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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-25 - Orange Coast PilotHIGH 80 LOW85 - S A lUROAV. AUGIJS T ,5, 19U4 ... ..... • 111111n 11111111111 ---- ORANGECOUNTY C.A Ll ~Of~NIA 1c) ([~HS Crys~al C~ve stables mu~t close However, state commission will allow horse-for-hire s table elsewhere in park Recreation Department ··actively seek" an operator fora 3().. to 50-horsc .rental concession to be located on the inland side of Pacific Coast Highway at the newly constructed Moro c.a- nyon equestrian staging area. The commi sioners obJCCted to to the existing equestrian centCT because it boards a laric number orprivately owned horses that arc not available to the public. ridin& i~ a &tgilimatc rccrcataonal use (of the park) .. The lang~ of the resolution adopted by the ptnel also urJn both the Orange County Board of Super- visors and The Irv me Co. to continue to took for an ~ble nearby itc for a private hone suble. By JEW ADLER Oftlle~"-4-- The state Park and Recreation Commission voted Fnday to uphold its decision to close the horse stable o n the coastal bluffs at Crystal Cove Jim Velasques of the Gabrlellno lndlan tribe sanctified the Bolsa Chica wetlands - claimed by the tribe - Frlday./A2 Caltfomla Californians are prepar- ing for the next great earthquake -even though they don't know when lt'scomlng./813 Customs officers on both sides of the border are working together to curb contraband./ A3 Natlcin A 7 ,000-square-foot pyramid Is home to an Illinois famlly./814 A poll of New Jersey teens finds many exhibi- ting signs of becoming compulsive bettors./ AS World Turkey Is replacing Beirut, tebanorras1l favorite vacation spot for Arab tourlsts.1814 A hijacked Indian jetliner Is refused permission to ·1and In the United Arab Emirates./ A3 Sports The Marina High football team will have speed to burn this season, led by Shawn Massey and Chip Rlsh./81 Mission Viejo High gradu- ate Mark O'Meara has enfoyed a profitable year on the PGA tour ./82 Howard Schnelienberger was left without a coaching Job when plans fell through for the USFL team's move from Wash- lngton to Florlda./84 Entertainment The nation's movie theaters are enjoying one of their most successful summers In hlstory./89 Artie Shaw, a biggie from the big band era, Is back again after a 35-year "re- tirement.'' /Bl Religion The first "Heritage Ball" of Old Mission San Luis Rey will be staged next month, bringing back memories of California's early days./81. Youth Gymnast!", like basket- ball, promises a way out of the ghetto for black youngsters./87. State Park. but asreed a comparable horse-for-hire stable is desirable elsewhere in the park. Following a five-hour public hcar- ina., the commission voted 7--0 to recommend the state Parks and But the comm1woners, with John Nejedly of Walnut Creek absent, specifically directed that the operator be p~luded from boarding P.!ivately owned horses at the new facility. A pile of empty•ddl•labeapedoatalde tbe meetmaroom lD a clramatfc appeal to tbe •tate Park and Recreation Com- ··rn my opinion. a need (for equestrian faalitics) bas bc'Cn demon- strated.•• said commission Vice Chairman Charles Hostler of San Diego. wbo recommended plans for rental horses be stepped up ... Hone- The existing stable, a landmark on the scenic coastal bluffi between Corona del Mar and lquna Beach ...., ........ _, ........ ....,, m.l.ulon not to clo.e tbe Cryatal Cove Bqafl9t:rlan Center. The plea wu unaucceufuf. Feisty youth 'gone fishing' on Caribbean dream cruise Super Sunday Brunch Guide See Page BIO Make-A-Wish Founda tion funds trip for teen who won't give in t o illness By TONY SAAVEDRA Ofh~ .......... Seventeen-year-old Todd Hanson rarely thinks about death. He's too busy living. Hanson wants to get his dnvers license in the next few weeks, and.he's scheduled to graduate from Edison High School next year. After that, he hopes to become a pro golfer. Yes. death is the last thing on his mind. But his wet cough and thin frame are constant reminders that Hanson 1s suffenng from cystic fibrosis -a tenmnal lung disease - and that he 1s dying. The sandy-haired youth from New- port ~ch is packing h1~ bags to embark this weekend on a dream cruise to the Caribbean sponsored by the M~e-A-W1sh Foundation of 'Fhe unkindest cut: ·Quieting a candidate ., DAVID 8ISHOP ........ Cc::; $I f Fl An Orange COeat cabfe t...,. Vision tomptiny 9CC<>mpUehed a feat that many others haven't - It silenced a campalgnfng pot~ tlcian. Preeldent Ronald Reagan was cut off about two-tNrda of the way Into hlS ap11ch to the RepUbllcan Party•a Nattonat Conventk>n on Thuraday night Wt'8n cible t.e.vlllon MMce WU Interrupted for 25,000 customers of Storer cable TV, Inc. In aouthern Orenge County. But tt watn't a conaplr11cy, nor w• tt the cable comPMY'• fault, though It waa an unhappy cotn- cldence. During last month's coverage of the Los Angillee Olympie Gamet, thousands of customers were irate when Stor• lost MMc9 after a fuse In Its s9lal tranemlsek>n Untt blew during the ~Ing night of the games. Storer lat• promlted Its cus- tomer• a rebate f<>t' the day. Thia time a San Diego Gas and Electric Company transformer blew up eomewMJe on Crown Valley Parkway about 7:.-S p.m. and caUMd a~ btaci<out for ,,._,1y aH of Laguna Niguel, Mid Martha Corr ..... arM man~ tor Storer Cable TV, Inc. in Laguna Niguel. StOfer MnW t8kM91on cuatomera 11n Laguna ( ...... 8MCABL&/A2) Orange County. The organization specializes m granung the wishes of terminally 111 children. Many limes it's their last wish L1teraturc from the foundation quotes the lyncal phrase. "for K.Jds W1thout Tomorrow . Make a Wish Come True Today" To Hanson It ma) as well say "Enter Freeway." He just can't relate to the term "terminally 111" or to the concept that he has no f uturc But he'll take the dream cru11oe "I've always wanted to go to the (Pleue MC YOUTH/ A2) Autborltlee bope tbl8 picture will lead to drlnr'a ldendty. for nearly 40 years, must be vacated by October. About 90 psfratdr· owned bones arc stabled there. Assemblywoman Maraan Bcraeson. R-Newport Beach, aSked that the peaal commission mceu,na be convened to roconsidcr 1o ... stand101plails fonhe stablc'sclosurc. A Bcraesoo aide. Julie Frocbe!:'J, explained to the panel that Bcrscson (Pleue eee 8TABl.U/,A2) Midair plane crash kills 17 Scattered wreckage sparks 20-acre fire in San Luis Obispo SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -A commuter plane that bad just ta.ken off and a private plane on a train~ fli&ht collided Fridartam;in' 17 people and scaucrina · wreck- • and body pa.n.s over 2 acrcti, authorities said. The collision occumd at If :34 a.m. midway between Los An&elcs and San Francisco in "ncellCnt" weather. according to an 1J1 traffic controller. Some 9J,., the bodies were dcc:ap"i-ta«dan ambulance attendant said. '"There was wrecka&e on top Of hillsides and wrecU&e strewn over a real wtdc area. .. said the atteoda ..,bo spoke only on CODditio\'l be not be idenuficd. for fear oflosin& his job. .. Both planes were in JriC'CCS. There were bodies outside. the fuselaccs of both aircraft. and there were bodicl m11dc the airliner as well. .. The bodies inside were bumina,. b.e wd. "AJI the bodies were tn such bad shape there was no chance at all Of n:sUSCJ tat1na anybody, .. he said. The crash Stte was a grazma land of rolhna hills called Sozc Ranch. Th~ burning debris sparked a 20-acrc brush fire. which was quicky con- trolled. The rcmams were takeo to funeral homo.. said San Luis Obispo County Shenff SLL John Hastie. "We've asked for the assistance of the FBI disaster response team·· to help idcnufy the VlC'tims, be said. "We want to make sure the identifi.. cauon is pos1uvc." None of lhc remains bad yet been identified. he said. A team of 25 to 30 rescue workers fonned a hnc and walked across the pasture Fnday afternoon to find body and airplane parts. B1U Machado ... .60. who lives in a mobile honfe onc-balf mile from t.bC crash s1 tc. wd be was· boUn& down (Pleue eee llIDADl/ A2) Drawing of driver released The m\.estigat1on surrounding the unidentified dnver who was killed .\ug. 3 after lead1ng poh~ on a 17- milc chase that ended Mth a spectacu- lar era h m Newpon Beach has raised more qucsuons than ans""-ers Pohcc offic1als still do not know t b( 1dtntll\. of the man who \.C'Crcd t~ car he· was dn\.'lng mto oncomm1 traffic on the bus) MacAnhur Boulc\<ard, killing himself m t.antl) and 1nJunna s1x other persons. And they do not know whether the momma colhs1on was a su1c1de or an accident. talc and federal 1dcnt1ficat1on spcctahsts have been unable to match the fingerpnnts of the man, descnbcd (Pleue eee DRAwmG/ A.2) INDEX Bridge California New1 Clliiifled Comlca Crouword Death Notloea Horoacope 8 12 A3 C3-5 Anlmals 'health lmprovlng as donations pour in Ann Landet• National Nftl Put>Uc Notlcee AMt Eatate Ref IQ Ion Sporta T-.Vlllon ThMtet• Weather WorldN~ Youth 8 12 C5 C2 C3 BO A3 C2 01-28 98-7 81-5 810 8 8.·11 A2 A3 87 .. Costs at pet hospital rl~f ng:s overtaxed staff stru es to cope with unexp ted Influx BJ PHIL °' .............. MoM of the more than I 00 ca izcd in Irvine thi1 week from an Indiana woman's motorhome a.re rqainina their health, aC'COrdina to a vctcnnanan at the animal ho pital -wile the re bcina trca~d--­ .. Mo t of them art proare int ma po itivc direction,·• said Or. Law- rence W. ZamlJi of the Woodbnd Irvine. "However. some AR quite ill and quite "'Cal.'. Zamlli said h1 naff lw ~ ovena ed by the: unexpected influ\ of animal but he al noted th t \ympathet1c animal lo~en throuah· out Ora c County have made dona· tions to help thr ho pttal C'al'T fort~ C'lt •••••••••llr' · Ho f'il•I for Animal and Birds 1n Nanc) Jane Elhs. 37. "'., 1n l~1ne th1 wtek as pan of a JOUrnt) "'<'~t to relocate hcntlf and hct pct~ Otv ., .. .. animal coou·of officers c ammcd the woman's motorhomc ancr rcah in complaints about odor from pa rsby •n a shopp1na center park- "'' lot where he had stopped Animal control officers found 11 cat 16 d • vcn rabbit t Quine p' and a 1r of parakttu 1n the rccruuonal vch1tlc. which .... al jamm d with animal came~. cks of food and water. The v.oman WI\ Ctted for amrroper an1m I can" and wa ordcrtd to aMWttt~ChlflC'S d n lh mtn .. ct'l at H11bor MuniC'tpal Coun 1n Nrwport Beach. ht do \ arc N-1na htld at thr • l~me nimal Cart Center. a cat} facilit). tot of the rcmamm& an1mal arc bein,atttnded at the Woodbnd e pct ho p1tal. Vctennanan said mo t of the c•m "ere be1na trtated for ~paratof') ailment\ · Dr. Zamlli said thrtt cat died, but treatment of the other f. hnn 1 conhnumg. He id '°me of h1'l tafT membtrs ha\C donated umc to attend to the cat~ but he id co l rt tall n mg. Zamlli id Frida) afternoon he hu ~n m contact with <'ll')' official hoping to ltam hov. "°°" the antm I ca~ will bC' rt lved He said the ho pllal ma\. not be able to nxovcr l the npcnscs 1nvoh·cd i~ trcauna tli cats Zamlh added. ''Ob\ IOUSI • wt can't kttp them indefinitely.'' Cit' offic1als have ~d they till con 1dcr the anamals Elhs' pro~ and that they may be returned w co he ~ows he has adcquatt f1e1ht1 to cart for them Bttaust of insurantt pro\.·1 ioni the Woodbnd hos-pital cannot u 'oluntccn to help cart for the call tn the intcnm. Zanilh satd. But t Htcnnanan sa•dlJUbhcttvabout tht~ (Pl eee A1'DIAL8/ A.2) .. t ,• A~ • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Saturday, August 26, 1984 Sanctlflcatlon ceremony Jim Veluqua, purportedly the lut mem- ber of the Oabrlellno Indian tribe years to develop tbe nte. Veluquee plan• to perform the ceremony all along the Oranae Coa•t ln an effort to convince atate authorltlee and de•elopen that hi• tribe ha• claim to varlou• burial grounds and other hl•torlc sites. •till followinC traditional •aluee, unc- tlflee the Bot .. Chica wetlands Friday ln ceremonial defiance of St.anal Landmark developers, which hu been fightint for From Al his dog when he spotted the two aircrafl beading toward each other. "I watched those planes and then I heard a blast. l looked and saw this plane spiraling down," Machado said. "The little one disappeared so fast . The big two-en~ne job was coming down slow. spiraling, spiral- ing down." Moments later. he said. he sa"' a ball of flame shoot up over a hill. "He (the Wings West pilot) was trying to work that throttle and pull out of it. I was hoping he'd bnng 1t down," Machado said. Wings West Flight 628 ongmated in Santa Mana. and stopped in San Luis Obispo to pick up additional passengers. said Wings West spokeswoman Carol K.ron1n. Six people boarded the twin-engine Jet· prop Beechcraft C-99 m Santa Mana and seven in San Luis Obispo, she said. She identified the pilot as Capt. Paul Nebolon, 27, of Rolling Hills. and the co-pilot as Dcverl Johnson. 45, of Merced. Johnson had just reured from the Air Force, and had been stationed at Castle Arr Force Base near Merced. K.ronin said. The other plane was a single eng.ine Rockwell Commander that had left Paso Robles Airport at 10:55 a.m. on a training fltght with an instructor and student aboard, said a Federal A v1a- tion Admin1strat1on controller at Paso Robles who spoke on cond111on his name not be used. The controller said the pilot of the smgle-engme. four seat aircraft took off mto "'eather he descnbed as "excellent ·· No plan was filed for the training flight. according to Don Llorente ol the Nauonal Transportation Safety Board. NTSB in vestigators lrom Los <\ngeles 1mmed1atel) fle..., to the scene. 175 miles northwest of Los Angeles. he said The Commander wa!> owned Aesthetech Corp .. a flight 1nstruc11on school in Paso Robles. according 10 the Air Foce Rescue Control Center in Bellev11le. Ill A woman who answered the telphGJle at Aesthetech's offices Fri- da} s;ud onl) "We ha\t~ no slat~ ment." The Los Angeles .\1r Traffic Con- trol Center in Palmdale hadjUSt made c.ontact with the commuter plane at ahoul 11·34 a.m . when both radio ~.nd radar con tao were lost. said FAA spoke!>woman Barbara Abels YOUTH HEADS FOR CARIBBEAN ... From Al Canbbean," sa\S Hanson "ho "as recently released from hospital care to make the ocean tnp from Fon Lauderdale. Fla., to San Juan. St Thomas, Nassau and the Bahamas Hanson's mother. Janet, will ac- company the teen.ager. who plans to snorkle, eat and do ··eHryth1ng that he can." ''He thinks he's (physicall y) doing really well.'' says Janet. "He's got the attitude ofa t'fp1cal 17--.ear-old." l\ctually. Hanson bCheves his at- titude 1s perfect!) natural. All his hfe he's been referred to as "terminally 111 .. He's spent as much ume in the hospital as other local boys spend on the beach. He ...,as raised on an11- b1ot1cs much as a normal child receives vitamins "You get used to 1t. the hospital "1s1ts. taking )Our med1c1ne. I've heard term mall) ill for so long "he stops in m1dsentence and shrugs.as.if to say. "so what " Hi s mother picks up the conversa- uon · I think 11 bothers me more than 11 does him We as parents find 1t hard to accept that one ofours 1s terminally ill. .. The harsh diagnosis was delivered when Hanson was six weeks old He was not told of h1.-. cond111on until he was eiiht years old "It wasn't real bad back then Besides. I d1dn'1 think I "a gonna· die." says Hanson "It's a little worse now. but I can outlive 11 ·· The odds are against him. but then, victims of cystic fibrosis rarely reach their teens And perhaps e"en more rare!)' do the~ snorJ...le in the Bahamas. "Todd has loc;1 a lot of friends (to cystic fibrosi s) 1n the last fe..., years." says Janet. referring to the people Hanson nas met dunns his sta}S tn the hospital and at special camps Harrson mourns his pals. but then he goes on. When 1t gets too tough to Just Call 642-6086 Dally Piiot Dellv.ry 11 Querentffd .... '·t~y • f pla" soccer or basket Dall. he pla) s golf When 11 becomes too unng to hold hrs breath underwater, he swims on the surface. And he'll get that dnvers license if 11's the last thin~ he does .. l'\ e been d) mg to get It I'\ e made a hundred appointments (to take the dnvers' test) but I always end up going to the hospital." Delly P'IMt pMIO llY Nel\atd ICoetl ... Todd Hanaen and mother Janet embrace. Whal do you llkt about the Dally Piiot" What dob't yo u like" Call tbe number at left and your meu11e will be recorded, transcribed and dellnrtd to the appropriate edllor The same t4·hour answ•erln& service m•) be used to record leuen to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letttrs column must Include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, plea1e. Tell us what's on your mind ORANGE COAST Circulation 714/642-4333 Daily Pilat CIHalfled •dv•rtlelng 714/M2·5e71 All other department• 142-4321 MAIN OFFICE flC)! ~a... .~ pager °' ~JO om ca t"'' P • r ~ fll"'O rl'JUI r 1, """' '~ DI' •·M Sat Cay • <! 5 lAr Y'Olf do ncn. ,~ .. "· , (O(ly th ' • ,.. " [)ef .. H. L Schwartz tll r'.;bl c:hpr 10 • ,,..,_ a• r ' Ct "" a. ,..,,,..,.a Clrcutatlon Telephohee "'"" Oo•"G" :o;ntv "'"I MJ~ u .. ~ ...... • ,. RoHmery Churchmen Lor !roller Stephen F. Cerazo Producl•on Manager Ooneld L. Wllllem1 C1rculat1on Manager VOL. n, HO. 238 Extended lvrl<tlQIOll VI Ce aper Cll.O..ton.S C c11a1 ... 1on.w v Chartone,N C C1141yenne Cll~ Ctnctnnat' CleWlll'CI ColwTtOl&.S C Coiumbut Oh Concotd,NH O•llu·FI Worth Oly!On Temperatures Oen\41 O..MOll1M 0.lrOll HI LO 0..kitll 70 eo El Ptto 13 69 ev1111vt1i. 14 81 F1110.nk1 • 67 52 ""00 73 10 K.,,...c.ty 81 H lUVllQM 87 76 lltti. Aoc:ll 78 SI LOIA~ a3 83 LOUl1lllile 76 66 Lui>~ 78 51 ~-pl\ol 76 SI Miami 8Mcll TO 11 M•~ 88 70 M~•aukM 74 61 Mplt-51 PN 7 5 52 Naallvllle 97 77 New OtlMnt 72 49 '"w York 80 11 NotlOll<. Va eo 57 NOl'lll Plane 77 41 Oki.llclm• Cur 71 47 Om911• 112 70 Orlando 80 68 Pnlladlll)l'll• 53 3• Phoenlll 10 10 Pllttl>urgh ,c~--· ., 5• " 13 •2 13 ae ea 78 SI 91 88 ., 13 H II " ee 19 53 76 !'>5 84 &O 811 73 77 1M 78 71 .. 62 114 17 76 58 fl 71 71 11 100 78 72 5'4 Tides TOOAV , 11• IL 1142 a"' I 4Sp111 l'4p111 IUM>AY Ftr1t tow 3.12 I .Ill. Flrtl lll(jtl'°"' 10'.,4 I In. s.concJ k , n p.m 5-ld 11191' t '9' m et Sun NII todlry II T 21 p.m , ,_ Sunde, 11 8 22 • m ar>d Mt• -ciain 11 7 27 pm Moon NII tOClay II 7.IO p.111. , ... Svn<llY 11 5 27 a m 9lld aeft ag6ln 11 1 5'4 p.m "tl>llly AIOUquwque Amarillo Ancl!Otagt ~lit Auanta A\l.tntlC Clly A1.1ttln hltlmOI• Bltllngt 77 67 1'1egttal1 15 53 Orll'd RapiOI 14 64 Gr .. t Fu1 102 77 Oreen11>0ro.N C 711 59 Hal'llCWd 76 47 n 41 90 54 81 81 11 eo 82 52 90 78 91 70 11 57 ee 87 89 81 58 53 I SURF REPORT Binn Ingham B•llTll!Ck 8ooM Boat on 8rownev"41 BullalO 90 59 Helena 88 84 Honowtu 14 85 H1>111ton .. 58 lnd-IPO'll IO 64 JackaOn.~1 95 7• JIGktonllllle 72 62 Ju- l LOCATION Zuma llMcll hnta MorllCa ~~IY 0.CTIOtl asw saw asw aw Six injured in traffic collision .\n elder!} Westnunster woman. her four grandchildren and another person were injured Fnda} evening when the woman's car was rammed by another vehicle at the 1ntersect1on of Edwards Street and Lennox Drive in Huntington Beach. 1 r C0Nr1Nu£0 SroR1Es Police said Myra Taylor. 75. was taken to the trauma center at Foun- tain Valle~ Community Hospital after suffenng major. possibly cnti· cal, injuries. Also taken to the hospital with minor 1n1unes were her jlrand- children: Jennifer Pratt, 9; Da\'1d Pratt. 4, Chnstopher Allen, 6; and Susan Mitchell. 11 . The dnver .of the other vehicle, Lawana Held, 38, of Huntington Beach, was transported to Hunt· ington Humana Hospital. DRAWING OF DRIVER RELEASED •.. From Al as 6-foot-6 150 pounds. \.\1thout an) moles. tattoos or deform111es. He was weanng cut-off denim Levi's and a plaid shirt Ident1ficat1on through dental records has also proved f uule Senior Dcput) Coroner Bernie Mazuca said authoriues are nov speculating the man, first behe.,ed to be between 18 and 22 years old. may have been )ounger. A''compoSlte drawing of lhe em- balmed face ol the man was released Thursda) b) the county coroner's office along with the statement that "all other methods (of 1dent1fying the bod)) have been exhausted " An)One recognlZlng the face is asked to call Mazuca at 834-43Q2 What authonues do know about the man is that he was driving a car stolen near~y five hours before .lhe chase from the parking lot of a store in Enc1n11as, in San D1t10 Count)'. The pursuit. at speeds ncanng 90 mph, began when the driver sped through a U.S. Border Patrol check· point near San O emente. Federal onicers were eventually Joined by Orange County sheriffs deputies and police from San Clemente and New· port -Beaeh durioi the JS-minute chase. ANIMALS ... CABLE CUTOFF ••• From Al case has prompted numerous count) residents to donate food. towels, disposable dishes and portable ken- nels to help the hospital care for the cats He said the hospttal's goal 1s to have just one animal per kennel for health reasons. "We reajl) appreciate the food and other things that people have donated." Zamlli said. From Al. Beach, t.egUna NIQuel. Dena Point and San Uu.n C.Plltrano. Corratet sild Storer empfO)'*f an emereencY ~•tor to re-store cable aer'YIQe to thoee customer& With •tecttlcttY by 8:20 p.m. The etectrlcaJ outage luted much longer, CorrateaAJd, "and · Spokeamen for s.n DtiOO Gu and Electric w.. u~ for COn'lfMnt. ST ABLES IN COVE MUST CLOSE ..• From Al favors maintaining th~ equestrian facility at Its present location because a search for an altemallH' sne outside the park's boundanec-, has proven unsuccesstul -. Froebcrg was joined by dozens of horse enthusiasts who also beseeched comm1ss1oncrs to consider am mend- ing Cl)stal Cove State Park's general plan to allow the stables to remain. Laune Gabriel. a Crystal Cove cottage resident, told the board the horses are a "link w1th our h1stoncal past" and "western hentage." And William Nupp explained that boarding his horse at the stable has allo...,ed him to explore back counm on horseback that he would tie precluded from seeing because of a bad knee. Also. Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn Hart and a representauve from the Laguna Beach City Council supponed maintaining the stables in their present location. However. representatives from a broad spectrum of county en- vironmental organizations urged the commission to refram from opening the plan to amendment. Representa- tives from the Laguna Grttnbelt Inc .. Fnends of the Irvine Coast and the Sierra Club's State park's committee all spoke against allowing the stable to remain "Crystal Cove 1s Orange County's coastal Jewel and the feneraJ plan would keep It that way,' said Terr) Timmons, of the Laguna Greenbelt Added Fem Pirkle, representing Fnends of the Irvine Coast, "The equestnan facility detracts from the natural beauty oftbe coastal bluff.'' WHY BUY AT ALDEN'S? Here are 5 good reasons: 1.) Large slectlon of fine qua1tty carpeting, vinyl troors, hardwood floors and window coverings. 2.) Knowledgeable salespeople and expert Installers. 3.) Prompt, reliable service. 4.) Free estimates. 5.) Firmly established In Costa Mesa for 27 years and a family tradition In carpets for 94 years. Please call us today to arrange a time to premeasure your home or business. : ILDEN'S Mo11 ·lr1 •1.~:io L!::::~i.7' . S• 1 9 :lO 4 00 ' Sun r ln,•d * ...... "· ..................... . carpet sales • installation • custom draperies 1663 PLAC!NTIA AVENUE •COSTA M SA, CA 926?7 •PHONE 646 4838 -646 23~~ ·UC NO 230422 BUT ffSlAllATION IN OUIG COtltn • lOCAJ(J)" COSJA WSA roa n n s FAMl.r I# CAl1fT IU$IESS SrflCt llH • ' ' ... -NATION - l Defense contractor sued for defraudlng ml1ltar.y By Tbt A11odattd Prt11 DAIL. Y PILOU turday, Auguat 25, 1984 A.I Joint venture.targets smuggler Officers on both sides of the border cooperate in effort to curb contraband ' adeot1ty the routes utcd by 1m....., 10 c:arr')i material across lhe bordit. WASHINGTON -The Justice Dep nment aued a Defense Department SAN DlEOO. (AP) -Customs contractor Friday to recover s4 million alleaedly defrauded from the officerso.n bot.b 11desofth~ botder~re &o'"'.ern"'!ent on bolts, pskets, scats, hin s, clam and retainins nnas. The coo~rattna in an. antMmuuhna civil actton ~as filed tn U.S. District rourt in ~ Anjeles and names as PTQil"am, ~o block illegal export of defendants.Richard tan Silver; Tim Carson; Roben White; Charles Downn; • U.S. m1htary bardwa~ and the I~ .tndustncs, lnc.; Cybermachine, lnc., and Aero tech lftduatries. ln fillina the no~ward flow of narcoucs, a federal mi~itary contracts, the complairu said the defendants -all of them actually official says. Mexico border, said John Hensley, assistant '8Cnt in Char&e Of th( reaional U.S. Customs Service htad- quane11 in San Diego. about hiilMtthnoloay material bc1n,g citPOrtcd co ithc Sovte1 Union from Silicon Valley (near n Franasco), but we are a tot more concerned about Sorrento VaUey an San Die,&o, Where the work u more onented to m11itar) appliauons:· JHcnsle) said. "\\ e pro,'lde rad101 and9i equ1pmcn1 io Mexican c nu for the opcrauon," id. "The Mexican &ovem ••A person could take maJor secret' across the border in a camera bag - microchips. blueprints. microfilm.'' he said. not only concerned about 1.em4a_a, 1t lS conoemed about the ~~ &lmqe that is done by conua nowioa into their country."' beh~ved to be aliases for Silver. who alleacdly controlled au three firms-did "O~ration Eagle" ~n about busmess as Aerotech Industries, which was then located in Canop Park. runemontlUagoalonatheCalifomia- He said the prOJl'&m i~ an ona,oi~ operat1on oonsisuna· mainly of cus. tom1-to-customs cooperation at border c:ticckpaints. 0 There has betn a lot of publicity One obJ«uvc of the operation, which also.KUllo ble>C.k imporution ofd11.1p and other contraband. is to An0ther <...'1stonu ktvw:e ;:;= uern ~portofhiah lilc:b is cali~~ration e.xod\i: .. Power re•tored la Bo•toa .BOS~ON -E.lectricity was restored to most of Boston's Chinatown sect10'? Fnday evening after a power shutdown that bepn a day earlier left unrefrigerated food spoiling in restaurants, many of wnich were closed by he~lth mspector:s. The blackout affectina 1,600 homea and buainesse in Chmatown continued until about 6 p.m. Friday, althouah PQwer was restored to the rest of a 20-block d~wntown section shortly before midniaht Thursday. O~y about two dozen Chinatown customers were still without power at 6 p.m. Fnday. Ways •ought to halt AIDS •pread .. SAN FRANCISCO -The Centers tor Disease Control bas asked health agencies across the nation to suggest ways to stop AIDS from beina spread by blood transfusions, including possible lists of unsuitable blood donors. The query to ep1demoloaists in each U.S. state and territory and in major cities prompted some protests from gay leaders fearina such lists might identify PY. men and be u~ by police and private investi~tors to harass them. Dr. Neal S<;bram, p~ident of t~e ~merical\ Association of Physicians for Human R1ahts, a na~1onal <?rsanizatton of gay doctors, wrote to the Centers for Disease Control sayma, ''Smee homosexuabty is illegal in over 20 states, the potential of that list falling into police hands is tremendous." Baby •muggllag ca.e end• In probatloa . LAREDO. Teus - A federal judge sentenced a 39-year-old woman Fnday to three years' probation for smuglina Mexican babies into the United S~te~ for adoption, calling the crime a new "sociol<>&ical phenomenon." U.S. D1stnct Judge George Kazen also fined Nelda Karen Colwell Sl,000 but said she would be allowed to do community service in lieu ofpayina the fine. The mother of nine maintains she is innocent ofbelpinaAmerican couples smugle Mexican infants across the border, saying she only b~lped them locate available infants for legal adoptions. She said she planned to appeal. Auto union summon• leaden to meetlng DETROIT -The United Auto Workers union on Friday summoned its top leaders from around the country to what a UAW 'official said probably would be a meeting Wednesday to choose a strike target. The union in accordance with what is known as pattern bargaining, plans to pick either Ford Motor Co. or General Motors Corp. as .a strike taraet. After a contract is reached there1 the union will finish bargaining with the other. It is believed that both comparues want to be the strike target so that the pattern-sening contract is one to their liking. CALIFORNIA Five dead In Monterey plane cna•JJ MONTEREY -Rescue workers on Friday removed the bodies of five people from the charred wreckage of a twin-engine plane that crashed and burned on a mountainside after take-off from Monterey Peninsula Airport, authorities reported. The Cessna 320 took off just before 9 p.m. Thursday en route to Fresno, but smashed into the rugged mountainside five miles south of the airport, exploding on impact and touchina off a half-acre brush fire. Firefighters brought it under control after four hours. Hundreds of women Jaycees •worn In LOS ANGELES -Hundreds of women have been sworn in statewide since the national board of the Jaycees voted last week to admit women as members, the state Jaycee president said Friday ... In California, there arc approximately 125 (swearings in) that I have done," state president Greg Stavish said. "In thts month, I would say we•u have SOO women join the Jaycees." The Los Angeles Junior Chamber of Commerce, wbicb split away from the group that became the Jaycees in 1960, has had women members sin« t9i2, anctSan-Dtqo Jayoee:s-iu1Vealtowe0women for several years, as well. Silicon Valley rich In defenH contract. SANT A CLARA -Silicon Valley industries ~ awash in defense contracts, to the excitement of some and the cJiaarin of others. One hundred Silicon Valley firms shared $4. I billion in federal defense contracts for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 1983. Only Los Anaeles County and seven states were paid more in ~efense dollars last year, acoordina to fiaures released by the Center for Economfo Conversion in Mountain View. U.S. wants buffer zone aroaad Livermore SAN FRANCISCO-The federal government has moved to condemn 7S acres near Lawrence Livermore Laboratory as a fU"St step in acquirina a .. buffer zone" around the nuclear weaPQns research facility. The ronejs intended as security against possible spies and terrorists, not to. prevent or discouraae the frequent demonstrations at the labs.The government said Friday it has filed papers in federal court to take title to the vacant land, formerly held by three pnvate owners west oftbe laboratory, and intends to acquire 388 acres around Lawrence Livermore and nearby Sandia National Laboratory for $34 million by October 1985. DeLorean call• acquittal 'mJracle' LOS ANGELES -John Z. De Lorean, &C9uitted of cocaine trafficki~ cha~es last week, said Friday he believes the verdict in his trial was .. a miracle and 'the result of prayer and the work of God." De Lorean, appearina on the Christian Broadcasting Network show, .. The 700 Oub," spoke of his desire to devote the rest of his life to God but also said he feels an obligation to ~Y back investors in his now defunct Northern Ireland car company and to '\>Ut the people back in Belfast back to work." As for civil litiption.still facing him and aUcptions that he m.ay have diverted funds from bis company, De Lorean said, "As far as rm concerned I've never done anythina wrong and I don't expect th.at anybody will find anything.'' WO RLD Talks open on Voice of America •tatlon• ATHENS, Greece -U.S. officials said Friday they will open negotiations on a new operating agreement for two Voioe of America radio stations that Socialist Premier Andreas Papandreou has threatened to close down. For 20 years, the relay stations near the northern city of K.avalla and on the island of Rhodes have been beam in• proarams to the Soviet Union and the Middle East. They also have been prov1din1 transmitters and air time for Greece's main state-run broadc.asting service, ERT-1. on a year-to-year basis since 1978. The negotiations, delayed by a sourina of Greek-American relations, "will last around two weeks and will be substantive," said a souroe. Student kHJed liJ Dominican rlotbJ6 Wife of Saharov exiled HAMBURG, West Germany (AP) -The wife of Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov apparently was uiled after beina arrested on her way to seek political asylum at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, a Soviet source was quoted Friday as sayina. The mass-<:irculation newspaper Bild Zeitung. which earlier this week obtained videotapes of Sakharov and his wife, Yelena Bonner, said the information came from i source who has previously acted as the Kremlin's pipeline to Western publications . The newspaper did not identify the source, but the description fits journalist Victor Louis, who Bild said provided the videotape. The source, quoted in a Moscow- datelined interview with the West German daily, said Bonner had been tried this week and "presumably will be prevented from leaving Gorky," the closed city where Sakharov was banished in January I 980 for criti- cizing the Soviet invasion of Afghani- stan. The interview followed a U.S. State Department announcement Thurs- day that it had received an uncon- firmed report that Bonner, 6 I, bad been sentenced to five years of internal exile after a conviction on charges of "slandering the Soviet state." The Bild Zeitung source did not den}' that report. but stopped shon of confirming it and did not say ho~ long Bonner must stay in Gorky, a city closed to foreigners about 220 miles cast of Moscow. Nothing about a sentencing of Bonner has appeared in the Soviet press, but the State Department made clear it was not dismissing the report. Sakharov, 63, a physicist who helped develop the Soviet hydrogen bomb. became a human rights ac- tivist and won the 1975 Nobel Peace Prize. A Paklatan1 medical team &148 one of two Norwetilan women, lower left, relealed. from a b.ijacked Indla.n jet lD La.hon. Pakiatan OD Friday. Hijacked plane takes off, Arab Emirates deny entry MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) -An Indian jetliner hijacked by half a dozen Sikh militants demanding to so to the United States left Pakistan Friday for the Persian Gulfrqion. About three hours later -at 2 a.m. Saturday (5 p.m. PDT Friday) -the pilot requested permission to land at the Sharjah airport in the northern area of the United Arab Emirates. but the request was refused, an official at the airport reported. The official, contacted by tele- phone from Manama, said the Shar- Jah runway had been blocked by vehicles to bar the comandccred plane from landing. He said the Indian Airlines -soe-ing 737 was "roaming around" over the gulf "trymg to land somewhere." The pilot did not mention any fuel shortage, said the official, who s~ke on condition that be not be identtfied. Airport officials in Abu Dhabi of the United Arab Emirates and here in Manama said early Saturday the plane was "still in the air." but gave no further information. The sky pirates. who threatened to suu-ve the passenaers, kill them one by one and blow up the plane, freed seven people in Pakistan -five in Labore and two in Karachi -before setting out again in the darkness. Reports indicated there were six hijackers.. Radio Pakistan said they were armed with a bomb or grenade and lcirpans-the dagc:rs tradttonal- ly worn by members of the Sikh religious minorit). The.weapons are exempted from lndian laws against carrying arms on aircraft. The two women released iD Karachi told authorities here were six "youni and jin.ery .. hijackers armed with two pistols and carryina four packa&es wrapped in newspaper - said to be ext:;:.ses. They did uot mention the . Paldstan aovemment spokesm.an Mohammad Sharif said the plane wu refueled at the iusistence Qf the hi1ackers, who demanded weather reports and Oi&ht plans for three Persian Gulf destinations -Dubei. Sharja and Abu Dhabi. Tb.ctr uitimaie destination is uill lhouaht to be the United Stt~ but the s6ort-rkn&C ID woulcfm>tbeablc to make it without refuctina stoi>a. Tilcre was no indication of why the United States was selected. Military probes second Hughes division LOS ANGELES (AP) _ -The military said Friday it is investigating the work of a second unit of Hughes Aircraft Co., which voluntarily stop- ped shipments from a third division after deficiencies were found in jet fighter radar. HuJbes is the Pentaaon's largest supplier of missiles, radar and a host of other high-tecbnoloay equipment. The latest unit to come under scrutiny is the company's Electro Optical Data Systems Group in El Segundo, which develops and pr-Oduces sensors, tiring--controf'-Thirmeans natf ot1fugbes~ sii mechanisms for space, airborne and o~ting if'Oups arc expenencina surface applications, laser systems problems with the military or a.re and aerospace computers, prooessors under invest1gauon. and software systems. Meantime, Hughes confirmed that An Air Force official, who asked HJ. Mueller. Vlte president and that his name not be used, said Fnday manufacturing manaaer of its missile that an investigation of the electro plant in Tucson. Ariz., is being optical unit had been under way ·:for transferred. ' two or three days." He added that the Earlier 1his week. it was reported Air Force ~tanned no further com-that Hughes had sto~ aocepting ments "until the audit is completed." shipments from the Mmile Systems Hughes officials declined to com-Group, which is headquanercd in ment on the latest action. Canoga Park, and bas withheld month!) progress payments until workmanship problems are oor- rected. The Peniqon already bas delayed payment ofS38 million for July to the nussile aroup. Pentagon spokewoman Jan Bod- anyi said Fri&l> that documents from Hughes uraina the payments to be resumed "arc still being studied.·· Mueller Wlll remain a vice presi- dent .but will bec-0me director of administration for Hua.bes' Ground Systems Group in Fullenon.. which Hlttlni the eampalp trail Tbe 4-J after Prealdent a_,an accepted renomination for a eecoll4 term, be and hla Democratic opponent Wal~ Mondale were bl~ tbelr atrt4e on tbe campalen trail. At left. Mondale _,., .. 1n tbe ttm.e-bonored ollclle of kt••na babt• (or at lent admlrtna them) u be bold8 4·montb-ol4 L"lr~er of 8prtn.aftel4. m. At rtibt. a._.an prepares to ad tbe Veteran.a of P'OJ"dp. flan IA CbJ.caCo. VP'W Commancler-lD-Cblef Billy Ray Cameron la at fi&llt. Dallas takes stock as visitors leave town SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic -One university student was shot to death and at least four were iruured Fnday durinJ clashes between police and riotina yQutha at the Autonomous University of Santo .Dominao. The Federation of University Students orpnized the disturbances to protest sharp 1ncrca~s in bu~ fares and the cost of textbookt. The ~d student was identified a Angel Ramon Peret Lopez, 20. The shootina occui'red while --i.--.•ouths hurled roe and other objects at POiice, toYCmment ~htdt$ an<t usines$C~ in the university neighborhood and set pil of tiru and trlsh in strttts on fire. DALLAS (AP) -The Republican National Convention is O\et. and Dallas. rccuperatina from a multi- million-dollar orm: of hosp1tahty, is tryina to decide if it was all wonh- while. Mayor A. Starke Ta)lor and City Mantttr Charles Andenon aareed that Dallas made a good d~but as host of a national paht1c.tl conve-ntion1 but neither was rud) to say he woula bid f'or another one. Walker said the mont) and effon WtTC -wcll-s~nt. "h 'WIS sptttacular," Walker ~td ofthc four-day ron,enuon that ended Thunda}. "We'\:t bad no major custod\ after a wild \;lndah m ~prtt throu h do"n'°"fl Wean day. About 20 remained 1n Jail Frida)' af\cmoon. - But the c~ent fail~ to meet the ~ pectat1ons of some othen. tiny tttatlefi. ~taurateurs and cabb Ci s&ld thC) art a.lad It'~ O\tr. . Slilltea nnMck Saadl emlMl•y. la Belrat BEIRlIT. Lebanon -Radical Shiite Moslems ransacked the consular secoon at the Saudi Arabian Embassy compound Friday, hours afttr a rocket attack on the Briti h Embassy in mostly Moalem 'Nell Beirut. An undcTlr'Ound sroup invowcd in auerril!a wa.rfift qainat the t~~li anny c~cd responsibility for the ovcmiaht rocket attack on tho Bnuah EmbaSI)'. The attack on the Saudi Embassy in we" Bcirut'sManararesicknt al neiahborhoOd swed by a nary demonstrato11 from Hczbollah, or Party ofOo<f They tOte down l<ina . Fahd's. ponrau and huna pictures of A)"ltolllh Ruhollah K.homcin1.'No •nJune ""'t rtponed. • Airline and hotel clcrtts shifted into overdrive as thousands of va)iton streamed outtfthe city Friday. The naa. button and T-•hirt vendors moved on to the ne~t bi& show. Caty buses returned to their rqular routes. And as the l.S.miJe Iona stcunty fence around the downtown C'On\'en- tion nicr w btma d1 mantled, some prote ttrs wtrt gcmns an up. clost vie" of Dalla • )a1t. "I think we need to n bac here and act all the ~cts and fiaurcs, evaluate what th1sd1d for u before we make any d«mon:· Ta) lor said Thursday. • Much of the money to p&\' for the POhtical bi h came from · pnvate sourt'C and Andenon wd ht' did not kno~ ho ea ) \l v.ould bC 10 n1~ another Sl9 mtlhon an)11mc oon But ron\l't'ntion m n r Ron • glitches ' · · Pohce Chacf 81ll\' Prince was "° sau 1fi~ \I.1th hi depanmcnt'~ huac sccurit) effort that he taid he would "carton C'OP) 1f' 1f he had 1t to do alJ O\:Cr qa1n. As for the de,1rab1h\)' oft rtturn. "Mk me tn thttt morr ~un.. .. be said Fnda). Sttret Service spakcsman Jaclt mtth gave h1ah mart to tht Dalla poticc. ~ho ~tcd more than llO OC'Ql'l<' m~cm u.kcn into "' n1ahtt1mt convtnuon JU t ICi.ll1 bu 1nc,s. bccau~ delcpte act off the floors 11 10 o·dock. ao ct \0 \hcl hoteb t'\hau ted ind arc too urtd \0 out of lht elcp.lwn and into cHn1ng clothe~:· Lennie 8 bC'r of the .a.soo Mc mnc Oub 1d Sculptor lllchael BUhop •tanda bee.Ide one of hU drl•eable creatlou, •porttnc 100 tallltchta and clocu for habca1»9. Why not bash in a car over Labor Day? Remaking of an auto just part of plans ----for ·earplays· event LOS ANGELES (AP) -Just because the car was decked with I 00 ta.illi&hts and 500 rear-view mirrors and had clocks for hubcaps, the p<?llce officer gave Michael Bishop a ticket. "He said 1t was a dangerous vehide" recounted Bishop. a sculptor who creates bizarre but drivable works of art along with fellow sculptor David Best. The Chico policeman also threat- ened to call the C-ahfornia Depart- ment of Fish and Game because some animal pelts were mduded m the decor, recalled Bishop but a Judge threw the ~ out of court. Ge t good cit'al4' on -used item!'> in t hl' cla!:>!'>lf u.>d page:-. Dail Pilat The two artists plan to create another of their cars, starting with a stopped 1976 Cutlass. in full public view during "C'arplays," an unusual three-day event involving one theater, one art museum, assorted artists and actors, and hundreds of aud1enc.e members. Bishop and Best have 10v1ted the public to join them during their 72- hour continous automotive assault and reconstrucllon over the Labor Day weekend m front of the Museum of Contemporary Art in downtown Los Angeles. "Some people have never hit a car with a hammer." Best said in amaze- ment. Viewers can contnbute small items to be attached to the car. Dunng one construction m New York. Best ~1d. Andy Warhol attached a I 0-franc note and Bianca Jagger wrote a secret note and put It in the car. Best and Bishop's project 1s among eight events to be staged during "Carplays," a sort of mini-festival that 1s a joint project of the museum and the nearby Mark Taper Forum. it's be1~ held in conjunction with "Automobile and Culture," an exhibit now on display at MOC A as part of the Olympic Arts Festival. "Automobile and Culture," which features classic cars, sculpture made from cars and artworks portraying automobiles, will continue throuih Jan. 6 at MOCA and then travel to the Detroit Institute of Art June 9-Sept. 9, 1985. Madehne Puzo, who is co-ordi- nating "Carplays" for the Taper in conjunction with museum curator Julie Lazar, sa1d the project is more an event than conventional theater. "These collaborations between in- stitutions are something that's begin- ning and something I think we're going to see much more, where different arts institutions combine forces and sensibilities," she said. In one event, she sai4, acfor SpaJding Gray will lnterv"iew the audience about their own cars and their feelings about cars and dnvmg. In another program, actress Eliza- beth Ruscio will portray a Cadillac which tries to ~duce its owner - ....... , llll co. FAMOUI AllllUAL PRLSIAIOll • WAIT FOR THE GOOD OllE! We have the BEST ••lecllon of the GOOD STUFF! FANTASTIC SAVINGS UP TO 70 °/o OFF! CLOTHING New 1984-85 atreteh pant1 for men and ladlea. Regular price $150.00. Special Sele Pric. '84.95 Nevy btue and bl.ck. all m.ea. Limited atock on hand New 19S.-85 parkaa for ladlea. Regular prloe$150.00. '74 95 Special Sale Prlc. • New 19S.-85 partlaa for men. ~ar prk:e s 160.00 '82 95 Special Sale Price • New 1984-85 100% wool IW9etera for men and ladlea Regular price $70.00. Sale Price '39.95 New 19S.-85 1weater for kids. Regular prtceS40.oo. Sale Prtc. '19.95 Men's and lad ... powder jadtet1 Regulet price $70 00 to S85.00 • s39 n5 Sale Pree. r.a Men'• and Ladles Parkas Reg Sale Tytolla .. . ..... $14500 S71.95 Fera . 110 00 59.95 s.rec . . . . . 155 00 19.95 Heed. • . • . . . 245.00 ••• Roffe. . 130.00 74.11 Aaaorted men'• and ladlee 11d gtowe. Sale Price '19.95 Assorted 100 % wool hat•. •4 99 Sale Price • Alao all men'• and ladlea aummer aportsweer and 8Wtm9Ufta. 50 I/a to 70 °/a off SKIS Reg. e Roeaignol IM ...... 1310.00 • Olln 970 ..•........ 295.00 •Flecher Super Ute •.. 270.00 •AtomlcGSE ........ 295.00 e Authler Gold Star .... 335.00 • Spajdlng Expert •.... 280.00 BOOTS Reg. • San Marco AXIR .... $299.00 eL.ange ZR . . ..•.•. 295.00 •Lange ZT ......... 315.00 • Koflach Ldy Comp ... 290.00 •Salomon sxeo ... 1eo.oo • N«da 970 ••.•.... 300.00 •Salomon SX90 ••.... 270.00 •Nordlca 770 .... 235.00 e RachOe Grand Prix . . 155.00 .... $111.15 171.15 171.95 1U.95 129.15 99.15 .... $111.15 111.95 208.15 158.15 121.15 199.15 1•• , .... 71.15 FRIDAY AUGUST 24, 10-9 SATURDAY AUGUST 25, 10-8 SUNDAY AUGUST 28, 12·5 played by Leon Martel -into dnvmg the luxury automobile .. And artist Rachel Rosenthal will deliver a monologue while Tom Anthony's prec1s1on car drivms team performs stunts. They'll be in the parking lot at the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. immediately west of the Los Angeles Music Center, where the Taper is based. Other events will include readings at the ltchey Foot Saloon, also near the Music Center, and performances at the museum. As for Bishop and Best, they plan to d onate the finished car to the mu- seum, for auction or to become part of its collect1on. Then the pair -who also work on other sculptures separately -have tentative plans to "build" another automobile at the Un1vers1ty of Oklahoma next spnng. In add1t1on, they say, they'd hke to work on a car Ill Japan. Or ... "We'd like to take an Italian car to Japan and a Japanese car to Italy. so they could share each other's cul- ture." Bishop said. Auorted 100% wool sweater1 for men and lid .... ReguW MO oo . Sale $21.85 BINDINGS Reg (114) 131-3211 • (114) 831-3211 Men'• and l1dle1 Stretch Bib• Reg .... Tyrofia $100 00 Ml.15 Kltex 215.00 99.15 Head 175 00 121.15 Kldl Outfltl Reg $110 00 Sale 159.95 Kkh~ Sate '29.85 Kld1 Blba •.. ........ •11.15 •MM1l• M-40 Otymplca ..••. 1140 00 •SelomOn 637 ...... 105.00 e 811omon 137 . . ...• 135.00 e Tyrolll 3IOO •.... 135.00 POLI!& Reg • Reftex International •• '39 t5 e AMO 11 •••••••••.••. 2t.15 \ .... .... ... .. .., M.15 Sele 821.15 13.15 2700 W. COAST HWY •• NEWPORT BCH. • 2500 W. COAST HWY., NEWPORT BCH. ' Boom predicted for once-spurned ·Mexican wines ENSEJ'l.4ADA, Mexico (AP) - Mexican wineries are prepanng for an unprecedented production boom, prompted by the nation's econom1c crisis and by m~or improvements in their once-spurned wines. Government analysts predict the country's 85 wineries must produce J 59 milhon quarts of wine by 1990- up from the 32 million quarts bottJed last year -to quench a new thirst among Mexicans. Much of at will replace importe(I wines that became prohibitively expensive in Mexico's economic slump. Nowhere in Mexico 1s the phenomenon more apparent than here on the northern Ba.Ja California peninsula, where vintners labored for years only to have their product snubbed by an unreceP.tive public. The stretch of Pacific coast from Tijuana to San Quintin is considered the country's finest wine-producing region: Baja vintners produce 75 percent of the table wine consumed in Mexico and export small but reaular quantities to the United States and Europe. The preva1lin$ Med1terranean-hke climate and moist marittme breezes in the Baja valleys of Santo Tomas, Guadalupe and San Vicente provide optimum growing conditions for such fine vanetals as Cabernet Sauvtgnon. Petit S1rah and Chenm Blanc. "The outlook for the wine industry ... is very optimistic," said Camillo Magoni, the Italian-born oenologist for the Cetto Corp., a Tijuana-based group of four wineries. Mexico's winemakers have waited a long time for this moment. Vines planted near Parras m the and northwest in 1524 give Mexico the distinction of being the oldest wine producer in the Amencas. But political turmoil and cultural barriers impeded the growth of a national wine industry, which must market its product to a public that likes its food sp1C) hot and its beverages cold, bubbly and. most of all, sweet But winenes are overcoming cul- tural obstacles by selling light, fruity whites. The producers say wine drinkers wooed on whites then will develop a taste for the more ac1d1c. hearty reds. "We are adaptin1 to a market that consumes beer, .soft drinks in friaht- enina q~antities and b~nd!et com- bined with soft dnnks, said Santo 1omas oenolog.ast Alfonso Arizmen- di. ' Bral'}dY mixed with soda or cola remains the country•, favorite al- coholic drink made from arapes. Of the 770,000 tons of grapes harvested in 1983. 53 percent WCf'C converted into brandy, 26 percent into wine and the rest sold fresh or as raisins, juice and jams. Most authorities consider Mexico's two-year-old economic crisis to have been pivotal to the industry's sudden growth. "At that moment, people bepn to discover Mexican w10e," Arizmendi said. "Mexicans are accustomed to the prestige of drinking imported wine." After the recession struck, the Commerce Department ltmited im- port_s of !uxury prod.sets, including foreign wines. The restncuons, coupled with a sharp devaluation of the peso, forced prices for imported wines to between S 16 and $85 per bottle m restaurants. A fine domestic varietal costs about $9 in restaurants, SS.25 in retail stores. Vintners acknowledge they have had to overcome a reputation for inconsistent q4altty and few fine wines. · "Up to a few years ago It was a risk · to open any (domestic) brand," the nationaJ magazine Expansion said in a recent article on Mexican wines. But producers contend wine dnnkers are not turning to the domestic product br, default. Says Magoni. ' Now, we have qualtty wines that compare with many that are imported -not the premier ones, but.. .. " The industry received a major boost 10 1980 when the International Wine Organizahon held its World Congress in T1Juana and gave high marks to se .. eral domestic blends and vanetals. Baja California 1s one of Mexico's four wine-producing regions to make progress toward quality, said Hugh Johnson in his 1983 Modem Encyclo- pedia of Wme. Carter to get down and dirty to fix up low-income project AMERIC LS. Ga (AP)-Former President Carter will don overalls and help other workers. including his wife Rosalynn, fix up a low-income hous- ing project m New York City on Sept. I so 16 families can li ve there. Carter organized the effort after an April VISll to the dilapidated, SIX- story structure on-Manhattan's. Lower East Side. said M11lard Fuller, executive director of the Georg.ia- based Habitat for Humanity. "President Carter wtll be in his overalls and working," said Fuller, an Americus attorney. Carter 1s a board member of the non-profit, 1nter-Chnst1an group, which seek!> to provide housin& for the poor. "We will be putting in floors and walls and making the building livable for 16 families," Fuller said. Fuller said Carter "knows how to use a sa". plane and level," notmg Carter recently auctioned some hand- made furniture to help finance his library in Atlanta. The Manhattan building is a gutted. shell, Fuller said. It will get flooring, doors, wmdows, a roof and other work, he added. Mlrrortma1e TJaJe American stret f oaad AD lDTlttna pond m La.Dcuter County, Pa •• wlaerit ab&Uow water pro.tcie. an abtindance of •mall flab to feed apon. The eoet can meuare three feet or more from tallfeathera to~ · , ·- Junior flreflghtera . Vl1ltinttota from the Wllll•m• Cooperath·e Nunery 8abool 1tft flren,hter Dtane Georae a band ln New Aahfor d, llua., u Edmond Orouo (left) and DoactuGeor&e look on. Judge facing censure insists public rebuke was right Accused makers of Dalkon Shield of pla nting 'deadly depth charges' MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Facmg possible censure for his-courtroom conduct. federal Judge Miles Lord insists he was right to verbally spank a contraceptive manufacturer after the out-of-court settlement of lawsuits against it. "I was right and I think ( have to prove I was right," Lord said of his stinging rebuke last winter of three officials of A. H. Robins Co., once makers of the Dalkon Shield in- trauterine birth control device. Lord said in courtroom remarks that the company put profits ahead of the health of thousands of women by implanting "deadly depth charges m their wombs." Hts comments fol- lowed out-of-court settlement of law- suits by seven women who said the Dallcon Shield caused them per- manent injury. Stung by the 64-year-old Judge's public rebuke, the V1rgm1a-based pharmaceutical company filed mis- conduct charges, cla1m10g Lord had "grossly abused his office." The executives said Lord's remarks were calculated to "hum1hate and castigate (the officers) in a manner that provided them no means of defense or recourse." A five-judge panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals investipted the complaint last month, but de- layed action pending the outcome of a hearing on an appeal by the Robins Co. concerning Lord's alle&ed inter- vention in the out-of-court settle- ments, terms of which were not announced. The appeal hearing be- gins Monday in Kansas City. The people Lord has counted as his friends amount to a Who's Who of the national Democratic establishment of the past few decades: John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, Adlai Stevenson, Estes Kefauver, Hubert H. Humphrey. Eugene McCarthy and Walter F. Mondale. Lord was not, and 1s not, awed by any of them. "I have enough of a lack ofhum1hty to ha~ncluded, after walkmg, talking and working with the great men of this centul). that I would not substitute their jud~ment for mme m the thinJtS I am domg," ~innesota's N~:w: Jei;sey teens on the road· toward compulsive betting ATLANTIC CtTY, N.J. (AP) -NewtY .a percent of tM high IChool lt\ldentl IU~ed In the .. OMl~" 1tate exhibit at 1-.t one ttgn of t>ecomlng cht'Onlc bettors. according to a ~ by a t_,..ager who once lneak~ Into a eulno dltgufMd uaahelk. The 892 ltudent• pot-.ct were Mktid wheth« ~ of the Mven lndtcatora uperu say Indicate compulllve gtmbUng -from ~00 et>out lolMe to ltMJl"Q to tuppoft the habit -.r>Pffed to them. . AboUt 1.9 percent of the atu· dentt afrMdy .,.. compuletve gamblera, thoWlng outward llgna In at leUt flw of MYen problem .,..., llkS Henry R. L-.Ur, a eock>k>gy prot...or at St. John'• UnMrtltY in N.w York. WhO or~ the eurvey. L......,. lllld 8.4 percent of the 1tudent1 thowed three of the warning ·ilQM. And about 3.6 percent iafd~tt.y had at teut .four 8'gne. P\lttlnO "*" In • dae Of .. probebtl" ~ bettort. 'We think the g91nbMng prob- lem lhoutd be eddr1111d the way dNg end llcohof •bUM ehoutd b9 eddreued," Mid Mertln Rimm, 19, a member of the 1t1t• Co&lnclt on ComPultlYe Oam-bllna~ whO oonduct9d the~· -"'W• .. oulltvetlnO • ..,.... aaon of oOlftDulllve ~· i11'9"*9 ........ " ... ..,. fftOf9 -·~ ... Rimm told the ..... Clltno Oontrol corn--on~-WN .. '" ....... ~. AtioUt .. '*°'"' of "'* POlld !..'!.d "-IMO ~ ...... -.... ~ ..... "'9 -t••"HlllNfMd .... '91111\ Mlltlo Cly di ...... .. bin ..... by ... --. '':.,,_ ... dOll ..... .. quultn of 11 ._..Pf°'*"' of !........ ~ lft'°"9 ........ .,Md .. ...,., Ii-'V• '" llld LI Ill t.11', I 'I,__.., of .. NltlOnll Oounall ~ ClilmbllnO'• ... ...... Nmm oonduc:ted the fAlt"W1 .. OM high lctK>Oi In eect\ Of the northtrn. centr I end 90Uthlrn chief u~s. Distnct judge said in a recent interview. Lord's outspoken behavior in the courtroom has brou&bt him detrac- tors as well as friends. A former Golden Gloves boxer, he has taken his share of judicial punches: •In 1983, the appeals court re- versed the drug convictions of five men because of what it termed Lord's "prejudicial conduct" that helped the prosecution try its case. •The appeals court in. 1976 re- moved Lord from a ease involving alleged pollution of Lake Superior by Reserve Mining Co., noting that he seemed "to have shed the robe of the judge and assumed the mantle of the advocate." •Lord was rebuked by the appeals court in 1972 for calling the U.S. Patent Office "the sickest institution our iovemment has ever invented" dunng a trial on alleged pricc-fuung by drua companies. Lord says the current dispute with Robins has aroused pubhc suppQrt for his pos1uon. "It shows the kmd of titanic significance of this thmg as 1t affects the so-called courase of the federal Jud1c1ary and their ab1lit) to sptak out." he said. "The vel') bnngina of he Will not retitt. made m) day." ~TOte a former U.S. ~ "The possiblity of my rettrcment senator whom Lord requested not be ditriinished as t hear from the people identified. "The thoU&ht occasionally who beard of the possiblity." he said. crossed my mind that perhaps )OU Amo111 the ktten be received is one ~ere mellowing. that )OU ,_,ere gro"w- wbicb reveals why some people refer 1ng flabby in the head and bean I tothcjud&eu"MilesGod." apol · eformytemporatywcakness "Tbe news and u oar ou caused · .. THINGS TODO 1. fi1 car 2. read the llllJ Pilat 3. water plants 6. The llllJ Piil 7. 8. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, llC. F• Tiit Rat Of Yw lh HU HUia aw .. COSTA llE'SA -54&-m• PALM READING TAROT CARD READER AND ADVISOR MADAME MARIA Mor c w I re you 1tie post, prese111 ood future 011d g1~e you advice ori o .. e ITIO'' oge 00<2 oosinen 650-7231 870 W 19th ST. READINGS $3.00 WITH THIS AD In 1980, Lord was named one of the 11 worst Jurists tn the country by Amencan Lawyer. a Ne"' York publication. But a year later he was named the outstanding federal tnal jud&e of 1981 by the American Tnal LaywersAssociat1on. Last month. the assoc1auon pve Lord 1ts Pres1dent1al Award of Honor and Merit for the Junst's "long and distinguished ca- reer." Lord entered pubhc service in the early 19SOs as an assistant U.S. attorney. In 1954, at the age of 35, be was elected Minnesota attorney gen- eral. After being re-elected twice, Lord quit that post in 1960. He said he wanted to spend more time with his wife, Maxine, and four children. three of whom have law degrees. this action .. may cause the greatest .L-----------1:::================== chan&e for the worse m the American JUd1etary that has ever occurred." In 1961, President Kennedy named Lord U.S. Attorney for Minnesota. and in 1966, he was named a federal jud&e by President Johnson. Hum phrey, one of Lord's closest fnends, predicted at the ume that Lord would be a "people's Judge." The misconduct charges against Lord arc based on a 1980 law aimed at d1sc1plinina 1ncompetent judges. A number of Judges and legal scholars testified at Lord's heanng that mvok- ing the law's sanctions -erasina Lord's comments from the record, repnmanding him or ask.ma h1m to rettrc -could have a chilling effect on the JUdtciary's 1ndepeodencc. Lord once said he might retire when he turns 65 m November. but not because of the Robms case Recently. however he has 10d1cated he Greatest Sale Ever! 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L..:.' • Spilled fuel lanltea a Navy jet (left) du.ring recent teattnc. but a MCond, identical craft witb a chemical additive mbed Into lta fuel doean •t Oare up following a almulated crub. , U.S. agencies will crashj~t in test of fuel ~dditive Additive designed to prevent fires on downed airliners .. LOS AN0ELES (AP) -The U.S. government will crash a rcmo te- controlled JCthner 10 to the desert this fall in a SQ m1lhon test of a fuel additive designed to save live!. b\ preventing downed airliner!> from bursting into flames. officials~}'. The additive ts designed to keep jet fuel from fomung a deadly. explosive mist as 1t spills dunng a crash .• according to the Federal A\ 1auon Adm1n1strat1on and the compan\ that developed 1t. Tests ot the addtt1ve so far have pro\·ed .. very 1mpress1ve" 1n prevent- ing old Nav} jets from bursting into flamei. after the:r were raced along ground trad.s and crashed said Dennts Flath. a spokesman for the Federal .\" 1atton Adm1n1strat1on m Atlantic ( ny. N.J Although Flath declined to esti- mate when the aienq might order use of such additives. the manufac- turer esumated that the FAA could require U.S airlines to use tt by I 989 or 1990. World"' 1dl use m1gh1 follow 'Soon after, Jim L McAbee. a project manager for ICI Amcncas Int: .• a Delaware chemical compan>, said Tucsda:r IC! Amcncas and its parent com- pany, London-based Imperial Chemical lndustnes, have spent two decades developing the addttive that will be used when the FAA and the National Aeronautics and Space Ad- m101strat1on crash an old Boeing 720 at about 170 mph mto the Mojave Desert at Edwards Air Force Base. The crash test probably will be in October. McAbce said NASA spokesman Les Remenson said no precise date has been set. McAbee said such aircraft fires account for 35 percent to 40 percent of all deaths in "1mpact-surv1vable'' aircraft crashes. "What we are tr} ing to do 1s prevent major disasters," he said "Post-crash aircraft fires can be prevented." The key ingredient in the additive 1s a polymer - a heavy chemical molecule. In normal use. the polymer molecules are coiled, but when the fuel is spilled and exposed 10 wind as a jet crashes, the molecules unravel into long stnngs. Those strin,$5 make jet fuel thicken and prevent 1t from forming a fine mist which bums explosively as a Jet crashes. 1gm11ng fuel that has pooled on the ground and engulfing the jet 1n flames. The add1t1ve. could cost U.S a1r- l10es $300 million to $500 m1lhon per year in addition to $1 I billion in annual fuel costs, McAbee said, estimating that would add $2 to $4 to the cost of an average airline ticket. He ~1d the cost of adaptingjets to use the additive as not yet known. The FAA has made post-crash fires a top pnority. When a fire in the cabin of an Air Canada DC-9 killed 23 people in Cincinnati after an emerg- ency landin' in June 1983. renewed calls for airline safety flooded Wash- ington. In response. the FAA said then It was making progress to reducing the danger to passengers from toxic fumes and flames in aircraft cabins. but stressed that, "The real problem is the post-crash fire." The agency noted the need for a fuel add1uve. Until now. tests of the additive have been conducted by the FAA at the Lakehurst (N.J.) Naval Aar Eng.i- ncenng Center In all the tests without the additive, the spilled fuel turned into mist and ignited in huge fireballs, Flath said. But when the additive was mixed with the fuel, the fuel fonned large droplets which failed to ignite he said. "As far as we'reconcemed. the tests conclude with the controlled impact (of the Boeing 720) that's due out at Edwards," Aath said. General Electric is now developing "degraders," which will break down tbe addativeJUSt before the fuel enters jet engines so the fuel can bum efficiently. McAbec said. A few years ot work also 1s needed to ensure the additive doesn't hander jet engine reliability and safety, he saad. Damaged engine parts teach students why planes crash RANTOUL. Ill. (AP)-A pertect model ofan F-106 fighter plane hangs from the classroom ceiling abo\ e 5,000 pounds of compressed. fused metal that was once the engine of a ~I jet plane. The room as full of twisted and burned eng.ines clues that students use to figure out"' h) jet • planes crash ''The eng10es 1o-M!~ are beautiful to us," said Air Force instructor Tom • Epps. runntng his fingers O\er man-aJed compressor blacks ··w11h good •parts, you can t teach damage pat- terns." The course at Chanute T echn1cal Tramang Center as the only one m the free world dealing exclus1vel:r w11h Ute jet eng.ine"s role in a plane crash the Air Force sa:rs "We ha"e to sa) 1f these eng.ines were capable ofsuppon1ng flight, and af not, what caused the failure, .. said Epps. who has been investigating crashes for 37 years ... If an engine failed, we want to prevent future occurrences and save lives. The next plane might crash into a city. " Epps prepares his students 10 be det~uves. s1f1mg through deformed and shattered engine pam for answers. The way the blades of a compressor are bent can indicate whether 11 had failed. whether tt had stopped rotating before the cra'>h hydraulic system had failed .. We can use lightbulbs to o ur advantage. even 1f the} arc peanut-sized." Epps said Since the e1ght-da) course opened at Chanute 19 years ago. 11 has been attended b> hundreds of students from the Untted States and 53 fo reign countnes The}' include both m1htar} personnel and Cl\ alians. who conduct accident probes for agencies such as the National Transportation 'iafet\ Board The I'\ students in one rcn•nt class mcluded Air Force sergeants with closl~ cropped ha1rand fat1iues. and a c1\1han with long blond hcur and blue JCans "Do not jump to conclusions at a crash site." Epps told them "I do a lot of .,.,alkmg around and looking. I've got m:r hands in m} pocket and I'm getting ideas." He told them that in the field they will present their findm~ to an accident board . helping the board reach a conclusion about the cause of the crash Actually. the cause seldom is eng.ine failure. said Epps. and more often 1s attnbuted to pilot error. Sul I. 11 1s essential to find out whether the eng.ine was at fault. The biggest problem at the crash scene can be dealing with the people 1n"olved with the flight. Epps said said "Sometimes people fight us be- their JObs." said cpps. He noted that a maintenance man's failure to add oil could cause a beanng to g1\e out. leading to an accident A d1flicult part of the JOb for Epps and fellow instructor Ron Shepherd I!. keeping up with ne.,., eng.ine designs and exotic. space-age metals. "When he's up there teaching. I'm back there doing research." said Epps There also are language problems to deal with. and difference~ among students in technical knowledge about panicular engines Some of those taking the course are pilots. while others are mechamcs. 'Tm a fighter pilot I had to start learning about the brcak-<iown of )Ct engines all over again," said Major Joe Jackson. a C anad1an officer from O ttawa whose new dutie!i wall include crash 1nvest1gat1on!. "A lot of the stuff I learned here -the way things break. the pattern -I had never heard before." In add1t1on to tcachmg. Epps and Shepherd frequen t!~ are dispatched to crash scenes to add their expertise to invest1gauons "If I 'ihoot \.OU. there will be a hole there,' said Epp!>. pu111ng his finger on a reporter's chest "It's a tattletale mark. that's what we're looking for" Tom Epp. (rlpt) explain• bow patterna of damage aid lnYeatlgatora in an air cruh. The remams of a 1my instrument panel light can tell a trained m- vec;ttgator \\hether the light was on at the time of impact. md1caung the cause our rcpons could hang them -.------------------------------show up their errors and they lose · . Is Your Child Fully Equipped For Life? Irvine Coast Chrt<.t1an "'" hool think., being prepared on the inside i~ important too. That', why, 1n addition to our award· winnina academic and athletic programs, we ilio encourage and train our <.tudent.., to grow ~pi ritually, equipping them to ~come strone and ~ell halanced Chrt'ltians in today'!i world. Irvine Coa~ Chri .. t1an School: • Oranae Co. School Arr Show • Kindt>rgarten to 9th aradc • AC51 Science Fair • 20~tudent cla'I~~ ' • 8;,lcre ,chool facility • ABEKA Curriculum • Prt>~idential A cademic.: Excellence Award Our nudent" art' winnt'n: • I t Plec• So.CA S~ltinir Arr (o,. 6th, 7th & Hth ~radt • lsr Pl cc Southern C.1 l1fornia Jr. Hi1h ~reech met>t For information and cla!i'I enrollmt>n t call 714/64S-97St;. IRVINE COAST CHRISTIAN SCHOOL .!1'.!~ (,,,,J .. ., I .an.- C"m1.i1 \.fl"" (. aliiorn1• ~2t'll7 'umnu·r 1fli. • ht•Ut• '1Am ·\run, GIVE YOUR CHILD THE EDUCATION YOU WISH YOU'D HAD Montessori Greenhouse Schools PREr11•uY(•CES2'1r-5): ~ EU•E•TUY(Cl .. 1-11: USAF ma;or to attend LOS AWHTOS (213) 43M409 .. •. CAIHI non :.I ,_'·_w_m_c'°_"_'1_1•)-193-·27_3• ______ n_1•)-at1--3'-33 __, military staff college I '111111 '11111 o\\11 11ptn111n-. •ill lllJI I 4ll tc•1-. "' Int .ii ,1,1tt· .11111 n.1t1on.1I Ill I 1 1•11 p•111 lt•11 ,1 II\ I 1 .1d1t11.! I he• I hnul.!hl I 111 < otl 11.1111' ,11111 c•d1l1111.d-. Ill lhl' [l,111\ 1'11111 Air Force Maj. Nancy A. Sbefflette, daughter of Patnck and Lois Sheffict- te of Lake Forest, has been selected to attend the Armed Forces Staff College in Norfolk, Va. Major Sheffiette, an I I-year veteran of the Air Force, attended tosta Mesa and Gerona del r.:==========,.,===a==E=o=R=a=E=c=o=L=o=u=A=1=s=P=A=o=o=u=c=T=1o=N=====::;-1 Mar hi$h schools and is a graduate of UC Irvine. • • • • •DAILY STAGE ENTERTAINMENT** • * • The Modernalrea with Paula Kelly, Jr. 800W •••·•900 • • • • Army Pvt. Robert C. Wblteoer, son of Gary Whitener of Huntington Beach. has completed basic training at Fon Dix, N.J. Whitener is a 1983 graduate of Manna High School 1n Huntington Beach. • • • PFC Jolla W. Flaber Jr., son of Linda Maruska of Huntington Beach, has received the parachutist badge u~n completion of the three-week airborne course at the Army lnfanuy School m Fort Bennana. Ga. Fisher will be stationed at Fort Devens, Mass. • • • Cadet James C. Froa, son of Frank and Antta Fron of Fountain Valley, has received practical work 10 mili- tary leadership at the Army ROTC advanced camp an Fon Brag. N C. Fron 1~ an ROTC cadet and a student at Southern lllino1s University in Carbondale, 111. ••• Army Pvt Mark A. Reeves, son of Myra S. Gates of San Juan Capi trano. has comrlcted basic ltlanana at Fon Dill, N • • • Airman Ml llul T. AluaDCler, son of Herman and Muriel Alcundcr of Huntington Beach, has lf'lduatN from an Air forte turbo_j)_rop aircraft maintenance course at Sheppard Air force Ba Texas. Alexander, a 1981 arnduate of Fdison High School in Huntinaton Be C'h, will serve with the 7th Orpni1a1ional Ma1ntcnancc SQuadron at Carswell Air fortt' Ba l cxas. • • • Airman Mark A. Almara1, son of Jorge E. Almaraz of Irvine. has graduated from the Air Force security police spcciahst course at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. Almaraz, a 1981 graouate oflrvine Hig11School, wall serve wath the 3287th Techntcal Tra1n1ng Squadron at Camp Bullis, Texas. • • • Airman David B. Graff, son of John and Juhe Graff of Hunungton Beach, has been assigned to Sheppard Air Force Base. Texas, after complet- ing basic training at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. Graft: a 1978 graduate of ~estmans~e~ High School, will receive Spcelahzed in- struction to civil enainccrina. • • • Army Pvt Steven H. Coronado, son of Carl and Sandra Forrest of New- port Beach, has completed training as a mihtary pohoe spcctalist under the one station unit traimna prosi-m at Fon McC1ellan, Ala. Coronado is a 1982 pduatc of Newport Harbor Ht&h School. • • • Airman J~rosne S. Co~•· son of Betty L Clctchcr of San Clemente, has completed basic trainint&t Lack- land Air Foroc BaK, 1 eus, Corpuz, a 1981 &ft\duate of San cmentc Hi&h School, wall remain at Lackland (or •pccialized instruction in the educa- tion and traininf field. • • Airman MkkltlA. BrlakJe7,son of Ronald L Brinkley of Fountain Valley, has lflduatcd from the Aar Force ref'riacration and aircondiuon- ina coum at Sheppard Air Fonx Ba , Tcxa . Brinkley. a 1984 aradu- ate of Ocean View lh&h School in I tuntinaton Beach, will serve with th( 603rd T1ct1c:al Control SQuadron 11 Stm ch 1r Bue, We t Cicnn~ ,. ,/'-- .,.., .... "'"--' ·-..., in the Ont lnn•na. then •etttna to third on , Meik O'M••ra h•vlng protltable ••••on on PGA Tour. 82. What you've seen ls just wtiat you get Marin a football has s peed to b urn with Rish.Massey By ROGER C~N °' .. o.llJ ..... ._ If you've been waW1ing Marina High football for the past few years under Coach Dave Thompson you've probably got a pretty good idea of what you're going to see when the J 984 campaign unfolds. It includes a veer offense predicat- ed on speed, a quick-hitting, but very thin offensive line, a smothering, very balanced defense and a passing game which has evolved into one of Orange County's fastest hitting, with an cx- defeos1ve back at the controls. backed by (what else?) a defensive back. . "Yes," says Thompson. who begins hts seventh year at the helm with a ponion of the 1983 Sunset League championship to defend. "f would say so, what you've seen 1s what you're going to get. "I know we had better enJOY the speed we have this year .. . What Vikings fans have seen oflate includes a pon1on of the Sunset League champ1onsh1p in 1983 and CIF"Big Five playoffberths four umes in the past five years under Thomp- son. Head Coach: Dave Tbompson Staff: Andy Doncpn (def. coor .. hnebackers ~ Doyle -(secondary); Man Rehhna ( fens1ve line); Tim Recd· (defensive ends wtdt receivers); John Roeers (defensive ends. runni~. backs). Ron VandCf" Sluis (defensive line) League Sunset Nickname. Vikings · ,. Colors: Navy Blue. Columbia Blue and Gold. Offense: Veer and I. Defense: 50-read. 1983 record: Lcaguc·3-1-1. 011erall 6-5-2. 1984 achedule SaL. Sept. 8 Esperanza (at Valencia) Fri., Sept. 14 Scr\'ite (at Westminster) Thurs .• Sept 20 Foothill (at Tustm) Fri .• Sept 28 La Quinta (at Westminster) Fn., Oct. 5 at M1ll1k.an · Fn .. Oct. 12 at Huntington Beach• Thurs .. Oct 18 Fount.am Valle)• Fn .. Oct. 26 Ocean View* (at \\e!>tminstcr) Fn .. Nov 2 at Wcstmmste,... Fri .. Nov 9 Edison• (at Orange Coast) *denotes league game . .\II games scheduled for 7:30. Top off enslve prospects Reale Jacbon •lidea head flnt into thJia bue after rapping a two-ran •tncle throwing error bi 6-3 'rictory oTer Detroit. Angels get a lead and keep it, top Tigers with four-run first Thompson has 15 returning let- termen within a squad of 55 and tht!re are two Wlth All-Sunset League .. credentials -junior guard John Porter and receiver Ch 1p Rish. Player Steve Blokdyk Keith Laszlo Paul Klein Adam Antoyan Shawn Massey Poi. Ht. Wt. QB 5-9 160 QB 5-10 160 QB 6--0 160 RB 5-9 200 RB 5-10 175 Detroit starter Petry own worst enemy in 5-3 loss By RICHARD DUNN Dllltr NM Cwr1., ,,.._,, Dunn~ the Angels' recent scven- game losing streak, a pnnciple factor was the inabiljty of the team to hold a.. lead. Friday n1fht, in front of 41 ,459 fans demonstrating The Wave for the first time ever at Anaheim Stadium. it was different. -Different m that not only did the Angels beat Tiger starter Dan Petry f~r the first ~me ~t home, but they scored four limes m the first inning and held on to win, 5-3. Petry, entering the game with a 5-0 career mark agamst the Angels on their home turf, was his own worst enemy in the decisive Angel first. Since May 9, he has not walked more than three in a game -perhaps the best explanation of why he's second an the Amencan League with 15 wins -but two of his three walks Detroit's Marty Castillo. a 1I3 last night were his downfall, and hitter replacing the injured Lance resulted in the Ansels' four-run first. Pamsh behind the plate. led off with a It all started Wlth two outs when homer to left in the sixth. his first of Fred Lyn~ singled. Petry walked the year, malong 1t 5-2. Dous DeCmces and Bnan Downing "Tonlght's game was a' en: crucial to load the bases before Reggie . bcca ked · ' Jack.son dnlled a one-hopper in the one use ~e p1~ up a full game hole on the right side to score Lynn (on Minneso~). .. Manager John and DeCinees. McNamara said. !he next three When ri~ht fielder K.irk Gibson's teams (Detroit, Bah1more and New throwtothirdtryingtona·I Dow York) can either make or break our iled · .... _ • 1 nm.g season. We have to come back and sa _uuo ~ Angels dugout, It win tomorrow~ hut it's_going to be a scored~wnrngandallowedJackson tough weekend. Don't write our totalcethird.Mom.cntslater1twas4-0 epitaph to soon this thing isn't over when Bob~y Gnch laced one to yet .. · center, sconng Jackson. · . . . "lt wasJ·ust a matter of not being ~1tt, who cruised thmu8!1 eight able to fin the plate, and I was getting in.nings. allowed a . lead-off ~mgle to the ball up," Petry explained. "After J Gibson in the nint.h, which was was able to adjust, it was too late. followed by .another smgle by Darrell "I hadn't been walkinaanybody the Evans. chasing the nght-hander. last two m~nths. then all of the On came reliever Don Aase. who sud~e~. to~ght -well, they JUSt promptly allowed a single to Ruppert capitalized. Jonesinto left, loading the bases with After C~et Lemon homered with nobody out. two outs in the second off Angel Da Be • · starter Mike Witt ( 12-10). the Angels ve rgm~n s sconng fly ball to made it 5-1 in the fifth when Gary center made ll 5-3, then Lemon Pettis scored on Lynn's single an the walked to load the bases again. This hole to right field. (Pleue 9ee ANGELS/82) JETS GET LATE RALLY TO NIP RAIDERS, 20-14 BILLBOARD TODAY LOS ANGELES (AP) -Running back Johnny Hector scored from one yard out with 1:47 left to play Friday night to aive the New York Jets a 20-14 victory over the Los Angeles Raiders in the final National Football League preseason game for both teams. The come-from-behind victory by the Jets over the defending Super Bowl champion Raiders at the Los Angeles Coliseum left both teams Wllh 1-lrc:cords 10 thcprcseason. Quarterback Ken O'Bnen, who entered the game for the first time with three minutes left 1n the third quarter, engmecred Ne"" York's wan- ning 62-yard, I I-play dme. Los Angeles scored the only points of the first half on a 25-yard touch- down pass from quarterback Jim Plunkett to wide receiver Dok1e Williams with 4:08 to play in the second quarter. The Jets, unable to threaten throughout the first half. got on the scoreboard on a 45-yard field goal by Pat Leahy at 3:49 of the third quarter. New York took a short-lived 10-7 lead by driving 65 yards on six plays on its next possession. scorina on a 12-yard pass from quarterback Pat Ryan to Hector 1n a third-and-I 0 situation. The Raiders bounced right back. moving 80 yards m five plays to take a l4--l.O -~d¥antage Ihc... touchdown came with 3:09 left an the period on a 7-yard pass from backup quarterback Marc Wilson to Greg Pruttt Big play of the dnve was a 50-yard run b) Joe McCall to the New York 9- yard hne. The Jets drtw to within three points on a 28-yard field goal by Leahy with 8:20 left in the final penod. Dodgers throw one away, 6-5 PH ILA DELPHIA (AP)-A touah at-bat and an error were the dcc1dina factors in the Philadelphia Phillies' favor Friday n&&ht. The J>h1lhes beat the Los Angel~ Dodgers ~5 in 10 innina.s when third baseman German Rivera threw wildly past fi~t after pick1na up Glenn Wilson topper down the third-base line. The wild throw aJlowcd Len Matuszek to come home with the winnina run. Rivera had to take the ball on 1he short hop and threw from a sliahtly off-lance po i1ion. .. Ifs a crime to lo~ a game hlr.e tl\at," Do<lgcrs Manager Tommy Lasorda said. "A routtnc arounder. All he (Rivera) had to do was throw It o\:er there ... Wil~n hit a 3·2 pitch aner fouling off a number of touf,h p1tchc offered by Dodger reliever Jerry Rcu 2-6. "I foul~ ofl two real Jood cut fast ba.lls and a lidcr.•• said W1IS'On, who at .236 1s havina a touah season dunn.a his fi~l ycu 1n the Nation1l LC' ue. "He (Reu ) St.a)~ in on me. I was lud...y to act a·ao00 hop on the ball." The first-place C h1c1 o C'ub wo,n ,1n the aftcmoo!". puttina add1t1onal prc,~urc on the Ph1llte . who tand ~1x. pmesback. Ph1lhcs Manager t'aul Ow n . who watched his team I a 4-0 lead in ti'<' c11hth , brcathcd a ~•ah of rthcf. "We'll take 1t," he said. Matuszek opened the 10th innina by walking ap1nst Reu and was sacrificed to second by John Wockenfu. '- After Luis Aauayo was intentionally walled. Matuszek mov~ to third when Ivan OcJcsus rapped into a fortt play. Wilson then ran tl'ic count to J:.2 bd'ott hitting a low hopper to Rivera. The Ood~rs tied the pmc 5-S in the top ofthe ninth. Steve Y r Wllked with one out ind Ed melu~ ran for him. One out later, Rivera srnaJed ofT Phalli~ rrhe\'er Al Holland to move mcluna to second. Larry .\nderwn then came on to pitch and sumnde.mi a bloop inaJc to Proro Guerrero to tic the pme. DcJc u • two-out double in the bottom of the ci&hth inning pve the Phillies a S..,. lead. The Dodi rs. limited to two anal throua,h snen inningst." Philadclpl\11 stancr hanc Ra~ley. came •.h~e in the ci th. Y(' r led ofTwtth hu fourth homer of lbc season. awl y \lndw1ched a pair ofout around R1,cra'\ angle, but a double hy teve \ prompted a l·all for Holland. () vc And('oon lfttlN ftoll3nd with a two.-run douhle and Tony Brewer followtd wuh hit fi~t major k uc h11. a douhk. to tie the game Steve Blokdyk has been groomed for the pivot tn the backfield at quanerback and it's anticipated the Vikings' opuon will be able to show it (Pleaae 9ee MA1UNA/B3) Vince Kelly RB Billy Craft RB 5-9 160 5-10 175 .,.., .......... "' ... Shawn Mauey pro'Yldea backfield speed. Adam Antoya.n adds the beef to attack. Watson shoots 62 to take command World Series of Golf record book rewritten after flaw less round .\k.RO"J. O hio (.\P) -South Afncan r>cms Watson set at least fhc course and tournament records with a spectacular. 8-under-par 62 that gave him a three-stroke lead Friday in the second round of the World Sencs of Golf \\atson. 28. a regular on the American PGA Tour for four )C3SOM. completed t~o tnps over the 7.173-yard F1~ lone Countr) Club cou~ an 131 . nine shot under par for the respected la)out that ranks'lmong die mo t difficult lhc touring pros encounter all season. H1' 18-hole sco~ broke the cou~ rcrordof63 t b) Bruet"Crampton m the I Q75 PG.\ National Cham- pion hip and the tournament rerord of64 stt b' And) lkan in IQ79. His 36-hole total broke the rou~ rttord ot 1 l2 !-Ct b\ Ja ·k 1'.1cldau\ 1n the 1969 \men.: n Golf ( 1 IC an(.i 1he toumam nt i 'Ord of 1.H set b~ Tom Wat~n 1n IQ Q. • th" c1aht b1rdtC\ fo1 the da} ~a' \till anolhC'r rt on.: tor the ehtc, mtcmational touman nt Bo1h hi\ 11\-hok ~o nd '"·hole total' mat, h('d the low tor he \Car on the tour. Hrm.'\' l 1ct1~c. thl" ti"'t-roun,1 leader. had a 68 1n the rn1ld , panl~ cloud~ "'cather and dropped Niel to <>econd at the tournament half~a' pomt "1th a 114 total ··(,od. it focls good." s~ud Wat son. "ho quahfied for this<'' en1 w 1th his tirst .\mcncan \'ICtOf'). t"o "~ks a~o tn the Bu1cl Open. ··1 ..aid \<'~terda" 1t''i. ixw;1hk hlr o;,omebod~ to get hot and -.hoot 6.:! or ti 1 But I had no idea It ""ould he me ··11 amazes me. t'\t"r\llmc I shcx)t one of tho<e low round\:· '81d Watson. "ho had a 63 in the Bu1cl and another 6' in the Hentage ( la<,Sll earhtr this ..ca on But this. he ~1d. wa\ "'the he't 'iC'Onng round r, c e'er had. fu-c- stone 1 one of 1he tough~t solf courses ~ou l'ln e'er pla~ lf grat1f}1na to ~hoot th1 kind of~!"(' on such a a.rr t cou~ ... Peter Jacobsen. a ~-time v.1nner this \tar. wa third alone at 1.'7. \J\ back ot Wat~ at the 1oumamcn1 hal"'~~ point. aner a 6 7 Frt"d Couple and Cra11 Stadler v.-ert thronl~ other men 1n the field of .i;! able to better .,ar for 36 hok The) wcret1ed1t I 1Q Couplc:"'>hadaNhnJ \tadler matchrd par 70 Ltt Trt' mo. who \\on the rt, National < hamp1on,h1r . had a f\ and led a larg..: ll"\'UP :.it 140, l om \\'at\l.ln ~"'at 7 1-141 Hnll'i.h Oprn ,hamJl ~' ,. 8-11~·\tcm\ ~ .. , 70-1 44 \b\tcr' 11tlc·holJrr lkn CrcMh:t" 'l 14 and lall 1Cklau"' ,_, 4~ Le\Vis' leap best ever in Europe BRUSSElS, Belgka'n (AP) - Cart Lewta. who won four o6'd medala at the summer ~ leaped 28-4 ~ tn the IOng fUnlp ewnt -the beet jump 8* record.ct In Europe -at the~ nnual Iva van Damme track and field meet Friday. U.S. attuetee flOured promt. nentty In moet ewnta but f.-d to tr t n. 40.000-1~ crowd o rec:ord·bt..adna pet'fonnMoe. Amertcan Kri 8eP*'e won tM 1~ race In 1CU1 MCCMMltt aheld of record~ CeMn Smtth't 10.23. SPORTS BRF AK Gott --- - - -----Qulaenbeny earna S4th eave Steeler publicity depart~ent guilty of jumping the gun Left-hander Bod si.ct shut out Chl· • 0 'Meara k . oonthrtt h•tsforc1ght.1nni""btfo~ see S WlD gc1t1 ~hcf help from Du QaltaMrT7 and Hal Me~• hlJhli&hted a three-run From AP dllpatclles PITTSBURGH -fhe co,er of the [iJ Pittsburgh Steeler..' m~d1a 1u1de 1~ out of c Cl• d4te e'en before the Nattonal Football Lnaue season beams The 132-page podc.et-med book feature~ a full- oolor drawing of runnma back Franco Ham), who n~ just 363 \.ards to become the NFL's carttr rushin& leader But the Steeler~ placed Ham~ on wa11.ers earlier tht!> week after a month-long contract dispute m wh1ch Hams reponedl) turned do"' n an offer ofa S200,000 raue this season The media guide sa)"s ol Hams· .. ,\ future pro football Hall of Farner and on~ of tht: greatest pla~ers m ""Fl h1stol'). Will become pro football"s all- t1me leading rusher 1n I 1)84 ·· Hams went unclaimed b' the rest of the '\'FL's 2., team·., 11.anU Tuesda' and can now n~got1atl' wtth an) team he chooses. Louganls takes diving lead SANT A CLARA -Greg Lo uganis set 13 the stage for his attempt to break the record for most nat1onctl diving tttles when he led the prelimtnar) scoring of the I 0-meter platfonn competttton Fnda) at the L .~ Ouldoor D11. mg Champ1onsh1 ps Louganis. 24. of M1ss1on V1eJO. scored 64~ 42 in the preltminanes of the event-one of the two an which he won gold medals at the Olympics Earlte:-in the week he won the compet1t1on in 3-meter and I-meter spnngboard diving. t) ing Cynthia Potter's re~ord of 28 national rnles. Louganis goes after his record-breaking 29th tllk toda~. Bruce K.Jmball , of Ann ,\rbor \11ch is the main threat to Louganis. In Fnda) 's compet1t1on ~1mball finished second wtth 618 30 points, followed b' Jim Gra) also of\.i1ss1on V1cJo, w1th 556 b5 points · Louganis and K.Jmball finished onc."-two in the platform event an the Olympics Michele Mitchell 12. alw of the M1s!>1on V1eJo club and an Olympll \11\er medalist 1n platfonn d11.ang. led the women", dn1s1on aher the prehmananes "'1th 395 79 point~ Quote of the day Vonnie Oroe, coach of t.M U.S. '#Omtn'a fletd hockey team. joking about how her team had 'Prepared for expected smog In Lot Angetea during pr...Olympk: workout• at Uralnu. College ln PenntylvanJa: ••a had IChedufed four car. to bade up to OYr practice gym and apew exhaust eo we would ~t ueed to It. But Urslnus wouldn't let U$ do It." Fast start gives Bradley lead DL"'\fR -Defending champion n Pat Rradle' e'ltabh~ ed an LPC1 .\ record wtth a .28 lor nint: hu~c!> Fnda~ and cruised to a bhstenng o-undc:r-par 65 to tal..e the ~cond-round kad 1n the LPG.\ tournament here. .\thunderstorm dela)ed com pletion of the ~cond round S1xt)-four pla\er'I managed to complete their rounds Fnday. while another 6 7 remained on tht: course and were 10 finish up this morning. The field then will be cut to the low 70 and ties Bradle1. wa!> 5-under-par for the tournament and held a one-stroke edge over first-round leader Alexan- dra Reinhardt, who \lipped to a 74 Fndav Patt\ Sheehan was 3-under w11h eight holes still to pla). Bradlc\ staned at the I 0th hole, and after a 1-on·r 37 on her first nine that she called "not impressive at all." ~he <:aught fi re on the second ni ne. She b1rd1ed seven holes on the nine chapping in twice and using mcred1bl~. onl) seven pulls She rapped 1n b1rd1e pum of 15 and :!O feet at the first dnd second holes chipped 1n from I 0 feet for b1rd1e at "'o '\and canned a '.!0-foot do"'nh1ll putt at No 4 Ali denies fr aud by company NEV. 'rORI\. (.\PJ -Former hea,)-m weight champion Muhammad ,\h dented in (0Ur1 f-nda' that a compam he formed to train hoxe·r., had deccl\cd 1n,cstors. <.a) 1ng that a' "the m<>'>t rerngniLed person m the '.'Orld," hl· would neH·r dream of selling a poor cxamrk Although he.., not a defendant in the Secunt1es and Exchange Comm1c,'>1on lawsuit against ha!> compan). Ah told a federal Judge he wantl'd to clear his name. The t<>mran.,.. ( hamp1on Sports Management. Inc ol Virginia Beach Va wa!> charged with deceiving 1n1.estcm 1n a \loll.. ofknng b) d1sgu1sing a $600.000 Ins<, ac; ,, loan that might he lOllccted -allegedly making< hamp1on .tppt.'ar a more a1tract1H' Jn\est- mcnt th<1n 11 "'·•' "It"d bl· l<m din' dH:ar. Jnd I can l hd1cH rm h<.'ing tm·d 1111 ,11nwth1ng ltl..c th1'> ·· .,,ud ·\h v. ho '>t.'nes as chairman of thr < h.1mp1on cum pan~ 'We"re tn.1ng 10 hl·lp (X"l1plt• nn1 Jl'l"raud 1hem " Thl \f < v.ac, '>l'l'k1ng an order from Judgl' Roben I V.. .ird .11 I \ l>t'>tnc.t ( ourt in \1anhattan that would hJr < h.1111p1on and 11' [Hl"'>1dent Richard H1r..chfeld. l/i Imm fu11m· traud I he lnmpam al read~ has agreed ton•1urn1n\t'\tor 'mnnl'' bu1dcn~11n) wrongdoing firJt annu\I ¥.1 th a nin·5COnnJ triple as K.&nus Cit> downed the White Sox, 5-2, Fnda) niaht. Quisenberry, a Co ta Mesa Hi&h product, earned fiis J.4th s&\e ••. El ¥.he~ 1n the American L..caaue Friday, pinch-hitter Rick MlUer broke a 4-4 1ic wnh a thrtt·run double in the ~&Ath innma. rallyin1 Bo)ton 10 a 7.t> vi<'tory over Cleveland Gary Ward drove in six run' wnh a t~run double and a three-run homer to power TcJ1u to a 10-3. vic&ory ovtt Milwaukee. Ward also had two smgjes m the pme Cuti Jobn•oa'• double in the eighth innin& drove in the go-ahead run and Lal1 Leal struck out a ~reer­ h.igh I 0 batters 10 lead Toronto to a 6-2 '1c&ory over Mmnesota. The v1ctol') left the Blue Jays un- gaJMitberry beaten an six games with the T~tns 1h1s vear and reduced Minnesota's lead an the West to four games .. EddJe Marray hit his first home run in three weeks, a three-run blast in the first 1nmna, and Mike BoddJcker patched a s1x-h1tter . leadmg Bah1mort to a 4-2 v1ctol') O\ er the Oakland. which lost Its si:\th straight game . WUUe Raodolpb'1 RBI groundout !>napped a IOth-mnmg tie. and New York !>Cored two runs w11hou1 benefit ofa hit to defeat Seattle, b-4 A tros take over second place Joe Nlekro pitched a five-hitter and a Terry Publ and PbU Garner each drove in two runs as Houston beat St. Louts, 7-2 •• Fnday ntgh t an National League action in the Awodomc The wtn was the 12th in 14 games for 1he Astros. who took over sole possession of second place 1n the West Div1s1on ... In other NL games. Dave Parker bounced a run-sconng single up the middle in the ~venth inning to break up Jose DeLeoa'1 no-hit bid and Cinc1nnau. despite the lone hit. beat PittsburJ!l. 2-0, behind the three-tut pitching of Jeff Ruuell ... Rick Sutcliffe allowed JUSt five hits m wmning his 10th consecutive game and Ryne Sandberg drove tn two runs as the East-leading Chicago Cubs beat Atlanta, 3-0. Sutcliffe. 12-1 since JOming the Cubs from Cleveland 1n June. struck out six and walked one m recording his second shutout ... Steve Garvey dnlled an RBI -single with two Nlekro outs in the ninth inning to enable ';an Diego to earn a split of a doubleheader wi th a 5-4 tnumph over Montreal. In the opener, Gary Carter broke a 1-1 tie in the sixth wtth a run-sconng single and Tim Wallacll followed with a two-run single as the E>.pos beat the Padres. 4-1 ... CbtJi Davis tripled home the ue-breakmg run and scored on Dusty Baker's infield smgle, capping a three-run rall y in the seventh 1nnmg th at earned San Francisco past New-York. b-5. for a sweep of a doubleheader. In the opener. Bob Brenly's second homer of the game. a three-run shot an the eighth mning, powered the Giants to a 7-6 tnumph Ex-Dodger trainer Wendler dies BA TO"'l ROL'GE. La. -Cancer has a da1med the life of 82-)ear-old Harold ··ooc·· \\endler. a tramer~ho worked w1th the Dodger~ \\hen the-. \\ere at Brookl\n and at Los ,\ngeles. · · \\cndll-r died Thursda' at a Baton Rouge hosp11al · He had "'orked fur the Dodger organ1zat1on through thl· ch amp1onsh1p ~ea sons of the I 940s and '!)s He n:11red from the club m 1959 after his team defeated the ( h1cago White Sox in the World Senes Dunng h1i. 16 years with the team. the Dodgers won ')even Nauonal League pennants and two world c-ham p1onsh1ps Pnor to JOt ntng the Dodgers, Wendler was M1.ss1ss1pp1 State Univers1t) 's fi rst fu ll-time ath letic tra1_ner. working in that capacity from 19 35-1943 and again 1n 1948 Televt.lon, radio TILIVtalOH 8:30 a.m. -TRACK -J-. Owens Garnet hlghllQhtt (taped), Channel 11. 10 a.m. -FOOT8ALL -Washington at New OrtMna In an NFL prweuon game, Channel 7. 11:16 a.m. -BAHBALL -Atlanta at Chicago, Channel 4. 2 p.m. -SOCCER -Dmamo Budlarest YI. Uverpoot (tape), Channel 34 3 p.m . -GOLF -Third round coverage of tM Wor1d Serlee of Golf at the Flfestone Country Ctub. Akron, Ohio, Channel 2. SPORTICOPE -High- light• of National Championship Truck Pun from Chicago (taped), Channel •· 3:30 -SPORTS IPECIAL -Pecttlc-10 tootball prevtew, Channel -4. 9POflT8 IPICIM. - Ptnonarttlea of NFL'• wtnnmo-t coache9w Chan- Ml 7. <4~30 p.m. -WIDI WORLD OP IPOWfl - Uttle League Wof'td Serlea ohamplonshlp game from WJlllamsport, Pa. (taped), Channel 7. 8 p .m. -FOOT8AU -Houston at OallU ln an NFL pr'e-season game, Channel 2. 10 p.m. -BOXING -From Me:xlco C,ty, Chanr*34. RADtO 11:15 a.m. -8AIE8AU..: Oodgera at Phlla- detphla, KABC ~}. 7 p .m. -BAM8Al.L: Detroit at AngelS, KMPC (710). But he still ran s third in ear nings on th ts year 's t our For a pla~r who basn 't won a tournament since he turned pro in 1980, Mark 0' Meara has done all n&htforh1mselftru5year. O'Meara was third on the money hst oflhe PGA tour through the PGA Championship with $31 S,SS7 in earn1n15. Qujteuum fora non- winner. Jn l'act, 1t'1qu11ea sum for those who have won tournaments this season as well. As usual, Tom Walson leads the pack with S429,46S and Tom Kitt 1s second with $322, 744. O'Meara, the·· Mission VieJO H1&h araduate and 1979 U.S. Amateur champion, is the only other player above the $300,000 mark. One of the keys to hts success is his consistency. O'Meara 1s the leader in birdies accordlna to the latest statistical lists compiled by the PGA. He has carded 303 birdies this year with Andy Bean second wtth 297. O' Meara is ninth among the scor- ing leaders with an average of7 l . l 4 strokes per round. He is also fifth in the par breaking department with a mark of .204. Those who follow the PGA tour fed it is only a question of time until he dents the winner's circle. His non- wmnmg marks are very impress1ve and could be the best-ever for a player without a tour victory 1fh1sconsistcn- cy continues. Overtb1s weekend, because he didn't have a victory toquahfy for the World ScnesofGolf, he teamed with George Ba yer 10 a partner's better ball eventatJeremy Ranch an Utah. TbJS one combines a senior (Bayer) and a regular tour player. O'Meara's best finish pnor to this year was 55th to 1981, his first full year on the tour. He won$79,063 that season, his best ever until 1984. Incidentally, 10 1983 he was second an eagles and I Ith m sand saves m other stattstlcal departments. Before the current season started. he said: .. l've always r layed on natural mstmcts but knew I needed Swimming marks fall in Moscow \10SCO\.\ <AP) -East German 'wammers ~t two world records tn one race and won four of five sv.1mmmg e"l'nts and two Soviet rowing teams set umes that would have won Olympic bronze medals at the Fncndsh1p '84 Games here Fri- da> The ~hooting com pe t1t1on closed with an East German win, while the field hockey finalists were de- termined - the Soviet "A" team against Poland. The East German women's 400- mcter medley relay team bettered its own mark by more than two seconds and Ina Kleber, the start swimmer for the team, lowered the record for the I 00-meter backstroke leg of the ralay. The relay team of Kleber. Sylvia Gerasch. Ines Geissler and Birgit Meineke was clocked an 4:03.69, a lime that beat the Amencan squad's Olympic gold medal perfonnance at Los Angeles of 4:08 34 The Soviet Union fini shed second 10 a time of 4:08.13, also below the U.S. Olympic mark Kleber churned through the water 1 n I :00. 59 to lower the previous world record of I :00.86 held by her coun- trywoman Rica Rcm1sch by 23 hun- dredths of a second. An individual record m a relay event can only be set on the first leg. For Gerasch it was the second world record of these games as she also set a world mark in the I 00-meter breaststroke of I :08.29 on Thursday. In all 35 gold and silver medal times of tbe Los Angeles Games have been bested at the Moscow pool so far with four events remaining. Alexander Pngoda posted the Sov- iet Union's only win of the day in the men'!> butterfl y event m I .58.83 which wo uld have given him no better than smh place at Los An3eles. The women's 200-metcr md1 v1dual med ley was won b y East German U te Geweniger m 2: 11 . 79. Tampa Bay wins battle of Florida From Al' dlspat<.•be11 T .\MP.\ I la -:.. lad .. Thomp\on IO'IM'd d 22 yard toulhdov.n pa'' to J1mm1l' <1ill'\ dOd Hugh ( 1ret•n n:\urn1:d an mterceptton ul Dan Manno l I \anh for anotht"r \rnrc tu lead lht• Tampa Aa~ Buc-cann·r\ to .t 14-1 l \ 1<.tnll llH'r lhe Miami Dolphin' 1n .1 National Football I <.'ague prc"K'a\on fioalt-f nda~ night The triumph l'nahled the Bue..'> 10 fin1~h "'11h a l-2 prc<,cac;on rcrnrd "'lllll· M1am1 finished at l-1. f homp'>OO lOOnl'dCd \\Ith ( i1le<, on a po'>t Jl311ern With 1017 rem•11n1ng ID lhe ~cond quarter and rnmplctcd ofq pa.,,t .. ,/or <)() }aHh bcfo~ 111.1ng W8\ lO h.Kl..up Sttv{-CXBer~ .1t halftime Manno \\ho ml\,ed the l>olphm!i lirn 1hrc(' pr< \Cil'>•tn contc\t\ v.11h ;a lr.1l tun·d 1ndn linger on hi\ throw.ans h.ind . tomplctl·d ~(I of 'M for W:l \Md\, but thc m1.,ta~1·-rn111l' M1::1m1 ntkn\C, ih1ch had live turncn rr' "'a' hm1tl'd tn n 1>31r of lJwc von S< ham•rnn til'ld ((oal\ ot 1' and '\4 ard\ and :t lut-mmutc lnu(hdown In ttlhcr Nf I prt'~a'°n finale' ! ew alaa.d 31. KIDIH Cl&y 7 t-0 >..BORO. Mu' -~le\l' < rrngan thrt'"' h> Stephen \tnmna for a S ·~:mJ toul hdown 110 --thr. P:ttrum lint utlrn\1\C pla) .ind J om fmnkljn k1d:c-tl lhrrc firld iioal' as l'"' 1 ngl.1nll I I crur;hed the { h1el!> The Chiefs 4iutfered another loss when '>laning quancrback Ball Kenney, a product of ~addlehack C ollegc. fractured his right thumb on th~ first play of the second quarter. It was not known how long he would be sidelined New England. 2-2. outgamed K.ansa C'it), 1-'. 244 yardo; to ti 5 1 n the first half and lec.J 16--0 at intcrm1ss1on The Patno1., hoo'itC'd their ad,antage to 30-0 w1th th1rd-quancr dn ve!> of 76 and 90 yards capped hy touchdown runs of 3 yards by backu_p quancrha~ k Ton) F.Jt\On and 6 yard~ by Craig Jamt'\ Clnclnnatl 35, De&rolt lf < J~C INNA. Tl -Ken Anderson threw three 1ou1 hdC1wn p:ic.~ ""the Bcnpls exploded for ~M earl\ point\ and rolled 10 n ea"" '1c&ory m cr t hr l Ion .. \nd('r'ion'c; C'nc;p pu'itnl and two tumo1.crc; hv the I fons led to tou~·hdowns on four of the Bcngalc,' fir\t fhr po K'SS1ons C inc1nna11 fini'ihcd 1-1 , 1tc; lx'st prc4;t'a\On m.irk \tn~·e 1t\ ~.1 C'\h1h1t1on record 1n 1977. wh1k l'>ctro11 ended l-2. Ot over U , A&laata U . .\ l l N1 A -Rookie C..1enc l....103 and c 1m1ld W11lh1tc scorc.'d cond·half touchdown\ on 'hort rut\ u the Rronrn~ duwnc-d the falcons Lang. from l.SU, erased Atlanta's 13-10 halftime advantage when he plunged 1 yard to put the Broncos in front to stay in the third q uarter and Willhite applied the clincher on a 4- yard run with 6:50 lefl in the ~me. The Broncos closed their preseason slate with a 3-1 record and Atlanta fell to 1-3. S&. Loats 31, Minnesota 0 ST LOUIS -Neil Lom&Jl ran 3 yards to scort 1n the opcn1na period and flipped a 37-yard to uchdown 10 Steve Bird 10 the third quaner. leadina tbt Cardinals past the V1k1np. Lomu completed 14 or 16 puses for 211 ~arch before an favorofR1ck Mcivor, who capped a 7S-vard 1 Loui sconna drive wilh an 18-yard ~ss to rookie Edd1t O'Bnen. Neil O'Donouahe booted a 37-vard field 1oal in the fourth Quaner Su Frnd1co 17, aUJe 7 AN FR NC ISCO -OwiJht Hic ks and Tom Holmoe of the San Franc19CO secondary made two 1nterccpt1on ap1ttt as the •9ers e'cncd their pre~son rcrord at 2·2 by po tina the victory over the prcv1ou Jy unbeaten Sea· hawks Tl'lc intcrttpt1ons wtre the fint an presuson play apmst ~ttlc. 4· I. Three ame tn the first half aptn ' 1tartana quancrback Dave Krieg. "'hocompletNI only 1hrec of 14 passc . Mark O'Meara someth10g better. I've been work.in& with Hank Haney 10 Houston and he has me swinging more on a plane. "I was always too upri&ht and that led to inconsistency. Now, I under- stand theswin(so much better." Others on the tour will ~ee with this assessment about his play th ts year even though he made the remarks before the season s&arted. * * * lf you're looking for a chance to display your putting sktlls, get an entry blank and compete in the Glass Eye Open at Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course in Irvine on Sept. 15 This is a S 10,000 event sponsored by a Costa Mesa firm, Glass Eye Golf Products, makers of putter heads from optical glass. The winners of the partner's competition will take home $4,000 and if they are us1ng a putter made by the sponsorin& firm, they will pick up an addiuonal S 1,000. * * * American GolfCorporauon, oper- ators ofRancho San Joaqum Golf Course in lrvtne, Meadowlark Golf Course in Huntington Beach and Casta Del Sol in M1ss1on V1cJO among others. is taking over three cit) courses in Long Beach in th e 1mmed1- ate future. American Golf will operate Sky- linlcs, El Dorado and Recreation Park courses to add to their ever-growing How ARD ~HANDY SPORTS COLUMNIST Its& of courses under the aroup's management. Amencan Golf also has an outstandingbuy foramateuriolfers who hke to play different courses or enjoy playang1n tournaments. For $40. you can get an SCGA handicap. a s"eatcr.acapandget to play 22 rounds of golf at vanouscourseson 1bc list they operate free of charge. This includes the three Ora nae Coast area courses along with Full· erton Mumetpal C.ourse and a numbcrofothers including the Sahara in Las V cgas. The aroup also operates a number of tournaments at most of the courses and those who belong need only to sign up and pay the entry fees tojom the fun. For further information, phone the American Golf Corporation at (2 13) 414-07 lOorcontact one of the local courses. At Rancho San Joaquin. checlcwith pro Tom Martin at 786-5522. * * * Jake Rohrer. chairman of the 11th ann ual Crosby Southern Clambalce at Irvine Coast Country O ub Feb. 9-10, tsn 't letung any grass grow under his feet. He already has the executive com- m1 nee lined up for the event that falls on a Saturday and Sunday for the first time in several years. Rohrer is geanng his fall program to include monthly meetings of those involved with the tournament. More than 200 volunteers are needed and most come from the 552 Club, support group for Hoag Memorial Hospital. The tournament has become a showcase for young pros on the PGA tour and being opposite the Hawaiian Open this coming year, ic could attract a large ntnnber ofoutstandmg young stars of the future. An&el Gary Pettie reacbea, but lt'a to no a•all thla time. ANGELS TOP TIGERS ... From Bl time, Howard Johnson lolled one to center. not deep enough to score Evans from third for the second o ut before pinch-hitter John Grubb hit back to the box to end It "It's very im~rtant for us to win because we d idn't play well last week," said Jackson. "I have bttn struaahna and we've all been struaaJ- ingasa team. This can almost be a do- or-die tituataon in the next 10 days" "ThJs club is capable of puttma a strina toaethcr:· McNamara added. ''The 17 days against these balklub<1 1s going to be tough." ANGIL NOTIS -Condlllon1"9 to.en Jim ""' ....... who •I ,, I• In hi• '71n VHr In Pl'oftnlo!l•I beMben, WU ho1pltell1td FrlOIV I I SI Jo .. Ol\'1 In Oranoe for an ntrtmt "" of lt llou. Detroit ce1cner t..IMe ,errtlll min~ Frldev's H mt with • bone bf'VI .. on ht• lefl Mind, en fnlurv thll OGCUrtd t1rti.r In 1111 wttlr. Ht '• UHtltd lo return to eetlon lonloht . Wlfn hi• alnott In Ille fow1h 111111119 Frldev, ltt1efl Oewlfle llH 1111 "ftlY In 1' of hit IHI 17 Ot~ with • 33t everaoe (21-U I OU!'lno 111e1 t.11tn ,,.. LYM It l'lllllnil l37 l2t-16) In flit IHI 2l oemes w1111 " runa atOl'td end Pie• 21 weltu encl 12 "II In 1111 11\1 16 Nmet .. Ton1o111· a plld11nv 11tlrlno1 find Adi Men1a I 16·11 0000.lftt lr'llCa l(IMft (J. 21. Sikes, Kratzert gain lead JEREMY RAN( H. Utah (AP) - Senior Dan \1k~ and PG \ Tour rttular 8111 Kra11en overcame a 'ilow start to rtcord fi~ b1rd1es on thc back nanc and fire an 8-undcr·par 6• to ga1n a I-stroke lead throuah t~o rounds of the ,hootout at lertm)' Ranch. 1kcs and Kraucrt. wh o held the ftnt·round tcad after fl h1onana a 12· under 60, faated to make a b1rd1c unul their fourth ho1r 1n the 7l·hok n1or- rtsul4r tour best-II event liut '1kcs rolled 1n b;sck-to·back birdie at &he fourth and fifth holes to get ht team ao•na and later tteordcd thrtt con cutivc b1rd1es to help build a I hot edit over Senior Tour mo ney-leader Don Januar:> and pan- ncr Mike Sulhvnn. "We're a link disappointed that ~e dadn'' make a ~w pun and act off to a btttt r,1an." id Si~n. who tc.am stood 11 20.undcr-P3r 124 throu&h .l6 hole , • .. ~ • f Gallo confirms it, freshman to start in quarterback role By ROGER CARLSON °' ............ Lift Chuck Gallo promi d to bring ?Omethina new to Mater Dci High as us new coach, and it'' apparently more than jmply tigbti!.l& up the re board via the forward pass - sometfiina the Monarchs have for the most part -lacked But no one could hav~ visualized quite the shakeup that is upon the Monarchs' camp with the realization that Gallo will be .going with a frc hman quarterback in the opener apinst Fountain Valley September 7. Todd Mannov1ch, the I S-year-old son of former USC star Marv Marinov1ch, a Los Angeles Raiders assistant coach, is being groomed as a four-year starter for the Monarchs. At 6-3, 170 pounds and with a left- handed soft touch, Gallo says his freshman will carry the torch to put Mater Dea back into the focus which Monarch teams enjoyed in the mid-.605. "He's ~tenually a superior quar- terback,' says Gallo of the Capistrano Valley area resident. "He came in during summer school and started as No. 6, but was up to No. 2 in three weeks. The next two weeks he JOI involved in a real fight for the start mg position and by the end of summer schoool had moved in to the No. I spot · "He has a good arm, but has greatest asset are ancrcdibly fast decisions. ''I'd stand behind him during passing league and watch each time be went back and he was ri&ht in selecting the nght receiver 90 percent of the time. "He remands me a lot of Burt Call (Capistrano Valley High product)" Gallo says the Monarchs will .. reinflate the ball'' and although his freshman quarterback has yet to cam the respect of his teammates m a winning situation, Gaito says he has no doubts. "He's earned it," says Callo ... Of course. we still have to put the pads on." 1 The Monarchs wall operate out of a drop back offense, but Gallo says has frc bman has the ability to scramble well and with a quick release, the major emphasis on improvina his skills will be in the strcnath and velocity area. Marinovich was born on the Fourth of July. so it all seems predictable that some real fireworks may be in order for Monarch fans. "We're lookin1 within our freshman team for a possible Pat Haden-John McKay combination," says Gallo. dWe may be a year away from beina a good football team, but we may make 1t tough for some on the . way. Our ~oal is to make the playoffs this year: While such a pass-catch combina- tion may be a ways off, the No. I target for Mannovich n.aht now appears to be tight end Mib Kelly, along with wide receivers Jeff Gately and Paul Cardenas. They'll be trying to helP. fill the void left by basketball star Make Mitchell, who has told the coaching staff he's through with football. The Monarchs ~ without the prcseason blue chip lineman, but they are solid with a 190-235 look up front, and the defense has a Jump with the interior line play of Mark Jos1pov1cb (205), John Barich (210) and Steve Bancroft (220). While Mater Dei's offense is o~ viously turning from the run-run-run format of many seasons, Gallo says the passing game will be slowly integrated, and be expects a great deal from two sound runners -whom be terms "Thunder and Lightning." referring to 200-pouod Junior run- ning back Charles Anton and 160- pound senior Toan Cao (pronouced Twan-cow). FOOT-BALL OUJ'LOOK Cllack Gallo Head Coach: Chuck Gallo Staff: Pat Callahan (dcfcns1vecoordmator. inside linebackers, assistant head coach); Dave Rudolph (offensive coordinator. backs)T1m Tnus (wide receivers); Vince Brown (offensive hne); Ray Fike (defensive hnc) Rach Schaaf (secondary); Jim Hartigan (outside linebackers) League: Angelus Nickname. Monarchs Colors· Scarlett and Silver Offense: Mulitiple Pro: Defense: Multiple 50 1983 record: League 3-2: Overall 6-6 1984 schedule Fri .. Sept. 7 Fountain Valle) (at OCC) Thurs .. Sept 13 Santa Ana Valley (at SA Bowl) Fn~pL 21 SantaAna (at SA Bowl)_ _ Thurs., Sept. 27 Westminster (at SA Bowl) Sat., Oct. 6 Huntington Beach (at OCC) Fri., Oct. I 2 at Bishop Amat• Thurs., Oct. I 8 Bishop Montgy• (at SA Bowl) Fri .. Oct. 26 at Pius x• Thurs., Nov. I St. Paul• (at SA Bowl) Thurs., Nov. 8 Servite• (at SA Bowl) •Denotes tcaauc &)me All games at 7:30. Top offensive prospects Player John Kane Sean Fort Mike Mothcrway John Suggs Tim Aanntgan Ron Byers Leo Presiado Scott Harper Mike Kelly Toan Cao Charles Anton Jeff Theis Jeff Salinger J~y Atkinson Jeff Gately Paul Cardenas Gary Coston Todd Marinovach Chris Fergus Joe O'Hara Pos. Ht. Wt. ( 6-0 230 OG 6-0 210 OG 6-2 210 OT 6-4 235 OT 6-3 215 OG 6-2 200 OG-C 5-1 I 200 OG 5-10 215 TE 6-4 210 RB 5-8 160 RB 6-1 200 RB 6-0 160 RB 5-10 I 70 RB 5-10 I 75 WR 5-10 160 WR 6-0 175 WR 5-11 170 QB 6-3 170 QB 6-l 185 QB 6-t 180 Top def enalve prospects Mark Jos1pov1ch John Banch Steve Bancroft Brum Luna Chris Barden Mike Williams Mike Kelly Mike O'Connor Steve Snell Albie Anderman Herb Garza Tim Ha1dcr John Doan Chris Gill Steve Montano Dave Gallivan NG DE DE NG OLB OLB lLB lLB ILB OLB ILB CB CB FS SS CB 5-11 5-11 6-0 5-10 6-1 6-2 6-1 6-1 6-1 6--0 5-10 5-8 5-10 5.9 5-10 5-10 205 210 220 205 205 180 175 190 185 180 175 165 165 175 175 165 Com meat Sr . '83 bac'kup Sr . '83 starter Jr . up from sophomores Sr .. '83 backup Sr .. '83 backup Jr .. up from sophomores Jr. up from sophomores Jr .. up from sophomores Sr .. '83 backup Sr .. '83 backup Jr .. did not play an '82 Jr .. up from sophomores Sr, '83 backup Jr .. up from sophomores Sr .. '83 staner Jr .. up from sophomores Jr .. pk, punter Freshman staner So .. up from freshman team Jr .. up from sophomores Sr .. '83 linebacker Sr .. '83 staner • Sr .. '83 u&ht end Sr .. '83 backup Sr .. Tustin mmsftr Sr comerback an '83 Jr . up from sophomores Jr .. up from sophomores Sr .. '83 backup Jr .. up from sophomores Sr . '83 backup Jr .. up from sor,homores Sr.. 83 starter Sr., '83 starter Sr . '83 backup Qb Sr .. '83 backup Connors inoves to seznls MASON. Ohio (AP) -Jimmy • Coonol"$ brcc1cd throuah has lil"$t set Friday and then had to stru le to W1lander. who faces Connors 1n the semifinal J beat Srcftn Edbns of n and advence to the Jemifinals of the Association of Ttnn1 Profc: sionals J Tournament. In the lone cven1n1 match. defend· inJ champion Mats W1lander. the third seed. used two tiebreakers to Q beat John dri and dvancc to the , semifinal Wilandcr, who had not played for two months !>«au~ of a wri t injury, lo t the first ~t 7-6 to Sadri an a tiebreaker, but tame W<"k 7•6 in the wcond pmc with a 1~ ucbrtakcnnd , " won the third CH1ly. 6·l. '11 didn't think . dn'~ Krvc would continue as tr<'n but at Jid," id , Connors -who entered the tour- n mt>m ~cd strond, behind John McEnroe v.ho lo t in the opcnina round -had lo win a ucbrcallcr to take the quancrfinal match. 6-3. 4--6. 7-6. Earlier Friday. fifth. d J Andm Jamd of ·wcdcn dcreatcd Paul McNamcc of Aumaha in anotbtt quarterfinal. 6-2. 7-6 and will face Joikim N)strom of den. v.ho camc'Dack to defeat Oan C'all1d)' ~ 7. 6-J. 6'2. Conno mad it too ca\)' an ha fira t. b king nc tn thC' fourth me to Utkc l· 1 I d and then co ting to ~ ictory. .,.._ ......... ., LM ..,_ Andy Miller and hJa left-handed pauee will be the tbrut of Unlvenlty lllgh'• aerlal &a.me. The Trojana, conaldered 80lld threata to the Sea View Leaeae champlonahlp. are eyeing a Cll" Central Conference playoff berth in 1984. FOOTBALLO University h:~Qanl1 1984 achedule Thurs., Sept. 6 lf'\1ne• (at lf"inc High) Fri .. Sq)t. 14 Minion Vat,io (J.t lnine H~) Fri .. ~pt. ll Laguna Hills (at Mi ·oo Vaejo) Fri .. St:pt.: 28 fa1anci1• (at OCC) Thurs .. Oct. 4 Saddleblck• (at A Bowl) Fri., Oct. 12 Laauna Beach• (at frviM Hi&h) Fri .. Oct. 19 Corona del Ma,.. (at C'\\l)Qrt) Fn., Oct. 26 Costa Mesa• Cat Irvine High) 1'1!un .• Nov. l Newport H.arbor4 (at Irvine) Fn.. Nov. 9 Woodbrid ~(at Irvine High) •omotc5 leaaue game. All sames at 7:30. Top prospects Player . Pot. Ht. Wt. Ken Bailey· OT 6-3 210 Phil Palumbo c 6-0 215 Scott Dryer PK-OG S-11 190 Tim Bates OT 6-3 20S Matt Wilken 00-00 6-0 210 Batry4tham OT 6-0 205 Steve Crane OL 6-3 200 C . Gilbert OL 5-10 175 B~Amold DE-TE 6-2 215 Jeff McGovern DE-TE 5-10 175 Mike Hennahanc f'S. WR 5-10 175 Matk favorite FS-WR S-9 160 Chris Smith CB-fl S-10 170 Grq~~in 00-TB 6-0 20S Kala.ma b.l.ra CB-FB 6-0 185 Shawn Noble TB 6-0 180 Al Con t.rcra SS-FB S-9 17S Adam Leiter LB-FB-TB . S-9 l7S And~iller QB 6-2 18S Jeff er QB S-11 175 Will Ferrell PK 6-3 180 Tom Dobbs OT 6-3 2lS Eric Carter OT 6-2 240 Scott Tompkins DG S-10 180 Tim Commerford DE-T 6-0 180 Mike Moses DE S-ll 190 Todd Pearlman LB 6-0 205 Scott Dryer LB 5-ll 190 Peter Pitchcss CB S-11 170 Crai Valli CB S-1 I 160 Mar~ Petrovich FS 6-0 150 Jeff Baker SS 5-11 17S Scott Cagle SS 5-10 I . Is this t_~e Troj·ans year? By ROGER CARLSON Of .... OellJ Noe ltafl A }Car ago the anuc1pat1on of the 1981 prep football season was ob- vious at University High. but Coach Rick Curtis admits ll, in the back ot everyone's minds was "Wait 't1l neiu year." Well. Next Year is here, and 11 appears somebo<ly had some pmty good tnsight because the TroJans enter the 1984 campaign with I 3 return mg starters, mcluding four with All-Sea View League honors. The Tro1ans began with a bang. winning all three non-league games. but with quanerback And) MLIJcr s1dchned with an injury in the heart of the league season agamst Newpon Harbor(Unavcrstty went 0-3-1 in that span), the punch was eliminated. Miller 1s back. however. along wnh running back Kalama Gohara. who rushed for 602 yards on I 50 camcs as a JUntOr, and 5 touchdowns Among the all-league returners arc tight end-defensive end Brad .\mold. receiver Mar._ Favonte, linebacker Todd Pearlman and defensive tackle Tom Dodds. among others. and with a revamped staff. Curtis acknowl- edges that the ant1c1pauon at Univer- sity could be higher now than ever before. "We feet it's going to be a good year." says Curtis, who as entenng his fourth year as head coach. "and 11's about umc. "I've been able to see the develop- ment of the kids and they arc c'pecting to win and the attitude has really changed." Although Cunas· staff has been reshaped. he says the system will remain as It has with emphasis on the multiple I. although the even front MARINA FOOTBALL ••• From Bl all. including the option pitches which have not been prevalent the past two years. RJSh, the three-year gem who as an obvious threat to go the distance every time he touches the ball. "'I like to get the ball going with the option and we think Blokdyk can do a good job with the option... says Thompson. Twice the league's I 00. 200 and 400 champion. he runs the 40 an 4.5. "Whether we can go le\ him any more than before I don't know," says Thompson. "But we'll try to utilize his skills and speed ... The Yikes have a lot of weapons, including running backs Adam An- toyan (5-9, 200 pounds and a return- ing stancr) and Shawn Massey (4.6 speed in the 40). but'" the spothght at the begmning of every play is C'h1p As for pro1cct1ng Rish as All-this or All-that. Thompson hedges a httle. saying: .. , always hke to wait to see if they arc that good." Player Chip Rish Darrell Payne Steve Jennings Preston Hayslette 03vtd t1ctchcr Brent Hyska Rick Hunt John Porter Pat Brown Dave Wilson Dan Mangcnetll Joe Han Pat Penner Pos. Ht. Wt. WR 5-11 155 WR 6--0 165 WR 5-11 150 TE 6--0 190 TE 5·11 180 OT 6-4 230 OT 6-3 230 OG 'i-9 ~15 OG 5-9 ~:?O c 5-10 200 ' c S-9 185L OL 5·10 185- PK 5-10 I 5C>1 Top def enslve prospects F~ Jordan Gary Thetford Dave Winterhalter Prc~ton Hayslette Dan MangcTielli Ray Maples Ron Larson Enck Vennes Joe Han Matt Scott Mark Chandler T~ronc ounablood fatt McDo*tll 0 vid Actchtt Dan Brandon Danny Famll John Porter Al Ritchie Vantt P1cdonc Juon Lo" Dean Yo4lh1yama Bally Cran ii.tub Laszlo (, rrin lon Rtcl. turgc Ru K1bata DE DE DE OE DE OT OT OT OT NG G G LB LB LB LB LB 18 B CB <B \ 6-1 6-1 S-1 I b-0 5-9 S-11 S-11 S-1 I S-10 5. .S-9 6-0 S-10 S-11 6-0 S-9 -9 5-11 ·10 S-11 S-~ 11 S-10 ~ 5-9 200 IQO 170 190 18S 100 190 195 1 S I 17S lOS 185 10 170 160 21 17S 1 (!() l6S 16 17 160 l6S tSS lb Com meal 5r. 3-ycar starter. 4.5 40 Sr . "83 letterman Jr .. up from SOP,homores Jr . 83 starter r . '83 letterman r. '83 letterman Jr .. '83 letterman Jr .. .\II-league in ·83 Jr . did not play in '83 Cir .. '83 letterman Jr .. up from sophomores Sr . up from Junior varsity Sr : '83 letterman Sr . did not play in '83 \o ~trong, aagrcss1ve Jr . up from SOP,homorn Jr .. 81 ~tancr Jr.. up from \Ophomo~ Jr .• up from 'IOphomorcs 'Jr . up from phomorcs Jr . up from sophomores ~r up from Junior \&nily \r up from 1unior vaf'\1ty: Jr up from saphomo~ Jr . up from .,r,homoin t.. 3 stancr r . • 3 letterman r . ur from 1unior va~Jt) Jr .. up from sophomott"S Jr.. ll·k gue returner Jr •• up from phomot'C$ r., Or. Lutheran nan fer Sr .• did not play: in '83 Jr .• ur from sophomore Jr .. return• taner Jr •. up from sophomorn r .. '8'\ ttcnn1n ~r .• Ufl from JUnt r " n1at) Jr •• uo lrom M>phomo~ that bas been a defensive trademark for the Tro1ans. may have some wnnkJes this year. .. There won·t be too man) changt"S." he says. "We want to st.a) with the system, it's a key for the kids." Athletes. rather than systems, how- ever. Wll1 most games. And the Trojans arc happy with their lot. "Ir's the fastest team l've ever had,·· says Curtis. favorite and Gohara runa 4 6 40. Greg Benjamin (6--0. 205 tailback- dcfens1ve guard) LS a 4. 75 and even Pearlman is a conStstent 4.8." Although Miller as back at the controls, Curtis says the Trojans figure to pass less than a )'eat ago. because 10 1983 they were fo~ into too many passing situations "Maller as the ke) :· says Curtis. "'He's a college quarterback... big and tall and v.1th a rifle arm."' In six MiJJer completed 63of136 paS$C$ 749 yards and 5 touchdowns. "We ,ot a little bit away tiom t "'e wanted to do." continues Curtis. ·1 ho~ to run the baU mo~. Defensively. we're gom.a to bt VCI')' aggrcss1\C, cspcciaUy wath tlae hncbackei:s and dcftt>Sl~ cod& have. All of those guys as.re physical and have really worked the wciabts;" The b11&C5t dcfenSJve concern as with the secondary, but that's an area that can be stocked with Gohara. Favontc and Dallas transfer · e Hcnnahanc. among others. lo all there are 27 lencrmeo on 50-man squad and althouah can't really be classified as buse. as 1'lewport Hamor with its tackles. the Trojans aren't small by any means. Choose from 26 with standard features llke: •Air Conc:lltlontng-\lllth ~lun • LNtMr ~at1ng ArHs-'lllllrn pushbutton controls mMchtng w~r-rrtmrrwd lftertng a A~FM Stt~-Slgn.al Sffktng with W'tlffl Kanner ;and digit.lit dlrpl"Y • Po~r ~ttnq and Po~r llnlkn fEfeetrontc.llly TUMd ~~IWl'I •Alloy \&l'hHh and SlHI kftl'd fO.I«~ opdon .wall b~I. RMSl.1111 TI~s 8 1buring Suspe-tulon and EIKttel"I< Fut'l l"J«'•04"1 • ... ~kes • CO,c.at ~ton • ,.,......,.,.. lAM•Deft • ~ *veu • COUit._. a Kno•lll,.••••• s.e.s ...._..,. CADILLAC f7t4J 540-9100 (2131 587-8266 hid' .. Orange Coast DAllt:Y PILOT /Saturday, Auguat 25, 1984 Schnellenberge r left holding the bag CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) - Howard Schnellenberger, who left the riational champion University of Miami for the Unncd States Football League, was lef\ wnhout a coach1na job Friday when plans fell throuah for the USFL team's move from Wash· in&ton to Florida Sherwood Weiser. who said last May he would bnna the Federals to Miami in 1985, and Schncllcnberger made the announcement at a news c:'onfcrencc at the hcadquarten of Wciser's Conuncnt.al Companies. Both said the league's an· nounccmcnt this week that 1t would switch from a sprinJ to a fall schedule affected their dec1s1ons "First of all. I'm regretting to tell you that we have elected to d1scon· Aztecs looking better SA~ DIEGO(o\P)-An1mprovcd footbaJI team with more depth means "some good things arc ao1na to happen" this )Car to San D1eao St.ate. which lost its last seven games durina a disastrous 1983 campaign, Aztec Coach Doug Scovil says. "This 1s the hardest working team that we've had since wc'\e been at San D1cao State," said Sco.,.11. who took over the San Diego State football program an December of 1980. "We're youna. a little incxpen· cnccd at some positions but we've had more depth than we've ever had, particularly in the offensive hnc." he said. "That's where we've alwa)s had problems before. losing people wllh mJunes" "Our defense 1s much 1mpro\cd." Scovil added. "It's probably the biggest area of improvement on our team. Apin the kc) 1s depth We have more depth than we've C\.Cr had. part1cularl> 1n our defensive line and -~dary." Tltc Ai\ecs. outscored b) their opponents. 347-226. and decimated by mJunes to key personnel. finished the 1983 season at 2-9· I overall, I ·6· I an the Western Athleuc Conference. "I think this year the whole team is reall) fired up. They want to start winning because ever) bod) here 1s tired of los1na." S&)S quarterback Todd Santos. a freshman who beat out sophomore Jam Plum for the startina assianment in the Sept I season opener aaaanst the Air Force Academy. Dunna his h1ah school career at Selma. near Fresno. Santos passed tor 6, I SO yards and SO touchdowns. "I thank the hardest th1n11s that he doesn't have any (collea1atc) ex· pencnce," Scovil says "I think he has the talent. the 1ntclliacnce and the pol.SC. we. re. JI.al aoina to ha v~ to Stt how he reacts to (pme) pre sure " The Aztecs ha ve 33 returning lettermen from last )Car, 16 on offense. J 7 on defense. Amona the veterans is senior Rich Moran. whom Seo\ 11 has descnbed as the team's best offensive lineman. Moran, a 6·3, 270.pound tackle. suffered tom ankle liaaments last year and missed the final fi.,.e aames Bui he has had a areat fall camp and appears to be back at full strenath, Jl)'S Scovil. Spilt end Vince Warren. ~ho cauJht 28 pas c' for 594 }ard' last ~ason, lead a \ etrran rct"c1' 1na corps \ tmue any further negotiations to said the two men still have a purchase the Washington Federals," "financial arrangement," but he Weiser said. would not elaborate. The former "I regret the fact that wc can't bring assistant to Dolphins Coach Don a team to M1am1. but I think the need~tt. Shula admitted he's lookang for work to make a prudent business dcc1s1on elsewhere m football. overshadows the desire to bnng a "I'm a football coach by trade and I team to this area," the hotel de-plan to be one for a long ume to \eloper said. come," he said. ''I'm sorry that it's Schnellcnberger. v.ho guided the not goang to be in M1am1. though" Humcanes to an 11 ·I season and Schnellenberger said he would 31-30 Orange Bov.I upset over top-consider offers from college or pro. ranked f'.Oebraska. left the college fess1onal teams. but he refused to team on May 25 At the same time. ·speculate about his future and said he Weiser affirmed that he had nearl) had not talked to an}one yet about a completed a deal to bnng the Federals new job to M1am1 Weiser recent!> said the agreement Schnellenberger. who signed a re-had not been completed because a ported five-year. SJ m1lhon contract partner M1am1 auto dealer "lorman wuh \\-easer JUSt three months ago. Braman. backed out of deal As _,..,....... Ste•e Youna may ba•e departed for the USFL, but that doean't mean BYV ha• 1t•en up tbrowtna the football. rccentl) as last week, Schnellenberger said only manor details needed to be completed. But on Wednesday. the league said ll would sw1tch to a fall schedule m 1986. Weiser and Schnellenberger said they didn't wish to compete for fans with the National Football League's M1am1 Dolphins and the Humcanes alma mater. He also had assistant coach1ngJobs at Alabama, under Paul "Bear" Byrant, and m the pro- fessional ranks with the Los Anseles Rams and the Dolphins. He left the Dolphins an 1973 for a bncf stlnt as head coach of the Baltimore Colts, but was fired three games into his second season. His Colt teams com· piled a 4-13 record. ·~We're gomi to be t.alkmg to the Washmaton pnnciples over the next couple of days," Byrne sa1d. "O~ v1ousl¥, we'd like to keep this a stable franchise." But Byrne acknowlcdacd that it's conceivable the franchise could be eliminated entirely in the USFl. consolidation, m which the Olcla· homa and Oakland teams already have been merged. "I would have rather had this press conference than to have brought the team to M1am1 under the present set of circumstances." Schnellenbergcr said. "I never wanted to go head-to· head wuh the Dolphins and Hur· ncanes" He rcJoined the Dolphins an 1974 and took the University ofM1am1job five years later. He led the Humcanes to a 41-36 record in five seasons. In add1t1on to Scbnellcnberatr, Weiser had hired Ken Hcroclc, the fonner director of player personnel with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Hurricane promotion specialists Roy Hamlin and Rob Steiner. Schnellenberger began his coaching career as an assistant at Ken tuck), his USFL spokesman Jim Byr'ne said Weiser's decision to back out of the Miami deal means the franchise tcchnicall) reverts to Washington and reluctant owner Berl Bernhard, at least for the time being. The planned M1am1 operation had not s1aned any players. BYU coach defies old· axiom Good things can happen, too, with the use of forward pass From AP dl1patcbet h was once said of the University ofOlc.lahoma-and other college football teams who thought every forward pass meant another step toward purgatory-that the only time the) put the ball in the air was when they flew to a road game. And 1t was former Texas Coach Darrell Royal who cracked that "three things can happen when you throw the football -and two of them (i ncompletions and interceptions) are bad." Now comes LaVell Edwards, who has been the head coach at Bngham Young University m Provo, Utah, since 1972 and whose offensive philosophy is that three things also can happen when you run the football -and two of them (lose ground. fumble) arc bad. It has taken a while for Edwards' game plan to catch on. But the last two national champions -Penn St.ate in 1982 and Miami last year - threw the ball more than they ran 1t. ltdwa.rU "I thank yo u can wm beina a passing team," Edwards says. "Passina is like anythina else -there arc a lot of different ways of doina it. I don't look at our passina attack as beina high-risk. We don't tum the ball over near as much as option teams do on pitchouts. To me, that's a high-risk offense. Most of ~r-passina 1s medivm.-.to short·renae- althou&h we do have the capability for the Iona ball -and we've never turned the ball over more than we've taken it away from our opponents." To say that Edwards and BYU like to throw the ball is like sayina Elizabeth Taylor and Zsa Zsa Gabor like to get married. The NCAA record book lists three BYU quarterbacks among the top 10 in major-collcae career passina ~ards (Jim McMahon is second with 9,536, Steve Youna is ninth wtth 7,733, Man: Wilson 1s 10th with 7.637). On the single-season hst, BYU claims four of the top five spots (McMahon is first with 4,571 yards in 1980, Youns second with 3,902 last year, Wilson third with 3, 720 in 1979 and McMahon fourth with 3,555 in 1981 ). · In average yards per aame, McMahon 1s both first with 380.9 m 1980 and second with 355.S in 1981, Young is third with 354. 7 in 1983 and Wilson is fifth with 338.2 in 1979. Young was the national leader in passing efficiency a year ago, McMahon in 1980 and 1981 . The list of noted BYU quarterbacks goes back through Gifford Nielsen ( 1975· 17), Gary She1de ( 1973· 74) and Virgil Carter (1964-66). The Cougars must be doing somcthm& nght. They ha ve won ei'1lt consecuuve Western Athletic Conference championships and Edwards' career record 1s 105-37-1. But, althouah they arc among the favorites this fall, the rest of the WAC can take hope from a line in the BYU football guide which says that quarterback "is the biagest question mark." There are three candidates to carry on the hnc of succession. The tOP, two arc Robbie Bosco, a 6-foot-3 junior from Rosevtlle, Calif., who completed 17 of 28 passes for 252 yards and three touchdowns as Young's backup last season, and Blame Fowler, a 6-0 junior from Elmira, N.Y., who saw some action in two aames in 1982 and was redshirted last year. The third candidate is Mike Young, a 6-2 sophomore from Greenwich, Conn., who recently returned from a Mormon church mission 1n Honduras. Mike 1s the great· areat--areat-areat grandson of Bnibam and brother of Steve and probably wdl be rcdsh1rtcd this fall. But before the rest of the WAC acts too ecstatic, Edwards has these words of warning; "I'd like to have more experience, but it's not really a question mark. Bosco-he's the auy, and 1 feel Jood about his proaress. If we have problems this year, 1t won't be because of Bosco. I don't want to put any undue pressure on him, but ht"s got the arm and hes look.in& sharp. "Bosco is probably more like Wilson in 51ze, temperament, the way he throws the ball. He's aot a very aood ann and he's very accurate. Fowler is a lot like (Steve) Youna. kind of a scrambler and not very tall" / Under Edwards, BYU has led the nation in passing six times, in total offense three times an<i in scorina once. He must have been some kmd of passer in his heyday, riJht? Wrona' He did play a little quarterback, but be was basically a center and linebacker in at Utah State. He spent eiaht years as an und1stm1uished high school coach in Salt Lake City-"I lost more pmes than I won" ..... and was defensive coordinator, of all thinas, wbcn BYU elevated him to head coach. Flu tie don't let his loo.ks deceive you NEWTOl'i. Mass. (AP) -He's a SrMU ktd With a choir-boy-face. H.c' fncndl> and polite. hardfy threaten· 1ng But don't be deceived. Sell Doua Flut1e short and he'll np you apart . "If we're JUSt havinf a pme of Monopol) he would fiaht about It 1f he thouaht he was naht and it would help him wan," says his brother and teammate, Darren . "He likes to win .. Whether it's passina Go or passma Ben Bennett's NCAA record for career pass1na )ards. Aut1c will roll the dice ... nd feel confident the number\ will come up nght . He's a pmblt'r. a\ rambler and a battler •)' ou look tor any Opl'Klnunit) thcr<. l'I to "-In," ~1d 1lae e\cillng quarterback "ho made Boston C'ol lege a nauonal football power. "I'm jun--~ compctictv,, even 1f it means doma th mas in an unorthodoll manner.'' His me to a hot He1~man Troph) candidate was unorthodox. Boston Collcac was the onl> D1v151on l·A ~hool to offer him a scholarship He was the Eagles' third choice amona quarterback recruu . The first two went elsewhere. St1ll, he was 5-fcct·q and his prospects for succcc;s ~ere ~1m1larl) ~mall. "He was fifth·stnna quarterback onlv b«•u e we didn't have a 'ilxth· stnna quancrb ck." said Reid ilihn. Bos.ton ( ollcgc:'1 asmtant 1thlt't1C director In the.' fourth me o Fluuc' freshman year, Penn State led 38-0. TWo Elate quartcroacks had <:tone poorly. A third was hurt. Coach Jack Bicknell had no ~at cllpectations when he sent Fluuc in to mop up in the founh quarter. So all Flutie did was throw .for a touchdown and the first I JS yards of what could be 1hc first I 0.000.yard passina carter in major colic c foot· ball hi tory. "ft was almost lake somebody touched a 1w1tch"' Bickncn 1d. "E\'erybody•s tempo picked up." In the pa11 two seasons Au tie threw for 2. 749 and 2, 724 yard , fini h1n1 third in the Hc11m1n billotina laat ~'car. nd the I IJ)cs were 8·3·1 nnd 9. They fiaun: to be trona · n when thcyo~n their season here next turday aaainst Western Carolina. Flutie' car r passina total is 7.125. If he throws for 2,490 this season. an average of 226 per pmc banina a third straiaht bowl appear· ancc, he'll top the mark of 9,614 Bennett set last year at ~ukc. "That' omcthina that I'd really hkc to reach. I'd hkc to set my mark and leave my name in the record boob," said Flutie. who needs 2,87S to mak It to 10.000. All tt\osc numbers haven't erased other numbers. Flutie'' he1aht of 5-9. from the minds of compu1cr-or1cntcd sCaut who y he' too hon to be a National Football t.aaut--quar- tcrback. and that fires him up. "It's Just my i1e. Who care ? Who care ?" Autie said. "I mean, you win a football pmc. who catca how bi& the auy is who won it? • "lf I do that (set the record) thc'n they have to compare me with the other quarterbacks who _ played col· Iese football," he said. "Ria.ht now I feel like I'm bcina put in a cla by mystlf, a mall quarter ck cateaory. where I'm a trttt mall quamrback but not necc sarily 1 attat quar· terback. And that'• the way t feel the nation looks at me, c ptcially the pre ,. "l'd ltkc to \h them diffcrciin).'' Oran~ Coast DAJLY P LOT/Saturday, AUgu.t 25, 1114 • Black and blue division is nip and tuc From Al> dl•Ptldta The NF Central never has been known as the: iun . Pot of the National football Le guc. Wilh new coaches Forrest Orcaaat Green Bay and Les tctket at Minne- sota Join1na Mike Ditka at Chicgo. phra~like0no-nonsen .. e" and .. fun- damentally sound" and "tou&h" are even more the norm and the Central contiouei as the black and blue" divtsion apm. "It's a nip and tuck division," says Monte Clark, coach of the defending champion Detroit Ltons. "It almo t always goes down to the final week. Then, there's the new coaches. That always makes an impact " Last year, the Lions won the NFC Central with a 9-7 record while Green lla). Ch• go and Minnesota all finished 8· . i · m1>3 &y Wl 2-14 ··we won 1hc tatle onJ) b«ause we went 7·1 against other t ms in the division," Clark )1 ··That's going to be pretty hard to bc:u. Plu we've ,01 a tough out ide hedule:· Grtg.g, who led the: Cincinnati Benpls to the Super Bowl two )'cars &fo. inhcnts the makings or a cham.,. p1onship team in Green Bay. · ''The one thina th• team netds is to plar consi$tently.'~~ys Gregg. "We wit demand, not ask for, production. And we will set production. The more you're fU hcd, the more produCllVC you wit be." i·he Paclcers' ofTen~ features three Pro Bowl player): tight end Paul Coffman, who had 54 catches for 814 yards an~ 11 T~. wide receiver Jame\ Lotton. who hnd 58 for 1. 00 ncJ eight TDs; and center l.an) McCarrcn. The other Green Bay 1dc rtteivcr i$ John JelTerson. who cauaht 57 for 830 )&rd and ..even TD With quancrbaclr.: Lynn Die.key. Immobile but deadly, completina 289 of 484 P? scs fur 4,-458 yard and 32 TO!. with 29 intcrcepuon~~ the Pack· trl fini hed founh in NFC team conna behind onl) .. Washington, Dallas and San "Francisco. Steckel. at 38. becomes the NFL's )'Oungc t c~ch.. He put his own stamp on the Vik in~ im mediatt'l)" b) outfittina them in white shoe • brcak- ina tradition with the 17->ear ~i~ of lht' low-key Grant who left with a 161-99-S record. His practices arc tough. l~R THE RE CORD -~-~----=-=---~---- ~ • • .. " MAJOR L&AGUE STANDINGS Amet1can L .. 9" WHT DIVt"°" W L ~~t. GI " '° S2I 63 ... 4'6 ' 63644964 MillMllOle .... KIMU Cllv Cllluoo Otklend TIXll S..111• '° " 476 6°'> 60 6' 46S I 57 71 445 10\'J 57 72 442 II EAST DIVISION 14 4S •SI Detroit Toronto llelllmor• New Yori\ Sen ton Cleveland Mllwaukff Tl S5 5'7 II 41 59 SJS IS '7 '° Sll l6 .. 62 ,s 1' 17.., S1 n M2 27 S3 7S •U 30''2 ,,,..,...SC.... An9lla S, OtlrO<I 3 Bolton 7, CleYelend 6 TtHi 10, Mllwtl.lkM 3 Ken .. , CllY 5, Chlceoo 2 Toronto 6, Mlnnt$Olt 2 Btlllmort 4, OtkltllO 2 N-YOf'lo. 6, SMlltt 4 TMIV's Gamft Ottrool (Morrll lS·I ) •I A,,_, (Kl\on 3-2), (nJ Cltvetend (Ferr 3 91 el 8o1ton (Nlooer S·51 Toronto IClencv 10 13) •• MIMe$OIA (HOOOt 4·2) 9.,111more CFt•neoen 10-111 et O.,ktand <Burri' ll-6) TlllH (Houoh 13· 1 ll et MllweukM !Sutton 11-10) tnl CllleeOO (Sffver 11 II •• K•n•" Cllv IGut><H f-9) In) New York IRHl'mll\efl 7-41 ., Saell .. IB .. ttle 9· 14), (n) SUftdey'1 Gtmft OetroH •I An911s Cttvellnd el Bo\ton Toronto et MlnnelOle Tex" et MllweukH ChktOO el Ken .. , CllV B•tllmort et Oelo.ltnd New York at S..llle Natlonal L"eu• WEST DIVISION W L i-ct. Ge San0490 74 S3 Sl3 Houston " 64 SOI 9 ., A11tn11 6' 6' .SOO 10 "2 o""" 62 " 414 12° " Cincinnati 54 7' 422 20' 2 Safi FrenclKO so 76 397 23 , Chia DO N•w Yori\ Phlleoetlltlle MonlrHI SI LOUii l"llllburotl EAST 01\llSK>N 7S 52 69 S7 61 57 ... 62 43 ... 54 74 S91 ~ s 7 S44 6 SOI 10., 496 12 421 21 ... FrtcleY't ker9S Ptllladt!Pllle 6, o.dlef'1 S I 10 lnnlno1l ClllCllOO 3, Allente 0 San FrenclKO 7-6, New Yorio. 6·S ~trut 4·4, San OlellO l·S C lnclnne II 2, Pithbu<llll 0 Houston 7, SI Louis 2 TldeV"•G-Decle9rS (Welch 10-12> et Phlltelelr>llle IDtnnV 6·3) Allente (Mahler t ·I) el Chlcaoo (Sand-'"°" 6-3) Ctnctnnell 1Ttt>01 2-11 at Pitt1t>uroh (Cendtlerle lC>-10), (n) San Oleoo (Whll$0n 12-71 et Monlreel <Gultlduon t -71, In) San FrenciKO IM Devit • ISi et N- York (~erenvl 9·1?). lnl SI LOUii (LaPotnl 9-91 el Houston (Knepper 12·9). In) SUndt'i'• GelNt °"""'al Ptlllt~le San DltOO el MonlrHI Clnctnnell et Pittlbufotl San Frencllco •I N•w Yor• Allenll et ChleeOO St LOUii •• Houston. (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE Pfllffel 6, Dodeen S LOS ANG•LH ftHILAD•UtHIA Mrll_. urlllll Sax 2b 4 1 I O S.muel 2b 4 O O O ScloKle c 0 0 0 0 GWnton K 2 0 0 0 Anet.Sn" s I 1 2 GGrou rl I 0 I 0 Br-er If 4 o 1 1 Lezceno rt 4 1 1 o Ltndntd I 0 I 0 VHeYHd 3 I I <I Mer$hel rt 4 0 I 0 Sdlmdl 3t> S 1 I 3 Howell p 0 O 0 0 Ollver If 3 0 2 0 Stubln Pll I O O 0 Gercl• u O O O O RtuH p 0 0 0 0 Holland p 0 0 0 0 Mldndod 4 0 0 0 A"'*"n P 0 0 0 0 Vu09r c 3 1 I I JoRull l>h I 0 0 0 Amtuno Pf' O I o o KGron P 0 O O 0 LtndtlY 21J 0 0 0 0 Metllk It> 4 2 I 0 Brod\ lb 4 0 1 0 WOdlnflC 4 0 7 0 RIYtfl 31> 4 1 2 0 AOUIVO H 3 1 I 1 APene p 2 O O O R•wlev P 3 0 O O Guer,.., rf 2 0 I I 0.JHUl H 2 0 I 1 T...it as11s T...,• Jt611s SC....ltY ....... L .. AMett• 000 000 041 0-S ,.,.. JOO 001 flt 1-• Two oui. when w11111ln11 rvn Kored Geme Wtnn1no RBI -HOM E -Rlvere DP-Lol Anotlff I L08-Lo1 Ai'Otlff S, Phi~ 11. 28-GGrou, Mltuuelt., Sax, Andel'Wn, Brewtf', O.Jews Hlt-Scllml(ll 1261, YffOtf' (4) S-WOCktnfus,, e.-H It llt H SO LMA,_.. A~ How•~ ltt\l\l L Z·6 .........,.. 1 ' 2 2 N 0 Re~ 1M S Ho&$\d I l An~rsen 1·3 1 KGronw.e S 1 1 HIP-SClo.cle (by • I I 4 I 0 • 6 0 , 7 0 J l 0 • 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 KGtot') w~Groo T-)~1 A-3S.S41 AM•RtCAN L•Aou./ A.-s J, tiews 3 OITaOtT CALt~NIA "'"" "'"" Whllekr 2b 4 0 1 0 P9111t ct 6 I I 0 Trtrrwnl u 4 o o o Sconirt lb • o o o KG•b~ rf a 1 3 0 LYM rf 4 1 7 I DEvn•dh 4 0 1 t DtCna30 3 1 0 0 llt.IOMtlf-4..0 l.J-oa.n..ell 1..1..A kll!M ID I 0 0 1 lt•AM 4 1 1 2 LtmOllct > 1 1 1 GI-It.fl at 7 t 1 1 HJMsl\Jb 4000 BooMc 3000 MC11tlll c i 1 1 1 scnorndu JO o o C.ruotllft '0 0 0 T... SJ ' t 1 T..-Je I • 4 SC.. '" Wltil9t Oetr.tl '" •• ··-J ~ ... .,. ··-· C.tl"M WIMlnt ltll '-llt•Jt<kWI Ill 1::-KCiltMOll. H/oM$Oll D~1m0t!lla I LO&o"-0-'Nlll •• Ce nit 4 2 Wlllta>llt, Mlt-\en'!On 1111, MC11r Cl) ,......_"" ld l.1F'-let9me11 • H •HNIO o.trtd flottryL.,U •1 • ' c.... WlttW,U·lt I I I 3 AHtU 1 I 0 0 Wiii tll<Md to t IMltttn n "" W Irv T ~.ill ,\-41. • ' • lltnlQutl Certw DtClnces Miller Lvnn Brown Witfono Downing Sconltn Herron Grkh Re J1ckM>n Pelll• Plcclolo Boone Sc:noftelel T.i.ts Aneet avtr•"• IATI'IN~ Al It H Hit 261 43 " • 271 3• .. 3 U6 6S 123 16 11 I 3 0 400 " 107 15 116 IS 2l 6 2S2 26 " 4 413 •7 IOI 17 l1S 12 29 3 Ill • 29 3 2SS 3' 6l 13 403 SI ts If JS9 S1 " 2 114 fs 24 1 3S7 29 70 3 JOI 31 '° 3 41'7 S41 101S 116 fOITCHING ... ""' l4 ).t I ,. 307 " .176 0 273 S3 261 11 267 24 ,262 72 262 12 2S2 II 2'6 39 139 62 236 29 234 9 210 2S 196 16 1'5 SCIO .254 IP H el SO W·L EllA AHe ~ 21 12 16 2-1 lS2 ForKll 16°1'> 14 3 10 1·1 220 Corbell 64 62 24 JS 3· 1 2.39 S.nc:hei ..,_., 63 2' 44 e-s HJ Z.tvl ISS''l 1S2 39 4S 10-9 3 13 Wiii 194~ 190 73 1S9 12• 10 l S6 Romanick 190 19' SS 70 10-11 3 79 Klson 37 37 13 43 3·2 4 14 Kevfmen S3 50 1' 30 1·2 US JoM 16~ 201 46 42 7-11 OS s1e1on 11~ 141 •I " s-• 5.20 Curtis 13~ 20 6 7 0-0 S 93 LaCorlt 1""1 JO 12 13 1 ·2 '7S Swen S a O 7 0·1 1090 Oll"ltf's 11 16 9 s 0· I 9 00 Tllhb llJt 11116 >67 S71 '3·'4 U1 MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS A~lc.an L••eu• ITl'lrtlltlh TlwndeV"s Ganwll BATTING IJOS et t>ehl Wlnf,.ld New YOfk JS2. MlllhnOlv New Yor11 3" Tremmell. DetroH lit, Hrbek. Mlnne1ote, 317, Collins, Toronto .. 310. Murray, Bath· more. 3IO, E11ter Bolton . .JIO RUNS Even' Boston '9, Wonhe1e1. Ntw Yori< 14, Henderson, 0.klanc:I, 13, B1.1!1e<, CJev-llCI '1 Arrnes Boston, IO. Boi>0s Boston, IO RBI Klnomen, Otklanel. 101, Rice , Bo1- 1on 97 D•vll, SUttlt. 94 Armes. Boston, 91 Murrev Belllmort. '9 HITS Mllttono•y, ....... Yorio, IS7 Fr•"· co CMtYtlancl, 152, GtrClt , Toronto IS2. w1nhelel. New York 1S2, R1Pken, Balll· more. ISi OOUBLE!> Perro,11, Tues, 35. Eveni, 801•on lO. MtlltftO'"· New York, lO, Be•. Texe& 29. Gerc1a Toronto. 29 TRIPLES Moseby Toronto, 13, Comn1, T Of'onto, 12. GilllOn, DttrO<I, 9 Upshaw, Toronto, 9, Owen. Seelllt I HOME RUNS Armli. Boston, 3' King· men, Oakltnc:I. 31, Perri"'.-· DetrOot, 19, Bnmanslo.Y, Monnesote 26 Kitt~. Cn•ceoo, 26 Murl>hv O•IUtnd 26. ThOrnton, ciev ... nel, 26 . STOLEN BASES Henderson. 011kl11nc:I 49 Ptfth, A,,...1, 441 Contns Toronto, •2 Burler Cleve1anc:1 39 G1rcoa . Toronro, 3S PITCHING (11 c!Ko,•0-111. LH , Toronto l?·J, 3 49, Blylt'Ven Ctevetand. I• S 3 II Petrv, Delrotl, 15·6, J IS. Alexender, Tor onro. 12 S. 3 JI, Stitll, Toronto 12 S. HI STRIKEOUTS Witt, Afl9th, lSl; L•"9ston Seallle ISi Stttll. Toronto Ill HO<iO'\, Tnu. m Noekro. Ntw "'°"' m Naflclnal LNtue (Tllnutilt TIMll"Sdlv'• Gemes) BATTING (305 11 bltlJ)· Gwvnn San Doego, JSI. Sandbero Ctltelt90 321 Cruz Houston 316, PuN H°'atOll 313 Leonard. San Frenc1Ko. 312 RUNS Sandt>tro, c111ceoo, '2, w1001n,, San Dteoo tS; Samuel, PllllaoetPllie 81 Mltthew1. Chluoo 11 Cru1. Hou1ton. 79 Gwynn San Dteoo 79 RBI Carter, Montreal. •. Dav" Cnl· uoo, '2 Schmidt. PtloladelPhie, IO Cev Chtceoo. 7t, Crut, Hou1ton, n HITS Gwynn, San Dlt90 17S Sanelbero, Cl!lceoo. 163. Samuet P111tadell>lll•. IS7, Crut. Houlton IS2. Wvnne. P1tt11>orot1, 141 DOUBLES Samuel Ptl11toeoP11oa 29, S1nC1t>tfg, Cniceoo. 29, liul>Oarel Atteflle, 27, Reine&, Montreal, 27. Durhem, C"k:•110. 26, Hendrlcl< St. Louis, 26 TRIPLES Sandberg Ctucaoo 16 Samuel, PMeeltlPlli• IS Crur. Houston, II; Dofen. Houston, II, R•Ynolel,, Houston. 9; Gwynn Sen Dleil<>, 9, McGH, St Lou", 9 HOME RUNS MIKPhY Allllnta. 28 Schmidt. Pllillldelr>lll• 25. Cartt< Montrea 24 Cev. ChoCllOCJ, 21 Merllltl. o.c.een. 20. STOLEN BASES Samutl, Ptllleeleo1>11oe, SI, Wlooln1, San Dleoo. Sl, Rat,,.,, Mon· 1rea1, S2, Redus Cincinnati, 44 MWllson. N•w Vork. lt PITCHING I 11 CllClllOlll) Sutcliffe Chi· ceoo 11 I. J 26. Oarlono, New YOf'lt 11-S 3 6', Perer Atlante 11 5. J 76, Trout Clltceoo. ll·S, 3 S7 STRIKEOUTS GOOCl•n. New Yor~ 202 VIMl\lue6a, Oocttan. lfl; Rv•n. Houston 1 .. SOto, Clnc:innell 144 C•rllon Ptl•ltelel· Phlt , 136 """ Alamtt9s fltlOAY'S llUUt..TS (6tll .. M-ftllfll '*'-'• mttflnt) l"IUT ltACE. One mile PK• Tella/TIOll IROSlfl) 4 40 lOO 2.60 Boose TZ IKvetlier) 3.AO 210 lmmeculete IFIKO) J.IO Also receel Mldnogllt Mine, N-Ca<)tl, Bft Jev G ... Andv' Unule, Frosty Gin, R us IV Sl1Vtr1 Time 2111 J S s.1 •XACTA (4-61 Nld '22.tO saCONO RACE. One rn.ie pec:e Dofolnv Bret (Perket) 320 2 20 2 10 Hy OH (Linton) 3 20 2 10 Rho<le Loo.ti IF. SMrrenl 2.10 AIM> reced. Double l~die. Oreo lvrcL Titne I.SI 21 S. s.1 UCACTA (S-21 .,_Id '12.90 THIRD llltAC•. Ont mite pece SklPOtn ~rll (l.Kktv) 7 20 3 20 UO Holehtd To Win IPl•!IOI 3 20 260 FIY J~ Flv (GrundVI l IO Also reced: Redout>lft Lt\! G, Cull Ptu1, FIY Fly sn.oow, Andvs Htrm-''" Cellf0tni• Sii.i-. L• 811111 F .. 1. Time 2.02 2/S U Ut.ACTA (6·3) l>t•CI s.ls.70 f'C>Utnlt ltACE. Ont milt PKt. Prlnc•u Lela (Vld"91\m) 17 60 • 20 S 40 HenotYt Sllltf' IF Shel'rtfll l IO 3 60 Beronnt ChrlJ (HIN) s IO Aho reced Dani• Endeevor, Ter00tl Merinenne. Stolen Moment•, Sl>fuce Goose Treci Miu Tim41 ISi 3/S P:lnH llltACE. Ont mile pace Caremel C.ndy (Pierce) 4 40 2 IO 2 40 Proud Coun•rv 1w1n1em11 • '° 3 40 ~· Henover IPtnttf') 3 40 AIM> reced: Counleu Rov•te M•u Gee Jev, Arll.IOW Ro~. F•\ltlon Queen. Sceoula, Tot•ra ltoed Time 201 '3 EXACTA l?·ll 1>a1C1 '3330 SIXTH RACE. Dnt mlle PK• MoodV Btu. (Kutbltf) 13.60 S 40 l Ill J11mt1 Grettan (Anderionl • 20 • . ..O Broolo.Clale 8ov tS ... thl S IO Also r.ced Doctor Doti D1.1stv1 Le1.1reyne Scotti'1\ Boy, Rowen Cre11 R Curios. Pet•lt Maotre Time ?01 -U l&XACTA 14·7> Pale! Sl7 00 SEVENTH RACE One mll• o•c• TemPO Btue Chop IFSnrnl 1100 •OO 340 JHontoo IPartr.erl 6.40 • 40 Bar-Oft Muelo<e (Crovnen) 2 60 Al$0 receo Winning Scott, Ju't A Fella C•Pltin Lord, Mlnnetlalla Flh, Wav• RI~ T11nt I S7 I S 'l EXACTA I 7 oa•CI l lll JO EIGHTH llACE. °"' mole Ptce K11nlua Princess (Rosen) 19.20 9 80 1 20 Finel Cati t Kuet>'4trl 510 380 Rovet R•ITI0898 IPerllerl 7 00 Abo reced Wvnna Nendona Trin Lest Summa<'. ~· Sterle+ ~ Do8 .,_nne's Jov Time I SI 4/S 5l EXACTA (I 7) pelel '19260 NINTH ltACE. One mile 1>tct ScruCllH (Perket'I 20 40 6 60 6 00 Ke0trl (Beker) S IO • IO Everton DrNm (Vellendinollaml 10 00 Al'° receo. Cooawlnna. Armt>ro COOl\le Hevnn Shel• Psvcl'IO. Reoaton. Hetcvon Hollo..,, Vantil• Henover Smoot11 Ginger nme 2,00 3 s. '3 l&.XACTA (6·4> P9od HM 10 S2 PICK SIX 14·2+ I· 1-6) Pelc! l 10,053 IO wlltl lwo wlnnlno llck•h (flvt hOr .. ,) Tolel urrvover POOi '32 Oll 34 TENTH RACE. One mole Ptct Bramble Screml>I« (Kin) 11 60 S 40 3 60 L• Norm (Oov•ll'I 1 40 6 60 ~k Oouget (Andtn onl 340 ~lllO reced Winnll'O Geme, Multi Rein t>ow Te•l>ei 8ov, TrOlloo Routend Bret Ll1-hme Time 2,00 '3 l&.XACTA (6-f) peid s ISi lO Alleodence· 8,340 Del Mar f'IUOA Y'S ltESUL TS (V"' .. 4l•claV ~-!NetlM) l"IRST It.ACE. 6 lurlonos Powerful Eves (Frndz) 2600 13 60 7 60 Rtrnembef My Fetner (Drulel') '60 S.IO Ble11no Irish I Toro! S 00 At'° reced Del Revo Men Unovenehle Brlelft. Sltv Tower Miami Kod 8o>C1 Boulder Wing Htgh, Buell Benny Mlliesllc Wind Time 1112S SICONO ltACE. 6 furtonos Rve et See CCest•'*la) 7 IO 4 00 l 20 world Ruter IVetenrutltl 3 20 2 60 Luckv Doc IOtloadlllol 4 80 Al'o reced· Ntt Polnll, French Melestv Senior S-tor, S"41Slt F ... t, Mlln•lt S.Y Bleck Gltzeote Tome 1~ 3 S n DAILY OOUILE I 11 ·&> Pe•d S 107 60 THIRD ltACE. • !Uf'lonOS "'wan IMcGurn) 12 00 7 IO '40 ATP t91.JrMment Another T 0011.. Iv altnruele I 21 20 7 00 Keven•• IMcCerronl 2 60 1•1 MolMn. Oflle) ""o receo Le Liz !It.ck Jeoe Dancing OU•rtotnlnel Sllltles St•<••· lnttmete Girt, Luclw Mattng, Cooa Jimmy Connon (U S ) Clef Sttlen c 1119 Luck-EODero ts~n), 6·3. 4·6, ' •· Ancters Glr~.~ut 15:'i61cnlnt1, "-"" Jerrvd (S•edtn) Clef Peul McNtmt9 (Al.I' lS UlACTA ( 10-9) P9•CI ., .. so tr•lltl • -7 7-6. Jo.klm Nntrom (Swte1tn· def. Dan CaulOV IU S >. 6·7, 6·l , 6 ·2, Miit' FOURTH ltACI • 1Uf'ton9\ Wlltndef !Sweden) Clef Jonn Seelfl IU s ), He 1 No M1tlren (Vtn11) • tO l 40 3 00 F rH World (Ol;abt > l 00 2'0 6"7• 7"6• '~enci lt91HM1 OeWtel Pugnacity IUPllem) 7 IO Tom Gullllo.ton• Tim G\lft!klOll (US l Clef T•me I II l S 8red Drt,..tlH(lm W1rwtci. tAuStrace) "'™ llACI I 1116 ml1t1 on '"" •-4 6 • Soclel Wl'llrl IHe ... iev) lS IO fllO • 00 ~ °"'*' Mv Counteu (To«>I 320 2 60 Scott D1vts·8en THltrmtn IU S l oef Max'' L.eelv 10...houn•Yel 4 20 Mlk• L1wls (GrHI Brlt11ln)·Oevld Mu1lerel (N-lHltlld), 6·4, 6·4, F'•t"CllCO T I 44 • ~ Gonllltl (1'.,.t01.1t1)·~ll MllChtll IU S) U l.lllACTA 13·1) M•d '216 ~ Ott. lroe!«IC:lr. 0Ykt•W .. v Mak.If' IAv,trel· SIXTH ltACI. 6tn l11rlOn91 tel. 6·l, 7·S Rot .. 1 It T (Vettn111ele) l IO l 20 160 Wemen'I toumllmenf Grtml>t" (Mc:CerrOfll UO SOO <•• Ment1'911> ltoomlnt Tvr•"' 10r1eoe1 J 60 ~ .... ~ Time.; l 16 >. S CIV•I Evert Uovd (U..S I .... ltosalV'll SaYWNTH ltACI. 1~ milts on l\lfi '-!r~nlt (S0\1111 Afflu), 6·J. 7·S, K•ttrllle Bftl L* (Ha•ltv) 2' 60 7 .0 00 Llndlllllll tSwtdtn) def Kathv Joroan Gordl•n (McC11rronl l JO 1 60 (U $ l 7 6. 3-.. 6·4 GOOd 11 011"'°"°' (Plf!Uvl l 00 0-..0 ....... ~ AM re<*I Honor~, 0om ~ H*"• Sul!owe ICtecno.lova Ill Ott H .. Po-. feenome F_..ome Mu!Mn· Ci.uc161•KOltdt-Klb~ (WM.I Genna•w> llt, L'f'Phltd't PrfOe. AN!tl•ltMlllfl9doft\ 6 .i, 6 2.1 lt1tttlna L.~1$1 IS,..t<ltft) cl..t 111111 Av L11t, ~ hY Terry Plleli'I IU S >. 1•6, 6·1. •·J, Chrts Tlmt 1 tt 7 s E•trl LIO'f'd IU3' I cltal Jo OW'e (ltote•'ll 1J IXAC:TA (6-JI N '4s " .. jg "'l. i.~-------------:-p•MI( JUI 6·10"3· .. ,, 61 .. Wnkhes• ....,.."*" 111 .. ""'"' Oflt w1r1r11M tlCket c,.i, (et A¥9 ltrMll, N Y,J l'IOfH•l 11 ~ Sui Cort' lion N•d Mefft Qwl,..._.., ,..,_ '3 71160 wltll It w\Mln9 H< •'' ltlft VllH Ckfuleilts (US I_. Juen A"'lltfe l!orMt) ($Nin), 7•6, ••7, 6•1, GtM IN'ffl IU SI llOHTH RAC•. 6 tur*'ft o.! JoNll J(fll'. CUll, 6 0 fo6, •.:J. 0Vo .._, ! CV Wiii ~20 :t• :ttO Heooet IU,lJ cMf tll $1tllle'f' l\J.S J, 6•1, CW r (fl'!nclvl UO 210 6•<1 Allbel'N Ne1lll (o.lllMlut.UV•) ,_. W"'*"t ,.,...... llMlft M11bu 6teW11 IU.S t Mt VlfetNt lt1111tt Time 1~ 21S. lltome I, 6·.to 1•1 U IXACTA U·ll M ~ Htmlet ~ *'"" ltACI. 1 ti" (at Micf1e. M.Y,> Joh -""°" IO!Mvl '" UO J.O I O..tll...... ...... Etw:ma1 "•'°" (S I ... • .. l•tll Ufldl tCttC'IOS!Ovl~le) lff Tim 0 h KtMe (D,.•lerl :UO ..... _. .. 'U •), ,.., ,., .. 1 JlmmY ... ,.... AIM rac .. C• L. ... ' Vt11rur• """~·· ' ~ ,,... ........ d l)aAMM, ~mole; Men'lelt• Al"• 1o:u Ott T tc !<lel _...,, 1·•. • 6, 6·1. lie 1 GUl\Ullrdt lhr1ll "IJI • .. .,.,000 tHll 4'f lt.0 0 1 IU$), •·4 •·I, 1 6 :r:lll~A lf •ll paid '119 Andra Geriltt I CIUIW} .., Crrl• l.WI• Al I• .... IN.-In J, • ll. •·J .. The rca Ytherc I .,. nt to sec impr-ovcmcnt 1s 1n our ork hamu.•• tcckcl Y'· ••J v. nt the 9layers to learn from hard and demanding pncu e Those wo~ habits win rry O\"cr to 1he games and lhcn continue v.ith them 1n lheu careers fter football. .. 'fhc V1kinp we~ 6-2 midway throuah the 1983 C'3mpaip, dtspllc the fao& lbat qusrtcfbKk 'rommy Kramer suffettd a n-end1na knee Jnjury an the third pme. But the) won onl> two mott aame1. tini hina 20th 10 the FL on offcn.c and 19lh on defense. With a he lthy K.ramer. backed by Steve Dils and Archie Mannini, the Vil.;ings passing attack should im- prove. Sammy While returns at wide receiver along with Terry LcCount. Wortd Series ef Gttf (a-t AJrren, Ofllt) Denll Watson Bruce Lltt&lo.• Peter Jact>oMn F rtd C«n>tes Cr•lo Stedler LHTrtvlno Scol!Slml>IOl'I Pat LlndM'I Dtv•CI Eelwtrds Boll Etsl•ood G•rvkodl Rex Celdwell Ronn,. 8ledt tsaoAOlll Hele lrwm ltfl Woo"'9m Tom Wiiton Merk McCumlMlr Jeek Renner Tom Kiie CO'ev Pevln Jolln~ff9v Jim COll>ef'I Tom Pl.lrtzt< Mark LY• Greo NorrNin Sen Ballesteros Nici< F11lelo Nlcll Pr1c:• Jectr. Nk:kltus AndV Bffn G•Yln Levenson P•vneSt ..... rt 8ob sneerer Ben CrtnU\ew HowardCltrll Tony Jcmn11one Tre-Mlno Chen Peter Fowler Lam-wecc Biii BrelA Scoll Hoch 6'·61-lll 6'--1).t 71>-67-137 71--139 6'·70-13' 72·-IAO 71-6..-140 70-70-140 71 ff-140 70-~140 70-70-140 .. ·72-140 73--141 n-ff-1'1 71-ff-141 70-71-141 70·71-141 6'·72-141 74--"1 73-ff-142 74·-142 71·71-1'2 10-n-1c2 61·7.t-142 71-71-1'3 70-1)-1'3 74-70-1.W 73·71-144 71·7>-144 72·73-1'5 71·7.t-145 7S·71-1'6 74·n-I .. 73-n-146 73-7.t--147 n -1r14I 75·7.t-149 7•·7r1SI n-,....1s1 71·7 ..... 1S2 1e·1r1S3 7S-WD LPGA toumatMnt (•t 0-.) , TiJbl end Joe Sen r, wilo lso milled all of 19 J, 11 k and he31th)'. Bu1 ~he de cnse may be hurtang Ddcnsa ~ e end Dou_J t4tt1 n is a holdout and Keith Mdlard, adcctcd o. 1 for msurancc at 1ha1 pa$.ltton, stancd ~·uh Jackson,11le of th<-lhc United States foqtball l.tque. Brad Van Pch. ObLamcd from the New York Gtants. for runnina back Ton) Galbreath. ckchncd to report, Ditb has always bctn a no. non~ coach and h 5 .. ask no quarttt. IJ"e no quantf' pproach t>qJn to payd1vidcnd$ when Chicago won five of its last ix pints. ··we ~'tte two different teams in 19U:' Dilb ta)'5. ••we didn't play with any confidence early m the su.son and that contributed to our).. 7 NFL lllN'Me.Mn NAno..AL COH"D•NCI Wm w l T Pd ,.F PA Ne•Dnn"' , 0 0 I oot 96 '° lttl'ft• 2 2 0 !oOI •• '° Sen Fr..-.c•Klt 2 2 0 SOI •s 73 A.tlenla I ) 0 250 92 Ill c..lllret TemN a.v l 2 0 tCIO 16 Ill DtlrOU 2 2 0 500 n ~l•v I 2 0 .Jl3 St MJnner.ot• 1 3 0 250 s. Cntcaeo 0 l 0 000 37 •ut St Louil l 1 0 750 71 0•'8• , 1 0 6'7 6S NY Gleith 2 1 0 '47 • Plll'-ClelPllle 2 2 0 soo 12 WHhington 1 7 0 lll 63 AMEllJCAN GONf'ER•MCE WesJ Snllte 4 I 0 eoo 97 Denver 3 I 0 750 " San Dleoo , 1 ~ soo .,, ~ I l 0 750 61 Kllll\U Cilv 1 l 0 150 " G"""1ll Plllat>uroh l 0 0 I 000 71 ClnclnMll l l 0 750 .. Houston I 2 0 m n ar..et"CS 1 J 0 250 S1 E.ul Mieml 3 I 0 750 9S N•w Enol•nel 2 2 0 500 100 llutfeMI I 2 0 J33 JI lndlentl>Olol ' 2 0 m" NY Je" I 3 0 F..-V'a~ NY Jets 20 ltaNlen 14 250 " New Eno&end l6, K-. Cltv 1 Dertvtf 14, Atlanl• 13 Clne:INMiti 3S, Det~I 1• Tempe &av 14. MlamO ll St L.OUll Jl. M1M810te 0 S.n Fr tnclsco l7, S..tttt 7 T.-V"a~ Houtlon et D ... .S IC'*-1 2 a• •l WtWltnO•on et N-Ortesnt lndlan~s ••Green Bev, In> Pill\OUrOh et NY Gtenll, (n) !uMIV"t GWM Ch~ vs. auffalD el lno*'eooh END EXHle.rnt>M S04EOUU ~ JD, tlaldtn l4 SC-"" Ouel1W' " " " ,, 31 '° '° " 6S a " " n " 41 5' 71 92 37 105 )1 JS •1 NY J•ll 0 0 -10 10-2'0 ... ,.,,. 0 7 1 ~ •• $«Ml ....... LA-0 W&m' lS NU ff-om Ptllnllell < Benr Ille.Ir. I. 10-.52 Tiwcl l"'trieod NY-f'G Lffhy 45, 3., NY'-ttectof 12 MU Jnlm Rve11 H .. -• ltiel<I 9'09 LA-Pnl•ll 7 oeu lrom Wol\otl t8allr i.:lc:tll. 11 St FMW'lll,..... NY-f'G L.ahV 11, 6 40 NY'-H«:t0< I r\#1 IL .. h• llidl), ll 13 A-1.5'1 TEAM STATISTICS NY LA Flnt oown' 20 13 Ru~·veros »·102 21 111 Pau1ng v-aros 194 174 Return verds 60 41 PIHft 20·•·1 17·JS·7 '"""" 7·42 7·44 Furnblff·tost 2·2 S·3 F>Mtll'-'·vere11 1-M l·SI Time ~ Po\MstlOll l?~ 27 SI ltfOfVIOUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-N-York HK!Of' 1•• U Berber 10-37 ~toe 6· Is AUOUltVn••"' t. 3 Ryen 1-2. O'l nen 4· 1 LO\ Anoale\ Joe Mee•• 7-71 Kono 7·23 Hawkin& •·• ll••ncti 1-6 Jeff McCe• 1 3 Pruitt 1·1. Prunltell 1-0 PASSING-New Y«lt Rven 14-2'·0-1"9 OBNell 6·12 I 12 l.O' An • ~ Plunkett 12·22· I I .. , WUW! S·13-1-67 RECEIVING-New York Geftnev ' 6', o.Mtton )·JI Sotln 2·J6 HK10t 2•23 sn ....... 2·20, Peloe 2· IS. Huml>fll<V 2·t Carmk:hMI 1-1, Minter 1-7 K...,_ l-7. Lo' Anoe<e' 8amwe41 •-66, D Wiiiiams 3·41 Jot Mc:C..I 2·23, Hew1ltns 2· 10 Proll• 1· 11 N\Onl""'9fY 1 21 Kilos I f Pefll~ l·I Brencll 1-7 MISSED FIELD GOALS-Lol """"' Bel'lr 46 Deep IM fl'shlne NEWP~T LA•OtNG IN•wP•rl ... di) -.. •~s. 137 t>oMo, ' veno .. •• L •1 oan. 2l2 medl.acaL MOCIC•Y .............. u.w. DETllOIT ll 0 Yli1NC. ~ fllt '"'"-' .. &IM• ~ <1111~ Sl LOUIS aLU s-~ 11: ... 111 UV -fO!'WWnl allO Ot"4 Cw --cou.•GI AL~llltlD--.a!Md tr:evtll COlllll n 1111• I trelft# wn But an tht K'COnd bat( * unapayen matured and we ..... on one quartetbark ... Thu quarterback was MCMahon. Who com.,Pkkd 17 295 for 2.184 yards and 12 TDI 13 sntcroeptions The Bea.rs oftCntc ranked No. f ~ the NF:L WI car and o. Jt II ru~ina. thanks mainl)' to -W P8)10o "'ho entm bis 13th se&50ft ranked third on the alMilllt ru1h1nahs1wnhl1.62Syanb. bdlill onl) Franco Hams (I l.9S0) and~ BrOv.l\ 02..312) °Tht" Bears' pa dtfc.ntc WU dlr best rn the lequc. allowuta a~ t1on ntc of only S0.8 ~rcan. "When re Wert l-1. • lot of p could ha"e aaken a walk.'' Ditta~· .. But they didn't ... Redski n s favored to repeat in East W HINOTON (AP) -~ Wlll bC plenty of jockeyina fdr position in the NFC Ean thu but notat the lop where the defenda Nataonal Conference champion WashinJtOn RcdSk:i:ns appear hcadcil for a third straight trip to the per \Bowl. l "Wmtnng three in a row will ~Ct) tough. dynasties are a tbiqs:of the past· in lbc National Footmu l.elJUC," insu.U Redskins Coach Jot Gibbs. wbo worries that bis team could be destroyed as mucb from within as from across tbe fteld. ··The Wlderlyiog.. psycbololical factors can kill you as quickly as ID)' touchdown. You ~er know how complacent you ba-vc become until lbc final gun," concluded'Gibbs, ~o was named NFL Coach-of-the-Year for the seciSnd suaidit year. A combination o1time and talent. meanwhile. has sccn the Dilln Cowboys fall from their Writliar position as d1vtsion favontt. Dalin Coach Tom Landry. who will com- plete a quarter of a c:cntury at ~e bdm of the Cowboys this year, ts con- vinced the Redskins att the cl.Us of the d1vmon "There's no quesuon the Red.Skins att the team to beat. -said landry. whose tum will &cc a second-p challenge from the fast chafJ)ftl St Louis Card.ma.ls ··But that coukl help us. We just seemed to float byt~ lut couple of seasons. this year ,..c will ha~e to ~ork hard.- The Nt"Yt York Giants and PbiJa- delphia Eq)cs. mean .. h1le. rouo<fo,ut the di\ asion tha1 has seen one of: llS members advance to the Supc~,r Bowl fh-e tuTies-m tbe last se~~ ycar5. a record unmatched 1n either con- ference. Two \cars of near-perfect football came to'a screeching bait m the Supcor Bowl in Januar\' when the Raider5 humbled the Redskins 38-9. The loss ovcnhadowcd a banner season b\ the Redsklns wbtcb in- cluded an Nfl. record 541 point a record 14 regular season wins and the league leaders ID both rusbtng defense and interccpuons. Quarterback J~ Tbe1Srnann .. the league's MVP. returns after complet- ing o'er 60 percent of has passn for 3. 714 yards and 19 touchdowns. The Redskins pick up added strength at quanerback .. ,th veteran Jim Hart, released by St.Louis in the ofT~n. joining the 1.cam after 18 years tn a Cardinal uniform. John Rigins. 35. m what may be his swan song from pro football. entcl"1 the last year of his cu~nt contract after rustuoa for an all-lime league record 24 TDs last year. While the Redskins seem solid from top to bottom. the Cowboy &tt a team in tran 1uon. ha,,ng traded Butch Johnson to Houston and watching long-time regulars ~ Pearson. Harvey Manin. Billy Joe DuPrtt Robert Nev.house and Pat Dono' an. retire tn the off-season "\\-e arc 1n a different suuauon. not rebuilding but reshaping." Landt) noted "No one seems to know ho"' "di ~t' .... ,u pla} We could be pretl) good or ~e could be prett) mediocrt ·· Other proble-ntt abound for t.a.nd· r.. who has vet to scttk on a starting quartcrbacl ·and who ha!t been forttd to JUggk his defense awa1tang Rand' \\ h1u~ to end his holdout. Landr.. has c1ccted to &JVC both incumbent D nn\ Vit h1te and Gar.. Ho eboom an equal chance to pro'e ~ho 1s thr ~o I quanerback before the c;c3son opener. Sandona is top qualifier .lllhn ndona of R~ht Canyon "a' the &op fin1 htt w1lh ~ potnu Fndl\ night m the final qualif) 1na for the "l°at1onal Champion~tps It the \lr'ttkh motol"t")clc racina prognam at the Ofln c Count~ Fa1rsround . Fims.h1ng ~nd 1n the qual1f'yin1 for the 32-man field for the Oct 6 e"cnt wa Dubb Fcmll (63 points), follow~ b) Brad Oxlc~ (61). m Ermokn o(S6)and1"-lanCbn uanof Huntm1ton Bead\ (52} Roundi out the field wtll be ' akt' Faria, Budd~ Ro inson. 'oth n • M1kc°Curo , Ktith Lanen. 1art l>A)"r. Jim l..aYr'SOn and Otnt Wood . ~lttaa, ~cd ""Ttt Kell) n. ~ho '' thC. d fcnJ1 nattonal cham- mn. and ha•n Moran and BObb b~ ru ... tio fin' hrd 1·2 in the mm n spc<'dwin fin L . 1 ' - . ' REuc1ous Noas emp es announce High Holy Days services Hot} "' bt pm:zdcd b) .... Udhot tunia). Sqx. ?2. a.t • p.m. •1th an open • ·socbrotim &aid m t pra)~ of pmttmtt. Tbq •ill be bdd 11 IM 1m1 :·s rq:ubr place of ip at ? 1 ltvlnt ''C.. • Ekadi, and ~ open to the pubbc. The I !O tradiuom:I da)'S of Rosh H.awoab v.ifl ~ obtcn cd bqin.o1 W cdnnda>, Sept. 26. 11 p m • rot 'ed b) monuna set'\'Kn Thunda~ and Frida) a1 10 a m • pttia.I bbat u h taV.cn will be bdd on fnda> Ill :IS pm Kot tdrt' WlD ah pl.a.tr Fricb). Oct. :S, al 7 pm . foll09.~ b) all-da) Yom K.ippur lt'r'as on Silturda). Yi.z.kot MtmOriaJ ta'XCS will bqia al I pm Siltunb~. Oonauom to all sen en n:main uncb.a0£td. ""th prcuf BIO (or1e11J«atizcn1. Out-of-to"llln ~udtnl.S "llh 1.0 caJd1 and scn"K'C ~n m uniform arc •dcoml' l lhoul cb.a..rF For revT\11Uons and fwthn infomut1on. call S4U900 Of 646-1 SI :! • • • Pii~ ~ QriJtiaa a.rca.. 610 \\', l&th St . Costa \1oa. wt11 bear Dr. Don Sbarn llSOCUtc pastor. g,~r a meuacc mulled, "God the 0...-inc Cas1ing DirClC'IOr -11 lhc 10:30 a.m SCf"llC~ Sunday Sptt-1al mus.c Mil be provided b~ solot51 R1ch.lrd K.Jn~ .ind orpnm Bctt~ WooJdndge. Youth church Old Mission San Luis Rey schedules 'Heritage Ball! 1Grtttcn v.1ll be Vakrie and_} n_ FdloWI of na n•••'•H'L Erin Ei and Kdl)' Bt\IUlS wtU serve )US. will bt Jim West and Henry Handy_ of .u ; Gobiel of ~ Point: me ~ and ~ tlliairu of EJ Toro. Ac:gwu~tancc 1n IUD 11 the ICl'Vice • ..,1th Caroline V • of nir Adult~i1* Oa.ss meets at 9 am. in the libm) and Sunday Scboo1 dasScS meet at 10 am. under tht direction of Linda Appk. Nunery 5CT'\'i« is• lable fot babiel and toddJm For ~ information, call 494-8061. • • • ta.paa Prei:bJtcrl.U CMrcl. 4 IS FORSl A vc., 1 ,.a•na Beacb. -.;u hear the Rtv. Or. Edward CaldwelJ speak on -The Least L!Uly Candidatt .. at the 9:)0 Lm. strvitt Suoda) The Rev Craia Wtlliams wiU 'sL The summer chOlI, under the dittctioo of. Milli Interlandi. ~ill sinJ several anthems a«emparucd b) orp.rust EDm W righ L FollowiQJ the childn:~ 's sermon. thi~ sradc children and )OWJFf _W'iU be disrmssed for tbe Little fisbmnen propam. Coffee~ lemonade will be setVed oo the patio foUO'A'iog the servlCC5. _ The Crib Room for in fan ti and toddlen as open from 9 a.m. to l I a.m. • · The Logos senior hip fellowship meeu on Wcdncs.- da) ~at 9 a.m. For mo~ 1nformat1on, call 494-7SS5. • • • • Cbrdl of !Wllito-Sclaee, 32261 C'.amino Capuvano. San Juan Caplstn.nC?, will bear the Rev. Jacquelyn Harrold speak on .. LiVIDI With Ease and Exoclle~-at the 9 and 11 a.m. services Sunda . Youns peolc's church and child~ are he d duriJla the 11 a.m. service. The 9 a.m. service is a lect~. folio.wed by a sbon discussion penod and coffee ume. ThiJ is a casual service for thOIC mho may des11e a spintual impira.tioft on their "'"a) to summcrumc Sunday ac:t.i"itJes.. What "et) ~-ell ma) prove 10 ~ one of Southern Califomii·~ m°'l glamorous occu1on~ m ~ean Wlll ~the fim annuat -Hmtqr BaJI' of Old M1u1on San Luis RC) on Saturdav. Sep1. 22. somet1m~ tt.l') dopn't apprttlate hov. much 1t takes to ------------------• A hea.lin1 SCTVIOC IS &ho rooductcd each Sunday It 10:.0 a.m. at which tune Rev. Jacquelyn, the Rl(r. Leslie Harrold. or one of the Heal~ Ministry staff respond to requests fot healing prayer which ba~e been submitted. TheC\'Cnl. h1ghhgh1ed b)' Les Brolllin and Has Band of R.eoown. wiU bring a~ touch of earl) California The SlOO.a-pl.atc affair. to ~ held in the c"clusnc M1ss1on .,-ounds and UCTcd prdens. calls for black Uc or earl~ C.Alifomla drns which will bnng back mernoncs of a ccnlW') ago wrhcn the Sparush aod Mc:ucan mnuencc v.as about to IJ"C wa) to Lolled States rule. maint.a1n 1t." He pointed out that a rcttnl "facelift" and pa1n1 Job on the front C);tcnor alone cosl more th.an $60,000. and there 1sa lot more to ~done 10 the mt of the building.sand ground\ ''Course in Miracles'' study group to meet For more mfonnauon. call 240-6463. • • • <>rure c.ui Ual&ariu Ulllnnallat Cb:rda, l 2S9 Victon.a S"L Costa Mesa, will feature two speaken at 115 10:30 a.m. SC'f";cc Sunday . Response to the upcoming Ball h.a5 been 1mmcd1atc. and Man 5te1ger, m\1tallonscruorman.. reports that mam tabl~ o( eigh1 are already rnct'\cd and ~ apphcat1ons A ··coune in ~1ra.c1cs·· 1oca1 stud} groupmeeue .. cn Tbunda} at p.m. at the Laguna Beach Libra.r). 363 GlcnnC')rc Christine Whittaker and Sybil Carrere. lectUttn and research assistants an social ecology at UC Irvine wiU discuss .. Physical and Psychological Aspc:cts of En- '\ltoomental Stress on Urban Life." arc amving each day. Ip\ 1tat1ons and rcsef'allons anqutnes ma~ ~ ~nt to Old ~iss1on Hentage Ball. 4050 Mm1on .\' c San Lui!> This 36S-da} stud} course LS bas.ed on I.be ~hcf that forgi .. encssand lo, care t"oofthc lcc~s to creating a ncher hfc. Father Macbacl Wc1Yla.ar Francncan supcnor of lht is1on. located four m1IC1 cast of Oceanside. sa)!> the cvC'tlt "aimed at ramng S25.00010 help keep the M1'>!>1on rntorcd and reno"alCd. Re~ 92068. or telephone (619) 757-3659 Enrollment is open and to begin studies a nudcn1 ncui onl) laH the doirc lO hH a nchcr and more fulfilhng life. The presentation wtU focus on water quahty and contaminants an drink.Ina water systems, indudin& effecls of lead from covU"Onmcntal exposures on pregnant v.omcn and unborn babies, and on bum.an health 10 .. People Stt thl' .\.11n1on. the lung of the California M1u1ons and the l:iirg~1 .. .,,. rhc~ lo .. c 1t," he ~1d ''But .\ttcndancc w11J be hm1tcd to 500 pc~n\ and tho~ panic1pating this }ear v.111 rccc1'l' pnont) table'> an follov.an@ )car. For mo~ information. all Dalecn Bo at 497-4510. (Pleue eee llZLIGIOU8fB7) Orange Coast RELIGIOUS DIRECTORY A C.r~ Welce•• tr.• The UNITED METHODIST CHURCH CostaMeea FfRST UNITED METHOOtST CHURCH 19th St. & Hllfbor Btvd. C1M#dt khool l:30 WonNp 10'A5 Charlea 0 Clar1c, Mlmsi.r Costa Mesa MESA VERDE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH WorMlp A Churdl ~ ~-10:00a.m. Dr Wllllam E. Steel Newport Beach CHRIST CHURCH aY TWE HA UNIT£D METHOOtST 1400 W Balboa Blvd ~.cl5 Of Robert B. Shepard. Jr ........ ce..rdl ....... 1::11 ........ • ..., ............ MdO.,C- 7:9 A.M. ..... ,. .llL HuntlnQton Beach Nor1h COMMUNITY UNrTED METHODIST CHURCH 6662 Hell Ave 8.42-4461 War.Np hMce l:30 & 1C>.00 l:.:30 •unct.r lchoot 10:00 ..... ...... .. td ¥ •• Fountain Valley FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 18225 &nnard St 112-2583 J~ R Hadley Pastor ..... I Cllilrdl kllllt 9:30 a.•. t NCWPORT C.CNTE R UNnEO MfTHOOIST CHURCH 1801 M.,guerlt• Ave. Corona det Mar 144-o745 .. & c..ctt S... t:ll l.I R~ Ken McMiiian SHIR HA-MA 'ALOT HARBOR TEMPLE REFORM lfltO &.f".t<d ' f C •"'!>' ,., A. I lb ti (). "-"'' '""' ... , 11()) • CM~:.'",,,..~,...,. •,u:h ~ ,.,,,,.,, Sebbeth Senlcet Mtlth.... aur• ,..., a... nm '*' " "' ~ 1 ,.,. S.W. the Nnpon ·lrmt Am ----2100 Mar V'isb hurch of St. Matthew ---·br. the Sea ,...... &lllllc~ HOLY COMMUNION EACH SUNDAY-9:00 Lm. .. ttlClloo!not,...,., -,. MERTZHALl of Corrmftey ~ Ovctl e 1 1 tWottcipeo. Cerone dill Mar .............. -.............. HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH (DtKlplee of Chrt.t) 2401 lrvlne at Sant. laab91 MS-5711 Morning Worship I 0 AM Sunday Schoof 9 AM OetM lwaneon, Mtttletef All SAJNTS AIOICAN EPISCOPAL CtuCH A c c 11'"""'9 to t1W 1121 9ooel of COflWNft "-fer ................ , .. ~.~­ HOLY COMMUNION 900A.M MOANING PAA YEA- CHUACH SCHOOL II 15 AM MORNING PRAYER&. SEAMON 11 OOA M lhtl'jC~llU .__, I f-111 W., t.lS U 18082 Bushard, Fountain Valley 963·3801 SOUTH COAST CRUICH OF IEUCIOUS SCIEICE lU 22nd St. Costa Mesa •O: 960·2715 SERVICES ..CO A.M. You Wiii .. W•lctotMd -And H#fUdt FIRST CHRISTIAN CHfJ.".f H ¥•1n •t Ad•m•, HuntlngTon h M I W h BUNDA Y: 9 00 pa. .. orn ng ors 1p....... ....... : m Bible School ............... • .......... 10:<45 AM Evening Worship ...................... 8:00 PM Ac-11 .. YMttl O•CIUWN -Nut_, ..,._ M•e '.,,. Dew MllkOln ,......,.,.. I Merge !def\ Alt)en M K•O-Dlrec10fl OI Cfltbll*' t~­ CMAl·A•O&VOTlON -....... OMee -.. 2:119 ............ Ctvt.t 1Mee ,_.. ST. MARK PIESIYTEllU CHUICH [&o:.b 1111 I) ' blllbotet. ~Buell llt• Wtllwra McQuold Pistor ROd&tr NMten. Muse OlrKIO' • NEWPORT HAllOI WTHERAN CHURCH M tt E41atio1 I CaiW Can t A.I. ·~ I a.di SdlMI 11 ll. hnery tan n--.. IMn 798 Dover Dr., IEWPORT BUCH SU-3631 ftr fife: Cd &U.1341 hcerJ. .... P.W WORSHIP SERVICE 8 A.M & 10.30 A.M SUNDAY SCHOOL 9 15 A M NURSERY CARE AVAILABLE WELCOME CHRIST LUTHEAIH CHURCH CMtaourt SYf'Odl 790 Vlctort. St.. Coeu ..... Lothar V. Tornow, ,. .. tor 131-1811 .,,_,,.._,P..- WORSHIP MJtV1Cf a. a 10::IO A.M. , s.dly Sdllll ' AM ... am t:ZO UI. anu. Dlnrlbry Sdllll 548-eaal r r-._ Sunday Worship '-L/ ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 600 St Andrews Road • Newport Beach• 631-2880 Dr ...... A. .....,._, ......... WORSHIP SERVICES 8·45, & 10: 15 AM "A Part of the Family of God" Or .lofln A Hun....,, 5' PrMCMr 8 45 AM -Infants thru High Scnoot 10 15 A.M -Infants thru 6th Grade .. llJ.llm tu.HU ~~ ~ ? Laguna Presbyterian Church ! 1 A i,~~J1~~~~~~ 1~.r,f;e"~~~"/:!,n,, St•mul't n,.: >crml ' buu•1fu "lu\ unday Worship 9:30am Child ~ Pro..-id~d. •"ttlcdo Pro~ram1 For Child~o. Youth & '\Ju/u. II~ fUtnl A•~•' • Pl,..,. ..... •\\ fJ Ot _, ,..,..."'' _ .... . ' .. Cl ........... Ot , .... ~ ~ ,_ ~ IJIAL·A PRA' lk ,,... PRAY SERMON TOPIC: "Ce/ebramt Service" CtUCH Of REUGIOUS SCINCE M.,,.,t. of the United CtlUfch d AellglOua ~ 2205 MAIN STREET, SUITE 23 HUNTINGTON BEACH, CA 92&48 Adufta & Jr. Church 900& tt:OO For lnfonnatlon MG--1331 MEW THOUGHT CHRISTIAN CHURCH 110 W. 1111111., 0.111 leu (T ... I 1 a.ltau ef 1114) "God the Oimt Cas~ Dhctary" Or Doll ""· c '~ti Blble Study Class 9: 15 Or Eleanor c bdson Sunday Mornint Mi w11. Ht11tn1 & Jumor Church 10 30 141-1112 ..................... ... • CJ..arT.a• (I ... ) lAIB MARK S . ...uR SH&AJBw:D Frl.-1 , .. -Sit.·lt:ll ..._ f ~ Stmces I st F ndly of Monttl -7 lO ~ Sdlool. Adlllt Ed Yout!I Gtoups. ~ 1011 ~ ....... ludl t• _, 844-1899 CentorAlmW .... f+ 1°1 ......... Y• "-le PRESBYTERIAN CllltCH OF T1£ COVENAHf Bruce A. Kurrle, PMtor T•ry t.tceeme, OireclOf ol Youth Minlsll'9 Cyndi Mc:Caone. Clw'ecta QI a.nn·s ~ s..y .... &:JI' lt:tl UI. c:a.o Sdllill - CIM9 .. &Ma1HIUI. "'-1 CIN mMll - tlO ' lO:tl UI. Yttp111 -7• P.a. 2l50 Falmew Rd., COiia ..... 557..U. SAINT JAMES W L MES YOU SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES 8:00 AM -Holy Eucharlat Rite I 10:00 AM -Holy Eucharist Rite II Church School (Pre-School-2nd Grade) 10:00 am (Mutlc, MrmOO, and chlld care at 2 MrVfcel) 7:00 PM -Holy Euc::harllt Rite 11 (Prayer and Pralte 111 Sonday of eech month) lllD-WHK WOMHIP Monday -Friday -8:30 AM Morning Prayer Tuelday -10:00 AM Eucharist & Heeling Service. Wedneeday -6:30 AM Holy Euct\arlt1 Rector, Fr. John Aahef • Aaeoc., fr. Men Cox. ~tlftg The Rev. Todd Soreneen • Mr. Samuel Shafer The Rev. Thomu Henry SAINT JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH 3209 Via Lido • Newport Beach • 714-67S-0210 CHRISTlll SCIEICE CHURCHES BRANCHES Of THE MOTHER CHURCH. THE FIRST CHUACH OF CHRIST, SOENTIST IN BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTES Sunday, Auguat 21th "CHRIST JESUS" Cott• Meu-Flrat Church of Chrlat, Sclentlat 2llO ..... VMde Dr,. CO.ta ..... Ctturch a lundQ lchoot -10:00 A.M. RMdina Room. mo ..... Ytnle Dr. -I A..11.-&:IO P.11. MOft. tin let. Wed. 7~ P.11. -t-e:ao P.11. lrvtne -Flrat Church of Chrt1t, Sclent11t Rendlo..,, ......... ~ lcftool •1 M1ch1teon ( ...... Y•) C"""°" a lundey ldlool -10:CID AM. "••cNnq Room, .a:ao a.;..nce PtcwJ .. lulte 14' It.......-"9u 10 A.M. -' ...... Mon. ttw let. 10 A.Ill -1 ....... ,,., .. , Qlld c.. -...., ' ... -~ Hunttnoton 8Mch -F1rat Church of Chrlat, lclentlat -• °""· ttuntlnalOft ..... Ctudl a._., tClhMI -tO:GO A.IL R1 I ...... ROOfft -m llWn IL Newport 8Nch -,.,., Church of Cht19t, lclentlat UOIYleUdo.Ne...,..._.. c ..... ....., tc:Met -... tct:ao A.II. "-dtnt "°°'"• Utl Vie Udo Mon. ttwu let. t A.M.• P .II. T--. -1• P.M. QIM C.t ~ r~ -"°'''*>AM ._ ""'nN Newport 8eech -l1coad Ct\urch of Cttrtat, lclentl1t 1100 Pecllo V... Dr., C...... _,Mer Churcih a lundq lchool -10:CID A.M. tt.•dlne Room -w ..... ,. c ... "*'·· ca n1. nu. nswn mtw -1•&w.11111m M If•.,.... llMted IO M ..... lfllt ~ ~ 11111 9"'°r h c of "°9IM. CMd Cert~ At AU~ll~ .. - YOUTH I . . rampolines Used to escape the ghetto CHICAGO (AP)-J sc White's escape route from w a,heuo is the somersault, the backward flip. the hanefsta~ For 2' >' ~. he hu awdcd poor black kjd alona th11 path for a glimpse of life oul&idc their bleak urroundmp. . ~ltc has ~uilt • tC!'m of tumblcn and aymnasts in in !On~r-aty ,hous~n· ,PfOJCC1 whc~ aanas prevail. He has 1 tillN d1sc:lphnc an 5trcel' where dope and boote flow Cteely. And heh~ created a touch of clamour in buildings trc rats and ro chea scurry about W~ite i& leader of ''The Jem White Tumbhna Team, 52 youna men, mostly from tbe Cabrini Green hbuaina. proJ.~ . who tumble. toss and pound the U'Jmpoline, Ima hundreds of thousands of spectators ever)' year. (fycr the years. White has seen many tumblen leave brin1 Green. Some have aonc on to coUcge. Others have me carpenters or computer t~bnkians. Two current mcmbcr1. are pan or a aroup representing lhc u s Tftmpohne and Tumbling Association at a meet · · White says the pace of his volun1ecr work so~ctuncs Ah, what a llf e Loob like thla cbabby eea lion coald have foand a btaer rock !or •unbatbln& ID the Monterey liiy, but there wun •t macb •an &DJ"'&Y with foay condltloD9 prnallJnC, and .o lone u he clldn 'troll o•er, what'• tile CCL5 toh1m. But the tumbler -and lhuusands of ttqutsts he rcce1vca for ud11ions -cncoura hitn to ill)' on "Some people collect coins." he sa)'s ... Some people collect rodes. Some people collect stamJ». I C'>llect k1d1 and.hope I can do 'Wmcthing for them." Whit~·s kjd5 put on nearly 200 shows a year, all markN by suspense and style. They 1p1n throu&h pl11t1c boops, flip through the air and form human pyramids. They hne up+ in hand tands, their tcp in ·v· formation. For their finale, they perfor111 lhe "Evil Kn•cvel," in which one tumbler springs from a trampoline and soars over 23 of his teammates bending over in a c:loStly rormed Lin~ _ lt's sh~r entertainmcot for audiences. But for the tum bl~ who cam kudos but no cash. i1's a lot more. says the SO.:ycar.old White. It's a lesson in stlf~nfidmce, discipline and teamwork for ~oungstcrs who have often failed in school, and even in life, he says. For the lumblers, who range in age from 8 to 23, it's aJso a chaoc:e to see life outside the ghetto as they perform at stale fairs parades, and spons events. This year. they cllfference? Tboa .. nd• of tourlata annual- ly enjoy watcbln« the .ea Ilona and thla one Remed eapeclaby adept at p091JU[ for plctu.rea -even if only half awake. 'fheae .ea Uona abound along the Pacific Cout. •1ll 1ppear1t th~ New Orleans World's fatr. ··1 'Ii nl them lo know, to feel, lO to b and to be a re ... 10 get out of this fcch lhat mf worid u ri_Jht here;• ys White, who also asa te ~lathe and a 1ym l chcr at Sch11lcr Elementary School, has alma m tt'T. Many members of the tram re Wb1tc"s studcnu at Schiller. They arc selected for their sic lctll and :they prac11et wherever they can find the space. from co"* gymi 10 mattrtsses an the strut. · At Cabnna Grun. White says., Juch "know au about rats, roaches. pnp and smptnJ ... but l want (them) to see this beauoru1, clean, rmh setun1and then say, "Ho~ do I acquire thcx thin~. because iff had the c:hanoc. this can be pert of my life. •• • Tnps out of the nc1J)lborhood play.a,lantc role an the team's appeal. ''Sometamcs we co place$ T just dream about," says Derrick Burnett, 20, a team membtt for 12 years. Another lure is the celebrity status the aumblm achieve. They have appeared on a pubhc television how entitled '"The AmbassadoB of Cabriru"' and in a Coca- Cola commercial, eam101 their fiBt money ~er u tumblers. "I enjoy the glamour, that's what it is," explains Perry Bro~Jcy, 21. a mcmbcf' for l4 ycan. • .. If you're a tumbler, people look at )'OU dtff'~ntly," adds Browley. "You ·re not out here drinking or smoking .. or mixing with ~ngs. White wont tolerate that. At Cabrini Green, there are gangs, drup, and violence. But White suspends any tumbler who fiJ)lts, dnnks, or swears wbjle in uniform, and he won't accept anyone who is in a gang. "There's only one gang," explains White. "That's lbe White gana,. I'm the leader " White, a compact man with a finn but fricndl) manner, has employed his st.rict djsciplinary code for more than SOO tumblers over the years -all boys. Wlute says girls aren't on the team because the tumblers must often cban~ into thelf um forms in a van_ However, White says be would like to add airts someday and integrate lhc leam. wbicb is now all black.. HB senior girl youth delegate lngnd Campagne. a Huntington Beach High School senior, has been attcndmg the Republican NationaJ Convention this past week as a youth delegate. Campagne was selected by the Caltfomia Republican Youth Associates to atlend lhe three-day convcnuon. which began Aug. 20 in Dallas. Campagne is an avid youth participant m civic affatrs and says sbc "hopes lo someday to become lbe nauon's first woman president " The youth delegation departed a week ago Friday by chartered-bus from the Registry Hotel in Irvine and returned Aug. 24 OAILY PILOT/ turday, ~ 26, 191M 97 Very affectionate Tb.la fem•le. trl-colored collie named ":aWZ la a perfect family pet. She la one--year bu been •payed and la iaiod aroa.nd c1all· dren. She can be eeen at the Laaw a.ell Animal Sbelterat20812 Laeunal:&DJOD~ Huntington girl, 7, vying for title.., ~vcn-)ear~ld Alethea Ann Da' 1s of Hununitoo Beach "-111 compete in the loc:al prcliminaJ) today for the 1984 Nanonal LlttJc Mw Pqea.nt title. . The winner of the local cont~ forg:irls4 to 7 ycano!d will receive a cash award and a round trip ticket to the national paieant m October in Lehigh Acres, Aa. Ihhc win . Davis plans to use the prize moncy.1 to pl)' for gymnast•~ lessons in hopes of competing in the 1992 Ol~mp1c Games. accordin& lo a letter sent from her mother. Sh1rlcv. The local preliminary is being held at the Hilton h.otet in Anaheim. Seniors get scholarships Four semor!. from high schools 10 the Ncwpon-Mcsa School D1stnct have rccc1ved SSOO apieet in cUh scholarships from the Ncwpon Bal.boa SaV1ngs and Loan Assoctauon. _ Winners of the annual scholarship compeUUon were: Chnsunc Benedict of Costa Mesa Ht~ William Kendall of Corona del Mar High, Kelley O'Hem. of Newpon Harbor High; and Shanna R1cdcn of Estancia. High. Pope tackles church dilemma on contraception &1 GEORGE W. CORNELL ~ ......... ...., At his weekly talks m St. Pc1cr's Square, Pope John Paul II lately has been f ocusmg on one of the most controvenial and widely ignored C.atholtc rules -that married couples must not use contraception. That rrohibition. and the rejection of it by about 75 petcent o American Catholics, has for years been a worrisome quandary to church leaders. It sorely troubled the l 980 international synod of bishops on family life, wbosc main counter-strategy was to urge clearer teaching. The pope, along with some bishops around the oountry, is making a try at 1t. "Eacb marriage act must remain open to transmitting life," be said at the start of a series of about 12 weekly talks planned about the birth control issue. He told thousands assembled outside the papal balcony that lhe church's position is ''based upon the iolC~ble connection between the two. aspects of the COn.Jupl act; its unitive meaning and its procreative mearung.." That dual appra1saJ, recogn12ing the personally unifying value of sexual relations as well as the creative potential, is a more broadly balanced view of sex than was stressed in church teachings of the past. The old emphasis saw reproduction a& the primary purpose of sex, with scant regard for the mutually binding benefits. The pope said: "The inseparable connection between the unitive and procreative aspects of marriage is founded on the intimate structure of the conjupl act itself. which enables a husband and wife to generate life. ac.cordlng to the laws inscribed in the very being of man and woman. "By safeguarding both these essential aspects, the conjugal act prcsen·es 1n its fullness the sense of true mutual love At the same lime. it remains faithful to God's dcslifl for the purposes of mamagc Ln duccting husband and wife toward lhcir high calhng of parenthood:' Even w1lh the more nuanced view of the subject, the prohibition of rontraccpt1on -whe1her by the ptlJ or devices to prevent fen1hz.al1on -has remained widely d1sreg,arded by most Amencan Catholics, numerous studies find. The ban, officially promulgated in 1968 by Pope Paul Vl in bis encyclical, "Humanae Vitae," met widespread resistance in the church from the start., including open dissent by about 600 U.S theologians, and qualified stands b)'. some European and Canadjan beirarchics. While upholding the teaching. lhcy stressed \he rcsponsib1hty of tndlVlduaJ conscience ID the matter. Before the encyclical was issued, a papal commission bad recommended -by a vote of 70 to 14 - a change m the long-held church pos1t1on. Nevcnhcless. Paul VI formally reaffirmed 1t Some researchers have blamed the cont.racept1on ban for wide defections from the church and as gencrall) wcakenmg the church's lcacbmg authority. But the 1980 synod, while vo1etng dlstress at the unmensc gap between lhe church's rule and refusal of most Catholics to accept 1t, stuck firmly lo 1L simpl) urging that it be better explaaned and JUSllfied. There was no move toward condemning or dnvmg away Catholics who d1<;agrec, but rather for pastoral approaches to the problem. The ant1<ontraccpt1on rule 1s gencrall> regarded a church d1sc1pllne. not doctnne, and thus chanJcable Cardinal Basil Hume of England said at the synod that the "well-being of the church has suffered" because of the conflict over the rule. and tha1 many Catholics who Covenant Community School opens its doors to the public For the first ume in ns three years of operauon. Covenant Community School in Tustin ba.s opened its doon to the public and is currently tak.lna applications for admission for tbc fall term. Open houses set _by Temple Isaiah Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach (Conservative) has set aside a series of open houses 10 welcome new members and &reel those interested in joining the conaregation. The first one will be held Sunday. from 2 to S p.m .. when Mr. and Mrs. Felix Van Bttk open their Newport h home to a prden party. Temple officers and board memben Wlll be on hand to on wcr qucsuons and explain the temple's proarams. The second open house is scheduled for uoday, Sept 9. at the Huntinaton Beach home of Sara Roberu Tbc third aa1berina will be on tu.Nay, Sept 22. 11 Uil temple's pla~ ofwonh1p, 2401 Irvine Ave .• Ncwpon Baidl. which will be in combination with thcscrvtceofthc Stllchot in prcpantion for the upcomma Hi&h Holy J?a>s. The tem_ple mv11es ne omers and unaffihalcd penon1to1lS Shabbal woBhip SCI'\' 1C'C$ each Fnday at : IS p.m to meet the c:onarcption and Rabbi G. Goodman, • ·11 officiate at all Hi&h Holy Oa)-s_ ~rv1C9- For more information, call 548·6900 or 646-?S 12. Grape juice alternative? NAIROBI, Ken)'I (AP)-The Presbyterian CbUtth o 1 Afnca. fiahtint akohol ClOnsumpuon. is conadcr- 1na the usc of srapc JUi<.'t' • an allemath·c to wine an d l4 ra1in1 the lord' Supper. Rcaistrat1on takes place ~cekda)s from 9 a.m to noon and I to 3 p.m .. from now unul Sept. 4. in Ille school office at 11911 Red Hill ~vc .. in the Old Tusun area of Santa Ana. The school has l1.1ndcrganen through 8th arade. mamunnmg a cumculum ID mathema11cs.. scicnct, social stud1cs, lanalla$c arts, and Bible. A strong emphasis 1s also placed on physical fitness Classes begin Sept. 10. with oncntauoo commcncina Sept 4. Pre-school and extended da) care arc also av11lable from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m For more mformat1on, contact Mike unnon. pnnc1pal. or Brant Kennedy. vice principal, at 731-8984. Episcopalian women urging female bis1iop PHILADELPHIA ( .\P) -Women who blued 1hc trail to the Ep1 opal Church' adm1., ion of•omcn to tht pri thood have launched a drh c for lhe churc to onlaio 111 fiBl woman bi hop About 400 people. ccte.bra ll n1 the I 0th an ni ~'ttS.11)' of the t 974 mqular ord1nat1on here of 11 women -l .. o yea~ before the churth in 1976 officaall'): authoril'Cd women's ordination -doptcJ 1 \l&lement ded.arin.a.: "We all upon the Epi pal ( hurth to pr«ttd ursentl and with d1~patch to the clcc11on and ordinatfoo of women to the episcopate: 1n order to bnna wholcm-to this onltr of m1n1stry, -.hich c1mt~ lo lt'<ld. 'uptrvast and unite the church •· or 65 w men prtt' l\ no" ~I" 1n lh('chureh. onl) 83 are io chJI e of pamhc reject It arc "good, consc1enllous and fanhful sons and daughters of the church. "They jus1 cannot accept that the use of artificial means of con1racept1on is 10tnns1cally evil ·· The talks by the pope, and olhcrs, sough1 to persuade them otherwise. A Vatican official, Msgr. Carolo Caffarra. head of the Insu1u1c for Studies on Matnrnony and lhc Family. indicated the pope plans such talks into September, possibly contjnuing aflcr his mid-Scpte!Jlbcf' tnp to Canada. · Caffarra said the talks were necessitated by .. con- fusion and doubt" about lhc leaching fomented by dts~ntmg lheologians. "They have helped preyent Humanae Vitae from being effective." he says. He named a few of the hundreds who have voiced reservations, including the Rev. Charles Curran of the Catholic Universlly of America.. Curran commented la1er to National Ollholic NcVr'S Service that a main theological cnucism of the cnC}clical was that ll ultimately absolutizes the biological - He said "biological rcductJooism" of human rcla- t1onsh1ps 1s a theological error and that "human Temple youth ready to serve Sally Spiro. vice president of memberslup for Temple Bat Yahm, has announced lhat babys11ung will be made available dunng Friday night services beginning Sept. 7. The first Friday of each monlh is devoted to a family service which Rabbi Mark Miller and Cantor .\Ian Weiner gear to families with young children. On subsequent Fnda)s. parents will have the option of free bab)Sitlmg made possible by the gencros1t) of temple )OU th who ba'c 'oluntecrcd to scn.·c the convegauon Graduates of the 1984 confirmation class wtll maugurate this sen ice For mforma11on and bab)slllmg reservations. call 644-Im Manan Brcns. chairman of the adult educat1on committee. and Mmam Van Raahc. director of educa- uon. ha'c issued a brochure annouOC'tng the tcmpk's offcnngs for I 984-8S Oasscs offered include Beginning Hebrc". Con,crsallonal Hcbrcw. Je",sh Literature Comparat1'e Judaism. and lsrach Dancing.. Oasscs Y.111 be held on Thursda> e'emogs or Sunda) mornings .\class exam mm& lhc Torah poruon of the w~k will be held on Fnday n1a.hts after habbat sen.ices In add1t1on. at·home d1scuss1ons led b> pan1c-1panls will conunue during next )ear All cla~ arc open lo mcm be rs and non-membcn of Temple Bat\ ahm To obtain a complete bf'OC'hure and course descn1> tions. or for mfonnallon and ~str:mon. call Van Raahe at the lcmple at 644-1999 Abortion, nuclear \Var related issues By THE IA TED PRESS lJ Roman { athohc b11hops told lhe Rcpu tican platform comm1tttt that their pnonty C'Oncnn art .. Ptt' ent1on of nuclear ~•rand the protection of unborn human hfr." In lC\tlmon) prt'S(ntcd to the comm1tt« prior lo Wt "'.'tt... Republican conHnt1on. the b1 h~ action arm, th(' t 'i Catholk Conference. said: "Some wron&J> rt'Prd aboruon and nuclear •"Ir a alt thrr .c rate and unrebttd i u~ applaudina our acuon on one and oppo na our ,,r '\on the other ... "But it a clear to u that lhc neut) -tnJttd. the 'u""'''ll -of human life is at itake 1n both. It 1 h ew1 clear that in both ca our n1UOn fa« .,.,c problems which Cl') out for a rc-d1rtttion of publir polt(') ... The tc\hm ny, the same a\ gn~n to the Ocmocnt1c pl tfonn commuttt 1n June. ·u PRSCntcd by u\lhaf) bl\hor John'f.. 1 anh) of Gahc~ton -Hou~aon, Teu\ rclauonsh1ps should be covcmed by bum.an norms. .. oo\ merely b1olog>cal ones The pope, in one lecture about the issue. said the te~chmg q.a.inst contraception 1s valid for all men and women but 1s of pa.rUculM concern to Catholics bccaU5C of their view of the sacramental nature of marriage. He sajd thal 10 the conjup.J act. the -1ango:age'Of thc body'' is mannsic to that sacramentaJ quallty and that understand.Ing the '"language of the body' an its truth 1s particularly 1mpon.ant in such a moment that IS so rich in sign i ti canoe." RELIGIOUS NOTES .•. FromB6 general The Smgletanans unda.. evening "Discovct)" d1scuss1on group meets at 7 30 at the church. For 10formauon about the group, call .\rlene R)dcr at 96~-8596. .\ bool d1~uss1on group meets on the third Fnda) of each month For general mformauon. call 646-465~ ••• Newport-Mesa Ckrittiu Center Fair Dnvc and ~cwpon Boulevard. Costa Mesa. will host Frtd Franl. TV Gospel recording arust. in concen on Sunday at 6 p.m Franl.., fea1urcd on Dr Robe-rt &hullers 1ntcr- nat1onal T\ program "Hour of Power" wtll appear wtth his wife. Jud~. and tv.o children Miss). 10, and Clms.. 8. For mo"" mformat1on. call 966-0454 • • • FoulaiD Valley Baptist Cat.rd.. 10460 Slater Ave., comer of Slater and \\. ard. w1Jl present a mus.1cal oonocn featunng 'ocal rccordang artist Kell) Willard at 6 p.m.. on Sunda) • • • Un.lt.arlan l 'alversalis& Fdlowataip. 42Q Cypr'CS$ Dme. Laguna Beach. will hear Joyce Dusenberry lead a d1scu s1on on "Books That Ha"c Changed Our Lives·· at the 10·30a.m meettngSunda) .\II 31"(' m' lied to share e\penences m hleral') e~plorauonc, and1nflueoces that ma) ha'e du'CC'led pc1"S0nal gro" th .\ potluck salad sand~1ch luncheon follov.s the program For more 1ntorma11on call 4~4--4 "4 3 • • • R.a.ncllo Capistrano Commalt} Qiu~. 2925 I Camino C ap1.,1rano. San Juan Capistrano v.111 prescnl lh<" Re' Dr RobC'n H \chullcr as guest spealcr for the 9:30 and 11 I 5 a m ..en ice<. on unda ... Dr · ·h ullcr "ho"" ·Hour o( Po" er .. T\' program 1s \ICY.Cd "orld-\\ 1dc "111 bnng his mf'Ssagc "Brcakini Through -There's Hope for \ ou." Pastor Roben "\ Schuller v.111 n:-3d the morning scripture and lead the mom10g Pr8}Cr. Del \h1lhnJ. SPt'('1al guc-.l ~lo1st. v.111 bC' accom- panied b~ organist .\Ian De-Puc The church choir. dil"CC'tcd ll\ Sheldon Dmud v.111 add to the musical minl\tf'\. • "cofftt fclloYt ship hc1v.~n sen 1ct<> Wlll be hosted b~ Glen and ~rlcnc Potter • • • Newport Harbor Latlatraa Cbarda, 7<JS Dover Drive. Newi>0n Beach. v.111 install the Re' llJm E1fen Kfosstad as a \0<:1ate pastor at a 'ipc'('1al 10 :\0 a.m . v.or5h1p Stt\'tcr t'n unda' Re\ l\roptad, 27. '"a natl'<' of Long Beach Ix rca: I\ cd her hachclor'' dqttt 1n liberal 'itudi~ from c.a tatc Lona Rea\ h, and completed her uud· or tbc m1ru lt) at Luther onhwcstem Seminar) in t. Pau.l Minn. ShCJOtn\ the st.atf bcadtd b) th~ Re\:, RCF' The church v.111 C'Omhinc both rtJUlar uoda) menu 1ce5 into the 10 30 am Yrv1ce. Follov.1 th~ rv1~. there v.111 be a potlud. lund\t'On. • • • VI lbvttrtu Ch~ p7 I I Fai" C'A' \ c .. G ~n· Gro'"'· ;., l huld its :Z th ~noUJ1I Food FC\ll\al on lUNa)'. Sc-pt .• rrom 3 to 9 p.m . Oncofth<'oldQtannual C'~' o(thcOra Japan romm nit~. 11 f. ti\ l 111feature.1n atiOn to the Olct\\h't' tnU, pmet. for lht \OUl'I t~ li-.d tntrru1nm nt. nd inuml"l'OU\ cullural t'\h1bit~. 8arpin huntc~ ~•II dtl11tu 1n the farmrn' ket and p( CR'&li n dm1' ion 1 fret and ti llel for door p 1 art rant llv m.kcmablc' for food and mo form rt 1nfi HOO. !1971-lllS .J I I t DAILY PILOT/Saturdey, AU$1ult 26, 1 84 Artie Shaw begins new Beguine (EDITOR e ofrh "l' clarinet 'ho J 1 lot of publicity Mllb hiJ frequent mama ro such HoJlvwood bcllu1ic a Lana Turner •nd • ' Gardner. Thoush he \014W M " s qumrns the bu in<'~s for lood .15 H'illl'S ago, me haw rs c-1' M~rh an"ot.h<-.r band) Br MARY CAMPBEU. u ............... .- • NF.W YORK -Artle Shaw, who ranked It the top along wtth Glenn Miller and Tommy Dorsc) in the big ~dcra. folded ht\ band 35 yea~aso an a buff and 1d he~ · through w11h orchestras. Five years later the clarinetist responsible for such hits as .. Stardust~ and .. Begin the Beguine .. said he was out of the music business -in any fonn -"forever· Today.at~e 74. Art1eShaw1sb3ck for a new bq.inn1na with a fal:s1m1le of his old band. onJy this ume w1thout his famous clannei. .. life changes." sa)s the man also known for has~' en m~mages-plus a present hve-m arrangement -to $UCh beauties as -\\a Gardner and Lana Turner .. If )ou're at all adap- t.able. sometimes )'OU change, too." The new band. based 1n Boston. made 11s New York debut at the Kool Jazz Festival 1n June While Sha" owns, rehearses. and sometimes con- ducts the group, the clannet is in the hands of Dick Johnson. "We are able to make a pretty Artie Shaw accurate facsimile of what the old band was. but much more energetic and "Ital," says Shaw. who now lives in Southern California "Jn thts band. the notes are exactly what they were The phrasrng. attack and dnve are different. Today mus1c1ans play with a harder edge I used to push my band to its outer limits. The trumpet would hit a high E Aat, maybe, 1f the nght guy was playing ll All four trumpcten m thi\ band n play higher than that. No~ il'"· ·How do )OU want 1t?"" He hopts to tan recordin1 soon. "No major label 1s breaking down your doors to male big b nd record ~oon &$ the b3nd is \\here I'm totall) 'lltisficd -I'm not quite )Ct -I'll ~ord them myself and work out a di uibution deal " s a photographer naps hi pic- ture. Sh w ~rs he doesn't <.-are if it's nauenng. ··1 m out of the pretty business 1 thought 1 wa~ out of the An1e Shaw busmess, too, but I auess I'm back in it. ~·Artie Shaw wns once lund of u legendary name Now 11•s 'Who'!'. It's going to take a while before we're known. A whole generation has been born since J quit the band business. including most of the men in the present band " Shaw as a younger man made news marrying movie stars. Man) con- sidered him an intellectual snob He qun music twt~ before he was 25 to become a wnter. He finalhr wrote two books. published in I 95i and 1965 and 1s working on anothe-r in which he ho~ to "tell the truth through fiction " He also could be abras1"e -to the public and colleagues in the music business Duke-Elhngton radiated gemal soph1s1icauon from the bandstand. A rue Shaw frowned. "People would say. 'Wh} don't you smile?'. I'd say, 'Sa} something unn).' I \\ s doin a JOb. I "' thinkin aboul the: mu ic. 1f it undc ngh•. if I'm 01p to ha'c to a ta ncv. tenor man ' ha\\ alwa)'5 ron idertd himselfan ani t. not an cn1cruuner, "An ani t 1 ba 1call} out to wluminalc ~pie, put lhinas in that people don t know bout, s.hinc light in10 dark corner :·be )'~. "I have a trona pcrvc~ streak 1n me. I played a pnvatc dance in C1ncmna11 om:e. We were hidden behind potted pslm$. A red-headed "1"1 mme up. She sa1d. •Pia. "Dancing in the Dark".· I ~1d, 'Please. When you ask. you ~y P.leasc. Haven't you bcl·n taught that? She said, ·we turtd }du : "A man came up and asked what happened. He said, ·oh. m) daugh- ter'sa lttlle hot-headed.' f ~id, 'Soam I.' Larer she came up and wd please and we-played 11. Tho~ are strange people. The-y tmtt a band leader like a head waiter" One of the frustrations that drove Shaw out of the music business was being booked only for dances. ··1 can remember at the Palomar Ballroom in Los Angeles, with 9.000 people there, there might have been 20 people dancm&. The rest were standmg, packed in around the bandstand. If a guy died, he couldn't fall down. I'd say to our agent, 'Why don't you book us in a concert haJI and let them 61t down?' He'd say no ... Se~ond cast also the 'Real Thing' Honest, Abe? .. Saturday NlaJlt Lln" repertory cut member Mary Grou fllrta with Barry Boetwlck, made up for a 1klt u A&rab•m Lincoln, In the makeup room u be botsta tonight'• edition of the ahow at 11 :30 a.m. on NBC. Cbannel 4. · Replacements in Broadway hit show treated royally -·like we were a new production' By MICHAEL KUCHWARA NE~ rOR~ -Caroline Lagerteh 1s the first to admit that she s not a household name. at lea\t not at thl· moment That's wh'v \he C\udcs an enormous amount of enthus1~m for director Mike Nichols and producer Emanuel Azenberg who took a chance on her and John Vicker; another little-known actor w11h ex· tensive theatncal credits. as replace- ments for Glenn Close and Jerem'v Irons m .. The Real Thing," one oft he few box-office sma\he<, oflast season In fact . .\zenburg and Ntlhols put m almost an cnureh new cast when Close and Iron'> depaned the Tom toppard drama 1n Jul\ alter a SI\· month run. 'E'el")rt11ng was laid on first dass for us Tht•\ treated u!. as a ne" production h wa\ an extraordmaf) e~penl'nce · sa~ s Lagcrteh a cool. cnsp actre\S with long. blondt· hair aQd starthngh blue eyt•<, ··v. e had a month's rehear\81 fhe prop\ ''t"rt· there on the first dJ"."" And so \\a\ '11d1ol<i' unwaH•ring suppon "He ma~es you kcl that he 1s lucky llJ(lU 'Ml UA..,_, "'1 "99' •COSTA llllSA '""~ e .... (ClllUl(SA I .,. :f'l'tfA A • ll IOllO that )OU decided 10 do this pla) with him," she says "'He gives you such a feeling of confidence." .\ndshesa)s ll waseas1ergomginto the play with a new cast "~e all worked together on the- producuon. I reall)' didn't do an) w-ork on the pla} before I staned rehearsal. except for JUSt reading ll through." Lagerfrlt sa}s. "I wanted to keep an open mind." She and the other new cast mem- bers also were abk to build their relat1onsh1ps from the ground up dunng rehearsals ·'tt"s a lot easier than coming m to act \.\Ith somebod) "ho·., already decided what their character 1s like or w-hat their relauonsh1p to the other actors 1s " she sa\ s Lagerfelt and Vicker) met last year under' en different c m:umstances. 11 "as on ihe soap opera "'Edge ol \i1ght'" He played a sp) "ho kept takmg off his dark glas~s and mullenng into the camera "M ) name is< onstanttne ·She played the C\·W-lfe or another cloak-and-dagger man and ended up being strangled "I did a great death scene. but ~ou re nol allowed to die \.\Ith your eyes open. I la> there with m) e~es glazed. and they had to reshoot 1t, .. TREAT YO UR FAMILY TO.\ ~ICllT AT THE \10 \lt:s FOR ONLY 5c EACH call 720-9266 ~!~!?.!9 '\F:U PORT CE~TER she laughed But Lagerfelt doesn't lnod.. the soaps They pronde a cushion for actors in Ne\\ Yori... "ho "ant to work in the theater but still ha'c to pa' the rent Fonunatel" she hasn't been out ot work for the.last fi,c )ears. finding employment in a steady stream of Broadwa) and off-Broadway pro- ductions. usually pla)s hy Bnt1sh pla}wnghts Harold Pinter or ~1mon Gray Because of her appearanc.:es on Broadway in Pinter's .. Betrayal" and Gray's "Otherwise Engaged," as "ell as off-Broadwa}' in Gray's "Quar- termame's Terms." audiences tend to think she's Bntish. They're only half right. Her mother 1s English. hut her lather's a SY.ed1sh diplomat. and Lagerfelt grew up in Sweden But her heart was in .\mcnca a land shl' karned about from .. Sc,enteen" magazine It was a place \\here young girl'> could stay up past 11 p m and eat hot dogs and angel food cake. Lagerfeham\ed in New-York after college." hen her father was a~1gnl.'d to the United Nations as a special ad\ 1scr to the General .\ssembh. On the ad"ICe ofa fnend. she auditioned for the Amencan .\cadem\ ol Dra- mallt -'\rts and was accepted Two \<Car\ later she was on the dinner theater t·1rcu11. m places hh· Jackson. Miss . and .\lbuqu<'rque N.M playing role~ in show~ hkc "Cactus Flower.·· "'We'd wait on tables. shower. rush on stage and act -dreadfully rm sure," she recalled "After the show- we·d all have to line up and shake hands with e"el)body who was leaving, like little performing monkeys "'And then -we each had our own set of tables-we'd rush to our tables for the tips."· She did best wuh the lead role in ··cactus Flov.er." the \tOf) of an ugly duckling ofa "oman who suddenh blossoms. · .\ud1ences lo' ed that character," Lagerfelt said ... , cleaned up on that shO\.\" A turning point m her c.:areer occurred when she was fired from a pla-. at the Kenned" Center m • NEWPORT BUCH* • IRVlNE • • COSTA MESA • • £l TORO • Ct fll r AS lWOOO flc;lllllOP[ <•l 00 l F ~' ~ 0 4\ • ' 1 'Xl UH llU I '"'' 'ro ~IX IASI SIM!IQITIJ '"'l ·~ SOOTH COAS I ClllllUlllS IN I •••• llO Jt~ 600 I I\ lt20 ~·· llW•J• ~.Jll 1 SOOTH COASI ..... ~.-.1111 111 '°'" " 000.-r"1 17" 1 lO UO 1 JC 101111 U•IJ• • IRVIN[ • W0008RIDC( ....... 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"-"' ... '' UO 6UO VICIO !~IN 0 ••• CUlll I ASTMIOQ "'8!TIOPr (I) I JO 140 600 ll'l IOJ~ ~!Soo<l tl~IOOO llllltOWI ".W aio· IN UI '" ,..,,, l:IOHS H014S9,. Sol t..-1150 U JOO IOIUlllllO .,. IJ) t • ...,, LIO I 0 6 I It.I\ ~ BR TOl a .. 1 r ...... llMTICfl. (II/ .. .. ,_ II' ll(l ~o.a • IOJO ~!I 7U• I ~ U J 8A1STOl .... ~ 1101T .-"'1 .,_,. t ~ . 11 JO I )t I JO 10 :b ... l ,. flt[ .... ... 1•1 ~o o• oo 11~ ~ too BRIHOI Washmgton .. , was absolutely devastasted." la$erfeh said .. You feel like you have a b1gsign across your forehead sa)ing. 'inadequate.... · So she returned to New York and aud1t1oncd for ··01herw1se Engaged." and was hired She hasn't been out of work smce. New Haven bidding for Broadway plays Even after she broke her back ma bad fall. she was back at work six weeks after the accident. She y,as in physical therapy for nme months but ll didn't prevent her from appeanng m "'Quarterma1ne's Terms."' ··They JUSt reblocked the !.how a httle bit so I didn't ha"e to bend down," Ms. Lagerfelt said. "I would rest all da)'. come in, do the show and get orr·· No". shl.' can't bclte'e that she's actuallystamngon Broadwa) in a big hn directed bv Mike Nichols. "I Just love the feeling 10 .\menca that )OU rnn do anything you want to do 1 f you reall) set your mind to ll. • she said "'It sounds corny But foreigners like me reall> kno" thal ·· By CHRIS DAHL A-l•tM ~ ... Writer NEV.. HA YEN. Conn. -This New England city, once a stop on 1he tl)out route for Broadway-bound shows, soon will raise the curtam on a second renovated thearer as part a downtown renewal plan. The renovated Palace Perfonnmg .\rts Center 1s set to open Sept. 4 with the Broadway musical "Gt8J," said Ed Yoe vice president and general manager of the Palace New Haven used to be a conve- n1t'nt stopo"er for theater com pa mes. mus1c1ans. dancers and comedians tounng the Eastern Seaboard. It was a good place for performers to fine-tune their acts before opening in New York or Boston. You can pursue trivia in the Daily Pilot again Long before Trivial Pursuit became the nation's most popu- lar fndoor sport. there wu the Trivia ootumn In the Dally Piiot. Each Saturday from October 1973 to Aprll 1983, the entertain- ment eectlon of the Pilot challenged tM wft9 of trlvladdlcu 8'ong the Orange Coast wtth 10 questions on a plethora of ln- conMquentlaJ acttvttlea. Now, In the wake of a renewed Interest In trivia nationwide, the DaJty Piiot ts revlvtng thls feature. The new Trlvfa cotumn makes Its debut on Saturday. Sept. 8, In the entertaJnment MCtfon. Written, as before, by enter- talnment editor and rongtlme trMophlle Tom Tltue, the column wm teat readers' recall powert on a variety of sub)ecta, lndudlng movtea, tetevlsk>n. comlc8 Wld sports. Re11dera WWI be Invited to submit their anawera, and com- pete against each other In a auc:cesslon of three-month Trivia Bowts. You may call It .. Son Of TrMa" or "Trivia Strtkee Back." What- ever, It'll once again be a part of the Dally Pllot'• Saturday enter· talnment package. Look for TrMa In two weeks, beginning Sept. 8. "'DREAMSCAPE' IS THE NICEST SURPRISE OF THE SUMMER." em 990 4021 UA vies 4 .... illlter Al()J .. I.., Bl.DA r 9S2 4993 UA Mo~1es 8 llllN HNA , 1c n ~01a Baena Park Of In l111ta OI J n ·IAC>Nnl Mallltl £nun.alnment Tonight Enter a world beyond your wildest imagination where anyJning can happen. COSTA ~ 631 l~l Edwards Halbof Twin "" " COSTA •SA S40 0!194 UA Souttl Coast 1\61 ""1 n TOO> ~ 1 S880 ldwatds Saddl bad (11ort A19* wt IM ~51065S Fd.vards Wooelhnd 111 htt-.1\•1 I ti MISSDt VO) 495 6220 £dward n VieJO Mal $0 '"' ,, "- ~6343911 UA Cttr Center .. 1111 [f (.f$I "'The tnck 1s getting people-used to the old tounng routes," Yoe said. At some pot n t show bust ness forgot about New Haven. said Yoe. Ma)be 1t was the advent of quick transpor- tation between Ne-w York and Bos- ton. Perhaps New Haven. now the state's third-largest city, lost what tt takes to attract modern per- formances. No longer. ~ys Richard Ferrer, the- arch1tect pnmanly responsible for rebutldmg the theater. "It used to bold about I. 700 people and you couldn't attract a m~or performance without a seating ca- pacil) of 2.000." Ferrer sa)s ··we upped 11 to about 2,050. · The Palace. built 1n 1926 and known as the Roger herman. "1as ruined b) a senes of '"destrucu"e renovauons." SS)S Ferrer. When be set out to rebuild the theater Ferrer found that no bu1ld1ng plans remained. Ferrer said he isn"t tf) 1ng 10 restore the structure. 16catcd tn what lit} offictals call the Entertainment D1s- tnct. "We didn't want someJond of fake interpretation of what 11 used to be," Ferrer S8)S. "We decided to respect what was here and emphasize 1t - not fight 1t." The walls were painted electnc blue. Arches and hallways were redone. Mirrors. and bars were in- corporated hberall)' into the new design. A $200.000 sound system and an equally elaborate lighting system were installed. Blue carpets and scats were picked. The stage and orchestra pit were enlarged and the theater "alread) had the most bathrooms m the city," Ferrer sa)s. The refurbishment will cost S3 million. he says. But a new the~ter would ha"e cost 10 times as much. says Ferrer. The next trick will be to get people into those bnght blue seats. Yoe says he's already boot..ed the theater through Ma} 1985 Broadway shows, mcludmg "Soph- isticated Ladies," "Pump Bors a nd Dinettes." and "Torch Song Tnlogy," will play at the Palace. Comedy acb. mduding David Brenner and Victor Borge, have signed on Dionne War- w1ck. Gladys Kmght and the Pips, Chuck Man$ione. Jerry Lee Lewis. the Pointer S1ster.s. Mel Tonne and Al Green will also be appeanng. When the Shubert Performing rts Center was reopened late last year 11 was hailed as the centerpiece of a downtown rev1tah1auon project. It will now have to share center $tage with the larger Palace acros the- strcet. 'Peter' set for filming in Russia LO ANGELES (AP) -Lara,e portion~ ofNBC's IO.hour miniseries "Peter the Great" will be filmed in the Soviet l l nion as the ••first totally 1nd5ndcnt America drama" cHr to be pbed in tlut nation. xecut1vc producer Y\Hencc. Schiller, ~ho is also dirccti ~pcn1 more than a \ear in Ru 1~ doina re arch and obtainina So" act cooper- ation forfilminJ in the rc!ltored cal) ot u1J I th h1\tonc mona t~ 11 Zoao y. Leningrad and Mo o~. Mallmtlian Schell na tht< mature Pttcr. thr leaendA11 crar opened Ru ia to the "orld. h also tars Vane RedJ!avc, u nee Ohv1er. Om t Shanf. Ttc\or How- ard, John Mill\ and Lili Palmer. In add1uon, 21 vict al·to~ • 1U bo ll)pcar in the production dut to ap ar on N 8 an the 19 S-1Xnod hiller 1d, "fh1· " the fi l tot.tlly indcprndcnt Am1:rican Clrlma C\Cfto film 1n the O\<JCt Unl()n,"Thc locauon hcdulc inC'ludc ~en month ol pnnc1pal pl'lotl phy in Ru\~• and othtr pan of ruro " - .. Good nursing homes better than martyrdom DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why did you Jet .. Barely Copina in Chicaa,o" ~t off ~ithout teaching her a lesson that she needed to lcam? Generally, )'9U are a lot sha~r than that. GOPn TV hit either The writer said her father wns bedridden, incontinent and had to be !J>OOn-fed. He was ill-tempered1 de· mandina and in severe pain. She added, heroicaJly, .. , vowed that 1 would nevet put my father in a nursina home -no matter what." There arc too many martyrs like that around -people who com- plicate their lives and do the elderly !'0 favors whh such warped rcason-ang. Surely the~ are aware that trained professionals m nursing homes are bettet able to care for the elderly - and the oost can almost always be covered by state and federal funds. The deep resentment of some of these sons and daughters is apparent. They show up every day because they feel duty-bound. They try hard to be loving. but it doesn't quite come off. The old folks feel guilty. Their djscomfort surfaces in the form of hostility. There arc plenty of good nursing homes around. If a bad one is chosen. it's because someone didn't do the proper investigating. Life in a nursing home can be rewarding. There arc ans and crafts, group discussions. games, music and even marriages. What does the "martyr" have to AtHI I.AIDERS offcT'? Just sign me -Traveled That Road And Am Glad l Did It Raght. DEAR GLAD: Tbanb for pru- endng tbe olher aide ol tile story. Muy wrote to upres1 a almllar point of view, but you aald I& best. - DEAR ANN LANDERS: These days we all need to cut down on expenses wherever we can. I found a way to slash my water bill in half. Please credit a bimonthly newsletter called Practical Parenting. I quote: There is a bag difference in cost between washing with hot water and cold water. Check out the chart below. Multiply the difference between the various methods by the number of loads you do in a month. You will soon see how much money you can save by not washing with hot water. Hot water, warm rinse -63 cents per load Hot water, cold rinse -SO cents per load Warm water. warm rinse -45 cents per load Warm wash. cold rin e -24 ~nts per load Cold wa h. cold rinse - 7 ctn ts ptr load If you think you need hot water to get clothes really cJean, hsten to this: Dr. Martin Blaser, chief of infectious' diseases at the Veterans Adminis- tration Medical Center an Denver. conducted a study that showed fQb.. rics washed in oold water were as free of bacteria as those washed an not water. If you still arc concerned ibout bacteria. you can use a bleach. But even with a bleach. the study showed, most bacteria will be wiped out by normal rinsing. -A Daaly Reader in the Distnct Of Columbia. DEAR D.C.: Thanl.1 for tbe taput. I haven't wa1bed clotbea la qalte a wblle, bat l Ualnk I'd bave a bard time 1wltcbfQg to cold water. I'd like to bear from t0me people wbo bave tried It. Do your clo&be1 1eem as clean'? Parents. what should you do If your teenager is having sexual relatwns? Ann Landers' new booklet, .. Hish School Sex and How to Deal With It -A Guide for Teens and Their Parents." give no-nonsense advice on how to handle this delicate situation. For each booklet, send 50cents plus a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago. Illinois 60611. Phil ties the knot Conrad Baln u Phil Drummond wed.a Db:ie carter on .. Dlff"rent Strokes" tonlCht at 8 on NBC. Channel 4 . LOS ANGELES (AP) -T&· \'tilon CO\l'Cfl&t of the Republican National Convention wu ecen io only sti&btly more than 12 million homes Tuesday ni&ht. accofdir)I the Niel1en rallnas. • The overniaht ratiQP from tjf.ht major cities ~bowed ABC &eadini with a ratingofS.67. NBCwa.ssc:cond with 4.S and CBS was third WJth 4 ). These initial ratiop, although they do no1 sbow the viCWJnJ pattern for the entire country, do mdicatc that the Republican convention in Dallas wiU end up with fewer vicwen U\an the Democratic co11vrntion in San Francisco. The week of the Democratic meet• 1ng. the Nielsen period ended July 22. had Lbe lowest tatinJS so far fot lhe summer. Viewers Ooeked back to their sets for the two wcas of me Summer Olympics, then tumedaQ)' with its end. Summer sizzlers pack nati on 's m ovie houses "The Republican ratings are ~ Lban the Democratic convention," Mike Eiscnber&. clinletor ofaw:tienoc research for ctss. said by telephone from New York. "l have no interpretation except that the viewer probabJy doesJt't npect any excitement or 'uspensc, in conuast to the Democratic conven· uon, .. he said. "They know the raillts . The other bad an element of uncertainty.~~ there is no elemfot of surprise. The viewer knows what to expect." By BOB THOMAS #.MC c .. ted ,,_ Wftter LOS ANGELES -Labor Day, the traditional end of the summer movie season, is a week away, but already the fLlm business is celebrating a wildly successful season. "Sizzling Summer Sends Cinema Sums Skyward," headlined the nor- mally restrained Variety. Accordfog to A.O. Murphy, Var- iety's financial expert, midsummer receipts ~red 1 percent over last year's record, pointing to an all-time high for the entire summer. Murphy pr:ojccted a 1984 theater gross of $4.0S biUion, up from last year's record $3. 77 billion. Rock fans cam.pout at Radio City NEW YORK (AP) -Radio City Music Hall in the hotel business? Not quite. But it seemed that way when scores of adolescent fans appeared outside the famed art deco concert hall with beds and lounge chairs to wait "It has been a great summer," said Ashley Boone, president of market- ing-distribution for Columbia Pic- tures. He is understandably pleased, since Columbia's "Ghostbusters" has captured top box-office honors. "Movie business has been quite good despite a rather strange sum- mer," Boone continued. "The Fourth of July, which is a very important holiday for theaters, fell on Wednes- day. so the effect of a three-day holiday was lost. "Then the Olympic Games cap- tured the imagination and attention of many Americans, especially m Southern California, though the ef- fect on theater business was not as bad as many people expected. "The nauonal political conven- tions also affected business, but in a different way," he said. "During the conventions, it's hard to get attention for a youth-oriented movie. The people you're trying to attract aren't likely to be watching politicians. so you can't run TV spots for your pictures." You can't get bumed seeing 'Gremlins: -O.Y~miaht so they could buy tickeiu~o-1-flf'--._,.. next month's Menuao concert. When the hot pop group appeared at Radio City last February. it set a record in ticket sales. This conc-ert is expected to be the same, a spokeswoman said, adding that five shows were completely sold out during the first day of ticket sales last Thursday. Radio City is sponsoring a· contest with a local radio station and TV channel for chaperoned dates at a secret place with the five Menudo youngsters. The winning girls can take a best (riend al on~ and will go on a shopping spree with a personal shopper at Macy's. Meanwhile, another pop superstar. Juilo Iglesias, sold out all 42,000 seats for seven performances at Radio City in a record 15 hours. His concert runs from Sept. 6-12. Menudo will be at Radio Caty from Sept. 27 to Oct. 3. NOW~! MNDI STADIUM OR IN 639-8770 COSTA MW EDWARDS TOWN CENTER 751-418-4 FCUITAll VAllIY Famlly fovr 963-1307 LA a.ADA LA MIRADA DR IN 523·9310 FOOlfTAll VAWY ~ Call 642-5678. Put • fe)llt words to work for ou. PACIFM: FruflAIN SYUrY Cl1Y CENTER OW& 634 2553 SY'UrY City Centt1 no1~ VALLEY DR·IN 962·2481 634-2553 11 Ko." in O~lli\'nn l~~tlt., "him t.. \ti.h.1LH..1nJ..,., wrsso. -BJ WAUM:tt, 1lMO'M PlflTIICl ~ Am JACICSOM • ..,. •-.HAWE TOOO, MM HAVES, -.011A LEE -1 o;....o., M1CHAB. LAHOON NOW SHOWING! l UXURY TI*AntlS ~~=.: ... .= c SMTA AM 540 7444 Edwards Bostol •111t1At....,. 'Int Two Mltinte Slt.wi"P * DRIVE-INS "••~'ow0 H LY SUI U11ten NttN • "OD \.OWe OJCfllOllO ....... (1119-t• A' htO 1111 l 1tl 71H 6 t:~I I Clint a anwood TMNT'RON nu ltlow• u t.ltJI "lill l i..tO t :•O 6 10 :tl Ill i 1;1 •l ''" •• 6. 131 IZ ZA K41t!tt Jlt!f Sta11""' .. ~aoPT .. ...... (a),hu ,.,_,.., C"> IM&D'A('N) PhHT"• Ult ltarfltMet (N) ea .. UMCN) ,lut TM Ht n r•Mlftt ltery ('°) s But despite those conditions. he said, the box office "was solid." "Gbostbusters" was the surprise winner of the summer season and 1s ex~ed to collect more than S 180 million by the end of the month. "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom," which everyone expected to be No. l, has sold more than $162 mmion worth of tickets. "Taghtrol)(·· has the best chance of Joining the b1ggrossers. It collected $9 million m its first weekend on 1.5 35 screens. almost breakjng EastwoQd·~ previous record wnh "Sudden Im- pact." The summer also had its bombs. The much touted" Rhinestone," with Sylvester Stallone and Dolly Panon, failed to sparkle. earn mg $21 million. less than its reported cost. Other losers included "Top Secret," "The And way over. Those three pictures may well sell a half-bilhon dollars' worth of tickets 1n rhe U na1ed Stat.es and Canada alone. "The summer business shows that the public does have a Large apl)(tate for movies. Not just the young public. I either." he said. ··1t looks as though I movies are attracting a greater vol- ume of1)atrons in all age groups. The The national ratings for the Demo- crauc convention ranged between 6.2 and 8.9. The nauonal ratiQ&S for Monda) rugbt were ABC 6.9, CBS 6.6 aod Steven Spielberg was the season's big moneymaker, having directed "Indiana Jones" and produced "Gremlins ... which will gross more than $130 million this summer. I surge started in the winter and sprin'- with 'footloose' and hasn't stopped.' N9C50. Pope of Greenwich Village," "Grand-·-;:==================:;;;======::;; view. U.S.A." "The Joy of Sex" and I 1 Following those three blockbusters came "Police Academy ($80 million) "Romancing the Stone" ($7 5 million),"Star Trek Ill" ($70 million). "The Karate Kid .. ($60 million). "The Natural"' ($4 7 million), "Purple Raan" ($34 million), "Bachelor Party" ($34 million). Most of these films will be ea ming big money until Labor Day and perhaps beyond. Among the late- summer releases, Clint Eastwood's "Meatballs, Part II " The summer movie product was aimed at youth. with an e01phas1s on fantasy and comedy. The more qualitative offerings. notably "The Pope of Greenwich Village" and "The Ncverendang Story," failed to regJster. "It has been a tremendously suc- cessful summer ... said Barr) London. president of Paramount's domestic d1stribut1on. ··Never before have three films released in the same time period grossed over SI 00 m1llton. Nici« D'Afrlelo was a winner. E~ came easy to him Unttl he Nd lo rlslc It all tor the only thing that really mattered. ANAHEIM Pacific's Anaheim Dnve·ln 879-9850 BREA UA Movies 990-4022 COSTA MESA iRviNf *ORANGE Edwards Mesa · Edwards Woodbndge Cinedome 634 2553 646·5025 551 ·0655 -WESTMINSTER COSTA MESA MISSION VIEJO Edwards Cinema Edwards Town Edwards Vlf!JO West 891 ·3935 Center 751 4184 Twin 830-6990 WESTMINSTER PaClfiC 5 H1·Way 39 Onve·ln891 3693 "THE BEST HOLLYWOOD MOVIE OF 19841" ·J Hoberman The Village Voice "A crisp thriller. Suspenseful, involving~ -Janet Maslln. The New York Times NWOI 879 9850 .... Tt* BUCH 848 0388 ~T 8UCH 6A4-0760 P~ NWtllM OA IN lOWAROS HUHTWGT~ lOWAROS NEWPORT Mtl ., lUilON BlACH aw Al IMll l (ll~ .. ~' CCNTU mA 529 5339 lA HABRA (213) 6910633 ~AG 63.4 2~~3 MANN BREA Pt.AZA Atlt. FA.SHION SQUAAl CINlOOMf. fWf S1 WOW. IWt> I CtW'IWf & 5 A IM llDA PW 952 093 LA •ADA ~23 1611 SAlflA W 540 74U UA MOVIES 8 SRO GATlWAY S , COWARDS BR&STOl 9' fl* IUtNU~ MAlt SA f~ 11"AU£Y .W-W lC. ll Ml n '°'° ~1 $880 ..,.. ~ SJO 6991 mniwcsro 891 93 EDWARDS SAOOll8ACK E'OWAAOS vttJO lWIH PAClfC HIWAY 39 OR fC l\ lOIO Al lllnflhl> \I.PAZ Al l llM>I W SO Clf G fi ' wtSTMldltl • lOWAROS ST 891 93~ " l 1 IRVINE 1446 CULVER PROUDLY PRESENTS .\N EVENING OF PO LYNb.6 1AN Db.Ll~iJT Food, Dnnk «Enterta1nmen1 of the "Islands·· CALL NOW 857-2103 Tickets sold m advance Reservations suggested AUG. 26 Two Dinner Shows 6:00& 8:30 Adults $17.95 Children $10.95 Prices includes tax & gratuity * BARGAIN MATINEES I FI RST 2 Pwformlftell Moa~ * Thru S.turdly (Except Holidlys & Spec. E•11m111ts) •flatifrtJ•I 3l ~:~~o'!~'~· s.v") .p "llOAM ml MD "M MllWt . mai 531.-lf..itx At c. .... .,.p M TOIU Of OCDf' (PC) It 1£D'" (PG-13) 100 315 H~ &l~ lit.JO I~" .CS H~ H~ I~ lit~ ··....u llA*" (I) 1.00 !I~ BO I<> I IS .. TII. WfJllAN '" lllD' (rG-lJ) 114' IS H~ ~ t\ • 0 RED DAWN" (P'G ll) t11n11 m110 1:101 ~'11£1'\11~ 11141114 2409 l• ....... lilloll ullllw .. A1llownt .. 0 11£YDU Of Tll fOOS" (I) I' ' 'I~ q~ ~)S '1~ 1'1~ "OXF<ml Bltl'S" (K-13) ~ I t I •S 10 t' • lmAMSCAPf"' CP'G·ll) 12 JO ' • :0 a •s ~" ORANGE ~ IJHl ~Ul1~ .... a. ,.,_ ' ...,. c .. • • SU'E" AP PIEETS C""V SAT. I 'WD DAr (PG-ll) " OOllY $1'£11(0 ll'JO 30• uo ·~ lo.JO ""9U Ulf" (I) • DCU\' STUIO 1• lJO. 600 • JO ltt4S "HIM" (N) 2J06JOIUS "COMll M OESTlOYll" (f'G~ 17l0 0 0 145 "Tlilft'll(ft" (a) • rua ·...uwacr<1> 810 Orange Coa11 DAILY PILOT/Saturday, August 25, 1984 TooAY 'S TV -------- -ue>- k==-DOOIHOW NIEWZOOMWI WLOKINGDOM TlllWm< .. IASOA.U. .. STUOIO NATIONAl OEOORAPMJC ~STORY CtWl.E 8ROWN AHO OICKVMOYKE M.UION AHO THE MAGIC ... . ~· (Q)*Mt . . tt "A HefM Call«! Jester" (1983) Sd FtOtt, MlcMel Semt0n. -~ n.sl>UNOEONSANO • PAC-MAN I AU8IK OUIE I .aooo I THATTEEH SHOW • KUNBFU 881 OWENS GAMES Ni\TIONAl CtWiR>N8H1P8 a AMENCAN 8TOA't Mm< OUIE I MENUOO OICKVMDYKE MCMI **** "Gallipoll" (1981) Mei Gib-eon, Miit Lee. ®llOVE ••~ "It C8me From Hollywood" ( 1982) John candy. D111 Aykroyd MOYIE ** * "Start In My Crown" (1950) Joel Mc:Ctee. Ellen Drew. {%)MOYIE * t'h "Maty Whitt" 11971) Ed Flinders. Kathleen Bellet -9:00-IJ (J) TARZAN: LOAO Of THE .uG.E I LEAVE rT TO BEAVER TEEN TAU< HAARYO e vtCTORY GAADEH Ct lll>ERSTNONO HUMAN IEHAYIOR GTMATOR. ©)ANNA TO THE IHF1NfTE ~ -t'.30- • (J) BUGS BUNNY I ROAD fUIER 8 Cit ALVIN AHO THE a.tilJNKS 8 OZZE AHD HARAIET- D 0 THE LITTLE.S ~~ ••~ "Saskatchewan' (195") Alan Ladd, Shelley Wintel'S. fDUNDERMIL G!) UNDEASTAHDING HUMAN BEHAVIOR CD IOOIES 1H MOTION -10'.oo- llU 8TAACAO! OJ NFL fOOTIALL TMEOANCE~ e HAWAI FlV&O ALL NEW THIS OLD HOU$E Cv COOPER'S OAAHOE . lilOVIE MISSING PERSONS: FOUR TAUE 8TOAIE3 MOVIE U "Red Htldtd Womtn" (1932) Jean Hartow. Chelttt Moms. -10'.»-DBTHUNOAAA l~T *'-' "The Lawless" (1955) Clayton M~. Jay SiMrheets. • JUSTIN Wll.SOH'S LOUISIANA COOKlf «i> AMEAtCAN GOVEAHNEHT (C)MOVIE * * * "Popeye" ( 1980) Robin Wil- liams. Shelley Duvall. (%)MOVE • * "Curse Of Tht Pink Panther" ( 1983) Ted Wass. David Niven -11:00- • (J) THE 8ISKITT8 D BBASEBALl 0 AMERICA'S TOP TEN m SOUi. TAAJN Cl) 8TIIEETS Of SAN FRANCISCO f.D KATHY'S KITCHEN '1!> AMERICAN GOVERNMENT ®MOVIE t t •"Reds" (1981) Warren Beatty. Diane Keaton. CO) OETTING IN THE GAME -11:30- 1) (J) BEHJI, ZAX AND THE ALIEN PAia 0 MUSIC MA<WM Cf) MOVIE ** "The Big Noise" (19«) Laurel and Hardy, Arthur Space fD WINE. WHAT PlEASUAEI '1!> rrs EVERYBOOY'S 8USIHE8S CID GREAT MOMENTS IN HISTORY AFTEANOON -12:00- 1) (J) FAT ALBERT 0 THREE STOOGES GUOYIE **'It "Operatt0n Mad Ball' 11957) Jacit Lemmon. Ernie Kovacs. G)MOVIE t * "T anan And The Valley 01 Gold" (1966) Mike Henry, Nancy Kovack ti» TOP 40 VIDEOS fD EVBtlNG AT POPS '1!> rrs EVEAYBODY'S BUSINESS mWRESTUNG (0 ON TH! AIR WfTH AOGEA ANO ADGER • ' C8JM<Ml * t "Cunt Of Tht Ptnll Panther" ( 19831 Tad Wau. Dlvld Ntyen -12:30-fJ Cl) QIU)Abtl FILM FESTIVAL li)OCfAHUI MOYIE ... ''Svptrmao Ill" (1983) C!v• tophtr RIM, Richard Pryor. (%)MOVE *** "Rl>cco And Hit Brolhtrt" (1961) AIM Delon. Aena1o Sa!Yatort. -1:00- IJMOVIE ··~ ·"~ Babyt" (1966) Tony Cums, ~ Schiaffino. 11 THE MUNSTf.M Cf) AMEJICA'I TOP TEN Q)NJA».12 fll) PLEDGE 8REAK «i> OCEANUS. (J) WONDER WOMAN m ADVENTUAES .. SPOAT8 -1:06- • PEAAL ANO FAIEHOS AT CBmlESTAOE -1:30- D f.TROOP D PUPPY I soooev 000 I ='fw. Cl) ADAM-12 m PA0J£CT UNIVERSE 9 WU WORLD OF SPORTS -2:00- 1 :.a ISUND G Wl.O. WllD WEST mMOVE * t 'It "The Big Circus" ( 1959) Vk:IOI' Mature. Red Buttons. Cl) MOYIE * t •,; "Gentlemen Marry Brunettes" ( 19551 Jane Russell, Jeanne Crain. • '1!> PROJECT UNIVERSE ... (J) STAR TREK Qt THIS WEB< IN BA8E8AU ~='AGENT * * 'h "The Big Slly" ( 1952) Kirk ·~Dewey Mar11n. t t "Runaway Island" (1982) Miles Buchanan, Simone Buchanan. -2:30- " GLUCWf'S ISlAND D AMENCAN BANDSTAND Cf) TONY RANDALL '1!> CAREER LR Pl.ANNING QtMOVIE ***'Ii "Gaslight" (1944) Charies ~~d Bergman. t t "The Toy" (1982) Richard Pryor, Jackie Gleason. ROYAL CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH $6.95 Condmentary Fnit Bar -----. ----~...--~----------.... -.... ------------- -1:41- • TOOET'HlR If CONC&n': Ttx IENBCENIOta ORCHDTM ~ ltl'™'°'" IAo~Ji:V.:owoA CAA&R UFl PWNNG MOTOMIO«rl ln'ERNAllOHAl ~~ *'I\ "The PtOtl\IM" (1179) Ktthlttn OuinlM, Stephen Collna. (%)MOYIE * t "Plrad'-1" (1982) W Aamn, Photbe Catel. -3:30-D COW!GE FO()TIAU. PREVIEWI 8 NR. '8 IEIT EVER (I) um.£ HOUll ON THI PMRE I!) 8EGINNG PIANO 9 WATDT IPOR'l1 L101ND8 m TOOETHERWrTH IHIRLIY AND PATIOONE -4.10- • aG BAND CAVALCADE -t:00-11 ='" WrTH Ml<! DOUOLA8 **~ '"Tiger's Claws" (1971) Chin ~ * * "Tht Dallas Cowboy Chttrteed· tt1" (1979) Jane Seymour, Laraine Stephens mMOYIE * ·~ "Fas1 Chlrlie, The Moonbeam Rider" ( 1979) Devid Carradine, Bren- da Veccaro. ' '1!> FREEHAND SKETCHNJ ®I THE AOaCfORD FUS Cl)HfTaTY (O)MOVIE • • • "An American Werewolf In London" (1981) David Naughton, ~Agutter. (S)MOYIE t * * "Heart I.lite A Wheel" (1983) Bonnie Bedelia, Beau Bridges. -•:ao-D Tft D WIDE WOALD OF SPOAT8 (!)AT THE MOVES Ii> THE MOLAOOHUH GROUP QI BASEBALL m TH&S WEB< .. COUNTiff MUSIC CID MOYIE *** "Heart Uke A Wheel" (1983) Bonnie Bedelia. Beau Bridges. -t:50- fli) ALL-8T AA SWING AEUNIOH I 0 tJl.W8 -5.«>- LATIC ltWO WONDIRWOMAH MIME t * * "Orlgntt" ( 1969) Jack Wtbb. mv:rMWAM TOJEDt: fHIMAKM CW AIAGA ~M•A•t•H (!= ~ THIVUO CONC:fAT CDMCME **Yi "Tbe Gieat Slnnet" (1M9) GregotY Ptdc, Ava Oatdntr • -•:30-15- **'A "Tbe Lu1 Atmaltt Of &Mu Gtttt" (1977) Marty Feldman, Michael Y Ott\ , ~ l icHfiwa~L ClHANJE'S ANOEl.8 HOW THE WEST WM WON THl&'I COMPANY MOVIE * "~t. Pepper'• Lonely Htlrte Club Band ' (1978) Peter Frampton, Bee Gees. , !~--~ **** "Anastasia" (1956) lngrld ;~u1 Btynntr. *'h ''Jawe 3" (1983) Dennie Quaid, Bess Armstrong. (J)MOYIE ** "Cur" Of Tht Pink Panther" (1983) ltd w .... David N!Ven. -t:10-fD Pl.EDGE BAEAk -1:25- 1 .. THE SWINO Pl.EDGE BAEAk -t:ao-1:. NEWHART I TOO Q..08E FOR COMFORT NATIOIW. GEOGAAPHIC (8) NOT NECEl8AAIL Y THE NEWS -7:00-D RaHT IACKI WrTH DAVIO HOROWITZ • CHAIU'8 ANOEL8 GMONL.A. l lWnCH QINEWS EHTERTAIMJfTTMIS WEEK 0 THIS• YOUR L.fE (8) alS8ING PEMOH8: FOUR TRUE8TONE8 (%)MOYIE Orange Coast * * "PoBy'e II Tht Ntd Day" ( t983) Dan MOtllhan, W)'fllt Knight l ;St~HT EYI ON 1AN OIEOO wm!HD MAOAZINe HOUYWOOD: ONl lHOU8ANO AND ONl NIQHT8 -7:45- GIUfMVAL -l:OO-D DIFF'RIHr 8TA()t(£8 ,.~ Mltllon 't'eate To Eatth" (19681:: Donald, AndrtW Ktlt. • T.J.~ Ci) lWIJOHT ZONE I =AOEAMEllCA **"'"Operation Daybreak" (1976) Timothy Bottotnt, Martin Shtw. '!~ANES! SPECIAL ** * "Superman Ill" ( 1983) Chris-(;'* ~· Richatd Pryor . "The Blood Of Other•" ( 1984) Jodie Foster, Michael Ontktll'I. cmMOvtE **'n "Rlttly Buslnea" (1983) Tom Crulle, Rebecca OtMornay. (J)MOYIE * ** "48 HRS." (l983) Nick Nolte, Eddie Murphy. -t:30-• D a SILVER 8POOH8 Cf) UUTYLES OF THE RICH AHO FAMOUS -t.00-B a;=.. 8UOOIE8 D ltt LOVE BOAT GMOYIE ** "Night Of The Zombies" (1981) Jlmie Gillle, Ryan Hlttlard. ~=AL U * "Barbaroea" (1982) Willle Nel· cz»~ Busty. * * "Cur.. Of The Plnlc Panther" (1983) Ted W•. David Niven. -e:ao-D a MAMA'S FAMll Y Cf) TWIUGHT ZONE m MARSHA1. DILLON -1'.85- (1) 8TEAM8A TH: IN THE 8EGll•tO -10:00- ClA880f 'l4 Q!..CAEPOATS eHEWS 80UDOOLD ©> R.EE1'WOOO MAC IH CONCERT -11):()6- Ct l PAPE.A Q4A8E: THI 8EOOHO YfAA -10:10- (C) NCHAAO B£LZER: CAUGHT IN THI! M:T AGAIN -10:11-m 8EalEl'8 °'A DESERT SEA -10:30--12:&0- (J) 80ll> GOlD (CJ MOVIE m HEAL THIEAT • * • * ··one Fltw Ov.r Tht f.D JOtNft MAT'Ht$ IH CONCERT Cudloo"e Helt" (1975) Jack MlchOI· -10:45-eon, LOUIM flttehtf', 8 IATUADAY 8PORT8 PAO! -1i00- " -11:00-8 MOYIE I D D (J) (1J NEWS t •~ "Rttum Of The World'• Grt1t· ~'8TOPTEN at Dttt:CtlYt" (1917) Larry Heigman, **'A "Down To The Sea In Shlf>'" I PALAOE (1M9) Richard Widmark. Uontl Bat· ~8'ACE f}mOrt. _,...,.. aJ MOVIE • • H~ "The Trtln" (1965) Burt Lail• • • "The Otllu Cowboy Cheerlttd· caster. Ptut Scofltld, era" (1979) Jane Seymour. latllnt e lllEPENDENT NEWS 51eptlent. QI MOVIE eMOVI! ***"'"Edward, My Son" (1M91 * * * "The Bad Seed" (1956) Nancy ~~ICY· Oeborlh Kerr. Kelly, Patty McCormack. ..,,.,. 6D HOT8f.AT **"' "LOYt Child" (1982) Arny (t) MOYIE Medlgan, 8tau Bridgtl. **~''The Challenge" (1982) SCOtt -1:15- 0ltnn, T oahlro Mlfunt. • 80MEviHEllf A CHILD (JJ) NOT fEOSAAILY THE NEWS MOVIE t:m MOVIE • • 'h "Fut Tlmtt Al RldQemOn1 "8rookt Does College" (1984) High" (19821 Sean Penn. Jenni* BrOOlle Fields, Joe S""9fa. Jason Leigh. (l>MOVIE * "H O.T.S,I" (1979) SUtln Kiger, MOVIE -1:30- Uea London. '*'h "Caanova BrO'lm" (1944) (%)MOVIE •• "Paradite" (1982) WiHle Aames, GwyCooper, Tn11 Wright. Phoebe Cates. 9 ABC NEW8 -1:A6- • MOVIE -11:30-D GOOONIGHT LA.: VIOE08 **"The Lat Day" (1975) R.IChard ·-· ~ -t:IO- Wldmarlc, Robert Conred. aD MOVIE 188ATUAOAYNIGHTLIVE ** "Blonde Art" (1979) John NEW YORK HOT TRACKS HollNI, Stka. ABC NEWS -2:00- INDEPENDENT N£W8 D ~ Cl) HAARV 0 8 MOVIE 0 KOi AOa<S 10 H "Night Monster" (1942) Btta (8) MOVIE Lugosi, Lionel Atwtll. U ~ "Rltky Buslnta" (1983) Tom -2'.30- Crulse, Rebecca OeM0tnay. Cf) SEA HUNT DMOYIE -11:45-$= ***'A "Cfomwell" (1970) Rlcllard *** "Hettt Utte A Wheel" (1983) Harris, Alec Ouinntlt. Bonnie Btdtlla, Beau,Brldges. -12:00--~ (!) FROM THE EOOOR'S DESK CID MOYIE e THE L.ETTUIMEN IH CONCERT * * "The Toy'' ( 1982) Rictlard Pryor, CB SPACE AGE Vl>E08 Jackie Gleaton. -1~--l-00- (!)MOVIE • •·;"Four Faces West" 11M8) Jotl l?()~ 4L Tt-141 CUlil~~ • Unlimited Champagne $1.00 Extra SUNDAY BRUNCH 650-3322 4001 W. Pacific Coast Hwy. - Newport Beach on the waterfront 2735 West Coast Highway Newport Beach 642-3431 Reservations Accepted BRUNCH WITH A VIEW Champagne Buffet 9:30 to 2:30 Sunday Buff et Brunch Unlimited Champagne 20 Entrees '9.95 per person 11 A M to 3 PM. ,. ROYAL ~ii~iiER -Cuts1neoflndia NOW SERVING COUNTRY STYLE SUNDAY BRUNCH 1199 Include• Severa;• -Well Drink or S..r 1712 Placentia 9 to l:OO 645-8091 COSTA MESA I GUIDE Sund11 Chl•Plflll 1111111 lrunell Cra/11 '19.50 Includes Two Hour Cruise with Uve Entertainment lO:lUAM and 1:30 PM Lido Village 953-8255 Reservations k about our Dinner & Cocktail Cruises Oft T1M •••""-• .,. I.No --v-... • ..,.,. ..... 111-4111 THE CA WATERFRONT BRUNCH CIWMK llllOt CUE 10 1.11. ll1d l:JO p.m. StlaET COCKTAI. CIUS( 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. LIVE ENTERTAINMENT IN LOUNOE 3010 Llflyett1, 11.,.rt ... 175·5717 Country Style Champagne Buffet Brunch 14982 Redhill at Edinqer TUSTIN $10.95 10 a.m. to 2:30 UTlllllY I IUlllY 1111101 II llLIOl Featuring ... ~ • H1H1Vos RanclHKot "" , • BrlfHIY 0..,, &en.diet t . Aaorted Omfllet• '3 RO -~ J .,. From aU ~~ ............. .... • ~ 1111. I ...... ON r;~~~~~ULA 171• 7128 SW1day Buff et Bnltch 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 1'1111Mttetl ~JHlllll Large Variety of Hot and Cold Entrees ... e Seafood Bar • Dessert Table AcMts •1.11C1Men ••.JI aM111 tlldar ~:::o:~ftlfll'C::"""\ tunder 12) 3 na SUNDAY . CHAMPAGNE IRUNCB Cbmnpagne Suftday Bnmch IOAM. ·2P.M. • Unlimited Champa$J1C • Homemade Putria • frcth Fniit a Julee Bar 7971 Center Ave., Huntington 81.ch (714) IH-0141 in the Mediterranean Room from 10·3 'Master Harold' in Africa too close for comfort (Editor's Nott: ''Mauer Harold ... and the Boys" will be pres· etJted by South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa durin1 thac theater's 1984-85 season.) blacks and whites at the Zimbabwe premiere of "Master Harold" lan January. One whjte matron with blue-rinsed hair brushed tears from her eyes after Harold's violent outburst. It was not out of auilt, she insisted, but out of -sadnesS.for ''that l().VcLy old-wa " HARARE. Zimbabwe -When Blacks, on t~e. other hand, saw the youna Master Harold spat in the face play as a chilling cameo of their of Sam, a black waiter, blacks know-fonner sufferina in Rhodesia and the inf!Y shook their heads and whites treatment of blacks in South Africa shifted uneasily in their seats. t~ay. The scene was in the Zimbabwean • Master Harold,'' which was production of Athol Fuaard's criti-plucked from a chapter in Fuprd's cally acclaimed "Master Harold ... and ~wn Y.Outh, tells of a special rela- the Boys " CUJTCntly playing at the uonsh1p between himself and Sam Edinbu~h lntemauonal Festival in µte. waiter and serves as ~ political Scotland. And the spittina was for indictment of the apanhe1d system real. which destroyed it. In the work by ihe South African Fugard really did spit at Sim. The playwriaht. Master Harold is a swaa~ act has ~aunted him eve~ since •. and genng l 8-year--0ld white South cause~ ~1m to seek the retired waiter's African student. Sam Semela is a penm~1on before he wrote the play. di&nified, middle-aged black who Sam d1ed last year in his mid· 70s, works as a waiter in the St. George's shonly before the play opened in Park Tearoom owned by the youth's Johannesburg. mother. The incident o~nated from a fit 1his sudden outra.aeous act, in of fury and fru~t~llon ~hen Harold. which Harold vents his rage on Sam laughing a.nd JO~nJ with Sam and served as a stark reminder to Zim-fellow waiter Wllhe Malopo, was babwe's racially mixed audiences of called to the telephone in the an era that faded in their own country tearoom. He learned from his mother only a few years ago. that his crippled, drunken father, The play is set on a rainy Thursday whom be both loves and loathes, ~as in the South African cny of Pon to return home from the hospital. Elizabeth. But it could have been Harold feared the return would Salisbury, Rhodesia, before the on-disrupt hi~ studi~s. , etime Bntish colony became black· So, pulhng racial rank for the first governed Zimbabwe on Afril 18 time, Master Harold hysterically 1980, after nine decades o white: h~rangues the black man, and spits in minority domination. his fa~e. The indignity and insensitivity of The production, by a privately institutionalized racial segregation, funded company caJled Sundown which Fugard exposes in his plays, Theater, played to packed houses was entrenched in Rhodesian society throughout Zimbabwe after its Janu- and was still vivid in the minds of ary premiere in Harare's tiny Theater "THE NEW PRINCE OF HOLLYWOOD:' -f>N' A..,., NNltJlld NOW SHOWINOI AIWDt -FOIMU. VAl.lfY P1e1f1e Anahtlm Or·ln family four 819-9850 963·1307 '"' tt Al~ I 116 I ltoelllvl ll ~AlllSA ~ Eftards South Coast C1ntdome Plaza 546-2711 63-4-2553 ltllllllAIMofllwt1 a.--& SA fwy a TOIO WESllMSTD idwards Saddleblck .. ".I 39 0r .in 581·5880 891· 693 (I ,.,. Al 111ai. lllctl Se Of G1i fw1 • PRESENTED IN DOLBY ITEREO Upstairs. The play opened to rave reviews on Broadway in 1982, win- ning a Tony Award for best actor for Zakes Mokae, who played Sam. The Zimbabwe audiences ranied . from poor blacks in the teeming township of Seke near Harare to conservative white farmers. Now, sponsored by private com- panies and government-backed foun- dations, "Master Harold" is being presented by the Sundown Theater at the annual Edinburgh Festival. The play will run there until Sept. 1. The original Sundown cast - a white journalist, a black hotel waiter and a black company personnel director -has been joined in Edinburgh by a white Rhodesia-born director, John Haigh. Haigh, a schoolteacher who emi- arated to Australia the day after the play opened in Harare last January, helped launch the Sundown Theatre in 1975 as this country's first multi- racial amateur company striving for professional standards. Sundowp bas sin.« pmd.ucccL J 9 plays, and lraigh has directed six Fugard plays, includina "The Island." the company's 1983 entry at the Edinburgh Fesf,ival. -NO\Y PlAYING - IUI •MISS&VIUS UA Mottles 990-4022 Edwards V.., Miii '* 80£HA PAlii( .CSIS-6220 UA MOY!es 8 <5iWi(il 952 .. 9113 OnedOmt 834·2553 •COSflMBl OM:ia EdWards Clntma PIC'lfte sOr.nge 5.c&·3102 DIM-lne.J.c·9381 cost1L1tu * WESTMINS'fiA UAClntml~ Edwanaci- S.CO.QSIM Welt 191 ·3835 ·~ WUHlllNSffM EdWW'OS UnMlrSlty 8S.c41811 Pacific '1 Hl-Wly 39 Orin * llGORA Riili 891 ·3893 Edwards/Sanborn LIQuna Hills ~nse.ee11 ·~Tm~»-. ( !10 """° .c:tO'T1D IOI TKS ~ ) ,,. . It'• a producer'• life Coaal OAJLY PILOT/Saturday, ~Ult 25, 198' ~ ~ .,. ..... , ... Scottish humor 'different B)' MATT WOUP ................ EDINBURGH, ScotJind-!QireO; to Bill f ORYlb D;lll' be'bcst.oc:I the United Stites for hi' 1983 .. Local Hero ... But tn Scotland t1J the real lbinJ: a local boy turned bif6, acclaimed intern tionaUv for co• • ~ . idiolyncrab'C< :--5~:itlt--"""-t-il humor to the screen. Born in GlasaoW, SS miles wc:sa ~ bett, Fonyth1 .Jlt wu in the Scaitii.i capital for the Bntish premiett ol' tm filn:i "Comfon and Joy." •" It opened the 38th Edinb International Film Festival last before a.n enthusiuuc audie~ io- clud.ina two stan of past F~ films, Gordon John Sinclair Of .. Greaory·s Girl," and Petet R~ of "Local Hero ... At a recent news conference, For· syth defended the film apinst some Enslish detractors and ·looked for~ ward to its American bow thiJ fall. "There is a major diffettnce &n comprehension between Scotland and 'EnaJ,and," the bearded writer- dircctor said, rcspondina to cntics such as Derek Malcolm in London "S Guardian newspaper. In an overview of the Ed= Film Festival's two-week p which includes 12 British features ,ao Albert R. Broccoli, producer of the Jama Bond movla, enjoy• aome of the frlnae beneflta of hla work, aurrounded by aome of the beautia who'll be aeen ln the upcomtnc 007 Olck, .. A View to KW,•• In Chantilly, France. iu 1 SS offerings. Malcolm . ..Jt .. Comfon and Joy" was a ""sli&ti:1 disappointment." He described t Glasgow-set comedy as .. fatally • tended." . Famed Cleveland theater reborn Eric Shorter in the Dally Tel~ wrote that the film "wobbles," add- ing, .. the strokes of wtt need a ~er framework ... " '"There is somethina in the Ensr sense of humor th.at lacks a strolii ironic context," countered Fo~ whose films have been ·praised Oir' t!1eir comically ironic approach By STEPHANIE NANO A1111l1Md "'-~ CLEVELAND -Once slated for demolition, the State Theater in Playhouse Square -Cleveland's theater district -stands scrubbed and polished and boasting a new $7 million stage and stage house as it again becomes a center for entertatn- ment. The 3, l 00-seat theater opened in 1921 at a time when movies and vaudeville flourished. It closed in 1969 as movies followed patrons to the suburbs. Now with a new stage and state-of- the-art equipment, the State opened its inaugural season this spring with the glitter and &}amour of the Metro- politan Opera from New York on its annual week-long visit to the city. The State is one of three theaters - all historic national landmarks -in what is now Playhouse Square Center. The area was dubbed Play- house Square 60 years ago when its many theaters created a bustling entertainment district a half mile out from the heart of downtown Oeveland. Officials at the Playhouse Square Foundation, a non-profit group that manages the theaters, banked on the reopening-ofthe State to resurrect the area by drawing theatergoers and their entertainment dollars to the "IT'S A BLOCKBUSTER. AWIJ.APALOOZA, A CLASSIC." -an W lttw Mr... theaters and area businesses. "The arand opening of the State marks the end of a dream and be~nning of a leaacy," said Larry Wilker, foundation president. "Great care has been taken to transform the State into a perfonnance facilit y that will rank among the best in the country," The State, primarily a movie house, and the adjacent Ohio Theater, a legitimate theater, opened in February 1921 under the auspices of the "loew's Ohio Theaters." In its heyday the top names of the enter- tainment industry performed on its stage. The State 1s considered one of the finest of the nearly 300 theaters designed by architect Thomas Lamb, according to a history wrinen for the foundation. Its architecture is a blend of Roman, Greek and European Baroque. Two marble staircases carry patrons fiorrt the lobby, which is dominated by four SO-foot murals. mahogany pillars and a huge marble fireplace. The State and the Ohio were saved from the wrecking ball in the early 1970s by the combined efforts of volunteers. civic groups and govern- ment agencies. Preservation of the two theaters was clinched in 1977 when the Cuyahoga County 1ovem- ment bought the Loew's Building "DON 'T MISS ... fascinating drama:· -&ephen Schaefer US Maeaz1ne ''WELL ACTED, literate:· -Vincent Canby NY Times ''SEDUCTIVE. graceful and clever:· -David Ansen ~ewsweek ANOTHER COUNTRY !iin.-... , ... 1.-, Jiii, OIUOrf-.... ,. 4l4I. , ... - )i U REALLY CHEER REVENGE OF THE NERDS makes}QJ care about its characters. Robert Carradine has created a great character("~ s~ ~.,_ MWlll 639-8770 STADIUM OR·~ .. 990.:4021 UA MOVIES 4 .,.,. 95249'3 UA MOVlS 8 COSTA 1EA 979·41'1 (OW C MA C(NllR COSTA 540-0S!M UA SOUTH COAST n TORO 581 S880 EOWAROS SAOOt.EBACK WOOf GROVE ~30-4401 £0WAROS WESTBROO« .. !50811 £0WAAOS ~RSITY lMitlP •ACH 497·1711 .f:OWAROS SO COAST LAGUNA ~ 637-0340 AMC ORANGE MAll 63A·3911 UA CITY CUfilR MllWCSTO J93 0546 UA W£S1 ru MAH which houses them. The foundation also secured a long-term lease with private owners of the third theater, the Palace Theater. A $27 million fund-raising drive launched in 1980 brouabt in private and public money to renovate the theaters. The refurbished 1,000-seat Ohio reopened two ycan aso as the home of the Great Lakes Shakes~ Festival, the Ohio Ballet and other performing groups. Restoration of the 3,200-seat Palace is to be com- pleted in 1986. The State renovation included replacement of the stage, which was 25 feet deep, with a 65-foot S'8.le and the latest m lighting and sound equipment. The house includes two rehearsal balls. dressing rooms and an orchestra pit. "The State is capable of staaing vinually any production touring the world toda)' -shows whicb--bavt bypassed Oeveland for lack of ade- quate facilittes.'' said Wilker. The State will become the home of the Oeveland Ballet and Oeveland ODCra and host the annual visit of the Metropolitan Opera. The New York opera company began performing tn Cleveland tn 1886 and tin~l926 had performed in the 8,SOO-seatPublic Hall, where some seats are the length of a football field from the stage. "'UNDER THE VOLCANO' i• eaploaive ... invencive end excicingly di,.ecced. Alben Finney'• ecclng i• eweaome ... he will be nomineced fo,. en Oaca,. egein chi• yee .. :• _,,.., •-.... GOOD MOANING AMDICA, AllC·TV l~. -• "Soonish humor has more lll common with American humor - New York humor to be exact .. he said. Forsyth's past films nave found favor with the New York critical establtsbment. .. Local Hero," bis third film afttr the low-bud2et 1"hat Sinlrin• ~l­ ing" and ·l"Gregory's ~ won Forsyth the best screcnetay awtfd from the New Yorlc Film CritlCS Circle last Dcoember. "Comfort and Joy," which liaa a world premiere showing this spriJl1m J Los AnJCles before an mvited au- dieru:c including Britain's Princess Anne, tells the story of a nilld- mannered disc jockey in GlafliJw named Alan "Dicky" Bird. He ICU caught up lD an internecine banlc amon-. local ice cream sellers. While the film struck some cntu:s as light on plot and heavy on charactCT detail, that is exactl)' the way its director v.uted it. "Lots of films manufacture •n ending so that people know they MU be abJe to go home •J! tlVO bo~.-i::. said Forsyth. 'BUt people mow tliat anyhow, so I see no need to approach film in that way." UOLISIYE EIUIEIEIT edwards NEWPORT lllFWPO•T C"'U:I •l&I 644 0760 "&CCOA\tM-•ttrw.lbt • , ...... out & ... c.1ntu1 "BUCKAROO BANZAI IS THE VERY ODDEST GOOD MOVIE IN-MANY A FULL MOON.':. -Richard Corliss, TIME MAGAZINE a.lnirs from Anochff Dimension han lnvad~ your world. •u Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/Saturday. AUgUat 25, 1U4 GORDO by Gus Arriola . GAR FI ELD by Jim Davis Q.1 -Neith~r vulnttrable, as South you hold: •KJ6 ~Ql05 OAJ85 •AJ9 'rhe bidding ho proceeded: outh WHt North EHt I NT 2 c;::;1 2 • P&H ? CHARLES GOREN WEl::KL\' lllll>GE QUl7. bidding with one club. What do you bid now·/ Q.4-As Soul h, vulnerablti, you hold: +AK854 c:J!AJ ¢AQ7 •A9S OMAR SHARIF Q.6-Roth vulnNahh>, 11 South you hold: •Q85 ~AJ92 QJ0953 •Q6 The bidding has pro ·e1·ded: North F.Ht South I • I N'f ? TME CAPE~ AVENGER PAO~E~ TO WASH Ml~ CAPE __ ......, ___ ...-..;....;;;;;::;;:=;:o,·~ Whatiu:tion do you take? Tht bidding ha~ prEK't'~ed: South Weat North lo:Ht What action do you takt'f Look for an wers on Monday. T H E F AMILY CIRCUS \'Is mint the only flavor they hove?" MARMADUK E by Brad Anderson ··can we call a truce whlle I wash the soap out of my eye?" BIG GE ORGE by Virgil Partch (VI P) "George, have you ever thought of going to Washington?°° DENNIS T H E M E~ACE Hank Ketcham GE~ WHIZ ~v rJQw CAN l ro ~I(: WHEN Yoo i<~ ux:i~ .v ~T \'\E ? , by Ferd & Tom Johnson MOON MULLI NS NAME' DROPPER ... ~--/N>VE ovefl, Mll<E _AN<i~l.O J/llJI? I MUST1V~ P,AINTEDTHAT IN MY SLEEP,. IT'S REALLY GoO/)! ,£ Q.2-Both vuln~rable. as South you hold: •QtOSO ~K65 0 AJ94 •7 'fhe bidding has pr~eeded: North Ealt South I • 2 c;::;1 ? What do you bid now '/ Q.3-As South. vulnerable. you hold: •6 ~AQJ83 OAK J6 +765 Your righ l hand opponent OPf ns the SHOE BRABBLE 2 NT Pa.. -4 NT PH• ? What action do you take'! Q.5-Soth vulnl'rablt', ~s South you hold: •A.13 'V 98742 OKQ4 +62 The bidding has proceeded; North EHt South W eat I + PHI I Pa11 2 + Pa11 ? What action do you takt-'! Your play to the firat trl~k c0'1ld dKfde the fate of the cont.rad! A writer once ~m&rktd: 4'h re'• no eucb thins aa a bllod opeoloa lead, only deaf openln1 leadera!" Learn• to Und the winnin1· attack wlth Charles Goren'• "Openiq Leade." for your copy, Hod 11.85 to "Goren·Lead11," c/o thJ• new1paper, t>.O. Box 611 . Palmyra, N.J. 08065. Make check• payable to Ne"•· paperbooki. by Jeff MacNelly "\, NO~tJEl.K I. 1~U6 I~ .. oH , f.l(UJ!>f. Mf.. by Kevin Fagan ONO ~ L-OT R WJ~SAND, M~.S.NUK . ~ M1 ,\ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston 1 c.a..>RSE -1""\0M' D WRN'T ME lb GO 'R> UNl\/E.RSITy FIRST 1 i'S SPUf DOWN 1F\E. ThERE'S SO MUCH NEFrr SIDE.. YOO C'.JULD FILL SfUFF f\TlHE.DUMP. l'D LO'JE. ~ WORK IHE-RE l.M'-"'.,.._ EN t,PI F U NKY WINKERBEAN DR. S MOCK HIS QU l "f'" MISt='ICINe ~ CHANGE!!P HIS NAMe -ro HUNK DISR~INGeR AN' IS N OW HOPING -ro G e -Y-HIS OWN ~ Sf:RIE:S! HOSE IS ROSE by Tom Batluk by George Lemont by Pat Brady PEA~UTS by Charles M. Schulz ~ 1D Hcw.E C.OOKI~ ! TUMBLEWEEDS DID ¥OU SEE TMAT ? I 8R006UT YOUR SUPPER OUT ON ONE J=IN6~ ! -,, le __ ,_.._.,. AND I ATE TME LtJMOLE ™ING WITM ONE STOMACM ! by Tom K. Ryan -I MEAN WHO 61.SE uses A CANPl...E- SAAJPFEI{ Ai HIS l'l~~'(P'AR"TV'f I j I I I OGE Pl\RKER . ' by Harold Le Ooux ' , The earthquake will come; we don '( know when LOS ANGELES {AP) -The day of America's worst natural disaster could be like any other m the Los An&eles Basin -sm9aay sunshine, jammed freeways, Hol- lywood dealmakers huddling over drinks at the Polo Lounge. Immigrants WOl;lld be toiling in downtown factones. At Venice beach, rollerskaters and break- dancers miaht be moving to the latest Michael Jackson hit. The Disneyland parking lot would be filling upL and Johnny Carson would be rehearsing the evening's show. Then, from deep below the San Gabriel mountains, a low rumble would spread !lOUth across the city. Dogs would bark. Buildin~ might creak and windows might rattle. Next, the ground would shake. And shake. As the heaving increased with catastrophic intensity over the next few minutes, millions of Californians would unite in fear of what many experts sec as their inevitable fate -the fate of people who have built cities on some of America's most restless real estate. The great Los Angeles earth- quake-the much-dreaded, long- awaited southern version of the 8.3-magnitude 1906 San Fran- cisco quake -will have arrived. When the trembling stop·s and the dust settles around collapsed brick tenements, fallen freeway bri4ges and shattered &lass high- rises, as many as 30,000 people will have died, with another I 00,000 suffering serious injuries. "A disaster of this magnitude Within the confines of the United States is unprecedented since the Civil War: says the earthquake reponse plan P,Ublished last sum- mer by California's Office of Emergency Services. "We know that the great earth- quake (on the southern San Andreas Fault) will come. The question is when," said Bill Ellsworth, chjef of the seismology branch at the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park ... Our best guess is that the earthquake should come within the next 30 years, but there's no guarantee. "So all a prudent person can do 1s make conservative decisions now and stick by them -con- servative decisions about the types of buildings we build, the types of land use we encourage." The 25.8 million inhabitants of California cannot escape their state's geology. They live along 1he 700-mile San Andreas Fault and an intricate system of related fa ults. The Saa Andreas JS the bound- ary between two great scale-like plates of the Earth's crust. Such plates-drift gradually over the planet's surface, spurring quakes where stresses build until both sides of a fault suddenly shift and snap past each other. Los Angeles and much of southern and central California ride the Pacific plate as its moves northwest at about I 1h inches each year past the North Ameri- can plate, which underlies the rest of the continent. "The sad irony 1s that the same broad. fertile valleys adjacent to good harbors that attracted people to California in the first place are probably all the byproducts of major active faults." said Al Lindh, a USGS seismologist. "... But if most people had to vote if they would have the risks of earthquakes or have the country look like Kan- sas, they'd vote for the earth- quakes." So Californians await disaster by preparing for it, more so every day. Buildings are constructed to resist earthquakes under tough state building codes enacted after the devastating Long Beach earth- quake of 1933 and subsequent temblors. Some cities require ~einforcement of pre-code build- ings. Geologists iry to predict quakes; they study the history of fault movements and set up extensive monitoring equipment to .detect J!Ound movement that m1ght indicate imminent temblors. Government eme~ency plan- ners write frightening 'scenarios" about what might happen and how they can respond to a areat quake. Elaborate earthquake response plans arc prepared by the Federal Emergency Management Aaency, the ~tate Office of Emergency Services, counties and cities, banks, telephone companies, news media and industries of all kinds. Many also conduct disaster exercises. Once a year, for exam- ple, Los Angeles officials pretend to have an earthquake. They crowd into the crisis center be- neath City Hall. stick pins in a huge map of simulated destruc- tion and dispatch disaster teams to make-believe catastrophes. .. I see a hi~er degree of readiness statewide than I've ever seen before," said Ezunial Burts, who bas led a statewide task force on earthquake preparedness. •• ... The scientific community is bet- ter prepared to tell us what will happen. Government is better equipped from a planning and education standpoint. And the public is better prepared than they were. "But whether we're prepared to handle an 8.3 is still a big question." As Pacific Bell spokesman Gary Sanderson put it: "No amount of anything we've been doing would help us if we were leveled." A 1981 National Security Council report said that while government preparations for moderate quakes might be ade- quate, those for a great quake were ''woefully inadequate" and the effects of such a quake "would surpass those of any natural disaster thus far experienced by the nation." The Office of Emergency Ser- vices' response plan asserted that a great earthquake -measuring 8.3 on the Richter scale of ground motion -along the southern San Andreas "is· virtually certain within the next 30 years." Such a quake. the plan said, "could cause 5,000 to 20,000 fatalities, cause from 20,000 to 40,000 serious injuries, leave over 250,000 people homeless and cause S 1 S billion in property damage." If the quake occurred at 4:30 p.m. on a week.day, the worst possible time, "fatalities could exceed 30,000," the plan said, while there would be "l 00,000 persons seriously injured and requiring hospitalization." A great quake is also possible in the San Francisco Bay area, but scientists consider it far less likely than a southern San Andreas disaster because the 1906 quake relieved huge pressures, The San Andreas is not the only worry. Potentially lethal faults "are all over the place," said Tom Heaton, a U.S. Geological Survey seismologist. "There are so many we don't even know which ones to concentrate on." Moderate quakes cause millions of dollars in damage every few years. Three veat quakes have struck California m the state's recorded history. The great quake of 1906 de- molished much of San Francisco and claimed 700 lives, mostly from subsequent fires from rup. tures gas lines. In 1872, a great quake ripped through the still sparsely inhabited Owens Valley east of the Sierra Nevada. An equally awesome tremor shat- tered Southern California in 1857, when the now densely populated region was mostly empty. Such a quake today. said the state's response plan, would leave many people with "their homes A 1906 pbotOfnlpb of 1'ob BUI lD -Franciaco ebowa eome of the d•inace caued by the lnfamou temblor. • . destroyed. If the quake were to occur during business hours, the greatest emotional strain would be caused by the separation of family members." "There would be those trapped on damaged roadways or in huge traffic jams. Some would be trapped in collapsed structures. Some children could be at school, or on their way to school buses - and worst of all -trapped or lost between home and school." Millions of survivors would face other problems: major free- ways into the Los Angeles Basin blocked by collapsed overpasses, telephone lines Jammed by caJls from worried relatives, water supplies curtailed by the rupture of two of the three major aqueducts serving the basin, elec- tnc power supplies cut in half and railroads and fuel pipelines shut down1or5afety inspectiollS. This chilling scenario -de- tailed in a 1982 report by Cali- fornia's Division of Mines and Geology -portrays a fallen metropolis struggling to survive with many of its utility and transportation lifelines severed for days, possibly weeks. Governments and businesses have reinforced freeway over- passes and utility facilities, but the scenario for destruction has changed little since 1982, although it has been "influential" in spurring emergency response preparations. state geologist Jim Davis said. At least for the first hours or days after a great quake, survival often will depend on an old- fashioned notion: neighbors and families banding together to take care of themselves. The huge mobilization of government agencies will take time. "Ifwe had a devastating quake, it can be assumed there will be points that will exhaust our resources," said Los Angeles police Lt. George Knopp. "For the first three days ... the people of this city are going to have to take care of themselves." So Californians must prepare for and adapt to the threat. "Anywhere you hve m the world you're going to encounter natural hazards." said Ellsworth of the USGS. The Loe Aneelem Veteran• Adm1nletratlon Boepltal In •bamblem after 1971 quake. Active Fault~-----­ Of California '- 1 2 3 4 5 en 6 --7 (!) 8 ~ ~ Ol Sacramento San Andreas Fault ~ Gar1ock Fault •• • •• San Gabriel Fault Santa Ynez Fault • • San Jacinto Fault Newport-Inglewood Fault ········· Calveras Fault -Hayward FauJt ,Extensions Of Recentty Active Faufts ' .. -, ..... ,. ~ ·;.:~~~\·~~~~':: Parts Of San Andreas Fault ·.:·~~~~~~~f/System In Which Fault Slip. San Francisc • -z_ Fault Creep. And SmaH-T o- Moderate-Sized Earthquakes Are Most Common "' I . . . . 0 50 100 Mil s .. Inferred Submarine ·· .. Faults That May ' I \ \ \, \ \ \ ' \ 1 \ ~ "' ~-' ~ . ~ · . ..._:·-.>-$.an Diego · ........ : . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . . . : . ··. ·. ·.. . · . .. Have Been Aecentty Active • 'Jaws' comes alive on board 'Shark Hunter' Men pay or chance to battle a shark a board Texas trawler PORT ARANSAS, Texas (AP) - The hne screamed ofTthr reel into the green depths of the Gulf of Mexico. .. Get him into a harness -move!" ordered Paul Dirk, captain of th.c trawler "Shark Hunter," gnpping an eiaormous, arching rod Cbarlte Albrecht scrambled into deep-sea fishing sear and &f.lbbeJ the rod to 6attle a hideous hammerhead shark. Albrecht's boss, San Antonio con- tractor Tom Williams, and five construction buddies shouted cn- c.ouragement.. Williams had paid Dirk Sl,000 JUSt for a moment hke thi). "Go. bab). go," ~·d Williams &rippina the hack of Albrt'C'ht') vtst harness to hold him o n dtd; as the boat pitched and plummeted down !().foot Wl\CS Albtttht strained, the veins on his forehead bulged and he reeled 1n a few inches from a half-mile of steel hne separating him from the fish Dirk barked instructions to the nervous. novice sportsman ''Clear the rail. follow the fish," Dtrk bellowed. Wit~ the sharl.roltin~aod tw'~ttn1 and runntng straight for the open ~a. Albrecht moved along the rail toward the bow with Williams hangmg on behind. Albrecht panted, flushed, sweat rolled down his face. "Now this 1s what I call fishing -a good fight through agony and pain," Golden pyr~mid 's home sweet home for Illinois family WADSWORTH. Ill. (AP) -The house that Jim Onan built is a 24 brat. gold-plated P>ram1d complete with most of the things )Ou'd e\~ct to find tn a pyramid -except mummies. The pyramid. built over the past six years. stands 54 feet high and covers more than 7,000 square feet It as surrounded b) a pond, which Onan plans to stock wtth sharks and other fish , and 1s guarded by a pair of concrete sphinxes that sit astndc the first-floor entrance Climbing th e stairs to the golden front door recalls fantasies of the Great Pyramid itself, un11I the doorbell rings and a young bo't }ells ··Mom. somebod) 'sat the door .. Onan. 46. and his wife. Linda, deetded m 1978 to build a p)ram1d- 1tyled home "Just to be different " "Living here 1s JUSt hke any other house," Mrs. Onan said. "I think people come 1n here and expect us to have mummies" Mummies the Onans don't ha-.e but they do have a reproduction of King Tutankhamen's throne and 19th centul) Egyptian chairs. about their h1stoncal s1gn11icance But Onan a building contractor who constructed his p} ram 1d.,.. 1th the help of his four sons. ~1d has fasci nauon wnh the Eg} pt 1an pHa- m1ds began in has childhood He called Egypt's Great P}ram1d, one of the Seven Wonders of the World, a "Jewel" and said. "It stands out lake a diamond amid rock " Onan's own pyramid 1s onl) about one-ninth the size of the ong1nal. but 1t too 1s a wonder of sons s1tung amid the small farms and scattered homc'I ofWads.,..onh Expens in Egypt from around the world have eApressed interest an studying the pyramid. Onan said "We kne.,.. 1t would attract atten- tion." Onan \aid "But I don't mind 1f I can d1ven ll to something poSlll\e" The Onan'I plan to take advantage of all the attention b) giving tours and having an Egypt ian cultural cel- ebration beginningSaturda). with the proceeds from a $10 admission fee going to benefit their church "For people -who come here interested in p}ram1ds "WC have v.hat the' want." Onan said "Then some people "Wiii come JUSt to laugh at me For SI 0 kt them laugh at me . said William • out with Dirk lor his ~venth hunt. "You tight this thing. You have no idea what 1t i& or what it looks like. And when 1l comes up -af it comes up-it comes with itsja\\ snapping. struggling to the lbt," he said. "l'm running out of power," aa ped Albtt'Cht. 41 , who was havana about as much fun as the final passengers on the Titanic. But when the 7-foot-3-inch, 120- pound ~hark was brought aboard, Albttcht looked triumphant. A Rag was mscd by l 4-~ar--0ld deckhand Pete DcJohgh, indicating the first catch of the day. It snapped in the whistling wind as the late morning sun beat down on the dying shark. .. That's what you call working yourself to death," Albrecht said. "1 never want to sec another shark." But most of tho who fish with bnckyard eiaht years a o and got Dirk can't wait for their next flaht scnous about sharks. and, like William,., come b ck year . He ha refined shark huntina af\er )'ear. 1 he Shark Hunter sails technique to a 'cu:nce. three times a week and 1 booked solid Whalt' the paying cu5tomt'n ippcd for the next two years. suds and shot the breeze, Dirk created Dirk uys he's the only shark hunter his no-fa al bait, na1lin1 and tying on the Gulf Coast. And even if he's chunks of bonito as bi& as a human wrong. it's hard to imaa1ne anyone head to hooks as bta as a fist. d1saatttm1 with the curl~-haired Pete. the deckhand, popped into a mammoth of a man, sport ins 120 motonzed red-rubber raft. the .. Shark shark teeth on a chain around his HunterJunior," and zipped outa half neck. mile to drop the bait attached to one- He guarantee catching at least one 6-foot shark per trip, or the next ~mon-i on the house -a situauon which rarely anses. Sharks caught by Dirk's clients average 9 feet ID length. Of the 40 or so shark species that roam the warm waters off the Texas coast, Dirk has challenged and con- quered 31 since he gave up his pound weights. Bloody bait was drop~ in a circle around the trawfer,.scndmg 1>ianal1 lO prowling sharks for several miles. While the men wlllted for the fish to respond to the carnal call, Dirk told stories about the deckhand who fell overboard on a shark, about the weak-willed German who was beaten by a noble Bull shark and, naturally, 11hout tht" world-record shark that got - away. "I tell my customeB that they n't be mad if a fish get away. For them it's fun. but for the fi hit'• a matte qf life and death," Dirk philoJOphi1e~. Eiaht stories. thrtt si,.-packs. one. lo t shark and two hours later. o ·rk bcpn reeling in lines to head in. Something tu.ucd hard at one or the lanes and Cif vm Montanio, 11, jumped into a harness for the fin 1 fight of the day. "That wasn't so hard," Montaoio told Albrecht, as he brought n unusually docile black tip shark on deck. • Dirk said black tips arc "good eating." and Montamo looked proUd. Pete told his captain quietly that the fish must have been caught d strangled in the lines. "I know," Dirk said, "but I bav~'t the heart to tell him tt was alrcidy dead." . On the wall facing the wooden .spiral staircase. hangs a wall-hanging of Tutankhamen's mask. And hand- painted heiroglyph1cs of Egyptian religious ceremonies cover the wall'> of a large exh1b1t1on hall on the lir'lt Onan \81d declined to \8) how much 11 lOSt him to build the p} ram1d. but ~1d 11 would take several more }Cars to complete the landscaping and other fin1sh1ng IOUlhC'> Thia 7 ,000-aquare-foot pyramid la home to the Onan family of Wadaworth, DI., who built it "ju•t to be different." floor. . The Onans said the) selected thc'>c items without knowing an'ythinit As for the popular notion that p}ram1ds produce a special energ} field that promotes heahng and retards decay, Onan doesn't place much stock in 11. He said that. laving in his pyramid. he has noticed that meat ·never goes bad and fruit won't npen. But he s.aid. "I haven"t found the proof(ofany special power). r ve had some elbow problems. lf this thing had healtng energy, they would go away.•• Beirut's Arab tourists are flocking to Turkey insteadl ., ............ Shoppers and touriata make their way through the •treeu of l•tanbul, Turkey, a new vacation mecca for many Arab•. Circulation war leads to numbers game LONDON (AP) -Newcomer Robert Maxwell, seeking to make tu Daffy Mirror Brttafn'a top- MlllnQ',newspaper, ha touched Off adicutatlon war by making an ''•btolut•, total and unequtvocaJ ==r~:h~: =Jo:i~ber~ two Mirror reader•. Maxwell, a flamboyant multJ- mHHonaJre who bought the Mirror Group newapaper chain last month, ha• shaken up Fleet 11RH.-, Britain'• newspaper r<YW, • ,..... hit effort to overtake Rupert i!lltU.181h'• 4. 18-mJUloo c rcua.. lun. The Dally Mirror'• ~illl'CUl•>rl It about 3.38 million. on Ft1day, he announced • runber• game called "Who Pl!"!' Win.'' and he tald two ,,~ .... .,. woutd each win 1 mllllon ~ ... ~ulvatent of $1.3 ... r merkable achievement ... has wU1 pubffsh a wtnning number stunned our rlvata." daily~. The Sun rNCted lmmedfatety Bi0ck1 or letters on the cards bY eaylng lt woutd tncreue prtzee wm make rMdeij effgtbte for for It• regular bfngo garnet to ematter prtt. of about tee.ooo. ur\lpeCtfled "record ~ .... " to •the Mirror Mid. be announced Monday. Maxwett Mk2 the Mirror'• prtz. The Sun, In banner heedllnet reduced to "Mnolt P<>et• Saturday, promlMd .. The Big.-stamp money" the $52,800 prize gest Bfngo Prile In History," and offered In .-1y bfngo "*'*by uroedlt1rMders, "TrustTheSun The Sun and lta SUncfay ,119t., foika, we're gonna make you paper, The NeWI of the World. euper rich!' H• gave 1n "ab191Ute, total Expr ... Newspapera, pub-and unequlvocel ~ .. tMt llahers of 1he 1.98-mHllon Dally twOMWror,...awoutd"eoon" Expr111 ri tha_1.37·mJUlon become~ but gave no Daily Star, raponded with a deadtlM f« the SMl)'OUt. ''Miii on re of the Month" game. Britain'• fifth iabkMd, TM Oalty ttpfed~topayaprlzeof$13 Mau. eneer9d at It• riva' ex>m- mlltlon Wlthln a month to\ the petition. OMcttbing ltMlf u the winner of the bingo game 11 rune "only paper ~ ®-l't PlaY In both newtpaper•. gamee wtth the newt," the Mali, The left·w ng Mirror'• blO::enze !~an article 80CUMd t~ ottteraof game lnvolv•• lndrilifually tnllli0nalt9 madneea . numbered card• ~ng malled to H~. unctertiMd In lteHce, 25 milt on homee, almost #IVfKY It said that H• daffy "Callno,•• hou.hold In this country of"58 another btnao game. hlld pild mllllon peop . Th ewapaper out a 1330,000 PriJll thll ~. .. . ' Turks greet tourists with open arms, Ara bs find much in common with hosts ISTANBUL. Turkey (AP) - Thousands of Arabs have discovered Istanbul and other areas of Moslem Turkey as the place for their va- cattons, now that Beirut, their usual playground, is in shambles. For many Turks, it is an unex- pected windfall. Said Tourism Minis- ter Mukerrem Tascioglu: "We shall recover the money spent by our people who 'o on the pilgnmage of Mecca, Saudi Arabia." Mecc.a is the spiritual center of Islam. At the same time, the presence of the Arabs and their flowing robes and headdresses present a picture unseen in maJor Turkish ctties since the Westernizing reforms of Kemal Ataturk changed the mode of dress m the 1920s. Also back 1s Arabic script, unused here since Ataturk Lattnized the Turlosh alphabet 56 years ago. Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, once was the chief attraction for Arab tourists. But Lebanon has been in conflict si nce 1975 and the Arabs, wtth 011 money to spend. went elsewhere, chiefly to London and Pans. But Arabs find the) have some- thm' in common with the Turks - religion, culture and customs. The Arabs were part of the Ottoman Empire until it disintegrated after World War I. Once again shops 1n Istanbul's famed covered bazaar adveri1se their wares tn bold Arabic scnpt. In the nearby resort village of Gokccdere. where 90 percent of tourists arc Arabs, grocer Scyfi Gorur wears traditional Bedouin dress and has learned enough Arabic to con- verse with his customers. House alona the Bosporus Strait are posted with slgns saying ··for Rent to Arabs." • Official figures will not be 1n until the end of the year, but those in the tourist industry say at least 40 percent of forei~ visitors this year -more than 600,000 people -arc from Saudi Arabia, Ku wan, the United Arab Emirates, Syn a. Iraq and Libya. They can be seen all over this sprawli na city of 6 million people, CnJOying the parks on Camlica Hill on the Anatoltan side, strollinf lhrouah Ottonun palace~ turned into mu- seums and CnJOYioa the belly dance shows at n\lhtclubs. Tr:anl .,ency officials SI)'. fli&hts from Kuwait to Turkey are &>oltcii solid to the end of Auau t and hotel manaaen aay they have no vacancies unti l aner the Kurban Bayram, the Mo lcm en tice fcaJt, in early P- tcmbtr. Turks watched with envy 1n the pa t d de a 01l0 rich Arab prtfi rrcd London and P ri for their hopp1na and-imustmcnt. Some l'urb, however. Clptt$S conccm that Wwem vi 1tor1 will confu the A1llbs with the in· ~i nous nouulation and go away 1n ' the belief that Turkey 1s less West- ernized than 11 is. Travel agency officials say that several lux1:1ry hotels an Istanbul, which cater to mostly European tnd American clientele, admit ;\rab guests with reluctance. Tourism Minister Tascioglu has threatened to take measures against "anyone who docs not treat our white-robed guests properly." But most Turks who have any dealings wt th the free-spending A.tabs share his enthusiasm. Erdopn Erkmen, the manager of UFI department store in Ak$41't)'. saad, "These tourists are God's bklS- ing to us. They are big spenden." Erkrnen has his sales staff learning Arabic. He said he thinks the Arab tounsts have grown to like Turkey ~se they share the same religion and cat similar food. Semir al-Rasidi, a university stu- dent from Kuwait visiting here wi1h seven other members of his family. agreed. "We feel close to Turks because they arc fellow Moslems." But he also said the countrx 1s inexpensive and the people "respect· ful and friendly." Abdullah al-A hmadi, 31, of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. who came here with his wife and infant daug , said the family spends $125 a day,nd find1 at very ancxpens1~. "We shall be back and also ~­ ommend to our friends at home to come and visit." he said. Rami Sipahi of the Cayin\ll;si Travel Agency said hotel spa in Istanbul cannot accommodate tl\e influx of Arab tounsts, who of\cn amve with large family .,.ou of e1&ht to I 0 to stay one to two mo . llich Arabs rent villas aJona the Bosporus, paying the equivalent In Turkish hra ofSJ,900 a month.]bc middle cla tourists, mostly 1ro Llbya,J raq and S¥ria, prefer hou n less amuent distncts, P!yjna S 1,300 a month, 1pahi said. The Arab bonanza has sent skyrocketma in tstanbul. Some fa ics have moved in with rclativ they can rtnt their own ho m Arabs. Talk about FRIDAY 9AM-10PM E SATURDAY 9AM-9PM . E SUNDAY 10AM-8PM • NO DEALERS OR • WHOLESALERS PLEASE ALL NEW 1984 DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS, ALL EXECUTIVE AND DEMONSTRATOR MODELS, ALL USED CARS, SPECIALL V PRICED FOR THIS AUTHORIZED SALES EVENT! ·1c1s: NOT PUBLICL y ADVERTISED, IN CONSIDERATION OF OTHER DEALERS. -- p CES:· PROMINENTLY DISPLAYED ON ALL VEHICLES. F Cl : USE YOUR BANK ,_)~\~~ .. ~ OUR BANKS, YOUR CREDIT UNION OR '\ 006~ F~~~J1 "6 ,f ANY OTHER LENDING INSTITUTION OF '"'1\ AVAi.~~,,~~[ d YOUR CHOICE, ON APPROVED CREDIT. 1,,.~~. 5j · AUTHORIZED TRADE-IN APPRAISERS IMMEPIATELY AVAILABLE ! BRING YOUR TRADE, TITLE, OR PAYMENT BOOK . . SOUTH COAST D.ODG . 2888 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MISA 540·0330 llTWIEN IAKIR & ADAMS . HOT DOGS, SOFT DRINKS * ~ FOR THE KIDS! ~ -~ ________ .-.........._ ______ ~ C3 Orano• Coat DAIL.V PILOT/Saturday, Augvl1 28. 1 fllOmlOUlllUIMU N'nTIOUIWN '1C1rnotJe • ACtJnOUI.,_.. ..,... .-.cnnout.,... nc:nnoue-.....11 PICTITIOUI.,_.. mnnoue.,... .. MMm ITUWISrT ~ ITATWNT N.U. ITAtWNT MAim ITATDmNT ' '1CTITIOU9 IU..... MAim tTATDmlf ....... 8TA,.....,,. MAia ITA,_..T NAm ITATW It••• .,., •• . .... , ...... ,, '"'9 lelc••,.,..,,..,. TJlil f~ ~ It Trit ~,__.Ila The fOIOWlot pnon la N.um atAT'lmNT TM . ~.,. hie S*tot11.,. TN~....,._... nt ~,.,....,. **"'.,..... ~........... ~ ~.. OC*lill ~.a: The !*Mn .. dOlnl bus"-.. dolna .. ~ -3:---. M9M CONt\ILTANTI, Clll088Y&A8SOC\AT 90l.8Al'A.lltl ,2000 :PAYNE & AISOOIATU. doing ... IAl(Lllll CONllGN· OCEAN llUFP lllOA'Tt, H H flNANCI, IOU {A ,LAZA,. H&AA'T!I) lTO l1t llnllMnlGfY Or. 413 MlfiOOld AM, CA I FO\lftll 11,...., Ste *· 2803 W. Balboa Bllld . ....... MHA Y£R1) MOOIL, MEN'l OEM~!. 425 N 1'8SI O:lMil alulf Cira., w.,.,. A~. HUnttnflOI\ "fN & AM 8Uft'. w.\, ~ leecih. CA 82W Santa AM, CA 111701 pon 9aectl, CA. 02863 27tt Hetbor llvd , Coata A,,.,.,,, Of'.,._ CA t2W Huntington IHCPI, CA o.lf tH41 Pt.JU. '70)2 l!dlngtr A.,.• t29IO Calll• Crotby. • U Jamee T. "°"nu.. t ArUWr A. ,.11"' 1803 w M9u, CA 8H21 Oen•••• Corpo••llon, 12641 Jo11ii* J M <Mll7 Hunlltlgton ... en, CA. MtrY Vlr;lnle Mindi, ltt Matta~ Alla . CA t2at H ... rnll9C19 Lana. '"*l>Ot' ••Ibo• aJo;d . Newport Aemaen Al\IMG Nouri, 7107 lo 400 W• •3. Mid• TllOIHI Jarry ~~an, w.,,., A\19 . Hu6ntmgl0ft .,.., PromontOIV Or Wtet, Nft· Thie bu•tnaae te oon-IMc:fl, CA t2'80 IMch. CA Ha 131'7 'Mal Aidoa. Anenaim vale, Utah MCM7 (ltata of 11131 ~ ~fl ~ heott, c.ilf t2Mt Leonaro LH 10944 Pof1 leM:h. ~ Mted by In tndMclual w Mte:neill Hey, 2000 Eut Th11 bu1lna11 •• con· Hiii•. CA 1210f OOl'pOf'atlon. Utah) Huntington IHCll, CA w ~. "-".128' Adm ,.ny N'OlltnlWk Cir~. Fountain Thi• b11alMN I• con· came C10lby llounh ltr•t . 81• 3049, cl~ by; an lndMdUll Tiii.i Ckltlnu1 11 con-Thi.I buelneae 11 con· 82141 Dr .. Huntington laldl. Ca»f. V*'I CA 927oe• duelled by; en lndMdliaf TI!!t ttat*'*"t wM flied s.nta Ana, CA 92706 AttlM A ~ Ouc1ed by an lndMduel ducMd by a 00f'PCW9UOI\ Jotln V•~t Ka11ar, 12141 L i , Oon McOenl ... Mrt ~ ~ wCltl the County Clerlc of Or· J O!'ln A. Dll'ranoHco, Thie etat.,,.,.,,t wu AAm.an Allmad NCMltt Cert fileynolda. Pf911dent 1H•2 I~ H•. Hurl-.. NMCY .._, 95$0 ~ l~~ e NIQllthawk Clrcla Tiiie ltatlrlWll WM fllad anga County on .My H . 2000 fMt Fourth SI. 6te "'Ith the County C.11 of Or· TI!ll 1ta1wnent wu fltad Tllil tllltment ... Ned inaton leedl. CA t2MI AV9., W•tmlntt•. Calif ~taln Velley CA t270I wttn ttie County a.tk of Or· 1964 ~. Santa Ana. CA '2705 enge County on Auouat 8. with tn. County Clefk ol Of· won IM County a.11 Of Or· lhl• bu11n•• I• con· t*3 Tillt bu.tnata j1 oon• anoe Coun1Y on Augwt 21. ntM.11 David w Pride>, St. 2002 1864 •noa County on July 31, 1nga County on A\IQUtt 21, duct.a by; • ..,_., pelt· rn. bu11n ... 11 con ducted by a general part· 1964 PubllaMcl Ott.n09 C:0-1 South Gran4, hnla Ana, CA '1SZJ14 188-4 1N4 nertl\lp ducted by· 1 general Pitt· ,,.,.nip ~ o.lly PllOI AUQ"81 26, Sap. 0210& Pub,..,., Oranoe eo..1 '2Sf71t naJ'7I T"°"* ~ Ayan MrahlP Pvb8tMcl Orange C:O.I lamber I, •• HI. ,... Tnlt bueln... 11 con-Dally PllOI Aug\ltt h, 11, ?&, Put>lleMO Or•ngie Coetl PubMNd 0r.,. CoMt Thie ttaterNnl WU fl6ad Joaeptl J Manin Leonetd ~ Deity Piiot AliQU9! 2&, 1H CSucted by 1 general parl• Set>tamt>at 1, 11184 Dally Piiot Auguet 4, 11, 18 Dally Piiot A"(luel 25, With the County Clef'lc of Or• Thia .tatamant w• fll90 fl\ll ttatetnanl WU nlad &apt.nbet 1, I . 15, 1"4 •DtfC Mf\ftl'c nertlllp 51·142 2&. 1tl4 September I, I, 11, t8"4 anga County on Augull 21. wllll Iha County Clatk of Ot• With the County Clatlc 01 Of· s .. 115 .. -. nu1P4 Jonn DtFrenoaeco Sa-1:29 8a-171 1964 t.not County on Augutt 8, enga County on JuJy 11, l'tCTITIOUI .,.._81 Thia etatament wu flied 11111111 IC 11111\TIC[ "'1171 181<4 18&4 Dally Piiat 6.42-5678 __ rtaJC ____ llC[___ NAiii 8T~TIMUIT with lhe County Clerk of Or l"UUL ""' P\BUC NOTICE Publllhed Of'ange Coeet ,..., l'mnl II) The t~ pal1IOn .. Inga County on Auguet 84. ftCTTTIOUI eut••H Plll.tC NOTICE Dally PllOI Avgutt as. Publlahaa Or1nga Cout Publlthed Orange eo.1 MOncl tW OIMOl.UTIOM dOlnCI t>ualnaae • 1914 MAME tfATWlllDIT l'K:TTT'fCMn _, .... , S eptember 1. t. 1'.1.1084 Dally Pllol AUQuaf 11, 2&. Dally Piiot Augutt fl, 1t, H , °' ,AllTNIMtW auoon l'Al!IOHT SYS· ~ TM followlng '*'°" I• ,tCTmou• IUllNH• NAlm ITATIMINT ~ml Septembat 1. I . ttM hptambat 1, 1864 Publlc notice la '*atlY TfM, 17142 Aelmat St • Publltn.d Orange Co.Mt dOlnG OU.U-ea: MAim ITATlllllNT The~.,.._....,. PmlJC NOTfC( 8A·'U 8e-144 given tPlat OONA[ rt; Fountain Val'9y, Calif, t2108 ~-r.::, A~!'iN4 OIFlECT OISTfltlBUTINO The t~ ~ It dOlnQ ~ M: o ·su1.LIVAH ANO THOMAS K.,,,,.lh £uoana Smythe • Sa 173 18&36 Soutn Peeiflc AV'&. ~ ~~ -r R 0 u T INT£RLOCK W!.ATH!flt· ,ICTmOUa IUllNlll H 8Al<EA. "*-OfOfa dcMng 17142 Raimer St., Founteln • SunMt Baectl. Caltl 90742 OAAPHICS 2eH.teu onva STRIP. 7e& Hamltton. Coata N ... ITATllllNT bu""-under tt'9 fletltlOul \llllay, Cal1t 112709 Richard Eugena Aylandlf. • 0 e27 ' M .... CA 82$21 Tna followtng penont are firm name .ws ftyfa of NEW-Thft bu1lna11 11 con· NSLIC NOTICE 18835 Souln Pec:lllc Ava . Coeta Maea. cam. 2 WNll&tn A 8oyd "' 705 dOlnQ but!MU .,. POAT W!ATH!MTAIP at ducted by en lndMdual SunMt laech, Call! 90742 Donald Edward Hunt Jr' Hltl'llltOtl, Costa MaN CA AACTIC CIACL! PAAT- 2424 ~ llW City of Kenneth E Smythe '1CTTT10U8 IU ... U Tlll1 buttnes• 11 con· ~~I ~2fr ' Coata Meaa. 92e27 NEAS. ..1 Covar Oflva, Coat• Meaa. County of Ot· Thlt atatarnant wu 111«1 NA.Mt tTATHllWT due1ed by "'ln01vt<111al Thi• builnatt 1, con-Thi• bu•lnH• I• con Suite 14, Newpon e..m, enga, St•ta Of Celll0tnte. did with ttw County Clerk ot Or-TM followlng ~ .,, Alotlard e Ryl1t1dar duC1ed'Jl· an lndlvlduil ducted by: an lndl11ldual CA 112080 on Iha 24th dlY of Augutt, Inga County on Auguat 8, doing buelneu al Thl1 t11111ment wu filed Wllllam A. Boyd, Jr JI/Ml J Foreman, 18101 1884, by mutual content, di... tot• ' Tt{E ANTIOU! CONN EC· wnll the County CWk of Or· Don Edward Hunt Jr Thll ttatamtnt WU 111«1 Laura Lane. Yorba Linda, IOl'la tM Mid ft..,.narthiC> ~ TION, Wae1mlnatar Ab-. =: County on Aun111t 8. Thlt ttatamant wat ltled 11tlth Iha County Clark of Ot· C .. "2••• ..-• ~, -..-with the County ci.11 of Or· " • ....., and t~ IMW ralatloN Pub1"'*3 0rMga eo.tt Antique Mall, 1175 WMI• 1 ange County on AUQutl 8, anga County Otl AUguat 21, CMttoe>Mr A CllaM. u '*"*9 tl'Meln Dally P!IOt AUQual 1, 18, 25. mln1tar AWi , Garden QrOYa, '21m7 108,. 1914 t774 P11m ()(Ive, LAgu~ f!-Ul1har notice la '*.OY Septambat 1, 1N4 CA 82843 Publlthed Orange COltt ,212111 F2SSSIJI BMch, CA 92051 gtv.I lhat the underalonad SA-137 lraM Wallet, l&&e Slat'ra Oalty Piiot Aug11•t 18 '5 PuDlltl'led OrllllQ• Coett Published Orenga Co .. t Nanc;y $-.et. 2•111 Lu wll not be~-lrom •mtl( Mf\TJC( Clrele. 1t11c. Huntington ~ternber 1, 8 10&4 0 ,.. Pll t A 11 ,8 28 ()ally Piiot Augu.i 25 N•r•nlu Drive. 1.aoun1 ttll1deyonforanyob11Qat1on ,._ nu 8aac:n.CA t2641 SA·155 al., o ugull ' ' September I 8 16 1084 Nlgual,CA82$77 tncu~ by the Ol,,.,. In ht• flCTITIOUt 81UIMll Oofean Ena Wallet. 2•18 Saptamt>er 1· 11184 SA-130 ' • Se-107 Jamee T Aountr ... 4041 own nema. «In IN neMe ot NA• 8TATl•NT Graham Ava . ,3, Reclonao iMIDIJC NOTICE MeoArtllur Bl11d , 9. 150, Iha firm Beec:t'I. CA to270 l"UU\. 1111m11 Mf\T N---< ,._ ....... CA 02880 Dated at Cotta Mete. The folio.Ing '*'°" 11 Thi• t>ut1n•11 11 con· ,tennout au ... H f't&IC NOTICE .. ~c "" ICE -~ E"'Md.,eon. 1737 Callfomte. 111t1 ~•'"day 01 ~M~~i.%:.oscAPE oueted by • general Perl· NAIR ITA~ ~nnoua au .... ll ~ua w?eo Newport ~ n.-eo..t co . 5309 w 111. Santa~ Wallet The followlng '*'°" •• FICN!M'TIOU1 IT• .. auTl!IMININTH• N.U. ITAT'IJHNT Fr .. ~~8r.2a .. ·ook .. d ....... --._,.. Ana Calif 92703 dOl,,g bull,,...... .. .. TM lollowl,,g pereone at• --"" ,.. _ .. Ody Piiot Augutl 28, • . Thi. itetamant w .. Iliad SPECIAL TY CONT AC l Thi fOllowing P«IO!l• are doing butlneea u: 835 N .. trand. San G~. IOM John L Sornert. 5309 w with tM County C*1c Of Or· LENS 88&5 Atlanta Ava doing t>ulioeu at TRIPP ELECTRIC AS· CA 0 1ns Sa-180 let. Santi Ana, Callf 92703 =County on Augu.I 21 8 0 ANO C SERVICES, SOCIATES. INC .• 3240 S Ann N I OenaC Corarey, Thlt butlnau 11 con· 1.. Suite 3 I Hunllnglon 3 ~ T .... 1 L-..........., ClrA ... , "~ta ---------d\Kted by an Individual • l'2AMI BNc:h, Clllf 92648 Cl 4 11 .-armtngton Ullin, Stand111d Aw . Santa Ana, M--.... -c·:.,.,..02,..,,7 ...,. ...,.... "8.IC M)TIC£ John L" Somare RutMtl P Baxter. 8131 A. 92880 CA 02705 ,. v .. Publillhld Orange Cout 0 Carol Lorretne HUI, 134 11 Tripp Electrlc A•.,...lalM, Oay11 Adam• Luciano. Thi• ttataiMnt wu tlled Cally Piiot A•"'-'•tt 26. Muntter r . Huntington ........ t••" ,..A .............. "~·-. u•· K·121a with Illa C ty Clark of Or -•-Beach Callf 92648 Fer ming ton. Tu111n CA Inc , 3240 S Standard Ava . v"" ...,.,..., .......... ......,.,,, n 8TAT'lmNT Of' anga eou':::rn on AUOUll 2 September 1 8· tS. 11184 Thl1° bu11na11 It con-92880 Sa11ta Ana. CA 927015 (91ata ~· Helghll. CA 91148 WMOOt•NT °' tOM . Sa-1ee ducted by en Individual Oma Hiii. Jr. 134 11 Farm-f lnQOfpotatlon. callfoml•) Mat11ar.i Ann McDonald U11 tW ,._. DllDI 'C f«>TICE AutMll p Baxt9f lngton Tuttln. CA 92&ao Thlt t>utln"t 11 con-(Truttl, 464 ~wood Clte!e, PlCTTnOUI Publltn.d Orange Co&lt ,.~ Thtt atttement ,,. .. rllad Thie bu1lna11 It con· ducted by: 1 QOfPOrtllon COit• M .... CA 92027 Ml ... 81 NAMe Cally Piiot AUOutt o l8, 23, FICTITIOUt 91.ltlNEll with the County Clar1! of Or-ducted by hueband and wife Garald L. Tripp, Preald«lt Tlllt bu1ln111 It con- Th• lollowl"iJ 1>41rton1 30 1911A NAMI tTATRlllNT enga County on A11gutl 9, Carol L Hiii TI!l1 1tatamanl WN nled ducted by a gan11al Plrl· nava abendoMd Iha UM of TH-217 The toftOwlng P«ton 11 1984 Ttoot ttetemant .-u folad witll Illa County Clerlc Of Or· ne<tl\lp tna Flct1t1ou1 Bu1lna11 --.. -111-11C-NO_TI_C_[ __ ,d0111Q t>ullnaae •• P252:U4 witt1 th• County Clerk ol Or-enga County on Auguit 21 . Margaret 8 . McDonald Name MESA VERDE ,-~ MUL BERRY BUSH PRO-. Publlthed Orange Cou1 ange County on July 3, 1118.4 19~ Tllit tlalament WU flied MOBIL, 2789 Harbor -Tl'T'llU•I aU ... ltl OUCTIONS, ea Fair Or Catty Piiot Augutl 18, 25, '2.41711 '2S3271 with the County Clafk OI Or· eoui.vwo. Coate M_., CA ""' '''"'"' September 1 8 1084 Publl1hed Orenga Cout Publlthad Orange Cout ange County on Augutt 0. tneH NAMa ITATl•NT Coste M .... Calif 92828 ' SA-157 Daily Pilot Augutt 2 II 18. Dally Piiot Augutt 26. 1084 The Flo1ltloua Bualneaa TM IOllowlng ~ It Debra Lynn F1y t555 23, t984 Sic>lembat 1, 8, 15, 1914 nal01 Name~ to above wee dOlng bu~ u · M ... Verde Dr E ••7E Th-210 Sa· 110 Publlthed Orange Co&lt ftlad In °' Cou CONTACT LENS SER-Cott• M .... cam 92828 PUBLIC NOTICE Otlly Piiot Augutl 28, Oct. 20. = FIL;ty ,...O' VICE COMPANY 3333 Thlt butlll•H 11 con 0tin•ic Mnflf'I: Pt&IC NOTICE Saptembat 1. a. t&, 19&4 F-227... Brlttol St Coste MM&, dUClled by· an Individual FtCT1TIOUl IU9'Hlll f"UIX. nu w. Sa·112 Kenwan Hatdanen 2123 Calif 92e20 Dabr• Lynn Fey NAME ITATl!MINT FICTITIOUI aUtlNEll '1CTTTIOUI 9UIN81 June Place. Anaheim, CA Barnerd Simon 1710 Thia a~amanb wu ."~ The IOllowtng petto11 •t NAME ITATEMENT ~ ITAT'lldNT 911802 Kanvan Heldatien Tanager °' • Cott• M .... with the nty la<k o . aotng butlnM• a1 The IOllO'WI"" ,,_aon It The lollowlng peraont •r• f't&IC NOTICE Thie ltatemant wu ftled Callt. 112828 = County on July 28· N A T 1 O N A L C O M • doing butlne~~ • .--· doing bllelneat U ' FICTITIOUI 9USNll wtth Iha County Cl«lc of Or-TI!lt t>u1lnau 11 con-• MUNICATIONS NETWORK EVEAEIT F WOLPOW SATELLITE EMPORIUM, HAMl ITA'fa.NT ,._......, July "' duc:1ed by an lndMdual 1"211441 200 Newpon Center Or ""' 425 N Arlahalm Bl\ld Or · -"-~ *"'91 ........... , on .. 1. "'-•·d Simon Publlthacl Orange Cout, "20l N-""" 8Nc:h Celll ENTERPRISES. 1.vt New· • The f.,,..,....ng partont are 18M ._ .. _ o p 2 II 8 .,..... pon Blvd Cot ta Meta, ange, CA 92Ma doing butlneae u Publi.nad Otanga eo.tl Thia 1t11ament wu fUad ally llOt AUQ\.ltl ' · 1 · 92880 Call! 112827 GtnHll Corpor11lon, SIERRA FINANCIAL Dally PllOt AUQ\.ltl 4, It, 18, with Iha County C!eni Oi Or· 23· 1984 Daniel W Fltcner. lo438 Everett F Wolpow, 2204 7107 S. 400 w .. 1 #3, Mid· GROUP. 2230 Fairview, 25. 1884 anga County on Augutt 2. TH-lllll Saranadt Tr • Coron• dll l<enrleh Court •B. La Habre, vale, Utlh 840<'7 (State or Cotta Maaa, Callf 92t21 Sa-,21 198"4 Mat. Caltl 92825 Calll 00833 Corporation Ulan) SteYa Wl!tlarnlOI\, 2151 Pl8.JC NOTICE IT A ftMIJfT Of' ~OlfUH tW flCT1'110UI IU9INI•• ..... The loll~~ ~raon1 l'taV"a abeond IM uM of the l"lcll11ou1 Bu1lnau Name CLU8 ST TROPEZ. a.sea Eut Cout Highway. eoron1 del Mar. CA 9262& TM Flc1111out ISutlneet Name raf9IT9d to aDOW WU 111ad In Orange County on 8/8/83 ALI MO F-m~e CMll• l"lac:Mf, OWnar. 2885 Eut Cout Highway. COfonl del Mat, CA f2e211 Thll blltlMM .... con- duated by an lndlvldual Tnta etatamant w.. flied lflttl tM County C*1I of Or· = County on Aug\191 21. Publlal'tad Otenge eo.tt Daly' PllOt AUQ\.1•1 26, , .... Sacrtamt>ar 1. I. 15, 1 .... a..111 '112011 P\&.JC NOTICE Tllll butlnatt 11 con-T1111 but ln111 11 con-Thi• but1"4tll It con-v•· ...... ..... MIMIOn Viejo Publj....... Or:T ,. ___ t ducted by• an lnOl\llOual C-allf ...... "2:'1' • ,._. ..,.,.. Cucted by an lndMdual ducted by' • oorpo,.atlon • v• Diiiy Pilot Auguat 18, 23, NOTICE INVmNG etDI Dani.I W Fltchef Everen F Wolpow C.r1 Aeynofdt, Pr•ldtnl Rey 8ul1artield, 302 Col- 30 1984 BIO ITEM NO 838 Thll •tttement WU lllad T"I• 11e1em~t w•• tll·.. Tlllt ttatarnant wet llled ·~ c I •• c "' NO TICE Is ... EAEB" wlththaCountyClarlcotOr· "~ "'" .., ;:•2·7 ot 8 ... ate, 1 TH-220 n ' with Ill• County Clark of Or-with Iha County Clertl of Or· UV ---------• GIVEN I h • t 1 ••I• a anoe Counly on Auguat 9 enge Coun1y on Auguat 2. ange County on Augult 21. Thlt butlnatt 11 con-P\mllC NOTICE prOC>ONJt wlll be received by 198"4 108• 1084 ducted by 1 gen.rel pan- tlla City of Cotti M ... to f~ '252001 F2An0 nerthlp flCTmout 94.ltfNlll wtt The City Council, P o PvbllthlO Oranoe Co11t Publlsneo Orange Cout Put>llthed Otange Coatt Stave Wllllamtonit NAMI ITATIMINT Bo.11 1200 Cotta M ..... Call-Delly Piiot Augull ll 28 Cally PllOI Augutt 9 16. 23. Delly Piiot Augint 25, Thlt tlllarMnl wu llled The lollOwlng pertont 11• tornl• 92828-1200. on or Septemt>at 1 8 l98"4 30 1914 S.,taml>af 1. 5 15 t984 with the County Cl«tt ol Or· dOlng b\alnaat • before ll'la hour 1t 00 am SA t54 TH-221 Se-174 enga County on Augutt 9. llA A A IN E RS M IL E on Friday Septambat 14 914 MARINE CENTER L TO . 1984 It lhall be 1111 re-Ml.IC NOTICE 1 f2S2AI 2430 Weal Cout Hlghwey, aponttblllty or 1111 bidder to f't&IC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Publlthad Orenge Cout Newpo<1 Baacll, Calif 928e3 dttt\lar hit bid to the City FICTITIOUI 9UllNIH 8 26 Turnttona Corporetlon Clark's Of1IOI by tile proper ITAnMIDIT Of' FICTITIOUI 8UllNEll NI.Ml ITATOllUIT Cally Piiot Auguat 1 . . (General Penner) California, announced time Bld1 wlll be WITHOflAWAL NAME IT AUMENT TM lollowlng PlllOfl 11 S9Ptember 1 8. l~A· 188 2439 W111 Cout Htgl\wey, pvblk:ly opened and reed FftOM 'A"™I"'"" Th• followtng perton 11 doing t>utln ... u : N9wport Baach. Calif 92883 aloud et 11 00 1.m .. or u ON"ATINQ UNOlflt doing bualnest u NEPORT BAY CHAPEL. • P\ISLIC NOTICE Thia butlnett It con-'°°" tl'laraeJtar u prec· 'ICTTTIOUI MINNEY BROTHERS NEWPORT BAY WEODlNO --------- ducted by 1 llmlted panner-tlcllbla on Frldey Septam-IUl..,_H NA.Ml SCUBA SCRUBBERS. 211 CHAPEL 3400 VII Opofto. FICTITIOU8 .U ... 11 thlp Cler 14 1984, In Iha Council N.wQOrl Beach Calif 92&80 Newport BNc:h, Call! 92883 NAMI ITATl•NT Jamee L Evant, F'rleldent Chamt>er1. City Hall, 77 Fair The lollowfng paraon 1111 JoH Ph Edwin Minney. OabOrah Marie No111k, The following'*'°"' are TI!lt ll•tament wu hied Or'lw. Coa1a M.... Call· wllhdrewn u 1 ge,,.ral pan-211 North St11 Lana, New-3t14 Yukon, Cott• MaH, doing butlneM ... with Illa County Cl«k or Or-lornla. '"' ll'la lurnllhlng of nar from tl'la p1rtner1htp oo-port Beacn. Calif 928e0 Call! 92028 ATLANTIC ELECTRIC Inga County on Augutl 2. LABOR ANO MATERIAL TO ll'ltlng under the flciltlOUI Thi• butlnHI It con. Thi• butln... II con-co. 2139 Santa An• AWi . 198.4 DEMOLISH, REMOVE. ANO but ln111 name ol SEA ducted by an tndlvtdual Oucted by an Individual Cos1a M .... Call! 92827 ~ DISPOSE OF A COM· BREEZE CAY CARE 11 879 Joeeph Edwin Mlnnrf Oab0r11\ M Novak Booth lnduttrlal, Inc .. e Publl9had Orenga Co&lt MERCIAL STRUCTURE Governor Street, Cotta T1111 11t1e~1 w .. llled Thlt llatamanl wat tllad Calllomte oorporetlon. 2130 Cally Pllol Augu91 0 18, 23, ANO RECONSTRUCTION MtH, CA 92827 wl111 lll.I Count)' Clark ol Or-with the County Clerk of Or· Santi Ane Ava., Coeta 30 19~ OF A LOAD BEARING The 11c1111ou1 butlntu enge County on July 2e, 1ng1 County on Augu1t 8, M .... Calif 92827 TH-222 WALL name statement for Iha part-1118• 198-4 Thlt butlnaat It con· Addltlonal Mtl ol 1111 neratitp wu flied on July 23. fZ11"4 '212111 ducted by. •corporation ~tlonl mey be ob-11180 In the County ol Or· Publlthad Orange Coul Publlthad Orange Coalt Marytan~ P. L.odge, Vlca- talned at tM omc. of Illa •no• FILE NO. F141818 Otlly Pllol Auguat 2, 9, 18, Dally Piiot Augutt f 1, 18, 28, PrMldll'll Purohallng ~t at 71 Fair Full Name and Aadra11 of 23. 1994 S..,tembat I 111~ Tiiie etatement wu tllad Drtw. ea.ta M_., Call-the Parton Withdrawing TH-195 SA-141 '1111111 the County Clatll of Or· DEATH NOTICES LOPAZANSIU W A L T E R LOPANZA NSKI . palled away Tunday Aueuat 21. 1984 Mr Lopanz.anakl WU a resident of Newport Beach for 12 years He 11 survived by daughter , Lisa Lopanun1ki Mr Loparu.anakl waa af- ftllated with The Arches Restaurant for 20 years, acting aa general mana.ier for the last 2 years G raveside Serv1cet wtll be held Saturday lornla 81<11 lh<>Uld be r• JIJMI Edwatd Lynott 8111 ange County on Augu81 8 belov~ m other of turned to tl"la attention ollna Governor sir .. t. Cott• PUBLIC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE tll84 Warwick J. Kayes, City ctet11. within Hid time MM•. CA 112e21. flCTITIOUt aualNIH l'll2MO Jr , and Cornelia H limit. In • IMlad onvelooe. Signed Jam .. E Lynott FICTITIOUI •UllNHI ...... ITATIMINT l(atlef, • ..,., • DofHott ldentrl\ad on tl"la ovttlda with Publlthld Orenge Co&l1 1UOO Von Kltfl'Nn, lv!M Mackey. 1i1ter of lM Bid Item Number and Illa Dllty Piiot Augutl 18 2& NAMI ITATIMINT The followlng perl()f'lt .,. Burton G and War-()p4wllng Cata S9Ptaml>af 1 8, 11184 The lollowtng pertont are dotng butJnaet u · 91~rvtna Clfff 11711 ren D Tremaine. Eact\ bid •h•ll a11111 bl 16111 ao1no bu11n ... •• IMAGINEEAtNG. INC . PuDllt hecl Oranr Cout med• on Iha Propoe•I form, TIOANNCcHo~·RP .. NCYON3S3!~6u;B· 22&3 Cornell Or .. Coll• Cally Piiot Augut 18, 2&, Survived by nine en.et• P-lA through ::.,,e ... " . .,., M .... Callt 92825 September 1• 8. 10&4 grandchildren and prolllded In the cont•eC1 Pl.ellC NOTICE Olene Dent Po1n1 C•UI Harold Edgar L8ng11on SA-ll3 h d documantt ana 111811 be ec-92819 CeJllOfnla. 2253 Cornell Or .. ---------t ree-great-gran • compani90.byaC«'1tlledor NOTICITO 1 Ana C s1111itl,33886•B CostaM .... C.111.02828 Pta.ICNOTICE children Strtclly pn-cuhlll''t Clleek <>< • bid CfltlDITO"I 0, 01an1 Ot ne Po1n1. C1111 Thlt butln•H It con---------- vate services are bond I<>< no1 1 ... than 10% IULIC IAll 1128211 ducted by·• corporation 'ICTITIOUI euttNIU be h ld F t ot 1,.,. amount ot the bid (lactlon1111>1 • Robert Shariff. 33585 •B H E Langtton, Prllldont MA.IQ ITATt.-NT mg e at ores meaa P•y•bla 10 the City 0j 1107 U.C C ) 011r11 Cena P01r11. c a111 Tlllt 111tament wat llled TM followtng '*'°"' .,. Law n Memoria l Coat• M ... No Proposal NOTICE IS HEREBY 928211 Wllh tlla CountyQarlc otOr· dolngbll•ln ..... : Park, Glendale, C. •ll•ll bl coneldared un..., GIVENtott1a crad11ora olth•1 Thie 1>ua1n1H It con· ange County on Augu1t e, ABC CUSTOM CAA FOREST LAWN 1ccompanlad by 1uc 11 wlthlnnamedtrantle<orth•t ductedby·an lndlvldual 1884 CARE.719W 10th8t.,IN, MORTUARY Direct-culllar't en.ck. ca.Ill <>< •bulk tran11« 11aboul10 b• Robert Sllarttt '212111 Costa M .... Callf 92827 • bidder'• bond meae on per10n11 properly Th11 1111amen1 w11 filed Publl11\ad Orange Cout Or90ad Inc Calllomle Ing. In lieu of flo wers No bid ll'lall beconlldlfad l\tfainettar dMCfibad w1tn Iha County Cieri. 01 Or· Dally Piiot Augutt f1, 18 25, 7711 w. IOth 9"i._ #N, Cotta contributlons can be I unlatt 1111 made on 1 blanl\ TM name •nd aadr111 ol enga County on July 28. Saptamt>er 1, t914 M ... Calif 02827 made to the charity of l<><m lurnlthad by Iha City ol ll'la lnienaed trenit1<or 11 1984 SA· t38 Dwalna Wrlgnt, 33•8 w I Cotti M ... ena 11 medt In BARRY L MILLER ENOI· F2114'2 OllnOt Ln Anaheim Celll Auiust 25. 1984 at 10 your choice e cco dance with 1111 NEERING INC .• Callforn11 Pub11tht<l Or•noe Co111 PUBLIC f«>TICE 92904 · AM, at the Good ~UGENT prO\l•t~ont ott tri. Propoeal corporation, 17200 Redhill D11ty Pilot Augult 2 II 18, "CTITIOUI aUllNlll Thlt Dutlna11 11 con Sam.arltan Cemetary, raqutratnantl Avenue, lrvtne Calllornlt 23 1984 NAMI ITATIMINT ducted by • COfp()ratlon H n-h THOMAS BRUCE Each bidder mu1t t>e a 02715 TH-1113 Owalne Wright PtMidtnt in untington °"ac NUGENT former llcanMd Contrector Pr•· The n1m11 ana •ddre1ae1 Th• lollowlno paraont are Thia itatameni wu nled . ' . ol the Intend.a tr1n1l•r-011111 IC MnTICE doing buelMU u C C Ot TREAT BERTINE TRE - MAINE TREAT IAL TZ IEAQERON IMITH I TUTHILL WHTCLIFf CHAPEL 421 E 17th St Coale MtH 64&-9371 ,ACIFIC VIEW MIMORIAL ,ARK Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 3500 Ptclflc Vt.IN Oriv• Newpot1 e .. eti 8'44·2700 McCOltMICK MOJtTUAltY t 795 Laguna Canyon Road l 1guna e .. ch Ca 92951 494-94' 15 HA"IOR LAWM- MT. OUVI Mortuary • o.m.tary Crem11ory 1825 G1a1., Aw Cotta M.._ 540-5554 "'"Ct POTtCU 81L&. 89'0ADWAY MORTUAltY 110 Broadway Cotta M•aa 842·9150 Paradtae resident, re-qualltlad u required by lew 1,1 ANTHONY L OUCHI ena rUU&. nu (A) BABY l9 QOOO COM· wllh lhe ounty lark ol • cently o f Newport end mull hold • \lalld c-21 MICHAEL L. McCARTHY, PANY (B) BIO OIL. 51 ange County on Auguet • Beach Passed away ~1~~01111lG and wr.c1e-17200 Rtdhlll Avenue ,.ue~~l~:N.No BetbOa. N-pon Beach. CA. 108• ,212177 Wednesday A u aust The Contrector 111111 Irvin•. Celllornla 92714 81FOlltl THI 92883· malllng •ddreu· Publltllad Oran~ Cout ., The property being tr1n1-CITY COUNCIL P 0 Bo• 30112, Newpon 8 2• 22 1984 in a plane &e· oompty wltll tile provt•lont laued t• looetad II 17200 OF THI CITY 0' Beech, CA 921S&3 Dally Piiot Augutt 1. 1 • "· • of Section 1770 10 1780 tn• 0 .-• 0 \ltd Sec>•ambat 1, 1084 c1denl Age 48 ye8.1'11 dut lY9 of the Cal1foml• Redhill All8f'IU9 and II r:ar· ,OUNTAJN VALLIY an-• Htyat 57 8A·140 Calaf Mr Nugent wu r111 end aca'1e or w•o ..... pllal. ~=l~k In ~o-GIVEN lhlt on Tu•d•y. 92~~•n E111ne H•"'"•· &7 P\81.IC NOTICE I Nauve of Alameda. Lll>Of coo. Iha prevaltlng ally dllCfll*) .. al aup-NOTIC! IS HEREBY BalbOI. Newpor18Mch CA · th N tablltlled by the City ol °"'· n V"""1· aqu P-September 4 108.4 at 8.00 ,. president of e ew-CotlJI M ... Which are flied mant. machinery. turnllura, p M In the Covncll Chambat Balboa. Newpon BMctl CA '1CT1TIOUl 11Ua•a1 port Poc1hc Insurance with tll• City Ci.rte ol Mid flJctur•• motor vahlCIH . Building t0200 llata< Av· 821S&3 NAJd ITATIMINT Company , wu a I Clly, and t11e11 fontil' penal-~!:! •;0dntr~~~~· ~=1~9: en~. Founl~n Vatt.y. Call· du!i,":, b~u~~:::m,1~ :i~:-The fOllowtng penone are member of the Pro-tiet praacrlbad therein '"' lden0.. of I aatited . lornla ,,.,. City Counoll wilt Kar..-. E' Hayee d°l'3e~1~~ tc;'ATFOLIO, f I J I noncomptlanoa of the 11&10 r1 ..... d n..... ""'d • hotd • publlc hearing on Illa T .. 11 •t•t---t ~aa .. ._.. eu ona nsurance Coda pur..,,1M •n or ar1, lollOwlng " ..... ~. ~ ...... 128t t Wtetl•k•, Garden Agents AMtX of Loi Eecn bid 11\alt.., IOt111 Iha copyrtghtl ..,...,.ea markt, APPEAL FILED BY LOUISE wllll Iha County Clark ol Or· Grove, Calllornla 92640 A l I ter· tullnarnaeand raaldeneaeol lfademtrllt, lf.0. names FAIL. O N BEHALF OF~ County on July 30, Raid Jeoob1on, 12811 n g e e.. n d I H•d• HCratt. P•t•ntt. A c u H E A L T H 1119'4 WHtlaka, Oardan QrO\lt, national Insurance ~:.,:;:;~:1,:npr~•: ~1tant appllc111one. ACUPRESSUAE ,OA 'n11• Callloinla02640 Agenta of Loi An· Iha bid 11 by a oorpo<atlOn. ~;,ZY•~ty not;~·· l>an~ PL.ANNINO COMMISSION'S Cal~-:::~~~ 1~o;;' Thlt butlna11 It con· if' I f'I. A Ir Craft :::. '":.ic, '*'.:bl~~ :; ~;Ml~ c1a1!~: r~u~~t ~~l~~A~T C~og~o~~~ S..,tambat t . 1914 ' ' ' ~ ~Mdual Owner & Pllota ag~ on Wlalf of.,_ and ao1u1tment1 of My THl ~!AATION OF AN a.143 Tlllt~latement " .. lt'9ct ASlllX of Oklahoma., corporellon and wne tnar lllnd ACUPAISSUAI MA&8A0l ---------wttll OW County Clerk of Ot· Ok.la., and &ho .ctJve mot• tl\erl one offloar rnvet The t>ualnaae name uaed FACIL.ITY LOCAT!O AT PlB.IC NOTICE &nQ4I County on July "· In LI a <MC'dl.clJ N · llgn If the b4d II by • pert• by the Mid trana..-or •1 ~ 18. t 0 8 A 0 0 K Hu" 9 T 1814 •a ~ Ot • joint ~tut• loottlon It tAfltfW L MILL 8TAE£T ITATIMIWT °' ....n ~l!\t Proa to Mexico) eta.• the Ni'l'Mll end ad· ER ENGINUAINO. INC. Thlt matter 11 being pro-WJTMDtllAWA&. Publlahad Otanga eo.t of Sant.a Ana Mr dr ..... of 1111 general pan-TreMfaror hN ~ 01ner OMMd pvreuant 10 IM fJl•n· ''"* ,Altl'NP.... Deity PllOt. A'.1u11 11. 2&. Nug~nt la 1urvtvf'd by nert and tolnt 11«1M••· If t>ueJn ... ;•r;-:0 adj ntng Law. or IM State of OflaMTlNG UMDI" hptembat 1, • t8&4 his wlft Joan Nu.:r.nt tll• bidde r 11 1 tole d,. ...... ur ng 1 PH c a nrornl• (Oova rnma n1 l'IC~ S..t64 •-~orlihlp or anol'* thr .. yMll Coda ~ U.000 • MCI ) IUeN.M NAMI of Ntwport S.ach, entity tri.t °'* tMlneal Thi. bUll ctranetar '~ and Iha P:ountaln vanay ion-"8.JC NOTICE four eons. John A of under a fkmtloua n9'Tla. the :::.= 6:c,. ':!:",! S lOI Ing Ordinance The Zoning TN foOow\ng par.on tlU ---------- L • a u n a H 1 11 1 b4d "''" be In •ha real name T .... b\lltt .,.,,111., 11 10 be Ordinance, Zoning M1 •P• wlttldr"'1 u •general pen-l'ICTITIOUI eua•at T • T ... ' of ,,.,. bidder wttll • dealO· .... and tllhlbllt.,. on ni. n IN Mf !Jom IN pwt'*"""O op-.... aTATIMINT homu J . of ...,unt nat•-,.............., ihowlnp coneurnmatad on or after Pl~ning o.>enment and aratlng under the flotltloue The loliowl""' ........._ .,.. Hilla. Ja.eph A of .. oi'A'<1,_;;;.ttf'~ name)' TI1ureda1. S..,1ambat 11, are av1llal)le tOf publle 111" bUaln .. • name ot HA d<»nG ~ u .....,_ p 1 r 1 d 1 u , Ca •• prO'ollcs.d, ~. no nc: 1tt141,~•t I~,.!!' ~ ~ ~ ~"'~~llon:tr, In IRUD DAV CAA! 11 '71 &abar Eectric Coml>anY. G C f Tu•--tlllou• nema lh•H be uaad • ......... ---;.·.::'.:.' ....... ..,...., ""' '° •-· 0011.,nor ,., .. t, Coit• 21"4 'aotnc Av.., ea.ta rt'80Ty o ._, .... there It a curr91lt flt.tiill't. ~ .-.tar fa\IQf or In oppotlllon 10 1\1• MIN. CA 12821. MMI. CA 92127 Okla. fath~r Jaet'ph ~~l•tretlon with tr.. Or•noa DtM, Sutt• 1eoo12~ propoHI -...a be owen aft op-TM ttc:t11iov1 1>u11nu1 J MldlMI ~ A of Paradl• C.., County"41COtw tn caMof ~·eT:'~°""':1 23 1114 pc>ftunltytocloeo lffuf'tl"lat name11atemen11otlhepert· 211<1 Pectflc Aft, Cot•• brolh(•r Pelrtck A . of 0Qr90(•tlon• tnclud• Iha ANT~NY L OUCHI lnfOfmatton I• d••red. you '*""P WM fllad on JVly 23, ........ CA 17t21 P Ca and namea oi the Pr .. 1dan1. ma1 contac1 tN Plannlno 1114 Jn thl County ttf Of· Thia ~ 11 c;on . arnct\lt', two Secr.iary Tru1Urar •nd lnlano.d Tranlfat .. Oapatlmant at 87:1-132 f. MQe. Ftli1E NO F 141111 Clueted by: tin lndM4util '7'1'ndch1ldn-n. Mtm· Men , . MICHAIL L McCARTHV In· bl 255 • '""Harne end A~ of o!•t .. ~Cot~ orlal 5"rvi~ w1J.l be T~tty Councll of tl"la _._. .. 111tinll~O &Tlralr:rt• CITY COUNCll Ofl Iha ,_aon Wllndrhtlnt• TI!ll atalAllMnt ... ll9d S d Cit ot Colt M eaerwa ......,.., THE CfTY °' Dofll Matte Lynott. 111 Wltll "'9 County CW. Of Or· held at u r • y hay hi I • : r or .. 178 11 Von Karman 'OUNTAIN VALLIY Oovarnet ltr .. t. Co••• ... COun11 on Juty "· AuiUlt 2~. at 2PM at ~ld•'IO ore eny l111t1 130 !¥91'fn M~on M ... , CA tH21 1tl4 the R oat Chapel Dated A u11 21 199'4 Irvine. CA 8271• City~ llanact: Dorll M L.~1 ~ Mortuar'(. 15382 Clark Puollan.d ~•nge Cool ~~·~0?'•;:11~~\ "'"'bllatled Orange ~16 Jtv*'-' Otanta Co.-""Dlllhad C>anoa eo.tt 10 steps toa successful garc;1ge sale 1 Decide on dates. Loo1t II 1 ,1reno1r tnd '91 lhe 011e1 1no 11rnea 01 your s.te WHkenas are 11t1ueJty gooo b11t m1ny succu,1111 • seles r11•• oeen helo •n 1111 ..,•n•n11 1u11 1lter work Chect. '"' wHlner IOllCNI •n 11'>1 pepar ind w11c11 tor •ny otner l11ge event thtl mmy 1ttrtc1 potent111 Duyera away sucn H !11ra or commYn11y events Htve your saie run II '"st lwO oayt -tOmt people m1y not 01 ao•e 10 come on 1ny l•nQ •City 2 What to sell. E•••yll'>•ng• TP'\11 1\ ••efYI" "9 ,ou N••n 1 u••O ·n 1ne 1151 yet• II 1n •lem 11as am•Que .11ue or 11 or•no new • CH hi~ unusual •41ut< be su•t 10 uli a l'le111ny prrce for 11 Ge1 • P•d 01 OIPt'• eno \earch your whole nouse Looi. ••ervwnere 1no ~1 ttve')1h•'1Q ] Write your ad. ~re 111 111gguted 10 Gl•age St·• -ouka S.ntwooo rocking chair tcyt 1nfani. clothing, 1m • V1c1ro11 '" orrgonet c1b1net rreny gedgtll 1011 01 unusu11 •lems rock coltecloon pltnls Re1rHhme'111 3 1 m to 6 pm S1tur01y t nd Suna1y 123• South "'1ystrHI Yourtown JUll -t ol Maon 1na 2na UM 11111 umple ea 11 t gurdl Bl ture 10 l•ll unu1u11 lltnl Bl 111pec1l1c u pot11olt G•YI O•recllon1 11 needed Con t u11 1Dbt9Yr11tone -1T11ny people won I bOther 10 aecopher 1t1am CAllTtON Oon t 1av1rllH 1nyt111no you dor1 t r .. r1y I'll .. Every otem on the 10 must be on Ilana 11 ,,,. sllrt o! Ille H it 4 Where to advertise. Place your 10 where 11 wool be -n ov peop1e who 1•'19 on the 1rH -most peOQte •hOP close to l'lome Tl'l1 • Oeoly p,101 is rho oy 88 000 l<Julll n Co111 Mui f\lewpor1 Beach Leguna Betth ,,.,,,,.,. Huntington Beach 1na Fountain Valley -guer1nt111ng you wide ••P<>ture Ana w11 h ,the Pilot yOU re not paying tor wHlt corcul111on on Los Ange~ O< Anaheim Plan 10 run your Id 3'tomt s or more 1no "art 11 1 ''""' aays ~fore Iha sale so b11ge1n hunters can have plenty ol nottce 5 Makt a si9n. To he lp mai.e your Hie 1ueoe"1u1 mtlle I •aw l •gns • lrom c1rdb0ara 1na letle< Wllh. mao•c mar~•r A good toQA Ille 11 14 a 22 6 Plac in9 your sign. T111 morning 01 1111 Hie b\ll no1 oetore p1ec1 your • s1gn1 8e IUrl 1nd edO yOur IOd'9H lr\d 1ny oor1ct1on111116w1 Th11 tllOulO bl Gone &DOut • 1'1111 hour blfOfe the tall 111111 Plac:. y0ur 11on where 11 cen b1 Hen lrom bOtr1 l •Olll ot Ille llrHI by p1111ng cart lf\O pea111111n1 CAUTION Som. town1 h1v• ftw that 111tr•cr 1he placement tno dura11on 01 111r10• u re signs P1t1H check with yeur towns pl1fln1ng oap1r1mant or c•e•k 7 Marking prices: Mark proc.a where they cen bt ... n cia1r1y Oftoce • suppty 11or11 111119 varoous 1<zn 1AO co1or1 ot 111cl\e11 11111 work weH or you cen uw ma11<1no llPt However you mark 111em. _...,...... ""'· G•r•o• HI•• t re tor bergaon hunters Remembl< \llof11tever you etn t H ll you II hlVI to Orig blt k '" .,.,. hOUM 1na tlore 1g11n for anothtr yeer 8 ServlftCJ refrestwn.nh. Thol doean t lleve lo.coat much and crutH t lr·eridly • atmosphere II 1110 enc:ourlQn people to 1111y ton111r 1na pern1pa buy more V'ou couta even Chtr11• tor expen11v• 111m1 lol\1 donutl or the k•dl co111a oo '" t>ua•n•H lor 1111 aay wotll 1 lemoneae siar10 9 Display. Mallt 1yre everyth•ng ,.,, oe Mtn Have Cl •O tablH or • boerdt'-d •• 11111v11 btlWMn twO c1111rt Don 1 c:1uH people to banO o .. r ... n1111 you can t ht lP •I Vie one llble H • dHI\ Wherl yeu ~n tel ev1ry1h1ng eno 11111 money UH 0111y one CHh bOll (ton c111t or bou1 work lonel Ind mtkt 1ure eomeone 11 1pe>04nted CH h•l r 11 11111me1 A111nge oetor1111na lor a froeno Wf!O ct n nelp answer quetloona rehel lor lunch ate IJ Ch•ck your n~C)hbon and frlend1. •s.. 11 any w1n1to1o•n ycut N ie Tll•• wrn 11•"9 you someo111 to 1h1re e1tpa,_. With tno •ncr11te 1ntetH t 1n yoUf uJe II 0111an iom you, bt turt to include ttllt "' your 10 tuamp11 fhr .... lem•ly u•• neoghborhood atlt • Group ule• 1r1 t iot more tun too Daily Pilat Claulfled Advert111ng 842-6878 ! Rd . Pa;adlJoe Call! 18~ ,, 111101 Auou•I 2& 1084 tt~:·'Y P1io1 Augu11 • =*"':, tr:;~• 2&. g::;,-;:, ~~~~ 2& ....::============::...-L~(9~l~ft~)::.:...877-4923 '~ ....!!:..!!!. ~. 17~'··~~ ... tr11 ________ 1_a _t11_1 .__ ___ ~~~~..;...;,.;1•-' ..... -~~-~------------------.... ....... ----------~~ " --. . Orange Cout DAILY PJLOTI urd1~, Augult 25, 1914 Cl 642-5678 --------------------...... ,.... ....... u... . ........... _ .. . LOST 1111 wt11 ~ Clll 1o11t.,....., COUNT~ M .,.._, 'ktl' In Top of ltle NIWl'Olln' YACHT IX• NI Of lltart tin. • Wotlcl.1. ZI Dr In Lal ld'I CHAHGI la II_...... ln~ttOUll 4.._. r11 QWAIU>l lot M ...,.,...oecu~ow• .,_., -----,..._---., IOll ln1taller Calf 7tt W.171h-. OM LOST: WMt Coctatltl,; 17 1800 lltP 1*M ~ = J._.'r,f· lllT.. fUIM!me, G,UIV'I DIU -___,;~~~~--1Houwwt'M ,..._, ~ T.Q..M01 our famous DIMES·A·llNE ...... deme,f11;/T*':.': LOIT:W UdO .... Miii Cllltllera, Uc*.e temm CAMIAAI, Mlnoltt llOYOl.U, ~·· OOMter A!OIOOAATIHO: Ottlntlf TOYI, Molle, beby um-1UOO Ille, 1.Q Tn.te: TV ~neut.AbWlnlen ptrlll1tt att~ Ito. tsl. Nootl Ml. lterto brake orulw wtth Mo-brlM tab6e lamp NO. brtilla lttollet U·l10, tn. 9'nch*'l11. lat· Cat, tM w/blk lkUd ftr, Aptpty 1n .~'!",".f .. apealln Nk• new, ooet tt10 lloht 141. l-flPMd Contempottry table lltteoernata H . Miftolta ttty ~ t11. Ladtt blk ttp on tall. ~ on tweM 2_, 'T ·-pm M40 Mii fOf tao eeotl. Ml. 1...,..0 939. Alt•· lemp tlCJ. 9raM hanalna Clltntrt '8. Antlqut box 114. hitter, aftMtOrt chin, req11lrt1 m9dl ~110 Nol"°* Ste C4 1iMM'4. oea.nt. Look. ride, new. temp uo. llack rdntf oam •,. u . w 0 o1 end c•rbvrttore for c.tlon. 171-1'81 ~ ~+ ~ IOiUiiwr.iiiiiiDft':"iF.iGiiiiiii a NATURAL. oolOf wtdttr e..tr• .....,131. tao. Mltd\ll'IQ ottomen bfanket1, oupt. mup 92. Oe&M\ end TO¥Ola 121 . .--""""T-----iinrr-.t ---· ·-_ .. • ..,. --80 •1 m ..,.":'I ""'k Ga tao. Oecotafor queen 110. PllloM, ~ T· CMlr9 MO . a.. W . ~tor ohaltt -teeft. "'"-Y ""'.., "' • _... btdepread (b•l1•· lhltt 1119 M OtYfn • Latnpt 111. vaouum N iCS&KiiHli ,;e:plT dUk UO. "rm. WOf!dnl HOO... vacwtn brown, PHOh) t 0 •• 1 M.lftd,_.111~. ltuea 0.lrit20 . ...._.7. FIC 1kkot ndi9d 10 -'tt DeC0M ! 141- 7 ato. f!·:b• ~ ~ racit Metef\llaoftoor·to-otll= ~1Pltee141 lootct, PbOM1 t1a. ....,. wt~,.,..,.,., prop Color/Oulgn, ,,n .. 10 41 YAADI carptt ttraw ·~·IO· o:aun ·,~~. Cir--. °'*"IOI plotur•• '5·110. ro• r~r( ·~~ r.r:, lllllTl/11111.1-~~ ~~ ... ~ ... .,,. ~"-f11.4447 oolot '2 lr9:id, paid t1f. bl.ickd.,tl'Mdtnt1o = bedtpt'8d llO. lantana. IMne Terrw, c ti" .. or -••• -··--...,_ ... v _ ··---....... , Wood ramt mirror 1119,.70•14 tire 11: lnOltaH~.~t~~~ Coton. def Mat. tam pwta). =-· = Outod ONL:Y -..1M t~. :=; ... ~.-... , .... _ .. _ ....... _ .. , ..... _ 21dt Ml. MlhOgtny llfl"'"'I with ft.-h ....,, ......,._,,, a.tllf'dey. 640-4734. 12""°. -· _ -..... ,...., """"""" ..,. __ _. wood twin bed, Do.od .. 'V-. Adame and Plaotntl• In ., .... !1tctrto motor ao. I Am not :NellOl'lllble '°' WWI pettnal\ant ,IT ....... bottlent drMna oondltlon tao. Dlahtt t1· OAillii lid boott 11n t Coltt MeM. H7·S1S2. TWIN bed OOfner table '1te told«I II eech. MYdebta but my own IP-~ v.y fttllc htt t9COtd 19qUll'td ..W:. 110 • .,._ 14-11 lln UC), Wlttf tklt 111. 135. lol9t .. end C0"*'9 Caetttt• 12. New tlOor prOY9d by fM In~ In P*Mnt otc. >ant~-PORTITATION!M,IHC 12. 8aturdey only. aooo Chlld'• water tklt ... A!f'AIGEAATOA uo. •11. Detk •11. Chair... -12t. Good Wll"4.lt Wlllllm "· Oevte ""call 75'M144 lf3.1200 P'ltlOl•lll o.. leevttw1,Cotonadtl M1t. Mtn'• lchwtnn 3-epttd King water bed flO. Dreulng table 110. tab6e l20. Four wMlft iOOKKiiPif( OulllftecS· pstment. t7a.o25;i. bike HO. '43" tkete Table with leaf t'40. Heedboard '8. Ironing t 11. Drlftln9 toolt 110, TUllJWIT.... ,,IT. •Hkendt. Od ....... 1• IAOWN OOUCf'I iiO bOatd 110. Crettaman 141-6472. bolfd ta. amen rouNI Nft feuott ti. link 112. N.L l'loUrl 9d pey 413-1113 IBTIL,._, Ooubte bed IOrina end lewn mowtr 121· Grw 8EAR8 antique whit• tt.blt 13·50• eao-2713· .S: ~-=·~·~ tlnlUJ 100i<' KUPtA wt.cs front ~-= .. ~ mattre11 UO. ~•Pl• cetctwl3. lumper Jack• proventlll turnttvre, Qrt1t TWO Frtneh dOOtl, ett '4pm llturd-.yor Hem'° latl.. 1114 for •c:Nttctia-11 deelgft wort( tn ~ quialty deft.. tlblt With lamp t1e. CtH 12. 540- 1113 · condition. Dflk HO. wood NO each. Uqvld 4pm Sunday. eom. by cw -firm . "IT· bl*lenct ta1 praotlee, 4 ctey ..-. after lpm•t 14f-tlSO. COUCH, DtW pllld iSO. Night ttMd• 115 teeft. am---""'*' """'nt. pt\ont. tn.17"4. ,.q. 714-441-1711 fUI btNfha, ..iery °'*' CoffM fablt 121. End New unflnlthtd detk, ___ , In -.10 ..... II. IPl* 4.,_.,11 ANTIQU! lolld oov;. t.otet10.Llmptl3410. chair 111 . ...,. 11 lnoh oompletttet tray . MAA9LEconeei.tMt * ... ""... ·- w.htub boli.r 131. •· Baken rlOk With wtne btactc end Whit• TV tao. ::~0~:;,~: t~~ Marble table tamp • ••ltlltllAll WE IEEI JOI lllTILJMJllllDTll ~ :,~nt= reokl28.~U-13. AM/FM cutette CloOlt Md\ 4tntlquelOlldCIM fr.'dr== Menage and A•· ~ .. ~ ..... -..4-. ... ff~.0=. ~u:: tabltt Wooden ! 111-7001 . etur-rtdto l10.l40-202t. chal,. t40 taefl. Dutch 21t wsffle'lron and ~t.OoeftTdtYI __ ,..._, .. , .. " Deya Celt our LOnt dining table with 1eef Ml. d-.y/lundey. 8TUL ehetvet, Smith '-* t'4dl ancU Ohalrt, ...-• 12 50 Moult fOOd 1o.m-12em. * H. Oid or tnl•l•d company .._;. olo t21S)M7.aal •--of " ladderbeck I •\ ••• Cotona tleetrtc Rem-)'9llOw .....anted ....,.. Mt. .,.. • • 12 .,. c ~ 11. A.cow I. Mede IMIUl't, CWOlllG!ld --~,,....,....,..-=~-:== '"'' '" CAI tao. Mtttr ... .-. ' ~ baHfnttt •Ith ~WO::::.:. ~-Frontaot Ad at 11°' s>ereon for front cflloe. DENTAL TREATMENT chtlrt wtth raffia ..... , Walker 110. Highchair lngton manutl, Git i'r. .... _Ind lao .. ktrt ._ .. ,. ..... -YWO• ...,.., loutrl 2 bkM:U Anftltrpnon., toeuratt COOAOtHATOA.tNllWe. ::..~n::.=~ t11.f4&-I071. ;:,:.·p~~:~1ne. $S5 t:dolbeder1ttque Tupperwart Hrver (TH)l46-T20I ~.L.ottof~ non...moter, w/Omt&I ......,. vani.u ..._,,,.,. 116. DINI~ ti ...... and f chaftt 111 llO Md\. L.tddtrU Ind oduetlOnt 111 teCl'I tUO. lot ~ mtk• ty '°' I Md .__ In • kl!OW'ml aper poeo. ........, .. , --· ,,_ .,,. • ........... ,.. · ta. e Mt• &hepMtd oonoeNal non-.moklng = .uo ..._ Wing beck ohalr, uoet-'41. Electt1o ~tr. Oek ftoor1no ., -·· Ftmttand ~lone outenlUO. TwotuH« ........ • 4114 atmo Ml• In Cottt 1 • lent wood tao. Chlld'• 1 oldtr. workl good &20. GM cene and toed llOnt 111 nctl. Hendmtd• cerryon lvggaa• u . Mtta. ~ MS.2'42 1 to out~ ~"-='~= !~; 147·M74. 15 teel'I. 144 Ne8. • ~~50~ FtrbetWtre rottlletrlt CO~~A~UN'c:~T I , MoMay & Tuttday ror-~p'::!8'cateo ,._ 111. etvtr., dtlkt t10-DIAT bike. runt good llO. 8TEAEOI l30. Oltll 1 10 Mot'*1 Day plet• ~ !:;, '=" = ~ High aroet. net. --CAiiHET MAK.EA hablllttttve Newpott 14& Vlntege 4 drew 42 1 Mini bike. MW good tao. IPeed bf.t(• 1130. cnn-~ 1173 f 15 ~ 12.IO EJtett1c ey Owner M&-2147 • CARPfNTElt I u c l'I pr to ti o •. 1nct1 wainut ottlot dttk 547·M74. dren'• toy1 1. Scuba Mch. Or)w. Not~ a• knlf9 110 .OC.. end Contractor neec1a exp'd ~,, 128. Herdwood Colonlal gtar H-t10. Large &20 (not worlllnQ . Cd ~·10.taefl.LN-IULDT&TI... l'letp Wtlo can buld Wiii ... O .... IN-T"'"A_L_..,'i,..,,.A.,..i..,.,AT""M~l...,N~T rocker 111. CNld'• 1t ... OOUILE bed tao. Love braJdtd NO tao. Owne :r=• '71-&f: 3 or tnaroomcNhl!IOteeh Prime Balboa/Newport ttHtmtntt or .. ,.. COOADINATOA. mnn, pedal oar n,. engine with I .... &20. Evenlngt cell S30. T ebtH, ttetmtr "· de Superb • ~ a.ach locatt-30 yre. modele lenlorMwtnd non-ttl\ok.,. w/dentet bell Ind ladder rlOll•1 MO-tt07 trunk• '20. Kero..,,. tta. '4&-2832 Ouarentatd Income ftom OK. 7141411400 ~~ PG9' l30 Holly Hobby hooded . lanttrn S3. Wheel batrow VACUUM cteaiw, good . ptopeny management. = u.... rooking doll bed tt. OAAPES ta I dteW« 110. 4M..WS.. IUotlOn t21. Oltt't bike NEW Die Hard battery Low monttlly ~ UIHlllll.flll Mgoing C*• lox• of Merine 9M'· ct1ett 111. Slnatt MWtnQ SURFBOARD f11. Tape 114. em.it l)lt(el1o. Add· 121. Tennl• t~. 213n"4-M41 ~ ~ope111nQa. Pen· eona1ny: fUI or ftelt11ma. oen. ~diet end llne t&btt tao. can reglater recorder 13, Metal foot· Ing mtchlne •20· Biby batket and balla 126. tntt ... t ume ~.Earn lull-time For eophltttc.1td , .. aot .. 10. E.nallth O.M.E. HO. Wooden Indoor loeker 110. Uphol•ter.d "at':' ~~1fc;~. = 7twl1t. ~ .... = tlll P41Y.__E_!Jttw '104" 11 0~ to ha1>ltlt1Uve Newport 8eH ttMr ullbott Mt up 1huttett t 1 a panel. occuk>nal chalrt, one • • t _ ~ Y°"•-f. -Calf eot9• 8 ••ch p r a 0 , 1 0 • • 150. Llk• ntW !nglleh Large tarp 110. outdoor ptlr,onulnQlet10each. ~wtl1~'· ~ b:. ~ N!W yardage 50.-11. RE for= or 711-240\ "44-M11 dlt1 bot.rd fl, Many old lhutt ... tmllf 12. Latge Bar ttooll 13. AIM clock whlttt29 AM/FM ttereo Drut/tklrt/blouu JV ptnt . 2!2 vntt CAAPENTiff llOht. plOkup 1111111• wooden tNnkt, box• 13. Attorttd rode IS-· radio 13, EJectrtc can lo-...;.... btulu tenatht. eact'I dlff9rent. condO pJt,ready to '900fd & dtlMty muet haw • ... and ohett1t2-146. Oood *21. 631 Hent Ortw, ~ t2. Lampl 11-red .,...,...,porta S2e 2Ut Orq• Av.nu., mep. 111 phW Conet own tNdl. M2·1717 IDllBm 1teemertrunkwtthdrew-Coron• del Mar. 13, Eleotrlo knife 12. ~~ .. -=.,.ell Nn Cot1aMet&. toenarrtngtd.752·5212 OC**'O.DtlMW--.for -.,. 131. Vlntlgt mtdl-3. Smaltmetaltlblel2.Plc· 1291 111 3 112 ftntnclal ..._,._ ~ full..Ur!Wdom1•ce t. .clnlceblnetcutglwmlr· ture frtm•• 10t·t2. good or •or NINE dr ... ce.t Ille• Wanted--• Matwe CMtlltr neeotdtull out. Elcperttlad 'onty. ror t12. 8tvtril ctUllc FOLD-UP btk• 145. 20" HouMwer• 21t·l1. Half each. Phone ~1125· new 135. Two end tablet, f« amall tM.ttlneae-no ttme. 40 tu p/wk. Laundfy, ll'onlng, gtn1r111 ~throom llnk1tnd o&n Z..vth btactc and whit• drytt 12. Pottery dlltlet hardwood, nice 120. "*· 114> ns.1114 "4l-4llf 1pone Chaitit ~. caottiet f()bt tub 11&:.tao. Venety TV, ~ ucelfent 135 k-50t. Aeo«d plaY* ASHER, dryer, Ollh· Large~ !Nn'cr, r-. ~ . ---can & ftt 00Clldn9. Cal of antique, datelo ~ 8eeta 3-.petd btk• tao. u . htutcfey and Sun-watier, pow. mower, N. Large whit• doth T / tell ._..,_ kblt'I. ~ Mtwn v1nteguutoec:ww, Eltctrtcrnodttptwwtttl m Call after tam. Kirby vecwm t50 teeh. temp thade SZ.. M9tal .I ~ • Herbor EOE (ttl)7~ trvnkt, apotltghtt and motor end battery, MYW 90e5 PUlh mower 115 8-.d Iron bottd 13. Stereo U UfKd Crvtet.len Churctl. ~ -liiiiiimiliiiiii-tampe 13-141. f4S W•t ultd 135. petd "6 new. ' aprtadert15. 221 F10W9t eight tractc tape 1 15 ,..,._ to. 2'401 tMne 111111 • ., 15th Street (off Ptaotntla 24" glrl'I bike 121. TAU t1and.20tng ~ ~.; Ser.et, Costa Meta. Oft Boote C1M t10. L;1mP llrtilln ... Ill. A ..... N.I . t29eO Of cell pert4WN, t.m Sd· Mue1 Avenue)Newpoftleectt. 548-2429.After11am. Dr_.120 ·T,_.., .. ,.1-0rengeA¥enUe. ~roundS7.Man127 S~ln11t&2nd P~,tll-40M.tt.tpm have car. Gel P•f· 546-01" s.turday only de.it · rempo ne ATER OOOltr 136 Floor lnch8cttwtMContl'*1tm TD'tSinoe1141 fll.1aOC> • plew. SAA o, ..... 5~·25•. m. ~.g~~ model::r::•·c.-y :=. sso. c .. h. ~en-aa:-.1c1: 011101uno• moamrm•n GIRL'S 20'' IMX Sohwtnn r,oe-u:-~:> ~ &4e-1024. ~Ing · !9: 9f~1 142-2171 '4Ml11 IE P/T Min I~ tllCP Fut ai> =r.:.2.=. condition eactt. Aoll top Nit 125. TIRES 7.00.14 e P'Y o.r.. hdtptWS king ce 11&. ~~n~:ttwtt~ ": we pey CMfl tor mott-IUIA I• !!!!. ~-:#~ Kitchen WW• 21t·$1. er• on 8 bott o.t.un llue fl Qt t i. Phone . wl $5 ~ Ct1 NeYoo Oii Tiw Dally Fl'llot tu lmmtd. -... HUFFY 1<Mlpeed bicycle Plctut•l1. 7098entana rime. OOOd condition. 54&-1toeatter4:00. 110• Biby • ~.. · (714)141-1122 openjngf0twetktnddll-A*>' to .tee l'Mt- 135. 2 rollWay bedt 115 DrlVe Coron. d.t Mar Flta alto Courter Md Luv Otrt • 8ctrwinn a-... trlct manag«'I Muat ~ w/lldnt ~· wn. 4'xf brown f\.lr rug 81 turd ey /Su n day $39 pelr. '31-3701. ~~EtctT~t: ~.'::; 1~ip8:': lllJ!:2 IHI have a ven. '11et1on ~,:.:. ~.: 111. 78&-4111. lam-3pm. TORQUE wrench 12&. 18 135. Me pattt, wflMls, CN1w 136. 8oy'1 H~ 2 ... ~ki:2_Ei ~..mr f:'f;, ci: Stan lmmed. 11~ to piece w· 90Cteet Mt 12&. tlr•. tubtt IOt-$8 teeh. S-apeed 125. BoY• 20 • Cfllld ~ _..,... , .._.... 642-4.:l -SW{.,.,._ In 00 ~. 13 pteoa §i'' tOdc.et Mt Two vecwm cenntstera lMfy '20. BOY•~ .. 115. Mutt 11a .... own ow & ,..,. Emaieiy, Xlnt beMfti.. s.11 your ltetM for $60 or ,... In 9'1' famou• DIMES-A-LINES puf>.. 1/#t«J each Saturday In tM Dally Piiot. 112. 10 piece~" mettle 110 and 115 each. Sun 3x7 OlltQe ~ bench ~ f7S-27t0 EXECUTIV! AOW tHC. Mt 15. & piece open end lamp 15. Screen door 15. with -outr.t It~ $20. AOMIN ASST/SECTY en.............. M01 MacArthur # 211 wrench• 12. Auorttd Baby swing ta. Oold 14f.17H. Laguna NIQUtl 110/hr pd deity ~leectt (752-7411) pller1 12.IO. Attorttd drapee and V9lanot llO. Profettlornil appearance, 1815 N.Fr.nctl It #2038 f0t lnttNlew hammertl2.50.Flletl1. Baby and women'1 RATTAN chelr, l'IMtOdt good typing & phone SA542·72111CM gp-lftft••-• ei.ctrtc extentlon oorda ctothM 50c·l10 MCh. t50. Twtn mattr-. box 1 k It I 1 . D I v tr t •1-:.-~~-----,..., ,,, .. ...._ DEADLINE: 12. "8-7358. CUh. W',\4", 1" copper pipe epnng '25. ltallM Pnwtn-reaponllblhtlet. 8atary ~ ~In pereon • IN bed ISO. L.adlet bike type M hard 4k-e5t cial coffM ttble '25. negot. ~ ~to: ~ MAT -· Costa M..a MhmublllN I p.m. ThUredeJ CoetaMeuotflce 120 a.t of drawert foot. Crystal IWIQ lampt Chine ~ '°' ~ Monarch Bey Pma. Ste Temporary help, buay 2833 Htrbor ltwd 115·. 3blll hehavy 1~u01y ~~~k~~~~ ~-~:~CS-5~ueh . 210.L.tgN1992177 • =-~cMW:: =~ ~7~11e n e " '1145. 545-7215. 557-1212. OOOd phone rnannera Experienced waltreu OIL' llTll and front omc. eppeier-wented. Cell Karen Sanday, Aapat H SYDllEY o •••• • ~· ARIES (Mareh 21-Apnl 19): focus on health. work, ttmm1-You may be tryrna to achieve too much simultaneously. Efforts arc scattered central force is weakened and many arc concerned about whether you can complete assianment. You·~ show th~m today .. TAURUS ~April 20-May 20): Empb.asss on chtldren, vanety, pleasure throu aivina and.receivillJ ai.~· Han.dle details, rea~ small print, realize t at young. viaorous individual 1s loyal and will be a valuable aUy. Another Taurus plays key role -Scorpio native 1s willina to risk reputation. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Be ready for chanae. travel, vanct) and pin throuah written word: You'll learn more about property, individual in your own home will teach you lesson concern ma safety and sccunty. Remember recent resolutions concemina diet, nutnuon and health. . CANCER (June 21.Jul)' 22): Domesttc &dJustment takes pla~. mvolv~ v1s1ts, travel and scnous considerauon of mantal status. You'll rec.1vo '1t\• you'll aho act eall from farmlymembe~ who now wants to make important concession. Be a petous wrnncr LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Visitor 1m~s infonnauon that can be transfonned into profit. Focus on hospitals, 1nstttut1ons, orpn1za- uons, ,aif\s and the ability to locate needed material. You'll encounter sens1uve person with apparent "psychic abihty." VlROO (Aua. 23-Scpt. 22): Cycle bl.ab judamcnt 1s on tatJCI and you 'II know what to do at crucial meetina. Romance is part of sccnano a.nd so 11 chance to do "bta business." Timina is riaht. c1rcumstancn take sudden tum in your favor. Capricorn plays key role. . . LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Look beyond the 1mmedtate You II h.Jvc access to confidential material, you'll be nd of 1:1nn~cssary burden What seemed out of reach is now available. lnd1v1dual whost ideas miJbt be contrary to your own is very mtcrested and could become &ood all).'.. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21); You'll get to hean of matters romance it a~entcd ap~ m~ny of your fond~s.t h~pes. W1S~es <"O':'ld come true. Stress creat1v1ty, rndcpcndcncc, on&inaht)' and P.aoneenna pint. Popularity arows st~n.acr. and many pcnons will c pre aratitudc for your 0 contnbuuon AGtn'A.RltJS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21). Study Scorpio m for valuable hint. Some re ttktions are rtmo ed. roadblock to prog.rus could now become an actual stcppi.n.a·stone. lntuiuon bits mark. ca.recr nows could be ver) encourqina. Stick to familiar pound'. . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. 19): GoOd moon upcct ~~1d nh travel communiaatioalro~ility to put ideu aero '" intcmllQ&. cttatJwminncr. News af'a.rasfcatURd ->ou'Ubtc~uraatd by call Of mcmae. Gemini "ttarius pcnon.s fisure proman~lly. AQUAJUU (Jan. 2~Fc . I 8). Check ~tads. read fin pnnt. ¥1~ c deep and ttalize thatothmdoshare your antcrat m theOCC\lh \'ou II learn more about al resource moacy \ha could com from bu1in deal or inheritance. Scorpao native pla~ un uaJ ~~-p (Feb. 19-M&ich 20): Be analytical, 4isccm,mot.a\ , cb k lqaJ document E chan of ideas prov 1t1mulatm1 and a \'~I') "special pcrM>n" could imprcutd, 1n p1rcd. focus on stron alhanc:c, coopcttU\'e effons...abiht)' to tran form IPJltttnt ~ t •nlo rou ana "' to!'}. hatuetanb 3112 ence 8*ry bewl on ••• aao §pjRffOX( RVJSINd§ 11m IYllUILI bPef. Cell Debi. btwn FLIUL ••nm Advtct In >.X Matt .. I In Laguna a.ct\. Mutt be 2-4, e•t 3M5 EJtP«ttnc.d full ti"'•· Countlftng. 1815 So. 8 CMr 18 ~ Old, ~ CL.ERK T#i8T Imm PIT apply In perw V... Catnl~.~2~2" Clem. ~:.~r~~ :-'''To~ T.iS Flor1sta, 701 w: Unooln. --,,--,--,~--,~-::--'.:"'i &m 400-aoo SI per Hrt ~ 12 PM M . Ane1'91m. 11rSplrttuei ~ M-month Celt 142-0" neg. Cell Beth M4-t744 --,FL:::--,:OAA=~L-=DE:::E8-::l0:'%:":N:::E='"- vtaorput, ~ &~ 10tm-$pm L• a .. E.lcptr. f/PT 1CM .... -.. IUlll 11&11 -eac>eCta of lhop Mn 875-2415 °' f31-IM4 or NJ* lldel. 1u1 a l*1 .. M .... s-.ooas-.. LMi I,.... lilt WLYPILIT tim.. Good pey. Call .. _ ..... _ joioilllllj'ft'l~~~""~I Or8Ce. 1-47-3515 ,. ....... I ...... Found 2 6'dt ~ w/'#ht 4 dayl a week, tome dd¥- 1Mt, 1 me & 1 t.m. wu.on IMITllL WAITIDI 1ng ,.quired. 141-«ia & Monrovia. MS-M78 Aerobic Extrdee in.true. 4-5 nlghtt p/Melt Wknci. iiiiii~i!i!!~i!i!ijiiiiiiiii I 12.SOllV. will trU\. w°"' tnctcf. for bHChfront FIU/tm "' NU\ IM own area. 772·1&47 hOttllnLAiguntlch.Stop PAIT/1'191-fwnu IW'1 ANSWERING SERVICE ~.'~. ~~~ A=t ~~nl~~ .:~~ IRE FRE£ telephone operttor1, ofc tor IPP EOE TIMES Clroutatlon 0.. I\ vartout lhffta. 382 3rO S1 pertrMnt In °"' dOOt '° Cal', aulte C Lagune IMc:t'I dOOf ~ taJte APPLI ANCE TECHS OIUJITll pr~ram . Gvartnt .. CI 142 ... ll needed. Muet have own Experiell{.'ltd tn Aatall ::=n~ou:"'~ trudtandtooll Toppey. Collectlonl tpm . Tralnfnt It 0 ND Cock Cl ...... .u...i 643-2'30 Pf'O\'~ Potent to F H~ Central •Pa';k-D;. UllT. ll&FTPllm Excellent opportUNty to um l300 ~pet.-. manaoe collection de--For an lntervlft, cell• tcnbe "3-M41 Exper. °' edYenctd 11"° partment with t IUCCHI 957-23e1 ext. 1204 FOUND· femele bit ~B d a n 1 Fu I II p 1 -time ful company In the N9w· vicinity B·HuratlHB 84f.t021 port Bwti .,.. lllll&L .. 142-1'2H ASS£M8LERS Part time AM'a. t'*1 et FOUND fem l¥9r I .tit App I y 7 Im on I y ~tional ablllty I $3 50 p/hr. Ca 146-t470 Spn Spenltl PCH In MecGregot Yechtl , 1831 llllUL.,,. CdMTa1.101a P\acentJ&. Costa ...... Contect Roger Slrnoneen M. tu r. g Ir I fr I Cl. y ::---...,,--~:-'."'.:'"~-::::: ATTENDANT UYe-ln. at --.. .... Found gtey kmen. pink Olaebatd tMch« Lg CM (714)55343f1 ~t· o .. -... . =i~....:. ~: home PIT. 845-2357 a.Nral Oftloe "8-7141 a:~·~~~=:: f/IMIUllPU SHIPPtNQ CL!AK·mutt FOUND lrvtne terrac. occaaYonal morn• I NB AMI &tate frwe9trMnt ~!5-~ on YOUtl9 ll'nM QNY oe1 w/ afternoon•. Dover Co, reepon.aibllltite tn-_,..,...,_ white flee collar .1117 Shot91 .,.... "4M 141 ~•vd• preparetton or OEN'L OfflCE. ,rlday1 720-0$10 ;oumaa ent,,_ eooount only, I to 5. Li. typing FOUND ... "*1elWtlt 8ARTtNDEA Dinner hM & belanoe analytlt & .. and phc)Mt, MO-t4'1 AUit ahep mht & a mt bill actlw Cantine lmrntd tlltanct In PNPeratlOn of Tern., rablet lflG 6473. opening tt5'-4I03 flnenc1a1 ttttemente. ill ULll SU MM ••--... flt Hand1-on experience Mame ~IOed only. __........,.. I pi• ed ful "'°"'"''i, )Qftt FOUND MIO~ wm1 partial Olien• to ;.~PO lox ~ Cal tot appt, II 18 vtc of luoherd/Del work In proleutonal 1701•121: H•l)I acti 8A81N MA.AtN INC. , v Identify. M3-0S2t Nftp«t ee.c.h__.... ~· 12W.17'0t 17).4MO ,..~!of\ ..... "_, ~ilii.l;;;;;;;l;:;;;;;:;i .... -.J,c;;;:;;;;;:;:;;i .. iimjjili:i=:""' FOUND M Nd~ titter, N 9Yt11. MM114 I' M DOidw'I ,..,._, M :z:::-:o:-=------1 golden retrt1ter OC UTY ~M~ ••RJllml w/treeld• 125 ..... Dr • l181TllT CM M4 MM AICfWd Ou1•1tte lelol'I liOUHO Nec:fll'eot 'ttNon 200 Newport C..... Dr I I . I f 2 2 d e ---.iiiiftiiiiiir:--1 '°"'"'"~ an 1 to fipf'ft l"UI~• FOUND:.,,.... n tM d09, Ohh.lahue '*' to • mill bOa Oft "'*"'°" St. c M. 131 ... 107 ~nt'irE:wl~;;:"w;I WNtt ~BIZ .V\c "9d .. & llt9uWlno. ,.,.. , uo LOIT t lt t hm K ..... 1011d $ of Tust I 22n0"41-0i40 ------~----· ---- Ullllll I ILllll Int Frtdayt D:00..11 •00 A.M. 1t 1390 North Pecfftc Coast •• · une ~9!\i.f11 (on PCH & V O) (11 ) c 233 - '"' l•r I•• llr••l•r For Ad Action Call a Daiy Plot AD· VISOR 642·5678 lelt WutH SllO Belt WutH SIM ltlt Wu... 1101 ltl1 Wulff SIM ltlt WutH SIOO ltlt Wut.. SIM 8111 Wu... SIM Aatisan IO Anliuct1 IOU A..UUm_ _ All ttoPemo'• Dr>-CliNner• llllEllllEI PHOTOLABPRJNTER UOPT/IE&IPI llLUOLll/IEm llOIETUY mDllllPlllllLY 68" round oek. Claw r;g MAYTAG electric dryer, WUherQUdryerf175tor ,.,._ hlrtng. Oel"*Y dr1v-Nottttu, exp hefptul. 1 hr Need prof. for buay R.E. Nationwide Frandll9or In Need apply table, mahogany armolr. ovet1111L11ed ,75 &42..a720 bOtl'I 549-9030 .,. & counter pereona. 7-3:30fm 3pm-11:30pm photo&4~2424Mlke o.v. nrm In Newpot1. !r~ct~r;:'~ ~~~~ Newport Beach IOoklnO Thebeaehlacalllng-Sun·a bevettdmlrrora,edraw· Caatrul Apply In per.on. 1000 N. 3:30-:30pm. GoodWOl'k· PICTURE FRAMER Good typing & oHlce 1Mk1 bright hatdWOfillng lor department HC· out. Work ewe only. Earn er MWlng machine. Muat Maytag wuher a Frtgldare ~ aAll Cout Hwy. 49.....o« ~£nv~~n•Ho~7.!:'. Full/part time. call lkllls raq. Non-amo!(«. lndMduaf to WOl'k pan· retery. xlnt typing aldlll lull-time pay S200-fe00 NII. e7s.<>3&4 dryer. S60 ... 759-9593 ~tat vv _,..Tiii near o.c. Fairground•. bel. noon. 494·5856 Call Ruth, 478-3120 time In ea.tee dept. and and abfllty to WOl'k with weekly. Call Hank Pot Belly stove, circa 1895 Newer Wttl/dyr S250 Mt; Phot01Vla6 ;qulpmeni Exp'd Interior pi.tit malnl Pleue call i-5. 540-3De1 Prefer HIHperaona part-time on front office francnl ..... and oulalde 751~8 $850 650-1193 S/S frig $175 873-1800 or bu1lne11 ·lrvtne & . greenl'IOuM. Depend FIO 111.IVEIY w/experlenca lor Hall-IENITEI ' w I t c h b o • r d . vendora. Good orgentza-TOPLESS MODELS O'Keef & M.mtt St dbl •-26_1_·5_2_17 ___ ......,crr trane nee. 47~7022 If I / mark atore. Contact With 2 yan dally Q· Reaponalbflltlea will In-tlonal akllla • muat. Top S100/day, Pd Dally 'A! 18Cll IOl l S250 &42 2s':' C1a~•tlll IOil Full time. High BChool 1eo..92n elude: ord« delk, ftllng. Benefits. Call Cheryl, No •xP nee. 820-2583 oven • l'COUSECLEANERS: F/T, graduate with good dr1v· perience, fOf an lmmedl-twttchboard, cuatomer 642·9'470 Mon-Fri. 8W'I h~ dty elec Reflgerator(2 dr)S225, APP E Ji. w/128K, 80 PIT. Reltable, honest Ing record. Apply 1n p«· PRINTER: Exp«. on AB ate opening on • So. Mrvlce. running errand• 8am-5pm TIW 11• •IYlll S99 080 55&-974 Wath« & Dryer S146ea cotumna, 2 dltc drtwa. $5/hr. ac.rt. 875-2095 aon to Mr. i:uent-. ol Olde 360, mufti 1250. 1 & Calif. ~· Send and typing. Good com-E>eper. w/PO'a, goad drlv I lft &nUllGll Olhwlhr 1100 &46-5&48° monitor, CP/M, ot:*at· !XIC 9 US INES S ROBERT BEIN, WILLIAM 2 color, larg• .. r preub 00, ~ ci~.:lyto~=~ ~uu~tca~ ~~l~"'aWmPuaMt.. lllPPIM IUll ~!_~lta ~d. xlnt pay and LES 957-8133 REFRIQE .. '"TOR• • ,.,. cond ' ant:'.~:.~~~ WOMEN w/llttle girt nda FROST & ASSOCIATES, exper. deelraf> . eata . p 0 Bo 1560 Coat ..., •• ·z-.. ~.,., Conaclentloua lndlv . ....,,., · · "" -F _...., 1 t rv~ ol ..-.,, to cwe for & 1.01 Quall St., Newport s. A. Arm. 558-8373 · · x · • rellable transportation w/UPS •xP pref. Casuat 132 Industrial ay, C.M. Maytag Wlhr/Oyr. 18 cu 175, 650--1529 · · ... .,..u •or. x -_.,.... Beech Ca. 928&3 ~.CA 92826 E.O.E. required, non-amoker tmo1 he • 30 40 Whirlpool refrtg. Micro-dlacl,dttc;oflddy.11.985. manage l'lahld In Newpon ' PSYCHOLOGY need only apply. For ~r/wk. P $4.~ • p/h; to TTPllT/Fllla10lt" wave. &44-1152 Whlrlpool. avocado(dlx) M2-3181 Be ac l'I Mon· Thu ra Offloe poaltlon avail wi no Behavotr 1peclall1t to RESTAURANT: Counter appt. call Madellne, start. O.C. Airport area. P/tlme. Accuracy a mutt. Wutw & Dry.tr t 150ea. ·-~-.,...;..o_x...;..820_P_C_+_Dlabk> __ S30 ___ 2:~. Perm. ~ exp n«:. ~ M-F. workwlthd~t.._ help In Sandwich Shop. 540-5686 25()...(M10 3 on.half daya p« wk. WANT ACTION? Lootca/runa ltl new 846-pl1nter +~Must ltlon. Englllh speaking. $4/hr. Contact Jay, Joyce ly dl .. bled In group 955-1247 or 971-1739 Start at $4.50. Set .. own etaulled Ada &42·5e78 -8544 btwn 10-12 or 3-8 NII BO 492.2145 Xlnt dtMng record. Good or Kathey 631-8220 home. Expertence with SALES MANAGE.A Xlnt .... U OUll hra. 631-&445 reh. 8'40·8224 or BellevlorModlftcatlonN-reataulrlanwt 111111 pay /benefits EOE 6-5 Mon-Fri. downtown VIDEOTECHNICIAN ~ lfflll/llUSUI quired. Salary ptua ben· 751~933 Sola! Sales ------------Huntington Beach firm eflta. 85()..()536 SUTTON WAITERS•WAITRESSES Huntington Beach purM Entry level, electronlca INSURANCE needa p/tlme .......... Mon FOUNDATION .... osTCaaea• manufacture<. 990-&4&4 bactcground. Bo County READY TO CHANGE • ._. ..., • ~ 8eMoe Center Phone CAREERS? I dldl thr Fri, 12 to 5. 980-M87 011••• •--Paradlae Cale, 800-0 •Smalt NB gift mfg need• · • ----_.,..., C C> Ulllllllll neat n/akg aelf-startlng Al Smltl'I 12·6s>m Haw your own agency HNI 1111 heavy cleanlng work Newport enter r • Exper. Apply In person lndlv w/labrlc •xP to cut (714)855-20-48 with the best. Mlg. Co. has an lmmed. male/fem. Tue.Fri 20·30 Newport Bffch Tu•Sat at Fragmenta fabric, type, do lit• bkkpg Yllll 1 TY ULll Farmera ·Call Me opening for lndlv. toWOl'k Hr/wk S5 Hr 557-1598 restaurant 2445 E. Coast Hwy. CdM (Wiii train), phone. Flt or major O.C. store • .11.lnt Howard 963-4518 In busy lalel ofc. Heavy Pit mature Liquor Clerk. TllllllT O. .. , ••I Plllll pit. Beg lmmed &4~2955 ~~.22ca11 tor lnt«Vlew. Japeneae couple dealre phon411 & Ofdera, gen olc Apply mornings at Seute & broiler a mu1tl -,_J..()3 Uv.ln employment. Call lkllls & order delk knOWI· 2229 E. Coast J.lwy, CdM Call Chef Chemin at For exl chlldrena atore. So. UICI Ill dally or eves 781-38&4 edge helpful. Contact 497.«n ext 290 Coast ptaza. exp. Mntl. Cuhler/Food Prep-VOTER REGISTRATION • Debbie 540-M71 llOIJYlll IUU LEMAGASIN 549-8~5 aratlon. Opening & CI09-WORKERS '8-15 HOUR 1J111Wm ITIOl IUUI IETllL Ill.II SALES/STOCK PIT Ing ahlha. Mature. Sea-IX*· Pd 3 ttmea wkty. No lnterlof & &tenor avail--HUlllT Full/part time. Part-time, 2-3 daya p/wk. Exp. pref. Children• ltO<e. ctllf County Club, ~xper;;ec· ~~-0~· able. P9rmanent full time poalUon avail. Send re-SAV-ON DRUGS, Attitude more Important Petit• March• In Costa 536-8867 fl(?. app · po91tlon. Muat haw good sume to Harbor Christian Newport Beach. Call Ken, than exper. FERN'S Meaa, &42~717 SOLICITOR lor L.A. WllTll/111 drtvtng record. 751-1756 Church, 2.01 lrvlne Ave, &42·2211 (9am-5pm) LINGERIE, Udo VIiiage. TIMES. can be done In Poaltlona open. Exper. Lift• IElPEI Newport Beach, Ca. call Krlaten, 673-7710 UllWIOl llAlll your hofM Good com-req ~ In penon 92660 or call Patsy, IEOIPTlllllt full or part time 5:48--5237 mlaalon. 5-48-s.«1 Rothol'llld'• R .. taurant: Own tr.napottatlon. H.B 9e3-0088 an. 6Pm Mfg. Co hu an lmmed. IMf PEI• btwn 9am-4pm Mon-Fri 2407 E. Coast Hwy, CdM &4M872 Pllllll LIT opening fOf lndlv. wl.tti Good drtvtng record • ... -ablllty to handle busy mu81. Salary, vacation. llOIETUY STUDEIT·S Wll'Tllllll lor NftpOrt Beach motel. Ing appltcatlon1 Mon-t:'rt. aome typing. Contact benefit•. RAYNE WA TeR noon. Never a dull m~ IET flll 111111111 ...... I H .,.. .-s• -.. Booth Attendant. Accept-phones. Gen. ofc. duties, sick leave, Insurance AM Work-Out 8:30 to •-•L--I 1 • "~11 .... ~~ •---L flTorP/TfS.42-3030. 9am-5pm, at 3333 W. Oebbte.640-M71 SYSTEMS. 17835-M mentlnbuayamallfrlend-. Part ttme, lnctud. wknda. MoVlng, blkea, freuer.~i2116XU:tPM. Ml'llD-IALEI Coast Hwy. N.B. Skypaft( etrcte. lrvlne ly NB ,.,.. office. AM'a IRID tllll llwtl Muat over 18 yr old, apply tum, hOUMhold 1tem1, Mo.t ltema $1. Woman• -·"--••In for turf PUT Tiii llOEPTlllJIT ... -IO< now. maybe lull-time We have opening• for In pertOn btwn 2:30-4PM appllancea. etc. ooa IWAP llm cl°'htng 11041'4. Mena ··:::::::..-..... ·......, ... ...,,,,.. W. S7.50 to .,._ ...... t .. m•.,., for NEWPORT BEACH _. later. Lota of pnonea & bOYI & gtr11 between M·F,Ma Barke<a, 212 E. 111 Diamond. Sat 9-3. E.-vSuncl.., Of.-1 atulf etc, hMtlold/acceaa _....,.. ~7 •• ,...,,. ........ " ...,.,. SALON F II ti e UYll WITll m.imt>era. 831-8480 12-16 Y98'1 ofd WOl'klng 17th St. C.M. co·.-;.:,,..,a-:;t.·F·':'...:!.:& 415 82nd St '50-2150. Oceanfront, N.8. reg. corp. All ., .... U.S. . u m ' evenlnga & Saturdaya. WAITRESS/WAITER Food .... :=,......,.on ~ ':';:...":"" citizens, high-achoo I &4S~ 18 ITl1llll •-1••• -·--E t 1 & "''""If ....,.,. -Country French tofa ~ Mechanic experienced grad• only. Call WPM. 11.__llT we are looking for an eg--" --.&•-• arn money. r pa & Cocktatt. Mex & Amer Ctrtaa ••l •u 8AM-3 PM. Admlaalon& Hat. Naw Wl'llrlpool llght truck. fOf' CM oon-Mlaaion Viejo 495-3315 _,..' •-greulve man or woman must ha .... aotld aecntarlal bOnu .... Cell food, actlw canttna. lmmd p.nttng FREE. Spacea retrto. anttquea, plctur•, tractlng firm. Tool• req. Hunt Sch 964-2890 llmll.... for direct aaJea In the 1 .. t •kllls. Agrealw, penon-Mr. Rountr" opening 9&5-4&03 Computw, TV, hOUMhold S 10 432-~60 .ic lofo 14 Swift Cc>Yrt ~ & benefit• neg able, en)oy contact with Ml· 1011 ltel'na, clothea, mlac. Sat · • · · · · PleaMnt phone manner. growing drinking water & 1 Xlt -.. lty M Fri 10 3 .WANTED: Experienced 6-12. 707'1t lrla. Cell evea &4~1417 &4 588 work daya. Part-time Secretary Medium typing & geoeral 101t water Industry. peope. n _...... •• n on.· · am-pm malntenan~ man. NB,--------- wt accountlng lkltta, gd otncedutfea~5Mon-Frl. S10/hr P'U• comm. Call loraaecretaryCwholl wJant,•, ref1(818)886-5"30 Furn. haehold ltema, -Ra-t-tan--tu-r_n_ttu_r_e_, -colored--1En1t~eotab·tea•ot' •bed· 1o~:!'1,' mllll&.lllllTllT phone,typlngakllla&gd CM/lrvlne area. Call for (714)250-1811 to grow. • e plants, blk ... & mOf'e. - Fo/80 Ophthalmology. appearance. &42-4868 appt. 55e-0353 Canavello 844-4242 TllllEI WANTED: Experienced Great prlceat Sat/Sun T.V., stereo amp, toya, mllkgl ... & mllC hou ... Good TranlCflhlnl>. akllla. l .. ••••••••l_:~iiiiniMimn--11111 Tues-Fri. Pre-school. Huntington lull-tlm~.u:bJ3o1k0keeper. 6-2 815 lrl.a, In alley SI~ 1!9ty3 ~pmador.1 warea.SatOnty&-5. 1818 -"-v 11 u---S2000/Wk Beach, 536-1441 -...-un ay lrvlne. 6-48-2782 Call Peggy &4~3242 PART-TIME, Varied hourt ..,..,._.., + 11omut Garage Sale Sat/Sun REMODELING Ml medical: to lnelude early A.M. H~hy prof ... lonal with Wanted 6 more In-home Full time departmental Teacher a1at end ex-WarehouH & Counter 25th-28th. 9am-3pm. Item• Ind 30"~E r~ 01'9&t,Sale, 712 Blaon. (on U.'1 IEllDt weeltenda. Must have d• ~HHnt personality. c1oaer1 . We provide role In John warn: Air-tended daycare teach« help 'rat11e:1nc.ic:iO:--Lota of hOUael'lold ttema t 32"dbl al k 25" Jambor•) R.cltner, Cof· Oeys PM. Wknda. Shifts. ~=~1\~~t~~:'~ ~;.~mc!:. 1~C ~:~~E~~.!n:t1u:oi!~ P<>'1 area. Eng neerlng Monteaaorl Harbor Mna ~er!.w &4~n or 535 Hazel Dr. CdM ,:gnovox TV. :tereo & I !:;' ~W~ =. B:t Bltlnoual. CAT lie. W/B wanon) to aaalat newt--typing requtred. Newport worthl Call Carl at nrm. Sell-motivated, with School. CM 6-49--3603 n SATURDAY 6AM-3PM apkra.. SaYfn 720 Autot ' ' ialdered A 1y t • Beactt area &40-8950 751-3008 pleasant peraonallty WELDER Furniture houaehold Copier. Motorola VHF1GARAGE SALE 2012 Port con 11t. PPC .~ paper dealer In lrvlne . sought. Good typing. TelephoneSatea MacGregor Yacht•. 1931 Items. clothing & mlac. baae trana/rcvr WeybtldQeNptBdl.SAT. 131 E. 17th. ·""· area. Mull be depen-llOIPTlllllT UL11/•..na91 telephone 1klll1. Ex-HUlliRY1 Placentla,CoetaMeaa 1226 outrlnnerOr w/antanna, ohnd'I won--1 8/250NLY.1C>am4pm 831-8300. 8970 Warner dable. Contact Greg Entry leY9I an«getlc r• _.,,. p«leneed on a word Pf'~ .. Ctl al 1 Ave.F.V.&41-2500 HydeMondaythruFrtday cerctto'nlat lor p~":t!:,~~ cnaor helpful. Apply In looktnglorawayoutof WOOD SHOP: Fun time. ~:'ora,*'ligh~';fxt:'IGlant Multlfamlty garage _... • t>etween 9:30 and 10:30 b 1 d /d 1 • 1 s c-• ,..,1 • ....,. peraon with resume to the .0 hr woft( weet1 with Wood work exper. hef~ .. __._ & .... 8·1 ule. Kida clot'-. tools • ..--a.m. on"'. &42-4321 N~ !~~.peGr oodn at. .. I "" .. ,,.., 11 the potentlal to eatn ful S4 hr 964-2965 """""•· m<>f'e. '~ 1 ant'"'•-•-com ..... ., • _...,. Mal "-'--ta •• ·-~. .,........, complete app cation. • . ,._ • M ... Or, Santa Ana Hta. at·~·.-:-:. ""f\17m ...... --.-sA'T ._"''' ,.._ .. wan tvn.t"",COMmunlcetlon& l&LUILDI Contact: Mr. Tom $.400-$600p/week. ~ 5110-111 IA T .,,,.,,.. "'"'" young, attrectlve women '""""' Balboa tlland Pharmacy Fuentea, ol ROBERT *Trainee Guarantee I ;§ONDAY 6XQ.,.PJJ; SA l0-3 8~pm (TODAY) 1518 tmoobed•hlalfcuttl. c!~ 'L:'~ngy. p:~n~~· ~g~· ~J:; ~=-~~~111•· Call nd1 exper. mature l&lea BEIN. WllllAM FROST & Salary Golden Retrefver Furniture. turfing Item•. Set 6-3: 2.0 Kl'\OX St,btwn Prlacllla NB (lrvln•- B 760 8305 -.-.... I II ti 673 1650 ASSOCIATES, 140 t * Hlghdt Commlsalona Pu~la. 8 Wka on 8/31 baby ctot .. -1. Senta Ana & Orange: Dovet') 675-0823 Cdm 3-9pm N. . • 1111-..-llT cM..,r" El~~-_ ... me. • * Med'·-1 "-flt ,.., bd 0 --------,.._ ~ Quall St., Newport .,,... ...,,,e I S2 557-9695 1970 WalllQe-Apt 6 Sofa ,echwlnn 1 apd. HUGE SALE Sat 10... ,.1.-UTH F 11 ti t>u h Beach c a 92883 * Early AM hours 6-12 new 35 MM camera. · lllYW UT. FlllS FIT mngr w/exP. 1231 N. Coast Hwy Lag. aftr 7pm r5 u me, 'l, P ones, Sales PIT • . If both bright and AKC Male Pomeranian, 4 FAMILY'S furn. baby· Furn. toya, aquarium, Flt· Pi t · Wiii trai n type 50 wpm, ront offtc:e CHIMNEY JACKI T lu llOlnllY energetic, call Craig at born 5/24/84, ahota, womans clothH, toya, Sat/Sun 9-5. Chlldrana organ. gamea. ClothM. 250-4744 :U:~;:~:O ~aren , people needed ,;o ou~ Mortgage Co In Fuhlon 631-5633 before Noon. 1200. 53~7440 much more. Sat & Sun boOka. gamea, \oya, play-1301 Santiago Dr. PHOTO LAB COUNTER Santa Ana olflce-m1klng Island hH Immediate TELEPHONE SALES llllH 5928 9-5. 1920 Contlnental ground equip .. furn. 25t· SAT. 12-5 pm, Lg aahwd Buye<& and sellers meet Sales. part time, outgoing R~tlonl1tltypl1t, pit, appt1. for our aweepa. opening for organlted C ... pd dlY Chartt fund A ..... Nr Placentia & 19th. $1 . 2993 Mindanao Or. table, 1g nat'rl MC1. aofa, every day in class1lled personality req. 1 Hour flex hra 548-0676 South-Good communication. secretary who can work r~i~lng. Soft aell, :0 exp 18H t•f!u,~no.2_~J~ed, 6 lamlly furn, wtrbd, (otl Plmba) M ... Vwde new aport• WMt, new 642·5678 • Photo. 646-242• Mike weat Attorney Service 6:30 to 9:30 pm 550-8090 with llttle or no direction. nee. 1238 E.Edlng« SA gen "" .vv &4 ~ clothea. toys. dlahea, Sl'lown by appt onty: An-caps, typewriter, alnk, Dictaphone ' word pro-··ra HU muctt misc. SAT 8-5 tlque ...-mac;h tllhtng etc,2016 Port Brl-1ol Clt- District Managers If yov en1oy working w1tn young boy\ & girl' ond desk 1ob' are not for you, c0f'ls1der o career 1n the newspaper circulo tion field This " o un1qve position wrth doily challenges & reword•. Our o,,.nings tire Immediate Appliconh mvst hove o von, stot1onwogon or truck We offer on ucelt.m wlory with o bonvs pion and go• oltowonce We hove on excellent benefrt pion thot rndud~ ho,p1 1oli1ot10f\ insurance, liberal vocation or1d holidor> Condldotes must hove o desire to be succeuful ond IM willing to work hord If you think you ho..-t+ie quol1fi<otiont, pl~~ opply in person lo: the Dailr Pilat M.ondoy t+m.1 ffldoy 9 l I om or 2 4 P"' 330 W. Bay Costa Mesa, CA 92626 on equol oppot?vntty •"'ployer ceulng required, ahort--Li--••• ,....,.. · 3092 Pl 11 0 1 • • cle 780-IM02 hand dHlrabl• Call '" r-.; -""'"' b tam• cockXtoo • e r. po.. • much more. 1-,,...,,...-..,.......,,..----_,....-- Dewn at &40-935o ~ lorF homer OWMl'1. SPta/Tte $1000 Oy (213)883-7533 9am tit dark Sat/Sun ~i-1786 LIDO ISL! • 143 Trleate arm n1urance. , .,. Price to Sellt Near NEW tween 9-12 lor Appt evening houra alto In· Tamra;Ev 957-2....,5 blkH,wheela, parta-SOLO HOME·EVERY- SIOlnllf elude• mornlnQa on Sat Patrot lame Yellow-Nepe lramea. baby Items. mt.c. THINO GOESI 2712 San = 8r;, J'!~ ,~; Part-time, min. 4 1ttn1 Gaurant" hourly wage + Talk•'. sing•, w/lrg cage: 961 Son0<a 546-7216 Cattoe Lane SAT/SUN all Evtnrud Motor $200 p/wk. typlni. dictation, comm. Adulta or mature Sac: $475. 873-3800 Appl'ce.: Upright trzr. tatr day Mch, Dllk·Belt Sander yng pe1aon1. 553-1115 j oven etc ~t achool B t IM L s12s Har.ti...-.... 2 Hp flllng. It bk pg, airport TWEETY BIRDS: Young! clothing. Sat/Sun. 20351 aa • I• Air Co=-~ S22o: area. Call &42-"300, elk Find what you want In Cocicat~! .. ~1 !:rakeet1 Orchid, nr oc airport ..... .. DI-· 12" T-.. .._ for Ana"' Ad 113 Dally Pilot Ctaulfleda. .,......... .,.. ·-· -~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim••••••••------..-1 BIG s ALE: Furn • Soup to antlQu.e Saw S235, Mlecellaneoua I 9eO-<KM>O CH!AP D•ttun and Newspaper iluaware, dllhel, ml~. Toyota Pam (all part• at/Sun 9 AM on. 1&75 Good fl.Im, ctothee, plant•, tt9ftd C•ll Flrt1). 11 KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! Orange Av.. nr 11th St. ml.c hOuaetlOld lterna. MOdel OL 8.W Datsun Corner Group, 2 elec dryra Sat 24tl'I 0-3. 3191 Fin· '3,850 S.. DIM!S A (714) 548-7058 Kia waterbed, recliner nlltetre, Hunt Harbor LINE Add -813-1114 clothing, toyt 3279 a SAT 9AM-6PM 32.83 A.l'tZona Ln. Sat ~S 81kH, book•. misc Movlnq: Conttnuou• 8124-1130 MPM. 190t Everything trom clothee to goodlet. 1737 Pine St Diana i...r,. Ht a.or, r;::.,.,-...s:o~s.= ~~~~~ob.::•nch=. PATIO SALE: QuaJlty tum, Oam--Spm 2217 Anel'lefm typewrt1ar 01..,_ 6 mllO 6 aotu. tampa. redfnl,,g Ave 'e42~8382 fe79 t RtlOn. (laacti i ctlalr. atereo, mint r.tr'tg I Kg u bed/200 boat/$250 Gothard, to 0t ~ l ~~; =.-::: ~. book•. blk• 120440. m.. --..._...... ._ -b rtct cl'lalr, typewftter, IOta ,,_,"If• •-eo, porta "'' • of Clothel, llrewooel. 231 Hanoa, cvoc eno & pta, ,,._ .... 8 wtndowl.. etc. 818 t-a. "'41brlll0..... •l. 6tl C.tallna..~ ..... L.ota ot Goodiel. $Unctay Only. 9AM & n6t ~ 855 Derrtll, CM Jr----,r--...-- MoVED & REMODELED ~\irullmrmr-Fum-flxtur ... appll' .. fan-r ....,..,,,..,..,,,....,.~,..,..,...,,,..--- tu tlo-ml 1c·8•t18u n , 'urnlture, hoUHhotd 34.0 Meadow Brook 11tma, .co. 84 Sat/hn. MO'Vf Sa»; Sat/Sun 9-2. 150 Mount• Ad -Fur~lure, l'louHhold Pvt Al1 Auction ll2& I. 28, good•, mite tr..auree. t0am· 1Pm Pttvi.wtno ,023 CMytnne t.;1CJMI. Oriental, Euro- 8A Tl&UH 10am-? 284 "owet It, CM 831·2724 pean & American acu plure. palntJnQa. tum. c:oatum.. 137 -Olen· MY'•AI" L 4944011 Dr-. COMt DAILY Pll.OT/laturday, ~ 2.5, 1914 ca Wt got ttn brown, w. got ----__..:...::..::... __ em wtlttt w. got em cat· rot r'**!. You Ott• em tr .. 11 Call Mr.Md Mra. SCRAM-LETS HOPPiHMtd 8«·0113 FOR IUNNIE.8 ANSWER tualnn IHI v~ Bully 12' iOfa I i £Mc Prong. ;.an.n typtwrlttrt •12&-1225 LAUGH 146-1024 My grtn<tmother tlWays 2 OY*'ttuff chre MrttttOM ~~ht that people who w/Fr. Prov lta.•. l matefl dldn t havewr1nk1tacnu1t lampe l2711 all 873-7153 MY« LAUGH. 7' CU.t. Iota. belot & It Tennt1 mmbr9hp-Ftn Val rutt, ttoo. 87M105 rec: Club '350 "°'4325 =""=-=""""....,,....,,..__,,,.....,,....,,. Brunawtdc llatt pool tabi. Uniting 2 houHhotda: 5425 King waterbtd + Pict. book1, du., 1219, 80% eoml)lMtd, maior llJPIAfl• hMter tH. 1159..a..78 hdlttboard, bkcaH. OY«haui.d. NB 111p avail. Up to 31, _"'f"mo · Saigon eleph . Ming jar, conlldtr ttm11 $14,000 "-C H IHA CA 8 1 NET kg bdtpread & much PP 842-5102 171-13" " SOUTHWEST LIAllNQ, 8.Al.U 'DAIL.YAEHTAL Oorn.tk>,Of~Oltc ,,, ...... NEWPORT 11!..ACH LAROE SELECTION OF NEW & USEO 8MW'81 ........ VOLUME SALES SEAVICEA LEASING 3870 N. Cherry AWi LONG BEACH (No. Chtrty axlt-406) '714)111-IT• tr.O.lnl WalcOmt OPEN SEVEN DAVI s10097g.3317 more. ~20 20' DORY . Cullom made SLIP WANTED lmmtd. fC>f Cir TV i 150, Mttr Br "400 Waring eteo mixer, nrty w/84 JohnlOn, 40 hp, tetandtr 30' Nit botl. WI D1tau tl IT Sota l lovtMt •a75, oak ntw 120. Gold arm chair O.B. Bait lank, Fath, NOT llvMbcwd USED CARS l TRUCKS 'ff &iaun 2io z dining Mt, cof/tnd tbla, $15. Egger at• twin mat· CompUI. Trali.r & many (2713) .,._87,. ~ daya COME INOA C.At.L FOR Air COnd, 8t\at1)(492WFL) t;•;:::=..;._=._::;:,t=:=::::=::;;t;::::;:l:;Q:;; dbl btd •128. 774-40e1 tr ... ISO, nrty new. 19" xtru $5800 848-1740 ( 14) ir-uvwl ev.. flll llfUIUI. M7N ...... Dining Mt: hutch-buffet· ~~~.:,·v.: ... ·!~.,3and 20' SHray Runabou1, W.!!.tdH6!°~·iOCii~ Cormitr-Otl.llo BIL.LMAXEYTOYOl'A '71 12dfC NM ;;:t, tabre/8 chrt •400 _,,...,.... 225HP V-8 OMC. tr.ah n-~· ._.. Of ..... .,, ~ 19202a.ctl M2-0S29 very clten $800 080 ~t-9030 iaalcal la•t. 1214 water onty, xtnt cond. Bwtur• 17S.-7195 18211 ll!ACH It.VD. "71 oatain 758-9347 OR Mt, e ch,..: Walnut & SliNGERlXNo· Pro-549-2120 day a or WANTED lllp tot 24' a.n. HUNTINGTON BEACH .Auto.AlrCOnd. Sttr90 lelJI ~=-•m antq wht •150 759-1985 ftetlonal C>f'um Mt, e 83l-OW evet bot1 In NB.,.._ Wll rtnl MJ .... lf Mf..1111 caa(557UXV) 'fi n=-J,_,....,.. Si drume & 4 cymba.11 1595 25' Wellctatt Nova XL 1Wln or trade f« U11t of boet. U5ll cond. ~ .. Make Good furniture. Boy't 173-2282 or e75-Ml7 • 350 ChtVttt, m.,,Y ax· H ~7. W l:IO-OM1 WIWllT,. BIUMAXEYTOYOTA on.t 142-1803/942"411 dtatt, dr....,, l>c>c*caaa tru fut otfahofa 18 I ffft llUI...... 1t202 8wh M2-4l2I s 125. 2 rac11ner-. .. aso. Offkt Pualtue/ pr ope. ue.ooo 'obo. J!tZ oeoe ·11 240212t00.,.. iw..1.1 .. .,...,..,...~ ...... ~-. ~7T" ~0 ~5 ~ ls!Jtatat IUI 873-2505attar5PM ~ ~'i.!°'t:' lhOCka. etno. atereo. 4 4ftto;oGC&OL Ht-7403 18 p;c: group of uMd 28' Owtna CNJw tltc. l wa1tt. Boati epd, PP 720-0735 8md Enatne. xtl'adelln I." ••• .,..1 walnut tu rnlt u r • 19ee Sacrlfloa 2 o . Io f 1 .• ,_. v . '72 240Z. 4-IC)d,,,... tlt91, (=Q) 1111• I D 1-0803 980-0900 Unltl.5af...44Cll bralc• l 4*1tch $2950 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA LES 957-1133 2 O..t $75 ta. 1 Skid •ti I ' 080 M4....ot7 19202 8wtl "2~ Mtd. OR Mt-oak Inlay tbl, 120 2 Swtvel chalrt 120 tlrlJe .... llbt Mll . . '74 8210 Xlnt cond-4o ml--=,,,_--.,,,...--- 42 ll ea In. tllpandl 16 .. 1 Wt1fgg*1100 3 Ovarntta crulH r. Exit ugp;a.171 Honda ill-J AH new pnt-ttr-. am/fm cu '7YToyotaCotolla ~g:.'~21~=.crc.~ =-:.res1~1. •. ':4.:..= ~odk ~ortvh!~ ':.rr.':i ~r:.J50 Ml 1300 3Je!PeREA8kd .a.tofferM2·27•29Ytl r:a=·Am/FMC.. 497-«>0587&-15Nevaa tabi.$50.BoyablktUO. tl'laS)9. Mull ... to ap-• I I lap,P/8,Tlnttdgtw,bkt 78110Waoon.nct.worti, 12111 842-4823 preclata. $7500, call 9'199 .. ...,. n ... ti Aad Tli• )(tr• 1700 090 873-4193 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA N::,~ ~~mr~~; 2 Walnut dtatta 30x50 In btwn 4 l e. 780-9<475 lnttm IOll c.c>. tank (i5M) • '77 200S)( Burg w/atrlpea 19202 8wtl H2-ol21 wk Old. Earth 1oM.. paid with IWlvtl chail'9 + 2 ·a.. Ba)'llntr Cbn Cftl 21' 178 Yarn:i'ia no. "'"' t10,lll 5 Spd. 1dnt cond AM/FM '79ToyotaCellce S795 Mii $386 974·1519 1tde Cflalrt coat U60 flybdg, 4 Mo nu, loaded gru1, xlnt gu ml, muet ORANGE COAST CUI 12800 "6-4107 Alrcond,AMIFUCUI, aac:rlflca S275 751·1103 frtt •Ilg, mutt tall. ttll. '575. 4)9..2525 atria JEEP RENAULT '78 510, tan, am/tm, 28 ExtraSharp(20lZHT) o:n\b~~O:= or 780-0157 '42.000 BO 848-2143 •81 Suzuki oaa&O ttrett 2524 Harbor ltvd, CM mpg aasoo nnn. Lv mag 8 ~OY Oak bdrm "400. ttaltan Bttut Exec dtak1, cred· PAITlll WllTll bike, xtnt oond 75 mpg (714)649-8023 Brad 55t-4221:84~MI! 1~J° Bwtl "2~ brua/gtu1 dining Mt tnzu, lid• chra, ni. cabl· 10' Tll.IU fl.n S750 845-0490 4 ftttl brim A30 '78 Oateun 2tOGX $350. Cutt ou: tofa MC· nett l mite ofc aqutpmt. 83 tow hrt. llkt new. Pay •93 Honda 200 XL pert 176 G1V PQu HTCHBK '7tM~ tOOK ml,;~ tlonw. wall unit, cofftt Mutt Mll-80 492-2145 NB ellp ren1 ('300 mo) cond .. saoo. 873-3381 4 whetl drtw uue2~l with Air Cond (M3WZP) nu ur.::f=·:l7021 tabt Mt. Xlnt 643-2241 Remington Rand alee axch for txtantlvt boat $29h 11~ On Anne Wlngbad( Chair typewriter, 1550. Port uMM3-0007 873-1974 H_9n~~4~w;:~ BILLMAXEYTOYOTA BILLMAXEYTOYOTA '81 ToyotaCalca 112htc:r.tary (Im~ Smith Corona, alee IMta Lli TOH · 19202 Baach 982-0829 19202 9aac:tl 982-0829 ~=~oJ:;'i9· S75 Gtw ':'fi $35 w/cu., 1100. Both Ilka ,.i H '6' iii COG NI ••ttr ..... ll20 4x4 1873 Scout ,.._ '14 300 ZX 2 + 2, euto. t '6181 =~5a1:4 ~r.r •75 }""· 548:2971 uS: oe'o~982·9715 • 173 ooao; 20' n;una; • ..Vtaapokt~. 11,.., '<t.~~s0o3KP~· BlUMAXEYTOYOTA On matt, box aprg l trm. P!1tH/O!tttl !W 14' LASER #58030. Grea1 r;:ooo~ cond. =$2'm :'::1:r'f' W 883-1400, H 844.itea 19202 Bw:tl ta-oa29 Qd cono. 1100 catl'I IALowbr15RaA-se~ oond . new 1811• + xtru , '75Toyotac.lca lrvlne 551•5948 Sund•y . Walnut l200. 759-1986 MUST SEE 11000 080 ·n Toyota Sunradtr '14 Toyota 4x4, wM, 8700 Very Sharp.Auto. Ptai.r. lllEitmlA'S som COllTY IOTllS @. 11u••- 11• 1&11 IMIJ 4'moCl.L &2't • tu .,., mo TC>tt 112.0 tUO ~•12.000 __,\llllWMot @ 11U VllllN IL aomoCLL . U2t .... tu.,., -T°' I 14,12t ao CA,. $14,M &2000 CAP '9ducllon ~"84080 m 11U •nLSE "rllO~l. '217· raa '*mo TC>ftl11.040M CAPS11.500 '500CAP~ ~152te78 Aaa/Bol> 1n LeUiinQ Outen Btd, trm , oa11 K~~~net,..:int ar· John 875-3719 Mint Motor .=::-<MIT JE> ~~~co;:..~~~~ ~ Air Cond :fWL> hdbrd, n9W matt & tpgt 090 "'7"'5732 noft a.~ 50 18' Hobi. Cat, w/trlt,g,..I BILL MAXEY TOYOTA T:=:c to'I ~ BILL MAXEY TOYOTA S 1151080 780-1807 • .. a ....,... cond & run Sac:. IM~ 19202 Beach te2-0l2t 1n&a • 19202 Beed\ 112.o&a \8711 Beach Blvd King bedroom Mt with two I a .... 1130 country 11400 752-7 t '77 GMC at' Of*1'at1 '71 T~ pid(up • ' • • • .,. '83 SUPRA. IOw ml. red a Huntington Beech ntghtttandt 844-1152 x t t 1 . 22' C•tallna '79, loaded. Trade 475 E 17ttl St CM Stereo. (1X28S20) blk, mint cones. ~Tech (114) 142·2000 /... • .. 7215 exit cond, mull .... 7"" " • .,,. ·~" "'S"-" 12988 remotaalann,xtru$12K _ Single btd, br ... hdbrd w . -HLN\ obo. 52• ...... 7 ,........,.., or_,,,.. • ...., BILL MAXEY TOYOTA ;aa ~ ...._,, Obo us-ee7e n0-1835 ~ c.mper ta • eofa 175/obo, both TV ..... 28' Sou Cou s '78 Tioga Mini MotOf· 19202 Baech 982-0829 rr.: •••• . .. VAN LTD -.-.. •75 lmm•c. 14300. good cond. M0-2865 1t 1 t••z th t allboat, home ~O'Mt. xlnt cono. •51 ,._,., ...i..a.-up. 350 HI .. LO "'"""'""-·S.,,..,SPO'""" 175-1512or175-t~2 I trlt ,.. ult eond, many utru. Lo mt t12 100/obo ..,. ... , ~ 177 a "~ Sofa beaut brocade, Ilk• 16'' fo:iliS: &ior '9mot• U•;OOO. 714-37t·51H 714/ni 1ou' • to;. APant q. & pacu x1t rn/bm rtblt cal 17~USO. u. 5* •ii vw Sdn. ,,.. s1a5 OBO eao-a133 -saoo obo te3-51t2 ang!Mllffler sy1t Owner --=-=--.....,,..---11ero TV. 3 mo1 old 18' Hobie Cat Uk• MW, Salt 22' e1 ... A '78 Titan ·7• T--SR5 moving '3000 obo '79ToyotaCorole (JZCl75) 10 1U0810 to WalnutOlnlngMt w/Totl'llba VCR, ~r race rMdy. 11700/obo low mt deluxe ,13 900 v .,,.,.1 ttar.o, 1575-5015 SportCoupe beaold10*1\.t/11/14at at25 842-4588 ultd te75. 720-0295 842-9558 759-110-4 or 84<4-87zl radlala, xlnt cond. 11700. I • tUS Sharp, Air Cond, AM/FM, 2014 Herb« IMS. CM Wht cotton I ' couch Bttutlful 25'' RCA Color CAL 25. 1/3 partner. Ntw A t ti .... 844-1805 •• I Fact alloy wT\lt (OIMYPX) vw wta, front & ,.., up- w/matctllng chalra, good TVS148.3yrwmty. Ooen eng, xtnt cond, Npt lllp. a ... ft '80 DATSUN 4x4 pit p/b 'MHIUllYll 83411 holst..0St25842-3720 cond •250 '754-1340 Sun. TV John1 846-1 tee Call 648-3183 star.a, dual eatbt & mor• I 135/mo, 14 75 dawn. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA TODAY'S (:ROSSWORD PUZZLE AC-.Oll S7000 obo 497-7374 Cloltd End Commerclal 19202 BMCh "2-oeat WE DlllE '81 QMC ¥•ton P.U. with Lttae '82 TOYOTA COROLLA ......... ~ d btd good COnd ALL-SAVERSLEASING AMIFMCu18tweo ..... ll!~~~~!!i~l!JI ~~ oaci 84&-1114 . (714)432-1977 (tEOR740) L ... Wu '81 QMC Sttrra Clatlc '78 Aeco<d LX Mint Mill BILL M~OYOTA new mtr. Cemper tl'letl & Witt wt\sle.Off to med act1 19202 Btach "2-0829 UULll tlatptr. Many xtru l 2832 Boa Vlttll(CM) ::, ,.,,.......==~,...,--~=___,.. AU lf llUILJ bentftttt Pnc:ed to Niii •79 CVCC automatic air 711 TOYOl' A COROLLA fNULINLUll 840-973& cond SOK ml SHARPt . SR-5 ------~~ *** 1974 Ford Trucit. F250. $2895 715YBT 0 527-9094 AIC, S1~DKV208) ... ..., _____ _.. 11 t fibOMXbo llXN. Aln, loedtd, moOIYoof, -'rt wNt, IO IN,~ OOftd •1•.600 M0-'431 an.-a. 'Ml 'U CAOILI.ACS Sttlda'MI C60Md End • Comm'I "-ALL-&\VEAI LEASING (114) ~2· 1177 ---------- NABERS CADILLAC 1 CONMEi.l CHEVROLET ...... ,. , '~·' I a I I" j .. '" S4b-1 l 00 ~ llu ~ordoba . f uiiy equtppad 12.tao. 142-0112 Aft 4PM M r.n t '85 Mldtang 2•. MO, nde body W0111, p/a, ,,... Xlnt '1400 54a..$ 154 ee Mustano Futbtek l4000/off• 171-2050 LARGEST Sa.ECTION ·ee Mustang, ldnt canes. of lal• modtl, lo.w ml!Mga pit. .,to trana. nu tit• CadJllaca In Southam $4000 OBO 914-4087 Calltomlal s.. ut today! 1Jlft•1110 'llCalSpecMUMang.~ .v IOw. 1 owner. tine running aeoo Herb« BtwS. 12soo1obo S4a.a 11 COSTA MESA •• I--------·-MUltang. VI, auto, am/fm c:.., rune great < .. \I >II .I .. \( : '1111.111&11 Tll-1191 A TRUE SPORTS CARI (OMZHZJ llHI *'** '1111111 letUI EconomiCal v-e _... low mllat(tFMS108) 111,111 ••• '111mW 54-1412 an. 5 - '79 MUST ANG p/a p/b ale radio, 4 cyc:t, 11d lhtft. 2S ~.13196.648-9581 ~~==~ l~O;W::•::·:;:Mi:·:;s.~ ... .:H;::lt~ OO¥era,Cwatt•Tape 1ii!ebTU§§supr.idn Ptayer(tOFJaea) AW Cond •• CNlae. Poww' 111,111 ~(32.atlt) **'* llHI '11 ILlllOI :n=~~~ ll&lllU FuQ Po.r (1CZT907) ...,,,.. CAA 114~111 W&ll EASING .... USEDCMStl ES '12 a.All OllPI 18401 8wtl Hunt 8ch L.-tnar Seating .,... 84 7., 707 c:..a.tta St..o T..,a ltEDM-447) '79 ~ Bt;hm. mcm-114,111 IOadtO. f\ill pwr, UC * • • $4450 Obo P9 179-2811 '1211.111111 1182 OLDS OMEGA Tl-~ ~~~·,,.,.. Trie>'8 b&ac*I A tN9 9POf\I 11211 cat (840090) 111 ... 24 mo/24.000ml Nrv<Xln- , 1nct IUb/prior NM *** 'MIRl.U ConvertltH9 t~. MU rww (807309) 121,111 ••• '11 .... IN Auto. ltaltltr ... 11no. luggage radl: ( 403214) 17111 18401 Baacfl Hunt 8cfl &A7-1707 PIJt?!t lilt '74 ttdOld m Automsllc,AlrCOnd, PIS. (814MIK) 122N Bill MAXEY TOYOT .A 18202 8tadl M2-0129 Padac Ills ITADIUM PONTIAC 1 Flow 53 -·ialtpeter S4 W911 ll\ef maii hne<· 69 197 l Oerb)' PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED •11 ROLLS "OYCE 3/4 ton, All. 11.1"8 gd ·51 HONDA llLLMAXEYTOYOTA 13250 75 Wavon. or- 811Ytr Splnt 91ectcl belge, 501( Mt.12200 te0-7285 Ex1rt Clean, Air Cond, 19202 a.act\ te2'-0829 Mae/brOWn ln1, am/fm, ltL----.-..... ---.-3-l-. 18,000 mllte, Ilka new ,79 Dodge~ T Stereo Cua Lo Mlltl Trl xlnl oond Ml-tl21 1'11nn1411 • STADIUl\ll 8 emp1oy9r 10 -Grand• AZ 14 A1hlrl1 15 T1blt 1Cr~1 18 Unpaid 17 SINI IOIH'c. 18 0rd9'1y 19 Dub 20 Dilput• 10Mng d9Vlca 22 Plf* money 23 Btu. Joie• 24Glummt1t 28Wlldlh"P ol A1l1 29 Cone.it 30 Monet., 31 Mongol 33 Holldl)' tlm• 37 Pltmlrn 311 Mlno1' r .. lm 40 Chemical compound 4 t Grown-up Cul> 43 -m:>Dlt 44 Succore 45 A.i1ttv. 47 lorn Fr 41 Goblln1 5t Shac1t1 I 14 11 IO 11 • • • ct'll np -Ald09 llO Clrtlat 81 Ktn1t Oii)"~ l)Mn 82 8N'l or Kint 83 o., unfa wil• 6-4 Pool 11101 85 Oltcerd 811 M1~tout 87 Lu11rou1 DOWN 1 Wori.. group 2 S. l·1rtou1 3 "Wfll, I'll b9l" '4 Sco•l1nd 1 S.n - 5 CI0\•11 Nlntr 8 Tun>1 lkln 7 Mou11111n pr•f 8 Suptll'lor 9 P'llt jtl 10 Coa1MC«1 11 KnO'vlng 12 Tr•ll.,1 13 Skttl'ul 2 t Hart-of cr1tt 22 Attlr n1t1vt 26 GIY9 11'19 9)1 28 UN ,.dlrll 27 Ar1u n1 1nc111n I 7 28 Llwye< 1bbr 32 Attacker 33 HOMY•r 34 --Instant 36 C91ttng 38 Otll«wlM 34S.IOfNles 39 USSR n•tt\'91 42 Enum.r1t• 43 Sacred eono• 45 POOfly m1dt • • 48 Ump'1 cell 48 'Ou11 49 Vin Dint I - V1nc• 50 ComP9Utor 52 Caty• p•n 55 SIMll p..c• 5&Wl~I~ 57 Wlf ... l bbr 58 P't«•t out llO Waxm111tr (13'2t) Attventu;.,on (018084) • ..,. 1171 '76 voevo 241 wagon 'folrnpa1aFC\IXitlt1i758 We re New •11 ROLLI AOYCE .Auto, Pwr Steer. Air Cond, S4ae& 178 IPli'!'re. 2 ilPd. ,..., 12400 080 amlfm. 4-146-2231 We re Dealing Sliver SpWlt. Brown/tan, CNIM control B'O whit & BILL MAXEY TOY OT A pil1ona, battery & good apd, all ~ M&-00~ 1-.7-8-~--.--ldn-t_cond_ 714-385-1919 ~~::...~~o~l1:)000 Tlrea, Extra tank, Tu1one 19202 BMch 982-0829 "'"· runt "'1 HOO '1t Vow 2'4Gl. xlnt cond 11500 oeo' Must ... s.i..-s..--.....1• .... MEACEetS:eENZ (lT03t 2i7.. Jgur l 548-U9e S&SOO. Cell 752--27~ ~5-2835 lelty ~ -,_,... 1901. 2.s a1.ck1e1ack. BtLLMAXEYTovot~ 1trxke 12 c;una;;. 8k Velb!~ HU!filiii••••••liiiiiiiiiii•••• ... liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii chroma whetla. many ax-19202 8aech 982-0t29 or~ mt, 1tortd ror t yra, 1ad\IWMXiaft ~':: ~O:~Joes-BEHZ '78 Courier Pickup ~ta t~~:o: kt!:' M-:.C'! Priced t=908133) IOOSEL llut/~ 214 AM/FMC.... Prlctd tC" on.r 833-&037 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA mtltt. loaded (1 1) Mii (~2) irc .. u 1 11202 BttCtl te2.oe21 ••a MERCEDES-BENZ sa ...... 5 O 0 8 ! L . BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 1tll IOO Ill 'M BUG. reblt ang AMG .Btack /blaek , 1t202a-cn 982-0829 Bia<:*, Palomino latthtf, 11000. 754-0845 r~~) mlltl, loedtd '78 Dattun Pk*up P7 tlrtt, 10,000 ml, One '17 SOBCK, cletn, rtblt, *83 M@AC!OES-IENZ Short Btd, (IL3825t) owo.r Every avattabi. nu uphl, mua1 _,, now. 38081!L Black/Tan, only 12W option. Mull Mt to ap-S1750 080 te2-8129 1a.OOO mltta, perfect BILL MAXEY TOYOTA prtclatal (4712) c.11 Mr ll8 POP-TOP CAMPER condition ( 1HSX949) 19202 8ttch 982-082' Ken Elltgatd. Eng In a 11 Int I 2 7 5 0 * MERCEOH-IENZ Ltt .. n llLlll1 TITTLI ... , e.&2-s.ce1 3: =· ~Qj:.; Clual~t totl UO·llll '69 vw Bue gc1 ~ MW(~ 1) '85 PACKARD. "'"' oooa. * '69 230. 4 dr. OU eno nd• wor11 l900 •83MEACEOES-8ENZ 51,000 mllta on anotne ale at•to. 4 apes runt '70 VW Futbtc* dalln. 3 300st> Turbo Dlttal. nlWUf'• llOO ltt-7iae great. tmmac In-spa *1te>, "'"' ;mt .Anttlttolttlblactc. 21,000 A ._I :M:t.. 11de/out. E1tat• u l• $1200, 848-2211 mllu, lmmacutattl •-·~ $4950. 786-3051 1 72 co-... .-...... 4 -.. (10331) ............ -. -· '*'° CL!NET ID llll It LIDIY 11U11 $,&x, ~· 52~-6;:'· lmla~/~n9 • .J!n(ly SIOO ; 112 S20l 51Pd. Wi. rtld. Mint• cond *22K 533-Q42 ia--------------------------•-. -...., OOSI) -•~ •• ., -• S • ..,.. 74 VW BUS ratlft ang. •12 l"IAAARI sot Qtal -"'· "vn .... t l,,._, '10 MBZ 280SEL Ortglnal good cond, ttareo ~ alack/tan, 11,000 mllta, 842-1780 owner. Fully factory $2950 obO 496-7481 {Jfl/"',,., SOUTH COUNTY MOTORS VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 44S.aoo new, toadtd '74 2002. Blua/aM, runt aqu1p'd Lt blU. 17200 ·79 BEETLE CONV ,,. 11 12 13 (30831) great, nd1 paint . c.1173()..9293 .... t 1 t _.... ~i.K ml 'ta MA4ERATI ... PORT 13200/0bo '41-1513 .. ,. • n ....,...,, ..., · ~ ...... \ ... ~OF $1 0 0 0 . llactt/tan on~ 20 ooo ·72 280SEL 4 a. good 80 Orig ownr 87f..ltt1 mfl• l'St,aoo tl'KTt7e) '7t S20I Mint concU1K ml cond, ale. p /a, orto .80 J•tt• w/opttont. *13 8HILIY 2 C08AA ale._ al MN rec ta.toO ownat llOOO l7&-tt43 53.000 ml, 15100 ~ ..... -t--+--t llec*11an, 8how Cllr, llkt 531 1* ewe ·9uooo Low ml. 1 owner. 557-7010.e73-01M MW (001t) •et S20i-1 owner 888.tnrl 1ba0lu1tly mint. Maf -+-+-~-.of •U POHTlAC TMNSAM lftreo,llpd, wtltan.1tlnt nnenoa.131-5118 C 0 N V ! A T I I l. E , OOnd HI< obo ln.5411 'Ii 3IO s• t d d -~:;J llW111ED TUii II TIW IT -lllAI IT -Ill lllYE IT lildc/Ttn, 22.000 mitt. "• Ot t • -+-+-~-•~ tCNlded (9364) chrome wtlta, tffther. •M OOOQl CARAVAN ahtaptklna 133.000. ~...,_-+_,.__ SI lurgundy/~undy, If••• ,..rt1 53e-.3t63 ~ta~) ···••••t1tf '83 SHOW,.OOM 2400 •12 AUDI Auto Loedtdl P"1 pty ~btue. 22.iOOO-'"* Ut.000 obO "95-1373 ladtd(1641•) llMO ......... _.._ __ .. •HTOVOTA CILICA QT Nt• aoo TD Wagon Ttft/IWoWn, 20.000...... ~ ~--"4801(11VC411) her)ll SM.171 7U..1 _.,._.....,,~............. •CHIV't' CAMAfllO l·21 etfftl /frey, I •Pfff. ~ .... """"4~... 21.0CICf! ....... illNll IOI .... (trvMnt ..... *a TOYOTA IUPM WMeJtwown, • ..,...., :~-mttt NW 111111111 LU- musTOL A"l llDGIR DI SIJf'tA Al A Nt·OUO ALL llEW '84 SCIRDCCD'S $1000WAn •• 9.9s FIUlllll llC I ' C8 Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Saturday, Augu1t 25, 19M Officially Authorized SANTA ANA CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH (O.R.Haan) Once-in-a-lifetime savings WE HAVE LOST OUR LEASE AND MUST RELOCATE All buildings to be torn down All Cars Must Go Now! PRICES: VEHICLES: FINANCING: TRADE-I S: Not publicly advertised in consideration of other dealers. Every vehicle in our inventory -nothing to be excluded -including all used cars. 60 months, 100°/o financing available on approved credit. Lease purchase, use your bank , our banks, your credit union or any other lending institution of your choice. Authorized trade-in appraisers immediately available! Bring your trade, title, or payment book. .. • FIRST ST. . ff SAN DIEGO FWY. (405) ~ ... II) a: a: :r-g ~ ~z COAST HWY . . . I . I NEWPORT BEACH m-,, ..... New on market -unbelievable property -tefflflc price -great location -2 master suites -2/car garage-new carpet-fresh paint -washer, dryer .Included! Community pool, spa, sauna & just short walk to beach toolf lllffl 1111,111 Super sharp 2 BR. Huge master bedroom. Custom shu1ters wallpapers, lots of mirrors. French doors to' private patio with spa. Fire- place. Wet bar. Near Shopping, Beach. Fashion Island. Ill CAIYll 1211,GM Former model and highly upgraded Greenbrier. Random oak wood pegged floors, cedar siding, spotlight lighting are some of the features. In the heart of Newport Beach, ctose to golf course, beach & shopping. Take over assumable loan. UllN WllW .. S 1211,IOO Wowll This lovely home has everything! Large pool-sized lot, great location, decorator de- signed. Lovely den with custom entertainment center. 2 bedrooms plus den home for $269,500. UYOUST SUl,000 Gorgeous 4 BR single level home lends itself to entertaining. Spacious rooms overlook a stun- ning landscaped patio-yard. Quality & exquisite taste aboundll 111 CAIYll UI0,000 Ideally suited for single person or couple In security gated golf community. One of lowest priced 2 BR, 2 BA homes offered. Owner will consider an exchange up In Big Canyon. Ullll VIEW llUS Ull,111 Terrific location with Newport's wonderful views -city -bay -ocean! 5 spacious BR's, family room w/fireplace, kitchen w/nook -secluded Interior patio, use of shutters. mirrored wardrobe doors! WESTCUFF SJl l,000 Dramatic architecture! Vaulted living room ceil- ing, expansive use of windows and wood. Gorgeous tile entry, kitchen w/eatlng area, large family room, upstairs den/study-plus huge yard with pool and spa. IELCODT ltll $141,000 Spectacular views of ocean, sunsets & lights. Sophisticated Plan 3 w/lavish master suite, guest room & library. Last chance to buy new. builder's closing out. Outstanding fixed loan. .. CAIYll 1111,llO Attractive stone exterior as the first thing you notice and you'll appreciate the privacy of the sparkling pool & spa; and vaulted ceilings & 4 BR will please you, and the price will make your mouth wa1er! NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 2 161 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS llOAD A MEMBER OF THE SEARS FINANCIAL NETWORK RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES OPEN HOUSES 1-5 SI TllDIY "'"'' 4 BR •na ... u 5 BR, Pool. Spa wat .. ftlf 3 BR/4BR. Dock .. EOUFFI 38R lnCMIT 2 BR, Den ....... llW .( BR. FR, View 2626 Vista del Oro $195,000 M. MATTHEWS 1438 Santiago $385,000 MAGGIE GUTH Duplex 4002 River $.«5,000 SARA MARVIN 215 Morning Canyon $4.-9,000 EVAN CORKETT $570.000 7 Northampton C.McMAHAN 2821 Harbor View Dr $649,500 L YLEEN EWING SlllAY •nnm•m_.,. 20 Tahoe 3 BB. FR $217,950 LISA WHITE UJ.-0 2535 Crestview 2 BR, Den $259.000 ELEANOR BOWIE --···-483 Morning Canyon 2 BR $259,000 MAGGIE GUTH ...... -... Duplex 428 Ma~uertte 2/2 & 2/2 $275,000 JOAN DO AHUE .... .au 3 Meinseff Or 2 BR, Oen $299.000 PAM MOSS UJllDT 2007 Windward Ln 4 BR, FR $325,000 CAROLYN ST ARR ••111.ua Duplex 720 Larkspur 3/2 & 2/1 $349,000 SUE EXLEY llUllYIEW llLLS 2601 Island View 5 BR, FR $365,000 EVAN COAKETT IUYllW 2121 Yacht Yankee 4 BA, FA $368,500 G.ANOERSON ... Ill. ... 2507 Blue Water 4 BA. FA $440,000 JUDY ROBBINS llMECUFFS 215 Morning Canyon 3 BR $449,000 KAY RANGER ~ 3 Potnt Sur 4 BA. FA, Pool. Vu $475,000 MARIAN REEDY OIUU lll. llU 333 Poppy 4 BA, Spa, Maid's $495,000 L YOIA MURPHY lnlUll 1 Point Sur 3 BA, FR, View $539.000 BERT REEDY llYmlDUCI 1717 Bayadere Terr 4 BR+ SS.9,000 EVELYN YOUNG lllHllT 1 NOf'1hampton 2 BR. Oen $570,000 C.McMAHAN ......... 247 Driftwood 3 BR, FR, Pool $575.000 EDIE OLSON UU.YllW •ll 2821 Harbor View Dr 4 BR, FR, View $649,500 C. BALOIKOSKI BEACH COMMUNITIES u n 11nu azH,111 Warm friendly home In jewel-like setting. Private secluded patio, 3 BR, totally remodeled and In meticulous condition. Excellent value In private gate-guarded community. WOT UY lYEIR UIO,llO Fun home for couple or family In this quiet peninsula location. Great master bedroom with roof sundeck, large family room and sunny patio. Just a few of the pluses In this 3+ bedroom home. 1.111 llUll ........ Stunning value! Custom built for architect. Dra- matic, spacious 3 BR home on 60' street-to- street lot. Doors to beach, 3/car garage, two Immense patios provide unique openness, light & privacy. UYUlm SIH- Exqulslte home, per1ect In every detail. Family room and 3 BR upstairs and away from master suite. Two lovely private patios, 2 fireplaces. The quallty Is evident throughout. UL.II& IS&Jll 1111,111 This Is the perfect lsJand Cape Cod home the whole family will lovell Outstanding south bayfront location. 4 BR, family kitchen, paned windows. wood floors. outside deck. S~bmlt. u• 111 11U11 1111-000 Be on vacation every day In this lovely bayfront home. Shared pier & sllp & sandy beach are out the front door of this 3 BR family home. Walk to the village -It's the good llfell UYFUR ...... Best buy on the bayt Remodeled Mediterranean villa with 4 BR + den, slip for large boat. Jumbo low Interest loan available and/or will trade down. Bring us an offer! PllJISILI UfflllT 11,111,000 This architectural superb 4 year old home Is the best bayfront on the market for construction - decor & price. Fantastic family home complete with sandy beach, slip & night llght view. PEllllSIU UfflllT 11,121,111 Exceptional 3-story 5 BA, 6 BA home on ex- clusive BUENA VISTA. This unique home has a 3-story covered atrium, elevator, sitting room w/wet bar on 3rd floor. Quality construction & decor plus beach lot & dock. PElllllLI U fflllT 11,111 .... Ou1standlng 4 BR, 41..'l BA home on exclusive East Bay. Superb construction & architectural design. Spacious patio, sandy beach, slip and you own the waterfront lot. Call on this appeal- ing home. WE SEIAI 4 THE HOMES TIIAT MAKE YOU SAY "TIIAT'S US~' AMERICA'S LARGEST FULL SERVICE REAL EST ATE COMPANY · Introducing Seabridge Villas, Huntington Beach. Ocean air, city lights. 11.45°/o Starting at $66,900 Herc's Sea bridge Villas, a beautiful, new, affordable address co call ho me. And what a location ... what a beautiful list of up,scale features. And wharvahre! -- Some units invite a city lights view. The beac h is about a 10 minute walk away. And che ocean air, the cape cod tyle architecture and a New England village charm create a welcome feeling and an atmosphere unlike anything you've seen. We've got the right plan for you, too-nine to choose from including a studio, o ne bedroom, two bedroom and a two bedroom with sleeping loft. There's even a plan with two master bedrooms if you're considering dual ownership. Lakes, waterfalls, lush landscaping sweep by just outside your window. To keep you and yours safe, there's a 24 h o ur, manned security gate. We've thought of everything. What features! Every floor plan is light, airy, with view windows and volume ceilings many with skylights. All plans have a nice reaLh of dcLk or private pann and ceramic tile entries. Many hmc wood burning fireplaces. There arc spiral staircases in plan' wich two level . Kitchens-hnve cernmirtile courTI'rr tops, ash cabinetry, double sink, di'· posal, dish washer, oven and range. Baths have cultured marble pullman cops, cwi n hasin .... Fo r upper lc\cl units an clc,·mor · ma kes Loming and going easy, dcl1,·cr" you to your car-m t1 LCwered. "eLure, parking area. Just for fun You can walk or bike to che heat.h of course, bur there's mo re-right oucside your door. Mola lkvdopmcnt Corporation Humm ton Beach, CA You l tin meet vou r f nend' :lt c he reLrcanon duhht'U'-e, "" 1m or rela"- amund a la~c. tn\'IClng, 1..ry'>tnl ·clear pool. oak it up in che -.pa. 'l'hen you feel mor~ aggressive, me"fe', an indoor ra1..4uecht1ll LOUrt and 4 pn,·act· renm' lOUrt'--ltghrcd for night plav ;i-. "di. le\ a lot of fun and 1t\ all vour". AnJ u\ .rnt1Chcr rea-.on ~l'a­ hndgt· \'1Jla-. I'-a hcaur1ful pla .... e to .... all home. Now what about price and financing? Well. prtle' 'tan at SN-i,l)(\) anJ go up ro Sl2l,9(X.1 d1.·rx·nJmg, reallv, up<'n the '>l::c of che plan vou like. \.'or the feature<.;. There'rc no '\tripped Jn" n" model .... Tht•rt·'n.· all ht::iunful. And for finanung, we've got c;e\eral plans mcludmg, for example. a l l.45°0 interest, bond finanung plan chat\ very attrau1ve. But ask. We11 explam them all and retommend a plan ~t for you. So 'cop h\ nnJ 'C..'l'. h\ cht ht..--.t hnmt· value for 'ale ch" \H'ek On &:ac h Bouk\arJ. "<'uch of Adam,. \)(~)-241~ - 0 '- BALBOA ISLAt~D CORONA DEL rt1AR ,... emu• ua uum1 Charmn ;s t~'"Jm .. .,Anlt' Wdh f:dmJy rvxn T.ir.ful decor throu&t>· out P~foJ w1,A ;,.,~ Cit"~ lo biy & aueat1 fmat C.aD far an •WA11~1•~tit "' fl''~~ 7~·l!i<IJ n1 tilflft)I t ;, ltJ'AUf.#j th;,t tndy can't t• ~ IUgbt aixNe dw. ooe:.n ... t c;,,,,,,., I> ta.bl, at t · ~~UC"' the nw..ct desir..hle beac:ta an 1YJ1JU1-~n <......i1fonu:, g,..,,. tt nuw4 Call 7Ml-l!'JOJ JU Ill I Cllfl IUSTT •~~utiful ltJt 41t .. ..,,. f;..auLlful J t..dttJr.im tx ·• ;and tl UJmtS wath a i.-~ JUfuJ 11.p;t l..tW•j ;,t $:V;,!°).OOO ~worth 1t UJJ 75fl·l~l MU 11111 ·nua All JnJJ.y .-. u .. 1.tttlt:H 11.:1Jttagf! by ttM· be'..d'I InUNiCUb~ insidP. <and ''tJll• ,,.,~,,ii. g..,,. tl ~,,,,, Jt waJI rwlt last CaJJ 75fl.J50J IKITACIUI <':,II,,,, d••t.;,Jh ;md :m 6J>fJf1tnllrw·nt ti>~ lhiS .fUrbor Vw:w HJlh hornie f nwly Vll!'W I n-:.ll:d 'lfl ;, Jlf"•!lty r:uJ-dc-ca(• 3 btdt'Of..m&, 2 baths "/'l.J I ~1'1 I rumtE Pltnm ·n.,, t.-.. 11Jt1fuJ h,,,,.,. ,,.,. tJ11• y•>0,.. wnh 4 ht~. fanuly mom and ,,a;arv••ltJWi '·'">'''fl vu~ 11' ;,JJy ;,n PXL'f~tional value at $279,500 7f/'J l '1'J I Piil au ua 1 .,.,.,,,,,,,, ... md :t •~tt.-l..1Jt:.jt1•d an Corona l.#>I MM . '11'11• sounds good .,,.,J 1t •• u,1ut l'.:xtra t.rw· k>l S.'lf• 1t now' 7!'>9 1501 CUIEI II IUIH t ;,..,. ,,, t~w· JarP,•~t J11ta 111 th!JI ''"'°'' ar1-a has orv• of thf-lovelJ.cst howtt-s ,,,1 1t J'rn , ... , ;,t $ZY~.ooo C;,IJ for an -.ppotntml~nt to 1C1e 759 1501 UlllmD ULllEI In tt11• 1 tJ1-<irt1om homi1· Sor,,_ of the• f•xtraa tndude a 3 car pra , ""'J)ltntlt• fum1Jy m'1m, formal dtntnlJ room and many more. Don't mm M'f•lflU lhl.11 hom1·. $it:'>O,OOO 7!>U 1501 COSTA MESA TWI• H! LIT Larw· lol with 2 tM.tUM,. Truly • .up ·r be.rga!n. Excellent family home plu• :l tMYirot>m wnwl untt 759 l:>Ol llPll Ullllll ITlllTEI J>~rftd tor owru:r/hu1ldc•r W..tunng hard 10 flnd hardwood f10ona. C.1a.e "' ahopptnR & lruruiportatit,n, f ,,arf(c 140' d("(·p lot in qu.i t nef&hborbood. ONLY $137,000 7MI 1501 unsm••• Gr-eat pot.ent&aJ for renovalors here. 2 hou:les Oil large GOX 150° kJt f':astad. lcaltaon ~ 3 bedroom and one 2 bedroom. Only $185.000 7~1S01 IRVINE lllft MYS · Are )'lJUn to enpy and rughts too in this immaculate 2 btdromD San Ma1eo model m the much desired Rancho San Joaquin axmnuruty. Adjacent 1o golf coune, oommuruty pool. Muon Park and UCL C.a.lJ 759-1501 l1M,lll Super sharp Warnungton Townehome. Atnum wtth lt.alian tile & founta:m. 2 bedrooms pll.13 den. Derorator wall ooverings Private and perlect. C.all 7~ 1501 Cl• •t, 9111J1Y • IUITY AD are aJmbi.ned in this 2 bedroom condo in the prime Rancho San ~area. Priced right at $187,500. Call quick! 759-1501 LAGUNA HILLS u1wm1 IUI DICI YIU.O YIEW! Beautiful decorator upgrading an this Laguna Village condo. 3 bedrooml. 2 baths and attached 2 car garage. Owner aruaous. $123,000. C.a.11 today al 7~1501 NEWPORT BEACH •111111us Beautiful view of bay, Newport Cent.er and night lights. Lovely courtyard pool. Skylights and French doors throughouL New game room and kitchen. Truly a find! Call now at 759·1501 Lim.I Tl Lim IT With new paint and carpets tJus &S sharp! Great family condo with 4 bedrooms aDd 3 baths. Prime area 759-1501 111•1111 .. One of the prettiest and largest homes in Spyglass can be yours.. Magnificmt de9c:ribes this home. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths. recreabonal room. 2 fireplaces. extra large loL Nothing has been left out.! Call 7S9-15CH SANTA ANA lllPPYFIRl- n,e.re•s room for everyone in-Ulls 4 bedroom home. Situated on a large lOt.. there is a.bo plenty of play room plus RV aiccesa. See it now. Call 759-1~1 NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 2170 San Miguel Drive Newpon leach, CA 12810 dl. AMERICAN HOME SHIELD "We Protect & Service .... _ NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 2170 Son ..... DrlYI Newpon 11ac11. CA l2llO (714) 751-1501 Things That Service You." (714) 751-1501 .. \ :J.un Zone l&0-8333 #3 C1v1c Plaza. Suite 170 Newport Beach, Cahfornia 92660 I of 'lnne Vatnline ProperlieJ of newporl Beach haJ Leen choJen aJ lhe excluJive feaJing agenl /or lhe long-awaileJ Ba/Loa 5.un Zone Pro;ecl. Specia/t'I relai/ Jpace will Le availaL/e. ConJlruclion on lhe one Jlor'I, r/ew GngfanJ Jf'lfeJ courl'larJ complex, /ealuring Caroiuef & 5.e,.,.iJ Whee/ iJ hopeful lo Legin in fhe near fulure. :J:Ja'llon AJJocialeJ o/ Ba&oa .JJ/anJ, iJ archilecl /or lhe pro;ecl . .Jnquiri~J JhoulJ Le JirecleJ lo of 'lnne Valentine ProperlieJ (714) 760-8333 t .. " llEW LISTlll .,. IWLD -Great South of highway location. Large & spacious unl1s with ocean view from re&1 unit. Only $299,500. 1141,100 ti 1211,100 11111.m IMll&llUTI -Perky cape Cod with French doors and windows, wood floors and formaJ dining, 2 bdrm townhome In Newport. Only $153,900. • Y1EW -Low price In CdM, now vacant & really hurting! Needs attention, view Is spectacu- lar, 20% down ~nd assume loans. Only $299,500. nHIFIC TIWllllll -Brand new! 3 bdrm, 3 ba, fplc In master suite and living room. French doors, patio and sundeck. $199,999. Back Bay. CLEO 11 UmLIFF -Immaculate 3 bdrm, lots of lot and comfortably close to high school, shops. Owner/agent transferred. $265,000. CITI All CHTDIPIUllY -Wow! Here's a one bdrm carriage house, contemporary style. There's a den, skylights, fireplace, hardwood floors and tiled bath. In CdM. $208,000. tllllT, "'n All TASTIFIL -3 bdrm In prime Newport neighbomood, big ""trees, covered patio; corner lot and great look. $219,000. OLUI All CllL -Harbor View Homes, Monaco, added skylights, bay windows. wooded decks and bubbling waterfaJI. Fairly prtced at $242,000. LOU -South Coast Plaza area, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, very secure. Very attractive. very spacious. $169,000. LITS ... FM IT -Corner lot, custom fireplace, brick patio, English garden and French doors. Carmel In H.V. Homes. $259,000. In Newport. Um&IY WHIS -Attractive Costa Mesa area 3 bdrm, 2 bath with used brick fireplace, paver~ wood floors & pine paneling. $147,500. Clll llPUI -Great So. of highway location. Large and spacious units w~th ocean view from rear unit. Only $299,500. m JOll TOE II -Just steps toBalboa beaches, 3 bdrm. 2 story, solid custom home with stone fireplace and ocean views. Only $279,000 [$311,000 t• 1411,000 I IU C4M OWSIO -Cheerful, charm personifled, meticulously malntajned, 2 bdrms, den. 2 baths. 45' lot and just a sklp to the beach. $384,000. OITSTUllll PllTIFlll -5 bdrm family home with a dynamite view. 4500 sq. ft., gorgeous decor. realistic price $450,000. TH LATEST L• -Clean, cool. contemporary, washed brick fireplace. 3 bdrms, an Immense yard In Cameo Shores. $450,000. Yllf SHOE -Big Canyon, 3 bdrm, on corner lot, light atmosphere, strong security. Monaco at $450,000. In Newport. M Tll Oliff -Above Newport Harbor. In- credible view, 4 bdrms, 4'.., bath, pool, spa and In need of finishing touches. Offered at $450,000. • • "M• YEW -.U -Spacious Burlingame 4 bdrm plus large rec room, canyon views, owner wants outl $389,000. OUYllE II LHIJll -For a house like thlsl In old CdM, newer 3 bdrm, 2 story custom, block to beaeh, owner says offer! $469,000. •• Ill LIT -Single story 4 bdrm In CdM's Harbor View Hiiis, large lot has sport court, covered patio Is near park, now $379,000. Ill Oii• HL 1111 -A pair of 1 bdrm units, with pool, spa, nr footbridge~ oceanside and a 40' lot. $329,000 (great loan) YH CAI MIT -Beams, brick! Solid, newer 3 bdrm, 2 bath, ,_., block to beach In old CdM. With h~lp It could have view. $385,000. 1111,000 I IP llCIDllll ¥IEW -Adult home plus guest apart- ment, breathtikmg locatlon, wm consider from LA, very unique. $699,000. UI 1111• If ·Tm-ID -Classic colonial on 2,_., lots In old CdM, white with green shutters! Guest house wtth fireplace. Pool, spa. $695,000. LOTS FIR SILE N'IWIMlllll -Aanot betng therel See a .o• tot and a 30' + lot just off Ocean Blvd In Old CdM. Very level and a vlew Is possible. Prtced at near lot · value. · NATALIE FOGARTY KEEPS THEM COMING BACK: She's courteous, conscien- tious and very successful. Unlque's Natalie Fogarty entered resldentlat rea1 es- tate over 8 years ago and now 197 transactions later she stlll tends to every detail with steady, reliable atten- tion-and treats every cus- tomer as If they were her first. Natalie has developed a loyal following (two of her clients pictured here are signing escrow Instructions on their second-purchase- within the year) That keeps comlhg back to her wise counsel. IPD IATlllAY Qumt, -... tullfll, l ...... $219,000 . .... .. ........................ .1940 Teresita, Westcliff, NB 3 Ir, fm h, .., 1ttnctioa, n ._. , £ICM , ..... ,.u. $259,000.... ........................ .. 2001 Port Bristol, HVHms, NB IPll l&TlllAY I 111111 Cltt I comt1 .. 1rlfl, l II. a., "Jfltn I Clm $208,000 ....................................... 2921 4th Street. Old CdM Cllu, CMI l l'OOllJ louco, Qytites, M} ...._, $24 2,000 ..... . ....... 2025 Port Bnstol. tMims. NB Classic Ctloaill, oNer 4 Ir, pest bl, ,..e,.,. $695,000 ........................................... 223 Poinsettia, Old CdM IPD llll&Y llllCo twlme, 3 II, 2 sty, tiOt llClf'lty, w.. $450,000...... ............... . . 2 Rue Fountainbleau, Big Cyn, NB View tf city flOtS. fetJ Ht let, wt ti ....,. $265.000 .......................................... 11S Bellis, E/Bluff, NB lMcat let, 4 Ir, l&t Clftl'M Ntle, &t J1t I s..,t cmt $279,000 ...................................... 1230 Sand Key, Hmts, CdM Clua. CMI, CMte .. lrlfl, 3 Ir, ,_., ,.._ I .. $450,000 ..................... 4515 Hampden Rd, Cameo Shrs. CdM lM(t, St. Ceut Plau .... 4 Ir, "" .... $169,000 ................................. 3917 Teakwood. So. Santa Ana . . -. Specializing in properf'I on Ike waler . . . near tfu waler ... anJ wifh 'lhe~ of waler NEWPORT CONDO-NEAR BEACHI NEW USTINQI 2 bedroom condo In attrecttve small complex that gtvee JOU prtvecr and brlghtneeal Neer pool, with a.,.. petto and 2 c:. Pf899· OHL Y S1~. e31·1400. °'*' HcMaee 8atvrd8J, 1·5.-00 p.m. 20 81 II C .. (oft 1'1cOIMleroga). PERFECT FAMILY HOllEI Super. t.m11J home thet ahowa like a model! Thia 4 bedroom, 2"11 bath home ha private J.-d with manJ fruit tr... and le bNutlfultJ a.dacaped. Watk In P9ftb'J, bultt·ln.,.. 8llQ on petlo. M8"J extral GN8t locatton neer South Coaet Plaza. Priced to ...... 1115.000. en-.oo NEWPORT BEACH-UDO SANOS NEW USTINGf I bedroom. 2 bath home ontJ 2 block• to beachJ OWner wll CMTJ 1atTD at 11 'h %. ~ ccrnntd patio, ........, aptem and ta neer eommunttJ pool. ONLY 1115,000 LH. l7S-4llOO BAYSHORES-flEMODELED Upg.-.cled BaJ8hotwe a bedroom, 2 bath home with l'9fftCld11ed kitchen end bettvooma PlU8 new cspeta and baamed celllnga. Uqe SUMJ patio oft llYlng r«Nn. Priced to ..U at S225,GOO LH. C.a 131-1400 BALBOA HOME BY BAY Wood floors, beemed celllnga end ehedJ brick patio enhance the ch8rm of thle rwnod•led a bedroom home. 8upef locatton ... J-=ht dub, achool, acroea beJ on A-2 lotl S211iOOQ. 131-1400 NEWPORT POOL HOME On large corner lot, • great femtly home that ha been profeMlonalfy decorated. 4 bedrooma, 2\'J batM, tamUy room, remod•l•d gourmet kitchen + -new-patnt aftd-«>0fl F .. turM-pool and deck.Security .,.,em. Submtt on.ra. SMS.000. ~ ENGLISH TUDOR-HUNTINGTON From thl9 elegant Enallah Tudor home In Hunt- ington 8Mch. ThoM wrth .... for the unuaual Wiii r.u for the custom blacll bottom pool. There eleo 19 • ape. famftJ room, thtM ftreplacea and wurtty and much, much more In a great famlfy --. $341,900. 131-1400 BAYFROHT-CHAAMER C..,. Cod chllf1Mf • 3 bedrooma, cozy ftreplace, greet kitchen, ahutt.. throughout. Large patio with brtcll bar.....,.. dock for IO' t.o.L Greet buy at '390,000. 131-1400 BAYFRONT CONDO a.autlful Channel Reef condo with pttme ocean and bey ylewal Alklna S398~ 2 bedroom, 2 beth, pool, ape In • euper roc.tton. 8efler want• ln.taH- ment ule. C.U 131-1400 for detak NEWPORT HEIGHTS-CORNEA A totally rwnodllld Brion JHnette contempor_, trl-19ftl home with epecloue 4 bedroom-. 3 bathe. Enhenced by euper ... m.,. llcftlghta, Jacon•, hardwood floors, fonNI dining room. Ocean Ylewa from the decka. '410,000. Call 131-1400 LIDO ISLE REDUCED Udo .... home on an extra aarg. lot. 2 bedrooma, 2 batta.. den p1ue eunn1 llNI. a..uun w poo1 and epa. own..-a readY to .... Prtce reduced to ""2,500. c.u 131 .. 1400 UDO PARK DRIVE CONDO LMoe .::rront condo with water ..... from lh1fta room rneew bedroom. T~ decorated~ bedroom + den Md a bedte In aecurtty bulldlfto. OWMr rMJ CMYJ 1at TD wtth large caeh down. t•.000 Cal 111·1400 I PICTURESQUE OCEANFRONT TotaUy remodeled 3 lnel reUdence with eubeten- tlal meeter aulte. Exqultllte detalllng of white oetc. teM and ~al atone. Plaltw wale a aolkl lneula- tlon In 4 bedroom home with dramatic A apecloua .llYlng room a gourmet kltc:Mn. Sll5,000 131-1400 OCEANFRONT DUPLEX Lender r.poe'"Md Only 7 ,_... old with a 3 bedroom. 2 beth unit and a 2 bedroom. 2 bath unlL Both with ftreplacee. 4 car er.doled garage. OWner w111 hetp with ftnandng. On.r.d at $515,000. 131-1400 MAI KAt-BAYFRONT-VIEW NEW USTINQJ llMuttfuUJ remad1l1d and H· pended 2 bedroom 2 bath condo with ••"'*'9 .... of bay. Sip aYalable. Excelllftt ........ Open ~ 8aturdaJ 1-S p.m. 1221 ..,... Drtw. "50,000. 131-1400 OCEANFRONT BEAUTYI Thia except.tonal oceanfront home of quaUtJ and dnlgn won't ._ti White Oak aplnl ataarceee and Ctlblnetry. 2 ftNplecM, leaded and beveled , .... wlndowa, ltall8n to., wurtty .,.a.m . ...,., •xtra emenltleaJ Ph.II Ylewal OWMrmaJ help In ftftandng. '720.000. c.u 131-1400 BALBOA ISLAND BAYFRONT DUPLEX A "WatatfrOrlt" et an Int.tor home .,,tee. TlrO unlt1I on• comer with 3 bedroom• In uc:h. NMr al...,.. with view of...., actloft. Uve In one and *" h otMr. S1ll5,GOO. ..,.... BALBOA PENINSULA-BAYFRONT ReedJ to mowe Into tr8dltlonlll = 3 bedroom. av. beth home. 9eeuttfultJ w wtth p1er tor 52' boat+ ... tlA ............. of bay, *1tlne. night lghta. Prtnle, large courtprd + Hlra perk- ing. Prtc.d to ... at "75,000 FEE.131-1400 BAYFRONT-PIEA/SLIP-VIEW Spect.cular mountain and watef Ylew from thla well maintained BAYFRONT DUPLEX. Sand)' beect'I + pier for I laroe y.chta. Grut tamlfy ... in •quiet locatton. Call for ....._ on U. terrtftc prop- ..,. OWNER WILL CARRY THE NOTE ANO FIRST T .D. ON THIS FEE LAND propettry. S881,000. 1;91-1400 DOVER SHORES-ON OPEN BAY 8MutlMty remochl1d 4 bedroom, 5 beth home locllted In the prema.r ... of DoYef ~ Su- pertor quellty and detalllng throughout. ..... of baJ frontage. Securtty eyatem.. FEE. OfteNd •• *1,295,000. 131-1400 LINDA ISLE VILLA One of the ftnlet homea on NewpGft BaJ. OYer 7'000 aq.ft. wtth I bedrooma, SY. bathe + •tudlo. mualc room, elewator, uune and 5 room......., eutte. Centered .round • ._..., planted atrium wfth ..,. prtyate awlmmlng pool. eu.tom. Exceptional and ganc1 In 9YerJ W8J. pter/lllp for lerve yacht ,I00,000 and ownara wlll negotiate. 131-1400 WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. 2436 W Coast Hwy,. N(>wport Beach 6:J 1-1400 .. 315 Mannt> Avt> Bdlhoa Island (l 7 :1-()(JCH> UYFl llT 1 lllll• '211,IOG Dramattc roam bay view-<X>mpletely re- furbished unit includes new kitchen, baths, carpet: and tile. Excellent location in full security building Boat slips available. Martha Macnab Cmtm Tll·LML I 1,"'1000 l•t l. LM4 SophtSllc.ated, dramatic 4 BR, bayfront family room, fonnal dining wtth wine cellar, library pter and slip which will accommodate a large boat. Top quality construction-lots of wood, leaded and etched glass, custom cerarruc and more. Great location within mmutes of Harbor entrance Martha Macnab FlllT IOW VIEW IHl,000 Beautifully upgraded 3 BR Bluffs home. Newly decorated with a gorgeous view of the back bay. city lights and mount.ams, and two great pnvate patios to help you enjoy it all Coby Ward SlllECUFF CISTOI HIE 1111,000 4 BR. study, library & lg country k.it.chen-1deal for the lg family. Separate master suite -upstairs with lovely view of CdM Beach. Assumable 1st T.D. OWC lg 2nd T.D. Sharon Smith WTEll TUllTlllW. H4l,IOO On Hampshire Circle. 5 BR. county kitchen. formal living nn w/garden, patios, fireplace. Pan- eled den w/fireplace & sit down bar. Lovely pool, oversi7.ed lot. Barbara Aune SIPHI FIUICll& 1110,000 Large West.cuff family home with pool & spa. Needs some TLC, 5 BR, 5 ~ BA, formal dirung room. family room plus large bonus room. Good neighborhood Call for financing details. Joan Lewis m UOllllUY FAMILY MOIE 11.111,000 BIG CANYON With a blend of traditional and contemporary this 6 BR, 7 BA home is truly the ideal family home. Features a fabulous golf course and lake View Includes the finest of qual.Jty construction thruout. Owner is very motivated and will consider trades Danny Bibb URlll VIEW llMES 1211,000 Outstanding Mont.ego Model with family room. BeauufuUy landscaped, move-in condttion, quiet location Available financing Danny Bibb & Stephanie Grody 111 CAllOI IHl,000 ON THE FAIRWAY-A beautiful townhome tn a superb locat.10n High ce1hngs, walls of glass and marble floors add to the sophisllcation of thlS remodeled and expanded Dtane "Deauville", now 5 BR and library Lucy Rose R·2 LIT 1111,000 Currently has a 2 BR older home with great rental history Excellent location near beaches and shopping Easy a«'E"SS Rent now {:lnd build later. Martha Macnab -.mlUTE II Ullll llllE Sll0,000 Upgraded and decorated SPF.cTACULAR VleW home centered around an atnum with K01 pond and dazzling waterfall Spacious luxury through- out its fonnal livtng room area, 5 BR. 3 Y'1 BA and 2 family rooms. Marylou Ingold 644-6200 2 Civic Plaza #100 Newport Beach, Ca. IPEI •us UTIUAY BIG CANYON Sllt,000 a TmtJ PfHt 4 BR. FR. Pool, Spa 1-5 Dan Blbb IPEI l llSU SATllllAY I SHIAY EASTBLUFF S2ll,t00 4 BR, PooJ 1-5 MARINA HIGHLANDS COSTA MESA S141,HO 3 BR. Spa 1-5 CAMID S}jORES '1,Hl,000 6 BR. FR. Poot, Wtlrt 1-4 BIG CANYON SllltOOO 3 BR, FR 1-5 BIG CANYON 2 BR. FR EASTBLUFF 5 BR, FR CAMro SHORES 4 BR IUtMO 1-5 SHl,IOO 1-5 -·-2-5 Z11l ll'Mta Coby Ward 11 10 •'4&• Crest Allinson/Cooper 107 1Hftr4 Donna GodshaJJ 11 IH Ytnt Dan Babb z ... o.... Stepharue Grody zz 11 "'• Yista Coby Ward HJ111Hw4 Polly Johnson WU lllSU SllllY HARBOR RIDGE wo.-aa..,....., 5 BR, FR, Pool, Spa 1-5 Marylou Ingold CAMIDSHORE.5 SlD,111 .... , ..... ". 4 BR. FR. Pool. Spa 1-5 Tom Allinson BIG CANYON IHl,000 21 ltyal It. lffrct 4 BR. FR 1-5 Dan Babb NEWPORT HEJGHTSHH,000 IOO 11 .. It. 3 BR, FR 1 ·4:30 Martha Macnab BAYSHORES SJH,000 2'42 Cirtlt "· 4 BR 1-5 Dona Chichester 2 BR. FR, POOL 1131,000 .a 1 .. , .. i., 041 l-5 Rosemary Stetz Ill RILi CUii 1411,llO 3 BR, 3 BA, fanl.ily rm., loft, 3 fireplaces, vaulted beamed ceilings, hardwood floor, antique leaded glass windows, & French doors. Exterior includes swimming pool, hot tub, volley bciu court, and is completely fenced with brick & wrought iron REDUCED $155,000. F.d &cano/Maw:een White WCUlll WAmF&U 11.ll0.000 Cascadtng waterfall flows mto private pool and spa with magruf1cent Views of Newport Harbor. 5 BR custom quality built Mediterranean in pnvate community of Harbor Ridge. Open, .tight & airy home-perfect !or e ntertaining. Ed F.sc.ano/Maureen White . TWI USTEI Simi 1111,000 IMMEDIATE POSITION-Price Reduction. EnJOy the unobstructed views of Newport Harbor, Cat.alma, & rute lltes from this 3 BR, 3 BA, family room, 3 car garage home Neutral toned decor. Ed Facano/Maureen White NICE 19'mll 11,111,IOG CA.MID SHORES ON THE BLUFF-INCL. LAND. Fabulous single story home. 6 BR, family nn., panoramic oce.an & jetty view w/sandy beach below. Sparkling pool in secluded co~ard. Perfect. for the growing family. Owner wtn consider exchange. Donna Godshall 41' llYFlllT &.ml llU ....... u DISTINGtnSHED-Special location near com- muruty park, beach, tennis. Very comfortable sized 4 BR custom home. Great approach to large slip & pier. Favorable new land lease and superb purchase option. Tom A1liNon Liii UY FUIT--llt&tl llLI llH,000 Under a million. Great investment. 3 BR plus large playroom with bath over garage-pier and slip. Barbara Aune II' IF UYSlllES W&TEIFUITt 11,211.000 Gracious one-story home! C\Jstom remodel w/gounnet kitchen for ease in entertaining. 2 BR. family rm, 3 BA 2 private beaches, 24 ht. security gate. Dona Chichester Ill CWH'l IEST Aft 1111,000 Beautiful golC course location. Possibly th.is is the opporturuty you've been waiting for. 4 BR, 3 BA, family room plus den or study. Over 130 feet of golf course frontage. A touch of Spanish Mediter- ranean design. Loll of potential. Reduced to $995,000. Owner will carry financing at very low interest rate! Dan BJbb Ill CUYl~YU m1E1. Pll,000 This 2 BR. 2 BA Deane townhome offers a spacious lot ln a most private locabon at a very low price. Asking $339,000 with as.wmable financing. Danny Bibb t11ru llOl llllUllS NEW LISTING-A real doll house. '~bria model with 2 BR and den and decorated beauti- fully with custom wallpaper and window c.'Over- ings. Lucy Rose EllULl l&f-YllW 1111;000 A great value in this 3 BR, family room home. An exceptional master su1te, 2 fireplaces, security system. Ocean view and complete pnvacy. First urne offered. Lucy Rose WIMllJHE llY 11U,IOO Lowest pnced Wamu.ngton Townhome Plan D ~~h 2 maste~ bedrooms, 3 BA1 den, spactous livmg room wtth fireplace & cathedral ceillngs. Formal dinin.g, large country kitchen. anxious owner. Lois Jacobs Ill C&IYOl-OTU UU1 LIT Ula.oeo BeautifuJJy decorated 5 BR. 3 ~ BA, home on larg~, well landscaped lot-private cul de sac location Immaculate adult occupied ho in mint condi lion. Martha Macnab UUtflCtlT lllE-IU CM 1411,0M Located on a double-wide lot, th. lovely home offers old world ambiance with the latest in modem conveniences. Beautifully remodeled. 4 BR, 3 ~ BA, family room, extra large living· room. large patio and yard. Some ocean view. Mjcki Cooper U111SU--.aYF111T 11,Hl,IOI 45 feet on the water with pier and slip for lg boat. 6 BR, 5'1'1 BA plus a 4 car garase. All just waiting for a large family. Lucy RQ9e ua~ atMl-vn 112..- Behind guard gate this single level 3 BR. 2 ~ BA, family room Spanish home has IOaring ceilln and a lovely fountain io the courtyard entry. Bank repo. priced undel' market for quid( ate. F.ecano/WhJte Orange County Real Eatate/An Advet1iling ~IP the DAJLY PILOT/Saturday, August 25, 19M -9 Dalebout Bay 8c Beach Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COME WITH US TO ••• _...._....._........._...__ ......... ...._...._.-.--.* * * * * BIG CANYON* * * * * ......_ ....... .._...._.._.... ..... _...._........._...__-. Guarded gate area. Impressive elegance! Five bedroom home overlooking the iath Fairway of the Big canyon Golf Course. Huge nvtng room With marble fireplace and built-In enormous teleVtslon screen. FormaJ dining room. Gourmet kttChen with micl'owave and compactor. Eating erea In kitchen. Parquet floors. Custom carpets, drapes and wan coverings. Custom pool and spa Estate size lot, luxuriantly landacaped. Three car garage. Highly motivated seUer has reduced price $200,000 .................................................................................................................................................................................. NOW $995,000 Open Sat-Sun 1-5 ............................................................................................................................................................................................... 20 CYPf'9SS Point DOVER SHORES ... Prime factor In determin- ing value Is locatlont This fabulous home Is on the bayfront with pier and float for large boat. Elegant five bedroom, four bath home. Special features Include french doors, 08k cabinetry, beVeled mirrors and gourmet kttchen plus mas- ter bedroom retreat wtth fireplace and adjoining study wtth fireplace. You own the land. .......................................................... $1, 175,000 SPYGLASS HILL ... Life Is full of compromises. A One Mllllon Dollar home should not be. This customized two-story five bedroom Cape Cod Southport Is a viewing revefatlon. EnJoy the vast vlew. the pool, the spa, the master suite sauna. You will agree that here (at last) Is ctass, attract- iveness and vaJue ... at a clvlltzed price. .............................................................. $995,000 DOVER SHORE& ... The ultimate In lmpresslve cu$tomlzed vtew homes ... trench doors: oak par- quet floors, three flreplaoes, two wet bars. skylights, paneled library, gourmet kitchen, large master suite. Three addltlonal bedrooms plus maid's quarters. A BRAND NEW OFFERING AT ............ $845,000 Open Sun 1·5 ........................ 1226 f .>farls Drive HARBOR RIDGE ... Build your dream home on this spectacular VIEW LOT. Approximately one- fourth acre allows ample latitude for a house design that would encompass the entire pan- oramic view of bay, ocean and city lights. ............................................................. $740,000 NEWPORT tSLAND . . . An exciting home of creative and unique design. Five bedrooms. Four baths. Formal dining room. Electric kitchen. Two flreplaoes ... one In llvtng room and the other In family room. Security system. FIFTY FEET OF WATERFRONT WITH PIER AND DOCK. Three car garaage. Excellent financing to quaJlfled buyer. No polnts ...... NOW $650,000 Open Sat-Sun 1·5 ............... 3802 Channel Place DOVER SHORES ... Stimulating bay view en- joyed from entire living area. Delightful family room with custom walnut bar and wine storage. Four bedrooms. Master with built-In mirrored dressing table. Spacious walk-In closet. One bedroom and bath Ideally located for maid or ~~~~· .. ~~~~~ .• ~~t~~~~ .... ~.~.~~~~~~~.~f~~~~ Open Sun 1-5 ..................... 1148 Santiago Drive JASMINE CREEK ... ENJOY THIS MAGNIFI- CENT UNOBSTRUCTED OCEAN ANb HARBOR VIEW! Designed for privacy and gracious living. Two luxurious bedrooms. Oen. Formal dining room. Eleven foot ~lings. 1600 square feet of outdoor patio tile. Air conditioning. Sparkling pool and spa. JUST REDUCED .. NOW $575,000 Open Sun 1-5 .......................... 23 Beachcomber BAYCREST ... An extraordinary five bedroom home featuring comfort and retaxatlon. Beauti- fully landscaped courtyard with custom pool and apa. Huge lanai with retractable roof, loung- ing area and dry bar. Formal dining room. Island Kitchen with eating area overlooking pool. Two master bedroom suites. The one upstafra ln- ctudea library and bUllarda room with wet bar. Two car garage plus hobby room ........ $550,000 Open Sat-Sun 1-5 ................... 1801 Toyon Lane KINGS ROAD ... Breathtaking panoramic bay and ocean vtew. Four bedrooms. Three baths. Three fireplaces. Formal dining room. Small but effecient kitchen. Easy care tropical garden, pool, spa, green house. Owner motivated. wm carry paper ........................................... $~9.000 OLD CORONA DEL MAR ... Country French custom three bedroom, three bath home. Lavish use of fine oak. Alt rooms are spacious. Very private master suite complete with sitting room. Restful patio with spa. One and one-hatf blocks to the beach ......................................... $525,000 Open' Sun 1-5 ............................... 332 Poinsettia DOVER SHORES ... lmpresslve two-story, four bedroom home, on a spacious 90X110 lot . Fabulous view of Fashion Island night lights from second floor. A replaces In llvlng room and family room. Built-In bookcases. Speakers throughout for music. Beauttful landscaping and pool. Large patio with gas barbeque. Security system .................................................. $525,000 DOVER SHORES . . . Most unusual five bedroom, four bath home. Large IMng room and master bedroom on second floor to take full advantage of the bay view. Separate ~ullding for mumpte use .. .ldeal party house. Exceptionally large lot with Interesting contour and develop- ment. W ith 15•~ down, buyer can assume the existing $37 4,000 of financing and seller will carry the balance at very attractive terms . REDUCTION OF $42,000 ........... NOW $478,000 Open Sun 1-5 ..................... 2018 Santiago Drive DOVER SHORES .•. A compact1 VIEW estate. The word "compact" needn't be another word for cramped. This gracious French Regency has a spacious and grand look .•. yet Is a manageable size for todays llvtng. The approach to the tour bedroom residence Is through large Iron gates to a courtyard of Intricate brick work. Few needs or conveniences remal" unsatisfied. FANTAS- TIC REDUCTION OF $75,000 .... NOW $475,000 Open Sun 1-5 ........................ 1630 Antigua Way SEAVIEW ... Location. location, locatlon ... a prime consideration In evaluating a home. This exciting three bedroom home features an outstanding view of the ocean and night lights. The extra large yard lends to delightful privacy. This Is the much sought-after Bar Harbor modet. ................................................... NOW $.429,000 • BA YCREST ... Walk Into this home and you wlll experience the sensation of being part of It. For entertaining, It's versatile. For family living, It's practical. All rooms (four bedrooms, four baths. kitchen. dining room and family room) are ex- tremely spacious. The pool ls slmply superb. The land ts lnciude6 In the purchase prloe. Dollar for dollar, this possession makes sense. .................................................... NOW $395,000 Open Sun 1-5 .... -~ ............. 1628 Santi.ago Drive 8AYCRE8T ... Courtyard entry for complete privacy. Step-up living room. Famfly room wtth fireplace and wet bar .Three bedrooms. Format dining room. BeautlfUlly tlled kitchen. Huge rear patloa. Adequate apace for pool. SELLER HIGH- LY MOTIVATED .......................... NOW $395,000 Open Dally 1..S ................... 1215 Martnera Drive 8AYCRE8T . . . A very practical home for a large family on lovely tree lined street. Ave bedrooms, four baths. Master bedroom retreat has sitting room for privacy. Spectal features Include trench doors, Plantation shutters and large yard wtth apa ............................... $369,000 8A YCREST . . . Meticulously upgraded. New paJnt. New waJlpaper. New carpets. New drapes. Three bedrooms. Formal dining room. Family room. Elegant master suite. Step-down llvfng room. Owner transferred. ANXIOUS TO SELL EXCELLENT VALUE. JUST REDUCED .................................................... NOW $3-15,000 Open Sat-Sun 1-5 .............. 1S.5 Santiago Dnve BAYCREST . . . Custom built five bedroom home. Four baths. One bedroom and bath Ideally situated for maid's quartef'S or guests. Gourmet kitchen wtth breakfast area. FormaJ dining room. Three car garage. PRICE RE- DUCED $80,000 ......................... NOW $345,000 Open Sat 1-5 ...................... 1519 Santiago Drive BAYCREST . . . Extraordinary four bedroom. three bath home. Impressive atrium with retract- able roof, ptea.santty enhanced with lush plant- ings, lounging area and wet bar. Format d1mng room. Famlly room wilh fireplace. [ow mainten- ance yard. Very private patio . OWNER FINANC- ING AVAILABLE. .. below market rate .. $339,000 Open Sun 1-5 ................. 1826 Tradewinds Lane BAYCREST • . . Attractive family home. Four bedrooms. Combination coun1ry kitchen and dining room. Separate family room or could be formal dining room. Hardwood floors. Conve- nient attic. Newly remodeled kltchen ... all new appliances. Child-gated custom pool and spa. .................................................... NOW $329,000 WESTCUFF ... Your first Impression of thiS attractive four bedroom. three bath home will be great...and the more you check the elegant features, the more you will like It. Spacious IMng room with artistic fireplace. Kltchen/famlly room combination with wet bar. Formal dining room. Huge three car garage with laundry and wwk area. Very prt'late side and back yards. Room for pool.......... ....... .. .. ..... . ... .. .......... $325,000 BAYCREST . Four bedrooms. Huge llvtng room with fireplace. Family room. Formal dining room. Neat and clean condition. Neutral colors Large yard with flowering shrubs and trees. Very private spa. Ample space for pool. Vacant. Owner motivated. J UST REDUCED .................................................... NOW $290,000 Open Sat 1-5 ........................... 1807 Toyon Lane BAYCAEST . . . To call this four .bedroom Baycrest's best buy ts to mintml2e tt. There Is more to value than a reasonable prtoe. Here Is alJ..around styte, comfort, quality and k>catlon. It's easy on the eye .. .It's easy on the pocket- book ..................................................... $275,000 WE8TCUff ... Very neat three bedroom, two bath home. Parquet h¥dw0od floor entry. Aoor to oelllng mirrors tend to lncreae ltze of rooms. FormaJ dining room. Specious yard wtth IUto- matk: sprlnklera .................................... $235,000 \ I ~ ~ -~ ~~--~~~~~------~~--.._ .......... --.............. 9!"""'-----------------:-.... --~~--~-._..,- 10 -Orange County ReaJ Estate/An Advert1slng supp~ent to the DAILY PILOT/Saturday, August 25, 1984 _) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- Over Sixty Years of Tur_ning Dreams Into Reality OUTSTANDING 180 DEGREE VlEW Of bay, Catabna & night lighta. Owner wants to reure Well built 2 bdrm home with eXCJung potential. Submit your offer, owner ready to pack and move. Call DOROTHY HARDCASTLE CHEVRON GAS STATION Complete package deal. Central locauon m Bellflower near fwy. 3 bays, 2 lifta, 6 pumps. Make the back room your dream Pnce includes all inventories. Asking $110,000. C.al.l FRED POUIAN · UDO ISLAND BA YFRONT Spacious family home on sandy beach w/adjacent green~lt. Seven bdrm residence w/separate maids quart.en., may be used as a 5 bdrm home w / 2 bdrm in-law or mcome unit. lsl T .D is fully assumable. Call MARIA BERCOVITZ BUILDABlE LOT ON THE BEACH One of the few remaining ocean Cront lots m Newport Beach. Great location near the Newport Pier. Wat.ch the waves roll in and the sun 11el $350,000 C.al.l DONNA WEBSTER or MARY RICHARDS 4400+ SO.FT. NEWPORT BEACH HOME 147' bay frontage w/pnvate dock for 70' boat. 4 bdrms + convertJble study, 4 'h baths, fonnal dlrung room and step-down living room. Separ- ate mast.er wing w /ID ttmg room, fireplace & twin walk-in closets. Offered with land for $1,700,000. Asswnable financing. Call TODDY SMITII or DON DeTHOMAS PRICE REDUCTION-HOME + INCOME Duplex across street from expe0S1ve bayfront homes. Walk to bay or beach. 3 bdrm & 2 bdrm + guest & bath, 3 car garage. Home • apt separated by large enclosed patio. Call MARILYN TWITCHELL or MARIA BEROOVITZ MESA. VERDE LARGE ASSUMABLE LOAN la ~. 30 }leer loan. Three-bdnn home with spacious family room and sepanate living room in quiet location. Walk to shopping center & Fedco. $136,000. C.al.l SALLY SHIP-LEY OLD CORONA DEL MAR A rare opportunity to own one of the areas landmark homes on Ocean Blvd. The chamung residence with rambling rooms is reminiscent o( a past era Located on a spacious 65X 140 corner lot Wllh a panoramic Vlew from Dana Point to Palos Verdes. RealistJcalJy pnoed at $1 ,100,000 Call BINNIE DIXON 6 UNITS-JUST REDUCED! Located m Santa Moruca approxlll\ately 1 mile from the ocean. Excellent units close to shopping. Need a fast sale! Price now just $235,000 Call DONNA WEBSTER VIEW HOME-NEWPORT BEACH S unsets and ctty lights. Four bdrms, 2 'It baths. Open farruly room and kitchen with french doors Formal dirung room. Gated, pool size front courtyard. Detached garage. $330,000 mcludes the land Call DON DeTHOMAS BLUFFS "ONE OF A KIND0 Bwlt ongma.lly by the bwlder of the Bluffs as his personal home on l 1A lots with 180' panoramic view of Back Bay, this eustom designed. ex- panded end unit lS TRULY UNIQUE•! $399,500 ind ucting land. Call SALLY SHlPLEY or JOYCE DABOL T • GREAT STARTER HOME 2 or 3 bdrm borne in good area with fittplace and pool Reasonably priced, easy to ahow. Call DOROI'HY HARDCASTLE NEW ON THE MARKET-OLD C.D.M. Pride of ownership is reflected in this ~utifully maintained duplex. F.ach wut features two bdnns w/numerous amenibes plus a four car garage. Great rental area. Al.most $300,000 of assumable financing. Offered at $390.000. Call LINDA TAGLl.ANE'TTI LOOKING FOR A TAX SHELTER? Never vacant. Spacious duplex m easy accelS location two doors from West Newport Ocean Beach. $25,200 income per year. Could be much more if rented seasonally. Two 3 bdrm, 2 baths w/woodbuming fireplaces. Motivated aellen are asking only $285,000. c.an MARILYN Hil..L OPEN HOUSE, SUNDAY 1:00 TO 5:00 1121 PORT TAGGART PL.-HEWPORT • llEACH 4 bdrm. 3~ bath boDw w/t.OUcb of New f.naland charm. Separate suest quanen, 1piral stair cue, cathedral ceilli\P, highly u~ SplldoUs manicured lawn with patim for enltttalnJ.ne. Located ate .. from cammunhy pool and park. C.al.l TODDY SMITH BAYFRONT-OCEAN V1EW BLUFF8-4EWPORT BEACH Fabulous front row VJew of bliCk bay & ocean. Highly upgraded single level. Laree a.-wnab.le loan. Lnd can be plarchaed fot $37,673 with 1<>'11 financing. A*inl $219,000. Call SALLY SHIPLEY or JOYCE DABOLT ONE OF THE MOST VALUAalE LOTI IN BIG CANYON J uat steps to the 7t.b greerl from this lovely --~--~~ executiw home. G<Mmnet kitchen, 30 Ceet of ward.robe p!\.ls a large walk~in do9d. 1.arce fam- ily room area ith bar that -ta 12 and a ainall dance floor or SJ*ll! for pool table. AD this with room to exJlU)d for only $1,.295,000. Call DOROTHY l:tA.RDcAs1u! NEWPORT BEACH-POOL a SPA Beautiful 3 bdrm and den or 4 bdrm home. Lovely patio entertainment area with lush gar- dens and fire pit. Abo has RV access. Excellent loction! A must aee for the dbcnmi.nating buyer. Priced at $329,900. Ask for Bll..L or DONNA WEBSTER NEWPORT CREST Lovely 4 bdrm, 2~ bath condo in excel.lent Newport Beach location. Formal dining room, family room, wet bar, fireplace and balcon.ies. A1ao tncludescommunity pool.1pa and tenrus. All tJus for only $189,900. Ask for DONNA or BILL WEBSTER AFFORDABLE HOUSING 1 bdnn mobile home in adult park m Cost.a Mesa. Wallt to bus, shops, rest.auranta. New wall to wall carpets and window awning. BeautduJ garden Only $8,500. Call MARY JANK MOTIVATED SELLER FORMER MODEL HOME JASMINE CREEK 1'wo bdrms & den, two baths, two fireplaces, air conditioned. Private pool & spa. Guard gated community with tennis & club house facilities. Good ~umable financing. CaU LINDA TAGLlANETTI • SAN CLEMENTE "TAJ MAHAL" LEASE, LEASE OPTION, SALE Totally uruque 6,000 square feet custom home wtlh spectacular 180' panoranuc ocean Vlew. Dramatic multi-level 5 bdrm wtth fishpond, a\num, skylights, spa. maids quarters & leCUrity system. $765,000. Lease unfunushed $2,300/mo. furnished $2,550/mo Call SALLY SHIPLEY or )OYCE DABOLT BAY VIEW-CITY UGH'TS Fantastic views from this beautilully b:ated comer condo. 2 bdrms. l" t.tha. Spedous living area. c.o.nmunity pool. Secwity buiJd.l.na. $385,000. Call DONNA ~TER or MAR\' RICHARDS EA8T8LUFF--$114,.5GO Three bdrm single family bOme. Convenient location on quiet cul de uc near Newpori Beach Tennis Club, Eastbluff s~ Center and Con:lna-del ~ H.ip--Scbool Large aawnab1e Joan at 11.5~. Call SALLY SHIPLEY or JOYCE DABOLT COSTA •&A R>Ulll'LEX $21,900 Grom scheduled inalme and p-eat de- pttd.ation. Motivated selltt, no def~ main- tenance, new paint and insulation. Reduced to $205,000. Call MARY JANK for details NEWPORT BEACH COlllERCIAL Three Iota, two fronting Pacific Coast Highway, plus a 3,550 tq.ft. office build.ina with good incane. $1 ,250,000. c.all CAROL PANGBtmN for par· Uculara. TURTLEROCK-IRVINE SINGLE L:EVEL HOME Sunny 3 bdnn, air conditioned home in choice area of Turtlerock.. Near park. oommuruty pool, and 8Chools. Comer lot with ~ yard. $184,500 lncluding land. C.al.l SALLY SHIPLEY or JOYCE DA.BOLT MOVE TO OREQONfl 3.2 acres on banks of Cbeioo River in Brooliunp. Oregon w /two hou,,es. 3 corrals, bar, fruit or- chard. 4 bdnna plus 1 bdnn guest houa w/RV parking and hookup. Assume loan, owner may carry 2nd or exchange for property or boat. Just reduced to $16:>,000 Phou in listing otrice. Call MARY JANK GEORGE ELKINS COMPANY (714) 759-9100 c2 CORPORATE PL AZ A 0 SUITE 150 D NEWPORT CEN TER ru RESIDENTIAL BROKERAGE GROUP •Tl.I.El llUSATl• 1-1 ... ,_ YIEW llLU" The neighborhood speaks for ltsefftll Take the location and combine it with a well maintaJned 3 BR, 21n BA, upgraded home with pooe and forever views. See It and you'll want it. Good financing. Ca'1 for appointment. $380,000 LH. Ask for Jim Sellers 11111_..IECI .. IE II 1-.1 11'1flllsl•••1111LE llCIJJ One of the largest lots offered In Broadmoor. 3 BR, 2 BA. large IMng room, formal dining room and Immaculate private yard. Outstanding lo- cation across from park and pool. Owner will carry $70,000 a1 10-;. for 5 years. Owner very motivated. Prloed to sell at $219,000. Fee. Ask for Randy H. Katz 1• 11 SllTUEU.l 1DIUCE IPEI SIT /Ill 1-1 .. -1#flf YU.IE I &SSIMllU FllllCllC II IOllllLE mYllE TDllCE"IJ Arst & Second Trust Deeds assumable at low Interest rate amortized over 30 years. Cheerful bright 3 BR, 2 BA contemporary home in perfect move-In condition. High beam ceiHngs. Like new kitchen & bathrooms. Teak entry. lovely easy- care landscaping, automatic sprinklers, lights & atrium garden entry. Short ~row posslble. Call Belle Chase Lee for additional financing infor- mation. Reduced to $289,500 with land. Ask for Belle Chase Lee UM ISU -IEST Ill.IE Charming outside & In. Open beamed ceilings. oak plank floors, French doors & brick patio create the atmosphere for good IMng. Add 3 BR. 2 BA. 2 fireplaces & It's a winner! Priced at $345,000. Ask for Linda Oeth .. ,.. ....... -$210,000 The two most sought after features are ~rs to enjoy In this 3 BR, 2~ BA, townhouse. Pride of ownership and locatlonll Privacy, ttled entry, French doors and more. Convenient to Newport Center and neighborhood shopptng. $160,000 In assumable financing. Don't miss this one. Call Jim Seiters Cllllll IETllllD Spotless 2 BR home plus 1 BR guest house on Eastslde. Huge private yard with R.V. access. Recently re-decorated and re.landscaped. New roof and water heater. A great value a1 $139,900. Ask for Halite Strock . maasm cam •• -1111,11111 Quiet location with garden view. Light and airy 3 BR. Master bedroom retreat, 3 BA, step down living room, fireplaces, wet bar and fonnal dining room. Ask for Lois Egan uw ••• IUJISIUD Owner will carry low interest 3rd on this cute corner lot duplex. Try 10-4 down and rent, remodet or build near the beach. Only $217 ,500 FEE. Ask for HaJlie Strock. LEllEI lnEI R-2 property with small 2 BR. -1 BA house in1>kt Corona del Mar. Seller will carry financing with 10-4 down. $219,500. CaJI Connie Maxsentl "l&CI 1&1 YIEW" Vacant condo needs you!!! Master BR with his and hers baths. family room plus 2 other BR aJI on greenbelt. $245,000. Ask for Barbara Gothard CHIU Ill Ill llPLEI 21h blks to beach, with great owner unit. 3 BR. 2 BA, fireplace. laundry room, huge pantry. High beamed celling, private deck. Plus! 2 BR. den, 2~ BA, family room, laundry room. brick fire- place. Atrium patio. Priced at $349,000. Ask for Lois Egan ".11111111 CIEEI" Beautiful plan 5, 3 BR, 2'h BA. with family room. Former model. Private sparkling spa. 24 hr guarded gate. Lighted tennis courts. $369,900. Ask for Marte Denny . 11111 IMS -Clllll IEL 1111 $al-811D Large owners unit has 3 BR and 3 BA plus two 2 BR, 2 BA units. All with private patios and fireplaces. Great income. Beach side of Coast Hwy. Ask for Mary Oentls NEWPORT .BEACH 2123 San Joaquin Hills • IS llWf 111 IE.lCI I II 1111• llBED Truly one of a kind with outstanding floor plan . Separate children's wing. Very spacious with soaring cathedral ceiling and 3 fireplaces. $449,500. Ask for Linda Oeth WUTCUFF cu1m -1411,111m Great 4 BR, 31~ BA, family home on large fee lot. 3 fireplaces, located In luxurious master suite, llbraty and family room. Gourmet kitchen. Great home for entertaining. Ask for Barbara Gothard SIRTICll 11 Cl&mJIE I SllSET YIEWS Cyprus Shores Oceanfront! 4 BR, 3 BA with 2 fireplaces, one in the master. Private beach, tennis. pooC & spa. 24 hour gate guard. One of the lowest priced ocean fronts at $695,000. Ask for David Hlrschler. "lllE • l 1111" Walk through a pine and fem forest and then enjoy the floor to celling views of the islands, jetty and turning basin. BeautUuWeaded glass- doors, windows and warm wood walls add charm to this gorgeous hocne located last on the bluff overtook1ng China Cove. Priced at $1,200,000. Ask for Nancy Short "•TllH LllE n 11 IEWPllT IUCl"U Large Irregular lot with fabulous views of Harbor. peninsula and ocean, stretching from bluff on Ocean Btvd down to its own bay frontage and boat slip. Priced at $1 ,400,000. Ask for Barbara Gothard IUlllFICEIT ICUIFlllT LITI! Prime, large lot In Irvine Cove overlooking Abalone Cove. Sensational plans for home ap- proved by the coastal commission included in the asking price of $2,200,000. Ask for Barbara Gothard ...WIS ISUll" Magnificent bayfront home on 196' frontage. 3 BR, 2'h BA, formal dining with fireplace, outstanding family room with complete bar. Beautiful woods throughout, crown mouldings. French doors and oak plank entry. Terrific for entertaining lnslde or out. Asking $3,300,000. Ask for Carolyn Mason "IEWNITIEIHTS" Soaring 2 story living room with used brick fireplace, 3 BR, 3 BA, luxury condo in Newport Heights. $1,200 mo. Ask for Barbara Gothard 644-7020 Your very best buy in Huntington Beach Occupying a bluff-top setting above the Bolsa Chica Wildlife Reserve and the Pacific Ocean, Cabo de/ Mar is just moments from Pacific Coast highway and prestigious Huntington Harbour. Studio, one and two bedroom condominiums are offered with special amenities including a full size indoor racquetball court, tennis court, pool, spa, and a huge two-story recreation building. Models open daily 10 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. (714) 840-4661 Lofts • Oval Tubs • Tiled Entries • Fireplace Ceramic Tile Kitchen Counter Tops Full Security *Reserved for first time buyers. cs ,. ' -·------.. -... Orange Gounty Real Estate/An AdvartlsJng supplement to the DAILY PILOT!Sa1urday, August 25, 198"4 -13 ~CONGRATULATIONS ~ MAXINE!! ;...-' ~ FOR CHOOSING TO RISE ABOVE THE CROWD MAXINE LARSON RE/MAX " REALTORS is proud to announce their newest Real Estate Broker-MAXINE LARSON Prior to her present career in real estate. M axine flew with Trans World A1rl1nes as their International Flight Atten- dant to the Orient and Europe. After leaving TWA almost nine years ago, she sold over 3 m illion dollars worth o f residential property her first year 1n the business In 1983. she again received the Top Producer award from her previous real estate company Maxine received her BA at the University of Washington and attended qraduate school for her MBA at the University of California She is a licensed Real Estate Broker and has been a multi· million dollar sales producer for the last eight years Maxine volunteers her free time to GAMMA TAU GAMMA of ALPHA CHI OMEGA •National Sorority. and the CABARET CHAPTER o f fundra1sers for the new Orange County Music and Performing Arts Center. You can also f tnd this lovely lady's biography 1n Who's Who in Cal1 for- n1a for 1984. Maxine also enjoys snow sk11ng boating and tennis with her husband Ed Maxine Larson will be 1oining Suzee Miller. Real Estate Bro ker, as a full partner A s a team. there is nothing these two professional brokers can't handle When you want to list. exchange or buy property, and desire professional assistance, call MAXINE. WELCOME TO RE/MAX . MAXINE!! R~MM<® 559-9400 Glen Hellwarlh Broker/Owner Re/Ma>< June 1984 Elderly tenants' needs are managers' concern Taking care of property just the start for those managing older tenants Managers of housing for the elderly are responsible for more than simply the financial welfare of their properties: '"they are often responsible for many of their tenants' financial security "One of the manager's invaluable services 1s to make restdents aware or benefits to wtuch they are entttled, and to make sure those benefits are received by the proper 1ndiv1duals." Rosetta Parker explained. Parker 1s the author of "Hous- ing for the Elderly· The Handbook for Mangers." produced by the Institute of Real Estate Management. It is the book is the first ever published to discuss the management of this type of housing. Managers of houstng for the elderly take respons1b11tty for mak1ngr4ture ten- ants receive any appropriate financial aid; determining 1f and when to implement special design features for elderly ten- ants. creating opportun1t1es for residents to wOf'k , and. 1n the case of ltfecare inst1tut1ons handling all of the assets of the res1dents. Panter. with Swiss Property Manage- ment of Dallas, Texas, has more than 15 years of expenence in the fteld of housmg for the elderly. Speaking at a meeting of the Institute of Real Estate Management in Chicago recently, Parker explained that extra design features needed for elderly tenants need not cost the owner a great deal more than conventional features In fact, if included in the 1n1ttal design, they can even cost less. Features which might be included are raised address numbers for the bltnd. doorbells instead of knock- ers. automatic door openers and wider doors to accommodate wheelchairs. ramps, which can be cheaper to build than curbs: and an emergency communica- tions system, which mcludes speakers ltnk1ng the tenants and the management office. and fire alarms with both visual and odor-inducing signals for deaf and bhnd residents A sotroound copy of Parker's bootc can be ordered for S 19.95 (plus $3 shipping and handling) from !REM 430 N M1ch1gan Avenue. Chicago Ill. 60611-4090 Ministorage centers can be good real estate investment But successful venture r~q•Jire5 an !nvestcr .. to do homework first M1nistorage centers can be one of the best real estate investments available today. 1f investors do their homework before they build. suggests Buzz Victor president of the Mint-Storage Manage- ment Consulting Co of Denver · Self-service storage 1s a business that 1s almost unique in its ab11tty to otter growth opportunities to investors and managers no matter what economic cond1t1ons prevail.· Victor says However, he cautioned 'the search for a suitable proiect 1s easier when the investor understands something about the min1storage market -who uses these units. and why ' Addressing the Institute of Real Estate Management recently Victor of- fered three basic reasons tor the rapid growth of the ministorage industry the trend toward multifamily housing and smaller housing units. changes in com- mercial and retail cycles and technology and the rising cost of commercial and retail space Yet the tremendous growth m the industry cannot guarantee a successful min1storage pro1ect. Victor stressed In- vestors must investigate whether the market is ripe for this type of fac1hty They must determine 1f the residential and commercial markets are strong enough to require ministorage units Aes1dent1at users make up roughly 70 percent of the self-service storage mar- ket but Victor noted that the commercial tenant population 1s increasing rapidly. growmq from 1ust 10 percent of all users a ie'fi years ago to anywheTe between 30 and 35 percent todav. "Mln1storage .s a gooo option tor tenants whose small businesses do not encompass sutt1c1ent on-premises storage space for excess merchandise. equipment. supplies and ftles. he said Victor stresses that potential in- vestors must investigate the total market before breaking ground. Information such as the area's population type, rental housing figures. income level. transience. commercial act1v1ty and unemployment statistics must be researched. · Location 1s a prime factor 1n the success of a self-service storage develop- ment,' Victor continued 'Market analysis studies levels of demand 1n the area betng explored.'" Victor recommends that investors spend time 1n the ltbrary looking up census figures and metropolitan statistics 1n order to see 1f their fac11tt1es will succeed "Current census figures are a fertile source of information on factors affecting the m1mstorage market.' he noted It 1s also important to survey the competition Although the amount of 1nformat1on owners and managers will divulge may vary, any data can be of immense help Vital information concern- ing market depth costs and design can be derived from what the competition says All of this 1nformat1on can give investors a good idea regarding the potential success of their pro1ects •• Af- firmative answers tell the developer to proceed with the pro1ect · Victor con- cluded "Inconclusive answers pomt to a need for some outside consulting. Negative answers should bring a halt to the pro1ect. or a sh1f1 to another site or community " BAYSHORES -BUYERS 3 bdrm 2 bath. Assume 10% financ- ing. 2 private beaches, guarded community, next to Balboa Bay Club. Asking $375,000 fee. RITA WOE 631-1266 LAKE TAHOE An absolute gorgeous lodge nes- tled amongst trees, view, sleeps 16. 4 bdrm + loft. Assume $88,000 1st T.D. at 13% fixed. Asking $125,000. SUBMIT ALL OFFERS. Owner needs action f astf For detalls call RITA WOE 631-1266 NEWPORT HEIGHTS COUNTRY COTTAGE Rli~WIDE RvM~ 631-1268 3 bdrm, 2 bath, huge yard with room to expand up and out. Tastefully decorated in a country theme. Location and curb appeal. Priced at $220,000. RITA WOE 131-1211 4 BEDROOM -$106,000 A real bargain! Spic 'n Span and ready to move into is this extra large end unit. Double car garage. New carpet, paint, roof, etc. RITA WUE 631-1266 -/'- LIQUIDATION CAN't BELIEVE IT! Must liquidate gorgeous 2 bdrm, 2 bath air conditioned condo near S. C. Plaza for $69,000 also 3 bdrm model for $77 ,500. Pool, spa, carport. Asssume 10.5% financing. Won't last. lllTl WOE 631-1266 MESA VERDE ORIGINAL OWNER OF.fERS NEAT 4 BEDROOM~3 BATH BUCCOLA BUil T HOME, SECLUDED LOCATION, EX- CELLENT FLOOR PLAN, WOOD FLOORS, 3 CAR GAR- AGE. PRICED AT $247,500. JlCllE IUIUlll SECLUDED LOCATION 4 BEDROOMS, 3 BATHS IN PRIME CONDITION. HUGE CUL DE SAC LOT WITH ROOM ENOUGH FOR POOL, REC. VEHICLE OR BOAT PARKING. EXTENSIVE ENTER- TAINING AREAS. CLOSE TO MESA VERDE COUNTRY CLUB. $250,000. JACllE IWllLEIUI CHARMING SINGLE LEVEL 4 BEDROOM HOME ON QUIET COURT STREET. HARDWOOD FLOORING IN ENTRY WAY & DINING ROOM, DELIGHTFUL "GARDEN ROOM", AND EXCELLENT NEIGHBORHOOD. PRICED AT $169,950. OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY. CALL FOR DETAILS -llCllE lllllLEIAI 631 -1266 NEWPORT HEIGHTS CUSTOM ONE OF A KIND NEWER CUSTOM HOME, 4 BDRMS, 4 112 BATHS, PRIVATE CENTRAL ATRIUM YARD, LARGE 3 CAR GARAGE AND MORE. ASKING $425,000. CALL FOR PRIVATE SHOWING. JACllE UllLElll 631-1266 CENTRAL ATRIUM POOL HOME SINGLE LEVEL 4 BEDROM HOME BUil T AROUND CEN- TRAL COURT YARD. EXTRA LARGE LOT WITH PATIO AND PLAY YARD COMPLETE THIS FAMILY ENTERTAIN- ING HOME. CLOSE TO MESA VERDE COUNTRY CLUB. $269,000. JAOllE llllLElll 631-1266 NEWPORT HGTS-VIEW-VIEW 3,500 SQ. n. Dramatic Desert Architecture & De- sign. 4 bdrm home remodeled and expanded. 2nd story just com- pleted. 3,500 sq.ft. of entertain- ment and living area. View from most llvlng areas. Observation deack and spa. This Is a superb property very fairly priced. Owner very motivated. $429,000. UI IODIERS 631-1266 UE RODGERS WM*- &31-1211 NEWPORT HEIGHTS-NEW CUSTOM Superb newer 4 bdrm home with traditional design. Gourmet island kitchen with exceptional features. Separ- ate formal dining with fireplace. Every custom extra you could Imagine. Massive deck with spa. It's a dream! $389,000. RAE RODIEIS 631-1266 BRAND NEW CUSTOM PRIME Newport Heights VICTORIAN design. 3,400 sq.ft. of living area. Master craftsmanship 3 bedroom, family room, formal dining. Antique doors & fireplace. Too many upgrades to mention. It's stunning! EXCLUSIVE SHOW- INGS. Call for appointment. $439,000. W llllERI 631-1266 EXCLUSIVE LISTING NEWPORT HEIGHTS Charming 3 bdrm, 2 bath den home in excellent secluded location of Newport Heights. Assumable financing. Great opportunity at $189,000. W llMEIS 631-1266 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Only $175,500 for this 2 bdrm home. Great Quiet Lo- cation. Separate Dining Room. Oak Hardwood Floors. Owner will finance at $12% interest. Call Todayl W IOllEllS 631-1266 EASTSIDE CONDO-REDUCED 2 bdrm, 21/2 bath cozy corner fireplace, custom book- shelves, step down living room, nice patio, community spa, only $116,900. JOYCE WllTZE 631 -1266 NEW LISTING CLIFF HAVEN Gorgeous Newport Heights customized home. Beautiful pool and garden. A very special property. Call for show- ings. Priced to sell quickly. Only $380,000. JIYCE WllTZE 631-1266 UNIVERSITY PARK Seller slashed price on vacant University Terrace townhome. 2 bdrm, 2 bath, new carpets, excellent lo- cation. $125,000. JOYCE WALTZE 631-1266 .BEACH DUPLEX REDUCED ONLY $159,000 Wonderful pride of ownership duplex in xlnt location between bay & ocean. Front house is 4 bdrms. 2 bath. Spacious bachelor unit over garage has L sleeping loft plus a large sunny .":a.., deck. JOYCEWILTZE 234 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA • 631-1266 -l ~ WE llEED YOUR LISTINGS HOME OF THE WEEK * PROMONTORY BAY * SHOWN ON COVER PAGE Four bedroom•, thrH batha, formal dining, famlly room, beautltul meeter aulte, DOCK apace tor up to 55 foot boat, great price •t $895,000 lnclud" land, with ••- aum•bl• 1at T.D. of $800,000. Submit •ny offer BOB a DOVIE KOOP •LIDO PARK HIGHRISE * cfutstandlng bay and city night light view, 1 bedroom, 1 ba1h. Co-op· hlghrlse, underground parking, community pool with fabulous decks. $250,000. 1111 IOVIE IOOP "CORONA DEL MAR BAYFRONT" Custom 5 bdrm, 4.5 bath, 2 master suites, beautiful large living room with spectacular view. 3 fireplaces, wet bar & room for 3 boats up to 55 ft . Best buy on bayfront at $1,195,909. Reduced to $995,000. IOI Ill IOYIE IOOP LINDA ISLE 5 Bedrooms, 5 Baths, Family Rm ., Din. RM., Large Master Suite w/sitting area, maids quarters, room for 2 large boats up to 65 foot. $700,000 1st & 2nd TD both assumable at low rate, steal at $1,250,000 Incl. the land, must move inland. Ill I HYIE IHP YACHTSMAN COVE BAYFRONT 4 BDRM, 4 BA, Huge Living Room with Lrg. wet bar, balcony and large patio with views of the bay, dock for 3 boats up to 55 foot, 6 year old custom, price of $1 ,095,000 Includes land. Ill I NYIE IOOP Ll>O ISLE PRM:ST LOCATION Complete turning basin views from this 4 Br, .l Bath remodeled home with new kitchen, baths. Beau. tile work. plus dock for 50 ft. yacht. $1,950,000. IOI Ill HVlt"llOP NEWPORTS KINGS ROAD One of the finest bay, ocean & Catalina views. The home Is designed for entertaining, including 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, large dining. game room with sit down bar, very large pool. Priced at $425,000 (land quote is $190, 102)'.'Great buy. lllerllYIEIMP . Elf CANCE Ill CAMEO SHORES Beautiful family home with 5 bdrms, 5 baths, formal living & dining, ocean view, stunning backyard with gazebo, pool Jacuzzi wet bar & full bath. 3 private beaches. Ex~llent entertaining. $529,000. Ill 01 IOYIE IMP BALBOA COVE BAYFRONT Four bedroom, 3 bath, formal dining, family room, break- fast room. Large master suite with view down bay, dock for 40' boat, very large home. Steal at $500,000. IOI I llVlllMP I D I e Bob I Dovie loop Bob loop, Jr. I TOP SILES ~:!:'!!~E~~~u~IUF. 1913 B · 4 Br. & 2.5 Bath, family room, 2 fireplaces, wet bar, nice ! yard, view of city & ocean. Security guard gate + pool & I tennis. $395,000. IM II •m IMP POSSIBLE COMMERCIAL LOT IJ Builders delight. This property has possibilities for office fl bldg., or commercl~I use. Lot size 66x300 with back bay ~ view, presently has ~all house and storage and is zoned ~ for horse property. $350,000. Ill I MYIE IMP • NEWPORT HEIGHTS El Catalina, Bay and Ocean Views, from this three bedroom, fl two bath, two fireplaces, separate family room, pool, room to add. Walk to town & Udo, very motivated.Seller can ! carry large Note. $375,000. Ill I llYIE IOOP i BAYCREST NEWPORT I 4 bedroom 2% bath formal dining, family room, breakfast I area, large yard with pool, will trade Condo Jasmine Creek 1 or Newport. Asking $325,000. Ill Ill MYIE IMP "LUXURIOUS VILLA BALBOA" I Villa Balboa's largest penthouse, 1st time offered. 3 bdrm 2 bath, family room, wet bar, formal living and dining · $265,000. Great terms. Ill II MVIE IMP ' I SPYGLASS HILL CDM LEASE I 4 bedrom 3 bath, formal dining room, family roomk den or maids quarters. Beautifully decorated with oak floors, large yard with spa and view of city. 3 patios. Lease at $3,000 month, or lease option. at $550,000. IH I Hm m IHP I CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX This country home is completely upgraded. Antique win- dows, rails, turn post from all over the country in this 2 bdrm, 2 bath home with 1 bdrm, 1 bath in rear, steal at $260,000. IOI Ill HYIE IMP CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX 2 Bedroom 1 baths OL D bedroom 1 bath $650.00. Bachelor $· e 1st T.D. $11,800 at 6.75% 2nd T.D. $2v-.,vvv cu ,.., 10 • .:>tlljal at $250,000. IOI lll HYIE llOP NEWPORT BEACH Highly upgraded with oak floors, gourmet kitchen, Frenchdoors, 2 hot tubs. 3 bdrm, 2 baths. $309.000 or trade. Ill II llYIE IMP I I I I 1· I 234 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA • 631-1266 BOB & DOVIE KOOP I I -I (Nik---"' IM!',,,,,, --1111111111m _.. Ml"f,1-. G*MW ~ +1111 ww: G¥#'1 .,.. GM 3 .,.. •. lilMll • .. 16-Orange County ReaJ Estate/Ari Advertfslng aupplement to the DAJLY PILOT/Saturday. Auguat 25, 1984 First hi-tech phase finished Construction has been completed on the $7 -million building which represents the first phase of the Tustin Research Center, a $25-million high-technology center just east of the Newport Freeway in Tustin. Announcement that the 7 4,839- square-foot structure has been com- pleted comes from the Newport Beach office of Business Properties Brokjage. Co Turner Development Corp. orlfv1ne is the consulting developer for the project. The initial building In the complex, which Is a devefopment of Santa Fe Land Improvement Co .. the land devetopment arm of Santa Fe Industries, features a treated concrete and black glass exterior and 1s highlighted by a1wo-story. glassed lobby Work bu been completed on a $7-mllllon baildlae in the first pha.9e of the hlgh-tecb.DoloCJ Tut.hi .... -. Expandable to 98,798 square feet . the building includes two floors of general ottice space with windows along three sides. An open bay, manufac- turing/assembly area is at the rear of the structure. outdoor employee dmmg areas. dock- h1gh and ground-level loading, full spnnklering and extensive landscaping The building also 1s divisibte and is designed for a second two-story lobby. of Redhill Avenue. It will eventuaJly consist of up to three separate bulldlngs totaJlng some 250,000 square feet, depending on the user's particular needs. and warehousing -1n a single building or in a campus-like environment of build- ings. ' Business Properties Brokerage Co. is the exclusive marketing agent for Tustin Research Center. Handling the project for BPBC are John Rothwell. Nick Hannon and Bill Garrett. Information Is available through BPBC's Newport Beach office. Other features include a 4-to-1 park- ing ratio, 100 percent dropped ceiling and temperature control capability, heavy electrical service. elevator capability, The Tustin Research Center 1s located on a 14-acre site at the corner of Del Amo and Valencia Avenues. a block south of Edinger Avenue and a block west The center has been designed to aJlow a hlgh-techno1ogy firm to locate its diver~ operations -such as corporate headquarters. research and de'letop- ment, assembly, testing, manufacturing E&Mf.,.._LR 2C •S .. Uf-WllUT 1-1 Reduced Price!! Spectacular view of mountains & city lights from this very special Nantucket model in Spyglass Hill. 5 Bdrms, formal dining, large famlty room. Professionally decorated. Entertainment backyard with pool, spa, BBQ, & fire ring. Now $669,500. Bob Gross sr~mll'fmm 14 TUFlllU -IPDI UT/$8 1-1 5 Br. 7 Bath custom Valentine built home over- looking terrific view. 5800 sq. ft with extensive use of wood and stone thruout. Extremely private rear yard. Family sized spa. Cul-de-sac location. Asking $1,695,000. PDmllUNM• •1 1121 E. mM IUl/Wll Slmlf 1-1 Great family hOf'Tle.just steps to sand and white ocean water. 3 Bdrm 2'.lt Baths. Alt new carpet, roof, copper plumbing and freshly painted. Owner will finance at 11¥.•1. to quaJlfied buyer with 25•1e down. Immaculate and ready for occupancy. $384,500. Bob Gross. • Tll IE.ICI .. W. llUIFlllT/Wll UT 11-2 Perfect oceanfront location. Two-story with great view. 4 Bdrm 2 Bath, fireplace, new paint. Walk to shopping. A real bargain at $595,000. UlmflCOT .... 1' IDOi -IPDI UT/Ill 1-1 Outstanding view location. Valentine custom home w/supertor design & construction. 5 Brs. Including elegant Ms tr suite. 7 Baths, famlty room, 4 FP, 3 car garage, gated courtyard 6100 sq. feet of , 8!-'~b ltvl~g '°! $1:850,000. UPI -• IPTIUIS 41 mW Uf/IPEI llmlf 1-1 Lovely 4 Bdm 3 Bath Cape Horn model with fabulous view. Tastefully upgraded throughout. Formal dining room. Additional cabinets In kitchen & garage. Soft. neutral decor. Custom drapes, marble entry, security system. Must see at $599,000. ~ WllOITI PUl-111TUllCI am 21 ml.WIS -W11 UT 1-1 Fantastic buy with great financing! Decorated In neutral tones. Large backyard. Beautiful view of the hllls. 3 Br 2 Baths, 2 flreplaoes In a great famlty area. Call office for excet~t financing details. Reduced to $234,000. llftl SHIU 11U11 11H m... -Ml UT/-14 Beautiful spacious 4 Bdrm 31.-'l Bath home. Separ- ate dining room, paneled famlly room, me>v&-ln condition. Panoramic view of bay and city tights. Owner will lease option. Price reduced to $499,5001 Marie Fargo ,._LmUtnm IHNL.m--lftlllmlf 11-1 New on the market. Exciting bayfront location on tumlng_basi"' 4 Bdrm 4 Bath homawtth2 kitchens, effective use of stained glass and used brick. Expansive view from ups1aJrs recreation room. Owner would consider trade for smaller Balboa Island or COM home. Call Vergllene Hull for detalts. Asking $2,350.000. fa.T 111111-llYlm 1111111 Charming custom 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath home ahowa pride of ownership In every detaJI. Beamed oefl- lngs, wood shutters, plaster walls, formal dining room. Prtvate courtyard w1th quality landaca~~· On fee lan<t at $395,000. Vw Ilene Hull . ~- 180-8333 #3 Civic Plaza. Suite 170 Newport Beach, California 92660 ....... Expanded, upgraded Miramar plan with terrific view In Harbor Ridge. 2 Bdrm, large den, 3 baths, mirrored wardrobes, extra cabinets, security alarm. Freshly painted and papered. $499,000. ... YMI Oll1'lm ... .al Huge 13,000 aq. ft homestte In prestigious Harbor Ridge. Lot Is 100' wldeX130' deep. Partial ocean, bay. Catalina views possible from 2nd story. Re- duced over $125,000 and won't last at $350,0001 Call Nowt Dave Busk mil.I LDll ILlfn IUllY1 Anest corner location. Best priced Anita plan In Bluffs. Inviting kitchen, family room, pretty patio, fireplace. Sparkling dean 3 Bdrm, w/convertible den, 2 Bath on fee land. $219,000. PIU111&. lllHm ... 6800 sq. ft of the finest quality craftamanshlp avallabte. 5 Bdrma, 7 Baths, 5 car garage, 3 level tuxurlOU$ home In prestigious Harbor Ridge In Newport Beach. French doors and custom cabl· nets throughout. Gourmet kitchen with lavish equipment. Thia new home won't last at $2,250,000. ............. UIYll - fllWll Excellent location. Available Sept. 1. $2500/mo. Call Marie Fargo. 11an1nMU 'IMAll ...Fm .... This gorgeous traditional 6 Bdrm haa been r&- dueed for Immediate sale. Now only $596,0001 This lnclud gourmet kitchen. wooded at lrways, French doors, stained and leaded glass wtndowa, pool, spa and wading P.OQI. Please take the time to M8 the be&UtitUI barg&ln .• r I • • • • I FV firm's condos popular Thirty-eight reservations have been taken for luxury condominium homes at Sunset Bay Towers. befng developed by Dover Development Corp. of Fountain Valley In Joint venture with Baywood Equities of San Mateo. The $45 milhon glass and concrete high-rise Is, to be completed in late 1984, is located at the water's edge on Ocean Boulevard In Long Beach The one-and two-bedroom. single-· level homes will feature wide window walls with views of the Pacific and the Long Beach skyline. Each of the homes In the 16-story luxury development will also feature an outdoor balcony. HB Ceritury 21 realty retains No. 1 position Office is top-selling franchise in realty system for fifth straight year Century 21 Watk-ln Realty's Hunt- ington Beach office at Goldenwest and Narner has maintained its No 1 position. bl\sed on closed sales to date. as the offlc1al "Top Selling'· Century 21 franchise in the country. according to recent sales statistics. Century 21 Walk-In Realty 1s an independently owned and operated franchise wllhm the Century 21 Inter- national system It cont.noes to run ahead of last years· record pace in sales. according tot compllauons published by Century 21 lnternatfonal. Beach. didri't waste any 11me 1n setting its own records, achieving second place within the entire system 1n 1983. ··our goal for 1984 1s to do the best possible JOb for all of our clients. The professionalism of the sales staff In this office Is the reason we have done so well in such a short period of time... remarked manager Terry Reay. Century 21 Walk-In Realty opened its third office on Barranca Parkway 1n Irvine "More and more prospective home- owners are stopping by at our temporary sales pavilion to learn about our 1,000-to 2.200-square-foot luxury homes," said Rod Giiiiiand, vice president of marketing tor Dover Devetopment. New staff member According to Huntington Beach man- ager Chuck Grant. "Our average monthly sales total of over S 18 milhon means 1984 will be the fifth year m a row that our top cahber sales associates have made the office No. 1 in the Century 21 system withtn the United States and Canada. 1n August of 1981. amid one of ttle worst real estate recessions in 20 years. The office rose to the challenge and its current • national standing is sixth in the entire Century 21 system. Manager Bill Plattos called the ranking "really exciting for us. especially since we opened the office staffed almost entirely with new sales associates We feet it ts a real testimony to their hard work and dec:hcatlon as well as the outstanding training program m which The 116 homes at Sunset Bay Towers. located between 7th and 8th Places at 1310 Ocean Blvd .. will include eight penthouses and 12 "bluff" units stair-stepping from the street level to the sand. Linda Oeth baa joined the aalea ataff of Grubb a: EIUa Residential of Newport Beach. An 11-year resident of Newport Beach. ahe bu been actiYe In real estate for etc ht years and takes an active lntereat ln community affairs. Oeth la a gradu- ate of Drexel University and t.. llated ln Who'• Who of the American Colleges and UnlYenlties. among 6000 offlCeS." " The Century 21 Walk-In Realty office on Warner. opened m 1975, was the first for the firm and has set a leadership pace as the top office m Orange County since 1977 The firm's second Huntington Beach office. opened in 1980 at the corner of Garfield and Magnolia. also in Huntington all our associates participate · · Century 21 Walk-In Realty s 1984 sales to date already stand at over $240 mil hon ·'We are very pleased that we have reached this incredible volume with 3 offices and 160 sales associates. when many firms don't achieve any more with 30 or 40 offices and three times the sales staff ... remarked Brot<er-Owner Cameron Mera1. For further information. contact the firm s corporate offices at 55 7 -0 77 1 or (800) 992-55.46 Further information Is available at (2 13) 436-6441. .. ,.,._um1m IJ1L91W-.... . BtllltiMIJ ......................... lt1 ....... wit+ ctnt .... 2 .... UAW..• C., SEC. ll.DC. ly -111........ a-..- ~ ... c.. ... l ~,...,...,... ........ s-tty ....._. ........... c ~ .... ,... •1 ...... _ .... ,......._~...._ ........ .., ...... 2 ..... 2~ W..swa....,W..Mtr.MallJ.Ml ... Mku-..-. mtl ITll U. .... .. ..... ... • .. """"",...... 5... +...., .... ,_ ,.., ...... .., .......... ,.... f&: .... ... -....... . ..... DCOlflf-,.Ut• ........ tf '9; al •11 ., w/_, ~ ............... ,,, .3~111 • ...., ............ . ........... . .... .. ~ NyfrW4 ...... 03 ') ... , •• ,. 8wa1tl4 ......... tide. 5 --. wi..i• et , ..... ~t.211Nts. ··---111 ·-111..-... , 1llUU ro•nw ... Caa1111..,, 1W1w.3-. ca 1y ,...,,.. .. .._,_..,. .. aarw :&Nasatd11t ..... . ..... 2 W.-. Z~ _.. k I 1,... t s t l 2 ar P'll'· ..., ,..., .............................. ......... . ..... [~ ........ _. ...... , ....... -.&U.T....,,..,. .. , ... "" .... I I ........ ~ .... I .... •-.uli .... ........ 2..._ ... ,, ~---.hut< p L •. llalltJ, .... I ... t.n I _... .. ,_ ........... lfD...S UT/• 1-4sM 11M UUD, llftl ...U 11911 1-4 •1 N Lm Sim. Lm llU ........ --.... ,... ' rtlracbllll ""· 4 bld;m, 4 ~lbs layhM • llrl' ..................... Iii aAlp.-.... .a + ......, ..-... S.-witw. $915,000 $1,US.• .... , 1-1 11 IUlllUI .-r, ..,, ... .. ..... , 1-1 111 N Lm-. Lm llU ~ Cmt C... 3 bdlw, 3 bas, ~J ...._ Sll0,000 Thill 5 ~ bayhilt la....., ta utlsfy •estate. "ut llcdllt ••.-t ..... .......... Cmt ~. 2...,.. +den, l'h .............. r-. ... N111t•1t c .. , ......... btadt. 2 "' ... . •Lii~ an._ ftll2cm.. .. ~~·--s-........ ,..., .... cmts,2W11n1,2~~ ........ ,__ ........ .... TOMlm Oii ltTHf .... Y ... l• _, -tt ....... ,_ lllST SEI rT. a.. by"' I' 114 UITIAM rr. •11•1 111..-......., --. 3 •. z ball,._.,._..._, ..... n 1CaS1. ~ IKlllll • ICrm .. -.. ... • '" ..... "1'-..., .... ,..... rm m 111..-'* ... la Ill ••• ~ .......... ~ f .... 4 ........ 2 ball, ..................... ,: i.t ~. "" .. . urr llll llml , • .._ Qdty.. J •• -of' .......... _.,. (lfllft. , w.-. 2~.._ ..... u UM& .. mu... • .... ~ MCWMmt..._ .. ,..., ... SUI.,,_~ tr.. s ll80l!l illlt,.._,., .. ~ IClt. ..... ... f ...................... l ......... , ..... l ,_ '*''int,_,.._...,.._. SI l IDOi MillL111L- a11D1t•1MSTim ..• bc4I 'tu._. • ._..._.._. ....... ..., ........... 1 ..... f • ..,..._ ..... lt7t cmtalll ... 4ar ..... 11 tldt ..... P59.•-. & Nut 11pw••·a.kt45' llM. Sl.72S.OOO L81ml "' ""' ..... , .. .,, .......... , ....... 21h bat.,,...,,..., -.-. .._..,.._Hn..,MHtts Nm.... llllMI .,..... ..... ens .......... Ill 4 ..... , ........ .... .-. .......... (i~ .... UM.11 •£ .. ... ...... _ ....... _.... .... • 15' ~ .... '-.-.,..., .-. Wi-...... c.tyd ............. ........,., .............. ..,. t.IJ. ,..,. rm..:m ... . .... Cllla .. l ..... ~-.--.............. IJI. rw 't':p •as' 0 • .... ·--..... , ..... ,, , ........................ .. ..... "'""' ...... , ..... ,Miii. ......................... ..... ... a-.- 1111 .-..:. BY SBlll ... U. ._ .. pt,_ Ill Ilk_..,,.._ ·-·-·--• .., ........ lS'llt.letulM' t aitMllra..., 1ktia 1J ..... -....... .... ., ................ o.. .. ~--·--.....,. NllDIHI Pm:DUD MU,I• 3 ..... N ....................... ~_....,, • --··:= lMJt 2., ...... "*11 ............. ii W91 I, ,...s&llUGlllWT• 4W1 .l~ ..... ,_.,,_, ••o. .._ ...2..._ ..... ,_... .......... s. ......... . l I I I I I I I I l . I I I I • County Real Estate/An Advef1istng aupp19meot to the PAILY ~ILOT/Saturday, Augyst 25. 198-4 HOMES FOR SALE 1 BR plua FAM RM or DEN 2921 Fourth, Corona Del Mar 675-6000 $208,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2 BEDROOM * * 1229 Bayside Dr, Newport Beach 631-1400 $650,000 Saturday 1-5 * 1429 Dolphin Terrace. Newport Beach 673-4400 $699.500 Sunday 1-5 2310 First Ave, Corona del Mar 673-4400 $188,500 Sunday 1-5 720 Goldenrod COM 644-72 11 $199,000 Sun 1-5 2 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN v 18 Atoll. Jasmine Creek, Corona del Mar 640-4868 $305,000 Sun 1-5 3 77 Bay View Terr ace, Costa Mesa 546-2313 $160,000 Saturday 2:30-5:30 ••23 Beachcomber Or, Jasmine Crk, CdM $631-7300 $575,000 Sunday 1-5 2535 Crestview, Bayshores, Newport Bch 644-9060 $259,000 Sunday 1-5 189 Masters Cr, nr S.A Country Clb, C.M. 642-5200 $215,000 Sunday 1-5 •2025 Port Bristol, Corona~ Mar 675-6000 $242,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2 Rue Cannes, Big Cyn NB 644-6200 $339,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 20181 Spruce, Santa Ana Heights 642-5200 $159,000 Sunday 1-5 3 BEDROOM 2592 Arbor Dr (Bayshores) Nwpt Bch 631-1400 $225.000 Saturday 2-5 715 Bellis (Eastbluff) Newport Beach 675-6000 f265.000FEE Sat/Sun 1-5 •• 1130 Berkshire (Westcilff) Nwpt Bch 631-"'994 $249,000 Saturday 12-"' 519 Fultenon Ave, NB 631-1266 $220,000 29 Hlllgraas, Irvine 760~8333 $234,000 918 Mackenzie, Costa Mesa Sun1-5 Saturday 1-5 54&-2313 S 134,900 Saturday 11-3 2601 Morning Canyon, Shorecllff 844-9060 $449,000 Sunday 1-5 •2001 Port 8rl1tof (HV Homes) Nwpt Bch 875-6000 $450,000 Saturday 1-.5 21"'4 Port Oumess NB 631-1266 $339,000 1527 PrlciUa NB Sun 1--5 631-1266 $175,000 Sun 12-... • 11 10 Ridge Crest, Marina Hgfnds, CM 644-6200 $149,500 Sat/Sun 1--5 .. 1419 Santenella Terrace, NB 64.<4-7020 $295,000 19501 Sierra Sec:o, Irvine 644-7020 $219,000 2221 S. Forest, Santa Ana Sun 1--5 Sun 1-5 645-0303 $116,900 Saturday 1-5 •470 Shady Ad Irvine Ave, NB 631-7370 $193,700 Sat 1-5 1940 Teresita (Westcllff) Nwpt Bch 4675-6000 $219,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2 14 Via lthlca lido, NB 675-6161 $420,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 * 551 Vista Grande Bluffs, Newport Beach 759-9100 $193,900 Sunday 1-5 * 2617 Vista Omade, Newport Beach 631-1400 $395,000 Saturday 1-"' 789 W 18th Street, Costa Mesa 759-9100 $113,900 Sat/Sun 11-5 3 BR ptua FAM RM « DEN 39 Beacon Bay, Newport Beach 673-1919 $398,000 Sunday 1-"' 1207 Blue Gum lane, Newport Beach 673-"'400 $444,500 Sunday 1-5 2021 Diana Ln, Harbor Hinds, NB 631-1266 $174,500 Sun 1-5 *247 Driftwood, Shorecflffs, CdM 644-9060 $575,000 Sunday 1-5 215 Morning Canyon, ShorecUffs, CdM 6«-9060 $«9,000 Sunday 1-5 3116 Klondike, Costa Mesa 54&-2313 $245,000 • Saturday 1-"' 702 Larkspur, Corona d~ Mar 673-"'400 $349,950 Saturday 1-5 **3335 Ocean &Nd, Corona del Mar 759-1501 $925.000 Saturday 1-5 1528 Orange Ave.(Com. Palmer)Coeta Meea 673-1600 $215,000 Sunday 11-... 1730 Paloma, off 20th St, Npt Bch 642-5200 $212,900 Saturday 1--5 1135 Pembroke, WMtcrtff, N.B 642-5200$245,000 Sunday 1-5 ••1064 Peecador, Dr, Dover Shra, N.B 631-7300 $550,000 Sunday 1-5 ••1900 G8'uy Or, Dover Shra, N.8 631-7300 S54S,OOO Sunday 1-5 332 Potnaenla, Coron. det Mar 6$1-7300 $525,000 Sunday 1-5 1215 Martnens Or, Baycrest, N.8 831-1300 S395.000 Oaily 1-5 Z3T1 Pwdue, Cost• Mesa &45-0303 $191,950 11 ~ Verte, Big Cyn NB ~200 $895,000 Sat/Sun 1--5 1945 Santiago Dr, eaya.t, N.B 831-7300 $345,000 Sat/Sun 1--5 1349 Suaex. Newport Beed\ 6'2-5200 $234,500 Sunday 1--5 *909 Titler COM 644-7020 $380,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 I 4BEDROOll . * * 1621 Bayside COM 831-1266 $1,095,000 Sun 1-5 *183e GaJaxy (Dewer Shores) Nwpt Bch · 873-7300 $985,000 Sat/Sun 1...-:30 1856 Iowa St, Costa Mesa 546-3848 $136,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 333 Ml"ord C. Shra,CDM 844-6200 $845,000 Sat/Sun 2-6 •2962 Mtndanao (Mesa Verde) Costa Mesa 751-3191 $167,500 Sunday 1-... 2029 National, Costa Mesa 548-2313 s 120,000 Saturday 1-"' * •223 Poinsettia. Corona Del Ms 675-eOOO $695,000 Sat/Sun 1--5 1230 Sand Key, Corona Del Mar 675-6000 $379,000 Sun 1-5 500 Rockford, Corona det Mar 759-1501 $295,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 941 SerTa Way (Mesa Del Mar) C.M. 545-5408 $139,500 Sat/Sun 12 .... 1133 Whltesalls, Corona del Mar 644-9060 $495,000 Sunday 2-5 4 BA plua FAM Rll « DEN 2755 Albatross.,.costa Mesa 645--0303 $185,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 * 1624 Antigua (Dover Shores) Npt Bch 760-6333 $449,000 Sat/Sun 1--5 •2107 Arbutus EutblUtf, NB 644-6200 $275,000 SaUSun 1--5 **801 8aylkle Or., Promotory Bay, NB 631-1400 $1,150,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2600 CUff Or., Newport Heights 87M900 $410.000 Saturday 1-... 518 El Modena, Newport Hts, Npt Bch $&40...a68 $389,900 Sat/Sun 1-5 1358 Galaxy, Dover Shore, N.B 642-5200 Saturday/Sunday 1 .... *1700 Galaxy, Dover Shores, N.8. 759-1501 $600,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 1"'41 Galaxy Or, Dewer Shena, Npt Beech 548-5647 $295,000 Sat/Sun 1-6 * • 14 Geneva (Hatbor Ridge) Nwpt Bch 760-8333 $1,850,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 322 Hamilton~ Irvine 848-7171 • 163,000 Sunday 2-6 2821 Harbor View Or. Harbor View HUis 644-9060 $&49,500 Sat/Sunday 1-5 2601 laland View, Harbor View Hiiia 644-9060 $365,000 Sunday 1--5 21861 Kaneohe, Huntington Beed'I 963--8767 $148,900 Saturday 12-... 1019 Mattan Lane, Westclm, Npt Beech 631-7300 $495,000 Sunday 1--5 1630 Antlau&W~ Oowr ~_M.8 631-7300 $475,000 &mday 1-S •2001 Gatatea. Corona Del Mar 759-9100 $789,500 Saturday 1:30-5 * • 1878 Maul (Meu Verde) co.ta Mela 751-3181 $376,000 Sunday 1-5 **•°" Morning Star Ln. Newport~ 6"-9oeo $550,000 Saturday 1-5 2025 N. Cepella Ct, Meea Verde CM 831-126e $169,850 Sun, ... •9332 Pier, Huntington Beech 963-83n s1s...9bO Sat/Sun 1..s 333 Poppy, Corona del Mar 844-9080 $495,000 Sunday 1-5 •• 1206 Cembttdge, Newport Beach 759-9100 $329,900 Sun 1:30-4:30 * 1628 Santiago Or, Baycrest, Npt Beach 831-7300 1395,000 Sunday 1-5 1820 Tradewlnds Lane, Baycrest, Npt Bch 831-7300 $339,000 Sunday 1-5 1148 SMtllgo Or, 0owr Shrs, N.B. 831-7300 $650,000 Sunday 1-5 4639 Tremont Lane, Cameo Shore, N.B. 631-7300 $595,900 Sat/Sun 1-5 •2001 Santiago, Newport Beach 67M400 $345,000 Sat 1-5/Sun 2-6 2409 Tustin Ave, Costa Mesa 87M400 $269,000 Sunday 1-5 * •338-4 &lmmenlet Ctr, Costa Mela &45-0303 $246,900 Sat/Sun 2-5 1789 Tanllg8f, Coeta Mesa 631-0303 $219,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 ***3 Torrey Ptnes, Big Cyn, NB 644-6200 $875,000 Sat 1-5 •1807 Toyon Lane, Baycrest, Newport Bch 831-7300 $290,000 Saturday 1-5 * 1009 Tradewlnda. Newport Beach 073-6900 $345,000 Srt/Sun 2-5 •2158 Vista Entrada (Bluff) Newport 8eact'I 759-9100 $219,000 Saturday 1-5 454 Vista Roma, Newport Beach 644-e200 $269,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 **800 W. Oceenfront (Bal Pentn) Balboa 780-8333 $595,000 Saturday 1-5 58EDROOll * •24 Mlaion Bay (SpyglisiJ CdSuMnd l-5 780-8333 $e69,500 ay 1508 Ruth L9ne. Weatdfff, N.B 845-6268 $387 ,500 Sat onty 2-5 •14 Trat.lgw (twbof Ridge) Nwpt Bch 5 780-8333 $1,695,000 Sat/Sun 1- 5 1R plU9 FAM RM Oii DEN * • e Trafalger, twbof Ridge 840-4868 $1,950,000 Sunday 1-5 ~ 2 co = Orange Coiunty Reel Eatate/An Advertlllng eupptement to the DAILY PILOT/Saturday. August 25, 19a.._ -19 2215 Aha Vista, EMtbluff COM ~ ~.500 Sat/Sun 1-5 ••1437 Antigua Way, Bayaest. N.B 557-7914 '415,000 • SundalY 1-5 ••152• Antlqua Way, Oo¥9r Sherie, N.8. 631-7300 $790,000 Sunday 1-5 **3802 Channel Pl, Newport a.land, N.B. 831-7300 $850,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2507 Blue Water Or, H.V. Hits, CdM 644-9060 $4.40,000 Sunday 1-5 1084 Corona ln, Mesa del Mar, CM 831-7370 $169,900 Sun 1-5 *. 20 Cypress Point, Big canyon, NB 631-7300 $995,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 1226 Polaris Or, Oowr Shores, N.B. 631-7300 $845,000 Sunday 1-5 1600 Dorothy Lane, (Weetdttt), Nwpt Bch 673-6900 $325,000 Satwday 1-5 2018 Santiago Or, Oowr ~ N.9. 631-7300 $478,000 SundalY 1-5 ••1801 Toyon Lane, Baycrest, Npt. Bel\ 631-7300 $550,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 **760 Via Udo Nord (Udo Isle) NB 673-7300 $1,725,000 Saturday 1-5 * *239 Vla Udo Soud, Hewport 8eect'I 759-9100 $1,550,000 O.ity 1-S I( I BR plua FAM Rll or DEN *** 107 Mitford, cameo~. NB 644-6200 $1,599,000 Sat/Sun 1-4 2421 Sierra Vista. NB 842-2134 $350,000 ***•101 Via Udo Soud,NB Sun 1-5 675-6161 $4,850,000 Sat/Sun 12-5 ***101 Via Lido Soud,NB 67s-6161 $4,850,0QQ Sat/Sun 11-5 ***103 Via Udo Soud, Hewport ~ 759-9100 $2,950,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 CONDOS FOR SALE 1 BEDROOll ••v102 SeholZ Plaza-PH 45, N.8 646-9827 $99,900 Sat/Sun l-5 2IEJROOll 2758 H ... 1ew. HV Knoa, COM 700-8333 $254,900 Sat 1-5 *20 S111 cape, Newport Beecf'I 831-1400 $125,000 Saturday 1-5 543WbonCM 044-7020 $119,000 Sun 1-5 2M plue FAM•orDEN **601 E. Oceenfront Unit 1 E. Bal. Penln. 673-5489 $278,000 Sat. 12-8 1656 Orange Ave., Costa Mesa 541-6813 $149,500 Sat/Sun 12-5 789 W. 18th Street, Costa Mele 759-9100 $105,500 Sat/Sun 11-5 38EDROOll 105 Eucatyptus (Latret Point) Costa Mesa 548-2313 $128,900 Satwday 12:30-4 . TOWNHOUSES FOR SALE 2 BR plu9 FAM Rll or DEN 34 Sea taland (Ford & Jamboree) N.8. 662-1873 $299,000 Sun. 1-5 38EDROOll 1 Rue fontalnbleeu, Big canyon, N8 640-4868 $550,~ Sat 1-4:30 IMR.EXES1A1 4 BR plue 3 BR * *4002 River Ave, Newport Beectt 644-9060 $445,000 Saturday 1-5 RENTALS •s.>e •Poot **w.....,ont *** w-•1ont&Poot "'GM~•fll*d gate ... I I I I I I I I I I t I I I I t t I : . I I t I .. REALTY The H&rbor Area's Oldest Real Est&te Firm JIST USTtl -IOYU SIMES IHl,000 Custom built executive home just redecorated. 4 bdrms, pool, family rm. A perfect home for entertaining. C.1.1 FIUCLISllE IHl,000 Conveniently located 3 bdrm condo, just 2 years old. Deluxe bit in kitchen, flreplate, beam ceil- ings, submit your terms. FUILllS YlfW 1111,IOO Front row In exclusive Irvine Terrace! Un- obstructed bay, ocean & city lights view. Older 2400 sq. ft. home needs some T.L.C. but the price 1s right. JIST LISTEI -C.1.1. VIEW LIT 11,400.,000 Approx. 1h acre with front row unob~tructed bay view. Ok for 4 units. ( 714) 673-4400 PAIL THIYI IESlll Slll,111 Quality built 3 bdrm home with bay & ocean views In old Corona del Mar. Featured In Home & Garden magazine. A real show case. 112,GIONWI 1111,llO Very nice 2 bdrm, 2 bath condo conveniently located In Westcllff. Assume low Interest T.D. & seller will carry 2nd. WEITCUFF FUllU HllE Sttt,IOO In exclusive Westclltf Grove. 1;\maculate 3 bdrm home tastefully decorated. Family rm, enclosed yard, 2 fireplaces, wet bar. A pleasure to show. IOICU II C.1.1 .. PU,llO Completely rebuilt 3 bdrm home on R-2 lot with room for 2nd unit. Hardwood floors, fireplace, nice yard, motivated seller. UYFlllT-1111,0M A great price on this lovely 4 bdrm home with 60 feet on the bay plus a private pier & float. Ideal home for an active famlly. 1~ 1.111 Ull llll ........ Famlly size 4 bdrm home near the clubhouse. Private sunny patio, expensive warm panetllng. We feel the best buy on Udo. TIE TIP IF U.I. '711,000 Elegant 3 bdrm home on secluded Isabella Terrace. Sweeping ocean view, spa, famUy rm, lots of privacy. Ulll O.I•. MPLD 1411,- 3 bdrms & 3 baths In each unit. Fireplaces, jacuz:zles & private ocean view sundeck. Must be seen to appreciate. (213) 628-2828 • 2845 EAST COAST HIGHWAY -CORONA DEL MAR CHmY OUll 1211,000 Entering into a large welcoming living room you'll notice a tru~ country feel. Crackling fireplace. Extensive use of I wood. C-ountry gourmet kitchen w /all ·' bull tins. 2 B<tnns, 3 ba, cozy den w /loft. Large lot. 2 horse stalls, tackroom. washdown rack. You must see this one! ClllU ID. 1111 -,. YllWI 1141,111 Fabulous quality customized 4 BR home with 180 view! Harbor, ocean, roof tops! Thia home is designed for family living as well as entertaining. ~ first time offering. Nothing compares! LYLlll ... .......... 14'- RARE 200' PRIME ISLAND POINT HOME 4/6 bdrm, big dOck(s), play fawn & swim beach. Walk to ocean fun. 7 car parking. Low owner fin. $750,000 (land Incl.). Open Sat./Sun. 1-5 Owner(9-5)650-0202 BUY DIACT a SAVE 2 .. 1 .. Pllll IEllGTlll Palermo, almost '/• ac., pool, cul-de- sac street with school at the end. 4 Btirm, 2'.h Ba, formal dining, family rm. $156,000 MIL 1st T.O. Variable loan maxed at 131.ho/'o. Now only $299,900. Opn Hse every Sat/Sun 2-5. 1970 Port Ounletgh Cir, Npt Bch. Smith. Irvine Coast Realtors. 786-7500. WAI.I Tl IDOi Very nice 3 Bd with Bonus Room, 2 baths, fireplace, patio, double garage. Only 2 Blocks to beach. Community pool and tennis -easy tenns -Priced right at $139,500. Jueu l•altJ llWllD Orange County Real Estate/ An Advertising supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Saturday, August 25. 1984 -21 Ill ALL TIWl•IES Ill Wiii 3 yr old immaculate Irvine 2 Br, 2 'h ba decorator shiny home in a very special. N. Wood area surrounded by 200K plus residential homes! Brick patio with fountain, air conditioning, 2 car garage, security system etc. $139,500 fee! hMa T11cll lf1ker 141-1211 IUlmFICUT YIOTllWI 2 Yr IW Majestic 4500 sq ft custom, sumptuous, decorator decked rooms-from the weather vane to the mahogany pan- elling and trim. This home, fit for a King, stands on Kings Rd. topped only by its smashing bay and ocean views. 602 Kings Rd. Slashed to $756,000. Fee or $660,000 leased. Robin Tench Bro- ker (_646-7276) Open Sat & Sun 1-4 SIPEI llY Very sharp 2 Br condo. Upper view with great view of greenbelt. Quiet location. 3 pools, spa, recreation room. Close to South Coast Plaza -reduced to bargain price of $69,900. , ... ltaltJ llMllO ltuflMlfflasJ&LHatlH If you need central location to almost everything, yet still require the tran- quility of a rural estat.e, this could be the home for you. Offered at $295,000. Open Daily 12 to 4 at 1104 Dana Dr., Costa-Mesa (TG27E2) lllJ11n11Unl llMIJI FllAL llCl•IOE 21r, 1~M ~ ... ,,_llPlau ......... ., ....... lnetl Lovely unit in excellent shape, but I must sell NOW. Has carport with storage, security gate, solar heated pool & Jacuzzi, exercise room and saunas. 111,tlO 111-11n, " 1111 ., n1-2111 uu -mu• -Wll •Wiii..,. Open Sunday 1-4 PM. 211 Mareumte at Ocean Blvd. 2 Bdr., 3ba "brand new CIOlllltr\ICtlOn". Style Is Country French. F.ntitt lit Door condo Over 2000 911. ft. All the custom Ceatuns you·~ dreamed oC. No yard work, 2 i-tica. "Forever ocean view view from your bving room and steps to Big C.oroo.a Beach.'' Asldni $595,000. Call for private shawm, weekdays ·-hHrt'-iptlt-flMHI PERFECT FmlLY HllE 1114,IOO . Located on a peaceful, quiet cul-de-sac with a lush park at the end. Costa Mesa nr So. Coast Plaza. Spacious 3 bdrm, 2 ba, family nn. Fireplace. Im- maculate. Call today for an appoint- ment to see. THE REAL ESTATERS MYEl ... ES IEW IEllOTill tl·Ull,IOO · IPH UT/SH 1·1 It 1"1 WaQ trite Spacious 4 Bdnn & d n, 2 1 2 baths. Two 2 car garages. Large lot wilt'. room for pool or RV parking. .......... ,.., ...... Ml-IM1 . ~ ... ll11U••1 · 6 Br. 2 % ba, dining room, Breakfast nook with used brick BBQ, Skylight beamed ceilings & Fireplace in living room. Lots of wood. lovely patio areas. extra bonus room & much more ..• OPEN SUN 1-5 W1 111rn Yiltl • ............ u...- .... TrhhM,......, -IG-J1M IUll ... IALlll --..n Within walking distance to NHYC and the ferry! Existing well-maintained 2 Br home with new plumbing and roof . .. or build the home of your dreams on the sand-$500,000 fee. ..... , ........... 1211 ~ s 22-Orange County Real Es1ate/An Advert ng supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Saturd~. Augual 25, 1984 Buying a home calls for tricky bcilancing act Timing the purchase of a home involves the tricky business of balancing mortgage Interest rates with home prices When one is up. the other 1s apt to be down and vice versa On this basis. toda> is a good time to buy, suggests John Pfister. vice president and manager of market research for Chicago Title Insurance Co Although mortgage costs are high, the rise in housing prices has been depressed below the rate of inflation. ·'While buying a house in 1984 will not be as good as buying one in 1983. the total cost increase will be lower than in many previous years," says Pfister Pfister says a Chicago Title analysis tracks housing costs and mortgage interest rates over a 12-year penod dating to 1972 It reveals that. for the penod analyzed. there was a trade-off between home prices and the cost of money borrowed to finance the purchase of a home. "Whtie the correlation isn'I perfect, the data shows that when mortgage interest rates have risen in the past. real estate 1nflat1on has slowed down. On the other hand, when mortgage rates have been more reasonable (affordable). home pnces have escalated more rapidly, · Pfister observes For example. assume you bought a house when mortgage interest rates were at or near the high end of the cycle Your monthly mortgage payment would be higher But the home you bought probably has greater potential for future apprec1a- t1on because, most likely. you paid less for 11 than you would have 1f interest rates were lower The reverse also holds true. If you bought a home when mortgage rates were lower. home costs would be rising more quickly. So, while 1t cost you less to finance the purchase, you probably paid more for the house. Thus. the potential for future apprec1at1on Is less. Historically. the cost of buying a home has risen annually. In the period between 1972 and 1984. average resale home prices increased 105 4 percent. or 8.78 percent annually But home prices are only part of the story. During this same period. mortgage rates also trended higher. with the average cost of financing a home rising 71 4 percent over the 12-year period. or an average of 5 95 percent annually "When home prices and the cost of borrowing are combined. we find that average home costs rose 176.8 percent. or 14.7 percent annually since 1972," Pfister says. The increase in home costs were higher 1n some years than others The peak year was 1980. when home prices inflated 11. 7 percent and borrowing costs rose 17.6 percent for a combined 29.3 percent increase The low point was reached last year. when home costs rose 3. 7 percent while the cost of financing a home declined 16.3 percent. · From a timing standpoint, the com- bination of dechmng mortgage rates and low housing inflation in 1983 produced one of the best times to buy a house In the last 10 years." Pfister says. "Obviously, if you bought a house 10 years ago, 1l was cheaper and the Daily Pilat ::Jhe Realtor 1 j J:ine REAL TOR'St> SEMINAR WILL PROVIDE "HOW-TOS" ON PROTECTING HOME AND NEIGHBORHOOD Expert advice and practical "How-tos" on "Protecting Yoor Home and Nelghbottlood" rrom acts of crime. will be presented by the Newport Harbor-CoS1a Mesa Board of AEAL TOR'S-free pubhc seminar on August 28th The seminar will be held at the lrvtne Coast CoYntry Club, 1600 E. Coast Highway. Newport Beach, at 7 PM. This Is the eighth consumer education seminar oft~ Board or REAL TOR'S• "Community Ot.ltreach" 9erleS mortgage payment was lower than today. But the same could also be said about 20 or 30 years ago. What matters to today's buyers 1s how the value of a home purchase now will stack up In the future." he believes. With mortgage rates once again on the rise. combined housing Inflation and higher money costs are expected to increase total home costs by about 18 percent In 1984 While buying a house this year will not be as good a deal as buying one last year. the total cost tncrease will be lower than in many previous years, including 1978 when home resales peaked in the U.S. Pfister likes the present timing for a home purchase because home prices have been appreciating at a rate below the average rate of Inflation. In 1984, home prices are expected to rise about 3.5 ~rcent vs. 5 percent for the Consumer Price Index. the standard measure of Inflation. Those buying a home today will do so at a tJme In the cycle when real estate prices have been depressed by the high cost of borrowing. However, white mort- gage rates In the future are expected lo remain high by historical standards, they're not expected to experience the sharp Increases of the past, he says. "If borrowing costs over the next 12 years were to rise by the same 71 percent they rose over the past 12 years. we'd be looking at Interest In the 25 percent range by 1996. Thatlsn't likely," Pfister believes. Half of Fallbrook -homes by Grant already bought Half of the aing•tamlty, detached homes at Country Knotl In FaJlbrook haw already been purchued, accordl"9 to Taytor Grant, prindpat of Grant Bulld!ng Co. The homes feeture Cape Cod ttytlng, using a palette of Cokri remlnt9cent of the sea, and a prlcel that range from $78,888. The two-to · four-bedroom homes have been purctlaMd by • range of buyers. Including imgles and couples, With or without chUdren. A c:oupt9 who haveteUtedenct a honeymoon couC hwealreedy mowd lnto th*MW . "No matter how many homel we bulkt. It la~apl111ure to ... Mmlflee MttHng Into tfHW new homel," Mki Taytor Grant "Thelt pleMut9 In being In thW own home *lid enJOytng their own prtve1e yard epace la realfy grattrytng." Further lnfonnatfon is l'Y&tlable at (619) 723-980•. Three expert panelists rel)fesenllng law enforcement private security ayatems apeciallata. and insurance protection programs, will present snort overviews of their 1Ubjec11. Following the three .. • presentations ample Ille 1s alloted for audience questions and aniwen. Tom Little. Community Programs Officer of the Newport Beach Police Department Yrlll provide Information on property security, Identification of contents, and community/volunteer, anli--crlme programs ' . Officer Little, has been with the Newport Beach Police Department for eeven yeara, lel'Vfng In 1 the Patrol Division as a Crime Soene lnvest~ator and as a Patrol Field Training Offl<*. In addition to his pretent assignment with Chier Gross office u a community refatlom apeclal1st, Utile la a member of the Special Weapons And Tac11cs Team (SWAT) and Pr-'dent of the Newport Beech Police Employees Aasocia11on Gerard Wooters. Pubhc Relations Director for SMcoast Securtty Systems, will 111ustrate servtcea available from pnvate lndu5try for protac11on against etime. Established In Costa Mesa In 1960, Seacoast Security Syatems desigM and lnatalla electrontc security systems for area resident a and business ranging from Mlcrodata's teven bul.ldlngs to the Newporter Re.ort Hotel Wooters began w()t't(lng for the company while a student at Hatbot High School.Five years ago on earning hla Business Degree from Cal Poty, San Lula Obispo, he returned to enter company management In hla present capedty. Butt Jaci(IOf'I, Corona Dal Mar State Farm Insurance Agent for twenty-four years, has extensive experience presenting the "Insurance protectioo picture" of property management to homeowner'• uaoetatlona, r..t estate, Junior Hlghschool and Hlghachool ctaaea Jadcson la rectplent of numeroos company awards for sales and MMce ltld he conatstantly qualltlea for State Farm National Conventions. Jackson continues his own educ.Uon by on go6ng partlctpaUon In lntUtance Mmlnara "Community Ou1reach" Chairman, Pat S<;ott-Warn•. Newport BeaQfl, 1tat•. "As tenants 0< homeowneta we're aH concerned and fearful about cnme perpetreted against OU1Mtvea or our property. We need to know that there are positive steps that can be ta.ken to heilp avoid auffertng flnanclal loae 8nd the emotional trauma of being a crime victim within our homes." Soon-w..,. c:onduded. "Take st<>cit of your IMng envfrontn«1t from 1 eecurltY~nt. w1d If you think )IOU COUid UM IOfne good advloe, then .. , ~the t..,,_ to .ttlirld this~". AIHN9tkWW •• not MCUHry, and the wnfnat Is f,. to the public. Orange County Reel Eatat8/An Ad~ -~ to the DAILY PILOT /SlllurdaY, AA9m 25, 1tl4 -23 MAIL ORDER 1111[ REAL ESTATE CHRISTA & GERRY Yesterday I called a broker on his listing In Corona def Mar. He was an out-of-area broker, and I had ~ dlfftcutty reaching him. The conversation went .as follows: "Joe -you have the listing on St.?" 04Yeah." "Can you tetl me If that Is a corner lot?" "You know, to ten you the truth, I haven't even seen the home." "Ohl How did you happen to get the listing?" ''The ownef ts an otd friend of mine." "Great. wm he carry any paper?" "I don't know. I haven't discussed It with him." "Ohl Could you find out?" "I don't know. He Is back East somewhere; I guess I should track him down In case an offer comes In." "How do I show It?" "I don't know. It's tenant occupied, and I don't have a phone number. They're supposed to coop- erate though." NEEDLESS TO SAY, THE TRAVELING HOME- OWNER IS NOT GETTING THE BEST REPRESEN- TATION ON THE MARKETING OF HIS PROP- ERTY. The lesson to be learned: Listing with an out-of-a- area friend could be more of an expense to the seller than h could be a blessing to the friend. Ill LISTllliS R-2 LOT 1_259,000 Clllll llllWIS Refurbished foHowtng fire. New roof. furnace, paJnt, carpets, etc., etc. 3 BA, 2 BA, room for 2nd unit. Owner may carry 1st T.D. OCUI VIEW DUPLEX One house from China Cove, CdM. View from both units. Recent remodet, 1 ~ tots. UIE IEW Remodeled Palermo In Harbor View Homes. Lrg yrd w/spa. Excellent financing. $319,000 Leasehold. WSE 4 BDRI -VIEW Harbor View Hiiis, exceptional quality home. $2650 per mo. IEW-YIEW CllEO HLIDS TotaJ remodel Includes C\lstom bit-Ins, beveled glass cabinets, solar hot water, air cond., Mstr sutte. spa, tub, etc., etc. Over 3000 sq. ft. Owner may carry 1st Trust Deed. IRVllE 4 BDRM JUST LISTED Woodbridge Place, great location. BIYSHORES Romantlc designer'• dream house. Just listed - won't last. $397,500 fee. Bay view possible If 2nd atory added. NRTOFllO __,.ACDllTA 710-1397 • 173-1781 ·State still falling short Jin affordable housing Despite a dramatic improve- ment In housing affordability during 1983. Cahfornla con- tinues to face a severe housing affordability problem, according to a recent study prepared by the California Association of Realtors. . The study, "Housing Cost Trends," which analyzes the housing affordability situation in California. shows that during the month of June 1984, less than 30 percent of California households could afford to purchase a median-priced home at current financing rates and income levels. Nationwide, 43 percent of households could afford to purchase a median-priced home. For the month of June. the California median home price totaled $113.848 With the cor- rent interest rate on a fixed rate loan at 14 65 percent. a mini- mum income of $45,000 is necessary to quahfy to purchase in California. · The fact that only 29 percent of households earn at least the minimum Income neoessary to purchase the me- dian-priced California home graphically illustrates the af2 ford ability problem in the state,'· said Becki Schwab, president of the 100,000-member real estate association. By contrast, the median home nationally was priced at $74,000 in June. A minimum income of only $29,000 qualifies a home- buyer for a loan. which means 43 percent of households could afford to purchase a home nationwide. The report notes that Cali- fornia Is composed of a variety ot distinct regions. each of which demonstrates the overall hous- ing affordability problem. Six regions are analyzed in the study: Los Angeles, Orange County. Riverside/San Bernardino, San Otego. San Francisco and Stltramento In June. median home prices ranged from a low of $78.778 1n Sacramento to a high of $136,541 In Orange County, a difference of $55.000. In Sacramento, the monlhly .. mortgage payment of $779 re- quires a minimum income ot $31,000; in Orange County, an income of at least ™·000 was needed to meet payments of $1 .351 Sacramento was the most affordable region with '7 percent ot the state's house- holds able to purchase. Both San Francisco and Orange ~ County were the mOS1 e>e,pen8've regions. with only 20 percent of all Caflfornia households able to purchase. "Housing affordability m Cah- fornta has been helped by reduc- ing the homebuyer's effective mortgage interest rate through various financing alternatives to the fixed-rate loan." said Joel Singer, CAR vice president of planning, research and" econ- omics F1nancmg costs are the major factor in determmmg monthly houstng costs At cur- rent Interest rates. for every 1 percent decrease. an add1t1onal 259 000 households can qualify to purchase. Yeiser-.Garland will design Oceanside's Oaktiee models Models to mirror casual lifestyle of the development Yeiser-Garland & Associates of Costa Mesa has been selected to design the three models for Oaktree Homes. a single-family, detached-home community under construction by Oaktree Oevelopmenf Co. in Oceanside. The models will display the three floor plans available at the one-and two-story community where homes will range from 1.310 to 1, 7 48 square feet. Situated on 10.000-square- foot lots in north San Diego County, Oaktree homes reflect a casual life-style that will be mirrored in the model homes. according to Pat Yeiser. princi- pal of Yeiser-Garland. "Along with an accurate portrayal of the lifestyle of the area. proportion and lme are Important a5pects of interior design," said Yeiser She said the size relatlonsh1ps of furnishings. accents and the space they will occopy are of cruclaJ importance to the l()of( and feel of a home. line also Is a prime consider- ation. she noted, because suc- cessful Interior design mus1 make viewers feel comfortable and pi.ased wf th what they see. "Therefore. a certain s~mplieity of tine works to our advantage.·· Yeiser said At Oaktree homes. Yelser- ~c::!c.:-.~ -v::: wu1;.. w1U1 ,;"- basic architectural sty1es: Cape Cod. Tudor and Spanish. The three-and four-bedroom homes will contain two and three baths. with the master bath providing a luxurious oval tub. The 57 homes are scheduled for completion in September and will sell in the $ 100,000 to $120,000 range Design assignments recently accepted or completed by the iu 111 111c1uoe Mesqune ureens. butlt by New Mesquite Develop- ment. Ltd .. in Palm Springs. the Del Lago luxury homes con- structed m Long Beach by Pac1f1c Marine: Country Park Villas II. a Griffin Homes pro1ect tn Ohhger Ranch, and Urban West's Buttercreek. a four-and five-bedroom community in Moorpark. Tinieshare of I ers buyers 's1nall piece of Laguna 1 For Mary Garcia. timeshare has been the passport to a few Laguna Beach dreams-eome- true. ··Laguna Shor8$ ts one of t~e area's finest resorts and has proved ttutf one of the fastest Mlllng tlmeahares In CaJlfom a. Laguna Beach is a very epeclal area nd timeshare has given people the opportunity to have a ~alt piece ~ t..aguna," ~ Gercla, Laguna Shores nlSOrt manager. Garcua was named to the pos1 by Woody Cary, president of Tricom Managment Inc. of Santa Ana, e Watt lndustties Santa Monica subsidiary. As such, her r~blt1tiel include houMkeeplng, mM\ten- anoe. I nd.cai>inQ. front and amenities management. In addition, she handles ha1son bet~ owners and the board of directors and look! after communtty public rela11ons. Prior to Joining the resort as en eSSts.tant manBQer. Garcia was an .fNMA mortgage loan underwriter and bank oper· at ions supervisor She hst s travel at the top of hef l•sure ttme actMt and has ~­ vek>ped a strong tam111ar1ty with the West Coast through a numbet of trtps ·'up and down the coast " But coming home to Laguna 8Mcil is always special. "llovt> 11 here," she says. "We nave a wonderful climate 11t1thout elC • tremet end a r8$0rt with an occuoancv that ru"~ gs Of>f't:""' .. ... ... ,. < •A ' h t1fD~'T" i llQ VII (I rt I J ""'" t 'h6 nll ot t •ff '°' ~ '°' 24 -Orange County Real Estate/An Advertlalng suppl ment to the DAILY PILOT/Saturday, August 25, 1984 lnMt In lalt ...... In l&1e leaMI ftr lalt Btua ler lali ...... lei IUt ..._ 1er Salt ..._ ler lalt en.au 1112j lanal ll02,lneral 1112 C..aal IOI lnnal 1112 ...... 1112 llDN 1 111u 1124 ~1111-•• 1111•n& u•MnlWlll ....,... 1117 .. mtan El.llY TIE IUCI 245,000 20311 Cyprw, 2 ................ Aalume low exlatlng !Oen .... m to • t Abeotut9 ..... llfld Liqw. Then relax and entertain m the terrific SA Helghte. 545-2&47 $149.500&S152.000 Of buy wfltl. new VA OI 3 80/2 80 ueumable 1117,600 Allum= detlOft lftUlt HO thl1 patlo of this comfortable 3 bdrm, 3 bath llff•.aE 1~P=/SAU~·1f.~· ~~ ~ellbem:l:n:s..: ~.:~~1~~&~Wi ~~=7~83~!M7 ~I ~=:.eoc!n':o home with spacious master suite, large citing gem tor the prl(;et 2br. 2'Aba, trpl, wetbar, deep lot with a garage rent the other, perfect fCt "--u ... Jiu l w/cerport nHt s.c. living room & den. This unique communi-Remodeled to be tight pv1 patloe. Dbl g8fages. that'• • handyman'• d.-remodedlno °' bulkSer .,.... ~1y $72,9001 ~ 8d ty offers a wide beach, boat docks, tennis ~~1 =.-:h.,:=•:t em :~~ttor :~h•ar~;o ~5':s~: Prlnclpala only-Diana UIY 1111..U 2 ba only S7t,9001 Large court Great location for children. , ... _ _.._.. ot this 751-3191 c.PP9l 831-1* 1111,111 3 8d 2 l1ory w/frplo only ... many Wnl\IOWI 'Br +den Of tmall 2nd Bd. $93,9001 TERMS: Try Slll,000 ~=r:· !,':" ~~ ....... ......,. htt !p SElECT Orlglnally caret•k•t1 sa.ooo down. ASSUME IPO lllUY 1.. Inviting femia., nn 1-. New wet«front home with ~RTte.S condo w/lovety bey IMw l0.5%G AXED fin. Theee "T ..,., ... , dock 3 8d 2 ~be t .... ~ fl; from llde llider kleet,. .,. REAT ll'IYMtrnente H leaoM lay, 1.L patio and huge yerd. New · rm. · Of-,,.., '°' t......bo.rd or and wttl NOT tut. For :~··~•=lb: =•~.lr~mi~~ •WF•TlllT WHkender for city appt cell Patrick UllY PFISTEl, lULTll ~tees. $159,000 SM doora leadlng to lrg Ill 211 W&LRT lalMI blad 1111 dweller. Small but the 7eo-t7o2 agl 673-1919 lhlaflratoffertng eunnypatto.$399,000. Bdnn..2 be wlttt OCMl'I i...t ~Mal-~ lllTAllUAIU Dalebout Bay &Beach Real Estate ._..._ 1•1 OPEN SAT /SUN 1-5 c~~-.~tlonllleweo. ~ REDUCED $35,000 by 1350,000. $99,900 Condo btand new _, 311 FINLEVCennery ..,.,_ ....,... ....,_ •••-1•11 2 8d /2 ..._ d0111.,,... lte VlllageRlty873-3n7 to the beach Thi• non-Slngle unit on Coral,~ ~ 6 w car gar, .,..., .... ~Ina ST WlllOMll condo has ·community ~~l'lt!::.°"J.:!. M.111\ =~~h:':u.Wh~ 1•2· ZOO 111• y SHAA MWI pool & tennus and • bery want• fU1 sale mue t ~ evallable? Call Pete .,_ tevorebte prlcl of only • • John8on 831 1260 Lge 11udlo rw So Coul $164,500. Thal'! not bed otter $250,000. • j PETE J BARRETT .. REALTY Plaza. 1 yr nu-on lak•. for Newport BHCh lora van"B ...... ..,..,., .... tprlc. Fr. windows. A.JC. 7!51-3191 " ........... . gym AAurM 12.5%1oen .... 2 ~.... • .. 1 .. ...,.,. patio. wio. tennis. pool. spSELecr reallor 1111,111~ $79.900-0WC Ml-1405 PROPERTIES 673-4062 -~ .... _,.,., manuu REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 I~~~~~~~~====-_;=:; IHlmlUIY 3 p~~c~;~.~o l.'ESTi•s IEVELOPERS Lllll l·SLE MESI YUll ---s111.ooo.torqu1c1cea1e. n -4 Bdnn POOL $139,900 COM hlli.lde w/c:harmlng OPEN SUNDAY 1~ EXCLUSIVELY LISTED: Rare mul-SUISTllTllL PRICE REIUCTIOI 4 Bdnn ATRIUM $140,900 ocean & vlttage views. •53 Elmhurat. tiple dwelling property of approx 4 Bdrm SPAClOUS $167.500 flneat quellty appoint-Heritage 1n.,.tment1 Be h f Makes this· large custom Bayfro t 3 Bdnn C'ONOO •169.""" ment1 •nd craftmanahlp. 54e-6880 aelc tor AJdlne 12.000 sq. ft. m Newport ac or n 4 Bdnn JC R • ~ 4BR4ba.temnn.vtewklt•--------· about 9 Units. Great location for con-home the best buy on the Island. 4 5 Bdnn 3 ~ ~l~GE u:::~ wlbreufast nook, lrg ot-ml ¥1111 dos or income uruts. Listed at $399,000 bdrm, din nn, 2 story, fam-rec-nn & 4 Bdnn . POOL $206,000 flcl/llbrety, maid• quar-UZI ... 631-7300 Hunt & Associate REAL ESTATE IUSllFICPT lllll Designed to please the most dis- crimma te, this 5 Br. 7 Ba, luxurious custom home 1s located at the very -VlEW top of Harbor Ridge. 180 degree VIew ocean, bay. city & Sunsets Over Catalina" VIEW. From warm library to farn. nn . w/one of 4 f-plcs to gounnet kitchen to 40' pool & spa at reflects the ultunate in quality. Master suite (over 1000 sq. ft.) w/sauna & f-plc & breathtaking VIEW. 24 Hr . guard- ed gate. Offered $1,950,000. Call Jeri Hunt. I Trafalcar .,.. S.1 1-& Ill CAIYOI SOPllSTICITill wnh a European flavor' Truly a unique and classic 3 Bd townhome! FonnaJ-marble-foyer-totally up- graded thruout. Private smgle end- umt m lush garden setting. 24 hr guarded gate Assume ha-loan. Shown by appr only. $550.000. Jeri Hunt. 1 IH Ftalf1i1~l111 Sat 1-4:30 PllDIAH SILE Security Gate. Jasmme Creek-2 .Bd-2 Ba + den. Plan 2. Priced at $305,000. OWC 2nd T 0 . Submit. Subject to court app Vee Stmson 11 ltell .,.. In 1-1 .. 11..UW elllnlS" Outstanding Newport Hgts family home. 4 Bd, 3 Ba. fam rm, & sec. system. Too many ameruties to list. A Must see--askmg $389,900 Owner wl assist w/financing. Vee Stinson 11111 • ...... . e,.11/11-1 bar. study, breakfast rm. Oversued 5 Bdnn 3 CAR GARAGE $219,000 tera w/aeperete •n-Just hated gorgeoua lge 3 lot, lge garden with room for pool. 4 Bdnn 3 CAR GARAGE $219,000 ~::.q re· 1i:1~' :. 2d=. =er:: Excellent terms. $1,225,000 : BdBdnnnn POOL/SPA $225,000 By owner 780-075 trend\ doors. skyfiQf'll, ON HILL $234,000 pool ..--..i... 4 Bdnn POOL $299,000 0uptax 1 8d M. edd on . _,., 91Stem.. Lawson Realty Company II~ ILIFFS -llUT LIUTill Lovliest Greenbelt location on Vista Cajon -Reflection Pond' Splat level 3 BR home with great privacy Owner transferred to New Jersey! $212,000 inc land. Barbara Reily. 752-1414. SEUEil UCllFIClll Seller relocating. Bought another Must sell! 3 Brs., fam. rm. 2 'h Ba. with A/C Tiu..<i model-perfect townhome has great location m Woodbridge. Reduced to $147,000. Krantl Rao 551-8700 HUT FllUU IOllE Just two blocks from "Woods Cove" Laguna Beach. Here lS a 3 Br., 2 Ba. home with large formal. dining rm.. f am. rm., breakfast rm & large enclosed yard. Newly remodeled with more room to expand. Assumable loan. Don't miss 1t. $289,000. Bill Wed- more 551-8700 WllFUllU._ Your growing family will ap- preciate the 5 Br. & 3 Ba. Plus an oversized ya.rd. Plenty of room for a pool For appt. to aee. call Dottie Edwards 551-8700. 1177,500. 5 Bdrm POOL/SPA $3lO,OOO potential. $210,000. 717 etc. Must ... thll decor- 4 Bdrm GO Femleef Owner &40-8182 "°' horM • St ... on1Y Bdnn LF VIEW $329.000 ----------t $229,900. 4 FAIRWAY $4?5,000 llYJmml&a DELIADELGAOO For details call 751-3191 1241.111. fM 83M2M sp 3 Bdrm or 1 bdrm pkla den SELECT PROPERTIES home In gr98t CdM toe. Famlly neighborhood, blklng dlstlnOe to bay .. &ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii --buch.. ~78-t2U .... II~ YH'LL 11 IMPIUSEI with this outstanding opportuni- ty in Turtlerock. Over 3000 sq. ft. of living area including super I bonus room. Resort like yard boasts a beatutiful pool, spa & profes,,ional laA<iscaping. Make plans now to look for yourself on Sunday from 1-5. #9 Sunrise. $389,900. Myrna Boom 551-8700. 644-0357 1111nm111 um. ICEll VIEW LEASE OPTION OR CAMEO HIGHLANDS 3 OWNER ANANCE. Pnced reducied. 4br, 3be. BR. lge rem rm, lge llvtng huge apa. OPEN SUN 1-..4 rm, Hp. dining rm. 2737 catdlnel '429.000 Agt. 996-7643 C&ll Glorltl 557-8320 llllllUffl llUILIT lfll-. .. 1-1 387 MAGNOLIA ST Loi elze 80'x 300' Plans evallable. Phone Steve (714) 973-1373 8d 2 be llv rm & 1h24 tam rm. wltrplo, lg fenced 1=iiimiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiil yard. I t 89. 500 with •. I• $20,000 down UIUrT\41 lml.ILOIL 11.1s%1nt 11t&M1terwt11 Uw.1-carry 2nd. 873-1600 ftr .. lrflner/ld WME.DOUO&COINC. SINGLE LML 28R ~ RUSTIC E.SIDE 2 Bdrm e.ytront condo -ex-R-2 own.rtnn. It lOK tenalwfy rwnodeted. Can llf'°P8 -trw -175-0097 beeitpended. Wiii oon-i--------------lid« trade tor part of FOR SALE BY OWNER .-!!!!!!!!!!~~--I equity or owner wm help tmmac 48' Meaa Dtl M.,. flnanoe with 20% down New Int/ext. Quiet 1treet PrHllglou1 looatlon: S139,500. Ml S«ra Way Magnificent view-Udo to 5-45-5408:432-8451 Jetty. Cllll &40-f 198 ot 790-«>e9 ewe Ull 111.E 101 Yla Ll4t S..4 .,.. SU 1 Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 78' on bay pool I=~~~~~~~ spa ioo· boat space Xlnt Fm. $4,8s0.ooo' Cetta Ina Channing Sparush 3 Br 2 Ba on 45' lot, lrg LCMty 3 lk, 2ba. r.r .. frplc. deck. courtyard, pier & sup. Sl.100.000 $142,900 agt 548-0595 ~ilftPfftiN--""l"""~iWii 8-c:Nll dMI crptd 2br 3 ha99 to Mfld garage bHm c•lllnge upper 1700'• 53M100 Belt Alty,.. Kenneybunkport? Isn't that the horse that won The Trlple Crown In '727 ~~ro ~ lntlla tt SW. M/F to llW 28t ---In Ct.4 $300 + 8200 d9p. Call 8111 548-e372 MIF to lhr 3Bt hie. Al convenienc. t290 + Y. utlls Pet ok Me IM2 Mtrmmt. new So. Co.t Ptau. non "'*'· dMn, .,..."iiifiiirJiit--."'I coot & ~ $240 tnctl utll s.4&-8300 MS lntn'I a dwlst9l'I room. ate servlc•. · 1tnglt parent• too. 55&422t NB Easlbluff, mM WI\ to stir rime w/lltfM, A"91 $4001• 762·24&4 911 S395 7eo.1311 B9lboe llMnd, '°""'Y office Prof F nla 25-40. 2bt 2b9 1450/mo. cal 875-5026 CdM 1 blk lo bdl $400 + OI ~51441. utl-1st·lat....C •• Sell • Ult nan .... 675-8134 or 861.-00 2 pvt otee, tro ktrytRcpt PV1 rm In lg 4Bt NB hrne. t7001mo Bkr 845-62ee Incl pool, utlts, w/d, kttch Ellll WWW -prMlegea. fem prof OI iln; _1_ student. Refs $350, 11t & !nine, ptlorw 8fWW. ,.. last Avl 9/1 79-0530 cept.. eonf. rm, utj pd, Pvt rm In lg 48' Herbor eea.awy ...__ 2so.-02n Vlftw hoc'M w/fsm»y. Ind lllSIMlll"m pool, utlll, w/d, khcn Aecept, coiltll•a rm, prMlegea Fem prof ot aec ..v. 1J1t11 pd. Nwpt student. Refl l350, 1• & Blvd. Call Maureen last. Avt 9/1 768-0530 650-17180t146-2111 Resp. non/1mkr pref., NEWPORT BA YFRONT Wt t/Jde C.M. $250 mo + PVT. OFC. 200 aq ft '> utll. 842-2:829 w/w.tn. ecc.a. '400, Hmmte ~-3 Br Clll 546-1501 ns.-L.-guna no pees S330 Neiwport c.n.. + dep. 491-1830 attr 4 iiilliM arra Aoommat9 lmmed. 911, 2 Ful SVC, he ,..,,t .,,...... btks OOMn ~' $300 64 4 6900/873-1700 tMt + utl Lor1/Ctw11tte, oc Airpr1 .,.. ofc ape 675-2019 or 875-2010 830 alt. l.otl of P8Rlng: Share NB OCEAH V1E.W jilnltr1, utl Ind. S1.10 a/f, Apt 2br 2b&, temJ~ mo to mo OK. 557-7010 smotcer '500. 875-3e05 lnfne Shopping Cent• of· Shr deltt 4Br FV pool hme tlce 11C*». 500-800 aq ft. w/2 8dlta. $400 + Y, ut. Agent 786-0600 Kit, lndry. ale, u-r. str. N/pet1, ltnk9 531-3414 c--.lll Shr lum. 2br on Bii P9m. a.tall ltll avt 9/1, S325 utl Ind. 675-2688 Niki tv meg. PRIME LOCATION. ~ I prox. 850 aq.tt. Busy ...... ..... Com Meea lhopp'g ctr. EJCec. unG1i. 2 & A.8 or C a II e 4 2 • 9 4 o o • F V-nr bet\ or w/pool 10-"l2ne>On or2-4pm L I e • g d r e f I • CdM dbuutt•. AC, empl 213·394-0823 prtcg, from $225. 2855 E. OCEANFBONT yrty or~ Coa1 Hwy. 875-aOO ler untum Altlst, widow with dlaablecl eon t 1000 IMutria1 ~· ~ ~1~ bdrm, ...... -~i'T:.::l:rll:hl Prof couple 40'1, _. ,_ 1000 'omo.e. ~ sitting reep, coeat --. llde Y8fd. Nr Harbor Blvd Loe reeldent & ~. & 405 FWy. '2,900/mo. relt avail. Terms negot. NNN 714-64o-4152 Agt Deya 833 -4716; ------~1 EYea/Wknds 844--2224 llilt . ._.... 2115 Yearly want•d. n••rl..,..._ _____ -i beectl. ,..,,.. .... cou-" ... i>te. no kldl 0t doge. Oct SI** ~ ec:roee 111 875-6233 from oceen. 536-8318 CLASSIFIED •.• READ FOii PROFrr· '::~':' S@\\cfllA-l&t.~s· ::: ----.-... C\ATI.~ ........... .....,, el .... ·-........... _.,, ... low IO ....... ,_ wople _.,. H A s y I N I I I I I I' . LULBY l"i 11 I I I . ,.._.,,_G ...,R_N...,.O_P....--11 .:2.! I I I I' . My gr111dl'l'o1ll1r 1lw1)'1 ttlOlqll lhll ...,.. whd dldl'l'I ------hive~ ---L A H F E l I -,-. -,.---,-, -,-0 ~= .:"-~':~ ':! .__...._..__...__..__...._,, -....... '--,... l """""' In these inflationary days, money is precious. Everybody yearns to find that pot of gold, but seems to overlook a source of money most families have. Yes, look in your attic, cellar or garage and you are sure to find remnants of child- hood, things of yesterday not being used today. These items can be your pot of gold by ad- vertising in the Classified col- umns. Call today and we'll have our classified service person help you write a sure- fire selling classified ~d . ·laily Pilat CALL: 642-5678 -• a ·-• 28 -Orange County Real Estate/ An Adverttatng supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Saturday. August 25. 1984 · THE :REAL ESTATERS . 1700 NEWPORT BL VD., C.M. 2790 HARBOR BLVD., C.M. 21030 BROOKHURST, H.B. CIST& IES& lllEL PHFEOTI - $118,000 4 bdrms home. Choice buy!! Private swing for relaxation! VA-FHA financing offered. 963-6767 FHI MlltS N & LIT -Great ln"est- ment opportunity for the smart In vestor. All single story homes wit attached garages and Individual enclosed yards. No deffered main- tenance here and lots of curb appeal. A super value at $275,0001 646-7171 can IEI& I IOI--$129,5001 A lot of home for your money. Neat and clean. RV access. Alley entry. Close to schools, church. shopping. Call for. Information. 546-2313 llWPllT IUOI FllEI -$14 7 ,5001 Move up to Newport at an affordable price. Lots of potential. 3 bdrm 2 bath. Large lot. Seller wants out now. 546-2313 4 IOllH FIBI -Priced to sell! Excellent neighborhood! Home needs T.L.C. only! Brand new listing and won't last at only $119,900. 963-6767 CHITIJ CUii -$299,000! Enteting into a large welcoming living room you'll notice a true country feel. Crackllng fireplace. Extensive use of wood. Country-gourmet kitchen with all built- Ins 2 bdrm. 3 baths. Cozy den with loft. Large lot. Two horse stalls. Tackroom. wash down rack. You must see this one! 546-2313 OCUI YIEW-GILY Slll,100! -Panoramic view of Pacific extends past Catalina Island from this lovely condo. Impressively decorated with 2 master suites. Walk to the beach. Amenities Include: pool, spa, sauna, exercise & game room! 646-7171 WIWI ULY Hl,100 -3 bdrm single level end unit condominium! Immaculate. Spacious unit with Pl. baths! Owner sacrifice. 963-6767 PEllFfOT HJllLY IOIE -$134,9001 Located on peaceful. quiet cul-de-sac with a lush park at the end. Costa Mesa, near South Coast Plaza. Spacious 3 bdrm, 2 bath, famlty room. Fire- place. Immaculate. Call today for an appoint- ment to see. 546-2313 Hll.IEU OUU11T -$79,5001 In Costa Mesa. One bdrm condos now selling be1ow cost! Oak cabinets, fireplace, skylight plus attached 2 car garages. Excellent financing available. VA, FHA Don't miss out on this great opportunity! 646-7171 WAnl YllWl MY 1141,IOO -Beautiful 3 bdrm + 2 story + 2 fireplaces + skylights! Steps to private beach! Assume financing! 963-6767 nrt llllllM CUii -$74,9001 Two great as- sumable loans, that total $55.000 with an effec- ' live rate of less than 12•1 •. Includes pool & spat Located In a private, gated community near South Coast Plaza. Best condo avallabtel 646-7171 'I UTI II -life on the water. See the llghts, smell the ocean, feel the breeze. Bright and airy 2 bdrm, 2 bath. Owner will carry. Call for Information. 546-2313 TM IHI Tl IE Tiil -Only $93,500 for this popular "loft model" condo. 2 bdrm. 2 bath. special air conditioner with air purifier ptus 2 car attached garage. Located In a very desirable Costa Mesa complex. Best price in areal 646-7171 Piii(, PlllE, PlllEJ 1111,110 -Immaculate 4 bdrm home In pride of ownership neighborhood I Surrounded by lush landscaping! New llst- lng-hurryl 963-6767 . USTlllE IUUll -And huge yard. $1 34,950. Room to spare. Lot size 108x107. Quiet cul-de- sac. Clean 3 bdrm home. Call nowt 546-2313 W.11& PElllUU-lllT Im -Oly $165,000 for this very charming 1 bdrm beach cottage. Lots of potential tiere. Could be used as owner winter home then a summer rental. R-2 lot offers future redevelopment. Call today 646-7171 I 11111, DmllE -$233,000. Great price, desirable area. Pride of ownership complex. Assumable financing. Sell or exchange. Call for details. 546-2313 11&1•1C01 PUIP•MI YIEW! -View of ocean. white water, Catalina and city llghtsl Designed for secluded living In this private community with pool, spa, sauna, tennis courts, and private sandy beach. Assume $550,000 loan. Low Interest. Oly $695,000. S.6-7171 1111.-UITllllt -Aasumable loan. Super 2 bdrm home. Redwood deck. Lush yard. Call for more detalla. 546-2313 If YA LIAM -Laguna Nlguell 76,000 oan at 91h'lo Interest. Completely upgraded and re- modeled 3 bdrm home with game room & huge famlty room. Approximately 2 .. 000 sq.fL Thls on won~f last because It's priced at only $127,0001 Hurry! 646-7171 COIT& Ill& FIBI 1121,100 -Giant family home. Large llvlng room, family room, formal dining. 2,000 sq. ft. Close to schools. Call today 546-2313 lits 1111111,000lnEHAT1118,000 -Beautiful Costa Mesa townhome.Large llvlng room with crackling fireplace. Overlooks greenbelt. Mod- ern kitchen. 3 large bdrms, skylights. 21A baths. Central air. End unit, cul de sac location. Com- munity pool and spa. Large assumable loan, below marked Interest rate. 546-2313 LIWllT PllOE IOIElm -Costa Mesa! 3 bdrm top of the llnel Oen/library! Skylights! Try 10% down! Executive home at below executive prices. $149,500. 963-6767 USTllll AT rTI IU1, 1141,000 -Beautiful ex- ecutive townhome. Ceramic tile entry leads to plush carpet, spacious living room. Dramatic vaulted celling. 3 large bdrms. 21h baths. Wrap around patio overlooks private rear yard. Call to see. 546-2313 WllTI & • llU..11 HLY 1111,000 -Spacious 4 bdrm In executive neighborhood! Cozy fire- place! Great 15X 15 sundeckl Great for children, next to parkl 963.a767 OUll Tl lbll, 1111,IH -Smell the ocean air. Newer 3 bdrm, 2'h bath home. Bright and airy. Assumable loan. Call now, 546-2313 I ... OILHw.n -2 story giant! 2o/• baths! Family room + dining room! Private poolt New llS11ng +won't last at $166,950. 963-6767 AO