HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-07-05 - Orange Coast Pilot--
111111 COIT YIUI HDMITlll DlllY PAPll
SUNDAY.JULY S.1981 OR AN GE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA . SOC E NTC-,
Which faults put nuclear reactor in danger?
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Of .. Delty,.... ....
SAN DIEGO -The sign above
the door identifies lt as the
Stardust Room, but there's little
to suggest that celestial glitter
can be found within.
Perhaps a
mor e ap -
propriat e
name should
have been the
Fault Room.
That 's
because for
the past two
w eeks . this
s pa c ious
meeting room KUTIMMlll
in a freeway-side hotel here has
been the site of highly technical
earthquake safety hearings for
Southern California Edison Co. 's
expensive nuclear twins -Units 2
and 3 of the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station.
Al stake -though critics
would say n ot seriously
jeopardized -is Edison's $3.3
billion investment in nuclear
technology, a down payment
symbolized by the gray reactor
cupolas that rise prominently
a bove the gently rolling
shoreline three miles south of
San Clemente.
The plant's fate rests in the
hands o f the three-m embe r
Atomic Safety and Li censing
Board, an arm of the U.S.
Nuclear Regul atory Com·
mission.
The panel has the authority to
issue an operating license to
Edison, which is eager to begin
low -power testing of Unit 2 by
SUNDAY SPECIAL
October as a prelude to fuJl.
power operation by mid·
December. These time
estimates, company officials
concede, are based on optimistic
assumptions.
First, however, the matter of
the plant's seismic safety muat
be resolved in addition to
answering questions dealing
with the adequacy of emergency
evacuation plans for com·
· munities whi ch surround the
seaside reactors.
· Since June 22, the subject has
been faults . And to any martini·
enlightened hotel guest who may
have inadvertently stumbled in-
to the hearings, the monotonous,
jargon-coated testimony would
have been enough to drive him
back to the bar ror a double.
Those who remain, however,
do so for a special reason.
They represent Edison or San
Diego Gas & Electric Co., prin·
cipal co--0wners of the plant; the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
sta ff ; the anti -nu clear
challengers, or lntervenors, who
are fighting licensing of Units 2
and 3, or the news media, whose
r epresentatives often look
either baffled or bored.
Through each day's testimony,
all sides present (including the
occasional iMocent bystander)
are transpdrted to a world
Kye Yeung's designs put him in a class by himself among racers of off-road modelcarsonCosta Mesatrack.
Crashes are remote possibility
\ Size of cars gives driver s license to take more chances on curves
By JEFF PARKER
Of .. D.ity ,.... IUfl
As far as fads go, off.road
model car racing has it all:
bone-jarring thrills, healed com-
petition , heroes , secrets ,
camaraderie, envy.
It's the only sport in the world
where a driver can leap a hill at
ridiculous speed, crash his car
into the windshield or another
racer. roll the thing twice, swear
and walk away without a
..1 scratch. The one-year-old sport
is not too expensive and is re-
ported to be bard on marriages.
Like lots or fads, off-road
model car racing started In
Southern California and it's
growing here like oranges once
grew. Three tracks are operat-
ins in Orange County -Costa
Mesa, Anaheim, and Saddleback
Park.
Hobby shops like Radio Con -
trolled Hobbies of Costa Mesa
are now catering exclusively to
off.road enthusiasts.
At one point, RCH was selling
ON THE INSIDE
WATCIDNG GROWTH -1be
acreage for Just the head-
quarters of Hines Wholesale
Nurseries ln Irvine looka lar1e
enouah to qualify for mem·
benblp tn NATO. Read about
the firm's prealdenl on
Pase Cl.
WAaJI &NOt1GBt -hr la
an inveat!pent . To avoid depreciation, lnvettmentl need care. U you buy a new mink, M·
bit , fOJ '1t l)'U coat or cape UU
fall, -.t out how to clean and
atore lt cm Pai' 81.
the Japanese-built models faster
than the giant Tamiya Corp.
could ship them over . Now,
they're still selling the kits (you
can get the basic car kit, a radio
controller and batter ies for
about $300) at a 20 per month
clip.
Since few racers can resist
modifying their cars for speed
and handling, accessories, tools
and special gadgets are even
bigger money items for RCH.
"I've been getting a lot of in-
quiries from New York, Chica10
and Texas recently." said Larry
Van Osten, owner of RCH. "The
rest of the country Is getting hot.
·'Our sales are practically
dominated by the Tamiya
model. They're the people who
made alJ the model~ for those
old horror movies filmed in
Japan -Godzilla and stuff like
that. The cars they make are the
best in the world, and they look
real.
"If you photograrh them up
close, you can't tel ln the pie·
GOING OVE&BOAUf -Ted
Lan1e1 who plays th• bartender
on ''TIM Love Boat'' TV Hri•,
has written a rock ~ualcal,
"Born a Unicom," wbic.b opeu
thi1 .... He deeeribel the plat
on Pace 81.
CM ... .,, • • A11 .. ..... _ Cl
~J:: .... ;;::....---1::
=.J -:
lure lf you're looking at a real
Baja racer or a l /lOth scale
model."
Like many other oH -road
model racers, Van Osten comes
from a racing background. He
built and raced dragsters and
endured their financial and
physical punishment.
And, like many off-road m9(lel
racers. Van Osten first came to
the sport through his son.
·'I can buy a model racer for
the rnoney I used to spend on a set
of s parkplugs for my dragster. I
decided to get my son one for
Christmas and J ended up playing
with It more than he did. I was
hooked," he said.
Al his son's request , Van
Osten got bis own car. A few
months later he opened RCH.
Van Osten's partner, Ron
Williama, tells a aimllar story:
"I u.ed to rtte motocross, but I
waa aiways breaking somelhin1.
1 spent ball the time on
crutches. Now I can go out there and race like cra17 and never
Buena Park
girl killed
in accident
A four-year.old prl wu killed
Saturday wheiil abe darted ln tbe
path of a vebkle ud wu blt ID
front of her bom1 at 5121
Burnham SU.. &a B..-a Pan,
poUce..ad. .
Llnda Lora •• trauPOl'W to
Anaheim Memorial llo1pltal
where .... deed .. am.al
followtnstbet:Up.m. acddent.
The driver, kllntlllN ool1 • a
1'1-year·old male~waa ,..,.
Uoatd at Ult HeDt PoQee ...
releued. Ac«dlal polkle n · poru tiae utaJe,·•rna a.. ....
1treet.from bildDd a~ nr,
get hurt.
··I left the real estate business
to do this. My wife said I was
spending too much time with the
car, and I'd better make some
money at it, or else. Now. I can
make money and do what 1 like
to do the most.··
A steady stream or model car
enthusiasts passes through RCH
dai ly, ranging in age from
school children lo retired people.
Among them is Jeff Cruzon, a
newcomer to the elite ranlcs of
the 10-man RCH Racing Team,
known throughout Southern
California for their a11ressive
driving and state-of·the·art
modifications.
Cruzon is an ex-motocross
racer who gave up full scale rac-
ing but didn't want to give up
the thrill of competition.
·•I get the shakea when 1 get
ready for a model race, jual like
I did the Baja 500," he aaid.
"You can take a hell ol a apiU
with these cars and walk away
from It. I Sj)ent two or three
hours the ni&ht before a race,
getting my tools and sear ready.
It's hard lo sleep." Mthoulh off.road model fans
can run their cars on pracUcally
any terrain, any Ume pf day (tbe
cars are silent), lbe focal point
of the aport ia the race track on
19th Street in Costa Meta. Some SO racers 1atMr on tbe
laat. &mdaJ ol e~cb raontb for
competition. "Raelnl teams from
Colton, llettda and Wblt Uer
abow up reiularly to ch.U.,.
the local drivert, and on days
wbH tie Colla ••• track la
cl01ed, local driYen follow the rot•tlDC circuit .
ln lbe early -Gays at the eo.t.a
lfeu track, the rec .. wert
domln1t1d bJ out-of·towa
racen. Jim Saeed of L711wood
and One Helbert of Paloa
Verdel w.. 8JDm1 lbe bandt\il
of IQel'tl .... ·Walked aWIJ wttb .._ ~ fter/ maatb.
Tb•7 ·r.~aUled amon1
( ... •OD&L, Pall Al)
"
where zones of deformation,
fault splays and plate tectonics
a re the passwords to un·
derstanding.
In relation to San Onofre, the
jargon-free question is whether
previously undetected geologic
formations 2 miles offshore
from the massive nuclear in·
stallation pose hazards serious
enough to render plant design in-
adequate in the event of an
earthquake.
Edison's position has been,
and continues to be, that the
plant was designed to withstand
the largest earthquake con-
sidered possible on an offst}ore
fault zone 5 miles away from
San Onofre's powerful reactors.
That sea floor fault system is
known as the .. Offshore Zone of
De formation.·· and it runs
generally from the Santa
Monica Mountains to Baja
California, a distance of about
150 miles
The Nuclear Regulatory Com-
mission, prior to the issuance of
construction permits for Units 2
and 3 in the early 1970s, had de·
termined from geologic data
tha t the offshor e zone waa
linear, potentially active and
capable of caus ing a major
earthquake.
Though Edison's consultants
disagreed, the utility stipulated,
fo r the purposes of plant design,
to build the plant strong enough
to resist an earthquake of
magnitude 7 occurring along the
oHshore fault zone.
But in 1980. when the reactors
were nearly complete, the
<See FAULTS, Page A4)
Soviets keep
up press11re
on Poland
WARSAW, Poland <AP) -
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko met with Poland's
leaders Saturday , apparently
continuing Soviet pressure to
prevent an emergency party
congress from going too far in
its democratic reforms .
Gromyko met with Stanislaw
Kania, the Polish Communist
Party leader, for the second
time in his brief visit, and with
the party's ll·member ruling
Politburo and the secretariat,
according to the official news
agency PAP.
J oining the meeting between
Kania and Gromyko was
Premier Wojciech J aruzelaki,
who on Friday reahutned Ilia
Cabinet in an effort to tackle
Poland's economic crisis.
The 71-year-old Soviet official,
who also is a member of h1a oa-
tion 's ruling Politburo, also vis·
ited World War II memorials.
Newsweek magazine Saturday
quoted Moscow sources as say-
ing Soviet military officials were
calling up reserves in the
Transcarpathian region near
Pol a nd for brief training
sessions, sending them home
after a day or two of political
lectures with instructions to be
ready for a general mobilization
at any time.
The magazine said the reason
for the training sessions was un-
certain but s uggested they
possibly were designed to pre-
vent organizational problems it
a mobilization were ever called.
Transcarpathia is an area or
almost 5,000 square miles in the
Ukraine, bordering Romania,
Hungary, Czechoslovakia and
Poland, all members of the Sov·
iet bloc.
Since last summer's labor un·
rest in Poland, there have been
concerns in the West about a
possible Soviet military in·
tervention to s que l c h the
liberalization trend.
Gromyko was expected to re-
turn to Moscow today for the ar-
r iv a I of British F o reign
Secretary Lord Carrington, who
was bringing a European Com-
mon Market proposal on ending
foreign inte rvention in_
Afghanistan.
IRA hunger
strikers
concili atory
BELFAST. Northern Ireland
<AP l Irish nationalist cuer-
rillas on hunger strike in Mue
prison said Saturday they are
willing to compromise with the
British government in an effort
to avoid additional starvalion
deaths. their supporters said.
British officials immediately
responded by allowing a Roman
Catholic delegation to visit the
eight current hunger strikers, a
government spokesman said.
The delegation declined to
make any comment after leav-
ing the Maze, where members
talked to some of the hunger
strikers and other prisoners for
four hours.
....... -.....
GOOD n.. -Slx·year-dd AlilCJll Murphy Of Faubtala
Valley wu In a holiday 1pl.rit durinl the lluntiD~ Beee.b
Fowtb of July parade.
..
-------_..._ -... --_,... ______ ............--.._ ___ _ • a a ca as :'I ------------, ~
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July 5, 1jJ81
•l
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'
h•
•• , I
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.,,
BY JEFF PARKER _ .. .....,"" ....
Besides paying taxes,
what else do you do
for your country?
Rick Smith.
Placentia, martletlng
"Well, I don't rob houses for one
thing. I respect privacy and property
and I go to church on Sundays. I
think It's a privilege to enjoy the
freedom we have here In this coun-
try. The free enterprise system Is a
very good one In a lot of ways."
~-t: R lclc Stobenbe'9,
Los At.mltos, truck driver
"I'm working now to go to school to
become a cop. Not a plg, a cop. I've
been hassled by bad cops before and
I want to be a good cop. In a way,
that's a service to the country
because we need to have good ~ce
officers for a good country. I stand
up for this country when people try to
tear It down too. I figure that the
country was founded on Christianity
and It was strong then. I'd llke to see
It that strong again."
Laurel Ekstrom,
Westminster. Mlrdresslr
'l • .,,
"I abide by the laws. I think If every-
one would do the basic courtesy of
obey Ing the law that life would be
easier for all of us. It costs dollars
and time to have people In court. If
the law Is something that I don't
believe In, I'll try to change It, but
most laws are common sense and
any country that Is strong must have
citizens who obey them."
It
LylMU Warmouth
Livermore, assistant manager
lit .
"I stand up for this country when
people try to talk it down. I could
never live anywhere else and I'm
proud of that. This Is the most free
country In the world and I'll always
defend It." ,r:
....
., .
'·' ill •
•!
Laura Mccully
Fountain Valley, student
"Im trying to get an education so I
can contribute as a citizen. Being
able to vote wisely and being aware
are both very Important. You have to
know what's going on."
Danette Anderson
Costa Mew, mother
"I vote regularly. I try to find out
about the issues and when they're
brought forth, I'll stand up for what I
think is good about the country. I
think that what is good for the coun-
try Is what God wants .. In Chronicles
it says that if we humble ourselves
and turn from wickedness that God
will hear our prayers and answer
them. That's true -I know from
personal experience. The country
was founded by people who believed
11 • in God and worshipped as they chose. ~11
'J , I'll always defend that right."
'· ·~ Terri <:abllano
l ' • Newport Beach, retail manager
"I traveled to Europe once and when
I got back I practically got down and
kissed the ground. I love other
places, I like to get away, but there's
still nowhere that I'd rather live than
here. It's such a good feeling to come
back and be abte to talk to
someone.''
Carol Pautsctt
Cwona del Mar, rHI estate
"I vote, I'm concerned about local
and national Issues, I 'm Involved In
women's clubs. I'm not a banner
waver or anything, but I get lnvotved
If I think the cause Is a good one. I
traveled the world on the Chapman
College Campus Afloat and I wish
every young person could have that
experience. It would give a tot of
perspective to young eyes -we're
realty very lucky to be here. The op-
portunity is so important.''
Riot scene patrolled
LONDON <AP) -Hundred.t of
police patrolled the streets of
Southall today after a race riot
between Allan immJl!'anta and
"skinhead'' whit.ea that iQJured
more than 120 people. The
Allam vowed further violence if
the white 1an11 return.
It wu the third race riot in
five yean iD the west Londoo
nei1hborboocl, where half the
80,000 people are tmml1ranll
from India , Pakistan and
Bangladesh.
Home Secretary William
Whitelaw ordered a full report
on Friday night's violence.
Police said more than 120 peo.
pie -80 of them police offtcen
-wen iQJared la the five houri
of ·~ fl~tin& between Al· lans and wblte youth tnowa u
"1ldnbeadl" becaue ot tbeir
cloeely cropped hair.
, .. , •• "" 0r-.. C:-11 '"-'*lllM,.. ,_, .,,. """' ,....... lll11'4relloM, "'ltotlel Melter 01 ed ntllH-111• MUii\ fl!•• .. ••ll•OOIKH wltn0\11 _,.,'""""IOI\ Of,....,,..,, .......
St<e!lf <l•u ~ .....-_, <••• MtW. C•lltornl• IU~I 1 .... 1 '-•i.tlOfl tty,.,, .. , M 00 MOflll\ly
.... lftlll 't tt l!lelltlll' MlllltfY _.llll\OI""'\ t• 00 "'°"llllY
There was only one word for the Huntington Beach strand on the F'ourth: crowded.
Residents burned up
Angry callers flood cops with fireworks complaints
Police switchboards Ut up like
dazzling fireworks displays
Saturday night u angry resi-
dents complained about illegal
bottle rockets, small roof f&ttS
and glaring noise.
In Co6ta Mesa, an 18-year-0ld
man was arrested Saturday af.
ternoon in connection with two
roof fires at 697 and 682 Gov-
e rnor St. started by bottle
rockets, according to police.
David Redman Roberts was ar-
DIES AT41
Carol Bright
Culture
patron
dies in NB
Rosary will be said tonight at
Our Lady Queen of Angels for
Corona del Mar resident Carol
Bright. who died Thursday. She
was 41.
rested on suspicion of arson.
The most serious fire occurred
in Tustin at 2:20 p.m. when a
bottle rocket landed on the roof
of Robert Reeds' Tustin home at
13102 Old Foothills and caused
$150,000 in damage, according to
Orange County fire officials.
By 8 p.m. there were so many
calls pouring into the Orange
County fire department that
emergency calls were corning
into busin ess Jines . saill
spokesman Chuck Murphy.
"Around 9 p.m . all hell broke
loose," said Murphy. ·•I can't
even keep up with the calls. I've
personally answered 200 since 8
P·Jll ·"
Most of the calls were from re·
sidenta complaining about small
roof and vegetation fires . he
saia. Many of the fires were ext·
inguisbed by the time fire offici-
als arrived. be added.
Newport Beac h Sgt. Pat
* * *
O'Sullivan described the Fourth
or July night as "kind of on the
calm side." There we re very
few complaints about illegal
fireworks, he said.
In Huntington Beach, there
were reports or two palm tree
fires started by flying bottle
rockets. Otherwise it was quiet,
police said.
"We are very, very busy,"
said Sgt. Larry Miller. "There's
too many people, too many cars
and not enough road."
On e pe rson was r e ported
slightly injured in Irvine when
he was hit by a flying bottle
rocket, police said.
"It's been a very busy night.
We 've been busy going from one
end of the city to the other," said
Sgt. Dave Freedland.
A Laguna Beach police dis-
patcher said they were busy tak-
ing calls from residents com-
plaining about illegal fireworks.
* * *
San Diego County
fire eludes control
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
Winds picked up again Saturday
afternoon to Intensify problems
of firefighters battling a 3,000-
acre brush fire that began in the
Wildcat Canyon area or San
Diego County.
In other parts of Southern
California, firefighters were
kept busy during the lndepen·
dence Day weekend putting out
brush and house fires, many
caused by illegal and legal
fireworks.
Tb.e San Diego blaze began
Friday but continued burning
o ut o r contro l tow a rd
Featherstone Canyon on Satur-
day. More than 900 firefighters
from the California Department
of Forestry, U.S. Forest Service
and various county volunteer
companies manned .the fire
lines, accord i ng to fire
spokesman Dick Marlow. Six air
tankers and SO engines were
deployed, he said.
No homes had been damaged
by the fire.
Beaches
jammed
on Fourth
A sizzling Fourth of July drew
more than 360,000 to the Orange
Coast shoreline where empty
fire rings became as rare as
snowmen and children eating
c harred hotdogs contented
themselves with the screaming
blaze or colorful rockets a few
miles away.
In Ne wport Beach, where
fireworks ar e banned, about
115,000 beachgoers s howed up
Saturday. "There weren't as
many people as we expected,"
said lifeguard Jack Lincke.
Lincke s aid the 63 -degree
water temperatures kept most
or the sunbathers on the sand
and resulted in only 90 rescues.
None was serious.
Although Huntington Beach
city lifeguards reported a capaci·
ty crowd of 60,000, there were
only 50 rescues.
Huntington State Beach at·
tracted 65,000 with its sister
beach Bolsa State drawing a hef-
ty 75,000 beachgoers. Both city
and state beaches in Huntington
have had a long standing policy
banning fireworks o n the
shoreline.
"It was a great day to be a
lifeguard," s aid Huntington
Beach lifeguard Rick Thomas.
"Everyone stayed on the sand.
"I don't know if everyone was
-spoiled by the 72-degree tem-
-peratures."
Thomas was referring to the
unusually warm wate r tem-
peratures enjoyed by s wimmers
during the last week.
In Laguna Beach there were
45.000 Fourth celebrants report-
ed with 125 rescues.
Mrs. Bright, mother or four,
was active in cultural affairs,
having been a founding member
and patron of the Orange County
Music Center's Sound of Music
chapter of the Newport Harbor
Guild to raise funds for the
future performing arts center in
Costa Mesa.
Newport urf and Sport
JULY 9·12 lONLYJ
In addition to her participation
in the Music Center guilds, Mn.
Bright was a charter member of
the Spy Glass Hill Garden Club
and the Spy Glass Hill
Philharmonic Society.
S h e was also an active
member of .Our Lady Queen of
Angels Catholic Church in
Newport Beach, where Rosary
will be said tonight at 7: 30 and
Mass will be held Monday at
10:30 a.m .
She wu born in Chicaeo and
graduated from Sacred Heart
Academy before attend.in& Mar·
quette University. With her
husband, ff. David Brteht, and
four children she moved to
Corona del Mar el1ht yean •to.
Friends Saturday recalled the
attractive brunette'• brave bat·
tie asawt cancer, which be1an
last year. She died at home.
Survivors include her
husband, H . David, and
children : Davld , 20 ·
Cbrlatopher, 18; BUI, 17, Ud
Kathleen, 14. Her mother,
Kathleen Polivka, lives in
Chlcaso.
In lieu ol flowe.n the f atnlly la
requeatJn1 that donation• be·
made either to the Oranae Coun·
ty Muatc Center or the American
Cancer Society.
\
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............. ,.....
They look like Ji&hermen but these hobbyilt• are really turning the controls of their off-road model cars
that are careening around curves on dirt track in monthly race at Co1ta Mesa.
From Page A1
• ,,..r; .. ~·.,,.~~·.;_..,,....,,..-=-.,.'Y'.Yl"':::lll":.> .. .,, .... "'!."""ll~ .. -.-.. -..... -.. ----,-... -. -:-;-.-, ;-:-:-:.-•• . ... , ... ... ----
Orange Coast DAILY PfLOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981
The sky's the limit
Handicapped Rainier climbers return in triumph
PARADISE, Wash. CAP) -A
jubilant group of handicapped
climbers returned from their
conquest of 14,410-foot Mount
Rainier on Saturday, cheered by
well-wishers who lined the final
snowy reaches of the trail.
The climbers reached
Paradise Lodge amid applause
and popping champagne corks
at about 1 p.m. PDT, ending a
trek that began Wednesday and
climaxed two days later with
nine handicapped people re-
aching the mountain's frozen
summit.
But before they got back, the
climbers faced a moment ofter-
ror on their descent when
chunks of ice thundered down
the mountain near a spot where
11 climbers lost their lives last
month.
"We all reached our limits,"
said Richard Rose. 36, of Van-
couver, Wash., an epileptic who
triumphantly hollered, "There's
one for the epileptics'" when he
reached the summit.
Jim Wh ittake r , expedition
leader and the first American
atop Mount Everest, said, "This
mountain is a hard mountain
. . We were lucky on two ac·
counts. We had good weather
and we had a hell of a team."
Justin McDevitt, 29, of Rose·
mont, Pa., who is blind, said, "It
was an exhilarating experience
There were limes when I
just about gave up."
He added, ''The outcome of
this clJmb will be felt by dis·
abled people all over the world
to meet new challenges."
T he nine handicapped clim·
bers who reached the summit in-
eluded five blind people, ~o
who are deaf, an epileptic anf •
man with an artificial leg. ,
Originally, 11 bandlcaps'ed
climbers, seven guides and ex-
pedition officials and two re·
porters set out on the climb. but
two climbers dtd not join the )U·
sault on the peak. :
When the climbers reselect
the s ummit Friday morniJl&,
they could be heard via two-"ay
radio in a joyful celebratipn.
cheenng and applauding as 4tieY
unfurled n ags. •
Spectators at the lodge -Nere
almost as jubilant as the cllm-
bers themselve. One woman •oo
watched the mountaine•rs
troop down the trail in triurrQ>b,
exclaimed. "It's the highlighJ of
my life just to see you c~
down that hill !"
MODEL RACING PROVIDES THRILI.S, LESSENS HAZARDS • • • Ross
Martin,
61, dies
themselves for the track lap re-
cord, based on two timed laps.
For weeks the mark stood at
just over a minute. until Sneed
r a n the laps in just over 59
seconds.
But all that happened before
the arrival of Kye Yeung, a 25·
year old Chinese-American who
owns a body shop in Costa Mesa.
In a few short months, Yeung
has come to dominate the Costa
Mesa track and set course re-
cords at Colton and Saddleback
Park as well. He's a cunning
driver and a perfectionist when
it comes to building his race
cars.
"When I first started laking
my car out, these guys were
coming from all over and blow·
ing my doors off," he s aid.
"E very time they'd show up at
Costa Mesa they'd win. I didn't
know who they were, but they
were definitely running away
with all the trophies."
Yeung, who describes himself
as the kind of person who does
things "all-out," quietly began
m aking changes in his car.
He beefed up the standard
Tamiya with a bigger motor,
added a seventh battery, creat-
ed a stiffer suspension and went
to a heavy aluminum chassis to
keep it on the ground.
Yeung practiced 20 hours a
week on the Costa Mesa course,
and spent untold hours tinkering
with the car in his shop. He
made test runs by racing
alongside the traffic on Placen-
tia A venue outside his busi-
ness. By the time Yeung was done
with modifications on bis unlimit-
ed class car, it would do almost 40
mph on a nat, s traight run.
Over the next few months
Yeung inched upward in the
s tandings and downward in his
limes for the course record.
On the last Sunday in May,
Yeung won all of the 11 races be
~
entered, shutting down Sneed
and Heibert in the finals of the
unlimited class. But more im·
portant to Yeung, he set the new
track record ,a stunning 46.78
seconds for two aps.
·'I knew then I had really ar·
rived as a racer. I had every-
thing going for me that day
my car was running great. I was
driving well and I was lucky.
There's a lot of luck involved in
any kind of racing," he said.
Off .road model car racers are
now divided into two camps
Kye Yeung is one. everyone else
is the other.
Yeung's theory is that you
have to have the best machine to
win and to him the best off.road
r ace cars have big motors. an
extra battery, heavy suspension
a nd a non-flexible aluminum
chassis.
Heibert and Sneed, a lways
close on Yeung's tail in the
races, differ in their car designs .
Heibert runs a hot motor with a
soft Sneed prefers f iberglass
chassis and a s malle r motor
with the rlexible chassis.
But Yeung has taken off-road
model design two steps further in
recent weeks he's introduced
brakes Coone or the other cars
has them > and a special three·.
speed control switch that gives a
valuable mid-range speed that
the other cars lack.
That middle range control
gives Yeung the ability to slow
his car around critical turns on a
la rge course like Costa Mesa.
and the brakes give him untold
advantage on tighter tracks
such as Saddleback and Colton.
Yeung blls a lso designed and
built special Teflon pistOllS for
his heavy-duly front s hock
absorbers critical in his high.
speed racing style .
"In my way of ra cing,
s peed is first and handlin g
and s uspension a re second.
Be f o r e I d eveloped the
SAVE 30' :.~on ,,--
Si\FARITM~E
It'1 ~t for u.ndwlcbee, In •ladt or cooked cm the fnll.
three-speed control, I had only
two s peed s low and
hyperspace -now 1 can tone it
down a little for cornering.
"I knew that my car would go
well on the home track, but I
wasn't s ure how versatile it
would be, so I look it to Colton
one Sunday to find out."
Yeung promptly blew the local
Colton racers orr t heir own
track, setting a course record
that still stands .
Not long afterward he did the
same thing at the Saddleback
course. giving him record times
on three Southe rn California
tracks.
"I was on cloud nine for three
days after that," he said. "It
was great to see all that work
pay off. To beat Sneed was all
important. He used to be my
idol, now he's my obJective."
Racers, !UCh a.s the pair
tinkering with their cars,
above, are glad that when
accidents occur, they are
not a.s e<ntly or ctiaa.strow °' with real vehicles.
And, best of all, no drivers
are injured in collisioM.
Heibe rt and Sneed came
down to Costa Mesa last Sunday
for revenge It was a day or sur-
prises, light racing and fierce
but friendly competition.
Sneed crashed his unlimited
ca r in an early heat. and
couldn't repair it before the next
race. Dejected, he left early.
Yeung a nd Heiberl battled
through the qualifying heats and
found themselves in the "Trophy
Run," a two-lap, one-car-at-a·
time dash against the clock.
Yeung edged Hei be rt to win
the run but failed to break his
own course record. Both looked
forward to the "A-Main" unlimit·
ed class race that would close
the day.
Late that afternoon Yeung,
Heibert and six other r acers
took their cars to the starting
line for the "A-Main."
T he flag went up, the cars jolt·
ed off the line and Yeung looked
down from the driver's stand to
see his unlimited racer fl ying
five feet through the air. The car
hit hard, the suspension jammed
into the chassis and Yeung was
lapped before he had his car
back on the track
He battled back to miss third
place by two seconds as Heibert
sped to victory.
"There's that luck I was tell·
ing you about." he said later "I
think I caught my tire on Dave's
tire a nd that catapulted me intc
the air . "When you 're racing
against guys like Heibert.
Cruzan or Ron Will iams, you
can't make a mistake and you
can 'l have luck li ke that and ex
peel to win. That's racing, and
believe me. I'll be back next
month."
RAMONA, Calif. (AP) -Ac-
tor Ross Martin, master of dis-
guise as a frontier secret agent
on the television series "The
Wild Wild West," has died ot a
heart seizure while playing ttin·
nis. He was 61. •
Martin. who collected m(>re
than 200 film. television ~d
stage credits during his career,
was stricken Friday at the San
Diego Country Estates and \fas
pronounced dead shortly flf·
terwards al a hospital, officiJ,ls
said. .
Martin had suffered a heart
attack in 1969 but appeared: in
good health when he showed up
to play tennis Friday, said t"°'·
nis pro Keith Boone. '
··He happened to be doipg
something he loved when it h•p-
pen e d ,"
Boone said.
"Ross always
looked good
to m e . He
mad e other
people
happy "
Alth o u gh
the Poli s h ·
born Martin
was seen in a MA•T11t
var iety of character roles during
his career. he did not achieve f
stardom until he played agent
Artemus Gordon on "The WJ]d
Wi ld West" from 1965 to 1969. ·
The popular CBS series "as
set on the Western frontier in the
1870s, and featured a pair of U.S.
government agents who used
sophisticated m echanical cle-
vices inspired by the gadg'.et-
laden James Bond movies of the
1960s .
"When I heard a bout it I
wept," said Robert Conrad, Who
co-starred in the series as agent
J a m es T West. "He was a
cred it to this world, and if more
people were like Ross Martin it
would be a better place to Uve
in."
Rubin for July, dlamona for Fo~r. From our cotlectfon of preclou. 1tona
ond diamond• In 18 korot )l~llow ~d.
A. peor1hope ruby two trllllon dlamondt: $8,400. 8 . ~ndont: $1,976.
C. brocelet with ouat n11'la and JJO dlomond1: $10.825. D . peor1ho~ ruby
and diamond, baguette diamond•: $9.575. E. oual rubles with dtomondt: $8,91$.
Bailey Banks&Biddle
World Rn1ow"td /ttotltrS Sint:t 1832
SOUTH COAST Pf.AZA, COSTA MESA
Flrat leu.I, Bullock'• lll4"f1. (7H ) 1$1"5640
Uw ow t'Oft-ltftf c ..... Al ...., ~ ftNI
Orange Coast DAJLY PILOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981
Fireworks, f estiva/,s no baseball on Fourth
81 u.e Alu dll ... Prw
Rain dampened Independence
Day festMtl• lo the nadoa'•
capital and other m~or clUes
Saturday, and for the fint time
in tbe JOth century there wu no
major league baseball on the
Fourth of July. '
But there was no le111 joy in
the hearts of 523 people from 61
countries wbo stood in Hart
Plaza on Detroit's waterfront
and took tbe oath of allegiance
(bat made them American
iitisens.
"I don't got much in the
world," Romanian immigrant
John Sciopu said. But "this I
got. This is freedom."
In lbe "We the People" hall at
the Natlonal Museum of
Ameri ca n H isto r y in
Washington, 28 people from two ~ozen countries look tbe oath.
And across the nation, despite
the rain ln many areas, it was a
d-ay of parades and Sousa
marches, fireworks and picnics,
a day for politicians lo talk of
patriotism and for curious con-
tests llketomahawlc tossing.
In Washington, rain doused
marchers ln a parade alone
Constitution Avenue and
prompted cancellation of some
outdoor events, Including an Air
Force "Singing Sergeants" con-
cert at the Jefferson Memorial
and an American folk festival on
theMaU.
But young people and f amities
arrived at the Washington
Monument grounds early for a
Beach Boys concert. And in
front of the White House,
feminist protesters called for "a
new. nonviolent but militant
campaign for women's rights."
A straw-hatted President
Reagan celebrated the Fourth
with a birthday barbecue for his
wife Nancy at a Virginia planta·
lion followed by a Gay Nineties
picnic on the White House south
lawn.
White House press secretary
James A. Brady, making a
brier, surprise appearance,
waved to the picnickers from his
wheelchrur on a balcony before
the president arrived by
helicopter from the barbecue.
Brady. shot ln the brain dur·
ing the attempt oo Reaaan's Ule
March 30, was on his first outing
fr om George Wubioston
University Hospital.
Shortly before the city's an-
nual fireworlts diaplay near the
Washington Monument, tbe pre-
sident told a crowd of about 2,000
White House staff memben and
their families that be bad never
~en interested in makine re-
solutions but be said there was
one appropriate to lbe day:
•·And that la that lbe cbi.Jdren
or our children's children in a
century yet to come will be car-
rying out the same ceremony.
thanking God for the freedom
that we have and celebrating the
birth of freedom that took place
here in this country.''
Polish labor leader Lech
W a le s a wa s award e d
Philadelphia's Freedom Medal,
never before given a foreigner.
He s tayed in Poland, not
because of the rain. but because
,., .........
If you think the sanda o/ Huntington Beach were crowded Saturday, you 1hould ~~ been at_
Chicago'• Grant Park. An e.timaUd 700,()()(), or about one-fourth of the Second City 1 population,
jammed the park for a symphony orche.tra concert and tent• where 60 restaurant• served a "tCllte of
Chicago."
Celebrations drenched
Storm dumps 10 inches of rain in southern Iowa
U.S. summary
sr1owora and lllunderHorma
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Ne lfljwtee-• ~. -1119'1
wew f.-.:1 w.tt -~Into • ..._. ... .._.._... lor<lfl9 II to llell
efml"'-. Pllllca In E-. Teus,
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Arita--..tllem Flor141e. 11 ... cloudy,,.,,,~"' T•u•
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, ...... _.,.. O..ote -0--· of ... ,, ... -..,.. ...
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tllewen -tllundenlorm• from
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of , ... c.Mrol -~ ·-· wllll ...,1.,. ,.,,,.,.returet 111 ,,.
s.vtll_..,.,, -ru -.. to 1u ........
California
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Monday In IN -7o. al llw _,_,, '°" 1n1-. &..ows '" t .. *-'nlaNI Yolle'J\ wtll ....,. nleM In
ttle 90I -low !Oh, wllll -1119'1 <-• .. ""'"' L.owt ,,.., 70. MounlMn~asto", -551.o u .
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tllo 7h I• 1-•. wltll llltfw In l'l•rldo noor 90 •nd In Ill• toa
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Nortllen> ~ hltiN 103 lo 110,
·-· .... 71. Soullwnl ... ..,. .. ,.,.. 107te111.-1110•
Norl-n -C-rel Colllornla will ha.,. ,,...labl• cio..dll"IHS tllrougfl
Monday.~ of • ..,,_, t-
dlt~ In ~ mounCalM .
eo.ua1 -c...,. -locally cllMlte 109 nlo11ts -,,_.,.,,.., Very • .,."'
Inland
Coastal forecast
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,.,....., s.turWy r .... ,,.., • -
ef S$ Inc;,.._.,. City, c:.llf. to• 111111
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lllrtutll tonltllt H<OPI wot lo
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NATIOM
'"'-·CA ••• hu«UlorW lct0n Sllanna (IRS) h .. unoun«d
the opm(ftl of lu lntenwlonal corporate headquarters In lrvfnt.
IRS 1peci•llzn In dw ma.rletlna and aale or tlmc.alllted vaaidot1
relOO 11«oomodad0N (Of ramlUe lftd COrpe>ratloiu. nnM-
llWfftl.....,.... IRS 111&blcs lndlvlduat1 •o rrcett their \'acAllon
CC*• ,.....,_ tad IN nuea 10 proYlde their cmployett with
t1Mncta117-M¥•.,ld lncentlvc pl1n1. for futtha ckt1llt on th•
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---------... ..... ..... -
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M
of mountlna troubles there. away from It au, and lbe Na·
The nation's highways were tional Safety Council esUmated fie accidents over the three-day
holiday. By Saturday night, the
death toll had topped 300. crowded with people gettine • up to SSO people could die in traf·
From Page A1 I FAULTS KEY SAN ONOFRE ISSUE • •
seismic picture muddied con-
siderably when two geologists
mapped the existence of what
they dubbed the "Cristlanitos
zone of deformation," 2 miles
offshore from the plant.
This zone, a collection of rifts
and ridges under the ocean
floor, extended about 16
kilometers, according to
geologist H. Gary Greene, and
ran toward the other offshore
fault zone already believed to be
active.
Greene, a resea re her for the
U.S. Geological Survey, and
Michael P Kennedy, a geologist
for the state Division of Mines
and Geology, were asked by
federal officials to review all
data connected with this newly
discovered zone and report their
findangs to the NRC.
Their report, completed in Ju.
ly 1980, concluded that there
were indeed two separate off.
s hore fault zones, the most well
defined being the larger Off.
shore Zone of Deform a ti on.
The smaller Cristianitos zone,
they srud, showed many or the
same geologic characteristics.
Missing from their findings ,
however, was conclusive proor
that the two zones intersected at
some point offshore.
T o t.h e intervenors, such a
merger would lend credence to
their contention that an earth·
,quake on the so-called offshore
zone would transmit devastating
g r ound motion along the
secondary Cristianitos zone,
causing more severe shaking
than the reactors were meant to
withstand.,
Through tough, nearly day.
long cross examination last
week by the intervenors,
however, Greene and Kennedy
stuck to their position that they
simply could not prove con-
clusively that the two zones ln-
tersected.
In their report, they said the
two appeared to merge, but that
"data voids" prevented them
from knowing for certain. Such
voids, Greene said, were caused
by either poor quality data or a
lack of information.
The two said they also had no
proof that the Cristianitos zone
ran ashore lo join with the
similarly named Cristianitos
Fault, which runs to within a
half mile of the reactors. but
has beenjudgedtobe inactive
Wes ley Moody , Edison's
manager of nuclear licensing,
said in an interview that Greene
and Kennedy's only real con-
tribution was to give a name to
geologic features offshore from
San Onofre about which the utili·
ty already knew.
Edison officials maintained
that the Cristianitos zone was
nothing more than unconnected
faults and folds beneath the ocean
floor, posing no serious threat to
the plant.
Said Edison lawyer David
Pigott of the inlervenors' con-
clusions regarding Greene and
Kennedy's work : "Their case is
speculation upon speculation up-
on speculation."
But Glenn Barlow, a re-
searcher ror the intervenors,
said it was his aide's view that
the Cristianitos zone was a
secondary branch fault of the
larger Offshore Zone of
Deformation, a relationship with
deadly potential.
The staff of the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, in its
review of the information, found
there was evidence to show that
the Cristiaoitos zone could not
cause an earthquake even if it
were joined to the larger off
s hore zone.
While most of the attention at
the sparsely attended hearings
in San Diego focused on the
seismic safety of Units 2 and 3,
Edison officials also were de
fending the strength of Unit 1.
whic h became ope rational
in 1968.
Robert Dietch. vice president
o f nuclear e ngineer ing and
operations for San Onofre, srud
in an interview that while Unit 1
was originally built to a dif·
fere nt set of standards, it has
been upgraded over the years to
match the strength of the newer
units.
Dietcb said seismic upgrading
has been in progress since 1973.
when construction licenses were
approved for the newer. more
powerful units.
By engineering standards, all
the units at San Onofre are
s trong enough to withstand
ground motion caused by an
earthquake of .67, t wo-th1rds the
force or gravity.
This is roughly equivalent lo
an earthquake of magnitude 7
occurring five miles offshore.
CLASSIC OAK
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Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July 5, 1881
Pick packet for peace
E lect ric-powered party boat cruises the bay quietly ·
By ALMON LOC&ABEY
o.My ..................
A powerboat that needs no fuel, never needs
a tuneup, oil chanae or spark pluas.
A powerboat that bas no vibration, no noise
and no diesel or gasoline fumea. No
transmission problems. In fact, only one mov·
Ing part.
Unbelievable? Not if you look at the
Newport Electric Packet, an 18-foot bay boat
now be~ manufactured and marketed by W.D.
Schock Co. of Newport Beach and Santa Ana.
·The Electric Packet is not new. It's been
built and marketed on a limited basia for 10
years by its designer Marshall "Duffy" Duffield
of Newport Beach.
W.D. Schock has recently been named the
exclusive builder and plans to market the al·
tractive little party craft nationally.
The fiberglass Newport Electric Packet Is
designed after a turn-of-the-century bay launch
powered by a 36-volt permanent magnet con·
tinuou.s duty DC type motor with only o'ne mov-
ing part. The motor is mounted on the liner on
rubber mounts and attached to the propeller
shaft by two rubber V-belts, reducing vibration
and noise to virtually zero.
Using the rubber V-belts also eliminates the
need for a transmission. The metals used to
construct the propeller. shaft and shaft bearings
all have the same electrovoltaic potential so
there is no danger or electrolysis.
Controlling the motor is a simple switch ac·
tivated with one handle. There are two speeds
forward, two in reverse and neutral. The packet
wlll go at full speed -5.5 knots -for 31h hours,
or at half speed 3 knots -for 15 hours.
After the day or afternoon cruise there is no
need to go to a marine dock for fuel. Just plug
Israel results
still Dluddled
TEL AVIV , Israel (AP) -Prime Minister
Menachem Begin and Labor Party leader
Shimon Peres faced a week of intense bargain·
ing with potential coalition partners as vote
counting entered its final stages Saturday.
The count, slowed by the separate tallying
of the military ballot, was suspended for the
Sabbath and resumed Saturday night.
Begin and Peres have met with the two
main coalition candidates and are waiting for
the official results to be announced Tuesday
before getting down to hard bargaining.
Unofficial running reports of the count show
Begin's Llkud bloc and the Labor Party seesaw-
ing a few dozen to a few hundred votes apart.
Both may end up with 48 or 49 seats apiece in
the 120-member Kneaset, or parliament.
After reswts are final, President Yitzhak
Navon is to consult with all the parties and then
pick the candidate who looks most likely to pull
together a coalition.
Begin Insists he is that candidate, but Peres
has vowed to explore every possibility of pulling
together a workable parliamentary majority.
The 67-year-old Begin looked like the strong
favorite on election night, but the coalition can-
didates have appeared to push up the price or
their loyalty .
The chief candidate, the National Religious
Party, which at first seemed eager to renew its
four-year coalition with Belin. is now speaking
in two voices.
Its leader, Interior Minister Yosef Burg,
says be would like Peres to join the NRP and
Likud in a Begin-led "national unity govern-
ment" to pull Israel through the down-the·
middle division reflected in the polls.
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~· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, July 5, 1981
Stifle stresses, • stop stuttering
8y IOEL C. DON ..............
ll Shane Dunn bad to be interviewed by
telephone, bl.a words never would have appeared
OD thia paie.
The Colla Mesa production foreman lives ln
dreaded fear of belnc alone wltb a rln1tn1 telephone.
Dunn bu no bbarre phobia of pbOnet. But
band him a receiver to
answer a call and he'd
begln'to sweat, tense up
and at best gurgle a few
unintelligible sounds.
center. to'or some, Schwart.a noted, the ftnt burdJe Dr. David McPherson. a eecHatrtcian at UC
can be tacllllnl fear of 1peallln1 Into a Irvine Medical Center, aareu aelf-imaae and
microphone.. stress are facton. He note• that stutterers are uaual· In February, Dunn HYI be tlnally felt t.be ftnt ly fluent when they read a book orsln1.
relief ol bla speeeb problem after yean of frustra-But once they have to express their own
lion wltb speech tberapl1t1, hypno1l1 and thoughts and Ideas, their apeecb breab down to a
psycboaftal)'ll1. halting and often embarruatn1 stutter. Sportiq a button that rellida "I occuionally Tradltlonall h b i t id f stutter -Therefore, I am ........... 1lowly these Y • sp1iec t erap 1 1 entl Y ........uaa the causes or emotional makeup of the patient, days,'' be says be Just sot fed up J:::C lnto •tores monitor situations where stuttering occurs and
to buy a pack ol cicarettea and w I out empty· begin an avoidance program to break up the pat.
handed. tern as soon as it begins, McPherson said. Now be can walk up to a store clerk without When Schwartz published "Stuttering Solved"
pointing, like a toddler, to 10methln1 he want.a to six years ago, some therapists dubbed the ap-
buy. proach controversial
"For years and years I didn't really think ln But he takes great pains to Insist, unlike
terms of what I was doing," be Hld. "I would Just speech therapists, be doesn't treat stuttering.
• •
Therefore, I am
talkin~ Slowly
theee dayt. DWUl stutters. And
a telephone la a
lliahtmare for him as well as half of the
estimated 2.5 miuton
stutterers in America.
try to say somethina and sometimes ll would get Rather, Schwartz says he. attacks the source of
stuck. the problem in a person's focus of tension on the . Dllfr,......,,.... "I would stru11le to try to 1et It out and that lamyx. Fnendly button on lapel reminda ltutterer al
Face-to-face, Dunn
stumbles on a word
every sentence or two.
Six months ago, though,
would just create tension and stress and you begin (8eeSTU1TER)NG, PaieAt> . well aa listener to relax.
lo form It into a habitual thlnc." r===================-----------_:..::.._ ________ _
SHANE DUNN
· he says he could hardly
chat, much less conduct
a 45-minute dialogue
with someone be had
never met.
He owes hia success to Dr. Martin Scbwart.z, a
New York physiologist whoee book, "Stuttering
SolveS," traces the root of the impediment lo early
childhood stresses reinforced by years of practicing
faulty speech.
Tension, be believes, causes the vocal cords to
lock. A person stutters as he tries to free up the
frozen voice box from what he calls a
laryn1oepum. •
By merely gently exhaling before spea~ing, 94
percent of the people who've participated in bis
National Center for Stuttering workshops can
overcome the problem, Schwartz claims. He says hls method, called the "airflow tech-
nique," opens the vocal chords for normal speech.
He slops short of calling it a cure for stutter·
ing, but says successful workshop ~articipants are
virtually relieved of their stammenng.
"The challenge is not to stop stuttering," be
said, in a phone interview during a Los Angeles
workshop stopover.
"The problem is to free the stutterer from
fear."
Following a two-day workshop, participants
continue to practice daily. sending in tape record·
ings of their progress to the New York-based
Though Schwartz Ues emotional stress to a
spasm of the voice box, other causes ol stuttering
exist.
Some researchers trace the problem to early
childhood trauma, parental preuures or sudden
peer rejection. Others have aoulht clues in brain
abnormalities, hormonal imbalances, lack of cer-
tain body nutrients, hearing impairmenf and faul-
ty learned behavior.
Parents' voices
help recovery
ROCHESTER, N. Y. (AP> -Tape record-
ings by parents seem to be a comfort to
hospitalized children, according to Gall Mc·
Cain, instructor in Nursing at the University of
Rochester School of Nursing and clinical
specialist in pediatrics at the university's
Strong Memorial Hospital.
Miss McCain ~ports that ln a study the
children, all between age 4 and 8, asked again
and again to bear the tapes, played at the "lone·
ly " times, just after awakening in the ,morning
and again at naptime.
They seemed to suffer less "separation anx-
iety." thanks to hearing their parenta • voices,
she said.
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981
Hunting for new or used Ph.D. (possibly helpful dissertation)?~
.A ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP> -When lbe tut seriea of educational films, "Fat Albert and lbe Against lbe Panthers: A Study of Repression in Bibliographic information on the dJ11erta·
araduate walked down the aisle in June to re· Cosby Kids," designed to teach moral values America." tlons can be accessed immediately by
celve a diploma, the nation'• unlveralUet bad and to combat racism. What happens to the thousands or similar telephone, letter or computer. .,,. , o
awarded an estimated 30,21.S doctqral deareea. dissertations that don 't become beat·aelllnl Subject indexes to lbe dlssertatiOOJ are '-ll
Tbc»e new doctors of pblloeopby left behind Whatever happens to books or mm series? available in libraries across the United States.
them more than 7.S mlllion pases or diaserta-"For decades, dlsaertatiooa were carerully More than 500,000 dJuertatioo.a bave been · ·!
lions, eome of wbicb are the best and latest dissertations that aren't researched, written, submitted, accepted -and microfilmed since the Ann Arbor project be1an '•I)
acbolarly research in rieJds ran1in1 rrom ac-then lost in individual colleee Ubrariet and re-in 1938. Theo, only a bandrul of uoivenlUea
COUDtlnl to zoolOlf. best-sellers OT films? positories," says Joseph Fltalmmona, preai-participated ln the program. Today, more than •i1 But, whatever bappena to thole millions of -dent of a Xerox Corp. publiabio& company, 439 participate.
paees that tr placed end to end would reach Just u interesting, but perhaps not the University Microfilms International. The Michigan firm provides milliona or
rrom Harvard to the Uoivenity ol Mlaml? material ror best-selling books or ror filma, are "lo the past it was difficult for one acholar paees of scholarly information every year.
Occasionally, dissertations have uses dissertation subjects of this past year on and by to build on the work or another. The knowled1e Including dissertations with tltlea auch 81 beyond scholarly work. For instance, Nancy Huey P. Newton, co.founder or the Black Pao-contained in dissertations like Newton's and "Creep of the Portland Mogtar Plant" and.
Winston Milford's 1912 Columbia University ther party. Steward's was virtually inacceaaible to other "More Fun Than Anything."
thesis oo F. Scott Fitsgerald'• wife turned into The rtrst is entitled "Burterine: The scholars and researchers." The latter, despite its umcholarly title, ta a the best ~Uer, "Zelda." Leadership Style of Huey P. Newton," by Helen Today, moat doctoral diuertatlona written d r l · Its c ant alta) Enterh.ioer Bill Cosby's 1916 dissertation at Steward at Brandeis University. The second, by in the United States and Canada are published stu Y 0 eye J>..Propei:um sa ore ~ 8 •
the UnJvenity ol Massachusetts resulted in a Newton at UC Santa Cruz, is entitled "War and stored on microfilm in Ann Arbor. coetainln&hY ocar ns. ~ --------~--------------------------------------------'---------------------------------------------------------------------------------~.
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Sunday, July 5, 1981
Jefferson, close frieiid look to the future
By SID MOODY
CHARLO'ITESVILLE, Va. (AP) -Dumu
Malone, perhaps the elosest friend Thoma• Jef·
rerson ever had, bas won his race with time.
This is remarkable because Dumas Malone
is:
his work here at the school that Jefferson,
scholar, created and Jetrenon. architect, de·
signed.
"J was not very conscious or Jetfenon's
personality unUl I came here. WUllam Howard
Tart once said, 'They talk about Mr. Jefferson
here as though he were in tbe next room.' '' In his 90tb year . . .
And blind. There is that. His mind still lives because
architecture is livina. To gaze at bit campus at
the university and his home, Monticello, on a
hilltop outside of town ii to have an l!DSpoken
dialogue with their creator. His reaaonlne is
there, before your very eyes.
Last Christmastime he wrote with a felt·
tipped pen in his stilJ firm script the final words
or bis sixth and concluding volume or hls
masterwork "Jetferson and His Time." It took
40 years.
·'I guess I know him better than anyone." ''Part of his appeal is that J efferson was a
universal man," says Malone. "Thal lasts. His
politics don't. But his architecture, bis writing
are timeless."
Malone reflects in his book·lined office in the
top floor of the Alderman Library at tbe
University of Virginia.
It is this university that drew Malone to the It is bistoricaJ justice that Malone finished ·
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EWS
rom all over California Is rounded up each day
I '"'he""',..
nation's third president. He concedu that Ben·
jamln Franklin, "the most entertainioa
American," might have been better company.
But he liked Jefferson at the start and. after
what he calls "my long Journey with Mr. Jef·
ferson." llked him at the end.
''If you're going to spend years with
someone, you've got to like him."
There is also a personal affinity. aaya Steve
Hochman, 35, Malone's assistant researcher
since 1968. "They both have the Southern man·
ner, the civility. They both look on the bricht
side. They look to the future.
"Right at the end, J efferson put in an order
for some Carrara marble from Italy for the
mantelpieces at Monticello. Mr. Malone, even
at 89, is planning for next year."
Curiously, eminent historians with failed
211-Ct. ,,,.,
vision seem almoat U> be the rule rather than
the exception in America. William Preacotl and
Francis Parkman, two of the gre.at hbtoriana of
the 19th century, both wrote when aJJ but blind.
Malone's vision began iaillne aa be started
the final volume, subtlUed "The Sa1e of Mon·
ticello," in 1976. He had had cataracu. Hi•
eyesight fell further victim lo old age. SUU be •
pressed on.
·'Steve wouJd read things I needed. Minutes
of the trustees of the University. Copies of The
Richmond Enquirer for legislative news. Then
he wouJd record them on tape and index the im·
portant parts.
"That way I became more familiar ~ith the
material than if I'd read it. I could play the tape
back four or five-times. I might not have read it
that often."
5.77
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AIDS STUITERERS
DT. Martin Schwartz
STUTTEfilNG.
<Fro~ Pa1eAI>
larn)'x.
• •
McPherson says speech therapists can control
stuttering in about 70 to 80 percent or their clienla.
The airflow technique "was controveralaJ
because the results were very high," said
Schwartz, who is a professor at New York
University. "People In the field of speech therapy
thought I was treating stuttering.
•'I find that if you try to treat stuttering you
don't have good results."
With follow-ups, group discuaslon sessions and
refresher courses, it may taJte up to two years for
a person to conquer bis stutterin1. Coet for such a
program can run up to about $1,SOO which works
out to $12.20 an hour, Schwartz noted.
The NationaP Center for Stuttering offers a
toll-free number for information on local
workshops at (800) 221·2483.
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IUllNISI
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981
•• Wl..Tlll ... SAVI -AD I -AU ML SMALL SHOP AND COMflAll llMU. ·~· ...
~ IUllNISS SHOP AND COM,All DC11. JUL 11, tltl DOL
~ ' """ -. .-
--....
What is The Bottom Line?
Dear Readers:
The Bottom Lme is your health. There are times in our lives
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health and named it The Bottom Lme.
The Bottom Line i s an exerClse salon where each individual
receives personalized attentum Our goal is for each person to
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Ale Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Suflday. July 5, 1981
~rn~urnrn~illa ITJillIB~
Reactor safety data
showing no jolts yet
• For two weeks now, a federal
licensing panel has held highly
technical hearings in San Diego
to d e termine i f Southern
California Edison Co. 's nuclear
reactors at San Onofre are earth·
quake safe.
· The answer. as is usual in
scientific arguments. is m06tly a
matter of interpretation.
Consultants for Edison. 80
percent owner of the massive
nuclear installation three miles
south of San Clemente, have in·
sisted their work shows the plant
to be seismically sound.
The $3.3 billion facility. they
say, is designed to withstand the
strongest earthquake considered
possible from an offshore fault
zone five miles from the twin re·
actors.
The plant's challengers -or
intervenors as they ar e known of·
' ficiatly -interpret the data dif ·
ferently.
In ominous tones, they say
previously undetected geologic
formations offs hore from the
plant pose hazards which could
lead to dangerous radioactive
leaks in the event of a closer -in
earthquake.
Both sides are, in fact, look-
ing at much of the same data.
The Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, which relies on the
work of the U.S. Geological
Survey for assistance as well as
reviewing applicant data. has
sided with Edison in the matter
of earthquake safety.
To yet a fourth interested
party -the general public -the
highly complex testimony being
offered in San Diego does little to
ease apprehensions about
the matter of seismic durability.
Up to now, however. as the
hearings reach their mid-point,
the seismic problems have not
bee n presented as enough of a
threat to hinder licensing of the
1,100-megawatt reactors.
The San Onofre situation also
has not been shown to be the
same clear-cut threat to safety
that discovery of earthquake
faults offshore from the nearly
completed Diablo Ca n yon
nuclear power plant turned out to
be. (The Diablo Canyon reactors
were built by Pacific Gas & Elec-
tric Co. a long the Central
California shoreline in San Luis
Obispo County.)
If cost figures provided by
Edison Co. executives are cor-
reel, licensing of Units 2 and 3 at
San Onofre could provide sub·
stantial cost savings to
ratepayers.
It has been estimated that
$34 million a month now spent for
fossil fuels could be saved with
operation of Unit 2 a lone by
December. Unit 3 is scheduled to
go into operation a year later,
perhaps doubling the savings in
fuel costs.
Executives at San Diego Gas
& Electric Co .. 20 percent owners
of the plant, also have estimated
they could save $6.5 million in
imported oil costs.
These figures, however,
should not blur public recognition
of problems which have dogged
operation of Unit 1 at San Onofre,
"on line" since the late 1960s .
Costly and frequent repair
work has been needed on t he
456-megawatt reactor. including
a recent 14-month shutdown in
which $61 million worth of re-
pairs were needed on the plant's
steam generators.
Only Monday, the plant had
to be shut down for 17 hours to fix
a leaky water measuring device
for one of the generators.
The adequacy of emergency
evacuation plans for com-
munities wh ich s urround the
plant also is a question mark.
The Atomic Safety and Licensing
Board, which is holding the San
Diego hearings, must deal with
this issue after resolving the
seis mic matter.
A recent test drill monitored
by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency pointed up
difficulties in e mergency plan·
ning which mus t be tended to
before operation of Units 2 and 3
is permitted.
All in a ll. nothing substantial
has been presented up to now
that says that any or all of the
three units pose ominous threats
to the public.
Nor has an alternative source
of electrical power been offered
to replace the $3.3 billion worth of
e quipment a nd construction
spent at the San Onofre instalJa-
tion .
So far, it does not appear that
a Three Mile Island scenario Is
being set up, or that seismk pro·
blems the magnitude or Diablo
Canyon's threaten San Onofre.
A cautious observation says:
so far so good.
Parade parody pitiful
Homosexuals are very
special targets of the Rev. J erry
Falwell's Moral Majority. He
seldom was tes an opportunity to
tell us how ungodly they are
because they don't fit his concept
of the Ouistian world and bow be
thinks it ought to be run.
Sometimes the gays walk -
or march, in this instance -
right into his trap.
That gay parade in San Fran-
cisco last weekend was supposed
to be a protest march against the
Moral Majority. That's hardly an
unlikely cause since the MM had
zeroed in on their way of life.
And, what the heck, a
parade's a place for a good time,
hi-jinks and a brush of humor.
The humor got a bit overdone
in this case: The group of men
dressed as fem ale clergy . . . the
two guys skipping along clad only
in red T-shlrt.s ... the 25 men in
high heels wearing jock straps
over their leotards ... the over-
done exhibitionists . . .
That's camp. It's a bit too
•
much camp. In fact, the dem-onstration ended u p looking
like the Moral Majority had done
a parody number of the gays.
Instead, the gays unwittingly
(or foolishly) were parodying
themselves. That's hardly a win·
ning game if they want support
from the straight community.
The public in general seems
to have a pretty wholesome at-
titude toward the topic of in-
trasexual relationships.
Note, for example, that
homosexual-bater Anita Bryant
has fallen out of sight and gotten
divorced, while Billie Jean King,
who was up front about a
homosexual affair, ls accepted
very matter-of -factly as she an-
nounces Wimbledon matches
from courtside on national TV.
Jerry Falwell notwithstand·
ing, most Americans don't want
to interfere with the private lives
of any group. But neither 'do they
want to be force-fed a particular
brand of lifestyle, religion or
political belief.
Opinions expressed In the space abOve are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex-pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit-
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
M2·4321.
L.M. Boyd I Beat goe8 on
A woman'• beart ll 20 percentlmal·
l•r Ulan a man'a, typ!eallY: Cer-
t.inly nobod1 anymore th1nU the
all• 41 t.be hurt hH to do wlt.b
1utroeity, altboucb "bi1-bearted"
llA1•n hl the lln10. nonetbelen. Lion-hearted u a 1ynonym for
coura,. II a medieval notion kin&
IOH, too. Rul lloM have 1mafi
bian..
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Blac,k Widow 1plder blta aren't H
deadly u reporu previoutl>: quoted
b•re claimed lhem to be, evtdntly.
Tbt Arlaooa Pollon Control folk aay
they've treated almott 300 1udl bltel
In lhe lut 12 mootha •IUI only on.
death that of an ... year-old woman.
Pa111iu1 they are. surely. And
dan1erou1. But 1111 lethal lhan wtde-
ly auppoHd.
Thom1s P. Haley
Publlther
ThomnK11vU
Edttor
l1rbar1 KnHblC-9'
Edltorlel Pete Editor
---_, _______ _
Mitterand's aide upsets U.S.
PARIS -The presence o( the
notorious leftist adventurer Regis
Debray as a high official ln the Elyaee
Palace heightens the alarm aroused ln
Washington by President Francois Mil·
terrand's new Socialist regime despite
his professions of deeper concern than
his conservative predecessor over Sov·
iet military might.
Debray was Che Guevara's boon com·
panion and chronicler in hia disastrous
communist Insurgency in Bolivia in the
1980s.
High French oCficials assure tbe U .S.
that Debray is a mere functionary in
Mitterrand's political household, not
engaging in policy determination.
Nevertheless. his presence symbolizes a
troubling mindset by Mitterrand's
French Socialists.
While claiming to be more at-
tuned to Soviet expansionism and more
aligned against neutralism in Western
Europ~ than defeated conservative
President Valery Giacard d 'Estaing,
the Socialists stand with Regis Debny
in supporting worldwide insurrection -
especially in Latin America.
Therein lies the fatal plan of the non·
communist left internationally: While
opposing the Kremlin, it backa causes
whose anti-Western animus ia no leas
Intense than Moscow's.
Nor is this the only disturbance
beneath the fa cade of avowed greater
anti-Soviet steadfastness here now that
Mitterrand is in power. While decrying
Soviet SS.20 missiles aimed al Western
Europe. the n ew gover nment em
phasizes negotiations t.o get rid of them
11111 I IDVAI
rathe r than balanciog Wes t ern
weaponry.
Furthermore, the presence of com
munl.st members in the new cabinet
(even though lhe Socialists won an
absolute majority of the National As·
sembly) undermines Franco-American
relations more than anybody admits of·
ficially.
All th is d iminishes the im
portance of anti-Soviet rhetoric by Mil
terr a nd and his for eign minister.
Claude Cheysson, in addressi ng the
Reagan administration.
Condemning Giscard for insuffi cient
outrage over the Soviet rape of
Afghanistan, they say it is not enough
merely to say there must be no more
Afghanistans but Moscow still should be
pressured t.o free Afghanistan itself.
Privately Cheysson goes beyond that.
Creatures challenging
Let's have a romp with the animals
today, in this quiz about the birds and
the beasts in fact and fi ction. One-third
correct is a passing score.
l. Name the only two animals that
talk in the Bible.
2. What frighllul mischief did lhe dog.
"Diamond," perpetrate?
3 .. Who rode a milk-white mare with
IYlllY HAllll
ea1le's wings and a human face with
horses' cheeks, whose every pace wu
equal to tbe farthest ranee of human
sight?
4. Which animal is "more equal" than
the others in Orwell's" AnJmal Farm"?
5. What creature is the narrator of
Kafka's fantasy s tory , "Th e
Metamorphosis''?
6 . In Greek mylholoey. what
animal did Zeus tran1form hhmell lnto
In order to seduce apd kidnap Europa 7
7. What did Benjamin Franklin pro-
pose to take lhe place of lhe bald ea,ie
as our national bird?
8. What philosopher waa bonorf!d
after his death by a marble memorial
surmounted by a statue of a dog ?
9. According to Hindu myth, an
elephant supports Lhe world ; on what
creature is the elephant standing?
10. "Catgut" for stringing musical in·
strument.s and racquets for ball games
is a misnomer; which animal's in·
testines (but never cats> are usually
used?
11. What is the origin of the phrase
"happy as a clam"?
12. How did the fish get to be the sym·
bot of Christ in the early church?
Answers: l. The serpent in Eden. and
Balaam's ass.
2. Knocked over a lighted candle and
destroyed Newton's research papers,
S. Mohammed, ridden from earth to
seventh heaven by Al Borak.
4. The pi1.
5. A huge insect
6. A white bull
7. The turkey.
8. Diogenes, who replied to Alexan-
der's introduction, "I am AJexander,
surnamed the Great," with "1 am Diogenes. surnamed the Dog.··
9. A giant tortoise.
10. Sheep.
11. Originally "Happy as a clam al
hith tide," since clams are gathered on·
ly when the Ude is out.
1.2. Because the letters of its Greek
name formed a monogram of the words
''Jesus Christ. Son of God, Savior."
saying· We would return to pre·Gaullist
adherence to U.S. leadership in the
West if only Washington showed it
stands for something. That something.
however. embodies the contradictions
of the non-communist left.
Cheysson actually is seeking U.S. en·
dorsement of a nti-Western, anti·
democratic movements in the Third
World supported by the Socialist In·
tcrnationaJ and its French members, in·
eluding Francois Mitterrand.
The new French preside nt up·
holds the romantic tradition of the
French left that invests any insurgency
against authoritarian right r egimes
with the highest values of mankind.
Whereas Chancellor Helmut Schmidt
res ists s uch dogma in his German
Social Democratic Party, Mitterrand
enthusiastically embraces it.
In Africa, where the practical in·
lercsts of France intrude. Socialist sup·
port for the Polisario insurgency in
Morocco is being tempered by dealings
with King Hassan The new govern·
ment's ardent backing of SWAPO guer·
rillas in Namibia is kept within the
framework of a unified Western Euro·
pean approach
But in Latin America, there are no
constraints on transforming the im-
pulses of Regis Debray into policy
French Socialist leaders poi nt to
repressive Nicar agua as a model for
Third World democracy.
Madame Mitterrand's patronage of
leftist terror in El Salvador reflects the
government's bias . Fidel Castro's
warm exchan~e of letters with Mitter·
rand upon hi s election was not an aber-
ration
Nor can M1tterand be excused
for playi ng Thi rd World parlor revolu-
tionary on grounds he is measurably
superior to Giscard in confronting
Moscow
Unpleasant though he was in dealings
wit h Americans (a s indeed with
Frenchmen>. Giscard performed signal
backstage services in stiffening West
German resolve agains t c ree ping
neutralism. Whether Mitterrand. while
publicly denoun c ing Soviet ex
pansionism. is similarly useful is yet to
be determined.
However annoying Giscard could be.
he never posed the prospect of com-
munist ministers.
French assurances that any com-
munists will be excluded from interna-
tio nal and internal security questions do
not mollify Washington, wbicb sees a
bad example that finally could push Ita-
ly over the edge into a Christian
Democrat-Communist coalition .
Mitterrand, genuinely pro-democratic
and anti-Soviet, represents the unwiU·
ingness of the democratic left to see
Third World revolutionaries as aux-
iliaries for Soviet expansionis m. a
failure that has cont ributed to the
decline of the West since World War II.
Whet.her or not seven years in power
will change this, that is where the new
president of France begins.
Messages' echoes thrill writers, readers
When I was a kid and firtt 1tartin1 to
read new.papen, I would pt up ln tbe
morning and read·Jlm Bl1hop'1 column.
It was syndicated lnto my hometown
paper; three times every.-I would
aee what atory Bishop bad ror me.
All I knew about hlm was that he
could hold my attention for 900 wordl.
and that he could make just about any
subject interestln1. A llny pbotosraph
of bl• race •tared out from .... column;
I didn't know where he lived, but l knew
ll waan't ln my toYill. and ao everytblns
ht wrote wu Wi:e a lonc-ctletuee l.U.r. tr thole momlllll were U. belinnlDI
of a Ufeloni new1paper-l'ttlllllq bablt tor me, then the Bllbop column •u
probably a aubllmlnaJ precursor nf
what I WU 1otn1 to becom..
ll I• • toN·UP whet.be~ tutun pnera·
Uona ol AmericaA children wUl IP'OW ap
readlne columnbtl; 10me doomla1en
predict that wttbln a dteede .. wW all
be let.tina moet of our lnfonutk!Q f'toD\
eable ttaeri&loa cbMDell. I •'t know;
lf llult COmM tnl lt'a a ...._ blew
tller'l 11. bond tUt ............. a
---·~ co1Ulml8t ........ ,...,. that .aid .. m bud to dapllca .. ln
UJolllili'-...m. · T•• 11•'1ealecl Yer1lom of tbe ~---Ii ......... . =II&· down -do J'ou;.t , ..... .. "" -..,...,... ..... ., ...... 1"llw.mu..,._,...,_: •
lat..., people ta tO..a JOU'" ons ..-
•llllad an reedbl• ~ ~ Md
thinking about the m. That's how I got to
know Jim Bfahop; I never met him, and
he dldn't know J existed, but through his
wordt, we had struck up a relationshJp
of sorta .
It ls still one of lhe oddest feelings l
get to fty Into a stran1e town t.o cover a
story, and lo wake up tn a hotel room.
·a1111111
and to order room aervlce and the local
paper -and io open lt up to find my
own column on lbe 11me paae u J im
Bllbop'a column. 8iehop ls 73 now, 1Ull uamlnf Gal b1a three a weell, and there
la not • time that 1 aee us •haring a ., ••• tbat ll doesn't affect me.
ft• UI I°' me to t.binkin1 about all et Ulil la • new book I Just plcked up. Tb.e bclC* -to be pubU1bed thla month ..... ta d1Jed .. A Btlbop'• ConleuJon." It
ll Jlln IUMp'1 memoin .
Jle .... ,u.rc..p lti I tot tbe auwer toalltlll~ ••d .... lwu tbat .W lot •bop'• column In
tM ~ ta what BilbaP'• Wt ,, •• ?lb dim.
AD• I bad to amll• whea I read
Bllbop'.a reconeeUoA• of b1t lnlUal daya
I
as a syndicated columnist. Apparently
the kicks ft gave back then haven't
changed much:
''The first t.hriU occurred when I saw
the speeding news trucks adomed wttb
flashy billboards stating: 'Read Jim
Bishop: Reporter.' My face on those
panels was bigger , ii possible, than my
head. The second thrill came when mall
came ln from readers In cillea I had
neve r visited. T here la sometbln1
almost profound in pectdn1 alone al a
typewriter and. 10 days later. beNinc
echoes from such places u Salem. San
An tonio, Seattle and Sl. Louil."
It probably Isn't important work we
do; after all, we only cau.e ~to
pause ror • couple of mlnulel dartDt tbe
course of their busy day1, and then'•
no reuon to lh1nk that tbelr U"9 an
really chan1ed one way or another for
havina spenl tbote few mleutee.
And yet Lt I remember tho9e mom·
Inge wllh J im Blehop., all tbele 1ean
later, then the work must count for
somet.hlaa.
One lhfnc Bl1hop aald ln b1a book
bot.hen me. He wrote: "It II part of the
wrlUnt of t.h1I book to ackMWl~• that
nolhlq more ol lnterut will ba.ppen In
my Ille. No one wtt.b part ol a Ule left to
life writ-. an aUtqblofrapb.J .•• "
I hoPI be clOMft't mean that. .• I WU
1oln1 to N.Y that I .,_... I ltad '°'* a chan~t ~wbel"I aklq tbe Um, to me~t rum But lt oceura to me that. ln
the only lmpor\anl way, I llne.
•
... --· -.....--,,.. F 4 ••rwi ?"r'o~··---...-:~-~. ~.--=-~.,...,,,""lTl""""!'f'"".".-~ .. ·~:r~.!'11! .. !!'"'ll!J-rt'"'.":""-:-.-."l"''.---,,-:-.-•• --.-:-;-~---,-.-.-.-•• \ •.
Soap fans can't judge
rules for clean story
By TOM KEEVIL ......... ~ ......
Mrs. M.T. Keevil
Syracuse, MO 65354
Dear Mother.
You know, my dear, in all these years
I've never leaned on you tor much ad-
vice on what to run or not run in a
newspaper. We sort of agreed that you
would confine your journallsfic cri-
tiques to the Kansas Clty St.ar, the
Sedalia Democrat and the Versailles
Leader-Statesman.
I've come to a spot where I thought I
needed a little counsel. It struck me the
other day that you
might have some
pertinent obser va-
tions.
Now I'm not so
s u re about your
qualifications.
Like all news -
papers, the Dai-
ly Pilot draws a fair
s hare of criticism
when, in the eyes of a
reader. it strays into what some con-
sider vulgar language or overly explicit
accounts.
We're sensitive to these comments,
even when we disagree. More often than
not we run them anyway. Still, I listen
EDITOR'S LOGBOOK
carefully when they come in -
particularly if a mother (it's always the
mother -the father never seems to
care) protests that something in the
Daily Pilot is offensive reading matter
to her child or children.
You set me up for a guilt trip on this
topic the day you confiscated my stack
of Esquire magazines. You might recall
the fall that Bill Starke, Jim Boulware
and I built the playhouse in the
backyard -the one with ricked stove
wood for sides and a cardboard roof.
It was a great haven for smoking roll-
your-own Bull Durham cigarettes and
studying the anatomical glories of the
female form as interpreted by Es-
quire's Petty and Varga. Ah. those
leggy. Lithesome ladies with the deep
re<t , reflective mouths and bulging
bosoms. Adulthood stirred.
You invaded our turf, found our Es-
quires and dealt a pretty stem lecture
on appropriate material for kids. Petty
and Varga girls, you made clear, were
not appropriate.
<Not that it stopped my quest for
salacious material. "God's Little Acre"
was under my mattress, I stole Boccac-
cio's "The Decameron" from the school
library, and we had field days examin-
ing Dr. Gunn's medical stacks on rainy
afternoons.)
Life is a great deal more explicit
these days than 40 years ago, of course.
StiJl, your lectures on what should be
seen in print must be in the back of my
mind when we're deciding whether
someone should be called a son of a bitch
in type or bow far we should go in report-
ing the lurid details of a 12-way sexual en-
counter on the San Diego Freeway out
here in Calllornia .
So I thought or forming a two-penon
committee -you and me -to rule on
such delicate decisions.
Now I don't know. Not that you'd be
too conservative. Quite the contrary.
The issue came up the other day wben
we began studying a way of improving
the Daily Pilot's weekly television book
and looking for new features to put in it.
One suggestion was a summary of
what went on with last week's daytime
TV dramas -the soaps. Knowing you
have had at least 15 years ot dedicated
study of this TV phenomenon, I judged
you could help me decide if such a
weekly column would be of interest or
help to you and your fellow addicts.
So I sent away for a column that
s ummarizes these epics for the dedicat-
ed viewers who might have missed a
week's worth of episodes and are thirst-
ing to know what transpired in their
absence.
Now I've just finished reading three
weeks' worth of lust, sin, depravity, in-
fidelity. "'urder, dishonor and eternal
pregnancy. And THIS is what you've
been watching.
Try this little synopsis:
Although Don ha.3 announced hil engage-
ment to Liz, Marlena can't •eern to for~t
him. Marie tries to hide her feelings for Alez
but wonts to marry him even though Jessie's
feelings stand in the way. Mickie worried
about Maggie's emotional and physical
health as her surrogate pregnancy con-
tinues.
Or this one:
Brooke slips Manning a mickey, but he
turns mean instead of sleepy, threotem her
with gun and tears clothing, ordering her to
submit or be shot . . Palmer wants Sybil to
take baby Bobby back home'° Nina will not
get emotionally hurt. Nina thinks sh.e's preg-
nant. SytJil enjoys freedom from baby.
Another sizzler:
Kevin perf orrru "wedding ceremony" with
Nola, then rapes her. Nola eicape• Kevin'•
clutches. AlthN teU. Maggie that Maggie
and Matt's marriage could be .aved by ltt
therap&8t.
Another sample of life as it is
portrayed in the midday hours:
While in bed with MichMI, Kim i.J •hmned
when a gun-toting Rae wallu in. Rae telu
Kim she wo.s al.so Mike's lover. MichMI
calls Rae old and ugly and •011• he only ·~
with her for her money.
It goes on for page after page -and J
guess day after day. year after year.
From what I read, there's more souJ-
searing explicitness in these shows than
there ever was at the dirty book.store in
Newport Beach.
It's too steamy for me. Mother, but
since I've never been much in the camp
of the volunteer censors l'U not aay a
critical word about your years of slyly
laking in all this seamy material.
I have, however, tossed you off the
Daily Pilot's moral standards commit·
tee before it even got organized. I'm too
afraid you and your lady friends who
savor such fare will be named in some
kind of indictment by the Rev. Jerry
Falwell.
Repent, Mother, repent. Or give me
back my Esquires .
With love.
The Editor Son
Cut hack on children
Item reprinted from the World Develop-
ment Letter, published bi-weekly by the
Agency for International Development an
Washington, D.C.
Sharp population growth is spurring
the governments o f India and
Bangladesh, two of the world's most
populous nations, into new efforts at
voluntary family planning.
.. We must stop the baby boom or
else we will perish," Reuters news
service quotes the late President Ziaur
Rahman. "You cannot go about produc-
ing children and then depend on the
world to feed them."
The one-child-per-couple campaign
takes the form of s uch slogans as "Boy
or girl, one is enough'' in every issue of
the state-owned daily newspapers (a
contrast to the message six months ago
-"Boys or girls. the two make a happy
family") and features catchy jingles on
radio and television.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July S, 1981 ,All I J
I NEED YOU NOT MER
YOUDONl
War too grisly for daughters
''We are not going to send our
daughters to do a man's job." Phyllis
Schlafly vowed more than a year ago.
Last week , the Supreme Cour t
agreed. Jn a S-3 decision it ruled the
government may exclude women from
the draft.
It was a gallant decision. The avowed
reason was that the Army has declared
women unfit for combat because they
are. in general, physically inferior to
men. The Army says they are shorter.
lighter, slower, weaker and many can-
not even maintain the Army's regula-
tion 30-inch stride.
There is nothing particularly gallant
in ruling women to be physically in·
ferior to men. But I don't think that's
the real reason the majority of our ag-
ing congressmen, generals and justices
agree women shouldn't take part in
combat.
Most young women I know are
physically capable of walking 10 miles
and firing a bullet into an enemy
soldier.
I think the real reason is that most
men feel extremely uncomfortable at
the thought of a woman killing or being
killed on the battlefield. J know I do. • • •
'"No man with gumption wants a
woman to fight his nation's battles,"
says Gen. Westmoreland.
There's some of that in all of us. We
feel it is the duty of the man to protect
the woman physically. The woman's
place is warming the cave, waving
ART HDPPI
from the t ower keep o r ser ving
doughnuts as her man goes off to battle.
It is a conditioned sexist reaction, but a
gall ant one.
Yet there is more to it than that. Most
men who have undergone the Army's
basic training of jabbing a bayonet into
a dummy while shouting "'Kill ' Kill!
Kill !" would feel uncomfortable al the
thought of a woman doing the s ame.
And the vision of a woman actually
jabbing a bayonet Into a Living human
body while shouting "Kill! Kill ! Kill!"
is downright obscene.
To commit that act. a woman would
have to rid herself, at least temporarily,
of compassion, generosity and Jove of
life. She would have to callous over a
portion of her soul. She would have to
become less of a woman, less of a
human being.
And if it is difficult to imagine a
woman killing in battle. it is even more
difficult to imagine her being killed.
"It's going to be one hell or a
shocker'," a West Point cadet was quot·
ed in Newsweek som e time back,
"when women are shown on the six
o'clock news coming home in body
bags ."
Body bags. They use bags, of course.
because what is left of the human body
is all too often too horrible a sight to
behold. That these bags should contain
the bodies of women . . This is un-
think ably obscene.
And surely most men gallantly feel
women should bf? protected from ob·
scenities such as these. I know I do. •••
So Phyllis Schlafly is right: we will
not send our daughters.
We will not, under threat of prison,
for ce our daughters lo commit obscene
acts, imperil their souls and risk being
blown to pieces . Our congressmen, our
generals and our justices are too gallant
for that.
They will send our sons instead.
BLJT
LOOI< ON iHS"
BR1'5HT SIDE,,
MISTER-· OU~
BOOSTER GROUP
MADE $114.3~
Sci.LING
FIReWORKS
IHIS
YeAR.'
-·
India's recent census put its popula-
tion at 684 million, about 12 million
higher than the government had pro-
iected. The population grew 136 million
during the last 10 years, compared with
an increase of 109 million the previous
decade.
As a result, Prime Minister In-
dira Gandhi has called for a more
vigorous effort by political parties. in ·
dustries, community organizations and
women's groups lo make the small
family a "people's movement."
How much luxury would you give up?
She said the time had come "to re-
vamp, revitalize and re-examine the
family planning program," reports the
New York Times.
In Bangladesh. preliminary figure.
showed the population at more than 90
million -in an area the aiae of ,
Wisconsin <whlcb has about 4.5 million
people).
That's an annual growth of 2.9
million, despite a ma11lve famll_y pJan-nln• campalp. The government now I.a
urcana married couples to restrict their
• famWes to one child.
111111•
-
Wby dld tboM rel1P. cultiltl ln
ArboDa all aell tWr bouHI, apectln1
to ucend to heaven ~ut weet u their
IHder pndictedT You cu't tab 1t .tlh
Yoa ........ --.......... ~ ... -= I -e..tlyl.._, ........... 14#$ .... ,_. ...... ~ ............... .......
'
To the Editor:
"There ii no 9ulet place in the white man's citlet. No place to beu
the leaves of 1prin1 OT' tbe nastle of
insect wings. And what I.a there to ll!e
ll a man can.not bear tbe lovely cry of
a wbippoorwUI or the areumeata of
the fro1a around a pond at nl_..t? Tbe
air ls precious to the redman. For all
tbin's share the same breath -the
beasts, the trees, the man. Tbe whtte
man does not seem to notlce the atr
he breathes. Like a mu dytnc for
many daya, be ii oumb to tbe stench. ••Au tbtn1• are connected.
Wballoever belalll the earth befalll
the MIGi ol tbe earth."
The foreto&nl wu eQIC'elled bJ an Amertean lnd1in Cblef wbele namt I
know not. ffowtter, there's oo deny·
lnc u.at be •• lndMd a man ol wlsdom.
LAST WBUEND THB Oran14!
County ratrsrounct WQ tbe atte ol
tbe 11th An.n.uaJ American ladlan
Pow wow. It 1pp.an to ba" NeD a
auccea and It broulbt m-., hinds
toeet.ber. We ~t*9 Sunday a.m. aad
found a carnp of tenta, anlnel and
happy people.
EArl.1 in the 11lomiol tbe llDOC WU bolllilc ."1> over AnaMlm HWI ID4 old Saddleblck was n..V out ol
•lcbt. I Ht on I beach .,.....,..., ud
MAILBOX
reflectin1 on my youn1er days -daya
when we did nol have this foul air.
There were no contaminated waters: aea, lakes and streams abounded
with flab and aame waa •WI plen-
tiful.
And then the thought cl'OIMd my
mind; would lhece laJU&DI sh1e up
their prtMnt ·so-called luurtu and
revert to the old ways It the earth
could be restored to some reuonable
state ol eleanllnua? Would tbe:)' Ii••
up lbelr aUlol and co back to th• horse and travola?
I 'm cueaalns tbey would and
nouJd such a miracle oecur, do you
I UPJ>OM one of German ancestry
could IO alone too?
I'm reedy,
WA.BREN 0 . AL1110FF
Democrats in Orange County attempt-
ing to rebuild a power bue after count-
less recent political setbacks.
The County Democrau are in trouble
because they followed Jimmy Carter to
defeat in the 1980 elections. Tbey loet
Dennis Manger's Anembly seat whlcb
they bad Iona held.
Not more than two years ago they oul-
num bered Republicans l.n Orance Coun-
ty. Today, the Democrats are behind
lbe Republicans ln re1lstratlon of
Orange County voters by aoroe S0,000 in-
cti vidual.a.
DEMOCaAT8 JN Orao1e County, not
tons a10. had three memben on the
Cou.nty Board ol Supervtaon. Due to
convtctiou, scandal and Jost elecdonl,
they no lqer bave these vot.ee and can
no lon&er cet mooey out ol tbe wealthy
bulldina lnduatty in Or~e County to
fed Lbelr partia,n cauH. And, a.t'a not
forcet, Edlaoa MUa.r wu 1 Democ.rat
llven to UI by a Democrade lllOVen>or.
'l'h• official OemocraUe Party, rep,....~ by lta Central CommJU.,
today II led b7 followen ol Tom H11dea
and Jane FoDd1'1 ... dlcal ltlft ....,
Campatp for Eeooomlc Dlmoaac1
facUon. Reeular Demoerata ID tbl COUD· t.J bne abandoDed that l..._.....p.
COUll!b' Democr.ta 1t1U tufter from
lbe DOllUcal wounda lDIUded wbeD Dr.
Lou1t CeUa and 1Ue!b1rd O'~eill wen
leading their party and county poUti~.
Now O'Neill and old line Democrats
Frank Barbaro and Howard Adler, the
same people who loet their party, are
foundlna an organizaUon to revive their
lost power bue under a ··non-partisan"
cover, and the Daily Pilot editorially
endorses Lbe scheme.
The group ls raisin& money. The con-
trol Is in the bands ol Democ:rata, not
·•non-partisans." lt wlll end up in
Democ:ratk campaians, Juat you wait
and see.
The Dally PUot owes lta readen mon
non-partisan reportln1 and edttof'lall1·
inc than its ccwera1e of I.he County
Club.
WTLLJAll F. OOHB
Republican Party
Of Orance County
• I Lttttr11 /rom rtod'" au •lcom1 Tht
right 10 condn•t lttctrs to Jtt IJ'OC' or
1'1lm1nolt hbfl 11 restr~ LArttrt o/ JOO
words or ltu wsll bf gfUf'fl prt/tTt'rl(f All
trtttrt mll$t ifacludt ,fpoturt oftd Wlrling
oddrf'!I but namt$ moy bf wul\lttld Oft re
q11t1I 1/ 1uf/1r1tnl rtoaon 11 opparrnr
PotlTJI u..'111 not M publllhf'd LA1ttr1 rMJI bt .,
ttltpl'I~ lo 642·50N Namt and ""°""
nwmt>tr o/ tht contnb\ilor mwsr bf' gswn /or
Utrtl1cchon purpoat•
------. -. . ---..... -... -....
1'12 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, July 5, 1981
Il [Tiffi~~[.
Bicyclists enjoy Germany's
Moselle Valley as favorite • 'By SC01T STUDEBAKER
....... Dlllfy .....
We have just passed the
halfway mark of our three-
month, 3,000-mile bicycle lour of
Europe. We h a ve traveled
through England, Germany and
France.
Our favorite place so far? Two
places actually, Germany's
Moselle Valley, and the "Roule
Des Vins," the Wine Road in
France.
We bicycled the 110 miles
along the Moselle River from
Trier to Koblenz in three easy
days. The road follows the river
in a gradual descent as it flows
toward Koblenz, where the
Moselle meets the Rhine . This
Moselle Valley ls similar to the
Rhine Valley, but less traveled,
quieter, smaller, and one sus-
pects , less touched up for tourist
a ppeal.
Like the Rhine, the hills are
covered with grape vines, and
topped by Middle Ages castles
a nd ruins. The compact little
villages here are m ade up of old
tlm ber framed houses, built
around a central church and bell
tower.
Most of the churches here date
back to at least the sixteenth
century. The coun tryside is
peaceful and serene : the quiet
broken occasionally by church
bells, and work boats pushing up
stream.
The Moselle is o n e of
Germany's best known wine re-
gions. In even the smallest
villages, one can buy localJy bot·
tied wine. We loved the litUe
''Mom and Pop'' wine shops, in l~e tiny villages. Al the end of
our cycling day (wine doesn't
mix with cycling either) we
would sit down al an 04tdoor ta-
ble overlooking the rfver, and
sample a few glasses of the local
wine.
on the hilltops here have been
made into restaurants. A little
expensive perhaps, but bow
often can you dine ln a four-
teenth century castle, and gaze
down on the peaceful Moselle
Valley and the very vineyards
that produced the wine on your
table?
While all the towns along the
route are beautiful, we found the
villages of Bernkaslel, Traben,
Rell and most of all tiny Beil-
stein, particularly plcluresqu.e.
France's w111e route was also
easy cycling. In the Als ace re-
route, through the Burgundy re-
gion, continues for about 100
miles south and end1 in the
Beaujolais regio n n e ar
Villefranche-Sur-Saone, 25 miles
north or Lyon.
This iB an area where town
names are famous for their
wines, such as Macon , Pouilly-
Fuisse, Montrachet, Beaune and
Meursault, to name a few.
Huge old country mansions
now house wine cellars and last·
ing rooms where the traveler
can sample some of the best of
the region's wines .
How of ten cq,n you dine in a 14th
centur y castle and gaze on vineyar ds
t hat produced the wine on your
table?
gion, the ''Route Des Yins," as it
is ma rk e d , s tarts at
Marlenheim, 15 miles west of
Strasbourg, and ends a{ Tbann,
70 miles south.
This is a fascinating area of
both German and French in-
fluence. Narrow curving streets
converge on little s quares ,
where in the past townspeople
would come for water. Water
still flows from the carved stone
fountains.
The Alsatian towns are full of
flowers! Geraniums and pansies
blossom out of boxes in front of
almost every window and along
the shop fronts and squares.
The Rieslings are the best
known wines from this region.
"Must See " towns are
Ribeauville, Eguishei m and
Guebwiller, all near Colmar.
We have spen t our most
peaceful days so rar bicycling
through the quiet Burgundy
countryside . Lunch time is our
favorite time of day.
We usually have a picnic
lunch in the afternoon s un. We'll
have a few different pates and
cheeses and some French bread,
all washed down with some local
red wine.
Oh yes, the French food . It's
everything we had expected, on-
ly better! The huge variety of
breads, pastries, cheeses and
meat loaves, all beautifully dis-
played in the s hops, defies
description.
Of course the restaurants are
ver y good, but when in France,
you must at least once pack a
wicker basket with c heeses.
fruits, bread and wine , all from
the local shops, and head out to
the country.
Many of the castles perched .
The wine road starts again at
Chablis, some 170 miles west ,
but can most easily be joined at
Dijon, about 80 miles southwest
of Thann. This part of the wine Ah France!
TDDAT'S CllSSlllD PVIZLI
ACROSS reeldenta remedy ~ ..ctlone
1 8abytonlan 82 Luc:ffer "7 Bridge b'<ta 19C...hydr0-M VllJntltO#Y
god 83 Pwt of OED 118 AteemeM carbon 87 Pro -
8 Fency 87 venerate tribe 20 SllQe ae So1w disk
footwear 88Camp 119 Cb whleperl 89 Monatw•1
11 W•t-ay ehettera ~ .. 34 Wedding loch
18 ArmadlllO 898.-tle 121 Begin ~ 91 Refuge
21 Grepe9: 70 Apothagm 122 ~ 35 Tf9P 92 Oellre
Botany 71 p,..., 124 Loftier H Greek letter 93 Spotted
22 Boot ltrlng 72 Mlatlc: pelm 127~ .. 38 WNle ~
23 Prlaat'1 731.Mip MrVltl1 o40 Roc*y hill 95 Mythlcal
garment 74 Glared 121 EGYPtlan 42 In reeerYe: ahlG
24 llcon-75 Alnlne abbf. IOUI 2wordl te 19th c.n1.
cerned 78 Hit hMYlty 129 One or any 45 Bertlecue Britleh
25 Nia1o1i.., 77 Cotton 130 Sun deity buttln1ld• stat..-nen
goddeN bund• 131 Coocemlng 47 SwlMelty 97 Sut>etence
28 Neuter pro-78 Horn 132 Cherndal 50 Heer-99 Tufl{ish
noun ~ ending i.tter ~
27 Street map 79 Lugee 133 Jewish 51 ()per1 rote 100 Metric
abbf. SC? Ne91 egg month 52 Perfume -..lgifll
28 Ch"-OWfier 134 OerleNe cry 54 T ul rider 101 Etonlerl°1
pagoda 81 Trim 135 Exlata 55 Cfiop up dad
29Chk-. 82 o-iand 138 MUiiee! 5e Prophets 103 Co-owner
porcelUi st-study 57 UM.lffted 1 CM F eutt find-
30 FOfWIWd as Book 138 Theater 58~ ..
31 Vocel pau .. fMtur• wont• 59MIM 105 -pro-
32 Pelm Illy M Lunar 140 Famlty 1t1trence tundls
33 Seed l*lod member 80Wond: 1oe OlegulMd
coating 17 Sprinted 142 Tally Hindu 107 Landed
35Fi-patt to Warns 144 Otecoutage 81 8orsd\ P'OC*'tY
37 Baltic SM 91 o.t.111 1'5 CMtaoff ll9edlel1tl 108 Helftt\
lelllncl 92Heg , .. ~ 82 SmelNngt _,
39 Cerried 93 Noggin top 14 7 Jack rabbits MUncommon 110 Prodalmed
41 Blbllcel IM Gr-Mt DOWN 86 Ripener loudly
la9dw ~ M~tiey 111 Comfol1
43 Gt-.k i.tter 95 Door lnaw1 1 ~ et Tr.,.,.. 112 Luzon
44 Small te 8mllea 2 Tldl • Bargllln natt\19
v9'1eyt 97 eomp.n. 3 U8Aper.an .,.,.... 113 Wlthdr-
441 Mother-of· Iona 4 Infirm 70 Mike 114 Rube out
pearl aouroe N Ragout 5 Twtt, Brltleh wnends 118 Sulttin'I
'8 Taro root 99Aut1 .. styte 72 ,,.,., ends Ofdet
49 Nedc pat1 100 f()f991 8 Leth 138'*ur* .. 117 Helm poa.
51 French tpace 1 Couf1 d.noe ...,,. 111 Mr. Pedno
paint• 101 lngfedlenll I eutr.nt them 1208MIN
52 Diii herb tor• pte 9Heed:Fr. 74 Ofendl fiber
53 Legel term 102 Cer1MI 11f• 10 CrtteN 78 Sleatlea 123 impullM
54 Word with 104 Oelent 11 Flatten 11 Herd roll 126 lcllend
bonor 106 Facts 12 Tlllamln 71 PNftx wtth mMIUf9
camp toe French 13 Nlc*el portorpoee 128 Mlted'. '°"
55 Shopping proooun eyrnbol 79 8c:attera 134 Quiett
mecc:u 109 Wol1hound 14 Scow: Fr. IO Owrstulll 137 Guido'•
541 Cubic 110 Sword 15 Ultltl: 11 Recumbent note
~-t .. ture 3WOfdl 82 Dllftgufea 139 Pronoun
58 Budtlng-111 Brlltle 18 Eatwecld 13 Siited 141 And: Lat.
ham, tor one 112 Verb torm 17 Unwfttten MDrMm:Fr. 143 Elther01
81Avlary 115 HeedKN 18 M«rlc 85 Window '*1'*
•
Golden West
offers tou r
A few openings a re
still available for Golden
West College's summer
tour to the Aspen, Colo.,
music festival. July 20 is
the registration deadline
for the August 6-11 trip.
Nestled in the Rocky
Mountains, the town of
Aspen provides an ideal
setting for the festival or
chamber music, opera ,
contemporary concerts,
choral productions and
recitals. Ski lifts take
visitors up the mountain
to bear jazz-rock con-
certs.
Sponsored by the -col-
1 e g e 's Communi t y
Services office, the tour
will include a pro-
fession al escort.
For more lnformaUon,
call Co mmunity
Services (714) 892-6250.
it
0 m a:
c( :c
&Al
:J:
~
i&.
0
"' c z :::>
0 "' 0
&Al a:
&Al ~
"'
'~Fash ion Island
Newport Beach
DAILY Pt&Or CLASSIRID ADS ....
One of the beautiful villages in the M oselle Valley of Germany.
Irish mad for racing horses
By STAN DELAPLANE
THURLES, Ireland -"A race horse owner in
Ire land is highly thought of, ranking somewhere
along with publicans and priests. You can tell him
by his checked. skin-til(ht trousers. He stands with
one knee bent inward, and he holds a cigarette
pointed down like a pencil."
The races are on now in Ireland and, even with
a spit or rain in the air, we drove over to Thurles, a
market town in Tipperary to see the horses run.
The Irish are mad for horse racing, and it's a
family festival. You can bet as little as 50 pence
(75 cents U.S.). Fathers press octagonal 50-pence
pieces on moppets who trot over to the windows
and lay in on a likely bangtaiJ.
We put a pound ($1.50) each on Smoke
Charger a nd Rugged Lucy in the two mile
s teeplechase. Almost became rich until the jockey
on Charger fell off like Prince Charles at the third
hurdle. · 1 d UP The track without hurdles is ova an runs
hill and then down. The horses run on emerald
grass six inches high, mount ~e hill -a painting
of racing silks and horses against the clouded sky.
They disappear for a moment and then thunder
down into view toward the finish line.
It's not the Royal Ascol but in th.is country
town everybody was dressed up. The men in ties
and jackets, women in tweedy suits.
The track was loaded with priests. Thurles is
an ancient religious center. A cathedral town with
a semina ry and several schools. The winding river
Suir runs through the town, and a statue of Wolfe
Tone -be brought the French fleet against the
En glish in 1798 is in the middle of the main
street.
You can bet the track tote 01' you can bet the
hnokmakers who 111ve better odds but take only "win"·
bets. fThe tote windows ta~ "wm·· and "r>tace."J
J asked a priest whose clerical collar showed
WHETHEI
BUYING
or
SELLING
i.bove a sweater : "How should I bet, Father?"
"Ah," he said, "I have to take care of m yself
first."
Track entrance costs 2'h Iris h pounds ($3.75).
We came home 10 pounds wealthier and maybe
you will too.
Or you can invest yourself in Ireland The
Republic will give cash grants to Americans of
Irish background who want to set up busine.ss
here What they look for is a workable plan -the
Irish connection can be stretched a long way. With
25 million Americans claiming some tie, you
s hould be able to make it.
J talked to Vincent Tobin of Shannon Develop-
ment (they're in it with the government's IDA >:
"T he person should send us an outline of the pro-
posal If it's accepted, we'll put everything behind
it to make it work. Marketing research, sales help,
60 percent of the financing."
You don't have to have a piece of Irish in you.
"You're eligible if you're married to someone of
Iris h extraction." (M y hunch, something m ade for
export.)
You can send it lo Tobin, Shannon Develop-
ment. Shannon Free Airport, Ireland.
The trouble an the .tu Northern counties < BrituhJ
doesn't spill over into the 26 counties of the Republic,
but it's hurling the tounst sea.son.
"Most Amer icans read ·Ireland' in the papers
and think it's the entire country ," says a hotel
man in the south.
Even so. the country is full of tourists . You
need reservations al the medieval dinners at the
r estored castles: Bun ratty. Knappogue and
Dunguaire. They're all worth it.
The BEST country for backpackers . The only
country left in the world where you can leave the
road and strike off across fields on footpaths.
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•
...
Dilly Piiat
SUNDAY JULY 5, 19'1
ENTERTAINMENT
FEATURES
BS
87
A new king at .·Wiinbledon
McEnroe ends Borg's five-year ·reign, 4-6, 7-6, 7-6, 6-4
WIMBLEDON, England CAP) -It wu a
star-1pangled Fourth ol July for the Unit·
ed Stat.es Saturday, and "bad boy" John
McEnroe led the parade by beating the
mighty Bjorn Borg for the Wimbledon
singles tiUe. ·
The 22-year-old American left-hander
defeated the Swedish star 4-6, 7-6, 7-6, 8-4
in a nerve-tingling final that lasted almost
3'h hours.
All the sour incidents of the last two
weeks -tantrums on court, arguments
over line calls and fines imposed by the
tournament committee -were forgotten
as McEnroe ended Borg's five-year run as
champion.
WHEN HE HIT the last winning
forehand volley, the 14,000 fans on the
center court stood and cheered. Some of
them had slept on the sidewalks outside
the tennis club for the last six nights to
stand and watch. At a news conference afterward,
McEnroe was a quiet ~nd dignified cham-
pion.
"l am glad to have beaten a guy who is
one of the ~realest players who ever
I
lived," he said. "And I want to con-
gratulate him, because he's a great cham-
pion."
The crowd thought so, too. When the
Duchess of Kent presented the trophy and
the runner-up medal, the crowd gave Borg
an even bigger cheer than they had given
McEnroe.
the third time. And McEnroe and Peter
Fleming took the men's doubles Utle, de-
feating Stan Smith and Bob Lutz 64, 64,
6-4.
Then, on Saturday, Pam ~ briver, who
was born July 4, 1982, te \med with
Martina Navratilova to capture the
women's doubles championship 8-3, 7-6
over Anne Smith and Kathy Jordan.
BOllG, 25, WON the title in 1978 and bu
held it longer than any other player this
century.
EVEN IN THE Wimbledon junior
tournament, it was a grand old day for the
USA . Matt Anger of Pleasonton, Ca., beat
Pat Cash of Australia 7-6, 7-S for the boys'
crown and Zina Garrison of Houston de·
feated Rene Uys of South Africa 6-4, 3-6,
6-0 to win the girls' title.
One man -Englishman Willie Renshaw
-won it six times running, from 1881 to
1886. But no overseas players competed in
those days, and the defending champion
had to play in onJy one challenge match at
the end of the tournament.
Borg won a record 41 matches at
Wimbledon until McEnroe dethroned him.
The old record was 31 matches by Rod
L3¥er of Australia.
In the only setback on America's birth-
day, Frew McMUlan of South Africa and
Betty Stove of the Netherlands defeated
defending champions Tracy and John
Austin in the mixed doubles 4-6, 7-8, 6-3.
But McEnroe wasn't the only American
invader to find victory here. For the first
time since 1975, Americans won both the
singles titles as Chris Evert Lloyd defeat-
ed Hana Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia
6-2, 6-2 Friday to win the women's final for
Because of a series of upsets in the
earlier rounds, McEnroe reached the final
without meeting one seeded player.
Throughout the tournament he had been
trying to get his service under control as
(Sff McENROE, Pase BZ>
.........
McEnroe gives
America a gift
July 4th fireworks at Wimbledon
WIMBLEDON, England (AP>
-"That was a victory for
America, John McEnroe and In-
dependence Day," said the new
Wimbledon singles champion ..
John McEnroe, the con-
troversial 22 -year-old left.
bander from New York City
triumphed over adversity Satur-
day to defeat Bjorn Borg and
end the Swede's five-year run as
the All-England champion.
Throughout the Wimbledon
fortnight, McEnroe's on-court
antics made him the center of
controversy. But he put all his
problems aside to concentrate
on toppling Borg.
.. l'VE HAD A tough time, a
really tough time." McEnroe
said . "I'm proud to be
Wimbledon champion. I won,
and that's all there is to it.''
McEnroe said he has con·
sciously kept his fiery temper in
check.
· · lt was respect for him
(Borg) and the occasion," be
said. "You have lo giveevery·
thing to beat him. You can't
cope with other problems. 1
didn't even say 'come on' to
myself. l wanted to conserve all
my energy.''
"IF I'D WON any of the set
.points, it would have been two
sets to one. It would have been
different then," he said.
But Borg said he was not
downhearted because of the loss. ''There is no way you can
continue to win aJI the time," he
said. "I think 41 wins is a pretty
good record, and l will be back.
I'll keep corning back as long as
I enjoy it."
McEnroe. beaten by Borg in
and epic five-set final last year,
clearly relished every moment
of his first Wimbledon singles
triumph.
"I WANTED to prove I couJd
win Wimbledon, and I beat one
of the greatest players ever,·• he ·
said. "I'm proud to be cham-
pion.but it is bard to explain ex·
actly how I feel. I'm glad I was
the one to stop the Borg streak.''
The two disagreed on the
quality of the tennis played
Saturday as compared to that
played in last year's thriller.
"I think the first couple of set.s
were better," said McEnroe,
"although it didn't have quite
the same intensity at the end.··
Borg said: "l think the quality
was higher last year. lt was
more exciting. But this was still
a very fine match.''
John McEnroe displays Wimbledon trophy at Centre Court.
Mc Enroe felt his serve was
the key factor in the result that
ended the 25·year-old Borg's re-
cord 41-match Wimbledon win-
ning streak.
The new champion, who also
holds the U.S. Open crown, fell
h e gained control midway
through the second set.
Angels g~ one up
while Dodgers feud
By JOHN SEV ANO .,._.,..., .......... measure of revenge after being
homered out of game one. 4·1 .
Ryan, who gave up an un-
earned run in the first and a solo
home run to Lee Lacy ln the
second, ran into his only serious
problem in the seventh when the
(See FANTASY, Pa1e BZ>
"THAT WAS easily the best
I've served in the tournament,"
he said. "I sure picked the right
match to serve well."
Borg agreed with the new
champion.
"On the important points,
when he needed to WlD, he had
bis first serve in," said the
Swede. "That was certainly the
difference in the tie-breaks. He
missed maybe one first serve in
two lie-breaks and that gave
him confidence."
Borg felt that his failure to
capitalize on four set points in
the third set turned the contest
McEnroe's way.
LOS ANGELES -There was
concerned etched across the
face of Dodger ,Mana1er Tommy
La.sorda. His team had just lost
game five or the Fantasy Serles
to the Angels, 5-4 ; they trailed
three games to two; and the
men in blue now faced the dlf·
ficult task of sweeping the
Angels at Anaheim Stadium. BUD TUCKER
"I THOUGHT he controlled
the first set and half of the
second," McEnroe revealed. "(
was determined to show be was
not the only one who could come
back.
"When l got ahead, I was
tougher than I was last year. I
wanted to close the door. l guess
he let me in last year. l wanted
to take advantage of m y
chances.
"I knew I had lo be mentally
tough, and I didn't get dis·
couraged like I did last year ."
McEnroe refused to carry on
his feud with the tournament
officials.
These rowers have
a dream. See B3 .
""""'--John McEnroe is a picture of ecstacy after dethroning Bjorn Borg.
Base ball isn't near
any type of accord
Both sides as far apart as ever
NEW YORK (AP) -America
celebrated its 205th birthday
Saturday without major league
baseball, and the two sides ap-
peared to be as far apart as ever
in efforts to end the 23-day-old
strike, which has wiped out 289
games so far.
Negotiators for the players
and the owners met for more
than rive hours on the Fourth of
July, but no progress was re-
ported from the session, during
which manage ment made a
change in its free-agent com-
pensation proposal.
The owners ' proposal ap.
pa re ntly would reduce the
number of "ranking" free
agents that required compensa-
tion in the form of a major
league player.
Representatives of both sides
appeared frustrated and angry
afterward, with the players' un-
ion chief accusing the owners of
"stonewalling" and manage-
ment's top negotiator s aying the
players ' stand had made
bargaining "a one·sided street."
No new talks were scheduled.
Marvin Miller , executive
director of the Major League
Players Association, said the
owners ' proposal was slightly
different from prevlou·s
management plans, "but in
terms of where we are on the
23rd day of the strike, it is so in·
adequate in terms of providing a
bas is for a settlement that it is
almost impossible to believe."
Asked to elaborate on the dJf .
ference, Miller replied : "I'd
rather not go into it. It gets me
too angry."
Miller also accused the
Player Relations Committee.
management's bargaining arm,
and Its director , Ray Grebey, of
deliberately trying to stall the
negotiations .
"The entire Player Relations
Committee is stonewalling it,"
Miller said.
The union 's executive board,
made up of player represen-
tatives from the 26 major league
teams, will meet here Tuesday
night to discuss the situation.
Miller said.
Grebey said th e latest
management proposal would
have limited to 12 the number of
"Type A" free agents for which
professional compensation
would be required. Type A
players were defined as those
ranking in the top 25 percent of
statistical criteria, and Grebey
previously said that 16 such
players would be ellgible for this
fall's re-entry draft. He said
Sa turday that the 12-player
figure was negotiable
The proposal also reduced
the· are covering Type B free
agents, from between the 26th
and 40lh percentiles to between
the 26th and 35th perc.enUlea,
Grebey said.
"We can do it. because we've
done it so many times before,"
F .4NT .4SY SERIES Dryer hopes football i,s jotting down notes
said La.sorda. "But we should
have never put ourselves in
this position. We have only
ourselves to blame for the situa-
tion we're in."
LalOl'da wouldn't come risbt
out and say it, but the poppin1
off and Nckerln& by some of the
Dodier players dwinl the aeries
lffmttohavet.akeo ill toll.
"WREN YOU GET involved
lD a Mriel llke thJI you can't
have other diatractlon.a , '' ad-
mitted Luorda. "You have to
come every day with one
purpoee in mind -and that'•
pJay baeball.
"It'• obvtous we haven't been
clolq tlaat ...
Of COWM, tbe AD•ell miebt
hue a .. Y or two fa bow tM
Dodi .. bave Mtll plaJiq.
la SlltUrdaJ afteraooa'• ..... ,..,..s before 1 Dode• lladham
crowd of 11,114, tbe laJ'C•t
hanlout tbUI ,.,. la tM ....... it
, wu Nolaa B.ran 1eUl•I a
The players of the N aUoaal Football
League will strike in 1982 and one ii
curious as to whether they have studied
the pattern of the baseball 1trike of
1981 .
Obviously, any stratestes uamlned
here should be thrown out but it ls not
clear that the football clodl have re-
ceived the mes111e. For lnltanct, COO·
sider the analysis of Loe An1ele1 Rama
defen•ive end Fred Dryer, an interested
party. ''Tbere lJ no way \be playen can lOM
thi11trike," I>ryeraay1. A bystander oole8 that the baseball
oafs have blow1l I.be ealary involved
wilh more than 200 11m• and COD·
clud .. they may have loet considerable
already. "TMre wW be a football •trike."
Fred Dryer 1a11, "and I bope our PY•
hav. leal'Md from the bueball tblq. ll
bH to be pr.tty obYloul tbat to Mttlt
tbi1 klnd ol a dllpute, JOU taeve to .,..
riv• at a c:ompromiM. Jt MelDI Uk•
both lldel wut ...,.,.tbln •. " u,,.-ltrik• a .,.. •. Wben &be com·
mon ......... tor ls li'Md1 tbe bottOm
line ii that both faction• involved want
it all.
"That's the way lt ls in football,"
Dryer says. "The players want it all
and the ownen want lt all. F\anny that
no one aeema to undenta.nd that tblt it
impossible."
Hut Dryer says W. 1ort of "alt.ltucM la
promlnent ID DeColatlODI between
player1 and mana1ement in football.
"Everyone 1eem1tobedumbor1tub-
bom," Fred 1ay1, "or bodl. Take tbe
Vince Ferra1amo caH. Tbe Ram•
never 1bould have lOll him. ••If the Rama people bad Jut bad
enout,b HOM to realise that Vinnie wa1
1 kid dominated bJ bll fami11 wbo real-
ly didn't know wbat M waated. All I.bey
had to c1o wtth four or~nve C•DMa to IO
l11t seuon •• to tell Vbmle they lmew
be waa playiq for bottle HPI <•.OOO>
and HJ, 'ber• la N,000. WMa the
HHOft .. OWi', take your wit. to Hawaii
and bav. a cood tlme oe • Md n'U
HUii tbt contract tblq ..._ 1CN pt
beck.' Vlllnle would have lcwtd tbtm
for U. Jn1wad, tbtJ clron lalm to
Canada."
Management probably bu an entirely
different version of the Ferragamo mat-
ter, but Fred Dryer hu the fioor at the
moment.
"Another reason mana1emeot loses
players around here la a lack of pt.I,"
Fred 1oe1 on. "When a 1uy, Jack
Reynold• for in1tance, aalu for
1ometblnt ridiculous, they don't have
lhe nerve to tell him lhey woo'l tlve it
to him because he ll11't worth tt.
1n1lHd, lbey hem and baw and
evel')'thlns brew down and the 1"'11•
1one."
Dryer can't place th• blaDM on an ID·
divtdµal laaamucb •It la not clear who
mak• the deeiltoaa wtthla the Rama
or1anilatioft. "It la lmpoulble to tell ........... It ..
Don <IOoltennaa> or Oeartl• (Fl"OD·
tlere> or Dom.blic (f'l•liln> ud It tuee eo loal to Ill a ...._, m&Jtie
tbey don't know •Um. ftMa ., .... ,
lhere .,.. tlmea JOU pt U........, tMJ
don't cU't. I mean, after tMJ reed tM
flnandal ~•t.atemnt. t.bey· don't care
about uythlq elH."
Dryer says that if ownership and
management cared, tbe entire al·
mosphere would be altered around the
camp of the Rams.
"For instance," be aaya, ·'the way
they bow and sorape to a fint round
draft choice around bere la enoulb to
make you throw up. I think a ftnt road
should be told to clean up bl.I act •tll
he makes the team Just like UYOD•
else."
All ol this la straytoc from the nb~
of bueball and football ttrltea but
Dryer seems anxloUI to remoYe It from
Ma cheat and belid•, be mQ DOt M all
lh•t ~ about a football llltt• Ila 1112 becaue be wtU prollabl1 4llpiu1
af\er tbe HUOn ~ 1'91. Fnd--....
not.IOlll ol 81l acttac C8Nlt Md .... Md
a couple ol l'MICleably MCUlll\ll 0-.
lap ln tbt ftlma.
"Pb>'llcllb', 1 cOuld 1Wl Dlu ;• bl
11.11, ''but l'm mentallJ tired: All U...
yean around UM mealal.ltJ oe 8lOlt •
tbt:te 1"'11 lt enoqb to wear JOU out."
Whether Fred Dryer ll ol luoeftOI
menlality ii a matter of opl.IUoa, but be kDow1 how to expreu him..U. __
•
'I
)
--• -..-.-... ~-...--..-..,.--... ..-.... _..,...,..,... .. _ • .,.,...,,.,.._, .... ,.,..,..,. • .,._. .................. , ... CIWU"4$ .... J 110 ........... , lllS•U .. 0 .. $ .. 011111$1113 ........ li'J ... £115•J••11Jll£•011111a10••t •t•s•s j j a a j --
Orange CoHt OAIL V PILOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981
.---------------------... Boo~t• glv11Aug:1 dMdllne
S&A'M'Lll -lruot loobte. leat· Ill tit Mlri.Dtrt' player repr1MDt1Uv1.
la)'I lf tht baffbalJ ltrlltt Jutl put
Au1. 1 ''it meant tbt rett of the
season."
Boehle, 30-year-old flr1t bueman, painted a
dismal picture ol posslblUUes that the strike
will be setUed quickly. "It'• a ale e," he Hid. "They (the owners)
are trying to starve us out.
aren't over yet "Down the line, we'll alJ
be hurting. The younger guys
will be hurting first."
From AP dlapatcbes
WIMBLEDON, Encland -John ~ Mc Enroe'• Wimbledon tennil victory
took on a bittersweet lute Saturday
when the tournament committee recommended
a $10,000 fine for his behavior In hla semifinal
match. .> It was in that match, aaainat Australia's
Rod Frawley, that McEnroe objected to line
calls 13 times, and on one occuion yelled out,
"You are a disgrace to mankind."
lo the five-year history
of the Marinera, Bocbte has
been the club's primary ac-
quisition through the free
agent r e -entry draft. He
makes an estimated $250,000
a season and reportedly is oc It the third highest pald Seattle
player behind outfielder Jeff Burroughs and de-
signated bitter Richie Zisk. Burroughs reported·
ly earns $330,000 and Zisk $290,000.
The umpire, George Grime, penalized him
a point and referee Fred Hoyles upheld the de-
cision when be was summoned by McEnroe.
Blackman leads Kansas State win
NOBEOKA. Japan -Rolando m
Blackman pumped in 24 points and Previously, the fi ery U.S. Open champion
bad been fmed $1,500 ror calling an umpire in
his opening match "an incompetent fool" and
an additional f750 for accusing a Kenyan-born
j udge of being biased in a doubles match
against the Indian brothers, Vijay and Anand
AmritraJ.
Ed Nealy canned 17 to lead Kansas
State past the Japan National squad 87-67 Satur-
day in the opening game of the four-nation Kirin
World Basketball 81 Tournament here.
The tournament committee asked that the
latter fine be increased by another $2,500 by the
Men's International Professional Tennis Coun-
cil.
It was a close battle for the first six minutes
of play. But the taller and more accurate shoot·
ing Americans, coached by Jack Hartman, led
42-32 at halftime.
Nobuki Kato was high point man for the
Japanese with 20 point.s. Next was Yasutaka
Okayama, a7-foot-8 mch center, with 14. If all recommended fines are assessed, the
total would be $14,750.
Quote of the day
Dick Casey, 87, described as Boston·s
No. 1 baseball fan. on the players' strike:
"I should be dead now, but baseball has
kept me alive. and I'll outlive this strike,
loo.,;
•
The 26-year-old Okayama was the first
Japanese to be drafted by a National Basketball
Association team when it he was picked by the
Golden Slate Warriors in the eighth round last
month.
Today, Kansas State. which finished among
the top eight this year 's NCAA basketball
playoffs, will meet Czechoslovakia
Confusion as to who
leads Transpac race
By ALMON LOCKABEY .,...., .................
Who's ahead in the 2,225-mile
Los Angeles to Honolulu race?
Thal depends on how you read
the position reports. At the 8
a .m. Saturday rollcall, Fred
Preiss's 84-foot Christine had
traveled one mile less than her
a rch rivals for first to finish,
Merlin and Drifter. but was
three miles closer .to Honolulu
t han Merlin and nine m iles
closer than Drifter.
The ambiguity is based on
C hr istine 's latitude and
longitude position which places
her closer to Honolulu.
The 73-boal fleet was closely
bunched Saturday as the winds
some 200 miles offshore bad
dinimished to about eight knots
from the northwest. The race
started Friday in a blustery
18-20 knots.
Fourth in the boat-for-boat
battle for first to finish was Fox
Fire, a Class C entry with 2,052
miles to go; fifth was Secret
Love. 2,059, a nd sixth was
Ragtime, 2,061.
Malibu broke up in heavy seas
southeast of San Nicolas Island .
C h ateau was one of six
mullibulls competing in their
own Honolulu race in an effort lo
beat the monohulls to Honolulu
The race started Friday at 1
p.m . a few miles south of the
Transpac start.
Leneman and his crew were
rescued by the yacht Westward,
one of the yachts in the regular
Transpac skippered by Willard
Bell of Los Angeles with a fami·
ly crew. None of the crew of the,
catamaran was injured. AU six
a r e continuing to Honolulu
aboard the Westward.
Another of the myltihulls. Bob
Haners 65-foot ca<amaran Dou·
ble Bullet, lost a rudder in the
heavy seas. but her crew was
able to m ake repairs with a
s pare rudder and Double Bullet is
continuing in the race. There was
no r eport from t h e other
multihulls which are not being
monitored by the Transpac escort
vessel.
Larr y Somers aboard the
escort vessel Jubilee said the
Jubilee aJmost collided with the
wreckage of the catamaran as
they went lo investigate the
fl ares. The crew had already
been rescued by Westward .
Handicap standings by class:
•
B11eball tdday
On th11 datt ln ti111ball ln llel:
Blll White 1muhtd thrff bomt runt while Bob Glblon hurled a four-hitter and
belted a homer of hla own to lead the St.
Louis Ca.rdJnaJs to a 9-1 victory over the
Los Angeles Dodgert.
The Carda, thou1h, remained ln sixth
place iri the National League, 14~ cames
behind the pace-setting Cincinnati Reds .
The Reds, behind homers by Vada Pinson
and Gordy Coleman, posted a 3·2 triumph
over the San Fl'anclsco Giants.
In the American League. Rollie Sheldon
hurled a four-hitter as the New York
Yankees blanked the Cleveland Indians &-0
at Yankee Stadium. Ya nkee slugger
Roger Maris blasted his 32nd homer of the
year otr Frank Funk, puttio1 him 13
games ahead of Babe Ruth's 60-homer
pace of 1927.
The Yanks moved to within a half-game
of the first-place Detroit Tigers, who split
a double-header with the Boston Red Sox.
On this date in 1947:
Outfielder Larry Doby played his first
game as a Cleveland Indian, becoming the
first black player in American League his-
tory
Today's Birthdays:
Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Gary
Matthews is 31. New York Yankees pitcher
Rich Gossage is 30
CNett gives Britain a lead
HELS INKI -Olympic gold
medalist S teve Ovett won the
1.500-meter race Saturday in 3:46.47
as Britain took a 5-point lead over the Soviet
Union in the European Cup track and field
semifinals. A crowd of 8,000 watched as Britain
took the lead with 67 points over the Soviet
Union, which had 62. Yogostavia was m the
third place with 54 points. ln the 10,000-meter
race. Finland's Martti Vainio a nd Britain's
Julian Goater ran a two-man duel with Vainio
winning in 28 : 15.91 and Goater finishing in
28 : 17.88.
Rogera forge• to the front
aw .. ,.,. tlnd 11x blrdi .. and n carded a Sounder.par ee Saturday to
take the third round lead ln the
Western Open at Oak Brook, Ill. Roae ... stood
two shota ahead of Ed Ftort, wbo shot a•· and
was three up on Do• Pooley, the toumament'a first round leader, Jim Slmou, Jim C.bert
and Greg Powers, the second round leader . . .
Jan S&epbenaoa and defending champion Pa&
Bradley shot 2-under-par 70s and remained tied
for the lead in an LPGA tournament ln Dorion.
Quebec. Janet ColH and PaUy Hayea are tied
for second, four strokes back . . . 8ever1aao
Balles&eroe of Spain shot a 3-under-par es and
took a three-stroke lead after l.be third round of
the Scandinavian Open in Sweden ... Bob
Mlcbael of Florida shot a 1-under-par 71 to cap-
ture individual honors and Jead the United
States to victo~ in the Golf Tournament of the
Americas in Miami.
Virgin wi ns Peachtree Road Race
Craig Virgin led 25,000 people II
across the finish line Saturday,
breaking his previous record and
winning the 10,000-meter Peachtree Road Race
for the third straight year. Virgin finished in
28 :03, breaking the record of 28:30.5 he set in
1979 Rod Dixon of New Zealand finished second
< 28. 11 > al the AUanta race . . . Gree Pltkett of
Alamo, Ca., won the CRC Trans-Am cham-
pionship race. He avergaed 90 039 mph during
the 66-lap. 100.98-mile race ... Mike Weaver
will defend his WBA heavyweight championship
agains t unbeaten James mus, most likely in
Chicago sometime between Sept 16-0ct. 10, ac-
cording to Tillis' manager ... France's Rene
Arnoux, in a turbocharged Renault, set a speed
record for the Dijon. France track to take the
pole position for the French Grand Prix. Arnoux
was limed in l :05.95 at a speed of 128.81 mph
The San Diego Clippers have invited fi ve
free agents, including veteran Eric Money a nd
Cal State Fullerton forward Calvin Roberts
(6-8 > to their NBA pre-season practice in
August.
From Page 81
...........
FANTASY SERIES • • •
Dodgers had one in, two on and
nobody out.
BUT THE nghl-hander calmly
got Rick Monday on a grounder
to second, Reggie Smith on a fly
to left and Steve Gar vey on a
grounder to short to end the
Dodgers' last threat.
Ryan. who scattered seven
hits , struck out 10 and walked
three.
"I wasn·t going to lose this
gam e for anything," said Ryan.
"When we got the lead in the
eighth inning, I knew we were
going to win."
The Angels, who have now
scored 24 runs on 59 hits in the
five games, chased Burt Hooton
with Don Baylor·s home run in
the seventh.
Hooton, who tamed the Angels
on six hits in game one, was con-
stantly in trouble thr oughout
game five.
THE ANGELS, trailing 2-0.
cut the deficit in half when
Ralph Garr singled, moved to
second on a walk to Rod Carew
and came home on Brian Down-
ing's single to right in the third.
The Angels then took the lead
with two runs in the fourth on
singles by Bert Camp aneris
(subbing for the injured Bobby
Grich> and Rick Miller , a double
by J im Anderson and a fi elder's
choice but Carney Lansford.
roll over and play dead. J hope
the y don't do a ny serious
celebrating yet because they
might be disappointed."
Game six will match the same
pitchers of game two -Dave
Frost and Tommy John. John
and Don Sutton have engaged in
a little verbal battle of their own
this series over their respective
spots in the rotation.
Sutton, who had expressed his
disappointment is being placed
behind John, just shrugged his
shoulders when asked about
today's assignment.
"THE MANAGER should
have foreseen this happening at
the start of the series," said Sut·
ton . "I don·t want lo keep harp-
ing on it because it's like kicking
a dead horse.''
When told that he would pitch
the seventh game if the Dodgers
won , Sutton commented: "We
have to get that far first."
"He certainly didn't help us
much when he was on the mound
the las t time," said J ohn bitter·
ly . "If I win tomorrow then J
guess we'll see just how clutch a
pitcher he really is."
Jn the meantime , the Angels
are quietly going about their
business. In the corrected time stand-
ings -wb.ich are not too signifi-
cant this early in the race -Fox
Fire, s kippe red by Dennis
Howarth. Ventura was the over·
all and Class C leader. Second
wa s th e C la ss A yacht
Zamazaan, Robert Cole, San
F r ancisco, and third was
Primavera, Jorge Dipp, Lake
Chapala, Mexico.
CLASS A -1. Zamazaan; 2.
Primavera ; 3. Natoma. Bjorn Borg was just out of reach all afternoon Saturday.
With the score knotted a 4-4 in
the eighth. the Angels pushed
over the winning run off Charlie
Hough on a two-out double by
Lansford and a triple by Baylor.
··Let them keep popping of(
and f ig hting among
themselves,·• s•id Dan Ford .
"After we win this thing we'll
propose a toast to them during
the celebration.··
* • •
Near tragedy was added to the
race early Saturday when the
40-fool catamaran, Cbateau,
skippered by Mike Leneman of
CLASS B -1. Brisa ; 2.
Bravura-87; 3. Aleta.
CLASS C -Fox Fire: 2. High
Noon; 3. Oz.
CLASS D -1. Jubiliation; 2.
Sweet Okole , 3. Racy.
From Page 81
McENROE WINS • • •
well as his temperament.
4 In the finals it all came right.
"I picked the right m atch to
serve well," he said .
McENRO,i SERV ED steadily
throughout the match and got
almost 00 percent of his first
serves in.
Borg's rate was well below 50
percent in the first two sets, but
h e finished with an over all
average of 52 percent.
Borg "'as the man with the re-
putation for winning the big
points. But on this occasion it
was McEnroe who won them.
Borg broke service al 3·2 in
the first set. There were no more
breaks until the end of the
second set, which went to a
tiebreaker.
THE ATMOSPHERE was like
a football game. The excited
crowd roared at each point.
They remembered the famous
tiebreaker in the fourth set of
las t year's epic fin al, when
McEnroe s aved seven match
points and won 18-16 before
finally losing the match.
But this time McEnroe bad the
tiebreaker all bJs own way, win·
ning it 7·1. ·
Borg led 4·1 Ln the third set
after breakln1 the American
left-hander ln the fourth 1ame.
But McEnroe enjoyed two blJ
slices o( luck to break back In
the seventh came.
At 15-lS, be hit a backhand
that hit the top or the net and
trickled over.
At 30-•0, Bora 1ot a bad
bou_nce on tbe wearina frau
court. He awung at ti.. ball, but
It •hot under bis racket.
THOSE TWO lucky points
were tbe turntna point for
McEnroe. It broutbt blm bllck to
3-4 and he leveled at •~• by bold·
ln1 tent ln tbe next same and
1muhln1 a fottband tbat
•kipped oa the net and new pall
Bor1'1 ea.r.
The set went lo a nother
tiebreaker, and again McEnroe
romped through it. 7-4.
Borg sai d Later that
McEnroe's service meant every-
thing in the tiebreakers.
"John r elies a lot on his
service, and when he is serving
well, as he was today. it gives
him a big advantage in
tiebreakers," he said.
THE FOURTH set was evenly
balanced for nine games. Borg
had a break point In the third
game and McEnroe had two in
the eighth, but neither could con-
vert the chances .
McEnroe served to 5-4, and for
t he first time 'since he became
champion ln 1976, Borg fou..1d
himself serving lo save his title.
T he Swede le d 30-0. Then
McEnroe won three rallies in a
row and got to match point at
30-40. Borg served and volleyed,
McEnroe hit a backhand wide
a nd the c hampion 's fans
breathed again.
As he did throughout the
match, McEnroe attacked on
Borg's next serve, volleyed deep
and met Borg's scrambled re-
turn with a s mash to reach
match point once more.
This time be didn't let the
Swede escape. He closed ln on
Borg's second service, hit deep
to the baseline and waited at the
net to hJt the loreband volley
that made blip champion.
Baker, Kyler aet
Pikben Ula Baker of Edlloa
HJgb and 'nna Kyler of M artna
bave been selected to the AU·
CIF 4·A women'1 IOllbaU fl.rat
leam.
Tbey were the on ly area
pla1en Mleded.
Durln1 tbt Sunut Ltaf\lt
l talOft, t1'e lwo split a pair ol de-
daiom. Baker la a JWllor ind wm l'9tllm ne•t tHIOD wbUe
Kyler la a aeaior.
....;..-
"There's no doubt about it.
we're in the driver's seat," said
Baylor with a smile. "We're a
game up and our next two are at
ho me . There's no way the
Dodgers are going to sweep us
there."
"TIDS SERIES isn't over yet
-not by a long shot," countered
Davey Lopes, who has been the
center of controversy during the
series with his predictions of a
Dodger victory.
"We're certainly not about to
l'ANTASY lllOTU -Ne ...... 111 ---
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c.llfenlle 901 • •-s u I
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Ferd. 11--.. u~ (A). Geney 10 1. ,._
• • ., •• , (A). HR•-••ylor (A l, L•<Y 10 1.
A-S.,7U.
McEnroe snubs dinner
LONDON <AP > -John
McEnroe, the new Wimbledon
men's singles c hampion ,
boycotted the annua l cham-
pions' dinner at the Savoy Hotel
Saturday nltht.
Dubbed t h e bad boy of
Wimbledon because of his tem·
peramental outbursts on court,
the 22-year-old American gave
no reason for not attending.
But only an hour after he top-
pled Sweden's Bjorn 8org to win
the title, the Wimbledon tourna-
ment committee recommended
to the Men's Professional Tennis
Council that McEnroe should be
fined 99.400 for his behavior dur-
ing hi• semifinal match with
Australian Rod Frawley last
Thursday.
He already baa been fined
twtee before during this year's
Wimbledon tournament ror bis
conduct on court.
Sir Brian Burnett, chairman
of the AU·Enaland Club, aaid at
the dinner: "I'm torTY that John
McEnroe la not With us tonl&bt."
T e nnis commentators
s peculated the new champion
mtabt have atayed away either·
beuu.ae be wu UP')' about the
latest flne or beeauae be wu
em ba.rrused.
Tbt champion lavarlably
makes a •PMCh at tbt d1nDer
tba.nJdna tht Wimbledon Com-
mittee for all it has done for
him.
C hris Ever t Lloyd, t h e
women·s Wimbledon champion,
earned loud applause when she
said : "Sir Brian Burnett said, ln
J ohn's absence, that I would
have to make two speeches.
"Unfortunately t can only
make one because J haven't
John's vocabulary. But I
apologize, as an American, for
the fact that he is not here."
Conditwning claaa
hosted by Newport
Newport Harbor Hilb Cl'OSI
country coaches Jim Newkirk
and Bob Van Sickle will conduct
a summer condltiorunt program
be I inning Monday.
The program 11 open to boYt
and lirls, grades '7·12. interested
ln rUMlnl cross country tn the
fall.
Workouta wtll be held on Mon·
day, Wednesday and l"l'lday
mornln11 be1lnnlo1 at 8. ln·
terested 1tudenll should meet at
Newport 'Harbor Hiib ln front ol
the small pool on IntntA•aue.
There la no chart• for ~
workout.a. Por more loforma·
tJon, call Newkirk or Van Sickle
at lb• 1cbool at aas.suo. .
' " ... ' ... , ... ·-.. .. . ·-·· .. -...
---.. ---,. ...... -.--------------------------...----------------•• ., ti • .. It ee I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981
This all-women crew is gearing up for the 1984 Olympics. There are 45 women in camp at UC Irvine where only a selected few will come out Olympians.
Stroking toward an Olyinpic drealll
Women gather at UC Irvine with the hope of making 1984 rowing team
By HOWARD L. HANDY Of .. o.ttr,.......,.
If you live on Lido Island and wake up in the
morning with the sound of a feminine voice callina
out, "pull, pull, stroke, stroke" with the command
repeated over-and-over again, you are listening to
rowers involved in the Women's U.S. Olympic de·
velopment camp.
There are some 45 women involved in the camp
that runs for almost three weeks. And they are on
a tough routine they hope will end with a spot on
the U.S. Olympic rowing team in 1984.
"We have some national Olympic team coaches
on hand to help with the training and several
Olympic team members from the 1976 squad,"
says assistant coach Bob Ernst, himself a former
UC Irvine crew mentor.
Currently, Ernst is the women's crew coach at
the University of ashington after serving as
freshman coach for six years when he left UCI.
"The girls are staying on the campus at UCI and
they jog the five or six miles to the boathouse for
the morg workout," he says. "We are on the water
for 21h hours in the morning, beginning at 6
o'clock, and again in the afternoon from 2:30 to
5 ..
"They also spend several hours three times a
week in the weight room at UCI which makes for a
full day of activity."
Most of those in the camp were in San Diego a
week ago for the women's national championships
and the Olympic development group obtained
nearby UCI for its three-week camp to hold down
expenses for ajr fare.
"After this camp is over, part of the group will
be seleeted for the elite or A team which will go to
Princeton, NJ . for further training and selection
for the World Championships in Muruch in August.
''Some of the others will be placed on the B team
to compete in the National Sports Festival in
Syr acuse, NY. The program is sponsored by the
U.S. Olympic Committee but they don't pay air
Yarborough explosion!
Veteran wins his fourth Firecracker 400 on final lap
DAYTONA BEACH Fla. CAP) -Cale
Yarborough, waiting until he felt the time was
right, charged past Harry Gant just two turns
from the end to win his fourth Firecracker 400
Grand National stock car race Saturday at
Daytona International Speedway.
Yarborough stopped trying to duel with Gant
22 laps from the end or the 400-mile race, concen-
trating instead on staying close behind the leader
until the last lime around the 2.S·mile, high.
banked oval.
"IN TIDS DAY and age, you've got to use your head or somebody is going to beat you, ..
Yarborough said. "You have to use your bead and
have patience.
"It's hard to do that over 30 laps, but if you'd
have passed Harry, he could have done the same
to me."
The 41 -year-old driver from Timmonsville.
S.C., followed his strategy to perfection.
He dropped low on the backstretc"h on lap 160,
Pickin's slim
on TV today
By HOWARD L . HANDY
Of tlle Oeltr ,.... SW!
The only live show on television in the sports
field today is the Western Open golf tournament at
Oak Brook. Ill.
Scott Simpson, winner of the Costa Mesa Open
in 1974. is defending champion. winning by fi ve
strokes over Andy Bean last year.
Otherwise, the pickings today are slim. CBS'
Sports Sunday will have an update on the sports
scene with Brent Musburger; NBC's Sportsworld
will feature the Sugar Ray Leonard fight or a week
ago and a report on the Tour de France bicycle
race; and if you are a late night person, try Flying
Sportsman on Channel 9 al mjdnight for a visit to
several Pacific islands.
Following are the top $ports events on TV tOday.
Ratings are: I 1 1 1 excellent; 1 1 1 worth watching;
1 1 fair; 1 forget It.
~ , 11 :30 a .m., Channet 2 { {
GOLF: Western Open.
Announcers: Jack Whitaker, Pat Summerall, Ben Wright, Frank Glleber and Ken Venturi.
Biii Rogers shot a slullng 6--under.par 66 to as~
sume the third round lead In the tournament. Chas-ing Rogers, two shots back, Is Ed Flori. Four players
ar• grouped thrff strokes off the pace Including first round leader Don Pooley.
OTHER TELEVISION
10:(5 a.m. (34) -FUTIOL.
1:30 p.m. (2) -SPORTS SUNDAY -Brent Musburger-Is the host tor an update of the sports
scene. Todly's show features the French Grend Prix Formula One auto race t..,_ at Dijon, France.
3:30 p.m. W -SPORTS AFIELD -A fHture
about a Cu.,.n refugee who teaches lnner·clty
children hoW to flSh. Also: A visit to the wotlel duck
calllng c~mplonstilps and a look at a bush pllot's
rescu.mlsslon m.neuvers
4 p.m. W -SPOltTSWORLD -Ayub Kalule
(36-0)~the WBA Junior mlddltwefClht title holder{ m~t ar Ray Leonard (29-1) rn Houston las w .. k -• Atso • report on tr. Tour de France blcyclt rece and Survival of th9 FU.est. (7) -MHRICAN
IPOtlTIMAN -Actor P.ul Mkhaet Glatw fly tit-hes for tarpon Off the Florlda CDMt. Fonner Olympfc
pole vaulter Bob SMaren hang gltdel off a 10;000-toot
ctlff In Maul, Hawalf. A frGUP of kayaar.rs Jwmeys
to tne Hlm.tayas to CNll""" tM walltn of NttNl's A run Rlwr'. Curt Gowdy 11 tht "-l of the progr1m.
MlclnlOht (9) -l'L VINO l""TSMAll -Serles
host Eel Tabor visits Tahl~~ and Iota lora.
aAutO • ._.,,_sett L.Me Oty M ~,noon,
KMP,C (710).
(T~ O.lly P1let 11 Mii ft•IM .. 1 t1r .... ,......_, I
l
...
pulling even , then passed Gant as they sped
through the third turn.
"I KNEW JF I could pass him there and keep
my momentum going, there was no way he would
get by me before the end of the race.'' said
Yarborough, who also won this race in 1967 , 1968
~d 1976.
/ Yarborough said racing at Daytona, already
tough because of the high heat and humidity here
in J uly, was especially ditricult because the
downsized cars introduced th1a year on the Urand
National circuit still tend to be unstable in traffic.
'·I guess I worked as hard here today as I ever
have in a 400-mile race,·· he said, wearily.
Yarborough, who picked up bis second victory
of the season and 7lst of his NASCAR Grand Na·
tiona l career, piloted his Buick Regal across the
finish line just ahead of Gant. who never has won a
Grand National race and now has finished second
eight times, including five times this season.
RICHARD PETrY WAS third, less than one
second behind the winner. Buddy Baker took the
fourth spot and three-time Indianapolis 500 winner
Johnny Rutherford, who has been struggling with
his NASCAR erfort this season, finished a strong
fifth after outrunning rookie Tim Richmond and
Kyle Petty over the last 20 laps.
Richmond's engine blew going into the first
turn just four laps from the end, but he managed
to keep the car under control and continue. Of·
ficials chose not to drop a yellow flag, setting up
the dramatic finish.
Yarborough left Junior Johnson 's team, for
which he won three national championships, last
winter and joined the team operated by M.C. An·
derson to trim his racing schedule and spend more
time with his family and business interests .
He averaged 142.588 mph in the race. slowed
by six caution flags. The victory was worth about
$24 ,675.
There were 35 lead changes among 10 drivers
in the competitive race.
QOLPBRS
.... .,..... i. flle cemty. ....... _ ..... ..._ /
,,......_. ~~:;;;;irr
OOfl'I ml11 thi• 1pec1a1 Srino
thl• ad and receive two green
'feea tor t 10.00 ('weekday• only,
void weekend• & holldaya) .
• ,$10.00 ,:n:.~.
I
AYAUILI MY AT n9 Ill.OW
CMJ•OlllA OOLP LOCA,._
MrJ!llltr•Y ... .... ---, .. , ....... ...
·-... 1171.11 ... .,.. . -·"" (OWllt LM11M AYM.)
........ MJlll•
fare."
··Basically most or the women are out of school.
·'They are real strong and are capable or com·
peting with the best in the world," Ernst says.
Normally you have a bard time getting to this type
of competition in college. Some of the B team
members will be going back to school but the
percentage will be less than half of the group."
Like all other U.S. Olympians, the gir~ were dis·
appointed in 1980 that they didn't get to Moscow.
Among those in the camp who were members of
that 'fk> team are Pat Spratlen of San F rancisco;
Carol Bower of Manhattan Beach; Jean Flannigan
from Massachusetts; Kristi Norelius from Seattle;
and Anne Marden from Princeton, NJ. Carol
Brown, a member of the 1976 Olympic team, is
also on hand and hopeful or another Olympic
participation in '84.
"In fact, last year our team rowed against, and
beat East Germany and they went on to win the
Olympic gold medal in Moscow. I feel our pro-
gram has developed into one of the top three in the
world today along with the East Germans and
Russia."
Head coach of the women's team is Kris
Korzeniows ki with three assistants i11cluding
Ersnt. Ernst will be handling the fours team al the
world championships.
The girls participating in the camp were select-
ed from all parts of the U.S. through various tests.
Only the upper two percent made it ills far.
But right now, the participants are busily
engaged in a gruelling trainjng program. And
Ernst says they head for the jelly most mornings
in order to let the residents of Lido Island get in a
few extra winks of sleep.
They average between 5-11 and six feet in height
and weigh in the neighborhood of 160 pounds.
But if the water is calm, the air serene and the
mood strikes them just right. residents wilJ need
no alarm clock to awaken between 6 and 7 t hal
morning.
Washingt,on upset
at Henley Regatta
Cale Yarborough
Newport team
being formed
Jack Houston, former head
coach of the Orange County
Volleyball Club and assistant
coach or the 1980 women's junior
national team, is forming a new
women's volleyball group to be
known a s the Newport
Volleyball Club.
Girls between the ages or 11
and 15 from any part of Southern
California are being sought for
t he program. They will be
s elected according to the ir
potential contribution to the club
and will be judged on athletic
potentia l , attitude a nd
demonstrated volleyball skills.
For further infor mation ,
contact Houston at 646-1196
HE N LEY -ON -THAMES,
England CAP> -The University
of Washington rowing crew was
defeated by the British national
crew Saturday in the Grand
Challenge Cup -the premier
event of the Henley Royal
Regatta.
The British crew. under the
name of Leander and Tyrian,
defeate d t h e 1977 Grand
Challenge Cup winners by 2~
lengths and advanced to today's
final against the Oxford and
Thames Tradesman.
OXFORD AND Thames. COD·
querors of Yale University in the
quarterfinals Friday, defeated
the University of London in the
other semifinal.
Washington al m ost im·
mediately found itself a canvas
down against the British crew,
but by the half-mile m ark the
difference was 114 lengths. After
three-quarters of the 1,450-meter
course was completed down the
river Thames, the gap had
widened to l'h lengths .
"It was not until then that I
started to worry and thought we
might not catch them." said
Washington stroke Maurice
Felix. "We are stronger over the
second half of the course but
they kept rowing away."
Sai d Dick Erickson ,
Washington coach: "We caught
no crabs, made oo mistakes, and
were still rowing good and
strong at the mile . But we are
still in a state of shock at having
lost."
Three U.S crews, however,
reached lhe semifinals or the
Ladies Plate.
WAStnNGTON'S junior varsi-
ty heavyweights beat the Dutch
crew ASR Nereus by three-
quarlers of a length.
Washington must race twice
today to win, first against Trini·
ty College, Hartford. Conn.,
which beat Fitzwilliam College,
Ca mbridge, "easily," meaning
al least four lengths.
The other semifinal is between
Yale 's junior varsity
heavyweigh ts -who be at
Durham University, England.
by 2/14 lengths and are looking
for their third Ladies PlatP wins
and rival Trinity College,
Dublin.
DUBLIN, WHICH lost to Yale
in 198> and 1979, beat Williams
Co llege, Mass .. by one-half
length in the days's most com-
petitive race.
Meanwhile, Julia Geer. 27 .
and her sister, Charlotte. 23,
both from Vermont. became the
first women to row down the
Thames in the 142-yaear-old re-
gatta.
The sisters, winne rs of the
U.S. National pairs and fours
this year, took the Dartmouth
Rowing Club to a 3~·1ength win
over Outch opponents Sharon
Ceha and Nlkola Hellemans.
World Class Tennis
Returns to Orange County
Monday, July 6th at 7 pm
The Oranges will open their professional team tennis
season against superstar Martina Navratilova and the
L.A. Strings at the beautiful Los Caballeros Tennis Stadium.
See 6 great sets including mixed doubles from your
own box seat.
FfM ,..t culh#ons v•lwd •t $1.00 wlll be given to
~one •ttendlng the opening night of Jul'f ettt.
Plan a great night of tennis under the stars from your own
box ... Tickets start at $10.00. $5.00 discount coupons
available at 811 three Bank of Newport offices. Call 751-6779
now to reserve your seats. Tlcket office is open from
11 am to 8 pm dally and noon to 5 Saturday at Plaza del Lago,
17220 Newhope Street, Suite 122. Fountain Valley. Five
minutes north of the .05 Freeway.
1111OMMGD9CMmM.I
July 6 SMnga 7:00 pm
Juty 12 ~ e:oo pm
July 15 Fr1art 7'/XJ pm
Juty18 ~ 7:00pm
Jut( 19 ...... 1:00 pm
.My 29 F""' 1:00 pm
"'
SEGERSTROM
:.----.. -.._ ------------. -_.. -----...--.....--·..----.--
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Sunday, July 6, 1G81
,---------------------------~ ~--------------------
........ Opeft ........... ...~ •• ,. ... I ,.., ...........
JIM~ ,..,..,._..,I
JIM"-... Jl,Jt-411 0........., .. ,.,....,11 Ot'9e ,_.. ....,.,t-a11 i.e."..... ,..,,.,_,., CwUa....... ,,.,..._.II
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John McEnroe
Villains of tennis
Is the game moving to court anarchy?
By WILL GRIMSLEY
APIMClelCau S I
WIMBLEDON , England -Tennis, once
the sport of gentlemen. has become the brawling
pit for rebelllous ruffians. The culprits ln the
dramatic change of face : big money, player ar·
rogance and absence of Iron.fisted authority.
The game Is moving close to court anarchy.
Even staid, stuffy old Wimbledon has not been
able to escape the angry, unbridled tantrums of the
independent-minded "nouveau riche" of the pro-
fessional lour.
JOHN McENROE'S REPEATED outbursts
during the past two weeks, resulting in warnings·
and fmes not to mention disruption of play -
has only served to bring the troublesome issue into
sharper focus.
The volatiJe racket genius from New York City
is neither the first nor the worst.
There have been more objectionable villains in
the past -Ilie Nastase of Romania and American
Jimmy Connors, to be more specific -but
McEnroe's antics in this sacred cradle of the game
has aroused an escalation of demands that the
sport be returned to some form of sanity. .
The mushrooming of teen-age "Superbrats,"
emerging from the jungle of the junior circuit and
mimicking the most disgusting traits of Nastase .
Connors and McEnroe, has brought about some
somber reflection in the highest circles .
What has caused the problem? What can be
done to eradicate it quickly, now and forever?
"WE ARE VERY concerned about the
behavior of players in tournaments," said Earl
"Butch" Buchholz. former U.S. Davis Cup star
and now executive director or the Association of
Tennis Professionals. "It is getting worse and
worse.
"Actually, the players on the Men's Interna-
tional Professional Council (the highest authority
in the sport) keep trying to strengthen the
penalties against infractions. But the promoters
and the members of the ITF (International Tennis
Federation) are against it.
"They are a/raid that a quick disqualification
could knock a top star out of a tournament and
hurt the game. McEnroe is a prime example. No
one would think of expelling him since he is a main
attraction."
The Council, formed primarily to administer
the game and deal with violators of proper court
decorum. is a nine-man body composed of three
player representatives, three from promoter 's
ranks and three Crom the ITF.
A SPOKESMAN FOR the Council
acknowledged that there is a hesitancy to be too
harsh when the attraction ls threatened.
"Remember," said one high ITF member who
asked not to be identified, "you have TV commit-
ments and tickets sold to lhe fans. If you took
away a guy like McEnroe before he gained the
finals, there would be all heU to pay."
Most of the present problems have arisen
since the game went open ln 1988, ultimately pro-
ducing a horde of professionals earning up to the
$4 million a year accredited to superstars such as
Sweden's Bjorn Borg and McEnroe.
They are independent, with la~yers and
agents and an association which hat lhe clout to
pull its vast stable of players off the courts if one is
believed unjustifiably offended.
The players have all the power. The ITF, the
various national usociatioos and even the Council
are tissue·paper admlnistratora. When lhe players
bark, they jump.
THE PLAYERS HAVE become so powerful, in
fact. that they have forced inltitutiona such as
Wimbledon and the U.S . Open to admit
supervi.sors to oversee all faceta in the conduct of
the "tournament.
But there was turmoil ln the came even before
It went professional. Tennis playen always have
been a different breed of athlete -moet of them
prima donnu ln their white 1borta, pampered
from cbUdbood, wtlh a sen»e of self.importance
and arrogance once they have reached adulthoqd.
Overall -althouch it'• W\falr to paint them
with a broad brush -they have been the moet in·
• dividualistic and intractable d btl·time athletes.
ONE OF THE MOST demonstrative early
stars, according to Ted Tinllng, a famed dress de·
signer, was big Bill Tilden, who won seven U.S.
titles and three Wimbledons. Tilden was a
frustrated Shakespearean actor and took his his·
trionics onto the court with him.
"He could melt a linesman with a stare " Tin·
ling recalled. "He had various ways of prot~ting.
He would sit down. He would walk off the court . But he aJways came back.
"Tilden, like other players, would say profane
words to himself but never loud enough for the
fans to hear "
Tinting said that players can be individuals
without being offensive.
"I disapprove when the players contaminate
someone else's air space." he said. "It is a lack oC
·I f you took away a guy like
McEnroe before the finals . there
would be all hell to pay.'
respect. That's where I find fault with the modem players .
"THEY SHOULDN'T HOLD VP umpires and
lines men to public ridicule. l think it is awful and
should not be tolerated."
No one contaminated the air space more than
Nastase and Connors In the un0s. when they were
called the "Vulgarity Twins," stars of a maverick
tour run by Bill Riordan.
Connors, a street righter·type, not only was ob·
streperous. contentious and uncontrolJable, but he
was inclined to yell out loud profanities and make
vulgar gestures to the fans.
He and Nastase carried on continuing wars
wi th the establishment, linesmen, umpires, fans
and the press.
Connors, pampered by a doting mother and
grandmother , gained maturity after hls marriage
and the birth of his son. He became a gentler,
more considerate man and the fire that be spewed
out on the court was turned inward to improve his
game, as attested by his brilliant semifinal match
against Borg here Thursday.
NASTASE, UNFORTUNATELY, never
changed. He became coarser as the years in·
creased and his skills waned. He currently is un-
der suspension for hls wild antics in last year's
Davis Cup match against Britain and is ineligible
to play for Romania this year.
Nastase has been fined more than $60,000, de·
faulted in tournaments in England, Italy and the
United States (Palm Springs and Washington,
D.C. J and once drew a record $6,000 fine for "tank-
ing" -not trying -In a match again.st Manuel
Orantes in the Canadian Open final.
Earl Cochell, a talented player who was
ranked in the U.S. Top 10, was suspended in·
definitely for not making an attempt to return
balls in a match against Gard.oar Mulloy in the
U.S. Open in the early 1960s.
"We were a set apiece and I had two service
breaks in the third," Mulloy recalled. "Earl ap-
parently wanted to save bis enercy for the fourth
set. but be made it too obvious.
"AFrER BEING SET DOWN be refused to
write a letter of apology. M rar as I know, he
never· played a tournament acain."
Trigger·lempered but never vulcar, Dennis
Ralston, a Davis Cup captain, was set down for
five months a year later for objectionable deport·
ment in a Davls Cup match ln Cleveland.
Britain's Fred Perry, three-time Wimbledon
winner and by his own admission "the biggest re-
bel of my day," said that the problem Iles in the
tennis money explosion.
"All the guys live like kines." he said, "and
there's no one who can tell them what to do. They
are independent and arrogant.
"I think officiating Is terrible at Umes and
there is reason for complainta, but they abould not
carry these complaints to the extreme tbat
McEnroe doea. "But you can't derault him? You've 1ot all thia
moody tied up in a tournament. Who would pay the
bUls ?"
Rough debut for Vince 37,665 attend
baseball game VANCOUVER, Brtlllb Colwn·
bia <AP> -LarT)' Key ran for
three toucbdown1 and Joe
Paopao palled for two more aa
the Britith Colurnbla Lions
1polttd ~ Canadian Football
Leacue debut of Montreal'•
hlsb~orlced imports by bomblfts
tbe Alouettea, 41·1 ln lbe re· sula~aeuon opener at Emsitre
St~dlum.
Key a.cored oo runa of t, 5 IPd
I yards , wblle Paopao
threw .ie 1ardl to lobn Paakratl
·and H to Ricky Silla for
toucMlowna. Lul1 PHU~
added 18 polntt oa fov 1oall, ftve cc.venlom Md a ........
llCliltrMI qurterback VIia ,.~ ........ tne
a1ew't"'"-tM Lot Aa .... llamt of tl9il NaUoliaJ .........
l.Aape, Ud dlftlcalt1 WW. u..
cover11ea of the a11ruslve
Brlllab Columbia defense and
twice was Intercepted as lbe
Aloueuee turned the ball over
rour Umee .
Running back David
Overttreet. the first-round draft
cbolce of the Miami Dolphlna
from tbe Unlveralty of
Ql1Uah~a. wa• etrectlve at
UmH aDd acored Montreal's oa-
ly touchdown oa a four.yard nm
late tn the 1ame. Hll tumble,
how•vtr' led to lb• nm ol the
LlOftl' ftve touc.bdowu.
Gerry lllcGr1tb compllted tM
Montr .. 1 1corln1 wltb two ........
W .. Neel~• 8Uly Johnlon,
wlto left tbe NP'L'a Houaton
Oii.,.. caillbt three PAIMI rw
lloetl'MI, lncludiaa a •1arder
from rwraaaat0 earl' la UM ••mt.
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Jay Kib-
bee and Brian Buckl•f com·
blned to hurl a three·bltter
Saturday nl&ht u Redwood de-
feated Reno, 24 ln a Callfonla
Le••ueJ•me played before a crowd S'l ,815 at San Dteeo
Jack Ill~ Stadium.
Tht victor)' by lbe Plooeen
save t.IMm a 'i>Ut of lbe two-
1ame Mriet played betwMD UM
teams ln mator l•af\I• pub
over the w..tend. OD FrtdaJ
nlcht, before 1 crowd ol 1,508 It
Anabelm Stidham, Reno 10C>k 1
2·1 dedlloa.
SaturdaJ Dieht'1 1ame, wblcb w 11 roUowecf by a finworta
lhoW, took oalJ 1:5' to COIQplMe.
Alt••dl•• hDI nc•h•d cu11tlona, rree water•tloa
berore t.be ia .. IDd Uck.U tltat
Clft be tul\anj4"1 ror • ,,..
meal at 1 k>cal rwtaarut.
\
'Good Sports.'
to be musical
87 JAY 811A&llV1T
NEW YORK (AP) -Carol Hall and Susan
Rice are worldne on a new sporta musical for
neat seaaoa, "Good Sports." It doesn't bother
Uaem that three baseball muslcala aho are la
tbe works.
"I'd think they'd be more worried about
each other than us," says Mias Hall, tuneamith
for the bit musical now lo its fourth Broadway
year, "1be Best LltUe Whorehouse in Texas."
Their competitors·to·be are "The Flnt,"
about Jackie Robinson ; "A Whole New
Ballgame," about black baseball in the '40s,
and "1be Winner," about the Dodgers' move
from Brooklyn to Los Angeles.
"Good Sports" isn't confined to baseball,
says Miss Rice, who'll be ma.kine her Broadway
bow as author of the show's book. The musical
concerns various sports, features both male and
female athletes. And it notes changing attitudes
in today's sports world.
But love is the main event, specifically a
professional and romantic tussle between a
grinled sports columnist in his 40s and a tough,
lovely young lady who happens to be one of the
few women covering sports for TV.
"She's a beaulirul Howard Cosell," says
Miss Hall, a tiny, doe-eyed delegate from
Abilene, Texas, who bas worked on the show -
it's due here in December -with Miss Rice for
nearly three years.
She always wanted to write for Broadway.
She got there after some modest success as a
pop singer-composer and as a songwriter for ·
"Sesame Street" and Marlo Thomas' acclaimed
TV special, "Free To Be You and Me." She also
wrote two children's books.
Miss Rice, on the other hand, dldn't have
Broadway in mind after exiting Smith College
with a philosophy degree. She set out to be a
movie critic, did that, and then became a
screenwriter.
I Mel Brooks' "History of
The World" (R)
II "Nine To Five"
"Take This Job & Shove It"
"Allen" (R)
,,,...,.,.,..,__., . .....,.,. .... ,
NOW SHOWING
t:elTA •UA ·Cinema t1M141 ...... • Slld•um Dr-tn . aJIMno
NAllll • O<anoe Mall 637-0340 WllT-.TU • UA Cinema . 893-0S4&
NAllll • C11v Cinema · ~4911 •ATWiii AT ll9IT TIIUTIU
:Long<john8i}ver~·
Shrimp,
Ash~
'Chicken
Special
$2.99 Thru
Aug. I
Dig into a deUc:lous diMer. We give you two
tasty shrimp, our crispy fish fllld.
.vld a boneless whltemeat Chicken l'tank• , plut
fresh role slaw, crunchy hushpuppies and golden (ryes.
It's a fVe<ll meal at a special price!
. ·~'jdm~.
SEAFOOD SK>PPES
1"1 .......... ce. .... :.U. IOuttt of SM '*lit fllwv. Aaroll from Fedoo
•lft.W ..... A'fMte'
l
. ' . -----------.. ---.. ---------~----... --------------------~ -~ ---.. ; . . . . . . , ..
In the Dark Ages, Magic was a weapon.
Love was a myster}'
Adventure was everywhere •••
And Draaons were real
NOW PLAYING
llWIW OWMll IHll•UCI ~-T9111Ual EJ rwo &el &eeo
HUl'tillQIOn lluc:ll 84a•0318 ~
-_. PUIA 0.tf!Ot 63HZ~ Iha S4&-271 I •
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" .......... Orangt 6~HllO
-AY • 1111"4 Wlstm1"'1t< 19 I· 3693
• PAUii ICCltTU ,.,....•••mmn
Orange Coast DAILY J>tLOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981
,.
~~t.9~~···
~~~
u pu.t v.p w<tk. ~.
CLASH IS THE SUMMER'
NOWPUVING
• COIU MIU fOUllUll uun ---wtn••TP
••
Br111G1 foulll.lltl l/fi •t Or"'9f "' • H!Qhway 39 0.Nt tn WI 10• 8J9 1500 637 OJ•O f9l 3693
NOWPUYING
•IOllTll CGAIT U. .... PUU I Co5U lin.i ~g 4JS? 81u S?9 !1.339
OWUl'I UlllUUU •C--
fl l0to ~1 SU0 I 0<.tnQt 634 ?S~3
•l•IWAM"I C•llAWUT •--
Wtst"""SI" 891 393~ ·--
'IClflC"I IOWTll COAIT
lfVU .. 8e.Kn 49'·1SU ·~ .. it• lNICOtlt Ollft·llt But .. ,.,, 81• •010
A AICHAAD PAYOA Production · Ac>Oeft ClvltU.. · 0-ge Coe
RICHARD PRYOR · CICELY TYSON 1U1
A UNIVEASAL AEL.EASE ~
-___ _,.,
A MARTIN Bl£GMAN Production '"THE FOUi SEASONS"
AUN ALDA • CAlOL BURNETT • L£N CAIJOU
SANDY DENNIS • IJTA MORENO • JACK WESTON
BESS AIMSnONG • Wntten and Oirecttd by ALAN ALDA
Execut1vt Producer LOUIS f... STROLLER
Produced by MARTIN BREGMf..N • f.. UNIVERSAL PICTURE
09-... 111·-·
a.:,aNIV•AaAL aTUDIOa TOUlll ~No MCA COW..,.,•OOl•_, IOtlllfO CAU(11J>f'71Jll
''BEITER THAN
THE FIRST
MUPPET MOVIE!!"
-llt'.'< """· \. I. lhll/1 ,,.,,.
~· "Gl1ARANTEED
TO DELIGHT!.'
-A•l•lt'rtt < •rmll.
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l.010 CllADI .... .,. • JIM "l"'S0' FILM ""Tiil CHAT Ml"" C,"£1 ....,..._,, MAm\ STAICll _.,,. DA~ID UUI • flA\K 01
-.. ~TOM "'TCHm, JA\ TAISL~ -JIU\ Jt "L· JACa ion _, .... ,, .. "'""'°' --,.., .. J()l IAPOSO •<•.,.......,OSMLO \llOl.l.ISt •
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~~ ampml ::=-.=:.·::.-:. oo-.... ·~-0 L • '-"'..,.... :J _..,..._.,._,_____ • .__.....
--NOW SHOWING --
A.NAHllM
loge 772-6446
COITA MHA
tRVINI
Edward's Woodbridge Cinema 551-0655
Edword'a Cinema Center ORANGI
979-41~1 AAtC Orange Moll
IL TOttO Cinema 637-0:WO
Edword"s Soddleboci<
Cinema 581-5880
FOUNTAIN VALUY
ORAN el Poclflc'• Orange
Ot1ve-ln 558-7022
Edward's Fountain Volley ORANGI
Cinema 839-1500 · UA City Cinema 634-3911
WHTMINITll MALL UA Cinema 893-0546
MAllHHI DAllY Af MANY ll41ATIU
"IT IS THAT RARITY OF RARITIES,
A SEQUEL THAT READILY TE.LE
SURPASSES
THE ORIGINAL."
RICHARD SCHICKEL,
TIME MAGAZINE
---·-·-II ._r
BBIT·••·•m
GTNQI M.UlllTOI ~ Wf.IT•taTII Cyor• Cilleml Ft. StaO<um Olive 1• UA Ii•• ID-IMO ~7•7 1>39 1770 893 0!>46 u ,_ ..... .....
~k ~~;? ~~.c~1~·._. ·cu-.... r
I 11at'-9 D•lly •I llloel T"9•''" I
TWENTIETH GNTURY-FOX PRESENTS
MEL BROOKS' HISTORY Of THE 'M:>RLD PART I STAR.RING MEL BROOKS DOM OtwtSE MA0£UNE KAHN HARVEY KORMAN O.ORIS LEACHMAN · RON CAREY GRE~ HINE
PAMElA STEPHENSON SHECKY GREENE SIO CAESAR INTl()()U(ING MARY·MARGARH HUME.S
NARRATED BY ORSON WUUS WRITTEN PRODUCED ANO DIRECTED BY MEL BROOKS ~BY JOHN MORRIS
Sl'ECJAl VISUAL EFFECTS BY Al.BERT l WHITLOCX
FILMED IN PANAVISION • COlOR BY 0£lUXE •
RESTRJCTED o
····-····-· ····llC-1111 ...... •••-·-·1w•~ TANYA TUCKER_. ................ _ .............. _ ........... ~-•111r...~•• ......... ,.. ........... ______ .... ... HOT!
Siu/Inf, sultry, soulful slnfin' from country to hard roe#< -r.nya TtJcl<er brings the house down st the Roxy
In t..A. Greb the best seats In your house for this hot
HOT TICKET,. ~rformance on SHOWTIME, the total
entertainment networlc, 24-houra·a·day, every day .
·-_,, :_·
I
f t
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July 5. 1981
11 JEaay BUCJ[
LOS ANGELES (AP> -There's more to Ted ~ange than just tending bar aboard ABC's "The
Love Boat," although he claims be can mlx a
Olean martini.
Lanie plays
barte nder J s aac
Washington ln the fiuffy
TV tales or romance
afloat. But beyond that be i i a dedicated
playwright and direc·
tor. His orfglnal rock
musi c al , "Born a
Unicorn," the story of
the fir st bla c k
Sh a kes pearean actor,
opens this week.
"1 lov e th e
theater," he says. "It's
so m arvelous. It's so
raw. It's wonderful to
see it survive."
Lange, who pre-
viously produced a n
original production or "Ha mlet" and a black
version of "The Odd Couple," is now doing a rock
musical on the life of black actor Ira Aldridge.
·'He went to England in the 18305 and they
wouldn't let him play 'Othello,' " says Lange.
"They said 'It's all well and good, but we don't
think blacks should play blacks.'
"They did let him play slaves. And he did play
'Othello' in the London ghetto, the poor area with
all the pickpockets. He became the fi rst black man
to play 'Othello.·
"I love doing Shakespeare," Lange says. "One •
r~ason is I love it when English actors are bad.
l'bat's why I do other Shakespeare besides
•Othello' and direct Shakespeare.
''English actors say to me, ·r say, old fellow,
you're a bartender .· l say, I've done Shakespeare,
and they say. ·Othello.,· I say, no,' Romeo and Juliet'
That gets them."
Lange grins broadly and adds, "there's
nothing worse tha n an English act-0r in a bad
American movie."
Charles Weldon sta rs in "Born a Unicorn,"
which is at the Center . Damita J o Freeman is
choreographer, and Phyllis St. James and Beverly
Bremers wrote the music and lyrics.
Lange recites the legend of the unicorn to ex-
plain his title. He says, "A unicorn cannot be cap-
tured ali ve. IC you want a unicorn, you have to kill
it. In its horn is a magical power. A unicorn will
lay its head inthe lap of a virgin and goto sleep.
"My play is about a black guy from New York
an the 1830s who thinks he can go to England and
become a famous actor . He bad to believe he was
a special person. He had to have the power of a un-
icorn And it is a wom an who does capture hi m ."
Lange, along with the rest of "The Love Boat"
<:rew, is just back from Australia and the Fiji
Isla nds. They spent five weeks filming two two.
hour specials.
As bartender aboard "The Love Boat," Lange
serves a lot of drinks -but none with alcohol
He smi les and says, "Actors have a hard
enough lime remembering their lines . It's just col·
ored water . Every once in a while I get to fool
around and make up a concoction with lots or col·
ors ."
That doesn't mean he doesn't know his way
a round a bar. Before assuming his role he took a
complete course at a bartenders school .
Lange also studied directing at the American
Film Institute, where he directed a short film. And
he's written several .. Love Boat" stories that have
already been on the air.
·~=a
OM.T h ...... Le,1-.-.1eo•
"DAAOON·
SLAYER"
.... , ,..,_ ...........
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Holywood btj_ - - -\
et Its funniest
and sexiest ~~
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People all along Dll.IJ Pl.Ill the Orange Coast rely on the 642-4321
Burt Reynolds · Roger Moore
Farrah Fawcett • Dom DeLuise
•
n vOIOEIOIAllVESf PRlSlNIS AN AIB(RI ' Ruuor PRl/0111 (!(}tr. A HAI N!FOHAM fl(M ''THE CANNONBAU RIJN ..
ftM' "'I DEAN MAHTIN ·SAMMY DAVIS. JR · ADRIENNE BARBEAU JAMIE FARR
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•, A.[lfP' H· t It 11rrbr8R1J ~ YAllS {J1tc1edb1 HA, N!lUHAM
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I RICHARD PR YOR In
BUSTIN' LOOK (R ) ChH Ch .. CPlonv'• N•xt
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JOHN BOORMAN'$ £XCAU9Ult (R)and HAPPV B IRTHDAY TO
M!: (RI
BILL. M URAAV In
STltlfl&S (R) Allo WHOLLY MOSES
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;)nw·IDI Open a 00 PM
WMkd41yi/Wffkend• 1 30 Undu 12 ~ ... Uni•" Noted
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Mf\A ~::~~-(~~\/'~:'~~~~MIU 979-4, 41
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ALAN ALDA• CAROL BURNEIT . ~ffourSea~
DA&f 1: .. -L•.eota.1-
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"HERBIE GOES
BA NAHAS"
ROGER MOORE ..
JAMES BOND 007~
FOR YOUR EYES ONLY
~PG]~.~....._. ....................
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( Mall,_• Delly 11 Moel ThHltM I
•BARGAIN MATINEES •
Monday thru Saturday
All Perlormancu before S:OO PM
(Exttpt Special Eng1g1ments 1nd Hohd1ys)
I.JI MIRAO" MAll
LA MIRADA WALIC·IN
o M 11oao 01 tot.et10"'•
994·2400
.-....-.. ... '"""Mfte CLASH OF THE
TITANS" (PG)
·~· ... ~--~ --~ .. ...-eoe..,.
'FOR YOUR
EYES ONLY" IPQ) ••l=•t::••••'•
---~ ................
RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" IPG) , ..... :m.-.:"~
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALIC·IN
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C•"l '' sou .. o C•ltit.i Jt \OVflt\)
BUI NA PA Ilk
BUENA PARK DRIVE IN
lf~Olt\ ••• W•tf Of l nott
121·4070
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FOUNTAIN VALLEY
OlllVf·IN
.. ....,.. .... ~ .
MEL BllOOKS' HISTOllY 0 ,
THI WOflLO ll'ART I" CRI -THE f'IN"L CON,LICT' 1111
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CLAI H 0 , THE TITANS" ~ CANNONaAU RUN" (N J ..... ....
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FINAL COUNTDOWN" IPO)
.................... ™.
IWOPS OF ntE LOST AR•··
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ORANGE DRIVE IN
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L.M. Boyd informs
1
in the llllJ Pillt
.. ----""""'!:-______ ...._._.. ....... , -"--· . ----------. ----........ ·---_______ .,.. ________________ _
urs
By SANDIE JOY
Of .. .,.., ..........
Kven though the only fur you
might be thinking about these
days is on Lassie or Morris,
fashion houses have more exotic
furs on their minds.
Mink and sabl4' and fox and
lynx. Persian lamb, sable,
beaver and chinchilla.
All these natural furs were
paraded before an appreciative
audience of fashion editors at
Neiman-Marcus' recent showing
of its fall furs at New York
City's posh Metropolitan Club.
Capes, long and short, in
American lynx, chinchilla and
Russian sable, were featured
among designs created by Jerry
Sorbara, who has just signed a
contract to design exclusively
for Neiman-Marcus.
Sorbara, originally from Italy,
has been designing furs for fine
stores in the United States for
more tha n 20 years and has
worked closely with N·M for
more than a decade translating
•
The more they cost,
the quicker the sale
\
designs from such noted interna-
tional names as Karl Lagerfeld,
Basile and Georgio Armanl.
The multi-market nature of N-
M ' s 14-~tore system poses
special challenges for a fur de-
signer , said N-M Senior Vice
President David Wolfe, who in·
dicated Sorbara is highly
qualifi ed for the challenge, bav·
ing a good understanding of UM
diversity in the coast-to·cout
market.
Sorbara's philosophy ls k> ~
the highest quality, sty I~ and
craftsmanship. His collection is
composed primarily of natural
furs with t he inclusion of
Swakara.
If the reaction of fashion
editors to the showing of a 67·
piece collection is any indica-
tion , N·M's new r elationship
with Sorbar a is off to a
smashing start.
There were ooh's and aah's
and plenty of spontaneous ap-
plause as models paraded the
runway in luxurious fur after
luxurious fur.
The show began with a natural
Kalahari beige Swakar a coat.
Kalahari beige ls a creamy
blond.
Following closely behind was
a natural beige Swakara cape
with sable tails, a natural Cana-
dian red fox cape with tails and
a smashing natural Bassarisk
poncho with bassarisk tails worn
over gold shorts.
Tbe street-length coat is the
dominant look for Sorbara's fall
collection, with heavy emphasis
on the full , grand-entrance-style.
Very dramatic.
New details include controlled
volume with shaping toward the
front of the body.
Also shown were smaller col·
lars, more sleeve interest and
shoulder emphasis.
The combination of two furs in
imaginative styling such as tux·
edo fronts in coats and jackets
provides an unlimited opportuni·
ty for expression.
<See EXPENSIVE, Page 88)
Drawing spontaneous
applause fr om fashion
writers was this
dramatic natural
bauarisk shawl with
ba..tsamk tails.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July S, 1981
Sheer luxury is this natural Persian lamb coat with black dyed beaver insets.
Keeping your 1
' fur beautiful ·
Fur ls an investment. ;
To avoid depreciation. lnvestmen~ need care:
If you're the owner of a rur or about to become
one -whether it be a jacket, a wrap or a OowiJii
"look-out-world-here-I-come" cape or coat +
knowledge and use of the basics of fur care la a
mud . •
Heat -a not uncommon commodity alon1 Ulla
Orange Coast -counts among the greatest tbr..O
to a fur's longevity.
Heat can damage a fur because it dries out UM
leather underneath all that lush fur, says Maurice
de La Valette, vice president of Revillon, U.
French firm that reputedly is the lar1eat Md
oldest fur company ln the world. •
When the leather dries out, he explala.t. it
becomes brittJe and the pelts lose their aupple'-'I
and begin to shed.
Fur can lose its shape if the leather la allowd
to stiffen and shrink.
"PosltJvely the worst lblnt you can do la to al·
low your fur coat to bani in a bot clotet all ....
mer loot," says de La Vallette.
· At Revillon, which reta1ls some of lta fun at
Saks Ftfth Avenu~. de La Vallette says proper can
means havlnt a fur cleaned and mended at the llld
of every season, then atortna It ln a cool, cUma&e·
controlled vault untU It's Ume to wear It.
Unprotected, a fur wtU,colied dust and "'1
particles, even ln a cl0tet.
• Then, of coune, there's the acour,. of e..-y
closet: moths. Tbey rtnd fun every bit u appetb·
Loa as woolen.a, he aaya.
"There la a common mlaCooceptioa," 1ays de
La V alett.e, "that cleanin1 harms flar coata. 1 ddM
this comes from the hanb treatment clotbe9 ,.
celve at the dry cleanera.
"With f\an," be says, "cleantna la -...Ull to
the health al the coat. I\ actually rwtone ant re-
vivea It ID every way." o
<See TIPS, Pace 91)
I
-,.--·------------_, ___ . -..
Orange Coast DAIL. Y PILOT/Sundfy, July 5. 1981
··: ~icktockers get Merci Award ·
· Judges celebrate after taking oath of office
By MAJlV JANE SCARCELLO
O( ... o.My ..........
T he Newport Chapter of the NaUonal
Charity League is bunting with pride at
the accomplishments or the youn1er
generation.
The Ticktockers, youn1 women ln 1rades
seven through 12, have served volunteer hours
in the Ticktocker Thrift Shop and the Golden·
Umers Senior Citizens Center In Costa Mesa as
well as working with tbe American Cancer
Society, Hoag Hospital Candystripers, High
HAPPENINGS
Hopes Recover y Group, Youth .l!:mployment
Service, Newport Beach Public Libraries and
decorating a float for the Rose Parade in
Pasadena.
Two local Ticktockers .• Joan Liechty and
K arin Leckie, were cited for the league's
highest honor, the Merci Award.
According to league President Dianne
Starnes. it's the first time in the 21·year history
or the group that two girls have earned the
tribute.
Joan is president of her Ticktockers group
and a freshman at Corona del Mar High, and
Karin is a junior at Newport Harbor High.
Three o ther girls were awarded gold
m edallions for working more than the required
hours for membership. They are Lori Gustafson
and C)lnthia Stoughton of Corona del Mar High
und Jana Liechty of Lincoln Middle School.
Nancy Ferda, Tlcktocker patroneaa, alao re·
cognlied group members who exceded their re·
quirements. They include Brooke Stanley, Jane
Van Steen Huyse, Kim Akin, Janet Blelen, Mol·
ly McGrath, Megan Tingler, Heidi Freundt,
Julie Ho ward, Leslie Van Dell, Cynthia
Adkinson, Linda Burge, Lisa McManigal,
Carolyn Haddox, Melinda Lee, Leslie Flamsen
and Julie Shoffner.
I t was all quite legal when Judges
Pblllip Petty and Thomas Crosby were
sworn Into office in Department Three
of Superior Court in Santa Ana.
Supervilor Thomas Riley adminhtered the
oath to Judge Petty, and JOO.e Edward Wallin
performed the ceremony for Judie Crosby.
After the technicalities, everyone a~ourned
to the courtyard in Bowers Museum for a recep-
tion Wlth an early California theme .
Strolling mariachi musician& entertained as
guests enjoyed a fiesta buffet provided by
Chiappes or Costa Mesa. and featurin8
enchiladas, chill (both verde and Colorado>.
guacamole and sombreros filled with fresh fruit
arrangements.
Notortes were served for desseri by the
three hostesses, J oan Petty, Patricia Erwig and
Kathy Bonner.
Judge Petty moonlights as a public address
a nnouncer for the California Angels. so guests
from the world of strik'es and homeruns in·
eluded Tom Seeberg, George Goodale, Jack
No kids, and don't want any
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 3S years old. My
husband is 27. He has three cruldren by a previous
marriage ages 3. 5 and 7.
I made it plain when we married that I was not
going to comply with his divorce decree that said
the kids were to be here every other weekend. I
111 lAIDfRS
I
don't have any children. and I don't want any.
Eve n good ones are a pain in the neck -always
spilling something. wanting something or fighting.
I have disliked children since I was a teen·ager.
Only recently have I had the courage to let it be
known. What did I get? Kids dumped on me for the
weekend or for "an hour" which sometimes
meant until the next day. Now that I have decided
to be outspoken and rude if necessary. I get a lot of
static from my mother·in·law.
My first hus band had two kids. ages S and 7.
That marriage lasted seven months. I was down to
83 pounds. My doctor said I was not cut out to be a
mother and to quit trying. So. how can I get this
across to my husband's family?
-HAD IT WITH BRATS
Dear Had It: From the way you write I can't Im·
• • • Expensive f ors
(From Page87)
The capes and ponchos drew plenty of positive
attention as did three wonderful Russian broadtail
suits with natural sable. one in natural grey,
another dyed black and a third in natural brown.
Of special interest was a blouson fur jacket for
a sporty look. done in white mink and gathered in
sort ripples from its.smooth yoke.
Prices for furs shown in the 67·piece collection
range from $4,000 to more than $100,000
aglne you having uy trouble getting anything
across to anybody.
Why did you marry a man who was oblJgated by
law to take bJa three children every other week
when you bate to have tbem aroaad? You walked
Into this meas wltb your eyes wide opea -for the
second lime. Sorry I can't be supportive, but I 1ee
nothing bot trouble ahead.
. . . Tips on furs
(From Page 87)
At the end or a season, a fur has collected
particles or dust and dirt that have worked their
way between the hairs , he explains. There might
be matted spots, and the fur might have become
somewhat flattened from being sat on or crushed
in the closet.
The cleaning technique addresses all these
ills. he contends. The fur is placed in a drum filled
with a mixture of sawdust and a specially blended
cleaning solvent. As it spins, the sawdust wor~s its
way deep into the pelts, removing the soil. At the
same time, the spinning fluffs the fur up to its
original thickness. The coat is shaken out and then
glazed misted and ironed (NEVER do this
yourself) and, it should loot like new.
Other pointers for keeping your fur beautiful
are offered by de La Valette:
-Hang a fur on a broad·shouldered hanger
and give it plenty or breathing space all the way
around .
Never put a plastic cover over a fur. Use a
fabric garment bag to allow the coat to breathe.
-If your coat has a collar, flip it up when it's
in the closet. This way, the fur underneath won't
become flattened
-Watc h out for fabric on some car seats
whic h can pull out hairs . You might consider re·
moving your fur for long trips.
"A fur coat is one of the most expensive and
luxurious things a woman ever will own," says de
La Valette. "It's only right to treat it that way."
-SANDIE JOY
Taurus: Your einotions cloud logic
Monday, .July 6, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
&RIF.S <March 2l·April 19): Moderate pace
should be advocated. Accent on steady approach,
defining duties, reaching greater understanding
with dependents.
TAURUS (April 2<>-May 20): Emotions cloud
lol{ic: you tend to see people as you wish they
HOROSCOPE
could be rather than the way they actually exist.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Change of P.ace
dominates scenario. You have added responsabili·
ty. chance to acquire property and ability to focus
on long·range potential. CANCER <June 2l·July 22): Ideas currently
submitted will pay dividends in future . Know it.
finish what you start, aim at advertising campaign
which opens lines of communication.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Imprint style, strive
for added independence, invest in your own unique
abilities. Meeting with member of opposite sex ~ould prove to be the start of "something big."
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Intuitive intellect
JTOVides "flasti" answers. Sense of direction
~comes major objective.
LIBRA (Sept. ~·Oct. 22): You could be invited
to Joln celebration staged by special group, club,
or11nization. You'll go places and meet intere.Ung
people.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Wish is fulfilled if
you are willing to "dismanUe" for purpose of re·
building on a more solid structure.
SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Written
material aids in obtaining needed material, get·
ting promotion and elevating standing in com-
munity. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Travel,
domestic adjustment, long.range plans and a new
understanding of "spiritual principles" comes into
focus .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Delve deep, get
beneath surface lndications. Rare opportunity ex·
ists fory_ou to "locate" truth.
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Unorthodox pro·
cedures are most likely to succeed. Relationships
are clarified, interest in your efforts muJtipUes.
Karin Leckie (from left;. Joan Liechty, Cynthia Stoughton, Lori Gustafson and Jona Liechty.
Brittain and John Ramsey.
Other guests were Newport Beach Mayor
J ackie Heather, Paul and Carrie Slayback,
Ruth Kahn, Joy Harper, Gary and Bobby Lov·
ell, June Adams, Tom and Holly Henderson,
Bob and Tricia Harrigan, Jack and Joyce
Starner, Jim and Gwen Felt.on, Roger and Jerri
West and Gary and Sue Schaar.
Celebrants from the legal world Included
District Attorney Cecil Hicks, Public Defender
Ron Butler. attorneys Sam Barnes. Marshall
Schulman, Dick Bonner and Jerrold Bloch.
Judges 1n attendance included Sheila
Sonenshine, Alicemarie Stotler , Betty Lou
Lamoreau. Bruce Summer, Tam Namura and
Luis Cardenas.
January's
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RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
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COSTA MISA-141-1 IH
• R
THE REGISTRY HOTEL
BRIDAL FAIR
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 1981
DOORS OPEN .. 12:30 P .M .
BRIDAL ENCHANTMENT
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Begins ot 2:00 P .M.
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-
-
Daily Pilat
SUNOAY,JULY 5, 1981
STOCKS
REAL ESTATE
CLASSIFIED
C3-4
C6
C7-12
•
Home mortgage lenders
raise rates to avoid
making loans ... C6
llines Nurseries a groWIDg concern
Electronics whiz digs
in as new president
By MARY JANE SCA.RCELLO
Of ... Oelly ..........
You don't have to be born with a green thumb
in your mouth to run a successful plant nursery.
"When I first came into this business, I didn't
know a camellia from an azalea," said Cecil!
Shirar, who just stepped down as president of
Irvine-based Hines Wholesale Nurseries.
He came to the company in 1958 after 10 years
in the construction business in Pasadena.
His successor is John Rohrer, 37. a Corona del
Mar resident who received an MBA from Stanford
10 years ago and worked for Memorex in Northern
California before joining Hines as executive vice
president last year.
·'The nursery was a real change from elec-
tronics. but the information rubs orr rast, .. he said. ··u was more important for Cecil to learn the de-
tails because the company was smaller then." •
Shirar agreed. "We all wore smaller hats in
those days ...
Hines began as a famiJy business 60 years ago
and was sold to Weyerhaeuser, a Tacoma, Wash.·
based forest products company, in 1976 because no
EXECUTIVE PROFILE
one in the family's younger generation wanted to join
the business and ''Weyerhaeuser made us an offer
we couJdn 't refuse,·' according to Shirar.
His late father-in-law, James Hines Sr., spread
the company to separate locations in Altadena,
Pasadena and San Gabriel. ......, ........... ,... .., .. Mrtcll O'.,_.
Some are sold right away. Rohrer said, and
others are kept toseU later as larger plants.
Machines, used to mix the rooting soil and fill
bins.Ji were well received by employees. accord.101
to Hohrer, and eliminated many of the back-
breaking, time-consuming jobs at the nuraery.
"It's an example or our opportunities for
future efficiency." he noted in a lour of the
facility.
Driving past rows and rows or "shade houaes"
filled with ferns. camellias aqd other delicate
plants, he sajd. "Basically, we just reed, water
and keep out diseases so the plant can do its own
thing."
(Hines uses about 3 million gallons or water on
an average summer day. 50,000 gallons of it
purified for use in the propagation department.)
In spite of his simplification, the business la
more complicated than s tanding around watchln1
plants grow.
"Planning is a challenge," he admitted. "We
have to keep the crops coming along so we'll have
something to sell. It's a factory with a living pro-
duct, so it requires attention and quick decisions."
Pointing to a field or greenery, he said, "Thia
is next year's crop. Some plants are here as lon1
as four or five years. and we have lo utilize our
space, find the right product mix and plant
varieties."
Far removed from the dirt and tractors, a
computer room in the offi ce helps track crops and
assists inside sales personnel with instant records
of what's in stock and what's on order.
"We're highly computerized." Rohrer said,
"and it's not just for payrolls."
Indicating the shipping department, he said,
·'This is the hub or our whole operation. In the spr-
ingtime, it's madness around here."
Shirar, busy with his own Pasadena construc-
tion business, was reluctant to join the company
until a 1957 sales lour changed his mind. ·
Retiring Cecil Shirar, Le~. will be replaced at the helm of Hines Wholeaale Nurseries by John Rohrer.
The California market stays more conai.stent,
he said , but Hines ships as far away u New
England and Canada, where seasonal demanda
fluctuate wildly.
'Out-of-stale orders are sent by refrigerated
trucks, so two separate loading docks serve the
Irvine facility -one Jor Hines' trucks and another
for common carriers. "I went to Texas with a salesman, .. he re-
called. "and I was· impressed with our reception.
Plant products were easy to sell, and everyone
listened to what we had to say.
"l could see a great potential."
His prediction was correct. "Our sales have
increased 70 times since 1957," he noted with
pride, although he declined to give out saJes
figures. An informal estimate, however, is that
Hines produces about $40,000 per acre. per year,
which would translate into an annual harvest or
around$32million.
Shirar joined the company in 1958. first as an
employee and then as part owner after buying a third
or the company when he moved to Newport Beach in
1960. (The other two-thirds were owned by bis
brother-in-law, James Hines Jr. and hia father·in-
law, who remained active in the company until his
death in 1967. Shirar took charge when Hine• was
sold).
The operation moved to its lrvine location in
1958. leasing 420 acres in the agricultural preserve
of the Irvine Ranch near the El Toro Marine Base.
And although land values have skyrocketed in
the 20-plus years since then and homes have
replaced the surrounding orange groves, the ex-
e cutives aren't worried about being forced out
soon.
"We had a good lease to start with," Shirar
said, "and we'll stay agricultural land as long
as El Toro remains because of the noise it
generates.''
The location is one or three now operated by
the company. with recent additions of 200 acres
near Houston and a 168-acre plot in Northern
California near Vacaville.
All were chosen for their good climates,
although Shirar remembers one ''black frost" on
Nov. 11 of the first year in Irvine which lert the
plants blackened and dead the next morning.
In recent years, the worst weather problems
have been the hot, dry Santa Ana winds.
"When that happena, we Just turn on the
sprinklen and let the wind blow the water over lhe
plants," Rohrer said.
AU together. Hines acreage is more than a
square mile, and the Irvine headquarters alone looks
large enough to qualify for membership in NATO.
Neat rows or plants tended by workers with
tractors s tretch as far as the eye can see -the on-
ly difference from "lost farms being that each
plant is neatly contained in a black plastic can.
But visitors comin1 past the guara at the gate
find more than just a farming operation.
"Actually , we're in the truck1ng business,"
Shirar said with a laugh. "We make aU deliveries
within California with our own trucks, and most
'fexasdeliveries are ours. too."
Including all three facilities, the company
owns 70 trailers and 30 tractors.
A vehicle maintenance sbop keeps them roll·
ing, and an adjoining fabrication shop creates
items the company needs but can't buy.
More inside operations include the propaga-
tion department, where plant cuttings are
trimmed. sprayed with a hormone and put in a
s pecial soil to take root.
Arter root growth is generated, the small
plants are put into different soil mixes according
to variety.
Rohrer plans to spend time on the road, too,
overseeing the three Hines locations and his 1,000
employees, including 29s alesmen. ·
"The business is more of a management
challenge now, and it's important for me to
meet the customers so r can understand tbe
marketplace," he said.
"Changes in housmg will affect us because
smaller lots and condominiums are becoming
more popular than large family homes.
"And freight is expensive. We'll have to rind
ways to serve the market more efficiently."
Rohrer looked at his modern office building
set in the middle of the farming scene.
"The other part of the challenge is followin1
Cecil Sb.lrar,'' he said. "He's well known and well
thought of in the induatry.
·'The company has grown so fast that I'U have
to maintain very much of a hand5-on style in run-
ning things. I never expect to spend much time sit-
ting in my office.··
Judging the judges on conflict of interest
At the Supreme Court level,
disqualification can change outcome
EDJTOR'SNOTE-Judgesarere-
quired to disqualify themselves from
caaes in winch they hold a financial
interest. Can such a cWqualification
itself affect the justice dUpensed? If
juaticedelayedcan be jwticedenied,
what about jwtice di.Tpensed by a di/·
ferentjudgeorby/~judges?
By RICHARD CAR ELLI ....... .., ...........
W ASIDNGTON -When a con-
flict of interest forces a judge lo
step out of a case. justice moet
often is only inconvenienced.
But at the Supreme Court such a
disqualification -not rare these
days -may change the justice
dispensed.
No one is telling the nation's
courts to curb the number or
times their members must slt
out. The focus in recent yean in·
stead has been on makina sure a
judge who has a stake in the out-
come of a case does not help de·
cide it or preside over It.
But when the controversy
reaches the nation's highest
court. a disqualification always
changes the makeup of tile
forum -and possible the out·
come. Last March 9, the Supreme
Court cleared the way for a
patent to be inued for an inven·
lion that directs t.be tranarer ot
data within a computer. The
vole wu4-4.
As wtt.b all such vote aplltl
when one of tlfe court's nine
memben sits out, the dedtkm
"Waa announced in the tradiUonal •
one-sentence optnton: "The
Judcment la afllrmed by an
equally dJvlded court.''
A nal1nc by tbt U.S. Court ol
Customs an.d Patent Appeal•
that the petet lbould be crant-
9" WU upbeld.
Such ,_, amrmanc11 are
The March 9 decision waa a
legal and potentially lucrative
victory for Honeywell Informa-
tion Systems lnc., a subsidiary
of Honeywell Inc., whose scien-
tists applied for the patent.
The ruling means anyone who
makes, sells or uses the inven-
tion in the mu.shroomina field of
computer technology for the
next 17 years will have to pay
Honeywell .
Chie f Justice Warren E .
Burger did not participate in the
case. He did not explain why ,
but Burger owns rrom $15,000 to
$50,000 worth of Honeywell Inc.
stock.
It is possible that the issue
may some day return to the b.lgh
court with some other company
involved. Would the chief justice
then be free to participate. The
answer depends on whom you
ask.
Burger might find it
necessary, because Honeywell
would have a very real financial
stake in the outcome of t.bat
future case, to sit out once
again.
If 10, the March 9 rullnl bu
set a practical precedent -UD·
less one of the eiaht otber-
justlces changes hia mind or a
chan1e In the court'• mem-
bership occurs.
Would t.be March 9 result have
been the same tf the chief Justice
had partici,pated, unencumbered
by Honeywell's presence in tbe
cate? Only Burier blows. But It
i1 posalble the Justice d11f*MM'd
in tbu cue by an el&hl·member
Supreme Court dlff ered from
tbat ol a nine-member Supreme
Court.
.. .. In the Honeywell case , it's possible justice disperued by eight justices, differed from that of a nine-member Supreme Court.
Cellulite remedi.es lack AMA support
81 PATOONN .................
"You don'l tlave to be over·
wel1bt to have celJultte,"
warns tbe advertisement.
"Try tbe ceU...Ute pinch teat.
No matter ~thin you are,
tboee uaJy ~.-woa't IO
away."
thou depo1lt1 of fat on
women's tbllht and buttocb
that Hem to real.It diet ad
uerclle.
Cellulite came to
America'• atteotloo w1Ua tbe
publication of "Cellulile: ·
Tboae Lumpe, Bumpa ADCI
Bulca You Cou.ldD't IAM
eare, lncludln1 cellulite
tHatment.
FollowtQI tb1I boolt't IUC·
cua (200,000 hardcover
copi .. sold), other books and
art.lei• aooo appea~ and
the mld-lt'f01 aaw many
"£uropean·1tyltd'' cellulite
treatmeet talaae. >
aupplemeota wtt.h berb9, ta·
erclae books, bath Uquldl1 ma11a1era , rubberlua
pants, brulbea, rollen ud
tonln• totJ_ooa.
Allhoqh these mall-order
Items can e.1Uy demolllb a
S2IO bill their coet pa1-lD
compartlOll with salon treat·
1'automaUc," and t.be COD••·
tlonal wladom amon1 1•1•1
aebolan and obHnen ol tbt
1taUon'1 blC!Mlt court HJ• auela
decl1kJDI an not road mape to
future law. 1'lllty are not .-lnNd
u cirrytq the wet1bt ol 1..-i
precedlal
A Helton of the Code of
Judlclal Coaduct, u revamped
bJ a team of letal acholan lD
1172, at.ates: "A Judse lbould d.llqualify bimtell lo a proeeed· lnf ln which hit lmpartlallU'
m sht reasonably bi qu11·
Uoned.''
CONSUMER CLOSE UP
Adi for mall-ord• prod-
uc:ts to buLlb ce1Jullt4 atW
appeU' ln 1ucb pubUu'4oa1
u "Colmopolltan." A.moq
product.a ~ U IW. nre retnedl9I are ··tootab"
1pon111, cactus fl b•r
waahclotbl, bol'Mbalr m.tua,
cr•ama that "dl11olve" eelluUte, •ltamln·mlner•l
menu. °'ar.., from •·• for nve vllltl ~ to tm
for 10 to l2 vblta are not ...
common.
z ....... t.b• "l•1al,'' DOt ...............
Tb• code UIU one lroaad for
dltquaW\c.UC. ., a "ftnaDdal
lnhrett bowever small."
Coalr91 tlDee bu mllde ll a
C .. lllDG-PapCZ) .
11Ctlhallte•• (pronounced
ceU·U·a.l) II a tenD ~
la Suropea l&loae ud 1P11
l.D tM Ml'ly llOOI to dMcrtbe
.
Before," b1. Nlcol• R.oaaant,
t.be rr.ch ""*' ol a beaut7 aalon ln New Yorll Clt7
•P9dallliDI ia um uct bodJ
•
Salon vl11tor1 ma1 flad
themaelna hooked up to
•l•ctrlc1I maacle
allmulatora, vlbratta1
macbinee, wblrllH>Ol baU., CIMCa.LULnC.?.,.a>
ii
,. ' 'f
~E~[~1LI1E ::::::::T,:•:Y~:·:~DI CA L SU PPORT ... .. loflatable blp·biCb prel'-~urlled boots, tubea that.
shoot streams of warm air
·tand other gadgets.
.,.. Some salons offer ;:f "hormooe" or "enayme" ln·
If" jectlooa, thermal treatments ;i with warm wax or beating
~pads or vitamln·mineral aup-"J> le me o ts . Mas1a1e it
, .. particularly popular, and
·customers are 1enerally
given diet and exercise plans
• for their $200 to $500 invest·
'ment -but no guarantee.
. Strangely enough, there is
• oo medical evidence that any
of these remedies works. In
• /act, none of three medical
~dictionaries published since
1974 lists cellulite. Although
the ·American Medical As·
• sociaUon (AMA) has taken
\:no position, the June 21, 1976
' AMA journal states: "There ~ 's no medical condition
:ticnown or described as ti ~elluUte in this country.''
:t l;.· From Page C1
A poaltion paper from the
Medical Society of New York
County aarees with AMA and
also aaya, "It iJ our opinion
that boob (on cellulite) ex·
plolt women throueb a flm-
mlck -The truth ls that fat
ts rat, and wherever it may
be located in the body. lt
matntalna ita common
characteristics."
CellWlte promoten claim
the connective tissues hold-
ing fat cells just underneath
the skin's surface become
saturated with water and
waste products that aren't
properly eliminated by the
liver, kidneys and other or-
eans. 'Ibey say these connec·
live tissues harden and com·
bine with fat and water to
form pockets of a gel-like
s ubstance (cellulite ) that
bulges out to . produce an
orange peel appearance on
the skin.
Vincent F. Cordaro, M.O ..
a Food and Drue Admin11tra-
Uon medical officer who bu
worked with the U.S. Poalal
Service oo a number of false
representation case1 Involv-
ing cellulite-removal prod-
ucts. pointed out that no
evidence exists to indicate
that wastes or toxins are held
in any one part of the body.
He explained that retenUoo
of body wastes is associated
with serious health prob·
terns, such as kidney or in-
testinal diseases.
••A person who retained
waates and toxins would be
very W and could die If not
treated," he said. "The
whole concept is irrational
and unscientific."
U cellulite were really dif.
ferent from other fat, some
chetnical or structural v aria-
tion should be evident. Not
so, according to a double·
blind study with 100 people at
Johns Hopkins University
a n d CI t y Ho 1 pl t a l In and becomes mo~ apparent
Baltimore. when the sltin fold iJ com·
Needle biopsies were taken preaaed lightly between the
from people with dimply, fingers."
lumpy Uaaue, as well as from He also points out that
people without "cellulite." most Americans carry sub-
Pathologista examined the stantially more fat than is
samples and there was no good for them.
difference, German researchers in
What accounts for the dlf· 1978 established that women
ference ln appearance? have lb1s problem more than
In his book, "Ener1etlcs: men, and that heredity and a
Your Key To Weight Con· tendency for obesity in
trol ," Dr. Grant Gwlnul?J families also play a part in
professor of medicine al U(; t h i s · · m a t t r e s s
Irvine aod chief of the phenomenon."
division of endocrinology and Since obesity is seen as the
metaboliJm, says, ''Fat un-major culprit in forming
der the skin has a cbarac· cellulite, it's not surprising
teristic appearance which the suggested treatment iJ to
makes Its identification an lose weight. The researchers
easy matter. add that for weight loss
"It produces a wained ap-. therapy to be effective it
pearance which is similar to should be done when the ~kin
the pattern of irregularities is still elastic (before age 35
on the surface of an orange or 40 ).
Haden to speak
~:JUDGES DISQUALIFICATION ...
:: crime to fail to do so. from interfering with their An exact count is impossible
:: Although the code says judges judicial duties. be~ause the justices are not re-
Pat Haden, quarterback of the Rams, will
address the Smith Tool Natjonal Management
Association at the Registry Hotel in Irvine on July 14
at7p.m.
! .. "may bold and manage invest· Justices Potter Stewart and qu1~ed , to st_a~e for the record
•: meola," it also says "a jud&e Lewis F . Powell Jr. are the1.r disqualifications from such
: should minimi&e his invest-millionaires. Bblh were born lo· review denial~. .
•'-ments and other financial in-to wealth. Of the court s fll'St Z4 deciluona
l',lerests to minimize the number The long list of financial .bold· o~ the term .. ~tewat:t or Powell ~'of cases in which be is dis· in gs for Powell and hiJ wife u ~d .not participate 10 four· The ~qualified." of last May. according to a state· Justices are no~ req'"!ed to, and ~Y,. It adds: "As soon 88 he can do ment the justice released in do not, explain t~e1r absence
t•.so without serious financial compliance with the Ethics in ~rom a case, but fmanclal bold· l 'detriment, he should divest Government Act, totaled from mgs appeared lo be the reason
himself of investments and other $1.92 million to $3.9 million. in each; .
The booking was arranged by Al Blender, vice
president of the Bruce Merrin Celebrity Speakers
bureau. Haden's topic for the evening will be,
··Hum an Relations -On and Off the Field.''
The Bruce Merrin Celebrity Speakers bureau Is one of a few major West Coast lecture and enter-
tainment bureaus. Some of the sports stars and r.ersonalities the organization offers include Jake
'Raging Bull" LaMotta, Steve Garvey, Ron Cey, Ray Malavasi, Vince Ferragamo, Sugar Ray
Robinson, Sean O'Grady, Bill Sharman. Magic
Johnson and Stu Nahan.
INVESTMENT SALES
One of Newport's oldest mortgage brokers
has Immediate openings for motivated
INVESTMENT COUNSELORS experienced In
the sale of 2nd Trust Deeds. Appllcants with
real estate license may apply by appointment
or send resume to Don Sutherland. ·
OPM EllTf ,._ II. • 2 c.r-Pim llM
.-Wporl teed t26'0
CALL 17141 760-6060
RADIO PAGER
*6.65 PER MONTH·
For services only
Unlimited pages and pur -
chase your reconditioned pa·
ger for only SIOO with 30 days
guaranteed parts and labor.
Be paged in a four county
area. Los Angeles. Orange.
San Bernardino and River·
side Counties.
401 S. SANTA FE
SANTA ANA
•
CALL 714/835-3305
ORANGE COUNTY
RADIO TELEPHONE
SERVICE
~·financial interests that might re· Their 1979 income from those . And. m each, the dlsquallfica· ··~ui~&~~~di~uaUfication." holdings was b~ween ~.500 ho~~d~appeartochanpthe ~~~C~OLLE~~CT~O~R~S~~;-~~~~~~~~-L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-f The chief justice is on safe and $2164,500. dec1s1on s outcome.
ground. Honeywell's is one or Stewart's personal and family · Stewart and ~o~ell, or D_lem-CORN.ER
the few stocks he owns. His in-holdings, according to the state· be r ~ . 0 f the 1 r 1 m med 1 ate A ere Coln• & Stemp a
h vestments have not caused ment he filed last May, totaled f amilies, own COf!Sid~rable GOLD & SILVER
· anything approaching "fre· from $965,000 to $2.45 million. amou':'ts of stock in oil and 7-2 ... 1 ~: _quent" refusals. They supplied between $89,500 chem.1cal companies -~n· o.Nc .... ..,u, :.,-a:::4 ~1' Burger, on paper, recently and $246,500 in 1979 income. dustr~es wh.ose members ·~· ::..~= i:n:: ::: ~ 1.may have become a million.aire Of the hundreds of appeals de· creasingly find themselves 10 toocor-tu1.• .a1.•
• / ·but his wealth was achieved nied review in the first six court. ~... . =•sr.'..,._ :',: ~ f through real estate investment months of the court's cun-ent . Perha~ no U · ~~rpo~ation l1I 70% Bank Financing '• -a method that rarely sparks nine-month term, Stewart and involved lD m e litigation than I AA & KEOUGH f! the need for disqualification. Powell disqualified themselves, IBM. When ~n -of those many (714) 556-6&50 ft:. Two other high court mem-respectively, from at least 13 controversies .reaches the SouthCoest Plea Vlll•g• ~ hers, however, have greater dif. and eight cases in which they Supreme Court, it may face a ,Ac,.=-..::..,~:S--~,
i ficulty keeping their wealth o held a financial interest. _ _:s~e_:v~eo~-~m~e~m~be~r~fo~ru~m::_. ____ t.========~I I t· r · r
r
IEASE A NEW
EXECUTIVE HOME
in an excl usi ve
Newport Beach Com mu nity
Two luxurious homes available.
Classic country elegance
at Rancho Santa Fe.
Unfurnished. one year lease. Single story. 3
bedrooms. 21.h baths. Wet Bar. All built·in kitchen.
Microwave and trash compactor. Choice carpeting and
drapes. 2851 SQ. ft. $2000 a month.
Two story. 3 bedrooms. 3112 baths. Large Jamily room.
Formal dining area. 2 fireplaces. Microwave and trash
compactor. Separate laundry. 2959 SQ. ft. S2500 a
month.
C.Ompletely landscaped and fenced.
For more information call:
Fairbanks Ranch . Per·
haps the most impor·
tant private residential com-
munity eve_r created· in
Southern California. 1,240
prime master-planned acres
at Rancho Sa nta Fe, an area
renowned for its prestige, the
traditional beauty of its ar-
chitecture and charming early
California ambie nce. Here
you will find estate sites of
one acre and larger with all
access controlled by electron-
ica lly activated privacy gates.
Throughout time this
land has attracted swash-
buckling romantics yearning
to call it their own. One such
man was Douglas Fairbanks.
Awe struck upon seeing its
breathtaking natural beauty
he determined that here was
the perfect place for his and
Mary's dream house. But alas,
it was not to be.
Fairbanks' passion for
this land continued, however,
as he turned it into a working
ranch where citrus' groves
were planted, lakes built and
streams created. Today, it can
be the perfect place for your
dream home.
Panoramk views across ·
· the valley to the coast in a cli-
mate of refTeshing seawashed
air. Towering euci\lyptus
forests, orange groves .and
beau tiful rolling meadows
offer· a rare, uncluttered set·
. ting~·A lakeside clu bhouse · ?h, beautiful, tennis fa~ties
\ .• , .. l ~
( . "• . .. . . .
Fairbanks
Ranch
are nearing completion . A full
equestrian center and wan·
dering trails will be included
as will Fairbanks Village
Plaza, to be built at the south-
west entry of the Ranch to
provide convenient shopping
and professional services.
It w ill almost be impos-
sible to believe you are only a
few minutes from the San
Diego Freeway, twenty-five
miles from downtown San
Diego and comfortably close
to Orange County and Los
Angeles.
Fairbanks Ranch holds
every promise of becoming
one of the most prestigious
and sought after addresses in
Southern California. A place
of enchanhng beauty and en-
during charm. It is one of the .
last opportunities to enjoy a
truly elegant, rural lifestyle
with every modern con -
venience. All homesites are
improved with natural gas,
sewers and cable television
and of course, all utilities are
underground.
Secure an appointment
to visit Fairbanks Ranch to-
day. Ranch tours by appoint-
ment only:
Fairbanks Ranch Realty Co.
P.O. Box 2012,
Rancho Santa Fe,
California 92067
Telephone (714) 756-3795
(213) 277-9488
From $175 ,000
Equal Housing Opportunity (i:)
Developed by Watt Industries, Inc.
WESTalFF GROVE (714) 646-5092
Located near the intersection ol Westchff and Dover Drive in
Newport Beech
can you afford
tog1ve
your money
to a total
stranger?
Of course notl You have trusted the Warmington Homes for
three generations and Wormington Flnancial wlll have your trust
f0< generations to come. We offer the high yields necessary to
survive In today's Inflationary times. For solld Investments coll
Lindo at .... ·
WARMINGTON
FIN ANCI AL CORPORATION
3191A AIRPORT LOOP COSTA MESA. CAUFORN1A 92626
(714) 540·2635
"A Souft'lem Collfomlo fomlly Helplng Soothem Collfomlons'"
1 am Interested In Trust Deeds with Wormington Flnonclol;
I l Personally ' I IRA-KEOGH Pension/Profit Sha1ng
Nome---------------------~ Addte$$ _________________ z1p ---
Phone Home ______ .,;_ ____ WOfk
·--------------~~~~~~~~-------------------_.. ................... .._ ...... ~ .................................................................. ~.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July 6, 1981
NYSE CO.MPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOOTIOflS lllCLUDI TUOUON T"I NIW YOU , MIOWHT, l'A(IJI(, l'IW, IOUON, OIUOlf UO CIN(llf ... TI JTO(ll'
lll(HAMOU ANO u..a1r10 IY TMI MASO ANO IMITll•(T
S\'o HMW
11 ~·w 2'IO s "•100 ~ "''"' ''° Sl* H1lblft 1.20 D'-HlmrP t. .. ,~ "•""$ l,'11 I~ Hll\JI t.'41 I~ Hndltnll I 11
-""""'" .so ll 2' Henn• 2 • :; .... ~~~ ,• ,. ,,~ "-"''"' '° ,, 22~ H1rr8k U O •
)6 .... ,,,, '° u 1' Hlfk • 1.10 I It H1rtSM I 12 I 1~ H1rtH .IO U ., H1ns. ......
lMlo HwflEI l.M • .~~ ~== JO ii ~ ~ •. 2• • llVI IW<IM 1 ,SO 7
ll'h HtllM I .M 11
•lilt He1111H UO I J~ lt1:Cpf 1.70 •
II~ Hlllrlftl l JO 1 a HolmP n 1t I"' ... me.
It ~~~':! ·~.~ . '
22 Henlly '''° 1 "'HeHIOn 20 ll Htlltl pf 1.60
'"' Hwlllln 1.17 a t.2V. HlwllP 40 20
Jl\'o HewP wl ~ .... ~, .60 ,.
11\11 HIShffr SO • ll• HIVOll 14 12
1'l't """'°" ' .. ' 1'~ Hlllon 1.60 ll
'IO Holla., .1' 10 J0\4 HllOyA l IOI
JAi') Holl;S 11 • 71\ HrntG pll 10 IS'IJ Ho,,.lk uo 10
Pl,\ -,J9r ' 71 Honwll l ~·4 Hoo• u ' 1• l.40
• ,,,,
~ 141
' 122 ltm $) 107 '°'
Slit> ....
l'·f Hit-W. L.ttl C.. Mlf-l..aw l'·il
I loll
'.4
,\\ -. VI
-
·:
·~····.
---~-------------------~-----~--------..-....--...-...---~--._....------............................... 11911 ......
~,
I I
f I ,.
•' !I
I ' ·f I
I
.
~
RIAllS TATI
The ti-nth about lenders
By aOBE&T J. BllVSS
DEAll BOB: WIU.O.t maclt ••eces•, we've
beea trylne to buy oar l'lral bome for several
mHt.1111. Oa.r latest adveatue lavolved maldq •
parekue Md wlticlt t.M Miler acttp&ed. We lit·
el .. e41 • c.Uageaey elaae, u yoa Hlle•t, ttiat
If we eou.lda't 1et tbe aeeeuary mort1a1e Ute
seller W091d refud oar sz.• clepc19tt.
Tiiie realty ageat llad u apply wltlt tllree dU·
fereat mort1a1e leaden, but we coaJda't qaaUfy
with aay. My llubaad ud I earn more thaa
S3Z,Mt a year, but tlley all tUl'Ded u dowa for a
$tt,Mt mort1a1e. Wllat are we dot.DI wroa1?
-Linda G.
DEAR LINDA: The ugly truth is that moet
home mortgage lenders don't want to make loans
today. Rather than shutting the loan window,
REAL ESTATE MAILBAG
which is bad public relations, lenders raised home
mortgage rates so high that even wealthy people
can't qualify.
Mortgage lenders can earn higher yields.
without making a long-term mortgage, on other in·
vestments, so they have practically abandoned the
home mortgage market.
It is shocking to learn how few home sales in· •
volve new mortgages from S&Ls, banks and
mortgage brokers. Judging from actual sales clos·
ings, I estimate less than 1 percent of home sales
today involve such new loans.
Most home buyers now purchase with seller
financing. That's the way you should buy your
home, too. The seller gets a normal down pay·
ment, the buyer either assumes or buys "subject
to" the existing mortgage and the seller takes
back a second mortgage for the balance.
Forget about wasting time with mortgage ap-
plications because most mortgage lenders don't
want to make mortgage loans. Seller financing is
the best way to buy a home today.
Consider lease-option
DEAR BOB: Our bome bas been listed for sale
more than four months. No offen so far. The real·
ty a1ent says buyers are walt1Jl1, bopln1 Interest
rates will drop. But we mu.st tell now IO we can
move out of town where we have boupt a new
home. We can't afford to keep up the $550
mortgage payment mucb loa1er. Any Idea• to 1et
our home sold?
-Mr. F.G.
DEAR MR. F .G.: A short term lease-option is
the ideal marketing device for your situation.
Have your agent advertise your home "Weekend
open house. One-year lease at $600 per month, op·
lion to buy at today's price any time within a year.
$3,000 moves you in."
There are plenty of pote.ntial buyers who will
snap up a good deal like that. Further lease-option
details are in my new report "How Short and Long
Term Lease-Options Can Increase Your Realty
Profits." To obtain your copy send a $2 check
payable to "Newspaperbooks" for Report 80111 to
the Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 259, Norwood, N.J . 07648.
$50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
• lncereet onJv p.yaent · ·--· • Co•••rclal • Reeldenllal
• Weekly co-lt•e11u
• Monte.Iv f•ncllfttl•
• 6 •ontll• to 3 11-re
• So•thent C.llfomll
{ 11flf1l,t H\lf
loen lnforaetlon eervlce
I • '' ltn.1ncin4 n.-,-d•
(714) 759·1515
AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE
730 Newpo'1 Cen1e1 011ve
DH'iln Plaza
Newoo'1 Beach
Ca1tlo1n1a
92~
Top6c J. lax Sheltera. \\WI discuss 10me ci
the more popular kinds -Including real estate,
oil, ges and art. ~11 also cover me concept'
d ~and e('CM*<i methods ci
~.
1bplc 2. 'Due A11nnMQ In OeneraL W!11 focus
on generaUng capltel ~ deferring Income
urd later ~ and acceleratlng deductions.
We11 allo explore year-end tax-saving
~.Arid~
• It
Ju11i 7 w. 9. f:JO·•.JO pm. At Ute South
COUI '9aN #**L ~ (114) 8'1-2269 for
r jpU.T ~.,.,,more ln(orYMdon.
Short fuse mortgages explode
DEAit BOB: We are tryln1 to sell Mr lllOme.
Tbe realty a1e•t HY• that lf we wut to teU we'n
,1ot to take back a teCODd mert1••e to llelp ftaa•ce
the •ale. We undentaad tllat ud bave retactut11
a1reed. For bow loa1 •lloa.ld we acne to carry
Heb a seeood mort1a1e! Tiie a1eat ••lle•t. ftve
&o 10 yean, bet I tltiDk oee or two yean woald be
better. Wbat b your advice?
-TammleE.
DEAR TAMMIE: Home buyers who purcha•ed
in the lut few years with ''short fuse" one, two or
three year mortgages are now learning bow fast
time goes by. The balloon payments on many of
those loans are now coming due. But interest rates
are still high and the homeowners are having dif·
ficulty refinancing to pay the balloon payment.
Smart buyers never buy with a mortgage for
less than a five-year term. Ten years is even bet·
ter. The buyer then has time to build some equity
in the house and refinance when interest rates
drop.
A five or 10 year mortgage may seem long to
you, but it is necessary to protect the buyer. To
make the mortgage attractive to you , structure the
loan with a fixed• interest rate for the first five
years, with its interest rate rising 1 percent a year
for the next five years. This will increase your in·
terest income, protect the buyer from a short fuse
mortgage and encourage refinancing as soon as
possible.
How profits are taxed
DEAR BOB: I am seltlng au a.vestment prop·
erty. My profit will be $48,000. How mucb tu will
I owe?
-EdT.
DEAR ED: Assuming you've owned the house
over 12 months and it qualifies for long-term
capital gain taxation, only 40 percent of your
$40,000 profit is taxable. The other 60 percent of
long-term capital gains is tax-free.
Forty percent of $40.000 is Sl6,000. This $16,000
is added to your other ordinary income and taxed
<lt ordinary income tax rates. For example, if
you're in a 30 percent income tax bracket, your ex·
tra tax on $16,000 would be about $4,800.
Where crimson bougainvillea still spills ovtr
grac~I adobe arches, where mission chimes still
echo across cobbled streets once traversed by
padres and conquistadors, tlw Maurer Elliott
Construction Company has creQted a lu.rury
cnmmunity of classic ~egance: Villa.Bes of
The Mission.
Herr, nestled among tlw hills and wla
of tlN lu.h Ctipistnmo Val~. you'll discover
traditionally ttylM homes that many the
rich Mrlt4ge of early California with all tlw
comforts and convenimces of today.
TM fiMl pM.w lit VlllAgeS of 11w Milsion feotum uncommonly elepnt J. and 4-bedroom
a,cuttve Nlid.mces Ht on-country-.siu lots,
mAnY with 10,000 "I· ft . or mor1. ChOOM from
Orange Coast DAILY PfLOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981
REAL ESTATE
QUESTIONS /COMMENT
R.E. AGENTS Atll IDB.OPERS
Co· Signers, Inc
~AM q ALIFY YOUI IUYBS
FREE IROCHURl-CALL llS.201J
••
Q: AJoai wttll au of dab MW creative flaHc·
1a1, ~tally la the bou1D1 markec, llH come a l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~--~~iiiiiiijii;;;;;;;iii=======
wbole dldkmary of aew tennlaolor. for tile dU· fereat ldndl of loau tbat lnclen ave come ap
with. Tbe two I llave bee• beuta1 moet abotlt are
tbe All 1.Delulve Tnut Deed ud tbe Wrap Aroud
Mort1a1e. Wbat a. tile differeace!
J .M., Cotta MeH
A: The All lnclu.stve Trust Deed (A.l.T .0 .) ls
the aame as the Wrap Around Mortgage except
that trust deeds are commonly used In the Western
United States and mortgages are used in the
Eastern half. Each serves the same purpose, vary·
ing only in the local usage of the particular form
encumbrance.
The idea of the AH Inclusive Trust Deed is not
a new one, but its revival in usage is. It became
popular in some of the farm communities in
California in the late 1930s, taking advantage of
changes in interest rates ln the period and the
terms in government insured farm loans.
The A,l.T.D. is first of all a junior encum·
brance. Since the most common purpose in using
the instrument is to gain an override on the in·
terest rate on an existing loan, it necessarily re-
quired the existence of a prior loan or loans.
Reduced to basic understanding, the A.l.T.D.,
by its terms, includes as a part of its principal
balance all or part of the previous balance on a
property. An example would be the following:
A home is sold for Sl00,000. Existing on the
home is a loan for $80,000. The buyer is putting 10
percent down ($10,000). The seller executes an
A.l.T.D. for $90,000 (the balance due the seller of
Sl0,000 plus the balance due on the prior loan
$80,000). The seller must make the payments on
the prior loan from the proceeds of the A.l.T.D. In
most cases it is the expectation of the parties that
the payments on the prior loans be made from the
proceeds of the A.I.T.D. The buyer in turn must
not only comply with aU the terms of the A.1.T.u, but must also comply with terms of prior loans.
EXECUTIVE SUITES
JADE MANAGEMENT
881 Dover Dr., Suite 14
N e\\'POAT BEACH
714 -631-3651
5 inspired floorplans with up to approximately
3,160 sq. ft . of well-planned interior space. All
are lavishly appointed, including 2 or 3 fire-
plaas, int.ercom systems, wet bars, ceramic til.e
or hardwood entry flooring, complete security
alarm systems, and built-in safes. Gourmet
kitchens offer microwave and self-cltaning
ovens, trash compactors, Nutpn. food centers,
and custom Ollk cabinetry,
A fluib~ financing program including
9-Yt % interest J«ond trust dttds with no
pavm.mts for 3 VHrS-can put this re/iMd and
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a division of Jacobs & Ridings Prop., Inc.
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Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981
Poacher:s under gun
Tipster programs crack down on illegal hunting
ALBU~UERQUE, N.M. (AP) -Payoffs bave
beea made la W., partin& Iota and even brothell,
and tbe nam• ol Upeten who flncer the ldllera
are cAolely 1uarded.
Offtclala are out to atop lbe 1Jau1bter of
wlldllle, and Operation Game Tblef -a proaram
that tradel cull for lnforUlatJon on poachers -la
proviq ~ potent and popular weapon.
.. ,... cuuaJ poacher, lf there la aucb a thin&,
probably l.ooU over bla shoulder IODI enoutb now
lbat tbe deer bu a chance to run off before he bu
a chance to kill It," aaid Dan Pursley, assist.ant
chief ol law enforcement for the atate Department
of Game and Fish.
The proaram, which la f\lnded by private
donatlona, be1an in 1977. It bas a toll-free
telephone llne and paya for information leadina to
arresta. Rewards vary, hued on the animala in-
volved: smo for a deer, $300 for an elll.
Tbe auccesa of Operation Game Thief, which
state olftclall say bu a conviction rate of 99 per-
cent, bu spawned many similar efforta, especially
in Western states with vut wilderness areas.
Some stat.es don't offer rewards, but get informa-
tion anyway -Wasblnston, for example, received
1,250 Ups in the first year of its Help Stop Poaching
pro1rarn. .
Tipsters have many reasons for coming
forward. One bow-and-arrow hunter called
Arizona's Help Our Wildlife hotline after he
stalked a deer for hours during the bow season on·
ly to watch a man jump from a pickup truck and
shoot it with a gun.
"That bow-and-arrow fellow was really mad,
and not so much because he loet the deer, but that
anyone could kill with a gun out of season," said
Don Vance of the Arizona Game and Fish Depart·
ment. "He gave us a description of the other feJJow
and the pickup's license number and a conviction
followed."
Thousands flee
NEW DELHI, India <AP> -Tens of
thousands of people were marooned Saturday as
torrential monsoon rains and overflowing rivers
inundated areas in India and neighboring
Bangladesh, Indian media reported.
Army troops and government relief workers
were attempting to reach stranded residents in
the northeastern sections of India, the Press
Trust of India said.
Solar oven invented
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -A Thai pro·
feasor has built a portable solar energy oven from
panes of glass and coconut shells and believes it
may be the world's cheapest lo make.
Professor Phairoj Uttarapong of Bangkokrs
Kasetaart University recently unveiled his lnven·
lion, andestimatedthecostaU17.SO.
Pha.iroj said the oven can bake a 2"2-pound
chicken in one hour, using refJection and absorp·
lion of sunlight.
rACtAC TllW
MIMOllAL rAal
Cemetery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pacific View Drive
NewPOrt Beach
644-2700
McCC>aMIQ( MOITUAlllS
Laquna Beach
494·9415
LaQuna Hills
766-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
HAlloa LAW~MT. OLIYI
Mortuary • Ce me terv
Crematory
1625 Gisler A11e
Costa Mesa
540-5554
,_Cl•OTHHS
m.L •OADWAT
MOllTUAtT
110 Btoadway
Costa Mesa
&42·9150
IM.TZIH•HOM
IMITM & TUTHILL
WHTCUff CHAl'IL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
Other tipetert call to Httle a acore.
"We may be ta1Jdn1 about ••·lirlfrieada, ex-wlvea, ex·buddlea," Pursley aald in a telephone in·
tervlew from bla oltlce ln Santa Fe. "A 1uy may
have sat on aomethin1 for 30 yean Uiat bll friend
did to him and be never really truly for1ave him
for ...
"An ex-prlfriend la a fairly typical altuaUon .
They have a falllnl out and lbe decides she not on-
ly could use the money but abe mi&bt aet even wltb
the rascal to boot."
And then there waa the mental patient who
turned in a staff member at a state facility for till-
ing hawlu. The offender, Punley said, promised
" ... never to kill one again ... because they tast-
ed horrible."
The cash-for-lnformatlon formula baa drawn
some criticism. "Some people feel it is not
American to be a stool pigeon," Punley said.
"There are some indlvtduala that feel thia ls
not the American way and that it I.a kind of a big
brother tactic."
Colorado officials were unhappy enough with
their program to cut off $31,000 in slate funds. The
Republican caucuses and Joint Budget Committee
argued that people charged with poaching cannot
face their accusers, and said the program had the
potential for harassment.
But authorities ln most states are enthusiastic.
In Wyoming.where fines from the Stop Poaching
Program go to school districts, the biggest case so
far netted $3,260 In fines against five people con·
victed of using artificial light lo shoot deer out of
r season. The tipster got $300. In New Mexico, the
largest reward was $1,100 for information on
thekillingsofsixelk.lnall,NewMexicohaspaidnear-
ly $40,000 in rewards since 1977, and 1,426 related ar-
rests and fines tota1ednearly$80,000.
Rewards and anonymity are the keys in
New Mexico, Pursley said, adding: "We've paid
rewards in bars, cathouses, parking lots. I want to
protect each person that calls lo the best of my
ability."
New Mexico's rewards are pa.id from public
donations, and Pursley said money bas never been
a problem -more than SSS,000 so far. "When we
bold out our tin cup and beg we always get a good
response," he said.
Some people claim the high price of meat in·
creases poaching, but Pursley dlaagreed, saying:
"the guy that poached the deer uaed $400 worth of
rifle to kill it and hauled It home in SS,000 to $10,000
worth of pickup. . . "
The primary goal la to reach associates of
violators, said Steve Smith of the Wyoming
Game and Fish Department. ''I'm talking about
the big-time stuff. We're trying to get someone
who's constantly poaching to be turned in for the
money."
Poachers should beware -more programl
are in the worlu. In Nevada, enabling legislation is
up for consideration. And California hopes to have
a toll-free hotline operating by Sept. 1.
,.,..,......
NICI lllOTI411S
IMITM~ MOITUAaT en Main St
HunllnQton Beach
536-6539
POWER TOWER -This is an aerial view of an experimental solar power
plant in Kagawa, Japan. 'lbe panels, or bellostat.s, collect the sun's
energy and focus it on the tower at the center, beating water to
generate steam for a power turbine. The f acllity is similar to the 10-
megawatt Solar One project under construction 10 miles east of
Barstow.
NEPTUNE SOCIETY
CM,llATION 6 BURIAL AT eM
TMI IWLATION WIW N•AL
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
,., ....
Bodie, located in tM Sin'ra Nevada, ealt of Ya.emitt National Park, t.DO.t a gold ""1a boom town a cen-
tu'll OQO. Today, it'• a ghlnt town, attracting only tourist•.
Ghost town of Bodie presents
bleak welcome for the curious
BODIE CAP) -Stuck in time,
this ghost town presents a bleak
welcome for those c urious
enough to drive here on bumpy
dirt roads through high desert
hills.
If it weren't for the gold rush
of 1878, it would be hard to im·
agine anyone settling in this
isolated sagebrush bowl betweeo
Mono Lake and the Nevada state
line.
Only 68 buildings remain in a
town that on~ boasted 10,000
people and a reputation as one of
the west's most lawless mining
communities.
The phrase "bad man from
Bodie" earned its place in
American folklore for the town's
notorious brawling and bawdy
characters.
Unlike other legendary places
that are restored to reflect the ·
good times, Bodie State His·
torical Park Is in a state of ar·
rested deterioration.
Dusty brocade sofas with stuf-
fing falling out can be seen
through the screened windows of
surviving Bodie homes.
A cracked globe of the world
bleached free of geographic
boundaries r ests in a
schoolhouse window between
two faded 48-star flags.
The people weren't all that
was bad in Bodie. Nature helped
persuade even the hardiest
miners to give up their labors
almost a half-century ago. The
fate of the town's founder, W.S.
Bodey, was the most obvious ex-
ample of natural cruelty to the
town·s residents . He froze to
death in a blizzard shortly after
discovering gold in 1859.
Fire also s haped the com·
munity. The last of three
destructive blazes, started by a
boy playing with matches on
June 23, 1932, devastated 90 per-
cent of the once-bustling town.
Unlike after past fires in 1892
and 1899, r esidents decided
against rebuilding because mine
production had peaked long ago.
Thousands of hearty miners
bad dragged $100 million in gold
out of the tunnels winding
through hills east of town by the
time its residents disappeared.
The state has made a few al·
tempts to change Bodie. The on·
ly signs of modern civilization
are power lines dating to the
1930s, a vending machine offer·
ing lour guides and chemical
toilets.
A rusted jalopy frame sin.ks
into a field between two streets.
Massive pieces of mining equip-
men t lie strewn about as if
someone were about to carry
them off. And weeds have taken
over the markers in the town's
three cemeteries.
The miners' union hall, built
in 1878, a handful of the original
6S saloons. homes with tattered
Irish lace curtains and a small
church bear silent witness to
their past. Buildings are closed
because they've been declared
unsafe.
The weather-worn structures
s park the imagination or park
visitors looking for remnants of
the Old West.
The best road to the park -
open in daylight hours -Bodie
Road off State Highway 395
seven miles south of Bridgeport.
A longer dirt road, Cottonwood
Canyon Road, starting near the
shore of Mono Lake is reached off
Highway 167 .
Both entries are about a is.
minute drive from Lee Vining a.t
the east entrance to Yosemite
National Park and two hours
from Yosemite Valley.
Cities seek 'sisters' abroad
Ohio businessman turns matchmaking into fun, profits
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -
Richard H. Oakland runs a sort
of municipal dating service, a
lonely hearts club for cities that
want "sisters."
About once a week, as mem·
bership director of Sister Cities
International, he matches U.S.
towns and counties with coun·
terparts abroad. The unions can
mean economic and cultural
profits for both parties.
''It's getUn1 to be so big It's a
computer operation to match
everyone," sala Oakland.
At any given tJme, there are
about 100 American clUes look·
ing for mates abroad. ln Colum·
bus recently, Oakland and his
cohorts talked to scores of
foreign rtfayors at the 25th
Congress of The International
Union of Local Authorities.
Some of them , like Cecil
Charlton, the mayor of Man·
devllle, a modest Jamaica town
of 40,000, were not bashful about
seeking a twin city.
"We're not capable of mating
machines. We're not capable of
making autos. But we're capa·
ble of making friends," he said,
adding with a smile, "And we're
capable of makln1 love."
Charlton and Parnell Charles,
Jamaican minister of local 1ov-
ernment, have just lined .JP
Dade County, Fla., as a "slater"
for Ktna1ton, Jamaica's capital,
throu1b SCI.
Charles says he's not at all
afraid to ask for help for a na-
tion bit unUJ recently with re-
cession and political uncer·
talnty.
"We u.nderatand that aome
American cities have laws pro-
h l bl tln1 use of fire trucks
beyond two yean or ao. We're
not 1D IUCb a privUe1ed (>OSitlon
to throw awQ a 2·1ear-old vebl-
. cle," <llarl• aald.
He 1ald Jamaica wo\lld be
happy to "atore" them.
Tbe matebmatiq MUton wu
about the e.ott..t tbiD• at the
HT LA conference, wblch
otberwtae d.iaeu9Hd world dti•'
problema.
SCI, founded lD WaablnftOD ID
1tM at t.be beilbt of PGlt·ltorean
war ut..&onl, bu re~
more than TIO U.S. clU• • Ill· ten for more tlMn teO clU.. ln n
other wmtslw. About• mWkm
Amerie-II" lD cltlel la tbla
natloa wtdl neb ananaem.u.
Loi ......... -Cleftlaad .... the eh p. U.S. liltel' dU...
Becu... ol tber tbelr etlmle ... ,....., tMJ Heb baft ol•
ftdal till to IJ dU. abroad.
Post-World War II programs
for international pairings of
cities also have sprung up in
Europe, Great Britain, Canada
and Japan. The Joint Twinning
Center in London and the United
Towns Organizations of Paris
each have paired more than
1,000 cities in the past 20 years.
The object: peace and un·
derstanding.
Cities adopt each other either
by City HaJJ first or through
citizens' groups. Cooperation,
participants say. can mean
millions of dollars of trade or ex-
change programs involving bun·
dreds of citizens. It can be as big
or as small a tie as desired.
·'There are things )IOU can say
to a friend that you can't say to
a s trange r ," said Wylie
Williams, city manager of
Inks ter, Mich .. who was in·
volved in the program years ago
as an official at Charlotte. N.C.
He recalled that a resident of
Charlotte's sister city of Port·
au-Prince, Haiti, became sick on
a trip to North Carolina.
Charlotte medical ex perts
diagnosed the illness as sickle·
cell anemia, treated the man
free of charge and sent a team
of doctors to Haiti to set up a
sickle-cell screening program.
u--TRACIONG caNTD -Two eowa ll"W in ft'Oet <rt two new
buce . antenna of the German apace ttackiq ciilW near RataUna. some 50 mlles south ol 111iilcb. W1th a total ol ft•• .. ,_., used malQJy for 1atelllte commumcaUom. tbe
ce6a.r II ODe of the wcSrld'a lar1e1t . .
•
ps $P WWWUWW¥4•cu vcww q o o u w . -• • )
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981 C'I
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Malibu probably houses more movie stars and millionaires than anywhere else in the world. Yet Old Road, parallel to Coast Highway , is cracked like "overcooked lasagna."
'•
Gossip magazines mi,ss real stars of Malibu ...
, •l
. 1:
By SHARON DALEY
MALIBU CAP) -ln 1980 fll'e
jumped the Pacific Coast
Highway and burned 37 homes;
in 1978 fierce surf wiped out more
than 20 more, and in 1980
mudslides and floods closed all
exits, stranding thousands.
But there are worse places to
be trapped than Malibu, where
mount.ains push their way to the
sea providing one of the most
spectacular coastlines in the
not find it chic to mention that of
the 3,000 milkmen left in
America, at least two stiJI de-
liver in Malibu. Or that the
Malibu Cinema uses real butter
on fresh popcorn and the barber
still charges $4 for a haircut.
Residents don't get excited
when they squeeze the Charmin
al the local market next lo the
likes of Mary Tyler Moore, Car-
roll O'Connor and Billie Jean .
King, have coffee across from
Beach lot:prices are quite high
when one considers that the land
may not be there when escrow
closes.
world. The insurance companies
may call it a disaster area, but
the approximately 16,000 resi-
dents call it paradise.
Less than 10 miles from Los
Angeles, Malibu offers surfers,
hikers, and sun worshippers a
place to escape the smoggy city
for a day or two. Few, however,
slay to contend with the wars
nature regularly wages on this
tiny beach community.
Instead, they pact up their
picnic lunches, their surf
boards, and their beach towela
and drive back to town, envying
what they probably consider ~
dreamy symbol of good living.
C ritic R ex Reed once
described Malibu as a "state of
mind." It is not even a city.
Approximately one mile wide
and 27 miles long, Malibu ii a
ZIP code. But inch for inch it
probably houaes more movie
stars, mogull and mysterious
figures than anywhere elae in
the world.
A motorist is ti.tely to miss
Malibu completely. Ho• dog
stands, real estate offices, gu
1tations and fences line the
hl1hway, bloctiq the view ol
tbe dramatic bllll oa ooe aide
aad tbe gUtterin1 Pacific Ocean
•tbeother.
Bat villton hardy enoup to ~ tbe steep bluffa to tbe bnch, or lucky enoqb to be ID·
..... tllrouP blP ••*· ...., H• tbe loeatloa for "Tile
80elE.fOl'd l"ll4il" or "C~ htte." ID fact, U U..,. 18 a beM1aMIMcmt-.e1ene.OMI .,............. . ......... '=adall ........
mo1Ur oa UHatl•I mo•I•
m ..... ltJ.le .... p. Tbere II .... a liitie In u.e worb ._..
oe a 1emdaloul novel slmplJ
ealled ''llallbu. '' aut Mldom ll
It --tt·1julta1ma11 ton. lt't Dat nett.lal news tUt tbe
iftleer at tbe local bnk ....,.
liH a' tmUe or Joke f• w
e•ttomen, or Uaat wlieii .., ...__. talb at tM 1md &. f'. a ........ bema1be~
........... aad •••• ., ....
T·IMrt.
No, mcm. ma•uiaea woWd
Paul Newman at the little
nearby drugstore, or order ice
cream alongside Cary Grant
and his daughter at the com-
munity soda shop.
Besides, anyone living in
Malibu for long knows the real
star is Al Starlin.
Starlin, a retired Malibu assis-
tant postmaster, has lived in
MaJibu for 30 years. Today he is
carpenter, plumber. electrician
and friend to anyone who has a
problem.
In a crisis, depend on Starlin
to drive around in his pickup
truck unplugging drains, build-
ing barricades and organizing
volunteer work crews. He may
not make good copy in a best-
selling Malibu expose, but he
has woo more awards here than
Hepburn has in Hollywood.
Ma libu is not just a play-
ground for the rich and famous.
It is a strange mixture of "old·
timers'' who came here before
the real estate gold rush, and
wealthy newcomers who paid a
king's ransom to live on what baa
been called the world's most ex·
pensive fault.
In the-late 1800s, most or what
is now Malibu was known as the
Rindge Ranch.
As late as 1917 Frederick
Rindge built barricades and sta-
tioned armed guards to signal
the end of the line between Santa
Monica and what was then the
only coasta l trail to Santa
Barbara.
But neither yesterday's gun-
toting cowboys nor today's fires,
slides or tides keep a special
breed from setlling and embrac-
ing the quixotic land.
The "old-timers" who have
lived in Malibu since the '50s
like to sit around and recall the
more rugged, romantic days.
One favorite memory is the
Old Raft bar, Malibu's legen-
dary watering hole. There,
Norton Simon, Jerry Brown and
Merle Oberon received the same
service as teachers, construction
workers and fishermen.
"Those were the good old
days," says longtime resident
and former Ratt bartender,
J ohn DiVico. "I remember when
Neville Brand, Lee Marvin and
Keenan Wynn used to drive their
motorcycles through the front
door of the Raft and right up to
the bar.
The Raft is a parking lot now.
lta septic tank overflowed once
too often and the state con-
demned the property. The owner
moved a rew miles north to a
new location on the beach and
the place hi a great favorite of
tourists, but somehow it's not
the same.
Malibu also has its l.?gendary
judge. John Merr ick, beloved
by the community and affec-
tionately known as the "hanging
judge," dispenses Western-style
justice that would be the envy of
Roy Bean.
Stuntmen used to be the terror
of Malibu. Once, one drank too
mu c b a nd terrorized bis
neighbors . Judge Merrick's
edict: "Be out of Malibu by sun-
down." He was.
Like most places, Malibu baa
changed. Ten years ago reai·
dents h a d lo drive to Loa
Angeles to buy a marriage
license or get a building permit.
Today the new civic center
serves as what might be called
the center of town. Clustered
'
here are the sheriff's depart·
ment, the library, and the new
emergency medical facility.
There are almost a.s many fire
stations as there are churches.
From heart attack to conflagra-
tion, call any ope of the four fire
stations and help is on its way.
Maybe it's because they have
had so much practice at helping,
but the firemen, paramedics,
and deputies are as much a part
of the community as the local
Perhaps it is a little road · •
paralleling Pacific C.oast -
Highway which best caP?\lres
the Malibu mentality. Prior to --,
1938 it was the Roosevelt ,
Highway and the only access t
through Malibu. :
In 1946, when the highway was :
rerouted and renamed Pacific I
Coast Highway, the little aban· :
doned road took the more
modest title , West Malibu Road.
To longtime residents, the 2,_,
'Nature doe sn't care if you're a
movie star or a postman. It keeps
us aivare that in the long run
we are all pretty equal.'
ministers.
Adjacent to the civic center fs
the new, small shopping center
containing at least one trendy
gourmet shop that offers cook·
Ing lessons, and one health food
s hpp that serves organic
vegetables.
But if someone wants hun-
dred -dolla~ cavia r , Gucci
loafers, or a diamond dog coUar,
they go to Beverly Hills, not
Mali bu . Merchants here still
hold out against the boutique
mania.
miles or rumpled pavement
crunched between crumbling
bills and rolling ocean is just
"the Old Road." It slips, slides,
burns, cracks and washes out
with seasonal regularity.
And oh, the price per sliding
inch. The few small beach lots
left on The Road sell for weU
over a half million dollars. That
amounts to nearly $12,000 per
running front foot. Quite high
when one considers that the laad
may not be there when escrow
closes.
Last year, a newcomer built
his dream house on the Road. By
the time constru ction was
finished, the garage entrance
hung helplessly in space. It was
not bad architectural planning;
the road had simply sunk a few
feet.
Described by Paul Mantee, ac·.
tor and resident, a.s looking "like
an overcooke d p iece of
laaapa," the road ii slipplftc ln
some places more than an inch a
year, a breathtaking speed lnl aeol<>Cical terms.
Why do ao many insist on llv·
In& with the certainty of recur·1· ring diluter? One easy answer
may be that the rich and fa.mom
can afford to be cavalier. 1 Anotber reuon for st•1lal may be that thla ll one ol tbe few
platet In the world that in tbael ol
crbla the f amout and t.be or-
d Inn y 1tand tlde by tide
1andhaaJq, aboveHnt, « J8lt ••ltinl e111 the wonen int.be belt
traditmolt.be fnatler dQa. Aj Stat'llb Il a~ a b etter
anner: .. Nature doen't ,.,. U
. 1ou're a mo•le 1ta r or a
poetmaD. It Uepl UI ewan tUt
la the loq run we ar• all pntty
equal... .
-.. In the Ion& run, notblq rMlly
explain• wlar people stay lD
II allba comptainlnl about tbe
lODI drtvee to town, the lllCll f1I
culture, tbe bad rettaaruta,
and the diaMen .
But the)' end tbelr da.J bJ **· a., at t.be ... pill 1llliMMllaed
a1alnlt a Malibu 1~.JDd WOIMllr..., they an IO._
bi u ..... bonowed .........
,,, ... ,,,..,,~.,·., .. -. \ ·"'
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, July 5, 1981
Your favorite recipe could
I f you like to cook and have a "favorite"
recipe, it could be worth a shopping
spree at Irvine Ranch Farmer's Market, o r
you could win one of eight $100 gift
certificates at participating merchants. It
can all happen in the 1981 Daily Pilot
E-avorite Recipe Contest. and it could
happen to you!
Even if you don't win a top
prize, your recipe could be
published in our "Eater's
Digest" special section in the
Daily Pilot Aug . 20.
Daily Pilot food editor Sandie Joy will
supervise a panel of food ·judges who w1 II
name the best recipe on the Orange
Coast. Winning recipes will be judged on
originality, ease of preparation, and of
course. taste. So get cooking. Read the
rules carefully and send us your recipes
as soon as possible. Entries must be
postmarked no later than Friday. July 17.
Mail your entries to: Daily Pilot
Favorite Recipe Contest. P.O. Box 1560,
Costa Mesa, CA 92626.
R e m ember:
Entry Deadline
is Friday,
July 17.
•
-sponsored by -
or one
$100 gift certificates!
-BUT HURRY, DEADLINE IS FRIDAY, JULY 17-
ENTRY CATEGORIES:
I. Desserts
Let's see what you can do w1 th
chocolates. gelatin, butter, flour. wh 1pped
cream and other favorite goodies.
2. Fruits, Vegetables & Salads
Including vegetarian dishes. And don't
forget the out-of-season treasures in cans
and in the frozen food section.
3. Soups & Appetizers
Meat spreads. zesty dips. munchies and
any kind of soup, be it the main course or
the entree. Take your pick.
4. Main Dishes
Whether it be hamburgers or coq au
vin, the best c hicken salad or roast
duckling, everyone has a favorite recipe
for the mainstay of the meal.
5. Cheese, Eus & Pasta
Enter your fcivorite cheese dis h, snack
or salad; or maybe your homemade
linguine is outasight.Or should you enter
your seafood quiche?
Ethnic Dishe8
From c how mein to enchiladas to
baklava, maybe your family has a recipe
from the old country?
7. Breads & Grains
Californians have discovered the fun of
making their own wholesome breads and
cereals. Or how about that homeblend
granola?
8. Microwave Cooking
Like to cook but hate to wait ?
On-the-go Orange Coasters know it's not
the time spent in the kitchen. but the taste
on the palate. Hurry, please! •
CONTE..~T R ULES:
1 'List all 1ngred1ents in order of use, followed by clear.
concise directions and the number of servings
Remember. originality counts Submit your entry on
8 1/2 x 11 paper and print clearly
2 Only one entry per person per category will be ac-
cepted. If more than one entry is received for any
single category, all entries for that category will be
disqualified Judges reserve the right to properly
categorize entries.
3. Recipes must be complete. and may not be changed
after submission Incomplete recipes will be dis-
qualified.
4 In the event 1dent1cal recipes are submitted by two
or more contestants. the first received will be the
one considered for 1udQ1nQ.
5. The contest is open to all residents of Orange
County. except employees and their 1mmed1ate
families of Orange Coast Publishing Co.
6 Indicate on each recipe in the top left-hand corner.
your name. address. telephone. and category en-
tered using separate sheets for each recipe Mail to
"Dally Pilot Favorite Recipe Contest," P.O. Box 1560,
Costa Mesa. CA 92626. o r bring it to 330 W. Bay St ..
Costa Mesa. ALL ENTRIES MUST BE POSTMARKED
NO LATER THAN MIDNIGHT. FRIDAY. JULY 17.
1981 . or received at the Pilot office no later than 5
p .m. July 17. 1981
7 Entry of a recipe constitutes agreement that 1t
becomes the property of the Dally Pilot, and may be
published with acknowledgements (no street ad -
dresses or phone numbers will be published) in the
Daily Pilot and Coast Life newspapers.
8. Entries will be disqualified if they fail to comply with
the contest rules. All 1udges' decisions are final. All
prizes will be awarded. CONTEST ENOS JULY 17.
1981
PO Box 1560, Co1ta Mesa. CA 92826 Daill Pilat
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITICIUI 9UllM•ll "ICTITlCIUl llUM••U MMMI tT~Tl ... NT MAMI STATIIMIWT
Ti.. , .. ._lftt Mr-MO M l"9 Tiit fojlowlf\9 lllff-• ate Mllll .....,. ... , 11u.inanaa:
ANATOH AUOC:IATH, )1 ...... Ill TOO llll"ND s.41.-T co~ m
lrwlne,CAt2114, THI DESIONIElt'S WIST, ?JOI W.
HOWARO I . JOHt:I, $11 t:-etd hftflow A-, ~ JU. Safli. ·~· U.-IMcll. CA....,.,, Ana, CA mo., l'ULLllltHllM PAltTMllU , MARY SUE $HIEA, LOR t:N
LTO,. JI -..e, ttviM, CA .,114 EHLl!ltS. UOI W. Slftlewef A-,
-..,, I . J-J 11, S...u Ana, CA tll'M.
,._ Tiiis butlMll ll COftCIU<l ... lty a
Tiii• ~ wa1 flied w1111 u. oanert1 wtnerlllip ....
C ... nly Clerll of ~-C-IY on Loren IE fll'-"
J-11, 1"1. Tiiis , .. ,.......,, w• filed wllll tlMI
t.AWO .. l'ICll Co11n1r Cltrk Of Or~ Cou11ty Oii
....... MIUAa & CA.•UON ,J.,... 17, 1"1. ..... , ..... T_ ,., ....
.. MK,.,._alft. Puoll.-Or ..... Coatl Dally Pllol,
....... ._.,CA.... J une JI, JI, July S, 12, 1911 216).tl "'*"-or-. co..t o.uy ""ot· .I-ti, 2', July S, 12, 19et 211M1
P UBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
"'CTI nous IUSIMISI
NAME STATIMIMT
"CTITIOUS•UltNass • Tiie IOll-IRQ P•rlon• are dol"ll
MAM•STATIMIMT butlnHS M;
Tiie lollowlRQpertoM aredolnobu~I· DAT ABASE COM P.ANY, 3001
naHH! R•dhlll Awe ... 103, Costa Mata, CA
P£GASUS PAI NTING, JOI '2•1'
Lueonla • ..._, Bttach, California Joseph L 0te1ue, tUoll Ml. HOOd
t2'43 Drl•t, Santa Ana, California 9?705 Mi<'-I Scott 8acMr, JOI LU90f'la, RoDer t A Root, l' St Trope,,
,._POr1 8Mch. California t M l Newp0<1 llNc:ll. Calllornla tJMO.
Marc 1._,, ... JOU MadllOft, Costa Tn11 bUllnet• I• conducte<I Dy t Mew, Calllornla '2617 ~neral i»rtnt,..,.lp.
Tiii• builness Is co,.oucted Dy a JOMPf1 L DeCtue
oaneral -11\en lip Tim .... _I was lllect with ,,,.
Mkllot•I S 8«Mr County Cler• of Orange County on
Tiiis .._,_,. we flied wllh IM June 11, Itel
C-tyC*1tofOranoa C-tyonJ""o l'I.,_
J, IMI PuDll"*' Oranoe Coe" Dally P1lol,
'1tMU J11rw U, 11, lt, JUiy S, 1911 2617-tl
l'vbll-0. ..... Coall Dally PllOI.
J-14, JI, 21, JtAy S, lttl Jiu.ti
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS aUSIMIU
MAMll ITATIMIMT
Tiie lotlowlng persons are Clolno
b<ltlneu u . SUNRISE SETS, IClt • Jlth Str•t,
,.._WPOrl llffcrl, CA~
JOHN Al-4N CALOWELL. 10t
27111 Street, -POrl 8H(h, CA n..i
Tiii• busll'IHI I• conct.Ktael DY .,. In
dlvldual,
Jor.n Al.,, Calctw.11
Tiiis si.tement was Ill.a with tlMI
c;,Mlnly Clark of Oran99 County on
J-12 ... 11.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINISS
MAME STATEMENT
TM tooowino 1>«son 11 dolno Dull· ,.,, .,
LEXIN ENGINEElllNG, ?'90 BabO,
Cost• Ma ... CA '2•M,
Jack Doll LUl'I, 19IO B•bO, Coote
Mata, CA'2U•
This bullnau t• condu<te<I oy •n In
• dlVldu•I.
Jack L .. ln
This sta1ernan1 was fll@O with 111e
Covnly Cler• 01 Oranoe County on
June 11, t9tl, ,,.,.,.,
PuDllSMd O.anoe Coast D••IY Pilot,
1'1.-June u, JI, lt, JUiy s, 1MI Zt•t-t l Publl\Nd Or-C..ll Dally Pilot,
June JI, 21. Julys. 12, 1tt 1 21'4-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS aUllNISS
MAM« STATIMlfllT
Tiie tollowlno persons era Clolno .,.,. .... ., ..
Ill THE G R EAT OI NI NG
GUIDE, (21 PRANKSTERS, 20 0
Airway,""''· C•i. Men, CA ti.».
HEllll LEE II, 1019t Amlle,__,
F-taln Val...,, CA '21GL
110 81EllT E. 8ATES. l»t1 Mani.
Coolrt, L....-N19WI, CA n.n
Tiii• -1~1 h CoMU<le<I by a
QeMUI -11Wnlllp.
HERi LEE II
Tiiis st.ttament was lllael with \lie
County c .. rk ol Otar>Ot County on
J-11. ""· ,.,.....,,
PuDllshed Or-Coa•I Oally Piiot.
June 21, 21, July s, n , "" 1•~1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS
MAMIE STATIEMIENT
Tl•• loUowlRQ P«llOn Is OOlno l>uM
MU •J
l(AINES l-4N0SCAPE a. MAINT ,
311 llonwin. Pl., C.O.u AMu, CA '2tJ1
llonall Scou ,.,..,....,, l21 Romona
Pl • COii• -~CA mu.
Tiiis bUsl,,.., "conouct..i Dy .,. 1n
dl•ldual
Ronald s Fiiter son
Thll .. _._,,t was ltled "'"" tho County Clerk ol Or.,91 County on June 11. 1"1
1'1""17
Publlst.d 0.enge Coa•I Oa11y Pilol,
JuM H, JI, 71, Julys. "'' JM6-ll
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUSIMIESS
MAMIE STATIEMINT
l'tMXI
PuDlll/Wd Or-c-1 Daily Pil04, -·011·~ Or , __ t D 11"tPtlnell J -JI,,., JtAy s. n, 1"1 J7SJ.tl ~v ~ _.......,, • Y 01,
June 1•. 21, JI, July) 1'11 JllM 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI IUSIMIU
MAMI STATIMIMT Tlle IOI_.,. _.... I• do"'9 outl· -·., INVESTOltS REAL ESTATE
SER VICES, A KA-I 11 E S. J
Car-aw PWou. Suite 103, N-l>Of1 BM<,,, CA t2*.
HAROLD G. MOREHEAD, •U
eavslde Drive, NewPOtt BH <ll. CA 92..0.
Tiii• OUllMU I• conclu< le<I DY ... In· dlYIOual.
HarOid G. Mor.i...a ~
This •lal-1 wH !lied wlln llMI
County Clerk of Orar>Ot County on
June 11.1911.
1'1Mll4
Publl•hed Or-Coast D•lly Pllol,
June JI, JI, Jiily ), 12, 1911 ,,..,,
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIU
NAMI STATU.,.•NT
Tiie lol-lftO peroon• are M IRO
lllnlneu as:
I K P ENTERPRISES, 1'711
MacArlllur 8oulaurd, Suite 100,
I nrlne, catltorftla 927 IS
llkllwcl H. Bl"Udl, 1:2 -eclto, eo.-clal MM C:.lllomla '2•2S l'redltttdl H. Kr-, 2S ,....,arre,,
'"' lne. cat 1ton11a m u David J . ,..ny, 14 Balmoftla, ,,,,.,,., catlfwftl• '2114
Tiiis -lneu I• <~led Dy a
...-ra1 per .... 1111p. ' llk llwcl H. lr~k
Tiii• ......,_ -• lllad "' 1t1e c-ty Cten< Of 0..81199 C:-y • '-"·"''·
\
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITlOUS aUSIMISS
NAMI STATIMllfT
T,.. 101•-lno ,.._ ••• ool"O
bu•lnan as EWING INVESTMENT COM·
PANV, 19Hl M«Al1h•1< -leYard,
S..lla )10, lrvilw.CA'27U.
P INECllEEK INVESTMENT
COMPANY, a partne"hlp, 11tU
Mac Arlhur 8ou le•ard, Suite 310,
lr•lno, CA '271S.
PHILLIP N. LYONS, Partner, '
HarOOr 111-. N-rl B•Kh, CA '2..0. •
JOHN I.. CASHION, Portrwr, 21 Locnmoor Lane, -P0'1 eeacll, CA
'2..0.
This OUllna<s I• conducted Dy a gon .. al partn.n/\lp.
Jofln L. C.nhlon, Partner
T"ll Jla-t was Ill.cl wllh ,,_
County c .. rk of Ore~ County on
JUM 11, 1"1.
LAWOl' .. ICU
AGMIW, MILLIElt & CAltUON
s.tta7•W...T-._ Mae..-......
Maw"" 9Mdl. CA t2Mt P\IDlllfled Oranoia Coast Da lly f>tlOI,
JUfte 21, 1', July S, 12, 1911 UIS-ti
P UBLIC NOTICE --------
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
'I
L
0
T
c
L
A s
s
I
F
I
E .D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
INDEX
A~"""""'' (•r Pool W1•lt-our-•, l.oo• ....... n4
P"tuft•b • Son •l C'lwt.• Tra\it'I•
SERVICES
4wr.1u IJ1r .. n0t>
EM'lOYMENT &
mrARATION
'M ,_.., IM•tuthon Joo w .,,1,11 • lt•lp ~.-nl.-d \of 6: t
MERCHANDISE
At'MMf~' AppUan<•~
A'°"'°" t!t:~ M •ltuet• (arnitrp 6 £,1w1pm."1
COit l>o&t Vfe.14> You l'W"Ntwt• c ........ 1. --Good· ,,....,.,.
'"'""'"'°" ....... _)
M•t.ttlf.....,.
................. ft. •fttf'd
MWSH"•& 1n\&rV-""l'fth ()tft('f' ,..,,,." ...... ,. ...
"'-'°'''"' ......_~Maou.,.,.
Sllorl1 .. Cood• -. llott-•ot .. , ~"t'ad ... H1J'1 -..
BOATS & MAtlN£
EDUl~ENT
i.-.1
ftoah Ma1M '°",.. .... fto•o M•nM t <f'NP Booeu p.,_,.,
BoMt Atnt t fl41rhr !loot. S.tl
-t.Sllpo Ool'h
11o ... ~'"' lloou Slor•lf
TlAMSPOITATION
Airrr•" t'amp;tn .S..I• RtfU
t.lf'C1rlt Can ......, ()>rift. Scoolon•
Motor Hni. ~Ir K•nt Tra1\ef\ Tn HI t:'t',!.~'~"~.,,~
AUTOMOBILE
t.tMr•I .
Anuqw.n ~··U•U R""'••hVO \ •-11 In :t~~I ~)~:: .. ~1•h
''"'" v ....
At,ttuWU lftC AUlotWaM~
AUTOS, IMPOITED
~ .... , ..
Aiib lllom.o \wd1 •
.\•R11n IW•••~ MlllW
l.•"'1 Pr
O•Uill\ .... ,.,, ,._ ..
II-'• J ..... ,
J•n.tf'ft Karnwnn '•ht• 1-l'IJN M~ud•
..... ,. '""'"' tt.lft1 'I v MOU
Uj>OI P•nt••• f>f',.UCM
t>ottC ht
llfll••ll K;..111 Ko1u ... , ...
t'.!~ ;:r;;,v
f:rv~·~
\'6lU•laltP Yoho
AUTOS, NEW
«o•·fWnl
IOU! 11111 IOCIJ IOll
IGll
lilH 1\111 um I~ 10.0 •004 I .. 1111 ,..,
IQll'I 1• ""' IV/I
IClm
Ila. u• IM
1100
""'~ .. 10
llQI) -llOll;) -en -~ -~ ---IOJ) ---I IOD -IOll'I ------
111110 -••JU -tlO!O ---"""'
tllO
"IO ttJO
11f0 OlflO ~·10
'fUIU
t.'00
... ., -Ill• .... ltll --lllll --mil = -·-tNf
USITHI
DAILY PILOT . ., .. ,
IHULT ...
SIDICI
DlllCTOIY
Far. aaull rsena~ Call
641-1671
..... IJJ
• ¥4 4 • 0 u 0 0 • s 0 0 a • • 0 0
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday. Jul 5. 1981
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5618
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 'G...er.. I 002 G....... I ooi G.......e tooz GtMr.. I ooz ..................................•........... ···········~··········· •......................
HOMEW/
PRIVATE SPA
CORONA DEL
Tast efully decorated
with wood floorin g,
plush carpels, wood
abutters, 2 Bdrm, den,
family rm, 2 frplcs, 2 Ba EQUAL HOUSING Spa off mslr suite. Good
0 p P 0 RT UN IT Y financing. Call ror de·
MAR DUPLEX South of the highway sits
thl.s elegant home plus
income. Huge owners
unit, brick courtyard
leads to French doors
that open onto Ita lian
tiled floors. Beautiful
wood pegged floors
en h ance den and
spacious ramUy kitchen.
2nd story hosts secluded
master suite with open
balcony and bubbling
spa too! 3 more queen
s1r.ed bdrms for your hk-
mg Huge 4 car garage + 2 Bdrm utcome un1l.
Price re duced and
owner )s anxious Call
Publ1her'1 Hotlce: l ils. Aidr\ennJ 1591·1221.
All r eal esta te a d· ~ r ~I ~ ~ee:S~!~~ dis ~~bj!c~ 1t~i 31ilJ
the Federal Fair Hous· 1°-•!!!!9!11!!"!
ing Act d. 1968 wh.ich 4 IR I "'CK I "'Y makes it Illegal to ad-~ ~
vertise "any preference. SI 37,500.
li mitation , o r d is -Room y, 4 Bdrm, 2 sty,
cr imination based on w /cor.y fireplace. Very
race. color. religion. clean. ll&hl and air y
sex, or national origin. New· d1Shwuher. water
or an intenllon to make heater. painl. paper,
any such preference. skylight' Beoul!fully
limitation, or di s -landscaped patio A
crim i.nalioo." muslSee1 646-7171 @
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
a dve r tising for real
estate which is i.n viola·
..!!Q_l'!_Of the law.
THE REAL ESTATERS
---------
MARIHEWI COVE
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
---------2 Bd 2·tlly l mi. from VIEW!
VIEW! ERRORS: AdYertiHn
shoukt check their ads
dally and=~ ron 'iwll . Tiw
DAILY PILoTO:.....,
ldbilty for the first
Incorrect lnaertioR
ORiy,
Hotts.1 for S-. ••••••••••••••••••••••• !~~~ .......... !~.~~
A HOUSE for YOU
ond INCOME TOO!
Two houses on 1 lot in a very desireable area.
Owner will carry lst No
qualifying. 2 bdrms
each. Only Sl.59,900. CaJI
~y979-5370.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
Trans-Season
Jacket Dressing
Layering a great jacket
over a soft basic dress
does it! ... U turns into a
day /dinner suit. J acket has a drawstring waist;
dress is elastici:ied at
neck, walat-quick. easy
fitting. Printed Pattern
A901 by DWJ comes In
Misses Sizes 81 10, 12. 1',
16, 18. Slz.e 12 (buat) 34>
dresa takes 21 /8 yds.
45-incb ; jacket 111\ yds. Send $2.50 far th.la Print·
ed Patt.em to DAILY
PILOT. Box 59, Old
Chelsea Sta., New York,
N.Y. 10113. Add 50c for
postage a nd special
handUna. Print Name,
Address. Zip, Style Number andSiie.
Oetlaner fublons at lar-
from ·deatiner pricea?
Send for ncitinc NEW
lUl PROMINENT
DESIGNER PATTERN
CATALOG wb over 85
fabuloua dlalpa from
the top IWDll. All Uw n w .. t IOft. romantic lookt ln j.ckdl. bJouHa.
aklrta, panta, dre..aet.
Plot 50c BONUS
COUPON for any .s>at·
lem of 1our cld~ Send tl for Boe* a nop.
,
beach. Pool, spa & ten
nis courts. Owner very
motivated Will assist
buyer Try 10% down.
$110,500. Wendy Siller
BIG FAMILY
COLONIALS
Mesa Verde popular hid·
den 2 story, covered en-
try, private living room,
huge f am tly room ,
firep l ace , countr y
kitchen. formal dining. 4
Bdrm 3 baths. full deck
in rear of home and
view!! On ly $225.000,
call for more details.
546-2313
5 Bdrms, 3 bat.hs, huge
fam ily room. dining
room. fireplace. m am-
mot h r ear yard and
mor e extr as Private
tree hoed cul de sac,
large assumable loans,
creative financiog. Call
546-2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
PENINSULA
Rx er Only steps tD the surf. is
this bar gain n xer. Bring
paint brushes & s hovels
and cash m on SSS. Call
now
@
I
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
THEREAL
ESTATERS
When you call Classified
to place an ad. you 're as·
s ur ed of a friendly
welcom e and help in
wording your ad for best
res po11se. Call Now!
1)42-5678
Thi Bluest Mat1tetpiac•
on the Orqe Coast
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED
ADS
You <.on Seit h, find It,
Trode It Wi1h o Wont Ad
[[42-5678 )
OM Coll S.mce
foil Crtd.t Approval
I
I
LOCATION
+ financing
IA YFROMT -Redilc.ed U00,000
1 5600 sq rt or quality construction on
114' of water with boat dock. Owner 1
, wi ll carry financing. $1.450,000.
207 North Star Lane, NB
1, Open Sat/Sun 1-5
I I IRAHD HEW .. YFRONT
t I 2% ~nonc:ing
4 Bdr m 4 bath. includes private
boat dock a nd view of coastline.
t $1,650,000 includes the land.
2274 Channel Rd. NB
Ope n Sat/Sun 1-5
IEST IA Y VIEW--IW Aftaft.
Overlooking the magnifice nce of
Newpor t H arbor a nd the blue
P acific rests this 4 bedroom. 3 bath
pool home. just like new. $995,000. •
I
1933 Galatea Terrace. CdM
Open Sal/Sun 1-5 .,
~Q,
QC ~lJ.:?0 RrAJJ '11
675-2311
STARTING
A NEW BUSINESS?
ACOOfclng to CelltorNe Bu.,,,. ..
end Profeellon• COde (Sec. 11900 to
17130) •II pertOftt dotftt bualneH
under • flctttlout n1"'9 tnult fll• •
1t1te"'9ftt wtth the County Clerk end
hn• It publl1h•d fo11r tlm•• In • M~H,.._ !MM"9 th• ere• In "'91ch
th• b'*"9 .. la toceted.
The ..... menl la required by l•w
1nd ta ....... ,, 1" protecang your
bueln•• neme. Mo•t bllntce NCllulN
proof of """' .. ..,." oom.....-c1•1 eccou"'8.
The DAILY PILOT ~· boUt ftltnt end '41blloatfen MMcel. We
hn• ell a.. nece1Mry tonn• end
tMtntMI • ...., ........... Or••
CouAtw Cow'IMUM. lftMt ... by ....
ef OUf OOftfelllnt offloet Of phone tM
t.aOAL DOMTlllNT MM321. Id. an tor ...,. ...,.. ...... Ind'°""'· .
I
I
I
I
IHVEStOR'S
DILMWff
Assu1n~ 81.2"4 loan or
90% financing available
at only 13%. 5 Bdrma, 2
baths . Only $109,900
· Ca II now 9'79-5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
SI 29,500
REPUIUC HOME!
Very popular 2 story
Republic home Close to
So Coast Plaza 4 Bdqn
2 baths. huge ramfty room, fireplace, country
kitchen Owner liquidat
mg, call now. 546-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
HARIOR RIDGE
Aw a rd winning
·· Jodelle" estate home.
Isl resale offering on
this exquisitely appot.nt·
ed t o wnhom e with
massive view of bay :
ocean. coastline & night
lig hts Offe r e d a t
$1185;000.
1!i,1"ttll~\·· ,\: ~· tl.
i!\1-.1 ! htr•,
R111q b40· 'J'>bO l•nyt1n1t·
E ,1.,tblufl Prnl Blclq
STEPS TO IEACH
2 bdr m each unit +
room & bath off 2 car
garage Good w/s rental
area . $2501000.
associated
BROKE RS IHlll TORS
l r 1' Viii Solbu•J ,. ~' t.lo
M.L ..... .._. .,...,. HtW.-rn
AIOffwlHHrd
Quaint end Qualltyi 3
BR 2 Ba, pool sized ot
Oak floors, fa bulous
kitch en a nd garden
breakfast area. Garage
worluhop with windows.
Aaaume $215,000. List
$319,500.
EIHrald Temace
• Shall
Birds 1 Vie w of
Emerald Cove! 3 BR 2
81, den , 2 fireplaces. large tree studded lot.
Wrap a round $70,000
9.5 NE EDS CASH. Jwit
ltsted, 1275,000.
Plchft Pft'fwct o,..s...10.s
OCEAN VIEW! 1625
Hillcrest, 3 BR 2 Ba.
spacious bvin4 and din·
ing room , fireplace.
elegant Oak kitchen, im-
ported tile thru-out and
an intimate rose garden.
pool sized lot. Assume
$192,000
Hillie McCormack
Sig w/bird
41RHOME
SI 05,000
Comfortable Costa Mesa
family home on quiet
s t r eet . Love l y
wallpaper One bath re·
modeled. liJed, Roof. 1
yr new. Covered patio,
b rt clc B BQ. beaut.
garden w beanng fruit
trees . lst t ime a d -
vertised' Hurry to see!
646-7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
HEW EXCWSIVE
SPYGLASS um.-
This beautiful 6 Bdrm house is the
Crown J ewel of Spyglass Hill.
Decorated in traditional st yle.
featu r es e lega nt wa llpa pers,
window coverings. carpet & wood
floor in g . You can e njoy the
spectacular ocean views from the
kitchen, family room. living room ,
o r m aste r s uite and from the
c ustom p ool a nd s pa in the
elegantly la ndsca ped backyard.
$925,000. Ope n S unday 12-5 . 55
Goleta Point.
LAKE MISSION VIEJO
A spl endid French CoWlty home in
the gated community of Tres Vistas
on the s hore of Lake Mission Viejo
with 4 bedrooms, 31h baths, family
room. forma l dining room. living
room and pool if you like . This
custom home is built with the finest
attention to deta il and atmosphe re .
Financing available. $745,000.
llG CAMYOH CUSTOM OH
THE GOLF COURSE
Frenc h provincia l family home
wi th 5 bed r ooms , inc luding
downstairs m a id's rooms with
private entra nce. Pool and s pa,
large f a mity room . quiet secluded
librar y, forma l li ving room and
dining room , and much more . All
the living areas offer views of the
golf course and night lights. This
home offers the most in formal
elegance fo r entertaining as weJl as
comforta ble li vabiUty. Call fer a
p r iv a t e s howin g . Priced at
$2,300,000.
HARIOR RIDGl CUSTOM
Elegant, country English home on
the top street in Harbor Ridge. 5
bedroom, fa mily room and library.
Fantastic oce an and city light view
to Long Beach and beyond. Buyer
choice of flooring, carpets, fixtures!
and kitchen appliances. Pool ana
spa included. Call for appointment
to see. $2 ,450,000
IN THI •Offs
Lovely large · · E • • plan with country
kitchen. RecenUy remodeled with
~rlvacy plus on a quiet cul-de·sac.
Early Bluffs locaUon. 3 bedroom
and f amlly room, lar1e Iola
available 1298,500.
llST Y AL• IM MIWPOD
BeauUluJ 3 bedroom or 2 + den
home on lar1e lot wtth private yard
and spa . French doors and many
other upgrades. owner wlll carry.
$268,500.
IPYMAIS M• IUT Great ramllY home. 7 bed.rooma •~
baths, lamlly room With bulit.ln
bookcaset, ocean views from paUO
and 5 bedrooms. ProMbly t.be beilt
value In Spy1lua' Hlll (ai "5C),000.
I
I
•
WOODHIDGl/5 •
Roomy. comfortable floor plan
for the growing family. Near the
lake and pool. Pvt courtyard and
3 car garage. Plus, fantastic
financing make this a buyers
choice. $299,500.
t.Ho/• 4SSUM4ULOAH
Lovely private 2 + den c<>ndo
with cathedral clgs, and lots of
decking. Security gated Arbor
Lake/Woodbridge. $175,000.
THE llAMCHJl•VM
SJIS,OH
Charming and spacious 4 Br 3
Ba, on private, wooded lot w/pool
and spa. Several skylights and
stained glass windows. Assume
loan at 133.
C!E
110111 ILlllS CD.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
4l llAIMIOW IUDGI rumaoc• IUDGE
OPEH SUM l·S
Fabulous View, Select Location. 2
Bd 2 Ba Plus A Study. Many
Upgrades Including Plantation
Shutters. Parquet Entr y &
Carpeting. Great Financing. Large
Assumable Loan. Priced at
$175,000 . Submit. A "Joy Of
Newport Listing''.
1 IOO ,OH CAil.OW
H4HO• YIEW HOMIS
O,EH SUM 1·5
Desirable Corner Location In Phase
II Harbor View Homes. Popular
Montego On Fee Land. Secluded
Yard With Spa. View Of Fashion
Island & Big Canyon. One Block
From Community Pool. Park &
Bike Trails. Owner Very Motivated .
$279,000.
IAYSHOHS
40' Bayfront, Private Pier & Dock
In Security Gated Community.
Quiet Location. Spectacular View.
Private Beach. May Be From 4 To 6
Bedrooms. Two Fireplaces. Elegant
Two-Room Master Suite W/BaJcony
& View. Owner Wants This Home
Sold Now ! Price Reduced $.550,000
To $1,100.000.
LAGUNA OCUHR<>Nr
WHm WA Tll YIEW
Elegant Custom Home. ijandsome
Wood & Glass Contemporary.
Beautiful Wide Beach. Four
Bedrooms, 31/4 Baths. Open.
Circular Staircase Leading To
Second Story. Lovely Teak Floors ,
Walnut Cabinets, Unique Tiie Work,
Stained Glass Windows . Huge
Family & Entertaining Room.
Guarded Gate Community, Tennis
Courts , Spas , Sauna. Pool ,
Clubhouse. Sl.450,000.
COST A MESA'S llST AIEA
"Lucky You. And It Has A High
Assumable, Too !" Beautiful
Contemporary Home In Costa
Mesa's Best Area. Features Include
Five Large Bedrooms , Two
Impressive Fireplaces, Gorgeous
Living Room & Family Room,
Skylights, Wall Coverings, Wet Bar
-Fantastic! Price $729,500.
ILUFfS
Great Investment Or Starter Unit
Wit}l Excellent Financing. Sharp
Tw6 Bedroom End Unit With Deck
Overlooking Lovely Greenbelt.
Walk To Shops, Park & Pool. Owner
Is Moti vated & Will Carry AITD At
13.5%. Price, $139,900.
lt.UPfS
Located On Wide Tree Shaded Lush
Greenbelt. Close To Pool &
Clubhouse. High Ceilings In Living
Room & Master Becfroom. Two
Fully Assumable Loans. Fee Land.
Open For Inspection. $249,000.
CUSTOM-IUILT NOMI
On Promontory Bay. Formal
Dining Room , Den/Library .
Spacious Master Bedroom
Overlooking Bay Has Fireplace.
Three Other Bedrooms & Maid's
Room & Bath. Piet & Slip For
Lar1e Yacht. $1,850,<n>.
&.AUi& POINT, COSTA MIS.A
JU1t What You 've Been Look1na For. Three Bedroom, Two Bath
Condo. Near South Cout Sbo0Ptn1.
Spaclou FeeUn1 Wltb Skyliihta.
Ind Unit. Alauqiabll F1nt Trust
Deed. Priced At SlM,000. Owner
Will Acctpl A Leue·OpUon At .....
i ·---··········-· ·= z
-------
M CAMYOM 60ll CO.SI Uff,tOO
THI PAMILOUS ~·
Inviting gated front courtyard with
fountain makes an impressive en-
trance to this exclusive listing. Spec-
tacular 2-story foyer and living rm
looking out on the golf course. Formal
dining room, paneled den with parquet
floors, gourmet kitchen, magnificent
master suite plus 3 other bedrms, with
private baths, guest bath and large
yard with beaut. pool, spa & gazebo.
Really exciting.
llG CAHYOH C.C. Sl, 110,000
GIOIGIAH COLOMIAL MAMSIOM
Unequaled elegance in this architec-
tural beauty o'looking the 8th green of
Big Cyn golf course. The finest
craftsmanship & materials! Imported
marble, alr·cond, crystal chandeliers,
crown moldings. rich paneling, 3 wet
bars + many other impressive
features. 5 Large bedrooms, each with
private baths, banquet·size dining rm,
Cam rm with marble fireplace, billiard
rm with coffered ceiling & oak floors,
refrigerated wine rm. A truly beautiful
home for someone who appreciates the
finest! Call for appt.
HA .. OI VllW HOADMOOl-YIEW!
New offering in this lovely 4 bdrm
hom e with a great view of bay, ocean &
bright lights. New prof. landscaping
front & rear. Lge family rm, formal
dining rm & 21h baths. Great location.
Leasehold. See today. $410,000.
1251 SUIRIH! WAY OPIH SUM 1·5'M
2·STOIY DUPUX44EWPOIT IUCH
STEPS TO IUCH-OWMa AHAMCE
Call today to see this fine duplex! Live
in one unit & rent the other. 4 B<irms,
deck & 2 baths in upper; 2 bedrms & 1
bath in lower. Fireplace in each. Some
view of ocean. owe 1st T.D. & note of
$247 ,000, int. only. $52,500 down pmt.
No loan fee. $299,~00.
lillOA ISLAND DUPUX-$450,000
4 Bedrooms upstairs & 3 bedrooms
downstairs with patio and deck. Cov -
ered garage + laundry room. Ex·
cellent for summer·winter rental. Just
steps to the bay & beach from the door
of this excellent tax shelter + poten·
tially appreciating property.
MR. AUOWHEAD-YU TO CAT ALINA
Unimpeded view 25 ft across to see the
world. 3 Bedrooms. Western red cedar
inside and out. Architect's award de·
sign. See it, then live in it. A great
value. Asking $96,500.
WESLEY M. TAYLOI CO .. UALTOIS
2111s.....-H•1..a
HEW,OIT cana. M.I. 644-4t I 0
I
WATHFIOMI' HOMI
Lge. liv . rm. w/dramatic cath. wood
beam ceilings & beaut. floor to ceiling
·trp1c. 3 Bdrms, 2 Bath, lovely open
patio w /brick walkway to sandy
beach. Asking only $259,500.
UALLYQ.OSI
to beach. 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath + loft for
kids to play! A fantastic buy at only
$170,000. PLUS ter~.
MEWPOIT 5HOllS
LAHD IMCLUDIO
Roomy 3 Bdrm , 2 bath home so close
to the beach. Builtins, including
dishwasher plus fireplace & .nice
carpeting. Only $194,500.
Try about 15% dwn. &
owner will carry balance.
TWO TIM'l.lllS
Right in heart of Peninsula. Side by
each-buy both for $590,000 or just one
for balf. $100,000 down will buy all.
Seller will carry.
JACOBS REALTY
675-4670
2919 ... .,.,. ...... ~ JOll
§ff Ttif§f
OPEN TODAY 1-5
UMl9Uf OM THI IAY -Two large
bedrooms and den, plus a wonderful
bay view. Excellent financing and the
luxury of living at the Cove make this a
vury interesting property. $649,500.
Fee. See Susan Harder at 973 Bayside
Cove West.
UMl9UI IM OLD COIOHA D& MAI -
Country Kitchen, sophisticated master
suite. two fireplaces, three patios, bay
view, two bedrooms, 2"'2 baths.
$324,000. See Sara Marvin at 502
Acacia.
UMl9U! IH SUYIEW -Beautiful 3
bedroom Hampton Model. Cul-de-sac
location, community pool, spa and ten·
nis. Unbelievably priced at $395,000.
See Barbara Hutchings at 1900 Yacht
Maria.
UMICj>UE IM JASMIME CH• -Great
price on this lovely plan 1. This is a two
bedroom and den unit, community ten·
nis and pool. Financing available. A
great o~rtunity to live in Jasmine
Creek. .500 Fee. See Artie Johnson
at 33 Whitewater.
""19UI IAYMOMT -114 feet of bay
frontage, dock will accommodate 60'
boat, fmest craftsmanship in this love·
ly 5600 sq. ft. home. With $500,000 dt>wn,
the financing is unbelievable. This one
you must see. SI.450,000 Fee. See it ! 207
North Star Lane.
UMl9UE MUI SOUTH COAST PU1A -
Skylights, style, 3 bdrms., den, 2"'2
baths. near greenbelt, only $169,500.
See Sharon Corzine at 912 Powell
Court.
UHl9UE IM OLD CdM -Darling 2
Bdrm house plus guest unit. So. of
Hwy., corner lot and financing.
$265,000. See Marilyn Hodges at 414
Heliotrope.
UMl9UE IM TUITLHOCK GUM -
Sensational 2 Bdrm and den,
overlooks greenbelt, cus tom
plantation shutters. lovely earthtone
interior. Excellent tenns available.
See Bob Hodges at ?.8 Rainbow Falls.
U~IUJf HMfS
REALTORS.675-6000
H43 f.Mt C.... H ..... 11Y. Corou •• Mu
WI HAYI 42 of THI mT AMMB IH TOWM
CHAMtaVIEW
FIOM SUMDECI
Only aot.llOO! Charming
Newport Beach 4 Bdrm,
features wood burning fireplace. Huge over-
1iud lot with rear cov·
ered patio. Owner is
lftolivated and willing to
btlp fmance! J111t listed.
Call DOW, 6'1H$50
THE REAL
ESTATERS
coe.acw.
+UYIM& Spacious 3 bdrm. 2 bath
apt. Bltins, wet bar,
fireplace. atrium. Over
500 eq. ft. ~ business
apace + 4 car eance.
Priced at aso,eoo.
associated
~ • " .. I ) .. . ... .
UOOISU
OPIHS..1·5
214Vle ...
2 bdrms, 2 bath. 11!"1·
maculate condition Wlth
expansion potential.
Just 1335.000.
tu.a112
WAIDFml c-HUNTINGTON HRBR.
Purcha.e with 5~ down
on faatutlc terms.
Brand ~. rpt'd and draped . ON THE
WATER. Guarded gate
entry. views. 2 car
garace. Pool and tennis.
2 fl 3 BR'S AVAIL. JM.
MED. ------~~ .... m!!! ......... ~~c~~~~~~~u~~----·':oo~·~
niillllllt .. s.m..1
c.-u. ....... ,..~
w ......... ,. ...... ,... ...........
T•Dlllrfwr-
S,1_..zl I II w••• m ._ .....,._ • wtl • .c.. ..... · ......... c.w ...........
In 171416Jl·IZ66
........... ............... ~JI!!!'! .. ............... ,_ _____________ ....,. .. c:.w.. __ _.. __________ ,
AXEi DOll lllUSE w ................... ....,.... .._ ...... Drt•• br 2ot JOllt,.,... •
al fw .W.. Sl61,000. 01·1400.
WTBLUFF VIEW flJME
&A. 119WI w ......... ~ ..... ,.,. ...
MW decw ffn•thc*t· Wood ftoon,
croWR •llll•g lit lllh ltmomclll• l
..... felllily ..... _, ........ cliftiftcJ
,.... ....... '349,000. 631-1400.
LIDO--lOWEST PRICE
9'let .t of I• °" Uffllr strodo. 2
bdr•, 2 bo. petlo. lrh19 offer.
$315,000. 673-6900
OCEAN YIEW--UJiUNA
Lots of wood .ct glals M fhit MWly
nm•led J ...._ 2 ba crcWhcturally
lllhrnt*J 2 dOt"f "°""· $304,000.
OWNER ANANClfC-OOPl.EX
Spec-. 2·story 4 ldr"M ._., plus I
... ... Fi"t H• • ...W . .,. _..._ °" MwlM A.-. Emy shpt to
So. .., $530,000.
SllJRECLIFFS CORNER -Ralllblftg
l .... -... w r;.,. fmRlty "" CIRd"
l'OOM to .. ,_d. LMM/opt poulbi. _... l°" fb ... LCW91 lot. Sl6t,OOO.
631·1 00.
OCEAN YIEW--tlWPORT
Two f•lly furalslltd lto111H ia ••
Hc.tl .. t focatloa, 120 ffft to the °"*'''-'· G,..at OWMn 2 bd. 2 ba. frGllt hcMe ~ a 2bd.. Ibo. ,.... hcMtM.
OwMf' wll c_,.., I st. SlSS,000.
DECORATOR'S YIUA BALBOA
C1..,11tely f•ntls.._.. wfth ntiqHs,
...... sher, crysW ..t a "wortcl of
llllrron" & .... -... Secwfty bldg
& v. fr'OWI IONJf' potlo: spocio.t &
coordlHt1d 2 bed. hd11ud to
$375,000. 6J 1-1400.
NEAR NEWPORT-tOST A MESA
,,....., ltOIM Oft pod w lot ifi a
9'11T t.ily -~Oft.ood COft•ltlietlt
to .. ..,,.. of oW'Mr'lllip" llom with l
.... ... 2 boftls. OwMf' lllGJ CflllTY
ht TI> wfttl 200/o cnh. doWft pcry1Mat.
~to $161 ,500.611·1400.
NEWPORT CUSTIN-URGE
Spocloe 2bd, 2 bo. • qMiet tree lilled
~ • MIC. FaMily l"OOll\ tidra lq. lot
,_ for poof, CMlto.ft bilift for ori9iaal °""'"' Wy iltwlotecl Many waitin
$249,SOO. lock lay ..... 673-6900.
OCEANFRONT AXER--3 UNITS
.... 1-wll woffilMJ to be c..t for Ml
... , s-d .... & llrf. OWMr will
cony ht T.C. at 121/J°/o h1ttn1t.
$675,000.
BETWEEN BAY & IEEAN
Awand1rM hotM °" .... f'zlt .... poW.
1\h l IN•u-. J '"'"'-story i.o.... It
rMdy for 0 HW f..ay. Eilioy .... Jetty *' w . Owaer filt•ct.g $425,000.
CAIW.FRONT--8 & llCE
Two ,..... to -fey .._ OIHoot'I ,... a
".o•e-I• & ll•t" cCMdlHN la tltls
2 .. tory. 4 bed. -... wifll 2 flreplocet
St.,-to Pool & tM• ORd buch.
$245,000.
BEAUTIFUL C(IO)-
OCEAN W
'rofeulo11olly d1corot.d bJ Ro91r
no ... 11, Lo91H l1oclt. "°" 5 111 ... .,.,. c,.. •• w /lW. Md. --..... '-'fl f-llJ r•. & P•~lc YU.
9'llfy & ....-C• ... o gtm~. Owwtr
• c.-ry AITO. S270.000. '31·1400.
PANORAMIC W-
OWNEI RI
ltHtlftl dtcor & coordlHt1d
lln-1.e .. y.. c• .-.. rit'lt IL W.,. ,.._ litcw.4 .. lih YU .._ ,..., ....... ,., .. ,. . ......,. ... ...... ._ ............
••lt"Y· OWMlt W1LL CA•IY. ma.ooo. n 1-1400.
0 olf'sc;o_o.o • .,•,, • -.. 'r -----
OCEAN Yl!W!ll
Spacious remodeled 4bd Harbor
View Hills w/lrg bonus room.
Prof decor in warm earthtones.
Best location w/brand new
custom pool , spa & gazebo w/wet
bar. Too good to be true at
$419,900. Prin only. Call Patrick
Tenore.
STEA&. -OWMEA MOYB>!
This home has it 3.11 and its a
beauty. 3bd 2ba. bonus rooms,
formal DR. fireplace, pool. spa,
f1repit. etc. Al only $129,900.
Assu me low mt. 1st T.D. won't
last. Call Patrick Tenore.
,RICE REOUCEO Sl0,000
Serious seller also offers 113.-4%
interest on $225,000. Upgraded
Baycrest home with pool. Good
family home. Asking $458,500.
Ca ll Pete Johnson for details.
IARGAIN TIMI
2 bd co ndo in super sharp
condition . Mesa Verde location .
Insure good appreciation. Priced
to sell $94,500. Anne McCasland
AFFORDAILE WXUIY
Outstanding pool home near
Mesa Verde Golf Course .
Beautifully maintained and
upgraded. Custom financed for a
quick sale Price $152.500 Anne
Mccasland
WATERFRONT 30' DOa
Newport ·s bes t water buy
s.525.000 gets you Jbr. 3ba huge
master suite with spa. Sun decks
with grt view. Sit dn bar. Excell
terms Bob & Dovie Koop
SPYGLASS LEASE
Jbr. 2ba formal din .. lrg master.
fam. rm .. very lrg. ya rd.
$1600 mo . Bob & Dovie Koop
"l" HEW,ORT CREST CONDOS
Ocean view, all 4br 3ba. fam.
rm .. wet bar, din. rm ., pool, ten·
nis. "3" to choose from . $197,000
to S210.ooo. Submit all offers to
Bob & Dovie Koop.
110' OCUM VIEW
Cameo Shores 4br. 312ba. family
rm . din rm . s pacious court
yard \\ilh pool. Private beaches.
Grt f mancmg $725.000 FEE Bob
& Do\'1e Koop
QUALITY CUSTOM MlWPOIT
4br. 4t>a. tormal din .. lrg. family
rm . solid wood panel. Huge
game rm. super master suite
\\1th vie". fireplace. spa plus lrg.
silting rm. Leaving area. Priced
to sell Terms. $415.000 FEE Bob
& Dovie
UDO ISLE
4br. 4ba . lrg. lot steps to tennis &
clubhouse. Steal at $460 ,000 .
$40,000 dn . must sell fast. Bob &
Dovie
MESA DEL MAI
5br. 3ba. pool size yard. New
carpel, drapes, paint. Range and
oven. Steal at $162.000. lO'k 1st of
$78.000 plus low down. Bob &
Dovie Koop
WA TIRFROMT LWE M.I.
4br. 4ba family rm. din rm .. Top
cond . Doc k fo r 40 ' boat.
$2200 mo. Bob & Dovie Koop
llG CANYON
Prof decor Dover 2br 2ba family
rm, lrg yard, room for pool.
Guarded gate. Must sell. Submit
any off e r or terms. Assum.
existing $300,000. Price $450,000.
Bob & Dovie Koop .
VIEW FA.MT ASTIC
180" of breathtaking ocean view is
yours with this spacious 3bd, 2
bath home in a most desirable
location of Newport. $395,000.
Ca ll Kasey or Norm now.
OLD & MEW IOfH
Two yea r NEW custom cape cod
in OLD CD M. 3bd, 2"'2bath, lg.
country kit, 2 FP. Quality
workmanship throughout, too
many ameni ties to list. Super
terms, don't wait call now for
details. Kasey or Norm. ~000.
HOW'S YOUI tHAMCI
You'll find Pride of Ownership
throughout t his lovely 4bd., 2
bath home. Enjoy your own
private patio or the tennis & pool
at the club. Located in one of
Newport's finest areas. you'll
ag ree lt's a bargain at $269,900. Call us now & find out a~t the
su.per terms . Kasey or Norm.
. . ~. ~ .. ---------~-~-....... -~------~---..-----------------------------
Cll •wr.. IOOZt•••rll IOOJ *-"F«Wt "'-"fwW. .._...FerW. Ho.Mt For Wt OrangeCoastDAILYPILOT/Sunday,JulyS, 1981
········~·············· ............................................................................................ ,, •••••••••••••••••••• ~ ....... .......Fers.6t
lwr.. IM2. lwrlll IOl2 l111rtll IOOl' •••rtl IOOJ Ho.Mt For Wt 'HonnForWt FerWt ...................... . ....................... ....................... ....................... ...........••••........ .....................•. •....••..•............. ~······················
..
OCIAH VllW ChMfat I OOJ CHMral I OOJ .hllrtl I ooz-.,.. I OOJ ~J~~t~~ ··W.·········
11
·········S.··· ······~ .................. ~:;~p~·s::~,;,-_a: =:m:::F
lQ .. u at •.ooo. l.arae :!::'~1:.r!;taC:.~ a lsr • ina
?Dd TO. Spectacular --"ii
You 've Arrived
at ...
llATTHIHMT
Possibilities of this Balboa Island
property are tremendous. Multiple
units ca n be u sed ror
summer /winter income or 11 a
combination In vestment and
summer residence. Top condition,
loads of charm. flexible terms. Now
$399.250.
~an •Ins from hvtna. _A
dlnln1 and muter & __ W_A_T_ER_FR_ONT ___ , bdrm. Huse lot with 660C•
Carlsbad Coado. $15,000 ~t~::! ~I>oo't
BIG CANYll
T-..W.
A classic beauty tucked away
among the beautiful homes of Big
Can yon . Th is Tudor e state
exemplifies gracious living. It has
it all, loc ation, value and
appreciation. $1.1 Million in
assumable financing. Owner will
help carry paper. Exclusive with
Cote Realty at $2.3 Million.
BIG CANYll
C.to.11•"'·" A great address ! Complete family
borne with separate guest quarters
(plumbed for full kitchen ). Large
family room, private pool, and your
very own billiard room. This home
is designed for luxury. Owner will
help with financing. Exclusive with
Cote Realty. $1.7 Million.
BIG CAtmlf
C..to.h.ed o...• Magnificent view! Plus large
kitchen, formal dining room, pool.
spa and sauna! This 3 bedroom 3
bath home is the ultimate in good
taste. 3450 sq ft of spaciousness and
all new carpet. Move right in .
Excellent financing. Exclusive with
Cote Realty. $875,000.
BIG CAtmlt
Cmto.GolfCam•
Entertainment plus! This home is
an award winner. And wh y not ? lt
includes Cully equipped kitchen.
bil liard r oom and JO ' bar
overlooking 7th green. Bring your
friends into th is ·home of quality
construction. A complete stereo
system surrounds you. Owner will
carry financing for approved buyer.
Exclusive at $1.8 Million.
Because of Big Canyon's security
regulations. you must caJI our office
in advance fo r anopen house
·appointment.
LIDO ISLE
Quiet and peaceful! Step into a real
beauty. A Spanish atmos ph ere
prevails in this 4 bedroom home on
one of Newport's most preferred
islands. You 've got it. beauty.
location and va lue. Beautiful pool
and spa or walk right down to the
beach. Call for fin ancing details.
204 Via San Reim
Open Sal & Sunday H
NEWPORT CET
Take advantage of this one ! Two
bedroom condo with lots of
amenities . Perfect for that
first-time buyer or retirees. Vaulted
ceilings, wet bar and sun deck. Call
for details and appointment.
I Ha•t lvytn for
lraadmoor .ct 0... Hws
2075 Sin Jo1quln Hiiia Rd.
Acro11 from BIG CANYON
Newport BHch
640-Sm
•COIYCOTTAGh
SOLA.a Hf.ATIHG
BALBOA ISLAND EXCLUSIVES
BAY FRONT PUEITIES
MAGNIACENT MEllfERRANEAN
PIH a11d SL". 14 roo•s, 3
fl ... plactt, library, profeui0ttaUy
dtcorattd. Flud u1tOM wor•,
htcl•dh19 •txclttsl¥t dellCJMCI tilt,
stwhitd C)lau wl•dows 9'd doon.
ltcMfM Ytr.cla 0¥~ lay,
pa•t ... d courtyard/IWCJf to.t.r... s I ,600,000.
EXCLUSIVE CLASSEAL ELEGAllE
WITH FULL 'IER. ldtal
fa•lly / Httrtal••Ht ltoMt wltll
bt..tiM roistd deck for a.y ,.....
1t1joywt. LctnJe _..,. ~
..... wftta 110 .,. a.y •'-•· 3
bt*oo... 21/4 ""' flWS M,. ...
1Mids q.arttrs. Cl0st to •llOCJt.
Sl .450,000.
PRESTIGIOUS CONTEMPORARY
Acrou fro. ttte ,.._ Mtli llO
*CJ. lay •lew. Conttr locatlot1,
aa-1110,.. •oorl•CJ· _...... woods,
Ycmhd Ceffiltgl, hall boollc•K. an
a f.w of tht ,..., flM fMhrts a. tWs
5 bec1rooM. 3 + ball! ._. PLUS
sepm att lltalch .,........._ Sl.2'5,000 .
-MORE EXCLUSIVE USTINGS-
PRIDE OF OWtDSllP
OH unu ISUMD. 4 t.e•o-. 21f•
batll, fa•llyroo• llo., of flH
craft1111C1115'lp. 0 .. c1illlulry aitd
woodworti HllOlglllMlf. ~ ...
tN-. ctililtgs, t.aded glals. lwtcll
flrtplact , dtch, ••d roof
~~. i. I 00 blodi aoc....
S61t,500.
NEW NANTlllET
Stofariaq Giid spec-. C. ....
ctilhMJ•• lofts, splr.. shlircaM to
btoidif.i roof •ck. 4 ....,._,
f-.ity<f'OOlll ]),'4 bate. ... .. ... s
wcA. ProfetslaMly ~ 9'd
l•dscaptd. FIH cnto. w.rior.
Sttps to tht S011tlt lay Fro.t.
$609,000. •
ISLAND IN T1I SKY
Alcftld to tlw CJOOd If. Ill yo.' OWll
spocio., airy.,._ 3 bedro o• 2 Wit
lowtr .... loth ... sa.d. ...... 5""'
lay. $595,000.
675-4000
Sensational 3 bdrm home featuring upgraded
interior, french doors & spa in xtra large yard.
All for $110,000. Owner will carry large 2nd T.O.
759-1501 or 752·7373.
SPECIM.
OFFER
D~Tl
Price reduced $5 000 on this bright and airy
famil y home. Lo~ maintenance backyard with
custom spa surrounded ·by redwood decking.
Ready to move in . Only $100,900. 556-7035.
• HAUOlt aioGI•
RW ESTATE
LICENSltC SCllJOL
WHk HIGHl'S Olt WIBIHDS
s3900
For more Information
down. •,(Q) AlTD at
14 .53 for 3 years.
Peaceful retreat Euy
frwy access.
R"1f lnv't 752-2197
THE REAL ESTATERS
HOMES ON Ttl WATER
* BAYSlllRES BAYFRONT--VU
Mew • tht ...t.t la a ..... loc.tto. ... -*tncffd vu of ... layfrollt
octt.lty. Vtnetile odMlt --.., ..._
.... ... .. c ..... & ...., of Mt"f'Ol'f.
0,.. & IMOOtllty floWMg Aoor,.. wttfa
Wgll pitdltd ..... u.,... ...... ....
9'd priYatt brick a.ttrior patio .. ..
~ 0... i.•tl wttll 5 ~o•,
.... ,.., + deck wftll ..... -....
lay. s 1,350,000.
LINDA ISLE--tUROPEAN STYLE
ow;;'~ Cllltolll l"ftld11ce Oii tlllf
WA wttlt dr...tic 2-ttory twtry.
Socng c .... wftta .... be.HM
colltctor atalatd & lta•d 9lau
widows tlino•f. Stcod floor
Wco#ty/ CJllltry OYtrtcdm tht .-_ of
91MrCMts 1Hh1 roo•. For.al ll•illt
r009, dtp·dow• ,....._., 1 .... u
._,,,., fonaail ...,., + ...,. ......
paHo .t kol polld. S1pw• if*loe
-W Mitt wftta WA.ta VUs + 4 f-'Y bedroo•. Dode for 2 yecllh.
$2,600,000. htct.dts a.d.. Ul-1400.
DOYER SllJRES BAYFIONT
._acctllh&~•.._.., -4' w ... tta .. Two story ..._ wltii = _ ......... ~ & paHo for
..... ,, .. l"Ytal) hrhct fw
Mii tzl 11 1 Ill tllit 4 bed. ._. wttta
opett f-'ly roora/kitdlea + IHdtd
~ ........... w. ............
wtte. ..tttt fl,..,._.. Dodi for so·
boat. w.lt often Oii prict ' ...... .
Owatr fte1lble. s I ,400,000 .... . ....
GRANDEUR ON UtllA ISLE
A ~t of grGlld pi~ °"
prtlfltlw Lilldo ••. Wtr "" ....
,... OYtr brick w'6 Wfl'f & dip
PG'JA/tpc1 ha total ftecJ•:t. Two story ..,.. wttt. wflldMcJ odi ...... .,. ~
f099tai•. ForMal llYllMJ roo• wltii
.,aclom f-'ly rOOlll e. t • I i..,t
...... lt•r. For••I dl•lltCJ rM. +
;a ... ldk ...... Law-. --...
+ 4 cs: bedroo• W. ...._.
patio boat dodl ' .., for 3 boGtL
Sl ,Jt ,000. 631-1400.
CONTEMIWRY ON WATER
0. Corwtr wi.. ~ ~' °"' ...... ,rlYocy, woods, w , •••l•qs,
~ ' ltoded p.. .-nY "" & .... "'°"· llltpf'flll"Ye COlltl .. Of'..Y 2-stcwy ho111t with 41r + l)CMINMt
kltcht11 & din. S 1,200,000 ftt.
67).6900.
WATERFRONT HOMES.INC
REAL ESTATE
S.,,,W.) Rt>n1Mt Pwprrtv ~""'"'
2436 W Co.tst Ii....,
NN<POl'I Beach
Ul-1400
JI~ M•11ne 14,.~
&IKM lsl.tod
'7Mt00
IA.II WA THRlOMT .. JIWB..
""'/PIMt-50' loat Prestigious Npt Bch offers the finest
un equalled charm of "French Coun-
try" decor in this truly beautiful home
w/4BR or 3 + maid's. Cobblestone
courtyard. expensive Calif. stone ex·
terior. French brick flooring & peg/-
groove floors w/plusb custom area
rugs . Rough-sawn . white-washed
ceda r walls & beams. Soft green
kitchen cabinets w/artistic hand·
painted "Trompe o'ile" depicts fruit,
vegetables and pottery. Den w/rich
s t a ined oak beams. panelling,
bookcases, French doors and shutters.
Xtra lg HIS /HERS walk-ins. Com·
fortable MBR & bath exudes the
artistic warmth of "Chinoiserie" hand
painted delicate flowers on walls & •
cabinets. Offered at $1 ,795,000.00.
Call/write P.O. Box 572, Corona del
Mar, CA. 92625
WAI.Ta S. KIHG & ASSOC.
(7141 54 ... 7716/ 644-5917
120/o IMTalST OM.Y
5Br , 3Ba. ram rm.
$165.000 $30,000 dwn.
balance in 9 yrs. NO
POINTS.
The Wied mans I B >
751-4293
MESAWOOOS
Assume the large exist me 9.,.,.,,, loan and lhe
owner would rocu1der a
small 2nd Ntw drapes,
some new carpeting,
JaCUUI & garage door
o pener a r e so me
amenities of thJS 38r,
2Ba home with an add·
on fam ily room offered
at a real value at
$165,000
WATEIFIONT
CONDOS
HUNTINGTON HRBR.
Purchase with S"'c down
on fantastic terms
Brand new. cpt'd and
dra p ed ON T H E
WATER Guarded gate entry , views, 2 ca r
garage. Pool and tennis
2 • 3 BR 's AVA IL
Im med
FROM 12119,000
CALL 714/556=9&00
DESPEUTIOM
50/oDOWH
$10,000
DOWH!
Fantulic terms. Owner
wants out. Eastside
Costa Mesa. 2 Bdrm 2
bath, 2 story townhome.
2 car garage, pool, spa ..
Only Sl29.SOO. A bargain
down payment Call for
mor e information
S46·2313
THEREAL ESTATERS
~°et~= Gorgeous custom estau,
ocean & harbor v1ews.
ultimate design & de
corating. 4 Bdrm, 3....,
Baths, Formal Dining.
Reduced to Sl.~.000.
(orporo\lt' rlo\IA Reo\lt)
714 760 <HB
IMllALD IAY
Arcllitect's aw.-d wf_.., llom.
0c ............ _., ,...
of thlt fallfHtlC J ... +
f..ity l'OOlll ...... ,...... .... ..... h.9f ll•IRCJ ,..... .........
c*b. Mothr bedroo. ....... tr... .d ,,...., C.__ yet IO
clost to Hals /.rl•• bHdt.
....... S7tt,OO .JntHlcl
I UO IRVIHE A VI
SI 00,000 dowa wfl lmy tWs
bta•tlf•I lloHt I• HeWNrl 1tc11. ._._ .. ,, 1st• tVt'I •
owe tht t'fft of I ZO/o for 5
yecn.. $325,000.
JASMIHE CIB
20%DOWH
OwMr wtl flRm!Ct ""' 3 ....
21/J la cCMMlo, pie 6, ~ •
a priYatt co-..fty of C.O.. cW Mw wttta 35% doWll fl IZ-/o
h1ttrut. Lt11dtrs will lltlp
ftRmtct It wttta 20% dowll fw
quallfltd btty•rs· llllMtdlatt
pos1ttsl011. $395,000.
IAUOA ISLAND
116 25tta St
Try I 0% dow•, b•y Hl•CJ
111...,tl• .ct a•oilaMe 2.t
T.D. Owwtr wtl trodt for .._.
or lot°" ,......_ S 195,000.
ASSUME ASSU ..
.. Mtwport INClt, 4 ~ 3 ba
lg pool & ..... lg yd. ...
lcMscaptd & .. cpt, I. MC
syste. + -y trlrol. offwed
• $275,000.
ASSUME
HARIOR VIEW
3 ldnn 2 la Morioco. SI 25,000
I st, try 20% down. TWs -41 not
1c11t 10ftCJ at s250,ooo.
For hlfo. ....... Oft ........
othtr fl• proptrlift cal ..
RHidetlff .. o.,. l11•1A
644-7020
fJ15-341i
See Ina 11 believing! Super sharp 3 Bdrm 2
bath, family room, brick
fll'eplace. Covered patio,
detached garage. RV ac·
cess Seller ve r y
mollv ated, try 5'7o or
10 % down 195,950.
546-2313
HACH HOUSE, SI 57,500 Newport Beach 3
Bdrm A-frame with a $74,000 assumable low,
low interest. SUPEI 1UY!
THE REAL ESTATERS
THMIHG
TOWHHOMI?
Call the specialists al
the condominium in-formation cent.er.
Touchstone Realty
~
WHITE WATER VIEW Assume a 91'4.'k loan on
this magnificent 4 Bdrm, ocean vie w home with
night light view of Dana Point. large rooms.
high ceiling, loads of storage, room to expand .
steps to the beautiful beach. $685.000.
TURnEROCK HIGHLA.HDS -Natural beamed
wood ceilings. paneling. warm earthtones.
Lovely view, this 4 Bdrm Edinborough has
everything. Excellent financing. $389,000.
s s s
SI 0,000 DOWN!! s s s
JASMINE CUR OCUH V1EW -3 Bdrm, Plan 5
with quiet, formal elegance, private spa off
master b<,trm and a breathtaking view. $438.000.
HUHTIHGTOH HARIOUl Davenport Island,
custom 3 Bdrm home with ~· of bayfront. boat
dock. sauna and spa, exquisitely appointed.
shutters. parquet flooring. paneling, rich tone
thruout. Owner w/carry at 14'7c with $175.000
cash. It's smashing! ~.000.
Very creative financing available on this
spacious home featuring 3 bedrooms & 2 baths!
Recentl y pain ted & papered for t he
Discriminating buyer ! Only $119,000 .
759-1501 or 75?·7373.
DOH'T CIY LAlU
Don't look back and say to yourself, "I should
ha ve bought when the prices were down."
Prices are down and it's time to buy this 2
bdrm, pride or ownership unit. Takeover
existing loans with modest down. 545-9491.
•IXICUTIYI SWHT•
WATIRFIOMT DUPLD -2 Bdrm plus bachelor,
both units with brick fireplaces. pi~r and float.
Room for two boats. $450,000.
This serenely beautiful home is set against a
changing backdrop of green & golden slopes,
long shadows & twinkling lights! Featuring 3
bdrw + a spacious library, formal dining &
gourmet kitchen for memorable days lhruout
the years. A dramatic stairway that's wrapped
around an atrium leads to a hideaway master
suite with study & fireplace for those chilly
evenings! For a private showing of this superb
residence call 759-1501or752·7373.
c .. Mase ....... lies•-•.._.
Sensational 2 story, executive home featuring 4
large bedrooms, 3 baths, formal dining, iamily
room & bonus room. Located at end of quiet
cul-de·sac. Only $187,000 with assumable
financing. 759-1.501 or752·7373.
OWHll WILL TIADE -20 acres near Rancho
1Calilornia. Owner wants condo in Nwpt, Irvine,
Costa Mesa. Can be divided into 4 to 5 acre
! parcels for small equity or $140,000 takes all.
DISPIU11 LADY
'Ibis superb 2 bdrm condo is a great sta~r &
priced al below market value. Hurry. th LS one
won't last. Call now!! ~Nn.
OCIAMRlOMr .... Al.OW
Private, lockable gate onto the wh ite sand.
Charming Laguna Beach cottage ii perfect
weekend hideaway or rental. FANTASTIC
FINANCING: With J>% down payment, owners
will finance at 13% with no payments for one
year! I Askin I 169$,000. 983-5671.
SI 3,000 OOWM
Spacious four bedroom, two bath beach home.
Superb owner assisted flnancln1 available.
.. 7(15.
Hlfttltt
54~f4tl HJ.1671
71,..llOI
NllllCTflOI
COMDOCOMfm
These 60 unitl would conm easily
into condos . Three excellent
assumable loa ns . Prime
Bakersfield location. $1,.,,000 or
owner will consider trade for
mobile home park. -..n.
•
CONTUCTOl'S .,.HT!
Custom built home has been this contractor 's
home, office and yard, but now it's time to
move. Storage galore including 20'x50' garage
with ~ bath (could easily be converted to
mother-lo-law quarters), 2 RV accesses for
trucks, boats or campers PLUS custom pool
and spa. Lot size : ¥.t acre. $179,900. 963-5671.
JUST Md MACIMT
Call for a look at this gorgeous home with every
luxurious appointment. 4 beautllul bdrm.a , new
earthtone carpets, lush tile floors
entertainer's delight! Call nowt 545-9'91.
L.AJY IOMIS snetM.
For th~e who'd ralher play ~n do yard work!
3 bdrmJ bath condo. !U>ieet to•~% loan. Well priced. roxtremeJy motivated Hiler. 5'5-Nll.
JASMIMI CIHI -Comfortable 3 Bdrm home
with plantation shutters, parquet floors, lush
carpeting, tasteful decoratin(. Within the
security gates of Jasmine Creek. 9V• %
usumable Joan. $320,000.
TUaTUIOCK Hlf9HLAMDS -A s tunnio&
achievement by Pollock lnterjors. Exquisite
ciee3ratinc lbruout :this 4 Bdrm, 1 sty home
with separate dlnin,t .. room and lar1e master awte. A new and excnin,I offerin1 $312,000.
·-~
Cll Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July 5, 1981
~.~.~ ....... ~~ ....... Wt .......... Wt ........... w. ........... w.
.
. .............................................................. ···················~ •••r• I 001 .... ,.. Iott I OOJ I 001 •1•rll I w~ .••••••................ •··············••······ ................................•.................................. ,.
• i
Dalebout
Bay & Bea6h
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
COME WITH US ••• TOllACOH IAY WATllNOHT. AN
ABSOLUTE DREAM FOR BOAT LOVERS .. REALLY FIRST I
CABIN .. YOU CAN LIE 1N BED AND SEE ALL THE ACTION ON
THE BAY .. PIER AND SUP FOR THREE LARGE BOATS .. SIX
BEDROOMS. DEN .. MAID'S QUARTERS .. OWNER WILL
CARRY ONE MILLION DOU.AR lSTT.D.
ASK FOi HAHllT rmY •••••••••••••••••••• $1 ,400,000
OPIH TODAY I ·5
COME WITH US ••• TO IAYCIEST. IMPECCABLE THREE ~~~~qo~.H lwgo ~A~rE~~MFRoDPE:R~~DI ~g~~~r N~IN,!~~
LANDSCAPING SHOWS LIKE A MODEL. YOU COULD DINE ON THE
GARAGE FLOOR SEE PIA D'AURIA OR STEFANI STEVENS.
lt2 f TRADEWIMDS LAME .......................... un.ooo
COME WITH US ••• TO IA YCIEST. ELEGANT THREE
BEDROOM HOME. THREE BATHS. BEAMED CEILINGS .. STONE
FIREPLACE .. SKYLIGITTED BREAKFAST ROOM .. HUGE COVERED
PATIO .. POOL SIZ E YARD PLUS PUTTING GREEN .. OWNER
ANXIOUS .. ONLY 10•1, DOWN ASK FOR GAYLE AMATO OR ALLAN
MI NOR.
2039 SHIPWAY LAME ••••••••••••••••••••••.•.••••• Utt,500 •
COME WITH US ••• TO DOYEi SHOUS. FOUR BEDROOMS. FA MILY ROOM .. SU BSTANTIALLY BUILT AND
MAINTAINED .. SURPRISINGLY QUIET AND CHEERFUL .LOVELY
BACK BAY VIEW . OWNER MOTIVAT ED .. PRICE REDUCED
Sl2,500. SEE ELAINE SVEDEEN
2130 SANTIAGO DRIVE •••..••••••••••• MOW OHL Y U37 ,000
COME WITH US •.• TO WESTCLIFF. T HREE
BtDROO MS FAM I LY AND DIN ING ROO MS .. CUSTOM
WALLPAPER NEW CARPETS QUIET LOCATION, YET
SURPRISINGLY CONVEN IENT TO SHOPS , BANKS AND
SCHOOLS SEE HARRIET PERRY
1521 CORMWAl.L &...-............•........•.••.•• $229,500
COME WITH US .•. TO IACIC liY ilEA. SPACIOUS FOUR
BEDROOM AND CONVERTIBLE DEN HOME .. FORMAL DINING
RO OM FAMI LY ROO M LIK E NE W CARPETS AND
DRAPES GREAT PLAY YARD WITH POOL AND SPA .. SEE ALLAN
MINOR
1572 PEGASUS .••••..••.•..••••••••••.•••••.•••••• S 17 2.500
COME WITH US ••• TO HUMTIHGTOH IEACH. THRE E
BEDROOMS. FA MIL Y ROOM .FLOOR TO CEILING STONE
FIREPLACE .. NE W CARPETS NE W PAINT CONVENIENT TO
SHOPS. SCHOOLS AND BEACH SEE SALLY NETTEL.
16151 SCHRYER LAME ••••••••••••..••..•..•••.••• SI 12,500
A VAIL.AIU IY APPOINTMENT
COME WITH US ••. TO LIDO WATEIFIOMT. ENJOY
WATERFRONT LIVING TO TllE F"IJLLEST. THE AIR IS FRESH AND
CLEAN TH E S IT DOWN VIEW OF THE RARBOR IS
SPECTACU LAR TWO SPACIOUS B ED ROO MS AND DEN
CONDO PROFESSIONALLY DECORATED . CO MPLETE
SECURITY PIER AND SUP AVAILABLE
ASK FOR DOTTIE AUSTEIO • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • $620,000
COME WITH US ••. TO WISTCLIFf. IMPRESSIVE FOUR
BEDROOM H OM E FA MI LY AND DINING
ROO MS FIREPLA CE ELE GANT CABINETRY
THROUG HOUT LARGE SECLUDED REAR YARD .. GREAT FOR THE BOAT OR TRAILER SELLER WlLL HELP GENEROUSLY WlTH
FINANCING
ASK FOi YllGIMIA SWAN OI JAME FIAZEE •••••••• $525,000
COME WITH US ••• TO IA YCIEST. PRESTIGIOUS FIVE
BEDROOMS. FAMILY AND DINING ROOMS. ISLAND TYPE
KITCHEN BUILT IN BBQ BRI CK PATIO .POOL SJZE
YARD PADDLE TENNIS COURT THREE CAR GARAGE.
ASIC FOR PIA D'AURIA ••••• .' •.....•••••••••••••.•••• $495,000
COME WITH US ••• TO DOYEi SHOIES. ENCHANTING THREE
BEDROOM HOME. SPACIOUS FAMILY AND DINING ROOMS .. THE
REAR YARD IS AN ABSOLUTE DREAM FOR PRIVACY AND
RELAXATION .. HUGE POOL . EXTENSIVE DECKING AND
LUXURIANT PLANTINGS.
ASK FOi DOTIIE AUSTEIO •.•.•.•••••••••••••••••• $495,000
COME WITH us ... TO oova SHOllS. ANXIOUS OWNER
WANTS TO EXCHANGE FOUR BEDROOM HOME IN DOVER SHORES
FOR TWO OR THREE BEDROOM CONDO IN WOODBRIDGE .. HOME
HAS LARGE POOL SIZE YARD ASSUMABLE S87.000 LOAN AT
12"'1'\-.. OWNER WILL CARRY LARGE 2ND TD
ASK FOi IOGEI IAl9"1ST •••••••••••••••••••••••• $420,000
1617 WESTCLIFF DllVI •••••.••• : .••••••• 631·7 JOO
''Rockled &-by-the Sea"
Ocean front es~te on 2 large legal
lots. Walled and gated with superb
gardens. Pvt steps to beach. 4BR·4ba
home and 2B ·2b guest house .
Brochure on request.
Carol Tatum, Rltr. 494·0029
REALTORS
'75-HI I
WATERllT CllOS
HUNTINGTON HRBR
Purchase withs~ down
on fantastic terms.
Brand new. cpt'd and
draped . ON THt:
WATER. Guarded gale
entry, views, 2 car
garage. Pool and tennis.
2 • 3 BR'S AVAJL IM·
MED. FROM 1299,000
7 I 4 /55'-'600
OIAMll
' MIWPOIT SHOHS: W Mr .... ...:
I J .... J ... .,.. ....... ~COIJ
Fn&it tree9 • room for your OW11 prdeD compli.
ment thll beautlruJ 3
bdrm, ramllr room
bome. Clole to bolplt.al.
Come aee it I SlltJOO.
MAUIY STAUJJa
SIA UOMllALn
67MJl4 .,,.., MC!,~ .. C"'9' 0--Wll llelf -..C.. . .._ ¥ SIH,oH ...
~ llOADWOOI ILMAMCI: h= ....... ,... ............ . .... ..,; 4 ..... ...., ,.... J
• 1'• • ....... ,.. ...... ,,.... .. ..... .,,., .... -COLI Of MIWPGll' IM&.TOll
Jltl' celll ..... c-.. .. Mir ., ... ,, .
LOWDOWM .......
r1bulou1 flnuet••
nalJablel Beautlllal I ' BR boalt. rr.11 ,.-1a
udGUt.PhU=. Larp, dmrJ . aJlllJat ....... .. ~ered ..... O......
1ar.t t RV 1toract.
lould , .... ? It Ill °'111 ~··Call .. .,,
COLOWC?U
Bl\.N~eR ~ 1
COOL.Hm4
& SHADY! SI 4 I ,000
Beautiful 3 bedroom condominium
that 's nestled amongst a babbling
brook and cool waterfall. Spacious
noorplan has nearly 1800 square feet..
Complete with formal dining room for
executive entertaining. Family room
and fireplace graces the living room.
Prime location in complex. Must see!
Call today. 979-2390.
OODLIS Of PllVACY
PAY $'87 A MOMYH! St9,t50
Super 3 bedroom condominium that's
located in all adult community. Highly
upgraded with plush earth tone carpets
throughout. Private end unit. All adult
co mplex with lots or recreational
facilities. Sparkling POOL. SPA. Great
clubhouse with exercise equipment!
Pay $687 a month! Call for details.
979·2390
MO W()d.
MO WOllYI $'6,500
Two bedroom condo in sparkling clean
condition. Tastefully decorated and ac·
cented with custom wallpaper and rich
panellin~. Attached garage with sp~ce
for additional car also. Great location
close to shops. Lowest priced of its
kind ! Hurry and see today! 979-2390
$30,000 DOWN
TOUCH Of CL.ASS! $204, 900
Beautiful 4 bedroom home that's up·
graded from top lo bottom. Spacious
rtoorplan has 2~'l baths. Sunken f<?r~al
dining room for elegant entertammg.
Family room and crackling fireplace.
Plush carpets throughout. Located just
minutes from South Coast Plaza.
Owners will listen to all offers! Call to·
day! 979-2390.
SPLISH, SPLASH
SUMMEIAILD DUAM SI 42,500
Cool down this summer in this fun lov·
ing POOL home. Sprawling floorplan
with 3 bed.rooms, 2'h baths. Dining
room, family room and double
fireplace make this a complete family
home ! Even a bubbling SPA too !
Creative financing available ... call
for details.
·--···· -..
979-2390
2955 S. HAUOI K.VD ..
COSTA MESA
RCTaylorCo
640-9900
TIME TO PICMC
on the park like grounds of this
sharp 3 br. 2 ba Irvine condo.
Near pool & recreation center.
Large private patio. move-in
condition with assumable
. financing. $156,000. Better hurry!
lllMG YOUI R.IET
Situated on 60 ft. of the most
desirable Linda Isle location.
This home offers 5 brs., 6 baths,
pool & spa with large double
dock. spacious enough to keep 4
large yachts. Own. will consider
exchange or carry 1st T.D.
$2,100,000.
WHITIWA TH VIEW
Lovely 3 bedroom with fantastic
ocean and canyon views. Sit in
the gazebo & e njoy. Lush
landscaping compliments this
sharp home. $299,000.
100/o DOWH
ONLY $219,950 for this 3 Br, 2 Ba
Harbor View Home near park
and pool. Motivated owner will
assist in financing and quick
escrow. Hurry, won't last.
WINDOW OM THE WOILD
The answer to all your drea~ !
This remodeled Port.ofmo is in
Phase III of this the roost popular
area in Newport Beach. 4 Bds., 4
baths, a sweeping view of Orange
County & much, much more ! Call
for financing details. $479,000.
A 1.16HTHOUSI
wouldn 't ha ve a better
spectacular night Ugtt and ocean
view l This home hu a courtyard
entry pool, 2 bedroom guest
suite, study, playroom and
family room. Master bedroom
suJte bas a separate jacuzzi.
'795,000 -Owner will finance . "'I. WILL DIU On tJl1I pride ol ownenhip .t·plex
ln Great Dana Point loca6on.
Four 1uper 2 bl' unlta. but bm ol
all, Hiler 1111 1ubmlt your
..... Prlee IO~ .....
• -· -------..--..,u-u-.w_u .. u..,u-s""";_e .. e-•e""'e-·.·1-, I
RESIDENTIAL REAL rs fAfE SERVICES
llU lllUSE 1·5
ontol OM SPY•LASS HILL
Distinguished custom Mediterranean Villa. Command·
ing ocean view. $2,400,000. See Barbara Ballmann At 17
MUIR BEACH CIRCLE
OPEH IH WESTCUff
Spanish Hacienda complete w/tiled floors & heavy
beams. 5 BR + Fam. Rm. & POOL. S495.000. See Evan
Corketl At 1437 ANTIGUA WAY
OPIM IH IMi CANYON
Elegant 4 BR. Versailles overlooking lOt.h fairway.
$650,000. See Lucy Rose At 5 RUE DU PARC
OPIH IH HAUOI VIEW HIW
Dramatic ocean view. 3 BR. + Fam. Rm. POOL.
$485.000. Magnificent tinancing. See Carole McMahan
At 1100 WHITE SAILS.
OPB4 IM HIWPOIT CIEST
A Best Buy! Walk to beaches frorn this 3 BR. 21h BA.
Beautiful condominium for $185,900. See Co ra
Baldikoski At 200 COLUMBIA
OPEH IH TUITI.EIOCIC
Broadmoor Plan Ill. 4 BR. Fam. Rm. 2112 BA. Acr06s
from park. Walk to pool & tennis. $210,000. See Lisa
White At 1*2 MOUNTAIN VIEW
OPEH IH WOOOlllDGE
This 3 BR. condo end unit is bright & cheery & in ex·
cellent location. Priced to SELL $109.500. See Jane
Mitchler At 95 WILDWOOD
IMYESTOIS HOTI
Corona del Mar duplex in excellent location Sur-
rounded by newly ex panded & rebuilt duplexes this
property offers great potential. Or live in half & rent
the other. Priced at $252.000.
DOYEi SHOIES-SOPHISTICA TIOH!
Bayfront! One of the lariest pier·slip-docks in Dover
Shores. Bright. cheery & elegant describes this 5BR.on
the water. Looks like a model ! Owner will carry all
financing. $1,750,000.
VIEW HOME IH USTILUFf
This lovely 3 BR. + family room located on a private
cu l-de·sac has a mountain and night light view. Near
schoo ls, shopping and churches. $250,000.
ALMOST OCEAN FIOMT
Charming Cape Cod with English gardens & huge
patios. Great ocean view from upper story & deck. 4
BR. On Peninsula Point. $400.000.
IA YSHOIE COMTIMPOUIY
Extra wide street frontage and large patio complim ent
this spacious 3 BR + Den. Private guard gated area
with great beaches. Land included. $450.000.
WOOD AMD USED HICK ,.
Good location on Balboa Island near South Ba y Front.
Immaculate home with beam ceilings & two firepla ces.
Lovely patios. 4 BR + 2 BA and beach showers. Terms
available. $45().000.
UDO ISLE IEAUTY
Owner found another house -truly motivated! Perfect
home for family & entertaining. The gourmet kitchen &
living room open through french doors to flowered
garden courtyard. Large for mal dining room seats
twelve easily. Many extras! $599.000.
IACIC IAY ESTATE
On prestigious Mesa Drive. 3 horse E-Z care stable.
Beautifully decorated. including new gourmet kitchen.
Big dining area. Ovemite loft. 2 Big bedrooms . Cozy
den. $335,000.
ILUFfS IEAUTY
3 BR. 2'1'.z BA. "v·· plan in Bluffs with great assumable
loan. Beautiful carpets & upgrades. Good location. A
must to see at $177.000.
TBMS! TB.MS! TBMS!
With only 20'7c down the owner will carry the Ist for 5
years. This charming 3 BR. home is perfect for a small
family & is within walking distance or the beach. Com·
munity pool & tennis courts. Immaculate. $225.000.
COUMTIY 11.KAHCE
In exclusive Cameo Shores. 3 BR. Pool home on ll:J
acre. French doors. Two fireplaces, including master
BR. Newly customized & etched glass windows. Open
beam ceilings . Absolutely smashing! Reduced to
$650,000 Fee.
A UH OPPOITUHITY
Beautifully decorated, very private condominium in
Newport Beach. Lovely grounds. Totally upgraded in·
terior with large spacious room. 2 bedrooms plus Den.
$179,500.
OCIAM YllW
Big family treat in Harbor View Hills. 4 BR. 2~ BA.
Den w/fireplace. Sparkling POOL. Lusk built
MONTECITO. Owner will help with financing . SlS.S.000.
SHOUCUffS
Elegant split level w/ocean & canyon views. Upper
level master suite w/deck. 2 other BR. + guest
quarters or f amlly rm. on lower level. Used brick
terrace w /spa. f750,000 .
TOWMHOMI Wmt A YllWI
Don't pass up tbe opportunity to see the Back Bay from
this 3 BR. Townhome today. Call for owner assisted
fJnanclng detalla. $16',500.
CUSTOM CMA.IM .. IAYCIBT
You will be eotranctd by thil home rrom the 1rack>us ·
exterior wtth leaded siw wlndowl to tbe trench doors
leadtq to the tre.abaded rUo wttb tiled Jacuui.
Family Um, at ltl belt; 3 B a BA. Family kitchen 6
a FULL baement. •.ooo. '
COUNTIY llllNCH
IN IA YSHOllS
Charming country 3 bedroom-3 bath
home, private master suite with
balcony, gale guarded community
with two beautiful private beaches.
Excellent owner financing makes
thls a great buy at $349.500. Open
Sat & Sun from 1·5. 2651 Crestview.
FAMILY OWim
This 4 bedroom 3 bath house in
Baycrest is perfect for family
eif(ertaini ng, large country kitchen,
formal dining. Pool and spa in very
private, tastefully landscaped
grounds. Owne r will fin ance
$31 5.000 . Open Su n 1·5. 1915
Tradewind
INVESTOl'S SPICIAL
~% financing with private lender
at 14'''t'.. 3 br. l ba, large fenced
yard, covered patio, family kitchen,
large double garage. Priced for a
quick sale at $123,500. Open Sat 1·5'.
20092 Spruce (Santa Ana Heights>
CHARMING IWffS
Delightful Bluffs 2 bedroom plan
''H" with view on the Caudal
greenbelt near pool and putting
green. Partial back bay view and a
delightful deck. f'Jexible financing.
Price reduced to $220,000.
IEST VALUE IN SPYGLASS
This unique Southport model has
view, 6 bedrooms, 4112 baths and on
one of the best streets in the area.
This home is in prime condition and
ready to move into. The customized
interior and lushly landscaped
yards make this home a rare find at
just S699.500
LIDO ISLE
Spanish elegance al its best. . .4
years new at the peaceful east end
of Lido Isle Community beach at
each end of the street. 4 bedrooms.
J 3,4 baths. gourmet kitchen, walled
patio with fou ntain. Super family
entertainment home . Owner
creative submit. $62.5,000. Open
Sat from 4-8. 116 Via Waziers
$50,000 DOWN MOVES YOU
IMTO SPYGLASS
Make an offer they can't refuse.
This exquisite 3 bedroom home
needs absolutely nothing but a new
owner. It has been professionally
de co r ated, land sca ped
meticulously . has sparkling pool
and spa, and assumable Joans. All
this in Spyglass Hill for $475,000.
Ope n Sat & Sun from 1-5. 8
Monterey Circle.
IAYSHOIES FAMILY HOME
This large 4 bedroom. 4 bath home
is just steps away from the pri vate
beaches of this gate guarded
community The living room with
heavy wood beams. paned windows.
and shutters open to the sunn y
bri c k pati o g r e at fo r
entertaining. Owner will assist with
finan cing or will consider trades
$549.500.
GORGEOUS JASMINE CREEi
CONDO
Plan 5 former model with
secluded patio and tile jacuzzi off
the master suite. 3 bedrooms, lar~e
family room /kitchen combo. 21'.1
baths. Excellent buy with unusual
financing and a very fl exible
price!! Offered at $360.000. Open
Sunday 12-5. 11 Mainsail.
NEWPOIT HEIGHTS CAPE COD
Fabulous large Cape Cod family
home well located in Newport
Heights. 4 bedrooms plus a family
room. Large back yard for a
growing family. Price just reduced
to $275,000! ! Owner will assist with
financing.
PICTUIE PllflCT
Professionally landscaped front and
rear. Very private entertaining
patio and pool area -3 oversized
bedrooms and 3 baths . La rge
kitchen/family room combo. Owner
will finance. $369,500.
RANCHO SAN JOA9UIM
Adorable, affordable 1 bedroom and
loft condo in the Villas. This bright
cheery· home is perfect for the
small family or single. $153,900
SOPHISTICA TID LIM> ISU
WITH FtMAMCIMG
This enchanting home has aU the
amenities for family life plus
luxury e ntertaining. With 5
bedrooms, each with its own bath,
there is plenty of room. At $400,000
assumable 1s t TD at 10% in
available with owner willing to
carry some balance. This classic
home will not last long. f7M,OOO.
Open Sat/Sun 1·5 828 Via Lido Soud
ADULT COMK>
DCILLIMT ""*Ill
This lar1e two be d roo m
condominium with its hi&h beam
ceilings and beautiful mountain
view is in the best location ol lhil
security 1ated complex. &Qoy WI
fully alr·condiU<>nea \l\it with tbe
community pool jUlt ltepl from
your door. Lar1e .....,, .... K
tou. All for $1.M,IOO.
cs 0 3 I cs
••
HARBOR REALTY
IAYROMT COMM>
Just listed! Spacious 2 bdrm., 2
bath first floor condo with 44 feet on
the bay. Prime location with view
of the jetty and Balboa Island
Bridge. New carpels, deluxe
kitchen. fireplace. wide bayfront
terrace. ~75,000.
OCW YU IUll mMICID!
Cameo Highlands : $335,IXX> fee.
S 0 U H l
OCEAN VIEW IMI I I I I' I
FOR $15~ill
IAYCIEST FA*Y NOMI
Large custom built 4 bdrm. home.
Traditional styling and lots of room.
Huge paneled game rm . with
professional wet bar. Pool. formal
dining rm .. office & family rm.
Quick occupancy Reduced to
$425,000.
OPIM SUH I ·5 214 VIA ITHACA
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lg~ ~ecrealion room & 2 patios. Beam ~~l1tt.is. Great for ttnlertaioina. $420,000. Best prtce for the money.
PENINSULA POINT 114QROMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm,
3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft.
featuring marine room $1,385,000.
CAMIO SHOllS-U'9DM
Panoramic ocean view.
Owner may finance all.
5".USS-OCUH W
Model home. Exquisite.
PINN. rotMT CUSTOM
5 BR. 5 yrs new. 20% dwn.
Owner may finance all.
The price is correct & there is
only one 2 bdrm. 2 bath left in the
Sunset Blurt Tract. Security gate
guarded community. Also 3 very
large 2 bdrm. 3 bath studio
homes with private yard. Priced
at $135,000. lO"k down to qualified
buyers.
I PESOOE ' I I I I' I
S H a O C C J You can al••Yt ltll tilt I' I I I I' J eaperltnced par11111 ti a · · · · S.yeai-old'a blrthdty peny.
-----.., They don't give tilt kid• T R U T I P neplllna, they give tlltm -I I I I' I . -.
WESTCLIH CONDO
Very convement location. Nicely
decorated first floor condo. 2
bdrms., private encla;ed patio, lots
of storage. ll 's hard to believe you
can enjoy living in Newport Beach
for $129,SOO -call to see.
<>PIH SAT & SIM 12·5
SUHSIT ILUFfS TUCT
2157 Poctflc An, C-.MtM
(Off YJctorie •• lroalill••fl
Jiff lllUY, IW.TOI
2'02 Htwport llYcl. • ....,.,. ....
675-tt 11 Trct 54*-'572
~.;;...l _o _G ,.....D ... o ,..,.'.,.........I • c-1o1t "' o.ctlo .--I I' I 1''1 "Mi"'I "'""......,_. . . . . . '/00.....,,, __ No , ....... ,, ·---~ • ?ww· r r r r r r I' r r r 1
1;1111 1 111111
SCIAMUTS A.wen ii C........_ 5100
I
HARIOI VIEW HOMES
Popular Somerset Model on an
extra large lot. overlooking the
nature park. 5 bdrms. + farmly
sized family rm. Spacious enclosed
yard with dog run and covered deck
area. 3 car garage. $329.750. ,SACRIRCE -BY OWtll
fTWs WttliCW,J ASSUMAIU RNAMCNi
$280,000
ISASllALL
PRICE TO PAY.
COIOMA DB. MAI IM'UX LUXURY TOWNHflJS( $165,181 EASTSIDI 2 bid units with 2 & 3 bdrms .
secluded at the end of Jasmine Ave.
Freshly painted and in excellent
condition. Both units have beamed
ceilings. fireplaces. private
~orch.es. $320 ,000 with super
financmg.
(714) 673-4400
Pric.d for~ Wt
~""•cl.gOpllwA•IMlt
Ideal Costa Mesa location near
shopping centers. churches and
schools. 3 Bdrms , den. 21,2 ba, mo
sq fl home with many ex tras
including parquet floors. plush
ca rpet , shutters. micro wave.
central air. custom wallcovering.
Large deck pauo <24x37') with
landscaping. Gas BBQ. Great (2)
storage rooms . $37K down .
Courtesy to Bkrs.
OP8t TODAY 1·5, JJ6 YISTA IAU
Cl.. C.M. Beautiful 4 Bdrm plus
family ; featuring enclosed
courtyard. entertainers backyard
with Koi pond and lovely patio.
Very open with lots of glass. Asking
$197,SOO. For an appointment to see.
call 540-1151
Esqmalte Model Home
At Loa Corralel la
SU Juan Capl1truo
121 JI 621·2121
Tiie HlliMlr Aree's "-9tst
Esw.aisJled .... &Wt \;Oii~
SUPlll RMAMCIMG! Fine 3BR
residence in Irvine Terrace. Well
priced at $259.000. Beautifully
situated and excellent financing.
C.oby Ward 641-8235 (P31>
EHGLl~H HOIMAHDY ESTATE.
Custom home on Big Canyon golf
course. 5 BR (each w/bath),
family rm , study, m.str suite
w/fplc & ,wet bar. Separate
maids rm . butlers pantry, wine &
billiard rm .. sauna and spa.
Immediate occupancy. $2.100,000
Lynne Valentine . 644-6200. CP15)
CHATE.AU OM GALAXY DllVE. This
magnifi cent home is an
entertainers paradise. Enter tall
stately doors to a spectacular
pool with marble and tall
colu11U1s. Look through the home
to the bay and ocean beyond. 5
BR, Den study large lot Sl,900.000
Barbara Aune 642·8235. (P16)
WATUFROMT VIEW. Large
handsome home on the bay of
Linda Isle. 5 BRS, 41Ai baths,
family rm, sunken living room,
immense formal dining rm.
C.ourtyard spa, slip and side tie.
Private tennis court, beach &
clubhouse. $1 ,600,000 leasehold.
Lois Egan 644·6200. (Pl7)
IAYSHOIES IAYFIOMT
EU&AMCI In "John Wayne
C.Ountry ". Tall impressive doors
enter through used brick to pool,
garden and the bay beyond. High
ceilings, large rooms. Crown
moldings. Inviting ~anien room
on the bay. 4 BR. swtes fam rm.
$1 ,400 ,000 leasehold estate.
Barbara Aune 642-823.S (P18)
tll.LTOP VllW HTATl 6400 sq. ft.
home to be constructed on
panoramic bay &: ocean view lot.
Owner wlll carry 1001-term
financing. Plana available for
to-peclion. $1 ,200,000. Paula
BaUey 642-8235 CP19)
MOVE IM COMMTION
Sharp 3 Bdrm. 5 years new, large
open kitchen , lovely atrium.
earthtone carpets. Aslung $134,900.
Call 540.llSI
llG CAMYOM PRIVACY. Beautiful
Broadmoor Plan 4 on a choice
cul-de-sac. Imported floor tiles.
wall covering, new carpeting,
and classic French doors. 4 BRS
and formal Ii ving and dining
rooms. large patio with pool and
spa. $865.000. Lynne Valentine.
644-6200. (P20)
COUMTRY HOME/YARD FOi
GIOWIMG FAMILY. This custom
country 4-bedroom home with
New England charm. shingles
used brick & wood beam ceilings
is the perfect family home.
$555,000 Bea Arnold 644 ·6200
(P21 )
WESTHH HAC'IEHDA. C1utt4>JTI
Spanish styled 5 BR. 4 BA Home
on 5/8 acre. Oak flooring TIO. 3
Fireplaces, basement & island
kitchen . Two elegant oak
stairways to master suite.
Assumable financing and owner
will carry the balance. $549,000
Barbara Callihan 642-8235 (P'l2)
PIMTHOUSl--HAllOl·OCIAM
VllWS. Top corner 3 BR .
Superbly upgraded in a guard
gated community. Clubhouse,
pool, sauna, & spa Quick-escrow
and good financing $450,000 Tom
Allinson or Terry Hanes 64.2·8235
(P'l3)
TUITLI IOCI
HIGtl.AM>S-POOL Real "Pride
of ownership" is apparant in this
gracious "Mactavish" Model
with a gated c?urtyard entry.
Cathedral ceilln1s. 4 BRS. formal
D.R. Prof. Landscaped wlth
custom Pool and Spa. $389,900
Belle Partch 752-1414 CP24)
uwJOittn•mr
ERITAGE
MACNAB
IRVINE
REALTY
HAllOI RID&l-HAUTIFULL. Y
appointed view condominium. 2
BR + conversation area. kitchen
with nook + formal dining -One
level. Assumable loans. Owner
will assist in financing. $419.000
Lorraine Rennie 752-1414 (P25)
YOUU LOVING COMIHG HOME •.•
to this panoramic view. custom
home in Turtle Rock. Upper level
invites formal dining, with family
rm, kitchen. 3BRS 2bath Lower
level widen , large game room
w/fireplace PLUS 4th BR and
bath. $385 ,000 . Helen Wood .
644-6200 ( P26 l
IALIOA ISLAMD HEAR IAY.
Enchanting English bungalow
w/3 BRs & 2 baths. Only If.I block
to south bayfront. Full size lot.
Seller assisted financing. $365,000
incl. land. Dick Halderman
642.8235 ( P27)
' WTILUFf -Five Bedrooms -
180 degree view. Lusk built home
totally remodeled. Quick escrow
and good financing. Pool size
yard with soft and ~arth tone
interiors. $329,500 Leasehold.
Tom Allinson or Terry Hanes
642-8235 { P28)
~OI VllW HILLS. Best value.
Newly listed, great home in
marvelous neighborhood.
Handsome exterior -three
spacious bedrooms -fireplace in
f amity room -larae private lot.
Only $299,500 leasehold. Barbara
Aune 642·8235 (P30)
DitD•
MEWH ILUFFS-FROMT ROW!
"Dolores" Plan -end unit over-
looking upper bay area. 3 Br. 2 BA
patios. Lovely built-in kitchen.
Master suite. $325,000 Including
land . Call Dick Halderman
642-8235. (P29)
ILUFFS "G" PLAM. Lovely 4 BRS. 3
bath home w high beamed
ceilings, parquet floors. shutters
throughout & located on
greenbelt. Close to community
pool . Owner will ass i st
w/financing $239,500 leasehold.
Donna Godshall. 644-6200 <P32 >
PRJME ILUFFS LOCATION! Highly
u p g r a d e d 3 B R , 2 112 b a t h
"Francis can " model on
greenbelt. A must see home for
the appreciative. $239.500. Young
Park 551·8700 lP33 )
CAMEO HIGHLANDS! Super 4BR
home w I pool. A beautiful home
w/a very open & airy feeling. Lg
rear yard totally enclosed & very
priv&te. $229,000. Sharon Smith
644·6200 < P34 )
CHARM LOCATION &
COHVEHIEHCE -Immaculate 3
BR Harbor Highlands Home.
Close to schools, shopping. A
quiet cul-de-sac adds to security
& quiet living. Fruit trees in a
beautifully landscaped setting.
John Richard 551 -8700 (P3.5)
OHi OF COSTA MESA'S llST. Lots
of French windows and a stained
glass entry enhance this 4 BR
plus fam. rm. Mesa Verde Home.
Recently remodeled with new
roof. carpets, paint & floors.
$179,950. John Richard 551-8700
(PJ;)
2 OH A LOT -ACIOSS .. OM
PW. Owner will carry first T.D.
on these two nice 2 bedroom
Wlits. One block from shopping,
buses and close to schools &
churches. $157 ,500. Call Larry
Dyer 642·8235 (P37)
901 Dover DrlVe H&rbot View CentM C&mpus \Uey Center llbodbr1dge Village Center
Ne"port Beach. QA 92663 llewpott Beloh, CA 9aeeo
('714) 648 .. 8236 (714) ~6200
~ QA 98718 lrY1ne, QA 92714
(714) 751~· ('714) 881-8700
.I
•
DIRECTORY
• .., ........ .....,., .... .,.. ............. ,.. .. ~-· •••• Al ................... wt...._. ............. ., Wial*; ......_ .. Wl(t OAl.l N.01 WAMT ADI.'*-*•lilt .............. ,... ... .-p4 .... -~ ............. , ........ s....., .... s..,.
MOUSES FOR SALE
2 IEDIOOM
1228 Ru tland Road, Newport Bch
642-8235 $135,000 Sun 2·6
9'l8 S. Kilson, Santa Ana
545-2737 $83,500 Sun 1·5
21~ Miramar, Balboa Pellin. N.B.
631-1400 $318,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
119 Via Yella, Lido Isle, NB
673-0697 $469,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
214 Via Dijon, Lido Isle. NB
963-8182 $335,000 Sun 1·5
Z II pM FAM RM w DIN
•973 Bayside Cove W.
<Baysd Cv) NB
675-6000 $649,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
502 Acacia (Old CdM ) Cd M
675·6000 $324,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
4951 Hemlock, Univ. Park. Irv.
552·1800 $189,900 Sun 1·5
33 Whitewater (Jasmine Ck) CdM
675·6000 $299,500 Sun 1·5
28 Rainbow Falls <Trtlrk Glen) Irv.
675-6000 $239,500 Sun 1·5
lOSandbar (Jasmine Creek ) CdM
675-3411 $335,000 Sun 1·5
2 II plm GUEST
414 Heliotrope COid CdM) CdM
675-6000 $265,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
3 IEDlOOM
264 E. Bay St.. Costa Mesa
494-4751 $174,000 Sun only 1·5
14 Park Vista, Woodbridge, Irv .
768-1081 $159,000 Sun 1·5
1946 Port Locksleigh, Nwpt Bch
644-5272 $215.000 Sun 1·5
232 Via San Remo. Lido Isle, NB
631-1400 $675.000 Sun 1·5
113 Via Ravenna, Lido. Npt Bch
631-1400 $355,000 Sun 1·5
•2553Greenbriar, Clg Park. CM
731-9278 $139,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
1614 Santanella. Corona del Mar
552·2000 $299,900 Sa 12·4/Sn 1·5
17386 Sandalwood , Turlerock, Irv.
552·1800 $152,900 Sun 1·5
1860 Port Wheeler, Newport Beach
760-9596 $239.500 Sun only 1·5
635 Whitney Way, Costa Mesa
631-1266 $139,900 Sun 1·4
2716Shell, Corona del Mar
631-7600 $795,000 Sun 2·6
3 IR ,.... FAM RM or DEH
806Aleppo (E/Bluff) NB
642·6368 $285,000 Sun 1·5
912 Powell Ct. (Citihme) CM
675·6000 $169.500 Sun 1·5
1900 Yacht Maria (Seavu ) NB
675-6000 $395,000 Sun 1-5
1921 Tradewi nds Ln. Baycrest. NB
631-7300 $325.000 Sun 1·5
16151 Schryer Ln., Huntington Bch
631 -7300 $112.500 Sun 1·5
2651 Crestview (Bayshrs) NB
644-9990 $349,500 · Sun 1·5
1528Cornwall Ln., Westcliff. N.B.
631-7300 $229,500 Sun 1·5
2732 Gannet (Mesa Verde) CM
64"5-0303 $209,500 Sun 11·3
19131 Woodford Terrace, Irvine
551·3000 $465,000 Sun 1·5
365 Newport Glen Court, N.B.
642·0430 $330.000 Sat/Sun 9·4
120 Via Quito, Lido Isle, N.B.
675-6161 $475,000 Suo 1·5
214 Via Ithaca, LidD Isle. N.B.
675-6161 $420,000 Sun 1-5
320 Seaward, Newport Beach
631-1400 $369,000 Sun 1·5
3024 Ocean Blvd., Newport Beach
631-1400 $1,350,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
2113 Mi ramar, Balboa Penin, Npt
Bch
631·1400 $444,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
2323 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach
631·1400 $975,000 Sun 1·5
2298 Redlands, Newport Beach
631-1400 $265,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 ••SS Balboa Coves. Newport Bch
673-9187 $.595,000 Sun 2·5
1343 Mariners (Westcliff) NB
642·5200 $279,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
1825 Port Manleigh (lMlms) NB
675·34ll Sat/Sun 1·6
16 Woodgrove, Woodbridge, Irv.
552·1800 $192,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
• 1100 White Sails Way. CdM
644-9060 1485,000 Sun 1·5 * •827 Via Lido Soud, UdO Isle, NB
673-7300 $1,500,000 Sun 12·4
J .. ,... DWI.II
2 -1.
368 E. 15th St., Costa Mesa
645-6625 $279,500 Sall·3/Sn l·S
4 llOIOOM
#8 Winged Foot, "' c.anyon. NB 67S.23U $799,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
U8 Via Ithaca, Lido Isle, N.B.
673-7300 SatlO.l; Sun 1·5
245'6 Loi Serranos, Lagwia Niguel
497.3511 $159,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
' 1800 Port Carlow (ffrbr Vu Hms ) NB
759-9100 $279,000 Sun 1·5 ~ $.omeraet <Westclilf) Nwpt
6'4.QOO 9555.000 Sun 1·5 • Gruada Way , Colt.a Me.a
M5-1111 A49$0 Sun 12-4 mo,cri Ort Yi, c.ta Mesa 541 '1•.000 Sun 12·3 •lowaSt.,C..Meta ~5 1117,508 Sun 1~
4 II ,.. FAM IM ,,,, DEH
17532 Cottonwood. Univ. Park. f rv
552-1311 $245,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
2 Sandstone, Woodbridge, Irv.
551-4400 $249,900 Sun 1-5
207 North Star Ln (Dover Shrs ) NB
675-6000 $1.450.000 Sun l·S
•1572 Pegasus , Back Bay, S.A.
Hghts
631-7300 $172,500 Sun 1·5
2130Santiago Dr., Dover Shores, NB
631-7300 $237 ,000 Sun 1·5
336 Vista Bay a Cr IE/Side ) CM
540-1151 $197,500 Sun 1·4
*2321 Aralia, Eastbluff
644-6200 $315,000 Sun 1·5
132 McKnight, North Laguna
642-8235 $895,000 Sun 1·5
•1 Trafalgar. Harbor Ridge
644-6200 $1,795,000 Sun 1·5
•2001 Baltra (Mesa Verde ) CM
645-0303 $230.000 Sun 11·4
t8837Teton. Circle, Fountain Vly
964-6395 $245,000 Sun 11·5
1827 Port Stan~ope (iNHrn.5) NB
675-3411 Sun 1-5
1521 Tahiti. Laguna Beach
497.5454 $.529,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
1533 Tahi ti, Laguna Beach
497.5454 $.529,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
••2274 Channel Road, N.B.
675-2311 $1,650,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
•1724 Port Sheffield (HVHms) NB
673-7761 $350,000 Sun 1-5
363 Newport Glen Court. N.B.
642-0430 $360,000 Sat/Sun 9.4
1251 Surfline Way. Hrbr Vu, CdM
644-4910 $410,000 Sun 1·5
204 Via San Remo, Lido Isle, NB
640-5777 Sat/Sun 14 * •8 Collins Island, N. B.
631 -1400 Sl,200,000 Sun 1·5
1712 Highland, Newport Beach
760-9333 $379,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
2121 Yacht Yankee (Seavu) NB
675·3411 $383,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
37 Cool brook, Turtler()('k, Irv.
552-1800 $259,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
2078 Phalarope, Mesa Verde, CM
957·1568 Sat/Sun 1·5
5 Rue du Pare. Big Canyon, NB
644-9060 $650,000 Sun 1·5
#2 Mountain View. Trtlrk. Irv.
644-9060 $210,000 Sun 1·5
3202 Delaware Pl., Mesa Verde, CM
979·5370 $139,500 Sat/Sun 11·6
5 IEOROOM
••207 North Star Lane, NB
675-2311 $1.450,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
824 West Bay Ave .. Balboa Penin
673-8578 Open Sun 1·4
5 IR plus FAM RM or DEH
1533 Miramar. Balboa Penin Pt.
673-7761 $459,000 Sun 1·5
828 Via Lido Soud. Npt Bch
644-9990 $765,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 1500 Highland (Westclif() NB
642-5200 $459,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
•#1 Muir Beach (Spygls) NB
760-9333 $1,495,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
337 Peachtree, Back Bay, N.B.
631-7300 $270,000 Sun 1·5
33801 St. of Blue Lantern, Dana Pt.
. 496-8338 $500.000 Sat/Sun 2·5
6 H pM FAM IM or DEH
•55 Goleta Pt (Spyglass) NB
644-9990 $925,000 Sun 1-~
2 HOUSES
I II & 2 M
•395 Flower (E/Side) CM
642·6368 $179,500 Sun 1·5
2 H plus FAM IM or DIN
43 Rainbow Rigge (Trtlrk ) Irv
759-9100 $175,000 Sun 1·5
TOWNHOUSES
FOR SALE
2 llEOIOOM
9766 Verde Mar Dr., Huntington Bch
968-8341 $118,500 Sun 1·5
2 II ... FAM RM w DIH
12648 Romaine Way, Garden Grove
640-5777 Sun 1·5
3 •• ,... FAM IM • DIH
915 Van Ness Crt, Costa Mesa
549·8067 $165,000 , Sat/Sun
COMDOMIMUMS
FOR SALE
J II ...... FAM IM or D ..
•2716 Vista Umbrosa1 Blulf1, NB
760-9339 $245,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
DUPLEXES
FOR SALE z 11 pllll IACH
••3803 Finley Ave., N.B.
875-3411 $450,000
4-1 ...
ll6 Marine Ave., Balboa Island
131·1400 JU(),000 Sun 1·! . ,... •• w••• .... w ...... ,..
~.~~ ....... ~~.~ ....... ~!.~.~ ........ ~.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ .. ::l
C.-.. Mlr IOU C... ...... IOU e..t. MtM 1024 c0.t. M.., I 024 tWi.tt._.._. 1040 .... 1041 .•.......•.••••••.•.••..••.....•........••.••.••..•...................••.••............•.••. ·····'················· ·········••·······•···· ~~ LOCATION FIHDOMHOUSI TER~g ~~~J:~MS For aale· 1tve Bedrm,
MILLION $ VIEW
HARBOR VD llLLS
OP .. TODAY l·I
2731 PRILi DllYI
Finest original Harbor Vlew Htlls
location. Spacious premium lot with
commanding ocean, coastline, bay &
city lights view. 4 bdrm + fam. rm.
"FIXER UPPER" .home with
limitless potential on this ''one of a
handf ull '' corner lot homes sites.
Reduced to $459,000 (L) (finest
r emodel o p por funity in t h is
prestigious community).
1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fors• by o ..... Spectacular~ story Cape
Cod. 3 &inn, 2 ba. + lge
1 bdrm unit. Seperate
guesl rm w /laundry &
bath. Lge (ixed assuma·
ble at 12~ + owe 2nd.
673·0188.
Fors• n!L. OwMr Newly re ed 3 Br 2
Ba home with bay view.
LoCt. used brick frplc.
laundry rm, 2 car gar
Huge fixed assumable at
113 +owe 2nd
673·0188
DUPLU CHilMH
OCUMYIEW
Perfect for owner·
occupant. 2 sty, 3 bdrm.
spa, din. nn, lge frplc,
dbl door master suite w.
ocean view!
2nd unit helps pay the
way w. 3 bdrm open
beamed ceiling. 4 car
gar. Owner may help
finance at m w /20"/r
down. Call Jim Davis
DOW 759·1221. •
R&'M~
IH:'\I TOHS
COrotla def Mer I 022 Investors Duplex on besl
••• •• •• ••••••••••••• ••• street, pool, hi income.
CHIMACOYE Owner. $32 0,000 3 Br remodel w /spa & in· ..:::640-:.::.:....:4::.:999:.::..:..... ___ _
door elevator. Steps lo --------water. Lease, le~se op. Nearly new duplex.
lion. S795,<MXI. Jen. I Th r e e a n d t w o
631-7600 I bedrooms. Three and
IUIL.DaS
3 BR -1~ BA home With
room for 2Dd unit. So. or
Hwy. 1235,<MXI.
OWNER MAYCARRY
Call Stephen Meyers,
bkr,al7~
WATERFRONT APT·
2Br lux apt overlooking
Nwpt Harbor. Spec-
tacular view, sec. gmds
w /pool It jac. Encl park-
ing. $450,<MXI w /$100.000
dwn. owe al 12.75% int.
2525 E. Oen Blvd. IFS,
boat avail. (213! 1.87·6055
agt.
12v.3 ralCilg
NEW! COUNTRY
FRENCH HOME.
two batru. Ideally de·
signed for g~tis Large
assumable lst and
owner will carry 2nd T.D. Call Roger Bar-
q u is t , 759·1243 o r
631·7300.
TllPUX
Three units wi th
rireplaces. on a 45'
Corona del Mar lot. for the price of a duplex.
Favorable assumable
lsl loan, seller w /carry
2nd. Priced at $322,000
down payment 180,000.
By Owner !BkT -will
cooperate. 675-3141
Irvine Terrace. 5 bdrm. 3
ba. family rm. Xlnt fin
Priu rMilced
to $340.000. Fu. 1407
Santaoella. Agent
760-8311
Nr SCP 2 ally condo 3 Br. l Ba. large yard. Slst,'95. Nr bch L 48, Two 1t.ory· full)' uauma·
SUUOO. Four yrs old. 3 ~.000. Ml-o?O. /3~ 0% dn ~WC ble S142,000·H.8 . 900 bdrm, 3 ba, move in 11t .. _._1 w T a. l 1 · 1 ..e:.m.o. llQ.71411. cond, don't miss ll, call 1uu•-Al 13% nt. OD y.
now Lila Duarte Lovely 3 BR 2 81, tam 962·l227or96Ue. 1_....._
631-1266 rm home w/fpk, dbl .. 1 .. ~ce """-1044
5%DOWH !
Roomy 3 Bdrm 2 ba
home on an R2 lot with
plans for 2nd unit. Great
Eastaide location and
great financing Only
$152,500
~NIGEL
OAI L[Y &
ASSOCIATES
OPEN HOUSE
Gorgeous 3 Bd 2"'2 Ba
condo end unit w /lrg
fr pie, cozy step·down
living rm & spa Only
$139.500.
gar. $149,$00 :STl~,_y -..=. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Broker,fWil..4380 • +.-,,,_ TH .....
i. ...... $93.750 TOwtllOMI? MOV~COMD. lmmedi1tte posaesion. C•ll the apeclaliata at Entertain on. lge, rov Rent Ull youn. Here It the condominium In ered patio ~.:w ls! Big 2 story TH.
drapes /cpl / pain t / w/Crml living, gourmet lo~~=leR~alty
ranae. Nr schools, park. kitchen , cocktail patio 983.al87
Pool sized ya.rd . and large master suite. . . Pleasant sWTOUndmgs. All jusl minutes to miles Rancho San Joaqwn Villa
E s t a b I i s h e d tf pounding surf + low Portola Model, must see
neighborhood. 5br, 3ba, tr no down payment. No m11y ups,_., prin only
$162,000. Assume 1st qualifying Hurry call $169,500. For appt
OWC. Bob & Dovie Koop 963-7010. Realty World -"'M=l-=-6890=·=------
631·1266 Beachs1de. MODEL' FOR2COVPLES • 2 adorable houses on one ~~ wll tt..c. Could be, sbo~ so well
lot. Beat East.side loca· With 20 ~ dn lmmac. 5 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba, h1ghly up-
tion Redwood deck, spa, br. 21,; ba, ram: rm w. graded. Purdue Plan Ill
hardwood floors track frplc, formal din. rm, CoUege Parle. Steps lO
lights, etc, etc. Si79,500. lge ~ackyd w tpatio & s.cbools, and pools. Just Devin & Co. 64.2-63ll8 gas fire pat, Crwt trees, Wiled. Call Now. ----prof. landsrap~d MHA YBDE $198,900. Owner1agt, 25~ down. 13~•'1. in-848·85.53. '
terest. Long term -J:unt&rnc
OR financmg avail on lh15
Darling 2 Bd 1'-l Ba beautiful executive <;APECOD bargain at $121.000 home. Lots of oak. large Refurb1Shed. red~corat
rooms. Pool and Jacuizi, ed, and new appliances
solar heating Agt, Chris added Ideal location. I Creative financing on
both ! Open House Sun-
day 1-5. 302 & 310 Cutter
Way !off Santa Ana Ave
nr Mesa Dr.) Joyce
Waltze631·1266
FIEHCH 9UAlTBl
3 BR 2i,; ba townhouse
Patio, double gar, OWC
$110,000. BKR. 646·4380
MESAYllDE
For large families-4
Bdrms and huge family
room . complete with re·
finished kitchen. Nicely
draped and carpeted
Excellent neighborhood
location. Easy main tenance yard. Sl79,900.
642-5200
j PETE
' BARRETT ... REALTY
LIA SE OP'TIOM
Luxurious custom con·
do. 2500 sq. ft. 2 frpks, 4
bdrm. 2\l:l baths. $1150
mo. $195,<MXI. 642·4623.
o,... Seit ;s.. 12·4
3 Barm. l~'ba. dbl sided
frplc, sun rm, low int
assumable, low down. owe. $127.<MX>. 336 Prin-
ce ton Dr Call
• ~3·371:,41_87 __
DISTR&'iS SALE
Owner had business
failure. Must sell 4 BR 2
Ba house, w/!am rm
Only $94.900! Near
957-1568 blk from Lake Park and -walking distance to the JULY 4• SPICIAL ocean.
Pool home. ~ down, CHtwy 21 /Swf
take over low int Llil & 53t;,75~z 2nd . Payable at $976 --=.~'--"-' P ITI OWC balanre Ocean view 4 Br. 2 Ba w/no pymt.s for 1 yr lndry rm, hot tub
S139.SOO. Open Sat/Sun $158.000 846 ·4080,
1·5. 2553 Greenbriar. 964·5412 ___ _
CM Call Brenda, Bkr No Down, Equity Shar·
731·9218 __ _ mg. 2 St., 2 BD . 217 BA.
$5,000 Down $1400 mo. Gary848-3 ll9
3br. 2ba . dining area, re· Extcllfin 0.....
J.M.PfYBS
CC>MtAMY
WOOOlllKE LAMDI..._
LAST AV AIL PLAN 5
For infocaU SSl·~
JUSTUSTID
Sharp 3Br. 2Ba. Plan 106
In Calif homes. WelJ kept
& ready to move-in As·
sumable financing. Call
for details.
---IU\NCH ~ IH /\L TY ~ 'hl 2000
furbished. beach, an -AuJo. SI 11,500
vest or 's dream. or The rightorrer & you can
starter home' Tailored be •12 mi from beach in
financing to your needs this immac . beaut &
All info call Skip 963-0902 h1gbly upgraded 2 br, Woocllridge
or963·8036 BKR 13, ba condo Ideal for To,,,._
By Owner. Two 2bdrm co u PI e . We lb a r . 3 br, 2ba. Next to adult
houses on 1 lot. Sl:.>.000 fireplace, romm pools. pool. Btll landscaping.
Assumable ll'Z lsl T. D. J a c u iii. tennis & End unit. $159,000. Agent OWC 2nd. 64C>-7~ _ rlubhouse for leisure liv-Sally 768·11111Sun1·5
mg RV prkg. Open 1·5, CUTESTAllf:R Fri. & Sat. 9766 Verde Show1Llle~
3 Bdrm l Ba Westside Mar Dr .. Bkr. Non·Coop 4 Bdrm, 3 ba, new cpts.
culie. Quiel tree lined 536-1600,1168-8341 tile entry. D/W. etc.
street. Assume low in-Best value in The
terest loan with low -•1 ... -0• __ •_•-8•e•c•E-Ranch 7"1•'7. VA as· down payment Full " ...-a.1 sumable. 1162,000. Call
price SlOS.<MXI. . AT LAST Agent Gene Hill 642·8079.
TJUDI T IQ\,\L
RE..-\1.T Y
63 1-7 370
Why depend oo lenders MEW WOOOIRIDGE when you can buy this
spacious 3Br, 2Ba Con· MHdowlarilfPoplar
do. owner financing 5 Mel yrs with $25.000 dwn Great location Ava1I for
Open Sun l 5. 16825 occ upancy beginning
Snapper. Jo·An 17H l Aug. l. Call regarding
846·9012 financing. Sl.61.990. Call
EDGEWATER RLTY 8S7-2100for info.
-------~!!111111!!!!!!!(2!!!!13!!!!!) !!!!434-448!!111111!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lllDRA M ATIC university
Ocr..a. .... BREEZES '!! Park Dean home. 4 BR,
laAf"'ll IY o~ER 3 ba Fam rm. AC. new Like new townhome on "" l the bluffs. 2 Bdrm 3 Ba. Py m ts of $1400 /mo, crpt, great oc. S245,<MXI.
k. h d b $8000 dn 2 br, 2 ba ~ondo ,_552~·~13~1~1 -----super 1tc en an a 1g ~ · -
2nd story loft. Full pril'e in Villa Pacific. Custom PANORAMIC VIEW
I $134 900 751 3191 frpk l mi. to beach. 3 TURTI.EROCK
pools. tennis. jac. sauna. PRESIDENT HOME
t:lll_bhouse. !lM-~5 __ Prime hilltop location.
HACIBC>A Cul-de·sac w /pool size
OM THE IEACH lot. City lights & hill &
Paularino. Needs $12.00<i -------•I COOPBATIVE cash Assume S83.000 MEW USTIMG
SBJ.111 loans Needs work Mesa del Mar Assuma·
2BUDS
TO OCEAN
Mt. view. 3bdrm. 2ba. Sl25,500 prof decor. Assumable Dramatic hjdeaway in financing. Prine_ only
pvt. community with By owner. Call for app"t
pool and spa. sauna. 752·0412. o ...... w11
flll..c.,_
Mo QtallffllMJ
641-0366
67l-75SZ
CH~
CdMUMODB.
&._, f.,.. Ali•cilg Prine only· Devin & Co ble lst. owner wHI carry
Spacious townhouse. 2 _.642=--·6368~-----2nd 3 Bdrms and
Bdrm with loft, 2~ bath. -------•I custom family room LOW INTEREST. Agt. HORT'HGATE witll. vaulted ceiling Ex·
Vivian Grant. MESA NORTH , com-ceUent condition, very
Open&mday 1·5, fort.able 4 Bdrm family private yard $135,000 12648 Romaine Way C 11 A Pet GardenGrove. home, convenient to a nn ers
schools and shopping. 642-5200 t Cote Realty near Fair vie w and
& Investm ent Paularino. See and ap· preciate. $1Z7,CXX>.
640·S777 642·520Q.
j PETE
' BARRETI ·.. REALTY
gym . pvt beach & ------
cocktail patios overlook IRYIMECOMDO
pounding surf Best yet~ By Owner Northwood.
Assume low interest !Bdrm, frplc, fully up.
loan SS661mo. Hurry, graded & decorated No
call Jl_..96J. 7010 Realty Agts. $110,CXX>. 494-0269
W9 rJd B~lajde~ __ WOODlllDGE
Bargain shoppers read Red. Price 1249.900
t he I it ll e ads in Assumable loan. Open
Classified regularly. house Sunday 1·5 pm at 2
And they find what Sandstone. 4 Bdrms.
.!_he 're Jookin for. 2 b a . Lg e pvt Io l
Great rental income in
next-lo-new condition.
Owner would finance
w/approx. 22-25% down,
Asking $.159,000. Call
COIOHA
Hl.-tt.AHDS
Prime location in
beautiful setting. 3
Bdrm, family home
w /pvt beach access. Financing avail Call Jo.
Ann Doran, Rltr 8Sl·9S22
j PETE
' BARRETT ··. REALTY
w/privacy. Agt Cor
ASSUME VA Lo .. .,, 3 lniH 1044 Donald M. Bird SSH400 "'~ uk for Libby BR 2 Ba Sunshine Home. •••• ••• ••••••••••••••• • 1~~~~-----Jim Davis. 759-
CAMIO SHOIES
IUUTY Estate swimming pool,
dr amatic ocean view. 3
lge bdrm suites. 4\A.a
baths . Exquisite
landscaping. SBS0.000.
Let meshowyou!
~~MIV ~
REAL ESTATE 644·6397
srYGLASS
IUILDllSI
An R·l lot in old COM in a super location. Plans
included in the price.
Drive by 314 Marigold
and call for details.
$28.5,000.
-
WATERFRONT
HOMES
REAL ESTATE
631-1400
Night lite & ocean view. Spy~ c.to.
Lovely 5 bdrm home. Spacious 5 Br, Cam rm, 3
9649,000. $70,000 dn & frplcs, open beams, spa,
OWC bat at 12~3 int. VUS. OWC lst. 1.2 milion.
7$).8158 Jeri.
PAl=W H.t6~=iatH
Double gar. completely
fenced. Only SU0,000. Be
SI 15,000 the first to~ t.h.ia one .
Approx SIZOOJMo. :~~. Laune. &46·4380
Low dwn. owe paper.
Allofferswelrome! o .. roW 102' 83l·98781548-17 31 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Charming 2br, lba. col· tage on roomy R2 E.
Side lot. eo· X 1..25'. OWC
$95K al 153 interest
with S25k dwnpayment.
646-2389
OPEN WfS-z.5 33IO I ._ lallen
3 yr old Spanish haclen·
da. 4 Br 3 ba, ram, din·
ing, billiard rm. 2 wet
bars, powder rm. Prof.
landscaped w /spa. Of· R 2 fered at appraised value . or~.000.
Three houses on one lot. C"°°'hl Proptrtle1
Eastside. Rented at $t95 49Ml31
ea . Only S179.900. Ca II '"'!!!!!!!!!!1!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•!11!!!!!!!!!!1 6'5·9161 =
. OPEN liOUSE
IHAL TY
/
BToro 1032 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Town and Country RGtars
Invite you to the falllling * OPEN HOUSES IN llMNE *
Al wf .. A11•llllle Lw
UHIVEISITY PAii
3 Bdrm, 2 bath, Dover Model.
$152,900. 17386 Sandalwood, off
Michelson a nd J ordan. Open
Sun 1·5.
UNIVERSITY PAii
2 Bdrms, 2 ba, fam rm Walden
Plan. $189,900. 4951 Hemlock off
Michelson and Royce. Open sWtday
1·5.
$160,000per.... 2 Bedroom House with li!!!!!!!!!!!l•!!!!!l!!!!!ll!!ll!!!I•
T be perfect du a I new 3 Bedroom Unit. 4
ownership property with car garage, large lot.
2 almost equal 2 Bdrm, 2 203 down. 675-0562
ba unlta with master ...;;B::.:.r.-.ok;;.;:e~r·'------
TERMS, TUMS
Spotless lrg 4 Bd w/all
amenities. Shows like a
model. Assume 9:V•3 .
Onl.,y $161,<MXI or lease op·
lion. A real value
Patrick Tenore. 631·12116
TUITLBOCI
4 Bdrm 3 bath, f amity rm. Heather
Model. $259 000 -37 Cool brook off
Turtle Rodk Dr. and Sycamore
Creek. Open Sat & Sunday 1·5.
au.ltes, stone firplc and -------· wood beamed celling• $ t Pr • all OD an oversbe lot IRSI 1¥111$
with private paUOI and Mon. July eth 4·8 pm.
decks. SD),CXX>, 10% Int. UH12~Goldenrod!
flnanclna. $335,CXX> C .. Mw644-721 I 2304'232Goldenrod ! ., $.W5,CXX> each
Have a happy• sale J U·
IY 4lh 6 ca.11 1.11 on Mon-
day. 87»41N.
----1 ~tk/~
If )'ou've never placed a <a. ... ..LM.'6~1-1. Classified tel, you're In ..J».y~
the minority I Try it once Wl!!J' ~_,..8fl!H
i nd see bow quick I)' you v ,..,~
aet ruulta. Pbon• *11.CMetHwJ.,C.
&U-6618. ------
C .. DWLIXMllPOOL
Immaculate & wen maintained.. 2
Bdrm home wiUl 1 bdrm ' ba maid'• unit~ plus._... 1 bclnn
lll"lll lpt. IWTOW'idl I pvt pOOI
and eauo on a quiet st. SD>,000.
Call Sue Ann Co(ly or Gecq1ann Cox.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
1 •rM. UT 11 TI
loelr\ ~ ,,_.,,~ ~ "'"'
MISAVllDI
llSTYALUI
Sharp 2 St«v. 4 Br, 3 Ba,
new carpel, reowood
spa, easy c~ yard. A&·
sume low interest loan.
'165,000. D. Burk'e
Realtor M&-9860.
R&'M~
ltt·\ITnH..,
5 lcl-T tn111 -------•I Huse model perfect home, estate aiicd EASTSIDE
2HOMES
On l1r1e lot. A 3 Bdrm 2
bath, 2 fplc 's, patio,
PLUS 2 Bdnn cotta1e. nas,ooo. Flnandng by owner. IJ"A,.
loyMcC..,Ur.
141-nlt
custom pool & spa w /vu.
El egant t hr uout.
$289,000 w/terms.
Patrick Tenore . 631-12(6.
... .,.....,.-. ,.., .• v., 1034
Brand newl Finest •••••••• ........... , •••
quality ~t J bdrm1, AlSUMAILI! 2~ ba. fantullc fil'l&nc· H ... & ,._, Ina. Call now for details. 11334 Sa.nla loenma Cir.
7Q..edl • 32$0 aq. rt. of wu m drama will fabldcM u.
1tnable. Pz!O ~ ltA u.aa 10.~ll fllMll nal-
dt • H C loullon. Near
d ublloUH l.Dd olymplc
DOOi. 2 b .. to hqe pan ~ achool, allopptna.
AITD or tab 0ttr. Juet 1131.IOO. ICS leaJt.)' •
Pl.1 11 IV Hr.11~)
'
HOITHWOOD
4 Bdrm .. 21h ba, family rm. Castillo
Mdl. 1 Candela, off Culver & Irvine
Blvd. $222,500.
CALIFOIMIA HOMIS
4 Bdrm, family room. Plan 102.
$164,500. 14532 Sweetan, off Yale
and Ryewood. Open Sat & Sun 1·5
wooo ... 11
3 Bdrm or 2+den . Wildwood Plan.
$165,000. 15 Elmwood, West Yale
and Woodhollow. ()pen Sat/Sun 1·5. -3 Bdrm. family room Cambric MdJ.
$1fl,500. 16 Woodgrove. Off E. Yale
& Eastsbore. ()pen Sat/Sun 1..S. -w. lteY• Olllrl •mu •• c.1
I
..._..Fer Wt . ..._.. F. Wt "'-"'-Wt HMMt Fer Wt He.Mt'-Wt Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Sund1y, July 5, 1981 ••••••.••.•...••••••••• •.•••.•.•..••••.....•.• .••••••••.•..••.••••••. !~····················· ...... ~., •••.••.••...•.. ..
~!: ..... !~ ~!: ..... !~ :!!!!:! .... !!!~ ~~~ ... !~! ~~~~ ... !~! ~.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~~:~ ...... ~~~.~~ ............. ~!: ...... . ·s. C.._. 1076 S.. C...... 1076 ....... ,.1p1rft 1400 ..._,. .. .., JM ..... w.it JJ
SPECTACULAR Q VIEW
\ $37~·
IN FOllCLOSUU
MIEAIL Y COMPLITI
Two fireplaces, four bedrooms.
1933Uppet-l ...... ~1Mclt ...... o ..... l21lt "'·1540
EMERID BAY
Ocean front lot in gated area with pvt. beach, tennis courts and 24 hour security. Plans and permits for unique luxurious home oriented to the superb
view. This is the only available front
row property in Emerald Bay .
$1,650,000.
C.-ol Tot., It...-494-0029
IM."4AC1U Tl
Four bdrm PaetiMUer,
ready to move In !
Compl refurbished,
w/oew c:riq. DIA. rm.
view Top location.
Prtc:ed f04' lmmedlate
aale at Sl!l.500. WllUam
Ho1ler, Realtor ,
4f7·15ll.
<"'•)
ltOLUMCi HILU
DILJGHf
180 dee mountain and
foothill view from lhls
slnglt story home
Earthtone dtcor
breakfast n<d, formal
dining rm. air cond.
S2S7.SOO
FAMILY UVIMG
... CAHYOM
Fabuloul DeauvUle
AI>eueffome
On Fairway
4br 3 ba1aroenn, ape BKR·Coop 111().1118
BY OWNER, 3br, 2ba
$189,000 owe at 13%
Prin, opJy. $48.m@
IWfPS
Completel.Y remode~
3br, 3ba. Tennis Club
BAY CRESI' BEAUTY. s Villa, all new ind.
Br. Family Rm. D00,000 carden &ounnet kitchen
assumable tat. Owner w/Mlcrowave. Sl.M.000
may u .rry $100,000 2r>d. auum flnt.ncln.& al good
1 year. $43'.000. Call old rat.es! 1245,000. CaU
Hedda Maroa I Agent _,o,...wn:..::.xe=-r 7...,6().=@'ll=---
648-1°'4. To Me fuel I! Harbor View Home
HAllOI VIEW
HOMIS
Lo.!IJC... 3 Br. 2 Bi. Financing
avaulable. Sll67,SOO. Fee.
LEN HAYN~ &ASSOC
6tl).8'S4
Monaco. By Owner. 3br.
2ba, auum $172K.
Shows 11.ke model! All·
In& $2311,500 111cl. land
Call 760-951160wn /A&\.
4 nH DIVB.OPllS
4 Bdrm 2"'a ba. Niguel ~
beauty. WeU kept. newly JOO' .... --.-
3 bdrm, lt,; ba home in
Nwpt Hita. Lee lot w. al-
ley in back, room for ad·
dition & UJ>lfade. Nice
potential for profit on re-
sale. $220,000. By owner,
646-49116. carpeted. frplc, uUI rm -'"'"'"'
Check finan c ing. + huge8000sqftolland l•-------Sl39,SOO + 1200 sq ft ol dee.ks + OCIAM PIOMT
............................................................................................................ , ....
THE Plllllf
Located in prestigious Mariner's
Point, these new Mediterranean style
homes off er ocean and valley views
and the incredible financin1 of 803 loans at 12~% interest.
HURRY, ONLY 7 REMAIN!
Priced from just $250,000.$325,000!
WA,_OMf
ORllCl&H
Pratleioul k>eatioa 1D
Ntwpor1 Beech. All tills
plu• a SO' boat 1llp
Owner will e.achanae.
Prin only. Call Mtmll
~ Kl'dh di ~'l).p kt· 11!\
t I ' • ; ~ : ; I II I
I lllTS Year.I) a a-. f .Ba.
Dls...vl ... ..-Prplc:, lar .. peUo.
"""' wuwr dlildrn. •Mo. Ref :::::r ~ot ~~f.de~~:: ~:J.V:::!r + 1ec~ritlj
D00.000. Vic Jaatlinakl
131·0213 or evea MS-Qlt. a.o.r .... l2 .......................
Family borne, walk ti
beach. 4 bt, ll ba, suoi
£ves, 87S.3m0
CoroM dlt Mir lJJI
INVEST IN A PARCEL •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ~!!!!!!-!!!lll!!!•l!!!!IJ!!!!!!I 1 0 or a n 1 e c 0 u n t y HVHM 2 bdnn and delL Ct .... r1JLoh/ Courthouse redevelop· New cpl, paint. huge e CrYPh 1500 meot area before the yard. S9SO /mo Ind: ~l ... QgO •••••••• .. •• .. ••••••••• land value skyrockets. ardener. · 63l·l400
2 c em et er y Io ts . Phone for detail&. Lovely 2 Br 2 ba hOUS4t-1
49Mfl0 Wtstminster Memorial D-..JL.Jt1A ,".lllt.r Lge country lutchen,
Park. Good section l\C\.1.11WyRe~'-J frplc in bVUtg rm. Fr.
----------------worth flal eac:h, ukmg doors In mstr bdrm $1000 for both 714 552 ~ 7500 opeomg t.o bric:t patio.
Mtwport IMdl I 069 Mtwport .._. I 069 642-9138 eves. /mo. 5'4-fJll03
•••••••••••0000•••••••• •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• C.....-cW DELUXE 4·PLEX by JASMNCllEB
P..oe mlc Vl9w US11LUFf PS'Of""'fy 1600 Covington Assumable Ocean vu 3br. imme4
New ' old Mediterra· $124K var. aasumablt ••••••••• .... •••••••••• loan and owner will help occ. $1500 Mo. 875-174~
nean S bdrm, 5 b•lh, loan at UV.3. Cellini COSTAMISA finance. Offered at 2131276·5620
family room. Seclusion. !.?~% for JI yn no pts Office bldg for saJe. 7000 S27S,OOO. W OC Prine __ 2_b_r -dp-lx-.-8l0--/m_o __
aec unty, 4 car garaae. Tri·level, 3 br + Ii (am aq . f I. located on only. Agt. 5'9-1Jfl6 Clean. new crpt. atrium.
60 feet oa the bay. Addi· rm. Eat.In kitchen, Newport Blvd. Modem, --~ Avail. immed SSS-2626 Uonallotw/3cargarage form. din rm. Lgt lot A/C, elevator lmmed p 21 ---
todevelope. St,406,000. Prin.only.~. occupancy S800.000 ...................... Cott. MtM 3224
Tille lna. at Ttust Co. WALi TO llACH w /terms avail. ••••••••••••••••••••••• I"._ 1044 New Modular Type
••••••••••••••••••••••• Homes, leased la nd , 131 ,..440 WOODlllDGE Oceanfront Pk, 3 ~vt '"'!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!m•l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!'!!!!!!
beautiful. spacious, sun-Huse 6 yr old triplex.
ny all-view Newport Prime location. Xlnt
Beach Isle Pt. home. 4 owner flna.nring.
(2131814-7371 R 1 . 67~6700 1•-5•1•0•,•l&mHG---~ New 3Br. 2sty, yd, patio, Dan Lewis 3 BR. den. 2 Ba. beamed ea ononucs ,,.. f I w D di ------===-=='-"--= gar, rp c, I . a ts n~ COME SEE & cei lln gs, 1st. TD . at RAR E C·l·H Newport Industrial condos for pet.5'6SO. 642-T72:S
Miuioft Vitfo I 067
l'lACE bcha, 24 security. f1&hing 1~
.. Stonewood" Model. pier from S29.9oo
Detac:hed 3br, 2ba, din· -4~99-·38~16--------
bdrms + +, large dock & Play a R. E 673-1900 COME BUY 10~3. creative fin. Beach Property. 50' sale. ~000 to~ sq rt. NEW Wimbledon Villagt
HOME THAT OFFERS $145.000. Owner /agt frontage In prime loca· Hunl1n.gton Beach & 2br. 2ba, garden home •
1111/ family nn. great local.ion & terms! Be in
for school. S215,000
Owner SS9-SS40
**CHERRY
BOE!
won •t compare to the
.. Bane" you'll get seemg
the view from thu
beautiful Turtlerock Terrace home. Located
on the highest street of
this exclusive area
Open House Sunday
1-SPM 19131 Woodford
Terrace, Irv $$65,000
\\OOdbrldge
Ru Ilg
551-3000
IHOOarranu Pk•y,lr~lnl'
SUPER COLONY HOME
with 4 bdrm, pool. spa.
special financing &
priced to sell. S177,900.
Redhill~ Realty
552 -7500
INVESTOR'S
SPECIAL
OCEAHVJ~S EnJOY country·l1ke
privacy wiUun walk.mg
d1Stance t.o beach. This
stunning 3 bdrm home
has many amenllles in-
cluding lovely gardens
with Koi pond & spa plus
decks. $335,000
EMEIALDIAY
A jewel of a home in this
lovely priute area
Totally remodeled with
new family kitchen, new
ballirooms & ocean view
decks. See this one and
fall in love! $48'7.SOO
UH01mucnoM
o cean views A
fabulous building site 1n
quiet area. nus pnce for
this double sl.Ud lot 111
eludes plans & permits
for a 3500 sq. fl. home
$205.000.
!'t'l\rf\L"I' ~\.~llC'•""~ -. ~
17141494·1177
"OUT OF SIGHT
OUT OF MIND"
That's how our out of
stale owner feel& about
thu PRIME DANA
POINT DUPLEX locat·
ed on a corner lot just a
••••••••••••••••••••••• parking. Walk t.o ocean. l!!!!!!!!!!!lll!!!!!!!!!ll•!!!!!!!!9!!!!!!!!!!!!
Owner will f111. $1,250,000 (land incl) C/B. Open
Sun. l·S. Call 673-0202
Beach & Boat dock at
your door 2 Br Condo
on MisslOl'I VieJo Lake Beautifully upgraded.
As s umable loan 100/oDoww
$195 ,000. Full price Sl37S will buy lhlS vu
S277 ,500. Pat Petro. condo in VIiia Balboa.
951-5766. • Assume loans. $137,SOO.
Rae Rodaers. 631-lB
WHYIENT??
Nothing down, partner
supplies down parment Won't last. cal now.
John Marsball 631·1266.
R&'M~
IH' \I .TflH°' .... port.... 1069 I ••••• • • • ••••••••••••••• i i ~ h B I G. C A N Y 0 N HlWPOITSHOllS ·-111 Towohome wt golf
1 • 1 courat view. Assum CANAL FRONT 4 Br. loan. Pool. tennis.
Fal!lilY Rm + loft with H.t»or va.., Hws $275,000. Al'. 615-5200.
VIMll.._. &t2·2643aft6pm Uon.Ownerwillfinance. f'ouotam Valley Call tenni s /pool pri v ,
End Custom Release IA YSl>I COVE Exc:lusive. Principals Paul 545-G1, Agt ~o. 645-8248 __
'4lRedlands ColumbiaPenlhouse only. Ask for Irene
CORNER ABROAD Lux 2 br, 2~ ba + den Loudon, Agt. 63l-047 or 2800sq ft bldgon9800sq ft 3 lh. 2 lo. OpenSun.11-~ roado w/bay vtew, near 631-7300. lot. Fenced & black f' P. D W. Yd. Bit lfts,
$270,000 Balboa lale. Pool, spa. topped. Owner64S-4832 Adlts. No pets 642 083S..
See Kruse 18 ooo. 963-0300 LOCA TIOM Lok for Sdt 220 $6SO per mo
l·S38·86ll, 644).2210 Coost Hwy. Hpt lcJl. ...................... DLX CONOO 2 Br + Ir
IUY YOUI OWN SrtCTACULAll 1000 sq ft bldg and 11 LAGUNA VIEW lot sale loft Br 2"1 Ba frplc,
DUPLEX. Vacant sum IAYROMT year lse. Prime window or trade !SOK. 25'Z dn gar · a c, new S775.
mer/winter rentals ~ U11tW11••f'Cl•'-w on Coast Highway OWC submit 646 578S 613-5489 or963-8377 bllt from bay $399,000 1 0....-Great parking Owntr ~e~v~e ______ 4 l bdrm rondo near So.
Open house Fri. Sat. f\ will finance. Good for .._. _ _.., .................. , Coast Plaza 1450 mo. S900,0D0e1 a mh f foods 1 b f t -__...... 63 OOA Sun. Moo. 11·4 at 310 ast ,cu ,o c.e c Rnort 240 1·14 ~ -
vara o ace. a a ~ Lu""ONT ••••••••••••••••••••••• n o 2 + en. a. .. Q:!.!!filLAfl 7SZ..5710 Pier & slip for 2 boats. WATrnrn PALM SPRINGS FEE pool. rec, patio. Quiet, s p 1 r a I st a 1 r c ase. Monaco. By owner. 3 br.
S279.SOO. 2 ba Assume Sl8S 000
4 BR. 2Vt. BA. on . the Reduced t.o $21.5,000.'WUi
water Will consider be listed for higher price
trade for small Costa at taler date. 1946 Port
Al d Pl B Ibo Fill•c-....at 121/J°lo -Cod BR d 2 B
4Br + maids, 6Ba. HOME.!:> UDO IAYRONT POOL+ htmis Sl,600,000 Fee. Call REAL ESTATE 3br.2ba, guest&pool close to Westcllff. adlt.s.
I 673·8578. Will cooperate 63H400 673-1241/(213)464·2270 $6SO. Ai!.,_646-J25.5 _ CUit.om country French $42 000 DOWN N H 2 bd I
Mesa Hou.w. S275,000 Locu lei di 644-5272 3 BR 3 BA On the -"=-"==-=-~'""""--.-.--
water. f'ee land ' 3 POOL
Fireplaces. 1329.950 Spacious pool home
6 ~rm._ 6 bath. Pier _and I N o q 'u a I 1 f Y I n g I n w /bk rs ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!I o.t of S.. pt gts area rm•
sElilp&. Bnlck .. ~~·'!!!-:_w. New p 0 rt Be a c b I o,r2EH4 ~~ ~ I 000 c.n. "· PS'Of""'fy .2.'.o. by:~d Gu~~·Ulg:1· !.~~c,:~ e an c"'""' ...,.,., :;q. Spa rush tile entry leads n.-.r -r ~ •• • • ••• • •••••••• • • • ., ft CaU now fOI' appt. to s ac10•• liv;ftg room Retail building for sale Res1dentiaJ Ulromt> unilS Drive by first 252 Knox
RL·dhdl¢~Re.1lty
1;~:: ~::11()
.... u• Newport Blvd. C.M Oc· !out of staLel Tax defer Stree!__B 752 6499 _
with soaring ceilings HEWrOITCllfST cupy or lease. l800 mo. exchange yoururutsint.o 3 bdrm. 1 ba. garage, Gourmet kitchen plus Two or 3 bdrm + den. income. $3)(),000. H T 7 r d d K 0 formal dining. Enjoy 2"'2 ba. Low down Realooomics 615--6700 ouston, ex as x ence Yll' .,1 mo.
your own sparkling pool. Owner will finance at 1-. gCoross. 20'7.lo aReppr1ecia~on. DriveBby flrst 21118 Ca-
3 BR. 2 BA. 2 Story. w /jac Gourmet II.itch.
Canal Front. Brand new ram rm 4 BR + office
carpet OWC with 20% (1 BR. ideal for mother
down. S'239K. or guest). 3 car gar. On·
PAlNT & SAVE 3 BR. 2 ly P401000. Bkr,64f>.UIO l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!l!m!!!!!!!!!!•!!!!!!!!!!~
BA. 2 Story A Frame HEWPOIT ISL.AHO S163,950.
seperate spa & paddle nominal interest rate Co..do111 .. l-fTow1t-unse r a ty, c.. n on 752·6499
tennis court ' Only Broker, Tom Gollier i.o..afor .. 1700 Calif/Texas Broker. Nice clean 2 Br l Ba. $289,000 Call 673-MSO 646-9200 ....................... Gary D. Bosler, ~~118. Fenced yard. new paint,
2 BR + d e n 2 $315,000°0WC
Fire places. 2 car $190,000at IOO/o
garage, ovtrs1ted lot Fee simple, 3 bdr, den. 2
Sl39.500. ba. patio deck 30 x 95 lot.
4 BR. lmmac. cond. Just Sine.le story. By appt.
li!ted. Good assumable _7_14_·67~5·_397_1 ___ _
loan. Asking $195.ooo CHEUY LAKE
Walk to the beach, poob, Two new homes. 3 & 4 br
tennis & volleyball from w/fam. rm. oo Newport
any ot these homes Glen Court. See Open
MIWrOIT CONDO
This 4 bdrm + ram rm
condo has all the extras.
Walk t.o beach, teMis &
pool. Wet bar blt·ins +
brand new carpets make
th is a real dream.
Owner will carry large
2ndT.D.
THE REAL
ESTATERS
I br condo. Hawa11 Big DIVORCE FORCES enclosed garage 292
IJlaod. furn. & ren~. "• SALE Wallace. House B".
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1nl SS62:5 + S177 mo Kauai condo, furn , S42S Plus $3JOSecunly. New 4 BR. family home. neg Write: R.R .. PO $130,000orofr 642 5290 5411.m8.
ocean view on cul de sac Box 165, Norwalk, CA
107'
$273.000. $40K dwn., 90650. OCEAMFIOMT 4BTow~hoBuse. lykt>alro~dl.
WIESTCUFF ownr w /carry. Call Den ..____ ,_... 2000 Res. house lot. Hawaii f r 1 a st Y ibgd 5• "' t c bd • n11 Lin°0 RE 4!18-4MA _,_ •..,-. •r Big Island, E25.000. sale r~ c · mas er r m .-ea urea " rms. " • • · · ~ ....................... suite commty pool
baths. large custom --------or trade. R.R .. PO Box · • kitchen with eating SPICTACULUVU MAKEAHOFFIR! UiS;Norwa.LkCA90650 ~.lHL --
area,greatfam.ilyroom OfSaddlebackMount.ain SEDOMACOMM QUIET, roomy. newer 3 and formal dirung room S lo come Properties • BR. pvt yard. 21l ba,
Assumable loan Spark I·
ing fresh. 2 bdrm, 2 ba
BradJey M~ in Univ
Park, Viii. I. Completely
redone inside and out
Very good location. Call
I.Oday tor in!ormallOn on
attractive lt>rms .
$133,SOO.
short distance from the HIRfa J.ottt O'lritti
Dana Marina C61JO"lriM H.se DtreC'tOl'Y 642.-0430.
Redh 1 I I¢~ Re.~lty
I ;~:; ~: ;1111 Loads of storage in and "back rowitry from th IS Easuide Costa Mesa On W · Hwy 89A. C 2. C-3. f le $'750 mo ~·4164
R f I 3bdrm home on quiet ....,.. down. "-·-er will ~ + A c h o m e . -----out oom or poo . cul-de·aac:. Impeccably ~-,;.Y Priced';~ell' showroom, greenhouse House . 3 Bdrm, frplc. dbl
'+523 CAM"" DI· htVIMt
LGCJ901..t. 1041 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Tr1-Plex ZS.000 Down
Great terms. Panoramic
Ocean View. Walk to
beach $295,000. Prin·
clpals only. 499-1526
New wood/glass. spa.
solar, 6 dk.s, 2 frplcs
3+ 13+ closetunobstruc-
table/paoor/villg vws
~M. P/P.494-7631.
VICTOIJ.A HACH
Exciting new wood and
gJass home. Coiy con·
venation area. Private
wood deck, broad ocean
view1, walk to beach
"25,000.
L.,_. V11e1Jt l.L
497-17{1
EMHALDIAY
Ocean view from charm·
ing 3B·3b home on large
level lot. Large assuma-
ble fixed rate financing
avail. c•T--.nr
494-0029
COLDWeu.
BANl(C!RO
Owner occupy the 2 64 •150 bdrm. 1 bath upper unit ,..
THllLUff
PL.At4 "X"
"59.ooo642•5200 cle1n! Spacious rooma, & lots. Write or call for gar. r775 Avail now Agt
30 S..,.Tolffclt ' xlnt Ooor plan. assuma-broc hure. Real Estate ~8·1168
w/BEAMED CEILING. JohnCoombeBkr
FIREPLACE. DINING -...,-o"""'w~OR~=.c .... '"""ev'""'E'--R-3 bdrm. din. nn .. liv. rm., ram. rm. F/P, 21,1)
ba, xtra large porcelain
tub w /ceramir tile walls
& floor 4 covered patio
areas. Pnce S230.000, 5%
down. auume $40,000 lit
Lrust deed at 7t,;%. Xlnt
land lease 11.53.00 per
year. Can't change until
year 2003. 143 int. only
2nd trust deed due
1986-87. Call owner for
appt. daily after 11 am.
(714) 341-SMI
Water view. Includes ble 9..,'h loan. Pouible 1 Central. p O Box 360, EASTSIDE clean 2 Br +
A REA & ENCLOSED " " PATIO : & use the lower If you don't buy your
land 103 assumable &O~ loan at 13~'1. ~ ~~C"CD Sedona. Az 86336 (602) suoroom. frplc. stove. loan. 4 bdrm. 2 ba. Minutes to beac.-h NfJ~ 212·4433. refrig. W D, lrg yard.
unit rental income lo dream house now, the
REDUCE COST OF price will be hs&ber next
OWNERSHJP. Or. rent year. Why oot call now
lhe upper unit and use t.o make an appt. t.o see
the Io we r as a this f,Orgeous4 Bd home.
"weekender" while en· You II find lhe terms
joying the beach & something you can Uve
marina! We believe with. Don't hesitate.call
you'll agree it's an Kuey or Norm today
.. 0 UT OF SIG HT " 831-1266.
w I po I 11 b I e guest $150,000 ClJ J1IYJW\? 11£. .... Es.. Pets OK S750 mo Joyct
a:arurs. Call now for ....... :EB:n"B it=-u bct..p 2800 ::.~.631 lB Aft 5, t11ftlm11t -------• ··~µ' S zsis'~oft~g~~\e sitiv~it;•.;;t;•j;~7 LUSE0"10H -·-·-----AWTS ••ai)(fi: C<>11ta M~a. CA Ftb/March 111 exchange Why pay rent????~!! ••LIDOISLI•• YOUGITMOll __ .. for ocean front beach New,fantaslic.wellloca
Lovely 2 bdrm, 3 bat.II ROM 1MI STOii hie or coodo July /Aug. 2 led 3 Br .. 3 Ba. nt>w Con·
home. Beautifully re-Jedi H. Leedt. Mcjr. 4Jlt.1040 493-0202 OCEAHPIOMT weeks. (213)5~73 do, $800 per mo, next to
mod. 2 yn ago. Ap· 675-lnl ... IWP,_•R•CH 7 Full leued Laguna Bch allshopp111_L631 ~-pr aised al $475,000. " ""'' -n.. Sacrifice at $469,000. Tnplex m oversiz.e lot Units for Hawaii home. "f"1et pvt area. great 4Br, VALU E at: $144 ,000
FULL PRICE' TERMS AVAILABLE.
MISSION REALTY
~ Cst Hwy. Laguna
PhoM 494-0731
CUSTOM
LAGUNA ESTATE
Magnitkent 4 Bdrm con·
ttmporary home with breathtaking coastline
view. Tucked away on
private road. offering
complete seclusion.
Sparkling gourmet
kitchen, sun drenched
breakfast room. 4 decks
and much more Great
financing available
S745.000.
don osen
r~·.d r 11r"'
499 N. COAST HWY
LAGUNA BEACH
497.4848
Hear Hfttler r~
Al Offwt He.rd
Quaint and Quality. 3
BR 2 Ba, pool sized lot.
Oak floors. fabulous
kitchen and garden
breakfaat area. Garage
wort.shop with windows.
Auume S21.S,OOO. List
1:119,SOO.
e..rtlc9T..,..
Ase.ti!
Blrda-J -Vlew or
Emerald Covel 3 BR 2
Ba. den, 2 fireplaces,
lute tree studded lot.
Wrap around 170,000
U -NEEt6CASB. J111t
listed, rm.ODO.
Plctlrt r.fKt
O..S-.10.1 OC EAN VIEWI 1121
Hilk rnt, I BR 2 Ba.
apeeto. lf'tlli and dlD·
ln1 room, fireplace,
eletant Oai: ~ lal· portedW.~.S
IO lftt.llDlile ,_ ......
pc* a1lld llt. ~ tm,ooo.
494.755 1
......... 11""1-HflllE ~C Ye OOf\MACK RE
OpenSatSunl-5119Vla JUSTSIOl,.500 6000 sq ft. Owner Coodoorofc 2Ba. $'775 mo 6459161. R&'M~
Rf \I Tt tll"
Yella. Owner Agt. Forlhis3bdrmbome -motiva~aodwiJlcoa TheWledmans lBI 979-1942
IAYROMJ 673-0697 Just minutes from sideranyreasonabltof· 751-4293 3 Br 1 Ba Easts1de
leclllctid Q00,000 beautiful area buchu. fer trades. uchanges. 8.67 acres nr VilJa Park. Fireplace. 2 car garage
Duplexes. oceanfront.
beautiful ocean view. Perfect location New
condition. Alt. 673-7300
5&(J() sq rt o( quality con-DESPERATE! try $25.000 down. owe terms. etc. pride of Orange, ready for sub· $700. Mo S48·89RS ,
structlon on 114' of Newport Beach Owner balance Aaswnable 8~ ownership. division Will exchange 1F·H~7 .
OCEANFRONT Duplex
& Tri-Plex Xlnl loc.
P.P. 673-7677, 67J.TI173.
water. Owner will carry muat sell 2 Br. 2 Ba. Con· COltOMA DB. MAI l!t TD -for oceanfront, home or
financing. $1,450,000. do. Veraaillu . Pool, DUPLIXES ..&.. WATf.RFRONT incomeunits.1937-1371 MESADB.MAR
Age o t . Dan 8 i b b jacuul. ocean & harbor THREE t.o cflOOH from . ...... H 1 ca RE~LOMES~T.TE l-L-L Beautiful 3 bdrm. 2 ba 67"'2311 u" 7"""c views. Xlot 1..23 flnaoc-..---• -" ,. WW111111t H d I d .r • _.. _, S 3 2 0 0 0 I with pool Wet ban. REAL 63,.,400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ea le poo an spa
EXEC C-...DO 1 0 g 1 • fi replaces, aarages. •• .... ___ F ...s...L.......1 Walking distance to "" 0 w n er I Agent Llveinoneanit -rentthe WIAIE l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I ._. waawc sc h ools & stor es :~v·i!ti:· ~~i~t~. -=2:13:112::l~-?N9~:;;;;;;~; other Xlnt financing --" l•-------•i M:~·port••••.:;•••3j96; Beautiful carpets, m1r PAID IN
HAl•YIEW
.....,5 n .. 77 MCI\ Owner saya .. SELL" 493-0202 498-1040 pn.ofO....n~ rored closets. m1n1 -... ,OOO ..... r, i..,,..,,.... UDO $100,000 C II tod ....................... blinds. sunny k1tcht>n .~a ay. 20 units. E.side C. . 7 , _ __.. u---0 · h k b N Prlctbcllctlow yrs old. 30~ down. ..._,_ wit oa ca mets o Smashing family room
with wet bar. Un-
beUevabtr beautiful en·
tertainer spatio 5 Bdrm
Sommerset on fee land
Absoluttly immaculate
move-in condition.
Creative financing
available.
RED CAR.P€f'
1202...
UDOISLI
IUCHllTlllAT
Strut to strada location.
Comfortabl.e 3 bdrm. 2
ba home with unusual
circular fireplace.
Priced right at $355.000.
-
WATERf'RONT
HOMES
REAL ESTATE 631-1400
On this 4 bdrm dream S. J-Overall rmanclng lO'l Prof decorated 3 Bd ts $875 Mo S56-7~
home. Featurin• -and 21 C.,..tr.o t07I Hurry'. Call Kevin home. Fully furnished 3 Br Condo S600 • ... •••••••••••••••••••••• w ea d onthl proportions & refreshing $50,000 DOWN. Great r ener. m Y fireplace. dbl garage. openoeaa . Ntwly • terms ~ACRE ocean clea01i;ig .~rv1ces and atrium pool spa
finished. T.>e> good to S•dpller64Mf50 views. Secluded 4 Br. assoc1at1on fees 1n -645•9494 ' • last. 3 9 ,.00 B k eluded. Jae . comm. . ---1 4 • " . r o er pool and delightlulfami· • E. Si.de 2br, fenced
RL·dh 1 I I~ l~e.1lty
I;~:~ ~: :1111
$215,000 499·1526· ly living. Least for yard, kidJ OK, no pets
Beautiful 3Br . 2 ~Ba 5-t. AM IOI SlSOO/mo 644·7020 CaU 10am-8pm 631-46.50.
land. owe w/$20,000 quired. _' ___ _
aoso --,A·v·c·m-,--
aeauutu1ly kept and re-
ady t.o movt in. 3 Bdrms,
country kitchen and
home. 2 doors to ocn. fee ••••••••••••••••••••••• •. S4SS/mo C~ Ref's re·
down. Pr1non1.y pleau. Sll.500 114 L1·ngo
GREAT Starter or for ••lfmn BToro l2l2 DIAMOND Investor. Well cand for WSED LA'iUMA ••••••••••••••••••••••• REAL ESTATE 2 BR. Dining Rm. Gar ICHUHITS · HOME FOR RENT
1rt1tw.eo.sTMWl. Fruit. Call $42-5272 ; Xl Big Canyon Condo 3br 3 Bdrm. 1625. Fenced n1n1.u. 545-2737 Bkr. nt terms, SS7S.OOO. decorator furn.. view, yard & garage. KidJ &
The Wiedmans (B) pool, tennis, lae 11800 pets welcome 545-2000.
LUXUllOUS UMD4 ISU 0.. THI
IAY SIDI .. A home for all
seasons." Extensive use of
specially woven rugs, drapes,
and exquisite oak panelina
accentu a t e the recently
compl eted interior designs by
Ca nn ell & Cb aHin. Th ia 7
bedroom, 7 bath home bouta an
Italian marble eatry wlndin1
stalrcase, 4 marble fireplaces,
spectacular brass lllhtlng
fixtures, elevator, and much
~-The master IUlt6 CM!l'loob
the 3 boataU ps. E&iltinl low
flnancln1 assumable loan wllb
owner wllllnt to 111l1t in
Cin ancln1 by ~~~ a substantial loan. U at
c ~rrent /ric e of $2.•00.009
Le11ebol . Barbara Lomma ,
(114) ISMM3.
forma I dining room. .1.41r7573
Many c:uatom features ._._l!!!!•l!!!!~-!!!!!!mm!!!!!!!!I s.d INdl include wall d brick 2 ,..
fireplaces, vaulted cell·
lnp and CUilom paperi.
8111 care yard.
1084
rm.soo. 1343 MARINERS DR.
OPEN SAT /SUN l·SPM
64Z..5200
J PE 1l BARRE TI
REALTY
°""" ·~ .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............ ~Wt II •••••••••••••••••••••••
751-4293
JUSTUSTEDI
T wo 2 Bd rm unlla.
E'alde aleept.r. sm.500.
Grab pbooel CtntW')' 21
Gold Co11t Realtora
548-1118
MIWPOIT HTS.
ADOITIOM
Thia beauliful 3 bdrm
2ba COlta .... home
haa two 1 bdrm unlta
beflttln1 a Newport
B e a c h eddre11 .
Mo. 640.69118. Agt., no fee.
Adult, ltt\U'lt.y gate. 3
Bdrm, 2 -Ba. private
patio &c 1aragt, pool,
·----"1!1""-
IM
• e s • <YV .. • •. , o co e e o : s a a e o
from
beach. l380/mo yrly.
Pool, encl pr, lauodry.
210 Cedar. Npt Shores.
640-S078
VILLA IALIOA
ADULT ONLY
2 Br 2 Ba. Lar1edeck.
ll50Mo. JRL PROPERTIES
4 4 0 4 SCI : 1 r z 1 t ; oe c s a a
WE HAVE THE ANSWER!
Yoga In Jhi Morning! · .
• Tension • Whole Body Approach
• Peace of mind' • Tonini
• R.ultby Body • Deep Relaxalion
• Breathlnt • lleditaU°" ... ,~
,.., ... 2 ..... ...,,.
Cllilli"llt ..... .,
MJ ••NI A.M.
YOG•CMEI
.ii OfCatem• ... ,., ....
U•-" ""*' & ~ •)
••••••••••••••••••••••• FIRST LADY
Escort. Models
Pertyhars.
* 9TZ.1345 * MC 6 VISA Accepted
COVER GIRL
• OU'rCALL * !ISJ..0778 MCNISA
. ·--------... --------·_...·-·--:""-·"""'11111 .. ll!llP"~·"'-9"'11 ...... _....,.... .. llllll!'lll!!!' .. ~• ... s111111~'·!1!111 .. a ... ~s .. s121•2 .. •s ....... 2 .. ~1•2 .. 12's•2-.2 .. 1!1£111 .. &•z•sl&ll!J
Orange Coaat DAIL V PILOT/&inday, July 5, 1981
I •• . _;. r.: I "j ) ...;"' ....... ":'. ~ •)I : " i' '-... ' I~ I ) ~...... ... ) I a·~ I rt I t:. I ; ·I ) • ~ r a: I ; • ~·:
--.~ .... ~ .... -......... C-.. c-.ttc-a• ,.,..,_, H•,, • H11Ud11ll11 LMll ....... ,,,..... ....... ~ ••••.....•••.......••.•...•••••••.•••.•...••.••••••••••.......•..•.....•••••••.................••••••••............ ·············································· ••..........••••.••..........••..••.....•.....
f_....11 ASPHALT RF.PAIRS 111! CAlCESURPRISJ!I Drheway1, pauot. room Wuut It-you dry It t CONCRETE 6 BRJCK ROBIN'SCLEANlNG MORTGAGE MONEY Fint palnlm& by Richard ROOYlNG SfNCE 19"1 ~ •SEAi.COATING Urdque flavored cskea additlona. Cement 6 LM'1 Tree Servi.ff lw PLUMBING, ETC. ~rvlce-etllorooehlY AVAILABLE Sinor. Uc, Ina L3 yra of AU typee Incl. ttpain 6
h fJ .. ~ SlDcell37 Uc.21DS3 delivered wlflowel'I ' brickwotk.55M'7$3 llWD firewood 11 as I ~ cltubcue.~OIS7 sao.oootomo.ooo bspp)' N.8 t'\lltomtn anowt0alhl1. Slate Ile. fl~ W.»00 .._, amllel.pt..00.54M314 CUltola concnte, compl. ~rel Ph• upert tree Carpentry, maaonry. Do you need a Cantutlc .._,..._,..,.... Tbankyou &11-4410 2822163. 2:$'lt disc. on yd
Tbst •AU.you '1 M•••*"-e.,.ta tervlce. Remove old, ID· lrimmln&. N0-18££. roorin&, ceramic tile, bouaekeeper with a Int Up to 15/yn to repay ~t/int paJnt.11\g, cab. re stock mattnal.
30
fota .............................................. atallnew.Lk.~U ,__.,1111 drywall6more.4119-4969 reta?C&llma>. PRIMEF'INANClAL fln/atsln. Prof. Rsnbl '46-5800 ft5;9!7 ~ad •UTODIJA.1.M All Typea ~Una Is GUARANTEED ....................... Rax GeoeralffoUlecltsnlna SERVICES ftteest.S&evese7·'2&1 S.wi19/Als:tls•
M Home. ffhide Is ru. Repalra, tAlp ~· 17 Block walla brickwork Formica~ Carpenll)'· llhlonry Relisb•Retereoces 527·3477 AGAPEFORCE .............. ••••••••• ~,.? lnslde ls oW.lde. Picklij) rnlnarta.ll . alabt dri~Wl)'I Reta' C111t.ombu0ltlmt&lled Roofln&·Plwnbina Owotr1D1. 9GOS10 y.._., PAINTINGCOMPANY Cstm Dreu Makins
,.,...., 6dellvery.915M2S$ Mr.Palomboi182·Pl4 Reaa:rata.SaZss · LatettColon/Oetigm Drywall ·Slucco-Tile Ofi.JHOUSF£LEANJNG ::.................... SGeneraUonaor Alterations/Repairs
SllVICI -. .... MelhrC. ft ,._._ Freeest. 146-4171 6more. J.B.~9990 SpeciallledServicet BRICKWORK · Small Paintl.n&ExttUence hoComn•e.u7l!!~!no in you r DIUCTOIY r • S la"~ In .. ,.-:;~ ~Tit ..... C~ U-L...u..l..__ l»s&sl ...,....,, ._,_.~ ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• pee ~ uw .. b 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... .., ,_...,.,.-~ t.o meet xour iodiv1dual Jobi. NeWJ)Ort, Costa Baby11ttlna io my home. remodeliq,Xl.ntm. Ceramic llle, Int/ext .............................................. , oeeda. Resa.m-4616. Meu. Irvine, Refs NEWPORT PAINTING SWten~
YourOsllyPUot Uc., from l1AM t.o 12 •nos Comm/~d. rat.el. All CRPT-LINO.WOOD RARDWOODn.C>ORS 'Ho•Hlttii:MJ 6'7S.3175 Comm./lndus./Resid. .. ................... ..
Servlcel>lredory , mldnl&bt. Mon lhru Fri. c:..,.. Senb Ame.rlcuTile~ lnstslled/repalred. Uc. CleanecU1Waxed ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• Frplca. patios. planten. freeeat. Low rates Cool your home. add Repl"eMO&Stive CM yrs Sl.50 hr ouc c•c.a 131182110 Gna G8-5l42 Anytime l3Mlll S A DON'T B" ., ... PTV. For 1 J'ob done right 642.-612J1 security. save SS. U in· 642·1671. ed J22 s ' · _,.~._ ....................... O.C.,...... ' · · r. ...,. s l a 11 f re e e s t 111!!------·I .CoastPLuaarea. Shampoo 61tum clean ........................ w•1la9 ....... THIRSTYORLONELY Lam7»9028eves DB's PAINTING (2l3JJ24.6Q4 :: Will babysit in Corooa del Color bri&btenus. wht •WA TWAU.S ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••o•••••••••• cusroM MASONRY Int/ext. Neat, reliable, Acea•.... Mar. Sat. Day, Sun. crpts 10 min. bleach. Cr f d f * CLEAN·UPS/LAWN Haul,clea.nup,concrete "Security Plua" will alt Brick,block atone,lOO'a. refa.Dave~evs ~ •••••••••••••••n•••••• Day, Sun-Thursday HaU. Uv.-dln. nn1 $15: oo!i~ ::;1 v~:c Malntenance-Lndacp removal.Dumplnlck. your house. plant.a & Local refJ. Call NOW' PAINTING. ~m •••••••••••••••••••••••
Acct' for am bus. PR evenioas. After S:30. 1v1rmS7.50:~SlO; Ston~c:'tion.s · Freent. &&2-9907 Quickaerv.MZ.7gi pets. Bondable. refs save!LgeorsmallJObs. work 2Syrseap Many Hot waler-pool heatln& ~trlie1, Illes tax, F /S. Susan 759-«271 chr 15. Guar. elim. pet 6'2-&33l /evesll73-l2216 Gardening, landscaping. DUMP JOBS 631·7587 . Repairs, etc. 64S-&512 local' refs. Lac. ·.o3941 save ru1ng ~gy costs·
omplete set up 6 ....... Senlc odor. Crpt repair. 1S yrs tree trimmio& l re· $Mall Moving Jobs Resp., malure t,adY will, Custom brick, stone. Bonded, ins. Free es t. gam lax credits Free
service. Reas. Fran 1 • exp. Do work myself Dr.,.rlet moval, major clean-up CalJ Ml.KE646-13U hou~ealt. Aug . Sept. bl""' ... c-~ ....... •tucco. Hutchison, 963-0911. es==-t=..cS48-=-=-1688=----
• ~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Refs. SJl-0101 •••••••••••o•u••••••• rree est. 752-1341 ' Oct, N ... ("""')967 ••n.n "'"• ""'·'~ • c-&..&.a.. TYPING MAPHIC5 Hauling Is Dump Jobs w~ """ . ........, Ref1 f ree eat. S49 !N92 Need a paJnter' Want a ...,. __.n BOOKKEEPlNG SCWTI~ NoSteam/NoSbampoo 1/>0FflMJUlY Dan'sLawnService AskforRandy. &..dtc..... pro job but not a pro •••••••••••••••••••••••
R
F or am all bu1ineu . ru, ...... .1.•71 OM .. ~•in Specialist. Fast Draperies by Giovanni Pree la loo I.awn ma int. 641-8'27 -....................... Mo•lstg pnce? Randy ... 552-8091. TSPR lRNKLERSal & SOCD T e11,reliab&e.&31-as&S ._ WT· Freeest. 839-1582 Also minl·blinds & program ror all lawns. CALL US w do 'll ....................... ree emov · DI I
.... .._.._. .. •--'-a....l.l..t..... leveloun. 542-221S. Expert labor. low rales, HAUUNG-&udenl has ,_ 1 ! e rotou · Movin1 ? The Starving f'lethr /Repair Landacaiie 646-7070 ....,......__ .-..-• ~ ""--el free est. 642-50l7 large lnldt. Lowest wg, awn & sprloltler ln· Colle1e Students Moving ••••••••••••••••••••••• --"
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• .... r-rile, prompt. '7»-1976 stsll. clean-ups ' hght Co baa grown, Insured Neat patches & textures Tilt Macnealte, paint, clean. GBWICl&50H (£? . / ....................... Prof.Japanese Gardener Thaokyou,Joho. hauling.~ same good service frfft1t ltl-143t ...................... . ~=~·.~eme~;. lcrptbs. BuUdersSincet!N7 ~~ ~.~r;•pllrodSpec. N11e'wU..&l re-~.:,n.~=,· ~~'!1· C'---Y ... Ad COLORSCAPEDF.SIGN IT124 ·436 License" PLAST~RPATCHING ATi1k.~J~~~o~
• ~n .. ,., we .... P u.m . Addition.a, remodeling, CARPET CLEANERS ~';s. #3899'4. 532·SS49 M-o-..,lng $10.-.. c -., We~ ca:rages. 1 lDJtlnt c<?1or ' clean-up. 641·8'27 Int/ext. 30 yrs exp. Refs John 893-1667 Brad, M2-3C plans. Free est. Reas. .. ._....., too truck.~ ... 1_ ""'"' Fut service. mlll96 ABC MOVING, Ex per Neat work Paul 545-2977 -·--·..=o=•-=-=~= Auppl•ce..... Llc.310IM2. 549-2170 E~1ctiooclear\in1re· Tape, Tenure, Acoustir Haullng/MovlngS25 "" ._, ~S-W. r 1 k ---~ --frff5.nlu
••••••••••••••••••••••• CONSTRUCTION vwes color/fruhoels ceilings. Free est. Kevin 7~-9904~ Mark HAUL ANYTHING • • • cparore'fulos'!'...!ac~!~., ~lcO Restuccos Textures •••••••••••••••••••••••
.57 .. 507 Y d I •••• • • •••••••••••••• -.. "· .....,.,. lnl /ext Patchwork GUAR. USED REFR's Add/remodel, concrete -. 675-9088/673-1.SOO YARD CLEANUPS. ltee ar c ean·ups, con· Custom Leather Sandals JAYE Tl& CARE
SALF.S•SERVICE Freeeat.581·&160aft.5 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!!!!!•I!!!!!!! Bectrical work. irrigation & re· crete removal. Have Tbe Sandalman makes •A·I MOYIMG• J:.re~ --~8258 Topping, pruning, re
Goodcood. 642·17~ ROOM ADDITIONS & c.fl-..Acndk ....................... pa i r , creen belt :~truck Re as. thebestror yourspecaal Top q uality Special lefiltfg~ movaJ&spra)'Ulg lOyrs
.&...a..a REMODELING Quality ....................... ELECTRICIAN priced 11ndacape.11Sl-Ol29 needs. Call642-&&56 care In handling. 25 yrs ....................... exp. Local rers. Free
::::::::'•••••••••••••••• construction from de· Acoustic Ceilings + right, free estimate on Garden Maintenance Ho.Mc..... exp. Competitive rates. J D Hom Ref11115hing est Lie ~-640-9308
Driveways, parking lot sign to completion ~ustombsndtex\ilring l~rgeorsmall jobs. Reaid /comm/Indus ••••••••••••••••••••••• Noovertime.730-1353 Ant1ques.K.lt.cabinels ~-rt...--'-' -
repairs, sealcoatin•. Family contractors for Lie. 389944 S32-SS49 Lie. 11396621 673-0359 Cln-upa & tree trim· Want a REAU.Y CLEAN To place your message Sunshine Movers Put a fine painting MS-0664 w --__...
S
.._., 0 m•ft& HOUSE'. ,..._,l G;ngbam .. .-1 sm1"le 1n your move-no -••••••••••••••••••••••• .., Asphalt. 631 -4199 30 yrs. Reas. rates. Fr C....t/COKl'ete Ft.c'-M• ...., ~ 11c:1orelbe "Let Th Sun.shin I " Llc'd. -ta. Allen E J-.. ----. ' ...., 840-1816·, eva ...... •""-7 Girl. Free est. ~5123 reading-·1.lic. JOb too small. 642-1329 It's lime to pion for that e .e n ~· URU:IULI ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-•••••••• • .,._..._... .,..... voe a hon trip. For extra Call Sunslune Window
ASPHALT REPAIRING 301007. Call 84().5656 or Pool Decks and Patios, WOOD ANCIMG GARDEN MAJNT. HOUSECLEANING phone P~JP.,.,ts.cJ cash, why not seU some Clean1n.B..1ld. S48-88SJ
SealcoatinefcStriping 840-4727eves. Muonry,Sport&Tenois Freeest. ~82.58 yd clean-up. Tree trim· Reliable, &ood work. Dally Pilot •••••••••••••••••••••"' flb · d • Comm /resld. Free est. Find what you want m Courts. Lie. 374067. Bob. . min&.~ (4 .. pm ) s le ad Y Job. Re r s Clualfled,642·:56'18 I'be Paper Hanger, Pror ~eed os;i;1'r:5 t~~Ji~ Ma ~e by our shlheopDpa nlg
Lie. 138131112 ~8181 Daily Pilot Classl.fieds. 851-1966, 1147.7079 Want Ada Call &&Z-5678 Clauirled Ads 642-5618 install. Decorator qua I. easier )' u.s1ng aa Y . &46-7228 Frttest.Steve~7-4281 ad'642·5678 P1lot Cla~1fiedAds
rir:::~! HelpW.-.t 710CI H91pW..W 7100 H91pW.-.t 7100 HelpW...W 71001HelpW...W 7 100 HttpW.-.t 7100 HtlpW..t.d 7100 HefpW..ted 7100H.tpWmhd 7100 .....••.•.......................•............................................•..................................... , •••••••.••••••.•.•••••.•..••••.•••••..••••.....••..•...•.•.....••....•.••............•.......................••••••
Jobs Wtisltld, 7075 A" MANACiB *AUTO SALIS CHEESE Expert needed. DB.I COUMTll E5CIOW GENEUL OfffCE
•••••••••••••••••••••••Mature cou pl e to .AMDLEASIHCi! BYaOnkUingSHOULDIE Banking toassume fullmgml & FullUmeincludesSat.& HELPMEB>f:D Good working rond i Colle&e Man 30 desires manage apt complex, County growth requires * * * sales or. dept. Xlnt. opp-Sun . shift Will train. Exp'd. secretary, recep-lions Good pay Handle
position u driver ror Ne wp ort Beach our sales starr ex· HERE! CiUiens Bank of Costa ly forrightpenon.Coo S4 SO /hr Fringe uonist. closmg officer AP AIR Constructaon
GeMr'Cll Offlu
Our .rapidly expand1ng
international co. is seek·
111g an enlhusaasuc. self· starling :hdav for a
general ol'flce pos Gd.
typing. phones & riling
req'd. Outstanding rom
pensauon & excellent co
benefits Pleasant work·
1ng environment Con
lacl Pal M1lls
private or firm Refs rullllme. Aduh. no pets: pans ion. Gd set for the Mesa has the following tact Jan, Jan's Nutr1 benefits. See Harold, 495 Fast growing co. Salary or au l om o t 1 ve ex
530-9863 before llAM. Mainteoanceexpen,·ence Chagrufi= _'82s ! ~f•l Bank or Newport is immed iateop1:nings: ~on HU~our, 6789 E.17thSt.,C.M. based on exper. Need perience preferred
Ed. neceasary. Bondab e. re· evy s in excat ng always looking for en· amer, · Dental -bri1ht, eager races 99'7·31020range
.... W.-.t 7100 rerences. 2 bdrm home John Wayne <Orange lhusiastlc individuals to •T!U.115 Ct& OITHO Call : Too1 Street, General --
••••••••••••••••••••••• + salary. Ph. 644-0814 County> Airport com join our sU!f. We have Experienced LEAD COOK IWB-1255 E o E • bcif99 Cc.cept •
Accounling <PT9amM·l2pmGwkdys) ~I~: ~~:~~b:O~ immediate openings for Top wages paid. Apply Chair side RDA, Ex· Exper:enced . p~uc11on Lrg. successful co owns
P/timePayrollClerk for A ANA ER.mal~e forEZstrai ht sell and ra•-s •MCIOPSATOI m person: Village lnn, panded duties. l year spreader/cutter ror btrl campgrounds insurance agencv couple. Beaut. 44 urut, 1 G g d lllloAoc;ft Experienced 127 Ma rine. Balboa min exp. 4 day week. sPort.swear co.""'6727 Needs phone reps no
J Cost M Adults ease. enerous pay an EXPERJENCED I I d " -.....,. . . Salary commensurate a esa. • no demo lans Auto ex· s an . Top pay & benefits ror selllng. Plush ale off:re
with uperience Call pe~ Apt ~mall salary perieofe not reqwred. Full-Time •LOAM SEClfTARY Clean Up Person, full topaltlll. NB. &tZ-6443 FOOD SBYICE Work w /nice people
Lioda96}0!Kl. + nus. dys642-t907 but previous selling We offer an excellent Eaperienced lName . Apartments , DEMTALASSIST. DUTIEWS.OIKludea Call ~~ll32Reed. 9am 12
AM#-
Sciewtffic ~
1111....atlaMI
18011 Mit6hell South
Irvine, 567-9051. EOE
Accounts Payable helpful. See Sales Mgr. ewport Bach, Coeta ORTIIO·. RDA WI .... ex· 111c serv111g n,oo"'"'n""" . .::::.,.,.,.=-"='----
/P C• _., A5SB•BS HOW "'ltD ,...__.....,. s a I a r Y and co m . We offer a good starting Mesa area. Experience "' meals. 2 patients.· clean· .A ~ Loe. Mission VleJO' co 0o"' 1,.,.~llSts..-.--. prehensive benefits salary and excellent required TSL Mgmt. per. pref. Excellent ups & general ass1Stance
Rapid arowing Irvine needs Assembleri w/2 ve ~ package incl uding company paJd benefits 642·1603. wage.S52·7llOO to kitchen F llame baaed restaurant food NEWPORTBEACH Medical. Dental. paid including attractive DR.U"P•• •11rsT. Capistrano by the Sea chain co. bas an opening yrs. exp. Candidates vacation. retirement work apparel. For in· CLERICAL '""•-~ H 496-57<rl for an up. A/P Clerk. mual have ed. manual AUTOMO'llVE and more. terview appointment LOAM SBYICE RDA, expanded duties, oap. .
PoaiUon req. coding ac-dexterity, gd. eyesight. MECHANIC pleasecaU: PAT Tl.Al4ll 2°"' day1 wk, Santa Ana. FJTCOOI
count numbers. lP.iin&. nea~ lnbf ~ncei!' 3e· Immediate opening for For 1 m mediate con-CITIZB4S IAHK Immediate open.ing in ~3838 Home style cooking for 10.key by toucb. 11Jng, pen a e. 15 ·re eaperienced Subaru sidenlion please call: 2'70HarborBlvd. Loan Brokerage Co. ror Desk clerk, Sea lark small reurement facili· preparin& computer in· support medical elec· me c ban 1 c . Man y Personnel Dept 1714) Suite 20& ,...~ta Mesa entry level loan Hrvice Motel . Costa Me sa. ty. Flex hrs Salary
CiEMHAL OfACE
Bnghl enthusiastic peo-
ple wanted ror expand·
Ing time share teSOrt.
Desk exp. not nee Com·
puter or lame share
knowledee helpful Con
tact Craig or Louisa
.!92-6103 ----put forms & monthly re-Ironies. Gd. benefits. benefits include medical 760-6000 (114) ~ clerk. Accurate typing, 3-UPM shift. Moo t.h.ru based on eap. 494-!N58. concllln\AIP state· Only responsible •· prori·t sharm· g. "Ae · d .1 •. Fri •Lday"A·tmorrun' g seekin "' ""' Equal()ppEmplm/flb attention lo eta1 .. ·.,.. .,. · ·-------• menta. alary com· persona · g perma-Ga ry Hut.sell at ~ abillty t.o cope with pre-Will train. Call Ray af· I•-------· meoaurale w/ability. nenl emryml need ap-AUMMACiMOt4 .;"i: Bank 5 5 u re esseo 1 i a I temoons.646-7445 General Office General
GEHHAL OfffCE
We need somebody who
as really good al sm
business ore pro·
cedures One girl ore
Exc1t1ng. challengan~ work with excellent pay
Call . 645-2835 ask for
Tom
Rust y Pe I 1 can ~!Y1:3830Cal : Mn. Parelli, 5....... •BlKESTORE• S8SO/Mo. Call Katie 0 .... -........... MYTAM7
McGaw Ave, Irv. Ca. "!!llm•••••I!!!! ---""-54..!.M=--"1%.:.lOO~--0 1 · gr ... m anic Heap640-9350 Graphs. maps, & ad· Restaurant, Inc. 2862 -_.., ~ f As 't M ... ech · -rt-" I Got It From G.D. AssistJnts Full &G~~~me. All Rec-tilnists areas. Uniforms rum'd. = for Schwinn dlr. Sal. KB.LY! _,{""'71...,4"")~""t-"-""m.=----1 Attractive female & male BABYSITTER needed ~port Sl0,400. Muat have prior CUllC.AL vertialnc preparation. W:th Kelly Ser vices File ... Cl-ir• Ages 21 or over. reUred
needed to deliver Tele-ruu time for 1 yr. old. bike mech. exp. an a P/time. Fine mail store Competitive salary & there's never 1 reason
ACCOUMTAMT F/C grams. Fun poaitlC~D Npt. Bch. '16().!QJ afts Stott.~ in N.B. needs versatile xlnt benefd.s. Aerocomp, ror you to be worried
llA ~ welcome No ex per nee
Looting for wort. but Apply Universal
Poa. w /Npt. Bch. invest-Good su.pplemen~ ID· Babysitter needed for 6 Equal Opp Empty M /F Bookbeper/Recept. for person who as detail ...:95::7.:...·.::::6586=·-----about tanning lime.
meot nrm. Resp. fordai· come. Cail The Stripper mo. old on Bal. Isle. Mlulon ViejoOb-Gynof· oriented & can use 1~ * DllYa5 * We've got over 100 dif·
Protect:oo Service, 1226 you havenoexperience• w Sth Sl S •-Good opportunities · ·· .anta n.na. available t.obelp you. No Interview hrs. 9-12& 1-C. ly financial transactions Telearam Service. <714) Im-'™ flee. Eap, reg. "7·S7Sl. key mac.lune by touch. Person with good driv· rerent job catecories,
& compW.erized G/L's. 613-2641 ---=.z:::;:...__ Banlung B 0 0 K K EE p 1 NG Will train to post sales log record, must be enou&h temporary as· experience required Mon-Fri _____ _
Analytical minded Auto ./ ./ on computers/other 18/yn of age, to drive signmenta t.o keep you
penoo, uper. req'd. F R O.N T E N D * * P /time. Apply at : feneral om ce tasks. companr car malting busy ' still buk 111 the
Call: 640-01.23 SPECIALIST Exp. on-BANKING VAULT JfilEI Crown Hantw~. l024 Work schedule flex. At deliveries. Start at Summer Sun!
Only one 111tervlew Call HAIRDRESSER Follow·
today for appointment Ing pref'd Cricket's Nofee Hair Design, Village
ly Own tools. 503 Irvine (Weatclirf Pla.za). Ease, Fashion Island S3.3S/hr. No summer
comm. Some lite mech Wells Fargo Bank has NB Mr. Cline. Mon-Fri help accepted. Call
ACCOUMTIMG helpful. Larry Hunt an Im mediate opening IOODmlU«i 644·5070. Mark al 751·2680, 8am·
Irvine co. bas imm~. Auto Center , 18 25 Wells Fargo Bank, ror an indlvidUll with lrri.ot co. baa lmmed. CLEl~.ASHI Spm,Mon-Fri. opening for exper d. Laguna Canyon Rd, L.B Orange County A;rnnrt six moe. previous bank-· t 'd --. B / ~v•r
person to h·--''e AIR. .... .. -or -.2030. ~ .. -ing un..rierace t.o flll the opening or ea per · mrow u11 "' ..,.... ......---· omce. hu Immediate · r -V I person to handle AIR. D .. -y related runcli_ons, ' AUTO MOTIVE open;•g.sror· posll:on as a au t 1 d r 1 , for busy Npt. Bcb. store -....--general olc duties Gd "' Teller in our Wood· re ate unct ons, Perm., full time poa. Ex· DIJYB
beoefita. salary D·o.E: PAITS MAHAGB bridge office. cneral olc. duties. Gd. cell. co. benefits. Call Delivery driver ror rood
Call: 754-1931 Excellent opportunity Ttlln nefits, salary D.O.E. B a I boa Ma r 1 n e services needed by Hun· ~.t'"--I 'th Call : 754-1931 ADVERTISING ror experienced GM _. •-A ong w1 an excellent -==..:....:.=:..=~---Hardware, 549-9671, lington Beach Ci t>'
llOADCAST person. ~dvancement salar y and benefit• llUIFASTCOOI EOE M/F/H School Dist. 11/mo pos1 SALIS opportunity for am· Working 30 hours <Mon· ~acka!e. you will ftnd 1 Full lime permanent Cl.Ill Lion. li*).$1233/mo de.
Se d . . . Ed b:t:oua & dependable m· Thurs 9.30·3:30) and rien ly working al· Must have experience. for Bookkeeping De"'. pending on experience. n 1nqU1r1es to: dlvldual. Many benefits working 18 hrs (Mon. & mosphere. For more tn· Apply In person: Jolly M F . .,. Start date 9/1/81. Apply HBua8h.CmA•~· BOX 5506 include medical & profit beFrip.ro). Sovi'dedme.lraining will formation please call: Roger, 400S. Coast Hwy, E:g: n~-Mc~WJi t~~~: 735 14th Sl., Huntington
· · -s h a r l n g. See Mr La1uoa BeJc.h. Beach. ~1.
ADYm'nftMl' M g 714-552-1147 ---Apply at 1680 Placentia
UINIM AUnon ......... ~ We provide an excellent CARW.ASH Ave. C.M. 1-i=:nmiii:::~·1
r11 tt PoNn~ salary and benefits Pull &Ip/time help, also CLBKJPllCIMG I IHGI Ufl1Q
MLLJ 5 .. 9 .. ~"" package and a friendly s •• ,,@ 11••• Assistant Manager Perm part time Tues DIAPl'SMAM N Ion I Com · h "" -..-v k · t h ~ • Trainee. ApplY at 2950 ·• ' · 1·2 yra. Mechanical o~~ces1 1n mc:'1~:~r _A_UT_O_M,,,_OTIV-'-'-~E=--;~~s~nc~~~-osp ere. Harbor Blvd. Costa :~i·J~~·~l~S~~~I~ Dralt.smanexperience.
cities. ii seeking 2 ex· UNUMJTED WELL S Mesa. Hardwire, 549-9671 , OR
per'd ules peraons M/F OPPORTUNITIE.5 &sit CASfm EOE M/F/H 2yrs. dratllngachool
to work with USC foot· Auto leuina company 7 I 4·973-5040 FARGO p /lime, uperlenced . CLlll .,._ST ball promotion. Lead.a needs SELF Sf ARTER Mon-Fri mornings Ap~ ' ... ,
provided, high weekly must have own car BANK ly The Earl's Plumbing, Typist/Receptionist pos.
earnln&a w/mlDIJe· 4M-N3'tor83:J,9135 /~'-2 8 9 2 2 C •m in o with homeowner'• H · ::;e:~rm~::~~x~ AUTOHM~E s .• ,,~,m • 4850BalTanca. Ca pistr ano. M.v. ~tl;~~it~=~~=~
per prefemd. CaU Vice -• 1 U.. Irvine, CA m4>49S-040t knowledge puf'd. Bil-
P r ul d ent of Sales MICHAMC WELLS EquaJOppEmplm/f/h CASfml lncual desirable. Salary Edward HI.nil collect Must hne GM ex-Q Fff 6 Ptr. Newport based uponeaper. Vaca·
(802) 21UJ33 perieoce. Call Gary FARG Beach ft Lrvlne area. lion, sick pay, health
•Co. will train
• Reports directly
to V. Pres-Eng.
•Company pata
profit sharing
•V1c1Uons&
Hol.idsys~d • Medlcal-Ule Ins.
Ajlartment Maintenance. Hut.aelJ for Immediate BANK BANICJNG Leticia: MH@). in1. 64H71M. 8 to s. Mon·
Part time fat colleae and &rest OAJC>rtunity. CASHIER Ftj. ltadent. General Main· Maaybeoelits. mlrD HOUMwa"'Slles.Apply COCKTAIL HOSTESS Only those seekloa l.ffts~wort-MJHS51. AUp~!"°"C '580MacArtburBlvd * IWU lo penon : Crow n g~~ime. SHIRAZ permanent t!lftllloyment
._,. what you w·-• in _..,"" NewportBeach,CA ,,. Hardware 1"2i' lrYint _,~uz..=•.w.__ ____ needapply.
nlN .. ~ 54f-4W EqualOppF.mplym /f/h A leading uvillp and CW!!tcllrf Pt;;),N.8. COM MERCIAJ.S. stunts, Call: Mn.Plertck
5. 57 M.U:: fair Mall, Lag. Brh
Apply at tbe Kelly Office ~ """494~-'-'·l:.;:600-"-"------
neareat you: rn. L'n-HAllDIESSBASS't
K E L L Y U \• f, -Cosmetology, Lie re·
, 11~ IUSONNfl Sfc~ qui red. Studio S. AJk for sr .. ES J1n trcll strtet Judv 640-6443
Ull9'1 MewDOff 1eoc11 HAIRSTIUST TheTemporary t .O.E For busy shop ex· NJ~ ~~CY · · · perience pN>ferred Call
NEVER A FEE forappU.3357 __ _
2102 Business Center General Buslness HARDWARE SALES
Dr .• 11208, Irvine. S--orc..., Perm ... full or pll.lme.
833-1441 (Nr. MacArthur $1000/MO Apply an person: Crown Bl. & 405 Frwy> Hrs. 8·S Hardware. 31(11 E. Coast
or 27 957 Ca bot Rd . ...;.H""'w'-'y._..,""'C""'d'""M~----
Laguna Niguel, 831-os.2 5ecr9taritil, .-bt-Home Aide needed for
(Crown Valley Pkwy. lrlg. ..,.., •••gt-young woman. 4/hrs per exit) Hrs. 9-3 or 161S2 ....t .,...; & ........__ day, S4/hr. Call 642-2434
Beach Bl.. 1123lE. Hunt· = _. dys; 1)4S.95Q'l eves.
lngtoa Beach, Hrs. a..s _ Mtid llftt Hotel
E.O.E. M/F/H -Wiow & .... HIGHT AUDnOI
Tiit lfalst ...........
on die Or-.. COllC
DAILY PILDT
CLASSIRED
ADS
YtiJ Con 6ta tt, FW!d 11.
Trwdt tt W"itft D WOii! Ad
[842-5878 )
apptera11ct . Fii " Co
17141147-2422. ~r. rllr~f~d. s:;rr:~s!~:
Sur & Sand Hotel,
Laguna Beach, "7·5313
N!:~c~~o 1i!6E '1@JIL
Sl, 140. Sales personsllty l'!!!'!i!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!m!!!!!!•••
Like people? 'f!l1S co Hskpr Attendant/Aid to need! you! Typing re· 1• • e quired customer con ive in ror lad y In ,: wheelchair. Some up, tact, .eep accurate re· Ref's Spanish speakln& cords. Wed ror re&iooal · aervice mgr Benefits ok. ~19.
start the day you do! If fCMl'N• 14.JJ
H7-61ll,7Jl·7711 _. .......
1003 FreeU>AppUcant fore~
Da.Ux PUotC'lwlfteda. • -loan bat an ucelleat -rllma, models, extras. l•1!!!!1••58l•·a30-••• ....... Daily Plat ·ea·.-111·~'"·~·,·.·,·, -·
1 t~W~~~~~~~ -..urc5'!'AS11DSll!lml---~~~""faces I I p·iat • • • ....., ~.e.;:a:~~~= UTaT·Eu ,;o~ri~~5 ••••••~ I J I ,.......~.
4500Campua Dr .• NB
.. " YES.
Ir you live In tbe •
NewPort·Mess area, ..,,_
betwH.n aces 14-22. sM
are looklng ror part·
time. Ct1ll·Umt1 or tem
Porary work, we CH
help you find a job
e e See our ad In today'• lucommerdslbeollor Ill day1. Permanent • e
•. Assistant Tl .• "1'~~~~ ~t.~·u~,e :!~:~,.a at:~ MARKETS f41:°'24c'::em. •. Field Sales Supervisor:. .•
(114) 7'MOOO tre_at beMfita lnclud· For 2nd U rd Shlfts -.-, e ~ M•?FT e 1• ID~ S&srtin1 9'upto ttJO. Bnfut, Clf8' '*· ft.ff • Limited oPMJnp available In the Oranse e
• WI prepa re huf.,,.... and e ..... • aldmedkslldmtsl We ~t.omuate-8rtca. ~~r"•· Cat e Co11t ma, for self·mot1uted, carett e Job~n1
l"llGIWCNdltaodbUlincprOlllta, • •Prdlbariftl meDIA1~klftftom _!!l'~9J!L oriented llldivlduaJ Who can 1"0f1t wltb 1._~~ .... ~!!!!lm-Woutahops
• 2 yu ra cndll u per wh it • •"!",:...~rtl wttbtD. C."411111r' • Field Sales People. Train, MOt.lvate and • 1• •IMBALOMCI lnlervlew~ua e umaerelal ucouta. Ooo4 e V-/ WANTACAJlilR? &peritnce~.butoot : ltt results. Stallon wa~oD or van e Ntwp0rtA.ra.ToS1.JOO. No charat '°you or t.t
14211 Yorba St, Tustin
Open MondayEvtainp 8yA~Only
•
~ atUJa. i.ct..., tnt • • Pteu. 8'"' oa MON· Colla ..... MCaaa'1. Put tlme. nc1c~~c.pdonal eam11111. pl\11 job • Gm wh.h UM compa""· ov.r 1,000 Cfl'\pioytn"' . *1~~.,·~-~ Mlis& bt • • lalll ~ DA y , JulJ I, from 5l7 W. WlllOllSt. Ref Required. re a-. 1ta avallablt for t.bt ri&M lna.rface rill~"·~ have on Ille. ll worta' -... --.. dl9llfta UM......,. l . 4 1 rd , ii r 0 0 m.-7!H0DlftJPM ". r:ple. 11 you can prod\ice rtl\lltt, not e t.ht DhcJOt Some f\ lhtouih tht Unlttod W11 • Pll•Uc u d 1sJel .wt: • Po11Uoa 1...,...lu ur THURSDAY, Jub t, ~ ,. l talk abOul It, call: N0-0894 tor e wor\. 1;1te typfi,~ and volunteera •1'•
•
c-, ... lfltJt .... ,,. a........ • C.O.vm•IMDD:lpt.11 rromt:JOtol!•at: LqlaaBM~ Gd.=--·· .. I ervlew.AskforMr.Cbu~ • Rtlutd atmoaphtte. care. lf rou'rw .... ...,.. .... ..._, ~ ,.w c.te K ... W.W a _.. -w fOfa )ob.lMtYISfd e llllD. ate ... dtll&al lwurn e per. preftmd, t.1"81 FIDBJTY lilt ...... rihcol· • -~ • f:·.: .. =. QPPtY. u www. CsJI 18 \o
• i~IJ ,!•:.&~121, u t 21' for 91 Mu':twpm req•l.red. FllllAL K11n~U1Beacll ~.~tg: e TJ~ttl _ e H7-61D.1Jt.nll :1~':.°f:':~=-
1 . I '' ""::..'~ ~.:m,"f.=' :\ .._-.. -• Wlt.b et 1eatt I year u~:,.:: • 1004.\ "'8ioApplltut 8. lft Coatalilela ___ -P.....-l .,._ ...r•. 1.-wUI tna, !:1 Mtlll atft. laan.t c~ 1 W.w
I ~~• ,. Ulfm . u11w-11n.. -~.~G•rr\e AlflrNPll •• _,,.......,. • ~ YES!
• .. "~..2..,. <:Mtn:r• ca1 sw1 L_~ADl•·!•,r •. ~~·• • •. .., .. ..,. ............. ., 1J ~ .c .... _._.. Vlial.Cel* t H U f ., UH•• ........... ......., e · ~ •· · ' Aa '4;11'5nf11•1 Miit JI" ...,. ~ i; ... •111&: llr-'-1 • m w. 9'li:lt • Yoo tit a:_•~•1m111t . rq.m ~'i~~. •!' ==r:.._ ,.,. L11aa1 ,..,_.a•at. 11tt •..,. ._.,~\ ColtaM .. CA e .. CilsiltjillOr Q of*Hll'tllrArt• ti I ~--.,-~.·1i ," IME*711wl. . :li.~Jdn. cal ;;.-:.•,:rn~ Bq..a~~,iu 141l1 Ylltlla.,_.. '°"74 ' :·;,::::::::~-J·'" ~ :'·' ~.~.:#~ anM~-..... ·ra•111t .. ___ • ..-::....~ .... ··.,,a,....,~'• ~~·~:_••.ai 01
-=·~-;::::.~-~~·;: .. :=-,:::~"~u~~~;:;::~-1~::::~~~~-~-~!!~~!l:;f~a..~;~·1~-~~~~~~~ .. ~ ... ~~ .. ~~P~!i9'~!,....__!_P~-.~+~~=~~S~C~lifl~ .. ~-~ .... ~~~·''•~~~~~-~~~~-~·~·,~~~~-~~~::;;~~IJ~'Al~s~·~,~~tOlij~~-~Y~f~~~~~..-,~'t~"r"~ ... ~t~r~ -... ~~ -,-·· -~---·~-------·-··"-· -·~ ~ ·-~ .. i:. -.-i -~ .. =·Ti
• • • • • .. • • • • .......... •• •• • ... • • • .................... ·-... -...... ,. .;a ·-........ -• • • .. • .. ...... -·--• • •• ~.. • .. ........ • • .. • • • .. • • 'I'. . . • •"'\. .. ._.... .. _. -· ·---------. --:.--r=~-~· ... .-it 1 . ~ . 1,_J
-------~-------~__......... 4 ~ ~ ---" -__ ...__..,..,...,....,..., • ..,.~~ ... z~• .. •~•_..,.....~.~u~z_....,.~.""~• ...... •~a ... •.,..•~O .... ¥..,_...., •• ~CPllC~C .. G .. C•S!"" .... •C .. S~Olllllb,..$~0 .. 0 .................. . .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, July&, 1981 ~W...... 7100....,_W..W 7 IOOHetpW.W 7100 tt,W..W 71M H.a. w...... 7100 ...., w..w 7100 ._.,. ............................................. . ~~~l"................... ....••..•.•...•••...... ••................. ...••.................. .. .......
INS.AGENCY Ptnon w /lome co. or
a111cy tlf . Type $
wpm fr 1ood on ttle. WI
train Xlnl future as
bentf1t1. Jim Toby !st1tu,
SECRETARY AJrp<>rt , __ LMAL llCllTAIY PAIT-Nl TIMI PHOTOTIAIMll RHtaurant SALIS SECRET ARY law firm. Top eklll•. Xlnl oppty In Stock 2 a "lat• r bl MIDICALllC.r Part·Umtln winttr, Full lf you aretaUw&tutle 6 MCDOMALD"S Ca~cb lhil opportuolty •d • • f b'""lbt, orianbed. Mlf· 8rokera1e Firm for
.... ·::"rorPora1t~ :t~ Very *;.:::.i r.:c· time no• In I Hirl Of· enjoy cbHdl'f'C • are s.c.ra...u •SlOO/d1y. YOW111m "' ma AH • •t~rter. Non-amoker motivated, mature Sa.la
torno 1 1eekln1 u -~vioy....__,1~~ flu at amall fneodly toolcln1forxtralncome, Come•joO)thetnmal bltloua c'" hu room For local ~n't~~f Jot!,4.!Sl·t015 Aulitaot Trainee
perltnctd (2/yra ) .,..._ •dr Mr1.Co11tSouthCOUt tralnnowror1po11tlon ourbredoew1toreln· for more. Tralnl.n1' company • . SUttll~ --Newport Ceoter Call
Mereta7 Id t Dini fr ~J:a~ferrtd. Cln :y, Plan. Phone, typln11 wlt.bprlvttuchooleom-•Ide sc. plaza No 0 • tr1n1po provided St1rt at SlD>/mo XJnt XHOXIOOortl MarJorle"4·2442
IMSllCTOI
IMPIOCISS
Medical Comp<>oent
mfar nftd.a a per
who Ukea det.alt won,
capable OI worti.l.n1 with
a mlc~' 1m1ll parts Salary com
meoaurate with exper.
Located In Milalon Vie·
io. Co. paid profit ahar·
ln1. v1cat.lon ' holidays pd. Medlcal/life ins
Qu1liried af pllcanta, please cal · Mrs
ParelU. S81·38Jl
d I et I j on r le 1111 -fllinl, fi&\ll'el, etc. Ga p~ny Work S.pt/Nov perlence Dl!('tlllrY We 540-TMtaf!.l)AM benefits 4 caner poltn To notch part time l
nect111ry, hllry com· btMfl\f. $4Hl01 Wllh p/Ume woril avail offer uniform• flex tlil. Aerooomp, 967·&sk P • ""·t teded In b91ica
menaurate with u -MIDICA&.ac.r. l·----... --•I Jan lhru May. Call Mi111 hra , perform1°nce Ir ~lea d ts 16 d -vauuon'40-~70 ·;.:!~uea alttmoou
perience ;bealUl fr detl· Pe1bo1rdaccount101. p•RTS Green9t3-4.500. '!'•&erev.._.6promo-p~~~l~e~~full~m~P SECREJIDl(S ---Porl8 r 2929
tal btneflta, paid ~rk· tome ln1ur1nce. rt· A PHSSIOOM tion.a from within. Ap-Fun job. Parties, contnt M s.c
1
; l~t TYPIST ~ wprn tRecep-
in1 ; hrt t.$·1>: an1 t:>:tb rc:-.::Y M~e:! PERSON SUPllV1SOI g~c:~o~al ~ ~!e 1!i and llood pay Call Mr. Huntin&l4n ~ach Unlon EH e I I en l t y p 1st tion1st tnt'I trad1n1 ~fp~111,.t{~e;.~~~ll ..:557~·-=1980=.'------Po• requlrtt min. to 38ro South Brl.stol St. Kell fil-4ll7 __ HighSchoolDiltrictha11 Ptraonable. 1h1rp co t lrvlne Ptrm .
Experienced ju'* yrs.printlniexp.Strong ·ustNortbolS c Plau these openinp tor well loeur.nce cxpn1ence P /llme. 2 day wk , Lecal ~ MESS84Glll peraon neede Im · mechanlul, technical ~on-Fri lHein · ' SALES organized Individuals htlpful, but not nee 11·4.30PM, m. per hr For busy O.C. Aceocy medl1lely for a marine bkgrnd tn Web offset. ' --IOHIS.A.WHIC with good secretarial ~-4~ CallNorrm,833-8970 DoY• Mustbeorsanlud/rell1· faclUth In Costa Mesa Org.Cty.ro.Apply : 1660 Sellin& new produ<'l skillll: 1_,,,~Y WI' 'be ble, full time, valid MDeuslrlolt1vDie'!sttendel Aedlliatohne PlacentlaAv! .. CM RESTAURANT from your home. Earn
\Arte ~ree. You Wit... California drivera .. in In Sl.$00 mo. 181 mo . to Sec'y-Sr-JD IJll'
a ppreciated In thl• Uctnae, & good drivin11 School and have ex-Pr t g W AJTllS S70,000 tst yr Easy
beaut. Faahloo Island rec 0 rd . St a rt i m. t e n s l v e p a r t s OffstU1nt1.-W • ... Ee~11t5 sale•. 497-4076 ofllce! Nlceboh,1reat mediately Call Susie knowledge. Exper'd is( Pressman. "'"NW.._ -------
benefits lncludln1: 556-o.60 Gosa Community 4 urut COOK TRAINEES SU~ Chrlatmu bonus. MMGMMJ POsmOH We otrer a compet1live Apply · 1660 Placeotiu CASHBS 1enero1&11u allowance, s a I a r y a n d a Av~CM. 23952 A...W. 'uptoZ2dayaolf with Fabric chain, C M & medical/dental 1n ________ , pay. $1,4~salary. Call: Anaheim. Xlnt oppt'y surance package. Apply Pnno ffsetp •loC.W. IM~I K1y Baun tod1y. Geri646-4040. 1n person at 12354 ,......., .... II Toroid. lee. Insurance •&ency 540-5001, Snellin1 as Model (f ) & assist video Lakeland Road in Santa Exp'd 2nd Pressman. L.,_. ...
bu Lhe following open· Snelling of Newport pholo&r•pher Volwilffr F s rm Goss Commuruty 4 unit * * *
in11: Buch Asency, 4340 initially. David&&S-3994 Apply : 1660 Placentia COOK TIAIMEES Renewals-quote & CampuaDr .. EOE PfTIMEEY&tlMGS Ave C.M. C•SHl&S
follow-up on renewals ~!!!!!!II!!!!!!!•••-MODElS/ESCOITS Co...t.g PRODUCTl-... "'
Musthaveinsuranceu· '!! Top0ol!an527-7ll!6 Yo""9Ccrritn •s.r~L"'"Y 21502Mw_rtte LllHllAM A _... • r.r DOCUMENTCONTROL MOTEL Desk clerk. Day Adult.s with outstanding Wire & cable assembly Portrww,_.
le Clerk-need rast Full tame""'"· with civil shift p /time, F /time allracllve person11tt1es, Pro"ressave shop wants A.•e~artw91 energelJc person for 111 ,.... N r Or an g e Fa 1 r · who enJOY woriting w11h " · h M'· vt&L. Ing eogmttring fl land plan-&rounds 64.S-T700, Jean· 10 15 year old youths someone lO grow wit q • .. ,..
n1ng firm Some nie evenings 69PM. Call company Please call ** * Paid co. beneltts Salary l..1brar1ao akllls destred. 6 4 2. 4 3 21. ex l 34 3 • i 71Jl.754-15.13
commensurate with ex Apply in person, lo Mr. Mother's Helper Sunday between 2PM lo SP M, •ROGB • ........ ER per. ca II pa uh n e, Fuentes at Robert Betn, thru Thursday lOam k f Lon ,.-~
963·0841 William Frost & All· 4pm, non·smkr own ~ or W 1th Fortran ex
sociates. 1401 Quatl St , trans, S40-53l'i --------1 perience. Learn IBM Nnt Qc ... h"------N del P-'TIMehnoft JCL, COBOL. Exposure z --ew5paper tvery ....., to micro-computers &
No eKper lence ts
necessary' Please apply
at the tocatJoo most con
venlent for you between
ththoursoC2PM 4PM Insurance
M~t&
MochWttT..-..
person, 18 or over To deliver Daily Pilot
Driver's license, in-aulorouteui theLllguna xlnt salary + growth BOB'SBlGBOY
surance, f(OOOmy car Beach area 7 days per poltntial Costa Mesa 15 an equal oppty emplyr INSURANCE Medical mt~. co needs
workers
Npl Bch·lrv·Qirita Mesa week loc Aer_ocomp, 957·~ _ IJl!!llll!!!!!lll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!m!!!!!!!ll!l!I
area. 7 dys pr wk. Mon Houni . Mon thnJ Fri 11p PROGRAMMER CLERK •Lathe Operator
(Min. 2 yrsexper)
•Min I Lathe Operators
•Mill RoomtOi>eratorst
Assemblers
Will train
Fri, 2·SPM Sat/Sun prox. 3·30toS.30PM A.MA.l.YST
4.7 30AM . ~prox . Hours . Sat & Sun 11p 2·3 yrs experitnce CICS SSOO /mo. Call 540·3007 prox.SAMl0 7AM h bet. llAM·SPM Ask for Earnin os (!:prox. $400 or OL ·I, must ave " Cobo l Great co. LeeorBob per mo. all Bryan benefits,S4S.~--N1ght Guard. A large Holland al642-4321
wholesale nursery 15 E q u a I 0 P Po r t P /T CLEIJCAL
seeking a per.;on lo as· Employer Clerical vacancy, 4 hn
RETA.IL
Part time clerks
STOPN'GO
MillCETS
4555 Coost Hwy .•
Newport leoch
RespoMibllltles will in
elude processing froup
medical t denla in
1urance claims, workers
compensation claims,
admmbtering f1rs1 aid
to employees and other
related duties Position
requires m1n1mum I
year of related ex
penence. a LVN 15 pre ferred.
J::xcell benefits & work·
mg cond1ll0f\S. M ISSIOn
VieJo area Only those
seek ing permanent
emf loymenl need apply Ca I Mrs Parell1,
581·3830
sume job with 1mponanl daily in loan brokerage
responsibtliltes. Dulles company in Fashion --~'!!!!!~'!!!!!11!1111!~
include. monitoring PERSONNEL Island Typing, com
main gate, irrigating ASSISTA.._.T putalionaJ skills. eye for plants ustng automaltc f"'ll details Call Katie
watering 5ystem. No ex Bank of Newport has :in 640-9350 __ I
We orrer a generous
benefit& package includ
Ing paid holidays and
Cbristm11 week shut down. Pleue apply in
person Monday through ~nesday s.u AM or
1-3 PM or send resume
<only resumes with
Sllary history will be
co.nsldered l
MAINTEJWICE
per ie n ce needed 1mmed1ateopenmg for a REAL ESTATE SALES ~-4221. Cootact~e h1ghl) skilled uidlv1dual We H••eA Seen+! I
MECIWIC NURSES-lYN'S to assist the Director of Our special R.E. pro.
North San Clemente Personnel gram
Dulles or lhls pos1llon ID·
elude matntenance. re-
pair and installation or
machinery. To qualify,
you should possess a
muumum or 3 years ex
perien<'e in uidustr1al
maintenance or
equ1va!ent trade school
edurat1on
area Tired ol bad hrs & really works tn today's depressing surround Our preferred candidate market Within 60days
t n g s , M E D I CA L should be fanuhar in all ou should be earn mg a W E I G HT L 0 SS facets or personnel. with man. of l'JX>Opr mo
CLINICS Rewarding empham on regulatory Pnorexpenencere-q
opp 'ly. BonU!leS • Full or c 0 m P I i a n c: e a n d ConfidenLtal anterYiew
p 1t1 m e 7 S 4 I 2 7 4, employee benefit plan5 •957.a781•
-1.758.4260. Supervisory expenence •R... ~oril• a plus. background in a ..-.....,. ... EMERSON
ELECTllC CO.
NURSESA.JDES financial environment RECEPT'S~c·v
Conv hospt Beach preferred, but not re X·ray t11b traming for
We offer a generous
benefits paeka$e that in eludes paid holidays and
Christmas week shut down Please apply m
person Monday through
Wednesday 9 llAM Qr 13PM
area. Free mjr medical quired. rl11hl person. Clerical·
& dental Free CRT hte bkkpg skills a must. Industrial
Controls Division
3300 S. Standard St.
Santa Ana, CA 92702
training Top salary You will be workin~ in X r a y exp . not
642·80'4 our beautiful, new cor necessuy~-p u r a 1 e orfices 1n
Ntwport Beach and en RECEPTIOHIST Nursing
eq_ual opply
employer m 1r h
EMERSON
ELECTRIC CO.
P /TIME ORDetl Y
Tues. & Sal., HAM lD
JPM for genUeman in
CdM home Call for ID·
formation V1s1tlng
Health Services. 966-0985
JOY an excellent starting Npt Bch. 30 hrs. per salary combined with a w k , 1 n c I u d 1 n g
compreheM1ve benefits weekend.5 Front ore ap package pearance Hvy phones,
ltte typmg, 50me exper
prel'd Start S4 50 per hr IMSUUHCE
Oldline insurance brokera~e requires ex· 'd I L lndustnal per . ersona tnes ORD"'R Desk & Counter A l Ad ro Controls DiVLs1on ""
For 1mmed1ale con
s1dera11 on please ron
tact PERSONNEL
DE PT C7141 760 6000 ccoun min r 3300S StandardSt sales GeneraJhardware Irvine corvor1te ofr cutting tools, pwr tools. -Strooa tech ba~ground Santa Ana. CA 92702 C u J 64S-3230 ~
a must Compel1ttve ~r. a im, ~Ba k
sharing, dent1l , empyermt """ 0 benefits include prof11 eqlouaJopptyr h RDAOWRTHtll OtraASSTui 7 ""12 :Ii f n
medical. & 1tre cov --!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!111!!!~1 Mon Thurs Newport Ne
tl'lge. pd ,, day off per Management 642-2626 WJ>Ort f:g~~e:~~Lto~~~arse~ TRt1Gl!}EE Part Time
call. 752·2255, ext ~ " f"'ll UP TO
Anderson & Anderson Inlemalaonal company $8 PER HOUR Im. Bkrs . Inc EOE esta bllJhing Soulh Bay
M/F,H & Or1nteCo dutract of· OR MORE. P1lime
Interior !Ices. Complete tratnuig Eves and Saturday
Pa.t Malnt. & liberal remuneration. AT HOME!
Full lime position If selected be prepared Ideal for housewives or
available. Co vehicle to start immediately . retired persons or ban
health insurance. start Call Mr Helberg dicapped. National or·
immed. Ask for Wendy 847-6533, Mon, Tues. ganizalionneedueveral
will train. 730-6460 Wed. before lpm. representatives In your
JA.MITOllA.L Manager, office work1 area. Nothing to buy, no
Fwll time. Work in counter help for fooa obligation. All contacts
beautirul Dana Point 5e rvice. Seasonable by phone Noprlorexpr
Harbor S3.50 r,r hr. Ap-(6,mo> H B area Call nee Send name, ad·
S E S o n g r a t h . dress. phone number lo ply Tues. l ru al · '714.,)~54!:!4~·5378=,,,,or'-'96().<=~96:..:1~3.~1 lndependant Rep Pro-Dana Point Manna Co.. ..l.!.!: -
2.4701 Dana Drive. Da.n• MASCH WOii gram Encore Produc·
Point Brack & block muoo. lions, lnc. 1Z11 SlmJllOn
Equal Opp Emply M 1F
PEST COMTROl
TEC9'NCIAN
Leading pest control
company needs route
technician for steady
Job En~ry level P<>l!tlon. We tram. no experience
necessary. Call Tirn,
Mon 9·12. 979--6021.
PEST COMTROL
645-7100 -----
R~~a~r~ J!.~fi~m.
has 1mmed. operunc for
dependable sharp
person w good typing
skills Able lo bandle
correspondence, filing,
adding machine. er·
rands. busy phones &
rront office. Congenial
small offi~ localed in Irvine industrial com·
plex Xlnt. med1cal1den·
lal package Orange
County Restaurant
Services, 2601 Daimler
SL Santa Ana 1714)641·5732.
RECEPTIONIST
Do you love animals?
Work with dogs & cat.s as
Veterinarian's recep-
11 on isl Typing &
phones. must be exp'd
~9·~-----
llec.,.._t
for publishing Co in
Irvine, Gentral orrice
duties. organiu eveats
column. Good detail M h 5 Way, Escondido, Calif L~ • • e.r1>-v uat ave yean ex· or "all 714n43-56n 5'14'-~ ' penence. Accepting ap-.. -N.8 . La.w Finn Good plicallons 1mmed1auly.
slills. word processing South Shores Construe
experience helpful, Uon Services, 831·11231
TIA.It& Leading peal control
comp1n)' needs route
technician for steady
Job Entry level position
We train, no expenence
necessary Call Tim.
Mon 9· 12. m«l21. -skills needed Call
salary commensurate M F 1o.3 with exp. Good benefits.-·-'!::!.-----
957-8~_22 ____ _
Restaurant-Snack Bar
Pvt club. Counter help
& rood prep cook Xlnl
wortung conds. 957-0174.
RN or LYN
3 to 11 lOPM County
Club Conv llOl'lpt . 20362
Santa Ana Ave , S A
ljgt5. 549·Dil
RUNNER FOi PA.iTS
Must be alert. have
valid Cahr dnver's he
& good dnvuig rerord 1
for construction eqwp-
ment firm in Orange Heavy hftuig req f 'I'
997~10L __
Salad prep chef needed
Exper neressary
Mtn1mun 18 yrs of age
1\pflY m person only I
P~ lo 4 PM Tues thru Sal 140 AVE PICO. San
<,;l~!!lente
Sales
$36,000+
BEVF.RLV lllLLS Health & Nut.nllon Corp
sellmg up operalioM m
O.C. Need key people ror Superv151on & tramang
Full or part Ltme Wiii
tram Xlnl career or supplement CaU 9·5pm.
Mr Zucherbrod at
973 8443
Sales
CHESS & GA.MES
UHLIMJTl:D
Specialty g1me store
has 1mmed openmp for
perm. full/Wne career
minded aalesprrson En·
try level position Z700
W Pacific Coast Hw )'. Nf!. ~~502=1 ___ _
SA.LESCLBI
Exp'd full or part time.
S.C. Pina. 751-7~
SALIS
COMMBCIAL
Tired of setun11 houses 7
days a week? We need
one licen5te lo team the
skills lo manage, broker
commerelal rul ttlate.
Income from mgml
while you team Super
benefits , life Insurance:
health msurance & den· 1.at pl1n Cont1ct Ken.
6'75-6700.
Sa lea
OFFICE
PRllU:TS
SALES
REPRESENTATIVES
Jom the progre.5i\e and
fasles l ~rowing
wholesaler ui the office
produ<'IS industry
Several account ex
ecut1ve pos1t1on5 are
now available tn the
CaltCorn1a area In dustr)' knowledge anti
sales abtlll) essential
Send resume 1n eon
riden<'e to
George~• DM1
Sales Mcmogtt
Ulited
Stationers
S~uo. 3007 IL
MoriftaDel ey,
CA.: 90291
213 .. 22-1 724
Equal Oppe>rtun1t)
EmployerM F
SA.LES PHSOHNEl Gd oppty for dynamic,
mature women w man S
yrs retail sales exper
ror contemPorary store
Onl) career mmded
need apply Salary plus
romm Pis apply in
person or call Apropo.
644 2652 or 1129 Fashion
Island, N Q_. EQE
SlAMST1tESS
Immediate openlllg with
large sail IOl'lt 548 3466
SEC/PA.RTTIME
2·3 ,.., days per wk
Hours flexible 631· I 124
SECRfTA.RY
LEGAL
Xlnt skills required,
~alary negotiable I
man offl<'e.._ 6'73-9201
SECllfTA.RY PASTOR'S EXEC
Comml> Presbyter111n Church professional
quahf1r11lJuris atlracltve
compensauoo package
494..1.555 roe tn~rv1:..ew
SfCIETARY
MetropoihM Ufe M et r opol1tan ·s
Co rporate lnvtstment
office in Irvine 1s cur
rently seeking a
Secretary lo assisl the
Administrative Assis
tant 1n performtng
various clencal duties
Must be able lO type 50
WPM. NO Shorthand re·
quired, will be tral!'ed on word proressing
equipment Ex<"ellenl
opportumty for qualified
individual who Wl!hes to
reJom work force We or·
fer a good starling
salary and excellent
Company benef1la Call
Mrs EllJ.s 752-11258 for an uiterview. EO=E __ _
SfCIETARY
Ptrmanent 9 am 12
noon. Mon·f'n Law or
fire Good typing skills
Newport Beach area
6'75·3772. call Nikki or Art 955-2.U I MllMCA.l
IEC.-TIOMIST More ram11Jes are getttng
the camping "bug" lhis
year If you have a
camper that's not gel·
ting used, sell it now
with a Clauifted Ad.
Sclle1~..e1r
Exp'd sales person/
esltmater wanled by SS
yr old o.c. buildana firm 1~~~~~~~~~1 to sol1c1l l1t'W work Send 1;;
l1't llpttt .......
Oii die Ofqlt COllt
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED
ADS
You C... W h, find It.
l111dt h With o Wont Ad
F 1t with uPtrlence for
facial plastic surgeon's
office.SU N.B
MIDICAL
RECORDS TRANSCRllER
Requlrtl 80wpm typing,
knowtedae ol dicta phone
& medical tenninology.
Organlutlon1 1tlentlon [ A.Al2•5878 ] to detail & roilow up are _ ~ -very Important. w~ or.
fer excellent environ·
ment. Capiatrano by the
Sea hoap. -.s102.
KIDS-
SUMMER JOIS.
READY TO BE
A WINNER?
I c• tllow y• how to ..-..sso.ooo +~
If:
.YQU. are tired or floundering in a
Oe3cI ofrice.
YQU crave specialized, personal 11ff0w To'' training from one of
the most successful sales trainers
in the business.
Yilll want to work in a plush,
Werr:'Jocated office with a group
of hig hl y motivated
professfonals .
.YQ1L want on.going sophisticated
eaucatlon & training.
YOO desire the chance to grow WITli a rapidly expanding,
progressive company.
~~ ME ~ow In absolute ence an ....
BE A WIJB
MB. IUINAM '4Mtoo ..................... .... ,. .......
RESTAURANT
re5ume salary r1!Quire-
menls to PO BOX 1560
CM CA 9262111 C/O Dally Pilot Newspaper Ad II
854 ------
RESTAURANT
MANAGDINT
ASSISTANT MAHMBS
S 13,000 to SI 5,000 p., v ...
~'ull comp10y bentlita'
opportunity for advaneemenl
HIGH SCHOOL GIADUA11S
We have 1 tr1lntn1 progam tor ~ hip
achoo! 1radu1tet who would Uie to •~rt a
carwr In realluranl manaatment. S..rtlna
aatary $12,000 per ye.ar
Fw1w••ca• .. ..._ AfJflr .. ,._
TUHDA f, J<IL Y 1a. tMUPM
211o1. c...,_ .... er.,.
ll. ef I trw,J ..-....-..
UMIO'S IUTMUMTS
IMC. " ......... IAMT A IA•AI+. CA.HI 11 .... , .. ,.,.,
•• JJ.
• SECllfT ARY•
Excellent oppty for
sharp eat to work m fast
paced Newport Beach
comm'I real eelale of('
Excellent typing ft die
taphone skill! required
Challenfing poeitlon for
right aa . Call: Lalla, 8.13-2900
fi1c11 HESTON I , .... , •.
Spedalllb In
Temporary Clerical
Pmomel
EXECUTIVE
SECRETARY
Sl2'72 $1578/monlhly
Requires typm11 ?Owpm
and shorthand IOOwpm
SECRETARY
RMS Sl173 tmonthl)'
Requires lyping 45wpm
andshorthand70wpm
P tr. Costa Mesa area
Judaic bkgd nee
9G8·M>S2
SERVICE TECH.
Photo & eleclnc11l exp
required F)etd uist11lla
boo & repa_ar 898·0290
SEWING MA.CHIME
OPSlATOI I
Experience Ill sa1lmak
mg a must Small. grow
1ng sail loll need!. u The salaries for the steady employee
above positions are com ~ hour & up Thompson
mensurate with your Sails. Newport J:k>ach. abahly and experience 631 4660
Apply at Room 131 , stnd Shipping & receiving &
resume or call misc Phone 9am 4pm.
Mon f ri 960-2463
SMA.CKUR
Cashier Food prepara
two Openuig & closing
TYPIST
CLERK II
Siii ......
tos..t
'81 · '82 Salary Schedule
not yet lllDOUDCed
Full 8eneftt p=c.. ~y~45c:=-........
Santa ADI.,....
CaU l'TM)--for ~-I 2 0 typet 45
ORAMH
COIMl'Y DEPT.OF
EDUCATION
Affirmative Action
Employer M /F
shifts Mature. Seachlf 11111111~11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
HI UHIO
10251 Yorktown Ave
Hunllngtoo Beach.
CA92646
17141 964·3339, ext. 220
equal opi>t:J,
employer m If th
Country Club 536-~-
Swltchboord Opr.
F 11me, grave yo rd shirt
Will train Mature adult
_l!referred 642·3013
TEACHERS Supplement
yuur income on pt.time
has1s w11h mktg mgml
business Call for appt
SS7·567S
T HCh.r A>nctor * .SECRfTAllES• * Exper .. EtE & Elem
Recr1 Tss1AnahS14,400 units req'd Managerial
Pay ConslLagNSl.6.800 ab1h1y a must lmmed Pres Sh901ExctgS17,400 ~!!l~642-0411 Pres R E/Sht90Sl9,200 laiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiii._ ___ _
Ex pd Consultant Ours
••Mews Rosh••
• • News Rosll! • • Karen <Elden, Lhe nev.
Mrs Lynn Dort. return
mg from Honeymoon on
Monday, thank good
neu
We are expanding
again ' That &uper.
super lady. Sharon
Parry Cformerly or
Purcell Temporaries I
JOtnS the co as a perma
nent Consultant began.
ning July 8th. Call us'
Liz Reinders Agy. Inc
4020 Birch Est'64EOE
Newport f833.81.90tFree
Secretarial
If you mdse rotten
coffH Ir en tir.d of
btlftg o t-5 Gal Fri-
day. eruoy working with dtf
ferent people. ha\C ex
per !or desire to learn ).
MA G Card or IBM
MemOr). are self m otivated . t}pe
75+ wpm . you can create
TECHNICAL
WRITER
Kawasaki currently hab
a <'hallengang pos1t1on
a\aalable 1n its
Technical Pubhcaltons
Department Quahhed
applicant must hdve
•Ah1hty torommumc:ate
em.•{'lt vel}
·~hgh dtgreeor ~eu
mol1v11uon
•Strong me<:hanical
back2round
•Prev1ou.' experience un motorc)'cles or
other recreallonal
veh1des
•Fam11Janzallon with
rorrecl operauon or
shop rel11ted e-qu1pment
•Illustrating capab11lhes
desirable but not
essential
your own srhedule to J)uues include prepara
suit your own needs lion or product support
Openinit for lull & part technical publications
time person Salary such as O-.'ller manuals.
comm With sktlb Call pa rt catalogues and
PRT 962-8311 or7S2·0234 service manuals for all
or send resume to Ul988 I 1ypes or ~wasakt pro Ml Demeter. fount dui·ui '{_aJky.92703
We offer a t'Ompeltltve
Secretary salary. a professional s• Sec) yet congenial work en Top land investment co v1ronment and a com
near airport needs YOU prehens1ve benefits
No shorthand Growth packagt Including. den·
oppty. Don't miss this lal. Please submit re·
one. S13,200. Call: Mar· sume with salary history
jorie Sullivan. 54-0·5001, lo Bonnie Whidden at
Snelling & Snelling of
Ntwport Beach Agenc)'.
4340Campus0r., EOJ::
Secretaries
JOIN THE WORLD
OF TEMPCAARIES1
HAVE FLEX.JBILJTY
JOB VARIETY
BONUSF.S
CLOSETOHOME WEEKLY PAY
NEVER A FEE
We are Specialists m
Temporary Clerical
Personnel. Wear~
Presently in need of.
-Secretaries
-Typlst.s
PBX Receptionists
Order Entry Clerks
[VICKI HESTON I
& ASSOCIATES
540.0400
KAWASAKI
2009 E Edinger Avenue
Santa Ana. CA 92711
<714)~ 7000
EqualOppty
Employer M tF ill
Word Processing
WOID
PROCESSOR
Col thh NIWllbtr
Kdyw..tltohe\>!
847-3491
ij•tiitqtoRhoch
Wang, OS6, Mag II.
Vydec. CPT. Lexatron. &
all other WP equipment
Assagnmtnts a\ ail
NOT AN AGENCY
NEVER A FEE
IELL~·=~-
C,f J'>v C ES
EOE M1F1H
Word Processors
Fled*T1Me
l1Hen!
Work out your own
schedule to suit )'our
needs If you like work·
mg with different peo-
ple. ha\e exper !or de·
sire to learn ) on MAG
Card or IBM Memory &
l)'pe iS +wpm. Opening for full & part time
person Salary comm
w1Lh skills CaU PRT
962 8311 or 752·0234 or
send resume to 18988
Mt Demeter. Fount Valle_y.L.92703 _____ _
Writer nttds good l) p1st,
to tale & leam to mkt
poetry. 9AM 12 noon
Will tram Salary open
499-5246
••••••••••••••••••••••• .......... 1005 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WAMTEO TO IUY
1 buy old guns .
diamonds. ivory. jade &
collectibles Call 1714 I
972·4~6 & a.sk tor Dane
MClllffc9 T,......
Co llector sacrificing
Museum qual ity
Nautical arttlacts: bin·
nacles, diving helmets &
pumps. compasses. etc.
--.J_ 2 ll) 24().SJ!H -
I rule
FIEB.AHD'S
864 W 19th.C M.
Open July 4th wknd
Good selection .
American antiques £x
cept1on1I dbl side chma
buffet
Ms.6434 ~-7331 !rule ____ _
Late 1800 Victorian style
settee 642-5770 wkdys:
~-~ e,_Vll""------
A.ppll•K" IO I 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I IUY A.PPUA.HCES
~ 95Hl33
Washer & Dryer S175 ea.
Rerrt11erator 1225. Dis-
hwuhe!_ 00. 646-5848
Gaffers & Statller Dbl
Cell Elec. Bulh·ln Oven·
/Broiler 1 steal at $75
~7148
r.:..
Orange'toast DAILY PILOT/Sunday. July 5. 1981 ., ...... ,.., 904< IHh. SI,./ ~i:'I IM I ....................... Dec.kt 9070 Sc "50
Jl'Y ... U .............................................. freA.n, TN"Y.. 9170 G ... All 9510 ~/ v-t570
10 Tw Cata 7~KW Front Slip Avail. Up t.o '79 Kawuakl LTDlOOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••-••• Clmlks 9120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ld'd w ,. "iJlp n IO'. tzz:H&o. 233 19th. St Clean, 4QlO ml. map, 'S$ Airatrum, 21'. &d 'II D&OllAM •••••••••nn•••••n••• '70 Ford. I cyl Ru.ns
•---..-......-....-..;...__ _ __. dW11. O.W.C. b1iance. •C. Newport Buch. dlau, S2HO /olfu cond, clun 13.200 sock (7l4l731·2434 &ood. &ood1 :to' ~811,t.
llHK. Bkr. 1'15·too7, 8'7MZ31orm.70l2. 287t l714}661-18'4 --'41 F• Au Io. 1 .
IMtrulLJ•s .. J •tnse.-e. 45' SUP Avail1ble Short HARLEY DAVIDSON 45 WANT Liihl Wt'lllht Tent ..... ::u. 951 . ~-!'28·S5'7·8'.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 15• Tluaaderblrd w/50 Tenn.ldeaUocaUon. Trike mi»t see to 1p Trailer will trade !f C Dtaae C..C.... 69DO~olfVA1' Ciblon La Paul C\lltom H.P Jobmoe,lrlrw/lle mszza preclale. Glass Sailboat+ cub'...................... l50cait¥....... l800or.-. er.
Mint Condition. •oo . 157.-Slip, Back Bay. N.B., 27', --~·5!MO rllTTllST Nted1. Rewinni. pa111t, 4~·S78l; IDlfm-4SIS
Bestoffu cuhsa.au Uatrute Jl, twn Vl'a, rest.room, dee., waur, Kewtllld 75 f,.Htn, Ulllty 9180 '57 T-1111> &d:~~lster1:!d1~~~ FClllllt .. c e.,t
Offkt ,... • • lbrcll. aenr eni.Lne.. ~~~~!areas. Peter. Only u,ooo mJ. sisso1ot •..... , .......... u..... IEISNTT~I. moo or e'er 10 Cbe?u S&ep, "= I\ 'f t IMI radio, fat bometer, · · fer67U129 4'X4'ClotedUUJltyTrlr. ~ '4'-Stll van I · •· H•••••••n••••• .. ••••• AC/DC rein,, atove, 'tO 5,.,...,. 45_ <iood Um. good tond. C~UKZ> paint. Unlqut tote~. USED OFFICE FURN. Nit tank IDOd sblpe. 45• IOAT sa,,. v-.i "" ultln~IMS-0243 Comfy Bea~y Rat-· Bal. lsl. nice rood. Set. Slip a.soil. '24,lllO. P.P. For ule s595,000 ! With falrln1. like new AWto S'"kt , P..+s '61 ltllQ IMen Ca rpeted . AM / PM
desk 115, Swiv t'hr. fl llJ.1 lncludet aud,y beach • 1\275· 55Mtl!B & AcctNOritt '400 Grand Sport L1m1ted stereo cuaelle. New
Loun &e chr SO ea. 22' Sea Ray Idol cood deck " patio +large '6$ BMW R-60. 15K m1, •••• ••••••••••••••••••• edition. Good oond Ong Goodyear ateel ~lted
&51·97N 210MerccNi.er many quality3 bdrm +den,2 w/acces.lowntr,make SSAVESA.YIS Qwner673-~ -A 11 We at e r
Big Gar1ae Sale -w Approx 75 sq yds of near-JM c~w.cw.. xtrll. Al'tlPM,mam bath home. Fireplace. offer. 648-6183 WITH USB> PARTS hrea/.cb~. New bat. V ia Lido N di .,....,,,. ....,... bn"ckBBQ+extrapar .. · 1""'9 Blk "····· .. 1· GS"U\ 4WhHI Drf•tt 9550 manifold. muffler. o r new c-.-..... g ......... Xlnt con With multiple •1•sr-~ • "' """'... ........ lrnported carparts De d ..... 7""'NPtt Saturd1y(Sunday9-5PM 1hr/dryr SlOO ea. Lazy document.a feed attach· , • -'·"-Ing. Owner/A&t 673-9187 Shaft drive, disc brakes, IMPORT '29 Model A Town Sedan ....................... pen auoc. ,...._, ·
M 0 VIN G SALE -boy type loun&e chr sso. men ts. Desks, chra, 70, Tw. <kl I, 7~KW, ore-75-7080. air schocks, fulJ gauges, AUTO SUPPLY 4 dr, restored. Ideal fot 1979 Chevrolet Bluer Allto1 Wiiied tltO
M-.. ay Julu 8th, noon· f.99.5246 shelves, tba., like new r1dar, A/P, 25'4 dwn. xlot cond. $2400 ODO IOI N. Manchester student. 110,500. ALSO 4X4 Loaded with op· •••••••••H••n• .. ••••• .,.... ...,, owe balance • 189K T ~ 963U"'l '•6 Ford Wood1"e. tlons inc automatic 5PM Apt G R THRU SUN Sect f c etc 981-1337 B;.r· 8"75.""""", ~.17 .. ~ r•t,a:-.-._. Anaheim • 776-9900 .. u u anie . , . so a, · • .....,, ,,.,,, """ restored Sl3,SOO trans. air rond. cruise new, dinette set, Hoover S75; mattresses, SlO :, Pth IOl7 eve. •••••,••••••••••••••••• MotorH-., S./ VW PARTS' Stock rims 675.6161 control, till wheel 4
uprilht cleaoernrnew. dresser, SSO; etc. 214 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r·~w·..--C~S./ l..tjStorop fl60 'GSBUG 5Mkh.rad1als more' <102949 ) Was
electrolux tank cleaner. Ruby,'Bal la.67S.5.Jll3 Boa Constrictor ,.. .. ,,_ -"''™ ltilt t120 ....................... New 6 12V converi.1on ·30 Ford AA stakebed $8999 , Now 17999 Bauer
kin1 n bed aet, triple Doesn't bart or scratch m9 Ptnn Yan a ' Sport ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE CAN SB.L kit more' M2·97&1 trunk. dnveabLe & lie Motors. 2925 II arbor
chest of drawen w/mlr £STAT£ fll( up furniture. MintseU! ~~i!e°i: ~~;;of!: 1~~re~~::.'t:":rs~':e~ YOUR R.V. ~s for We bods.1SOOY w'129xlntSpodoortrsco~~ Bl vd .. Costa Mesa
ror. 308 Catalina Dr. NB '1N. $250. 646-98U. cruiain& or faabing. lm· port . a. potty A 11 5SIH!ICM ••••••l•M••P•O•R••T•ANT••••••••• ·29 Ford P.U. Ca b :;:: 979 2500 Open 4th of
493-2658 f:11~1 0 W--"-~lo~._... & .... _...... / •-· B ~~ bed fN'N Julr WWn'lll • ...,.__, rntc. UMIQI we,_,. utane, ~.size · For Rent 20' Motor N<mCETO AAchassi.\M00675·~75 AMnqUIS ~..,~,,._M for....t.tftdttuh t ,.nlca. ~3 equity, Sleep• 6. In excellent Home, c lean Call '74 Int ·1 Scout must
Oakdreaaer,pinebulfet. ,..,__ = ll500 do + $1.55 mo. condition. Sl500. Call AnawerAdl484,6424300 READERSAND sacr . ps. pb. manr
bla nke t box , oak Vlc ·Ball&Euclld llJl tto.ec20jevtdS7·932'7 between 10am-5pm. AUVERTISt:RS USE THE m1les.xlntl"Ond Best o
Wr'll Buy
Or '>t'll
Your Cll'o"
Import On
Con\1qnml'"I'
Coll Our
U~f.'d Cor
Monoql'r
TODAY'" 9 AM to 3 PM 631-76$7 24brs The price of items D "'ILY PILOT fer 61s.s2s1~ n~L-sldeboard, odd chain, VI . f Pair peach fac-.a love '74 Carver 25', bristol 1981 Plush Tioga Mini adverl 1sed b} vehicle "' y-.-L-9560 baby fum • port. dis· ctor11n urnlture, "" coed. 225 Chevy OMC motor hme Sips 5 6, dealers 111 the ,·eh1rle "FAST ·-" 831·2040 49') 494'1
bwasber. 22118 Meyer Pl. chi Ina cablneth. lamps. ~~~esss. rr:;:: ~ .. '!y~. drive, lOHP aux motor. generator. lllr, awning rlass1hed 3d\.l'rll~lng RESULT" ••••••••••••••••••••••• CM Sat 7/4S.3 v nt1ae clot es. Br • '"' all xtru . By owner 64.5·3009, 96»~ columns doe:, not in 10 VWl'ICICUP
furniture. cut and anti· S48..o924 eves. 54l-02IM 675-5181 1 d I b I V CE D .......i h
Soddleboc~ BMW
M1uion V 1e10
Troiltn, y,..tl 91 70 r u e any upp 1ca e SER I ynam1te 4 s~ wit
Furn. Complete HO Train ~ri~.:.1:::~.1U!'~f 30~~ "-• & Or,_. 1090 C............ ••••••••••••••••••••••• laxe:.. license. transfer DIRECTORY stereo cassette Sharp' layout, pboWequlp, TV, prim. Visa & MC card! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·79 Nellcrat'\ Cabin 1978 Taurws Vacation fee~. finance charges. (IWl9790)
bikes, misc. 16672 Se· accepted. BABY GRAND ~lANO Cruiaer. Incl NB slip & MOPED 5350 Trlr. 24 •. sips 8. Incl fees for air poUuUon con For Result $5f95
q u 0 1 a F V < n r 5' Wurlitur, *13oo. trlr. Re))lacement value bunk bds, new cond. trol de' ll'e certification!> Service Call JIM MARINO Warne r /Brookhurst) HE&.lt040LUI> 64.5-0775 S k 1 644·5U7 aft. 5::.l or denier documentary• VOLICSW•Git.a.1 Fri s Su.n 2 1 • 0 0 0 . a a n g 000 842-8429 642 5678 " ...., m, at, . l1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!! BALDWIN Piano. Beaut. $;13,500 /bstofr. 673-6411 PARTING OUT . preparation chnrgei. un • 18711 Beach Blvd MOVlNO Td ARIZONA· Garace Sale-antiques to cond. 1'11 yn. old. Cost PEUGEOT les~ othcl"W\Se spN•1f1ed ht. lZJ 00 Everythin& must go modem. Pressure can· S2.600. Will sell Sl.800. 18 " Sout hcoaat good 631-8910 \Van) Clas1ifedAda 64.2·se78 1!Ytheadven1Ser 142·2 0
C.:lass1f1ed Ads are the
answer to a successful
garage or yard sale' It's
a better way to tell more
people! -----
now! Furn lo power ner. canning jars, kitch 640. 7762 • engine, n~J:lnl Sl200 A.toa, Mtw 9100 Avtoa, Mtw 9100 Alltoi, Mtw 9100 Alltos, Htw 9100 A.uto1, Htw
tools, car, + all kinds of appll.. tabk!s & much Kwim/bbeanlcl hs. p2ineylrsp. i1onldo 11' 0 /B -~ wn 5hp ••• •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• • •• • •• ••••••••• • •• ••• •••••••_. ••••••••••• •
9100 4..tos, Hew
good1ea. Sun Only 9·5. more. Fri, Sat & Sun. 552 r1
526 Catallna NB BernardSt.C M /bestofr 675.7816 Evlnrude. .r. cover ....... . -:==~=~· ~='--! 16th & Riverside Place, Sportl.g~ 1094 CM.67S-B:m,S:n·3199 .· .. ·' 642-56 78
'' ' I •
',• r' t ' •,' I I ,
••• •• • •• •••~••••••••• •• British Rowing Dory 14' Waterakl. Vector xlnl cond-Sl50/0 BO
honey co!J?b ~omp . 673·1763 ..... ,,,.c.. 1010 ... ____ IO•O 165cm, adJ. b1ndinc. -... --1--33--.---P----Y---f.-~:;::.: .............. =.=................ xlnt 9 ~ a enn an sport ll·
RAl TY I _;_ her. twin diesel m.ooo Stove. quabty, O'Keefe & HORSET LER H' I:-", S"---
1
_ \213) 592-ast Merritt SJ50. S48-8513, '71 lmpenal. 2 horse. n .........., v-r
S48-4485 tandem w/lack rm •••••••••••••••••••••• llo4ltt,C Im/ Elec brakes. Daily Pilot Beautiful Color TV, 2 yr '-'twr
G.E. Upright Frost Free Credit Union re po wrnty Free dehvery •••••••••••••••••••••••
Freeier ::°'9() Sealed bids are be111g ac· $148. 646-1786 ** * * * ***** * * *
cepted until July 10 21 .. RCA color console ************* ~iUt t~~P~t ~a!ll TV. x1nt ~16$100 •rr·s SMAITB• ....,...., •TO CHAITB• ~.~Y 32St.. C M 'l!J6or ~all IS'" SONY Tnrutron Go back 50 yean in time Dryer, gas, clean. works ..... ·4 I. ext. · 00 Sl50 to the era ot Sir 'nlomas
good, f75. Wshr. clean· lhru Fri. 8am·5 m_ -640-7051 Lipton and the Van·
works good S85 Ho.ello6dGoodll065 derbllts while saiUog 548·8513, 5411-4485 ....................... loots & ~ aboard Uie ele1ant 82'
Washer & Elec. Dryer CARPET, lemon yellow Eqei,_. S c h o o n e r
like new Sl50/Bolb Gold shag, clean. 45 sq yds. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. SHEARWATER." Feel
S36-95Sl . 642·3646 G .... ral 90 I the thrill "Ted Turner"
SEARS Gas Range, 4 Plwih crpl,woodflr.cer. ••1••,·..:.::,··,·=·T·::••• e xperiences while burner , Broiler /oven Ule & lino. Guar. install. ~ --· you're al the helm of the
like new. 3 yn old. tuO Bar ains. 996-5141 Non·profit organization famous 58' Sparkman &
incl. gas line. 645--0944 or Used, but not worn. 100 nds your boat, plane. Stephen's Ocean Racer
~-lnSO yds nylon cptg Not car. etc. Liberal tax de· "'GESTURE." Cruise
22ft side by side (new ) ~potted,butneeds clean· duct ion advantage tbe channellalandswilh
Wards refrig. "50 080. .Y!I· CdM, 67S..22S8. __ 213/654·2341 Joe Minney aboard hta
Washer . 642-0612 Jewelry 1070 Riverchaser Kayak by ~~:p~I~~.~ n:e ~~
lk ,__ 1020 •••• • •••••••••••••••••• Hollow form , new never yc111n :t. Kl Marquise diamond used. $195. 6:5-12B7 att at our docks NOW!!
••••••••••••••••••••••• weddlng nng size four. and avalla~ for your 10 apd 2 used l1S1ea I Best Offer T7S..858S lllflcrtablt Spart to.f. 1nspectioo. Skippers &
new, $75. -----Avon S400 rriodel. !BHP. crews are standing by so 8'7-5~ Mkcel ••-1010 Evinrude mot.or. com· come oo down and see
.......... ,.. 1025 .............. ;:·.:: .. ..
••••••••••••••••••••••• P_....O.. •4
llOW0002l6'$ Wtllws.niu 2· lo 20· lon1. Fru h All you want.. IZ.50 wlt.ly.
tr uck toad arrlvln& Sampl.e bottle dehv.
weekly. Save at ~/ft. frtt. Dispatch 731-2'727
PP call Jim 646-9115 IEDWOOO 2 X 6'S
an e 2' to 20· lone. Xlnt dttk·
•••••••••••••••••••••••
IOJS Ing. Fresh truck load ar-
riving weekl,y. Save at
55<fl . .PP call Ji m
648-11885 anytime PURR·FECTLY beaut.
pure-bred, UJac Point
Siamese kit.tens. Mary New Burglar Alar m
6 40 . 6 5 5 O w k d a y a Device. Under S50, de·
8-5/493-98118 eves/wknds veloped by Billion dolla.r "--1040 corp. for home, bus1·
....,. , ness. boat. 645-9677, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7·12amoreve KEESHOND Pu])ll. AKC ----·-. ---Champ sire. M/F. Pet & Port. hydr. winch. best
s b o w pvt pt y . offer over SIOO .. MG
213/119'1·l~afl6pm. chusis 00.1146-2146
Free t.o good home, 10 Refri&. 2 cir TVs, 10 spd
mo. old female, part Lab blke
& Pit bull. Likes S48-7U7
children. 64S-8a
1045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F'r'ff AKC Poodle & long·
haired black 3/mo old
kitten. (714)~2848.
FREE to GOOD HOME, 4
kittens, black & gray
Weaned • boxed
trained.
5'5-1611 after 6Pal
plete with launch wheels the boat.a, 1p111 a few
and li1hts. ldul for y&111.1, bave a toddy or 2
ocun fishing and Baell ud arranp a cba_rur ta
Bay too. It's a good dive a rine wooden yaclrt.
boat and could be used C A L I F 0 R N I A
for river rafting. SU9S CRUISES
firm. 972-2168. I 2Sl'7 W. Cout Hwy
lln8 Jet ski. 474c.c. Runa Nwpt Bch (714) 5'Mltl
excellent. Low Hours. Wben It cemu to
Must sell ! S1750/obo. dulrterlni, we wrote the
545-0722. ~~on~O yean same
loots, M..-A Minney Famlly E11lllp•1• 9030 Orpnlutlon .......................................
4011pe.t.a... ************* Comp w/ahilt & throttle, ,
Elec starter. S47S. •IM MAC 21'·34 BOA TS
644-5$85 6/12 mo. plans prepaid
from SIB!l/mo. lncludlng 7.S hp. Sears outboard allp lessona ?IA/964·S994 w t FWD-REV aear. -=;.ou..;•==~'""""'"'""'"~
Used less than 2.5/hrs. '73 HONDA C83150 w/roll
$240. 7S2·836& bar fl carrier. 24K ml. . , good cond, clean $400 one scoop l /B live bait t'Uh. 8'2-4321 e•t 204,
tank w /rod holders. Jff·I.M5eves tua. or trade for elec .-.=.;.....=;.=...-.-"-----
anchor winch. Situ SHARKS!!
H E30B . graph type •· Pacema.ktr Yacht
depth recorder. 1200. sltepe e, for Charter!
962-4224 Sottialldq In Gart n..
hlna off Catalina lala.nd.
'll3/37HW11. Weekdaya.
WB.COMIAIOAID
<-t...L&.. 190 Pvt aaillni yacht --_,-BU RN'S CHARTER
Gd cond. ~ Radio, 8'15-2118'7
Wonderful Mere 1118 1/0, ~ Cover, llo4ltt, W no trailer, In water ..::979-:.::...:17..:.:80~. -----j ~~ .......... ------• Newport Beac. $llC>O
Le ........
Rtllum louqM&I de·
llvered. Perfect for ""'~
'7"'444.
MAIUM SPICWJ
SANTANA.JO
with triller, cover, 2 aeta
or aalla. $7750. Pb "°"*· 7»0Zll HTATIWI
1171 C1talina f7' Good
tond. Week ct..ys pleue
Clll
198 1
TOYOTA
TERCEL 4 SPEED
198 1
VOLVO
2 DOOR SEDAN
lt7'1MW 197' AMC
200Z JHP CJI 414
• ~. ' .... --.. llllW'OOI. :-r:: fQulclllwll ~ I Ye f!IO•llt J tP..i MHM..,. C8Mlll9. l.olel Int __,, ....,,.,.,,......, I AM·FM lteltO IMW21) Cilllldot'• .... (~ "-I' Ill ,. IOr only
57399 555ft
tf7'TOYOTA 197' HONDA
CateAaT STATION WAec>N ~ 'c,4,:.:: ..... 1111 cxnl, jllll 4c,4 ............. ....,.,., ... 1111111 =·--~--11111111 ._(IJ~E~tt~ -l lllOl'llM, D ......
1981
TOYOTA
PICKUP
198 1
VOLVO
2 DOOR SEDAN
lt71 FORD tt71 DATSUN
COUllB PICKUP 1210 HATCHIACI •C'll.•..-~ ............ ·~ ................. AM.fM--~l~GIM~ ,...., .... ,... ....... = (1¥341-..-.................. , '"""'
537ft 53699
lt71TOYOTA lt76TOYOTA
COIOU.A WAaOM COIOLLA
~ ti· • J .... ., coniMIOllilll ... ' ............... , 'c:.;:.
i-. ,.. ' IOOlll tor "" ~ .,....., .......... , .....
u.11ot1•1
HOG
,_
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, July 5, 1981 Mtet.1.,....... 'Alltot.'11,1rW ~ ..... r..t' ...... u.. Alltee,UM4 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
WiiW..e.4 Htcl MtetWtlllld tltt ~........... ...... .. -., floncltt '750 ,........ 9770 V•o t77Z C.-.C ttll Cort.... tHJ OW.mr•• ftll ....................... .....•••.....••••...... ....................... ,., •••••••...•...••••.....••....•••.....••••.....••..........••.•••.•............••.•..........•..••••••••.............• ., .•................. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11
W!PAYTOPbOIJ.AR He.HIUY• 0.... 9720 ~... t74t "77 tllS TARGA, ilnt. '90-'&s VW left ' rilbt '7' Volvo 114£ A/C, 1t16 ~ville, Ute bluo, ·n Corvette Loaded '1t Olttel c.\tWI Cata ,
for top aud cars· Top dollan i>r Sports ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• roo d $17 950 Wht door, 'TS left door. llO Leatber, 73.200 mi, new 35,000 miles. 1 owner, Good cond. M1a1t eelJ. 11,000 ml,llu new.Mott forel&n, domettlcs or Cara, Bup, Campers, ....................... w/blll. top. t!o¥ each. W..wm atyle wbl paint, sharp. $2795, like new. Must see. @700.,saUS'f3.5298 extrH. Allume 1ae for
d a11fc:1. It your car ls tl4'a, Audi's , rtma for Super Beetle m-0315 175-7707 c....,. ttn Sl,000 or buy for ll800.
u tra clean, au us A.ak forU/CMOR 74 tll, sepia brown, ea.541-974' C ff ....................... ~...a ;Nao-53>0
•1RST! JIM U4MIA stereo. 31,000 ml!...5. spd, ... i Cla r..... XR ·-o OLDS C\ltJaas VI 2 --nawle11 cood, JU,200 ••• vw Convertible, Nlll ..... U-' ....................... 0 Hit' .....,.,.ar 7, ..... . ·~ VOUSWA•_. 84$.2375or~ 1reat, $2,000. MUST ••n••••••••••••••• .... '74 Camaro, l owner, 70,000 orl&lnal milts. dr. Coupe. AM /FM 18711 Beach Blvd. ,741 ..... .a. SELL l llldl ft I 0 112 ooo fwy mi re& 111 Xlnt conci New p.1lnt, atereo CIM. Daily. Pilot
HUNTJNGTONBEACH ""' "' •7, VW R•BBIT ._ ..... ••n••••••••••••••••••• IOo tolr ... l60I ' am/lm t'asaette Credit Union repo
I •2000 tl1 St%2 XJ54 " vu. ti O 8 i k C ~ Sealed bldl are betnl It'· .,. · 4dr, a/c, am/fm, re11aa 1 u c ut u r y '11 Mdl LT. full power, · ce ted untlJ J uly 10
'73 911T, Tara•. blk /blk, "500firm~%133 Sedan. Cl!!Clll. Cholc~ atereo, brand nu radiala. Dodft "JS ac: be aeeo at Dajly
mint! Orl1 pot, new I o·~ of 3 to choose from . mint cond '94-0135 ........................ Pl~ A to Shop 330 w #1 i. Or.ft C...ty ms Harbor Blvd
COSfAMPSA
979-2500
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FO•USEDCARS
41.AMMA...aM
POMTIAC/SUIARU
2480 Harbor Blvd.
COSfAMESA
549-4300 549°1457
WEIUY
CUAHCARS
ANDTIUCKS
COMMElL
CHEVROLET
.,,_,. lt.orl•·• 11-..i .• ,.,.,1,.,n -..1
546-1200
TOPDOU.AR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CWN
USED CARS!
WEHHI>
YOUIEIOTIC
&HmSHCA.RS
l~Wi@
• 3100 W. Coast Hwy I Newport Beach
;____ sa.94ai - -I
~TOP SDOUARS
• For Clean Used
Cars&Tntcks
We pay cash on the spot'
• Contact buyer at
De SANTIS
CHEVROLET
•' San Clemente
'll 1·0510 4tU500
WANTED!
• Late model ToYotas and
:•Volvoa. Call u s
:.TODAY!!! . .:
TOYOTA·VOUO ................ .,. c .........
"60-U OJ • U O·t O 7
Tep Dollar
Pid
For Your Car!
JOHMSON & SON
U.c~
2626 Harbor BlvO.
Cotta Mesa 540-5630
w.r!l.
OVER ......
For Your Good
VW, Porsche or Audi
llmflJS§
VW·PORSCHE·AUDI
445 E. Coast HI way
at Bayside Dnve
Ne rt Beach 67J..0900
Premium pnces
pald for any used car
(foreignordomeslic I
in •ood condJtlon
See Us F\nt'
'701 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEACH
IMPORTS
NOW ON
HA.llOIULYD.
IN
COSTAMISA
IMrOIT
Sl'ICWJSTS
LOOK!!!
'7 1 Muerati Indy
'63TR3
'78 Audi 5000
'74" '78 Alfa Spiders
'78Peugeot
Diesel Wagons
'80 Honda At'cord LX
'79SaabEMS
'74 Peugeot 604
'732401
Auto, air, DIOOOBO
DA 540-21811 , 5S7 ·9359
1980 280ZX, lOtb an·
niverury special de·
luu, T-top, 113,500.
957-tu.; aa..BISuJd
'702401
768-5837
'73Datsuncpe1200, $1900
Good coodWon
(213) Ul-8804
'77 B210, auto, stereo. lo
m1 , good cond ,
~/OBO. 84<> 761.S
Fiet 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 Spyder.1mk /gry, xlnt
cond, loaded $&000.
55M213
Somebody Elle
Paid Your First
Ye1r'1 Depreciation
For You!
Compare fr Save!
•G>SLC
'79 Slvr. blue /blue
(Ser. 05788)
•210'•
'76 2llOC blue /blue
<Ser.OIU6)
'73280U&hlfm/bamb
(Ser. <Mll73)
'75 280 bei&elbamboo
<Ser. 815301
•DIESILS
'7930050 maa blu/parch
(Ser.6804)
'80 30050 ivory /parch
<Ser. 16011 )
'81 JO«iD bllt/blk
(Ser. 81320)
-t4-do '727
IEACH IWORTS •••••••••••••••••••••••
'78 2400 be11e/bamboo
(Ser. 8U524)
1~~~~~~~d. VISrT YOUR
631 -7170 ORANGE COAST
'80 gm/parchment
<Ser. 83176)
'79 300$0 put.el blu /blu
(Ser. ll.8MI
AH••o.-o 9105 HONDA ••••••••••••••••••••••• HEADQUARTERS '80 3000 silvr /blk
<Ser. 87455)
'78 Alfa Spyder Convt TODAY!!!
perfect rood ong own. ui..11v11sWc
•6.t
'796.9 sll /blue
!Ser. 81435)
•4SOSILI
'79slvr/blk
(Ser. 91223)
20K mi, $1500546-2352 " A.Md! 9707 SALES&iSER CE
••••••••••••••••••••••• '80 Audi SCXXS. 12.000 m1.
like new. loaded 644·5108
afl6PM
IMW t712 •••••••••••••••••••••••
for The Best
Buy Or Lease Deal
In Orange County
Come See Us Today'
&
SADIUBACK
BMW
28402 M1r(llerile Pkwy.
M111sion Viejo
Avery PICwy. ex11
(off 5 f'reeway I
131 -2040 49S.4t49
Closed Swxtay1
CREVIER
$1 SI ' HOAOWAY
SANTA ANA
835·3171
1 H( UlllMA Tl DlllV1N(i MACHIN(
•USEDIMW1• '77 320i S IR (lll&l 1
'77 3201A S R ((>f74 l
'78 320i S IR (1167 J
'79 320iS/R !SllM I
'79 S281 S R U076J
'81320! S 1R (6693)
_CloMd~-
TM Most bcltl.g
rortOfYow
IMW flwchaM Or ...... c.w ..
Mela"" IMW!!
l.yOrl.HN •10 ....... ,..,
(7141 522-5333
OUMGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
OLDSMOllLI
HOM»A.
GMCTIUCICS
2850 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
540."640
76 HOHDA.
CVCC hatchback 4
speed. Cute as a bug'
<658PQH )
$2''5
JIMMA.llHO
YOLKSWAGa.
18711 .Beach Blvd.
14.Z..2000
'77 2 door, low miles. a1t. s speed Oue Owner.
$4995. Call 5'9-5100 txt
318 days. 96o-Of72 Eves&.
wkn~
'76 Honda WIJI 64K m1.
Sl75010B01$ is
&57-~
'78 Honda ACCORD Red
Hatchbck, auto, am/fm ,
re& gas, ~673-5619
.IOCJllOr t730 •••••••••••••••••••••••
t 970 JAGUAR
'74 grey /bamboo <Ser. l.a56)
•450SU
'73SLgm/gm
(Ser. 062Z2)
'79 SL sl vr !red
(Ser. 562271
'79 SL ylw /bamboo
<Ser. 51894)
'80SL white/SleMa
(Ser. 61122)
'80SLylw/bamboo
<Ser. 81619)
'80 SL while /pal
!Ser. 816181
'73 SL bei&e /bamboo (Ser 81601)
l2 M0./12,000 nu
WARRANTY AVAJL
LUSIOllUY
60 MOMIHS, OA.C
7 I 4/13J..t300
714/Ul-1276
19'10 HARBOR BLVD
COSTA MESA
FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
DEALER
XKE 2 + 2 '71450 SL
Bntish rac111g green, 4 2 Mt.Ian brown. mint cond
lilre engtne. new llres. Assume 11 more lse pay
brakes & en&ine over· menlS. S490 per mo. Buy
haul. Air cond .. custom car for SlS,000. Asking
stereo, sbeoepsk.ins. very Jn.900, 6'73-6411
t'lea~. ~xcellent runrung '79 Mercedes 3000, silver,
cond1l1on. 18,000. Call stereo, auru'f. new tires.
557-1708 after 6 p.m & 23 ,ooo mi. $19.800
a1lt for Ed. 642-2643 PM
'11 XJ6L. li~e new. Lo m1 M~. 8"-'"'" ..... so.'""300~-T-.-D-W_g_n_,
Fully eqwpped. Sl0,500. s n r f, Euro h d I its
644·1886 Ivory /tan. 642-7407 .
'79 SERIES 111. 18 mos 568-6848 old Maroon w tan .~79=-JOOS ......... ._D_,_Turbo-d ___ i_ese-I,
leather, 12,000 m1 . Colo. beige, sunroot. beaut. cond. Sl7,900. am lfm. perr. cond
640-009 126,250 4~1. 640-SMO Lo_. a•/' ' t7l5 Kerrx _____ _
~·•••••••••••.·~··•••••• MB Factory Alloys. ~ 73 Lam.borgh1111 ~pada per set. SL leather front ~.oc:;· n.awless . N B. sealJ . &31-1 I05
--MGI 9144 Mercedet... 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sales·Service-Leasing MC'il OWHHS
Roy Caner.Inc. SELLING YOUR MB! We need your 19'7&-1979
Rolls Royce BMW Wlf'A.Y MGBs! Top doUar paid
1540Jamborff TOP DOUAl SS for eood can!
Newport Beach 640-6444 Call Jack Bacon IAUER MOTORS
'75 2002. snrf. body xtnt JIM SUMOHS 2925 Harbor Blvd S5250. COSTA MESA
7SZ..Sl20. IMr<>nS 979-2500 -.----t9'70Harbor Blvd '65 BMW 1600 4 dr. runs COSTA MPSA '79 MGB, 18,000 m1. over
perfect. needs body 6lH2'76m.9300 drive, luggage rack, im
work. 548-4636 --1 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! • ..!!!_aculale. 675-5548
·70 BMa.1002. Good run· '76 Mercedes 8en2 ~E. New '78 MG'-"B-=-.~red....__/_b_Lk-.1
nang cond 12500/ofr Atr cond . sunroof. 6,000 mt. wire whls.
CaUJeannie644·7211 stereo. silver/blue. Pirelli'a, ster /cass.
1976 2002. Blue snrf, Original owMr. like showroom coniJ, make
stereo, 4700 mi, flawless. new. Beal offer oyer offer. 844·S31!6.
000•98.f90'1 11•,200 645·'226. onclae--'750
:l888 11.irbor Rl'd 'T1 BMW, sllclc, sunroof. _.683....._.·2..-.17_.1 ______ 1•••••••••••••••••••••••
new tires. 60,000 mi. '75 Mer cedes • •osL l'o~ta ~!(:su ~o 03:!0 .... • 10 roasc .. 111,SOO or best. 7~9206 poliahed alloys, wht Bat 914 TUllO p .P. WANTS· &:831-2191__ -_of_r_. 67_5-_raz_J____ &
79Preludewlthair. 0...._ 9720 .70 MB 1.8CSL. beautiful! Jndl1napoU1 Red. full
546-_jS.-1741 Xlnt cond. 117,000. raceread.y.Under l2,000 VAN WANTED Ford.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• mllea . Muat sel l .
too. Gd cood. Auto VS. '750 .... 2101 ,!4~0· ·" (lASFOOO) Private
WUJ pay reaa. price. 2 fully loaded. Radio, •11 _, , ... ver, tt.ereo, p.1rty.
wind ows In back . stereo cassette. Wire 1nrf, new Urea. 23,000 873-1.IOI
5*9111 or 64$-3716 WIU wheels. suooor bstofr. ml. $19,800. '42·280 540-3010, Ext. 2$3 earr•u· prkt. l11'>14S-4628 evu. Mk FSJ!'Bill
~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
tires. llS,500 645-0315 I -•5ts. Bauer Moton, m 2318 71 flt...!r.-150 u ' eves, 752-T13ldaya 2 dr, anrf, AIM F/M 2925 Harbor Blvd., Cotta , · · -...... Bay St .. C.11 or call •56 PORSCHE Cpe 3S6, cauette.hpdl~OOOml Mesa.W7~2500.0pen•th 76Camaro.Whlte/clean. Lo ml. xtra t'lun, s.2-4321,. ext. 298, Mon
5 0 % re at 0 red , 508014$.-0823 of July. Lo ml, 250 auto. $3900. loaded. :5141).SIM lhtu Fr1.,lam·5em
loota/l'Unl gftat! AD· '11 VW Futback, rblt i3 REG ALfu.lly eqwp Dy '9IHS3l, ev '92·58'77 ~ i6 Olds Starflr• &old·tan
111 54C).063Z en1. ateerln&/brakes beautcond' snso' '75 Camaro, 50,000 mt Ford 9940 int, 5spd, 11.ereo. tapt
.65 Porache 912 C"", new New SB radials, com-,~~ Leather top , tape ••••••••••••••••••••••• deck 1950.844~.
,... pletely equl--' for RV , player plOO.~. '71 Fiesta Sport , en1. 1lnt cond, ~950 .,,_. 74 LE SABRE Convt. .78 Chev Camero LT AM t FM /cau, 12750. PWo tf57 firm . \213)~ Lowin · 641-1/c. 1tereo, p/1, p/b. N fut rl d pp. 536-1414 d y s , ...................... .
,73 911T Real clean, '71 VW BUS 7 pau, 11n~cond. 14()..7315 14~:sl1Dysf'°sio.~~~6 ; 536.9587 art5/wknds. '74 Pllllo, loaded, 4 cyl,
blk/blk,newP.a'aon7" :1cua, xlnt cond. 719PASS.WGN evea:673-S701 1980 F-350 17,000 mi , re1111.uklne lt400or
a1Joy1, Koois. lowered, $fl272 Full pwr, a/c, ll95 '78 CAM ARO, auto, PIS. loeded Martt Slemmer ofr 54::.::9-=·•:.:.11:.c::J ___ _
18K on ena. Belt orrer - -548-1581 pill, Wht. •~ --' ..... "'" 98G-7JT1 _ '76 Squire wgn, 52,000 ml, over ti5C>Otake1. 71 VW Squareback. Very '., "' ""' ..., '""" 4 •pd a/c pa SHOO 951~ good cond. Must sell '10 llYIBA 644·1651 ___ __ '62 Falcon Wgn, 6cyl. 644-0i25 ' · ·
•--9755 soon. 963-0048 Xlnl cond. AIJ options .77: 18125 mpg , 57,000 auto. 48K m1. one onw 9960 -'78 VW C t Bl 631-7629 mjles. Clean one owner. ~ 499-5754__ _ Pty...tll ••••••••••••••••••••••• onv . ue • ....,50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71117 ~ metallic w1wht lop, ZllK Cedllec ftl5 stereo cassette . ...,., . LilKoM tf45 1975 P lymouth Duster
• ml, am/fm cass, &ood •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• 640-•778CdM. •••.••2•c•o•NT•••lN•••ENT••••AL••••• Coupe·Hu only 47,000
PS AC, AIM FM tapes, con d . S750010BO COHT~TI... ClaeYroltt tf20 1 miles ' !243659) Wu elec sunroof Clean! ..... 1111.12 Xlnlcood SlSOOtlrm 14750 .. _..... CA.DILLA.C7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' 12999: Now $1999. Bauer
S0.9l38 '72 Super Beetle, xlnt We specialize in leases • CIMYroltt 'IO S46-93.19wid 5 Motors. 2925 Harbor
cond, lo ml, orig. owner, for the business ex MolllMl'-"Ooor Mercwy tf50 Blvd . Costa Mesa loh loyce 9756 am /fm, 8 trt. 775-'274 ecutJve & professional. Sedan Auto. llans . air ................... ~... 979.2soo Open 4th or
....................... '71 Pop-Top all ammen, L.onpS.llctioa cond., AM /FM, pwr. ORANGECOUNTY S -!uly ___ _
• 1 DEALER IN U.S.A. cm, rbtt eng 30K ml. Of tWw I tit windows, locks, & steer· FMST 11 rLY...ount 11----..--.ROY /OB0556-6817 C.._t I n a . A Io, e I y . LINCOLN·MERCURY HOllZON
C •avER '72 Bug , Super Beetle, Mow la Stock! economi~al ar. <8315>. DEALERSHIP 4 door 4 speed Suptr
"' Ukenew, C9X>or bestof 13,000mtles r k ROllS·ROYC[ fer. 751·8230 NABED ,~. OMLY $61'5 <O--'Jliufl'te ~~~~A) roo r a c
1MIJ1mMrtt s B tJ . 1'4: HOW·ao,.~-L..J. ~ T ' 11ew,.n1 .. c• '72 ee e se.ooo ong (~AOILL A. "' ..._..rv.r LINCOLN.MERCURY $3295 \.__ __ ...._ ml AIJorig,new radlals, ' '' ' Dove/QuailSts JIM~O
b '" b ••· R lnt l<~XJt~t1l••lll\.•• NEWPORTBE.ACH 16·18Aut.oCenterDr r .. s. a....,ry uns 11 · c, "'·' ~ .... '>4<> 'lllJ\i SD fwy·Lk Forest exit VOLKSW A.Ga. 640-'2.&'I UJ..0555 IRVINE -18711 Beat'h Blvd
'88 Rolls Royce Phantom 'SS VW Convertible. xlnt SEE US FIRST! 130-7000 14.Z..2000 V limo, imrnac, xtras, cond 14,000 79c&Na1 •c ooooorinn.673-27_77 4W7·1S82 _._ Wehaveagoodselecuon SEVIW DIES& o r N E W & U S E D '71 c_,.. XU '76 Plymouth ARROW
Xtra ctn, loaded, wheelll. S2,<nl/080 Toyota '765 '72 411 w~n . good '••••••no••••••••••u transportal1on, needs
'80 Tercel SR5. Air rond.. paint, $1650 '94·<Yl3S _
AM /FM stereo cassette. YolYo 9772
alloy wheels. loaded. On· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly 1soo miles. Uke new! #I YOLYODIAUI
T,._;--z 97671 IN ORANGECOUNTY1
•••••••••••••••••••••••' SA.LES. S&VICE
TRIUMPH OVE~l&~RY OWNERS EXPERTS We need your 1977-1980
TR7s or Spitfires! Top
dollar paid for good
cars!
IAUIER MOTORS
2925 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
979-2500
'74 TR6 wlute convert,
Alpine sound system
966-JM2, 89'1·3S7S Pei:a_
VolitWOCJl'I 9770 •••••••••••••••••••••••
UJU.lllCE
VOLVO
1966 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
646--9303 540-9467
OIAMGI COUNTY
VOLVO
Largest Volvo Dealer
111 Or111&e County !
BUY or LE.ASE
DIRECT
Exdiltmly Yof¥o
AM /FM radio, wire Chevrolet.s! top, Low mi. Q195 641-1733 __ wheel t'overs, tilt.
cruise. leather sphl
power seats. beautiful
CK333YDH>
$12 500
COMMElL
CHEVROLET .X" 11.rrl••r 111, 11
11~1\\H'o\
546-1200
_SS±.~ .... &i0-~ _ rOt1Hoc tt65
W..tmte) t952 ~······················ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 78 Trans Am 400 eng .
'61MUSTA.HGYI ~pd.2?~~
(289 1 Auto, Air rond ----
(2) '79 Malibu Sedan 6 Radio. Heater. 80,000 m1 n.ct.riMrd tt70
cyl, 4dr. 121 '79 Malibu Veryclean Sl.99S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wagons 8 cyl. 4dr. MZ-0731 1966Thunderb1rdClass1t'
w tcrutse control. vary MUSTANG Convt .5 151 Recent new mot.or Will · 1 be worth thou.sand more 1~g co ors. a 1c. new '65. $3900 & up N 8 llres. am /fm radio, p/s. 759.0097 m a few years' 149191
R.L!L.Call ~s:lll ext 263 ,68 MUST •NG 289 VB $1999 Bauer Motors. " 2925 Harbor Blvd .. Costa .._lllQ.I! ·73 Chevy Wgn Good p s p b a c w cvr' Mesa 97~2500 Open 4th
fhaDi 83i~ cond. Make offer Will $27Soi0B0673-8o37 of Jul
donate to legitimate .65 MUSTANGC VB · 9974 ESTATESALE charity 6J2.1.54S days. · pe · YICJ9
'80 Cpe DeVtlle. It eves wknds644·2224 auw.goodbody.S2<»5 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Yellow. landau lop, full" ·77 Ch lte A C -l-__ SS&-S941l -'74 Vega H.atrhback, xlnt
J eve · . I • s ereo ~-............ tt55 cond $1000 673-7010 equipped, very lo mt, cass. New llres Xlnt. .,,_ '
xlnl cond, Sl2.950or best ~· 962-2314 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~l ·~~
offer Days 8~1·9339 . '80 CITATlON2'dr": 19'/BOldsCust.omCrulSer OHSOHICE!
evesW79·9M4..:..___ h hbk -•-d llK Wagon D1tsel model '74 Str~t crw.ser Xtra a.le . llWl con . c009V Ell Was $4999 . '79SeviUe Elegante ml. V~. auto, a1c. p/s. N 0 w 539119 Bauer new and clean. $2300
Leather, pwr, cruise plb, ltlt wheel, radio. Motors. 2925 Harbor OBO 537·7871 Alt6.
MUST Sill!
1967 VW Baja Bu&·ln ex·
t'ellent condition.
$2000.00 Must sell this
week! Call
cont,digit.alspeedo.tnp radaalJ,~4053-Blvd . Costa Mesa '71Vega ~·,·~· .~~-f'~~.~ -'f°<=oa:.i.':.:..:::;c=.~:....::er:..::;27=-~=te=reo=-o-~i-~~-~-I;, '67 · Clean. runs good 979.2500 4th of Jul . good rond. air, 1'750 -• - --- ---Body & intenor m good .77 Olds Omega __ 9&"1702or 96J.8121 7oo. 640-ell22 cond S'7500BO 759-9282 Good Conditt0n '74 Wagon 20r. auto. rblt
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546-2619
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7'VWIAlllT
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14.Z..2000
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IMW
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A.llfot, Mew tlOO A..tltos, Mew 9100 Mtos, Hew tlOO A.Mtot, Hew tlOO A.Mtot, M•w tlOO ....•...•......•..•....•...••.•...........•......•...................... , .••..••....•.........••••••••••.••.....•..
.... _ .... _ ·---.. ... --.._ ___ _
.. ..,_ ................ , ...... _ -
NANCY
:
NANCY ---HOW
DARE YOU READ
MY DIARY
By Ernie _Bushmiller
, ·~
a
DENNIS THE MENACE
-. Ai THE -; .
RE~TAUAANT WHERE
MAR6E WORK6, THE
WAtTRE5& IMME.DI·
A1'EL. Y REC06NIZE&
I THE PHOTO THAT5AM
f>HOW5 HER•
! HE:AAD )ttJ 1HE
FIR9T ilME.
~IJDGE PARKER
I DON'T KNOW Hl6 NAME WHEN DID YOU
,,, 5UT, LIKE l f>AID, IT 15N'T LA6T 6EE HIM r
TH~ KIND OF FACE A
WOMAN FORC1ET5 .'
I •
by Jim Davis
WMEN A CAT PRE5E.NT5 'fOU
WITH A OEAD, SMEl.L'l 'fMIN&,
IT'S AN E.XPRE SSION
OF LOVE , vou -rwrr
1Mt united feature Syndicate. Inc
By Hank Ketcham
. <.] . <.. t •• . .
HE LEFT HOW COME
AL.ONE ,,, YOU'RE ASKIN
6EFORE AL.L TH E.5E
6HE DID! QUE5T10Nff~
WHA'f'S WHl'TE AND PAINT5
PIG1URE.5 ~
MOON MULLINS
He~E:'s To THE:
MoM~NTS OF ---VICTO~Y. ..
DOCTOR SMOCK . .
HE.RE'6 MQ ~ Cl.DUD
JOKE, F0~5/
GIVE UPt;. CLOUD MONET! GO AHEAD! FEEL F~EE
10 USE. 1HAI 1lf E. NEXT'
11N\E q()U'RE. GIVING A
. · 5PEECH OR SOME1lUN& !
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
llMS TO CEL.EBRATE . THE END ... ANOTHER DAY OF UPS
OF ,ANoTHE~ CHAPTER IN ANt:> DoWNS ... OF
PLUSHBoTToM's Wo~kWEf:k'... IRIUMPH5 AND FIZZLES ...
--...
YOU'RE: GONNA
L-OVE: -rH IS, Kl c:>c:>O !
,AND .HERE's -ro THE:
REST OF TH~ D,A 'I .'
~Y George Lemont
i
'
--U
ID
B a.. e .;y• WI e
I
btt -i//{NI
--..
-.. .. . .. ' . J ••
w;; ~N T w~ T l'"o !SW'
LA'T'w FoR TM~ F'IR£~S!
ONE: .• FU11.JFU: PROSPf'Cfl~ ••• HUEJEJV
-MEP/lJM .. 5 1ZE •. -MAl.-f: •• -
S1..IGH11..Y ••• VLJS1Y. ••
• 1
CAN YOU TRUST vou• IYIH TMN af'e at ........ .....,..
~ In •awtnt detalh MtwH• ... ._. ......... '9MIL How
4Ukkly can you find tMmf ~k answers wttll "'°"' .......
·s-AOW 11 W"I ., 1va••111P 11 ~_,.) 't .,,_...,..,
"IGldS t 6u1urw •t ...,,IO'l"•d t _...'°"' •t 1•ns ·c ·1~11P" •no1e ·1 .~110
&~
® -------by H~IKaufman---~--
• FASHION NOTll K..,.ng your w.,..._ up to INtfft ......,_,..penned....._
Wot1ls • "'9 IUbfeCt N9 Much Ado AMut No"'in1: "Thlf ellt ionw Nl'I eutm ~
PUZ.ZLI ITOUT
IV YOURSELF
Whit fetllng °' .....
of mind do9I one••· perltnee wh9n str•nd·
td .. , ...,.on• desert
lslend? Letters of
tnr.. words underlln·
td et, the end of thl1
rlddle·wne can bt
rHrrengtd frw a on.
wordansww:
While many 1reet the
friends tMy meet,
I know no ,.ce, I
,...stnoMnd.
Though My ffft rNY
throng .... street,
I t!._t ~· t!!:J, Tffh"I grand.
What Is the word?
Hint: It begins with S;
ends with two S's.
...... , .. ,'"'' ,_ ... l
,,.rtltltanth eman.H RNrra ... ...-clftt fw MnM.
H -... -.. .. Adde ...... ,,. .... .-... 1..
• Waist Product! Measure ycur waist. Muttlply by 0
99. Jot down the sum of the digits In tht product.
Anewer Is below: ...... "Ml-J
• Sea WMf "My favorite coler ls ONfM," uvs MN" "My NVOt'l .. color Is llut.'' says ,..,........,,._."MY livertll celtr Is Rose," NYI _. Flh lili•t wt"' flrtt MIMI of wtll°"'nown sports . ...,,...
e Tongue Tts..,..I Sey fett: SI•~ chlppmrs wt
chipping soep chips. Now1 try this: Cats scratched for scrod scn1ps. Repeat Hen teWt"al times.
19
. 20
e
!
l
___.....__~f
Cit l
J
Ill ...
BIG SPLASH! There's a rNson for the big spla"' above . .:..
What can it bt? To find out, draw lines 1 to 2, 3, etc.
MA~ LIZ'Z\E
ME! BUT HIM
Tc;>OKM'/ fl ~
l . ~" '' : ~ .: tJI .. . " -·
ti ''• I ' • , ~ . ,, ~ J ; .\.. ...
SfNCE \ CAN'T
FO$S\6L'( KNOW
WHO'S .fIT Ff\\JLT
HERE ...
I'M SICK OF THIS RACKET. I'LL LET YOU -
HAVE' TJ.1£ WHOLE' CROWD FOR A BUCK.
THAT'S TOO GOOD A
DEAL TO PA5S UP.
HOT STUFF! Add tM follewfnt colors neatly to this c.nWal
scent: 1-R.-. 2-u. blue. 3-Yellow. 4-U. brown. 5-Fltth
tones. 6-Lt. .,...._ 7-0k. blue. I-Lt. gray. t-Ok. pWplt.
SPELLBINDER
KORE 10 polms tor using all the
letter• In the word below to form ----t-----two complete words:
RISONANT
THEN l<Mt 2 points each tor all
words of fOYf' letters or more
found af'l'IOng the letters.
Try .. tcoN at teast SO points.
.,.,., • ...,H :w•;6..,•111q1•'6d
by Lynn Johnsto~
MOLD
tTJ
SOlt-\E·UUDGE. AND
U'URY MAY EN\f OY
A BR\EF RECESS.
O.K., GUYS, Tl-HS 11£RE CLOWN
IS NOW YOUR NEW Lc=p..D£R.
L>LL Be SEEtN • YA.
GORDO
Al/CE OP VOi.) GUVS
TO .SWIM OV/!:lle FOi<
M'I Bll<TJ.IOAV
DOJAJ'S' •
SHOE
I PR£AM£01'1tA-r 6tAN1
MON~~ l='~M OO'f&R
SPA,£ wtU tN M'-/
St~OM 1'~'/tN~ 10 -S1EA
M" -fats~ .
·1
' 'A~ I ~L.UV IN ~~~f: "'fo~t"MT', St&
6Ro1'~R.~ 11M Ar:~At '7
1•M (,OttJ~1'o •ONE
1'~f;~ Nt'1"fMAU !
By Gus Arri~la
by MacNelly ..
July 5, 1981
l _.
THEm
YOURSELF
Sen0 Ille QUeStlOll • I ...... IO "Ask . flmlly ~ 641 l tUIQ!On A-c Ntw 'IOI-HY 10022
We'l pay I~ lol ~ QUtSllOftS Sorty wt tin I "'5-Olftn
FOR KENNE1H RING, profaaor of
ptyeho&ogy, Unlvcr*Y of Connecticut
Do you ...... the d-v ..... the poeN-
Wllty of Ida dw deadl can be prown?
-E. w .• Grand Wand, Neb.
e I think as this raeardl 11 CIC>lltinued
and more people become aware of It
(and we have an cxganJzation -the
International Association for Nar-
Death StudJa -which exJm to fur-
ther these alms) many Individuals will
become convinced that there Is a high
likelihood that physical death ls not A look ~yond the horizon. the end of life. This Is not something
that can be proven sclendftcally, but
our research can be Interpreted as provtding more evidence whk:h 1uggat1
this polliblllty. h's up to each Interested Individual to evaluate the evidence for
himself. Perhaps the best way to do this Is to talk With people who have had
NDE's (near-death ~nc.es) themselves -they're the real experts.
FOR EIJZABETH TAYLOR, 1tar of Broadway's Th• Lit·
de Fmca
When 1ifOU look beck on thll pley. a d«.-de from now,
what wtl lifOU remember moet about the apertw:e?
-F.N., Albulf. N.Y.
• The fact that I just went ahead and did tt Is nothing
short of remarkable. Also the fact that a week after the
opcnklg (my Broadway debut) I received a Tony nomi-
nation. It will put an end to the attitude that Hollywood
stars cannot make the transition to the legit stage.
FOR sn.JART E. WHITE, orchatra leader
What'1 the wont thlnl that can h8ppen to an orchestra
&.der? -H.O., Natcha, Mill.
• Betng given the wrong directions to a party. I'm told
it's the Hiiton, but It's really the Statler Hilton . Can you
think of anything wone? That's why I get to every job at
least two hours early, so that If an error of this nature
does occur (IOme people don't reallze there are places
with slmilar-soundlng names), I have time to rectJfy the
mistake .
FOR CAROL STALLONE, executive director, National
Women's Hall of Fame. Inc.
Ha. Mary 4'oae (who founded Mt. tto¥*e. America'•
Int llN' echool) .,.., IDRaDed .......... of the
W-'1 Hal of Fame? -J.J. Johmoa, Pocat.ao, ldeho
• No. The National Women's Ho.D of Fame has so far
Inducted 27 women. Our next Honon C«remony wdl
be July 19. and we plan to Induct addtional outstand·
Ing Amcrtcan women from the put and present every
year. Mary Lyons ts a candidate for future klduetion.
FOR 11iE ·ASK-mrroR
What II the nletkJoehJp between Yollo
Ono and the three IUnllvtat Beadea?
-E.W., Norwich, Conn.
• According to a family &tend, John
Lennon's widow was \lety unhappy at
not being Invited to the recent wed-
ding of Ringo Starr and Barbara Bach
In London. That friend reports that
Yoko -who feels John Is still with
her and protective of her -doesn ~
m1nd the exclusion herM?lf but be·
IJeves Lennon would be hurt at the way she was Ignored. Lennon's death Yoko: the fifth Beatie after all?
did not seem to bring about a rap·
prochement among George Harrison, Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney and her·
self, although they were quick to extend condolences and express their grief.
It has been said that a business meeting between the trio and Yoko. Intended
to unravel their complicated business affairs, Is In the offing.
FOR LEO SAYER, r.cording star
What did lifOU man wbea pou Mid that. prCJ'lrr'onelli!,
li'OU..,. pour own wont enemy? -V.K., Decatur, m.
• Because I've made a point of confusing my fans (or
the people who hopefully buy my records). Throughout
my career I've been a love balladeer, a soul singer, a
rock 'n roller. Although all this proves In a way that I'm
versatile, it has caused me to suffer commerdally. In
fact, my whole career looks like the charts they put at
the end of a hospital bed.
FOR SANDRA WINSTON, author of The Entrepreneu·
rfol Woman
You W'mt from euburban ho....V.-mothcr to manage·
ment coneultant. Did 1ifOU ~ doubt your chotce?
-R.M., GNen Bay. Wll.
• Of course. Pk:ture this: pressure budding up from a
client to deliver a completed training manual; publisher
tcreamlng for final chapters ln book. I wonder why I am
doing this to myself. But then the crlses pass. I feel In·
vlgorated by meeting these challenges .
FOR 11iE •ASK" EDFTOR
WhU did Gene Beny ............ he Mid a.ft Gable ...
ltllli OMllie b i.-MW ......... a chain of photo-
proc I 'tlihope? -R.M.,Lllde Rodl. M .
• In 1954 Gene was In Hong Kong, making Soldier of
1 Fortune with Clari< Gable. He wanted to take some pic-
tures of Gable, as a memento, but he didn't have a
camera. Off went Gene to buy one. took some snap-
shots and became hooked on photography because of
hts professional results and Gable's encouragement.
PRO lteprJJ mtattw towa Seo11ee 10 . ..otuo). chair-
man. Etha Comrnttt.c PRO Ano con CON s.n.eor HoWll T. tWln (0. ·Ala.). vice·
chairman, Senate 5eJed Commtttec on Ethics
Va. Members of the Senate are
not under any limitation on the
amount of lnoome they can earn
from any eowce outside of their
Congr'8llk>nal aolerlel. However,
the HOUie hu lmpoMd on Its
members a llmbtlOn on outlide Jn-
conw with the~ of lnvat-
nMrrt Income. Tuer.ten, we have
two .andardt Mt for co-equal leglelettw bochet. The
9ng of flnandal dilclosur• ttat.mentl required of
both HOUie and Senate membas proYkla an ade·
quate YChlde for Ca9alk>nal Suders end the
public to monitor the oubkie lncOme of membm,
Should Congreulonal Members
Ek Permitted to Eam
Unlimited Outside Income?
~ ....... -..... ..., ............. .................................. a..-,__._,
..,~---....... , ... ~ .... 11 ..........
No. We are elected for one pur-
J>09e: serving our constituents.
Thote constituents expect and
daerve fuU-ttme representation;
they quation the time Involved
and the relaUonshlp of the member
to the eource when income Is re-
adved by a member of Congras
bec.aUll of Mrvtca rendcmf out-
side the Congreu. At the same um., the ftnandal
raponllbl1lda facing members are ~t. A ban
on all outlkle Income would disadvantage members
without penonal fortunes. Let's ICl1ke a balance:
tome outllde Income but wtth limits.
C> 1•1 ,AMILY WlEKLY. All t1gMI r.....c1
Easy-sew sunbonnets for
garden or beach. Craft No.
370 has pattern pieces:
directions for both sizes.
Knit tabard with button
side·tabs for skirts or pants.
Oaft No. 649 has knit
directions for Small. Med·
lum and Large inclusive.
Bright pineapple motifs are
set together to make this
warm afghan. Oaft No.
402 has complete aochet
directions.
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A patchwork toaster-doll Is
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Family Weekly Magazine
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Be sure to include name, ~ress. zip code and book number
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'
AFTER VIETNRm
The Long Battle to Readjust
Vietnam divided America as no foreign adventure In our
hllltory ever had. The Vietnam vets oak not for our
monuments or our pity. Simply for our help and under·
standing In rebulldlng their lives.
8y Al Santoli
-When I came home, I cried when I
sow mv porent.s, but thot was the lost
time I cried for a very long time. I
dldn 't feel anything about anybody
anymore. I had no feelings , no feel·
lngs of looe or hot.e or anything. Just
nothing. And I didn't know why. I
guess It was becou.e I was emotional·
Iv exhausted. I hod bun through the
highs and the lows and the fears and
the hatred and the caring for o year,
and J had nothing left to glue anv·
more. Gayle Smith
-I hove nightmares and sweats. 171
be sweating something fierce . My wife
will say, "What's wrong with you?" I'll
think of something else to soy. I've
never talked about thue dream• with
my wife 'cause she can 't understand
It, you know. She's been a dull/an all
her fife and how would ahe under·
stand It? The persons I can talk to Is
the rop group or another Vietnam
sold~. Robert Rowls
-In the war you leamed so much so
quickly at such a young age. That Is
part of the readjustment problem for a
lot of people coming bock. There's
some trauma, but they've hod their
whole value systvn changed.
Scott Hlggf 111
G ayle Smith Is a nurse In a
small hospital In rural Ver-
mont, where she lives with
her husband and daughter.
Robert Rawls, who works In a post
office In Cleveland, lives with his
famUy in a predominantly black east·
side neighborhood . Scott Higgins Is a
vice president of one of Wall Street's
most prestigious banking firms.
These three people have one thing In
common: They are all Vietnam vet·
erans who have worked at overcom-
ing the emotional trauma and stigma
of the war.
There Is a deep trust among many
of the 2.8 million veterans who
served In the Vietnam War and who
once relied upon each other's skills
and Instincts to stay alive. But most
Amerleans have yet to hear from the
Al .scind, who ~llJcd o &on. 5"" lot uolor
In Vietnam, II tM outhato/Evcry«htngWe ~
(ROfldom Hoi.J, on Of'O/ hlttory of tM war,
t • ,..._y WlO<LY, JutiJ I, ttt1
Starting over: Gayle Smith,
a nurw lr1 Vietnam, now
lives tn Vermont with her
husband and child.
soldiers themselves about what they
experienced In Vietnam . For the
country to come to terms with our
still unresolved feelings about the
Vietnam War, we need to listen to
and try to understand the memories
of the men and women who experl·
enced It firsthand .
For many years, Vietnam veterans
chose to remain silent about their war-
time experiences. There was trauma
for the returning soldier -whose
average age was only 19. The experl·
ence of combat was awesome , and
the veterans' feelJngs about them·
selves were complicated by the tur-
moil at home. We were once Idealistic
young soldiers who risked our bves
bebevlng In the goodness of our coun-
try's motives, and then found our-
selves blamed by the media and by
other citizens for taking part In a war
that we did not understand. We came
home disillusioned young men with
old men's eyes. Jama Bombard, a
former Infantry Ueutenant In the lOlst
Airborne Olvlslon, sums up that
disillusionment:
"I can remember sitting at McCord
Air Base before I went to Vietnam
with a friend of mine, Hunter Shot·
well .... He was a West Pointer and
had been to Vietnam before the buUd-
up as an adviser .... He had a beautiful
wife and a little chUd . I said to him,
'Hunter, why are you going back?
You're going to get out of the Army.'
He wanted to be a lawyer. He wanted
to set his llfe In motion . And he said,
'I'm going back because I am a sol-
dier. .I belJeve In the nation and I
believe that this Is my duty.'
"Right after the Tet offensive I
found out that Hunter Shotwell had
been killed. And I couldn't help but
feel that had been such a loss, such a
waste. He represented to me what
was good and right In the nation. And
he was destroyed. I thought of his lit-
tle child and his wife, what that did to
them. And with that death and many
like his, with each death a little bit of
the fiber of what was good In this
country wa~ being destroyed."
Veteran James Bombard came
home from the war, got mamed,
began to raise a family and found his
way back Into the mainstream of
• Al Santoli (Jcneeli11g. far left )
In Vietnam: "We were ldeofla ·
Uc young soldiers believing In
our counl1y. "
Vietnam vet Robert Rawls.
"My wife will soy. 'Whats
wrong with you?' She can't
understand It. "
society. But for many veterans the
road back was much more difficult. In
March of this year the Veterans Ad·
ministration released the results of an
eight-year study that Illuminates some
of the problems vets face. According
to the report, Vietnam veterans have
.. slgniflcantly more" social. psycho-
logbl and career problems than non·
veterans, and combat related stress-
emotlonal problems -known as de·
layed stress syndrome -have led to
arrests, drug and akohol abuse and
medical problems.
The repo'1 also indicated that, of
those SIUdled, white<Ollar ;otis were
found by only 50 percent of the Viet·
nam vete:ans, while 54 percent of the
veterans from the same era and 69 per·
oent of the nonveterans had found
white-collar .)obs. And a total of 24 per·
cent of the Vietnam veterans who had
been Involved In heavy combat were
later mrested for Criminal offenses. com·
pared to 14 percent ol nonveterans.
One reason for delayed stress syn-
drome Is that when soldiers came
home from the Vietnam War they
were given no buffer period or
(continued)
I
Another Design Original from
~ A,\\llASSAlttllt
71 1 W. Broadway •Tempe, Arizona 85282
Ambassador's
Elegance
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One look tells you It's beautiful! Sottly •
shirred. Just-right size. Great style and flalr.
But Inside, It's down-to-earth practical. The
huge main compartment gives you the
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length front pocket Is perfect for all those
"extras" you llke to keep handy. Quallty-
cratted, too, in our own supple Ambahyde™
Expanded Vinyl that gives this bag the
super-softness Its style demands. On the
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into a gleaming Signet Plate adds a final
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But that's not all! It comes fitted with
Ambassador's most-wanted organizer fea·
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credit cards and checkbook, plus a built-in
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safe, clean, easy to find. And (2) (3) TWO
"lnata-And" Key Chains that snap Into your
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Take your choice of SIX rich fashion
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Use It for JO.days. Risk-Freel If not totally
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Total for Bags s
Sh•PP•no and Handling 'I o~
TOTAL ENCLOSED I OR CHARGED
I CHECI< 1.-1 METHOO OF PAYMENT 1 II O CMdtenclOMd (peyabi.10 ••AmbuMdof'') Ch.,OI lo my 0 Vl8A 0 Mut8f' C11&roe
, 1 -, _Mo....;;...,~y-, -
I Ct9dit Cerd No. (Pfint AU dlglll) C8fd bp,191
II ;;:-·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--
.1 ti ..... First '*"'
I 91!M!Addl9ae ~---------------------------'-----I
,. City --------------------------~
A~a lftlclenla IM:ld Salff T ..
IOftllY, ... C.O.D.'1 '1.IAll
L-----. ---------·
No oae f(K a1duat1 'Tiie reason cricket Isn't our
notfono1 sport is thot the people o/ MassochtMtla
(and o few spirit.ed nefghbors) got fed up with on
arrangement that hod once been easy ond pleasant
but euenruolly become Intolerable:· Not e bad
thought for thls lndependenoe Dav weekend, from
Boston Herold A~ articles by Massachusetts
Gov EdwardJ. King. Yesterday tea. todayoO. Having
to Import so much foreign oO ls "o notk>nol disgrace:' the governor says, urg\ng our
country to mobllll..e Its "Yankee lnckpendena" to produce more «Mr9V •home.
That's a thought refreshing enough to toast with a summer Sunday's glass of Iced tea
(the Ceylon. Darjeeling and south Indian varieties. If you'd lil<A! to taste what the
Boston Tea Party dumped).
A.aerie. the bowrttfuJ. From Bostoo'• Old North Church ( .. One fl by
land ... ") to the mlMk>na of Old Calilornla. the U.S ... hos plalty of of/ and
natural go.:' GoY.. King nota. "We have coal In abundance, and •hale oil we'r.oe
barely touched ... uranium to kttp nud~ pot.Der hummlng for d«oda. and
aoe·~ Ju.t gdtlng started on c:ouervodon progro,,,. and rennooble enazr
90C'rces like .olar and ~hermol ~· Then why do ~ also have our ltill·
heavy dependency on fordgft enngy? Gov. King recalla Sam AIJan1' words
back ln the 1770s: "It la to befeoretl that the people wllt be so accu•tomed to
bo~ a. to forget they ~ ever free:·
"The Redcoou are coming-unless they run out of gos!''
Ubcrty or debt1 Instead of squabbling, one region of the U.S. agnlnst another, our
energy needs require a united home front effort-New England and the Old South.
Ea.st and West, energy-rich and energy-poor states alike. "We must all hang to-
gdhe,:' Ben Franklin remarked at the signing of the Declaration of Independence,
"or assuredly ~shall all hang ~y." Still true. Gov. King points out, for even
today wlhaes a big crowd out there thot enjoys rhe sJght of Uncle Som twisting
slowly In the wind:' The cost of our foreign-oU dependency ls nearing $100 billion a
year. "money we urgendy need he~ at home In order to aeate jobs, to ~vfue our
falling Industrial ltmlgrh, and to ~ht in/latfon:· When any pert ol America finds and
produces more energy, everybody gains.
Rally roundl We can't ded att energy ~ ovanight, not when lt
tMa bWona ln aplorlltlon and production outl9'11 jutt to keep &om .upping
~on the aerw acalalor. But we coaW cut ow od lmporU In halfb,,
1990. MVS Gou. King. How? .. Nothing mioludonory, but only enough change
fn gooemment mm.iv policy to .tobllae oil and ,,_
production at praent Inda, doubk tlw nodonal UK q
ooal, and complete the nuclcor pion,. that alreod)I
tto. been ...... gooemment pamlc.:· Conttnue COll-
Mlwdon. deYelop ..,.._. and Na., tw 9dck.. And
balance "the goo'-ct molronmentaf NI/et)! and thOM
".,..,.,, MCUlft)I:' If Y'O'l ~ with hl9 call '°' ectton.
then vohmteer yom thoa9hta to <Apttol HW ... Md to
lo'OU1 ltate capital. That'• thc danocretk way. and the
unbd ~ ol Ammc.'• people would be • .a.oat hard
'roaacl the world..
It'• rn.: For a booklet on "Making your uo4ce heard In Woahtngron:• mail
a postcard to Box Vat the address below. The booklet won't put words In your
mouth, but It wl1J show you how to wnd your own message more effectively.
Mobil'
After Vietnam
• . ' After the war, James Bombard ldtled down to raise o family. But for
many uets, the homecoming was far more turbulent.
counseling to prepare them psycho-
logically to re-enter society. In many
cases, they were suddenly home from
the battlefield with all survival and
combat instincts still functioning full
tilt
"The Immediate homecoming per·
lod was disastrous for many
veterans." explains Dr. Ar1hw Blank
Jr.. an associate professor of psy-
chiatry at Yale University who has
studied the problems of Vietnam vet·
erans. "A lot of guys walked off the
airplanes and faced, instead of cele-
bration, demonstrations and yelling.
One pa tient told me that when he
walked off the plane toward the
crowd. a demonstrator spat right on
his face. Also, the Vietnam War was
an unpopular and controversial war
There was no sense of doing some-
thing valuable to make up for the ex-
perienced horrors. And because the
war was lost, the suffering became
more acute."
It wa.s not only the soldiers who had
to survive the shock of homecoming.
Our families -the people who loved
us and cared for us the most -were
directly affected. And they, too. were
unprepared to face the changes that
the war created. "When these guys
saw their famUles, the famlbes didn't
want to hear anything about the war."
says Dr. Blank. 'Tuey just wanted to
forget it ever happened."
More than anything, a veteran
needs family members to listen.
Stephen Kllnkhammer, a former navy
hospltal corpsman, believes he has
weathered the stonn of his wartime
experiences In large part because of
the great compassion and under·
standing of his wtfe. She has en-
couraged him to express his feelings
and relate painful memories.
Ml still sleep with one eye open,"
Step hen says. "And I wake up with
bad dreams that I have of taklng fire
I • ,AMIL.V WUKL.V, J111'( l, ''"
and watching people being murdered
and being a part of that process ... .I
get really angry, and I have to cry a lot
and talk .. My wife feels Inadequate. I
tell her. "There's nothing you can do
that can be any more adequate than
just to be here."
Dr. Blank agrees that it Is essential
for the friends and famUy members of
vets to listen: "Those of us who come
In contact with veterans should active·
ty help them re-enter society by letting
them talk, encouraging them to be·
come active again. and never making
them feel guilty "
I n 1979 Congress voted to fund a
network of outreach centers for
Vietnam veterans under the aus·
pices of the V.A. A veteran could
walk in to one of these storefront
centers and receive counseling and
support from fellow veterans.
In less than one year of operation,
91 Veterans Outreach Centers have
been frequented by over 55.000 of
the estimated 500.000 veterans who
suffer delayed stress problems. Many
find these centers to be the only en-
vironment where they can work out
their postwar combat trauma in con·
ftdence among peers
Despite the success of these cen-
ters. the Reagan Administration has
proposed closing them down as part
of the budget cuts. But as this story
went to press. It appeared that Con-
gress would provide the necessary
funds to continue these centers.
JJJSt as vets and their famlUes have
had the courage to face their mem-
ories of Vietnam , our country as a
whole needs to show similar courage
In dealing with our memories of the
war. Without that courage. the Viet-
nam syndrome will continue to haunt
us. By dealing honestly with the pa$t,
we can move fOTWard Into the 1'111
f uturc much more confidently ~
. '
I '
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7'6-Hell w~ .,IO • ch41c!'s '-t wUh SJl6'""9 f)lf1 end !m:klu Dnction' lo.
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wtth 8 enchanung a19'k Eely tmbrOldny'
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Crochet borden on lftTY low.ls 10< apron,
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average funeral in t he United States was Rush <Mt11ls •bout your "no physical tum"
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Stitlsh Adress
Jane Seymou1
Captutea America
By Katrine Amea
J ane Seymour d~ logic and
convention . She has become a
Brttish staple of the American TV
and movie diet and yet, she says,
many people don't know who Jane
Seymour ls. She was cursed with flat
feet but became a baDertna anyway.
She has had little formal training and
yet may become one of the most sue·
cessful actresses of
her generation.
Seymour, 30,
blames her versa-
tiltty for the fact
that people have a
hard time recog·
nlzlng her. "I
haven't been type·
cast," she says. "In
England I played
exotic beautie,s or
Persian prtncesses.
I also did a lot of
Victorian virgins."
When she moved
to America a few
years ago. her
roles became even more varied . "I'm
lucky," she says. "l'he range of mate·
rial rve been given on U.S. networks
Is outrageous: a pioneer woman who
goes mad [TM Awakening Land), an
alcohobc dress designer [Seucnth
Avenue], a woman who Incarnates
evil [Ea1t of Eden).
Seymour Is unblinkingly stralghtfor·
ward about herself: "l have confi-
dence about me as a person," she
says. "My own standards are ve-ry
high, but you can't do more than yow
bat ... .Imperf ectlon Is the best thing I
have going for me."Though comki·
ered beautiful , she sees herself as hav·
Ing "rat-<:alored hair and a nose that
never made up Its mind between be·
Ing Jewish or Aryari." Nor did her
eyes agree on a color scheme-one Is
green' the oth,,, brown.
Her venat!ltty and 1elf~nfldence
can both be traced to her background.
Born Joyce Penelope Wilhelmina
Frankenbwg, ahe grew up near Lon·
don , the eldest of three daughtm of
an English-Jewish doctor and his
Dutch·Protatant wife. "My family II
ve-ry ~pportive and I have a mar-
velous rot« model In my parents," she
says.
Seymour made h8r profa.ional
dancing debut at 13 with the London
Fattval Ballet, but a knee Injury IOOn
forced her In another dnctlon. She
went Into musical comedy, until a
one·Bn• rol8 In the movie .Ohl What a
U>vely \4b-changed Mt' coune
agU\. At 18, Jane decided to study
acting but found herself turned down
by three drama schools for being too
young. So "For a while I had a career
of screen tests," she recalls. A more
fruitful period followed : major parts In
popular series on British 1V, wide·
ranging repertory theater and the eye-
catching roJe of Solitaire, James
Bond's girl In Live and Let Die.
Seymour never did go to drama
school -and she feels no loss. "I
don't believe In acting leseons," she
says. '1 don't go to classes. People say
I break the rules. I didn't know there
were any rules. I don't know what I'm
doing and I don't want to because
maybe I couJdn\ do tt then."
Seymour has survived her on· and
off-camera growing pains with no ap·
parent tcarS. Her two marriages -to
Michael Attenborough, son of director
Richard Attenborough. and to a Bri·
tish businessman -ended In amiable
divorces.
T his summer. she will marry
David Aynn. an American
money-manager. "For the first
time I'm able to contemplate
spendklg my llf e with one ~n,"
she says, beaming. "Davids clients
are actors and musicians. He under·
stands my business and Isn't threat·
ened." Seymour and Aynn are ex·
pecttng a chlld around Christmas.
For the moment, Seymour ls taking
time off to rad satpts and prepare
henclf for motherhood. Recently she
stepped down from a ftve-month run
u Momrt's ~ •. Constan.ze, In the hit
Broadway show. Amadeus.
This does not mean, however, that
she la planning t.o give up her career.
"I won't stop acting," she says. "I In·
tend to be hanging on at 80. I love
climbing Into characters. The day It's
no longer lntaadng, I'll gtvc It Jiii
up." ~
l'AMllVWUKl.Y, J11ly 6, ,., • 11
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24 EXP. 110·126
S2.98 POSTPAID
Umit two cartridges with
coupon from this ad only
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Off• ... Sept. 30, 1•1
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WE USE
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I ,~~ I I MV NAM[ (PRINT) ~ :
I MV AOORlSS I
L CITY c Sknidland l'llCllo 1911 STATE ZIP FW281 I ----------------------------·
I
I
Edited by
FAMILY WEFKLY'S
Food Editor Marilyn Hansen
for only $9.95
In response to countless requests for a new
cookbook based on recipes from our maga-
zine , nationally known food authority Marilyn
Hansen has edited 300 pages of illustrated
recipes organized to help you cook through the
seasons.
Published by Times Books, a division of Qua-
drangle/The New York Times Book Co., Inc .,
"Cooking by the Calendar" includes 12 beauti-
ful color pages that can serve as a calendar.
Please allow 3 to 5 weeks for delivery
,----------------------------------
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ORDER YOUR FAMILY WEEKLY
COOKBOOK TODAY
Fill in and mail this coupon, along with your check or money
order payable to FAMILY WEEKLY for $10.95 -includes $1.00
to cover postage and handling (New York State residents add ap-
t plicable sales tax) -to FAMILY WEEKLY Cookbook, Box 5120
1 FDR Station, New York, N.Y. 10150. I
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Amount enclosed$ ---------------
(Check or money order; no c .o .d. 's, please)
CHARGE IT: (check one) Exp. Date
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I r" I /.JpCud~
I f you have a recipe to
share, write: Marilyn Han-
sen, Ne.ighbors'Recipe Ex-
change, FAMILY WEEKLY
magazine , 641 Lexington
Ave., New York, N.Y.
10022. For every recipe
published. FAMILY WE.EKL Y
wtU pay $10. Recipes must
include your name, address.
telephone number and the
newspaper In which you
read FAMILY WEEKLY We
cannot answer letters or re·
tum recipes. Jn case of dup·
llcation . recipes with the
earliest postmark wlll be
used. AD recipes become the
property of F AMll.. Y WE.EKL Y
From Linda Whitley's
kitchen In Chino Valley,
Ariz., comes a recipe for a
hot-weather cooler.
SLUSH
4aipe....-
6aipe--
1 CM (46 oa.) ..,...,.,.. J'*:e
2 CMI (U-. lbl) ..... OfM8C
J'*:e c:w:e1t1•. ~
1 CM (12 Oii.) hwi ........
WfiC81Ca .... _. ... s ........ ....
6 boalel (1• lbl) ...._...,., o,_,.or......, .... wnd
cart.outed bfter ...
1. Measure sugar and water In·
to saucepan. Heat, st!ning until
sugnr dissolves; bring to boiling
and boil 1 minute. Refrigerate
unttl cold.
2. Mix chilled mixture with
pineapple Juice, orange Juice
and le~ concentrates and
bananas. Pour Into 5 (1 ~t. size)
containers; cover. label and
&eezie.
S. At lmflng time. half.fill tall
glasses with lemon-lime JOda;
spoon In frozen mixture to fill.
Serve with spoons and straws.
Maka 30 to 35 glalaa
Unda writes, "I am a
young homemaker and
always searching for new
and lnteresttng recipes. I
follow yow column and
especially thank you for the
100 Cookie recipe. It was
debclous; my little girls en·
joyed them so much, and It
made enough to freeze a sec-
ond batch.
"The Slush ts a summer-
drtnk Idea. I make It up,
freeie a large portion of It
NEIGHBORS' RECIPE EXCHANGE
8y ffiarllyn Hanaen
and use It directly from the
freezer on those hot and
muggy days."
The Whltleys read FAMILY
WEEKL V In the Courier,
Prescott, Ariz.
Patty Aleshevlch , a good
cook In Palmer, Alaska.
sends us a recipe that's sure
to please the poppy seed
lovers.
POPPYSEED
CITRUS CAKE ....
1 cup vegetable oO
1 YJ c:upe mJlk s cape umlfted aJl-purpoM
lour
2 ~-..r
1 ~ •u11a1>1 .. beldng lode
~ ....-ult
2 ~ -.-ted orange rtnd
2 .. ..,.,... .,.tad lemoft rtnd
Ir\ cup ~.-d
1. In large bowl, using electric
mixer, beat eggs thoroughly.
Blend In oil and milk.
2. Add flour. sugnr, soda and
salt. M1x well; stir In orange and
Lemon rtnd and poppy seed.
3. Pour batter Into a greased
and floured lO·lnch tube pan or
3-quart bundt pan. Bake In pre·
heated 350'F. oven for about 1
hour and 15 minutes or until
cake tests done.
4. Cool on rack 1 hour, then
tum out of pan and cool com·
pietely on rack.
Maku 10 to 12 aervlngs
Patty says. "This Is a yum·
my cake that I like to serve at
a lazy Sunday brunch."
The Aleshevlchs read
FAMILY WEEKLY in the
nmes. Anchorage I Alaska .
From Ann Threadgill In
big Texas we received a very
pleasing cake recipe.
TOASTED COCONUf
CAKE
1 pq. (11.S Oii.) bmm redpc
~ c..u mill with puddlne
1 cup ~~..,.....
~ cup ... chopped pec&nl
1 cup-cnam ....
~cup\...,..W.oll
~cup ..
YJ cup....,
1 ta111.., a 11t1 8'ound dnnuaoft
1. 1n 1.mge bowl, combtnc an 1n.
gredlents except sugar and c:ln·
namon. Blend at low tpeed;
beat at medium speed 3
minutes.
2. Mix sugar and dnnamon
and swirl through batter; do not
mix In completely.
3. Pour batter Into greased
lO·inch tube pan and bake In
preheated 325°F. oven for
about 60 to 70 minutes or until
cake le$ts done. Cool on rack
for 1 hour, then tum out of pan
to cool completely.
Malcu 10 to 12 Krvlngs
The Threadgllls read
FAMILY WEEKLY In the
Express-News, San An-
tonio, Texas.
From Rockport, Texas,
Patricia Potter sends a recipe
for a hot tuna dish.
TUNA CHEESE PATilES
2 cue (6~· or 7~. me) tuna,
draJned
1._
2 tableepooc .. lnely chopped
ocUoo
114 cup pldde Rbeh. dndned
2 tablapoona wheat germ
llJ cup lnad cnimti.
'i4 cup ..... ., ....
IJi cup "°9Uff Of IOW' cream
~ 'Mepc>O" cary salt
llJ taepooft ,..,...
IJi t.eepooll b.a leave.
1 cup ahr«lded cbeae
Shredded lettuce
Sandwich IMMie or toest
1. Combine all Ingredients ex·
cept the cheese, lettuce and
buru In a bowl. Mix well. Shape
mixture Into 6 (4-oz. size) pat·
ties.
2. Place on broiler rack and
broil. about 4 Inches from heat·
Ing element about 4 minutes or
until golden brown. Tum and
broil second side about 3 to 4
minutes or unttl brown.
3. Sprinkle ~h cheese and
broil until melted and bubbly.
4. Serve with shredded lettuce
on toasted sandwich buns.
Makes 6 servings
The Potters read FAMIL v
WEEKLY in the Caller, Cor-
pus Christi , Texas.
...
CAU• POR Maps of the gold 1n North PAU• Cmolina and Virginia are now
avaiable, and Overbey Is
Ever wonder how base· working on ones for Georgia.
baD's traditional "seventh in· Alabama and South Caro·
nlng stretch" originated? Una. The maps cost $6 per
According to the Baseball state and can be obtained by
Hall of Fame In Coopers-sending a check to Big Ten,
town . N.Y .. one theory says Inc., P.O. Box 1231. ~
It all began In 1882. Manhat· Beach, Aa . 32931.
tan, a Catholic college, was -------------------------------
playing a semi-pro dub called STMIUZATIONS
the Metropolitans. Brother for the year 2100." lbere cause I said so." Instead, he size of classes entering med SO••
Jasper, Manhattan's athletic they aawl Into one of 418 adViNs, "Look at It from the school during the last 12 An
director, was In charge of p&astk capsules -stacked child's point of view and re-years; the Influx of thousands Voluntary sterilization Is
keeping the siudent fans sit· 5i tort, 'Do your of foreign doctors and U.S. now the world's most popu-
tlng reverently and quietly at .i homework IO graduates of overseas med lar form of birth control. with
the games, and one partic· I ~ you can grad-schools lnto this country and one·third of aJl married cou·
ularly hot and muggy day. he ~ uate on time the growing role of nonphy-pies who Uie some form of
noticed the fans becoming ~ this spring and sldan health providers such contraception relying on it.
restJess and fidgety. So before then go on va-as nurse practitioners. physi· notes a new report by Johns
Manhattan came to bat In the i cation wtth us clan assistants and midwives. Hopkins School of Hygiene
seventh inning he told the ~ tn the sum· and Public Health.
students to stand and stretch 3 mer.'" QOLDl'INQER The use of voluntary ster1·
for a few minutes. Connellan lization has increased fivefold
The idea worked and was adds that There's gold in them thar over the past decade, to a
repeated at other Manhattan communlca· hills and Charles Overbey cunent level of 100 million
games. And since Manhattan tion within a wants to help you find it. The couples worldwide. The
annually played the profes-two-high -that measure 4 famUy suffers from special "hills" are the Appalachian leading country in numbers
sional New York Giants, the feet by 11 Inches high, 4 feet handicaps: 'The levels of Mountains of the Southeast of sterilJz.ations Is China, with
practice spread to ma)or by 11 incha "-"de and 6 feet closeness Involved often U.S .. and after extensive 40 mllllon couples relying on
by 7 inches deep. force people to get emotion· research, Overbey, an en· this method. India is next
league fans -and It's one
we maintain today.
Who Invented Cracker
Jacks .. and "Red Hots,"
though, we don't know.
CRAWL IN;
CH•CKOUT
In dacrbnsa an tnnoYlliw
Ji!pln ... hcJMI, IOnMahow
the old Joke "'The room was
so smal even the mlc4t were
hunchbecked," coma to
mind. For SU a "'9hf, vlll-
ton to Osaka can check Into
the C..,.W. Inn -the Id·
prodatmed ''butin.. hotel
Granted It's not the Hilton, al. Then they get defensive gtneer and retired NASA ex-with 25 mUJion . In the U.S .,
but each capsule does have and retreat Into talking about ecutive • has put together sterilJz.ations have risen from
Its own TV, radio, alarm themtelves and away from detailed maps of Just where 3 mllllon to 13 million cou-
clock, mirror and alr-<:endi· considering others' Interests." that gold ls -aU the way pies in the past 10 years, with
tiontng. There are vending from Alabama to northwest the percentages divided
machines and sofas ln the TOO MANY of Washington D.C . about evenly between males
iobby. where guests lounge All you need to become a and females.
about In orange terry cloth M.D.'S BY 1990? prospector Is a shovel, $5 -Eliot Kaplan robes provided free by man-
agement. And for $2 extra, a
sauna Is avallable In ~e base-
ment.
Reportedly the Capsule
Inn 15 fllled almost every
night, mostly wtth bustnas·
men traveUng on fixed e:x-
pen1e accounts.
TALKISCHBP
It's been estimated that In
most communication situa-
tions, people retain only one-
tenth of what we say. And
according to one expert, this
IS often the result of one llm·
pie mistake.
"UsuaDy, we talk only from
our side of the fence. We
don't take Into ac.count
where the other person ls
coming from, what his Inter·
au In what we're saying
might be," points out John
Conn e llan, president of The
Exec:uttve Technique, a com·
munk:atlon training program
beeed In OUceeo that offcn -"**" In ll\Wtll dda.
For ~. Connellan
Mys, an aamp'9 d poor
fmnlJy c:ommunkatkJn JMY
be when I ch8d ub, "Why
lhoukf I do my homework?"
and the parent answm, •s..
caUM you have to" or "Be-
By 1990, the U.S . will
have 536,000 doctors -or
70.000 more than needed.
By 2000, there wl1l be
145,000 more doctors than
necessary. A four-year study,
by the Graduate Medical
Education National Advtsory
Committee, blames the com·
Ing excess on three faaors: a
substantial Ina-ease in the
ltoDmtl~
gold pan, magnifying glass
and small plasttc vial. And
with the prloe of gold hover-
ing near $500 an ounce,
maybe It's worth a try.
But don't expect to get
rich, warns Overbey: "You11
probably ftnd only a few
specks, but best of all , it's an
outdoor actMty the family
can en)oy year round."
BIRTHDAYS
(All Cancer) Sunday -Julie
Nixon Eisenhower 32. Mon·
day -Sylvester Stallone 35;
Merv Grifftn 56; Janet Leigh
54. Tuaday -Doc Sev-
erlnsen 54; Ringo Starr 41.
Wednaday -Steve Law·
renc.e 46. Thunday -O.J .
Simpson 34. Friday -Ario
Guthrie 34; David Brinkley
61. Snurday -Tab Hunter
50; Yul Brynner 61.
--~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~--
~ ,.,,. ~ .,.,....,.
t4t ~--,._ -..11.Y., -
~,:fl'"*
""'''~=~flvbtl--~~-· Edoutl'le ldltCH, ArltlUr Cooper
~9'1:1'Hn:t'~ me~:
-..
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
My Feet Were Killing Me ... Until
I Found Relief in Germany!
I T was the European trip I
had always dreamed about. l
had the time and money to go
where I wanted -sec what I
wanted. But I soon learned
that money and time don't
mean much when your f ect
hurt too much to walk. After a
f cw days of sightseeing my
feet were killing me.
Oh, I tried to keep going. In
Paris I 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, I was in my hotel room. I didn't
even feel like sitting in a sidewalk cafc.
The whole trip was like that until f got to
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 needed. I
learned that women also can wear them-
cvcn with sandals and open backed shoes.
They're completely invisible.
MADE FOR YOUR FEET
ALONE
Here's why Fcathcrsprings
work for them and why they
can work for you . These sup-
ports arc like nothing you've
ever seen before. They are
custom fo rmed and made for
your jeer 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
. Hamburg, Germany. There. by accident, I
happened to hear about an exciting break-
through for anyone who suffers from Jore.
aching feet and legs.
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
Germany with my own countrymen.
Whatever your problem-corns. cal-
luses, pain in the baJls 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 lllfrer pain and discomfort need-
leaaly. If yoar feet hurt, tlte minde of Ger-
many cu help yoa. Write for more detailed
lnlonaadon. nere ii no obliptloa w .. t.
soever. No salesman will call. Just nu oat the
roupoa below •nd mail It todmy.
This wonderful invention was a custom-
made foot support called Flexible Feath-
erspf'ins. When I got a pair and slipped them
into my shoes my pain disappeared almost
instantly. The flexible shock absorbing sup-
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.
WHAT PEOPLE SAY ABOUT THE MIRACLE: ~ 1981 ~ lnltlmahanal Cotp., 13100 S._ A¥tf!Ue, North.
s.cmte. w°""""°" 98133 'PoMd by Prolftsional Models •
Rtuivtd my M'ift · s
Ftathersprings two
days ago. Thty art
supu-ntlthtr of us
can btlitllt thtt u ·
suits. Sht has had ttr·
riblt fut for yttars: al-
rtady no pain . lnci-
th1ttally, ht; sort lmtt Is much bttttr ...
As a rttirtdphyslcian, this result ls amaz-
ing. Or.·C.O.C.frucson. Arizona
"My husband felt a great rtlit/ and no
"''"" pain. They art truly on answtr to
our prayus . Only •
wish 1ha1 ht hod
htord of them twenty
ytar1 0110.''
Mr1. F.J.S.IMttalrit'.
Lo11lsla1ta
•
"Since l"H bt'en
h'earing F t'athtr-
springs I havt bun
obit> to we'" shon I
11•0.rn '1 obit-to wtar
before. Mainly btt-
cauu of m.v corns and
<·a/lust's. Thanks a
r--F~;.:EASPRING INTERNATIONAL
CORPORATION
hundrt'd ti mu uver ...
A .H ./Eust Orongtt, New Jusey
· • J havt bun wtaring your Feothtrspring 1'
Foot Supp<>rU for tJ\'tr a yt(lr now, and I
just h'Ont tn lt't you I
know the great C'Om-
f<>rt I am uptrlenc-
l n1 . I havt' ruom·
mtndt'd thtm to many
of our Sisttrs su/Jtr-
lng from foot trou-
ble ...
Sliter Mary Patrono
C.S.J.
13100 Stone Avenue, North, Dept. FW281
s..ttle, Wahington 91133
YES! I want to learn more about the guaranteed relief
Flexible Feathenprin1 Foot Supports can give. Please
send me your free brochure. I understand tliat there is
no obliption and that no salesman will call.
Print Name
Addrcu
City •
301614• Gonton Lichtfoot
l™iiiii 1 Dream Strfft Row
291021 SUP£ATRAMP rrr:!J ........ In AIMrtca
293647• -~~ ~ ,.. .. ,.,.._
291302. MmS WLCMr'I
!Wwww§@il ~HSTI
I 239830 • IOZ SCAGGS
(<'no.• ....... ; SLOW DANCER
291132 • .,_. WIWAMI
!s~ ........ -..aeonc.,I
265447 • ~ BILLY JOEL
TURNSTILES
295253 OtOHHE WARWICK ~ DIONNE
294799• JUDYCOlUNS ,.., ..... , LIVING
PR£TEND£RS
BOZSCAGGS
MIOOlEMAN
303404. tuft . 1~1 UNMASKED ·:.::::=-
303313 • CHIC ~ REAL P£0Pl£
302042 LINDA RONSTADT ~ MAD LOVE
301416* JANIE f'RIQ([
lf .. -1 FROM TH£ HEART
293H8* E...VLOU HAIWI
I -e 1 -Klflludly <Mrt
284257 • PABLO CRUISE
nv WORLDS AWAY
300038
~
290247 • CAT SrtvtM
. u •. BACK TO EARTH
285866 IOSTON ~ Don't Look -.Ck
291914 Frri sin.n··
I I Gr.-..HMallOl.1
2ff248 CAPTAIN a TENNIUE
1c;;;;;"""Sij MAKE YOUR MOYE
299552. ~
215017 ASSA• VOUW·VOUS ~ ·-··--
216509 CARLY SfMOH ~ SPY
274043 • ~ ANNIE ~CAST
295279 FAAHKSIHATRA
lmlilliil ~ ............ '
28H31 • 8088Y VINTON
Autumn Memories
J
J
i 0
~~--------------------............ ........
I
I I
I· I
I
D
THE COLUMBIA RECORD I TAPE CLUB INVITES YOU TO TAKE
ANY 10 ALBUMS·f~ .,......, .. c:........---.ay_,.a..-... ..,...•...,•-...... <•......,a....,.._1•._,...,,._ ....,.
306366•
AEROSMITHS
GREATEST HITS __ ,_
THf:ROS[
FRANK l lNATAA
OllUlflffl ISIACll
MICKEY GILLEY
ENCORE
VAN HALI N cw--•-) Women And Ctllldr9n "'"
~" ·-
MAY NARO flltOU~
ITIMYTIMI
306071 * KOOl 1 THI GANO ~ CELEMATE
HUBERT LAWS
FAMILY
306704• GEORGE BURNS
a oeJiii!J IN NASHVILLE
305839• JEAN LUC PONfY
i,!!UlWTI<:) CIVILIZED C:VIL
307421 • ---_ _.....
~ CJReAN cowaor /1
305227• II.VIS COSTlllO ico.-1 TAKING ueEllTIH
291418• COLOM ~ntl D4W
lhL•• .. ! ...... ,.,
AIOY COUJN9
303743 ....,...~,..,...,.....,,.... ..
L!!J.M"i"{\ The Blues Brothen
307272• GAIL DAVIES 1---.. 1 l'LLBETHERE
303727 •
IBi!!!!l
302448• hu~,.. I
305250•
~
~~
JUDY COLLINS
AuMing Fot My Ute
LJICy J, Dalton
HARO TIMES
303894 • LARRY GATLIN lcou-"J THE PILGRIM
ao.t341• AL JARRCAU ~ -~ THIS TIME
TED NUGENT
•TINtnllt ... tlCl'TWI
RITA COOLIDGE
GREATEST HITS
216189 c-.-.. 1~
l!!.!. 0.-
300111 • ~MOiie:«
ll!ICl r-.oor• -·-·-
Secondl Of lite.we ~ AOCKPtlE )
'e•iiili•Oi'l I c ....... t1'<Wlle ~°"'"-•-
~ ..
301340• HT'TE MIOLER ~
~J DIVINE MADNESS
308043 • GEORGE: JONES
~ IAmWhMIAm
GROVER
WASHINGTON JR.
WINELIGHT
PUNCHUP12
302126 • RUPERT HOLMES Imm!) Pattnen In Crime
293951 * Rickie LM Jonee CiilP'"iiiiiBlll
211271• n.o..... ........ ,.,_~, .... orn.o.-...
300912• ,__"'
l!!i!!!!l
____ _,__ -..........
211435. LEDZEPPEUN ~
307137•MUOO~ORCM.
1-J lllUllCM. ,,....._ \Q. I
301523 ~
302087 1~1
305573•
!!!J
309035 • ~
304337. I oe. I
JOURNEY
0£.Pi\RTURE
~ ....... .......... ..... f!Cfwml ..... .....
AU THAT JAZZ
JOHNNY PAYCHECK
NEW 'OAK TOWN
AMBROSIA
ONE EIGHTY
,_'If\'..,.,.. ··-----
SllOtl & CAlflllllll 'S
CIUTmllTS
JOHN CONLEE
fncs.y ...,. Blues
l!LJONJOt4N
QM.ATUT HITI
fWi(~
305235•
IDii!!l!J
L!!W
MeltaHMMKMNer
FOf The Woflllng 0111
JETHRO TULL "A ..
AIR SUPPLY
LOST IN LOVE
llllClllY OIU.n n..t'• u r .... ..-. 1e 111e
-~ --l'lllCIU ICI II IM~
POCO
Under The Gun
UMSFOR1t
THE CARS
PANORAMA
PETE TOWNSHEND EMPTY GLASS
BROADWAY MACMC -., ..... ~ .....
MICHAEl FRANKS
ONE BAD HABrT
CHICK COREA TAPST£P
GRATE.FUL DEAD
GOTO HEAVEN
266437 * THE BEST OF
396432 lE'il!: ROD STEWART
307231• YES 397232 1•1....,.ocl YESSHOWS
306217 • Earth. Wind & Fire
396218 ~9<-6"'9 FACES
c
305212• YES !....-cl DRAMA
COMMODORES 304198* Ctuwl.19Dlnletsllnd
HEROES nl FULLMOOH
30l113• ----· 3Qe763 * HIAOSHtMA ~ n.~--~_, l"iiBl ODORI
2'4894• -~:t!!e. 279430 IOZICAOGS (iii) ~ Down lwo,;n.,.. Left
274731• LOMTTALYNH ~ c:o.i .... ·.o...,
303IOO DIANAAOSS a2221 a.ry.,.,.
!wwul DIANA 1-•·l EVEN NOW
KANSAS 274491• ~~ ...
AUDIO·YISIONS (!!!)
,.. __ ·-
304642• JOE STAMPLE'
~ AFTER HOURS
271285 * CHUCK MANCMONR
(ID flUUIOOOOO
r18t1.!o!..i~AC
249113 eullT eACHAllACH"I
lu•] OMATllT KITI
CMlYSIMON ..,. ... n..r,..
257887• TH£1DTOI -. THE STATlER IROS.
307496•
(!5!)
305151• ·--1
DIAHAROSS
"ROSS" --DINN l'W QGI • ... _ .. ,...
THE LEGEND°' JESSE.JAMES
VAN MORRISON COMMON ONE
304071* LARRYGRAHAM 1-._..1 One In a M.,,, You
305268 ·--1 CRYSTAL GAYLE
THESE DAYS
303818 CAAlY SIMON w:-, COIE UPSTAIRS
307330 • LORETTA LYNN ~ LOOKIN' GOOO
308888 * CUlllAX IWH IAllD
, .... ....,, fU IMOTHHLAG
307348 * CONWAY TWITTY ~ M IT "'°"" LOVf ON ME
~28 • THE BEST OF ~ ~KENDAL.LS
30600h
~
Wll.Ul Nil.ION ITAAOUST
CHEAP TRICK
ALL SHOOK UP
CONWAY TWITTY
HEART& SOUL
307207 • WARREN ZEVON
laa..-J Stand In The Fire
306837 • 1--1
THIN LIZZY
CHINATOWN
ZZTOP
The Best Of l2 Top
THE BEST OF
OON WILLIAMS'°' •
SVP£RTRAMP
PARIS
298762 FLEETWOOD MAC 398750.!.XW••~'"llil TUSK
306613. 396614 , .. .,-
WILLIE NELSON
Wld FAMILY-LIVE
·~---·---
282558• 'iiii(A~
I LU£S IAOTHfAS
MAD! IN AMl!llUCA
Cll•l'IM. GMLI ovtCMOftCkUI -Oll'IOl .. Yl<U
256255• A CHORUS LINE ~ o,.,,,... l •oedw•r Catt
260638 . .,.. . ., .. · CHICAGO IX C-CAOO I Oltf•UST .._.,, .. .,,. ... ,.,.... .....
Al STEWART rime Passages
207324 0•'911\81 ...... .,CHI
._,.,.• GOOl"l!ll
398fil7 .._.,,,& BARRY MANILOW
GREATEST HITS
STEVIE WONDER SONGS1._T.., "'"or 1.tr1
(
....................... _________________ ~~
r------------------------1 CobllblaAecofd& r..,.Ctub, P.O. Boa 1130 I Tene HaM. lncllaM •1111
1 Ml lndoelng d"9dl °' mONy °'°" tcw 11.H (wh!Ch lf'IClode6 1C I f()t my 10 Mlechons. plus $1 es '°' Sll11>C>1119 and hano~ng) Please I Kc;ept my memt>ersh11> ilppheation unoe< lhe 1trms OU111ned Ill thrs I ~t I itgree 10 bUy eig111 more t;apes 0t rec&dl (at '* I u111 CluC> pncea) dunng tne coming lhtff years-and may uncet
I rny membefsnioanvtme after dcMnfl $0 ...... _.,,._ I __ ..,.,.., .. Md\ ... L I _,
I . I
5£"0 "'' $[LfCT•ONS H .,..,S TYPf
OF llCCOl'IOl'<G 1oe ••"•IO <"K• .,..., "93/tA
0 ~hell CartrtdgM 0 ..... ,... o r.-c...... o ~
MY MAIN MUSICAi. INTUICST 1sw-~ Oii<" (8'11,.,,, e/Wej'S,,.. '° cl>OOH lfOtn •ny Ul~YI
O hey UiMnlng 2 O TMn Hiia 7 O ci.slcal 1
O Counlry 5 (no reel tapes I 0 Juz 4 (no reel llPH)
O.lr. 0 1111.. a--~---.,,-.,,----~~---:-:-;::::----,....,.., _... -i.. ... ..... ___ _
~·~-~~~~~---------~
-c.. ____ _
DI .. MMA ~ (a.cl•> D TtS 0 llCI IOSIFll Tlt.10lf9rnot•~.,APO l /IO Ailllka N-• Mffl>ll<o ,,.._ _'°'_..Ol_,..,,.,.o,,.,
Clttadlefl~ _,oe _,,_ ~
I .. ,. I I .. ,20 .
L----"--------------~-'!" ____ .J
H
Yos he•o s a ru~ be>• that w111 11ta~ tou1 l•vorite muslC
tor hours on on<t' Jusl push lhe buttons lcw tne 10
altxims you want ano write 1n 1neir numbers on the ao-
phcal!on Then ltll 1n lhe entire aophca11on ana mail ~
togetner w11h yO\.lr cl'M'Ck 0< money order to• SI 86 as
payment 11ha1 s tc for your'"" 10 scloctoons o•u• St 85
to cover 1n1pp1nq and h11nQl1ng1 In ellchan<Je yO\.I s1,.,01y
agree to buy 8 more 1aoes Ot recoras at <t-•)·••a• Club
oroees1 on lhe llC•I throe voars 1100 yo-. "II; l;ll"Cef
membership an';'11rne alter doing so
11ow the Clul> operat•a every 10 .. r weeks 13 lime-a a
year I you II rocc111c lhc Clul> s music magAL.nc which
aescr1bes 1ne S.lec11on ol the Month for each musical
1nteres1 ofuS hundreds ol allernatM rrom every tietd of
music 1naao1t1on uo1os1• t•m~ a year you mav roee1ve
olfe<s of Soec1111 Seiect•ons usually a1 a d•SCO\.lnt oft
regular Club onces for a total of uo to 19 t>uyong oooor·
1un11oes
u you wish 10 receive the Selw.;t10f'I of the Monlh or 1ne
Special SelectlOf'I you r>eeo oo noch1119-1t ""'" l>e
shipped auto,.,a11ca11y If you orefot an aflcrna10 sclcc·
11on °' none 11 111 fill 1n the •esoonse cara aiwaya ore>
111ded ana mail 11 1>y t~ oalf' soec1t1ed 'll)u will always
have at least 10 days to make your dee•S•on If you ever
receive any Selection without hall•"Q had lit least 10 d&ya
10<1e<:~ vau may return 1t a1 our ••oense
The iaous ana records you oroor dur1nQ your me~
ber1n10 will be b111ea at regular Clul> proces wt11ch cur·
rently i re S7 9810 S9 98-olus sn1001ng lr\d handhn9
1 Mul1tplo·un11 se1s ana Ooul>lc Sclcctoons may be some-
whal h•gher) And 11 you oec•de to co1111nue as a member
ahe< completing your enrollment agreemeru you II l>e
et1g1ble for our oenerous money·sav•~ b<>nus plln
tO Day rr" Wal we II sena aotaols of tno Clubs ooer•·
1100 wtln your introductory sh1oment If you are noc sat·
1slled for any re11on wha1soover 1us1 reiur11 everything
w1th1n 10 daya for a full rufund and you will have no fur·
ther obhOlh<>n So you r15k ab$0!utely nothing l>v actrnQ
now'
(,~~~ ~~~y~ ) 297671 JOHNNY MAT l11S
lono·-1 MATHIS MAGIC
(~ ~·TMJIAHD ) ( 276818 * Mellau M•1Ct1 nhr ....,...,.,_ ...... SIHGW: .•
(r"!:=-, MA~ElN ) ( 277954 STEELY DAN ~V£AN 8!l AJA
274993 CARPENTERS . ( 2971549 * INll!Y 0#\Jll
& TIC CM>tUll-~ PASSAGE 5il& naAIQHT~
( ~91;~.~ UTOP ) 297473 FOREIGNER DEGUELLO ~ HEAD GAMES
(= flllJl.DWllOND ) 298912 HERS Al.PtRT ... _ '°""' ..... (!!!J RISE wm.•r-.
( f!!!!!1* ~~ ) BARRY MANILOW
~'""' ONE VOICE
297558 RAY CONNIFF MTKMTM
llAiiiliil I WILL SURVIVE In The ..... °',,_...,.
(=04 STYX ) CHEAP TRICK CORNERSTONE DREAM POLICE
2981570 BLONDIE 275933• rttecP~sion (iii!iiiil EAT TO THE BEAT :!IE
279281 hullilftOn· ~WL~ liiiiiil ~Hiia.at.
298512 JETHROTUU. JAMES TAYLOR ~ STOAMWATCH JT ·-
()f~ IF YOU PRH f H A rn IAL ME r.rnE RSH IP
'-.E f '1P!_ UAl O F~! H <JN P~~H ! D lfJ(, P1\r ,f
t I • It J • •
l
)
)
)
~=--~--~----------................. ...._
~, ... HEATWA~ CANDLES
~4 • JOHNNY Lil ~ LOOKIN' '°"LOW
306170 •~ ~ ·-··--"
307413 • MEL TILUS
lou•-1 SOUTHERN RAIN
106631.
~
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AOIOIMITM TOYSINTHEATTIC
CAT STEVENS GREATEST HITS
If rou .,. f uat .,. oceu&onel record or tepe bl.Ifs .. If you prefef not to obllgaa. youf'lelf to pur-
chue nine more 896ectiol 1S • ·°' If you cannot find 12 ..-ctions you want right now-here's a petfect
opportunity to "try out" the Club on a special tr.i-
membetlnlp buitl
....... In l'9 IPK6lll '1"al Menlllentllp Appke-
lon" M the rtgtt-and we'll eend you ANY 6 reconn
or tapes-All to< only 1c. plus snipping and han-
dling. In ••change. you simply agree to buy u few
• four Mlectiona (at r99ular Club pricea) dUrlng the
coming three years. ThW!tc of lt-onty four selectionl
and you have three whole yea,. in which to buy
them! And that's d there ls to kl
Al a "1.i IMl'ftber, you'I enjoy all of the benefits of
regular memberlhlp as desctibed on the following page-but without any lengthy commitment. .. you
may cal'lCel at any time after buying Ju• lour mo<e
seleellons. So it you'd preflef to enrol now undef lh•
special "get acquainted" offer-mail the special
applica1lon today, together With only S1.Cl0 (that's 1C
fo< your 6 llltroductofy selections. plus 99C to cover
shipping and handling). Read the advertisement tor
detalfa on how the Club wolb
*>ft:• ----·--e.... ..... _ .. ....,. ...... ..,,,re -----------------------, TRIAL-MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION 1
• .w._._ __________ ___J._. ~--
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TELE oMPTER
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TANYA TUCKIL NI.II '"""" COtlCOY
H011
TV WEEK. Ji,.IL" !I. 1991
GUIDE TO PAY-TV PROGRAMS
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TUESDAY, JULY 7
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THURSDAY, JULY 9
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• .. ~of •• ,, .. (ft) '89-Hwry Andrtwl, Anthony Quayle. e .. ...,,.oflllt9"tfl" (ldv) '58-VUl8renrw.Aobel1Fulllf
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FRIDAY, JULY 10
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· IATUROAY, JULY 11 8:00. "Wolldef WoMM"
8:00 e <I> D "Tiit Fow MutktlHta" (adv) '75--0tlv11 Reid e "1t1rn111"
10:00 e "llllltto" ( dr1) '89-Allx Cold, Britt Ekland, Pllricll O'Nlll.
~ Ffri Furlllo (o.niel J . Traventl) and publlc <»lender
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•tfalr In "Polltlca •• U.U.1" on NBC'a •ool81med Hiii S,,_t &u.,
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(Z) Z (Movies)
CD ON (Movies. variety, sports
9 SELECTV (Movies, variety,
sports)
HBO ( Mov•a. variety)
SHOWTIME ( Mov•s. variety)
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JUlY5
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9:00
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Dod9t1 Prt-011111 Show (If tht
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CDlt'1YourlUllMM
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'73-flod Teytor. Ame Htywood
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lund•r Cover1tt ot tht Frencll
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Hcfne" , .. , '&2-Sltvt Codirlll .... ..,..,. ""' e Tiie T• Coetll ti:ow
e11e11ee, ...... r E~
• PYoflCt UlllffrM
-2:30-............
9 Mowte: ''TIWff .. Nett ltt a
l.Ollt 0." I .. ) ·n-e.u Br\111' tMI, K.ellll Van Der Wit. a...,..: .. ....,_,, <•>-Aod
~ """"*· 'It a 'Cll ..., ..... <c:on:l
·71~a... VifltWn.
llOO e lllltM: ·111 ...,.., .., .. <en> . ......,.. ....,., °''*""' .,..., ........... : .
,......, ..._,.(OM) '31•
TillMIRlrolln. ......... , ....
(l) .. N ....... Wtl-~" ;-~~~ ....,._
11:':!*\'rn ........
TV WEEK JULY S. 1981
•:oo D SporttWorld Cove11ge of !tie
Tour de Frenc9, marathon !Mk• rec..
"" AsllOdome Thnll SllOW dtmoltllOn dert>y lrom Hooston. Tuas. and 'Sul·
Y1vaJ ol lhl Ftlltlt '
• CD 4J al SPORTS: Tiit AIMr· lclll lpoftaln111 Pllil IAlchlel Glaw
vtnturts to lhl Florida COlll IO lyiall
tor tatl>Oft; Bob Set;ten hlno gltdts
of I 10,000.loot clrl ill Maui Hawa~.
Ind ftw .. l~ptr1 '#tllll Wit., klylkl!S
will try thtlr lkilla on tht htedw1111s ol
!ht Ari/fl Avtr rn lht HllTllllyas Cl> Wofldtr Woman
• Movlt: "Wiier• LOH "" Oont" (drt) '84-Sustn Htyward e Mo•I•: "llut Water, Whitt
Dettll" '7 1-()0Ql!ltllWy
• Mom: "Tiit Luelf tr ComplH"
(Id-I) '73-Aot>trt V114ln e Wiii SttMI Wttk
Q! Mo¥t.: "Plymouttl Adventu11"
(adv) '57-~ Trecy
-4:30-
0 Olrtctiolll •• t e Wlttll119ton _. In RtYltw
9 Victory Oatdtn
5:00
CD Wiid Kllifdotn
• Tiit llolllc Wolliall
•@alKlw1 Cll ll'A.S'H
0 Cllt!Ndelphl111t
@ .... tt!ltPr ...
18 Oardtnlttt frOfll ttlt Ground Up
• Flrtno Liii• • ™' (ltd Houle ( c.c)
-5:30-
••WONewt Cl> WtkOIM BIC~ Kotter 0 Dr . .lecl& Yen lt!lpt a Foe• 18 Fell& Gultll
aBNewtforct
8 1ttr1'1 to YOUf Htaltl: t C.C)
nm•IG
i
~
81 ••1111111•1••• 111111 11111811 ........ ,.... ··1•1181181 118111811 ,-.,,
HJ. l(tP,f Hif n,: I ijlf H,~ 1,lif 'H!i, PHJ~ ;1 U:=~t II HiP'f I~ u,r;1q111 '!IU
f f Jir Ii i I rs . l f f fs ~ I ff ~[ r• r i ! f ! J I 7~e~;
1 f1 f I II _ i f ~;·t!I
I 1111 111111 1111 Clll8111
8 Pf 18 il!!lfBf! f ff8 . I lf'f8i1
D I 1' I .,. ii D ~ f 'I' i I 8 _. ... ~I i t I ..
11 rl~ i r IPt ~ r; r c !1
8 rf i ff le -If ~ i' i'8
1 I 1 r }·'
• HUI! !t(l§,1 hif!f I1 11: f l1l1
·:!g 'J
g i 72: · ~·•ij ··f li1 bur gf l 111.r
8111111 111018)1111 111111 ill••······· •f!•••• ~·;s:;; ru:u1:1:r ·1p:: nrr;Wi-J;; l1uq.11· ;I {!If~ JIJf1·1{ ff:: I 'il~ilf1k• ;Jlfl Jiff a I•. '1' if f' ''fl ... Iii J .,f !4 11' ,'.~.~;;. -,J· r ~t
I ' 1! f ~J. ~·1 :·rr·>_., 1
-9 . J
Ill 111011118 lllDIDll8ell ell 11e1eee
f JI ii8 11Jlif If f if l§f~lf ~r -iif 1:~
ilit !if duf I J. t1 I Pif rl1• .. H ."'. '· ! 1·~1 , f g !! rl1f If l i i r!r s· Jf' -~ rl I I 'I i. · I . I
1a1uo11s 11•11118 1 ••••o•seee •••••••• nn§tJ~ . irr'i"~11111li!ii1'' 1 1l~11u' ~· If~, 11 1
' ~ii If f I t f I. If
t I
I MONDAY I
JULYS
fof momlft9 nl lfttrnoon "' Unot. plnM '" OAYTlltE PIOCllAllS.
lttow. for 1ou1 eonwe11tence, are
ttw 41J'• lllO¥ltl.
~mlt( ltOYlES
11:30 • "ltttlt of !tit .......
(com) '80-Pttet Sthft. eon..
Illa <Alnnwlo&. Robert Monty
12:00 • "Tiie Nation Aff1lr"
(eta) '73-Gllncll J1cltlon, Pt-
t11 Fllldl
• "lutltby of Broadway"
( 1M) '5 I-Dons Dty, 0tnt Hel-
ton A 111111' dlc:idM 10 INkt 1
upr1M vitil to 1111 molhtr wlltl
1111r dtsutrous rnults
3:00 8 "Tiit Strewbtrrr
Blonde" (com) '41-Jamta
Cagney, Rita Hayworth, Olivia de
Hlvilllnd. JICll Ceraon
3:30 G "hrtll 11" (aeHI) '71-
Gary Loclcwooel, Scot1 Hylands
Hight laMb•ll (Regular program· •tttnd tht PrHldtntl1J pttat eon·
m1ng •Ill bt eirtd until 8PM ii the ftttnct In W1111i11Qfon Tiit Stet11
butball strikt 11 'ttdl Jn P'OQrtu ) Service deWerl IOll'll thodling news
D Tiit Joktr'I Wiid to tilt blwifdtrtd ntWtmln, wlucll
• Al Ill tllt Flfllfly pt~ hill! lo rtlrlClt Ns roots and
• Tiit a.nn, ltlll Siio• Ind oul who "' l'llly Is
• ....... It wlltl Cltl• ~ • D a Lltttt HOUH on tllt e ()) C 8 Ntn Prlllrtt (CC) (A) Pat1 ont ol two
9 Studio... Pfl1• "Sylvie" Alter Albtrf1 14·
1:00 YMt-old glw1fritnd la ttaueny H ·
SllAed by 111 ll!ldlntJled 111111, lw kt.
• 8 al Newt II tldlftd by Ille~ r.aion • "-1 Dly1 Apln of lw widowftd lather n1 IN O-
(J) Tlc TK DoU911 ~ ..,.._"'°' o1 t.h 011eor! ....... ,. •Mom: .. ~or Fortu11t"
• M"A"l'H (adv) '53 (2flrt)-ci.tl! Gt.bit. C To Ttl tllt Ttvtfl &lllflHeynrd. A~.~
• Tiit ~Mta of San Frll!Cltco lsltd p ""'* 1MCU111 glr(a IU· a Fiii Fonrerd bind"°"' ~ow. • 0.er bey (C..C) • (J) 8 Cll hMltlt A:.:t.J 11
• Aprtfldllndo • ...., Ille ........ llun't )
9 Tiit Mtc:NtH/ltllrtt Atpoft D llo'flt: cJI> "A11 .. l1 In tllt
-7:30-OutfleN" (com) '51 (211ra)-Ptul e 2 on tM Town Oouglu, Jlnll LtiQtl, K.lln WYM
8 Flgllt 81ckt Wltll Dnld Hor· A IOllQll'9UJ lllWQtf of lht loelng owftz Piltlbwgh Pire ... lllddlnly Inda him·
• Ille NI HI NII blilG lltlptd by an "Angel from
()) l'M llltglllnt Heewn."
11 Fact tM MW1c • 1111 Meeadnt • All Ill tM F...ity • Mo'flt: "Tiit 11111 of Rtclltl I llV•NING GJ lll'A'S'H Cldt" (ch) '81 (21111)-Anglt al Bemty MtMtr Dica"*I!, P'tttr FW:ll. A rniellonwy 8:00 QJ PrtMlllt ncnt.1119*1IOlht8tlgieil Congo,
• ()) a -...... • Tiit llllc:Hell/ltllfer Atpoft Inda ii dila* lo kttp Ille 11111Yt'1,.. a •• al 0 al a! Ntwa e "°" dt Llfot aptet llttf Ille commita an indla·
• 1(11119 Al : ~':'~OfllllftCM ·-=·Grtlt "'1~ Btm-• Tic TIC Dougll lltin Conducta Mltlltf' 1 Sympllony
• 1tA"11C 8:00 No. I: Four W1y1 to Say Falwell" : == ThrOllfll t11t Artl • ()) D WWlllClflclwtl (R) ~ ~~,,_~1 •• -.... ~ ,.~ Ardy, l• nl Mr Ctl1ean dlcldl 10 -~· ,_........., "'"'-" •-~•"' """"'*'' lnvtttigatt _,,.,. !ht Stct.c StrY1ce nl lolowirio 1111 perlonrwa, lltm--8:30-,.,.,.. to illUI Pl• crldriels lo ..... ~~llllapprotell
• (J) GI II UOt!TS: flfo11d1y 1C1t 'IPOtMr La Nmrnln 80,. * to tNt 1u1 °' ...,.... ~of·
------------------.---. ...... Illa f"ll dtdloll lot Ille ........
a.letu.19 .................... CL.My
UIWlll, I),.._...,. ••fa .. _, LAtu GrMI c-.....
M9) --ID lllllp 0--. ........ M , °" Wll .... .......... cm. . .....
-8:30-
• D 1111 Tiii Colnrey 111ow
(J) ....... la Kottef
•ThtO..C..,.. ·~ llOO
• (J) 0 l 'A'l 'H (R) Faltltl
............. blnlllO
-"11114077'1 b9lort Ille enMI °' • tNlltng Cetdlnel. Mlll!wllilt •• OJ,...,. lledgett ~Ind 8J
• Qft ,. ,:;: WMdld ~-t..•Jt a....~=~ .. • --......... w.J:. ....... ....,., .
........ lil......,loll!d
... ·-~ Oettylt end a..··--~ U.\ f.::,.AIC CfllMJ ...........
-t:ao-•<1>• ...... Cllll <"> tt'• ~r.. ...... ....... ... a.., .......... .....
U,80 ................. ,... • ................. ..................
i=:'.,,.. ......... .. .......... , ... )
I"',, ..... ....... = ....... ..
~.:.,=•• fl'll••••l'lli••t ... ..... ....
tO.OO •<1>•'-... l"~-............... .. ....
.. Qlllll ..... _I t•lllt I
TV WEEK. JULY 5, 1981
1llOO ee..-,.._
I ~ •• ,..., .... muh ........ . , . ......
-tt:ao-
••• .......... c.e .. c:.e
tlOO
.,.,.... ... , I !fl ·---.................
-1:10-...... : ............... ..
<*'t11,~;u ,._,.._-. .... ...,__ . ............
-t:ao-................ ...,..
, .. , • ., ........ -u.,f ...... ............. ...... ................ .................... ....
-1:11-
• llMlll .......... ,." ( . ,........a.a.. ...... . ........
-7:30-
• Wiid Wiid World of Allllltlt
• All tllt tllt fMllly
eMt1M21
8aOO e Cl) D Atclllt .,.., •• '*•
(R) Ard'ie end Mlir1y hMd ol lor •
convtntlon. llld MllY•y'a pltn lot •
•WlnQlnQ WMkend turnt Into ,., '"°''
ltlln ht Clll hllldlt •It• ht'*'*. gin ~ ldel of e OOOd tlmt la poelllvtly
crlnWI. eaecKI,. (R) (2hnl
"Onw, Lady, OriYt .. Alea '* ctlvtt
Cindi Wl1fO.mu 11).yter~ Mt·
way over to Clltornla HW!w•Y P ... ol
Obi Jon end ~ bul "" child
ACROSS
r"'*t IO tttwn to IW IOtl• 11on1t
end ~ CMlll Ill ICICldwll .... ~IO ...
et& HAW'I GOT FUN * wmtEUHAQCWD
• Hff Mn M«M Haooard, Sllm Pld!n end JoM ConlMa Qultl. tll Tiit Wol'N of CMrtlt COllll*ly e 1....._ et,.,. JoM Willlama
end "" loeloll ~ Otcllwl kki ott .. 12111 **"' w11t1 GI*' M dyflld1.
• lllttttr!Mtct Tllt1tt1: Co111ln .._(C.C)
-8:30-
•Cll COM 01y tt t Tllllt (R)
Barber• auddtnly rMlll" 11\at "1•
doelft'I hlYt tht 9'ighlMt ldet Whet
WI wtntl to dO wltll tht 1111 of her lift; '* aoMioll to "" dilemma-to ctoP out of COiiege
• Tiit Worid TOlllOttOW
8:00 e Cl) C Allct (R) Altti' twenty
Yllfl of mttriage llld llOmt bum td-
vlot. Htnry rttet1 to hit wlft Clllot'•
tllddlrl luat of '°"' Ind lttcllon by IOCUtlrG her of btlng 11'111~. Hetty
only l6ds more lutl lo Chlot'• 1111
.... ,. ... Ind 1tllt '* .... "'~
an ••u wilt! A1ct Shi 11vowt""' out
end Mel IUM him in-but only 11'1111 tfll'
DOWN
An\wtr• 11 r no ol
'"' Satu•O•y IOQ
...... • "'*' Alllltf .... .1 ......... ,...., e ,,., lo Clloott
• Tll• Worid of Clltflt eo.,.,
-10:30-. ...,,,, ...
• J11111117 •• ....,,
11IOO
eee (J)aD:=..~ Cll """lfllloftt: "TM 1111 tiol "-t" (com) ·12~1or1
Hteloft, a.a MlltiMlll. -~ • Wiid Wiid World of~ GH'1Yollr.,._
tll MettltlllKt Tlltttr• e1e.atir1••• QIMtwt/.,_,. .....
• Tiit OrttMtll
-11:30-• "°"' Fllltl • Tllt700C...
Cl)Ttltpwltt a Mom: "l•nll T-'°'11111 ol • T11n111 Alcollollc" (dra) '75-
Llndl 81alt. LI/TY Higman . e llo•I•: "llue W1t1r, Whitt
0Mtll'''71~ a Motlt: "Otl ttlt T1111tllold of
S,.C•" (tclv) ·~ MtdllOft e '°'Gott t11t COUfttty e Loe A11tt1tt Wtttt Ill "9¥ltw
QIJtckVllllllpe
•Mo•lt
-11:45-
• Movltt: "Tiit ~llford ,MM,"
"Ntlllt Of tllt Gllllt"
D G 8 llowlt: "Tiit lllluourl
...... (wtl) '7&-Jec*Hlcflollon
• Movie: "Plywlovttl Adweltturt"
(cltl) '57~ Tracy
, ....
•1m-m1P.••1=111111·11·•111!1r· 111• •••ttJJtr~11 rs• •11111•es f''"ISlf-l'J§:f 111 =•11~'i•1 Sl ·._, ·,1,"g'"r.'•P!1 1 1~,1··1111·11r.t1• ... liJ1i01 i111-11 111~='1' i!~ 11!t~11 ~!11i111•s1-1!~~1&111'1! 1~i1i~~'1= x: . • H Jh ~,111 H .. 1r• t -· 1 • i t 1• r• Jli,,J.-i i'&J U I• 11· "it d1•a .. hii a
-f!,-
111i11q1 ,uu 11,u1·1v.:11i!:t! bnu ' Hdl1r1:11'~~1111r it !1i~!iiJIUJ!fi·11u11 e 1-I .lli'l 11 l .. Jti-.st!ia:f •o •-. , .. Jill fil st I . sti!:ai •... !-c-81. =· g
·n· e·n --~-1 1 ·. n •1m ...... -"lfl .. 1111111 18111111 Ill lll,88jl((~lllJ §:1 l lfl!I ·1· "'~I -,. f ·I II ·.ri_ .. 1111-8•1 --1'1§8•8 liif if!8 rl• l'f rv i11· ~811 s IU ¥1 r~s
W.s '• .. ~ . llj J, Jll\ Re.180 ~ilf f 13: I" I -f! atll 11 1:• ~!I'll if;§>
• ..:: 1f R 1 11rlfiff1l;;1~'i 111 ~r·.·.· ,....l • 1-~;1.' _1·1~.11~ ... •1r. •__ ,~~11111 ",,~~1· T ~r r I 11 f Jr !11 .-1~ 1 :11!s . 111r. ~
• • -'. : -s . • • . i . ~~ I Sln ~ i'Jf •--: irg Ir Cit ~ .. • • --.... , c • I ~ -! . ii . !~fr~~-~:~-:·,=~-:!·-" .. f! ... :I C 1 ,_ ·-'J .·-·-· . · r . I. i~ J l tl 1.l• ~
Tritia Toyota and John hard.
LA.'S b9st MWS ttam adds anothet gMat MWSman.
John Beard's got what it takes to join the finest news team in
Southern California. He's sharp. Incisive. Dynamic. And he
has 15 years of solid experience as a rv journalist behind
him. Now he's teaming up with Tritia Toyota to give you the
best 5 P.M . news in town. ·
NowonNewsCenter4~at5
~[[@ ~[[ @t@Iruat®(] fl@j>~
p..,.11
I W•DNl!SDAY I
JUlYI For"'°"'"" llld llttf'llOOll 111tlflts,
plt1tt ... DAYTIME PROGRAMS.
a.low, for 1011r contnltnct, •rt
the ., •• """""·
DAYTIME MOVIES
t 1:30 D "Th• Colo1tu1 of Hew
Yott!" (lci·ll) '68-Jolm Bara· orrt. Otto Kruoer. Miia Powers
12:00 e "TllrH World• of Gui·
llver" (adv) '80-Kttwln Mat·
thtWI The atOfy of 1 ships
1111oeon who gets walhtd ow•·
bolld '" • storm. and Irids him-
... " 1111 llncl ol l.Jllputs, whose
people .,. oNt 111 llCMI "" •<II> "8ttt11t19 Btllllop"
(dr1) '38-B•tt• Divis. Hum·
plYIJ Bogan, A riY1lry bltWeen
two croolltd boxing manaoers
comes held to 11t1d 11 1 dlampl·
ontllip~t.
3:00 QI.I <II> "Th• Corn ta
GIHfl" Part I (dl1) '•S-Bette
Devit. John Od, Joan Looing
3:30 G "Tllt11 C•m• Bron1on"
( drl) '89-M1rtln Sllffn, Ml·
cNtl Ma, Slllf .. Nor1h From
Ult Goldtll Gate Bndgt, 1 man
lelpt 10 his dllth. IM'MQ behnd
1 HIMy-Oavldson and 1 friend
who 1truoo1t1 to make aome
111\M ol the loU
I llVDING
•200 eeCllC8Ntwt
D 8 (1)0 aJ a Newt e Kung Fu G Tic Tee Oo119h
eM'A'S'H
•GoodTIIMa a Mtkl119 It Count • 8 Tiit Etectrlc Compeny
-6:30-
D Tiit Joker' a Wild
O Birner Miiier
• All in !tit F1mllf
• '1'llt Btnnr Hiii Show
• Htwlkat with Cl1t1 Roberta
18 M'A'S'H
G Cl) Cll 0 !JI News
8 StlldloS..
7:00
eaeDHtwa
CD llfMJ Mlhr e "-!IPJ D1J1 Apln Cll Tic TIC Ooi19h
GlluMMr• O Mt!Y Grtflln Sllow
eaM'A'S'H
O To Ten Ill• Truth e The Strut• of San Ffenclaco e Over Eltr ( C-C} Ill Apredltndo 1 A1111r 8 The MtcHell/Lellrer Reporl
-7:30-
• 2 on Ult Town
Cl) Hippy Otys Again
D 8 8 Ftlllllf ~11d
eSMHIHI
• Hoflywoocl Squ ...
Cll PM Mteaiint D flee tM Mullc e All Ill tM F11111tr
Oll"A"S'H
D Birner llllltf a T1111 Old HoUM 'c-c 1 e The MtcHtllllehm Report
•AoMcltlefOt
• Nltionll a.otflClfllc S9tclll
8.-00
8 Cl) C MoYlt: "Tiie Plrtlt"
( d11) · 78 ( 3lv1 )-F11nco Nero.
Anne Arc/ltl. Ohv11 Huuey. ti n
~. CIWlll~ Lit The S1orY
ot comptlltng 11um1n p111ion1 Ml
1011n1t 1 backdrop of A11b-t111ttl
111tr1QU1
D ~HI 11t11 Ptoplt (C.C) (R)
Featur• lnctude 1 viii! to tile IMUll
Qat'1tlinQ of Llutel Ind Hefdy ... ; I
prolle Of Miry Efiubtlh Baktril, I
1t1chtl w!lo can 11111 blckw11dl: •
look 11 1111 Blue P\gl. I Dllroil rod!
bind mlde ~of polce olcerl: end I
lc>ol II the NallOl\ll H1ndic1p Ski
~-. e MoYlt: "Ker~r" (di•) '86
(2hrs)-Plvl Htwmln. Jlfttl Llloll
A pr1w1te detective is hired by I
women to Ind lier mtlWIQ IMblnd
G Cl) ell Clltrllt't An9el1 ( R)
"HI Married an Angel" The •noel•
play w'tlll 11'1 whtl'l l!llY wt ~ • con
man wtlo bel'llY• Ill 1111 found a lover
In Kns, but tilt anvel Join• the IMlllolr
1lli1nce u bait to t11p the clever
c:toolt 11 his own gerne. G lllowlt : "LtVtlHI of lllt Lo1t"
(adv) '57 (211r•)-JoM Wayne,
Sophll Loren, Roaaano Btaw Two
men end 1 gift INldl for trtlMt end
a loll City in the Sellac• OtMl1 9 SPECIAL: Htnrt Mt11clnl end
Frltfldt
•NMttlZIM • MOYie: "Hlgll Noon" ( wtt) '52
(2hra)-Glry Cooper, Grace Kelty.
The town mlftllaM mull ftce 1 killer
ht eem to prlton b• r•• before.
• Nat101111 Geo9raphlc S~clal
"EIOllll: A Place Of Ory Wat." This
documentary obMrVta wildlife ltwiv· --------------------, lno and perishing 1ccordlng to tll• II•• of nllWI Thi$ inltrplay Of lilt
and dlltll ~ recotdtd It EIOW, 1
pret«W WI the toUltlweat Afncen
cony of Nllllibll
-1:30-
.TheOdd~ Qt M1tlOMI lyMpllonJ Otcllt1· tr•'• 4lll of Mr COllCtft e El lllow cltt Loco Vlldtl
8TIMtt.,.....
9iOO
D08 Dll'rllltllroll" IC-C) (R) "DNmmond't Flil Lady" Or1'll'
rllOfld .... ldoplld toll Nrdll'• -a lftlrbel'V IUl!wd '°""tor•• by. PNftY ...... .-11.-
......... Wllll ..... •<ll•8..-." ... UM ,..., .. <•> '71 (lllPIOll 2tn)-Jtn WldlMI Vinc.nt. Mm Pdri,
Kay Lw The ttory of OM 111tt1'1
.... --Ille COft'\IPCIOll llld bMllllY ol 1tlt Ari1on1 tndlne
lflMlry
...... Qrtmll ... ... ....,.,. .....
-t:30-
••• ........... (R)'..W end.,.... .. 111* ._ ...... IO
... IO,..hlrW.._...W~ dt ................ i.· ......
................ Clllll
.................... 111
.... M. ec....
tOIGO r.•42:~~:' DeW ...... ..:::::: .............. ...., ....... _. ......
TV WEEK. JULY 6. 1981
objtct1 GI" lier rnnalicM ~
10 11111 1111 lid! ......... a s,oi.to'l1 e Btcll••d• to Btck StrHta
This~ Ilk•. ,..llOnWidl
look ., -o4 the c11sut .. ol Cilllt'
llU'oity menial *'Ill CIR end the ll·
ceptiorlal pr0Qf1m1 thet provide
aftercare for diadlargtd ment1I
petltnta.
•NocM•Hoctlt • Fllllbtt•
-10:30-......... ta Tiit Orl91f11l1: Writers In
AlMtlel
11:00
eeCllDDNen
8 (1)9(11QIJHeWI
... Tr ..
• The Hewlywtd °""' .llMllll • Tiit ..... , Hiii Sflow ta PMMIEM: Tiie To111 Cottle
SlloW
el>ldC1fftt
8 Wof1d CIWOlllclM
-11:30-
• Cll C Movie: "Tit• Spiral
Sta.lfCIM" (mys) '75-JlcQulllllt
Biutt. Chliatoplltt Plu!M«, Johll
Philip Law, 51111 Wwmek•. Mil«ld
O\moc:a, 0.yle ~
.De Jofwly Clnoll
e CllOalllflltllftt GL.et'1lllllt1Dell
• The......, .... Siio•
Qt Htft'I To Your HHlltl I C.C) e 8 CaptloMd AIC IWn
•MoYll
12:00 e Movlt: "Tripoli'' (tdv) '50-
John Plyne, Mll.r.-i O'Hlta e CJ) 8 8 The Lo,. Iott
GGIMllMll• .............. ....
-12:30-
• D ta TCllllOnOW Show COMl
toCOllt
There's an old maxim that says "don't believe every·
thing you read in the paper.'' and Blll Rafferty couldn't
agree more.
Rafferty. the roving reporter on the hit NBC series.
Real People. alrlng Wedneldays at 8PM, apenda almost
four months a year traveling and talking to people
across America. What he find.a Is often at odds with what
we've been programmed to believe.
"I think the country'• in terrific shape. I really do.'' he
says. "People are very up and positive. They're not at all
as depressed as we're often led to believe. It's very
reassuring."
Although Rafferty says life on the road can sometimes
get lonely. he rarely finds It boring. On one eight-day
trip. for example, he visited: a bikini factory In Miami
Beach: a chimpanzee that teaches karate In North Car·
ollna; a lover of vampire bets in Ohio; and a Chicago
man who keeps a pet alligator In hla apartment.
"I wake up sometimes convinced I have the best job.
in America.'' he says. ·:1 get to travel first-class all acl'Olll
the country just'° I can talk to Interesting people.
"I guea what I like most la the spontaneity. Every·
where we So it's something different. And we're always
treated real nice. People really identify with the show.
and they welcome us like we're pert of their extended
family."
Next season (Real People's third full season). the
entire R.eoJ People cast. pictured on the cover. will be
back-Bill Raffery. John Barbour. Skip Stephenson
(standing 1-r~ Byron Allen and Sarah Purcell (seated).
Rejoining the cast next season will be Fred Willard. who
was one or the original hosta on the first six episodes of
Real People when It began In April. 1979. as a limited
series. Byron Allen. who replaced Willard in Septem·
ber. 1979. is attending the University of California as a
full-time student and the frequency of his appearancea
EYES OF BLUE
MULTI-LINGUAL TOO
. Fr.nco Nero, ntematloNly known biln flm 11¥. ~ i-clV ~s !hit It WIS .. ~ bY eye thlt won him
the coveted~ dtte role il The ,_..t~. bated onHlrdd
Robbhs' best .... novel,~ IS I ttv~ specill movie~. ~Y at8PM on CBS. CosUrTrc ~ Nero Is Olvla ttmey v.N> deplr1'I her
"period imlae" ~ she lppNt\ IS Lela, the hlle-fled ~er of Bayct Al Fzy. Also starring we Arne /vdw,
I~ Fnndlcus, Owislophef' Lee, a Walach and SllMrt
Whitman.
Franco Nero's eyes, strictly n the color tradldon of Frri
SiNtra and PaU Newman, do ~ his charllderiudon of
Robbins' Baydr Al Fzy, the rec:ogrized son of a rovil Anb
flllt'rly who is, l.dnown to twnself, ldUlly a jew, IU the
actor's eyes are twdy the reason prc:dlcer Howard W.
Koch tabbed him for the leiding role In his ftltn.
"Nero gives us the c~ screen presence de-
manded by Robbins' 'Pirate.' I beieve that our audence wl
qree that he dominates the screen," said l<och.
Nero. perhaps best remembered by American au-
diences for his portray.t of Lanc~t in u~. the Latin
lover in The Lesend of V.alentm, and t.he terrorist, Issa, il
11 Hours in Munich, moves easily from one nati<>Nlity role
to another.
The son of an Italian policeman from the town of
Parma, Italy, Nero Is multHingual. speaking fluent ltabn.
English and French. He also has what he cans "a smatter-
ing of a half-dozen other lang41ges.''
In his more than 60 major films. Nero has appeared u
various nationaliti~. providing his own language ca·
pabilit.ies in many of them. He's been Swedish. Yugosla-
vian, Rus5Wl, French. German. Polish, Czechoslovakian.
Spanish, Mexican, Arabian. Dutch and. of course. Italian.
As to the question of ~her he could portray a na·
tive Amerbn. Nero offered the opinion. "It wou&d be
difficult to rid myself of aM traces of a European accent.
However, given the tme. l suppose it could be done."
will depend on hls other commitments.
Abo next aeason. Bill Rafferty will occasionally alt In '
as a studio host In addition to hla reportorial duties. But
whatever he does or where he is. thla stand-up come·
dlan. bom and bred In New York. will be having a good
time-even in Boring Oregon.
THURSDAY
JULY 9
For moml119 Ind efttmoon Ha 11119'.
plt1H '" DAYTIME ,AOQAAMS.
Below, for 1011r con•tnlt nce, .,.
the day'•'"°"'"·
DAm ME MOVIES
11:30 a "Tiie Man Wllo Could
CMttOMltl"(hof) 59-Anton
OlfrtnO, Cht1stophtr lM
12:00 e "Tiie lffford Incident"
( ct1) '85-&drlty Pother. Man.n
Btlsttn. Ricntrd w"""" e "Tiit Tlllrd 01f' (dra) ·as-Gtotoe Ptppard
3:00 8 "Tiie Corn 11 GrHn ConcJ
"Gtffft Dolpllln StrH t" Pen I
( drl) '4 7-Lant Tur1111
3:30 G "Mtell of Slltbt" (adv)
'70-Waner Pidgeon
I •V•NING I
8:00
e D • Cll (!JI @ Htwe e K11119fll
•CDoaeHt•• G Tic Tee Ooutll
•M'A'S'H e Good Tlmff
QI lt'I htrybodft lutll'IHI e 8 Tiie tlecttlc ComptnJ
-&:30-• Tiie ~.,., WNd
0 lerntJ lllllltr
• All Ill tM Femlly e Tiie lleflfty Hiit Sllow e Mtnbelt Wl1tl Clttt llobtrtt
otll'A'S'H
e CDCllC'9 ... •• &Studloht
7:00 •••a,.... CD llttMJ lllllltf
• tteppy 0.11 Attln
CJ) Tic Tac Doutll . .....,.
• O lillff Gfltlln lllow
•811'A'l 'H
OToT .. ttllfruth
• Tiit ltrHlt of 8tn fltl'ICltcO • °"' .:=:-c)
• Alfi • """ e Ttit MtcNtll/Ltllttt ltlpon
-7:80-
• J Oii ttll TOWll i:'l=:c ........
eErtOllU
(l)Ptl ....... .,.. ....
.Allallt'-lly ......... • t':. ... I ,. .. , ... ...,.
Tiit ........ ,L*" ~ ....... ::-.......
Van Jolwlton Oletrs revolt llQIJl!St a
capt1111 they consider is mtntauy unfit
8 CD 0 QI Mork & Mindy ( R)
"Motk and !ht Famdy Rllnon" When
Mindy 1111 one of Motk '1 gourmet de-
llght1 Ille tumt 11110 I wacily Orh11
lltrstll, Mr1d1ng 1\81 l1m1ly reunt0n
into I 1oll1dung tazy and ltNttng pom·
pus old Undt 01vtto 1 t>awt ev•
1WIG"' won't forget
CJ) Tiie Btlttr1 wltll Jerry Bltllop
G lllo•lt : "0Htlny of 1 Spy"
(ch ) 69 ( 2111• )-Harry Andrew&
AntllOnJ Quayle, Petrick MagM A
Bt1lt1ant Rusa11n Spy 1nd 1 Britisll
double lgtnt d!seovtt ttla1 OU1 of "" murky WOlld of 1nt11gue, love can
bloom
• Pflt MtOHlnt
• Mo•lt: (JI) "Return of th•
S.ven" ( l4N) · 56 ( 2ln) -YUi Bren-'* · Robtf1 Fuller The 'M1gnlhc:en1 S.Ven' IMm 1"" egaln to rtta1e one of
tht1' former members who ii !ht vic-
tim of • kldnlpptng
• T.H.R.C .. PrtHnl1: "The Great
Amtnctn Wild Waat• S/IOw" This pro·
gr1m lt1turn !ht Twelfth Niglit Rep-
ertory Comptny and toouMS on ttlt
con1t1v1tion ol n1turtt tntrgy
IOUfett The company olers 1 Vludt-
vllt.-type variety s/10'# on !ht Iheme of
'""' and gll'blgt 8 Tiit Magic of OH Ptlntln9
-8:30-
• CD a a 1oeom Md1 .. <R> "lollll• Thy Nttghbor" Kip and
Ht!vy's lritndttllp tttter1 on Ille~
wlltll KiP llllis1& ttllt Sonny hve Wlltl ''*'"titer'* roommate, Atny.111 a ti ot anger. ttvowa '* Oii! of t!lt •Piil·
mtrll they Wit
CJ) Utln "otll
• Tiie Od4 Couple • Sllttk PftYltWI .C ... dtHu~ 8 Jllllt Clllld I lllJ
e:oo e CJ) D Mt01W11t, ,,1. (R) Five
h1111 llChool glna, tlltif milling IMC:tltt
end I prictltte painting C1UM Cht1ll·
'"" llolid1y complicttlOl'ls tor Mlgnum .
• C1a QI Movie: "Tiit Advtn· hHtt Of HucltltbtftJ Flftll" (adv)
( 2hr1)-l<"1 ld!I, Forrnl Tucker. LAr·
ry Storeh, Stock Ptttrt. A tl-Q'Mtlon
OI Miit! Twlin' I Claulc toeounl ol t!le
ttcaptdtt ol MtMOUtl letm bOy Hu<* Fm end tilt two COllOrta, Tom Sawytr
Ind I RMwly ellvt l\lllltd Jim, 11
.,., ~jfl down "" MlNluippj Rlvtr
on • llOmlmldt rtft. e CJ>GQla.nityMllltr(C.CJ
(A) "Movie I" Ktn1e 11111 btefl u-
llOr*' 10 wm.. produce Ind clrect "' 14111 .. for ... Ill It\ oldll lnwd-
getlon, IMll hit grind p11r1t 10 cr..it
In '91c Ptoductlon dtiV9 Bltnty
;'l..,W. ..
e1nn•t111 ...... ,,.....
-t:30-
•(J)lll8THI (C.() (A)
"Thy Iott' Wlft" LtcMM Louil
"" tllt Meow llOllOf °' btll'll .. ltcttd bJ Ille tlllClloYtr' • tt\'ttlQI' lltlllftt •lft to be '* CltMMtfnt
lovw. 1111111 COllttdlo pMc "' tllt IM IW wtltll 1111 llota lhow1 up -=· .......... Mll9
10.00 C,'t:~ ::tJ:t
hotic Earl Trent, finds h1mlllf in the
position ol at1y1ng tilt whOI• night
with Earl'& ptUIO!lltt wife. Judy, 11
they Mitch for E1rt. and Rlchatd bt-
comta !ht tall! of the nttQhborhood
when lie '"'"'' brtltn PUMI .. Abby in lront of Llur1 ........
•CDoa20120
• US CIM'Olllclt "Abtctm lt'ld 111t
Ph1l1delpfl11 Story" Jun lthrer r•
turns lor 1 MCOnd ... ton ol ,.,.. r•
ports wtllCh ofer I doeHp look I I
national laauM and tttnelt This •11
documt11t1ry reporls on Phllt·
dalph1a · 1 political rnacllint 1nd rta
role in lllt Abec:am ICtl'ldlJ
• Hoefle I Noelle 8 Ntweclleck
-10:30-···"'"' a Fot1t Guitar
• Alltttlcan '"•pectlve: An· otMrVltw
8 Vlklng1I
11:00
8DCDOQl ... w1 a SIM Trek
8 CJ) (!JI 0 18 Htwe
G Tiit UndtrttOllnd Connection
e11a11n11
• Tiit Benny Hin Sllow
QI Sntlill Pr••·· • Olclea .. tt 8 Tiie Tom Cottlt Show
-11:30-
• CJ) (!JI J1ffer1on1 Hee ... ,
DD a JoMny Cert0n
8 CD 0 a Nltllth e lAt'I Mah I Deel
• Tiie Stanley llegtl 11\ow
QI""'"'' e 8 CaptloMd AIC Newt
e111o¥1t
1l:OO e Mowll: "Tiie Cell of t11t Wiid"
(tcN) '78-JohnBICk e CJ) 0 8 Cllalllt'a Angtlt
• GullMtok•
• MIMloll ""'° .. "" e11r1na
-12:30-
D D a TOlllOttO'# lllow Cotti toCoaet
TV WEEK. JULYS. 196l
FRIDAY
JULY 10 ror morning Incl lfttrn00n lhtl119t,
plt1" "' DAYTIME 'ltOCRAlllS.
8tlow, for 7our con"nltnct , "'
lllt day'•"'"*·
DAYTlll£ llOYIH
11:30 G To .. Allftounctd.
12:00. "Oon'l lltlM tM lridgt,
Lower lllt llffr" (com) '68-
.s.rry l tw11. Terry Thomla An
Amer1e1n wltll irnpoulblt get·
~ ldltl!ltl tnda up wllll
hit llntit/l fl1tt lttY'lllQ llim e <II> "And Along Ctmt
JenH" (adv) 'C5-Gtry
Cooper. lor1tt1 Young A lanky
COWJ)Oil• 11 rnilltken for an OU1·
law and lulttd by a pow
3:00 8 <II> "GrHn Oolphln
SlrHt" Concl. (1h) 'C7-ltt'll
Tur1111, V1t1 Helin, Donni Reed,
Frtnlt t.bgan A hry glr1 and I
gentle llater faff In love with !ht
11mt man Tllrouglt 1 rn11t1kt. ht
'"'""' tllt wiong one. 3:30 G To Bt At\t\Ollt\Ctd,
8:00
8 CllCDIBHtwa
aeeCDOCllHtwt e K11ntfll G Tic Tac Oout11 eM'A'S'H
• Good TllllM ta It'• E•"YbodY'• lutlMM e 8 Tiie fltctrtc COflll*IJ
-&:30-
• Tiie Joktt'• Wiid
oa.nitrllllltf • All lit 1111 ,_,..,
• Tiit ltMy Hiil Stiow e MtWlbttt wltll Clttt 11oMttt Qlll'A'l 'H
e CDCll QQJHtwe <udlolH
7IOO •••D ... •• CD 11t11tr 11111tt • ...,,.,.,.A ..
Cll TIC tlic Oo11t11 :=-r...111o.
••WA'l 'H D Tt Ttll lllt 1'nllll • Tiit ........ Of IM FnllcltCO
• ............. Ill .......
·i::"~~) e tAINt
• ....... IL*"~
-7:30-•••lltfMM iEf.~C .,.....
(1) .. ...... .,... ... .....
• Al ..... ...., ......... ·==-I= ...... "'!"""'"' ""°" ........ .._ ,,.....;;;....._.
llOO
e <1>0TM ""'""" M (~) A '°""' M ~ __, Pl*
Foti"' ~"Y 5.,.,.,n,y (/) with gang m,mfHn
On Saturday at 9PM, KITV (Channel 11) will air lnoncsegment.St,tttsof Ang,r.S"'"sofHo,,,takesa
Strttll of Ang'r. 5t,,,ts of HofH-an in-depth look at the look at the hiahly succcss(ul Philadelphia Plan-a plan
continuina problem of Los Angeles' inner-city street gangs devised by the city's officials to deal with their aang war-
and the problems inherent with those gangs. fare problem. In less than five years, the Philadelphia Plan
The documentary discUllC$ the problem of gana war-dramatically reduced the violence and deaths in that city
fare, violence, control. socio-economic conditions and pos-through a cohesive and inter-relating work force involving
llble M>lutiona to those problems, specifically in the East communit y leaders. civic and business pro(cuionala and
Loe Anaelca area. Interviews arc conducted with both cur-gang members-all Joining together to resolve their dif-
rcnt and former gang members and their families, and the fcrcnccs. Immediately following the one-hour documcn-
police who patrol the neighborhoods and work with the tary, KlTV will conduct a half-hour live "call-in" follow-
tension on a day-to-day batis. Professional members of the up program an open dialog involvi ni callers and a panel
community working with the problem, i.e., church officials of LOi Angeles business and civic leaders.
a nd social workers, also share their thoughl.S throughout Written and produced by Father Terry Sweeney, 5t'e'ts
the program. of Anger. Struts of H of)' is a first-run Paulist Production.
With the warm summer months
upon us ... there coi1/d11't be
a more perfect selling for your
next party or t•acat10 11 tlia11
tire waters of Newport Harbor
or beyond, ul>ourd the yuclit
Chi11a Si>a.
-" ___.
• Harbor cruisP, 25 passengers
• Ov"""Klit tirc1m111101/atio11s {or 8
• Wt>e/.../11 wtes m•mlaflll'
• F11/ly eq1ii111wtl galley
• Ci>o/... twailalilt• 1111011 re11uest
• Lict!nsed ~/...1ppl'1 with crew
a11m/11/i/c•
This summer's fo ndest memories cn11/d heR"' w1tl1 a telel'lio11e
call for fL1rther i11fon11atin11.
(714) 645-8945 o r (714) 552-4135
P ... 11
SAMOAY (c.tiMM)
Cl) ... ~ Dolllf....,
• Ult Deya of ... = ............. a Tiit "°"'°'d Fli.. ........ ~
.LllCMUIW9
8 To It AllllMllCM
-2:30-
(J) lllcwlt: "Tiit Idol" (ch ) "66-
Jennit• Jones. ~ Pa,.. e Tiii! About Plctut"
C .lowMy to AclYtfltvrt
9 MlikMe It COIMI ·Ollt~lofl9 8 To It ANMMctd
1:00 e Att\Cllllwt USA • , .. 11, "'• ,.,,,,.,: (U)
"TM Uttle ""celt ," "Salute to
~·· Cl) llolMfttl Ill T1lllt e llo•lt : "Tiit Certtak•rt"
(lh) '83-Ny 8ttgen
0 llo.ie: "ClllMlll" (wta) "70-
Jolln W.yne. FOITtlt Tucktr e 11ov1t: "THX·1tH " (dra)-
RablrtDwal.
OHltlP• ... e 11owte: -"'*11\a" (com) '64~Bogart
G fHhirtltt "Tht 1980 Kemper Open"
• Old frietlcle, .... fflendt 9 Joney to Advlftlutt
-3:30-
e 1181 COORS lnt'I * llcydt CIMelc/Todly
Cl$ lpofta Slturdayl
5:00 II A111erlc1n Adunture "H1w11i
AO\'enlln ~··
Dfrff-4·All e Tiit Bionic Wolntll
• CJ) al SPOllTS: Tiit Wldt
Wofld of Soottt
D Movie: <JI) "Blt11n" (c!la)
. 43-Aober1 T1y1o1 Gtofve ~
O Htn
• MOYlt: "Dttlll With" (dra)
. 7 4-cllatlts SrOlllOll
@ ln'rtnetw.lk e Movie: "Llft;uerd" (dr•)-
Sam Ellcoe. ANre Ald'ttl at Vic lf1dt11't Ttnnlt Tlpt for
ttlt Fvtutt (cc ) e All-Ster Socctf
-5:30-
• Lnl of lflt Wild "'Tht Hllnttd .. ......
0 SPORTS: Tiit Wldt World of
Soottt
9 Slim Cultlnt e Etta SMtnl tn Btltl>ol
8 Jufll Child 6 lilof t COlllPlllJ
1:00
••@Newt e llovlt: "Woftder WoMlll" a Vlkln9tl ( C-C J
I
• 011ct Upon• Cl,.tlc (C-C)
"The Tllrsmell "" e ly AA«• Olit 1 8 Tiit LlwMMttt
-6:30-
••Cll atHtwt (J)Blmtyllltr
• ...., Tyltf Moot•
c Tiit OollC°" "'°" 9 Socctf, Ill 0tr111111y
• TOlllOrrOW'I , ....... e Tllllolou
8 Vic lftdtn't TtMlt fOf !flt Fu·
tuft (CC)
e SPECIAL: World Vl1lo11 Ttlt·
Uloft fOuf (!!Na) Oic:tl VIII Palttn.
Maurttn Mlc:GoYtm, O.ant Ca"ol,
Cato! Uwrtnet ll'd W'illilm Sllltntr
hoell IHt lltllllOfl
9 Cooklll Catllll
• HtrHtt of Sllllllt Thlt docu·
"*'IMY It "" ltory ol Amerlcl'. ml·
gretory wort•• who ltarvnt !tit
nellcwl'• food. Their tAng rd wcnlng
condlllont .. aUll'intcl
• lou« ..... "' °""""' -8:30-
aJIMlllPr ....
9&00
•a a 1.1 111d '"' "" <R> "S TU N. T" 8J rttlkl I* llt 10 lftcl
~ wtlo ii aebottQlllO • """ al ...... ·~lllrnillO·~""" e CJl08LefeloM (C-C) A
dol••llll'tne moe. .. to bnilll llf) •
romtnet btt#ttn htf ton and I
OOt9'0UI girl; ll'ld • '*"""' WOllllll
Andi !tit ""' c:rowdld Wlllrl .. Mt ol t. .... )Din'* .,... ..... e lnCW.: ltrfftt .t Allft', ............
,.~------------........
1 eW.OOO'tetaOMM
• ,...., ._,
•• wa z-•
... r... .... .,
.......... llCM
Oft wOM• dlldftft,
TV WEEK. JULY 5, 1M i ....... e CJl 0 8 F111t.ar ltleftd
( C-C ) ( R) A wflMt of acl¥tnlln ncw-
tla finds INqltCttd delioar U thl
kVM out !hf lllllUy of I dWac:tar ol '* own creation: and a klrlll tAl*1
.... "" Ullirnltt a.-.. e lllo'tlt: "lttlttto" ( dfa) ·11
(21v1)-Alla Cold, Britt Ekland
e AFRICA'S mPtMG
• C.ol Lnrtftet lloetl
tuett -.111 "'°""' hour ~ Alrica cftell
e WOrW Yleloft Ttltllloft Four
9Sot1Mo•• • lltylt9fy1 Mtec.I ( u l ecoMldo
• Auatlll Cltr UMlta
-10:30-. ...... 9s,oleeo'l1 eA11Kaou.
11i00
••CJl•Mtwt e ClloaeMtwe
• Tiit ic..r !ftfttt V1'lo.,. e lloYlt: "0..111 With" (dra)
·1·~ Bronaon
eWlwMVW.T...._Fw
@llf'My ... a ,,_.. lllclltMt'• Wof1d •"-,.... 8 I0111ata11
-11:15-CD lloflt: "Ill...,_., W.," (ch}
'86-Jolln Wtylla .
-:-11:30-. ....... : ........ , .........
''LMIM Glf Crlllt'' •a a....., t1111t Ll'ft
...... : "" c... ""' o.t• S,.." (ec>t) '63-Bnn "*'·
Cl) liloftll ''TM,."" of,._,.
(ch) '72-.... Mllhu. 0 lloYlt: "Tiit W1ld ~II"
(Wll) 'et-WllelllHddln.
0 llloWt:''WIW' (com) '17-
~ Tiiey, KINN ~·
• ..... ''OllllM "'-""'
-11:45-...... :.,,... ....... (ch)
'71-Dytll c-on. ~ 0.....
1la00 '°'"=-T1le ,., ...,....,
• Diie !we .... °""
• FOMOTTBIW. ,., ........... ........... ~
DM1111 ._ C110M hllrt ol t•c,. ... ol
..... ~·pa
• • •...,.., Vlllf P.U . (1') ~ht Cllowt M ~ Ytlley"
......... ...... IWly nett 11\t
tliMOdnoGI Ille petk lo Nkt wa~ for
I..-ioc. ae.le dleilw herteilt IO
....... ~._ ... lnpro-
... tllCI Clll Olll a TV ,... crew.
• llMtt: "0. ...... t:TM Lldy llllM" ~·11 (2111•)-Buft ~ Al*ton OtnAu· ,..awctlM lot.'*' of lady kllttt
• (]) 9 e t.MOll (A) "Bio Mlf1'' n.Ptl'l'IOf wlp llnoft
IOdo ..... WOl\~-·atitutt taltllf 10 • mlacNtvoua 10.
rtat<old ~·· "*' arreettd IOt ~ llollO will l(atle.
• llo•lt: "Tiie AM•111l1t1t"
(OOll!l '97 (2hta)-Oetn Mt11ln, S....8'row.Jtniet!Mt. ADerltMltt
Hl*ll la Miii IO diloowr IN wW•
abollll of Ill ••ptrlmtnlll ttyifto
1auctr wlllctl waa broUOht down
~elllMexloo ardtoketptllt
..._. ltom ltllinO • "*"Y '*'°' ........... e 11owla1 "lAw llld Dleotder"
tcom> '74 (211ta)-Carroll O'Con·
nor. £tnall Botonlw Tiit 110tY of two "*' • .,. .,.red •1 IM Ct"'* In
their New YOltl ~and di
Cidt 10 Join 111 lUAlltty pollct IOfct a Hlddefl '*": Wlltf• HlatOfY u. .. e Loe ~ W.-In ltevltw
8WlllltrMIWetll
-8:30-
• ~ ltnlotd (A) "To Kttp •
Thltl Afttl Frid turna a jilvtnllt
~Into tllt poloct, • IUdot
tMqll tllt youtt1 10 Ilia cart
• CJ) 0 a''"' a lit Girl Now
(A) "Wlttl 9tci y. You Gtt EOQloll"
Btciy'a l)lritl In • ClwltM ru 111nnt
ii Ille MljtCt ol • rteO\#ll"'IJ of Ille
Joylul evtnt when Diana tills In ht!
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9111 10 Ille IOC> by tt.enallll\l Ills wife
end ftltlldt, only to lose to !ht sy11-
dlo1le
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Q! Mo•lt: "On A Cl11r Oay You
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1:00
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8 Movie: "Gtnglll• Kllall" (dial
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t Ion" ( wts) • 72-Etntlt Borgnone ®I Movie: "BtnHth lllt Pltntt ot
the Apll" (1C1·i ) '70-James Fran·
ciacus. Kun Hll'ltt1 m Movie: "Wlltn World• Collldt"
( ICl·I ) . 51-Batbera Ruth
• F11I Forw11d
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• f.TIOOll • OutdoOl lift e Tiit o.itlmH Art Co111ln9
2:00 e Movie: "The Strine• Po11tt•
1lon of Mra. Ollvtr"·(dra) '77 -
Karen BltGtt, George Hamiton
CD Rote on "°""'' a Coon Wttltrn Outdoor1111an 8 Glltt9a11'1 l1land
Pege11
TV WEEK, JULY 5, 1111
atEantic music stereo
video
OPEN SUP.WAY~ At-40 EVE~ING ':>
S~ech~-Senict--Satistoctiorl--sin c t' 196 I •
ATLANTIC'S 20th ANNUAL
INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE
ILICTRONICS UIT Sl.E
YMrM at·l040
Ralvsl)watts '435 ,. a...i (D) "" "."" ... " .. &!
Y .. at-840
lahwfiOwatts '326 =: .................. se
Raivs40watts '260 ~~· ......•......... S395
.... 50watts '159 ·=-=~~,. ................ S-15
.... .,watts
~~so······ ............ s
..... watts , u-:gr (D) •••..•••.•.• 149 IL watts tr ch (Tl) .......... $450
kT-' 5 _,. T• (JG .................. $299
... r.A-2010 . "'
ilp UD Witts '489 ~~~~-· .....•.........• ..., •. ..,
1111' ... (JC) .................. OlO ...,
SPIAKllS UIT Sl.E MCH
AL-19 'I 19 8 Inell 2-way (0) " .. " " " .. " .. "Sl 70
JI. l-40 '173 10 Inell 2-way (0) ................ S250
JI. l·llO '279 10 Inell 3-way (0) ................ $4J)
JI. l·ll2 '330 12 Inell 3way (D) ....... ······ ... $t95
JI. l·2'l0 '589 Fbr u.q tower a>) .......... sum
l'lf coou '180 ~~(N) .................. S250
'I 16 8 lncll 2• (0) .................. $168
UIT SALE
IUl 1257.50
-the automatic .. blfancnidge a>) .......... fl69 '153
M 1264-55 =:•nbett Mlmltic with
01Dbl m (D) .............. Ol9 alllatl 101
belt tM '79 ........ snl 00 .............. $200
..... 11).103
• " .. lne blttG'iYt lll•ttanunn 00 .............. ~
.
ONLY A PARTIAL LISTING OF
OUR MANY FINE VALUES.
STOP BY THI; STOREllll
IOI MclAUMS IMW
At Beach Blvd. & Whittler
La Habra -122.uu
AMC-JEEP
COSTA...s.A
AMC__.-aeeAULT
252~ HarbOr Blvd.
Costa Mesa -54t .. 02l
CADILLAC
MAllttS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -540.tl 00
C HRY SLER -Pl Y.
ATLAS
CHIYSLB-PL YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -546-1934
DATSUN
MIWPOIT DATSUN
888 Dove Street
Newport Beach -133-1 300
OLDSMO~ILE
UMIVllSITT OLDSMOllLE
2850 Harbor B lvd.
Costa Mesa -540.9640
LINCOLN-MERCURY
.IC>t*tSOM It SOM
UMCOLM-MllCUIY
2626 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -540.5630
I
CllVIH MOTOIS
208 W. 1st St.
Santa Ana -IJS.3171
CHEVROLET
COMMILL CHIVIOUT
2800 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -546·1200
GMC
UMIYHSITl OLDSMOllU
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -540.9640
PEUGEOT
IEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
Newport Beach -752-0900
PORSCHE-AUDI
CHICK IVERSOM, IMC.
445 E. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach -671-0900
llLL VAN
PORSCHE.AUDI
13631 Harbor Blvd.
Garden Grove
636-2333
SAAB
IEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
Newport Beach -752-0900
DAILY PILOT
TV WllK. JULY 8. !NI
IOYCAIVBIMW
1 540 Jamboree Road
Newport BeachL 640.6444
SADDLHACIC IMW
28402 Marguerite Parkway
M ission Viejo
tll-2040 -495.4949
MAZDA
MIRACLE MAZDA
2150 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -645-5700
TOYOTA
EARLE IKE TOYOTA
1966 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -646-tlOJ
VOLKSWAGEN
JIM MARINO
VOLICSWAGEH
18711 Beach Blvd ..
Hunt. Beach -842-2000
MAllC HOWARD
YOLICSWAC.IH
13731 Harbor Blvd.
Garden Grove
534-4100
VOLVO
EARLE llCI YOLVO
1966 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa -646-003
I ~DRIZED SALES/SERVICE/BATISFACTID~ I
P99911