENNY?
ONLY[Citit!=~
/ ..
13
CADILLAC
NAIEAS Cl.Oii.UC
2600 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -140.fl 00
CHRYSLER-PLY
An.AS
CHIYSLll.ft. YMOUTH I
2929 HaibC>r Blvd.
Costa Mesa -146-ltJ4
• ~I
' . ./ ' -
I · · l [ .
...
CHEVROLET
COMNB.1. CHIVIOUT
2800 Harbor Blvd.
c.osta Mesa -146-1200
DATSUN
MIWf'OIT DATSUN
888 Dove St11eet
• Newpart Beach -IJJ.I JOO
PORSCHE-AUDI I
IOY cAAva IMW
1540 Jamboree Road
NewPort Beach -64CM4~
SADDl.lbcte iMW
28402 Marguerite Parkway
Misslo" VieJo
131-2040 -4tMt4t
OLDSMOBILE
UMIVlllm OLDSMOllLI
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -14M'4U
TOYOTA
v •.) L r<. ':. -...-• ~-· • i •
•+~The Musica(Mandrells +•
Country mu110 •lnglng ,,., Barbara 0
Mandrell (c) Is
ffanlc«I by slater11 Loula. (IJ and lrleM. • · . ~ . . .
rockers and her tongs draw every kind of music fan."
All three alatera play Instrument• as well as sing,
and they will do so on the serf•• Barbara plav-·• steel guitar, banjo and saxophone. tou1se prays the
baa and flddle and lrlene · 11 the drummer. Tht9Y
began performing u young1ttra. '
The Mandrelt. were-and ttill are-a "ltry music·
directed faml'>'. Father lrbV sang and played guitar.
Mather Mary played piano •nd tauqht muile.
While lrktne f'®" to pureue a odellng and
acting career, Barbera and LOUIN are committed to
musk:. In recent~,., ffi~ tur .. pursued flidepefh
dent carHra.
LoulM. this year, was nomlnlted bV tht Academy
of Counlf\V Music as~ NeW ~ ... YoCd.t and
etiar.d a nomlnatldh Wtth herlfngef/eongwrfteNtu.
band, A.C Bannon, fn SM 'Tbp""°" Grout ca~
· The Mt1M l)fO(luo.d ~ KrotfMnten.lnment.
aflo f9eturw walc!y gueet IW'I end l<fofft ~
epeclatty 'CrMtect for 1h• ..net Thie WMk'• 9UMt tter Oc)!tly Plrton
P~9d puppet1t9r1 Sid and Marty Kroftt-whO
brlftGh4ld out Into '*'19 '*"8, motion ptctu~ and
TV••1ndtpe0..._....,,_~elt~ .,torthe fl,.. tfmt.n 21 ,.._ ~ ........... -..... '"°..,. .. ~ *" L":-• ............ -
BUSH WOODWORKING-
SPEOALIZING IN THE LOST :
ART OF Fl~E CARPENTRY\
' CUSTOM FURNITURE
ANJ)' FINE CABINETS
HOME, OFFICE OR BOAT
1l 97 4 Placentia, Costa Mesa
646-7029
MoseJ Pendleton and A/Ison Chase cmre continuous
plastic shapes In ''Alraune," a dance duet about depen·
dence and Independence.
f • -., i · 1 . -~· :'T ... --/ . • ,,... c • ' -· c I ' -~ / . •, ~"' ~ • j ·1 I ::::::.. I I. "'r' ,._"a ""•r-J ....... 1 -'1'-~-··,_.-. .,J _ _.: ··~ i I .. ..: •I f""'· ;-l '• ... , ,..,.-'-';y·,--1;. '~ ' ....
. ' ~~· .::':-\._,·,,L_· .•-~\·~.~;.,·-.-__-.~.~_,..:., .. _: = t•. ~
=~••s • .• ,., •••• = -'!HP ~ i--•••••• ,.. ,~.,. ... •••111•1•1 ·•1111111 :-111 ' r 'if:! · ~ ! • · -J 1•1 · 11n11 _:. -_1:9J'1 .l!!!i"8 ; ~ , · . !!~ :r: ---
. 11~ ;ff 11 •• ;. ln,~, rt:;.;p•'.t=•.•,.~·.;.-'1~.~ .•. i1,m .. :·g· ... fD,•1,1. *.'k'.!ltil. .. I Sit .11 , s-_ 1 • .. :~-111~c!s ·1~ -i I·;,_•.;' ,. :g !llr· -r 1-'ii!'· -.· .. ,. , .. ,, .. ; ,.-• ..._ T r -J A l ··-"' ----ii_-., ·~· .. ·I . . .· ~-I .
II .. . I I J··. ·-, (~ -~-1-. _· . -~ ,.;,~·_..!:'__,;.., """~ <!_ ... , • .i..f· ~.,, ·•. --. ·r ·· I. .,,. t . . ., I I . I ' I -! ' ' •· I -• ,.. .. " I '-, .... .., , ._ ·--·' .. -;:'1 · 1: ''. " -~ '. ..,, . . ;_ ... . r 1 ·o • • ·i " · . ~ · -"i _ .. , ~ _ _
.. • • -~ l' • r l •
• • .,._ ( -' • '· .... 4 • l .. . ' ·,. -. • -
I Hll818 f-IJ8;;:1!f1811 II 18,IH ~_Niii .-J!~~18181 >·IOl"ll81
l ;1ur,11 f If 1~1Jll·IGI u . l:!!f 1 :Jilf1~-. ~:fil(f!ll:f· '~:-··.e.iilf;! ' l11:tf· 9Jiit•111r•1~r1!1 $t lf4f .Tilfrtf'gf~ifJlf'~!'tf • .. !.!'jl f''' .f '
16·' ,!1-'1 I I~ 1 .. 1{ r 1 I 8 If Jlf,1 I' ·'11&".·.'l.: ,c,i :Jr __ 'f!· . -... ~--
-., ' Ji 1(~. II I -11 -i ' <,;·_ ,_. . '"t,''''--~ ·-.·' 'I .~' .. ~ ~ 4 I a • ·. · ·'i -, · · --~
S° r ,.,~ • 'j -, -~ "./ . i "·I I'..• --:, '·)_ ~· .~i" ~
-· -··~ "!lf t:•·~··••1u1n,• IJ•f '''I' 1
8
--.!1-~.. . -1!111.•i• ''•--'H I iii I'' . i-!!I· ft '~ 1f(1ifi• -~.!I I "·111·1 ~lk._r~,;,irJ~· . ·. "' ',_ ... ·". . ~·1 I =· .(,_ ~ ll1f· r :1 _. _,,1:11,.
_ 1 ·a( •• -~ a . : .1 ~!· -~ ,'' ''-.l!lJf • !T .. fi(! · i::ikf f~I -· 1 111 .. ·, ,'liUJ!t1 .. '..1 !1!di~J!:11
Original musk: bv th• BEE GEES .
. SPEGU~L'RME! es:OOPM .(?i) .
ABC SUNDAY NIG .. T . MOVIE AHOTWlll OUTSTANDftlj(J MOVll °" fllH TEUVISIC*
THIS WEEK AT 6:00 PM ·
ON NEWSCENTER 4
•1
Archival footege from tN hour-long docutNntary
F1M Voice of Labor-Th• Jewlah Anarchlsta.
Exploring 1 Rldicll MWllllt on PBS
Th• hlltory of an ~rlookied radical mCMtfltent.
coml><>Md of Jewl1h ~lgl'Mt to the Untted Stat•
and th• n'ewlpaper that became their voice for tl7
yeart, 11 explored In the documentary FrN \t>/ce of
Labor-th• Jewlah Anarehl1t1, airing Monday at
t 0:30PM on KCET (Channel 28) and at t OPM on
KVCR (Channel 24).
Large number of Jew1 from the vlllagn and cities
of Eastern Europe came t.o the United States during
the Immigration w8Y89 of the 1980'• and 1890'1. The
majority of them settled In New Yort<'s lower East
Side. Some of th ... uprooted Jews. quickly dl11Uu-
8'C>Md by th• brutal ano totp!Olttw working co"d~
tlont they endur.d In the eweatshope. were drawn to
radtcal pofltlca and eepouled .,,archltm. In their
daffy' llYM they replaced Amer1can CUltura with a
count.r cultu,. Which better reftected their VleWI
and In Which tbev c,-..ted their own tOClaJ and
Intellectual outteta ., well a• an experimental .choof
ayatem Which ftourtlhed for 3e yeara.
Through the u• of ra,. ~I footage. atlll
photoe, ~llpa fn>m Ylddlth fllma and excerptl of
Ylddllh eong1. the hour-long documtn!ary tecreates
a vtvld tmpreMk>r\ of thl• alternattve llfe style and th•
condition• that created It.
The Jtwl1h anarchl1t1 con1ldered them1elve1
Jewl only In a cultural aenM. They--. against both
government and organized religion,. bellevktg In-
stead In pereonal autonomy and the advancement of
freedom through peac.ful meant. Contrary to popu-
lar beliefs, there w11 only a amall minority In the
mCMMT1ent that emp~ and adYC>Cated violence to
achieve political end1. Since the majortty of the
Jewl1h aRarchl1t1 were employed In the needle
trades they w.re Instrumental In atablllhlng trade
union• throughout the cloth Ing Industry.
The newtpaper "Freie Atbelter Stlmme" ("Free
Voice of Labor") from Ill Inception In 1890 was both
the clarion of the Jewish Anarchlata' eoclety and ari
Important forum tor the dM1opment of early Ameri-
can Ylddilh wrtt.,. and poeta. lntet"Vlewt with actual
parttclpaftta In the mowment. Including wrltera from
the "Rw Voice of Labor," many of Whom are now 70
and 80 yea,. old. and with their chlld1'9n and their
grandchildren, help to update the mQYements' his-
tory, and Its Impact on detcendents of the Anarchists
and on aoclety as a whole. Pege11
OON7.fEEL SORRY
On July 25, 1977, 11-year-old Suzy Gilstrap, on a:
school outing, bent over to play with a duck in a pond.
Suddenly a huge tree limb snapped and fell on her. Her
spinal coed was severed and she'll never walk again.
But don't feel sorry for Suzy. "I have accepted the fact
that I'll never walk again," ~he says, "but that doesn't
mean I can't do almost anything I set out totlo."
Among the many things she set out to do w~s 10
become an actress, and her very first role was so
1mpress1ve tt)al there's now talk about her own televi-
sion series. America will get their first look al Suzy, now
14-years-old, 1n NBC's two-hour World Premiere
movie Skyward, on Thursday at 9PM.
She got the 1ob because she'<, a pretty fair tennis
player. She 1s a member of a wheelchair tennis associa-
tion, and her coach 1s a friend of actor/director Ron
Howard. When Howard mentioned that he was prepar-
ing to shoot a movie about a paraplegic girl who sets ou1
to become an airplane pilot, the friend suggested Suzy:
Ho~ard invited her to the studio for a test, and was
so impressed he took her to NBC so the people there
could have a look at the talented youngster, who had
never acted before. NBC eagerly approved the casting,
and that's how Suzy became a TV star.
Starring with her are two-time Oscar winner Bette
Davis an9 Howard Hesseman, normally seen as wacky
Dr. Johnny Fever on CBS's WKRP In Cincinnari.
"I was scared silly at fifst," she says, "but everyone
was so nice to me that I soon felt right at home. I love
Ron Howard. He was so calm and easy-going as a
director. WJlen 11 was all over Mis\ Davis patted rne on
the shoulder and said, 'Voe're good, kid.' I.enjoyed my seen~ with Howard be&I of .i1 He Helped me so much.
He made me relax .ind laugh. He treated me fike an
equal-like a friend."
The movie was filmed on loation at a small airport on
the outskirts of Dallas. Texas, in the middle of the long
summer heat w.ive. "The temperature was usuany 110 or
.. 115,'' ~ys Suzy, ''but Ron sent for one of theabove-the-
groond swimming pools and set !t up on the edge of ~e
airstrip. That way when anyone 301 too hot they'd 1ust
jump In fot a minute and then get back to work I
couldrrl jump into the pool, but I splashed ~ lot."
In addition to a possible weekly series about the
adventure• of t~ pa~plegic glrl who ~an fly an air~
plal'le, Michael Landon, st.ir and eli~Cutlve producer of
NBC's Uttle House on the Prairie. signecl her for '-
guest-starrmg role in this week's eplsdde.
Oon't fttl SO!!\' for Suzy-ht*' Nvl a ball.
s. o.s~ TELETHON ••••••••••
An outstanding number of people rep~ting gov-
ernment, the entertunment industry, p11>fessiorul and
college sports, radio ;,md television sportscasters .and
sportswriters, will participate ,n KHJ's ~"r' Owr Sporls
15 0 5 J four-hour telethon produced for the ~rd of
Education .11nng 'liw on Saturd.iy, ~gmning..at 8PM
.over K.HJ (Channel 9)
The purpose of the tel~thon 1s to ra1~ S570,000 for the
Los Angeles Unified School District's athletic program
That amount of money w.1s remowd from the 1980-81
budget c.1usang the c.1ncell.1hon of .1 num~r of sports
programs. Among tho~ "manor" sports th.1t -were elimi-
nated u.: cross country tru·k, volleyball, gymnastics,
soccer, swimming, golf, tennis, wrestling and badminton
Lynn Schackelford, KHJ's Director of Sports, hosts the
telethon with Tom Bosley of H11ppy qii'lls acting as one of
the cohosts C\Jtsts scheduled to appear on th~ telethon
are Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bndley, Councilman John
Fernro, Mathew and Patrick Laborteaul'( from Li/tit Howst
on tht Pr11ir1t, Dennis Berkley fror,n SanforJ, TV host Wink
Martinda1e, Werner Klemperer from Hog11n s Htrots,
Robert Mandan from So11r. Gina Hecht from Mork ~
M1nd'll, Brian Patrick Clark~from E1ghl Is Enowgh:Bruce ·
Jenner, and Cathy Lee Crosby, John Davidson and Fran
Tarkenton from Tlt11t'1 /ncrt1li<l
. ..
A trip to a jeans fashion show where
Jordache Is busting its britches to
beat the'pants off the competition.
In Las Vegas, the real fun is behind
the scenes of The Hottywood Squares.
And in Houston, everyone is shaking
a leQ at an aerobic dance-a-thon .
• 0 5'1111 • Lia w.wu oi.-• ills,.tt~
10190 8 G 8 O*J "Lnt Day. first
O.y" QulftCY ll'llllS •• attnct1ft
yo\1111 tMdlCll s1""111 to ... llltdl
cal u.allli11er Mit 11 lllocl•ll alld
distur11td whtn she reports thl •
vet11111 stiff llodOJ Is • CMri.11 "' Ille homlCldt 411111 of a pnptet. .....
8 VEU$/DM 'UllS * °""' , ........ r1 • CJ) 9 • v.ps '1uHtft
Oulll" Wiien Oan ~Is a c11n-w1.U 1n c cat 1M111tw to uve a beautillll woman. tOllKienct compels him to
inmt!ptt tM v1Cti111'1 past, but tbe usistant D.A. 1truul11 to stop
T1r1111 at all cosU. ............... a "*""""' c..y 111 ,,.... an..
-10:30-..... ac-
11:00 ••<Doa ... .._ =~i!f ..... .. .... ..... .......... . , ..... , .... • , ...... ~n.s... .....
-11:30-
• (J) O Ill* ........ ,.. d&"(*1)-lMMril.
TV WEEK. NOYEM9ER 19, 1llO
DQOJIMlfC....
• f'rillMr: Cel .... -is
111ioyllla the •tt••• .. Glllft
• CJ) C!I e lnll\.M 111t ....... :::-=:-= ID Hn'i .. ,_ .._.. <"1
•T•Slt IM ...... ~ lll~---t2z00 .T_...1-
mY•letf•Uh -~-..
-12:l0-• a a.111a T ..... • lleiwlt: '11ne;.. .. , .....
(wa) '61-Mtvlllt lltlnd. .. ,. . .............. .................
1s00 •Cl)al•'*'--..... : ... ......, c.t"
(mys) ''3-Hf11ry Silva.
-i':lO-........... ..... ., I I -(llJS) '59-
Gtorl• ~. ,... Stlltll
a coo . .......... , ..... .,... .. ... .... . ........... ,..,, ..... ...... ~ ......
-t:lO-................ ( ... )
'40-Jtl• ~ .... iw.i...
,.__
-~#=--~I ..:.:= .... _ .......... ............................
~:" .......... ,. ..
1 .......... ... =:·--le:»-: I U'!r -....... ...., .. ... l ......... ..
..... lni11 11 Lahf AMtic11
ct•ltritt 1114 Itel* OI tllrtt == ... ~·~ ___ .. .....
• I ~ ........... ..r: ..... r..ru
-11:~
• (J) 1:.ic' t:.,,. .... ....... • .• c.. · f)el::c.1 1n. .. ;J ·~..-. .......... 11 IOl!tlry, ...... lo .. lier ... llld nttm tti. ................... •Cl> a e 11em1 ... : "Uni,......., MIN" <•ra>
71--llltttf: c.m. fialler . . ~ ...... • ~:l'Wlf .......... ••c.,....• ... .......... .
t2100 • Twlfllllt ,.. • "' Ill ,_ Llfl ........
-12:30-•a •llllT-....Slilll .... .,. ..........
(Cllfllt:,'4-Sal .. Dte. . ,. . .............. ........... ...
1:00 ....... : • "1111 St,.,.,..
(dtl) ''3-..... llt Weodnt•.
-l:lO-••"'-.... .................. ( .. )
'U-Cllatt!Dlt ttatoa.
2:00
........ 1 h ... --.. "1111'1 ...,. _,_,, ......... , , .....
LM Llalry" '
-2:l0-..... , ..... : ... lhl .......
o,tls" (lllJS) '56-Robert Wiper.
-3:l0-.... "°"' ...... ~ (ldv) '52-Ann IAytlt
.
Ford has a better Idea-modeling guru
Eileen Ford, that is-as she conducts
a ta1ent search for a new cover girl A
teen sex symbol changes his image and
ttien in Boston, ballroom dancers kick
up their heels in toe-to-toe combat
WEDNDDAY
ea:IOPM(i}
Pege 17
IM>ftllm 11
f• _.., ... ~ liltitp.
''"" Ht DATillllE l'IOWlllS. ...... ttf ,_ C.•MllllCt, Ill ti. 41y's......_
DAmME llOVIES
..
TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 18, 1980 .... ..._._ ... as.er..... ......... .. ..,.,.....,... •C*m as..,,...
-10:30-....... a u. • c.-. (t-C) J11 5t f'*" "YOlllll and In no ett1r
8100
l uu··--u.s-.:rr~>~
.,. ~" llltell ~ eTkT•._ . ......... en...,•-· . ··~, .. •"-•C.-..~ ......... , .....
-l:l0-
(1) ....... ....... ........ .....,
Ill .... ..... "'-... c... .. as.z.1c...
7100 •!!._• .... I n:T.c c=.• ........... .... ..,..
(IJftl•IMT ....
• SPUIAL; Tiil llllt tf la .....
... ,.. (90ln) Wayne Newton ~ts
lttil tvtllt wltll IUtSb Tony Orfl'ndo,
Joan Rivlfl, ancJ '"'"X· many "'°''· 0 "' .. r--. (C.C) • °"' -(t.() et-•' t 1 llluf !Ip llacWll.*w ...
-7:30-
•Z•IMTRI ... ,...,, ... .....
(1),. ....... . , ......... ...... ,....,
tD 11-.-sett . .....,...., ...........
• Tiie llldelll*• .... ec.....1me ........
8:00
8 Cl> <IJ ,.UllUl: Tiit Wal· ... Part OM of two parts Jollll
Watton IS thrown 1n larl aftlf ht tnu to defend his blec:k 11eichbor who is
KUlld of murdtf'1nc • •hrt• """· • D 8 srmM; Dtffy hc*'a 1W1 r. Gltilc Darty talb hlS
pl'Oductr Into doin1 a sequel lo his
most famous feature. "Duclt Dodi en: so that his hordes of 11111
Lawrenoe-Hllton Jacobs and~ Tutman
dream of escaping the ghetto. But the
ghetto doesn't give up without a fight.
•
following FC>C>tb91 ~
Md "Morie & Mindy" \U
-9:30-
.. ID (8) TM D•tfy '*' Show
11) Gtttin' Owtr
(IJ) Journey to Advt11ture a> Mo¥it: "Hou4ini" (dra) 'S3-
1 ony Curhs. lanet lt1ill
~ ------ilCIT't---------ll~--__ _. .L - - - - ----.. ---.._,.,, ______ --'
TV wt:EK NOVEMBER 18 1980
.., ...w letwoB ..... .., ....
Ill ..... CitJ Ualts
-10:30-....... O .Vtilpl (C.C) , m ~ .wz Flltitll 11 Sara. tit• "Battlt of tl1t Sues" lll1llOI$
lacqutt, Johnny Crrlhn a~d Eddie
DIVIS ptrfor111 lrom the Jazz r rUJ¥tl
at Sa11toea
11:00
G G • CI>CID<JJO llewl CD lt .. nlll"le: "rt111 Sutt•"
(com) '71 -W•lter Matthau e stOIB: Celltat fw!Mll UClA
Bruins vs. the USC T roJans.
•MIN: "Tiie lat llo'lil" (dra)
'71 -Dennis Hopper, Julit Adams
0 CMll lllMtt IM f"-* ac.-.ats~ • Tiil l'ytN!s (R) a """"""': ''tlfs Scare ,....
Cl " Delltl" 01"nMltt
-11:30-
• llewl/flllriel;; "Tiie c..w.r ...
"Tiii .......... .,..,.
• o a Satll,., """u.e . • ~: "Uttle ....,. ..
(du) '71-Elhot C<Hild. CI> llfl ........ ,,..., .... :
"Tiii ,.,.,..
Cfl .... "(ipr SMdi9" (dra)
• 7 5-Qlnt Eastwood. 9 ... : To be announcd .... ~ •TM.~
12:00
0... .. 1tUrl•
• ... : "l Tate .r"""7" (drl) '62-Ada Tuslllnaftalll
..-12:30-
• TM llfkm/Mnerid ., ... ., ... .,..~
hOO
()) .... , ................
81' "'-"llQ c..t ·~itlc .. ._DW~"· ,..... ............. c..t I
-1:30-
8:00 e CJ) ('fJ Tiie .. Adwetltltra If 11"'"1 ...._/ltecWe , .. Wit. 1J 0 8 frM IN lll'HJ lhet tllta...
• Lint " It ..... ,
• (]) Cllll • llNttdff ' Dll!t· Mt
• ....,S.,.nt111
• ..,.. "fwr Ftce1 West'' (adV)
'43-Joel McCru, fran"s Dee • s,.cw,..,.. • o.u .,,.. • Cllsslc eea,.,c...
-1:30-
• CI> (J) "9 Tom & Jttry SM
• "' llHllN11 • (]) cm • T1111n4m lllt .,..,..
m llftlity F tctery ....
0) D Vblblltl
9:00
• Cl) (I} Tiit .. k11117/ ..... ,._.._
e1sn • CD cm a srons: •cu flltUll Teams lo be announced
G LJUrtl I lllrdy mearrac:ele..US f.E) ....
0) Trill11111 hlllia
-9:30-
D 9 8 The Oatfy Duck SlloW
'Q) Gtttl11' Over
I An•R•OOlt
12:00
e (J).O F1t~
IJIMMJIMllll..._.
-~·""' • "' Ent Si4t lie II) T11U11
OlrtlllWI 9 Tiie Cilwllla Yun gTMsON..._
8Qb&IM111aa
OWllStr .. tW.k
-12:30-
D (}) CUI Tiit l.eM llln&lf!Tar·
lift Advttttllrt Hour
D Aal1allturt USA
• CD cm ia srom: •w r.-1 r e1ms lo be announced
m ...-.: "''"°' 111 t111 ery,r· (llor) '60-Clmstopher lee e sa .. c.n
GI FutW hrttrudoAll a 1t11Ma ill Alatricl• CiowtflllMllf
1:00 Uhlicllc..ter
• Tiie .... lf'S
Q) llbrCllS W..,
0 ID s,.rtsWerN 8 Family hrtrlil m Tiiis Is E,tltmtra
-1:30-
• (.[) 111) 30 ll11nvtes
II f·Tr-.
• All"9tt ' c.t111 m Ocuaus
ID 1t111111111t r11no
2:00
6 KidsWtfld ' U £mywhtre D G1n1111's ls&an4
Cl) Allbott ' Cesttllo m Outtt li111its .
(I.Zl Journey to AclYenture
ID Mo-tit: "HOlldini" (d1a) '53 -
Tony Curtis, lanel Leieh
~ est Idea Since
. Shopping Carts .
Now you oen do a week'• •l'opplng
• without forgettf ng • •Ingle
Item! Use pre-printed
•hopping lists
prepared for you by
PILOT PRINTING.
1'10 • ....,_ ""''" •• ,.. •• plu• eddlllol\el .-• ,o.i can IMI In ,...,_
~: ::'co':.,:',.:-'W::1":; • •.,
t S1 75+ 50~1ege & llondllng to I
: Piiot Prtntlng Sh~ng Utt I fl P.O. Bo• 1580 I 330 W. Bay SI. I
I citsta MeH, Calif. 921126 I I I INANE--------------1
I · I ,ISTAEEl-------------1 ·CITY------___ zt,. ____ _.
Send
Today To
Become A
Super
Shopper
DAILY PILOT
'-••••••"9••··-..,1 _______ ..J
INSTALLED
·STARTING
~T
. 51'!.lt.
/
Hal WiUiams-Unsung, But Womng!
His chameleonic ability has cost him instant recogni-
tion. People have to pause a moment before they
recognize him. He may shave his, moustache, grow a·
goatee, change his voice, or adopt physlct1I manner-
isms that make him appear different than he has before.
Hal Williams is.--one of Hollywood's most versatile,
Ul\sung working actors .•. but work he does.
He's Harley Foster, nice guy. hardworking <1uto me·
chank in The Waltons ... he's unflappable Officer
Smitty, straight-man foll to Redd Foxx in Sanford and
S.1nford and Son ... he was Alex Haley's aging. stern,
sharecropper grandfather in Roots II .•. he was the
good·"~tured cook inmate in On the Rocks .. : and he's
the contemptible, money-grubbing owner of a base-
ball team in the upcoming ABC movie, Don't Look
Back, The Story of Satchel Paige. '
Hal'Willlams 15 all of these people and more; He
has had recurring roles. on as "'any as three series, at
once. "I lean more toward heavy drama, buJ I Invariably
end up doing a lot of comedy. I personafty don't find
the ~omedy as much of a challenge as the more
dramatic pieces."
Hal will get an opportunity to show off his dramatk
bent in the two-part season· opener of The Waltons,
entitled "Jhe Outrage," which airs this Thursday an4
Thursday, November 27 at 8PM both nights on CBS.
Returning In his role as Harley Foster, the WaJton's only
black neighbor, who works as an auto mechanic and
helps out In the mill, the story line delves into Harley's
mysterious past, tiis defense by John Walton (Ralph
Waite) and /tis rescue at the hands of none other than
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt himself. Lynne
Hamilton stars as his devoted wife.
However, when production resumes on Sanford, Hal
will again find himself doing a balancing act between
his two series ... as well as between comedy and drama
... as Fred Sanford calls for help from the hip black
patrolman Officer Smitty, when trouble is brewing on
that series.
Another example of Hal's comedic expertise, cur-
rently a boxoffice smash, 1s his role as a by-the-book
army drill sargeant in Private Ben;amin. In it, Hal,
working in tandem with the talented Eileen Bren-
nan, takes particular joy in putting Jewish princess
Judy Benjamin (Goldie Hawn) through her paces in
basic training.