HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-04-29 - Orange Coast Pilot'
111111 ClllT
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NfEDLE.S HOLLYWOOD
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GARFIELD ®
YOU GOY5 MAVE A G00'7 TIME, 0UT NO
DIGGING tN T~E 5ANV, IF YOU KNOW
WMAT I ME.AN
AW, GO POUNP 5ANP,
'c'OO LITTLE TWERP
SUNDAY, AMIL 29, 1984
IT'S A LETTE~
FROM MY BROT~ER1
SPIKE~··
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ACE
Productions
Mf.Y, 0AeY.' WMAT'~ YOUR SIGN?
Ylll llllTIWI 11111 Ml
POOR SPIKE .. ME LEADS
sue~ A BORIN6 LIFE ...
RO, WE'RE SORRY, BUT we DON'T
T~INK IT WOULD BE A 6000 lDEA
TO ANIMATE ''crnzeN KANE ''
by Jim Davis
CARE.FUL, f>Ut?PY.
5M£'5 MV GIRL
WELL ••• l GUE.55 WE ARE
10 170 A5 ME SAYS,
NOT A€> ~E DOE~
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NANCY ®
AUNT FRITZI, I'M
MEETING 5LUGGO,
AT THE LIBRARY
I DON'T THINK YOU'LL
BE ALLOWED IN THE
LIBRARY WITH IT
DENNIS THE MENACE
JUDGE PARKER
WHY NOT?
LATE FOR HIS
LUNCHED N DATE
WITH CARLA,
SAM DRlVER
REPRIMANDS HER
FOR WAITING
ATTHE eAR
DRINKING A
GLASS OF WINE
-fi_4R.0J..V
WHY ARE YOU SO YOU'RE NOT
lf;PJ-~~r
ANGRY AT ME, SAM? AT HOME l
I DRINK A LITTLE
WINE AT HOME~
,,
HERE I AM,
5LUGGO
HOW DO YOU LIKE MY NEW
NOVELTY
COAT?
ITS TOO
LOUD!
We're not
particki lar ~
by Harold Ledoux
HARRIGAN OBVIOUSLY
D\DN'T KNOW YOU WERE
A MINOR! HE COULD LOSE
HIS LICENSE FOR SERVING
YOU AN ALCOHOLIC~
BEVERAGE! .
NOW TELL ME WHY SUS\E
DIDN'T COME WtTH YOU t
I DON'T KNOW, SAM~ WE WERE
READY TO LEAVE AND AT THE LAST
MINUTE SHE .JUST SAID St-\E DIDN'T
WANT TO COME ALONG! SHE TOLD
ME TO LIE AND TELL YOU THAT SHE
I REALLY WORRY ABOUT HER! AFTERTHAT
LOVELY WEEKEND WE t-iAD AT SPENCER
FARMS WITH YOU AND ABBEY., WE CAME
BACK TO THE SCHOOL AND SHE WOULDN'T
SPEAK FOR HOURS f
WASN'T FEELING WELL l SHE WAS SO MOODY!
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:
r
. bY 10M BA11UK
..
MOON MULLINS
NICE oFYou 10
HELP WITH THE
SPRING
CLEANING,
WILLIE ...
DOCTO R SMO CK @
PON',... GIV~ HeR IHOSES ReP
Pl lA~S WHS:N 1""He <SRE:E:N ONes WORK JUS,-AS weL-L.. .'
I THINK COOG~lA1iON5
ARE DE.FINllELG' IN ORDER
FOR THE 7RDMBONE5 •.•
FOR Fl~15HING FIR51 !
b y Ferd and Tom Johnson
... WORKING FROM ... LEFT IO RIGHT ..
IOP TO BOTTOM ...
You'RS NO,-~
S 'Posec::> ,-o use I ,-HA-r PHONS
FOR PeRSONAL,.... j eus1Ness ,
Kt c:>c:>o / I
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by George Lemont . -.
SHe 's
-rRYI N<.S
FORA N6W
CA.,.-eGORY. .. A Noe>et...
PRIZES F=OR
M.f; l?Pt... I N<S !
. I
-___ ._,,,.....,... '-· I -· -• ---------.- ------ - -• -- ---_...,.... ~~--
DONT RUS~
ME=!
;
WHO
VIM=SlJPON
INS I PIOUS
F~~ weevu . .s ..
..
Ll-~'f
,.
¥>> a a z e P • . .a
•• FOR Ht:fU! COMes1HE
INSIPIOUS ™1lt:R
Wlit!'ltL.. ~
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CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYES? ""9re •rt at ,_,, 1lx differ·
tftCft In dr•wt"I details ...._ .. " '°' and Mtt9m ,....... Hew
.-kkly can YM HNI "'-"'' a.ell ans.en wttlt tMM Mlew.
Jett~' 11 lfllOCI -*Id • 1-11111111•10 ·s · -J -IJ• •llMtS ., 'PIAOW II WJV ·c peAOW •1100~ ·i ·eu1111w •t •Jfll>td 'I 'MlUeJ .. 110
~urii-rWhirl@
® -------by Hal Kaufman---------
e POINTBLANKIR .. torethtmluiRl_...:,,..._ofY1ca1Ut.M ............. MYMI
.... ume •10Uf'Mfv"" -Olar Wilde, 'rn.t Pkture ef Olrielt Gny." f'.S.:
PUZZLING
WEATHER I
On Monday, the day
before yesterday, the
weatherman advised:
"Today's weather Is
the opposite of yester·
day's. If the weather Is
the same tomorrow as
It was yesterday, the
day after tomorrow.
should be the same as
today. and the next
day clear."
So far so good, It
turns out. It Is raining
t~ay, Wednesday.
and It ral~ the day
before yesterday.
Question: What was
the weather llke
yes1.rday and what
day next should be
clear?.1,.~1 -~
111.t. eq Pl""I' 11'W A-s>~MJ. --.> ... fl .... -i1ntP111
16 •
................. wont tMt rttymea .......... .
.. '9'jM'j., .. .,_ lwt-.w "ll
• Tacks Problem! If It costl one cent for h first
tack and double that few each tack thereitfter untll 32
tacks were used, whllt would be the total cost? 1+"93~ Af•"
• Seedy Bunc"I UMCramble names of m .. ,....
v ... taW..: 1. SEAP. 2. RONC. 3. SEaAN. 4.
SPINURT. S. ABAGCEB. 6. TUCELET.
·~.,·· ...... ) S sOtvM\! t """9 t WO)''~ L • Punny Express! Imposter -fake mac.rant
maker. Persia -source of Persian Ivy. Helium -
what a patient hopes his doctcw wlll do. Whlrly~rd
blrd that gets the worm.
•
11· '~
• . '2
• y 19
SEE HERE I OUr worm friend above Is not long for tl'6s
world. To complete scene, add missi"l llMI dot to dot.
For Better or For Worse
LOOK,EUU\BE:rH! I
BoUGHT you A
PUDDLE SUtl.
Now you CAN PLAY OlJT-
SlDE. WITHOUT Ge.1iiNG
We.Tl
FULL TANKI AM eeler'S .. ttlh fhll -~ -; 1~ 2-Lt. W.. 3-Y ...... 4-Lt .......... S-F....._ FU . .,_. 7-a
browtl. t-Dk. Mue. t-Dk • .,.... 11-Dk. ,.,,... n-u. ,.,,.._
by Lynn Johnston
DoESNT WORK . .
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'fOU ARE. AU.. A50l)T ro WtTN£!>5 AtJ
AMAZING fEA1 Of WllAADR'i ~
.
MOM, I lalAN1" 'IOU fO
WR11f. OOWN
~'4 t{OM0£~ ...
\N5\QE. 1"A1 L.t11e.R, l'vf. lllf<lilf.N
\~£ f.~ACT 6AME. NuMSf.R 1'1~1
Nota> MOL.1'lP~'{ lT 6"/ \7,
f'-'f.~ ~0fRf\C1 % ANO
O\\/lDE. IT 0'/
'2.
bu&'fRAcr l3 AND AOO LA~T
'If.Al<'!> 6AlftN& A\JERA6E C$ f~
~ICAbO Wl-\ lff 50'1.... tHfN WRl'ft
DOWN 'IOUR f l~M ...
AN~wE.R!
CAN 1 60~R.DW ~Ou'~£ 1~E. MA6lll
A QUARfE.R. F~ rvLL ONf. OUT ~
A ff.w OA'i5 ~e:,o, 1
M~\L.E.0 A L.E.11f.R ro
M+Sf.L.F, ~NO lT '5 Ouf.
10 A~r<t\JE. ~N~ Ml~UTE.
MOM HA~. Hf. ·~ 'f~f. MALL.MAN NOW ... ~OMEONE. ~ '<001<
-'I
rA6AN
G·ORDO ®
l 1MA
TOUGH PfF<.~N/
J?.E:OPJ-S
D0~1T
IOUCM •
J::NOUeHf 1~....,."'-..,, ,n•~.....,.
SHOE
~&'f2E. 6TANOJNG
AT ™E ~SSRO\DG,
M'-i FRIEND5H ...
1"H!" etJ~
I? FOil HI~, ~t:&O~l'TA!
l-IE'fU' ME.A>-J~
~sti:.Er •
.%~ 60/Ale EIV.J.ITV
Mil-ES AA/ HOUR
AND WMEN IT PUJ,~t; JNV 'JUAT JUNCTION
WE CAN e.rTHER CLIMB~ ~D,OR WE
CAN Wt\TCU IT ~01,E ON ~N 1UE. L-INE!~
OOT lF UE CNJ GE.TIT
~ ~GIC J-f~·~ ~IT
9IG IN N~US. ...
E,AR '· 9
by Gus Arriola
..
lly Jeff Macllelly
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o.r,t .......,.. sure made
waves as a mermaid in the
film Splash. And why not?
She's been preparing br the
role most of her lite. Her
fawrle fairy tale is Hans Quis..
tian ~-9:'-'ii'-_....., maid. and on vaations she
and her friends would tie their
legs together bebre IJ>in8 into
the pool in order to play
liss:>me underwater ~'Tve always wanted to be a
mermaid," says Hannah. "It
would be great if I could
aJways play mythological
chMatterS. but there aren't
that many p>d films with
those kinds of roles. Making
roovies is like getting a license
to play for your whole life." A
rather ftippant view of acting?
0 .
Looking for Doeu MID9T
She's not on the Knots Lm<J.
in& set, ~u say? Then nm
over to Rodeo Drive and cor·
ra1 her at Neiman Marcus.
That's the favorite haneout of
Mills, who gives new meaning
to "mean" as the scheminS
Abt1y Ewing on the hit Dallas
spinoff. "h wasn't k>ng ago
that Abby was a bookkeeper
at Knots Landing Garage; her
dothes were pretty drab,"
remembers Mills. "Today,
she's an executive and the
only character who can afford
to wear relatively expensive
thinp." Though Mills' size.
four fig-
u re would
probably look
swell in design-
er~ theYre
a bit out ol fine
with the show's
budget. minute
compared to Dy·
nasty's. Still,
silver lingerie em a nod of ap-
proval from the
accounting de-
partment, and
from male
viewers. Whal
does Donna
Mills usually
sleep in? .,. «Urts."
'1\\\\11 "f I' i\ 1P '\\'\'
They said the day would
never come -but It has.
Lem Home, who has had
her share of stormy weather
(her second husband and her
only 900 died within one year
d..ead:t...otbe).Jm decided.to
retire in October. when she
wraps up the tour of her one-
~ show Lena. age 66,
marking her 50th anniversary
as a perbrmer, has her future
nicely mapped oOC h'll spend
time wlh her ~.
then attack the books she's
never had the time to read.
0
What do you do when
you're the star of ab~
get science fiction movie
I and you've
bareJy seen a
single scj..fl
flick in your
life? That's
the plight " ltol*a c.&.
who stars in
the role of Lieut
Saavik in Siar Trek
Ill, scheduled for
June release. "It was
really a b~ing In dis-
guise," says the ad·
ress. "I came to the set
dean. fresh. with ~ own interpretation. '
Though Robin is cool on
the subject of futuristic
plots, she loves the idea of
actually going to the moon.
"Sci fi is fantasy," she ex-
plains. '1'raveli~ to the
moon is very real."
0
What's in a name? Ask
Allina Stewart. The soon-to-
be ex-wife of rocker Rod
!tewwt is looking to change
her last name once again,
but not necessarily by way
of marriage. The Tex.as.
born beauty started her
modeJing career with
the surname C.ol·
lins, then switch·
ed to Hamilton
when she mar-
ried the ever-
t an actor Georte ll
When she wed
the "Do you th lnk I'm sexy"
star, he insisted on the change
to Stewart. After all, Rod
_,,.., PbotOI -<Mtro: Randy Taytorl SYJPM; VetCO: Ed Strulcy/Camera 5.
didn't want any wile of his ac-
ting under another husband's
name. Macho ado about noth-
ing is what we think. One
possibility -no surname al
all, a la Cher -has been re-
jected Says Alana, "I think
that would be a little pre-
sumptuous."
0
Bad news for Albert fla.
ney fans who loved him in
the film Annie and had put
money on his appearing in a
sequel as the shiny-<iomed
Daddy Warbucks. Seems that
since his Oscar nomination
for best actor in The Dresser,
Finney has been so inundated
with offers. he has decided
not to commit himself to
anything definite. There
might be a terrific script at the
bottom of the pile -perhaps
one that won't require him to
keep shavtns his head'/
0
From Ania Summe; Nau Yorll,
Robert Windeler. Los Af18de$.
Edited by Joanne Kaufman.
. •
\
ou:ws 11114
To help you take care of
your postal business in record
time. we've installed Self·
Service Postal Centers in many
post offices and shopping
centers.
You can buy stamps and
other postal items for no extra
charge at the convenient touch
-of a button .
How to be moved without tears.
Moving can be a trying experience. but with a little advance
planning, we can help you avoid unnecessary delays in your
mail delivery. The key to it all is making sure that everyone
who should know about your move is informed well ahead of
time. To help you do this. we'U provide you with a card to
inform your local postmaster of your forwarding address,
and several more to send to your other correspondents.
Magazines in panicular should be notified well in
adv&nce so you can avoid forwarding charges. And
they'll appreciate it if you include an old subscription
address label on their cards.
There's also a new brochure at your post office
that will tell you everything you need to know to make
sure your mail comes directly to your new address.
How to have the post ollice protect you.
Every year at this time. as a part of National Consumers Week, the
Postal Service launches a fresh campajgn to inform people of their rights
as mail-order consumers. So if you have any questions about consumer
protection or anything else. just ask us. And
feel free to fill out Consumer Service Cards
with your questions or comments. These
cards are available cit all post offices. and
go directly to your local postmaster.
And if you still need help. write to
your Postal Service Consumer Advocate.
Washington. D.C. 2026().6320.
Talk to us. and we'U help you get our
best.
• ~ help)Qt t&etourbest.
~·
In Novmtbe' 1982. a ~d
jury in Miami took the · ary
step of indictin& four Cuban ~ d:'eu~~~ ~::::,;.
~ drugs inlo the Unit«l Stales. The
tndictmenJs caused a worldwide sarsa-
lion. but the ~ kin/ll)in of the smug-
gling operation LOOS nol among those
charged. He is Robar Vesro, the
fugitive linander who has kd a
shadowy existt:nCI! in the Caribbean
region for the past eight 'Yf!OTS·
FAMILY 'ltEKLY assiBMd investig«iue
reporter Ernest Volkman the job of trackinS down how and why Vesro
and the "Cuban connection" came
about Volkm<ll\ who last year in FMllLY
~Y expos«l Nazi butc:Mr Klaus
~·s coon«tion with American in-
telli(Jma. spo11 two months. in this
rounJry and the Caribb«Jn. tracinS an
otensiue dntg-smutJflinB ~ that
! has btttJ mastmninded by V50.
111 What follows is the reuJt of Volkman 's 1 inCJf!Stigatiue dfort. whidr indud«I in-1 terviews with many U.S. ~
~ and narcotics agents. Cubans and 1 others directly inuolved with the co-
~ cai.ne conspiracy. i he villa is one of the
luxurious homes that
dot the breath·
takingly beautiful
seaside area about
17 miles east of Ha-
vana. Cuba. Com-
plete with private
dock and beach, the
sprawling white
house with the red
tile roof currently beJongs to the Cuban
Communist Government , which seii.ed
it when its wealthy owner fled to the
United States nearly 20 years *>.
The villa is U9ed by the Government
k>r VIP auests of Fidel c.tro. Ordinar·
ily, It wOu1d not be worthy of mention,
except that ils current ocx:upant -at
this writing -is a VO')' special guest of
the Cuban Ciovenmmt.
His name is Robert Vesoo, and his
praence there ls qble evidence of
ode of the most unusual partnenhips
in the h1stc>ly of atme. Simply put,
Vf:lm and Adel Castro have pe Into
the drut-tm~ buslness. How this bi7.arre partnenhip came
about involves an extremely tangled
tale. the bottom Line of which is money
-and lots of it. AaDrding to admitted-
ly impred8e estimates, believed to be
on the C001e1Vative side, Castro and
VerDJ sar at the center of a huae dnJR-
mn.ialin8 operation that is raponsibfe
br a sigruficant portion of the illegal
· .intn the United
Stales. The operation has generated
nearly 120 bUUon in profits during the
past four years alone, and Ca.1b'o ls
believed to have made about SSO mil·
lion thus far on his end of the deal.
"Fundamentally," says one U.S. nar·
CX>tics agent, "the stOtY of Ve!/!00 and
Castro ls a story of pure. unaduherated
cynkism These are people who de-
serve each other."
The story begins wlh Robert Vesco.
a a1mina1 mdennind who has been
eluding U.S. authorities for years. Prob-
ably the most wanted white<oUar
aiminal in recent U.S. hi.story, Vesro was indided in 1971 for looting S224
million from investors who had put
their money into a Swiss-based mutual
fund known as Investors Overseas Ser-
vices (1.0.S.). Additionally, Vest:JJ is
wanted on charges that he made an il-
legal S200,000 contribution to Presi-
dent Nixon's 1972 reetection campaign
-in the hope of having the 1.0.S.
charges dropped.
Since then, V5.X> has popped up all
over the Caribbean, living at various
times in Antigua, <:osta Rica and . most
significantly, the Bahamas. It was while
residinR there three years¥>· acoord-
in8 to U.S. law-enbroernent offidals.
that Ve!'itD began smuaUng drugs.
As Vetm oould not have faifed to
notice, the Bahamas have been notor-
ious for yean as a prime tranHhip-
ment point br mari~a. cxx:aine and
other narc:otio moving nortnwant
from production renters in South
America. primarily Colombia and
Bolivia. Dotted with tiny islands and
secluded anchorages, and only SO
miles from the United States, the
Bahamas are ideally suited for dfU8"
smugllng o~rations. Fast boats
regularly run the gauntlet of the U.S.
Coast Guard and Drug EnJora!fllef\t
Administration (D.EA} attempts to
stop them. The potential pro6ts.
however, are worth the risks: A boat
loaded with 100 kilos of cocaine can
bring up to S25 million in street sales.
The hundreds of millions of dollars
passing through this Bahamian a>n-
neC!ion -the single most important
entry point of iff egal drugs being
shipped to the United States -at·
traded Vesa:>'s interest, and by 1981 ,
U.S. officials became aware that a new
sophistication and style seemed to
have entered the Bahamian trade.
They were right Vest:JJ was organizing
the traffickers into a much more effi.
cient business organization, and in the
process, subverting Bahamian Govern-
ment and police officials with an exten-
sive bribery scheme that soon a>n-
verted some Bahamian bureaucrats in-
to virtual partners. "It's almost in-
describable what goes on out there,"
says one U.S. afleOt of the Bahamas.
Vesco's most sophisticated rontri~
tion was the solution of a problem that
had been bedeviling major narcotics
traffickers for years: What rould they
do with all the money they were earn-
ing? This may not seem much of an
obstacle, but in fact it is. Some traf·
tickers have so much money. they tally
it up in pounds. More importantly,
bundles of unaccounted-for money
tend to attract the attention of Federal
agents, especially from the l.R.S.
VC!XXJ devised a solution that Federal
aeents concede was nothing short of
brilliant He set up a series of small
banks in the Caribbean, where secrecy
laws make it easy to protect the iden-
tities of depositors. Working in concert
with corrupt lawyers and accountants
in the Southeastern United States,
Vesco then devised a oomplex scheme
to launder all that drug money throll&h
a series of bank transactions that oon-
vmed cash into holdings in oftshore <X>r·
ponitiolLS baed nntly in the Caribbean.
But although the drug business wa,,,
HalJiina 1torbor: ~ • . thaJ """""'*" booll haw ~ban pcm and opfl'tlled in OlbatJ waters.
flourishing, Ve11JOO had some worries.
One was an etcalating U.S. effon to
stop it. induding a crackdown on big
dealers in this muntry and an increa.Y
ingty suttesdul eflort to infiltrate the
maior c1rutcnUlldina rings. More
~tly. the ~t of the Reagan
Aamlnistration brought a renewed
campaisn to bkx:k smualing routes,
using lnaeued air and ship patrols.
Cle.arty, the snu~would need a IOI
of help u they were aolng to be able 10
evade U.S. pllJ'Ols.
One of Vf:lm'I most important part·
ners. a notorious trafficker named
Carlos Enrique Lehder Rivas, is be-
lieved to have provided the answer:
the Government of Cuba.
U.S. agents were weU aware of
Lehder. F"or yars. the Colombian h~
been lbted as one of the world's maior
ax.aine traJ6cken.. ()penting out or the
Bahamas. he ~ took over one
small illand, Normans Cay, setting up
landing ttTips and a ~ed rom-
municaliona S)'1lem {induding a
12().foot radio antenna. which piobably
' allowed br a>ntact with most of the
U.S. East Coast) in order to run a>caine
into the United States via a small fleet
of boats. U.S. agents say Lehder and
Veoo met in 1980, when the C.olom-
' bian was h')'in8 to figure out a way to
hide the money from his drus profits.
I He decided to IJ> into partnership with
Vesco. and by 1981 the two men were
the most important suppliers of cocaine
to this a>untry -in the process. raklns
in nearly S300 milUon a year.
By 1982, Lehder had established
oontao with agems of the D.0.1., the
Cuban intelll&en<:e service. operan. ·na
in Colombia. The Cubans needed
Lehder; they were trying to run IUN to
leftist Ml9 suerIDas in the CotOmbian
$ Lehder, with his extensive
sm operation, was perfect for
. d a deal was struck: Lehder
would aid Cuban anns smu881ill8 into
Colombia. while the Cubans would
provide protection, anc.horases and
other· help for his drug-smugling
operations Into the United States.
M a highly succesul smuaJer,
Lehder attracted a lot of attention -rrom
U.S. drug agents. It was an interest that
increased substantially when the
l(lents noticed Lehder in deep a>nver·
sation with known D.G.I. agents in Co-
k>mbia. "'You didn't have to be much of
a genius to figure out that the Cubans
were cooking up a deal with l..ehder,"
says an American intelllsence official.
''The formula was simple: For the
CUbans to be talking to l.ehder <X>Uld
mean only that their orders came
straight from the top. In other words.
Castro. Lehder worked with Vesa>,
which meant that !OOner or later,
Vesco and Castro would be working
toaether too." Tt was not long before U.S. officials
had proof of the Cuban involvement:
tracking of drua-laden boats revealed
that some of them were operating in
Cuban waters and berthing at Cuban
ports. Obviously, there was ol6dal
Cuban Government sanction lor the
drug boats. What the Americans did
not realize then was that the Lehder·
Cuban a>nnection was only the ~n
ning of what would beoome a much
more extensive business partnership.
As Vesoo realized, the l.ehder..Cuban
deal was important. but given the Castro
Government's apparent willingness to
work with drug smualers. there was
potentlal br an even greater business arransernent. Bei>re v f!S'J) CX>uld make
a move, however. the Cubans
themselves acted. In late 1981 , D.G.I.
operatives in Colombia oontaded
Mather Veeco drus businell assodate -Johnny Crump, an American wt.th a
severe 9t\Jlter, whole family had 9eltled
in Cdombia )'ell1 bebe. Ater his
cattl&ranchin8 business failed In 1979.
Crump went into the narcotics racket,
running a laqJe«ale cocaine and
marijuanMmuggling operation with
Vesa> in the Bahanias.
Crump knew Jaime Guillot-Lara.
another Colombian listed by U.S.
aaents as one of the biaest and most
sua:e.ssful marijuana nllllllers in the
world. It turned out th• -OuilJot and
Crwnp shared a problem; U.S. agents
_were .ooml•entJy kMcking off _their
MW>Clates and leizin& their boats.
There were heavy Jo.es, and Crump
-who at one point was makinf S3
million a year from drup -was in
trouble. So was Guillot, who had lost
six ships.
Apparently aware of their problems.
the Cuban D.G.l agentS had a propost.
tion: oflk:ial Havana protection lor the dNR ships, in exchanRe for which
Guillot and Crump would obtain Amer·
k:.an anns in the United States, then
smuagle them into Chile to be used by
~ k>rces. Both men ac-
cepted the deal. and the Cubans then
proposed a more efficient method for smuatins drugs. The problem. the
Cubans noted. centered on the large
"mother ships'' (big merchant ves.1els)
the Colombians were ~ to move druss into the U.S. Those stups. loaded
to the gunwales with tons of narcotics,
represented a huae investment; if the
American agents seizecl sud\ a craft.
the loss would be oonsiderable. The
solution, the Cubans noted, would be
for the mother ship's load to be
transferred into a number of smaller
and faster boats. The Americans could
not hope to Intercept every craft. Thus.
the traftickers could afford to lose a
small boat or two, as long as the other
boats sat through.
Since transferring drug$ from a big ~ip to smaller ships is difticult on the hi8Jl seas. the key to the scheme was
the use of Cuban ports. The mother
ships would dock at several Cuban
Navy bases (most often at Cayo Largo),
where the drop would be transferred
to smaller boats. anything that oouJd
make the run. The large ships involved
in the operation would have the name
"Viviana" painted on their stems. a
signal to Cuban Navy warships that
they were to be protected and escorted
into Cuban ports. ("Viviana" was the
name of Crump's infant daughter.)
The "Viviana" operation was a key
piece of evidence about the entire mn-
spiracy. "We learned," says a U.S. of.
tidal familiar with the case, "that the
0.0.1. agents in Colombia had est~
lished a very dose relationship with
Crump. So close, in fact, that one of the
senior O.G.I. men served as godfather tor Viviana. Crump's daughter. Crump
may have thought it was dever to use
his daughter's name as a codeword in
RDbe1 Varo, .. Costa Rk:o. 1917.
the operation, but it ultimately
bacldired, proViding an important link
between the Cubans and Crump.
When Crump was arrested last year In
this a>untry tor dJ'U8 trafficking. it was
the Viviana busines that indicated an
undeniable tie with Crump and his
Cuban friends. Obviously, it can be
fairly deduced that it was all a 0.0.1.
operation. with the 0.0.1. men taking
their orders from Castro himself.
There's no way the D.0.1. and the
<A.Jban Navy would have carried out drus smualfng without Castro's oftidal
permission, that's for sure."
The deal was somewhat similar to
the one worked out with Lehder, but
with an important difference: This
time. the Cubans demanded a cut of
the drl18 profits, acxording to U.S.
a&ent.s. amounting to SS00,000 to
$700,000 tor each large boatload sail-
ing in Cuban waters. depending on the
-and type of careo.
.. , .. CAITllO
The Cuban insistence on money
caufit Vesco's attention immediately,
for tt sugeested that Castro might be
willing to do real business with drug
smU88lers, despite the Cuban Clovem-
ment' s official (and stiff) prohibition
against all narcotics. M Vf!Sa) further
noted. the Cuban involvement initially
seemed mainly political, oonnected
with smuggling arms to leftist guerillas.
But the Cul>ans were now looking for a
CMh piece of the action.
No one is quite certain e.xact.ly when
it came about, but some time late in
1982, Vesm established mntact with
Castro's representatives and apparently
suggested that there were a number of
attractive business propositions to be
discussed, all of which could lead to ex-
tensive profits. for the regime. At. first
glance. there 1s cause to wonder why
the Cubans, officially a revolutionary
gov~ment fi~y opposed to having
anything to do with drop, would want
f AMILY W fDLY . Al'llL 29 . 1914 5
CAlftlO.VllCO
to get involved With an especially
notorious capitalist like Vesoo and his
drug tral6ckers.
b is probable that Vesoo did not very serious problem Ca.1lro was fac-
know the real answer to that question, ing. The problem was the D.G.I. lttelf.
but the CJ.A. did. The answer, the Created, nurtured and funded by the
aeency disa>vered. had nothing to do Soviets. the O.G.I. had been taken over
with capitalism, but a Joe to do with a by the K.G.B. in 1967, and since then.
RAlBQt ri11L ts ... Y .1.0 ...... llBAIR 1i11L I ...
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I CAU.ORMAILBYMeyS.1914
YOUftNAME _____ ---:--~----:----------
1 111m21 .... Of.OfOGlrl ADOMA ~~~~~~~~~~-
1 aTY---------ITATE ____ DP __ _
CURMNTIRANDlll()t(ED _______________ __
I
I
operated MI vinull K.G.8. branch of.
flee. Its ~ leaden were
total Soviet puppets. and Castro fretted
that as Jona • Molcow controlled the
D.G.L pune ~ ~ never have bis own ice Rl'Vi<:e.
CallrO a>nduded, say U.S. agents,
that he woukl hive to bm his own in-
telli8ence aeency, one k>yaJ onJy to
him. To do that, however, required
money -lotl _of lt -~was
in wry short IUpply in Cuba. ()peraring
the muttry on a ~ dole
estimated by the Sme ~ment as
$1 million~t Ca11ro had no access
to t vwy &lrJle amount cash that
would be required to fund and operate
a mmpedna lntell~ aaency.
The oonned:ions with drug runners
provided one IOW'Ce ol ll!ICM income,
and Ve1a> then~ another lucra-tive ldM!me.. Qj ~the target of arr
Amerian tr8 emb•••>. whk:h mean t
that C.ro lacbd the kind of high tec:hnokJCY he needed bf modemiz.a.
tion of the Cuban eoonomy, especially
the supr lndusny. the a>untry's staple.
Vesco propoled a p&an under which he
~ukS arrange to anup into Cuba
advanced Ainerican technology. the
kind the Sovidl aMlld not provide -
ln exchan&e br whJch Caltro would
protect the dn.t trll6ckers. As an
added bonus.• the Cubans would be
paid a cut of the axaine and marijuana
traffic moving into the United States.
It is unknown at this point how
much advanced technology Vest:1J was
abte to procure br c.astro. but it mu.st
have been extensive. br by last year.
U.S. agents had begun to receive
reports that Vesco bad taken up
~in Cuba. where he was being
treated like ro)'Wty, at the magnificent
seuide villa just outside of Havana.
Further a>n&rmllion of the extent of
the Castro-V escx> partnership surfaced
last year, when U.S. Customs agents,
lnvestiSating a cate of illegal shipment
of goods out of Texas ports, unearthed
a businessman from that state who had
shipped a load of bull semen -vital
for breeding high qualky a>WS that are
especially suttea to tropical dimates -
to Cuba in an arrangement with Vesco.
But as Ule agentJ dug deeper. they
bund th• the ille&aT shipment of
semen was evidence of a larger corr
spiracy: In an extensive arranaement
involving four oountries. v~ had
a>ntrived to sml1881e out of the United
States a large amount of embargoed
equipment to Cuba, induding com-
puters and S700,000 worth of sugar·
pr~ing technok>fl)t.
The investigation lllo provided 11r
triguing peeks into Ves::1is special
status in Cuba. For example. the agents
bund a man whom Vt!i!:D used as a
a>nduil for money to be given to
several men dlarged in the United
States In connection with the illegal
shipments. Aax>rding to the man. he
flew in a private plane hired by Vesco
(contmuMJ
L loruCOl.flOll ce...,... ........... Ollrlrllmlild .,«tlf IO '*-oouparw'* ~ ~,,..be ~ W:;Mildil1tlil~ No..,.._...._,..._._ ........ .,._. 01 .... WT Co 6 F A&Y WUSJX. Ara. ZI. 1114 ----------------------
Buy her any GE Small Appliance ••• then call her for FREEi
Por ............ Motber'9 llnecaaae totrmtGEforh19bqullty,
lnm»tillhe producb. rtow, wbm JOU buJ Mam my GE Homes:aea
pnNluct, you cm do .._..._me abe'• aure to -M· Clll her -
FREE.
rrs EASY
Cbooae ""-• the wide nrletJ of GE amall electric kitchen
IH' Ka, ,..... c:m9 producb _. llw belltem nour mcl
June 2, 1914. 8encl .. proof olpwct ML.,.,_.,.. OD the model,
we'l wad JOU .. to n.oo In A'l&T Lona Net•w.e Ceitlkmlel.
Mo9t GE mod• o8er •3.00 In Catlllcla9, ....... lo pa, fol' a
14 n+Plle pbaae Clll hm Plew Yodl to La. A119elea.• And If
Mom'• cloeer, JOU cm tllll even longea. Your fnadte GE remler
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JOST IM-'l'IMe POR M011ER'8 DAY
Par a ..,... Jlllotbel'• Dlly gift. look to OE. We hae the qmltr
producb Mom wll lowe ..... he phone all tbllt ....... ber..,
aln.,..:W.
.GENERAi. fl ELECTRIC-•
y,hen~buy
ARMSTRONG no-wax inlaid Ooors .
Nowwben you buy 20 9qUal9 twdl of
Amwtl'G.i..~· 5upt9me, Destgner Soladan D. or OowDe
eo11on•-Armltrong'1 beaUtt1ul no-wax
1nla:td floors-you get am beaUtt1ul
TbommvW.e mmor-11'8ef
0t cbooee from two 'Jboman't1le OCCO·
llonal tabie. at a 1ractlon o1 tbetr usual
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nus beautUul otter ends May 19, so hurry
in soon.
can ton-tree tor the Armstrong dealer
nemestyou:
800-233·3823
Alll llf ....... Tlllll• ..... .. :• ... -... ,......,. •a.agg 5 J 0 .-al pdCe.
@111strong
Hi cocaiM hauls lilw tNs one -«Miami "*'natJonai Airport .. ~ iJJU!ltrtW ~ enomtily of~ droftlmuafns business.
CAITllO-YllCO
into Havana, where despite
the fad he had no visa or
passport, Vesco waved him
through customs and took
him to the large villa men.
tioned earlier. Vesco, he told
U.S. agents, handed him
$240,000 with instrud.ions to
use it raising bail for defen-
dants in th~~ involving iJ..
legal shipments.
Some time before this inci-
dent. Federal narcotics agents
in Florida had uncovered
another part of the Vesco
operation. The key was the ar-
r~ of Crump while h.e w~
trying to unload cocaine m
Florida. Crump agreed to
become a CJovemmenl infor-
mant, and equipped with a
new identity and under
round-the-clock protection.
has since been revealing the
connections between the
Vesco drug operations and
the Cuban CJovemment.
Crump's revelations -
along with ()(her information
from several defectors from
the D.G.I. -have led the
Reagan Administration to
publidy accuse Castro of run-
ning a drug-smuggling opera-
tion. In testimony before a
Senate subcommittee in April
1983, James H. Michel, Depu-
ty Assistant Secretary of State
for Inter-American Affairs,
said: "We have a report that
the Communist Party Presid-
ium, and specificaJly Fidel
Castro. in early 1979 consid-
ered a scheme to begin deal-
ing with narcotics smugglers,
using Cuba as a bridge and
support base for the networks
to the United States."
The Cuban CJovemment
has consistently refused to
aiscuss such allegations.
Although the arrests in
Texas and Florida may have
put a crimp in Vesco's opera-
tions. it would be an illusion
to thank that th have slowed
8 f AMILY W EE.KLY • "~ 29 . 1994
him much. For one thing, U
agents have no real idea ho
much American technol
Ye!a) has managed (and i
still managing) to smuggle i
to Cuba. For another, the d
tralBc northward into th'
country continues at ev
sreater levels (It is now esti
aaed thaa traffickers in Colo
bia alone ship about 50 to
of cocaine here each year. Fu
ther, despite indidments
crooked lawyers and bank
who have worked with V
in his scheme to hide d
profits. money is still pourin
into new banks that V
seems able to create ove
night.
ihe problem is the eno
moos potential profit to
made m smuggling. VeY:::O'
standard payment of 7 pe
cent of a drug deal 10 tho
willing to run the nsk
laundering the money ·
Bahamian banks is 1emp1in
to anyone who wants 10 take
chance on becoming a m·
lionaire overnight. And 10 th
traffickers, who also stand I
make millions, trying 10
boats past the U.S. bl
hounds seems a risk wel
worth taking.
More imponantly. the gc
ble is still appealing to Fi
Castro. who. thanks to V
has found a source of
money he so ~rat
needs. As US. authonties
the first to concede. sto ·
men of the ruthlessn
shrewdness and sheer amo
ity of Fadel Castro and R
Ves;x, is not easy. After
they are proven sum' ors
Emal Volkman 1s an m1.es11gat ~n-who has wntttn ~1.-eraf
ttda kx F AMll.Y W trxu: me lud1fl!
This the End of the Cosa "IOSJra' o
The Search for Nazi War Crimi H~ is a '°'"'" natlOflaf td11or ~y and ls cumntl.1 u 11/1f18
~on US mtf!l~t optra
The Devil's S&bbath 10 ~DU
by Wi/lt0m Morrou. no t ~tar
!IC~~
SAVE 25C ONUQUID
All. -...... "-..
LNJNDRY OETEAGENT
-. ..... .. --· .. ~ :t:."::':i ---= .. _,,
.. a.-... '-=~ ~-...... ~!':"U:: lr"niiW ... ------·s _,, .. I
0 1'1l3:
ON tux·
DIStMWHNG L.Ja.m
~ ~
::::-'.,."";;: ........ :=:.":ft ~-;;-_ .. _ ..
=-~= =-:. aiEi e=--r-r i5
llOlflf:
·-'-· ==~.:.: :=:.":ft ---~·t..-:: i*ai 5.'!.§ 5..K-
,.,.._.-.-.•••1111!.9!1!.•••• Ill! I _._.
~ERICA WELCOMES
BACK DANISH MODERN
By Evan Frances Agnew
I n 1949. Hans W~ a Danish
cabinet maker, designed a round
chair that was so beautifully crafted
and comfortable that Americans
dubbed it The Chair. At the same time,
his Scandinavian colleagues were bog-
gling our minds with their innovative
yet wonderfully practical furniture
pieces: stacking chairs, stools and
tables; storage-waJI systems: castered
and swiveling seating; and rocking
chairs and rolling teacarts that looked
more like sculpture than furniture.
Americans toasted "skol" to "Danish
Modem."
Unfortunately, the hand-built pieces
were prohibitively expensive, partly
due to import tariffs and high shipping
costs. Still, because the quality of the
materials, design and craftsmanship
had no equal at the ·'tfine. Americans
who rould afford to pay the high prices
did so with pleasure. The rest of the
<X>Untry rould only admire from afat
Then, inevitably, some manuf~
turers here in this country decided to set on the bandwaaon and "knock off'
the Scandinavian pieces. To entice and
feed a mas,, market, they cut prices by
using inferior materials and tech-
niques. The honest simplicity and
beauty of the Danish, Swedish, Norw~
gian and rmnish pieces were missing
from the imitations, which carried the
appellation of the unique originals. It
·didn't take long for consumers to tire of
these oopies. The style began to be
~ed with cheap motels, and by
the early '60s. "Danish Modem" was
~nymous with tacky.
With the American market eftec:tiv~
ly shut down. Scandinavian manutac-
tuft!t"S tumed their attention elsewhere.
But their~ bridled under the
accusation that nothin& new had haJ>
penect since the dassic period of lhe
1940s and ·50s. Their ~ had
always depended more on evolution
than revolution, and instead of strain-
ing to invent something merely for the
sake ol "newness," they ex>ntinued 10
concentrate on ~mvins already-. . styles that. through the Cl!n-~demonstrated their practkaJ
value. Their diligence paid off.
Americans have once apin become
appreciative of ScandinaVJan furniture.
A little bit of history: Modem Danish des:ifl can be traced to functionalist-
ardutec:t Kare Klint. who in the 1930s
designed furniture lo conform 10
human proportions. It was Klint who
introduced the practice of molding
traditional designs into new and inl"Kr
vative forms. placin& the stress on fu nc-
tion. His maior work WM done wKtl 01.iJ>
pendaJes, but he also had great SU~
(CXJnlinued)
~WTE
This unique Lourdes Rosary has been especially designed
for the Missionary Oblates and is now available to you.
It has almost indestructible peartized~d a sturdy
mckle-sllver link chain. 1be unusual oen~ ts a
Lourdes Medal with a droplet of water from the Lourdes
Grotto permanently sealed in the back side.
The solid pewter Cruciftx_ a replica of Pope John Paul II' s
cross, has been blessed by the Pope. This Lourdes Rosary
comes in a rich. red velour protective pouch and can be
yours for a donation of 110-or more for the works of the
Oblate Missionaries.
COME VISIT THE SHRINE···---------1
8 miles from St. Louis • 200 Acres •
Stations of me Ctou • Doily Mos.ses
(outdoors weekends] • Rel9ous Gi~
Shop • Candlel~t Processions • Mllll-
Theoter • Penonal ~seling • Mother's
Prayer Wolk • ltewrection Gaden •
ltestourant • Angelus Befts & Annuncia-
tion Gorden • Outdoor Altar & Amphi-
theatre • lru'des Grotto • Motel •
* • Open to oil foi1hs ..,.. round • ,. ................. ...
-------------------------1 have enclosed an offering for the worb of the Oblate I Missionaries. Please send me._Lourdes Rosary(ies).•201 I
I (110 olfertng or more each) I I Enclosed is 0110-0120 0115 01 I I DPleaae send PREE Shrine Brochure. I I
I N~ I I Pie ... Print I
I Address I
I ~ I I ctty I
I · I
I State Zfp I
I 1 _. NATIONAL SHRINE OF OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS I
I Mtaatonary Oblates • Bellev.Ule, Illinois 62222 I .. ---------------~---·····
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........ , .•.
adapting the deck. safari and ladder· back ch-airs.
The trend was oontinued in the
1940's and SO's by w~ (!till an ac-
tive designer) and others. One of Wei-
ner's ..-achiewmem was his adlp-
tatioo ol the ~ Windler into a
beautifully symmetrical Peaoodt chair.
In a time when mllly of the interna-
tional pieces on the maket were
harsh, anaular. spartan and literllly as
well • fipatively oo&d (oleo of tubu-
lar steel), the Scandinavians were ex-
porting furniture that was mzy and rombrtin& -with exposed ' from
a wealth of available :,rm (beech,
oak. elm, ro5e'WOOd and teak, thou&h
the last lost much ol its appeal from
overuse~ It WIS rich in a>lor, un-
a>mpliated in form, ligh=t and pliant. Though new and i • , the
pieces seemed like old friends.
"Denmark's position in intemational
furniture design," Wegner says, "is a
ronsequence of our late industrial-
izaDon, which allowed our aaftsmat to
survive and preserve the skills that
~ lost ~" The desilPlef is a
freelm ~ AdMr than an
etnployee. ~ with the
mnulacturer. Thia C is prefmed
by eYel\ the ..... a>mpanies.
Still reawer'.ne from the ao. of the
~ IDlllret in tbe ·-Scandina-vian «ti. ,.._. k>olled for ways
~ inaeale tbe ...... of their product
IO mmumers in the· Unled States.
They expe1ianeieed ~ plastics and
~ Del wire. nylon thread,
~aodJtD~oould
be ltitocMd cbt.ft Of broken into parts
for h'.uporting. Thia ewd the cost of
lhippina mnsiderlbly.) They moved in-
to--~. fdMll ~
ancfi1'11311Q.A.
One mm. an Ameicm llllOled Rob-
ert Dlntn. .,_.a 11111! plrt In bring-U. Dlnilh Modern bd ., this oountry.
lb IOlvie the pnJl*nl ol furnishing h~
awn ..,..... b1rdloiuely but on a
modelt .,. .... DIMn boufW furniture
from an Air'J'Olm plot who was ftying it
in from Denmmt. Flom this "-innina
Darvin Dted the. ·~ D-.,1" retail chain. His ~re
E (from Bomi to Minnea-
S60 million 1WOdtl of furniture
llOd apeets to double thal in
1984. The mn.-tY ., .sis through
the IDll.
Aw>tclnJ to ~ Today (and
mn8rmed by trade export divisions of
all low SaindinaYian mumries~ the
growir'8 ~ of the dollar ha.s
made Sclndinavian fumilure products
more oompetitive in the United States.
In 1982, Denmark WM the fourth
largest exporter of furniture to this
oouotry with $450 million in sales.
moldy in wood fumkure. And in 1984.
25 percent of all Danish furniture ex-.
ports will be shipped here.
"Dmlilh Modern" is back. Still noted
for its beMl(y, QUllity and combn. and
now b b albdlble price. it's better
than eYa IW
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Here at lut la THE NEWS that MIUJOHI of
MEN and WOMEN ptagued by exceaa fat. fleb and
eellultte HAW IE!N WiUT1NO FOR. tf you need to
LOSE WSQtfT, and we meen LOT'S OF W!JOHT-
10 pounds, 15 pounds, 20 pcxnfa, 30 pounds 50
pounds or mor&-lt'a time to FOAGET anythtng
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MCTs NOW 'TMRll IS A CURa
'°"Mn
A -Ilda~-................ t.IW lllda • ....... ot nolHlleC. ............ Qll'llOOllldl Ills i.i bClm -An nn1v-...-o1 ....-.............. ~
Nlhaslmfltt ........ .._ ......................... ._ ..... ...,..,dllll. ~-rrrndtt'-..--...
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THE
WILL
•
While governor of CaJifomia, Ronald B J Sc registrants an unknown wikk:ard factor
Reagan often tempted Sacramento re-Y oe ott -those states west of the Mississippi
porters into closing their notebooks with ----...--.----may well influence the outcome.
his frequent political allusions to "building a prairie Can the West be craclced wide open by election day?
fire that would spread East" Reagan. after all, is a Or are the Democrats slmpty writing it off! "Absolutely
quintessential man of the West and his rhetoric not," replies Brian Lunde, director of Campaign '84 for
reflects it Running for president in both 1976 and the Democratic National Committee (D.N.C.). adding
1980, he attacked Washington's bureaucracy by refer-that JO of the 13 Western pernors are Democrats.
ring to it as "those puzzle palaces along the Potomac." Yet the Wh.ite House has reason to be optimj5tic that
Four years ago, it all paKi off. Reagan beat President the Western bastion is safe despite any adverse early
Carter by almost 10 percentage points nationally. And returns from east of the MIM~ippi. "As was
his popular margin in the West was double that of any demonstrated in 1980, the West is Reagan's base,"
other section of the country. says Stuart K. Spencer, a chief strategist to the re-elec-
Now. with Reagan referring to his second-term bid tion effort "It's still going to be in 1984."
as a "last hurrah," and the contest for the Democratic Gary Lawrence, whose firm. Decision Making lnfor-
presidentiaJ nominapon beginning to narrow down mation, polls for the White House and the Republican
rapidly. the question is being asked again. "Will the National Committee, says simpty, "the West is
West be 'Reagan Country' in 1984?" Today, you can't Reagan." A gJa.nre at both the 1976 and 1980 election
find a Democratic or Republican pollster anywhere maps provides the GOP with a security blanket against
who doesn't concede Reagan an edge in virtualty all politic.al chills.
the 13 Western states. beginning in the Rockies and in-In the last two elections, presidential contenders
duding Alaska and Hawaii. Political pundits and Gerald R. Ford and Reagan both scored solid sweeps
strategists in both parties are even more specific. in 12 of the 13 states in the region. Only Hawaii
Reagan . !hey opine. will take the We5t., lose the Nort~ managed to stay in Carter's column. This year. 270
east. and leave the Midwe5t. and South up for grabs. electoral votes are needed to win the presidency. And
Nov. 6 is still months away. But in a close election, some of the President's closest advisers predict
with peace and prosperity looming as the dominant is-another near sweep of at least 100 votes for Reagan.
sues -and the impad d a record tide of new-voter There's good reason fot such GOP enthusiasm
-------------------------------------------
II
in the Wes. It has a candidate whose
rugged outdoor manner and coruerv·
atism seem to match the independent
profile of much of the rqrion's elec-
torate. And. more significantly, the
1980 federal census figures have
created a fresh political map of
America which reflects major popula-
tion shifts in the last decade.
The new Electoral College score-
board tells this story. Jn the 1984 elec-
tion. the first based On the 1980 census,
g 10 Southem and Western states stretch-l ing from Florida all the way to Cali·
~-t~ b mia and reaching into the Northwest
; will h_!ve Jlained new votes at the ex· J
' ~ ·---~<:.i._~~~~~JI~'-~~~~
-
pense of the Northeast and Northcen-
trat states.
For the first tJme, Western states,
along with the Western plains SI.ales
and the South, can elect a president by
a margin of five electoral votes
~rdless of how the rest of the nation
votes. The realignment caused by the
1980 census gives Reapnauts mudrto
cheer about from an historical stand-
point, too. In the eight presidential
elections since the victory of Dwight D.
Eisenhower over Adlai Stevenson in
1952. states that have gained electoral
votes have overwhelmingly voted for
Republican candidates.
With such sobering data. which in-
clude a gain of nine electoral votes by
Western states before the 1980 elec-
tion, it is not surprising that some
Democratic cand1dates with an eye on
the Oval Office express alarm. Col-
orado's Sen. Gary Hart. mindful that
his own state, New Mexico, Arizona.
Utah. Nevada, 0!'e80n and Washington
have all gained a vote, and that Califor-
nia has i~ its first-place stand-
ing in the Electoral CoUeee from 45 to
47, publicized his concerns during a
major presidential fundraiser last
December in Albuquerque, N.M.
There Hart focused on the impor·
lance of learning from regional gover-
nors how the West might be won in
'84. He criticized national pa~ officials
for failing to stage a pubhc forum
whereby the candidates could conduct
a dialogue on issues within the region
with Western governors. "The domi-
nant political fact," stressed Hart. "is
that for the last four national elections
Democrats have conceded the electoral
votes in the West to Republicans.
There is justification for the perception
out here that the Democrats really
don't care about the Wesl"
The strategists for Walter f . Mon-
dale and the Rev. Jesse Jackson. as
well as key party operatives ma~
ping strates,y for the fall election,
do not totally share Hart's worries
about the party's insensitivity to
the West
But the sting still remains in the
Democratic donkey's hide from
the 1980 debacle. Reagan's victory
margins were often staggering. He
took Utah by 52 percent; Idaho.
41 ; Nevada. 37; Wyoming, 35:
and Arizona, 33. In California,
his home state, despite a
three-to-two Democratic
registration edge, Reagan still
won by 17 poi nts.
Part of the 1984 Democratic problem
in the West could stem from the
regional election calendar. This is not a
big year for gubernatorial and US.
Senate races that can be counted on to
bring out a larger share ol the elec·
torate. (Democratic candidates generaJ.
LB.J.. like Reagan, co"l«l California.
Can only a BOOd ol' boy win the hearts of
Western voters?
...
ly benefit from laQle eledfon.day turn-
outs. especially in Calitomia.) Montana,
in fad. is the single Western state that
has state, House and Senate races on
the ballot. Only two pernors -
Democrat Ted Schwinden of Montana
and Republican John 0. Spellman of
Washinston -face rMJection. Max
Baucus, who received 56 percent ol lhe
vote in 1978, Is the soie Democratic
senator on the baUot-in ~region. T~
seats ol slx Repub~ -Ted Stevens
of Alaska. William Armstrong of Col-
orado, James McClure of Idaho, Pele
Domenici of New Mexico, Mark Hal-
field of Oregon-~ Simpson of
Wyoming -are up. None. ex~pt
pos.sibly Domenici, appears to be in
trouble.
The Democrats are not conceding
yet. of course. Despite such sparse
pickings, some Democratic plar.·
makers feel that. in addition to Hawail
the issues this November will favor the
party nominee to be chosen in at least
three states -Wa5hington. Oregon,
New Mexico and pos.1ibly CaJjfomia -
with a tidy 69 eJectoraJ votes.
Democratic National Chairman
Charles T. Manatt sees the party's
nomlnee as having a "real good
''U 110111t1!!011e were to tell
me that Reagan wUl
1oee Calllomla, rd...,,
thal he hall lolll the Pre:tlldencJt ,,
chance" in Ne""'-Mexico, with
Washington and 0!'e80n offering "an
opporturub'..,.'.' "B~ has potential
trouble/811 along the Pacific Coast,"
says Duane Garrett. a San Francisco
lawyer and national CO<hairman of the
Mondale ca.mpalgn. Garrett, who has
been focusing much of his energies in
the Northwest. believes that both
Washington and Oregon are "win-
nable." California. he believes. will be
"up for grabs."
Fo~r Rep. John Rousselot (R-Caliti
the Wes.em regional director for the
Reagan-Bush '84 Presidential Cam·
palgn, ls responsible for the stales of
California, Oregon, Washington.
Hawaii, Nevada and Idaho. The con-
servative former congressman, who is
weighing a GOP U.S. Senate race in
California in I 986. views Hawaii as
"contestable.'' but says he is "upbeat"
about Reagan's prospects in both
Wa,,hingtor. and Oregon. However,
longtime Reaa_an guru Stuart Spencer
believes that Oregon remains the one
state in the West. besides Hawaii,
where the President could find himself
in difficulty this fall unless unemploy·
ment and recessionary factors abate m
Beaver cou n .
Spencer, the chief arthited of
Rqpn's win over Carter and the cam-
paign jet strategist, 'says c.aiifomja
repYaents one ol the eight b'8 states
where the battle for the "swing vote"
will be fougbl He ls c.onvtn<m that
Texas. which he rtprds as part DI the we;., is the .. toughest'. state and the
ke'f to Reagan's re-eJedion chances
aJong with CaJlfomia, New Jersey and
poutbly IUlnois.
As ol this writing. you can·r gef odds
that Reagan will lose California.
Douglas Watts, a key political operative
for Gov. Geot1le Oeukmejian, who
chairs-me Presklent's re-election drive
in the state, says, "An upswing in the
economy and an overall confidence in
government work to the President's ad-
vantaee." And accordins to the !tale's
best known pollster, Mervin 0. F'leld.
"If someone were to teU me that
Reasan will lose California, I'd say he
has lost the presidency. CaJi.fomia is
representative of the counhy." In the
past. Field's California Poll has con-
sistently shown Reagan to be running
ahead of Mondale. Hart and Jackson in
the race for the White House. Much to
the c.ha&rin of Dernoqatic chief Charles
Manatt, the Los An&eles attorney who
has given the D.N.C. a d1stinctJy
Western flavor in temis of personnel,
CaJifornla l\as not been In the
Democratic column on election night
since Lyndon B. Johnson's landslide
win over Barry Goldwater in 1964.
NevertheleM, because of what he calls
"rnobillzation of voters," Manatt says
he is "much more hopeful than in
earlier times" about carrying the
Golden State.
Reagan, who ironicaJly began his
rise to national promjnence in October
1964 when, as a washed-up movie ac·
tor, he made a dramatic 1V speech
.which raised S l million for Republican
candidates, has not exactly abandoned
the state since moving into the White
House in 1981 . As Lou Cannon. his
bio8ral>her. has noted, when Reagan
returned to Washington from his Palm
Springs vacation early in January, he
had logged 1,078 days in the presiden-
cy and-f 72 in CaJUomia.. The President
has spent 137 days since the inaugu~
tion at his beloved Santa Barbara
spread, Rancho deJ Oelo.
Mike Masson, a longtime Reaganaut
who headed the Western states caucus
operation after the former governo(s
1976 defeat by President Ford for the
GOP nomination. is the other 1984 re-
election operative in the West Masson,
a pro(es.sional engineer based In
Phoenix, is responsible for the rest of
the West -Arizona. Alask~ Colorado,
Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Utah
and Wyoming. He rates Cplorado and
New Mexico as the most difficult
stales for the President to win again
this fall.
Masson. who indicated that the
Rocky Mountain area has always been
a R n old. sa that the
A symbolic presidency? Reagan's rugged
manner and conservatism M!etn to match
the profile of the West'.f electorale.
· focus in both states would be on
registration. "We'll target ~ counties
where we can get the largest number of
Reagan voters," he adds, confirming
that the tactic is high on the Western
campaign agenda.
The use of registration as an early
election-year weapon, to which both
Republican and Democratic strategists
are devoting considerable financial
resources in the South, also has impor·
tant implications for the West in 1984.
The Committee for the Study of the
American Electorate says that the
percentage of eligible voters taking part
in presidential elections dropped from
6Z.8 percent in 1960 to 53.9 percent in
1980. But, starting with municipal elec-
tions in 1981, and in 1982 statewide
contests, the number of voters began
dimbing again. Two leading pollsters.
Richard B. Wirthlin, who surveys for
Reagan, and Peter D. Hart. represent·
ing Mondale, have speculated that the
percen~ of presidential voters may
bounce up to 57 or 58 percent because
of the new recruitment efforts.
Estimates are that the Reagan cam-
paign and GOP organizations will
spend between S8 million and S9
million to woo new GOP voters -the
biggest push since the 1972 Nixon re-
election campaign. About Sl million is
expected to be spent by the party to
deveJop Hispanic political organiza.
tions in the West. including Texas.
Democrats will spend less. "The
His panic vote is cru cial." says
Republican pollster Lance Tarrance of
Houston. ClairniJ\R that ReaAan needs
one-third of this vote in Texas. New
Mexico and California. Tarrance main·
tains that it could mean the difference
between winning the election with 51
rcent or losin with 49 rcent.
fAMILYWE.DU.Y•Af'RIL29• 19&4 17
William C. Velasque-z, executive
director of the nonpartisan Southwest
Voter Registration pro;ect, contends
that Republicans have a chance to rut
deeply into the Mexican-American vote
by responding better to Hispanic
needs. ·•Absent that, the vote will go 90
percent Democratic," he says. ·-
The importance of the Latino vote,
which, last year. a Gallup Poll survey
found to be just 51 peJCent Democratic,
appears pivotal in terms of a potential
breakthrough for that party in the
West Democratic Gov. Toney Anaya of
New Mexico, who has endorsed M~
11 mg. "tar . 0.7 mg. l\ICOll
...... nm ....
dale's candidacy, A)'I that "the hands
that historically have picked the lettuce
in this country. and the hands that
historically have picked the cotton in
this country, are the hands that can
pick the next Pn!sident of this
country."
New Mexico and Texas, in many
ways, appear to be keys to future
Democratic pany straeegy acrou the
nation. Reapn won there in 1980 by a
solid 57 pen:enl muatn. and by 1981.
the GOP had the entire oongrellionaJ
delegation for the first time since 1917.
But then, in 1982, the Democratic Na-
tional Committee foruled in on both
the Sunshine and Lone Star States as
political &abafalOI a of the future.
Through @cuive 1>artY building" tecli~ Democ:rals knocked out
GOP Sen. twrilon SduniU. won a new
Hoose seat. elected Anaya. am recap-
tured control of the Slate ~ture.
And ln Texas. the Democrats ousted
GOP Gov. Walliarn Qemenu by elec-
ting Mark White in a bjg sweep. nus ~ building program.
which Democratic National c.ommttee
director Brian Lunde views as .. redefin-
ing the role ol the party in campaigns,"
is beifl8 employed in 22 states this
year, includlOfl Wahington, Oregon,
New Mexico, Coloracfo, Montana,
Alaska and. to a degree. Calibmia. The
success of the pilot operation two
years ago in delivering "candidate-
driven, party~livered" services to
Democratic victors in New Mexico and
Texas makes the party high command
want to take another look at the West,
says Lunde. While he is not overly
sanguine about ma;or breakthroughs
this year, Lunde sees big political
payoffs building up to 1988 and 19'J2.
both preskiential years. Basically, the
D.N.C. technique involves -CWa-~
and voter-inbmation development,
two of the areas where the Democratic
Party has been weak hittorically.
Lunde describes it as a "bottom up"
"The hands th« ~ pidted the J«tuce
and the hands that have picked the cotton
can pick the nat lttsidml. " daimJ New
Mexia> s Gou Tooq Ana,a.
New Malco and Taas,
In many ..,..., appear
lo be tey. lo l'alare
Denocratk party
8lrall!l/Y, not ~ In the W• but aaw the
United State&
instead of a "top down" political con-
cept 'That's our whole thing," he says
about the effibent political marketing
of goods and services -"program
pies" -starti~ at the county and state
levels. Interestingly, in his best-selling
book. Megatrends, John Naisbitt writes
of America becoming a "bott~up
society," with California. Wash.ington
and Colorado among the five
bellwether states where most of the
"social invention in America" occurs.
In his 1980 debate with Carter. who
was never popular in the West. Reagan
~ked voters whether they were "better
off' than four years previously.
Already. Democrats are shifting the
focus from domestic to peace-related
issues by asking. "Are we safer than we
were three years aeo?"
Any big happening could disturb the
GOP's hopes, of course. A number of
factors -Reagan's health. the gender
gap, another Tehe.ran-style crisis,
whether the substantial increase of
black voting this primary spring turns
out again in the fall, the return of 1980
blue<ollar Democratic defedors, and
increased immigration tensions along
the Mexican border -could cut deeply
across the West. But. short of any "sea
change,'' unless the Roc.kies crumble,
Reagan's "prairie fire" still seems very
much alive. AV ·
~ Scott is a ~troll polil1eal column/SI ~
111 Los An.!INs and tdtor of tht national
n~~ The Political Animal.
FAMILY WFDJ.Y • "'1UL 29 . ,,.. 19
Sew ~p a great deall Get this compact
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A GRADE "A" TEACHER
WH0 LOVES HIS JOB
By Denise Melilli
For the pllt 13 years. John
Bowerl has been the advilor of
Tht Tima. Not Tht Nau Ycri
TUMS, but the loMwood
TtmtS. , a twioHnclaliy ttudent public>
tion at Ohio's LIRwood HWl School.
Hls read-alHboul-it sitcee95 wtlh the
aspiri.ing ~alillS in his marae ls ex-
emplIBed by his record: tflS Students
have won ave 400 individual awards
since he ~ the std, and the paper
has received the Quill & Scroll Gellup
Award (the joumllism honorary soci-
ety's top pria for edik>rial m:el.lenoe)
for ftve CX)(lll!Qaive ~
In recqpWioo ol bis f6>rts, Bowen,
37, was named the 1983 National High
School Journalism Teacher of the Year
by the Dow Jones NeW!pll>er Fund. It
might not have been ~~ news,
but it gave Bowen an ema" boost.
His own inboduc!ion to headlines
and Pica wkM1s QI. Bowen reports,
.. in the dassic W11y": He had an ~
teacher who bt!liewd in his potential
as a newswrler. Bui as time went on,
his enthusiasm for reporting became
overshadowed by his admiration for
teachers. Somehow, the dassoom jusl
seemed a more appealing place than
the newsroom.
"It's the kids," explains Bow81. ''See-
ing the thinp they can do and watro.
ing them Pl'Ol"'9 and grow is a terrific
experience, and ll's even better when
you can take a kid who has never
thought ~ writing and reporting
and get him to try IL 'nJat student may
never IJ> into junalilm. bur seeing
what he can do and waldling him suc-
ceed is a suooes for me."
Pleased as Bowen ii with his
students, he is les than enchanted
with the academic S)'ltem.
'1bere is ohn more attention given
to seJecti~ a footbaU madl than there
is to selecting a~ teacher," he
points ~ .. A loocball a>Kf1 can teach
studenls how 10 play football and en-
courage them to-win. But if a team
loses a pme. then they put it behind
them. If there ii an error in a game,
then you I« I pa.
"In joumatirm ifs not thal easy. U
you make an error. it is printed and it's
there lorever. A miltake can affed a
reputation -and not lua for a week.
but perhaps a lileOme.1'~
Attention to ~ Ind excellence
has made ~ Timo an award--
winning~. Nontthdell. the
honors are ~ to providing
students wlh a p&ace Where they can
start their eweers and sharpen their
writing skills.
J "I try to be 11 FOCI • I can, and If
that means winning awards. Ihm I llll
happy with our S.kXftS. .. Bowal says.
'When I started as the ;uru&m ad-
visor, I leit ~ had to win the aw.di
tor recosnmoo of our pn>g1es. IU we
don't have to do that anymore."
Despite his obvious love b laChin8
at the hilJh school leYel. there was a
brief period seven ·yean IF when
Bowen ronsidered moving oo. 1
figured f'd be more fulfilled teaching at
the roUe8e level," he rec:aDs..
He dkf, indeed, apply to JeWral ~
leges and received an oler. "'lb • the
last minute. I reali22d that tracbing
young srudents wa,, more impolW ID
me." he explains. "I haven't lamed
the point where I want to ~ and I
may never reach that poinL f.adl aop
of kids is another ch~
''There are rough spots an what I do.
and I am always working on gmilJ8
people to ~ journalism as ao academic discipline. There ~ some
teachen and peop&e who leel dlill I
don't teach anything worthwhile. ..
Stressing the importara « who.
what, when, where and why -the~
w'a of reportln& -ha at times been a
trying experience b Bowen.
"The )oumallsm teacher is alooe iP a
school. There ls no one ebe on the &aa
who understands the pains and the
needs. They wouldn't wanr to. They
only understand that they an upm ~
lhe!r pet rrojec:r is not placed on P9
one -al of 1>aQe one. ''Yet I fed vtndiated by the hll*s..
Bowel rondudes. "It ii a reinbcing
experience, and it confirms thal wtm 1
am dolf\l ll worthwh&Je." IW
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1HE COURAGE TO
GIVE IT AGO
By Morion Long
...,,, Lonf • 0 p;llllllilr fl1lto .... b O CICP
~ d "'*""" $ OS • •
J OLYMPIC .. BN
T he Summer Games are ! still three months away.
but there's already a bit
of an Olympic overload.
There's the official car, the o~
tidal camera, the official candy
-there's probably an official
anti-perspirant -of either the
U.S. Olympic Team or the
Olympics themselves. Aren't
we just a little tired of it all?
J i:: • 0 u ~
Apparently not Crain C.om-
munications of Oticago (they
publish Aduert1S1ng Age)
surveyed over 1,200 adults on
this very subject. And. sur·
pnse' Not only has America's
Olympics saturation point not
been reached. but many peo-
ple (35 percent) are more likely
to purchase the produas of
Olympic sponsors than they
are to buy othe.rs.
The Olympic spon·
22 F Alo41LY W r.D.1.Y • At'lllL , ... l'IM
sor label is also an attention
grabber. Almost three-quarters
of the folks polled said that
they had seen ads that men-
tioned Olympic sponsor·
ship. And the people most
attracted to these products
are those in the $20,000 to
S40,000 inoome group
-just the consumers
Olympic sponsors
had hoped to~
the first place.
•lft&•Y THI
C ry<>senics, the process
by which life is pre-
served over extended
periods of lime th~ freez.
ing, has k>ng been given a fr09-
ty receptk>n by serious ~
tists. Now. however, es
at North ~a State nivri
ty (in FaqJ>) are giving the pro-
cedure a cold hard look.
Every year, many strains of
rare and genEtically Wlique in-
sects -which are used in r~
search -are destroyed be-
cause of the expense and diJ.
ficulty of maintaining laboratory
colonies. In order to preserve
them lor future generat)ons of
scientists. the Dakotans are
looking into free-zing the sperm
and embryonic cells of these
bugs. When they are thawed
out and trans-
p I anted to
eggs. the
BY MARION LONG
scienti9ts hope that they will
develop into mature lnseas.
Even if it doesn't work out,
imagine the possibilities for a
great sci·fi flick inspired by a
melt-down in the ol' cryo-
senia lab.
HOWGAUGlll
R ight·handed people
have heard for years
that left-handedness ls
a sign of creative genius. C.00.
sider Michelanselo, Einstein.
DaVinci and Reggie Jackson.
One theory: The left side of
the brain, which controls the
right side of the body, is the
center of rational thought: the
riAht hemisphere of the brain.
which governs the left side of
the body. is the source of
abstract. emotion al thought.
Some researchers believe
there's a tendency among
very creative people. who rely
heavily on the brain·s right
hemisphere. to favor their left
hands.
Now it appears that the
same theory of how the
brain is organi7.ed is
shedding some light on the
cause of phobias. Oaude
Oiemtob. a psychologist at
the Veterans Administration
Hospital in Honolulu, noticed
that a la,rse proportion of the
people he treated for Irr•
tional fears were either left-
handed or had many south·
paws in their families.
Alter further research. he
has theoriz.ed that phobias
may be c.aused, in part, by
"incomplete lateralization" (a
confusion over which side
controls what) in the brain.
In most people, the rational
hemisphere (left side) controls
its more creative neighbor.
But in many phobics. the two
sides appear to
share control, and
the rational ele-
ment is unable to
overcome the
fears dreamed up
by the more emo-
tional right hemi-
sphere.
PTOOIYI
T hough the
annual Con-
vent1on of
Watermel o n
Growers is
already over and
most melons won't be ripe for
a couple of months. the rules
of the convention's Water-
meJon Seed Spitting C.ontest
are worthy of note -as you
start dreaming of summer pie·
nics. Melvina Bauer, editor of
PrvdUCI! News. filled us in.
•A person's height. weight
or size of mouth shall not pre-
vent any individual from com-
peting.
•Official seeds wdl be pro-
vided to all contestants.
• Blowpipes are prohibited.
• A contestant who acci-
dentally swallows a seed
while sucking in air prior to
seed launch will be given one
extra seed.
• Denture wearers whose
teeth go farther than the seed
shall abide by the judge's
decision.
We phoned the Norton
Shores Library in Muskeesc>n.
Mich., to find out what's being
read there. The 10 most fre-
quently requested books are:
• America the Poiloned. by
Lewis Reaemtein • Creatfn8 MWllth, by
Robert Allen
• Having h All, by Helen
Gurley Brown
• Lindo Eoans Beauty and Exerme Book
• The Practice for the
Armed Forces Test,
David R Turner, ed.
• The Professional Rau.me
and Job Search Guide.
by Harold w. Dlckut
• The Sedue1ion of Peter S
S . by Lawrence Sanden
• So Many PartingJ. by J
Cathy Spellman
• Somebody Plecue love Me. by· Aziva Hellman
• Who Killed the Robbins
Family?, by Thomu
Olutain, created by 8W
Adler.
'\,,•\\, •• ,,1 \\.
\ , lt ' I 1 I '•I j I I• I, • '
• 11 II 11 I II lo' I ~ ' ii 1
alltTllDAYI
(All Taurus) Sunday -
c.eJeste Holm 65. Monday -
Jill Oayburgh 40: Willie
NeJson 51 . Tueiday -Kate
Smith 77: Glenn Ford 68.
Wednesday -Benjamin
Spock 81. Thunday -M~
Astor 78: Pete Seeger 65. f'n-
day-Audrey Hepburn 55 Sat·
urday -Tammy Wynette 42.
e.eu1 ..... Edi«"-" VMte, ~~rm ~ OeelQll ~~~ • .._Editor.,.._~,_, Ytot.........., ~ Aeeoo. ldlt~....,., E.11111 en-·
AMllMMI Eoi!Oc. OM! GIMge( C.opy fdlto( ~ ~ "• •lrclW, ICMn £--. ,,__Id-. VICl:ltll .... M 0...C:tol. AiOo ~ M ~ ow.ctoc, Alcfll.O **II. M
AMociJMe, a.it.i. JIOIOtl M. OoNld K~ ~ ~ ~tll Leigh~ "*"1 CO. ...,,... o.t.lolr .1o9Mt ~ Mdl ~ ~ Wllldllef (UJI ~
VP·MIO, I Dir of OC*Mlona. Alc'-"l M""'1. Prod. Ok.. Dew!~ "-Wno. MICllHI Mar!Nmuf'IO MaM110 Mot, Wfllllm ~. l'tPe Mot. .M ~
v p A-AO ow. Joe,_ Jr. ,...,. ~ •• i.-. G Gtwn. Dir .• cu-I AOef>CY ..... ,~~I ,._,. M90o. ~ Mor, ~rd I( Catroll. lout"9fll tiitor. 1(9MIMfl J ,..
~tty DettOlt Mgt, I.Hr-. M. FllWI. Clltt., '-"ill'4 Soefllng '/Oft cllt W.ttl end JOMe V.P.-MarlletlflO Oil. 111"'-Y Aoeenltld, MerMClng MOf, itelll 0 ~o ~loll Olf.,
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H-~8'* "9fetloM VP. IM Ellle V.P H~ hMoM, ~ J Ot<i.u.n. ~ Ael Mora.._.,.. Q lel!ef "*'1 H t.Aemon Aon s.v.gg.o Joleol>C w ... TrartepCll'
lellon Mgt. J<fn McCenn. 041trllMlliOll Mgr .~ P!tit10, eon.um.t Sllca, LlllOI Mount Mmlll • .U.t~ Rtla S.ncnt1 o.n·1 WQ(1'111MCl•I ()peratlOM, Jdtfl lltNotrt ConllOll«, Jemet T
En•¢1Jr
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No filr1Mr ObUptlon wt1aDoMrt tt1 all up to you I You buy
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MEDlEY. Each Issue Is CflllH1*S with luldnlds "hit tapes and reconis-many a low aS2.99to13.49 P'Us YQll'tellbnd
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A postage and handling charge Is added to each shipment.
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~:·:·
I
irt official says he advised boy's paren ts
Ir son is in dire need of professional help
Dwyer M1ddlt School early this
month and questioned behind locked
doors by two police officers befoft'
beina told he had a ri&ht to an
attorney and a riaht to ft'main silent. -
The principal at the school the boy
aUt'nds said ~orts will be made to Jtl
the youth proper counsthn& ind that
his rt'appearanct on campus will be
"'downplayed."
But Hickman saicl that dffcription
1s 1 ··buzz word"' that implies the cast
was toued out of court on an iilUe of
little substanct.
'EVE MARBLE .., .........
juvenile coun comm1ss1oner
~t the stage for releasing a I 4-
1ld viewed as a pnme suspect 1n
ig of arson fires in Huntington
said he1old the youth's parents
ion ism dire nted of th~rapy.
ice. however. said the\ are
med the youth is a threat to the
:oast
m deBoom was high
dder ~ta Rotary Club
Jct Ion on a chance to be
1e Dally Piiot's editor for
day./A2
atlon
del Castro and fugitive
lancier Robert Vesco
·e allegedly llnked to a
·ug-smuggllng oper-
lon into the United
tates./F•mlly WHkly
David Domlnelll ls ar-
sted In Miami./ A3
7orld
eagan Is censored a
M:ond time by the Chi-
~. but the U.S. pre.$1-
9nt remains optimistic
)Out ties betwee the two
:xmtr\SS.I A3
or women who trans-
3nd time, beaded eve-
ng gowns by Galanos
·e up to the minute./C1
awall calls -and so do
!cycle trails and Euro-
9an spas -for va-
1tloners this summer.
::3-5
. ports
akers overwhelm Dai-
s, 134-91, In the opener
f their National Basket-
all Association playoff
3rles at the Forum./8 1
ewport Beach's Dave
llman is In third place
'ter the first race at the
nited States Olympic
achtlng Trials./8 2
olden West College's
aseball team stays In a
9 for first with a Win over
errltos, but Orange
oast Is postponed./83
:·:·:·:•:11:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
:ntertaln ment
hlrley Maclalne has her
ead together these
ays, thanks to her best
:tress Oscar./81
not her flock of TV pilots
ready to take wing -
nd most of them will be
10t down./8 5
ausln ess
ewport Beach-based
mlth International plans
>r a takeover of Gearhart.
adustrles./01
~DEX
>mt>eck
ldg•
11lrieu
•llfornia New• asst tied
·oasword
tath Notices
~tures :>roacope
'"Landers
1t1onal Newt
i>fnk>n 1bllcNot~
NJ Eatate
)ortl
ock Marketa
~ltlon
\etters
·a vet
reather
'Or1d N wa
C6
C6
01
A3
F1-6
~
05 ce
F5 ce
A3
A6
05
E1-6
91~4
02-3
C1·3 04 es-e
C4·5
A2
f..3
community and worry he won't
rt'Ct1vc the professional help they
believe he needs.
The boy was frttd this week after
Juvtnile Court Commissioner Gale
Hickman determined the eighth·
grader was intt'rrogatcd by police for
two hours before being read his
Miranda righu.
Hickman said the boy had been
called to the principars office at
Police said they read tht' t1ghth
arader his rights before amsung him
and had not informed him of his
rights earlier because he wasn't con-
s1dcrtd a suspect.
The 14-ytar-old. whose identity
has not been made public because he
1s a juvenile. rtpOrtedly confessed to
setting one of the nighttime fires that
have plagued a congested Huntington
Beach neighborhood rt'Cently.
And they're off... ·
Clue D yachta in the·Performance Handicap Raclni Fleet
crowd the Hart:lnC Une u the 37th Newport to Eneenacla
Thcrt havt bttn 12 fires since
January in tht' dense apartment
community off Yorktown Aven~.
The latest firt. however. broke out a
Wttk ago whtn the I 4-1ear-old was
still in custody at Juvenile Hall.
In explaining the unraveltnJ of the
case against the 14-yur-old this week.
fire depanment authorities in Hunt-
ington Beach said the youth had bttn
released on a "legal technicality ...
.. Nobody likts to stt a potentially
danacrou1 kid put back out on the
strttts." said Hickman. '"But ~
courts shouldn"t be put in a pc>Mt1on
of Jpoloaizing for follow1n1 a law
thaf s lonpcandina and very cl~r. ••
Hickman taid he bclievts the two
offictrs sincerely thought the )outh
"wasn't the right auy" and held on
rtading the boy his righls for that
rtason.
··out that's not tht-ttst," the Judge
yacht race ·t>ettna. They were amonf 588 l>Mta particl-
patlDf In the contn t Saturday. Stoq and photo on Bl.
Cities face claims over car accident
ISy ANDREA ADELSON °'Ille DelJ ...... 1141f1
Two Irvine couples have tiled
combined claims for damages ofS 1.2
million against the cities of Newpon
Beach and Irvine. stemming from a
three-car collts1on in January that
killed a 28-ycar-old woman.
Stephen and Katherine Giraud and
Larry and Kathyrn Vickcr)' claim
both Hazel Ne1swener. who was
killed. and poor road de 1gn caused
the Jan. 7 pileup.
Nciswender. of Newport Beach.
died instantly in the spectacular
Saturday-night collision, which
forced the closure of heavily traveled
MacArthur Boulevard between Ford
and San Joaquin Hills roads for more
than three hours.
Newport Beach traffic investigator
Ri ck Bradley said Neiswendcr's al·
leged intox1ca11on and excessiv1•
speed caused the collision. He esti -
mated her car'!. speed at 84 mph and
her blood-alcohol k~el as .. well abo\e
10." the legal yardstick for "driving
under the innuence. ··
Neiswender's car crossed into op-
posing traffic and collided head-on
with the Vickerv vehicle. The
woman's car overturned and was
broadsided by the Giraud car.
The drivers and their passengers all
were in1ured. with Larry Vicker) 's
inJunes listed in1uall) as extremely
cnucal.
-COMPTON (AP) -A dri¥er wflO
feft UIMp AprU 21 on a Utah
highway with • butload of 80y
Scout tkJera from Orange County,
two of Whom died when the bus
crMhed, aayt he'• haunted by their
deett\a.
Driver Samuel Peyton of the
Pinetree Trantpe>rtatlon Co.-cait-
fornla Charter 8u ... Inc. WU beck
at hla home In Compton tut week
after the eccldent near Parowan.
Fire crews brace
for tough season
Officials say th is we~k · s Laguna Hills blaze
could be just the first aft~r dry winter season
Firefighters in Oran&e and Los
Angeles counties ha,~e braced them-
selves for what they fear could be a
disastrous bru h fire season. They're
describina hillsides as being vtrtual
t 1 nderboxes.
"One dropped cigaft'tte. That'~
about all 1t would take:· said Jcffrc)
McDonald. a Los Anacles fire in pee.
tor
So worried arc firt officials that the
annual ntual of opcnma the fire '
season by taclun' up wamina sign
and clos1na ofT wilderness an-as ha
taken place a month earlier th n
normal. -
"'The problem 1~ this: We had all
that r11n last )car and e\'crythina "'•
arowang hkc mad Then the rain
stopped and cvcrythana JU t dried
out.' explained Orange Count Firt
Capt Mali< Reinhold.
"'The hill,•dc naht now arc \:Cry
vc3 nammablc."' he 1d
STEVE
MAIBLE
Focus ON TH£ News
bl ckcn1na n acrt and dam111na
tv.o nd ehne home
Nc1rl} 200 fircfiahtcrs. somt from
a far o ta Mc~. "'e"' orouaht in
to cht'Ck the blaze. which v.as
prevented from rea hina me home
b) ro" of ucculcnt \e elation.
L.aauna Bea fl Fire C'h1cl Ron ~CJam\. who • dcpanmcnt helped fiaht f"nda) ·, fire said ht \\"IS
afarmtd at how bnttlc the b1 uth 1
All have since recovered. although
Larry Vickery is sti ll wearing braces.
said Michel Shine). the Sherman
Oaks attorney representin• tht' two
couples. Vickery's medical bills
totaled $70.000. the claims state.
Claims were filed against the l"'o
c1t1es because both had helped con-
struct MacAnhur. State Route 73.
Sh1ney said.
Utah. U'8t Injured 44 people
b ..... klling the two youth• -NW/ o.cwg., 17, of Dena Point and
Byron.....,,,., 15, of Mlaion Viejo.
.. , don1t want to talk beC8uM
there's a tot of things to think
abOUt,.. Peyton Nld Friday. ''My
health, mentally, ts not too good
becaUM I stlH have It kl my mlnd
abOut those two kids."
A Utah highway patrol trooper,
David Excett. totd an OranQe Coun-
, ..
"Until we get it sorted out who 1s
responsible:· the anome) said. he
plans to continue pursuing both
claims. He said a third claim has ~n
filed against the state
Ir\ ine re1ected the claim this "'eek
af1Cr Newpon had done the same
three weeks before.
Claims are a prerequ1s11e lo tili ng
suits against governmental bodic\.
ty newepeper that °"' of the younoat .... In the bul had com-
mtnted to Peyton et.ortty before
ttw cruh~ ''Hey, you look Nke
you're lleepy. You want a alp of my
Coke?"
"He only got a couple of houra of
sleep the day he (Peyton) left,"
Excell said In a telephone Inter-
view.
A relief driver was to have taken
over from Peyton at Cedar City.
-,-
. ' • l I. -.
ranac County ha had two bru\h
fi renince the ~a\On opened \pnl IS
The worst erupted Fnd1) when firt
\\\.('pt up a La una 1 ud h11l\tdc.
"lhat bru\h "' burn1n1 l\li A.ill) v.ell for ~pnt :• ht gid ... In• roupl<' An Oraqe County Fire .Depe.rtme.nt bat·
(ri ...... raUPIOHTlllte/A:I) talion clilef walk• tbroqh the charred
'
Deputy·
killed in
collision JV
An ofT~uty sheriffs deputy was ,,
killed Saturday in Irvine when the car
he was riding in was struck head-on
by a motorist driving the wrong wa)
on the San Diego Frccwa).
The dnvcrs of the two cars in-
volved in the violent 4:50 a.m.
accident near Irvine Center Drive
suffered critical injuries. according to
the California Hipway Patrol.
Jeffery Anderson. a 24-year-old
Los An&eles County Sheriffs deputy
who was a passenaer in one of the
cars. was Oown by helicopter to
Western Medical Center in Santa
Ana. where he died.
Officers said Anderson, a resident
of Little Rock, was ridina 1n a 1982
Toyota being driven north in the
nonhbound lanes by Robccca
Bcardon.20. Thewoman'scarwasbit
head-on by a veh1c&e dnving south in
the nonhbound lanes.
The driver of tM wrona-wa) car
•as tdenufic<t as Ctcil Biih~ Sr-• l.
of San [Mgo. OffiettS art in\'.cstipt-
1ns Bishop for pos iblc druum
dnvma.
Both Beardon and Bishop ..-ett
rushed \0 Miision Communit) Hos-
pital whctt they u~~I cmera-
ency surgery. Both arc 1n "\Ct)
cnucal" condition.
··Our offi~rs said It was as vrolent
an accident as they've seen in a lo~
long 11me." a CHP spakeswoman
said. •·There wasn·t much left of
either car."
The shmffs depanmcnt said the
deputy wuofTduty at the time of the
accident and the dcpanmtnt would
coordinate memonal services with
the man's next of kin .
Dldn'ty4u
reineinber
to turn the
clock back?
Tal..l' a loo!.. at \Our clock o'er
lhen· v. hat's 1t 'i<1' ·>9 a.m.? I f~ou"re
the forge 1ful t)pC. that'~ probabl)
\\fOng
Tn IOa m.
\ c-"s. once 1t again it's Da)Jiiht
Sa' ins Time -t1me tg move clocks .
watch'> and c.-ven sund1 alo; ahead one
hour o 1fyou forgot last night. better
adJU"l ~our t1 mcp1cce now or ~ou
m1~h1 be late for a 'Cl) important
appointment
\nd don't wolT) You'll g,et that
loo;t hour bacl.. nc't fall
I
Residents say amphitheater
show not music to their ears
Russ Millar is one of those auys
who never tho\llht he•d be liltenina
to heavy-metal music, let atone a
heavy-metal aroup with a name like
the Scorpions.
But Saturday -behjnd tocked
doors and sealed windows -Millar
sot 60 deciber1 worth of the popular
bend, which wa1 playina at lhc
outdoor Pacific Amphitheatre in
Costa Mesa.
"We•ve measured i1 as loud as 68
(decibels) in one spot," said Millar,
refei"ring to a sound engineer hired by
amphitheater neighbors.
Since the amphitheater opened a
year 130, residents have comp_lained
of excessive noise, heavy traffic and
conption from concert..,oen seek-cemed Citizens of Cost.a Mesa. ina free park.ins in the residential .. When you can hear ir lnJide your
tncts. bomcand m yourbedroom, that'stoo
The owners of the amphitheater loud. I'd like to go to bed at 10 p.m.,
reportedly have made strides to .)but I can't," he said. ''At least, I can't
improve the situation by removina sleep.''
some speakers and reducina the Costa Mesa police. however. said
theater•s parkina fees to encoura,ce they bad only one complaint Friday
customers to stay off residenual night when the jazzy Mai;i.hatten
st.rcets Tranfer was pcrfonning and only ' Tho~ah the season only opened handt\11 Saturday when the Scorpions
Friday, Millar reported he is hard put were oo stage.
to notice any improvement over the "I expected we'd have record
amphitheater's rookie season. complaints tonight but it's not even
.. If it's quieter, which I tend to close," commented Lt. Tom Laiar.
doubt it is, then it's still not quiet Residents said they intend to
enough. It's not acceptable. It's still present data from their noise tests to
too loud," said Millar, president of a city officials in the hope it will lea~ to
residential coalition known as Con-the sorts of reforms they are seeking.
Rodgerscenterreopensin
~ )
gala dedication ceremony
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. .,.., .... ...,,
A crowd of nearly 650 people
attended <Jedication ceremonies Fri-
day for the Michael E. Rodgers
Seniors Center in Huntington Beach.
The center, where the city's senior
citizens can bold meetings, attend
classes, play pool, snooker and card
games as well as get leg.al aid and elder
care. had been closed since remodel-
ing efforts began last April. Work was
expected to be finished JuJy 19, 1983,
but dragged on until a few weeks ago.
If seniors were 4isappointed by the
delay. they didn t show it at the
festive occasion Friday feat1Jring
music, speeches by city officials and a
buffet.
Members of the audience, which
spilled over from the enlarged meet-
ing room to line two lobbies, were
drawn to the ceremony by curiosity.
They wanted to see how the work
came out 1n their 12, 528-square foot
building a its 17th Street and Orctnge
A venue IOca.tion.
But they also came to honor Mike
Rodgers, the man for whom the City
Council named the facility on ~arch
5.
The 8 l-year-old Rodgers is known
throughout Orange County as a
strong leader dedicated to improvin~
the quality of life for less fortunt.te
senior citizens.
''He always looks out for the little
person and never does one thing for
himself," said Vivian Borns, super-
intendent of the city's recreation and
human services department.
"And he does it with a ready smile,
a jaunty step and a twinkle in bis eye,"
she said. "I don't believe people know
how hard he really works."
Rodgers serves on the Orange
County Transportation District Ad-
visory Committee, the Interfaith
Alliance, the Housing and Communi-
ty Development Advisory Commit-
tee and the Seniors' Employment Michael E. Rod.gen
Committee among others. He helped
found the Council on Aging in
Huntington Beach, which advises
c!ty officials on the needs of elderly
Citizens.
He's also been instrumental in
distributing government cheese to
Huntington beach seniors and low-
income residents.
Rodgers, a native of Ireland, for-
merly worked with the Marconi Co.
of London and installed radio sta-
tions throughout the world.
He also-was--e~nd-techntcian at-
Paramount Studios and then worked
for McDonnell Douglas before em-
barking on a real estate career.
Suspect charged in 1979 slaying
A former security guard was for-
mally charged with the brutal beating
and strangulation murder of Savan-
nah Anderson, a 22-year-old woman
who was killed nearly five years ago in
her Irvine apartment.
Robert Lloyd ~llers, 26, success-
fully asked that a preliminary hearing
on the murder be continued to Aug. 6.
during a Harbor Municipal C.ourt
appearance in Newport Beach this
week.
Attorneys for Sellers, who is being
held at Orange County Jail without
bail, argued they needed that much
time to put together a defense. Orange
County Deputy District Attorney Pat
Geary opposed the lengthy delay.
Sellers. a Brea resident, was ar-
rested March 29 after a fi ve-year lull
in the investigation of Anderson's
murder. Police, who had never closed
the case, alleged they were able to
match Seller's finge!'rnnts with some
found in the woman s apartment.
Anderson's nude body was found
on her bed in her apartment on May
15, 1979. Irvine police said she had
been raped, strangled and
bludgeoned.
Sellers, a security guard at the
apartment complex at the timr, was
questioned shortly after the murder
but wasn't charged.
~5if Mi~f fi~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ARSON SUSPECT'S RELEASE .•.
From Al
were not a factor in the court case.
according to Hickman.
Alan Rasmussen, principal of the
middle school, said every effort will
be made to get the youth back into
class without making too much of a
fuss.
"Obviously the word gets around
on who it is. The rumor mill takes
over,'' he said. "But the staff here will
attempt to keep things as normal as
possible.
"We're not in a position to make a
judgment ourselves," he added.
"Until proven guilty, a person is
innocent."
Sgt. Ron Jenkins said the youth is
still a suspect in the continuing
investigation of the fires. Hickman's
ruling does not bar prosecution of the
youth for other fires.
FIREFIGHTERS BRACED FOR SEASON ...
From Al
of months trom now. we could have
real problems."
Much of the problem in both
countjes has to do with the contrast-
ing winters in the past two years.
Record rains drenched Southern
California in 1983. And, while hill-
side vegetahon grew almost un-
checked. the wild growth was moist
and green enough not to be con-
sidered a fire hazard.
The brush fire season last year
passed without a single major blaze,
marking the first time 1n 30 years that
canyons and hillside have been
spared a blaze of 10,000 acres or
greater.
This year the picture is ominous.
Firefighters say they can almost
predict trouble.
Orange County has received less
than 2 inches of rain since Jan. 1 and
all the vegetation that flourished and
Just .Call
642-6086
Dall1 Piiot
Dell very
11 Guerant..ct
IA•• '1•1 I• lty fl y<>v lj<
,_.,, t .... ~ -t Ill• oet* ny
~ ~ C ., r All r-trv" 1 (' rn
.,..., ff'l•ft '"'' *" tM d4t1Ntf1' ... 11
•
stayed so green last year has been
reduced to dry chaparral.
"The brush is very dry and the grass
that pushes up under the brush is dry.
So what you have is a big clump that is
capable of ~enerating incredible heat
if 1t gets going," said McDonald.
Although firemen hesitate to say it,
part of the problem now is that there
were no major brush fires last year.
"You never want to see a fire -
anytime," said Reinhold. "But since
there weren't any major fires last year,
things are worse this year."
County firefighters stepped up
their preventive measures early this
year. Fire breaks have been bulldozed
and thick, grassy are.as near homes
have been burned off under con-
trolled supervision.
Residents who live in canyon and
wildland areas aro being asked to
clear the brush back from their
homes.
Ironically, a fire in late January -
the worst of the year in Orange
County-was accidentally ignited by
prison immates who were clearing
and piling dry brush for a controlled
bum -trying to prevent just what
they c.aused.
The Modjeska Canyon blaze, driv-
en by Santa Ana winds, scorched
1,200 acres and forced about 100
canyon residents to flee their homes
as the fire hopscotched ttlrough the
rural area.
A unique fire prevention method in
the county is the use of cattle.
Reinhold said Irvine Co. herds are
moved from canyon to canyon to
graze down the brush.
"It's amazing," said Reinhold.
"They'll take the growth right down
to the ground."
Wbat do you like about tbe Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call tbe
number 1t left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered
to the appropriate editor.
The same !4-hour anawering aervlce may be used to record letters to tbe
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column mutt l.DehJde their
name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calla, pleaae.
Tell us what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilai
H. l. Schwertz Ill
Put.>hsher
Circulation 1141842-4111
Cl•••ln.d 8dvertlalng 7141142·5171
All other department• 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
330 w .. 1 Bay SI Coll• M.u CA
M•-•Odf So• !MIO Cotra ~ CA 02628
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10 1he Publtsher
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Lifelong dream comes true ..
I
for a would-be news editor
By MARGE BITETl'I
OftN.,.., ..... ...,
Jim deBoom has had a lifelong
dream to be the editor of a city
newspaper.
At the 6th annual Rotary Oub
Charity Auction in Costa Mesa-
Friday evening, deBoom got his wish.
For SSJO, deBoom and his wife
Barbara will be able to enjoy the
power of the press for one day by
serving as editors of the Orange Coast
Daily Pilot.
Hardly a stranger to the Orange
Coast, deBoom is executive director
of the Orancc Coast YMCA and is a
trustee of the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District. He is also an avid -
and oeinionated -"Letters to the
Editor ' writer.
Bidding for a chance at the ''power
seat of Costa Mesa" was amo'!I tbt
most active of the evening. CbaZy
Dowaliby, the paper's real editor,
even got into the spirit of the auction
by bidding on her own job.
The greatest compeution, though,
occurred between Barbara deBoom
and Maureen DiDomenico, who said
she bid actively because she bad
several issues she wanted to address.
"I'd like to have the social page on
the front page," Di Domenico com-
mented later.
Master of ceremonies for the eve-
ning was Gordon Bowley, a past
president of the Costa Mesa chapter
of the Rotary Club.
In addition to the live auction
bidding, there was also a silent
auction on more than l 70 items,
including a restored fire hydrant,
Olympic Games tickets, a bottle of
ho memade beef jerky (bid on by the
cook responsible).
The highest bid of the night was
$2,800 for a vacation fo r two to
Tahiti.
Nearly 400 peo{.>le attended the
auction. Proceeds from the auction
support the club's designated chari-
ties and civic projects. Officials
estimated that this year's auction
raised more than the $8,000 netted
lasi year.
.,..,,...,.........,.,_.~
Jim and Barbara deBoom were hla(h bidden at Rotary
auction to win him •editor for a day' laonon. ,
ff1dcor1
1mportec1 German farms Butter Cheese '" 0~'0
Buttery emooth cheese with delightful mlld
flavor. A\'allable only while auppllee last. Only
Hickory Farms has It, right now, during Mayfeat.
ff ldcory Farms g:,o.
We11 give you e tastA! of old-time country p>dn-.tv
IOUth
Coast
'1ua Iii .
t.w. c;...,.., Mill
•1tte1 at the
Son Diego FrHway
Cotta Mesa
0,-~ 'Ml ' ....... ....,. ....... ,~ .... ...., ......... .
540-6991
NAT ION
--~-
Solar Max repair was
in time for solar flare
By Tlte AHoclated Preti
SPACE CENTER. Houston-The repair of the Solar
Max satellite on the most recent shuttle mission came JUJt
in timt to let scientists u~ it to $tudy the largest solar flare
$inoc 1978, a NASA official says. Frank Ccppolina, the
manager of the repair mission and an official at the space
Q&cncy's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland. said
last week that 1 month-long period of ttsting has been 5et
asjde so that the satellite can ~ used to observe the
"henomenon. A solar narc is an explosion high in the sun's atmosphere that links relatively cool, dark spots which
appear on the face of the sun. When a flare occurs.
temperatures rise millions of degrees within seconds. X-
ray emissions increase dramatically and a billion tons of
$Olar material can be spewed into space. Observing the--
flare has kept scientists at Goddard busy through what was
expect~ to be a calm period after the repair of the Solar
Max earlier thi.s month. ne said.
Quake rocJr• Mammoth LaJre.
RENO. Nev. -An earthquake measuring4.6 on the
Richter sca le hit the Mammoth Lakes area Saturday but
apparently no injuries or property damage resulted.
reported the University of Nevada-Reno Seismological
Labo!'ltory. Alan Ryall. director of the laboratory.
described the quake as "moderate," adding it was
apparently only felt in the Mammoth Lakes area. Rya ll
s.a1d the temblor laS1ed for about four minures beginning at
about 2:48 PST. According to the scientist there were no
repons of injuries or damage.
Augusta mayoi convicted
AUGUSTA. Ga. -Edward Mcintyre. Auiusta's first
black mayor. was convicted on federal extortion charges
Saturday by a predominantly white jury. The jury of three
blacks and nine whites deliberated for seven hours before
finding the 52-year-old mayor guilty on aJI three counts.
He was accused of using his posiuon to profit illegally
through extortion in connection wilh the sale of city-
owned riverfront property. Mcintyre was freed on $50.000
personal recognizance bond.
Welds blamed for mall fire
ROLLING HILLS ESTATES-A tot.al of six fires.
all blamed on welding, caused more than SI milJion
damage at the Counyard shopping mall, which stayed
closed Saturday. firefighters said. Nobody was hurt in any
of the blazes. but the first fire at l 0 a.m. Friday forced
evacuatfon of the mall just as most shops were opening.
The number of evacuees wasn't known, fire officials said.
A second fire alarm came at 9: 18 p.rri .. Los Angeles County
fire Capt. Mi chael Stearns said. Firefighters. who had
already determined the cause of the first fire to be
improper welding. then "checked every place where
welding had occurred," Steams said. "In checking those
areas, ther, found fo ur other areas where smolder fires had
occurred. 'Stearns said. •
J 5 -year term ln cocaine case
SACRAMENTO -"Thi~ case makes John De
Lorean look hke a pauper." said U.S. District Coun Judge
Raul Ramirez as he sentenced a man to 15 years in prison
for possessing 718 pounds of cocaine. The Judge imposed
the prison term and a $25.000 fine Friday on Joseph
Michael C 1..1rt1s. 28. of El Segundo. who had pleaded guilty
in December to possessing the cocaine valued at up to
$200 million. Curtis. a graduate of the University of
Southern California with a degree in finance. was one of
four persons arrested when the cocaine was seized last Oct.
12 at a remote ranch in Lassen County
Deposltors to be repaid
LOS ANGELES -The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. announced Saturday it will begin paying off insured
and secured depositors Tuesday after the st.ate shut down
West Coast Bank. the 21st bank to fail this year
nationwide. State Superintendent of Banks Louis Caner
named the FDIC as receiver for the bank and shut it down
Friday as depositors made a run. withdrawing some $4
million after word of the closure leaked in advance. Carter
attributed the bank's insolvency to heavy loans and
operating losses.
Censor shuts lsraell paper
TEL A VIV. Israel -Israel's chief mili tary censor on
Saturday ordered the daily Hadashot newspaper closed for
four days after it ran a story about a new in vestigation into
the deaths of four Palestinians who hijacked a bus.
Questions were raised about the official version of events
-that two hijackers were killed when troopers attacked
the bus on April 13 and two others died olwounds en route
to a hospital - when one photo. taken by a Hadashot
photographer. showed a man who did not appear to be
injured being led away in handcuffs. A Defense Ministry
spokesman said Hadashot violated censorship regulations
Friday when 1t reported that Defense Minister Moshe
.\rcns had appoi nted a senior officer to investigate the
deaths of the htJackers.
Bombs found on buses
TEL AV IV. Israel -Bombs wrre foun d and
dismantled on six Paksttn1an buses in east Jerusalent'and
the lsrarl1-occup1ed West Bank oft hr Jordan Ri ver. poltce
reported Saturda). lsrad Radio said 20 people were
arrested. Including an army officer and residents from the
Tel Aviv and Jerusalem areas as well as Jewish settlers in
the West Bank. Israel Television said earlier that among
those p1ckrd up by police were se·1eral men who held
gOvl'rnmrntjobsand an electroni cs engineer with a senior
rank 111 the army reserves. It did not give their names. The
telcv1s1on report '3id the suspects were known to have
"radical views" in favor of Jewish settlemenh in the West
Bank and the Ciolan Heights
Clash ln El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador -Leftist guerrillas
an d army troops dashed aturday in northeastern El
Salvador. an area where the rehcls appear to be preparinQ
for a maJor otTen~ive. The gut"rrillas' clandestine Radio
Vencercmos !laid their fighters killed 10 sold1en and
wounded 20 near Oscicala in Mora1an r.rovince. about
11 S miles northeast of San Salvador. Mi llary pccialists
said at least three iucrrilla columns were mov1na south
through the province in what could lead to the biggest
rcbtl On!ilnught in more than a month.
Slaylng• attributed to fear
SAN SALVAfX)R. El Salvador-A lawyer for one of
five former notional auardsmcn accused of murdenna
four tJ .S churchwomen sa1J Saturday his C'11cnt took pan
1n the k1lhniS bccau~ he wa afraid to d150bey orders.
Raul Hcrnandel Zunip. the attornc) for C'arlo~ Joaquin tontrera~. 15. ~1d 1n his les-11 bm~f that Contrcrai acted
"out of on 1rrcwa1hle moral force that completely
$Ubmcrgcd hi' will and f)OWl'r of d~i~ion 10 rebel again!<.t
1hr illegal and immoral orders he r~·t·1vN1 from hi"
1mtned10lc ~upenor ""That <lc!i1ruct1\.C force ha\ o namr
lcat." Jhc documrnt ~1d
PEKING (AP) -President Rua.an.
censored the sccond da)' in a row 1n his
efTon to talk dirtttly to the Chinete people.
took a stroll atop the Great Wall on
Saturday •nd then told the Amman
community here that when he leaves for
home ... the U.S . .China partnership will be
stronaer than ever."
Reapn and Premier Zhao Ziyana put an
oPtim11tic note In toasts at the end of the
day. after the president spent the momina
with 79-~r.old Dena Xiaopina. the
senior Chinese leader.
This mornina. the president and his wife
were to fly to Xian, the ancient capital of
China. to view 2.00()..year.old temt cotta
figures unearthed ov.cr the past several
years from the tomb of Qin Shihuwn, the
emperor who unified China.
In his salute to Reagan at a dinner given
by the president. Zhao said world peace
requires that the United St.ates and China
move beyond "the difference of social·
systems and ideol~1 and work for ex-
panded cooperation.
The question of Taiwan remained an
o~cle. as it has throuJhout Reapn's
th days or mtttinas. But C'h1nese
spo sman Qi Hufiyuan satd Dena told
the presic:knt thal after reunification, the
United St11eund Taiwan would be able to
maintain thtfr ciistina rclattons.
But a point of contention emeried once
apin as the Chin~ 1overnment censored
Reaaan's messaec critical of the Soviet
Union and his statement in an interview
with ChineK telcvisjon that ··economic
arowth and human proaress make their
greatest stride$ when people are secure and
free to think. speak. worship. choose their own way and reach for the stars."
Before that passage was deleted. White
House spokesman Larry Speakes issuec.l a
written atatement complaining about a
similar deletion from a speech Reagan gave on Friday.
Speakes said: "The Chinese govern-
ment. which controls information in the
country. has given the president extensive
news coveraie -certainly more than we
would consider likely for most foreign leaders visiting the United States."
Gi1 ctilefplan,ts a tree in China
Prealdent and Mn. Reagan on a tour of the Great Wall of Cblna.
Dominelli arrested in· Miami
U.S. llanha1 Pete Mapmy taka J. David
Domlnelll lnto caatody In Miami.
MJAMl (AP) -Fugitive financier J. David
~~in~lli. ~u~t .by feder~I officials trying to find SI 12
million 1n m1s~1ng investors fund$, was arrested Saturday
at Miami ln-temational Airport.
Federal agents frisked Dominelli. read him his rights
and andcuffed him as he step~d otT an Eastern Airlines jet
fro;n Antigua. where authonties had seized him and sent
him back to the United States.
Dominelli is the founder of the J. David & Co.
currency trading investment firm . A Newpon Beach
company. Trans Atlantic Bancorp. is Dominelli's biggest
creditor. It was forced ioto bankruptcy when when
Dominelli's financial empire collapsed.
Since his expulsion was ordered Friday from the
Caribbean island of Montserrat. Oominelli. 43. had
attempted in vain to find refuge on several other islands.
Federal authorities attributed his return to State Depart-
ment requests for cooperation from fnendl y island
governments.
Also arrested were Debra Hart. 26. Dominelli's
secretary. and Calman Han. 25. her husband and also a
Dominelli employee. All three were ordered held without
bond pending an appearance before a federal m~gistrate '
Monday.
Hinckleys stump for mental health
PITTSBURGH (AP) -The parents of would-be
presidential assassin John Hinck ley Jr. on Saturday urged
the relatives of mental illness victims to .. gt't out of tht"
closet" and ca mpaign for more research into such
disorders.
John Hin ckley Sr. and his wife. JoAnn. have
undertaken a three-month speaking tour·of 20 cities in
order to publicize the problems of mental illness and raise
funds for research. The step into the public eye is a
depanure for the couple. who tried to avoid the spotlight
as much as possible in the days after the March 1981
assassination attempt and their son's trial.
The younger Hinckley. 25. diagnosed as a
sc hizophrenic, has been in a Washington. D.C.. mental
institution since his acquittal by reason of insanity.
"Join your local groups and work to improve
conditi ons." Hinckley, 58. told the audience of 300. "We
think it's time to bring mental illness out of the closet and
remove tht" stigma. We want to do for menial illness what
1hr American Cancer Scx·iel} did for that illness."
The Hinckle ys. spurred b)' letters from families of the
mentall) 111 nationwide. last year formed the American
Mental Health Fund in Washington to sponsor research
into mental illness. They hope to raise $35 m11l1on -one
dollar for every victim of mental illness in thr United
States. Hinckley said.
The fund has collected abolJt S:!00.000 so far. he said.
"There's a lack of facilities. a lack of insurance
coverage. a lack of good doctors. Man y people have called
it (mental illness) the worst affi ictt on that can happen to a
person," Hinckley said m the speech sponsored by United
Mental Health Inc. of Alleghen) County.
The H1ncklcys' campaign has meant an almost total
break from 1heir previous hfe. The cider Hinckle~.
fou nder and president of Vanderbilt Encrg) Corp. 1n
Evergreen. Colo .. sold his stock in thr business last year
Dominelli refused to answer reponers· questions as
agents took him from the jet and through Customs.
At a press conference in San U~~o. Ass1st.ant U.S:-
Attorney Robert Rose said Dominelh s expulsion from
Antigua ··was not a function of a treaty. It was with the
cooperation of that government arranged by our St.ate
Department."
Dominelli's passport had .. been confucatcd by a
federal judge m San -Oi"ego, wherehc tr wanted far
information about wbat happened to some SI 12 million
in missing funds after his financiaJ empire collapsed.
Reagan picks
1st woman for
.Justice post
HOUSTON (A P) -President Reagan has nomi-
nated C'arol E. Dinkins. a former semor Justict
CXpanment official. to be the t'irst woman deputy attome)
general. the White House press office said Saturday.
If confirmed b) the Senate. Mrs. Dinkins. 38. of
Houston. would be the h1ghest-rank1ng woman to snve in
thr Justice Depanmcnt. Sh~ would su ceed E4ward C
Schmults. who r~iJncd in January to become general
counsel of GTE Corp. m Connecticut.
Mrs. D1nk1ns was assistant attorne) gt"neral in charge
of the department's land and natural resources division
from I 981 until last summer. ~hen she resigned to return
10 her family and pnvate la\\ practice in Houston.
Attorney General William French Smith had re-
commmcnded that Reagan nominate her for the job.
Reached at her home Saturday evening.. Mrs. Dinkins
said she felt she could not discuss prospects for her job.
.. In terms oftalkmg about goals. I'm not ready until
after the confirmatton hearings" in the Senate. She said
.<;he had not been told when she 1s to appear before the
Senate Jud1c1af) Committee.
She said she was e'c1ted b' the nomination.
particularly b~ its announce mt·nt b~ ·Prr!>tdrnt Reagan 1n
China.
Go'vernment demands Libya release Britons
LONDON (AP) -The government said Saturday 1t
is demanding that Libya release two Bntons still detained
after diplomatic relations were severed. In Tripoli. the
Libyan capital. the Libyan diplomats expelled from
Britain received a heroes' welcome.
Their departure Friday ended an I I-day police siege
of the Libyan Embassy here that began after gunfire from
the building killed a British policewoman and wounded 11
Libyan dissidents demonstrating across the street.
Col. Moammar Khadafy. Libya's authoritarian ruler.
met Saturday with the expelled Libyans. who werr
described in alibyan telecast monitored here as "the
revolutionary force which was based at the Libya n '\rab
People's Bureau (embassy) in London."
In what was seen as a possible peace signal, however.
a .. basic popular conference" in Sabha. south of Tnpoh.
ruled against Libya cutting relattons wtth Britain. saying
"relations are between peoples. not governments."The
conferences. nominally people's forums. alwa)s rrfl~t
Khadafy's will.
The issue 1s academic. however. as Britain severt·d
relations with Libya when it refused 10 surrender thr
embasssy killer to police. But London has said tt has no
Alcohol report cites
dangers of drinking
WASHINGTON (AP) -Alcohohcs have a !.utcide
rate six to 15 times 1reater than the general ~pulat1on,
while alcohot ranks second only to Al7heimer s disease as
a cause of mental deterioration in adults. a repon to
('ongrcss said Saturday.
The study by the Department of Health and Human
Services said that althouih one·third of Amencan adults
do not drink. the other two-thirds consumc enouih
alcohol for every person in the C'Ountry over the aae of l 4
to annually have 591cansofbeer.11 S bottles of wine or 3S
fifths of whiskey
Findinas of the depanment's latest .. Alcohol and
Health" repon were relea$Cd at the ~ond National
Conference for Youth on Drinking and Ortv1ng. whi h
broua,ht toaelher about 300 teen-aae"' from around the
country to discuss ways of ~uc1na alcohol abuse by their
contemporaries.
HHS Aismant Stt'rct.ary Stephanie I cc-Miller told
the ronfercncc it was c timattd tl\at 1Mre than 3 milhon
-or 19 percent -of youths 1'4 to 19 years old ba\:e
problem" related to u!IC of alcohol. \he ~1d.
Nottna that drunken dnvina remains the leading
-<'Au~ of death amon1 )'ouna pcopk aae 16 to 24. Lcc-
M 11ler declart<I that "we mu<;l commit our time. energ\
and rcrourtc'i to 'iolve this 5CR\tl~ devastation ..
quarrel with the Libyan people and wants good relations.
provided Libya renounces violence.
With British and lib}an diplomats back 1n lhrtr
rapttals the da y after the siege ended. police launched a
full-scale investigation into the A\pril 17 shooting that
killed Constabk Yvonne Fletchl·r: 25. e'en though the~
said the~ assumed the killer was among thr 10 L1tl\an
diplomat<; who left Fnda} and prohahl} would ne,cr he
caught.
The Brt111\h Foreign Otlin· said Saturda~ 11 "as
making "the \trongl'l\t possihk reprr<,rntatt un!I" to
Khadaf~ 's go,rrnment about_two Britons who ha .. e lx'l·n
held 1n L1b\a !>incr the da\ ot the shooting.
Douglar, Ledingham .· J5. Tripoli manager of Bnt1-.h
Caledon1an .\11'\\a~~. and John Campbell. "'ho was not
further 1dt·nt1fied . havr no1 tx·en told what charges thl·~
lace and ha' r tx·rn rm.'' cntrd from seeing Bnt 1\h
d1ploma1,. a F·orr1gn OfTtn· <tpoke<,man <,atd
But hr ad<le<l the~ "-l'rl' "in good health." and 1hr1e
wa\ no rl':t'\on 10 hcltt''C tlH'' '"en.· hc1ng 111-treatl·d
Ledingham ha\ telephonl·d ht\ w1fr in Britain. thl·
spol..e,man \atd
On Fnda~. a'i the \t:ttT of 1he I 1h"an Emba!>s~ was
Doagonedoglagone
Danna Dutton la the panuer tn an lm·
promptu 1ame of blde-and-•eek u 9he
mearchea ror her do •• Boone. who 4laap-
being !WXpclled . .\mbassador Oltvrr Miles "'as hauling
down the Union Jack at the British Embassy in Tnpoh. He
Ile"' homr to London that night with 11 otht'r diplomats
and thrtr fam11trs. lea' 1ng behind two diplomats "'hose
top pnorm was thl· latc of Ledingham and Campbell. the
Foreign Offin· -.aid.
. t James·., Square. '>Ile of the rmbass~. remained
'ealcd off Sa1urda' although a group of reporter\ and
photographl'rl\ wa' allm'l'd to tour 11 bncth during the
afternoon
Thn \JI.\ polll°\'. cadl'I' on their hands and 1...nec\
combing the '>qu.m· for n 1dencr. such a., hullc1 fragments
and dl'mons1ra1or.,· placa rd'> The cadets used sho"rl' and
m('tal detector\. 1n add1t1on to ll'<'hng "-tth th~1r bare
hand'-among the gr.t'" and tlowt·~ of 1hc quH.'t .. quart• a
tl-" hlod.-. from Pircad1ll ) ( 1rcus.
'Nal I nndon ncw,papcrs ~1d poller had l'\tab-
hshcd thl' 1dt•nt11\ nfth<· gunman O) bugging the cmbav.~
and lt<.1cn1ng to u)n\c~1t1ono; inside
Thl· Oh\l'n cr. lhl' ~unda ~ Expre!.!> and th e Da1h
Telegraph ~1d fil'rll' argument!> ,.,,rre heard tn "'-htch thl
rl·puted gunman "a' mentioned b} name and al'cu\ed h'
othl·r L1b~an" l'I m1<.rntcrprct ing Khadaf, \ 1n\truc1ion<.
## ..........
pe.ared amona .. aroup of doe ho while
the pair were •hopptn.a for a e,anlne cotta1e
In LaWTencevllle, Ga.
• •
Orange Cout DAil Y PILOT/Sunday, April 20, 19S.
WASHIHOTOH (AP)-A eurwv megazlne'tedltor-ln~. Hen R Of "~Amettcanwomen'' Levlne, tOld report-..
c:ondUcted1>yWoman'10.ymaga-Yet, the Mid, women embr.u ztne tndicat• tMy .,. ~ on the laeuee ueuaUy tupported by
IOCtat·leluel. oonMrYattw on law t.mlnfstt. More than two-thtrdt
Md ord«, COMeirned that tM U.S .. IUpport the EQuaf Rlghte Amend-
poeltton In the world hu lffpped ment. 79 petc.nt b-'tew a woman
but utllfled that enough 11 being hu a right to an abortion, more
~ton defMM. than half ftvor atftrma!Ne action
Moet of tM women who re-Jobi program• and 60 perc.nt
epondtd do not ICMntlf'y them-want I '-deraety tub91dlnd, n•·
..,_ • temlnteta or believe that UonaJde.yca,.pfogram, the survey
the women'• mowment ha had Indicated.
fnUCt\ ~ on th4Mr fives, the One In four respondents said she •
WoUtd be f'n()(e 11tcefy to 'IOte for a
prealdentlal tJdcet that had a
woman u the vie» preildentlal
nominee, the a4ded.
Mor• than 116,000 womeo;.re-
IJ)Onded to the 83..quatlon IUIWY pub119hed In Womeo't Day. whkh.
hu a monthly circulation of 8
mttUon. Some 2,777 of the com-
pteted form• w.• analyzed In
detalllfor the ttudy, Levine ... d.
Many women retpondlng to the
survey were not tatlsfled wt~ the
way American foreign pottey· I•
being hancn.ct, 1M Mid.
ThrM of fOUf' ~ a n~ a.. tr.. Md 78'pei'Cent Mid
they tMtleved tM AfMf'lc:an pot;.
ttlon • a~ hu lllPS)ed In the IMt . ll*ty-14Mfl
peteent thought U.S. poky towerd
the Soviet Union It too lnconela-
tent, 32 percent beM~ the
UNted Stat• lhould t» tougher
and &5 perc:.nt Mid mor. ehould
do more to guard walntt the
spread of communism.
. But the women were hftltant
·Restricted coed dorm visits stirs universi~ uproar
'I don't know about
others. but I have
more freedom at home'
MACOM B. Ill. (o\P) -Meg PO\\l'rs sa)s
her parents don't m ind" hen she sleeps wnh her
boyfriend at home. and she rese nts being
depri ved of the same freedom b) Wc'itcrn
Illinois Univers1t). where she 1s a freshman
But Glona Ga) nord. anothl·r ~ estern
freshman. says she wants the C\tra pm aq she
gets when men arl' ordt.•red off her dormnof)
noor at night.
"I came down here to stud):· shl' ~) s.
The two 18-year-old women ltve on the
only noor of any Western residence hall where
coed visiting 1s restricted. Ga) no rd chOSl' the
noor: Powers was assigned 11.
But now the univcrs1t) sa)s that \taning
next fall it "'ill expand that restm11on to all
noors of all dorms that house frl·shmen an<l
sophomores.
fhc plan tO end 14 )Cars of around·the·
clock room v1s11ation bet"'ccn the se~es has
stirred an uproar among thc 10.000 students at
~ CStCrn. \\htch SllS amid the sofl hills shapeJ
b' thr La Moinc RI\ er 10 an otherwise nat
e\pan'>e ol Combclt.
Onl~ a decade ago. the uni' erst\) was rated
b) Pla)bO) maganni: as one of thl.' nation·,
prl·mtl're .. pan)·· com puses.
.. I don't know about othl·r people. but
haH more freedom at home:· said Po,~cr'
"hose parcnh liH' 1n Rod.lord ... I can go home
and rn) bo) friend can sta) "llh me 1n m) room
\\tth m) parent'> nl'\t door. The) don·t l'are ...
'tudents don't Lonrern themsches "-tlh
~ho sta)s "-Ith "horn and ··ne1thl·r should thl'
'admin1 str:1t1on." shl' said.
Powers' mothl·r. Mal) Jo. a fifth-grade
teal·her 1n Rockford's publtt· schools. agrees
with her dauihtcr -to a point .. M) ph1losoph) 1s, )OU arc not going to
'>tuP students from ha' 1ng prl·mantal se" ·· shl·
said "~om\ husband and I ha\(~ tned to teach
our children the proix·r tx·ha v1or. We don't
behew in bed-hopping.
ushered 1n when radical sexual and poli tical
thinking swept U.S. colleges during th e Viet-
nam War t'ra.
Paul Jahr. chairman of the research
comm111ee of the Assoc1a t1on of College and
lln1,erstl) Housing omcers. ~Id man) of the
colle~cs with 24-hour coed v1s11auon were
considering 'ietting limits. but he didn't know
ho" many had do ne so. In man) caSl''>1he said.
~uch changes arc rcqul'Sted b) .. 1ud\.·n t'> seeking
greater pri' ac).
.. , don't think the idea ol ha' 1ng 14-hour
'1s1tatton 1s so glamorous .. to studl·nts as 1t once
"-3S. Jahr sa id 1n a telephone 1n1en 1e" from
Kearne) State College in Kearne). Neb .. "here
he 1s director of residence life ... The)·, c gro" n
up in a more pcrm1ssl\c .. oc1et) where
'1si1a11on wasn '1 an issue.
.. The women want to be abk to "alk down
the hall in their ho usecoats and not sec a ~U\ ...
.. Students are not as interested now 1n their
indt' 1dual freedom as the) arc 1n getting an
cduca11on.'' he said.
Men won't be allowed 1n "omen·, rooms.
and women won't be allowed in men·s. after
midnight on weekdays and 2 a.m. on "eekends
The curfew will end at 8 a.m. throughout the
week.
"There was a lot of groundwork before
Ml'g·s boyfriend C\t~r slept over." she said.
But Mrs. Powers said Western probabl)
"as nght to end the open dorm poltl') -
Ron G1crhan. 'ice president of student
afTa1rs at Western Illinois. said the new rule'>
\\ere prompted panl) by complaints from
freshmen an<l sophomores. usually females.
locked out of rooms for a night or a weekend b)
roommates occupied "'1th lovers.
Weetem Dllnol• Unlveralty 1tu-
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Chain saw death puzzled cops
Wealthy chiropractor faces trial
in ear-old sla In of his wife -
DAVENPORT. lowa(AP)-The w1feofa successful
chiropractor disappears. Then an un1den11 fied woman's
torso 1s pulled from the M1ss1ssipp1 River. and police learn
that the m1s<,1ng woman·s husband once threatened to
"cut her up in ttn) pieces:·
-\fter a ~l·arlong in' es11ga11on. authont1es sa) they
ha .. c been ahlr to 1denttf) the bod) using soph1st1cated
gene 1es11ng 1crhn14ues. As a result. the husband has been
Ja tlcd on $1 million bail. r harged with murdering his wife
and cutting up her bod) with a chain saw. ·
Dr Jame' Klindt. 35. showed no surprise when taken
into rn~tod' Mnrch 28. ~hen onicers am .. ed at his office.
hr 'i1mpl~ ...ill.I "H1 there:· and followed them to thc squad
tar. \1111 "caring his" hnc laborator: coat.
·· .\t first 11 lool~ l1ki: a mama shot papa. papa shot
mama'' ix· of Jumest1c .. 1olcnce thtng. But what makt>s it
so h11arre \\<I'> how the hod) "as dt!>poscd of.·· said Lt. J 1m
Van f o\wn of tht• Da,enport poltre ... It was more than
JUSt a fit of pa.,..,1on -he had to plan 11 out."
Brfort· the d1<,appcarancc of h1'> .3+}car-old wife.
JoH·e. i....linJt'' lite had heen an en' 1ahk one. A track and
ha\lcthall <;tJr hl.'lorl· graduating from Da\Cnpon V.cst
High ~chonl 1n I %ti hl' "l'nt o ff to Logan ( ollcge ot
< h1ropral'tll in ~t Louis. marm·d had a ~on. and then
rl'lurned 10 hi\ humetm'n 1n tht· earl) '70s to J01n his
t ht roprartor fa thl·r's prospcrou .. practice.
Over the next I 0 )cars. Klindt thnved. He bou$hl a
$100.000 home an a fashi onable suburb and drove a s1lvN
Cadillac ~cv1lle. He pla)ed 'ollc)ball and basketball in a
church league. and sponsored a "omen's bo" ltng team on
"h1ch his" 1fe pla)ed.
Thl·n. on March 18. 1983. Jo)ce Kltndt \\as reponed
missing Some fri ends and relatl\C'i \\ere concern ed for
hl'r safet). but her husband said 'he had simply run awa)
from the couple's marital problem,.
On .\pril 16. 1983. commernal fi shermen came
acros<, part ofa \\Oman's torso It wa"> a secti on from about
the na,t'I to the m1d-th1ghs. and police determined 11 had
been ~e' ered '-"llh a chain sa".
fhl· nnt da}. poltcc used a \earch "arrant 10 \C11e a
l ha in sa" lrom the Klt ndts· home
The da) aft er that. police rl·vcaled that Mrs. Klindt
had rl·corded a ('On\crsa11on with her husband 1n which
'>hcasked him ""'h) he has told her that he was going to cut
hl·r up in 11 n) pieces ... Poli ce said that Klindt's taped
APWlr~
Dr. James Klindt. right, will be tried ln
murder of wife, Joyce, left.
response ~as "to admit to ma ling the statcmt·nt but say he
\\3'i JU'>t being dramatu.: ··
But "nhout a defin1tl' 1den11tirn11on tur the tor<,o.
de,elopml'nl\ 1n the ca<.t• '>IO\\l'd tu a rra"I k.lt ndt's
confiscated chain sa" was returned. and he appeared 1n
coun only to plead gut IL) to possession of marijuana and
amphetamines and pa y a S300 line plus coun costs
• The break came from the Southwestern lnsrnute of
Forensic Snencc in Dalla!I. authorities said There
sc1ent1sts used what are kno" n as ··genetic markers" to
determine that the pan1al torso "as almost cenatnl) that
of Mrs. Klindt
Somettmcs known as genetic fingerprints. genetic
markers are an ) one of about 70 substances found 1n
human tissue or blood that can be 1dent1ficd as being
inherited. Pett) said. Most of the substances arc enzymes.
and arc traced in a p_roces!I much ltkc blood t) ping. onl)
more complex. he said.
Kltndt''i trial on a first-degree murd('r charge 1s
scheduled for June. and he will be defonded b' Des Moines
attorne) Larr) Scalise. Repeated call' to s<-altse's oflicc
"ere not returned.
Da.,.1s said he believes he has established a mo11ve.
"She (Mrs. Klindt) was going to expose him a'i a drug
dealer:· he said. "I reall) can't say more:·
PREPARE CORRECTION -FREE MEMOS,
LE TTERS & REPORTS WITH A TRS -80®
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NB delay& c.ampaign reform action
But council votes to
raise disclosure level
BJ JDAY lllR8Cll ................
Approval of a campeip tpendina reform
peckqe bu been delayed once apin by the Newport Beach City C:OunciJ.
Tbe council pve tmliminary approval to
the PICDae in March, But this week the oouncil
postpone() consideration of the fair campeian
laws until May 14.
The council revened ittelf Monday ni&ht
when conaiderina the amount a contributor can
Jive to a municipal campaian without disclos-
ma hi• name.
'At the WJina of Councilman Bill A&ee, the council voted 4-2 with Mayor Evelyn Hart and
Councilman Donald Straua in oppolitfon, to ,aite the di1cJosure level from SSO to SIOO to .~nd with state ca.mpaipl finance repon-
ing su1dlinea. Penon1 who &JVe S99 or lea do
not have their contributions dilclosed.
''That will encourqe more donations from
una1I cootributon."' Alie IUd. "The idea ii Iha& we wut to bKnue involvement in the oouDCil racea and pcopje
should be able to aive to the camoeJ&n they want
without feeli1' ptttture from· their boa or tomeone else,• A.tee aaid.
Stnust •trooaJy objected to the cbanae
callina it "a move bec.1Cward1·• in campaian
refonil.
"Anybody i1 entitled to know the people
wbo an-. supponina '°meone who iLrunoioa for office. I .cannot .aar-ee with your approach/' Strauu iaid.
The S200 •i>endina limit op 'the total
amount an indjvidual canr contribute to a
candidate's cam~ i1 adequate control over
donaliona and will keep 1pend.ina down, Aaee countered.
The City of Newport Beach imposes a $200
donation limit compared to the 11ate'1 S 1,000
limit let by the state Fair Political Practices
Commiuion.
.. We all have established that we don't
want larae contributioDJ in our campeians. The
$200 limit takes care of that.'' A#e said.
Jim ~ the president of the Newpon
Harbor Area \,.;Damber of Commerce asked that
tbe COWIC'i1 .UC:k to ..... wt fedeta1 ... jdeti ..
wt DOC imPoletiabter f'lll1ledou.
He called Newport's ttrictercamP9ieli laws
"inimicail" to the democratic l)'ltem.
..The fact that we rewn the S200 limit
mana lhat ftObody it~ to
11
7 the elect.ion or vo1e1 on the coUACil, · Mayor Pro
Tempore Philip Mau.rtt. "The state requin>
ment ofS 1,000 could be difterenc."
Al the campaip ontiunce ~ con-tributiou would be limited to S200 and the names of anyone donadn, S l 00 or more to a
campeip would be made public.
-----... -... ----...... -----. -... ----
Lt.Col. Murphy taking reins
at Headquarters Squailron 37
T HE MINI Bl IND l /\lJNDHY
WE CLE.AN LEVOLOA-MINI BLINDS
... , Lt. Cot. James E.
Murphy received the
squadron colors and as-
IW1led command of Head-
quarters Squadron 37 dur-
ing cban&e of command
ceremonies at the Marine
Corps Air Station in El
Toro earlier this month.
Lt. Col Richard L.
Barton. who ha1 com-
manded the squadron stnc.e
Au,ust l 982, was re-
as111ned to duty in lwakun.i. Japen.
• • •
·:. 11 J> f H B I I N ()
j •I t j -~ I I •
1539 Monrovia Ave. 18
Newport Beach, CA 92663
·631-5390
PICK UP a DELIVERY AVAIL.AILE
Window Cle1nlng • Rep1J; I Sell Bllnda
Sale
DRAPERY AND
SLIPCOVERS
50%
ON SEL.ECTED
FAllflCS AND
30% OFF ON ANY
OTHER FAllllCS.
8IG SA VINOS OH
IHSTAUATION AHO
HAlfDWAltE roo.
j~~«ft~~ CAAP£~~~:~ACM
~--DlllONCINTll
1803 WISTCLlff DI.
-650..708 ... ,
-.._ .. ,. • FmllCtlA.,.. IDWCl•m-• .,. ..
7erde 6enter
· 2 701 Harbor Blvd. • (Harbor and Adams) Costa Mesa , CA
Alexander's
Cafe Bar & Grill
241-0123
Albertson's Market
751 -4270
Bank of America
759-4476
Biibo Bagglns
545-1718
Dolphin Hair Fashions
540-0600
Edwards Cinema Center
979-414 1
Hamburger Hamlet
546-7392
Ice Capades Chalet
979-8880
Mamsefle Beauty Supply
662-2875
Mesa Verde Travel
556-6311
Mione's Restaurant
97~735
Music Market
546-0038
Photography by
Jeffrey
545-6786
Plecemakers
641-3112
Spa Lady
540-9822
Swensen's fee Cream
YOUR FAMILY SHOPPING, DINING
556-6937 .
Uppef CUta
Haircutting
850-1889
Wheel Land
751-4882
& ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
WELCOMES ''ALEXANDER'S CAFE BAR & GRILL''
J
II
\
Orange Cou~s
Rel•xlng Music Station . .
Is
KDCM tlm.t .........
lots of Room
For Any Room
ALL THREE s179
Eith ruOY io assemble uni1 scands n "h x JO"w x t2'd Stnoll llO<*USe m
Atso iYil latlle 111 16 • depth It 3 lof '231 htrl ~ cDltl cloor$ Incl desk
llilO are optlONI ilCCessofees Choose from lhret dof bit hn1shas ~II. d.10.
bu~f block l.nCI 0
DIRICI ... ,.,,....,. ... ~
-j
:Child custody system
_disregards JDoins, klds
;ro the Editor.
1 My friend, whose ex-husband earns
$48,000 a ycar;-tecentJy was awarded
S230 ~r child per month support for
two children. The yearly total comes
to SS,S20, or approximately l l per-
cent of the ex·busband's earnings.
,How many mjddle class, nuclear
famiies spend 11 percent of their
inoome on their kids?
Our child custody system as it is
presently structured allows parents to
~ower their living expenses by de-
tertiq their family. The courts sup-
port \he system with total disregard
:ror the health, safety and welfare of
our children. This 1s a system that ;goes unchallef\&ed by those who
should know what's going on -the
divorce lawyers.
I
: My friend's attorney advises her
that she can appeal. But. of course, ;this will take time...:._ months of time.
And lots of money. In the meantime,
__ herJQn and dauahtcr must be lO!d
that the piano lessons must go-even
though he just won second place at the
Bach festival at the age of 9 besting a
field of l SO kids ages 8 to 10. The
dance leuons must go. All of the
extra-curricular classes are off -
even though both children have been
jdentified by the school as being gifted
and need the intellectual stimulation
of these extra classes. Who knows
what will happen to the braces that
were just installed in the boy's mouth.
There-is no ·more money for the
continatuion of the orthodontic ther-
apy. There will be few frills in the
future; just the basics.
disgrace that a parent who makes
upwards of SI 00,000 a year is re·
quired 10· pay no more than $500 a
month per child in child suport. Yet,
this is the standard formula in Orange
County. Assuming the traditional
two child family, this works out to 12
percent of that income. How many
married parents spend only 12 per-
cent of their income on their kids?
T he whole of our societ y is forced
to pick up the slack from what their
parents refuse to do. We will in some
way subsidize their day care so that
their mother can work full time. We
will in some way subsidize their
housing so that they can pay the same
in rent for a 2 bedroom apartment as
they now do in mortgage for a house.
We will subsidize their recreational
opportunities with taxes and chari-
table donations for "under-
privileged" kids. "Underprivileged"
kids who. as in this case. actyally have
a parent who makesclosetofSO,OOOa
year. We will subsidize their voca-
tional training or c-0llege education.
The baby boom generation has
produced a significant number of
fathers and mothers who are abdicat-
ing their parental responsibilities in
the name of personal freedom. The
phenomenon of a SO percent divorce
rate in our culture is most keenly felt
by our children. We read and are told
that the court system is only
interested in "the best interests of the
child." In reality this &imply is not
true. This situation can and must be
-----~ or 'i!O ~ i~ ~ MO&e
Why? Because daddy is 40 and has endangering the social fabric of the
decided he'd rather support a live-in next generation.
mistress with new furniture, ap-
pliances, stereo equipment, dishes,
clothes and of course, the necessary
recreational opportunities befitting a
man of his station offered by a
membership in the sailing club.
This is justice?
The myth is that divorced fathers
·li ve in one room apartments and dole
; out their hard earned money to
(children they never see and to ex-
Jspouses who sit at home and eat bon-
; bons. The reality is that the lifestyle of
:divorced fathers goes up 40 percent
·while that of the moms and children
:goes down 70 perc.cnt. This is true
:even in .. communjty property" states
·such as California. And therein' lies
•the crux of the problem. For even
: laws allowing gamisheein~ of wages
. of either parent to meet child support
, payments are wholly inadequate
. when the support payments are
inadequate to begin wirh. There is no
reason why this need be so other than
greed of selfishness. Divorced parents
should spend no less on their children
than do married parents. The courts
. cannot protect individual rights and
freedoms and still demand that
. parents stay married. However, the
courts can and .1ust protect our
· children and demand that their
· parents support them. Parents should
• be expected to put as much back into
·society as they took out. Parents who
themselves were raised in that good
ol' traditional middle American
home should provide the same for
• their kids whether or not they choose
to live together. It is a national
Da vfd Kennedy
ORANG£ COAST
DailyPilai
PvtWt.r ... ,.,,...., ,,, f lh• .,./If itt ,),10 WMi (1,.~ M
,. li,li•w. A 1-•-..; ~~~!ill' 11'\ f\. , f!,ft;J
~··'-· . (,. ..... '
A decisjon to have a child is a 21-
year commitment to try to raise that
child to be a happy, productive
member of society. Parents cannot
decide arbitrarily that this is no longer
convenient or that a new boat would
be more fun or that a new spouse
would be more fun and .simpl)' refuse
to provide adequate financial sup-
port. Chi ldren need security, both
emotional and environmental and
both of these things can be provided
for children of divorce if the courts
wouJd require that parents co-parent
in terms of time and money. In
concrete terms, what this means is
that joint legal custody or liberal
visitations be established where
feasible and thai parents be required
to support thier children relat1ve to
theil'" means. The courts can force
parents to discuss or arbitrate their
differences bf refusing to grant the
divorce unti it has been demon-
strated that the best interests of the
children will be served.
Thee is no denying that adults have
a right to choose their lifestyle. It is
not the province of the courts to
intervene. It should not however, be a
clever financial maneuver to desert
one's children. The courts do have an
interest in that kind of decision. It's
~bout time they did something about
It.
SUSAN E. SHUFF
Irvine
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Puol~
ChHy DowaUby
f C11t0< 1"'1 ""''q'""' to I ri. Publl$hef
Frank Zlnl
A~'IOCl1ete En11nr
Tom Tatt
City (dltor
"Our child custody system as Jt Is p~nUy structured allows
parehts to lower their llvtng,expenses by deserting th"Jr famll(Jes). ''
i===============================::=; -lc.---5
8U8Alf &. SBtJ'f'F
lnta•
J1C1
A11uso1
Feds
demand
Indians'
property
'Godfather' deal
tnclucJes off er that
can't be ref used
W ~HJNGTON -. For years I,
have been exposing the government's
treacllery toward American Indians..
It bas collaborated with their de-.......................................................................... r-•sponrut1~ proteetilij lhe ~
Second most ... important race
beingrunforO'Neill's gavel
By ROBERT BADHAM
While The race forthe White House
is in full swing and will continue
throu$h November 6 of this year, a
less visible campaign for the second
most powerful position in the United
Stales is also underway. This cam-
paign will not conclude until January
of 1987.
The position is the speakership of
the U.S. House of Representatives.
Last March when the current
Speaker, Thomas P. (Tip) O'Neill,
announced that he would retire at the
end of 1986, the quest for a successor
began.
Although it cannot always be
assumed, traditionally the majority
leader has moved up to the
speakershi~. If all goes according to
his plan. ll appears that the heir
apparent will be the current majority
leader, Jim Wright of Texas.
It does not stretch the truth to label
the speaker of the House as the second
most powerful official in the U.S.
government. As a matter of fact, the
Presidential Succession A~ of 194 7
places the speaker seconom line in
succession to the presidency, behind
the vice president.
But, the Speaker's real power rests
in the House of Representatives.
While the "Rules of the House" spell
out some of the powers and duties of
the Speaker, the office holders own office through 1986 when he hopes to
personal dynamism and the size of his tum it over .to his annointed suo-
majority are the true controUing ccssor, Con1J'e5sman Jim Wright.
factors of the Speaker's powers. But, Jim Wright isn't taking any
Prior to 1910, the Speaker had the chance~ He is travelling the country
power to appoint standing commit-on behalf offeUow Democrats and, in
tees in the House and their chairmen _ doina so,..pkk.iov1p a p()Cket full of
and select memben of the all-IOUs. He has also formed his own
important Rules Committee and ~~tical action com miuee called the
serve as its chairman. Then, in an Majority Congress Committee which
effort to lessen the concentration of donated $88,000 to l 02 Democrats in
power, the speaker was removed from the 1982 elections.
the RuJes Committee and was While some have speculated that
stripped of the power to appoint the House leadership under Wright
standing committees and their chair-will be more moderate than present
men. day, the facts don't bear out thts hope.
While somewhat reduced in scope, In recent years, Jim Wright bas
the powers of the speakership are still opposed the president's proposed
rather extensive and in today's en· budaet cuts and tax reduction
vironment used in a very partisan measures. He has been the Demo.
manner. crat•s leader wheo it came to fighting
The modem day speaker presides for more dollars for social welfare
at the sessions of the House, an-programs and cutting defense. And
nounces the order of business to come the liberal Americans for Democratic
before the full body. puts questions to Action gave Jim Wright a rating of 70
a vote. reports the vote and decides percent. 2 pen:eqt below the overall
the points of order. He also appoints Democrat rating m the House.
the chairmen of the Committee of the There will be a chanae ofleadership
Whole and members of the select and in the House in I 987. But, until there
conference committees, and refers is a change in the political makeup of
bills and reports to the appropriate the body there will not be a change in
committees and calendars. It is tax and spend attitude that dominates
difficult. if not impossible, to bring the majority leadership.
legislation to the House floor without
the speaker's prior blessing. Robert Badham represents the
Speaker Tip O'Neill will occupy the 40th Congressional Disrrict.
Take a little off the sides, Doc
Your distant ancestors back in the
first century went to the same
practitioner to get a tooth pulled or a
com P.ared. And they m ight have said,
"Whtie you're at it, give me a
haircut." Said practitioner did that.
too.
One out of every four university
presidents nation~de admit to the
surveytakers that they're so dis-
enchanted with their jobs that they'd
quit tomorrow were 1t reasonable to
do so.
From the seafood section of a
cafeteria menu in Santa Clara you can
order "microfiche" with tarter sauce.
Nearly a million teenagers na-
tionwide will get married this year,
and nearly 500,000 of those eventu-
ally will d1von:e.
Y~u can inherit the tendency to get
buntons, too.
L.M. Boyd I• a 1yadlcated
colomAl1t.
The death of a Kennedy
is never a private matter
NEW YORK -Celebrity is truth.
The New York Post this day bas the
death of David Kennedy on the
c-0ver. It has the story on eight inside
pages. Last night, the local television
shows interviewed anyone they could
find about young Kennedy. You
could hear the wisdom of journalists,
of authors. of magazine writers. One
of them, Tom Oliphant of the Boston
G lobe, bad the decency to point out
that David Kennedy had been a
person -his own person. It was.
though, a futile reminder. The death
of a Kennedy is never a pri vate
matter.
Jgnormg the 1nJunction of
0Jjphant, though, you could make
what you want o( the tragedy. Some
said David Kennedy had been Sirhan
Sirhan's latest victim. The bullet that
had killed the father. Roben, had in
the end killed the son. But you were
told also that other kids lose their
fathers and ao on to lead normal.
uneventful lt ves.
The New York Post trotted out a
glossary of those damned by cel-
cbnty. Paul Newman'• son. Scott
shot himself in the bead. Gregory
Peck's son. Jonattian, put a bullet
throuah his brain. Diane Unkletter,
daughter of Art, leaped to her death.
Roben Taylot's stepson, Michael.
died of a drua overdose -a month
before Taylor himself died of cancer.
The list goes on.
Othcn were JUSt as quick to point
out that the children of ordinary
people sometimes also kJll them·
~elvn. ft 1s true. too. that children uf
RICHARD
Co HE I
non-«lebrities are often drug addicts.
Indeed, if it were only the children of
celebrities that used drugs, the gov-
ernment would have cleaned up the
drug problem long ago. The crisis is
not in Hollywood, but in Harlem.
There1 the trouble is hardly caused by
celcbnty.
On television, other expen s fol-
lowed tbe experts who talked of
celebrity and these pointed out that of
the gaaate of Kennedy children -the
children of John, Roben. Ted and the
Shriven -most wett quite normal.
Indeed, most of them were indist·
inauishable from other children or, if
they were, they were more ac-
comolished.
1 Watched -we all watched -the
experts disgorac their contradictory
truth, wait ins in vain for the one clear
truth to prounounoe itself. The sift of
the Kenncdys is not their weafth or th~i~ power or .• for that matter. their
ablliues. It Is, instead, thtir indelible
normalcy: t.he fact that they. like us,
have only hm11ed control over their
lives. Neither money nor power nor
education tta vc been able to shield th~m from tniacdy. In this, the_r_arc
nenhc:r cuned nor blessed. They
simply are.
That is the fact, and a mundane one
it is. But because the Kennedys are
celebrities, because one was president
and another almost so, because they
are born and die and marry and
divorce on television, lhey are fam·
iliar to us. We look to them for truth
-for hinfi, for lessons. How do they
do it or, in this case, how did they ao
wrong? But the more we know them
the more we realize their problems
are like ours.
Neither we nor the Kennedys have
been able to solve the problem of
children. Neither we nor they know
how to control a young life, shelter it
some but not too much, indulse but
not to exccu, love but not smother,
reward but not spoil. punish but not
hun. Neither we nor they can
measure the cost of ambition, of
accomplishment, oflona houn spent
on the job. All they could do. all we
can do, is the best we can.
So before the television tel the
niaht David Kennedy died, and the
next day in the papet"I. we all watched
and read as the s>rtss poked around
for us. What went wrong'? What went
rijht? lo the end, you could come
away with whatever ~01.1 want·
ed -there were. ex •fi!ll
everythina. But the only un·
mistakable lesson is that w-e are all
family, f.amous or not, and life
bumbles us au.
Pain is pain and 1n thit., if oothlna
else, celebrity is lNth.
Rldanl Co6a ll • fP#lbletl
colna.i.t.
-
tribes as it is supposed to do under
solemn treaties. Murders of Indians
go uninvesti_gated; white trading
posts swindle Indians with impunity;
Indian lands are leased by the
government to greedy corporations
and are left strewn with timber
wastes, the earth tom up and the
water polluted with mining poisons.
h is a disgraceful chronicle, and the
latest chapter is .remarkable only for
its brazen attemp_t to ule the Supreme
Court to pull off one of the biggest,
most outrageous land swindles in
history. Here's the story:
Mary and Carrie Dann are two
middle-aged Shoshone Indian sisten.
For the put 10 years, they have been
figbtina the federal government's
sneaky attempt to steal their land in
northeastern Nevada.
The 6,000 acres involved would
hardly seem worth the government's
10-ycarcourt fight -and it isn't. But
if the government finally wins, it
would set a legal precedent that could
be used to take most of the 22 million acrea of Shoshone land in Nevada -
o'nc-fifth of the state.
The Danns' troubles began when a
Bureau of Land Management official
demanded to see their permit for
grazing cattle on federal land. The
Danns replied that they didn't need a
permit, because they owned the land.
The bureaucrat didn't believe them.
and charged the Danns with trespass.-1
i°'nte Danns' defense rested on an
1863 treaty between the Shoshones
and the United States. Though it ~ve
the government certain access rights
to the Shoshone land, the treaty did
not give the government title.
Jn fact, when the government tried
to pay the Shoshones for the land, the
Indians refused to take the money.
The Shoshones twice attempted to 1 stop the proceedinas, but the Indian
O aims Commission in 1979 awarded
the Shoshones $26 milijon anyway.
The money is still sitting in a special I
Treasury account. lf the Shoshones
took the money, it would acknowl-1
edac the government's ownership.
fn their trespassing case, the Danns
argued that they owned their land
despite the claims commission's at-
tempt to pey. The government
argued. somewhat absurdly, that just
by its offer of payment it became the
owner of the Shoshone land -and
thus the Danns were trespassers.
This .. Godfather" theory of real
estate -making an offer that can't be
refused -should strike fear in the
heart of every homeowner in the
country. You like that big house on
the hill? Offer to buy it -at any price
you choose -and it's yours. That's
the government's argument in the
Dann case. Even one of the govern-
ment's attorneys admitted to my '
associate John Dillon that the case is a
''technical one of procedural law."
The Dann sistcn won in the 9th
U.S. Circuit Coun of Apoeals. but the
government bas taken i6e case to the
Supreme Court Solk itor-Oeneral
Rex Lee told the coun why in his
petition for appeal.
"The 9th Circuit's reasoning could
easily be extended to encompass
much of the 22 million acres in
Nevada that were the subject of the
Indian Claims Commission liti·
ption." Lee wrote. The disputed land
tncludes parts of NeUis Air Force Base, the Nevada nuclear test site,
Death Valley Monument, Toiyabe
and Humboldt national forests and
the Ruby Lake National Wildlife
Refuse. ' FL YNT'S CAMPAIGN: No one
seems to know how much imprisoned
porno publisher Larry Flynt raised in
campaian contribuuons before he
pulled out of the ~dential race. If
be railed more than SS,000, he must
report the names of his oontributon
to the Federal Election Commission
and tell what he did with the money.
The publisher is now in a f ede.ral
prison servina time for various con·
tempt-of-court citations.. His brother.
Jimmy. bas been appointed COO·
IC'fVator of Aynt's considerable C$-
tate, and tut month he told che
commission: .. Since tho specter of
(..any Flynt's competency bas arisen
in~ leaal prooccdina. tbc l 983 year.
end and aubteQutnt repont for hjs
poUlicaJ campaip have not been
filed. We do not believe they can be
flJcd until the couns re10lve the i ue
orbla competency."
JMt AJMH.nM I• • l'J'IMIJ~•lff
i»lfnlWjt.
Zahn's
month:
April
Angel left-ander
now 2 4-5 tn mont h
ter 10 -1 victory
Spedal to tbe Daily Pllot
AnieJ left-hander Geoff Zahn is
bqinnina to buy the notion that all he
baa to do to win durina the month of
April is walk onto the field.
Zahn went the route on a six-hitter
Saturday for a I 0.1 victory over the
Seattle Mariners even lhou&h he felt
he was in for a short day.
''l had no jdea what l was doing
until the fifth inning. J didn't have
any rb~m and they bad me on the
ropes; he said.
But Zahn somehow always man-
aaes to come out on top during April.
While improving his 1984 record to
3-1 be also yp~ his ~r mark for
e month to 24-5. He has won a total
of only 99 games in his 12-year major-
lea,,uc career.
'I can't explain my success, es-
pecially this ume," said Zahn, who
began the season on the disabled list
with a thigh injury. ··1 felt like I was
still in spring training. Considering
how J went into this April, I feel pretty
aood." ·
Five of Seattle's hits didn't leave
the infield, as Zahn walked three and
struck out two.
Zahn benefited from an Angel
attack I.hat profited from five Seattle
errors to score seven unearned runs
includins four on Gary Pettisi
seventh-inning grand slam.
The Mariners took a 1-0 lead in the
top of the first with an unearned run
of their own as Angel third baseman
Ron Jackson bobbled Jack Pcrcontc's
lcadoff grounder. Perconte came
around to score on a grounder, a fly
ball and Dave Henderson's infield
hit
Loser Mark Lanpton, 1-2. walked
Brian Downing and Bobby Grich to
open the bottom of the second. Bob
Boone bunted for a hit and Downin&
and Grich both scored when third
baseman Darnell Coles heaved the
ball down the riptt-ficld line. Boone
scored on Rob J>iCClolo's infield hit to
make it 3-1.
Boone's sacrifice Oy in the third
scored Jackson, who had reached
base on Coles' second error. Pettis'
triple and an RBI single by Juan
Beniquez in the fourth gave the
Angels a 5-1 lead.
Lanpton left after again walking
Downing and Grich with one out in
the seventh. Dave Beard got Boone to
bit into a forccout before walking
Dick Schofield to load the bases.
Perconte muffed Picciolo's
grounder as Downing scored and
Pettis followed with his first home
run of the season into the right-field
seats.
Garvey
delivers
in clutch
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Fint
baseman Steve Garvey of the San
Diego Padres has not had too many
hits this year. but he's making the
ones he does get count.
Garve} was h1l\lngjust .203 at the
start of Saturday night's game, but be
banged out a homer and a double to
drive in four runs as the Padres beat
the Dodgers, 5-1, to regain first place
in the National League West.
"Essentially my role is to produce
runs," said Garvey. whose two-run
homer off Los Angeles ri~t-handcr
Bob Welch. 2-3. m the first inning was
his first since April 5 ... , know the
average will be back."
Garvey has only 18 hits this year,
but he has dnven in 20 runs,
including six game-winners, tops in
the National League.
"I've taken some extra batting
practice, and made a few minor
batting adjustments at the plate,"
Garvey said of his attempt to shake
his slump. "I'm beg1nnin1 to take a
better approach at the ball and fcelina
better at the plate."
Andy Hawkins went eiaht innings
to piclc up bis third win witbout a loss.
It was lhe 24 year-old riJht-hander's
1CCOnd impressive showma in a row.
"I had the best chanaeup I've had
all year," said Hawkins. who limited
the Dodgen to just fi ve hits in ci&ht
lnrunp. and blanked them af\er
allowing a first-innma run. "I'm
throwinJ more strikes. and I've aot a
better shder "
Welch, who was 4-0 ap1n1t \be
Padres 1n Jack Murphy St.adtum
surrcnded only four b1u but walked
five in the six 1nnmas he worked.
Steve Sax doubled and scored on
Mike Mar.hall's a1nalc tn the first
inn1"4 to give thc Ooagcru 1-0 lead.
Sax s throwtna error on a routine
aroundcr to second by Graia Nettle
sc the tliC for Garvey's tw~run homc7rrnhfli't~Nettles wound up
on tccX>nd a.f\erSa~ threw the ball into
the dua,out and Garvey hned Welch's
1-0 ddivei; into the ten field ~at\
...........
Clue C boate ln the IOR and the PHRFhead down the coaat at the atart In the Newport to Enaenada yacht race. . .
Ho-hum start in Ne\vport to Ens~nada race
at 1:20 p.m. 5 86 yach ts begin slow
125-mile journey south
Virtually all of the 17 classes in five
divisions started close-hauled on a starboard
tack with the prospect of tacking back out to
sea by tbe time they reached Laauoa.
that the wind would switch to nortb-
nortbwcst by early afternoon which would
provide ideal sailing conditions. But by 2 p.m.
there was no indication of a change in the
weather -unless it was for lhc worse.
would oome anywhere near her lO'h-bour
elapsed time record she set last year.
Minor bumping and acreams for sea room
were observed durina the siaru of tbe later classes as most of them cbote the weather end
of the line. By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
O..,Net ..........
The Ji.ant Newport to Enseoada yacht race
got off without mcidcnt Saturday with the
wind in the wrong direction and the wrong
velocity, giving promise of a slow passage to
Ensenada, 125 miles away.
"The start was so slow and so orderly that it
was sickening," said Bob Wheeler, general
chairman for the sponsoring Newport Ocean
Sailing Association.
· As usual, the starting fleet was down about 8
percent from the number of entries. A total of
586 started, down from a total entry of 635
boats, according to Wheeler. He said the
percentage was about the same as in previous
years. Another 8-10 percent are expected to
abandon the race before the finish, especially
if weather conditions do not improve.
The southerly means that the fleet will be
tacking down the coast, adding many more
miles to lhe race. A number ofboats tacking
off the beach near Laguna appeared to be
heading well out to sea, hopina for better
winds-but as usual, it was a gamble.
Under normal oonditiom. the lead boatl
would be arri vina in T odos Santos Bay and tbe
firusb at Ensenada ~ mid-morniDf today
with the others dngina to the fi.nisb line
throuahout the day and Jri&bt.
Deadline for finilhi~isaHOLm. Monday.
Those finishina after that time would be
classified DNF (did not tinilb). r presentation of the more ... 17 As the catamarans and trimarans got away
at the stroke of noon the southeasterly breeze
was 7-10 knots and was even less by the time
the la~t two classes received the starting signal The weather forecast Saturday momina wu
Bob Hancl's 65-foot catamaran, Double
Bullet, started about in the middle of the
multibull fleet and was soon outfooting her
oompetitors. But unless oonditions cbanacc'
du.rina the late afternoon and evcnina. there
seemed little likelihood that Double Bullet
tlOphict ia ICbe!IW'ed • 3 p.a.
)' OD \be lrii ol ... Haell ......
headq\WUn (or .......
Lakers make quick
work Of Mavericks
Pressure defense,
accurate shooting
key 134-9 1 win
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Coach Pat
Riley of the Los Anaeles Lalccrs
admitted that his team can't play
much better than it did Saturday in
overwhelming the Dallas Mavericks,
134-91. But, he said, he'd like to try.
"You want to improve every day,"
Riley said after the Lakers took
command early in the opening game
of lhc National Basketball Associa-
tion Western Conference semifinal
playoff series. "It's goinJ to take a
relentless 48-minute effort on our
part for us to win the title."
The well-rested Lakers looked like
acbampionshiptcam Satu;t:,\' mov-
ing out to a 20.point lea er less
than 71/l minutes of play in destroying
the weary Mavericks. The rest was
easy.
''Our team was highly-motivated
today to win the first game, regardless
of whether it was by 30 paints or two,"
Riley said. "Now, we've got to win the
second game to bold service."
The second ~me in the best-of-
scvcn senes wtll be played at the
Forum Tuesday night before the
action moves to Dalfas for the third
and fourth pmes.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 16 of
his 18 points in the fmt half as the
Lakcrs, who had been idle since
completing a thrcc-pmc sweep of
Kansas City in a first-round series last
Sunday, blew the Mavericks off the
court with a stifling full-coun press
and 65.3 percent field goal accuracy.
"We had the benefit of a tremen-
dous advantage being able to rest and
prepare," Riley said. "We took ad-
vantage of it. It was night and day for
Dallas. They're ,oing to be a lot better
Tuesday night.' .
The Mavericks had less than 36
hours of inactivity after being ex-
tended to the limit by Seattle in
another first-round playoff series.
And it showed, as Dallas made only
34. l percent of its floor shots in the
opening 24 minutes and 34.3 percent
overall. ·
"We are overmatched," said Dallas
Coach Dick Motta. "It is a very
dcucate situation for a young team to
be in. It is to the point that we could be
overwhelmed if we are not careful.
We had a very emotional series
(against Seattle). And we know we
have to play perfect in this one to have
a chance."
It was the Lakers who were perfect,
or at lcasJ close to it. on Saturday.
Even with a JO-point lead at halftime
and the game wrapped up Los
Angeles didn't let down much, flnish-
mg with a 60.0 percent shootjng
performance.
Los Angeles took a 10-2 lead after
three minutes of play, saw 11s advan-
tage trimmed to 12-8 and then really
took off. The Lakcrs outscored the
Mavcncks 18-2 in a span of 3:28 to
make it 3().10 with 3:43 remaining in
the first period. Dallas wasn't closer
than 13 points after that.
It was 36-21 after one quarter and
the Lakcrs scored the first six points
(Pleue eee LADRS/82)
Laken Maatc Jobnaon (leftl and Michael
Cooper aup ply am other n& def en•e
aialn•t Dallu' Mark ACulne S.ta.rday a t
the Forum. Defenae llfted Laken to win.
At last, a little good news for taxpayers
Congress obviOUsly has a new source
of revenue after 01 ym pie a ppropria-ti_o_n
~~·--~--~-
Nobody came in on the noon
b&Jloon from Saskatoon and uked
me, but ...
•The news that Conaress has
appropriated $50 million for Olym-
pic security is good news for tax-
payers ... Inasmuch aa we have been
repeatedly assured that the Olympics
will not cost the tax~yers one sinalc
dime, Conaress obv1ou1ly has a new
source of revenue.
• R~e Jackson watch . . . Mr.
October • best April in teven years
wuin t983whenhehit.276andwent
on to have the worst season in his
m~or leaauc career.
•In iu n~otiauons to buy the New
Orleans 1nts. the Jacnonv11le.
Aorida aroup will have to add the
cost of a wardrobe for Coach Bum
Phillips.
•Whale LA ~pre owner Bill
Oldcnbura was try1na to fiaure a way
to draw a few people, his UO m1lhon
quancrb: ck Steve Youn1 was dl'llw
m• a crowd of reporters with a stated
opinion that the United States Foot-
ball Leaauc has no chance to survive.
•¥ou do not have to go 10 Europe
to study abroad.
•The question 1s . . Will more
merchandise be sold at Sears o r g,ivcn
awny with adm1ss1ons to Hollywood
Park?
•San Francisco may act its $110
million domed stadium and the city's
mayor says 11 wi.ll be used for football,
bucball and track and field . . OK.
add the cost of tables under which the
latter athletes act pajd.
•The symbol of the Kcntuck)
Derby " Pep u~. lhc wanatd horse of
Om'k mytholOJY ... h should be
chan cd to Squtczus, the Greek aod
Of l<)U •
• rhc mo t i,nificant thina about
the n Dicao Pidrcs' fast tart as that
Dack W11bam.s ha not yet found a
way to screw it up. •< in1;1nn,111 Reda outfielder Dave
______ 1
Buo
Tucu1
SPORTS COLUMNIST
Parker says the rina he aot for hclping
the Pittsbuf'lh Pirate win the 1979
World ~ries contams fake diamonds
. The place you find that out is a
pawn shop.
•lfthcre was a 1w•mm1na or water
polo team in New York. 1t would be
called the Wet
•Stu Nahan went to the b(ach and
they named a song aflcr him .. "l
Cover the Waterfront ••
•The women's profcs~1o nal
huketball leaauc ha held 11s dratl
and i1' ne't official funcuon ma' ht
to fold.
•A surve) conducted for the
United lite, Football U.,uc 1n
I 980 ~vealed that 76 rc'l'l'tnt of f:a n,
interv1ewt'd said thc' woulJ be
mtert'sted tn watch mg spnng tootball
on TV
•You know you are gcuing old 1f
you lods never heard of Sal Maghc.
•Detroit T11cr Manager k)
Anderson says, "If I am a good
mana&cr. 11 is because l don't take
myself too scnously.". The thing is.
Spark} 's players do take him
scnousl>
•Graig Nettles of the Padres sa)s
the infield at Dodaer Stadium 1s thc
best he has ever pla)ed on and be has
insp«tcd a lot of them . fa~ down.
•For the likely magcr. the a-
t1onal Football Leque will 1elcct
U FL teams on thc bast of financial
wonh of the ov. nen which may 11vc
an edge to the bprcss· Otdenbura
and New JCNt) '\ Donald Trump
• l 'SC has formcd a Sl\-man com-
m11ttt to 5erttn applicants for the
Trojan track coachin&Job and the h11
QUCStlOO IS whcrt they found SIX IU)'S
1ntcrc It'd 1n track and field.
•Which is another reminder oflhe
hnc I v.i hfd 1 had wTitlcn .. "If the~
" •n>,thina duller thaf\ tn ck. at ,,
fit'ld .
Shadden leads Olympic trials
Newport's Ul man
in third place
ter first day
LONG BEACH (AP) -John
Shadden of Lona ~ach captured
Saturday's flnt race in the 4 70 class at
the United States Olympic Yachtina
Triala off the eoaat of Lona Beach. .
was actually the fint to finish the race
after leadin• all the way. However, it was detemunod that McKee bad a
premature stan. ao be was placed 26th
and las1.
Benrand Jed all the way in winnina
his race by about a m inute. Russ
Silvestri ofTibtton finished 5eeond,
followed by Scou Macleod of
Rowayton, Conn.; Crai& HeaJy of Pt
Rkbmond, and Kimo Wonhington
of Mu Vista.
Macleod finjlhed third despite
f'allina out of his boat at the fint
leeward mark of the race and bavin&
to rcround the mark.. which dro(>ped
him from KCOnd place to about suth.
The winds were between 20 and 2S
knots and there were waves of up to
16 fc~t.
In the Finn class of the Olympic
Trials, beina held at the same sue,
John Bernand of Anaheim Halls won
the fint race.
LAKERS ROMP •.. From Bl
Nine more races will be held over
the ne~t two weeks in each cla$s with
the top competitor qualifying in each
for the Olympics this summer.
of the second penod to extend their
advantage to 21 points. Los Angeles
continued to pull away until 1t was
68-38 at halftime.
left for good with 3:23 Jen 1n the third
penod.
MiKe McGee led the balanced Los
Angeles sconng attack with a career
playoff high 25 points. Michael
Cooper ana Bob McAdoo finished
with 18 and 17 points, respectively,
for the Lakers. Seven Los Angeles
players scored in double figures.
There arc 26 skippers vyina for the
berth in the 470 clasa and 28 banling
for the spot in the Finn class.
The Lakers only had three turn-
overs in the fint half to l 0 for DaUas.
Shadden. and his crew, Mike
Sqcrblom, won the first race by
about 10 seconds over Steve Ben-
jamin of()yster Bay, N.Y.
Dave Uflman of Newport Beach
finiJhed third, followed by David
Pritchard of Oakwood, Ga .. and Paul
Dickey of Greenwich. Conn.
The Mavericks, who advanced to
the second round of the playoffs by
nipping Seattle, l 05-104, in overtime
at Dallas on Thursday night to win
that series 3-2, were unable to mount
a serious threat in the finlll 24
minutes.
The high-scoring Dallas tandem of
Mark Aguirre and Rolando Black·
man was held to only 28 points, 16 of
them by Aguirre, which led the
Mavericks. Jay Vincent and Bill
Garnett added 11 points each for the
losers. Olarlie McKee of Seattle, Wash ..
It was 99·66 after three quarters
and reserves played most of the final
period for both teams Abdul-Jabbar
New 'M
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t/ SEDANS
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LOS CA3ALLEROS TENNIS t. VOLLE: YOALL S TADl\Jt.•
FOUNTAIN VALLEY CA
CALl ; 14 q57 876R for t1Clcf'lc. o• n•o•mat1on
Aztecs gain CIF
volleyball berth
La Quinta High's Aztecs swept Marina in tbree
straight Saturday to quaJify for the CrF 4-A volleyball
playoffs as the Sunset League's No. 3 rep~ntauve.
LaQuintawon, 15-7, 15·9, 15·3.
The two finished in a 11e for third place with 7-5
records, requiring a special playoff at Fountain Valley
High Saturday afternoon and setter Russ McKenzie led La
Quinta to its 75-minute victory.
The C IF playoffs begin on Friday with the pairings
expected to be released Monday afiemoon at the Cl F office
in Norwalk.
Marina finished its season with a 7-10 overall record
after finishing 7.5 in Sunset League play.
The Aztt>es take an 8·6 overall record into post-season
play.
La Quinta joins league champion Fountain Valley
and runner-up Edi~on from the Sunset League in the CIF
playoffs.
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VOLLEYBALL
CLUB
VOLLEYBALL
EXHIBITION:
The 819 Dippers
with
Wilt Chamberlin
Kiki Vandeweghe
& a host of others
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TICKE T~ WJLL BE HELD AT THE GATE
Arbitrator rules
~suspension lifted
from pitcher Pe~ez
From AP dlapetdlet
HOUSTON -The one-month la suspension of Pascual Perez f ollowina drua
charges was lifted by an arbitrator who
ordered the Atlanta Braves pitcher rcinatated to the
team's active roster, the Braves said Saturdty.
Commiasioner Bowie Kuhn called the decision by
arbitrator Richard I. Bloch "inexplicable, indefensible
and hi.Jbly destructive of ba1eball's etroru to deal with
its ~nous drug problem.
"I will decide shonJy what
funher action ia appropriate in
this case," Kuhn &a.id in a state-
ment from New York..
Perez, convicted recently in
the Dominican Republk of co-
caine possession, was suspended
without pay until May 16 by
Kuhn, retroactive to April 3. He
also was placed on probation
through May IS, l 98S.
The Major League Player1
Pena Association tmmediately filed a
gric-.ance protesting the suspension, saying there was
"no just cause" for the disciplinary action.
The matter went before an arbitrator following
preliminary hearings with baseball's Player Relations
Committee.
Quote of the u1
8ob ..... coach Md oeneret man., of the
SM Antonio Spurt. 1Um1 up tt'9 game In llmpledc
terma by uytno: ''Butcetbalt ll • llmple GM'9· " II
played by thnpte ptayers, C09CtMld by ~
c:oechee-but not owned by anpte ownere.•·
San Antonio earns OsPL win
Nick Mike·Mayer'1 42.yard field goal m
broke a J 4-14 tic and Mike Ulmer scored on t II•
a 60-yard punt return as the San Antonio
Gunslingers held on to beat the Arizona
Wranglers. 24-23, Saturday night in the United States
Football Leaeue. The expansi~n Gunslingers, now 3-7,
sealed the Victory by blocking a 32-yard field goal
attempt by Wrangler place-kicker Frank Corral with 58
seconds remain mg ... Job.o Reaves passed for 172 yards
and three touchdowns to lead the Tampa Bay Bandits
to their fourth straight victory. a 37-l 9decision over the
Washington Federals.
Islanders tighten Cup series
Greg Gilbert scored twice, and goal-~
tender Billy Smith set a Stanley Cup record '
wt th his 81 st career victory Saturday night
as the New York Islanders closed the gap
on the Montreal Canadiens in the Prince of Wales
Conference final series with a 5-2 decision. The four·
time National Hockey League champion Islanders
trailed the best-of-seven series 2-1 with Game 4 set for
here Tuesday night. The Islanders finally found their
championship form in the third game after beu\8
manhandled in Montreal. They made it easy for Smith
by scoring twice in a team-record 13 seconds in the fim
period and three more times in the second ... ln the
other Stanley Cup semifinal series, Wayne Greliky't
successful penalty shot capped Edmonton's five-goal
third-period nurry and moved the OiJers within one
game of the Stanley Cup finals by topping Minnesota.
8-5.
Mahaffey In char ge at Houston
John Mahaffey, pla}'1ng aggressively
on his home course, shot his third
consecutive 3-under-par 68 Saturday to
take a 2-shot lead after three rounds of the
Houston Open golf tournament at The Woodlands
Country Club West Course. Mahaffey. who earlier won
the Bob Hope Desert Classic, ran in a birdie on the first
hole of the day and then had 11 straight pars to finish
with a 204 tot.al, nine under par for the tournament.
Mahaffey held a 2-shot lead over five golfers in at 206.
including Corey Pavtn. Doug Tewell, Buddy Gardner,
Mark O'Meara _Alld 36-hole leader Bobby Wadkins.
Calvin P~etewasanother stroke back at 207 after a third
round of I-under-par 70 ... Betsy Klng, Alice Miller
and Missie McGeorge tied for the second-round lead of
the LPGA 's Orlando Classic afier Jan Stephenaon
triple-bogeyed the final hole. King and Miller shot 5-
under par 67s and McGeorge a 70 for identical two-
round totals of 136, eight under par. The veteran
Stephenson, who shared the first-round lead with tour
rookie McGeorge with 66. had a 2-stroke edge over the
others when she stepped to the 18th tee and triple-
bogeyed ... Gay Brewer rolled ma short birdie putt on
the final hole to give Brewer and partner Billy Casper a
one-shot lead after the 1hird round of the Mutual
Legends of Golf. Brewer's putt put his team at 17-
under-par 193 for the best-ball tournament on the
senior PGA tour.
TENNIS
C&rcla deal Montreal .etback
DantU Por1t1"1 two-run homer la
capped a tbree·run ftnt lnnlna and the St.
Loui1 Cardinals went on to defeat &he
Montreal Expos 6-1 Saturday behind tho
ei&ht·bit J)i\Chial·of Dave Lahtm1 and ane. a.1w. T6e Cardinali jumped on Mont.real staner Btn s.Jdl
4-1, for a 3-0 lead in the flnt inniq. lAiMle lmla.
opened the same with a triple and, after AMy Vu 8l1b
walked, DavW Oren bit a sacrifice fl)'. SmithJ. who wu
biddina to become the ~or •eaa~· rmt nv~e
winner, yielded Porter's R>unh
home run on the next pitch a
towerina fly ball beyond the riiht·
field fence . . . Elsewhere in Jhe
National Lea&ue, Dale M..,..y
broke out of a Slump with a pafr of
two-run homers and IUd Camp
and Oeae Ganer combined on a
five-hitter to pace Atlanta to a S-3
victory over Houston. Atlanta
1tan.er Rick Camp, 2-0, did not
aUowa hit until ltevla BaH led off ~ the Houston sixth with a sin&le
and OeH Garber pitched the final 211, inninas to cam
his fint save of the season and send the Astros to their
fifth consecutive setback ... Rott Joae11 w~-~entered
the pme in the eighth inning, doubled foy rus first
major leque hit in the ninth, driving in the wanning run
as the New York Mets defeated Philadelphia, 4-3 ...
Dave Concepcion'• two-out double off the center-field
wall scoced Tom Foley in the 13th inning, givina
Cincinnati a 7-6 victory over San Francisco ... Scott
Sa.ndenon pitched a two-hitter, giving up just one hit
after the first inning. and Gary Matthews drove in three
runs as the Chicago Cubs defeated Pittsburgh, 7-1.
Tigers regain winning touch
Detroit's Claet Lemon and Loa Wlllt· ii
aker homered to back the three-hit pitching
of \lnbeaten J ack Morris as the Tigers beat
Cleveland, 6-2 Saturday, stopping the
Indians' winning streak at five games and recording
their 17th triumph in 19 American League games this
season. Morris, who struck out five and walked three, is
5--0_ the-best. start io his carec.L.Hc was_~ in April of
1982 ... In other American League games. Dave
Kingman belted his I 0th home run of April, one short of
the major league record for the
month, to cap a five-run second
inning that powered Ray Bar ri•
and the Oakland A ·s to a 7-0
victory over Minnesota. King·
man, who did not homer until
Oakland's eighth game, bas hit all
I 0 in the last 15 contests .•. Pinch
hitter EddJe Jarak tripled home
the tying run in the ninth and
scored on an error to cap Boston's
rally from a six-run deficit and lift
Whlta.k.et the Red Sox to an 8· 7 victory over
the slumping C hic.ago White Sox, who dropped their
fifth game in a row ... Eddie Murray drove in four runs
with a pair ofsinglcs in the first two innings, leading the
revived Baltimore Orioles to a 6-1 victory which
pinned a fifth straight defeat on Texas. The defending
world champions have won three in a row and six of
their last nine since losing lO of their first 12 contests ..
. WlUJe Upsbaw hammered his sixth home run in
support of Dave Stleb'1 three-h1t pitching an~ 1"oronto
cruised to a 6-0 victory over Kansas City, futnding the
Royals their third shutout in five games ... Claack
Porter and Bob McClure combined on a six-hitter and
Milwaukee scored five unearned runs in the third
inningin routing the New York Yankees, 8-0.
Leonard aaya he'll meet Hagler
SPRlNGFlELD, Mass. -Sugar Ray m
Leonard, returning to the ring after a two-
year retirement, said Saturday be would
fight world middleweight champion
Marvin Hagler, but first he must face bis comeback
opponent, Kevin Howard.
"l'm in a totally different setting now. I have to
reassert myself and prove that I can come back
successfully," Leonard said.
Televtalon. racllo·
Ta&.aVlltON
10 a.m. -PN> aAIKllftAU.: NBA pltlyofft
-._ Yorit at BOiton. ChMMI 2.
11 a.m. -IPOWTaWOILD: Aft-I~ hurt-
ing ~am~ (tape). wortcl PoWWUftlng ot\em-
plonthlp (tape). motorcydl hit• cffmb (t9Pe),
Channel ...
11:30 a.m. -,OOTaALL: USFL. Birmingham vs. Denver, Channet 7.
12:30 p.m. -PRO MeKETaALL: NBA
pt«yofla -Phoenix at Uteh, Chennel 2.
1 p.m. -llA8laAU.: Dodgen et Sen Otego.
Chennll 11.
1 p.m. -GOLF: L~de toumement, CMn..
nel ...
RADIO
1 p.m. -U I UAU: Seattteat Angela. KMPC
(710).
1 p.m. -MIEBALL: Oodgert •t S•n otego.
KABC(790).
McEnroe , Connors paired
Each score straight-set wins
in semifinals of WCT event
From AP dispatches
DALLAS-Defcndmgchamp1on John McEnroe and
No. 2 seed Jimmy Connors each vanquished their
opponents in straight sets Saturday to advance to the
championship match of the World Championship of
Tennis Finals.
The only other time the two Americans have played
each other in the title match here was in 1980, when
OCC wo.men's team
ln Ojal flnals today
OJAI -The Oranac Coa t College women's tcnnt\
pair of lk-cky Bannorc and Noel Gaytan concluded a
i-ucec5sful day for the Pirates by advanc1n1 to the finals 1n
d()ublcs S3turday here
Barmore and Gaytan downed their semifinal oppo-
nents 1n straight set$, 6-0, 7·6, captunng the tiebreaker. 7.4
Barmore is two steps away from the sinaJes title aft.er
postina a win over Santa Ana's Nancy Davis, 6-3, 7-6.
winning the second ~tin a 7-3 tiebreaker.
On the women' collcae level, the UC Irvine double~
team of Linda MaJlory and Stephanie Rhorer ~n't u
fonunate, losin1. 6-4. 6-2. a day after pullinaan UJ>tCl of the
top-seeded team from UCLA.
Today's champ10n4'h1p final\ 1n communi\y collcae
men's ~in1fr5 find, an all·Saddleback Coll~ge hneup w11h
David Salmon. the No I seed 1n the 100-playcr field.
agamst teammate Jim Stephens
Connors won in four sets.
McEnroe, the WCTs only three-time winner,
dominated South Africa n native Kevan Curren, now a
resident of Austin, Texas. 6-3. 6-3. 6-4 m the second
semifinal.
Connors posted a 6-0, 7-6, 6-2 victory over young
Jimmy Arias in the first match.
The final 1s set for today. The winner will collect
S 150,000 while the loser will pocket $50,000.
McEnroe now is 6-0 hfet1me against Curren. the 1979
NCAA singles champion at the Univenity of Teus.
The world's No. I ranked player broke Curren's
service in tbe first game and again at love Lo take the first
set.
McEnroe broke Currcn's service at love spin in the
fourth pmc of the 5CCond set.
Curren, who had won both his matche here after
losing the first two sets in each match. tried his comeback
magic in the third sc:"t.
C'umn was up 4-3 before McEnroe put away any
potential rally by brealuna his opponent's service in the
ninth pme of the third set.
Na vradlova brulJa ulde Anaya
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. -Martina NaVT&tilova
brou&Jlt Laura Amiya's fairy-talc tnp tllrougb the
Tournament of Champions to a era hinJ end Saturday
wuh a 6-0, 6· I victory an the championship match.
Navratilova1 the tournament's top ICed and the
dominant force 1n women's tennis the put three yean., took just 47 minutes to knock off her Pcnivtan challcnacr .
Early in the attond wt, N1vratilov1 won I J c:onseaJtJvt
poant .
After (alltnj behind 6-0, S-0, Am)'I fin~Uy claimed a
pmc. winn1n1 the final two points on drop hou
Amya qualified for a spot an the tournament by
wannina a satellite event in Miami last month. he bad
shocked k'<:ond-$ttded Hana Mandlikova and q:venlh·
SCC<led Andrea Temesvari on her way to the final.
I
•
Long race begin•
International Oftabore a.ie (IOR) Claa A
yacbta fl&bt for poeitloa u tlleJ crOM tbe ~ line ln tbe 37tb 1'ewport to
EDMnacla yacht race Satarday.
BASEBA LL
OVmovesbackinto tie
Sea h a wks throw 5-0 shutout at Marina;
Barons .deadloc ked for third playoff spot
Karl than followed with a two-run
single to left to break the ice.
Kirby got it started in the fourth
with a single and after stealing second
base, was knocked in by Andy
Austwiek. Ocean View moved back into a tie
for first in the Sunset Leaf.UC baseball race with Edison High s Chargers
Saturday -and Fountain Valley -
buried in an early losing streak, bas
found its way into a tie for third place
with Westminster a.s the season
readies for its final two weeks.
Here's what transpired Saturday:
Ocean Vlew 5, Marlu t
The Seahawks upped their league
record to 9-2, eight .,ames better than
cellar-dweller Manna, which was
blanked on five singles by Ocean
View pitcher Dean Douty.
Douty struck out six and d1dn 't
walk a batter in handcuffing the
Vikes, to continue bis red-bot pace.
Douty is now 8-I on the year and has
struck out 84 in a total of73 innings,
while walking just 20 and allowilng
just 13 earned runs -a 1.25 ERA.
Ocean View struck for two runs in
the second inning when David Tinkle
got aboard on an error and advanced
on a free pass to Mike Kirby. Tim
Two more runs came in the fifth
inning when Henry Hitchcock
singled and scored on Tinlde's
double, folJowcd by an RBI-base hit
by Kirby.
Marina failed to move a runner to
as far as third base.
Foutala Valley S, Westmluter 1
The Barons revitalized their play-
off hopes by winning at Westminster
and catching the Lions in the battle
for third place.
Rustlers keep pace;
Pirates postponed
"This was our playoff game,•• said
Fountain Valley Coach Tom
DeKraii. "We felt we couldn't afford
to lose this game."
The Barons, who never trailed after
scoring a second-inning run, received
a stout pitching performance from
Bob Sharpnack, who tossed a four-
hittcr, sturck out five and at the plate,
drove in an insurance run in the top of
the seventh. Golden West College's baseball
team pushed Cerritos out of a tie for
first place and now shares the South
Coast Conference's top spot only with
Santa Ana following Saturday's ac-
tivity.
Orange Coast, meanwhiJe, wa.s
unable to stay with the leaders but
through no fault of its own. The
Pirates' game at Compton wa.s post-
poned because of wet grounds and is
nowschcduled to be played Friday
afternoon.
In the Pacific Coast Conference,
Saddleback continued its slide, losing
its fifth straight game and fell out of
the lead.
Here's how it went:
Golden West 6, Cerritos 4
The Rustlers quickly recovered
from a Ion~ first-inning homer off the
bat of Cemtos' Craig Worthington to
score four of its own, then held off the
Falcons.
In the first. us Light got it started
with a base hit and took third on
David Applezoller's double. After a
walk to Kevin Elster, Shane Aores
doubled to the gap in left-center to
chase home three.
A subsequent vound out moved
Flores to third, where he scored on
Ron Morello's suicide squeeu.
Morello also drove in Golden
West's fif\h run in the third on a
single, and after Ron Ewan homered
to riaht to close the pp to S-3, the
Rustlers added another run in the
sixth. Morello apin was in the
middJe of things, leadina off with 1
double and eventually scoring on
Gary Buckles' sacnfice fly.
David Wille earned his third save
by striking out Cerritos' Kevin Everet
with the tying runs on baso in the top
of the ninth.
Gn11mont , I Saddlebact a
'The Gauchos suffered their fifth
straight setback, again a case of too
little with runners in scorinJ position,
according to Coach Jim Bndewcscr.
..We're just not producing runs."
lamented Bridewescr, who saw his
team faJI to 12-6 in the Pacific Coast
Conference, 18-11 overall.
Starting pitcher Mike Lomeli
sluucd a home run for the Gauchos.
butne and his relief were rocked for
three Grossmont home runs.
Dave Rohde, a product of Corona
del Mar, had a double for the game's
only other extra base hit.
The Gauchos get a breather on
Tuesday.
It was the sixth straight victory for
Sharpnack, who started the season at
1-2. He got relief help from Noel Yan
in the bottom of the seventh, as Yan
pitched out of a second and third,
one-out jam to secure the victory.
After each team scored once in the
second inning, the Barons scored the
go-ahead run in the sixth when Brian
Belcher reached over the plate and hit
a potential pitcbout for a double to
dnve in the run.
Meanwhile, Gary Schoonover con-
tinued his torrid bitting. With an
average of over .500 this year.
Schoonover has hit/in 23 straight
games and bis three shy of the school
record for hits in a season.
UCI splits twin bill
to snap losing streak
UC Irvine snapped an eight-game
losing streak in the opener, but
couJdn't Jet untracked in the niJ.htcap
in splitting a Southern Cahfomia
Baseball Association doubleheader at
CaJ State Fullerton Saturday.
In the S-3 victory in the first game,
the Anteaters erupted for four runs in
the eighth inning to snap a 1-1 tic. Bob
Perry singled in one run and Mike
Suaar hit a bases-clearing double to
chase home three more.
UCI had pulled even in the contest
in the seventh when Steve Morgan
lashed his fifth homer of the season. a
blast to deep center field.
Doug Linton worked 7'1> innings to
rnm the win befnrf' Rn KC"nt picked
up and worked out of an ei~th
inni~ jam and retired the Titans
1-2-3 in the ninth for his sixth save.
In the second game. the Anteaters
were victimized by a six-tut pcr-
fonnanoe from Fullerton's Eddie
Delzer, 3--0.
Delzer struck out seven in winning
his fifth game against two losses.
UCl's best threat was in the second
innin& when the Anteaters put two
men on with two outs, but the runners
were strandtd.
The Titans, leading the SCBA at
15-5, arc 48-17 overall. UCI moved to
7-13 in conference play and 19-30-1
in all games.
Record run at Endurance
West German's Ludwig sets
mar In Riverside qualtfytng
RIVERSIDE (AP) -West Oenna.n driver Klaus
Ludwia set a record Saturday in qualifyina for today's
Orand Pru of £ndaranct sporu car ra.ct at RJverside
International Raceway.
The 34·year-old Ludwia, of Bonn, toured the 3.25--
milc R1vcn1de road course 10 one minute, 34.06 l sccond.s
at an avc"'gc si>ttd of 124.387 milcs.-per-hour. The old
record of 121.5 l 6 mph wa1 t la t year by AJ Holben.
"The wind was the bt11est enemy today," Ludwaa
said "On my fut lap. there waa so much eand that It was
like drivinJ on now."
Co-dnv1n1 the 7-Eleven-cponlOl'ed ford Muttan& in
the six-hour race with Ludwta today will be lndaanapohs
driver Bobby Rahal of Dubhn, Ohio.
In second place on the stanina lfid wtll be Btll
Wh1ttinaton. dnvina 1 Chevrolet-March. Whittinaton's
average speed Saturday was 123. 745 mph. His CCMlnver
will be Randy Lanier.
ln preliminary racies held Saturday, Lance Stewart
wanhcwinncrin the nfo•lap Renault AlhallCitCupmatch
race and Mark Wolocatu1lc took the checkettd flq in the
20.lap Jam Russell Matda formula car ratt
Flnt!lhana SC('()nd to tewan wa Mitch Wriaht while takJ~a the runncrup spot bctund Wolocatuik was Malec
Groff.
• The I 00-milc Champion park PhlJ Challcntc race"
tchcdulcd to beain at 10 1.m. today with tbc cnduranl't
ratt lated to stan 90 minute later. There will ht SJ
starters in the endurance ra
-----
... ....... ,,..
~ecascbeerwilleerw•~tOJW.,_...1 fntc'11d9 lllla'DllioMI ~ Wedraad Ill Mftko OD May 19 .. 20.
HiahJilht of llw wttliad i& die 13-mile
Ealtftadi ~le ridt, wtaidt IMI ,_dlT:W over 9~,000 peniapuu aod :\O::::.,'°" mak-tht event lhc ~ · one-day
ridr U)'Wbcre U1 tbs WOftd.
The tvent i• o_pen 10 lbe public ud bu boetl
delcribed u 1 .. IUa bkyda ri*, aol trace." All
Ptrticlpant• who cocnplete the 73-crille coune
from Tecaie io ~will receive a medal '
and finiabina certi&.tc.
Tbe race _bl:lin• ll Tecate'• Mnicu Towo Sq~ It 9 Lal. 00 Suday, May lO, Md
concludes io Emenada. Aid statiom -which feature rmt aid, mecban.ical amtta.nc:r 1MCb
Ind bevetqn -att lit~&ed ever 6.2 miJe9 for
the leofth of llle 73-mile cou...e.
Enltles for the bicycle ride arc SJO per mdividual. Mon i&lformation may be obtained
by writin_a Monday lntemationa.l lnc., P.O. Box
99120" San Diqo, 92109 or pbonuw (619) 27S-IJ"4. •
Racquetball toamq 9dledaJed
C1ote io I 00 of the best pjo(essiooaJ ncquet-~J playen in the wot1d are expec&ed IO compete
lD ~ Ektelon Racquetball CbampiOlllbip N1t10~ FmaJ1 Wcdoetday lhroup DeXl Sun-
day with the finals tchedulcd for The Sporu
Gallery in Anaheim.
Amons the men's entries are Mike Yellen of Sou~bfield, Michipn, ~e defendin& champion, wb~ 11 be 1hootin& for h11 founb atrai&Jll major
national championship title.
Also entered are Dave Peck oT El Puo and
Marty. Hopn..l the five-time national champion
and winner 01 the 1981 edition.
Amona the top women arc Heather McKay of Toron~o1 teek.ina her third straight crown here
Costa Mesa's Lynn Adams, Fountain Valley'~
Laura Manino and two-time national ch.am ·on
Shannon Wri&ftt.
Amatear 1ou toam.ment
prinae County amateur golfs can make last· minute rcservauons for Monday's American
Golf Carta Blanca California Oassic which
benefits the Children's Home Society of Cali-
fornia's child abuse and foster homeprograms
()pc:ninlstill remain at Fullerton Golf Co~
(871-Sl41 • Casta .Del Sol-~ission Viejo
(SSl-0940 , Mounwn Shadows in Huntington
8each(84 1364), Rancho San Joaquin in Irvine
(SS l-SS22) and Yorba Linda Country Oub (779-2461 ).
Green feesarcS 17.SOat the public courses and
$37.SO It Yorba Linda. A new car and aotfin& v~tions to Scotland and Hawaii are amona the
pnzet.
. ' ~
Vlllted ••r ou toama.meat The third 1nn'u!un1te4 Way of West 0ranee
County aotf tournament is acheduled for Mlle &Juan OolfCoune in Fountain Valley May 11
with first &ee at 11 a.m.
Entry fees are SJS per penon, which i.ndudea
cart aod dinner. Dinner sucats are SIS each. . The field i1 limj&ed to 112 playcn with awards
for lonaest drive, clotest to pin, low sross low
net. handfoap and blind bocie for men' and women.
Entries must be made by May S. The
tournament is rpon90rcd by Pcret's Restaurant
in Fountain Valley.
For further information, phone 898-0029.
Rl~enlde race Mt Jaae S
The 1984 Winston Cup Grand National terics
will be at Rivenide International R.acewar J~
3 with such dnven u Richard Petty Bobby Allison and Darrell Waltrip entered. '
Petty and Alliton have won this event t.bn:e
timea and Waltrip is the Ol;lfy t.ck~
winner with wins i.n 1980-81.
1 t' •a three-day event bcainnina J UM l and the
finals will include• companion event -lhe 200
NASCAR Grand Amer1can st.ock car race.
Tickets for the fi naJs rante from $20 to $28 fOf" 11'1~ aeau and SIS for aencral admission.
Junior pod.stand seats ranse from SS to $13
with c~lldren under ,12 with a ~nt admitted
free. Tick.cu are av11la~ at a reduction of SJ when PUl'ChalCd in advance.
Ticieu are available at the raceway's box
office and aU TicUt.master outlets. for further
information. pbooe 6Sl-l 161.
Schmidt highest-paid player?
He reportedly makes m ore
tha n Winfield and Garvey
PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Philadelphia Phillies third
baseman Mike Schmidt is baseball's ~est-~d player
with a ba~ salary of just under $2 million this year, the
Philadelphia ln~ircr reponed in its editions today.
In a copyri t story, the Ioqui~r said Schmidt couJd
earn more than 2 million in 1984 ifhe collects bonuses in
his contract for finishing anywhere from first through fifth
in the Most Valuable Player baJloting.
The paper said Schmidt earns a base salary of
SI, 989,875 -more than those of Dave Winfield of the
New York Yankees and Steve Garvey of the San Diego
Padres.
The paper did not list the salaries of players outside
the Phillies. But Winfield's 10-year contract is reportedly
worth $25 million and Garvey's five-year contract is for $6
million. ·
"There are certain players that we caH franchise
playe rs," said Phillies President Bill Giles. "You have to
pay those key players what the going rate is, or else you're
going to be in trouble ... I don't think Mike Schmidt 1s
overpaid."
Schmidt said, "My feclinf'S always been, they've got 1t
to pay. They wouldn't be pe)'lng if they didn't."
The Inquirer also said the Phillies have a payroll of
about S 11 .5 million, probably lhc highest in the NatfonaJ
League and the third-highest in baseball, behind the New
York Yankees and the Angels of the American League. No
figures for those teams 'NC1C gjvcn.
The lnqu1re:r said it obtained the Phillies' Waria
from the team's .. contract summaries. ..
Under Schmidt's contract the sJ~gger wiU coUect a
base sa1arY of$2,096, 961 next year, SI. 903,000 in 1986 and
$2,094,000 in 1887.
CdM's Palnier sets
1nark at Mt. SAC
WALNUT -Mark Palmer's school record leap of~ 7
in the high jump ttighHghted Coron.a dcl Mar High 's efforts
Saturday in the ML SAC Relays.
PaJmer. who finished fourth overall in the event, just
missed a ll) later at ~9.
Other Sea KJOg performances included:
•The 4x 100-metcrrela}: team finished first in Its beat
and second ovcraJI. Pat McGrath anchored the relay. and
overcame a tWO-)ard deficit.
•In the 1,500 meters. standout Dave Anderson
clocked a 3:59.02 for a third-place firusb.
•The 4x800-meter team was fourth with a umc of
8: I 1.5 featuring a I :58.5 anchor from Andy Coleman.
•Cart Scbnug won his flight in the PQle vauJt at 13-6
and just missed cleanng a school rec-0rd h4eighth of 14-1.
Devil's
Bag wins
Trfal 714 385-1919
LOUISVILLE. K). (AP)
-Devil's Bag prepped for
the May 5 Kentucky Derby
With 3 front-running VIC-
tOry in the Derby Trial
Stakes Saturday on open-
ing da} at C'hurch11l
Downs.
AMERICA'S PERFORMANCE SEDAN
The 1983 ~.,car-old
champion will no" go into
next Saturda} 's I 1·4-m1le
Derby wuh two straight
v1ctonc!t -at ~c"cn
furlongs and a mile -but
without ever having won a
race around two tums
Ridden by Eddie Maole.
Devil's Bag finished ~''•
lengths m front of 81lox1
Indian after racing the mile
on a fast track in I 35 3-5
under 122 pounds
The Ila) colt owntXi by
James P. Mills. who has
been syndicated for $36
milhon. earned S3S.425
and paid $2.20. There w&$
wm hcttina only.
Ocv1l's eaa· victor)"''
achieved Wlthout the Ha.II
of Fame trainer \\ ood)
Stephens present The 70·
year-<>ld Stcphtn~ 1 1n a
Lou1sv11lc hospital rt·
cupcrauna from pncu-
mon1~ and OeVll's Baa wu
saddled turda) b) M1~r
Gnffin. a former tnuntr
who break' ycarhnf'i for
C111bomc Farm
Devil'\ Ba nov. ha\ ~on
thf'(C of fou1 !tan thn )Car
and c1 ht of nine can-er
races.
PONTIAC 8000 STE
World Class Excellence For 1984
BUY ME NOW! LEASE ME NOW!
SJS,441 OR
Loaded wntl wwy ~ option~ •
GMAC ftnanctng ait>tect to credit llP-
provel An cars .,. eubtect to prior Mle on., e.JtPlrea 5 days •"-pubMcation
sz791a
•8 month ~ ..._ &..s Oii
15,000 m ~ year. eap, COit
S 15.•6' 1 ~I MIOOO Tot.I pe,-
!Mnll of S 14,234 88 Tot down to
irnt ate lease, S 1397. (S. 21 \582~
ACROSS FROM THE BIG .A ON KATELLA
JUST WEST OF THE 57 .ORANGE FREEWAY
•
:
,
f 0 H l rH R ~ C 0 RD
~ • • •
MAJ0a L•A.U• ITANDtHGS
Anlel1c:M Leetue
W81T DIYISION
0.klend
~
SMttte
W L ~ 01 I) f .'91
... 10 .• :-
11 10 .524 l\Ai """""°'• l<enM.1CllY
10 12 455 ) • II 421 ,,,.,
THH
Cllleeoo
• 13 .Jll 4V)
' '' .316 s~
Detroit
Tor'Ollto , ........ "° N\llweukM lot ton .. ".,.,.. New Von
•AIT Dfvts.ON
17 2
lJ ' 10 1
' 10 9 12 . " 1 12
.... .,.. 1c-
~ IO, SMll1t I o.troll 6, C...,.._nct 2
loaton I, Chieffo 1
0.klend 1, MlllMIOI• 0 a.tflmot'e 6, Tuea I
Mllw~ •• New y~ 0 Twonto 6, KeNU CltY 0
T .. Y'a 0-
M S
·"I see 474 .m .lei ,..
SYI • • ' 10
10
SMllle (Moore 1-11 e l Aft9lh (Wiii 2·1l
CleYelenct (~ 0·01 el Detroit 1"-lrv 2·1)
MllweukM (H... 1·2) •I New York
(HIMro 4•0)
Texet (Siewert 0-S> e t Belllmort !Devla
0-0)
Boaton (Boyd 0-21 " Cnl'800 (OollOll 2·2)
T-to IClencv 1·11 •I K•itlH Cllv <llKk J•ll
NllnnetOI• (Vlole 0-3 end Smllhaon 3-1)
et OMlenct (Scwe11aen 1·3 •nd Coctlroll O·Ol.
2
MeftdltV'a G•mea SHttlt el AMilb. (n)
TnH •I TorOlllO, (n)
Clevetend •I B•lllmort, (nl
New York •I Chlceoo. (l't)
Nenen.1 L .. eu•
WIST DIVISION
W L .. ct. c;e s.noi.oo .,.,...,..
Aflenl•
ClnclnNll
Sen Frenclsco
HoullOll
IS 7 "1
IS I .6~
' 11 '50 • 13 .311
7 13 3SO
7 14 333
EAST DIVISION
Ptllledell>hl•
Chlceoo
Ne• Yon<
Montr .. 1
St Louis
Plllal>urQh
11 7
11 •
II I
10 10
10 11
7 11
'81VnllV'• kerft S.n Dle9o S, Dedeer1 I
SI. Loula 6, Motllrt•I I
Afleitle S, HoualOll 3
New Yorto. 4, Phlledelonle 3
611
S79
.S79
SOO
•76
.ll9
VJ s
6'h
7 , . .,
, ..,
1 7 ,
'
Clnclnnetl 1, S.n Frenclsco 6 113 1nnln11'>
Chlcaoo 7, Pllls0Vr11h I
Tedll'f'aGemtt DMew'l (Pelle 3· I) er Sen D1t90 (WM·
IOI! 2-1)
SI LOUii (Cox 7· 11 ., MonlrH I (LH
3-1)
Sen Frenclsco (Kru11ow 1·) eno ltOO•
lnlOll 2·21 •I Clnclnnell ($oto 2-1 eno
IMrfl'IVI 0-ll, 2
Phlledell>hl• (Koosmen 1·3) er New
York !Terrett 7·1J
Chlceoo !Troul 7· ll et Plltaburgh
(Celldelerle l · ll
Atlente !Berto.tr 7·7) et Houaton (Scott
O·IJ, (n) ~
Mlndev'a G•mes OedeW1 et Sen Frencl.co, (n)
MOlllrHI et Phlledelllfll•, In)
St UMll1 e t Pllt~rgh, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Aneeta 10, Marlnen 1
SEATTLE CAUl<OttNIA
P«cont 2t>
&onnell d
ADevls lb
GTllOtmlf
DHnoan r1
SHnoan <11'1
COin 3t>
MMce<lo c "'"'°' ..
Tehlla
ellrl'lllll M rl'lllll
' 1 I 0 Peltla d 4 2 2 • 4 0 0 0 8ell!QUt r1 SO i l
30 1 0 IUch nlt> •1 00
3 0 0 0 WllfOllQ 2t> I 0 0 0 • o 2 1 D.Cnc' oh l o 1 o
' O l O Downing If 3 2 O 0
4 0 I 0 Grich lb 1 1 0 0
3000 ._, 3271
4 0 0 0 Schofhd II l I 0 0
PlcciOIO 3t> ' I 2 I lJ I 6 I T...n JI 10 I 1
ScertbY lrll*lel see• 100 ooo ooo-1 C:......... OJI 100 SOx-10
G•me Winning ltSI -N-.
E-COlft 2, Perconrt 2. lt•mo•, Ito· J•cklOll OP-S.etlle l , Clllllornle 1
L08-SHllle I, C•lllornle 7 2B-8oone lB--Pellls HR-Peltla !II SF-Boone
II" H ll Ell 88 SO
*"" Lenguon L,1·1 6 t·J 3 6 J
8Hro I 7·3 0 I 1
c..IHwnle
ZAM W,3·1 9 6 1 0 3 2
HBP-<;r1cn (bv La ngston! WP-Ze lln.
T-2::1' A-31,537
NATIONAL LEAGUE
PedrH S, Dodeerl 1
LOS ANGllU SAN DllGO
Sex ?b
wn1111t0 r1
Guerrer 3t>
Mershll If
SlubC>t ID
Ml<lnoo ct
SC:loKle c
8Runetu
Wektlo
MottdV pf!
COle10 T...U
•brl'lbl lltlrl'lbl
' 1 2 0 Wlgglna 2t> l 0 0 0
• 0 I 0 Gwvnn r1 4 I 1 0
3 0 0 0 Ntlllft 3t> l 2 I 0
• 0 l 1 Gervev lb ' I 2 • ' 0 0 0 Kennec!v c l 0 0 0
' 0 0 0 Merlln1 If l 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 McltVnl ct 3 I I l
• 0 1 0 Tmpttn 11 l 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 He•klns p l 0 l 0
1000 Goueoeo 0000
0 0 0 0
Jl 1 S 1 T.-.
kenbVlrll*lel
LM ~ 100 000 000-1 SM 0-.. JOO 020 Olx-S
G1me Wlnnln11 ltSI -G.rvev 161 E-Se• LOS-Lot Anoelft 7, Sen Dlelx>
6. 78-Sex, Whllfleld, C.ervey Hll-Gervev
(2), McRtvnoloa ISi S-Wtleh, Wiggin•
II" HREll88SO
LM Alltl'lft
Welch L,2·3 6 ' 4 s 3 COiet 7 2 1 0 l
Safi 0-..
H1wldnt W,3 0 I S I I 1
Goueoe 1 0 0 0 0
T-2 11 Ito 41 ~16
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Anwf'!un LHeue
(Tllf'evtfl f'rtdtV's Gemnl
SA TTING 130 er bets) Gerbev O.troll,
41S, TrtmmeU. Detroit. lt7, Gercle, Tor
onro, m . UPoth•w. Toronto, lts Bell.
TP'onlo, .37'
RUNS Tremmt!t, O.lroll. 19, Wtllteker,
Oetroll, 1', 11110!\ell, 8•1f"'-•· II, Ul>M\tw,
T0<onto, 17, Sutler CleYttenct. 16 Gercle,
TOf'onlo, 16 LYIW'I, .,,_a, 16.
1181 Klngmefl, 0.klend 24 O.CWes, ~. 201 Mb\eov, f oronto II. Ile. Jea-. ""91b. 111 1tl01r.e11. 8eltlmore 17
HITS Gtrcl•, TOf'OfllO, JS e.14. TorOlllO,
11. Trtmtl'letl, Detroit, 79, lllOlr.fl'I Belli·
more, 21, O.Clncft, """'1. V
OOUI LES 8etl, Toronto, 9, ·-· A,....s, 81 Vl>M\tw. Toron10. I. Seti h •H.
7, Merr lnolv, New York, 1
TRIPLES t •rt tied with 2
HOME lltUNS Ktngmen, 0.klend, t ,
ltlC*fl'!, Seltlm on , I, Devh S..ttlt, 6.
STOLEN BASES· Gercle , TorOftlO, ll,
Sull., Clt vtlt nd 12. Strntte rd, c .. veteno 9, ....,,a, .,...., a.
PITCHING 13 Otcl\lonsl C•udlll, Oel<
lend, J·O, 2 2S, Gure, l<•nte' Cllv, l ·O, l 33, l..H I. Toronto, 3 0, 2 10, Morris, Detroit
4·0, r 9', Nletaro. New Yori<, •·O, 091, Stewert, Settlmort J-0, 7 70, !olleb, Tor ·
onro. 3-0. 7 •S
H ltlKE'OUTS 9tvi.ven Cltveleno 31 •
Sutcllfft , Cltveten(I 7$, L .. f, Torew110, 7',
Mootrt, lealllt. 24. Witt, ~. ,.
SAVES Qulsenbe<rv, K•nua CllV, 6,
C•udlN, OPlend. 4, Ce l'!\Kho, C•vet•nd. l,
Flr!Off\ Mllw•ul<H , ), L.tmo, TOf'OlllO )
NetMnel LNtue
I llwwtfl f'l'tdtV'• O•tMSI
IA TTINC. !JO et l>eh l ~-. °'"9r1, AJt1 (;wvnn ~ Di.o<> O J
lt•v """llurt h JIS Lefet>vre. PMe<1e1
°"le JH . Litt" Mof\lrH I, )~
•u NS W~1ne Sen Oleoo 1• (iwyn<>
Se" D•N IJ l/ lte lnel Molllltt l. 16 Llttle
Mot\l• .. I IS, Matlhew\ Cl'llal90 H ltll c.,,., MOntr .. t, 10 _,...,
e>.-r~ "' w .. hlnet011 Allent1 II Sdlmldl ~.. 17 ~,, Molt
tr .. 1. 17
HIT S C,wyrin k n 0~ )4, llll ..
M0/11'89' 11 lhlnei MolllfH f 7' Sea,
~. »1 ltn, Plll•ouroh 7S
femcNetOll ~" D•to0. 2S ~·LES c.,rel', MonlrN I 1 lllllt
MOnlfM I 7 C Oevls, kn F'r•Ml.CO. 6
Ce'I, ChlcellO 4 F Potlel', N•• YOf'• 4 ,,.n(Ol\t ~1,._1 6 Trll!Q. ~" rr111
Clt<O •
Caught
UC lnine buerunner Brady Andenon
can•t avoid taC from Cal State Fullerton'•
Kirk Batee while ~ to diTe back to
flnt. UCI apUt twin t.W7
STOLEN BASES S.muet, Phlledelol'll•,
12, Wiggins, Sen Dlelx>, 11, Redus, Clncln·
nerl. I, Gwynn. Sen Di.o<>. 7, Miiner
Clnclnnell, 7, Sex, DMew'l, 11 WHhlngtOll, Atlente, 7
PITCHING 13 oeclalona) Smltn, Mon·
lrH I. 4-0, 7 17, H-...cvn. DedWn, 4-0,
l ... 1 Hu<l\CWI, Pl\llede!Pnl•, l -0, 4 43, ~-. °'"9r1, l·l, 1..141 Cenoe4erle, Plttaouroh,
l ·l. US; L.ff, MontrH I. 3·1, 2.62, Show,
Sen Dleeo, l · I, 2.01
STRIKEOUTS llven, HOUSIOll, 31,
V~, Dedlifn, 211 Soto, Clnclnnell,
V . Gooden, New York, 26, Strenvl, Clncln·
nail, 25
SAVES· Goueoe. Sen Dleeo, 7. Sutter.
St. Louis, S, Hollend, Phlledell>hl•, 4, Smith,
Cn1Ceoo. 4, N~, DeOeera, 41 ltt·
eroon. Montr .. 1, '
c .....
... ST GAMa
UC INIM S, C.. S•te fl.,...,_ J
UC Irvine 000 000 I~ '
Cal Stelt FuHerton 100 000 020-:J 10 1 L1ntew1, 1Cen1 (I) eno Moroe11. Rouaev,
Wrlohl Ill end C1llrtv. W-Llntew1, 3·S
L-ltousev. 6·7 2S-Sug., IUCll Hlt-Morg•n IUCI)
SECOND GAME
Ct1 Sfllte ,119tr19n J, UC 1rV1M 0
UC Irvine 000 000 ~ • ?
C.I Stele Fullerton 0'20 100 x-3 S O
Oeew end Morgen, Otiz.er end C.ffrev
w-ot11er, S-2 L-o.tM. J·S 2&-erv•nl
ICSFJ, C..ITICIO ICSFl. H•mmond (UCI)
Communltv caleee
G4'dell Wftf 6, Cen1tM 4
Cerrito~ 200 100 Ole>-4 6 1 GOiden Wfll 401 001 OOa-6 10 1
Bedt, Agundez (I) •nd S<!ulrH ,
Scl'looltr, 8ullOll (I), Wilk (9) • nd F lorH
W-SChOoief, 6·2 L-9eck, 1·4 21-Ewerr
CC>. Aoc*tz.Olltf' (GWCl. FlorH IGWC). Morello (GWC> HR-Ewer! !CJ, Worth·
lngton (Cl
Greaament 7, Saddiebtdl l
S.ddltback 002 100 000-3 I 3
Groasmonl 010 014 Ol.11-1 ? I
Lomeli, Merlo.et (I) end Cemtcho,
Devis, Lene (I) •no Sl•dek W-Devl~
L-Lomell. 28-ltof\de (SJ Hit-Lomeli
(S), Sladek (G), Rubelcevt (GI, Ev•na IGI
COtNt\UNfTY COLLEGE
s.u1tl CN1t C•• toe•
GOiden Wftt
S.nte Ane
Orenge CoH t
Cerrllos
FullertOll
Ml Sen Antonio
CYOf'HI
Comoron
W l T GB
16 ' 0 16 6 0
IS 6 0 ''>
IS 7 0 I
12 10 0 4
• ,, 0 •
4 11 1 tl'l'J
0 20 I IS S.IUrdtv's Sc..a
Or•llll8 Coest et Comoton. oPd wet
grounds
GOiden WHI 6, Cerrlloa 4
FUlleflOll 4, CVWftl 2
S.nte Ane 9, Mr S.n AntOlllo 6
TwMllY"a Gemft 12:>1 !Mn. I
Ortnoe CoeSI •• CvorHS
GOiden W111 et Mr Sen AnronlO
Cerritos er Fullerton
Senre Ane •t Comolon
Peclflc Cout ConfweMe
Sen O~o MeH
Sedd .. beCI<
Pelom.,
Southwfltern
Grou mont
MlraCoare
Sen Dleoo
W LT GB
12 s 0
12 6 0 ~
10 7 0 7
t 6 I 2
• 1 2 l
S 11 I 6'h
2 IS 0 10
S.turdav'a k«M
Gro"mont 1, Se <1<11e1>acro: l
Sen Oleoo Mff• II. Sen Dleoo I
Sovtnweatern 6, P•IOmer S 111 lnnlno11
TlleldtV'• Gemes (2:l0 p.m.)
Sen Dlelx> et Mlr•Coat•
Sen Di.o<> Me'8 el PtlOmtr
Grou monr t i Sovtnwearern
""" ~ OCMft View S, Mar1N t
OcH n View O?O 12 0-S t 1
Merine 000 000 ~ S 2
Douty eno Klrbv. Emrnona, lteltach U l
e no SIOkoVll W-Doutv L-Emmort•
28-T!Mlt (OV
l"-.IHI V ...... J, Weatmlnstw I Founteln Vellev 010 001 1-3 I 4
W91tmlnater 010 000 0--1 4 7
5nerone<"., Y•n 17) end L~ro, Moon ev •lid Long 7S-hlcher !F VJ 38-<>laen (FV)
Edison
OcH n View
Wt1tm1n,rer
FOU11t1ln V•ltev
Hulltl,,IJ1on SHcn
Merln•
W L GB
' 2 9 1 • s 3 • s 3
2 ' 7 1 10 •
S.llHdtY'I SC.ts
Founteln Velltv l , Westmlnsrtr I
Oceen Vie# s, Merine o r..-.,,.o-
Hun11no1on leach .,. OcHn vie-11
Mlle Souart P•rt. (1)
Merine e t Wtttmlnsltr 13 IS)
W.....WV'aOeme
E<111on "'' l'ounte1n v ,1,.v et M iit Sauer• F>er.k 171
MM'• YtleVbal
HIGH SCHOOL ~ Tl*• ~ ,...,.,.
l • Outnl• 139' ~rlne, IS 1 a-t t~ )
NIA .. veftl . CON,•R•NC• saMlfltNAU
< llest·ef· sew.. I
LMIW1 134, Delle• 91 (L.tlrers 1 .. d
aeries, 1·0)
TedtV's Gemea
N-YOf'k et BoslOll
Pfloelllx •t Ul•h
N-Jerwy e t MllweukH
TWsdlY'I 0-
Dell" et Ltlltn
New Jtraev et MllweukH • ..... .,..Games
Ntw Yort& et Boston
Phoenix •I Ut•h
Tiwndi'f'• ~
Mllw•ukM et New Jerwv
,.rid.Iv'• Gemtt
L.tller1 11 OelllS
Bolton •I N-York
Ul1h e r Phoenix
Safut'clt'('a GelN
Mllw•ukM er N-Jerwv
lundly, May ' Ulltn el 0 1"4s
Boston •t N-YMI<
Ut•h et Phoenix T-..v,M9YI
(If ....... ,..,,
D ... s •t LUen
New Jeraev •I Mltw•vllM
Pnoenlx •I Vtel'I
W ....... Y. May'
(N MCH\trv)
N-York et 8oslOll
Tlwndtlv, Mav 10
(NMCMMrv)
Ullers •I D•lle• Mllw1ukM •I New Jer.ev (or Frldev, ,.,.,.y 11)
Utah el Phoelllx
"'*¥·May 11
(If MCftMIY)
8oslOll el N-Yort&
Sat\lrdty, Mty 12
'" nKellel'V) D•llH et Ulrtn
PllOenla et Ulah
SUflclty, MaY u
(" nteftUrt)
Ntw York •I 8oslOll
New Jersev et MitweukH
&.Aken 134, Maver1c111 91
DALLAS -Ae>ulrrt 16, Vlnce11I 11,
Cummings 6. 8tedtme11 12. Devi' I,
NlmPhlus 6, Gtmett 11. H.ri>er S, ENla S,
TUl'ner 4, w .. 1 5, Phegley 2. Tolela· JJ·'6
24-32" \ LOS ANGEllS -Coooer 11, Rembla 1.
Abdul·J•bC>er II, Johnson 6, McC.H 15,
Wortl'lv 10, Scott 10, McAdoO 17, Nerer 6
Sorl9Qs IS. Kuoehek 2. Tote11 Sl·IS J0-37
134
"9r• by Ou•r1WI
DellH 11 11 2t 1S-91
Loi Angete1 36 37 31 3S-ll•
ThrH ·POlnr ooels-Coooer. McGee
He roer F ouled out-Wear Rt·
boundt-Oalles 41 (Nlme>hlus 10), Loa
.t.noelft '3 IR•mt>h II Aulsta-O•ll•s It
(0.Yls, TUfner 4), LOI AnoelH 37 tJohnlOll
11). Tot•I foub-O•lle• V , Loa Anoelft 26
Ttellnlce ls-O•llH Coeeh Motte. Curn·
mlngs A-13,S12
Alvtnldt EndUrance
Toe> quellllers lor toaev'a II• hour
Greno Prix of Enourenc~ soorh cer rer~ ot
ltfvera~ lnttrnetlonel ltacewev
1. Kleus Lu<lwlg·Bot>t>v Rahe l, Fora
Must•ng, 174 317 me>h
2 8111 Whlrtlngton·Rendv Len>er Che•·
roltt·MerCh. 123.7•5 mph
3. Al HOll>ert·Dtrtll BtH. Porache 967,
121 9•9 mon
4 Al L-'·Art ~-Hurltv H1ywooo
Cnevrolef·Mereh, 121 OH S. C""°' Kenoe•· Jim Cook, Chtvroltt
Lole. 1 lt ~ mofl
6 S.rtl Ven Cler Me<wt·To11v Merlin
Porache·MerCl't 111 797 mon
7 JoM Keteolen· JOhn Uovo Ct>ev·
rOltt ·L<Me, I II S 10 mofl
I Kell-Mlllef·Meun coo DtNtr¥Hr.
ChevrOltl·Mereh, 117 M4 mOh
t Johfl Mortoft·Ton• Adamo•lc1,
Chevrolel·LOle. 111 S'3 mOh
10 K•oru Hoshlno·Meaonerl S.lve
Tovote·Toms. 117340 me>h
11 Lyn Sr. JM!W1·Jlm Trueman. Foro·
Ar90, 111.0lt mcitl.
12. 800 ,Aj(ftl·JoM O'SIMll, Poo che
T ur1IO, 116. f 17 mofl.
1> Gle"91ero Mortlll· F ulvlo Selleblo,
Ford·Momo. 116.11t mc>fl
14 Ken Medre11·M L s-Wayne
Plclierlng, Sulck·Mtrch, 115.491 moh
IS W•Yne Ser.er-Jeck New,um,
Potldle Turbo. 115. 131 mon
NHL •voffa
eotf"&RENCI f'INAlS
latuNIV'• ~ NY IU.~• s. MonfrH I 7 IMonlrN I
'-•d• --~·· 1 11 Eomonton e. Mlnnewt• S ll:Odmonton
1te<11 .., .. , > Ol
T-.MV'a o.mcs
MonlrM I et HY 1111~\ -EClmOlllOll •I Mlnnesot1 ,,.,,..,,. o..nea
NY I~\ If MontrM I
Mtnneaol• •• fdrnOftlon (If ntO \M'VI
s.tur•V'• G-MonlrMI et NY tlletlOer\ ltt llee.tnerv)
'411'*v, MllY 6 0-
£ dmOlllon e t M~I• (II n«:enervl
TWMllY, MllY I G•me.
NY hl1ndM\ •• MontrH I llf "8Cesse•vl
Mtnnesot• •I ld~IOll (II 118(1\W•vl
WCT teuf'Mment
(etD*t)
~Slnllet
JC>M McEnroe IU.S.l o.f. Kevin Curre11
(US ), 6·3, 6·4, 6·4, Jimmy Connon (U.S.> def Jimmy Aries (U.S.I. 6-0. 7·6, 6·2.
Women's teunwment
(•f l.tll• 9WM Vllte, ..... ,
Slnllet fllNll
Merlin• NevrelllOv• (U.S.) def L•ure
Arreve IU S ), 6·0, 6·1
Deullltl SernMlrleb
Anne HoC>bea (U.S.)·Wtndy Turnbull
(Au\trtllel won tlY defeult; Hene Men·
dllko11e (C1echoslov•ki.l-Cleudle Kohde-
t<llscll (Wtll Germenvl def Virginie Ru11CI
fllom1nl•>·Kettw Horvern (U.S.), 4·6, 7·6,
6·3
()tel
COLL•Ge MaN
Ou• ....... Slnllet
Nlnlev (UC S.nre lerl>ere) Clef.
Btrhem (UCll, 4·6, 6-3, 6-4, Anlston IUCI)
def Soeermen (Cel Lutheren), 6·1, 7·6
lel'nNIMI ........
Alldtnon (UC s.itt• ~rel Oef.
Anlllon (UCI), 6-0, 2 ... 7·S.
OWIM ... ~
AnlllOll·l•rflem (UCO Oef Tl'IOlnPIOll· IC•bellla (USIUI. 6-2, 3-6, 6·l.
~ Deullltl Anl\IOll·S•rhem (UCll def Wekefltld·
llovt>el !Fresno SI.I, 7·S. 6·7. 6-4.
COMMUNITY COLLIGI MEN
OUertllrilMI llnlle$ Selmon. IS.ddlebecit) Oef Collins
IBurtt l. 6·2, 6·4, Steohella (S.ddlebt<:k)
def. Gllhorn (S.nl• 8erber•l. "'· 4-•. 6-3.
,,,...,.~ ....
Sermon IS.ddlebeckl def Ullmenn
IP•IOm•rl. 4·6, 6· I, 6·2, Sttl>hen\ IS.ddlt·
beck) def. Hewto.eabv (Mt Sen Anrontol. ,.,, 0-6, 6·4
HIGH SCHOOL MEN
OU•""11Mt '**81
P•ullOll·Ollver ( Unlvtnftv) def. NI tel·
t<rew11>trg (Senti S1rt>ere), 6·3, 6·2, Jung·
JUltO (H1cleflde Heights) def. Hedi·
BtllllWO (Bevertv Hiii\), 6·2, 6·l, Prooo·
SrkKla (CCl'Oflll dtl Merl Oef. Colw .. ·SIMlt
(L• JOllll. H . 6-1, 6-4; o.olen•Hum
(Soulh Torrance) def. GoldeMen· JoMaon
(Mlrtlftlt), 4·6, 6·2, 6·1
StrnHIMI• °"*" P•ulaon·Ollver lUnlverallv> def. Juno·
Jung (H•clende Helohts), 6·7, 6-l , 6-4,
Hunt·D•dlen !South Torre nc•l def. PrOPC>·
Brl9Gs (Corone def Mer), 4·6. 6·3. 7-S
'**"' """' Hunt Dedl•n !South TOf'rtnctl def
Pt ul•on·Ollvtr IUnlveralty), 7·S, 4·6, 6·3
(Ne,.... Slnllet
Gr"1' (University) def. Grennla
(Slal'IOCIJ, 6·4, 6·2, Tr*-o 1s.n11
8erbertl def Dunn (Chemlntdel, 6-2, 6·1;
Amend (Mlreleltt l def. e rowM08foer
ICorOll• del Mer), S-7. 6·1, "°I; Rober!aon
tGercea) def Y•IH ISoYth Torrence>. 6·2,
6·1
SemtlNI ....
Amend IMlrelfttt) def Greer !Unlver·
altv), 7·S, 6· I, Trlouero (Sent• 8•rbere)
def llobtf'llOll (Gr~•>. 6·4, •·6, 6·l. .... """' Amend (Mlrelestt) Clef Trlo~o IS.nit
Berber•), 7·S, 3·6, 6·3.
Nore. In lhe IMm llnels, Unl11ers1tv
llnlsl'leO 118'<1 tor first with Mlr•IMlt •"<!
South Torr•nce with 10 oolnta eolec•. Sent•
Bert>ere w11 next with nine •nd Coron• dtl
M~r tted t l11ht
COLLEGE WOMEN
Que,..,.. OeutN$
Serrv·NHtd (Sen Dleoo Sr ) Clef
Mellorv·lthO<er IUCll, 6·4. 6·2
COMMUNITY COLL.EOE WOMeN
~Slnllet
Bermoft tOCCI def D•vls IS.nit Anel,
6·3, 7·6
CMto ..... DNlltl
8ermor•·G•Y1tn ((>CCI def D•VI•·
lttnko IS.nit Anel, 6·4, 6· 1 SemHNI~
S1rmore·Geyten IOCCI def Lucero·
Lyona !Sullel, 6·0, 7·•
U"L
w•ITEllN CON,Ell•NCE ~telflc
"" L T ,ct, ,., ,.
o.n .. er 1 2 0 111 20t 111
Arlrone 4 ' 0 '°° 15' 17S
LA lllllrftl , ' 0 ,,, 143 200
0er.:11no 0 • 0 000 12 211
c:.tllral HovatOll • l 0 '" 1'4 7.35
Mlc.flltel'I • J 0 .. , 2U llO
OlllehOme ' 4 0 MO lS> m
Chlceoo J ' 0 .m 20t , ..
~,,Antonio l 1 0 JOO 1111 110
IASTaltN COM,llltlNCI
Alellfk
P,,lleOttOhlt • I 0 tOO 151 llS N-Jenev 1 ' 0 111 7'0I ll-t
Pitt lbuf'etl ' • 0 200 161 1" We\tl•l>OIOll l • 0 100 ,,. m
~
l.rrn1~m • I 0 .. 262 m
New Or!Mn• 1 l 0 100 21f "' T'amoe ••v 1 J • 700 t47 m
JK111onvllle 4 ' • -,., -Memoflla a 1 0 -111 -........ Iara
T •moe 8•Y fl. WHl!lneton If
Sell MIOl\tO JA, Mltoi-. 2> TMIV'•.._. alfl'l\IMflem ,, 0...-
0.ttlalld •• CNcMo M'lfl'lltl'lelHew_.,....
MlllllV'• --LA •unu '' ~ton
HelYwMCI hit!
SATUllOAY"I ••tuL.T1 <••u_,.., .. ,u..,..,,.....,
....rRACa.•\.'t~
L9 Fontevn lHewlevl UO lAO 2.IO
TllCllt Tift (SIOAle) UO UO
GMllc'a F•¥or (Guerre> 6.20
Alto reced: Swtfftv Mine, K!Mor•,
L.nlle'a Dlt>, AccrUlll, lledt of Ludt.
Time: 1:16 3/S.
S.CC*D •AC•. One milt
PrOP« lled (Pedroze) lS.IO UO UO
Run the Ge1exv (Sfloemekerl S.20 4.00
u voneonme CFllll uo
Abo ntCld: Meacer9do, 8ftt HMrt.o,
Lord Oil Erin, Lov« Boy Mk:kev, lndl•n
Arr<YW.
Tlme: 1:.'W 2/S.
U DA.IL Y DOUB LI 11·21 oeld 110.IO
THlllD •ACL 1 111' mllH. ,._.,,.,, (snoemakerl 1.10
Trlbet King (Slblllt)
FllUlllln CMcCerron)
Abo raced: Gelo MonlH ,
Slnolt Tl'lrMd, Exclusive Arla.
TlnW: 1:'5.
4.IO l.IO
I IO S.to u o o.,1enoe.
as IXACTA 17·2) o•kl S119.SO
f'OUaTH UCE. 6 fur'tono\. Joklhnldl (Met.el IUO
IN. ~ (GIMT•)
DH~l~«l OH·Herd Hll (Plnuvl
O~t tor "'°"'
1.00 uo "'° uo uo
J.00
AllO raced: Dlatlnct lO'tef, Mernle'a
Oallcer, Femltv Fox, Rloht Thrlll, Crlmton
S.ul, Monsieur Exclt-1, Ctwla'a Ucl.
Tlmt: 1:10 3/S. U EXACTA 11· 10) pek! 1221 00 "'"°" •ACR. I 11 lt-mflll on turf T•o1'8edl <McCerrOlll 4.40 J..20 UO
Atebev (Toro) J.AO >.OO
... , Loe* l/Mte) uo
Abo recied: Dencllt>el, Cerro Pinto. Men
In !tie $11'1, ltldl Welton, Jelrnoocl IN Stone.
Time: 1:41 )IS.
$.S EXACTA (S·ll Hid Ill.SO
MXTH llACa. • turtonos.
NIOfllhewker (Plnc.tV) 6.00 4 00 2.10
V•lld Commenl (Fell) U0 UO
FHI Pea .... IFuentH) UO
Alto rlClld: Curr•vllle, Son of Song,
SOmethlnowonderlul, Meny Gleelen .
Tlme: 1:10 4/S.
l.S IXACTA (5-21 oeld 191.00.
aavmNTH llACI. 1 1116 mllM on tun.
V1ctorv Zone (Mcearronl 6.00 J.00 2AO
Femous Ster (Meuil UO :uo
Durt>en Deeo (H•wltvl J.00
Alao rec.cs: Me1ot1 Winner. MOu·Fernl·
fofchl, Ot>atlnedo.
Time: l:O J/S. as IXACTA 12·61 oeld U4 SO
12 f'tCK MX 12-7-l ·S-S-2) Hid
112.NIM with 12 wlnnlflo 1k:ket1 (aht hOUM). 12 Pick Six COMOlallon olllcl WJIAO
•Ith Jlf wfflnlftt tldletl (five llOt'MI).
EIGHTH •ACL 6 fur'tono\.
DelloMlr• Nrtltfl' (Jt\CCnl) J.011 2AO uo Fortunaft PrOtMd (Plnc:ey) UO tM
Donl.r Pwty (llblle) ...
Alto raced; SMl'I Oellofll, Com·
memorelt, Lotd of 11'18 Wltld, Draconlc:
~. U9hf Wiii.
Time· l:OI '15
MWT'M ••Ca. I 111' mllft on lurt. llalabe (~wWt) 11 00 uo 00
Swift MM.M1M ("""91 JOO ....0 GHleno <Caatafledel 6.00
Allo rllClld: Noelllo, hnefll Pilf1onnel,
Procurer. SOier Wind, 0.• ""''· ltlM 'II Fty.
Time: 1~1 J/$.
1$ •XACTA CMl H id t1'S.OO.
A""ldencr. 11,os.e.
,.. ........ trwt .....
LOS ANO•LU -Arrovo lece C,.._,
Sit Tulunoe Ct.ell (UHW), C.•lelc Laite,
"'" er.-(Frendvneft'I , .. I), """9·
dlMttone Ltke, .-Vrtmld Yke. s.n Oabr ...
.,.,., , ..... -· and norttl tork•> IA#TA aMIMIA -Cedlume ~.
$eltle YMJ •twr.
lllV•IU409 -''*"°' LAii•. Heme! I.Alla. IAM H•MNIO.O -ltt IMt Like, g,,..,. Valty L.aN, ~""°' &.eM, _..,
LAM, L""9 0.S ("'6MI lflf .-tfl final.
•YO -N« o.k. ltt ,_en:; ...... er. ,....,, ............
....... II), c..tMla ... er., Dlu LIM,
a..~. 0....... er.~-...,.. o.k, Lalla IMrtM, ~ c,... Otllk er. (Nf1tt ..,_,, .......... v.-...... ..,, ow.. "'* Cl.Mn
.,_ ~ .. Stewart L.ene), .,....... .....,,,,.,.. c,.. Tetttle er..~ er... TutMe Ct•.
i
Rilots taking ff
how many Will fly?
!J,~ !..,OTll£NBEao th$T~~ 51nec·· would bN1k tbe
NEW YORK -ABC ~a.ad NBC conveeliooal oope-e9'fkobbcn mold. IM have spent about SlOO mlllion on 86 pilot network Deeded a sample show ... But all
prosramafor nexueat0n. Only a quarter of idea cSon•t require pilots." Zinbera laid.
them will ever become TV seriel. Kardly "The pilot proce11 is Nd when it'• applied
Ul ...... __ hi to e~hin• .. any w ~me ta. zi;~ Who hu J)l'oduced a Dilot tor ~::= ~ ~~ ~~~bich the cm aboUt Radar o·aemy (Oaiy 8wshofY'
t"" .. -...--·-.a... Th -m "M·A ..,H''), 6 .:.11 many ~ti were networks pay producers to m-..i. • uu --
networkt then acreen the pilou before ordered too late, with netwo -lmpoted
decidina wbetber to order 13 epitodct. deadlines that came too catty.• Many are
Danny Arnold, creator or "Barn~ shotattheumetime.crettinJwbatbecalla
Millet," Cl1JS them ''I Waite." Q~ David ''pilot frenzy."
Ooldbera, executive producer or Family 0 You wind up makint decisions because
'Ties," 1uaaests the networks miaht do just of time requirements," Zinbera said . "You
as weU oickina abowa out ofa hat may have an excellttlucript, but can't find
"We4fe JueWJ>& all tho time what peot>'e the riabt director or cut memben. Or it
want." said Harvey Sbepbard, CBS' aemor m.iabt be raiJtlnl. lf the &bow ctoesn•t tel
vice president for prosrammina. kif M picbd up, it mlaht not be the ictea•s &uft."
knew, then we wouldn't have such a hi&b Producer David Gerber ("Police Story,"
failure .rate e~ch year." . . . "Cleo,_ WathinJton") said the 1ucceu of
Oe.tt1n1 a pilot selected for a aenes 11 like lilht action-adventure propllms, such u
runmna a marathon throuab a mau, and ''The A Team" and CBS' "Simon &
then beina told the real finish line is 26 \ Simon,'' have turned the networks' fancy
miles in the other direction. The public's toward lookalikes. "It's cheerful vigil-
taste represents the finish line. Of the antism," be said. "Everybody wants one."
1983-84 1e110n'1 22 new fall procrams, . .
only ABCs "Hotel" cracked the top to. Other popular fonn1 ~o the current pilot
Back hi clVTie.
It'• a Dew Ute for xuncer (Jamie Pan) and Illa wife. 8ooll Lee
(R09&llD4 Cbao). OD tlae •=remlere of .. Afterll.ASB, .. Wu
rebroadcut ID two puta t and nat 8antlay at 8 on 'CBI( Nevertheless. the networkJ stick to a crop are female detectJv_ca, female . ~t
costly and often ineffective development agents and ma~es operating an trad1t1onal
proccu in which they pay for ideas to female TV temtory. such as the home.
become scripts, finance some scripts to .................................... ~ ...................................................... ... become pilots and select some pilots to · ·
Cbamlel2. ..
be~i;;:~~~5iystemisnottheonlyway, '66' creator finds paradise dcmrn under
but it'• better than the alternatives," said
Shephard, who has auided CBS to ratinp BJ BARRY RENFREW
supremacy for each of the past five seasons. ..:.11.,111 • ,,._.,,..,
ABC was to announce its fall schedule
Monday. CBS announces its 1984-85
lineup Thursday, and third-rated NBC on
May 10.
Pilots act commissioned in three basic
ways. A network can approach a producer
with an idea.. a producer can approach a
network with an idea, or a producer and
network can collaborate on an idea.
Five years ago, Michael Zinbera. then in
cbarae of NBCs comedy devefopment,
had an idea for a different kind of cop show,
usinJ producers Steven Bochco and
Michael Kozoll. The result wu "Hill Street
Blues," named best dramatic series the past
SYDNEY, Australia -Twenty years
after two adventurers ended a Jo urney
aGrOS&-America on "Route 66," Stirling
Silliphant has turned to the South Pacific
for what he hopes will be a new departure in
television.
Silliphant. who produced "Route 66," is
exccuuve producer of "Welcome to Para-
dise,.. a projected 1eries following three
youna people traveling in a sailing boat
around the South Pacific.
A pilot eP.ilode has been completed for
CBS, and S111iphant is hopin• the network
will accept the show as a scnes on its fall
schedule. C BS will announce iu fall lineup
May 3.
"It's a whole new texture for prime-time
television,'' Silliphant said.
American television all tQo often has a
depressing sameness whether prov.uns are
set in Kansas City or Brazil because they
are invariably made in California,
Silliphant said in a telephone interview
from New Zealand, where the pilot was
shot.
"Virtually 90 percent of American
television is shot in Southern California.
even when it's set somewhere else," he
said. "It stifles the freshness and surprise of
a film."
Californian landscapes and casts can
only be diJguiaed or made up so much
before they all blur into a single wearying
image, Silliphaot added. "It's a California
look and it J11Stdoesrr't look lilcc France or
Turkey," he said.
Silliphant hopes to give "Welcome to
Paradise" a fresh look by filming a
beautiful and spcCtacular part of the world
with mainly local actors and film crews.
"When you look at this film you have a
feeling of being lifted out of your living
room and being put somewhere else," he ~~. .
From the first laugh, you11 be hooked/ ''JTMADEMELAUGHI
'ANIMAL HOUSE' WALKS THE B~ATt"
costa •tu •U..-~
UA C-.0. UOOU.•---------------"""""
"FIRST-RATE ENTERTAINMENT:'
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EDWARDS IUCTftGTON
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Le !lftAQA AJ 8QSWIANS
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12-40. UO, 4 CO, 6 CO. 1 40. lt CO
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-!'tl.JJLl:IU..llu.llUJ,:....-.. FIW CClnlA ro.u • .. ~
Blake ~
bounces back
with 'Mickey'
IJWTllOIUI
ft .. , ..........
1.05 ANGELES -R.a&i~ in hit 111010r .._
end or a filmiN day. direcu>r Blake £d'Waldl ....
about survival. ·
"AJ Mon SahJ rccimOy told me, 1wviYll ii Ill
rev~." Edwards ea.id.
1be motor bome wu J*kec1 iia alOt ha .... buatJiq Wntwood Villaee, Wbcft Edwardl ..
his 42nd film 11 a dfrector. The movie, "
Maude, .. i1 not lbe movie he wu planftina LO IMU M IMj
time hence bi1 crack about survival lMi ftll amjd much hoopla, It wu HNMl810id M
Edwards would direct the dynamite la.Ill ol
Reynoldt and Clint E.astwood in "KanMl~~lhm
few weeks "°' Edwards auddenl? left the M I 1f of the utUa1 "anittic ditTereoces, and bo wu ,,.,.... .,
Richard BerUaroin. uf>art o( the ~ent WU that neither I*')' wolld
discuss why I lcf\.' said Edwardl in an inierviewwida Tiie As~ted Press. However it wu apparent I.bat lie bM a f alli na o ut with Reynolds, his starin the UDIUC'CeMtul '1llir
Man Who Loved Women."
David Gershenson. a spokesman for Reynolda.
issued the foUowina statement from the IClor:
"Acton ' eaos are always bcina blamed i.n lituatioM
like thil, but that just isn't the cue. It tnaly wu a c.-QI.
artistic differences and it had to do with ditre.reoce1 0/.
opinion as to whauhe pubUc wants from Oint aod mYtd!
"I still love Blake and I miss him very much."
Edwards admitted that he was in a depreucd ata1e
when Columbia sent an oriainal script by Jonathan
Reynolds, "Mickey and Maude." It concerned a TV
reporter who is eqer to become a father. He aucoeeds
beyond bis expectations, imJ>tCIDAtina bis lawyer-wife
and a new romance, a beautiful cellist.
.. l read it and ( liked it,•• said Edwards, who bas
written all of his own scripu for the put 12 years. .. I
figured the best cathanis wu to go to work immediately."
A larae part of the lµre wu Dudley Moott.-witb...wbom
he collaborated on "10 .. five years ago. The situation of
Moore with two prqnant women on his bands was
irresistible. His wife Mickey is played by Ann Rei,nkina
(" AJI That Jazz"), the cellist MaUde is Amy lrrinl
("Yentl"). Moore's best friend is Richard Mullip.n. wbo
was Julie Andrews' mad husband in "S.O.B."
"If all socs well. we1J take 'Victor-Victoria' to
Broadway," be said. "Julie (Andrews) will be in it. Bob
Preston, too. The whole thin& takes a lot of plannina -
movina the whole family to New York for a year. That~•
how Iona Julie will be in the show -provided it'• a bit, of
course."
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.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Suoday, Aprll 29, 1914
hirley calmed by Oscar
Triumph brtngs perspective to
actrc · ltf e as she turns 50
IJ OOl.OU3 BARa.A y ........ .._ ...
[\\ 'OR" -The entcnainment world may be
ccltbralt her mo,1e triumph and &hCJl'IY be the hotte t
Broadwa tl et 1n tov.n, but you'd nev er know It from
bctn& around her.
Shutt~ t Lame 1s calm. Real calm.
Thc\.Ot~assoftcr, Lhc taccato pacing gone. The arms
and bands. e\pressive tools of a woman who has courted
controversfol causes. arc at rest
~tt's no boast1na or bleatina or sudden turns to
prima donna at being named best actress for her rok anhe
mot.hcrofa dyang dau&hter in "Terms ofEnde~rmcnt" or
over wriuna a bC'st-scffina book, "Out on a Limb."
She sftould at least be chewing her nail!! in
anticipation of another performance of her one-woman
show that opened thts month at the Gershwin Theater.
But the pressures of a return to Broadway arc
nonexistent for this performer, who turned SO on Apnl 24.
She bas no need to re~valuate her bfe to put things in the
right R'rspective.
· 1 think all this wonderful stuff rs the proper
perspective," she said. "I'm learning more a~d more that
life is like this .... I really do believe we are notJUSt ph) s1cal
beings and intelligent bcmgs. but we're also :iptntual
beings. When you &et that spuitual part of the tnad more
in tune, then everything 1s more m harm on)."
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'i;o ~ASSlS ACCl~T(D J OA THIS lHOAOfM(I" l
"ONI Of THI fUNNIUT PAaODIU
TO COMI ALONG SINCI
1 AtaPLANI.'"
Vincent Canby-New York Times
'"DON'T MISS 1r·
NOW PLAYING
SPECIAL
ADVANCE PREVIEW
Tonight at 7:30 PM
\\ 1111 \\I RI IC.Hand FLFTCHER C H Rl'ill .\ \
lltt I -.nr rnfOd\ through hdf
1111 1 Ill 1 Jmc rncn11('S in P.ir•dl\t
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EDWARD9 CINEMA WEST AMC ORANGE MALL
EDWARDS WOODBRIDGE SYUFY STADIUM DR-IN
EDWARDS SOUTH COAST UA MOVIES 4 BRfA
PLAZA BAOOl<HURST LOO(
EDWARDS MISSION VIEJO EDWARD') HUNTING TON
MALL
Sbo spoke quietly from tbe Ooor of bcr livina room in
a duplex overlook.in. lbe East R~ver. Wood burned alowly
in the fireplace, tak.ina the chill otf a rainy April day.
Spnna. buds fa.lied the room with ~nee. . . "Ob ya. th&f Oowen arc tpec:ial, •• lbc said with a
smile. ••1i wu a 11ft from ftieodt. Tbey juat wanted to
weloome me home.'' . . , .
Fncndsand inner tranquility are unportant 10 her life
riaht now and she's quick to admit it took a Iona time to
find that ' m0$t elusive of human oooditions. peace of
miod. • .... : ..... r...:.-.a .. ..My most treasured Umcs DOW Ire ~JDJ Who m"uu.
who I can talk about life to," she said ... l find 1 really need
more time alone now to reflect. You can call it prayer or
meditation. . ··1 was speodina all thote yearstravehna to try to find
out who twas," sbe said. "I wun't travelina to tee a new
culture-I was lcamina about myself. rve been' addicted
to finding out about myself all my life."
Friends told Maclaine that her quest for inner J)e8ee
was sclf-indutaent. She disagreed. "It's more painful for
me not to know the truth than to le.now it. ... I can't
celebrate Jnyone else unless I celebrate myself."
MacLaine, like Jane Fonda and Vanessa Redarave,
was once one of Hollywood's "naut.hty girls" -an actreu
outspoken and unconventional.
She sprang from middle America, a southern Baptist
from a ·•wonder Bread family," to elevate defian~ of
convention to a fine art. She condemned former ~dent
Richard Nixon's policies in Vietnam and championed
civil nghts and sexual freedom.
She's living in Manhattan now for the run of her
Broadway show, but otherwise s.he prefers ~e! home in the
Pacific Northwest where she said she as spantually fed by
the trees and flowers.
"I write better there, I sleep better there and I love the
rain, .. she said.
WINNER OF ACADEMY
I
A PARAt<>IJNT PICTURE 4 e......,,...•wtMl.••• .. ._ ___ I
.................. .
NOW PLAYING
COSTA MESA NEWPOltt IEACH OfWKlf t!*!i Eawaros 8ostOI Eavmas Newpon Cmedome 634 2553 s..,, • ~
S4{).7«4 Cnem~ W£1TMIMITfJI ANAHEIM
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Edwards ~eback 581·5880 891-3935 Or1vt-ln 879-9850
f ltO Pt\IMI ACCU1'fl0 '°" TKll ~~''
"A TARZA N MOVIE
LIKE NO OTHER
YOU'VE EVER SEEN!
-Jack Kroll, NEWSWEEK
GREYSTOKE
-THE LEGEND OF -
(PGj
TA RZAN
LORD OF THE APES
·••Y ~A~m •1•.• •11(.A' •uN!) COMPANY
f W t IU ,. " A ... ,, ... _.. .....
NOW SHOWING!
ANAHEIM 639-8770 llYlll 551-0655
SYUFY STADIUM DR·IN EDWARDS WOODBRIDGE
BREA 990-4021 MISSIOI VltJO 830·6991
UA MOVIES 4 EDWARDS VIEJO TWIN
• COSTA I ESl 546 3102 • OIAJCE 634·2553
EDWARDS CINEMA SYUFY CINEDOME
WESTMINSTER • EDWARDS CINEMA WEST 891 -3935
• PR£S[NT£0 IN OOlBY STEREO
Frum h~ frmdl mafd, he p Prtv.atr Lcs5ons.
Now tu." F.ngli'ih professor ts gMng him a ra1 ed1 icaUon
TDEflm PIAFING
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Slll.rley llacLalne ba•iDC aja.mbo time.
She stays in shape with long mountafo hikes, which
also allow her to meditate. Her face is relatively unlined
and she has returned her hair to red a~r "lettina at all ha"
out" in middle-age honesty for"'Terms of Endearment.'
Few graying actresses would be willing to remove the
hair dye and let the aging show. "When l saw the fin\.
closeups in the dailies, I knew that kind of commitment
socs through to your soul," Macl.aine said. "But they
made me look worse. The harsh lighting was deliberate."
Macl.aine began in show business as a Broadway
hoofer and eventually got her break as Carol Haney's
understudy in '.'The Pajama Oame."
But the role of Aurora Greenway was the right one for
the Oscar. "Everything happens at the right time," she
said. "This award came when it should have and it was for
tbe right role .... There were some I d idn't think I should
have &ccn nominated for."
'"GOLDIE HAWN'S BEST ROLE
SINCE 'PRIVATE BENJAMIN:'
-VINCENT CANBY. N1111 Yorlc 'l'imH
--o ,,..,_ ................. ·---·--·--
UAllEll 639·8770
SYUFY STADIUM DR·IN
llU 529 -5339
MANN BREA PLAZA
COSTA MUA 751·4184 •
EDWARDS TOWN CENTER
llSSIOI Y1EJO 495·6220
EDWARDS MISSION VIUO MALL
IEWPOIT IUCll 644-0160
EDWARDS NEWPORT
OIAllCE 634·2553
SYUFY CrTY COOER
W£STllHTH 89 l ·3935
EDWARDS CINEMA WEST
wtSTlllST£1 891·3693
PACIFIC H1WAY 39 OR-IN
.Another k ind of man
would have given up.
A nother kind
of woman
would have
let him.
~
fHITllll WIU.ll 839 I ~00
EDWARDS f~T~ VALLEY
~Al llllCn
.IMC( 634-391 J
UA CfTY CUfTER
II M OTY S>Of'flC cvntl
Robert "Chlp" Thunton Ill
wW lnherll S~0.000,000
... IF he •un1We.s the ~kend.
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JO MN MAAStW.l. l'tT!R ~.KAM' SHIA, MT\I 1-nU..llnU.0.
LINDA Wfl!SMl'!llUI. and l11t10CIUC!f11 CU.DY MAl'llON
l>t"'r tnr !'Of Ptwlt .. niph1 LAJUtY ~Nt Qr1clnal M111lc i.y IA1i SHAW ~ rtr11pl1y by CHUCK V1NC•lfT and a.tea MAJUt
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AfW£l1 63!-1770
STADtUM DR·IN
COSTA EA 979-4141
EDWARDS CINEMA CTR
n TORO 511·SllO
EDWARDS SAOOl EBACK
fotlfl~ VALL!Y HJ..1307
FAMILY 4
GARDEN GltOVE 530-4401
EDWARDS WESTBROOK
WffA MA 540.7444
EDWARDS BRISTOL
'Footl<;Jse' back
as lea<41Rg L P
By TM AJIOdated Prut
· The f'ollowioa are BiUboAtd's bot record hats for.the
week u they appear in Billboard mapzine. ~pyriabt J~l41 Bmboard Publications, Inc. Reprinted wtlh per-
m1111on.
BOTSJNGLES )" Ph'l 1."ApinstAll Odds(Take A Look At Me Now 1
Collins (Atlantic) ..
2."Hello" Laooel Richie (Motown).
3. "Hold Me Now" Thompson Twins (~nsta)
4.'4footlooae" Kenny Louins (Columbta)
S."Love Somebody" Rick Sprin&field JRq.) .
6.""To AU the Girls I've Loved Before Juho IsJcsw
and Willie Nelson (Columbia)
7."You Miaht Think" The Call (Elektra)
8.''Tbey Don•t Know'.' Tracey Ullman.(MCA~ .
9. "Let's Hear It For the Boy" Denaece Williams
(Columbia)
JO."Miss Me Blind" Culture Q ub (Vi~n-Ep1c)
11."0h Sherrie" Steve Perry (Columbia)
12."Head Over Heels" The Oo-Oo's (~.ll.S.)
J 3. "To.nit.ht" Kool &. the Gang (De-Late) .
14. "Time After Time" Cyndi Lau per (Portran) .
I S."Don't Answer Me" The AJan Parsons Project
(Arista)
16."Tbe Authority Song" John Cougar Mellencamp
(Riva) .
17."The Longest Time" Bill Joel (Columbia)
18."Breakdancc" Irene Cara (Network-Geffen)
19."Automatic" Pointer Sisters (Planet)
20."Sister Christian'' Night Ranger (Camel-RCA)
TOPLPS
I .'"Footloose' Soundtrack" (C~luJ!lbia)
2."Can't Slow Down" Lionel Richie (Motown)
3." 1984" Van Halen (Warner Bros.)
4."Thriller" Michael Jack.son (Epic) .
S."Colour By Numhen" Oalture Club (Virgin Epic)
6."Sports" HueyLewis and the News (Chrysalis)
7."Heartbrcak City" The Cars (Elektra)
8 ''Love At First S~" Scorpions (Mercury)
9:'"She's So Unusual' Cyndi Lau~r (Portrait)
10."lnto the G ap" Thompson Twms (Ansta)
I I ."Touch" Eurythmics (RCA) .
12."'Against All Odds' Soundtrack" (Atlan~1c)
13."Lcarning To Crawl" The Pretenders (S are)
14."An Innocent Man" Billy Joel
I S."Uh-Huh .. John Coupr Mellencamp (Ri va)
16."Hard to Ho ld' Soundtrack" Rlck Springfield
(RC1~. "In 3-D" 'Weird Al' Yankovic (Rock 'N' Rott)
18."Ammonia Avenue" The Alan Parsons Project
(Arista)
19."Talk Show" The Go-Gos (l.R.S.)
20. "Seven and the Rqged Tiger" Duran Duran
(Capitol)
•"ICEMAN' IS A UNIQUE,
MIND-TURNING EXPERIENCE ...
Stunnlna at lb ~the molt "ypnodc dram
ol cUlcovery lince '1001: A Spece OdJ11ty'
• : .61uman' becomes one of the pat vltdom
ooftlm." ...
COITAllOA &.-MAIM OMMI
Eowns '°""' Cel1W ~f--$Qlilr1 OlyClr!lll
7&1~184 .,~ .,..mJ
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COSTA MfU £l TOllO
Edwatoa BnstOI E~nlS ~
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COSTA MESA fOUWTMll VAi.UY
Edwatds DNrm Ftmly F1>lll'
Center 979-4MI 963 1307
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6S4-9361
IMDOllMM
EC!wlrdS Weslt>fool< 530-U01
OMlt8f
NII:. OrlllOI Md 837-0340
• RICHARD FREEDMAN
NEWHOUSE NEWSPAPERS
WUl9mTDI UA T..wi Cntmu
m.SJ33 IOO--""''* ---·
* * * * . . . Stunning."
f rr
-ROGER EBERT, CHICAGO SUN TIMES
AT THE MOVIES
7 00. 9.30
rrl warll~ llOO CI NEMA
··~·.:.: 0 .... 61] 8350
... .., , I ' II•"-,,
S1t/SUA u s. 420
7 00 9 30
Designs intended for affluent
women who transcend time
"'By MELINDA HUDDLESTON ..................
Fashion designer James Galanos. in Nt"wport 8nda
last week for the opening of Amen Wardy's new GalaDOI
saJon. is a man who speaks out boldl)' about his approech
lO clothts.
"I don't d~ign for tht bl~ Jean set.'' he said. whi~
takma a brief break from his consultations at the stOlf.
"I design for very am~nt women who arc elepnt.
who transcend time. They have quality. character. The
women who buy my clothes ha ve the money for it: they
don't have to ask the price:·
That price can range from $2.000 for a day suit to
S 16.000 for an elaborate evening dress of the kind that
have made the dtsijner a favorite of Nancy Rcapn.
So what does his very special customer' get forthatc<>51
she presumably doesn't need to count?
For one thing. she gets the benefit ofGalanos' intense
attention to every aspect of his clothes.
When a customer ca me into the small lounge whett he
sat discussing his work. he immediately was on his feet.
checking out the way the hip wrap was tied with au the care
of a master craftsman.
"I'm interested m the little details. sublety.-Galanos
said later.
A closeup inspection of Galanos garments reveals
seams as perfectly finished inside as outside. The patterns
of beads and rhinestones follow the prints on the fabrics
which arc the finest he can find on regular trips to Europe.
Pure silk jacquards. chiffon and crepe dominate hjs
collection. and the styles themselves arc strons.
.. Eve~hmg 1s very slick. pared down. w1th large
shoulders. • he noted.
Doris Fields. the new vice president and genera.I
manaaer at the Amen Wardy nore. is enthusiastic about the new salon.
"We've had a tremendous response and support from
the community. not onl y in Orange County. but also in the
Beverly Hills area. And customers arc not only those on
the 10-best-<tressed list. but business and professional and sociall y prominent women."
For Fields. working with Galanos is the continuation
of a professional relationship that began when she was
working at Saks Fifth Avenue. Beverly Hills.
"I bought the first three dresses be ever made under
his own label. I sold one to Polly Bergen. one to Claudette
Colbert and one to Edie Goeu (daughter of film mosu1
Louis 0 . Mayer). They were little white pique summer
dresses. He had a tiny collection. just stanina out ...
That collection has crown to SOWM l SO piccn. with
daytime clothes now tf\e strongest seller overall. accordi ..
to tM designer. Still. when certain wd\-known women
think about bu)'tng that special dress. visions ofh1s Oowin&
evcmna wt-ar dantt throuch t~r heads.
And if Mrs. Rcapn prefers Adolfo suits for dayttmc
appearances. 11 is still Galanos she turns to for special
0ttas1ons. such as a rccen1 stare dinner hononng French
President F12ncois Miuerand.
Dally Pilot Photos by Richard Koehler
Thi• beaded and aequlned, hip-wrapped
Amid the 1prln&tlme opulence ln the new aalon at Amen Wardy'e ln York model• in one of bl• own creation• -a two-piece eventnc •ult e•enln& aown wt th lta abetract nower print l•
Newport Beach. dealgner Jamea Galanoe admlrea one of bl• New of pleated allk chiffon -aet off by a picture hat of hi• deatan. modeledln Galanoe' fa•orite alze, a foa.r.
Fashion business booms as in en look for labels
By JUDIE OLA VE
N11111ltM,,,_Wrtlw
NEW YORK -The world of American haule
couture. once considered a woman's dom1in. 1s fast
acquanng a male cast and rackina up billions in sales as
mort and more fashion-conscious men choose des1ancr
labels.
The lucrative label business has led top women'
desiancrs hke Perry Elhs and Geoffrey Beene into the once
minuscule market for men ·designer clothing and led to
the nse of others like Jeffrey Banlis. who t) le "clu ively
for men. It also has re ulted in at lea tone new men's magazine
emphasmna male fa hton and purrtd a ntzy Fifth
A venue fashion store -which for nearly 8~ )cars cater('(f
only to women -10 con truct a "Men's tore.''
"There have been dramatic advanct in men'\
fashion consc1ousnes\" 1n the In t I 0 to IS )cars. 1d retail
marke11na analyst Kun Barnard.
f)lpcns ~' there 1\ no onc rca~n for 1hc.• 1ncrca\1na
number of men interested 1n haute couture but 1he
attention has helped the industry arow from a moderatel)
pnced market cons1stina pnmanly of business clothes to a
.fnarket alutted with h11h -pnccd designer sportswear. suits
and acct sonc
It has arown so much that la t }car the men's mar~ct
accounted for S40 billion to S45 b1lhon of the total SI 05
b1lhon spent on dothe~. reported Barnard. v.hcrca\ "a
decade aao we didn't even keep figures on hov. much men
spent on clothe . "
There al o i no 11aure on how much 1s pent on
d tantr labels. althou h retailers c 11mate de 1ancr
clottic account for 10 pcrtcnt to 20 percent of the market.
doubhnJ the amount sold five car\ qo. according to the
Men· Fa hton A soc1at1on of mcnca
()(' ptte the growing label ''On5<'1ou ne ~. mo t m1mc·
brand manufacturcn ~Y the~ are not ftthna an) pinch
hccau . a Debbie L1ntl, a Pokti.\\oman for Hathav.;a
put\ 11. "Then~ are <1i1mpl) more and more mcn drc'I ma up ..
Unul re«ntl)'. men loolong for labels h:id httle
vanet)
Whrn Pen') Elhscntcred the mcn'sdes1gncrmarkct 1n
1981. there v.crc few mencan des1ancrs be ides Ralph
Lau~n and Lcundcr Julian olTcnng routurc collccuons
for men \lld Ellis Pre 1dent Ed Jone .
Mo 1. hke Cah 1n Klein and Henl"\ Grethel. ~ere
showina le \ t\pcn l\C "contemporar)'' hnt"S of h1ns..
S\\catcrs and pants.. moderatel) pnced at a minimum of
$30 for a drc 'i shirt and a ma\lmum SQQ for 1 sweiter
"(red1tors did not believe there \\IS much potential
for bu1ld1na a h1aher·~riced bu mess ... Jones said They
v.crt wrong. ·lhs' men hnc -with 'ih1rts that \tan at $6S
and S\\eate" that can co t a\ much as $300 -ha more
than doubled •n t\\O \Cir\.
Juhan. who launched h1 line 1n 1975 . .said his
dcc1\1on to d1: 1'n for men w parktd b\ tht no11on that
men \H'te "m1\~1ng the chance to get up in the mom1n '1nd
~ct dre'i\Cd 10 ~omcthing that \\ll o tum-on ..
Bui i\mcn un ni.1 • ..!1Jn': ,;J\:I\ break out ul th~
con~nat1ve Brook\ Bro\ mold that 1~p1ticd ·s~~ and
'60s-st)lc businc sman
"It "a a battle." hc <1ia1d "I th1nlr. m~ first three \Can
of bu inc s tottethcr I onl) did about SI m1lhon '· He
t'\fX'C't\ to do $100 m1lhon in 1984
T~cre al~ ha' r been lhangcs in mrn's bu) 1~ habit\.
Where the) once -...ould send "'"cs or airlfnend to
chose their w·ardrobe\, the' arc no" 'cntunng out to
purchase their own clothes. ~ulttn& in more men·\
oout1Quc h1gcr tortd1 pla~ andmortmccha11tent1on.
The l han c prompted f-a1rch1ld PubhcatiOn\, pu
II her\ of I ht la\h1on bible Women·\ Wear Daily, to launch
M. • mqazanc ared toward the S10.000. •\t ran~ up
bu inc man, cmpha 11ina the ~ .. t nc 1\ le\ 101 the
"::.ophi tll'lted. \UC('t ful man." said Th ma foran.
t\rcut" c editor
\1\·n -...ho· c...arc abou1 thc WI) th., loo 1' art nu Ion r
.. ,11gm1111c-d" for 1t Jultan 1d "h' OK now for am n &o
Jre,, up 10 t'n)o' clo1hc\ and not N afraid to ailmu u ...
I
r
..
Orange CoMc OAILY ptLOT/8Und9)', April 29, 1984
...., ........... ..,....., .....
Fred MacMurray. June Haver, Wield McDonald, Merlin OIMn, Suan Neleon, Bill Wenke, Jack Lemmon and Johnny llathla played cbarl~··olf.
Childhelp reaches par with celebrity golf:
More sports, Cinco de Mayo
are upcoming event themes
Jack Lemmon, Jobnny Mathis and Fred MacMur·
ray had starring roles in the second annual celebrity golf
tournament hosted by Merll11 Olsen at the Irvine Coast
Country Club.
Lemmon came away from the auction after the play
with a silver fox coat; William Schmal scored the day's
hole-in-one, and the big beneficiary was Childhelp,
USA, with a boost from its Newport Beach chapter and
sponsorship by The Catch restaurant and Sko-Fed
Mortgage Co.
A former Rams punter. Pat Studstill, led the
winning fivesome of golfers last week that included
Edward Ladd, Paa I Copley, Lee Mann and Irv Sacks.
Other celebrities leading winning team~ere Carl
Ekern, Deacon Jones, Rich Saul, Norm Alden and David
Ray.
There were a lot of winners that day: Ken Urbanus
won the Father's Day package for box seats at the Angels
game and brunch at The Catch; Jim Holsclaw of Long
Beach won a tnp to Hawaii; Deborah Spielman is due to
head to Dallas and Forrest Smith won two Super Bowl
tickets.
The benefit was chaired by Connie Olsen (wife of
Merlin's brother, Phil), who noted that all of the entry
fees would go directly to Childhelp's residential care
facilit y in Beaumont, which is dedicated to the research,
treatment and prevention of child abuse and neglect.
Others in tbelocalchapterassistinJwith the
tournament were MartU Fleener, Becty Ray, Carol
Clark, Sara Hinman, Jeri Rlmel, Jean Campbell, Gaye
Blriclter, Karen V 011, Slaaron Sarvak, Eileen Saal, Jady
Schatt, Marcia Mat1bew1, Dale Su FWlppo, Sblrley
McCormick and Rosemarie Moller. • • • That was some Easter parade at the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club.
Myrna Thompson and Kathy Thompson (friends,
not relatives) got the idea fora combined springget-
together-the Original Easter Chapeau luncheon and
contest -after reafizing that their hsts offriends
overlapped. And the winners of the mad hat competi-
tion were ... Joan Mack (most beautiful-an all-purple
number with a parasol on top), Darlene Mu Clark
(most humorous-with a bobbing hamburger bun
marked .. Herc's the beer') and Joey Tomu(most
original-for wearing one of the centerpieces). The
grand sweepstakes winner wa\ Nancy Caldwell, whose
creation had a duck on top, a real attention-getter. • • • lo the credit-where-credit-is-duedepannent: Jean
Upton organized the membership social for the Braille
Auxiliary of Orange Coast recently held aboard the
Pavilion Queen. The event was a cocktail party forthe
group led by Debbie Gray. • • • After the spring holidays, the pace of partygj ving
and going is picking up. Herc's a sampling of coming
events:
Evil eyes
popular
NEW YORK (AP) -
The evil eye was no match
for the tortoise.
Orange County's
Relaxing Music Station
The Chinese believed the
tortoise was a sacred
creature that brought luck
and long life, according to
researchers at Corning
Sunalass Products. Is
KDCM tm.t
FMSTERBJ
When someone had an
eye ailment. the shell from
the tortoise was used as
cyealass f ramcs to d ispel
cvif forces.
Althoush people no
longer beheve m evil forces
or the magic powers of the
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rtoise, ~rtoise s~U is
...i11 still one of the favorite
May Sale
Jump Suits
choices for frame color.
C•ll 642-5678.
Put a few words
lo wprk for ou.
A Celebracion de Cinco de Mayo from 6:30 to 11 :30
p.m. Saturday at Lido Marina Village in Newport Beach
which will feature live entertainment and authentic
Mexican food. For information on $20 tickets to the
event, sponsored by.the Cabaret Chapter of the Orange
County Performing Arts Center, ca JI JalJe Polemaa at
957-0458 or 536-7657. • • • A tennis exhibition featuringMartbaa Navratilova
and Ha Na will be held May 6 at Los Caballeros Tennis
and Volleyball Stadium in Fountain Valley. A reception
will be held after the exhibition for which the Big
Dippers-includinJ. WUt Claamberlaba, BW Walton and
KW Vudewel.lle will be on hand. For information on
tickets, call 957-8768. • • • .. Lido and AJl That Jazz" will be tbe themeofthe
27th annual Home Tour and Tea to be conducted by the
LldolsleWoman'sOubfrom 1 to51) . .m.May9.Among
the five homes highlighted is that of the Robert
Crom wells, whicltwas build in the 1930s. Tickets($ 10) will be available at the Lido Oubbouse on the day of the
tour. For more details. call 673-6170.
Dramatic occulon celebrated
A reception Monday eTeD.lU to mark the
opewatna of the Coeta 11 .. CtTlc Playboue'•
new theater at tbe Rea Commantty Center
drew a crowd that Included, from left,
20o/o off
Selected Pants, Blouses
& Sweaters
"'91 A&D jjjL_ PARTY RENTALS For Ad Action
(
I
up to 30% off
Specialists in weddings. parties
and fund raising events
642-1184
Something Special Lynda L. Potter
feminine f asbions
250 E. 17th, Costa Mesa • 645-5711
Gl•l good deals on
used items an the
c lassified pagl'!'i
Wt 1pedaliu in faahaoo for the miaay figure
(111.et 4 thru l8) Daily Pilat
1 WEEK
ONLY
Jult
14311* ,~·
._ , ,1 pe< year
,t . • a , per peraon
GO FOR THE GOLD AT
Spa(DLady
E ARE CELEBRATING THE OLYMPICS WITH A
2 FOR 1 SPECIAL
Party Consultant
A Colorful
Line up ...
Crisp cottons
for warm
spring
days
1 ~ 'f" I with thas AD \ .,. ·-1 'I 1::11~ -4 a I
-,p ·~ '• --~ &.1)" ,,,
TWO 2 year Memberships for the Price of One for you and a
friend OR Ooubte your Membership Time and get 4 Years!
The f"-' In Fddll I Selva. f.ICll•Mly for L*.
\ \,\ --/ 'I' I
• Alro•lcs • l~lrtpool
• llNra wrctse ~•l•lt • SMu
• .......,",.. llstrKtlll • '°'''' Sllntrs & Dm1t11 lotta • lltrttllul 5*-t • Uf1 C,cles
5 GREAT LOCATIONS
';3,:' ~
Cal a
Daiy Pilot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
A tennis tournament is on the agenda for Let Petites
Aeurs Auxiliary of the Children's Home Society. To '
find out more about the May I 0-11 event at the Laguna
Niguel Racquet O ub in Laauna Niguel, call AMrea at
495-4437 or Bev at 496-2484.
• • • ..Dinner at the Ritz," a benefit beinJplanned by the
Orange County Mental Health Associaoon, is sched-
uled for May 20. Honorary co-chairmen will be UC
Irvine Chancellor Dr. Daniel G. Aldrich Jr .. and Hans
PraJer,ownerofthe Ritz in Newport Beach. ForS 125
individual reservations, call 547-7559.
• • • The Professional Women's Agenda, an organiza-
tion designed to address the professional and penonal
interests ofblack professional women in Orange
County, will bold a luncheon May 19 at the Anaheim
Marriott Hotel. For reservation information, call
997-5885 or 993-9204.
Pany Wrap is written by Daily Pi/or Style E.diror
Melinda Huddleston.
Jennifer LaTtane, Stan Wlulck, Dr.
Leonard Ranaen, ADD BanH11 and Bnerly
Allen. Tbe flnt abow ha the new theater la
.. Tbe SecoDd Time Aroand."
CLUB CALFNOAR
CALIFORNIA FEDERA'nON ef Wome11'1 Claba,
Or ... e Dlltrict reooaiiiz.ed i ndividual club achiev~
menu at iu 28th annual oonventioo in Anaheim.
Io the small club cateaory, £bell O ub oflrvine tied
for most awards with firiu in 14 catqories and five
second places. Tustin Areas Woman's Oubsweptawards
in the the large club division.
For medium clu~ the Woman's Oub of Hunt·
ington Beach took fints for consumer concerns and
legislation and second for citizenship. Fountain Valley
Woman's Oub received first place for membership,
safety, public affairs, and 1CCOnd for women's history.
school priorities and junior coordinator.
Ebell CLubofNewport Beach took fir1t for emblems
and seals and foundation fund and a second for FREE
and Dollars for Delegates among intermediate clubs
where Costa Mesa Women's Oub rcc;eived first place
recognition for ESO membership (Avalee Keach).
member1bip and California history and second place for
federation extension, creative writina and personal
development. • • • HUNTINGTON BEACH ART LEAGUE will start its
monthly meetina at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Edison
Community Center, 21377 Magnolia St. Demonstrating
anist will be Stan Sinnett whost works renect his Indian
heritaae. His painting will be donated to the league's
scholarship fund.
• • • CHRISTIAN WOMEN'S CLUB has scheduled •n
11:45 luncheon with a "boo voyage" theme Friday at the
Saddleback Inn, 1660 £. Fint St., Santa Ana. Bonn.ie
Smith, former club chairman, will be the auest 1peakcr.
To make the $7 reservations, phone 838-4077 or
73 1-1132.
• • • AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNJVERSJTY
WOMEN'S Laguna Beach branch will meet at 9!30
Saturday at hte F1nt Baptist Church in J...aauna Hills to
hear Or. John Matkarian discuu the Middle East. Dr.
Markarian wa1 presJdent of Haiozian Collcae in Beirut
from 19$'-66 and 1971 -82. f"or fflemberahip tnfor-
mation in AAUW, phone 499-2721.
• • • DELTA DELTA DELTA alumnae of the Ncwpon
Harbor Atta will see .. A Rainbow of Fashion" durina
their J I a.m. luncheon Saturday at the Santa Ana
Country Cub. Proceeds from the event will so to the
Pcd1atnc Cancer Research fQUndauon of Cbild~ns
Hospital of Oranp County.
·1
SwingiDtoa'Sent,mental Jt;1urney'
Follow1nj the successful Trans-Pacific cruises of
1983. Amencan Hawaii Cruises will repeal those
.. Sentimental Journeys" across the Pactfk Continuing
with the Bia Band theme. AHC invites passenacrs to
.. swina through the '40s as they cruise to Hawaii."
entertainment in the "Pacific Showplace."
• 1stersh1pSS C'onstttut1on will feature the Alvino Rey
Orcheitra on her Ott. 8 Trans-Pacific from Honolulu .
And. rtturnang the Ott. 17 aaihn& from Los Anarles will be
Mvron Aortn and the ta~ of the Lawrence Welk Show.
per person. double occupanc) for five, seven or e1Jht days.
Third and fourth persons pay $395 (fi ve days) or $495
(seven or eight days). Childttn under 16. whtn sh&nna a
cabin wnh two full-fare passtnacrs. pay S2SO (five days) or
$350 (7.8 days) .
fares ror lhc 1ntemland CfUl$CS ranac from $99~ 10 S229S
per per on. double occupancy.
The SS Independence leaves Honolulu on Saturday.
June 30. Featured on this eastbound sailing will be the
Russ Morgan Orchestra conducted by Jack M o~n. The
shipamvesin LosAngelesJuly 7and in ~an Francisco July 8. When the SS Independence sails bac'k to Hono lulu on
July 9 from San Francisco. Ernie Heckscher and his
Fairmont Hotel Orchestra will be aboard to headline the
In addition to the music of the '40s. American Hawaii
Cruises has planned onboard ac1jv1t1es r~minisccnt of the
era. For example. mystery. comedy and western radio
shows: movie. posters: dance contests: ·405 costume
panics: '40s swimsuit parade; copies of old Time
Magazines and newspaJ)('rs: and more!
Trans-Pacific cruise fares range from $795 10 S3696
American Hawaii Cruises will also fly Trans.-Pacific
cruist passenaers between Los Angeles or San Francisco
and Honolulu for $99 per person. Third and founh·benh
passengers also pay $99 between those cities.
;\ddit1onallv. a 25% d1scoun\ will be &l\'CO on"'iriy
cabin for a seven-day 1ntcnsland CTuase JUSt before or
1mmed1ately follow ing a Trans-Pacific crossinJ. Reaular
Due to such e~ccllcnt ttsponse to the •·1
Honolowlow pccLal. AHC bas extended ill O«lr
indefinitely from Its California gateways. (h was p~\'iout
ly scheduled to cit pi re at the end of this month.)
"The HonolowLow Special is accomph5h1n1 ju11
what ll is designed 10 do.· said Allan P. Olsen. vice
president-sales. ··11 affords those with the flexibtlny to wait
14 da)s be fore sa1ltng fo r a confirmation to travel at av~
special price. And. of course. it' helping to fill our ship:
Loo~1Nc Gooo
Famed Italian spa
water power taken
B0rghese products
keep skin glowing
Princess Marcella Borghese'seyes
twinkle when she talks about Terme di
Montecatini. the thermal reson and health
spa located between Pisa and Florence in
Italy.
··When I was a cha Id I went there with m)
parents and with my grandparents."she
said during a visit last week at Bullock's
South Coast Plaza.
For hundreds of years. the mineral
waters at the spa ha ve been known for
restorative powers-a place where
aristocracy and celebrated people from all
over the world go to "take the waters". The
water and volcanic mud arc used in
therapies to heal and rejuvenate.
··1 noticed that when JX'Ople let\ there
their skin looked so healthy and glowing. ..
the hahan Pnncess Borghese said.
Fi ve years ago the international!) known
.cosmeuc authority established a research
and development laboratory at :
Montecatini with the puf'J'(>sc oC"putting
these natural 1herap1es in a bottle".
She did it.
Today it's possible to get some of the .
benefits of a spa visit al your home b} using
her new skin care products. The) bear the
same name as the lush reJuvenaungspot.
Thecosme11cs have been available 1n a
bouttque at the go\ernment-owncd spa for
more th~ a year. But. 1fth1s not ~ our year
or "tak(njthe waters ... there· s no problem
-the prOductsmade 11 to New York in
$eptemberand arc now a\ tlable on the
West Coast an selected store~ where the
tfiorghese h ne 1s sold
The Pnncess' v1sll at Bullork's ""as the
first of three she had that da) 10 meet
customers and discuss the ne" lint."
"It 1s for women of all ages. except that I
would not recommend myConcentratod1
VIDA
DEAll
V 1ta (living water scrum) for teen-agers. It
is for skin that is severlydev1talized.
show1 ng accelerated signs of aging surface
llSSUe ...
The concentrated product comes in
small vials and wtll show great results, the
princess said. if used only 1wo orthree
times a week in conjunction with the other
products. (But, the princess confessed she
used 11 everyday. "It 1s very good.")
Other productsavailablcat Bullock's arc
cleansing creme(comes in a tube and onl )
a small amount is needed to deep cleanse).
a stimulating tonic. restorative fluid or
cream. Fango(ltahan for mud> for face and
body and also for the body. a refiner
(cleanser with natural grains), Bagnoda
v11a (a soak forthe bath)and Cura di V11a (a
lotion to revive and plump drying cells).
No perfume 1sadded to the products.
The nice smell comes from natural oils.
larrivedfi\eminutesearl) form)
1nterv1ew and was told the princess would
be along 1n a few minutes. She was upstairs
shopping.
On the dot of our appointed ti me. the
tram. blonde pnncesscame in to Manager
Sue Graham's office weanngablue and
wh11e floral drtss wrth pearls at her neck
and wrists.
Smiling. (as she frequent!~ does)she
explained that she had SCl'n so man) nice
things an the stOfl'. "I ne"er ha\ e enough
time to shop:· she said. (She had been
lookangat handbags.)
As we cha11ed about her cosmetics. Shl'
said that she has seen a great change in
Amcncan women's attitude about prod-
ucts they use on 1he1r faces ... At o ne time
their emphasis was on makeup. but now. in
the last fi ve to I 0 years. the) are more
interested 1n skin care. ··The Oriental woman has always gi ve n
great anent ion to ski n care. In Tok)o the)
have a fan club for me:· she said looking
very pleased. ··They hold meetings."
The princess has been involved in skin
care and makeup for 28 years. Du rang her
first v1si1 to America with her husband.
Prance Paolo Borghese. she talked about
beauty potions handed down by her .
mother. Later through assoc1a11on w11h
Charles Re vson and his brother she fun her
developed the beauty secrets and began
marketing them.
She is an America often now to oversee
the development ofher "a nous collections
r •nd to visit hertwin sons and grand-r"'tlr•~~..J children. The pnnce and princess reside in
Swuzerland where her princi pal
enthusiasm is for the Coupe Borghese. an
annual ski compc1111on which she in-
augurated to encourage the )Oung to
pursue fitncssofboth body and mind. D8lly l'llot l'Nto bJ "lcll«d lloeftlef
Prince•• Marcella Borahe•e
promoted Terme di Montecatlnl
akin care product.a In Coata Meea.
FASHION CALENDAR
IL__ --
(She also encourages all skiers to protect
their skin against ~un and lost moisture
while engaging 1n lhe sport.)
Fashions On th_e go
modeled in 2 shows
Casual sportswear and exercise wear tor
men and women wall be featured dunng the
"SprlD1 Fanfare of Fashion" to be held at
6:30 p.m. Thursdar in the Irvine Marnott
.lobby. Fashions w11h an Olympic theme.
cruise and boating wear. eveningwear and
exercise clothes will be modeled. Stores
taking part 1n the show include That's
Some Body and A 'Marees of Newpon
Beach. SunD1al of Laauna Beach . Estelle
Allcnalle of Corona Del Mnr nnd Claire
McN11r-ax of Tu'llin For more 1nfor-
mat1on. call Linda Wamn of K WIZ at
554-SOOO. • • • "Fas~oa Wluer• '84" 1s the theme of
the spnng/summer St)le show to he
presented at 6 p.m. Fnda} on the center
court staat at M1 s1on V1cJO Mall h)
students al Saddlcback College Sout~
tµdent5 from dos~s 1n fosh 1on d1spla)
and coordinauon. modc:hna. cloth1na con-
struction. pparcl dcs1an. careers in
fashion. cloth1n1 selection and creative:
dccora11 ve fashi on'"" pre~nt \t) le' from
mall merchant "' well '" their O" n
creations "lf5 '° areal 10 kno"' that we ha' c: that
kind ot talent .. \ltd Nonn KC\"ilcr
• profes or of fa'lhmn mrn:hand1!1tni ond
\how coordinator an11c1pat1n, the tra\rl
act I\ e sports. e"enmg. lounaing and career
outfits 10 be dt played by the 200 'ltudcnts
and 35 retailer\ The evening will conclude wtth 1hc
prcscnta11on of S250 cholar hips 10 the
outs1and1n~ continu1na design and
merchandising students by Ethel Ransom.
prc!>tdent of the Mall Merchants Assoc1a-
11on • • • ROBI NSON'S: Fvan Picone representa-
ti ve Donna Fontes will be at the Fashion
l'lland store·~ hos1el) department on
Wcdnesda) 10 talk with customers ahout
choosina hosiery to complement o pnng
wardrobe
Came: Hodges. fashion consultant for
Ju'll • mith Jewelry. will be at the 'ltorc
Sa turd•)' from 11 :00 a m to 4 p m 1n the:
fine fashion Jewelrv dcpanmcnt. ' . . NORD TROM: The uth Coast Plaza
store 1s ofTenna three event on Saturda)
From noon 10 J p m pretty. ~stet fa hions
will be presented at a mnthcr-dauantc:r tea
1n ("ollttlO~. level two , wh11l' lC\le rate
will be in .\ell\ e Spomwcnr. le\ cl l\\o,
promo11na the late l in Vuarnct anJ
Ct rJO)IC \Un&IOl\\C\
The m•w hnr of Jo tlrn1m ond artt'C'
\\('tlf \\ 111 b<' l"rt'\\'ntetl in a mint ra .. h1on
'"o" an Sa\\' le' cl two. at J 10 pm
BLYTH TltHVEL
120 NE.WPORT C'ESTLR DRJ\lf
SUlTE 160
SfWPORl BEACH ('Al If ORN IA 'llllloO
CABO SAN LUCAS
Is The· Fascinating' IRA VIL
Industry For You? /
Baja California
Two Bedroom. 2 bath condo
If so, you can be a pr~fessional travel consultant in
iust ten weeks. Three weeks Apollo computer
training included. Next class starts May 14.
Ocean view
Pool and Tennis. next lo
Cabo Baja hotel.
Rate S40 per night plu~ airfare
CABO CONDOMINIUMS
(714) 759-1471
• 1 HOUll COLOll PllllTS
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1901 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, CA • (714) 631-6861
Hlcle·•·b•d" Sot•
bf Sl111111on•
\-__ ..,....._.._ SOUTHW£1T FEA TIMES THE
LARGEST SELECTION OF
SIMMONS ~-A-BED•
SOFAS .. ORANGE COUNTY
SALE PRICED '388 FROM
:lUtl Harlter Bh• .. ('OST\ w•:.4'\
.1 ..,..1,&. .. ~w"'I" Al ....... .,,~.tl'W\ 545-71U .
... .. K.' \411'ft 4nf1 . fl , .. -.. f....-.i °'''" '" "" '-1 ,,. " ~ .... : '\
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t COAS" ,.w.. ~
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( 11 Co11I #"1. •111
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in•ex•pen•sive*
•(i n 1k spen· sav) not high in price: reasonable;
classified advertising
-·-.. ... -·-... a
The aiternative to the 5plane,12 taxi, 4 hotel
and 3 rent-a-car Hawaiian vacation
\\'hen ynu gl1 tl) pl.tl L'" l1h.r \l.1u1
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American Hawaii Cruises
\c\('n da\' I our i .. land' ( )m• unfor~('tl.thk \dt dtinn.
I
I
I
Fly-in fishing an affordable adventure
Those who know Northern Ontario only from movies
and television &bows Kem to rq,ard Oy•in fiabina 11 an
exotic e~pericnce mtricted to the IUF-rich ·~"'ler. In
fact, fly-in flshina is both an exhilarauna and affordable adventure.
Almost every medium-sized town in Northern
Ontario has •n airport that eervieet a number of nearby
resons. A variety of lodaes offer accommodation tbat
ranges from a 1in&le cabin on an itolatcd late to ultra·
modem resorts tuc'ked away deep in the bush. Some of the
airbuea a.re closer than you miJht imqjne -there i1 even
Oy-in filhilla u far south as Rice Lake.
You can fly in to fish a lake for just a day, or stay
1everaJ weeks. Many o~Voors can drop you otr at a remote lake in the moman nd oome back that evenJna.
cbaraina you for air miles own at a minimum of about
S2.SO a mile.
The most reasonably priced fly-in trips offer a
bousekccpin& cabin, either near 1 maio lodae or on a
remote lake. Tetu J...od&c, north of Minaki (BOx 11 30 N,
Kenora, Ontario, P9N 3X7, 807-224-3487). maintains a
single cabin on Alexander Lake. Analm. for S32S per
person per week, can have the laJce to themselves. The
frame cabin has a stove, beds and cook.ina utenails.
A week in a housekecpina or outpost cabin usually
costs from S2SO to $400 per person. That includes the fliaht
and the use of a boat that•• aJrttdy on the lake.
But these days, that'• reprded u .. rouahina It. ..
Throuahout Nonhem Ontario there are plush IOdatl with
wall-to-wall carpetina in the cabins. bot and oold runnina
water, even saunas where you can rest and relax after a day
offiabioi.
You don't have to be dediclaed aniJer to enjo}' a
remote vacation in ooe of these luxurious lod&et. The
entire family can fish and swim totethcr or just tab Jn the
unspoiled 1eenery while meaJs are preaprcd for them in the mafo lodat kitchen.
Tim6erwolf Lodae on Naaaaami Lake near Home·
payne (14 Sable Cr., North Bay, Ontario, PIA 3X7,
705-476-4316), has mott'l·•tyleaccommodalion. plenty or
aood 1nalin1 and a wide, '8ndy beach. For S 125 per person
per day ihc fli&ht. accommodation, all meal• and the use of
a boat att. included. Similar· lodles that run on the full
American plan~fromS7StoSUOperpenon per day. In
addition, many camps can arranae for auides, who are
hired at a minimum of $60 a day.
Once you're settled, a day ot an&)ina often tqln1 at
dawn. In the early momina. u the nUlt banpon the water,
youcao-hearfish spluhina. SomeaniJers walk down to the
dock, treadina carefully and quietly to make the first cast of
the day.
UCI Extension Olympic crowding refuted
P lans wine tour Concern amongst Anaheim botelie!'Sand Disneyland write to the Anaheim Area Visitor and Convention officials that the Olympics will hurt their normally atrong Bureau, 800 W. Katella Ave., P. 0. Box 4270, Anaheim,
summer tourism season bas resulted in a cooperative CA 92803.
The rest of the party heads out after brnkfasL Pike
fishermen direct thetr craft towards shallow baya, casting
tarae lures towards the shoreline. Trout an.Jlers cast or troll
in the deeper water.
At lunchtime, the walleye anf)ers, who've been
worlcina rocky points with lures andj1p, arc the centre of
attention. Walleyes are one of the essential elementt of a
shore lunch.
fillets the fish on a die. Lunch is fresh walleye, cooked Lunching in elegant country chateaus, dining in some nationwide advertising campaign heralding that there are
of France's finest restaurants, sampling wines at the very Anaheim area hotel rooms available before, during and ------------------• vineyards in which they were grown -these arc some of after the Summer Olympics.
thebighligbu ofa Wine Tour of France sponsored by UC A recentsurveyoftbearca hotel and motel properties Holland tour offered
The anglers gather on a rocky island. sheltered fr~m
the wind. TradiJionifll , they coUect wood while the guide
over an open fire. e faJlets are crisp and brown on the
outside, succulent white inside.
A northern Ontario shore lunch combines scenery.
companionship, woodsmoke and fresh fish to make a
memorable meal in the fresh outdoors.
. •
. ~ .
. .
. . . . .
Irvine Extension. revealed projected summer occupancy levels were wclJ
Scheduled for June 23 to July 7. the 15-day trip is below the normaJly strong levels. Bill Snyder, President of
described as a unique opponunity to acquire an an-depth the Anaheim Arca Visitor & Convention Bureau reported,
perspective of the wine maker's arc in some of France's "We arc afraid that the general public pcrc.eives that the
most legendary wine growing regjons. Anaheim area will be crowded with Olympic related
The trip will begin in Bordeaux and continue ~hrough visitors and activities throughout the entire summer and
Provence, ~"'undy ar:id Champagne. with v1s1ts to this is simply not the fact." c~teaus, ":Vmenes ai;-d vineyards along the way: I ncl.~ded According to Snyder. "The Olympics are only a three
w1!I be ynvate ~stings an~ a t~rec-da~ semm~r The week event." He added. "We're not about lo sit back and Wanes o France, at the Un1vers1te du Vin at Av111.non. allow people to postpone a summer vacation to Anaheim
Pre-trip meetings are planned for Wednesday. June 6 because of a misconception that there are no rooms
and 13, from 1 to9 p.m .. on the UCI Campus. available."
For funher information, co ntact Sandra Adams at To receive. an area l~ging guide ~d. a l!st. of hotels
856-7129. withroomsava1lablcdunng theOlym pacs, tndJVJdualscan
lHE LOWEST-PRICED
MEXICAN RIVIERA
l_ SEVEN DAY ~~SE ~-...... PACKAGE. J)U/7:
One Time Only-May 27.
Fly from Los Angeles
to Acapulco and spend
two days at the new
Acapulco Plaza Hotel
(breakfast and trans-
fers included). On May 29 board the sleek cruise ship. the SS RHAPSODY and cruise w Califontla, stopping
in Puerto Vallarta and arriving in Los Angeles on June
3. French cuisine and complimentary French winet are
offered daily
Call ~oday 64 2-4403
369 East 17th St
Costa Mesa
•mlfn 161111 ()() ptt I"'""" i-<J on <loo~ OClVl)ancy
BRis~ol
Village
TRavel
FOR ALL YOUR
VA CATION PLANS
"EVERYTHING YOU'VE EVER WANTED
TO KNOW ABOUT CRUISING ... "
AND MORE!
CALL (714) 979-9480 -:t=.;:
270 S BRISTOL (AT REDH ILL! COSTA MESA. CA 92626
--,
• The naml· '>a\'.., 1l (!II. Sitmar
(
UPTD
1100
per couplt.• on 111side rabm "'i.
: 1-)uper Sti\'(:r~· an: the best bar-
• gams gomg tlm, fall. Take any
• cruise. Or any rabin. You'll find
San up to 1611on1
C.rl/Jbl1n cru/11
the ~a\'ing~ an· ..,UpL·r i:H'r<I'-...,
: thl' board .
Hu t wt.· h;1\l'll
0t goill' fl\('r·
: board. \\'l'\t: l ut pnn:-,. but not
• qualit~. You'll '-Liil l'nJo~ .... ump-
; tuous dirung. ~parklmg tnter-
: tamment ..... parious cabins. and
• \Varm Italian hospitality. ;
: lwl u1to'Ill1111
OFF
\THISFAll.
You can also enjoy big bar·
gain .... on till\ 10 or 11 -day
LTlll'-l' tot he laribbl'<lll
dl'p;irt mg ~<:pl l'lllhl'r 1
through I ><:n·mlwr 8. Saw
$600 pl'r roupl<· on out~1d<·
rabm~. $:300 per couple on
inside cabins.
"'"'' ~ Trln-C.1111 • Mlxia en1i11 ..
: From Sl'ptemb<·r 22 through l>l'ct:mbcr ~~I.
·; you can gc:t t tw .... t· gl'nl'rolh .... av.ing.., 011
:: 14-da y cruise~ to the P<1narm1 Canal: $800
. per couple cm outside cabin~. $600 per
:: couple on insid<· cabins. Or. save on a 10 or
:: 11-da y ~1t'XI( o rru1 -.e ..,ailing August 25 ;~ throu.gh I >ect'mh<'r H. Wi th our $200 per
:: rouplt · transportation allowance. you 'II .... ave
·• $800 pn roupl<· on outsi dl' cabins. and $SOO .· . :! .
Tht'"l' l'xrlu .... in.· Sitmar
off er~ inrludL· e1thl'f frl'l' air fare to and from
tlw Litwrntn-rt'j..,~"itt.>rP<l Fair~e<l. Fairwind
and t lw 1ww Ffl ir-.;kr. or. a $200 p1..·r roupll'
trcmsportat1011allowanu·1f you <lon't ust• our
Air/Se?. program.
But -.;l\'ing-.. this .... upt•r don't last. so make
... lirt· \11u hon!-. In ~l'ptt·mlwr I. 198-t S1tmar
c ruhl'" (ll'l' "old l'>.rllhl\'t·I) b) prokb'ilonal
t ntV<'I aj.wnt "· 1-\<·t· \'Our.., t oda\'.
IUPEllAVE•
,.Q
FOR EXPERT CRUISE INFORMATION
CALL US
Mesa \Terde Travel
~
Me a V rde ~nter
C..o 10 M , CA. 926J6
556-6311
A unique, 15-day "Holland Homestay" wilJ be offered
thissummer by Orange Coast ColJege's Community Service Office.
The tour will run July I 0-24.
Tour participants wall live with Dutch families in
private homes in the Hague. and will have breakfast and
dinner daily with their families. Tours will be oonducted
each day in pla~es of historic and cultural interest in
Holland and Bcl~um. . Cost of the tour is SI , 799. The fee includes roundtnp
airfare, transfers, accommodations. breakfast and dinner
daily. tours and all admission fees.
For information about the tour, calJ 432-5880.
Many of the fly-in lodges arc listed in the Northern
Ontario Tourist Outfitters Association booklet. "North·
em Ontario" available at Ontario Travel Centres.
Non-residents require fishing licenses in Ontano.
Residents of other Canadian provinces ~Y $6.2S for a
yearly license. Non-residents from outside Canada can
purchase 4-day licenses for $10, 21-day licenses for $20,
seasonal licenses for $30. A new seasonal family license for
$40 entitles husband and wife to the daily fish limits.
Anglers who fish for muskict and lake trout are required to
have additional $5 stamps for each of those spceies.
For more information call toll free 800-828-8585.
mesa travel
.. me toc.tlon alnce 1965 ·-For all Y•r travel needs
•cruises
•tours
• airline tickets-at airport prices
2110 H1rltor
C1st1 1111, CA.
II tilt Otrltr tf l1rlttr
atl419S
548-8181
~· IF YOU THINK
YOU CAN'T A~FORD A CHARTER
YOU~RE MISSING THE BOAT!
• Vessels 22' to 136'
• Accommodate 2 to 300 People
• Select your own boat
• Hourly · day · week
• Personalized services
available
'~/~ tLbJeO/ ,,
3355 Via Lido, Suite 330
Newport Beach, CA 92663
(714) 675-2410
125 Faahlon Ieland
Newport IHach
759-9101
Garment Bag ......... .
25" Pullman ......... ..
Boarding Bag ....... ..
38'' Duffie ..........•....
3 Zlppu Carry-on ..
Tota Bag ................ .
Utlllty Kit ............. ..
Portfollo ................. .
••· Now
160" 124"
15" 61"
85" 60"
66" 41"
,, .. 76"
62" ....
l6H JJH
'60" ''"
-------·----·----,_...._......,_..-..,
,.,,,
One hundred years t40,
Thomae Stevena beoam8
the f1ret oyol18t t.o aroee
North Am8rica. He
made the C1'0l81nC 1n
103 days, which
rem.a1n8 a reepeott.ble
time today. Thia sum-
mer eever&l hundred
more cyoUste w1ll oon-
tinue Stevens' legacy,
many of them followtne
the 'n'&naAmer1oa BJaJ·
ole 'niLU which wu
developed by Btlte-
centenn.1&1 of M.1ssoula,
Montana.
•
Palm
'playgroun
afwealthy'
lOlll kaowa • &M 1'19,poad al die...,._ ~ =.•..:-,.=m= ::.:c:q-.= u=r-..:.. "t'l-:r 30~:· ... ~---,...,.----=
llCCOfttial to Ibo Palm ~. Vititon ud C..v dre
Bwau.
Tbe liaa u.dudet die Hum INCbln; ._ Uililld ...
States AmbeMtdof 10 Oral ... Walllr AH 'BS
Marriott Corp. C'bainn&D Jou Willard Sr.i Wlltp= AnnwtffMlw:r;MdTV,IMiollllioa_.,..
oner by 6dwmd DilDIJ, ••rr ol IM 1111 W Dlmly, aot to ..... .., I n ......... --~ .. ,-· Siaatra llld former Plelitdeal a..rd L ..._.
What ii it dW aUllidl .cla ,..,...,., • • ltt
peopic to Palm SpriDlf? Tbe WlllW,."" lalOw, ---coup d'etat that lured ~ cddlritim ........
'JOI. Tbat ~of lkmoar p.e birdl to dlil ..,.. .. •
exclusivity. Today, one can tee more llolJI..~ _.
Mm:edet Beoz's per capita than pabapl aaywbere ia dlS
100 years .of cross country cycling
wottd, and atteod &Dllual fud..raiteri wbidl iUll .._
more Starl lhan a mooo.leta delcrt ~L • •
lt'1 euy IO~ moaey in Palm~ -Iota Olk•
whbout travelial mote than ah milel. Tbil IOW9110lllj
761quare miles, and lw a population of a mere ~1000. Y •
many specialty retailen cater ODJy to tboee wim the bii
buckl. ud benefit sbowt beed•inM by bis-name entcr-One hundred years ago1 at a time when thousands of
families were loading their worldly goods in prairie
1Chooners and heading west. Thornu Stevens tied a
handful of things to his bicycle and headed east.
On April 22, ast.ride his Columbia hi&b-wheel bicycle,
Stevens waved good-by to a few wcU-wisncrs in Oakland,
California, and pedaled off toward Boston. Al tall arid
proud u a rider on honcbeck, Stevens spun silently down
the macadam surface of Oakland's San Pablo Avenue.
The easy riding. however, did not last for Iona. By
niJ.htfall he was lost and afoot, pushing his b~ throuah-a
tuilc swamp. Undaunted. he stumbled forward, his way lit
by the flames of a nearby range fire.
The goina was never easy. He was charged by a
mountain lion, nearly trampled by wild broncos and bit by
a rattlesnake. He was arrested in Ocvcland, buUY-
wbipped in New York, and regularly ridiculed by drunken
cowboys and paqenby.
Yet, 3, 700 miles later be made it.
.. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon of August 4, I roll into
Boston, and whisper to the wild waves of the sounding
Atlantic what the sad sea-waves of the Pacific were saying
Cruise bargains told
~ by Travel Network
Travel Network of Costa Mesa announces that due to
the introduction of many new cruise ships into the
vacation marketplace, there are numerous bargains
available for the 1984 season.
The Network's cruise specialists arc focusing in on the
many cruise lines that arc now offering considerable
discounts as well as free airfare due to the increased
competition.
ln addition, this summer will sec the fint time for
several cruise lines to sail the Mexican Riviera from the
West Coast during the coming months.
Travel Network counselors make frequent visits to
Los Angeles harbors when these ships arc in port in order
to inspect and become familiar with the many cruise lines.
Whether the traveler prcfcn Alaska, Mexico, Europe
or the Caribbean, there arc cruises of all lengths and price
ranacs available, and 1984 is truly the year of "cruise
bargains."
For these and other vacation adventures, contact
Travel Network, 369 E. 17th St.. Costa Mesa, 92627, or call
642-4403.
when I-left tbete,just 1031/J days qo," Stevena wrote.
Others soon followed in hd track. Before the end of
the 19th century, cyclists ridina "modem'' bicycles -
with diamond frames, chain drives and inflatable
pneumatic tires -bad cut the record to 57 days. •
In the 20tb century, the rec:ord continued to fall. Jn
1949 a solo cyclist made the crosaina in 23 dayt, 20 hours.
In 19$3 it wu done in 14 days. 16 houn.
In I 982 marathon bicycle racer Lon Haldeman
rocketed from California to New York in 9 days, 20 hours.
Haldeman prcdict1 that this year -if weather conditions
arc favorable -he will cut his time to 81h days during the
annual "Race Across America."
Record-seekers aside, tcnsofthousandsofriders have
crossed the continent at a much more leisurely ~-In
recent years most of these riders have ridden • off-th~
shelf" JO.Speed b.ikes. althoup the cronina bu been
made on everythina from unicycles and cheap clunkers to
a com_puteT-equipped, aerodynamic recumbent bicycle .
To avoid the noisy, smogy Interstate system, many
transcontinental riders follow a back-country route
custom4e~igned f~r cyclists bY, Bikeccn~nnial, a non-
profit service orpruzation for bicycle tounst1.
Bikecentennial inauaurated its 4,4SO.milc Trans--
America Trail in J 976. During that bicentennial year,
more than 2,000 riden, from ages 7 to 86, made the
crouina.
Since then, Bikeccntennial has researched and
mapped thousands of miles of bicycle routes, exploring
backroads throughout the nation and visiting many of its
scenic higbliahts, incuding Glacier, Yellowstone and
Grand Teton National Parks.
Cyclists can use Bikeccntennial guide material to help
plan their trip, or they can sign...up for one of the organized
toun provided by the I 0-ycar-old organization.
.. This summer we'll offer everything from a 90-<iay,
transcontinental campinf trek to a week-Iona tour of
Montana hot sprinas, complete with motel accommo-
dations and a van to provide refreshments while on the
road," said Bikeccntennial executive director Gary
Macfadden.
Such conveniences arc a far cry from the conditions
encountered by Thomas Stevens, I 00 years aao. Stevens
had no carcfulfy researched route to follow. In fact, he had
no maps, and, for much ofhisjoumey, he had no roads. He
was forced to push orcany his bike for at least a third of bis
cross-country trip.
.. Stevens' work is alwar,s with the wheel, but be is by
no means always mounted, • stated a 19th century writer.
"Sometimes he wades through the sand of a desert,
pushing before him the deeply embedded tire. Sometimes
throuJb a rouJ.b or swamp).' country, he bumps his
machane for miles along a railroad trestle-work; or on a
high mountain pass, carries it in the air above his head.
In fact. Stevens said that if be were to "push" a wheel
•
across the American West apin. he would pre~ it to be a tainen can nm u hiah u S 1 000 a penon.
wheelbarrow. That way, he explained, at least be could Where elle would one fiDd an aviation facility in die
trundle along enough provisions to make him1elf cateJOrYofhaurious.WbereoiloUorpe-.ncantak.ea
comfortable. dip LD 1 swimmiaa pool on Ifie property:;o;i io =bot As jt was, he carried no food OT coolcina pr. He ate IWlbetbe oo a tundeck, nap In a IDOOIC room. abowet,
only if be cncounteTcd people willina to share or tell a a few rounds of pool, eat and bave tbe Lear Jct b
meal. take.om It'• the new Jimsair Aviation Facility, a one-of+ "The chief discomfort of the experience was bUDFf, kind · vate aircraft puadjsc.
as my appetite was all the while ravenous, and • ~yinthistown,too,woUJdooefindacardealenbip
sufficiency of even the coancst food was often unat-with three quarten o( a million dollars ln R.oUt Jloyca
tainable," Stevens told an interviewer. sittina on the lot at any Jiven time. At Peter Ept1een Lid.;
Stevens. who stood 5 feet 5 inches tall, departed San sboppcn can chOOIC from about 12 ditl'ereot llollt Royea,
Francisco weighina l 58 p0unds. Forty-two days later, with price tap ranaina from an economical S99,000 to L
when be reached Cheyenne, in the Territory ofWyomina. hefty _SI 7S,OOO. Rumor bu if this dcakr h o.oe of~--
be bad lost 25 pound&. Larant-tell.ins in the country.
Unlike modem cycle tourists who drape tbcir bi.kct Palm Sprinp' 111op1. alto, are not nm-of-the-mill
with specially designed bias that~ 40 to SO pounds of Althouab many~ .in the mid-ranae price bracket, tbedite aear. Stevena made bis crossing with httle more than what of the c1etcrt can be found~LD like theMc.ourtyard,
wu on bis back. which bills itself u tbe · na international fubioa He crossed the Siem Nevada Mountains, ~here pUeria. The C.ourtyard 0 en a ricb melanaie of visual,
snow was more than I~ feet deep, unp~ by ei~T tactile, and pstronomical pleasures. but ir you're not
co.at or blanket. He earned only ooc extra shirt and a thin prepared for the bill, it could pve you ind~· on.
rain poncho. . . Select a peir of sboel from the · t Bank Shoe
Instead of spectahzed tools and replacement partS, Company -famous for Cln')'in&_ Qivc S ·ton shoes. who S~evcns outfitted himself with a. monkey W"renc~. a can of desiped the wcddina shoes for Princcsa Di-and expect to'
011, a few extra spokes, a spare ure (made of solid rubber) pey more than $150. Or try 1 SM:ater by Fapani, where
and a J?Ol ~f glue (!Jsed to mount the llJ!lfC). such deaip,er prestiae will s:un $300 or S400. ~·bicycle withstood the ordeal wi~out breakaac or Yves SL Laurent francbite-ownen also operate a
excessive wear. That was one o.f the m&JOr advantqcs of bcalthy outlet here. An evcnina IOWD ot silk with a
the .. Ordinary" .cycle$, as the '1.iJh-wb~lcn were known: matduna boa. all in blac.k and silver, 1elll for $1,SOO.
They were so sunple that there wu little that could So Accord.in& to store manqcn, tbc·most expensive piece wro~g,. and, when something did, the rider could usually sold was a dress tba. t went for Sl.000. The people at SL
repatr it. Laurent-Rive Gauche aay they ~ ~ at my
The major disadvantage of the Ordinary wu that it moment ~o take merdlandi.tc to special ~ts who call up
was difficult to ride. With the rider seated directly over the from ~ country dubl or ~ MU.CS ~!C for
front axle, the Ordinary's center of pavity was located IOIDethina to wear. lletailen bri.Da tbe mac6and•te '°
precipitously to the front. Any raistance enoouaten:d by them. . . . .
the b1g tire whether a rut or small rock. would brina the · At Caruer's, let the JCWekr to the kiDPt kina of
rider divini forward in a fall known as a .. header." jewelers .bed~nle ~th ~ house'• ~-famous ~
On '""" ds h~..1-....... tu &Old rollin&-nn& desaan1 LD braceleu. nnp and ncckllCeL rou.,.. roa . ~u were '"It~ occurrences. '""-rich . Palm~ be found-dim On the wqon trails and wild terrain ridden by Thomas '~ au~-LD • may -DI
Stevem headers were virtually unavoidable. ~le Vallunua, an ~uuvc: renic~ ~~t where the
lo ~ne instance St.evens performed what be called bill of~ can euily_ nm in~ tri&?le ctisiU for two. or "~inglorious b~" along the South Plate ~vcr, in full Mel~ ~°i:!r'7': =~~~any ordinary
Vlcw oheveral wqonloada offrec:kle..faced childn:a bmber b' hair trimmina and ltytina. r-~ mey IO to
for more information concernina the sport ofbicycle saJonl, like the one in the Sheraton ~otd. Herc,
touring. contact BikeccotenniaJ, P.O. Box 8J08..B, auests ~ivc a two-hour therapeutic seaweed. trtatrnent
Missoula, MT 59807: or call (406) 721-1776. for about $100, which is suppoted to be good for skin.
C•ll 6'2-5678.
Put • few word•
to work for ou. Mesa Travel School
classes start May 14 ~ eg1n our Travel
Career
Bl#eBeU
C!t!M11te1 etJ "'e eau
20912 ,e.,... a..'°. ~
494-1516 The Orange Coast has a first class vocational travel
school.
f)(6wey
Costa Mesa Travel with its 30 years in the travel
business is applying its expertise to professionally educate
prospective travel a•cnts.
*8 p~?
The school offers a complete curriculum including
hands on computer training. These classes take I) lace in the
headquarters, based in the Pacific Federal Plaza building
on the comer of 19th Street and Newport Boulevard.
U se
Classes arc 10 weeks in duration with the next class
starting May 14.
For brochures and additional information, call Cost.a
Mesa Travel at 631 -6861.
AllSw•rAtl
Daily Pilat
642-5678
INCLUOU HOTU AHO Al"l"A"IE
"91 oe<ton dlll OCC PHH HTBW
HILTON SPORTS SPECTACULAR
Unllmlted Free Tennis, GoH and Horseback Riding
S539 ONE ISLANO·TWO WORLDS:
• Round Trip Airfare ;:-
• 3 Night• at lhe Hiiton How•llon VIiiot•
• 4 Nlghtl at the Turtlo ••r Hllto" •n41
Country Chtt.
• Untlmlted F,.. Tonnt11 Unllmlted FrM Oolt (Qotf Cart
Not Included). Unllmhed Free HorMback Riding
..... A SPORTS FILLED WEEK AT THE
TURTLE BAY HILTON AND COUNTRY CLUB
! HOLIDAY INCLUDES: s II!!~.
• Round Tr1p Airfare 'rom ..V . a:.~""' • 1 Nlfhll at the Tttr1M .. , Ml..._. --..-.... -•• "ii •Mc ..... ,, CIMll .... _ _M ...
--, ,. . l, • 1 Dap Ootlat C. "41ftt.i '"~··,. • Unllmltad f,.. Tennie, Unlimited ,,... Oolf (OoU C111 Nol
,.. · • ,_. Included). Unllmltod ,,.. Horl••cll "ldlftt
• And Mud\, Mud\ MOf9
.... ,,.. ,_,riot..,.. A#tJ ... .,..._,,. flf Call tor ~ _,.. """'" ............. feut .,_..,,. HeftiMJ • .....,..,,.....,... l1Wl1..-tt Mar,,_,,, .. ~ Ti-. M .. Y-.
ll'n.e HIOMf lflf ~WM tlt/M tllf lleyeM. .,.._ ._....... .. ~
Mf H011t A#O MW' t:"' WITH n. 9fST J ... _ ~:J ............. .. : ..._....., .. _ __,_......., _ _,
SElYOUALOCALTAAYlL AOlNT O,_
CALL TOLL FREE (800) 2·HAWAll .,.iu·•™>
CAll llftflU'U ., •Ill ·t •• • I U Ull " •II t ., •
PlooBlllll HllWBllBI Holldaq
----WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS_..,.
•
MAY 7
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
Courte Include. Theory Plu1 Hand1-0n Computer Tralnln1
•NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED CURRtC\JLUM
•JOB PLACEMENT A ISTANC£
Eorollment Now lo Pro
LISA SURETTE
OWNER/MGR
Boarding & Grooming
D•y & N{lht Attendence
Tender Loving C•r•
for Your Cat
775 L.agun• C•~on Rd.; Lagun• Beach
PHONE (714) 497-5233
..
,elJ#IUlll lJetW, e.11/«JtUI 92651
21«1'4 q. ~' D.11«
Passport Photos
While You Wa1t·Only $6.95 Pair
Film
Orange County's Largest Select Ion
al Discount Prices
·cameras
Orange County's Finest Selection
Binoculars
Bushnel Nikon M1nolta·Ze1ss Leitz
Photo Classes
'Let Us Toach You All the Tricks"
.
Processin2
By Cal s Own Custom t°ab
24 Hour SPrv1ce
1
omeo, 67, updates sex statistics Volunteerism . . prepares one
!luy C'iurheu
chums shouted, "Oo, ao, ao!" He peMtd out on the ooue11
and they let\ him there to alecp it off.
Al oew 'auest1 amved someone asked, "Wbtre'1
KcUtT' They checked on him. and ctiecoveted be had been
vomJtina blood, and took him outside. When be fa!led to
respond, they laid' him on the porch. One of the auests
noticed his lii>S were tumana blue and called the police.
A 19-year-<>ld is dead because hi• friends Cued Him
on to show off: just to see what would happen. How can we
teach our youna people to be more c:arina? Plcasel ~nn, comeupwnhsomeanswers.-SrCKATHEARTIN N.J.
DEAR N.J,: nere'a more lavolved t.ere &Ma .....,
tgecl OD fty ftleMl.ftat lad mut Uvebeea ID •eapenS.
aff4of ...... dell _.a~eue.UMw..W auem,ts.
dl1dapl11t fllmteU b)' drtakbac five beers aad a ,..,.. ef
... Key.
OCCsets
Baja tour
Orange Coast College's
Community Service Office
is conducting an excursion
this summer to the rugged
and beautiful islands off
the west coast of the Baja
peninsula.
for greatness
To my knowl· cctae, no one hu ever
researched the his-
tory of volunteerism.
•
Was tho battle at
Little Bia Hom I
¥J"OUP of rathers and tons attendina 1
Scout cam90ree that ••••••••••• sot out of hand? . Wu some poor mother volwneered by her ~d to
brina the poiato salad form for the first Thanktcivina at
Plymouth Rock?
I sus~ we will never know for 1ure.t but of one thina
I'm ccruun. Volunteerism preperes you ror areatness. Leafina throuJh the pqea of history, you can almost
read between the hnes. Take Sadie Orchard. Do you think
her beoomina the first woman to drive a 1t.qe00ach in
1880 in the Wild West was by accident? Get bold of
yourself. Thia woman had been a veteran of five years of
Stqec0aehpoolina, hauHna kids around from one outeost
to another for everythiq you can think of from kicking-
the-<:an Little Lca&ues to intramural barrel races. History
reports she carried a bull whip. Don't we all.
And what abOut Rebecca M. Winboume, wbo was
known as the Betsy Ross of the Confederacy for makina, a
flaa that was adopted by the Confederate Congress an 18~1? •'
CHINESE REST AU RANT
The trip runs Sunday,
Auaust 12 through Frida).'. August 17. The tour wlll
explore the isl4nds of
Todos Santos, San Martin,
Cedros, and San Benito.
Women don't 10 around m~ flags for a bobby. I
smell a committee here who needed a woman to make a .
flaa out of old dyed flour sacks in less than two weeks. They
picked on poor Rebecca who had .come to their fint
meeting ... as a guest. ·
And what mother who ever suffered throuah merit
badges bas not wept for Evelyn Cheeseman, who traveled
alone among cannibals in the South Pacific in 1881 , and
collected more than 42,000 insccu and ~itic worms.
The splendor of Chinese cuisine and elegant dining Cost of the trip 1s approx-
imately $545 per person.
Cost of the tour includes all
meals, lodging. insurance,
and OCC fees. Reser-
vations arc limited to 26
persons.
Special Luncheons • Dinner
Cocktails • Sunday Brunch
Open 7 days a week
Recognition for volunteers even existed at the tum of
the century, but what's the uae if you don't set the media
out? Therefore on Oct. 24, 1901 , I suspect some health
organization sent Annie Edson Taylor over Niagara Falls
in a barrel. The trip took 35 minutes and got her on the
wire services, along with the cause.
Banquet facilities • Wedding receptions • Private parties
The tour will depart from
Enscnada, Mexico on the
chartered boat Royal Pa-
cifico. Tour participants
wiU bike, snorkel, fish and
explore the islands by sk.iff.
At the conclusion of the
tour, the Royal Pacifico
will return to Ensenada.
Ana who could forget Josephine-SCnauer Blatt ofNew
Jef'Sey, who is credited with making the greatest lift ever
made by a woman -3.564 ~unds. And why not? Only a
year before on a field trip wJtb 35 prc-scboolen on a picnic,
she picked upacaniqcand threatened them with walking
back to town if they didn't shape up!
1400 S.E. Bristol St. Costa Mesa
Corner of Bristol & Redhill> 756-9229
Big Prize
Giveaway
May 1·5
• Over $400,000 in prizes
• Balloon bust prizes
•Prizes in every balloon
•Three Course Fiesta $4.95
• Mariachi music on Saturday, May 5
• Win free fiesta dinners for 10
~~Fun for children of all ag~~
~ .. ~ z To celebrate Cinco de Mayo, we're having a gala five day
party from May 1-5. There is a prize in every balloon, and a bal-
loon for every table. And, a specially priced Three Course Fiesta
with steak picado, chicken enchilada and beef and bean mini
tostada for just $4.95.
Be sure to visit Acapulco Mexican Restaurants during our
festive balloon bust celebration. There's a prize In every balloon,
and a great atmosphere for having fun.
r
I
I f'
\11Ahl'1m • I~ l(°l IW!l.>1 81\d
'' '·"' '"'"' O"~ l.t11<I ~~(•7JM
li<lrdtll \lf.:Wf • 12101 l V•llry \'IN !ii
011 \"lln Vl<'W ""'Jlh o( l h mun \~<'
""-' 1~1.'
lMU \1tY • 121\l 'If llfm,•I '>I
I ml '4.>tllh ••I ~"'Ulh (Olli M,.u.i
H 4 (l!-28
OM onze betloon per dlnlft9 ~ Some orlt• ~ ,...,.lc:J1om •• ti offer OOOd through M•~ J 1 191-4. NO ~ ,..,_..ry k>f •tr .. orlze belloOn. wtlle IO fl!O Boa 10249, hMHn•, CA 91107
Not .. •ll•bf• on pN)n•ln Of t.U-out OfcMtl
The volunteer is a species that has endured in
America. I do not presume to suggest what their epitaph
will be.
RUFFELL'S But Katharine Elisabeth Goethe's is as Jood as any:
"Say that Frau Goethe is unable to come, she 1s busy dying
at the moment.'' UPHOLSTERY, INC.
ftr .... lest .. ,_ lie
1m .... 1u1. CISTI IW -SU.UH
GULLIVER'S
cprime ~bs of ~eef
with all the escorts
Reservations Essential/
t 8482 MAC ARTHU R
IRVINE 833-8411
BRIDGE
CHARLES
GOREN
SUPER·MOY8E -
THE 1-3 FIT
DEAR READERS: Wo
laave lled •u1 requite ever
U.. yean fer tlteee laud1
that we co•Uder to be ffr
favoritee. Ttia.t aue1 qalte •
U•t. Fer ~e U..e belq.
therefore, we are devotJ•1
the Sanday colum• to a
eerlea of famou1 laallde. At
the ead of the eerle1, we will
10 back to our weekly qiae ..
tlo• and u1wer eela•n.
East West vulnerable. North
dealt.
NORTH
+A 102 "'an
0 AQ74
• 83
WEST EAST
+KJ9 +8765
';?AKI06 ~QJ98
0 K J 2 0 109
• QJ 10 • 60
SOUTH
+QO
<:.? ..
0 8653
+AK t75
Breaded Shrimp
Platter s2.99 =~6
Shrimp lovers! We've got the be$t little st'\Jjmp at
the best little price in our Breaded Shrimp
Platter! Lots of lightly breaded shrimp, served
with f ryes, slaw & 2 hushpupples.
3095 Harbor Blvd. In Costa Mesa just
south.of San Diego Freeway across from Fedco
(Drive-Thru Service Available)
o ... ~
SHARIF ! ... 1
The bidding:
North Ea1t
Pu1 Pue
Rdltle % "'
OW. P ...
<t + Obie
Pua
South West
I + Obie
P ... 2NT
3 + PaH
Pu1 Pa11
Opening lead: King or '?
The trend today is toward
five-card maJor opening bids.
Some years ago, the tale
Sonny Moyse. when editor of
The Bridge Worl<I. devoted
much ink to espousing the
cause or the 4·3 major auil Cit.
Even before that Adam
Meredith, the mercur ial
genius or British bridge. WIS
advocating his idea or three
card spade suit opening bids.
Meredith's theory waa
that the spade suit possessed
great preemptive qualilie•1.
It stole the whole one level
from the opponents. He prac
ticed what he preached. This
hand ii Crom a lournament
meny yean ago.
In third uat Meredith
trotted out his ravorite one
1pade opening bid. When he
ran Crom two no trump dou
bled to three clubs. North
1hould have realh~ed what
wes going on. Instead of pass
Ing. North rashly leaped to
four spade1, but a catas
trophe was averted by
Meredith's skill.
West led the king of hearts
and continued with the ace.
Meredith rurfed, rinessed the
queen of diamonds success
fully and ruffed another
heart.
With Impeccable timing.
dec;larer cuhed the ace or
diamonds and the ace·klng or
clubs. He ruffed a club low in
dummy and was overjoyed to
rind that suit divided evenly.
He came back to hand by
r urring dummy's lut hearl
with his queen of trumps. By
now he had now 1cored eigM
of the Ont nine triclle and he
wa1 in hi1 hand for the co1tp
d11 groce.
Declarer led a club and
Weal was helplea~. If he rurr
ed low, declarer would ovt>r
ruff with the t.4ble's ten. and
tht' ~mp ace wQuld be thf'
Culfllllng trfck. 'o Wut rutr
ed with thf' Jttc:k of trumps
Meredith. however, had a
neat counter. lutead of over
ruffing. he 1lutred 1 diamond
from the board. Now dummy
was poist•d ovtr We•t't .K g
with thr A 10. No matter
how the deCensr prtle eded,
1ooner or lahlr tlummy would
•core ho« h trump' for 1 hf
rulrlllin~ trirka "' .. , ........ ,., '"' ...... '-' c ....... c ..... u4
O•er •erlf. ten of t.i1 ... .,.~r. F.eot• •H• • prtw., . "'' ., ,.. ..... .. .. .
,,..,. (' ..... '41 ............. .
•II ~ ••ltt4H fer t .. 41"'''" '~th .... ,._. ......
C'erlu Oor .. ••4 O•er
llatlr ,., .... 11, ,. ... , •H•t·
tM -. ••••rr 111 ~·••Uo .. "'-ltle4
• I ~; ... • •• •,
ewchefforDlsneyland Hotel
,,.... 1. ••• -naac O..IM i1 the new .J• aaa., .. n....,.,., baa
necutive chef for. the I, I ~room purcbued a 4,00()..tquate-foot 1tudio
DllMylaM a.a.I 1n Anah~1m, an-at 137' Lotan Ave., Unit UL, in
nounced....., Dlebau, VI?~-Cotta Mesa. Raley, a former staff
dellt of food, bevmee ud ~ pbotop"apber at r.tPs n.~
Devine bu previoualy been executive ler+klw, Jae., boulbt the studio trom chef' for the ..._._ ...,.. ..._. MPS. Raley primarily WOfbd with
Betel and ~be( at . Adutil • ...,. com~ producu in the areu of
tJvuc. ~th 1.n ~n Dieao. In his new electtoruca, recreation, al>l*'tl, in-post. De~ 111n cbarJe of all food ~UIU')' and furniture. He said be
preparation, QOlt control and em-bou&ht a studio near John Wayne
ployce development in the Di-. Airpon because of the area'• arowth
neyland Hotel'1 l 6 restaurants and potential.
bats, room service, banquet and • • • ~terina departments. He also super-JuJ1 L. BalfHI of Totldle Rosa vises more than 210 aervice em-... C.. accowitina firm bu been
ployecs in th<>te department.I. A transfcmd to the Newpon Beach
native of Dublin, rrcland, he is a office from San Diego. Recently
member of Cltef de Cal118e Alaocla-promoted to supervisor of the tax ti•. department, Bafl'oni will be respon-
1ible for 1upcrvision and man~
ment of ~or accounts. She special·
izcs in real estate, pannenhi~ tax
provjsions and computerizauoo of
tu mums.
• • • BW.......,.. ii the new mant~ of
MaT.-..•mleatlwC...'10r· anae County ollk'le, mpou'bie (or
the carriers sales and servicn ~
tivities in Orange County. Leonard
joined MCI last June u manqer of
the San Jose office. Prior to that, he
wu manager for Nadoaal Adnaced
Sy1tem1.
• • • TIM Web Pria&er bu 1i&ned a lease
for 32,000 square feet or warehouse
space at 149S N. Main Street in
Huntinaton Beach for paper storage.
ORANGE COAST STOCKS
Here are the stock market actl.ttlee of publicly traded
Orange County firms In the week ended Friday, Aprll 27.
Data provided by Newpert Seeuritlee Corp.---
------·• I I ----------,---tltd 1itd I --.------i·------.------,
llAHt 1STH 1 lltlDQOAl!Tt:M PltODUCTS tlUllRT Pr1oe1Prloe S US 1P/! tT!U t lfD , llEYEllU! 1NET t1IC1
\
COMPLITI NY8 ..
. Takeover
attempt .
by Smith
9'JmYRTUCB .............
lnvcttint_in private corppan.in can
be a rcwardina. but risky, businesl.
Arthur Lipper. the cbaimwl of
Venture Mapzioe, a publication for
venture capitali111 and en-
trcpreneun, hu juat completed a
book that could provide some im-
portant auidelines for people con-
siderina such an investmenL
Lipper,. 52. WU in Cotta Mesa
earlier this week to meet with
advertisers and promote hi1 book,
"InvestinJ. in Private Companies.''
He said there are some buic
· principles about invcstina in private
companies that people should learn
before they invest.
---------·-~~~~~-----·--------------------1-----:~~=~~:~~=~~-~~=----~--: ____ :_~~~~~--:.~-:~-~~~~-----: ""N __ B.__..,,f,..lnn-.--w--an--t-s_t_o_b_uy __
"If you arc not a aood judae of
people, y~u will . not be a aood
mvestor .in • pnvate compeny,"
Lipper said, addin' that the key to an
investment is dccidina whether the
entrepreneur ca.n develop the busi-
ness.
"You should have a realistic antici-
pation with wbatcan be earned on the
money you arc invcstina. The bJ1ber
the carnjna objective, the lea likely it
will be fullfillCd and the more likely
yo_u will lose your money, .. upper
S81d.
1 &tr ca11ror. &CAL
2 Alpha Mloro &ua•
3 U t eo Corp.
q A!Mr. Dla1. ADGlf
S ._,.. Pace • &.EC •
6 Aaer. Pao1r10 APF
1 Aaer.149<1-0.nt &MED"
' U.r.Sta~e 9 Mer.TMrul
10 Apld Crt. Teob AC•T
11 &robhe Corp. &CRY
12 an ltyat.e.a &TU
13 Balcer Intl. S O •
111 Bank-llwport
15 Btrlyx, Ino. llJP'L
16 !lolled !Md. BOHO
17 Bov•r t nduat. -
1! llrtdafol"d rd. llRtDI'
19 Butt•rtl•ld llVTR
lO C.ptat.rano lilt •
21 Car• tnt. Ull!
22 Carl lrarober CUV
23 C•rtron Corp. CllTll• z• CbeHpealce ens
25 C1t1Mft8 !lank -
26 Clot.bu Tl .. CTME
27 Colla bta llaY. -
2! Coearoo, t no. CHllO •
29 C:C.pre. Ca.-. Clt'H
JO Corp ltl Bank -
J 1 C:0. t nct.ew1 COY Y.
32 C1111llaao lleot CU.Sii
lJ O.taPoWer ore
,. 0.tatl"On D'f ...
JS o.t .. , Ino. D&Ttfl
36 O.atgn V••t DWtC
37 Dtc•on ll•ot. Dl CN
3~ Dtal tal Oat.•· DDt t
39 Dtat . Losto DLOO•
40 Dovn•y Su. OSL
q1 E!CO, tno . E!C •
q2 !Tl' Ktorovav• EIPH
•3 El Torl to tno ET
U Eldorado Bank ELD8
~5 t.uln Corp DCLX•
~6 F. Anahela
q7 rar V.at. 'tn. PVI'
'' First ... ,..F. r&KR
q 9 Fluor Corp. P'LR e
50 Fluorocarbon 'CBM•
51 r or Bett. ... L. nn
52 Oanar•l Auto. OtNA
5J Gen•l"9l r.,..
5• Gtah lltaaed. OISH
55 Golden V. H. OWR •
56 Oradoo Sy at. Ot CO
57 G.-.at.wutHoap Giit
59 llaa.ond Co. TMCO
59 lleltonn lc• KU
60 llcma Health RRCA
61 IrvtM S9ftaor t llSI
62 L&a•r Preo. LASR
63 Laa•,...d Cor p LAKD
6• L1b9rt1 Nat.l . -
65 Lt on Country ORRR
66 Loa A1 .. 1to• LARC
67 Luther Hed LUTHD
6' ~ba Cor p. -
69 Herour y Sa•. HS L
70 Hloro D HCR[)ll
71 Ht~ro Gen•ral HOEN
12 HICl"OIHl HSCC1
7J Hr>r•houae Ind HIXS•
H HST Data Corp HSI 1
75 Natl Eduoatl l!C •
76 Natl Ha•lth NHCS
77 Natl L,.119,. NTl.J
79 hUCl H ,ood llAOO
79 Mahon Rah ll!LR
'O llewport Corp. lllVP•
~I Newport !laot. 111111
'2 Newport ..,,_,.. IM'H
93 llK5 Pha,... IM!lt• e• Od9llo• ()Oil•
's OM189dtoa 1 OMMI
06 Or•n .. Banoorp -
'7 Pao1r10 '°l•n PSX •
'' r.t.roalneral 1 P'TM
,9 Plper Rydro PIUI
90 Pl•se C-. PW
91 P.-.al •y Cow. PDC I
92 Prtnt.ront• PTllX•
9J Queltty S71, QSt I •
9• Raap!lrt Oenl. -
95 RB I ndu1t.r t•• RBI
96 Rep.RHOW'O• 111:&"9
97 11u1t.1 Pel t oan 11sn 9' Sari/liar Corp. SBAR
99 Saeb..,k 011 SW
100 Slltoon Sr• sLCJ•
101 Sll H roraat Sl.f I
102 S.Hll lnt.t. Stt •
10) St..nd~rd Pao. SPP •
10• s u n• R)'dro. SM
105 S~rhl Corp, STAI
1o6 Sv9dlov,tno.
IOT ll)'elOfl•llO•
I~ T.ObnOle>S1 Mir\ TKIT•
109 T•l•tll• r,..p -
I 10 T•~St.tk T04P1
I 11 ,.,..111 l •,,.. Is TSllC
111 Olt.r• ~toal •
11) Ol,r••r•taa• ll\.Tlt9
I U h l•n"h e.n11 -
1 I~ h f'ee tn\l, YRC I
l 16 '"' co..,. fl.ti I If YTll Co.-,. ~
I 1 • WCJ ln\1 ICJI
1 19 11tnu1 1ntl. llltTI
1 20 v.1,.ro"'"P VP •
1 II Vu tel'!I Dll • llOC\.
' ,, V..Uan4• ' VISA I I) VU laN Co.
1 ~II Wtnn tnl•rp lfT•
I " Wynn •• Int\. '"'
llwpol"t S.•ob
lrYlM
lrYlM
hvpol"t lleaoh
Nw'port leach
IrrtM
AnalMla
Nevpol"t !leach
t,..ln•
AnalMla
Coat.a Heaa
Sut.a An.a
Oranp
hvport. lle•oh
tl"YiM
tl"YlM
Sant.a Ana
Ana.Ml•
llrea
San Juan Cap
Oran ..
AM.bet•
&Mbel•
llevport. lleaob
Coate KeM
Ana.Ml•
Anahel•
Anabel•
llevpol"t. !leach
Sant.• Ana
l'ull•rt.Oft
llwpol"t. lle•ob
3uh lna
T\18tln
Anabel•
lrYiM
trY1M
Lal\lna N t gua l
O.rd9ft Gr oH
Costa HHa
Sant.i Ana
N•vport. Be•oh
t r•lne
Tuattn
Coa t.a H•aa
~Ml•
llevport lleaoh
Sant.a Ana
tr•tn•
Laguna Ntguel
t.asun• Nt~l
Anal\91•
Tu.at.in
Sant.a Ana
Sant.• Ana
Sent.a lna
UrllM ·
IUo..-put..r SJ•
Sound Produot.a
Ned.l>iasno•Uo prod.
R~ bl dl • 6 eleot..
lleal !at.at.e/Ftnanc.
Dent.•l llMltb Plan
Banking
Tbe,_l •Ml"IJ
Htl THt. lqu1p
Htv ot Tape Drl .....
Hioro Into. a)'St. ...
011 t lald equ.ip.
llulctng
IASD&Q 11 ,50 11.50
11&.SDAQ 12.75 1•.50
OTC 0.13 o. 11
llA!DAQ 5 .13 5.1J PCS! 7.,! 1.,,
llUDAQ •.JI •.JI
llUOAQ 0. 911 I. 00
OTC 5 .00 5.00
OTC O.JB 0.63
NASDAQ 5.00 U,50
1&3D&Q 7.75 7.75
H 5DAQ 1.e9 1.99
lft31 21.25 22.25 ore NO 1.50
San1o• St.at.ton• NASDAQ 0.09 0.09
Hedlcal !quip. NASDAQ •.25 •.oo
81ocbftJoal Procluch OTC 2.00 z.oo
Frosen tood prod. llASDAQ J. 75 J. 75 s . L holding oaapany NASDAQ •.oo u.oo
llanlcing OTC • .00 • .00
lfursin1 F•otllt.l•• OTC 9.00 7.75
Faat tooda
MacneUo tape prda.
Mt I • llood door a
lllankinc
Dtaoount. Clot.binc
Savtnp • loao
IU 11 t.ary •)'S • •ncr ·
S.alt.b ca.-. ....
C-relal lliaftlt
lie-. butldat"•
llad1o • Ttl•. A Tl"an.
,_,. aupplJ ata.
IUoropr-uor 17•·
Spec • .ieo •• ,..
C-rctal dHt.sn
ClrouH Boards
Factory •Pl coap ay1
C:C.pa~•r Cont.roll•r•
Sa•lnp • loan
El•ot.11•·• swttohaa
Htorovave counters
ll•ataur1t11ts
&onktna
!leotronloa
S.vlnp 6 IAan
Sa•1np A li>an
Tl t.le tnaurana.
lfeaY)' env. A canst..
H.SDAQ 22. 50 2• . 00
l&.SDolQ 2.99 Z.99
IU.SOAO 2.50 2.00
OfC 9.00 9.00
NASDAQ 8.00 !.00
OTC 10.00 10.00
H SOAQ 9.00 9.00
NA!t>&Q 1!.99 20.00
OTC 1'.00 111,00
llUD&Q 1.63 1'.6)
IUDAQ J.25 J,25
WDAQ 6,00 6.IO
l.&.SDlQ 1.69 1.J9
l&Stl&O 6.50 6.50
lfoLSDAQ 0.,9 0.9!
ll&SDAO 15.00 15.25
NASDAQ Q • 00 3. 50
NA.sDAQ 9.50 9.50
ASE 1 I. 00 I I. 25
ASE IQ.63 U.3,
llA.sOAQ 11.00 I0.7S
NASDAQ 10.25 11.00
NASOAO 5.75 5.75
NA.!ID&Q 16.00 15.75
OTC 110 17. 50
NYSI 31.6) Jl .25
NASDAQ 2•.50 23.50
NYSE 21. ! ' 2 I. 75
n uo,.ooarbon plutlca NASDAQ 12.50 11.00
Precut ooncret. llUD&Q A.25 •.25
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lt9dtcal d••lc•a OTC ).3! J.)!
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NASDAQ
NASDAQ
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2.13
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Sant.a Ana l l •ot. ..... u.r. lnatr. 11&.SDAQ ).00 J.00
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llA.SO&Q 2.)'J 2.~
llASD&Q 17,75 l1.00
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Texas-based Gearhart
Newport Beach-baaed Smith lnter-
national, Inc., said Friday it plans to
make a cash tender offer for up to 3. 7
million shares of Gearbart Industries
Inc., but the Texas firm opposes the
plan and has asked the couru to stop
tl.
Smith, with sales of$697 million in
1983, already owns 33.2 ~nt of
Gcarban or about 5.3 million abares.
If the compan).' successfully
purchases 3. 7 million additional
shares, it will own 56.3 percent of
Gcarbart's outstanding shares.
Smith, a worldwide supplier of
products and services to the oil and
gas drilling and minina industries,
plans to offer $31 a share, said Paul J.
RUSldl.~cepraidentofcorporale
communications.
The plan was announced Friday,
shortly after a state coun in Tanant
County, Tex.as, lifted a tempc:nry
restrainina order issued A.pril 18
which barred Smith from commenc-
ina a tender offer. pun:buina
Gearhan commo• stock or oblainina
control of Gearhart, which is hued in
Fort Worth, Texas.
Other coun actions, in both state
and federal court, were stilltpcnding.
Marvin Gearhart, president and
chief executive officer of the com-
pany, said he would "vigorously"
fight Smith's tender offer.
"It's not treating all of our share-
holders right," Gearhan said. "It's
not being offered to all shareholders.
It's only being offered to 56 percent: ..
What's going to happen to the other
44 percent? They feel that once they
get control of the company, the other
44 percent likely will be worth
whatever they want to p,aY for it,
which could be very little. '
"That gives us majority ownership
in the company. That 1s all we're
seeking to buy at thls point in time.
We arc not making any particular
offer for the other 44 percent,"
Russell responded.
People should be ~ of "act rich
quick" schemes, he advised.
Never invest in a company that is
being started by a relative or a close
friend, Lipper warned.
"lf you want to help a collcac
roommate or a son-in-law out, write it
off in your mind by Jivina it to them
in the fint place," Lipper said.
'111e relationship between the
entrepreneur and the investor is
adversarial. That doesn't work with
your best friend or son-in-law. lf all
goes -well for them, they can sive it
beck to you some day," Upper said.
The very nature of invest.in&
autes the advenarial relationshi
bct'N'Ccn the investor and the el.
trepreneur, accordina to LiPPCf'.
.. The invemr is prom.-CS to
invest by projections of profit.I made
by the entrepn~neur. Nearly every
projection does not wort out -
certainly not in the predicted time
frame. As projectiom fall, the in-
vestor has a ri&ht to· 1ncreued
ownership in the business, .. Li~
said.
lncttaJCd ownenb.ip is the OaJy recoune invesaon bave if the __.
uepreneur does not come tbroulb.
Lipper cautiom that (il()l1tnctl oudin-
i~ what happens if the busineu does
n·ot do u well u projec1ed be carefully
written before the investment is
made.
In any case .. only inveat that wbicb
you can afford to lose, .. lipper said.
Lipper calls investon in private
compenies "nabp'al raourca" dm
do not tel the praise they deserve.
They put the money up to fOl1er crcati~ty and innovation m busineu.
"lf the investor bas a IOOd tt·
perience, be will be P"nin& tbe money
up fonnore entrepreoeun. lfhe baa a
bed CX.ffiiace, he will oner i.nvell .,.m. u ~
He -'Th: ... '""'1ll oc.aar-r.z..~=P"''" tbat ... wida -sudl -..... ... rnailiaa lila ud ratiQa .enica. '
.. For tbe rest of our lives the
buliN -· tUl will~ IDOlt will be the busiDCSSCS who beJp people lo
Ute tbeir minds to do a belt.er, •art
efficient job,•• LiPS>eT said.
Lipper also is the chaimwJ of New
York It Forcip Securities Corp. and
the Arthur Lipper Corp.
National Lumber achieves
record first qu~rter in '84
The Santa Ana-based National
Lumber & Supply Inc., annougced
record revenues and earnings for the
first quarter ended March 31 .
National lumber h.as three stores in
Orange County and a total of 13 in
Southern California.
Revenues increased 19 percent,
gross profits rose 16 percent and net
earnings jumped 88 percent to
$327,650 compared to S 174,586, for
the same period last ~· announced
Melvin Jaffee. president and chief
13.000
13.250
13.500
Int.
..... Pta.
2.00
2.00
2.00
executive officer.
"We arc ~ntinuing to. benefit from
our ~ve marlcettna stratqy,
which 1s paying off in increased sales
per store.
The home improvement store
chain bas embarked on a widespread
television and newspaper advertising
campaign featuring two distinct car-
toon cbaractcrs -Shony, a )'OUthful
carpenter, and Cheap Chicken. a
rambunctious bird.
15
30
AdJu1table
Rate
W•tem Empire
Any loan otncer
Citicorp Saving•
Any toan otncer
Seara Savings Bank
Any loan officer
.... •
10.50 1.75
10.75 1.50
10.75 1.50
30
30
12 mo.
12 mo.
6mo.
C8ip
4.5
5.0
5.0
$250,000
$250,000
$250.000
Adlu1teble
Mortg111•
., .
-
..... ..........
9.500 2.0
9.875 2.0
10.500 1.&
AIMft..
Yre.
30
30
30
..
A4
emoa.
emoe.
NYSE Co"1 Pos1a TRANs~cr 10Ns 1
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Orao09 Coat DAILY PltOTISunday. April 29, U~S•
Getting
ahead
Milwaukee'• Beat,
the Miller BrewlDC
Company'• neweat
entry lnto the buqet
beer market. la now
•••l ia b l e In
Southern CaUfornla.
Mill er a lao In·
troduced a lower-
coet beer. Melater
Brau. laat fall.
Smith International tells profits
Ne w port drilling equ ipment firm
earns $3.3 million in first quarter
'im1th ha' unclt-rgorw a number ol l;1~om and othl'r
rust -.a, 1ng ffil'U\Url'' dunng that jX'nod.
··bl·n 1h1wgh 'ak' art· lo,~er and pnCl' d1<;cuun11ng
ront1nut'?. to penalize results. our gross profits and
m11h lntl·rnatronal lnr thl· Nn .. port Brach-ha,ed
supplter o f 011 and ga\ dnll1ng l'qu1pnwn1 rrponn.I a ti"t
quarter profit of $3 ' m1ll1on. or I ~ l'l'nt'> a ~harl'. at 11'
annual mn·11n at thl' \\n u n \outh C oa't Pl:i1a Thur.,J:l\
ojX'ra11ng 1nrnme haH' 1ncrea~cd." Neel) said. ·
The com pan} 'c; domestic !oak!> ha' e responded to
1mp1 t)\l'd drillrng tll'tl\ it) dunng the )l·ar. increasing 5
Pl.'flcnt from a \l'ar ago.
lntl·rnallonal \all'-; del'lincd 17 ix·rn•nt from thl' first
quam·r ol I Q8 ' due to rl·duccd al'll\ II) out?.tdl' the Olll'd
·1ate!I
The earning~ l':lml' on rl'H'nUl''> 01$1..,2 J million an·d
com par«! to a net loc;<, ot $2 9 m1ll1on on re' cnucc; 01
$18~.J fo r thl' same pcrwd a 'car .igo
•• m1th t~ n·o" C\pem·nc1ng th e tx·nl'lit., of lOSt
restructuring and othl'r actions ta I.en ll\ l'r the pa'>t L\.\ u
\ears." said chairman and l h1cf C\crnt1' l' otlin·r Jcrr. \.\
In othN bu .. 1nl''>' '>hareholders re-elected directors
Roben L Fl} nne. Harold H Sm11h and Harold .
Voegl'hn to thrCl'·>ear terms. Directors continuing in
office arc eel} m1th President Fred J Barnes. Carl E.
Hannad .. Bast I Pl Kanlll'r. James \.\. Roche and E.O
Roddfer .\lbcn M. B1rn1c resigned from the board on
.\prtl 13.
Neel~ ·
.\ddn· ...... '1111 ... ttrtH·r prol>l1 •ni... l'on
lrr1ntrng '1111 .111rl oth1 ·r <>r:..tllJ.!l' (·0,1"1
r1..• ... 1cll·nh 111 tht· \1 Y1111r ~t·n·tl'f.' tol
11111 n Daily Pilat
.\nhur .\ndl·rscn & C o. "as approved as independent
aud11or11.
Smith International ,., a worldwide supplrl'r of
products and services to thl· 011 and gas dnlling.
comple11on and production and mining industries.
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0 ~ SUNDAY MORNING 0 THIS IS THE LIFE 0 LITTLE PRINCE
0 LLOYD OGILVIE
~ RAWHIDE
ti) BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS
W SESAMESTREET!R)Q 10 JERRY FALWELL
J9 REX HUMBARD
a) FRED JORDAN
C MOVIE * * • Oea1h1rap 19821 Mic11ae1' Caine Cnr1stopller Reeve
-8:15-z CHARLIE CtiAMPUN ON THE
FILMSCEHE
-8:30-0 ODYSSEY
0 AT THE MOVIES
0 MEETING TIME AT CALVARY
G) FREDERICK K. PRICE
ti) TOM ANO JERRY
J9 KNOW YOUR BIBLE
€D RELIGIOUS TOWN HALL
O BUZZARD
S MOVIE • * Dusty • 19a 11 8111 Kerr Noel Ire.amen
2 MOVIE
• • Lone Wolf McOuade t 19831 Chuc' Noms David Carradine
-9:00-
0 NEWS CONFERENCE 0 VARIETY CLUB TELETHON
(CONT'OJ
0 BEST OF A.M LOS ANGELES
0 ORAL R08ERTS
~ WILD. WILD WEST
ti) FRED FLINSTONE ANO
FRIENDS
ED OPEN MINO m IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSINESS
Io IT IS WRITTEN
a) HEART OF THE MATTER
11 VIDEO JUKEBOX
-9:30-e 8 FACE THE NATION
0 J9 MEET THE PRESS
0 DAY OF DISCOVERY
CD THE WORLD TOMORROW
(E THE CHARMKINS ED AMERICAN INTERESTS
EI!) IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSINESS to KENNETH COPELAND
a) PETER POPOFF
H MOVIE
• t Silver Dream Racer 119801 Oav1<1 Esse~ Beau Bridges
-10·00-0 8 NBA BASKETBALL
DOUBLEHEADER
0 TAKE THE TEST AMERICA
• 0 BEST OF L.A TODAY I 0 HERALD OF TRUTH
9 FINANCIAL INDEPENDENCE
TODAY
G) REX HUMBARD
ti) PINK PANTHER
EL) THE LAWMAKERS m WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
J9 MORK ANO MINDY
a) TELEJAPAN
C MOVIE • * Ra1ap1a11 119791 Mavr1z10 N1c:t>Ptll Angela F1nocch1aro
0 MOVIE
• • The Grear Aoventure t 19761
J;ic~ Palanc:t Joan Collins
S MOVIE
• • St• Pack 119821 Kenny Rog·
i>rs Diane lane
-10·30-
0 1~ LOWENBRAU WORLD
DART CHAMPIONSHIP
0 19 THIS WEEK WITH DAVID
BRINltLEY
0 ROBERT SCHULLER
9 BASEBALL
CD JERRY FALWaL ED ON CAMPUS mi WALL STREET WEEK st 808 NEWHART m SO YOU WAP<T TO MAKE A
DEAL
Z MOVIE
• • • Gun Cr u~ 19501 Peoiw Cumm•M JOI\" Da11
11-00-
0 l• S~TSWORLO 0 VARIETY CLUB TELETHON
(COHT'DI
QlMOVIE
t t MISlf!r Ifill~ ! 1979) Llil Ch•a Hui
You can help guard ag~inst;
fraudulent credit card use
When I mak<' ------------MastcrC'ar<i. coun1erfe111na " on the increa~ in 11111
locations. purcha$C with n'ly
rn:dit card. I rip out
the carbons from the
transartion lip?.. SYLVIA crumble them. wrup
them in a piece of p
tissue. and shove ORTER
them into my purse.••••••••••••• Once home. I rip the
carbons into smoll fragments and toss them out. This little
ritual prevents counterfeiters who loot the stor~· trash
from seizing m> carbons and &cuing my valid -and
valuable -account number
To make cards more difficult and costl) to'
counterfeit. both Ma!iter('ard and Visa have rcdesaane<l
their curds and incorporated new security featurti.. •
Among them: linc-hnc printing: use of ultrav1ok1 inks'
that glow when held under ultraviolet lights: and
holograms. A ho logram i a three.dimensional image on a
mt>tallic surface that chanics colors and reveals a difTercn1
picture when the card is tipped.
Recently I've noticed that some transaction sltps
havt> perforated carbons so that "hen the} 're tom out. the
numbef ~cu cut in half And some stores u~ carbonless
sltps. which avoid the mc'iS) problem en11rel}.
The United tales l'&n. "llhout pnde. claim title a~
the v..orld t'ap1tal of credit card truud. accounting for 94
paccnt of fraud losse'i worldw1dr. Much of this act1" 1t\
occurs tn ?.outhern Florida and the New York metrO..
polttan area A 1982 tud) e!lt1matcd that 96 pern·nt ol the
lraduknt transal'llons tn this nation occurred tn 12 states.
Thl' nc" kinds of sltps mcnt1onrd abo' e are among
the latl'?.t dl· .. clo pments 1n the ongoing war against credit
card r nme no" tx·ing waged b~ the card compan1e).
linanc1al inrn1u11on~. merchants and poltl'e.
Credll l'ard frnud hase~plodcd 1n the last fh., \ear's to
1rul) startltng d1mcns1on~. lron1call}. this growth "
occurring at a llmt• when the credit card companies arl·
making ,·1gorou!> efforts 10 sign up nc"' l'Ustomt"rs and to
·expand a~ fa\t as the~ t·an.
When the stati!>t1cs an.• tallied. 1983 will ha'e been a
n:rnrd Yl'ar for card fraud. sa~s the .\ml'nn.tn Bankers
.\ssot1at1on. up to 40 percent O\ er the $160 mlllton lost to
fraudulent bank credit card transactions 1n 1982.
False or altered cards alone cost the 1ndus111 about
$40 m1ll1on in 1982. well o'er two ttmcs the $15 m1ll1on
lost 10 counterfeiting in 1981 .
Visa lntcrna11onal. which ha~ more than 104 million
card-holders "orldw1dc and 70 million 10 the L'n1ted
States. estimates 11 lost about $20 million to counterfet11ng
in 1983. almost double the $109 millton in 1·982.
MasterCard. which has 90 m1llton cardholders around the
world and 65 m1llton in the Un11ed States. 1s still adding up
the figures for 1983. but admits 11 lost $9.3 millton to
counterfeiting tn 1982. Its toLal fraud losses that )Car wen:
$45.6 mtlhon.
Aml·ncan Express does not disclost" this I~ pe or
information
In some locations. fraud 1s actuall~ decltning. says
Thomas F Kelleher. vice president for sccurit~ at
0 tO USFL FOOTBAU
0 TERRY COLE·WHITT AKER
CD CHURCH IN THE HOME m UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR
C DARYL HALL & JOHN OATES.
ROCK 'N' SOUL INTERNATIONAL
H FRAGGLEROCK
0 MOVIE • * Crossbar t 19821 Kim Cattrell John Ireland
AFTERNOON
-1200-
0 VARIETY CLUB TELETHON
0 OUIETHOUR
CD THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL
W WE WERE GERMAN JEWS m AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
c;)MOVIE
• • , T11e Wild Blue Yonder
t 19521 Wendell Corey Vera Ralston
C MOVIE * • • , T11e Music Man 119621
Rot>err Preston Shirley Jone)
H COUNTRY ROCK '82
S PAPER CHASE. THE SECOND
YEAR
Z MOVIE • • * . Po1terge1s1 r 19821 Craig T Nf!ison Jobeth Williams
-12:30-
0 FISHING FEVER
CD DODGER DUGOUT m AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
-12:45-
CD DODGER PRE-GAME
-1:00-
0 J9 SENIORS GOlF 0 VARIETY CLUB TELETHON
(CONT'D)
0 HEEHAW
G) BASEBALL
ti) ADAM-12
Ell) WHEN SILENCE KILLS m A MATIER OF TASTE
H MOVIE
t t The Killing Of Randy Web-
ster 119811 Hal Holbrook Ot•1e Caller
0 JUDY GARLAND WITH MICKEY
ROONEY
S MOVIE
• t Merton 01 The Mov1~
1194 71 Red Skelton V1r91nia 0 Brien
-1:30-
9 MOVIE
• • , 1s1and 01 The Blue Dolphins
19641 Celia Ka~e La1ry Domasin
(I) ADAM·12
EI!) A MA TIER OF T ASTE
-200-0 MOVIE • • * P·ranha 119i81 Br<ldlOfd
01limdn ~eather Menzies
lD MOVIE
• • Sr.in li>p Revo1u11on W11hou1
MP 10•01 Gene W110et Donald
5ulllerlano m FACES OF CULTURE
ID GENE SCOTT
0 JANE FONDA S CELEBRITY
COMEDY FASHION SHOW
Z MOVIE * t • Enchan1meot t t9491 OaVl(l "li.Pn T erPSa Wriqht
-230-ED GRANO CENTRAL m FACES OF CUL T\JRE c MOVIE • * Loo~,., 119811 Alt>ert ~tnnlfy James Coburn s MOVIE • * • Same T1m11 Ne~t Yea1 119781 Alan Alda Ellen &rsty11
-3:00-
0 AMEJllCAN ADVENTURE
O TIPS
0 VARIETY CLUB TELETHON 100Hro1
0 AMERICAN SPORTSMAN tD PAESEHTE mi FA.MIL Y ~TRAIT
I BM'TANICA'S PHe.NOMEHAL
WORLD
10 PEA$PECTIVE
M WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS
330-0 2WITHYOU
0 AGRICUL TIJAE US A
Q 10 NEWSCOPE
Q OLYMPl.AO
0MOVIE
• • • Fall 01 Tiie House Of Usner'
I 19581 Tom Tryon Marshall Thomp-son
CD MOVIE • * • ' · Murder By Natural Caus-es' 119791 Hal H04broolt. i<athanne
Ross
tl)MOVIE * * The Burning Hiiis ( 19571 Tab Hunter Narahe Wooo
W BREAKING THE SILENCE: THE
GEHERATION AFTER THE
HOLOCAUST m GROWING YEARS 10 ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEK
J9 MOVIE ** Mtssion Monte Carlo 19111 Roqer Moore T Olly Curtis
C MOVIE * • * Oea1n1rap 119821 Michael Caine Ch11s1opner Reeve
H MOVIE * • The Personals t 19821 Bill Schoppert t<aren Landry
O MOVIE * • * Morning Glory 119331 Kaltlarine Hepburn Douglas F'a11-
banks Jr
l MOVIE • • * • Around Tile World In 80
Days 119561 David Niven Shirley
Mac Lame
-4:30-e NEWSMAKERS
9 TAKINGAOVANTAGE
a!) GAOW1NG YEARS ~ FIGHT BACKI WITH DAVID HOROWITZ
S MOVIE • * , Mother Lode 119821 Chari· ton Hestoo Nick Mancuso
-5:00-e LORNE GREENE'S NEW
WILDERNESS
O CHIPS
Q ABCNEWS Q
9 •.THE WORLD OF TOMORROW
til) FIR!NG LINE m SQUARE FOOT GARDENING
f M'A'S'H
10 NEWS
a) NHI( KAYO HALL
-5.30-
8 CBSNEWS
0 MARY TYLER MOORE
U NEWS m MOTORWEEK a ALICE
10 ABCNEWS Q
H VIDEO JUKEBOX
0 MOVIE • * * My Favorite Wile 11940) C,ary Granl Irene Dunne
EVENING
-6:00-
80 NEWS
0 MOVIE
• • 1 Where The Boys Are 119601 OolOfes Har1 George Ham1lloo
Q AT THE MOVIES
0 GREATEST AMERICAN HERO
9 PEOPLE TO PEOPLE
CD M'A'S'H
tl)MOVIE * * * THX 1138 I 19711 Robffi DuvaH i:>onald Pleasence W BUTTEAFUES
a!)NOVA a CBSNEWS
10 TAKING ADVANTAGE
.l9 NBC NEWS m OSHIH
C MOVIE * • • • t See A Dark Stranger·
t 194il Oel>Ofeh Kerr Trevot Howard
11 MOVIE
• • Cr9Cking Up t 19831 .Wry Ltv.1S M~too Btrte
-8:~-
0 N8CN£WS G HOll YWOOO CLOSEUP
t WAU STREET JOUAHAL
REPORT CD Wl<AP IN CIHCINNA Tl fIJ YOUA CHILOAEH. OUR
CHILDREN e HEWS ro BARNEY Mil.LEA m SECRET AGENT
The switch 10 the new rards will take place aradually
Visa expects to ha' em new cardi. in use b) October 1986
and MasterCard ant1c1patt"lt its turnover to be complete in
June 1986. Eventually. all Visa cardholders will have r
personal 1den11ficat1on numbers. or PINS. just ltlcc those
u~d with automatic teller machine cards. E vcntually:
merchants will be outfitted with terminals into which> ou, ~
will enter> our Pl N when you make a purchase.
You. though. remain thl· ke) fighter in this 'itrugle to
<:untain credit card fraud.
• Ciuard ~our card as )'OU v.o uld caloh -and nc' er
k·nd tt to an)om·. Never give your acrount number 1u
someone who asks for 11 o .. cr the phone for an) reason -1
unless )OU haH· 1r111iute<l the call. '
• Scru1in1Le your month I~ statements and make i.un.·
~ou can a<.'<.·ounl for each transaction. 1
• Con?.1dt_r disposing of !>Oml' of ~our card,.
pan1cularl) tf )1nl ha' e more than one of a kind. Snip
e'p1rcd or cancell.'d cards into pieces.
•And alv.a\S shred thost• carbons: ask th.: men:hants ~uu deal w11h th·qul'ntl) 10 get the carbonc; from 1ht.·1r
bank!I.
You pa~ for credit card fraud through annual fee?. and'
intc.~rest charges. Stop cheating yourself.
$4 million loss for PSA I
PSA Inc., OM of atx major airline& operating et,
John Weyne Airport, reported a net loN of•
$4,381,000, or $1.08 per share for the first quarter of
1ea.. compared to a net lost Of $7,223,000 for the,
same period • yar ago.
The company operating Income for the quarter-
totat.d $5. 1 mHHon In compared to an operating loaa
of $5.6 mHtlon for the flr•t quartet 1983.
ReetJtta f« 1983 renected a gaJn from the eete of
two Boetng 727 8'rcraft.
1983 r.eutta also Included a eman net gain whUe
1984 reflected a emetf net loM from f oretgn currency
tran1aetJona retated to tong·term debt repayat>te In
J apanete yeo.
7 NEWS
CD ST AR SEARCH
Ell) All CREA TURES GREAT ANO
SMALL II
W LIVING WILD
0 JUDY GARLAND WITH MICKEY
R~EY
l MOVIE
• • Looe WOii McOuade 119831 Chuck Noms David Carradine
-7·30-m GENE SCOTT
H FRAGGLE ROCK
-800-e a AFTERMASH
0 J9 KNIGHT RIDER 0 COUSTEAU AMAZON 0 10 HARDCASTLE&
MCCORMICK
9 TWILIGHT ZONE
CD THE WORLD OF TOMORROW
ti) LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH ANO
FAMOUS
W LIVING WILO
W MASTERPIECE THEATRE
C MOVIE * • • ' The Music Man 119621 Robert Preslon Shirley Jones
H MOVIE * • Lone Wolf McOuade ( 19831 Chuck Noms David Carradine
0 MOVIE
• • • Cu10 11983) ~ Wallace Danny Pmtauro
S MOVIE * • • Same Time Ned Year ( 19781 Alan Alda Ellen &rstyn
-8·30-e i THE FOUR SEASONS
t LOUGRANT
-9.00-e a THE JEFFERSON$ 0 J9'M0VIE • * Special Bulletin ( 1983) Ed Flancers Kathryn Walker
U 10 MOVIE * • • Chapter Two ( 19791 James Caan Marsha Mason
0 WILD KINGDOM
CD FAME
ti) SOLID GOLD
Ell) MASTERPIECE THEATRE m MYSTERY!
2 MOVIE
• • • · Potterge1sl'' ( 19821 Craig T Nelson Jobeth Williams
-9·30-e 8 ALICE
0 SCHOOL BEAT
9 MOVIE * • 1 Shadow Of The Thin Man 1 t94 ti Wilham Powell Myrna Loy
-10:00-e a TRAPPER JOHN, M 0
UCD NEWS
0 THE WORlD TOMORROW
Cl) Bill Y GRAHAM CRUSADE W THE GOOO NEJOHBORS
a!) THE SHAKESPEARE PL.A YS
H MOVIE * • Si~t Rage I 198;>1 Chuci.
Norns Roo S1lvtr
0 MOVIE
• • • Man Woman An<l Child 11983) "4arhn Sheen Blythe Danner
S PAPER CHASE. THE SECOND
YEAR
-10.30-
0 IT IS WRITTEN
CD ENTEAT AINMENT THIS WEEK
f];) SNEAK PREVIEWS m HORSE RACING
C DARYL HALL & JOHN OATES
ROCK 'N' SOUL INTERNATIONAL
-10:45-
" SUNDAY SPORTS PAGE
-11-00-
8U1 NEWS 0 WAlL STREET JOUAHAL
REPORT 0 PETER POPOFF
Q) JIMMY SWAOOAAT
tDFAOHTUNE m CAlUNG All SPORTS c MOV1£ * * LOOller 1198 II Alber! F'1~
Jtmel Cotlurn
S MOVJE * * Mo1het LOOt ( 198,1 C,.,._ ton Ht11on Ntdl MancutQ
l MOVIE
.§.. HARRYO
J91 MOVIE • * * French Postcards' t 19791
Miles Chapin Blanche Baker
a) 700CLUB
-11:45-
O MOVIE • • * French Postcards 119 791 Mries Chapin Blanche Baker
U 10 NEWS
H MOVIE
• t S•tver Dream Ratef t t98Gt
Dav•O Essea Beau Budges
-11 SO-,
8 MOVIE
• • • The Friends O• Eddie Coyle
119731 Ro1>e<1 Mitchum Peter Boyle
-12:00-
0 700CLUB
9 INDEPENDENT NEWS
ti) CHILDREN BETWEEN LIFE ANO
DEATH
W JOHN CALLAWAY INTERVIEWS 10 MOVIE * * • M1oway tPart t ol 211 1976
Chariton Heston Henry Fonda
0 MOVIE
• • Crossbar 119821 Kim Ca111etl John Ireland
-12:15-
U ABCNEWS
-12:30-u HOU YWOOD CLOSEUP
! SERGEAP<T BILKO
8 . MOVIE • * • t The Savage Curse 1197 •)
Geofge Challm5, Jenny Agutter m WALLY GEORGE
C MOVIE * * } The Lady In Red 11979)
Robert Conrad. Pamela Sue Manin
l MOVIE • * • * Around Tile Wortd In 80 Days ( 1956) Oavtd Niven $htrley
Mac Lame
-12.50-
,S"MOVIE
• • Six Pack 119821 Kenny AOQ· ers Diane Lane
-1:00-
Q MOVIE
• • ' R PM ( t970) Anthony Quinn Ann-Margret
~ DENNIS THE MENACE
tl)INDEPENDENTNEWS
a) MARTIAL ARTS
-1:30-
9 MOVIE * • Hard Boiled Manoney ( 19471 Bowery Boys. Leo Gorcey
H NOT NECESSARILY THE NEWS
O MOVIE • * Tile Woman lnSlde t 1979) Joan Blondell G1ot1a Manon
-145-
0 ATONEWfTH
J9 NEWS
-2-00-e i CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH 10 ABC NEWS
H MOVIE
• • Tiie 1<1111ng Of Randy Web· Sier 1198t1 Hal H041>roolt. Ome Carter
-2:05-
C MOVIE • • * Tile F1rs1 Deadly Sin t 19801 henlc Sinatra. Faye Dunaway
-2:.0-s MOVIE
• • Dark Places ( 19731 Ro~rt Ha<dy Joan Collins
-NS-
-3:00-, CHICO AHO TliE MAN
-330-, FAJTH20
Z MOVIE * * * • Hamiel t 19'81 Llllft!Q Olivier Je111 Sammons
-3·45-
11 COUNTRY AOCK '82
-4'()0-
t TOP o· THE MOAH1NG
C MOVlE * * • Oeatlllrep I 19821 Mdl~f Caine CtwtttoPflet ReeYt ' FANTASY ISL.ANO m TONY BAOWN'S JOIJRNAL
'1i) FAMILY PORTRAIT
S MOVIE • * Ou-tty I 198 11 841 Kfft Noel
Trtvallwl
* • • Gun Crazy <t9501 PtOO'f Cummins, JOlln OaO S MOVIE
_, 10-
I HOU.VWOOO
0 GETTIHO IN THE GAME
-345-
-7:00-u t i 80 MJHUTES
-11 t6-tJ CISNEWS
• • Raw Forc.e 1198 ll CltNlron M1IChtfl. Gtoff 8mnty
ti) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
~ UNOEAS T AHDtNG Hl.IMAJl4
BEHAVIOR
z CHAAUE aiAMPllN ON THI
Fll.MSCEN!
0 FATHEA MURPHY 8 10 A1Pl£Y'88EUMITOR HOT
-11.30-ll ~TlllHAL
O PACUETTEAS
0 CAM ArPOA'T
-•30-t Tli(MUPPm
SEE ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED m £YF ON SOUTii BAY
1130-
-400-fJ INT£AFAOE
0 8UHOAY
8 MOVI£ • ** Ptranna ! 1971! BrtelfOfd 0.ffmAn Hlllllltr MerlMS
t AT1lt1MOVIU
G) JEAAY FAlwtl.l
H MOVIE * * Lont Wolf ~Ouaclt 119131 C.lliiCk Ncwr1s Oiuid C111 lldin
'1C1mOU8 .,... .. ...... .,..,........,
The foltowlng pet'IOf\ It doing
bullnMI .. :
FINE LINE FINISH CARPENTRY,
2277 Pacltlc #A t04, Coeta Mee&.
CA. t2t2t
Thomal "°"* ~. 22n P• clflc: IA 104, Colee Meaa, CA.. t21H
Thie bullneal II c:onduc1ed by. an
lndMdual.
ThomMOutMY
Thll etacament WM llled with Iha County a.it of Orange r.-.--.. on Mardi 29, 1914 ..,.....,.,
~ PublllMd Of.nge COU1 Delly
Pllol Apt1I •• 15, 22. 29, 1914
1KM4
"#::8'1fA'-U I • WfrJ' r.: I .. :;.z.............. -............. ~
JIMt O~flO 'LOO"t"•· MD&.m.._,.. t:t·i=··· ~ -. C:.'tl:a"°'*Oltlila......,.. . l*I .,,..,. CM. M• a. ~ ,... r t a w Nllllir •
'Gr-.orrJoM ........ •t0a 'l:taC. Hia1'11••: ......_,CA. .._AM.CA._,.. •t ..... c.11.W ,. I. C... ........ ~ = !!!l!l'W =-~~ .... Qi\. ............... ,,.., •• :.J .. a .. ~ .. :::.~~ ,~.,. .......... ,.., ·&~-.!. . ........ .. _..I ~11111
....... ~ CMloe, W ~·:.:·'¢'·,............... ,_...._ .. _.. :Clfby.M 111. T .... Ollr.. .....::.:-.::;:.; ~C:·t\•911 :.I.in L ~~I •Tero, CA.· ca,.. L. ldw1rd1, 1110 ., .. , 11~=--•vn•OlllbY-111 ~r--.:.:'' ''°' Dr •• C<&~ ......, ,.. "'~·=·~·:.::•; ----·oondUcted ~ c. """"""" ..... TNIMMICe ............. o.111............ ~~ .... ~-t .:::::-~u=-__ Ulwllf_
DWf91 l*tl•-~" by.
1 TNI ....,_ 11 oondYoe&f llr: • f::::-3';9'.: Or-. Oounly on ,.~ '!.£!.. •• -tied.-lie ,,_ l•laatlt, 11141 "-" ~ = ;.ti ... ~ .... ...=. ~J.~ ....,.. ....... .,. • • _ __...._..,ar.,.c..ron ...._,•-Dr .. ~ .................... a... .. 11111 ~~-.....·
TNl•l-MllolW .... wMt!IM ............. .~ ~ ~-'-· 1,,.. CA.tlllt ,_ ........ Q 12 c-.:e ... ;;i.;; =°=4of0tlftee~on lNl,:-:rc::..~~IM PllolApttl, tf,d;Jt, 1 ... ~ PuMitl&f Onnie c.."': ..=-..=:condld&f~a "Ct,.~c:"r'&. Mlf'lllr IS l'll 111 ...... I .._ , . •. ,......._lt.1114 -• ......,.1f!'l*~a.•.-e.1a.t11it .-.c._.. '--~41111£1
Publll'9d Oi-Mlllt C011t ~ ' ,_,. PlllJC llJla I li4Mit 11111 rlMU •• -tied-.: f'I Tilll ••••lllW w ... ._ .. -
Hot AIM'tt2t, Mey I, 19, ao~... ~ ~ Cwt ~ -~~ .. 0..-Counir • eoun.ya.tc .. ~ c.._ •
1-14 PlotApttl •• , •• 22.-.1~ .. M4 ":=t-:tari=:m.:e ..,Mna ~--"I:... ... ¢C , •• t1... .... ·li·i·e;5~;::: --~ ... ~-IC-llJ_n_a___ l1'I ~ .... II... HCIHW•H•n ==CA.iillil: ~ ar.._ Owl a. " I __ .....,......., ............ -...__ -..CmTa ......__ .._., • .,..,, _,.._, ... Of-.. 0.-Dll1 ~Allf!IZl.ae.llaWl.tl. .. Tllfl ----
==IT,. lllClll .. •1111• -~~= ~::11. parw 11 dolrlf NaeAiPrta.Y-rl,11.•.-.. ,....,.. =.er:._,..__..,. The............... UlmlTam " ~ ........ 4111 ... PATNWAYl.•1Hlttaorltwd. IJilM4 ,.,.,. ._ ~-Tlle.....,..,.,_. ..... A-. ............... CA..taMI f~ ...... C..tHll ........ .
• ~ INC. OM w,.. bu ... ~o ,_..._ ..... lklatlid by. M ft..M _ .......... e-....... • • ., .... ~11 .w·-...... .
lAGI TILIM. mu ...._ .._.. WM•••11 """ -• ~-·-· --II! • '-...,.. ,,,_to, C&l1£ ....... CA. W VICI,; ltll Tlullt ML. Colla ~ ltwwtl.. l'!' ....._ 11 OOftcluoeld by..,. w·a.=t" rd.':.• Mill I• I ... Mlli:J I~ !.f.l!W •
..:.: .. ..:·:.,. ... ~~ ~D.-ltlln..tr:A.w, ~·::=.:::t .. c:..--~': -=:......... HClllWS ...... .=•.:..:tv::LI~= ....... ~. ·~
tat1t . ' Colta ...... Ce.._., Mltdl21,1114 l'*Mt111•1t .... _. ... .!:~ ... ~ eu Na .. e: ADVANCID .---------iiiiiii---COITNl:=:-e.cn111.t~1dby.a ~:--·CIOftdUoledby.tn Publlflld ~ COiie~ ~.'=Of°'9ne1~on --~--~~ =~~= rws--1=.!i(ctt ... T,....,... .-... O. Miio Plot Alltll t , 15, tt. It, tte4 ,_.. leUNQ llfMCI. -L 11'1t CA. lllCiii-• I 11112
TNI 11•1 •It w llld -.O IM TNI 11111 , ... W llld wtltl ttoa ,...... ~ Or9nll C08lt .,_ =-.... M. C-..... Ce. The ......... ..._ ...... ,.. ..... -r::: 4W ff ~an of o,.,._ County on ~an of Oi-M11 County on Plot Aptt 22. 21. May t. "· 1114 The ActltkM...,... ..,,_.to 1M¥1 w tied"'~ TM ._.,. ... -..
.. l 1114 ,.... ... 1114 ..... "8JC llJTIC( 21.W. ~to abo¥e ... ftled = cc:::.~ ~.,:.c::.. Dr., ~ lllat a.um. 10I
Pub11Mc1 er.._ COllt ~ Puealnd Or~ OOMt ~ MTrflOUe ...... "8JC llJTIC[ Fii22U°" AuOI* 5. 1M3. At Ho. ~on lwll. CA. 92141 ~ .... ~ 911do, Ce.
NoCApr11t,Mtqt, 1a.ao~ ..... PlotAllrf 1J,n, ·•~ Tha.::=,n•w ..cnr10W•r11w ..,._.,. ...,_ Alcfwdl. a111 ~1':i1QC::t:·C:112 V'9 ~ ,._, IOI L....-.; ~ 11: Plf'ION.,. ckllil9 MAim nam•n Pomone. Colee...., ea. na1 .,,......_ .. ~by• Newport......, ee. -•
mmii ti' 111\TM'r ---.. -.. -.,.-llft-~----FINANCIAL PROCE880fll8, The llolowlr'9 P9f90ft le doing en~~ ... oonduot9d by DWf9I ~--,,-TNI ....,_ 1100I • *'by.• ... _ nu1~ '"-nu•"4 142152 CulYer DrM ~ A--221 ~ea: .. ......._ JeMt R. 'ord r lndMdulil. __ _.....;.;;,.;;;;.-...-;;-.;,;::;;:;;... __ ----..;.;;..;;,;.-..;.;.;..;.;.;;,;;,.... __ lnllna, Calf. 92714 ' BAISCOE·SMITH LTD, Th<• Thia atatement W9 Ned lll4dl ttoa Thie ltMement .. lllad with ttoa Aonllld ,._
'9CTITIOUI ..... ~A~.. etwt.tlne Bamae. 5 Alba e.t CorD:t•1• Plea Coun~ Clwtl of Ol-eno-Ccun1y on Cour:1y Clerk of Orenge County on TNI ........ , ......... "" ...... STAm•rrT The fOllowlng P9f90ft ........... trvlne, c... 92714 • . ' 202, N9wport ..... Cellt. t2MO ~~ Aldlard Apttl 23, 1M4 County an of 0....,.. ~ Oii
The f~ P9f90ft le doing bU11r'918 •. ........., Thie~ 11 condllc:1ed by. • Ter .. L)'M Smtth, aaoe RMr Pu~ Or F221&1t Aptt "· 1114 bullnw •: oenet• pannentifp Avenue, Newport ewn Calif __, enoe Cout Diiiy Publllhed Orenga eo... Delly ....,., SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA MOBIL NOtiL AANCH POOL 8UPPl.Y, CMe1lne Betnea 82M3 ' . Piiot Aprll 15, 22, a , Mey e. 1914 Pllo1 Apttl 29. May •• 1S, 20, 11NM ~ Ol'w'8e c.. Dill1
WAX. 17921 Ctlrrenza. Huntlng1on 65.: !......, Uncotn AY911Ue, Orenge, Tble ~lement W8I flied with the Ttoll ~ 11 condllc:1ed by. 1n 205544 U....... Piiot Aprl 11, 22. 2l. Mfq t, 1 ...
BMch, CA. ""47 . ·-County Clerk of~ County lndMduel •. ...... , .,_ Aoea Meole. 17921 c.r-, ~ o. Tonn 1111n. 2442 l!lden Mer. ft, 1... on r ... ~ """'° PB.IC NOTIC( PlllJC NOl1C(
ranu. Huntlnglon, IMch, CA. Thie~--:-~~ l'Mltl1 'Thll Nellnel1t ... 111ec1 With ttoa PmJC mTa 9~ ~ ,.,, Publlltled 01-.,.. COMt o..v CountyClerk ofOrengeOounboon ._.w ...cnnoue• rnrus
··-buelnleallc:onduc1edby:111 ~ T Piiot A.prll 7 14 21 21 1~ Al#. 11, 1.... 1--=•-THI .. --·-n lndlYlduel . oonuun ' • ' 1921..,. PW ,....,..... """ -.,,.,_ "'
J.,.,. A:. Magee ltlMment WM ftled Wl1tl tne Pul>llehed Orwoge CoM1 Oely ANNUAL ITA~ Of The followtng ........ ck11i19
Thia 1tatement w Ned wtcn ttoa ~~of Orange Coun1y on "8JC llJTIC( Piiot A.prll 22, 21. JAay e. 13, 1914 lt.w.t TMla Gw..e, co..-J bue1n1ea • County Clerk of Qrwioa County on ._. • 21......,. GetJ: utel't!, T ... -....._ ~ _M.J. BElZAHO, we .. '" Alwtt 23, 18M ,__ HCiiilOUI WU" ~ ... ...____._ ............... eEL.Z.&MO, ENE & AUOC&Al!.a.
flJMltl Publllhed Orange COMt ~ N.u. ITAW ~TX~ -2102 ..,,_ C.. ~ Wtll Publllhed. =r. COMt Daly Piiot APf1I 22, It, Mey 4, 11, 1... The followtng l*'l?M we doing y._. .-.....-..... 0..,c1111._ .... , 1_ 203,. 1iMn1. CA. 92715 ~·--M-18 20 1".., 2141-14 ... .....___.._ '11C1 11---.,.... .,..._..... •• -•1~ & -..,11111, ft.
... ....,. ....... H , .... ' ' • '"" ---NAmnAW Tot .. admitted aseet. $43,979,979 oorpoillled Ire c.m.. 2102 ....... 22M-l4 c & L COMPANY, a2t6 lldwie Total llablltlel '30.-452,264 C.. DrM. .,._ 20S. lrfN. C&. ------------------1 PlllJC llJ11C( AV9.,Colea ...... CA.1212t Thi llolowlr'9 P9'IOn II doing c....-..i...!A...o-tl7tf "8JC ll)TIC( .... .,. -TIC( Loil K. v~ 1211 W1Ma ~ 11: _. ... _...-..,.. 13,'480,000 ___ ... ____ ...,-...;._____ PICnteoue ....... Avie., Colee ...... CA. t2l2t COl.OM IV DARCF, 410$ a.. ~:i'~ funds l.501,-404 TNI ....,_II CClidU*d by. I AC'JmOUl--u N.u.ITAW a.tea Q. ~. "96 Ins lhcn,Nllwpcw18Mdt,Callf.12ta U ~ $9,6'e,311 oo.pot .... 1.
..,... aTAliiii'Nr The folcM4ng Plf'ION.,. doing dlana Ave., eo.. ....._CA. t2eat Dwce' DyAnn Giibert. 4103 a.. Surpkla 81 regard• ~ & .&..:i ' 111
fl'ICTITIOUI .......
N.u. ITATW..wr
The lollowtng 1*.:n1 .. doing
butlnell 11:
Thi ,...._.._ la ~ bulWleil M : Thia~ le condllc:1ed llr: Ill r.hof'e, Nllwpcw1 Baadl, Callf. t2ll3 pol~I *13 '"'"7 715 'ft.&.. H. Mofw bulltleM ~"' pereon ~"" H & H CONSTRUCTION, 29131 lndMdult. Thie bullnw la conducted by. en I "'7''fthe • •"'' • •,.. .... 1men1 .-fll9d wWi dl9
MADERA INVESTORS, 24221
Calle de le LculM. Sufte 308, l-auna Httla, CA. 92853
NE w p 0 RT LAN 0'1 NG Hiddenwood, LIQune Niguel. Clillf. ~ K. V9Uglhn ~Gilbert ~,.:..,ta~ $1G4.285,5M ==Of °'Mii County on ~RTFl8C"H'!2:.,1503 Edgewetar. ~ J. Haubriclc, 427 s. County ~-:e. ~ '= Thie etawnenc wee tied wtth the the~ $95,et7,514 PIGrll
J.R. Evant Cornpantea. Inc., a
CaMt0<nla e«PO<atlon, 2.C221 Celli
de la LOUIN. 8U1te 309, LJ1911M
Hiiie, CA.. 929fSI
.,._ "" ... _ w..... 0r C8llf 82MI Mardi 30 11NM Cow\ty Ctark of Orange County on We hereby certtty that the above Items are In ICCOl'dance With PutilINd ~ C.. Dllf
... ~A& ~~~·~77 Ronald =:·Holli.on. 29138 • PJam AfK. 12.1914 the Annual Statement'°' the year ended December 31, 1983, Pllo1Aprt 11•22. .Mllye. 1 ... ._._ ............. -""'"n-Htddairwood uiauna N9"' Cellt Pub!Wled Of1nge COMt Delly PMml made to the lnturance Commluloner of the State of Caltfomla 2052>M ~ bwinall le conductad bY-en t21n ' ' . Plot Nw11 t , 15, 22, 29, 1... Publlefled Or.noe COMt Delly I
Thia bulif'8le .. conducted by. •
genar9I pettnerthlp.
l.lndla1 HaeMcti CM1t11 J. Haubrtca Jr. 1946-M Piiot Apttl 22. 29, May I, 11, 1..-r:~.t~. Va President ftllJC llJ11C(
Thie ltatetnlnt WM flied wtttl the Cou~ty~~c:-~ .... ~the •-... llft-21-.... Brian M. Hughee, Mat. Sectetary -MTihOUSMJH•l I J.A. Evan1
Thi• 1ta1emen1 WN llled With lhe
CQunty Clertl of Ofanga County on
M.,_cn-29, t9U
County Clertl of Or1nge County on 1nge ..,_.,, on ,._,,, nus-. PlllJC fl)-Published Or•-Cout Dally Piiot &.v11 26, 27. 28. 29, 30, 1984 llAm ITA.,. Fr •~ff 23 1914 A,fK. 11, 1914 1"4 -·-......... 223"'· ... The...-........ A""-~ ' nw:m • , 1'11..,. ACTmOU• ...... ....._ bullnw ...... .,..... .,. -..
P>m10 Publlehed Or.nge COU1 Daly Publl9had Orenge CoM1 Diiiy um ITAW f~A=-Hcnlten &1911 =t1a•, 27215 la
Piiot """"" 29. MIY e. 13 20 1914 Piiot April 22. 29. May fS, 13, 18M Thi IOllowlng pereon II doing The f...._....,. la ........., "8JC NOTIC( PlllJC ~ a-w-...... 200, ....._.__ .-.. ~ft -· ' ' • 2143--14 ~-: bult.,...";;""""" perlon ~"' ""''-. ·-·---· • ._.. 229744 CROFOOT TOOL & MANUFAC-RENAISSANCE STUDIOS, 884 CONIOUDAT'B> ~1,._ a.nton, 27216 la ---.. ---... -llft-Tll'r____ NI.JC fl)llC( ~I~~· ... !!.5 ~ ~271!'. AV9., ~ .. 171tt1 SI.. Coeta Mee&. Cellt. REftOWT OF COMDITON Alfnb6ll. "* 200. Mlllloi\ vi.to. '"~ nus-. "'-"" •&-OP AmNCAN STATI 9A* Cllllf. t21t1
HCTmOUa MJH•M ACnnow •11•M o!:.vi!:,~·~~~71.' 1 Ncherd Roel. 1122~ ~ CoNolkiated Report of Condttlon of .. A.mence11 State e.nk" ...,::. ......_ • OOflduated llY-•
MAm•TA" n The ,:nans ".-..... TN1bullneai.1accnductldby.., ~=~"-:en oft~ Bw:h, Orange County, and Oomeetk: 8ubeldAattee ~ ..........
The lollowlng P9f90ft • doing . .,..... .,.. -"' lndMclull. · lndMdull "'7· at the dOM of bualnw on Mttcti 31, 1914. ,_ pe 1 =•-tllll .. -NI.JC N011C[ ~ -bue6nela •. DNd Ayen Ctofool ............. 1072 County a.tt "'!'-" U~O:T M=GE UN, ~=~~.17th8l, TNletatementwatftled'"wtttiu. =--~Wtllflledwt1tlthe DolerAMt•1111 Aprl~.1114 of0rlfte9°::.: ftCTTTIOUl.,._U
N.u.ITAW
The followlng .,..... .,.. doing
bullnlNN:
200, ~~ CA. ~.... Petty Woodlwd Inc, CeMfornta. =an of Ol'w'8e County Cl'I County Clerk of Or8nQll County on "' Tlui 1 I 121 ""1lllt'9d Or-.. ,.__ --Aichard s.wn. 1121 ~. 6:0 JM.~ Loe Angelel, • 1M4 ~ AfK. 12. 1.... ,,_,. AUETI Plot Aprt 11 21. .. ~ W
Corona Aalodat•. 27285 LM
Ramblaa, Sufta 200. Mlellcn "'9!0. Celt. 82881
<*ta Meaa. CA. t2t27 NOw-l.etwmen inc. ~ Publlhld ~ eoeet Delly ~ Or~ C08lt Deir Cuti and due from banks. ................................................. 3,112 • ._... ~~ conductad by. en ~.,_~io_:i :~.;:. ~ Piiot Aswtl 22. 21. e. 1~11~ Pilot Af#I 22. 29, 1. ~a;41!:! In~~~-~.~~~.~ ................................. ~ ......... ~.449 ~ llmcl
Milltofl Equtty, A c.llf. Corp ••
27215 la ~ ..... 20o.
Mtellon "'9!0. Callf. 12111
1llla d llld corporllloft "8JC NOTICE Federal funds-*' and MC:Ufttlea purd\wd under HCiifllOue ..... County~ C::C,. ~ .,_ Jofln E. MoClcltc~. Pw. • ftaJC MJTIC( eg1-11a11ta to,_.. In domestic offtcaa ....................... 4,800 .,... ITAfT I J
CMnee f . King, 107 8.E. Bflltol,
Santa AN. Callf. 92707
Apft 23 18M on Ttlll a•Im.rt W1e tied With ttoa L0Ma. Total ........................................................ 45.15e8 The tA l• l*9Cft la ...
' f'Ma'tt County ca.rte of Ol'w'8e County en Nllll LW; Anow8nce for poealbte bullnWaec
Thi• bulkleel .. conducted by: •
Publlahecl Orenge eo.c Dally AfK. 12, 1914 IYNOPSll OP T.-loan io..... .......................... _.................................. 511 PACWIC COAST JAHrTONAL.
PNot A.prll 29, Maye. 13, 20~~ Publllhed Or~ Coa.11"= ANNUAL 8TATl•NT Loana, net ......................................................................... 45,058 20902 Blootlltut"at. Huntington general pertnerthlp.
Ml11lon Equity .. .. ._.... ........... ..,.. 22 ..... • 18 1"·~ UNICAllE IN9URANCI COMPANY Bank preml .... F.F. & E. etc ................................................. 240 8eec:h. Ce/It/. tae47 ... _. ,....." • ..... ay v . • ...,... m1 Campue Drtw, aute. 10. Reel .. tat• owned other than Yk:tcJe o. NtcHa. 28792 AewNde. Rlchatd R. Stenton, Pree.
Thi• ltatement WU !tied with the County Clertl of Ofange County on
Aprll ... 1984.
--"-'!"'.MUC ___ NO_TICE____ 21.....,. lrvlne, CA. 12711 bank premlees ................................................................ 3.908 El=~ ~oonduded by. an
Pt8.JC NOTICE HcNne Oftlca Other aaset1 ........................................................................ 2.523 lndlvtdult . l'IC'TTTIOUa .,._.. y.., Ended o.c.tnber S1, 1113 TOTAL ASSETS ................................................................ 62,N7 Vlckte o. Mc:1i1e
MAim aTAT'lmNJ '1CTTTIOUI .,.... Total admitted...... $28,490,507 UAINUTIES Th1I.......,.,,. ... filed wftfl the f'1a'740
Publlahed Orenge Coeet Delly
Pllol Apnl 15, 22, 29, Mey 8, 11NM
2051-14
~IQ peraont.,. doing um ITAW Total llabllhlM $22,637,670 TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC OFFICES ........... 57,580 County Clettc of Or8nQll County on
CASA BALBOA MEXICAN RES-The followtng P9f90ft II doing Capltal, paid-up/Guaranty Total demand c:k9poljt. ......................................... 7,332 M•. 15, 11NM ~--
NI.IC flJTICE
~u=· 106 Main Sl, Balboa. ~-:OALDFAMILY(b)NEW ~~Oepoelt $1,000,000 Toi:t-'J~~~s9r~1~M=~·NO .................. 50'248 PubllJNd °'8n9I COMt '-
Chien-Shen Wane a. Huegyn WORLD MEDIA SERVICE. 24621 Grou peld-ln and FOREJGN OFFJCES ...................................................... 57.580 Piiot Apttl 7• 14• 21• ~1::: w~, 2001 w....ny Dr., Anahlim, ~11· ~· ~·19~ contributed IUl"Ptus $3,500,000 Other llablllUes ..................................................................... 975 '~-~.. c~~ " c:onduc:ted mond w~. e' Toro. ce.. 92830 u~ fund• TOTAL LIA.BIUTIES .......................................................... 58,555
The followtng pertona .. doing lndMdullll ~ & wlte) by. Th11bue6nelalaconduc1ed by. an (IUrplua) $1,352,637 SubordJn1ted not• and debenturM ..................................... 714 ~ u: CHen-8Nin Wang lndMdull Surplus u regards IHAMHOU>llltl EQtHTY
FOUR CE! SERVICE co .. l3lt Ttlll etatenoent ... flied wtth the OontMle P. Reddy pollcyhotden $5,852.837 Common stock
Sonora Road, eo.ta Meaa. Ce. County Clerk of OrM08 County on Tt111 etatemenc WM llled wttto t.he Income for the yeat $22,019,951 No. aharea authorized 1,200.000
92828 .-23 1914 County CW11 of Orenoe County on 0t1burMmenta for No. lharea outatandlng 1.10..,423 1.380
Cen&Awll8cti'wlllldt.Nllonora ' P1M1t1 /lftr. l1, l814 ~ theyw $11,842.169 Surplu1 ..................................................................... 2,330
Road. eo.ta Mee&. Ce. l2l2t PublllMd ~ COMt ~ PublllMd Orange COMt Delly W• hereby certify that the abc>Y9 ltem1 .,. In accordance with TOT AL CONTRIBl/TED CA.PIT A.L ....................................... 3. 710 ~laconduetad by."' Plo1Apt21 • ..._ • l3, 20. 18M Piiot Aptt 22. 29, Maye. 13, 1884 the Annual Stat1tnent for the veer anded December 31, 1983, Retained eernlngs............... ... ... ..... .. .. . .......... (12)
can uw $chwandt 2298-M 2147-14 mede to the ln1Urance CommlUloncw, purlUMt to law. TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY............... ... ........ . 3.698
Thia atstement WM flied wt1t1 the ELWOOD T. BANNING, Prealdent TOTAL LIABILITIES A.ND SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY . 62,967 Coun~ Clark of Orenge County on Ml.JC MJTIC( NlJC NOTIC( RUSSELL E. LEATHERBY, Sec:tetaty The undersigned, John P. Engbefg. Pll"ealdent and S.A.
Apft , tlM fl'ICl1TllOUe MfU•M Published Orange Coaat Dally Piiot A.prll 26, 27, 28, 29. 30, 198't Whltfleld, Sr. V.P./Controller of the abow.-nlmed barlk, each
,_,. "'9IJC MOTICI 2240-84 declares, f0t himself alone and not for lhe other: I have personal
Publlltiad Orange COM1 o.lfy um ITAW MOT1CI °" DIATH 0. knowtedge of IN matters contained In Chit report Ind I belteve
Piiot Apftl 15, 22, 21. May•· 1814 Thi folcMlnO S*IOft 11 doing mMARD THmODOM LOMG. ••.,. llt'ITll'r •-.,. N011C[ that eecti statement In said .._.....,. Is true, Each ot the under· 2047-t4 bullnell -AMO °" HI'''°" TO ... _ nu I~ ... _ • "Y"". KOCH I A880CIATES, 204 ~ '-"•llTIATHI UTATW ~.for hi mself alone and not fOI the oltler. oertlflet under
AQate. llllboa llllnd. CA. 92te2 l8TA.,. MO. A• 11tnt a-21111 pen.tty of perj\lry that the foregoing It lrue and correct.
0ougtM J. Kodl, 204 ~ Aoet•. To .. heln, ~ cradlo-IYNOPSl8 OP Ttm Executed on A.prll 23, 1984, 11 Newport Beactl. California
flCTITIOUI .,..... Balboa laland. CA.. 92te2 tore, and contingent credltcn of ANNUAL 8TATl•NT John P. Engberg, Pretident
NAMI ITATWMUIT Thlebullneealec:onductedby:an Batn•d Theodof9 long. and 10 COMCO IN8URANCI COMPANY S.R. Whitfield. Sr. V.P./Controller
The IOllowlng l*90"• are doing Individual. pertone who may olhetw!M be 20l5 1 .. t Tenth Street Published Orange Cou1 Dally Ptlol April 29, 198.C
butlneu N : ~!:t~ WU ftled with the ~t:;,:td I~~= lltd/~ .... ,. AmlWftlo, , .... 79101
1332-84
(Al USM (9 )US AA·UTILITIE8 County Clark of Orange County on A petition hu been ~by Laur• Home Office
SYSTEMS/RATES ANALYSIS, April 23, 1914 Perry In the~ Court of y.., Ended December 31, 1., Ml.IC NOTICE
2172 DuPont Dfl~. lrvtne. ca. f34a11 ange County ,.queetlng that Total admitted assets $23.120.756 92]~ Valgean. 24282 Ofltar1o .. 9YdlMnllllUftl • Long P9rry be 8'>PO'nted .. Total llabllltlet s 18,306.432
CONIOUDA TED
REPORT OF CONDfTlON
OF SOUTH COAST BANK Lane, El T0<0, ea. 82630 ~~·::...~~tr'MI rapreeentattw 10 edmlrQ.. Capital paid-up/Guaranty
Thie bullheM .. oonducted by. In ~blllNd Orlnga COMt Dally tar tN ..... of llnwd Thecdcre CepltaU
lndMdual. Piiot Aptt 21, Mey t, 1S, 20. 1114 ~; ~ :.o-=t~ t!: Statutory Depoalt
Jamee va1gean 229044 ~Perry 1n u. 11upartcr eoun of Groea paid•.ln and
Thia 1tatemen1 ... meet wtth the Orange Couney ~ IUttlorlty contributed surplus
$1.250.000
eon.otldated Report of Condition of "South Coul Bank" or
Coit• Mela. Orange County. and e>om.stlc Subtkilarlea at tile
cloM of buslneaa on March 31, 198't
County Ci.rk of Of1nge County on 1-----------to edmlnltlar the eltMe Of Bernard U"•-"'ned fundt AfKll 5, 18U •--v fMm7 NOTICE Tl:aodofe Lono under the 1~ (aurplua)
Publllhed Ofange eo..t Delly dent Admlni.tra\lcn of btat• Act. Surplus u regards
Piiot AfKll 15, 22. 29. Maye. 1914 PICTmOU8 .,..... A Nartng on the ":c:. lltd tne potlcyt\olderl ~ um 8TAW :':1~~~:ao A.M.":'C: Income for the year
----------The ~ penon la doing pettmen1 3 of the Supertor Court of 06lbur..,,...t1 for
$3,546.000
$18,324
$18,•60,538
$4,814,324
State Banll No. 12'1
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks ........ .
Investment MCUrltlea (Market value $2.888)
Loens. Total............ .. .....
L-= A.ltowanoe for
4,354
2,961
24,222
NI.IC NOna bullneae • 000 0r.,. County, 1oca1ect .. 100 CMc: the v-r s 1 e.334.381 ~ AON W AACING PAO<). C..ter Dr1W Weet. S1nta A.Ila. Cel· W1 h4nby oertlfy that the above Items .,. In 9CCC>rdanat wtlh
PIC1"10U9 ..... M
MAmlTAlW 758 ~. <~J111":,, =°=~ fom6a 92702. the Annu., S1atement for the yw an<Md December 31, 1983,
poeslbte loan losaes. . . ... ••• ....... .................... s 11
t2t2e IFYOUOBJf:CTtottoatfMtlngof made to the INUranoe Commlsaloner. pur9Uant to law.
loans, net................................. ............................... . . 23,711
The folloW!nO pef'IOM are doing
bullMll M: Ronald 0 Wood 2001 Port the f*ltlon ot the emendment HAROLO'LEROY ANDERSON Prelldent
Ram9Gata. ~· Beectl. CA.. ::r~t; ::::-~ ·~ ROBERT ARTHUR BRIDGES. A..l.tant Secretary
Bank ptetniw, F.F. & E. etc. . ....... . ....... ....... ... .... 3,406
STEPHANIE RICHARDS lltd AS-
SOCIATES. 250 E. 17th St,_,
&lite M. Costa ~. Ca. 92827
Stephanie Mn Rtdlard1, 211'
Pomona. Costa ~. Oa. 92627
Ttlll bullne11 la conduc1ed by: en
Real •tat• owned 01her Chan
92= bull It condue!ted by: ttone, or you may,.._:, ob=· Publlthed Orange Coast Dally Piiot A.prll 28. 27, 28, 29, 30, 1984
lndMdull MM .an ttonaWl1hlhecourtbeforethehellr· 2241~84
Ronald ·c. Wood Ing Ycuuppeeranca niey be In pet· UAIULITIES
Thia atelement wu ftled With the -o:;: °Y~ TA'°E •~°CWDtTOR or • ___ MlJC ___ fll_11C£____ l't8JC NOTICE TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC OFFICES
bank premlMt ......... .
Other atMt1 .................. .
TOT AL ASSETS ..... .
County Clertl ot Of1nge County on oontlng9nt credllOf of the de-Total demand deposlls.. . . . . . . .. .
Stephanie Aloherd Mardi 29, 1914 _ Cl9Uad, you mutt tlle ~ Claim a-nlOI Total tlt'M a.nd savings deposits .. .
Thll ltateno=rt ... Mid wltll ttle .--•• ...... IM oourt prtaent It 10 the IYNOPlll Of T.. TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC A.ND
lndMdual.
County C11rt1 of O...eng1 OCUlty Oft Piiot"'=. 1t?a?: ~ ~ ..!..'!!.;..._~~ ANNUAL ITA,.._NT FORBGN OFFICES .................................... . ~ 4, 1114 ....... by tM ...,_, ......., -.._..,... ANVtl IHIURANCI COWANY Federal runes. purc:bued and MCUrltlea eold un<*
f'Wn 1 ffom Iii elate of tnc i.uenc» of 11m1 Cowan IQf wnenta to repurctiue In dome111c offloM
P\lbllehed O....,.ge COM! Dally 1----------,..,.,. .. l)tO'Med by a.c11on 700 ltvlne, CA. 117t4 Mortgege Indebtedness (lncludlng S226
Pltot Aprll 16, 22. 21. May I. 1... of tN Ptobale Code Of Ceflfomla. HoftM Offtoa capital ...... ~... . . ............ .
205444 !;:.,. r.'°:o::,.: :! = Yw l!nded o.c.mber S1, 11a Olher llablftt ............... .
----------date vie IOMl'lnl no4klld abcM. Total admltted .... ti $11,370.830 TOT A.L LIABILITIES... .. ....... . ... . "8JC ll)T1C[ YOU MAY IXM)tNe the tie kept Total llabllltlea M .350.737 SMAMHOU>E"I IOUITY
fllCTITIOU8 .,.._18 Dy lhe oour1 "you .. ~"' Capita! pald -up/Guar1nty Common st~
3, t39
910
38.4!1
38.331
13, 194
23.137
.. 38.331
22e
~
37,491
U..8TAT'W TA.FT INVUTORS. 24221 Cele u.-....)'OUl'IMl)'~upon-Capital/ No lharetauthorlud 1,000.000 The~ pet'ICN .. doing de 1a L.~ a. a . LIQUna ••eou1or or~"°'' or upon Statutory Oepoait S 1.500.000 No lhllr.-out.atlondlng 588, 138 1 470 ~-.... CA.... -~-IM--or• oon°'OMt ... but~~-*275.000 SurpM..TO "l ,.:;::;.;T··r;,1·,;,;~~D· .C."PfT."L ........ •• 1'3882.•.o:• V8'1ey Auto Center, HIOI J.fl l!wr'9 Ou;t~-lftc. a ~. Incl .. """ ttoa oour1 n ... -...-• TOf A.l Cvn n uv •'" " .. -"9nlfM Ndrgl. E Tcwo, CeMorNa Cel9ofNI OOl1)0l 100t" W21 Cele elone....,. proof ol-*8. • wrtnlfl Unw6gned funda Retained earnings I Uet) ~-M~ f~13~ : ... ~~.,._. llOI. UiQuna :: ,,::::. :-..;uof ~ (IUf'l)klt) $3,246,093 TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY . 990 Htit ... ,. ----_.. . . Thia bulln.-la conduCted by:. ~tory lltd llppflilMI of the --Surplus .. regards TOTAL LIABILITIES A.NO SHA.REHOL.OERS eoutTY 38.8.41
Paula , HugOlnl. lt3 !merald QIMrel partne11Np. Mlltl. ~of ttoa pellltlne and ao-pollc:ytlolden $&.020,093 The ~Md. Catt R Tin<*. Pr.ktent and Barbera
lay, Laguna laaoh callf 9215, JR. Ewne oounl* menlklfted Iii leCtlOne 1200 I~ fOt the YMt $8.232.322 Jonte. Vice P~t!CuNet of the abo~J'Md b&M, eech fN. ~ 11• oonduetad by. TN. at~ .. Ned wtttl ttoa and 1200.f of tM Cetlfornl• ~•for deClar"t for hlmteff atone and not tor the other 1 have pertena1 ~ (hult>and . ...... .. . OounM·'"""IY 2-"-. 1-~ Orenge County Dn ~~~:,or.let 11 Law the )'Ml" M .175.141 knooa4edge of the manert c.c>nlt!Md In lhit repot1 and I btl~ ~ M. t4Ugglnl. Jr. ....., .,. ~ ...._ AltofMY tor 1 W• herltby certify tfl•J the •bow Hemt are In accordance wtth that ..cf\ ltlt"'*'t In laid rtPC)f't Is 1rue Each of tht under·
Thll 1ta1ement wu Wied with Che ROY A. LllOWITZ 1412 PrttcMM Lana.,..,,.._._.... the AMWll atatement tor U~ yaw ended o.c.m.-.e'. 19t3. 11gned, for hlrnMff alone and not for the other, certlflea und«
County Cleft! of~ Oour\ty on -......, ......, IUll• 111 CA.. tltlO mlld9 to the l"IWaooa Commi.toner, pu~ant to lew. pen.ny Of Pl'turY that the f0tegolng 11 true and COff9Ct ~4.1114 ...,. c.e.-..cA.-(11:=4t.. 9<9\tonM.WM111l,~1t ~edon~ 17, 1964.atCoetaMesa,Cdfomta
P\ttlllaMd er._ OOll1I Dall1 ~ Or""9 C01M Delly f'\i ~ CoMI ~ D • ...._, ...._'I c.rt R. T'lftdllr, Pr..adem
DEAT H NO TICES
Beet
DIXIE LEE BROWN born
January 20, 1951, ~
away in Durham. North
Carolina April 17. 1984.. Mn
.Beck attended Anoallla
School f0t Girls, graduated
from C.orona de! Mar Hiih
School and WM a gnduate
of usru c.oJ:Jep, San Diego
She ls awvived by hUllbuxl.
Leonard J. Beck and dauah·
ter, Jeanne Lee B«lt;
father: HalTy B. Brown; •-
t er; Cynthia Brown
Clemons; brother, James
Brown. Also survived by
nephews; John and Jeff
Brown and niecea; Lisa and
Jenny Oemona. Services
will be held Tue.day, May
l , 1984 at 10 AM ai P.WC
View Mortuary O\ape.J,
3500 Paific View Drtw,
Newport Beech. 644-2700
r -,
HA"BOR L.AWN·MT. OLM
Monuary • Gemet..,
C<ematory
1625 G1slef Ave
Costa Mesa
S40-55S4
P1ERCE MOTH£"8
HU l"OAOWAY
MORTUA"Y
t 10 Broat<l•h
Costa M•sa
642·9, !>O
BAL Tl 9bGt;.tO"'
SMITH & TUT .. 11.L
W(STCLIH CHAPEL
•.·~ 1'1t S•
..n~t• ~.,;,
t.•6 ri3·,
PACIFIC VllEW
MEllllONA.L f'AU
C•met•'l • Moou_.y C"•~ • Cr•m110"
1'!00 Pae•I< v -Or•,,.
t..i,.w(.'Orl S..at"
t!U :1 •QO
McCOfllWJCI( MO"TUA"Y ,79~ t..agJ,,a Carro" A4
L•ovna Be:.c"' Ca 116!1 t
' .. 9&1~
c Piiot A.pr11 ,., n . 8 , M9Y., 1114 "'°' Apftl •· 11. n. a , 11141..... ... AINI 11. 21, • •· ""' "*"'*9 Or...-eo.a o..v PIOt Aptfl a. 21, te. n . '°· tlt4 a.beta JotM. va PreelctentlCatNer
I04M4 --n4t..,. P\lblllhed 0r..,. co.at ~ Pilot ~" n . 1984
1~ ~ ...... _____________ ..,,~ ..
SHOP
• ALBATROSS WEST
SW IM & SPORTS WEAR 104 Main , 675-9790
• BALBOA BEACH
COMPANY Pa lm & Edgewate r 673-4925
• BALBOA BEAUTY 701 E. Bal boa
& LOCAL COLOR Blvd
• BALBOA 710 E. Balboa
FLORI STS Blvd. 673-7957
• BAL BOA
HARDWARDL 200 Main S1.
• BAY DEPT. STORE 303 Main St.
ME N'S, WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR 673-5656
• BL UE SAILS ~
STATIONERS 304 Ma in SI. 673-8170
•COOL 707 E. Balboa
ACTIVE WEAR Blvd 675-6954
• DO N ALD S ON '~ ..)
DEPT. STORE 300 Main St 673-4910
• GE "lERA L
STORE In The Pavil ion 673-8160
•THE HANDMAIDEN
GIFTS 813 1 1 E Balboa Blvd 673-43 14
• MAIN STREET
EMPORIUM 105 Main ~t
• MOLLY Evening WeM for Your 302
BROWN 'S Romc1 ncc t ~lr & Plcasur<' Main St.
•MAGGIE'S:
A FLOWER SHO P 107 Palm
• MENDELSON
GALLERY 301 Pa lm
•NEAT
THINGS 714 Bctlhoa Blvd
• SEA GHOST
CASUAL WEAR 207 Palm
•SE A ~H E LL
SWIMWEAR 509 Balboc1 a1 ... c1
11 3 Palm
675-9204
675-2502
675-3581
675-0896
673-3364
I
on 1ne · PEnn1nsu1.a
BALBOA ---
OCEAN FR.ONT
PA RI< ING.
DINE
• BALBOA BAKERY
& DELI 301 Main St .
• B.J.'s C HICAGO
PIZZERIA 106 Main St.
• DILLMAN'S Balboa Blvd .
RESTAURANT & Main St.
• HIDl'S COFFEE
SHOP 105 Palm St.
•MR. FUN
FOOD 705 1/2 Edgewater
•ORANGE Balboa Blvd .
JULIUS & Main St.
• PAPAGAYO'S 509 E Bay
•PIZZA
PETE'S 701 Edgewater
# 1 Balboa Pi er
•STUDIO
CAFE 100 S. Main
•TALE OF Balboa
THE WHALE Pavilion
• TOMFOOLERY
Serious Chocolat s 705 E. Balboi
:z -
~
BALBOA
1'fNINSU LA.
<("
2: BOULEVAR.D.
673-3082
675-4771
675-RUBY
675-7760
•
673-4633
•.3 ARCADE "'\
AT BALBOA Games & Amusements
•BAY IA~lrobcltl A RCADE Games & Amusements
• CATALINA PASSENGER
SERVICE
•DAVEY'S LOCKER
SPORT FISHING Bilboa P.lvlllon
• NEWPORT LANDING
(formerly Art's) 503 E. Edgewater
• OCEANFRONT -
WHEEL WORKS O ce41nfron1 at Pit"r
• PAVILION Q UEEN
CRUISES Balbol P1villon
• WHEEL LAND lOS Palm St.
Edgewater
Edgewater
• BALBOA s E R v I Es
FERRY Servtn1 .. ,boe since 1t19 673-1070
• BALBOA PHARMACY 116 E. Balboa Blvd. 673-5370
• BALBOA
TRAVEL SERVICE 712 E. Bllboa Blvd.
• BALBOA WINDOW WASHING
SERVICE Commercial & RcMdentill 673-3135
BANK OF AMERICA 61s t Bllboa stvd. 759-4430
• PAVILION
REAL EST A TE 200 E. aatboe Blvd.
•_GREAT
AMERICAN S&l
'
ExP lRT Aov1 u
Real estate
salesman's
status eyed
ar ARTHUR WRIGHT
This week's column wtll conclude our quo-
tations on the Independent contractor va. em-
ployee status of real estate sales people according
to the "Callfornla Department of ReaJ Estate, Study
Manual and Gulde."
In February 1980 the state Supreme Court let
stand an appeals court decision that said, "A
salesman, Insofar as his relationship with hla broker
ta concerned, cannot be claastfled as an lndepen-.
dent contractor." And an additional warning la
given as It relates to f allure of a broker to carry
workman's compensation Insurance.
"The foregoing two situations deal with a
broker's potential llablllty If a court of law finds that
the broker's salesperson Is In fact an employee. A
less dangerous situation and one Which can be
resolved before trouble actually develops IJ the
broker-salesperson relatlonshlp under the Federal
Insurance Contributions Act and Federal Un-
employment Tax Act.
''Here the broker may submit broker's employ-
ment contract with the salesperson together with
detailed data as to operating methods to the
District Director of Internal Revenue and obtain a
ruling as to whether or not the aaleaperaon la
considered an employee under thele acts. If the
maximum freedom of action Is permitted the
salesperson, the broker may not be subject to
these two federal laws, and may not be required to
make Income tax withholding payments required of
an 'employer.'
"The California Unemployment Insurance Act
orlglnally posed problems similar to those set forth
above. The act now excludes brokers and
salespersons ·remunerated solely by way of
commission' from the definition of 'employee.'
"The (Real Estate) Commissioner's Regulation
2726 provides for every real estate broker to have a
written agreement with each of his salespersons,
whether licensed as a salesperson or a broker
under a broker-salesperson arrangement. An
employment contract between broker and sales-
person may be Instrumental In establishing the
relationship between them, but onty to the extent
that the provisions do not conflict with the
relationship as mandated by Real Estate Law and
other statutes. The details of the association should
be spelled out In the contract and adhered to In
practice."
Q -Can you tell me what a capltal aaMt I• -
John Lynch, Tuetln.
A -A capital asset Is an asset of a permanent
nature used In the production of an Income, such as
land, buildings, machinery and equipment, etc.
Under Income tax law, It Is distinguishable from
"Inventory," wh ich comprises assets held for sale
to customers In ordinary course of the taxpayer's
trade or business. A spectacular choice of
homes and estate sites
behind ~arded gates in
Newport Beach.
From magnificent townhomes on the grandest of scales,
to estate-sized lots large enough for a substantial custom
home of your own design with swimming pool plus tennis
court, to highly-traditional single-family detaChed homes,
Belcourt offers all the finest of the special way of life that i~
Newport Beach. From $375,000 to 1.7 Million
' EXCELLFNT FINANCING. I See salesperson for dltmls
(714) 720-1010 ~~~~~!!!!!!!~~~
I M,..J,/ homt< "" "'"" da•I•
/"'"' 10 "'' "' "" '" ~ 00 p, ...
ASIC SALES REPRESENTATIVE ABOUT OUR HOME
EXCHANGE PROGRAM BROKER COOPERATION
\
Jotin 0 . Lusk & Son Is selling homes with
$1,000 down payments In Yorba Linda.
The company's Green Hiiis development of
elngle--famlly homes has starting prices of $99,000
to $132,<>:<><2 for Its three floor plans, whleh range
from two bedrooms, two baths to three bedrooms,
a den and two baths.
The development's third phase Is already one-
third reserved, wtth views across the Anaheim Hiiis.
Green Hiiis, just three miles from freeways and
highways leadlng to Orange County's major
empl9yment centers, Is located In a rapldly-
growlng new resldentlal section of Yorba Linda.
"Green Hiiis Is a traditional single-family home
community," notes Mlchael West. vice president
and director of sales for the Lusk Co. ''Each home Is
advantageously placed on Its lot to provide garden
and recreation space for the homeowner. The
result Is a classic California home, which can
express each owner's· lndlvlduallty. And yet Green
Hiiis homes are priced in the same range as
condominiums. townhomes or apartment con-
versions.''
The prices are possible because Lusk com-
bines advanced techniques 6f manufactured
housing developed by Fleetwood Enterprises with
Its own community planning and land development
skills. ·
. Each home has a double garage with auto-
matic door opener. air conditioning and forced-air
heating. Energy efficient insulation. asphalt shtngle
roots, security deadbolt locks and smoke detectors
are other construction features.
"Green.Hiiis homes. although modestly priced.
have many of the custom touches which are
normally found only in much more expensive
homes." West points out.
Kitchens have wood cabinets. easy-care
laminated counter tops, deep-shelved pantries and
double porcelain steel sinks. Included are gas
ranges with double oven, light and fan , dishwashers
and garbage disposers. Each home has a laundry
roOITLor area large enougb fer tuU-$l.zawasher and
dryer that is equipped with utility cabinets.
Model homes designed by Serengeti may be
seen from 10 a.m . to dusk daily at the Lusk sales
complex on Westfield Street. To reach Green Hills,
take the Riverside Freeway east to Imperial
Highway, travel north on· Imperial to Esperanza
Road, turn right (east) to New River road. then north
(left) on New River to Avenida Adobe and the
entrance to Green Hills. Information may be
· obtained by calling 779-7 134. J ohn D. Lusk&: Son'• Green Hille deve lopment in Yorba Linda lncludea a generous lot for outdoor living.
FAIRE HARBOUR AT SAN CLEMENTE
EXPERT ADVICE
Assu1nables
still out there,
but be carefu1
By SIMON SYKES
Although congressional action has gone a Ion~
way towards eliminating the assumable loan. suet
loans do still exist.
Unfortunately, some lenders have taken tc
deceiving the unwary into believing their loans are
non-assumable.
The lenders· aim is to force buyers to negotiate
new loans at today's higher interest rates, or to pa~
off loans with hefty pre-payment penalties.
The 1982 "Garn Act" and its related regu·
lations set up some so-called "window period'
loans.
A qualifying window-period loan -origlnatec
or assumed between Aug. 25, 1978 and Oct. 15
1982 -is assumable on its original terms so Ion~
as the person assuming the loan can meet the
lender's customary credjt standards.
~. . ·Loans qualifying for assumption under the
window-period legislation are strictly limited. The)
Include loans made by state-chartered banks anc ~~J~~~m~==~ savings and loans. Loans originated by lenders whc ~. are federally or nationally chartered are excluded.
. f
~ l : ' -~
'~ -
.1 ..
" I\
>) ,,
Faire Harbour • e
to-------------------~-A· pr ,,, P1 San Clemenle
H1qh Sc.hoo1
Yu CAN own at the beach! Easy lo qualify for financing now makes
homeownership possible -even at the beach!
Imagine '1 d1.lrming '.\:t>w Engl,rnd-stylcd village that overlooks the entire
San Ut•nwntt• arl'J. Onr .1nd two story home!:>, reminiscent ol Cape Cod. Built
\.v1th all the LJUJltty th.1t '~ m.iJc Lu~i... the leading rc .. identidl builder in Sou thern
C1l1tnrnia for almost lnrty years. And priced from just S109,000*! •Wood-burning
t m·pl,Kl'" • Fin1-.lwJ na!... c.1binets • Private patios and Jcc!...s •Vaulted ceili ngs .md
.. kyl1)4ht~ Isome rl~rns l • CultureJ mJrble counter top<:.• Bi~ t\\O-car ~arages wi th
autnmat1c gJr,1ge dnor opl'ner~
Cnmc ~ee Fain.~ H<1rhnur'., quiet securP \.vorld nl was1Je living today. Then
I ind nut hnw altordable 1t all can be with "Lusk Leverage" on your side.
"LUSK LEVERAGE" ic; like no other form of financing t0r your new home.
Since the Lusk Company is making the loan directly tn the buyer, 1t can q ualify
by 1tc; own c;tandtirJc; ol acceptability. f\1Jny homcbuycr!:> \vho have been unable to
nht,1in t1nancm~ l.rn now do <.,o \~Ith Lu~i...·s help
So ple,1.,t' l .111 nltr .... 1lt"' reprt•.,t•ntJllVl'" lOl l ElT tnr ,111 tlw Jetailc;
PRICED FROM
$10~000~ ~e __ _
~1nd<:I'-by I u .. k1 '>t'rengt'l1 npt·n d.1il v trnm Lusk@Homes ....,. 10 a.m . to Ju.,~ 203.J \'1,1 ~l.int.ir<1y<1, 7 l·l f·t08-o882 .
\ l ~ 1 A I~ A I I I I l -\ 0
•
'-
Some lenders are claiming that their wlndo>A
period loans have been sold to the Federal Nations
Mortgage Association (familiarly known as Fannie
Mae) and thus. the window period is renderec
inapplicable.
Federal regulations clearly state that a qualify·
ing window period loan is assumable on credi1
verification regardless of who currently holds the
loan, or is servlcinQ It.
And a lender who falsely represents that a loar
is not assumable, and thus kills a deal, is liable fo1
damages for interfering with a contractual rela-
tionship.
(Simon Sykes is editor of first tueaday, ~
journal for the real estate industry, P. 0 . Box 20068
Riverside, CA 92506. Tel: (714) 686-8005)
• ·.
-
Crystal C~y
opens fourth
Niguel tract
Shea's Crystal Cay In Laguna Niguel recently
celebrated the sellout of the first three phues wtth
the opening of PhaM four.
"Because of our conll1tent ..... succ1111e1 we
had to acceterate our efforts In order to bring Phase
four on the market," said Chuck Lockhart, saJea
manager for Coats Realty, Inc.
Located within the muter-planned community
of ~una Helghta, Crystal Cay IOld over 50
percent of lta homes on Phue four opening day.
"The reason la llmple,'' Aki Lockhart. "Of all the
developments In the lrM. our project hu just
about the finest array of amenltlel and value for
prices starting as low aa $69,990."
Designed by the Berk us Group, the slngt.-level
condominiums with one or two bedrooms and .two-
story t~homes tncorporat1ng up to two
bedrooms and a loft range In size from 759to1, 171
square feet.
Crystal Cay offers FHA and VA financing as
weU as conventional financing eet at 2 percent
befow the prevalllng market rate.
Amenities Include two-story IMng rooms with
~loped celllngs, separate dining areas, draperies,
Interior laundry areas, akyUW-ts. and private patios
or terrace balconies.
Kitchens are enhanced by contemporary
European laminated cabinets, trimmed with oak,
ceramic tile counter tops with oak trim, and
luminous celllngs.
Fireplaces with hearths are Included In some
plans.
Recreational amenities Include two swimming
ti pools and spas, a volleyball and basketball court
and a viewing gazebo.
Seven furnished models, decorated by Design
I, and the sales office staffed by Coats Realty, Inc.~
are open daily from 10 a.m. untll 5 p.m. For further
Information, call 831-8860.
Visitors should take the Crown Valley Parkway
exit south from the San Diego Freeway. Continue to
Street of the Golden Lantern and turn left to Crystal
Cay.
'Re1narkable'year
for LeParc ho1nes
When Le Pare/El Toro opened for sales In Aprll
1983, it was the beginning of a remarkable year for
the 300-unlt community of affordably priced
· townhomes and condominiums.
THe response to the Innovatively designed
development by homebuyers and the housing
Industry was nothing short of phenomenal, accord-
ing to the EPAC Development.
Starting with a lottery to handle the tremen-
dous deman~ Le P-arc quickly became a "best-
seller" with 60 sales In one day. The overwhelming
demand prompted EPAC Development President
Rick Ooreus to move up the production schedule of
the remaining two phases. .
Sales have remained steady throughout the
year and, with the final phase recently opened, 216
of the homes have been sold.
"There aren't many developments that can
boast of selling an average of four homes per week
over the course of a year," said Doremus. "We are
very proud of that accomplishment.''
In addition to record sales, Le Pare/El Toro has
received unprecedented acctaJm from the housing
Industry. The first accolade waa the Gold Nugget
Grand Award and six Merit Awards from a regional
design contest sponsored by Builder magazine and
the Pacific Coast Builders Conference.
Le Pare also won the Grand Award In the
MAME (Major Achievement In Merchandising
Excellence} competition by winning two categories
and being named a finalist In nine others.
Sponsored by the SaJes and Marketing Counctl of
the Building Industry Association of Southern
Callfornla, MAME Awards are· considered the
Industry's most coveted awards In recognition of
superior contributions In the merchandising of new
homes.
National recognition came to Le Pare with the
awarding of the "Smaller, Smarter, More Af-
fordable Housing" award from Protes1lonal Builder
magazine. Presented at the Natlonal Association of
Home Builders convention In Houston, Texas, the
award was one of just 12 presented to builders
across the nation.
The tropical landecaplng at Le Pare won
honors for South Shores Landscaping In the form of
the Landscaping Beautification Award from the
Long Beach/Orange County Chapter of the
Callfornla Landscape Contractors Aleoctatlon. Le
Parc's landecaplng, designed by Praburger &
Aasoclated, features an "aquucape" design of
meandering waterways, tall palms and lush
greenery.
Le Pare offers the contemporary architectural
design of Johannes Van Tllburg & Partners, AIA.
The eight floor plane feature amenities such as
wood-burning flreplacea, enctoaed garages with
etectrto door openers, lofte, Mttuded rooftop
terraces. private patios and batcontee. ceramic
tlled entries and counter tops, cuatom draperies,
hand-rubbed oak cablnete, mirrored wardrobe
doors walk-In closet•, Interior washer/dryer
apace' energy-efflctent appliances, upgraded heat
and s0und Insulation, and central heating and air
conditioning. The one, two and thr ... bedroom homes,
ranging In size from 733 to 1,195 aquare feet, are
priced from $72.990 to $121,990.
Condominium Management," the neW•t text
publlhed bV ttie lnetltute of Re.a &t• ......... rnent, ..,.. to a.. up nwwy of .._ foggy
.,... for ownera end rMNlgerl. Wrttten br 1 twft
of experta In the field, the book~~
~ of running a condominium 111odatton end
managing a condomtnklm -..opment.
l'he text benefit• both condo ownera and management agenta. It offerl helpful guldlllMI on
letting up a board of dlrectora, ~
governing documents, chooelng ~t
fechnlquea, enforcing ru~ and regutatlonl, con-
tlve home bayen line up for new townhoma at Cryetal Cay In LaCuna ·l'flgael. A fourth ph.ue of tile deYelopment l9 now open.
•
Lavish landscaping every-an ownership oprortunitv like no
where you look ... the leisure-time other ... and an exdu,ive address m
pleasures of separate swimming one of the \S.Urld's pre~er resorts.
and therapy pools, a Ad-1-Two.Bedroom Lux,
sun deck, outdoor nre-And A Newport r\J uress. ury Condominiums
place and barbecues. from $209,900
Sun.-splashed beaches and the sea
are a short stroll away, just waiting
br )QUr enjoyment.
This is the incomparable
lifestyle cl Villa Balboa, a secure,
luxurious condominium comm.i-
nity high atop a viewsite bluff over-
looking Newport Harbor. Truly
~ (ffrrtf\~ dart n( puhlio. lttlt.'f'I. ~,.,,.1'rl'!o
1~ 1va1l11hk ~ •1" l~"
-
Sales Offke Open Drulv 10 A.M.
To 6 P.M., Or Bv Ap{X.1mtment
VlLLA BALBOA
220 Nile Lane\ Newport &~11.:h,
CA 9266 3 (714) 64 5-M ")\.)
,..
-
,.
Builder foots Closing
cost at Meadow Broo~-
P8Yf'Mnt of eH non-recurring cloa-
• Ing coats by the bu11d.-1a enabUng an
Increasing number of flrat-tlme home
buyera to purchue at Meadow Brook
Vlllege.
Buyers can move Into the Garden
Grove community for as low as
SA,800, according to Warren Toman,
preeldent of the TOIT)Jln Co.
Thirty-year 10'A percent fixed rate
bond financing la offered at The VIiias
of Meadow Brook VIiiage. Conventlal
loana are available at both The VIiias
and The Townhomes. One of the more
popular programs Is the conventlal
30-yttar 11¥• percent fixed rate loan.
The VIiias, one and two-bedroom
condominium homes, are priced from
$79,900 to $93,900. Two and three-
bedroom, _two-story townhomes are
alto available at Meadow Brook
VIiiage, priced from $109,900 to
$135,000.
Meadow Brook VIiiage homes In-
clude spacious decks or patios, wall-
to-wall carpeting, fireplaces, built-In
appllancee, kitchen and tHlthroof"
nxturn, reclrculaJlng hot water 1)'1-
tem, maximum security panic-proof
front door deadbolt locka, natural oak
kitchen cabinets and cultured marble
bathroom counters. -...
To provide mature lanaacaplng, the
Tom an Co. saved existing fully mature
tr ... and shrubs when the develOP-
ment began, replanting them In ac-
cordance with the master land-
scaping plan. Walkways, spas and
waterseapes complete the village
environment.
Seven decorated models and two
"Home of Quality" demonstration
models are open dally from 10 a.m. to
dusk at 13175 Creek View Drive In
Garden Grove.
To reach Meadow Brook VIiiage,
take the.Garden Grove Freeway to the
Magnolia off-ramp. Turn west on
Trask and right on Yockey to Meadow
Brook VIiiage. For further Information
call The VIiias, 539-0736, or The
T ownho1'hes, 539-0734
I •
The mortgage that
gives you more
now costs you less.
•'.
...
Imperial's Tomorrow
Mortgage'm stacks up better.
• Additional advances allow you to qualify today,
then borrow again tomorrow.
• Interest rate ceiling.
• Assumable.
• No prepayment penalty.
• Indexed to United States Treasury Securities.
• Free interest bearing checking account.
One-Year Adjustable Monthly
Plan.
• 7. 5% annual payment cap.
• 4. 5% lifetime interest cap.
• Rate can change after 6 months.
• Monthly thereafter.
Three-Year Adjustable Plan.
• .f .0°<, lifetime interest cap.
• Payments can change every thrc:c: years.
• Interest ra!es can change every six months.
Our Fixed Rate Loan
is another option.
• Protects you fr om the risk of interest rate increases.
• Payments re mai n constant.
Call 1-800-CHEK-NOW
( 1-800-243-5669)
• Financial representatives are on the lint' Monday
through Friday to tell you how and where to apply.
• A~k ahout our variety of 9ther rnort~age loan plans.
• Ask about home equity loans and other personal loan
program~
Claremont
(714) 621·3996
(213) 62,·0491
Topanga Canyon
(213) 908-1406 Nnvport Beach Wilshire Om cc (714) 67,-9,70
(213) 937-24'° (213) 48,·0839
H im~ Savings.
Association ,,
Where T(nnom>u1 Begins Toda)1. w
-•It~ """tt • t t11 • h~HllV •tthotut rn..tf4 r ~nnu1J ,, rt' of.-•• a"'' hf"••
on lvptit '' lutn' •u,....tt to lrtt ,,.,..,. ,~,, wnl,.mfnl til !!
Meadow Brook Village Townhoma offer 1ractouJbina rooma da•p ed ID coatemporary arclalteotual lltfle.
Final Canyon Center phase finished
Construction on the third and flnal
contract phase of Canyon Corporate
Center, one of the largest research and
development centers In Anaheim, has
just been completed by Equldon, the
Irvine-based contractor for the project.
The $18-mllllon construction contract
Involved renovation and expansloR-Of
old manufacturing and warehouse faclll-
tles Into an administrative and research
and development center for Hughes
Aircraft Co. In Anaheim. The develop-
ment, located at 5605 East LaPalma In
East Anaheim, now houses the engineer-
ing services and support division for
Hughes ground systems group.
Phase I of the project, completed In
Sept. 1983, Included the remodeling and
Interior development of two existing
warehouse structures Into research and
development facllltles. Reflective gla&1
curtaJnwall entries and second-story
offices and mezzanine areas were
added, along with extensive new site and
landscaping work. The bulldlnga now
offer 107 ,318 square feet of space. . In Phase II of the project, completed In
January, Equldon remodeled and ex-
panded two existing concrete tllt-up
manufacturing facllltles Into office and
research space. The front exterior walls
were demolished and replaced by a glass
curtaJnwall, with new second-story office
spaces joining the two bulldlnga that noi
total 155,571 square feet of apace.
Architect for the first and eecon
phale of the project was Corbin Yamafu
& Partners of Newport Beach.
Ph..-Ill of Cenyon Corporate Cente
which was completed In early Februaf'!
features a new four-story office bulldln
with I00,80 square feet of space. The™"
facutty features a structural frame dealg
and glass curtaJnwall. Architect fc
Phase Ill was Leason Pomeroy A!
soclates, Inc. of Orange.
Equldon la a major commercial ger
eral contracting, development and 8884!
management firm baaed In Irvine.
fil egant tow ~ omes!
Prestige location!
u~ty features!
Great financin !
Only '144,900 to '159,900
~· ~~~
1 . ~ ... ,-::-_t· €""
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An Exclusive Community of Elegant Townhomes ideally situated near Mesa Verde and Costa Mesa
Country Club~. Longwood Greens is'just blocks from all the fine restaurants, shops and movie theaters
of the Mesa Verde community. South Coast Plaza and Newport Beach are only a few minutes away.
Featuring bt:autiful exteriors and a park-like setting, Longwood Greens townbomes offer spacious
inte ri ors w ith up to 1,800 square feet.
• Second fireplace in master bedroom • 2 car garage with auto opener a direct access to
home • ceramic tile kJtchen countertops • laundry chutes • built-In vacuum systems
• alcoves with window scats • second floor sundecks • curved stairwells • dens with
wet bars • security systems • mission tile roofs • trash compactor • mlttorcd wardrobes
• swimming pool • spa and cabana • microwave oven • clerestory window • vaulted ceWna
•double master suites
2 ~ror). 2 lkuroom~. 2 Vi D•ath~
Op<.·n IO Jm to c; pm (do~<.·d Friday)
r'I i ) c;40-'\082
f'rt<C·• <lie. 11\1 1l;t1 "I 11Hhll1 ~Ill If\ llWf •UI~·· I Ill I hJlljC<'
..
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(
Master suites help sell Ali
Single-tam ly home 1tyle mu-
ter bedroom• are one of the
moat populat f .. turff among
the buyer• at Allao Mffdowa In
Laguna Hlltt, report1 Tiny Rhein
of Watker & Lee, exctutlve ..._
repreeentatlvet.
''For the majority of our
buyers, this ta. their first home,"
says Rhein. "They are uMd to
llvtng In apartment• end looklng
at condominium• whlch'are built
like apartment a.''
~ Into the aufte. They IOYe the
twin werdrobee, the d~
room, the oompertmented bath,
Md the maet• ltnen Clolet.
''And they apprectaM the IHd·
Ing gl ... door th1t opens onto
th• fenced patio.
ier bedroom 11 In the IWO-
bedroom Beocria mooll. Prtc:.d
at 183,500, It lnetUdet MO
lqUafe feet of IMng ~.Ith ..
a formal entry, •Mng room.
dining room, kitchen Ind dual
m .. t., bedrooms at oppoahe
endl of the hOUM. Thie mak• It
tuitab'e for a couple, two
ltnolet. or parents wtth an o6der
chlfd.'
percent• r•ll t2!M ~
The doMt p9)11'1111-:, ...
IOW M 5 petOlftl. ...
,,,..... on ... BeooNe °'" _.
at lltO (prinalplil Md .,_..,
• wtth 5 percent down ....
pereent down, ~cen be•
111514 on the..,.. modll.
11111• ··w~en they see our attached
alngl•famlly home• with their
alngle-famlly-home-type matter
suites, they really get enthused.
They like the double doors that
They can picture them•Ye8
havtng • weekMd breekfut on
the patio. Or, W.ta&Ung a hot tub
right out8'de their b.ctroom door
and going dJrectly to bed 1tter.a
relaxing soak under the atara.
Such luxurlee are not avatl1ble
to the buyers of almoat all other
hom• In this price range," lhe
ueerta.
With conventional financing
and special buy-down program.
the lnter11t rate 11 8~ percent
the ftrat year, 91n percent the
aec:ond year, 10~ percent the
third yeat, and 11 'n percent the
remaining 27 years. The annual
The Niii oMoe Md ma fJfl
are ~ IMurUv ..,..
Wed,..._, from 10 a.m.'tifl
p.m. Abo MeedOWI ""'
reached =Ing the IMta or San Freewa.y to
Alicia Pnw•y off...-.rnp m.
tween El T«o Ind La . .,.
Allio Meadows' large.t mas.-
Road•). turntng towerd ..
ocean on Allcta and going~
west 1 in mites to the modlll.
~!~N~~?_ i~~?ie~~s ~~~:}mo~~o~ !!,~~~~
After seven consecutive ptevlously occupied homes median-priced resale home the median Income would...,,.
months of Improvement, the was 12.24 percent In February, would have consumed exactly just enougt) money to~
National Association of Re-up from 12.16 percent In Janu-25 percent of the nation's for a mortgage to pur~ a
altors' Housing Affordablllty ary, median annual family in-median family gross Income. typlcaJly priced existing eh,ga.
Index remained unchanged come rose $144 to $24,988. The "In other words," Carlson family home."
from January to February. median existing single-family J ohn Swanaon, Barratt American preeldent and chairman
Barratt-Irvine ranks No. 1
in n .u111.ber of honies built
Barratt American, Inc. of lrvlne
ranked first In volume of single-family
homes built In Southern California
during 1983, according to the 13th
annual Survey of Residential Build-
ings In Southern California. prepared
by a Southern Californla newspaper.
Barratt reported bulldlng 610 slngle-
famlly homes last year, to top the list
of 121 builders surveyed In Kern, Los
Angeles. Orange, Riverside, San
Be~nardlno, San Diego and Ventura
counties.
Addltlonally, Barratt American was
ranked eighth In sales volume with
$82,400,000 reported.
"We were very pleased with the
results of the SYrvey because they
define our leading position in the
marketplace( said John Swanson,
president and chairman of the board.
"Barratt American Is very success-
fully offering Californians the kinds of
. homes they want at prices they can
afford. After all, our policy is to make
home buying easy."
The company also bullds attached
housing commercial projects.
Meister expands
out of California
Scottsdale, Ariz. -Expanding its operations
for the first time outside of Southern California,
Meister Development Co. has acquired a 28-acre
parcel within Scottsdale Ranch, a master-planned
community is northeast Scottsdale, Ariz.
"Projected as one of the top three growth
areas throughout the '80s. we chose Scot-
tsdale/Phoenix because of its relative proximity to
our corporate headquarters and a sound knowl-
edge of its housing market," explained John
Martin, president and chief executive otf icer of the
Newport Beach-based Meister Development Co.
Martin previously held the same position with
Cavalier Homes. one of Arizona's largest home-
building firms.
"Given our company's high standards in
creating exceptional residential environments, we
specifically selected Scottsdale Ranch because of
the outstanding quality of development already
demonstrated within this community," Martin said.
The residential collection, Casa del Clelo,
introducing a new concept for Arizona, Incorporat-
ing 150 patio-style homes in a unique Ian -planning
configuration. '
Meister Development Co., working i conjunc-
tion with the land-planning and architect al firm of
Richardson/Nagy/Martin of Newport B ch, has
developed an unusval presentation th rovldes
for more usable yard and patio space as well as
greater orientation of the homes to rear yard area.
In keeping with the strong Indoor/outdoor rela-
tionship that is a part o f the Scottsdale lifestyle.
Additionally. the plans Include windows on
every side of each hOIT\O to achieve more natural
Interior lighting and floor plan flexibility. Three of
the single-story design plans include from approx-
imately 1,380 to 1,820 square feet of living space, to
meet the requirements of young professionals,
small families and buyers seeking a second or
vacation home.
Small loop and cul-d~-sac streets will be
augmented by angled or staggered setbacks and
by varying positions ,and approaches to the
attached two-car garages.
A. Wayne Smith and associates of Tempe, Ariz.
has been retained to develop landscape architec-
tural plans to complement the development's
Mediterranean architectural theme. A 15,000-
square-foot recreation center with a swimming
pool, spa and playing field Is also being planned for
the exclusive use of the residents. .
At 87.2, the Index during the home price remained the same
first two. monTils of thrs year In the first two months of the
was at Its highest level since year at $71,300.
December 1979, when It stood The monthly principal and
at 88.9. . Interest payment on a medlan-
"The February Index means priced resale home In both
that a family earning the me-mO'nttlr,$597 In February and
dlan Income had 87.2 percent $594 In January, consumed
of the Income needed to qualify 28. 7 percent of median family
for the purchase of a median-Income.
priced resale home that According to lending re-
month," explained Dr. Jack qulrements of the Federal NA-
Carrison, chief economist and tlonal Mortg~ge Association. a
executive officer of the Na-major purchaser_ of mort-..
tlonal Association of Realtors. gages, principal and Interest
Carlson noted that the Index payments may not exceed 25
remaJned at January's level In percent of a borrower's in-
February because a slight In-come.
crease In mortgage Interest If the February Index had
rates was offset by a rise in been at 100, which It has not
family income. been since December 1978,
While the average mortgage principal and interest pay-
•2000
As a part of the 1,119-acre Scottsdale Ranch.
which is a planned community by Markland
Properties, Inc. and Costain Arizona Inc .. both of
Phoenix. Casa del Clelo Is situated just southwest
of a 10-acre site designated for a future neigh-
borhood shopping center and another five-acre
parcel for profession al services. Im med lately north
of this center. another 30 acres have been reserved
for a future park, and residents of Scottsdale Ranch
already enjoy the ranch's 42-acre Lake Serena.
With site preparation work scheduled to start
this spring, Meister Development plans to Initiate a
pre-sales program at Casa del Clelo In mid-
summer. Models are expected to be completed for
1 grand opening before the end of this year.
FOR A HOME WAN
WITH AN INITIAL RATE
WWER THAN FIXED,
COME TO BANK OF AMERICA.
nnH.:h that rntl' cmslJ ch;rngl' O\'L'T the
life of the lo<m , the nAht lo.m trn
As the developer of numerous, award-winning
resldentlal communities In both Orange and San
Diego Counties, Meister Is currently preparing to
open a community of ranch-style homes In
Escondido and two multlf amity developments and
an apartment project. Among Meister's recently
completed commerclal projects are a 5.6-acre
shopping center In San Bernardino and a 7 ,200-
square-foot office building In San Diego's Rancho
Santi Fe. Construction la also under w~y on a new
Chrysler-Plymouth dealership In Irvine and wlll
eoon begin on a 209,000-square-foot commercial
plaza In l:nclnltes.
B.mk of Amcm:.1\ aJ1u~t:ihk r:lH.'
cu~tom I lnml' LO.Ill'-.m: our lowc ... l
1111t1 .ll J.ltL' hnnw lo;rn ... -lower mit1.lll\'
limn nm fi\t'\.i r.Hc lo:in~. Or. if you're
looklllA for .1 low mitt.ii r.ltl' phi-. thl·
.1dded rmtl'l"tl<lll of knnwm~ lll'I how
you '"our rn ppc<l .1<l1u,t.1bk r:HL' 111.m
WJO[R Cl it )IC[
Now wt' h.1v<.' more tvpc' ot hrnm· lo.111 ....
to t hoo-..c from th~1n ever hdnn: \il
whether you're bunn~ or rdm.mL II)\!
n\ <.'.1'-\ to fm<l ;1 Cu..,tom Hnmc L11.111
t h:H ... ll1'l n~ht for \'OU
fA\TIR ·\PPRO\.\L\
\Ve h .l\t' over --lO nt''' Home Ln.111 t 1.'ntl't"
MEDIAN INCOME A~ QUALIFYING INCOME
~
.. '
1182
...
Ull3
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.... t.11 ll'd w 1th "l'cu.tl ''t.., \" hn c.:.m 'pccJ
up vour lo.m .1pp111\ .ti J"'Tlll.'l'"'-111~ t1 m1.:.
\nd th.11 mc.111 .... \H c.rn clcN . .' \'our
lo.111 1.1 ... tL'r tlt.lll \\'L' \ c C\ n done hdnrl'
'\l )\\ I\ Tl IL Tl\\E
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,llld 1.1,ll'I .ll'l'll 1\".tl' )11 I\\ I" tht..' llnll
t1• L'lltnl' 111111 ,111, h 1.11h h 111 C .llllrnm.1·,
k .h.l tn~ kndl·r .rn~I BANH
~l't thl· 11~h1 111.111 ONTHf "'
.II till· 1 H!hl I.Ill' LEADER
'(11 1.1lo.t• .1ch.int.1J.!l' ol Jll lhl' \\U~..,
1 ht• (huh Piiot ht•lp~ I tJ,!ht inrtutmn
nil I fi 12 1:t2 1 Diii Piiat Bank of America
.. OfAn99 Coa11 DAILY. PILOT/Sunday. Apr II 29, 1984
~-----------~-----------, I . · I
! Youiµay !
I for a home loan !
: on an income of : I I
! $JO,OOO or less. , !
I I
I ' "'l \I \10' I Ill.\ I'\\ \It., I \J((~,()~~11 .. :',.",:.\1<'>,'','"·1" I IU>l !'\t-1101.1> \I\\ (Jl \Ill\ IOI{ llO\\,ft.\\\ll-'I ··Ht-.llEHllO.\lt-.·· .
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I '!12:'.01111 ~7X.fl.\0.00 $ X.t.70 .00 ~71125.& $1.04S.SI I (I '!t2K.OOO X7 . .\00.00 11,7110.00 KK.&.O.' 1.167.0S I
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I \re''"'""""''""'''""'' (714) 250-8014 Hm• du~""'""" •I"'" :
Hun~as
·Sunflex
Custom Blinds
• CNer 100 Oeeigner Cotors
• Spnng-tempered aluminum
9'ats that spring back into
shape
• FuH Uieelme Warranty
•Also available "Energy Saving"
Thefmostop .. Blinds
• Limited o~ Present this ad
FAST DELIVERY!
!Examples)
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TO I TO TO TO ,, n 12 tl
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--JOKttttUNTtEY INTERIORS
8581 Westminster Ave.
Garden Grove 894-1339
CENTURY MINI BLINDS
13656 Red Hill Unit A I Ii:" 1h.11111n \tlllf uirrnll h111m: 11r JJ'.Hl111i:lll (;t'I \II tht' Fact' :\cm I T ustrn 730-0676
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0 & S DRAPERY SERVICE
17420 E. Mt. Herrmann
Fountain Valley 545-5346
SANDY'S HOME DECOR
19171 Beac~lvd.
Huntington Beach 842-4000
I \ 11d h1.·1. .1lh1.' I hl· r .Jk '' 111\l l' r. J 11u r PJJ 11 ll'llh a fl' lrn-1 .. n 'lkll l'I fl, 11111.· · h 1,111 pJ1. ~l'I h~ rl'I urn 111.11 I I
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17941 Magnolia
Fountain Valley 847-2221
18400 Ward Ave.
Fountain Valley 964-6666 I upli•ll\t lull\l·Jr,· R'"''"""''''"''"/t,,,,,, ,,,,,,.~, ""''""'"'"'' I CHAPARRAL CARPETS
15825 Graham St.
SPRING CREST CUSTOM DRAPERY
440 Camino De Estrella I NORTH I Hunbngton Beach 897 ·3552 San Clemente 496-6333
I ~~,., f' I I @ 1...,1.1( ll\1,11"11"c1l1111•11•1,1 .. l11 I DECOR CENTER
2717 S El Camino Real
JEFFREY'S HOME DECO. CENTER
1215·DW BakerSt Costa~754-0151 L l(.Q'; lt lf11"11.'l l.1I h "'"I" l I' UI t'•'" ••I tl,,h .• I"-11111111 llh lilt. 1tl Iii, lt•.11\ ..J -----------------------San Clemente 498·3400
T ll E U\11.' PILOT
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SClllM-UTS h1w1n '" Ol1111fiaatl°" 3002.
642-5678
..
A SUBSIJIARY OF THE IRVINE COWPANY
PRHTtitiH 1120,000
Great location, view of bay. island. lights. Walk to
Lado Village. Spacious 2 BR. 2 112 BA home in the
sky. 24 hour security. Elegant decor .. excellent
price. Joan Lewis
Biii CHYOH FUUST SHl,500
Dt.·;.irw built lx·,1uvill1 · ovC'rlnokrng fairways.
rnuntr \. 1 lub & ni~ht l1ght!. of lidrbur Hrdgt· This
hnght & 'ht 1 r\ .i BH d1 n homl' ha:-. <i lg
1·11ll'l IJ1tinu•nt .in·.i wllh pnv,1Leo pool & spa
8..irb.11,1 Aunt
UliUH CtOlH FRHT $1,111,000
\'ll'W forc>ver &•<iutil ulh maml<Hned older
Lc1gu na home. US("Ci brick t~rract.'. lush courtyard
l'ntr Jntt with -,('( ludt-d "" 1mmmg pool 3 BR.
l11m1al dining rm. <lt·n. m;.i1<l ... quanen. Barbara
Aunt· Gt'Orgc> Grup<•
HIRIOR IUDIE 12,&00,000
Th1l> l'll·gant Country English l'Sl<:itl· o ffers the
f111~t lraftsmanshap available m c:ustom home
11111struc taon Thi' bf•<1ut1fully landM...i1x·d grounds
.ind l'ohblt·~to1w tourtvard on• st'C'Ured bv elet·tnc·
1'1111 v li(<•l<'S -l lx'<irooms. l'dt. h <>nsu1t~. plus a
f\lastt·r Suite• with fabulnu<; VIC'W..., plus a :acuzza
tub and .1 h.ib1tat ..auna &:I E.s<.·anotMaureen
Wtutt•
COUNTRY EHLISH TUDOR 12,700,000
'I lw, o BR fl 1• BA Cam rm library. bonus rm .
v. int• rm hornt· has a breathtaking unobstructed
oc:t>an bilv. and nate 11 ll' view This is the perfect
tamtlv & t•nt.-rwmmg home wnh lg pool & spa tn
lfartx"ir R1dgt> Ed ~<1no Maure<'n White
JISlllE CHH IHl,000
Smglt• -.tor y J. BR dt•n 1. BA homt behind guard
g<lle Tt>nnts n1urL.., & swimming pools &f
E.t,(·;molMaurt'<'n Wh111
·w1r11t it means rrr your
ad to be ''c/assif ied"
SIHLE FAMILY HOME 1117,000
lmmacul.itl• :i BH. :! BA homl' on quiet cul-de·
sac Co~l<I M1•<.,;1 l()(:allon 0t'<.·orator <:ondtt1on with
4ual1tv rnq.x·I:-.. dr;.ip<•:-&.µdratl' l<.-1m1ly & formal
dining rm Lov1•l\ \arcl with covered patio
MC1rth.1 M.H 11,1b
EHLISM TUDOR-I f& CHYH 12,H0.000
Primt• loc:atwn ovt•rlookmg fairways. lake and
nite lite!. 5 BR. 4 fireplaces. library. billiard rm ..
farnaly rm Attc:ntaon to every detail an this custom
Valentine Built Home Tom Allanson
dlMEO MlliNLllDS W /POOL IH0,000
N1t·ely dC\:oratt..-d m neutral tones. 4 BR. 2 1/'l BA
surrounds lush pauo w 1 pool Ind. Land. Martha
Macnab
ODUMTRY OLUI COMMUNITY 1711,000
4 BR. 2 , BA -··xqw-.1lt• honw ft•aturmg oak
cabinets All nt•w mtt>nor. puol. spa. Security
gatt'Cl t'ommun1ty Sandie Fix <)
Ill OHYOM 1121,000
This elegant :J BH. .i BA smgh• ll'vt'I tuwnhome
features the ultunall' m qualaty. detail & l'Onve-
naence lndudt>s pool. spa & u1r <.'Ond1llonmg.
Danny Babb
IOLf COHIE· TDWIMDlf 1211,000
This 2 torv. 2 SH, 2 BA. Mt Lam Townhouse has
an unobstri..c tt>d vww of 81g Canyon Golf C-OW'ie
Fabulous mastf'r l4U 1tt· <:um plt•t(> with kyHghts
The ulumate in 11i<.>ph1•a1cntt><l h'-&nl< Danny
Btbb/Stt-phunw (;roctv
.\
M&HOR VIEW HILLS 1311,IOO
Outstanding 3 BR home on level corner lot with
loads of privacy & view of hills. New carpeting &
pamt--r<'adv to movf:' into-close to shopping &
schools-a n ~utst.andmg b'uy at $319.500 md. land.
Maxine Propp
CAT&LIU YlEWS 1421,000 Lii
Large lot with private secluded pool & hot tub.
Excellent owner financing available 3 BR. 2 1 2
BA with huge view living room. George Grupe
14 ACRE VIEW ESTATE UH 11,llO,OOO
Ont> of the only opporturutaes ever offered for a
huge estate complex Located JUSt above 3 Arch &
Monarch Bays In South Laguna. Sweeping
coastal views with room for every thing. Private
road to secluded h11ls1de location. George Grupe
VIEW II COHH IUlllUIDS IH0,000
lncludang land. Canyon and ocea.n view from thls
charmmg 3 BR. 2 BA home. Extra lg lot wlroom
for expansion. Access to private beach. Great
potential. Donna Godshall
Liii IUfllllT 11,100,000
A large family homt> on V1a Lado Soud with pier
and slip, 45 foot frontage. 6 bedrooms and 4 car
garage Now one of th~ best values on the bay
Lucy Rose
Ill O&IYll t 1,Ul,000
With a blond of trad1Uonal and conte mporary this
6 BR. 7 BA home is truly the ideal family home.
Features a fabulous golf coune and lake vi w
lncludes the f ln t of qu lily ron.structlon
thruout Ownrr i very mouvated and wUJ con-
sider trad Danny Bibb
°" ll•n J*IPlt -d •WP !Id 111 elut1l1" •~"' ,. _d,, l4 11111' •lld KUvel)' -t<ll
11111 101 1he ~uct 11At111 tn hll l"-11 -·
•'llHt.. II I Ill Ytltll td
...,,..
¢11Hlfltd 1d1
10·5671
LINDA 18LI 8AVFRONT
===~·= ~~ ,... n1t•1noe. tutud1d ........ pello.
elnt:dlF lllll'Hll1 I lrllllllll Md 91.....a
~o.w ......... ,......., .... ..... .. ....... 111·,_
8AL80A ISL DUPLEX-CORNER °"" .... doOf lo ... ..,. ............ .....
"pie ::r•r tot. u..a..-• ........ _. .......... + .......... :r:.."G ....... """ .............. . n.,.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. lt£Al. ESTATE
s.loe llen1.it. "'-'~ M~-"'
24J6 W Coee1 ti"'V 3 ts Man!W Ave
Newpott Be.ch BAlbcN Island
Ul·I-'7M"'
PAlllRAMIC VD -$369,500 FH
WTIUff -Spacious 2 story, 5 Bdrm home.
Hi&hly desirable family neichborhood. Close to
shopping. church, school & tennis club.
Open Hue Swl 1-5
2933 ea-.. EastbMf Nnpart eactt
PERFECT RETR£AT -CW, $450,000
"Golden Triangle" of S.O. County. fallbrook
Country. Outstandina 3 Br custom home with pool
& jacurzi, nestles 1mo1'115t approx. 50 acres
stately avocado producina irove w/income ben-
efits.
• 3 BR COfl>O .. CUTEY"
Neat -sharp -only $88,500 upper end unit.
Security gated area, close to So. Coast Plaza &
Freeway access, highly upgraded carpet,
wallpaper, etc.
631-3955 644-5917
Hunt & Associate
REAL ESTATE
IEW
Ulllll •••• llllM
Live above it all & enjoy the
finest in q uality & one of the best
views in all of Newport. 5 Bdrms.
7 Baths, library, VIEW fam nn
w/one of 4 fireplacs, VIEW
form. dining overlooking foun-
tain pool and the world below.
Sumptuous master ste (1050 sq
ft} w/f-place, sauna and huge
walk-in cloeet-room +sweeping
VJEW.Totalluxuryfor themost
diacrim.inate. 24 hr guarded gate. Ofteted at $1,950,000. Call Jeri.
,,,........... ...../11-1
840 4818
2125 Sen Joequln Hiii• Rd.
Newport Center
OPEii HOUSES TODAY
1 to 4:30
12t5 •. larfrMt. .... , ................ $125,111
Custom home 80' completed. 3 bdrms.
2~ baths. family room. Pier & slip.
121 VII Qllte, I.Wt late .......... _ ............ $'25,111
3 bdrms, 2'4 baths, formal dining room.
Very close to clubhouse.
UN llll
Beautiful 3 Br. 3 ~ Ba, Bayfront, pier &
float for 65' boat. Best buy at $895,000.
i t4 Via Ithaca Optn 1-5
BeautifuliifJ Br, 2 Ba, playroom, fireplace,
beam ceilinp. Xlnt. financing. $420,000.
unm •m UYnMT _..
Jetty & Bay view, newly decorated Mai
Kai, 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio. $695,000.
llYllE THUii
1133 Galatea Tenact Open 1·5
Panoramic bay & ocean vtew. 4 Br, 4 Ba,
patio, pool home. Fee price $775,000.
PllllllU ... .......,
Ocean & Jetty views, marine room, 4 Br,
3 Ba, 3700 1q. ft., car parking. $1,285,000.
unm PU111&m111
Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up,
2 Br, 2 Ba down, 2 boat spaces. $1,350.000.
R&IM~
1191
-------
-
COTE ··
REALTY
Second Kortgqe
A second mo1't4age ts a method of
nnanctng whereby the buyer is
provtded with an &dd.ltton&l or
&econd mortgage when there is not
enough cash to &BSume the
ex1sttng mortgage. A second
moM.gage can also be \a.ken when
the first mortgage and the do wn
payme nt fall short oft.he sales
prtce. A second mortgage can be
provided by either t.he seller or a
lending 1nst1tutton. Pa.ymenta are
made both to the seller or lender
on the second mort.ga«e &nd to t.he
lender of the underlying mort.g&41e.
Impa ct OD buyer
• Down payment m~ be necouat.ed
• Eneblea purchue or home w1UI
extatln' moJ'\C&Ce requ1.rtn4 WC•
down pa1ment
• With uaumptton or e1t1aU1l4
mort.ea.c• a ru orable me.rear. rac.e 1a
poulble
Impact OD Miler
• Smaller down p~ment au.nee. more
pot.ential buyen
• Add1t1on&1 prom with 1nc.er.i
~lved on MCOnd moMCa.ce
• ~tv• &U run<U 1r tend.11\4
1n1Utut10n prowld• eMlOnd moM«aee
Attention
Businesses
A Flctltlou• 8uelnett Neme
Statement ftled wlttt the County
Clerlil la v1Md tot ftwe ~ 8fter
which time c o atln«al111
bueln••••• mutt retlle .
PubUcation 19 neceu.rr only " there are cheng••· Call the
Legel Oepertf'Mftl et tM DAR. Y
PILOT for lnformeUon end
nece ... ry~•. ·
••021
-·
Ofange Cout DAILY Pll )flSuooey. Ac>rll 29. 1~• -lel le91ta ualaW ...... ,...,.,,. l!j!p Vala1.UW ...... VatUU.W · Alldmlt• laL AMrllt!i!!. 18L ......... Val.
tnet •ac• · 1119 I t ..... lllt C..w .. 11111 ll!I C..tl ..._ -U14 lntM 1H4 lt•!!d leldi Ult JiUiiiCi ltil .... ._ 811 C11t1 ... UM l!!L ..... ,~ 6Y ow;; \ If $2 1• 000 &;.,UiJiiy t~n Twnha': EMtlNM lalO' 1 Bdtm MC 2 bt 2 be m:Ati"T: • • ji;t t •• "'*· ,pou, 0.1
luxury condo VIiia by~ 1 . ... trplc, pool, 19'\nls ct. crpta/df98, 1 w oar i modern111rulnct1poot& ~~~x=C:: ~·ss'1o~ :t7g:e· ,....P!'P'.,l.A11,? .. ID.D ..... Wfli No.-..•W . ._. .. ....
Ball>Oa Bargai n IU loanwittl 12'~" $1195tmo 173-olM carport LeaM 780-83" git HOO'a kid/pet aa~ betd\. '3300/MO. _, .. _, -~· ltw I d....,. 1621 llO-af1 ...._..,,Lil. "'"-. w/d Ne· 1121,000 S18K belOW tfwad rate, 24 yurt ltft -S3M190 8-t Alty fM •u"/AllttueA F poo nary ·-·-'"• m1rtctt 1·148.7193 OWC 2nd TO •I 1 1'~ haa Ptlat E'SIDE. CJMll 28A lba, a -..... 3 a. 2 .... .,,._ M no Ot8t340-l2M •<h7V . urn or un-at ' no Pttl tee5 em.. 1 If. 1 1 Meple up, WI'· trplo. MIO
3BR 28a. trplc, mOd CiOM t Q f 1 B pa1to agl otrtge. S825+ Turll• """"' -• ""..,.,... .... lal A"• ~~ :,8;!'!nioe'h~~ rt 1i. egt. $31· 12te AV9. upttaln. ~ no IG•77•111D-t lt3 ua• llMl 11UU kllC'*', r-.nOdeted In modtl ~on,:' na •P•' dee>. &4&-o4t1/f1S..3432 ly hme, low rnalnt y.,d, 1 ,. BR 2be, 2 cii' ,.., Shown by' appt 001" pet• 1 penon 13tl.4 •• 39( * & 28r 28a , ..... "'-I T 1979 Xlnl cond AM"-' POOi. · 'Jf 1 .. or month-to-month "' • ' POOL trplc prvt patio ~· Momt M HS2 t d -"'"' tr•• s465·000 call 850.tacie"" S925 499-2713 Luxury Condominium: S1025/mo. 151·8278 Beautltul condo a11all 2131277·2120 .. • In 4·Ple• crp • r...-
Ur.t,•dt1oo8aloret 4BR • · -1 lttc~ S900trno. 38R 2~ba. 2 M~ 1&, s 11501m0. Oayt 11 Ma ~== .t1 ~7 ':e4cr 8tunnlne woe 2 If 2 ea Mltlll .. ""t.1"' ~:o.~·~K =·m~ Im~~ 2 be bi&mo 2:tYLCitLY. =:e~::a::~~ 1:~11.:=:g !!,;l9l~11erevt1 & ....... nn A • -V.-,cf:1tinS: ............
Low "'n ..... , tin Pool, d:' lonnal din rm. 4bf, 3ba. 3300 .n. 3 ear N t I ~ 3 br 2 gr .. nbell Av•ll Hrly s ~ldO I hocM: 3 Gardtn-lk• a bt wlenmd .... Sill..,.~
$585,000 John Zatvos. $325, . 771-8111 dys, gar.PoQl.jac::. V.ac Poea :! :r,:n hm lotaa xtru May, 1 yr IM pref $1250 :-eden. din~. CfttrY kit, peld . No peta. A:.,,. ::~~=~.: w~~~t 1~~~!~~-V1k~ R E 8'2-5289 evee unturn. or oPt.. 8'2· 1381 tncd 4 kid• M76 + em fee + dep. No petl. 8 A.in-upper deck, poot No Adult. Summer Olymplca. bldQ"' Pac Amph I. OOC u..a-7 We can ofttt MY-TeteYtMd aecurtty. encl. 780• 9 540-0289 .. Ellecu11~ condO on bl)'. 539·6190 Beat bOW Falla. Bier as 1·"87 peta. $1800. 17$-3880 Avail Mt)' 25th. Vtulted celllng, 10' frplc, thl"" "°"' • emall ..,, to OMIOM· pool, JIC, ~
UlllOllTMIWUI --··==u1 ... dHlgner. comple~ Handsome ,B, 2'-'b• TURTLEROCK TWNHME: VWMAll• 2 Br. 2 Ba. 2nd 100 EBayAw.Aptt. ~crpt/drpt,lrgtkytit• •• 't"°" ... lflootclnoln ctubhOUMW~--CIM
38r + fireplace ... unit . ..,... w•w urn. S1995mo 873-0 condo 1700 tQ tt many 2+ den. w/Jac. over· floor Condo. mo to mo. ... .. balh & walk-In. w/d htt-up CM, NB or HB tht~ of"' room. 848-1113
S.acn '-" t>lk, some vu. SACRtl'ICE: 2 br. '2 ba n 2·11Y backbay. 4 extras' Nr but & 'atiop1 looklng ornM!t. Avall avell now. 1750/mo. Nice In dbl gar. w/entry, ... , flrtt for that choice ot ,,-....------:a:;;;rJ"
$375.000 ~·5520 1ownhome. large muter Bdr 3 ea pool/ape 2 1 l050i mo 642_..823 M1y 1. 1 yr IM pref a 1250 PoOI tauna wtlght rm 2 Br 1 B• a.undectl, rw ctn own. tee. blra. No ldMI IMna t ~ aulte w/frplc, 1tep down , . · 12300 · • de9· Ort.,. by 9 ~· Che9t,1re A E 75~1en ' pello, carpot1, rdtg41, no peta .. 1740. Avlll. 511. TSL MGMT 8'2·1803 i aM eonao bY ..,...._ UllWATllflllT llv rm, lrpJc, dtx tdtoh. ~~c~3&e ec.. . Aenl this 3 br you'll be bOW Falla. BkT. RoMann '. peta.S7251M790-171S 5'4e-1238 (5-9pm) NBREALTVfS75-18'2 Pool. Jae, Tennlt. AVllll
Orut1c1lly reduced, spa Totll pyml $1500 _· glad ¥01J did prlmo area Deluca 851·"87 VIEWI OPEN HOUS •Ii 011 $526. 891-ottt
$895,000. Sllp for 65' Currently appraised at IHHt ~ under 1700 Kldt call SAT I S UN 4 2 8 'A 3eR 2 BA. Garage. FtplC, LARGE 1 & 2 9'. Cl'l)t, Utlla p~ 1 Bdrm quiet
yacht. Call -oent1 Sally $200,000 Will Mii for ~~1r1l ••Az 539-6190 Beat Alty IM W•lnut Squllfe 2 br lwn· &.gonla 2BR. 2~ Avail SPKk>'4•· Walk to beeeh drapes, laundry rm. p1t10 No peta s34&1mo' .......... , fttl
6H·0496 or Joyce 1111,000. Cindy Shaw, ...... hM, Plan D. mutt ... to now Bk; 759~1t '1250• $7&-5-4 .. l f,rlcng, water pd, Ott & A e11·M a.•.ee58 · 28ftTI>CT 6ik from
646-2389 broker. 780-8600. Coalal tlOU .. rental lg 2 br Sharp 2 Br. EHtlld•. apprec. U45. 833-7619 Want:... to. •·a .. ·. H·· ... -· .......... ,, m. Nor'd,!-ta.a'!.~11.-8)('!'2t71oc:. w .. v t·""-•.Y2· Sr. 1 ba, -... -..-. nr M"'"'" Cow. Utll bltlns g1rage tncd n' pvt beam ceilllng, t1/d hk·up. e11es; 752-1800 days .., ,. _.,.,. .-..-...,. _ ... ......, ,.,._ _... ~ UST SIU IY IWHI Tait~ lotO 5859 Info 539.6l90 Bell Child & pet ok. $695/mo. l;F:t •---Afdge Ettat" or amal Superb 28R w/vlew, lat e 1 Br 1 Ba new crpta/drpa. $600/mo + pd. Adultt, no peta.
Assumable lo&n with 10% -Riiy fee 180-8882 .._ model In Spyglua, B'9 aundeck, fl replace, 0 t d ~ht & $250 MC. Call Beth aft leaM $750, 4tt-2"0 u.m ITUL 1 ~t v.,...u;: Ref.. Canyon Belcourt• or on waah/dry: new cpt & carpe s rtpea. 5PM t 631 5230 , ....... down.ligtlt andalry3Brllqldlll""•"'•-3Bdr 2Cott.,..,S485/moEldep4Br2'h BadplXNr SC al the water. Up I paint . $1110/mo. aunny.$435.851 ·923 ' • lllJ 115W with large paneled office u "''• .. -... -.-NI let street Plaza vacant $825 rno courtyard view Av I. ... ,.,..,.., S I July 644-0380 ....... -• aa• 0 -• 1 f
0, study In exclualve Ba home wttrpk: In great terms ce, qu For appt 528•5080 611. $750 mo 845-9333 _.,.,,.,, mo. lift no • Large 1 Br. ~I. crpt1,m-.,......, Only 1 .... nu.. '°"' Westclll1 .,. .. s229 000 arH Only s 1 t8,900 841~208 lee Augull. Well quanfled View 2 Br 1 Ba rear unit, drpa, pool, landteapad 1 & 2 er. llPt• evetl. pool, Laguna, Y04IT own ptlvete
Call 845--7408 • • Won't last. Call Patrick Daa• ..... m 2 ~ 2v1:· lv-::-'~: famlty of three. 759-18431 garage, 508'h la.smlne. pool .,.., $400/mo. No epa, l/r, patlo/bel. No OC*tl view from o.'8
OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 .. anon1 780-8702, t 1 Br.ciea;~b;~t~obch NOrth of Marina 2 bdrm 2 $1200 mo. 845·9333 Saa Jau •I· 7 , no pet.•. $775. MS-21687 24 pets. 846·3618 an 3:30 Tri.''·J!:,~4':.5-0091 or =• b=~'1.1tt-:c'.::1
1337 SUSSEX LANE s .... ., I Wllftr be bltlns yard & gar S700 •LIKE NEW 2 Br 2 Ba lrg 2 bdrm. 3 i;,, 900 aqj •••• Ill . Large 1 BR with o•rm· 842-1803 Br wi den. •tr• IMge prl-
Near new resld or comm. • • · 539·6190 Best Ally lee Twnhs. Newport Terrace. f1 3 car gtr Mlsalon 18r Condo 1pllt level No pets. Redeco. S4 5· v•te petlo1. C•ll
with bay view $425.000. R11t1h Baat ltac~ 2240 Frpl. Poot1J1e Gar + C~eek. S1100. 494-7224 ' takes & ·atreams, trplc: Call ah 6Pm 645-3497 HI Ptlat 7 ~31 Of' drive by
509 29th SI 673-5553 OO J&OIU RW.n · mch more S800 875·8048 I L.. micro, 2 car gar w/opnr, Large 2BA, 1BA wldectt, Go 2 s; + den 2 L 24585 Santa Clara to ....
N b yf I d 2 B •• ~n. ..... II , • ., ll&UIEIHT ,3Br 1f. ba. Up, land· -A,.rtanh Fara •• pool & apa. $625/mo End. gar. 1tt. laat & Sec. Ocean VU, encl. o•; ~ •
~7..cha. g~n s~·~n sa~.~Y dbl wide. lull lront 'porch: 11• -. dener included New-3 Br, 2 ba, 2 lrplea. lmm1e. 2 BDAM/1 BA UPPER peted & decorated. 71 1 21t gu. wtt,
~ Ba ron con o. r 198l Fuqua 20x42 2 Br I /Ill 1111 I scaped lncd yard. gar-•NEWPORT HEIGH1'S• 545--3115 I yr lease $550. 5-48-t936 w auto opener, newly r• au ~
1817 W B ~ .. 15000. drywall lnl. upgraded WESTWOOD TOWERS 1and l lnd1a n apo tl s Sad97u511.s43pOreAt~lanndo sp~vtes .. C I • .,.24 ""12 p Ln $""" 93-1030 traah. lndry, pool, 673-3777 ay ~ ' · cpts & appt In park w/2 , 10717 Wilshire, Westwood S70\l/mo• sec 536-2789 "" " "1 111 .., n eppertree .IVY carpon. tel + MC. No
clubhouses & pool. pvt ' Single. 1 Br • den. 2Br 3 Br condo, 1,.., Ba. 714-648-0448 Eutslde B1ehe1or unit for mo. Child OK. 559.,.716 bbq IH Virgina Pl-; aat. INc 74 pet1. 29041 Aloma.
IWPT OIEST Ollll
• br, tam. rm. din. rm. 2'h
ba. Near pool & tennis.
Walk to beech. Lrg H ·
sumebte loan $192,500.
marina Astum. loan $725 lo $2000 carport. renovaled, llke 213.473.1114 quiet person, $300/mo + 2 Br. 1~ ba, 610 Joann St. Lovely. 2 Br. 2 b•. gar. 1eR Gar no pelt m 9-7PM. Mgnr 495--8221
Terms or trade. $39,900 u111111es/Valet incl new $675 + dep •WA-TEAFAONT• utllt. May 5. 546-9878 Adults pref'd. Small dog yard 2370 Orang•. rear & Adams$450. i>M.7631 I INck H
839·6644 Call(213)474·3575 213/596-1498. No sgls Dover Shores Lae. 3 Br 3 IHI. ltac~ 2140 01<. 6(5-8453 lower unit. $575/mo. llDALAllllTAIT ~rt •
&". "•SlllYEll C •IM 2222 BA Be Fam Rm, 50' boat 2 BA down. DlshwasMr. Ownr2 1~1-6198 t BRSW:dmr.r•
By owner 646-5377
I -trtH I II Clean fresh 3 1 '~ba, doc k $ 3 0 0 0 I mo. I garage. AvaJI 512. 1110 Newer 2 Br with patio & 2 Br 1 Ba 4-plex, blt·lns. frigefator Ind. NO pelt. Loo_klnglo~ultlma1equall·2ievethse.2Br.1ba.g1r. bike to beach $625/mo 7 14/64 5-55 7 0 & YOUR DWI Victoria.Call to .... No garage. no pets. c:pta. drapes, waaher/ 54-g.49S5btwna&3dally
ty in MH 7 1 Cambridge. lrplc. patto $800/mo No • sec 548.3350 645--5000 ext 410 dogs. S560tmo 631-6812 1530/rno 631-5553 dryer hk up. encl oar. $60dlatiort term r9nlal 3-1 --------•I custom special trl·plex dogs 635--0344 Cottage· $485/mo El dep 3 Br. 2 Ba ~ Bonus Am. COUITRY . ' \ $675. 536-0921 lo 5.30 3 .... 2 Ba. 1 ... k 1800 st. ovetSlzed corner · ' T 1"3 Br 2 Ba S.C. Plza SA Nice quiet 2Br. 2Ba . .,..,,,..-..,...,,..-------"" "" IWPT llTS YllW LITS 101 1n adult park. Small 3 Bdr executive Spyglass terms. Nloe, quiet street. Canal lront 11295/mo. ESTATE pool, patio. spa. garage downstrs, encloaed gar., 2Br 2Ba bl1ln1 nr beach lo beaeh.
Fantastic turning basin pets OK. Walk 10 beach home. 2 Ba. family rm. 841•6208 lee Dockside A.E 840·8208 $895 No pets 752·5822 2 patios. Aon 548..o•77 gar. best area U75 No 203 33rd. St.
view, 4 available, prices New crpl & drps. Space many amenities. Approx JuSI blocks to ooeanl Ett SBA 3ba pool tam rm Be1utllul & park llke pell 760-1713 833-3307 N.8 . Aa1lty 675-18'2
range from $190,000 to rental $193/mo In OC 2400 s t .. 180 deg. view 1n kitch3br2bafrplc dbl Dover ' shorel erea' vPrlv1tePat1os JUll ~~: ~~et~tt~~· .~.t:i· I~ •1400/up. Bach, 1 Br. STUDIO APT NRBEACH S215.~~,L~~~!,H•rt Agt besl park Young couples S2500/mo. 1st. last +. gar S700 flat ~39·(219Q ~imo Pl•Y• --mai vCovered Parking w side, all new. 1'11 Ba. mature couple SS50 mo pool, spa. t8992 Flonda. Sep. klt w/retrlg. a. 11ove .
• --•""-•'•~---• welcome! Norm Buck sec dep Refs-. Drive b} Best Arty fee c. 67,,;1900 vSpeclou1Apts patios. O/W, no pets, ... 2 2834 .u2-3172 .., ... th No off atrMt Agent 536-3234 = l Little River Cir. Call .,,,_,,,.. _tate ~ vOlnlng Area kids OK, avail lmmed. Avail. now. 646-68-42 '" • ·.... 7 4 .,. •
Don Bolton 675-1836 tor Just listed! ._..,., 3 br 2 ba vWalk-ln:Cfotefs $675 645--6648 prkg. No peta. 1 per90n ----..---1-4-1-1-,000-Obi wtde, 24x60. s-s1ar appt to see. newer kltch pool kid• ok lY&ILllLE lm&LS vHome-llke Kitchen• /rno. IHI. leac~ 2741 Baat. ltack 2741 only. $350/mo Incl. all
park. 2 Br 2 Ba. lrg 1111 rm. , others avall 539-6190 Must rent mid may 3 br 1 block 10 Huntington & $525 Large quiet 2BA utll1. Avail. 511. 835-s.MS 4 br home or 2/2 duplex dining, k1I wtstove & Compare! U II rent this 2 br Best Alty tee lrplc, 2 ba dlhwahr, deck F tba, new cpts, drps, treah
Best beach. 5 t09 Se•· retrlg. Upgraded cpts & 2 ba blllns lrplc a flal at $950 yearly kids pets ok. rwys. paint. lndry facil. no pett. Kenneybunkport? snore. Open dally 2•5· drapes. 2 nice porches ~ $875 Call 539~6190 S.st Old Town rare hou~ ren· *lll-11IO* ITILITIES FIEE 31 t w. Wiison. 631·2177
OwnrS45·2847675•2346 carport 894·4541aft 5. Rltyfee tal 1brupperS400spays lop notch 2 story near LAOUINTAHEAMOSA Didn't he win the
Monaco Grand Prix in '73?
Spacious single. one
& two bedroom •ts. ---------..,,-___ rant & ell ullls 539-6190 OCEAN VIEW HOME In A ll25 RentS1600SaJe $295,000 BeslAlt fee PCH2br2bamanyKlras 16211Parksldeln,1 private N.B. community. crta1e 3BR 3BA Lrg tlvtng rm Y S700's others not In ads block west of Beach. 3
Want smaller home In 47 acres & 6s acres. Oeei.nvu .. (714)83 1-5137 lmH 244 *lll ... 1IO* blockaootEdlnger.
N BllRVINE Spectacular views Cell $300 bachelor bungalow Ul-1"1 Bkr 759-0619 Harlie 830·8205 / 643-SPYGLASS• Br. 3 Ba. 180 Call us tor lrvlne a pp ls turn utllt paid
r.7 t2 Laguna V1e10 Alty deg. ocean city light view Leuea 539~190 Best Ally tee IHI 11111 -$2400/mo. Bonnie Agent
Sat/Sun 1·4 434 San leac~ Prorrty__ll75 675-6000 or 644-0452 ~ Main Daylront wllrg dock, Ima• 2644
Bernardino. 2 Br 1 Ba In 30" f IEACH c • 2224 Wisor 1 4 Br 4 61. 1034 w. Bay 1 ,BR condo by stream. one of the best .areas of 0 ttta Ill Ave. Steps 10 send. Yrly Pool. Jee. Tennis. Avall
Npt Hgts. $189.950 CIR 100 mlles ol SUNSETS & 'h of duplex. 2 Br. 2 Ba ealty , $3250/mo. 673-3777 611. 1525. 891--0999
Rltrs 646·5096 or tons of BLUE PACIFIC 1200 sq tt. w/prv yard
631-2262 and SAND Righi on 1he $800/mo 660·9063 I 786 -1172 1 NEWPORT CREST Avail-·~·· ltack
water is this 30 tt . by able Apnl 15th. end unit 4Ut86X BA\( CLUB PIOIATf SALE M H T property and 4BR 2BA, lam rm, lrpk:. w/2Bd 2'~ba close to S 11 2 Br. 2 ba Lido Isle along w11h It 1s a FUNKY OIW. carpets. May 26th ub rent 1 rm e · apt to
$300,000 650-2493 3BR 2ba with FAMIL V rm. S900mo. 1st/lest. dep. pool. Move In condition. July t Musi be club mbr.
BEACH HOUSE. 2 fire-363 E 16th St 548-1511 $1200/mo.. Mr. Austin 642-4097
SAVE $10K Villa Balboa places. 1 car garage • 4 Br 2 Ba pool $1000/mo. 3880 Michelson Drive Wiftrfrtlf lt•H Ill. IOWFRllT APT
$650/mo. lovely 2 Br, 2 ba
Townhse. Frplc. all bllns
940 W. 18th Street
642 6221 eves & wtcnds
TIL llllT .. 2 1IOI
AYAIWU•W 1 Br ralrlge, range, laun-
dry, pool, carpon. no
pets. $495/mo. 931 W.
191h. St. 548-0492
Bachelor Eutside all ullls
paid $395/mo No pets
plea.se 760-8862
Bachelor, E.slde C.M
Cath celllngs. patio.
kltch.. very clean.
$415 /mo ... dep.
850·4160 Iv mag.
II you're not sure wllo (or wtial) 11.enntybun~Porl
was don t tett bad-you're llOI ,tone
11.enneybunkPott is one ol 14 dtstmtt1¥ely
different apartment llOo• plans al Seaiw1nd V1lla&e
1n Huntin&ton Buell Suw1nd Vtllage ts a result
ol tolaHy personalized professional ~nnin&
Tilt \ind ol 1ttention .,ou OtUrwe
FURNISHED or
UNFURNISHED.
ALL UTILJTIES
PAJD. HEAlJH
CLUBS. TENfOS.
SWIM~NG. plus
much mort! Sony.
no ptts. Modffs
open dally 9 to 6.
Condo Securll y, near BUT talk about FUN. yard & pool service. Irvine R11lttr1 111-1400 Winter rental to 6123. by
beach $165K. 548-6294 $35-0.000 . 50 can 2131602-6965 days HARBOR VIEW-4 Br 2•.1, week or month. No pets. llllMLllllJl•ll-.BflU
WALUOE I Ot llllll -1485 Sq tt. 2br, 2ba home ba tam rm acrON irom s..a.1930 or 673-78-44 ~ u
A perlecl DI~ of n11ure and hw•nc-
ntstltd '" a forest with babbkna broo•s 1nd QU1tt
Ponds cooled by n1tura1 ocean breezes, Add to
that tenncs courts s11111mmin, pools, a 1acuw llnd
a tonwenienl lotahon near showin& and
employment and you· ve got a plate anyone would
proudly ~all l\Ome ([ven KtnneybunkPort1 l
One al'ld Jwo bedroom one and two bath
adull apartments and 1 ownhomes ~ OPEi SAT /SUI 1-5
IAYSHOllES
(111) 121 1111 S.aulltul 2 BR. ,,,., Ba 2 tor lease. lrpl, micro. per· parlc & ~ 0 rd - -• Sl y Townhouse. 2 patios quet. cibl gar. wlopn. no Sl600/mo &Co}144ene< Ocean Vlew-200 It to S.autllul land9Caped oar·
Ctaaercial $645 mo 213-766-1707 pets $850/mo 644·2227 water 2BR wllg llv/dln den apts Poot & Spa
P 1250 ---N rt c t d 2 B rm opening to front gar· Patlo/decka. No pets 11rrtz Brand new luxury condo Oelux lg. 1 BR Town/ho :WJ'° dbi'es con ~· r den patio Ntcely furn • 2 Bdrm l't. Ba $835 T:~;~:~t1:x~ns;~~s ho::'e~ liitr lllt,,ill Otlttr 3BR 3BA. Jae. 2 Fire-FtP. Pool/Jae. Tennis, nls ~950 ~~~·.f~9· ten-bright & airy Available 151 E 21st 548-2"408
sireable private com· In ideal NewPort 'Beach lo-I places, Yard, $ lOSO mo Retr · s7oo. mo 838•8300 ' · May 3 10 June 9· S300 wk. Cute 1Br cpts/drps fncd
munlty only a short walk cation Prlnc1pals only. See 253i~1~~~2~na Ave. Turtlerock 2 Br 2'" BA N~;-;:"2 Ter:kln3 ~0A~m2 63l·0114 ;rd $400. 25Z2 Sama
10 lovely beaches arid 6"40-5078 Siiverwood & I Townhome, den, lormal pool Ss~o 4~7-3689 Saa Clt•tat•.. 217' Ana Av. Apt 0 . 6"4S-3192 Harbor act11111y The Co A~ for Dennis Snell Don I wait bold 2 bdrm dining, prv1 patio & deck. · . ,
Seow1nd Vtlla9e·-· J .~
15555 Huntington \11lla&t lane Huntmcton Beach CA
I 71'l 898 9961 "
f rom the San Dieso f ree.,ay dmt north 011 Buch to
Mcf addtn then west on Mcfadden lo Sta11111nd Yllla&t
f urn1sh1ngs ava1tablt • Qoen daily 10 AM Ill dus~
Ne•pcN1 Bed So.
1700 16th Street
(at Dom)
642-5113
Newport ludl No.
880 lrvlnt Attnut-
(at 16th)
645-1104 home 1s a J Bdrm 2 balh --• I $450 won't last flat gd beaut decor. premium NWPT TERRACE (W/slde) 2BA t''oba. encl gar. clote E side 2BR 1"' be twnhse.
with with master suite D1 lextl Uaat1 1300 deal child pet call loc w/pool. spa. ienntS 2 ~r. 2'h ba view condo. 10 be1ch $500. 225 La Pelto & gar 276 Cabrlllo
wtlh hardwood floors and plex an lemenle 2 Br 539·6190 Best Riiy lee AvaJI 6· 1I1150 851-2225 $700. 645--92.19 Iv mSQ Paloma 637-7918 collect S575. 640-0839
lo Is o I ch arm A & 1 Br walk lo beach ==========::..i===--==-=......:.~;::==--------...:...:========-leasehold property with $129 500 Kent Really &
low conversion and excel· 1n11 es t men ts Inc
tent terms $215,000 4~2-4663 or 496-6713
2131 Crest.I••
Clll FIR tn&ILS
1"·1211 ~ 50
IES& YEHE TRl·PLEX
Two 2br 1''1ba, 3br lba
encl pa11o·s $209.000 1ox gross 646·3627 agl
ONLY HWo DOWN!'
CdM 2 Units • gsl rm.
Fixer In front spacious
modern units In rear.
706 Avocado $265,000. Soph1st1cated contem· 675-4863 porary Harbor Ridge 4 Owner/Br_o61_e_r __ _
Br, pvt pool & spa, ocean lactae PrtJ 1350 I & city vu $845.000 Opn •
Sal/Sun 12·5 644-4424 3 Sty Hist Com Bldg I
-Manna w/500% lax
YIEW/TUIS/STUUI wnte-olf 2131383-2269 t
10•1. CASH DOWN I
Harbor Ridge area 2BR & &OflOll HOI IUCll
den cluster hm Spec· Seashore Or, NB Duplex:
tacular city & min vus (2)2 br, 1 ba, lrg cor lot. 4
Only $25K cash dn, T 10 prkg spaces Lrg assurn·
StBOK 10 int loan Only able loan $195,000.
$255.0001 John Zarvos • By owner 646-5377
Viking R E 760-9669 CommlBldg $375,000
540·0299 North Laguna with 4 res1d
--------units Ocean vtew. 1 l .9Vo YllU l&llO& CHOICES assumable linen Owner
Security living. clean ___ 837·6030
ocean breezes. large
greenbelt bay and ocean
views pool enlertatn·
merit center under-
ground part11ng and
elevators all ftrst ctass
single level 1t111ng
HITS E OHTA IESA
4 u grt toe $2 15.000
I t U Twnhs -4br 9xGSI
S U 2Br $SOK dn assume
Many others Prln only Agl
John 642-1518 M·F 9-5
Lots ler Sale 1400 Ctr11r ltcatiH ~
Pian 2 · Proless1ona11y ESTATE ACllEA.E
decorated and upgraded. I Build your dream home on
2 Bdrms with high cell-th•s Capistrano Valley
1ngs and skyltghls A11a11. Estate acreage 5 5 acres
able tor lease option or ocean and valley 111ew
lease S t69 950 Much privacy Horses
OK Rural feeling P11th1111 lt.111 S5so.ooo
Plan 3 Catttedral ceilings CaptStrano Vally Alty
and skylights. fabulous II 1 ·1131 panoramic ocean view A _ _
rare opportunity to en1oyl Mtaltlilr D11ert
the best $114.900 ltttrt 1450
00111 Yltw Desert Aide-Away lsl lime
Plan S • Spacious 2 Bdrm olfenng 2 Br 2 Ba vu
2 bath immaculate con· ho~ Palm Desert CC
d1t1on • soph11t1cated 586·8119 6 t9/346-7 405
decorating Ocean 111ew LAKE ARROWHEAD
end sunsets' S t95 000 Going into foreclosure
Elegant Colonial home
lrtlt ltoatlll S320K w/dock, S285K
3 Plan 6's · 2 master suites I without Bring ollers
oft the h11tng mas and 2 Ron Luther's Realty
baths Choose penlhouse t·337·24 t4 cottecl/24 hrs
or patio locattons
s11• 500. $t77.500 or Oat tf State
s21s 500 w11h tabu1ou1 Prerrtt l 550
llleW I ' 6 Timber ecru. near
llr&Ht Ftttr PIH Crawfordville Georgia
Plan a Spacious and! $12 500 firm 650·8847
elegant penthOUM with Beaut I•, acre Spraque
sweeping p11io1 opening River Valley, Oregon
olf all rooms 2 Bdrms $98 000/obo 960· 7047
and den $274.500
142-1200 I I .E. Exc•u11 1'00
IWHll WILL TUil
$280.000 equity 1n prime
· 1eesed '~ 1cre comm1
property lor coastal area
1 nome Owner/Agt I
I ~46·2~3 t ------1••IMI JJT11~ Ziff uutA lll llPUJ WMITH RID&U Welk to lhops be.ch Bal
pier, ferry/rests 3Brt 2be I •• 21e Bal 01 en 25143
WANT H1rbor view nomt
ar•I 10 laa~ buy 01 Of)
r1on ~4e 4609 .l:cm~~~!!~~!
ip PICTURE YOUR ,
HOME HERE
Private Parties
Are Welcome
Call Cl1ttllied,
642-5678
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
ON THE BAY
luJ1uriov1 Cuttom 8'1111 Mobile Home Un
obtlructed View of Boy and lido ble All Teak
Int 1 BR w 2 lrg wolk 1n closets, lux 8o1h
w sunken 1oc tub 24 ltv rm, frpk. gorage
avo1I S7 5 000 fin avail
OPEN HOUSE SUN 1.5
701 Lido Par Ir Or. rr 2 (Li do)
675-0205 •••· 642·1946 Offc.
FABULOUS MAI KAI
Thrs highly upgraded 2 Bdrm water-
front condominium Is located on the
bay in beautiful Corona del Mar Just
reduced SSOK • owner offers great
financing. $639,000 Call for
further detalls
Hunt I A1aoclate1 ~
&40 4868 ~
~ ~,II J l~liNG
NEW WATERFRONT HOME W/000<
New unique 3 Br .• 2 Y, Bo . custom home
featuring beautiful mslr. suite, form. din.
rm .. 2 frpb, oak cabinets, dbl Fr. doors that
lead to lrg., sunny boy patio , 2 car goroge.
Open Sot./Sun. 1-S 3311 f inley
673-3777 $470,000
NEW PORT BEACH BARGAIN
l mma~'ulate, vacant and ready to
move into. Remodeled & refurbished
4 Hr. :l Ba. form. din in~. Luts of house
fo r the money. Open Sun. I ;., 19:30
Terei;ita. Only $215,000.
TRADITIONAL REALTY 631 ·7370 ~·
SPECTlOIUll
2• IOUR VIEW!
4 Bdrm 31 Ba Custom home on hu l' pvt lot.
w pool & 'P• l altns1vt ust nl o.ik ludeiS clas~
windows brtaklasr rm w "''' b.11 Grtat enter
ta1nine homP Musi sell J~OK under app1a1sa1
Xlnt ltnanc1n& S850,000 640 0357 John Mur
1 ay Bkr Open Sit Sun 1 S 40 7 Ml'!ndolcl
Jerracr Coronc1 del Mar
VACAIT All llUDY TO 10
This lovely home located in Mesa del
Mar has been totally refurbished. A 3
Br.. 3 Ba., 2000 sq. ft. home also
features add-on fam. nn. $139,500. 1
TRADITIOIAL RLn 131-7370
Centrally located near Coll. Pk., Costa
Mesa. Only 2 years old. 2-sty, 3 Bdr. &
den, 3 baths. Tastefully derorated
w/use of Fr. doors & stained glass. Opn
Sun. 1-5. 2256 Heritage. $182.000
TUllTIOIAL llLn 111-lllO
HARIOR RIDGI $359,500
AWARD WINNER 2br, 2ho, 2000 1q. ft ,
upgrade$, gorgeous, 9 u '4 ht, 20%
down.
OPEN• HOUSE SUN. 1-5
#29 Coventry, Newport Beach
640~9714 . 516-l666
& JmL II Liiii Ill.I
Su penor water views & 52' of waterfront.
Docks for two 60' yachts & bay boat S~i~g 4 bedroom & den on the lagoon: Magn1f1ce!'~ cathedral ceilings, 2 stair-
ways. maid s qtrs. $1.350,000. CaJJ Joyce
Dabolt 646·2389 or Sally Shipley 644-0496.
IEOlllE ELllll CO.
IESA VERIE 1u1n
Lite and airy feeling thruout this 4
Bdrm. 2 Ba home . Extended family
nn. 2 brick frplcs, clean & beautifully
decorated. New paint inside/out.
$145.000. Call now!!
OOLIWELL IAllEll 141-0101
ofiJo !JJ/e fla'l/ronl ·
Spectacular 6 Bdrm. pool nome wtt
79 ft. of prime bayfront and room for
2 120' yachts. Wiii sell. lea e option or
exchang
OPE ' AT/ 1·5
101 ia Udo oud. Lido Isle
10 Orok~ 673-787
A1119e:!L "4. '•1111 II 'wlla II
I ..... D• lo ~· "'bctl, ~tum., .... M ~ .. . ,..... room or 1
fWt kt fK. POOi. --. Ctv1 .. 1_, t/21 n•tmllt LI 'ma; m . J00t _,. ._,. CdM/HllLI ~ Cntr 1610llnl 'ftlllMiMil' Jee * It, ootor TV, '"'" pleH • 10 llve Jee, ltll met ewt, l600 Aef9. l v MtO 171-e?M 840-6'70 emu'"~.non4..,:~.!.;.~ WI. w/NfM.1/1,1290=---••ure"'em tea·1542 1am,. .._.., ~ ... , ...... 20 mo AcMoelnMIMlllN.l.0"9, 111 .... I 111' .. ,. """ ._,_..., !!ti CM 87• .... .. ..,..._ -" ... "'aft.... & 1N11tw. II thef9 ..... OUI .... • .,.._ .r .I . 3bf 2be duP!ex. nJ .... Ull Uttl Pd Alf~ Ground AJto counte16nG ... 1111 lftM W01M _.. 90 ..
tH N!WPOA llptMr '**'-·*bath. F Rmm 1mkr w91t! to IX:h '300 floot. 105S fl Cwnlno Df So Et cemino ~. a.ri ,...,_ of a 21 ,_, '*' A~t~~ TllACH kttlflm rm ptlv N...-r emele1n,.~ t tttere 3 Bf. Me-i4~ °' 642·2150 . Eaetelde CM. gatege Cotta W... t bMtf [.of etem LJe'd. 4'2·1211 eatarprlal•t .,0 .. ::s ·iiNiiiiiir....,.--, ...._..to~ on the Fum 1250 862·3&50 ~ ..._1a Mee&. wuti.. Euy tlC()eM 12 ha~ rt " " , .... 11
PPtt lay Private •• p ., d~. S250 241· 148t Newport CoMo w/2 tnM-S5Slmo. 642·2221 '1:~v1~!. M•nTd Ad•m• SCR•ums lfllOfMft1 .... INI\, OIUbhOUHI & health --tw bdrm• 1400 par mo + .,.... -r tttt:Jy. ,.. ,.,,., "' • "'°'""" no :=..~"::=:..7 111 '=::t:~:\~~ ~-~~~ s;:iti ~~~:.~•vg~W: 5'2~:"'°'c~L~>11t•. ANS--. r,ttt=.~=
oc Airport, F••hlon llTM. ~= ut~ll. <r.:'"""· 642·3002 or 979.5310 55~9UIO 171-50~ or 642__.1 ~· ntfttl teilw n rp •• .... I 1111r .. w.:..,:-.:,...0.:..,T~~ ~· COl'lllWllanl 11\ope Wkly,.,,, .... 1105 & up. •., · Newpot"t cr .. 1 BHutlful E'tldaCott•Maal.20x20 Spadoue 824 eq h •lfutl Aentier·Accerft le...,.~°"' "'°'9ll.,•1t11n ......
-vhl. Color TV, fr• cottaa. Fem. rmmeta 25-35 yra. 3BR oondo nr Bch. ft Storage only. klt.lnoolortul mwlneaet-OoMip·lcerGf ••na&... !::u. ~a c:;;-~old eel: •
sinoi.. 1&2 Bdrm Apen. heated pOOI. & •tape to ;;n~d1i:tlf•?51.~~· 1275 + utll. Tanni..poo1. 1125/mo+ eac. "45-7234 tint. N Udo Shipyard p=~~ AndNMlnt7AM-9:30PM entarpr1a1no young COITAMllA ~I• l TownhouMa ocaen. Kllelh • •vall. . mutt b9 neat. Frank Storaoe Garaoe. down· avail. Imme<!. 1570/mo. Kid• IPta to play IJfl"* • dty. 1 dtYt • ..-. womlft1 ""• lolln. M Con1eet: C...... ...._.
from Meo. (Ask about NINCoettHwy. Fem. rmm1ta 2W5 Yf'I, 642·2114/85M750 townCqetaMet&.9•20. Photoc:opylng&ottletof. thatlmltatetheil'eedlti.I Preeent WI Id end,... retum In e........, ftO (714~1•D
lurnlahed apta. com~• Laguna BNch. 49'4-5214 nMd•d 1mm1d. C.M. wk 730-0182 E>ct.303 $50/mo. 642-4907 nee W"1c* evtll. Cell OY9f'helfd 1 yoYnG l>Oy ca111e a hllO 1Mtt1gae for co4lelerlel MDIP1 lftylelt.
with TV, llnanU u1ena111• ant 1275 + 12 utll, 751-6448 On the water, mat M/F 10 llRM LllWI HH LIN 875-0132 uy to his pal•. ''t.et'• tftl ~of one. 71 .. 1892·2254 Brend• FOUNTAIN VAUIY
may be ranted for lhort F/M non-emkr 21-315 1hr lhr 2 Br. 1 b9 w/ptot WATERFRONT 900 eq f1 play cop1 and PEA· •••• ''AW IMve m•tege, Con1eet. KlilhY ...
ttrm or loneer). On Jam· ............ Wllltt4 2br 2ba apt fplc poo1 male, non-amlu. 9390 4817 W .. tcHH &. N.i °'*' off1ciet 7 cublclae. PETR.ATOM." 111 l.WOTID ...... (71')97t-1aeo ~~Rd. •t San Joaquin 24 Hr. Care. Lovely lloanM )90, 1enn11. etc. 13'40 m0 H~ ulllt 873-&464 S1.30 sq ft. elegantly 'furnl1had '. •Splr"uet AiMder & M--· --,.,-, 1 ........ ..a ..
144-. 1... home. (714) 979-54M +'I\ uUI C.M. 546-3240 Prof. Fam 10 lhera new Agent 5-41-~2 Laur• 648-5015 1118of. AdVC. In II life ,._11._ .• ,•--.I -•• -·
$3301 p ''Pl• d •w a1 .-. •• For 8111. 1tt f:::S "'--An lndapellOelll 8IM •-tr F n11mkrto lhr 3br houM. 3bf C.M. apt near Beck u " r_.... c lailatu mettar1; lo.,., merrlaoa, Face ·~ iW,.oo-;. Equal ()ppty lrflPI, YIP
lntall 2H1 N.B. Walk to bch. $315. ::l.4 ~::~ :.a-~eeetll. =."::i-~:..Ufltlngton lntall 2111 buslnatt, NB t31-93t 7 Dllm/11111.1 l~ c ... eSMl47 lllll • ·-
Furn. 2 8( fa L hM. ,...., t11 & last Refs. 831-0757 Lett Outc:ell ONLY 13M1tl ......-.
8• avlll •• 11• thtu ~a. F rmmte: S250/mo ~ S lOO Prof M ... aaekt M/F. 3br 412 N Cout Hwy, Leg 1900 II II 63 fO Peclllc Ctt •=====.;;;; ---------1.1 llm.n fOt aaMoe ber. Hrw 10-& v v • CdMhouMavlllMay 11t Beh,OCEANVIEW, 1100 Hwy. NB 11100/mo •P•IU.. SUAf&SAHOHOTIL
1122 47th St, Npt Bch. dHepB. 7A5«2ost.()23f!~ t>eacnm.,, • & June tat. 87M 194 eq ft . s 1600/mo. Mary 213,.889-5985 lull• ........... Ill.. . UIQun9 e.ec:ti c.a ~
oweru1111.eso-120e · · ... ,, .. -.. Ag1~2-3998 875-4883 21a..9«-&9t4 fNM\ADS s~1n11t&2fld 49f...,.n 1o. Prol M/F lh exec HB ho ' UU11U 4320 Clmput Drive euita TO' S 9 Furn 2 Br Condo. •valf F rmmte to lhr back bay 3000 eq ft Jae clOM to 2 t>lka OC Airport· 600-C.•merclal 190 Nwp 8ch 5si.22t0 Robt. a.:~noe 1~H/CM EIOOKK.EEPEA
6116-9/t. $700. Call $dplxw/yd.Smokepet0K Beh 1400 9M-S505du 1200 eq ft , 4-8 MP ot-......... 2911 IR[fRE£ --·-...,t-,,..,,..---RE8'oker Bd"-•tor• PermanentPIT.ap Oftr 751-550 t or Ana Ad 225 -+MC 984-2459 flees, 854 ..,, tt. 979-9941 ,... ft TOP llS .._ ..._..... ...___.. ...., ieel
•2t3642.,.300.24hra HOUSEMATES Prof M Mtkuame20-30 .... . t60IO A.,.b& ?V CI F---praf MOdelsend 642·2171 545-0e11 ;;;1;,;;:;.:::;::
F UNLIMITED yrs lo ~r 2 Br N 8 . apt, ·~ Balboa Island Maflne Ave 1240 sq tt a ', Escorts (213)1M-1914 WAHTEO: psr,o need...., f'-Non-._..r 17 ..... ~. um wt(ly rental• April-blk from bCh $325 Incl. uppe< oftiee $225 mo A ~--·-.,..---..,..__,""' ... ,... ....... _ .. Sept Steps t-o .. WIULOOKFORYOUI uUI Mlke957.05571f16. 67s-8877or'675-9057ev. ~ent 54t-5032 142-1111 Vletnameeefemunder40 pvtTDUS 10,000up. Aesumeto:P01oa1111.
ocean/bay. Gain comfortable rent & Comm Bldg c.2 zone '°' rm(nte & pouibla No credit "". no panwty Newport Beecti. t2llO
YHli Rtetlls lll-4112 the nice laell.':'Q ot finding Prof M lo shr Balboa llllllL IElllLL 2000 eq ft 2 offices. use. merrl• • Raaponcl to Denison Assoc 873,.7311 llKllDll P/I r.r.~-.P.""I'-..,.~-:---:--·--,-----I a new friend I Penn. oceanfront turn OlllEI warehouM °' light mtg. suite A. 1880 c•trano W ... 51 - -Penln oceanfront hme, NEWPORT & TUSTIN condo w/carport. Avail N 2 bid $800 mo 548-1303 Found· Fred Doble w/1811 Ave, Ulg Bch, CA 92651 f •~ $18.000 +. mU9t be ,.,.
Jn/Ju/Aug remOd CUI· 832·4134 51 t $400/mo. -+ utlla. ew stry g, good lrwy & ears. F lawn Terrier/Pit '76 VW Vanegon Var) Illar with IBM P/C ~·
tom 2 Br csen $6000/mo Call eve 675-9644 access. From 750 ti up Npt Beh charming brick m111 M blk & wtit Collie la1latu ,.__ 4014 clffn Supe< buy. MuS1 etlon 1n addltle>f\ 10 A/P, K1u p • 720-9886. Irvine 3 Br 2 Ba New Wiii build to au1t tenanl. bldg on busy Newport . • :rr• Me this (77LRB13)·RAY peryroll, GIL Full dlMga ' · Condo Pool/Jae. Neat & Resp le rmmte, HB, 2 Br. 2 $.99 net. will coop w/Bkr Blvd at Cannery VIiiage reoently cut N.B. Animal oumf.. FLA DEBOE YOLKS· position w/retlfl co. ~ V1c1tita Mat.552-1831/548-0115 b~ apt. nr beach $275 -3900sqttgroundfloor 1100.s.t.-+tOOOt.f yard ~:.':~e!!~~~s2'·· Salt due 1o owners 809, WAGON.20AuloCenttw are1growlngcompeny &
$200.Seo.Rel631;1t96. ltatab 2H7 M 25•35 lhr lrg home, .. ~utlls.960-1866 with rstrm, open lloor Ownr/agt673-5369 equip + Inventory 11 Or Irvine 830-7300 nd an enthutl .. tle...,.,..
L-a Boh·Furn master Br & Bdrm w/balcony, pool, Rmmt M/F n-amkr, mstr plan. plush upgrades. Found large blac:k dog, vie price. Xlnt reputetlon. member In cherge of
ba. $300/mo. Avail 5115 NewPort Beach 1'1~ blocl<a spa , Mesa ,Verde bdrm, avall nr beach Avall. R & H. 751-5989 *hHlltht ltllfff* Albensons In Dena POin1. Hamilton Oak. Wkdy• bkpg. Pleue call:
Hwwy 499-5550 toocean.Deluxe3br2ba $300/mo . 'II utlla. $300mo.Julle536·3865 Buslneu Profesalonal 1MOFREEAEN.T 831·7291or49&-3288 957-2983Ev .. 6't5-10&4 U.Allllln' Mr.Reynoldsat (714)
SSOO wk.(818)881·1'05 540-4464 H8kasa.metolhare W/Silort term leeM, lull Found male Akllt Hutky OrannaCountv"'•• .. hw!!! mllTlft &.46-<>0ttor843024 Newport Crest, amenities, Shr am 2br 1bl duplex Npl aerv suites. 881 Dover Or ··""" •7 •-• .....-"' beach. $375. MATURE n--amk M/F resp. Hgtl toe $250 mo. Call private 4 room fuml1hed Suite 14, N.B. 83 t-365 t mix Ian & white. male tor tale. Otters maaNget 'Pf'1oOrange Coat Delly Bookkeeper, PIT. hrs"-· Aft e c.11 650-6't58 lurn hse nr Irvine St. C.M. Lark 83t-2128 Iv mesg luxury offlGe In Irvine. brown Te<rler mix. female and sauna. Annual groa t haa an excellent op. Ible. 8anlC rect. A/P, AIR. l••••r lltetah &tall. $300mo+utll. 548-8369 W/F, non-smkr, empl to $395/mo. 851-8686 la•aatrial black Afghan '83 Uc.. i960.000. net profit portunlty lor a carMr salet jrnls. Cell AM
Nicely furn rm. 11eadlly Oalt Hf hla•tl lffMI ltatala 2920 lemale choc Lab. New-before tuH. $480,000. oriented M1jor Account 640-9053 &«die emplM/F,wllhor wlthout M/Femlothare 2 Br.1 Be. shr a spac Westcllff apt. Coronal del Mar 525 sq tt port Beach A11lmal Cash buslneu longterm Executive with• proven ·
kit ptlv In nice area. ftr llttlap I tletlih Apt, Balboa 1111nd. Walk to shops, pool. ~lie, lease SSSO, lnclda 1200 • r. front oRloe. lrg Shelte<. 125 Mesa Of. leue. Prlc4i s't.500.000. Irick record. GrHt IOOllEEPEI
979-9656 Wlttrfrtlt lt•1s la11 $350mo yearly. Non $300• '.Al 1.11111. 548-5414 all 67!)..8409 d r I ve· I n r r door . CM. 644-3658 Owner retiring or would potential. guaranteed
RHfftn 111-llM smoktw 675-9564 Jerry aat.. 2 --w·ltl!l'm '48elm0 629 Tetm+nal Found· Small long halred not even e«islder Mlllng. d,..w ay•mil .,.,.""".::+-'.w.,-e_ar_e_at\.-~----Or~---~ llAI lllAll 11 U . M/F n-smkr $275 Incl ulll Ctr. Two offices avail May Way. C.M 540-9352 dya, dog tblue/tbr_own eye, Fabulous opportunity. mission. Desire to mow ange County~-firm
M .. ,., aulte In large home lor 4bd hM, nr S.C Ptz. t. The E>cecutlve Office, 646-0681 eves blk/brown/wht. West-Thia unique busJneaa Is Into management I plus, lootUng for I bright, •· near Beac:h & Atlanta Pvt ltatab tt 54~277 or 955-0809 t 10 Newport Centef Dr. 1600 s/I w/sml ottloe 50c mltnatef/Springdale. nr olfered with t1ntutlc Send resume to perltneed B~keeper
blth. blloony, Clblt TV n 2911 ;: 200, NB. 644-4492 p/I 3 phase Randolph H B. 893-4910 tefms, 20% down. 9'~ P. 0 Box 1580 whO enjOyl e nev.r-static:
hook up, kitchen & laull-llt MJf shr 2BR tba apt, nr Prof lem. 29 yrs. Clean Furnished. 10 desks & St. CM 546-1653 Int. Amorltlzed ovet 30 Costa~. 92626 environment ._....,. dry privileges. Fem. pref. 2500 sq tt Condo. View 01 Uth/S1nta Ana, CM Found. Sml Lab puppy, years, Interest only pay-EOE
$400 mo. u011 lnclOded. Bay swimming pool & $215 Debbie 646-6806 quiet seeks to share chairs, kitchen. CM, Just 2000. 2000 & 4000 eq tt 19th & Placentia. C.M. ments tor 5 yeers, a --------Thia poaHlon lnvotve• 989·1221 •tt 6pm ...... au' tlful gr~ ....... t. Will house or rent guest off Nwpt Blvd 17th St. 3975 Birch NB 650-2284 • baloon P-t at t"'· .,...--------handlinn ,_,.b6es ,.. ""' ...,.,.,.,, M/F shr 2 Br 2 Ba, vol-hOUM, Harbor View/Hiii Approx 900 sf. $600mo. $ 50 tt ... t s.4t 5032 _, .. ~. , .. Acct'g Cl.,k tor Cfedll ··• _,_ '
Pvt room, bath & ent. Nr •cc e Pt ch 11 d re n . I ey b a II, 1 en n la. n r area. Exit rel. 720-14 t9 644-2270 eves wknds · sq · ,.g • Found young female calico end 01 5 years. No eol· \.Inion. 10-key Call Ron c:elvableS, general ledger
OCC. Refs. $325 Incl. 557-7863 eve. 640-6339 So Coast nice $365 Stt I t 9•• cat. vie Hamilton & lateral necesury, a the 558-3t10 and payrofl, u ..,.. .. . ' . . Resp., mature lat yr med O.C. AIRPORT AREA !!!!I Mi business general.. the general offlce dutlea. TM utlls. C.M. 545•7264 Cln prol n-smkr. 2br 2ba. 556•8775• 752"6393 student seeks quiet qtra. 535 10 t 163 sq ft . 1011 of Feno;a storage yard. 9000 Bushard, HB. 968-5735 profltt. For Into call Mr Aide, househeper, ltve In sucoaasfut candidate wll
SEA & SUN LODGE lovely sec condo. W/O, M/F to share 2 Br. I'~ Ba. Xlnt refs, m&JI $500/mo. prkg, janltorlal & all utlls sq tt Newport Ht• erea. LOST small whlte/F dog L9Wls. 213-928-8471 or for 1 lldy. Some peraon.. ha..._ 2-3 yeers t.ook·
$105wk/up.Colo<TV pool.nrbehHB.$300+'h Costa Mesa nr OCC. Cell Ans. Ad 836. tncl.From$tleqtt.moto $500/mo. 548-9831 Mon vie of Birch & Bristol In writ• to 7808 Florence care. drlvlng. cooltlng, keepingex,perie11C1ecom-
3026 W. Coast Hwy, Npt utll. Deb 969·2138 Pool. $288. 24 t-8868 642·4300 24 hrs. mo OK. 557-7010 thr Fri 8·4pm. N.B. 551-34231754-0308 Ave, Downey, CA 90240 etc COM 720--0416 plementad by en AA c»-
gree In Flnanoe °' N;
counting. ========-1-=========~=========-i-========~.=========+======--==:t.i.:=======-=====-===:...:..::=-=============~I Aide, reeponslbl• olcs.t
LOWEST PRICE
in Harbor View Homes
3 Bdr. 2 Ba--Carmel model.
$229,500. Fee land. Opn Sat/Sun
2-4. 1730 Port Barmouth t•• Starnes Co. 873-7181
1"
•
2341 11th St., •.I.
OPEi UTIHH I llllAY 1·1
1Y IWIEll -211 lllH APPRAISAL
Secluded Newport Heights 3 BA. 2
bath with family room. Near new.
Minimum upkeep. $207.000 with
$20K down. C'lll Owner,
645-4670.
-·1 ·-MYH UHH YIEW ESTATH
(lfum• lht-5.000 sq ft. custom home
on 'It acre lot.
hfartlla41t4 Ylew-Back Bay. Mountains.
Fashion Island, Nearly every room has a
view llet.rMslta4-Near new condition. new
pool, spa, wrought Iron fence. carpet.
drapes
t11llty-Leaded glass doors. brass fix·
tures. tile floors. dbl dressing rm for
master bdrm.
Motivated Seller will exchange
and carry paper. $975,000.
111 • l1t11•11tt ll1·HH
NEW EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA CONDOS
$113,000 to $117,000
RARE 200' PRIME
ISLAND POINT HOME
4/6 bdrm. big dock(s). play lawn &
swim beach. Walk to ocean fun. 7 car
parking. Low owner fin. $850,00~
(land incl.) Open Sat.!Sun. 1-5.
Owner (9-5) 650-0202 -------
ARCHITECTURALLY STU••l•li!
Newer custom home So. of the Hwy in
Old Corona del Mar
1411,000
111·1111
Must inspect interior to appreciate! ITO darrell pash properties .?2J 5190 compu' dr , ncwporl beoch
llLOff llT
PUI E TIWIE COLUCTI ..
:: 1 Ch1tll1• Ctu1, I .I.
f mu nttidl·I tu i.dl oul At'uu11f11I •ml un11 I fit'<j
• -' Ba . i.ludy. plu:. l.im1h ru1n1 :~ flrt•plau-s.
all Fn'nch doors & v. ind 1H1o·'· :J r.1r garagt· hwf'h
lanrurnpmg. romni P"OI & 'P<I $79~ 000 ~:n1r
guard gall' at F11rll & M.i(·Allhur C.lll no rm~
HUE OOllNllATlll
C1tl U0· 110I Tt ltt
2 bedrooms. 2 batha.. large yard, att.
garage. custom kitchen. 2302 Elden
Av (corner of Eld n & 23rd St.).
Costa Mesa Open Sat/Sun 12-6
Wknds 850-2374 Wkdys '40-t128
AV access in Mesa Del Marl This 3
Bdrm, 2 bath home on corner lo-
cation is a home you would be proud
to own. Neat. clean & nicely up-
graded. Assume low interest 1st &
seller will finance 2nd. $128.000.
THE REAL
ESTATS:RS 646-7171
Ocean view. prettiest spa in Newport
Assume $450.000 in financing Ask-
ing price $610,000. The BEST BUY on
the Hill. 851-8767.
ITO darrell pash properties on 51 90 compu' dr n~·wporl beoch
1330,000 DOYER SHORES
OPEi SAT/SUI 1-1 it 1441 l1l1ay lritt
Spacious 4 Bdrm & d<'n ~ baths
Two 1. car gara~W!. L.H"gt· lot "1tl.
room for pool or H \' p.1rf<m~
ltlsH lltltl11t1, Rutter 141-1141
OPHISTI ATED B YFRO 'T
Mo L dt> irable 'IE'\\ 11n tht' hn\ from
thii. worm contt'mporun .!. i.I\ ,·u-.tum
home. Gorgt oui-\tii1 r Ad rm ... uiw ~/lrtt .deC'k (Wtrluokrnir \\lt er.
1 revert int marbl e entn. •uurmf'I kit. $2,9~0.0\)(l, L. \'altntme
UNS \ o\L£\Tlt\f. f'ROP•:irrn:,,
PICTURE YOUR
HOME HERE
Private Parties
Are Welcome
Call Cl111ilied,
642-S678
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
• NOT FANCY -JUST HOMEY
Sharp 4 Bdrm, 2 bath Costa Mesa
home In move in condition. Large
corner lot for possible RV access.
Includes wet bar & covered patio.
Don't wait another minute to see this
"more for your money" home at
$115,950.
THE REAL
ESTATS:RS 646-7171
PACIFIC MORTGAGE
MORTGAGE BANKERS
Whatever your
need-purchase. equity, or re-
finance-we have the right
financial plan for you. * FIRST TRUST DEEDS *
95% LTV $150.000 97 eo/o ARM
90% LTV $400.000' 107 , A R M
IO •HATIYE &llORTIZATIH
95% LTV $ 114.000 13%
30 , .. , fi114I, .. ,,.,,, .... , .. 11ty
95% LTV $150,000 7' 2% A.R.M
l111•1ltle, .. '"'IJ•Ht ,. .. ,.,
* SECOND TRUST DEEDS
* 80%LTV $150.00J 11 '•0/o
SO JHf LR.I ,, llHIHltlt,
•• '"'IJ•Ht , .. ...,
90°/e LTV S 150,000 13 ' ,•/o
11 ,.., fi114, h ,,.,.,. ... ,..atty
Loins u11 t• 3 •111111 awail1~I•
0111 fer ••tails
ISi FOR JIM
1900 E. 4th st.. Suite 204 .
Santa Ana, CA 92705
(714) 541-8501
woman 10 live In a care
lor 83 year old lady. Need we ofter a competlthle
car, non-smkr 548-6587 salary, and an ••~lent
after 1 tAM Sat/Sun benefits paettege. It you
mll.-.utllllll
Artlculate respon1lbl•
people needed to set
appta for our SOClal club.
No cold Cllllng Advanoe-
ment poulble Good
phone volc:e neeenary.
Top «>mmfssionl paid
would enjoy WOrk)rJg with
success-oriented peop4e
In a' clean, proteasonal
environment. pl••••
send your resume with
salary history to: PLS-t.
P.O Box 16024. lrvtne.
CA 92714.
Call Mr L• 545-7666 Equal ~unity ......... ~
!Telephone operator. BUS DRIVER: PIT. mc:l.
7-3pm shift Top pll)'. 362 Wltnds & nigt\ts IOt ~
3rd St. Ulguna Beech. decker Lof'ldon Bus.
Must ha"9 ci... II, OMV AISWl-lln• print-out & med. est.
\
Full/part time hourS avei.~ Ask tOf 0e 752·7383
able. tome weekends & .,,,.--~-----llohdays Must type. Paid Candy Shop in Newpott
while training Please call seeks mature personable ~tween 8 & 5 at full/I, pttlme lle!P
966-1599 EOE 3419 Via Udo 67~7•8
/
Appointment setter .. PIT. Ca<elaker. resident tor
calling hotels & motels. Newland House &
SS 00 hr Call Western grounds. Yards & hOUse
Piiiow & Suppl)' aft 5PM maintenance In exch tor 964•1211 ' apt. Reis. adults
prefefred. no pets. Apply
APPRENTICE TRAINEE to Board ot Trust ....
100 YEAR
OLD COIPAIY
PROVIDES
lllllllfLlll .,,..T11m
19820 Beach 81, H.8. or
Iv l'n$Q at 962-5777
CHILD CARE, HOUSE·
KEEPER. Resp lady to
watch my child & do
l"lousekeepng, hrs
variblt Min of 30 hra per
wk REF's req. 675-5607
Large West German Com-ClerlCll
pany eJlpands to IN1ne Amm11
Key pos111ons to be filled
by serious appt1can1 We
d"'1elop & train our own
managers per written
agreement
•Secretaries
•Typists
•Clerlts
•Oita entry operators
•Word proceMOrS
I .. It_.... • Assembly trelneei 10••• •11 •PBX ope<etors 11200+ ,., ...... lNeeded lmmedlatety to
No e11P9nence necessary
1
work for prestigious com-
M1n1mum Quahhcations panles In Orange County
Neat appearance. Amb· Work w"8n & wner.. y0u
111ous & Reliable Must want. ·
have car & be 1 year So FEMALE/MALE
Cahlorn1a resident HOMEMAKERS urged
CALL MONDAY
9am 1pm only
210-1SH
ASSIST. DOCI llSTH
Knowlt>Oqe or boat mech-
anics and own toots
necessa•~ 56 per hr to
stan Bali Yach1 Clut>
3 tO 1 W Pac1t1c Coast
Hw>. NB 6•1>-8955
&SSTIH SALES
u:>ll•On l!>lanO deslQl'lef
bOul•Qve E \~r•enced.
Reis r u• t•me 760-9333
avlo
~~
VOLT
I ..... ,I " .. ~ ,.. l • • •,.t I• o( I
38•8 Campus Dnve
Across from 0 C Airpo'1
Newport Beacn
217 Averno1 del Mar
San Clemente
Clencat help needed Fast neat han4wr1ttng ,,_
Qutred Carr754-194 t
CLEAICAL
nPIST
CLlll 11
111111 ..... .. 11411 ..... _
S1evf \ Deta•11ng is 1~
'"9 1," respons1bi. ano
tnot•1rate<l mC11v1duals tor
autc. .Jeta111ng and or car
WIS"•"9 611 6906 Type lelters reports and
Babys1tt~ Costa Mesa other t1ni"* copy lrom
are-a 11ansportat1on rough Clralts not .. or
nt"eOea 6•6-8762 machine tranacr1pt1on
l&IYSITTH . MUST type al corrected
rate of •5 wpm Po1it10n le>r 1 cMO 1n my home, 11 located nMr South
8 • 4 days wk 63 1 -8842 Coast Plaza FUii blneflt1
BABYSITTER needed packt09 o"ereo lnclud·
Grandma type pref •ng dependent health
YOUR home NBI CM COYerllge
area fie~ hrs 646-1• 17 Call (l l•}tll...aH
uJYstm• wun1 ' ., 111-4121
Pan hmt' my Costs M... fOf tnf0rm11lon
home Mon Fn. 2 llpm 2
children Pteu. call
MORNINGS ONLY 645 •941
Babys•1tef wanted 1n my
home p T REF'S
NOf'l·ltT'lkr 7!i 1 •310
~anking
ltfloe aece~ Rec•W-~1 .. rs ans...,.
P"O"•" 1111ng. misc
c.1e"c11 duties "'•rbat
communicatlOl'll & typing
Skllltn~
Weltahr .....
660 Newp<>n ted)"'••
N~"'P<>fl BeK" Contttl Sva,· Winn
973-$168 fOf IPOI
£CW"'I Oopty [mpiyf
~"~'"O enCI ••ll•no 11 a
r•.oanab•• p11ce •tflat 1
• r.11 c 1a111ll•Cl 11 all
lt>Ou1 a.J-5'171
11A1111111n
Kn •• a.Anti
Affirm AC110n Emplyf MIF
CLERIS
\ .,.
,., ........
NEVER A FEE
VOLT
' ...... '. -. '
•
HOMES FOR SALE
2 BEDROOM
• 2168 Kristin. Costa Mesa
759-1501 $135,000 Sun l -5 • * 6410 W Ocean Front. Npt Bch
759-9100 $645,000 Sun 1-5
2308 Chit Drive, Newport Beach
646-7171 $395,000 Sunday 1-5
309 Enema. The Bluffs. Newport Beach
644-9060 $295.000 fee Sunday 1-5
,
2 BR plua FAM RM or DEN * 1429 Dolphin Terr. Irv Terr. CdM
673-4400 $750,000 FEE Sat/Sun 1-5
18 Atoll, Corona del Mar
640-4868 $322.000 Sunday 1-4:30
* 19 Curl, vu, Jasmine Crk, CdM
(619)728-5151 Open Sun. 1-5
232 Ins. olde Corona del Mar
675-6000 $380,000 Sun 1-5
621 Lido Park Or E2. Npt Bch
631-1266 $496,000 Sun 12-4
19 Northhampton. Belcourt Hill. N.B
644-9060 $475,000 Sunday 1-5
7 Ocean Vista (Sea Isl) Npt Bch
760-8333 $475,000 Sun 1-5
9 Ocean Vista (Sea Isl) Npt Bch
760-8333 $535,000 Sun 1-5
37 Sou1hmpton (Belcourt) Npt Bch
760-8333 $395,000 Sun 1-5
3 BEDROOM * • 106 Via Lido Nord (lido) Npt Bch
759-9100 $950.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* 5596 Oakley Terr (Trtlrk) Irvine
645-0303 $359,500 Sat/Sun 1 30-5
2001 Altura. Irvine Terrace, CdM
675-6000 $395.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
943 Arbor, Costa Mesjl
720-1060 $105,stO Sun 1-5
20451 Bayview Ave. Newport Beach
650-55204 158.500 Sunday 1-5
65 Beacon Bay Newport Beach
675-6000 $430 OOOLH
17 Canyon Island Big Canyon. N B
Sun 1-5
644-9060 $219.900 Sunday 1-5
4733 Cortland. Newport Beach
6 75-6000 $315,000
1522 Cumberland. Westclltt. N B
Sun 1-5
644-9060 $230,000 Sunday 1 5
33 1 1 Finley (nr Lido) Npl Bch
6 73-3 777 $4 70,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
4~ Gav1ote, Bluffs, Newport Beach
644-61 14 $189.900 Sun t-5
215 Morning Canyon Rd. Corona del Mar
833-3622 $580.000 Sun 12-5
19452 Olana. Huntjngton Beach
963-6767 $111.000 Sunday 1 5
21 47 Iris Place. Costa Mesa
546-2313 $1 79.900 Sunday 10-2
2463 lrvlne Ave, Beck Bay. N B
631-4 167 $209.000 Sa11Sunl 5
17 4 7 Irvine Newport Bch
6450303 $1 79,000 ... SU1'1 1-4
1851 Kentucky Pl (Mesa Verde) C M
657-5659 S 129,950 Sun 1 5
1528 Orange Ave, Costa Mesa
673·1600 $215,000 Sunday 11-4
l Point Sur. Spyglass Hill
644-9060 $539.000 Sunday 1-5
1977 Port Cardiff, Newport Beach
644-6926 $219,000 Sat/Sun 1-4
•4645 Roxbury (Cameo Shrs) Npt Bch
644-6200 $499.000 Sun 1-4
1419 Santanella Terr (Irv Terr) CdM
_ 644-7020 $299.950 Sun 1-5
19501 Sierra Seco (Trtlrk) Irv
644-7020 $219,000Fee
501 Tustin. Newport Beach
644-9060 $195.000
120 Via Quito. Udo Isle, N B.
Sun 1-5
Sun 1-5
673-7300 $425.000 Sat/Sun 1-4:30
2706 Vista del Oro, Bluffs. N.B
644-9060 $210,000 Sunday 1-5
3 BR plua FAM RM or DEN * 1880 Maul. Costa Mesa
645-0303 $249.500 Sun 1 :30-5:30
• 2 Rue Fontainbleau (Bg Cyn) Npt Bch
644-6200 $475.000 Sun 1-5
• 2001 Altura. Irvine Terrace. CdM
675-6000 $395.000 Sat /Sun 1-5
* 3210 Colorado. Costa Mesa
546-2313 $154,000 Sunday 1-4
2631 Crestview. Bayshores. N B
644-7211 $215.000 Sat/Sunday 1-5
4515 Fa1r11eld. CdM
673-7771 $595.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
200 Hanover. Costa Mesa
545-8685 $ 134,500
1736 Highland Dr. Westcliff, N.B.
Sun 1-5
644-9060 $248,000 Sat/Sunday 1-5 * * 1205 N. Baytront, Balboa Island
673-7300 $925.000 Sat. 1-4:30
39 Orangegrove. Irvine
644-7020 $162,000 Sun 1-5
1721 Port Barmouth (Hrbr Vu Hms) N.B.
759-9100 $249,500 Sat/Sun 1-4
5004 River. Newport Beach
646-7171 $199.900 Sunday 1:30-5
1 1 Rue Verte (Bg Cyn) Npt Bch
644-6200 $745,000
711 K-Thanga (Irv Terr) CdM •• * 644-6200 $375,000
2572 Circle Dr (Byshrs) Npt Bch
644-6200 • $695.000
Sun 1-5
Sun 1-5
Sun 1-5
1088 Salinas. nr S C Plaza. Costa Mesa
540-1151 $154,900 Sun 1-4
528 Seaward. Corona Highlands. CdM
675-6000 $435,000 Sun 1-5
•3098 Sumatra. Costa Mesa
546-23 13 $139.900 Sundy 1-4
1337 Sussex Ln. Westcllff area. N.B
645-7408 229.000 Sunday 1-5
214 Via lthlca. lido Isle. N.B.
675-6161 $420.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
2551 Vista Drive. Bayshores
644-9060 $320,000 Sunday 1-5
2551 Vista Drive. Bayshores. N.B
644-9060 $320,000 Sunday 1-5
*412 Vista Trucha, "Bluffs" N.B.
640-6259 $226,500 Sun 1-5
4 BEDROOM
• 1221 Berkshire.(WestcllH) N.B.
548-9516 $295,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
690 Congress. Costa Mesa
673-7794 $115,000 Sunday 1-5
* 1336 Galaxy. Dover Shores, N.B.
673-7300 $985,000 Sat/Sun 1-4:30
1821 Kings Rd (Clfhvn) Npt Bch
759-9100 $639,000 Sun 1-5
2032 Kornat (Mesa Verde) C.M .
631-1266 $287,500 Sun 1-4
1796 Kinglet Crt (Mesa Verde) C.M.
631·1266 $247,000 Sun 1-4
28~ l oreto (Mesa del Mar) C.M.
645-0303 $129,900 Sun 12-4
3 Point Sur. Spyglass Hill
644-9060 $518,000 Sunday 1-5
* * 5109 Seashore. Newport Beach
545-2847 $495,000 Dally 2-5
1830 Tahiti, Coste Mesa
546-2313 $213,000
218 Via Quito, Lido Isle
• 644-9060 $425.000
Sunday 1-4
Sunday 1-5
435 Vista Trucha (Bluffs) Npt Bch
631-1266 $259.500 Sat/Sun 11-6
1909 Yacht Puritan, Seavlew. N.B
644-9060 $429.000 Sunday 1-5
4 BR plua FAM RM or DEN
v 1901 Yacht Enchantress. Seav1ew. N.B
644-9060 $419,000tmtttttttt Sunday 2-5
* 300 Bayside Or, Corona del Mar
760-8333 $270,000 Sun l -5
* * 404 Morning Start ln (Ovr Shr) N.B
759-1501 $645,000 Sunl-5 * • 21 La Rochelle (Hrbr Adg Est)N B.
644-4424 $845.000 Sat/Sun 12-5
* • 407 Mendoza Terrace. CdM
640-0357 850.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
2725 Alta Vista. Eastbluff. N.B.
786-0585 $250.000 LH Sat/Sun 1-5
2108 Arbutus. Eastblutt. N.B.
644-9060 $375.000 Sunday 1-5
25 Augusta (Bg Cyn) Npt Bch
760-8333 $1 ,995,000 Sun 1-5
1227 Portside (H.V.Hls) Npt Bch
760-8333 $449.000 Sun 1-5
2830 Carob, Newport Bch
644-7020 $299,500 Sun 1-5
10001 Cliff Drive. Huntington Beach
546-2313 $140,000 Sat/Sun 12:30-4
10093 Corral! River Court, Fountain Valley
963-6767 $136,500 Sunday 1-5
32 Drakes Bay, Spyglass
644-9060 $389,000 Sun 1-5
* 1833 Galatea Terrace, CdM
675-6161 $775,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
1441 Galaxy Or. Dover Shores, N B.
548-5648 $330.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1377 Carllngtord, North Costa Mesa
549-2644 $139.750 Sun 1-5
282 1 Harbor View Dr Harbor View Hills
64 4-9060 $695,000 Sunday 1-5
19 Hermitage (Bg Cyn) Npt Bch
644-6200 $579.500 Sun 1-5
1422 Keel (Hrbr Vu Hms) CdM
645-0303 $410,000 Sun 1-4
225 Potneetua, Corona del Mar
6.0·506• $849,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
1820 Port Char!M {Hrbr Vu Hm1) Npt Bch
8-44-6200 S269,000 Set/Sun 2·5 ** 225 North Star (Ovr<Shrl) Npt 8ch
64'.-·6200 $87S,OOO Sun 2·5 -1230 Sand Key, HV Hllll, CdM
675-6000 $399,000
320 Seaward, Shoreolltf, CdM
675-6000 $375,000
19 Toulon (Hrbr Rdg Est) N.8
759-1501 $579,900
347 Vista Baya, Costa Mesa
751-3191 $189,900
5 BEDROOM
Sun 1-5
Sun 1·5
Sun 1-6
Sun 1·5
* * 239 Via Lido Soud (Lido) Npt Bch
759-9100 $750,000 Sat/Sun 12:30-4:30
2933 Catalpa, Eastbluff, N.8. ,
644-5987 $369,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
3009 Garfield, Costa Mesa
546-2313 $139.900 Sunday 10-2
1506 Santanella. Irvine Terrace. CdM
673-1181 $289.000 Sunday 1-5
5 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN * 14 Geneve (Hrbr Rdg) Npt Bch
760-8333 $2.000.00 Sat/Sun 1-5 * 35 Rldgeline {Hrbr Rdg) Npt Bch
760-8333 $1 ,850,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* • 51 Goleta Pt Or (Spygls) CdM
759-1501 Sunday 1-5 * * 618 Harbor Isl Dr (Prom Bay) Npt Bch
759-9100 $1.650,000 Sun 1-5
1600 Sea Bell Cir (Spygls) CdM
644-6200 $650.000
* 14 Bodega Bay. Spyglass. CdM
Sun 1-5
675-6000 $550,000 Sun 1-5
2601 Island View. Harbor View Hills, N.B
644-9060 $375.000 Sunday 1-5
220 Jasmine. Corona del Mar
644-7211 $479,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
6 Trafalgar, Harbor Ridge. Newport Beach
640-4868 $1,950.000 Sat/Sun 1.5
6 Yorkshore. Harbor Ridge
644-9060 $1,350,000
6 BEDROOM
Sunday 1-5
* * 333 Via Udo Soud, Npt Bch
644-6200 $1,300,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
6 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN * * 103 Via lido Soud (lido) Npt Bch
759-9100 $3,750,000 Sun 12-4
• * * * 101 Via Lido Soud. N.B. 673-7873 $4,850,000 Sat/Sun 12-5
CONDOS FOR SALE
2 BEDROOM
2302 Elden Av . E/slde. CM
650-2374 $113K-$1 17K Sat/Sun 12-6
TOWNHOUSES FOR SALE
2 BR plua FAM RM or DEN
•v 4 1 Northhampton Court, Belcourt Hill
644-9060 $545.000 Sunday 1-5
* v 7 Northhampton Court. Belcourt Hills
644-9060 $5 70,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* v 19 Northampton Court, Belcourt
644-9060 $475.000 Sunday 1-5
3 BEDROOM
403-409 Poppy Ave. Olde CdM
673-6589 From $225,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
3 BR plua FAM AM or DEN
d 7 Crest Cir. CdM
644-7020 $ 195,000
DUPLEXES FOR SALE
701 Iris. olde Corona del Mar
675-6000 $215,000
2 Br plua 3 Br
Sun 1-5
Sun 1-5
* * 63 Beacon Bay (Beacon Bay) Npt Bch
644-6200 $1 ,075,000 Sun 11-4
414 Carnation. Corona del Mar
675-5174 $475.000 Sat/Sun 1-5
720 Larkspur. Corona del Mar
644-9060 $349.000 Sunday 1-5
3 BR plul 3 BR plua DEN
120 42nd Street. Newport Beach
650-5520 $375,000 Sunday 1-5
* 452 Swarthmore (College Park) CM 1325 Manners Dr Westchff. N e • S p.1
241-8362 $127 .900 Sat/Sun 10-6 644-9060 $3 l0.000 Sun 1.5 * Poo1
• • W.tlerlronl 3 Valley View. Turtlerock Vista. Irvine 23 Montecito (Spygls) CdM • • • Wdlerlront & Poo1 ~6-7_3_·_77_7_1~$-2_6_0._0_00~~~~S-u_n_d_a_y_1_·5~~~~~~851_8767 s61~~0~0~~~~~S-u-n~l--5~~~~~~~-·;_<_··v_e_a-dd-d8_~'_:_a_•o_u_e,_d~~~~-
Home
Wi th all th e interest in re.al estate as an inves tment, don't forget that your home is also where
you'll be living. Sure, resal e value is important, but so are your housing needs now. For a good
balance. consult a member of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REAL TORS®.
Each one is rcq ui red to be a real es tate professional , actively engaged in real es tate, and
publicly commi tted to a written Cod e of Ethics. REAL TORS® are experi enced
1n helping you find the right home f or today and tomorrow.
It co uld also take a heap o' look1n'. Before
you st ar t, call a REAL TOR® f irst .
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,_., ~ 5 up new lawn• 701·3478 PIYnt, Mnoeia •c. Y• e.t. Ptlone ~2S.2
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ldfUttlat Counael. Meo 142•7047 ~Xll TXPiNd • Ywd Maint.eHaulif'.'O wru. HOUSE.SIT HOUii PW Mt • 1'1lllll.111..-.0 ~ iOCing ctJid lrWIJ AR T-1'"9 & ~tic MIKE l!J0..32t3. HAUL-MOV!~REMOVI! PLAHT8, PETS, ETC. At,.....-1Pttft1 ,.._ lltiL!ii!i~;~;·
ewe, my CM home. Eldt •---t-Fr .. eet. Kem11a.1503 Commera.l/R11hsant1a1 ~l~~R~.. R911.CatOll42·1141~ "••.De\lllftl4I01 '*w
rera. Fncd )'d. 831·1831 .-nn ~ Malntananc9 ......, IMlltMoa Aapelf ..,._. ~ ~
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loving Mom will "'' for w@b&Nd INVITXTl6Ns ....... Quellty Service, rMI. tic. ~ ttUdent w/lg truck 1Utfom .,".m lzlno In P.ineincit,....,. ~1':79 ~ , .... TM-..... .....
your toddler "' my CdM Hend addreaeed by Irena ..... Diii ~. 20 Y" In .., .. , ~ ptompt. Thenk Blodt-Conc:t••Stucco Ing. Uc. Qwte IU-1143 . . ""a.. ...... ~7-
home. 875-5229 ah 8:30 cr.r.:aptty or Cut~ Quallty """' McWean.y Lendac;epe you 15e.19~ CdM Ref•. Fr• .... 5'1-9412 INT 16T 20 .., ... &.per wooo LATIU COYW :B!:!!9i! .
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Your Deity Pilot
MoO• wtll h•-lo I Cal (714)"'"""' 42551i ~. et1-14o1 145-5124 KRUEGER HAULING ~ONRY. TILE Awe1:c._· "°°"' 121 + o.cor-. •Concnee a ........ ,_, n my . Furniture, tr Uh cteeh-u~ Deeb. •· 1327 lie cont. ,. • ..-r.
C.M. home. dependable. C.w..t ~·1..1 ELECTRICIAN lll'l\MI a eotn91ee• CJwl Matt 14S:5089 . Reea. & Uc Met• 142"°'42 High QYIMly d1J1 lflMI
~Directory
AepreMntatlve aa..a11m.M1
cau Marcel S41-1eo&"•t Lie. 233108. Small/lg• up m8lntan~ & ,,.. 831·2345 Le>c* p..,,_ a H;:· "-'""': WOf1'. ~a.._,, •':.
Mother wtN bebyalt In my iNf oe '*'· cabinet Jobt, repelra. 543-5203 trimming. 64°"2502 IWTI ~ ' man. I.ow ,..,... • T':;;; ri;;;r;, u:;n 141o0124 • •
home. Reuonable ratea. C:,~~ b•tt .. ~ .. ~5orm7471ce REDUCE ei.ctrtc BILLS Tll llUI ·--bofhooO ref'•· 840-1 8 enJoY In~ c:oncett. ·-~ :: Mra. Llttleton 850·8016 ~· ........ ApVCondo/Church/8u1. LawMr ... thrub-=:".ii cr:::~7h=~~ ~,:Z:f'f:: ;.., ...... Puna n0..0274 0( SM-557·/~ ; 2 ~~~~~~~~ PENNY'S DAYCARE Cuttaby tr• Conault. ~11 Tr .. trlmlAernoval DorbyS1m1AH 5'48·8401 Uc. T13I041 552-0410 lnllex1 fr• eet. Le>c* ref f ...... /lallll ----·
lunchlSnacka Inc txp;rC::pentry rm RESID/COMM'UIND Lawn malnVRototllllfio 10yra np. (714)838..etl 1 fltUfiAhtcRINd Low ..._t7M»MI
Ref.Ille 5'6·78311 Rec>elr-A9m0d·Addltion. 28 yra. Oo my own w<><I> Fr•91tlmate 648-i085 IHH CIA~ *'-1 ... * PAINTER NEEDS WORt<I Reatuccoa. Int/ext. 30 yrt YMJT(WifAiij) a::na>m: ore, Cit. rm Summer Fun. Toya G1lore, Door1-etc. 548 ... 980 Lie 2780• 1. Al a.cw 128 lar•••'-W..e.4 ROBIN'§ cLElNiNG L~~ ~rtl8 25 /~f53 lnt/~t. ceUlnga, reftn ceb. IJIP. Neat. Paut 6"5--2177 WINOOW.:"ASHtNO
add + bay wndw, French Fncd Yd. lnlant1 Up, FENCES & DECKS fualtut Mow. ed~ twice 1 mo. SERVICE: a thOroughly (26) yra exp., ~· ED'S PLASTEAINO OUAUn' a 1•20•
dr, pello COV/ded(1. Uc. Older Mom 542· 110'7 Experienced hetdworillng 120·125. 650·8018 or Clean hOuM. 540..0857 siJ~~~':3M~~~~Glo 011fia Painting 37 HNI Patct. & T.xt~... I ':-th1· UJ1h l'1l1i1
'41485. Steve 547-8078 & h<>neit. Wife & 3 lcldl to leflal•~.. 645-5737 ' Dependable HOUMt!Mpef Uc T124-43e tnaured. QUALITY PAINTING. FAIR 1111/exl. tr ...... 145-8258 ..... 1 "'''Ull "'f\ ...
ADOIATNIOONRE'SM,
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EESIGN hlaty ltmet feed. LARRY 764-1620 ilm--.nllf .... Experleneedl own Trant 641-8427 PRICES. Fr .. Eltlmate1. --------,1.,,,,.1.,_., '"ur
l Color Analyll1 & Makeup. Repalr-Doora-Alt9ratlon1 Cuatom Made Furniture. .. ~ c.lla 650·3283 WATCH US GROWi C.il Jotw't 831-2050 Pl.-U, lie. rHI. Prol•Hlonal Selection ,, key. Unlock Remod•l·Pan•l·P•tioa 20-t. dltc. 21 yra exper. ••Woe REPAIR GENERAL OR SPRING INDEPENDENT FAMILY ____ iiiiiiiiii.._ _____ I .... .,.,,. ,. ,, our
compl aerv~. 831•2345 your winning color com-Wlndow-Fence .. Cablnel Guar. wotk. Fr .. P-U & e1ec.Plumb-Carpentry Wlndowa & Appllanc.. Estimate on phone. No job Compere before rcM.I t>uy. Ofalnt clear from 115 ''"°''1·111 v ----------bl-na·t·lo·n···Mi!i&-~354~0~~!!3!S!y!r•!•!x!p!'J«iry!ii6"ei-44ii13~~d.i~IV~ef)'~(~7~14~)~5·6"--7=1~2:8:+Rem~~O<lel~l~K~el~th·a.4-M~6~7~2~F~r .. ~ .. ~t.~~~·~·~·~85~2~-.1~00~7~~too~~tm:•~l~I P~a~I~. 8i50-ii~t83~1~~~~2i·5e~7il~m··~·-1•~--v~~·~=~ilme~r~taucetiMi&iM~·i·~ii2-~m~..c~3~'~~··,:i:ll,lo4i4!ii.ii ... ~.7~14···.~·~~;:1
1111 ...... Siii ~!II !•tM 1111 1111 Wu... Slll le1 Wu... 11• 1t11 Wu... 1111 1!1t ..... 119 ..., .... IJM ~:
Furniture Oltplay H•per. INSPECTION ReolptlOnl.VGenerlll Ut· • lliMi pert0n IUlllpen iifM . •
Muat' be neat, hutky & 1141111 ,, ... lfftM Police floe tor gtowlng bottle Reataurant. CouM• Hel!p tor .udlo Yldeo st0f9 -
HOROSCOPE SYDNEY
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•bl• to think. 751-8822 SOURCE Experienced. Pediatric•. llllllft NUii water companJ. Good :rs:~~ CdM, out~ twd
GEN; e.rn White you train. llSPECTOR Fountain Val. 549-0474 IFFIOll (Ylt.111111) phone peraon lty, non-• • WOtklng. MO-Sollc:lt (f t) lmmedl-' tmOket. Wiii train. t t ~ 00 N Sell Medlcal Recep11onlat, Eye, J04n the City ol lnllne M a Apc>ly In per90n: G':u: ~ ........... 11&.D PIH• • ~'!;;;;';~•· ~ ~ l••tlectHleMlil lrH Ooc1«. pan time. ••· Reterv• Police Offiolr & 17842 Cowan St Irvine NMt reliable'* i.dH" lnvoMI ..... & rent.Illa o1 • perlence preferred become an Integral part ' t . . m soft wet« & drinking •
m!Mk>n. Full co. beMflt1 An Innovative lead« In 631-4780 6·5 Mon·Frl. of the community. We are ReceptlOni.t. PIT. for bu9V erent ooncept. ~ water. Cw necnHry. :
Monday, April 30 ror lull time employ.... medlcel electronlc1 11 -•• uoin•• seeking ar.. reeldent• rHI .. tat• otflc:e. Mull llTll. •--Salary + ~. In--. S Permanently 8111~n•d currently 11eklng 1 _.._ -Y 1ntetested In volunteerlng have pleHant phone Ntght/Wknd":':.d.ct IW"~ + peld.....uon. :-ARIE (M arch 21-Apnl 19): Emphasis on val~e. quality. ereu.Keepphyalcalyflt Sootulnapeclor. For Newport BHch atleut18houraamonth voic..Goodworklngaur• to ... ___._ ..... ...,. .............. .
endorsements. long-distance communicat ions. Money judgments arc with pay for Hklng Opt11hamo1ogt1t Exp. toasslstregularpollceof· rounctlngs, wlll traln on RlltatA--·-equtred. 2'0-llf( •
on t~rgct. You'll learn more about investment potential. ability to people If they heve any Minimum 1 year H· Reaume to P.0 Box 2118 !leers perform their the job. SaVSun 8-4. ~ ~ "'9JIP9'· • r. --.... ,· ••
bt.a I G S usable ltema to donate to ,_.lence In fn•_,.,lon ot Costa M .... CA g2828 dul.......... ...u..-t.a -.. c8'1 No6an 2 10 H•~~ ... C-.u. . 11LD llT• ·. o m. necessary matena . emin1. ao•ttanus persons figure -~ Th•ttt t p ... -• ._. -.,_, ....... """" -... -prommcntlD. D" "'""" '" a ore1. .,, mtcroe4ec1ronlca and hv· lllEL AMI Eltai. 497-64$4 Wom.na ...,, FfT & PIT. •
TAUR S
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0-time poeltlonl atso'avak· brld1u we11 u tamlllarlty tf you are community..,. * --llllllT * llT& •111.1 -iew _ __.. --.. •• ...._. • -(Apn May20):Youtakegreatcrcontrolofyourown able Apply In perton with MIL883 r.,, Ire Sc 1 t en--' t I . ..i--•--t..o & 1..... RIRISr ••••--... ~-.....,--, _, d · Y 'JI · ctioC Thrift Stores. i02S --... u • u P ur ·-• ema • """" or._."" en,.,., a Mlaci. offlol work In ,..,_ Carpet & dr9Pe"Y ••· + commlealM. Al1ttJJy An .• ~stmy. ou begin a program of review and renewal. Lunar cycle w .. t Flrat St. Santa Ana. ments. lndlvlduel will be model. 951.111g aft. 5 challenge, con1act: den cen1er 842.aeee..-periencaMCinery 1n r• P....on. 245 Fcnili A• •
high, m~ke personal apP.Carances and appeals. New cont.act could representing Pacuettlng Madel M te/F ai. CITY OF IRVINE · · tall & deelQir'I cent•....._ LAguM lk:h. Allll. lor lob. •
develop into viable. possible romantic relationship. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Syatema. Inc. at our wortl 1 a em 17200 Jambor• ~ Pll llllPlll•IT Liberal commJ•Me wttt1 .. ..,....... .,-•
. GE~INI (May 21-~une 20): Look behind scen~s. open dialogue llmll.,,. location In Huntington WE NEED NEW FACES lrvlM, CA 927 14 Laeuna 8wtl Mtg Co drew. Banta Ma. _ • ......, -·-•
with tnd1v 1dual who ts attracted 10 you. Spotlight on intrigue. Full time position available Beach. -For placement In mocs.i1ng &e0-3922 Need• mature per.Qn foi 556-3921 (Mictlele) Hunt ltdl . .._1"1
clan~estme ~e.etmg. r.omance. G. aan. shown if you speak right •. en. gage an tor qualified lndMdual to We otter eJr.oeltent com-Job• In Orange County. before 5121/84 our front omce to operate 99911. ••• -11 lllT.-S V S 11t11t Salft ManaQ9f. penaatlon and benefits. llW Ylll WEIT awltcht>oerd. open and 115' -... creative act1v1ty. irgo. agittanus and another Gemma figure Ou11es to Include: direct Pleaae aobmlt reaume to: TllHt :I"" PIE·lllllL TUml route mall, and aaalat KJt~ lhoc>. pert time In •Typlltl •CRT 1 :
prominently. " phone contact with cua-1 .... -II 8 to 12 noon. Mon ttlru Fri. wlpersonnel dept. Wortt Newport Bwh. After-•WOfd ProcellOf9 •
• CANCER (June 21-J uly 2~): Emphasis on friendship, persuasion. tomera, billing & sales r• l ... J aa..-HB area Call 536-3588 loacU "'*· ~ noona.. ~ture per90n •Stenoe •Gen. OMce •
diplomacy. major domestic adjustment. Romance 1s part of scenario. lated c1er1ca1 dutlH. l•fllJ811f Nanny wanted: Brit. or PRE-SCHOOL TEACHER 80 wpm Prev ctencal pretered, experience LDng & ~~ lnOC
you'll get what you want. aspirations an.• fulfilled. Financial bonanza is Good typing lklllu muit. I lrllh trained tor glrla agee Full time. Hunt. 8cl'I area. •~ dell~ed helpful. Ca.II 95i--U04 TEMPORARY SERVICES •
highlighted as result o f business or career maneuver. Contact Deen 863-9333 .,,. .... ltht ~ & 6 Inquire 752.0700 Beneflt1, ralMS Call W• offer exdnt P8Y & ben· Monday t>etw.en 9'-
12
43A1 Blrcti8t •105
LEO (Jul'r. 23-Aug. 22): fapenses can be cut -emphasis on Ollff.Ot•YIMPrt4Mts PICESETIER IPFIOlOUllP/T Marltyn847-5284 •flt•. + e
4
day wortt IOll.llLD NewportBeed\5&6-8520 • 17741 Ut~Cftetl, Irvine week. Call for apptm. The Great Ametleen Short
superiors. business opportunities. courage of convictions. Define SYSTEIS, llC. Mon· Fri. 7:30am to PlllTll/lfFllT TELONIC BERKELEY. Story, clothlno co11ee-Um111t$11,111 ;
terms. streamline techqniques.' make decisions based on facts as "'--~ai 0.,.__ 12·30pm. Hea1 ptiones Ex,,_ience n-...rv on Alk tOf' per10nnel. t•--· ,,,.. -"'fl 3 In T~ eo "·-....--• U'llll'I""' ,...,. 12884 Bradley Avenue misc duties 3.50 to. H ........ am .... 1 or ~~ultl. ,.._'··•tty (714) 4M-9401 E.0 .E. .":: ..... u~':.'~..... ... · --,_ ..... , •-· : contrasted to ~ishful thinking. Pisces. Virgo natives play significant PTITI•--OUll s c '"" .., ......, .... ,,._,. ---"' ... ~~ -
I r--ylmar, A91342 start. Apply In peraon. Sh H'"h Volume of AP y ro cs. ~111,41112-1122 BOOKS ON T~PE sa~·.N,.'..!p1~to......... IE nF!!,~t .~~t~ Lii.....--,..~-• VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Profit results from sales which cov0 r Buiy clrculatlon ottlc• o• , 729 Far· ... c-ta M... ..... """' ........ '""'" J ........ ~ .,._r-'--...... --· --n .... _ ,,_,._ .._ ' need a a part/time derk qua ppor1un.ty .... ..,. Greg or Jeck 540-1355 "'" ..... .., ~ "'-· u-ate opeillliga tOf fUll & 4000 W....,. '14 •
wider tcrnto ry. mclud1n~ possible o verseas agreement. Emphasis on tor an1werlng phone• Employer Pllllll PRODUCTION ARTIST world' a largHt di•· part time aaiea .v.....,_, ~la3-t1IO~ ••
commun1cat1on. educauon. travel and knowledge of international end dispatching meta-lTIEllUT p /T wanted lor trade Ma:'Q. ~:a~'• ~tr= 111~. -~-ovt• ,~· .... ftex· •ii--111-:
customs. laws. Stress responsib1ht). willingness to .. take charfe." egea. 14 houra per week, '"'t""=R'"'v.,.,.iN"'.'::E=-D==RY,.,-::C,,..L-=EA..,..,..,N""E""R..,,,..S P b P ocs ...... ,,_,... ·-... -·-·-·
LIBRA (Sept i3 Oct 22)· You str1k" chord of n·1versa peal Fri. 2:30-7:30pm, Sat. Major Newport Beach u d, r ~c·cs~et putet products. •KJ*lence, ~If\ Pet· Funcompei~Pwm.Jpt .. · -• · · ' u ap · and Sun 8:00.10:30am. Counter help, hrl vary. company 11 looklng tor a rea Y art ..,...,_ ,._ We need a ~ tor our .. 30 thru May 2 time. Mon.-~ 1:00 \0 -
You'll d1~over additional resources and could sign a$reement w11h studenll a homemaker• Call Mon·Frl. 9·3. person to work part time sup~rv l1~n _._Typ: Costa Mesa offtce who IOf\ ~;3()Cwft.Ok:lllphone.ltM •
valuable all~. Focus also on coopera11ve eITons. pubhc11y. legalities encouraoeo to apply at: 552-1322 as a parking a11endant1 SJ*: ng. p • .,,.o ""1ng cen handle bu1y phOMI, ROUTE MANAGER: PIT typing. 10k9'1
surrounding possible inheritance. Anes and ano ther Libra pla) key 330 W. Bay, C.M. 2-4pm .IAllTllllll maintenance person. cropping. ruling. and stat Interact w/employH1 12·30-4:30 WMkO)'I AccomPltlf* Peraonnel ;
roles. (Hk ror Oebre) Day position av all able. (Excellent opportunity for camera operation. Call and cut to mart and SC.25/hr + S. 18 a mite Servlc:iM. Inc. Free
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·No v. 2 1): C ontract. agreement can be RacquetBallWorld ~9!:: ~;~~~~ ~~1~ Helen
549
•
4634 ~~ri:!~Ag:;~'~ Call 631~15
33001rviM.N.8.6"5-9971 :
renego tiated Emphasis on break from past. new stan. willingness to HYll•llT .IMS Call Randy 982· 1374 6pm Some heavy lllllng PllOllTIOI pearance and phone SAIN. I••• SECRETARY/EXECUTIVE
take chance o n ~ourown abihues. Focus also on pannership. publtc1t). S16.559·150.553/year llITTlll required Good working manne<. some prevtoua to ""°"' tor Ch+.f exec Ui •
mamal status. Stud) Libra message for valuable hint. Nowtllrlng. Yovrarea Needed hand knllters for conditions. Salary com· Can you exper.(preletred)endthe s .. matr•H mlf. muat =.""",!: .c:=::.
SAGl ...... ARIUS (N o" . ., __ 1.Dcc. _,I)·. c·oncentrate on details. Call805-887·~ penutlon $4 25/hour Spare3tlranlghtty? ability to work In. fut ha~ buic aewtng tkllla. a a • Ext. R· 1590 Fee sweaters & vests Full or PleH• contact Norm Are you paced environment 11... Wiii treln. North Salll, man.I tkllll & exp Job -
improving security. making sure loved one understands your m o tives. part time. Call K & D Fine Thorpe, 759•7840. Avco wen groomed, 1en11a1. Hunt. BMctl. 898-1234. requlr .. tact, cUacretlon
aspirations. Collect 1nforma11on. be aware of up-to-date material and Imports, aak for Klara. Flnanclel servloes. 620 dependable Call Nancy Leaning to ar-Sales .',1tP1°1
1Mw0· ,,.,.G1°n~d cD0.,,;;.;
ba · C r-· om A rson la · mponant HYllllEIT all 786--2794 ... t "·-i D 1 and self motivated? ranna tor an Interview or •" • sic sources. ancer. ~ apnc • quanus pe s p y I Thousand• of vacancies iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .,ewpor ..,..,., er r ve, Do you . 11;.;in and rill out an at>-111111 fM _. dttlonl/offlce hrs. Call
roles. mutt be filled lmmed. Newport Bell 92860 Enjoy working with kids? pflcatlon. Tired of titting around with 979'-7800
CAPRICORN tDec. 22-Jan. 19): Be ready for change. unusual s11,63410150•112 UULllOln&IY EqualOpptyEmptoyer 11youcananawerYES AVNETELECTRONICS nothing to do? Do you --------•.
communications. travel. increased social activ ity. Spotlight on variety. Call 716-842-6000 Fest paced N.B. real es· Phones.46-7021 350 McCormick A~. Ilk• to mingle? If'°· Qfw SECIETllJ
s/:ulauon. children and romance. You·11 have greater freedom of lncludlng Sunday tate lltlgatlon llrm seeks PUT TIIE1 2.30-6pm Mon. ttlru Fri. Cotta M ... 7141754-6073 u• • jingle at 540-03<>1
. fi , . . . Ext. 32644 Fee motivated experienced tor an ••Ol11ng Job u a h rt _........__ ..._1
t ought.action.Gcmin1.Sag1ttanuspersons 1gurein exc1t1ngscenano. legal Hcretary Thia Early morning single copy telephone ••lesperaon .,.. ... -~
AQUARIUS(Jan.20-Feb.18):Sticktofacts.display determination HAIR DRESSER Spece chatlenglng position re-distribution for Newpor1 P/TllOl'Y&llllTllT UllPT/TYPllT with The Los AngeMI ...._ _, ...-•
and confidence. Spotlight on land. territo ry. long.range goals. Some rental. CMINwpt area quires exceptlonal skills Beach area. 3•1t to 4 Work 1 week 1 month <40 Active aa1e1 office on TlmM Two tt11n1 •vall-flM, L9t1 tf ,., .. ., •
rcstric11ons are necessary. delay 1s temporary and could actually prove 546-9771 or 646--l l98 & strict attention to de-houri Sunday morning hrs) Typing. ptione. •n· Balboa lllend. Atk tor able, hourly w89I '*'' ... I 11 1 • 1--... • • tall. References required. Requires dependable ve· rands $7 hr 851·7701 <>-tty Wal· ... 73~800 commlMlor'I Location •• , •• , .. -.• •••
--&40·6962 OAIOC very exp. reur.. 1375 Sunnow. Av .....--• ...,... :.-beneficial. Scorpio. Taurus perso ns plar key roles. ••1a111••R11 t11c1e (Contact Mikel """' ... v ................ Ill .... -
PISCES (Feb. I 9·March 20): You' I be given more leeway. you"ll with some following tor • ~~~~~~~~~l1-_;S5;7;_;·;83~9~3~E~.O~.Eiii. -o1c On-call 1nsp. In your Coeta Meaa .,_ •
have more room. many of your views will be vindicated. Short trip ma~ charming talon In New· : LIFEllAllll R 1 t........ RECEPT /..,..ST ......... etary
Port "'·ach. "'-nt Of com· area. etume: n ,.. ,.,., I I r1 SALES CLERK: Fil apply l ~·• .. ~·ter mantetlnn
be necAs•"ry. relative communicates. makes special request wh1c ...., """ Par11tlme· publlC relatlons 930 lndlan Pk Rolll""' IA# N...rrt Bch nrm x-ox ........ ~·....-... .... .,.. mlstlon.Joycetw6-1675 ' "•"' -.. -In peraon. 9am-12pm. &serv1cenrmaeek1per-·· deserves serious consideration. Sagmarian plays significant role. Of' 786--8105 evenl""• (Park Attendant) customer service. lrvlne Hiiis. CA 90274 word proceeaor a pl~•· Coet• M ... Stationerys son with aecntariel &
:111:&.t .:;:W;::;H::;.;.l .. ;;;,;.......,;1-.llO~ ltlt Wut ..
. .., location. 281·123' tlllJTY OllTllL Salary more thin you re 270 E 17th St .. c M t>ooltkeeplng tkillt Ex· •
Siii Btlt Wut.. SllO Hair 1tyh1t & aa1t. needed. 111.11 't~~H) r Fil, OC. wlaudlo cua making now. 831-7645 ..... perlenceln a comc>utet or -HI S mutt have cltent.ie. extra ... p PART. TIME, Varied hours n~ .. , t--_ ..... .-i..., tl --•••._ Bal 111. 873~13 minimum wage to star1 ._.taurant Experienced Furniture " -_., ,,_,..,.... rm • .. _.,JNllSll The Envlronmen1a1 Man· to Include early A M. Apply 11 Boob on Tape. ••••ST&IT •••••o sa=needed Also-•x· pret«Nd. Initial part ume •
Dl1hwHhlng & general agement Agency Recrea-weekend•. Must have d• 729 Farad. Costa Meta E:'::'teneed In-:;-:-... of P9f ced Carpet and ernpioyrMnt will be con-
cleanlng tor perty equip-• HIRlll tlon Facllltles Dlvl1lon pendable vehicle (1mall 546-5525 ask lor 8111 I II tuta di I •• ...., -·'-F II nme ~-Submit returnee • ment rental atore. Mon-truck . van. atatlon liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii am Y•·1-nng .... ana-"" ......, u to 3931 MacArthur Blvd
con1tructton t.. ~ IEUYIH lllYll F /I
FUlllll Poaalbte apllt ahlft. Apply
& layout crft needed. 12-•. W.F. Circuit• Inc.
Immediate openings t281 Logen, unit J C.M.
Vat" contructlon
c.i1 Bob 960-6035
Fri. United Rent·All. currently has iwlmmlng w..,,on) to assist news-gertal experienOe 8 must. ~ 1°' Marcia. 581•2121 S It 204 N
Cotta Mesa, 145-0780 Outgoing. enthualastlc pool Lifeguard positions P8Per dealer In lrvlne IUL ISTATI Late altetnoon1 & ~ SALES Gift Prod Nan .., • . ewrport
HLIYHY lllYll --.. ., ~~u;~· vc!art,:,t~r: ;; ~~~u~'it;ro~~,~··~ area Musi be deperl· ·-···. ......... ntngs. 5 day/WMlc e.n-Firm needs people IOf' Bted'. t2t60
atlmllllLP
tor auto part1 atore Must ...,, 'I FIOE ti< Laguna Nlguel dable Contact Greg -.... e ll ts Excellent OP· Salel & Mgmt. 1200 wtc lllllTllY /llOEPT
have valid Call! driver's Front & back offloe. part wo Ing with youth and Hyde Monday thru Friday *llSTAIT l•IE* portunlty tor advance-guar • comm S500 to Full llme One person of.
Full & part time avellable
Good pay Good atmo1· P'*• can tor appoint·
ment. ask tor Beth or
Rick, 95 717
nc, gd driving record. time. will train. Mutt type. b~!ir~;'~~el~~v~r General duties of L•I•· between 9:30 and 10·30 uc·o AGENTS ONLY menl tor the right peraon 800 poss Pd Training floe. must be mature
Apply at Hub Auto Supp· 'Cotta Mesa 645·1171 guards include teaching a m only 642-4321 Playl R.E llJ· 1toO Apply in person 2 to 5pm 535-3935 have excellent clerical
ly, 2120 Harbor Blvd DRIVERS X COUNTRY "9· 10211·1•• swimming classes col· lilllillillll. lilillii•• Wed tl'lru Sun JOLL y 1---skltlt and worll well with
646·24&4 see Claud Call!. lie. req'd 1ec11ng tees 1nlorm1ng ROGER •OO S Coast SALt:::O pub lie Call Terri 11 ••cGREGOR YAC'-'TS patrons of parlc regu· RECEPTIONIST Hwy Laguna Beach Ma1or Orange County ~.7377 tor further •n-
m " lllTlll/llST tauons and adm1n1stetlng P&IT /TIME General office duflea 1 R--tauran-t we9111y newspaper has formation
.ELIYl•Y/ITIOI 1631 P11c.nt1a, C.M. I Sh ... 1 'd .....
• m • llLP " Eso•ow uoan· Alli Pre1tlglou1 Orange Coun· emergency first l ld Wd•ts••Y • .., arp person wtth front I OAFmllA "Tiil opening Of exp .. ----GI " 32 Hours, 18 )'rt t " ty Merced•• Benz deal· Certlhcate1 reQulred: Ad· 9am to 5pm Driving. office appearance Call 1 person Above average lll'Y /IEOIPT.
Full & p/tln\e day hours I 495 E. 17th SI C.M One of Orange Countlea erahlp needs "Hostess" vanced lifeguarding, Founiatn Valley & Hunl· 850·0655 Colla Mesa 5 days. no salary/comm Aggreaalve Rapidly growing o c
Flelt schedule Apply In ----oldest companies. car .. r ll"l')medl ately . Some CPR, First Aid w s 1 re· ington Beach. 10 vetlfy wee+ienda 1oam 10 3pm ' only f\eed epply prQP9fty mngmnt firm
perton Orange Jullu•. IEIT&L IEOIPTlllllT apportunlty for right per-modeling experience quired prior to teaching newspaper delivery ~ lllCl1'tit1i1t Will train Ph 673-«o3 Contact Tobey Anglln ..-1ng PIT 1ndtv1dual
711 BalbOI Blvd, Balboa Mii tlv led ton exper or train.. preterred Outgoing per· swimming classes uable auto necesaary SS Ute typing S4 50/tlour ~T AURA NT Wesl Ora~~· IAM-12PM Potenll•I tor
Penlnaula.675·1073 A~f.i:vtng~~n~o w/atrong HCretarlal aonallly ApPly lnperaon Apply lmmed1ate1y per hour plus mileage 642·9505 Coot<1 busperM>na and 53 ·75 10 lull time within short
Counter person 10, dry 1 1 ti flen skllls and desire Mu1t to 1001 Quail St. Nwpl No resumes Apply in person at The ----waltresstwatter Apply 1 SALES PERSON -term Oppt y to learn
R lbl is look ng or a ?cl~ g· 1 IYP• 80 wpm, Salary Bet\. Jim Siemon• Im· Delly Piiot. 330 w Bay, RECEPTIONIST dally 2-4PM Oonat•lll's Currently telllrtg Avon. prop mngmnt tecll· ~,:1~~0. P~:f'.'::'~ •· 1~8~1P~~~~~~allty ~~:C~ open. Benefits provided ports/Renie Dlvltlon I (l 1•) IU·2H4 Costa Mesa see Mr 2230 Fairview. C M Mary Key. Tupperwere? niques Clfl for •POI Jo
846--5110 ~Ice that nMdl a speciel l RlngLynn 547·5t25 533.g300 0t8.t.1flr1111 Clyde Barrow EOE T Consider~,.., In Ute Gi1t>ert 47&-29 11 nd SlllW llOln 0 "'' lmrM<11a11 opening tor ••· REST AURAN ln1urance s .... One of person to manage a E . UY H T BODS-Personnel Dept penanced indlVlduaJ with Crown Point Res1auram 1 Secy'• No ,_
stlmul•t• growth 4 daya Triton Eacrow, Laouna Have you got one? Male Hett of Admln "l <•I UlllS) good telephone per-now hiring Sous chef. the Hatton • i.adlng
EOE
CISTOIER
SEllYICE
a week Salary open. Beach 497·2411 0-5 Model• needed. & Fem 10 Ctvic Center Plaza W tonality 10 worlt tutl time baker hne coot! tt•w· Fraternal life lnauranci.
M4-1801COfonade1Mar for po1tcard compenlft SentaAna.CA9270t Ans Mrv ••P r><•f 111 1n our main office Good .ard. rece1v1ng person, Soctetleahasapeningaln llOl .. lll'YP/T Callnow213-592-3113 train Flex hrs. FT/PT 1yp1ng ak1lls preferred dl1hwas11ers. broiler per. Or1nge County 11 you
We 1ra a rapidly exp1nd· LOAN PROCESSOR -Pll/RECEPT. We offer competitive person Conttnental potentil l. advancement I
' llmOWI Mon.-Frl. N.B. 95s.ot50 Hotel I Atf Action Emp MIF 1 Fast11on 111and 760·8305 son. guard mgr & prep Ilk• unlimited ••rnlng
Ing Orange County ap. Exp Sta tr Oletlcltn F• W.U FlllT IUI OLlll IUL PllPlln aalariea and t>eoeflta FOf' cooking exp helpful Pit opoortunlty protaelOnal
perel flrm and we have nHd•d to overtH ........ ~xlblehOUra.5dayW'Mll •hhe more 1ntorma1ion.p1NM appty 2460l Dana Or traintng and fleal ble
Immediate opening• fOf' Dietary ServlGM In a Mon· Thvra 24 houri a SURF & SAND HOTEL l.endet/Bkr needs expd call Btdg F Dana p1 hours Mnd ~ to
C\lltomet ~ rep· growing SNF chain In CA. wMtt c· Laguna Beach Call: loan P<OCMIOf to handle .......... I Royal NelgtlbOrl of
TOI
need I
SECRETARIES
c::all 4 appt
111-1100
"' TlllP' mt. Natnta11we Mutt have curr lie & be 2t3-~M,-S:aary. Mergle, 4g1-4477. EOE loen1 and front office !Of •lltritM CA.MELLA NASON
1
Rnllurant --America. 1052 eon,.
fr" to tra1191. )(Int. Med. non·1moklng Newport I (l 14)540·5300 8" HST /llSTlll Ct Leverne. Ca 91750 4570 Cempua Of , •3 NB
Theee p(leltlon1 wlll be r• Dental, Liie Int. & Pen· REST AUAANT Hot6I Beach oHloe Salary + NEVER A FEE A 10-2
eponalble ror handllng alon Plana Send reeume Food Mf'Vtc. work•• fO< l ..... kar4~rlttr bonus 85l~938 Linda lllTI CIUT IUI pply In'*'°" pm, I ·1 ,., ..,
cuatomer 1nq1.11r1e1. oroer 10 Al!Ge Riddell 393 Ho. sanctwlch a aa!ad ... 2 daya 7•m-3pm 3 daya 890 Baker
1 M~~EF~~ng:=re11 •1 J I It· · pr~ng. procluctlon plt8l Rd NB, Ca 82813 Mmbly. Fil 5· t 30 PIT 3pm· I 1pm Mutt be able lll!!!I Cotta M ... CA 92126 & t9 Sleepy HQftoW l.,,. •
ancl Mmptl comrol and I -;;:;;;;;:::=;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 5-9 30AM to woB '#tends. Margie ----I E ...... 1 """''" E-"" .. .. I I --· 8eiacl'I I tleleon .with the ,......,. !11 Cat• r In G work• r • 497--"'77 Surf & Sand THf DAILY PILOT ta now ~-~ , ....... ::::.!.:._ ~--PART Tl ME
force. Ttier• la ,,..vy N••• •••rt• 7AM·3·30PM or PIT Ho11l, Lag. Bch EOE accepting appllcattona 3848Campua0flve
phone WO(lc lnvotwd •net 1 :30PM-1:30PM. Mull tor Ol11rtct M~• to Acrott from O C AlrPQrt
the poeltlona requtr• per· •4•1•••11t f bt ,.1, cJiMn a reliable. Hotel auperv11e new1paper NewPOf1 Beaoh eone wtth "''*'°' com· A.PP4Y btwn i0-12AM °' PllTIY ...... carrttn Mutt h.v. va11,
mun1cet1on lkllls 2-4PM, Mon/Ffl &.orra Morning & NIOhl Shlf11 wagon °' pld(-up Good 217 Avenlda del Mer
K"c:Mn 3077 8 Herbor SUAF a SAND HOTEL aalary, mileage allow· San Ctemenl•
SuooeMful candld•t• wtll 81, 8ani. Me (Herbor et L.eQuna 8Mcl\ C.11 Cl'lel Snell, C°""*'Y benefttt ~ Friday S51hr C M
potteta at .... , 2 yM'"I CatNge Dr).119-07•7 Chemin 497...C477 EOE and bonu• oPj)OftUnlty Sml con1truc-t1on ..,._
or 0Ua1°"* wvlOt •-I AwtY ,,., perton at Daily 1 .. ·-perttnce and haw good FILL/Tm PIY .... Ht.Ml• p /T Piiot Circulation Offlcl nM<I• mature lndMdual
... ,.,, ......... ., lklllt Ix· p•-,.-... Must be .. --1. Reliable 330 W•t 91". Cotti to handle Ille acct g,
:;;;;·-;;·the app.,.. _.., ,_ · GOOO °PA-0 BONUS M ... Monday'tnru Frio-typing peyrOll stc Call
lnctuatry la PfetelTtd OpportunlUe1 avallabl• Hl-1300 day No phone ~111 thwn 4.tPM 540-1130
We of* • pteaNnl. high-~:;E~he ~~E~ HOUSEKEEPER E 0 e PllTt W /UU-
energy an¥tronmel\t, u pattrMnt 1n our door to Uve 1n tor me1ure woman • l~ine lab Pattf111M bond-
• ea a competitive • u .1. Ooor nenpepet ulel 176-13&8 ... 11/Frwt ttte able COi.iniet help Mon•
NltrY and btMf!t• peel!· progrtm Guaranteed fxperd only Hra M Tun-Thun, 20 htt/llilk. I
tQt.lftntuoundallkethe ForC'llalfWAd hourty w-:1c: plut oom. --....-1 &oayweett c.na.e-.301e C.lltearen &49-17!7
opportunity you've ~ .. cn0., mlaaloft °"''-' 4pm 10 Cell 11,_»i21tte~~ on ----PllTI UI ••iMil
,..;..i.w. tor lend yovt_ ,. " ,, ~ TralnlnQ II Pf'Oo Ml ... _ ...... 1-wtc-en• M.OICll '**>I 8vty NB' ;:;'1;0 Pl.6-C81, PO C.Q v1oed Pottntlal to llllfn -.... -.,. ,,_ ~as-ti1en1t1u11utic. Norltau •xoer only ror
Bo• 18024. !NIM, CA ) A DA"-Y "OT S300 !)fut per _. '°' "" ~ ad'fW\l.al"O ,,,... , peraon1t>te. prof peraon I quality t "' Ptlolo tn Np1 1271• Equal Opportunl-.... YllOI an lnlervt.w. can .. ~ the l"Md«I Duty pl\on••. typing 8cf\ S1l•fl OP«' Al k for ·~Imp~ j MM611 957-.2311 t•t 1204 ere 142-M71 840-20'3 Mike 64 ·2424 ---~...;;;;;;::,.
'
AGENCY MANAGll
HQ fX(CUNfT TRA V£l the fcnfflt orow
ono tr~I networll 1n Amen<o 11 looiitnQ for
o l1m1t.d number of qvol1f~ ~ncy mon
09enl
Tht 1ct.<JI cond1dot• mull h~ o m1n1mum
of 2 ,-.or' tro,..f 099f11 e.c~t1e11c• wrth ot
le<n1 1 yeor of tic lltt1119 Pre"'°"' '"
per~• 111 operotloll\ mOflOQem.nf ""d/
or truvet '0111 11 o plu1
A <Ompt'flt•-..i ,olory ron~ ood benefit\
pocko~ or• 01101lobte Ovol1flflf apph
ce11n Vlovld coll the HO fXECUNfJ <«nl'tf
tn your OttoO
714-15 ' >061 l ···-~.._,_.... ...
Dt>lhtr Dail) Pilot b) auto in
I a~u na R~arh La~una
'i~ut>I ~ewport ~1ch atta
(appro"<. 2 houn pt>r da~)
wttkda) afttrnoon & early
mornin~ on •t. & ~&ln .
lam appro"< S..\00 per
month . .\ It for Brue-~ Em Ir~
I l a m, to \ p.m.
CIRCTLATlON lJEPT
642-432 1 EOE
\
OAI AGI SAU AO( NOW
Q.AHIPRO IY CJnt
'81 l llOW
ltl•dl••"".. ..... ''" .... .... .... ;:~: II ,, " lyMM, ttOMIC .. cyt •• -.:a. II' ..... t ... !JI nPllT/..., H It o on cl t UOi) .._. ii6iiiii ·-• •• IGft 17$-1611 OI 84CM242 • • • .... ,. WWW Uf .. .... ........ ... Lo mlla: . ~A • ~ ''~ oaat ••Ctl conct. A/C, 1 °"'* 9MH. Hu,, 1 0 n 1 ti I• Ste ro, f>ll. lo ml W• ., •• Duty Ofenee IMrp pefW ,... to 4 l>fOwrl ""'~dining 8POAT,,8HER 21' c.ne. "900iOl>O, M4-lt71 •4170 -v-vw. on• (2Cl71S4t) lt4n. f2UM)-1fHM· AA' County dl1tttbullon WOftl In fut Pectd ...,_ orclwlct1a6ra$30 .. WtJ Contote F•t.1ontrenee --~ MYFlADEllOIVOLKI-FLAOl9C>I HONDA. 1t
centtrandwtnowh•v. ponBMc:hrMl•• .. of· huQoetreclin«l130 Uv 1401\p ,lowl\r'a.Pric.ct'748-vW1L'Otcyt4dr.137"4ioo 413-4511 WA~ 20A4MC«'IW MIAO~°' !MM
optmlno• tor al'llpplng floe, Mull h•v. tJCCll!ent rm uph chair t75. All •Int to Stfl, Will\ or wtthoUt Air. alt amlfm ,,.,., °' lrVIM U0-7'00 ao.:.7800.
ct.rk• typing (fSWpni) a d)C. cQf\d. Antlqvt hteh blCk moiOt S.t-1 .. 4 evhllknd "91. &2M ml. !xqept. '12 Mazda 01.C. Air, • -~~=-=~~~ ~r lhlPP«• .,. ~ taphone lkllll. Word pre>-r-ciat chair. ewwcs lea• •-u c't-n '3800. 644..0121 amltm cw. IUC* buy. tllltl~!!.._ 1-m WlllM IMt albtefOf~.lnv~ cHalng ••P· helpful. llU 2553 f'Otdham Or. .!!,-. .7 2002,aunroof.wn/tm, '49" RAY FL.ADHOI TffrWiSftP«W: 'ffib&i&CO:.;;;;a
Ing and lhlpplng We ate S.l.,.led pc>eltion. C M. 549-26« fai ~on SuniQI. Hh nu. ldnt con4, 559001080 ~~~=~Ag~· r:'v~o ToP. 4-ep, ...,_ "64'6. brown wl wht tOJ)
k>olc':t!OfttlONlndMd· SACRIFICE: Beeut. °*' wht & blu, $475. 840-5363.evea759-155t 830-7300 . (2 ... AAO).MV .... VW. s..oocwoeo. 4N-t114 "·---"* .,. •J(pefienctd ....... PWI Wll bdrm, '4001 Oorgeoua 720-1878 '78 630f euto * low ~ w feo.ot4 t '!'~~.-•,.. .. """1-illar ___ '" ,.lniM_ ... ,...""""'.,.._._.1 and~:-'~::: 133.2B eofalloYu .. ulolldoele: 11'P..UTw/trlllr mllet, 9'••t 'conotUon. 493--4511 137.,..800 ·n secLiii ~ Full) lth I Retlotrope. 9-3. Hoge s;J; satlsun. BOtu. r.' r~ly •>q>andlng Typlttl No ,.. EO! con.. tbf Mt. wall unit , S2000. 845-4218..,.. Call A Joneia 131· 111e 1676 2&l ttfa vw Tiitno conv .. 4-loedtd .. xtr•. ""
S-1/Sun Furn, couch, chalrt, H.llboat, '8\ firm Ilk• o..ir•. we prefer hope. en.et. chin• c1b11J Fut lloop for .... c,..,, .81 3201, delux•. ; Lo ml. 2-owner. comp6ttt tp, 81.000 ml. 13995. ti,... 13"6. 780-9591
Fridge & hOYMholds ~:~:~a Y~1io~',,5oo, ·,~r. thoM thlt have appatel T 0 I Din . ..,, S200. SU.2241 Excalibur 28.: will ••~. antrt, 6 apd, met wv. rec. Mlntl 7""?203 (Ser'3Se> BUI Yatee VW •• 80 Cldffleo Cpe De VIiie
aurtboard, rtn.. train Mt. lndu11ry exp«tene.. but need• Smoh Q4Ua dtntno rm finance. 497-7205 or aaco\ grey. gold wt\11, 1872 300SEL 4.5: Mint 4=j11 837....00 Loaded, lo. lo mH ..
c ........ clotMI. etc. 3706 Prov-don'tletthatruteyouout table w/4 chra (velour) 881-4194. • 28K ml S12.000. Condl1ton. N9w Paint & SuC*'cteen(S.. 735SA)
Inc.town 551_3702 tt you would enjoy a clean. TYPISTS sm. MMMI P CAT 19 ft uu f 1 845·1459 °' 548-7471 St~. 631-5811. 1874 vw Ven. 41C)d. ~ l8099. MY FL.ADUOI DIN. Room Ml, amaU an·
tfques, book•. pictures.
lots misc •25 E. 20th St.
hlgh-«*'OV l hnoeph«e. ' ra aa , airfing van. Nlo9 ~ HONDA. 11 Auio Centt1 MUST SELL IMMl:O Prof and are lnter .. ted In a c..i 4 IP9t Sofa~~ &.240. Sofa 8-.ity. 2 Mtl Mila, 1 82 5215 A.IC:OVC>*. auto, 1'75 MelcedM 280 4..ctr. an (121LPH) 12889 Dr Ir.Me 830-7800
WOOd shelving Incl tradct gr•ng company ptNM Ill 1100 bed N9t t1'15. Love ... 1. MW New rigging.harken aatu~ 13&5/mo °' buy auto, A/C, 1 Pfevtoul MY FLA0£IOI YOLKS.: " ' ·
brecket1$40.Pla)tpenw1 Mlid your resume to· • rua1&135.xlnt.857-8175 bloekl, duel tr~. furling at *17•850• 720..ot41 or ownr, lo ml. setts. Biii WAGON 20AutoCenter ·ao~.,.._,mklnlghl new pad S20. Table IC>f' PLS-SHPl p 0 Box TllTlllP.SDY. )lb Tr.ilef & box. racing evea552·4~88 YatH VW. Allen. Dr lrvlM 930-7300 blue. S7tt0.1M-1159
hairdryer 1111• (tf1W $40 16024 trvlne CA Q2714 Sofl & loVMMI w/matcf\ champ S3450. 492-48l0. • .. 'I• 121 (O HMFW) ... 7 ........ . . '81 CdV dal· loldtd 88K Garage Sale: Water~•
etc. Sal/Sun April 28·29.
2770 Cibolo. Costa
MM&.
Fat>erwar• broiler SlO, · · · 4570Campus0f.,N3,N.B. chr&Ottoman,bmtonea. 4$3-4511 """_...,., 1879VWRabblt.5~.elr, · d 1 •
All EXCELLENT Much Equal Opportunity ··--·1w·--· l(Jnt cond. 1275 974·2584 t • ••• 10 To ChOOM From 1979 300 co 70 000 I IUpef nloe car (051V0F) ~low.r'~io..oeT more 5~294 Employe< •111111:-••111:11 s f whit 8' S375 s Ivel ltnitt 70ZO 1.. .... buyptlone 1 1 'ooO<t cm· $3995 RAV FLADEBOE tor. · trvtne. Wiii train ••· o a, • w •••• I-I Call fOf tmmed. quote dl~!,~$1; Soo. 876-4~; VOLl<SWAOON. 20 Auto '81 El Doredo. Lo mt ~rt ltac• SllPHI perieneed per1on chair 1175• 2 end tables -1n11 • Center or. lrvlne. White. tmmaeulatet ---------~M Pink y;:;; fineo Experi.need ChartM cap-Closed Sunday & hol· 1225 ea. 780-9295 WE clean VOUf boat bol· 878 450 SEL. Sunroof, Ii· 930.7300 S 11,900. 847-teeO
llGIWUIEO E~ry Sunday Orange
Coatt College. Fairview &
ArllftQIOn, Coata Mesa
8am-3pm Adml111on &
parking FREE Spaces s 10. 432-5880
d 4 taln needed 646-8955 ldaya. 250..()404 all 1pm Solid Cherrywood Dining tom and ,..,.ace zinkt at toya. IMtt'I, xlnt cond. dr~s. eusSt50om Smka e. Baily Yacht Club w•l'T9E••/W......_n Table. beaut. 40x72'" your lllp 848·0792 S 18.500, 6'2·7888 w1dth1 ea. . y blue .,,. -..... / d $300 drapes. 1 pr dbl, 2 pr""' St1tlon attendent FIT PIT Ex,._,..__,. .. Only w cuitom pa 1 fli~ A--L1 7022 '70 250 Cpe. 1 owner car. ..., .--· ..,.,..,... w/neg 9&0.3175 Iv msg .,...11 S25 King sz green CHEVRON STATION Karen644-9550 401~1 mooring wlbOet Excellent In/out. Mull
bedspread, hand woven 3000 Fairview. C.M. _ WAREHOUSE Stlped couch/matchg chr. near pavltllon S 15.000. sell. $6500/obo.
from India, deep trlnge. •miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimm earthlonei. S1~2· t540 Jamboree NB (213) 901·9213 $25 Hanging basket See our ad under ·2722 blwn 5:3.0'8:30pm (8181 795..a-025 140·1•• •
chair & st1nd. $30 2 Mex· STUDENTS •., or -~~Pi:u~L~RKPLS-SLIP W&ITEI ~ '7:0~~~~::Ut~c,p!;~·
1can striped blankets. '"' •1c11.1-e~ 12111_ 3.0· p I & •~ 10 Ylll SHPl, P.O. Box 16024. ... v .. ower w water e,_. $14,500. 631-0257 ---------11 SlO ea Yellow queen 82 I CA92714 Tableuw~adlO armaaw trtCJll needad. Can as-~ _m....-i comlot1er. $15 Wagon SlllHJllSllWU rvine. 14 Inch band saw. sum• any month this ~YL~ '71 280 SL. I bought the
R whi Ch•ndeher. amber we have opentngs tor l·UY lfFIOI Joint~. .,_.1 di·'" ••w. summer (805) 496-9507 . _ t>est car after IOoklng f0< ecord Players. Ataris. shades. $15 Lrg matador boys & gtrls between ... ....., --Sa1e1-Service·lAaa1no months. now mu1t Mii. games. smi appi, turn. picture. $10 631-1049 has perm. p/ttrne Potltlon Drill press, Bench band 1:.-I ~ 5 800 673 147 clothes etc Sat/Sun _ --12• 16 years old working for AMs. Mu1t be CRT, saw. Orum Sander a_C7C 11 " S,1tl.U1 ... ii 5 2•5 °' ·1
2606 Redlands or · EVERYTHING $1 2415 evenings & Saturdays. AART. Contact 545·9441 Bench Grinder. 630-6930 Campangnolo comp. E1rt-1• hllnry 72 280SEL 4.5
B k I E 1bl II) Earn money, trips & I d dbl b tied cl r• S T~u~s;:Ye only ~~3 u bonuses Call Jt~I Waatt4 S MisctllHH81 1 ~~~P New ~ond r;8~ Excellent Selection ot New X~~~.C8~~d6908 unroor
YARD SALE
Sunclay onty from 8 unlll 4
21 1 Knox Place
Variety of Items
11 .... ,,c ... E M:_.~oulOnllr,ee Male Xttendent fO yra exp. * coPi4'r 30269. xfm 642-4300 ad •625 and Carefully prepared 'll -· ... UL
--·-· wfhandlcapped & eldefly. cond. malnt. by 3M. sup. Mlzut1nt Super Seraph 10 Uled BMW's atwaya In -.& color TV. kit appl., furn Mon -Fr1 10am-3pm Resume. xlnt rel. SIO./hr. p1i.s. s450 2~4444 spd. mint cond. 23•24... Stoetl 42,000 MILES. ti11extr111
lOols bikes, camper shl. --------Steve 997.3534 •""railed S900+. 5550. 131·1111 BeltOffefoverS20K ski equpmnt gardening 4 Homemade Quilts. Ver) ,.,. (714)49e-2338 supplies Sat/Sun 10.5 OPITllLllC Painter need• work. beautiful. From $40. Eves 642·9611. 208 W 111. Santa Ana
lot. leac~ 1212 Pembroke Ln (off TEOlllCIH r int/ext. 840-1450 Ref1. Cati Jenny 642-2114 Motot>ecane. 25" Mirage. Closed Sunday
Jlum·Famhy Sale. Sunday Dover & Mariners Dr) Needed for Newport available on requeat. Attn Buliders: solid tmac $150, 857-1448
'81 2400. S 14,500 Wht
w/black. Pwr anrt, pv1
pty. Or. Pugh 972·9143 9-4. Furn., clothes. toys. UDO ISLE moving sale. Beach Opl'llhamotoglst REFINED Practical Nurae, mahog. doors. Fr 10 Ute CaaptH 1014 LARGE SELECTION OF
linens. ele 9641 Catth-Sun only 9.4 Furn. mtsc 631-4780 Mon-Fri 8-5 Hperlenced, w/etderty. & 1 Ute. raised panel $40-----------• NEW & USED BMW'S! neas (tndlanapoila a1 housel'IOld 221 Via Fire· -----toe.I refs. 830-2068 $90. 760-1 817 Camper for Toyota long-Liil IUOI ... '81 300SO Turbo 011.
ahowrm cond., anrt. alloy
whla, tan Int, 62K mt, dya
730·3760, evea/wknda
844-1533
Br<><*hur1t) nze Lido Isle 675-8924 TELEPllOIE SALES bed. w/sl889 unit & 1/4 VOLUME SALES
iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiii .. _______ -.i lor MAOD Benefit Show JtM Waat .. / Baby slrollef lk new $30, cab C>Vef, S250 642-7901 SERVICE& LEASING c M location ~ & up hats tic Sl 07 Umbrella baby stroJler --------3670 N. Cherry Ave.
-lt......,l1-.W .... 1a....,tH--.. _ _.S ... l ... OO.;. Btlt Waatt4 5100 Part/time. day, evening. W sh old !t11d $18. car eeat $25. wnt White rnetat camper shell LONG BEACH --No experience nee oman ... 1 1 yr "'' dresaer/chell bed S175. for short bed Mohave by '81 380 SLC. Ohemp/Pal. Stn. St1. ltt11~11t 7s..1g41 10 live aa daughter to Relrlg $35. 759-0591 B r 11 h am 11 S 1 5 0 (No. Che<ry exlt-405) Sunroof, altoya, excel S.0'1/011rt TJtilt Art museum needa brlghl.
energetic aell·•tarler
lmmed. Mull type 50
wpm, accurate. good or-
ganizational skltts Ben-
efits. Donna 759-1122
Full or part lime: evenings. older man or woman: =---,.,.....,.---...,-.---.,--968-7823. ' ll14) 111-1110 cond. S36,500. 642-7888
weekends & graveyards. Ttlt~lltHltllolttr tight housekeeping, Beautlful custom jewelry ~.---.-/----'frad•tnaWelcome ·94 u~-... ~"'~-3000
h I I d showcase Perl. cond. tttr-c H OPEN SEVEN DAYS ..,...,.........., .....," Neatappearance&hand· PART IME. Outgoing. s oppng. aun ry. gar· s1500/obo. 720•1128 ., Leue direct-eliminate the
wrlllng Apply tn person aggressive person to gel danlng COf'ona del Mar lcHttn 10111---------middleman & save
2590 Newport Blvd C M SYbscrlt>ers for our 2 ren-to Capistrano Beach Beverage air refrlQeralion 1980 Suzuki. New dl8ln. Datsu 117 SIM• _ ...
1a1 s9f'V1ces Hours Tues-areas No salary beer tap. incl C02 tank. r b 11 t s 1200 r Fn. 3-7 Sal. 9-1 ~hour 675-2679 noes. 3 hllups. drain. ire. a .,-y. une · '71 OATUSN 2Joz • 5354.20 pr mo +tax.
SlllPPlll /llECEIYIH Service station attendant
full & pan. hrly • comm
Ins. & vac 673-3320 Clerical experience help·
lul Some lifttng (50·80
St", lti. &Htl4Ht lbs) Exc;.,lienl company
Exp·c Over 21 $5 hour benefits Costa Mesa
Apply 81. 4678 Campus · Cail Miiite alter 9am
Or (at MacArthur), N.B Hl·ilOO __ <_? -----
CAR EER
OPPORTU ~ITI ES
'1111 JJ\11 \ 1'1111 1. Clr.t11~t' (11u111\,
• uu .. tul 1 ••111111111111\ Ut'"'ll .. fti"'t. h.-.. At \'Utrh uf
lull w11tl 111HI 111111· i'"'''"'"' "'••lldhl1• \tl\ oil•
uf thr fullu"'u'-. '"" .. 11 "l'l'urtUIHI\ \H "'"'" "'''"
.. u uul,l;uul•ni .. 1,..ff u11,.r'"""'"'J in .,., lu• '1u~
1111h tlu tw .. 1 """''''"" .111 , '' ""'~ uutu""'' \
661-1912 eves 78.000 m·ii-buedon66mo.cioMd • oommlsslon.2~1811 ~I SSIO Keeps '•&'it barrel kegs ... On
"
• t S t $500 720 1879 ·77 YAMAHA LB80 runs $3500 650-4593 end i.aae. approval
IJH 1 tr JS ••• 41ampion Rott.....,fer. fem • g e I Fl st $200 takes ot credit. Cap raductton ...., Camper shell. Chev___ ,;ct11 helm'i 55~729 · ·7 4 260ZA. k$3500
1
.
5
Good S 1500. Residual S 15,638 TUllEE pup, 6 mo, sroatl. loving. cond. a or colt w/QPtlon 10 buy. Total
'SSE •• LE•S $2507,,~783500• ,.8eovoes dys. Eccentric stull·weaving ·77 YAMAHA RD 400. 53s-918•. all 4:30 down ,2972.45 n ...,.. yams. huge carved desk. Total rblt eng Great cond. I ILlll U •No expertence nee. Mate Doberman, 6 wks, guitar. hl·baci< Mexican $750 OBO 979-8208 '76 Dal B210. New pelnt & Ml
•Immediate openings bik, s75, c•ll 983-0975 chrs. Futon, atrange Jew" brakes, stereo rM QfMI l•NTI •All 1htf1s elry etc. 675-1429 '80 Vespa 200E~ exlru. S 1900. call 499-3660 1301 Quall Street
Pit Bull pupplel. UKC 2300 mi Xln1. cond ---NEWPORT BEACH
HOMEMAKERS URGED regts S75 960-0088 MEAL Tl I OllFIRT S t095fobo 840· 7376 '77 280Z. 5 IPd. new paint, a•a.i•-TO APPL y tires/brakes Has aunroot • ._ Never a Fee Pit Bull pyps. P.A Reg A custom Ill BRA designed '8 1 HONDA 250 S5600 Call 546-7326
VOLT
Tft~AAl' ~A'\fllCIJ'•
3848 Campus Drive
Across trom 0 C Ajrporl
Newpon Beach
s 100·$200_ 548·0272 for women ot all 1lzes and THREE WHEELER II I.I Lu•ry w ..
So CALIF DOG TRAINING ages. Recommended by 650--4593 80 B210 2-dr, 5-apd, nu Car phone, sunroof. xtnt
In home obedience train· ~~ aT~,fl~:,;J'ase or '81 KAWASAKI L TO 440_ ~;~~53~~~;4~~1/blu mt, cond S595 mo. 533·4242
•no Reas. rates. 15"1. ott consultant call Jo Ann lmmac S 1000 645-2663 82 Datsun 200SX. A/C, TOP $SS PAID
lhta month' 963-3388 759-0619 ~3 Honda Pas.sPort. 1800 am/Im stereo. gd cond FO< Pampered lh tisat1 6010 JWayne tennis fa;:nrnern-mites Perteet cond $5600/obo 650·9188 IERCEIES lllZ
1979 VW SoltOoco. auto-
matic. at«eo. SAMS Uc.
894XKA. Biii Vat• VW
Allen.
493-•511 837-4800
t980 VW Van99on. auto.
A/C, new engine 18995
(aer 4630). Bill Vat .. VW.
Alleo
837-4800 493 ... 511
1982 VW convert., auto,
A/C 9500 ml. $9995. Uc.
1FUZ288. 8111 Vat• VW.
Allen.
493-4511
'982 VW Rlbblt 4-dr.
automatic, AJC $5995.
Lie. 1EOR317. 8111 Yates
'83 amarron. pert cond.
10,000 ml, all the extr ... s 10.500. 8'4-2119
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTION
of tat• model, low mileage
Cadfllac1 tn Southern
Callf0<nt11 S.. ua tOdayt
&•0-1180
2800 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
VW. Allen. t.,.C,.,..._-....-,---=r::l..,.
483-4511 837-4800 .... .,m.,.•.-•-..--..mj..-. ·se vw BUG '77 CamJrO. mi•· V-8.
Good Shape 1111 around 1•;iso~uat aelt. 64:~=
$3000. 845-4218 •VM
'87 Sqrblt whit• good '78 Chev. Camaro, Auto. A_.. or1x' _,. '1o ml ale, am tm atereo. Super
""'"'" ..,...., • , ' clean. 48K mli.. (Ser. $1900. 54 ..:sms. 7'08A) $4999. RAY
'70 VW Con~ r• FLAOEBOE HONDA, 18
ator•d lnalde & outt Auto CAnter Dr.. lrvlne,
$3995. obo. 497·1458 830-7800.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiil ·19 Mont• Callo V8. PS.
PB. Air, am/fm, Low ml.
Sharp I $3950. 497·1456
'81 CO.v. Citation. Auto. --------•I air, 'US*' a.an c.-... '72 VW. Clean. Oepen-to beffeve. (1CHH431)
dable. New ttr .. & In· $5499. RAV FLADEBOE
'll"' ........
Look• good, runa good $1500/obo.14~172
· tertof. $950. 87s.-8908 VOLKSWAGON. 20 Auto Center Or. Irvine. '74 VW Conver!. Xtnt 830-7300
oond. New tQP. Pdr blue. ---,...---,,..----Lo ml. $4500. 497-5742 '82 Camaro. Super aharp.
'77 VW Bua. Great Cond.
New tlr•.am/fm. Mull S..I $4000.ob 846-3012
Tiii, p/w, crulM, LlcMned
to Sell. ( 1EB223L) $8799.
RAY FLADEBOE VOU<S·
WAGEN 20 Auto Center
'79 vw camper ven, 59K _o_r_. _1rv_1_ne_._830-__ 7_300 __ _
ml. loaded. good cond.
S7800/obo. 941·3849 SEEll FlllTI
We have• good Mlec:1lon '79 VW Vanagon. 4 spd, of NEW & UMd Chev·
radio, extra clean rolet1t S.. u1 tOdayl (207XWP) $8499. RAY
FLADEBOE VOLKS-
WAGON 20 Auto Center
Dr Irvine. 830· 7300
'81 Rabbit Conv. wht/bltt
lntr. lo ml, t owner. gd
cond.$7500.673-8888
CONNELL :
CHEVROLET .,,.11 ,r1 ... I< •
• • "' I \ \1 ~ , .
~41>-I 200
,,,, ~ 11 1 hl'\1,
• I lut,1111 '""It, I 1 ... ,1111·11 ,'(. 1(,.1 .. il ft .,,,.
.i.~.,1 •• , h•r11I UI\ OfH lllH~' for tdOth1iht•·-"""'''\,
t'\f>t'f U'Ut •• lllltl U pro\ .. 11 I U•• ~ r1·1Uf11 ~11hu"
pJu, t Oftlllllllt'-Ulll
0 I t l A ti S •~ bershlp, $600 645-6489 I $450 673· 1003 btwn 8 & 5pm ask for Pat 217 Avenidade1 Mar ren a n ques e<._ -------Top MercedesPric.t Pald I S C ol estate antique sales Maple Otn. S200 3-Pc Sec I MOTORCYCLE RENTAL '82 Detsun Sentra. Air. '8 R bbl C 24 K I an lemente 1>eginn1ng this weekend.
1
$60 Luvseat 575 Oryr HONDA XR 500 pi s. nice car. (1FFL778) 0111 Ptter/lft 1 8 t onv. m Fer• I
!
Travel agency manager. tmarl &Kutanj 494-1003 70.S49-3637241·8181 IS50 a day Other sizes $5499. RAY FLAOEBOE OIAL213/714MER~OES Steto. Air', Mlntl S8600. --=:-:-:==-~~--
UI "'"'""'"'UH IC t-
• \1tuuu1, Ht t •l\~tftl, 1 I· r~ -I"''' f,.,,.,
f'"'-lf1uu \u t''l'"ru Ut • fl•, t·u._tt ~ "111 ''" I.......... I "" ...... ,, .. .,,I.
l.IH IOHI \I
• ( 11•1 J.. I \ f"'' l';Hf 11101· l"'""IHou lupu111u~
• ••p\ 1iriu1 ll11i ru.ul 111;f ~r111·1111 • f1·r lu1~
ft''-JIUU"'1 lultltt• .. ..!U h 11ur .. huu1I\
\\ • ,ff, r 1 ·"' ,-, 1:.ru,.111 tl1·\1 lttf'llH ut ••thl
.1 1 OUtfWllll\'* l11·11rf1I• 11.11 l..HJ•' If 1111• ,,.,,, 11
.. ,,.,.,,. , uut• 1n .e1ul "'l'l'h frun1 IU .! rt.uh •tr
1iit•rul ''''""'' to PHI 't•·ptu u .. un ..
Daily Pilai ..
EQ1.1a1 Oopor11.1n1ty Employer
Newspaper
1mmed1ate open1ng Min • ~-----avallable 641·9826 VOLKSWAGON.20 Auto HOUSEOFIMPORTS,tnc Orig.owner.6"4-<>209 •ESTATESALE•
2yrs exper Datasli New-Atthl•CH IOll 1Pool Ible en1emble lncL --Center Or Irvine p ~ 1S7 '81 Rabbit Conv, 30.000 '82 T-BtAD.10,300ml.all
port Beach agency I ._ lr 'f II j 4X8 ..,, .. slate lbl. reg. Jitter Bt •tl 1020 830-7300 trlC f ml, white. extras, per1 options Including leather
I 548-77 42 lrwtr ·II ' 1101 bails. 7 cues. rack, cover . e . ------·58 Speedater OrlaineI cond. S7750 631..0858 S9000. s.48..0739 __ Reing Ser.ilce Recond. & stained glass lite $500 76-77 GMC Royale. 26 '83 SENTRA 4 dr, 5 spd, M tn1' New En 1Tne TRAVEL ASEIT Sales Guar s.49-3077 720-l879 Ree.r bath dual ltr. mint am/Im MUST SELL.pp 514 000 963 7398 g '81 VW Scirocco Sunroof, '65 MUSTANG CONVERT
2 yrs expr, computer not 16 cu It upright Freezer, P & R. mix & matcn iadtes' ~20-0830 540-9550 $6500 obo 831-6820 . • 5apd, mag wtll1. Super Xlnl cond, OOllector'a ltem-
1
nee 650-1500 tor appt I gOOd eoncl $65 559·6543 wear Slacks. blouses & Tniler1, a.... 125 ·1,2al'!.14. 1.bl8kL/.bMlkulusT'lysAdC• Clean. ( 1BGG t57) $6999. 731·8557 evenings -.. RAY FLAOEBOE VOLKS· •67 Galaxte 500XL Bi.
Typrs-T___ Electric Dryer Good con: shorts. $5-S 16 837'!\ W Trntl IOZ4 1980 Honda Prelude. 5-ap. $4800 or 7 848-4528 WAGON. 20 Auto Cente< 7cw. restored, nu 'paint:
I ·~ dlllon $100. 644 -5268 ~~th sr '"cArcadec~lata Tour America this AIC sunroof. S4995 ·77 91tS. 47,000 mllea, Or. irvln•. 830-7300 tires, rHdy to dance
[ 60 WPM · opp ng enter, . summer Musi sacrifice' (368ZFB) Biii Yates VW sntrf. mint cond. S t5,000 '82 Convertible. S 10.000. $2600/obo 8-46-4305
•Dict1,h111 LEJ Ill.APPL~: 33 SCM C09ler, $75, Sec-Beauttlul German Trailer Atten obo 6-42-2790 Low mileage, cu11om .• 67 Muatang good cond •Staltlatloal · 1 tarialdesk $75.2Chaise Cali857-1429 837-4600 493.4511 ,83 911 Cabrlolat Yellowtmmac:PvtptyOr 1,.70 302 1 ·•
Relrtnarator $150 Wsh I (new) S125 ea Ratan --------Pugh ~72 "1 .. ;, Iv m...., '" eng., au o. •Plrobst er4trl ..-r table t>es.e $40. Bomt>e Aat11 Waat.. 9020 1980 Honda Prelude. 5 WhltelTan 14.000 ml ., • ., "" ...., s1aoo obo. 780·9'19
NEVER A FEE
VOLT
Tl MP()RAA'I b i" PVll £ f-.
3848 Campus Drive
Across from 0 C. Airport
Newport Beach
2 17 Avemda del Mar
San Clemente
Dryer $135 ea Olah-spd . moonrool, ·cn1.. s 50 wuher s1oo Trlshcom· cheat S135. mlrrO< SJ9, s•••lfll&YI like Newl 31.2 '82 Rabbit Con'*tlble,
$7 6-;ge '"' glass sq 550 OWt -a/c, 10 to mites. mag1 759-9534 red, new urea & Wheell, pactor 5. 64 5848 lamp SSS, 631:2191· tor vetllete. 551 -8285 (DTHNTAX). $6999. RAY am/Im CHHtte, 34K
Sears Coldapot Retg. auto WE llY FLAOEBOE HONDA. 18 '84 930 TURBO. mites. $9000. 833-3282 lce-mkrltce wtr, F/F. mini Sears, llke new. lawn Auto Center Or .• Irvine, White on white. 70 mt .
cond. $150. 673-3969 mower & edger, both for CLUI OARS 830·7800. Serious tnqulrlet only. '82 Vanagon camper, like $225. 549-9823 eves 642-6016. 845~20 new. auto, A/C, AM/FM Used Retrlg's s 100·$400 1111 TllCIS 1981 Honda Aecord1. 4 d1r . It _,1 l c a 1 1 , s 1 2 • 9 o 0 . All sizes. Also buy refrlg SPA· Portable. self-eon-auto. al e. cass .. p 1, P b, •1111 l-987-0338
Anderson Appl 841 West talned. gazebo. decking, "super clean" "lo lo 1976 Renault Ce Car ROna
19th St. C.M. 646-5538 covers. S1750 84~102 S71~:: .. RAv~~~~~bk ex. 4spd, TV 'amp.
Coa attn 6011 ••lical last. 4 HONDA. 18 Auto Center ~UAMosJ':bl2~L~~
omm ore M I 2 . ew Acoustt tstr ouftarfea.. Dr .. Irvine. 830-7600. WAGON. 20 Auto Center
Slwr $75, 857-1448 Gd end. $65 857-1448 1982 Honda Civic GL. 2 Or. trvlne. 830·7300
'77 Granada Ghia. alt pwr, new paint, good cond.
Bargain. Mu11 Mii. going
over ""· S 1850. off« 875-8-417
·79 Ford Granada, 4 dr ..
auto p/1, p/b, p /w, 2 tone
new paint, to mllH
(74341A). $3999. RAY
l=LADEBOE HONDA. 18
Auto Center Or • Irvine.
83()...7600.
FrH to YH 6 2 Trumpet (Benge) $800 °' WI llY dr .. 5 spd . am Im caH . '79 Gordlnl ale(i trlc t>est offer 551-4009 "!ricked" (\.EAM919). aunroof hardl<>P ractng
Ofll.ct Faraitart/ cuos~pEctNAORSR&clRLLu~oK~ sa.99 RAY FLADEBOE ... 11 9/c p11 nk• new KIDS-E ARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
'83 Ford Ringer Pick Up. 4
apd .. "like New" "Auna
strong" (2DVYV8). sem. RA y FLAOEBOE
HONDA. 18 Auto Center
Or .. lrvlne. 83().7600.
I
AGES 11-14
EARN UP TO $75.00 PER WEEK
w, IV" ~~., I~ ~Pfn1na\ lo• youni t.ti''
bfd•tr\ I~ s,cu!P rtadtrs tor Ille Oranee Coast
Oailf Pilot Our c """\ \larl at ] 30 pm •nd
,work un\118 JO om weekdays On Saturday "'
worl a f,w mmt hours '\'ou will eain many 1110s
and prer,s along with Pa1n1ne you1 own money
· there rs no dtl"''""& or collfchon rnvolnd
11 you a,, 1nt,,,sled pluSf r •ii M• (arr
ARCA
C()O( (714) 548-7058
ldn ~tvr. m, hOUH·
broken, welt behavad
962-8254 aft 12 & eve•
Gordon Setter (or Spaniel
mix) Beaut. blk M 8 mo
Ptayfulliuvln 546-24 72
..., HONDA, 18 Auto Center $3J00/080. e5o-4138 -~--~ ls•ieHt 6226 Fiii &PPIWUL Or . trvjne. 8J0..7600. -------
MOVING . OFFICE FURN. Cormler-Oelllio 1983 Honda Clv1c •• 4 dr .. ltll• l!zc• IHI
cheap lor quick 1ale. ClmtLO auto, ate. am fm caas. 'lZ IEllTllY 121,llO
642·9398 182 11 BEACH BLVD. Super clean. Must ... l lfHOe 873-3025 HUNTINGTON BEACH ( 1GFC8) $7999. RAY _ow_m ___ . ___ _
Ul 1011 141 3131 FLADEBOE HONDA, 18 '81 SILVER SHADOW ti • S • Aulo Cen•r Dr .. lrvtne. Unique Rolla. Mu1t .... Dy W E WAIT YOll 930.1600 952.1200: ev 54S.9014
CLW HH O&Jll 75 Ctvtc am/Im. Air, aHra 7
See Ronald Dace Greal Cond11lonl S 1000 1---------obo 494-4211 '81 Toyota Supra ~ apa
,
Super cteen (1ESG153)
$8699. RAY FLADEBOE
VOLKSWAGON. 20 Aulo
Center. lrvlne. 830-7300
lllEWDU'S
SOUTH cou1n
YILllW&IEI
"WEWIUllT
IE H•lllLI"
Volum. Salea. s.Mce
AndL...ing
, 87 11 a.acn Blvd.
Huntlnl ton Beach (l 14) 42·1000
WE ClllE ........
BILL YATES
VW-PORSCHE
...... • l 1 j, '
817 ·4100 4'3-<4S I I
HIT
'71 E:ltal• Wgn, good cOf'ld . mech /llet MW, dr• 130·3780 ...,,..,,_..noa 1u-tW
'84 Tempo Very lo. mt.
T.O.Pmta, AC, AM/FM
s1«eo. caaa. GC>fgeou1.
moving. 850-2698 or
647-4111 work
7
837-4800
'77 Cut1111 Brougham
Clean. 1 OWMt, lo ml.
moonroof. a/c. 13700.
1+4·Ht7 an 5pm
'78 2dr Cu11a11 Sup.
Brghm. FuUy eqp<1. Red
Yelour $3700. 581-4087
'82 Cutte11 Sprm. gd
cond .. Int >tint, f8.900 mt.
18500. 841~745 att 5.
'
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