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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-09-05 - Orange Coast Pilot--------~------------------------- -----,. ORANGE COAST YOUR HOMETOWN DAILY PAPER SUNDAY, Sff'TEM BER ~. 198:7 ORANGE C,PUNTY ' ('~ltFOnN:·A . ~o CENTS I -I I lawsuits swarm over Bee Canyon By GLENN SCOTT Of lhe Dally Pllol 8t•n Bee Canyon didn't get its name because it was inhabited by humans. Author Don Meadows, in his "Historic Place Names in Orange ' County," wrote that the canyon probably got its title for the many apiaries located there during the t urn of the century Descendants are s till buzzing around. A recent hike into the property owned by the Irvine Company (which consented to the trip) SUNDAY SPECIAL confirmed that the canyon -and its balance of inhabitants -hasn't changed much in the last 80 years. Only two ~ety, empty dwellings can betound, both at the canyon mouth. The musty cabins might have been temporary homes for cattle owners. A sign on one exterior wall identifies the occupant's barn. But the rooms are empty now. except for a swarm of tx-es that has moved into an old ice box Bee Can yon. on the western slope of Loma Ridge overlooking Irvine, remains one of the increasingly rare places in Orange Coun ty that has not been transformed by civili:zation. It is precl.S('ly that Jack of encroachmen t that h as made this undisturbed com er a focal point of local politics. Bee Canyon is the next place w here coun ty government leaders want to bu ry your trash_ Because of its des1gnat1on, it h as berome a battleground for those who would preserve its open space and those who claim such areas are the only feasible locations left for the unrx:>pular public facilities no one wants in their backyards. Throughout the debatf', h owever , few people have seen the WORLD Anti-Mafia battle Yowed canyon ln a high ftre-danger zone. th e area ts kept off limits to the public by the company. Moreover , its dirt entry road begins at the far edge of a company- run orchard and cattle ranch. It is not an entrance a casual hiker is likely to look for -or find And it's blocked by a locked gate anyway. An environmental impact report prepared in 1979 says coyotes, mule deer. bobcats, rabbits, skuuks and squirrels live in the canyon. One wary but well-fed coyote was roused from a nearby wash during the recent hiktc> A few red-tail hawks swooped tranquiUy over the cliffs at the base of the canyon. A chorus o f unseen birds. probably the wre ntits. towhees and common flickers mentioned in the report, offered a friendly counterpoint to the blasts from a remote gun club. Bee Canyon's wildlife and topography are representative of the foothill terrain carpteted w ith its sweet-smelling sage, evergreen bushes. d r y soil and a scattering of Live oaks and sycamores. To the untramt•d eye, however, th e canyon 1s not much diffe rent from the other soft slopes a nd vales in the vicinity Its most distinguishing trait is an old windmill and water tank on the canyon floor ·County Htstorn:al Society members have reviewed the windmill. a n Aeromotor from Chicago. They concluded the apparatus can be moved to a new location. according to t h e files in the Coun ty Historical Commission O ffiet> Its vanes still twirl in the breeze, but the gray windmill once used to pump water for cattle is no longer hooked up. A pipeline to a spring now carries water to a watering trough. (See R UBBISH, Page A?) . "' Delly Piiot PhotOll by G••y Amb<o•• \\'eatht•rbPaten windmill. spindly liv•· oak and syt·amores pokt> sk y above HN· (:anyon . NATION Demos point finger at Reagan PALERMO. Sicily (AP) -The government vowed to press its war against the Mafia Saturday iollowing the assassination of Italy's top fighter of organized crime and terrorism, Gen. Carlo Dalla Chiesa WAS HINGTON (AP) -Com eback -hungry DemocratS stepped up the political tempo this Labor Day weekend with speeches describing Ro nald Reagan as a "president who onl y li s ten s t o millionaires." Heayy loan fund hike sought TORONTO (AP) -With the exception of the United States, world economic leaders issued a call Saturday for a "substantial" increase in contributions for loam to aid a growing list of countries unable to pay their debts. Israeli troops pull back BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -I.sraeli troops turned over a major base to Lebanon's army Saturday a nd began pulling out of positions south of Beirut. R eagan points finger at Demos SANT A BARBARA (AP) --President Reaga n Saturday blamed the high unemployme nt rate on decades of government tax and spending policies in operation before his election. COUNTY Can't sell? Try trading house Many reside nts unable to sell their homes ln a prostrate real estate market are turning to h ouse trading. Page Dl. Arab • reaction to peace plan holsters hopes WASHINGTON (AJ-'J US officials are encouraged by th£' initial Arab reaction to President Reagan's new Mideast pl·acc_. 1nlliat1ve, but they say Arab leaders must take the next step by giving Jordan the go-ahead to enter negotiations with Israel u11 bt·half of the Palestinians One U S official, who asked not to be identified, !.aid that l'ouJd <.-ome at an Arab Ll·ague ~ummit meeting, tentat1vt.•ly !.l'h edulcd to open at Fez, Morncco, on Monday At the least, he said the admm1strat1on hopes the Arab leaders will set m motion a Jordanian role m peace talks. If that occurs, the ofhnaJ said, 1t could constitute an unofficia l recognition or Israel by the part1c1patmg Arab nattom. JX>SSibly including the Palestine Liberation Organization of Vasser Arafat -that would also amount to embracing UN. Sl'Curity Council Resolution 242 ll could all add up to an enormous breakthrough toward resolving the decades-old conflict between Israel and the Arab world over the Palestinian lSSUe Reagan dearly had in mind such a breakthrough m unveiling his s u r p r i s e p e a c e 1 n 1 t 1 a t 1 v c· Wednesday night. If the strategy works, Reagan will be deserving of plaudits as .i peace-maker equal to or greaU'r than President Carter recC'iv<:d for his efforts in hammering out the 1978 Camp David peact' ac-cords NIWS ANAlYSIS According to senior U.S . uff1l'1ab, Heagan decided months be fort-Israel's invas ion of Lt•b<rnon that ne w proposals w<·n· nt'<:t•s."'1ry to break the Jong :-.t a lem:.ill· 1n the pe ace rl<'gotwtions being conducted an1<mg Egypt, Israel and the Urnted States under the Camp IJav1d framework R1:agan made this the priority a ssignme nt for Secretary of State Gt_'Orge P. Shultz when he took ovt-r from Alexander M. Haig Jr. m JuJy -shortly after tht-lsrad1 invasion of Lebanon. Ht-agan 's initiative builds on Camµ David, but points it in a new d1rec:llon l;>y attempting to s t)ape the o ut co me o f negot1at1ons on the future status of the· Israeli-occupied West B<-111k und Gaza Strip. Unde r Camp David, the United States remained public:ly neutral. Reagan wants Is rael t o withdraw from the occupied tr·rri tones and allow the 1.3 m1U10n Palestinian inhabitants to have their own government linked to Joradan. He msists that Is rael s to p building a nd expanding its settlements in the oc.:cup1ed territories. At the same time, Reagan opposed a separate Palestinian state and said Israel's security mu s t be a paramount con s 1derallon in the final outcome of the negotiations. US crowd gets lots of 1nusic and heat SAN BERNARDINO (AP) - Hampered by cruel heat and traffic jams, the $12.5 nullion US Festival became a trip through a lot of heaven and a little heU for 150,000 rock music f ans celebrating Labor Day weekend at a makeshift city in the desert The event, which swung into its s~ond day Saturday, was billed as the "rock event of tht' century" by Unuscm Corp , the staff of 30 assembled a year ago by Apple II computer creator Steve Wozruak to tum his v1s1on of a major music event into reality But most of those who sheLied out $37.50 for the three days of rock 'n' roll agreed that 1t had evolved into a h1gh -t«h hybrid • of Woodstock and Disneyland. "They've thought of a lot of things to do to try to keep people comfortable, but I don't know ho w lon g they can keep it up," said Rand y Banis, a 21 -year-old UCLA student, as temperatures soared above the 100 mark at the 57-acre natural amphitheater "I've heard a lot of negative things about big events like this, but I wouldn't have rni3Sed it for the world," added Banis, who be<.·ame trapped in one of the WC<'kend's worst traffic tie-ups on Interstate 15 Fnday momine. Co ncertgoers continued to arrive, and crowd estimates swt>Jled to 150,000 at the concert sit<· Saturday 300,000 escape inland furnace at OC beaches Crowds estimated at 300.000 jammed Orange Coast beachl•s Saturday to esrape the hot and smoggy inland area. off1c1als reported. No major problems or mishaps were reported. The crowd was part of an estimated 1.5 million people who sought refuge at Southern California beaches on the first day of the long Labor Day w~kend,. T h o ugh Southland temperatures were a bit lower Saturday than the previous two days. the mercury still climbed to 101 in Riverside, the mid-9()s INDEX E4-6. Fl -6 E.1 E3 A8 Classified Crossword Death Notices &litorial Page En tertainrnen t Featuring Finance Robert Gardner Horoscope Ann Landers El-2 C4 01-7 AB C4 C4 SPORTS m Los Angeles and 86 in San Diego Locally. Santa Ana recorded a high temperature of 94 degrees. The high was 81 at Newport Beach A cooling trend is expected today and Monday, however, with highs in the low to middle 70s at the beach and the 80s inland Smog levels were expected to continue· to be fairly high over the weekend. with officiala predi cting u ncom fo rta hie conditions for sensitive people through the holiday. Mailbox Movies Public Notices Sports Stock Markets Style Television Theaters Travel Weather AB EJ -3 D2, E3 Bl-5 08-9 Cl-6 DlO El-2 C5-6 A2 Rams win, Raiders lose There was good n ews and bad ne ws for Southland football fans. The Rams beat San Diego, 20-14, at Anaheim Stadium, but the Raiders were clipped by Clevela nd, 27-10. The games cloeed the prese880n for both teams. Page, BL .. jf • # .. 01 a11u• Cuaet DAIL V PILOT /8und•y, Seplembtt ri, ti82 ... i RUBBI H CRISIS HEADING FOR CANYON • • • PftOP08ED /' Acc1aa _,/ Wlndmlll ,,.- / I ~~A~ ......... ."' El Toro Mar1ne Corps Atr S tarion \ PROPOSED BEE CANYON DISPOSAL SITE 0 Lambert Reservoir Irvine fi<'i a ls pn·dic t it will tukt> :io years rth of •·ompu<'lNI trash and its daily <·ring of dirt to fill Ht>t' <.:a n yon. • in LA 9 perish ipartmen t blaze OS ANG ELES (AP) A dawn fire roared through an crowded, aging downtow n rtment building Satu rday, ·ng 18 people who a pparently 'eked and ran to their deaths •burning hal lw ays an d a ~onth-old baby who clung to e f or 1 4 hou r s be f ore u mbmg, authorities said. h e c hild, Gerardo De orrt!, was pronounced dead ~ounty -USC Medical Center 5 .28 pm , a h ospi ta l esman said The baby had ered secon d -a nd th1rd- ee burns over 90 pel"C'Cnt of body. he blaU' may have burned more than 45 nunutes before fighters were called, said C'ity Chief Allen Evan.sen tween 170 and 200 people m the 50-year -old building '!::>unset .Boulevard, which had "You hav0 to understand that people are not ail rat10nal when the re's a fire li ke this. They react to their emotio~ . . . they panic they're like animals, lJke a herd of steer stampeding," Evanscn sajd. Half the victims were childr en five of them infants -and at least 38 people were injured , several when they jumped out of windows of the four-story bnck b uilding. Four o f the injured were listed m "extremely critical" condiUon with second-and third-degrt>e burns over 90 percent of their bodies, said a county h ealth spokesman. n d eemed a "high -r isk" ntial fire hazard by the city :.. • east a decade ago ~:·i t was obv1ouslv ~rcrowde<l," Evansen said "There's no questJon , there's no doubt. that if th06E' people had stayed in their rooms, they'd still be alive today," swd Deputy Chief Al Shultz Dozens of the s urv i vor s wer e rescued b y neighbors and firefighters who yelled at frightened residents to stay away from the hallways, said Battallion Chie f Gera ld Johnson :· ~~~~~~~~~ ....... --~~~~~~~~~~ *oas tal ~ mall cratl •<l•ltory ttirough Ill tor outer wllera from nt Conception 10 Sin Nlcotu nd lot nor1h-•t wind• el 18 30 knott South of San T e niperatures NATION 78 19 92 83 99 67 55 44 82 58 84 57 81 58 98 72 82 55 96 &4 85 57 From Page A 1 ~ Canyon w1t.1 ~l«t.ed In uno by the county Board ot Supervltor1 to replace Coyote C~nyun In I1-vlrw'1 San Joaquin Halli M• the county'• Iar1e1t landfi l l According to the t-nvlron mc-ntal Impact report, Bee C-ilnyon wu choeen over 24 other foothill 11tea 1l la four miles northeast of the Santa Ana Freeway, a nd because of the girth of lt8 ridgee, ll 111 projecU:d t.o hold 109 milllon cubic yards of refuse Whe n c:ompleted, Ila leveled top would Include 243 acres, the report 11ay1. The county governmen t ia negotiating to buy 700 acres In and around the can von from the Irvine Company Hay Rhoads , ass istan t d1ra·tor of the county's G eneral Ser vices Age n cy. said the landfall would rise no higher than 50 feet of the rldgetops. Delly Piiot Photoe by 0My Ambr- One hopes the romance lasted longer than a Bee Canyon cabin whe re a hive inha bits abandone d re frigerator. •cOlu Island nor'lll-1 wlndt ot 10 to 18 knots Llglll •ar1able wlnde over lnlend waters mostly .outheeat Winds "xcept lor 1outh-1outhwe11 winds at 8 to 15 knot• AloflQ lhe sout'-n c;ou t end -• •nutllwesl along the norlhe<n oa~t Wind wev911 I to 2 feet 9oulf1WMt swell •I 2 IO :I , ... £;ill '".,' eacec1 10< mot n1ng Albeny Albuque Am1tlllo Ancnorage Aatl9Vllle Ati.tll• Allentc Cty Amil'! B11lllm«• Bllllnga Blrmlnghm Bltmarc;k Bolte eo.1on rs : MOM . US Dept of Comtn•c:e on•l•I log I .. ~. ~1111111u1ry l'1unclerttorm• dolled pen 1 nl thl! West and Mid-I wtlllft moll othe< p11r11 or the neuon t<nJnyl!d sunny aklee Sllurdey lot the llr1t <ley ol th4l Labof Day w11ek end traclltlon•lly summttr's la•t hurrah Thunder1torm1 were acrotl lhe northern M lclwell, from eastern South Oako ll to 5oulhwe1t M lnne1ota. Into norlhweet Iowa end from centrtl Kana.tit Into nor1'1-t Oklt1hom1 Tllund.,1torm1 ....,. widely acattMed from Montana through weetern Art1on1 Showell and occaelont l fllund1!'1torm1 1110 were ecattered elong the .outlle<n All11nllc Con t end 111• Gulf Co111t while 1unny 1kle 1 ""'""lled elMWl>e<• -E x te nded weather Tue•d •Y· Tllurtdty Some' night end morning log end low cloud• -tile coeat. 01~ .. lelr end wwm Coutel hight ritnQlng from 1"9 mid 70. •I ~ 10 96 lo 106 In 1"9 velleya 0--nlght <:QUlal tow. In tile eoe 1nd lowe• 701 Mountain high• In 1111 S01. OVfttnlght !owl lrom M to 83 California Soulllern Calllornl• wtll be COOIM alOflO OOH l lodey end Mondey, bul c;onllnued hot lnl•nd P u lly cloud y In mountll)111 end d •H•ll with chi n e • o r 1 ft e rno o n thund er1howet1 lnc;•eHlng ~nf9ht OOMlel IOQ Orenge County oen •xpeei rtlloh• In 70. Ill bMohM. '°" lnfand LOW9 In ~ to llP9I' llOs B• .,_,t'lllle Bullllo Burlington Ct -c>e< Cher1ttn SC Chlffltn WV cruvttte NC Cheyenne ChlCaQO Clnc1nn111 CleY941nc1 Clmbl• SC Columl>UI 01l·FI Wiil 01y1on o.nver OM Moln .. Detroit Oululll El Pat0 Fal•b•nh Fargo Flegll•ll GrH I Fall• HarttOtd ~ Honolulu Houalon tndneplla J.ckan MS Jackanlllle J- K•n• City Kno>Mtle LU Vegu Ultle Rock LOUl9Vllle Lut>t>ode Memphtt Mleml MilweulcM Mpl .... 81 P NMIMl!e New Or1Hn1 83 58 Fronta:Cold .. Watm ,,.., 94 73 87 52 74 80 93 64 92 75 77 53 88 ee 8' 59 74 45 7e 52 n o 90 70 75 4e 94 84 74 49 88 81 80 57 74 45 74 45 97 86 59 42 so 56 85 51 88 59 81 62 90 &4 e7 1e 97 74 7e 47 88 59 98 74 81 43 84 &4 83 eo 1oe 83 83 &4 7e 61 91 ee S6 e2 ee 82 71 49 75 53 90 54 9 1 14 ·-Y0<1< NorlOlk No Platte Okla City Oma111 Orlando Phlladphle Phoenix Plttaburgh Plland. Me Pllend. Ote Provldenee Ralel9tt Rapid Cll y Reno Richmond Salt Leke Sen Antonio S..11141 S hrtrYl()Oft SIOux Flll.1 SI Louie SI p. Tempe St Ste M W'e s~­Syrecu .. T°'*'e Tuceon TulM Wuhlng1n Wichita S1 90 e9 71 19 e 1 91 e2 so eo 92 74 S1 56 111 89 75 54 79 53 ee 83 112 58 91 e7 116 411 ee 47 118 811 94 70 9e 70 e2 68 Sii 80 90 511 80 68 112 re 58 « 90 117 71 53 116 57 102 7S ee ee S5 90 19 SI 119 e1 93 70 102 75 H e7 8" .. t08 8" 80 87 8:1 M 89 t.3 •"'1 11111 .... ...... .... .... ...... . ....... ,,.., ..... .... Dir Zt.lm• 2 4 14 8Mll Monloe 2 4 t4 N9wpot1 2 4 14 86n OlegO County 2 4 14 OutlOOit for Mondey· Uttle c:MnQe. • .. 1 ~ r: 2 3 aw 2 • aw -... Fr-.<> L.Anc;utef Long a..ch Loe Anotolee Monto,,.fa Montebello Monter-r Ml Wlleon Needlel Newpo<t S.OCh Ontario Palm S1><1no• P1Ndene Puo Roblee Red Blull RedwOOd City SICf-10 S•llnM San Bemlldlno 9.,, 01br1el Sen OleQO Sen Franct.oo Sen11 AN Senti Berber• Sen11 Monica Ste>c*ton TlhOI Vdey Tlletmel '°"-Yum• Smog I. Stationtwy •• 93 el 9S 85 92 e7 96 12 1oe 85 119 72 es M ee ea 1oe lM Sl e7 102 es 113 ee 100 70 9e 50 97 80 S7 6(- 92 S6 73 ... 108 e7 100 ee 91 74 78 5-4 94 ee 81 10 80 .. es 88 78 3e 103 80 t 1 ee 97 83 But th• county want• land 1urruund1J1i the a..rM to en.sure th.at no homee a.re built too cJoee The can yon la IO vut that offlc.iat. pr«llct It w ould take 30 yean worth of c:ompect.ed t.ru h and II• daJly co,,v•rtna of dirt to fill ll So far. tht· c'Ounty and Irv- ine Comp1my h1aven't agreed to a prkt! tor the property. CQW'lt)' otflc1als Initially offered $3 mill io n , c lai m i ng t he undeveloped pr ope rty un der flight pattema fro m nearby El Toro Air Station wasn't worth more. Ne~otiators for t he Irvine Company, however , &rfl\'ed that landfill sites are at a premium today and are revenue-producere for the govenunen t. They asked $21 million T h e c ounty h as begun eminent domaln hearings to set a fair market price throuah court hearings prior t.o acquiring the prop erty The hearings are echltdu.led to belin in December, a lth ou1h a ~e lay 11 likely, offldall lldmll. -Dttectott,,I the aolid wut.e manq~t4 lytllem aren't IUJ"e h uw lona~ht ave before Co)ote Can)"Ol'l filled. They ct three to 1lx yean, and they note that thelr leue wtth the Irvine Company (w ho el.ae?~bu. eJC.pired and. haa been extended on a month-to- month baai.I. Company o ftlc lala have been eager to atop the parade of diesel-powered traah trucks rumbling up Bonita Canyon Road six days a week to Coyote Canyon . In the heart ot perhape the wealthiest diatrict in the county, ttult landfill LI only a hall-mile from Ne wport Beach'a~pyglaaa Hill and a mile from 1\lrt.fe Rock 10 Irvine. Bee Canyon la about 2 5 miles from the cloeest homes in Northw ood, a1ao in Irvine. But those who object to plans for a Bee Canyon landfill argue that more ia at stake than proximities. A t issue to them are the lasting ecological effects of the new landfill and related t.hree- m i le accesa road , a n d t h e attitude of county leadens to eeek in novations that might render the new landfill unneeded. At the forefront o f the debate is the Irvine Q ty Council, which voted last month to file a lawsuit in ari attempt to block development of the landfill; elty officials say the suit, still in preparation, could be filed in Orange County Superior Court within two weeks. The suit is expected to a tta c k th e co unt y 's e nvironmental impact report for failing to adequately con.sider alternatives to the landfill. The same tactic was used su ccessfully last year when N e wpo r t Be a c h block e d implementation of the county's mast.er plan for improving J ohn Wayne Airport. AB Councilman David Sills noted recently, the strategy can force a new examination of the options, but can't stop the county from eventually embarking on the same plans. Sills has stressed t h e im port a n ce o f t h e city someday acquiring the eastern foothills in i t s s phe r e o f influence to gain more control of land uses. Northwood re11denta, who cla.im \0 be! the me.wt ulft't'led by the pot.enilial truh truck.a and th t' le n d flll. are a trona ly 1upporU ve of the •ult llfMi any att.mpt.1 to re-examine ot her optiona of u-uh dt.poul. Mayor Larry A1ran ha1 lobbied the coun ty 1upervl.aon to extend the capacity of Coyote Can y on o r r eaort to m ore t r a n1fe r atatlona u nt i l lnnov a tlo n a make resource recovery 1y1tem1 leu expenalve. At issue are the lasting ecological effects of the new landfill and three-mile a ccess road. l t has not gone unnoticed to Irvine officials that both Coyote and Bee canyons are on the city's outskirts. ''Our residents have borne a fair share of the burden and l d o n 't f ee l w e'r e b e ing Yn reasonable a bout this," said Agran . The paved access road is planne d to r un from Sand Can yo n A venue ove r t h e foothills and up a 6 to 7 percent grade to the canyon . The road is d esigned to e nte r through a saddle above the canyon floor so trucks don 't have to face a steep grade as the landfill grow s. Land acquisition ahd road construction are estimated to cost $13 million, said GSA's Rhoads. With the ir e yes on thes·e coets and mounting pressures t.o replace Coyote Canyon, county officials are not happy about the lawsuit. Rhoads warned that residential trash collection rates wiU soar 1f the time comes that neither Bee nor Coyote canyon is open. Co ll ec ts o n fe es, h e explained , are closely t ied to transportation costs to move the trash t.o the closest landfills. Few if any other sit.es, he a dded. are both as isolated yet as close to c1viliz.ation as Bee Canyon. Said Rhoads: "This 1s the biggest rubbish cr isis e ve r in Orange Coun ty." Finance formula hurts By PRO. SNEIDERMAN Of"'h o.., '1lot ltaff U n der the presen t s ta t e financing formula, California's 106 community colleges cannot con tinue offe rinf the curre n t w i de range o academ i c, v ocational and recr eatio n al courses. Tha t w as t h e warn i ng delivered by Gerald Hayward, c h a n cellor o f the atate 's community college sy1t e m , dur ing a v isit Thursday to Orange Coast College in Cost.a Mesa. "The community colleges have received no money for inflation , none for growth," the chancellor said. "Yet the demand f o r eervices i. i.ncreuinl-•• Haywar d told the lunch eon a udien ce tha t commun i t y college. w ill be taking the overflow of students who cannot get into claS9es at Callf ornla St.ate University and University of California c&mPUJel. In addition, he said, pe r iod• of economic receaslon tradltlona11y cau1e many peo ple to e nroll In community colle g e• f o r additional Job tralnina. "We're required and expected to meet all of the.e c:Mmanch. but we can't d o It with exlattna reeourcea,'' the clwloelloc aald. Hayward received • dlfftc:u.lt l4NIOO tn aetUna prtortd .. thte eummer when th• California l,4tp!9ture removed $30 mUlion tMi the budlet for community colleae-. He w o rk e d with the community oollef• 1y1tem'1 l~rnem~r oo.rd 0 aovernon in pnparlnt a "hit l11t" of Gerald Hayward rec reational •nd personal enrichment cow-.. that will no Ionaer receJve ttate funclln8. Aa a re1ult, c ommunity coUecea th.ii year no I.onawr can offer~~ fm creCllt Oft a tuition-tree bMll. 8Gme aubjec'tl haw t>e.n ClCll'lwr1ed to fee-~ community aerY'lice PfOll"'IN. AJthouah b••ic academic . .. ,. instruction is still offered without tuition charge, Hayward said th.is too may change. "There ls no q uestion in m y mind that tuition (for community colleges) will be a major issue during the next session of the Legislature ," he said. "But it's too early to tell whether it may be imposed during the 1983-84 school year." Haywa rd said he be lieves leglslators may be more inclined t o d is cu ss o the r w ays o f funne ling m o r e m o n ey t o communit y colleges a fter the Novem ber elections. H e d i d n ot rule out the proapec t o f local d istricts regaining the ability to r•ise eome of their own funds, even though the traditional property tax method has been eliminated by Proposition 13. The chancellor al8o predicted th.i the 1tate'1 ability to continue financing the community college a y1 t e m may hlnge on a nationwide economic recove.ry. Hayward declined to comment apeciflcally on the telev1:tion coune diapute that hu cau.ed friction between faculty and adminlatr•tou In the Coast Dl.a\liCt. But he did aay collqes mutt adapt to chanaee in IOcfety and make cow-. available ln the moat efftctent manner._ ''The th.lna I'm moat c:onc..med about la the quality of lnatructlon," H•yward Nld. "I woWd look at qu.Uty and cost· effec:U~. But I don't foreeee 1 day when televlaion or •ny othtr media will ever replace faculty membeta." .. • Orange Co11t DAILY PILO T/Sunday, September 6, 1882 'Alaska E a g l e' • a r r i ves home Gift to OCC makes berth in Harbor By ALMON LOCK.ABEY ~ .............. Wrltw Alaaka Eagle, the Swan-65 that represented the United State. ln the recent Around the World Race, was eased lnto her berth at the Oran~e Coast College Sailing Rowing Baae at 4 :58 p .m. Saturday to a rousing welcome by OCC students, faculty and friends of the college. Yach t owner Nell Bergt, president of West ern Airlines donated Alaska Eagle to OCC after co mpletio n of the 27,000-mile Whitbread Around the Wor ld race. It marks the fourth large sailing yacht to be donated to OCC. Two of the others, Sauda~e and Scandalous rendezvoused witn Ala.ska Eagle at 3:30 p.m. off North Laguna and escorted her to the harbor jetty where she was three minutes shy. of her 4 p.m. ET A from San Diego. The 0CC sailing base was the final destination for Alaska Eagle after her voyage from Portsmouth, England with stops in the Caribbean, Panama Canal, Acapulco and San Diego. She left San Diego at 10 a .m . Saturday and motor-sailed to Newport Beach . After passing the JeltY Alaska Eagle was joined by a h06t of other welcoming yachts, The Alaska Eagle towers over other boats in Newport Harbor as it head s for Orange Coast College berth. The sailing yacht was donate d to OCC by Neil Be rgt, president of Western Airlines. mcludmg a Harbor Department fi reboat-escort, spr aying two streams of water to clear the way. She was greeted at the sailing base by hundreds of OCC students and yachting fans and jaz.z tunes by Rodney and the Music Men. After Alaska Eagle was secured in her new ber th a formal welcoming ceremony was conducted by college officials, including Dr. Bernie Luskin, president; Dr. Bob Moore, recently retired president, and Dave Grant, dean of the college's marine academy. Grant introduced Make Farley, skipper of Alaska Eagle in the Around the World race, who also convinced Bergt that Alaska Eagle's permanent hom e should be at OCC. Alaska Eagle Is a S wan-65 designed by the New York firm of Sparkman and Stephens and built specifically for t h e Whitbread race. Banning focus of growth • issue By STEVE MARBLE 01 the Deity P16ol ltan The Banning Ranch is nothing more than a couple of oil wells and a bunch of shrubs. But the one-time sheep ranch suddenly has become the very foundation that an entire ci ty e lection in Newport Beach is being built on. It is here, on this rugged dusty piece of land off Coast Highway in West Newport that Hancock "Bill" Bannin g Ill is hoping to build 75 acres of homes, offices and industrial complexes. The development, approved by local city council members last spring, has stirred controversy and, from one point of view, has come to represent everything bad abou t development and growth in the beach city. Critics of Banning's project launched-an e ffort to turn back the building plan. They collected more than 6,000 signatures. forcing city officials to put the matter on the Nov. 2 ballot. The opponents come from different parts of Newport and from groups with a variety of names like SPON (Stop Polluting Our Newport) and RAP (Residents' Action Plan) and the• West Newport Leg1slat1ve Alliance. Together these groups. who charge the development will snarl traffic in an alread y congested area of town, have pushed and shoved the Banning project into the poltucal limelight. Jean Watt, a longtime spokeswoman for slow-growth and the president of SPON, says the project represents piecemeal development and sugges ts the city develop a master plan for West Newport before approving any project. Watt, like others in her camp, believes that the zoning on the land before the council changed 1t was fine. The old zoning called for construction of homes at a very low density. Banning is m a tter-of-fact about the ~ontroversy surrounding his project: "It's a good project for the city but citizens do have the right to have a referendum If they win and I lose we go back to the drawing boards. "But," he adds, "there's no way we would built out there under the old zoning. That would be absurd." His family has owned the land for four generations. His great- g rand father bought the oceanview property more than 100 years ago. The ranch has shrunk to 500 acres a nd Bannin g is asking perrrussion to develop only the 75-acre chunk. Development on the rest of the land is at lea.st 20 years away, he says. Banning, like his critics, also had hesitations about the way the council approved his project. He felt the council watered it dow n while h ea ping on conditions at the same time. He calculates conditions such as building roads will coot him $10 million or more. Last Friday, Banning finally announced he would support and campaign for his own project. He says he was encouraged by the formation of a support group calling itself Citizen s For A Better Newport. Fonner Newport Beach Mayor Don Mcinnis, leader of Citizens For A Better Newport, sayw the support group hopes to raiae and spend $30,000 before the election. Banning acknowledges that the battle lines now appear to be clearly drawn. One critic of the project, city council candidate Allan Beek, fired the first salvo last month by filing a lawsuit challenging the ballot wording written by the council. Beek charged that the wording was confusing and that voters who wanted to vote no had to vote yes and those wanting to vote yes had to vote no. The case was thrown out. Last week, the other side got into the action . Councilman Phil Maurer, a fan of the Banning project and a director of Citizens For A Better Newport, filed a lawsuit. This lawsuit also deals with ballot language, charging the the ballot argument writte n by Banning's critics is mis~eading and false. The suit is to be heard Sept. 14 In Orange County Superior Court. The fina1 day to change any wording o n the ballot is Sept. 16. A large crowd of OCC stude nts a nd (acuity was wait ing for the Alaska Eagle as it _ headed toward th e berth that will be its new home. .. Mesa Verd e cr ash t--- The California Highway Patrol was investigating this c rash between a Costa Mesa police cruiser and a nother vehicle late Saturday. The driver of the second vehicle was injured (shown being treated in inset ) after her car struck the cruiser from behind and flipped over. The accident occ urred on Adams Ave nue between Mesa Verde East and Mesa Verde West. ORANGE COAST Clanlfled advertl1lng 714Jl42·5f71 All other department• 142-4321 Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE m Weit ... St . C09te -·CA. Thomas P. Haley Publ•sl>et ond Ch,.t h e<111t•• Olloc., Mell add'"4 80• '*·Cott•-· CA "6J6 C•yrl9"1 1tl1 Or .... c .. 11 PUll>llthl"t '-Y No ,,_, 1tontt, lllullratlOftt • .olltorlel m.tlttff or_. v..-tlHmenl~ heroin mey IW ••ll'Oduc:ed wllfloul -la l ,..-m!Hlon of c.,,.,,r'911l-Nr. Jane Amari E.ecultve E d1t0t L l<ay Schultz V oc.e Pr .. "'°'11 ond OitectOt ol Ad>i9'httng Micha.I P. Harvey Di•ect0< ol Motkettng !Cl<culotlonl 0.-, ......... .., a ........ ~ Thomcu A. Murphlne fd110< Raymond Mod.an Controlor Kenneth N. Goddard Jr. Owectoi ol ~ohons TM Or-Coetl o.lly Piiot, •1111 wtllCll It c- l>IM<I Ille _P,..1. It ""4141-l>y Ille Or ..... C•u PIAl4ttlll,. C-y S--•I• _._ _,. p.illlltlled ~ "''°""' "•kfey fe>< C-'e MtM, Ne•PO" lleecll, H""lk>g!Oft llffcll. "-lelft V .... .,, lrvlne, l _.. ~II. $ouWI c .... A 11 ..... ,....._ MlllOft II lllUllll-s.!urdey1 end ~. Tiie prlnctpel pu«M~ plent 11 et J:90 '#HI .. Y SCrwt, P.O au'*· Cott•* ... Cellfotnle .,._ VOL. 75, NO. 2Ai We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Daily Piiot" What don't you like? Call the number below and your me11a1e will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answertn1 serv1ce may be used to record let· tera to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verification. No clrculatlon calla, pleas,. Tell ua what's on your mind. 642·6086 ... I . '. 0 (}Vewport 8urf c& 8port, Inc. 0 8th ANNUAL GOOD thru SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 BACK TO SCHOOL"''' ·--------.. !:-------------------------------~ I FREE • I •ooK •Ao I LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR , WITH , -on aelected · -i~~~~~·!~ ._I _M:.;.:.:E::.;:..N.;..;;:S;;;__· ...:.W.;..O;;;;..;.;.M;.;;;E;;.;.N.;;..;;S;;;..__-...;:;;B;...;O;;....Y.;_S~S-P_O_R_T_S_W_E_A_R_~ MENS WOMENS ffllllhorts ............... ZS.501 Off rants ........................ 2s.501 Off Shits ........................ ZS-501 Off Drtsstt ............. 501 Off Shorts .......... }5.50\ Off rints ........... .10.501 Off SMnwt1r ........... Up to 501 Off SMnwt• .......... 501 Off BOYS ftts ............ 2S.50\ Off rants ............ .10-401 Off W•lhotts .... 10·50' OFF Swtmwt11 ..... 10.50' (ff wmam 10·20' Off. stUS I 'i ACCESSOID 201 OFF OP • IZOD • CALVIN KLEIN • GANT • HOLBROOK • OFFIHORI • IURFLINI HAWAII• GOTCHA• EIPIRIT D'CORP • HOBll • CHURCHILL 1• •UCANllR -AND MORI ~ 8AL80A ......... 11111po1..trt lurt ....... ..... 110'-' .......... ... lall11 ........ CA (114) .,..Jm ltOO a.m. • NO p.m. Dlllr ------·---- Orange Co It DAIL y PILOT /Sunday, September 5, 1982 Nosy dogs give valuable aid • in W 1 r o BY SID MOODY &6'l•nt•, 1tnd th6 dofll 1nlll can u .,,.. .... ,",. WrMet dNc>ct th drup FRONT ROYAL , Va "Oog11 an· not the whole Cor)<y 1nlff1 '-'OCalnt' for ll living. n n s w l' r, bu t t h ey arc Mn 'the copt know a ll about It. extc n11on or our capabllltlca. Indeed, when he snort.II a stash, Tht•y work eight-hour 1hlCt1, but they aay "Good dog!" tht•y nt'C>ti n rest, JWJl like the !"\.'It Corky ls a male LabraJor or us." ret;ri~. He iB about to graduatA> Cua.tona....alao u.wna dos• to from the training center here of st· a rt· h for weapon 1 a n d the U.S. Customs Service to join ammunition. T hiai 11 a little the war on narcotiai a. a member tJ·ickwr because ~ou don't want of the Reading, Pa., police the amnu1I cht-wmg into a lime department. bomb. Those dogs are trained to One of his cjassrooms was a sit wht•11 they smell powder. mOc;kup of a post office package St&ud1 Arabia, whose strict conveyor belt. While an assisl.ant Mos I l• m f a i th e n [or c es piled packages on the belt, Corky proh1b111on, wantt.>d dogs to smell ran to and fro sniffing, scarcely out booze This didn't work too less animated than his handJer at well However, the Saudis a're the other end of the leash. One of <:ontra(·tmg tor 60 dog ~ to the ~xes contained Quaaludes in patrol ror imported weapons. a plastic packet. Asians who are not Moslems will "Good boy! Good boy!" cried bl• th(• handl<.•rs, as dogs are the handler. r<>gardt-d as unclean in the Corky raced back and forth on lslam1t· faith. th~' treadmill, sniffing. Suddenly Chowning's biggest problem is he unced on a passin~ package finding recruits. Competition for an began chewing like he was t r a 1 n a b 1 e d ogs is k e e n . in loin.City. He had found the Penod1cally Customs sends talent n le in the haystack . scouts to animal shelters in big ood boy!" exclaimed the cities like Los Angeles, Chicago er, sur{'eptit1ously slipping or N cw York . They have apped towel scented with streetwise dogs whose aggressive tics into tbe remains of the nature• has spt.•lled survival. .._. __ ..,,e so Corky would think he· The n.'t:ru1ters look for tbis as reward. well as good condition, strong essence that's what the hips, a possessive nature and an ms di>g training is all about, instinct for retrieving. 12 eeks of playing fetch the "We've had dogs with one ear sti~, the stick in this case being down and their tails bitten off. th~towel. like in 'The Little Rascals,'" says he dogs who graduate are Chowmng. Breedmg is secondary th nes who look on it as a game to P.ersonality. an never tire of it," says Tom · We experimented raising a Ch ning, the Customs officer in lttter of I 0 golden retrievers. ch ge of training. "Pedigree Only one made it. It's cheaper to nothing. The dog has to scout. w t to do it." "Dogs oC the same breed are s not dog's play. Only one in just hke peoi;le. One will do dates is accepted into the better because of desire." am. One in five-and-a-half Ideally, the rc<:ruits are about a uates. They earn their keep. year-and-a-half old. "We don't with a nose for narcotics hke them older µian three. If we 4,522 seizures last year of can get five or Six years out ~ a ·with a street value of $190 dog, that's pretty good." n . An lverage of 91 teams Males are preferred because at work acr~ the country they are m o r e aggressive g that period for Customs although Customs is a fair an oth er law enforcem e nt employment hirer. ag~cies for which this school A recent class of 62 recruits on trails. campus. a wooded retreat in the Ai dog in San Ysidro set up a Blue Ridge mountains, included huf and cry at water dripping Sa m . Coo k i e. S p u n k y , fr<f.'1 an ice truc k. Officers Humphrey, Stretch Crom Port A ~ og sniffed a cach e thro ug h a one-inch st ' I plate o n a ship. Ano ther sniffed th ugh the a roma from a sealed coffee which contained 50 grams of cocaine. ed the trail of melting ice to find 1,000 kilograms of m.aaJ1..uu:1.11. A dog sniffed a cache gh a one-inch steel plate on at· p. Another sniffed through the ma from a sealed coffee can hich contained 50 grams of co ai n e wrapp ed i n a p ylactic. Good dogs. indeed gs even can trace drug seep in the seats of recently va~ted airplanes. It then re ins o nly t o check the nger seating assignment me smugglers say they can the scent with mothballs or a," says Chowning. "But e tried a number of alien Washmgton, N.Y. and Fritz from Oxnard, Calif. The first days tn cla.<;& are spent fetching the towel which has been impregnated with the acid odor of marijuana and hash1Sh The dogs tram with th f" same person throughout the course. The trainer becomes the handler on graduauon Later indoctrination 1s done under ' game conditions in large part ships in Baltimore. airplanes and luggage al Dulles International Airport, police vehicle lots in the vicinity. Customs a lso has i t s own parking lot here staffed with Dog tra inee ,,Moi:_l< rips ope n a usp1<'10uo, pnc·kaµ.•· lw l1l 11, ( 11 ... 1t• Officer Gene Godsey at Cus to ms' dog-training •·•·nl• ,. i11 \ 11 •11 ,, Mo rk is le arning bomb d etectio n in u simulntc·d ,.., .. , oft w, ...... , 'I' Drug d etection is a ma jor part o f tru inin~. /.scarded military ambulances and assorted other junkers. The t owe l ls t ie d t o th e undercarriages. Then the dogs are trotted up to s houts of their handr---' ~couragement. -When the dog starts getting close, the h a ndle r crawls underneath with his animal. urging it on all the while. The dog emerges 'with his towel, the handle r without his breath. En~husiasm 1s the name of the game, for the handler has to be as enthusiastic as his dog. After seven such exercises a day. the dog goes back to the k e nnel t o think it over . Eventually he makes the critical association: the smell of cannabis means fun w ith the towel. If the animal doesn't think it's fun, he w ashes out. Customs has little trouble placing the animal in a domestic home. Eight weeks 'Into the program, the dog starts training with the harder stuff. cocaine and heroin. Four weeks of that and arumal and handlers arc ready to go out into what Chowning and most oth er comm en cement spe..akers refer to as "the real world." The man-dog r elationship is kept business-lik~. The dog ltves in a kennel until re tire ment, generally as the handler's pet. "You want him to loo k forward to the job. U Duke's kept at home as a pet, he's apt to look up from the rug and say 'Why should I go out and work for a living."' Custo m O(fict•r (,ar) Dea ch,) l••t· '':al• he·~ Bui! 1·lwd\ a c·ur intf>rior for n a rcotic'°' al Fron I Ho~ nl. \a .. tt ai11i11~ t c•11tt·r. Ttlt• do~s g o AP Wl,..photoe throug h a l 2-\\'eek roor.,c• in, ,i,;ui:, homh :oul "'·a1mn"' clt·te<'lion. ~~--------------------------------:-----------------------------------------------...--------'-----~·------------~ --~------------------ 2 Beginners of all ages welcomer Whether you've ice skated before or not, you're never too old to learn. . We create fun, we treat people special. rr----------11 t Mesa Verde I s 10°0 Off I Center 1 Jee Skating Lessons I I for I 1 Harbor Blvd., . BEGINNERS ONLY I Harbor a Adema Prnent coopnn for diM:OUnt. OST A MESA ~ ~ll~es_Nc:m_:er ~· ~982_ ~ 979-8880 7 .I. PUBLIC ICE SKATING EVERYDAY ~ --- --------- ------------- -- t Our famous Fish fr More· has two crispy (i$h fillets. fresh cole slaw. QOlden fryes. and two crunchy hushpupples. 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(MO$ AlR~DY Lf TICKE1 0 liXCLIJDLD) MAaTllllCARD • VtSA • AM•AICAN •XPR•a a • Orange Cout OAILY PILOT/lunday, 8eptembef' 5, 1812 Al L·ove ~f birds sparks insights foP DDT study • MADISON, Wl1. (AP) -In the oak·ahaded oae.11 behind the home of con1ervatlon alant .J 0. e p h H l ck e y I ta 1 k 0 f envlrorunental daltrucUon aeerna Jamnaly out of pl.Ice. -Althoutih he la the en\'il"PlllM'l'f!. Oanlel wJ> ioc>k onth·e llona-Of the chemical Industry and helped force a national ban on DOT, the 75-year..old Hickey doesn't teek the limelight. Hla reeearch ln the mld-1960. showed the correlation between high levels of D.OE -a breakdown product of DOT - and poorly developed eu ahella ln IOll'le birds. Then he organized an international conference who.e particlpanta proved the pesticide was wiping out the ~efalcon. He also Is author of a waterfowl banding analysis, of a 1943 book t'hat helped change bi.rd-watcl;Ung from a list-making hobby into a studious pursuit, forme r ch airman of th e University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Wildlife F.cology and former editor of the J ournal ' -. . -• r . . --. . . -...... ---. . of WUdillt Manaiement. work affect.t tM «'OicHn' ~ Hlckty became lnteretted ln look cloaely at whar they're blrd1 11 a boy In New York, dolJ\a, ecoloalcal chance la not when he helped fonn the "Bronx always to.-th• wont. County Bird Club." Other Hence, he' a leu upaet by m t m b e r 1 , l n c l u d l n I coutal oil exploraUon than many phoio,rapher Allan Crulckahank envlronmen&aliall. and n•iiuaUl.LBo.1,...er.._..'f._..o...,r-.#oy __ •_• W..._Jl.U.L...)~JU& allo _oil Petenon, alao made careen of exploration on the land, you ornithology. • c e r-i a I n 1 y c h a n i e t h e "It'• not euy to recall how nice environment for a lon1 Ume to the Bronx W'8 In the '20.," he come," he aaya. 11It It'• a coutal aay1. "You could aee 50 kinda of marah, the rip 10 ln by devillna blrda ln a park on a May a canal 1y1tem. That certainly mornin1.'' 'chansea the ecolosy of that A gentle man with a face marsh for bundrecil of yean. Not weathered from yean of outdoor alway1 to the bad, b ut It la life, Hickey alt1 comfortably ln a chan&ed." back yard dotted with bird HlCkey came to that view ln a feedera, 1uet holder• and a typical way. He put ulde bluea, birdbath and say1 that he'd examined 1clentlflc data and r a t h e r t a 1 k a b o u t t h e vialted oil rip ln Loulaiana. accomplishments of othera. "You simply don't aee oll He has aome strong oplnlona. slopping around," he aays. "It'• a Like many con1ervationista, he's very careful operation. You aee a concerned about the Reagan lot more canala. It may even improve the mar1h for aome apedel." At one potnt in hl1 DDT reeeueh, tt\e Audubon Soctety ukecl hlm to 1peak about the pesddde at an annual meeUna· He..refuaed hec1u• he aid be didn't have enou,h lnfonnadon ~et. "You c•n't afford to take a poa1Uon 1n advanc:e of the facll, then conduct reeearch to orove you're right," Hickey aays. fi<>n a cont.rovental 1ubject, you releue your tlndlng1 to a critical audience of rour peers, not an applaud ng gro u p of conaervatloMata who already have made up thelr mlnda." There ii a1ao a Joe Hickey who Robert McCabe, hla 1•MXle80r u UW-Madiaon wildlife department chaii-man, says can make undergraduatea open up admlniatratlon 's environmental policies. But, he alto has an open mind on aome political aspects of conservation, b elieving, tor example, that whil~ oil companies and others whose g;Qnciscan -5 50 wlltta per channel, min. rma Into I ohme from 2o-20,000 Hz, wlh no more thM . 320/o ~ 400/o ~-..... Uke no other t.Mehet. l Today. he lament• that hll •• htarln1 mun b• 1otn1 - YOW'\Pf compenlorw on a recen~ bird-watchina jaunt heard 14~ 1pectea of blrda to hll 135. He contend• he'• retired, but Hlctkey'1 lciu_M_zetlrement would leeve a far younpr man sup&ns tor breath. • He ltU1 appears ln clallrooml -u a atudent -and M1'VM u 1 the unofflclal librarian of bl1 '• former depar tment, where h• ' maint.alna an offl.ce. He review• papera 1ubmltted to acientlflc '' Jourpala by ot her ecolo~cal' '. reaeitchen and he'• comple a bluejay lonpvity atudy for • 1 flrat wife, Peay Brook.a Hk!k.ey, ~ who reaearcbed lt for yeara before ahe dJed in 1976. And he ii • writing a hiatory of the • publication• of th" Wildlife Society. ·' ,. , Buy at this low price now and get the power, features and per-0.05 .. THO forrnance found in receivers costing much morel Full LED array 23911 with 21-segment power meter, ~ signal stren h Indi- cator, FM-stereo, Znlng and mode indicators. Aut~agic9 FM tuning system, bass and treble controls, tape monitor. . N31·2096 171.95 Save Even More on This Complete HI-fl System By Realistic Save s3ooao s479 Reg. 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Selett from stemware and barware in Apple and Desert Rose plUs a wide variety of MrVing and accessory pieces in Desert Rose. ~ . ~· Orano• Oout OAIL v PILOT /Sunday. ~\ember 5, 1812 Walla ~e: A. comebaekor lasthurrah? MONTOOMJCRY, Ala. (AP) -Many an hand wlll never foraot the bon•·11Chlnt oold. I\ la Jan. 14, 1963, and a bltter wlnd rakn the crowd wlth numbln1 auata. To the Georae Wallace faithful, there (1 a name tor thf1: "Yankee weather." Some band• that parade pHt Wallace actually w!!ar Rebel unlform1. Some plal ·~ -Dlxre." And r>enft'Ch me"mte-tlotrii!d CIJ?F. at the aite where Jeftereon Davia took the oatli as prealdent of the Confederacy, George Corley Wallace become9 governor of Alabama for the flnt tlme. In truth, he becomes 10methlng more. He deliver• an lnau.rural speech that will be . 1 9 6 3: ''. . . And I s ~:Y segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever." remembered even two decades later. The speech raises old banners of the Civ,il War, stirs new passions of racial division, an~ signals a new era of confrontation -ln Alabama, the South, be yon~. "Let us rUe to the call of the freedom-loving blood that is in us," says Uallace, "and aend our answer to the tyranny that clankl lte chains upon the South. "In the name of the greatest people that have ever trod th.is earth,". he continu~ "l~w the line in the dust and toss the gauntlet before the feet of tyranny. And I say ... segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever .. The sun winks off the steel bars of the Geo~e Wallace credits his renewed political career to his third wife, 34-year-old Lisa Taylor Wallace, a former country singer. FINALLY! A photography workshop for beginners and amateurs in Laguna Beach September 15. • LECrutES • Sll)( DOOGTlATIOM • tWl>S-ON PUCTICE Under the direction of a professional. IHFO/llSHVATION Bt»t:l•I Sept. 1, 1912-~t. 7, 91~ Kryptoptcna bklrrtis: 1.79 MJ bodJ IS slendef. $plllt wis4lle 1lonc m1 l1ttr1I hnt , 1ntern11 orrw contlinld 111 1 siwer sac under my ll11d. A lasc1n1t1na addition to the 1quaroum 11111 I am Oft sale 1t A11t11bc T roptells under Ult name "Glass Cat" f9f 1.7?. VJS4' .. .. mo ........ ~ ~t.lltl•C.. .... & ... 11o/o TAX FREE The NEWPORT HARBOR BUSI/VESS & PROFESSIONAL WOMEN cordia)ly invit. you and your frienda to join them in a SOth ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION SA'IURDAY., SEPTEMBER 11 , 1982 LUNCHEON -11130 a.m. l lS.00 per,._ Speaker JULIE ARR~.._......._ .... , ...... ._. ................................ _ E.aertalame•t b)' ...... .,... • .,.. .......... 9hrpn Balboa Pavilion Reataurant, 400 Main St., BalbOe l.Puld111 la ........ lole -downtown Belble. ,...__, =-- wh lchaJr u Geor1e Wallace 11 rolled alone the ln thll Tue.day'• prl~. And ktn1 black pavement towaret the Holiday Inn near votet with a dU11ence that 1ugeeta every black Tuake,... Cameru follow him and he wav9'> vote may be crltlcal for hlm. 1nn1, and pata down hla halr to keep lt fro'1' Thero are black.I with 11Wlt)lace" bumper belna blown Into dlaatray by a 1udden breeze. 1Uckera on their can, and there 11, amona many Then hell ln1lde the motel, In a conventon black Alabama Democratic leaders, an room wtth tablee 1pre.d out for a luncheon. T.he undercurrent of polltl~al 1oodwlll toward room It fUlod with more than 100 black ee2Ple. A Wallace'• candlct..cl:...-.. llff'lqUICRIY tol"ffirtc>lha1le-KTrhan0.6P'~lv~e!"---o.;=-WiIIiCe,· now p&rily&f e ep a people. Ten people. A few dozen or more. would-be .... 1n•1 bullet 10 yean qo, It y It la Nov. ,20, 1981, and Wal.lace la the gueat the arch-villain of the civil riahta move nt he 1peaker at the Alabama Conference of Black once wu. Mayor11. Thoae 1hakln1 Wallace'• hand are More recently, Wallace wu pre.ed to 1peak eenerous In their remarka to him. Wallace Is hf4 mind on aegregaUon when he appeared . In likewise. • Blrmlngham before the 25th anniversary Hll hearing ls a blt poor and he often has to aak that namea be repeated. But for one old, large black man with a vol~ like a arowl of thunder,•Wallace need.I no lntroduct.lon and they shake h'andl enthualutically. 1982: "I did stand for the separation of schools. But that was wrong and that will never come back." j The man ls E. D. Nixon, the 82-year-old patriarch of the civil rights movement in Montgomery, the man who ln 1955 tapped a young black preacher na~ed Martin Luther King Jr. to lead a historic b6ycott of the capital city's aegregated buses. ' A couple of days b~fore -he Tu1ke1ee meeting, Nixon had said publicly he wanted to see WJlllace run for governor again. U Wallace ran in 1982, said Nixon, "I certainly wouldn't be convenUon of the Southern Christian Leadership . Conferenee, the civil rights group formed by King. Asked about his racial stands in the past, he replied, "I did stand, with the majority of tl)e white people, for the separation of achool.a. But that was wrong and that wlll never come back again.'' again.st him." George Wallace, as almolt every Alabaman of voting age now knows, ia running again, seeking the Democratic nomination for governor Joaeph Lowery, the " president of the Atlant.a-bued.SCLC, later mused: "If he says he (See WALLACE1 P~) George 'Wallace .. Our Reg 7.57 I 6.50 1.9Z .. Miiier Lite~ Beer Traeh & Lawn Bag ., ........ ClaHlcally Tailored Shirts Misses' basic shirts of carefree po- lyester/ cotton, so right with skirts and pants. Pretty colors. Crew-neck Sweat Shirt Solid·color shirt of Creslan• acryhc· /cotton. Men's sizes. Cook like a Lite• allstar. Lite• Beer in 12-oz. cans. Handy trash and lawn bags. Plastic bags with ties. 30.count. 15-0unce• Pert Shampoo 'F107 . ~°'_,.,"'° Tl.I 12.88 Ladles Sweater Jack eta Our Reg. 16.96 Perfect for the. beck-to·achool ward· robe. In Misses llz• S·M·L. • "-8-itl Av-at t10 ct1W99 Color Packs fall color Many van· Plant now for early 1 17 ell" to choose from • 1-Gal. • Liquid Fertlllzer buket. 1poke Sturdy w i re as wheel1 In back & wheel• In front. Plated 14. ftM!e. Liquid organic flah beae plant lood. Fast ectJng, HI)' to use. '"'°' s2 · "Ou~ Best" Bias-ply Black walls Our Reg. 35.97.eo<>>c12 •2z. P1Ui f'.!.T. 1.43 Ea . M" " T 1, 1dv-. "' 11 h'· il1nq H(J • t \ l , ' I 1 > 11 ~ I r 'f' ~ I f O..Aee•·• 54.88 .... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, September (;, 1982 WALLACEBAC I POLITIC • • • (J'rom P111 Al) madct a ml1take and a1kl for1lveneaa, l t'an for1lvt him •.. But u 1 candidate, ht' repr11ent1 WaliK'elam. He conjun1111 up all th ne11uvo tmaae1 of the patt.11 For Wallato, them, there are no certalntll!ft a1 black.a -and whlta -enter the polUng booths Sept. 7. lnltead there'U be the long watt tor the final tally to find out If hta polltlcal ca~r has been reborn. That caree!r 1panned more than a quart.er century of active 1tate hou1e politicking, ·WW>ns thn!tt fuH temis ...-p091.,. mod-four- partial or lull-fledged bida aa Dixie'• wild card candlc4ate for president. ·Whether h e'• speaking to a group of farmeni, newspapermen , or dentists, Wallace repeatedly cites his presidential forays, the national debates. It la one of the curlosltlet of the 1982 campaign that Wallace may end up talkJng about Ruasia, or' Khrushchev, or Castro, while appealing for Alabama votes. At a July appearance in Birmingham for a farm organization'• conference, Wallace opened by reminding the farmers that, "~ck in '68, I recommended 100 percent parity" ... Wallace physically attempted to block desegregation in 1963 · when he stood in the door of the University of Alabama in an attempt to pre vent two black students from enrolling. He did not succeed . Thls theme song, emphasizing the national figure he cut during the past two decades, is drawing discordant notes from his chief opponents, who have at least plausible hopes Of bringing Wallace's career to a close. 1n Jhe Democratic primary, Wallace faces two actlve opponents, Lt. Gov. George McMillan and House Speaker Joe McCorquodale. Wallin~ 2 Pair Misses', Girls' Knee-Highs Popular stretch nylon opaque knee· hrgh s in assorted colors Shop K ·mart· and save. Develop And Print Focal • & Kodacolor • II Film Or Other C-41 Films. Sizes 11 O, 126, 35mm And NEW "disc· Film. (Sun.-Mon. Only) Regular Processing 12 Exp. 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Mont"Qn~ry Mwyur Emory Jl'ulmar, M<'Mlllnn, IAt .m o quurwr c1'ntury young1 r than WoHuc.'t\ 11 u B1rmlnahom luwy..r with tk to the mocfor w Df'Ol(X•rutw Party n·gulllrl, tlw r bh1c•k vow Wallnct• 11t't1ks, nncJ uroon lnwr •111.1 A lanky, baldln6' mun glVNl to rnpld flr1• ornt.ory, McMlllun 11 pc~rhap11 the moat ouupok n oppont'nt of tht.' Wullut'C' rt'<'Ord , Mc.<A.>rq uodalc, 61.. \J.S a les111. Uyt• wt<'& M and a llOUth Alabama bwdnc man with LI profllt- rcaembUng Tenn ~nic. F<mi and.a h.iatory , of being well-vcnied In the mu!l1t' of t-ountry politics. A former Wullnc.•t• aJly, M1.0>r4uodalf' has appeal for the farm and rural vote that might have been con<.'t-ded to Wallace. No.matter If Wallace or somc.'One t.•l!ll• Is the Democra}ic nominee on the Nov Z gt'nc.•raJ election ballot, the• He publtcan candidate, Folmar. t& f'Xpe<:ted to be formidable. Folmar, 52, Is a w ealthy developer with hefty financial backing. He also IS a physically rugged man. As a pistol-packing mayor of Alabama's capital, J''olmar frequently has been in the {in;t police squad car to arr ive nt the scene of a crime. Wallace, once a Golden Gloves boxer, was left confined to a wheelchair by gunfire that sent him sprawJlng on the pavement of a Laurel, Md., shopping center on May 15, 1972. When he turned over the governor's office to Fob James in January 1979, he quietly left the pol'ltlcal spotlight and became director o f rehabilitation r~sourccs for the University of Alabama al Birmingham, workmg out of a downtown Montgomery offaC<' • Divorced Crom has sec:ond .w1fo C.ornclia at the time. Wallace seemed to lose a certain motivating zest, seemed often in pain and in an interview shortly before his 60th birthday in 1979, said that politically, "I'm through." In his recent appearances, however, he has shown little sign of being in serious pain. For the most part, he SC<'ms to be the same man who ran state government from a wheelchair during the nearly seven )'.ears after he was shot. Wa llace credits much of ha s revitalized political life to his third wife, Lisa Taylor -Wallace, a 34-year-old former counfry music singer who was a WaUace campaign trouper m 1968. Wallace, if elected for a fourth term, says his days of presidential campaigl)ing are over. Wallace also Cl1soams ta'lk of New South politicians versus Old South politicians, and where he might classify himself. Among the more redoubtable Southern politicians, the Huey Longs and the Eugene Talmadges, for example, Wallace makes no comparison. "Huey L o ng w as Huey Long. And Talmadge was Talmadge. And Wallace." he says, "was Wallace." Incentives work WASHINGTON (AP) -Whe n welfare recipients in the governme nt's Work Incentive program get jobs that make them self-sufficient, they're likely to remain employed and off welfare, a congressionaJ study says. "However, those who got jobs but did not earn enough to go off welfare tended to lose their jobs," said the study by the General Acx:ounung Offace. It found that 60 percent of the recipients of Aid to Families With Dependent Children who were involved in WIN got jobs that dad not pay enough to take them off welfare. E.T. Phone Home "E T ? Where are your "I have landed at Huntington Center on Planet Earth. I'll be here to meet the kids on Sun from noon to 2 pm " . Children's-. Puppet . Shows Riede Marionettes wlll provide fun, music and fantasy for the little • ones. Huntington Center Mall Fri. thru Sun. at 1-2-3 & 4, Mon. , at 2·3 & 4. J I I Hospital tug-of-war contenders: cool down Currently, a full -scale i mbroglio has developed over proposals to build a hos pl tal to serve the p eople of the city of Irvine. The controversy spre ad across a much wider area than simply Irvine .~t has involved many fac llons across Orange County and rattled through the halls of Sacramento. Many good and fine civic leaders of our region can be found with opposing views on the question of who should build and control any future Irvine hospital and where it should be located. On the one hand, there are supporters of Irvine Medical Center, with highly respected Dr. Arnold 0 . Beckman as chairman, and one of Irvine's strongest civic leaders, C. David "Dave" Baker as president. This group sought through legislation to lease land from the Saddlebac k College's north campus for con struction of a hospital. Such a lea se required state legislation in a bill carried by A ssemb l ywoman Mari a n Bergeson, R-Newport Beach, one o( our region's most e ffective and respected legislators. This hos pital pro posal, howeve r is opposed by Dr. Stanley van den Noort, d ean of the University of California, Irvine's C.Ollege of Medicine. Dr. van den N'oort believes any future Irvine hospital should be located on the UCI campus. UCI Chancellor Daniel G . Aldrich, Jr. appears to s tand somewhat amidships on the issue. He made statem~nts indicating the the university would not oppose the Saddleback campus location, although earlier, he had stated his belief that any future Irvine ho spital s hould be o n the university grounds. Van den Noort took a more hard line view a nd lobbied against Assemblywoman Bergeson's bill, which by now had passe d both houses of the Legislature . Van den Noort asked Gov. Edmund G . Brown Jr. to veto the measure. Brown did. Bergeson's efforts to push through an amended version in the wnning hours of the legislative session dled. In the f rantk Cina I hours of legislat!ve action, Baker fired off a rather strident letter to Gov. Brown, castigating the governor !or his failure to sopport the Bergeson measure and threatcrJng a mass mailing to 15,000 Irvine hospital supporters, oppoalng B:rown's U .S. Senate candidacy, If Brown failed in supporting and s igning the modified B e rgeson legislation. Gov. Brown's office promptly overreacte d . accusing Baker of attempting to bribe the governor. Clearly, emotions ran out of control in those f in al hours. Baker's letter was imprudent but it did not contain any e lements of a bribe; o nly s trong political overtones. Brown's reply was rasht · Through it all, it is obvious that Dr. van den Noort can exert considerable clout in Sacramento and he has numerous alUes. The medical dean insists hls motivations are clear. He wants the future Irvine hospital on the UCI campus, regardless of who builds it or runs it. He does believe it shoulci have a teaching mission in part, with strong ties to UCI. The tragedy in all this is that we have fine, dedicated people pulling and tugging in opposlte directions in the effort to get a hospital in Irvine . They are working a t cross purposes in seeking the same goal. Perhaps it is not yet too late to salvage that goal. The Irvine hospital question n eed s a cooling off period now. After that, perhaps all of the interested parties could set aside past acrimony, come together in common purpose and campaign in concert in the effort to provide Irvine with the full h ealth <'.are services the city needs. Such a n approach might sound lofty and simplistic in ignoring all of the complexities and past histGry of the hospital dispute. But approached in good faith, it just might work. Nothing else has so far. Procrastination costly · For just the third time since the state Legislature became full- tiroe in 1967, members·iast. week failed to vote· themselves a 10 percent salary increase for the next two years, as allowed by law. The pay raise bill, already approved by the Senate, went down to defeat in the Assembly when Republicans refused to join the drive to obtain a two-thirds vote. The measure would have given members, who now receive $28,111 a year, a 5 p e r cent increase to $29,575 next July and a second increase to $30,991 in July 1984. In addition to their pay. which has steadily increased from $16,000 in 1967, members now receive a $350-a -w eek , tax-free expense allowance while in session, along with leased automobiles and state gasoline and phone credit cards. The defeated bill also would have granted pay raises to the governor and other s tatewide elected officials. But opponents, some of whom said they certainly could use the extra money , cited ri s ing unemployment in their home districts as a deterrent to voting themselves an increase now. With • an election looming, that probably was a politically wise judgment. No doubt the pay raise issue will resurface next year but if passed then it could not go into effect until 1984. Apart from the ir unusual rejection of the pay measure, the legislators spent the waning hours of their session in the usual state of confusion, hastily approVing, defeating -an occasionally just overlooking -measures of varying importance that Mive been pending for months, before dumping 900 bills on th e governor's desk for his signature or veto. Since h e has a Sept. 30 deadline for either action, it seems highly unlikely that even the most diligent efforts of his staff to screen the mass of legislation can cover it all. So we will have the usual s pectacl e of m e asures allowed to become law without a signature for lack of time to examine them. Since lawmakers seem to find it impossible to organize their efforts without this end-of-session scramble, it's probably just as well that their pay raise, for a change, will not be among the pile on the governor's desk. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt· ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. L.M. Boyd I Golf addict . It WM only a few days after her hµsband wu murdered that Mary Queen o1 Scot. -the flrlt woman golfer in h11tory -went out and plla7ed a . couple of rounds of soU. How ahe loved that 1ame! Q.' ''What'• water ,..... .. ? ORANGE COAST Daily Pilot l'llelltllel .-r ... -' .... YN I •I U0 .-....1 ll41Y \I • Getl• ........... ~ .. ,._....._ ...... IMt. C:... -CA t'ffJt A. Another name for zlvan#a 1quatics now erroneoualy known .. -wUd rice. Medical 1tudle1 1how banda1ed wounda tend to heel two to ftve tam. f..ter than wounct. left exJ>C*CI. Thom4n , • Ha'-f ,vbl11ti.f Themot A. Murphlne f~ Jo9'• A"""I {.ecui... t dtlol ..... ~ fdil«ICll '• ldllol n..-~ .. M011oe-o Ech • No,No, GoVERNOR! IJSETJIS SIC PIN, NOT/HE 81<: LIGHTER!! j J ·Letters to the editor Sculptor should pay the price To the F.dltor: Your reeont t-dltorlnl 011 tht• Cortta MCA·All Rouahan dh1putc l• 11adly off the mark. You al.aw that th 181uea are free exprc11lon Vl~nu• heullh-aafety regulatlona. T™-' Wt-ff the luues. The l11ue now 11 only one -that being whether we are a government or laws or a government of men. The iaue of free expre11lon was decided against Ali Roushan when h e waa ordered to remove the offending structures. . UNLESS THE U.S. Supreme Court or some other federal court intervenes, that decision is final. Mr. Roushan has' a choice, he can obey the Jaw or he can defy it. To ask the city to compromise or accommodate him at this point is ridiculous. The city has used the legal process prope rly. I'm certain that compromJse and accommodation were attempted before it started litigation. The law is not something to be accepted only when it is to our advantage to do so, and disregarded otherwise. If Mr. Roushan chooses to spend five days in jail rather than obey a lawful order of tbe court, that is his choice to make. lf through his civil disobedience he can convince enough people of the validity of his. cause, then the laws will be changed. Until that happens, he should pay the price for his contempt. It appears that Mr. Rouahan understands that concept. The Dally Pilot apparently does not. IX>NALDE.SMALLWOOD Li've by the rules To the Editor: In regard to Ali's jail term: It'• ridiculous is right. Again the taxpayers are getting a slap in the face. What's wrong with Costa Mesa City Hall? I think he should be made to live up to the Jaws of this country. I! he doesn't want to, then let him go back where he came from. But don't make foola of citizens and taxpayers. We a.re getting fed up with all Gardner's column MAILBOX this lawbreakjng by foreigners. So forget the joll terma and make them live up to the rules and laws or our coun .ry. NAME WITHHELD Rate drop a lift To the Editor: Along with citizens across the country I would like to lend my applause for the decllnlng prime interest rate indicated in your Aug. 23 issue, "Prime rate drops to 22-month low." Every American consumer is hopeful that this may well be an initial indication of an economic tum-around in the not too distant future. While the change in the prime rate does not immediately or directly effect the interest rate on home mortgages, which in most cases are considerably lower, it does assist in the creation of a sense of economic well being. DAVE DAWSON President/Regional Director Century 21 More on criticism To the .Editor: In his reply to my letter on heroes and patriotism. Mr. Tom Williams remains as myopic as ever. He equates criticism of what is bad with negativism. He seeks to excuse the declining medical care standards that cost us all so much with an example (the Salk vaccine) of one doctor's work. How does that mitigate the failure of a country as nch as this to provide hospital facilities for the poor as good as those available in Portugal? HE EXCUSES the avaricious legal profession by pointing to Abraham Lincoln. Could Lincoln have envisaged a socie\y so litigious that there are now more lawyers in California than there are engineers in Japan? Which group produces more per dollar-earned? He praises Frank Lloyd Wright. Do the people of Watts or the South Bronx live in architectural show pieces? How often dld careful planning outweigh developers' greed during the tract home explosion in Orange County? Williams defends patriotism as the . h allmark o r the just individual confronting the unjust government. That leaves o pe n t he question of the Interpretation of what is just. Hitler, Lenin and Pol Pot all thought their fight was just. Yet the unjust governments they overthre w may h ave seemed halcyonic compared to the patriotic regimes they installed. They were another trio that couldn't take criticism. A.M.GWRGE Rhe toric misplaced To the Echtor: Supervisor Bruce Nestande made the front pages once agai'n last week by threatening Newport Beac h for considering a 210-room addition to the Marriott Hotel. l failed to notice any caustic remarks toward lrvine, a city in his district unlike Newport Beach , which is allowing the Hilton and Marriott organizations to build two new hotels with some l,500 rooms near the airport. These same two companies also are proceeding with approximately 1,900 new rooms In Anaheim (Supervisor Ralph Clark's district). Nest.ande should direct his rhetoric where it is relevant RICHARD T . ROKS Apology misdirected To the Editor: Your Aug. 25 editorial on apologizing to the Japanese threw me. They come over here to bomb our harbor, ruin our car sales with their little cars and abo steal our electronic secrets and buy up haU of our businesses. I think they owe us an apology. I don't agree with Gov. Brown giving them $5,000 each and their jobs back. Our people need those jobs. NAOMI AKER •• l.ttltt'\ tram,~,,.,. •••<ornt Trte '•9'\l to<Cl'ldlfny Mt· ,,,. to 111 -·Of 111muw11 lllMI I\,._,,.., Utten of Jiii .. orch °' •H• w111 ._ 111""" P<•lottno. All t.lttA m11st '"' ct11d1 "QNllurt end m•tll"ll eOClrtn ovt ,,....., mey 119 wttnn110 on reque•I 11 wfflt1ent rHloOfl I• e,,..ertnt PMtty ,..,II not °" 11UIM•"'9cl 1.•lltr• m•y l>t 1111...-cl to...,.._ ff•m• end l>hON ,...,,_, ol '"" < antr11Ntor muft ._ 9lw.., for •trlllee llonpurPOw• Surfboards ride wave of herois01 By ROBERT GARDNER RoberJ Gardner, ch ief justice ol Amerialn Samoa, is remembered alOlllf the Orange Coast as a lcmgtime jwUt, frequent emcee and senior body surfing entJu..WMt During the 1920s, Newport Beach had an honest to God, certified, authentic hero -Antar "Tony'' Deraga. Tony Deraga saved more p eople from drowning than he could count. Beginning_ in 1919, Tony Deraga manned a weather station on the cliff1 overlookinll the harbor en trance at Corona del Mar. He had a Iona flight of steps from his hou.e to his dory and he lp~7 men into the water. As usual. was constantly dashing down thoee 1tep1 manning his do.ry and saving IOmeOne Tony raga charged down his flight of wh o1e boat had overturned ln the steps, leape:d into his dory, rowed out channel mouth. The jetties hadn't been and began' rescuing people. Charlie lnltalled and in heavy llW"f the harbor Plumber, our one-man lifeguard entrance wu tttecheroua. A. a result, department, got into the act from the Tony was kept busy pulling drownl!lC peninlula aide. Charlie and Tony were boaters from the troubled waters. on working to1ether and by their joint one reecue he received help from an efforu they saved five men. Paddling unlikely aoun.-e. over from the Corona del Mar side was the Duke on hla aurfboard. In three trips. WJULE TBE BARBOR entrance wu he uved wven men. Unhappily, in 1pite a pain in the neck to boaW. It ,,, .. • of all theee efforta, five men drowned. surfer'• l)U8di.le. The IW'f rolled from All of th11 la recorded In Lancev the eand°'bu'J. locai.d at about the end of Sherman'• "Hbtory of Newport Beech'' the current UJtOM del Mar jetty, all the and JIJD Felton'• "NewJ)Of't Beach 1976.'' way to China Cove and beyand. Duke Of coune the newsworthy part of the Kahanamoku, who WM maJdna moYle9 1tory today la Duke Kahanamoku - ln Holl~ at the time, dJlcoYend UUa Hawaiian royalty, Olympic 1wlmming South«n Califomll answer to WaUdk.l dwnplon and later, 1.Mrift of Honolulu. and he and a fe"' muecular friend• However, we were a Ut\le ~in be1an to 1urf there. They had to be thOM daya. We all talked about Tonl. mu1cular. Tho1e 1urfboard1 were, o.naa and Charlie Plumber, but I don t mume.a -12 ,_ ~ e lndm thick recalJ' ... ~ mentlonJna the HawalAn ln lb• mlddle, .wude of redwood or .... 1nW1oper, Cl' &be aarfbou-d UMd tn that inahopnJ md ...._.upw_. ol IOO .-. • paundJ. . AD0tMr Mil1board WU med a few ID dl9_...,= .. Gi1-14..tm. ~ ..._ tn a w that hll not bem • oua4,,..._ ....... ovw la M •d• a part of Newport· Beach'• MIW1 ... ol da• harbor •v..,.. , ... ..,_ ~. This was a re8CUe by J ohnny Lugo during the big chabasco that roared up from Baja California on Sept. 20, 1939. By this time the new jettl had ruined the Corona del Mar s ur so surfers moved down the coast to San Onofre. The boards were the same size but somewhat lighter -around 9~ pounds -since laminated redwood and balsa had taken the place of solid redwood or mahogany. THE W EE K BEFORE the chabasco, s urfing condition• at San Onofre were ideal. The water was warm; there wasn't a breath of windi the surf was glassed off and consiatent 8 to 10 feet with perfect 1hape. A group from Balboa was staying on the beach. In this group was -Johnny Lugo, a experienced water man -board surfer, body surfer, swimmer and diver. When the chabuco hit, San Onofre cloeed out and everyone left. Johnny Lugo atopped in Corona del Mar to watch the storm from the cliffs at the harbor entran ce. Huge 1urf was breaking on the way .cram the entrance between the jetties and rolling along with about 10 leet of white water all the way to th«! present Harbor Maater's dock. A boat, Lrying to enter the harbor, tu.med over. Johnny ran down to the roclca with h.la 1urfboA.rd. He paddied out to the overtUmed boat, dove down and uved the people trapped ln the cabin. He received a Cameli• Medal for hla herolam. So, you mothen and fathers, who think aurfboanla are almply expenliw playthtn11 to keep your ldd1 fl"OID u1u1ar auenda"c• at aohool, rtmember the ~ the ~ ....,.. a. ,._ effonl. , Orqe Cout DAILY PILOT/8und1y, leptemb« 8, 1882 Barnum ~esearcher debun~s 'con man' myth BRIDOJ:PORT, Conn. (AP) P. T. Bamwn rnlOt have told at w whJte 11• in hil Claya u a ahowman, but never d.ld he aay, "'l'here'a a •ucker bom every minute," llOl'Ordlna 10 one of U\e nation'• leadlna experta on clrculel. reclpltnt of th• Ou11•nhelm hlloWthJp Nit IP91't the PM\ tleoede uacldna down more than 3,000 Jett.en and documenta related 10 Barnum flCl'Oll the nation. -Before that Bamum eerved M mayor by hia famlly and just plain "P.T." by ot ~from 187&·1878 and wu ueoclatea, held the first Brtdat"pon a ttata repretentatJve for two terma. library card and IN'rved u prtsident of And documenta 1how, Saxon Nld, the Brldieport Hoapltal and othtt that both Republbn and Prohlbltlon local factlltlet he helped buJld. parti• wanted to put Sarnum on Saxon aald docu ment• •h ow their presidential Ucket in the late· Barnum wa• "a fairly moral man" Fairfield author Arthur H. Saxon'• reeearch lhowa Barnum 1pent more time donauna money to the poor, bulldtna low.coat hou1tn1 and attractJ.na bualnesaea to hll native ctty of Brt~1eport, than he did under the clrcul big top. Some of the letten date beck to the early 1860• when_ Barn'lm, then pubU.her of one of Connectkut'a flnt weekliea ln Bethel, wrote to frienda from LOln~ ~.c:llll--k~M. found autJty U i Saxon aald. 1880.. who favored the temperance "Everyone think• that he tald movemf.£~ey%~clqlJcAd..J>lone.u ... ~:;=:::;:::1 ~... I -~)nlt , --- but I've aeen no evidence that h4' ever , , Saxon la wrlting a 1er1e1 of booka he hopea will paint a hUl'l'Ml1\ picture of Barn.um, whom he delcribeS u ~ of the moat milundentood men In the world. The 39-year.old, two-time Other documenta, Saxon aaid, date back to Barnum'• moat profitable years u lona·Ume owner.operator of a New York muaeum during the prime of hil Ute. · Al Saxon poiotl out, Baniuin didn't atart the clmla, for whictl he la best remembered, until the age of '61. Nld that," Nld Saxon. "He really Of course, he aln;ioat had to wun't a oon man. ~t (the q.u uote) appro:-;-e of the wo~.n 1 movement wu ~p 1ong"ilter hla death. then, said Saxon. H~. had four "Actually the word 'sucker' had a daughters and two wives.: different meaning In thoee days. The Saxon's first book, "Selected • word wu a1ang for people from the Letters of P .T. 2.arnutn/' wlll be Midwest." published early ne xt year by Bam'um, who waa calJed ''Taylor" Columbia University Presa. ..-----------------------;;;;;;;;;--------...-....-·r-~~~~~-r.:::::::::========::;i:==========::::;;.) Gull and buoy DMly Ptlot Ptloto br ll'atrtclt O'Donnell Gull sta nd.s guard over sea ~ions ta king a sie#ta on bell bu~y al Newport H arbor entrance. 3DAY . PUBLIC ·AUCTION ESTATE JEWILRv·a FINE PORCELAINS, CHINA, BRONZES, RUGS, FURNITURE, SILVER, OILS, Etc. FREE ADMISSION -POBLIC ANO DEALERS WELCOME • Don't mlaa this Important ·••l•I r . A ne China, Crystal; Porcelains, Bronzes, European Furniture, Olis, Etc. Also many flne pieces of antique and contemporary Jewelry Including fine watches, sollt8're dlaf'!Ond rings, earrings, gold chains, clut ter diamond, ruby, sapphire, and emerald rings. SALE flGHT Fri., 3rd, Sat., 4th Sm., 5th, 1:30 P.M. INSPECTION 2:00 p .M. -5:00 p .M. Ii 7 -I P .M. Sale flchts ' Property of sever~ prominent Leisure World residents, together with Inventory of well-known L.A. Jewelry In flnanclal trouble. Also, out-of-pawn merchandise. TERMS: Visa • MasterCard Personal check -Cash. Some extended terms can be arrangeci Property moved for convenience of sale to: 108 Tustin Ave. (Corner Pac. Coast Hwy. 6 Tuatln) Newport Beach . CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPftD 'TIL 5 P.M. TODAY TRUCKLOAD SALE ~~R PARKING LOT! AND LABOR ~ MIRROllD PIDISTALI ,. • J ........ ............ 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. EVERY DAY DAY To ~ ~rad call 642-7fXl7 'ltUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY .......... -~ 1121 ~IOI ILVD. COSTA MH A-'141·1 ~·· Celelirate Labor Day ~-- Weeliead At Appearing I ( Fr1.111t. fr•• 1 •·•· -UTZ I JlllERS .... 2 .... " I •.•. "I 'I ............... -UYE JIVE. .~ .. . •••••' 2 •·•· t• 1 •·•· -SIYUR BROTHERS I fr•• I •·•· -LIVE .HYE 2406 NEWPORT BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH 675-2244 l ; i- i ' " , . ••••••••••• $ 59 ............ !109- • ll • 0 .,. 16 ~$169 . ~· 11 er .. , . .... .7. : jJ I!' lr ' 11 ;.. '111 ; 11 . fn '1 ')t I 1. • '(.l ·U :! I " 1• I• ' r: ) ... (I ·~ '" This amazing teak organizer e>CPa!'ldS to flt vour needs. Closed, It measures ooty 32"' >C 21" >C 45". opened It measures~·· wide and reveals a ctesk fOrwrtttng or typing 559 bOOkcases, a fife cabinet-and $ ~ 10ck9'1 storage shelfl $769Val . ThlS vartetv offtne teak tabtes come In sofa.bade, Cof'fM table and end t3t>te Sizes, ~Ing stvte anct convenfence. _ t2::.021i.~.~.':.S129 ~ ~ t.i~~~.1:. •9$ i ff11 c. 58)(16X 25, t.95 ............. t139 . .. . I EXpanc:lable stereo Benell or wan Unit I The ctever doors on tt\15 fine teat entertainment · center otves vou ··now·voo-see·lt'' conventence and "now·vou-don't" Deartvl TMre's room fOr vour TV and I VCR beneath. $519 val . 39Y." Wx 41~" H >< 23Y." D . imported Teak llOOkcases TWO 1or$17·8 walnut. .. TWO FOR •191 Rosewood ... TWO FOR·•249 Q ::::I These QOOd looking, flame-grain teak DOokcases are a si>eclar direct Import purchase and are an unt>eatabte value. Crafted Of the finest teak veneer wtm aclJustabte shetves they measure 76" >C 12Y. .. x 35". Alsoavalla~te In walnut finish at sllahtly higher prtces IM<lc Olf*S lllt ~mJCtect Wien tnlt~ PVC =~ F0199 EACH Matching dOOrs. $39 value ..... s29 outdoor stacking $ 24 I cnatrs. $35 vat... ..... ..... ~rv~~.~~·I·~ ...... $29 .. utdOOr dining ~~~f~:-.~~~ ... $65 OCcask>nal tlOteS ur~?~~: .... : ....... •11 llltyPllll IUNOAY,81PT. 8, 1912 FOR THE RECORD 85 Dodgers hut out by Pirate rookie. See story. Page B2. ams . to trade Rlltledge to Giants? \ . . -----fi:u~~?v~~ce~e~h~ '°'=~~~.~~.~ ~~~~~~!n .~1.n°~.~!.~~~ th~~~g~~:i :.~2!-2~1 ~ tM Deir Not llaff that the Rama and Giant.I have acquiring Rutlqo, the Gian ta out. • indeed it'• true, I don't thU\k It'• for weeka, the best and moet been working on a deal aince forfeit only a "mid-round draft "Jeff hu got ability and (New right I aay any more until I hear continual atory out of Rama Wednesday of last week. And, u pick that could escalate York Giant.a Coach Ray) Per.kina 1omethlng from them (the camp wu which quarterback. It it.and.a thia morning, It will be depending on how well he likes h~. We also had problema Rama). , were going to stay · · · and Rutledge who pack.a hb bags and does." With Ferragamo, the dealing Vince becauae of all the "Whatever happens I IUPJ>C*' y.ohich ones were go~. to go. headl Ea.st. price is a No. l coupled with good quarterback.a coming out of wu going to happen and It wlli ,;,_:~day, that dec1s1on will "They're just interested in a another lower selection." colle1e next year," the l(>utte probably turn out to be the best ¥i~Y be official. . backup quarterback," continued "Bert (Jones) haa always been admitted. thing for my career." ti.A Rams source conf1rme~ the source. ''They stlll like the No. 1 quarterback," the Rutledge wu not totally Center Doug Smith, a close turday nlg~ alter the te~ s (Scott) Brunner a lot."' source continued. "And. as far as surprised about the transaction. friend of Rutledge's: took the -14 victory over the San Diego The offlciat explained that I'm concerned, Vince has been Me. said he had heard the rumor newa hard. Chargers that ''most likely" Jeff Ferragamo was never really ·No. 2 a1i along." for about a week. ' ''I don't want to aee Jeff Rutledge, or to a l~r degree talked about during negotiations. . The trade -or at least \he "I am d.1sappolnted that I had Rutled1e leave," Srnilh sala Vlnce Ferragamo, will be traded Still he was showcased during player who's moving on -is to hear It from eomebod).' elae emphatically. "He'• a good to the New York Giants this the 'Second half of Saturday's somewhat surprising in that it's though, and not from (Rams quarterback and a talented guy. af~oon. • trame, "for one last evaluatfon." been Ferragamo, not Rutledge, coach) Ray (Malavaai) or "Football is a b\uiness, You t\ave to remember its It's been learned by the Daily who has been talked about most someone with the organization.'' though, and aa far as the team pure speculation aL1his poi.Jl~Pttot-that'the final declslon will ~eparture. said Rutledg•, who did nothing aapect and peopJ• ~~ get w~ed the official. "There are emanate from owner Georgia Ferragamo's asking price was more Saturday night than pace used to something li e t · .uI other quarterbac~ they (the Frontiere's Bel Air estate. obviously too much, however, the sidelines with a ball in his "That stlll doesn't mean I like Giants) are considering. Ther, of c 0 u r 5 e. the fin 8 1 and with the Rams having a hands. it." could still back out of the deal. dete~g factor in who goes surplus at that position, "I really don't want to say any (See RAMS, Page 83) Angels belted Vuckovich gets 16th win, 8-2 MILWAUKEE (AP) -Ted Simmons singled in the go ahead run and Gorman Thomas followed with a two-run triple in Milwaukee's fifth inning and Pete Vuckovich won his 16th gam~ as the Brewers defeated the Angels, 8-2. With the score tied 2-2 in the fifth, Robin Yount and Cecil Cooper singled with one out to put runnen at first and third. Simmons singled to right-amt.er off Angels starter Luis Tlant, 2-2, to score Yount. Thomas then blooped his first OA TV today channel 5 at 11 :30 triple of the seuon to the same spot for two more runs. ' Vuckovich. 16-4, was backed by a 15-hit attaek as he won his &even th game in a row . Vuckovich allowed five . hits, walked six and struck out four · ln going the distance tor the eighth time. He is now 5-0 lifetime against the Angels. F.ech team scored a run in tne fint. The Angels' Rod Carew extended his hitting streak to 19 games with a single and later acored on a wild pitch with the bales loaded. The Brewers tied it in the bottom half on a fielding error by Bobby Grich. Charlie Moore tripled and scored on Jim Gantner's single ln the second, but the Angels tied It in the third on Reggie Jackson's RBI single. The Chargers' Kellen Winslow is brought down by Nolan Cromwell ~s the Rams' Jim Youngblood (53) comes up to help out The Brewers aaded two runs in the sixth on run-scoring singles by Paul Molitor and Only 38,840 view Raiders' 27-10 loss 8y CRAIG RUSSELL o< tM D9'ly "'°' Sblllf LOS ANGELES -It was a rlight Al Davis and the rest of •il15 Los Angeles Raiders would IJltber forget. N t only did the Raiders rm poorly on the field. to the Cleveland Browns, • but the Saturday night Collaeum crowd was an even more unlmp~ve, 38,840. But there ia a bright spot. The pme was just an exhibition, cloetng out LA'1 pre.eason with a 2-2 record, and the Raiders won't play in the Coliseum until Oct. 3 against New Orleans. That gives Davia four weeks to drum up a larger following. In any event, considering what transpired on the field, maybe it was a blessing in diaguise that there were 15,000 no Shows. "We certainly didn't play very well tonight," said Raider Coach Tom Flores. "We were flat right from the beginning. We dropped a lot of balls. turned it over too much (two fumbles lost and three interceptions). and there were too many penalties (11 for 95 ards)." ~d that to the fact that the Browm accumulated 23 flnt downs to the Raiders' 14, outgalned LA by 104 yards (354-250). and had a 36-24 advantage in time of poaesslon, It's no wonder the outcome was u one-aided as it Wa!J. It was apparent it would be a long night for the Raiden right from the outset when 0-n Cl~veland 's first possesaion quarterback Brian Sipe marched the Browns 80 yards in 13 plays for the game's first score. On the drive, Sipe complet~d f ve consecutive passes, th t f which was a very c g six-yard touchdown pass toss to 1979 Heisman Trophy winner Charles White. The former USC great was knocked out of boundl at the goal line. No touchdown signal was given and u the conversion by Matt Bahr split the uprights, the Coliseum acoreboard read 3-0 instead of the correct 7-0 acore. But even with the hometown scoreboard trying to keep the Raiders cloee, things juat kept getting worse. Los Angeles did g~t on the scoreboard with a Chris Bahr 44-yard field goal at the start of the second quarter. But with a picture pe rfect Sipe at the controls. that's as close as the Raiders would get. On Cleveland's very next possession, Sipe connected with wide receiver Ricky Feacher for 4 7 yards and a first down at the Rai~era' 29-yard line. It wu one of. six receptions Feacher would make on the night for 93 yards to lead both teams. After a defensive holding penalty on Los Angeles, Sipe connected o n hil seventh straight pau, a 23-yard touchdown 1trike to tight end Edison football {lury is still out on But Chargers look like a contender in romping past Hawaiian foe By ROGER CARl.M>N or ... o.-,,......,. Ozzie NeW90D1e. The Browns made lt 21-3 later ln the second quarter. After Sipe'• 1treak was halted at eight straight completlc..na by overthrowlng Newaome in the end zone, the former San Diego State great hit Feacher for five yards and a touchdown. Sipe ended the first hal1 10 of 15 for 137 yards and three touchdowns. He played most of the third quarte and finished the night a very impressive 14 of 24 for 175 yards. "Without question, he's (Sipe) U laying u well u he did in 1980· Sipe wa1 the NFL'• Most aluable Player in 1980)," aald Cleveland Coach Sam RuttaUano. ''They all play well with good pua protection. No question the key waa our pus protection. In the flnt hall, it WU flawleae.'' Sipe aareect. "I thouaht our oftenalve line played really well. I don't nica11 any time havin& preuure on me with the HONOLULU -A 44-13 non-league football victory bad been scored over J\mahou Miah 24 hours earlier, but the ~ qu.UOO among the Ed1lon Hlah Gamp Saturday WM, ''What do you thiJik, bow doea It look to rou?" 1be uncertainty o a f.lnt-yame triumph alway• there, eapecia ly with an from a Jot of our kids," aald Edilon Coach Bill Workman. "It wu a touah situation and we made our ahare of mlatakee." . Amol'\11 the rnlat.akel wen 16 flap for 166 )"anu, but Workman utd, "I can't complain (the offlctatm&), most of oun were atupid rnlatak• ''Our llnebackere (Andy Sinclair, Anthony Johann and Mark Wooda) played a little ~h, but they'U aet down (lower ln atance) ,, quarters, giving F41*>n a 10lid look in the · e~puon of a couple of bliu pauing gaine with receiver Mark probleml. • Maybe. we1had a f~w Votend8hl and Jeff Wuhinaton equal to Ulipl1ient probleml; but· we ve the tMk on the other end of the ball. · , won the IJC' u e Hon ch.amptorwhip "Our paaatnc same I.I belt when we (the Browna finiahed una.feat.ed eatabll1h the runntn1 1ame, •• eald at 4-0) and thins• are l<,>inc Workman, who watched Ju. ~-pretty well. uce 81 on M c:em. ( ''The IUY' are alrMdy ~ ~ tc..) outlkle of 1 about ordertna (cham~ opponent. but Wtt'f lndJcation ppean tO be that Edllon ta a bona fide ontender for the Sunaet Leaaue hamplonahlp and CIF Bt1.Flve honon. But that'• down the the performance .. ; U ~re la a Jesitimate Ital' ln a 3l·polnt romp with balanced ~ 1t would be 160-pound aenlor Jerod Jcniil. who ran for 59 yarda on hJa only carry of the m,ht and retunwd kick.offs for 35 and U yardl to keep Bdlaon11 tJeld po9iUon dorn1nation of the ..... Intact. "H•'• a converted tailback,'' aald Workmui. "And It oahowt." Quarterback Don Oibba hlt e ot e f« 1ie yarda and Ol)e touchdoWn throuP three 59~~ scamper and reaerve Vemon rlnp.'' W 'a 78·)*ard TD run. But while Sipe 1pok• And the ldeklnC pme left little to be pollttvel}' about the exhlbldon dealred. althouah left-footed Gerry aeMOn, nor. tried to downplay Graham did .. hJa PAT atrMk mapped at it a blt. · S2 (aound famiUar?}:,._Oraham'1 41-yard "We ju1t have to •ccept field pl wu a tehODf naord and hla =t and put it out of our boom1nc klclroaa Iii and out of d» md " laid ,,.._, "Nm week ICllte hlid P\8.-ou ·~ 11 th• on• that counte (the 1t waan't exaotly lb• domlaatlDI Raiden °'*' 1he ~ ...., ~ ol'J:':' A :-l'dlal-:: at san l'nadlEo ........,). They (8" JURY, P ... 81) . ( ... ft.AJDDI. .... U) ' Yount to chase Tiant. Rob Picciolo doubled home the final run in the seventh off John Curtis. In today's televiaed game, the Angels will send Geoff Zahn ln quest of his 16th victory. Zahn has lost six games. He'll face Mike Caldwell (13-11). Following today's game, the Angels return home for 1lx games, hosting the Ch~o White Sox Monday (1 o• ) and Tuesday and Wednesday nights . Rookie throttles ~ Doilgers LOS ANGELES (AP) :.:..... .. Pittsburgh rookie rtght-hadder. Lee Tunnell learned abou.t a half-hour before Satur(\ay night's game that he would iet his first major-league atarl. ·. "It was no time to cet nervous.'' said the 21-year-old Tunnell, who earlier in 'fhe evening had pitched batt ng practice but bad enough left to shut out Los Angeles for -"en innings before turning it over to the bullpen to preeerve a .1--0 victory. "I didn't know any of . the batters. I relied completely · on my catcher (Tony Pena)," ~ Tunnell. who waa a last ml.qute re p 1 ace m en t for J Q~t'I Candelaria, who had an lnjQ:ted shoulder. .· .... Former Dodger Lee l,.IM':)' cracked a finrt.-innlng homel: tor the game's only nm. He alllf&ed It off of Loa An1ele1 ace Fernando Valenzuela, 11..:u, who-absorbed the la. despite giving up only_ four hita walking. two and striking out a lleUOI\· high 11. . The 21-year-old Tunnell, Jllho was 12-9 for Portland ln:.ibe Pacific Coast Leepe. pve~ qp four hits through eeveJl inn4Q8L He left the game becau. ·oT • blBter on the middle finlW ol hia pitching hand while pltcbina to Ron Roenicke. the leadof1 hitter in the eighth. . Rod Scurry took over and· Roenicke singled throu1h the middle, wu bunted to aecond by Valemuela and took thil'cl··U pinch hitter Grea Brock med out. Tekulve came in ad intentionally walked Rlc:k . Monday before 1ettina DUaty Baker to end the lnnln1. Tekulve retired the Dodae'* in the ninth for' hia 18th eave. College football West ·:· CS Fullerton 18, No. Art.a. 16 Art.Iona St. M, 0reeon 3 ---····· New Mexico 4!1 Wyomlnl •; ........ ..: Bolton CoL ,. -r.... A&M a Baylor 21, N. Tem St. 17 .... ..... nortda 17, Miami, n... H Ml8illlppl 8'. 30, T\almw 21· Wsd-'-17,,:._""t' 8t. JO ~;a,.. ___ ... ~. nortc1a st.-. a.tnnaU ai: .. South~~•·::. Millouft .. CciMuda 8&; 14:!•. ( ................... . ••• 81· Or1nge Oo11t DAILY PILOTl8und•V. 8aptember 8, 1882 T J: He could he t~e diff ere nee for the Angels ~ th<' dl1putt• 111 on.iolna u w wh lh r one plt.chlng nrm cun muku lh~ dJff r<'~ In a pennAnt raro. you nOlt' wht•rt• lWO ot the m<>ll promln~nt Umbll In the aimnd old gamt> hnve ._bc.>cn traded to <'On.-.mdanai tt•111t~ :1'om.my John and llon ~ulton, lrunBitnta alnce· • • • the:podgcra concluded nel\.htr wu worth milUona hav~ o.Ughtt'd again. John It with the Angela and Sutton is in the <.utume of the Milwaukee Brewers, reai;vnable bets to play off tor the champlonahlp of the American League. BUD TUCKER Buzzle Bavasi. the Angels' negotiator, thinks ont' player can make a difference In the destiny of a ball club. :"Suppose," Bullie says, "Tommy John win.a £our games for us in September. ln a race as close as this one, four games could certainly mean the di f 1"rence." · ',Similar logic would apply in Milwaukee. , ,Obviously, this sort of a trade ta~es the p~ure oCf the principal figure in a deal. John and ..... _ .. Sutton need only to win two or three games and they have served their putpo•ea~ which ere conlrlbuUona to Immediate champlonsnlpa. A team concerned with the future does not give up youn1 talent ln order w obtain amu which are cloee to 40 years old. Such ~an88cllons arc also ot great value to the rnorale of a team's exiating forces. For one thing, it Indicates that. management ·ls doing what it can to help ease the plod to the finish line. For instanre, when the Tommy John deal was announced to the Angela in Detroit there was much rejolclnjl amona a collecUon of pt'Ople who aro 8 norally not ln th J Ml t!moUonal. "WMn la TJ du In?" uked ca~her Bob Boone. MldnJ&)\t, h WU told. "Let'• 1tall," Boone .. id. ''Thay (manaiement) had to do tom0lhlng," aald &gle Jack8on. "W• have our Jobi to do and thoy have their Jobi to do. We don't have iny e>e~ any more with thJI CMm." t The contldenc aapoct waa there even if T~ Jobn..wu...not ~· alnale 1ame , In ·~ contrut Wat the case surrounding John Curtil, a left-hander obtained by the Angels on the aame day. Curtla was acquired by means of a straight cash tranaactJon with San Diego. You aee the Implication of this to the players of . the Padret. A pitcher with a respectable record of • 8-6 was 1<>ld out ftoi;Jl under a ball club which was only 61h games out ~ith a month to pla~. 11 - Certainly, it ·would be difficult to Jump over two teams, but the poalbllity was still there. By Mlll"8 thct pl l<'h~r, th t;an Dleao rmnaaement announced to th· pl•ycra and the fana that lhlt lt'UOn wu written off. Similar w th<-ca.et ot th Houston Alt~ pt.tddling Don Sutton and hll record of 13-8 to Mllwuukc which had a r<Mlter loadc.>d wlth bil boppet'I but fell tht· nc ~ of plwhlng lnaurance. Several Houston pl yera xpremed displeaaure with the deal for reaaon.s mentioned above. At tha lime, the AJltrOtJ w ere J 1 gama out ln fltth place anti gett1ng ttrthn -- Of COUl"llC, such deal.a do dllpenae the aweet aroma of banknotes. The Brewen and the Angels get arms which could vory likely pltch them to the playofCs. The other sides get pl.ayers "to be named later." If a guy hopped past on a pogo stick and aald there were very big bucka lnvolved In such transactions, I, for one, would not tall off my bar stool in astonishment . Baseball today On this date, in baseball in 1971 : James Rodney Richard of the Houston ·Astros tied Karl Spooner's modem major league record by striking out·l5 batters in his first major league game, beatlng the San Franci.sc.'O Giants 5-3. On this date in 1918: Babe Ruth -pitchea a six-hit shutout as the Boston Red Sox beat the Chica o Cubs ~~~-wiNA.u~~~ e&1reo..-~~~--.... _..~~~__,~n~~~~-,Cwtclnn~~~~--t~+-tJ~·~~~..Qf...lh&..!!11A~:i.....:1U:Jiea.-.+-1-~ The regular season had been halted on Labor Day due to the outbreak of World Byers outkicks Scott to win in 3:51.35 From AP dispatches NEW YORK -Tom Byers, m callin himself "the Rodney Dangerfield of the milers -I don't get any respect," won what he termed the biggest race of his life Saturday. - With a punishing finishing kick that enabled him to overtake American record holder Steve Scott from UC Irvine. the 27-year-old Byers won the second Fifth Avenue Mile in 3:51.35. Although the time was relatively slow -Sydney Maree won the inaugural Fifth Avenue Mile last year in 3:47 .52 -Byers was overjoyed with the victory. "This was the most Important race I've ever won," said Byers, who last year beat Steve Ovett in a •COTT 1,500-meter race at Oslo, Norway, only one of a handful of defeats ever suffered by the tough Briton. "It's important because Sydney Maree became famous off this race." Byers. his long blond hair flowing in the breeze, hung with the leaders for most of the race before making his move down the stretch and out-sprinting Scott to the finish line. Quote of the day • :. "If anyone has financial problems, it might well be Reggie, because several New .York restaurant owners have told me :·Reggie has an awful lot of unpai<J checks at : their restaurants. Personally, I would be : very happy to take a polygraph test ·:concerning my statement, if Reggie would : care to do the same concerning whether he .; personally has illegal debts." -New York ";Yankees principal owner George •• Steinbrenner, reacting to Angels' outfielder :~Reggie Jackson. . • .. Kennedy powers Padres past Cubs Terry Kennedy smashed a pair Ill of two-run homers and Tim Lollar hurled a three-hitter Saturday night as San Diego defeated Chicago, 4-1. Lollar, 13-8, allowed only one walk and struck out four in gaining his third victory without a loss against the Cubs this season ... Elsewhere, Bo Dia& drove In three runs with a bases-clearing double to lead Philadelphia to a 4 -2 victory over Houston . . . Dave Kingman'• 32nd homer of the aeaaon helped New York shade Cincinnati, 3-2, in a battle of last-place teams . . . Jack Clark'• three-run homer )liith two outs in lhe bottom-Of the ninth gave san Francilco 4 dramatic 5-4 victory over F.astem Division leadirlg St. Louis . . . Scott Sanderson and Jeff Reardon combined on a seven-hitter and Warren Cromartie cracked a solo homer as Monlreal snapped Atlanta's four-game winning streak, 4-1. Reardon ~icked up his 22nd save despite allowing Atlanta s only run on pinch-hitter Bob Watson's RBI slngle • in the seventh. Track and fleld athletes to be paid ATHENS, Greece -Track and m field took a lunging step forward in history Saturday as the congress of the International Amateur Athletic Federation gave qualified approval to appearance money for top performers. Provided hia naUonal federation agrees, an athlete will be allowed to compete ln a limited number of invitation· meets aanctl9f\ed by the IAAF, and be paid for doing so. ~ Bul the money will go to the athlete's national federation and be held in trust for him. Once he draws on it, hia career la finiahed. The congress voted overwhelmingly for the new formula alter the IAA.F's Italian president, Primo Nebiolo, had insisted this was not professionalism. "AB the world changes, we have to be more realistic," Nebiolo told delegates from 168 countries. "The lAAF d~ not want any professional status. We have no thoughts of arranging profe5sional athletics." 1'oah extended at U.S. Open ~~vratilova, Austin easily advance to fourth round '• .; NEW YORK (AP) -Ninth-seeded Yannick Nb,Ah of France was pushed to the limit before ~ping the upset bid by qualifier Eric Korita, wtele top-seeded Martina Navratilova crushed her thifd-round opponent Saturday in the U.S. Open Tellnis Championships. ; Also advancing into the fourth round at the N'ational Tennis Center were defending champion Tr~y Austin, the women's No. 3 seed, No. 7 Pam Sbtiver. No. 14 Virginia Ruzici of Romania and Nov. 15 Andrea Leand. : Third-seeded Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia 1."CQpleted the day action with a dull 6-3, 6-0, 6-1 vicJory over Harold Solomon in a match that featured long baseline rallies. ·In nighl matc hes, fifth -seeded Hana Mandllkova of Czechoslovakia defeated Manuela \ MaJeeva of Bulgaria 6-2, 6-3 and Mats Wilander, ~bie,,J'rench Open champion and seeded 11th in the m'n's singles here, took a 6-4, 6-1, 7-6 decision o~r Ttm Wilkison. :.Noah needed 311\ hours to outlast Korita 7-5, 6-'I; 6-4, 3-6, 6-4. Navratilova cruised by Nancy Yeargin 6-3. 6-3; Austin stopped Jo Durie of Great Briqtln 6-4, 6-3; Shriver ellminai.d Dana Gilbert 3-6' 6-2, 6-3; Ruzici defeated Beth Herr 7 -5, 6-2, ~Leand ousted Healher Ludloff 6-4, 6-2. ~Gene Mayer, seech!d sixth, stopped Mark Dickson 4-6, 7 -6, 6-2, 6-1. "He is the best aerver I have ever played against," Noah said after edging Korita on the hard court.a at Flushing Meadow. ''He eerves very well . . . Maybe he served very well today becauae this i.s the first time I have aeen him. It (the ball) almost hit me four or five times." The No. 5 player at Southern Methodiat University, Korlta had to qualify for the 128~player field in this $1.5 million tournament, the richest in the world. He earned h1a lhot at Noah by beating SMU teammate Jerome Vanier of France in the opening round and Brad Gilbert in the second, lel'Ving 16 aces. Both Vanier and Gilbert a1ao had to qualify for thi.s year'& Open. Against Noah, Korita, a native of Glenville, W., boomed el.zht aces. He followed hia aerve to the net and followed up many of them with put- away volleys. "I served pretty well," Korita admitted. "l waa hoping to come up wilh a few boomera, and a couf.14' times I did and a couple times I didn't. You cant hit them all." But the experience and mastery of str<1kes pulled Noah through. In the final eet, he broke Korita in the fourth aet, only to be broken back in the aeventh. ~ Edison girls romp in Hawaii ~ PifPtt leads Chargers runners to sweep at meet <'! doNOLULU -If the HaJ-aii•n establishment felt ~what lJ'f!ed arqund Friday ~~ by n's foolball team (44~over Punahou High), me lfully moat were spared Sat y morning's annihilation of e lalandl' best croea country te~ on the women'• level. Edi son runn1?n proceeded to finish 2-3-4-M-7-8-9-10 behind their record-aetting teammate. F.dleon Coach Ruben Cha~plnl, "but the 11:401, that• an Indication (of jood thing• to come)." ~slle Pratt, a lithe Edtaon aenJ>r with a powerful atrtde1 toolC the lead at the out.et ana s~ to a course-record 11:23, snaiping the exllttna 1tandard by 12 aeconda at the Mc.K1nley HJp quadranauW invitational. It waa &n lmpreulve ~rformance tor Pratt on the two-mile courae at the Unlveraity of Hawa11, but what wu to follow wu aweeome u _,... It left Oahu's two top teams, McKinley and Radf ord1 aomewhere in the dust, ahead ot lagging Kalani High. Behind Pratt were Tammy J'nydera (11:43), Sherri White (11:49), Shelly VanderMolen (11:60) and Loriann Mtller (11:53), the top five flnlahen liVinl Edilon a perfect IOOre of I5. Just the 1·2·3..,..-0 fln1lb wu enough for perfection, th e 6-7-8-9-10 plactna tmply put more apace between the chamok>N and the punuera. "Tfie 11:23 WM tbeft," noted The Charaera return 23 of thelr top 2~ runnen f.rom 1~2 and only one (Pratt) la a llel\lor amon1 their top 10 rated l'W)Ml"I. "We jutt aort of PlaaY-blCked our way to Hawaii with the football team," tald Chapptna about the trtp. T• .......... 1, "''" (~ 1f:O; I . .__.. (II). 11!41: I . Whitt (I), 11:-. •. Vlfldlrftallrt (II). 11:IO: I. Mllllr (II). 1t:N; I. a. T"'911M9 I). 11~ 7, ~Jll~7 .. Gii ..... I). l :n : t . H ... 11:1t; '°· (I). 11~. 09lllia 'T....,.. (I). 1'700: 1• wie... .. 19:1t. hlel IOOflllG: 1. NMft. ,., I ~. 191 s ~.to ". .. Palmer's one-hitter carries Orioles Jim Palmer pitched a one-hitter Ill for bis 11th strajght victory and Eddie Murray homered aa Baltimore stayed hot with a 3-0 victory over Minnesota Saturday night. Gary Gaetti.. fiftl1- lnning single waa lhe Twins' lone hit, as the Orioles won their 141h game ln l~ outings ... Elaewhere, Dave Winfield cr;ashed hls 27th bomer with one out in the top of lhe ninth inning to snap a 2-2 tie and give New York a 3-2 triumph over Kansas City The Royals, however, maintained a two-game lead over the Angels in the American League West . . . Rtcbard Dotson fired a four-hitter and Greg Ladnakl hit hia 17th homer to lift Chicago to its sixth straight victory, 4-0 over Texas. The win moved lhe White Sox to within 5 ~ games of Kansas City in the West ... Tony Armas homered and hit a tie-breaking, nlnth-lnnlng sacrifice fiy to give Oakland a 4-3 win over Detroit ... Jallo Cnz stroked a two-run single to highlight -a four-run second inning as Seattle edged Boston, 4-3 . . . Rick MUiling'• seventh-inning single drove home the winning run and Tom BreDDaD picked up his first triumph ~f-the season· in Cleveland's 4-3 victory over Toronto. Peete's eagle gives him B.C. lead Calvin Peete used an eagle 2 on II the 441-yard 13th hole Saturday to vault over Fa11y Zoeller and into the · lead of the B.C. Open golf tournament After three rounds at Endicott, N.Y. By carding a 7-under-par 64, Peete took a one-shot edge over Zoeller, while Jerry Pate was third, three shots back . . . Veteran Jay Sigel, 38, and longshot David Tolley, 22, each fashioned dramatic 1-up victories on the 18th hole to charge into the championship match of the 82nd U.S . Amateur at Brookline, Mass. Sigel edged All-American RJcll F~br, 20, a Brigham Young University_ junior, while ToUey made a 40-foot putt for a birdie on the final hole to upset All-American Jlm Hallet from South Yannouth, Mass .... Jo Ann Wa1bam shot an 8-under-par 64 to take a one-stroke lead in the LPGA Rail Charily C1aasic in Springfield, W. War I. Today's birthdays: Former Pittsburgh second baseman Bill Mazeroskl, whose ninth-inning home run won the seventh and deciding game of the 1960 World Series, is 46. Otis suspended for bat-throwing KANSAS CITY -Kansas City a Royals center fieldet Amos Otis has been fined and suspended for five games for a bat-throwing incident last week against the Texas Rangers, American League President Lee MacPhail said Saturday .• _ Otis, who sat out games Friday and Saturday, was to begin serving the suspension today, MacPhail said. The amount of the fine was undisclosed. The penaltJes stemmed from an incident in Texas' 7 -3 victory over the Royals Wednesday in Kansas City. In the game's third inning. Otis was struck in the back of his batting helmet and Royals second baseman Frank White was hit in the elbow by pitc h es from Texas' Mike Smithson. 1 On three consecutive pitches in the sixth inning, the bal went flying from Otis' hands. The first swing sent the bat into the seats behind the Rangers' third base dugout. On the second two tosses the bat sailed between the pitching mound and third base. Otis was ejected on the third swing as players from both benches a nd bullpens streamed onto the fie ld. Duran loses split decision to Laing Kirkland Laing, showing • flashing speed, upset Roberto Daro i.n their 10 -r o und junior middleweight bout at Cobo Hall in Detroit Saturday night. The split decision left the 28-year-old Laing, a native J amaican fighting out of London, with a 24...3-1 record, while Duran suffered only his fourth defeat in 78 fights . . . bland Wblrl, an outsider 1n the betting, ran like a solid favorite, taking the lead at the star and holding it to win the Woodward Stakes at Belmont Park. The winner paid $24, $7.60 and $5.20 in earning $133,500 . TH f-LU 8 E 0 IL & F" I l Tf H L HM~ GE PACKAGE INCLUDES $24.98 Wit\ Cout*I All I..,.,.. ca ........... $29.98w ... c~ AM• ..... ~ Moll c..9 Tl\f •C>ooe .. °'~ •• 1)11101~ on •OOfOJ1tll'IAMly JO m1nvle1 W•lllOUt folUy remo.1ng ti.. r-tlDu••\Ot ~·"Cl ltQtn -cer Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Sunday, hptembw S, 1112 . Kenney___...eads KC Steelers edge ~agles; Patriots roll ST. L..OUIS -QuaJUrb.ck BUl Janruav, a product of San Clemente ff!lh and ~k EE Colle1e1 team d up with Carlo• Carton on a NFL ROUNDUP ••• 83-yard touchdown pa19 play in the fourth quarter, Utuna the Kanau City Chlet.. to• 10·6 preteUOn National Football~ trtumph Saturday nJiht over the St. LouJa catdJ.nlla. ~-...1.J!he-wtftnl~b-Ai(lhllahted • &bak offenalve clilplay by K.anau aty, held to jult • field aoal in the opentna half. The Ch.let.., who trailed 6-3 at a h~Jftime, ort(Jlnat.ed only nine playa wu returned to the 2~ ~br New York'• Bn.lele -Harper. ---+ -- Colt. 2tl, 8"•rt1 17 CHICAGO -Rookie quarterback, Mlke Pagel threw firat. half touchdown puses of 22 and 41 , yards to Ray Butler as Baltimore rolled to a 26-11 victory over Chicago. ln 'the third quarter. · St. Louis, hobbled by 14 penalties eo11tin1 126 yarda, put It.elf ln a hole late in the third quarter with two hol~ lhfracdont. After David Martin returned Carl BJrdeons'• punt. to the K.anaaa City 37, Kenney and Carlon made their oonnectlon on the next play. Steelers 2 .7, &•le• Z4 Pl'ITSBURGH -Terry Bradahaw threw a 16-yard touchdown pua to Bennie Cu!minlham with 1:69 left to cap a 98-yard drive aa Pittaburgh rallied to defeat Philadelphia, 27-24. The Colta cloeed with a 3-2 record while the Bears finl.ahed the exhibit.ion aeuon at 1-3. Pagel, who 1-aet to be ~e •tart.Ina quarterb.c:k againat New EngJJatd ln tl)e Col.ts' regµlar aeaaon opener next weelt, played only the fint half and completed 4 of 7 pa9aet1 for 73 yards . . Paa,1 capped a 54-yard drive in the first q~ with hla 22-yard touchdown paaa to BµUer. Mik'e Wood'• attempted conversion was blocked. Midway in the second half, Pagel hurled a 41-yard touchdown paaa to Butler for a 13-0 lead. On the final play of the half, Chicago'• Bob Thomas booted a 33-yard field goal to make It 13-3. Pittsburgh ended a 4-0 exhibition aeaaon. The io., the third by the Eagles in four exhibition aames. marred a 1tandout fint half performance by quarterback Ron Jawonki, who completed 14 of 21 paaaes for 206 yards and three touchdown.a u B'lll o Philadelphia took a 21-7 halftime lead. · l!I 1..,, Lions I 0 Bradshaw completed aix paaaes for 91 yards ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. -Nick Mike-Mayer during the Steelers final aooring drivt!, fucluding booted hia second field goal of the game, a -....m-.,..,.,~....,""'~~a.rder with 1·3$ r:emaU\i.ng, to Utt Buffalo .to..-__ ., paSleS for 27 yarda to John Stallworth. 13-10 victory over Detroit. ' RAMS OUTLAST CHARGERS Fr'Om Page 81 !J'hen, as an afterthought, Sfll.ith added: "I don't '+'ant to I say anything bad about Vinnie. He's been playing well." Naturally, F'eriagamo was the happiest person of all. I "I'm just happy the Rams brt>ught me back here to LA," 1 said Ferragamo, who was given I a rousing ovation by the 59,4+2 at , Anaheim Stadium when be ' entered the game at 11:58 of the thitd quarter. ''This is the best pllk:e to be and this is where I want to play ... That's not to say Ferragamo dh!n't show remorse toward R~tledge's situation. ".I :"I think it was unfair to Jeff to: just give him a half," said Ferragamo of Rutledge's pre- 1 season showing, which f anjounted to two quarters of wQrk against Denver in the te(m's pre-season opener four weeks ago. "But, 1 guess you ca4't be fair to everybody. quarter at 14-apiece had the fans on their feet. The Rams won the game two minutes later on LeRoy Irvin's 71-yard punt return, but it wu Ferragamo who made everyone stand up and take notice. "I don't think what hapr,ened ., boiled down to this game, • saJd Ferragamo of today's pending trade. "l think it depended on the price they (the Giants) had to pay. Plus I heard they really didn't want a first-string quarterback." So, what started out to be the quietest pre-season in many years, enda on a noiley note. The Rams end their four weeks at 2-2 and now set their sights toward their opener Sunday in Green Bay where J ones arid Ferragamo should both be In uniform. And, u for Rutledge, at least he didn't 1oee his senae of humor over it all. Toward the end of the game Saturday he broke out into a chorus of "New York, New York." • • • Score b1 o...n.,. Sin Otego 7 0 7 O -14 Rems 7 0 O 13 -20 LA..J. Tllomu 2 run (LantlOl'd kick) SO·Wlntlow 13 peu from l"outa (Blnlnchk• kldl) SO-Ceppelletll 1 run (Blnlrtchkt kldl) LA·8ry1nt 12 peu from F•rr•g•mo (Con1I kick) LA·lrvln 71 punt r•turn (kick !tiled) A-59,442 ao Flrtt downt 20 Ru9Ml-yard1 3S.119 Peulng yerda 180 Re.tum ytfdl 1 1 p-14·34-4 Stella by 2· 1 1 Pun It 5-39 FumblM-to.t 1-0 Penalt ...... yerd1 5-35 Tlnw of P-..on H :4t lodhl d ul •1et11ttoe LA 19 27-145 129 140 24-35-2 2·22 4-<tO 3-2 10.75 31:14 RUSHING -SM Diego, Muncie 1M7. ~· a-20. o. Wlllerne 8-10, .... 4-12. Foutt 1-4, 8'oollt 1-4. LOI Angelel. J. Thomu 8-48, Altondef 7-48. etyent 3-27, F•mer 1-11, A9dd4ln 3-t, A. S'tnlttl 2·5, Oumen 1.1, Ftrr110tm0 2.0. PASSINO -8•n Dl•go. Fouu 8-11-0-103, LU1'-8-23-+84. LOI Angelel. JonM 13-21·1-78, F«regemo 11-14-1-72. AECEIVINO -Sen Diego, WlnllOw 3-48, JKtllOn 2"'47. Joiner 2.ao. Brook• 2·18, Slewrt 1-'7. Fllzk .. 1.e, Ohandllr 1·t, C. Wiiii.me 1-7, Muncie 1.e. Lo• Ange!ee, Altllttldef 4-25, Gumtn 4-17, J. ThomM 4-18, Birt>« 3-18. ~en :S.-3, Fenner 2-24, 8ty11nl 2-18, Miiier 1-18, WMJa( 1-7. MISSED FIELD GOALS -Sen Diego. none. Los AnQtllt. LAnat0<d 59, Correl 48. ~·We've been talking . to each olber and we knew they had to do someth~. It's a business and I know thats the way he looks at it. .. At least he's in the NFL and not going to Canada." RAIDERS BEA TEN . . . Ferragamo said he was totally unaware of the New York trade or the fact he was possibly being showcased one last time. And, for what It's worth, although Rutledge seems the better bet, Ferragamo put on a convincing perf onnance. Playing the entire second half, Ferragamo completed 11 of 14 passes for 72 yards. This wu after Jones completed 13 of 21 for 76 yards in the first half. Ferragamo, too, wasted no time in delighting the fana. His 12-yard hook-up with Cullen Bryant for a touchdown to tie the score early in the fourth From Page 81 won't even remember this game in December. "Obviously we didn't show everything tonight, but we'll get better. We were just ragged. Once we get down to our starters -thoee th.at will play all the time -we·u play better." The whole night wasn't a disaster. The Raiders did show some offense in the second quarter. Trailing 21·3, linebacker Matt Millen piclted oU a Sipe pass and returned it 17 yards· to the Loe Angeles 38-yard line. From there, Jim Plunkett, who finished the night 11 of 19 for 1:>6 yards, hit Malcolm Barnwell at the 45 and the tpeedy receiver JURY STILL OUT ... From Page 81 overall game appears potent. U there were any breakdowns I or concerns, they are centered around an offensive line weakened by the absence of 1 guard Jim Painter (out for the sea.son with a neck injury). "We blocked well on the runs," commented Workman, ' "but our pass blocking, espedally in the fint half, was very poor." The Chargers eecaped injury free. Woods went down on the game's fiut play from 9Crimmage with a knee, but WU beck on the field in abort order. • --.., QlwWe Ed'-! 7 8 24 7-44 Puneflou 0 0 0 13-13 E-tltllnlalr 2 run (Or8Nm llldl) E-G1'1111tfie • run (kick t811edl !-Votendeht H p .. • from Gibb• (Otllhlm kid!) E-Grtlllthe 1 run (Orallem kldl) E-FO Orllllm 47 E-Howotny 10 run (Otlhtln kldl) P-Kobe)'Uhl 11 run (Derby kldl) P-Holodt 12 pat trom l(ob41yMN {run hlllld) t-W~ 71 run IOrehem kick) A-3,000 (lltln\aled) . -... .......... Pakl PollllClll M.. raced down the sidelines, just stepping out of bounda at the Cleveland 23. Then, following a Cleveland holding penalty, Plunkett calmly connected with tight end Todd ChriateNen for five yards and a touchdown with just 45 seoonds remaining in the ball. The Browru closed out the acoring with a couple of fourth- ?:uter field goals, Bahr hitting 23 yards out llJld Steve Cox connecting on a 47·yarder. Cleveland'• Mike Pruitt led all rushers with 66 yard.a. * ._....,~ ~ 114 o e -21 LOI AnQt11t 0 10 0 0 -10 Clev-~ 8 peg lrom 810e (M. 8llw' ~-C. &Mr 44 FO Ctev t...,,80IM 23 .,.._ lrom Sipe (M. Behr klcll) et.v-~ 5 pMt trom Sipe (M. 8al'tr klcll) LA-CnrittlflMfl 5 pe. trom Pluntlett (C. Bahr llldl) et.Y·M. 8ahr 23 FO et.v..CO.a 47 FO A-38,840 LA 14 22-74 178 171 37-1~ 4-24 M7 3-2 11·9& 23:47 . I Fort Lauderdale wins opener SEATTLE (AP) -Fort Lauderdale aoalkeeper Jan VanBeveren ahut out the Seattle 9ounden Saturday niaht to lift the Striken to a 2-0 North Amerlcan SOccer t..e.cue victory ln the fint pme of the belt«·th.ree Mmifinal ..n.. ALLAN BEEK FOR CITY COUNCIL VanBeveren made three superb •ves, all ln the MOOnd ball, ap.l.M Soundera Steve Daley, Peter Ward and Kenny Hibbiti. P'ort IAudftdale'• tint pl, It. 10:40, W11 by former Sounder .-uce Miller. Bernd Hoblnbetn SQt the bUl It the rfPt eclae of the boa and cromed lt to ldt 'post wnen MW.r traPDICI it and put a left-footed shot pest kt.per Pauf Ramrnond . . \ --~-.. ,,.., ....... ......,... ..... c.11 u2-1111. l'ut a ftw word• to work for u. Mike-Mayer put the Bills up 3-0 early in the Patriots 41, Paefiers 27 second quart.er with a 27-yarder. Wide receiver FOXBORO, Maas. -Tony Collins dashed for Robert Holt acored the Bills' only touchdown on an 130 yards and grabbed a touchdown paaa as 81-yard reception late in the game. opportunistic New England rolled to a 41-27 Despite a listless three quarters, Detroit was victory over Green Bay to give Coach Ron Meyer even with Buffalo 3-3 on Eddie Murray's 47-yard his fint triumph. field goal on the Lions' last pol!llfeSSion ln the half. The Patriots, who bolted to a 21-0 lead after The Lions took their only lead in the fourth the first quart.er, turned two interceptions and a quart.er when rookie quarterback Mike Machurek pair of fumble recoveries lnto 24 points u they hit Bobby Kimball with a 39-yard touchdown paaa. ended their preeeason with a 1-3 record Green Bay, which cut the lead to 24-13 at halftime, fell to 2-2. New England took a 7-0 lead after just 2:40 of the first period when Mosi Tatupu recovered a fumble by punt returner Johnnie Gray and carried the ball 7 yards for a touchdown. Rookie Ricky Smith scored less than seven minutes later on a 78-yard interception return, and Matt Cavanaugh hit Preston Brown with a 25-yard . 8COrl.ni strike with 1:16 left in the opening period. Broneos 20, .Jets 13 .EM;T RUTHERFORD, N.J . -Sammy Winder's 8-yard to~hdo~ run capped an 84-yard drive led by quarterback Craig Morton with 4:58 to go to give Denver a 20-13 victory over the New York Jets. The winning drive wu highlighted by a 37-yard pass to Jim Wright, followed by a 15-yard run by Gerald Wlllhite. Denver tied the score 13-13 with 14:11 remaining in the game when u.fety Mike Harden intercepted a Richard Todd pus and returned it M yarda for a touchdown. An aggJ'el8ive defense got the Jets in position for their fiiitt touchdown, in the 8eOOnd period. The Broncos were driven back 20 yards in three playa to lhetr own before Luk~ Prestrlge's 38-yard punt Sports on TV TELEVISION 11 a.m. (2) -NCAA FOOTBALL PREVIEW -"The Class of ~82" featuret reports on _fitt'• Hei•man Trophy candidate Dan Marino, new California head roach Joe Kapp and SMU running · bacla Eric Dickenon and Craig James. 11:30 a.m. (5) -BASEBALL -The Angela at Milwaukee. Noon (2) -U.S. OPEN TENNIS -F.arly- round coverage from the National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows. N.Y. 1 p.m . (4) -NFL FOOTBALL -Cleveland a\ Los ~eles Raiders, taped Saturday. (11) -NFL FOOTBALL -San Diesc> at Loe Angeles Rama, taped Saturday. _a_ p.m. (2) -U81 OAKLAND RAIDERS HIGHLIGHTS -A look at the Raiders' 7-9 seaaon, their flrst losing campaign ln 17 years. (7) - SUPER BOWL XVI HIGHLIGHTS -Highlights of the clash between the San Franciaco 49ers and the Cincinnati BeORals. 3:30 p.m. (7) -GOLF -Taped coverage of the U.S . Amateur from the Country Club in Brookline, Mass. 4 p.m . (4) -SPORTSWORLD -Undefeated middleweights James Kinchen (20-0-1) and Odell Hadley (12-0-\) meet ln a scheduled 10-round middleweight bout from St. Joaeph, Mo. RADIO Baseball -Angels at. Milwaukee. 11:30 a.m., KMPC (710); Pittsburgh at Dodgers, 1 p.m., KABC (790). Tennis -U.S. Open reports, 10:45 a.m., 12:45, 1:45, 2:45 p.m .. KNX (1070). Southern 500 field complete DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) -The lineup wu completed Saturday for the Southern 500 Grand National stock car race, with pole·titter David Pearaon and the other top competitors fin1abina their preparationa for the Labor Day event. Nine of the tut 16 •pots on the 40-car race day grid were filled by drlvera who atood on qualifytnc apeeda posted either Thunday or Friday. The futeet qualifier in S.\Ufday'a final ~ of time trials wu Slick Job.IWbn, who drove hla Buick Regal around the 1.386-mlle Darllnat.on International Raceway oval at an ave1"9 tpeed of 147.4!K> mph. 'That WM aood for the 29th polldon. next to Connie Saylor, who WM c:Jocked at 147.0U ln an Oldanobile CuW.. -------------·Goll&•••••• PIOM TOUlllNG NO ALAN TAPll 1181 .................. '" """"' °" ,..,. Cowboys. 20, Oilers 14 IRVING, Texas -Timmy Newsome dashed 15 yards for a touchdown With 22 aeoonds left to play, rallying Dallas to a 20._14 triumph over Houaton. Newaome's touchdown run concluded an 81-yard drive by the Cowboys. The Oilers had taken a 14-13 lead on two aecond-half touchdowns by rookie running back Donnie Craft. Craft ran 20 yards for one acore and caught an 18-yard pass from starting quarterback Gifford Nieben for another. DaIJas quarterback Danny White toued a 14-yard touchdown pass to Tony Hill with ks than two minutes to play in the first half, for the initial acore of the game. 49ers 17, Se•ll•w"s J 3 SEATTLE -Joe Montana, bitting 10 of 14 paaes for 113 yards, directed San Francisco to a 17-0 lead in the first half and the defending Super Bowl champion 49era held on to beat the Seattle Seahawb, 17-13 Friday night. · Montana guided San Franct.co to its only touchdowns of the night on drlva in the aecond quart.er. SET SAIL THIS FALLI O.C.C. 's l•t•st donation. TM 6S' Al•sk• E._. to bf! uS«l In c~s this fllll. .· Orange Coast College Salling Academy•s fall program begins this week with more than two· dozen courses cdverlng almost all aspects of safllng. Whether you are a beginner or an experienced ocean racer. the Academy IS prepared to meet your sea-going ambitions with a staff of top Instructors, two dozen boats, and a perfect waterfront facility on Newport Harbor. Check out the list below tor the course most suited to your needs: WINDSURFING BEGINNING SAILING INTERMEDIATE STILING ADVANCED SAILING OCEAN SAILING ADVENTURES UNDER SAIL FUN DAM ENT ALS OF COMPETITIVE SAILING NAVIGATION & Sa.A.MANSHIP INTRODUCTION TO NAVIGATION COASTAL NAVIGATION CELESTIAL NAVIGATION OCEAN SURVIVAL MARLINSPll(E SEAMANSHIP CRUISING UND•a SAIL SMALL 80AT CRUISING LIVING AFLOAT MEDICINE AT SEA RADIO LICENSING & OPERATION COOKING AND PROVISIONING CRUISING IN MEXICO (ALI.NOW 556-5880 C•IM-FB-6.Sat.8-noon For course Times. Fees. ar1d regfstr•tk>n lnfonn1tlon. - ~· . •• Orl('ge Oout DAILV PILOT/Sund•y, leptembe( 5, 1982 D e f ense key for ' Art ists Laguna Beach .inexperienced, lacks depth Bt ROOER CARLSON or.--~ .......... Denn1a llaryuna hu re-taken &he re~ •t LiBuna Beach High u the 1982 football aeiaaon approachee and he'a ln1talllng the sa)ne phlloaophy now that turned the Aftlata ahip in the mid-70., emphaailing d<!fense as the big weapon. · • ~{enseiaiofng ~ be the difference b6tween keeping the games close," says Hiryung. ''Our goal is to play good defense ~ hope for some breaks on offense." 1dcst of the "breaks" on Offense figure Jo COfne from the potential of tailbacks Bede, ~abe and sophomore Mark Draper. 1whlie the Artists are very thin in depth, t~y've got their usual handful of blue chippers, Including 6-2. 190-pound senior Kevin McDenpon, a do-all athlete who will g~ his chance to do just that. ~'The c:rf uca1 difference for us Is depth," sa~ ffaryung. "McDennon could play any place in Orange County. I have maybe two or three like that, others have two doz.en." Jeff Oreenouah (oft n.tlve llne). th latter aUow 1..uc:eto more Lime on def nit. Craif on 1 voluntary bull. ' Cµm.mln,a (6·1, 203 Jr.) ii one of th more plMMnt. IW'J>N-ln the ArtJN' camp and t. • Hcrc'a a rundown by poelUon: oxreect.ed to play a heavy role In the QUARTERBACKS -II one ot four of enatve llne. Sean O'Connor (6-9, 176 Jr.) la a returning at.atter, but a knee lnjury emergee with the ability to get the pauet to llmlta hla avallablllty. John Hernandes a talented crew of recelven, it could make (6-l<l 170 ar,) fl~ to tak• O'Connor' the Aniata' .euon. Haryunf-tr1 wlw-*ktngtn11no'"+,..e'l91 ----:guara=-:-:=r-:1"="po:::-it~&n~ar00Uj" MartnO (6-D, 170-ar.) Pete Kimball (6-1, 180 ar.), Thad Bau (6-0, will be at the other guard. Jeremy Jacobeen 160 Jr.), Cuey O'Callaghan (5-10, 160 jr.) (5-8, 170 ar.)atar(ed four aamee at center aa and Saakatchewan transfer Dan Dewar a junior. Brian Zimmerman (5-9, 190 aoph.) (5-10, 160 jr.). None has any experience, all couJd be a t.ctor at guard Of center, but la are right-handers. botherod·by a rib Injury. RUNNING BACKS -Arabe (5-6, 156 ar.) carried the ball 89 times for 427 yards as a 1982 OUTLOOK junior, including a touchdowns (once for 51 yards). He's quick, as la Draper, a 5-11, 175-pounder with the potential to be inserted as an opt.ion quarterback. At DEFENSIVE LINE -Nick Hernandez (5-9, 160 ar.) ls a returning starter at the nose and the tacklea wm be Wetzel and Lucero, with potential he!J> from Greg H enegan. (6-3, 190 soph .) and Yudy Vinograd (5-10, 195 jr.). Howard Quigley (6-0, 166 sr.) i. a retuminR letterman at end (outside linebacker), and McDennon wW probably anchor the other aide. The aearch ls on, however, for more help in this area. The Artists play a nine-game season. tailback ls Kelvin Marino (5-9, 165 ar.), who LINEBACKERS -Kelvin Marino ls a opting for a scrimmage at California High carried the ball only twice and caught two retuming start.er, and Mark Bithel (5'-10, Friday night (7:30), before beginning a passes for 15 yards agalrult Mission Viejo. 166 jr.) appeara to be right there. Phillips week later at Western High ·against Transfer Anthony Philllpe (6-0, 180 jr.) oou1d move lpto a starter's role off early Savanna. shows potential. • showin!t Also ~ith potential: -a -tfi iron"'-00%tr.n'yabr.--'"Wrre~RE'CiiVERS -n;~f;;"Tony w:kh~ ...... ~ -\A...1,~~~.-:""""",,......,....,,= came here in !974 we opened at West.em (6-2, 180 sr.) and Brett Morrison (6-1, 185 SECONDARY -This ls Laguna'• true and I had~ ~phomore starter at free safety sr.), along with Dru Murphy (5-11, 170 sr.) strength, with Murphy and Waltcher at the (Rich Nurus). give the Artists a solid look at wide corners, backed by Andy Burnhl\m and The Artists figure to have another receiver, assuming the Artists can get the Mike Schrock (5-11, 163 ar.). Morrison is at sophomore starter at free safety in Draper. ball to them. McDennon was an all-league strong safety and Draper is at free aafety. selection as a junior at tight end, backed by A big plus in Haryung's opinion, despite Bill Padgham (6-2, 175 jr.). the fact he got such a late start with the team, is the team's attitude and positive leadership. OFFENSIVE LINE -Pete Wetzel (6-0, 220 sr.) is a returning starter at tackle, and Tim Lucero (6-2, 222 ar.) was a defenaive starter as a junior, ao the Artists appear solid at the top at tackle. Sophomore Clark Pauley (6-3, 190) may be Inserted here to KICKING GAME -"I thought it was hopeless," sar.s Haryung, "and then out of the blue, we re all right." McDennon ja a solid punter and soccer find Adam Johnson, a senior, is the plaoe-kic:ter. J ohnson, with virtually no experience, hit 4 of 7 from 40 yards out and is very consistent on PAT attempts. Eagle hopeful Assisting Haryung ar e Tom Purdy (running backs and linebackers), Mike Roche (defensive coordinator), UC Irvine quarter-miler FAdie Carey (secondary) and A;izona State's Willie Gittens, a Fountain Valley High product, rajnbles for yardage Saturday during a 34-3 win over Oregon Ongais wins pole position Santa Ana racer clocks 10 1 .159 at Mid-Oh io trials . LEXINGTON. Ohio (AP) -Danny Ongais clqc.ked in at 101.159 mph Saturday to win the pole ~tion for his team in the Lwnbennena Six-Hour Camel G.T. sporta car race at the Mid-Ohio •ports car coune. Ongala, of Sant.a Ana, atill heavily limping from operations to his legs aubeequent to his 1981 crash at the Indianapolis 600, craahed owner Ted Ffeld's Lola on his first lap around the twisting, 2 .• ·mile Mid-Ohio coune. But Ongala redeemed hlinaelf ln he and Fleld'a aeoond car. ; John Fitzpatrick of Britain turned ln a time of IOJ.162 mph to fin1ah ln the second Polltion for today's race and will share h1a Porw:he "rurbo with feµow Engllshman David Hobbe. ; Ongai.. aald beating out Fitzpatrick wun't terribly important in the alx-hour race. : "lt'a more of a morale boost," he aaid. "'lbe ~Y pomible advantage ii you're on the front and you're away from the melee of cars." Spain'• Emllllon DeVUlot.a and South African Deaire Wilaon qualified third in their Grid- Coaworth at 100.240 mph G .T . Series leader John Paul Jr. of Lawrenceville, Ga., waa fourth in a Porache Turbo that he will aha.re with h1a father. Their time wu 100.019 mph. Bob TuWua of Wlnchester, Va., and Bill Adam of Ontario, Canada, will be mlasing from today's 45-car starting grid. Tullla' Jaguar, in only ita aecond race, crashed into a undbaJ\k. Damages were determined to be irreparable, and the car waa returned home. Tullis had already captured the eighth qualifying spot with a time of 97.196. Atlanta'• Gene Felton qualified hia V-6 Chevrolet Camaro on the pole for Sunday's Kelly Amerk:M Challenge Race at Mid-Ohio. ff1a mark of 92.663 mph set a new GTO clul qualifying mark for the main event. Yachti ng fle et off to San Diego . B~ ALMON LOCK.ABEY .,.,. ................. : Sixty aa1llna yachta headed toward a buy hOruon Saturday in the 10th aa1llng of the San CSemente laland nice CO"oapON()l'e(f by Dana Point Ykbt Club and SUver Gate Yacht Club of San Diego. ' The fleet round~d the weat end of San Clemente Island before setting a ooune toward Sari Diego. . It ii the 10th annivenary of the Labor Day t\"J,ent and, aa uaual •tarted in extremely light a1n ~t provided bare headway. . _ Five minutee aft.er the lalt clul received Ill IJtartlna llpal a M&rf8Ce fOf mettled in off the oout, .red~ vt.libillty to i-than a quarter of a mile. ~ rec1na fleet conmted of four ct... of Performance Handicap raUn11 and two International Offahott Rule. Top rated boat in IOR Clau A la Arriba, akippered by Ben BeMett of Balboa Yacht Club. She giva neerly two houn to the loweet rated Clall A tx.t, Red Shift, llklppered by Anne Kahle of Lot AngeJee Y .:ht Club. . H~ the IOR,B 01-la Duet '11'.m. uiled by Stephen SOaree, San Diesc> Ya(:ht Club, 1:1~ about an hour tn bancUcap time to Rkk s.dewttz Rocket, San D6eao Y llCht Club. Top rated 00.t in PHRF ii Kathmanou, a Santt Cnaz..ISO Mlled by John Landon, San Dleeo Yacht Club. If wlnd cond!Uonl and vWbWty improYe the IMd yachta are expect.eel ln San llleao •bout mid· day today ln the lM-mlle ..... SUwr Gate Yat Club will f1Mlh p. boat. and conduct the trophy prwntation Cllemonlll Monday. • • .,I Estancia junior tailback Mau Wolf awaits the season opener Friday night against Ocean View at Orange Coast Titans ·rally, 19-15 Arizona State b elts Oregon, 34-3 From AP dl1patcbe1 Junior quarterback Bob C.ffrey came off the bench to rally Cal State Fulle rton to a 19-15 season-opening football victory Saturday over visiting Northern Arizona University. C.ffrey scrambled for an 18-yard touchdown to put Fullerton ahead for good 10-9 with 6:40 to go in the third quarter and then threw a 15-yard pass to Jeff York to aet up a I-yard plunge by Van Campfield for what proved to be the · winning touchdown early in the fourth quarter. Caffrey completed 9 of 24 passes for 166 and ran six times for 38 yards in relief of sophomore Damon Allen, who aprained his ankle in the first quarter. NAU scored on a 60-yard pass from reserve quarterbcack Doug Stanley to Pete Mandley with 23 seconds to play and recovered an on side kick but couldn't score ln the final seconds. After Fullerton took a 3-0 lead on a 35-yard field goal by former Fountain Valley High star Greg Steinke In the second quarter, Northern Ariz.ona took a 9-3 halftime lead on a safety and a two-yard touchdown pass from Scott Lindquist to tight end John Foss. _ Elsewhere ln the Weet: Arllona St. U, OrefoD 3 -Willie Green returned an interception 4 yards to set up one TD and Mitch Callahan recovered a fumble for another TD aa the 19th-ranked SWl Devils burled Oregon in Eugene in the Pacific-10 Conference opener. Fonner Fountain Valley High standout Willie Gittens. a tailback, caught five passes for 38 yards. Green, a linebacker, set up the only touchdown the Sun Devil.a needed when he picked up .a Kevin Luak lob pall and returned it to the Oregon 20-yard line. Dwalne Wriiht acored on a I-yard run momenta later to give ASU a 10-3 lead. East Peu St. 31, Temple 14 -Quarterback Todd BlAckledge threw four touchdown passes as the eighth-ranked Nlttany Llona beat Temple. Penn State, famed for lts tailback-oriented running game, gained just 100 yards on Sl carries. It was the Lions' 10th lowest tUl\ning total since Joe Paterno became coach 17 yean ago. Blackledge completed 14 of 25 passes for 203 yards as he became only the third quarterback in Penn State history to throw four touchdown passes in a game. So•t•west Bo110D Colle1e H, Texaa AltM 11 -Boston Coll_,ge aophomore quarterback Doug Flutie spoiled Coach Jackie Sherrill'• Texas A&M debut by rifllng three touchdown puaes and running for another acore over the atunned Aggi.ea. It waa the wont openlna lo. for the Aggies atnce a 38-3 defeat at the hanCla of Georgia Tech in 1966. Flutle, the ninth lead.Ina pueer in the country as a freshman, wtnced a 44-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Jon Schoen ln the fint period and hit him ap1n for a 18-yard ICOrin8 atrike in the aecond quarter. Sherrill tell the Unlventty of Pittaburgh for a $1 .8 millJon pllCk.aae at Texaa A&M. 1pread over a five-yeer period. Elaewbere in the Southweat: Talta H, Air Poree 1 '7 -Running back M1chae1 Owltier shredded the Air FOl'Cle def.,,. for 240 yarda and two touchdowna to led leed the Hunicane to a -.11 victory. Hurrteane quart.rt.ck Sldp Alt ai.o ran tor two touchdownl and .,_., for a third. •.•... , llll••l• ft, Nortllwo1ten ·II -Mitchell Brookinl ai\Alht OM touchdown pem and~ for two other toUohdowna • IWnoil opened the Bae Ten .-in. • ~rbeck Tony s.on, one of the belt pe111n in the nadan, thnw effectively to put mu.. ln ........ ~ but ... of the l9Y9I' toucbdowrw wwe on the sound. A ~ ~ of 8'7,0M Wll cm Miid l COLLEGE R OUNDUP [i] for the first night game ln Memorial Stadium, as Illinois handed the Wildcats thelr 32nd consecutive 1088. §outll Florida 17, Miami, Fla. 14 -Quarterback Wayne Peace tossed a 17-yard touchdown pass to senior fullback James Jonea, who made a one- handed catch as he fell backwards into the end zone with 1:48 remaining to give the 16th-ranked Gaton a 17-14 victory over No. 15 Miami, "I didn't even know how cloee I was to the goal line," said Jones, a senior. "I just caught the ball and fell backward. I looked up and saw the referee throw his anns up, and everybody just jumped on me." Pell aaid he couldn't "ever remember seeing a catch like that. That was a Willie Mays deluxe." Elsewhere in the South: Soutb Carollaa U, Pactflc I -cOrnerback Harry Skipper aaya he was as surprised aa anybody else by the fumble that provided South Carolina with a 100-yard touchdown and the momentum ln the Gamecoc.k.s, 41-6 win. The fumble by Tiger tailback David Brown into Skipper's hands put South Carolina at 21-6 over Pacific midway throUgh the 1eCOnd quarter. "I was coming to the ball to help on the tackle and the ball just popped into my hands," Skipper aaid following South Carolina'• aeaaon opener win. "I was really surprised.•• Skipper's run made a achool record and was regarded by both achoola' coachee u the turning point. Football scores .... CS Fullerton 19, No. Ariz. 15 Ari%ona St. 34, Oregon 3 l•I Penn St. 31, Temple 14 Edinboro St. 34, Bklol'MbufO St. 7 OlenYllle St. 20, Wl~O 7 Melne SI, Howard lJ. 15 Sllppery Roell 21. Wiit Ubl!'t) a Roctt ... N e w M e x I c o '4 1 , Wyoming 20 I I!.. New Mexico 19, Adwn1 St. 11 0 Sioux Fllle 14, IMmldJI St. 12 Wchnet M119owi 28, C.Olo. St. 14 DllnoU 49, Nrthwatm 13 Bwina Gm 40, Ohio U. Cent. Mich. 3!1, Ind. St. 10 Wichita St. U , Mia-Rolla 14 L.JncolW\. 12, 11.enhle*y St. 7 Wll.·Whltewltlt 22, RIOOn 20 YIMton 11, BID H• at. 12 TotldO t , N. 11*10i1 S Cllldron St. 21, 8. 1>111011 Tedi 0 3 Doerle 14, Dllcote Wi1¥1 0 N. DellOUI It. to, N. MlahlgM LM• 17, Upper '-11 NW !Owe 43, o.llote It. 7 N. Olllot1 7, "'-IOlltlCI I a . .,. ta. w . .,..1 8. o.llota It. 37, It. Cloud It 14 wi. . .atout 10. ~ t.o • Wf/'IM Midi. 14, Mliofl 11 .:..=-:-.... •. Dellot•· w. MlofllOerl tt. Gtancl v~ St. I wi. . .a.._. pt, A ,. AullbWI • Mool'llMd It. 11, K__, 81 a1 c:.nt . ._ 17, 0-... .... 11 HUnlft "· w..... 0 .... nartda l 7, liCJlilnl. ,... H . Mbl. St. 30, Tulane 21 Mialllippl 27 ~ Memphi. St. 10 Va. Tech 20, Rkhmond 9 Duke 25, Tenne.ee 24 Fla. St. 38, Clnci.nnati 31 Louisville 20, W. ·Kent. 10 S. CMo. 41, Padflc 6 S. Mia. 45, NE La. 27 Wake Foreat 31, W. c.ro. 10 OrwnbllnQ St. 42. Morgen St. 11 W11f0fd 31, Gll'dnw·Webl> 2t NIW H1mp1lllr1 28, .f1n11• MldllOn 8 01org1town, Ky. 21, W. Virginia Tecfl 17 Gu4lford 57, Emory .. Henry 7 Mllllpl 61 F1'll 0 Dell• St. 18, lJtlerty ...... 13 Mint Hiii 21, c...M 17 Norf04lt It. 27, 11 . ....,.., o NlC. Cilnlfal 42, ~ .. tt E. KIM\ldly 20, 8. ~ St. ,, JedllOn It. 21, Alllbeml ••• 1 J.C. Smltll 28, EllutMllfl City at. 1 ~ St. 42, T-A&l 21 T1nn11111 Tloll 14, E. Tlflt'llllee St. 0 Murfe, It. tt. II~ I lo11tlllrn U. 14, l1tllu,.... Cookm.n 10 N. A**"' 17, IW ....._. I NW Loulllenl 14. U' 'J r';;l Col, lO l eclltaeA Boa ton Cot. aa, TOM A&r.M l~ Baylor 21, N. TeJfM St. 17 Tulia S&, A1r J'orc:e 1 f Abllnlt CtwtlllM M. W. ,_ at. .. Mgllo It .... 0-. .. M-Teoh 11, Mc~ """ . .....1 ........... , Oe11t. Ar-an111 44, NW Mllloultll.O "·"'""·'"~· Nltllall1 It. 141 THH ........ . ... ,... ..... '--. Oett•. It.. Otna, 11, NW Oflllfleme7 ~ ' ~ . ' ... ·. MAJOR LllAGUI ITANDINQ8 • ~= W L ,.._ M .......... CIMIMltt 010 001 000-1 II I Ntw Yoril Ga 1 000 OOll-1 I 0 ... enyl, ""°9 II>. Her,;. (ti ~ V11n GofW: 8wt11 ~ (I) Md Hoc10M. w-••"'· il. 1.-~. 1-11. •-Puleo (1). H,.._ClncllriMtf, hndl 110); ..... YM, 1("'91Nn IH), A-11.ou. ........ cw., ~ ooo 001 000-1 • a .,.,,, ~ 020 otO OOll-4 11 0 Jlnlllllt.r.._!<f_ Ill. W. ~~I Md J. ~: LOllet Md T. K . W-loll•r, 1t•I . L-Jt nklne, 10·1 . HRe-CNc9Qo, J. De\111 001: "'1 IJMOO, T. Ktnntery 2 (11). A-1&,440. K-... City 71 51 .171 01M1t 1, C_..... • ~ 71 It .la I 8t l.oute 111 010 000-4 • 1 S.ttle ~ ~ ·~~ ,:~ llAn f:rMCltco ooo 001 103-1 10 a o.111nc1 " 11 ...,.. 11141 ~t. aw m. Sutter 191 ""° o. T-•2 H ·* H141 POf'ltt: Otnlott¥. Clv'l9 II\. ..,, Ill. " '"" l tytllt (8) 111\d 8rtniy, Mty. W-l.t~. ~· ... ,.. ... 0::..:., .Ht 29141 l ·t . l -Sutttr. •·I. HRe-81. L0\111. ~-IO 61 ."3 MoOet (3): 8"" Frtnd9co, ~ (24). a.lttrnot9 76 6' .M4 4 A-11.711 8olilon n 5t .MO •i. Too 10 Delroll ..... 116 11 (llMM --• ...... , Ntw Yot1t ti It .511 11 nw...,_ ,,..,.. GtMet ~ 14 ti 4t6 14141 ... MCMl.IAOUll Toronto '1 75 ,..,.. 11141 • o Aa It It '9t. ...... ,. • .__ W WlltOfl, K.C. 109 474 70 113 .344 ...._._ a. ._. 2 Yount. MM 128 w 103 110 .U8 ~· ~:'on~ 3 HlllTth, Cle 130 411 82-180 .321 ~ ....... e.Murrtot. 11a1 121 434 ee 1ae .-.11 ..._.IMc:I 4 ..... roll 3 Ow~. 'tor 12e ~2 80 1111 .318 ,._ YOttl 3, ~ Cla-2 l.trlefofd, Ban 106 3"4 54 124 ,315 ==-4~·T=~· =·::... 1::1: 8;, ':. ·~!! T...,.. 0-.. lkett, K.C. 117 450 M 140 .S11 -~~~ •t. ':fltw•uk•!~~~ ia.:.,.5.U-25 t.M .m _ ~en.?7) (KtoUgh 11-181 •t Ottrolt o. ThOmu, MitwllUMt. 34; ... .-.-. T0ton10 (LMI 11-121 •t ~ (&Mtltr ........ a; Thofnton. CltWlencl. 2t; Pttrlell, 12·10) Ottrolt, 27; Cooper, Mllw8ulcM 27. ~'::-o:;..1(~ 4-6) t1 89'1tmon (D. McRH, K=• ~ ~14; Thornton, SHiii• IStOCldlrd 0· 11 •t Bo•ton Clelltl•nd, 103; Cooper. Mllw9UkM. 98; 0 . (Aelney 7-4) T'llOma•. MllweukM. 95: Luzlneicl, Chlcego, .. : .... (8'.ttllhtf , ... , ti Cfltoeoo (~p llO. flttcNne (11 DeoWoM) :J.. Yonc (Ouldty 1a.111 " Kena. Ctty Pelmtr, ae11rmort, 12·3 t Vuckovich. (L.eontrd WI MllwtultM. 15-+. Ouldfy, Ntw York, 13-&: Burnt, Cfllcego, 13-5; ZliM, ...... 11-t; Oure, KantM City, 17-t; Ptlty. OtlrOit, 14-7; Sleton, Mllwtuktt, 10.5. Neltonal ......... ... ,.. ... DMlk>N W L f'ot. Gii AtlMte 78 611 .563 :!:!cZo ~~ :: ::4~ 8"' Frencieoo ee 17 .5Qit Houlton ea 12 .... 1 Ctndnnttl 62 13 .311 IAaTIM OMetOM St. LOUlt 78 at .5117 PN1eC1e1pNa 7 6 eo .615 Monlnltl 72 13 .~ Pit~ 72 13 .633 Cl*-511 71 .434 New 'i'ot1t 52 81 .311 .............. Pl1Ubu<gh 1. ~ 0 PNltcMlpflle 4, .._.on 2 MontrM 4, Atlant.t 1 Ntw Y0111 S. Cfnclnnetl 2 Stn °""° 4, CNcego 1 2141 5141 • 13 24 Sen Fnindac:o 5, St. loult 4 T..,-e 0-.. PH1eburgh IMoWIMeme 7-7) II Dtdette (Hooton 2·6) Atltflta (&ogga 2-0) et Montrttl (Aogtn 16-7) \ Clnclnnell (Shlrlty a-10) et Ntw York (Lynell 2-8) •t Houtlon (llyM 14-I) tt Pllltedtlphle (8yllrom 5-6) Chlctg<> IM•rtz 8·81 11 Sen Diego (Dl'tveclty 4-1) St. Lout• (Stuper 6-4) et Sen Frenci.co 1Mtf11n 6-11) AMKNCAN LE.AQU. .... .,. .. ~2 CAU'Of!MA -.wAUKll ........ .., ..... Grich 21> 3 H 0 Molltor SO 6 1 1 1 c.r-tt> 4 1 2 0 Yount • 4 2 2 1 Downing" 5010 Cooper 111 11120 AtJadleon rf 3 0 1 1 8lmmcw'9 c 5 1 12 o.anc. 3b 3000 O.Thon\M c:t 4022 11ay1or Clh • o 2 o Howell Clh 3 o o o 8tnlqlJel c:f 4 0 0 0 Money dll 1 I 1 0 ~ c 2000 C.Moort t1 4120 K ... 1000Edwwcltll 3120 Wlltong .. 2 0 0 0 Plcclolo pt! 1 0 1 1 OQllilt II 0 O 0 0 Otntner 2b 4 0 1 1 TOU!le 31 2 7 t TOI ... 3t 8 15 I ...... ~ ....... Ollltofnle 101 000 000 -2 Mllwtull• 110 032 10x -e l!-Orlctl. Fttgueon. DP-Ctlttomlt 1, Mllweuk•• 1. LO 8-C•lllornlt 10. Mllweuk•• 8. 18-Beytor, O.Tflomu, Plcdolo, Ortcfl. 38-C.Moon, 0. Tilomtt. S&-Cerew ( 10~ Yount ( 11~ MolltOt (34). 8-t< ..... ~ ... ""'-" T\lnl(L.2-2) 5\'o 12 7 7 1 4 Cur'llt ,.... 3 1 t 0 0 Kleon 1\'o 0 0 0 0 1 ........ Vuc:kovtch (W, 16-41 II 7 2 2 8 4 HBP-Otlch (by Vuckovich). WP· V\dov!c:ll. T·2:6lS. A~.381. YW-I, ..., .. 1 Ntw Yortt 010 000 011-3 1 2 Kan.-City ooo ooo 110-2 e o Rnlty. l'I. Mty (8) encl Ctr-Oure encl Wtthen. W-Rnlty. 1CM. L-Gur-. 17-8. S-fl Mty (3~ HAI-,._ York. Plnlelle (5). Wlnlltld (27). A-47,111'. ......_. ........... / 8tattlt 040 000 000-4 8 0 eo.ton 002 010 000-3 1 t Ptny, Caudll (81 encl s-: E.dttrWlty. Hurtt (1). Apontt 13> enCI Al1tnt011, Oedmen. W-Ptrty, 1-12 L-HU<91. 3-7 $-Caudll(23l A-2t,744 ..... Tie9n • OektanCI 001 000 201-11 0 0ttro11 010 ooo 020-a 6 o Norr1W and ~ Auc*er. ~ (8). 8lllty 18), S-11~ P. Undwwood (9). 'rot>lk (I) tnCI L.M Perrtlfl. W-Norrla, 7-t. l-8-. W . HAl-Olldencl, ,,,,.,.,_ (23); Dtltolt, WMtker (13~ A-11,53a. .....,..,_.,.. Tcwonto 000 000 ~ I 0 QeveltnCI 030 000 10x-4 I 0 Elchho1n. D. Murray (7) tnCI 8 . Marllnez, Petretti; Otnny, Wtlte (8). = ~~.:=n.<1t2~. ~ M . 4-8plltntr (1 7). A-e, 110. __... .............. T-000 oocJ 000--0 4 0 cniceeo 011 000 02a-4 10 0 Ten-end 8undt>ttg: ~ eno fllk. W-Ooteon, 10.11. l -T-. t-18. HR-C.-lctlgo. LU.llnekf ( 17) A-2',0ff. o.w. ........ 8 MIMMOI• 000 000 000--0 1 1 8elllrno<. 210 000 00.-3 1 0 •• CMtlllo, A. Davie Ill Ind UuclMr: Pelmtr Md Nolen. W-Pelmtr, 1W. t.-8. ea.tllo, 1-11. HR-8tltlmort. L Munwy (28). A-11,W , NA TIOM.AL LllAQUll ,.,.._ 1, Dl~l'9 0 "" ................ . .. ,.... ., .. ... ~cl 2010 ..... 20 1010 o.o.w. rf 1000 8todl"" 1000 L8CY ff 4 12 1 T-211 0000 ~ .., 4000 Mol*Y" aooo ~ 1t>200Cl ..... c 0000 T~ c 1010 .._ • 4000 ......, • 3000 ei.n-ff 4010 ...,.. • aooo o./ • aooo J,"-r 111 aooo o.twr 1e 4 ooo n.w1e1 p ao oo ,_...,. .. ao 1 o 9ourry p 0000 "'-'*-pt! I 000 T•IM' 0000 Y...., O to 10 T~ ft14 1 "°9111c1Mcil 1010 v....,...lo2000 ....!!!_• 0. 0 ..... .... .,, t0010o 000 -1 Lot~ 000 000 000 -0 L 4,~7,..,._ "'I (4). 1-T. V Ctr. ~, • •" ••IO TIMMl{W,f. ? • 0 0 t I ._,, 'AtOOOO T MfOOt 0 '--v I 4 1 1 I 1t T«.t?. .. MAT10NAL L.aAOUll OM" Hl'at. O!Mr, Mil. 132 5o4 76 188 .333 Mtidloc*. Pv/I. t31 4N 81 1511 .320 Lo. Smith, St L. 123 506 IOI 158 .315 Durhem. Chi 12t 4e7 70 14& .St3 a..c.-ntr, Chi. 134 548 n 191 .306 Cetttr, MIL 127 •541 75 1311 .305 Knight. Htn. 134 512 62 use 30e o.ner., LA t2'7 411 71 1C7 _.. De!non. Mil. 121 489 11 151 303 Au. Jorwe.S.O. 101 3ee 62 110 301 ,...... ....... Murilhv. Atlenl-. 32: Klnamtn. Ntw Yot1t, 31; Sc:htNCll. ~ 29; J, ~. Pltteburgh. 2t; Cettw. MontrMI. 27: .._, AUtnle, 27; 0--0. .,...,.. 11. ....... .......,.... M<ltphy, Attenl&, N ; Olt ... , Monti_,, 91; Buclcntr. Chlcego, llO; Clwk, Sen Frtn<*co, llO; J. Thompeon, Plttaburgh, et. ~(11~) P Nlt kro, Attentt, 14-"3: CenCltlerla. Pltl•burQtl. 12·5: Rog«a, Mon1rtt1, 16-7; C811ton. Phlfadelphte, 1a.11: D. Rol>IMon, PIU•t>urgh, 15·8: V•ltnauelt, Oe4ftre, 17-10; F'orac h, St Lout•. 13-8: Cemp. Alltnta. 11·7. u.a. o... , ...... ,,_, ...... 'flllN ....._ ........ Y.wdt NcWI (,.,.,_) dtl. Ettc ICortta 1u.s .11 • 7-6. 6-7, ....... w . ....,.; Kim WlllWlal (Auettelle) Gel. Htlnz G..nlhtfClt (Swttnrltnd). 6-3. a-2. 6-1; Gene Mayw (U.8,) dtl. Mtrti ~ (U,8.). .._., 7-t, ~2. '-1; Mttt 00"'9 (U.S.) dtl . ...,_ Simor_, ~Swtden). 3-6, t-2, w . 6-1; ..... WlltnOIF 8-Clen) dtl ntl W1lklllon (U.S.). M . 6-1, .... ._ .. ,..,., ....._ ........ PM\ 8tw1-(U,8.) dtl. Dini Ollt>er1 (U.&,I, W . t-2, W ; VlrQlnta Autld C"°"'**I def. a.di Herr (U.S.), 1-6, t-2. Vldd •:.i-. (U.8.) dtl. Ludt "°"'9IO't I~ 6-2. 6-2: Andree LtMd (U.S.) cltf. t+taltlw Ludlolf (U.S.), M , 6-2; 111ot Ftlrt>tnk (South Afrlce) def. Al)clt Moulton (U.8.). 8-2, a-1; HIN ......__ (Cachotioweltla) Clef. ...__.. ......... jllulgarlt), w. w . Mlctl 1lab ~ "9glanele (et~~-> ln1tml0Ufltaln def. Pedllc: Nol't'-1, 3-2; Southtm Ctlllomlt def. T-, 4-1; Ttau dtt. Ptclllc NorthwHt. 4·1: lnlttmountaln Clef. Honhtm Cllltornla. 3-2. womJf'9 ONN Northern Celltornlt def. Hewllil, 3-2; Southtrn Celllornl• Cltf. T .. u . 4-t: IM-ttln def. T--. 3-2: 8cuthem Cellfomll Ot(, Nor1lltm Cellfomte.. 4-1. NnEOm'TION ~41,hr:ibrert ---~o..toww Of-..,, 0 13 7 1 -27 .._ Eng1tnC1 21 a 10 1 -41 HE· T etupu 1 tumllllt ,..,.,, l.Jecobe kldil NE·R. 8mllh 78 lntttctptlon return IJtcOCltklelll Nl!-l rown 25 P•H from Ceveneugh (Jacob9 kldl) 08-Elle 1 nm (Sttf*'UCI klc*I 08-0le 7 SIMI trom Dk:k41Y (llldl flllltd) Nl!..FO JtcOClt 37 08-lllerY 1 run (Oarcle kk*) NE-Collln• 18 P•H lrom Ceventugh (JtCObt klc*) NE-FO Jecc>Oe 20 NE·WMlhtrt 1 NII (JllCC>Oe klc*) OB-Lewll 81 p.-lrom Cemplltll (01re1t ktc:lll A-311,818 ................. AU8HIHO -~ Bay, Dlt ...0, "-\' 11-44. Huc:klttlP)' 4-20. Lofton ,_, 1, Aodaerw 3-11. JtnHn 2·7. Ntw Engltnd, Collln1 14·130, WHthtr• 12·54. Calhoun 7·42, Ftl"gWOll 4-7. ltA881NO -or .. n Bay. Dlclley 10.111-1.11 yarde. Wllltttiunt 7·16-.2·14, Cempt>tll 2·4·1-12. Ntlll Englend, ~ .. 1~77. Grogan 1""-i .. , AECfJVIHO -ar-811)'. Lofton ..... Elle W2. ~ .....aa. Lewie 2-t2 tvery 2-22, ~ 1-7 ..... Englend. CdlM 2·21. HMJ t!Mdl 2·1 .. W...,_.. 2....,.... 1, ·-1.U, °""°" 1-12. '°*119" 1 ..... F1EL.D GOAL8 M188€D -None • ......... ~,, Der.-..... .., 0 • 0 U-20 NY . ..-0 10 I 0-tl MY -McHlll I NI ILAlf!Y ...., 0..-'0.....,,tl MY -ffCl ,_..., .. °"' -'° c.tlll ... MY -ffCl ....., I.I 0.. -Hltdlll 14 lrlWOC4MDft ........ ,.~ _..., Den -Wlfldet I NI (Cerlill lddl) A-..,. ~ ...... ,_uaHINO -°""*• Wllldet 4-11, w.... '"'\:::-0" .. ,.1. Cenede .. 14. ,.,.., .... ..,. l.1W 1..0, ~ ......... ~1oflll!Mfl ..... Yor11. MONtfl tl·tl. .., •• r 1·11. zr-.,.. .. , •. ...,. ..... ~ .......... -0.-, --.. ,., .... Dlltte 11·t•M44 ..... Yon, Todd 11~l:,1.!1.i.. ~ 0-H•O• _,,_ -0.-, ~ 4-11, ,.....M?, ................. ,. ........... 0....., ........... . ,.,,. ,_., ,_ YM. I. --....... l~ ....... ,.. ....... , .. .. ,., ...., '"''· ...... , ...... t. ~-...... .. Or•nge Coaat DAIL. V PIL.OT /Sunday, September 5t 1982 .. ,,. - - -~ Sunset League football schedule . DATt IDIOM fOlltlMI VAWl Punanou S.,t. 3 tH Il l Miter Oe1 .-s.,t.10 El Oorldo l11IOC-.., ~r·• h -'-'<-c..,-i~ at Vista foothill ·1 o;:;- Sept. 17 1!iol .• ~. 11. a p.1111 lot T11tH11l Stpl 24 • Banm't.,. Sl Paul lot lvto. Stod,. . 2Sl IOI CNrltot Coe.g.1 Oct. 1 Servile 101 C.1rlt~ C011f9tt Oct. I Mater Der Lo't Beach Poly lot SA &owl, Oct. 71 IOI anot Coostl Oct. 15 Marina at Huntinaton Beach lo! Cw1itot Colegtl Oct. 22 at Huntinaton Beach Westminster lot OCC. Oct 2 11 Oct. 29 Fountain Valley Edison . lot Mohtim StodtUnll lot Anoht1m Stod111MI NllY. 5 at Westminster Ocean View ISot., Nov. 61 lot HuntlftQ!Ofl Beochl Nov.12 Ocean View -Marina lot OCC. NOii 111 IOI C•1ttoJ ~ "-(Al llmtl It 7:30 tlCIC>l whlft nottd) cNet.10. c.,..,. • .... ~ o.r....t KtflMI City o a o 1 -10 BlST~ O'=if" ... ~4-A.c-..$. ~··­ KC.FO lowwy 8Tl·FO O'Donoghut 44 KC·C1non 83 p•H lrom Ktnnty, (L~ ktckl A-311,112t .~ .......... Al.18HINO -Ken... City, McKnight 2-17, Hedno1 8-17. ltlton a.t1, 8*j-~9. Jeokeon 2-7, ThomPtOn 2·6, Ctnon 1-8. Glllntt W, K.vwiy 1•2, Fuller 1.0, ~ ~. St. L°'*-Andtt'lon 13-54. Mltc:fMll t-40, Lomu Mii, MON1t 6-8, Low 1-4. PASSINO -Kaneu City, Fuller 1-15-0-70, Ktnnty 8-12..0-137.-Sl. LOUii, l-16-27-1-180, Hitt 6-11..()..33. RECEIVING -K-City, Cetwon 4· 120, Me11htll 3-21, Htdnot 2·4. HlnCOdc 1-17, Thompton 1-14, Oelntt 1·10, Aomt 1-11, and $con 1-8. It. LOUlt, Tlllly 6-70, ~ Ml, Mw.I\ W 2, JOlntt 3-34, MltctMI 2· 10. LeAtur lit. end or-14. FIELD OOAi.8 MINED -~ City, l 0WW1 at St LOu1a. -· ... 11, 'OM 10 .... ~Co,. .... Ot1ro11 o o 1 -to 9ullllio 0 ~ 0 10 -13 lluf·FO Mlk•Mlyer 27 Dtl·FO Murrey 47 ~ at pttt from Mtchurek (Murrey kk*) a .. t.Holl 11 P•H from Koller IMlk•Meytr klc*I 8uf.f'O Mlk•Meyer 25 A·37.120 ................. RUSHING -o.lroll, l<Jne 1().30, Fl. Potter 4·17, Jont• 3-11. BatH 2-4. Mechurtk 3·4, 8uuty 4.4, 8ulltlo, WNtttnoton 2)-100. Brown &-42. lMlt• -. MoOte g..3, PASSINO -Dtlfolt, Mechurtk 9•M -116, Denltlton 16-7·2·13, Hlpplt 7·3·0·3U. llulltlo, Koller 9·5·0·111, F•oueon 10.1.-Q.ll 7, Rolllnton 7-3-0-3 7. AEC£1VINO -Ottrolt, Mtltin !I-ell, Klmt>1ll 1·88, T. Porttr 4 ·H, L T1'Qmoton 1·24, Hiii 2-16, King M t. Rubick 1·7. eu-y ' 1-1. ""'*· Holt 1-81, Plocont 8-54. MOlfey 2·2t. Tllttlt s-20. ·-1-13, WtllttfnOIOll 2·11, leek t-6. MISSED "ELD OOAL8 -Ottrolt, -8uftlllo. Mlkt-Mt)'W. «. AndenOll, M.51. CoHt a, ...,.17 ._.~a-wt lltlUmora • 7 3 10-28 CHceoo 0 3 7 7-17 ... -IMltr 22 p.-from ... Oildt ..... , 11a1 -auu. 41 ,,_ from P90ll (Wood kldt) CN -FO ThcwMe SS 8a1 -FO Wood 40 Chi -~ .. peM "°'" "'*" IAcMllo lllc*I 8a1 -Humm 1 tun (Wood ltk*I CN -A....,,, 1 tun {ThomM kick) 8al -1'0 Wood 25 A -51,172 .................. RUSHING -8tlttmort Dlokfi' 11-40. Wrtgfll 1-31. Frenlllln t-1t, Olck.tOfl 7-47, slnWnt 1-3, HurMI 1-1. CNceo!i P•on , ..... Sulley 4-2, McMthon 2..;cv, ~ 2· 10, MoCltndon 2-1. Hwper 1-3, A,,..,, 1·1. PASSINO -Betlllnort, P90ll 4-7.0-73, H11mm 4·1•0 •10, khllollltt t-.a..1..&. Chtcego Evin• 6· 12·0· 105, Avt llll'll fo.14-0-10a, MoMthon 2·11·2·27. RECEIVING -~ 8uttlt 6-138, Smith 1-12, MoClll 1-t. Wrtoht 1•5, Dlcllfi' 1-4. ClllCeQO. 8ul'9Y 3-40', Htrptr 1·11, Peyton 2·27, Watt• 2·U, McCltnClon 2·17, a .. chntgtl t·U , MlfgtNm 1·22. Fttoweon 1·12, l!.ar1 1-8 MISSED FIELD OOAL8 -llalt1mol'e. none. Chago. "°"'40 43. l.....,.rt,halMM ..... ~ o-'ltre PNlaClelphle 1 14 3 0-24 l'tttAurgh 7 0 1 13-27 Pit -~ 2 peM from .,...,._ {Trout klc*) ""' -Fl. 8mltfl 8 t .,.. from ,,_... ,,,...... lllc:ll) PN -~4p.-fl'orn~ (f'renllln klokf ""' -11. emnn 4 p.-1roin ~ •(f'renllln Ilk*) PN -F0~27 Pit -HtwlhOff\t 34 peH frOt!I .,..,_ (Trout ltk*) Pit -8ttd"-1 tun (Trout ~ Pit -Ounnlnfh•m 1& p ... "°"' ·~ (ltldl fllled) A -62,274 .................. RVIHING -PttltdelllNI. Han1ncl1on l-40. ~ 2·1. l'lnllOwgh, ltt!lerd tS.61. .,..,.,_ 4-20, Heme ~17. P.U.INO -"tlllaclelpllta, J-8111 21· 14·0·208, lttu rclll 14·4·2·44. l'tttebutafl. 8redlhlw .... &-2411. MCEMHO -Pttlldllpflle, I\ 8m4th .. ff MottlllC)f'MfY 2·2t, .._ l.·27. ~. ltllllwcwttl •tat. OuMnahem 4:17,-r,· 8mlth 3·42, Poll•rd l ·H, ·~ 2·71, H«iMtlorne 2-42. MINEO PllLO GOAL.I -~ Nona. f'ltt9IMVll, Trout, J1. t. tUnleQT°" KACH MMIM OCUMVD WlSflMSTO ~ Estancia . Corona dtl Mir 1 ~ ... ~,~= 1: Jt.1W'!e2,!l ~bor -·--,__ ...... La Quinta ~ -1~ Los Alamitos tllwtldoy. ~· 161 Los Amf&os lot Gd!>. Gto••· Stpl. 231 Bolsa Grande IThuo., Sept 301 at San Clemente Founi11n Valley EdlMIJI Ocean View Marina lot Wt\ll911111ttl Westminster La Quinta Pacifica at San Luis Obispo lot W tttllllnttw I IOI Gotc»n GfO¥tl foothiU foi O.ongt Coo111 cwren IOI ellttnl Newport Harbor La Quinta Sunny Hiiis lot H!Mttng!Oll 8.oc:hl \ at Compton " tot Wtllf'ntn1tttl Western at Millikan Lone Beach Wilson -tot Huntington 8tochl Edison at Westminster Ocean View lot Ct<,.IOI Colltgel Ocean View Marina r ountain Valley lot We11rn1nst.,1 lot W~mm1.,1 lot OCC, Oct '2 11 at Westminster at Huntinaton Beach Marina Huntinaton Beach Fountain Valley Edison IOI Wtf!Mllllt ... 1 lo• HunhngtOll lltoc:hl tSot , Nov 61 fountain Valley Edison IOI c., .. 1°' c~., lot OCC. Nov 111 at Hunt1naton Beach . Det..., aA TUflDAY'a Maul Ta (*llltOf a-dtJ .......... , ........... , P .. aT llACI. 8 lutloflal, Sunlhlnt Room (Mc0m)'f3.20 7.40 6.00 Petitt Poww ISl1>441t) 11.IO 7.00 Anolhtr Tov (Otleg•> a.40 Aleo rtOtd: Prim Duet. CtntUf)I'• Ltcly, P"'-IAllth, Ax Imp< ....... , Ketllinkl, HMYWI S«lt Me. Htmptn'I Nurw, ~ Jourt, Ruttmufftn. nm.: 1·10 315. NCOMI MCI. 8 l\lt10ngt. . Cite '8omt>rtta (Mceen'Ofl)7.60 uo 3.4C Tocto (Slt>llltl 14.oo 8.oo P9111• Room (CepltMnt) uo Aleo reced: Uaultre, Oulcktt Gold, VOlagt, Fly a .J«wry, Doon'e \Ady, OOICltn Mtelrt. Tlmt. 1: 10 2111. el DAILY DOUal ($-2) l>-'d '411 40 TMRO MCI. 8 luttonQe. Bond Aulltl1 (Plnca)') f1.00 6.80 2.IO AlnOlinll (PltrC91 11.40 3 80 FlnQal (~I 2.40 Aleo t-0. DMdy Wit. Sottgtdo, Olitccl LMk, Preempttw 11me: 1:oe 11i.. • HACTA IW I p-'d '2711.00. 'OUfl'TM MCa. Ont ...... etowClnntlOll (Dia' · H .80 20.eo e.80 Plaza Ntll\oe (Md4etgUt) 6.40 4.40 lllelc'e • Kk* (Mtu) 4.20 Al•o rec:.d: Cornlah Warrior. H•ad DtCktr, No Trump•, RtcorCI Cetch, 81111\tf, It'• a c.rtlllnl)'. Yu Ltlgll Otnt. Time: 1:311 315. ~ ~ 1 1118 mlM. Tttt Of Tlrnt (Plnctyl 3.20 2.80 2.40 Voodoo O\IW\ ~~) 3.80 2.80 Ah Nth Heed I I 2.IO Alta rectd: Modtl Aun. L• Pole, ShemHn, Ftct North, Won't Otvt ., Ind! . T1mt: 1:.42 315. • l.XACTA (.._.) e>eic!.*32.00. eornt Met. 8 ~ ~ 8kltt (MoCtmlnJ7,80 4.80 U C Nelllt a. Fttendl)' {Toro) 1.80 8_00 AtCI E.m::.J~ 5.20 Aleo : . o·~ oay, Lo#!, MU)' ~:~Ucw~tUM She e t Lid)', Hoe>'I ·"'-~·~°"'­..... OUlc* Plteh. Coeten1ng "*-T ...... 1:10 215. ~ RACa. ra turtonge on Mf. Edlo Piece (Toro) 9,09 3 to 2.10 ~ lntrlgut (Sllmlt) 7.00 4..00 8leon 8ty (MceetrOll) 2.80 DO-f:ltlltMd nr.t. dltquellfltd and .,.._, ~ Aleo rllOld: P..,,try, Hollow AMoer' Cdlntflen: ........ F<tfldl eoi.vn.na.r. Lei It . TllM' 1:30. • IXACTA (Ml l>-'d '17UO. U lttCll atX J2·$-1~-5·31 peld H8.· 023.00 W1th 1-.o winning Uc:k.U (llX ~). 12 Ploll Six coneot.llOn ptlCI 1215.80 wtttl 181 w1nnin9 tlcktle (IM hcnM) . SIOHTM MCL 1 1119 mitt on Mt. flock 8oNy (9iecll) 15.40 uo 4.40 llelfon IMoOarrorll a.eo 2.80 Ttll AQe1n (HewltY) 4.00 Alto reotd: Crectvtl. 8u.n Chtc:o. 8fent't TtW'I• Am, Celllc Wwriot, L• A'C; 1:42 4/5. ~ UCL 1 1118 ,,,._ ~ (Moe4wron) 5.20 UO 2.IO Otoll'e ~ (0..-IU 11.00 uo o.o... (Hawl9y) a.eo Aleo r~: Chit! Gummo, CtPltlfl Oout>tt, Sword ol Honour. Tht &IQ T ~ ~ Of Or-. Kitty. T1mt: 1:43 115. • IXACTA ( .. I ) l>-'d 1232.IO. Atttndenot'24.481. ..... ood,... uf\M6An MM.Tt ,, .......... ...._ ....... , ,...., flACS. Ont ,,,.. peca. Klr (Pwry) 27.40 14.20 7.IO ~ SQott ~ 4,., 2,80 Ceo ~ (T',....,.._, 2.10 Al90 raced: Twt Lord, ~ Lid. .,__,.,.., lllcHlum. ..._ ._,., N, MftUl!t LONI, Ul9UfM M. TlrM: 1:M 315. • IXACTA (t-7) ptlCI 1116.tO. llCC*D U CL OM mllt .,_. DeNI <~-1 7.80 4.to tl.80 Tatplde l(nlgflt (,. 8tltfNn) I.to 4.20 M-. -· (J. ............ 5.00 Aleo reotd: Tlmt 8quse a.on. Gtl Happy. lloMng, .... H-. OellM SCiur. Madl ~ H. Time: 1:14 311 . T-..o Utt OM mllt ,_., AoMlalld 81..c (~) 'UO UO 4,IO Dout>6t o. N (A.ndtr9onl uo a.oo Teel W:J&.onool 2.40 "* I: W ...... Ctptllrl Knight N, lurtl•'• ..,..,., a,.,. 8tm. Atoll Genie, 8olllM .._, ,,.., ... King. TIM« 1; ... • DACTA c .. 21 P9ld t1ouo. POUWTM MOL ON ,,,.. .,_. ......, G (9 NJ OtOll) 41.40 11UO 1.20 o-i l'olnt ~ 4.IO I.AO TeljMloft ("-') t.lO Ai.o ,....,; °"""°"°· ...,,.., C'Mofl ~ • .,. ~ ........ 0.. ~ ""' , ...... T1IM: 1.M 1/1, ...,.. Mee. °"' ,,,.. .... .__ Lodi ~ 7.20 UO I.to ,..,..:s.:J~ uo • .., ...... ( 4.IO Mto • Mia • ...,, ........ .... ....... .... a.ti ""° Ouljy ... .... ~. "-"" ~ ~ a.e,. TIIM. 1:11 .,._ • IUOTA Cl-4) .,.._ '94.IO. _,,. UC9. ON ,... p-. OW .._ ~ N..lO IUD 10.00 YM 1i111M (9 ..,.._, tO..• UO ._ "'-N (Teddi t.00 AllO , .... , Tlfl'l'I Mitt. Alttlf N, *"-' AIM TllN. .. MlrN. 'eMlll IAMI.~ 11"lr t: .. ~ • IUOTA (IOOt) peld 11.-S.IO • ..,..,.,. MOe. ON llllle .,_, :.:i ~e::;l), . .lO :::: l:ll ~~~ ..... ~ ~ ·:=i::.. l.tMll. • IUOTA (1-4) ,... PUO . -... .... 0.. ..... ,..a. ~.FEI=.. tUO '::: ti ... Aleo rtctcl Cou,.gtou• Rff. Full Poobi, llMt Of Al>Ot, Cutlle H--• TIKHl>tf OloOt. HuetHn Auet Tiiiie: 1:65 415. ......,,. UCIL Ont mile ~· BtntOCICltn ILonQOI 4 40 3.80 2 .80 8mett Kotle (Ku.bier) 6.40 3.40 Hurne-llhtnnon (Blll<tf) 3.20 Aleo reotd: T D Eecott. llulld11n. TtqUllt Ster, 81y l t•I N, 8te1pom1 Cholct, &fending Iron. Time: 1:&e 315. ti UACTA (4·31 ptkl 168.20 '2 f'ICI( 91X (1·2·10·7·6-4) Pltd $7113.IO wtth 112 wtnnlng llelttl• (lour llOf->· S2 Plc:k Sta con1oletlon ptld $18 00 with 818 winning llc:hte (tllr• hot-) TINTM UC .. Ont mitt ~ . Kelty Vive (BlllletgtOn) 14 40 1.20 UO HM\llh ~Whttitl'I 18.80 10.IO Awn 8parll ~I 10.00 Aleo r · ~ Piey, AINlllM. Kone eo..t, Southtrn Ahytllrn, Handov«, Pint Ship. Diat>iO N Time: t;68 115. a l.XACTA (Ml ptkl 1713 40 A~11,1U .....m IOO (M Del ..... 1, a.C.) Tiit ~ lot Monday'• 8outhtm 500 Ofencl Nlllonll ltook Cir r-. with typt ot cw eno QUtllfylne IPMCI 1n mp11: 1. David ....,._, llulc* Reoal. 1~.7311 lbr .. ke old Sovthern 500 quelllylng r-d of 1154.NO tt1 In 111711 t>y BoOt>y Allleon~ 2. Otn• Waltrlp, 8ulcl< Ragel, ts.4,513. 3. ~ """°"· lkllCk Regel, 15•1.224 4, Jot Auttmtn. 8ull:ll "'°"· t54.078. 6. Delt Earnhardl. Ford ~d. 153A2t. 8. Aldly Audd. Pontltc GrMd Prta. 16a.Me. 7. Tim Alcflmoflel, 8'llCll "'911, ILU.383. 8. Aldwd Petty. Pontltc Ofencl PYlll. t&S.212. • II Ctl• Yt~roueh. 8ulck Aeo•t. 1~.282. 10. Htll llonneU, Font Tbuftdarbltd, 152 .... I 11. Terry Labonte. C'-rolel Monte Cerio, 152.517. 12. H*'Y Gent, ... "-*· 152 381. 13. 1111 flllott, Ford fllunCl.,blrd, ,63 ltt. 14. Mor9tf1 8,,..,....CI, 8lllCll Aegal, 163.1"'- 15. Oeofl ISodlnt, Pontltc Or.-.cl Prix. 161.Ml 11. Jody Aldlty. FMd Thundtft>lfd. 151.5n. 17. Dev• Mercie. Clltvrolet Monte Cltlo, 151.525. 11 IWC!Cly 8ektr, P0<1Utc: l eMene, 151.461. 18. Mn Mtrtlll, 8ulcl< "'9t1, t1SO.i4'. 20. 8tnny Pereon•. Buick At0tl, 150.M6. 21. llon 8ouch1rd , lute-Atgel, 150.018. 22. LAii• a,-s. 8ulc* Regal, 1411 4111 • 2.3. D.lt Ulrtcll, 8uldl Alael. 1411.263. 24. Kytt ~. ""°" ..... 141.783. 21. Tom G•I•. Ford Thuf\dert>lrd. 14a.ete. 2t H.S. lleilty. Pontiac Grind Pl1ll. 14a.501. 27. 8uclCly Al'rlngtOll, Dod9t MtgnUm. 148.1te. 28 Lennlt Pond, lkildl Aeotl. 147.Nt. H . 811ck Johnaon, Sule k Regal, 147.450. 30. Connie Slylor, OldtmoCNlt cw.... 147.575. Alm~-=~ l'l)-94 anQltr&. 541 blM. 2 t>arracudt. 441 bonito. 430 mt«••· 20 roell fltll, 5 tcuf4>1n, 3 ll"9CI •head. DAYn'S LOCUlt (~ .,._., - 227 engllr'e. 1 t>arr-..da, UNI bonito, lM callco "-· 1 lltllbut. '·"'' ........ 121 rod< WI, 7t Mnd ~ 123 wNte IWI. DW WMAN'-2tO .-.,~ t>w. 3 t>en-.O.. 445 bonito, 165 ma6.,., a rocti ftlfl. 3 )'9lowtlll. 13 ~. al&L alACH -181 eng1tr1. 270 t>arrtcuda., s 1 bonito. 11 c:ellc:o ball. 750 mec:kertl, 100 rock fl•ll, H Hnd beH. (~) -"'4 engltrs. 50 bonito. 8 hlllbUI. t7S infdl_.., 21 atfld t>w. 12 9CU!pln, eoo wtllle etotlter a50 ci-IWI. aAM 01100 (MaM Ltn-ln9) -87 tngler8 1110 ...,_.., ... .. I .. ; .. .._ . .. ·. :· .. .. I : .. • ! .. BRAND NEW 1982 ·TOYOTA TERCEL 2 Door Sedan. 4 speed transmission, bucket Natl and fully eetw1 a~~~i4ff1M9). Froftt wtteel drive for you mountain drivers. Economy, reflablllty & quallty -you get lt all AND at euper savlng1I Sft'!'- ...... ., ~TAX BRAND. NEW 1982 TOYOT• COROLLA 2 Door Sedan. 4 soeed transmission, trucket mts and fully factory equipped. (270842). All t~ perl~ 4'C<>nomy & .· rellablllty ToYOla .,I DO ·99 onel , ;--7 MO. +TAX WORLD'S BIST SILLING SIRllSI 48 ,_,., -enc1 ...... ~ ssaes.oo. c. .--muo. ~ srn1.11. ~ ~ 11042.M. S11UO. T0411 .._. Olllgoltlon .. 10l.27 on ~ BRAND NEW 1982 TOYOTA STARLIT 3 Door Uftbeek. 5 speed transmission, MPX stereo radio, pin stripes, wbeiel well JT'lofdlnga & fully factory equl~. (809895). Won't last long at this low-monthty paitnent of only 9 19~~ ••• +TAX ~ .. --_, -c::-e coet 1$11S.OO. Cap reclucfton s1<M0.26. AelldUel attlJIO. WI HAVI ''THI SMALL WOllDIR'.,, """-~ S1331.15. OMV 1123.00. T04 .. -~ tl1N.Ta Oft tPPtWld c:tedlt. • \ BRAND NEW 1982 TOYOTA PICKUP Standard bed 1A ton model with "4 apeed tranemi.ton &--a-2.4 litre engine. (053974). You'll J-U-M-P for joy at thl• fantastic buying opportunity! Fully factory equipped & ready to rout 5 109?~ BRAND NEW 1982 TOYOTA SUPRA 5 speed trans. Fully factory equipped plus· AM/FM stereo, cassette with amp equalizer, pin atrlpee, wheel well moldings & lots morel (0420«). 5 199~ ONI TOUGH TRUClll IMPOllT CAR OF THI YIAill Thlnk(ng of sel!ing your car? If IO, please consider our TRIEX ayatem. W•. will sell your car as you would but consider our plussesl We will advertise, gual- lfy all prospects. take trade-ins. · ·have available financing & do all PllP8f' wort<! When your car la sold all you do la.stop by and pick up • check! Call our TAIEX representative to list your car today! 714-846-9303 714-540-9467 BEST USED CAR BUYS IN . ORANIE COUNIYlll 1111 YIYITI ~2IMll ~ 4 IPMd wttti ·air cond .. •''•r•o CHHtte, exterior trim pee~• & morel Very clHn & COiflfl .. liltJ orig!Mll (347Y8 K). -~-3999 ' I 1111 ''''" ............. Popular 5 apeed trans., air conditioning •and AM/FM stereo tape. (245WRN}. Room fOf' the Whole family at the low price of Just '3299 ( ~"-=' Believe it POQUlar 5 apied, with 1tereo, ttlt t I •h• ... c:.u1tom wheel• & more. 0 r n 0 . I (~~ cfMl'l In~ reepect. -·-.... --:;,--~--! 1------~·=~:::!. !!!!! •. -~~;,;;A! 1• 111111 I ~l..Jf --:L .. :'.41 .... • 111 lllPI :American Alrltnea IS 1peed, air cond., stereo, alto~ 1W• •• Amencal\ ,.._, wh"I' & more. ( 1t5ZUY). Don't IC>oino w11et -00 bat mt• tht• one f« onty : WIN 2 ROlll> TU' TICkm TO '6399 : HAWAII •• !!! L~~A!!'!'~!f]_ .,...__ ___________ ......... ""'"" ...,..,,.09< 10 ciua• .... '°' fl•""'ll"" ""'" 1111 PL Yllll11I UlnUU"MIPE Equipment ~ncludH 4 apeed tran1ml11lon, radio and heater. (744WRM}. Economy ptus comfort I« the low pnce of only '3199 --IOt 2 fACE '°""" hlP !Oott 10 HAWM "° ··--·--lie,,.·-----·=Mo-::.":.'!.:~:-..:.":-':..""'.:= :--"Y ~ ._ • ...,.,.._ t tlOfU , ., .. cir-•------- :----------~-I t Addr---------1 Phone---------- -------·--------------~ ... Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Sunday, 8eptemb r 15, 1982 Long hair gets )piggy back riOe . Bv VIDA DEAN Of'\M Delly ~lol 81•" Let's dredge up some hairy memories. --1 cyou att ovet"'"41>~. you pro~ tlt!'it1t!'lnbc1 going to a beauty shop and having the beauty "operator" give you a permanent. She (and usually it w~ a she) would hook y&U up to a machine and give you a curling. One of those attachments at the neck often would lcaV(' a 1b1ister. · You were warned not to shampoo for a week or you would have wasted your five bucks. Today. you go to a beauty "salon.'' and you are given a perm by a "stylist." MQre than likely it will be a body perm and it will be heat activated. Cold waves, according to Steve Eisenbelss, came into .being in a bout 1948. Then by early 1970s, the heat-acttvated perms were marketed. "The heat-activated penns are much improved over the cold waves. The solution is not as harsh and you can give a perm over a perm," Eisenbei~ said. "By using a heat lamp on a person after the hair has been put on rods lVld the solution has been applied, the shaft of the hair ope.ps and the solution can penetrate better. You ge t a better curl and ~t's better for the hair ," added Ste\le, owner of Steve's Hair Happening, (1>sta Mesa. -·?· '·'l~;e:fO'l(l :~~·~l"·~j916f'f.t!!Pi°~'fl'-­ perm to shampoo, and 72 hours to a week later to color the hair. A person should use an extra amount of conditioner before and after the perm. "After one week, I have them come back in and let me check out the perm and the condition of the hair a nd to discuss styling to make sure they are getting the results they want." Big doings ready to get under w_ay The Junior Auxiliary, Assistance League of Newport Beach, is inviting tennfii and bridge players to enter its annual shuffle and serve tennis and bndge tournament. Interested players can '1lter one or both of the.tournaments\ Participants play at their convenience on e 1e11sion each month from October throu~ March, except December. An awar luncheon wtll be held in May. The entry dea line is Sept. 15 and applications are available at tennis club. in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and lrvtne. The entry fee is $17.50 with an additional fee of $5 for the luncheon. Further information is available by calling 833-0755. Proceeds go to help support the league's Children's Dental Health Center, The Child Day Care Center and the Social Service office. Assistance League of Huntington Beach will be o1fering a preparatory class for the Scholastic Aptitude Test. The SAT is the official test most colleges use to help detennine ad.miaion. The purpose of the class is primarily to review and improve scores. The first class will be held one month prior to the first SAT which is in October. Additional classes will be held prior to the following SAT dates. The class will be held in the evening and will consISt of four sessions at approximately two hours per session. There will be approximately ·one to two sessions per week per class at the league headquarters, 301 Walnut St., Huntington Beach. Laguna Niguel Women's Club will hold a salad supper at 7 on Sept. 21, at Republic Federal Savings and Loan in Laguna Niguel. A general meeting will follow to welcom e new and prospective members. All wome n living m Laguna Niguel are eligible to join and may call Karen Flatt at 831-3568 to get details on the club and all of the activities pla nned for the n ew s eason. Fundraisers, social events and philanthropic projects are on the schedule. From the J unior League of Newport Harbor comes this informa tion: A docent training progra m is b e ing o ffe red by Coastline Community College. Individuals will be trained in the presentation of the league's Natural History Traveling Exhibit to Orange County Schools. The exhibit is designed to introduce viewers to Orange County's Ioe Age. It demonstra.tes in six parts how, through fossils, we di.acover .the animals and their habitats of 100,000 years ago. The exhibit, accompanied by a docent, will l>e laced in schools for two-da visits. A leading Style Director fOf Regla Corpordon wtl b9 oonducttng a tr*'lng .. ...,n fQ( Aegit HlllratytllCa. • If you •• lntereated In a frH halratyte designed by OM Of the CXM.l\try'a ~ experta In hair fuhlon, eel for ... appointment. Oates: 9-7-82 Manager: Adam Llttle ReGIS HAIRSTYLISTS Mission reejo Mell • 4~-2005 4 . A pennJnent will last six t.o seven months, St.eve u.ld. "If they want ,more curl ln certain part.a of the hair before lt is llme for another perm, that can be done and it will not ---v1u -damage the hair.'' $100, and this includes a hair cut or trim and the 1tyU.ng. It's the time involved that determinet the price, aooordlng to 'Steve. From start t.o finish, a perm wlll take about three hours for rather short hJlir. . · . With three per strand of hair, Susan Kaska ends up w ith 152 curling rods on her head. This, is piggy back style. In th~ days of the machines (and, ye:i I can i:emember those :!laing days) the hair had to be snort. T y. it is a different 1tory. You can get a perm no matter how long your hair, Recently, we watched aa one ot Steve's patrons, Susan Kaska of Costa Mesa, had her wailt-lengt.h hair curled. Her extremely straight hair had not been cut ln 10 years. ~he had wanted t.o keep it long, but she had tired of having straight haiJ'. The answer was a piggy back perm. To each strand of waist-length hair that.. had been trimmed t.o eliminate the split ends, three rods were added. A very small rod was used on the hair next to the scalp. About half way down the strand, a medil.Pll size rod was applied and on the ends, a large rod was used. In all, 152 rods were placed in her . hair. It took two people two hours to complete the rolling. After that~ it was. easy. ~"""""-~191Mii"'91W~-_....,. • .._ - . Phol09 by Rlctlerd K~,.,. Not ..... From s traight' hair w orn combed straight back , Kaska goes to curly b angs and permed tresses. under the heat lamp. The small rods wou)d give her hair a good body and base with the larger rods le tting the hair fall int.o ROft curls. Now Susan has several options: She can let the h~ dry naturally int.o waves, use a hand dryer and brush to give it a full-straight look or blow It dry and then use a curling iron to get lasting curls. • • Fodr ii the right number to get a square · dance started at the Irvine-Harvest Festival Oct. 1-3 in Heritage Community Park where popular country bands. will provide the music. Jim Ell1s . and Tim Parker, right, president of the festival's • board of directors, wear western attire by Red River, exclusively at Neiman~Marcus. Sharon -~ ~ one of th&-~~·!\1!11'1 vice pttaidents, left, aeJeicted a navy denim skirt by Gloria Vanderbilt and a print shirt by Ralph Lauren. Htt outfit is completed with a suede vest and 4n eyelet petticoaL Rhonda Parker dances in ~turquoise ·Prafrle ·skirt teamed with a ootton plaid Calvary •shirt. FASHIONS: Nelman-Marc~_Fuhion Island, coordinated by Kitty llealle. LJA;,\TION: Traveland USA, Irvine. PHOTOGRAPHER: Richard Koehler, Daily Pilot Staff. Change of pace Western duds are just fine for the Ckt. 1-3 Irv;ne Harvest Festival at Heritage Community Park, but the Harvest Moop Ball in The Regi&try calls for attire that's a Jitefe more formal. ~t right, Tim Parker, pl'elMdent of the festival board of clirectors. dons his tuxedo and his wife, Rhonda, wean a liRht lavender lace gown trlmmed with darker lavender beading by Jayna. In the photo at left, board vice president Sharon Ellis' whit.e iaffeta gown by Jill IDcbarda contrasts prettily with the black of the tuxedo worn by her husband Jim. All fashions lrom Neiman-Marcus, Fashion Island. I DJCSI<;;NER PATI'I CAPJ'ALLI Designing clothes for f he weekend Patti Cappalll, a New Enalander by birth and a Callfornlan by choice lor the last five yean, designs loungewear. Her definition of loungewear -clothes for the weekend -clothes for relaxing. The Los Angeles designer's Living Line is four yean old and la marketed throughout the U.S. as well as in Englu\d, Australia, Hong Kong and Japan. "M clothes travel well and they are . ~ " ~·at the eHGeYanµoH"'jho:!W'Wl=~=~~~ in Robi.rtlon's Fashion Island. Cappalll likes cotton and pure silks. Her styles are sized small, medium and large. For the show 's finale, Cappalli sho~ed a variety of top/pant enaembles and jumpsuits in Colorful stripes, solids and flowers, left, bl ossom on 1'. e top an WJ eleg bright solids and stripes, silver and black, the pants. Carrot pants and top from Fair Isle print offering at right. The print emulates the black and white tuxedo look, patterned top From the Life Saver group of Patti -· Cappalll styles, model wears a black caftan wi'th bright color accent circles. The same design is used on short dresses. hand knitting done on the islands off of Ireland. The cream colored grouping al.so includes creams and a dress and caftan from her new Life other tops, a skirt and a poncho. · ' Saver group. 13M.)~ 16" String o/ :Jre~k Q&1:if'F~:Q Water Pear~ J35oo Getting dressed *The Largest Selection of 14 kt Gold Nautical Sea Charms Starting at $2.60 for fundraisers *.Jmm Pearl Studs 14 Kt. Gold Posts $14.99. Three groups have announced upcoming fund-raising fashion show luncheons. On Sept. 22 Las Madrecitas Auxiliary will present its 18th annual Peacock Alley event at the Newport Marriott and the Women of St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal will host its fundraiser at the parish center in Corona del Mar. Sept. 18 is the date selected by South Coast Cultural Service League and the Irvine School of Gymnastics for a mother-daughter "Touch of Autumn" show in the Newport Harbor Yacht Club, 720 W. Bay Ave., Balboa. Fashions at the Las Madrecitas show will be from Lillie Rubin'i; in South Coast Plaza. The ensembles will cover a broad spectrum with emphasis on the California woman now. Also furs from M. Jacques, Fashion Island, and \ jewelry from Bailey, Banks and Biddle, South Coast Plaza, will complement the costumes. Phase II will provide music as the fashions are modeled. Prizes galore will be awarded including a w hite fox jacket, Waterford crystal, the traditional money hat. a money tree, a weekend at the Marriott, Oriental porcelain and jewelry donated by Col. and Mrs. Mervin Porter , paintings, champagne and gift certificates. The social hour begins at 11 a.m. followed by luncheon and the show. Proceeds will benefit Holy Family Services, the second largest private counseling and adoption agency in California. HFS has been serving LA and Orange counties for 33 years. The planners, shakers and movers for the event are Gina Daniger, president; Lazelle Grothe, chairman; Billie Jenson, consultant; Judy Roehm, courtesy sales; Kay Segal, decorations; Doris Lawson, hostesses; SaUye Braly, invitations; Beverly Chappell Tuttle, patrons; Polly Holmberg, prizes; Madeline Anderson, programs; Jo Bell and Beatrice Doll, reservations, and Lee Jean Danielson, publicity. Ticket information available by calling 739-0311 or 644-5350. Fashions for the 11 a .m. show at the parish center will be from A'Maree's Boutique in the Eastbluff Center, Newport Beach. Hairstyles and 1 makeup will be done by Olivera's in Corona del Mar. Reservations are necessary and tickets ($8) may be obtained by calling the Rayner residence at 851-9095. The churchwomen will act as models in the show which has been themed "Fall '82 . . . the Shape of Things to Come." Proceeds will go towards the outreach of the Epiacopal church women. Audrey Nye and her committee have put together the 12:30 p.m. Sept. 18 show featuring fashions from Bidwell'• Boutique in Lido Vil.age, • Mes Amies, Westcllff Plaza and t he Dance Theater Boutique in Laguna. Students from the Institute of Dance Arts and the gymnastics achool will model. Tickets are $12 for adults and $8 for children under 12. Further infonnation and reservations may be obtained by calling 631-1678. Proceeds will benefit the Irvine School of Gymnastics, Young Perforrnen Workahop and the Institute of Dance arts, the organizations which share the Irvine Cultural Center Facility at 17302 Daimler, Irvine. ROBINSON'S: Menswear designer Jeffrey ~ will appear at Fuhion Ialand at 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. lr. Banka ls the designer of both a slanature line of tailored clothlnt and the MerOna Sport Collection. NEIMAN-MARCUS: The o.car de la Renta ool1ecUon will be modeled in the Couture a.Jon aJld In the 7.odiac Rest.urant from noon to 3 p.m. orl Wectne.Say and Thunday, SepL 8-9. NORDSTROM: Monica Hank1, color CONUltant for Ultimate Llfeltyle, will ahow dpt on ooJor coordination with ICal'ft noon to I p.m. Monday, Sept.&, on the flnt Ooor of the South C.oMtPIAraltol"e. LAGUNA HILLS MALL: John 8taJn01 who pla11 the p.r1 ot .Bi.ckle Parrt.h on ABC's o.n.ra1 H~tal will be emcee for a 8 p.m. Saturday, Bept. 11, teen/coll• fall fuhlon lhow. Aft8I' the~ lhow Stlmoe will be ~wa.ble for qu•d11111 tram the audience end WW. award priw of carat t ddreta and fMhklnl. * Lowest 14 kt. Gold Prices in County. Compare/ Jfliu.xi Jlurrqaeing IN "THE FACTORY" 425 30th St., Newport Beach (714) 875-7833 Hours: 10-5 Wed.-Sun. Closed 9/5/82 madine's Orange County'• FlnetJt Private Health Club For Women Only COME HELP US CELEBRATE OUR Sii YUi llllYERSIRY JOIN NOW NO MEMBERSHIP FEE EXPtAU l-3CM2 We've had 8 eucceesful years of helplng ladles all over Orange County be the thin, fit peraon they have always wanted to bet • FUU Y EQUIPPED WEIGHT AOOM • MA88Eua&MITAITIOHl8T • PERSOHAUZEO INSTAUCTION • UF£.cv<:lE8 • AEA081C CLA88U AU. DAY LOHO • PNVATE DAE88lf40 AOOM8 • SAUNA • WHIRLPOOL • TOWEL.8 & AU. TOlt..ETAIES •TANNING BOOTHS • MAHtCUMT MADINE'S -THE #1 WOMEN'S HEAL TH CtUB 751-3200 20l8 Guell St., Newport •••ch \ I Distinctive Fashion Every Sunday in .------- GOLD IN THE BEST OF FASHION. Nothing matches the beauty of our finely crafted 14 karat yellow gold jewelry. For example our fashionably detailed bracelets. Worn singly or in pairs. these bracelets will be a welcome addition to any woman's Jewelry wardrobe. Priced from $175. to $485. Bailey Banks& Biddle World Renowned Jewelers Since 1832 SOUT11COAST PLAZA, COSTA ""MESA Fint level, BuJJoclt'• witJ¥. (714) 761-6640 COME TO·OUR: •••••••••••••••••••••••• • • I I• J • • I :OPEN -.1. IHOU·SEI • • : Wednesday, September 8 : • 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• FREE HAIR CONSULTATION REFRESHMENTS GIFTS Meet Ian Gavet, our award-winnlng International Master Stylist. He will be available for consultation. R9GIS HAIRSTYUS1S - MISSION VIEJO SHOPPING CENTER • 495·2005 . .I ! A ' VIDA DEAN ........ ,... ..... You ...an lm~~~ u the mandollna .•• ~ .... ~ rVfT1l .. \'lniTi6renune ri\Wf~ , om!"eriil ·- the majeaty or St. Mark'• Square and no.t once Jialn In that romantk sonaota on a Vt'rwtlan Qlna}, ~ Tht' eventna promJHt 11La Doloo Vlta,'' a warm and happy tran1formatlon ot a bit of ===~tm::Qlf.::s;s!.\!!n~ lntq_Jl bit ot Italia Sept 11 aa out aat -kepertory atagea another onll ·.pect.acular whitQ tic arid tall.I galaa. . Strolling from the Imperial Bank Buildlnff ~ tlte South Coast Pla1.4 Hotel, "La Dolce Vita' ·alJests .will encounter Italian market. stalls, entertamment, Including commedh~ del artes, puppets, mandollnls~ and circus acts. • The 500 guests wlll begin the evening at 6:30 p.m. witlf cocktalls in the Im~rial lobby .,..here "gondoliera" await their pleasure. The 'recevtion will be catered by Randy Johnson of Hemingway's of Corona dol Mar. The atroU of the hot.el for dinner will be climaxed by a fireworks display in honor of SCR's 19th season. ~~ An Italian theme for the gala, explains ·~nairwoman Valley Reilly, was selected to reflect the festivity and excitement that characterized 1he flourishing of the arts •during the .~ce. :~~ ~The-hotel ballroom will become a formal 'Dalian garden and piazza ·under the direction of Gc>ral designer Andrade McKOO. A five-course ~=::l~-~~~nquet will be served and a special ~~-a~Y1m'"b~·cmtea by . Moshay's orchestra wiU provide the music. "As a theater, SCR will do what it does best i provide an exciting and theatrical social ent," said event co-producer Dwight Richard le. ''We're goin~ lO pull out all of the stops on this production ... ' The gala ball is the culmination of a series of DJ,anning, funding and fashion activities. In June Ole event was fully subscribed. • "An event of this magnitude would be tfnimaginable without the support of individuals and businesses throughout the community. Since the planning of "La Dolce Vita" began eight months ago, scores of interested people have stepped forward lO contribute time, money and services to this elegant benefit for the arts," Reilly said. A goal of $60.000 has been set for the event which will benefit SCR's annual fund. Last season's "Simply Sterling," chaired by Dot Clock; raised' over $50,000; the 1980-61 gala "Broadway West" under the direction of Pat Orange OoHt DAILY PILOT /Sunday, September S, 1Ut- The Sept. 11 gala ball Is the culmination of a series of planning, funding and fashion activitifs. One of the even ts was the patroness luncheon hosted by Barbara Bowie, right, and Marcia Cashion shown here with MarcJy Svendsen, center. Valley Reilly, eight, is chairman of 'La Dolce Vita ' and has set a fund-raising goal of $60, 000 to benefit SCR's annual fund. Reilly exchanges gala ideas with Dot Clock, chairman of last year's 'Simply Sterling.' Allen raised over $40,000. The first gala, held to celebrate the opening of SCR'a Fourth Step Theatre complex in South Coaat Plaza Town Cent.er Park was chaired by Louiae Ewing. THE RIGHT BALLOON: Judy Goletz of Irvine has a new Patu Cappalli design in her cloeet. Pat Calderone, Little Mermaid Guild of Huntington Beach, from left, chats with Anne Neish, Tres Osos Guild, Mission Viejo, and Carol Palermo of Irvine's Small World Guild. The CHOC eponsored fashion extravaganza held in Robinson's Fashion Island concluded with all of the models carrying balloons out to the audience. Judy got the one with Patti's name on it and became the owner of a Cappalli loungewear it.em. Prior to the Cappalli finale (Patti was there When the expression, 'A little later, sdn' is toO late DEAR ANN LANDERS: As you can see, the attached column is yellow with age. I have had it under my dresser jiearf for several years. Every time I read it I get tears in my eyes. How I wish I had taken more time to play with my children, lO hug them and kiss them more. Please run it again, Ann. I am sure that somewhere other mothers and fathers will see themselves -too hurried, too impatient, too foolish to give their little ones the affection they need to nourish their spirit. gANN~ Dear Mrs. M.F.: Here lt b. TO MY GROWN-UP SON The little games you a8ked me to. I didn't hnve much time for you. I'd wash your clothes, I'd sew and cook, But when you'd bring your picture book And ask me please to share your fun, I'd say: ''A little later, son." I'd tuck you in all safe at night And hear your prayers, turn out the light, Then tiptoe softly to the door ... I wish I'd stayed a minute more. For life is short, the years rush past ... Frances Stawicki, left, who is in charge of volunteers at Childrens Hospital, had the opportunity to thank Robinson 's President- Alfonso Schettini and Fashion Island store manager Pa trice Farmer. as special guest), the more than 300 guests were served luncheon in a basket -fruit, cheese, shrimp, salad, sandwiches, artichoke halves and • chocolate moUsse. Guests also viewed fashions by Sonia Rykiel, Perry Ellis, Willie Wear, Anne Klein, Nipon and other designers. \ No longeris he at your SJde, His precious secrets to confide. The picture books are put away, There are no longer games to play, No good-night kiss, no prayers to hear ... That all belongs to yesteryear. My hands, once busy, now are still. The days are long and hard to fill. I wish I could go back and do The little things you asked me to. -Author Unknown MRS. M.F. IN CAMBRIDGE, ONT. My hands were busy through the day I didn't have much time to play A little boy grows up eo fast. . .::-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Capricorn: Don't start new pro1ects Monday, September 6, 1982. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Tas~ is completed; realize it, don't linger, know when to close deal. Lunar cycle high, judgment and intuition will be on target . rteacn oe yond cu rre nt expectations -for you the sky is limit. Another Anes will play significant role. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Areas previously shrouded in mystery will now receive benefit of greater light. You'll meet people who are creative, dynamtc-, sensual, stubborn and who express faith in your capabilities. You'll be flattered, wined and dined! •• HOIOSCOPI · BY SIDNEY OMARA LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Open lines of communication, pursue educational project and outline publishing plans. Y_g_u'll overcome dlstance, lanQuage barriers. Journey transpires Lf you plUJ loopholes and choose proper personnel. Scorpio could play significant role. ground rules. Some who rely upon you are taking adyantage by leaning too heavily. It ia ttme to become "creatively selfish." Special services can be inaugurated ~you make proper inquiries. Keep on Piaces! SAGITTARI S (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Your personality becomes forceful, dynamic and your charisma captivates "very important pe«»ple." Thil ii your power-p)ay da~! · CAPRleORN fDee. 22-Jan. 19): Fin.i&h rather than initiate project. Rules will be outlined, territorial right• defined. You'll have chance to graep pulee of public; ~you mt F with trend and be a1 place at crucial moment. Watch ' LIDO DRUGS 3445 via Udo enewport beach •phone 675-0150 GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Follow first impressions; intuition is on target. R'6e above petty differences, office politics. By keeping diet resolutions, you'll overcome digestive problem. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius pe rsons figure prominently. VffiGO (A~. 23-Sept. 22): Be ready for.change, travel, variety and a realistic view of budget. Dig beneath surface; Lf persistent, you could strike pay dirt. Focus also on financial prospects of thoee close to you, including partner or mate. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 Feb. 18): i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Relative baa plan which can wol'k if you CANCER (June 21-July 22): You'll have more room, prestige is on upswing and long-distance call will stimulate optimism. What had seemed a setback is boomeranging in your favor. Be alert1 ready, versatile and be sure that your plans are flexible. ... Harvest time LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Play waiting game, maintain low profile and check legal requirements. You gain through diplomacy; velvet glove achieves more than iron fist. Important domestic adjustment is on agenda. You'll have rare opportunity to beautify surroundinp. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Eatabliah From Page Cl Festival board members are Tim Parker, president; Sharon Ellis, vice president; John Murphy, vice president; Patty Baker and Margo Stoclatill, secretaries; Carolyn Rapp, treasurer; Dave Baker, Mike De Silva, Kay DeVita, Pete DiCarlo, Rusty Kem, Christy McCormick, Bill Staats, Don Willet and Doug Bodkin. : The first festival waa held ln 1973 and was otoganlzed by a group called Irvine Is. The purpoee was to give residents an opportunity to 1611 their arts and crafts 1n a hometown aet~. · Some 35,000 visitors attended last year a event, and the purpose, deapite Its growth, ~the aame, an opportunity to bring the OC'µlmunity together and give the residents a chance to aell their arta and crafts in a f¥?metown aettlng. e.,../H Jwi .. ,,. (714) 675-.1442 Of' 754·6290 are willing to pioneer a project. Key la originality, independe~ -.net courage of convictions. Leo, Arin and another A.quarian figure promlnentfy. You now will ~t_ ~-heart of matt.en. PI.SC§ (Feb. 19-M.arch 20): Obtain accouating; know what ia ..min« in and be aware of -.eendit14.re~. Family memlllr make. 9llllle delMnds, moet of which are AllOrascd •nd Reedy to Playl Our flannel lum· berjac:k shrrt rn buf3undy plard, also rn royal or red, s1z~ T·Xl, $3800. Underneath, our basrc turtle'leek rn cream, also rn nitlY, royal, bur- gundy, red and !OK, sizes T-XL, 132.00 lasic Jun pant, slzaT~ $3200. LABOR DAY SALE Nevclclo't Volley of Fir• offen arches In ancient ~ndatone (right), 01 well as 'The Coblna ' (below), built by Clvfllan r.----·-~-· C~s...wadw1.ln.tba.~~~~~~~~~~~ which blend into the natural 9 01 .. , fc w ea fr a bj °' I surroundings from .which the building ston .. were derived. . ~ 3Nevada shows off some of Mother Nature's finest art eeh· By CAROLYN A. CAPALBO . or .. Dilllt' .... ...., a) , Ever" been 9tuclt ln Liii Vepe with time but no money to . ti! spend? Bored watchtna your friends loee theira7 Saturated with ui ~ ahopa7 Lon8lna for fresh air and natural llghtt Well. w cheer up, relief la -In m,ht. 11 of thin 50 miles of downtown and the Strip, there are e..Uy acce9iible wide open IJ>llC!9 with awe.inspiring 1Ce11ery and ce unp&!'&lfe1ed qhta. pt Two hours la all that la needed to enjoy Red Rock Canyon, I> located about 30 mllee west of Lu Vegas. Just take Cherie.ton N1 Boulevard ou~ of town. It becomee a on.way tour tJuouch the R4 canyon. The vt.lton' center la just put the one-way drive, and al requirea a sharp lookout few there is no tumlng beck once embarked on tM 13-mile ecenlc tour. t11 PlcrUc mtes and vtewpomt tumouta abound, but there are no w aervica, and a full ... tank will .. y dividends In pea of "' mind. • w Red Rock may be a mlmomer, llnce gray and bu.ff colored d( strata are abundant in the walls. 1bere are lnteftstinl fault• and thnasta and overthnwta_villlble from the car, and dependinc on ae the time of day the cokiw are more or 1em clymmic. The roed nc winds up and down and around curves, keeping the driver's ra interest-and attention. It la not '° demand!QI • to be strenuous aL nor doe9 lt d1mlnJah the viewer's pleeaure. The entire 13 mils pr can take • little • half an hour, or • Ions • half a day. It to de~ eolely on the amount of enjoyment derived. 811 To, the north of LM Vepa. on l\Oute 93 off the intent.ate la Valley of Fire State Park. Thia WM created by the state of Nevada in the late 19e09, and la relatively unknown. but ~ definitely worthwhile. The bat approsch ii from the west, e> aero. a narrow and undulatin£ road. After a aeeminllY P• interminable ~p and down UMf around ride a 15 mph qn appe.an -and it means it. hJ The road 1oe9 around a sharp right·hand comer and down a steep grade. It la very narrow and requires caution. Drivtng up et ~t hill must be very ditticult for both car and driver. °" Once down cm comparatively level ground, reddish rocks ri become evident. ltriklnc att.er the '°Jemn gray and brown of the delert. ~ The lelwil are virtually -ulted by the plethora of brilllant red .ndstlOne fonmtklm. 'nle9e are all named. 81 .ometbnee 8el'lawly but moetly whlnwlcally, u the Seven Slaten which reeemble nothinl • much • red rocb. Deee!t flora and fauna are displayed at the visit« ~tion buOdlna where a variety of radin.r materials UC> la available. TbJa la an •ppropriat.e comfort stop and about the only one out there, ~-for-camJ)O'OUllda and plcnic sites. I pl iJI '1' "· I I Drt~ IOUlh out of the perk.-Rorth Shore Drive perallela the shore of Lake MMd. It la breathtakina to top a rt.e ln this vibrantly colored aree and me the brieht turquoi8e of the water ab.bmnerina in the cliatanoe. On the far l6de of the lake are the Black Mountains, named for ~ color, a rmrveJow 8Clene. North Shott Drive winda alani the lake for ebout 40 m11ea, in and out of the mountainl, with an occ.-....I turnout to a marina or limply a view of the water, tantalJDnc in lta cloaene11. - When Mother Nature paints a ~ .•• The colon of the forlDllCiom vary, but return always to the red atone. At .-e di8tancle into the cs--t la found an electric aenenUnc plant, • aeesn1na mlnea· Al9o to be eeen la a akeleton sprawled on the side of a bymmoclg ).l9t to t.be rtcht of the roed. About the me of a holw or cow. Ma. ~i-~. The road la in aood candltlan .... tbe cldvbic .. fairly ..,. A final Iona upblll ...... 0 'IP thnJulh the Mddle in Sunrt.e Mountaln with 811 of Lia V .... lpl'tied out below. Except for the view from the air, tbli van"'19 point lhowa belt the roacnltude and breadth of the deveqment takinl plllCI in the LM Vepa area. At one point on North Shon Drive ii a turnoff to Boulder Qty. ThJa ends up just beldde Boulder Dlln. which la another Hamburg. . . . or sculptures • Jat man out of stone. must...ee. Boulder Dlimt or Hoover Dam, can UC> be re.cMc1 .fna Hender90ft. The so.I down to the dam la throuah ... of the molt deeolat.e ... Ngecl mountainl to be tow.a uywbere. 'Ibere are nu:milfem wntaee pomtl above the dam and putdnc .,... near and m It. Dim toun are available wvery hour cia the half-hour and-' •1. nm ... worthwhile lnveetment of Ume and money .. the world.np of the machinery lmlde the dam are tmprelliw .S mind-boalinc to anyone who la not an encme-. Any or all of t.heae llde tripe can be done in a day and are a welcome brMk from the artifidal Ught and air au.rroundlnc and auff~ the bote1a and c:uinm here .. th.en some .. Nestled between the mountains on the east and the Pacific on the west, San Diego (above) ls the second la rgest city in California. Just across_ the bay lies its twin sister, Coronado (left). Coronado still holds to old-fashioned charm STORIES BY li.REN E. llEIN ........ tM Delly ..... \Vhen the Coronado-San Dlego Bay Bridge replaced the Coronado ferry system ln 1969, some n!Sidenta feared the beach resort would 1Q1e \ta old- faahioned charm. Not so. The town of Coronado, covering one equ.are mile at the tip of the Coronado peninsula 1n San Diego's Glorietta Bay. la still dominated by tum-of-the- century Victorian homes, tiny,· family-owned shops and, of course, the famed Hotel del Coronado, built 1n 1888. Although the 230-foot-high bridge forms a modern back~ for the town's skyline, Coro still retains the sleepy reeort atmosphere envisioned by hotel founder El.Lsb.a Babcock. Shoppen in swim suita and pleated tennis ald.ri. stroll along Orange Avenue (the main - and only -business street on the peni~ula). reflecting the obsession, of resident• and tourllts alike, with sun and sporta. Don't let the eeuoned tennis buffs scare you; there are plenty of places to get instruction, and free public courta to practice on. And if tennis isn't your thing, there's always aaillng and other water sports -boats of all shapes and sizes ?" be rented at the Glorietta Bay Boat House. U you're still not that active, there'• always sunning - tomething everyone can do well on the m1Jee of public beache9 that form the western border of • the peninsula. The beat part: you can pick up your towel and not have to worry about shaking sand on your neighbor. The town ltaeU la full of history, aa can be found on the one-hour. el1bt-block walking tour leaving from the Glorletta Bay Inn, acnm from the Old Del at 11 a .m . on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. ($2.50 for adults; call (714) 4U-5993 for more Information.) Just browsing can be fun, too, without a formal history lesaon. Almost all of the stately old buildings on Orange Avenue have been declared historical landmarks by the Coronado Historical Society, reflecting the residents' concern with preserving the flavor of old Coronado. . High-priced; exclusive clothing stores -not franchise depart.ment stores like Broadway or May Company - are housed 1n 100-year-old store fronta. Merle Norman operates out of a small, stucco shop next door to a barber and a dog groomer. . In ~. nothing here is run- o f -t fie -mi 11 . Fast food ls practically non-existent (not even a MacDonalds). The privately owned buaineues on Coronado are both preserved and profitable. Prices here, even for hair spray and toothpaste, are hJgher than at home. bn Saturday mornings, the green formica counter at Clayton's coffee shop, 979 Orange Ave., la obecured by heavy white coffee cupe and saucers. The green leather booths along the wall are filled too, with towista and 1ocala out for the bacon and egp. $3.75, or the ham and cheese omelet, $4.25. It's h<lmetown-style, and it doem't get any fancier than thil. ~ the streeti Andenon'• Bakery, 81tabliahed in 1909, ii a good stop tor a cup of coffee and a fresh-baked pastry later on. For dinner, more historical landmarks: La Avenida, 1201 Orange Ave., where the menu often much more than Mexican food. Prices are from $7 to $13 for everything from sweetbreads to lobster the.rmador. The daily sped.ala are definitely recomnlencled, u are the murals, by Alberto Martinez., which decorate the stucco Walla. Mexican Village, 120 Orange Ave., a CoronadO tradition for 30 years, offers nightly entertainment and dancing on Friday and Saturday from 9 p.m. to 1 a .m . The Roman columns at Marco's, 1100 Orange Ave. near Park Place, lend an authentic look to the eatery, which features entrees such as chicken liver saute and veal parmesan. from $6 to $10, as well as aandwlcbea and pizza. The bulldtng (also an hiatorlcal landmark) housed Coronado's tint bank in 11>11. McP's Irish p ub . holds a Happy Hour (or two) from 4 to 6 p.m. when lt 1erves beer for 50 centa a draw. Stay at one of the round tables for a bowl of Mul.Ugan's stew or corned beef and cabbage. Prices range from $6 to $10. T h e enticin g arra y of restaurants on the pen inaula makes it unneceaary to plunk out another $1.20 round-trip toll for the trip over the bridge to San Dlego, but you may want to go over for the day to visit Sea World, the San Diego Zoo ($1 for children is still a good deal), Balboa Park,. the San D!:C Wild Animal Park, or even the new red can -the Tijuana Trolley -down to the border. The 43-minute trip costs a dollar each way, well worth it for the bargain-hunJing you can do eouth of the border these days. Stay 1n the dty for nightlife, like Shakespeare at the Old Globe Theater Festival. running through Sept. 19. Ticketa range from l8.50 to $15.50; call (714) 239-2~5 for re.ervatlona. Good theater Isn't limited to San Dleao1 though. A aurpria1ng h o m e 1 rown fjnd la the Coronad o Playhou.e, w here tickn are $7, $6 for students and .mon. U all this ii too much activity to take 1n one day, why not stay in Coronado ovem!ght? Beside the Old Del Coronado (see related story), you won't find any big names or any of the familiar bed-by-the-road stopovers either. The El C.ordova at 1351 Oranae ii little more than a block lrom the bMch and near a golf coune and tennis courta. It has a pool, two restaurants. and a la~ mat. Slnlles $29 to $49, one- bedroom suites $40 to $48. La Avenlda Motel, at 1315 Orange, has all the amenities and accepts credit cards. Singles Ho te l de/ Coronado grandness with style U you're planning a trip to Coronado with lwcury on your mind and money in your billfold; you'll undoubtedly want to check in at the Hotel del Coronado iteell. This grand dame of hotels, built in 1888 by entrepreneur Elisha Babcock, was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1977. Red roofs. turrets, and cupolas characterize the Del, one of the largest all-wood buildings in the world. The hotel's Hall of History. on the lower level. Is a fascinating look back over the inn's almost 100 years of existence. · Soroe highlights: 11 United States presidents have stayed under the Del's solid oak rafters, from Benjamin Harri9on to Ronald Reagan. Legend has it that Prince F.dward of Wales, for whom special Del Coronado china was designed, flnt met Wallis Simpson at a reception at the hotel. Thomas Alva Edison supervised the electrical operation at the hotel 1n its early years. Several moviea, including "Stuntman'' and "Some Like It Hot," were filmed in or around the Del. which baa housed a myriad of celebrities, from Marilyn Monroe to Barbra Strei.sand. Today, the Del offers comple te resort facilities: two pools, ~en Ughted tennis courts, a health spa, and 33 acres' of be~ in its backyard. The original five-story, 399-room building. still the most romantic, stands at the heart of the complex. and two additional buildings, the Ocean Towers, built ln 1973, and the Poolside Complex. in 1979, provide the hotel with 700 guest rooms. Shops, historical museums, and dining rooms (notably the elegant Crown Room, where early dinnen are $9 and $10) make the Del a complete vacationland ln itself. In the origlnal wooden building, standard street-aide rooms are $68 . Pric es and accommodailons range from there to bay or ocunfront suites, at $199-$325. In the new W'lnaJ, standard rooms are priced at S99 suites are $250-$314. One-and two-bedroom apartments are $325-$525. For re.ervations, call (714) 436-6611. Don't let the magnificence of the Del monopolize all your time ln Coronado. There are plenty of other exclusive spots for eating and enjoying on the peninsula. The Del, a grand old dame. If you had someplace a little quieter ¥Mf smaller in mind, try staying at the Glorietta Bay Inn, just across from the Del. The 100-room tnn dates back to 1908, when John D. Sprecldes, of sugar-<:ane fame, bullt the grand mansion in the center of the hotel. The elegant flavor of the rooms is preserved in the wings that have been added since then. Bay-view doubles are $62-$68, suites are $85-$135. For equally luxurious dining. sample the French cuisine at Chez Loma, at 1132 Lorna Avenue just off Orange. The restaurant 1-a converted Victorian house built in 1889. 1'be prices are not bon marche. but $10 w $17 is~ all the bad for a complete dlnner, includinl lemon tart or ricotta cake, these days. The Chart-house occupies the old Del Coronado boathouse. acroes the street from 1be Hotel. The bayside atmoephere is pleasant. ahd the food typically good Chart-hou.e quality. are $40, doubles $50. If you're not staying overnight, getting home is aa easy u gettlna to Coronado. Take the bridJle back to the 5 freeway north and follow it until It joins the 405 near Lion Country Safari in Irvine. The trip is around two hours or just under 100 miles. anywhere ln town. Watch qut, though -tralfic . l11hta Ue scaroe, the roads wlnd.ing, and drivers are often too bu1y gawking 1tt old homes to wlllCh the roaa. Park and walk almost if If You want a low-cost vacation, you better plan it ' -If you're traveling independently, investipte the availability of kitchen facilities or tamDy ... tyle dinlna- This is the way to take a vacation - instead of ending up with the vacation ta1dnc you . ._------------------ADVERTISEMENT-----------------!""~ Airport Express Starts New Mini-UNJch Routes to LAX call1ng your trawl ..-nt. --SUNDAY, llPT. 8, 1911 • erl'tces are STOCKS TELEVISION lwo topics in Busine1s Can't sell home? Considel! trade ~.!&'°~~R A new word la creepinf into the · teraely worded rea eatate adverti9ementa that vie for attention on the bllCk pages of area newspapera. "Owner will look at trades," procla1ms one recent ad for a three-bedroom hot.lie. ."Trade/auto or?" queries another listing for a $198,000 Newport Beach residence. The other side of the relidential real estate market reflecta a almilar . inclination on the part ol home buyers, who are finding it difficult to obtain fina~clng given current economic constrain ta. One local realtor recently reported being contacted by a man hoping to trade his 48-foot flshing trawler for a home in the area. And then there's the guy who la hoping to ewap thousands of baseballs and rock and roll T-shirts for hla Orange Coaat dreamhouse, this same realtor swears. "Trade" or "exchange" indeed are words creeping into the residential real estate agent's lexicon with increasing frequency the.e dAl'ys, agerit.s along the Orange Coast agree. Faced with a moribund home market -largely a function of by now familiar high interest rates -a growing number of homeowners are willing to consider tra_ding their homes for other houses, apartment notes, airplanes, yachts or other types of pe90nal property aa an alternative to the traditional cash deal. Other. include the sx-fbllhy of deferl'lnQ such taxes aa the ~pital gains tax ana obtainlna debt relief, he uld. lncJucfecs m the packet of materlala handed out to all who attended the evening ae11ion was a llat of 14 · properties handled by Cote Realty and repr.esentlng $17 mlllion worth of Newport Beach real estate that now la available for trade. Another proponent of house.trading is real estate salesman Albert H. Weinert of Lingo Real F.ttate, who recently completed a trade that included hla own ~ Beach residence. • Trading ia almost an ecortomlc necessity," explained Weinert. "There are just not that many hOUBeS moving on a cash basis and I think rou're going to see more and more of it.' He explained that hla own home had been on the market for close to nlne months before.he decided he was willing to try a trade. Within 60 days of that decision, a trade was in the works he said. ' "Someone wanted to live in rn)' area -~ had a little cash plus a bowie that was not on the market. I took the smaller house and some ca.sh and some paper back as well," Weinert recounted. "I was very happy with what transpired and all parties came out satisfied," he said of the deal, which was in ex~ of $1 million. Three months after the trade was completed, Weinert sold the smaller (See TRADES, Page D2) I Oell)t Plot at ... f'NtM Wh1 ile Jack Kistler, an Irvine Realtor leads a house-trading seminar, Joe Despins of Riverside shops the 'Country Store' wall of possibilities. Outloolc, Pases D3-7. And the ads in local newspaper real estate aections attest to the numbers of homeowners willing to try this · 8Itemative. · In a recent real estate supplement to , the Daily Pilot. one page alone listed five unrelated advertisements by sellers 1 willing to consider a property exchange of aome aort in lieu of a cash deal. ·Flexible package intriguing "We're aware that it(trading) is certainly very much more of a viable ~h~<?"le"on than 1n the past," observed Dw1ght Dlckey, executive officer of the Newp<jl't Harbor-Co.ta Mesa Board· of Realtora. "It's reall~ jus~ a form of ~an.ti~ financing.' One convert to the virtues of home- trading la Newport Beach realt.or Willlam P. Cote, whoee Cote Realty and Investment Co. specializes in listings with fashionable addreelea and million- dollar price tap. "rm looking for viable alternatives to .ell houaes, '' Cote explained. ''There ls no ability to sell property with interest rates ao devastatingly high. But there la al80 an enormous pent-up desire to buy property and what we're doing is trying ~!f..Proach the market from a different Newport Beach resident William C. Rouzer looked around his exclusive six- bedroom Big Canyon home a year ag.o and realized the house was just' too blg for him, his wife and young child. So Rouzer decided tb place hia home, overlooking the Big Canyon Country Club goU course, for sale -at more than $1.6 million. The 48-year-old retired civil engineer and real estate investor, however, now la extremely realistic about hla chanc:ea of 8elling the home in the near term. That's why the home's real estate listing recently was amended to include a notation indicating Rouzer'• willingness to trade his home for other South Coast residential properties. "I'd prefer a cash deal, but that's unrealistic in this market," Rouzer conceded. "Up to two or three years ago, though, I wouldn't have considered a trade.'' Rouzer said he decided to try exchanging his house, having never done so before, for several reasons. Uppermost in hla mind is the impossible state the housing market is in gjven the continuing high rate of Interest homebuyers are being charged, Rouzer aaid. And being a real estate investor, Rouz.er aald he would use the proceeds from the Big Canyon houae sale to buy · one or more other houses for inveatment ~ anyway ''So why not try a .,.. . . . Rouzer alao cited one other factor aa a reuon for trying to strike a trade with another homeowner: "It's one more thing that in a market like thla may help it to move sooner." What Rouzer is hoping to get out of an exchange is another house or houses. aome money and possibly a note. "In my cue, I don't need six bedrooms, '° why not trade dowt•," he said. · Rouzer added that he intends to be quite flexible if an acceptable exchange package comes along. "If I get cloee enough to the asking price, I'd be wllllng to take almost anything," he commented. More and more people are tur'nlng to residential property exchanges because people can't qualify for loans; others are making pay,nient.s that are more than they can afford and some have huge balloon payments coming due in the near future. "Interest rates have started down, but not really enough to do anything yet," Rouzer noted. "People are being more cautioua in general." One drawbeck to trading, he admitted: is that he will loee aome flexibility in picldng out a new house. But that is not a big concern since as a real estate investor he tends to hold onto a home for only about four to five years before. sellinl{ it. He's eager to see if an acceptable exchange package can be put together for hla home. -~i: and other real estate agents around the county said they now routinely are asking sellers· to consider exchanging their homes for other properties. In ·the past year to eight months, the number of properties traded baa increased dramatically, said real estate agents from several flnns. "The time for expectation of cashing out la gone," Cote said. "And that's why I'm trying to instill that and educate the real estate oommunity-at-J.arge." READING RAILROAD INCOME Toward that end, Cote hosted a seminar last week in Newport Beach . He stressed that trading oflers a 1 potential ,eller several advantages, including the ability to make a property more salable in a sluggish market. ORIENTAL AVENUE • TAX • PAY 10,, OR $200 BALTIC AVENUE MEDfTO .• RANE AN AVENUE Good management lacking in nation's colleges By LEE MITGANG l#IE ........ W.._ For much of the past tw~ rears, university offidala have been bemoaning higher education•s worsening money won, usually blaming the federal budget cuta, a weak ecoriomy and the dwindling aupply of college-age students. At" the aame time, their troubles are fon:ing a harder look at their lnatltutlona' internal management -.erioualy flawed -101De higher education of:fidala say, in perhaps half of the nation'• 3,200 collegea. Even aome college pn!lidenta CClllCede that their bluest problems often Ue within their ivy-dad walfa. Bureaucracin so need.lett y bloated that teachen quit in dilQult, mUece edmlnllltratiorw at odda, or out of touch with, faculty and atudenta, and above all, l8ck of plannlna, remain at the heart of hilber education'• difficulties. "It ia aoberlna to obaerve that the rnan.pmenl of coti.c-and unlvenltiel la the Number One concern of hleher education," Patrlcla Crc., an lnatn.&Ctot at the Harvard educalion achoo!, recently wane. . And an offldai of ,. na~ Ol'pnlz.ation wbme milliol\ la to improve collese-manapment •Y' that "about 00 percent of coUepl, probably even bJCber," haw~ ~t flawa. A period of economic hardahlp has undeniably led "' coet ~ on many c:mn~. CcmeU Unlwnity hM a ~ ~~Y!ar on Wllte," which •vm the .mool about '220,000 a fear throuah euch meaaure1 aa curblna ~ ... II, ........ = .... I The UriJventty of New peblre has r • 0t1ngo CO 11 DAILY PILDT/8und1y, Blptombor 8, 1882 I ORANGE COllT llBCll Here are the 1took market aottvltl• of p~bllcly traded Orange County flrma for the wHk ended Friday, Sept. 3. Data provided by Newpor1 Securities Corp. _____ ,_ .. .,.,,.., .. , ' ..... •••• ..0 :~ ::~a.·:~•r::~ 1jrL ll l•lil{tord Pd. 1110• 11 lul i: ... lo•. IULDI II COftHI H t• • a g:~~.!~·~:~;. m~ IT C•oupookt CMU 18 CltlltM lonk • ;x ~:t~::i:. 'I:~. : )1 CoM r•o. If~~. tet•o l2 Coacu"•· c.,.,. Cl41H 11 eo.t•1to• con• 1' Cuett.._tlt lleet. CUStt 1~ O•U""',. orwa 26 Ootatroa OTH =' ::!::, .... :~re· 4 19 llCO, tne. llC S JO "' Mloro. "'" l 1 lldorado 'I Hk ILDI H ~:::,sn ... O:L1: IV"'\ 11 ruoul. IOd. 111 . ...,..,, ,~ , .. """ ""· "" ,II ' '6 'Ir•' leor.r. fMO ., , , H ~t~:~o~:~:~. ~~M: bl'lJ :: ~::.~~·::t~: ~~:· 411 Ot n•r.• \ Tera. 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(0.02) • 1.s 1.01 • 2.1 (0.01) llC ... 11C o.•• ::u 'tW S-3•·81 •.• l·lt.91 • ll·l•·I I • 10·)1-ll •• • •• 10·11 •·10·•· •.o 11-11-•1 U.S 12·11-tO • )·1•-1• •.• fl·)•·•· to0,616 u,•u 1t,toi t:m "ff.HI n,•,. u.•k '>·"' '··'°' '·"" '·"i 11, T• IST, 1' U:m 'l·''Z I ,Of ), Ill 11,167 11,,lU 126,0• 6,ou:m Jl. 10• IU,ttl I),_,, S9, 100 l::m 'Z:m '" l.16) t,6)1 '·'" 1.011 u .u:~ ti 1,0ll 99,08 )6) T ,911 10, 1so .n:m s~.•12 1,182 .~:m 10.•U 9,su .. m 1 tS,010 &•,a~s 1•,100 9',002 l,11) 20, Ill su !i:m •• ,,,, 159 )e, 111 :i:*i 'NtZ S,71\ 9.•99 "' ), l 11 1.22• 118 ~l:m 19), 111 11.6\l l,'90 12),9'1 .,, 1' • Ut ll,010 .,,,., ], 161 •.i•\ 202,lts COLLEGE MANAGEMENT PROBLEMS (From Page Dl) '·"' ·'·l" .,:.a .. ~ . , .... t,IJ• •IH '"·* •·!•: l°' '·,;: •·t" .Ii: 90 -.n ••• l ·••1 .z,1n HJ .l; _,,. .u.•oo 1,IU lso I, ti 1,101 ::m • 1.i1t .), I) I 1'tm '. ,., 11) ·901 _,tt l,f IS m .. ·1'2 , .. 761 lOt 1!? .. .;;~1 .759 )l 1 -1,ea. ·202 •1• l ll I, TIO 5, "' 2,JH , .. 2n 1.10t 6 6 •• ,'10 ·lU 91 1,009 '.661 n• 8.n• ·l, :~l ·250 '· ··~ 5. Ul ••• 100 m "' 61 11• •l,015 •n. "' ... , -1,IU ?:lr. '·m ··:m -s6• .1,669 -25 .:m '·'" U,)06 ·SOl )21 ·l,,St ·190 I, )tt'° ·•ll '·"' ••• 1o:m • • • that runs the state university a)'lltem, "with rules and regulations for everything." He resigned to take a post at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. may clash with traditions and values that make higher education what lt is. The last straw for Dalton apparently wu when it took hlm "something like six months" to arrange for an outside fellowship for one of his students .-something that USC and other -managed universities could process in a tter of daya. Probably the most common failing ln higher ucation, experts agree, is lack of planning -a idespread failure by college adminl.at.raton to alistically conside r their schools' overall on , and where the resources to accomplish it ill come from. Many &ehools draw up plans, but too few are ffective, honest and thorough," wrote Ohio 'versity president Charles J . Ping in a recent tion of the Harvard Business Review. "Too uch w ishful thinking is now present in rollment. and budget projectiona and, more lntedly, the longing to protect what exists." Colleges may be si~ a lack of such anning, for lnstan~. when they_ announce rupt annual tuition increues. making it more fficult than necessary for students to plan the ancing of their education. Good planning, by contrast, can pay v'dends to students as well as the ·achoo!. egie-MeUon University's aophistlc:at.ed long- ge planning allows the echool to give students months advarEe warning of tuition increaaes. Good management at universities can't ays be rendered strictly in profit-and-loes . A decision that makes good financial aense ~ll~byen ... f 0... L. IMfton 11111t.t-i ws1119ct wtll\ tM Cllrtl of Or-. County on 12, 1N2. ,_ llehed Otlftjle CoHt Delly ,t.uo. 15, 22. ~. 9'pt.~ t Few would argue, for example, that universities should scuttle their liberal arts programs to make way for beefed up computer acience programs. even· though from a atrictly dollars-and-cents viewpoint philosophy and Greek literature don't always pay their way. Two prestigious schools, Northwestern University ln Evanston, Ill., and Stanford University ln California, Uluttrate that there is no single definition of good or bad management that f,its all colleges. Both faced severe economic 1train and defidts in recent years. Stanford ran coneecuUve deficita from 1968 through 1976. Northwestern ran a $9.6 million deficit lut achoo! year and ia still •truaJ.ln& with its financel. Thoee who prai8e Stanford'• manag~t cite the open lines of campus communicatlon, decislveneaa at the tof· and sophisticated planning which the echoo pioneered in the early itages ol lts flnandal problems, and which it still uaes to stave off future ttouhle. When the school ~red $16 million ln red lnk ahead in the late 19e08, It decided to cut heavily into administration, oventeaS studies and aome student eervices, while largely sparing core academic programs that lie at the heart of Stanford's prestige. Northwestern'• president, Robert Strotz, hal different Ide.as about planning and budgettns. ideaS that .et off a call for his resignation last May by faculty members. During hia 12-year tenure, faculty aalaries at Northweat.em decllned from seventh nationally to 20th. • p t TRADE From Page 01 N•wpou Buc h hou1e h • had tak•n ln trade. He eakJ that even thouab be 1old H In • tttdltlonal cuh arranpment, he would hav• been wllllnc to make anothe r trade had the rlaht o,,_ottunhy preaented lt.tielt. Weinert wtAt on to uy that hi.I off Ice It pttlna more and more involved In tradee of realdenUal property. "The •Conomy la \oush, but Jt 11 , po91ble to work out aales with trwe1:· he aatd. . • People have to conaJder the alternatives. They can' 1ell for cuh and wait, they can take back paper ln the form of lerond mortca1e1 or they can trade. ''They may jult u well have real property u paper since the real property appreciates," he added. In the pa1t 1lx month•, Weinert aa.ld he h.aa concluded one other trade and has had three dlfferent trade offers on a property he ls handllna. Both Welnert and Cote, who aa.ld he now has two tradee ln J>l'Olfell, polnted out that when restdentlal properties are being traded, what really Is being tranaferred ls the equity ln that property. A $100,000 home, for example, with a $75,000 mor1gage could be. traded for a $200-,000 home with a $50,000 mortgage. Because the difference in equity be tween the two houaea la $125,000, the traders (buyer and seller) would have to arrange the deal to accommodate tran.efer of that sum ln addition to the tra.nafer of the property. The difference could be paid in cash; through same aort of eeller-financed aeoondary paper; through some sort of institutionally financed note; or aome combination of the three, Cote said. He added th3t the moat common sales tetmf involve some combination of taah and -paper. Of course, multi-party deal.a that might involve a aeries of property trades, cash, not.es or personal property also can be arranged to satisfy traders. Multi-party trades, usually involving three traders, are occurring, Weinert ta.id. As for tax advantages in tradlng properties, there reall)' aren't any, these brokers agreed. While there can be certain tax deferrals and tax exclusions, prope rty taxes and even Proposition 13's sale provisions apply to prope rty that is exchanged, they said. While many real estate agents are ha1.Ung house-trading aa a new market force, espedally ln California's once booming housing market, It should be pointed out that real estate, especially invea1ment properties, have commonly been swapped for decades. Nancy J. Cassube, president of Irvine's Pyramid txchangora and prealdent of the National Council of Exchangora, h.aa been arranging real es1ate trades or exchanges ln the area for 20 years. TRAD! ADVANTAGES 1. Tax deferral, exclu1lon .a. 0.bt relief 3 . Take advantage of poor market condition• '4. Mak• property more Hally dl•po•a* 5. Poulblllty of lower property taxes 6, Wider rang~. of oholc• If partlea con11de< other property (pereonal et.al) 7. May avoid new. high Interest rate loan• Nancy Cassube TRADE DISADVANTAGES 1. Possibility of higher property taxes 2. May become banker 3. Complicated? No 4. Limits, choice on residential 5. Financing difficulties with federal lenders (blends?) Cuaube explained that the number of houaes oUered for exch.anae bu 1ncreued recently to almo1t one-third ofa all properties traded among the ooundl'• 4,000 exchange agents nationwide. The national council was formed to facilitate communication between brokers with properties to trade and let uniform exchange atandarda, ahe said. Much of the trading between member agents is accompllahed • • • at m"tln., conducrted around \he country whmia qenta markel their propert&ee to Other apnca. Propertfea are dl1cu11ecf and offers are made at meetlnp 1uch H one held Friday at the AJrponer lnn {n Irvine. "The avera1e homeowner doesn't know about u1, ao It blow1 their mind when they flnd out there-'1 eomet=•k• th.II.'' Calaube aaJd, u exc broken dilculled potential d In t.he hall outalde, the organization'• meeting room. "When the marqt ceta bed the home people come In and the houaee will move out again when the market lmerovea mainly becauee thoee axchanges (a houM for a houle) are to hard to do." She ta.id It la more difficu.lt to exch.anae a houle for a houle becauee people are emotionally tied to their residences. And when they are seeking a new home, they are seeking particular attrib\l*. In trade1 Involving lnveetment properties the key lactor i. the bottom line, lhe explained. "If they want a 1outhern exposure and the hOUle available la agreeable but.has a·nortbem eXp<>!Ul'e thl don't WADl.-•Tnaf., h rra i!OTf'l' - exchange a ouee for another property, not.es or (apartmen~) units," ahe explained. Therefore, C.aaaube laid that clients who seek to trade their homes through excha.nse agenta affiliated with the national oouncil have to be "flexible" in what they will accept in return for their properties. But Cassube claimed that if sellers are flexible, they will have a far greater chance of moving their property in a shorter time on the exchange network than in the traditional market. "We have creative ideu on selling. Sure, multiple llatlng ia ooe way and .advertising la one way, but exc~ la another," Caaaube con&ued. "We have techniques normal real estate agents don't know about because of our training.•• She said that a flexible trader mi&ht exchange a house for investment property and then 1wap for a house in another trade. "If a person is stuck on a certain type of house ln a certain area, its tough for us, but I would encourage people to contact an exchange agent to aee what they mi§?!t be able to do," she said . We might be able to help them. It depends on what they got, why they don't want it, what they do want, why they want it and what benefita they are look.ins for," the Costa Mesa resident remarked. "After all. we're dealing with people here, not jult properties." The bottom line on houae- tradlng, C.aaaube, Weinert and Cote agree, la that property exchanges are really nothing more than another tool for aelllng properties ln a market in which eel.ling has become a moet difficult thing to do. Are mortgages aff ordahle ? Not quite, need decrease of 3 more points, economist says LOS ANGELES (AP) - Prospective homeowners walling for mortgage lntereat rates to drop dramatically before they buy ahouldn't hold their breath, says the chief economist for the California Aaaociation of RP,'~"'· 'flie decrease In ahor\-tenn loan rates hu been dramatic," Joel Singer aaid of a recent aeries of reductiona ln the prime rate paid b)t banks' most credit- worthy customers. "But the same isn't true of long-term loans. They're down, but not nearly as significantly . ., Sinter .. 1d mortgage rates would have to clip to "12 percent or below" before homea would be within the reach of moat people. And that just isn't in the cards, he said. "The best you can do now on home loans la about 15 ~t.'' and Singer predicts • there b potential that the ratee will ea.e furt.her to about H percent." Mortgage rates peUed at 18 percent to 19 percent late lut year. "We expect a modelt .reco~ next year, but it certainly wont be M robwt M it WM after the 1975-78 recma..:• llid Stnaer. After the earlier recestlon the number of housing atarta statewide akyrocketed from 130,- 000 a year to 283,000 a year by 1978. "Right now, we are bumping along at 80,000 to 90,000 aiarta a year," he said. "We hope to see a 25 percent increase next year, but by our historical 1tandardl that will be extremely low." The number of real estate' agents who belong to the CAR is expected to akid to 111,.:000 by the end of this year -;,5 percent below the record 150, 000 members it bad only two years ago. ''Because the market has been down for ao long, many of our memben decided to find other kinda of work," 18.id Slnger. · Even though interest rates are down, Singer said rat.es are still too high for mott families to qualify for loans. "U a family has a 30-year, $90,- 000 mortgage at 15 percent, payments are $1,138 a mcilllth. At a 12 percent Interest rate, paymet\ts are are $927 a month. The difference la subatantlal when it comes to qualifyina for a loan: FOREClOSURE --.---:rRUSTEE SALE--............... Y• • we cain hind .. your torecloeure ~ ... of MIMd tNlt• on DMd of. Truilt . ST~. im"ATION , ..... ., \ Orange Oout OAIL.Y PILOT/Sunday, September 5, 1982 .. I THE ORANGE· c:fOAST USINESS ·OUTLOO An Advertising Supplement to the Daily Pilot Sunday, September 5, 1982 ----· I Allure of ocean view, nearby soclal l center enhance Newport Center's gr~wth I By JANINE FIDDELKE lpeollll leotlon• ldltof Fifteen y.ears ago earth was turned on a hillside plain at the eastern edge of Newport Beach overlooking .the rbor 'ind Catalina nd. What was once A comparison of Los Soon many national • headquarters for A VOOi Financial Se.rvicea, Pacific Mutual Llfe! Insurance Company and ~ the Irvine Company. • NEWPORT CENTER OVERVIEW - Newport Center h as a total of 530 acres, including a 130-~cre golf course. Of that, only --er:1Hl~ll-la11d -and-the 1 ~In terna tipnal J3<>y Scout Jamboree s i te blossomed into what is today probably the most distinctive master-73 acres suitable for commercial use remain undeveloped. pl.anned business district in Southern California. Angeles and Newport and international firms Center is like night and and corporations were day. Newport Center has lured to Newport Beach a n ideal location in bring'ing alo·ng a N e w p o r t B e a c h "Western Wall Street" overlook ing the Pacific image by locating their 'Ocean. It hllS some of the he a dq u a r. t er s and t o p r e s i d e n t 1 a l regional offices in the communH.i-it-8-lo,cated' growing business and nearby, putting an end to retail district. commuting hassles. It As an added touch, also has easy access to . u p s ca 1 e s tores 1 i k e transportation including N e i m a n M a r c u s , several major freeways Robinson's and other and the John Way ne clothiers made the move Airport. to Fashion Island, the The list' of finna with! regional oJfices in the, Center reads like the • Who's Who o'f th e - corporate, financial and legal communities. There are more than 25 law 1 firms, seven stock brokerage houses, 10 • major CPA firms and almost every major bank I in California has a branch operating there. ' The commercial gem of Newport center was the produc t of the brilliant. urban desigher and planner William Pereira, who was also responsible for the master plan of the Irvine Ran c h and th e University of Irvine. According to Pereira's master plan1 Newport Center was designed as a circular complex of otfice. buildings, medical centers, hotels and other commercial facilities. As the freeways·to the north congested and thtt city-of-Los ~les lost its appeal, many lawyers, architects and financiers decii:ied to end their long commutes. Instead, they moved their suites to the ne w oceanview office buildings on the 1 perimeter of the circular Newport Center Drive. According to Dan Carlsson, public relations manager for the Irvine Company, a lot of companies wanted to escape the smog and hubbub of downtown Los Angeles. The Ce n t e r is . a nationally known open- community in itself. The air shopping complex buildings are surrounded that lies in the center of by broad greenbelts that Newport Center. are not usually found in In less than a decade, a comme r cial center. more than 730 corporate, Restaurants, hotels and professional, financial, recreational facilities are real estate, retailing and also located within the service finns employing perimeter. more. than 8,600 people Newport C e nter resided in Newport definitely has the laid-Center. . back coastal influence of The growth potential the area giving haggard hasn't ceased. Today. executives a welcome over 700 companies change from the high employing 11,000 people pressure that is usually boast a Newport Center associate<:! with big address. Newport Center business. i s t h e w .o r 1 d In the heart of . Newport Center, Fashion · Island features 84 high t quality fashion and ~ specialty stores including the most prestigiou s · names ln high fashion ! and design. It is truly the : "Fifth Avenue" of : Southern California. , No other regional : shopping center can , match the se r e n e , atmosphere . ..and scenic • beauty that puts Fashion Island in a class by itself. Fashion Island is not just ! (See CENTER, Page DI) ! This month . in business: 1 I CENTER STAGE -A l azy afternoon in Center Stage Court, Fashion Island's entertainment and social center. Fashion Island has over 50 origin al pieces of artwork including the Skydive by Aristides Demetrios pictured here. COMPLETE COMMUNITY -You could do it all without ever l~aving Newport Center. A relaxing game of golf could be enjoyed at the Irvine Coast Country Club. The Newport Marriott Hotel and Pacific Mutual Plaza office tower rise in the background. "When firms decide to make the move to leave Los Angeles and open up a branch elsewhere," said Carlsson, "Newport Center is usually where they look first." For a listing in the Business Calendar contact Janine Fiddelke, Special Sections F.d.itor at 642-4321 ex. 241 How Can A Business Checking A Reduce Your Bills Quite simply. Open a Business Expense Allowance account at Huntington National Bank and we'll provide your company with free business-related services.· Choose from our wide range o_f pre-authorized op11ons- computer services, tax preparation, accounting, property management. The list is endless. Plus with our per· sona11zed messenger service you don't waste time or INVOICE money with trips to the bank. A minimum average collected balance of $10,000 in your checking account 1s all you need to qualtfy L---..,.~--i111 01cc For more information about the BusiAess Expense Allowance and our pther credt1ve business banking services. call one o1 .our Business Service officers at (714) 840-1354 or (213) 592·1337 ·The 1mount ot tree servicea provided ie based on the customer's ave11ge eoffecled check11\g accou111 balance [ I NJ J TM ,,,,,,. with Solution• for Bu.i,,... HUNTINGTON NATIONAL 8ANK . Corner Bofea Crtlea and Hett • 16531 Bolla Chica Street Hun11ng1on Beach. Ca11fom1a 92649 • (714) M0-1354 or (213) !>fl2· 1337 Member FDIC NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS Indivi4ual OR Commercial Accounts Check Today~ Current· Rate The Best Checking Account We've Ever Offered! ,: Our new Interest Checking account keeps your money working for you 24· hours a day-365 days a year. Earn high interest on any balance above $2,000 and 51/4 °/o interest on the balance below $2,000, FREE of all service charges unless your balance falls below $500. •tnterest Checking rates will fluctuate with market conditions. Call our office for current rates. Your balance over 52,000 is not a savings account or deposit and is not insured by the FSLIC. It is secured by notes or obligations of the U.S. government or government agencies. For individuals. deposits under 52,000 earn 5 a;.% interest and are insured by the FSLIC. Commercial deposits under 52,000 earn no interest. ' Wntcliff Plaza, 17th and Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach • 714 I 645-6505 Corona del Mar, 3021 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar• 7141675-8060 Open: Moncl_ay-Thurtday 9 a .m . to 5 p.m. Friday 9 a.m. to b p.m. Saturday9a.m . tol p.m. • .. Business bri fs Bank charters •continue rise· New banks contmu~· to arow In California. Total numbe r of stute and federal charter approval& In this year's first half jumped 65 percent to ~6 from 34 In the aam~ period In 1981. According to data compiled by Edward Carpenter & Associates nat ional approvals mor e than doubled to 46 from 20 while green lights from the state ebbed to 10 from 14. Meanwhile,; t otal filings f o r stat e a n d federal ch arters edgc•d up to 39 in the first half from 37 a year earlier. State applicati ons through June 30 almost tripled to 16 from six • whale federal filings declined tO 23 from 31. Ther e were three national a nd one state denials this year in the same period compared with one n ationa l and two state turndowns last year. Design I PR firm opens in Newport Walt Chespak of El Tor o, formerly vice president of The San- born Company, Newport Beach , announced recently the formation of Di.signage, a full service advertising, desig,n and public relations firm with fa c ilities in • Newport Beach. Client& include Health Energetic Corp. of Costa Mesa . Th e W a t er Factory of Costa Mesa, Morrison Optometric Centers of El Toro and Westminster, Tra1 nex In terna tiona 1 Recruit· ment Divisio n of Gard en Grove, Physio- 1 o g i c Reps In c. of Fountain Valley, Society of Critical Care Medicine of Fullerto n and a number of community and teaching hospitals in Southern California. Newport office space available V o I t• n ,. 111 8 u n k 1.J. offl1rlnl( 6975 bQUllrC' f <'t.~ of dlstim:tlvt• oCfic.-c spuc.'t' edjacent to Its commercial bank off1cr Ca<:lllty In Pacific Mutual Plaza, a newly completed projl;ct compr 11>t'd o f tw i n aevL•n-story tower8 . Valencia Bank, which is h oused In Tower 11 Is located ut 840 Nc~port Center Drive. Valencia Ban.k's profes.5io.baJ office space available Is suitable for one or more tenants with a n d improvement allowance provided. Pa<·1f1t· Mutual Plaza 1s locatt>d an om• of Orange County's mOIJI\ ntttoctlv•• model. <:ommunl ti<~. '!'ht• suc.-ceasrul envlronmon.\ of Newport ~nter offert a combination of butl· ness, medical, legal, ahop· ping, cultural and rec- reational opportunlUes. . Close ptoxlJn lty to John Wayne Airport, Pacific Coast Highway, the• San Diego (405) and Santa Ana (5) Fr<.--ewuys, gives th e bullding additional advantages. For lt~a alng in- formation, please con- ta c t Chris .Smith, Assistant Vice Presi- dent, Va lencia Bank (714) 773-1461. Physician's strike contributes to pharmaceutical firm's losses N ew port Pharma- ceuticals In tern a tional, Inc., announced today financial results for the fiscal year ended April 1982. Total revenues for fiscal 1982 were $9,567, 000, a decrease of 9 pe r cent compared to fiscal 1981. Product sales for the fiscal year were $8, 168.- 000, d own six percent from $8,703,000 in 1981. This d ecrease was primarily a r<>sult of a phys icians' strike a nd license r educt ion of inventories in Italy. one of the Company's major markets. The Company r~­ ported a loss of $430,000 from cont i nui n g operations or $( 05) per s h are compa r ed to a profit of $807,000 or $.10 per share in fiscal 1981. The in crease 1n expenses for r1scal 1982 is primarily aunbutabJe to nonrecurring starling costs of the Company's manufactu"rang plant in Ireland (approximately $500,000) and expenses relating to U. S. Food and Drug Administration regulatory matters (appr oxi m a tely $350,000). The Company disco nt inued th e operations of its wnolly-. o w n e d s u b a.Id i a r y , Empire Medical, Inc. in Atlanta, Georgia. The loss fr o m thi s discontinued operation amounted to $1,039,000. Bank offers brokerage aid Beverly Hills Savings a nd Loan Association (OTC) reported net earnings of $2.2 million or $1.80 per share for the second quarter of 1982, compared with a net loss of $1.7 million or $1.39 per share for the same period last year. For the s ix months ended June 30, 1982, the association reported a net loss of $1.8 million or $1 .5 2 per s h a r e, compared with a net loss of $3 million or $2.49 per share for the same period a year agff Dennis M. Fitzpatrick. president a nd chief exec u tive o ffi cer , attributed the improved results primarily to a gain of aproximately $9 million on a previously announced ~le. H & A Block qpens tax classes 4 ll & R Jlluck . the world'• larg(•t1l Income uax preparation service, is oftPrlna a baslc income l x course ~tarting ·September 8th and 9tn with morning, afternoon and evening c lasses nvallabh•. During the 12 week courao, students will s tudy a ll phases of income tax preparation and r ecel ve ac1ua 1 experien~ In preparing i ndividual r etu rns. Experienced Bl oc k pe rsonnel will teach current laws, the theory and application as practiced In Block offices nationwide. Anyone may enroll. There are no restrictions or qualifications. Courses are ideally suited for housewives, r e tired persons, teachers o r p e r sons w a nun.g t.o . i n c r ease their ta x knowledge. Qualifi ed co urse graduates ma y b e ofC ered job interviews for positions with Block. Many accept em - ployment with Block because of the flexible hour s available . Howe ver, Block is under no obligation to offer employment, no r are graduates under any ob liga tion to a ccept employmt:nt. There is a course Cee which inc ludes all textbooks, supplies and tax forms necessary for completion of the school. CertiC1cates and 7 .5 continuing education units will be awarded up on s u ccess ful completion of the course. The course is licensed by the California Board of Education. Registration forms and brochures for the income tax co u se ma y be obtained by contactin~ the H & R Block office at 2 138 N . Tustin , telephone 835-2695. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - If you're in Business, you should be In Ti ii: ORANGE COAST =1 BUSINESS OUTLOOK Coming Sunday, October 3 in the financial section of your local newspaper - the Daily Pilot This Month's Speclal Feature: A focus on the IRVINE INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX Each issue o f Business Outlook offers you: • Local forecasts from key business figures • First hand knowledge of what your competitors are doing ~ • Features on people and events In your business community ·• Business growth potential In and around the Orange Co•st area Take advantage of this opportunity to pl~ce your advertisin g message where y ou'll receive results -In BU~INESS OUTLOOK coming October 3. De•dllne for sp•c• reservation: Tuesd•y, September 28, 1982 ADVERTISING RATE •10.so per column lncfl (comml11lon•blef ,. , 'HILTON[; ND' PREVIEW the taste of Mick<..y Mousl' 1Ju1mJ.: 1 ai Li Hilton. As D1silcyland's nl'\\ e~t nc1 lilx. 1. , hotels upon oompl<'tlon in .Jutv1r11 '1 ·-· .. Bank expa First lnterstatt• .&111k t 1 • (FIB), t h e lor.ip .,1 statechartered bank rn California, has inltlotcd th e Hispanic ProJ cts department to mcreast• i t s 1 h a r c o f t h <' bur g eonin& L a uno market. Of the bank's nH11·<• than 330 0Cl1c:ci.. approximately 90 havl· been identified as hovin..: substantial H1s pan1t· patronage. Each branch has a scertaine d the• -population of Hispanit-s served and the tyJ)<.-s or services required Mary Salinas Du1 on, assistant vice prcs1dc·nt and m anger of the Hispanic projects, is m charge oC desigmn~ and impl emen ting Jo I B's overall plan to S<•rv( ltH Hispanic coru.uml't .ind business customer~ Dur on, a MBA graduate from UCLA. has been with the• bank JOIN T REVOL 101t11r.om1n'I •'"' r 11(111 M1~11 R,w,.11 M,111l91tr • service 11 •1111litll'~·nwnts for job- 1 • I .1 I c-cl S p a n i s h l.111g11.1g1• <lasses and po 1 t1t1µdt1o n 1n the l11 s p:11111 Ban k ers /\S,')<"OC·1.t111J11 "( hw· t hmJ of the top l 5 111 ... 1 .. 111 t· businesses in 1~.t111 .. r111<1 arc F irst I '' t t r s l ;1 t e B a n k ...... 1c•rnc•1s,' Duron 11 tc<l ' Wt arl' trying to 1·ap11.<1lm: oo the fact that WI' presently ser ve a good i,ha r e of the Htspamc busmess firms to further increase our H 1 p. rr 1 , 1 M B-A lhspan1t· business and -~-~rermnt-p~~n-e+ .etfftt-emff-- 1 rl ~ o I I t' J.: 1 ' -h:lsc·. Needless to say, we ~·lrt• .. ~l 111 11re--ulso pursuing the lopn 1 nt Jl1 s pan1c consumer :nark<'t and t.atloring our serv1t·es to meet that 111 <J r k e t ' s n e e d s wh1·nt•vcr feasible," she add1-<l l\1ore informa tion ahout caree r op- J>C•rtll n 1t1es a nd the H1span1<· Projects CARD • \ •. \ . . 11 . . •' I ' •'' t • ?. ... -1: ·:.i: •'W . ~,t. ~l .. ~ · '9 I love it. l ·01ink-tfssu~i: ... we·r~just '--------...:-~ '9 Ql.!te h~lpful ... told us what was infqrmatlve 9(i I think people trust the Sears Financial People are talking about the Sears Financial Network. ..... '· / .. /' /' Vera Dina . ,/ . " . ,.,, to.us. Gave us a couple of different ideas. ~ Kay CarfK'lll~·r very helpful. Explained a lot of things to us. ~ \ Networ!t because they know Sears. ~ Mary Noplos Real Estate. And Allstate Savtngs for your savtngs and loans. Because now. the financial eervtces you and your family need mos~ are to~tlier under' one roof. The roof of the Sears store in South Coast Plaza. Because people-even people who make a good Uvtng- n eed good, sound advice about tfielr money. And they need that You 're lnvtted to see exactly what these companies can do for you. And tell us how you feel. advice s imple to understand and easy to find. And perhaps most of all, they need lt from people they trust. That's why Sears has started the Seara Financial Network. With Allstate for your insurance needs. Dean Witter Reynolds· for your investments. Coldwell Banker for .. -ti Th~ Cent~r ls open for your cpnvel\ience during regular Sears store hours. Monday-Friday 10:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m .• Saturday 9 :30 a.m.-9:00 p.m., Sunday 11 a.m.-5:00 p.m. JIW fmtb• .......... a If you can't vtstt the Center (Its • at 3333 Bristol Street, Coeta Mesa, CA 92626), SEARS please can <11'> MO-aas. Fl N i"A''NClftL The Seara Flnanctal Network. Because Iii' today. tqe beat prace for your future should be N E1WO K · wtth frtendll you can trust. .. Al.__.. At Sears. . Dl.dle • Dean Wrtter Reynolds Coldwell Ban~r · ~te Savings •• .. • .. ,• ., \.) I '· l ., ' . , •I I ... .. , lullder1 lmporlum ' under new management . Shortly toUowi.na the announcement by Buildera Emportum of an a11res1lve new marketlna plan and a major renovation and remodelln1 proaram. Wickes Companies, Inc. a nn ounced a new management structure at its Builders Emporium chain. • Anthony J . Swiea, a veteran Wlckea retail executive, haa been named president of Builders F..mporium and will assume re - sponsibility for overall direction of the 62-store chain. William T. Teachout ha s been .named executive vice president of the chain. Reporting to Swies will be Martin R. Bocola, vice president of operations; Ronald P. Ma ccaro n e, vice president of finance , accounting and systems; RIBBON CUTTING -Bank representatives of Capistrano National Bank's permanent and local business leaders were on hand to help facilities in Irvine. cut the ribbon s~bollzing the official opening and Richard L. Morphet, vice president of human resources. Reporting to Teachout will be Robert E. Craves, who will have expanded Newport Center conti.nues growth responslbllties in his from D-3 weekdays and Sunday 'beginning to sound like a position as vice president Brunch. complete community you of marketing. a shopping center. it ls a The Newport Center are ge tting the right Jeffrey Chanin, senior cultural event. Branch of the Public message. In fact, until vice president of Wickes, Over 50 original pieces Library, located next to recently the only thing s a i d t h e a d d e d of artwork adorn the the Museum, offers an the center lacked was management emphasis at grounds and plazas of impressive collection of residential housing Builders Emporium is the center. Included in business reference books Jo c at e d within its .. indlcative ofthegrowing this ar twork is the along with a large perimeter. importance the chain sculpture "Sky Dive" selection o f general • will play In Wickes' located in Center Stage. interest materials.. One of the most recent future. This exquisite piece was Civic buildings include additions to Newportl the Ritz Restaurant. The Marriott Hotel is in the process of constructing an additional tower, and the Newport.er Inn has just undergone a $10 million renovation project to bring it up to four-star level. Prestige and culture arrive one cornerstone at a time and at Newport Center the grow th continues. Opinion Fredric Foreaer Newpor& &.>boa 8a~t•1• Ir Loaa By Prtdrtc J. For1ser Jor all thOM In real •tate and lendJnc who are aaklna queatlona about the Supreme Court rultn1 on mortcace "du.-on-l&le'' clau1e1, the answer la ye1, there will be life after De LaCueeia, but lt will not be llte u we have known it lt1r the put 20 yean. The day1 of cheap money are gone forever. The halcyon decadea of Uvl.nf looee and eaay, or hl&h on the ~. are over -and pro6ably never to return -and I believe the nation can be stronger for it. Once -saln, your home will be a place to live, .not an Ins t rument for speculation. The Supreme Court ruling on the De Lacuesta case did not cre ate any new conditions. It simply confirmed the fact that the nation'• economic rule. are changing and have been changing for nearly three years. Now everyone will have to live by these rules. Some groups suffered first -at a terrible price: 1) the auto industry; 2) new home construction industry; a nd, 3)the savi n gs and loan ind us try. Now the homeowner/~eal tor group becomes the fourth major category to feel the full pressure of the new rules. Essentially, the new economic prlnclples boil down to this basic need: we must make o ur money worth aomething uatn. It meane that the cn••p, taay, lnfla· tlon-ca\l.llf\l lac.. money just ian't 1.oln1 to be around, and all of U1 wW 'need more diaipllne IJ\ money mati.n. For thoee not familiar with the De LaCueet.a rullna, the S upreme Court limply atated that 1avln1a and loan the new rules, the end aaaociatlona operauns result or bottom line la under federal charters really a matter of reality. could demand that a A a ch ea p money homeowner had to pay diaappean and intlation hia mortgage in full is reduced, true valuea when he aold h.la house, once again appear. as specified in the Homeowners now must original contract. He aell their homes for what could n ot pa as on a they are truly worth, not low-interest first at overly-Inflated, mortgage to the new speculative prices. owner. Thus, the "due-on-sale" Clause ln It a1eo ls apparent that the mortgage was under the new rules, enforceable. commodities like gold Nearly every first and other precious rt ln f metaJs, &Te non-mo _gage now ef ect productive flelda ln containa such a clause. which to invest your Anyone who has been money. You should teek successful in taking over areas where your money . another peraon's ola loan is working to earn the at a low rate ii simply highest interest, free of taking ad~antage of speculation, insured somebody s mista~e. wherever possible, or That mistake Is be ing backed by government f e 1 t b y 1 e n d e r -s-securities. This requires throughout the country mor e discipline, more who are learning the 8 t ten ti 0 n 0 n the hard way that they investor's part, but it is s h o ':11 d n o t h ~ v e secure, safe and aolid, not conurutted to low, fixed loose, easy and scary. rates of interest for long periods of time in what has been an inflationary economy. . But more importantly, all businesses are now learning that they are in a new ballgame with new rules. In each of the cate- ROries suffering from Yes, there will be a good life after De LaCuesta, but it will not be as flamboyant and as exciting as the roller coaster of the 1960s and 1970s. But it can be productive and profitable under the new rules. "Wickes is firmly mad e by the a r tist the headquarters of the Center is Sea laland, the conunitted to the home Aristides Demetrios and Newp<>rt Beach Police first residentilal project lmprovement business," was recently featured in Depa rt ment, the within the center it.self. Chanin says. "Swies' the Pageant"of Masters Newport Center Fire It ls built on a hillside overall management in Laguna Station and the Newport overlooking Newport skills co~bined with Popula; during the Harbor Area Chamber of ~ach and' the distant _Teachout s freedom to_ summec are....the eueniiijf Commel"Ce 1'be cnamber harbor. The ...J.a2.Jwwa. ~na ntnrt e-trtrT?rr outdoor band concerts building is the center of condominiums are set merchandising aspect.of featuring sounds of the activity for its 1,400 amidst 8 tropical the business should give Big Band Era and Pops members. environment of exotic Donald A . Miller, $102,625, or 17 cents per to $18.5 million and loans increased 103 percent to $14.4 million. In additlon, core deposits (demand and savings deposits) increased 84 percent to $5.4 million. Since the Bank's inception in July, 1981 over 500 new business banking relationships have been Bank has set in motion a vigorous operating plan for the coming months, including a new pennanent headquarters location and a proposed-- branch site in the Irvine I ndustrial Complex ,. adcled streng~h to the selection Music devotees R~reational facilities plants, towering palms president of Marine share. new management group y : c . 0 the 1 n N-e w p 0 rt Center and quiet laf{oons. National Bank, (OTC), Miller states that the and provide a n ew ma pi ni c n reported a significant favorable operating dimension to the goals ~urroundinglawnsor eat inc l ude two movie "Newport Center is improveme nt i n performance was due to th t Builders Emporium in one of .the 14 r:es-theaters featuring first-st I 11 '1 row Ing. but operating results for the substantially hl~her loan cana achi'eve." taura nts tn Fashion run movies, an 18-hole slowly,• said Carlsson, e-.nnd q••ft ... Ar and ir:-t d · ·11 .......... ...... ... un volume and eposits, Swiesj6ined Wickes in lslan · golf·course, three tenrus "15 years and lt is sti half e nding June 30, i.ncreaaed interest spread 1965 as merchandise Ne~port Center also clubs, two first class not co m pl et el y 1982. and higher non-interest manager in its lumber P.r'?v1~es cultural and hotel/resorts, and 15 developed. That is the Total income for the . area." · clivision. He has served c1v1c IJfe. The Newport restaurants. These beauty of a master plan, second quarter was ~the beginning of Marine National Bank as vice president and Harbor Art Museum facilities provide a broad it is a slow evolution." $819,977,502 net income 1982, Marine National provides s pecialized established. managing director of recognized as one of the range of entertainment Oth e r additions was $100,502, or 17 cents ha1 experienced a 60 fin ancia 1 services to Wickes Europe and nati o n's leading for residents, business include the Pacific per share. First half percentincreueinaaets Miller stated, "to growth motivated gene ral manager of c 0 n t e m P 0 r a r Y. art people and visitors. Mutual towers, the Civic total income waa $1,403, to over $25 million, ensure continuing rapid bus i n es s es and Builders Emporium. museums, occupies a If Newport Center is Plaza garden offices and 338 and net income was deJ>98its roae 104 pen::ent growth, Marine National professiona}s. He was named a senior 2 1 , 0 0 0 ·sq u r e · foot i---;::::=======================;;----·.--''----------------------------vice president of Wickes building in the Center in 1980 and a group and attracts 100,000 officer in 1981. Prior to visitors annually. The joining Wickes, he held ~ u s e u m b r i n g s p o s i t i o n s w i t h important contemporary Montgomery Ward and exhibitions to the public Company and Armour & and provides in-depth Company. · educational programs, Teachout joined inc luding l c tures, Wickes in 1978 as vice conce rts, c hildren's p r e s i d e n t o f workshops and films. mer ch and is in g of The Sculpture Garden Bullders Emporium and Ca f e i s s t a f fed by became general manager volunteers and open to in 1980. the public for lunch on Money markets not just for the wealthy It's not as expensive to wealthiest individuals , get into a money market could previously afford • you mig~t suspect. them. This enables even The latest list of people with few money market funds resources to earn a rate llsued by the Investment of return they couldn't Company Institute -the have achieved on their Wash ington D.C.-based own. national association of In recent weeks, the rnutual funds -shows r a t e' s been i n the that of 136 such funds neighborhood of 13 available to individual percent. It has averaged investors, half require about 9 percent for each rn.inimwn initial deposits of the past five years and of $1,000 or less. Several, 12 percent or more for ill fact, require less than two df thoee years. UOO, and a handful Of the 700,000 people h ave no minimum who opened IRAs requirement at all. through mutual funds S u"b sequent in . during the first quarter veatment minimums of this year, about 70 are normally only a percent opted for money fraction of initial Jevela. market funda .. According More than 80 percent to Ben Korschot, require $100 or le8S, and c h a i r m a n o f t b e rp0re than 20 percent put Investment Company .,0 minimum require-Institute, rponey market ment on aubaequent funds are "ideally lnvesQnerita. suited " to lnveatou Foe tholle investing in u n w l l ll n g to take Individual Retirement 1pec:ulatlve rlska with Acco u n ta ( I R A ) , t heir money, which la minimums are often why 1uch a large lD~r atlll, or waived number have chosen .ttolether. money market funds M their IRA invelltrnenta. All ln all, it's llUle Al economic condlticN wonder money market a nd personal aoala Aandl are boominC. both chanae ·ovw the yeen, lD terma of the number Konchot-expecta JMQY ol abaftbolder accounts m u t u a l f u n d I RA (.,.-e than 12 million) investors wlll ta.Ile apd .... ta (more than adv a n ta a e 0 f th e t200 billion, maklna freedom to move all or rautual funds ~_f~ part of their inveetndla ~ type of 1u ... ....-. from one type of fund to 8 y p o o ll n 1 t,h e another nm by the same o6ntrlbutlona of many orpnbadclft -pert.ape people, the money a mutual fund that IMtUt funds an able to AnW1t1 in ltOCka or ~ )llll'CMle -=unu. that -and .. aptn. ThAI •r• ln auoh lar1• "nrappln1" option l1 deaomlnationl that anly uniqUe to mutual fund lnatltutlon• and th• Jnv.tmanta. .. When it's Business you can Bank on us. and of course we are a Full Service Bank extended hours for your convenience 9:00 to 5:00 Monday-Thursday 9:00 to 6:00 Friday 500-C Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, CA 92660 • {71•) tM0-5100 Town & Country at Main, Orange. CA 92668 • ~714) 558·3212 (falJtalnO ([rib le Open 24 Hours Breakf asVLuncWDinner tJ.f edit e 1111nea 11, CRoom Superb Continental Cuisine Cef'~ PA~ To Suit Your Every Need 10 to 600 Entertainment Nightly Happy Hour Mon.·Fri. SUNDAY CHAMRAGNE IRlf.tCH t; in the Mediterranean Room 10. 2 ur ., Irvine, 9'l715 (At John Wayne Airport) Hl«4 Bh.ai:l ,. The Maserati Quattroporte. Perhaps the ultimate auto· mobile. A select few are made for a select few fortunate individuals. You can be one of them See the Maserati Quattroporte now at Beach Imports • l ~L I L.J • ' n IMPORTS 848 Dove St., Newport Bea~ (714) 752-0900 Mom says, "San Marino Savings is big enough to be safe ... small enough to be neighborly. " I. No minimum or charscs on your inttre1t bdrina chcckina account l . Frtt checks l . No charaes for overdraf1s 4. Ttw tlmplest, fairest IRA plan for your retirement $. Pays you ~ 4't above the lnttrt$1 rate that the U.S. Trca ury bill$ pay Get lour money to San Marino Savings ~ Wna C'Ot" H1Jll•a1 NP"°" -..h. C1 9U6l 111•) .. J•tlU • ., iell ot.Mt .. ,..,._, <'* •110' lll)I ~,.,, .. llJJ H1tnlln11on l>r1•t Sell Merino, t:1 91 IOI t21U7t' •~ tlSWwt....,~1'4 M_...,C1'°640 (>IJl'7JU7JO $l7 8 Nor1h Clknd•lt Ae CMfklak, t e 912'H (21)).,. 'Oj2 )1'6 '°"''"" ~-' I• C1Nt1Me, ("1 tilt• 121h 2..a.MI)~ Corporat ladder Roa E . 011r1I~ ha1 been a ppointed dlatrlcl aale1 manaaer of Finl Ameri c an Tltle lntura~ c.ompany. The announcement wia made by A. W. "Bua" Smith, reslonal vlce prealdent ' and manaaer of Flnt American '1 Oranae County Title Division. Sonarath l• re1pon1lble for bwsinNa development in the Mlaaion Viejo, El Toro and Laguna Hills areu. Ore1ory A. Adr1k1 33, tlu bHn nameo controll r tor Jet Amt'rlllA Alrllneei. Andruk comer trom Contlnt!ntal A rllnoa where he 1trved H manaaer of finan cial plannins. Prior to jolnlna the airline Industry, Andruk held potltlona aa a financial analyst walh Dart lndu1tr(ea and Pacific Lighting and practiced as a certified public accountant wh.h Arthur .Young & Co. He holds a bachelor's degree In accounting fr om Utah State University and an MBA from the University of Southern California. Lorraine Attl1 was promoted to Senior Vice preslden t at He ritage Bank. Jtfflly JO~llOI WU allO promoted to •nior vice proaldent at H rhap Bank. Johneon, formerry vice preeld.nt of R .. 1 btate and Conat.rucUon Loana/ Airport Of fk'e, II now 1enlor vice ~t of Reel Eetate And Con1t.ructlon Loana/ Airport Of fie.. In thie pmltlon, he II respomlbfe for Interim conatructlon loans. long and ahort term real estate loans, 2nd trust deed loans, and la abo responsible for over •90 million in commercial, industrial and residential real estate loans . Johnson has been with the bank since 1980. CORNERSTONE CEREMONY -Costa Mesa Mayor Arlene Schafe r a nd David Blankenhorn, C.E.O. of. Commerce BanJc, cast their hands in a cornerstone block of cement symbolizing the "topping off" of Commerce Bank's•new South Coast Regional Office. Developer Henry Segerstrom (ta r right) and Gene Spindler of Prudential Lifo Insurance Co. (far left) look on. network Thi' ~raer of Or at • Wt1t rn 8av1na1 and NorthMn C alltornle -tia¥ini..-wa1 formally c:ompll>t.t.oq July 31, with Ort'at W 1tern aa the 1urvlvlna 011oclatlon, ann()unced Jam<'• F. Montgomery. chairman Ind ch ief executive.• of r~at Wc..'itern. 'Th e addltlon of Northern California's 61 otllcea bring• Orea~ W es t e rn '& branc h network tD a U>t.al of J.90 omces, lhe Jarget1l In the s tate. Great Westcrn'a t ota l a sset• were . lncreaaed tD $12.4 billion and ne t worth now exceeds $6~0 million. "It Is Important tp. emphasize that this lS 4 merger of two healthy associa ti ons, .. Montgomery says. ''The, Robert M. Patterson of Newport Beach has b een promo ted to assistant. vice president of First American Title Insurance Company, third largest title insurer in the nation. Attig was formerly vice president, f:mployee benefits and now she becomes senior vice president, employee ~nefits/investments. A s the firs t woman with the Bank to become a senior vice president, In the new position Attig is responsible for the Bank's investment portfolio. In addition, she is vice chairman of the Investment Committee; a member of the Salary Committee, the Senior Officers Committee, the Employee Incentive Audit Committee and th e Profit Sharing Committee. She has been with the bank since 1979. · Savings and · loan spokesman calls fo r. associations to work closely with bu ilders much larger Great. Western Savings now la uniquely po!itioned ~ better serve o ur 1.~ mtlhon borrowing and savings customer1;1 throughout California." An agr eem ent in principle for the two t'Ompanles to merge was announced Jan. 19, 1982, a nd appr o ved b y stockholders of both on June 29 . Patterson, who joined the firm in 1977, is director of sales for subdivision and commercial -industrial a cco unts of First American's Orange , County Title Division located in Santa Ana. He is a member of the Executives' Association of Orange County, the Newpo~ Beach Chamber of Commerce, Building Industry Association and Home Builders Council of Orange County. Jack J . Woodlock has been named vice _president -finance and chief financial officer for A irCal, the airline announced recently. Woodlock, 51, will be res p onsible for the airline's daily financial and accounting operations. Woodlock fills a position vacated by Andre C . Dimitriadis who left Air Cal in May, 1982, to accept the position of chJef financial officer at Western Airlines. Woodlock joins AirCal after serving thirteen years with Continental Airlines as vice president and treasurer. Additional past positions included two years as tax attorney for McGraw-Hill Inc., and eleven years as tax manager for American Airlines. J ack F . Wood, Jr., was appointed to the position o f central regional sales manager for Kwikset Division, Emhart Hardware Group in Anaheim. In h is new position Wood will be responsible for the management and sales of 15 states designate d ~s the Cen tra I Regio n by Kwlkset. Wood was Assistant Sales Manger for Northwestern Steel and Wire Company and National Accounts Manager for Tree Island Steel, Inc. R a ndy B e1cb, was appoi nted v i ce president/manager of El Camino Bank's corporate branch office at Harbor and Lincoln i n downtown Anaheim. BeRch has 25 years of successful banking behind him fr.om Installment lending in Norwalk to the big commercial credits in Los Angeles. Ronald D. Taylor, has been appointed to t he position of Advertising Manager for Kwikse t Division. Emhart H ardware Group, Anaheim, California, according to William Tell Thomas, Vice President of Marketing. Taylor brings to K wikset a background In the hardware industry. having served as Account Executive on six hardware industry accounts with three Orange County-based enci~ n"hls new ·posi tlon Taylor will assist in the direction a nd implemen t a t ion of Kwikset 's trade and consumer advertising, sales promotion a nd m e r cha ndising programs. He will also supervise and coordinate Kwikset's trade sh ows and co-opera tive advertising plans. Martba "Fltzgera ld w&S appointed President and Manager or the Bulk Sales Department for Betts E 11cro w Enterprises, Inc. Fitzgerald brings 11 years of complete etlCJ"OW experience to Betts, including such t-ulk sales specialties as Alcoholic Beverag e Co ntr ol •'INTRODUCING THE NEW MESA VERDE BUILDING IN COSTA MESA • YOUR CLIENTS AND EMPLOYEES bESERVE OUR OFFICE QUALITY AND ACCESSABILITY • YOUR BUDGET DESERVES OUR NEIGHBORHOOD RENTAL RATES • CALL US NOW TO GET YOUR CUSTOM OFFICE · SUITE READY FOR THE REBOUNDING ECO'NOMY I For Information Call: MESA VERDE LEASING WIN LIEVSAY A.tent TEL: (714) 833-0250 .. ... CLIENTS Who Are Looking For A Tll Fiii W8'j To Make Their Money Grow ....•.. Current lnt• .. t Rate 11.21% builders a.nd we these fund!J as collateral to finance land acquisitions pr devel o pm &n t activities. "The $4 million loss can be amortized over a period of years so that the Institution doesn't take the full brunt at one time. In the meantime, these r ea l est.ate investments can be used to generate fee income and real earnings quic kl y, m ore than enough to absorb the amortliation period of the real loss," h e concluded. Ross has been working with savings and loan associations around the country t o deve lo p strategic planning under the new regulations. Great W este r o Saving s . a !ederaJ.. savi ng s and loan association , i s the principal subsidiary of_ Great Western Financl~ Corporation, a NYSE- I 1 <>le d firm h ea d -, 4u<1rtered 1n Bever -. ly Hilb .California AAA rat.ct Anaheim Munlclpal by 8t•ndard Cerllftcate Bondi & Poore Of Partlclpellon -tt-_,......,.~~i'ttUH>ETAILS CALL OR MAIL TO: Crowall.V.J'~on ,. Co csr.-.•L•S"cn •9 ll M-'*· H-Yori< Stock E.cenanoe "...,. ________________ ~ -·------------------""°"41-Home ______ ,,_e ... ------- • ould you belie~ e . • • FINANCES CAN BE FUN! lllTRODUCING A NEW UPER CHECKING ACCOUNT · · Don't-Settle For An Old-Fashioned Bank Checking Account. UNDER $2000 •.. it look1 and acts like the state-of-the-art frff checking account you should havel _,OVER $2000 ... stand backl w e "sw eep" it all into a high-rate money- market investme nt d ailyl Reol checking occount conven~• ond doUy occess to your money. Write os mony clleds 01 you wont wti.never you wont, In any omount ... we outOfllOllcolly "sweep" ony bolonce obove $2,000 doily ond outomoticolly Into o high rote money market investment occ;0Ut1t. Your surplut funds outomotieolly eorn mooey morlet rotes without monogement 1 .. 1/without ''in ond out" paper w0<). To inveJt, simply open o "super checlc1n9 occount" ot ony of the conv9"1en1 Equitable offices. ---~--· ... EW YORK STOCKS CONTINUED s.lft -Mitll L.-'·I Mltlt ~ L.114 CJit "'!!° ~ AMERICAN S'rOCK EXCHANGE mtA ..... l*Lutl•IMll•ttlllie9 ..... ll .... 9',NCIM, .......... , .. ,he Cll9CIW .. fllf'ICil ..................................... , . •• ·I '•I '\II\\ MOfNNG lM(8)MOIM " * * "BrttkllHOUQll" ( 1979) Richard Bufton, Rod Sttlg9r. A Nazi -- Qetnl *-911\btollad In a plot to a.....inata Hit-..,, 'PO' &11 CZJ MOVll • • "Agency" (1981) Rot>-an Mltehum. LM Majore. The new head Of a maJ« ~ 9CIYw1141ino """ ' --. c:Nldl'9'1'• brMlllut ~ drlnll c;ampalgn to trenemll ~· eubllmlnal polltleal m.- • 8eQM. 'R' fi41 • CHAISTOPHER 1 ClOUUP t:oo. ~AHO THE 8POt<EH WON> !'I • YOUTH AHO THE I ll8UU ·i. ·~~ • • ''Land Of The Fr .... ( \970) Rot>e<t Culp. Bur- geu Mef.Ollh. A auepec:t- ; ed apy help• • boy looll tor hi• fathef during Iha war ol 1812. .MOVIE I • * "Captain Scari.tt And Tha Myeterona From Mara" (1981) Puppe11. c.ptaln Scarlett goat ln1o deep epac:e to atop tha dudly Myate<one from destroying Ear1h. 8:30. FOR OUR TIMES "Living With Oeelh: The Grief Pr~" Marlene Sa.ndera vlaita two mem- IMI<• of the etetgy who are helping adults end chM<lren I cope with the death of a loYed Of!!'. (Part 3) l =U\.LSI CAMP\18 PAOAl..E; vtlWPOINT OH NUT'NTION "Cell Degeneration" G-ta: Dr Franc:o Colum· bo, Dr. Davkl St..iblod<, .~~ f Herber1 K..,iow hoeta an examination of the kay temlnltt luuee In rellglon. 1=Ut..TURE U.8.A. * • "Lookar" (198\) Albert Finney, JamH Cob\lrn. The myaterlou1 dealha Of a Mflel of bellu· llful model9 ln\IOMl<I ln • 1 new edvefllslng project L ara blamed on the plutk: autgeon who opkated on them. 'PG' 'I=~~~ ~ COPB.AHD I Do\Y CW oe8COWRV • CAln'OOH8 ll ~~TH IUNOAYMASS MOVIE * * * "The Gtue Bottom Boal" (1"4) Dorta Day. Rod Taylor A ~ becon'-. ln¥0Ne<I with • gift who ~ M a mer- mtlcS pert-time. Cl) COUNTRY OOE8 TO I ENGl.AHO Mel Tlllls hOala Ihle country I mualc llC)9Clal filmed In England feeturlng Kris Krlatoffeftoo, J«ry l .. Lewie, Roy Or~. Boll Cw Wiiiy, T ettl Olbt>e end 811tySwen. (I)MOW! * * * "Shanghai EllP< ..... (1932) Matlene Oletrldl. QI.,. Broolc. p- l ~·on a treln lnclud· ~ Ing a doctor et>d an adwn- 7 lturM9 ~enegade9. WK1lCY AHO THE NJ80'T I ==~ ~AOOEA8(R) TV .. LOOKIAT LEAANliQ 9 WECTAUM 8'Tl4E WORLD TOtltOfllAOW .MOVIE * **'h "Trilogy" (19&9) ..._.., Stapleton, Mar11n ' 8e1Mm. Three llorlee by + Trum.n Capote are dr.,.,... atllied. I aUNDAY MON-.o THll•THE~ ~ PONnANO ...... l =Vle CNITOOH8 IU!CTAIC COMPANY ' . i~:;s~~ llNmt. WM> ANO .... ~ The lm2·lunll-fOCll group comtilne _,.,..... llnolnll With COIT\9l9ll ~ .. phy end llMhy epedel • "'9cta In • ~ I .,.i at the Oakland ea.. : r =" "' C>akland. Cell!Of. ... 00¥WY Outtta: Rell. Rlatwd a.. Ian. Eplaooptl priMt 8lld ooonllnetOt_ lof }~ ~-- e KNXT(CIS) e tcNBC INK> • l<TLA (Ind.) • l(A8C IA9C) e ti,M8fCH> e l(HJ-TV C 11'11.I ekCST (AICI e KTTV (l,,.S.) e ICCO-TV (Ind.I e 1CCU CNSt t eKOC• CNll TELETHON BOST -Jerry Lewis will host the annu al telethon, benefiting Muscular Dyst rophy, beginning at 6 tonight an~ ending at 3:30 p.m. Monday on KTl'V (11). • efn Ofhc• ot C11urcn and Sociely. Of ThomM D. Eng11a11, enoir-and con- au11an1 on envlronmen1111- ecotooteal eatlh IClencM; Jim Oown1ng and Ar1 Hob· ba, Churctt on Iha Way. Van Nuya; Prt.iOenl Ot Jamee A Sanders. Old Teatamenl aeholat and theOloglan. and Auoelate RIGhard D. Wela. Ancient Blbllcal Manusc:rfpt Center al the SchOol of Theology, Claramont I PEOPLE7 MEETING TIME AT CALVARY I FREOERICK K. PAtCE ELECTRIC COMPANY (R) I THELAHAYES KNOW YOUA Bl8lE lWO OAHOEAOUS LADIES Two apjneo-Ungllng l&leS of two ~utllul and myaterl- ou1 ladles; one wapeeteCI ol praeuclng the ~t. lhe Olher a -llhy woman on a atrangty cs-led lllaod. (%)MOYIE • * * "The Waler Babiell" C 1979) Animation and ~ aeUon. JamM Muon. A courageooa young boy aavea Hveral playful ocean creatures 11 om the -ath Of und-ter -- mlea, t:OO G NEWS CONf£R£NCE • A.M. LOS ANGELES THl8WEEK • Cl) OAAl A08EAT8 • 8E8AME STREET (R) ~ IT IS WRITTEN ~MOVIE * * • "Return 01 A Man Called Horse" ( 1976) Rich- ard tiams. Gate Sonder· gaard An En(jlllh Lor<I relurna to Ame<lc:e wtMra he learns that the Sioux Indiana whO Initiated him Into their tribe haYe loet 1"'91r rnode61 pr-to tr~• (8)MOVIE • • "The Pilol"' (1980) Clill Roberl10n. Diena Bak• A pllOt tuma to drinking to MCape the unNpplMN of hi• IT*'- rlage and the lruatratlon of hll c:ateer ·PG' t:aO !~ACE THE ICllMEETTHE~ PAY OIF Dl8COYERV THE WOftl.D TOMOAAOW 9 KEHNETH COPELAND (l)MOVIE • • • "Elm" ( 1979) Ku<t Ru .... I, Season Hubley. EM• Prealey ri-trom poYefty and ob..:urlly lo achieve lame and fortune ea a aupe<atar mu&leal per. former. .MOVIE * * ~ "Matnmle Daara.t" (1981) Faye Ou111way, Ola. na Searwld Forties lllm atar Joan Crawford rait. her two adopted children In • clomMlk: •t"'°'9he'• thal varies from luJW<loul ~orl 10 Mdlatlc: dlld- pllne. ·PO· 10:00. NEWSMMERS GUMll Ttw• minor perty CMdldat.. for Gcwern«. Ellubelh Martinez.. J- Grilfln and Den~-8 ONCAMPUS "A Spec:lat Tribute To 0-ge Fenneman .. • MOVIE •• * "11'1 A Gift" (1~) W.C. Fields, Baby !Moy. A grooery atore owner Inher- it• an orange plarltatlon. ~ I ~T09ASC8 HEllAl.O OIF TAUTH MXHUM8AAO ~LAWMAICEM CorrHpondenta Linda Warthelme< and Colli. Roberti Join PllJI Dulle lor an up.to-th4Mnlnuta sum· mary of CongreHlonal ectlYtlt.e. • MMMC OIF Oil PAINTING I~ WIB<l.Y tO:tl CJ) MOW • • "Agency''( 1N 1) Rob- ert Mlt<:tlum, Lee M .... The new heed of a rNllor Amerleen ec:twnlell1Q firm -a ehlldren'• bn!Mlaa1 dflnlt ~to transnlt aubllmlnal polltlO.i ,_.. C'R' 10:ao .,,..ACE A"'8 OIF A11A 8 KID9MI TO(> (01 On·TV Cll Z·TV (It) HBO lt.l (Clnem.1111) lfJ IWO,_) N Y., N.Y, f1J IWT8SI II > IHPNI Ill ("-tfmt) • 5"tlleht • <C*e ..... '"'-•• ' Guetla Jon ··eowa., .. Bauman, comedian Pat Hurley, Linda Gray (R) I R08E.RT SCHULLER J£RAY FALWELL OPEHMIHO MAGIC OIF OIL • PAIHTINO 8 CHICO AHO THE MAN 11:00 8 (I) NOAA FOOTBAU PREVIEW A look al Ille upcoming aeaaon with Interviews, IHIUr•• and hlghllgh•• 0 TALKA80UT PICTURES • MOVIE * • • "Nol Wllh My Wile. You Oon'I" fl9681 Tony Curtla, Vlrn1 Utl An Air F0<ca major suddenly reai. lzea that ooa or hl1 friends •• peytng ITIOf9 allentloo to his Wife than he Is • MASTERPIECE THEATI\E "Otatae!f• The Chief'' Tha aging Olar aell Is eleYlled 10 Iha House of Lords and laces one of hta grealat1 dtplon'latle ehallenget •• the Suez oonnk:t (Pan 4) (R)O G ftA8HtHOTOH WEEK IH AEVtEW (R) 8MOVIE * * '+ Glfl Happy" (1Ge51 EM& PrHley, Shell8y Faoarea. TNI leader of a moaicat ~,. atalgned to keep an aye on a club owner'• daughter (C)MOVIE • •'" "Adem'a Woman" ( 19721 Beau Brldgea, JOhn Miiis A wroogly lmpr11- on8d aallor a ttempta to win his releaae by marrying an lnlluenllal woman (8)MOVIE • • "The lrlahman" ( t978) Mleh ... Crelg, Robln Nev- in A proud lrl1hman reluMI to yield lo progr"' wnen hi• ooslneea u a INl'fllter la threatened by motot11e<1 tr•nac>o<tatlon 11:30 D SUNOAY Location Frank G Bonelll Park, Sat1 Dimaa • BASEllAU California Angela 11 MtlWeukM er-• • 9 TIM WEEK wrTH DAVIO BAINKLEY • TtAAY COl.E- WHfTTAKEA • CHURCH IH THE HOME G WAU ITAEET WEEK "Al'flefica Flrat?" GUet1 DouglN F. LamonL dean Of the College ol Buslneat Admlnlalratlon al RooM- Yelt lJn4Yefslty (R) AFT£RH()()H 12:00 • TEHNt8 "U.S. Open'" Ulre COY9t'· age of earty round match· .. from the Unlle<I Stat .. Tennla Auoctatlon Nellon· al Tannla Center. Flushing Meadows-Corona Perk. N Y .. 8EAACH • GAEAT OUAln'EABACf< 8HEAK • PAPER CHASE ··~ Mote Wllh Ftellng" A 1ew p.ofeaaor (Robert Reed}" glvw • top atudent • low uam ICOfe arter lhe rllfu-tUa advancea. G POmlWTSIN PASTn.8 "Spring Water" Cl) THIS WEEK lH MSBAU (D)MOVIE • • "Runaway lal1nd" MHee Buehan..., Simone Buchanan In 183ot Aul- t ralla, lwo young1tar1 eecape tha clutchM ol a corrupt gOYernor Cl)MOVIE * * "The Man With 8ogart'a Face" (1980) Rob«I Sacclll, OIMa HUf- aey. A man decides to change hll llleatyle and phyateal appuranoe to r-ble hit aereen Idol 'PG' .MOVIE • * "SOio" (1978) Vlflcent Gii, Petty Atlftltfong A !tercel)' ~t Au .. trellan woman MIO work• u a foreat ranger ~ ln¥04Y9d with • fire pilot CI>~ • * * * "Robin Artd Mari- an" ( 19711) Bean Connery, Avdfett ~ An older and wle« Robin Hood returna from battt. to Sher1111ood For .. t to reclelln IM btlo-..ct Maid Mtrien, WllO hat tt"..O e C4111Wftt IWld .... .., '* \<owt 'P'O' 1UO. °"*1TIONI "~ Two Worlds· Tne~Mlan~" Harbert K~ eHmlnea the l)llOllt of AmerMlan chllck9n wllo .,. ffequent • ty aubjecl«I to pr9judlce 9'ld 91(1)1o1ttitlon. (Al • MCNIS ··~ ........... ~' U." ( Uff 1) MIClltl Ltn'IOIM, .. Wit Pit """ 1.-==~:. ...... ~MDMa , ' a..-~ 2:11 • NEWS 2:30 ~Y'S flB.JOION MOW • *"' "8HI Friends" ( 1975) Richard Hetd1, Doug ctlee>ln. During • trfp to Callfoml•, an emotton- llly dlatreeeed ~ man trt.e to dee1roy NI beet !fiend'• retatlooahlp with his glrtlriend 'R' 2:'90 a:> MOYie * • • "The 0-. eottom Bott" ( , ... , Dol1ll Day, Rod Taytcw. A phY*Mt ~ ln\IOMld wltfl • girl who ~ ... --mMd par1-11me. t I Otangt Oout DAILY PtLOT/8unday, leptember 5, 1812 ,_ ____________________________________________________________ __, ......... """""'!~"!""""'--------~,....---.. Actor·Richard Th omas wi ll portray Hank Williams Jr. in a television movie made in Nashville. Not exactly a 'Valley Girl' By YARDENA ARAR "-lated P,... Writer LOS ANGELES -Is Moon Zappa really a "Valley Girl?" Gag me with a spoon! No way a'oes the daughter of veteran raunch rocker Frank Zappa talk like the squealing nincompoop on lhe record .that's sweeping the country. "I myseU am not a Valley girl, but I guess that is my claim to fame," shrugs the 14-year-old ·vercedes Benz , Brand new a nd beautlful mid-size Sedan with turbo engine. Cla881c white · with palomino leather Interior, electric aunrrof, stereo-cassette and . alloys. 3000-T. Call Virginia 714-645-4800 ,,.._._.,.= .. -~-.. .. f/I r-:1!' _,.,......,.,, - M.L MIU Al*rn'ID a....--- Zappa, whose everyday speech is deliberate and squeak-free, and who lives with her family in Laurel Canyon and not the San Fernando Valley, truit 'vast Los Angeles suburban sprawl that insr'ired the record. · "Valley Girl" started out as a cut from "Ship Arriving Too Late to Save a Drowning Wit.ch,·· lhe latest album by Frank Zappa, but has since See MOON, Page E% Clllllf IED · John Boy goes .country t By JOE EDWARDS A-lal41d ,,.., Wrll1t NASHVILLE, Tenn . Richard Thomas, besl known aa • John Boy on ''The Waltona," {>Ortrays country mualc alnaer Hank Wiiiiama Jr. In an upcoming television movie he describes as a compelling character study. Williams,' whose father la a country music legend, had lo overcome the stigma of living up to his father's accomplishments. He turned to liquor and pilla and attempted suicide. But juat as he built his own Identity, he suffered a n ear -fatal fall of£ a Montana mountain in 1975. He fell 500 feet and literally scraped off his face. He battled back from that, relearrung. among other things. the basics of talking, and is now one of lhe top stars in country music with hits like "All My DAil Y •:ao, 1:30 ~--DAILY 2:21. t:al. 10:11 fA!'f f!Mr1 AT ltlOGIMONT HIGH 2:00, l:IO. t:OO "THE SOLDIER" I 2:tl, t:ao, 10'.20 R owdy Friends," "Famllr, Tradition,•• "Eleven Roses, • "Dixie p n My Mlnd," "Texas Women," "Whiskey Bent and Hell Bound,'' "A Country Boy Can Survive" and m08t recently "Honky Tonk.In'." Thomas, who star-red on "The Waltons" on CBS for five years, saya all thla adds up to an Intriguing story. "It's a fascinating ch aracter atudy and a gripping story," the actor sar.s of the film, ''Living Proof." 'It's the flip side of the country music fairy tale. It's a different kind of story about this business. "He was born with everything -a famous nam~, money, a career. He had everything except the capacity to be his own man. "Another thing that makes it fascinating is that h e had an almost complete physical change as well as a personal change," "THI WORLD ACCOftDING TO GAAP" DAILY 1:11, 1:00 "HOME WORK" TljE "BEST LITTLE o1:':'.:..~ (R) WHORRHOUH" "THI euT LITTU WH<>ttfHOU. IN TUM" (Ill ' DAIL V 4:10, 1:11 .. TitE 80LDIEft" DAILY ~. t::IO, 10:28 POLTERGEIST-I!!! OAILY4:00,e:OO T.~Ot~m "THa •AaT MA8TRR" DAILV1~.-. ... td&~m DAILY 2:41, l:to, 11:00 . POLT.ERGEIST ,.!!! DAILY ~.l.1IO ,.llAiKltS OF THE LOST ARI(" tNI 1:00. WI. 10:a0 on "TEMPEST" ""' 7:11, 10;IO ••TleuM. 1HI, 2l40, 1:11,. .... .. Thomas says. "lt'a a bold film for televiab'l. It'• exclUng and It 1how1 a Vet)' Interesting world. It movea quJckly." The 31-year-old Th~ doeea 1 little singing in th e mo\la.t, ; though he, professes that oper-..la t his favorite form. He even *-9 I some hard drinking -certabi11 ' out of character for John Boy,;·. ! "I really toye Hank'• mumc," : he says. "He's original, and he hu : a powerful voice. He forged ~ • own ldentlty at the forefront:of country· music. I like country music, but I never knew u much l about it as I do now," the ad« 1. says. 4 • • • J Will ia m s, who had an : unprecedented seven albums. on • the country music c~ at~· l last fall, has hlnied that aclor r Jeff Brld~es Wtlll his choice 10 ' protray him, but says he has tull I failh In Thomas. ' ..., .. ,,,,.., P'\OlfAM8 ... ., .... ~· Orange Co11t DAIL V PIL.OT /Sunday, 89C)temb9r 6, 1082 Moon Zappa not exactly a 'Valley Girl' ' 1-'rom Pua El be<'OOlt' u vt•1 y hol alnitl~ · To ba<."karound mualc nnd l'hOrUH by Zappa 1.ind his band, Moon dcllvPret a aerie• of "l~cNpeak" monoloKucs on such iv-omcntous topil'S aa lhc dcllghl.!I of 11hoppmg al lho Sherm.on Oeks Galleria, "h'1, like, IO bltchen cuz like everybody's, like, 11uper super nice" and the ugony of having to do lhe dishes " ("H's ltke, 0110mebody el!K-'s food . . Grody to the max!"), Her verbal mt'andrrings have anfecled the national voc•abulary walh Huch expressions as "lubulnr" (('001, hip), "grody" (grOdS, disgusting), "for sure" (you bN!) and "totally" (an all- purpose spe<.'<'h flll.:r). Already the song hus inspired musical spinoffs -"Valley Dudes" by the Straight· A's, "Marina Men" by lhe Valley Girls, and, Crom Hawaii, "Palolo Valley Girl" by Da Mokettes - plus a "Valley Girl" poster and "The Valley Gulde to Reality" paperback, which next to the hel.1ding "museum" shows a closed General Motors planl in Van Nuys. Bock to the sonf{: "It was my falher's idea," Zappa said. "See, I'd come home speaking the Vl)l.ley lmgo after haVlng met doi.ens and doi.ens NOW PLAYING COSTA MESA Cl TORO fOUNUIN YAlUY low.no· fh .lo! f ll'N 1t(1 .u)CJ!t h.tt"' t Ow,trO J Oullld~ll VJht''f '14[1 (441 '•"I ·,~HO 8J'l 1 ~OU COSTA MlSA I tJw,1111 i:.nrm.1 Cr111t1 97q 4141 l NO 'AUfS ACCl.PUO '0A fHll f_HOAOEM[N_!] ----------------- nu Mant<B1uPl.ll• 529 ~339 COITA MHA Edw~OS HMllOt 1.,., 631 3501 GAllDE• GllOH DMllGE ~!llrOOil • .-¥C 0t41'Qe Md )JO n o1 637 0340 ORANGE City Ctn1t1 1714) 634 928? "'The Chosen' ... .One of the year's best!'.' • .)j)ll11}y1 ~ M""BSfiAOIOO"'<lwPll IV I' .,_. ~•-<&A&Ma • .., ,.. t tun JO:. ~ .EXCLUSIVE o.c. ENGAGEMENT SAT·MON. 1:30, 3:.45, 1:00 8:15, 10:15 edwards LIDO CINEMA Hl!W,.ORT llVD. AT VIA LIDO MEWPOllT HACH 61l·ll50 THE ORIGINAL IS DACK. ' of Vall y girl• and al*>rbc>d ~vc;rythlna that I'd ov rh~ard from p11rll •ind bar mltzvatui and thf' Oallcrla. ''Tht-charoct<'r 1 creau.'Ci wa» a collt"Cllon of th08C.' vi.lley stria, a flcUlloua l'horuc!4lr ond a lot of fun." "He's not putUn.i Vala down," she udd~'Ci of her lanky, mwttAchloed father. "llo wrote the -t0ns-aad then he asked me If 1 would lmprovlee over what was already recorded and just do tracka of just 1tralght talk. "And IO l just babbled on about my toenalls and bondage and whatever elae. We just made five tracks of ju1t atralght talk ancf then he edited the parts he wanted to uae." Zappa, whoee brown hair and eyes mirror her mother Gall'• looka more than her father'•, said she was somewhat s urprised when the record started being played nationwide. "I thought that basically the aong would take off In L.A. because It was our inside joke about people who live In Encino," she said. But it seems the Valley is by no means the only place where teen-age girls talk in jargon. Zappa recalls a conversation with one disc jockey in Toledo, Ohio. POLTERGEIST ~ It knows what~::::·.~:::... ~ NOW PLAYING ANANllM COSTA MlU •ClllANG( •wESTMIHTlll f d#•ld C•l<ttll• Crn•ct AMC Otano<! M~I EOdtd> Cini'm<I We•1 ll<oollllU\I L llll• 11u11n 6446 q19 4U1 b37 0340 891 3935 COSTA MlU ldwa1d\ lawn Ctllltl 1~1 4184 ll TDllO Cd"'ild\ S..oa>ebJ< • ~a1 ~aao ·~ OllHGf UA C11y C1n4!m' 6343911 IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN rT- YOU'VE MISSED THE BEST LOVE .STORY IN A LONG TIME •.• IF YOU HAVE SEEN rr- ISN'T rr TIME TO FEEL GOOD AGAIN? .n,,.Olll IEACH Of'AllGE Eawaids Newpo11 Cneclome 2"9 5339 c-644 0760 634 2~5:1 llllSSIO• fllJO EOwatlb V1t10 fwlfl 830 6990 AIWlll• COITA •IA _, ... , .. IUCll WHTMIUTIJI fllwatdS Cinema Wes1 891 3935 NO-t.OCUTCO ~Oll.)M• llOQ,\QDllOll l'aeil•<°S -°""' .. l.--1 .. ftc.o .. (---....... ~ llt 1100 ISi •ti• 1•1 O:IH lllU ll TOM LAIWllA INACll -fliH "'"11 [Ow-5-INO (Owllf> Sowl• Coltt U9 !>llt Ht SHO •14 U14 COi TA •IA IAlllC• lllOft t ...... w""'°"" UO 001 tdW-C-Coo• .. ,,. 4141 from Jiii( CARS to MOVIE STARS ·--....iACT• ... Mll•CMlm,..,_ .. • "l did 1 alaUon ID for hlm, and l talked to him on tho phone, and he uld that the people in Ohio, the farmen, caU«t and uld, 'Let me ht-ar that IOn& again, lho vUlagera 10und Jutt like tJu1t.' "Everybody hu their own Valley girl, every city haa thulr own 1peclal little lingo," •he said. Th Zappa clan al.lo 1eema to havo Ill own ~pedal language. The family dog la named- IJogca, Moon'• brother la named DweezU, and Zappa pull out hill own recotdt on hls Barking Pumpkin label. HAMEIM COSTA MHA fUlU"TOM ORANGE 8'00kl\1>1st fdwatds Town Cen1e1 Fo• Pac1hc's 0Wtot Duve In 77211446 75t 4194 525 4747 634 9361 llllA Mann Brea Plua 529 5339 wo •uan &CCl'tlD f011 T ... 111•0M1l•t•• Tiie lletum of the Great ...,,.nture. *BARGAIN MATINEES • Monday thru Saturday All Ptrlorm1nc11 before 6:00 PM jEllcept Spec__ill Enp911111nt1 1llcl Holld1y1) LAKEWOOD CENTER WALl<·IN "THE JUNKMAN" '"°' ____ ,__ lAl<EWOOO CENTER SOUTH WAl ll IN "HOME WORK""" ................ A~~·~! '-' ANAHEIM 01uv1 IN .... wow ti ot l91"W>ft St "AN OFFICER ANO A GENTLEMAN" 1•1 tl..tl,,_ ...... ,... •ntl HAST MAST'Eft" CJll .... ""' .. •THE a0l.04Elr 1•1 ......... fo cu11y 01 Co11<11ewoo0 21J/H1·9610 •THI •STUTTU Wtt0ft£HOUH .. TEtAa• llU ,_ ...... __ _ "flOC1tJ.! ~ ':" :.:.--•fOX,._.. !NI-•,. __ I --- "fMIAY ntR UTI4 PA/ff r1111 IUD -----·- ---.-•-7_f_·_f _l _50 ___ -r---Cf!!!.!'~ -- _,lllDAY THI 1-. PAltT a !•l -"TMI MAaT lllAaTlll 1111 cwn- I •t ,.,.A f'AQJ BUENA PARK OlllVI IN Ur.c•f\ A .. Wetl Of lftelt 121-«>70 R I ·~Ii f' A Ii' l LINCOLN OlllVE IN lttliC-olft A•• .... Of I M" 121·~70 I ;NIA1,.,, FOUNTAIN VALLEY OlllVf IN $01\ o .. oo ,....., 01 •-'""'" lk> I "ntR ~ll&AW' --~ ..... COMD9._ c ... k- "I. T • ntR DTll.A• TIRMSTlllAL • --"nta QMAT ~C~(Ol ..,AaT T9ma AT NOQDIOWT HICllM" 11111 -"TMI HOU. VWOOD ICJllGHTt• 01t ff2•24fl C•"f 11 - "CtmCtl I CMONO TMNGa AMI TOUCltl~ OWll'' (111 •ZAPND" 1111 CIMll- •THICM~"Clll "fM! ... aNAaTUI" !Ill C-II IOljOIO " .. "~ .. LA H A El~A ,,.,~, '" --·--·-..... 171-1162 .. ' 0 11ANG E 0111\-J IN ~-:c: ~ ::'..:O~ J 191-3693 - "ttOMI :,.o-· c-1 "NllVATI L1aa0Na• 1t11 :nOl.lf'°""° --- •LT.THI~ ,..,_.TNAL !"I -"TMl QMAT llUPNT CANR" tel l f M.IO MOTICl .. HAllOll UWl4-MT. OLIVI Mortuary • Ceme1erv Cremalorv 1625 Gosier Ave Costa Mesa S40·5554 PIHCI HOTHEIS IElL HOADWAY MOI TUAIY 110 Broaowav Cos1a Mesa &42·9150 I.AL n & IHGHOH SMITH & TUTHILL WESTCLIFf CHA,IL 427 E 171h SI Costa Mesa 646-9371 PIHCE l lOTHUS SMITHS' MOITUAIY 627 Main SI HunllnQton Beach 536-6539 P'ACIFfC VIEW MEMORIAL, ..... Cemett-rv Mortuarv Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1l1c View Drove Newpart Beach 644-2700 , _, Nil.IC M>TICE . • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/lunday, September 5, 1912 NOTICI OF SALi OF RIEAL PROPERTY The City of Huntington Beach I• ottering the tollowlng property tor ••I•: ASSE'*IORB PARCEL: LOCATION: ZONE: MINIMUM BID: AS8EB80R8 PARCEL: LOOATION: ZONE: MINIMUM BID: ASSESSORS PARCEL: LOOATION: ZONE: MINIMUM BID: ASSESSORS PARCEL: LOCATION: ZONE: MINIMUM BIO: 153-421.01 AAIA: AoofOlC. e,ooo eq. tt. 18012 LlndMy Ln .. Huntington IMch, CA R·1 (RM!d«lllal) se 1.200 (8t•tr Ont Thouund Two Hundred Doll'11 114.150,43 ARl!A: ApproJC. 1.20 acrff 8871 Edl1<>n Ave .. Huntlngto1t S.ach, CA M·2 (lndullrlal) S1U,210 (Ont Hundred Flfly·tWo Thouund T'wo Hundred TWentv Dollart) 025.040.08, 11,AIEA: Approx. 1.30 ec:rM 1301 Alabama St., Huntington Beach, OA R·2(~tlal) 1844,000 (E.lght Hundred Forty-1111 ThouNnd OOHart) 024.080-02 AREA: Approx. 1.15 1cr" 704 Lake St., Huntington S.ec:h, CA R·1 (R .. ldentlll) S586,eoo (Five Hundred Slxty-llve Thouaand She Hundred Dollars) SEALED BID$: Sealed 6ld1 wlll be opened In Room B·6, Huntington e.ec:h Civic Center, 2000 Main Street on Thurlday, September.SO 11182, at 2:00 P.M. All bldl must Include • c11hler'1 or certified check made payable to the City or Huntington Beach for 10% or the bid amount. ORAL BIDS:. Oral btd• wlll be called for and received •"er the opening and rM<tlng or ... led bids. Suen cnl blcn-muat eJCeeed the highest Maled bid by at le41t five PtfC«tl (5%). Sealed bid• mu1t be on flle to .be eligible fOf' Of'al bidding. · . TERMS OF SALE: Sale• wlll be In CHh • 10"/o of purchaae price payable upon acceptance or bid with the balance due within 30 days. REJECTION OF BIDS: · The City reserves the right to reject any and all bide. The tuOCMaful bid for the Edison Ave. p1rcel It tubJeot to the 11t right of refutll of the 111l1t1ng tenant on the lite. INFORMATION ANO BIO ACCEPTANCE: Area plat maps, apprlllll and title lnlOf'matlon la on file and avlllable for lntpectlon In the office of the City Clerk. All bid• mutt be submitted to the City Clerk, addreued .. follows~ Allcla M. Wentworth, City Clerk P. 0. Box 190, 2000 Mafn Street Huqtlngton Beach, CA 92648 Telephone (714) 536.5404 SEALED BIOS MUST BE FILED WITH THE CITY CLERK PRIOR TO 3:00 P.M. MONDAY SEPTEMBER 27, 1982. \ . CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH Alicia M. Wentworth, City Clerk 1 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 p I . L .• 0 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ~.Mii ••.•.•••••• ~.'11.1111 ••.••.• IOUAI. HOUtlHG OllllOlnUNITY ................... All real eeta.. ldVtl'tlt-ed In thlt newepeper 11 tub)lct to the Federel '•Ir Hou11no Act or · 111M which mlk .. 11 11-legal to ldvet11M "eny preferenc41, llmlt1tlon or Oltcrlmlnatlon beeed on raoe, COior, rellglon, M X or national origin, or any Intention to mike any IUCtl P<el•ence, II· mltatlon or Oltctlmlnatle>n." Thia newtpaper wtH not knowingly ec~pt eny .overtltlng '°' rlel ... tat• wttlcl'I It In Yiolatlon of tl'le lew. ~~¥. •....•.•• 1.ftl 111 CROWN POINT • SPYGtASS HILL 8upetbly oon1truottd aateo eetate on elmoet ~ ICfl with l()eciec:ulet view.. 11,tOQ.OOO. 11 ...., ,.... .,.......,1.1 .. (WM 11-.) See large eel In SetUf • ct•Y Dally Piiot A.E. MCtlon. .............. . ....... 111-"" 111·1111 :.-· 1111111 Advertla ~~~~~~ era ahould check = their ads dally and repor\ errors Im- med I at e I y . The DAILY PILOT aa- aumea llablllty for the first Incorrect Insertion only. . ..... "',.,. ..••...•.•..•......... ... , ,,,,,. •••••••••••••••••••••• ltHtll Ill. •••••••••••••••••••••• LOOI II HFAILT And mutt tell now. Llgtlt end llty 3 8drm home. Enjoy the OCMrt brHzet. Bike to th• bMCtl from 11111 Marina HlglllanO• home. Prtc.d at 1120,000, wttlch It 15,000 below IPP<8IUI price. Mutt NII I~ Olatety. Tiie• advantege, clll nowl 548-2313 THE :REAL ESTATE RS THE :REAL ESTATERS ------ T R,\DI TIC)\, \I RL\I T\ 1111,111 IUMlll IDIOlll Cuatom home With pool. Super vtew of Newport'• upper Beck Bay and city llght•I 4 Bdrm 2 bath bargain. Cell now! 646-7171 THE 'REAL ESTATE'RS ..:: ~· IWIU ·:: 1111111 ·:· B11utlfut upgreded • Mff• Verde 2 ttory: Prime oomw lot. ~ family room, big. blf bdrm•. CO¥t(ed pet'4r beautiful ground•· Owner may contlder • large 2nd Trutt Deed . CIM 54&-2313 THE :REAL ESTATE RS ...... PrHtlglOUI four b•· droom tlome. EJl\lnllW bUllt-lnl. POOi allll ywd with guebO end off- atrMt oertclnO for llx cart. Liberti flnendngl :... RANCHO SANTA 1416·og1•1• FE ~~~~ ............. ~~~-= ;:, ':'::n:1 :•y ; year. "you • ~ per that'• not 911uno 1211,000. Cell owner •t 111ec1, ... It now -"" • 114/456-7911 CIMllfted Ad. _..;;...;.:.,;.......;.;....~~~~-~c• Ortno• Ooul DAILY PILOT/Sunday. S.,lembe< s. 1912 !~•m.~~ ...... . ~A«•t ........ !.~f lfllliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiliillll• I ::•;m., •H•... E ~·!:! Prloed '"°'*!161 bt10W .~"&,.,.I~ IMOfl view of OOMfl, !Mftlell llllt pool home redWOOd pello l IP4lt mountain• a canyon• .wt1 llM flnanclnQ end hand.om• btfJk lrpto, on Mfen41 008 '°'' .. M1W terme. lhoJd ti. atre lg 2 otf gerege llno. Apprelud at over •140,0001 Cell to• w/'#lne o.llM Ot dlftl tO.l ,000, now 800, 09'141-111' rm. MU•I .... AIAI'. 000 .fiil\D l~::.a~o~v.~!!~y~~~.~d~~~2~,!!!. :.:t1l. .?=l~::.C~ ...... l\Of!'!'• lrg lrM elllded ll'IOdeMCI bMUtyJ CO.le yrd, panelled l1mlly MML MoUvaleo Miier. lttHI ffl M.r room, HCluoed pello off t1H,to0. &1n•9'e. fie...... Melt Bdrm. Super f'io. • HUT ·-ror .,.. et on1y 111t. • _.. toO. 761-3111 .. , ... ·•··· 38r. 2bl, 2'70 cleo vi.w. $315.000 , .. " c=.•,t I I 1 I -1-" ~ l\~f 1111 I~ I II ', 4 Br 3b1. $3711,000 F .. -------- l<o,,1 m"I/;,., 1<11" ft 01' 714-641-8629 111•... -.. uu 11111"1 .. , .... llt •• ,.,.. -AWAM) WINNI" -'' OoMn ~ I llidfm, 4 lpeolout Ht • 2~11, Hug• on• 1toty, 4 be, kit wloon'ltlllef.i.e, redwc>Od patio l IP•. bdrm t inti. bHOll, lem. rm, lg• oarctan, hand~om; brick ltplcl, prHt\g1oue n1lghbot· r.t~1 tormal din. rm, atr~_J _ _..1o•r gerd'O! hood, wllllllnO dlltanoe ""· rrn. Quiet cM-w1 ...... ..-ar or "" l!dl1on HI 1011001 ... .. .. o H11.000. ly rm. Muel ••II A8A,, bOHtl 11uge flll'I rm, owner. 646-eMO dble IOI OOdOOI LUIU>• 17S-441 t 111 .. /HIH •Hll rtoue c:= lllr~ Yll • ~'eo~noent hofn. '~~ .._.., •11111 /. ... LeHe/OpUon or Pur· ueumab .. IOan et only T:'ll.: •••• r.-::: ••••• ~~J OhaN. VOUR new ta&O ~. ... 111J. aq, f1, (pk.II dbl gareot ~I 191·to01 Neille 0111 AMoh, IUXU· w/open«) Del\11ce Con• Eva a wttnd• 84l-400t rlou1 new oue lom do. OrHt park elde l\Oml. HMl109 vttw. BIO loclllon, ne•t to all 4br/2ba , tOSK. owner ~. &IQ room1. 4 oar •hopping l th11te0r1. wlll help fin. 10381 g111age. Hbl'M pr0f*1y. lnol. ell emenlllel. P. M 1 1 k e I. o 1111 • 14 4 4 , Wiii rrlde your hoUte or portunlly 10 eta(t OW· 497·1037 ?? $515 000. nll'el'llP w/qulllly 110mt11-.;....------1 .. ..:. ... • t II w/lu Mvlng1. 11'1•• IHf -• 1141931-1101$11 01 ..... ftii............ 11•-111t.01oe t-42-2ooo. ._ POOUllO VIEW IT.al IT Turti.roctl, •Int flnano• •-"·--'il'--.1 1.-• Ing, own« wlll carry 0t 3 br. 1V• ba, AC, up-..s-•1 ... _.., • ~........ -1 e•-"aninoe •2aaooo gradu. a 1 to.ooo. Ill n. ••NIT Unmf BOAT ON THE BAY. Pl.AV ON THE OCEAN. 8paclout. open & tunny tll vi.w home w/ pll\Ol'amlo *k•. on huge prl~ leland Point. • docking & prkg gllore + you own the land. + owner flntnclngl •'' for 1085,00 4028 Ch•nn•I Pleet. Ntwport 1111nd. Newport Beach. 873.0202. __........ ................ -------.......... Oa•et herM 4Br. 3ba. p<>ol. leciuzzl. $475,000 IMM/hold or $892,000 lu. Call 876-5930 ··;rmii'wiiiii .. 3e,"2"·:A;.. or,~ cioL.DfN. PROPEATIEs ,_95_1_.3_20_1. ____ _ Exclvtlw 8elb0a leland T1nore, 831·1288 or (714) 7112.-11189 ----------------home. For dltelll, m _113_1_-2_71_1 ____ 1 _____ ......;_.-.,_ltlll ____ .. --l~~.!'M.!!! . .J.~f UM llLI 11111 Ull Jul\ llued-front row vl1w. LOwHt priced "I:" Plan 3 Br, famUy room. 1197,000 A.umt loenl. Submll on dwn . u.o Vit1a Oma(fa pu,ooo Open S.VSun/Mon 1-~ IPI "'{lll/Mll 95~182; ev9 u~ 2 ~~~LI~ :c;r:.1t,' fet'oo~· !,:~ YILLlt!~!~~lll 111 YI& UH •I IHI II• 1-1 llUllY lftU. . l1TUl11Yf and ownet wlll help wtlh dn, l lOl2/mo. total. No OLD WORLD Prime Lldo Nord bayfront. 5 bdrm, 5'A r.=======!!!!!!!!!:::, .... •----,._1 111--, • -y aCSdlllof\al ftnand~. Full ,_P __ ..!f',!', ~c 4• nomuqvltl~ TOWNHOMES ba•'-L L R 2 boa .:.ti $1 500 000 ----& ··-.. _..... _, ........ WI, ge • " l Bl ps • I • ·"'-rt .......... ___ .... +MODERN Af>T. r:ice II only $13 ,500. ·-.cs.. Adult eomm By Howard Mark Co. li.'W~ * 675·5930 * ..., - -N •-...... 000 w t on' I wall, c all -.... · · from •1"'9000 r .... ,., ..,..... . wlpool, l•e & 11g111aes •9.. ..... • • " 7• &I\ ......... Remodeled 3 bdrm 2 bath+ 1ar ltrales "" I ... bltn l1bu10u1 llnanc:lng. 979-5370 NOWI tennle c11. Owner/bkr, 1_ .. _~_..,_ ..... ___ ...,.._ .... _.,_.. ' ge rec. rm ••.L 11 _........_ ... ___ saw sss ...... .,..2 beam ceill"""'· Tumisned, patios. $420,000. ::lti.1; E l',1 ""' ('cl\I CLASSY 5 BR Dover Shor .. .,... de-luite throughout, cullom 3300 aq ft Magnificent p<>ol, 1191 & fir• ring. 3 ear garage. owe II· n1nclng. A1klno $885, ooo. Appl. only. Call 640-6600 or 759· 1111 i; • .;,•-::: mi UALn -··a,.LI TRADE FOR? ·-- .1 ..... hullntl~~(~l~11~)~U~4~1~111~~1~~~~~~~~ 3Br. 2·~e1• gre11 fof II I MWI PElllllU lllEI ter••• 1w11r •1111~ h~ jfu llU f~1y .0:.~vTr~C:nc~;~ I 0 EA" FI I IT :!~ww~~ Bay baytront. supa"!! :'~~ ....._.,.... ••••••••••••••• .. ••••• QlllUCD t • t l32,toO. 1111 remodeled 3 bdrm. 3 bath •1.200,000. • f>RiCED TO SELL THIS •FULL OCEAN vu• ftllU\ . GOLDEN PROPERTIES • WEEKEND AT $385, 12'Woen Jumlne Crk II e ee ti I II (Tl•) 7•2 1..... . Meir 1ulte plue 3 Br 4 000 o er1 • p ona • .. " • """ .. _ 2 yre ,_, 11-1 10 · Owner IOI 640-1515 n1nclng on oul1tendlng .... d bMc: ..... ~ & jetty vlewa. Marine room, 4 bdrm. 3 818 Marigold U' Miii LIT 4 Bdrm 2200 1.1. M ... Laltfr•lf w .... ..wa, 'i::/eo. P8ssessioN bath, 3700 eq.fL $1,385,000. Oceanfront. Verde p<>ol home. g&;n 5bf/3bl egl fll'f\Uy Get. F II I •1 0"0 000 ••11a11 PlllGEI COl.I Of NIWPOfn With 3 Br. W• Ba. trpk:. sat/Sun 1 " •150 drHm horM. Pool, Jae, u price • • " • Lllll lm l"'FllllT a IU -•L-• By Owner. 648-8588 3185 B1;::;ud1. 'Ail·, l1ke vle'WI. Aaeum. fin. Agt. 844-9513 at home, 11mlly rm w/ nu L c-• "••· le!Mllt Ye•r ttftr Lo I• 8 3 1 • 1 2 8 • $410,000. 1111111• Vl1l1 IH1 ~oon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom, The Gerrie Co. Sgl level detae~ 4 Br ,_ •vne Wiik-behind wet bar, e .. -,., ... H--~u .. t+inc~ 873-75•4 Owner/agt, 551-8829· •••••••••••""~••••••••• ...a--rm den Boat sl1'p Now $1 000 000 un...-n.;o ..... ~ ,........ Sat/Sun " " \UU ' • ' ' ' ' Mii-ciean Litton oven 6 11S·SS1 i owe 111 • Fllll. T•m• ....... LE TURTLEROCK HILLS "2-...... ·1 Spr"' .rv mlcrow1v1. Car1lree ""9 .. 1 Cd•• bell •l .. 3 Br 2 B• comm """' ...,.. ,., · · --------~ .. cae a ... nr Lill• 6 1-nle w' 111 1r1d1. ~I Be1utllul pool home. frontyard. Only $135, ••-~ ft Spotlesl Vacant Duplex .... . • -• VERY auumable loan. 3 450. Seller mot1v1ted. &_. • • Huge Sbr/3ba+3bf/3bl Model l)lffeot M ... Del leall opt., or llralght bdrm, 2 ba, A/C, $20, Cell Olen Hellwarth or CUSTO HOUSE. 440l< own/bkr 645-7048 Mar. 3br. 2b1, count"" ...... 179-8886, agt. ooo 01111, • 142,1100. 559 9400 Excellent financing ., • • 1$639 000 kit, brick p1t101, up· Woodbridge 2Br 2b•. Owner wlll carry b1I. • 875-8921 -.... gtaded thruout. priced loweet ptloed Avalon on (213)845-493'4. _..:;;:======'--•Selllng anything wllh 1 o.Jty Piiot Clallllled Ad Heve aomethlng to NII? 11 1 llmplt melter . . . Claalfled 1d1 do II well. )ult c:a11 642·5878. o oooooooooobDDODOODOOOOQJ ~ SEPTEMBER SALES § D 0 _ _ to Mii. call Jody/agent corner lot. AIC, up--•/••• .... _....,_ 657-1289. gradN. $118,000 In &- &- lmm1culale 3 Bdrm a• ••• GllH ueum1blet. 857-2045 Lbl1. 1400 IQ It. o.,.,. 2b•th ownet'• unit. and ..,.. 1--------1 looklng M.V. Goll spacious 1 bdrm rental, Nr gollcourM. All ame-2br condo, $118.500. CourH at L•k• M.V. both with lofted beern nltl ... Low dWn or no Owner wlll help fin . Incl. 10K upgradH. eelllngs. frplc:e and a dwn. Showe Ilk• 1 14878 Golden Glen. 126K, 10% dn. bel. 11 WJrY privet• pool. 1,.0-model. Carl MOHn, agl. 497-1037 12%. P.R. Hickey, agt, ~r1~r~ :~~:~ Re/Max 1&e.1221 *" .... * 1_8M-_2_ae_2. ____ _ 1lreell. 4 b loek1 to 11,I~ llJ, NII. &Mui. 2 tty. 3 br. 2~ ...... ,, IHli IHI Llltl1 Coron• B1ach. MM& V•dl/48drm, IP• b •. 9 V• % 1 9 9 K ··-·"••••• .. •••••• .. •• $2118,ooo By 0wner 551-2412 eet-181s .. umll'I 144-1111 $205,000 ·<>pen Sun. If OWIEll "40.000. Quiet ., ... 2032 Swan DJ, C.M. Walle to Udo VIiiage. 3 IAYlllE PUGE Spectacular bayfront dplx 2 br. 2 ba up; 2 br, 2 ba dn. 2 boat spaces. Reduced-$1,500,000. IL1FFI 00111 Single 1tory end unit. expan(ied 3 br, 3 be on largett greenbelt & lake. $250,000. FAlllAlll UICI Brand new 4 br, 4 ba, custom 1''rench Normandy Estate on 1 ~ acre hilltop. $1,250,000. lVlLOI Fee aimple cottage on quiet Descanso St, (in Flat.a). $145,000. o CHIU H1 lllla lelfti et llcltw•J -g D JnteHMMltttlllellleH ......... o -'-~ ult.~ ....... ,, tJlutl ,.,.,. g 0 ,... .... ,.., ....... , .. , ., ...... 0 ~N IG[L GAii EY & l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil CONDO, tow down. enr. bdrm. 2'Ja bath. t>MUI. 11 ...... •--"'-' 1wm1, 3br 2ba, Walnut 1plral o•k 1t1lrway, •••1••-o•JS -Squara. $99..Qj)Q.. oo..ucm11 kllc!l.~"..1.. 2 wwn ..... • Large 3 bedroom condo 875-0372 Of' 857-4978. ffl>IC8, MCUrl~. central Coronado Island C\lSl. 6iyff0nt lot. 8 with 2~ batlll. CUiiom iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii vacuum. 30 pier & 0 a twe-llle•,... .... " .. 1xtr1 .we a --------1 B let. Well "9••• at '470,Gll • .., tllle a 0 ... ., .... hi• ........ 0111 •• , g ASSl:l(IATES IPYILlll drapee, lot• of utru. __ YI llW float. Stumb1th & -boat dock. Flans avajl. Now J370,0 0 ~ 17911 aq.11. Thr.. r"S139•600 Wtllrlpool. All dOOfl eo-w/ferms. g .,,.,....... 0 0 0 o JUllH OIEH a l•••••er nr g 5 Twin Lek• Cr- 5 Bdrm Southport. V•· c en I 6 reduced 10 $459,500. p 1tio1. 8 PA . .B 8 0 . lld 09k. AMlly C:Ulto.qJ. Super locatlon In Eul· 2 Bdrm. den, 2 bath, Upen Sat/ Sun/Mon tide Co111 M.... $1112. large kllctlen. llr cones.. 1 • 5 , 8 0 3 3 at h St. 000. Call lor financing end ~ncloeed garden 873•8778" or 875-9284 detlll•. 979-2390 p1tl0. Thi• condo llu Agt. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 341 l'"Y''''' (1• ,, '• B ~7~ fi lt.1 g ,,., ... , •" -.... .,, _., HY111 It o OllEO IHOllEI o creat, I •H• I llWI tltert tM." I'• 1n o0 Dramatic 3 Bdrm. 0 telll•c •r ... "" '""" ,.11 1, -.1s 0 4~ba. Pool. 111ew. Pvt 0 , beaehea. $495,000 lel- .. ., Tiie P1111 LO'o'll'/ 3 bedroom con- do llltlng vacant. Sell• looldng 10< quick ..... Otlll'S 2'A batlll, fir• place. Pool lec11111 .. e1Cee111n1 1oc11lon·1nd unll. $139,500. Call for cs.tall•. 979-2390 IHI of aepar1te home' 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I on v our own q u I et 11 _ 1 _ -• ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ COfMr In lrvlne GfOYM. -·---= can Biii 0< Helen Gold. Owner wlll trade pano-41 ramie view llom1 In 0 Is th l1r11 ,., .... ,,,.,., t1•llJ o Mhold. o ''"' a hr••I "lllic ,... Ill ..... a 1I0-14U • Newport H1lght1 lor unlll 0t San Francteco ~ l~~~I a IHllJ .... H•• .......... ,..., g L a-r~~ § tl•••Hst, THiii OlllTI, ... .,.., o Al ESTATE 644 639 o 11t1. Prle .. tt nll If Ull,IOI. WI § RE · 7 o hr .,,......... o UUH YllW au .... Yer4t O D s-altto Lua« homl on TllTLEllOI realdence. $1811,000 In equity. Cell Linde a.th 142·1100 A PETE BARRE TI \l.,' I ~I I '\ '\ ~Y LOR CO. I\!' . \ 1 l < lf: -..., '· : : , • I ~ H Ii g llYEUllll ammo• PLUIE: 0 , .. land. 3 Br. 2 ea. llv ...!i9~": = 3 Bergeln Ille by own.. . REALTY O O a din rm. lg fem rm, all bath home. lnclud.. LO'o'll'/ homl 2 Br/2 Ba a 0 0 amenltlee.1. lo trH lol. 8Y formal dining room. & land . $177.100.1~~;~~~~~ o 11.WllTTlllr lerllf' et .... , I llewfle. Owner. ,-m.500. Call famlly room peneled 851-3933 . r a ~r Is H ,,.,.rtJ). , .............. g _640-__ 7oo_._, ____ I wllh tnplaee. Loll of 1--,.-n-LD_____ lllWPMT •TS g .w.r ..... Whlcllll le ....... o II IWIEI ~ ri::':t ::' =~ , .... mML lllT Ill a 1111••· OH rt•HH te 0-2. lr11t g 122 3891,500 twn. 3~R 2~.~eda. 1279.toO. Cell Huge 4 Bdrm 2~ ea. 2 llou ... on rrg 101. O ••h1tlal. lw1er wlll fllHU. 0 ory 19• G 111-2111 AJC, & ape on extra lrg Total price $162,500. 0 MC, pool. 1enn11. Jae. I I S P• fl ancl f. Exe.ii owner flnand"" 0 1111,000. 0 '*'"&. club room. Walk 3707 S. BRISTOL o . u r n n Curt .Herblr11 II, .:...1: 0 O to shopping. bike ,0 SANTA ANA 1vlll. "Make me an o • -.. D .._,......., You -,_.. I•". AllcJng $238,900. l"ii83ii1ii·ii12eeiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii a II PALI HHIT1 "Tiiie LMc•" letleffl 0 2Q.%dowr, ~-·~;e ·Opn Sun M . ·uee111 0 •rff f8r11stt-' •.aa.. .a.. ener'a _,., o 12% loan. By appl. Antioch. Call Robin a ... .,.,..-552.1soo °' 848-72711 0 •1t1•111, tlrtpl1111, ......... g 7141780-3875 o i ..... .,.., ... ''l" nrt.•les ,..a. o a••• •1a ;=iiii~;I FUILHI g 11111,.1 _.'"Itta -,.telflll hr 1• g :;;i.~':9·2 ~~cs.!,~ FllllLY •I D ••ltt -:-1e9'ff, lflrflHltl, .... Oall 0 xlnt fin--•~. Agt, ca-.. ,1.11&•UI Expanded Kenelngton In f .. II .. t-llt tn _... ...... •----....... .,. • the Deane Hom••· 4 0 er .. , er "°' -... ..-0 f o I e M c M a h a n • ..,..... bdrm, 3 ba. Bay wino g at HH,000. o0 844-8067 or 844-eoee>. Magnltloent 2 etory on dows. 2 fl~. Tllll Old COM DUPLEX lerge cort'lll' lot, near home 11 e11cept1onally g PLEASE CALL .ON E. COLE 00 $330,000 F.P. wllh $30, MeH Verd• Country decorated and 11nd- 6 000 down Tenn• avlM Club. Colorlul red ti.. 1caped. A mu1t He g (714) 75-5511 or 640-5793 g able. Sus* 1nveetmen1: roof. 1tatllly entry. Mt-before deciding on Cell John 559-8300 ide1n tlle. Sparkling anylhlng llM. $288.toO. ;Jooooooooooaooooooooooo0l1 poo1 and epa. To ... TRADE 1111• epeclal properly, ··~· , .•. ·-... ...... ...... ...... IC.-0-t~ ..... .. _ ~=~:::.,. ...... ,.'-""< .. .. _, "'• ,, __ ~=~=~ '"··· .. ._ .. ~ .. , .... "''"'"''"" '::~~~, S~\\.4{1~-"f..~s· = -----l~ ... QAY I POU.ul O!:;>":i!-~ "'..&.:~ ....... -dt ,.,... t.llen ol _,. ... "' ~ ... ol ... -.. r r Al G i El R 11 l ( LEGBOI I ~ 1· I I I I I PADKEE I I' I r I I 1 PYHORT I 1--r-I _.;.,.l'~l'-..-J-..-1 -1 My oou1ln I• doing lhre --------. 10 ten In 1111 1t1te pen. t1• I O U C N E F t 001 carried away by the art• ~. =~r::i~~l~~l===I :. =~~u!:•_Y_g_o.' him tor I .. • cell toes..,. your boring Income prop1r1y or outgrown rHld1nce with larg1 equity tor 11111 neat ru1Hc: ~nd roomy • bdrm 3'A b1111 home wllh 180 dig ocean ~~n :rM':-~ ~~·~-~L~ .. ~-~--~~~l~·~s~.n~o~u~1P1~•~s~111t:~IMtl'~~·I tlon. M95.000 f .. with : UMHn&ble 11.2'% loen . M4-ll11 ~NIG[L GAIL[ 'f & ASSUC1 AT[S ~·HE RITAGE Rf J\I 11 •II'· \I 11 I tU ,.. - W • Wl1R w 1111 pier ancs 11011. Single llory home wtth 18rge bflCk ttn'-'*" encloHd g1t1d entr· ence patio. 3 Bdrm and dlnln9 room, view of wa11r from many rooma. 15211.000. 142.:.11• j PETE BARRE TI . REALTY um..., ... ., .... Furnished 2 bdrm, 2 bath bayfront condo. Located in security building wlth outstanding view of turning basin. Boat slip available al best rate lQ town! Liii llU UYJatlT uwum• Beautifully decorated Cape Cod 4 bdrm, 4 baths. Pier and slip, holds 45' boat. Please call to make appointment to see this outstanding home $2,200,000. .... '""' 1-1 211N1DtA • .. , ••• Ult A big house. 3650 aq. ft. on the best street, with a nice view. Best price. $475,000. Your tenns ... submit. Ull llYJUIT Completely remodeled elegant 2 bdrm home plus study.· Also features pier for large boat plus small boat. Ideal location on quiet end of island. Only $1,- -~50,000. II~ Ill lllYll YllSllLLEI Completely customized golf course townhome. Informal, warm decor with Mexican pavers, wide Bermuda Shutters, country kitchen & beautiful pool & spa set in lovely gardens. $850,000 Beverly Morphy (T'll) Pll•E Liii llUll UOATlll Perfect 5 BR, hardwood floors. s1i1nny patio home. Priced right at $450,000. Berit Mitr.hell (T22) .IHllH Hiil Gate-guarded community. 2 BR + den . Tastefully ifecorated. Cloee to ~1 & tennis. $395,000 Berit Mitchell (T23) ~ ·11 -UHM NW Low, low priced 4 BR tri-level Broed.moor home w/vault.ed ceilings. formal d ining & separate fam rm. Beautifully landscaped garden overlooking greenbelt. A great famtly home. $369,500 Belle Partch (T24) Ill Paltl HllOTlll This is a splendid opportunity -new remodel and lovely decor in a great family area. Warm any and spacious w/a beautiful view & 4 BR + library. $320,000 Coby Ward (T25) .............. 1 ..... 11•1 Big Comfy home in Eutbluff on quiet street. Prime family neighborhood. Hard to beat from the standpoint of price and terms. $269,000 Coby Ward (T28) IWI• llllUUS -...... IMI Country feellna -4 BR wt th new roof, trench doon & window1. B -1 bookcU8, 2 11 patlOI, 1pa, fiJ'eplt. Complete privacy. $239,000 fee. Beverly Morphy ('1'27) llPLll lllTA 1111 Great s.uade locatiton -2 BR .-:b - Larae corner lot. Great lnvntment at 1170,000 Berl\ MlticMll ('1'28) rm:n•11• 1tn111a s.-oOUI family home on quiet street In r119 ;u.rded communlly. 3 BR, BA, converllbl• den. Your decorallnl touch could add mum to tJUa lowly pl'OP9f\f. 1449.101 Ou1l. land. Dia-....._ (ftl) I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, &.ptember 5, 1982 El l!tttfl. '!!. ~.. •• • • • ~. '!!. h!!....... ~.'It. 1111.... •• • flltlft .'!!. 1111 ••••••• ~.~ .... '! ....... l~m.~.~! ....... l~•ML~IN!,. •..... ~ft.~!:*-.•.... ··· 'f!. ..• ······•• · • .flt!!/~ t&1si.lm! .. l.'M ,,.'lflft.fmA •• I.~ '1.wnt.ftltA .. J.. flll(fliil' 1#11.Atl ....... I. • lm!eiumaii •· ~1( ........ J."1 ~ ••••••.•• } •• .......... , ... <•• '1'"'••11) 1441111.m ' 11¥11 ..... ,,, ................. " -11.':.39"' ............. ~.... " •ttl,IH. Yll IWI TH LHll lw1tr ................... r .... 9-WllTI -----. . IAOllLU IMlll, IULTll ·>· 171-1171 11!.llWI lll IL ... Spacloua .. C.. Plan In the new aectlon of The Bluffs. 4 bdrms., 3 batlul, approx. 2300 aq. ft. in all. Priced at juat $279,500 L.H. Seller will carry a 30 year ~ loan at the low market rate. (714\ 673-4400 (2f3) 628-2828 The Harbor Am's Loncest Estlblstled Ital £st1t1 ~ 11.4 \J llJ( )ll AESIOENTIAl AEAl ESTATE SERVICES llYmllft ,,, .. ,. A magnificent tropical setting with waterfall & sparkling pool make this 5 BR home spectacular in every way. Best swimming beach on the coast. Owner will carry first T.D. IN ~EWPORT CENTER 644-9060 VIEW -VIEW -VIEW T.ntflo toe.Hon Md~ hOIM wtltt tofwer wtew tor_,, ..... on._ lend. Or HoMnge tor ....... MIM or lniocMM unit• In Ihle area. Lare• 2-•torr, a bedrooln ........ ...., room, .... room plua a car.., .... .Aaaum..,.. loan. Tanna flexible. OW ..... /option. LOCATION VUI LOC'ATIOlll "9cft1d1l1d ..._, "°'9M with clan .. w Of..,, e.o.e.. .... and nlaht ........ he.Nin 8"'°111111 "°"'Ihle alted....., ,......, room plua PftYate patio. OWMf ........ With good tlinwlng. 1111,000 Fee land. LINDA ISLE/Low Price A STEAL A ....... YaNa tor on1J flH,000 and owner I• llexlltl• on l•r•• end oondtlona. 8ubMlt exdlMgu or ..,.. or CAIMI Al exuptlonail WATIJtl=RONT hoftM on "'9 ....... with prtw.-I...,, realdatlOator~ .......... or dallJ llYlng In I bdnM and tor"'8I lhtng room, lerge famlJ "" wteh .... clown INlr -on ihe watw, 1pul1• patio and "''"'" "'°'•· CaH for detalla and IMMt NOW.....,_ prtoea .. UP. Pier and ---........... LIDO ISLE DRAMATIC 8plral •lalre and proteoaJonal decor tlvn.,,_. Ihle 1pul1111 4 Md, 4 bMll ........ ,erfect for ......... ..,. blellftt ................. Of ..... @ eflectlve 1U~ lnterMt. ..... prtoe ...... ..._ NEWPORTIS.BAYFRONT Alt aftofdabl1 INice •HM • ..., with ,.,,elp tor .. boat......, ........... with lart• ..-110 • deck. Adeptaltle r11ld1r-.oe CM ~ _... or holM. owe ..... 2nd T.IJ ........ , ... llALaOA IS. CHARMING DUPLEX 8eld tarnl•Md with ,.,.. •Mlftable feana. Ideal IUlftlfter/wlnler re11t•I =;:""" ... I lted. ....... Mn.-. DUPLEX-BLOCK TO MACH Twe ••ll·prlced •nlta '" a •Mallen .....,.. .... ,_ a -.. ""° _. 1 1tec1. •"• ..... ft,....... ..... '"'· Good .................. .,..., IAYIHORE8-,RESH a FRENCH A ,_.... .,...._ ... .._.,, ,,_... I ~. a It• ........ •"" .., ... ..,.,,, ............ ~ ....... .. ....._IWtft!l.OWCllr'8tT.IJ ....... ... .......... -.... aAL.aOA 18&.AND COTTAGa UltlleNIMltl111111 .......... ... _.. ................ ...... .. ow-. -Cll.,.... MIACULA1W Hom c .................. ,.,. .......... . L.-99,... .. ...,_ ......... .. ,.,., ••• ••• 1t•tt + w••· ... . LA 111 .,......, ......... C1da .......... .., ............ , ...... . .. .... WATERFRONT HOMES, IN< M ... \llHM"' -........_,~,--- AW I 1\4~ NAlllDll Lionc·term .. wnable loan on thll three-bedroom ~ the cleslrable "Blutfa" at Newport Beach . Nicely up1raded "Carmelita" model with tarp palk> overlooklna the greenbelt. Near pool. Owntr wants to aell. .. RECENT PRICE REDUCTION ... and don't toraet that· great uaumable loan!lll Call Sally Shipley. AllTAITIAL ... ....,,. $,eller is desperate. Absolutely muat aell. ~Deauvllle model in exclusive Btg Canyon. Handsome French doors throughout; high celllnga have all been plutered with smooth flnlah. Impressive two-story entrance and living room, oak-floored kitchen and family room. Luxurious master suite, and large brick terrace. The home is vacant, and awaitln8 your final touch. The price' Jiaa been teduced to $650,000, and the seller will carry paper. Call Trudy Stubblefield. A"DIUI 111111 A remarkably well-maintained family home in a good neighborhood. T~ beautifully decorated three bedroom. two bath home is complete in every way. Great neighborhood for children. The home radiates warmth, comfort, and a feeling of well- being. Call Joy Holker to preview this lovely property. Please be sure to ask about the available aeller- usisted financing that can make this home so affordable for you and your family. (!) --...·-····· 759-9108 AfHAl'MI MIT • .... IUUllNWIMllr1= lulftd MW Mdrm be, ~~'~'JA'=• tor NMt ~ lllllld ADUl.f MOM.I HOMI Lii MW CIUMOftl ~ fMI rm t 110fy i*N to NI* 10 ,._. 1 bt ll't099'1Y ~ "'*• ,,.. ltA"K ON THI IAY. on '"' !Ota. 0,., let/ Lee Pf'IY• tot. a Ot a Hlth ..... Wleleel -· OOndo '•1c pool ... Md Ole* ...,.,. LI t.1,1 bdf'IM wtth t Md lun/Mon t«I. 110 Vie ldtme. I~ IM'I rm, MAklrnum ~ & ~ cur1ty' aate' .... a'.ooo. Jolla lhor••· ltr••ll· ! .. M . AL.90 MNTALI. left "-'O, Owner/eat. I Ir plot, thullert. fn411n~ hiller wlll Owner fn.0771 ~ looetlon. 'A blk to [1,000 to .... IOO. D 176404t 0t 171-IAt htl 000 ueumebte tat f1Mnoe wt.0. Int ,.... ' leedl llftd TIMll ctllb. ~ =..u~~. 1• ..,., ... LWt Ille :! .. ~01~ ::,au;:. 12.:.!.:_000· ~t·• lfll.'1!.tA ...... l!M :d~lr~11~ 17~7 ... .... .... 000. Oall for appt. ..-..... ~ 001.AN '~ tnNl.,pleoe. AIA O.· Oholoe IOo. Xlnt fin. Prln 4MCM:IU ' · INI 1 ... It. S Ir, 1" be con::, 910ned. AWMd wlnnlnG •... T"' ~. Own 17~71H. ..-... 'OA 8Al.l IV OWNIA eoroe:.;:., beaOtl~· property. Luth lend-..... -·-fH. :a~ J-f r1; 1eao1na, "eo•tone ,. • ...._ .. I~ 1.a 1 .. u M ..... llarltfl Aeduo.d to tl4t,OOO. "' It •11 ~ 11 '*'9 tloi. "alMCf tlr~lao.. ~.:....... 11, :=: ":":-: =t ..... ,,_....., " Owntr flnanolnn, Tri· •••H• ... ••••••.r•• 0 O. Owner hM lual p _ -·-= !!!!!! • ....... _,.. ___ ~ • , ~....... ma... tU.. , ....... ....__. ......_ .A ttll.. •oo•d wood 1 0011. ldrm a belt\ 1Qe-. '"'"' .,.. .... """ ---.. .. -.., Top m1terta1r end '"'· bau lencJy, "'Ail a110.o0o. 112,000 0n: yard, IOhoolt thOOOlnCI ,. llftlTlllll aoo 12131 ot-0211 W()(lcmantHp. wa1k 10 417-4144 p~ "47.50. Cell ... Mlf by. Ooen &at7 8an C6tment• pride of A••lly World • 8 w but bHCll. lhOP•· PattertOnl,.U Ill.I. owntr. 714-<M1 ..... 11 8un/Mon. lubmlt tll ownerthlp, modern P1oPt Permanent rHldentt. •-----------•---:::r;;;;;;;:;;;:~:--1 olle11. Agtnt Heddi Jpenleh atyte 4 unft lt)t. F•tlcMOutly tnalnt.ined ........ Marotl, f41·1044 or ~ wttll ooeen-flllll & IHlt Lw-l by engtnw-owneir wflo ~ I '44·1742. oolf courM view. CloM •••••••'Tilt;;;"; •••••••• It tn0tt regretfUl!y r• m.L U1 UYl•lll ~v2•hin~1~1k! OJ:.:P:!!~~ ~; ~~'2!':;J~·IOO.OOO. owe Charmlno 2 br home MEWi New QWfW could Ing _,·~ Allto 9Meh. 2901 ca1...... wlOUM1 room & bath, ocoupy 3 bdrm 2 bltn a 1 1 3 1 Ho 11 Y D' • 15 lllll'TS Upgraded 3 ~2 a.. ioe brlok patio & frplc, otty & C>CeM vt9W 14)1. 11 4ff.21&7 or 4et-1IOO. Ul1ll larnlly roorn rnoYl"G • 601 LIDO 'renoh doora. But applicable &. rant the .,... • MMb .. muat 111/1 Owner 8lh FLOOR • price In ltythorul other 3 iapeitmentt tor ,,.., i..I ll~N 1ll ,_ 720-1211 W~~~~do ~!t0::1 Flex. t.,tnl, ~ ~vE'"i:: •••••••••••••••••••••• Priced to ..a It teee>. BlYfR()NT Spedacular View 83MM7& or 8111-&300 thouHndt of dollartl ~-!-" II 000. 111% down and ft REDUCED Mlllng pr1c;e 1H -OWMt wtll FINANCE tt •789,600 Ill IMYM of •2111,000.00 i. way •••••••••••••••••••••• REASONABLE RATES. Cl\MIV\ Wllllam Cote Broodmoor Plan W, 4 BELOW current repll· Ullll .ii Can't beet prlc;e lor 1et1 Ul1UU --Broker bdrm, 2'A be. OrHt c em ant cot t 11 I Beautllul 24XM 3 BR 2 than 3 yr Old property 1•1u. ...... view. End ol cul-de-uc. Prlnctp111 ONL VIII Call BA. lge IMng and dining I h It c o 11 to th• 1785,000 Open S•tlSun OWMf 11 (714) arM. Kitchen open1 to OCEAN. c.11 12-4, 7 Winged Foot Ln 142.llll• tam. rm. Corner tot ....... a O., lltn. F" land. Outttandlng 844-4904 or 711-4-7724 540-11937 (11C) 121-.... bay ytew from lhla lu-Partl Udo Adult Condo 3 .. -... J•U By owner • lrvlne·The SURFSIDE PVT COM· xury ~FRONT . Br. pool, ""' hoe91tal, ...... ..... .. c,.i,,,... 111.'I Gro~ 2 tBA/2 Bad '3dbl MUNITY PROPERTIES :-m"· ~!i11p~A ~ Home with 4 BO & FR ••••X.'••••••••••••••• =· .':"' ooo~ .,h, 38', 3Ba 3 leYlll, oeeen 142-5002 &46-10« o'looklno pvt pool. Et1Httrl11 lrtl 11 i,ooo ·~. 13 ~89·, home for 1111. New. 111 Ll4e ( .. IL.Mb UllllT ,. ... Oreulng rm lor kid•. Eleoint ~9"' England .. _ 1 ~ h 125,000 down. Owner Gue1t hM hu own nv ttylt country manor IO-L... n '"'!'.-""". ec carry l>llllllQI on con· Secun~ high , ... (f. IN VEA8AILLES7NIEW rm w/lplc l klno IZ caled on. woodty .,.. tor 119,0®. 2 bdrm. 1 tractad HI•. OAC. s ... : 950.000, L.... Security, pool. Reduced bdrm. o.ttlng kltch & lot 4er 41>11. 3 frplca be In private comm. Brkre ~tabla (213) l3000/mo Incl. utll. & pr1c;e becauM no realty bll. GrMt pkg tor gltl. QOOrmtl kitchen exfen: Very clean. Muat -II jl 11·II114 7 or ( 7 14) UIOC ..... Furnlthed. 1 ... 1 1120K. 1131-2018 Only 1320.000 but, tty llW oak paneltne. cs. 875-2742 892.0987 ~~:.5f1~c1 Agt. Rll1. Owwllr wl" finance 90% offer. Ruth Laurie, R11r llQner tlle, 3 e« garage JtMj .__,,. IJll CMil#iW of .-. attr_ .. _ 2~-&4&-4380 • .,. Jut1 • few of the ••••••••::r.;;'••••••• ,,_,. , .. _ IUYllW 1111111 aq ft"3 bd,;'"h:m. In iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 1m1nltl11. Seller wlll Olde!' Duplex ,_ 45th •• :.-.~:.'.. •••••••• ~ 1eo cMot" Yiew. I.Md· Newport'• Upper 8acit llLmYI IT buy down exlatlng IOan 1t. NB. 3 br, 2 ba.1-------•d glaH, oak lloora, Bay. Or11t v1lll• at • llT to 11.11% • ltntHtlc upttalra. 2 bl, 1'A bl. *_...... outdOOf' llreptt. 3 Bdrm 1299.500 .... 2.9449 You can own a·.;~ In term•. Call for more down1tllre. Wiii NII u ...... "* • grMt home. By owner Nrrl.ort Beach for only Information end an I• tor 1700,000 or wlll JI Yr, f ..... I•• • 3% to bkre. 1441,000, 111 000 Ith appt. to-· bulld to eult for 1875 -tmall dn. 844-eeee • w •n ••· Off.,ed at •1so,ooo ooo & up. (plane & 2 br houM & 11udlo CUiiom 3 Br waterfront home w/pler & tllp. FEE. Af191. CNW 1 mll- llon, MCriftoa II 1975, =.o~ HM 8un 1·5. BALBOA ISl.Afl) eumab1e 30 YMt 1oan. oa•L 411•2112 ~cw• obta1nec1> "'· itoned '°' trt 11ucs1o. gttt Owner It motivated, .. .......... tlq _, 1 ,..---....,. tn I t I g e Ra 1 I t y -"'>"•• Ill I.Ill, ..,,c ...... BAYFRONT olfera. Spacloul 2Br 2'A' \ encl 1 25 yeara be condo. with garage Duplex on the Nn<I. 30th Only "\13s.ooo. c 11i .. IJ ...., , and catpOf't, communltv It. NB. Newty rernodtlo-759·1501 or 752·7373. lleXlble and open lo all • 714-544--2484. Owner wlll carry fl· pool and epa. eel In and out .. 3 bf., 2 21170 Sa11 Mlguel Or. IL.''I • YIEW ...... ,. ....... '"9lJ11 'U Uf be. Upttalrl. 2 bt., 1 bL _8-:tl . ....... flueH41 w downlltl'tl. Min. 10% FM landl End unit, po-down OWC balance II pular "E" plan. L•H . • 13.9% IOf' 5 yrt. OrMt than 12% llnan .• 20% lll-llll I tor 1ummer rental•. 1 1 ' ' dn. $349,000. Denni• 1735.000. Armitage Rickett.I Rltr. 96-1"°424 • Realty. 714-544-2484. 6•un #1 "'11 •••HS l•1 "'11 •••111 /11 S.11 ... ,,, l•t Wt •••Ht /., "'11 BH111 /., l•I• .,. ................••.•......•..........................•...................•...•.•..•.....•.•.•.............•••....................... ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ~~~t ........ !.~l1~~~t ........ !.~I ~-~~~{ ......... !.~I ~~~~t ........ !.'.!I ~~~ ......... !.~I~-~~~~{ ......... !.~~ #JC_,. ........ ... .,.,....c...... (_N_E_W_P_O_R_l_B_E_A_C_H_ ELEGANT BAYFRONT CONDO In the Cove overlooking Balboa Island wtth 2 bedrooms + den, 2'n baths, fireplace; private beach. $825,000. SPYGLASS HILL WITH 1224.000 IN FINANCING! ....._Seller pecking, looking for offer on thla 3 Bdrm 2 Bath residence w/famlly room, ftreplace, wet bar, several eating areas and views flt to klll. $'495.000. EXQUISITE WHITEWATER VIEWS A country kitchen and akytlght wlndowa wlll light up your life wh¥ you move Into this 3 bedroom, 3'n bath wood condo near beacn and ehopplng. Reduced to $249,500. . WATERFRONT TRADITIONAL HOME On the bay of Unda lale, this 5 bedroom, 4'h bath residence teaturea a large bflck courtyard entry wtth epa, a apack>us bayalde brick terrace and approxJmately 4'500 eq. ft. of llVlng apace. Sllp and aide tie for 80 ft. boat. Seller wtll help finance. $1,450,000. ANNIVERSARY ESTATES NEAR THE GOLF COURSE Thia rambllng ranch home Is Ideal for first time buyers with an overalzed lot, 3 bedrooms, 2'h baths, country kitchen, room for pool and reduced prtce of $183,000. Seller wtll carry with 15•;. down or wlll con8'der trade down. OCEAN VIEW DUPLEX JUST STEPS TO SAND On Oceanfront Blvd., this duplex with a 2 and 3 bedroom unit could be converted to a comfortable family home. Seller wtll carry at 12.5¥. with 20'/e down. $'475,000. SEA VIEW PRIVATE COMMUNITY HOME Thia well cared for 4 bedroom, 3 bath home hu Impressive city and Catalina aun1et vlewt plus good uaumable and ~ler financing. $465,000. LEASEHOLD UNITS NEAR BEACH These two bedroom unit• carry owner financing with 20-25°/e down. $225,000. RESIDENTIAL INCOME PROPERTY Leuehold, thla duplex with 2 two bedroom units hu seller financing wtth reuonable down. Jual a few ateps to the aand. $235,000. HARBOR VIEW-MINI ESTATE Try AITO or trade on this 6 Bdr 4 Ba Harbor View home with over '.4 acre, 2 frplc, lkytltea, French doors, gorgeous pool, spa, Kol pond and huge lot. $'495,000. Open dally 1-5. Submit any offer. ( . . ''IHI HUNT CLUB'' MOTIVATED SILLER WILL FINANCE OR CON81DER TRADE ) Ruatlc ranch home on 1 ecre with 5537 eq. ft. r•dence lnciudlng 6 Bdrm e'h Ba, pool, apa, tennle, and ltable. $1,500,000 . UNOBSTRUCT!D VIEWS OF CAPO VALLEY Englllh Tudor 5200 eq ft home with 5 Bdrm 5 Ba + pool a. ape to be oonetructed on 'A acre lot. Can be taJlored to buyere apeclaJ Medi. '"5,000. CU8TOM VIEW LOT -aUILD TO SUIT Try a Jotnt v.nture on thtl .121 acre view lot With equeltriM trait eoceee. Seier wtn 1Uborden.te or trede tor other reeldentlaJ or oommercNll property. IMl,000 . HARBOR RIDGE ) "JODELLE MODEL" FOR 20% DOWNI Assume $5&4,500 at 11. 75% on this 3 bedroom, 2'n bath gateguarded home convenient to the Harbor, Newport Center and airport. Realdence features panoramic views of Catalina, Harbor and city llghts from larqe decks. $695,000. "LUCERNE MODEL" WITH TERMSI Seller wlll carry an AITO ~f $519,000 at 12.75% for an extended term for a qualified buyer. Ideally suited for entertaining wtth approx. 3050 sq. ft ., 3 bedrooms, 3'n batha, large decks, 3 fireplaces and famlly~room. Incredible vtews. $850,000. \j "DEVONSHIRE MODEL" FOR TRADE Assume exlstlllitOO year t296,000-Flret at 13.25% fixed or seller will consider trade on thfs 4 bedroom, 3'n bath home wtth 2 large decks, private yard, 2 flreplacea, atrium and panoramic ocean and city llght views. Seller relocation. $775,000. °CASABLANCA MODEL!~ WITH UPGRADES Mirrors, celling fans and pavera accent this llke-new 4 bedroom, 2'A.bath home In close proximity to the tennis courts and pool-spa area. Only $520,000 with excellent owner financing. CUSTOM HOME LOT Premium lot with plans for • 10,000 sq. ft. formal French home wtth no houses behind or beaide It. Create your "estate" that wtll rlval all others. Seller must llquldate but will consider a Joint-venture agreement. $1,600,000. CUSTOM 8,500 SQUARE FOOT RESIDENCEI Located on an unusually large lot, this panoramic view home can , t:RJ1raded toTl'elltttrntlal or commercial property «-Mtlet-wlll carry at below market rates. With 6 bedrooms. 7 baths, projection room, wine cellar. family ~oom & large kitchen. $2,700,000. "EXPANDED" MIRAMAR MODEL "Estates" 3 bedroom, 2500 eq. ft. home with spectacular ocean and night llght views. Convenient to pool and tennis. Terms with low down. $575,000. LUXURY VIEW CONDO Spacious wtth • bedroom•, famlly room and 3'A baths. Lg deck over1ooks reservoir lake. $595,000. TRY LOW, LOW DOWN See and compare this "Oynuty" 2 Bdrm 2 Ba 2000 sq. ft. home with large redwood deck, fireplace and vaulted celllngs. $231,000 usumable long term financing at 10.38% fixed. $379,000. ( __ E_M_ER_A_L_D_B_A_Y __ ) COMPLETELY ~llTORID TRADITIONAL HOME Located on 1 large comer lot, thl• 4 bedroom, 3 bath art deco home hu a large patio wtth ape, cuatom landeoaplng, famlty room and full UH of recreatlonaJ fecfl"lea. Try IMM/optlon or low down. $825,000 . N17,000 ASSUMABLE AND 81LLER WILL HELP Spectacular 2 bedroom ocean vtew home wtth ewtmmlng pool and addition-" Miier ftnanotng. "50,000. WALKING DllTANCI TO RICRIATION Charming 5 bedroom, 4 bath home In Uclullw gate-guarded cornmunfty with UM of prtvate bMah. 1700,000. BEACH AND COUNTRY CHARM A e bedtOOm ocean view r9lldenoe -h metd'1 quartera, formal dlntng ahd .,.,.. ......... 1790,000 . .. :.t I ... •• Or•nge Oo•tt DAILY PILOT/Sunday, September 8, 1•12 RFS10£NltAl REAL fSrAIE SERVICES llYllE THUOE IHT Ill ,, ......... - 1711 ....... ,,,, .. . . ,. .......... , 1r00 •• llOO LQvely 4 ·BR, lanai, large private pool & view of harbor & .ocean. Buy in fee for under $700,000 or just reduced t<? $465,poo leasehold. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 •DOVER SHORES* This custom Ivan Wells designed home wa5built with executive entertaining in mind. Quality throughout from the solid oak paneled den to the mahogany paneled family room. Some of the numerous features are: Sensational view of Fashion Island &· ocean, black bottom pool & spa w/outside bar, 3 car garage, complete security system and of course formal dining. To view the luxurious features of this magnificent residence, call 759-1501 for private showing. $1,500,000 FEE. · *HARIOR VIEW HOMI* Monaco Sensational 3 br home on quiet street with pool sized yard. 11.25% assumable financing!! Pricedat $216.000-fee. Call 759-1501 or 752-7373. * 113 FINANCING* 103 Down Payment on this builder closeout! Extremely spacious townhome featuring 2 master suites & attached garage. Priced to sell now at $149,950. Call 759-1501 or 752-7373 for details. *IAYCRIST*l2~ financing spacious executive ranch style home in prestige area. This home features 3 brs., fplc, large lot. & fee land!! Lowest price at $260,000. Call 759-1501 or 752-7373 for appointment to view. *STEPS TO IEACH* This sensational beach cottage features an ocean view and sundeck. Existing 1st T.D. $110,000 is payable at $400,00 per mo. (negative ~ortizatlon). Offered. at $165,000. Call 759-1501 or 752-7373 for details. *HARIOR HIGHLANDS* Pool Sensationally remodeled & decorated 4 br. home featuring swimming pool, bonus nn., skylite, lush private courtyard, fplc., & assumable financing. Reduced to $280,000 fee. For quick sale ... can. 759-1501 or 752-7373. *CLIFF HAVEN* *OCEAN & IAY VIEW* Unbelievable VIEW from spacious 3 br home on extremely large lot overlooking Balboa Bay Club & Channel $675,000 FEE with great tenns! (714) 759-1501 or 752-7373. *$30,000 DOWN* * 11.463 PINANCING Available!! Fabulous TURTLER~ VISTA TOWNHOME. Featuring 3 br'a, fplc, gourmet ~ng and private courtyard. Only $280,000. 759-1501 or 752-7373. *HIRITAGI PARK* *9" FINANCING ••• * When you takeover exkting 1st Trust Deed on this abeolutely beauUful PLAN 4. Thla former model features 3 Br, 2 ~ Ba & extenalve upgrading. Only $139,800!! 759-1~1 or 752-7373. • *NIWPORT RIVllRA * 3 br, 2~ be, family condo locat.ed on greenbelt!! A.oc include. pool, tennit & clubhouM. 759-1501 or 752-7373. NEW.-ORT IEACH OFFICE 2170 Ion •II• Drln Newport leooll, CA l2llO (714) 711-1801 • • •111m IGUIFlllT l "-I l~ l I I ' I H I l l I\ \I \ '\. 1 I LIGATl•I Current Saleable Solutlpna .{L In fabulous Cameo Shores - Spectacular rock formations and a private beach! Zook .designed 4 bdrm. home with formal dining rm. and family rm. Beautiful garden with many exotic plants and flowers. A showcaae home perfect for your Indoor-outdoor lifestyle. $2,500,000 owner will assist with financing. Tranaactiona Laat 30 Daya Jl Volume Laat 30 Daya 3.0 mll. (714\ 873-4400 (2f3) 628-2828 The Harbor At11'1 Loncest £1t1bhhed lttll E1t1tt Company 11~\JtlJ()ll ~-----.. -····----·--·--------.. AffENJ-ION FIRST TIME BUYERS ONLY!!· , - If you have not owned a home In California In the past three years you may be ellglble for Orange County's Revenue Bond Program. For the first time money Is being made available ONLY for first time buyers and ONLY In the city of Huntington Beach. The loans are a 30 YEAR FIXED RATE with payments and qua,llfylng based on II lliTEREST RITE IS LOW IS 8.1%!! If you've been considering buying a home but have held back because of high Interest rates, don't let this opportunity pass you by. There ARE some price and Income restrictions and the total funds available are limited so act now and call us for complete detalla: 556-7035 or If that llne Is busy, 963-5871 . ' . HUNTilllTON llACH O...cl IOll AM• Ave. ~llllla.,OAlaltl . ~. ·~~ ... 70ll . •. RED CARPET' RID CAllNT Of llOUNT AIH V ALLIY Proudly presents the opening of our new office locatlonl WARNER -NEWHOPE PROPERTIES I 17151 NEWHOPE AVE., STE. 107 FOUNTAIN VALLEY OPEN HOUSE FRIDAY, SEPT. 10, 1982, 3PM-7PM Looking forward to meeting you, ·Charlene Roulgnol, owner/broker. 714-545-1030 ~.'P.!!.fffl~ ... J!!~!~.~! .. !.'.!f NPT BltfFS BARGAINS Reduced over $57,000. Fee land. 4 Br. F.R. Oak flooring. New carpet. Vacant. Now only $287,500 .. Call Pete Johnson 631 -1266 . Reduced over $65,000 Fee land. 2 Br, spa. Contemporary int. View of back bay & Fash. Isl. Now only $260,000. Call Pete Johnson 631-1266. R&IM~ of Costa Mesa ~ Walker G Lee ....... OllTll Prime corner locetlon on buay Wnt 19th St., Colt• M ... near rede-velopment tree. Fully rented end priced 10 Mii et $477,000 L.H. Ownw wlll nnanoe. IUll I• 20.000 aq. ft tllt up bld9 on 1.4 .er.. with emple off etrMt Plrll· Ing. Loeeted near 17th Street end Pomone Ave. In Coate Meta. •••• ,.,., l#Htt, ..,.,, ,.,, .................•.... "' , .... , ..... llTIHIMI IOIUT Natural Geothermal Hot Sprlnga on 12 deeded ecrM with Nll'I Forllt on 3 lid.a end OY9f on 1200 f1 of lrontege on Warm Spring• Creek. Only e mt from Wor1d Famoua Sun Valley Skiing. Extreordlnery opp. to develop • pri- vate, corpor•t• or rell- glou1 retreet. Offered for • llmlted time only. J $115,000 cuhlll ~ Divided Into four 5,000 CONTACT: aq. f1. unfit. 1950.000 OeYld v. v. Helmbectl owner wHI flnence. IDAHO REAL TY AS-TILT IP soc. Pride ol ownerahlp 208-n&-9e99 proS19rty 1~ 1•Hed Geoffrey Bush611 on Segeretrom In South HOLLAND REAL TY Sent• An•. Approx. 15, 208-728-8453 300 eq. f1. with 5 quellty ------- tenente. Nlcely lend· Ull UllWll.U ec:aP8d 4 yur old bldg. Hemlltelr I.Me Front $1,040,000 owner wlll REDUCED $80,000 to nnence. 1595.000. Owner fin. · OITlll HIYI 7 14 -848-3278 or 133 eorea In Hemet _1_1_4-3_3_7_-383 ___ 5"""'.eg--=t. ---- planted In Grepelrull II PU lllllT end Orengea. Top 1 1ou t eltty quellly production with A uxur 1 op qu future riotenll•I for auper energy efficient manufectured home, 2 1ubdlvl1 on. M•n•g•· Br 2 ea, 2 car gerege ment 1v1ll1ble. 12.500. on felrwey of golf 000. COYl'll In exclullYI M-1714167).4400. cured ldu" panc, apec· 121 JI u .. 2121 • tec:utar Y19w, big eheded " •RaOR patio, lrg 11nd1ceped ._ lot, i.a than • yew old. Appr. et 1125,000. Cd OWMf (714) 340-4950 or write P.O. 272&. Pelm Oeeen. Ca. 92260, for det .... ~~~~~~ ,., ., ,,.,. s.v.r'll delUXI 4-Pleua, ,,.,.,. 1111 Ind Covtngton1 In chol-•••••41'5••.,•••••••••••• Cl loeetlon• .. low .. • :!!·0:n:0~7.;. T!ic;. So Ore1on Coast Agt. 845·8100 ; 11 IMM YI &Int 549'-13ea ..,.... • """' &.II ,., "11 "" end PASTURE. Cout •••••••••••••••••••••• Hwy lronteoe. 111&.ooo Mein beyfront lot for 2 with $40t< dn -blilnCI lge condOI on Penln· et 1~ 1ut1. S.ndy bHCh. 111/141·1111 '345,000. Penclla outl 1~~~~~~~ 173·8778 Agt. 1- ~4M.40'•· eqty IHOK, trede lot 811 111 prop or ' ,,......... ,_.,,,, ••• [¥.t!'l ••••••• Mft 8'IYW hill aeooo dowl"I • • for S br houM, Ind '500 p1r· month for p I 'I ~m e II t I • 114-4M-M37 ... ~ .......••.•.•.• :::-~ .... •••• '1/Htl. ••• l.~ff ~ UI lot YEAN. Y 01 WINTER rwnt*. Mtt;r ProperUet 17~ ' WWT£A RENTAL. a bd. 1'A b1. 11110. en-~ °' uwe111 .... ~ 1111 •••••••••••••••••••••• Oceenfront winter ,.,,..., 2 bi, 11>1, compl. ,. furbl1h1d. 01r1oe. wuher/drylr. Ut• JHild· .. 7-3970, a to 5. WINTEA1AENTAl 1ro 1br, 1 'Aba, utllt lnoid, non- 1mkr, no pet1, H25 mo. 175-6471 Furn. hM, 1 BA, 1 blk from oce1n or b1y. 203'A E. Bey, 1350 mo. Can bl 111n S.t/Sun. 11-3 WINTER Sbr. 2 'Ab1, t7H. 3011 Mont1ro. 8711 -5881 , 21S-335-4ete. 4 Br beyfront w/doek. $4000 yrty, $3000 wtnt· er. Avtik. ~8110. J.A. PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 17M173 48A 2BA. wtnt. ,.,,... on Balbo1 Penn 11,000mo. Agent 113-M80 ~-~~ ... !~ff Emer8ld Bl!y. P'tt bMctl, -··~rpOUl'l:-ttrmTW • 0-00'rN, ocean view. 3 Bdrm. · 3ba & guut hou11. 11800/mo winter 1'9ntel or S2200/mo yrly. 714/15i-0047 lmm1cul1te wood1y chinner. AIC4Nltly r• model9d 1nd rldeco- '8tld. 2 bdrm, 1\4 bl lncludlno dining room. Luge 1unny deck OVlflooklng canyon. 3 blk1 to beach 1nd 1tor11. Winter rent1I saso per mo. 497~ 11.'P.!!.~ .. l!.ff uoo l8t.E -s bdml. f8ll'I rm. 4 Be. a1100 mo. OCEANFAONT 2 bdml, 1 81 '700 mo. Biii Onlndy, Mr, 17M1et. ...,.,. home tor .. ....., penone, gr9doUI llvlng. 12500/mo IN. 175-1530 8~ TO BCH, 3 Br & engl. (213) 2111-3507, 3IO 6'611, 611-36811. ~, .... 2 llory. 4br. 4 beittll, dining rm, glent ICt9lft TV, hot tub, mod. kltoh. 2 cu encl. p1rkln'I. Av1ll Sept. 1 , 875-7850 Junior 1 Br. v ........ on court. Slltll/mo. 213/887-32"2 d1y1, 213/387-5900. 2 Br oceentront 1111. Winter llOO/mo. ~ llYe egt. Alt• 752-11110 2 Br, lgl Mng nn, pdo. glflge. MOO, llC. dip. n&-"432 & 87M111 Der1lrla 1 BA. 1 bit fr 1>a1cn, wtoar., wtnt• rentll. 1800 mo. Ind utll. 790-1"2 OUTSTANDING 1 & den, 28a, IUndldc, f()f 1 Of 2 pereon1. teoo mo. Lie 1 yr. Lola Mltllr Age. 831-1298 ...... ,,~ •••••••••••••••••••••• ~e. ......... IMI lllTILI , Ye1rty-W11kly-Wlnter. 2.3.4 Bdrme. • Allll IULn .... 1111111111 11M111 1 M pM PAii Ml or DIN 31111 HollY Or, AJleo Boh, So. LAQ. 4"-2881/48t-1800 Sat/Sun/Mon 1-4 31 Sllkleaf, Woodbrlda-. Irv. 857-2045 $133,900 Sat/Sun 1-5 5e Chardonnay (Wdbrg) Irv. 7ec>-8333 ·~ ~900 2308 Cltff Dr. (Nwpt Hgta) NB 642-5200 $370,500 Sun 1-5 Sun 1-5 2 llR ~ FAii RM or MN *19 Curt Dr., Jasmine Crk, Vu, CdM 640-1515/1-728-5151 1 •• Sun/Mon 12-5 1829 Port Shetneld (HVHma) NB 873-7781 $295,000-fee Sun 1-5 ..., 11111 ...._••If• I.,... r-*' ...._..J: fl 111•• ....... Al tlll ......... l.e.4 Mtew .,. •...e-4 .............. m.y •wt', .. _. 111...,-. DAl.Y fltLOT WANT ADS. ........ =~ ... ·~~· ...... fw ............ ""'4 ....... ..,.,_ .... "' ........ ..cit ht • ., I • ,._ PAii fW or DIN 318 ~. Coat• MeM 54e-t313 $139,600 Sun 12-4 55 Jumtne Creek (Jumn Ck) CdM ... 552-2000 $335,000 ----Sun 1-5 5 Jamlne Creek (Jaemn Ck) CdM 552-2000 $416,000 Sun 1-6 -~ 120 Shorecllff Road~M 8«-8200 $495,000-Fee 102 Via Koron, Udo ltte; NB 8«-8200 $885,000 Sun 2-5 Sun 1-5 2288 Golden Cir (Upr Bk Bay) NB 642-8«8 $219,500 _ Sat/Sun 12-8 2718 San Carioe Lane, cO.ta Meu · 557-1289 Sat/Sun 12-5 2811 C.rcle Dr. (Baythor .. ) NB 645-8218 $219,500-UF Sun 1-4 **1038 Polaris, Newport 8ch 846--0523 $975,000-F.. Sun 1-5 4 • plue PAM RM or DEN 18891 Antioch (Trtlrk) Irv 552-7500 $238,900 * 1878 Maul.Circle, Coate Meaa 1 Sun 1-5 751-3191 $395,000 Sun 12-4 2032 Swan Dr.t Meta Verde, C.M. 557-2472 ~205,000 Sun 1-5 959 Springfield, Coste Mesa 645-0303 $150,000 Sun 1-5 1441 Galaxy Or. (Dover Shores) NB 5'48-6847 $420,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2881 Corvo, M-. Verde, C.M. 957.:0701 1175,000 Sat 12:30-5 * 1412 Santiago (Dvr Shra) NB 831-1288 $31&,000-Fee Sat/Sun 12-8 *21512 Camino Trebol, Lk. Forest 831-1400 $218,000 Sun 1-5 1255 SomerMt (Bayctest) NB 831-7370 $385,000 Sun 1-5 • *3 Mi.tfr a.on, (8pygft) NB 780-8333 11,tea;cJod I *12 Trafalgar (Hrbr Rda) NB 780-8833 ,.$1,195,()()(f 3 San hbaetlan, Hrbr Rldg9, NB 780-1900 12.100,000 Sun/Mon 1-1 *1«8 Galaxy Dr, 0owr Shra NB 875-2373 h95,000.Fee ' Sun 2-5 I BIDROOll .233 Via Gef\oe, UdO' ltte, N.8 . 873-7300 $575,000 I llR plue FAM RM or DEN 938 Via Udo Soud, Lido Ille, NB 673-7300 $847,500 CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE 1 RDROOll *300 Cagney Ln #107(Veraa1U..)NB 831-2918 $120,000 Sat/Sun 11-8 **827 Via Lido Soud, Udo Isl, NB o••-.. ~!.:~,.s:,>~~~..L,~~-~ -1.:~----1~~~ 1~~:.~~s.u~ .. H.2~~~~-.. -~~-=~-..2~- ~ Hazel Dr., Corona def Mar 8«-9080 $300,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2834 Catalpa Eutbluffa NB 1973 Vla1a-del Oro, Btuff9, fi'B "97 4'&44' ·,206 000 ' Sat/Sun 1 5 210 Via San Remo, Udo Isl, NB 780-6616 $285,000 Set/Sun 1-5 19881 Potom.c, Huntington Bch ta-8787 $125,000 8un 12-6 2345 18th St., ~ Hghta. NB 642-2171 $2"5,000 Sun 12-4 307 Sapphire, Balboa Island, NB 673-5291 $385,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2763 Drake (Meea del Merrc'l 540-1151 $124,900 Sat/Sun 1-4 314 Martaokl, Corona del Mar 831-14l>O $689,000 Sat 1-5 1801 Yecht Metia, Newport Beed\ 648-7171 $339,000 Sun 1-5 1718 Port Weatboume, HVHma, NB 759-1501 $218,~ Sat/Sun 1-5 502 I Street (Penln pt) NB 831-1400 $438,000 Sat/~ 1-5 1511 KJngia Road (Nwpt Hgta) NB • 873-8900 $419,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 *2001 Gelat• Ten, cdM e.te-7171 $995,000 Sun 12-4 817 Seaview, Coata MeN 646-7171 $138,900 Sun 1-5 *1514 Ruth Lane, Newport 8ch e.te-7171 $234,900 8un 10-1 1824 Port Stlrtlna Pt., Nwpt Bch. 648-7171 *2f4,900 Sun 1-5 *24041 Sprig, Mllelon Viejo (213)846-4'34 $1'42,500 Sa/Sun 1-5 *204 Via Eboll, Lido ltte, NB 873-7300 $550,000 Sa 1-4/Sun 12-3 185-4 Suntet Ridge, Laguna 8eect'I .• 494-1177 Sun/Mon 1·5 • -Joen St., Coeta Mela 646-2313 •1n-ooo Mon 11-2 ......... aT -• -875-30481873-2558 Sat/Sun/Mon 1-5 15 Rue Fontaine (Bg Cyn) NB 760-8333 $975,000 Set/Sun/Mon 1-5 1218 Key w .. t, HV Hiiia. CdM 8«-4010 t379,500-FM Sun 1-5 22N Redlanda Dr. (a.ck Bay) NB 831-1400' 1248,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 870 SMdcaltle, Corona del Mat 8«-9080 1312.000 Sun 1-5 Sun 2-5 2501 Harbor View Dr (Hrbr Vu His) NB 780-8333 $585,000 Sat/Sun/Mon 1-5 112 Via Koron, Udo ••• N.8. 873-7300 $405,000 Sun 1-6 1301 Dolphin Ten., Irv. Ten., NB e31-7300 $986,000 Sat/Sun 1-.5 *512 Roctcford Pf, Cameo Hghlnda, CdM 831-7300 $199,900 Sat/Sun 1-5 1135 Pembroke, Newport Beach 645-6656 $264,900 Sat/Sun/Mon 1-.5 * tf 38 Bai boa Coves, Newport Bch e1s-1oeo '525,ooo 8un & Mon 1-5 818 Merlgofd, Corona del Mat 875-5511 $385,000 Sat/Sun/Mon 1-8 15 Rue Fontaine (Bg Cyn) NB 780-8333 $975,000 Mon 1-5 2501 Herbor V1ew Dr (HrbrVuHla) NB 780-8333 $585,000 Mon 1-5 2'405 Cffff Or., Newport Hta, NB 831-1400 $820,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 *1472 Galaxy Dr. (DoYer Shoree) NB 642-2610 teH,000-fee Sat/Sun 1-5 *2007 Holiday Rd. (8eycre9t) NB 845-8100 $289,000 Sun 1-8 1514 Myrttewood, Coat• ~ 646-2313 1142,800 Sun 12-4 * 1901 o.atea Terr, Irv. Terr, CdM 844-elOO 1795,000.Fee Sun 1-5 2804 w. OcMnfront, Newport Bch 831-1400 tee6,000 Sun 1--5 *3185 Bermuda. Coate Mela 831-12te 1150,000 8at/8un 1-5 222 Ccnl, Balboe ~ • 17a.eta 1 tue.000 213 Diamond, Balboa Island 8"4-4910 $595,000-Fee Set/Sun 1-5 * 14 Burning Tree Rd, Big Cyn, NB 844-4910 $895,000-Fee Sun 1-5 4 IR plua FAii RM or DEN 1M3 Port Laurent, HV Hma, NB 8«-8080 $310,500-Fee _ S 2·5/Sn 1-5 9451 Gat99head, Huntington 8ch 083-8787 $335,900 Sa 1-4/Su 11..a 8072 Adella, Huntington Bch 083-8787 $179,800 Sa 1-5/Su 11-2 *1707 8aveder9 Terr, Irv Terr, CdM 6«-8200 $895,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 7 Winged Foot Ln. (Big Cyn) NB 6«-4804 $785,000 Sat/Sun 12-4 320 Seaward (Shorec:Uffa) CdM 831-1400 $475,000 Sat 1-5 228 Poppy, Corona del Mar 644-9080 $585,000.Fee Sun 2-5 8282 Sierra Sienna (Trtlrk) Irv 780-8333 S 199,500 Sun 1-5 1251 Surttlne Way, HV Hiiia, CdM 8«-4910 1275,000 Set/Sun 1-5 **833 Bayltde Dr, Waterfront, NB 875-7852 $1,050,000-Fee Set/Sun 1-5 ••DIK>OM 2912 Carob, Eutbfutf, NB 8«-1742 1249,000-LH. S/Sun/Mn 1-5 **108 Via Lido Nord, Udo Isl, NB 875-8181 11,500,000 Sun 1-5 . * 1524 Antigua Way, Newport Beac:h 848-7171 "49,900 Sun 1-8 I M ...... PAM RM or DIEN 1818 Tanager .L. Cotta Mela 646-2313 •H0.000 4' Narbonne, Hrbr Ridge, N.B. 8«.e200 11,825,000 Sun 1-4 Sun 1-5 *1 Muir a..c:h Cr (Spygl ... ) CdM 640-e2H Sat/Sun 2-8 *46 Aovlll St. George (Big Cyn) NB 144-7MI '848.000 Sun 1-1 2 llR plue FAM RM or DEN *25 Canyon Island Dr, Big Cyn, NB 759-9051 $249,000 Delly 3-517-9 100 Scholz Plza Ph. 10(Versa1Mee) NB 831-5300 $259,500 Sat/Sun 1-:5 I llR plua 'All RM « D9N *1738 We1tctltf, Weetclf, NB 873-7300 ., 19,000 *1640 Iowa #0, Coate Mesa 846-7171 $89,900 3 BEDROOM 1984 Vista Caudel, Bluffs, Npt 8ch 780-8816 $315,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 a llR plua FAM RM or DEN 2845 Vista Ornada, Newport 8ch , 840-0020 $315,000 Sa/Sun/Mon 1-5 MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE 1 llR plUe PAM fW or o.N 300 E. Coast Hwy Unit 111, NB 875-3347 $80,000 Sat/Sun 1-4 2 laDROOM 700 Udo Park Dr (Cannery Via) NB 831-1400 $32,000 Sat/5un/Mon 1-6 700 Lido Prk Dr. #12(Cannery V1Q)NB 831-1400 $39,000 Sat/Sun/Mon 1--5 DUPLEXES FOR SALE -..... , .. 509 AC8Cla (OoNnelde of hwy), CdM 845-704'8 t«0.000 Sat/Sun 1-6 . ' ~ L , . Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Sunday, September 5, 1982 BEACH 200 YARDS! NORTH LAGUNA Wh ite wate r view! Early California Spanish 2 BR, 1 ~ baths, hardwodd flooni, Fr'ench doors, formal dinina, fireplace, new country kitchen. View deck. Lovely decor. Unlimited expansion area. and assumable 12% loan. New ~g! $347,000. OPEN LABOR DAY 12-5 145 LoBrea Agt., HOO. Mc<Mmodi, 494-4674; 494-7551 SPACIOUS llESIDHOE + IUSllEll Must look inside! Approx. 2900 sq ft! Completely remodeled 2 bdrm, 2 bath , 16x40 formal dining/living room, stairnxi glass windows, central heat, laundry room . Large stor age bldg. As king $195,000. Fle xible terms. Owner will assist financing. 114 W. lltlt St., Ot1t1 Mesa 142-1331 " 141-1414 PRIVACY, VIEW AND CHARM French Country cottage plus guest house on estate sized lot. Completely remodeled, pack like jp'Ounds, 50 bearing fruit trees, entrance courtyard, brick' patios, deck overlooklng the coastline. $475,000. MNER ASSOCIATES 1101 I. Ot11t llwy., Lq1111 ltaoll (114) 414-1177 LAGUNA BEACH · Exclusive n e ighborhood overlooking Emerald Bay. 3 BR 2 Ba, plus den and 2 fireplaces in a woodsy setting. $110,000 ~wnable and owner may assist. The lot alone is worth the listed prkle. "A STEAL" $299,000. Art., t9ie McCormack, 494-4674, 494-7551 Gre~~fo~ r~~~~T ~!!~~~q~~~~~ome with all amenities -2 frplcs, 3Br, family rm TERRIFIC HOME ,..__. ~~.Jt..J....Gft,--~--~ -· -built-in kitchen with best appliances -2 'h DESERT LIVING -.yTv~"'~ ,,..._._~~Bea ~~ee:~,c!:_..,~-==:~.,_-'4l0r:.;.~iu:R 2!JLL~IU'.Jhis rel~xin 3 P~of.._decor, warm .. ~~· fam rm, LAGUNA BEACH s prinkling system--in -Leme n G rove -rm, ~T>a. a;-ear garagenouse w1ti-t""so~~-1-+-1~."'g'_..1<..;i""t.,..c"h"'e'""n .... ,-.h""6igi'r-m?am ceilings, Li ·~ti SI SportsCourt -room forhorses&poolon wa1er,horselot,undergroundulils.l617 sq. h r e _place, +a .l arge p ri·va t e ** •11•1 H I '** the spacious 2 acres of useable land. G;eat ft. Only 24 miles NE of Palm Springs in 3 bdrm, 2 bath, wood & glou. financing $469,500. In San Diego's fabulous Yucca Valley. $97,500. Courtesy to Brokers. m arucured yar d . A real value at Small but clouy 2 story. Nor th County. Call Narcis.5us at 48 1-9094 or Western Hills Estates $375,000 a nd you · Jwn the land. 497-2322/497-5487 756-2908. Call 714/365_2392 _Open Sun 12-6. 1218 K eel Dr, CdM. OPEN SUN a MON 1-5 38 BALBOA COVES, N.8 . BA-¥ FRONT BOAT SLIP. privet• beech. Lit • •nd ChMtY 3 bdrm 2 beth home. F1r..,a.c:.. Prtc. Nd~ to 1525,oocit CASH TALKSll Or $200,000 down & Ml .. r wlll cerry 1et T.D. et 12% for 10 , .. ,.. lubmH .. , often, *BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES* 673-9187 or 875-7060 DOVER SHORES 1441 Galaxy 4 Bdrm. Den, Formal Dining Room, 2 Fireplaces, 3 car garage plus large Hobby Roo m . Pool Size d lot, b e autifully land8caped. Owner will assist at financing. Only $420,000. Open SaVSun. 1-5. Nelson Robinson: Rltr. TREES GALORE NEWPORT HEIGHTS (EASTSIDE) One Bedroom, one Bath 7 ,000 sq ft lot! Garage. Fenced. School. transportation shops. Priced at only $106,000. ' ·Coll: 498-1490 PICTURE YOUR HOME ON THIS PAGE Next Picture Album Sunday, Sept. 19 , Call 642-5678 from romantic covered patio & beautiful rose garden. 3 bdrm, 2 ~ bath, lge family rm, eat-in kit. + d ining area. $225,000 avail. at 11 ~% to qualified buyer with 20% down. Owner may carry 2nd. Offered at $345,000. Call agt Nan, Another 3Br w/pool. & 2Br apeoe age kltch. Kida ok. $825. & Flet IM. et S..t Alty 53M180 SHARP 1 BDAM FLAT $325 Best -,_ 53M 190 644-2999 Patrick T e nore , RE/MAX., 631-1266. -:::::... -=-~ 20Cf Fl.REWPORT B"AYFRONT BOAT ON THE BAY, PLAY ON THE OCEAN -Spacious open & sunny all view home w / panoramic ~. on huge prime Island Point, + dockin; & prkg galore, + you own the land, + owner financing, all for $965,000. 4028 Channel Place, Newport Island, N.B. 673-0202. J Orange Ooaat DAIC.Y PILOT /Sunday, S.ptember IS, 1982 Fl ..,,_,"*.,.,_ DOLLAR DAY DOUGH 8 AYIR8 for Meroh•ndlH und., 11,000. 3 3DAY8 • OLLAR I - 8eU your no-tong« needed 1tem1 for caah. If It doe1n'l Mii, we'll run It another 3 d1y1 FREB. One Item INES _ . P9I' ad, mutt be prleed. Sorry. no real Htat• or com mere I al ad1. Call today for full det1111. (M9ft ,...., ••••• l lltN llftee et•) • CLASSIFIED8642-5678· .... ,, n.i.,,,... ~ .... -•·'-.-........ .. "··n~. ~ A,., .... ,, ..,,_,, A,.,:, ... ,r. L • .J 11!.~al!.lt.~'!.I .... ~~al!.!!.IH.'!J.'M 9!!'!!..ft,.'11 .... ~~ ••• -.;&.-1/ ~ ..... '"' WINTER 80. IAYl'..oHT ~ • ••i' .~....... • •• ln::.......... •••• • •••• • • ••• • • ••• •• • • • • M:i-4. ~ Plu.al., MIF tht my 1.c.M. hM, ...,.,. ...... ..:r= •••••••••••••• ••••• ••t••••••••••••• :".~-.:.r.r:r.nu.~1' •••• •::_•: ... 'l :1 • li~' ..... &...J "•'-•.UW v•/•t• ••w. S&-5 ht lbf Iba . .,.~.,. ..... -:rn:.............. 4 br. l1IOO. lncldl "'*' ocU.N;AONT. ~ .. ·;·: -,,::,.. • MM~ .... • .. ,,._, 1"f ,:: ntaa$.th ~· furn/unfurn, 11unclry. Off~ tulle OW<tooklng ,.,,,,,,, OC·AENTAl.8 excel. view 875-tl2t. B 8Y w..ei ..,.... lh J'n.:r. • •••••~"--s:J r.:'l1.Z1m•••••••••°7; •••""'•""• • ••••••••• 84~_.813 ere u ' 9'0. '350/mo. tAe.1873 Newport Harbor. I.Ill lt.M1laa.I"' fMI 1·&bt'• l200 to 1aooo 9;;.7173 or mon . N ,. h/f' 1 " 1 1 .. I .. a ... ...., NeWpot1 pier, 2 " • Fem 30 1hr lge llVlth IP~ IVIHI~ ATOii ••• -..( ........ a ••••• ~J 750-3314 open 7-d•yt ~··" ,,,,.,,."' ' t ~ • Newty deO«. Ou ~. 1 .. upl)er unit. MOO M/F move In IOV91y hOme twnhN w/r9ef). WOfklno 1 • 0 0 0 • q I LIDO ISLI! 'llLLAO! rt Shor .. 3 Br 2'A • •••••••••••••••••••• 2&3 Bdrm wlnt« rent lit •· "';~,.,.,.,pct 1 o:fcs encl g# ctwtnr pOol yrty, Avlll. now. CM. Pvt B• & oompl r • m u n b •II• v • b I• 714-tAS-7100 Tht Molt Hole· 01"' ~ block• to ~ ~ on Newport Penln. •&26 ~·no petl '4eo. AQt .. bbo. Ad~lt1, nO pet1'. J.A. PAOPl!ATY houHhold prlv. Leelle roo~1. overlooklno MNI IAIUlll home decor eeceff, Mt cioM to echoot & ttn: h•ll,.•h 1,11'1 up. Agt, 015-11M2. llO '" IMS.2000 142-6073. MANAOe~l!NT 842-3277• broo.k a w1ter1a11. Pool, Exec Sultu lnol obtote. Oood ltut. nit. M2·8983. v•••i; .. .,;•bjk"t~•ben••;; 1 Id, ~ le d•"'ltll, uttl 911-81 3 Fem. roommete wanted l•C. leke, elo. NB/CM reaapi., H o'y Hrve: .1~00 ICI It. 8ub OhlPI" ~Br ., teas ' In-,,.,,,.,.,, ..,. •-"'111 .., 'rt BIOOll to bMctl 2Br to 1tl1t• turn OoHn atee, from l-27 5. conr rm kll m•ll 8 oorp. Protected ter• Wntcllft 3 Br, cs.n. or-d ·,J :,:r.. 111 ·lllt D.JadldH plld. '37t_mo9lt~L~ r.':'r.••••••••••••••••• bright & airy. 170o mo: Front w1n11r ren111. I.lg 780-804& handlg R••ponel11• to rltory. IH.000 + Inv. flee, 2'A 91• 2 cer le"· dry'. 873 .. 32f. ' ' •••o••••••••••••••••• move In, ..,,t, · l.erat 1 '*9 yrly. 861-8213 Bch. AvllL 9118. '326. 6hr nlot 2 br, 1 ba 11Pt. your butlntH nHdl. 458•7812• 87~868 gardener. no pate I 5. ep "1#1 lllw ~ EAST81DE 1 bd lot• Of UUI. pl. ••so mo. 2 1·240-7005 aft e PM NB Pool 1242 50 911 AdJ 405 F"wy In F.V. ,_ , I 1-837-1458 or 648-5028 Winter rtnt'I. 3 IR. 2 I>& ••••••••••••••••••••• wood, quiet, pvt, 1315 bdrm• •vell. '4N-4804 e4S:83te · 759.ie14 Ind.Iv. of ct. Mo/mo ... rn ••• CHARM· fllpended 5 B Wtrfnt. Avlll 811. UOO. 2 BA 1 Be, no pet•, yrty, 11tll1 lnolcl no pet• Agt "" CIMMll Uff YOllng Profeulonal, open ' t $326 8e3 eo& o...,,..,,.,, l llf 3 · HvJ· 730~777 837-2813 lndry rlOll. cllCtc, MOO. 831 3848 AM or aft •••••••••••••••••~• mlnd•d mele Htk• M/F to thr condo ocean rorn • · ••• -..(1";; • ..-.;, ••••••• J car 11g•~·~~ed wi ' 876-0348. •pm• OCEAN VIEW 1 br, 1 be. l•Y M Tiit -11tne lor 2 bdrm, 2 be view am•nlll .. • 1375 NEWPORT EXEC SUITES Ptttnerthlp: I l2,000 r ICU~ • 1 : lk • 11~bEr •. !_5-~~-~.;lvd. R I, yrty ' J.428 !TIO. 2 bt, 2 ba, ln Sen Clefnlnltf Neer lrvlnl home. Oaragt, mo incl llllll. 942.4eg1 Full MtYlce, rtue>nable c .. h a.cured 8ho11ld renc: w n owl, y .. ,......,. <> 1 B lb~ In. Utll pcl, 1 br, l'OC>lmo. •8&0 mo. no r•11. NEW 2 Bdrm ept wtth )'ll'd. Non-emoker. 1385 r 11a1 )(Int Io c . ..ally return 1100,000 ~:iti3 ~:~~3~mo . 8 7 9 • 8 8 8 1 • 1&50l mo Incl. Quiet. Pelto, nr boh. 7 14 • 8 5 8 • 1 12 or bullt·lnl oerpetlng, In<> Incl utll. 581-4288 Chrlttlen ltm rmmtle lo 752·8408 thll yMf to party ... • . 213-3315-4888 876-2578 Sept. 1 & 15. &U-e858 661-2338. drepet, laundry fecillty, .,.. 833"°"50 deyt thr rurn 2 BA ~t. HB FFICE SPACE·CdM l•Cled. Mr. Cullt( For ..... or leue option, c.i.. "I., 311J I bdrm. pity rurn., yrty Huge 3 bdrm 3 be prlv und« roof Olfpor11 for Femtle to 1hr 2 bclrm, ., .. 9""1248 A I • c~ .. , H 45o+ " 9e'4·8'1l. •1800/mo. & Br., l11ge ••••••~•.!•••••••••••• 1528/mo. 307 Corel. P•tlo. No pett. 'seoo MudMIN 2 cart, put:>llc ttnnl1 2 b• N.B. ipt, 1250. Fem to thr N.B. ept wl •vtll. 14~: 844•84~ 0wn--h-•'""1t-ln-ter-.. -,-1n_,,C-M ylfd, toh0011, •hopping Ocean view, beeutlfull~ 873·5132. 973.1g39 mo. 151-2l7& -...i #ff court• & golf court• 720-1845 av" .. rM. 1 blk to beach. tiome. Mlnlm11m down. n • • r ~ Y · A g • n t fum. townhou... frplO, Beytront 3 bdrm 2 ba. • •• -.;";;'.............. right bltllncl prope1ty, U78 mo. 545-8H5, EltOUtlYt Suites enere In 150,000 equity, 848-1044. pool & pe\lo. $885/mo. l.erge petlo. N9w opt. STUNNING l1rge 1 Br .. o.tuxe ~ekll lltra fir· welltlng dl1tanoe to I.I. IOIUfllllT 875-4340 For 1.,... 3 adJecent plue 1 tlx benefit•. Cell N c t 2B d 873-0888 ,1200 yearly. Garden Apt, pool & rec ge 2br, 2 ba, bllnt, s t 1 1 a p • r k & ,. nontmkr to thr • br, • G •, y 0 • R 0 b b I 0 ewpor1 :••. r u-mo ; 87~ 11et,. 710 Yl. 18th. St. Cl1wtlr, 1't' mli.t beech. beech ... c:lOM lo every-2'il ba 3rd fir apt: lrplc, Fem rmll• In 20' executive tullH. Tocf. 714-631-1289. plex condo. Attec:h ger, IAOllLll APT 975-7009, e 5 B So C No pet•. 1800/mo. ttllnf.I •475/month. eunroof, bllcony, lndry, 2Br dplx lloor of prHt1Qlou1 a • -------.,.-== dining .,.., pool, ttn· Rm /bat'" kit No 2 B .. f""" :r llv tll * 2Br. 1 a. New • · ..... •<>•2 o Sh 1-2ag5 dren. BHutlTul view. .. w 1-~ •••o nit, clbhH, 17 Wiid w "·~~c.? · "• ""'1 rm, u Plaza, 8 .A. Luxury .......,...., Aval Ible ctob•r 1, den. Yrty 1275, let, IHI Highly upgr•ded. Aec:• i:-_!,!T..'!f!'.."!';. •• ~. c.looM. Ticonderoga to pelt. ~ft . .-S. °'*' Incl. I O mo. Avl Condo wl pool •s75. .. .... ,. ... • one or two lldult• only & de9. 873--4742 F. TO SHA NWPT a t1onl1t servlct pro-145;000 thor1 term 40% W Fri 3·5· 611 .& Sun t0/1/82 213-587-8595 ' l3S-tt74 --&•no peta Cell owfter It APT ON BCH $260 P • • • Intrepid to lld~oo••· 10•12. 515~ Segonia. · No pelt. · i_ge 1 & 2 br twflh .. (714) 842:0138 MIF 25-33 prof only, no 875-7738 857_2703 vlded: Sulla tvalltble L.T.V., very w.11 NC:ur• saso. 714 543-24 7 (213)355-t5g7 ~ • 2 br, "' occ. gw/petlo eptt, frpicl, dlthwUher, . tmlu. clean. to thr 2br, lndlvlduelly or .. • ed. 483-7874 IL'nl T ..... I ...._,_ -• ••-S 4 e o p I u, 1 e c encl gar. Nr Huntington 1 8', pvt deck, old wor1d 2'M>I new condo, CM. I I ,.,.00 group ldeel tor brtl>Ch • • C..11 #IU '114 •• !.~!:!~ ..... ~! '46-1:l87 Chllcl O.K., NO Herbour. From 1475. charm, •P•Cllcular Dave, 631-4381 '!/!!'!. •• !~!! ..... '!.'... olflce or pereon In the 'G::J."' 11811110,. 1 3Br + den, 281, Pool. •••••••••••••••• •••••• 2 bdrm 2 ba newer dPlll. 0og.e CtllldfllO Ot<. ~7 cc.en vu, walk to beech llnenclll lleld. Ple11e 1 ~ ~ Frplc:, wash/dry, bit-Ina. STUNNING large 1 Br. ty MI kr MH Contac1 Mgr •t Prof. non-tmOker, fem... momvE 11m1 call (7 14)780-1818 •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Petloe, 2 car garage Garden Apt., pool & rec yr ta u;;50no;·ri rs, 1 bc1 ept, U9Ptf, clMn, ept C 332 Encino Ln. to 1hare 3 and den IAVINE. PllOne an-· Newport Centtr . I I Unul Beeutll, Quiet Oreenbel1 area $435/mo. 710 W. no ri: t'-1 8 8 4 1 8 5 pelnted patio, Raft, · ti om e In New Po rt Ing, cont. rm, ulil pct, I ::w' • 1111_ .. I 1 0 0 0 . 1 yr I I. 18th: St 2 1 • • I 3 7 5 • n d I • • • • ShorH. Wt1her, dryer, tctry serve. etc. Also PlOlflO PWA • as• -· •. 840·20g& 257.97g2 846-18113 ,.,., 400I comm. pool, l•nnlt, d"k epece. 1150/up 234 EHt 17th St CM Specie zing In 111 & llWPHT YILUll or 17141 73-3888 •••••••••••••••••••••• Wiik to bHch, ut11111.. 5-40-g745 1"100 IQ ft to 2&00 eq , 2nd 2 BA remodeled hte w/ g11. 1'A bike off Mild. •&95 yrly. Alli tor Biii, 857-5880 BHutlful •h•dy ap11, 1425. 1 br. utllt pct , 417 E.tlde luxu~ In • pine • S1cur1ty 011es l.egun• Beach Motor Inn Inc I u d • d . $ 3 5 o . 1817 w .. tc:lltt, N.B. 256, ft-11.05 per 11. Utll & TD a since 1g49 CM i., & w1ter ~·I~. Patlf E Bey B boa No pet•. ~or:t·2 i.:~ is~~~\~l: • P(lOt & Rec Room 1185 N. Pacific: Cet Hwy. 846-9587 to 4000 IQ. ft. 111. janllorlel Incl. See bl~g ~oEbt.B~:.::"ad ~[tor, deck, poo , o1~u:ii 647·1155 811 5 . M gr A Io k • '' 2 BR Patt0 AptJ 1.1g1,1na Bch. Dally/ Do yo11 heve entlque fl<>Of. Agent 541·5032 mgr 845-3120. 642~2111 545-o811 tennle c:ourtl, v fu •-e 3 1 e 7 4 1 or MI F • G1rde11 L1no1up1no Wkly/ Kitchen avail. furniture? Shere my s allng Down? O c llf I IOUI YIEW c~rt. recs:~· ~r I~ 3 BA. 2 ~ uS10~r-;Q 2131582-2845 • Obrtwulltra&BllO's Low wlnttr rat ... beeutlful 4 Br. Meta *llLllE lffl011* ~ranch? Offioe et R.: WIDOW HAS $1$ for 3 br, 2 b•·lrvlne Terr. ~5/&;75 · ' =n 2131737.;212 _. Jo0tolltacn&Sll09S 484-5284 Verde home. $300/mo. From 1 room to 3 gency Center, Exec ro·1 RE Loent. 10K ~· home. $1400/mo Incl. . d•Y.. 7141873-0358 28', 18e Trl.plex, 1~ ml Fem. nice room, pteuant 55$-0837 room•. From $1.18 • eultH In Newport nr No Credit Check, o g11deMr. 1818 Bonnie B••tiaflt• • · to bch, fncd yd, gar, eree. E/Slde C.M. nr M/F to Illa.re Beechfront eq. 11. No le•N requlr-Airport, fully equipped & Penelly. Dennlton & _,g_1_t_o2_~_:_2_e_1_5_._1_5_4_1_ •••• ~!~ ••••••••• /!.if ~.~';.~!!.~.!!.¥. ;=os=tPl.s~~g.e:~· ~~-fe58 s 1 o o I mo . ~n~s1~n~s':~f ~~i ~=,/~~t~!r. l"~. :~~~ :;oj~o 1aqn!: ,:,":" ::1:,::, Deed EASTBLUFF Exec. home llTATI UY1lt Lrg. 1br, bech apt. 2 18', encloMd patio, utll 1 8', 3 blltt to beectl, CdM, nr beach, great apa. Prlvete entrtnc:t. 833-3223 free w/6 mo. IH, 2 mo wented, prlndpalt only 3 bf. 2 be. din, format Beaullful parl(-llke tur· bike lrom BIO Coron•, Included. •• 10 mo. 1330/mo Inc. utll. No room In 2 itory llouM. 1500 Airport eree • Exec:. lree w/1 yr 833-9976 54g.1e21 dining, 2 frplt. gerdtn rounding• .• Terreced utllt pd. $~75 mo, 857 -4828 home, pets. 638-8541 \ -$425/mo. 840-4255 213 -512·1541 or Suite•. From 225-450 Shara chok:e garden ol- patlo , $1250 mo pool.r S~en gta bbq, 873·1l53. e.42.0350work. Frun 2Br 1 ba, & 213-5g4.9024 eq. ft. S1 per sq. It. flceepece.ntar Alrport. All••••tt•••t•/ 842-0350. sparkllng fountelnt. Dellghtful 1 Bdrm duplex Sharp 2 Bdrm 1 be, breeiy, encl gar. O/W, P~;1,'fi!~ b:~r:YP~~:: AVAIL.ABLE IMMEDIATE· Meny xtru. Call lrvlne. $260/m o . l1i ,.a1l1/ l g 48r, etepe to bMGh, S~acloue roomi. Sepe-nr perk & ooeen. Utll 2912 Peppertree i..ne. no· pate. n 15/mo. Ut..llllO L.,Y 557-7010 975-0202 I.flt I FH8' Newport Shor•, comm f~e01::~·~~;w:::; ~5~sll::.1'~1~~tlo . nntm~.-,..O-pt1•. 8(2·2HT -to there wllh prof re• executive olflce 11ulle, Our purpose al our lull .................... .. poollttnnle, yrly, famlly kitchen & cabinet•. 558'-4718 2 br, 1'A ba twnhH, 3 Br. houH, 2'"' Be. pOntlble female 25-30. comer of 405 Fwy, Near service Ntwport Center Allat••tf9f8tl SIH . 111g5 mo. $45-3370 Walk to Huntington C..11 #IU 3114 Speclout 2Br apt, pvt 1415 + 1375 dep Nr kitchen prlv., jacuu.1. 2 bdrm, 1'"' b• COM H11bor Blvd. Teke over Execullvt Suite la to •••••••••••••••••••••• a11 5PM. Center. •••••••••••••••••••••• patio, bttln•. Encl ger. Beech Blvd et Mcflld· ~lg~& /o86.~~o Leguna apt. 3 blk• to ~· P.oo1 leue. 1600 IQ.fl. at 90¢ Nrve n8'!¥ and exllllng SCRAM LETS Npt Tert. 3Br 2'M>a, epe, 1 Bdrm-furn. l505 Specloua 2 Br. 1 Be. Con g,c ... • Apt 1 . den. Quiet older peraon · & gerden~ lnci d. ••t, ft. Call 751-8191 bllalnesN"· with 1 fully • pool. g11age. 1725 mo 2 Bdrm-l1.1rn from le05 $425. 3 Br. 1'h Be. &42·1875. pref. No pett. 883-4884 Leg. Nlg. Lge rm. gor-laat, NC, ~ utll. Con· equipped 1taf1 Thia la ANSWERS 552-7074 -2 Bdrm-TownhouH $475. Laundry fac.. geoua vu,"prl11~1>901, tuelo, ~~.5e~1 -eg11, aec:ornpllahed In prestl-. .....:_,........... ~-4. br, 1 be, t. Br, p1t10. • pill(. ~J. k 11....... -~ ct-ee tlf 1 ----~· .. ~~1>-' turn. pool. 541-9$~~ 1 d no I I l. t epe. It. ,_,, •• -au u -ar.ven . Oblige 2 bdrm, 1 be. appll-from 1975 -'---------rt, n ry, Idea or c ean qu • 1285. 240-807 P~el. F to thr beeul. 4 br d kl surrounding• with In-P-· .. _. • Tr_..y ancH, drtpH, quiet PINE BLUFF APTS pet•. $430 mo, 271-A E. • du It.. N 0 p. t.. tu re. goo par ng, lvld al f1jc:ee M /M --.,.,.. ~!!:' ,~071 1~~~ A~~i ~o ~l~T~u~'~J~8;l ~.~·cv;:l~ 1o:i<.' :n ~h! 18th Pl. e«-0'452. ~38&~12~08 1~1~1~~ I cf: L!f,t• p~1~!~~11~~t~o~: ~~$2;'t,f~~c_e,:rk i:\~~1~19~rookhur11 ~om uss~ 844-71~9 o. F~~t<E~~~: Sept 15th. Drive by 115 16211 P•::ld• L.n, 1 Bluff•. p1t10, view, rrp1c:. M~~. ~dr:r'g;J.'~ 545-7831 rpren~..'!9..!r $300be1C~K~C: Fln1ncl1lly reepontlble 400.900 PLUS 1400 sq. CllTI •EU j t;Y,!,~~n,i:; ~~:: :;• 26th St. NB. Cell w . of e..cn. 3 blU s. tncl gar .. gH 1tove, pets. 724.B Jemet. 2 Br. 1 ea. upttelta. ,._ .. -w-· ,..... · &Femlle 2 1 5-39 1 tHo •,here ft. P1nthouN B~ront 200 50 eq. It to 2tt600& sq. He got carried -•Y by 875-3148 evn of Edlnger ... 847•5441. dlthwHher, •P•. lndry 873•7797 cl'lllcl ok, no pett, water ,,,_, ocass one 01 eH, Sulit, perking, patfo11. rt c per eq. . up. the art• and they got SUPER DEAL 3rm w/ rm. UOOlmo. Id MOO Aotnt 9e8-2951 45' Motor-Sallor docked 873-1003 Call Aealonomlcs. Corp. him for crtallve BOOK· cozy £l••H ln1• Jffl SPMC 831-8107 Lux, 2Br, 2Be, So. Ctt r• :a.s-2000 ' no Yeerly ,..., blk to bch lrg In Newport, hu central CdM dlx suite, AIC, 675-6700. t<EEPING. kltc:ti. utll·pcl, 1325 .. , ................... 2 bd 1~ b Fl• Plua, AC, pool, MCUr1ty ea. · 1 room & ~" Be.' no air, heel, 2 · biltht, pd 2855 ol--------- OC-AENTAL$ 750-3314 Lp~~e.'~<!\~· =:Ha':,~: pt~.mbithw~. rJ,1~ g;~~ ~ryi9'=a !1f.u1 .... j 3141 k I I ch en . I 3 2 5 . •'lheocwtr•I:.· Pklletcatlttan.,,~dll r.'~~t P~!y~~75.6900 ~!.1}!'.'.'..~!~!~!.!.~t £•11 ~ ffH' SJOO 1130 .. ~ ........ 3015 petlo. Oar. No pate. 1 · ..,,.. •• ••••••••••••••••••• 873-9327 v Comm'I or bu11. ottlce •••••••••••••••••••••• On the Water. Supar ........ .,. 1520 mo. 54s-5478 g18-2390 dye. BLUE 1.AOOON town-· rel4.lme, current pt\010, 2000 sq 11 office epace w/phone & 700 IQ ft of Lost: Wnlte end grey eharp 3Br 3be, water -1 B Tr....,_x '37S houH, on the oceen Room In prlv home, pereonal background to for IN. Cl • evall now. yard In C.M on Pl•· ttbby femlle. Vic of the p cl . Dock av a 11 . ·~ .... j 111 BAY TIMBERS :._ ~& plint no tide Of the hwy. 2bt, th are rent end utll. P.O. Box 35·8, Balbol 825 W. 19th St, Coat• can t I a 12 5 O I m 0 . Lal<n Northwood. Hu 11000/mo . A~t . ••••••••••••••••••••• Spaclou• 1 Br. frple, ' 2ba, poolt, tennl• Welk to beach. 1250 1t1and,Callt.g2&&2 MeH. 645-8830. see 648•3332 colltr & tage. da ••2 '"'73 or •7"77 7 Winier Rentll. 1, 2 & 3 pool & more 846-9883 pete. courtt,"""' bMctt, 1850 mo. 845-0118 ••re N-.. "'rup a•• 7...,2 -731 22•• "" .._ v "" · 2 2 e 2 PI a c • n t I a · per m"'o.·· Edgewtter CdM, near beectl. Greet '"' · """' · .-v-"'" -~ • vu ---------bclrme. ~ P«lln----------1 1 # Retell etore et 2850 New Exec:. home on IUle. Pllya AMI &lite Nice 28drm 2 ba. Moat t.45-CMM 484-&53e •r.h •r.11 41 room In 2 etory tlOuM. SUNNY Newport Beech Avon. l685 eq t1 plus Lott 2'"' wk1: grey M WATER. 2 Bclrmt. plut 873-1900 utll pcl. 622 Hamltton lar 2 8' 1 Ba. wtth . ••••••'••••••••••••••• $425/mo. 640-4255 Patio Office. 833 OoYei', 8 Cir gtr..,.... llA1-8777 t•bby c:et, ne.ut., den. dock •v•ll•bl•. 1--..,.....-------=,.,,,,.~ St. 0:-eoe. oiw. lndry rm. s:,;,.'A14~ t~~'. MMMI mtll Olac:rlmlnellng & llnan-Suite 2 . $308/mo. -..-"Teeger", vie Biibo• :::.:1r~ ~;in1¥'· ~~~~~-R~~L1 1525/mo. 548-04n 105/mo. Avell 9-1. 111 mo onty + uoo ~o'l r· ~ ~· clelly rHpon1lble Fe-831-1084 •llllfllf :~J.7C St. Reward. Bdrm Winter $475. 2 8'. 1¥· BL, frplc, pool, t.45-8&25• cl ep 0.". l ••••. ~ ~·room 2214 milt 25-311 YHrt to ... ... ... • llT HISE MUI YllW YNrty 1576. 3108 W. spa, •ttecned o•reoe. Cloee to beactl 2 Bdrm 4'4·5410 or 494-2787. NewS)Of1 8llld CM thare luxury 2 Bdrm. Attrectl've ruetk: upst11re Top "tabll1ned M••• Lost Diamond Hamllton Deluxe new 2 Br, 2 be, Oce•ntront. 973-1873, ~5~:!,~· S:1".!!la..now. 1 Be. 1490/mo. Pool: ., .... ,, .._.. -•i &4&-74'45 · ~~=o· n~o:z,,C:, Tpooo~~ Mttlng. we eupply cletlc, locatlon. For Information Watch. vie: N~ HunJj ,frpic, decit, gar. Secur. 846-5902 get. No pet•, t.42-4-470. ~OOio:r.':'~ •• ~. Send resume, ourrenl 1p1ct, copier. You call ~~~~~8Bc:h . newer gete. One tor 1935, one ,..., bioc:tl 10 beectt, 28r 3 br. 2 ba. deluxe condo. 2 BA. 1 BA, frplc, pool, NO FEl!I Aot. ~~ 8 ( I C H I R £ I photo. pereonll back-eupply phone, &. sg5 pr MEL FUCHS 15g5. B·1qf S11nHt tba. 1525. Utll pd. lrg. rtlo, pool & ape. gar, t385-A W. Beker. rentele. V1l(e .--n-. " " " ground to P.O. Box mo r d .. k . Call PAVILION REALTOR 1100 llEWAll Bvl1uffo1o'rcl•ond&o~.co;.ner,c11fcf 646-5743 c:hll o.k . nHr SC No peta, c:tllld ok. 976--4112 Brotcer. $84/wk 35-B, B•lboa l•l•nd, 844-7 11. 111-1120 Abysllnlen. male. 5 mo. "" P 1111 · 1 8 8 5 mo· 1&25/mo. 845-3415. C•lll. g2892. llWPtlT IDOi N.B. 31175 Birch. 1000 57th &. Seuhor•, Weat Ave, C.M. See Int then ... MfrHt/Y\ewt 213--"'4-26ee. ..........._.,Of·Mllcl-Pool ... , 532'" c ell. 545-8588 or 2 and 3 bclrm. Ldry. S550lmo. 2 8'. l'A 8&. 2 BR. 1 BA, otd houla, 'H;prlMvd & Wlllon PrOf F• & Son to there 3 Prlv•t• Otflce ... J.495 ~·,_i,3~1A rone. Agent Newpon . ...., • ,. 942.en2. 7tlC>-Oee3. ... fl ........... .... ..... _.. no _,.. cNlcl OK. All • ,..._. ... _. • •• _ .. 7•5 bd home In N.B. Wiii Brandl Offloe ... S75 1211 11W··· g .. r..,._. -.,.., Townhouee, balcony, ..... . _ _... .,,.., _.. .,_ .. "' ... ._1~ S-....... $40 -A up winter. 840-4784 1......, rm, car port, Ill utll pcl. 415 H.,..,,on, conllder 1 ct\lld. Lloht "'' ..,......... 81111•1 Stolen: 2 Jet 1kl1, 1 llUT llEIT LI M'""nlfloent view, cornpl. btt'..:ia. Avail Sept. 1535. t.45-3415 COUHTAY1.,81.UI I.IV· B £ 1 C H I R ( A ohlld·c1te. Over l'JO. 7 2-6408 liati/ fSOO red. orng. )'911ow & whl. 4 Br 3 Be, comm pool ,;;;'n. 2 br. 2 ba. trplc, TSL Mgmt 142-1803 IH NEWPORT BEACH n "- . S3SO/mo. Lv Meat llll 111111 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 wflt & blll. Rewerd ~1~~ •• 11250/mo lo tennis ct•. Jee, MUnl. $530-1540/mo. 2 8'. 1 WILU ..... A total environment tO•/wk 751-9135 •• ,.., 111111 $750 up 2180 ft. lndu-c. 11 e 4 6 . 8 e 2 7 . mo pool, walk to baech. Be. 1 atory, lheg crpt, Specloul E.Slde Apt&. epartment community ~ F-em 10 there H.B. Con-COMPLETE EXECU· atrlal • 2"~··~~8~0f 545 .... 554. or C.M Po- 3 Br 2 Bt. 2 car, 873-3720 or (802) drpe, petlo, lrplc:, End ger, patio, d9hwthr on the Upper Bey. Prl· Aefrtgerltor·Mllcl·Pool do, fully furnlthed, TIVE OFFICE SERVICES A~do Ir e B h 1_l1ce __ 0ep __ 1·----- comm. poo1 $1050/mo 1-.::2=7=•-8:=994~.:;;:;;;:;;;;;::~:::::: beltned oelllnge, tnc:lad & atove. Moat utll tree. vet• clubhouH and Nwpt 81Yd & Wiiton non-•mkr. 1250 + "' FROM 1185 to $885. ~u2~~isaJ•on,' .. c · Loet: Blk Kltttn, M .. 9 2 Br 2 B •• g. r . 1. No~ hHlth •P•. e tennl• Coat• M"8 543.g755 \11ff. Avatl lmmed. Don UN EXCELLED SEA-. mot old, no COiier, Npt 1g751mo THE ¥:~·gmt. t.42·1~ 2 B • , perton ru0 court•. 7 poolt, cloM to y I ,.. b • .. 63l-Oe15 VICES, ENVIRONMENT, ltWi,trt·Alr,trt Hiii• ., ... 75g.1240 2 BA. 2 S*'~ 5 butlntH, llrROr1, Fa-eer y on ne e C:n, STAFF Hev• other•. Ag•,;~ '325, utlllti.t Ind. Sm. 1 1 Br •tarting at 5 thlon !eland Convenient hotel room, kltehenett• M wanl1 MIF to •hr 2 THE HEADQUARTERS Offlct/lndu1tr111._ev_ .. _. ______ _ T63•1n-2o7r1•1 831 · ''GOOD bcl. 1892 Newport Blvd, 2323 Elden Ave. C.M. thop1 on tit•. Unfur-&. thower, 1280/mo. br, 2 b1 ept. NWpt Bell. co••P"NIES 4,000-14.000 aq "· All Found: Injured Ooldtn CM 631•73g2 842•7905 ""'*' bechelOfl 1 & 2 ptut eec. depoell. 2306 Pool, Jae, tennlt . ,., " AIC Hvy Pwr and L•b c 11 Hwy Dena Bluff• 4 Br 11300/mo to bdrm aptl end' town-W. Oc:Mnfront, NewS)Of1 1400/mo. Incl. utlls. 114/111 .... 1 Lighting. Xlnt tor R&D point mo. Spllt level. Au~ •;.,~ Muri..IN •• .,.,. tloutee. Beadl. 173-4154. Depoel1. 548-0829 2000 ICI f\ wl500 eq " ; n2 d 0 ~ 0 0 w 8 ; •1 t ~ • · 891-1112e Guinther, egt. 631-12 LIFE'' Nfl ...i _.. l540 • 11000 Pine Knot Motel on FemeJe w111t1 to ther. 2 11or1ge, o .c . Airport 213•827_4404 1100 Rew11rd STEPS TO BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Several bec;tlllots and 1 C09St Hwy, NB. Stepe bd, 1 be home. No Ire I . I 2 0 0 0 I mo. Ca 11 c: 0 C 1 t , F , t er du""'"'w. ~ FUN: Bdrm unite felture fine to OCMn. Wkly ratee. amllre, no alcohol. S250 851-8828 P1ecentlt/171h St, 11~50 l6th/Orange, HB . ,..... · k t? clellgner lumltur• ancl 84~ Npt Helgtltt. t.42·2151 a.I. Incl. office .. 53g.2312 842-8970 Soc:lal Ac:tlvltlu Ke nnebun por . ecctH orlH Move In so. LAGUNA. 3 Arch mo. 848-1184 dye. ----~----,.. c1,.,.,, 3111 •...........••..•.•.•. 2 bdrm condo, 2 b•, frpc. den. we1b•r. ger. Beau turf vleW. Stepe to beach. 1750 per mo. 4g2.1e1g laa J•u ••• ~A!!!'.'.~! •••• !.~~! 4 br, 2 be, fem. rm, frpk;. big ywd. 2 car gar. Good loc. 1850 mo. Incl. g•rdener. waler & trtah. 483-2448 ... II .t.1 "" .....••...........•••• 3 Bdr 2 Be towntlome, "" S.C. PIU•. AIC, frpl, DIW, retrlg, atove, pool, apa & much more. No pet1. 111 & lut req'd. Le1H. Avell now It 1700/mo. ()y9 878-7100, ev" 775-0380. Mike Doherty. 0 Ire c: Io r •Fr a 1 today or re .. rve for ... I MMff 4111 F«nlle Roommate WMI· Bey. 2 Sult .. avell. Gd. 945.9543 eves. Found: lr11h Setter puppy s u n d • y Wasn't he the Ambassador from • um m. r m 0 n t ti.. •••••••••••••••••••••• ed lmmedl•1~c to atllr• Hwy Vltlblllty. 4g7.2351 M: lab F; Shep. mix, Brunc:h•BBO'a• S 1y fumlttled mocl-Pvt rooms. Lovtng c:ere. 3 Br. 2 Be. clM. As61 f,.llll W,.IH 4111 ehort tall, blk & brn M; Parti.t•Pfua A t ,.. ..t~ T dd Roosevelt' met1 d bet. diet•. rurll erea. 24 for Vlc:1ort• 720-1902 Low blldget •tudlo-offlce •••••••••••••••••••••• Shep. mix, blk & bm M: much more US ra 13 UO~r e Y • ... open •!IW· hr. cere. 558-7107 or M 25-35 I th 1vall1ble, nr O.C Air· A .. p. F dHlrH cleen. Shep. mix. brn F. QR I A T 731-1247 A .. p. · 0 r port. 801 per 11. Miiie tunny apt on Pen. or ..,_,.,, .. _ ...... Anlmll ~f"V""\~ On Jambor• Rd II lovelY. 11ntum. 2 br, 2 Crow Agent. 842-1243, I d t o t Yrl ,...,"''"" .,... .... .. "E c "I AT I 0 N: \.,:...... ~~· r.._J\..:::./""'"""" Sen Jolquln Hille Ad, ,.,,,,.,, ... ,,,,4,,, ba Promontory Pt, N.B. 945-3174 II en •• or c . y Shelter 844-3859 Tennlt•Free ..... 1HO •••••••••••••••••••••• '400. Allton, 87s-e204. 1275-1315. gee.6481 • · L .. ton, (pro & pro ....-LK. ARAOWHEA0-21tI •2500 IQ.ft. lndut1rlal meg for Sue Found vie Warner & 1 h 0 p). 2 Ha 111 h II you're not sure who (or wllal) llenntbun•po1t wn. 1----------1 •8 + ,_.. 2... Prol non..mkr M/F to .... ,.. 325 ft f Alltt, SA em•ll bel~ do 'I ..... •J ·re not ""'·· Ktnne ... ·n•port ts 1 br w/--Ml) and new .. r ""'• .... ' ' unit .. , " eq. · 0 I 1 , I•-York I• Pekin••• m w, Clubt•Seuna• n llm ..... -JOU """"' .... • • .......... • I frptci 2 betconi.t ce-"" 28', 2Be, NB. Apt. offlot + 5000 eq ft ... • ...... , .... ,; ft Hydromueegeo one of 14 disflll(lfwdy dlllnenl apailment 11001 plans parkln~. 400. cal thedr .. oelttng CC>lcM-TV. Straight. ctM to bch, phelt covered &. t.nc.o flaun let. 548-8207 Swlmmlng•Oolf al Stawtnd Vill;icr rn Hunt1nclon Beath. StlWlnd 876-0e1 •ft &. 8lpe 1•. Nof1h Shore. •35S mo. + 'A utll. yercl. •••••••••••••••••••••• Found m•I• Germen Or1vlng Renot Yofla&t is a ruutt ol totdy ptrsoNltitd prolmiooal CONDO apecloue 3 BA, 1285/wklld. 1395/wk. 780-8788 •2400 tQ.f1. lndu1trlel ,,.,..,, Shepherd, 1 yee1 ~. •I A U TI ' UL pi,lllllflt Tht •Ind ol alltnhon you dnelYI A peritct 2 BA. lrpl, dtllwf, lndty 1585/mo. 522..ee31 MAt.E TO SHARE unit with 9000 aq.tt. of a.-ttuJt. SOI flH collar & 1 .. ther A fJ A" T M 1 NT.; bltlld of l\fturt ~ hYf11C nnlltd tn • lofnl With hookup, 3 cerporta, ..... NWPT BCH CONDO upgreded office. • •• ~I'::•···"'········ eolltr. Vic.· Bol9e/Cllk:e. SI n g I e' • 1 & 2 ba~ bloob 1nd qllltl pond\, cooled~ "atural OOOI. prvt petlO. •788. llAll - -~224 842-8228 •2400 eq.f1. lnduttrlel HUNDRED I Part Time 543-5812 Bedroome•Fumlatled ocnn brHm Add 10 t1111 lenn1s cou1ts. sW1111m.,. H1-H22. 8Mu41fVI 1 8'. 2 Be. unit with 1500 eq.tt. ol •t Hom.a. Web•t•r ,1-L-0-,-,-.. -0-0-"-._,,A,....•_w_•_r_d~ . & Unfurnlthed•No _.... a spa and a convtnitnt loution neai sllopplnc -• .. y Condo at the Wheler In Quiet F nontmkr 10 look upgraded otflct. Have American 1 .......... 11 dtc:.-Pet1•Model1 Op•n ;;;=-•mtnt and roo/ve col a place anyOtlf would •-Keanepoll BH c:h Re-for 2 bf CM er-. for eutHMN ten111t for 900 ,.......v r Brown, l dgebeck, dally 8 toe. ' ecrou ttreet from eort. Newly deooretecl, Oct. 1. U9 to $275 .._ sq.ft. of ornct epece 11 tlonwy comptny need• tlend•r, F. 541·504t; 0 • ptoudly call hOrn« (htn llt11ntbun•port1) bH ch, 2 bcl, 1 be, fu::Y .,. • .......,,.. Sfr'll CyntNe 845-2732 .. ~•r--'. homt workert to up-845-5317 •LWOO Ont •nd lwo btdroon1, one and 11"0 btttl -... -.-..-...... _, dll• local malting llatl.1---------• 1par1rncn11 from SSIS.00 wetherlclryer, carpon. F rll•. 873-52 1. M/F non..amkr w CclM •Mot1v111d owner '' All 1ge1. bperlence Loel: Tri color Plplllon llHtl m-8095, 111 42nd 81. BEACHFRONT WINTER home wltlrl!oht M, pvt reedy to make • deal. unneceuary. Ctll "Telly" via Leleure 880 Irvine ..,., '"Y' open bMme 1118 W. newly r emodel ed. M/F thr furn 2 br a ba a,1rtilt1tt ~ d 28r, 11e, 1678 mo. 'tfto/, AENTAl.8 Npt Bctl, Oct br & ba 135()/mo. utll• 0•11 7U·751 -4780. 1-718-842~8000, Ext. World vie. Aewtrd. EYI ...,_. ..... /It. ~n gelnTI11 •AA Vtll~ carport, cpu. drpe, to Mey, 2 BA,« 3 BA. Incl. e75.-iil2 Pr1nclplll• onty. 11190 830-1125 (It 18th) BlllK>L (2 13) H6-2842 71~~2484. Ttnnlt. pooi. J333 1nct: ...................................... _ .. "' ~ I I (71") a..c 11'"" STEPS TO IEACH 1 er • .....,_ 4, llCl'foa utlla. 9*5«7 N.8. .,..,..,... .__:_ ._,...... 1-:;:_ 1 8' ctupa. th• ttrHt from tnt .. 1F, ..,.,, --.~, 10 ...... f~ Jfll _,,,_, -IS~!>!> Hunlu'llon Vill11e lane Hlln1t111ton Buell. CA ..... 2 ... 70 .., .... ...,,_ ..... •••••••••••••••••••••• · 1700 18th St. (114) 898 9961 -b ••ch· • 2851 wk · betctlfront, 52nd St, Orlngetrtt condo. leoo (Oowr at 18th) frOtll lllt SM! Oleco frttwaJ dlrvt north Oft Btadl to Pine Knot MoWI, 2 Ir, tl75·50M. N.8 . 758-1710 C)(eg ~~. ~O tennl~:· = (71_4) 642_5113 ll'cfadcltn, lfltfl wnt 011 Mcfaclcltn It Stawllld ~ utll pd, Ute 1nngmnt Lall• Tehoe on water Vltw oonrrnt No Leg "11 ...... ,,... ~A!~~-redue-w/bolt ~-4Br 3t1a turn 2br 2tie. ~78/mo· .. .,_... .. Id .............. ~ nee hm COl'n9I f\Kn. • f • "'··ta Anl .,. .. Werner/ ~ .-. t• 2be 1100/Wtt . &52~2115 or Otver 3.,0 prof. pre • F'.im-. 3 Br 1't' BA. 2 2 •. Wint«, OWllO'. "° i!i!!-~··u.iiiiul w~ 2-;. pool ...... t 1i-4311 1-•-7_·7_0_1•_·---.,.,.....- atory, nr 8C Ptua. AIC, pet•. •1•P• t~ .. ,d. iilliiiilil!llM!IJlii J ftr 11iop1 • bu ... : NLll lllllT -AMMTE ~ ... t>o.: :r.o.d~rv.-,s:?'oel:: ?:f.:~ J:e"~h~. un ~AP,\ . MIOfmo. '42-G4t4 ~Mofltet9Y Country Club) =· :;•148. '"°' non-1mkr, no s>•ta. 38r. atepe to Miid, ~LE'•s~ I!."""'· 1175. I br, 1" br, 2 ba, rum .. w1 ltiete ooean vi.-ept •100 mo. 714-IS4-702t. mo. Ir:/. •v•ll now. ~~ IDl'~•Vl··-.v ~ M. frplo, a • eer .• trplo, Oolf, tennl• & Promontory Poln1 a br 97"'·"' 1 __ ....___... j)OOI, Ho "'· Mor: IOt 9Wtlftmll19, Dally, WlllY l. a b ' ._ ' 8IO CANYON a br, 2 be. .,...., ...._ ..... -. Amlp w., . ...,._7111 monthly retH. Call •· non·1rno .. er • ..,.,.., pool, MOO 1¥1111 a br, 2 be.. trplo, ~ ....,_ lll-I001 ...,. 8754t06 Oct. M4-7M7. klX\ll'Y·'YPt ept. 8 c;::, lnobrPel"1~ 1 • ~l'elNlll;....__~25-~20~-=.-Ulll-:--teef- E'llde c.M. oondO, a It to water. hpt-Junt . OffittO,. 11111 •t. Ne wport fl!f.tt •• lf.Mf.!IJ.ft rrW'I with~ flOUee _.: =-::r .~~o~i1~ : 1 1 •: ~ 'i 0o" a~':'•· luxurious adult & family living In an 111 H • 1,L';, t 1 • I • 2 • • MllIJUTI WWI• ~ gift ~wo. 1726tmo. e:a1-710f °' (211IMI IM8 nfW coontry ~trng, 1. 2, & 3 Bdrms. 142-• f'retua1ou1 M•I• '* "'° a1-o303 1 '"' 1426. ,,. '* to Amenilieslncludt: o.:::,"'1'"11r.:.'t.1: :::r'e ~:. •: ri.4-1tM ... ...._ ..... tiwh. 1 91W --. I '--I ~ .....,_. 'ial lclmt., a tM1t1 ~ ""*' Mlf.1.."" eo. eo.t Piia. 1 bdr'IT'iM.,.,1 N. U:,:· 1 -~•rton. 111 •Ret.JGas R~nge •Tot OC/Wfenud$ 1111,..,..,, ,,.,, -. :'~~;...~ !.'!' •. * .. !!:. '=:alJr· "'..,.._ a oer ~ 11· VM 712 * Oishwashertdl ~I '*' PallOlsundeck wen °"'" · ..-. ,__ tt~ ·--rr.re.1 £1:· Xlftt. F=· a:~·ioo: 1a * Otapes/Carpeting •laundry faciOtlfs 1 81\ I '* llnl It., I :"~11 m:u~~.··,,c:. .. ~ "::": ':":::. "=' wt1Me "1 *"· AV911 '* RKteation room •Air col'dltloni,. =--~-tf.· :f "•''r.' · o1 "00':=,:. ..... ""9 to • n1aa r..ArlM 1·11·H o 1-11-n. =r::;::; :' Dlua ...______. ... ' ,,.,, ... , ., l\oUle. 1 blodt "°"' •• IM*Atl ..... 11.fl 11~.oi..;_ CCMM ift 111now~ ... ~~~ .... w. o:a-t.=J:."Y • • 1 ~.;o;o"0:-'t t 141 :="r~.=P~ = Aanetto I an Jotquln, ~ -are..... Y•Loapl0 101-•--~ ..... ,. ...... 111. or Lan m.o4t0 Mo4ef Townl\OuM In flt oen""'8 """8" .. 1· 5. I IL -!IJr!Hlt =.:fwll '-• ..... !MM. I 1M9 pM den, ,_,,If )iou1'Mie a..,._ ""'.: 0 t e °"' .. .... In flt "' .~ .. •• "°' .... lftt ......... .._ Oft -"" pd. .... "'*'· ditulloplllefll. Mll/IM -.cl, ... It 11C11W .... t !J...:._NOl/1eart1 ......... _, .. ---;:-Ill ~..l!°'· 41Mm, 1194f41 01111•1dM. --..... 11.' ••- • ~ ' ' ' -t ' I ' ' ~· :: t . ~·· Or ng Ooa1t OAILY PILOT/Sunday, 88ptember 6, 1Q82 lessianal S . ~I~.~ ....... ~ .....•.•...... ••8AYANT'I ** vH[NAY A0Ql"IH0"' ft!!!!f.!'l!r.!!!f ..... ~.'~~11!'!1 ........... ~Hr..-.!'!. ............ f!1H.£'.'.~ ........... '111.~!¥ ............ l ~ftiffffl .. , ..... ffM!ftliv .......... 'tm.1P.I. .... ~ ....... . Infant to 3 yra, my C M CUSTOM wood p1llo FIT Child Cara, l'-30 to Tllll ,.OllN'8 OLIANINO LA81Ulm ... PA111111 !!:.!~!e!J>~l for • ;10 d•y ad In the IAJLY PILOT HllVIOE llRIOTOIY DO IT NOWI Ask fer la14ra Your Delly Pllol Service Directory Represen11Uve w11Jcovet1no AetnoY11 SM11 .. a111no....comp. A.It fYpee. 842· 1343 Uc 415232. 54e.e21' home 8 hr dey Lie ocwett, o.e¥& • ""cee 11 .30, by YO orad. T C a.Mee ·• t~~ ~ -'la..... ~h d .... Uc 88C 1""$3 7•4 "231 b It e C II a r (Ma It er 1 O~/ramovad. i.en ......... o.-.... 147 ' ,., v..., ""' tu omOf. • ~ "' •v Y u p , I aw n r a n o v • ,.._, '""' W 4ff.,7214 2 • 1' Yrt OI heps>y -0-,-.. -.-•• ,-.-ntl-.-1-. RANDY 0'1-0f22 o.g1M), AoM 2 l up, 8 , C ...., •-'"•A IOo I t -org1nlzed 1ot1vlll... 78 1·3'7 Joen • leal'I .. "' "'""''"""" Y8'd Malnt. & Clelnup. • ClUI Ol'nltl. ''' CUI Roof PfObtem? Dont r .. C M ar.. 848·117110 QUALITY CARPINTRY C M home M Nwpt &""•ftt LHftt.....Jll --~!""°. Apt .. ~ta11,,'11 Sod, aprlnklera. roto, Tt1111k you, 531•44 10 •••••••••••••••••••••• roof, rec>alr et lrac1'°" Pillo covert, door• & Hgla t i.m. t.S-4857 '"" ... ..,.,,_. ....v-" trH rmvl, drainage, RALPH'S PAINTINO Cefllfr.d HOllM 8111ttl of 1n. 0011 Cell ~ O•b)'tlltln~ Ill Mt_ home. wlndowa Compl petch-=~~)':orf"'i:,:"':~: TIREO OF HASSLES? hlllald• weedln°t Brian 1nvex1. ~. rat... Bonded •11101/ (av;7 867·2800 '" Vlct~..'2.~8i ~~m!n. P5~1~~ro\. Jim f!!.1.'/.'}!ff,.f/t,.t,,l.. Call 549·1804 anY111M. Ouallty CIMI\:! '*r la 888·2253 Ref. FrM .... 538-9198 3rd wit frM) 8 1-123 -~-,-H-.-,------ C u 1 tom r •mod 1 1 a · "-tel Refa. 745 Int/ext landaoaplng. l"rM P1lnt1no: our famtly tr•· '''''" Tt .. llf. •••••••••••••••••••••• 81by11t11no by Chrlltlan c,, .. , ,,,.,,,, 11ddltlon1. ,, .... ,. Tll •••• ... DIAL·A·MAIO. quality & .. ,. 80d. ,, .. & ellrub dltlon for over 1ob )'rtl ••••••••••••••• •••••• MOBILE SERVICE mother & teacher, •••"·-·•••••••••••••••• Ouallty 2nd to none. L1wn-1r ... 1hrub ln1t11t Serv. Nr Al Your 1n1t1ll1tlon. SeHonal lntltKt. Lio, 348262. Con1ull1tlon & H•nd AelcrMnl/N....., terMf\1 Mon-Fri. 882·71173, CM No St••m/No Sh1rnpoo Oaodel Conat. Lie TrM trlml ramovll Phone. •••1S46 • .color fQr any oqc .. lon. Fr" "t. 001-3198 Mede Fremee. 40 v-1r1 ,..O/CM 8'2·HU J t II $. I Stain Speclellll. FHI 4 18870 1148,..271 1..1wn Malnt/Rototllllno 11"°"""' )(Int r•!•t rallebla. CaH E.lcperlence. 8'48-11141 I .l-Lt .lf.!~ •• !'A •• 1!!.~~••• dry F•M "'· 839•1!i8:l . PrM .. 11mat1 548-aot5 PLANTWORK otlT• Pllmll '1Htlll flM/I .lf!ffl!!!•••••••••••• JAYS "SPEAKEASY" Shampoo & etelm cleen 11,J, M1ff•H t lt1 QUAl.ITY WE!DINO & Cuatom home cleanlng & 499•3'4721815-0808 211 yr1 a11p. Lio. 4031M1. ••••••:r.•.,.•••••••••• SERVICE 6 REPAIR Prol Barlendlng St rv COior brlohlenert. wht I-le 30&888. RemOdtl, Mllnt. '*'*'"bar tn. 3 COMPiete maid eervlce. Bonded. In•. Ref9. Color ED'S PLASTERINO Vin Oppen• Servlc• Any occ111on. Pr1bl bar crpta • 10' min blffCh Add'na, Ceblnata. R'i ·. Rea•ona ...... , ... 1, Prof., bonded & Ina. "-•1 All t11per1. M3-o911 Dick Neat petch ... lnllellt. eo. 7"'755 /5" •1•1 ••• 1•9•1• .. • .. a.... .,.. ,,.. ,. Unlcleen 811yetem1 of ::'••••••••••••••••••• 1·8 .. 2 '1.., .. ~:g"· ,~1'$7 50,• c!'c'ti ....... " ., ...,.,_.,.... able, Rick. 497-3070 Npt Bc:h. 850-1200 YllH WILLI Biii'• Pelnllno. lntlaxt Re11uoco1 8'48-8258 (714) 838-486& ••2·1111, , ... , 12• 1•1'-111 S1mtll S 1 , chr $5. Guar .. Im Df•11IJ1 Blmmona Gtrdenlng -1 For • lrM fact lheet, RNld/comml. 8 Yfl exp. PLASTER PATCHING pet odor. Crpl repair. •KATRINA·s : LIVE-IN Cln-up1, ltwn C816, lull Clll Herry w ..... At-. • ., ... nO qu . RHIUCCOI ln1 /e10. 30 .! ••..•..•..•.•••••••• .. .. " ··a·r~E·RA···L··B·u·s·1·N·E·s··s·· •••••••••••••••••••••• aue111y HouHC1e1n1ng s c ' '"'1 h .1 ,,,,, ~~~~~~~~~I , D L & Id 1 t w/a peraonal touch. 1 0 r n • y 11 L • w , & metarlela. lo price yr 1 . N, 11 p 1 u I .:: SERVICES 1.., yrs l.llp. 0 wor.. hlkl)ft. d•lly mlld ..,...,, comm r•• ml n . CM, Irv, NB. Beth 663-0280. Fr.. 111 I . R. r . 545.2977 TILE INSTALLED ~!! ... ~tf!!!.£•}!!'!1!... ~iflp for llT't&ll buslneH myself. Refs 531.0101 office OIHnlng, crpt 848-5584 860-0933 496.5717 ---------i All Kindt. Guaranteed • d tt d I phone call eway. EXCEL CARPET CARE ct .. nlng 835-HUI GARDENING SERVICE n••• Hou~I"" JllH•n QU•LITY WORJK • ft~t, ,.,/ $1nlt1 llM/n Rell. John 840-9217 ,..pptte • re-app • ' Recordkeaplng, 1e11 Sutt C"" t & ....... "• •••••••••••••••••••••• " ·-••••••••••••'•••'••••• guar., 1n1ured. ltc'd Jeell lngton "rYw-11) .. an-ul)ll, ,... MrV. RMloneble Bente ho t R • Uc p~• _,._A ~14691 730-1900 lrM prep, Buslneu counsel· OwnM/ope<etor ~~1.-.~••••••••••••••• lleuHno. 541-t098 Pete Bllboa 111.itd 875-3810 BRICKWORK: Smell Jobi. ~~'rfo1. O!'ve e:t.·1045· Melnt:"~·lrepalr. ftH l1nlt1 estlmstOI IOQ. 496-1255 Carpet, uphOI, trff rug DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC We! N-s><>rt, Cott• M..... •••••••••••••••••••••• 110".EOALL clellnlng. Work guer. Rec>alre, sml Job -. ... .. Dutch CIHnlng avall. lnllne. Refe. 875-3175 PAINTER NEEDS Reuoneblt ret••· $ LOW RATES S AJi I S J Ei -..--••••• •••••••••••••••• T d 18 h 892-1632 Tree trimming & remo-• ••~'!!!.'!f •• .'.'.r. !!.... GP Bullnffs .. Doctor"' Free 11 &45-t77l ~512./~~· up. Bud carpentry· Ma10nry x:!i~' r:h. ~~7n.0105 :,; B~~:wo~~~:·~~r ,1J:. ~19::..• ;~ou~~rc ~!fi: POOL SERVICE· melnl· vel. 50% OFF FIRST MONTH Booka/ Dala/WO<d c •• ,.,1c1at11t• I Wall ... 1ur ... •~·11lc ~."11~ s·t.Up~om~ng..... 648-4413 Since 19f9. 545-8612 Inga. Uc. 368780. Free 11n1nce & repelr. R... ell cl~5Uf'.10'11mowlng Dependable. eH0<d1blt, Processing •••••••'•••••••••••••• , ,_.,., ~"" ,,... Tl.. , ., .. euentlal Anawerlng 90 Min on-site vlsll Cemenl-Masonry·Block Hlllg·T~StMI atuda f\emoct.t J.B. 545-0990 Been.tor'• HMCl9anlng ...-•...t.-.L.tf.........L·lfMt •t. • rec .. 892•183~ I 1erv1ce. a.cr•terlal & S50 eJCll• llm• S25hr. Watls·Cust WOik. Lie Lie 389944 1-632·66-49 6 L.eundry Sefv. Keten, .,..._ .,_ Devi• Pelntlno 847•5188 • ti Ila r1r. /.r llPlllll buslneu services. mall (7 14) 645-5~79 •381057 Rob 5.47-2883 DRYWALL TAPINO °-::~m~'L7!:'.!,":in~ 640-2818/850--0892 ~~ 3~:~: M::~~:.~ SPIRIT Pelntlng. N•ver .!."! .. ! ... ,1 ... 'f!..... TIH IDYIOl boll rental, word pro· Concrete·smell or 1011 1 All TelllUrM 6 Acouatlc Pelntlttg Call 964-5231 If you nHd a houH-11 -1 under bldded. Satlefac-R~ & •ddltlone, fr" "Tr•• Work wltll • c •Is In Cl Te I e II. C•)l••I 11.lti•• Jobs Remove. replace Free NI Kevin 875-8088 IRED H•NO WILL keeper H fuaay u you "''"'•f ' tl on Quar. lnlle111. design & fft. Quel & Conscience ... Trimmlno Fscslmlle, order entry, ••••••••••••••4'\•••••• or repair. 845•8512. H " • .,., call 873-8890. Xln1 •••••• ••••••••••••••• comm/rn. 536--013.4 l ow r11111 . Si eve , & removal tty Howard pagers-lease buy. desk Cablne11 & Carpentry Eltdtlt•I TAAVEU Many dlver1e r•ft . *l•1 MIY1H* Lowell relHI Prompl, 752-9556 Dolloff. P.O. 8011 34, space rental. Sm11tt jobs & AepaJrs OrlVes·Pallos-Walks •••••••••••••••••••••• chore•. Wlllle 842-3491 Top qulllty. Specl•I neet profeeslonals. 15 Colla Mua. Ce. 92827. ANSWER NETWORK Frae Esllma1e1645-2003 NO JOB TOO SMALL 'ELECTRICIAN-Priced CALL HANDYMAN JIM •ntnJlll•t, care In handllng. 25 y11 )'rt ellp. 848·5684 _M_O_l_C_U-LO'!"!U~S~M~O~R~T'~S-Ph. 842-1932 760·7320 (ask tor A.V.) CE FT Free esl. 536-2607 right, free Mtlm11e on M•lnt., plumb. repelr, ••••••••••• •••••••••• e11p. KITCHEN FA LI 11rge or emall lob1. • Aeeponllbla cpl, mid 30'1 c tltl R 1 * •011 IOFFIWI* E R'oAIRS..REMOOlLS A••1•i1111 Restyling existing kltch-Desperalel Pallo work. Lie. 398621. 873-0359 painting. Ree/comm I. IOOklno to hou-lt thll No :v~eme~e 73i-~3"3 • ...,HOM ..,. 11t11I•• .,.,................... en cab. wtreal wood Free design. Lo prlc:es. I 538·99571538-3684 aummer. Wt'll care for " Pelntlng: All type1I .... m IT SERVICE •••••••'•••••••••••••• REAL ESTATE s . v e s s s n 0 w I Xlnl refs. 497.7354 LIC'D ELECTRICIAN Cerpentry • Cet>lnet1 plant•. hOUH, etc. Cell STARVING COLLEGE Want the bflt? 20 yr1 • Carpentr,. plumb1nc Moll 1UbJect1. K-14 Ae1ldenttal/Comm'I 642·0681 Qual. work·AeH. rales Plumb • Drain Cleanlno Ken Ha...,n, 780-8078, STUDENTS MOVING exp. Sells. gu11r. Refs. ee1ectnc11 f1n1shed Clfptntry Day/eve S5 & S 10/llr. 673-1919 C11••l1 11/e I Free "'·Tom 631-5072 El_., .... 1 • Tl... refi avlll. co. Lie. T124-'438 Insured . Call dya. Mr. M<><o•n 645-5176 • ••• •••••••• ••••• ••••• 1 ""' ...... .. 836-5526, 8v1 838-8708 9doors emoldln&s •cabmels A j It C•tHIJltr Klich baths entries 1 ELECTRICIAN Ael1. Oon 966.0149 & i ,,.,l ln1Ured. 541-11.427 •shtlvini faucets 10 &•race .!/..~•••••••••••••••• ... ,..-•••"••••••••••••• cuslom & comm Sml Job1/Aepal11. Lie. ,. II •• !!!.~ ..•• tf~!!..... WATCH US GROWi '•r..tl•A !!'!~!!.~!!~!!!I .•... Driveways, Parking Lot Door hanging, remodel, Free est. 640-2062 233108·C~10. 548-5203 !l.t!~ •• •J.............. INTERIOR WALL Preitlg• Moving. Low •• •••• ••••••••••••• door sprinas Bia or small we Repair•. Sestcoallng cabln•t•. penellng. e1c. C.'Li'J' C•t• ••NORTH STAR** DUMP JOBS DESIGN r•IM , fanlutlc MrVlce. F1nhlng lnlerior De1lgn do 11 all fut ettic1tnl seMce "Lei lhe Sunlhlne In" CaH Sun1lllM Window Cleaning. Ltd. 548-8853 S&S Asphll 631·4 199Llc Pslnllng, cemenl Reis. • & s II •• '"" J ... •rrann.a you ... r•-llu s ·""d VI & ••1c HANGING/STRIPPING ?O yn ap Jerry 546-4413 •••••••••••••••••••••• Eleculcel Contrec1or m• mOV"'JIJ ous "' -.. - r .... .,,, ., Ille "' e. N .., Visa-MC Scott 845-9325 ----------tHARBOA TRINITY PRE· Lie. New servlc.. 220 Call MIKE t.6-1391 photos ate. for luff tt.-lntured. 543-8462. Cal. oonse #83S?6SI Dan Hallberg Grading & Paving Co Aes/coml Lie 397804 642-1720 ~!!!!~!T! ••••••••••••. fllH EITlllATEll SCHOOL. DAY CARE clrc:ulla 24 hr 845-4174 H•ULING ""•DtNO nelll ol their bHuly. T-137.12'4. ASR PAPERHANGING 951·6067 CENTER Colt. Mel. " """"" Shlr1M 714-545·3873. ---------7 yr1 1~·1 e11p Gu•· Reasonable prices. fasl. · · demolition. cle1n-up. ••Ill•• l.nltll "'--· .... ~~~~~~~~~ Ullle Miu MuHet 191 on • profeu lonel work Opening Sept 13. Full F•1•ilar1 ltll•hi Concret• & lrM remo-Jull•tlll ••••••A•••••••••••••• work. Prlcee aca1t a1 = -Tuflet, along came 1 cuslom work 1001 No and 'h day care 7 AM •• ••• • • • ••• ••••• •••••• 11 ••••••••••••••• •••••• • NurMI A11·1 tor home $8/roll. Alec: 979.0653 1pld•r and reed In th• Job 100 small or too 10 6PM Register NOW Cullom Reflnl•hlno-Furn ~.;...k ""' 842-7638 Complet• Janitorial ..,. care avlll. lmmacl .• fully ---------• ll I Delly Pllol Cl111lfled blgl Cabinets. kllchen Corner Beker & Felr· & lnterlo11-All Repelr• ~ . vie••. trelned 1t1ff, Ina. 538-11883 Vickie, Ellpert wallcoverlng In· '!'!!..~!. •••••••••••••• HCtlon abool Miu Muf- remodat & Unlehed car· view 556-4335 or Call for .. t. 54'-5294 HAULING & CLEAN-UP bonded & IN UnlclNn 1·921-1080 ~!!:::!:.:~1Ac:.'~~=t Huber Rool\ng-eJJ IYPM· ter1Tuffatandboughtlt 20'1. Monthly Dlecoont pen1ry . elect/ plumb/ 556-1787 fhrit•J. Yde~~-o9~iaff~~t :~~~ of Npt Bell. •·'• _ 581-8590 New-recover·dec:xa ror S9.95. You cen Mii ceblnet1/ countertop1. I 'Graveyerd Shlll" lie. ••••••••~•••••••••••• ,. ... ~ -UC #411802. 548·973' your tuffel end 1011 of ---------1 I •.•.• -:1:1 •••••••••••••• DillOfc•Support Chlllge do everything from 111rt chlld care. tge F,V. MOWING • CLEAN UPS Hev. eometlllnQ )'(It.I want SELL Idle ltem1 with a Cullom wor11. Int & ut. Seti with EASEi ROOF REPAIR olher t hlnga through All Family Mallert lo finish! Cell Brad at hom... ple.11ty of slpg Hauling • Landaeaping to Mil? Clullfled acle do 08illy Piiot Cluelfled Ad. llc'd 20 yr1 In ar•a. relt. 11'1 e BREEZE SPECIALIST $254185 Diiiy Piiot Cl111lfled Atl'y Kolfrolh 848-4375 (114) 111·3210 rms. $6/nlfi 641-2277 Free Ml. 842-9907 It "41. 542·5878. M2-M78. Hett> 521-8012 111 6:30. ClHtlfled Adi 542-5871 Free ntlm•le 770.2725 Adi . Call 542-5878 Person1llzed, low cost legal sorvlces. Ind • family, busl lnlllal oon- sulletlon lrM 553-0290 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~ .. ·~~~~ ~!!.~.~!!~!. ... !.~~ !!!'.Jr.~!'!. •••• !.~!¥ '!.t.'P..'lf!.n.1.t.( ... !.1.~~ '!!.11..Vf.·~!~t ••• !.~'! !'.~'~.Vf!.".!~t ... !.~~ ¥!!1.)1. .... !'!. •••• !.'.~ IJ.~11.."!.'!.!t!. •••• !.'.'!f IJ.1.11..'!!!.~'!. •••• !.{'!f ¥.!.11..Vf.'.-.!'!. •••• !.~'!! !'.!~~~~~!!!! ......... . FOUND ADS ARE F~EE Call: 142·Hll Dedicated Spanish Beauly . DHOUTlllULEI ILIOTll•IO TIOI HOUSEt<EEPEA for mo-Medlcel A11·1 tor d•r· llEGEPTIHllT SECAETARIAL·work your A.ll•lll 1115 epeaklng lady wishes Orange County s Finest PIT F/T lllnl comm WAITll tel, meture. 30_.0 hre/ malology office, 4 full home. Type lrom m•· ••••'••••••••••••••••• llve-ln Job caring tor Salon needs elegant, w<><k In OC Mull have Pro audio Mfg. lech 2 wk I n c I . wk n d 1 . c1y1 pr wk, Mon-Tues-Who 11nJoy1 people and chine, phoM, errands, eldetly or Ill Loe rel talented, hair slyllsl. 11 1 1 1 • 111 1 1 )'rt upere and M or 3 494-5294 Thur1-Frl Wiii treln c • n hand I e bu• y misc detell1 e11per w/ WESTMINSTER Asking S150 6 de wk Top S•lary. ' 6:; 5~~9coor, w r•n. yra •KP and equlvllent HoueekeepM: Mon tllru 552.1313 wkdya. • phorw1e. Muel be fa-rei..'io-'40 hra wk. P.U. ABBEY 6"2·3912 RIVE GAUCHE • AA Benellll aveJI Apply lhlon conaclou1. For & dellver to C.M. Have ANTIQUE MALL •tlLISM "'EITLEMAJI HAIR SALON HLIYEllY /HIUJll In person · Fri, hlllf dey. Newport lllltOAL eleganl selon lull· Ume. car & elec correcting 11751 W11atmln1ter Ave. s • New po r I Bee c n BLUEPRINT MACH c 0 ar ... 873-2332. TIAllOllPTllMllT RICHARD OUELLETTE 1111-oH lypewrlter. Type GARDEN GROVE Adventurous. seeks 5"40·8187 OPA · QS AUDI IHlllllPll Work 11 home: Current 200 N6Wport Cent~ Dr. 60WMPM. No Shor-56...S103 work 85 lravelllng com-r o r I a n d s c a p e I 1928 Pl1cent11 Av• CM 4 hfl wk 15 per hour. Medlctl Record Dept. Newport Beac thand. Nol employed ~~l~~r~· .~~dyXl~lua~g: IEST PART-TIME archltectural llrm In Ir· HB. Mull rMd Engll1h. e11pr. required. Full & HITAIUIT IELP full·tlm• elsewhere. $5 Orlentel heavlly cerved Joi I. Tow. vine. Full/time. Mu1t IYlll• · 9f2·3257 p/llmt poeltlona avell. DAYTIME SHIFT needl hr. + 20$ ml. a.42-5494 hutch, 2 PCI, repro. Lost Persian Passport ~:r:r:ceo ;i:~u;~· a ~~I: have own tr1n1porta-PUT TIMI lrnmedlete openlrng In Ir-7141758-8500 DELI PERSON; HOS-$950. 1-628-3313 •513927 494-6481 ~~na ~~:r:O~rp~~':i ~lo~3 979-5120 b•t Be a cem.r counMlor vtne Law Otfioe. Min 1 llltOAL TESS & SANDWICH Sec~~~8{J PLATFQAM Orlentel heavily carved 642-1106 newspaper. Private 8 pm. tor I local fl9WllP8per. e perllnoe Knowlege CATERER. Paradise SECRETARY coHee & 2 end tables, ---------Well·groomad mature desk, casual alllre. Only DEL 1 v EA y Is To c K No e11perlance neces-~ CxPT Word. Proceuor Traattr1Hr/Fr1 lft, Cefe -Fashion Island. 8 od • r e p r o • • I 5 5 0 . ,,,.OIJ.I. SJSO OHCHl:~.·p~er' ~ .. ~e~ ~~sl r11,qulremen1 Is a good l l•m-8pm, TuH·Sat. 1ery. Work only 12 helplul. Call Lauria Full time l or Ml11lon 600-D Newport Center. 01M8191'r.'! .. ~n~~r I Be6tk~ 1-628-3313 .... •'""' phone voice and lot• or ~nts '"Harold 495 hOUtt • weak. $75 to &33·3822 VlaJo redlology office. Apply In person 3-5pm, ,_. ---------• •••••••••• •••••• ••••• & organized boss rather en1hu'111asm. E 171h, SI CM 1t1r1 plu1 eddltlonal 49M700. Mon· lhru Friday. Ing. ln1arvlewlno by •P-Anllque Singer oak --COEDS • Would love 10 1hsn high ..iery C M. Hours · · •here of partnerlhlp'e lndultr1al potntment only. Ing machine, $90. cut\. ~~rtyK~:~:ouinc;i1:;~~ erea 631-3123 Moo·Frl 5.30-930PM D£LIV£RY profits. llW all Ml lllMW. A61teuran11 IAll If llWPtlT _C11_1s..ao __ 2_4_. ____ _ ~13/804-3233 NURSES AIDE/home Sal 9.30AM·1.30PM Full time IO< local dell· M~A rMI :u" ~unl-FIT ..... , ... Tff• F'1.~~~ iuf:~ (114) l....... Antique Roper OU ltove. c1re. days, exP9r. all $84.00 10 start. ........,.. ~ Weft Ind runner for M.D of-$90 CUii. fletda. 548·3636 Atter 111 ~. share In venes. Exceli.tll drMno tlee. or ln18Mew cel1 f~ In Miiiion Viejo. for Laurie 59 Fu/lion 875-6024 UH& I YlOKl'I partnennlp proms. record required. ~!2~~•7r '",8•~t030t2.P M . ........ No. •11Pf. nee:. 49s-4700 laland. SECROIRY Ant bullet, tlg1r oak. PHOTO MODELS BtJ• W .. t" 1J00 For Interview, h.,,_r1 ltlfkttrt ,... "" 0 --u RESTAURANT _. I I $875 ESCORTS/DANCERS ... ,................... caH atter 6PM 557-9212 Mr Ernmon1 li'fDt•T --. •-A•L I .... -Mt. mnl. ' OUTCALL 24 HAS ART CENTER with di-FANTASTIC EARNINGS 1&11 tff10I -ar Record player, w/ Ill 0201 verse op•ratlons and 1•2-1178 Dental Excttlngly slmple. We W....SI Buay OB-GYN need• lttt14Ht/OHll We 111ve 1 need for a cylinder rcd1. $450. -I cledlenucl•sl~r~wrsldo•nseewlkth' tXT 312 nE~~le,'.!;•Ortd .. ~:.Oon.Atlc •or • expcandlng tdo UIHl•I bacit olflo• aul11ent. Part time poelllon. Must Secretary I. entry level. Ellft 720.0509 ""' ... ....,..., "" '""" range ounty •n PIMM C•I Today ""~ •• s 1 ...... ev·•table any hours Mull type 45 WPM and Hind cerved antique good olll ce skills, prec11ce In Mluton V19Jo need et lelet 8 people '°"per. H ... eture ... adery c"""ont-= Tony . have lhOrthand llclll1 of "~-• ,.....1., T .... -.. .-... SUNNY'S E•ecullve amblllon end wllllngnese Boat Cl9anlno Monda ... , area. 830-3703 to be trained u leld«a ltllJ ltntt" open. our1 .... on •Y .... , 70WPM w ,..,. .. ...-.. ..."' .,...._ Siren-Reduction· to conform to rigid 8 h0u11. S6 per hour~-In lhl1 organlUtlon. Cell 2171 Cam= Dr, Sta tllrough Frldey. Call 551-S522 ceptlng. 1p~ll~~·11oa~; S150/eech. 549.0208 ~hm-oulcall dra11 code. 25-30 hours &42-4763. Dentel Allltlanl 5411-7192 utl for Chm Anawer Ad No. 722. AMtaurant dally. P19aH eppty In lllltr ltWlll la• SJl-6377 to Sllrt, chance lor lull HIV. )'OU been ... ,Ch· or Connie lor an 1ppt. Herllage Bank Bldg. 842~ 24 hrt. NOW ACCEPTING perlOO In room 13 1 or Lj ~~~~~~~~I time executive posfllon BOAT SHOW Ing for 4 rewarding lrvlne 833•1441 MQTtlR'S APPLICATIONS FOR: cell: HBUHSD 10251 I• II and flnancla1 p&rllclpe-. c•r•tr oppor1unl1y FIU OLDI E.O.E M/F/H IOYEll Yorlctown A\19 Hunllng-Electric. 1940. Oek * * * lion. 64µ545 Housewives. sludenta, where your experienced Insurance Agency, NB. INTERIOR DESIGNER-ton Beach Ca 92648 cj•wfoot cabinet, woru It' t• p I p/llme temp. hel p: chelrelde e11per1IM wUI 545-9000 HELPER E11perlenc11 necHHry 33' • 0 E pert S150 In II ar or Atlende nl overntghl Cashier. tlckel takers. .,. UH<I and apprecllt· NB APPLY: betWMO 2 end <714> 95'-39 E. . • . 7a0·9556 Open 24 hrs• day wkend1 $25. Aullt etc. Apply 1760 A-6 ad? If 80, we Invite )'OU FOOD PREP. plua dell Home dt1lgn. o•nter 4, 37 Faahlon lslend. --------- 7 days• week dlHbled pror woman Monrovia. C.M. between to Join ua and ehare In counter. 7 •m-3pm. want• prof dMlgner w/ NEEDED Newport Seac:h SEOllTAIY a.ti••• Alll Jacuzzi, Seunt. Locals 645-2357. 2 and 6 pm wMkdaya. the growth of lhlt cer-Mon·Frl. benefft1 .• '" •tab fOllOW!ng, IKpet Ii\ RESTAURANT IUL ESTATE Knowtea 1900 clrce. as well aa Tour1111 1---------cs 11 Hea t her a 1 Ing o.n1a1 office. XLNT Herold 496 E. 17th it. technlcal f d .. lgn wa111ere 1:.!ftl~g l~1• M"fttt/IHt Full tlJM • real Mtele Service for 12. Wht/plnk BankAmerlc11rd, Amar· ATTORNEY 646-3966 1>9neflll Include medlcel CM. aspect• o window poa va n lue on Ileen•• dealr• .. I• .. ut go Id I e • r •do•. lean Expresa, Oineri. All In• r anee S1400 If F d 1 treatmnet, llrlno. furn, to a malure lndMduel u u S750/ol'fer I BOOKKEEPER w/3-A yr1 u · rl •Y type 1>41tlOl'I or fir plan1, con1ultlng. with th• lntareet and O kfttl not necu1try Bu1y welcome 714/6415-3433. New admlllee -k ng e11per tor trvlne Arch quallfled Newport bu1y m9dlcel dletrlbu· Oenerou1 comm + undefet1ndlng It tek.. to Soulh Laguna . Office. 780-9655 2112 Harbor 81· CM =~~:r~811fo;:!~1~tta='. 11rm, Will work wtoutsf9• Beach. 548"5602 tor. E•c•ll. typing 6 con1u1tlng , .. ,. Mutt to help with the care of Wlltress/Wllttr Coldw•ll Banker. Call YOUR DUST COLLEC- Relaxlng masaeo• by Sllurday lnlervtew. 720 aCClnl on computerized Dental/Front Office , apelllno •ldll• 1 muit. ha~ portlollo of 'WO(f(, our 1 )'Mr o4d. We al80 Su11n Roe for eppalnl· TOA tennis pros from La-w 19 h s c sys Word proc would ple111n1. bu1y eat•· Good all around office ref•. 2 t-hr dya per wk Mk for anlllance with PIH ment. 831·0838 or may be 80n'\4IOne'1 COi· guna Beach. Wayne or M • 1 ~ 1 1• o ~~t~ be a plus. Typing nee:. bll1hod olflc• n .. d• PP. Incl. AIR needed. • noor time. Non-1mkr the bulc houHhold Waltr.u/Watter '499-1320. lec1ablel Let ··ca,o1ee·1 Steve by eppt. 10.9PM 714-645-9350 M0-2228 e111. lront ofc mgr. 8:f•"1~4 ~~15~ti.-pral. VIiiage Home De-reepon1lblllt1u . In re· Attic Again"' Mii It fO< 546-2617 ---------CASHIER/HOUSEWARES E11per n~eH. '4 day e e. • wn e1gn 640-9193 turn, we oll•r lovely Must .,. experlenc:ed )'Ot.11 Info Of eppt: ---------Auto Delelllng s-·-.,,_,,,_ prel •p""' N 0 r k w •• k . c M 10-12. ec:cofnmodlllone In our APPLY IN PERSON Secy/Recept CALI. CAR.01 LEE Denoeri for Bach•lort Stave't Detalnng la now ....,.. '"",.~ " ..,., 6-45 7580 a II Hel t LllAI. lllllfllf N-port 8Mct1 home 87S-3U 2n54-6290 B11chelore11e Parllas. hiring compe•enl and at Crown Hardwere. • = p, earn up o Nawporl C•nter Reel Ind 1 Mltuy bMed on Typing/ ape4llng/ gram· . 738·8538 or 556·6538 responsible people ror 3107 E. CSI Hwy , CdM DENTAL ASSISTANT IOI eholl ~ ;:W:O ::::. Eetate Litigation firm )'(It.Ir o.sre end PP«I· TIE IUOI Mii mer 11c1111 1 must ror umoo-China Hevtllend, 'CAPEZIO MASSAGE• eulo detailing Experl-ClllCILATHS Ortho ore, cllalrtlda, Amateur ptiotograph«I naeda exper Legal enc.. For rl'l()(e lnl0<· 819 Sleej:>y Hollow Dr. young busy Sanle Ana Aoeelyn Pattern. &tnl. 20 mln.·$25 By Appt. e nc• Pre I• r r • d . Hpar pre I' RDA or needed PIF tfn Sec'y, Kint typing, die· metlon we Invite )'OU to LAGUNA BEACti oHlce. Submit employ· lor 12. $3,000. D. Wall. t0-9PM. 548.0407 831•6900 lor voter reg111r111lon .Wglble. 979-t400 • NAllng me, !d taphone & lhonhand • cell (213) 941-8781 ment hlll<HY Including PO Soll 922. SNver City 1---------1 drive. Pays $50-5100 HTAIL n1111 ~ or Uni ... '~o· mu1t. Salary op•n. An Equal OwtY Emplyr s:.~;.s r~p;."'S:ndCAJ.~ Ulary requlremenll lo NM (605-53&-3272) W • n t e d R ock I llTO MECHllC dally Pekl twloe _.ly Bo11 • J~o. Monte~10: &40-eMO M/F . .ume·. 4232 E. Grove PO Sox 19511. Attenllon Rolt-Tnn Ollk, Olk 48", Rockabllly. New Wave Exper In VW & Por... 750-1828 750-5S84 Needed by txotlc car Ca 90&40 --11-y•-1 St., l>hoenh1. Arlzone Derlene, Santa Anl needi" retlnllhlng. Sn5 ~~ ~=: ~:!'d "c: ~:9 65t°t,'37 neoessar;. CLHICAL/P·tf.. ~~~~~~· ~~~~n b:r~~~ __ .. --L!~~,-~~ ~~~!~:·=~~ti --n• •-85040. 92702 "' OBO, s1w205 peny e11per Picture· 1---------1 Matftetlng olflce ...ica able. DM-11308 ---.... .,,._ h<>tM In Mlsalon VlaJo. Noon Sus>«vlaor• ur-T811Chef·1 Au't A ••'l••tH 1111 tape pleeH Reply AYTO TllE IERYlCE r911>. lnvtdlduel to per-lie Al..1 PIT openH Ing avflallfblm-1 Lg private room with ~ltlyonneededB••c~ HuCl~t'I· sa,&.11 (llTAIL) Specie! ct111•• for .'lr.••••••••••••u•••• Claullled Ad ,.768, end llghl repaffl, N--lofm varlou1 clarlcel fltJ •• med. ou11 9ll •· bath. Aoom 6 Boerd ~ool Dl1lrlct. Salary Full Of pert/lime. Better "tl.nlSIC8pped edul11. 2 HARBOR AREA Delly Piiot. PO BOX port 'fir• Cenler, 3000 duties wltllln our Npt. Pert time PM end RConequlrMseome.,"~311ngO. Plus Salary. Paid vec:e~ $5.078 per hr. epply men·· l90f11W91r, SC yr• college exp. req'd. APPLIANCE SERVICE l560, CoSla Maea. ca E Cout Hwy, CdM Bch ofc. Must be good weekends. 4000 Hllarle llC1 lave..,.,.,.. 11C lion. Cell 575-310, Crt Ptau. Julie 649-11703. $750, Xlnl vaclllon & we Mii racond .. guar. 92826 1---------1 Wllh numbers end de-Way, Newport BHch. IEl'L --· after 6 pm t.2-2824, 2HOB48!.... ~~~r::•r Lene. Saletpereon for plant lnaurenc• benefit•. epptllnc.e •. 549-3077 ---------BebyslUer needed MOl'I, lall1. 9 to 1, M·F. $4 hr 642-5881 .... r_ d • • ..--....-. Wkdya 8:30·4 United ---------Unemployed M will vllll Tues, Wed. for llllle 2 yr to slatl. Call Robin on Ofllc• •klll• • muit. aya NUTRITIONAL etore. Full end parl· C.ebral Palay AllOC., I llT A1rua.I lonely F. Leave rr.ag, old girt. Npt Bch Area, ~es at 545-8808 lllP&TtlR OAn HHvy phonea. Some M~NAOER OPPORTUN· CONSULTANT time. Exper preferred. Sente Ana. M&-5780 L.. 957-11133 558-4395 J. Tucket 830-3462. 673-0322 Community Ceblevlllon ore man&ge1Mnt. O.M. ITV for loe cream 1tore. 0 lk 646-3392 BABYSlnER Oltrfoal T1'11t hat en uc•ll•nt op-• r • •. e 4 2 • 3" 9 O • Muat have aJCperi.nc.. .=\,~ F'! :or; ---TIA--Yl-L___ Ttl••llHt letltlttn Fr..- Consclenllou1, ateady portunlty for an upe.-542-4&90, Mr. Devil.. BHcl\ aree1 aalary Into. call ltl·laet. NHded lmmedl1tely. 1200 ,,,..,,,, Melure, for .. mo. Old. per1on. Wiii maintain rl911Ced r•dlo dlepetcho ....... o1p~.848·81144. call Sales/ Seer ldHI for 11udent1 or 545-475'4 ' l1nltH 5310 M • F 8 • 5 : 3 0 · c · M · Important ~ermanant er. Thi• fall growln" 0-.,,.... 34 Openlnga llom1meke11. Hours. WHIRLPOOL FREEZ•R •• • • •• • • • • • • • • •• • • •• • • 9 .. .e 63.t2 • __... f F I "' Sat T I 0 h th n d 3 I •1_.... "' ...... records. AP LY •• of-cebl• TV comr any want... or r . .. . MARKETING 'IP n • • or • -9. No Mii ng. "•JIV'• 3 yra old, Ilk• ,_. Allritetlve merr. ooupl•1·B-A_B_Y_S_ITT_E_R __ 7_A_M--8A-M-llcu Room 202 San Miii• 1n lndlVklue with (6 Sun. evallable) for M~ bookkMPlno. S.c<atery .,... Call bttWMn 9·12, 1260. ll*-eta7 glvH privet• danc• & allarachl 'untll dinner Clemente 1,,n. good communlcetlon Newport Batch pet Itel• ·-..a.ett MGMT POTENTIAL 11111"1 plus tre\/91 NIM 840--4M7. Alter 1 pm, ---___,-...,..-~.,.-..,,.. fe11on1 & •ct u wttdy• 8'8·7922 ---------eklll• and radio know 11\op. Mull bt tltP9· .,. comm. "8-0151 Cotd1pot Ralrlg SUS. MC()(la. Neme & phone · OlllPIJ!l OPEUTH how. Mu1t enJoy fa11 r1eno1d a ra11ab1•. -.. y-••ffl Jlmhii5 4p__o 540.2500 8 M•Y1ao. G.E. « Ft1tl-# to PO Bo11 214• a.a. IAIYllmll Pror. otfloe need• si-· paced envtronmt,,1. 640..ooeo ~· ... ••t 1408 eat 6-7 TalephonaE ..... M ........ the dalre w1ehar tt9 aa. 92142.0274 w•MMllll Ion to treln on mini W«k ICMdllle ... ~ ... lrea leil9 ,_........ em""" 0MY v, 548-M72 frntJ $4IO PIS . ...,. Hardwere S•IH PIT, at.,,.. Your new C*9ar SECRETARY, FANT OFC t>Hch. $300· 110001 -------- •••••••••••••••••••••• M1111 heve own tr1n1· ~~:.P:;'7 1~9~~J~ ::i~"Jf:.v~=~ aarnl1n ,_~ed. ei'C Al1fll'I on our 3rd lhlft. W'*'CI call Sun/Wed noon A1,!: A.anOlld"IC'p~~.!..,oodvotYP-ca WMk. Call 535-7611. L~~~. ~t11~ Wldow9f wlmotOf nom. i:rt111on N••4•d 10 -----m--.. -11-LP--p11ct111on to: wet.:'31o7 E. Cet ~ "'·Up to '4.50 • ~ 114 "'""· Mt.nt1a1. s'~lc: Top Sr. Security door ... __ '"2-e77o' ..... M1::'~~~2-1:11~ow1, urt •. '" c7'1 ~:~; Mature pereon. Celet• c!:;,~~t~c=:n CdM ~:o~• .,.'":::n= to PM-time gen otc. Dellt9 p1111. Opp,ortunltY to ~~fie: ::o:": w--~·AafrtO. 5411-7827. If no 1n....-. rt• ttyfa rt1taurent. 1ott Camtlblok at. .._ __..... tor ~ momt. l 1upervleory coll "' HI "uderlt at-adv.not. elaty com• n1um 1n Newport 8Mctl Dlltlwnher~,..., ... Al.M WfTll ft PLEASE keep try1ng to Recql/etball • hHlth J< 8-ch. t2MO ~ C<lmpeny. Wiii I a v a I t . 0 a I I : lemoont 111-MIO ::::."~:ll~r~ C&pabr. of tt.ing d.: Xlnt cond. 8*-6148 fly/CrulM MedltarrM· c ell et raeeonebl• clilb. In IMne E..,.. & E ) 720-2~/fl/H train. r..uet tleve aw. ~U7-040. Inter-P11f 1mt ..,,._12 tlfl'I. 6$7~2 putlnd. 87M101 btwn Refr'--ator, whit. with nMll hauls. Salurdavs. 1173-01138 11 "" lnteretttd In htl.PIN Mid .-Y Wed .... _ __.., ___..__...... t-4 Mofl.>Frl ....... Af>t 2 to May 8, 1983 to 4 DRY c• c ... "IRI QoCMt 7-t pm at 111 Dal w.r: "'---or --. -' ' '°9 f,._.,. 17 CU ft. RH/Info 110-0430 ....,.,.. tlC$*'d ..... ~· OoU .._. anf "9fY ~-ICMta. °'* ~llT/--11•· 1169-7218 Owen Banking COUNTER/YARD person Counter clerk, &KPtf. Pt'/. 1 Ttiur• tem-"oon at 21, with ovtatendlng, to C.F.O. of Np( Bott TRAINEES 19 ~ f\ lfoet "" ...,.. P/JllE JIU.II ror IOOI & equip rental pr.t CdM. 81M4'3. Hoi&HOIHnere, muat tMO Ne-, Hwy Leg. attrMtlY9 peteonatltMia l"ln. Svc ... Firm. ,....,.,., °Welle ttargo Bank 1.; ·C"omp1ny In l..eguna e.___..._. ,_.. OOocf NfW11ng 0# ldl. I. O. I. '• to work wltll youth CMllnQ., ~. ~ Aefrto. :.:::''• -= .. ;f;'-'.47.::........... M'. fc Bah. Muet tnJoy work· .._..,_ oper pret'• t>ut w) · (19H 10· 14). 0111 tton. Good typing, inc.. co rVD.I~ ~· t O O •p · ,.._,,I B. Call or Interview lnO w/peopla, good ... IUllllUL TU1 .,., c.11 846-NH MflM ... 2~1. Ext-atetttttcal. SM tJ<lltl a , tArftnUll1Q 7.!,. ~ 7o ~ tt Y K I m 0 • n n I • 11ry a ~ l*O ap: UIDll~ 14t. toe aptitude for numbaral at OftENINGI 7..,...,..1 ... ~'.~!!!'! .... !.'!!! 7141973-5081 ~IY 1706 So. COHI .... .......... IRN\I\ ::CU'· raq'd. O•I ~3 50 ~ ElaCtflC w.... .._.. UI .. In... aum BWylvd' .Lee. _1930or Ne2'!t;o"o Tllllll ftHd•d fOt working -··~· NIT ,.. 123 l 7 !~ = ~ ~ .=:~e::.~;::33:. ~'.'"""" ,,.;,"' ~~ ~:..!:'~ --=-~--·=·~:~ = __ J,:-..:: !'I.~~i!i:i old a, Tue-Thu re , r'~o-= o.y Oare Aaelttent 8.,, Ju9fl tor • horn. aeMMtel. a $14 499 =""' •venln9a. Wt :-''ator~ ': 11\lncl«I eduR• pref'cf. UnMf'alty NO. J4 1:10-2PM 181-1632 TO OU~ 8T.4ff e11t9"ded day care at tNtlng ......,. "" '* wk. "'l-1471 """W .. wu to ~Ctl~ ~ •oellaftt No .....,... l'!Mded. Kanmcwe pOtt d....._. .1.6. ·~ 1nl • 1 Mlk .. up Anlet e O fl o o I , 3 • 8 pm • *'° ....... ..,.,_ IMtfOr9 tpft -~ OOUfl--• Ollertl NltttoM. tYP4nf 714 9M IM. •· I 100, .... NIWllna r:r. ... mm......... • 1 Mantcur111 H7..tS33 uon equipment u.L. • m••• =!&1' " 11 .. ...-+. WOid= , oonc1 ... ,... -· r ENT RI p "a N ! u A Carllfl•d olroultt tor ••••If ~ ... ... Of .... •P· . • ... /W..... I-···· 1 ~ A8118TANT -••P•· Cllantela not naoea...-y To Piece 10Ur l'nMNClt 10,0cJO and 11.000 kftOCllll ...... -Alllllfll\...... ,,.. ............... -~ "" 'ldnl 90M; rl•nCad Properly/ Wen the .... A. I. Q. Atiill•HM '*' ~,:; • ·,_ ,.... ............. "' ...... Av ....... tell, •. AP.F.!!:._,*••1 YI• .,~,. • =:....==: ... =="' -::..:-· ~:!'.~ =~-....: i;;c::i.. ~-i:E::~·~·.:: =· .. -~~ ... ~:'::':::elf 1~. l'romotlon. itPI. c....=::r-ee7t OUOTI. ~ Otl ~ ...... __ T~... ... .... .._ • I~=· ..C:~-~ 5 ..... ••!!Ith• &11oallent ttftrenoe1 Want Ad HelO? ' ~IOO '9r ........... ~ --·• t1•w ·~·:...~ • :Jt1A '.."' !,I!. !!9!t, _,_ .. tll ... _ Ma. l(.«IMdY tlt-t1H 942·64171 , ..._.. -a.it -.--. - . ' • I 23 FT. PIERCE ARROW White with IWlbunt atiipea, on trlr, sar l1nce new. 370 hp. 4 bolt maim. $64,600. 'NEWPORT Y!CHT EXCHANCE. 3404 Via Oporto Wte 4 Newport 8tld9 lll-1 ... •• WlllY USED CARS & TRua<S COME IN OR CALL ~ .......... Com'lllr.o.ulo ...-n 18211 BEACH lllVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH Ml.-J, 1•1111 COMMflL ':HE~ROtF• ' . ' ~·I>-I JOO . .... . .. . " ,. Fl Orano• Ooalt DAILY PILOT/Sunday, September 5, 1882 '73 2002, Ot1g. owner, nw eng .. excel oond, $5500 . • 85M2M. ·79 5281. Avto; exoellent cond. All extru. 114, 500. 494-4360 •n 830 CSI, euto, air, 91'1\/fm c:eM,. full pwr, xlnt cond. Prlc.d for ~ .-i 7"4932 '81 3231 Beur conwrt .• ~tPd. 888 whit, For. grn, ext , tin Int. M?-3962 DICK Mill ER MCJTOR<, t. ... .. ' . 1879 3201, rad, mint --------1 c:ond. Alf c:ond. em/Im c111 ttereo. 84K ml 19200 84&-2088 '74 Fl9t Good oond. $1100. 536-8054 C4-' . ff JI '71 A1t 800 Spider & r•r.: ........ •••••••••• Parta car. ,976. 77 Capri, 8 cyt, 4 tpd, 982·5009 tunroof, 1mlfm t•P• 1-------- !!'.~~.~ .. !!.ff ,.. 1111 r.~ ............ !~?f .. ......... ·Wii·r1iirwf #1 , ..... ....., We'll allow you over .. --C ... II •1111 '"9tJI 100 New & Uted •-- Merc.d .. ·B•m:. Come $345 42 U&.11, sm. In & conlldef our..... -LIA-•n~tt or long t OVERSEAS DeUVEAY t.-m f!Nlndng. .-monttl pg tu EXP£AT8 Houae °' ""9om. Inc. 4t month dOMd end DIAL 213 or 714 ..... on sopprowd «• 637•1333 dlt. Coat-115,375; UIU •I *852.15 cah required. Yll.YI Come In and eek for 19ee Hltbor BIVd. detlllll (111824). COSTA MESA IUll llPllTI Ml-laa ....... , Ml Dow Street A•,., D-' NEWPORT BEACH •••••l••• ••••••••••••• ___ 1_1_1_ ..... ....,...___, _ __, ~~~ ......... !!!! '72 8ub t9E. gel eng Come In & ... Newport ~. bronu, 90K mt, 1111 .,,.., ...,, rune perr. S1tOO. A ci-ic. Good cond.ll~Mfij~ 831-3589 Xln1 exterior. $2.300 or (Trana Pl'blm) mutt tow'. a.ch'• flnelt Mlectlon a 8 O O Io ff• r ( 2 1 3) of prevtoutly OWfled 512-4371 or (213) Portetle'•. Audl'• and 111-3091 v~ '77 C81)H Ohla. ve, 4 b9t ofr. 845-1442 tPd. A/C, eunroof. em/ '75 Aet 128, rune gr .. t. fm GMI. flt\'er. Good Stereo 30 mpg. Very cond. 12eCSO. 955-e359 cleen. Alktno 11700 dys, 831-3472 91191. t82-4047 Believe it or not! It's a short drive to HAWAII! •2-19tamTO HAWAI vii AMERICAN AltlltES .. ""' -....... 9'° -dr"'9 -ol f/NI -Ot UMd ceft ~ ...,._. to ~Y •or df•'lll'lllO Dy INt ......... IOr 1 'An -.... _... 10 HAWAJ .W ' Atrlet.can AA-MY91 ..... •eloel ~ OllY9n ICeflM nl bt It )"9 OI ... OI -,_ Au10 ~ 1'o!lotlMllrOll Of ~ --..,._ Of ,......., ..... ~ Ofltr ...,,,.,.. ~ tll0/11 Thll It the time of Y99" for the belt Mlto buytl T•• MYMtage of thll' =unity to wtn 2 round trip eta to Hawaii· via Am•tcan Mrtlnel ALOHA l!AVIClt '77 450 8EL. 8unrf, beige/brown lntt. l15,900otr. 87~ 1153 MBZ ......... ...... 714-"6430t ...,., .. ''''"''m ~ ......... M! 111 UllllT 11111'1111 of l•t• mocl•I. tow mll•ae• O•cllttac1 In loutNm CeMwNel .. UI IOd9rf ..... ........ 2900 HwbOr IMI. C08TA ..aA .... , .. FRl>AY•SATlllDAY•SUNDAY•MONDA S. 9"Cls MondaJ, Sept. 6th at 9:00 P.M. LABOR DAY SELL-A-THON SHOP IN THE SHADE WI WILL NOT ··~ UNDER- SOLD. UNDER THE BIG TOP! 1979 GADILLA ILDOIAOO CO (83<t042) •10,995 1971 CADILLA llYILU (971VNI) $8995 1912 CADILLAC PLlnWOOD llOUGHAM (1EAL.546) $15,995 l ~~ / DO VOU LIKE BIRD STORIES? ~~~-~J1'1f~"i!'. MERE'5 A BIRD . STORY ••• NANCY ' I IUNDAY. llPTIMll• I , 1t11 • It CINfl TMERE WAS TMIS LITTLE BIRD, SEE, AND ME AAD BEEN VERY eAD •• MIS MOTMER MAP YELLED AT MtM, AND ME FELT AWFUL ••• ME WAS DEPRESSED At-lD AN6R't', AND HE DIDN'T KNOW WMAT TO DO •.• ' ILL BET THAT CHEAPSKATE HES ALWAYS DROPPING IN ON SUNDAYS TO MOOCJ4 SLUGGO WILL BE HERE ANY MINUTE A FREE MEAL. Ylll lllDll-llllY PIPll l\ ALL Rl6~T ! ''ME SMOUTED ... '1 IF NO ONE AROUND HERE LIKES ME, I'll JUST 60 OUT IN THE BACKVAAD AND EAT WORMS!'' By Ernie Bushmiller GARFIELD® DENNIS THE MENACE HAVE You READ ~~ WHArs HAPPENING TO THE COST OF SENDING A ---~~p l>>l> WHAT MADE YOU DECIDE THAT YOU WOULDN'T ee PASSMORE'& ~ YER 1 l KNEW IT WAS GETTING BAD .• : BUT TH IS IS OUTRAGEOUS! ~-.JDGE PARKER 1 HAO A LONG TALK WITH Hl5 &ON TONY! HAVE YOU EVEP\ MET HIM, ...__ 5AM1 - by Jim Davis : ACTlJAL.L.'1' I 'TfiE ONllJ ~N I'M UPON . 1fif5 HtGH DIVE. IN 1HE A~T PLAGE 15 00 iHA"T 1fi05E GI~ OOAJN f!R 1J.4E f?OOL.. CJJI L!.-NOTICE. ME ! ·-,-~.,_...,­. ,......,.._ . ,AUTOMATIC BANKING ... DOCTOR SMOCK -rHe KESYS ARE: IN 1-r, C'OC'rOR~· '· ~u ae-r,. SON LOOK lfT 1MAT IDIOT! ME'S BEEN SMNotNG UP 1MEP;E FOR 'f'Ell:. 1MREE HOUltS • . .. .. A'O l STAND ~Ef(E 00 -rHE HIGH DIVE , I CAN HEA~ A ~ LrrrL.E VOie£ IN NY.) HEAD SIVJINC:,: '~ CAN DO rT ! Q)(J CAN 00 rr·!' BUT 'THEN '! HEAR A ?reroND LlffL.e \AJICC: ~: ~ USTEN 101Ue A~T iJf1'tE. VOICE.! :rr~ aeAZIJ ! I ) .. by Ferd and Tom Johnson AUTOMATIC ,AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR AUTO WASHES ... OPSNERS ... By -George Lemont ' ,, • -~ " I ~ '1 . l--·· .. ( ' , 'WEE:~, YOO SHOW ME: YOU CAN ROUNP UP JUST ONE S1RAV' sn=e~ ANP YOU'VE GO'f A JOEJ l / ... ·' CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYES? Then ere et lfftt six cllffer· eMeS 111 drawlnt •tall• betwHn top ancl Mttom PIMIL Now "'6d&ty can YoU find tMmt Qecll answen wl"' ttloM below. , ...... lllP tt I ... \,1 .... ) t 'lutH tW aA \'1>0$ S ·111• .... llP •11.-. ·r ·-.1.w• 11 'il»N<1lu1n1~ ~I Jwtlf) ·c ·lk.l1n1w 'I llMICIW"O ... l.,._n1110 ' WOIDIQUAaE CMALLIH• She words correspon- ding to ct.tlnltlons ••ow complete the word ..,.,.. .tiove. How quickly can vou discover the words? (No. 1 -hMOn -It •lready In pl.a). Deflntttens: 1. MlrlMf"•Wllftlftl. J,C.rdgame. J. Yield .. ,,...twf, 4. Champedwtttl ... "'- S. TfYMI ..... tlftel '· tt.dd.,.stoet. Remember. • word square contlsts of words that read the wme both .aoss •nd down. ....... • 1•111.io ., .,.......) •• ..,., >v -c ·•.,.>ftJ ·c . ..,._. ., For Better or For Worse tvlOM ··· EL\Z-ABe-IH uuSI WENT~tDE . IUSY WORIU Find 11 sltns of ltfe •t the eld scMol • ·-.-.1••J1•1wnvecio·11 · ... i1·01 ·•-.ows·• "'"' ·tot:1 •1·-w ·t ·11oW ·•·~ ·s ·..-4 ·r .,...,,.HIS r ·PtOu•>s ·c ,1111.-1 . - LENS HOI Apply the foHewlng colon nNHV to enlYnce the ....... KeM above: 1-Red. 2-Lt. blue. >-Yellow. 4-Lt. ~. J-Flffh tones. 6-Lf. tray, 7-Ole. brown. 1-~ll. -. . I • . ~ .. l ~ I I I I I -. I I • ~a I \ ' OON If t<~OW, NE.U ..... I JU!» f CAN'f nc,uRt If OUT. DRA86LE. iOO ~~E £N11REL 'I "Mt \JRONu GORDO ' ... • ... l MONE~1'L.'f 6El-lE.'1£ ~~E. ENJO'IS ~E.£lN6 Mt PlJf "'" roor 1N M'f M001'" t By Gus Arriola by MacNell --.ic-------~ U££~~w A 91}~ OF ft'T~ --->W IJH5 ... .. September 5, 1962 . Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. • HALEIGH FOR GERARD NIERENBERG, author, The Art of Creative Thinking (Comer· stone Library) An people born wtth aeedvlty, or la it K· quired? -O.N., Anniston, Ala. • Everyone can be taught to be aeattve. Most adults have merely per· mltted their creative skills to become dor- mant. The average person, for ex.ample, presently o perates on a few cylinders, using only 10 percent of brain capacity; "Ninety percent of brain WOlted." 90 percent Is still available . Babies use creativity skills better than adults because infants are constantly forced to deal with new sights, sounds and experiences. Grown-ups should try the art of creative thinking. When people are not creative. they set up barrier.; so they see only what they expect to see. This tun· nel vision is not beneficial for career or day·to-day decisions . FOR JANE POWEU.. ac11 ess How do you keep 90 Ulm and trtm? Do you work at It? - E.C., <>wa.boro, Ky. • I have been counting calories all my life. I come from chubby stock; my mother Is always on a diet. too. And as a teen-ager I was chubby, so I had to start my calorie-watching at a young age. I don't diet, but I know what Is good for me and what lsn 't. l also exer-11: dse every day. ;;, FOR GARY COWNS, emcee, Miss America Pageant Dtd your ... Mary Ann Mobley (• former Mm America), give you any advice on making the pllgeaftt run llDOOIChlo/? -D. W .. Trenton, N . .I. • She gave me one important tip: Be nice and help- ful to the contestants. When she was up for the tide, she was a petrified little gtrl from Brandon, Miss. Bert Parks gave her encouragement. She never would have made it to the end without It. FOR LINDA EU.ERBEE, of NBC News Overnight Do you do your own m.mbup? -T.N., Vanoouwr, WMh. •When I was a reporter on the street, l did it myself. But studio cameras are different -they're not as kind as natural light! Without makeup, under the Intense lighting of a set, your eyes tend to disappear. Watch- ing yourself on TV ls unreal, too, like hearing your voke on tape for the first time. Frightening thing ls, when I see myself, I wonder, "Is that really me?" J TH Em YOURSELF FROM 1HE •ASK9 EDITOR QUOTES: Jim Nabon, now on screen In The Best Little Whorehouse In Texas, griped about the music business of today and concluded: "You don't need a true singing voice to succeed. You can croak like a strangled crow. 1bey take care of you with super electronic equipment so that you end up sounding like Carmo." ... Comic Joan RJw.rs met a new mother and advised: "The best chiJd-rearlng philosophy I've seen is a He*" up by loving spoonfuls. special edition of Dr. Spock -with a foreword by .loan Crawford." ... Octogenarian George Burne has a satisfying substitute for a rom.anttc interlude: .. Very hot soup -home~ooked barley soup. And if It Isn't zingy enough, I add a little ketchup." ... Pete Rozelle. Na· tlonal Football league commissioner, said this about his ideal vacation: "fd like to go somewhere with lots of water, no phones and no stores." ... MJSAP- PREHENSION: Christopher Norris, of TV's Trap- per John , M.D., wants to set the record straight and . enlighten all those who mistakenly assume that ac- tresses have it easy on the set: "Most people In other fields work from 9 to 5. They think all we do is loll around the set all day. But In fact, by the time most folks get to work, rve already been there a few hours. And I don't get home until 8:30." ... Slnger Vikki Carr Is ,., the wife of Michael Nilsson, ' .. Qbors executive vice president of the Sinclair Paint Co. In order to become familiar with her husband's work, she accompanied him to a string of conventions. "People who think those things are fun need their heads examined," 5$ghed VUdd. "I told Michael I'd never doubt or envy him again. It's a back- breaking grind -all work, no pU.y. Even If conven· Rluaa Hon-goers did want to goof off or fool around, they had no time -or energy.".· .. TRANSPORTA110N: When Prince Chllrie9 was late for an engagement, due to heavy traffic on London streets. one of thoee walling to greet him handed him a tube of ointment for little Prtnoe Wllbam's royal diaper rash. "If you can come up wtth something to cure 'trafflc rash,'" replied O\arie:s, "I'D be eternally grateful." ... .lohn Hlllenun, of Magnum, P.1., recently reWited New York City for the first time In 20 years. Allho\l!il as Higgins he sees Magnum In plenty of jams, he was shocked by the city's trafftc Jams. "l can't recall It ever being that bad. Only city worse Is Rome." PRO Frank N. WllrMr. director, ts..ue Development, Assoda.llon of American Railroads < PRO Ano con CON RepnMntatlw Byron L Dorgan (0.-N.0 .), member. Agriculture Committee Yes. Railroads were granted lands to encourage settlement of the West. In tum, railroads had to pro- vide reduced·rate transportation to the Government. Two Congres- sional studies concluded th~ the rallroads earned title to the lands In this manner, and th' Supreme Court affirmed the railroads' repay- ment and ownership. Confiscating private property - or prohibiting abandonment of branch lines -would harm the qualfty of main-line service and threaten more rail bankruptcies. Should Rallroada Be Allowed to Kttp Federal Land Grants Once They Have Abandoned Service to an Arm? ~, Send 9111ta111 ol MIGMI litfllbic», • t ...... • "f'lll I Oon, * Fllllily.....,.,, M1~•wie •• llNMo111.Y. 10022 .... ,.,11fllrlllOll,...... No. Co~ gave over 130 mUUon acres of public lands to, railroads that proml5ed to provide servk:e for the publk. Now thoee railroads want to abandon some of that service and keep the lands - rich In od, gas and dmber -for themselves. They want taxpayers to pay for highways In order to replace this lost MMc:e. That's not fair. The rellroada My they ha~ ''paid beck" tht land ~ts. They haven't. They thould tither keep their promlM or give back these lands. Plqymusic rt.gnt away with theuruque Yamaha Card- Reader system. PL.AYCARO READER Music-making really rakes off wrth Yamaha 's nevv space-age PortaSound PC-100. It's the fun elec- ounic keyboard anyone can play nght CM/ay. because of Yamaha's exclusive Playcard System. Just run the Playcard through the built-in CardReader. press a but- ton. and the PC-I 00 plays back the music. You can play melodies and chords along with the programmed • • • music. Or. without Playcards. play the PC-100 just like any regular keyboard. Every PC-JOO comes with a selec- tion of J 2 Playcards featuring a variety of music. And more =M::E=LOOY=::LED=. Playcards are avail- ____ s able for endless hours of musical fun. Just like Yamaha's R::>rt.aSound · PS-1. PS-2 and PS-3. the PCv' 00 comes complete wilh a dura01e carrying case. And an optional ... three-way povver system so you can play it af'o/Where. Additional features include polyphonic capability. a wide range of instrument \Uices. automatic fythm accompaniments and chooj5 played with the touch of a singJe finger. So put the future fun of· Yamaha PortaSound at your finger- tips today. See your lo(:al music retailer or write: Yamaha Specialty Products OMsion. P.O. Box tJ:JXJ, Buena Pali<. CA 90622. • I- -at to Hate Yo hen l left college six years ago last June, I was giddy with high hopes about join- ing the world at large. But I was not naive about the dif- ficulties of snatching a good job nor about the rigors of work. Of course dues had to be paid, a track record established. I suspected. for Instance, that a 21-year-old who owned one suit might not be CBS news's ftrst choice to take over for Eric Sevareld. Shortly after, a )ob was offered to me, as a copy- boy for the New York Da1/y News. My memory of the first day at work is hazy. I do remember fetching coffee -aeam, no sugar -for a famous colum- nist who now acts in beer commercials on TV. and I remember walking 12 hot blocks to pk:k up an envelope from the houseboy of a slightly less famous columnist. Somehow, It was not at all what l had had In mind. EJght hours after I had begun my newspaper career at the News, I crept like a ter- rorist Into the executive suite, shot a cwt note oyer the boss's doorstll and ran. Ufe shou.ld be taken one day at a time , they say, and one day of this kind was plenty for me. My panicky retreat after only a day was certainly rash and probably arrogant, although It turned 01:1t to be the oomlCt career move. But In my Oeeting tenure as a ~y. I had a potent short course In 10m« of the realOl'tl why so many people hate their )obi 10 much. We me smart humans. yet we are tomettmes given the work of pr0grammed robots. W. pine for responsibility and Nspect, yet we are given a paycheck and a ~uctlon quot.a . The an- cient Greeks 'knew that work was almost always a duD drag: Slaves did all the heavy llfttng (and they did do windows), and nobody pretended that drudgery y.ias good for the soul. It ls revealing that In Amerlca, tM suppoted gloc1a of work are annually commemorated - Labor Dey -wttMa long weekend of beer and ~ver wonder why we celebrate Labor Day with time off from our jobs? Perhaps it~ because working for many of us is no labor Qf love. en You . . By K~ Andersen are .. or le country determinedly loafing. f course, would have us believe n of blissful laboren. Nearly decades, Gallup or the of Americans tf they " with their )obs, and ardness are often found the seeds of discontent. But It's more complicated than that. Some of our problems lie with the types of jobs we must petfonn In our society. ln the mkl-1800's, most Americans worked for themselves, lo 6eld.s or in shops or on the road; working life today is "™lUestionabfy less between 80 an yeah, sure, right. polls Is that often their deceptive. Maybe those major1tles are saying that they're re- signed to their jobs, that they're not about to quit, or that they're not losers. But uerv satlafled? When the opinion surveyors phrase the question about jobs differently -less ~ -they dis- cover somethSlg more like the truth: Nearly 60 perarm of Americans say that If they ~ their woridng llva to begin again, they wou.ld choote another line of \VOl'k. In other words, If Yours 11n't a 1labor of love, YoU are not alone. Most Americans are not crazy about the )obi. How ls It that 10 many of us are ltuck with )obi we'ct prefer not to have? ~ of us simply •arted off on the wrong foot and never got sound to dllcoYetng what we'd really like to be doing. . According to Rosalyn Fotba, Ed.O., a New York City psychologllt and bull- n .. CC>NUhnt, molt people don't cWb.rmly chOOM their )obi, "but llmply ,.. In· to them." In this ~ (I said, (oontJnued) w--.w. ••11Tl111. -•• ~ I l Warning: The Surgeon General Hes Det1rmin1d That Cigamte Smolang Is Dangerous to Yow Htehh. . LABOR DAD lconimued) sweaty. but now less than 10 percen1 of Americans are self-employed. Many of us are Simply cogs in the wheels of big companies, and the result In many cases has been dis- enchantment. uln the days when peo· pie created something themselves and then sold it, there was a lot of mtnnsic satisfaction," says Gerda McCahan. Ph.D., cinical psychok>gist and pro- fessor ol psyc:hok>gy at Furman Unt- uersity, Greenville, S.C. "Today woriw!rs don't feeJ they have a handle on what their company does or how -they-flt Into the owrall picture." h's not surprising that according to social sdelltim, the people ~ with. their work .. ~ eamepie- ne\D'S and profesaionals -men and women who are often their own bos.s. Thllt doesn't meeri It's mpo.tie b ~ -to be happy. Dr. Mc-Cahan tels ol one manufacturtng a:>m- pany that rn.dws workas W'I the ded- .slon-rnablg and running d the rom- pany -and worker sati:hctioo has i'l- aeased. But t's rare for an American ftrm to go to such lengths. This sense of lack1t1g control. of not belonging, can be true even fo r peo- ple 1.11ho by all appearances are "in charge " Says Dr Forbes· UMany mid- dle managers have responsibility but no authority. And companies are Just not utilizing these workers as 1hey could and should." I n addition, a spedAI set of protMms exists for workers of the baby-boom generation. who were educated for great things and promised the world But a shrinking economy, lack of projected expansion In many in - dustries and an extended retirement age have meant that jobs haven't turned over as quic.kly as expected. Statistics compiled by the American Management As.sociauon show that 80 to 90 percent of middle managers don't make It to the top level by age 40. The great expectations of many baby boomers have ended up going limp Some of us also end up in trouble because of expectations about what work in general should off er "We are a work-oriented society, bound to the Protestant ethic that work is good and. therefore. a person who works is good," explains Dr McCahan "We tend to think that work Is the mast important part of us lf we 're not do· Ing a job that is very Important or ex· citing, we worry that we are less good than we should be." This problem has become compli· arted by the extreme emphasis In re- cent years on job fulfillment, satisfac· tion and enrichment. Work is sup- posed to be engaging, a well-lit avenue of self-expressk>n. ~ l'AMll Y WHKL'r. hQlemi. ~. 1182 • 7 Some of ow job-related unhappi- ness may be tied to Internal changes that we experience as individuals. Ed- ward B. Klein , Ph.D .. professor of psychology at the University of Cin · cinnao and one of the co-authors of The Seasons of a Mans Ufe, belleves that a person's age often plays a signi- ficant role in on-the-job dissatisfac- tion: "A aiticAI stage is age 30," he states, "when a lot of people reap- praise the kind of life structwe they buUt In their 20's, including the work they do. The most dramatic time of unhappiness with work comes at around age 40. If you're a middle manager, you may have expected (conlmUltd) ~ I .I Ad,..rt1Mment My Feet Were Killirig Me ... Until I Discovered the Miracle in Germany! I T was the European trip l had always dreamed about. I had the time and money to go where I wanted -see what I wanted. But I soon learned that money and· time don't mean much when your feet hurt too much to walk. After a few days of sightseeing my feet were killing me. Oh, l tried to keep going. In Paris l limped through Notre Dame and along the Champs-Elysees. And I went up in the Eiffel Tower although I can't honestly say I remember the view. My feet were so tired and sore my whole body ached. While everybody else was having a great time, J was in my ho tel room. I didn't even feel like sitting in a sidewalk cafe. The whole trip was like that until I got to Hamburg, Germany. There, by accident. I happened to hear about an exciting break- through for anyone who suffers from sore. aching feet and le>(S . This wonderful invention was a custom formed foot support called Flexible Feath- erspring~ When I got a pair and slipped them into my shoes my pain disappeared almost instantly. The flexible shock absorbing sup- port they gave my feet was like cradling them on a cushion of air. I could walk. stand, even run. The relief was truly a miracle. And just one pair was all I neeQed. J learned that wome~ also can wear them- even with sandals and open backed shoes. They're completely invisible. Imagine how dumbfounded I was to dis- cover these miraculous devices were sold only in Europe. Right then I determined that I would share the miracle I discovered in GermaJly with my own countrymen. In the last nine years over a quarter mil- lion Americans of all ages-many with foot problems far more severe than mine-have experienced this blessed relief for them- selves. MADE FOR YOUR FEET ALONE Here's why Feathersprings work for them and why they can work for you. These sup- ports are like nothing·you've ever seen before. They are custom formed and made for your feet alone.' Unlike con- ventional devices, they actu- ally imitate the youthful elas- tic support that Nature origi- nally intended your feet to have. NO RISK OFFER Whatever your problem-corns, cal- luses. pain in the balls of your feet, burning nerve ends. painful ankles. old injuries, backaches or just generally sore, aching feet, Flexible Feathersprings will bring you relief with every step you take or your money back. Don't suffer pain and discomfort need- lessly. If your feet hurt, tbe mirade of Ger- many can help you. Write for more detailed· informadon. There ii no .oblipdoa wlaat· soever. No salesman wiU call. Just fill out the coupon below and mail it today. WHAT PEOPLE SAY ABOUT THE MIRACLE: © 1982 feotherspring lntemotionol Corp .. 13100 Stone Avenu.. North. S.att11. Woshington 98133 'Posed by Professional Models R,c,;v,d my 11t•ift! 's Featlrersprings two days ago. n.,y arr supu-nl!ithu nf us can believe ''" U · suits. She hos hod ll!r· rib/, fut/or yl!ars; al- rl!ady no pain. lnc:i- • "Si11cl! /'vi! IHl!n wl!aring ..-----------------------....i dlau&IJ.1, ltlr sou lcltt' i.t lfUlllC'lt WU#r .•• As a r~ti"d pltyskian, this result is amaz.· Ing. 0r .. c .o.c.rrucson. Arizona lifter wt'uring Frathrr.fprings for J months, I w1111ld nt'ver l1•ant 111 bt' without tht'm. lt'.f Fl!atlwrsprllflls I ltavl! IH'" I ab/I to wl!ar sir.on 1 was11'1 f abll! to Wl!ar IHfon. ftlaitdy buauu of my cortLS and call11:sl!s. Thalfb a lr11ndrrd I timl!s ovu." I A.HJEast Ora.. I NewJeney ·:My lt111bond ft!lt a '''"t _.._. * 1 rt!lil!f and no mofl! p11in. I Tht!y art! truly an an.rwl!r to nur prayirs. Only wish tltut I lu had ht!ard of '""" -twtnty yl!ars ago.'' .w wondtrf 111 111 walk 11•itho111 evny s lt'P hurting. They hal'r ht'll!Jd my corn.,. in- /I"'~" tot' nail,,. and my lt'!l,f and hu('k art• .w mudr bt'lll'f. • Mrs. F.J.S./Metairie, Louisiana Mrs. C.P.E .. Sarasota. Fla. ... ··At tht P"""' tlmt I .rtlll wtar tltt FHtlt· trsprlng.r and lndud thty pt!rform wl'll efttr ~ Yt!Or$ of uu." O.M.O. Dallas, Texas '' Wish I hud bt!llt111!d ym1r utf /lt1t Yl'urs u110 . '' Mrs. W.C .• P1ycttevlllo. N.C. RATHERSPRING INTERNATIOMA.L COftPORATION 13100 8IDne Avienuew ~ Dept. FWAZ12 Se.me, WeelllngllDn •tSS YES! I want to learn more about Fleub&e Fatlle....._ Foot Support.. Pleate teed me you· free bnic~ l will watch for the lvae PINK envelope. I undentaftd thllt there is no obliptioa and that no aalcamao wi1J call. Pl'inl Name Addreu City State Zip When In S.lltle v~ ti. FellheqprinQ ~ HemorrhOid sufferers. U$e medicated Cleansing Pads by the makers of PNparatlon H!' They often provide soothing temporary relief from the burning Itch and pain of Inflamed hemorrholdol ttssue. Use only OS directed. Easy Crochet Turban Snug 'n warm: made from 4-ply wonted. Craft 648 has full directions. Send $2..00 to include poet.age and handlktg to: Familv Weekly Magutnc P.O. Bos 438, Dept. A·212 Midtown St•tlon, N.Y., N.V.10018 ~~ ....... ,.( ..... <1 ... ~ (,....._ "ib. .. S1M" ,-~~.did witin In I o your heels ache? -----------.... ~-------~ ---------... LABOR DAZI! (continued) that you would have made It to a senior positio11 by then. Not having done so can often result In enormous disappointment." Another possible cause of the working • blues: Most jobs unfortunately require us to work alongside other people. Now. other people are not objectionable per se: some of my best friends are other people. UnUke us, however, they are sometimes insufferable jerks. And the jerkiest have an uncanny ability to rise to positions of power. Disliking a job Is often a matter of disliking the people wtio come with It. One factor that many of us assume crltl- ~ affects job happineu is money, yet Dr. Forbe$, among several other experts, contends that since the 1960's money really has becdme less seductive. ..Low salaries don't seem to dissatisfy people as much as other aspects of their jobs," she says. Dr. Jonathan Freedman, author of Happy People, points out that although income ranks high as an aspect of work satisfaction, It rarefy ts the major factor. Re.search, he says, has revealed that the amount you make Is less Import.ant than how It compares to others who are at your level. If you seriously disUke your job, don't despair. Some authentically negative aspects of work can be counteracted and even fixed (see below). When he was 40, Ralph Waldo Emerson griped that, 'The life of labor does not make men, but drudges." But by the time he was 57, Emerson had cheered up: .. Every man's task," he wrote, "Is hi.s life-preserver." In- deed, the older a worker gets, according to several contemporary studies, the more pleased he becomes with his W6rk , spon- taneously. And the more job satisfaction he achieves, the longer he Uves -a Uteral life-preserver. CJ Advice lor the Shopworn Overcoming job dissa:tlsf action Is often a two-part proJed. lnldally you'll want to see what you can do to rme your saUsfac:tion lewl at your praent job. (Aho, bee.• of the economy, you may hove to make the best of it for now.) If that doesn't work. you'D want to draw up a game pLar\ for finding more rewarding \Nork down the road.. • 8eglr\ by aoalyDlg what It Is ~ .. and dls!tke about your present po9ltion. According to Or. McCahan, many people actualJy tum the little thJngs they disllb about their jobs Into monsters by putting off doing them or taking care of these tasks when they're tired or lrrttated. She sug- gests you get them over with early In the day and as quickly as possible. Then save the rest of the day for the pro)ects you like -and want to savor. • Use your lunch hourt to refuel psychologicalJy, soys Dr. McCahan. That hou{ or so each day should be a tiro• to do things you enjoy, either alone or With J*>- fcontlnuadJ p'.AMILY W£1!KLY, leplflllbet' 6, "'2 • t 97SR-~ ftowlng ease at curved yoke and hem. Crochet In pettem stitch of synthetic wonted One size fits 1(}16. Olndions., ....... $2.00 731R -Go ew.rywhere In a sltmming vest Crochet ct 2-ply medium ~t sport yam in 2 colon. Directions, Sizes 3848 Incl ........ ' ...•.... $2.00 499R-From $party sepera.tes to a lacy dance dress, this wardrobe fn.. , cluda . ewtythlng for her 11 'h-teen ' doll Crochet of aaapa. . -..... $2.00 ~~" .... t14R-54s.M eedl MCtlon .. ~MW: Join for QUiit. No llnng, In~ qudt:lng. lt'a nlYe"libk f}atc:h pen.n pleCeS •••.•••••••••.•••••• $2.00 78"-M.wl 'n', tuy to make for pen-....... u.. COftOI\ b hone wtth )lllTI !'MM, tail. Wt 1-tlnl. Tninst. j'let· i.n pc. lM "tr .......... $2.<Xl ............. =-:;·--~ L.U.iie.O..:..::.....-.: Y.r..ii'u. 63lR-Palnt «Id embrdder owls on • quilted throw. Tusue transfer of 24 moUfs, charts for 6CM x ~-throw, clNcUot• lnclud8d ......•... $2.00 • The beige cigarette More 1t: I I f l • I I I I I I LAllOR DAD fcont1nuedJ £1JD1 folb whom toe uiew as having glamorous, exdtlng c:areen haue at some t1IM hod jobs they Jwt c:oukln't stand. We asbd a Jew Jamow members of the American woric Jome to daicribe .the job thev hated mo.t. \,../ S-W.• W.... Prmmlle. "In 19Tl. as Olairman of the Senate Banking Committee. l wanted to get a ftrsahand view of the abitude of New York City workers toward accepting no increase in pay. So 1 took a job as a garbage collect~ in Brooklyn for one day. When we began work, it was cold and dark and. ~s face It, garbage is garbage. But my fellow workers were great. All in all, 1 feh in some way my job as U .S. Senator had a slight edge on trust Brooklyn job." Wayne Rogers. actor. "Aher graduation from Princeton. I was a waiter at the Pierre Hotel in New York Oty. One' night, two friends from college came In with two beautiful girls. 1 told the captain that I was having a coronary. 1 just could not face my friends. I feh my world had come to an end." StiDft' and Meara, comedp tam: Anne Meara -.. While waiting for my talents to be discovered. 1 wodced at a research lab, testing o ut a detergent. I had to put my hands In lye -and I ended up with a rash." Jerry Stiller -"Ai 21, 1 eked out a meager living by selling magazines door to door. Nine out of 10 doors pie who "make you feel 100 percent better." Too often, she says, "we spend time with people who end up taking from us." • One way to infuse new llf e into a job, particularly for older workers, is to become a mentor or adviser for young people in the company, says Dr. Klein. • U your job ls drudgery and there's no way around it, Dr. McCahan sug- gests you assess your total life and determine what aspects make you happtest. Then put more time and energy Into them. There's no reason why you have to define who you are mainly by your work. • Let's say you do decide to try to make a move. If It's the offlce politics or your boss's moodlness that you dislike, you might be happy doing the same thing under a different roof. But Kun Andcrwn, author of The Ral Thing (Holt. Rlrwhart A IMnlilon), 11 a #off udtr at nm. mGJll'lllfnc. slammed In my face. but the lOlh homeowner opened the door wide, with a big smile and a loud we.laxµe. I never got to make the pMd\ rd been rehearsing far 90 long. Jt was the other way sound. She tried to axwert me to her rebglous cult. Jt wasn't too much ol a wrench to quit that job." .lama Coco. •ctor: .. One Christmas, I got myself hired as a Santa Claus. As I made my des- cent down the chimney, my pants got ripped on a nail -which resulted In my baring all." Dolly Parton. alngeNlctreu: "I was 4 when 1 was hired for my worst job. That's when I was big enough to pick up and hold a baby. f m referring, of course. to the eight brothers and sisters foDowing me (f m one of 12). I was the baby sit- ter. At the start I thought it was a grand, fun way to play house. It stopped being wonderful when I knew I had a nonpaying job. l was doing volunteer work. And my mother kept volunteering me more babies. But even with pay, It would have been back-breaking work." Harold Robbim. .mhor: "I was budget director at Universal Pic- tures. responsible for the annual disbursement of $40 miJlion . Somehow, I got hold of a new pro- perty. which I described as 1ousy.' That's when I knew I wanted to write, not jugg)e figures." -Anita Summer you may realize that you'd prefer something totally new. See if you can sum up what you Uke doing and what you're good at. Do you like playing it safe or taking risks? Do you like to in- teract with people or are you a lone wolf? Do you love or hate giving a sales pitch? "Match your preference to your job,'' says Dr. Forbes ... Satisfying work is a matter of finding a balance, of keeping your expectations high enough but within the bounds of reality.~ • Broaden your options with educ.a· Uonal programs, either wtthln your company or outside of it. "Take ad· vantage of these programs to learn another skill and ftnd an alternative path." says Dr. Klein. • He al9o advtses that you find a .. support group" of peers you can talk to -people outside of your company M weU as wtthin . Spaktng With them regularly can help you ~ peaspec- ttve and give you a MnM ol 1"1111 altemattves. 11L.1 • I FAMILY WllllLY.~t9'1'1Mr a, "'2 • 11 \ Now, you too can bri,. the toOthlng "song of the winer into your home with this gluming IWMI 100-lel Wind Chime. For centuries, similar wind chimes have graced homes in the Orient. At last, Americans are discovering the soothing tranquilizing effect of these beautiful and exotic wind chimes. They'll come to you fully assembled, and with a hook that makes them so easy to hang on your porch, patio, in a window, entry hall, or anywhere they can catch the wind. Even the gentlest breeze will start these 100 gleaming brass bells tinkling harmoniously ... so they'll even respond as you p,ass by I Bring the soothing 'song of the wind" into your home. You too will discover the musical magic others have enjoyed for centuries. r-----------------------------, STllWNG HOUR. Sterling Building, Bo11 m...n1 C.rnef\'ille, N.Y. 10923 YISI I would like to bring the soothlns "song of the wind" Into my home with this , .... WW CW... l'teue send the following: . O One for only $5.• plu. $.90 poltate and handling. 5HAU lHl5 DllCOYERY WITH SOMIONI YOU LOVE. om>Ell DTLU Fo. am NOW, AND YOU'U SAYll O Two for only S11.21 plus $1.20 pos~ge and handling.CJ Three for only S16.'48 Dlus $1.50 PQSta1e and handlina. Endosed is S . blA&GE rr on~ of 1 cw mon t 0 VISA 0 MasterClrd bpires --- Yird. ----------------------MONO IACK GUAaANT& on your full purchue price, less po1ta1e and handlln1. · . N.lme ---------------------- Addreu --------------------- .J 0~ ---------------------- State Zlp JI. ........v.,w.. ............... L----------------------------- No-Labor Day? Don't get up; after all. ifs a holiday weekend and, besides, you· ve got over a thoosond sexvants ready to tote and fetch for you. Sure you have. in the form of eneTgy from foutl fuel1-oll, gas, and coal. Though you may take them for granted. they provide the equivalent of 1.000 laborers tolling e!Jf!ry day for f!Odt man. woman, and child In the U.S So while most of us are enjoying that extra day of leisure-tomorrow's well-deserved Labor Day lrlbute to Amenca's working men and women-all of us in the lndustrlalized world are also able to take life a whole lot easier because of abundant energy Sacred cows. Back In the Stone Age, people had only thdT own muecle powu-equaJ to about three w1U1. Then came animal power. harneulng a bullock, for lnttance. provlda nine tlmg as much eneTgy u the hardest human labor. Tod.y, ow society runs on eMTgy equivalent to more than lOOol the.e '' sacrrd cauis" for~ ~n. "Consrdenng alt th e work they do, they re entrtled to celebrate Labor Doy" W.tta you eat. Down on the farm. technology has replaced much human labor Energy to make and run farm equipment Natural gas for "super fertilizers." Pdrochemicals for Insecticides and mOfe. In 40 years of progress-fueled by energy and petroleum products-per-acre yields have more than doubled. and labor u~ per acre hos decreased by mo~ than two-thirds. Internal combustion englnes tum 15-30 percent of fuel energy Into useful work. while y2!.U.Jgood (Of only about two percent. since your threewattsof musclepower requires an average of 140 watts of food energy Bright let... Amertca'1 overflowing picnic basket of food. stuffs Lan' t the only Tesult of working amarter. Overall energy dftciency has Improved throughout the economy 10 that now tt taka 23 pera:nt !m e"M1'9Ytoproduoe .. 1Mnl/ .,..1md services as 30 yurs ago. Still. whetheT you labor at poundtng a Jadr.hammer or a typnrrtta. It taka lllU9Y to keep ua working-and to .-... econoalc 9fOWth that wiU aeate new Jobe, rural and uTban. Aa the Natic>MJ CoMuencie of Black Mayon pointed out, tor example. "The 1ucca. oJ economic rftlOOft)I atrategla ..• wlll k aub1tantlallv poUJered by the aoolloblUty of lanladetlfl"k 1upply oJ reacmably prl~ electric energy." TM tamef0e9 forMCUs. od. g ... and otha energy eouroa, for the fact ti that work 11 the UM of •ntrll)I. Fortunately. today•1 cnd-of·aummer hoUday requlra neither: Relu and enfoY. It'• a fact: One barrel of oil proyldes as much enetgy as a person hord o't work for 15 years-a terrtftc bargain since that much labor would cost more than $100.000 at the minimum wage_ Pute Coin 8y ffiotllyn Hansen 0 ne of the great delights of summer just has to be eat- ing fresh , sweet com on the cob, with plenty of butter and a sprinkle of salt. But there are other ways to enjoy fresh com . Here are a few suggestk>ns. COIN PUDDING 3 c:upa -=r..-1 hmh corn • .,._ 6 _.. 1 ~lliOOlloar 3._. l cup 1-v Cl'eMI l)J cup mllL l llmlpOOt'i uh l ""'"9' a 1111 ...., o..ti vr'OWld DWIMI 1 llmlpOOt'i baldng powder 3 t~ -.,.... "'....-. --..s 1. Scrape com kernels off the fresh ears (use tender, young ears, If possible). TOS5 rom with the flour In a large bowl. 2. In a medium bowl, beat together eggs. heavy aeam, milk. salt. sugar, nutmeg and baking powder. Sdr In mehed butter. Pour over com·floUT combination and mix well. 3. Ughtly grease 8 ramekins or cwmrd cup1. Vou may else> use a shallow, 1 l/:t-qt owr'H<>- table casserole. Ladle com mixture Into prepared dishes. Set dishes In a beldrlg pan and fill pan wfth hot water · to a depth of 1/2 Inch. 4. Bake In preheated 375° oven for about 20 to 30 minutes, until a silver lcnlfe In· sated lf: inch from side of dish comes out dean and pudding • dghtly puffed up with a golden top. Time wlll vary depend- ing on me and depch at balGlg dish. Maka 8 wrvtngs Note: This recipe Is one of l4M!l1l.I deJight· ful com puddJng van.tk>M terVed at Hubert's Restaunlllt. ~ Yorit City, where Amer1can food~ wlttl ttyte and «1an. COIN AND CUCutnllt SOUP 1'14 c..-ea...-t ..... oara. ... 4 .... I CM (14'11 OL) ~ bfodl l ..... c•n .... ,-.. 2 *''""aa-.-..lddwl laip .... ~ 'Ao,.~ .......... .... 1._..a•Mll Deeh 'iw..co MIDcld ch"'--...... 1. Tum com and chlclcen broth Into a tklllct. h• to bolling 9nd boll Qendy s mtnuta until com ls cooked; cool. t.. Cut cucumbll'l In h.af. tcoop out IMdl wtdl IPOOf\ end throed cucumbert In lood PfOOl9IO' °' with hand ~. 12 • ,,um.v WUKI..\', ._,_.. 1. - 3. In large bowl, combine com-chic.ken broth mtxture with shredded cucumber. chives, yogw1. club soda, salt and Tabasco. Mix well. Cover and re&lge:rate until thoroughly chUled. 4. Serve In chilled soup bowls with a sprinkle of minced chives on top. Moku l quart COi.ACHE ,,...._....,. ...... '14 ... c ... com 3 • tofD8I04e Ya ~ built.-"' .....,._ 114 ~ ~ .-n onion or OG6ofl l tUllpOOll Mil 114 ....-freehly troand Meck ~ 1. Peel squash and dice. Smipe com kerneJs from cob5 Peel tomatoes. remove seeds and dice. 2. In a large skillet, heat butter unbl hot, but not smoking. Add green onion and oook, stirring until wilted. about 5 minutes, Add tquash, com, tomatoes and 1he l8lt end ptppa". Mb! well. s. He.at mbcture to boiling, reducia heal, cover and llmmer about 15 to 20 minutes until ~ are tender. Stir now and then. Maka 6 lmllngl • COIN AND CHEESE SAlAD Sc..-cooMd Cllll com \t\ I>. Mi I BIW .-.ti ......... .,.,QIP.._..,...w,.... Yaap._.,.., ' ........ ,...,... .,., ........ ~ lQiPdik..t~ \4aip ............... ~CllllP JU '" .. 111 JJ Da• .... 'i4 ' p DIMI ...., potmd bledl ,.... "4• 'fa•,... 111 If ....... J. In • larv-bowl. combtnc com, cheae, bd peppe, ptm'-n1o, onion and celfty Mix wen. I. In a measuring cup, mix vlntlgS, oil, alt.~. peprika and auger. Pour over ~heat comblnalion. Mix well. a. Save at room temperature °' chlDed. MIP; b. ..vect ~.on a lduct _,bed ot ..... In ~ • ._,. eomMDel. ,.,....6I08.....,,. --· / / I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I / .......__ FREE TRIAL ORDER FORM ' ' CLASSIC MEN'S SLACKS ONLY $9 971/ EACH(whe!1you ' I • / 2 buy two pa1rsJ T~Y us ON FOR SIZE. FREE i • handsomely tailored, neatty ftNshed to length • 100% Celanese Fortref9 polyester for ultl- te comfort • Ban-Rol'9 no-cur1 walstbano • dependable n no.snag zipper • four man-sized pockets • reinforced loops • simply machine wash and dry-always stay ase-perfect • 8 classic colors Navy Grey YES f Please save me time and money. RUSh my Classic • Men's Slacks right to my door for a week's FREE TRIAL After one week I'll send onty $19.95 for BOTH FAIRS. plus postage and handling, or return them at my expense an<l owe you nothing. H I send payment with this order, Blair pays ALL postage and handling cos1s. My money instantty refunded if I'm not pleased. TO ORDER. CHECK COLORS AND ALL IN YOUR SIZE. I I I I I I I I I I I I PRICE OESCAIPTION QTY Slec*a 2723 2 Nlwy 00 c....... 04 St996 I Grey oe aiu. 09 RUIC 07 LOden OS Blown 01 a.ca 02 I WHATSIZE1Glw: W ... Mffmft ________ ln. (30" ltwu 48") ............. ptea99c:ircllt: I StlOtt ~ Long X-Long XX-Long• (27~8) (29-30) (31-32) (33-34) (35-38) •xxL ......-nsaYllilM*t 1n wlililtas 32 lhN 42 onty. OMr OMrt o ----------------88'/.A ....,... ___ _ It's been some 12 years since the pres- sures and hypocrlsles of sho w business drove comedian Mar- ty Ingels to a nervous breakdown. Now he Is sticking his toe ten - tatively back into the shark·lnfested waters of performing. He'll supply the voice of Pac-Man on the new Ingels and friend: "Pacopaca~wle!" ~ were all rock stars. But now rm going to stick my to ngue out at all of them and say, 'Ho, rm Pac-Man!'" The same old Hol- lywood nonsense prevails, though. In - gels thought Pac- Man should utter a catch phrase, like Captain · Marvel's "Sh~." every time he eats his power- inducing Pac-pellets. Ingels suggested Saturday morning Poe-Man cartoon show, pre miering later this mo nth on ABC. "Pacapara~!" "So al these big stlOG are standing around ~. 'WeJI, should it be "Pacapacaweewee," or maybe "Pacapaca- woowoo?"' Anally. they had to aill an execu- tive in New York He nixed the whole idea. Ingels, 46, recovered after switching careers (he became a celebrity talent broker) and marrying actress-singer Shirley Jones. He told us recendy, "I've been In the back- ground In this famUy for years, IMng wtth this famous woman and three stepsons (David, Shaun and Patrick Cassidy) who "That's the kind of baloney that broke me before. And sure eno ugh, drivtng home I began to hypeiventllate, which ts how my anxiety attacks begin." WHY TEA.C.CIMEJl"tS BURNOUT Summer's over. h's back- to-school time and kids everywhere are crying in their oatmeal. But thanks to the rising Incidence of teacher burnout. many teachers are also dreading the return. And surprising- ly. a recent study has found that the prlmary cause of teacher frustration may not be unruly students, unrea- sonable parents or unre- HOT nP ON A NBW TONQU. Geraldine Gordon, 50, Is a lucky woman. One of only a handful of people In the world with an artificial tongue (her own diseased tongue was removed In 19n), she has been fttted with the ftrst tongue designed spedftcally to aid speech. She Is now 80 to 85 pereent Intelligible and has returned to work as a county welfare department supervisor. The tongue Is an Incredibly complex muscle, and this new silicone model. which attaches to the bottom teeth and ls removable, was five years in the making. Developed by speech pathologist Rebecca Leonard and prosthodontic dentist Robert Gillis, both of the University of California, Davis, Me.dkal Center, It contains a special groove to funnel hqulds Into Gordon's esophagus. Otherwise she would eat lenting paperwork, but an unsupportive school system. through tubes to keep food and saliva out of her l~. Dr. Glllis told us that Gar- don still can't make certain sounds (k and g). He hopes to add slight movements to the tongue, such as flexing the ttp, that would aid speech [lVefl more. Instructional supervisors, whote job Is to observe classes and have direct teacher contact, are Instead spending al- most all their time on man~ gerlal duties, reports Cheryl Sullivan, assis- tant professor of education at Etn<>fy Univer- sity. The result: Teachers are not getting the feedback and emotional support they need. This has a cW>rutattng effect, espedally on younger teochen. "Teaching con be very lonesome," says Sullivan. "Teachers need 10me ~ng to talk things over." ~ TM Nftt/#IPW lleflCIM 941 (MMfjMA .... _,. _.111.'I'. HIOfl ~m~.,., vie.~·~· Mot. &eouttw Edlt0t, All.nur Cocpef Chakman EIMfltue, Mot10n F19nk ~i~lr.l.J:'~~. JJ.m, M~~'l; GiTYn~. l'ii1~~ DOCTORS' Rx POR HUI.TH Doctors may talk a good game when it comes to preventive health care, but do they actually practice what they preach? Well, ac- cording to a recent swvey of some 600 members of the Harvard Medical SOBllRlllQ NEWS Someday soon, you may be able to enjoy a three- martini lunch and then go straight back to your job - even tf you wori< as a tight- rope walker. That's because scientists are closing In on a pill that sobers you up almost Instantly. Dr. Ernest Noble, direc- tor of the U.C.L.A. Alcohol Research Center, has been giving the pill to volunteer ttppJers and then testing their coordlnadon, balanoe, memory and attention span. He reports that the pill, a combination of three drugs, sobered them up by as much ~ • 50 percent within 1S to 30 minutes. Noble, who's also an ad- viser to a Los Angeles com- pany that soon plans to market ~ sobering powder made of natural ingredi- ents, told us both remedies are designed for the IOdal, not the problem, drinker. But It's hoped-~h an In- stant sober-upper might reduce drunk-driving ac- cidents. l! j a: School facuhy, It appears they really do, generally foUowtng the advice they give their patients. They get exercise (49 percent jog) ; 84 percent regularly see their dentist: 78 percent eat breakfast: and 73 percent buckle their seat belts. Some 44 percent ratrict their consumption of red meat, and 41 percent try to maintain a tugh-flber diet. Additionally, the doc- tors avoid antibk>tics for mi- nor illnesaes such as colds, preferring chicken soup. BIRTHDAYS (All Virgo) Sunday Carol Lawnrnce 50; Raquel Wek:tl 42; Bob Newhart 53. MondllV -Jane Cur- tin 35. Tueecillv -Peter Lawford 59. Wedneedliy -5'd Caesar 60. Thun-Mv -Kristy McNlchol 20; Cliff Robertlon 57. f rlcWJ -Jot8 Feliciano 37; Ar- nold PUner 53; Roger Mar- is 48. ~ -Hedy Lamm 67; Bear Bryant 69. Landmark smoker study confinns that the majority of higher tar smokers who have switched to MERIT have one thing in common -Praise for MERIT taste. ' 18ste Debate Fats. Nationwide survey reveals over 90% of MERIT smokers who switched from higher tar are glad they did. In fact . 94% don't even miss their former brands . Further Evidence: 9 out of 10 former higher tar smokers report MERIT an easy switch, that they,didn 't give up taste in switching, and that MERIT is ihe·besr-wring 1001 tar they've ever tried. Wamingi The Surgeon Gtntfll Has D1termin1d Thlt C°lprlnt Slnatil'l ls DlnglrM to Yow Hllhh. ... 1aste \ftdict MERIT. Further, extensive unmarked-pack tests confirm that MERIT delivers a win- ning combination of taste and low tar when compared with higher tar leaders. Coafirmed: The ooerwhelming majority of smokers reported MERIT taste equal to-or better than-leading higher tar brands. Coafirmed: When tar levels were revealed, 2 out of 3 chose the MERIT combination of low tar and aood taste. Year after year, in study alter study, MERIT remains unbeaten. Tile proven taste alternative to ~tar smoking -is MERIT. . KMp:7 .... w:·u .. wit d tW1A11:•" "w:· 0.7119 li---Um'a Mii: I 111 ·~ii!' 0.7 ......... Plf cillllli m: .... 0.:11 ---- P1oponioc1 Teilored In PETITE, . AVERAGE and TALL ••• Even WOMEN'S SRFSI ... NEW COLORS JUSTIN/ See Youneef In all tlae Faalalon O.lm• pou clail't llaee yetff PAIRS of Ladies Knit SLACKS • aa.lc dMtic Nc>-RdJ s-t--r+t-c-b Wlisa lblt ~ Oii eaiJy. lDOYa when you do, llleYa' binds! • Built-in·INDEUBL.E CREASE i.s stitched in for the life of~ sladcs I •~Pa '"-NOlllONWlllllA1'Wlr. • 10C* Long W..:.119pot;1 •n •M1111lllal SEEING IS BELJEVINGI CHICk .... , ....... ...,.... Toe.I IOr ' 0 Cfl9Ctl --- lllleldlelldlle .......... lO "Arrl'tlUlldor'') =i-11 I S-0 Qwfe IO'"' 0 ... o .... c:.11 TOYAL..0-I' AZ....-.aellll .... 1~ '°"'· ftO c.o.o. ma11 •• •' ·~ Pl.US 8 MATCHINI ACCESSORIES, FREEi I 6:3al I B 91 B g I S-0 0.. c...I ..._"""'AU -...i ~ ~"""' a..rty) §~ Fnt.._ ______________ ......, ---- .......__-_-----------.... a-__ _ ' • I f EASY·CARE 100°/o COTTON ... WITH WARM FLANNEL TRIMI ..... W VA'""\ 111 Wlel ......... T ..... AftmM-OW.. ,_._ ......................... __. .... ..._ ,..._. ........................... _~ ........ ·----· .......... 11111 ............... .-91 ........... ,, .. -~ ... I .,..... 2 '°' 11111 2 .. 1:17. I ~ .... -::::~1'191-t-'~~-·-+-.;__~;..;;_;+::..:..::....:~..:;.:;;:~-----..J~-..Jl----.I .::, I ... ....,...eu9 I ~ a1ora:ua I 81ua(1tl .... ·~ L.. .._ ... " I ~ I m.r.::::iccr.::ft:::==;-L----...._ __ ...._ __ __.,_,,r::~=-= .. ~ ..... ~~ .... ~ I ....,, •CAD..., I 1111!Cliiibl: I e rnness w 11111n1M111W tW .---------------------.... '9: AMAWDOfl, n1 W..t ~ay. Tempe, At'-15212 0 ftal Auth me 1"41 It.,,,• llal«l llelOw. I undat9tand I QI! UM my purchaM l0t •.,., then retUfn II tor • lull refund if rm llOI dellO"led-IKlt \Mt the fflU GWT .. mine to kMOI l'etcflwel1i ........ _ .. ,... • TOl.i for • . ,..~ .. .I;? D1u1._,.._ Colar ~ Slllpplng Md • I $1J .._ ----........... ., ... HMdllno ..... -..................... TOTAL-.--• OllCMAMl!D a.... ..... -Ne.lt117 .. IUI AZ~8dd..._tu. w.,c:--.............. 1 a. Sony. no C.O.D.'11 c.-llllC..--111•.1 a. I I I I I I I I I· I I .. I I ~~· I SEND TO:~ Print CIMtly) I §~:?:. -----=-..,...,,,...------..,....,...,,...,.,.,...,,,...,......------:nw.I* I Mt. Flrat "-LMt .._ I I Addr.-~ "°· __ _ L~ _________________ _:: ____ : _; .::. c... c... ,_ .... .... .... . I :-_-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-:_-.... -=~=-~-:=====I t: --------~-------· __ _._ / GENUINE LEATHER COSMETIC CASE. .... DI •• ..,.. .... ...... ...,, CoemeticC... _.. -12tor111.10...3tor111-441 ~Spece ..... .._..II ,., a15....3 tor 11•.aot 14'1*T01e 11 .. -(2 lar 111 .111....S lar $11.441 The~ 17'19 a.a (2 tor 17.00...3 '°' 110.Ct I I I I o ..... c:..-AZ....-ne.llllidMlle'8a. I Cfedlt CerO No. (f'MI AU. OICJIU, Sony, no C..O 0. '•I 1 1~ ~~~~~~~~----b~&::--~~'·-------1 ......_.~ ____________ ;;;.;;.i.... __ _ I ea:. TO: CAMM Miit CIMtlyt . §:,~ Fnt ,._ --LMl--.._--------2MMM»I I AdOr9A Apl. "°· I I city ... __ Zif' I -----------·----------.-.J THIS OllOER. &£15 A Totel lot II FREE GIFT/ MetCIWlcliM SN~end • I ~o CHl!Clt , .. , ........ ...,_.. Hendlln9 0 0....MCto..o TOTAL &ea oelD • ........ " t 11st"') CMQtMQID Qleroe IO my 0 VllA o·