HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-08-22 - Orange Coast PilotDUIGI CUii YOUR HDMITDWI UllY PAPll ·
S UNDAY AUGUS T ;n, 1981 on ANGE COUN T y . C ALIFOR NIA so CE NT ~
Parents ·fight bills for juveniles doing • t1me
By DAVID KUTZMANN Of the OMty ll'ttol llaff
' For decades, California parents have been
routinely billed by counties for the cost of
keeping their chUdren -as wards of the court
-incarcerated at Juvenile Hall.
If suc h a s tay in county custod y w as
prolonged, the bill sent t.o parents could have run
into t housands of d ollars,
although officials said a lesser
amount was frequently paid
if family fln.ances proved t.o
be stretched too thm.
In the case of one Orange
County famHy, however, not
one penny has yet been paid.
Nor will it be, t he family says.
This refusal t.o reimburse the
local juvenile justice system
has escalated into a fight that KUTZM
justices of the California Supreme Court may
receive soon.
At issue is the constitution~lity of stale
Welfare and Institutions Code Secuon 903, which
requires that the parents, spouse-or guardian of a
minor be held liable for the costs of keeping that
youth in any <.'Ounty institution, be it Juvenile
Hall or a home for battered and neglec ted
children.
WATER TOT? -Not every infant put into the
pool durit)g the summer's swimming cl889eS
turned out to be a water baby. The look on the
face of 5-month-old Lesley, for instance, tella
her mom, Carole Schmutz, that perhaps she
WORLD
SUNDAY SPECIAL
T h ose who oppose the law say It is
diacriminatory against juveniles, mainly because
jailed adults are not required to pay for their
care.
"I don't feel (the law) is oorrect. I don't fee)
It i.s just," said Mrs. Xenia Williams, a Los
Alamitos mother of three whose teen-age son's
31-day stay et Juvenile Hall in 1980 resulted in a
$1,497 bill being sent t.o the family.
Rather than pay, Xenia and husband Paul,
who admit in court documents that they are
fin.ancially able to reimburse the county, asked
Orange County Superior Court Judge Byron
McMillan t.o declare Section 903 unconstitutional.
Judge McM1llan , however , refused and
ordered the pare nts to pay the county. The
Williams family, adamant in the belief that the
money was being "extorted" from them, went
next t.o the state's 4th District Court of Appeal,
which upheld McMillan's decision in a ruling
handed down last January.
That brought the case to where it is today -
in the hands of the California Supreme Court,
which Is s tudying two similar challenges from
cases in northern and southern California.
.,_, ..... ,._..Ill' ,...._. O'OoftMll
isn't thrilled about the class. The program in
which the mother and daughter participated
was sponsored by Saddleback College
Community Services. h dre w 1,200
participanta, mainly from IOUth county.
STATE
The question ln each l.s basically the same -
is It conatftutional for counllea t.o charie families
for care of children housed in county lacllilies?
much in the way parents of minors ore now
billed.
The laws which permit local governments t.o
do this date back more than 60 years. They have
undergone revisions through the years, Axelrod
said in an mt.erview. but the thrust has remained
the same.
M rs. Williams and h e r husband are
convinced that it is not. "We feel very strongly
about this," Mrs. Wl.l.liama saJd of her family's
decision to pursue the matter to the state's
highest court. The family la being represented by
Santa Ana attorney Ronald Talmo, who works
with the American Civil Liberties Union.
They penrut counlles t.o fax a per-diem rate
for care of individual minors which corresponds
to the actual costs of providing such care.
In Orange County, the Board of S uperv1SOrs
has established the rate at $4 5 per day for
children kept at UlSlltutions such as Juvenile HaU,
Albert Sitt.on Home for abused and neglected
children and Joplin Boys Ranch
Orange C o unty 's le gal advisers, in
documents on file with the Supreme Court, say
that previous legal challenges against t he
reimbursement repeat.ed.ly have been rebuffed
by the courts.
The argument, they said, that prisoners who
are minors should be treated the same as adult
prisoners I.a simply not upheld by current laws.
"This approach is not the law and never has
been," Deputy County Counsel Gene Axelrod
said.
Axelrod and other county officials said the
charge is negotiable, however, so farrulies which
do not have the ability t.o pay the full amount can
settle for a lesser per-diem bill.
Ironically, Axelrod said, legislators in
Sacramento are considering proposals which
would indeed make the treatment of child and
adult prisoners the same, but not in the way
many adults would be happy about.
Referring t.o the Wlliams case, officials said
the family challenged the charges from the
outset, not bothering with the process of settling
on a lower fee.
Mrs. Wilhams admits this, and explains
why. "If they had asked for a reasonable fee (in
the first place),'' she said , a court fight would
never have ensued. ' These proposals would impose financial
responsibility on grownups who are incarcerated,
"We refuse t.o pay it because we didn't get
(See PARENTS, Page A3)
PLO guerrillas ship out
Pullout smooth as 400 fighters h ead for Arab nations
BEIRUT. Lt:banon (AP)
·with th<.>1r l'Omrades firing
machine-gun volleys of Vll'tory
and Israel proclaiming th<.> PLO's
"crushing deft.'at, .. the firs t
Palet0t1n1an guc-r nllas evacuau'<i
L ebanon by sh ip Saturday.
begi nnin g a two -week
withdrawal that will Sl'altt•r
t h em throughout thl' Arab
world .
The pullout wc·nt smoothly as
about 400 un1forml•d guerrillas
carrying AK-47 assoull rifles left
Beirut aboard l hl• Cypriot car·
ferry Sol Georg1ous at 2 p.m. (5
a.m. PDT)
Frem·h paratroopers had come
ashore mne hours earher as the
vanguard of a p<>al't.'kt>t.•p1ng lort·1·
tha1 will latrr indudt· U S
Mann<.'!> and Italian -;old1ers
Sumt.• gut:'rrillas. wParang
garlands of wh1w flowt·rs around
thC'ir net'ks and in thf'1r hair.
<;<.•ttled into stnpt.'<i loung<.> cha11·s
on the canvas-toppt.·d upper d1'<:k
of thl' whill'. twin-stackro f<·rry
Othl·rs w<ived w1stfullv il!>. ~1rul. thl'1r home for I~ Vl'ar!>..
got smallt·r and smalll·r ·
Tht' 1:vat·UC'l'S, lr<Jlll•d by .1
~~n·nch gunboat tor Sl't'Urity.
arrived in the southeast Cypriot
port of Larnaca early today.
Cypri ot governmt•nt
;;pokt.-sman R1tsa Achilles S<Jld tht•
gut'rnllas would not bt· allowl-d
LO disembark ~fore I a m !!l
I' n1 Pl>TI for '><>t'UrJl\ rt_•asoru.
Onu· t1-.hun•, .Jordanian a nd
l1Jq1 Jt•tl11wr-. v.Jll 4u1l·kly fl~
tltt•m lo Amni:in .Jordan. :ind
ffaghdad . lr.J4 v. hill-anotl'r
,11wth1•r l .Otlll gu1·1 nll.1!>. bound
for Tun1s1a p1t·pu11· fur •t•o
l'\'LICU<tlton from Wl'SI &•irut in
1 hl· nl'X: 14 houn.
L1·1J,1nl·s1· Pr1nH· M 1n1ster
Sh..i t1k W.111..111 ..;;1111 :iYi' f1ghten
from l ht· B<.idt 811g<.1dl' of tht
Pal1·sl1n1• L1bt•1;;11on Armv
Orlj!Jrlall\ b,lst•J Ill J on.Ian. anr
tht· lra4I bal'kNI A rah Liberal 1or
Fr1111l dt•p.irl<'d tn tht· first wavt>
Thi· gu1•rnll;.is <1rn\'ed in thl' por1
111 ;1 U trut·k t·onvoy. flashin~
"V " for victory sign anc
CSee PLO, Page A2>
Congress still has long way
to meet deficit reduction plan
WAS HINGTON CAP)
Despite the Republican cheers
accompanying passage of $98.3
billion in tax h ikes and $30
billion m spending cuts. the bills
together provide st·arcely one-
third of an overall GOP plan to
reduce deficits bv $380 billion
through 1985. ·
And as difficult as it was for
President Reagan a nd his a lhes
t.o deli ver the initial. $128 b1lhon
down payment last week. much
of the remaining savings could be
even tougher to produce ,
depending on economic trends
th a t are n o t s u sceptible to
political ann-twtsung and Oval
Office persuasion
But even 1f Reagan and his
Republican friends m Congress
deliver everything they promise.
there are critics who say de ficits
will r emain Car above the $60
billion in the off1c1al GOP
forecast for 1985.
Ahce Rivlin, director of the
Congressional Budget Office. told
the Senate Budget Committee
this summer. for eJqtmple. that
instead of $60 b1lhon. the 1985
deficit could exceed $140 billion.
The pri n cip al differe nce
between the official Republican
estimate and Ms. RivUn's more
pessimistic one is a dispute over
how the economy wiU perform.
In general. the CBO says
mteresl raLeS and unemploym('nt
w ill b<> higher, while et'Onflm11.·
growth will b<> lower than thl'
Reagan adm1nistrat1on and
Republicans pred11.·l.
Ignoring thosC' 1mport;n11
differences. though. hNe is a
S<:orebo.:ird on what rC'mams to b(•
don<':
-Federal pay: Tlw plan
c1c;sumN-that f<'<kr<1I pay raises
wJI I b<· hl•ld to 4 ix·rl't•nt annually
frn th1· n1•x1 thn'<' years. !o.Clving
mun• th.111 $:lti billion from
l':!rl 11•r pn '<lil'l IOns
I) o m <· s t 1 (' p r o g r a m s .
l!undn•tb ol domt·st1c· programs
an· s<:ht·dult•d to b<· 1.·ut bv nearlv
$:i!1 bll 111111 ov<•r thre<; year s.
HB cops arrest man
in attempted slaying
Huntington Beach poll('(.' havC'
arrested a 34-year-old man who
allegedly rammed his estrangt-d
wife with an auto and inJun'Cl a
5-year-old child sh<' w as
babysitting
The man. Tanh Lai of Santa
Ana. was pla<..'ed in Huntington
Beach City Jail on susp1c1on of
attempted murder, acx:ordtng to
pohc'C' Sgt. Charles Poe.
H is estranged wifC'. Thu Thi
Pham. 33, was reported in fair
condition Saturday night at
Fountain Va lley Community
Hospital with internal inJuriC's
and a broken leg.
Trong Pho Nguyen. one of two
children she was caring for, was
In stable condition al the hospital.
INDEX
r<.'c<>vC'ring from t.·uts and a
brokt•n ll·~
P()(.• said tht• mc1d<'nl occurred
at 9 45 a m Saturdav m front of
I 736:l Kolcdo Larw · He said the
wom.rn wa~ m an auto with two
1.-hildr<.>n sh1· wa!> c;Jrmg for when
Lai. who had bt'C'n quarrehng
wllh his w1f!.'. rammed the car
several times with his vehicle.
Whe n thl' woman 11.'ft the car ,
Lai struck her with has vehicle,
crushing ht•r against the other
car, Poe said. The impact c.aused
thP st-<:ond c·ar to roll ovt'r onto
01w of the· children. he said.
Nt·1~hbors summoned police
and paramC'd1cs. who treated the
inJury v1curns and arrested Lai.
Cuban military worrisome Reagan begins vacation Classified E5-8,Fl-6 Mailbox A6
WASHING TON (AP) -Cuba's increasingly cloee
military ties with the Soviet Union represent a
considerable threat to American security interests ln
the Western Hemisphere, a new State Department
report says.
Polish· protesters routed
WARSAW. Poland (AP) -Martial-law riot ..
squad~ threatening to spray a powerful water cannon
routed several hundred protestera.
NATION
Witness intimidation a concern
The intimidation of vktlms and wltnetHS by
criminals ii thwarting the nation's criminal· )lltlce
S)'ltem, a growlng conc:em of attorneys, judire9 and
other court off ldah. Pa,e A~.
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -President Reagan
began, hia Jong-delayed California vacation Saturday
after aides told him the evacuation of Palestlnian
guerrillas was proceeding smoothly.
Desert brush lire I ought
PALM SPRINGS (AP) -A brush fire was
partially conta~ed Saturday alter burning 3,000 acres
near the San Jacinto Wilderness.
SPORTS
. It'• .imc.t time for USC and UCLA to 1tart the
fall ~ ..._ For preview of both ceama, ~
P•Bl.
Crossword 08 Movies El-3
Death Notices E5 Real Fstate 06-8
Editorial Page A6 Sports Bl-7
Entertainment El-3 Stock Markets 04-5
Finance 01·5 Theaters El-3
FNturing C5 Travel C6
Hor~pe C5 Weather A2
Ann Landers C5
COUNTY
Pac Fed compleilng complex
Paci.fie Fedenl Savi.np hu built an impreaaive
of flee complex that Costa Mesa of ficlals hope wUJ be
tho keystone or 8 downtown revitalization proaram.
But the bulldlng IA a1ao opentna amid an ofCice space
glut. Pages 01-2.
..
$ a
t Al Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1882
PilotiiJg president
feather in his cap
·'·Bl PATRICK J . KENNEDY ...... ...., ........
Marine Colonel Ward B .
"Johnson flew more than 800
' helicopter combat miaaions in
Vietnam but hla molt enjoyable
·•duty during the war years was
~·urving aa pilot for Pre1ide nt
. ·•Richard Nbton.
' Ward, who this month was
· appointed commander of the
'Marine Air Retlerve C«J» at the
El Toro air base, aald Nixon
, didn't have time to speak to the
_eilots, but seemed to enjoy the
· rughts.
'. "lie usually smiled afterwards
· and he never got air sick or
complained," Ward said. He
would occasionally wave or pal
us on the shoulder but he was
. ,always on a timetable and was
'whisked off Air Force One, into a
helicopter and then quickly off
again.''
Johnson was one of Nixon's
pilots from 1969 to uno and he
often flew
Nixon and
Cabinet mem-be n to Key
Biscayne ,
·Camp David
or the "West
ern Whit e
Houae" in San
Clemente. JOt4M80N
"There was no additional pay,
except for the ego. It really gets
you pumped up having a tour of
duty serving the president.
Nixon got the best and safest
crafts in the country and had the
best ground c r e w s a nd
mechanics. Everything was firs:
From Page A1
PLO • • •
brandishing portraits of P LC
chief Yasse r Arafat on thE
muzzles of their guns.
They waved red. white, green
and black Palestinian flags and
chanted "Revolution , Revolution
Until Victory" and "I Lov£
P~estine" on their two-mile:
truck trip from west Beirut'~
municipal stadium to the harbor.
Many women along the route:
wept and waved handkerchiefE
from their balconies. ·
cl.all," Ward Mkt .
aut he te1la • dtfferent 1tory
about hll first combat duty In
Vietnam t.n 1963.
"We tran1ported South
Vletnameae troops to combat
positlona and the only weapon
the helicopter had was a machine
gun that the co-pilot held in hls
lap.
"That's about as crude aa you
can get and none of the pilots
were very good shots. ll was
moral support," Ward said.
Returning stateside in 1964\ he
sa.id he helped persuade military
officials to mount 50-t aliber
machine guns on the transport
helicopters. He served a second
combat tour ln 1968.
By 1971, the "war had wanned
up" and Ward served his final
combat tour piloting a Cobra
attack craft that Included
machine guns and 20 rockets.
Ward, who entered the Marine
Corps after college 26 years ago,
was awarded the Distinguished
Flying Cross, 40 Air Medals and
the Purple Heart as a result of
combat action neer Da Nang and
in Laos.
Born in Alcot. N. Y .• Ward la
married and hu three daua~:n. He declines to 1pecifically ' uaa
h is war experiences and
discount• "minor" wound•
received in combat.
"Every pilot who was over
there for very long had his craft
hit by enemy fire once or twice,"
Ward said. "I got my share." '
Ward said the helicopter is still
the best combat craft to quickly
transport battle troups. But he
said that it may be replaced in
future years by a "tilt rotor"
airplane that can also fl y as a
helicopter but is faster and has
greater range.
Most recently an assistant chief
of staff for the Reserve's 4th
Marine Aircraft Wing in New
Orleans, Ward said h e's
"d e lighted" with his new
command at El Toro. It consists
of 300 regular Marines, 1,000
reserves, 12 helicopters and 12
fighter jets.
"It's always better to be in
command," Ward said. "I find it
rewarding to train hard so the
reserves have responsible flying
skills."
Humidity draws crowds
Hot and humid afternoon
weather made the cooler
oceanf r ont a tempting
destination Saturday afternoon,
and lifeguards estimated tha t
about 200.000 people v1si1ed the
county's coastal sands.
Morning clouds and brief
showers cut into attendance early
Saturday.
More hot and humid weather
ls predicted for today. National
Weather SeJVice forecasters said
the mercury will climb into the
upper 70s along the beaches and
into the upper 80s or lower 90s in
inland Orange County.
Ocean water temperature has
been a comfortable 68 degrees.
Lifeguards said surfing accidents
Saturday caused back injuries to
. two people at Huntington Beach
and Laguna Beach, but no other
serious incidents were reported.
IN THE CAULDRON Associated Press
reporter Les Blumenthal watches geology in
the making u Mount St. Helena continues its
fascinating process of building a lava dome
..........
inside the crater blasted out by the cataclysmic
eruption of May 1980. Wide angle lens distorts
view of Blumenthal with 700-foot-lava dome.
Inside nature's furnace
Geologists study St. Helens la-Ya dom'e inside crater
TN THE CRATER OF MOUNT
ST. HELENS (AP) -Don
Swanson stood in the c;rater of
Mount St. Helens and talked of
eruptions -past, present and
future.
A quarter -mile away, rocks
sloughed off the 740-foot lava
dome. Mount St. Helens was
erupting, but n ot with the
violence of the past. Slowly.
according to a timetable known
only to nature, the volcano was
rebuilding itself.
Scientists have wired the
mountain in an effort to learn
what comes next. While they are
able to predict eruptions with
increasing accu.racy, they are still
unable to say whether the
volcano will erupt with thunder
and fury or a slow flow of molten
rock pushing up and out from the
dome.
"We have a very good chance
of predicting an eruption, but we
can't say if there will be an initial
explosive phase," Swanson, a
ge o l ogist with the U .S .
Geological Survey, said.
So m e sc ientists were
concerned during the initial
stages of this latest eruption that
the pressure was building ·as the
dome swelled by more than 60
feet in a single day.
The brief anxiety was relieved
when measurements showed
gases being released from the
volcano had increased four-fold,
thus easing the pressure inside
the dome.
Molten rock oozed from the
laya dome within St. Helena on
Saturday, but the volcano's
seismic activity ha1 been
subsiding and the latest erupUon
may be nearing an end, adenu.ta
said.
The e ruption, o f a non -
e xpl osi v e typ e , began
Wednesday night.
The dome -about 700 feet
high, 2,000 feet long and 1,800
feet wide before the activity
began -has been growing
steadily and could 'continue
growing for two more weeks, a
scientist said.
Swanson has been in the crater
more than 200 times 1ince the
May 18, 1980, eruption that left
59 dead or missing and
devastated 150 square miles of
forest. He 1aid he has no
particular fear of the volcano, but
he has a great deal of respect.
Swanson said one of the main
puules ecientists want to BC>lve
involve• the underground
magma ch.amber. They know the
main conduit from the chamber
is directly bene~tb the dome.
They suspect the chamber La a
few hundred yards below the
crater floor.
"But we really don't know the
structure. We don•t know if tt i. a
chambel" or a main re9el"VOir or
just the t.op of one.
"It would be nice to know ao
we can deltp experiments u to
how it fillt.and empties," he said.
The information could be u.ed ln
predicdng the size of future
eruptiona.
Liquor
at camp
OK near
Huntington Beach city offfdala
are 101.na to make it leaal for
penon1 21 yean of age or over to
drink liquor at the dty'1 beach
campina facWty .
Final approval of the
ordinance La expected bef0tt the
campi.r\I...,., 1tarta Sept. 15.
Drinking hu been prohlblted
at the camping fadllty u well u
at the beach. ""The ban on beach
drinking will continue to be
enforced.
Vincent Moorhouae, director of
communJty 1ervice1, aald
estimates ahow that 85 percent of
the pen10n1 using the campates
drink to some degree and that
there are few problems.
The ordinance will be in effect
from Sept. 15 through May 31-
the time the camping facility la
open. lt'1 not uaed in the summer
becau.e of heavy beach crowds.
The city provide. about 250
spaces for mobile homes and
recreation vehicles in the parkina
l ot 1outh o f lifeguara
headquarters between Lake and
Huntington streets.
Campers can stay as long as 14
days at a time at a cost of $7 per
night.
The camping facility came into
being as a result of the approval
in 1967 of a $2.3 million revenue
bond for the construction of a
2 ,100-space beach parking
facillty and highway median
from the city pier to Beach
Boulevard.
The facility wu completed in
1969 and waa hailed aa a success
during the spring and summer
months.
It wasn't used to its maximum
In the off-eeeaon, however.
The facility was opened to
camper• in 1973 after a ~
survey showed a shortage of
f.adlities.
Moorhouse said the city
received $80,000 in revenue from
the facility ln th e most recent
camping eeuon.
Warm_, humid
'
Coastal
Wlnd9 decreulng a Miiie during
night and morning hourt.
EJMwMra. ltght van.t>te wk*. e
to 2 foot aouthwftlerty a-'11.
Verlabl• high cloudlnaM with
patc:hy night end morning fog and
low doud9 outer waten.
California
Variable cloudlneu ttlrovgh Moncs.y In Sou1h«n Celltomfa.
W91tm and humid Ill all ...._
Orange County can aa~t fllOtl8 ~ trom llP9lr 70a tr
Iha ~ toe Inland. Lowa ..
to 72.
lntlind ¥tl99yl CM expect NQha
In 80a Mel low 100.. lawli,..., '10. Mountain hlghe In eo. • .,.. 55
to ea. laolated af1ernoon and
evening tllunderallo•art d«ll eaalrlg Monday. Cllanca of a
, .. '-Vy~· with *OflG 9l*Y wlnda through today. oea.rta can eJtpect 1cattwecl
~.with.,_ '-"Y
--· thrOUgh today. Not1ham . ~ hlglll te to 102. 1ow11 In
, 10a and 1ow eoa. Sou111em deMrt
hlaN 102 to 112. Iowa In eo.. lb'than\ and Central Cllllfomla
• mottty fair exupt low cloud•
along coaat and chance ot
atMrnOOfl t9'underel0f'ma o-aou-.m Slwra.
Extended
weather
: ~Thunda)': Patd!J ..
nlfl't and m01nlng t09 illoftt ooatt, oonllnued wam1. Hlafti
c:oMtal. ., ... ranQlno from lite
upper 70. at Ille~ ... • IOa to 10ww toe Inland. UMI IO
to n:, Mountalna: fllr ....... Ill
ttia .,._ Lowa aa 10 ea.
Temperature•
I ;
= . " " .., : .. .. a 10 • IO II
ft = ., .. .. .. !! ..
ChlCago 71
Cincinnati 78
Cleveland 89
Clmble SC 89
Columbut 79
Oat-Ft Wth 99
o.yton 74
OenYef 87
Oet Molnet 84
Detroit 72
Duluth 69
El Paao 97
Felrt>anke 71
F111go 91 Flegel•" n
GrMI Fells 113
Hartfofd 71
Helen• 91
Honolulu 89
HOUiton 19
lndnapltt 79
Jacktn • Jacktnvtle 91
KMw City 82
Knoa¥111e es
la l/egaa 104 little Rock ee
loui911111e 79
Memphlt 90
Miami 17
MllwllUltM 71
Mpla-81.P 87
NaahYtlkl ... New Orlean• 92
New YOf'k '75
Norlolk 80
Oltla City • 115
Qmahe 81
Orlando 112
Phlladphl• 75
Phoenht 103 Plll•burfr. 75
Piland, 88
Piiand, Ori • "'°""'* IOll 11
Reno 100
Alctwnond I& Salt Lall• ., ... -80 ~~ .. as
SI Louie 8$
St ~T1m99 IO == 93 .,
T°'*'a es
Tucaon " Tutaa ..
Waalllngtn 112 Wichita 92
CAUf ORNI~
~..J:c,ley
lantow
leaumont 81g8-
Blythe
57
tlO 59
71
58 74
58
llO 7 80
58 47
70
52
19
57 sa 58
58 75
71 1\.4t0"3' W~i,.,., Sf« ·Cf'
llO ..,o ... ~ vs =><-:>• <:>' c or--···u· • Fronts Cold ..., Warm ,....
71 91
72 C.tallNI IO 98 12 73 eu.... City 92 ee
94 RMno 99 89
71 LMICal• 91 70
12 long 9eectl 101 llG
eo lOIAr 98 75
se Monr 105 71
~ Montebello H 10
Monterey 94 54
88 Ml. Wiiton 88 87
74 Neadlaa 110 18
71 Newport 8Motl 78 98
58 Ont.to 108 78
74 Pllm Sprtnga 108 17 .. Paeo Roblaa 107 94
15 Rad Bluff 107 95
80 Redwood City 81 H
ei a.cr-10 88 57 .. SellnM 71 49
83 8.n Bernardino 109 71
56 8.n Gabflal 103 71
7'0 .., Dl9gO .. 73 ... 8erl Ftandloo .. 52
M IMJoea N 51
1'I ..,_AN M • M ...,. Barbara ~ 80
IS ,.,... Mana N
" 8Mt9 Monlce n .. .. atodlton 101 94 • lano.V*'t .. 41
l-1 ,.,__., 111 ae
n TorrwlC8 90 ae .,, v-107 81 .. n ..... "" .,. . ::::::.: IO n 12 71 11 llnNlda .. 12 ... ~ .. .. n 12 71 :a ~IPa .. Tt ft 17
Occluded ~
a~
Hev-
Klngtton Montego 8ay
Mazatlan
Merkle
Mexico City
Monlarr9'1
NllMU Sen Juan, P.R.
T eguclgalpa
Trinidad
I/era Crui
CANADA
Calgary
(dmonton
Montl'MI
Aaglna
Toronto
VanGOINW
W1nnlpef
Smog
84
88
89
90 84
95
71 95
91
91
81 91
84
81 74 91
18 '2
71 74
73 71
79
79
71
73 55 73
75 79 ee 73 72
CRUISING -Morey ~ champion Kat1h
SNtkl does a "dl'op-knle maneuver OD his
board in qualifying eventa for third annual
Morey Boo1le board championehlp•.
...., ......... •a.t.. _.,
Qualifylna was held in Laguna Beach
Saturday. with championship set for next
Saturday in Oceanside.
. .
D.ity ~ l"tlotoe by Oeborllfl Wechter
F UN OUT OF WATER -David Garrick con testants to use in sand crab race, a
a n d Brian Hughes, both 10, dig for diversion from junior lifeguard practice.
Actor's without pier
Junior Iii eguard instructor joins national stage company
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
O(tt.. Delly Not I la"
The curtain is coming down on another
summer for the Huntington Beach City Junior
Lifeguards program.
Youngsters also are bidding farewell to one
or the program's more popular adult supervisors,
Bob Bejan, who has been a dty lifeguard for five
years, wor king three summers as a junior
lifeguard instructor.
After maste ring the methods of helping
children learn to frolic in the surf safely, Bejan is
moving on to his other great love -acting in
musical comedies.
Earlier this month, his popularity on the
waterfront spilled over into his stage career at
the Harlequin Theater in Santa Ana.
Although Bejan had only a modest role in
the chorus d uring a production of the musical
"Sugar," 280 junior lifeguards and family
members packed the house during a Thursday
night performance to cheer him on.
"The cast gave me a separate bow at the end
of the evening," Bejan recalls. "It was a moving
experience."
This demonstration of affection also is
causing the 22-year-old Los Alamitos resident to
feel a lU8 of emodon at aoncludi.oa hia aunt ~th the jUnJor JJleguards. ·
"It's a great job," he explains. "I enjoy
working with kids. It's a lot of work, but there's
an incredibly rewarding feeling when you help
kids get over their fear of the ocean."
This summer, about 680 boys and girls, ages
9 to 16, took part in the city's junior lifeguard
program. Bejan said the program's 15 instructors
try to "waterproof" the youngsten;, teaching
them how to cope with all types of ocean
conditions, including hazardous riptides.
Bejan has worked with the youngest junior
lifeguards, ages 9 to 11 . He has drawn on his
theater training by making up songs about the
yellow beanies junior lifeguards must wear and
about "dolphining" (diving into waves).
"If you make it fun, sometimes they don't
even realire they're learning," he says.
"With 9-to-11 year-olds, life is all questions,
and sometimes your patience wears thin. But
most of the time they're great to work with."
With the summer season drawing to a close,
Bejan is now focusing his energy on his acting
career. Earlier this year, he earned a degree in
theater arts at the University of the Pacific in
Stockton.
When "Suga'r''' concludes Sept. 5, Bejan will
take a leading role in a national touring company
of "Grease." By spring, he expects to move to
New Y'ork City to continue his theater studies
and seek stage work.
Though he'll be living thousands of miles
east of the Pacific, Bejan said he'll carry many
fond memories of his junior lifeguards work.
"l think the best thing has been working
with the kids with the least experience," he says.
"My favorite lesson is taking them around the
(H untington Beach) pier for the first time.
"When a kid who's half as wide as a piling
can say he swam around the pi~r. it's a great
feeling."
.J. ...... ~-
INSTRUCTIVE ROLE -Bob Bejan points
to fastest sand crab in race. Below is a pose
from his portfolio of state appearances in
musical comedies.
D.-p ..... htl•«y ........... We're Listening •••
Moncl_,·l'nOo II You 00 nol "-
'IOU• -by ~ 30 p m cell 1>el()'e 1 P"' and You• toe>V wtll be O•~-ect
S9lutdey •nO S..~11 You"° not : = 16':':.. r:r You• ~o:v "'..11C:: -
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ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thomen'· Holey Publ"he< and Ciw.I hecut1ve Offlcet
L Kay Schuth
Vice ~
and Oii edOf of Ado<etlltlng
Mkhoet , • Horwy
OlreclOr of Mcri .. lllQ
ICirCl*iihOfll
Thomot A. Murphlne
Edllof
Kenneth N. Gedder4 Ir.
Dltec!Ot ol OperotlOlle
Clat1"'9d 1ctv.rtl1lnt 11 41142·M71
All other ..,_rtm•nt• 142~321
MAIN °"'9<:1 ..... 8ey $1,, CWI• MeM, CA.
llllell ....._19" IMO, COiie Mete, CA. mM
C-.r"9M 1111 0reft91 CMM ~'*IWftt ~. "9 _...,.... llhlilltelMlflt, ect .... lel f'l\.n.t er ...
wertl-tt Mreln may lie r~--.......... ..... '"""""* .. tot>YflitM ..,.,,
YOL. 71t NO. llot •
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Sunday, August 22, 1882
New Right misses shot ..
Action on abortion, school prayer stalled in Congress
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tho
New RJaht took lta "best lhot" at
c han1ln1 nallonal policy on
abortion, 1ehool prayer and other
social l11uo1 IHt week, and
miDed.
New Rlafht followen failed on a
69-38 vote Wedne9day to get the
Senate to table a liberal
amendment declaring auch t..uec
the province of the courll, not Cofl81ft8.
The Reaaan White Hou., Mid
Gary Curran of the American
Life Lobby, an anti-abortion
group, "la full of country club
Republicans. They are ecol'lOOlic
con1ervatlve1 , n o t social
Ma reNlt there la almolt no
chance that the IOCiaJ lea!llatlon
Pretldent Reagan ana other
conservatives embraced In thelr
1980 campalp will aet through
Corigreea thle year.
Helms, vowing that the light's
not over, claimed hla colleagues
did not understand what they
were voting on.
conservatives." ,
"They got lied to the economic
iaaues and forgot where a lot of
their votes came from ln 1980,
blue·collar workers, man y of
them Catholics, who are
d isa ppointed with Reagan ,"
Curran aald.
Pa..rtJdpantl in the battle say
the blame -or credit -lle1
with the hard-Une conservatives
themselve1, the White House,
congressional leaders and the
American public.
But Sen. Lowell P . Welcker,
R·Conn., a leader of a liberal
filibuster againat Helms' bill, said
the vote effectively declared the
social IHues "dead for this
session." His comme nts reflec t
widespread anger among eeveral
conservative groups. A recent
iasue of Conaervative Digest was
devoted completely to criticizing
Reagan as having turned his
back o n his moat l oyal
supporters.
"Thia la the only lhot we will
have," Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.,
said in a heated moment during
Senate debate over legallzea
abortion and 1ehool prayer. "So
we had better take our beat
shot," he 1ald, explaining his
willlngnesa to water down his
proposal restricting a woman'•
right to terminate a pregnancy.
Despite the election of Ronald
Reagan and a Republican Senate
in 1980, the New Right has failed
to puah a sing.le piece of social
legislation on abortion, prayer or
bu.tngfordesegregationthrough
the Congress.
Sources familiar with Senate
Republican L eader Howard
Baker's thinking say privately
that Baker had no enthusiasm for
the New Right's social agenda,
and sklllfully planned to limit
the amount of time the Senate
spent on it.
Although there will be further
debate thia year, Helms and hia
The most frequently heard
r eason is that Reagan has
devoted most of the time and
energy of his administration to
economic iaaues, givfug only lip
service to changing national
policy on volatile issues like
abortion.
PARENTS BATTLE CUSTODY CHARGES ...
(From Pa1e Al)
our money's worth ," she said. "The county says
it will nelp you with your child. They don't.
They make it wonie."
Mrs. Williams said county officials sent her
family questionnaires on what property they
owned and what other aaaeta they had. "I don't
feel they have the right to know how much I
have," she said, adding, "I think those people
exceeded their authority entirely."
The Williams family fl.rat became involved
with the juvenile justice system when, in 1980,
their then-16-year-old son waa sentenced to
Juvenile Hall following a con viction for
misdemeanor arson. The youth had burned a
cross on a neighbor's lawn.
"What I did," he explained in an interview,
"is I took aome kerosene and burned a cross on a
guy's lawn. It was a childish prank, I admit it."
"What 16-year-old doesn't make a mistake?"
Mrs. Williams asked. "He should have been put
on probation."
Instead, he was sentenced to &ix months in
J uvenile Hall, a jail-like facility in Orange near
UC Irvine Medical Center. After 30 days there,
the youth attempted suicide. He was later
transferred to a neuropsych iatric hospital in
Long Beach.
After running away for a year, the youth
returned and has received counseling. Now 19,
he works for the Army re8erve and bis mother
says his r,roblems are behind him. "This kid is on
hia way, ' she said.
But the legal challeJ'lie rema.lna.
Acoording to Talmo, the family's attorney,
the lawa which allow parents to be charged by
counties violate the due process provisions of
both the U.S . and California constitutions.
"When the minor i1 removed from the
parenta' custody for the purpoee of imposition of
punishment or to segregate the minor from the
rest of society, that is an act done for the benefit
of society alone, and the burden of paying for
this function of the system falls upon IOCiety as a
whole and not upon the parenta," Talmo said in
his legal brief.a to the Supreme Court.
"Where there has been no showinR of fault
. . . on the part of the parents of a mfuor who is
a ward of the court," Talmo said, "imposition of
charges to reimburse t he state ... or the
maintenance of such ward for the benefit of
society, constitutes a taking offroperty from the
parents without d ue process o law ."
Axelrod, in his legal responses, said that
court after court had rejected the conten tion that
t h e juvenile justice system is meant for
punishment alone, as he claimed Talmo was
insisting.
"Regularly," he said, "the appellate courts,
in restating the purpose of the juvenile court
law , indicate that said purpoees are treatment,
rehabilitation and protect.ion of the public, not
punlshment."
W hat thb means, Axelrod said, is that
taking custody of children need not be 80mething
for which society as a whole must alone pay.
If the state Supreme Court were to declare
Section 903 unconstitutional, eith er in the
Williams caae or in the other two cues pending,
all counties would loee a aource of funds.
UP
TO 50°/o OFF
The amount of that 1068 would depend on
how vigorou sly the counties h ad soug h t
reimbursement.
''Some counties are lax and some are
aggressive in collecting fees," Axelrod said.
Walter Kra'use, director of administration
and fiscal services for the county Probation
Department, said the latest figures available
indicate that about 33 percent of the parenta
with children in county care are unable to pay.
Of the remaining 67 percent, Krause said,
the average per;-day bill for each family was $18
"The c ounty s a ys it
will h e lp y ou with
child. Th e.Y don 't .
make it worse ."
y our
They
well below the $45 per day in actual costs per
child.
The probation·~fficial said that for t he
1980-81 fiscal year, it cost the county $8.4 million
to run institutional programs for juveniles.
Reimbursemen ts fr om parents in that year
totaled $834,000, or 10 percent of the cost.
Fred Baker, a P robation Department
supervisor, said each case was examined
individually in determining a family's linancial
obligation to the county.
A settlement could be negotiated either
while the child was in custody or afterward,
officials said.
Though he had no statistics, Axelrod said
he felt most parents paid off some portion of the
charges. He said he based this view on the fact
that, as a county attorney, he has seen few
w ntested cases reach the lawsuit or court stage.
The Williams case would appear to be the
&laring exception.
Claiming that the care her son received at
Juvenile Hall was both careless and indifferent,
Mrs. W~ said, "I can't believe an unjust law
can last forever."
Plane falls into sea .
SANTA CATALINA ISLAND (AP)-Two
men aboard a twin.engine plane. including an
Irvine man, escaped injury Saturday when one
engine, aod then the other, failed and the plane ·
crashed into the water about one-fourth mile
offshore. authorities said.
The Comanche aircraft too k off from
Catalina Airport and flew around the island for
about an hour before the engines gave out, said
Los ngeles County lifeguard Lt. Gary Crum. The
plane crashed one mile east of Avalon, he said.
The pilot, Jack ~1dy, 36. of lrvme, and
passenger Tom McBride, 30, of Long Beach,
~aped from the plane as 1t sank an 200 feet of ,
water about a quarter-mile from the shore, Crum •
said.
ANN·UAL
PRE-SEASON
SALE
WATCH FOR IT!
AND
MORE
Fri., Se pt. 3rd
10-9
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Sat .• Sept. 4th
10 -6
CEV AS * COLMAR • DEMETRE • FILA
• MEISTER * ROFFE • SERAC • OBERMEYER
SKIS
ROSSIGNOL
K -2
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SALOMON
RAICHLE
SAN M'ARCO
Sun., Sept. 5th
12-5
BINDINGS
SALOMON
TVA OLIA
MARKER PRE
FISCHER (ANO llUCH, MUCH MORE ... J
. 2700 W. COAST HIGHWAY. NEWPORT BEACH
•
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0 c:JVewport (jurj ®, (jport, Inc .•
8th ANNUAL .
FRIDAY, AUGUST 20 thru SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12
~' BACK TO SCHOOL "'1'
t•·;::;;~ LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR
, wtrH , -on aelected -~SEt ... : _M=E:.;;..N;;,,,,;:S;__-....;,.W;_;O;;..;M~E..;..;N;,..;;S'----=8....;;.0_;,Y....,;;S'--S~P..;:;.0..;..;R;_;_T....,;;S_W.;....;E=A....;,.R _ __.
~ ···-···-
MENS WOMEN I -....u ............... 25-5°' Off DNsMs ............. SO'S Off
hllb ............ -.... -25-50\ Off Sllorts .......... 2~ 50\ Off
Mb ........... -......... .25-50\ OFF hnts ........... 10·50' Off
Swt!Mt• ........... ~ to 50\ OFF S"""°"ar ......... 50' Off
BOYi
SllWb ............ 2S-M Off ,anb ............ I0-4H Off
Wllksllorts .... 10-50\ OH
Swinwtlf .... .10-50\ Off
wmam
i0-20' m
SHOES & ACCESSoal'S
20% Off
OP • IZOD • CAL VIN KLEIN • QANT • HOLBROOK • O'FSHORE •
•uRFLINE HAWAII• GOTCHA• E8PIRIT D'CORP • HO&IE •
CHURCHILL • BUCANlER -AND MORE
MAIN STORE .... P«W1 1w1 a lpcKt. 1nc.
ztM Newpcw1 Blvd.
Ne•pcw1 BMch, CA
(714) 175-n74
BALBOA
NewP«W1 9Uff a 1pon, 11tc.
2101/1 Merine A ...
BMboe .. lend, CA
(714) tn-7121
t:OO a.m. -t:OO p.m. DelfJ t:OO a.m •• t:OO p.m. DalJ
MEDLEY'S
Presents $5.95 Dinner
Specials
Al U-FISBJQREJJ
COUNTltY SWD!Y sum:n
A genetous portion ol tender golden chicken. coated on our homemade breading and deeP-lrled
-Served with buttery mashed potatoes topped with our own creamy gravy. plus flesh
vegetables. Includes soup or salad. hot bread -and a frosty mug of beer'
MUCHO MEXICAN MONDAY
A tasty South·oHhe-Border treat of two treshly·made enchila<las. Med With ched<Sar cheese and
mlldty·spioed shredded beef -smothered woth encholada sauce end topped with treskl SOUf
cream Served with the tred1t10na1 Spanish rice and retried beans
Includes soup or salad, hot bread -end a refreshing margarita•
CHEF LUISE~
ITALIAN THURSDAY
This is a rtJB/ ltallan lasagna -tendef egg noodles with a special t>lend ol ricotta. mozDreua.
parmesan and romano ctteese. combined with seasoned ground beef and sausage ~er.cf with
OUf own homemade ltehan meat sauce
lncludeS soup Of salad, gar11c bread -and. of course. a glass of wlne'
Along With Other Supe<b S.Cectlon• From Our Menu •
lntertolnm•nt Nightly In UHlng•
OMtt Yorbrou•lt App«Jfing 1-24 A l-2$ S"-wt ot l t10 a 1t>:•
1177~ •ookhurat St. R••rvotions accepted 963-2366
• POUNT AIN V AUIY 1 MU so. of 405 fWY.
NOTICE
DISSOLUTiON OF PARTNIRSHIP
PUBLIC AUCTION
•mun TIE an.m ...... lltlUAtllllll.
l1nd111d1 Peni1n I Orl111tlt R11p .
We have been commissioned to llquldate tM entire lrfWntoty plut
othera for Immediate cash.
Al PER IN8TRUCTION8 ALL ato8 WILL OPeN AT 21" GM THI ~ft AND LOT8 WILL H 80LD F9'0M THI •XT -OM.
MONDAY. AUGUST 13 AT I ,,M.
IU.MonlNN
.. •W'°"1 CINftR D ...
NIWPOltT IUCH
............... ~
CLEAN AND QUIET -On di4play in Laguna
Beach Saturday was an electric car built by Vic
Schisler. The vehicle runs on 16 six-volt ~olf
De1tr "'°' Ptloto by Chet1" SIMY
cart batteries, and has a 75-mile or two-hour
range. The car w as displayed at the Boardwalk
Energy Fair at Main Beach.
THE PRICE OF THE TURTLE IS DOW N.
There's something different going on al tlw Velvet Turtlr. Both on your
plate. And in your pocket. We've go/ a new menu . Nru• dishrs: Xew
decor. Bui best of all, new low prices.
NIGHTLY SPE CIALS ON BOARD.
Every night our chef will be serving a changing variety of black-
board specials. Six delicious dinn ers starting as low as $7.95.
Everythingfrom fresh fish to delicate duck. All waiting011
board at the Velvet Turtle.
A NEW SE'f OF LOW ER PRI CED DI SHES.
We've added some brand new specialties lo your old favor-
ites. A third cut of juicy Prime Rib. A Petite or l arge
Lobster Tail. Plus tender succulent chicken prepared in
a variety of tantalizing ways. And they're priced as low as $7.95.
So when it comes to dinner, we've got your number.
THE BEST DRESSED TURTLE IN TOWN.
>Ou won't recognizlusfrom our shell. We're taking on
a brand new /()()k. We'n light£r. Brighter. And more
relaxed. Tm perfect setting/o r dinner. All at prices
you'n sure to find very ftl3hionabl#.
WE LEAVE WELL ENOUGH ALONE.
Some things never change. Like our splendid service.
Warm atmosphere. Fresh cut flowers. And superb food. So why not relax, and
enjoy y<mr night. Because the price of Turtle was never better.
Wnt Lot A.let (213) 477-GSS
Loe AIWtl~ f213) 489-2555 "'1oodllnd ~ill• <llt3> 700-&160 PIUdena (213'1792-3101 Totraia (213) &34-1701
f'llllerton (714) sn-9340
Nntp0rl 8etch (714) &"4·5313 Tholisand Oaks (805) 497·7818
Rfdo9dQ Buch (213) 378-8377 r..nn. BellC'h (213) 426-0391
South Galt' (213) 923-3331
Puente Hills (213) 912·5358
El Tr1ro (714) 859-7885 Covin11 (213) ~3606
t •
ii • 'e c ~~
Orlnte Coeat DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1982
Witness intimidation undermining judicial system
"
1;1 I < 01 ') IAMf ORD, C. 1
20"PRECIM:T By Tbe A11oclated Preu
The young m1o1n'1 fa<'e was
puffy and brulit!d, and his hp
was dlatorted by half a dolt'n
alltchea. He had been muggt.'CI in
the parking lol of lhe grocery
store where he was head clerk
He had recognized the three
guys who Jumped him and wok
his wallet. He had seen them m
the store, and he even knew the
nickname of one. But when the
police asked him about the
muggers, he said he had never
seen them before.
"l just wanted to forget about
It," he told friends laler. "I want
the word lO get out that I'm not
going to testify. I don't .want
those guys to come looking for
me."
The attitude is an example of
the way victims and witnesses
are intimidated by society's
wrongdoers -and the hard.
cruel reallly of the risks that go
with stepping forward to point
an accusing finger at the
criminals.
Vicl1 m-w1tness int1m1dation
can take many forms. Some are
so subtle lhat the police, and
eve n the people being
intimidated, are not sure the
threats are real. Others are as
subtle as a brickbat through the
AP llluetretlon living room window at 3 in the
FEAR Victims and witn esses fearful of reprisal from morning. ~
.crimioals...o.Ct.en.Le{vsiuo...te$t.;f y..or.,...p.tr.ss .. c.be.rges. undt>.rm.in.iog ··--.. Jo e~tb~.r:..c~. tbe.JcrrorJs....reaL
the criminal justice system . "It is a crime which is very
,
<'OIT\ll\1111 yt•t une for whkh
t h 1• rt• 1 i. n o pro b o b 1 I 1 t y o f
µun1!1hml•nt," o<.•t•ording to an
Aml'ncan Bar A..ssol·1ul1on rt-port
A study by tht· Vl•ru lruitltutt•
of Juatlc<', a prlvut£· non-profit
rei.earch foundation 1n Nl'W
York, estimates that vll'luns or
witnesiws are thn•aLt•nf'd In om•
of t•vcry four t:rirninal c1u1es.
Tht.>1 t• ls no way of knowing !or
'
In prlbon, but the wltnesaeti are
sentenced lO a l1fet1mt-of ft-ar
that the criminal will one day
t.•ome lle<!kang revenge.
Sometimes the lnt1m1dauon 18
d mix of threats -spoken or not
and a t.'Ode of the streets that
promot.es a cultural bias against
uny type of cooperation with
uuthortllt>S.
"Thl•re's a lot of people who
•'/ could tell you the n am es of all
the g uy involved. And by the time the
police got over h ere, I 'd b e d ead."
s ure be c a use, u n II k e o th t· r
t:nmes, only sucx·e~ful atll'mpts
are reported
lntim1dat1on 1s 1:spec1ally
1ns1d1ous becuus<> 11 undcrnunes
the criminal JUSt1 ce ,;>ystem
When 1t works, victims do not
report crimes and witnesses do
not testify against crurunals.
A fl•dt>ral s tudy fuund that
"ft!ar of rcpns..il " 1:-the most
co mm o n rea so n c ited by
w1tneSSt'S who refUSl' to testify
Thosc who do t'Omt• forward and
tesufy aft.er being threatened say
the intimidation ncvt>r rt'nlly
_.c.ru;is__ The crjmmaJ muy get a
sentenee of a yt:ar, t•vt·n JO years
know whut happened, but 1t JUSt
doesn'l pay to talk," Doreen
Frcquez, 19, of San Jose, said
after her boyfriend was shot and
killed at a party nearly a year
ago.
She said a number of people
told her who pulled the trigger:
but they wouldn't talk to the
police. Her own anger al th<.·
p e>t l'nt1a l w1lness es was
gradually replac<.'CI by tht' same
kind of fear.
"I t.·ould telJ vou the names of
all the guys involved." she says
"And by the time the police got
over herl' to protect me. I'd be
dead"
A study by the Victim Services
Agency aay1 there it retallAt!on
In an alarming number of cuet1.
One of every four v1ctlma who
reported being threatened waa
subsequently the victim of
bu rg lary, vandalism o r a
mugging.
In most stat.ea, there are no
tough laws aimt.'CI at punishing
criminals who threat.en victims
and witnesses. A Wiaronaln law,
until it was changed recently,
provided a 10-year maximum
sentence for threatening a
witness but only a five-year term
for actually assaulting a witness.
The Amer 1can Bar Association
has proposed a model act for
states to follow, but thus Car only
California, Rhode Island and
Pennsylvania have adopted 1l,
ABA researcher Susan Watson
Hillenbrand says.
The model statute makes It a
mlSdemeanor !or "attempting to
dtssuade another from testifying
for an improper or malicious
mouve," and provides for felony
prosec·uuon and prison sentences
for "express or 1mphed" threats
of force or violence.
The model also gives judges
broad authorily to deny or
revoke ball for defendants who
threaten witnesses, and to issue
<..'Ontempl citations for defendants
or their friends and family who
try lO scare potential witnesses.
The statute is pending in
<See WITNESS, Page A7)
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I
''Legislature should
confirm Nestande post
• T o say the least, it was
encouraaing last month when
Gov. Edmund G . Brown Jr.
appointed Bruce Nestand e.
chairman' of the Orange County
Board o f Supervisors, to t h e
California Transportation
Commission.
Finally, we felt, the second
most populous county in the state
-and the one facing the most
serious transportation problems -
was getting another needed voice
on the panel charged with
distributing billions of dollars in
highway imP.rovement funds.
Now, differing legal opinions
and regional disputes -the old
Northern California versus
Southern California routine -
threaten to dash the appointment.
The Rules Committee of the
state Senate was scheduled to hold
a c onfirmation h ea r i ng
Wednesday on the Nestande
appointment. It didn't come off.
Nestande requested a delay
because of county business. And,
sources say, .the governor's office
quietly wanted the matter put
over for a week.
The governor's office finnly
believes that Nestande, as a county
supervillor, may aerve on the state
tranapor1ation panel. Not ao, says
the legislative counsel's office. It
went deep Into the English
common law to develop a theory
that Nestande would somehow
face conflicts of interest by serving
both ·as a s upervisor and a
transportation commissioner.
We'll go with the governor on
this one. Had the Legislature not
wanted elected of flctals on the
state transportation commission, lt
would have s aid so when It
adopted the legislation creating
the panel.
As for the regional disputes,
we think Nestande will be fair in
the allocation of transportation
funds. We see little chance that
one c9mmiasioner could single-
handedl~ (or legally) give h is
jurisdiction an oversize share of
l unds. Those decisions must be
based on need. Nestande knows
that.
Thus, we . con clude there
should be no further attempts to
block or delay the appointment.
The Nestande appointment should
be confirmed b e f ore the
Legislature adjourns Aug. 31.
An unnecessary threat
A bill that could put a further
damper on free speech by holding
the threat of criminal liability over
the heads of political campaigners,
newspaper publishers, editors and
reporters -and even writers of
1ettets to the editor -has won
approval of the state Senate and
t will be up for a vote on the
A88embly floor this week.
: It would, in slightly modified
1 form, revive criminal libel an~
· slander laws that were declared
unconstitutional by the state
Supreme Court in 1976, opening
the way for criminal prosecution,
1 fines and jail t erms for any
• individual held responsible for
' spoken or written words deemed
, maliciously harmful to an other
person.
Under existing law, persons
who feel they have been victims of
I slan der or libel can seek civil
, remedies by suing for damages -
and there have been enough
successful cases under civil law to
inspire a certain warln~ on the
part of the press in h andling
stories that might damage the
subject's reputation.
That would seem to be quite
sufficient, without the added
threat of arrest and sentencing to a
jail term for speaking .or printing
statements without a "reasonable
ground" for believing them to be
true.
Sen. Ken Maddy. a uthor of
the bill, SB 1847, believes the
requirement that the offending
words be spoken or written V(ith
"malice'' takes care of objections to
the measure. But just who could
determine such malicious intent
remains unclear.
Is a candidate for office being
"malicious" if h e criticizes his
opponent? Is a reporter or editor
"malicious" if he reports such
campaign criticism? Should they
be arrested if a district attorney
scents "malice" in their words?
Enactme nt of the proposed
criminal libel and slander law -
with iU obvious temptation to
political abuse and questionable
constitutionality -would go far
beyond need.
If members of the Assembly
cannot see the inherent risks in SB
1847 and vote to approve the bill,
G<>v. Brown should lose no time
vetoing it.
P hone settlement welcome
! American Telephone &
·Telegraph and the U.S. Justice
,Department made the correct
~ecision this week by accepting a
'federal judge's proposed changes
'in an antitrust agreement to break
up the Bell System.
Endorsement of the revisions
lears the way for Ma Bell to
.begin divesting itself of its Jocal
operating telephone companies
and competing in unregulated
fields.
: It a lso means those local
companies will be left with
enough resources to continue
offering reliable and affordable
universal phone service -which
the original agreemen t had left in
doubt.
U .S. District Judge Harold H.
preene had ref used to sanction
the breakup agreetnent, reached
R
y AT&T and the Justice
epartment after years of
1 ligation, until several major
ehanges strengthening the local
~mpanies were incorporated into
Greene's action was especially
lmportant considering that a
§onal bill to address those
was withdrawn by Rep.
y Wirth, D-Colo., after
vy bbylng from AT&T.
1 The settlement's basic
ona call for AT&T to divest
of its 22 local tele phone
panles, which includ e
G!allfomia's Pacific T elephone. In 41'tUm, AT&T would be pennitted
., cunpete in unregulated market.a
have much promise of
such as computer linkups
ta proceMing.
' Many observers expre11ed
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
... -.,.. •• • .. - -...... :=l~~~~
fear tha t telephone companies
which could no longer count on
financial support from Ma Be1l
would h ave to seek tripled or
quadrupled phone rates to stay in
business. Needless to say, such
inflated rates would mean many
households could no longer afford
a telephone.
Universal, affordable phone
service is not merely a matter of
convenience. It is essential in a
society heavily d e pendent on
instant communication.
In addition, we have stated
before the telephone has helped
to break down geographical and
cultural barriers that used to
separate Americans.
To keep the local companies
strong, the revised agreement
allows them to continue marketing
phone equipment and generating
revenue through Yellow Pages
advertising.
Greene a lso agreed with
newspa~r publishers' contentions
that permitting AT&T to offer an
elecvoruc information service has
monopolistic implications, because
of the company'• control of
telephone llnft.
The changes will bar AT&T
from offerln .. such a service tor
.even years, 'until the risk of ltl
domination of that field has
abated." The restriction could be
removed by the court after the
seven yea.n.
The propoealt were nec:8l8ry
changes ln &he AT&T antitrust
eettlement. We are ple.aae<I both
the company and &he Justice
Depanment acapted them. ,....,...,,...,
P\lbllOWM
n..,.,..A.M~
[d•tor
Jmne AMOtl
£,.c1t11¥e £dilor
...... I(~
fdot«IOI •ote lddOt
T....,._Mceeftn
~fdtfOt
TtllNGS J UST MA\I EN''r
BEEN i~&' SAME SJNC~ l~EY r~REW ou; OU~
P&~IMETE~ RULc ·
Letters to the Editor
Court esy n ot
so co mmon
To the Editor:
Although six feet tall and weighing
180 pounds 1 am, at times, invisible to
certain strangers. Examples drawn from
recent experiences in Laguna Beach will
prove my contention.
While making a purchase: The shop's
only clerk was writing up my charge
t.icket when an affluent looking matron
interrupted to inquire about an item she
was holding in her hand. I stood there
for at least three minutes, glaring at her.
as she debated her decision to buy. She
was blithely unaware of my presence.
While walking in Heisler Park: Two
extremely fat wom~n. clad in shorts and
bras which we re about to pop, were
walking toward m e . When ne ither
moved behind the other to make room
for me to pass I stepped ofC the narrow
walk and stopped, fuming. Both acted
Uke they had not seen me.
WHILE CROSSING Ocean avenue
with the "walk" light: A 20-year-old
beauty. driving a topless Mercedes, had
stopped awaiting her chance to tum
right into PCH on the red light. As I
stepped off the curb she made her turn,
quite suddenly, missing me by just a few
lnches. 1 quashed an urge to shout an
ob&cenity because that would have been
ungentlemanly.
While walking on Forest Avenue:
Several young men (?) in strange attire
approached me marching three abreast
and making a lot of noise. I squared my
69-year-old shoulders and prepared to
make a stand for my fair share of the
sidewalk. But a voice inside me said,
"Careful, Old Boy, you might hurt
someone and be sorry." So l stepped into
a shop entrance and allowed them to
pass without incident.
In my mind. inconsiderate people like
these are all birds of a feather.
Sometimes it amuses me to think about
the bedlam that would exist if they could
be penned up in the same coop for a few
days. And I shall be forever thankful
that my feathers are not the same as
theirs.
BILL COCKRELL
Gardner's column
MAILBOX
Mor e traffic
To the Editor:
I can't believe the Newport Beach City
Council would approve a three-story
building with many underground
parking spaces to be built where the Fun
Zone is now: That plan will only bring
more people and more traffic to the
peninsula and, believe me. the peninsula
doesn't need more people or more traffic.
U that three-story building is allowed
to go up what will be allowed across the
street where the Bay View burned
down? Another three-story building
would have to be approved, bringing in
more people and more traffic. Think of
the congestion by the ferry landing!
IT SEEMS to me a two-story building
would fit into the area aesth etically and
cause fewer problems.
I wonder if any of the city councilmen
live on the peninsula. 1 know at least one
lives on Balboa Island. I wonder how he
and the rest of the Islanders would like a
three~story building with all th09e new
parking spaces built by the ferry landing
on the Island or m the middle of Balboa
lsland Village?
I know. at least, one ijves on Lido. I
wonder how he and the others on Lido
would like a three-story building and
parking spaces to clog up their entrance?
I doubt it.
BARBARA MAPLE
'On negat ivism'
To the Editor:
I think a more appropriate title for
A .M. George's rebuttal to my letter
on role models and heroes would be, "On
Negativism". One would think from
reading his comme nts that everyone and
everything in the world is wrong, that
mankind's plight is hopeless; that there
is nothing a nyone can do about our
human existence but bury our heads
in the sand and indulge in national self-
deprecation and snivel about how the
world is not perfect.
He e pitomizes the few people 1
referred to in my letter who seem to
mC\kC a profession of debunking our
national heroes. o r selecting one
undesirable individual from a group or
profession and then slandering the entire
group or profession for the misdeeds of
this one individual. To this end he is
consistent.
In his tirade agaiost the medical
profession, o ne wonde rs 1f it ever
occurred to Mr. George how many
miUions of children will never have to
s uffer the lifelon,g aJ;?ony of
polio myelitis. becausl' of medical
research led by Dr. Jonas Salk (a real
hero).
SMALL PEOPLE see urban decay
through myopic eyes. potnt an accusative
finger at architects and utter a pathetic,
"Why did they do this,?" Other men such
as architect Frank Lloyd Wright (a real
hero) with loftier perceptions of the
human existence see this urban blight
and dream of cities that have never been
and say, "Why not?"
Mr. George lumps all lawyers into one
group and labels them as avaricious and
akin to cocaine s muggle rs, while
<-ompletely ignoring the acts and 'deeds
of one country lawyer named Abraham
Lincoln
But 1t 1s the concept of patriot.tsm that
proves most difficult tor people like Mr.
George to comprehend In his effort to
debunk patriousm. he totally fails to
make any distin c tio n be t ween
government and country tn hts analogy
of Hitler and the Nazi youth groups One
of the major points of my letter is: the
foremost patriotic resP,ns1bility of any
citizen 1s to defend the 1ndiv1dual
liberties of its people against the unjust
demands of an unjust government
Leadership's task 1s \9 dwell upon the
good there 1s to be foUJ)d tn the past and
with the knowledg~;of that past to
1llummate mankind's hopes and goals for
the future. TOM WILLIAMS
• l f'Ut''\ ttom r~.Ot'r\ .,,. w •ltOmt' T~ r19M to \oncM>nw l•t
''''to l•t \()~_. 01 e-11m1rwt..-•1tMtl 1\ ff'\~rvf'd '°"•"•''of JOO word\ 0' ff'·n ..w1tl Cllil' g1vt1>n prf'teten(e Afl ff'U"n rnu,t tn
t luOf \•..,Wturt 4ncl m•1llnq adCHt\\ but Nfl'e\ ~Y bf>
W'lt"'t-lelO on rf'Qk"iot 1t '\ufftl1H\t t••\On I\ •PCWttnt Pottry t
t11tlll ,,ot bP out>t•\nit-0 l tt1,.,\ m•t Of> 1•~•~ to ..,, ..
N•m• and~ numbf't ot tf'Wt CM010Ut0f tnu\t DI' o•vein tor
•ft tftt •t•Clt'I PY'"PGW''"
Putting the hex on witchc raft
By ROBERT GARDNER
Robert Gardner is a semi-retired
jurist, frequent emcee and senior body
surfing enthusiast along the Orange
C.oast.
One quiet, sleepy Southern California
day Charlie Carrillo, the court
interpreter, brought an Indian to see me
when I was a deputy district attorney.
The Indian was accompanied by hla
wife, an e maciated little woman who
wu barely able to totter into the office.
On her leg was a great running sore. &
Charlie explained it, a Mexican family
living next door to the Indians had put a
hex on the Indian woman -thorn
crucifixes, mumbo jumbo, the whole
enchilada -and -she was dying.
1 WU In complete accord witfi that
diagnosi.. She looked to me like she was
dying -and was liable to do It any
moment. According to Charlie, If I didn't
do tomething the Indian wu golng to
take the law into his own handl arid if
he did, thOM Mexicans were 1olnc to
think that the once feared Geronimo was
a Sunday School teacher by comparuon.
Charlie said the Indian was quite .mou.a
and that he wu about to wipe out the
Mexican family.
I VENTURBD A ten&ative opinion
that cl\Sa looked like a rnedkal c-. and
that they ahould 10 to the county
MlpltaJ. They already had. (called the
hotpltal and t.alked to lhe doctor In
cNrle. My dSaanolia wu rlcht. The lady w• dyina -for no di.apoMble ~ aid the cloctor. .
Today 1 would c&11 ln a Pl)'Chlatrt.t.
But that w• in the mld·'30I and the dty
of Sen&a Ana did not haw a ~trlA. art that Wll ln the mid· 'SOI arid the dty
woaderful aelf~ of youth -1
would do IOmtthJ.na.
We all ptled lnto a county car and
went to the scen e of this curren t
witchcraft. I ordered the Me>Cican family
out of their houae and Uned them up,
from toddlen to ancients, all 14 of them.
They spoke no English so I asked
CharUe to tranalate. Then I read the riot
act to them. At leut I think l did. As I
remember, I made a pretty Rood apeech .
but I ha~ al\Vaye had a leellng t.hat
Charlie'• tran1latJon was even better.
You aee, Charlie was the cousin or Leo
Ca.rrillo, the actor, and apparently a
eena of the d.ramaUc ceme natural to the
Cantlloa.
I BXPLAINED TO my Mexican
audience ln EnaJJah that witchcraft WU
.,.1n1t the Jaw and punishable by
lrnprilOnment, wrture, burn1nl at the atak=. lm 1leroent and drowntn1.
Charlie bly added a few more ln
bit don. He w• pUtlcularly aood
H he dHc:rlbed \he burnln1. The
Mexicmw. wtlh \belt hetitace of violence
...,,. bee* to thi de.Ya of ~ cou.l.d
undid slllnd. ,... tm.t of drown1J\I (ell
a Ut\le flat bet-awe none of them had
ever aeen man than two lnchea of water
m the Santa Ana River
After Charlie completed his speech
(and I hope part of minC'). 1 walked
around the house and broke aU of the
thorn crucifixes that w.tre strategjcally
placed so the Indian woman could see
them when she looked out of her kitchen
window. Fourteen sets of black eyes
rolled up to the sky as though expecting
an Aztec thunderbolt al this affrontery.
Then, just for good measure, a nd
because it seemed sor t of scary, I
sprinkled salt all around their house. It
seemed like a good Idea at the time. but
for the life of me I don't know why I did
1t. As I sprinkled the salt, (of course with
suitable incantattons) Charlie was
talking with them. I don't know what he
told them about the salt sprinkling. but
they almost fainted.
WHATEVER WE DID was e ffective,
because when we lef\•the two families
were In each others ~ and already
plans were being madtt lor a big fiesta to
celebrate the termlnation of the
neighborhood feud. ...,
A few weeka later the Indian came in.
With him was a bouncing, plump,
snappy-eyed woman. This, amazingly
enoush. was the walltina cad.aver of a
ahort time before. 1 called the hoepita.L
Yes, a miracle had occurred. The great
aore on the woman's Jes had h~ed and
1he had made an lncredlble recovery.
The Indian and his wife left afi.l' bl~ me and promlsing to· name their
next aon Robertb. Thlt they did -I u8t!d to 1ee him once ln a wbU1 -and the
rnoa\ bizarre part of this whole atory ii
that he 1ook:a amuin&lY like me.
So, ll you would UKe to dlapo.e of your
mother-In-law just c:eli on old Voodoo
Gardner -Witch~ exltllOl'dJnary.
I malce no claim that T can kill her, but
l'U bet I am ma.ke her awfully ldck.
... ____ ,._.
I ii .... e
Orange Coaat DAIL. Y PIL.OT /Sunday. Auguat 22. 19t2
It's been a long, hot summer for Khadafy
TRIPOLI, 1.Jbya (AP) -Col.
Moa1nmar Khadafy, Llbya'a
Oarntloyan\ 1\l'orqpnan, hu come
Oil hard UmH. Hla huge oil
Income ha plurnml!ted and his
dream of leadln1 Africa and the
Arab world afaln1l "Western
lmp erlall1m • has lost Its
c:redlbWty.
Once regarded by the Uni~
St.Item u the main paymaster of
lnlerna\lonal terrorism ,
mattermlnd of "hit te1m"
&UU1lna. and the meet danprow
llOW'a! of inatability ln the region,
1'h1dafy'1 financial probfem1
and diplomatic 1elback1 have
sharply reduced hla International
dimension.
Yet with in Libya , his
personality cult continues
unabated and his face and
sayings decorate every waJJ In
the nation's dusty capital.
EGYPT
SUDAN
0 200
' a •
CHAD Mi&.,
A hua• Illuminated rooftop
portrait of "the Oulde of the
Revolution" 11 backed Uke a halo
by the rialn4r 1un.
Khlldafy'a penio.W th.ory of
aodaliam, "The Green 8ook," la
eeen more often on Tripoli
bookahelve9 than the Koran, the
Moslem holy book.
The world oil glut cut the
value of Libya's p~troleum
export.a from the 1980 high of $2~
billion to an estimated •a billion
thla year. For the tint time since
Khadafy took power ln an anny
coup on S e pt. 1, 1969, the
booming economy la ln decline.
Rigorous austerity measures
billion-dollar, Sovll•t supplied
military araen&al 11 conalderc.-d
1lmo1t meanlngleu becau1e.
diplomata say, he has acquired
tour tlmet as many MIG fighter
bomben and T -72 heavy 1'&nlu wi
he has pilots and drlvt'rft to
operate them.
When the Israeli Invasion
trapped the Palestine Liberation
Organization guerrillas in Beirut,
Khadafy wrote to PLO leader
Yasaer Arafat urging him to
commit suicide rather lhan
1urrender. The PLO responded
by inviting Khadaty to lead the
way.
When Khadafy o ffered lo
1upply the hardware for a vut
Arab anny to drive larael out of
Lebanon , mott Arab leaden dld
not even tend a reply.
Yet the c har lamatlt'
40-year-old Libyan leader 1how11
no sign of diacouragement.
But diplomata aay there is no
reliable way to gauge his real
popularity. Few complaints are
heard. Government spies are
eve r yw here. One widely
displayed quotation from the
"Green Brook" h aa it that
"democracy is the supervision of
the people by the people." KHADAFY
.-~~~~~~~~~ ........... ----~~~~~~~-
are In force and Imports of !ALLAN BEEK virtually aU consumer foods are
banned. But L ibya a three
=~ !~=~f 1~1:;~l~ FOR CITY COUNCIL H & R Block to Offer Tax
thOae of most CIQUntrles In the ..... t;;!::_.'.'!~~~11 .. ch School In Orange County ~fy spent more than $100 Thousand• of people are earning money in their spare lime
million building hotels and R OY G. G RA VESEN, M.D. as Income lu preparers
conference halu for a summit l'orm.rty 01 ........ s .. • Mo11i.1 Therapy n.,,..,, ur1 Medon1 c•nr H & R BIOCk. the workf1 largest Income lax preperatlon meetJno of the Organization of 1 d h . f h eervlce, 11 oflerlng a baetc Income lax course atarllng Afrl~~ Unity in early August. SEi~~a;: M';;:;;~I~;;t ~~~nT~E~lPY ~1:~~':~,~~g1:nd 9th with morning, afternoon and evening
The summit was canceled for CENTER OF ORANGE COUNTY During the 12 week course. students will study all phases of lack Qf a quorum and Khadafy Kpecialiiinf in the tre.tment of Sexual & ~letionship Income lax preparation and receive actual experience In lost hla chance lo be the D11-0rder1 of lndividual11 and Couple& preparing Ind ividual returns Experienced Block personnel wlll
organization's chairman and 1000 Weal LaVeta Avenue, Suite ~O~ leach current laws, theory and appUcatlon II practiced In Block offices nationwide There Is a classroom lecture on each Africa"s spokesman for at least 12 Orange subject and practice problems at avery level Courses are
months. (714) 8St>-2677 programmed 10 teach students Increasingly complex 1ax
Twenty-two African countries problems as study progresses. Students will ftnd the course bo o tt d K h d f • 1 .,.,., both Interesting and challenging
ye e a • Y s ong-LLff ••••••••••••••••••U'~ Anyone may enroll. There are no restrictions or awaited summit, dealing his :!l Quallllcatlons. Courses are Ideally suited for housewives. i n t e rn a t ion a 1 pres t i g e a I'\ 1 /... \~" ••v retired persona. teachers or persons wanting to tncrease their
calamiious blow. . , < .. -...• I.I '111-· tax knowledge.
More and more Arab leaders ~? Ouallfled course graduates may be offered 1ob interviews for ignore hla hardline stand against ~· ~ pos1Uona with Block. Many accept employment with Block I '· . ~ because of lhe llex1ble hours available. However, Block fs Israel as irrelevant. His multi--t .... _ C----{if;\\~ ~ under no obligation to offer employment, nor are graduates ' . ~~ IV~ ..,a under any obllgatlon to accept employment with H & R Block
. WITNESS INTIMIDATION A CONCERN ...
The modest e-0urse lee Includes all textbooks. supplies and Miii Exo1//111t Dry Cl•••i., lllll rorms necessary for completlOJl of the school Cen1f1cates
1 _ .1 3 L .1 I 1 • and 7.5 continuing education units will be awarded upon Finl .... ,,,.,, • • • O••• ' successful completion of the course The course Is licensed by (~m Page A5)
eeveral other states. but st.ate and
local officials have t.aken other
steps. too. In Kansas City, for
nece88ar)', physical help to move
a frigh tened old lady from
Brooklyn to the Bronx. The
agency also provides locked and
guarded lounges in courthouses,
he.lpe intimidated victims report
threats to the district attorney ,,,\ ..
OP
Fnl ,iok•ll, I l1/ir1ry the Calltornta Board of Education.
,, ••
'
r.1·nilh Sallll O•" lltYiOI -Regl1trat1on forms and brochures for the Income lax course ri "' may be obtained by contacting the H & A Block ofl1ce at 2138
N. Tustin. Santa Ana, telephone 835-2695 1494-4044 1
•In s t ance, officials began
. providing more protection for
Witnesses after the murders of
three rape victims who had
agreed to testify. In Florida,
a uthorities have set up a fund to
bring visitors who are victimized
back to the state to testify.
A more typltal local program is
the one in San Mateo, where five
full -time e mployees and 20
volunteers offer to help victims
get to court to testify. They send
them letters and .maps telling
them where to park and what
door to use to ge t to a locked
room where they can wait to
testify -away from the
defendant or his friends or
family.
andhelpegetunlistedtelephones 1--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--1.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
...
But f ew states or local
proarams help victims or
witnesses escape their fear.
No state has anything like the
federal government's witness
protection program, under which
nearly 4,000 people -many of
them involved in cases against
organiz.ed crime figures -have
been given new identities.
The federal program, however,
costs nearly $30 lJ)illion a year
and hM ~ aitidzed as a haven
for mob killers who suddenly
find themselves out of favor and
see the government as less a
danger than their own bosses.
Most jurisdictions., however,
don't even offer a letter, map or
secure waiting room. The New
York study estimates that as
much as 25 percent of all victim
or witness intimidation occurs in
the courthouse.
"The big problem with
intimidated victims is the lack of
response by the judicial system ,
starting with the police and going
all the way up," says Candy
Ellington, a oounaelor with ~ew
York City's Victim Services
Agency.
The New York agency is one
of the few in the country that
provides money and, when
Pleaw present to waltrns
when being seatPd Th"
coupon 1s good for ').I O(l nff
1tw r..gul.lr dinner pm 11 11f
~'ill di dny Big Ydluw t louw
Rl!.,taurant Pnc\' oJ'>Pli\'> l<I
,1.1ult 1>.1.-.,·r .uni 1Juh nwmtwn
and new locks on the apartment
doors of victims.
But even when relocated, a
victim or witness suffers. In one
recent ca.e. a murder defendant's
brother thr eatened to kill a
woman witness if she testified.
S he and her hU5band and their
four children were uprooted to a
new apart ment and a new
neighborhood, neither as nice as
where they had been living.
There's no way to compensate
that kind of loss or suffering for
victims and witnesses, says Lucy
Friedman, director of the Victim
Services Agency. And, she says,
there's no way to guarantee that
any victims or witnesses,
including those who are
relocated, are really safe from
violent retaliation.
All you can eat
each day of the week
for oDly $5.50
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When you give this coupon to your waitress. she'll give each adult member
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At Color Tiie, our tr .. ncd pcnonnet _.... Yota ._ lnllndon broc:hura end ccpcrt acMec on do-ft· ~ lnltanMlon end deccntlns. flWI M'I IOln you ~ tools. And w.'11 c:harft.llty refund ~ money on If'>' unwed tile Ind W1CJlt "* ol vs a-...
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\
I
JACK KEMP
, r I $ ) $ $
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1982
He lost on tax hike, but Kemp still has ambitions
• WASHINGTON (AP) Tlw
lk.-ene is the White House Cabinet
room. Pre:ildcmt Reag1m, seeking
converts to the tax-Increase
proposul umong a gro up of
Republican congressmen, Is
asked by a reporte r whether
Re p . Jac k Kemp and other
conservatives were trying t o
undermine his presidency wilh
their opposlt.ion.
"No, I think that Jack is a
purist in the s upply -side
economics." the president replies.
Reporter: "He's not running
for president himself?"
Reagan: "I didn't know the job
was up for grabs."
JOB SQUAD
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That'• how Rt'p. Jack Kemp.
H-N.Y., wanta his detectl.on from
the Reagan brand of economk
policy judged. He <.'it.ell tP.at bit of
dia logue when uketl if hi11
campaign agairu.t the tax increase
(which hWI been approved) could
be related to his presidential
ambitions.
ln Kemp's conservative cu·cles,
there ls no higher ac.-colade than
to be called a purist on supply-
side economlcs. AB for the rest:
"I've said publicly, I was with
the president in 1980. I've said
publicly that I'm with him in
1984. I think he's going to run
again in 1984. And I'm going aJI
D.OYE
SOAP
Bath Sbe
2:*1 4. 75 OZ. EA. :
uround the country speaking and
worklni for him a n d t h l'
Republican platform."
I l's hard to find anybody who
knows Jack Kemp -admirer or
detractor -who doesn't think
that the New York congressman
will 'make a run tor president, I(
not in 1984, then 1988. 1992?
What does it matter? Kemp has
time. He's only 47.
"There is a sense of destiny
about him," says Ed Rutkowski,
a teammate on the Buffalo Bills
pro football team who considers
Kemp his political godfather.
"He'• got un uncunny ability to
bt! able tD do the rigln thing at
the right time."
Doe1 this sense of destin y
include the presidency?
"It does," says Rutkowski, now
the executive of the Erie County
governme nt. "A lot of people
have said that, not just this year
but years ago."
The issue that he's generated
this time around ls Implacable
o pposition to raising taxes,
whether by closing loopholes or
other means. "It's because it's-a
big Issue, because it's such a
fundamental prindple at stake
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Everything about K e mp
suggests an All-American liUccetl8
story He played pro fe1t11lonal
football from 1957 to 1970,
quarterbacking the Buffalo Bills
to Amc-r1can Football League
champ1onsh1ps an 1964 and 1965.
He was a special assistant to
then-Gov Ronald Reagan in
1967 and to the chairman of the
GOP national t'Onumtt.ee 1n 1969.
He h e lped fo"nd the AFL
Players A.'ISOCiation and was 1t.s
presiden t. He was elected to
CongreliS from suburban Buffalo,
N.Y .. in 1970.
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DlllJ Piiat
SUNDAY, AUG. 22, 1982 0
FOR THE RECORD 86
Raiders suffer
exhibition def eat
in Detroit. B3.
~
0
Trojans should have an all-new look In •
N or m ally ground-oriented , USC figures to b oast a Salisb ury aerial attack
By ROGER CARLSON of""ttw o.1J Not It.ff
LOS ANGELF.8 -On the surface it
won't be apparent. Their colors of
cardinal and gold remain, but for the Tro)!lns of the University of Southern
California, It appears to be very clear
thia ls a year for a change.
It's .•till an I-oriented attack for Coach
John Robinson, but the key to the 1982
football season won't be the traditional
emphasis on the tailback -it's going to
be on a sophomore quarterback with 15
paaa attempts under his belt at USC.
It'a 6-5 ~, 210-pound Sean Salisbury, a
19-year-old, whose rapid-fire speech
lives you the Dwight Stones look and Fila rapid-fire arm gives you the Bert
Jones look.
"Sean's going to be a very exciting
player," Robinson told a press gatherin_g
Saturday.
"He's the kind of player who if you
aak him something for which he doesn't
Easler
does in
Dodgers •
PITTSBURGH (AP) -It took
104 games, but Pittsburgh Pirate
outfielder Mike F.aslcr finally got
his first game-winning RBI of
the 1982 baseball season.
F.asler slammed his 11th home
-run of the season with two out in
the bottom of the eighth inning
to give Pittsburgh a 2-1 victory
over the L os Angl'lcs Dodgers
Saturday night.
"I wasn't aware that he didn't
have one but I'm glad he got it,"
said Pirate M a nager Chuck
Tanner. "He picked the right
spot."
F.asler said he was happy to
end the dry spell. especially
On TV t oday
channel 11 at 10:30
against a left-handf'd pitcher,
Steve Howe.
Under T anner's platoon
system, the left-handed hilling
Easler usually faces right-handed
pitchers exclusively.
"It's especially good against a
left-hander and Howe's one of
the best in the league," Easler
said. "It's a challenge and I enjoy
a challenge."
Howe dropped to 6-:J with the
loss, onJy the fifth in thE-last 18
games for the Dodgers.
"It was a good pitch," said
H owe. "What can I say? rt
happens."
have an answer, he'll reply: 'Give me a
minute and I'll come up with something.'
The insertion of Salisbury Into the
starting unit haa sent 1981 starter John
Mazur off to Texas A&M, where he'll lit
out a year before continuing his college
career.
Also lost to the Trojan.a for 1982 is
fullba.ck Michael Alo, who ii being red-
shirted for a year with no contact in
hopes of recovering from a neck injury.
Robinson promises a more varied
attack for the Trojans, particularly in the
pasmog game.
"Last year we were too conservative,"
admits Robinson. "Five quarterbacks in
six years forces some things on you."
With Salisbury, Robinson has a
situation where it'll be a three-year stint
and he predicts nothing but good things
for the product of Orange Glen High in
Escondjdo.
AB a prep Salisbury was marked for
certain stardom on the collegiate level,
but his freshman season wasn't much .
"I thought I waa ready," says
Salisbury. "But now, especially aft.er the
Fiesta Bowl game, I know I wasn't.
"It was just a matter of thinking 'give
me the football. that's all I need.' But I
learned that if you can't take the snap
right and get the pitch right to the
tailback, you can't play. And. I learned
there la such a thing as the short pass,
too."
Robinson conti nu e d about h is
quarterback:
"There's a dynamic quality about the
position, and the truly great ones have it,
and I think Salisbury does, too.
"Dan Fouts had it when I was at
Oregon.
"But when Sean came to us he wasn't
that interested in the efficiency part of
the job, the drills and details.
"I finally convinced him, because he
finally bought it that he had no choice. If
he didn't, he wouldn't play."
Salisbury admits he was close to
leaving USC duri.ng his freshman year.
"I laid awake at nights asking myself
if I did the rlght thing and questioning
what I was doing here. "Mr parents and myself were asking. 'whats wrong?' But now, looking back,
it's a lot to ask (s~ quarterback as a
freshman) from a kid. '
Aside from the new quarterback ,
meaning a new emphasis on the passing
game, other sections of the USC attack
appear very similar to what Trojan fans
have come to expect.
Marcus Allen, the Trojans' fourth
Helsman Trophy winning tailback, is
history, but two sophomores (Fre d
Crutcher and Zephrini Lee) and junior
Michael Harper appear to have the
situaton in hand.
"Crutcher is the kind of back who will
attack you," says Robinson, "and Lee is a
Ricky Bell type runner, except he hasn't
(See TROJANS, Page 84)
Los Angeles had runners at
first and second with nobody out
in the eighth but failt'Cl to score.
Pinch hitter J orge Orta a nd
Steve Sax singled. but K e n
Landreaux hit into a linc--drive
double play.
DOUBLING UP -Pittsburgh's Bill Madlock slides into
second base with a double while Steve Sax of the Dodgers is
AP Wireptloto
unable to handle throw from the outfield. Mad.lock's hustle
turned into a run and Pirates nipped Dodgers, 2-1.
W inning reli ever Kent
TekuJve. 8-6. who camc-m relief
of Manny Sarmie nto, the n
retired Dus ty Baker o n a
grounder to end the mnmg
''We had scoring opportumt1es
but we didn't capitalize o n
them." said Dodger Manager
Tom Lasorda. "Ordinarily we
score a couple o r runs an a
situation like that."
Pittsburgh took a 1-0 lead in
the third against rookie Ricky
Wright, who was making his
third major-league start. Bill
Madlock doubled to left-center
with two out and scored on Jason
Thompson's single.
The Dodgers tied the S(:ore in
the seve nth whe n P ed r o
Guerrero walked, went to second
on a groundout and scored with a
head-first slide on Bill Russell's
single to left.
The Dodgers had runners a t
first and third with none out in
the fifth inning but failed lo
score. Gue rre r o and S teve
Ouvey singled. but Sarmiento
got Bon Roenicke to fly out and
Guerrero was thrown out at the
plate attempting to score on
Ru.ell's grounder to third.
1J' ALKER OUT
FOR S IX WEEKS
ATHENS, Ga . (AP) -
Henchel Walker, ~rgla'e All-
.American running back, suffered
• fractured right thumb In a
aTlmmage Saturday and will be out of action for three to six
*9eka. i.am offlclala 11aJd. The lnjury occurred aa the
•u11do11 prepared to meet a.a.on on Sept. 6. Walker wW
und e r ao 1ur1ery thh
murn.lnl to repair the fractw'e,
....S will be wurfn.a a cut fOC' at
1-tlv. weeb, offJdala u.ld.
A rosy outlook for Bruins
UCLA has a new home, new h o p e for 1982 season
By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS
Of the D•lly Piiot Stat!
LOS ANGELES -It isn't often that a
coach will spend more time answe r ing
questions about where his team plays than
about the squad itself.
But, for UCLA football coach Terry
Donahue. it's understandable these days.
The Bruins have a new home, the Rose
Bowl, vacating the Coliseum and will no
longer be co-tenants with cross-town rival
USC.
''The overall feeling from the UC LA
people seems to generally be~s0pportive."
said Donahue as he met the press Saturday
afternoon on the Westwood campus.
"There are individuals here who would
prefer we were still in the Coliseum, but
the vast majority see it as a good move.
"The reception from the Pasadena
community have been exceptional. Being
the only tenant (al the ROiie Bowl). they
have been very anxious to please us and we
want to please them, as well."
WHILE A FEW things still remain to be
ironed out ("The locker rooms are still a bit
too small"), Donahue peraonally ii looking
forward to the move.
"l think we can develop a h ome
followin~ and a · real home-field
advantage.' he aald. "It may take a 'few
games, but the •t~ is ideal for the farw.
Without a track, they re much cloeer to the
fleld and closer to the action."
What the fane will be teeing I.a a veteran
football team with a lot of promile. The
Bru.lna, who open Sept. t 1 agalnet Lona
Beach S\ate at the Role Bowl, return 4&
lettermen from 1.ut year's 7-4-1 equad that
mimed by one P11e-lO vtctory of~
the conferenct uu. and pkytna ln the Rc.e Bowlpmt.
lnli.ad. UCLA concluded lte Muon
against Big 10 foe Michigan, dropping a
33-14 decision in the Bluebonnet Bowl in
Houaton.
No less than 24 players who started at
least once in 1981, plus a full-time 1980
starter, return for the 1982 season. AU-
Amerlcan candidate Connac Camey and
quarterback Tom Ramsey head the list on
offense. along with tailback Kevin Nelaon,
fullback Frank Bruno and flanker Jojo
Townsell.
While solid enoush offensively, the
Brulne' defenee, especially the aeoondary,
could be the atrongett link In the chain.
"WE'RE VERY deep in. the eecondary,"
said Donahue. "We've got virtuaJll no
newcomers and it's the fcx:al point o our
defenee."
Free safety Don Roatl'I, who led the
team with 133 tackles, and atrona ealety
Tom Sullivan, who accounted for 109 stops
and led the Pac-10 wtth alx lntercepUona,
form the 1ut Une o1 defenee. The Brulnt
also have three cornerbacke, Jlmniy
Turner, Lupe Sanches and Walter Lana .
who have ltarted at 1eeat 11 pma.
How does the Pac-10 chase look to
)
Donahue? He sums it up in two words.
''wide open."
"I think we have about as good a chance
as anybody," he said, "although I think
most people are picking Washington right
now . USC is outstanding as always and
Arizona State figures to surprise some
people.
"Last year, I figured that we could have
beaten a nybody we played a nd I also
believe anybody could have beaten us on a
given day."
Someone asked if Oregon State, the
conference's perennial doonnat and winne r
of onJy one game last season, fit Donahue's
theory.
Donahue responded, "You have to
remember that we didn't play Oregon State
last season."
* * * WhUe the move to the Ra;e Bowl has
provided a new beginning to the Bruins'
football team, the same could also be said
for freshman quarterback Matt Stevens.
the Fountain Valley High product getting
his feet wet at UCLA.
And that's his primary responsibility
th9e days, orientation with the school and
hla 11.ln'Oundlnga.
"When I was an eighth-grader, l was a
bla stud, but had to start over again In hlgh
ecf\ool," said Stevens. ''The same thing is
happening now. I'm atartins over In a
way."
That may be true, but SteveN did rate a
mention by Donahue, durint the coach's
briefing to the media co~mi.ng UCLA'• tncornlna fl'fthmen. And, Si.vena would Jutt u eoon keep getW\g notlced. ··
"At thlll ltllle• p ctice ti very Important
to me ~ meetinp are very important to
me. t don't really have a timetable about
when I would like to start playing.
( ... UCLA.Pa,.81)
1982
Angels
blast
Tigers
By CURT SEEDEN
01 th• Dellr Pllol Sl•ff
Gt•ni• M.1ut h lt .. mt•d bcick an his
t·h:m and -.u.on·d ;H tht· cal<'ndar
on ha-. olfau· wall b<·h1nd him.
"Wt• havt· to kt•t·p playing lake
ht•ll and tl11•n un th<· 20th of
St·ptt•mtwr. w1 hav1· to gt'l hot -
reaf hot.'' he predicted.
S(•pt :w I'> an 1rnpc>rtant oate in
Maueh's mind Thi· Angels and
K ansas C11v Royal-. began a
thn•t··ganu• -.,1·n1·-., •• t Anaheim
Stadium that d:1v A11d when it is
ov<:r. th1·r« will ·1,1· JU'>L l(J games
rt•ma1ning 10 dt·ud1· Lhl· torrid
Amt•rat·un L1•agut• 'v\'t·-.t p('nnant
rat·t•
In Mauth " w11nh. the· Angels
d 1 d 1 n cl l' c· d µ I a v I 1 k t· h e 11
Saturdav night -.conng enough
The re' still a lot of
baseball left.
-Doug O.Clnc.e
runs tm the• c•\'t•nanj.! and at least
one of thtN-' g.11nt ... m S1·ptember
Jgainst tht· R111,db
WllE/..; TllE du ... t h •• d s<'ltled.
Bob Boone had cracked a pair of
homt· run\. Frl'<l L\ nn added a
two-run bla-.,t amf thl' Angels
rolllod to ,1 I :~-1 v1( turv over the
Dc·tro1 t T1gt·rc; lwfon: 44.194 at
Anah<·1m S1;1d1um
B u 1 c • v 1• n "' 1 t ti ;1 I I l h a t
f1n•µow1·r lht• An~{·ls had _ to
sNtlt• for ..,h,1ra11g a poruon of
first plal·t· 111 thl' W<-st thanks to
tht• Royals' 4 :~ VIL't• 1rv ovt·r the
Chicago Whi te Sox ·Saturday
night
"Tht•1 t•" -.till a lot ot baseball
ldt." t·autw1wd third baseman
Doug L>d . .'1nt·c·s. who paeked up
four HBI 111 the• l'ontc-st "It's not
time to be looking at the
scoreboard." The Tigers certainly
didn't get a charge out of the
Anaheim Stadium scoreboard. In
fact. by the second inning, the
Angels had glVen starting pitcher
Geoff Zahn all the runs he would
need
Lynn opc.-nt-d thl' -.<'COnd with
a smglt', l)({.'11wt:s rlnublL'Cl him
homt.'. and two outs laL<·r. Boone
nflC'd his far-.t honw run over the
ll'ft-fal'ld f<•nn·
Tht' rc•11i<1andt•r 11f the night
was pun· agony for starter and
loser Jack Morn.., I 14 -12) and
four otlwr DC'lrn11 µ1tchl•rs.
LYNN DE LIVE RED a two-
run homer. his 18th of the season,
in the third inning. Boone belted
his SC't'Ond hom<•r in the fourth
and the Angels wrapped things
up by putung :.ix on the
sc:oreboard in thP bottom of the
fifth
The rest was up to Zahn, who
went on to pack up career victory
No. 83 It's an important number.
because coming into the game,
the crafty left-hander also had 83
career losses. The victory. his
14th of the season against five
defeats. puts him at the career
500 mark "l knt'w we needed a complete
game and when we got so many
runs early I knew I was in there
for nine (innings). l was &lad I
could give the bullpen a rest,"
Zahn said iJ fte rward.
Zahn picked up his ninth
complete game of the season ,
scattering six hits while wal~lng
two and striking out two. It was a
typic&J Zahn ou\.lng, hlghJighted
by plenty of ground balls
Including two double plays.
"Lut n ight wos a tough
game," added DeClncca, who
now haa 28 RBI Ln l~ gamee in
Augus t and 31 R81 since tM
All·a~r break. ''Tonight we came
out to wln and 1ot ~nough nma
(See ANGELS, P.,e 8'7)
.\
.. Orange CoH1 OA1vw'PILOT/8und1y, Augutt 22. 1882 .... --------------------...... ~,~\\\. &\~ ~ . Girl gets a kick
out of footba ll
From AP dl1patches
WILLIAMSBURG, Ky . -
Marjorle Beth Bates haa the [i]
cllaUnction of being the tint, and only, 4 •
1 trl on a Kentucky hlgh sch ool •
football teem.
With her brother, Hunter Batee, 14, holding
the ball for her, the 16-year-old eecond stringer
for Wllliamaburg High School attempted a
polnt-afte r-touchdown kick Saturday in a
prMeUOn game in Wil.liamaburg.
.Beth's kick was blocked in much the same
manner that llOl'1'le Kentucky football coaches and
officials are trying to block girls' participation in
contact sports.
"Beth is not our best kicker, but she's been
pretty consistent in practice," said Williamsburg
Coach Bob Rose.
Quote of the day
"It was just like meeting Santa Claus.
You go in, get your picture taken with him,
and then you leave." -World Boxing
Auoclatlon li~htweight champion Ray
"Boom Boom ' Mancini, recounting a
recent visit with President Reagan.
Braves Inch closer to Dodgers
Cbrh Chamb l .. s crash e d a a
three-run homer, and Jerry Royster
singled home the go-ahead run in t he
sixth inning as Atlanta trimmed the
New York Mets, 6-5, to highlight National
Le~e action Saturday. It was the third straight
win for the Braves and moved them within two
games of the Dodgers in the NL West ...
Elsewhere, first baseman Jeff Leonard's three
e rrors in two innings led to
four unearne d runs and
Lonnie Sm ith rapped an
inside-the-park homer,
helping St. Louis beat San
Francisco, 7 -6 ... Tim
Lollar and Luis DeLeon
combined on a two-hitter and
Gene Richards and Tony
Gwynn each drove in a run in
the sixth inning, leading San
Diego to a 2-0 win over the
Chicago Cubs . . . Nolan Ryan pitched a five-
hitter and neared second place on the all-time
strikeout list while pitching Houston to a 5-3
decision over Montreal. Ryan struck out five,
giving him 3,433 career strikeouts . Walter
Johnson leads the all-time list with 3,508 ...
Paul Householder and Ron Oester drove in two
runs apiece and Bob Shirley scattered seven hits
as Cincinnati belted Philadelphia, 10-3.
Aikens gives Royals a big lift
Willie Aikens slammed a
towering, two-out homer off Salome
Baroja1 in the bottom of the ninth ,
lifting Kansas City to a 4-3 verdict
over the C hicago White Sox to h ighlight
American League actio n Saturday . Dao
Q8J1enberry, ex-Costa Mesa High and Orange
Coast College graduate, who came in with two
outa in the eighth inning. got the win (7-5) ...
Elsewhere, Doc Medich and
Rome Fingers combined on a
six-hitter as Milwaukee
blanked Seattle, 3-0 . . . Dan
Meyer hit a three-run homer in the fifth inning, and Tony
Ar mas followed with his
third career grand s lam as
Oakland blasted Boston, 12-5
... Jim Clancy and Dale
M u r phy co mbine d o n a .
three-hitter and Jesse AS Die
Barfleld't RBI double keyed a three-run first
inning, leading Toronto to a 3-1 win over the
New York Yankees ... Ken SlogJetoo's run-
scoring single capped a three-run. eighth-inning
rally that led Baltimore to a sloppy 8-6 victorv
over Texas . . . Gary Ward knocked in two runs
and Al Williams and two relievers combined to
scatter nine hits to lead Minnesota to a 4 -3
victory over Cleveland.
Baseball today
On thla date ln bueball ln 1965:
San Frand8oo•1 Juan Marlchal and Los
Angeles' John Roseboro touched off one of
baseball's moat famous bench-clearing
brawls during the third inning of the
Gianta' 4-3 victory over the Dodgers at
Candle91ick Park.
Dodger pitcher Sandy Koufax had
delivered a pitch to Marich.al, and catcher
Roseboro then threw the ball back to
Xoufax. Maricbal complained that
Roaeboro'a throw had come too cloee to his
head, and, eeconda later, Marichal started
~ his bat at Rceeboro, ee«ing off the
After the fireworks had ended, Willie
Ma)'I belted a three-run homer off Koufax
to alve the Gian ta the victory.
On thia date in 1961.
En route to his record-breaking 61 -homer
~New York Yankee slugger Roger
Maria belted his 50th homer of the year -
a ahot off Los Angeles Angela' Ke n
McBride -to become \he f1nt player ln
major league history to reach the ~-homer
plateau in August.
Today's Birthdays.:
Boston R ed Sox veteran Carl
Y .. tneimki la 43. St. Loula Cardlnala
pitcher Doua Bair ta 33. Montreal Expos
pitcher Bay B u rrla la 32. Milwaukee
JINwera infielder Paul Molitor la 26.
Anot her upset at Saratoga
Raaway Groom, a 12-t longahot
from Canada, rushed ~ apeedstera Al•••'• R•ler and CHq•l1t1dor a. "1th about a lbrteenth of a mile • to IO and won the $221.~ Travers Stakee at
8arato1a Satur~ay as the "Graveyard of
a.n'*"'9'' cl•lmed another vtctlm. Runaway
Oroom .-S .J!!a.80, ~.eo md '2.10 •.. Mk'hlpn eo.h le .. ~•YI a pu~ report
tlwt mon than fO percent of h1a ~now l*'fonn1nl ln the National Football J..""8ue ah!
wtdwJut coUtee decrw .. "°' true.
•
.Success hasn 't spoiled P e try y e t
Detroit righ t-h and er is amazed b y wh a t h e's accomplish ed
By CURT SEEDEN
O(Ule o ... r f'tlol ......
Conaecutlve 10-9 aeaaon11 In hia flnt two .full
yean wl\h the Detroit Tigers didn't s~U succna for
Dan Petry
Just belna a "mediocre pitcher" 1&nd winning
10 garnet each year left the former El Dorado High
standout if nothing else, content. •
But things are rapidlr c hanging for the
23-year-old right-hander. Ho 1 gotten to the point
now where success is Interfering with his job,
which ls to wln ball games for the Detroit 'I'lgers.
"Actually success ls the reason everyone plays
this game," Petry was saying the other day while
hiB teammates and the Angels were in the midst of
theLr three-game series at Anaheim Stadium. "But
success is also hard."
Petry should know . This season, he's posted a
13-7 record to go along. with a 3.17 earned run
average -tops among Tiger starters.
"l was just mediocre, and maybe I still am but
I guess I'm having a pretty good year," P~try
modestly admitted. "And now everyone expects me
to be fantastic. It makes you work that much
harder."
Ironically, Petr y admits, he takes a philosophy
that he's going to wm every time he takes to the
mound -especially in Detroit where he has posted
an 8-2 record this season.
"I've really realized just how much success I've
had there. Now I go out there and say, 'you can't
beat me, you can't beat me,' " Petry saya.
Is succes.5 spoiling Petry?
He says it's not. But then, that was just a few
hours after he had left his new 4,000-square-foot,
Lundquist sets
swim niark
Moffet, Barrett finish next
lNDIANAPOLlS (AP) -Steve Lundquist, a
senior at South ern Methodist University, broke his
own month-old world record in the 100-meter
breaststroke Sa~urday night at the U.S . Swimming
Long Course national championships.
Lundquist, 21, of Jonesboro, Ga .. was clocked
at l minute, 2.53 seconds at the Indiana University
Natatorium, breaking the world mark of 1:02.62 he
set July 19 at Mission Viejo.
LUNDQUIST, A member of the 1980 U.S.
01ympic team, also won the 100-breaststroke at the
world championships in Ecuador earlier this month.
Saturday night's victory was his ninth national
title.
John Moffet, 18, of Costa Mesa, third-place
finisher in both the 100-and 200-breaststroke
events at the world championships and winner of
the 200-breaststroke earlier in this meet, finished
second at 1:03.16. Third place went to Bill Barrett.
22, Mission Viejo. the winner of the 200-individual
medley Friday night.
flvc-lx'Ciroom Anaheim Hllll h~ where he 1pent mo.t of tht" day In the 11wbnmSng pool And It wu a
tew h oura before he was aiolng t.o return to hla
4,000-aquare-foot, tlve-bedroom Anaheim Hills
home for a dip In the jacuz.z.l.
I "But that Includes the garage," he quickly
polnta out of the vut llvina apece.
"I never hod anything like that before, you
know, growing up In Placentia. It's luxurious and
•Actua lly success is the reason
everyone plays this same . . • But
success is also hard.'
it's different," be says of his new investment. "And
It's a 101 better than my stuffy old apartment m
Detroit."
~ctually, l'etry's trying to enjoy his new home
as much as possible. It's the first time he's seen it
since he and finance, Chris Cairns, purchased it.
And because Petry isn't scheduled to pitch against
the Angels, it's alm06t like a much-needed vacation.
"I really looked forward to the AU-star break. I
needed it," Petry confressed.
After throwing a team-equaling high 199
innings this season, it's no wonder Petry was
looking forward to this particular series. He'll have
a chance to see old friends and some of his ex-El
Dorado chums who were around to watch him pitch
the Hawks to the CIF 2-A championship in 1975.
The Tigers selected Petry fourth in the June,
1976 draft. He produced an impressive ERA during
his minor league years and then pitched two
SOLIDARITY? -Angela Bob Boone... (right)
and Doug DeCinces shake hands after tk>One's
two-run homer in the bottom of the second
<-'Ompletc gornt!9 In h is flnt four major leallJe 1u.rti
ln 1979.
Now, In Just hi.a fourth major lugue aeuon.
Petry II ~ed for thJrd in games started (28), lied for
third with teammate Jock Morris In lnnln11
pltchc:d, •l><th in earned run average and tied for
tlfth In 1trlkeou ta with 109.
He got a little n.atlonaJ expo8Urt! a few weeka
ago when he faced the New York Yankees on a
Monday night. He was srullng along with a 7-0 lead
only to !M.>e IL get away a.8 the Yank~ eventually
pulled out a victory.
"l didn't do too well. We lost the lead and the
game," Petry recalled. "And everybody In th.•
nation aaw It. It makes you look Uke a Utlle leagu•
pitcher."
One look at his new home a nd It's obvious
there is nothlng.lmle league about Petry's upward
mobility .
"I was telling my dad and fiance thla," Petry
disclosed. "We were looking at all the cars and
houses a round there and I began to wonder if we
went over our heads. Do we really rit into this
society?"
Like it or not. Petry has be<.'Omc a celebrity,
most notably in Detroit, a town he has fallen in love
with.
"l want t.o pitch in Detroit. I'm trying to talk
my f1ance anto buying some land up m Michigan.
The house we have up here we could get for
$15-0,000 or $100,000 there," he admits.
The way Petry's been pitching. it may not be
long before he can afford a small paJa<.oe. But then,
that just wouldn't fit into his lifestyle.
He'll stick to five bedrooms for now and try not
to let success spoil him.
inning that also 800.red DeCi.ncee. Boone hit
another homer off Detroit pitcher Jack Morris
in the fourth as Angels romped, 13-1. Lundquist's record swim followed an American
record-breaking performance by Sue Walsh in the
women's 100-backstroke. Walsh, 20, a junior at the
University of North Carolina, was timed at 1:02.48,
breaking the U.S . record of 1:02.55 set by Linda
Jezek in 1978.
Betsy Mitchell, 16, Cincinnati, was second at
l:04 .02, and Debbie Risen, 16, Overland Park, Kan.,
was third at 1:04.11.
Handshakes come • all forIIJs
T h ere's the traditional, t h e slap and, of course, high five
THE BIGGEST upset in the four-day meet
came in the women's 100-breaststroke, when
16-year-old Kim Rhodenbaugh of Cincinnati beat
triple-gold medal winner Tracy Caulk ins.
Rhodenbaugh, a two-time national champion in t he
200-yard breaststroke, beat the favored Caulk.ins at
t~e 50-meter tui;n and stayed in front for a winning
time of 1:10.79.
Caulkins, 19, Nashville, Tenn .. came in at
1:11.62 for second place -her Cirst loss in that
event in a national meet since 1977.
Caulkins, who earlier won the 200-backstroke
and the 200-and 400-individual medleys, was
trying for her 43rd national swimming title.
Third place went to Shan non Orcutt 16
Mission Viejo, at 12:47. ' '
Rhodenbaugh's older brother, Mark, 18, won
the gold medal in the men's 100-backstroke with a
time of 56.90. Mark Rhodenbaugh, who will be a
freshman at Southern Methodist, set a national
high school recoi:d in the 100-yard backstroker
earlier this year.
Ki1nhall pulls
upset in diving
Pl'M'SBURGH (AP) -Bruce Kimball w on
the men's 10-meter platform flnals Saturday with
603.63 polnta ln the U.S . Outdoor National Diving
Championships as world champion Gree Louganla
f1nlahed eec:ond.
It seems rather the final straw that the unrest
between football labor and management would
come down to the traditional -indeed innocent -
ritual of the handshake.
As you know, there is considerable commotion
about players of the Na t ional Football League
shaking h ands on the greensward prior to
exhibition games. The rite is to display solidarity in
the ranks of the NFL players association, a body at
odds with the owners over several issues -mostly
money.
It is the contention of managem ent that the
handshake thing is in violation of NFL rules on
. fratenUzation. Some teams have fined their players
for the deed and other club& are sworn to do so.
It should be pointed out at this critical juncture
that there are many players who refuse to take part
in the handshaking ceremony for reasons other
than political. They feel that prior to a game as
physical as pro football that shaking hands is a silly
and sissy thing to do.
But the handshake, in all its fonns through the
yeara, has always been such a vital part of football.
For Instance, during the introductions of the
players before a game, one athlete will dash onto
the field and embrace and pump the hand of the
clod already out at midfield for all the world like
they had not seen each other for several decades.
Now this is an indication of solidarity between
members of one team and it is e ndorsed by
management. lt is also enjoyed by the fans. At least,
it seems to be inasmuch as each handshake is
greeted by generous cheering and applauding.
Then, of course, there is the ritual of the high
five. This is usually performed after a player has
done something h eroic such as 8COre a touchdown or
kick a field goal or sack a quarterback.
The high five is done by one player running
toward the other and both leaping in the air as high
as possible and clasping hands at the very summit of
SPORTS COLUMNIST
BUD
TUCKER
The high five, of course, evolved. It was not too
long ago that a player was greeted after a display of
excellence by the basic handshake. the ordinary
right-on-right.
Before the high five, though, came the palm slap.
The palm slap was extremely popular for many
years and, as a matter of fact, is sull widely used in
football and other sports . The palm slap falls
somewhere between the handshake and the high
five in temlS of emotion.
T he palm slap 1s an uncomplicated act. One
simply opens his hand to display the palm and slaps
the palm of another.
There are variations, such as the double palm slap
and the ritual is often enhanced by various
movementa of the body and feet. This sometimes
progresses as far as a touching of e lbows and
bumping of torsos. There is palm slap maneuver
which concludes with both parties doing a
backward flip. but this is pretty well limited to
professional basketball.
At any rate, you see where 1t is upfortunate that
labor and management in pro footblill are reduced
to scrapping over a small -but important -item
like the handsha ke.
Perhaps a deal could be worked out.
The owners wish to test the players for drug use.
The players object. The players wish to shake
hands. T he owners object.
OK, compromise. Before a player hands over a
hand, he hands over a sample.
Wendy Wyland of Miaalon Viejo captured the
women's 10-meter platform finals with 427.14 at
Settler's Cabin Park in Pittsburgh. Michele
Mitchell of Tuc.9on, Ariz., waa eec:ond with 415.41. the le ap, which quite clearly explains the ..---------------------
origination of the title of the maneuver, the high
flve. Kimball. 19, of Ann Arbor, Mich .. who dives for
hia father, University of Michigan Coach Dick
Kimball , ia back on the b oard following
recuperation from an auto accident 1ut October. He
suffered a c rushed cheekbone, fractured skull,
ruptured spleen, lacerated liver, broken fibula and
The high five is almost exclusively empJoyed on
the playing fieJdt but It la aometimea uaed at
parties or when mee ting by chance on the
boulevard.
tom knee ligaments. but competed at the world ..----------.-----------4
champlonah.lpe earlier this month and placed third
behind Loupnb.
Kimball collected 603.63 polnta, while
Loupnil had 558.4~.
Loupnls. 22, of the Mmlon~le Nadaclclr9.
won two of the compet1t.lon'• event&, .Svt.,, h1m hie lS>th and 20th na tf tlea.
••••••e•••······ ARTIST : ,
NHd e11oeptlonal ertltt 10 do •
IPOl't• eotlQn figure lke1Clle9 • et rHtoneblt price. Cell •
.1emee btWn & , 10pm. I
661-3316 • ····••e•••••••• Loupnla. a student at UC lrvtne, ewept the
men'• •p rtnaboard and platform even&I at the
World Dlvln1 ChampJomhip ln Ecuador a few ,,__ml!~ml'!•
weeb llO· _ 111 ~ third ln the men'• went WM Mike · IAllL •s Wantuck. • of Awrtln, Tew, With 540.81 sdnta. . ,., .........
Matt &aa1n. 18, ol the ~ Hom l>tvina M aa a •ale
Oub of AustID, 'rew, wu fourtll wilb 5st.82 :':'!... ... ":.
pointa. t.nn1 IAyJand. 21 , of Mmaoo Vlejc>. WM it lit,.,.., lifth wt th oot.eo .D04nta. ..... T1IM...,.. et v. o.e. M.rk Vli1I. 2'. ol the Lena Ham DMn8 Oub, fClll ._...,.. .,_ Mlt
cla h ned m1h place with d0.09 polnte. Brian cmtA W 6' 1-12H
Buqum, 27, of tu Lona Hom DI~ Club, __:.-:.:_ ;~1 . amm.ct ..wntb with 481M pomta. Ron..,.,_., 30, .., c..., , a
of ~ R.uart.ck Dlvtnc Qua> of.,..~. Artr.., ................ ~~ ICONd 4Je.90 pcm• for efcbt.b .,.... ................................. .......
' ,
-. -------.~-..:......;;-...c'-"'-~--~-~
ORANGE COUMTY
4:9LU~'!'9!1AMA
GUN SHOW
-·· ••••• 1'HAN ... Aueuat 21 & 22 Sat. & Sun.
IUY -SELL -TRADE
250 TRADE TA8LES
,._uri"Q Guns -AntlQut & Modetn
Ammo -Wer Rtlk» & Surplus
lndill'I Mlfactt -Ruo1 & Jewelry -Colnt
Admleelo n ta.GO
Chlldrett Under 14 11.li
r--. WI All Mwlll
MOUi• IAT .. ..._ t .. I
OIU•I COUNTY Mii 810 ... I
..W '9GIUCJI PA'9UOM. .... II
....... M"1alrt •• C... ..... .. .......... 11 ...... HIJ
\
j •
~UNKED -Raiders quarterback Jim
Plunkett loses control of the ball after being hit by Detroit's Dave Puriefory for a five-yard
' ~
loss during the first quarter of
game in Pontiac, Mich.
Lions cut Raiders off at pass !
!
Interceptions prove fatal as Detroit posts 30-16 .
Win
PONTIAC. Mich. (AP) -Detroit strong safety
Ray Oldham thought he was dreaming when he
picked off an errant Jim Plunkett pass on the third
play of the game.
' It turned into a nightmare for the Los Angeles
Raiders when Oldham returned the interception 22
yards for a touchdown to spark the Lions to a 30-16
victory in a National Football League preseason
game Saturday night.
It was the first of our interceptions for the
Uons' defense.
"I'll tell you. that was an exciting play for me,"
otdham said. "I thought I was dreaming it at first.
We practiced against that play all week.
"Then, when Plunkett called it so early, I
couldn't believe it. As the play developed, he kept
January, Collins share lead
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) Don January fired
a 2-under-par 69 Saturday to share the lead with
Bill Collins after three rounds of the Greater
Syracuse Seniors Golf Classic on the PGA Seniors
Tour.
Collins shot his set.'Ond straight 71 for a 54-hole
total of 2-over 215. """°' A double bogey-6 on the last hole cost
Australian veteran Peter Thomson a cha nce to tie
January and Collins.
The tournament is being played at the
Bellevue Country Club. a 6.572-yard layout with
tricky greens, narrow fairways and windy weather
that have allowed only seven subpar rounds in
three days.
looking at me and I kept reacting just the way I did
in pract~ce. I couldn't believe Plunkett actually
threw It."
The Lions never lool.ed back after Oldham's
touchdown runback and led the entire ball game.
The closest the Raiders could get was 10-6 at the
end of the fu-st quarter.
"You can't win when you turn the ball over
like we did," Raiders Coach Tom Flores said. "The
quick TD we gave Detroit put us' in the hole. We
gave them a couple of touchdowns that shouldn't
have happened. We just didn't execute."
Both teams now are 1-1 in preseason play.
Detroit quarterback Eric Hipple. playing only
the first half. passed 46 yards to wide receiver
Tracy Porter for a second-quarter Lions touchdown
and Gary Danielson hit wide receiver Mark Nichols
with an 18-yard TD strike in the fourth period.
Place-kicker &Idle Murray booted fie ld goals
of 20. 40 and 23 yards to account for the rest of the
Detroit scoring.
The Raiders scored on a first-quarter pass play
from Plunkett to fullback Marcus Allen that
covered 15 yards. but the PAT attempt was wide.
Reserve Raiders quarterback Marc Wilson hit Todd
Christensen with a 22-yard touchdown pass late in
the fourth quarter and Chris Bahr locked a 43-yard
field goal in the third quarter.
Before the opening kickoff, players from both
sides marched from their respective sidelines to
midfield and s hook hands in a show of solidarity for
the NFL Players Association in the union's dispute
with club owners. The gesture was greeted for the
second successive week by an equal mixture of
cheers and boos from the crowd of 51.311.
Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian
presents
GETTING A GRIP
ON ARTHRITIS
Wednesday
September 8. 1982
7:00 p.m.-9 p.m.
Hoag Memorial
Ho~pital Presbyterian
Grace Hoag
Conference Center
301 Newport Boulevard
Newport Beach, CA
Introduction:
Janet Kelly, R.N.
Community Education
Topics:
Type;; of arthritis
Diagno-;i~
Lateiit Trend!> in Treatment
Avoiding Medical Quackery
Speakers:
Mitchell C. Austin, M.D.
Rheumatology
Anthony Bohan, M.D.
Rheumatology
A lfotpltll PrMb)'IM1t n. Community F.dur11lon Deptrtml'nl. 301
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Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1982 D .
De Berg lifts Broncos
Chargers fall to Dallas; Saints nip Chiefs
l''rofti AP dt1patcbe1
DENVER SWVl' OeBerg threw a 20-yard
touchdown pa&S to Clay Brown l.\nd rookie Sammy
Winder sc.'Ored on a 26-yard run -both in the third
quorter -to lead the Denver Broncos to a 17-14
victory over the Miami DolphlnB In a National
Football League exhibition game Saturday night.
Miami went into the third quarter with a 7-3
lead by way of a four-yard touchdown run by
Andra Franklin. But DeBerg, who started at
quarterback in the second half, generated a 7-play,
71-yard drive capped by Winder's 26-yard run on
the left side lnto the end wne.
Only moments later, Steve Foley intercept<."Cl a
pass by David Woodley and OeBerg hit a wide-open
Brown det>p in the end zone from the 20-yard line.
Cowboys 26, Chargers 16
SAN DIEGO -Quarterback Danny White
l'ifled an 11-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver
Tony Hill law in thl• third quarter to put Dallas
ahead to stay as the Cowboys topped San Diego.
26-16.
Immediately after the Chargers had taken a
1 :~-10 lead in the nationally televised contest, White
directed an 80-yard scoring drive, which was
capped by the White-to-Hill pass with 13 seconds
rema1rung in the third period.
Both tC'ams now have 1-1 preseason records.
Tht• Cowboys. with good field position early,
drove 46 yards on thl•ir second possession to take a
7-0 lead on Hon Springs. two-yard plunge wilh 2:54
remainjng m the first period.
San Diego quarterback Dan Fouts brought San
Diego back to a 7-7 tie' with a 56-yard drive
l"apped by Kellen Wins low's tumbling. juggling
catch of a 14-yard smring throw with 10:51 left in
thc> first half
Saints 6, Chiefs 3
NEW ORLEANS -Rookie kicker Morten
Ander~n booted a 52-yard field goal with Jess than
f.our !"linutes to play to give New Orleans Saints a
6·3 victory over Kansas City.
Andersen earlier booted a 24-yarder with six
seconds left in the first half. He also missed from 37
yards and had a 50-yarder blocked.
Kansas C1ty's score came on a 48-yard field
goal by Nick Lowery with 2:42 to go in the third
quarter. Lowery also missed a 4.6-yard shot after
l.ioth teams had been called back on the playing
l.l.'!d at the game's apparent conclusion and three
Sl'<'Onds wcr(· put back on the clock.
Steelers 13, Giants 10
EAST RUTHERFORD. N .J . -Backup
quarterback Ch ff Stoudt connected with Jim Smith
on a 60-yard touchdown pass play, propelling
Pittsburgh to a 13-10 victory over the New York
Giants.
The Giants led 10-0 at halftime a f ter
quarterbal·k Scott Brunner tossed a 6 -yard
touchdown pass to J ohn Mistler in the second
quarter and Joe Danelo added with a 42-yard field
goal
Running back Sidney Thornton gave the
Steelers their first touchdown, plunging one yard
over the line early in the third period.
Steelers free safety Rick Woods set up the
winning touchdown. intercepting a pass by
quarterback Phil Simms on the Giants' 40. Stoudt
put Pittsburgh ahead on the next play, passing to
Smith on the left side with 31 seconds remaining in
the third period.
The game at G tanls Stadium drew 51,118
spectators.
Vikings 7, Seahawks 3
MINNEAPOLIS -Tommy Kramer's 11 -yards
scoring pass to Joe Senser in the third quart.er was
Minnesota's only score as the Vikings edged Seattle,
7-3.
Kramer completed 21 of 35 passes for 198 yards
as the Vikings increac;ed their exhibition season
. . ... -•1-..-1\-•-•I ,,,.,., ..... °'"" .... ........ ... _,....,_
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N'COrd to 2 l Seattle fell to l • l .
The record crowd of ~7.81$0 wltnc:aed \he flnl
fvotbull game ever played In tht" Hubert H
Humphrey Mctrodome.
Kramer'• touchdown ~ to Sen.er came wU.h.
14 aecond.a left and capped a 77-yard drive. :
The touchdown was 11et up by a 15-yard pall to!
Ted Brown and a 36-yarder to Leo Lewis. both b y i
Kramer '
49ers 16. Cardinals 13
S AN FRANClSCO Rook.Je Bryan Clark
tossed a fourth-down, three-yard touchdown pass
to tight end Eason Ramson early an the final period, .
giving San Francisco a 16-13 exhibition victory over :
St Louis Cardinals . '
The defc•ndmg NFL <.'hamp1ons went ~5 yards '
for the winning touchdown with Clark at :
quart.erback. The son of Monte Clark, former 49ers :
coach and current Detroit Lions coach, completed :.
three passes to Ramson on the drive. ·
The wanning touchdown. with 9:24 remammg
in the gaJTie, guve the 49ers a 16-10 lead. ~t. Louis
rrokie Bob Atha kicked a 42-yard field goal wirh
1.43 left, and veteran Cardinal kicker Ne il
O'Donoghue was wide to the left by JUSt a foot or
two on a 47 -yard try as the clock ran out.
Colt s 34, Falcons 3
TEMPE. Ariz. -Rookie quarterback Mike 1
Pagel threw three touchdown passes -one an
83-vard sc.-oring pass to Ray Butler -as Baltimore
Colts beat Atlanta Falcons, 34-3.
Pagel. a fourth-round draft pkk who played
his college ball at Arizona State. completed 9 of 11
attempts for 207 yards as Baltimore built a 24-3
halftime lead and coasted to victory.
The win improved the Colts' preseason record
to 2-1. Atlanta is now 1-1.
After Mick Luckhurst's 37-yard field goal gave
the Falcolns a 3-0 lead early in the first quarter.
Pagel hit rookie wide re<.-c1ver Holden Smith with a
38 yMd touchdown pass.
Mike Wood's 43-yard field goal put Baltimore
a head. 10-3. four minutt.>S into the se<'Ond quarter.
Sues 28, Redskins 13
TAMP A BAY -Quarter back Jerry Golsteyn.
launching an NFL comeback try after spending a
year in semi-pro ball. tossed three third-quarter
touchdown passes to propel Tampa Bay Buccaneers
to a 28-13 victory over Washington.
Golsteyn. the former New York Giants
quarterback who played last season for the Orlando
Americans of the American Football Association.
replaced starter Doug Williams at the beginrung of
the second half and promptly marched the Bucs 80
yards in nine plays to cut Washington's 13 -0
halftime lead to 13-7.
Golsteyn. who has a lso played for Detroit and
Baltimore during his four-year NFL career. hit 4 of
5 passes for 62 yards on the drive. and found
Gordon Jont's slanting over the middle for a
24-yard gain and the touchdown.
Bears 21 , Bills 14
ORCHARD PARK. N .Y -V etera n
quarterback Bob Avellini threw two touchdown
passes for Chicago and Vince Evans guided the
Bears to tht> winning S£'0re as they beat Buffalo,
2 1-14 .
Avelhni threw an eight-yard sconng pass to
Emery Moorehead in the first quarter and tossed 10
yards for another touchdown to Brian Baschnagel
in the second.
Chicago got its winning touchdown in the third
quarter on a handoff from Evans to Dennis Gentry,
who carried one yard for the score.
The Bills' first touchdown caJTie in the serond
quarter, wht'n Chris Williams intercepted an
AveUini pass and returned it 53 yards down the
sideline for a touchdown
-
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SALISBURY
From Page 81
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/8und1y, Augu1t 22, 1982
SPENCER MOSE BAR SLATON DEL RIO ACHICA MATTHEWS
TROJANS FIGURE TO HAVE A DIFFERENT LOOK TO THEIR ATTACK IN 1982. • •
had the training for a tailback ln high school
"Harper ls one of the fastest we've had al
tailback, has added 12-14 pounds and is very determined, II
"We think 2,000 yards from our tailbacks and a
1,000 yarda from our fullback (Todd Spencer. a
junior) is a reuonable goal.
"Our offensive line could be very 90lid for us.
Bruce Matthews (6-5, 265 sr.) and Don Mosebar
(6-7, 270 ar.) are first round draft ch oices and Tony
Slaton (6-4, 255 jr.) Is golng to be the best center in
USC hi.story. II
Except for q uarterback and tailback, everyone
in the off el'\le Is a returning starter.
The defense appears solid, too, w ith All-
American George Achlca (6-5, 260 sr.) anchoring
the line. In all, there are seven returning starters on
the defense, including linebacker Keith Browner
(6-6, 215 jr.), tackle Byron Darby (6-4, 240 sr.), end
Jack Del Rio (6-3, 235 soph.), linebacker August
'·Curley (6-4, 224 sr.) and defensive back Joey
Browner (6-3, 205 sr.).
· Two-HJan show
at Buick Open
GRAND BLANC, Mich. (AP) -Forty minutes
on the practice tee helped second-round leader
Curtis Strange work out 90me problems with his
drlver.
It didn't, however. pre pare him for the
determination of hard-charging Payne Stewart in
the third round of the Buick Open Saturday.
'Stewart and S trange put on a dramatic head-
to-head duel and finis hed tied at 12-under-par 204
after three rounds.
"If l could have made a few putts, I could have
had a good round," Strange said. "You've got to
make some, especially on the back side.
"I think the back side will be the deciding
factor in Sunday's final round, when you tum into
the wind.''
It was on the back side where Stewart made
hls move on S trange.
"The front side was really boring," Stewart
said. "But I made a chip on 10 a nd that really got
me going.
"My swing got back m the groove a little bit
and I putted real well.
•:The thing about tomorrow is that Cur tis
already is in next week's World Series of GoJC no
matter what. I've got to win here if I hope to get in
and I certainly think it's worthwhile. That's a
guaranteed $3,000 payday."
Strange, the second-round leader started the
day at 9-under, 2 strokes better than Stewart and
four others -Fred Couples, John Cook. Lanny
Wadkins and Masters champion Craig Stadler.
Strange, playing in a threesome with Stewart
and Couples, shot 33-36 and carded a 3-under-69
while Stewart, who has become a gallery favorite
by wearing brightly colored knickers, caught fire on
the back nine and finished with a 36-31~7 .
The co-leaders entered the final round 3
strokes ahead of Peter Jacobsen , Bob Eastwood.
Tom Kite and de fending Buick Open champion
Hale Irwin.
A s troke back at 208 were Stadler, Cook,
Wadkins, Larry Ziegler and Mike Donald.
Couples was tied with Wayne Levi and Gavin
Levenson.
Carner way ahead
CLEVELAND (AP) -J oAnne Carner has a
cautious approach to her tournament-record lead
after 54 holes in the Chevrolet W o rld
Championship of Women's Golf.
"It's not enough," said Carner, after po5ting a
I-under-par 71 for a total of 213, three strokes
below par for three rounds over the Shaker Heights
Country Club Course.
Carner, however, admitted sh e was in a very
favorable position in her quest for a 35th career
victory that would qualify her as the l 0th player
for the Ladies Professional Golf Association's Hall
of Fame.
"I've got to play terrible tomorrow to lose it,"
J}le said. "No, I don't have a target score. But let
. them thlnk they've got to shoot 67, right?"
Carner was only one of two players to break
par in the third round and she blamed the high
900res on the wind.
"It's so vicious. It just goes crazy out there," she
said. "I've never played a golf course where in 150
yards the wind will be blowing in two different
directions.''
Carner said the pin placements, all at the rear
of these fast greens, made the course play much
longer the third round. "It forced you to use two
clubs more against the wind. I hit a lot of three and
four irons, where I'd normally use six or seven
irons, 11 she said.
earner's 54-hole margin wiped out the
previous one-shot record for this three-year-old
tournament.
Amy Alcott admitted she faces a big challenge
to overhaul playing partner Carner in the final
round in the battle for the $50.000 first prize. the
'Hchelrt ever for the women's apoM.
"JoAnne will be Vf:f'Y tough to catch. rm not
predk:ting any\hing. Thia la a tough coune to make
ahota up on." Mid Alcott after ahooting a 3-over 75
for a total of 218, two over par for the tournament.
NFL strike a certainty if . . .
NEW YORK (AP) -A 1trike by National
'Football Leaaue players la a virtual certainty lf
snanapment does not eend "a re11ponaible pel'IOn"
to the ne10Uat1ng table, Ed Garvey, executlve
director of the NF L P layera Association, said
S.twday nighL
, a.rvel , interviewed by CBS-TV at hal11ime of
•tM Jlallu..San Dieeo pl'WM OI\ pme, WU asked If
a .utke wu one the ho rizon. He Nld , "We're ~ in that direction becau.e ~t hall :JWA mnt anyoM of authority to ~ barpint.na table
to ftllOdate with UI."
"Phyalcally we're in pretty good ahape," says
Robinson. "And, the outlook is good. But there may
be 20 teams In the country wlth the same chance
(No. l)."
There I.a no chance, however, for a bowl bid
because of NCAA unctions levled on the Trojans
for the next two yean.
"What that means," says Sallabury, "ia that
someone has told us we can't go 12-0. But there's no
one stopping us from going 11-0. We 're young,
and hungry."
USC opens the seaaon at Florida Sept. 11 and -
along the way there will be journeys to Oklahoma,
Stanford, Ari?.ona State, Arizona and UCLA (Roee
Bowl) before the finale against invadlng Notre
Dame.
9.97
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MON.·SAT.
Sale Price
11.99
011, lube, Fitter Special
For many cars and hghl
trucks Labor 1s included
Sale Pnce
15.88
Front End Allgnment
Service for many U S cars
Foreign cars are e•cluded
Sale Puce
98.88
Diec/Orum Brake Special
For many U S . foreign
cars Light trucks higher
Save
Sen--lie"'°' $10 -·
46.8a~~~~
I( mart·~
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T~. tide tetmil\al ·~·· • M1ny car•. light truck•
sut..-MON.
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10W40 Motor OH 8avtnga
All, of whlch brings lt t>.ck to the central focus
polnt: Salisbury.
"I'll juat try to hold up my end of the stick,"
says Salfabury. ''It may be an auet not having
Marcus Allen here.
"We can't sit back and wait for him to pull It
out for us. We have to do it ouraelves."
Backing up Sallabury are Scott Tinsley and
Jim Arrivey, a pair of aenlors. Arrivey ha.a never
thrown a pasa for the Trojans. Tinsley ha.a ~,.een
only sporadic duty (31 of 57 for 38% yards in three
ye.an), but was the star of the 1980 victory over
UCLA.
The new interest ln the passing game with a
quarterback of Salisbu ry's potential does not,
Pkg. of Candy Bara
I pound' bag 3 Musketeers·
Snickers·. or Milky Way•
'Nfl Wt
however, have the Trojans forgetting about the
bread 'n butter.
"We must open up the passing game," aaya
Robinlon, "but we're ahooting for the full hou.e."
One of the aore pointa in the USC game a year
ago was lta wide receivers, but all are back and
Robinson says t he handa are there and should
deliver with Sallabury at qb.
Among the Trojans squad from the Orange
Coast area are Edi.son High products Mark Boyer
and Duaine Jackson and Mater Del High'• Kennedy
Pola, a freshman.
Boyer and Jackaon are sophomores and are
listed in relief roles at tight e nd and in the
secondary. Pola is a linebacker.
3.87 Gallo Prf'm1um table w•ne 1n
your choice ol Chablt!> Blanc;
Rhine V•n Ro!>e afl<l more
1.36
32·01. • Bag 01 Cookies
Choco1a1e chip 0<
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Polish or ko~her <l•ll'i
SavC'
Malted Milk Candiea Corn Chips 14-oz • ~rpet Freah'"
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ck'O<I0,,11>1 bu lie•
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11.88
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The only pen that eras-
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Included 60 Sheet book,
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Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Auguat 22, 1982 ..
Crisler left his mark • ID college football
Former University of Michigan coach initiated the platoon system and decorative helmets
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -Herbert Orin "Friu" Crlaler of the UniversJty of Michlsan, one of
the most auoceaful football roaches and athletic
directors In intercollegiate .,pon.u hiatory, I.a dead at
the age of 83, authorities reported today.
Crisler died Thursday night following several
recent lllneuea, said U-M aporta lnformatlon
director Bruce Madej. Crisler
had been hospltallz.ed at least
twice In recent m onths, once
reportedly s uffe ring from
pneumonia, said Madej.
CRISLER CAME to the
University of Michigan in 1938
as head football coach. He added
the duties of athletic director
three years later and held the
AD's job until his retirement in
CNeUR 1968.
His career as a football coach climaxed in 1948
when h is Michigan Wolverines won the national
.c hampionship with a 14 -game winning streak
capped with a 49-0 defeat of Southern California in
the Rose Bowl. In th e 10-year span before he left
' coaching following the 1948 season, C risler
compiled a 71-16-3 record and won the Western
Conference championship twice, in 1943 and 1947.
He was an innovator as well as a winning
coach. It was Crisler who is generally credited with
founding the now universally used platoon system
6
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of eeparate offensive and defense ~ama In footbaU
Before Cruler switched \0 the two-team concept,
players handled both otfenalve and defonalve duties
with only qccasional subltituUona.
DURING HIS DECADE of coaching, Crialer's
1quads ou~ed his opponenta 2,234 to 732 and his
Wolverines gained 26,598 yards while giving up
17,321.
His teams finished second In the Western
Conference six times and third and fourth on two
other occasions.
Crt.Jer lert his mark at the university In mny
ways. He decided he wanted to dress up the plain
black football helmet that U-M players had used for
years, so he created a distinctive winged-helmet
Caps' Norwood hospitalized
WASHINGTON (AP) -Washington Capitals
def..enseman Lee Norwood was hospitafi7.ed recently
following a scuffle outside a downtown Washington
restaurant, according to Capitals spokesman Lou
Corletto.
Norwood and at least one other player, Torrey
Robert.son, were confronted by several persons that
night in front of Rumours Restaurant, Corletto said.
He said Norwood was knocked to the ground
and kicked in the face.
4.48 Colorful Lunch Kit
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lr,g ol C·41 ttO, f28 or
35tnm (luH frame onty). 1
,mt Mctl on·~ ,._,,Sew now.
that la 1t1U worn by Michigan teama today.
BEFORE COMING to Michigan, Crialcr aerved
aa head football <.'O&Ch at MlnneeoLa In 1930-31 and
at Prlnct'ton from 1932-37. His MinncaoLa teams
went 10· 7-1 and hb Princeton aquach regiatered a
35-9-5 mark while &olng undefeated in two seasons,
1933 and 1936. In 18 years of coaching, his teams
were 116-32-9, a .768 winning percentage, making
him the l 7th-most-succeuful collegiate football
coach ever.
Crisler was born in Earlvllle, 111 .. on Jan. 12,
1899. He was graduated from the University of
Chicago In 1922 with a pre-med degree as only the
second athlete in Chicago histor y to have earned
nine letters, In three sports.
Aa athletic director at Michigan, he enlarged
Michigan Stadium twice, helping to make 1t the
nation's largest college stadium , seating more than
100,000 people. Crisler also was responsible for
develbpment of the basketball arena that bears his
name. A new hockey building also was built under
his direction.
Crisler received the National Association of
College Directors of Athletics James J . Corbett
Memoria l Award in 1968 for outstanding service to
intercollegiate athletics. He twice was chairman of
the NCAA football rules committee and later.
became one of the few men ever to be named as a
permanent member of that body. He was elected to
the National Football Foundation HaU of Fame and
received the 1979 Amos Alonw Stagg Award.
1.11.
----liir ... t==:i IC m•r1• AO¥tAt1SfD M(ACHAH01$( POLICY
Aqua-fresh· Toothpaste
Contains fluoride to help ft<Jht
tooth decay Formulated to
leave you< breath refreshed 6 4
oz.
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Our Reg. 2.68-3.47
2.22 Package
013
Misses' And Full Figure Panties
Bnght zefran• nylon. tasht0n cc>lofs Briefs 5. 10 h1phuggers. 5.r Other ltyl&s, cotton/p<>lyeiner Shop Kmart and ~ave
'-... C.0.QOOll.,..Roq IM
r~~
"' I l • t ,..,_ ~ ~. .!.L._ .. -~ d l ~ ..... .. .
HOPEFULS -Fountain Valley High products
Matt St.evens (left) and Duval Love are among
the UCLA players preparing for the upcoming
season.
From Page 91
UCLA· OUTLOOK. • •
"Naturally. I'd like to play right away, but I
know you have to pay your dues."
Duval Love, St<'vens' tc.•ammate al Fountain
Valley in HJ80, impressed the coaching starf enough
last sea.son. his freshman year. to earn a start in the
USC game. This year. he 1s listed on the depth chart
as SE.oeond behind Chris Yelu.:h at nght guard, but
Love stJll believes he could wrest away the starting
spot before the season opens
"I cxpet't to play, but it's going to be a battle,"
said Love. "I feel l'vc madc some adjustments in my
technique and I'm happy about my pe rsonal
progress."
About thC' team, Lovt• notes, "We have a great
chance. And I fcC'I the move to th<' Rose Bowl has
given thtS warn a new 1dcnllt1y because no one else
plays there.•"
That may t·hangc on Jan I. Thl'n again .
Lendl, Denton
post shockers
MASON. Ohio (AP) -"For me \Onight the~
was no mat.ch. I should have stayed home ... J1mm}'
Connors said after No. 3 Ivan Lendl whipped him
6-1. 6-1 in 63 minute!> to gain the finals of the ATP
TennlS ChampiOnships.
Lendl, of CU"Choslovak1a, will now meet Steve
Denton, a 7-6, 6-4 upset victor over top-seeded
and defending l'hampion John McEnroe.
"Il was one of those days," said Connors, who
was seeded second in this 64-player hard court
tournament. "I don't think I hit the ball m the court
10 times all night."
It was the worst loss in Connors' career. which
On TV today
channel 2 at 11
includes Wimbledon tllles m 1!:174 and 1982, and
captured the U.S Open tn 1974, 197(j and 1978.
Asked when h£> thought he was m trouble in
the mat.ch, Connors replied: "How about the Cirst
one?"
Lend! said, "Basically, I'm happy with every
shot I was hitting." Asked the last time he played as
weU. the strong nght-hander said, "Yesterday."
Today's winner m the natio nally televised
match (CBS) will collect S48.000, with $24,000 going
to the loser
Lend! was awesome as he posted his first
"official" victory over Connors m eight career
meetings. Connors had lost to Lendt in their last
meet\ng. an exhibition last January in Toronto.
The only two times Connors could hold serve
he had to battle back from love-40 and 15-40. In the
first set, Connors. who won Wimbledon in J uly for
the second lime in his career. won just 13 points.
Many of those came ·on unforced errors by Lend!.
ln the second set, Connor5 averted a shut.out by
saving five mat.ch points in the sixth game by
holding serve. He had to win nine points to do it,
matching the nine points he had captured in the
first five games of the set
Connors didn't help h1ffiS('lf as lime after time
he drove the ball into the net or out of the court for
unforced errors. The left-hander also committed the
only double-fault of the mat.ch
The \One of the match was set in the opening
game when Connors. serving. won the first point,
then fell behind 15-30 after finding first the net
with a forehand, then sending a forehand long.
Lend! won the final point to break serve when
Connors was wide with a cross-court forehand. But
the crowd and Connors felt that Lendl had hit a
ball long during the rally.
After the point. Connors pointed his racket at
the linesman, then held his nose to show what he
thought of the call.
After that, Lendl could do nothing wrong and
everything Connors tried failed. Lendl closed out
the first set by breaking Connors al love in the sixth
game, then serving a love game.
Today's TV
Dodgers, football slated
TELEVISION
9:30 a.m. (4) -NFL FOOTBALL -The New
York Jeta, a wild card entry in the 1981 playoffs,
will meet Earl Campbell and Co. In Houston.
10:30 a.m. (11) -BASEBALL -Dodgen ~t
Pittaburgh.
11 a.m. (2) -TENNIS -The flnala of the ATP Championships from Klnga bland, Ohio,
where Ivan Lendl will meet St.eve Denton. ·
12:30 p .m . (4) -BOXING -Junior
middleweight contender J ohnny Bumphua (15-0)
va. Ml1uel Montilla (37-7-2) ln a acheduled
10-round bout from Great Gorge, N.J .
1 p.m. (2) -GOLF -Final round play in the
Warwick Hill.a Open from Grand Blanc, "'MlCh.
2 p.m. (4) -WOMEN'S GOLF -Flna1 round
p1-y In the World ChamplonahJpe of women'• golf
at Shaker Helahta Country Club ln Ohio.
3 p.m. (4) -NFL FOOTBALL -The t.c.
Anplet Raiden will_ meet the Llona ln Detroit.
RADIO
Butb&ll -Doc.t8en at PittabW'gh, 10:3() ~J KABC (790); Oetroft at Angel.a, 1 p .m ., KMPC
(710).
f
l
-.... ~_... ..................... .
-Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/8und1y, Augu11 22, 19ta
~------------------.....;;..... ____ ~ ~,_..---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------.
~ . ' . " ..
MAJOR UAOU• aTANDINOI
A-IG•n League
WHT81tH OfVllR>H
W I. l'ct. O•
A,..i. 70 52 674 Kan ... Ctty 70 S2 574
ChlcaOO 84 57 619 51>
S..tlle 511 53 4114 11
Olllllencl se 68 452 15
Tuu 411 71 403 20•..,
MlnMeOla 43 711 352 27
U8TEllN DIV18ION
Mllw-..kM 71 50 5117
Boeton es 56 537 &
a.ltlmOt• 63 57 525 7'>
Oelroil 62 511 5 I? II
New V0<I< 90 60 S00 10'>
c ....,..and sa eo 492 11'• T0<on10 511 64 4&0 13
ktutdaJ'• kOf" Mfeh 13. Oetroil I
M~tt 4, C...,.llnd 3 Oekland 12. Boaton 5
Toronto 3, New Vork 1
Ken ... Cny 4, ChleagO 3
8«11im0<e 11. T eJ<U 6 MllwauliM 3, Seattle 2
Today'a 0Mftff
0.troll (WllCOx 7·71 •I Angela (Tlanl 2·1)
Toronto (0011 4·8) a1 New Vor~ tR1ghe11t
7·51 Mlnne1011 (O'Conno< 6·4) Al Cleveland
(Sutcllfle 10-4)
Chicago (l<oosman 5-51 Al Kansas C11v ~ (Spllllorft 7 ·Ill
B ollon (Dedman O 01 81 08kleno
(laogfQ<d 9· 13)
Baltl more (Palmer 9·31 al le•as
(HOMyeull 5-14) Milwaukee (Haas 9-11) at See(lle (Bannlt1eo
11·11)
... tlonal L .. au•
WESTERN DIVlll"ION
Dodget9
Allan ta
Sen OMgo
San Francisco
Houalon
Cinc:lnn•tl
w L Pct Ga
69 55 556 66 56 541
65 S8 528
64 eo 5t6
57 65 467 II
47 76 3112 21'.
IA8TEllN OIV18ION
St. Louis
Phlladelphla
MontrNI
Pttlal>utgh
Cllic8Qo
New V0tk
70 52 68 54
64 se
63 59 53 72
50 71
2
6
7 ,,.,
19'>
l alutdey'• lcotff
Pillll>urgh 2 Oodg«a I
Hou11on 5. Montr .. I 3
San OMgo 2, CnieaQo o Cloclnnato 10, Pto1iadetpn1a 3
Atlanta 6. New VOik S
SI LOUIS 7, San Franc1ac:o 6
Today'• 0-... Oodgera (Hooton l·S) at P1111burgh
(Rhooen 7·11)
New Vork !Ownbey O· 11 at Allanla (Mahler
11-11) San Francisco (Hammaker 8·7) al SI
Louis (Andu1ar 11-10)
Philadelphia (ChrlS8'1SOn 7 ·8) al C1nclnna11
(Soto 10-8)
San Diego (Show 9·4) at Cn•ugo 1R1p1ey
4·6 or Kravec 1·0)
Montreal (lea 10·61 11 Housion (Ruhle
7~). n
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Angela 13, Tiger• 1
Ol'TllC>ft CAllFOllNlA IObrhlll ab t hlll
Wlllteker 2b 4 I I 0 Oowrung 11 3 I 0 t
WlltOn cl 4 0 I 0 Beniquez II I 0 0 0
Herndon If 2ooocar-1b 4120
Johnton II I 0 0 0 RoJlldcson lb I 0 0 0
l .Patlsll c 3 0 1 I Re.,llCkson r1 3 I I 0
F8hey c 1 0 0 0 R Ctarll r1 2 O 0 0
Me ~ 3 0 2 0 Lynn Cl 3 4 3 2
l-rt 4 O o o Wdfong cf t o o o
WOdcenfun 3 0 0 0 O.C.~s 3b 4 2 3 4
C.bell 3b 3 0 I 0 BaylOf dh 3 1 0 0
Brook-M 3 0 0 0 Ot1c:h 2b 4 I I I
Boon<tc 32 2 3
Kellehe< s& 4 0 2 I
TOlalS 31 I 6 1 Total• 38 13 •• 12
ac-by ""''"'' OetrOll 00 I 000 000 -1
Calll0<nta 032 161 004 13
DP-Calltorn1e 2 tOB Detro11 5. Call1ornla 3 28 Lvnn, OeC1nces HR
Lynn (18). BOOM 2 (7) SB-0.Ctnces (A)
Detroit IP H l'I Ell 88 10 Morn• (l.1<1-121 • 8 6 6 o o Rucker .,, I 3 :l 2 I
James' 0 2 3 3 2 0
So.a 2i, 3 I I 0 t
PeaMick I 0 0 0 0 0 •
Celllomla
Zahn (W,14·5) 9 8 1 I '2
Ja"'" pjtched to 4 batter• In Ille 5th
WP-Jam•. T-2 48 A •• 194
"'90Ara l.ATW UNmacOfUE ,.....,. .. ,,......
h-.bf ......
OelrOll 240 101 000·8 17 3
Calllornla 2'20 110 000.8 12 1
Ujdvr, P Und-ooc! (8). Tobll< (1) 8n<1
L M. PW'f1111, FOflCh, 81.Wer 12~ GOitz (II)
9nCI 8oone. W·Ufdw (7-41) l·FO<ach (10·11) ~o.trolt, G Wli.on (7) Callfomla, A4I Jecbon (21). Boone (5)
Angel IW«9Gff
8ATTlltO
U II H ltl'I "91 Pel
3!17 67 107 28 73 327
371 63 116 I 31 313
422 1111 12e 24 78 299
398 79 1111 18 73 191
463 85 130 111 52 281
103 15 28 I II 272
3119 68 108 211 73 272
470 59 128 UI 74 26e
356 34 114 1 411 264
311J 52 103 13 54 2112
383 40 100 2 47 262
87 7 15 '2 7 224 73 II 18 2 5 2111
144 Ill 28 I 10 1114
45 • 7 0 2 158
311 5 4 0 I 103 4.163 615 I, 1311 1311 577 274
PITCHIHQ
• H M ao W~ IM
H....., 81 43 34 34 2·1 1 92
Slelrtf 7 7 4 5 o-o 2 5 7
Tlenl 181'> 19 5 18 2· I 2.114
Witt 133',C, 124 42 84 7.4 3 10
A.9M S2 45 23 40 3.3 3 48
Kleon 117111 87 35 57 24 3 811
z.tln 17S\A.i 111 55 83 14·5 3 811
8enc:n. 82\oa 84 25 40 4-2 3 118
Fortch 111 tn 48 &4 10-11 4 03
R-o 142'h 147 44 71 10-4 4 OS 0ottz a5v. 111 2s 38 &-4 4 55 Tot•1.1t~ 1.oee 391 m10-52 3 11
lltlle "11• a. v--1 TOfonto 300 000 000-3 ~ Cl New Vor11 000 000 001-1 3 I
c:Mrley. D. M\lttey (9) Md 8 MenlMr.
OIAdty and c.rone W-Clef>cy, 11-10 L
Guldty, 11·5 S-0 .........., (S) A-24 019
A'e 11, ...-... I e o.ton 302 ooo ooo-5 8 1 QekMIM 001 n5 01•-12 13 2
Relney. 8. S~lev (5), Apont• (7) end
°""'41n: MoCetty, Owcfllnllo (5) and M. Hiedi. w-~o. 2-3 L-11 tlleni.y. M . H,.._8oel0fl, Ev-(21~ Len•lofd (II); 0.l#d, M. HMth (1). M~ (I), Arma•
(11>-A-M. 182
' .
n.tllit 4, ......... * ~ 100 010 020-4 11 t ~ 000 000 0)0-, ' 0
A. Wlllmme. ~ (1). " 0.\119 (8) find
LaHIMr; ~. ~ (9) end HatMY w-wllh•m•. t-7. l.-8ortnt•ll, 10-t
a-ft. °'""~:t. A-~I .. ...,
Qllc.,o 000 001 020-3 13 ' KMl9ll (:fty 000 012 001-4 • 0 ........, ·~ti··.~":.~k.~w'~
~1.J, 1,.-........... Hllil-
1 ctt1. ic.,.. c1n ~ °"1 ,...._. (8>. A-40,4't~; . ...............
1• ... C*> *NO-, 11 I ' 000 oc.o 002-1 • I ,..._,..(II l!ld einw-. e.11e 'L ... I••• Ill. Vlll!de ..,.. (t\ -~ •11. l--. CfiWtt, '" .. ""_........' "'-""' ~~
Su 2o
Lendr• cl BaOr II
ou .. ,., 3b
Oervey lb
Roenlek '' Ru&MllH
ScM>SCla c:
Mondy pll
YeaQe< c WtlQhl p
Orte ph
S Ho-9
To1aJ1
Moreno'' J Ray 2b
MMlklk 3b
J Thp1n lb
T Pana o
D Davit rl
Eat1•1 II Berra 11 Sarmnlo p
Tekulve p
32 2117
100 -1
1\\ 5 I I 2 I
I'> I 0 0 0 I
Peclrea 'l, Cuh 0 Sen Otego 000 002 000-2 6 1
ChlCago 000 000 000-0 2 I
Lollar. Deleon (91 &l'ld T Kennedy, R1pt•y. Campl>flll 17). W Hernanoe• (9) and J Davia
W-Lollar. 12·7 L -Rlpley, 4-7. S-
O.Leon (12) A -32.365
A•lroa 5, hpoe 3
Montreal 000 010 001-3 5 0
HOUSIOr\ 100 102 Oh-5 10 0
Burros, B Smllh (SI. Lerch (81 and Carle<.
Ryen and Pu101s W-Ryan, 13-9 L-Burrla.
4· 13 HR-Houaton. J. Cruz (8). A-17,3211.
...-10. ......... a Ptllledelph1a 000 200 O 10 3 7 3
C1nc1nna11 200 4l1 20•-10 13 0
BySlrom. J Reed t•I. Fanne< (61. McGraw (8) an<! Vlrgll B Shirley and Trevino w-e
Snlrley 5.9 L-Byatrom, 6·6 HR1-
Phlladetpll1a 8 Robinson (7), Schmidt (27)
A 24 099
.............. &
New VOik 010 013 000-5 e 3
A11an1a 004 011 OOa 6 5 0
Puleo Ra Jones (!>). Hausman (7) and
Boche, Hodges. Walk Bedrosian C71. Garbe<
(9) ano S1na1ro W-Walk. 11·9 l -Ra Jones 7-10 $-Garber (22) HRa-New
Yorio. Brooks ( tj. Kingman (29). Atlanta
ChambltS$ C161 A-4 1 477.
Cardinal• 1. oi...ta • San FIW>daco 100 130 010-e 10 3
St Louis 0 IS 001 OOx-7 10 0 lasl<ey Br.,runo (3). Hollan<I 16). Monton
(81 end Brenly, laPotnl Lahti (Ill. l<N I (7),
Suite< (9) and D Porter W-l •P0tnl 7.3
L-laskey 12·9 S-Su11ar (261 HRa-San Franc11co, Brenly 2 t•). Morgan 1111
leonerd (61. St louis. Lo Smllh 181 A-3!> 376
LITTLE LEAGUE 1s-,,-.-..
SENIOR MINOR WOllU> Hll•a
(al Taylot, Mlet\.)
lloblnwood 17, Vee-a.ia O
Roblnwood 023 453-17 11 I
Vega Be1a 000 OOx-0 1 3
E-agerd end Jenkin•, O..llnQ (4); llloju.
J1rnenez 131 Pintor (5). Del Valle (SI end
ReSIO HR Rob1nwooo. Harper, Ev••111•rd
Other Score
T arnpa Bay IF'l0t1da) 6, llbe<tyv111e (llllnolal
I 1cnamp•onsh•P!
11-12-y .. r-old1
3(at San Be<natd•nol
Flnal•
OP. Grove (N0<1nem Calllornl•I 19 llbl>y
1Mootanal 5 c11tth t>lac:e)
Kaneot>e IHAwaJll 6, Kodiak IAIHkl ) 4
Hhlrdpleoal Klrklend (Wuhlngton) 3, Chula VIiia
15<>.sthern Caltl0<n1a) 1 (cnarnp+anll'llp)
r;.n!Of LHDue
'"' GMJ, lnll.) C"'""'91on•hip
GOieta Valley (Callf0<nt•l 11 O<enve Park
fFlorodal 4
ATP Cl\arnplonahlpa
(•t M-, Ohio)
hmlftnaf Slf19 ...
lv•n lendl (Czechoalovakla) del Jlrnmy
Connors (US I. 6· I 6-I, Steve Oef'lton (US I
<lei John McEnroe (US ). 7·8. S.4
Grand Prlx toumement
(al Stowe, vq
Semlfln.t ........
Jey Lapidus (U S ) <lei Tom Gulllckaon
!US ) 6-4, 7·6. E11c Fromm (VS I del Te<ry
fofppt IU S ). 6-2. 3-6. 6-2
Legend• tourMment ~~~ Rod Laver (Australia) Oef Mrk Co• (O<NI
Bn1aln). 6-1. 6-3. Fred StOlle (Australia) <!el
I<.., RosewaM (Au1traha), 3-8, 6-1 8-4
U.8 .... tton.1 AmatMir
champloriahlpa
(et l(lafMeha l.Ae. NY)
........ Final
Tom Pawu1 (US ) def Stev""son Cl-•
1us1 6-4 e-.1
Oeublff , .....
Pawu1 Dannv GOidie (US I del Jer0<ne
Jonft-Kelly Moore (Us ) 1-6 7 6 6-4
Pl•,.r'a Chllllenge (et Mooll,...,)
....,mnar • .,.. ...
Martina Navratilova (U S I def Hana
Mandllko•a fCzechoalovaklal. 8·2, 7-5, Andrea JHQer (US ) def Sabina Simmond•
(ll•ly). 6-2 1-6. 6-1 S....lftnaf·Oouble9
N1vralllov1-Candy Reynalda (US I <l•f
Ann 1(1yomura-Vlrg1n1a RullCI (US). 8·1,
~·6 11· 1, Barb1ra Po11ar·Sharon Wallh
(U S )' del lvanna·M adrug a·011e1
(Argenuna)-(;alhe<lne Tanvler (France), &-4,
6-2
AIMflcM t1:1deHI* Awl. ... ometoM
WI. "'9t. -Coate..._ I 1 .IOO
!Nine 1 3 .700 2 N~ 8Mdl 3 7 300 8
Huntklglon 8eedl 0 10 000 t ..... ~
WI. flet. OI
1 a 100
84 .IOO I
8 5 aoo 2
3 1 '* 4
A, Wltepholo
AN EARLY START -Three-year-old J eramie Smith
discovers the delight of football despite a helmet that
appears to be three sizes too big. The.youth was practicing
while his two brothers were trying out for a football team.
NfLEXtWmON
Llona 30, Rald4fs 11 a-1DJ Oli«ten
l A Aald8fl 8 O 3 7 -16
OetrOl1 10 7 6 7-30
Ot t Oldham 22 pau 1n1ercep11on (Muttay I ICk)
Otl FO Murtay '20
LA ""en 15 pasa from Plunkell (kick
faJltcH. Del T Porter 4tl pau from Hipple (Murray klCk)
Del -FO Muttly 40
Uflt -FO Murray 23 LA FO Bahr 43
Del N1Chot1 18 pan from Danielson
(Aulen kook)
LA Chrltle'1Mn 72 PHI lro"' Wilton
(Bahr klCkl
A 51,311 r,.,.,.. 11a11111c:e
I.A
Fite I <1own1 15
Ru11\M-yatd1 '20· 128
Puaino yard• 212 ~urn yar<11 II
SICl<a by a p-18-35-4
Punta >47
Fum-loll 3· I
Ponal114'1·y•rds e-55 l ime ol PoaMMIOn 24 40
l1•dMd...C ltaHetlca
on
23
41·161
244
49
4
111-34-1
3.49
'2·2
4-25 3$20
RUSHING -l A ~. Montgome<y
1-48, Allen >34 l<l<IQ 6-13, a.ms 1· 10 Van
Eegll•n 3-11. W•MI• 1·7. HaW1<1n1 I 4 Wilson
1·3 Pruoll 1.0 Oelr0tl. K"'ll I 1·49, R P0<te. 11·38. ButMy 4·25. C.llocull 7·2•. Jones
5· 12. H1pl)le 2· 11, Bal .. 1·4
PASSINO L A Raiders, Plunkall
7.17.3.71 Wiison 11.19.1.112 Detroit.
Hipple II· 17·1·166 Dan1•1ton 11-15-0·!IS
Komlo 1· 1·0.12. T POrle< 0-1.0-0
RECEIVING -l A RaJde<t. Chnatensen
7-103. Bernwetl 3·82. Allen 3·32, Hawltlns
23-21, RatnM)' 12-18, Berne 1-7 Detroit
NICl>olt II· 121, T Porter 2·63, Kimbell 2·2!>. ~WICk 2·'20, BUIM)' 2· 19, Hill 2· 111, Jonet
1·8
FIELD GOALS M188EO -L.A. Raldeft.
none. Oet<Ol1. 1.turrar. 40.
... ,. 21, •Ill• 1• kOfe by Q"811en Ch~o 7 1 1 0-21
Bulfalo 0 1 O 7-14
Chl·Moorahead 8 pan lrom Avelllnl
(R0\1910 klek)
Buf-Cnn1 w1111am1 53 pass 1n1arC4C1t1on (Arltl l<ICkl
Ch•·BH cllnegef 10 pau lrom Avellino
(ThO<nU kick!
Chi-Gentry 1 run 1Rove10.1<1Ck) Bui-Brammer 8 pan lrom Roblnaon
(Anderton klel<)
A-37.a38
lndlvklwl a1at1a11c1
RUSHING -Chl~QO, Payton 12·54.
Harper 3· t3. fllOmU 4-12 euna1o. Leak•
4·60, Moore 7 ·34 Brown 6-2 I
PASSINO -ChlcaQo. AV911tnl 12·20·1·117,
Evans 3·11·0-34 Bulfalo Robln1on
10.22.0-122 Fergv-6-11-1-38
RECEIVING -Ch~. Fe<gerton 3-33
Moorehead 3· Ill Buffalo Brammt< 3· 18
MOlley 1·10
•uc.e 21, RMakln• 13 kef'9 by o-tefa
WHnlngton 7 8 o o -13
Ttmpa Bay O O 21 1 -28
wu-R1gg1n1 3 pan from Thalemann
(MOM!ey klek)
WU·'O Moaetey 30
Wu-FG Miiiet 34
T arn-Jonet 2• PHI tr om Go111evn (Smyth
klCk)
Ta m·Jon11 12 pau trom Golateyn
(Capece klC1ll Tlm·J. Be41 24 pus fr0<n Got11eyn (Smyth
klekl Tem-~Old 2 run (Smyth kick)
A-63,8118
lndMd...C ltellelloa
RUSHING -Wall'llogCon. RIQlllM 11-51,
W1thln9ton &-30, Wonaley S-22, Jackaon
5-17, Tht11mann 3. 14, Flk:ll 1·0. Tampa,
M0<1on 12·70, C.rver 10·41, Stona ll-12.
Wlldet 4-7, Wlttlamt 1·7. HouM 1-4. Ford
1·2. Batrett 1-0
PASSINO -Waahlngton. Tntatmann
t-18-1·73. Flick 7·11·1-l:J Tampa, Wiiiame
5·0·0·35. Oolateyn •· I0·0· 148. Ford
3-e-o-eo, 1.-2.2..0-10 RECEIVING -WUhlllQIOn. Won11ey
). It, CMl., 2-43. Wlfll., 2· II, W Jacll_,,
2· 12. Waahtngton 2-e. Oer1'91t 1-22, Bf own
1•8, Al9Q1n1 1·3 Didier 1·3 and Wlfllalne 1·2 Tamc>e. Centf 4-13, JOMa ).<Ill, Moy 2-3S,
Houae 2· 11. T Bell 2-12. J 8•11 1·24. F,..,_lek 1-18, Tyler 1· 13. Mo<lon 1-1&, T O.Yle 1-3
FtElO GOALS Ml88EO -WMfltnQton,
-Tlllllj)e, c.,_ 34
Cowboy• 29, Chargera 18
Sc«• bJ Ouarten
Dallas 7 3 7 9 26
San Otego O 7 6 3 16
Dal·S11'0tlOQI 2 1un tSec>toen ktclo.I
SO-W1n11ow 14 pa•s lro"' Foul&
(BenttlChk• klCk) Dai-FG Sep11en 24 SD-Wln1low 21 paaa trom Fouta (kick
llllled)
Dal· T k ill 1 I pass trom Whole (S1111toen
ktckl
50-FG BonlfKhke 3 I
Oal·Salety Luther tacklOld on end zone
Oal·Peopl<U 8 run (Sep11on k""'
A·49 1112
lndlvldual S11llellc1
RUSHING Dallu Newsome 1!> 6A
Dorsett 13·61, NewhouH 4-22 Peoples
3·20. D White I ·!I, Bu Johnson f.5 Springs
•·4 San Diego. Broo•s 6-24 C1ppe11e11o
3· 11, C. Williama 5· 10 6•11 2·4
PASSI N G -Dallas, D Whll&
21·33·2·215, Carano 0·1·0·0 S•n 01~0
Foute 10-21· 1· 138. Luthe< 11· 15·3·85
RECEIVING Ollllaa, r Hill 4.4 I Ou Pree 4.3 7, Pea11on 3 36 Donley 2 29 Cosbie
:1-20. Peoples 2-16. N11whou!l8 2 14 Dor!IBll
1.14 6u Johnson 1·8 San Diego w1r111ow
6-711. Joi,.,., 2·38. S1eve11 2·24, Chenoi..
2·21. Sc•••• 2.21, H Jeckeon 1· 13, Bell
I 7
FIELD GOALS MISSED Della) S~P"""
49 San Diego n1>11e
St..,.,. 13, Olanta 10
Scot• by Ou..-1era
PlllSDUrQh 0 0 IJ 0 13
N V 0 1an1s O 10 O O 10
NV M •Sllf'' 6 P•SS trom 81vnntu
1Leopa1d k1Ckl
NY -FG DanelO 42
P11 -Thorntn I run (koc• taffd)
P11 Smolh 80 pen orom '>toudl If rout
klCkl A-51.1111
lndhk:lual Stallalleo RUS>11NG P111sourgn PQ1•••d 12·59
OeG<ullOla 11-31. Amti.<crom1J1e 6 72 Davos
4·20. Ham• 2·9 Bradll'law 1 ·3. Tnorro1on
1·1, Mo-3.7 SwM1141Y 1-16 S1oud1 1.2
New V0tk Olanta Morna II 48 Perry 9 41
WOOlfoll< II· 15 Colley 6-29
PASSING -P11tsburgh Brad•haw
8· 14·2· 152 S.oudl 5 10·0· 75 New Yor~
Giants, Stunner 13 21 O 20!>, S1mma
7-111-3-37
RECEIVING -PllUburgh Stellworth
6-107. Smith 3·70. Swann 2·• I Hams 1·4,
S-ey 1·3. Pohrd 1·2 New YOrk Ollnll. Cotlfey 4·21, Mittler 3·49, Mullady 3·40,
Morrla 3-23. Edd1ng1 2·$8, Perry 2·25
Woolfolk 1·10, Jackeon, l . 1-8, Slawson 1·8
MISSED FIELD OOAlS Pllllburgn
Trout. 53. •5 New Vork G1an11 Da~o 32
Viking• 7, S.•hawka 3
lk:ota br Ouat'lera Saallle
MlnnMota
Sea -FG Jonneon •3
3 0 0 0-3
0 0 7 0-7
Min SenHr 11 Pfll lrom l<r•mfr (Ofdonez kl<:I<)
A -57 880
lnclhldual atattollco
RUSHING Seattle T 8<own 7 ·I
Ooorn•n-14-89 Krieg 2· 15 Lane 6 9 Jodal
3· IS. Zorn 3·0 Th0tnat I "minus I Ivory
2· 13 Mlnneeota. T 8rown 7·28. VO<JnQ 2·8,
Oalbrealh 3· 17 Nellon 5 t 9 Kr am er
1 ·monus 3 R-ne 5· 11 S WM• I 3
PASSING Seall .. Kr199 5·7·0"$1 Z0<n
I• 8-0·82 Monf\MOla Kra"* 35·2 I 2 198
RECEIVING -SHllle McCullum 3-30
Largent 1-11. Lane 1·7 Welker J.61 TICle 1-24. Ooornlnll I-minus 5. Metzetaars 1 5
Mlnneaota s.n-4.39 Brown 6-34 S
wn111 2·37 Galb•a"ll 3·26 Nelt on •·3 Lewos 1.Je Redwine 2·'°· Harrell 1 "O Bruer
1·8 FIELD GOALS MISSED s .. tlla Jonnson 3 Mlnnesola Otdoner 1
COL~QI[ ICH•DUUI
9outti.m C.ntotnlll
Sept. 11-et Flor1cla. 7 Sept. 18-!ncflene (hOme). I :30
Sept. 25-11 OlllehOma. 1:30
Oct. 2-0regon' (home). I 30
Oc\. II-by. ac.. l._t 8tanfont•, l:JO
Oc\. ~ S1a1a•. (home). t JO
0.,. »-1 ArlJona S1a1a•. 1 30
HOY ~lomla' ~). t )0
NOY 13-11 ""'-'· 1.>0 Nov 20--<ot UCLA' (Rem Bowl) I >O
Nov 21-Notn Dome Iheme). IUO
·PV·IO pnw
!all home ........ at Loa"-'-Colioewnl
UCLA
Secll 11-Long BNGh Slalt 1 30
S.P1 18-at W1aconaln 11 30
841>1 25-11 MICNQan. 10 00
Oct 2-11 Col°'llOO· 12 )0 Oct t -Atllona .. 1 30
Oct t8-WMhtnglon Stat•'. I JO
Play Better Golf with JACK NICKLAUS
N o~W~'.SHOfj~ ~U,-T.S ~P.ti
M\ S.0 ~MPL.: CAU .. TH PL~ ... p. " UITa" -t£~aE& U ON "TME S"T~O~ll O"-E.
OP. AT IMPRC"T.
M•~e.·a ON&a T&CMM\~ 'THAT' M&L.~O Mlt
bliA'T TH\9 P~INfJUL.. Aft=l..lCT\ON.
t.
• hfnl•PfO footMft
HUNflHOTOtf VAi.UY lllA"*ll'll 11U~
&.n<iar ""'II n 11 fd ... wd• Al D ' Aug 29 at Ontano •
Stc>• 1a -a1 ren.:nl!Of llt•t• "'''_, 8'191 19-Ain.tnb<a' (hO<ne)
a.c>t 28-at Loa Al&Mltoa·
Oc1 3-...,•bank. (hOrne)
Oct 10-at City ot 1n4~1ry•
Oct 17-at Wffl Valley'
Oct 2•-0ntetlO" (hOmel
Oc1 31-•t .Alh1mb1a· Nov 7-Van Nuy1• (hOme)
Nov 1•-8.,, Fe<nando Vlllley' (nome) Nov 21-Clty or 11\dullry • 1nome1
Nov 21-byt
Oeo 5-loa Alarn11oe • (lll>lllt)
Oeo 12-Leegu• cha,.,,p1on1h1p playoff
(•II gamea •I t pm unlau noted!
fall home g11T1H at OcH n View H•gh
8cnool1
' llenole1 High 0.-1 L .. gue oarne
Del M•r 8AfUfU>AV'I 11.HULTa
(21th ot u.day thof°"9llbrecl mMllnt)
'"'IT llACI!. 6 furlongs
8rendy s RaD (Velan:uelar 4 '20 2 llO 2 20 Sonne• Aglo (SID1llel 7 eo • 20
O For Goris (Eatrada) 3 40
Also raced Splendid Mark, Ramada 8
tnv1nc11>1e. I m F ash1onable El11e 1 Sitter Silent Music
Time 1 09 415
SECOND GAME. 6 lurlongs
Nan'• Dancer (>1awleyl 26 60 8 40 6 00
Flying linnet (McCa<ron1 8 20 4 80
Admirers MIWHI (Black) 10 80
Alto raced. Joy Bluff, Far Our Ha<oona.
:Z.a11na. Magn111oen1 Dawn, Jordy'• Baba,
DH dllne, Beyou Mil l.
T1rne 1·09 4/S
t2 DAll.V DOU9l.E 17·81 paid $60 60
12 CONSOLATION DOUBLE (7 71 pol(! S5 40
THIRD RACE. 6 lu1lona1
St.,llog Sliva (V alenLuetal '20 20 I 0 40 4 60
Brtuenes1an (Va<gara) 12 80 6 00
Oen11eman Bla<Je (Upham) 3 80
AllO r&Q9CI· l'Chlc:I•, w .. 1thy, Hallabll.
Plantation JubllM. Bat"• Mike
T1mtt I 10 •
SS EllACTA 15·3) pa10 $713 50
FOURTH RACE. 6 11.irlongs
Vahd Comment (P1ncay1 4 20 3 i>O
PaQe&nlry (Valenzuela) 4 llO
M•M Slteam (McCarron)
2 eo 3.40
420
Alao raced Pull 01 Smoke
Beer Le Sm1r1<. M1i<e 1 l(Jc• Time I 09
Jack Th~
FIFTH RACE. One mole on lurl
lncO<POt'•IOr 1S1btlle) 6 80 • '20 3 40
Mountebank (Valenzuela) 11 60 6 00
Sigememar tP1ncay) 4 00
Aleo raced Prlncalcln. Sllnglngly, Keret1aan W1newood HOSI ~haybOOo Me
Good Man Oue S8fa Time I 36 2/5
S5 EICACTA C6-91 pa10 $199 00
811CTH RACE. 6 tur1ongs Monaleur EJceltment
(P1ncay1 11 eo 5 oo 3.00
Balt>oe Nallve !Valenzuela! 9 00 4 80
SuDll<llle (McCarron) 3 00
Aleo raced lalayelle lark. rime For
Fantaay, Moorlah Prlda, Crou o, Vivify,
Concierge S11mmy The Boy Butled
Treuur11. Sonic S?Md lime I 11 l/S
SEVENTH l'IACE. I 1116 moles on lutl M•S$ Wold Cal cCapoaine) 43 60 9 20 5 40
Aggrandizement tMcCarron) 2 80 2 60
l 81k ~Best (011va1es1 11 60
Also r•ced Gran1a Ouquesa Surely A
W•nr>er Mayan Oella Or...., Any Time Pe!
l'ealnethlU TllTl8 1:"3 A/5
SS UCACTA !•·5) paJd $25000
l'l PICI( l llC (8·5·•·8· 12·41 paid S7
737 00 W•lh I!> ... 1nn1ng l1Cke1t (hve hOlses)
S2 Conllola11on Pock Six paid S78 80 woth
490 wonning llCkell (lout no<sesl
EIGHTI4 llACE. AOC>vl I • ""'" C11erman IMtCerron1 4 20 2 80 2 40 E119 Toss ($1btlle) A 00 2 60
Ca1un Prince (P1ncay1 2 40
Alao raced Per a Lad La Due Oe Bar,
Wot-Heoghls. Be On Tome
Tune I 57 215 18 EXACTA (3·21 paid '35 50
NtNTI4 RACE. I 1/16 miles
Banoela1re (McCarronl 9 40 5 80 4 20
HonctlO Notor (SIKk) 20 00 8 60
Captain Orren! tGue<ra) 3 80 Alto raced He Man Sam, Cepta1n Double R~al Sport. Omahe Ml~• Swamp Lark,
SullOw. Cherly N Harrigan. lol!J Eagle Time I 42 21!>
18 l!UCTA 19· 101 pakj ssea 50
Allendanoe-2 I .S63
Hollywood P•rk
IA TUllbAY'S llE8Ul. Tl
(Sii\ or A-night hamea• meeting)
FllllT RACE. 6ne mile pace
Rebel Ruler (Park .. I 11 00 6 60 4 80
Siar Rocky (Aubin! 5 80 4 80
l<leal Byrd IBernatl • 40
"'so r acad K1ogs1ey Hanove< Ideal Balle
Andya Sumi>e<. GOLo Star G-81 Snv .. l• Patron N. Awea<>m4! Lally
Tome 2 00 3/5
S3 EllACTA (4-6) paid $63 00
HCONO llACE. One m"9 pace
Benroddon (Longo> 4 00 3 '20 2 60
Rambling IO<ld (Grundyl 3 60 3 00
Burke• Brigade (Kuebler) c 80
Also raced Gerry JuniOt' l o<d 9r1Qade
RAllM 1 Gotcl 0.t<ava, Soutnern Rhythm
P1ncl'I Hot llll Etton N
Tome I 58 315
TIMO ""CL One mole pace
Scotlllh RefnbOW {K.-1 t 80 4 IO 2 80
Ch8'18flS Play ll>aom«I 6 60 4 20 RustlC Scot! (GM>dy) 2 40
Also rac;ed Avon Spark. Han<lo-. Kono GA11)1, Kiit, Sledgatlernmer, H11tdy Macfaber,
Deana Stone
Time I 59 115
13 IXACTA (10·S) paid S 107 10
FOUllTH llACI. One mile p-Hurr1Cene Shannon
(Balcer) 11.20 3.80 4.20
•·Kong ol Alba (Copeland) 3 80 3 80
l ·Oel Happy (Ooudreevl 3 80 3 80
• coupled Alto tacecl T0<Plda Knlghl, Andy Henlf;
Pate<, 0..by lord. Allalr N, Tim I Mat•
Time 1 57 4/5
P1"'H MC•. One mlle .,_,
1,aron Chip (Ooudruu) S.'20 4,20 3 00
S.1 Rov« N (TOdcl) 17 00 10 40
qeeounl N (9-lllat990"J 4 60
Also rac.d Double GM N, Scoltlsll Loch.
J.llntano, The 09"1 N, Coot Gar. Cou111au nme. 1 S8 1/5 •
S3 l!XACTA (1-7) pai<I $173 70
81XTH llACL One mlle ~ ,,.,. Rhel 18al1Jargeon) es 80 2e oo 14 40
/Ible OolO (Croghen} I 1.00 7 00 r D Elc:ort (GOU<lr"NU) 8 40
Allo raced lkH Marina. Alba Time Hait~ little Brat Rut•. SundAl'Ce Sour. OM .. l'IOyW, Medi 0ougei N
T-. UI SIS.
• IXACTA (2·31 paJcl $2 S2• 00
.. VWNTM ltACI One l'llile p-•e1., °'*"" tGovdrMul • 00 • 40 ' 80 ,,...,. ICoeta ti<.,._,) t 40 2 40
lraq;oMa 1111 IW.,_) 3 40
A1110 teoed rlAI NGWI, UYrlll -· )elJQ lpuir. .. , L .. I N ... , C>1 Abba rwne 1 a1 ·•10
.. UACf A (6 4) PllJ4 M I 00
•ICIMTN uca. 0ne MM peoe
Oaoaocofl Lobell ~I M 80 ta tO U O wt J1tn 9oO 1aowr-1 a oo 2 ..o c-..--~ (l(lletllef} 2 '° A leo r1oed la1 Cllamp, Craig 0 •1. CowllO\t Bpuf, OotedO H.,_, '1YW'9 ...,,, .. n ..... 1 66 118
NINTH llACI. One mile 11-
lt>e TMly llrdr (l<bl) 4 00 ? 90 2 20
Sulldan (GOUdfffU) ' eo ' eo Fie• Hanov .. (8P<IQll•) 6 IO Allo raced Lord Neutnno. Fabi.n Lobell,
MN l at JOke. Tabb Hanov"' Randow Wind 11me Square Baton. McKenn1
Time I 57
I) U ACTA (8 71 pa10 S tll 20
I) fl'ICK ••• (8·1·2·~·4·8) paid $2,1142 ao
wolh 13 w1nn1ng llckell 111v1 hOr ... ) 12 Poc:k
81~ coneolallon P••d S30 80 wllh 4 13
winning llc~•ll llC'ur hOI '"'
TIHTH llACI One mile pee.•
Loyal Lad (lac~eyl 4 00 3 20 3.40
Snow D•~ A (LOOQO) a 00 8 20
like a Snot (M~) I 40
Alto raced H11T11all Rad 0111 N, PIM
llhlp Wallakl Suprema. Phoenla Jae•.
Ou.... of Ou. Ounamoll• N
Tome I 68 3/5 1:3 llACTA 15 7) pa•d '85 10
Allen<lanGa 11.11111
POA tournament
(al Grand 8lat1e, Midi.}
Ptyl'le Stewatl 88·69-67 -204
Curua Str•nv• 66-611-811-204 Petet Jacob1en 72-67-68-207
Bob Eetlwood 67-71·69-207
Hale Irwin 70-68-69-207
Tom Kiie 71-67-611-207
Larrv Ziegler 74·66·68-208
Mike Donald 11-68-811-208
John Coo• 65-72-71-'208
Craig S1ao1or 69-68-71-208
Lannv Wodk1n1 66·71-71-208
Wayne L.ev• 7 1-611-611-209
Gavin Lavaneon 70-811-70-209
Fre<I CouplH 71-86-72-209
GIO<Qa Archeo 74-67-69-210
LOU Graham 70·7'2-66-210
Jack Renner 73-68-611-210
c 11.,ence Rose 72 611-69-210
Ed Dougnerly 71-69· 70-210 Jell Mitchell 70·72·69-211
Jonn Adamt i;t.74-69-211
C•lvon Peele 72·70·69-211 Dan Hanoeuon 611-71-71-211
Dan OuOQlf; 70·70-71-211
Rea Cald-1 71·68·72-211 PM Hencoctr 73-U-72-2 II
Tom Simpson 70·6!1·72-211
VICI()( Regalado 69-69· 73-211
M1~e Raid 70·68-73-211
Scon S1mpt0t'I 69·69-73-21 t
Mike Smith 69·74-119-212
Lon N.etson 72 70-70-212
Ed Sneed 70-72-70-212
Fuay Zoeller 70-72-70-212
Barry Jaec:kel 73-69-70-212
Mark Hayea 70-efr.70-212
Bruee Devlin 72-69· 71 -212
Mark Pleil 71·68-73-212
Tom Purtzer 70.$11-73-212
Dave EIChelberger 72-71-70-213 Andy a.an 72-71-70-213
Sieve Melny• 71 ·72-70-213
Ed F1011 11 11.11 -213
Jim Colbetl 72-69·72-213
Tim Norr11 12·71·71-214
Bobby c1ampe11 70-73-71-214 0111 C.ifee 73 70·71-214
Mark Caluveccnoa 70-73-71 214
Jack Ferenz 74·611·72 -214
Paul A11nga< 7• 70-71-215 Chop Bee~ 74-70-71-215
Allen Miller 73·70·72-215
Andy Nor 11'1 71· 72-72-215 Fran~ Conntor 72·70-73-215
Bob Bymen 7•-68-73-21S Jtm Deni 70-72-73-215
Pet Mc:Oowen 71·73·72-2t8
M,,,,,, Ha1al$~y 73-71-72-216
Peter OotU!rhU11 72·72·72-216
DA WeoD11ng 73-71·72-216
Don Pooley 76 68· 72-216
Mark Lye 72-72-72-216
Roa Curl 72.11.73-216
Mike B<annan 73-70-74-217
Jay Haas 70·73·74-117 l onn1e Clements 71·72·74-217
Bruce FietYtet 74·68-75-217
Kon Gr_. 76-68-74-2111
Slave Loebler 7•-70-74-218 Matlo. Mc;Nully 72-71-75-218
Randy Erak1ne 76-68-74-218
Mike Su111ven 71·72-7S-218
Jay Cudd 73 71-75-2111
Pal Lindsey 72-72-7$-219
Cho Ch• Roor1guei 76-611·77 -221
POA S.nlora Cl .. •lc
(ti 8JfKUM, HY)
Don January 72·74-69-215
8111 Collins 7J.7t-71 -215
BoD GoaJDy 70-76-70-216
Guy WolllenhOlme 71·73·72-216
Peteo Thomson 70·72· 74-216
Gene lllller 72·72·73-217
F1edd1e HH! 69-73-76-218
Gardne• O.C:k1naon 77·611·74-2'20
Ari Wall 71-76-70-221
Bob Rosburg 73-73· 75-221
Biii JOhnt10t1 74·71·77-222
Howie Jonnton 7 t-74·78-223
George Bayer 72.73.111-223
Ari Sllvellrone 73-76-7!>-223
f\Aer!J Furgol 73-76-74-223
Donald Hoenig 7!>-73-75-223
Peu1 Ha<ney 71-74·78-223 Sam Snee<! 78-70-7!>-223
Bob ErlCi<M)ll 7'2-77-7!t-22•
Billy MuWilll 110·72·72-224
l(el Nagle 73-7&-7!>-224 Che<IH S1tt0<<1 77-71-76-224
Ootc>on J~ 75-73-76-'22•
Millet Barile< 7!>-74 77-2:/e
Jim F8frM 75-74-78-227
J.,ry Sarti.< 7>74-78-227
Mike Felchock 77-72-78-227
Chanolef Harper 711-74-75-227
Dan Soke. 75-79-73-227
Mac Meon 77-7>76-228
Al Bald1og 77-76-76-228
Al BesMllnk 79·71-79-228
E<I Cauaey 73-711· 71-228 Jimmy Clark 74·82-72-228 Fred Hawlllnl 76-77-75-228 Oen•• Hutchlnton 78-76-74-2211 Julius Boroa 76-76-78-219
Jact. Fleck 76-80· 73-229
l•onel Hebert 81-73-75-219
~•Cooper 79'-72-80-231 Harvie Ward 78-76-80-231
Milon MeruslC II 1·7&-75-232
Ted Kroll 112-76-74-232
Bob Hemlllon 77-711-79-234
Tom ~oporlt 711-80·75-234
Edward Rubi• 711-711·77-234
Paul RunyAn 80-711-78-234
Oonald Whitt 112-78-78-238
E<I Furgol 81-711-61-241
Hatman KelMI 90-80·115-2•6
Joe Rusto 113·7'!1-89-261
Women'• WOJld Ch.mp&on.hlpe (at Clewe4-ncl)
JoAnne c.,,,., 72·70.71-213
Amy AICOll 74-ft-7S-2 ti
Jan Stopnenton 76-70-73-2111
Aya110 Ou mo10 73·72·75-220
PatlJ' ShWl•n 76-73-71-220
J-' Ale• 74-75-74-221
M11t11 F\Que<N-Ootll 75-71·79-225
Nancy L~ 7•-77·75-228
Sandt• Heynle 15-71-80-228
Holltt Slac:y 72-74-80-228 8etll Daniel 78-78·75-22t
Salty t.mle 711-78-77-231
(
•
'
I I
\
•
Orano• Co••• DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augutt 22, 1882
From Page 81 • • ' ANGELS CLOBBER DETROIT . . . i
early ao we didn't have to worry about coming
back. ''Zahn k.ept the b&ll down and when he ptl hJ.s
c~. up worklna and keeps chan&t~peecla on elle, he'• touah. The auya en) J\J'l ~~ the ball off the end of t e bat.''
DeClncet ed.
The Aniela batted around In thelr bta tlfth
lnnlng. WUdneea on the part of the Ti.gen' first
reliever, O.ve Rucker, played a big part, too.
Brian Downing opened the Inning with a walk,
R-Od Carew followed with a single. After Rucker
I felt strong the whole night. I
just went out there and pretended
it was a 0-0 or 1-1 game.
-Geoff Zeftn
struck out Reggie Jackson, he issued a walk to
Lynn. DeClncea then followed with a two-run
single off reliever Bob James.
James then walked Don Baylor, gave up an
RBI single to Bobby Grich to score DeClnces and
walked Boone.
That brought on Elia Sosa who gave up an
infield RBI single to Mick Kelleher which wrapped
up the scoring Ln the flfth.
The Angels' final run came in the sixth inning
u Lynn doubled and DeCincee singled him home.
Boone, meanwhile, said he hadn't cracked two
home runs in a game since he played single A ball
back in 1969.
"It's a lot more fun playing this game when
you're swinging the bat well," he admitted. "I've
changed a few thlnga. I was opening up o n
the front side and 1 wasn't getting a real good look
at the pitches. But now, I'm getting into a groove."
Hia battery-mate Saturday Dl&bt at.a llNIDI toJ
have found his groove.
Zahn has now won tour ot hla laat five at.art.a
(the other wu a no dectalon) and ht.I 14th vlciory
equaled a C4reer' aeuon hJgh 11et in 1978 and oa-1n
In 1980. He'• al.lo 7-1 at An.a.helm Stadium th1a year.
"I enjoy pltchLng here. The mound la great and
I'm getting great defense behind me," admitted
Zahn , who thr ew juat 91 pltchea. "It's just a"'
pleasure t.o play with these guys. I
"l felt atrong the whole night. I just went out I
there and pretended tt wu a 0-0 or 1·1 b&ll game," t
Zahn added. 1
The Tigers' only run came in the third inning
as Lou Whitaker delivered a one-out single, Glenn 1
Wilson followed with a base hit and one out lat.er,
Lance Parrish singled Whitaker home.
Thanks to two double plays, Zahn faced just 19
batters over the final six innings -one over the
minimum.
Once the Angels had their comfortable
advantage. Mauch gave most of his regulars a rest
and put Juan Beniquez, Bobby Clark, Ron Jackson
and Rob Wilfong in the lineup. Wilfong, a second
baseman by trade, wrapped things up in cent.er
field.
* ANGIL NOTIS! Rod Car-. 1lmlng for hit 14th coneecullve .300-plus saoaon, carried 1 .311 avaraea Into Saturd•y night'• game and promptly 1lngled In lhe llret Inning and again In lhe tltih . Ha now hat 32 multiple hit game• thlt ... llOr1 and 771 lllatlma . . . eotl ._
collected 1he 11111 IWo-home nm game ot hit car-wOh hit two watl-cte11lng blas11 Stturday night Setdom~Md Midi K..-.,, 1111r11ng In place of Tim Fofl (SOta r1g111 wrl61) 11 anortt109. ool*ted only hi• third hit ol the se&llOn will\ a llne drive up the mlddla In the MCOnd Inning. II was alao Kellehe<'a llrst hll al Anaheim Stadium . . . When the Angell 11o1e three b-Friday n1ghl against the Tigert, II marked the lirtt time alnce Aprll 13 lhey had pHle<ed three In a game ... More on
Ke!leh1w Hla lnfleld elncile In the Anoeis· big fifth Inning prOduced hi• ftrtt RBI of 1982 . . The lhr• game M(lee concluOet todey (1;05) with Miit Wllco• (7-7) going for the Tigers agalnll Lula T!Mlt (2-1).
JtJST MISSED -Oakland outfielder Rickey
Henderson makes a valiant effort to reach a £¥ ball hit by Boston's Jerry Remy Friday
APWll .....
night. Henderson came up just short and later
left the game because of stomach sickness. No
wonder. Irvine rolls
behind Walley
Laver, Stolle • Will
I :Robinwood settles for third I . Keith Walley put a lock on the
Individual scoring championship
in the American Speedsoccer
Association Saturday night as his
Irvine Rebels turned back the
Huntington Beach Dolphins, 11-4
at the Los Caballeros Racquet
and Sports Club.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Second-seeded Rod Laver beat
Great Britain's Mark Cox 6-1. 6-3
in the semi-finals of the Fosters
Lager Championship at t.he Los
Angeles Tennis Club.
The Stolle-Rosewall match
took two hours to complete.
Rosewall had few problems
winning the first set but
appeared to tire in the second set.
ln the final set, Stolle won the
final two games to end th e
match.
TAYLOR, Mich . -The Robinwood Senior walk anybody while pitching a one-hitter, which
J
Minor Little League Al_l-stars may not have came. on ~ h~gh chopper over the third-base bag in
captured the champioru1h1p here Saturqay, but the fifth inru~g. . .
they did mana~e to finish with a flourish. Meanwhile, the Robmwood bats came ahve,
Laver required 1 :45 to advance
into today's final round where h e
The Huntington Beach-based squad scored in spurred by a two-run, second-inning homer by
every inning but the first while shutting Scott Harper. In the third, Mark Jenkins delivered will meet Fred Stolle. ·
down Vega Baja of Puerto Rico and coming away a two-run single, scoring Eversgerd, who h'ad
with a 17-0 victory and the third-place trophy. singled, and Brian Bosse, who reached base five
Walley poured in four goals,
giving him 18 for the aeaaon, as
Irvine prepared for the playoffs
by winning lta aeventh game in
10 outings and posting a runner-
up finish in the Beach Division.
The unseeded Stolle upset
top-seeded Ken Rosewall of
Australia, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4.
Macres triu mph
The win did a little to soothe the feelings of the times with four walks and a single.
Robinwood squad which lost a chance at winning In the fourth, Micky Hitch~k ~rove in a ~ir Laver broke in front early in
the match as he broke Cox' serve
in the fourth and sixth games in
the opening set to 6-1 triumph.
Newport Harbor High
graduate Tim Macres, the
Sailors' No. 1 player and two-
time most valuable player,
teamed up with his dad, Tim, to
win the Family Tennis Ch.allenge
competition in Torrance recently
and is h eaded for Flushing
Meadows, New York, in early
September.
the championship with two earlier defeats to the of runs, and followed thAt an mmng later with
Puerto Rican team. another run-scoring hit.
"They' really came back and played good Puerto Rico did not bat m the bottom of the The Dolphin•, meanwhile,
finished their campaign at 0-10. Laver broke a 1-1 deadlock by
winning the final five games of
the set.
baseball," said Robin wood Coach Paul Matlock. sixth, choosing instead to call the game. U a team is
Adding to the Irvine attack
were Gesner DoCarmo (three
goals) and two apiece from Don
Burke, Lee Cornwell and Paco
Eacofet. Steve McKav and Val
Fernandez tallied three goals
apiece for Huntington Beach.
"They played the way they have been capable of behind by 10 runs in the tournament, it is allowed
playing. Yes, maybe we were a little too tense in to concede the game if it impedes with the progress
the early part of the tournament." of the tournament.
Cox recovered in the second
set as h e and Laver s plit the fifth
and six games, but Laver again
broke through on Cox's serve in
the seventh.and ninth games for
the win.
Winning pitcher Todd Eversgerd helped his In the championship game that followed , Macres, who is headed for Cal
State Fullerton in the fall, will be
competing with his dad against
15 other doubles teams .
own cause at the plate, driving a three-run homer Tampa Bay completed an undefeated run for the
in the top of the sixth inning, but by that time, the title with a 6-1 tr iumph over Libertyville , Ill.
issue w as decided. On the mound, Eversgerd didn't Robinwood is due to return home today.
Ptl1UC NOTICE NII.IC NOTlCl NI.IC NOTlCE
...cnnoua .,..... NOl'ICE OP DEATH OP ' l'ICnne>ue _.. FIC11Tt0Ua -•s ftCnnout ........ ..... ITATlllENT ITATDmNT M EV HURLBUT ...... tTA~ . ...... ITATDmllf ~ ITAT'lmNT ...... ITATDmNT The fotlowtng par110r1s are doing Wl'THD"AWA.L FROM BELEN A The foltowlng l*'IOOI are doing The 1o11ow1ng ~ -doing The fOllowlno ~ •• doing The tollowlnQ .,.,__ -dOlng ~ u : ,..,..,...,.... ~TINO AND OP PETITION TO l>Yt1,_ u : ' ~ •: ~a: t>ualrlMe-= LEISURE MARKETING UNDlftflCnTIOUS ADMlNJSTERESTATENO. bullr-.a: HUNTINGl'ON H,ARBOUR ZEIGLER VENDING SERVICE SOUTH COAST CO N· STACEY MORTGAGE & INTERNATIONAL, 22974 El Toro aua..n NAME AlHHt. CLAUS EN1ERPRISES. INC. LIFl:CENTER FOR WoMEN. 18857 INC .. 9771 La Zapatlll• Clrcl•. STRUCTION COMPANY , 4000 INVESTMENTS. 3990 Wfftarly
Roed. El T0<0, CA 92630. Tha followlng pareon hH To all hein beneficiaries dba PACIFIC POLYMERS, INC., AlgOnquln. Huntington a.ch, Ca. Fountlln Veley, CA 92708. Birch Str .. t, Suite 113, Newport P*», Suit. 200, ~ 9eedl, LAURENCE ANTHONY da wtthdrewn u a llmlted per1ner trom • . ' 15702 ConllllMr i.-, Hwltlngton Neutllue at~.,._, Inc. (a ARTHUR V. ZEIGLER, 9771 l.11 BMch, CA 92nO. CA 92MO. COSTA, JR., 24942 Dove T1ea lhe par1nerahlp <>P41'atlng under Iha creditor• and contingent Beectl. CA 92849. Callfomla corporatlOn). 2015 Radhlll ZllOe* arc.. FountMI Vr/Mft, CA l<ENAUO CORPORATION. • O.A. STACEY a MSOCIATES.
i.-. El T0<0. CA 92630. llctllloua bualneu name of creditors of Helen Eva CLAUS ENTEAPRISES, INC.,• Road, Bulldln, 0, Cotta MaH, 92l'08. C.ilfomla ex>rpcwetlon. ~ Blrdl a Callfornla corporation. 3990 GERDA de COSTA, 24942 CANYON CREST RIDGE VENTURE. Hu.rlbut and persons who Calllornla corporation. 15702 Calttoml• 9262 THERESA M. ZEIGLER. 9771 Strwt, ~ BMch, CA 92eeo. W-.rty ~.Sult• 200, ~
Oolttll Tree Lane, El Toro, CA 92630. 25301 C•bot Road, Sulla 112. may be otherwiae Interested Contlllner ~. Huntlng1on 8-:h, Thie bull,_ le oonducted by • Lii z.s,etllla Clrc:M, Fountain v.a.y, Thl9 ~ 1e conducted by a e..ctl. CA 92eeo. WALLACE SUMNER, 10091 Laguna Hiiis. CA 92653. the will and/ . CA 92$49. eorpor1tlon. CA 92708. oorporatlOn. Thie ~ 11 conducted by 1 Whlppoorwlll Avenue, Fountain The llcllllout bualneaa name ln or estate. Thia ~ It conducted by a NAUTILUS OF l.alglar Vending Sarvloe Kanaod C«l>or•tle>n corporation. Valley, CA 92708. ttatemant for the partnership was A petition has been filed ex>rpcwatton. COSTA MESA, INC. lno. . Gayta E. Poat, Pr•. G . A . St e cay & LIN 0 A SUMNER. t 0 0 9 1 flied on April 23. 1982 tn the County by Robert A. Eastman ln the Cleu9 entarprlaN, Inc. Oii-. Bennett, Arthur V. ~. Pree. Thia at~t -ftled wtth the Aleoclet• ~~~~~;~~o~.venue. Fountain or ~~orL\E ~~lr.1~1DALY Superior Court of Oranhge Thlll m~tC::·n::w.ui the Thi.~~= -Ned with the ~ ~t~ ~ '!: = ~9~2."'anoe eountv on Thie •• =., ~': with the
f\lls businMt Is conducted by 11 TRUSTEE. 17 Corporate Plaza County requesting t at County Cler1c at Of.nga County on County Cler1c at CX.,. County on ~ 20, 1982. P1llNI Counry a.ti at Orwige County on
general partnership. Drlve, Newport Beec;ti, CA 92660 Robert A . Eastman be AuQl.iet 19, 1982. Ayguet 5. lN2. ,,_ Publlahad Or•n.11• Cofft Dally Auol* 20. 1M2 ' L.A. da Costa. Jr. Published Orange Coast Dally appointed as personal '111119 ,..,. Publlthed Oran.J19 Co••t Delly Ptloe, Aug. 22. 29. sept. 5. 12.1"2 · ,,_.. Tlll9 statement w111 flled with the Pltot. Aug. 15, 22. 29. Sept. 5, 1982 repreeentative to admlniater Publlahad Oran9a Cout Dally Publl•hed Orange Coaat Dally Ptlol, Aug. 22, 29, sept. 5. 12, 1912 3738-82 Publlthed Ora1199 Cout D•llY
Coooty Cl«lc of 01ange COYnty on 3832-62 the estate of Helen Eva Piiot. Aug. 22, 29, Sept 5, 1327•3~~2 Piiot Aug. 8. 15. 22. 29. lte3~2 _________ 3_7_s&..a_2 P11<>1, Aug. 22. 29. sept. 5, 12, 1982
Ju1y 29, 1982. ...... •-.,. MnTIC( Nit.IC NOTlCl 37()4...82 F1tu17 PUlJC NOTICE H u r 1 b u t ( u n d e r t h e ·-.,. ..,,._ ~ nu
Pl.ibllthed Orange Coast Dally -----------Independent Adminia1ration Nit.IC NOTICE "-""'~ '1CTITIOUI ~•• PlaJC NOTICE Piiot. Aug. 1, 8, 15. 22. 1982 FfCTITIOUt BUSINESS of ...._._._ .... ) The peti"'--rm---.. ..-nniouK...aM. -· ... as NAm ITATE•NT 3440-82 ...._ STA~ ..,,.. ... ...,. ""' · ,,_, FICTITIOUS IMJllNIU ..... --:'a ... tTa:...,_ ~.!~~o~~ .. wlng peraon 11 doing ~IT';_~U Th1 following person le doing ia aet for hearing in Dept. N~ STA........., NA1m tTA,._,. -.. ,_.., .,.,...,_. _ --. .. ,~, PUBLIC NOTICE bYll..-s as: No. 3 at 700 Civic Cent.er The lollowlng paraon 11 doing The followlng ~ -doing The following per90n 11 doing ADVANCED MOVI NG ANO Th• following peraon 11 doing
.............. s ........ 8r~E~t;.;.0,N~l~2.88: Drive, West, In the City of bual~~'·s APPLIANCE 11148 ~:i-ECH ENTERPRISES ~N~OR AUDIO SYSTEMS STORAGE co .. 421 Fair DrlYt. No. bYlll~~~E JEAN COMPANY. ,.,..,,,..,.. '"' ·~-.,.,... Santa Ana, California on · 1.u•D Ad-"-·-M c~ 5021 "Id 1 e p c • 201. Coat• Mesa. CA 92628· NAm STATEMENT 921183. Plscentla No. I, Cot1a Maaa, Ca. .,...,.. amt, .....,... .... " 90621 " g H . uena trlt, A PETER ERNEST STONE JFI., 2428 Newt><>r1 Blvd., Shop I, Coela
T!le followlng peraon Is doing GENE PIERRE GASPARO, Sept. 15, 1982 at 9:30 a.m.the 92827 92e26J~··Es .. IT .. Ll .. NO ..... 7 J ~ AOA··o 5021 Rid I 421 Fair Drive. No. 201, Coat• Mes.A. CAP92E82R7C.E 0 ~ u : 2804 Btoed Street. Newport Beech. IF YOU OBJECT to Stave Harold Delong 1848 . "'"' ... .. " .... v ·"· ... • g H , M .... CA 9282CI. AY I . 2431 range . DIAMOND STAINED GLASS CA 921183, ...... n-i-.. ol the petition, you Placant11 No. I, Cott• MeH, Ca. Fullwton. Colt& ...... CA 92927. Buena Pert<, CA 90821. Thi• bUal""9 It conducted by an Ave .. Coal• Mesa. CA 92827. ST\,1010. 414 w. Rowland Ave.. This l>Yllneas Is conducted by.,, ----· 921127 WAYNE a. HUNTER. 1002 Thia bu*-.. conducted by an lndlvldual. Thi• busl-'*conducted by an Seo\• Ana. CA 92707. Individual. lhould either appear at the Thia bullnaas It conducted by an ~arc.. Co.t.e MeM. CA lndMdual. Pet., em.1 Stone Jr. lndlvldu•I. KRYSTYNA DURIAN. 20151 a-Pierre Gaspard hearing and state your lndlvldual. 92926. J.A. Adamo Thi• ttaiemant wu filed wtth the R. Plaroa
' Vtvtj Circle. Huntington Beach. CA Thta 11atement wu llled with the objections or file written Steve H. OeLong Thl9 ~ 11 conduc'*' air• Thie ltat-1 waa ftled with the COYnty Clerlt of 0renga County on Th._ atatemant wu llled with the 926'8. County Cleric or Orange County on objections with the court Thi• 11a1emant wu flied with Iha llmlted pai1nerlhip. Covnty Cler1l ot Orange County on July 28 1982 County Cletic or Orange County on
Tftll business 11 condoo1ed by an Auguat 12. 1982. before the hearina. Your County Clark of Orange County on Jema A. 1t..-.no ."'*f 15. 1982. · '1M2M JulY 29. 1982. l'tMS1t
lndlV\dual. F111211 '" Aug. 11. 1982 Thia.....,_. -111911 wlltl the 1''91411 Publlshad Orange Cont Dally PubHthed Orange Cont Oally Kryttyna Ourlan DONALD aEORETTI appearance may be 'in penon l'•t1'1 Coooty C1ertt Of Ofwige County on Publlelled Orange Coaet Dally Pilot. July 3 t, Aug. l , 1,, 21. 19112 Pitot. Aug. 1, 8, 15, 22, 1882 Tftl• statement wu filed With the fl l"rotnaloMI Lew Corp. or by your attorney. Publlthe<I Orange Co111 Dilly Augu91 20, 1~. ,._ PMot.. Aug. 15. 22. 29, s.s>t. 5, 1982 3424..e :wl4-tl2
~~.~1:'~ ot Orange County on ..!:.t°i::.:: ~~-.:o IF y OU ARE A PllOI. Aug. 14, 21. 28. Sept.34;.~~ Publlelled Or9 Ooaat 0. 1 _________ 384_1_..e_2 -----------r MlJC N01lC(
F1Ma20 Publlthed Orange Cont D•llY CREDITOR or a contingent Plot, Aug. 22. a.~ a. ti,·= "8JC N011C( MUC NOna: ------------Publllhed Orange Cout Dally Piiot. Aug. 15. 22. 29. Sept. 5. 1982 creditor of the deceMed. you P\llt.IC NOTlct 11t7.at fllCnTIOUI ~II l"ICTmou8 .,._.. ~=-
Ptlot. Aug. 1. 8. 15. 22. 19112 3833-112 must file your cla1m with the RCTmOUS _,..... •-.,. N0l1C[ ...-ITAT'lmM'T NAm 8'TATDmWT The tollowfng ~ .,. doing 3361-82 1----nt-__ ll'_NO_T_ICE ____ court or present it to the NAME STATE..wf l'-.n. The tollowlng f)ilrson I• doing Th• followln9 peraon 11 doing bulllMU u ;
'ACIHC 'lllW
MIMOllAL,AJIK
Ceiretery Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
8500 Pac1f1c View Drive
Newpor1 Beach
644-2700
NcCoeMICll MOaTUAltlH
laquna Beach . 494-9415
LaQuna H1119
768-0933 San Juan Capistrano
4~1 776
HAll09 L.4~MT. OLl'll
Monuarv • Cemeierv
Cr4!rretorv 16QS Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
l'..-.n. peuonal representative The follOWlng peftOl\I llfe doing F1CTITIOU9 ....... l>Y"'-•: ~ -(A) ASSIST-U-SELL: IBI appointed by the court buat""8 aa: ...-n .. .,...NT COMPUTER TEACHER, 3105 B & 8 DOC'S SWEEPING ASSIST-U·BUY. 1113 a.II• Strwt. K-o1215 '1CTmOUS llUSMU
~STATEMPfT The lottowtng per110r11 are dolnQ
butllneU u : PENNFIELD HO ME S -UPLAND. 1548 Adami. Suite D.
a MeM. Ca. 92&28
Pennlleld OeYalopment, inc. I• C1lllornla corporation), 1548
Adams. Suite o. Costa M..., Ca. 9282& CalltOl"nla Dreem HomM, Inc. I• C1llfornla corporation), 1548 Adami, Suite 0. Coell Meea. Ca.
92t2t Thie bull,_ I• conducted by an unincorporated euoclallon other th.,, I pertn«ahlf>. Pennllald Oavalopmant. Inc.
within four months from the THE PEN ANO PULPIT PRE.SS. Th• followlng person It doing Harbor Blvd., Co•t• Mesa, CA SERVICE. 861 8endafwood AVMUA, Suite E. Costa-Mesa, CA 92828
date of first issuance of :~:~A Airway, Coat• M .... C•. ~:9boAST MOTIVATIONAL 929':ARY DAVID FLANZER. 19 La ~RC: Fe1ROWN 851 SAFEGUARD PROPERTIES.
lettera .. provided in Section The Compoalng Room. Inc.(• SUPPLY, 1538 Monrovle, Newpott Cherry Hiiie Lane. Newport Baech. ~ Av9nue. La~ CA ~9r·s=~~1:?.°'C:.ro:~ 700 of the Probate Code of Calltornla corporation), 3187-A 8eecfl Ce. 92te3 CA 928e0. ..,.... · CA 92628.
California. The time for Airway. COl1a ,,...., Ce. 92828 MichH I Jam•• Hall 1834 Tiiie ~ 11 conducted air an Thia~ le ooncluc* by an Thia t>uw-11 conducted by a fllin8 claimJ wW not expire Thia bualneaa " conducted by an ~ Newpot1 a..cn. ca. hMci lndMduet. Gaiy Orlld ~ tndMduel. Tany L Brown corporatloni.arry E. Welchman
prior to four rnontha from lndMduelTh. Coml><*n!> Room. 1nc. lndMdl* butlneea 18 conduet9d by 1111 Thll atatement -Ned .ith the TNI ltllt-t -ftled wttti the SafaguaTd Properti.e ihe date of the hearing Ar1 Oriflln. . Mika H.111 County Cler1l at Orenga County on County Clertl of ()fllnQll County on Inc..
noticed above Pr191dan1 Thia etetement -filed wttti the JVtt 20, 1912, AUOUll 20, 11182. Thi. IUl~t ,... Ned w11t1 IN
YOU MAY EXAMINE Thie llltement wu flled~the ~ ~~ Orwige County on Publl11\ed Orange co!~ly P~bll1tled Or•n.J19 co!~r = fn~.°'9"09 Couflty on the file kept by the court. U =!"{ i,~r, ()range on ___.. • · ,_ Plot, Auo· 1, 8, 1s,.22, tM2 Plot. Auo· 22. 29, ....,._ 5, !!i._ 1912 ~
you are lnterested in the FtMNI Publl1hed Or•~ Cout Oaltv ~ . 3ra7.aa Pu1>n1hed Orange Cout Dallr
estate you may file a request Publllhed Ornenge Coett Delly Piiot Aug. 15, 22. a . Sept. ! .. ..1.~2 "8JC NOllC[ i----.. ---... -..,,.-na:----Piiot. Aug. 15. 22. 29. s.pt.3~~ with 'the court io receive Pltot Aug. 8. 15, 22, 29, 1N2 _.,.,_ ... -.... "" .,,_ 3491·112 __ .. --.. special notice ot the ----------__ .,. --~ .. ·-·-'1CllTIOUS_. P\lllJC NOTICE ~ ""'~ ...... ITATllmln ...... ITA,......,. lnventory of estate aueta PICTmoue •••• Tiie foltowlng person 11 doing Th• folloWlng per1on 11 doing 1'1Cml0Ut .,... .. Jamee L. Cottoa, and of the petltiona. accounts P'ICTmOUS llUllNlll ~ tTA~ blllineal M: butlnell -...... ITA~ Prellldent and report& detc.ribed ln NAiii! ITATm•NT Tiie IOllOwlng pereon II doffl9 EYI LEVEL STUDIO. 100 1 ADVANCED SERVICES, 1882 Th• IOl!owlng per910n II doing ,.l!!!!, '!.-~oft~ia;!! ..... w:'.!!!. t!: Sect Ion l 2 0 0 of the The followlng f)ilreon la doing ~II: Fulla1'1on Avenue, No. 4, Cotta LanQ1ev Avenue. No. 41·0, lrvlne, WllMN M : ........., .. , ..,_,. ~·-'¥"' ~ ... , Ca11forn1a Proba Code butlna&l M : OARIH PACIFIC IEl'VtOU ....... CA 92ta7. CA. t21i•. Ki NT MAN A 0 EM ENT Auoult 4, lQ82. .,._ 8 _.___. " •---~• • JEFFREY INT!RNA TIONAL ,,. It t'1tll 8tNile. 0.. MeM. cA RONAU> ANOAEW LUP, 1M1 OANIEL LEWIS 8HIL TON, COMPANY, 17 Roc*y KIWlll, lMne,
r ·-• ._" .-_.._ ASSOCIATES, 113"' Topu, P.O. tat27 'ullerton Avenue, No. 4, Co1ta 2740-A ~rOf'l'I, Sante Ana. CA CA J:t118, Publlthed Or•nge Cou1 01lly A....,..J at IAw Bo~ 24-B, Balboa 11t1111<1, CA 92982. OANIEL JOHN MOATt 1 Meea. CA t2827, 92'70.. l'RANK J. F18H£R. 11 ROOlcy
Ptlot Aug .•• 15. 22. 29. 1~2 .. , O...er Drtn, kite H JE~FREY L. MYERS, 113~ WNll*tna Wind, !MM. CA..,.,.. Thie bullnae .. oonducted by'" TNI ~le oondUO*' by an Knoll. lrvlM. CA 91111. Nm-&: •-..a. 0a -11• Topaz, Belboa 191and, CA 82M2. f1* bu1ine1e II ~ ._., lndlVlcluel. lndMdull. . Tlllt bue1ne1t 11 ~ by .,. "8.IC NOTICE -· • .., • Thi. butl-le QOnducted by an tndMdUel. "' Aone1c1 A. Lup Denlel L. SMfton lndM<tull. (7H Nl·?t'11 1n0tvldue1 Daniel J ~ Thia ~ -tied wnh !hi TNa Mt-t -tied wtth tt1e Fr9r$ J, Fw.r -~'1C~=nn=toua~~~ .. ~ .. ~-= .. ~---r Publlabed Oraoae Coast Jeffrey L. MYltl Thie ......,_. .-tied w11t1 County an o1 Or-.. c-~ on County Ctertt oe 0ninge County on , Thie ttMelNM ... tied ~ me
Tk-fNAmoll-tnaoT~~nNTlt dol"" Olill"'"2y PlJot. Aue· 21, 22, 28,, Thia lltatament w• fllect "'"11 ltlt County ci.tl Cit Onnf9 OOUnty >Jlly 21', 1882. Auouet 12, 1912. County a.rtl Of Ofwige Oounty on
.... v-...... -•• ., .-County Clerk at Or-.. County on /i.vcufA it. t.a naettt •-JVtt 20, 1..a. ,__..
bullMel M : • a?80-8I July 21. 1982. ' ,,.,.. ~blllfted 10t-,:. C~ Dally Publlt~ o,.na. Coatl Oeltr p t>ll '*9 Orenge COQt Oe~ 8.D.I<. AND ASSOC., aa2a ,..,. Pub!llMd Or11199 CoeM ...... Auo. 1, • 1 ... -1.-"°'· Alao. 11, 21, ft.. .... a. ,ta u • • 18 n. ,. "°'111e• Wine. Ca. 92714 ft8.IC NOl1C( Publl1hed Orin~ CoMI Otlly Not, AuO· tt, It. ._. 4. 11 t ~ .-...a PllOt, Aue. 1. • · ,..... Wllllem R. Me1dowt. 52H Piiot, Aug. 1, e, 16, 22, 1"2 ii17 ~. !Mne, Ce. 02714 flCTinOUa ...... WZ=M 1-----------1 Ml.JC M011Cl Ml.IC MmCf: NI.IC mncl
fNI bu11ne11 II oonckleted by an NA19 STA,._, -.-.,. -N1JC llJl1C( --';wGmiCMiiiiiiiiiil-lndMduel. The fOIOWlllO pereone -doing '"-""'-HOlfflOue 8Ull•M HOfl iiOUI MJll•• ~ ~M ,,.. ..:i. ";,,.. ~wltll lha ~<>MT All" 8POf'T8WEAR. ~A~-TM =::A.=-r. doing TM =::A::'r. doing Tne follOwl:· ~ II doing
County C*1I ol Orange County on t7t·I 1Stll. NIWPOl'1 leech, ca. Tll• rouowtno petun 11 clotno ... ........__ ~ • ~ llll .......,._ • A&.,.c 6, 1912. t2t13 ~fl: --a IC.I . LITH 0" AMlftlCA, NIW YIOIO IXCHAHOI D111M caH1'IR MWAfat
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UPHOLSTllY "*.....,..,. -11ec1 wnt1 tM TI* IUtement ._ flflld w11t1 • T'llll $kt1•1t -llM wllll Na=••• -._.*'JM nlll ...,.llMl'll w llM""" nm ....-W•• -....... ~ Clartt of ew.,,. County. on County an o1 Onl::nail County°" eo-r Ollft ., Olwllll o.._ ~ _of Ofw'llt ~ Clfl ~~Of °'9'11 OauMy e11 ~ ~.,... ~ • Al9* 12. lta.. ~ 1t. ltll. ~ti. -. _, ·-Ml .. ,. ......... ·-
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I ;
. -.... . . .. Orange Coatt DAIL V PILOT /Sunday, Augult 22, 1882
(
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0 RA
F AS HION SECTION OF THE ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT
~Britt hopes w make a bfg splash in fashion with her bright Options.
: I
I •
Bv SANDIE JOY Of'l.Olll)'--•
. On a hillside in Clarens, i ~witzerland, beautiful black
• ~heep are bred not for wool,
but for cells.
The flock, which, has been
carefully bred through 40
· generations, is the source of
the closest thing yet to the
fountain of youth, claims
operatic star Richard von
Vrooman.
The lyrlc tenor Is a true
tbeliever in fresh cell therapy, a
~technique perfected at Clinic
~-
La Prairie, which owns the
sheep.
La Prairie is a licensed
medical facility dedicated to
alleviating common
debilitating symptoms of
aging and disease.
Although former patients
have called ft the fountain of
youth, van Vrooman carefully
stressed La Prairie makes no
claim to turning back the
clock.
Instead, he said during a
recent' visit to r. Magnln's ·
0 A S T
..
South Coast Plaza store, the
clini,'s goal is to slow effects
of aging through injection of
fresh embryonic cells derived
from La Prairie's black sheep.
The cells are catalysts to
influence cell growth and
regeneration, he said, noting
fresh cell therapy has been
used successfully on persons
of all ages and types ranging
frorri movie stars and
corporate executives to
chffdren with Oown's
Syndrome, a chromosome
. . . -........ ....-
SUNDAY, AUGUST 22, 1982
hen you purchase
f ashlons created by
Costa Mesa
designer Britt, the
word "Options"
takes on a deeper, richer meaning.
Options Is the line you are
buying, and you get a multitude of
them with a single ensemble of
pants, blouse, bandeau top and
skirt that will let you rook dressy or
be casual.
The cotton blend creations travel
well; they know no season, and
you'll never go to a party and meet
someone In the same design.
"My clothes are not trendy,"
says Britt. "They wur be just as good
eight years from now as they are
when you purchase them.
"There are no zippers and no
buttons. You gain 10 pounds and still
wear them," she said during a show
at Sundial ·Fashions In Laguna Beach.
"My clothes are very versatile,"
she continued as she added a piece
to one ensemble and created an
entirely different rook.
Britt, who Is Rebecca Britt Lahey,
has been sewing and making her
own clothes since she was 13.
"Professionally, I'm a late
bloomer," said Britt, now In her 30s.
She explained she Introduced her first
correction last June. At present, she
operates from a studio In her Costa
Mesa home with the help of three
seamstresses.
She buys th.e fabric and does all
of the designing and cutting. "Fabrics
seem to talk to me as I'm cutting, and
r sometimes change the design as r
am cutting," she said. She works
wlt'1 30 different pant patterns.
"There seems to be a void In
women's fashions that make a
personal statement," Britt said as she
demonstrated how a simple
adjustment of one of the pieces in
one ensemble can change the
garment to suit a whim or mood.
Her clothes are available at
Lorraine Sutherlands, Fern's Lingerie
In Udo vlUage and Fashion gallery at
the Alrporter Inn.
They are In the s 125 to S400
range depending on the number of
pieces.
She has another label, Britt Ltd.,
for which she produces one-of-a -kind
designs.
Although she has started out In a
smarr way, working from her home,
Britt has big plans which Include a
Farr opening of separate production
f acllltles.
Also, she Is planning another line
for pre-teen-agers which she has
named "Britt's Brats," and for which
she has her own model, daughter
Shannon, age 10. This fine wlll be
pants and tops and ensembles
retalllng for SSO to S 100.
Britt, a Costa Mesa resident for
10 years, Is a native of Miiwaukee,
Wisc. She has a background of art
training and worked as a f ash Ion
model on local televlslon.
A trunk show of her correction
wlll be held Aug. 24 from noon to 3
p.m. at Fern's Ungerle, 3406 Via Udo,
Newport Beach.
deficiency characterized by
what is called saddle nose.
The opera singer, who
was treated at the Swiss clinic
six years ago for
incapacitating migraine
headaches, is particularly
Interested in the clinic's work
with the Down's Syndrome
children and has establ,ished
an Information center for the
cllnlc fn Kansas City, Mo.
"We can't prolong life,"
See In search ot, Page C6 . .
,.
I
I
Estee Lauder gives nature a he lp ing ha nd
By VIDA DEAN ~,... ...... , .. .,
We all know "lt'a not nice to fool
Mother Nature," but Is there any harm in
assisting her ?
F.stee Lauder probably doesn't think
so because her latest skin care product
promises to do just that -help out nature.
It's called Night Repair Cellular
Recovery complex.
. At a press conference held in Beverly
tlills, Joseph Gubernick, vice president of
research and development for Lauder,
.; explained the working of the new product
• which will be available in September.
· · "Night Repair" is a breakthrough
formula that accelerates the natural repair
of cells damaged by ultraviolet light,
according to Gubemick.
"You are exposed to ultraviolet light
whenever you go outside. Whether you are
a sunworshiper or not, you are exposed to
. _ligh t and those rays change your skin.
·• · Your s kin may be suffering the effects of
age before its time.
"At night, your skin naturally repairs
its damaged cells and then renews itself by
VD~
reproducing those cells. As long as you can
repair the damaged cells before they
reproduce, your skin will stay in good
order.
"However," Gubernick continued
"when you're overexposed to the sun,
there a re too many damaged cells for your
normal repair mechanism to handle. You
can't repair and then reproduce new cells
quickly enough to avoid the signs of aging.
Night Repair speeds the normal process by
40 percent.
"Ultraviolet exposure not only
damages cells, but it da~ges the natural
hyaluronic acid that helps bind moisture
in to your skin," Gubemlck continued.
Ntaht Repair, he NY•· repJacc:.>s tht!
hyaluronlc acid and helps your skin hold
vital moisture. HA can hold up to 300
tlmes its weight in water and conlrols the
rate at which moiature flows through the
skin.
The hyaluronlc acid in NR is a natural
product, Gubernick 1ald. "It comes from
rooste r combs," he explained, adding "We
pay $1 20,000 per kilo for it. (This price
quote prompted one reporter to say ''lf
anybody has land. they w ould start raising
roosters.")
"We are putting hyaluronic acid back
in the sk in. We will have come to the ideal
time when we can make the skin produce
It.
"NR is the super product of the
decade. We have gone from moisturizing to
nourishing and now to repairing skin. We
thought of t his 8 1h years ago."
The product (Lauder has applied for a
patent) was introduced last year in Europe.
"At Harrod's in London," Gubemick said
"they sold their three months supply in
only thrf''t' weeks."
Night Ilcpalr tS part of Lauder'• Swtll
Age-controlling skincare program. It will
sell for $35 for a .87 oun<.oe that includes an J
eye dropper for dispensing. .
At night, after the sk in has been
cleansed a nd protected, you will fall the .
d ropper and apply a drop of the liquid on
each cheek , forehead, ch in and throat and
then smooth over the entire face. After
that, you put on your night cream or
moisturizer
Evelyn Lauder, daughter-in-law of
Estee, a vice president o( the <.'Ompa ny,
conducted the conference. S h e said she
began to notice a change in her skin after
using it for only two weeks.
S he stressed that NR is not for use
either as a substitute for sunscreen or aa a
remedy for sunburn. It as for appHcation to
the skin and not to be used in the eyes or
nose.
At the press conference, the c.'Ompany
also introduced a new fragrance along with
a line of products for men -I'U tell you
about those next week.
Sandra Ventura Josephine Caines Dr. Lona Rosenfeld Betsy Saunders Bob Payton Nora Lehman Harriett Wieder Barbara Grady Helen Barrios
Your clothes make a statement
By VIDA DE AN
()('!tie D•lly Piiot 8t•n
What are you saying with your clothes?
Cecilia Goodman, speaking at a business
women's conference in the South Coast Plaza
Hot.el, said you can use clothes to exp~ your
talents, your needs, personality, disposition and
your destination for today and for the future.
"You sell yourself every time you get
dressed," said the co-owner of Image Works. Her
firm was a sponsor of the conference along with
·.COil, Ballback and Slat.er.
The first thing someone will notice about a
career woman is the color she is wearing,
Goodman said. "It should be used correctly, each
color makes a statement and makes us feel a
certain way though we may not be aware of it.
''Certain colors," she told the more than 400
attending th e ~nference. "help project authority
and other colors will help one to gel notice from
superiors."
Colors of authority, according to Goodman
are navy, gray, burgundy, cream and white, and
to be an attention getter, one should add bright
accessories to the usual dark business suits~ add a
Clower or a scarf at the neck.
She explained that there are "safe colors"
for office wear that need not always b e
"conservative, dark colors." Blue, blue/green and
purple are considered "safe," according to
Goodman.
"People also observe your makeup, your
• FABRIC WAU. HANGINGS
• AU.-QVER PRINTS
• FABRIC CUT-OO'TS
CW. SELECTION!
.. 8PORTs1ee FABRICS YO.
8CHOOl 8PECIA1..I
CUTTINO s111 BOARDS &. ,....,.. .. ~ .. ~
hair (keep your style updated) the line and
proportion of your attire (have you down-played
your figure problems and played up your best
features'?), your accessories (have they pulled
together your outfit?) and your nails.
"You can learn to dress properly and
achieve your own look by yourself or you can
come to us (Image Works) and we'll help you,"
Goodman said.
"If you decide to do it younelf, you should
read books and magazines de.aling with every
aspecLDLthe subject. You sh®ld_tclkudy_an~
of department store 'personal shoppers' arid.
attend fashion shows. Also, observe how
PIONEER TWIRLERS will hold beginning
square dancing cl.asses starting Sept. 12 from 7 to
9:30 p.m. Cost is $2 per pel'90n and claaaes will be
held a t Pioneer Town, 1002 E. 17th St. in Santa
Ana. For infonnation, call 776-6906.
ORANGE COUNTY Women's Network
Alert is holding its second annual Suffrage Day luncheon Aug. 26 at the Balboa Bay Club, 1221
SUNDAY AUG. 22
thru SUNDAY AUG. 29
• • • wear them correctly
t,: I successful women dt'ess," she said.
And to give examples of what she was
talking about, Image Works and Nordstrom
staged a fashion show using local well-known
women as models.
In charge of the luncheon fashion parade
was Sandra Clark, the other co-owner of Image
Works.
Clark provided the commentary as Helen
Barrios, IBM regional marketing program
administrator; Jo Caines, assistant director of
community affairs at KOCE-TV; Barbara Grady,
direaOrof development at SCR: Mimi Grant,
president of Five Star Marketing; Vivian Hall,
educator and four\der of Women's Networ k
Alert; Dr. Lona· Rosenfeld; Betsy Saunders, vice
president of Nordstrom; Sandra Ventura, Bank
of Irvine vice president; Harriett Wieder, Orange 1
County Supervisor and Nora Lehman, fonnet'
Style editor of the Daily Pilot who has formed a
business with Dina Von Burger to assist others in ~
dealing with the press. walked the boards.
And to show the women how a well-dressed
business man should look, Public Relation&
Executive Bob Payum joined the women as a '
model. .
During the-morning session, Ann Coil and
Jane Ballback of CBS, discussed how women can
gain recognition and visibility in thj! world of
work.
"Women don't realize the power they have.
Clinic schedules fun draiser
Research shows that women are inhibited by
beliefs and assumptions about themselves." Ann
Coil said. "They are passive about skills and
accomplishments.
West Coast Highway in Newport Beach al 11:30
a.m. For reservations. call 552-7170.
.
MONDAY MORNING Club of Laguna
Beach is holding its August Friendship Tea Aug.
30 at Clubhouse VI in Laguna Hills. Cost is $3
per person and rese.rvations may be obtained by
calling 499-4041.
"Women need to learn how to analyze their
skills," she said. The topic of the CBS portion of
the program was entitled "Rules, Roles and
Nonns."
CBS 1s a firm of career management
consultants m Santa Ana. "We do more than
teach women how to wnte a resume. We gjV'e
them information on options open to them -'
outline positions available that they may never
have even thought of or considered might be
within their grasp," Coil explained.
Denim \den-em\n
1 A well known basic COiion
Of blended tob11c The fobrlC
Is ve<y durable ond IS populOI
for all types Of QO!menls flom
WO!\( clothes to sportswear onc1
e\19Nng weor
2 A coarse blue o.mgoree used
for "'°"k cloltles ~'/
used for SOtlOIS v.ak clolhes
Al's Garage; Your Denim Store for Bock to SchoOI ...
--A l8111 "501;· Shrink·k>·ftt basic denim.
8. ~ OtlglnOl stone wash denim Jeons.
C. Levl·b ·Men. a1r8tcti denim o. CoMn l(leln, 14 oz. denim
~~[;
56 F~SHION ISLAND · NE'WPOITT BEACH • (714) 644 -7030
£! _; ...
Or•noe Cout DAILY PILOT/8und•Y· Auou•t 22, 1982
•
•
On the ,
cover ...
The beach at ............... :11
Laguna provided a
perfect backdrop ·
for Britt's bright
stripes. Model Jane
ROBINSONS : Loungewear designer Patti
Cappelli will be at the Newport Beach s tore
Thursday. Aug. 26, al a fashion show benefitting
four guilds of Childrens Hospital of Orange County.
Luncheon and the fashion presentation will
follow an 11 a.m. social hour.
Tickets are $12 and reservations may be made
by calling the guild office at CHOC, 997-3000, ext.
277.
Tea room modeling of fall trends for women
take place in the Lido Buffet from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
each Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
NORDSTROM : Representative Murray
Powers will show new fall Pendleton merchandise
at noon Aug. 28 in Individualist Sportswear of the
South Coast Plaza store.
NEIMAN-MARCUS: lnformal modeling of
Stanley Sherman 1s scheduled Wednesday and
Thursday, Aug. 25 and 26. from noon t.o 3 p.m. m
Galleria.
Leonard , left, /
wears an ensemble
c•lled "C•b•n•. •
C•rolyn Poster
models 'Im-
pressions.·
Britt gives names to
all of h er creations.
Here, M od el Jane
L eon a rd w ears
'Firecrackers. ' And
you have 'Options'••••• -the top is
r e placed by a
camisole and Britt
turns the head scarf
into a hip sash. The
legs on the pan ts
can be worn up or
down depending on
your mood.
Show to benefit CHOC
A Lancome representative will conduct
complimentary skin care treatment and makeup
design Aug. 27 and 28 from 11 a .m. to 5 p.m .
Appointments can be made by calling 644-2121 ext.
143.
I. MAG NIN: The Anne Klein collection will be
presented Monday, Aug. 23. Continental breakfast
will be served at 10:30 a.m. Reservations may be
made by calling 957-1511, ext. 337.
Stanley Sherman collection will be informally
modeled noon to 3 p.m. on Aug. 23, 24 and 25 in
Fine Apparel.
Aug. 26-28 Designer Robert Bell will be in Fine
Jewelry Gallery. He worq with precious and semi-precious stones.
On Saturday, Aug. 28 fashions from the South
Coast Plaza store's junior and contemporary
collections will be shown at 1 p.m. in SCP's Jewel
Court.
BROADWAY: The Mighty West,S:oast Kids
. back-to-school fashion show will be held at the
'.Newport store Friday, Aug. 27 at 2 p .m. Local
children will serve as models.
SAKS FIFTH A VENUE: St. John Knit's fall
collection will be shown in the designer sa.Jon Aug.
27 and 28. Cosmetic promotions have been
scheduled by Clinique. Aug. 22 through Sept. 4, La
Prairie, Aug. 21 and Aug. 25, and Chanel Aug.
26-28.
I'
,,
c~rat~20 '"~ .r~ ~ ~ please join us at our ~,
Anniversary
Substantial Savi119s Tfu-009Fwut The Store
on
Men1s aru{ Lrulies1 Cfothi119 aru{ Accessories
pfzLS ...
A[[ Summer Mercftandise Red'uced!
Safe Starts
Monday, August 23
'We have gifts for you ...
!l(egister for our Vrawingt
Join us for cake aruf cftampagnt
at a cefebration Party
A[[~ -F~, Auplst 27
Mastercard & 'Visa
54.cceptetf ' f4.ff Sales
will 6e. final
Mornfuy tfiroU9h Friday 10 to 9 • Saturcfuy 10 to 6 • Surnfuy 12 to 5
#11 Soutli Coast Pfuza • 540-4600
co1~0A moir11on !!!!
Active wear at Joel's i1 bright and vivid in color. The fit i1 more
feminine, and the prices won't wear you out.
CREW NECK
SWEAT SHIRT
Sizes: S-M-L
Price: $I S.00
HOODED JACKET .
Sizes: S-M-L
Price: $24.00
ELASTIC WAIST
SWEAT PANT
Sizes: S-M-L
Price: 16.00
All pieces 1h~wn come in bri9ht 1Mc:le1 of turquoise, fuschl•.
red, purple end yedow.
l r
._ .......
. . . . .
I
1
Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1982
Lofty goal ·set for Bal Mardi Gras auction
•.·
~. .
OFF THE PRESS -
•Ginger A lie n , left,
and Carol Pangburn
t.ake a look at the m •w
N ewpo r t Ar ec.1
Community calendar
~ . .producc-d by Virginia
Castle Auxiliary of
Assistance League o f
Newport &ach.
,.
BENEFI T CHAIR-
'M AN Jo an
K arsten and A .
Vincent Jorgensen are
heading a group of
volunteers planning
the Oct. 23 Bal Mardi
Uy VIDA DEAN
Of the 0•111 "llol ll•fl
lll'r guul 111 $100,01)0
Joun Karslt•n IN d1u1 rmun of the.• 01:t :l:l
Bal Mardi Gras a ut'llon uml dan1wr lo I)(•
held ut lhl· Nl•wpurll•r tu IJl'nt•f11 th1•
Orang~ County Un11 of tht• Aml•r1t·an
Can<:er So<:wty
"The Bal 1s the tnL1jor fund-ru1~r for lh1,
society In Orange County Last year thl' &I
brought In ovl'r $64,000 Thu; yc•ar 11 1s
expt.oelcd the evtmt will top $100,000
"A New O rleans r· zz band Wiii tll't the
mood for cxccptiona New O rleans 1.·u1sine.
The band will be entl'r h.1 ining guests
during tht• 7 p.m . c<.x:ktail ho ur a nd u silent
auction An orc:hestra will perform during
the 8 p .m dinner hour u n d providt• a
delightful evening of d anl'lng," Karsten
added.
Vincent Jorgt.•nsen ha!> bc<.·n namt•d
honorary <:haarman for the C.'V<'nt I le· has
served as past president of thl· Commodon~
Club, the Southe rn Californ1u Mannl'
associates, the R otary Club and ll11ag
Hospiwl's brn:t rd o f directors.
"We're elated that he has agr<'t•d to be.•
honorary chairma n for thl' Bal," Kurslt•n
said.
Plans were finalized for tht• t'Vt•nt last
week al a m eeting in J oan and 1 larry
Karsten's Laguna Beach home
Besides the Kars tens, the planning
committee includes Messrs and Mmt.>s
Keith Lindsay, Wilham Fredt>r11.·k!>on .
W illiam H ugh es. Ala n R yp1nsk1, Paul
Bender, Bob Te lle r, Ygal Sonenshtn£'. Don
Karcher, Wayne W illiams.
Also t he J o rgensens, Dean Davisson .
Ardiste Re is, Dr . .Miriam Wysocki and lJr.
and Mrs. J erome J ones. and Dr. anc.J M rs
Malcolm Paul.
The Ryp1nslos will host a patrnns party
on Sept 24
11d1t•tlull'c.J (ur l>l'(.' I :l J11 tht· l>1111u·yl1111d
I lott•I .
Tht• ~~I! t'luh'1> lloul{ ll1wkc•ris' lllJl11 x
tourm ·y ha11 114•1•11 M·h1'<JUlc'(J for Jm1 I I
Thoi.t· 1·vt•11 l.'I .md 111.my ollll'n. Jn' Ji,t1·d
011 lhl' St•plt•mbt•r 'Hl th111ul{h l>1·u ·111IM·1
'K:t N1•wp11rt l l.uh111 A r 1•:.i C11mmu1111 y
C"al1•ndar n ow on ~It· ($Ii) hy tht· V11 g1r11~1
C<eillt· Auxahury of /\o.....ai.U111u· Lt·<Jgu1· 11f
Nt•w port Bt•iJl'h
Mt•rnbt•rs rt'(.·t•IVt'<I lht•ll t•opw' •1f I lw ,.. . ...,
t·alcndar last Wl't!k at u t·offt'(• 111 tllt' ('11n111,1
c.Jel M ar humt• of Mrs Anthony All1·11
Mrs R1t'hurc.J Pungburn, t'a l1·ndar
l'hairman, said dat1•s of ltx:ul ('ornmu111ly
und phllanthrop1l· Ul'llv1tu·s an• hstt'tl a)1111g
with high sc·hool fo<Jtba ll tmrl bai.k1·tl1.tll
i.l'heduh·s und USC and UCLA 1011111.oll
S<.'hl'<.!Uh'l>.
Community 11rg:.i n1zallons m..ty t.ikt•
advantogt• 111 1h1 l·:.ilc·nd.ir 1 lutlmt· nurnl~·r.
760-07\J!i tu add di1h-s lo tht• ongrnng mas lt-1
<:<tlt-ndar. or t'ht'<.'16. on poss1blt-eonfhcL-. 1n
plcmning futurt· a~vttws
An ;1ddt'd l1·11tun· of lht· e<.1ll'nclar 1s
photographs of N1•wp11rl an·a st·t·n<·'·
provldl·d by phut11gn1plit·r Yana Brnll1•
All pron'l·ds frcnn Liil' S<t lt•s will go lei 1h1·
Lcagul''s Child C,1rc• ( '1•11tt'f 111 Cost.a MP-..1
and tht· Childn•n's l.>t·r1l<1I lil-allh Ct•1111•r 111
Nt·wport Bt•at·h
TAKINC POTLUCK Coro! ,mt.I K1·n1
Wil kl·n w 111 111>1·n t ht·• r I rv1nl' hom1·
Sunday, Aug :.!!J, for an old-fash10111·d
Potluck party fur nwmlx•n, :.ind µc1lrons of
the Swgc Door chaplt•r of Ornngt· Coumv
Performing Arts C1·n11·r anti 1h1•11
husbands.
T hl'lnw Fr1t·d1 •J, IH.'W t'ha1rnwn, will
wckom1• nPw nwmbt•rs with Manv f311)n ,
hoso1tal1tv l'ha1rman ·
Stagt• Door 1s a funtlr;..1s111g guild of
CX."PAC and ha.' oO ~11·t 1v<· mt·mbers
C ALE NDARED . The Christmas "'UNO-RAISING Tht· Ht-lms rn•·n .1
C.Andlclieht Com:ert olanrnxJ by thl' Orange support group for Goodw11l lndustrw' ol
County Ct.-nter for the Perfo rmmlo( Arts 1s Orangt· Countv. c1r(' ml'Nmg tod;.iy .. 1 I L IO ()
.. Ill IOI •• d1JlllJJU~Jlt' bl'UIU'li llVt'rlooking
1h1· N1·w 1M111 lfadJ11r l'liuru1·h •r &mt Parude
.11 11!1• l111111t• of Mui ty 11nd Ani<'llU Lo<:kney
I Ill l.ldlJ J...J1 •
'( hll l'Vt•ltlS <Jrt• JJl<Hllll'il lor fun rah11ng
.111d I 1111d r J1s1n~ .di 111tl1•d togl•thcr,"
1.111 k111 \. I l1.J1I rrliJll of l )W or~UlllU.lllOn,
.... 1111
"Tlw I l1·l111"ru n 'f-"1111"ir 11unwrous scx·1aJ
1·v1·11h lhr11ughrn1t lh1· vt·.ir "' J mt'uns of
111 ov11l111j! I 111;111n,1I aid lo { ;111,1dwlll's work
l1 .1111111g .111d 1 111pl11y11wnt prc1J(I ams
t :IJYS ANl> lX)LLS Tlw l-"rwnd11 of
S111 1tlr Coast H1•p1·rt1J1 y N1·wport Bt•ach
< :uild llll'1t1lw1·..., and 1lw1r ~uc'SW. art• alc;o
gl'l1111g t11gl'llwr tuday Ttwv will dint' Nc•w
Yc11 k d1·li -..•vii · at th1· 11111111· <1( Juyc:1• and
.Jir11 .Ju,llt1 <trHJ Sh11 l1·v L,ir111><·rt. program
t li.111111.111 has promlM-tl "Guy:. and Dolls"
I lll1 •1 l.lllllllt Ill
.J.1111·1 llu-..1w11 , 1lw IH8:! 8:3 guild
1 h.11r111.111 will grt·l'I 111..., llll'mbt•rs al th~
1•v1•111 pl.1111H·d h v Judy <:oll1m., Daphne
W.d k1 1. H.1rl>a1 .i Johnson and Diane
W,1lk1 ·r
l\11".MHEHSlllJ> OP~;N Th., South Coast
.Ju111111 W1111w11 's Cluh 1s 11/'lw .1t't'Cpltng new
111l'111li1 ...... wo1111 ·n I H am.I ov1 •r Ml·mbershi p
111(111111.1111111 Jllll d1 ·t.11Js 011 wh;.it this group
1s pl.11111111g !cu 110.i yl'ar t Jll ht• ohtotned by
1.ill111g N.1 111 ~ Engltbn·d11 of Fountain
V.dl1•\
Thi' -.11111m .. 1 rn1·111ll(·r. hJVt' lx'<.'n busy
g1\ 111g 1111 W1 ·.,.1 01.1ng1· <:ountv Munw1pal
('t1u11 .1 !.11c ·llft
Ho11kslr1·lvt·x. maga11111 • r aC'k!>, toys 1n
b11gta1 I\ 1·11lon·cl hins ,111· .1rnong lhl• items
1l1a1 h.1v1• b1·1·11 ~1dckd l1y tlw Juniors in
sl1p1i<irl •1f th1· V1d1m-. W1tm·s.-. As.s1stance
of W1·-..1 Or;111gi• County
An1Jrd1ng Lo L:.ina Burn-.. chairman,
I 11ghl1•rn·d 1·h1ldr£'n ;ind r11-.1r aught adults
"ho "'1111 t1111t·s musl wall !111 hours at the
W1·,lr11111-.11·1 n1urthoust• 110Y. t«lll at least
'>p•·nd th " diffit·ult 11m1 111 c1 ..., armer
1·11v11 011m111t
=~e::;:;;~~=srtcr.;;;;;;;;;~ =T=h =e ======~1 Debut sch e du I e d f 0 r 2 2 y 0 u n g women
.
'
'W •
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FOUNTAI"" VALLEY
963-5659
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everytime! You'll be
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Sam6"" [5 ':Delilah .
Twenty-two young w omen will make
the ir debut De<:. 28 at the Newport Marriott
H o t e l during a ball p lanned by the
N e wport H a rbo r Auxiliary of thl•
Childre n's Home Society.
They were selected on the• b:1!>1s of
scholastic aduevem e nt and Sl'h ool and
community activities.
Introduction s w er e made a t the
organization's traditional tea held at Allan
Trane's Balboa home where the debut.antes
were greeted by Barbara DeMo tt, auxiliary
president; Nannette S utherland, dl•butantc
chairman, and Sandee Kerr, ball t'hairman
With the ir fathers. thl' debutantes
toured the C HS distril't officl' in Santa Ana
Dorothy Fitzgerald. director of volunlt-t•r-s.
told them of the services C'fferc.'<.l by the
facility and J ohn Rohe. stale controlll·r.
s p o k e o f the f i n ancial s truc turt'.
direction and needs of CHS.
Ch1/drc•n 's /Jome• Soc1etv dC'/Js from
/(>fl: A Jyson Jord~111. j;,11wc· Adclv.
:\clrlC't1t1<· (;unkt•I. fll.1rth.1 Donnl'r and
lfamli Tn•hlcr
Summer activities for the dl•butantes
have ind udc'Ci a family picnic at Manner's
Park and an informal get -together an the
home o f Mrs Wc·lhngton Bonnt•r Parlll'S
and ball-related acllv1t1cs will resu me'
dunng the Chnstmas holidays
thlld Wl'lfan· $t•rv11.1.·s provided by CH S
wh1t:h indudes edut'allon. par ent-child
t r>un-..<·ling prC'gnanc:-counc;c>lmg. foster
l,1mil v l ·•I t. ~r•)Up home-l .lfl' Cor <:h tldre n
,111d 'ou th and ac.Joplwn s<•rv1<·t·~ The procec-ds from tht• ball help !unc.J
More CHS debs: Beth K ennv. S helley PortC'r, Shc>n•I Hadns. L;wne
Sewell and Anne Sammis. Not pictur"ed are Gn'lchC.:n Swrr and Ertn
Sm11h.
BENCHMARK. DOUBLE CHIMES.
For everyone who loves the beauty of chimes. Benchmark l"dS created
'The Cathedral." This classic anniversary clock plays botr thr. famed
Westminster chimes and "Ave Mana.· A selec tor lever let.s you cl"iaose.
Crafted in brass with West Ger man quality. S 190 Just one d1stmc 1ve
gift from our clock collect1ont
Bailey Banks& Biddle
World Reno wned Jewelers Since 1832
SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA Firet level, Bulled'• wi'll· f7W 761-MUO
. ,..
Sc•<it<•d I' B.1rlwrn &rr and . .;t:mdmg from
th<' h •ft Nat.rlu• Gra_\. ::;Jll'rrt Simpson ,
Allyson Pizzo cJnd K..i yla Gr.1.\
/\Inn· Chlldr<'n 's Hom e Society debs: Seated:
M1cht•ll<' 0!(al.c1. Yvette Lohse, Perri Heaton.
Lcnorl' Ruttl•r. and Kristin Basmaj1an .
.. #
Pilot advertising
is good
business for
Lanz of
California
I
l
I
I
L
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Orange COUt DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1912
This doesn't like 'Gypsy's' topless performanC~. I
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l rect!ntly vl1Jtc.ld my
11<>n and h11 Uve-ln 1trlfrlend. I am • brood·
minded penon and hlvo made a point of keeplnfC
my mouth 1hut. Th alrl wore a very 1eanty
bikini around tho cabin lrom momJng till night. I
never lald 1 word. although 1 thought she looked
vuiaar. When we went out In tht! boot together,
she removed her top.
a wonder what you think about It. -NO NAME, how mlaerable we were and how m~ l NO CITY would have rejolced If lhey had aouen •
.,.. DEAR N.N.: Slaff m0tt womH la &heir 801 10 we could l1vt> In peace. •
• A.,,, UN'~ and 701 don't wl11t to &eU ~•Ir •1e, tlte mlol1ter Our parents are still toQet.her, ttUJ
I
~ ,' llln1 ~ 11tould ltave Hked moU.en over O to ral1e tbelr and etiU ~lephoning to comP\aln about iM
b1Dd1 -and 1oae OD from tltere. I'll bet the upheaval tt •• hard to deal with, but at JMlt.~
winne r wa1 e l1ted, tiowever. My bela ted longer fe.-1 ll'1 my fault. I've grown up but
coa1ratulatlon1. h a v e n · t . -N 0 T B I TT E R • 1 U 9
It wu appanmt to Inf' that her semi-nudity
made my son uncomfortable. l was flabbergasted
but said nothlna.
DEAR ANN 1..ANDERS: Your advi1:e to the REMORSEFUL IN ALBANY
This la going to occur again, I um 11ure.
Should I speak to my son or to the girl? Or to
neithe r? T hey are both 2~ years of age -old
enouah to know better. -KEY WEST. FLA.
DEAR K.W.: Tell yoar 100 you were
embarra11ed when Gypty Rote did he r number
lD ttle boat ud yoa bope Ile wlll a1k her to keep
tier top on ln tt.e futare wlaen you are present.
He will probably be glad yoa spoke up beca•se tt.e lmplied crltlcl1m will have come
from yoa, aot him. -
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Laat Sunday our
pastor, who nevel' coyld win flrat prlz.e for tact,
decided to honor the oldest mother preaent.
At the close of his sermon he said, "All
m others between 60 and 70, hold up you r
hands."
Then, "Now, how about all the mothers
between 70 and 80?" Next, "How about thotK'
over 80?" Then the mothers over 80 were asked
i r they were 81. 82 and so on. Finally they broke
the tie when two 84-year-olds were asked to tell
the month they were born.
I thought this was in very poor taste and
17-year-old In MadllOn whote parent.a fought
c..'Ontt.antJy was right on target. •
My parents have had a rotten marriage for
over ao years (I am now 3~) and it's u darned
shame nobody told me when I wns 17 their
probletns were not my fault and it was OK to
talk to a counselor.
How I wish all battling pareni. know how
much damage lhey do when they fight in front
of their kids. My sister and I have both had
extensive therapy and are still struggling to get
our heads straightened out. Mom was one who
"stayed for the sake of the kids," not realizinR
' DEAR NOT BITTER: co..,ahla~ ..
the victory . I'm 1ure a 1reat muy !!19 .. 0 wll
see tbemulvea ta yoar letter. T'attlt fet
writing.
Planning s wedding? !har '• rlflh t'! ~·,, •
wrong? Ann Landers' completely n c'N ..
Bride's Guide" will relieve your 1U1x/e~
rereive s copy. send a dollar, plua • Joni. • •
addressed, st.amped envelope (37 cenO ~~)
tu Ann Landes, P 0. &x 1199~. Chi~ DJ. ,
606JJ.
In search of youth • • •
, .
Mr. and Mrs. Ferrari
· Ferrari -Balentine
Meredith-Miller
wed in Laguna Hills
While carrying borrowed handkerchiefs which
had belonged to her mate rnal grandmother,
Geraldine V.H. Meredith of Irvine became the
bride of Bruce G. Miller ·in a ceremony at St.
George's Episcopal Church, Laguna Hills.
The bride is the daughter of Robert Hutt.on of
Riverside and the late Mrs. June Hutton. Her new
husband 1s the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Miller.
The new matron graduated from West.minster
H igh Sch ool and Golden West College in
Huntington Beach. She earned a B.A. in social
ecology at UC Irvine where she works in the
Department of Ophthalmology.
From fy.ge C 1 ...
"we ca.n enhance 1ts quality ... We can't reverse
the aging process. but we can defirut,ely slo•v it."
"Skin doesn't breathe as many people think;
it's fed from within. The injections stimulate
circulation . . . For example, we treat acne very
e ffectively with injections as well as many
different skin disorders including psoriasis."
The clin ic staff, for which Dr. Christiaan
Barnard is scientific adviser, has had years of
experience treating serious skin disorders.
"That's why fresh cell therapy was developed
in the first place,'' van Vrooman explained.
The process was pioneered by Or. Paul
N1ehans, a Swiss phvsician who's done ext£>nsive
r esearch and exper iments with Down's
Syndrome a nd retardation, as well as with
diabetes and degenerative disord ers such as
rheumatism and arterioaclerosis.
The clinic also has become somewhat of a
me<..'Ca for the rich and famous and JX"Werful
including Charlie Chaplin, Marilyn Monroe,
Winston Churchill and Pablo Picasso.
Some folks spend thousands of dollars for a
seven day-six night clinic stay and treatment just
for the regenerative effects.
An o utdoor wedding at Clubhouse II,
Laguna HU.ls, united in marriage Rebecca Jane
Balentine and Michael Louis Ferrari. They are
the daughter and son of Mr. and Mrs. William M.
Balentine Jr. of Costa Mesa and Mr. and Mrs.
Louis J. Ferrari of Framingham, Mass.
The groom. a resident of Reseda, graduated
from Crespi Carmelite High School in Encino
attended Los ffilgeles Pierce College and earned a
B.A. in social science at UC Irvine He works for A .
L. Williams and Associates in Santa Ana.
A wedding reception was held in the Newport
Beach Marriott Hotel to which the newlyweds were
driven in a blue Rolls-Royce Bentley.
Van Vrooman said the minimum weekly rate
for a so-<:al.led normal person at the clinic is $4.-
200 while the maxim um is $5,200 for a complete
medical checkup and 10 to 14 ceUular injections.
In addition. each patient can plan on spending
another $ ~ .500 fpr peripheral services pl us
transportation.
The newlyweds are residing in Pittsburgh,
Pa. following a honeymoon at Big Sur. The newlyweds plan to live in Irvine.
"Aging is cells dying faster than they're
reproduced," the singer explained. " .. Fresh
>
Capricorn: Don't believe everything you hear
Monday, Aag. 23
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Strive
for actual meanings, realistic tenns and
proper financial perspective. Lunar
emphasis on-h idden affairs, special
expenditures and clarification of legal
rights, p ermission s . P isces p lays
sil!liflcant role.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Be
aware of financial obliga tion s. long-
range implications of legal commitments.
Focus on public relations, partnerships.
unique proposals a nd marital status.
You'll have added responsibility, but
chances for signi ficant reward are
enhanced.
GEMINI (May 21-J '-lne 20: Task
which had been ignored or delayed must
n o w b e comp leted . Foe.us o n
employment, diet and health. Highlight
moder ation , ability to a ppeal to vast
aegmenta of public. Aries, Leo, Libra
persons figure prominently.
CANCER (June 21-J uly 22): Acuve
.cenario highlights love, speculation,
variety, children, new starts and possible
travel invitation. You'll get to heart of
matters, especially w here romantic
HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
r e lationship enters picture . Watch
Aquarius!
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Check
property, security and safety measures.
Intuitive intellect works overtime; your
first impressions or people tend to be on
target. What seemed a "lost cause" now
comes within reach and will be under
your control. Watch Cancer!
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emphasis
on movem ent, artistic expression ,
interest in many areas and tendency to
spread self too thin. Give full play to
intellectual curiosity, ask questions and
evaluate answers. Relative in transit
calls, transmits good news.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Be willing
to revise, review and rebuild on a more
solid structure. By correcting minor
faults, blemishes. property value will be
LIDO DRUGS
enhanced. This is your "money day" and
if determined you can strike pay dirt.
Wat.ch Scorpio! ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Charisma
oozes -emph asis on personality.
magnetism, physical attraction a nd
intensified relationships. You'll make
new start, valuable contacts and your
judgmen t and hunches will be on target.
Virgo plays important role.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
P rivate confer ence aids in mak in g
necessary home, domestic adjustment.
Get behind scenes, reject superficial
explanations and discern "true motives."
Admirer presents you with surprise gift.
Express gratitude in gracious manner.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Don't
believe everything you hear -member
of opposite sex will "sweet-talk" you.
Lunar emphasis on friends. hopes,
wishes and a unique brand of optimism
designed to disintegrate gloom. Pisces
plays significant role.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You'll
have added responsibility, chance for
promotion and you'll learn where you
stand in special relationship. Emphasis
o n busin ess, prestige. honor.
achieveme nt and car eer. Cancer ,
Capricorn persons figure prominently.
PISCES (Feb.• 19-March 20): More
people are -concerned with your views
and will seek your opinions. Emphasis
also on travel, spiritual development.
educational projects and communication.
You'll have wider audience and block to
progress will be removed.
• I
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IVllYTHING YOU'VE
ALWAYS WANTED TO
INOW ABOUT PAT-
TIIN FITTING AND
Wiii AFRAID
TO ASIC
CHICAGO,
DETROIT, llEW YORK,
BOSTON,
c..'Cll therapy is a viable alternative to medldi'tlfa
and/or surgery in certain cases."
Van Vrooman said he no longer h• the
migrninea since he's had fresh cell thttapy. 1
He also noted his energy level a up 8n6 h9
skin, which should be in poor condition ~ the
thousands of times he's used heavy •tage
makeup, ism exa:llent condition for a mall Of.~~.
\ Along the way, La Prairie got i!Uo the
cosmetic business and has begun marketing ejght
skin preparations called La Prairie CeUular
Skincare Treatments, sold locally at I. M...,u.n I
and Saks Fifth Avenue in Soulh Coast Plaza plus
Neiman-Marcus in Fashion lslanrf. .
Like the clinic treatments, the produe\s ~n't
cheap.
The facial kit. which includes Cellular ~
Skin Conditioner, goes for $275.
The body kit, including Cellular 'Neck. ~
and Hand Treatments: sells for $150;. arid'' die f Travel Collection, with half sizes of <AIMar
1
Wrinkle Cream, Day Cream, Night en.n, ¥8*
and Skin Conditioner, costs $170. .
The prod•Jcts weren't developed llmJ>lt b
beautifying. van Vrooman explained. . · .
"We oniy produce creams for a reuon.," ~ •
said. For example. the first product IOld to the 1 public was a placenta jelly cream d~~ ,_
treating serious skin disorders, bed 10re9 ..it'fitll j
and second degree burns. •
Clinic patients each receive a tube of the Jilly
to take home, van Vrooman said, and the clinic I
began getting orders for it from all over the '
world. So. in 1978 it began marketing Its vuPAI
creams and lotions in 17 countries. ..'t
"Nothing is going to take wrinkles away <>r-.:e
they're there." the singer emphasii.ed, but \he
creams can help clear up some skin problem and
be used as a preventive aid. ·r
"The secret is to use the creams every ~· he
said. "Use them conunuously and they bne."1
inter-reaction ... In three mon ths, 1bb'll
definitely see a difference and many people see
an improvement in texture after one "1ofKh." .
All the creams, which are made with fdal $
from La Prairie's black sheep. are ~ed tn
glass containers so the cellular material reD1ain9
potent, Van Vrooman explained. The C!N!lllrw.811t.
a biological, deep treatment w ith ftO alda,
plumpers. ,
Furthermore. he said, "More is not bell~.
Don't over-use the creams. Skin can °"11'-~
a certain amount. You don't want co ba~tllml
that's overburdened. · , ,
"Use minimal amounts for maximum ~. ft
keeps the wrinkles down." . .•
Orange Coaet DAIL V PILOT /Sunday, Auguat 22, 1982
Mt. McKin ley, (right) the highest peak in the
Un ited States at 20,320 feet, has attracted
many a mountaineer to its rugged peaks and
. rivers of ice. An Alaskan trapper's colorful
cabin (below) is no unusual sight in the wild of
the 49th state.
Alaska •
IS a wonderland • •
By JOAN BELLINI
Of ttM DallJ Pllol St.ft
Visiting Anchorage in the
summer is like going to the Land
of the Midnight Sun. Almost.
T he sun sets in the north
around 11 p.m. and rises again at
3 a.m. And it never gets pitch
dark in the interval. It is easy to
become disoriented by the
lingering daylight, especially
when dog-tired after touring all
day.
The city 1s situated on Cook
Inlet, an elongated arm of the
sea, which mitigates the strong
ocean weather.
It is easy to become confused as
to directions since the open water
is on the west, not the south, as
would be expected from looking
at the weather-satellite pictures.
Un the northwest edge of
Anchorage is Knik Ann. On the
southeast is Turnagain Ann, a
tidal bore with a 50-foot rise
when the tide, wind and moon
are in the right positions.
The C hugac h Mountains
surround the city on the east and
are magnificent, when they can
be seen -clear days are rare.
The city is growing so fast that
houses are springing up on the
slopes of these mountains
affording a spectacular view of
Anchorage and its environs.
The most devastation in the
1964 earthquake is at F.arthquake
Park, where the earth split and
slumped. There is a road along
the edge of the broken land and
ruined homes and buildings can
be seen below. Trees are now
growing through them, and in a
few more yea rs they w i 11
completely cover the ruins.
The view across the water to
the skyline of Anchorage is
marvelous, especially when the
tide is changing and the water is
like a mirror. In the background
is the Alaska Range, a hundred
miles away, but on a clear day
the range seems tQ be right
behind the city.
Anchorage is just below the
Arctic Circle but due to its
location on the Gulf of Alaska
and warmed by the Japan
Current, it has a nuld climate -
1f 10 below to 60 above can be
called moderate. No matter the
season, it's a good idea to bring
rain gear because there is always
a good chance of being involved
in some sort of moisture; mist.
driz.z.le or just plain rain.
Hot and cold running
There are several new hotels
in the downtown sector with
good restaurants and lounges
with entertainment. There also
are .a few good smaller places,
but they take some findi.ng. It is
not what one w o uld c all a
gourmet city. Plain fare, yes. but
not fancy, but with plenty of
fresh seafood.
There are s hopping centers
where most everything is
available. but not m the plentiful
quantities that we know here.
The park where P ope J ohn
Paul II celebrated Mass on his
way back from the Far East, is
beautiful in summ er, with
flowers and flowering vegetables
abounding. Merrill Field, just
past the center of the city, is very
busy since the majority of
Finns
•
• even
Portage Glacier (left) is
53 mile s so uth of
Anchorage and a big
tourist attract in Alaska.
An Alaskan boy (right)
shows off his dress for
the harsh northern
winter.
Alaskans fly as a matter of
course.
The Anchorage Zoo is a
charming little place with a
variety o f exotic wild Ii fe,
including musk oxen, which
surprisingly are only about 3 feet
tall. They seemed so much bigger
on the Natio nal Geographic
s pecial. The city also has a
number of art galleries and many
stor es and boutiques featuring
native handcrafts and art works.
Fur specialties like mukluks
are handsomely done and would
be nice to wear in a cold climate,
but a bit much for Southern
California.
Fairbanks is some 350 miles
north and east of Anchorage, and
can be reached by car, or by train
after a day-long ride through
By ST AN DELAPLANE
HEILSINKI. Finland -The national
passion of Finland is the suana. Some
visitors ador e it. A woma n from
California said: "As bad as you think it's
going to be, the real thing is worse."
HELSINKJ wall. Can be used on a bed or ma sleigh.
The Finns are sure that
' EVERYBODY will love the.sauna. You
might as well get on with it, for they will
drag you into one if they have to.
The drill is to get into a wooden sweat
, box with a pack of Finns, all of you bare
I-as a radish. You sit on wooden planks
and you sweat! You drip! You get a bLrCh
·branch to beat yourseli with.
"It opens the canals of your skm,"
they tell you, whacking themselves fore
and alt.
Once in awhile a Finn gets off his
plank and throws water on the red hot
stones. Instantly the place is thick in
steam, and all the bathe r s sigh
contentedly.
The land of Merimekko dresses, fish
and smoked reindeer tongue and
Laplanders. Take the ferry from Market
Square to Suomenlinna. an ancient
island fortress, the Gibraltar of the
north.
Lunch at the Valha.l.la. Finn fam.i.lies
oome over here to spreJJd herring and
reindeer picmcs on the grass beneath
mossy, silent gun ports.
You can go up to Lapland, 300 miles
into the Arctic Circle. When the
signposts are spelled in reindeer antlers,
you're there. There are 35,000 Lapps. all
thawed.
National drink is a potato schnapps
like akvavit. It ls called poetically "The
Ear of the Waterfall."
Very little tipping. There's 15-percent
service added to your bills.
"Rugs are a good buy. Finns buy rugs
that look good on the floor or on. the
"Small things to buy: rug beaters and
fish scrapers. Finlandia vodka in the
ace berg bottle. Karelian rolling pins."
She gave good marks to the fur shops.
"If you hate people who wear furs, stay
away from Helsinki. The shops sell
everything from the fox but the bark.
S uede crowned hats with red or silver
fox earlaps.
"There are sable lap throws. Cossack
coats tnmmed with wolf fur. Gloves of
wlldcat or Siberian lynx."
Cruise ships can go on to Leningrad.
The Russians qon't require a visa but
they do take your passport away at
the gangway.
They hand out little maroon booklets
-e ntry permits. Permission granted to
"take tours, have to round table
discussions with workers' groups, take a
speU on the beaches and swim in the sea
at authorized resorts."
the summer
some spectacular scenery, with a
stop a nd Denali State Park.
Denali is the Alaskan name for
Mt. McKinley.
Also from Anchorage it is
possible to go by land to Valdez
where a sightseeing boat leaves
for Columbia Glacier. This is a
two-day trip.
A one-day trip by car 1s
Portage Glacier, situated just
past the end of Turnagain Arm.
Some of the ice calved from the
glacier has floated up to the edge
of the lake where cars park. It is
possjble to walk on the icebergs.
they are so close. Rangers adVtSe
against it since there is always
the danger of the ice rolling ·and
drowning whoever is on it at the
time. And the water there is very
cold. •
An interesung side tnp to Port-
age Glacier it Mt. Alyeska
chairlift. It is open and stkp and
extremely exciting. From the top
you can see across the whole of
Turna~ain Ann.
Anchorage is reminiscent of
the Midwest of 40 years ago. Two
blocks off the main streets the
roads are unpaved and remain
for most of the year muddy and
potholed. Watching the natives
drive is an educauon m craft and
cunning. And it IS evident why
there are no clea n o r n ew-
looking cars on the roads .
One oddity is the e lectrical
plugs hanging from underneath
the cars. ln the winter they are
used to power the engine block
warmers so the car s can be
started.
Also note d was an auto
dealership owned by one of our
mo re n otori o u s television
hucksters. the on e who is an
animal lover. Is there no escape?
Things are not cheap
anywhere in Alaska, so bring lots
of money. There are all kinds of
rental cars at the airport and at
•he hotels or a car can be brought
up on the ferries. There is no
other way to get around and the
ci ty is s pread out over a
15-square-mile area. Like Los
Angeles with only 150,000 people
in it.
A visit to Anch orage is a
"different" experience, but 1{ one
1s not a mountain climber or
outdoorsman. a week is probably
enough to do il all. If the weather
breaks. it is lovely, but if it is
overcast, then it could turn out to
be a long week indeed.
~ : ;.:'@STA MESA TRAVEL
We have moved ..
Please come see us
in our new home.
Located in the new
Pacific Federal Plaza
1901 Newport Boulevard, Suite 129
Costa Mesa, California 92627
(714) 646-4431 or 549-2246
The California woman said: "When
they think you've had enough (which is
none too soon) you run outside down a
wooden pier and jump into the cold, cold
Jake.
r---------------------------------------------------.-------------------ADVERTISEMENT---------------------. Airport Express Starts New
"They told me: 'Lucky the ice is
melting. Otherwise we would have to
chop a hole in it for you to jump
through.'"
That's the sauna.
Helsinki is a clean city of half a million
people who speak a language related to
Hungarian. Summer here goes non-stop
for 17~2 hours. The sun doesn't set on nnntsh ground for 73 days.
~e city ia fairly new. It was founded
in 15~ by King Vasa of Sweden. It's
population by 1900 was only 79,000.
Towiml ta growing though. Cruise
ahfpe are making a port rt.op. PU1engera
lope uptown to buy Marifnekko cotton
dft91es. '
T h e California woman who was
steamed out Hated the. ahoppinlz Items:
"Arabia and local glasaware. Wooden
MUna bucketa. Blrch IOented .,.p. Mud
JJMll for kids ar:e called KW'ahousut -clUOWY but keepe the water out.
"Yecht pe>ple find the GREATFST ..w.n, par YachtJ.na emblem.a. F1ao.
"8ou'wntera. Famou. Flnniah puuldco
knlve11 ..
'
• 747 • Meals • Valid hru Dec. 83
Executive Park Travel .
16082 BEACH Bl.VO., tamm<* BEACH, bttw ... Chlfll llrown/C111 Mn
(714) 842-9327
c.
Mini-Wach R outes to LAX
La Habra, California, July 1982.
24 Hour Airport Express has just
started a Mlnicoach Service to ~
Angeles International Airport from
Laguna Beach. Thia new aervice will
rt.op at 6 conveniently located hotels
near \he Paciflc Coast Highway and
will provide low C08t, scheduled van
eervioe for Laguna Beach, Newport
Beach, Balboa, Huntington Beach
and Long Beach, Kenneth J. Woods,
Director of Marketing announced
today.
Mlnkoach aerv1ce will operate 14 •
tin\el daily on a IChedule/reeervation
buia to and from LAX with u little
a1 tour hour raervadon notice.
RetervaUona, faret and eervlce
lcadona can be otMlned by caWnc 24 Hour Airport l:xpreu at '114-711·~108 or 714-83&-6871 91' b)'
calling your travel agent.
Fares per person will range
between $14.00 and $17.00 one way
to LAX. Reduced fares are avaJlable
for children 6-16 years old, travel
-aents, families or related groups of
two or more and aenior citlz.ens 65
and older.
24 Hour Airport Express ta the
oldeet and largest door to door
airport ser vice ln Sou thern
California and began ln Whittler,
California in 1971.
In addition to minlcoach .ervice,
door to door service and charter
service, Airport Expreaa often
luxury llmou1lne Mrvlce and h•
become a complete tranaportat.lon
company, tranaportin& over 126,000
~lutyev.
Mertiet Anety1le
~""'Jon•• Diiiy Pilat ln<W1ttla l• Check to ~
AuQl,;41 UI JO +11 .14 ee how your ~ SUNDAY. AUGUST 22. 1982 H1g~m·1 stock s per( ormed in one of LOW ,
C IOHd • STOCKS 04·5 :::.,,,,, th e wildest weeks in Wall REAL ESTATE 06·8 Street h istory. Pages D2, 4-5. ,
Pac Fed complex opening amid office glut
SPR AWLING -Pacific Federal Savings and Loan
Association has spent $17 million.putting up a three-story,
colonial Spanish-style office complex in downtown Costa
Delly "4IC l"Mtoe by &... P.,M
M_esa. The S_&L's officials are hoping the distinctive d esign
will lure business tenants weary of "flash cube" architecture
in other Coast office centers.
Seniors
~ompete
for jobs
For retJred senior citizem with
time on their hands, Ed Grell has
a solution: Go out and get a JOb.
For the past six years. Grell
has been senior citizen adviser at
Irvine Senior Cent.er. 3 Sandburg
Way. One of his main duties is
counseling fe llow seniors in
searching for employment.
G rell says he c:an't tell how
many people have obtained jobs
as a result of his counseling
because the senior cen t.er doesn't
have staff for follow-ups.
But when he first started his
employment counseling program,
Grell said most businesses told
him they "didn't need any old
people working for them. Now,"
he said, "they come to us."
Grell estimated at least 25
Irvine-area firms have hired
senior citi zens through his
efforts.
Some finns also have accepted
GreU's suggesuon that they let
seniors share jobs
The job-sharing IS desirable. he
explained. because people over
65 and on Social Security lose $1
in benefits out of every $2 they
earn over $6,000 a year.
INTRICATE WORK -Hand-carved teak
banisters grace staircases at the Pacific Federal
office complex. Although distinctive, the
building is com ing on a market glutted with
vacant offices. The S&L, however, is planning
another office complex, on 3.2 acres adjacent to
Pacific Federal Plaz.a.
By JODI CADENHEAD
oftM Oelly'11oC .....
Mark Letter says he isn 't
worried that the aprawlin.g $17
million Spanish-style office
complex at the corner of 19th
Street and Newport Boulevard is
nearing completion ..at a time
when Orange C.Ounty is facing a
glut of vacant offices.
The Pacific Federal Savings &
Loan Association vice president
said the company had predicted
the current economic slump and
commercial explosion when its
decision to r elocate corporate
offices in Costa Mesa was made.
"We knew early on what the
climate would be," said Letter. "I
don't think you can look at
commercial real estate on the
short term. You have to look at
the lonf haul."
Paci ic Federal 1s be tting
heavily on Costa Mesa. The
mammoth colonial Spanish-style
building with a sweeping tower,
hand-carved teak banisters,
stone fountains a nd three
courtyards is only the first of
several projects the company
visions for the city.
L e tter talks o f an e ntire
town covered with
S h -style r ed roofs where
visitors would be able to shop, eat
and conduct business.
The P acific Fed e ral
headquarters building_ has 125,-
000 square feet. About 88,000
will be used by the 200 S&L
employees who will move in
when the building is completed
in Sept.ember.
The rest of the three-stor y
complex will be leased by
corporate tenants. Costa Mesa
Travel Age ncy already has
moved into a 2,600-square-foot
office.
In about two years Pacific
F e d e r al plan s to b egi n
construc tion o f anothe r
commercial complex on 3.2 acres
adjacent to Paci!ic Federal Plaza.
Also, n egotiations have been
under way since 1980 for Pacific
Federal to purc hase 10 acres
bounded by Harbor Boulevard,
19th Street. Park Ave nue and
18th Street for the construction
of a new commercial r e tail
cent.er.
A decision is expected by Sept.
30, when the deadline giving the
S&L exclusive bargaining rights
to the property passes. All of the
e xisting s ho ps on the land
pur c hased b y the c ity's
Re d evelopment Age n cy a re
expected to be relocated by then
also.
Pacific Federal. with assets of
$1 .8 billion, is no stranger to
redevelopme nt, having built
shopping malls and high -rise
office buildings in forme rly
rundow n section s o f San
Bernardino and Hollywood.
Costa Mesa's downtown was
targeted for revitalization
because of its proximity to John
Wayne Airport, South Coast
Plaza Town Cent.er and Ne wport
Center, said Letter.
But Pacific Federal's location
near some of the Orange Coast's
most successful financial centers
is both a problem and a blessing
when it comes to attracting
corporate tenants in today's
(See P_t.CIFIC, Page D2)
IN THE SHADOWS -Am"Ong the architectural features of
Pacific Federal's Costa Mesa office complex are arch ed
windows offering views of the plaza below. Designers al.so
included Italian marble floors, Mexican tiles, antique pewter
and French windows.
One problem Grell said he's
run into is that many of lrvme's
sen ior residents are highly
educated and don't want the
typical offerings available to
s e nior ci ti ze n s, s u c h as
babysitting and night watchman.
Can national paper make it • in USA today?
"These are people who, m the
past. have earned top money," he
explained . indicating Irvin e's
senior citizens are looking for
challenging employment.
He's had plenty of such jobs in
his caree r -salmon packing
plant manager, cross country skj
coach, retail merchandise r and
.(See SENIORS, Pa1e D%) ,.
Deir ...............
OOUNSEU -Ed Grell 1&)'.S
hla counseling at the Irvine
Senior Center has helped
.enlor dtit.en1 land jobl in the
Irvine area.
ROSSLYN, Va. (AP) -The
U.S.A. is about to get what it has
n ever h ad -a n e w spaper
published coast-to-coast. aimed at
the general reader.
The paper will be called USA
T oday a nd the person who
plunks down a quarter in Macon,
Ga., will read the same paper as
the person who buys it at Los
Angeles International Airport. It
debuts on Sept. 15.
This is to be a polished ,
packaged, colorful newspaper,
heavy on business news and
lifestyle trends, and full of sporta
and what its creators call "quick
reads."
Thete wiU be enough weather
news to drench a climatologist.
In USA T oday, says editor
John Curley, the newa will be
"massaged." Rather than simply
telling readers what they already
know, Curley says his reporters
will foct.aa on the news' impact.
The founder, chainnan Allen
H. Neuharth of the Gannett. C.O.,
believes USA Today will appeal
to two audiences -Americans
traveling away from home and
peopJe who are newcomers to
where they are now living and
still Interested In what'•
happen ing where they came
from.
The paper's target audJence, an
affluent readership aaed 20 to 60,
ap~ to national aclvertieen.
The first edit.ton wW to on ale
Sept. 10 In five 1t.atet around
Wuhlnct.an. O.C. The followtnl
week the paper will be available
in the Atlanta area; the next
week in Minneapolis; a w eek
later. Pittsburgh.
By next April, Gannett will
add Chicago. Denver, Detroit,
Houston, Los Angeles, Miami,
New York, Philadelphia, San
Francisco and Seattll!. More areas
may come in 1984 -if the paper
survives. There is plenty of
"It's a judg m ent
call. Until y ou go
th e . 1 n 0 u t
marke tplace, y ou
don 't know."
speculation It won't In a lime of
sttuule for many newspapers.
"lt'a a judgment c all,"
Neuharth says of Gannett'•
multimilllon dollar investment in
USA Today. "And ¥ntil you go
out tnto the marketplace, you
don't know."
Within six months. USA Today
will be avallabJe Monday
through Friday from 42,000
newutanda, convenience ltol'ft
and eirportl, end from &8,000
newly dee~ vendtnc m.chlnel that look televt.ion ee11 on a
pede•tal. he paper will be wlthln .a. of eeven out of 10
Arnertcana.
Neuhanh ahrugged off any
NEUllARTH
suggestion that Gannett is going
for the natlonaJ influence that b
now d e nied the company
bt'cau.e. while its papers have 4
mlllion readera, they are
ecattered in small communltJee.
He Hid Gannett is aher
profits, not power.
How the country takes to thia
venture la 11 matter of intense
curiosity within the lnduatry.
Newspaper readership hu fallen
behind the growth of pOpUlat.fon.
In the laat decade, -168 dally
papere merged or 1u1pen ded
publJcation.
Neuhanh ea.Id USA Today la
not ln~ed to replla anybody'•
regular newspaper. He doee not
want it to compete with the
Cincinnati Enquir e r or the
Richmond. Ind., Palladium-Item,
or any of the 86 other daily
papers Ga nn ett publish es
Instead, he says the new paper
will be "a second buy."
The faur news sections each
will have a "cover story" probing
a trend or topic in 800 to 1,200
USA T o d ay is
not inte nde d t o
r eplace anybody's
reg ular n e w s-
paper.
words_ Major stories will average
cloeer to 500.
Many events that might
occupy a lot of space in another
paper -the latest turn of events
in the Mideut. for example -
will be handled in USA Today
with jult a brief mention.
The weelher page uses every
graphic trick, deacrlblng and
predictlna the weether with
arrow• and boxes, 1wlrlina Jet ·~ a aeven-color map. state for eca1t1, •irport reports,
worldwide cohdltlon1 -and
lnatrud.lona hetdllned "How to
Uae Thia P.,.."
''We Opect the llpOrt8 will be
the alnale area teat arabber," .
r
Neuharth said. "The jocks have a
greater hunger for more news
and infonnation than any other
type of reader "
The prototype iss ues 's how
what readers will get: a colorful
40 pages of news, and lots of
g raphs a n d s ketches. lots o f
state-of-the-art color pictures
and news summaries.
The busin ess section will stress
news that can be u seful to
readers; the lifestyle section will
beat these drums: self, health,
good living, travel and books.
There will b e s t ories o n
computers, television, newsy
people, science, showbiz.
The paper will be printed at 15
sate1lite plants, including the
Dally Pilot.
To be a su ccess. Gannett
figures, USA Today will have to
sell only to 4 per cent of the 61
million people who buy a daily
paper now.
Wall Street is skeptical. Bruce
Thorp, a n ewspaper lndustr y
analyst with Lyneh, Jonea and
Ryan of Wuhington, D.C .• uye
Gannett atoc;k Is down out o f
i nveatora' an\iclpatlon that
launchlf\S the paper wlll coat
Gannett $20 million more than
the paper will earn in 1982.
Gannett ca n abaorb those
losses . Gannett hu reported
record earnings for ewry quarter
since it fin\ laued stodt to the
pub.lie 14 yean ago. 1t had record
profits of ist.6 mllllon In the first
quaJ"ter of lhl• year and f~0.3
mlllion ln the IMlCOnd quuter.
I 1
DI Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1982
DRANllCDAITITICll
Here are the atook market acttvltlee of publlcly traded Orange County
firms for the week ended Friday. Aug. 20. Data provided by Newport
Securities Corp.
Pacific Federal complex first
step f o.i: Mesa downtown plans
----;---;t 14 ·ti• ---t I I f I
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From Page 0 1
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PACIFIC FEDERAL COMPLEX
competitive market.
The Spanish motif was
choeen not only to blend
in with the First United
Methodist Chureh next
door, but also to attract
tenants tired of what one
Pacific Fede ral official
refers to as "flash cube"
an:hitecture.
"We knew we couldn't
compete with (South
Coast) Town Center or
Newport Center," sald
Letter. "What we knew
we could do was create a
landmark building ...
James Brooks, project
coordinator and staff
architect for Pacific
Federal, said nearly a
year was spent deaianlng
the building, wnicb
includes handpainted
tilea from M exico,
marble floors from Italy,
antique pewter, beveled
glaaa in the numeroua
French windows and
plaster deliberately
chosen to look s tately
and dated.
Towering palm trees
were relocated from
agi n g apartme nt
buildings in order to
make the Costa Mesa
complex appear 20 yean
old, said Brooka.
David Stolte, a
representative of Grubb
& Ellis Co., leasing
agents for the building,
said he hopes that the
location and unusual
architecture will lure
major tenants to Pacific
Federal.
"We're going to pull
them away from the old
glass wall environment
offices in to •n
environment that leta
them open their windo*
and catc h a fr esh
breeze," said Stolte.
'nl.at won't be easy, he
admitted. Two yean ago
Pacific Federal officials
estimated that there
would be 1.9 million
square feet of vacant
office apace w ithin a
five-mile radius of their
project.
A recent market
survey by Grubb & Ellis
showed that the figure
was more like 4 million,
said Stolte.
In Costa Mesa alorle
more than 3.5 million
s qu are feet of
commercial offices have
been built recently,
including South Coast
Plaz.a Town Center with
l . 7 million, Harbor
Gateway at Sunflower
and MacArthur with 1. 4
million and the
Automobile Club with
430,000 square feet.
SENIORS WORK. • •
Last month the city
council approved the
constru ction of 1.3
million square feet of
office development on 50
acres owned by the
Sakioka family n ear
South C.OUt Plaza.
(From Page 01)
president of the C.O.ta Mesa Merchants Association.
Grell said h e hae been able to help senior
citizens get jobs as part-time bank tellers,
receptionists and salesmen.
The main task, he said, in job hunting la to
detennlne what salable ak1lla you have ana then
find a company that needs thoee skilla.
Critical in the job hunt is resume preparation,
Grell aaya. "A resume ii suppoeed to be a billbcmd."
he explained, "and you're telling what's on it to a
company. It's the door-opener."
After that. he advi8es eenior dtizen job aeekm
to puah and keep ~· "Just go and puah until you get a job you 11.ke."
Second canal eyed
•
WANTED!
CLIENTS Who Are
looking For A
TU FllH Wly
To Miki Their Money Grow ...... .
Current lntereet Rite
12.1~
-100\ ~tttd Saltly
of Prine~ -f'1lo ,.., .. , Risl
-1'o C.nent lntolM Tu When
J~. "' ,, .~~' ',no•
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Ill 108
~ \1 ':~~l
Marilyn Wolfram took o ne
look at Pacific Federal'• lavlah
Spanl1h-stlyle building and
decided to give up her job u part
of the redevelopment team in
San Diego and come to Coata
Mesa .
The former vice president of
San Diego's Center City
Development Corporation said
she LS convinced that C.O.ta Mesa
can move ahead as quickly as San
Dlefo In Its revitalization plans.
'' wouldn't be here If [ didn't
think so.'' said Costa Mesa's new
redevelopment
direct.or.
In 1975 the
Center City
Development
Corporation,
the agency
c reated to
revamp San
Diego 's
downtown ,
W<>l'"--M embarked on
an ambitious program to turn
1,200 blighted acres into a
thriving conunercial center.
9•
1,04)
II.•"• l'I f .Q" ,il,P1li
-r~· ,,,
.1.~e· .1a2 "l' 111 -<. t&O
In Costa Mesa officials are
hoping to persuade private
developers to revitalize the
downtown redevelopment area
bounded in a zigz1g pattern by
Plwner, 19th and Bernard streets
to the north, Orange Avenue to
the east, 17th Street on the south
and Pomona Avenue on the west.
Delfr ........... ., Lee .,.,_
VIEW OF PLAZA LOOKING TOWARD NEWPORT BLVD.
". 11e t I ~ , ' '1 r
..... 3 '·
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I~ I 11' '),'bl
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~:m 6S) ). '11 1.n• 1H
2),•S&
26, )80 19),tU
21,6)) 2,e,o ll),9~ I •n u.nt n .o•o
01 ,761
), 16~ 1,2•~ zoz.o~
• 19q
l, IT~
11a
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1,&9q n . 106
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10,b•~
In 1973 the Costa M esa
Redevelopment Agency, whose
members sit on the City Council,
began the job of changing the
city's aging core. The Casa Bella
sen ior a partm ents, th e
Neighborhood Commun ity
Center, the fire station, the
historical society building and
Lions Park were developed .
Pacific Federal's new red tiled
headquarters at 19th and
Newport Boulevard is the first
private prioject built in the city's
redevelopment area.
"Pacific Federal is the
organization which has given the
real beginning for the downtown
redevelopment area with the
construction of a landmark
building," said Councilman Donn
Hall. "It shows what private
industry and government can do
together."
The redevelopment agency •
using its power to condemn
property, purchased 23 acres and
sold it to the S&L. The city and
Pacific Federal have been
negotiating since 1980 on another
10 a cres at 19th and Harbor
Boulevard, known as the
"superblock."
Although the city has already
purchased all of the property and
relocated many of the former
tenants at a total cost of $5.8
million, other deta.lla have yet to
be worked out before the Sept.
30 dead.line for Pacific Federal's
exclusive negotiating righta.
Chief among them i.s the city's
agreement to provide
improvements in the area,
develop a master plan and
revamp a small section of land at
19th and Newport.
In the last two years the city
and Pacific Federal have
extended their negotiating
agreement twice.
MB. Wolfram said she will ask
the city's n!development agency
to hire a private, non-profit land
use group Monday to review
Costa Mesa's entire downtown
area .
The Urban Land Institute
Panel Advi8ory Secvice wW look
at traffic condltlona, development
potential and urban designs for
the entire 200 acres.
Cal ling Pacific Federal's
headquarters "an excellent start"
Ms. Wolfram said she expects
that the building will entice
other developers to move into the
city•s redevelopment area.
Without redevelopment Ms.
Wolfram predicted the
downtown area would "further
d ecline .. and that thriving
sections of the city would be
forced t.o shoulder the tax burden
of deteriorating areas.
"Condemning pro~rty is not
pleas ant," adm i tted Ms .
Wolfram. "The re are some
relocations that are not pleasant.
But they are the cost of turning
an area around."
The redevelopment director
said that several business people
have e xpressed interes t in
getting involved in the city's
revitalization.
"Redevelopment is good tor a
city," said Ms. Wolfram. "Once
develo pers see others going on
the ball really starts to roll.''
THE SMART WAY
TO BUY
HOMEOWNERS AND
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IF YOU EARN MORE THAN $75,000 A YEAR
If your pos111on rn hfe rs aboVf'
avetclge. so c1re your 1nsur;mc e needs
You\~ goc 100 much at st.'l~t· 10 perm11
routine handltng or yow property ctnd
1tab11tty coverage •
Th<1n why many smarr successful
people lrke you .Me turnrng thf'ir hOme
owners and automobile pro1ernon
needs over to M arsh & Mclenncln We re
specially suited 10 serve specr.:11 chem!>
Al!hough we've made our ncime as
the world's leading comme1c1.:1l 1nsur·
ance broker. we also handle cl s1gnifi·
cant amoum or personal covt>r,1ge as
writ Homeow nrrs and c:1ulomob1le
rnsur.:mce for a select group or 1nd1v1d·
l.klls rn the upper rncome brC!ckecs We
offer severcll drstrnc1 advantages over
buying this cype of pro1ernon 111rough
Olher brokers
GIT,UU
REPLACEMENT VA.LUE
Because we're accusromed ro deaf·
1ng w11h policyholders who enjoy an
atnuent lifestyle. we're not "razed '" by
unusual requirements and big numbers
For instance. 1t you have valuable art
anuques. 0< correc11bles. we know
how to insure each one 1nd1v1dua11y
for the full replacement value ill
Before we insure your home. we
,mange tor a free inspection and
c:1ppr a1SC1l ff you need some lclnd or
coverclge 1ns1ant1y we ccin probably
arrange btndrng protec11on over the
phone that wrlf keep you ccwerecJ
until your polrcy can be issued and
delrvered 10 you
And 1f your pm1t1on In life makes
you a rempr1ng target for damage
lawsuit~ we can provide you w ith
excess lrab1lriy coverage of SI m1ll1on
to SJO m1ll1on ac a much rower cosc
than you m1gh1 expect
GIT A HOMEOWNERS
INWNlOR'Y-,lta•
Whether or not you ufC1macety obtain
1murance coverage through us. wet!
ltke ro provide you wrth a small but
important piece or pro1ecuon right
now-absolutely free Its a Homeowners fnven<ory. lvl 1n-
d1spens1ble 24 ·page booklet designed
to help you take a ras1 and accutate
inventory or your home\ contents
There's a place ro 11~1 every l(f'm you
own. the dclte you purchase<J 1t tht'
purchase price <1nd the reploil{emenr
cost II will help you 1tsr. room oy
room. item by item. all tht' valuable
pos~ssions you've <1ccumu1a1ed
rncludtng those articles at exceptional
value hke furs.Jewelry s1lvt'r r11)(> arrs
and an<1ques There\ even ,1 special
section for the 1nclus1on ot photo-
graphs and rece1p1s Stored in a safe
place. your Homeowners Inventory
could mean a big difference 1n seuhng
an insurance claim shOuld your home
ever be hit by d1sas1t·1
Th1~ h<mdy b0okle1
is yours w11h our
comphmencs To
ob1,11n your copy
simply comp1r1e
and return the
coupon below
We'll see th<lt your
Homeowners
Inventory rs sent 10
you 1mmed1a1e1y
r---~---~---~---------.--, OP 8/22/82 I
I
Manh a Md.enn•n, 4400 McNthut llvd .. ~•HO.
Newport le.ch. CA HMO
Ami: a.ty Henton. Vk-. flteMdent
TOKYO (AP) -The Transport MiniaU'y wU1
eeek the equivalent of '391.000 for prelimln.u'!
stuclM9 of a propoeed eecond Panama Canal, oftldall -Mid S.turday. .
Japan. alona with Panama and the Uni'4!d
Sta• II tniere.t.ed In bu1lding a eea-level canal
parallel w t\le ~ ~aterway .
P...O To leMlicwy -*All AMlllty ...-A 80lld
FOA MOAI INFO. CALL
Oft W"!TI
today's puces We know how 10 cover
your Jewelry. furs. and silver so chat 1n
case o r loss you won't be d1sappo1n1ea
by subtractions for C1epret1at1on
YES, I~ like to rte er.it my_ frtt copy Of lht' Homeowners Inventory
I undt'tStand this 24-page IX>old~t 1s mine withOut Obligation Ptease s~nd
me my compflmenral)' copy 1mmedlacery
I I
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FORECLOSURE
TRUSTEE SALE
Yes -we can handle your foreclosure
regardless of named trustee on Deed of Truat
&TAN-SHAW CORPORATION (714) id.;ca11
Profa11lonel b11l91w 1tnoe 1M1
'
,
GIT NMONAUZ•D
Al'TWNTION
Because we rend to insure above·
average home"S"f!nd cars. we give
each pohcyholoer frrsc-class treatmeni
My time you calf with a quesuon.
nttd. or claim. you'll never be rorced
to deal w11h a nameless. impersonal
cte1k. 'rtlu'll ask '°' aM ta lk to your
own Account Repre.sen1a11ve. some·
one Who 1s k~nly 1nteres1ed 1n yolH
neeas and personally re.spon.s11:>1e tor
see1r19 that )'OU are taken <.are or
\
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'
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Auguat 22, 1982
~ People like ou
are talking about ·r future
with a trusted friend .
"-------------------At
Dean Witter Reynolds,
you can find out about the Sears
U.S. Government Money Market 1h.lst fund .
A great way to keep your money
growing at money market rates .
Ifs .
nice being able to do
this kind of business after work
or on weekends; .. it's really convenient.
Delighted
to know Coldwell Banker
offers Home Market Evaluation .
Helps you decide what your home is worth.
lt
feels good.
dealing with Sears companies.
Sears
is on to something. offering all these
services in one place.
You
really ought to talk with Allstate.
Right off the bat.
they could show you a way
to lower your auto insurance rates.
--------------------~
The Sears Financial Center • • 1snow~en·m
South Coast Plaza. the
FOR THE FIRST TIME .ANYWHERE,
THE FINANCIAL SERVICES 'YOU AND YOUR
FAMILY NEED MOST ARE TOGETHER
UNDER ONE ROOF.
The roof of the Sears store in the South
Coast Plaza.
Because Sears knows that people-even
people who ma ke a good living-need good.
sound advice about their money. And they need
that advice simple to understand and easy
to find.
And perhaps most of all. they need It
from people they trust.
That's why Sears has started the
Sears Financial Network.
What follows is just a sample of what
it can do for you.
TRUST ALLSTATE TO HELP
WITH YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS.
The Allstate Insurance Company. n ow
a vital part of the Sears Financial Network.
continues to Invite you to bring tn your
insurance poltcles for comparisons that
could save you money.
· Your Allstate agent can also tell you
about Alls tate Life's Jotnt Mortgage Protection
Plan that provides decreasing term life
Insurance that can cover both famlly bread-
w1 nners for less than the cost of two poHcles.
TRUST COLDWELL BANKER
TO HELP WITH ALL
YOUR REAL ESTATE.NEEDS.
Coldwell Banker. America's largest
f ull-servtce real estate company. ts also part
of the Sears Financial Network.
Among the important real estate
services available to you at no cost are Home
Market Evaluation. Homes for Sale. a full
description of homes that are on the market.
information on available Fina ncing Alterna-
tives.Out-of-State Relocation a nd Community
Information Service.
TRUST DEAN Wfl"l ER REYNOLDS
TO HELP WITH ALL YOUR
INVESTMENT NEEDS.
Dc,an Witter Reynolds ts a full-service
investment firm. able to h elp you w1th the type
of pla nning people need today.
Your questions are welcome on stocks.
bonds. mutual funds. money market funds. unit
trusts. tax-deferred annuities. options. retire-
ment programs and more. including the
new Sears U.S. Government Money Market
lh.is t Fund.•
TRUST ALLSTATE SAVINGS
TO HELP WITH ALL "YOUR SAVINGS
AND BORROWING.
Allstate Savings offers a full range of ways
to plan a financially sound future. Interest-
bearing checking accounts. retirement pl~.
T-Bill accounts and the new 3-month T-Blll and
3-1/2 year PLUS certificates.
And as one of Californias largest savtngs
& loans. Allstate Savings can help wt th residen-
tial real estate loans including Equity Loans.
Home Improvement Loans. Ftrstnust Deeds.
And Allstate Savings Easy Money
Machine wtll be located at the Sears Financial
Network Center for convenient depostt a nd
withdrawal service.
AT THE SEARS FINANCIAL CENTER.
THERE•s NO SUCH THING AS
..BANKER~S HOURS:'
The Center is open for your convenience
during regular Sears s tore hours. Monday
through Friday. lO until 9. Saturday. 9:30
unltl 9. Sunday. 11 until 5.
WHAT TO DO
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
If you can't visit the Center (Its at 3333
Bristol Street. Costa Mesa. CA 92626). please call
(714)540-3333.
Fbr your insurance needs. visit the
Center or call or visit an Allstate agent at any
Sears or Allstate location convenient to you.
And the people at Dean Witter Reynolds
and Coldwell Banker will be happy to serve
you at their other offices throughout the area.
As w1ll all the people at the eighty-seven other
branches of Allstate Savings throughout
California.
But no matter how you use the Sears
Flna9cial Network. the main thing is to use it.
Because today. the best place for your
future s hould be wHh a trusted friend.
!lt Sears.
••
SEARS
FINANCIAL
NETWORK
Allstate
Dean W itter Reynolds
Coldwell Banker
Allstate Savings
• Allstate Insurance Compantes Home Office. Northbrook. IL.
for more complete information about Sears U.S. Government Money Market Ti ust Fund 1nclud1ng charges and expenses. please obtain a prospectus from your near est Dean W itter Reynolds
office Be sure to read it carefully Oef ore you invest or send money. Shares of the Trust are not sponsored. guaranteed. endorsed or rnsured by the US Gover nmcnt or any agency thereof.
@Sears. Roebuck and Co .. 1982 '
'
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Orange Coaar DAILY PILOT /$und1y, Augutl 22, 1982 •a
AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE
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.. DI Orange Cout OAILV PILOT/8und1y, Auguat a , 1882 (11'-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aliso Meadows
dralVs buyers ..
froin afar
Aliso Meadows. the affo rdable horn"
ccmmunity in Laguna Hills, ls attractina buyers
from near and far, reports Terry Brennan, project
, manager for the developer, Aliao Meadows, Ltd.
~ "Nineteen percent of Aliso Meadows' homes
' have been purchased by people living within five
\-miles," Brennan explained "On the other hand, 8
per cent lived 30 or more miles from the
development. Looking at it another way. more than
half the buyers, 57 percent, lived within 15 miles
while over one-third, 35 percent, lived more than 20
miles away."
"The most popular former city of residence is
· Costa Mesa, accounting for 13 percent of our
: buyers." Brennan continued. ''The second and third
most popular areas are Huntington Beach with 10
percent and Laguna Hills with 9 percent."
A previously announced homebuyer survey
had revealed that 58 percent of Aliso Meadows
r esidents w o rk less than 15 miles from the
community. The most popular places to work.
according to the survey, are Irvine with 22 percent
of ihe residents and Santa Ana with 14 percent.
A condominium development, Aliso Meadows
offers two two-bedroom plans of 960 square feet
and one three-bedroom model with 1.248 square
feet. Four units are clustered together in a pinwheel
configuration, so every home has the privacy, ~ight
and ventilation of an end unit in a conventional
'condominium. To further enhance privacy, each
h ome has a fenred yard and no one lives above or
:~1 below anyone else.
Pric.'CS atart at $79,950. Sales at Aliso Meadows
are restricted to those with gross annual household
incomes of $25,664 to $38.496 because the loans are
government-assisted. The interest rate is fixed for
30 years at 10.6 or 11.5 per cent, depending on the
buyer's income. The normal minimum down
payment is 10 ~r cent percent.
Open daily. from 10 a.m. to dusk, the sales
office and furnished models may be reached by
taking the Santa Ana or San Diego Freeway south
to Alicia Parkway off-ramp (first exit past E1 Toro
Road), tummg right on Alicia and going southwest
1 'l'l miles to Via Lomas and Aliso Meadows.
BEDROOMS 'GRACIOUS' -Spacious master
suite of homes at The Forest are showcased by
soaring cathedral celling over a raised hearth
flrep,lace plus built-in wet bar and bookcases.
Firm's honie design popular
Fundamental to the art form of
a home is the function and flow
of every room as well as the
esthetics of the archite<.·tural
design. Such consideration of all
of these elements is to be found
in the Eloquence model, one of
five floor plans presented by the
Meister Co. at The Forest in
Lake Forest.
Introduced by a large foyer
area with soari ng ce iling
overhead a nd imported Walker
Zar1ger Italian ceramic tiles
underfoot. this four-bedroom
r esiden ce invite d total
enjoyment. A planter area with
outside drainage creates a subtle
screen for the formal tl1n1ng
room to th e left. T o t ally
separated to the right of the
foyer is a sunke n living room
with high vaulted ceiling and
co rner wind o w grou ping
overlooking the garden area at
the side entry.
Indoor greenery is again
re peated by a second planter
tucked underneath an ope n,
sk y lighted staircase, finished
with a hand -rubbe d wood
railing. For eve ryday family
comfort. a large kitchen with
island worktop flows directly
into a nook eating area with
window seats built into a bay of
windows. Adjacent. the family
room features a massive wood-
burni ng fire place and s liding
glass doors which provide access
to a backyard entertaining area
already pre pared with a gas
~~~~~~~~~~-
outlet for a barbecue.
Ranging in :¥ze from 1,750 to
2.900 square foet. the other one
and two-story homes at Thi:!
Forest offer a choice of two to
five bedrooms and up to three
full baths.
To visit The Forest in Laly:
Forest, take the San Die{ J
(Interstate 5) Freeway to the
Lake Forest Drive exit and
proceed north to Jeronimo Road.
Turn right on Jeronimo and
continue to the sales office and
five "display homes". which are
open daily, except Wednesdays.
from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m . and
on Mondays from noon to 6 p.m.
For further assistan ce call
770-4003.
San Clemente's
Finest at
0 ·y 12 3 ~o/o.
Trade in yo11r
present liome
for a palace by
the sea.
You'll enj oy a fixed rate of 123/4%
for the first h a lf of your 30-year loan
and we g uar antee to re-finance the
second half of the loan. We can al so
offer a trade-in on your present
home. With our low 10% d own pay-
ment, you won't find a better value
on the coast of Orange County.
Palacio del Mar overlooks the
ocean from h igh atop the mountain
crests of S an Clemente. Uncom-
promising craftsm anship is evident
in the elegant architectural design.
Rlchly colored and textured tiled
roofs enhance the graceful
California styling;
plu s dramatic
s loped ceilings,
sky Ugh ts, stained
glass and b eveled
windows and
p lenty of r oom for
en tertaining.
Ch oose two or
three bedrooms in
five s p aciou s floor plans. tOU .. Dl'fOO
From 8275,000 Models open from
12 t.o 6 daily,
except Monday
804 Via ColJbrt, San Clemente
(714) 498-4282
Llnio Jk&I e.cav • 8.KlvMft AflDl
a.. LO Mill.at brOlitcr
(
Hom e re~ale
voluHJe cfown
California • 1n
U)S ANGELES The 11tatew1de seasonally
adjWlted home resale volu~ in June. 1982, wua
down 11.4 percent troo) May, the California
A!aociation or Rt•altors (CAR) annount-ed.
Existing single family tral\&lctions for Jun1r
1982 we re recordC'd at u iwWJOnaUy udjus ted annual
rate or 237,019 unit.'I, down 38.6 pcn:ent from June
1981 and 65 pcr<.-vnt below tht• cyclical peak m sales
with OC'Curred in latl' 1978.
"Unaffordablt• inlt•rcst rates and continued
market d1slocat1on resulung from attempts by
l.'Onverted (edt•ral lendl'rS to 1!.11fon•e due-on-sale
clauses m loans originated when they were state
chartered, will continut• to retit.tlct exlSting home
sales," said Seb Sterpa, pres1dunt of tht• Realtors
A ssociation. "As a <.·o nscqu en <.·c, we expect
California rt-al estate markl'l a<:t1 v1ty to remain
weak through thl' remmnder o ( .Lhts year:·
The statewide median sall'O price of a smgle
family home increased I 7 JX'rt.'l'nt to $112,163 m
June 1982. Compared to JunL· 1961, ~1fomia home
prices appreciated at a rate o ( 6 perc.'t'nt, the first
month this year an which the annualized rate of
housing price apprec1auon ex<.'E'(>(l<.'Cf 5.0 perC'ent
"Large lederal dt'f1t·1t.s and a huge demand for
credit by business caught in a liquidity squeeze
continue to l·rowd out housing cre<l1t needs. Even
though an a nticipa ted recov1•ry an consumer
spending should rt'SUlt an 1mprove<l c·ash flows to
business and government, t'as1ng borrowing net.."'<18,
credit conditions an tht· long-term market will
remain dire.cull," said J oel Singer, CAR's director
of planning. rcscar('h and l'<.'Onomll'S. "Investors in
that market are µarlicularly concerned about
federal deficits. That uncertainly will prevent
significant interest raw dt'(;hnrs."
The distribution of sales by lx'Ciroom category
showed a s1gn1hcant shift toward sales of larger
homes m June 1982 C'Omparl'd to the previous
month and to Junt• 1981. This fac·tor mnuenc'ed the
continued apprt'C1at1on in single family home pric."eS.
"Despite the upsurge m Olp p reciauon this
month, real housing prt('('S have· ~·n dcdinmg for
the last two years and may dt'<.·lane further m the
foreset>able futurt>." S mgl•r said ··However. we do
not expec t any maJor c·ompressaon of nominal
housing prices to occur, bccat se of continuing
inllation in the new construC"t1on sector and the
remnants of underlying housing demand "
Despite worsening salC'S acttv4ty statewide, the
median time-on-th<.'-market before sale for single-
family detached homes d(!(.:hn<.-d m June to 75.1
days from 77 5 days m May The index of unsold
inventory for smgle-famlly homes was 17 9 months
during June. as compared to 20.9 months m May.
Alternative• financing continues to be crucial to
the housing marketplac·e The evidence of the
impact of the de la Cuesta decision wall not l.5erome
at all apparent , howevt•r, until CAR reports the
July and August statisti cs. Assumptions ac."COunted
for 56.9 perc.-ent of sang!<.• family ho me transactions.
up from 54.8 perl·ent in May. Combined. alternative
financing techniques assumptions. seller-carried
firsts and wraparounds a<.·counted for 71.0
percent of all transactions while n ewly originated
institutional first mortgage loans accounted for only
19.1 percent of transactions.
Condomtnium sales accounted for l 7.4 percent
of the resale housing markN activity in June. 1982.
nearly unchanged from May thlS year. The median
price of condominiums in June was $101.755 down
2.7 percent from the previous month. The median
lime on the marke t was 83 3 davs. down from 88 l
days in May, 1982 ·
Allowance aid
in home buying
The new $10,000 allowance now available on
se lected plans a t the townhome community on
Magnolia S treet, one block north of West Lincoln
Avenue in west Anaheim . has provoked an
increasing number of visitors and buyers. .
ln addition to the $10,000 aJl(>wance on certain
homes, the La Solana Corporation of Irvine also is
offering a $2,500 closing l'OSt alJowance on the one
and two-story, two and three-b4i<froom residences
prired from $98,990.
Only 5 percent down 1s required on some _Plans
and a low interest rate of 11 .5 percent 1s available
for the first year on a graduated payment plan. La
Solana also offers a lease-option plan that permits
buyers to hve rent-free because all monthly
payments are applied to the purchase price. which
is fixed at the lime lease-o pt10n plan becomes
effective. Carbon Creek town homes boast wood exteriors
with a distinctly quaint flavor remmLSCent of New
England. Building placement among the greenbelt
areas provide homeowners with a pleasant feeling
of spaciousness and the pool/cabana area and
nearby tennis court are two focal points for leisure 1 time activities.
Better living amenities include air conditioning
and forced air heating, ceramic tile showers and
countertops. all kitchen built-ins, spacious master
suit.es with walk-in closets, caq>eting in all living
areas. fireplaces and inside laundry areas in many
plans.
The furnished models and ~onnation cent.er
are open daily from 11 a.m. lQ 6 p.m. Ex.it the
Riverside or Santa Ana Freeway~ at Magnoha and
turn south on Magnolia about a ,111ile~and-a-half to
Carbon Creek t.ownhomes.
Call 761 -2355 for detailed information
regarding financing and homeowner's 8330Ciation
fees. Carbon Creek ls a joint venture of the La
Solana Corporation, a division o~ Sumitomo Really
& Investment Co .. Ltd. and Sun-Cal Investment.
Who 's Who?
Who's New!
Every Sunday in
----------
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1982 DT
D e l•ul d eadline r uled
· Home developer liable
ly ROBERT J. BRUSS
JOMph and Sylvia, New Jersey resldent1,
bouaht two Iota In Florida from Deltona. Paymeni.
of $14,648.17 were made In lnstallmenta over three
yean. Within 00 daya after the final payment,
Deltona was to deliver to Joseph and Sylvia the
warranty deeds, paved streets to the lots. a central
water 1y1t.em, and a title insurance policy.
Deltona retained the titles until Joseph and
Svlvia comple~ their payments. However, if all
payments were made and Deltona Willi unable to
meet lts obligations, the contract required Deltona
to return all payments with interest to J06eph and
SyM.a.
After all payments were made to Deltona, no
warranty deed1 were delivered to Joseph and
Sylvia becauae Deltona's promised improvements
were not completed. Deltona offered to refund the
$14,648.17 payments plus interest. But Joseph and
Sylvia weren't satisfied. They sued fo r punitive
damages. charging that Deltona fraudulently never
intended to Install the improvements.
Deltona argued the federal Interstate Land
Sale Act bars punitive damages. Also, Deltona
argued that the two-yea r statute of limitations has
expired since the installment purchase contract was
signed over three· years ago.
IF YOU WERE THE JUDGE would you allow
Joseph and Sylvia to seek damages?
The judge said yes. The Interstate Land Sales
Act allows a purchaser to sue a developer for
damages due to untrue or omitted statements of
material facts, the judge explained. Until Joseph
and Sylvia completed their payments, they didn't
know of Dehona's default; therefore the statute of
limitations began runrtlng when the default was
dl.9covered, the judge emphasized.
Applying the statute of limitations period,
Joeeph and Sylvia can sue Deltona for fraud and
misrepresentation damages discovered within two
years of their last payment, the judge ruled. In
addition, Joseph and Sylvia can seek compensatory
but not punitive damages, the judge concluded.
Based on the 1982 U.S. District Court decision
in Hadad v. Deltona Corporation, 535 Fed.Supp.
1364.
Condos for adults
suit personal need
Allowing home buyers over 40 years of age to
choose the home that is best suited to their
individ ual needs and lifestyle, five one-story
floorplana are offered at Huntington Landmark, an
ocean-close condomirtlum community in Huntington
Beach that is limited to adults over 40.
Aocording to Jim Leishman, sales manager at
the Signal Landmark Properties development, the
homes at Huntington Landmark are especially
designed to appeal to mature adults.
"Ranging from a one-bedroom, one-bath plan
with 834 BqUare .feet of living space to a three-
bedtoom, two-bath model with 1,336 square feet,
theee well-planned homes are ideal for adults who
place a strong importance on convenience when 8t!lectin« a home," Leishman said.
Priced from $94,450, each of the condominium
homel has a fenced, private patio. In additiotl, one
plan futures an atrium that can be viewed from
the living room, dining area and master bedroom,
while another has a large entry courtyard that is
vlewed from the living room, dining area and
kitchen. All homes come with one-car enclosed
~g is offered with an interest rate of
).&at 1311i percent, available for a limited time only.
'n)e sales center and five, decorated models,
open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., can be visited by
taking the San Diego Freeway to the Magnolia
Stteet exit, driving south on Magnolia past the
intersection of Adams Boulevard and turning right
into the sales center parking lot. More infonnation
la available by ca.U.ing 536-8847.
Landmark A lisos
financing lower
Below-market financing at 121.ii percent
interest and a $5,000 decorator allowance make the
four and five-bedroom homes at Landmark Alisos
particularly attractive to home buyers who want a luxury residence in one of Orange County's most
dellrable Jocales, according to Ralph Decker, sales
manager at the Signal Landmark Properties
develo~t east of Lake Forest.
•"Thf: 12~ percent financing not only will save bU'9f'I hundreds of dollars each month in mortgage
payments over what they nonnally would pay with
market-rate financing," Decker explained, "but it
a.l80 will allow them to qualify with much lower tnoomes. And the $5,000 decorator allowance is an
added bonus for buyers who close escrow within 60
days."
Priced from $218,000 to $290,750, the two-story
luxury homes at Landmark Ali.sos range in size
from 2,222 to 2,873 Bquare feet of living space. They
are 9et on Iota large enough for full-size swimming
pools and feature spacious family rooms with
fiftplaces, both fdnna.l dining rooms and separate
breakf.-t nooks, and three-car garages.
The Landmark AlflOS sales office and five
decorated modela., open daily from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
can be Villfted by Uaking the San Diego Freeway to
the IAke Forest exit and dnvmg east on Lake
"Forest to the development, which is just put
Trabuco ao.d. ¥ore infonnation is available by . caWnc 869-9874.
PllME OCEAN FRONT
Newport Beach duplex. Will trade
for real estate, trust deeds. Low
down, ready t o deal on this
fa,ntaatlc , newly remod e le d
pr9P8rty.
$735,000
The 'WeUlngton Group
( 4) 838-3232 Eves.
I (714) 5«-0614 0. '
REAL ESTATE
llllUG
TODAY'S REALTY QUIZ ii about mortaage
terms. Check your understanding of mortgage
terminology.
1. When a home buyer contacts the lender on
the existing mortgage already on the property and
takes over the legal obligation to make the
mortgage payments, thla procedure ls called (a)
alienation, (b) assumption, (c) deficiency, (d)
"subject to."
2. When a home buyer does not contact the
lender on the existing mortgage already on the
property but the buyer begin.a making the monthly
mortg.age payments , this procedure is called a
purchase (a) alienation, (b) assumption, (c)
deficiency, (d) "subject to."
3. If a mortgage lender seeks full payment
when title to a property Is transferred, the lender is
trying to enforce a (a) prepayment penalty, (b) due
on sale clau5e, (c) exculpatory clause, (d) foreclosure
clause.
4. Otto Owner decided to pay off his home
mortgage early; what is the name of the extra cost
Otto may incur? (a) prepaymef\l. penalty, (b) loan
fee, (c) loan points, (d) discount fee.
5. If a mortgage lender forecloses on a property
which sells at auction for less than the loan balance,
in some situations what is the name of the
procedure allowing the lender to collect the loss
from the defaulting borrower? (a) alienation, (b)
deficiency, (c) exculpatory, (d) punitive.
Answers: 1. (b), 2. (d) , 3. (b), 4 (a), 5. (b).
N I CE VIEW -Outdoor living can be
enjoyed at the condominium community of Sea
Island, recently opened on Jamboree Road in
Newport Beach. Wide upper level decks are
among the exterior features offered in the
condominiums which range in price from
$455,000 to $795,000. The development by
McLain Deve lopment Co., offers views of
uppe r Newport Bay. the ocean, Ne wport
Center and the Irvine County C lub. The
project is just north of Pacific Coast Highway
on the east side of the road. Models may be
viewed by te le phoning 673-0474 for an
appointment.
·New housing construction declines • 1n • nation
NEW YORK -Construction of new housing
units in the second quarter of 1982 fell 22 percent
below the volume in the same period of 1981 , it was
reported by the F . W. Dodge Division of McGraw-
Hill Information Systems Company.
The extremely high interest rates whicn
prevailed through midyear held the s pring
...
quarter's total of housing starts to only 265,000, or
an annualized rat<.' of 968,000 units, according to the
construction authority. McGraw-Hill lnfonnation
Systems Company is widely known for its Dodge
Reports on construction acllVlty, Sweet's Catalog
Files of building product information, and building
cost information systems.
..
"Even under conditions as harsh as these, there
were a few bright spots," remarked George A.
Christie, vice president and chief econom1St for F .
W. Dodge. "Exceptions to the generally depressed
homebuilding market in the sec:o nd quarter -not
surprisingly -were Houston and Dallas. which led
all other metropolitan areas by a wide margin."
...
DI Or•noo Coeat DAil. V PILOT /Sund•y. Augult 22, 1882
Real estate showing recovery • ID California
LOS ANGELES
t'ullh1n11u'!I n•ul l•!ilDlt' murkt•t
•howL•d ltlHllS of irnprnv1•nw11 t
during JUIH' us l'O fllltr'Ul'tlUll
1ncn•ast"I 1111d holh hornt• lJl lt'1:i.
and mu1 tKut(l' rates stal>tlm·ct.
rcportl·d Set·uraty Puc 1r11·
Nauonal Bonk
"llornl'huildl nl( rorw for lht•
111-t·und t•o111Jt'l0Utll>1l' month on<t
n•aC'hl·d th~ h1ghl'11t lcvt•I In
ulmo11t u yC'ar," 1rn1d Puul
(}' tlrtt'll, S('ntOr Vlt'I' prt.•Hldt•l\l
and thl' bank's c·hlf•f real L'llWtt'
off ll'l'r ·' Hnwt:ver, l'Onstructwn
.. 1l't1v1ty 1N :nlll dramatkally bt•luw
tht• Prt"·rt'(.'t.'SS!onary luwl "
Nationally, hou11lng pnmlt11
rose to D s1•4111onully udju:HNI
1mnuul rote· of 94tl,OOO ur11\ll, dOt«.•
lo tlw bt·rwhmark of 1 mtl hon
units This wos _. 0 4 1wr1·1·11 l
increase from Muy
O' Brlc•n attrlbu tt-d ,-smnt.-uf
Will honJeowners 'double up'
with children in the future?
Televis ing a segment of
"Cahforn1a Showcase" at the
TVRE studios in Laguna Niguel.
Mary Eastman Rigney, a
comm u n 1ca lio ns con s u ltan l ,
addressed the issue of "Wht'rt'
Will Our Children Live'!" wl11d1
is the I 980's theml• uf thl'
National A:;sol'iallon of llomc-
Buildt'rs.
l'Onsidt•rvd rad1eal.''
Thtc> d1scus.'l1on touched many
areas of intl'rc•st to tht' real
estate-o riented v1t>wers who
regularly tune an to the program
broadcast on table tell•v1sion
stations m south Orange County
<.:allfomla11 26 pt•l"\.'Clnl monthly
1n{·rton11t· In homebulldlns t.t> the
u11tklpollon of new resldfnt1al
l•nt.>rgy s tundards that wt·n·
i-c.•hroull'<.I to start July 13 The·
1 m p I c• m e 11 t a ti o n o r t h t• iu·
lltltndardi. was p<Mlllloned, und lt
18 l'XJX'\.'l(.'Cl that some of Junt.>'1
housing permits will be
cnm•eled California permlti;
<Aulhorlu.'<.I in June jumped to an
annual rate of 94,300 units.
Southern Callforn1u again
dominated the state's
c· o n s t r u c t i o n a c t 1 v 1 t y .
tfomebuildmg in the nine-county
a1 ea leaped 56 percent in June w
an annual rat.e of 53,600 unit.fl. Ni.
throughout the state, most of
that increase was in smgle-family
homes
The building slump continuc.od
an the rest of the state as monthly
housing activity an Northern
Cahforn1a shd 2 percent to a rate
of 19,900 units. The annual rate
of units authorized in the Central
Valley fell 13.8 percent.
Hom e prices varied greatly
betwN'n California's three major
u,.ban centers, O'Brien said. The
average price of a new or existmg
sangll'· family home in Los
Angl•lcs dedaned for the third
l'OJUecutive month, drupplnJC to
$1 18.~00.
Prices r<ll'll' 12.9 perl'<'nt In Su11
Diego w $119,1100 Awrol(l' homl·
prkes in San Jo'ritncasl'O w1·n·
slgnifacanUy higher at $ H9,ttoo.
and tht•y regllltered an 111c1 t•a.w
of 3 2 ~rcent from May
San Franc~ also r<:g1st.erl·<l
the h1~hest rate of home prn·1·
apprec1at1on of Cahfornl<.1'11 thrt-t•
major metropolit.an arcru. during
the first half of 1982. Prtct's
jumped 11 .2 percent over tht!
l'Omparable period tn 1981
Average home price In L os
Angeles increased by only 4 I
percent, below the stut1"~
average rise of 6.6 percent
O'Brien said both home prices
and appreciation rat.es are basc..-d
on data for conventtonally
financed home sales a nd do nut
ancludc transactions rnvolvrn1oe
sl'ller financing. The dot.a may
a lso be sk ewed sann· fl·Wl·r
homes are being sold during
these troubled economll· llm{·s.
Mortgage rates also dtppt'li
slightly in June The avc>rcig(·
rate o n loans closc•d f<>r
convt'nl:onally financ'Cd m·w and
existing homes dropped Lo 15 '1..7
perl'enl in California during
J 111'\1•. The ro lc• for nt-w 101tns
now rangl"!l lx•twt•l•n 16 ~r<'C•nl
und 17 :.!5 ix·r<«·n\
' · T h t' n o n r 1• 11 1 d 1• n I 1 ;_J I
umlltrut:tlcm llt":tur l'OllUllUl-d to
ch·monstraH· liome re111llency
during tht· 1:conomtl rl'{'t!Sltton
that hu11 H•·v1·rl·lr ct1·pn·i.1wd
homt'bulldanl{, · ht• !lo.Aid
Valuauun.'i ro:M..• to $953 11111l1on an
June. That ts o monthly antrt.•..uK"
of 26.3 pern·nt ov(:r May and a
24 1 pen•1•nt in<·n •<JSI.' over J ul\f'
1981 .
Commcrl'ial <.0 onstrut·t1on
<.·ont inued to dominutl' buildmg
attivaty Valuations lt•;..ped 46.5
pt-rt-ent in Jurn• to $466 b1lhon
O'Brwn c.ttnbutl'<.1 this la1·gt·ly to
filings for S{:'Verol m·w hot<·ls and
ufft<'t· bualdmg." 111 Los Angeles
County
lnsll tutt1111,JI building JUntpt'<l
40 7 pet t't•nt frorn May to Jum>.
rdll>t·ting Lhl· t·xpan~1on program
at Lo:. Angel1.·1> lnll·rnatwnal
Airport lh·mudt•l1ngs rost• 6
p<.'rcent and industrial valuallons
droppc-d 21.6 J.x:n:t·nt
O'Brien baS(.'fi his uirnnwnL'> on
Lht• new 1!-.SUI' of "California
Con::.truct1011 '1'11·111h,' pu1Jl1slwd
monthly hy th• 11..ink-. rt''>l·ar(·h
dl·partnll'lll
''Families doubling up" was
one suggestion whkh talk show
hos t Stevt• Maxwell constdl•r('d
"rad1t·al ." R athl'r than
communl .. style living. Rigney
was refc·rring Lo families who
live in 2,000 to 4.000-square-foot
homes but who are so jealous of
their pnval'y that they "re.)('t.'l
the whole conc<'pt of tlwar
l'htldrt•n and grandl'hildn•n
living with them for any p<Jrtud
of time exeept total crisis."
As a commun1l'ations specialist,
Rigney re<."ogniws thl• potential
impact of cable advertising
whereby the audience l'an "not
only tune in to the specific
subject of their t•hoit·e, but also
they can respond through
electronic feedbu«k devices
wl\tl'h have· already bc·cn
developed but art.-not yet in
general use
"Jusl as Cahforn1an.s pioneered
fully furn1shl'd modl•I homes,
I a. n d s ca p e d r cs 1 den t i a I
developments, pcrimt:ter walls
around h o u s ing tracts and
thousands of othe r
merchandising tools now used
throughout the United States in
the presentation of nl'W homes to
perspective buyers, 1t 1s logil'aJ to
assume that lh<' use of cable TV
for rnarketmg new and resale
homes wall be p1om.oered here,"
she concluded.
Fixed rate offered at Coral Pointe
"It's an American tradition for
families to assist lhcir young
adults to acquire housing Tht'
Homestead Act was ont' of tht•
greatest methods of settling a
<:ountry ever used. and Uncle
Sam gave away millions of alTt'S
o f land to those w11l1ng to
improve ll." she noted.
SPEAKER -Mary Eastman
Rigney talks about h ousing in
the future on TV talk show.
food That 1s much more
expensive than eating at home.
They have to havl' thl' latest
clothing fashions and they spend
hundred:; of dollar s a y(•ar on
concert;;, tapes. ht-ft c>qurpment,
makeup. veterinary bil ls and
vacations. They are not saving
for th e down payment or
exploril'\g methods of utilizing
the new creative financing
te<:hn1ques.
Maurer Elliott Development
has announced a new financing
program for its luxury homes of
Coral Pointe that features a fixed
interest rate o{ just 12 ~-percent
for a full 30 years, with a down
payment of 20 percent
The t.enns, arranged through
Santa Barbara Savings. are
among a number of innovative
financing plans now available to
1:reat.e the best possible purchase
situation for buyers of the San
Clemente oceanview estates.
Located within the master-
planned community of The
Coast, Coral Po in tl' restdl•nc.·l·s
a r e pril·ed from $299,990 to
$599,990.
Each one or two-story hom<• ts
enhanced by views of the bluffs
and beaches along this shoreline
The choice of four Coral Pointe
floor plans frature three or four
bedrooms with up to 4.370 squan•
feet.
Full details of Maurer Elliott':.
new f1nanC'10g programs are
available from Jean Irvine, Coral
Pointe sales r epresentative, at
498-8100. or at the developmc•nt's
sales complex Tht• sales office
and four l'legantly decorated
models are oix-n daily from 10
IA m. to 6 p.m . at :Hfi C<tlll· Corral.
in San Clement,.
To reach Coral P<11ntt'. take the
S a n D 1 ego F' r c• e w u y Lo t h e
Camino de E.strt•lla l'Xll. drive
north on Camano de Estrf'IJa unuJ
n become~ Camino dl• lo:. Mares.
l h e n t u r n l' a s t on A v e n u «-'
Vaquero Follow that -.trct>t tu
the intersct·11 on o f Calle
Guadalajara, then turn left and
up the hill to Coral P0t_,_p_tc_·. __ _
"My grandfather 1mm1gratc.-d
LO this country and received land
unde r t h e H o mes tead Act,
farmed it. leased more farm land
and moved most of his sons onto
farms It wasn't unusual for
relatives to get together to build
a house on the 'south forty .'
M ore recently. parents have
become co-owners of homes to
assist lht'1r childrt'n to havl'
shelter"
"lf a home is important. I have
full confidence that American
1negenu1ty will create new paths
to home own ership Recent
changes in the lending
anst1tut1ons' attitudes towards
women's incomt' occurred as a
result of economic and public
pressure. The w1fr's mcoml• is
now recognized as part of thl'
qualifying income, along with
the husband's rather than a
'frill · At first. that was also
"California Showt•asl'." with
its provoc<1tive qul'st, Mary
Eastman Rigney, will air mor~
than a dozen times during t he
month of August. The program,
developed by TVRE (Televised
Real E:;tate, Inc ). of Laguna
Niguel. is carried on cable
channels 29 (P) (T1mes-M1rror
and 21 (Storer Cable)
Residents of Laguna &at'h to
San Clemente, andudang the
areas of Saddlt•back Valley.
Laguna Htlls, M1ss1on Viejo,
San Juan Capistrano, Laguna
Niguel , Dana Point, and
Capistrano &•al·h will be able to
view the program whil'h ts
product'd by Sll'vc•n Maxwell
and Gary Dixon.
II vou don t smoke. I can
olter important savings
on auto 1nsurancP.
TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE
Rigney dismissed the conc<'pl
of the "right" to housing. saying
that she has observed very few
young people actually
"sacrificing to be able to own a
home
"They eat out m restauran~ <ill
the time, even 1C 1t is JUst fast
I ~
..
I
~.,...) .-
J' '
1· '1i ~~~
<t ''" . -1 I ( .' . ...,. : \ ~~ -. ....
1d ~~~ 1 , u
'v\lc•lc onw to Carbon (r(•t•k, a .charming nl'w town-
hornt-> <.om111u111ty l>o<1.,t111g drnmat1c P>.ll'ftor dt>~1gns
wilh .1 qur1rnt Nt'w f ngland flnvor
ln1oy a more op<•n lt•L•linA with plt•flly ol mom
bNwt.•rn building<;. t.•nh(tn('('O hy lowly land<;c r1p111g.
1 hP p<x>l/cahan.t arc•a ,ind ne;uhy tenrns court pro-
vidtt a plt•asant foe .ii point. Jdding a special flavor
to this 1ruly uniqUl' community
Carbon CrN'k offN'\ unc ompromi<;rng qur1lity from
thC' shakP roofs to thP rrramic ttlP -;howero, and k1tt lwr)
ro1111ll'rtops. Central air tor1d1t1ofling ;., a priu.•
induded feature.
And you can'! beat thl· luc.1tion right in 1he heMl
L
>'' _r :>·
~·
Claim your reward from:
RABBITT INStltANCE
441 Old Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach, Ca.
831-n40
t1•• I 11•1
· $10,000 Allowance on Selected
Models .
• $2,500 Closing Cost Allowance.
• 5% Down on Some Plans.
• 11.5% First Year Graduated Pay-
ment Mortgage Program.
· New Lease Option Program.
All Monthly Payment Applies to Purchast
Price. FiJc Sales Price Now.
On Magnolia, 1 blcx k north of Lincoln
t-urnic.hed rnodcls Of)('n daily
11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
(714) 761-2155
'\•·•· ,,1l1•,111•r-rm lor ,1\\rn 1.111un
dUI'\ ,Hid ltrl<llH 1111: d1•f11il\ l'rlll''
.ind h•rrn• •uh11·11 rot h.rnµ1· \\1th
C>f Orange County. Ano<;<; from sct->n1( Oad .-----llUI l'IPlll •' • Miller Coif Cour'\P.
2 a~~p) t:;r~~ry, (~!\ r1L8DJ'J
from S98,990.
' f • ... '. l
.\.1"tfl no! lo « .tl1•
ACROSS deed
78 Female ruff
1 S.auty 79 Avoid: 2
parl0<s WO<d9
7 Cavort 81 Revolves
1 t Plant stalk 83 Loves madty
15 Black-85 Cobblers·
board a concerns
21 Fromlhe 86 Chess piece
mouth 87 Faulty
22 Wicked 88 Gatbo
23 Smootl\ 11\e 89 Bandit
way 91 Amateur's
24 Natural gttt ballpark
2.5 Not Pref 93 ObseNes
26 Aunt· Sp beforehand
27 Steeping 96 Coln of yore
potion a 97 Charms:
29 Ecology Slang
agcy. 99 Big -
30 Scythe Calif.
31 Youngster 100 Listens to
33 Scott 101 Boundry
35 Stice Comb lorm
36 Break• 102 Bowhke
IUddenly curves
38 Goal 104 Proofread-
39 Oltc0<dla Ing marks
4 1 EJiplo11ve 106 Peruses
42 Pub again
m.a~res 108 Plumbing
44 011-yleid· complaint
Ing tree 109 Gathered
45WIMm&n leaves
48 Lowe<a In 111 Young yt1ars
rank 113 Siik net
48 Showed off 114 AerM<ly
50 Swtuclty potions
52 Extremist t15 Motor
54 Parted outings: 2
56 Hurried words
59 VIC10<l1 and 118 -Oellvery
Alb41rt 120 Sleepy-
81 Aegean head's den
lllland 123 Erves
82 Sudden rear 125 Socks
86 Spelt 129Blgfu1Se$
67 Dlmlnlahed 130 1812event
gradually 132 Ove<slutfs
69 Enduret 133 California
71 Htohwiry fort
divider t34 Oanoe
72 Pronoun movement
73 Stonn1 135 lllumlnated
74 Folding 138 Nabbed· 2
b«f words
76 Notable 138Japanese
coin carte record· 2
139 "I've-" 18 .. _ Deum' words
(fed up) 2 19 Naval 89 Zoo
words banner greeting
141 Chemical 20 Thwart 90 Extra Scot
ending 28 Melodies 91 Surgary
142 Attending 32 Indistinct 92 Persian
t43 Scull 34 Fodder native
144 Ats\JmeS preS8fv1ngs 93 Norman
command 2 37 WWII explo-Vincent -
words Siona Hyptl 94 Lake of
147 Museum word pyzzle fame
display 38 Bern s nver 95 Drinks
149 -pro-40 More pa1nl1JI slowly
fund ls 42 Vautier 98 Turk
150 Lacking 1n 43 Flower part 100 Assists
energy 45 Hero's 103 Singes
152 Arabian award 105 Cuts quickly
chtef1aln 47 Young one 107 Tricks
153 Uncommon 48 Manu-108 Toy shop
154 -down lactures olf e11ngs
(secured) 49 Defaced 110 Musical
156 Afrtcan 51 Win&-pair
gazelles planl Fr I 12 Atomizers
157 Hardens 53 Frolicsome 114 Mail tn
156 Planllng leap India
need 55 Garden 116 1n the direc-
159 Asparagus flowers l•on of
stalks 56 College I I 7 Locations
cheers 119 Cleveland
DOWN 57 Mine base ballers
entrance 1'0 Bully lree
I Went by 58 Returns 2 121 C11y Desk
boat words manager
2 "With trum-60 Time UOllS 122 Speck
pets -.. 63 Story· 124 Choir
3 Behold! tellers membefs
4 Table scrap 64 Arrow 126 Airline abbr
5 River nymph poison 121 Sens11111e
6 Tiiied 65 So-so t28 Humes
7 Pface11n-grades 131 Rituals
8 Above 67 Inns 133 Jomed the
9 Among 68 Speck crew
Poetic 70 Gazers 136 Banosler
10Calm 73 Broadway 137 V1C1or1a or
11 Frothy parts Albert
secretion a 75 Small stand 139 Present
12 Hebr-77 Delightful 140 Snare
letter spots 143 Unseal, to a
13 Nights 80 Flax refuse poet
before Scot. 145 Tool chest
H Inter-81 Sprinted 146 .. -111c1us"
mediate 82 Make lace t48 Bind
15 Oo aw1y 2 84Westem 151 Japanese
words Ind Ian mile
18 Folds OV8< 86 Conquer0<1 t55 Creole
17 Words with 88 School State Abbr
' '
J
l!:llen Burstyn returns to Broadway in "84 Ch aring Cross Road."
"The most exciting down-Jo-the-wh'e action since
SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT and the funniest bunch
of rascals since THE BAD NEWS BEARS."
-8111 Tu1h, WTBS, Th• All•nt• Superatatlon
KENNY ROGERS is Brewster .BaJter ..
· TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX Presents A LION SHARE Production A DANIEL PETRIE Film
KENNY ROGERS "SIX PACK" " DIANE LANE • ERIN GRAY Music by CHARLES FOX
Executive Producers EDWARD S. FELDMAN and TED WITZER Produced by MICHAEL TRIKIUS
Written by MIKE MARVIN and ALEX MATIER Directed by DANIEL PETRIE •
IPGlf'MBITAlGUIWa suamD~ --~ ... ,-.""'---CtMafWlllTllTHCINTUllY'O• ,.
. ·~~ -' • .!' _ _j
ClASSIFllD
Burstyn on Broadway
She's the first woman president of Actors' Equity Assoc.
By JAY SHARB\J'IT A~ Dr•m• WrtJw
llfEW YORK -Ellen Buntyn, who in 1975
won Broadway's Tony for her work in "Same Time,
Next Year" and Hollywood's Oscar for "Alice
Doesn't Live Here Anymore." is returning to
Broadway this season.
She'll star in "84 Charing Cross Road."
Rehearsals start in October. She anticipates no
problems with working conditions, no gripes to be
logged with the st.age actors' union, Actors' F.quity
Association. ...
But if there are, she can go nght to the top and
complain to herself.
She's president of F.qu1ty. She was elected last
May, the first woman president in the history of the
69-year-old union.
F.quity says it represents 30,000 players and
stage managers in legitimate theater across the U.S .
Half t he membership is in New York, which is
where she first became a member in 1956 when
""~··· DAILY 1:15, S~
8:00, 8:20, 10:3I
.......,...._I
f.dr 11///IFJ
DAILY 12:30, 2:30, 4:30,
1:30, 1:30, 10:30 (PO)
AT •tOOCMONT HIOH • "!~~~i:-1·-(!)
DAILY 1·3-5
7-1:50, 10-AO
12-M, 4:IO, 1:15
"THINGS ARE
TOUGH ALL
OVER"
2:41 1~. 10:11
"THE WORLD
ACCORDING
TO OARP"
DAILY S;45, 1:00 (Ill
*-•m~ 3:45. 1:00
1:15, 10-.30
(fO
POLTERGEIST-~
DAILY 4:00, 1.-00
•L~ llUll,_,.
fRI. 1:00 • SAT/IUN. 4-1
"FORCED
VENGEANCE"
. FRI. 1:15, 10:15
SAT/IUN. 2:11, lc11. 10:15 (R)
•'THE HAIT MASTER"
DAILY 4: 1 I, l:JO
~~Im
DAit. Y l:20, l:IO, 10-.AO
POLTERGEIST~
DALY~l:OO
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARI<"'"''
DAILY 1Nll l:oD,
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'SUMMER LOYIRI"
DAa. \' 4&11, 1111 (R)
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"THINGS ARE
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I ATISUN. S:1S, 7:00, 10:45
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DM.Ylltl, ?.-'
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making hl'r Broadway dt•bul 111 "F'dir Game," a
comedy.
She readily admtt.s sht· rwvl'r uSt-d to bt.· very
active in the union
But last November she agn'<'<l to run for its
presidency, an unpaid post. whl•n a'>.'>un.-d "the job
is what you make 1t, that you t·an l!C•Vl' as much or as
little as you want to, that 1t''> really r<~·pn~ntang the
actors of the legitimate stage• publicly"
The union chief. who'll Ix· t:hwf fur a three-
year term. suddenly grins "Tht•y all lwd Nobody
in their right mmd would b<· doing this .)Ob for free
After I accepted the nominatJon. I called up Ed
Asner and asked. 'How bad 1s 1t?' "
Asner, genial star of CBS' smc:e-canceled "Lou
Grant" series Jnd controvt>rs1al pn·s1d1:.-nt of the
51.000-member Screen Al·to,-..' Gutld. gav£• 1t to her
straight.
"He said. ·w orse than your wor.,t ntghtmare.'
And he was right Tht•t l' •~ ~• mul h to know and
learn. It 's like learning how 111 sw1111 aftc·r you've
(See ELLE N, Page E3)
"THINGI ARE
DAILY4111. .. TOUGH
ALL OVER''
14THa WORLD DAI&.\' MO, 1:11 ..... 1:41, 10:18
AC:COltDING lllf.,D11tl Of THI '''ORCED &.OIT A"lf<ml TO GARP" VINQIANCI" DAILY 1:40 llll.N0.10:IO(R) .... t , ......
~·1.~ "THI llNll'..._I
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Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1882
John Sambuco, Sharron Holland and Rose-Lee McKay (from left) on the violins.
Irvine SUDlDler concert due
The Irvine Symphony Orchestra will present
Us aecond free summer concert Monday evening
V(ith a three-work program featuring Prokofiev's
clasaic "Peter and the Wolf."
The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the
central plaza of Woodbridge Village Center on
Barranca Parkway at Lake Street.
Narrating the composer's story o f the
adventurous Peter in the Russlan woods will be'>E.
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
IT'S VERY SAD
, TMAT SOME
I y~ PAST EVENTS
'. • WERE NOT
"1!:CORDED.
AND EVEN SADDER
T~AT SOME OTHERS
WE:RE.
Marty Ingels signed
to b e voice of Pac Man
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Marty Ingels was
calling producer Gordon Hunt at Hanna Barbera to
pitch a project starring Robert Culp.
Hunt's ears suddenly perked up. Ingels has a
one-of-a-kind rasp.
Hunt, it seems, had auditioned 88 voices of
every description to play the role of Pac Man in a
new animated series for ABC. He immediately
signed Ingels, a comedian and actor who also runs a
businel8 pl.acing famous names, famous faces and
famous voices.
Ingels is n o w the voice of Pac Man, the
ravenous little creature who has eaten his way into
the hearts and pocketbooks of millions of video
game players.
You vividly remember "Surf" and now you're
anxious to see the sequel, "Surf II."
Hold on, If you recall "Surf" you've fallen off
the surfboard once too often.
Producers George Braunstein and Ron
Hamady decided to skip t,he preliminaries and go
straight to the eequel.
MOVIE RATINGS
Riii MRENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
,,. ...... 111 .. ,......,. _ ___ .. _ _,fl/ _._,,,,_,,,,,, __
riil ALL~ M*lntO l!!J a.-...--
Ray Quigley, singer , commercial jet pilot and civic
leader.
Other works will be Rossini's "Overture to the
Thieving Magpie" and "Tubby the Tuba,"
featuring soloist Robert Sanders of the Long Beach
Symphony.
Bernard Gilmore, new conductor of the UC
Irvine Symphoney Orchestra, will lead the
orchestra as guest conductor.
The same program also will be presented at 4
p.m. Sunday, Sept. 12 at UCI's Campus Park, the
grounds in the middle of the campus.
•
'"AN OFF1CER AND A GENTUMAN'
IS A MIRACLE THAT WILL LEAVE
YOU FEELING 10 FEET TALL"
_,. .... Md
----NOW PLAYING ----
AMAMEIM •EWrm.T IUCM OflHGl WHTMIHTlR
Pic1!1t's A11atieom EOwards Newpotl Cnedome Edwards Cinema Wes1
Onve In 879 9850 ~ 644 0760 634 2553 891 3935
MIUIOll YIUO Edw¥ds Vllj() TWW1 830 6990
WMOM •itl;tJM#i!.j r,cnrm· -so.i .. ~
MU •• , ..
Mann 8rn Pl&U Pacdlt"S Lincoil llnY•·ln
S29 S339 821 4070
COITIMllA ~ Edwards HattJor T "''" Paalic"s Ot11191 OtM In n1 3so1 sse 1021 :=-:'!-. s30 u o1 I • DIM INS ~soom "QltlEMWllP{ rcn •>QI
110 ,,,.... M:C£1'ff:0 RMI TIMI~
Wiiii
&ut&Dolly
,,.,. Mudt fun
)Ullt <:oflldn.,
~lqall
4 lllln'IMU..-DO PIClWI . __ ...,,,__
GOllll 011 lllDGI
ev CtiAALES H. GOREN ANO OMAA SHARIF
DEAR MR. GOREN
Q. -Over U1e yMr1, you
have aehJeved oae of the
1reatelt reciordt of any
brfd1e player. CertaJaly,
your 1taadtac .. aa authority
11 without peer. What advice
would you live to • youac
player Ju1t 1tartla1 out la
the pa1teboard juqle?-R.
Taylor, Detroit, Mich.
ll'hlt qu11Uoa ha1 been
awarded the weekly prlz~.I
A. -I can tell from your
question that you are a
young man of impeccable
taste. You will go far in Lhc
world of bridge -or politics.
or business, for that matter'
Seriously. there ~ one
piece of advice that I ha\oe ex
prt>ssed Lime and Lime again.
and I think that today it as
observed more in the breach:
Keep it si mple! A void rom
plications wherever you can.
There are enough dirricult
situat ions in bridgf' without
you adding complex biddin~
or play agreements to them.
I would like to recall two of
my favorite anecdotes. Some
years ago. my team was
defending a national learn or
four rhampionship. We were
in top gear. played an ab
solut<>ly perfert session. and
had taken an enorrnou11 lt-11d
ovt•rouradver!IAriu. A 1·harm
ing young lady had OOl!n
kibitzing mr. At th1• t-nd of
the se11ion, I ovt-rh1•nrd ht•r
telling a friend: ··1 don"t 1u•e
why he's so wonderful. Hr
didn't do a thing tonight that
I t•ouldn"t have done!"' I still
regard that as one of th('
grt'att>st compliment!> t hut
l'vt• 1•vt•r bt•en paid.
The late S.J. Simon loll'!
me about a hand he play1•d 1n
un English tournam1·nt with
Maurice ll arrison Gray.
They reached a t hrt·e no
trump ron trat·t ul whir h
there were 1•xat"lly n1n1•
tricks off lhe top-no more,
no less. After the opening
lead, Gray claimed his nine
tricks and that was that.
It turned out that a pair of
super-scientists had had a
rather long and labored aur
tion to reach a contract of
four hearts, down two. They
asked Simon how he and
Gray had managed to gel lo
three no trump. "Quite sim·
pie," Skid Simon replied.
"Gray opened one no trump
and I raised to game!'"
Q. -If you are such a gTeat
theoretic~. how come you
have Dever had a conv•nlion
,,.
'
b•arla1 your D&•e? -R.
JohHoa, New Yot'k City
A.-You have me mixed up
with someone else -1 am a
teacher, not a theoretician.
f:Jesides. the fa ct that you
have a convention named
uftN you doo8n't neceasarily
mean thal you Invented it.
f or rxample, McKenney
signals wPre invented by Hy
Lovlnthal. B.J. Becker has no
idea how lht-Becker Conven
lion got 1ti. name. The Jordan
<.:onvrnt1on wu probably
dreamed up by Alan Trus
<'Ott And the Slayman Con
ventron ill the brainchild or
G1·orgt· ltapee.
I might try to comt' up
wrth a (;ort'n Convention
wc·re I not s uch a great
hl'l1t>v1•r in a ~1mplt'. natural
'llylt• a' ti. rvident from
my rnmmt•nh t•arlier in this
rol11m11
Send &11)' quemtloH for tliJ1
column to: Charlu GOl'en and
Omar Rharll. un of tlll1
nf'w1paper. F.ach week a prtu of
a copy ol thf' new "Goren'•
Bridie Complek, .. a S9.95 valve,
will be awarded for the que1tJoa
judced the but received.
Charle. Goren and Omar
Sharif pertonally CIUIHl oJMler·
lake lO IDIWf'r alJ que1lloD1 Hb-
m itted:
It knows whal scar~s you. ~
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Tiie Retum of the Greet Advent...e~
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• Money Sevl<19 Show Spac'-11
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Adults 14.50 Monday· Tnu1sday 2Pfll to tOPlll
Ch11d1en 18 •II V"11 12.90 F•rOtty 2Pflll l u U P'llll
Ch11dren 1_. • "' Froo Sa1u•oav 12Noon to 11~
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':-=--~i!lii~(___J-l!jii~~!-~ AIR CONDITIONED ~ EIM FO" INFO CALL
COH V•H TIQN C •NT•i. (7Hl "9-8900
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The comedy sleeper of t he vear. .
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---~-;;___..:.-_;._ ___________________________________ iliilililili .. iiiiiiliiillili
•
Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Auguat 22, 1982
June Lockhart
in China film
Ellen Burstyn on Broadway
By JERRY BUCK
UT.........,Wrttw
LOS ANGELES -June Lockhart was
vacatJonlng at the local mountain ret<>rt of Lake
,4J'rowhead a year ago when her manager caUed
and aaked If she'd like to go to China.
"I said, 'I d on 't even want lo know the
ctrcumatances. I'm going,' " she recalJB. "One of the
wonderful perks of this business ts that you get to
travel so much."
She spent 3 ~ weeks in the People's Republic
of China , filming "Peking Encounter," the first
joint American-Chinese production since the
mainland was re-opened to cultural exchange.
"Peking Encounter" is an hour-long Liberty
Mutual dramatic special that te lls of the love
between a young American woman and a Chinese
orchestra conductor. It will be broadcast by more
than 100 stations over the week beginning tonight
on KTLA (Ch. 5) at 9.
The drama also stars Diana Canova and Mason ~dams and two Chinese performers, Shi Yong and
Chen Chong. E.W. Swackhamer directed the film
tor Robert Halmi Productions from an original
screenplay by Cecile Tan~ and Timothy Burns. .
''Nothing prepares you for China," says Miss
Lockhart, who has traveled extensively around the
world. "They don't teach you in school what to
expect, how it looks or what that communist
philosophy has done to them. Even before it was
communist, it was tightly controlled.
"You want to tell them to lighten up," the
actress says. "I sensed they were very cautious
about who they talked to, who they were seen with
~who they laughed with."
S he describes "Peking Encounter" as a "light,
sweet, gentle" tale.
"Diana Canova has an implied romance with
the conductor of a Chinese youth symphony," Miss
Lockhart says. "The romance consists mostly of
longing looks.
"Our big problem was that they were not
allowed to touch each other. Any public display of
affection, particularly between a Caucasian and a
Chinese, is strictly forbidden," she says. "It's just
not done. And if we'd tried it. the head of the film
unit would have been on the set very quickly."
Adams plays a television gourmet chef, and
Miss Lockhart's character is a woman who has
followed his career for many years and who
suddenly finds herself on the same tour of China
with him.
"Mason and I have our own little romance,''
she says. "I end up with my head on his shoulders."
Miss Lockhart says she wanted to stay on to see
more of China after the filming. but she had to rush
back to Park City, Utah. to begin work on a
"Grizzly Adams" special.
Miss Lockhart, probably best known for the
"Lassie" series, which she began in 1958, was born
San Diego wants to save
'Simon and Simon' TV show
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -First "Harry 0,'' and
now "Simon and Simon." San Diego is up in arms.
Mayor Pete Wilson has signed a proclamation
urging a letter-writing carnpajgn. Radio station
KFMB is planning an "I Love San Diego" listener
party. Disc jockeys Bob DeCarlo and Lee Mirabal
devoted their show on KOGO all week to saving
"Simon and Slmon ."
CBS and Universal Television has moved the
television detective series from its home base in San
Diego to a more exciting locale. CBS program
officials call it "Nondescript, Calif." It seems the
netwo rk decided San Diego lacks compelling
"cinematic values."
San Diego is not going to take that lying down.
June Lockhart, wearing "Mao" cap and
huuing her dog, Tony.
into a show business family. She made her movie
debut in 1938 at the age of 12 in ''A Christmas
Carol" with her parents, Gene and Kathleen
Lockhart.
A few years later she got a part in "AU This
and Heaven, Too," which meant she would have to
be absent for several weeks from the exclusive girls
school she attended.
"My father went to the headmistress and told
her what a wonderful opportunity and experience
it would be for me,'' the actress says.
"When he finished, the headmistress leaned
back and said, 'Really, Mr. Lockhart, I have no
personal objection to June being in a film. But I
certainly think the parents of the other girls would
not want their daughters going to class with a
student who appeared in motion pictures.' .
"My father turned to me and said, •June, pack
your boOks.' He took me out of school that instant."
From Paae El
alrcadr, left the high board and are approechlna the:
water ' Be• th11t a.a It may, Mlaa 8uratyn, a tanned, flt·
look ing woman of 49 who 1poak1 quietly and
radiate& 11ensuality, n"w la In the union 1wlm,
paddling about, learning on the Job, flcina llaue11
l•rlf' and small. The su~cea1or to actor·1ln1er
Theodore 81kel, F.qulty'a president for 12 yean, ahe
isn't starting out with gum bla%lng and banners
flying. That ifn't her style. She'a tacklina the buica
first, she say•.
Such as getting the few actors lucky enough to
work steadily mucfi more active ln union activities:
"I just don't~ many of the work.Jng actors at the
meetings." She also wants to help the multitudes of
actors "at liberty" -the unemployed -get
employed, "to find ways to create more work for
actors. I'm thinking about that now but don't have
any answers yet."
F.qu1ty says about 80 percent of its members are
unemployed at any given time. She want.I to study
that, too. to learn how many members actually
work as actors or want to, as opposed to thoee who
began as actors but now permanently work in other
fields while keeping their membership active for
various reasons, including nostalgia.
And then, she says, there's the major Issue of
merger down the road involving F.quity, the Screen
Actors Guild, and the 55,000-member Americ~n
Fede ration of Radio and Television Artists
(AFTRA) whose jurisdiction covers broadcast work,
both live a nd taped.
She thinks an F.quity-SAG merger more likely
at first, because AFTRA membership includes disc
jockeys, announcers and even TV r~rters and
anchorpersons, "whe reas SAG and Equity have
only the aame people -actors.''
Weighty mattRrs, far from her early years as a
star-struck kid growing up in Detroit. HeT first
performing job was on the lowly side -as a model
at the Michigan State Fair hired to point out the
innards of a truck to those interested in such things.
The n. a slow, difficult climb upwards, from
hoofing in Jackie Gleason's old variety series to
soap operas, from studies with Stella Adler and at
the Actors' Studio with Lee Strasberg to the top
Hollywood roles, the breakthrough coming in 1971
in Peter .Bogdanovich's "The Last Picture Show."
SCOTT BAIO : WILLIE AAMES ~1' ~
t:mb":~~·:z.oP':.·i~'.t~t:"~~'~,.';.rg"~::~•on
f'"•Hc• Schachl•r He•ther Thomu Roben M..,.daft ON• Bra.cUord and Sc.atm&.11 Cro~ --
A festival THE ORIGINAL IS DACK.
in music
for the
whole
family. eople.
llow
J)'s singing. Ifs danc-
ing. Ifs entertainment
like you've never seen.
The Up With People
Show is an Internation-
ally acclaimed cast of
OW/Ill 100 young people
who sing and dance
their way right Into your
heart. With mu1lc from
home and abroad.
Don't miss this chance to
see this beautifully choreo-
graphed, colorful festival
of music.
Coming Sept. 5 and e to Orange Cout College auditorium at 8 p.m.
Advance tlcketa for 17 available at the OCC ticket oMc., 558-5527.
Ticket1 on night of performance are S8 at the gate.
Event co-eponeored by
Orange Cout College and the Orange Cout Oally Piiot.
5lamng
MARK HAMILL HARRISON FORD CARRIE FISHER
PETER CUSHING and ALEC GUINNESS
• MAie t7,-~odvG~ by 'Monwn ond Oir«IWd t)V
JOHN WILLIAMS GARY KURTZ GEQP.GE LUCAS
l(CHNICOlOI\• Pf\INn OY0£ LUX£ Ill
CXI,,. ____ ___,,. --~·-,~..._,! Cl-... -~ ... , ..
"'-'oflt.,lf ..... ..,, ... ·~ ...... ",... •"---..........
'~ ...... :~:::.::;::.
~ " .._ .. ' -· ---...........
,
She didn't wln the a.car for that fll.tn, but
Cloria Leachman, did. Four years 1.ai..r •h• aot The
Prtie aa the middle-aged. would·be llnlfl' with a
eon to ralae In. "AJlce Doesn't Live Here Anymore."
By that time. 1he didn't Uve In Ho0ywoo4
anymore. She'd taken up pennanent rsldence In
New York In 1972 after making ''The £xom.t,"
whf're ahe eueyed the mother o( a Utt.le devtl.
It'a not a question o( why did she leave LA,
only "why did I ever live there?" ahe wryly
chucklea. She only lived there, ahe aaya, beatuae
her then-husband, actor Nell Burstyn, father of
their son, Jeff, wanted that.
But the thrice-wed actress, whoee marrlage to
Buntyn ended in divorce, had to leave. She jult got
'It's like learning to swim after
you have left the high board and
are approaching the water.'
tired of LA smog. of hearing "you're gonna die of
Lnhaling the poison."
There's some debate w hether the inhaling ls
any safer in Fun City, but here she ls, a union
president preparing for her Broadway return in "84
Charing Cross Road," a British import by James-
Roose Evans.
lt's based on Helen Hanff's best-selling novel
about an affectionate 20-year exchange of letters
between at New York author (Miss Buntyn plays
her) a nd the owner and staff of a London
bookstore. The play is scheduled to open here in
December after a tryout run in Balumore.
"It comes down to good writing," sh e says
when asked why she took the role. "It always
comes down to that. Whatever other considerations
l have m selecting material, good writing wilJ grab
me every time." ·
She says she'll be in the play for a season:
heaven and critics wijJing. But she has no plans for
a long run as president of Actors' F.quity. "I'm just.
going to do my best while I'm there." ·
She says she took that role because sh e feels.
"we should a ll do what we can to be o( service. And
it seemed to me a way to contribute something to~
profession that I've gotten a lot out of. I'd like ~.
give something back to it." ·
*BARGAIN MATIN•••*
Monday thru l1turd1y
All Performancea before &:00 PM
jhcept lpecl1I En1119emtnt1 end Holl~•Y•I
lA Ml"A(}A MAi l 10 Morado 01 l o••c•o"•
LA MIR.AD.A WALN ·IN 99'·2•00
AN Of PICH AND
A OINTllMAH 111 11olt11ltl11tll•l .. IO
l.T. TMI IXTUnUll111Al!Nl ""' TMI 1ucmc MOUIMAN fNI
PllDAT THI taTN 'AfJCW!
IJ,.IMIWIMU..-11 ...
ClillCH i CHONH THINOI f All TOUGH ~U OVll 111
U110 •1 II .... ""' TMI '1 n MOVll !N l
TMllUTUTTI.I
WHOHHOUll IN TIXAI 111 ,, ............ .-..-, .. ..
ITAaWAUfN ) l<1hllty-
111M l 1tl ,, .. l oll lt>•I
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAlll IN
Ill ,ACIC CNj , ..... 10 .......... 10
loculty 01 Concll••OOd
213/IJ1·9110
TMI '1 llA Tl l'lllOVll tN l , .......... ,.
'"" NICHtl a.ti" Ill 1 ....... , ....
PllDAT THI 1 JTM
'Alf 2111 ... , ... ,, ...... , ...... 1, ...
...... 1 JO \f
IMPORUIH NOTICE• CHHOREN UllO(R 12 fRU!
-Mii w"'* ..... Tin Fri. 1·00 • s,t .• S.... -. HIN t!Hf-n SOI/MO• •OUO ,,. CAA llM>IO IS 'IOIJ'I vtNtl•
• ti() AM CAii Ml)fl) WITl4 ~ oct(S$()11• ~
-Aloi l'OllT¥U 1•~ Clllf-R -D lllf AM -
ANAMt•M
ANAHEIM DRIVE IN
...... ,ti ot , • ..,.., It
879·HIO
ITAi WAlltNl ""'' ,.,.,,.,
CIOlt fl IOllllO
8111 ,.. ... ~ .......
BUENA PARK DlllVI IN
ltl'COlll " ........ •"°" 121-4010
1'1 •I ,_. A l' A U•
LINCOLN DIUVf IN
\tn<OI" A•• Wetl Of •"Ofl 121-4070
I ,,.,.1a.1r-..
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
ORIVl IN
ZAllHDl11> ""' TM11UTum1 WMOllHOUll
INTUAl(I) c;1111 .. _
AN Of•ICll AND
A MNTLIMAN Ill
THI PINM ?l.HTDOWN1N1 c .... 11 IOuOiO
l .T. TMl IX~!!UlmtALINI
THI 1umtc HOUIMAN , .. ,
fAllTIMllAT . ..DllMC!'!! ...... (I)
TMI MOU TwOOo KNMMm I'll So• -.o ,,.. 01.,oou'"'"110 >
tU•2411 CM "' -
........ _o._'f_.~_1~_._;3_"_)
lfl,ACKIMI
NNif PM
Cllllfl-
..... ,. ... ,.
LA HABRA l>lllVI IN
17MM2
19..... I
TMI llAtT MAITll 1"91 ~ SW_, """8 INl
...I Mt !outM AU 0¥0 MONTY~lM •
AT NOU TWOOD IO'#lltt
U . TMl ll""lfl"TllMCNl
TMI ILICTttC MOlllMANpe1
ORANGE N11\lf IN .... ''"''"" Nf.1111t
VINDM111t
...
"
I
~
l:GO (C) MOVIE * * "Shlpw1.ck" ( 11)78)
Rob4W1 Logan, Mikki Jarnl-
toll·Ottoll A~. nit
.fWO d""Qhl.,1, • reportw
atld • ~y -11ratld-
9d on .,, ltOl•lecl lll9nd •It., ...count4Wlng • vto-
lent "°''" •• -·o· O MOVIE * * "Sitting Ouck1"
( 1980) Mlc:hMI Emll. z.ch
Nonn•n. Two crlmln•I•
Hempe the U.S. with • mll·
llon doll•re 1111d run Into •
1n1g In their pt1n1. 'R'
5:08 Cl) PETE.A Al.LEN ANO
THE AOCKETIE8
The Rocl<ettea l<>ln llnoe<
Peter Allen on 11909 •t
~ City Mualc: Hall In
lhll tnuelc:al apeclel.
5; 15 CID JOHffNY CASH'S
AMEUCA
The country muale s1111
per1orm1 • salute to Amer·
lcen hlllory and lrlldltlon•
with OU"'' June Cart«
CHh, Sieve Goodmllll,
Jottn Prl~ •nd Rodney
Crowell from Kennedy
Center In Washington,
o.c
(%)MOVIE * * "Down Argenllne
W•y" (1940) Betty Grable,
Don !lmeche. A bellutlfut
heir-follows e wealthy
South Arnetlcen from N-
York 10 Argentina
&;46 .. CHAIST~
Cl06EUP
t:oo D SEAEHOIPfTY
• MUSIC ANO THE
SPOt<EH WON> IJ YOUTH ANO THE
ISSUES
• 818l.E ANSW£A8 G» ROMPER ROOM
Cl) SUNDAY MORMINO
5: 15 CS) JANE FONDA'S
ca.EBNTY FASHIOH
SHOW
An d-1181 8')edel INIUt·
Ing high fuhlon, atylllh
IOP*fllllrS and m~
~lure
8;30 8 FOA OUR TIMES
"LMng With Death: &eek·
Ing Taboos" Dougie•
Edwerdl looll1 et People
Cete, .,, organlutlon lh•t
help• find the !>al poul-
ble care lor the termtnelly
Ill. (P811 1) D THArSCAT 8 A08£RT SCHUUEA
I OAY&AEAK LA.
SUMCUtSIHE m CAUFOAHIA PEOPLE
~~TUAE U.8.A.
* * '.t "Some1Nng Sl>Ott
Of Patlldlle'' ( 1979) Suaan
Sarandon. David Stein-
berg Two young N-
YOlk-i.ern •bout IOve
and the Ylclaaltu<les ol a
one-10-one rel•llon1hlp.
'PG'
7:GO 8 TODAY'S REUOION D WHITNEY AND THE
AOeOT
8 UTT\.E AASCAL.S 8 rT IS WArTTEN IJ ICEHNETH
COPELAHO
• DAY Of' Ot800V£RY I CARTOONS
YOOA FOA HEAl TH 8 SUNDAY MASS
(C)MOVIE
***'ii "The Way We
Were" ( t973) Barbra
Streltand, Robert Redford.
A young college couple In
the 19301 dllCCMI< that
their potltlcal differences
819 strong enouo" to jeop-
81dtze the!< ~rTlag.9.
0MOVIE • * * "BlacllbOatd Jun.
gle" ( 1955) Glenn Fotd.
Anne Franc:il. A dOdk:atmd
young luct.. attempt• to
r11tore order In a blg-dty
training achoo! where ,_,.age ,_..._ And
vlolenoa have lllken root
(%)MOVIE * "Tarzan. The Ape Man"
f198 O Richard Hurla, Bo
Oerelc A young woman
~ for ,_ m1-1rtQ
lalh« In the African )ul>gle ""'*• ane eneountera an uncMttred wflll• man eNS
an Olangullln. 'R'
7:30 I UF£TMO THIS 18 ntE Uf'E
CAMPUS PAOALE.
V1EWPOINT ON
NUTIVT10N
"Ex«clM" 0-11: Or. Jon
Frink&, aportt mmdlelne
epeclallel; John Smith.
t rack atar; Henry
SchNftet, ·~ In 0'18 l~S?
Mella ..oGEAS CA>
TV .. l.OOKI AT
LfAIMNG 9 '*'ECTIOH8
"Samuel Rull Ouc::ta.
Mellloo't 811ttOP To The
·~·· Blehop Samuel Rutz O«da'e ettona 10
.. the poor people of
~lltco ere •XMnlned. (R) -~WOfllU> TOMOMOW --1::v~
av.ta: RebOI e.n-Tnon ~. dlfeQOI', CNbed
Courrteractton ProOnlfll ..
""' Chetled ~ of 0.. West Com!, Loe ""09-
... ; P•OI' -'-TOll9.
CHAtlll LISTINGS
• KNXT !CB$) e l<N8C INBCl
e KTLA (Ind )
.ICABC IAOCl
• KFM8 (C.,S> e KHJ TV tlncl l
e KCST IA8C>
e KTTV llnd.l e KCOP TV fllld,)
·~CIT rN SI
I e KOCI: I P8Sl
TOURIST -June Lockhart plays an
Arne~can touris~ in "Peking Encounter,"
the hrst American production filmed
entirely in Chiha, tonight at 9 on KTLA
(5).
Church on Ille Way, van
Nuya 8 POPEYE ANO
FRIE.NOS
I DIMEHSIONS
~OYO OGILVIE
G» CARTOONS
• EUCTAIC COMPANY
(R)
(I) LET THERE 8E UOHT !Ht JERRY FALWEll
at REX HUMBARD CID P.T. BARNUM ANO
HIS HUMAN OOOfTIE.8
Rlcherd Kti.y hoa1s lhlt
document•ry tracing lhe
career ot 1tw1 "Greatest
Showman On Earth "
(S)MOVIE * **'A "OaJby O'Glll And
The llllle PIOC)le .. p959)
Alb«! Shetpa. Sean C-On· ,
NllY An ol<I Irish caretaker wno la about to ION his job
10 • lfOUllQ4lf man captures
lhe king or lhe 1*9fechaun1
and torcea him 10 grant
111rea wishes. 'G'
1:30 D NEWS CONFERENCE 8 TODAY'S BLACK
WOMAN 8 ME.ETING TIME AT
CALVARY
• ~t<.PAlCE
• ElECTAIC COMPANY
(A) Cl) THE I.AHA YES
at t(NOW VOUA BIBLE
t:OO D MEET THE PAESS II PEOPL.E7 U Cl) ORAL R08ERT'S
• SESAMESTAEET(R)
i IT IS WRITTEN
(C)MOVIE * * • * "The Spirit 01 St, Louis" ( 1957) James Stew-
art, Murray Hamilton In
t927. Char• A. Lind·
betgh t>ec:Of7181 the llrst
man 10 fly nonSloo ICJ'OU
lhe Atlantic Oceen 10 Par-
11.
(8)MOvtE **'A-"Victory .. (1981)
Sylves1., Sl&llOne. Mlchael
Caine. During World War
II, AHie<! POWa -lhelf
ltcket lo lraadom In a
match between their
toooer team 11/ld the Ger -
man Natlonal Tum In Par-
le. ·po•
0MOVIE **'A "Hurry Up Or I'll Be
30" ( 19751 John Letkowltz,
Unda De Cott A Broolttyn
prlr>ter approaching hie
30th birthday leels 11\al
he' a gOlng r>OWt>ere. Oii he
meeta a bNul1tul actreea
'PG'
(%)MOVIE * * * * "The Miracle Of M0<gan'a Creek" ( t944)
Betty Hulton, Eddie Brack·
en. When a young girt flnda
he<Mll pregnant alte< a
night on the town wllh a
group of Gia. sne Is hard·
ptoaeed lo Identity the
lather
8:30 8 (I) F~ THE
NATIOH D 8 NFl... fOOTIIALl.
"Pr...S.eaon Game" New
Vork Jell 11 Houlton
otltn 8 NEW ZOO REVUE U DAY OF DISCOVERY
• THEWORL.D
TOMOAAOW 9 KENNrnt
COf'E1..ANO
10:00 9 NEWSMAl<ERS
Guests: Wlt80fl Rltea 11/ld
Biii Honig, w'10 la Rlle9'
C>PPOf*'I to< Sllle Super-
lnlencHfll of tnstrucUon.
8 MOVIE ••'It ··summerdog"
(1977) J-Congdon,
Ekubeth Eleetlman. An
lbendoned dog llnde lta
way Into lhe hMlta ol a
family In a big city, tMC:h·
Ing tne member• a ,.._
In compassion along the
way. 81AIEM~~
Japan'• Saguaro Sf\8111• er• Ille QP90Mnll IOI the I~== THI! LAWMAKEA8
" MAOCOFOIL
PAJHTINQ
~~WOMAN
**'Ao .. Victory" (198 t)
e~1er s1111one. MIChMI
Oline. During Wond Wet
II, Allled POW1 -tMlf
lkltlel lo freedom In a
m1toh betw•en lhelr •
I0009f tMll'\ and ttwt Qet. "*' N1Uonll TMm In p.,.
la.'PO'
• 1t I DQOC191 flM GAME **' ..,..,.,ACe 9 IOOINW.
NOfll.ITOO
f01 ~TV
Cll l TV
<HJ HBO
!Cl CCl11t!'r1U I
IWOltl NV,. N Y
Gl'I CWT8$l
•I IE&PN l
re1 cs.-tltNJ
• SpoUIOflt
• Cc:.t>ll NOW\ N11l -tlll
Guuts nockey 11ar
Waynfl Gre11ky, ac1rea1
JenllN Hartlaon, Peter
Bllhngsi.y (RI 8 A08ERT 8CttUU£R ID BASEBALL
LOI Angelel Dodger& al
Pltt•burgh Plrtlas
fD OPENMINO
QI!) MAGIC OF OIL
• PAINTINO
UTHE GOLDEN AGE OF
TELEVISION
'Wind rrom The South"
Donald Wood• and Jutte
Hillrla atar In 1 dremauo
tale ol unrequlled tow
cenlated around aeverll
AmeflCan couplea In e
small lrlsh Inn
10:"6 MOVIE
• • • • .. The Flreman·a
Bau ( 11168) Joeef Svet.
Mane Jezkova. Elaborate
plana IO feta their 86-year-
old chief •• e special bait
go awry tor a group of
-II-meaning C1ech0110-
11ek1an llremen
11:00 II TENNIS
"AssoclllllOn · 0 1 Tennll
Prolosalonals Chemplon-
ahlp" live covetage ot the
men's alnglee from the
Jack Ntcklaua SPO<t• Cen-
t&( Klnga lllland, Ohio.
Cl) MOVIE
• • • "When WOl'lda Col-
ll<le' (1951) Barbati Ruan,
R1cnard Derr
SI MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
"Oiareetl; Mary Anne" Ol$-
reel•. now a rnembet of
PerllAmenl, prop<>9a to
Iha W118llhy widow ol hi•
friend end poltlk:al ally
Wyndham Lewis. (Part 2)
(RIO
\Yi) WASHINOTON WEE<
IN REVIEW (R)
(I) PRE..Q.AME SHOW
WHAT ON EAA'TH
O.son a.an noa11 11111
tu1-~. lac1-lltled ac1-
...ce _.1ee
'1: 15 Cl) 8A8E8AU.
San Diego Padres al Chl-
Cl190 Cuba
11:30 fJ 9 THIS WEEK WITH
DAVID 8AINKLEY U TERRY COLE-
WHITTAKEA
\Yi) WALL STREET WEEJ<
'A Summer Ren1t1-
sanoe?' G..-1· Josec>h C
McN•y, p1eslden1 of E-.
lnvea1men1 Management
Co lnc.(RI
{CJ MOVlE * * .. Honky Tonk F-
wey' (Comedy) Beau
Bridges. Bevetty O'Angelo,
A amalt town In Florida
••Ilea ma11en 1010 II• own
Mnda when by-puaed by
•new hlghw•Y·
(lil MOVIE • * ·~ "Scool'e Honot""
( 1980) Gary Coleman.
Katherine Helmond. A
lonely or phln cone an
ealrernely retuciant. hac>c>l-
ly ~no.. axecullw Into
t>ecomlng dtHI moth« 10 •
Pack of Cub Sc:out1. 0 HAMMER HOUSE OF
HOR~
'Guardian Of The Abyaa"
A beautiful enllque dealer
boya an old mlrrOI once
u!led 1n human sactlfloe
rnuol•
AFTERNOON
12..-00 D LOST IN SPACE
U SEAACH fll PAPER CHAS£
SOfcerer's Appr-enllca" A
Supreme Court Justice la
l>Ut Ofl the tpol becaUH of
h11 rlttord ol ,_ having
hired a f«nale •-clet1< In
hit 30 years on lhe bench.
~ PORTRAITS IN
PASTELS
"Summer Shadow"
(aJMOVIE • * ·~ "II'• My Turn"
( 1980) Jiii Ctayburgh,
MIQIMI Oougtu. A bf1'-
ltanl Chicago rna1h ptot..
IOI rMJll .. Iha pt~
In tww ttv.-ln r~
whll1 1119 llnde • -tow
while In H.-Yori! IOI her
tatner'1 r-rtage 'R'
(l)MOl/IE ** .. Tnla 11 EMa" (1981)
Documentary. Fltm 1001909
and dramatic rtH:tMtlonl
.,.. uMd lo , .. , the 1tory of
Etlll• Prffley'• HI• and
car-.
(%)MOVIE * * •" "Tell ..... A IOO· die'' ( 11180) Mel'lyn OouQ.
IN, LK• Kedrove A .....,,.
dr1wn, •tdetty woman.
unew.,. 1"411 .,... Ill dylnQ.
ernbel1l• on • IOnO ~ 10 reeequeinl ,...,..., wlt1l '* geographlcalty ~ e111otton1tly eep•raled
l~'PO' 1l:30•a~
8clledl.lled: ~ OOWf'90I
91111e~~/
MfOutl Montllte lo.round
fUnlOr wel1l!Welaflt boUt
from 0rM1 Goree. H.J.
• a.MD'f~ ,,,, "°"""' °' ... ClwtmtlM ~ wtlO lnt'Miblt .. ....
"""""" lllbtlutl "' .... .. -~(~
••" ...... otCMlfP-1190"' ( tta) \Alt .....
I.on C11an9y
e IUMOOllM .,.... to tnow'' •="'QM Al • ._. "Victory .. !IHI) •vt-•• a1a11on11. Mloha9I Cline Outlnq WOtld Wit
II, Allled POW1 -their
11ei.e1 10 lrMdom In •
match beh11••" tnelt
.occet l .. M and Iha Oer·
tnan N1110t1el Teetn h'I p.,.
.. 'll>G'
1;00. '°"'~ "W ..... Hitt. Opet\" LIW
-909 ol lhe tlnlll round
from Werwlck 1'11111 Colin-
lry Ckib. Orand 191at>c:.
Miah
• 1".MUNlmw • MOVll
• • • "Ryan'• o.ug.hl«" I 1070) Sallh MIMI•, RoQa(I
Mltc~m.
• AOAM-11
• CAU'Of'NIA WEE< IN
MVIEW CD MOVIE • * * "lltllan Ru .... I"
( t940) Allee Feye, Don
Ameoh•
9 PUeUC POL.SE
1:30. '·TROOP
• HOGAN'S HEAOES
• AOAM-12
•"PM.sam
"Cocoanut Kida" Six auc-
ceu-orlenled ~utcal'I·
Atnerlcan high IChOol atu·
d1t1t• dlacuaa dlacrlmtna-
tlon and Ullmllallon.
(() PGAOOU'
(Jolnmd In Praor-1 ~~RUM • * ~ 'Papltton.. ( 1973)
Slave ~. Dustin
Hottman A pair of OeYll'•
llland conl/lc:11 8')4lnd their
time planning their eacape. CID YESTERYEAR. .. 1947
Dick Cavett travel• bacll to
1111 proec>«ou• poet-World
Wai II et• that aaw the
growth ol lhe auburba,
televitlon and the puaet>-
~ Cllr
(.l)MOVIE ** .. Hee111>eep1" (1911)
Andy Kaultnan, S.rna·
dell• Pel.,. In a WOtld of
Iha ,...r tuture. two corn·
metciel robots experience
lt>e lllCINllU<lft of llf1t
IOY1 •pa·
2:00 D 8 LPOA OOLF
"World Champlonahlp 01
Women·• Goll.. Taped
coVe<• ol the final round
from the Shaket HelOhtt
Country Club, Ohio. D OIUJQAN'818LAHO a MOVIE * * • "Now. VoyAQet"
( 1942) Bello Davia, Claude
Raina
ID MOVIE * • * "King Kong" (1933)
Fey wrav, Rob«1 Arm-
etrong
• MOVIE • *~ .. Angel And The
Badman" ( 194 7) John
Wayne, Gall RulMlt.
• INSIOE BUSINESS
TODAY
.. Two Good Bualneaa Ideas
Thll Felled" Two
enlrlPf-•• wlth good
lntWlllons tell why their
bull-went brOke
0 MOVIE ***'A "Thoroughly Mod-
etn Miltie" ( 1967) Julie
Andr-_, Clrol Cl>anntng
{1D MOVIE * • ..ltnprQC>er Channell"
(19111) Alen Arllln. Mallette
Hanley A aerlel of mtaun-
dertlandlnga cauNll •
socllll WOtker to auapec1
the 5-year-old dllr.Jghtor of
• 191>arated couple 11 11111
victim of chlld abuM . 'PG'
(l)MOW ••'Ao "Any Numl>4W Can
Plly" I 1949) ~i. Gable.
Ale1tla Smtih. An hQnn1
anO catefr .. gambler'• life
II b9e1 with a _._ Of
Ir~
2:30 • GLUGAN'S ISLAND
-~ AOCKWal'S WORLD:
AN AMEAICAN OM.AM
A noelalglc look II tllklfl al
the Ille artlll'I '"•· work
and homelown ol Sloclc·
b<ldge, Muaacnua.tta.
(ft)MOYIE
•• ~ "~hing Short
01 PetldlM" ( 1979) S-
Sarandon, O•vid SI ..
ber9. Two young N9W
Yoril.,. learn about loYe
and the vlc:IUllOO.S Of •
on.lo-one r .. auonahlp.
'PO'
OMOVIE * * * .. lo•t Horizon"
( 1937) Ronald COiman.
J1ne WYalt. A kidnapped
diplomat dffloOll-the
Htmelayan kingdom of
Shenof1·la, • pl-ot
etem• ~and lmmof.
llffty
2!M. PlEDOE ME.AK
~lerly acMcMed pt~
'grwnmlng may be~
duelo~b<emka.
3;00 8 I WfTlt YOU D .... l f00T8All
The LOI Angelet ~a
meal lhe Ltont In Detroit.
G am• wee played
Sllurday. •wov. •• * "They Got .... Cov-
«md" ( IM!I) Bob HCIC)e,
OOlotl'ly Lamour. A Wlillho
1ng1on tabolage rtno le
aoddtnlally lnvllded by •
lootllh~.
• GllJfW n... htetorio AOMIMd ....
room • the 1111t1Jno for a
mualoal trlbu11 IO the
lfllettalnerl and """°'
OfQMlHtlone lhet QeW
thelt llMI and taten1 to
boOlt tnOtall during Wortd w., II, HOlled by V1111
JOllrlaon.
-~ *\.•'A "Brlg•doon"
( 1954) 0-Kelly, Cyd
Charl•H. Two 1r11nd1
1tvmbl9 upon 8tl0adoon. • vl"-ot tn lhl loottleh hlgl>-
llfldt., .... oor-to .,.
IOt • MIQlt dey w.y 100 .. _-u.....,..
~LR ..,.
* •'14 ''On Any ~·
( 11111 Dooumlrtta'y .....
MoQueaft, ., Ulwwlll.
woeMCMI *. • 14 ..,,. lpy Wtlo c-tn rrom The Coed"
{1 ... ) AtoMnt lw1on,
C...lloofn •
·ON~ ,....,,. .... ~ .. u\'tffte.,...........,. ............ _,.,.....
---wttfl ......... Q-. Md Or. NIMlt
......, dleOttllll ..
oanp.
... · ' ' .
TUBE TOPPERS
K.NBC (4) 7:00 -"Born to th~ Wind.''
Painted Bear prepal"8 hl1 warr•ora for
battle with another Lrlbe over custody of
an orphant'd boy. .
KNBC (4) 9:00 -"Magic With the Stara."
Magicians and Hollywood et.a.rs perform a
vorlcty o( 1Uu11ions.
KrfLA (5) 9.00 -"Peking Enoouni.er."
Story of an American w oman who meets
and falls in love with a Chinese musician
while tour ing Peking. See photo, le ft.
KOC E (50) 9:30 -"Broad way Plays
Washington Kennedy Center." A host o!
Broadway stars tum the Kennedy Center
Into a celebration of the American
theater.
C1J BEAOEAHT ~TON Of THE
VUKON
I MEET THE PR£SS
4.'00 SUNDAY
live from Frank G Bonolll
Park. San Olma.a U MOVIE
'The Oevll'a Wedding
Nigh I " ( 1973) Mark
Damon. Sere Bay An
archuotoglll l1nd1 11 ring
believed lo have aupe<nal·
ural power• and he
111emp1a 10 dettroy the
IOfOll WhlnO II ID MOVIE •• * f> ··Tookapl" (1964)
Mtllne Me<courl, M8lllmlll-
1n Schell A veluable
1-*l·lludded aword 11
a101en trom a Turklth
muM1Vm G» MOVIE
f> * ··Target ZAtro" ( t955)
Richard Conte. Pegglo
CHiie
(() STAR TREJ<
atMO\llE * • " ''M811ot#e'' ( 1969)
Jamea G81ne<. 01vle Hun·
nlcull
(IflMOVIE
• • 'n "Victory·· ( 198 t l
sy1voa1er Stallone, Mk:tlaet
Caine. During World War
II. Allled POWa Me their
llcitet 10 ffeedom In a
match b etween their
IOCGer team and lhe Ger-
man Nallonal Team In p.,.
Is 'PG'
(.Q)MOVIE * • 'n 'The Irishman ..
11978) A ptoud lrllhman
re•u-10 yteld to p1ogtesa wnen Na bualneaa u e
teamll9< la threatened by
mo1orlled 1renaponatlon.
(S) LAFF-A· THON
4:30 0 0 SPOATSBEAT
(C)MOVIE * • It * "The Spirit 01 SI ,
Loull" t t9S71 James Stew-
art, Murray Hamilton. In
1927. ChBtlea A Lind·
betgh becornM lhe flrl1
man to tty r>0n1t09 ecrosa
the At111111c Ooean to Per-
l•
MOVIE • * "Saturday The 14111"
(1981) ~d Benjamin,
Paul• PrentlM. A coupe
dlacover that Iha hOuM
they've Inherited la being
occupied by vemplrea,
gho•I• and uaorted mon-
atera 'PG' 0 TltE GOLDEN AOE Of
TEl£VISION
"A Doll's Houee" A woman
(Julle Harris) 114Mr1• her
own ldenllly alle< con-
fronting her hoabend's
(ChrlStopher Plummer)
lmmotaHty In a telepley
baMd on the play by Hen-
rik I~
6:00 8 KUNG FV
8 OREA TUT SPORTS
LEOEH08
"WMlle Maya·· Hotl Reggi.
JeckllOn. ID THIS OU> HOUSE
The footing• for the
bretaway I graenhouM
are poured and Ille houae
gell I high-tech f!fl«gy
audit IRlO
(I) M'A•8•H
~= * "Tanan, TM Ape Man"
(11181) Richard H81rt.. Bo
Derek. A young woman
1Nlct'l8t tor net m1asino
ltlh« In lhe Atrlcan jungle
wfwtfe aha encounters an
uncivilized while men 11/ld
an 0tangutan. 'R'
6:30 I C88 NEWS N8CNEW8
8 9 ABCNEWS
CD MONEYMAKERS
"l"vwtlnQ In Hard Asset•" CIJ HEAL THBEA T
e:oo 8 D 8 NEWS 8 MOVIE
• • • ··s1111da 01 The
1(1laharl" ( 19851 Stuart
Whitman. Stanley Bakw
St• aurvlvOfa or • plane
cruh In • d1ngerou1 Afri-
can "-1 tlgl11 for eurvlv-
11. G THE HAAOY BOYS I
NANCYDMW
t.tVl'TPla
Frlr* and Joe befriend a
deal glfl wflo ,,,.., be killed
lot tlporw:Mng an ••tortlon
p1o1 111 LM veou -~HI.JU(
··~"'
• MOVll * •" "The F°lgtlllng Ken· luCklan" ( 111411) John
W'Yf'le, Vere Ralllon. In
the •l'f 19009. a KlfllUO·
lly men 11tempt1 lo pte-
wnl • PAW of orooh rrom
..... Ing and tttlll rind• lllM
lo rom-Iha *"11M
dauOlll• of a French Olfl-•11. eGMAT~WAY "°' ,.. .. °".,,.. WON.D
"Con.....,,_ ot A Treln
8poU«" MIC"-1 Patin *• • 110t from tu.ton, l.onoon, lo Kyle ot
l.OClfltlM1 tn 8ooUend.
.NOYA .. ,,,. Wlurd Who ap.1 On
Th• flltoor" l arn.,d
Hughm ---..... ponnft of TtlGINe ldllon
... Mint~ ..... °'
ldl•Otl ~·••lnlnt ... .. ~-·-·--::o:.'Jii'101ts•
I = MICIM-DN> ....
atN&CNEWe CID P.T. BARNUM AHO
HIS HUMAH OODmE8
Richard Kiiey hOlll lhl1
documentary tracing Ille
career ot lhe "Greatatl
Snowman On Ear1h "
(Q)MOVIE * • • "Manny'a Orphan•"
( 1980) Jim Bai.11, Malachy
MCCOurl TIWI boyl al an
0tpn1nage risk melr Chall·
ly fund In an a11ampt 10
netp lhelr IOCC4W C06Ch
pay back • "40.000 debt
lo Iha mob
(.S)MOVIE • **'It .. 011by O'Glll And rne u111e People" 119511)
Albeit Sharpe, Sean Con-
riery An old trllh caretaker
whO la 1boUI 10 toee his job
10 a younger man captur•
lhe king or lhe leprechauns
and forces him lo 9ren1
thrM w111hea ·a·
G MOVIE • * .. WUly Wonka And
The Cllocolale Factory"
(1971) 0-Wildet, Jaok
Alber1to11 A world tamou1
conlecll<>ne< ofter• a Ill•
ume aupply ot canoy 10 the
live winners o t a treasure
hunt e:so D AOKT BACK fJ INSIGHT
A delOfmed young man
who has tpenl all of hi• Ille
In sectullon al home lace•
a cr111s whet\ 1 phone pat
ms 10 meet ntm In per.
aon
(()at NEWS
1:65. PLEDGE 8AEAK
Regularly acheduled pto-
grammlng may be <letayeel
due to pledOe ~a.
7:00 8 Cl) 80 MIHUTES D 8 BORN TO THE
WINO
Paintlld BeAlr ptepar• hll
warrior• tor tHlllle with
another tribe OV« lhe c;w...
tOdy ot en 0tphaned b•by
boy.
II COO£RED
The ROfc.,_a are plagued
by • -lea of mysterious
lhrNll and acta of vandal-
ism (R)
I PAUl..HOGAH
ROCK AHO AOU.:
THE FlMT 2S YfAM
. 'The Bltth Of Roell Artd
Roll" HOii P•t Boone
looks •• the toundlr19
lalhetl ol rock anO Iha
llOClll C1lm11e ol the '50s
lhal Ml lhe siege for Ille
new mu1lcal phenomenon.
Ui) PLEDGE~
Regulerly acheduled pt6-
grammlng may be delaymd
due 10 pledge b<Nl<t 9 PEKING EHCOUNTEA
Diana Canova, Mason
Adema and June Loclchar1
1181 1n thll atory Of a
romantic llalaon ~
an Amerlc4ln lourlll and a c..._ rnulllelan
(C)MOVIE • * • 'It 'The Wey We
Wore" ( 19731 Barbra
Strelund. Robert Redford.
A young cOllege couple In
the 19301 dltcover that
their pollllCll dlfter-
are llrong enougfl to jeop-
•r dlle their marriage
CfDMOVIE . *... "Scout•• HonOI" ( 1980) Gary Col•man,
Katherina Hetmond. A
IOoely C>rl>han COl\I ..
extremely r111uct11111, hepj>l-
ly llngle e•ecutl"8 Into
becoming den mother IO 8
pack ot Cub Scout•
(%)MOVIE * • "HNr1beepa" (1981)
Andy Kaufman, e.ma-
0.lle Pel«• In a wor1d ol
Ille ,_, lulure, two COM·
n...rdlll robot• a.perlence
the vlclaaltudat ol first
k>"8 'PG'
7:08. THE MAR)(
BAOTHEAS IN A
NUT8HEU
F11m cilpa and 1ntervtews
are ,..,ured In • Mluta lo
I he m06I oei.t>talmd corne-
d)' IMm In the hll1ory of
tnollon pictures
Groucho, Harpo, Chloo,
Zac>PO t1nd Gummo Mini.
1: 15 ID SUfMVAL
.. Penguin Summet" 08'11d
NIWn nartalM a ~
IOOk •1 , ... pengvlna of the
Felillat>d ~ off tfle
c;oaat of South Arnenca.
looutlnQ on Ille actlw pert..
od _., Wint• wtien the
PMOUln• breed.
1:ao I P'OCU9 ON INTAIN 1:00 (J) ~
llUNl((W8~
Arc::hle tllk• on the lytlltn
when Mrs C1111by 19 CflMI·
ed by • aiMz'I' garment
~e11Qft(R) •aCHt.N A band of oompoter
tfllwM '*"'* Jon end
Po noh'• effort• lo
..,.,. ef*1d "*" by loulnO
11P the CHP'a Ofln'ICIU1W.
; 8mfl'M-fT n.-wmc In...._ """ ~ end
Uncle .--. Lou cao..tt
Jr., Stlellll ~. OtuClll
Manglontl end~ C-
nott.
•• MO'l9 w tit "Airpoft '11" f1tTIJ .,.._ ~n. ~
VIOOllrO. I ::,. .. ...,._,, .. , ......
* ... "K911 Kone" (,.. ,.f#t .,,.,.,,, .....,. Alff+.
littOllt-A ---... -..... "' ..,.., ..... ~ .. ,..... -............. • illCMI
• •'4 ~ ooumrf'
I 191 I I Dowlnenlll'f A
~---~ II'-lrOfft OW IO IMtl>re
UI In hll nBIUfal habitat
CQ)MOVI&
••• "ZOOI 8ult " (tfft)
O•nlet V11ld1&, !dwafd
J-Olrn0t In 1$409
Loe Anoelef, I CllUM ~
t>te etupll ~ Iha tram
lhQ Of rnemt>er1 of a Chica no,,, .. , O"'O I()( murdet
R (J)~ * 'A 'Undet The Rainbow"
I t98 t) CheYy Chue, Catrle
Flthef The 150 tnidgetl
WhO are in IOWfl '°' tne filming OI TM WlUld 01
Oz," turn • Callt0tnla hotel
~tldAl-down ·pa•
lilMOVll!
• • • 1-t "Sorcerer" j 1917)
Roy Schaldu. Bruno
Cremet Four deaperata
men rlak m .. , llv11 whlle
llaullng eaplOalve nllro-
(ltvcMlne th•OUQh South
AmetlCan lungiM 10 battle
an Oll·well fire ·po· e. 111 ID MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
"Ol1raet1 The Grau
Oamt" Oueen Vic toria
~· Ot11aell lllld their
legendary alliance tlkn
root. Mary Anne coura-
geoullly b1111 the burden
ol • greve Illness (Part 31
(R)a_
8:30 8 CJ) ONE DAY AT A
TIME
A al•·IOOI tamale RuMJan
t>U11.i1>111 player lalla I()(
8chneldat (R) 8 THEWOAL.o
TOMOAAOW
t .00. (() ALIC€ a a MAote wmt THE
STARS
Some of the world'• f0111-
moa1 magJclana and •n
array ot Hollywood a1ar11
perform a va11e1y ot myatl·
tying lllualons: Orton
W•llea and Jaclyn Smith
ha.I (RI 8 PEKING EHCOUNTEA
Diana Canova, Meson
Adema and June Lodthan
atar In lhl1 llOIY ot a
romantlC llalto11 bet_,
an Amertcan 1our1s1 anO a
Chlneae mutlcian G OA.CtiO
(C)MOVIE
• • "Honky Tonk Fr ...
w1y" (CotneOy) Beau
Bridges, Beverly O' Angelo.
A smau town In FIOrld•
takes matter• tnlo 111 own
hands wnen by-passed by
• new highway
(f()BUSSTOP
The llvee ot aeveral tra-
velefa cn•noe when they
are llranded "1 • smlllt
Kanaaa town Metgot
Kidder and Tim MelheSOn
11ar
(%)MOVIE
• •*'ii "T .. I Me A Rid·
die" I 1980) Melvyn Ooug-
lu, Ula Kmdrove A Wllh·
drawn, elderly woman,
unaware that &he " dying,
embarks on a long journey
lo reacquelnl herself with
her geographlcolly and
emo11onelly separated
tamlty 'PG'
t: 10. WASTEAPIECE
THEATRE
"Olaraell The Greet
Game.. OuNn Victoria
meell Olar ... 1 and their
leOendery alllenoe tek•
root M8')1 Anne coura-
oeoual'f beafl the burden
of a gr1ve Ill-jP8'1 3)
(R)Q_
9:30 8 CJ) THE JEFFERSONS
l1J JACK VAN IMPE ID BAOAOWAY Pl.AYS
WASHINOTONI KENNEDY
C£HT'ER TOHIOKT
A host of 111r1 from
Broadway turn Ille Kenn.-
dy Cenle< Siege lnlO a 084.
•brllion ol lhe American
thee I er, 11>9 pert or mer I
Include Debbie Reynalda,
Peart Balley. Barry
BotlW'IClt. Robert Morae
and many other•
10:00 8 Cl) TRAPPER JOHN,
M.O.
A young tnan who 1>91.._
he Is from enolh« planet
and • aerlouaty Ill older
woman form a strong bond
during their holpilal 11•y.
(R)
•• NEWS G THE WOAD FOA
TOOAY 1::::.IHREVIEW
• * * "Which Way Is
Up?" ( 19n1 Richard Pryor,
Lanelle Mcl<M A ....
alarved frull plci.er la
ceughl lr1 e comic cra.1llre
bet-hll onion and the
Mob. and 1 hypocrllleel
pt81Cher find• hoe,..,, '" a ladlell' cflolr 'R.
(()MOYE • * "Thia II Ellll9" (t981)
Documentary Alm loot909
and dramatic r-.ctNllon•
are UNd 10 , .. , tM llory of
Elvtl Premley'• Ille 11nd car-0 MOVIE * "Terun. Ti.. Ape MWI"
(19111 AlchMS H•rte, Bo
Oetek. While ~-
111(1 het lather Oii • ~
for Iha legendary Ete-
ph1nt' 1 Grav•yard, •
Y°""O -en It 1bduoled
by "' unc:Mtl%9d Milt•
Man~ ... ralMd by
~ tn t"-junOle.. 'R'
10:tt• ADM.MtCAUB>
ftUIUC~
ttie hletory lil4 gtOWll'I of
publtc lelrlfelon owr ,.,...
ly 30 ,.._. II CIWOI~:
Orson w ..... narm.e.
10:30 G L<>Nf MN0M
"The Star Wtl,_ ..
• WD'K£NO Sf'Ofn'I
~-UP ! ==SWAGGART
• "Tanen, Thll Ape Man"
( tN I) Richard Harrtl, 8o
Oat.it. A young -*"°"" lot hel rMllfnO lather Ill the AlflcM """'9
wllet't IN ~ 8r1
~ """' "'911 Md "'~'"' ... ,.~Vr""'
11••••(1)88 ..... e.-oQ..aooM ..__ tn,,.. Wiid ...
dom" ,._..,,,... .....
........... lllldY """"**' .... ...---. ..,...
fjf::i.-
··" "Tiloe OC•'IOfl" (""' 0.-,..,.,... '--v... CMet. A _....,
""""' WOMlft .... • .,...._....,,.cNM-
060l'I 10 ptOMCI '* lfOf!I
l•fOl .. lt """*' "' ..
1!'1"•1cM Nll\ja °"" '"' (ffJWOV11 ••'A "Vleiory" (1H 1)
8 ytvetter t1..ii-. MloNll
Caine OUrlog World W•
II, Altled POW1 -ttl9lf
llckel 10 trMdclm In •
metch t.11ween lh•lr '°"'* '""' and Ille Ger· man NetlOflal T_, In ~·
II PG'
11: 10. INeAK PMVWWa
ROQ« Ebetl and Oefie
81tlo. .. ,..,.... -llPN
1ha1 n•atty eYer ybody
m1ueo tne ltfll time
&1 ound, lfleludtno "fin-
gen, ' "Gil• Of HMven"
and ··Tne Onion Flekt " (RI
11:151 CMNIWI tt:30.~
~SPORTS
WRAP.UP 0 MOVIE * * * "Come Blow Your Horn· ( 1963) Franll Sina-
Ira, Tony BIN A. ret0<m9d
pl•ybOy find• hll younget
brOll'l9' IOltowlng In hie
fOOtllapa.
Gf)MOV'tE
• '-t "The Falt 01 The
Hou.. Of Ulher" ( 1912)
Marlin uandeu, Robert
tiays Bated ()(I the 11ory
by EOgar Allen Poe. A
youno enoi,_ llnd• hie
hht In dartger whll1 he la
wmmoned by a CNldhOod
triend lo help -hie
crumbling ..._ England
hOUM (R)
11:46 6 TH£ AOCKFOAO
ALES
U MOVIE
.. 'II • The r all 01 The
Houae 01 Uaner" ( 1982)
Merion Landau. Robert
Haya Based on lhe 1tory
by Edat1r Allen Poe.
fJ MOVIE • •'It "Bachelor Fllt"
( t962) Terry-Thomaa.
TueadayW .. d
(OJMOVIE
• • ·ou1c1ma" (1971)
Jonn Milla, Carol White A
young nouMtceeper COY8'11
the llllShed for1une ot h«
miserly employef. a -.
ingly 1mpoverlahed old
!aimer PO
CSJ MOVIE
• • ''Frldoy Tt>e 13th, Part
II" (1981) Amy SIMI, John
furoy The orlaly kllllng1
contrnue at a summer
c;amp 111a1 had~ closed
down &Iler • aeries of
btUrre murde<a occurred
1twwe. 'R'
12:00 U 100 Clue
«D MISSION:
IMPOS818U.
Cl) TALES Of' THE
UHEXPECTU>
T t>e P eny" While the
owne< ol I IOy company
oro•nlaa 1ne onlce Chrlat-
mu party, 11Ml younget
staff plan lnetr own aec>a-
ra1e teatlvllle$
(I) STAR TREK
0MOVIE • * • "Loll Hort1on"
( 1937) Ronald Cotman,
Jane Wy111 A kidneC>C>ed
diplomat dllCOVWS 1119
Himalayan 111ngoorn ol
Shangri-La. 1 place of
alernll ~ and lmmor·
lallty.
12:30 g) MOVIE
• "The Dawn Rider"
( 19351 Jottn Wayne, Mar-
ion Burn1
l%)MOVIE • *'"' "On Any Sunday"
( 1971) Oocumenlar;. Sieve
McOueeo. Merl LawwMI.
The world ol motorcycle
roctng 11 -from varying
points of view
12:4511 NAME Of' TH£ GAME
Oen F81rell Investigates
corruption In 1ne lolk-tOCI<
mullC industry
12:50 (C) t.tOVIE • • *'"' "The way We
Were" ( 1973) Barbra
Stretaand. Robert Redford.
A young college couple In
the 1930• dl!ICO'lor '"''
lhel1 potlllcal d1tterences
are alrong enouah to jeop-
erdlie their ~rrlage
1:00 «D TE£H SCENE
THE UHEXPUAGA TEO
BENNYHIU.
The wild and waclly Br1Ulh
comedian portreya vlllbJa
charac1ers. lncludlng •
etrcus clown 111\d 1 French
exchange atoc:fenl. In
numwoua tketcnea
t.15 MOVIE
• "Tt>e Children" ( 11180)
Manin Shaker, Gii Rcoera
A strange radioactive
cloud turns 1 group ol
1Choolchlldr1t1 Into mUt·
derou1 zomblel ""1h black
llngerTia•t. 'R'
1:*> ®) ABC N£WS
Q!NEWS
1:450 ATONE
Gueat Suun Anspacti
2:00 (1J) MOVIE
• • • "Tile Enforcer"
( 1978) Clln1 Eutwood,
Tyne Daty "Olrl'f Harry"
Callahan ta l<>lned by •
tamale r oolc le In hit pursuit
of a group ot Clllt0tnl1
revotutlonat*a terr0tlztng
San Franctaco ·R'
U MOVlE
• • • "Get Out Your
Hendkerchtele" c 1978)
Getard ~. Palrlcll
OewMfe A young and
OOlltnlaOc; hutband 0089 to
atrnoat unbellev••bl•
lllngthl IO 9"1U(I hll w4fe'a
(if='R'
** "HMl'tbellpe" (tNI)
Andy l<11Ulrnan, Bema-
delle PetetL tn • WOl'ld of
the nMt lut\lfe. NrO -
l'N<Clal tObote ..,.,.. ~
lhl Ylolultudll °' ~ love. ·PG' 1:1'1 NlWI l:tO TOOAY'9MIQIOtf a:.-. ...
t:ll MCMI * "T'l'lot HlllPPr .... Ooea To WMfllnf'on"
(1t11) ~ I ........
Q9M09 HMtllton. The lrNCH •• ..... ~ ... tinder~ to .. U.t.
QIOltel and ..,_..,. -"'Y_....... ..... .,...
Ci'~
............ Cllme"
ttMOI .._.. O'Co!WW, ..........................
~ ..... ~ ..... ,,.. ....... ......-.
'H"
..., .. , ...... IJICI ....
... •••• HQG
llCMI **•"' ''T ..... A .... .... , ....... 0...-
..... I.II ICe*M.
I
.. ,
l..
Dally Piiat
Sunday. August 22. 1982
, ..
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classification 7100 .
IHI 1611,_ IJ.'.~!~!.'!f.!tl! •..•... HHHI /11 l•/1 • ".·~~".~'.'.!.~I.' ...... . ... i .. i;i; ... , ... , .. ,," 111J ~·i·i~ .... i ... c;.,;·.... m• Hou•11 111 11• n11111 11 •••••• t •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S
'
a I l•I• Ho11111 lo '1•11 Ho11111 /11 $1/1 • • ....... •" ....... •. • • •• • • • • • •. • •• •• • I OOZ G ... r.. I OOZ! G...,._, I 002
•.........•..•........•• .-•.••• ! ••••......• -.i;;i •••••••••••••••••••••• C111 11•I I 001 C.~~~·.J.... ... . . ... . .. • • ••• ••• • ••• •• • •••• ···················•·• ..
•MWIHHT ISUllD 011111 1.~!~e~'!,='9!. PlllDILI .... BEST FISHING ANO Alldecorated 38r 281 on 4 6drm 2 baln, lam rm INI llT 1 I SWIMMING BEACH plu• prlmt t~ellon. Garage. By ownet 557-2472 1411 W. IH "
2 bdrm home • 2 car eundeck, e>atlot Nr lfo. $205,000 Open Sal/Sun Prize West &y bayfront. Sllpa for 2 00.t.t. IOUAL HOUSING g11age. ttCI $625,0001 Bey Owner wlll contllder 2032 Sytll\ Or, CM remodl'll'<I 3 bdrm. 3 bath $1,200.000. nPPOIHVNITY •IPYIUll fl n 1 n . 6 7 5 • 5 3 1 G. 1-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiij ,.~Hslltr'• ltHttl BAY & OCEAN VIEWS! 4 673-5291 I' Ol-ean & p_tty vh:w1. Marine room. 4 bdrm. 3
All real e1111e ldverll bdrm. 2'/\ bllha. llre---o••r 011 ...... .,. LH•I bath. 3700 !"'.ft. $1,385.000. Oceanfront I '"I 1 1 3 1 '""• plu• ar Grell condo located . ..., n In a new1p1per P ttG41, car g r_,, 4BR/Fam Rm, plu1 1 .. I " ...
iubjecl to the Feeler• much morel S6SO.OOOI bdrm ren111 u11lt w/ cloM lo t .. e paz1 .. .,... Liii llU 1110 F1lr Houllng Act ol 196 ....... ltJ Prtp drooma. 1'1· bllh1. which maket It llleg•I t • ' llreptace. ju11 1tep1 to Communlly pool. $89, lOI yu L'-llll IHI Sii 1·1 , 1, "t•fftn So Bay 11 sparltlea & 500, cen't lull Cell ,. ... "'I"" ... _ h advertlM "iny pre eran· *11•1-•* there's Iott ol wood "79-2390 t'rune Udo Nord bayfront. ~bdrm.''" .,.t · oe, llmll11lon or dlecrlml ~=~~-~~-~== ~ . m 000 nation blHd on rece , p1nelllng. ftrH4 liltl Lge LR., 2 bollt slips .1. ·
color, rellglon, HX o sci5.ooo 67~"'648 Sp1clw1 3 bedroom, 2'/\
111t1on11 origin. or 1n bath home Dining, 11-f<emodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath + large rec nn
Intention to mike •n\' I ATTIAOTIYE mlly room, llreplace Ix-am ceilings. furnished, pallos $420.000 auch preferet1ce. llmlla , 2 ITlllY Poaalblt mother-In-law
tlon or dl1Crlmln1llon." + MOOEAN APT querter1. $I 55.000. Liiii llU UYFlllT
This newte>apet wlH no Nr Beys, $385,000 WI ownet Wiii help flnenNt Lagoon \'lew from 6 bdrm. ~ bath, playroom.
knowlngly accept en •llW• bltn l1bulous financing 12.ll"l lltttrttt dark rm. dl'n. Boat slip. Now $1.000.000 advertising lor rHI es, II llYlll Save $$$. Auume high balance
tete whleh 11 In Ylolatlonl Sp1clou1 three or five HIE llUln loan! Plueh 2 bedroom BAYSIDE PUCE
ol lhe law bedroom hOme One llr-c21•) U4 OIOI condo Flreplaoe, beevtl· b 2 bu
ge bedroom and bath ~~~~·~~~-~~~I lul decoretor eecenta Spt-ctAC\.llar bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up. i r ' ••6n l'1 l•I• dowristelra. Two be· Col" den $ 134,900. dn 2 b®l ·~ Reduced · $1,500,000 •••.•.........•.•..... , '11•'1'1 1002 drooms upetalra plus t.JiH nurryl 979-2390
•••••••••••••••••••••• bonus room $253,500. l••l•l•I• /001 111·2110 TWO IEW 111-llOO •••••••••••••••••••••• 3707 s BRISTOL
Tow.Ho.Es HST '" IULllA SANT A ANA 2 br, 2 ba, den, FP, patio TARBB.L These lovely homes are OWC at 12•1, or even 5%
located In an excellent (Q. $27~.000 645·4220. area of Costa Mesa Are VI-~
Ideal tor co-ownership z ClrlH ''' /1111 lOll lltiilftilVll~ with 2 great master ~ ••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~~~~ bdrms with private bath •FULL OCEAN VU• :-:
Wood burning fireplaces, l:'"leloan Jasmine Crll VA AEPOS 4br pool
large 1111ached 2 car ga-• ,...,,·jt. Owner agt 640·1515 $136,000 Mesa Verde
rage. Low, low priced el ~ 41' OHll LOT 3br $157,500. Agt $110,000 end S 108.000 546· 7739 With 3 Br. tV. Ba. frplc. _ ltl•E Fl" ••LE !\46-2313 By Owner. 646·6586 -
•• • HLIFYlll -_;..-----:---1 3 bdrm. 2 be, aep1rete
llW USTill II
lllYllE THUOE
See lhls exceptional hornel Recently redeco-r11ed with creem color
carpe11. plan1at1on shut·
1ers & wOOd floors. It hu
brick pl1nters, a spark· ling pool end aaparate spa. Aslt for Na1111e (ag1)
673·857 t or 675-6000
OPEN SUNDAY l·S
UNl()UI: t1()~1:S
S•~•lt YHr Offer dining. covered patio. 10.l"l Home+Guest+lncome Ponderose St. (Herbor Assume Iha tst Trust OWC ISi ·Fie.IC. Terms and Beker) $135,000
OHCI 351( down Siller 509 Acacia CdM nr bch 963-0363 will cury Iha reel. No Spotless Vacant Duplex 1---------
qualllylng You benefit Huge 5br/3ba+3br/3ba •EU Wllll
with 10.5% eflecttve <140K own/bkr 645-7048 ELEGANT Ranctl Style 4 Interest 3 Bdrm 2'"' Ba ---------1 bdrm Warm country Sundance Townhome 11.UllH YIEW lrencn decor, a reel Formtl dining, Family SauS8llto luSk home on dreem come true. Just
room. tncl Pillo with lee land 3 Br 2 Ba. llv & $174,500. Bkr 848-0709 Gr--.house Window end din rm. lg tam rm, all
Decorator Tiie, 2'"' year1 amenities, IQ lrH 101 By
new Owner. 1313,000 llllARllE
OUl•Ell • 1111,000 640-7007
CALL ME TO SEEi Diana Pletenpol·Volpe
111-1400
-----~-~
S20,ooo Dow. Beautiful 4 Bdrm lamlly
home, tealurlng spa & Dix So of Hwy duplex encloeed gerden room
Only 3 yrs old Darrell, ofl the mister sulle
COROIADO CAYS
C<1ronado Island l'USl bayfront lot 115' boat
dock Plans ava1l Now $370,000 w/terms
ILlffS COllO
Single story end unit, expanded, upgraded 3
br, 3 ba on largest greenbelt. $250,0-00.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
)41 Boy\odt' Dr ove N B 67~ biol
RARE BLUFFS OPPORTUNITY
Just listed·front row vww Luwt•st
prtc1.:d "E" Plan 3 Br. family roo m
$197.000 Assume loans. Submit on dwn
2645 V 1sta Ornada $315,000
Open Sat/Sun· l-5
BLUFFS LEASE
2 Bdrm, water view. S950tm o
Also 3 Br. front row view $1200/mo.
140-0020 llO-Hll
w1 .. s1 1-:Y N
TAYLOR CO.
HEALTOHS Sl lH't· l!H()
IEW EHUID H HLIOA ISUID
first ttmc.• listl'd. Charming nr nf'w 2 s t,v.
arc:h1tectural gem. 4 bdrms, f<tm. rm.
Quality <ksign and d <.·<:tir throughout.
1 Ot•stgm.-d for guest quarter::.. Pn·:t'Cl to
St'll $595,000. Scllt'r fina nce No loan fet·
213 OIAllOID OPEi Sll I SUI 1-6
ltOllllE S2J&,OOO -VIEW FREE
1 Ea1 thtom·~ thruout 4 br. 2 1 i ba. family
rm. d1n1ng rm 2,:378 sq.ft . View of
J>av1hon, rntc lites & Catalina. I
12&1 HllFLJIE, CDll Sll I SH 1·&
MAlllOll .VIEW MILLS -H&E UH
Qu1C'l. park-likl· S<>tllng Rm for paddle
tcnn1::. a nd pool. Great for orchard Cul
de sac St. ~~ bdrms, fam rm $379.500
1211 IR WEST, Clll OPEi SH 1-•
IEAT JASMllf OllEH 0 w n r I Ag 1. Re I M a 11 Completely remodeled
$290.000 Least e11pen-759-1221 thruout w1th many up-foHl•i• V•ll-1034 ifoHl•i• V•lltf. 1034 2 ILOCIS TO IEWPOlllT MICH -S22l,OOO
THE HEAT
And keep cool In one ol
meny beautltul pool
homes. all In excellenl condlllon, and In all price
ranges. Call any ol our professlon11 Real Es1a1e people for delalls.
sive home by S3S.ooo. -T-,-,-.-,-,-,-,-.-W--.,-S-1 grades 10' •he dlscrlml-•••••••••••••0"••••••• .............. ....... Charmin~ 4 Br & f<tn1tlv room •J bnt'k I 2 & d hi hi neUng buyer -'Sk•ng 2 d 2 b h E I . . h -lovey eCn.2 g y Posslblenoclown.Brand $195,000 Foranap-sl~ermA.lln~acvs~ou~zed MESAVEAOE ftreplact•s, country kilt' f•n , qull'l
1 upgraded. Al • 4 tlr. new 4 bdrm. 7 balh. I t 1 II " v -S S I 5 d I lty Pool• tennis po ntmen ° see. ca remodel. Country charm, Open •II un · residential area m you nu t'Ve opment secvr • "' · 6500 sq II. John Marshall 540 1151 09 GANNET OR "' Talle advantage of lg. Agt 631.2242 -encl yllrd., frplc. oak 27 by Buccola. IOq{, cin Ownc•r carry 1(1 yr; assum loan w/low Int&-· cabinets, blllna, ceramic Owne• wlH carry 181 TO. 1
rest Don'! wall until OLD CDlll $231 000 Ille more $1 42 900 low rate, xlnt terms. 4Br. I I
546-2313
Y RENT Ill?
DOWN PAYMENT ??? No Ooalltying, monthly payments SlrU<:tured to your need•. Call 549-2969 or 675-14 IS
FAMILY
HP&IDllHi
prices go up again. Call s I h R 2 3 ~ Owner flexible. 138. Wal-1".Ba. 2 aty. lorrnal din I VIEW-UIE a llOIEL-UYCUSS
or come by Agl . 0 0 wy. · rre-nut,556-6996. rm,park.979·5099 I Two stor y Nar1tu<.hct 5 Br with 644·9060 or 644-8067 model. Liv rm opens to d
Carole McMahan pv1 backyard Move-In UllUll Hm"I *LIW HWI 12Y4°l llOO PH •I. bt>auliful S unset pool s urrounde by .,El Sii 1 I cond. Great terms. Musi 2 new very delu11e $20,000 dwn lor a 25% 14,000 rt•d brn:k~ TCiStefully det:orated • sell. Della. 63 t-1266. agl 2300 IQ fl 2-sty, 5 Br 3 hOmes. 2 bdrm + den, 1 t 118 h h · h 11 d 14WllTEWITH '-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Bahomew1newcrp11& 2,L beth, 516,.,,.., eect1.' nterestinproperyw • t roug oul w1t wa papers an
11 F 1 " •" shelter benefits Owner • h 1 k cl I h o --------TRADE paint ull price on Y owe 5 years. 673-0359. occupied or investor, -;huttt•rs S r)ws 1 c-a mo e o m e ~-•-d StS9.000. Owner wlll M d S II II f. -... help !Inane. 631·7370, * •fl& Ill llU *I position avall Call R1ct1 any upgra cs e er w1 tnance OfNewpod, fj) your boring Income pro-I 549-3546 Model perfect beauty on ~/agt, 9&4·617 1 Submit down $760.000 mcl. land. 11.eabon. )I party or oulgroWn real-Cree lined street. 3 bd. 2 •••liIIJI••
975.5511 __ ~_/' 1 e1ence wtth large equity be, upgraded home ""' /040 WESLEY I. THLOll CO., llUUOllS
_..._ lat this ~eBa1dru1tlc3,!bnd W1tk to alt schools. ten-•••••••••••••••••••••• 2111 .Su Jtt••1'a .. ,.IJs Rta~ roomy ~ rm " • nls courts. and perk. BY OWNER 4 BR 4 Ba .. " • IPH IMSIS 1·1 home with 180 deg Owner flexible. $137.500 hme approx 2900 sq It IEWP8"T CHTH, I .I . 1«-4110 'u••-· Ort .. y•-ocean view In walk to Jody/Agl 557·1289 Nr Meadowlerk Goll • • -.,... beach. Corona def Mar
Ttrrlflo PIH I, s111· location $495.000 fee OCUI VIEW ~~~r!~e11s~~61~· s\~·~~~ BLUFFS* EASTBLUFF olHI lfH•Hff ""· ~1211 I 2 Bdrm. 2 be, condo. Full also wltake back 2nd
This IS the home tor the grOW1ng family Shi. yes 6 big bdrms, 3 bllhs, big
lfvlng room with fire-place Family room wllh
2nd nrepl8()41 Formal di·
nlng. family kitchen with
u~raded range. grill & microwave Ankle deep carpellng. Shimmering
pool and spa. Gorgeous
lnllde e.nd out. A delight
to preview. Call for pre-
view. 5'46-2313
... H MW fn• pa-... STEP INTO THE YARD & 1menlltes and sec gate 846-0450
I • fl I. step Into Hewell. t>eau1 1 No quehlylng with $60001--------I
t t . tt4 •••••I ~ e11011 c with pool &I dowri 10 75% loan CLOSE TO OCUI S ix·<.:w cul<tr 4 bdrm. f,tm rm. 2 hrep acc-s
1110,000. J larrltr ~ waterfall 2 BR & den. progrem 1vallable Call No money down no Lusk 1 lt•vt•I ho m e Oversize lot with I
"ttf. huge lam rm w/bar R ic h Ownerl Agt quallly1no . own your large pool Only $:339.000 t•CLIDIH TME
THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS
I I I $179.500 631-8011 96•·6171 home on our unique
, •• t. I .. t, o• OUlllll -----==---1 shered appreciation II· WI. By appl
a..ttl MPLD •---------FIXER nanc1ng We have S IESTllY.Lovely2000sq·ft 3 bdrm,2'i
4 Mr, ftr•tl 4111, Immaculate 3 Bdrm El Fon 103Z . homes In Hunt Beech . 3 baths. fam rm . wi'de greenbelt, near • 1 nd •••••••••• • ••• •••••••• BR 2'.'toa. 1600 to 2100 TMf UllD ,., ... 11, nl, ,.. ~=~~ou°:'~er~r~:.:ill. * UTH c1•111m $98,000 sq II Payments run pool Only $249.000 llCLIDllC •
,, .. lrtat tltoltht bolh yvlth lolled beem New 3 Bdrm 2 bath $1200 10 $1600 per mo Will lease o ption By appt lit•• 11 prt1tl1l111 celllngs. trplcs and a very VERY deluxe home. Ca-Eestslde Costa Mesa, Call Geo Brooks al HICllHrllet4. 0.1tr private pool Localed ~n nyon area S 1691< .OWC $27,000 under 11ppra1sa1 714189 l·S556 OPEi 1.5
. ' one of Corona def Mer s al 12.75%. 673-0359 Owner desperate. Hurry! 2s.31 lllJI s. .. , VltW $215 000 will lltfJ wltll flHI• prettiest streets. 4 6 5 0303 S & S Trl·level. near lhe ., 'v • 1 1 Rill man lfO .,., ..... ,. •• , blocks to Little Corona ,., i '"' 1034 4 • Wiier Warm decor pvt 2111 Vista,, .. , •• a ''·view UH,000 • uo. I -·TIH Sil 000 •10 • Beach $298 000 .!~.~!'!.J! ••••• !f....... spa. elegance galore 2001 laj1, a tir, 1 ltHI s 111,500
Well eat•b=d New-•••• itar i~ tr-
0
14'-1211 a HY II :::.1;109$319·000 Bkr IOI Avt. c •• ,t, 1 ,, .. ,, fit• 2 ~' UI0,000
port Beach locallon tor ........ ...d .. ~ 0.... ~ 4 Bdrm. 2·~ bathe, lemlly IAlllUPTCY 2lll Yht• •• ., ... 4•r w/I••• •• H,000 aale. All replies confl. pwnnO t• .. , rm. formal dining rm,
dentlel. P 0 Box 821, ltJft Ct14t I ~ eparkllng pool and ep1. •FORCES SALE• HELEN B DOWD Balboa, ca,. 92661 ...... "--tll ~ti lar ~> , Vacent and ready Lge 4 br. 2 ba. pool Nice
--• -usvmable loan Submit ~~~·Olf~,,~,~~~~-~·-~;;~~1~.-e~a~. ~1~m~I ~lrJo~m~be~a~c~h ' LOWEST PRICED ........... I •• ,. 4 CHI•.... l0.Z4 Bkr 848·4557 21052 Indigo. 962-0293 IULTORS, llC. •••·8311
.Es' YE•IEI II ttwllatllt lllll ••••••••••••• ••••••••• BEACH BANKRUPTCY •
2 Bdrm con:o with •••llJ , •• Walls tf ·~" 2 II, 2~ .. a .. ,. 3Br,2Ba.dblcargerege. Speclll prOvlSlor1S ol ltlfl I •
community pool, mlefo-s••u ,,,., t1t411r ASSllAILE HJ '12•.500 owe $100K 2 patios, flaostone frple, Bankruptcy Act allows H••lillf lH B1111l1•1t111
wave, lresh pelnt end sar4tH lift SllJllt on this 4 Bdr College 12% 10 yr t0178 Du-~~~f.t0~1°7,!~te~°'::i lor assumption ol $60. ••u• 1040, .,.,, 10401 mlnvtea close to p1rk1 ' I ~ Park home e nd owner rango A1v Ct Christine ~ 000 In fin $8t9/mo Pill ...................... •••••••••••••••••••••• end shops. Seller wlll rtt••· 11 VII ft• wtll help wttn eddlliontl Bkr 675-1771 O~n SIS carry 1st loan. $10.000 dn owe $t5.
cerryl Only $89.9'>0 . call ttllll&lr 11• flHrt, fmenclng. Full pr!ce II 1-5 1., ~~trlMtlH' lttr, ~ B~'.pr.!11~~~ 4.!' todayl 646-7171 t1tir.wtftlolt.t .. lar only $132,SOO.Oontwalt _.
... ·• le I • call 979'-S370 NOW! INVESTORS to OQMn Agt ~ t-4141 IMflml ~= rE:. ~-:! ~ji:.i;E~J:¥ "":.~::::11 :::1t .,, ..... • ~ at SJl0,000. 111 Call Rich Ownr/egt Aaaume (Freddie Mac>' -USTSllE OILY INCOME??? Br 2 Ba lrplc 19911
A NEW WAY
OF LIFE
IN lhe BEAUTIFUL
IRVINE • AOUL T MOBILE HOME PARK
lt1fitW. 964-6171 SHORT ON Buehard St Brk/Own 111,000 DOWI DOWN 642 7743 Cot.a OF NEWPORT Lovely 4 Bdr home w/ 4 ltlHll Pttl I•. PAYMENT??7 -----·-----"l.ALTOAS lam rm, no qu1lllylng. Spacious trl-leve1 4 PAYING TAXES??? fllllOLllllll
uu L e-1 "••· Auome loans. take over Bdrm. 3 bl, lam rm Well Wilh our lnveflor. live & $10,000 needed to cover c. ..... d•I •.. VA 1st et t 1 50% Mini maintained Priced under gain epprecletlon In 111 beck 11,1yments &
875·551 t cond. Call Diane C1ppet, market S195,000. Open lantaatle 3 Br. 3 Be. new charges. Tat<e over
Re/Mu 631·1266 Sund1y 1 ·5 17086 condo, :iext to Ill shop-$184,000 In loins at
Greenleaf St. ping. No down peyment, $I 110 mo. 4 yr old 4 BR.
lllllT II.I. minimum CHh needed S blks to beach.
V. ACRE PLUS SPA
Fabulous n ewer 4 bdrm beach estate.
Has family area. brick frplc, plush d t'('(Jr
Extensive cul-de-sac grounds feature I
Km pond, waterfall, orchards. etc.
I
Sacrifice 1111: S 121,000
STAii 11.E. 71•·1212
142-llOI for clo•lng cost. Pnone FAIR REAL ESTATE
63 t-50&5, 642-2000. 8•8· 1•68 Lit 1,t1 .. tr left I I I OllLITT
HOMES FROM .. $40,000 to $55,000
w/gOOd llnanclng avail
Call Mary Graham 551-2360
Of Boyd Allra 675-5930
Oarr". Or1lst Ftr J Cloae eacrow 9130162.
New 4 Br. 3 Ba Laguna Beach view ot oce1n, mouritalns & canyona on
Hrene COS Porl1flno.
AppreJMd al $4115.000.
now l•S0.000.
•%CASH or? 3Br 1"'· ba, Gr actous 4 Bdrm trl-USllAILE MESA VEROE-3Br. 2Ba, HHlll for s.i. a ..... /or s.1, aterter home. No quell-level Pv1 spa. Contemp I
YA L.. FA. lrplc, LR, cov petlo, •• • •••• • • • ••••• • • • •••• •• ••••• • • ••• • •••' • •• • • !)'Ing nee, lul>ilf 1erms decor Asking $319,000 ·
)(Int lln $140K. Owner/ G.-rot 1002 GtM,... 1002 640-5076 Dennie make olr. Bkr 848-0709
11 91/\% on Ihle 4 bdrm rllr. 751·36"42 -=======~;;:.;:;:=::::;;::=~~=====-~~~! ~ .. ~·~11~1dpeo~'. -.,.--,-,-u-.. --... --111--'::~::· S@ \\.ci! lA-a £.~s· ::: ~~~~~~~I 12,. , .... , .. ..:; 4 Br, 2 a.. 1 bdrm with llAlllllEI Mpar1te entrarice Re-•P• and m1ny other 4Br, 2Ba. completely r• -----._.....,cu.• • "°""" 1menl1le1. $110.000 In modeled. New roof.
1uum1ble loen1. On • plumblng, p1lnt & ctr~t
cu1-01 .. 1c 1001 OWC, )Unt lln111clng A super
•
RW.aflT lllEI modeled t>etuty. Coall liftr• M ... Motivated eellet Harbor View Home• 3 $136,900 Bclrm 2 beth MONICO on , .. la nd! AH11,.,,. •111 ..
tlnQ It low rat• end Miier wll carry! Priced 10 Mii
It $21'.000 • cell tOdllyt
146-7171
--""'' "*' thll neet a Oltetl 3 lldrm home 11 lull for
yo11. E•cell. flnenctna
Witt! • fUll NIUl'llnte , It
T.D. 1t t~%. Ful pr-ic. 11st,OOO. 7614 191
~·· '
RoJ, m,tl.·n,
Reali or
714-641-8629
Atduc.O 10 $159.900 bug1ln 1t 1125,000 Cell 919-6370 64$-3000
\f >Ill tlFtl . .:. . •,' ..... -------
IYIWllll·WTIM
Divorce force• quick
Niel 3 bdrm. 1 bl . lrplc,
2',. gar .. 1ge IOI w/lot• ol PONlbillltee. SH.500 -Ill olfere eoneldere o . 642-45e5 eve a wtclld1.
IY ... 1111l.-
Aeduc•d 1111.0061 Nr· new ao11r, vi.w twnl\M. 1
ml. trom ooeen. Apc>ro11.
1500 aq ft. 2 br, 2-.. be.
ofen hou•• s 111s u n 1 -4. 1091 s .. llvtr
Dflv., 646-9190
I Ulll f II 'JWllll I
1 wl1h 2S4 bathe, 2 otr lflC4
'.
-OW & Y•d. NOOO down • ...... &.---·· 1.-end pymt IMllttd PfoO· ' •m.,TIRMI*'* t I ... "'',....., : ram. Call Alclt. Owner/
------
~ ... ~=ibt, 1' a.1&.. llJ~ /Mt! =-== =~':i.i:I Ag1 teA-0171
.._ _ ""' • :::r:7. ••• ~. • •• ,....-rf' 1o w.olff lhope. a..t , I!.-.. a " a 1 " ...,. ., 11121417 , .... ft, I IOCadon. t• ltftle ---rite houeel, t IOt, good
l'l*r1on I or OUITO-M HOU&1. • ,.. bttOW,,..,.,..... Income. owe t 10Cf.OOO ' E>me .. I bd, 8 be, poet, J ~t flNnolno Mat, ~ l t tt,IOO. AGt. et 13%. f 1A3,IOO. Nii
1port1 ot, MP o1floa, I 000 ~. tlll•ld•, 414·7611 l tdtn Av•. 764-ltAI, IM0,400 62.....UM 175-tt21 CS.,...._ 4'7 .. 21A. ffl..tlM 1119. ·. -----
11£SIOENllAI Rf Al [SIAff $£AVICES
•• , ••• u
The definition of quality la tl.l1
truly magnificent custom hom~.
•teps to private ~&ch. A kitchen
for the discr imlnatJng cook. T he
exciting famiJy/ente r tainmoot
room. 4 bdrms. formal dining. Thlt
could be your d ream h ome.
$795.000 Fee. ..... ,1 ...
117111~ ...
•hotr~ ,,.. 6 W''OMbW _ ............. -·. __ ,,. ~ ........... oi
-h ... i'1 i-o1-..
S 0 F A r C
I I I' I r
WELDOG
I' I I I r
I SAWLUR ... --.-1--.1~..-1 --.-1 --.rr-1 At IHI my ltldl hi~ o leerned tne v1h1e of money l and how hlrd II la to earn.
f
S C R 1 U C I Tney won't acic•et • hot i-.,,;...:...;.;...,.;.-.;,.....;;...,--1 check 1nymor1. Tney w1nt
I I r I I I_ 111_11: money In QOld -·
11 OE£LA 9 I
I r· 1 I" l!il:;.t=.~1= . . ......... __ .... _
!{~!~!! l~!~!!~!.~ ... · 1 ~~~!!!. {~!~!!~.'!. ....
~~~:-! ...... ~?~~ ~~!'! ...... ~?.~~
TRUSTEE 'SALE # 2395
View Lot -Cowan Heights
On St'pt Ill. IVH2 ;H 11 um, al the
fro nt l'ntrnn<'" of S tmi-Shaw Corp ..
i:11 ri l•: 17th ~1. Sant.1 Ant•. Caltf, said
trnstl'l' will ..,('!) t•1 the h1ghl•St bidder
Lot :I:.!. TIJll l!.llitt , Known to be
11pp111x • • .1l·1 t-:s •11 v&t'atlt It.ind For
furtht•1 lllf411111,1t10ll t'OllWl l
STAN-SHAW CORP.
114/542·6811
Coles worthy
{1Co.
2S4S E ASTBLUFF DR .
NEWPORT BEACH. CA.
640-0020
WIPE YOUR FEET WHH YOU LEAVE
~:.astlJluff pott•nllal unl11111tt-d 5 Bdrm.
\'tJUntrv k1u:h,·11, l'Xtroi lrg farrnly room~ ·~ Ba -Thi.., hnmt· has bt't'n betrayed ~bus(•n ,ind 1h1·n ;1h<indont•d Premium
1tx·at1•m. F<ihul11u~ n('1ghborhood but the
home· nl>t'CJ ... o •V(·r,vthmg Bor A financing
of $154,0IJIJ t11wl pm·f• $2115,UtlO No t for
tht· fatnl ol hl':.1rt <!kOO Carob. EastbluH .
,.-.u., g .-•nythintJ N11t1 d · ,..,,. 'tO<n' .. """9 you wan•
Dao•~ P•ICJI (.1as~oheo Ao .,, ~.,11-1 1,.~·ohed ads Clo
os a sornple mallP• 1 well C..all NOW 1us1 catl {,A~ !>li78 f.14?-5678
LIDO IAYFROllT
Custom count r y Engllsh
bayfront home with pier and
shp, designed by 1nternat1onally
acclaimed ;:u c hllect 6
bedrooms, 6 baths. gourmet
kitchen. 1ormal din rm. s ecunty
system. $2.700.000
LIDO ISLE BUFROllT llEW
LISTllli
Beauttfully decorated Cape
Cod 4 bdrm. 4 baths. Pier and
slip. holds 45· boat. Please call
to make appointment to see
thi s outs tandi ng home
$2.200.000.
LIDO BA YFROMT
Just listed this completely
remodeled elegant 2 bdrm
home plus s tudy. Also features
pier tor large boat plus sm.all
boat. Ideal location on quiet
end of Island. Only $1,850.000.
LIDO ISLE
HYFROMT
40' lot: 5 bdrms. 5 baths.
Watch the sunset from g1gant1c
master suit e 4 car garage,
Enjoy beautiful beach in front o f
your home S 1. 7 50 .000
LIDO ISLE
BAYFROMT
FANTASTI C TERMS
Owner will c arry 1s t Trust
Deed. Priced to sell Near Lido
Clubhouse & tennis courts Will
accommodate a large yacht .
$1,300.000.
LIDO
Own your own doc k for your 85'
yacht Professionally decorated.
4 bdrm. 3 bath, Random Oak
P l anked fl oors Patio
overlooking prime bayfront
location. FEE LAND Security
gate and many more extras.
$1.110.000
LIDO
Delightfully appointed 2 Bdrm,
211, baths baytront condo. 24
hour security Sauna. pool •
sub-parking. close to shopping.
The most prest191ous highrlse
condo building in Newport.
Owner may exchange
$735,000
IHFROIT COIDO
Spacious lido Park Drive
condo w ith sit-down view .
Security building. Boat sllps.
Owner will consider exchange
for units $525,000
LIDO HI-RISE
PHTHOISE
1 Bdrm, 1 bath. Fantastic bay
and ocean views. Subparklng.
pool, security building. walk to
shops and· restaurants. Sllp
available. $350.000
UYFllOIT lll·lllE
With view of ocean, 1 Bdrm .
mirrored w all, beautlfully
decorated. ready to move In.
Sub-park ing. Pool, Security
bulldlng. W a lk to Lido Vlll.ege.
Stlps av1ll1ble. $295,000.
t·
Orange CoHl OAll.V PILOT/Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1982
-·. . ..
RVM~ IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
• • •
UllLllUILI VALHI Lovt:ly
singl e famil y home in old
Corona del Mar. 3 BR & 3 BA on
3 level plus guest/maid's room.
M ini view Drastically reduced
to $4 69,000 o r lease f or
$1750/mo. Martha Macnab (R60)
... ,,, /11 S1/1 •····••···•··········· :oru1 HOUSE sat 1su11 1-1 : '111,~~~:" I
G..,.al . 1002 •••••••••••••••••••• • Fll&IOlll • • Beautiful 1 Bdrm end •
BETTER THAN A NEW HOME
TOTALLY IESnLED, IEIUIL T I IEllODELEI
DEYlSTlTlllLY anUCTIYE
IPll Tits WEHHI SIT I Ill 1-1 Pll
1Hl su11nn '"· "llVlll TIHJOI", CIM
Here tS a marvelous opportunity to acquire a "better than
new" home in a lovely prestige community. No waiting for
grass to grow or trees to mature, and no big fancy new
h ouse price either!.
• • unit on th• water Deco· • rated In •atthtone1 with • 0 C E 11 Y I E W • ehuttara thruout. Many • extrae. Auume current ~ C 0 U II T R Y FRENCH • financing and owner wtll ... e conalder carrying 2nd •. 2100 I. llHI llY4., l1llM1 P11l1. • TO. Aaklng S118,900,
•Reduced to $675,000 with $552,000 • cell 540-1151
•ASSUMABLE FINANCING AT 14% .• • • : BETWEEN Ill AID OCUN :
• 2141 Mlr1•11 Ir, l1llM1 PHl1. • ~~~~---
.v• HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
OAllEO Mll tllJllf VIEW Fantastic
panoramic OC..'C'an view within
walking distance of three
private beaches. Single story 4
BR. Cam rm residence situated in
Cameo Highlands. Great
potential . close to shopping and
sch ools ONL Y $369 ,900
including the land Call Dnna
Godshall (R61)
•New Country French. Steps to jetty .• r=
This gorgeous custom masterpiece situated across from a
delightful park is just 2 long blocks to Balboa Bay awaits
your admiration.
Ranch style with French flavor: 4 bdrm, formal dining nn,
sk ylit ceilings, family rm, htde-away loft & sparkling pool.
•Reduced to $575,000 with $452,000 • -•,•IY•l•H-H•l•Y•IS-•I
: ASSUMABLE FINANCING at 14%. • # 1 PlllllA
• • See It todeyl Convenient • CAPE . COD 2 & 3 BR. CONDOS : ~0.~~11:~· e~~~·~tlcou~.~~ • 11• M ..a YI t I ttl"" O .... M • nice 2 Bdrm end den end • • •••• I •· II •• •••1 ISi unit. Fenced pe11o. elr • From $137,000. All units have• conditioned, community
•fireplaces, wet bars, French doors and! pool All tor S139.500
•fully landscaped yards. • IPH-llUAY 1-4
LJIHA MILLS LUXURY Don't miss
this delightful single level home
in paradise location. Decorated
f eaturing 2 BR plus den ,
majestic fireplace, 2 patios, spa,
central air and security system .
$210,000 Anita Schandel (R62)
Offered below replacement cost at $478,500 (you own the
land), over $250,000 assumable l~ at 11%. WOW!
• OPEN DAILY 1-5. • 142-1200 • • •NEW 3 CONDO PROJECT FROM e -
• $169,000 • I: , I I NEWPORT HEIGHTS •
1597 Riverside and 16th St. •
DOLLMOUIE 3 Ill, 2 H charrrnng
dollhouse on qutet cul-de-sac. 2
brick fplcs. curb appeal & loads
of charm. All for $178,000. Terry
Aune Hanes (R63)
Spectacular 3 Bdrm, 3 'h baths : I~~~~~~~
548-5270:
144-1200
. 850-9778 . • Hoa111 for Silt ••••.•...•...•........
1002 ********************
( ______ N_E_W_P_O_R_T_B_E_A_C_H ____ __,,
SOUTH BAYFRONT WITH VIEW OF PAVILION
Located Just one block from the Ferry with boat mooring
available, this 6 bedroom Balboa Island residence has 2 kitchens
and assumable financing. $1,095,000.
SPYGLASS HILL WITH $224,000 IN FINANCING!
Seller packing, looking for offer on this 3 Bdrm 2 Bath residence
w/famlly room, fireplace, wet bar, several eating areas and views
fit to kill. $495.000.
EXQUISITE WHITEWATER VIEWS
A country kitchen and skylight windows will light up your life when
you move into this 3 bedroom, 3'/t bath wood condo near beach
and shopping. Reduced to $249,500.
WATERFRONT TRADITIONAL HOME
On the bay of Linda Isle, this 5 bedroom. 41/t bath residence
features a large brick courtyard entry with spa, a spacious bayslde
brick terrace and approximately 4500 sq. fl . of living space. Slip
and side tie .for 60 ft. boat. Seller will help finance. $1,450,000.
ANNIVERSARY EST A TES NEAR THE GOLF COURSE
This rambling ranch home Is Ideal for first time buyers with an
oversized lot, 3 bedrooms, 2'h baths. country kitchen. room for
pool and reduced price of $163,000. Seller wlll carry with 15%
down or will consider trade down.
OCEAN VIEW DUPLEX JUST STEPS TO SANO
On Oceanfront Blvd., this duplex with a 2 and 3 bedroom unit
could be converted to a comfortable family home. Seller wlll carry
at 12.5% with 20% down. $475,000.
SEA VIEW PfUV A TE COMMUNITY HOME
This well cared for 4 bedroom. 3 bath home has Impressive city
and Catalina sunset views plus good assumable and seller
financing. $465,000.
LEASEHOLD UNITS NEAR BEACH
These two bedroom units carry owner financing with 20-25%
down. $225,000.
RESIDENTIAL INCOME PROPERTY
Leasehold, this duplex with 2 two bedroom units has seller
financing with reasonable down. Just a few steps to the sand.
$236,000.
SUBMIT ALL OFFERS-OWNER FLEXIBLE
Try AITD or trade on this 6 Bdr 4 Ba Harbor View estate with over
•;., acrel 2 frplc, skylltes, French doors. gorgeou1 pool, spa, Kol
pond and huge lot. $495,000. Open dally 1-5.
HARBOR VIEW FOR FAMILIES
Submit all offers on this 4B/3B contemporary home with financing
and fireplace. $310,000.
( ______ N_E_W_L_Y __ Ll_S_T_ED ______ ~)
' LUXURY HOME WITH 35' BOAT DOCK
lSpaclous ·~ Bdrm, family rm exeoutlve realdence on Trinidad
llsland, Huntington Harbor. Assumable 1st with additional teller ~lnanctng available. 1399,960.
NEWPORT OLEN-PRICED TO &ELLI
Juat 2 ml. to the Orange Cty aJrport, thla 2 Bdrt"I) tight & airy
upgraded townhome features additional den + UM of pool, apa &
BBQ. $120,000.
8AN JUAN EQUESTRIAN RANCH
, .. :TM Hunt Ckab" e bedroom, 8'~ bath horpe with pool, epa, .. ~.owe. a1.soo.ooo.
_______ H_A_R_e_o_R_R_l_D_G_E~~--J
"JODELLE MODEL" FOR 20% DOWN!
Assume $564,500 at 11 .75% on this 3 bedroom, 2'n bath
gateguarded home convenient to the Harbor. Newport Center and
airport. Residence features panoramic views of Catalina, Harbor
and city lights from large decks. $695,000.
"LUCERNE MODEL" WITH TERMS!
Seller will carry an AITD of $519,000 at 12.75% for an extended
term for a qualified buyer. Ideally suited for entertaining with
approx. 3050 sq. f1., 3 bedrooms. 3'h baths. large decks. 3
fireplaces and family room. Incredible views. $850,000.
"DEVONSHIRE MODEL" FOR TRADE
Assume existing 30 year $295,000 First at 13.25% Hxed or seller
will consider trade on this 4 bedroom, 3'h bath home with 2 large
decks, private yard, 2 flreplaces, atrium &nd panoramic ocean and
city light views. Seller relocation. $850,000.
MAGNIFICENT CUSTOM MANOR
Elegant 5700 sq. ft. home with French marble flreplace, Jacuzzi
tub and steam shower In the master bath, 4-car garage, Insulated
wine room, 3 addltlonal bedroom suites. elevator, full security
system. 4 fireplaces and much, much morel $1 ,895,000.
"CASABLANCA MODEL" WITH UPGRADES
Mirrors, celling fans and pavers accent this like-new 4 bedroom,
2'h bath home In close proximity to the tennis courts and pool-spa
area. Only $520.000.
CUSTOM HOME LOT IDEAL FOR
BUILDERS OR DEVELOPERS
Premium lot with plans for a 10,000 sq. ft. formal French home
with no houses behind or beside It. Create your "estate" that will
rlval all others. Seller must liquidate but will consider a
Joint-venture agreement. $1 ,500,000.
CUSTOM 8,500 SQUARE FOOT RESIDENCE!
Located on a lot that Is unusually large for this area. this
panoramic view home can be traded for residential or commercial
property In .Orange County or seller will carry at below market
rates. With 6 bedrooms, 7 baths, projection room, wine cellar,
family room & large kitchen. This home has It all! $2,700,000.
"EXPANDED" MIRAMAR MODEL
"Estates" 3 bedroom, 2500 sq. ft townhome with spectacular
ocean and nl_ght light views. Convenient to pool and tennis. Terms
with low down. $575,000.
LUXURY VIEW CONDO
Spacloua with 4 bedrooms, family room and 3 in baths. Lg deck
overlooks reservoir lake. $595,000.
( _____ E_M_E_RA_L_D_B_A_Y~--~)
COMPLETELY RESTORED TRADITIONAL HOME
Located on a large corner lot, thla 4 bedroom, 3 bath art deco
home hu a large patio with ape, custom landacaplng, family room
and full use of recreatlonal facilities. Try lease/option or low down.
$825,000.
$517,000 A88UMABLE AND SELLER WlLL HELP
Spectacular 2 bedroom ocean view home with swimming pool and
addltlonal Mfler financing. $6!50,000.
' WALKING DISTANCE TO RECREATION
Charming 5 bedroom. • bath hoJM In exclualve gat-.guarded communrty. 17'?0,000.
NEWPORT BEACH Call fo~ addre1M1
' -----
-rt a a a -
Call Me To See!
DIANA PIETENPOL-VOLPE Ill·••
R&"Mr.l< of Irvine
GE
GEORGE ELKINS CO
'"' '"'" 1-1 1111 IUlllU WAY, IPT IOI
Beautiful Wood & Glass Home On
Secluded St. Near Backbay. 3 Br's
& Convertible Den. Fabulous
Landscaping & One Of T..b~
Prf'ttiest Swimming Pools
Anywhere. And There Is A Large
Assumable Loan. Call Joyce Dabolt
or Don DeThomas.
lllllFICAIT PlllOI IHHT111
On Balboa Island's So. Bayfront.
With Pier & Slip. Incredible View.
Two Older (Island Cottages) On
Adjoining Lots. Outstanding Fanily
Compound, Or Superb Developer
Package. Jus Reduced $700,000!
Now Priced At $2,000,000. Call Don
DeThomas For Details. 759-9110
® ·--...... .,,.,.
75!-9100 u c..,... ........ ... .,..c..-
II. \H B( >B H 1.; \ 1.T '
OK FINANCING
21%HWI
South of the Hwy. in Corona del
Mar. Well built 3 bdrm. 2 bath
home on R-2 lot. Needs a little
T .L .C. Open beam ceiling,
fireplace, large back yard. Out of
state owner is asking $240,000 &
will finance at 12% interest due
in 10 years.
20% ....
Corona del Mar rental units
South of the Hwy. just a few
blocks from the beach. Currently
earning $1450 per mo. Price
reduced to $229.000 with 12 'h %
financing.
21% ••••
Ocean and bay views from these
beautiful R-1 lots in a quiet
out-of-the-way section of
Corona del Mar . Attractive
owner financing. $595.000 each.
Two lots left.
10% ....
Popular Bluffs "C" Plan with 4
bdrms. and 3 baths. Near the
pool in the newer Bluffs. Large
living rm. opens onto sunny
patio. Owner will finance for 30
years fixed rate. Asking $279,-
500 L .H .
um111 HWI
Well, almost anything. Owner is
desperate to sell this clean 2
bdrm. mobile home in 5 Star
Greenleaf Park, Costa Mesa.
Has attached carport and
encloaed sunroof. Asking $34,500
owner will carry the financing.
Anything reasonable will be
accepted. Adults onJy.
lft>tJSTRIAL BUILDINGS
10,000 "· "· West Costa Mesa divided into
tour 5,000 sq. ft. units tilt up
construction. Located on 1.4
1cres with ample off street
parking. $950,000 submit terms.
100~ Wiii
Prime corn er location on
Segentrom in South Santa Ana.
Nicely landscaped 4 yr. old Wt
up bldg. approx. 13,300 1q. ft.
wi t h 5 quality tenanu.
$1,040,000 excellmt tem\I.
17141 673-4400
12131 u•.2121
nt H..-.or A""'t .......
ht.Mf.ei.d .... hNlt c........,
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IPll llllAY 1-1
114 ...,..okl, CdM --.000
2121 lncllen lprln11 Lene, ••cit ••Y ---V\e om.t1o, Lido I•, N.•. "11.000 10I Twquo6ee. a.I le _ .......... -..... 000 1211 ~. N.•. _ ... -....... .,._,000
141 Cenyon lelend, N.•. ··--·--~9311.000
111 MenM .... " --···-· 9214.000 JOI 11th ltNet, '-nlneul• .......... tl1t,000
11M a.tenede Ton, lrYIM Totr tn0.000
alO .... -. CDM ...................... 11.000
1111 Kint• lltood, N.•. --···--·-.... ,000
411 CerMtlon, CDll -.................. =·-I001 King• Roed, N.• ......... '"--,000
40t Columbt41 Npt Cr"t -·-1341.000
Moe Clttt Dr. t,u --·-·--·-iUO,ooo tOI Horbof It.Or., on wet0t -· t1,'81,000
OCEANFRONT-RED Mll,000
lxa.ffont flnenc:lnt ev.a ..... "°'°"' v·u from thle outttondlna propony noot ell
tho ectlon. Wolk by Mm *· Ocoonfront
end coll tor dotoll• on thl• Dupln.
'f.1E1:tft1FUL GOLF COURSE VU
OWNER AllllTED FINANCING on that
tunny end unH with Vu from •YOt'J room. Wrop-oround dock, 2 bed. + 2V. bo.
lo¥ely don end luxurlou• meeter eulto.
Community locllltlH of pool, apa • ,_ ... 1211,000.
BLUFFS-WITH FINANCING
Upgrodod 2 ''°" condo. Four bodrooma, 2 YI bot ha, lemlly room plua Iorgo
oncloHd potlo. End unit. 1110,000. en-eeoo.
NEWPORT IS RED. S2Al,OOO
Appeollng 3 bodroome plut don coltoge.
Own0t out of .,.. end I• cM•POf•I• to Mtl. Wiii help nnonco. Drive by 404 40th
It. end catl for cktotla.
LAKE FOREST-BEAUTIFUL
NEW EX!
lmmoculato end totolly docorotod 3
bedroom ttom. cloeo to parka and tonnla. Woodey patk> and lown. Great ftntohlng S131,to0. 131-1400 .
VILLA BALBOA CONDO-VU
On• bedroom plu• don In • aocurlty
IMllldlng. VU Wiii not be obetructod. OWC
.financing ot 10% for 21 y..,.. '275.000.
DUPLEX-BLOCK TO BEACH
Two well-priced unite In • vocotlon Mtttng noor fun a 1un. Two end 1 bod.
unite with llropfocH. Now roof. Good
ftnonc6ng. *258,toO. ln-llOO.
DUPLEX-TRADE FOR BOATI
Newer 3 bod. 2 be. unit• with fl~ a
only elope to oceon a a.y. ANume 1at
T.D. Owner would Ilk• 31 ft. aotlboat ..
par1 of doWn payment. '350,000.131-1400.
LOCATION VUI LOCATION!
~ 2 .. tOtJ homo with cloM-up
VU of a.y, boata,-.n end night light-.
Entertain onfoyobly from thl• 3 bodt'OCNl'I, fomlly room plua privet• patio. OwftOt' noxtMo with good ftnencJng. Sllll,000 F ..
lend.
OVERLOOKING EMERALD BAY
Mogntnc.nt "whltowotor" oc:.en VIEWI
from thla cwt contomporory homo with
mo1tor eulto + 3 bedroom•, maid'•
quortore end 4 •At both•. Et.gone• end
wermth, gourmet kitchen, formel dining room. Motlvotod Hiier wlll corry Fire!
T.D. ot 10% lntorHt. Coll for dotoll1.
9151,000. 131-1400.
WATERFRONT W/LG BOAT SLIP
REDUCED $400,000
Prfftlgloua Uncle ls6e, eocurlty, tonnle,
ctubhOUM beech. Over 4000 aq. ft., w/4
bod. 4 be. + meld' .,..,..,.. lunkon wet
ber. Low .. t fWlce on lefOOft on LlftdL T1ko ower approx. 1550,000 In notff.
a.lier very mottvotod. Witt conaldor .. term• on belonco, Including trodea or
..... ,option. With c:aoh to loefta, wfM Mtl
for 11,115,000. Owner ••Y• "toke
odvontago of thlt •muat ..et' altu.aUon."
131-1400.
DUPLEX BY BEACH, NEWPORT
OM door to beech, In 9root condition with good tonontt In thlt 4 a 2 bod.
property. Somo VU. Flnonclng ov•ll.
1218,500.
NEWPORT TWNHME W/DOCK
Two •IOtJ 3 bedroome, 2V. beth• In o
quiet locotlon. Groonbolt vi••• end
lowoat priced In • wetomont community with boot dock. Good ouumoblo ftnonclng. 8320,000.
PENINSULA PT PERFECT
lmmecullta, odoroblo ttom.. Ju.t etopa
to bey and beech. Exc.tlont flnonclng on
thla 2 bedroom, 2 beth plua don, patio
home. Drive by 15" &i1t Ocoon end cot1
'364,500.
BAYSIDE COVE CONDO-VU
•••utlful docorotor coordln1tod
executive rotroot wftti wonderful VU of ••Y. boot• end night llghta. lold completely turnlthod Ihle 2 bedroom
home plut don end dining It poffeet for
tho dttctlmlnotlng. Thia WAf'ERFRONT community on.,.. boat allp •• .,...,._ end
pool. S417,500.
LIDO ISLE-55' LOT + POOL
Count11 kJtchon In thlt 3 bod. 2 be. on llrgo lot. .,.,,ec:t for ontortolnlng with
Iorgo patio end 40' poof. 1915,000.
BAYSHORES-BRANDNEW ~ 5 bedroom, temfl'i room, 4 VJ betha,
I cor ~. Mini a.y wtew from Uppof ckck end moat0t aulto. Cuetorn Cope
Cod. Buyer may flnlah decor lnalda. '725,000.
OFFER NOWI FOREVER VIEW-
REDUCEDI
Terrific locotlon •nd lorge homo with forov0t v'9w for onty ... ,500 on fM lend.
Or HChongo for Im..., homo or Income
unit• In thl• oroa. Lorge 2-•tory, 3
bedroom p1U1 "'ve tomlly room, dining room ptue I cer goroge. AllUfMblo loon.
Tonne noxlblo. ow ..... ,option.
LIDO ISLE -40' LOT
Now on IMftlet wlttt lunny lo4.tth patio
end remodeled ond now decor. fWdwood noor.. INdod ., ..... gourmet
llltohen In thl• 2 bedroom plu1 don.
''lood under morkot for qulcll ••••·
Aooum...._ loMa ond OW ~ --1411,IOO. ....,. • .._.
NORTH LAGUNA-VU
Trt-tevol, rom04Mtld home In a 1upor .................... eod ........
1 bodr...-.. ow "*It._.... a11,ooo.
OCEANFRONT--LAOUNA BCH. =rr:. ~ .. :.!..~.!~3 .... ,... ...... Al ntrae ..
..... , .... ....._ llrlotu lllFll a '°°'--
LAOUNA-fOREV•R VIEWS , ......... ....., .......... ..... _..a YU..._ c ... ......,.,., wood •1 .... with ~ft a bed. + fem.rm.
I -LINDA llLl-
WAftM a WONDUFUL
OlrMr ............... -., .. .. ••••relol, lnduatrl•I or ltolfto In .....,, .... IHotlM I lladroom, ,..,, .... ~ ...... °" ......... ded ....... Allllnl 11-.-
WATERFRONT ~toM[S. IM
HUI llltl" ...,_, .......... ,.._,t "---
......... _ft., au•-••• ~._._...... ...... ....
111-1400 ..,,....
s s s a 0 0 • 0 0 0 -4 • a;
Or.no-Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Auguat 22, 1982
WEST IEWNIT
4 bdrm & 2 bdrm duplex. 2
doors from w ide beach &
excellent surfing. The best In
rentals. Owner wlll lease back 4
bdrm upper unit year-round.
Make offer. $310,000. l'l l.Jll l'll\l1'H\t\'ll
Current Saleable Solution• JZ.
Tranaactiona Laot 30 Daya .!!.
1 Volume Laat 30 Daya 3.0 mil.
Lido Realty
673-7300
U~IVUI: tiC)Ml:i
. REALTORS, 675-6000
2443 Ea.et Cout Hlth••Y· Corona clel Mu
Ho.111 for S•le H1H11 fer S•lt ..... -----~ ·-------1............. .. .. . . .. . . .................... .
Daily Pilot
classifieds
work for
you. Call
642-5678
for quick
cash sales.
Im•• IH lni•• IOU ......•.•..•••••.•••••......•••.•.....••.•..
*BAYCREST*
12 ~ financing spacious executive rancn style home in prestige
area. This home features 3 brs., fplc, large lot & fee land! Lowest
price at $260,000 Call 759-1501 or 752-7373 for appointment to
view.
*DOVER SHORES*
This custom Ivan Wells designed home was built with executive
entertaining in mind. Quality throughout from the solid oak paneled
den to the mahogany paneled family room. Some of the numerous
features are: Sensational view of Fashion Island & ocean. pool & spa
w/outside bar, 3 car garage, complete security system and of courae
formaJ dining. To view the luxurious features of this magnificent
residence, call 759-1501 for private showing. $1.500,000 FEE.
*HARBOR VIEW HOME*
Monaco
Sensational 3 br home on quiet street w ith pool sized yard. 11.25%
assumable financing!! Priced at $223,950 fee. Call 759-1501 or 752-7373.
*$48,500*
TOTAL PRICE
For this smashing home in one of nicest parks in area. Two large
bedrooms. formal dining & air conditioning. Call for detaJ.l!!! 759-1501
or 752-7373.
* 113 FINANCING*
103 Down Payment
on this builder closeout!! Extremely spacious townhome f~turing 2
master suites & attached garage. Priced to sell now at $149,950. Call
759-1501 or 752-7373 for details.
•STIPS TO BEACH*
This sensational beach-cottage features an ocean view and sundeck.
existing 1st T.D. $110,000 is payable at $400.00 per mo. (negative
amortization). Offer ed at $165.000. Call 759-1501 or 752-7373 for
details.
*HARBOR HIGHLANDS*
Pool ~
Sensationally remodeled & decorated 4 br. home featuring swimming
pool, bonus rm, skylite, lush private courtyard, fplc., & assumable
financing. Reduced to $280.000 fee. For quick sale ... call 759-1501 or
752-7373.
*CLIFF HAVIN*
•OCIAN & BAY VIEW*
Unbelievable VIEW-from spacious 3 br home on extremely large lot
overlooking Balboa Bay Club & Channel. $675,000 FEE with great
terms! (714) 759-1501 or 752-7373.
*IASTBLUff +
When you takeover exi8ting loan on the elegan\ 4 Br executive home
that has been extensively prepared for entenainlng. One of few homes
in area on FEE LAND. 759-1501 or 752-7373.
NEWPORT BEACH OFFICf
2170 San Miguel Drive
Newport leach, CA 12HO
(714) 711-1101
G~
THE REAL
ESTATERS
9°/o FIRST YEAR
Assum able Loan
Custom Quality Homes in
Lake Forest in Orange County
From S255,000
2700 to 2900 Sq. Ft.
4 to 5 bedrooms
Selected homes feature 3 cu g.m111es,
interior laundry rooms, family rooms, kitchen
nooks. master bedroom retreat$, Close to ~c-hools,
shopping and recreation center .
S Y•'•< 1c,.n
Fully a-.um•bk unJrr curri'nl lr11 .. l•11on s. ... •all'\ ..,p,.....ni.tow> lor Jrl•ol>.
tn41710·400J
I 405 10 Lik• fol'<'.i '"" 10 Jr1on1mo Turn ngh1 10 1<1JK• l<••UI•
•nd lurn ldl
Broker Participation Invited
Gl -
*DESPERATE*
Owner says sell it!! He will finance this six year new home for
ZERO INTEREST!! 3 Br, 21h ba, plush carpets. ceramic tile.
parquet entryway, the wor~ $20.000 down and it's yours. Priced
$20,000 below market @ $139,900. 963-5671. 9032 Adams Ave ..
Huntington Beach.
REALTOR MURDERED
This could be the headline next week if we don't sell this spacious 4 br
home near Huntington Harbor. New decor inside. Seller moving out of
area. Asking $125.000. 9032 Adams, Huntington Beach. 556-7035.
*TROPICAL
*PARADISE*
You mu.st see this backyard to believe it: pool, waterfall. Koi pond &
malibu lights. The house comes in threes: bedrooms. fireplace and
ovens plus a wine cellar. Sacrifice: $185.000. 556-7035.
*ABANDONED*
Artist's chalet w/panoramic ocean view aH the way to Catalina .
Sacrifice price $15.000 below mar ket. 963-5671. 9032 Ada ms .
Huntington Beach. 556-7035.
$765/MO
Buys this charming 3 br townhome w/onJy $8.500 dwn. Bicycle to the
beach from superb location. 9032 Adams. Huntington Beach. 556-7035.
*TURN
A
FROG*
lnto a hand.some pnnce. Spacious 3 Br 2 Ba home wldble-a ttached
garage. Needs help. Seller anxious. Sacrifice $103,500. 9032 Adams.
Huntington Beach. 556-7035.
*53 DOWN*
Brand new townhomes near Huntington Harbour. Two and three
bedroom modet. with two baths. Builder will finance at 12.9% and pay
buyers non-recurring closing costs. Prices start at $105,990. Call for
complete details. 963-5671. 9032 Adams. Huntington Beach. 556-7035.
*OWNER DESPERATE*
Must sell this cozy custom home near the ocean in ''Old Town"
Huntington Beach. The soaring cathedral ceilings with 5 skylights and
the romantic bay window add grace and charm not normally found at
this price. Secluded patio/courtyard with low maintenance yard
completes the picture. Sacrifice for $171,500. 556-7035. 9032 Adams,
Huntington Beach.
•$45,000 TOTAL Fii*
Real Estate Licensing School. Walker & Lee Real Estate. (714)
963-5671.
*BELOW MARKET*
Thia Mesa Verde beauty la at least $10,000'low at $124,900. Cozy
country kJtchen, a brick fireplace, and fruit trees at back add up to
lm!siltib)e charm. 556-7035.
*NIWPORT RIVlllA*
3 br, 2 ~ ba, family condo located on greenbel{f A#OC includes pool,
tennis & clubhou.R. 759-1601 or 752-7373.
HUNTINGTON IEACH OfflCE
9032 Adame Ave.
Huntington leacl9, 'A 12Mt
(714)n.703I
• ET
I ' Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1982
EMERALD BAY
Best ocean view in all of Laguna Beach.
this superbly appointed custom homt• has
every possible amenity. Approx 5000 s.q .. 1t
features 5 Br. 2 bars, gourmet k1tt·h<:h. 4 Ba.
. 2 decks and gorgeous spa. This home• offers
a million dollars in financing $1,925.000.
WHTEH ESTATES llHLn H1-1234
$4~,000 No Qualifying
Beautiful Mobile home-near water 2
bedroom . 2 bath. $35,000 assumable loan.
13 'A%, $469 per mo plus lease.
OPEN SAT -SUN
700 Lido Park Drivt, s,act 22
875-2833
PRIVACY, VIEW AND CHARM
French Country cottage plus guest house on
estate sized lot. Completely remodeled,
park like grounds. 50 bearing fruit trees,
entrance courtyard, brick pauos. deck
overlooking the coastline. $4 75.000
TURNER ASSOCIATES
110111. Coast Hwy., Lacuna Beach
(714) 494-1177
DANA POINT HARBOR
THE ULTIMATE VIEW
LEASE or buy this beautiful pvt 3250' Tn
Home with its breath taking vu of the
harbor, coastline, mtn's, night lights. 3Br
3 Ba huge Master suite w /sauna, spa. Lg
oak gourmet kit w/nook. Security
Walk to Sch & Harbor, 20 mins rm Newport
Leo1e $1995 Sale $499,900 496-7009
LIDO ISLAND
This beaut. open & airy 4 Br 3 Ba compl.
remodeled homt' boasts 4 sundecks. indoor
jac In Mstr Br, greenhouse windows, spiral
s taircase, sk ylites + extensive hrdwd floors
& tiling throughout. Try sml dwn and
seller will carry back AITD at 9%. Very
flex terms. Owner will trade. $675,000.
Mary or Ken 644-9450 dys. 673-4371) eves.
JASMINE PLAN 4
Price slashed over $20,000 on this huge 2
story, 3 bdrm prestigious .Jasmine Creek
Home. Tennis, pool, guarded gate. fee land.
Priced well below market at $362.400. Open
Sun 12-4. 25 Mainsail. Corona del Mar.
Steve Wille Associated Realtors
581 -1100
DOVER SHORES
1441 Galaxy
4 Bdrm. Den, Formal Dining Hoom, 2
Fireplaces. 3 car garage plus large Hobby
Room. Pool Sized lot, beautifully
landscaped. Owner will assist at financing.
Only $420,000. Open Sat/Sun. 1-5
Nelson Robinson: Rltr.
548-5647
BALBOA ISLAND BAY FRONT
This magnificent 2 story Mediterranean
Villa with pier and slip is richly adorned
with stained glass, Italian chandeliers,
designer wallcoverlng, unique carvings and
fountains. A park-like piazza Introduces
this 14 room waterfront showcase. Offered
at $1,600,000.
AEGIR PROPERTIES 675-4000
.1!.. ---
l••••rf lttoll ll1ffs
SACRIFICE $210,000!1!
Make the down payment & m onthly
payments you prefcr & owner may carry
the remainder. Price reduced $25.000.
Beauuful model home. Won't last with
these terms. Call (714) 551-8185 ask for Rod
Surratt. Agt.
(714) 111-1111
203 BELOW MARKET!
URGENT SALE . Condo . 2
bedrooms, 2 1h bath. Excelle nt
location. $110.00. $12,000 down.
Payments $947.50.
TERRIFIC HOME
Prof. decor, warm 3 Bdrm, fam rm,
big kitchen. high beam ceilings.
fireplace. + a large private
manicured yard. A real value at
$375,000 and you own the land.
Open Sun 12-6. 1218 Keel Dr, CdM.
Patrick Tenore, RE/MAX, 631-1266.
THREE 4-PLEXES
Costa Mesa
Positive cash flow w/25-30% down
$219,000
Ken or Uz
646-3627 or 548-8785
ELEGANCE ON THE EASTSIDE
This beautiful home has it all! 3 BR, 2 BA.
huge master suite leads lo redwood deck &
private spa. Largl· family room wtth
atrium, 4 car garag(•. Newly d~-orated &
rt•modcled. Excellt•nt financing. One or
Easti;1de's finest. $197,500.
412 lroadwaJ, Cll
JACKIE GILLIS, REALTOR
831-1011 541-3110
CORONA DEL MAR
300 sq ft of elegance with Ocean View Crom
both levels. Some call it a mini Versailles,
we say its the best Jasmine Creek has to
offer. 2 yrs new Assume fin. Priced below
replacement cost of $440.000.
OPEN SUN. 1-6
32 Mainsail
640-1212 Owner I Agt.
......
200 FT. NEWPORT BAYFRONT
BOAT ON THE BAY. PLAY ON THE
OCEAN · Spacious open & sunny all view
home w/ panoramic decks. on huge prime
Island Point. + docking & prkg galore. +
you own the land. + owner financing. au
for $965,000. Open Sat/Sun 11-5. 4028
Channel P lace. Newport Island, N.B.
673-0202.
SACRIFICE SALE
New NeRie Gail Ranch Custom
Want to move up? 4100 sq. Ct., big house.
bag rooms. Luxurious home. Horse
property. hill top view, 4 car garage. See to
believe! Consider trade your h~me or ??'!
Open HouM Every Afternoon
26331 Sorrell Place (Off 8uclc1ldn)
JENSEN & CO. .
714/759-0706,_Afternoon 831 -6308
,, .. ,,. ,., ,,,, ...•.••....•....•..•..
~'fr.II. ~!A .. J.'.f I
ll•o•nl s Ir a d1n ,
oou11try ••VI• llOMI . ir~ dOOft. b1y win· esow., hrctwood llOOtt. ' frplo'•· wr; io-tot owe
lotll, 6% dwn, •Int looe-
11011 f 111,IOO F• land
8y OwMt 931-2134
HARBOR RIDGE .,., IHNJ 12·4
View of oeHn and city
llghtt 3 Bdrm, 2'i\ 81
pfua offlca 2 tr~
Jodelle MocMI ~uoed
10 $5115,000
3 ST TROPEZ
CUSTOM LOT
HARBOR HILL
Gr"I view of OG•an and
city Uohta. Wiii aubordl·
n•t• WIU bulld to IUll
BOB HALLEY, REALTOR CALL ~~55
601 LIDO
8th F'LOOH
Waterfront Condo
ADULTS ONLY
Spt'C.·Wc·ular V1t'w
$7119,500
Wm Cote, Brokt·r
IUllll llMI
If IWllll
Sharp. ocean view 3
bdrm, 2'n ba, aott ea.r1h·
tone decor, spa & all
other extras. $500,000 &
i_reat terms
~ 14)955-0177.
3 BA 2'n ba condo, ocean
view. Aaaume $140,000
1st TD. or leue option or
rent . $1100 m o
63 1-5661 ·------114r•, 1 latll
R-2 Fee Land. 'n block to
sand $195,000 lull pr
Fin $50,000 dn. Owner
may carry 1 S1 and/or
2nd All reas otters con-
sJdered. Prine only ........
Waterfront Custom Home with pier & slip, fee lend.
$975,000. 646-0523
Park Lido Adull Condo 3
Br. pool. near hospital,
beach. S 145,000. Owner
will help. Agent 646-1044
WlllT lU OHM
IN VERSAILLES/NEW
Securi1y, pool. Reduced
price ~a'use no really
reesl $120K. 631-29t8
BAY VIEW
1 hOuM from Bay on the
S.lboa Peninsula. Newly
decorared 2Bdrms. 1 'n
bl. 2 car gar. $195,000. MEL FUCHS hYlllH •• ....,
111-1120
l&YfUIT OllH
Outatandlng view loca-
llon, MC. bldg. 2BR 2ba
end unit. $4&5.000.
Ill! IAYFlllT Llltle Bel. Ille 3BR 2be
w/apl. Wiii conalder
trade on Bal Isle and/or
carry paper. $1, 100.000.
WALi Tl IUOI
2BR 2ba & den. Beaut.
condition. Community
pool, spa and .aeuna.
Good terms. $139.000
HOLLIS WOOD, ~L TR
875-8678
PllESEITS
FlllT IFmlll
or CdM duplex. next to
Begonia Park. Ooeen
Vlewt 2 & 3 Bdrm unl1t.
Attractive nnanclng.
WYllW/hr larhr
Forever view of ocean
and mountain•. 3 Bdrm
with spa & aolarlum
Open for excnenge: Fl·
nenclng available.
llAlllll YlfW
SOMERSET In great
locatlon • cuatomlzed
featuree throughout plus
pvt. gardens & decka.
For
BIG CANYON
OPEi HOUSE
11 .... ''"' .... ht/h1411
11 ..
3 BDRM -2'11BATH
Approx $235K uaum el
12%
$4i9,000 Owner/Bkr
21~1 .. 2111
MYll .. Ill
IAYFlllT
llJ • LHll "'· """" .... .. 401 ..... ltlr • ..., 4 Nttl ..... ...., ......
141-1111 141-11• ---• E8TATE.8 • 2 Bel, den M• brery, ouatom Sp•,
,ANTA8TIC VIEW. 1610,
000 (~) 16f.. 101• agt.
HOUSES FOR SALE
2 HDROOM
117 Marine, Balboa Island, N.B.
831-1•00 $254,000 Sat/Sun 1-15
.430 Catalina Or., Npt Bch
875-6670 $209,500 Sun 12-5
2308 Cllff Or. (Nwpt Hgts) NB
642-5200 $397,500 Sun 1-5
2 llR plua FAM RM or DEN
* 19 Curl Or, Jasmine Cfi<, Vu, CdM
640-1515/1-728-5151 Sat/Sun 12-5
7 Rue Cannes (Big Cyn) NB
760-.8333 S.450,000
15 Evening Song (Trtlrk) Irv
760-8333 $169,990
1123 W. Bay, Balboa, Penln. Bal.
Sun 1-5
Sun 1-5
645-4220 $275,000 Sat/Sun 11-5
14 Whitewater, Jasmine Crk, CdM
644-9060 $290,000 Sun 1-5
**827 Via lido Soud, lido Isl, NB
673-7300 $1,850,000 Sun 1-5
1829 Port Sheffield (HVHms) NB
673-7761 $299,000 Sun 1-5
* * 10 Balboa Coves, Newport Bch
644-6200 $495,000 Sat/Sun 12-6
124 Via Ithaca, lido Isle, NB
675-4562 . $645,000
3 BEDROOM
4832 River Ave., Newport Beach
Sun 1-5
675-2399 $184,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
314 Marigold, Corona del Mar
631-1'400 $669,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1536 Serenade Terr, Irv. Terr, NB
531-1.400 $230,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
307 Sapphire, Balboa Island, NB
673-5291 $365,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
2 Shoal Drive. Jasmine Crk, CdM
760-1900 $369,500 Sun 2-5
11 Rue Verte, Big Canyon, Npt Bch
213/470-2880 $499.000 Sa/Sun 11-6
2345 16th St., Newport Hghts, NB
642-2171 $245,000 Sat/Sun 12-4
36 Aue Fontainebleau, Nwpt Bch
644-0448 $599,000 Sun 1-5
* 1016 Dover Or., Westclltt, N.B.
631-7300 $255,000 Sun 1-5
*204 Via Eboll, Lido Isle, N.B.
673-7300 $595,500 Sat/Sun 2-5
1905 Yacht Puritan, Seavtew. NB
644-6200 $475,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
2753 Drake (Mesa del Mar) CM
5•0-1151 $12.4,900 Sat/Sun 12-4
*182.4 Port Stlrllng, Newport Bch
646-7171 $214,900 Sun 1-5
1903 Yacht Colina, Newpor1 Beach
644-1017 $485,000 Sat/Sun 12-5
**38 Balboa Coves. Newport Bch
675-7060 $525,000 ~Un 1-5
1218 Keel Or (Hrbr Vu His) NB
831-1266 $375,000-Fee Sat/Sun 12-6
25 Malnsall (Jasmn Ck) CdM
640-9592 $362,.400 Sun 12-4
16 Rocky Pt (Spygls) N.B.
760-8333 $1,975,000 Sun 1-5
2298 Redlands, N.B.
63-1400 $2.48,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
.416 Carnation, Corona del Mar
631-1.400 $569,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
2405 Clltf Drive. Newport Beach
631-1.400 $820,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
**748 Via Lido Nord. Lido lat, NB 6«-9060 Sun 1~
11 Rustling Wind, Trtlrt<, Irv.
S.U.9060 $235,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
870 Sandcastle, HV Hlllt, CdM
6«-9060 $312,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1883 Braemar Way, Newport Beach
759-9100 $365,000 Sun 2·5
818 Marlgold, Corona del M81
875-5611 $370,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* 10178 Durango River Crt, F Vly
875-1771 1124,600 Sa1/Sun 1·6
2&69 F, Elden Cotta M-.
e10-1111 $152.000 Sun 1·15
14 Rue Oeauvffte, Big Canyon, NB
831-7300 *598,000 S.t/Sun 1 ... 5
1301 Dolphin Ten', Irv. Terr, N.8 .
831-7300 *885,000 Sa1/Sun 1-<5
1211 K91 W•t, HVH"'-t.. CdM ......... ,0 $379,500-Fee Sun 1~
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT18uod1y, Auguat 22, 1882 F l
DIRECTORY
* 19-01 Galatea (Irv Terr) CdM
673-7761 $795,000-fee Sun 1-5
*512 Rockford Pl., Cameo Hghlnds, CdM
631-7300 $199,900 Sun 1-5
350 VIiia Nova (Coll Pk) CM
645-0303 $132,500 Sat 2-5
3 Vienna, Harbor Ridge, N.B.
644-6200 $475,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
#3 Valley View, Turtlerock, Irv.
731-7771 $270,000
*.426 Flower. Costa Mesa
646-7171 $209,000
2506 Fordham, Costa Mesa
646-7171 $129,760
Sun 1-6
Sun 1-5
Sun 1-5
*1.472 Galaxy Or. (Dover Shores) NB
642-2510 $739,000-fee Sat/Sun 1-5
261 1 Clrcle Dr. (Boyshores) NB
645-6218 $299,500-L/H Sun 1-4
4 BEDROOM
*21052 Indigo, Huntington Bch
962-0293 Sat 10-5/Sun 12-5
222 Coral, Balboa Island
675-6921 $539,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
943 Cedar, Costa Mesa
645-3000 $125,000 Sat/Sun 12-5
1589 Skyline, Laguna Beach
494-1177 $255,000 Sun 2-6
*21512 Camino Trebol, Lake Forest
870-1900 $216.000 Sun 1-5
1606 Mariners, Newpor1 Beach
644-6200 $239.000-Fee Sal/Sun 2-5
*1514 Ruth Ln .. Newport Beach
646-7171 $234,900 Sat/Sun 1-5
* 1901 Yacht Marla, Newport Bch
646-7171 $339,000 Sat/Sun 1-"
3 11R ptu. FAM AM Of DEN
111 Via Dijon. Lido Isle, NB
*2001 Galatea Terr. (lrvTerr) CdM
759-0840 $995,000 lee Sun 1-5
21.45 Miramar, Bal Penln
673-2282 $575,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* * 1036 Polaris, Dover Shores, NB
646-0523 $975,000-fee Sun 1-5
2100 E. Ocean Blvd .. Bal Pen In, NB
548-5655 673-2282 $675,000 Sat/Sun 1-!
4 llR pin FAM RM or DEN
30422 N. Hampton. Chrtr Terr, LagNlg
494-1177 Sun 2-5
* 1412 Santiago (Ovr Shra) NB
631-1266 $318,000 Sat/Sun 12-6
2709 Gannet Or., M898 Verde, C.M.
979-6099 $182,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
**1314 W, Bay Ave., Newport Beach
675-6670 $1,395,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* 1837 Seadrift Dr. Irv. Terr, CdM
&.40·5560 $478,500 Sat/Sun 1·5
2032 Swan Dr .. Mesa Verde, C.M.
657-2472 $205,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1 Warmaprtngs, Woodbridge, Irv.
8'44-2999 $345,000 Sa 1·'4/Sn 1·15
*8 Winged Foot (Bg Cyn) NB
780-8333 $795,000 Sun 1·6
11 Aspen Tree Ln, Univ Park, Irv,
875-2373 $225,000 Sun 1-5
4821 Gorh.am, Cameo Shoree, CdM
844-eoeo $789,000·F.. Sun 1-S
11 C~ HHlt, Big Cvn. N.B. ~9080 $1,005,000
*1878 Maul Clrctw, Cotta M ...
Sun 2-a
751-3191 S395.000 Sun 1-5
**319 Morningstar, Dov« Shre, NB
844-9080 F• • Sun 2..S
808 H•bot lelend Road, N.I .
831-1400 t1,4",000 let/Sun 1~
**5.42 Harbor lei Or, Prom. Bay, NB
759-9100 $1,200,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
11 San Sebutlan, Harbor Ridge
760-1900 $1,600,000 Sun 2-5
1441 Galaxy Or. (Dover Shores) NB
548-5647 $420,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
633 Bayside Or., Npt Beach
675-7852 $1 ,050,000 Sat/Sun f-5
12 Rue Verte, Big Canyon, N.B.
631-7300 $850,000 Sun 1-5
* 1244 Polaris Or., Dover Shores, NB
831-7300 $895,000 Sun 1-5
* 101 Via Florence, Lido Isle, NB
673-73,g<> $595,000 Sun 1-5
1118 Somerset Lane, Westcllff, NB
631-7300 $475,000 Sun 1-5
1530 Anita Lane, Hrbr Hghlnds, NB
631-7300 $299,000 Sun 1-5
1251 Surfllne Wy, HV Hiiis, CdM
644_.910 $275,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
213 Diamond, Balboa Island
644-4910 $595,000-Fee Sat/Sun 1-5
*14 Burning Tree Ad, Big Cy~. NB
644-4910 $695,000-Fee Sun 1-5
.434 Begonia, Corona def Mar
644-7211 $595,000
4931 Lorianne. Calif Homes, Irv
Sun 1-5
759-1501 $142,500 Sat/Sun 12-5
1007 Tiiier Way, HV Hiiis, CdM
644-9060 $3.49,000 Sun 1-5
18 Cherry Hiiis, Big Canyon, NB
6«-9060 $1 ,095,000 Sun 1-5
307 Carnation, Corona del Mar
644-9060 $850,000 Sun 1-5
2871 Bayahore Or, Bayshorea, NB
644-9060 $759,000-Fee Sun 1-4
1948 Port Chartee, Newport Beach
646-7171 $330,000 Sun 1-5
9451 Gateshead, Huntington Bctl
963-6767 $315,900 Sat/Sun 1-5
4 BR s>'ua FAM RM Of DEN a QUEST
*2211 Tustin Ave .• Newport Bch
646-8430 $320,000 Sun 12-.4:30
5 BEDROOM
**4028 Channel Pl., Nwpt ISi., NB
673--0202 $965,000 Sat/Sun 11-5
* * 708 Via lido Nord, Lido Isle, NB 67~161 $1,500,000 Sun 1-5
2912 Carob, Newport Beach
646-10.4.4 $264,500-L.H. Sat/Sun 1-5
5 BR s>'ua FAM RM Of DEN
*45 Royal St. George (Big Cyn) NB
646-7171 $895,000 Sun 1-5
*1«8 Galaxy Or, Dover Shrs, N.B.
675-2373 $995,000-Fee Sun 2-6
*3 Muir Beach (Spygls) CdM
760-8333 $2,295,000 Sun 1-5
2591 Bayahore Or .. Newport Bch
631-1.400 $725,000 Sat 1-5
3181 Madeira. Costa Mesa
673-3663 S 149,900 Sun 1-5
*35 Rldgellne Or, Harbor Ridge
760-1900 $2,650,000 Sun 2-6
3 San Sebastian, Harbor Ridge
760-1900 $2,100,000 Sun 2-5
*10 Hiiicrest, BIQ Canyon, NB
780-1900 $1,595,000 Sun 2-5
**401 North Star, Dover Shra, NB
5-48-1188 $1,495,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
4 Rocky Poln~ Spyglua Hiii, N.B.
631-7300 ~1.395,000 Sun 1-5
*#2 Winged Foot, Big Canyon, NB
673· 7300 $699,950 Sun 1-5
959 Sprlngfleld (M .. North) CM
645-0303 S 150,000 Sat 1...4
·~ 233 Via G.,,oa. Udo Isle, N.B.
873-7300 1675,000 Sun 2-5
I IR ptua ,AM RM Of Ol!N
•938 Via Udo Soud, Udo IM, NB
844--90e0 Sun 1-5
1 Iii..-'AllMI ot HN
*1408 Unooln Ln, 0oYW ~. NB
213/289-1128 *580,000 8.t/'Sun 1-6
*110 \lttta Tr-., Lido t•, NB
831-7300 M75,000 Satl8un 1-S
·-~
CONDOMINIUMS
FOR SALE
1 BEDROOM
*300 Cagney Ln II 107, Versallles, NB
831 ·2918 $120,000 Sat/Sun 11-6
2 BEDROOM
183 Monte Vista, Colla Mesa
5-48-5270 $137,000 Sat/Sun 1-6
•1736 Westclltt Or, westclltf, NB
673-7300 $119,000 Sun 1-5
100 Scholz Plaza Ph 10. Versailles. NB
631-7300 $259,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
*40 Canyon Island (Big Cyn) NB
642-5200 $219,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1973 Vista del Oro (Bluffs) NB
760-8816 $315.000
1640 Iowa St. #0, Costa Mesa
646-7171 $89,900
Sun 1-5
2 BR ptua FAM RM or DEN
209 19th Stree1, Newport Bch
631-1400 $3 19,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
3 BEDROOM
685 Vista Bonita, The Bluffs, NB
631-7300 $229,000 Sun 1-5
•2428 Vista Hoger, Bluffs, N.B.
673-7300 $124,500 Sat/Sun 1-4:30
3 BR plua FAM RM Of DEN
2645 Vista Ornada, Npt Beach
640--0020 $315,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
#7 Rue Vlllars, Big Canyon, NB
759-9100 $650,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
*2642 Vista Ornada, Bluffs, NB
759-9100 $209,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
* 1 Pandora (Irv Groves) Irv
642-5200 $139,500
25 Rustling Wind, Trtlrk Vista, Irv
759-1501 $269,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1984 Vista Caudal {Bluffs) NB
760-8816 $315.000
TOWNHOUSES
FOR SALE
2 BEDROOM
* 1099 Sea Bluff Dr., Costa Mesa
646-8190 $167,000 Sat/Sun 11-.4
9517 Bickley, Huntington Bch
963-6767 $99,900
MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
2 BEDROOM
700 lido Park Or. #22, Nwpt Bch
673-2633 $45,000 Sat/Sun
DUPLEXES
FOR SALE
2 -2 BEDROOM
2001 Kings Road, Newport Beach
631-1400 $395,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
4 BR plua 1 llR
132 South Bay, Balboa Isl, N.8.
631-1.400 $1,595,000
5 BR s>'ua 3 BR
509 Acacia (Oceanalde ol hwy), CdM
645-70.48 $4.40,000 Sat/Sun 1-6
HOUSES FOR LEASE
a llR .... FAM AM or D•N
1855 Port Kimberly, HV Homes. NB
759-1501 $1260/leue Sat/Sun 1-5
1730 Port Barmouth, HV Homes, NB
759-1501 $1200/leue Sat/Sun 1-5
CONDOMINIUMS
FOR RENT
2 MDftOOM .e Sum"* Walk (Nwpt Terr) NB
137-2888 $895 mo. Se 10-S/S 10-1
* Poof ** W1'*1rQnt * * * W1t-"Ont ' Pool
~==-~==:::.--::~====:::::::===:::;.::::===:;:;:::;;:;;;;::=;;;-; .;·.:...;· -;;;.;· -;;.,.;;-;;..;-;;;.:-;;..;-;..;· --~ -~ --....----~---~
,,,.,..... ... , -
n Or9n91 Ooat OAIL.V PILOTl8unday. Auguat 22, 11Uta
~~!!~.(~~'! ....... l .. !!~!.{tf.~'!....... P. ~ fl!t. l'-ft , ~ ............. Ma ~~'!ff.V~J1.1.aJ!~.':4'•• ~!ft.!!'/Mt}/!~l ~~flff.f,/r/,J.i!'!I. .. ~19.'1!t~}!.&!l!!.~t;4 A~~;":',~ A'i.:;;'!w ~.fftl~ ... l!M lll..t!llml1. ••• l.~ff 0~··,·i.~.·~~~ v·.;~·~,·,. . r1'-,,,,.. •• lh~r 9'!J1.!m ...... IM1 !m¥. ........... l1.u ~wnt.fft!~ ... 1~1 ..,.., , ......... r1~.t •• ·······~······· ............. . ... .,u= I ~i4'o{/'r"'du,IH, ... tlldt , "' ~·· utll LUlllll ,..,.,... '"' #1rrwt ... ,. '11 ,, __ ,..... HM ,_ aWliltnOanltnt, ' Winter 1160 up, 7110 Incl, yerd, pet ok . Deoot9tot :I IA 3 la llO •••••""• r'l't. .... o .... ••••-l'oo••••••••••••••• '"°'""'1 ••••••••01.'eTf 1&.•n .... ,. en-Super terrn1, owner down, 1 1, 2 11, lrpl, ~/mo. M. Crow Aot. 3 Bdrm ~t.ctltd hornet Canyon oondo, ovetloo· b Hllftff ltwlM 2 81 ta.., ttiJi,.._,
You own tile land. 2,000 San Clement• prldt 01 648·1771 ger. M0--4 111 645 ... 3111 Of ~2•1413 In ••oetltnt 1r11, Av111.. Icing 9ott oourM. Av111. 1.,. bill• 10 -b-•acli, 2 poo1, No l*L 201.n..
1q fl. 38r, lam rm, 2~ ownerihlp, modem a.,.. 1.-,,._..., ,.._ bit l mmtdllltly . 9/171 . 541..oe32 bdrm• 2 b• •Plr•I _.....,_BAU .t:i3 w. ley, 5<4 ti
Oa. Wide Gr_,ti.lt. nett nllh tlVlt <4 unit ip• • .-:'lll":le'it~Jt'TI'U.:'r.':T BIAOH CQTTAOf Ml!8A Vl!RD!·Hr. 21a. HOO/mo on,J year INH. N ...,.. a /b bbll •ltltt 'skytlghll ino ~.u pool. Fer Otlow marktt houM with OOMn•hlll• 6 E·llde C.M. Trl-91ex, Ml>· air tba, blk to bHCh, IHO mo. l•I 6 111 + MO l'lve oth1rl1 to ohooH r rm k{ u e":J flrepl.cie Patio •P• ..,c APUMITI 3 Br 2 81. frplo, yerd,
'246.000. Wiii le&M oC>-golf OOUtM vi-, Clo .. IMl..-.d. 111,000 0roH. •av1ll 8ept I. '860 wtnttf, OtP No Cllt/lg doge. from Wt'ra the C>nN to 0C~~-~LSl°95o.331<4 Qttl(lt S1200 jw mo Bllutlh.lllY land1oaped '-e~·.S:.~!1':,~.
tlon.Bllr ~63&a to everything, only 3 11•1 .000 . Jt.1.Gly. u111 pd Av1118.t5.76t·3&42 callfori..... e13.t138•11ttr8 , ~•rdenapi• Pootllpa "4211/mo ........ -_...
N --·"" " '" ' ' ~i \\b\~hrldnt wuhtr/dryer, o ct1n Lrg. yrty. hilt bOt to bch. 1 "'°"" 151..QOO yt1r1 old I eflow1 1111• \~·111·2117. 1181'"• ., IR 1 I t Vd• g 81tS>t 10 Ml\d. 2 Br. I Ba. overed parking No ...
llMlllD
SEAVll!W • Elegant l c harming Hampton
model, febulou1 v1ew1,
deoor, 1p1, pvt comm
w/pool f. tannl1 tecllltlN
$486,000 Open HOUlt
S11/8Un 12·6 . 1803
Y•cht Colin• &A-4·1017
IWI Nft owner """"' Income property. No 3 Bdrm I llngi. monthl)t oar, pet OK, 1830 mo. ,, br, j••· 1820. 1 rm J ba pet•
occupy 3 bdrm., 2 tMlth down or very amalt rent. Sltl)I to bt1oh. Xe2•402.5d~e 1, 6<40·UOO RU llU view. l73--0S<47 132 • lndry, 111, lut, Pl Bech. 1<416 1326 • S'ecntlor apt, m ~lpt)'p~c::::"&~n~:h~ down PIUH call, 21a1285·31107. ,. cs.p.nopet1e73-9327. 1Br $470 E 211t.C.M.AfctB•O.
other 3 apartment• lor Sh•wn, agt 11 5'1·21111 2131310·5.tH, wkdyl Loaded 3rm lWllroploal SS l ·:t-OtMI UIJlllff Liii "I" 2260 Vangu•rcl 6-46-6509, MM 03
213/817-3&86 patio, cozy tcltoh9n 1320 If~ imnu P~•1 .lntnt <4 BA. 2'A be. 11300/mo l!•r .. , ,,J #u 3112 640·9820 or &A2~906 •lea --11~;:~~ :e1~:v!'1~~:~ ~·,;;· h·::. 1a~·e~pt~~808 IOUIPlllT/P••· OC·AENTAL8 750·331<4 Ava II Sept. 8 Oya, r~OCEANSioe'oF°Hwv·· Spacious 2 Br 1 81 SA25 2 BR 1'-'~a.'.:':11o. no
houund• ol clolltrel monthly Inc, ptebl9m 11 2 •IOI')',• Br. 2Y. tM1tt11. 6p110. 3Br, 21• townhou-1 to 5 :ci~!'.1.~•rtlng 11 :!!21~!5: t¥1/wknd Allracllve bach w/W/O, 3 e r 1 '.-t Ba $4 7 ~ p1t1. $626 1552 Elm.
REDUCED "lllng price mg mt and gen cond, dining rm, glint lcrMn M, lfPlc, rntcto. 2 cer 0., I&&<> 10 11200. av111 9/1 $400 per mo ~:8u~~;/ t~·7~M poo 1_8_•e._3_8_21 _____ _
of 1295,000.00 11 WI)' SA500 plu1 elbow gr.... TV, '10t lub, mOd. kltot\. 2 w /opnr 1780/mo. Avail CHARM; Exp1t1dtd 5 er Incl utll 875-8081 • • Spaelout 2 SlOfY 29'1 11; naRIPIO LllTIH BELOW current ~lee. tllrl•UP n .. d.o. Tim oar encl perking. Av1ll Sept 1, 5•8·3271 I 3 car gartgt. HVH. Ja· C11t1 ""' J1Z4 Ftraplace. p ool. Ollh· BA, l)OOI. pvt, patio. W ·
Out1tandlng lrg ltmlly menl 0011111 Prlnolpa 1• 1_2_1_3·_•_2_,_.1_,_00 _____ 1_S_ep-'---t-1_5_, _8_7_5·_7_8_50 ___ 1Eaatlld• houH 3 br, 2 ba. I cuul, loedtd 1111/lrtnch •••••••••••••••••••••• washer, pv1 patio )( LO port, children OK, no
home. Pool/Spa, Redu-ONL VIII Call owner II 20% DOWN wlll buy 3 trl· Elegant woma: '4Br, corn, 2 ctr ger. w1 lndowe. lk y011'~~ 13. S<440/ut111 pd, 1 br. up•· 0 er den 2 B r 1 580 PETS, 1475/mo. 23 tO
Ctd 98K to 1379,000 ,., 1<41.. ..2 a 1 •1 PIUH In Coe I• Mtll, pltlt view, glled com-S800 mo. 6<48·35e 1. I 1600/mo. 84 • • talr1. elo .. 10 beach, Iota 557 ·28<1 l Santa Ana ,..,. e.46-3017 Owne< m•y leue/opllon.. •• with 12% tnumablt munlly 14500/mo I 833·2237. ol wndwa, buu1 1un· or 213-375-8107
2.t06 Fr1ncleco. NB. Opn ·-J lo1n1 & s 1&00 POlltlve 780..a<l99 E'alde. 3 Br 2ba, f1m rm, ILIPPI ··u Mii • .Sept 10. 8'42·5027 ... ~ $395/ 8 a. Sun 1·4. John Cuey, -• ••• . 1111 '83, l~n neer brMJI llvlng rm, .._, dlnlnfc rm. -W'W.::.~1 -=-a mo. 1 r. 1 .... ert-
Bk c. JI,,'. 1,11 0 I b 2•97 E d TownhOUM 3 Br. 2'/\ Ba. •••l/•ill• . clad gu1g1, lndry rm, r. , ••• '!f •••••• !......... evocenc. w,,e11 IOC& ·s'tdc 'pine. .... H u.i.11111•~ r 118 y " an. UllLY .,.,. Piiio/ yard. lfnell l)tl ol(,
1800 mo. payment for 0 age au, ,.·••••••1••0••••••·,~~:. 1900• e..2•2191 =~~~o 844
•
8138
' ••• ~~! .•.•.•••• .1.~~9 Beautiful gatdan epte. av .. Sept.
2Br,2B1condo.9'hY.VA GSI 6'4,800. Owner wlll •t1' ,..,. 3 Br 2'/\ Ba, nHr new, ttS23~M1111et\..,fMJl.te Quiet Junior• & 1 Br Patloi/docka, Hall p1ld TSL Mornt &42·1803
REALTORS 673-7771 lo•n. asking $94,500. sell II 10 x oron. Call •••••• .. ··.;···,·,··L·.······· lane ~erd. treea, 2188 rv .. w . "" "~ om UTll/IOW VI From S376. Pool. rec NO pets 2 children Wei· $550/mo. 2 Br. ,.,. ea.
A euH•dlorr o• u e A . Inc 601·3380 754-8993 (Prln only) Ii Miner $750. 8'40·5010 Woodbridge-on Iha lake. 2 maattr bedrm. tUltH, rm . sauna. encl1d ga-come TownhouH, balcony, ln-
UNITED BAOKERS 1
-----'--------1fl•I• AJli J'llO 2 Covington •·PlaKH, 1op Year1y.wee111y.Wlntar, 2, Large 4 bdrm, 2 ba, tamlly Executive 3 bd, 2 .,., ba. deck•. •P•. all utru. rage. 17301 Keeleon off 2 Br 2 Be S585 dry rm ~r P<>rl 111 I>"·
----+----·I •••••••••••••••••••••• 1oc. Nr So. Cat Plue. 3,4 Bdrm•. home, llv rm, flreplaet, Many Exlf .. I $1400/mo 171& mo. 964-3480. Sla1er 842· 7848 398 W Wiison 831·5583 Ins Avail Sept. ·
YE.WWI 2 Br 1 Ba. lrg lot. contact Greetly recluotd·prlee & JlOlll RULn blt·ln etect llltch, tamlly I ea 1 e . 5 5 2 • 9 6 • 9. LM /Opt or Nit or traela. 4 HTIR LlllH Large 2 Br 1 Ba. wltH TSL Mgmt 8-C2·1803
Elsa, agt. 751·3191, down, 180,000 c•n PllOP rmanachedto2car~a· 551·2193or987·8857 Br 3b1 Ocean vu d/ 1 nd m· Deluxe 1 bdrm Condo 662·2411 handle. OWC 11 12'IO. . Beautiful ptrl1·llka aur· garage, w, au ry r · 530·1540/mo. 2 Ir. 1 la.
Penihouae. Security r Ii IAAA Agt. 846·8100: 549-1366 raga Fenced yd. w lh 1 BR Orangatree condo, 555-<>511• 54•·2110 rounding• Terraced I s49s 1 11ory. •hag Cfpt, drps,
p I b •• • .,_ MllAIEIEIT p1n'c'1'·0d· 8Wla~:r25&mgoll.d$~ by Iha l1ke, pool, tennlt, -··· YI"'"' pool Sunken gas bbq. Al&O lrg 2 Br 1 Ba. $490 pallo. lrplc. beamed<*· ~~~~·a. ~fn't ~rnain~:~g: ••••f'inrciiiiii•• .. s22.ooo deprec1et1on de-lla..1113 See. Pet~n appro~ Avl 9/7 1460. 875·9229. Oelu~ 2~e, 2ba. sparkling 1oun1a1ns ~ell 9·1 645·8626 Unga, encltd gar1ge.
S135t< or beat offer Call • ductlon tor 1982. East· Drive by 309<4 Yellow•· Exec 3rm, w/pool sp11 frplc, deck, gu Sec Spacious rooma. Sep1.1 Don't wall only 1 large 3 TSL Mgmt. &42·1803
for apt Sat.sun 1.5' PM. 2 Bdrm, 2'J~b1 , low aide C.M. 5 Units. 3 yrs tone (oll Paulerlno) ~ kllch. nr '"'""' ••10 iate. Adulll. One ror rate dining area. Walll·ln Br avail wllh 2 Ba .. pa. IBR S380 ulil paid,·~~.
631.506• down, 10\1,% llnan 8\1111, Old, delu11e 3 Br. 2 B.. HELPI Reaponslble cple. · •• , ..., cloa~t• home Ilka kllch 1 1 1 1 ~ .. 957·0701 Agt by appt. O -RENTALS 750·3314 8 2 5 . on a S 5 8 5 -~. • t o, n qu et area, 1rge porl laundry no per• Call Rich Owntr/Agt. Break even w/S75.000 13 yr Old boy, cat & dog 844•8722. 55t.8822 or en & cat:>lneta Walk to pooL $875. 845-3381 or 383 'w Bav s:.8•9516 ' PlOElfTTIR OllH 96'4·6171 down. S38<4,500 SP. need house In "Old Lro e~ec. 2·aty home nr TURTLEROCK EXEC . 2 8,.2•8808 Huntington Center. 575.5949 ,
&est buy In Back Bay. OfLll IHJ •-tilt 631-45t6 Huntington" area, H.B. So. Coast Plaza. 4 Br 2'h m1tr1, den 2'i't ba, leroek 1----------1 1Bdrm·lum.1505 ----------1
Near new 2 bdrm, den, • -1----------1 (Weat of Adema. South Ba avail 9/1 1795 Hlghlanda baa t deco-3 Br 2 Ba. comm_ pool 2 Bdrm-furn from S605 PINE BLUFF APTS D••• l•i•I 3111 ••••••••••••--••••••••• 15 Units. C.M. $<40,000 dn B . . -. u , 11195/mo 631·1268. 2 BClrtT··Townhou·-lurn 1 Br wllh loll. & 2 Br. 2 •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Vr ba. Reduced to .. ,L1·11 a,.,, equals ... of evlatlng of Beach lvd). Approx. Blomgren Alty, 780-9355 rated, 8' spa, S1695/mo.. , -11 t 2 BR 2 8 .. ~A>
,., • .. , '' ft 1800/mo .. rent or laua/ 90 831-27t 1 Fred Tenore, trom S675 Ba Child otc , on the ecan • "'• ....,. sow18n9er'.950!>o·.91201~2· loan. FNS.11 ''" p1ttnerahlp.$18,000de-opt1on.Raf1.5S8-9832. Eaalaldecleanolde<2Br.,_1e_a_S6_.8_5_1_·_22 _____ ... I I I 61ull& patio view lrplc port. enc yd S525 .. •• • ••••• •••• • • ••• •• • •• preclatlon dilducllon for • 1 Ba house. $526/mo. •v•· No pal a, Ulll ties ree . ' ' ' 5 4 2 3 5 9 7 A f t e ---.-.-,-,-.-.,-,-,---i 12x80 Champion, carport, 1982. No puroh-coats. No pets. 548·88&0 £•,.••• •-,..,L Jz·~i 3 BR 2'h ba OPEN DAILY ' LA QUINTA HERMOSA encl gar gas stove, dis· 730 7 ;tl5 '
patio. awning & ulll 1hed. 631·4516. llmllllll OI. -•• , 427 8. Weatmlnater Av• .. 1 16211 Parkalde Ln, 1 blk nwaaher. spa. lndry rm •
3 bdrm, 2'!r ba Monaco. 2 br, 1 ba, llv rm, l(ltchen. USY MOIEY Hou .... Condos. Ple11n, 2 Br 1 Ba Eaatslde re-• • •• ••••• • •• ••••• •• •• 11100 mo. 83 t ·5681 w . of Beach, 3 blks S. ~~~~mo 83 I ·6107 B••li•1I•• 1599,000. 8-C<4-0U8 partly lurn. Adult Plfk. Apia .. All prices. dee, Ip, ~nc gar. ~ear EMERALD BAY 3 Br. 2 ot Edlnget ... 847·5441. IH1i 1141
•••• RIHE Seniors pref. No pet1. c•n be had 11letu by 11• -11 yard. older people pref. Ba. lrplc. brick patio with MW FllllT ., 1.. L 37~111 Newer 2 Br 2 Be No pets •••••••••••••••••••••• -X , •-v• 645·2423 s P a . S 1 5 o o . 2 1 3 I S •frtNt IC• v~ s 1 . WllPPl.1110 2 bdrm lux. condo In Int location. See at purchasing thete exclu· · 878_2255. 3 Br. 2 Ba. yearly. 1000. ••••llr•••••h ••••••••• Avail appro" apt st.
gated comm. Great 11• 2119 Tustin Ave, COall slvaa: LUXURIOUS Xtra Nice 2 9 ,_ home. Br 2 ea, ocean ••u, 58r.28ahouaeWlnter $450 760·1418 or I & 2 Br Discount on
nanclng. $399•900 Mesa •n back. 4·plt11. Nwpt. 359K. •--------•I $6501 clda sl rellg • S850. THE 548·8675. some models. Pool, Spa,
.. ~ ... /' n ove, r 8 1825/mo ... rch Beach ••5 3••7 640..9605 86 Owner, exlra wide, SMART 15 unite. E/Slde ,,., & utlla. 648·'4102. " .,.. -.... I Large 1 Bt 1 Ba_ dsh'"l', G Y m . S • u n a ' e 1 c .
b /., bile h I C.M., 720K. CHARMING Drive y 1811 Bayside 1----------1 Hg IS . Av ll 11 9 I 1 F I I II I Cl m ca port W/ 846-0619. IEWPIRT llllm a ena. MO ome n board & care home, Or Avall. Sept. 11t, 3 BR LANDLORDS/REALTORS 833-9212 all 3PM_ or ease or eeae op on. ''GOOD I n ry r • r ------~--
Brand new 3 Bdrm 2 ba, Bay. Pvt enclsd patio/ 631•53840 752• t920 w/lam doe · · mo-d 8 ra 8 Es T Ree I I y Modern 3 Br. 3 Ba. pano-yard. echool1, shopping 645-6625_ 2br, 2 ba, blt95 lido Park on Newport 185K. Bob Scott, bkr, k 13000 Fasl tree tenant prov1.1----------$1500/mo. 5 Br .. large I side $390 Avail 8-11. Deluxapoolalda)(tralarge
fam rm, 1 story home. garden & pvt bHch & CdM/Qcean Bllld 539•6194 ramie ocean/ coast view nearby. Agent 648-1044. LIFE'' 2 bdrm. 1,11 ba Fireplace. Av1aJI 9115. nice eree 3br High walls w/elec. gala. clbhse. Walk to Lido VII· l 'tl .. Cetta ••u 1 S890/mo. 213/378-3119, For lease.· Harbor View Dishwasher. pllv patio. 2 llba 2 ur gartgt. frple Maximum privacy. Low 1age_ Ample prkng. $39, Incredible ocean v ewe, STUDENTS UNITE· Party $650 Also 2br 211• $550 maintenance. Seller wlll 750. w/assumable ,26, 8 units. All 2 bdrma./ old Ume elegance, 3 BR. hse 4 Br batlc decor, OCEAN AN 0 WHI TE Hom .. 2 Br. & Den. 2 Ba. . Gar No pets. $520 mo 1st & 1811 558-81U
finance w/low Int. rate. 0 0 0 10 8 n 11 1 l '/. Owner will call financing. lge lam home. S1895. appls. big fnod yard, fair WATER VIEW 13 sun· trplc, shutters, new paint, YEAlll·ROUNO FUN: 543·5478 · ·
$2<45,000. 675-5552 Callagent851·1217 money BEST lee decka,3bdrm,21'ba.2 commty pool & lannls. Social Acllvllles 2 brapl,N.E slde,feneed2 Br. 1 Ba. Mlnut•lrom JIU 11 .. St IW n . 4-PLll Balboa 1at1nd/Vlew 539-6190 lrpc's $1125 Mo plus water paid. $1200/mo. D 1rec1 or • Fr a e front. cul·da·sac, qulal ocean. newly pelnted,
1, .. hi i., 22, ~~C.t~!!f'!!!:r •• /.~~ GOOd financing avail. Charming 3 BA & den. Coste Mesa Charmer. -;.9~~~~5;,0;31.1188 840·8189 ~r~n"c~•~Jo·s· $525 mo. (7t4)594·1661 $485/mo. 720-08<44 or
Duple• on Iha .. ftd 301h T 1 C & C Furnished, 3 car gar PtMn•• Ptl-" eves 720·4691 12-4 ~· · ayor, row o. Close 10 South Bey. orpld, 2 Br. 4 lamlly HARBOR OCEAN FRONT •• Par11es•Plua F S '0w at. NB. Newly rem<><Mled 8'42·1423 845-3178 $2200 mo. yrty. riome. Singles fine 100. . 3 BR 1v. ba. dbl gar. encl much more WESTUIE YI' 1 ••E WALK TO BEACH: Bach, or ale By ner In end oul. 3 br., 2 t1a. Waterfront Homes, Inc. Kleis OK $4.tO. Move Nu 3200 lux hm on blutt. sun porch, loads of prl-1 0 RE A T .._.. stove & relrlgt, 8H £ upstairs. 2 br., 1 ba. Triplex Ealtslde C.M. 6!5'·1400 now. Info 180 deg. vu ol harbor. vacy. AgL 875·3890 REC R E AT I 0 N : t & 2 Br apts avail . water peld. S30 Imo LOVELY downstairs. Min. 10% Owner will carry, great •539-6194* surf, mtns, 3br. 3ba, ev1/wknda 11200 mo. Tenn I s• Free pool, spa, lndry rm, no 536·7979 down owe balance at tax shelter. 642-5431 1ecurlly. sauna, spa. lessons (pro & pro pets, lmmed occupancy. ---------
OCEAN VIEW 13.9'/o lor 5 .,.1, Great fOf' Mark ... L..... 'tlu' 3.-$475 3 Br. 2 Ba. duple• $1995/mo. 498-7009 Pl"'lR p••r 1 Br S.440·$450 2 br. 1¥. ba nr bch. Sept. ,. ,_ ~· ._ h 1 h 1 " -shop)•2 Heall h 2 ·B s51 5 1 Clean. Patio. bale. sumfTlar ran1111. $735, Wh /tu laJ1 JM v•t•;;;;;C .... ;b•••••• es crp ·' t ru·OU . up· cean view 2 Br 2 Ba, TOWNHOUSES: Weal· Clubs•Sauna• Call fo. r app.t. $-450. Tim 842-90<40 Ytrulllff 0..4t 000. Arml1age Realty. ••••• .. ••••••••••••••• r Y • ute r, gar., graded decor. shady 1800 I I I bee h aide. H d
2 Bd 2 b T I I lly 714-544·248-4. ANEST VIEW Pr kg . Na a r w a I a r ' yard, kids line. Sm lee •1 s1100'1'm"o'.eposarroe11. Rea/· 2 mstr bdrma, 2'i't baths. SY romassage• TSL Mgm1. 6'15-81221eachelor apt. turn or uni. rm, 8· aaeu IN RANCHOC•LIF. 875,..000(Brett). BEST. Othere avail. w1mmlnA•Goll and completely fur·o1derOuple11near45thst. "' 5396190 Max759·1221 washer, dryer, refrlg.I DrlVlngRange 2Br l'l>Ba,nopeta.$450 u 111 pd, non amkr, ~:~;.ed. 30 vur llntn· ~~·r.31~l·b~.b~o~:::::: ~u':'~~:i-=~~~t~ .. ~ ... g .J JZOl MAK~ IT YOURS $350. A 10UJ1 VIEW r:;m1, 2'h batna, kids :::111°/J :~TLS : 11°~t/sf.8~:g.':soi 55 w.:--:°-l-:-~-~-B-EA_C_H_· _B_ec_h_, $211,000 Wiil sell 85 11 tor s7oo. miles from center. From •••• !, .. t.f.......... whole houH, eat In kltch, Redec. 3 br. 2 ba. 2 trpl, ok. pet maybe. John s 1ng1e9 , t & 2 BAY TIMBERS stove & relrlge. 811 utlt•
Please cell Mona Che-000 or will build 10 ault $80,000. 20% down • eavlront minus 30'. 180 big lncd yard. Kida pets $1150 mo. 1422 Tetrece Marlhall, Agt. 631·2242 Bedrooms•Furnlshed Spacious t Br lrplc,pool Pa 1 d . $ 3 5 0 / m 0 •
shire 1orS875.000&up.(P1•n• owe 81 t2%. 752·2550 deg. vu, gourmet llllch .. welcome Sm fee at Way 780·8376. BAYFRONT CONDO: & Unlumtshad•No & more. 646•9883 535.7979_
Cheshire R.E. 759•1877 & approvals obtained) .... ,. Dlurt 1 or 2 Br & 2 Ba, furn/ BEST call S39-6190 North end 3 tlr. 2 ba, walk BHul. view. 2BR 2ba, Pet&•Modals Open ---------
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Ar m I t a g a R a a 11 y J / / •~H u n fur n . Yr I a a I a NEAR BEACH 3 br 2 ba 10 beecil. $800 mo. Peg Sec. bldg .. no children or d!'llY 9 lo 6. Nice 2Bdrm 2 ba. Most I br, lrplc, pv1 petlo, pool, 714-5-44-2484. .,_, .., $1350/mo . Wi nter R 9 7578 t l1S006758876 0 k ..I ulllpd laundry, walk·ln cloH1. WW Tl 111111 •••••••••••••••••••••• $950/mo Opn Aug 29_ condo. gar. pool, tennis, Allen. ltr. 4 .. . pe •. • a woo. $525/mo. 548--0477 quiet. S-460 mo. Del•·
Newport Shores lee land Ct•lltf1 Wll lllSATlll&L. .... 673·0'433 or 556· 1610. $900 mo. 873..()872, £ .. u, Ml•••I 3ZSZ Harbor View 5 Bdrm So· lar4H NEW BREED APTS ware Pines, 8-42-8807
1 _ 3 Br 2ba new cpl. CIY911 ISH 2 Br 2 b4 ·Unique! Palm Crnr 10th/Bay. RUIS ••'•••••••'••••••••••• m8fM1 w/pvt back yard P:iios dbl 0 ·Asam..:. •••• -.,,~·•••••••••••••• Oeaert $132,500 F'h: Eaa1Slde 38r 2'nba Niguel Shores pvl comm. and remod.ied features. &,ut.tllft 16R & LOFT. Frplc, rec B••li•lln
bl 1 i 12238~ u 6 graves In Pacific View 1-~711 Winter rentals. quiet Ba). townhouse. Nr pool & 4 br & family. 2 ba, Avtll $1600/mo. Bkr 11.,.,t ltM•lle. room. pool. Jacuzzi, gas1 B•tH•t "41
a s 1· l .. 1.ll1 Memorial Park. SOid out '/,share ••ammoth condo, boa loc. 3 BR 2·~ ba. tennis. Available now. atrium, 3 car gar. Pvt 759..()819 880 Irvine & water paid. No pets •••••••••••••••••••••• r section of Vista def Mar. ... new hme. S975 mo. Cute beach & rec center 393 Hamilton, C _M Bactielor Condo. Step• to
l!l!IJll•• .. lll!!ll 1550 each, sell 2. 4 or 6. walk 10 1111s. Mountain-1 BR & work rm, turn, $725/yrly John Marsh•ll. S 2501 759 1485 Blul11 3 bdrm. 2 be. gOOd (at 16th) 645-4411 sand. Flreplece, D/W,
968• 1895 after 8pm, back -Beal project In $600 mo. 873-5369 Agt 631-2242 1 mo. • locatlon, greenbelt. (714) 645· 1104 De 1 .. i e 1 8 R u P"ar 1 relrlg. S365, 1 yr IH.
673 ,.5 9 bef -.... Mammolh. Prof. decor. C lrg 5 Br home w/ocean, some view $1150. ,,..., .. ltH"/•-u .. • 213/592-3171 aft 8 "' 1 Of'a ..,...... 955-2238 meg. C.nal '•I #11 JZZZ 2 Br 2ba condo.·' ape gollcourae & min vu. 84<4·6388. -r-" • -· palnlad. patio. $375 &• . C•-•ttl•I •••••••••••••••••••••• Serlet. Excluelve .r: tide. huge pool & ape. For 1700 16th St. fast, credit rel. 645· 1693 lm•I #ff • 7. 1•-Ull UllWIUI ...,._, Yltw Pool, prof lndacp g. Pvl executive or proteastonal UITILIFF (Dover at 16th) west side SPARKLING! ..................... .
rnNI -H·-11t·' l k F I ~a I I 0 . 2 c. r j. r 3 8 2 B 1 2 (714) 642 5113 Woodbfld-lh•"' 2 BR •••••""•• •••••••••••• .,,.. .. r a e ron . .,, ... .., 750/mo. 5•2-21 ·1 or w If am 11 Y . No pets. r a oar ger, • CLEAN & SPACIOUS 1 & vv . .,. • ~~~=:::=!!~ 1600 aq. 11-storefront REDUCED $80,000 to .. S2300 495-4223 view. close to comm, avail 9/l, $600. property, Harbor & $595,000. Owner lln. Beaut. exec/family hme 494-<1791 ---·------pool.$1100&aeour.Agt. 2Br Newty redec,c~pts, 551-3000
Adams. Coate Mtu, 7 14·848·3 2 7 8 or with 4 BR, 2 Ba, plua BACKBAY 2 Bd 3 ba lfl11/•a f/1i• 3111 552·7500 OCEANFRONT • shar-p ~rps. Clshwr. re;ge f6' -£---... --.L--,,-.~-· o.-avvtra .. lc." .. ""7 .... 71 .. "373835 •g1 powder rm. parlecl for I '1 . d'& . •••••••••••'•••••••••• ---------2BR.wlnter.nopeta.gar. rlge , view ocean--••••• I• .,_. IELIM IT ..
011 IOT I
It's easy to own a home
In N-port Beacht ONLY
$25,000 down and as·
aume $75,000 • 30 yr
loan. Seller Is flexlble.
motivated and will carry
balance. A spacious 2BR
oondo with communfly
pool and spa. 1121,500.
144-1111
/.Jn NIGEl
01\ILE'I &
A55UCI ATE.5
BEST IN BllJFS
IPll Ulll 1-1
JllTUITll-PHI
1114 Ylttl IM4al
~ Bdrm, 2 yrs new,
lhows Ilka model, super
location, excellent flnan·
clng, covered deci<, put·
ting green .. 1315,000.
Owner/Agl Call
760-8816
1111 Yltt• 4tl "' 2 Bdrm, fee land, 2 YT'I
n-. baok b•y VleW, prof.
decorated. reduced 10
1285,000 with $40,000
down. Ownet wlll help n.
natlQ8.
ll0-1111 .........
'"' ., " .,...,.., "" ...... • " entertaining w/wetber, bll·lns,-rp • yar gar., HOME FOR RENT •-u4 h YI b 1 a a z as. no pa 1 s ••'••••••••••••••••••• liiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilJa~;,;t.:n;;ll~llll;;;;;,~--pvt yard, custom Hae plus full rec leellltlea. 3 Bdrm. & 4 Bdrm, $695 _, 111 •• 1850 mo 2131795-3018 $385-$475 642-0684 & IOUIFlllT UYPlllT ,,.,..; ' n• hOUN for th• children. $750. 6-42-6<477 to $800. Fenced yard• & ~.=rr;:c,!.~· ~~~ Tpe;; 2Br. 1Ba. $550 mo ... er. 552·9723 Moat elegant apl. bldg. IPFIOl ILll ...................... Pleue call 720-0332 very nice 3 Br 2 Ba. la· garages. Kida & pals rno Ind grdnr. 2Ba. $750 mo. Aoroaa 2er, pool, Wealllde S<4 1sf In Laguna Beacn. flntat
with •Ide 118 lor 60• boat. llYE lWAYll Eiieen Artukovleh Alty. mlly rm, Mesa del Mar, welcome. 545·2000. &7S-l5..tl, 673•2242 trom bch Sept-June mo lsl & lest locallon In town, braath-
6 year old building. One Rancho Calif. 270<>+ IQ Split level 2 Br-den. bee· gardener. $950. Sierra Agent no lee BIG CANYON 3 br. 2'"' ba. _1_2_13_)_8_4_8-_22_3_2 ________ 8_3_3_·8_5_3_3 __ ....... ! ~a~l~g,v~. all ~u~t~"'i':
01 a kind 5 000 ..,. 11 It 2 ttory on 5 acre•. med, celling, S795/mo. Mgmt Co. 841·132-4 • rt .... L ••~1 OCEANFRONT Ot11 2·4 Br. I • .....,. · ,..... •• ,._ view. Yearly or short Eastslde, lrg bright 2 br. sub -garage. a evator Greet terms. Rad uced 88K. Now 707 "' Ac.a.. 840·8 188 NEWPORT HTS. 2BR 18A •• -.-..-;................ term. Ave 11 now By week or month 1•11 ba. patio. avail. 9/ 1 Lease only. '850 a up.
189K_ LANO WEST Large 5 Bd Home. garage. ne111 to park. 346 -SllUT REITALS* 64<4·90&0 Even, Agl. _8_7_3_·7_8_7_3 _____ $550 6-40-0997_ 330 Clltt Or 494·8083.
1-678-2040/498-7078 Corona del Mar A Ogle. 644-9778 BIG CANYON lhlfp & lrg NPT SHORES 3 br. 2 be. Lovely 3 BR 2 Ba, gar,
Lido Realty
673-7300
Failbrook 8.8 Acree, 1<Wo 78().8708. 675·214<4 325 Rochester. 3 BR 2 Ba, condo. Only $850/mo fplc, patio, nr. club. $875 steps to water. furn. or
flnanelng. down negotla· 2 er 2 Ba, den, lrplc, steps 3 car gar. huge yd. 17!i0 LAG <4 BR 4 BA SPA· yrly. Aclt. 013·9080 u n I . y r I y Dy s .
ble, 180 deg. view. 10 bHch. s 107ot mo. mo. 631·8011: 5<48-336<> NISH pool home w / 714-673·1889
494-7104 or 759-2988 0 arr a 11 ' Re I M a)( gardener. In greet cond Npt Creal vltw 3 Br. 3 Ba. Winter 3•th St. Nloe P•· Elegant 3 Br. 2'it Bl, 2 Only $1199/mo to qual. Plan <4, St200/mo Agent 110 Utllltlea Incl. Avail lfll llllll 759-1221 story. pool/~nnl•. fur· tenant. 840-8208 •--&. ••-ute 2 Br. ape. gar, nlahed $1~0 Unlurn LAG 4 BR TOWNHOME Sept 8. 2Br 1500/mo, 1 ••• ~!!'~!'!~ ••••• ~"!! oceanside of PCH. R·1. $1000. w/nu crpl & paint. Also C..'-8/al.., Br $400 mo. 675-6437 ~~~~~~~~~J PRllE llPLEI Cell al1 6PM, 973.3577 PROPERTY HOUSE pool, spa, greenbelt & Da/uahitl 34z5 3509 Seashore. 2 br. tum r;.,_ ~ • ' I TO EXCHANGE $189 New CdM Hm 3Br 2'hBa 6'42·3850 846-1889 close 10 Fash. Isl Only •••••••••••••••••••••• ~rrlyn. So7. oo"orno· lro6m7" .... 6n3d0 .. -••••JJI ... ooo 1 1 ' lrplc. 13000/mo. 317 SFac. home 2 yr1 old, 4 $1195/mo. lmmed. avail. Lux. 2Br. 2Ba, S.C. Plaza. , ..,.._ r ... t•un I 1tll equ 'cY or lnccome Po I n a at ' I a . C a 11 BR. 3 Ba. formal dining. We h•ve many more at Vu, AC, pool, avail 9· '· 846-8388. •••••••••••••••••••••• property. all Mike row great prices. A lso w/ $575 mo. No pals. Sher-1----------01 "• 1-016t " .. •• F sap. l•mlly rm, lge CO· 3 B 2 Ba Wlnte S750 Newport· Aatumeble 30 .,... • .-.,, .... • lease option• to pur· ry or Donna 979·2390 ' r · II I S84 000 Taylor, Crow & Co. vered patio. 11100 mo. C II od FRED 2 Br 2 Ba ocean front yle~r 1 n1~~: ng, ad ' 642-1423 or 845-3176 C.11• 11111 3114 Joan Bracey, CfIT 898o'Re8 531 •Y266 1-dyl--------Winter $750.
s . a •·gal com· ··s··,u•n•n•tng•••2•b•r•w•/•;.a•rt•y••• Unique Hornet EN 1·1 or Gard«o Grove. N-2 BR R S munlty, charming, mini Or Isa op• Lagun• Sch Ir ,. 675--6000 or 6•4-5125 780-8702, aot. P OPERTY HOU E bdrm. only SH,OCO, 48r 3ba. S.t89K, S70K ~llo,blt·ln1,kld1$<425 l'i'tbt,petlo.gar.S550 & 842-3850 8-C&.1869 ......... , 759-0120 MESA VERDE exec home, QC.RENTALS $100 dtP. No pets "P" a q u 11 Y 8 5 5 • 0 5 17 • ·RENTALS 750-331.t 1-5br't S200 to $2000 Cr•"'. 5<45· 1370. GG. Aaart•••h
OCEAN FRONT 5<44·2170 2 sty. 4 BR. 2'1t ba. den. ,. _.. Westside 2 Br. 1 Ba. fncd formal dining, fplc, grdnr. 750.3314 open 7·d8VI ... LUii D•l•nidtl
Decor turn .. 2+ bd. 3 ba. J _,_ patio, encl1d garage, $1100 mo. 8-Cs-80.1 EASTBLUFF 3Br. 2ba. •••••••••••••••••••••• 3 car prk'g. $SOOK. Oual. ••l.u new carpet1, drepta, 1---------Avail Now. 111ootmo UITILIFF J.1Ha lllH' 310f
buyers only. Enclnlta1, •••••••••••••••••••••• paint. No pets. S5t0/mo. • • • a.11 •••~ 640.9019,831·0838 3 br. 2 •it ba con de ••••••••••••••••••••••
owner (71.t) 848-1088 •nlH fataldH plul MCurlty. 548-54-42. !!!~~~'!.~ffl~.!'~? S 1000 mo. 111 & tut Yrly $775. Oelu11e 2 t:>r,
S IXft •••••••••••••••••••••• 770.58211. 3 bf & den. 2 ba, crpt1, Plrk lido Condo. 3 Br. 2 month. 1ec dep $500. xar., prkg. Near water.
LUXURY COllOS ~'.'!r.!!.~~ ... !!:!f
Wllr tt Se. C1t Plua NO FEE! Apt. & Condo
Frplc. elegant French rentals. VIiia Rentell.
windows, AC, Jn home 875-4912 Stoker.
security. 2er 2Ba. 1sr Yll lllD"I m 1Ba & studios. I • 1Br & sludlo incl Wshr/ NEW gated 20 Town·
dryr, also Includes pvt home VILLAGE COM·
club wl tennis courts. MUNITY 2 & 3 Br. 2'"' gym, pools, jacuzzls, Ba 1600-1800 sq II ol
saunas, ~a..,11fully e1eco· pure luxury. Garage1,
rated clbhse & much spas in every home •
more From $450 mo master 1ulla. dining
ln,ls most ulll too rooms, wood burning
549·342 '-3641 Bear St. llrepleces. mlcro·w•,,.
( b 1 w n Sun I Io we r & ovens, private palloe I
McArthur! yards.gardener provl· ----------i dad Eleganl IMng only YILU OOIHYA 15 minutes from Faanlon
Spacious E.Slde Ap1a Island, 7 mlnutM to s,c.
Encl gar. pallo, dshwshr Plaza or 0 C Altpor1.
& stove. M9.st utll free. JJsl east of Newport
No pets. Blvd & so. of San Diego 2 BR. I person $5t0 ~ r w y . I 9 0 0 I m O .
2 BR, 2 parsons $545 631·~39, 2473 Orange
2323 Elden Ave. CM Ave .. Cotta Mesa.
642·7805
'
•. , 1•-11.lM lllu' 3IOI 1---------drp1, lrplc, blt-ln1, OW, Ba. lrplc, dahwsh, lndry cl ean l~ dep $250 75·<4000 (Bren) • ,, ., - , -•••••••••••••••••••••• OUTSTANDING 1br wt S79 ... ,..,. .. •118 rm. 3 ca.rport1, patio. Adult• • no ....... call B I b I s·50 •••••••••••••••••••••• C•ll ue tor YEARLY or hugt "' ...,..... "'"' ay ronl •Ch un I. .. QPfl fll SE,'fD WINTER rtnllll. Aeglr Piiio, utll·pd S300 Cill $795. 851·962.2 JI Ck Ga Iv In, day! Inc Ids u 1111 . Day s Available nowl 1 Br cat·
FN llWHr•m Propertlts 675-4000 OC·RENTALS 750.3314 HIYffn Laue orB leue op1t1onf 1ar· ~~oe;9~ 3 O · 8 v 8 s 960·2471, eves 675·9302 ~:~!·. ~°t~5~~~un~[i,· ~
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENT S
San Clemente pride of NO. BAYFRONT OPLX 2 8 1 Ba I d J.Mt lUf ge 4 r. cana ront, 1 br. plus Sludy, lndry, 19th St. 548-0492 owner1hlp, modem Sp•-., __ .. Unit 3 ""rm, 2 ba r.d et' lwd crp51'2· .. /ps, •••••••••••••••••••••• yearly. avail 9· 1. oommty Lovety w , 3Br. P«ilhOU· u t 11 I Inc I -I 5 O 0 COUNTAY CLUB LlvtNQ
-S-p-ac_l_ou_s_2_B_r .-1-a-.-.-on--1 IN NEWPORT BEACH
Eastslde. near schools. A 10111 environment 1 h 1 1 ,. 1 ,._.,, "" yer • 1 •· ll " mo. QC-RENTALS pool• & tennis, w•lk to ... 2 car gar, aec gate. 875--5685. n s • Y 8 un 1 •Pl. Front 11200 mo wtntw 875-5008. 1·5br'a $200 10 12000 beach. $1300/mo !amity. Lei• World, 5<44·5258, ,.-1-........... __ ------
houae with ocean·hlll• & RNr Unit 11200 mo yrly QC.RENTALS 750-331.t open 7-days 8-45-3370 •115 wkdys. 544.2111 -
golf courae view. CloM 780-1977, 875-t5<41 1•5br'• S200 10 12000 ---------h • .i 3101 Yto••~•ve0r1dyth&ln1g.0wo1ntri1k•3 •-•L....-750-3314 open 7·d•ye br, 1 ba, frplc, dbl gar, Newi>0r1 Sharee 3 Br. 21-l 01.noel'" condo, $500 .••••• '!!!! •• f•••••••••• 1h ~-vard & petlo. leOO mo. Ba. 2 blocks to bff<;h. , Br & loft, 1ennls. pool, 2 bdrm, 2 ba ~ dplx.
NEWt New ~ COUid , •••• ,, 3111 1500. Cottege 2 BR t BA, 111. IHI & d90<>tlt. R•fl ClloH to llChool & tennis. atrMm. NO ~ta, Av•ll ytly. Matute nor1..emkra,
occupy 3 Bdrm .. 2 beth •••••••••••••••••••••• dining er ... fncd yd, gar, req'd. 675-2520. 982·8683. 911. 553-1141 no pets. s15o x 3
cltV & ocean VI-apt. If 2'h br. 3 ba. oce•n front. very clten. Children Ot<, Nr Bch 2br 2ba w/double Leue Weatclllf 3 Bdr. ax· 3 br. 2 ba. cltluxe condo. 2131799-4195. 257·9792
applicable & rent the E. Penln. winter, $1050 no pate. 213'-<471-1871 nar, patio. bll·lna $480 c ell. cond, 1ro well Lrft. pitlo. poos'c'Piuapa, s•so. 2 Br. utlf. pd .• 10 olher 3 ap1ttmen11 for mo 875-1245. btwn 7 & 8PM wkdy1. • d .. .. Income. Seller will hefp OC·RENTALS 750·331<4 landacpe ytd w t ch ld o.k. nter a. Harding. Btlboa No
S 11pertment community on no pets. 450. 631-6155. the Upper Bay Prlv•I•
Lovely Ea.stslde 2Br Iba.
2912 Peppertrff Lane.
No pal s S-495/mo,
659-4718
clubhouH and htaltl'I
sp1, 8 tennis court•. 1
pools. oloM to ~--. airport, Fllhlon llltf\41.
-e-·s-Jd_e_C-.M-. 3-8-r-2-b,-con--'"' Convenient ahop1 on
do. Lg yard. frptc, 2 cer site Unf\lmlslled ~ ger. pool/Jae. 1725/mo. lora, t & 2 bdrm11>1• lrlO
631·7905 lownhouMt. lln1nce & SAVE buyer i-.. •• ,_., 3141 S325. Cottage/duplew, rg • Bdr ho~. 21 ... B'" 3 gardener, HC. •v•tem. 1666 mo. 21~904-268S. pate. 5<47·1155
th d f d II I -::-r.T::... ............ ft .. ..... ,.. ... st tOO/mO. Nr j)ark & ~~~~~~~~~~I ouun a o o ara Emertld Bey pvt belch newly recondlllon•d. oar gar, nr beaoh a tchoola. 833.t290 LUXURY CONDO Pen Pt, 2 Br 1 ea. eltcl. 2Br. garden apt.
REDUCED aelllng PflH pool•, tennl• cour11: new carpet. 1 BR wt ICl'loOle. Kid• & pet OK. 1 br. ll)OOl, JK, etc. gar. andk . no g•u No pats. $440/mo,
S540 • 11000
8.,,.,al b~ end 1
Bdrm unltl feetlll'9 fine
deelgner furnltu,. end
ICC4l9IOritt. Mov. lrt to. day Of ,......,. for ..,...
mtr mont111 8m•rllT
turnl1hed mocMq 099n
dally.
+Pl +Nll + 1 8R apt, excepllonal
Cullom bullt w/Ao•H:
Fruit trte1; Dog run;
grMt Ol1·1treet pkg. °"ly 1320,000, Ruth Laurie,
Altr. &AM380
01 S295,000.00 l• way oceen view. 3 Bdrm. 3ba nun1 & fncd yard. No f1150/mo. 984-5098 Weltcllfl 3 Br. dtn, olflct, Agt, Nan, 644-2999 18251yrly, 875• u 3 548-9950 ~;~~~o'::rr,en~rr::: :1.iol:: ~.;,; u,!n~ai ri•a:~~~;!.671 btwn •••Im,,.. ~~r~·~~ C:~1~1rtYo:o: LUXURY 2 BR 2'i't bl, 675-7998 New, lerge 2 br, 1 be.
ONLYlll C•ll owner 11 or lnOO/mo yrly. lllrill•i 3MI 1-837·1<458 or 548-5026 Nwpt Ttrrect condo. "•-'ttru• L..j#lf dl1hwaaher. 1tove. bit• (714) 7141759..00<47 RENT TO OWN; New 28f •••••••••••••••••••"• Pool, etc, fplo, p1tlo. :rr.~ •••••• ~-r;· •••• , Ins, oallo, g11r .. lge ~
l _.2_.1•1 2'nba, condo. Call Rleh. Seldom avall1bl• WH· MVIJI .-11 Kid• OK. Quit" Mii& mo. Ouptn large 2 llr. 2 Ba. area. ReeDy to mow tnf
• • Attractl\le 2 Br hOuH.. lge Owntr/1'Qt "'4-8171 thtrly Bey Townhouee. SPAN ISH VILLA; 1 8374tle laundry, gar1ge, yerd. 1-411<>. {213)781·7813
---------1r----------llvlng rm, tned petlo. 3 Br 2 l>e on lo\ acre w/3 8oet lllp, 5 bdrm, 3 t>a. 2 bc:lrm, 6 bath, huge,.. lmmed. occupancy. 2 bd l'h b 2 °" Jem~ Ad et
fntNrl lfut lOff ..... J.•I Ctoee to boh. M&Otmo. cet' 0., p1ua OU-I hou· car. tenn11. pool, 111 mlly rm, pool & 1p1 • fl= 770-2904. 1550rmMo. Aleo a., bd~~; Sen JCMlqllln ... M.
••••'••••••••••••••••• ••• •••••••••••• ···~ AveM Stot 1 to June 1. ... s.'2630 s.,,1a An•. 1ppt11noe1l•menlt1e1. completely r·emodtltd. 1111 ba 1380 mo. Cell eltw •••11M
• • • • • • • • • • • • • 40«>01f 00 NOT DISTURB TE· I 1 4 7 5 mo • A 0 I • f 2e00/mo. Cell Century atU'm'2'ii1 :•;e..::•TH ~!.'!f/!e .. 11.¥. . 5:30 PM. 2864 LaSalle --~-----
. bf,2be,vlft.pvtetreel, NANTS. 1\200 mo. 937-oeee. 21/0rambow Alty. Atk .Q,..,,....,nrpoot.Frpl N!W CONDO. HOO. 957·27<40 LIOOO!LUXEl•.frplo • REDUCED S2ll Ill • gated comm. Lcw.IY de-en.eut jlmH JMf !Of Al.Ith 2131289-'1728 • ~lo• dbl gar. Adult•. OoHn view. ' 9drm, Ulil pd 1Br 1300/ mo lro bt lCIC p ello D"·
• • cor. No.,·1mo1cer. No 2 BA. nr ac Plia. Condot. ••••••••••••••••••;n . 1~ llll UY No~ tmmed .1950 . lrl)IC, modern kitchen. ulet, P•tlo, nr bclh, A;;;.! ftO!O. 91s.«MI. • Ill OllYH'I lllT lft p • t 1 . I 1 3 o O mo . POOi Jee. Ml "° oat· P1nor1mtc view. ~nchO Av&ll 11,, Lux twnhtt e mo or 10.,o•r teaH. dtOll, gar. 873-3271 or ~•Pt 111 & 1 51 h , Spec. 3 ., a e..6', ..,,
• 6 000 f f f 1 • 497..:1230. Pon.'L1111 unit. o,...i Loe. san·Joaquln 28" T den. eesoimo. ·,,,, 1a1t 4 "°: C ell JoCerol (eo tl 831.()$02 644-8858 beedl t ·111tt. ~. • •q,. t. o ami Y livin9. a.-A Jiff No ~1.16$0 ptu• '35 r.r'n~t'1,7~~~· 3 br, 2 b•, s c•r ~. ••tolOIO «~ ~PSTOOCEAN 1eroe2 3 er. 2 BL No ...... 2fld No~M&-t
• enterta nment facili ties for • ••• ... ':l'J'n"•••••••• utlll ~y. sse-1121. at • gar., mu111o1e.,.1, frp10, ar. 2 81. trptc, nieny ,...._ entire family. ~ Bdrm, 7 baths. 1.100 ISLI • 3 bdrm. fem 11&-2HO ~San .io.Quln, 2 It, eethedrel celllnQ, ll(yttt., ~-...._! r.-1.J..J •m•nlllu. HU/mo. floor. l 48s+ciep. 3 bdrm °' den. 2 be"'-
• ~1u 1 mat d •. ~u 8 rte r a . • rm," ea._•_noo_ mo. -•• -a Den. Condo. Pt9rntum patio, lnal ... 1.,. Nn -;r.e,-:r.;-, .;r.r.:n.-: D•YI &A2·5117 IV9I l 540·22•& UPC* 0t.5~4¥1111 ._ " -. .-.. 004f OOli,... I llke Yltl#. arpt. No pete. Comm • .,... •~ 1!!f 'Mind• 831·6'30 2 er. 1~ ea .. fri>IC, l>OOt.i-!11'.!MrtMl~rll:!!'I~· ! ...... =:-=::...--• door/outek>o.r poo . a jacun:ll, • OC!.AN,AONT 2 bdrm, 09cor•tor 1*1901, ... No pet1. Avlll • ..,,, 1. pool. Agt 14 .. ftea , ....... ;:::r."'.... ... I N>•. •ttechtcl Qlltlge. No,3 Br 2 aa. frpl, ow .... 18' bar, IOda fountain, complete 1I•1700 mo. 8111 cloue2bdrm.2\4t>a.new StSO/mo. Ao •nt 8"ul,,.,2 ar a8a,lo-~..... #If pet e . Avalt now.' btlOfl 2 blk1,_y rr1 .
• •• Un .. room, eno .. moua pl•t • Orunctv. Ritt. 87M1f1. C199 Cod. Poot,~. j 873~1111 Bt.UFFS l.IASI I wtr dupllt, •Ide petlo ....................... ' M25tmo. eat.,..984 1 873-.2511. 11&.111'
... & ., .. pvt patio, 2 ar. w•UW vu, llOO/mo. fplo, ~ 11200/mo 'I 1 .. I ... a.. I • room, iourmet kitchen, 3 su e tralns'blkes wtn•t o.iw 1 io. ~'. L8e·OP'TION, scir. 2 be. Alto 3 Br. 1ron1 rt1W vu I utll. Newly deoor. 011 i>d. '3 br 2 be. dtl\lxf oondO.,Aoroee ft'om .,._.., Wflllt f t d o.oorator wall paper, S"'· WOOdbrldQ9. 1119 11200/mo AQt 640-4020. I.lg I Ir I .. !Oftf ctptll. I encl oar, dwihr, pool, Lrg. plllo, Poot I ta'a, l elry 2 Ir, ~tic>. lftirr • iero re r I · •n many more • •pianos•cars c1raperl•• and m ore. I mo. p ·t u 1 op 11 o". 78().M78 1 w1'rplo, front pallo 1>bg. Adulta, no peta. chll'd oJc.,,.., tc ~ rm U 30/mo. "''"
•
ameni\lu. $699,9$0 . By refrlnarators t to 11o 1 mo . o •II . 652....,... ~mountain & $1200/inol"fY& "'"· 1 042'-!07~. , Ml5 mo. 21S.."4-2tll.1 oea.ua
appointment with Marci Cooper • • skat;S • • • • • • l 0*-22'1, 1o:IO 10 ~ 12 8'. 2\i le, 09:ege, ""'°-OOMfl "'9w, '3 8'. 3 811. • S 8t I .. 0Cltt1:_ w/trg 1 £uttld9, brtght a °"'8rYICr.v ftr1 new ....._,
• 644. 7844. • pm. I oomrl\ty ~l. ITIIOhnO. I b •au t I f u I I 'I don•, = = ::,.., I= For CINllfled Ad 1 If. 1 I& NIUnJI wood' '*» ..... tum fll'UIUft. ... lllllY 1 I @ 1 -. l"'9a. . er.• eo1-llOO 1 U400/mo. Avell. now. & 1111. , ~ ~etllng1 4 oabln•t•. MOO/MO..,.......
:
,..,,.... ..,. • j ,.,plo~-,."' '"'· plUl h 12 bf. a De. Oet'*"91 ... av°"'* 7'°"11"' I. 114 ..... '*"I o.Ay Piiot l410. ll1·Mtt. 1 ..... ,,.,. 6-1iil
.... ...a. 1._.,.._ • 1 opt•. 1 m1 "°"' bOl'I, t j ltno 11ma ""· ""°' ~ .,., a bt, ,.,. be. No.,_,_... llOOrmo I "O-VllOA ci.n 2 "· ·~ ,..,,. ""'-· «*\. ..--• blii -..... .. ... ow~ • .,...•· No '*"' 1wn1ty fl~. '1M .._. --.. a ow ow .,,..., & ~ Mi.M71 wld hll-\tp, patio. a ,...1 o. -. . ..,._ .....,
••••• 1•••••• . I ~. UOO lllQ, ftt ffle l n e ll . l m lfta4 . H it .. "'· ... O.tH O 41119: L YNaN.TM Pl • UU. no peti . _... .~ tll N ;;,..;::;..;.::...=:;....::~;.;..;:;.;.;:::;...;:::;..;:~:..;::-.;~!J..===-:====::;b ~ ........ 1117 __ l ..,'*'• • t 7'0-eMI tl¥ll8. Mr ... I .,..... • '41-°'4e1. J:~114--=t=MJ=, ==:-:==
•
..
DO IT NOWI
ht ftr .... ,.
Your Dally Piiot
Service Otreotory
Repr1aent1t111e
,,. .. ,!'!.~ IR!!!r. ••.•.
O&Nlf\AL IUSINIH
Sl!IWICH
~l•IP for 1m111 butllleH a
phone call away. Aeo•
ordkeeptng, tax prep,
8ualnau counullng.
496-1285
f ~.~,!~~.'!~!~I. ..... .
Ceblnet1 & Carpentry
Small lobe & Repair•
Free Ett male• 845·2003
f ,.11!,l. h!T!tt........ fM'!!!!Hh . !ff !Ill .•
No 6thll'l1No Shampoo O u a t o m r a m o d a I • •
Slain 81*!1•11•1. Fu t addlllone, lfM Ml. Qua· dry frM Ml. 83t· tal2 Illy 2nd to none. land ..
l't•••f/C,.fntf Con et Lio 418570. ••u•••'•••• Ii••••••• SA~ 4271 Cem.nt·Matonr;•lloc:k 1---------W111 .. cu11. WOl'll. Lie ............. ...
R!ft~I~{ •••••••••••. ~'!!ftl!ff ••••••••.•••
FIUIO/ COMM1UIND. C1rpenlry • Matonry
20 yr1. Do my own woflC. Roofing . Plumblng
Lio 278041 Al 8"&-t 129 Drywall • lluOOO • Tiie
*•NORTH 8TAA* * ~cdtt J.B. 94&-tttO
Electrlcal Conlrao1or 1Sen'1 Maintenance 881'11
Lie. Naw Hrvlce UO Plum~eo-carpentry
olfou111. 24 hr 6"45-41174 Painting Call ff4.52:)t •381057 Rob &4?·2043 LIO. 309"1. AamOdel, Add'na. OablMta. ..__,, •·1h!I" Orlve1. pat101, walk•. Ft" MW046/M&.4M4 • .,. a.N -• E11. No Job 100 •mall. 1----------••••• •••0 •••• • •• • • •
HIRl!D HANO, WIL.L
TRAVEL! Many dlYWH
chorea. Wllll• 642-34111 s:19.2901 f!~~.!!tt!w.~'!f. c~·:~~r1:~!~~~r1~~::i~~
Cu1tom ooncrele brick· Kit. ,..m04 .. 04lfamlc tlle. Call for Mt. 6<141-5294
block wall•·pallo•· cabin•••· can now · free 8114 l c.,r..•t7_ l oundatto n1. Ll~'d Mtfmata. M:t.06e1 .......... ¥ ...•........
536-so 13 · Tlllll • • • • •• • •• • • • •••••• • • ---------O.C0t1tor etyle Int, be,..,
CALL HANDYMAN JIM
Main I., plumb. r•P.•lr.
paJnllng. R•ICOmm 1
536-09571638-3044
Ooor hanging, rtmodet. Concrete-1mall or lg• manlela, llbrarle1, high T--..tremowd. Clean
Orano• Coa1 DAILY PIL.OT/Sund.Y. AC1Qu1t 22, 1~82
~~!!!!~"········ !!!!"··············· AP1' I liHCLIANING 8TA"V1"'G COLUO!
Rellebl•, ••P· ,., •. No STUDINTI MOVINO
Job too ll\'lllf. 9514341 00. Uo. T12<MH
I.IT Ml 00 YOUR IMUred. M 1~l7 CL.!ANINQ 110" VOUI WATot4 IJ& 0,_0WI
CM/CGM. Jutle &42-t087 Pre1ttge Moving. Low
11 yov need a hOUllJI~ rltee. fantalllc wvio..
!'~"'~············· ASA PAPEAHANQING 1 yra 10011 elCp. Ouar
work. Prloe1 11art It
II/roll. Alee 751·7027
E.llptrl wallGOverlng In·
ttalletlon. AH• prlce1.
Con•ultant A11lgnment 581 .. 59(\ ae tuuy 81 you .,. Stele ~·· VIN &. MIC.
Ph. 873..a8llO Xlnt reta. ~~~u;n2r~--C82 Cal, i---------
r.·r..~ !!~~!~! ...... . ~~~!'!l!I •.........
Reepontlbte opl, mid 30'• looktng to houeeelt thll
eummer. We'll care for
plant1, nouM, 9tc. Call
l<en Haven. 760·8078.
r~11lfl .•••••••..•.•.
PAINTIR NEEDS
WOAKI 30 yra eJ1p~ lnl/
Exler Acol>lllO o .. tJnga.
Davie Painting 6'17-5 186
••&AYANT'S••
WallGovetlng AemOYll
All Typea. 6-42• t343
I IDJ I .'l! •••• tl! •••• ~~······ SEAVIC! & .. UAIR
Van Oopena 8eMoe Co.
(114) 638·46M
'"• c11blne11. panellng. eto. fob• Remove 1 1 1.... 1 ¥,.,...... MHll•• 142-Hll, t rt, a22 Painting. cement Rel a • rep 1ee or •IY • ra _..pane wall• & up, lawn renov. 751-3476 ••••• •"'••••••••••••••
Je,ry •• 6 •• 13 repair. 8•6-8612. c;elllng. Lie. M&-2366 O OUMP JOBS
ref• avell. Cuetcm work, lnl & ext, llc'd 20 yr• In at91. <efa. Long term hou1Mltllng, Herb (714) 521·8012 art 1vaO. Aug. 22. 720.105", 5·30PM
t!~!!ft.I.~~~ ......•
ED'S PLASTERING
N81t petcn ... lnt/e1Ct
..•................•..
Chuck ,Ot Tiie WOl'k
Free Est. Dyw 6"0·5188,
E111, Wknd1 615·5100 ~~~~~~~~ "~ -.~ M WINO • Cl.EAN UPS ---------Cl//' C1n O.anlll Htullng • Land1eaplng & Small Moving Jobe fRll llTllATlll • • • •• • ••••• • •• • • •••• • • • ••• ••. •••• • •. ••• •••• • Free eet. 842•9907 Call MIKE 6416-13111 6-46-58t1 wit. Xlnl refs. -·--·------
RNtUCCOI. 845·6256
~!! ... ~1!f !!. f!!!{".t! •••
Applied. re·•pplled. guar ..
tn1ured, He'd 4 t 469 I
730· 1900 lree ettlmates
Reasonable prices, laat, "!ARBOR TRINITY PRE· *KATRINA'S: LlVE-IN HAULINO·GRADING
prolesslonal work SCHOOL. DAY CARE hskpre. dally mild aerv. Jeffie'• Gardening demollllon. cleln-up
cus1om work tool No fob CENTER. Co1ta MeH. offic e oleenlng. crpt CIHn-upa, lrae trim & Concrete & tree removal.
too small or too big! cs. Opening Sepl 13. Full claanlng. 835-2116 malnt. aerv. 5410-8035 Qulok aerv. 642•7638
L. BATES PAINTING PROTECT YOUR HOMEI SPECIAL! E>tl. 11G1 $400;
Prof. M 40, avall. now, 2 aty 1550 6<15-9~83 >tint raft. 6" 1-11312
PLASTER PATCHING
R81tucoo1. Int/ext. 30
YT•· NH1 Paul 545·2917
Tiie ln11a11 & Repair
Guaranteed WOl'k. Rel•
Free 811 Bob 875-8595
blneta, kitchen remodel and 'A day ca,.. 7 AM to 1----------
•-.1. It & finished carpa111ry 6PM Register NOW DHr Bu1.l•1. Arille1 LH.IHtltl PROF. SERVICE ID••• A1•~t/ I b/ c bl t 1 Corner Baller & Fairview. ••••••••• •• •••••••• Trae lrlm. ~en. c1nup1, Haullnf • yrd cla'"" up ••'••••••••••••••••••• v""' P um a no• Doore •epla·· .. doo-ava '"''
---------!CANYON PAINTING • 1• Sept. or later, fem~.. yre In o .c . sa11a1act1on
mlO 35. Until Aug. 31 . guar 41941--4541 673·2047 .
r!~!!~!~1. ...........• '!.~.~~!~ •....•...•
ATLAS PLUMBING & S LOW AATES S
HEATING • Speclallzlno Tree trimming & ,..,,oval,
D P t t Id 556-4335 or 558-7787 • ........ '" ,. cement wor . Free 81t Quick clean. Free 81t rlveways, arklng Lot coun er ope. o every· added, Franch, entry, Cell ... 9 1804 a 11 '••I ~,, Repairs. Sealcoatlng. thing from s11rt to finish! Ex par. & dependable cuatom & Inte rior . ~ • ny me. 1 ____ 6_7_3_-0_5_'4_8 ___ ~., ••• i:-:.;. •••••••••••••
QUALITY PAINTING
Ex1/lnt. ,... ralee
Lie B3482'T8 536-2366
In Repalra & Replace-all 01Mnup1 & mowing
S&S Asphll 631-4199Llc Call Brad at ChlJd care during grall· 631-1526 anytime. Mowing, edging, lrlm-HAULING & CLEAN-UP Yllll WM.LI
Dan Hallberg Grading
1
(114) '11·1210 eya1d shift. Lr~ F.V. Hm. •----.~-----mine· clHn up. RH•o· Yd1tgaraga1. Prop. mgt r or a free fact eri.et. call EXTERIOR PAINTING • NII ,11 I
menl (714) 646-1688 ~--:--55_41_-_10_1_1 __ _
'!.-.~ .. '!~~ ............ .
& Paving co. Res/coml. CUSTOM wood pi tlo co-plenty of sleep ng apace. n.-all nab e ral81. 540·1482. 631-01153/631.0865 Herry Wene, Attorney at Cu11om wotk. Free ffl .• !."! •• ! .. ~11~.!f!.! •.•
Lie 397804 842-1720 vers. decks & fences by 841-2277 ':'U.";'••••••••••••••••• Tiii ••HI IOlll Lew. 553-0290. RHa. + fine Int. & ital· A44'n·IHl1t ... t•••· Most aubJacta. K-14
Day/eve 15 & $10/hr.
Mr. Morgan 6415-5176 Randy. 6'4 1·0622 -P,-e--a-c_h_o_ol-ln_C_M_h_o_m-e. DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC Iii l J ---------1 nlng Sl~e 5-47-4281 F
Att'l.,'1!. ---------1-<I yrs. BS D""'ree. C'"lld Repairs, new & old. 1 t LawnT -lree-ehrub lnatall •• ~~!~.~!.~f••••••• • #•H•n RA.LPH'S PAINTING ou'a"1 eeot.kReL8t 1. 3p3171ce16s9. ..., " yrs exp. Bud 552-9582 rea lrlm/ramoval ROBIN'S CL'"'Nl ... O •••••••••••••••••••••• · w r c.
P••••••• •••••••••••••• "•ir.,t •, . ....l,., Dav. Exp. 642-2707 Lawn cue/Rototlllltvt s~tce _ a 1:;.',~1• .. ~ BRICKWORK: Small Jobs. lnt/eJC1. Ren. retes. 645-4010 ersonallzed, low cost la-"'' ~· • "'o Wall texturff-ACOu1tlc F · ... v.. "~ " c M R t F ee Ml ..... "898 1----------gal services: Ind .. family. ••• •• ••••••••••• ••••• Llc'd Daycare, ages 2-6, Hang-Ta~St"I elude ree MUmate 548-8065 clean houee. 5410 8 7 N-por1, oeta •8• _e_. _r ___ . ___ .,.. __ .. _ R 0 0 M ADD IT ION S
busl. lnlllal consulletlon Shampoo & steam clean. my home, Sagarstrom & Uc. 389944 1-532-5549 QUALITY WEEDING & lrvlne. Rafa 875"3175 ptlf PAlmll Honett,Rellable & Rele-
ENGLISH TUTORING
Reading, wri ting &
grammar. Pvt lnttruc-
tlon S5thr. 751-1640.
lree. 553-0290 Color brlghlenera, wtit Fairview. 957-0360 Malnl. Remember Iha 3 Joan's Cleaning Secvlce Brickwork-smell or l~e bA Rlc'"ard Sinor. Lio. renoea. JC&B Con11 Lie w 1 ' '" l crpts • 10 min. bleach. ---------DRYWALL TAPING Houeee-Ap1e-Rentals .. 11347'*77 97 7 ............. •1. Hall, !Iv/din. rms $ lS: avg Exp'd MOM wlll care for R's: Reasonable. Rella· Olflcea. 540•1287 Jobs. 100'• local ta a. 2 0644, 13 ~s of nappy , ___ v ___ 4_-_6_6_5 __ •••••••••••••••• ••••• ldniltiH I room ST.SO; couch $IO: your child Any agee. Mv F~!,T!:ttu~:,~ :~~1c8 1_b_1e_._R_1c_k_._4_9_7_-3_0_1_0__ Since 1989. 64~8512 local customei-a. ,-"Let the Sunll'lna In"
....... ~................. Chr SS Guar ellm. pet Home C.M. 645-1t83 TAKATA NURSERY TIREO OF HASSLES? -.oa.. Thank you. 631-4410 IHll•t. Call Sunlhlne Window
Loving mother wlll babysit odor Crpt repair 15 s •'HliJ1al end tand·~a-. Summar Quality clean Ing help la ••••_•A••B·•c•!:o··v·1NG••••_•••• Palntln .· our lamlly tradl-•• •••• ••••• • •••• ••••• Cleaning. Ltd. 548-8853 lull time. N1 Fairview & ekp Do work mys:t'i. C•otr•tt•ll l#•fl•I ~!'•••••••••••••••••••• 1.....,.lal cia-::'up. ••atnt· ,_h_a_re_1_R_e_11_._960 __ ·7_4_5_2__ "" J ig Huber Rooting-ell types 20% Monthly Dlacount Baker CM 546 8653 ···••••••••'··•••••••• """ -· .., ·-Quick. Careful Service. , lion for over 100 ~"1 New-recover-decks · · -Reis. 531-0101 RE"'ODELIADD-ONS ELECTRICt•N-Prlced enanca & land·~ape . Expet. Houea Cleaning I "•6252 "" " ~v Free estimates 552.0410 • Int/ext. L c . .,... . ree Lie 11411802 548·9734 w ....1 • I EXCEL CA_R_P_E_T_C_A_R_E_ & Carpentry. Llc'd, 25 1lgh1. free eetlmata on Tree trimming and Bon-Reliable. Rafa. 1 asl. 681-3998 1----------!'!!~'!.~!mf!.~I ......
J k B ffl yrs e)(p. lrwln 5'48·2719 large Of small Job8.. ea I Ir a e pr u n I n g . 553-1675 * A-1 llYlll* It#. Computer word procas· !~!!!!'.~{·~-~!!'!!.~~ •••
JAYS "SPEAKEASY"
Prof Barlendlng Serv.
Any occeslon, Prtbl bar
O~nerl~~f,:::,~ Ili'i1-letl&t·le•e4, Lie. 396621. 673·0359 830-9900. EXt 5B. Housework, own trana-Top quallly. Special care rfr.l!~J. ............. ?::~~!............... sing. Fast, accurate eerv.
Ca1pet, up'101. area rug Free est. Reas. prices. ELECTRICIAN The fastest draw In the portatlon, Eng. apaaklng. , In handling. 25 yrs e1tp. Farthing Interior Dellon MOB.U.E SERVICE Reas. retM. Notary. FrM
1-879-7552/521-814 t
creanlng. Work guar Qual. wo1k. Lie. 337169. Sml jobaJRepalr1. Lie. West .. a Dally Piiot Ca ll Eloisa Sota et Competitive Rates HANGING/STRIPPING Ffaacreens/Naw screens Pkup & delivery. Len,
Free Est 645-1771 645--4010 233108-C-10. 548-5203 Classllled Ad. 6'42·5678, 546-4839 No overtime. 730-1353 Visa-MC Scott 6-45-9325 NB/CM 642-9552 7!51· 1314
A1•1ta111t1 Ap11tm11111 IHt• Al• 3UO B•t•I• #•t1l1 4100 l••t1l1 I• li•lf 4300 l•atal1 ,.11111 4300 O/li1t 1111111 4400 l1•t1l1 W1a1H 4100 Ualo1111·11ted V11/0111i1ll~d 2 ·9;2b; ·c~·,;;;,· ;;g~~ c·a~ .. • ·,·.::.· ::·.· ·····m······ . •••••• ••••. • •••••• ••• ·2·····;·· •t ··;; ••B• ib··· 20oo·a·,: ;t ~fri;; :~;; •t• •••••••••••••• ••••• ••• #'Gl:J."' ,,.,, S03S f!!!.~.f.".".'!~ •••• !.~~
•••••••••• ••••• .. •••.. .. • .. • ••••• • •••• ...... Pl $45011 & I t N ~ F 25-35 lo shr 2 br. 2 ba rmm es o s r a oa ... ..,... or otlPlllAn ~!.'!r.!!.~!~!~ .•. !.~~! IJ.'!!r.!!.~!~!A . .!!.~? p:.~: 2t3/69~:46:; i tt ~ ~1kci~ r:n~~~ 2~r0,8'1~: ~ro~onl~r~ f~1~t6 agt; ir~~: 1~~~3~~i10~~~:1 ':.~ 1~11h -s~.v~~~:WM!;; PlllllllT
• •••••• ~.............. Lab Puppy. female. Blue I. samH collar. Vic Paularlno
WESTCLIFF 1 br. condo $675. 2 Br 1~. Ba. lrg up· 3 br 2 ba. deluxe condo. Phones In room. 2274 (9im-lpm) + utlls, John, 975-6267 645·8830. sea M rs. Recently moved to
pool. no pats. $540 mo. per. Eastblutf. dbl gar, Ltg patio, pool, spa, Newpott Blvd. CM. r----------bat. Spm (al work) Northrup.
• • Sehl. days 540•4040, l•rt&•I• Oe, Ito, evast wknda 545-8762 Specializing in Isl & 2nd Gary
673-6640 no pats ' poo I. 80 9 chlld o.k near SC Plaza 646-7445 Neat F mid 20'sto •hr 2 br Christian lady wlll stir ntcaS __ U_N_N_Y_N_e_w_p_o_r_t_B-ea_c_h Catlfornl• desires quality
A I w 6 7 8 S6 2 3 96 88 N.B. apl w/aama. $225 & v;aJ~rJro&rll~~~tgr. tia% mg;AS.;L.;;
11
• .:~:0· 1
• "-~0:, 8 EACH AR£ A 'h utlla. 552-4409 ~:.4ure~ug~~~e~t~l ::i~ i~~~~:~·s~i8~~:: Furnltt1ed home tor rent
TD's since 1949 ---------Robt. Salllet NH/CM F'OUND· Blk Doberman.
A E Broker Bd Realtors red collar, 11lc. Camino
642·2171 545-061 l Capl!ilrano & LaZanJa.
642· 112 1. eves 730·0104 Spacious 2 bdrm. view. E••A•S•T•s••ID •• E •• C •• M•••P•r·i~."a"ie" $S4/ Mala rmml needed. 1 blk male. S 175. 6"5-1062 eaasonal or long tetm • wk from bch, non-emkar, no 1-R---------PVT. OFC. S1J"'/mo. Nr DOEUI v1rrw pool. nice area. No pets. fl k A II 8 /21 asp. non1mkr, child OK. " -" $675 544 4797 furn. room & bath. Utlls. a ea. va · · t h I 1 h o.c . Airport. Conv par-In Laguna Beach, 10 steps to send Lge · • Incl., retrlg S315 mo. Rarrlgarator·Meld-Pool &46-9223 ° sbr ,Jee .~rr:,.8 °2'_!'9e7. k P 1 e 1 1 Newport Beach.
1---------1 <193-5197 WIDOW HAS $$$ tor TD's
RE Loans. tOK Up No
Credit Check No Pen-
alty Dennison & Assoc
673-7311
---------Lest: ltokJHe
REWARD_ Sentlmen1a1
value Gold Chain with
butlarlly charm
494-7432
2Br & patio. Furn or furn. $750/mo. 3 Br. 2 Be. en-573.7544 I Nwpt Blvd & Wlleon own a "· .m . ~ • ing. v n ranee. n· ,._
Winter or yrlv. Bkr/owner clsd garage. walk to · Costa Mesa 548-9755 _J_o_h..,.n_______ eludes utll. Rcptlon avail '""''°na dat Mar , ROOM/BALBOA $230 ROOMMATE fem. to by arrangement Taylor. 848-4557 or 962-2305 beach, yard/balcony . 1 · 91 Yearly on Iha beach hotel share 2BORM Condo. PSSST! Ara you a dlvor-Crow g co. 642-1423, Contact (7141) 494-3757 Secured. discounted Isl Won't last, call for appt. mo view. urn. avlb 1· · $262 par mo plus utll. oad dad/sgl M feeling Small ocean tront bach I / 2 3 + n 0 n _ s m k r room. kitchen & shower. 1 1 _6_4_5_·_3_17_6 ______ ,2 Responsible. retired TO's !or sale. Pvt patty, Found. Shettle/Collle type unit $360/mo. Broker TSL Mgmt 6-42· 1603 673•90 15 . S320/mo. plus sec. de-Adams & Bushard area. In latlon P nch? Nead (213)698-2284 small dog. Irvine area
645-3683 S•a C''1a1•t1 3116 posit. 2306 W Ocean-Call 964-7167 attet 6pm. more space? Break out & I IEll IPIOE Cl• ~dut/,s (MIF) wl,sh I~ rent -.,....-,-------< June. 497-5726
-:----:-------•••••-'••••:'••••••••••• Pleasant room avail. Bay front. Newport Beach. • stir gorgeous N.B. Bay· Attractive rustic upstllr$ ob 8 Home or mo Sell S 12.000 sec Mort----------
Across lrom beach. studio 1 Br. pvt deck. old world St.,.C.M Working person 673-4154. l.IDO ISLE $500. crest home w/2 sgl mo-setting. We supply desk, ~6~-~11IOe11 o w Pet . gage, 4 years straight Found·temale collie trl-
apt at $385/yrly Encl charm spectacular only $1 501nclutlls.r·S----.---,--~-·--•1,ut11.,non-smoker thers.S-435/mo+'hutlls spaca,coplar.You sup-1.:Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim no t e 12% t or color.ctiokechaln,llaa
gar. pool and laundry. 1 ocean vu, walk to beach 548-3663 •• •.-••• '.' •••• •• •• '.•.• ...... -..... Carol 575.9449 goafltslcayoutopsvthrr.mL/blnad&a ply phone. & $95 pr mo 1• $8000/Casti on Costa collar Vic Northwood. adult only 640-5078 s495 Co t 1 M t i----------pr desk. Call &44-7211 HELP! Responsible cpla, Mesa House Irene 75"'-3734 Dannis · n ac gr 8 apt Room tor Rent. 2 Bdrm WEf.ILJ·IEITAU Raaponalbla female rmmt 642·86101631·1777. 13 yr old boy. cat & dog ,_5_5_6-_'4_2_1_1_a_11_e_r_4_P_M __ ---------
s II h • C. 332 Encino Ln. hse. College Paik, CM. Available. Agt. 675-8170 25-30 to ahr Bal Pan. Fem to s'"r w/sama 2Br *FllEE llEllT* need house In .. Old ·-Found: Mesa Verda. 2 e l ings iast with Dally Have somert11ng lo sell? lull prlvllegas. $300. Call house /same 675 3798 " H ti t .. H B DO YOU HAVE a tst. 2nd Fem Killens-8119.
Pilot w ant Ads. Classilled ads do 11 well an 5 we r 8 d 11 5 2 o. l•I'•• PeiltHI• w · -1ba apt, CM Rec. facll Mo-Mo. No lease req (;~st"~fo~da~:."'so~tti or 3rd TD to SELL? 549-0077
• • • • • • • • •
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If it's got
handles
you'll grab
a sale
faster in
Daily Pilot
classified
ads. call
642-5678
carts•model
trains•bikes
•pianos"cars
refrigerators
·skates······
~! ........... !.~~11!~~! ........... !.~!1
~"EW t\PARTIIEVfS
~OWLEt\SnG ~~Vtll~ Olfi~
Lulluriou~ aduh & t..lm1ly Irving rn an all
new country selling. 1 2. & J Bdrms.
Amen111es Include. * RC'I ( "'' R..lng~ • 1 ot 101 Krrenhelts * 01'-h" ii~her d1\po~a1 * Pa11o·~undec k
* Orapes'carpeting * L.wndrv IM il111e~
*Rec rf'.)l1on roon1 * '\11 rnnrl111onin~
Come see us now for best selKtion. Take W.
Yale Loop to 10 Thunder Run in Irvine. Call:
(714)559·51 IO G) _ ... _ -... ·
642-4300 24 tir. $300 wk. 1'olJ blka to Fevas. $ 2 472 . 5 0 & 'oll "t 11 Feculel s,e,rvlc,e. 'eurnla~d2. of Beach Blvd). Approx. i-7_60_·_9_1_4_5 _____ Found Fem. Husky puppy.
beac,.,. 673•93D• emata Waslcllll area. 631· 286 r P con . ar aa. .. p 8 All> t Fem/pvt room & bath. .,... pool w/d non smkr mo. lree. From l 16.,. 11. $600/mo. rant or lenel a >t. mos. er son
Compl. hsehtd prlv C.M.' 1 Br. sleeps 4. across the S290i mo 531_7332 · C98d~8P:0o:.qwuieotm2abdn ~-~'. 960•2471 ....., option. Refs. 53&-9832 •••••lf•111t1/ mar1ce1. CdM 673-7359
$ 2 9 O I mo , '-Y u t 11 stteat rrom the beech. -1----------'•t1•••l1/ Found gent's ring vicinity 631-0412 $295/wk. 675-50e8 Fam. to ehr furn. 3 br wlk bch $325 share bllls.
1
2000 sq rt. comb Offiees Prof. woman & 14 yr old Lflf I fH•' Dover Shores.
Back Bay. NB. pvt rm IGWlflllT condo, $300/mo. E/Slda 644-4026. and Ilg ht work shop. daughter with lo lllara a •••••••••••••••••••••• &45-9190 c .M . Aval!. now Storage area w /lge homawltha.......,,...•'"' ... •-I SIOO $185/mo. Incl utll. Yng 642-2225 F RMMT WTD to shr 3BR 1 ovarl'laad door access. 3 · -..... ~·'"'""" na••••lf•f• I • I SJSO I e m . n o n • s m k r . • .. , •• PH...... Apt nr bch yearly $250. min from Udo 1$19, Ideal r 0 0 m m t · W r k · •• • ••••••••• • ••• • ••••• TftH•• 1 .
9 2 stry '4br. 2'Aba, dining' • MaJe 35 45 shr Sb 2ba e 7 5 1 1 3 e ( , s 2 1 3 -5 9 s -o 7 7 1 h m Psychic Readings c··0····s·· • •••• • • •••• ••• 646-555 . • r, • a t • tor comb offtoe/atoraga. .52., 4077 • (Spiritual' ED -Would love to giant TV ICreen, l'tOl lub, hse nr S.C.Ptua/Frwy. 857-2703) Call 645-4800, aak for __ .,.________ Jack 1714) 556_1178 pllfty with you. Call Sue
Lg rm$1050rent 'r'c patBIO modetn kltch. 2 ur gar. Sp1. $250+ahere utlls. F wanted to share N.B. Vickie or Anna. or Kathy any t Im e bath 2 · 11'1 est. H. · Aval! now to 9 /15. 641-4913. la1/•H1/l•rnl/ Pllol program tor teane-213/804-3233 near bch, 536-7103 6J6-7650 apt, 1 block to bch $276. 2000 eq ft w/500 1q ft r.· gera. Designed to trim . ------------------FIM to share 2 br In Co-675-4340. 545-886!5 storage. o .c Alrpod ••••H M/F prof. Capistrano bch. 11 ,1 • .r ~••o d t M $300 •••••••••••••••••••••• slim & provide care tor Liii& I VIOKI ..
House w/ocaan view,!!.'.'.'!!~ ••• ~~!~!~'!'~. ~~~I ~ 9 ,a;·5 Ev~os Female roommate went· ~;1~a8s28S2000/mo 'jG;' skin & hair & a weekly ·•
$250-$300 mo. Paul PALM SPRINGS &40-<1047 ad, prefer student. Ado-r----------ttnl"' SOOS counullng session to E:c~~~~~~~~S 714-759-2968, wkdays PRIVAC'I'? rabis 2 t>r houee on Bal-llEWNIT IUGI ••• •••••••'•••••••• motivate & Improve self
8-5. New 3 BR 2 BA homes. Shara Beaut. N.B. Watt· boa Island $285 mo. Private Offloe ... $495 Laundry Mat, Harbor & Im a~ e . Ca 11 Mary. OUTCALL 24 HRS
Npt Bch, quiet home for pool. spa. bbq, stereo. ctllf 2BR35+2BA apt wt 673·6900 ask tor Carolyn Branch Ottloe ... S75 Adams. Grou Income 85~ 624 ~===lilili-0:::20:::7::~ dally maid Hrv. From employ. F/M. Pool, Paysse at Water front Answering Sarvice ... $40 $4000/mo. Full erlce 1----------~3~~.e~~~2~-08ng::;i~; s125 night. WI D $325 + ·~ utll Homes; aves 337-7238 752-6408 $6000. Flu!! & Fod In· SCRAMLEJS
644•0369 Palm Springs Resort &42-6492. Vicki. eluded. 640-675".
Steeping room w/patlo.
Pvt ba. entry Aval! Sept
12 $250 mo. 11 t 37th SI.
Newport 686-3592 or
781-0467
Rentals, 213/87M208 Raap. F to ahr beaut. 2 br. Interior Design firm haa WUT ANSWERS
LK. ARROWHEAD-2sty 2 ba So. Tustin ap t. llr•ltft /11 •al 43S0 -400 sq. It, fum'd upataJre .. ,
new 4B, + lo". 2Ba. 2 $287.50/mo, 731-8630 ••••'·-····••••••••••••• office apace lor rent In Swallows Quartefl bu\ la Health . Fiasco
SUNNY'S Ex8CU11va
Stress· Reduction:
Otllce-hm-outcall
631-6377 " 12JC20 Garage lor rent. pvt Skypark area Looking nol your typtcat Video Glowed • Walrus
lrplcs. 2 b1lconle1. ca· M/F to 1hr tge 5 br home entry, storage Of' cars. lor compettble Co. for Game? Weighs only 7 Circus • Beadle Stable American host la· thadral oetllng, color TV. w/poot, lrplc, off Back $80 mo 648-2556' Info. oell 556-29'2 aak lbs. & can be carried CASH DOLLARS
Sips 14. North Shore. Bay, C.M. $300 utlla Incl. Allllf •nJ•I ~~oo tor Jan. under your arm? ts as last mu kids have learned mlhty w1 a1ndtad1
1~1'1 1h111gh Campi. furn, congenial $285/wknd. $395/wk. 631-6220 v"' A • ,.,. 1----------easy to sat up 41 plug-, sc oo s u en ,... v ng black man. Hunt Bch. $595/mo. 522-8631 •••••••••• ••••••••••• Costa Mesa 200 sq. 11. to glng In your toaiter? the value of money and expanses wlll be pd. dys Reasonable. 536-85-44 ---------Prol. Fam, non-emkr. Sh( 0E0ntn Simi 2600 sq. rt 75¢ per sq. T k I I how herd i1 Is to earn 979-5056, ev/wknds
---------PALM SPRINGS LABOR 2 Br 2 Ba CM apt. Pool, IRVINE. Phone answa-rt. & up. Call Realonomlc, e es on Y one m note lo Thay won't accept a hot 5" 1-6243 all< 101 Marla Next 10 greenbelt, pvt ent. 'DAY New Condo 1 8r. tennis. Jae. $327 & 'A u111. rtng. con!. rm, uttl pd, Corp. 675-8700. play &. can never be check anymore. Thay ,,_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
& balh. newly radec. H.B !steapa 4, pool. spe. ten-545-4356. Iv mag. i cl ry sarvs. ate. Also '.:Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii mastered? HM dapen-went their money In cold 1• $250 536-0794 n11. av all. 1ny1lma. $50 desk space. $ 1 ISO/up. 1• dabla mlcro-proceuor CASH DOLLARS EXITIO
P111. room. Co11a Maaa. day. Owner 5418-5669. F!Ta~~~:r:'t~ :;:; 540·9745 base circuit~ Can get r----------r
$50 wk, parking. Kitch Maul Klhal 1 br, ocean 1rvlne condo. $240 plus -16-1-7-w-.,-1-c,-ltf-, -N-.B-.-2-5-6 •::-..: =· fn".:1~~:':ppe~:':~ ~!!.~.f!.~~t .... !l.'!! llOh:~:~E~~oha·
prlv. 548-5082 vi ew. luii. $30 day. utll. 559-7416. 752-9069 10 41000 sq. tt. lst. noor. for under $6500 tor 5
PVT ENTRANCE & BA 673-6210: 673-2493 eve. Rmml wanted f emale, Agent 541-5032 I •I t I l II unlla? To find out about lortfte ,llfiat,
Non-smkr , business/ llAll l&WAll non.smolcer 1hara 4 Br 450 sq. 11. $1.00 per sq. ••• • • 1 H I· ~~·. ':,"!~o:~~~~f;:~ FOUND ADS The Last l•ffah,
prot. Laguna Bch S2SO. Beautiful 1 B<. 2 Ba. house. CdM , S285. ft 4001 Birch NB lfllW.eet 1-800...531-5256 ax1 620. 7•1-1111 494-0451 Condo al Illa Whaler In 640-4259 AQenl 541-5032 ·· · · ARE FREE .,
RMMTE. F Eastad. CM. Kaanapoll Beach~. M/F move In lovely home Small three room Sulla ARTIST. Need e1Cceptlonal
trg. yd, nice area. 3 t>r. Newly decorated, fully CM . Pvt B• & com pl with aeperete entrance artist lo do IJIOrtl ac11on Call•. ***
houea. lrpl 63 t-7958. equipped. Spacial Fall hou .. hold prlv. LHlle to single 120 a<: ti ofllces figure akelchel at reu.
$150. rates. 873-5211. 642-3277. lub-leuad. Secratartal/ price. Jame• 8e1-3388, 1•2-1111 Affanti• Parlor Racapt1on111. t84epflone. btwn. 5-10 p.m. • 0 WANTED: Patson 24 plus l•tall ,. llm 4Jfl M/F to lhr beautiful CM .t,•~ c-.-.. Copier/ MMQea avalla-pen 24 h,. 1 day
to rent room In Costa •••••••••••••••••••••• home. 1 ml. from beach. ./.., c....-,_..,. bla If desired. Free Par-LIQUIDATION DlSTRIBU-7 daya a week ~esa. Prolasslonal P1• l•J ........ Spa, washer/dryer, lrplc. .,.... lllng. Call Miii Marta TORS STOCK Lost· At OC swap meet. 2 Jacuzzi, Sauna. Local•
f d. Beaut. view. 2 yr old Contact largest Gay $300. 645-1637 .,....., ... _ ••a •atl Light Bulba • Fluore-RINGS. Sentlmental va-as well as Tourleu.
c 0 n d 0 ca I I Am y Male Female aervlce In .I''""--• -soent1 • Commerclal lue, REWARD. 540.6968 BankAmerlcard. Amer-559 -9400 daya or so. Calif. 540-67t6 M shr 1bdrm apt, non ~..,.,. ... _ 2500sq11 lndultrtal unll Light Fliiluraa ·Heavy lean Express. Diners. All
63 1-8506 aves S2 75 smkr. no ulll. Newport -'"''"" Ith 325 .. f trlc + Duty Shel\llng -Datu>Ca LOST Grey and oraam welcome 7141845-3433
plus '"'-' utll House prlvge. Fem. 30 shr lge levlah Beach S260. 548-3008 ;'ooo aq ~~~a~ co~a-Otflce Funrnlture • Who-ramala cat. (Had yellow 2I12 Harbor Bl. CM
Incl twnhee wlraap. working 0 ...... 1 ••/F t k W/23 , .... & fen--" vard. lesale Prlca9 collar w/lag) 1 yr old. • _, · ram.unt>ellevablaroom1 •• ":"1 "'c 0b• r yr .'2.oo~tttndulltrtal untl DISCOUNTS AVAILA· Olanneyra S t . Lag. T•n••., Employed male, laundry overlooking brook & ,., n dm lk rrm bch BLE Chlld h tb k •-~ ••~•
tacit. Quiet C.M. • area. w11arfall. POOi, Jao. lake, 2br 1 ba pool $295. *llLm lfFIOll* wg:athd_!0
01110casq. 11 of up-3 Deya~ R_a;~,n497~?31/° an .•• !:'.6.~·.'!! ••••••• !.".'!!
S 189. 646·0936 all 10 ate. NB/C .. a.ea. from 673-5309 From 1 room to 3 ""' •ug•-' 2•10. 2•t 26t ..
am. $300. 7~46 Share trg 3br w/1 rmmle From S1.16 a ,.r~~ •2400 sq tt lnduetrlat unit "I f 'A:n,; Lan;, Irvine" Loat· white F Shepherd. lllUlll llm.lllAll
I C •• all.,_ ... •-·" ,_,u1........ di. Air-with 1500 sq ft of up-Or ,._,1 2131."'" ...... 5 vie. Atlant• & Newland, ., __ ,..,for w----· ...... P'TII' m. M/F non1mkr 1hr 1rv1~ 2 n .m . Ill .,.,,1 1 ... 00 ..... • ..... '"" grad..,. o--.... .............. H B 536 2267 ....... ~. ..,, ...... n 1 " ·-1 1 utll "-" It porter Inn. 2172 Dupont ""' """'· · · • 497-572~ (bet 8am.ep"'l Bdrm. bath & rafrlg. Xlnt br. 2 ba Woodbridge mo. nc · ~"""s re-C 11 AM 833-3 3 Have 1ub-lea1e tenant VIDEO route, 9 gamat. ~~~~~· ~~~~-~· EI S Ide C . M . S 2 7 5. Chateaux w/M, 32 & 41 )If quired. ~90 8 · 22 tor 900 1q ft of office S.E.O.C. 15 K, FP/OBO, Losl: 8/13 M. Seatpolnte -
760-0169 or 548"6263. otd aon (retklee wltnda). Park Nwpt 2 br, 2 be apt. Airport ., .. -Exec. Sul-apace If d811rad. teavtng ., .. 815-2172. Himalayan. Sen Joaquin While Male wlll model
Walk Ing diet. to lake , N.B. 131()/mo + ~ utile. tu. From 22~50 1q. ft. Mcttvalad Owner. I m Ir: tJ lllf ~t• Dr. ~;~ ~tel Rd. Aay
In ~B. &q~let S;o;ri ~/~~ al'tOpptng •. All. gar. $310 760ot1854 an. 12. $1 per sq. ft. Many IC1ru. 751-4700 .! ... -!~ •• !!:;.'"A•••• -•rd. • 1 53~283
:1?3526a. nc u . mo.&1"utll1.552·9016 L bd bat Call557-7010 llU.lllTll Cllentwltheelo~ Lott: Bleck tong haired A l t hough In-. n on -
......,--------lnl'I sl-ard .. 1 w111 thr eg ara r'!', ~d. n~· =~ Eucutlva office aulte l ... WrNIT _._ plumbing bualn.a In Or. cat wllh tags. vie. Weef· maritime bllslneu, hold 4 BR 2 Ba nae. WID. elc. 1 Cd"' t / ._...... f ..... F u-· • 111;1 -Cty. Cont•-Elaa, •gt. oltff, OoYar Shores arae. Masi.,. lie .• all ~ft•, um. "" ap • gar, w Ing. /mo. 5'18-6058 comer o .,,,., wy, ,_.r COMPLETE EXECUTIVE "' A fd 64 5 2020 -·-$225 mo. No 1•t & laet. nonamkr, 9/1, 1400. HatbOf Blvd. Take over
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OFFICE SE"'VICE S 751-3191 ewa • or unllmlted tonnage, US 646-8386: 6"2-4172 675-51"8 II.UT .Ull&m iea1e. 1000 sq.ft. 11 904 " 5'46·2661. Merchant Mattne. Aleo
2500 .,, rt Condo. wtff lie· Hae ~Uful h0me1 In ft Call 151-6191 FROM $l8 5 to Oil. &Yn'-1 Loll: blk Lab/Shep F Mii lie. Would .,itertaln
C.pl-.. 2 adlt•. Or 1 adlt Laguna Beach lo •hire • UNEXCELLEO Sf A· i'ssv,_,,. "" &'1P"" W/bandlnl Nwpt avocational runt . wt<nd• $300/••" o-41M 12114 l'ountaln Valley Office I VICES. ENVIRONMENT, ••• ~ r.::......... I ;d' & v I a • '1 d0 & the tlke . at lltlle lo no w/1 ehtld or Juet 1 edit. ..,.. ., • epaoe. 2500 tci.ft. at 60$ STAFF Reaort oondoa. a.Mlead 876-0723 .. · charge ror "rtgtit 1tuff"
Pool, IO kit, 2 patlOe. lg Pvt, quiet 2nd nr furn. LR, a ft. Good ewpoaure. THE HEAOQUAATEAS City, Laufhllnfl~o. c>wnttra Sieve "Frileman.
baloony wl b•'I view. BR, i>.th fat mature M/F. good parking , Ta 14100 OOMPANIE8 Atver"'i""f. & I.oat: Malt. yellow L•b. 973.350c) dy9: 8734211
557-7043 or~ POOi, Jae, tennl1. C.M. nr eq. fl. PenlhOUN Bay-714/.1-1111 '1'"' , We Ntw ~-approx 4 >"''· reward. othafwfH
M/F proi.a.lonal 22.ao to 405. '310. 751 .. 133 tv front Suite. '*1tlno. pa· ale.~ 000. ~ P*· e31--0e58; 6412-4522. Jlrn .... ,,-_-,----~-,,-
.. 2 bd 1 b m-a tlOI. 673-1003 , ty, (2t$ 2294 '•rw 1 .. r • a •Pt In I .._. Ii '•' fflf Lael: t yr otd brwn Getm. ••••••••,•••••••• • •• C d M • Non·• m It r . Scaling Down? Starting .! .•..•... !!!n.,.... ara... ••MJ MM 8"°'1ttalr poln'8r. c.en & l..A.' to Allant•, 1• c:la• S300/mo + utll. 1tt/1Mt out? Lower overhHd a..uttful axecutlYe office ~:t • .:tr:".71' ••• r.;o;J Orenge. CM 142.--3151 11lr1lne tlOQt. S1eo Value. + dep. 7tl0-8236 ..,.., maintain Im•· omoe at aulte PIUa wwenowe tn l25K, lh«t term. __.. ... . wm NII $00(>. CMl't. Valld
wltnd. Regene9 Center, Exec PfSlglou detlGn t cu. red, 36~ loan • to •
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Foul'd: Golden Retriever. !Of 1 v-r. M7·11H ,left lllJlt• tn ~"" AJt. '*'...ft 1718 cen ~ 111"'9. 4Q.7t7'4 lrlah s.t19f mix. •
MIF_!"r Pbelil.ll t~. 811C1l1 e.yl , ..... _ nr ...._...., pr' port, full'/ equlpp•d & =~5-3812. from ~-5; . &u-<4929 --Clattilled Adt ~T• COuvO. OO • • enn I. ,..,.... ......,, ,. l ,9ftad for eY•r'I bUll· e44-tl39 .nw 6, f '300.145-51 va~ M t. & balh. H.B. ntM need. lndfv offt1c1e 1
M/F to •hr 4 br condo, '300/mo. ~.,,.. mo/mo. f rom 1315. 'CoMa M91a' You can be a : .
amtnltl81, EHtl>IUUa. ooldng for aomeone to 833-9978 Mov.ln AJIOIHnoe i
N.I . S240. 120-0112 roc:. a thar• apt CM so LAGUNA 3 Neri&.'/ mall or oMce. 000-1200 WJNN ER .
M/F .. iabt'd prof. onty, NB or CdM. 431:see1 50o aq ft w1it1 DOOcl tiwY a..t. 4197 .. 131 • •
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2 8 ·3 3 , e tr a I g ht , "'811 lllalblHly. 491~23&t ~
non..,,_., cMl't, to!"' partmant to •titre In I ........... •w-.-........ ~l.lal --..IAW I .C 2bd. 2"' b& ,_ qonao. L-aun• 1or 11...,., m• ....,.,., ... -. "''-o::i::;;m.-:n"mr.:m Just by sendJng us your name and : : :g~~1~· c.M. Dave, Of ooupte. "•741M 1 5.~~1!«:.":,,: H;~ :~:_~,f'::: 1 addres1 and by watching ror your
I • 2 "' apt to ..,. 1 · ~..., Aaant "''=-· 1 t th 1 1r1 d d r th MNt., Bdrm, own b.ith, w/,_ ~-1130 J*lt ·~ 4t1~ 17IO up, a tlO f'I. If'®" D8 me ft e C 8SS e 8 S 0 e
n .. r 1 .. ch/Adama. ut". 846-0IOI 1xim HlttKW 8'llcf loo. J~ etl'tll. Oftloe, 11101 At-Daily Pllot. : ~ =-~~:'°' ,a. Ii.tit oondo, Harbor .. o. Of laletf .... OM. , dO"do Clrote '" • 'r I
'Pre•tle;oJ• H.B. avall :f:~ ~l.;':.t~ .... 'I•· =~2.:.::fl~, ~ ... u~tlnttoft, 1 .. 01t. Win t'ckct.a to th\' "1rt'us. area amuatmenl altr•r· j .. .. ........ ""' lion• or 6portlnt e\'enu. JUSl nu OUI lhlft coupon and I · now, • oor. SUI. 940-~ tMa. , U~a..' 4 8 • • 1 o O: 1300 -a. ft. iUO ' mall ll l.CldttY 10 the. I .. No Ol'Mf, .,... .. 1 antacf: 2 rlnl'l'llM, etu· · j l'ront o,_., ._.. ,.., ' I
1Alfl'M'• wentact, *,..a d8flt• pr9f. tat. IHt a CdM dt• IUll'e. AIO, arnp1e door. l?lt _....A...., CIHtlfled Deptrimen& Oal1•• 0 Uo& I
I IA 11114 In OdM. *2'50 mo.. H o. req'cl. IHO/mo. J*g, ut• Dd. 2155 I. Cit I ~:l~40·-tHt. tv•• 1 • ., ~ • z 81).18" H.B. ooncJo, t7...atl Hwy. nMtOO 1• _l HOW. Bt)' S.ree&, Ootll MeH, CA tHH
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Oranne Coaat DAIL V PILOT /Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1G82
fOI your a.wn mower
•
DOLLAR DAV DOUGH SAVERS
Sell your no·longer-needed Items for cash.
If It doesn't sell, we'll run It another 3
days FREE. One Item per ad, must be priced
Sorry, no real estate or commercial ads .
Call today for full details.
(NOft..fetundable. l atre llne1 11 00)
3 3DAYS
LINES
CLASSIFIEDS642-5678
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sd .. 11 I COMPANION NIYll L.ag11 Se<;retery. tempo Office 001111011 Mull be RIOlnlOlllT TIUPMOH ~~htt -: eui!~e~~'i.:'':ou .. lalttHll,. 1005 HST PllT·TIME Ltvt·hl Older l•dy 10 help tor light local dellv8fle1 rary, 2 Weeill, Ctvtl Liii· Hperlenced In cotre I or 1Ju1y Chlropr•c.ttc SOLIOITOlll ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• JOI II TOWI drau, cook m•1l1, It Flllrne Mon-Fri, nall Olllon. Newport Center 1pondt nce, bid• h1r1"g. 0111c11 Min typing !i!> ~~lE ~· ·.... OWN HOME
Student Tr11noo Fall an ~o a llllephone promou. hsewl< Mull hive car 1ppH r1nce Good drl non 1rnoller, lully ope-typing. etc &A&-0806 WPM. g<>Oll flgur11, aptl ~~ • T ~-:~· • e.
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rollm•nl Show hOrte Ori c.ltrk for IOUI 11ew NB 548·0805 vlng record. Apply at rlencad only 760-8866 Op1ra1or1 w/Cllarllele. tuCle i 6 Mon/Fil Ei11 Wtt "~ uooll people to IJ r .
ttabla Live In Non •IHtpor Privet• desk, Ceaolari• Metler 81uaprlnt. 234 llYl·ll NBICM. ,1111 toe Arnio 1t1!ll•Alf. 11011 11rnok1ng ~'~~" ~~" n,J!,~~,';:1~:~111~ .~ ·.. '; ~""5 -~ l ( . "' .,.._. 1 ,,, 1rnoke11 244-2218 cosual a111ra Only '""'ui· L F I• h a r Av o C M bl• working ownoia 1111, pretor d CM O:J t e.600 1 • ./ , • * ~... Naod•d for lu~ury II· 540·9373 Pormanont, full time 101 111 ic.-. 1n the 11ver1111g lor , 1 • r' ~ 1. • ~ PIANO INSTRUCTION rorr"'"' 15 8 good phone 11un11 Banch h?tol Wee----------r 1nlm11 ca a or 1 dealt 631·411 ' REITAURAlfT ilolldoy Inn, ""'w trovt!I .,.
Privacy your home voice "nd lols 01 anthu kend11 ti n1vs1 3 daya per 0111111 l~valld EKp~r or !~17rio PART-T-IM-E rull 11mo µ011110111 11v111 th•h Stil11ry 1 r.omm1• GAIAGl !IALI AOS NOW • • } , ~
Cl111lc1l.popa-11n 81118lfl Hours I 1v11ok Conl8c t Mrs PAIT Tiii 10 lorn care of lfeoa-18btll tor lf0&1·8U/ c 11 111on I t,onuh C ull CLASSIPllD IY CllYI
W o r k s h o P s B A I Mon-f rl !>:JO 9 '.\OPM Voughen-Purdle Be a carrier countalor tomy No llltlng, no hou-CLERICAL •ti I 1H ' W ti 11 e' Io s s IL 113 I 1740 11fl1J• 1 pm SU llllOW
559.5754 Sat II 30AM· I 30PM 49~~:60 for a local naw1pepar ~ea,work MIF Aefa1an luu1H11111 11ur~u11 Xlrit Ir TELIPMOlfE
Jej1 W••led 7075 $84 00 1r1 s111r1 No a•1H1rl•nce n•cet v E1ec1ror11c n1111 tn Laguu11 "1n° 1o c 81 10 n c.; u 11
••••••••••••••• ....... Alter ''' woek, ahare "' COOi aery Work only 12 houra 673-2389 Beach tlas immediate !i!i t 5300 lor l11 tormtl llEIERYATIO•IST
PART TIME light house rumnershlp prollls Min 2 y1s exper Hiring a wee" $75 to aterJ ptua LOii OFFIOEllS open11111 for II part llrne lion A•k lor Jo Ann MOUSEWIYlS I
keeping &in axchng lor ror Interview. 1 immed Days onl y ad<lltl:>nal share ol pa1t· Aggrasaive Newpc•·l general clerk In our an SILIS OLElll STUOE•TS
prvt rm bath EKper'd call alter 6PM t1141553 0735 nerahlp's proflla Beach firm •eeks motl· gineerlng print room over the counter & phonu Pteo1:se111 s11n•>uroll1ng~
me e1ur111 responN11b1e, 1•2.&&l8 Coun t~r Help for dry A real lun Jobi val&<l lndlv1due1s Terri· Duties include lots ol II· ord11r., lor "rult1nyt yr11 Eusy nours I 9 11111 est re arences wpr " u " M1n1geman1 opportunl-1 1 bl " v M F r Bch/CM 631 8284 tll 312 Cle11n1ng Plant Expar , I F" I I I II torles open Must hav11 Ing opera! ng uaOrlnt ph1c supply ~I ll me Ot1 " No •lll"'l'"' •· -or w111tre1n Mu81beneat 1,as 6o00r PnMer~.a2w5:7•8 A E Lie machine and Xer o ll Mon Fri Apply Master nf1<ttn~ry Oll1cl'IOChll'tt Light housework In ait •tar '" • " Harbor·Paclflc equipment Must l>e atlle Blut1print 2:14 Fi~cher m N B c,111 64 t O 1 1'1 chng for prl rm /ba 1 n a PP e 8 ran c e &Kl 312 955-0073 to type 45 WPM Em Av" CM !>40-937'.! 1i .. 1w~11; 4 1J m
Resp . mature. exper d BILINGUAL AIDE 499· 1985 30846 Coast Exec Sac/Admln Ant ployee will work S hours
RETIRED?
references 545-2515 Hun 1n1g1 on ll ea ch Hwy Souttl Laguna Ltaa Pre1&11/E1ort• dally Prttla• someone Sales for landscape Archllec· s A School 1a1r1c1 in111r Custom Cabinet Shop turat Firm In Irvine Xlnl Min 2 yrs e•per Heavy abht to work mornings Est ale• ep 10 <11s111 Sharp distinctive custom estod 1n hiring substitute n~"s man e•perlenc--' S 1 1 typing & clerical tun"· buts Tho New Europt1en 1 van 1 ck """' ~ ""' acraterla and organ · " E mura s 1 · ru 011111gual a1oe 3 hours m cabinet making & In· zeflonel tklllt Ability 10 tlons Small Nwpl mtg We oller good pay and a Effortles' KCerc1se ma
motorcyc a. comm I per day S days per stilllouon Call 631-3455 work under pru•ure, co S 1000 + comm 4 day work week ChlM Comm Wiii tro1n Reas 775-7184 w11ek Salary $5 115 per btwn t-4 30 ($200+, 85 t-0•44 I 111r1101185 a,51gneo anurna raapontlblllty. •---------92 239 Logos. letterh•ads. ads• hour Fluency "' Engllstl I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii coordinate worll lor large Maintenance/ Gardener Ttltalo ltrkltr 213 5 4
By award-winning gra· and l dot1an/ HCmong OANCEAS olflct1 Word p1ocaaa1ng prefer over 40 yrs for Sates Hardware. lull 11me
ptllc artist Ouellly qua· A pply 204 5 I ramer dostrabla or wlll train 71•.•94.9•01 1n rMlali h111<1wert1 l.IClre L H t 1 B t1 ilPI comptei1. e~per1ence "' "' "' " ranteed 848-1875 ane un ing on aac •<tOO to Sl,000 WHk I Call 714-llnl-5120 bll· neoasaarv 546-9556 Ask 1or Lynda no Sunueys ar eves See O Phur1e 964 8888 •U ween 8 AM and 3 PM 12•7 Stave H W Wrtgn1 Co IJ.'.11..~~~'f'. •.•• !.1.~. C.aptt11n tor 80 motor Full & pa11 time dancers FACTORY TRAINEE liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I Part 11me. mature girl lrl 126 Aoc11aster Co'llll
AOCOUITS llECEIYHU sailor immediate wanted lor Bare M111-3 shllla. Ideal !or women Management :!,~rg ~~~g~~ 1~~190':;1~~ Mesa
AO AGENCY 760· 1977 1mum Taleg1ams Audi· over 30 No phone cell• Utottlll Markets I work, typing & packing Sales, PIT Retail Faor1c.
Fast-paood envtroriment 1 CAREER OPPOllTU•ITY lions being held this Apply In person. • A M w 8 1 s 9 c 0 s 1 or a An a 1 7 1 4 )
11 you have related ax· 28 openings week from 9 AM to 3 PM IVERPAC CORP Mcmt. Tra1n1ts
1
7141851:8239 772-4471
parlance. a•cellent ty Le Jr n t ti a I I e I a o I Apply at Sare Minimum. 5455 Production Or, HB lecl• Ytur 01rttr I PART TIME OE LIVERY SILES PHSH ~!~~~~~\~~lt~J~9a ~0~8°~ m11rkeling-merchl.lndls111~ !?~7h°":::m~a~~ll~,e~1'~? 11~j FrHt leak Oltrll Start your new career on PERSON 18 yrs gll w onted fer retail shup
you Call 9 7 9 . 7 00 O 778-8421 Ex par pref'd. full tllT'a. our 3rd shift. earning $4 driving record 751·4705 on Balboa lslond Apply
(Eileen) $1 17 5 Apply In person. Ask lor Up to $4.50 as you be· In person only. Mon-Fri
I
Margie. come more exp'd. You I PlllT TIME 226 Marine Av Part & Aide lor paralyzed young DATA E TAY CLERK8 E><-Sllrf I Sialll lltttl w ill ba promoted to Eves an<l/or weekPnds lull/llme
woman Mon-Fri. 7 30-S I p11ndl g Nwpr t Ch mgml. & supervisory le-Respons1bltl adults. over pm. Must drive Balboa PEFfMONTH credit c rd company has 497•4477 EOE vets. Call. 714-537-4840 I 21 , wllh outs1ar1<Jlng. al Sales Aeprt1senta11ve lor a
Island 675-5652 910 EXPERIENCE FIT tem positions avail I lllllEllll a I ntervlews held every tractive personallt1es lo unique new m1nl-powe1
MEEDlD lor Data ntry clerks Wed 7-8 pm at 111 De' work wtth youth (ages surrer sport ooat ElCtan Apt. Manager, couple w/ 1 10.000 key strokes per I PLANT MAINTENANCE Mar. Costa Mesa and( t0-t 4 ) Coll 2-SPM s•ve background nee evperlenc·e lor 100 unit lmmed1atehir1ng Perfect h xp r req ired Parl/llme $350/hr Ma· A I 8 ~ r e e u · · every Thurs 9am-noon al 642-4321. Ext 346 EOE e~umes on ) aste• garden apl . Costa Mesa ror young m1ndeC1 peo· c 0 n 1ac1 J Ta 11 0 1 lure. reliable Call Mo· 1390 C H L Inc 3961 Mac Arthur
$750 +bonus+ apt. pie Cail Sun-Wed noon M on -Fri 8a m to n1ca.i;..2.5604alt 5 h N 0 st wy , ag 'PAOJECTIONIST P111me Blvo Stet06 NB92660
642-4907 wkdys I ~ 9_6_4_5_3_!>_4____ 4 30p m 714-759-7900 I General Olllea Sc E E expar pref d. NB
675-4580 att 8PM Sates Artist PI T. for sllk screen Carpel c1ean1ng & light DECOUTIMI SALES PI T, 9 am -2 pm. Mon· Manuel tebor s4 per hr
!·Shirts EKperlencad maintenance Some days PI T FIT. Kint comm. Fri Need mature person 18 end over Unskilled 631·3494 and some evenings PT w/otflce &kpar 10 do
TEUPMO.E
IDYERTISl•G SALES For IOl"11I collnqo 'lpo11-.
aru.J pt1t1orn11uy 1J1b pu
1>1tc;U1on t> r F t C 111
'J<i7 9910
r t!lllµhona Sal•···
Er;1rn ll1g Money oy '"" lltt•H.n $JOO S 1011111
week (,all 5J6-7 '> I ,
TOPI (SS MODELS
$/'\ DAY • PAID OAll Y
110 8>P IH'C • 826-258"1
Typists
Experienced La~1tro11
Operators
NEEDED IMMFOIAlE P
VICTOR
434 I Olfcll St ~ 2 1 l
S56 8520
Con1ai;1 Anne or P .. gQy
101 dppomlmt-lnl
Un<J.,rwr111ng
Coron• dt l fll•r .•.....•..•......•.... 1.10ltf11J ( qu111 Jl1•ltf
r.11,11" VW '""'~ l'I II \ttl AYI• (,(.JM /~CJ UJ'JI,
Coit• /11111 •••.....•.•....••....•
IANfl " INl•OU I f'I Al" '.Al I 4/ll .vf
tHU1 .. t ,.'4 t ti '' ,, .,,.,.,
Mov•hU 1t1 r U•t.;fJI , • .,,,.,.,
\t11fhJ IHU' I f"' ( .. cJOhH 1 'J
11(_.n tr.JfJnt ••'l uo J vtru
l U t I fl I t U t •Ji I C'
It 111• 11 .I\ ')lltt 1 /I
'.l ''' tl1•1n.1nt.11u •11
I .. 111 l~t •I t •fll' ti /-\ti
''"'' " ,, ti ,, t •·.d' ' \!(
PVt 1
~'!'!!~~f!!~. ~.'!.~~ ....
'•• 1\1" ~ulll S11t1Su11 M·~r 1.-ms ~ 1:12 Sinon
11 '• [l f'l I S ti C ti I (. B I I •SH1l)t•I
S.t-Sua 1·5
lit··•• n tuwel~ soo~
1otu·1•J•• 1Jd10S e>1<.tures
1 "n ,.1 .. u tools and
1 "" r me"" 9J4:? Hud\
''" Or tliu~tlilrrl & Ha
n1111on~
t "'' 114t• \JI~ Desk5 mo
''" • •••JqPr 4 • 6 Bd1usta-r •· 'uo• , .1<,• for van
• ,, t1 u10 t hdirt; misc
t 40lil C.,.Jritteua Lane •°''" ''""'''" 8Pactt Sat '' '"" or, Sun 9-3 "' , , ,
/1vi11t ..•.....•.......••••••
A.1T1H1 1 , 1•w f.,, E Washer
I ft•l11t1r•'
(J11••hftJI '''J'
t '"'" ~ tt1 1 .. ,._ .. ,,,,c.ler~
• If I HIN,, •ti {)f M~ ...
t U1 11 ti ll iUI UH) r1 ft 1f \ II•,,., b (, r 18 Re
fHUlf"• 1h 4 h1h• Wt',h•ff ''''It C q11trOI rV b/W,
f1•1n·. i ,,,., l•H1 "J(f•v11 pli1•. br1r •J Otdt 2 Tor·
'"'" ~)''••• tt <•111l t iH~t I •>•''1 '.1r1t1tl Ir ·nne. 1J1•r1t'1 q ''' ''' ~ lfl) W.•lruil WtHner •lfln1s "HJ 'hHl"t•i,tlU"1 It
11 ii ">·•' 1,w1 cr+d4 r-,.,~,
th~nt ''l.iu C.(1!J,t.1 Mu'•••
I Alff,f 1,AHA<•t '•"l I
/ .'( 1) IJ1 tp1 t)f ~ 111 I
v·'"' p I I ~"I <;"
'J J
H• ._.,.,I t ,t1•tt V 1>!~1
IJ,i nJ1n.tJ•.. ,, '"'Jt lt'CJ r:; t t <j 11 "JHI rJ ,
t 4 I U:J I~
"A' -,t ''" tn1s w,.,_.tJ .... in
Bttrm JI ... ''" d111 rn) '"' n lur.-b 11 '·b33
1.1w.1>r~t '.>Al f SAT Bl:?t
'I •,L111 8·n 9AM to 1
A11Hr.111 ... ~ cr;ilec11ole$
1"''"'•1 1 111 lf"ms ooo~s.
tf)utt; ,.,., nnSs furniture
Jt\IJ Ml/(. ... MORE Also
'" .. tH''' I• ,.-.. ncAt door
'' 1 1 ""llo;e Way
Gisantic nm,le hie
lJl, r ,1.~" to• all ages , ... ,1,, in ·1 rcscque1ball
11-1q 1Jut11"~ luggage
···Babysitter wanted tor 4
,; month otd Full time
•. Mon-Fri. starling 9-t3 CASHIERS
966-253 1 worll In OC Must have Local )Obs flair lor color. will train bl\kg. typ'g 60 wpm & 548-4360. 494·0395 phone Could work Into --:--=-=:-.,--...,.-...,.----840-5249 lull lime call 556-2932. MATURE Ambitious per-
Expenenced at OCC DEITll ASS'T ask for Lorna son w/aome mkl Ol<grd
Supplement your income
by dotng 1nteres11ng work
on bet1elt of nat1ono1
companies S• hr guar
plus xlnt oonus incentive
program Good speaking
votce a must For perso-
nal interview call Jell
Patte rson et
Looking for e .. 1rc1 Ill·
c.ome? lry Part-Time
sales Tuesday thru Fr•·
day 9 AM IO I:? Noon
Apply PENNYSAVER
1660 PlacE>nt1a Avtt
Costa Mesa Asl< tor Mr5
White
Our Grow1119 Gener el
AgP11cy ties an e•r;allf!11t
oppoflunity tor an e, pe
11t:nt..~d auto U'1Ch:HWrllUI
Musi have a n11n1murn ot
2 years eip w11t1 non
stanueru markels w.-
olfer compe1111ve sala1;
e•ce11en1 hinge 1>ene111•
and e pleasant wo11>.1n l
envtronmt!nl (all I nr,
549-9923
WAITER/WAITRESS
1 f AMII• SALL Aot•
'i'Jt"~ tr 'J'fi fJU·l'll) r Ir>
lh1•~ Ir,,., ~f\ 'JUI dCJUit
t• rn ,•;r .,/,Jk• hM~'t()
' 13Q J.l,u1I J' ,,.,.., (utlJ ~ur 9,,,.
,, I '""'' f-IS r OP line Of
1111 •· .1nC1 cr .. ldrens
.,,. H' Jf".I~ i,.;h1s Acnve
U·I"''',, w ... .,, Ant•Que sale
r ,. •I 11(;01 Sat Sun 9.4
1J1111"r~ •y Park •8286 I l)•')IO•t' Your home or mine
... 955-2526 Costa Mesa Temporer)I to help in mkl /mgml
port 11me days contact NEWPORT BEACH IEIElllL IFFIOE business 6•5-6776
Joyce 556-5896 or Challenging. rewarding E•parienced perton to ----------
555.5927 EOE MIF/H career oppl"y lor a ma-run small office-type MEO. CHIROPRACTIC Banking
TELLER
Part-time position ava1· labia In our South Coast
Plaza otllc;e Experience
preferred. Contact
Kathy Amburgey
7 14-540-4066
CALIFORNIA FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN
695 Town Center Or
Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626
Equal opptr Employer
71<11545-5776 CASHIER/HOUSEWARES turE! eTnergat1c. eFKper . quotes. answer phone. ASSISTANT t girl office ass t op pay ringe process mail Spend part PIT PM Ins experience
Sales Exper prel Applyl oeneflts 4 dys Non-lime learning inspection required SenefllS ---,-.T-1-1-E-S_A_l_(_S_ 3\o~rEoC~1 ~!.;Cle~~,:" smkr 644-0595 ' lor smell machine shop 541-4779 Enioy working with I.ids,
Dental 1 MICRO Precision 273:?4 MlllT. TlllllEE I and wish increased ear. CHAUFFEUR Experienced A DA nea-1 Camino Cep15trano. LB· We continue to grow and n1ngs. ut11tza your out
AND OTHER DUTIES dad lor Orthodontic guna Niguel prosper as the natlon·s going personallty. 1e11rn
Male College student. practice In Ml5llton Vle1o 1 714·•99•4SOB most successful and ! how to become a 1ra1n11e1
25 35 nrs per wk Dey or area 93o-37o3. I General Olflce respected marketing co sales counselor Call
evening driving Non· DEIUL ISSIST/Or1ht. Insurance agency In Due to expansion, we j 2-SPM 642 4321. E•t
red 640-5335 bene. ROA or eligible lor energe11c person to highly motivated lndlvi-----
Saut1t cook m10 2 yr e~p
lull ttme poS111on Apply
1n parson at C.orela L•l
Aestourant 900 Bayside
Or N B MuSI have Re·
terences ------Sohoal Offiot Mer.
BANKING
smoker. dark sun requ1.
1
Chairside Xlnt wage & Costa Mesa has opening have openings lor t or 2 1 346 EOE
CLERll N e w p 0 r t 8 e a c h 1 handle a variety ol olflce I duals to assist in mane-Quality Engineer
" 640-0121 duties. Must be reapon-, gament.
slble and willing to learn. Rapid advancement in MECHANICAL TYPIST 1 Dental Assistant. lull time. Paid company benefits salary and responslblllty
lor an elemen1Brv school
40 hr wor k week 10
mos work yE>ar ~ vrs
c lerical expr req 55
wpm 1yp1ng 80 wpm
SIH St 188 1$ t443 per
mo Apply 1n person
FOUNTAI N VALLEY
SCHOOL DISTRICT
172 tO 0111< SI Fountain
Valley Closing dates 8/25182 E 0 E SAVINGS REPS GREAT WESTERN SA· Iron! & back olllc;e a•-Call alter 9 am. For ap.
1
Exper In public contact perlence, ROA X-Ray lie polntment, cell Pauline, preferred. but will train VINGS 15 the place 10 req . solary open. t>ene-549·6909 aggressive, hard worlllnp
dynamic. grow1h Orient· 642-6680 eves & wknds tllll mUSTI Tete-Marketing career II start your career with 8 1115• Newport Beach area ----------, lndlvldual who desires 'I
ad fln11nc1al 1ns111u11on 673-3403 Motivated atyllat needed you era seeking a ctiat· 1
DESIHHS H GALL to lotn progressive salon lenglng and rewarding
Sall Comm/ Vac111on position with an esta·
C a I I m a n a g a r I bllshad. growing com-
714-540-8889 pany. call Kevin McKln·
Full Time. Day shill a&·
s1gnment clflcetlons 10
establish detailed 1n-
spec11on requirements
Ouallty a.saurance bach.·
ground required Call
Collect
SECRnARY /LECJL
Columbia Savings. a1 leader In savings and
toana. has 1mmad1a1e1
openings In Its beaullful
Ora119e County Offices
These positions olfer ex
callent salartee. good
growth potenttal and
' outstanding benefits
One year Teller expe-
rience In a bank or sa-
vings and loan Is requ1
red Please contact the
ottlce or your choice tor
more Information
This 1nd1v1C1ual wtll work
1n the Loan Document
Department Dulles In
elude llltng. preparing
real estate loan docu· 1 ments answering
phones chec:lling docu·
ments and 1nven10,.es I
Typing of 40 wpm is re·
Quired
for the Professional that
SJmply Cloesn t have the
time. and for everyone
concerned with value
Flat design lee. $3 per sq
ft We will sell al cost
plus 20% 759-1406 P 0
Box 5 t20 Balboa Island I 92660
Hardware Sales PIT. semi _n_o_n_a_i _7_t_4_15_4_s-_5_77_8_·_
retired lypa. Apply In
person Crown Herd·
ware. 3107 E Cat Hwy.
IDIUS
Tonre Scanty Penty now
hiring models Please
INTERTEI
SERVICES
BILL MAYS
2131377-097 t
Mld·tlza Irvine law firm
seek& diligent legal sctry
w/m1n1mum 2 yrs recent
civil hl1ga11on in Cahfor
n1a Salary negotiable
excel benefits Send re·
sume 10 l aurie S111ei.
209 1 Business Center
Or Ste 200 1r~1ne Ca
9nt5 CdM un 548-6444. C.M _ll_El_l _l _ST_l_T_E_S_l_l_E_S SECRETARY FANT OFC
HIRING IURSES AIDE Need 2 eKper people in Adv Agency Gooo ly·
•' ·.
COST& IHA
Part Time
Darlene M 11g u1re
646-7141
ll llUH
Full and Part Time
Ja11neue Moore (213) 943·3767
llEWPORT /FASHIOM
ISLAH
Part Time
Joanne Piccolo
760-8551
Wl FOREST
Part Time
Cheryl Wilson
770·9065
We offer compe1111ve sa-1 1a11es ($800/mo 1 qnd
excellent oenef11s For I
1nterv1ew eppotntment.
ce•I between B 00·4 30.1
Mon~ay lhru F"<Jay
laoll Mer1lt1
(114) 1H-Ul3
or 151-UH
GREAT
WESTERN
SAYINGS
Coste Mesa CA
Equal Opp1y
Employer
COLUMBIA for Ad Action
SAYINGS Call a
11111 Lt11
As1toletlt1 Daily Pilot
Equal Oppty AD-VISOR Employer M/F
DRIVER
Delivery driver tor food I
service department
needed by Huntington
Beach City School DI·
strict 1 t month position
Salary $1069 to S 1332
per month depending on
experience Apply 2045 I
....ctamer Lane Huntlng-
1 on Beach Phone
964-8888
If it's got wheels
you'll move it
faster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad.Call
642-5678 and
a friendly
ad-visor will
help you turn
your wheels
into cash. Selling anything wilt> ill
oa11y Pi101 ciass•f•ed Ad ~~~6~4~2~-~5g6~78~~e;;;;;;;;;; 1s a simple matter
jUSI call 842-5678
< c. ___ cs __ : ___ ., __ , )
W4NTBD
( ---a5-.----) )
Newspaper
Carriers tor routes
in Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley & Newport Beach
•
ln Pedlatrle group In N.B commercial end mdu-1 ping and ptlone voice 111111 WOlllEll llLY Full or p/llma. Call Mrs stria! real estate tor sue-es1an11at Shorthand a Local firm has 36 ope-Austin 545_4670 cesslul and growing llrm plus Opportunity to ad·
nings In 5 dltfarent de· --.,...--------Beat working condlhons vance Salary commen-partments NURSING ; n Newpor t Beech surate with !'.rparien'e
.~l~Q~g.
•• (a,.,1 .... I• ....
•• ,art.e.t1.
YHll llllEI
PHPU llLY
714·964·5354
Call Sat-Wed Noon
HOSPITAL
lGCHm
HOllYllU
Gene1al olflce position tn
corp accta receivable
office Medical billing
eKpar praf "d Good
communication. mattte·
matlcal and typing sklll1
M ust be dependable.
r esp . and 1all·
motivated
I Ruiz 714-640-8950
HOSTESS
10 help thow spec1ecular
Newport Beacb E.acu·
!Iva rasldanea to wealthy
proepectlva buyert t or 2
dar• wk. Bright and
exciting personality, &K-cellent converHtlon1ll1t
end typer grooming end
appearance are 1610111·
t•ly a11en11a1. Real ee·
Ulla lie. 11 halplul. but not
required. Send reply• to
Dally Piiot Ad No 1041. P 0 . Box 1560, Co1ta
Mesa, CA 112626
ltllHLWll
3 dayt, 6 hr9/day In Nwpt
Bah. Lt htawork. Raia
Owft tra11tp0r1atlon.
676-3615/675-3471
MttnlUlll
Exper M 11tt he ve
Supervleor quall11••·
Ma111r• Pan time. Ex0411-
tant pay. llee-1300
llYD1•Y
otHllU ....
' 7 14/646-5051 Call Carol, 10 am-12 pm I
1
557·0642 OPERATING
ROOM
REAL ESTATE SALE----SPERSONS· Earn extra Secretary/ Receptionist
Income. part time F1. full lime position. Lido
nanclal plann1ngr Marina Village please
Insurance sales & recru1-I c o n t a c I L • s a .
ting We 1raln. 646--3683 I 714-675-8662
RN'S I
TECHS
1 11101rT1011st SECRnAH /EXEC
Newport Beach Area I to CF 0 ol Np1 Sch Fin
Law Firm .seeks recep-Svces Firm Challng
11on1st with light 1ypln1; Aespon po1111on Good We currently have ope-
nings for both positions
on day & evening shirts,
for Individuals wllh min·
lmum one year acute
hospital eKperlence In an
operallng room envlrori-1
ment
• STAFF RN's
lt41otl
Evenings & Nights
Ell
Evening• & Nights
ltHltal l1r1try/
Ptlll1 IOI
All Shlf1s
Ions consist of three 12
hou1 thlfls per week and
part·tl(Tla poalllon1 are
two 12 hour shifts par
week. Earn $18/HA on
full time night shift, plus
lull benefits package
•MEDICAL
SECRETARIES
IMIHI
Oayt (pert-time)
IOI
Evening• (part-time)
Botti poaltlona require
medk:al larmlnology.
• IOllTOR
TECH I ~~K~1~~:n ~==I
quired I
We off•r en uc•ll•nt
talary and a Pl•aaant
modern working •nvl-t' ronman\ Pleue call.
apply In P9'IOll or ror-
werd your rnuma to:
Jackie Serlltt, RN, NIHMI
Recruiter.
sllllls. Full time position I typing. 1nc1 sta11a11ce1
Call Karen 851-1005 SIH Skill! & aplilude for numbers. &lCper req d
Call 640-0123
SECllnAllY
E .. per d 8 30·2 30 3 de~ wk Xlnt typing Non-
smoker Corona del Mer I~· 1770 ·-----
----SECllnlRY
car s •bikes•
•s k a t eboards•
tru c k s *bab y
carriag es•t ea
c arts•trikes
rol le r s k a t e s •
w a lke r s •to y s
•wago n s•••·
E1<pand1no CPA Firm
FIT. phones. typing. dlc-18phone. 10 Key word
prcc helpful E•cellent
benefits 833-9887 Judy
SECURITY
GUARD
Ona pert-time po1llion,
rotating on 3 shllta 24
houri per wMk Requl
res aiper1ence In an
Industrial or manufactu·
ring environment. PlaMe
submit appllcallon Monday through Wed-
nesday. 9·11 AM or t-3
PM
EMERSON
ELEOTIUO 00.
lndu1trl1I Controt1
Dlvttlon
3300 S Standard St
Senti Ana. CA 927t2
SCOOt e r s •ho t Equel OpPOnunlty
rods*coupes • Employer
tra ile r s •ha rd ltnftt ltatfH to~s·conve:-t-ATTENDANT Full & p/ llma apply Chavron
i b e s •rnotor 125t No cout Hwy, LllO
h o mes •iawn Sch 1 mowers•limos 1tw111 IHlllu e,.r. 1
E.am extra money In your
tpar• time. Oeyt, Evee. &
Wknd1. Xlnt opponuntty
lor ho11 .. wlv ... tanlor
cltlzen•.1. 1t11denl1 &
oth•r• •4,00 P•r IH.
Cttlld care or car pool fOUITAll mll .. ge euppl•mant9d.
I
I I
•corporate Produotk>n •110-nacae· 1
heaaquarters I :~ :r.o&:\ .. · Costa
•garden carts TWID 1111 I
Call Jami• from II· 4, I VAWY 2131430-8201 or Model A's•••• • PART TIMI . Immediate • typlngtables opening. 850.0907
•
Good Enrnin9s
Super Trips
Great Prizes
CALL
CIRCUL.,ATION
DEPARTMENT
7141527.0235. oo1111m
I i...oa1 &«lfetary In Hunt-I HllPITAL , lngton e.ach. P fl, bpeJ I
Wheelbarrows• ,T&ACHERS: fern extra !
t i I lnoome, part time. Fl-
r e cre a ona n11nclal pl•nnlng/ lntU•
• Daily Pilat
6 42-4321
I N.011 .. ry. At 1 .. t t 2 17100 l!uelld 0 WafMf
dayt a weelc. ,,.. houre.1 Fountain Valla y, C.A : wm train on 18M Dltiplay 927ot
wrttar. 847-eo.41 (714) He-to92
Selling anything wl1h a• E\'::~J1~'Y
Dally PllOI CllMlfle<I .Adi--~---:-::-~-::
11 a llmpla matter ... ,Shef> at ho!M. lt"I au~ tu•t call 942-st71 1 wtlh _c11Hllled 642-5678
Vehlcles•golf renca .. IN & racr11ltlng. carts. mode I We train. '4&-3683 .
tralns•bfkes ca<11t1ac• to Oo-Car11 •ptanos•cars wn11t~ the 'a<1
r efrlftAr&tors Roll ·em off tha marllat ..,.. With a OleNlli.d Ad •skates• .. ••• ca11 Nowt 942.sua
w111l car lor w1cke1 b:t~
kPI 1u,,c11 service 9 ~o 1
1 :io pm Mon F11 r.m1
$t~ to $170 w~ly MH~I
be neat. pe1sonatite t:n
ru9e11c 979-07-47 "' tO em 101 appt
Wanted a lew good peo-
ple wtio Nani a chance 10
have a financially secure
ruture ANO are willing to
1nvl•SI SCI&• 0 lllllE' 10
ac;h1P ve 111e" luture
goal~ Jeacoclt. D1s11
'::onsunants 1\31 5008
WANTCO ENERGETIC &
CREATIVE people IOI
costumed b11lloon dah·
very service Musi have
own transportallon call
76G-876B for appt
WIREMSE WOHER
Fullll1me Must be 2 t .S havP valld Cahl driver 5
he. 497-1741
WORD PllOCESSOR
Long term pos111on •n
Son Clemente tor a Mag
Cai u ;.. operator who is
ffe"tlle & works well un-
llP< pr~"sore Fo• in.me
Cl•ate 1rterv Pw •a 1
Manpower t empo1 ar~
Services Irv 85 t 5858
flt t'I c IH ad i If ..•••.••..•••.........
~!'.111.".~'. •••••••• !.~~~
WEST MINSTER
ABBEY
ANTIOUE MALL
1 I 7S t Westminster Ave
GARDEN GROVE
554-6103
Oriental Dragon labia &
Cheirs $ t t 501080
2 4 85 Irvine C M
628-33 t3
Antique pine hutch 36 1n X
68 1n Xlnt conll $375
~48-6234 -----
*IOITMU*
AITIQH Hiil
I FLU IAHET
SUNDAY SEPT 5.
LOS lllllTOS TRACI
IMFO (211) 111-3140,
0 1-1311
Oriental heavily carved
hutch 2 pcs repro
$950 1-628-33 t3
Or1en1111 heavily carved
collee & 2 end tables repr o s $5 50
t-628-33 t3
So•t'lt-t tur *'"''*" IOI"> ""' 11r <N g• u.J•• ' tr on1 ov,
,t(J,f· ?:JtS4 \A 1nv11•m tr
W df tM
Sun only 9 4 Cl<•th .. s
turn apple~ m1~c 10',
Sa1110 l'>ab<'I
J6C W•~1f"1 d C11
4r, t71b r v~ m11rl
m·"~ Sal/Sun 011 cldy
!'.".'! !{'!f !~~. ~.t.'.C.~ •••• u 1am11y Qt1r,1q .. s:i11 mull•
,, ...... ,.1r,.,. H'""''es A'sn
<,t mmun11~ Ga1age Sale
61• r.on es Irvine • S F
er• ,,., • t Cul;er & Wat
11ul tu~I So o l •·5
!)a1 Sun Aug 21·22 9.4
Barqa1ns Galore•
fl,.r.1t1l Or11•r •violin Ii·
'" 11 rir .. ~Ps sew ma
t 111"" •~h•c; motors. many
,,.,,,..,~ <;.11 8-'l Sun t2·3
<.,viver I'. Se1on area
1 lbl,~ lrunoa<~ C.as11
bab~ furn ll~tr>ss .-t11I Aris Jr1d Cralts upright
tltttns tcivs I'. 1.lolh1>~ 1.>1otno records ciothes.
many hsehlO items somP labr•cs etr. Sat-S11n 9-3 tools No 1unk Sdl Sun No 2 Ouskuwing 9 4 10311 M.,.1ka1 Or , •• ----
GIRAfiE SALE
Hntg Bct1 Brflo~r•u•sr ~ Newu1t Bt•c• Gart1etd •••• ,; ••••••••••••••••
-C..AAAGE SALE Every· G1an1 Apt comp11 .. garoge 1,.11ng goes Sall Sun
s •" Cornt-r U • CJ Augu~t 21 :n 319 Irvine OPl&war., <;at Sun tO " Avt' Na
!l.~~~~~~!.i!! .......... ~11.lf!!'.C.~~ •••••• !.~{~
Aali•Dll 8005 Rpfriq S!'ari. t6 cu 11 FF
••••'••••••••••••••••• hot\om frf'PZer w nt DfSlfilflR'S HOME s tc.,, '>5 t s• 11
FI •. 1 I I 0J.ul1lu• I .j I' REl"R1GERATOR
11>11Qu"~ Comµ1 n1;i·11 No lrosl >Int cond
Wto0t1 bdrin '<t•I Slt S, ~' C.J!.t 640-9079 000 compl 011 rrn ~.,,
w1m..i1c11ing r;h11•· c;arH G E r•!'I .. armon" $1!101'10 flE'Ct"c Dryer S85
ledlhP• 50t.; "" m.11rt11r"~ 7 t41963·7920 eves
Ct101r<o II. Slfl'•I~ <11'1''"''" H~ f H GEAA TOA Frtg1·
Po Pa' f1 c n "' h "' r1il1re n••wtv mdl wh11e
matching ch.w .~ '"'r,11'. Sl40 67'.l·i'652 muny Olh• t 1l.-r11 ----1;75-3738 P\Pnmore w11st1er and
d• v••r ~"'' Xlnt cond R<rll TOP Dosi.. Ja~ '111 . S~'J'> 5.i 7 2916 n.,eds rt-tin1slHr1Q S7h ------
000 67!i 620" Et ECTRIC DRYER GOOD
-C.ONOiTION $9Stobo ~11.lf!!'.C.~~ ••••. }P.{~ <..all 7:?0-0262
HARBOR AREA [ure~a delu-~-e-u_p_ri_9-h1_v_a_c
APPLIANCE SERVICE c1eoner wlattach & re-
We ~E'll •<'conll gu,Jr 1roctable cord ~Int cond
app11.mrn~ S4'l ~0~7 S9q ~59·5038
Ret11QPrate>r with l•IJPZP•
lor sale Wo•ks grPat
A!.~1nq S 1!>0 or 0••51 ot
te • C .:i tt Darlene•
492-3321 O• 831 4675
I IUY APPllllfCU Leos 957 813.
Apft1Qf'r a1c-r wa ~hPr
Clryer d"hwa~n,.r f.
freezer 646-58•8
30 INCH GA:, RANG[
$35
S48 t02 t
Moving "' 1g1da11 p g 1~
drye1 yellow vP•V r.l!'An
$ tSO fi4?-3589
AMINI
REFRIGERATORS
AT COST
Wh•I" supply lasts Gar-
<l"t• Grove Appliances 11tq1 Haroor Blvd Ger·
OE'n Grove 537-6333
Open 1111 6pm Sun 11 to
4om
<;p;1r ,-,-w-1n_O_o_o_r _C_o_ld_s_Po_I
RPlrogerator with freezer
$200 548·2•83
,J ( 1>11 • .i~.>•• AtlClllN[I
•\\'. All .... r. A11EN1•0N ro
ESALES! 111W Tl IAVE I SUCCESSFIL URUE SILE
l
I I
(or Yard Sale, Eatat• s•. etc.)
Place your ad In the Dally Piiot
Ctaaalfled secllon (It's best to run 3
days for maximum exposure). It you
pay tor your ad In advance we·11 run It 3
deya end only charge you lor 21
2. Get yoor FREE Garage Sale signs (all
you havt to do 11 come In to the Dally
Piiot & pay for your ad In advance -
we will give you two 11 x 17 Signs -
FREE of charge). •
3. Price eaoh plee• or meic:handl1t.
"· Have plenty 0 1 onange on nano
(nickels, dimes, quarters. halves,
one and five dollar bJllS).
5. Relax, h•vt run. and count your montry
at th• end Of tM day.
DAIL T Pft.OT
CLASSlfll• ADI
CALL MJ.1611
...
-----------
Orano• co.at OAll.V PILOT/8und9)', Augu1t 22, 1912
• _____ tt •. 1!nl •••• .J_,,,_.~_._ • ...... !Mf_ "'.Iii.. . ...... II.ff lr,hl.ffll. ...... lf!f •·: I::,~~U:.-~oo
-oii;ato 1t' Ullt "1li1 18 Hobie Cat, y.clow WI •• T..Tlf1, m;1•oT'9'3 '11 Toy .. a. V-e
ESTATE SALE -AUG ~25/26 =:~=. irA~.f'· ::-. :~~.;~1e\'~· :10~ Jl::.r.-':~1~ ~~1.9.: " .... 117 ... ..... • ... 21' Ohrt• Cr1rt oal)tn 8AILIOAT, 25 .• Cl•HIO tr•nemt .. lon from •1e& ~or ., n..i ltN Ml lt' I Pl orul11r, eng. I '""'· Ludera, w/lllp In Hpt. I Up. N4-1150 N50 v ...
C reblt, r.aently rehir· l!loh. 13,000/ofr. he It Aut~ ltlldent need• :=-.::..;..:::;...' ~""""':::'-:'~~~~ Antique furniture, Hummula, onn bllhecl, belt tanll. rac:tto. 28th St. Merine (2U) !>f'Oi.at9, ·10 10 •112. Imp •71 011141n fJ. , • Organ, Chickering ~ Grand Plano, Nwpt 1llp lnol. Xlnt 592·4088 a Oonwltlo.,,, c.rt. 111e 2000 .,.. ~
China doll• fig 8 clock• w/calender !1h .. ~1U,· 11 1 •50 0 • ._.,.,.._,,., AMI truok1. N .. r totat1. " louYer9, °'*°"' 181 t ' • . • • -n". l~:r.' • rr;a Seyt MOMYN·N>junlc •• tnlr. Cu110'" • prtmltlvee, linens and Iota. morf' aoodleti. *• UUll w~Nreo ·.-;·;;ni 11j1• 2nd ollto• .. rv101 . U500IO•: ••'
MC or VlSA OK. Winner ot Cil1taot1r board for 2 WMll•. 21,,.844...,.82 5'0-7t18 •• ..
11011 P1r1d1. 1'1' Xlnt fl1i=ifl! PAINT & lue body wort!, '79 '~ton~ il:t •LO llLAll bey orulHr. IHOO or ... ,, IJJ,. vp to 50% off your body mt, •Int OOftd •... .._,.,...•"
1>111 oner. t7S-1877. ~k• Htl thop 111. Biil 53M832 &<1•·1'16. !!f=t.._ ~
91f1c~~~~~~0~1o~::~~ fr.!!!~l.~~~ .. I.~ '11 ••• 8i1°p·;-:::1i;t,i;:-c;:;~; A••"'"'' , • ., • eofe & Wedo-wood wnt Slng11 72 Scuba 11n1t & ll&llAPT ..,Wa" 011 M1r area, 10 pr 11 ....................... ~;;-;00•;•v;-·
po1cel1ln gu etow. Side bactcpeok. Brend new CultOM bull!. Olllll en-P • g g Y Or C I r r I I IMPORTANT NOTICE .._or ll'9 ~
haoli blo~. M2-8207 u.s. diver'• e1no1e ,,108 glne. Lot• of tM kwood. 966·2413 wkdyt 11-5. TO READERS AND Call t:2.oea
• I A nufetor llffutllUI Ol'UIW. Orattl· ADVlfllTISEAS ~ Arn Oii/ider, 81C8, NII IUP· sa~~~u:ll. '• · celly reduced. Pr1v Party. 41 Ft, INrial The prla. of lt1m1 •d· Ford 'et uoo. Mite>~ ported, Olf·Whlt1 l•O. (714) 802..0007 645'-25t1, 87$-9301 Exc1ll1nt Newport Hit• vertllld by vehlcte dee· Ill.I IUll), C• .. _.
894-8947 enyllme , bor toe. Nur Public w• In the ventci. cl•MI· tebld v-•. aootl .,_ • ~ .~ . 1-~'.""'.'"'~----~ p O O L TA 8 LE . w I Gl11ttron 21 185 Mlf'C Dock. $16,000. 564-2328 'lid ecJwnlalng columne 12750' ......... . .............. ,. 11111 •AA-•"' 1 .. ("'" elate) • Crut11r I/Board 0 1 1 • .. .... fb ___,r .,.. .. Board. lOw Ing hrl full BOAT SLIPS AVAILABLE: OOH not noluO• any -----.... ""T'!~--40 ft. De Fever esip Trawler
She has twin diesels, Lewco battery
charger, canvas, VHF, Fatho, RDF,
Fiberglass. Dealer Demo. Underpriced
at $89,500. Slip Included.
'NEWPORT YACHT
EXCHANGE
3404 Vii Oporto
Stitt 4
Newport Btach
lll-1100
'2,995
1982 Close-Out Sale on SRV-172
Ret1I Sll,700 Sale $8,995.00
w/120 h.p. 1/0 and trailer
HllllSOI SU IAY IOITS
G1rdtn Grove 554-8500
Newport Beach 673-0940
38 ' Scarab 79
~::~ 8~"i:c\'::•of oe: ~~~'1 tbl top. $476, oenvu trlr U l50 Newport Beech: 40'. Call appllc•bll t•lCN, llC.nM, Tham!...,.,,,~~~'
200 d .. lnn1, atzt1 and ---------760-8325 . . 042·•044 from 9 -5, tran1ftr 1111, llnenc1 ~ ... ,_ --. • ---------1 Mon·Fr1 chlfOM. f ... tor .ir po1. _..,,,. ..,. -· color comb. Price from Mu1t lfquld•t• 28' Well-lutlon control device ...o.&1<M 1,
$100 lo 16!50. Dlr1Ct Im-craft Nova w/trfr. SIPI 4, Super •O ft mooring wlth certlllcetlone or d11ler -p...-..1 l•llll ..
porter whol1Hf1. Can fY. ~11, xlnt cond. 1•1 $8900 18 11 Inboard. euper toe. documentary prepare--ww order your dnlgn. Can M llllH 11111 ta k • s 1 t. p vt p 1 y Reduced 12500 to $850. tton chargu unleu Wltll pop top, ,.. S~ 714/fl71-0820 •••ho'/00•1••••••••••• 6•6-1230175•-&ee2 546-8734 olhtrWIH IPICllled by new Irena. Need9 l:':-2ft:::""'.Ex::-'.'ttn-817o-n--:-A-:-lu-m~l-num-1BEAUTIFIJL 25" RCA c • I the •dwr11-. 1750. 551-5121 ·=·
C I TV •-2 t , • .._~ w....-.a..~ 40' Balboa OVID, nV8 I i---------i-------...°"--... ladder. $70. o or ..... yr wrn y. ..,_ ..... now. $300. Pwr or IOld· 11-a.-tll ••10 '75 OodOI Wlftdotw V 8'16-1•23 1148 Fr" dellve't 26 ft Skip JICk Hunting-d 0 w n m 8 • t . Ag 1, -• .,., Custom tint --. ,.,,...
B C G TV John'• 646-788 ton Herbout Sllp lrnmec, 845•8100. 649•1366 t:ii•r;~;·;~~·~·.·,:·;~; S2•150. ~
A KSWIN buy dlatrl· RCA Portable Color TV loaded. S2200 dn, S 111 • Jeepe for $44 through the butor dtrec\. R,. S3•9 S 00 mo . 5 5 7. 9 3 2 7 e v . PIER up to 28' $160/mo. U.S. Government? Get ~.~~J8279 . teve set. 1
897_74Q6 869-0500de 18' $100/mo. Marcus tht l•cte todayl Cell A•,.,.,_.., ...
~ $7~ or otter. 15x24 gold
carpet end pad. Gd
cond. 411•·1~
Baby crib youth bed,
white lorrnlc1, clean
mottr"9 $35. 494·1664
INTELIVISON
$326. Plu• 8 tapes
842-2840 evening
11 n IWPU Channel. 873-81•5 312-742-'143 Ext 4726. •••••u••o•"m.•~
Obie hull, 85 hp Johneon .. ,, l,.H I (OPEN SUNDAY) I MJ
VllH Ltl••••llOll nc. trlr & cvr. S1800. 16' Tahiti. 115hp Mere C/111111 IJZO gal. bit-In fuel tank, '82 ••• • • ••• • • • • ••• • • ••• • • n.wl•f8tl A mtr, auto belt tenlc, 24 lkf HIO ,a_,, / C.YI
••••••~•;11;•••••••••• 875-1386 0/8, w/trlr, good concl. •••••••••••••••••••••• P• Pacific Micro Wave Ant· $2960 S.2 9994 ... L "1"11 ennu. 24 hre. Fr" mo· ... ti l1al · · s · 11 I • C CI c:·a.~,,,, H•O 11· BOSTON WHALER. h•Y rep cu: P ckupa... ••• --• .. ,1,,...,,1•H•I vies. 111 ancy . -., •• k 100 " E 1 coupee. 4 to choose -_, .. , "''' ••H< 631-0906 •••••••••••••••••••••• .... ontau • , .. p. v n-from! (008768) (Stk. 2145 HatllOf ili4. WH"' IOll 1---------40' Vlkln9 for Charter rude. low hre. •Int ·cond. A309S). PrlOea starting at COSTA MISA" v.;;,;..·-reo~·L.:~~~·Chl~~~ ... ,. ' •• r1.. i~•rht1~Yn ~1:1~f. 'c :~; ::5~0~g3. N ° t r a I I er llLY H ,ltll ..,..., ~
Prlscllle pattern. Dinner. L•l••••I 682 2788
Hied, bre1d & butter ••~•""•••••••••••••• • · Ill .. IT WE flJ ''
i:tates. Cell An1wer Ad llfa,,•I IOll Oal l·M ...... I 16', Johnson V-8 110.
459, 842·.ao<l 24 hra. •••••••••••••••••••••• Newport 714/631-3e00 $1500 firm. 873-2190 TOP N 30' Rlcherdeon Sport 494_.aoO • 1---------WANTEO; Working bike Fleher. Sleep• 8. ADklng __ 1tHl•tl•liM FIR Im llllSf llew ht White with sunburst stripes, on trlr, lor 5 Y."r old, end tiny S18,000. (213) 918-a.31 ,..11 lall IHO •••••,.••••••••••••••• 1 ll S,.till E41t1Hs gar since new. 370 hp. 4 bolt mains, office ridge. 494--8279 ,..,,, #ul•• ;9•8 •• 1•2c5 •••• M·::.:.:%••••••w•i c.
1
.,.,,, hi• ti•• _!!!~CU. $69 500 FURNITURE wanted: 3.4 L J H'•O .....,, HI -~1...I/:._ ... THE WORLD'S FIRST ' · drawer walnut chHt ~•!f•••I "' trlr, 7'A HP. Ael< ng, $8, •••••••••••••••••••••• ·53 Studebaker Champion 2480 H~ .... 3404 Via Oporto 42x28x 10 approx ..... • .............. 000 080. 714-598·72"3 1970 Datsun, overhead 5 pen cp1. Nice car. C~ .. TA···le.i·A . HOBIE DEALER ·NEWPORT Suite 4 •9S-2783 SACRIFICE: 8 11 SABOT G!'Mt lhape camper. sell corit .. tip• $3750. 213/592-1792 _ -••
Hobie Dana Point YACHT #•lital 50 hp Mere. O/B, n-si60lobo.. . 3, reblt. $1970. 873-3113 hM ... " ...... ...1.1
341 95 Coast Hwy., Dana Point EXCNAfllt,f:. Newport Beach :,15~~· :,r;Hn ~~~~ c.i1 644-5941 #il1tl•H 111n 1140 1940 Ford woody wa-1---.-.-......... 1-. --
(114) 411• 1211 87&• 1800 •• !~!.'!P.!m! ••• I!_!~ OFA. 535-2578 Ulll IW ·~•••••••••••••••••••• gon, $13,000.
Save """ buckll 25 new 11 HUA DPlllS CWI .. --YAMAHA BUI Amp. 85 H.P. Evlnrude motor: Luer1";;'aec:1tor3 deye In $175. 752-0558 Merk 1929 Ford Mode4 A Town l!m/!! •...••.•. ~ !~.~ ........ !!.!! ~!!~~ •••..... !~~! !'.{'.'!/!~~.'!.~! ••• !'!! ~~•d1;!1:k!rd~:~n1.5~: ~~-~:e.1ow hrs. 11600 the O'Oey llnQll handed ·92 PUCH-MAXI. brand Sedan, SlO,OOO IR .,.....
HUFFY 26 Inch 3-epeed PIM ... rttlfJ 1171 * *' BtJY* * Antique m•h<>Qeny cebl· Fender Bn• Prec:lalon Teak Wood 2M BF As-chemplonahTpe. Fully new, never ulld. S•50. HHl3 Studebaker Aventl, gtrl'a touring bike. Like 873•2833 net w1th orig. RCA radio Gult•r with CMe end ex· equipped. 6•0-8601. l11ve mu-55500. 67Ml8l.
new$76.980-1161 Oak 5 pc bdrm set, con-Good ulld Furniture & ~ rec4?~d player-$75.00; trae. ell In ucell1nt ~~~·d~llls°::~d;,BK~~ TheL-Stor1 eage. '6" Ced El Dorado con-Sehwfnn Scremblef Moto 1 1 t Appflence.OA I wlJI Mii JVC table AM/FM condition. 2131897•1809 824 W. lSth St, C.M. '79 MOTOBECANE. Un-X. w/tull whetle. $75. temp~ sty e, x n or SELL for You stereo radio with 8 trlCk 111-1171, 1.... 642-0848 der 100 mites, ha bu-v er I . or I g & x Int.
&«.59-41 cond. · 831"8633 ll&ITlll AIOTlll & record player-s75.oo: 4 6 hp outboard ~e boat '81 LANCER 25. Sipe 5 keu. s•oo. 840-8801 :;f~6°/5°'r · PP· 12131 ---------1 Elegant contemporary If. bathroom "marble type"__ ~nchor, compUs, tech, hinged mut. Trlr Avell. leave me1a1ge .
co~~Hl
C t-4l 'l'RC f • '\.,. ' .. r ,
')O i;,i1
........ lh1a vlng room Mt. $500. Xlnt 141-1111 111·1121 link In 1 door & 2 dr•-Flute, Gemelnhardt, 25-P, belt pump motor & misc. s 14 ,500, 558 · 7 8 7 8 77 Puch Newport, 2000 '60 Alfa Romeo 2500SS.
20' Ftlr Ledy Uk• New cond. P.P. 631-6833 1 llY .... "'IE cabinet plus matching 2 allver plated, good cond.. Cell S.6-3642. Kt r • • n g & tr an a. Top dollare for -~ •• OBO S..8 02 r•-door wall Cllblnet & seldom played. 1250. weekdys, miles. very clean eppea-S 0 p _... ..
..,5 ·l 1 Dinette Mt, walnut llnl1h, Les 1157-8133 "marble type" wall shelf, 499-5198 VHF radio, $200. Grey SAILBOAT! SAILBOAT! ranee, Auna greet. Must 7oo /olr. P. <213> ~:;.~: ~~ Ca""9fa.
Motobleane Grenet Jubl-4 grn chairs $05 . 6chlllra.eolldwalnut,xlnt all lor only $100.00; Kaslno8ch.P•-....... d,125 marine eng, Velvet drv 14'xlntcond.MUST see $250. 549-2753, ,_8_118_·_7_6_25 ______ , AlllfofU/OMM
lee, 12 8Pd tour1ng bike. 073-7852 cond. 1120 for all. horse blanket-120.00: ,...,,_ trena , sel1/trede , SELL s.470. 551·9145 Mike Olde 98 Convert. 1949. -.... hardly u11d. Extras. Ortho Supreme Queen g I r I • s r Id 1 n g hat watt RMS, 2 Peevy cebl· 554-1277 orig., 05,000 ml, $5300.
Must eell lmmed. $375. mettrea & Bo• Spring, 6"4·4167. N.B. (small)-$25.00; new car rieta w/15" epeeker• & Ult 14 #4'll Motobecene 50VLX. xlnt Atl. GA. 404.352.2222 fllllWAm 876-2153 .. -•ao•J floor mats (4)·$20.00; horns. $450 /llrm. .Johnson 2hp outboard $2500. (2l3)22S-3-443 cond, blue, surf reoke Sam 18711 .. __ .. -..... frame. headboard, good H--642-8155 $175. Incl. $290/obo. 780-02o47 1---------1 .....,., .._ •Ill 1111 Ill cond. 1260 or make of-Furn, eppllences (smell new 14 Inch fight alloy 840-1295 Lido 14. Totally recond '64 Buick, 2 dr. like new. HUNTtNGTO~etACW
897 7~ fer. 389 Aalcam Pl. C.M. and large). Mlsc hou-rime (BMW's) set of Tame Sllngerlend pro with care. 2 aet1 aa.111. #1t11,,cl11/ 35,000 orig. ml. Appral-...... :
• hold Inside end out. •·S200.00: two new con-drum set, 8 tom tome. ,..,, 11n1 9040 T 1 1 1595 875 9588 It llSf aed a1 $25-00. Beat offer 1---------Nlthlkt ladles 5 apd tou· Burgundy chair $125. Like 642•0853, 8 AM-noon tlnental steel ~lted ra-24" beu. 1w· chrome •••••'·••••••••••••••• .~~ • •••• .'!.'!.'!............ OWf 12150. • ...........
ring bike, xlnt cond. $65. new. M'!'~ .. -7719 Wkde, Set-Sun all day. dlal tires 195/70 HR snare, black, dbl• heed•. Must Dell (2 boat owner) . Yemih• OT 115. Streit _.99_.119 II I~
6-44-6989 ~ 14-$100.00; BMW 3201 ell hdwe. cymbals & ·n Searey. 2<4' Cuddy Shock 8abot. compl. w/ legal mint condition Ilka •---------• Late model 'Y19yoUe, ....:...:....:...=:..::....-----1;6;-;;ft-;bl';:;:Ul::--;:1111::d;;-:g;:le::sa:-:ao":tf;;e Beautllul 8' Flore! Piiiow hoodmask-$20.00; mlr-caHS. 11500. 982-0207 cruiser. Twn 470 1.0. trlr. nice cond. $400. new :.Vtth only 350 mites. Near clan lc. '63 Olds VolVOI, Pldc._. I V ....
$ Sola, Ilk• new. S200. r or med I c In e Meres. $150 hr•. lleh 67$-0451 Cell Merk 11 0-4i;..203e.11 Super 88, exc. cond., Cell us todeyl . • ' • .. ~~-'I ,,, •• ~~~;,1t~ke new 150· 552-4108. ceblnet-$20.00. Cell Ollltt hnll•ll I ready, I 14,1100. Oya 25 ft MacGregor •81 trel-no enewer, pleeM keep owned by Utt le Old •••~· -1---------eunkBedaw/Mettresaea. 642-0138. L..!f!nt l#S 213-278-8610; eve/ fer. 7.5 Honda, extra•. trylng ... evenlngsbelt. Pasadena Ledy, 20,500 •••••••••••••••••••••• Antique Walnut Bdrm Set. 8 drawer Dresser/Deak ..... -...... ~:':! •••••••••••••• wknds 714-673-2058 Ex ....... 1..,1 concl .•• 5000. ,_..;._..o_ __ ...;...,,.....,..,....,...-,.-ml. Make offer. 642-0379 •• w 110/" dr-cr-t full bid ... ~ IBM Ptraonal Computer """' .., 1976 Husky 125 MX. In •---------•
RedWood 2xe decking. $500, S:.1-4130 · ~~~91770-0584 8 to 20· long, 36C per ft. or Apple 2 & 2 Printers. I ' T•i•el leaf 213-37&-3231 perfect condition! Muet Jeguer XK140, ~...;.;;.;.;;;.;.:-.;.Ii!!-.~"'
4-20' long; e19o redwood Sole: Strl.,.c:i gm/yell & 775-1491 anytime. Mu1t Mii. 673·7•22. Futer. lune<, .. ier. then LIDO w/tr1 A·1•tra11350 NII for ONLY $400. Cell 631~~;': ~~:.':944 fwriclng. Can Jim or Ken ~to•. Loveseat & chr. Stlffel bf-table lamp. 2 Flbergless chopper gun. DESKS FOR SALE A let •kl, with treller. 673-6319, 873-9-467 Merk et 645-2038. II no •---------• ,..,
lltlytlme, 775-1491. BroyNll. 1225, a.1-"130 monfth•1°100ld. N53-:7'7
200
9 • airless system S900. Pv1 Oe1k1 end matching Needs motor. '1
2
200· 12' HOBIE 1•. llke new, In •n,swer, P11988~teep '6o4'"' Mustang Coupe, ~======!!:':::~~
Mii or . .,.. 1 P1y. 754-1507 chairs et iecrtfloe price m1m1 &kl t>oet, Meter, garage, w/treller. $1300. try ng ... everi ng• .,..,. • mint, new 289 engine, WI llY
!'!'! •-1 Reitan Beritwood w/greeri It II T Cart Uk ---a• $550. R1plecem1nt 45 HP Mere. 11.000 5•• 0 Pll •1-•-auto trane factory air f .-cuahlol'I $70 8 en .. · e new. Attic Ventilator Turbine COii' 1 $2300. c •LL o•wN 845-2730 ayi .. v·l 1 1: eves _.. pi s .. ortginel owner'. USED CARS~ lttUCKS •••••••••••••••••• cai1a..1...c130 New$400.aelllor$l50. Cooler w /base $10. "' "' (213)430-8630 Wlllde11Yeruplo60•~off $4000. 714/49•-6918 11 COMEINORCALLfOA ... "941 ..... Glau Can 536-7719 644_5941 9-5pm M·F. 833-8600 By owner 38 It Grand •uL I Tll llELnl ell work on itreet & dirt no ins 213-442•3801. Fm "1111• Sign up nowt For Info: GrMt 8' Bar & 3 uphol. 8 Ft ~ SOFA ood Sharp 810 Bond Peper Bank a. Xlnt cond. Sleeps -b 1ke9 • A 1s 0 AT c &
Cell: a.7-788& FV Stool•. A steel $276. d !'000
150 · g Mirror, goldleaf, Ire~. Cop•-. 8,L x 11 ... 8,L x 8. $59,500 Fin. Av1ll. Lancer Satltng Club In Odyssey. For eppt. ceU E•c•llbur Serlea 1 '66. Cormllr~ ••• •1e1 con ·• •9"v8•" $125 Cell "" ,.. " 11• 979 1650 kd N t I I kl I --.....,..., 759 5079 552 "''""7 .. A .. 1•", 11 X 17'', doubi.-... • w 8 · ewpor • 00 ng or a.48-9580. 36,000 mll11, Cherry, _ .. _, Shlh-Tzu pupplee, 2'At mo. • ' """" 536-7719 '" 714-8<40-8e<>o Wknde lndlvlduela 10 buy new 1...,--..,...,,..,.....--~~-=-~ new wlru. S 13,995. 18211 BEAGtt~ old. See •I 10811 M t Greet 9' Architects Teak Eer-thton1 couch S 150. •lded, l•b,•I•. tr1napa-Lancer 28'a & 30'11 for 111 XL 250 Hond• '73. Good Marty days 973-1345, HUNTINGTON .. Cotll1n, F .V. Daye Woodo.atll125. Dresser $25. Walnut Dining rm 10-lltecllandil-rencl11. 1250. (714) *llhtrhl 1110 equipment IHH·b•ck cond. r une g reet. evea673-1344 ........ ,
962-0017; 839-91M12 aft. 646-8181 titble, hutch. buffet. lier. White wood/metal. 846-<40ro JUST REDUCED $15,000 program. Provtd .. ow· $465/0BO. 6"s--0177 1---------1 141 1, ..-
8. HANO CARVED TEAK $150. Gold chelr w / $30. 536"7719 DHk, black metal with for quick Hie. Twin die-n1ra full UH of their 'Y._A_M_A_H_A-1-00-End::---u-ro-.-J-o T-Blrd '66 Landau. Bo! T ft...11-leWell ...,..,_, BAA. New, natural ftnlah, ottoman 160. 963-0200. John Wayne Tennis Club wood grain lormlce top. set gen .. comm'• lie, fish boat• but without the ml. 1150 or trade for llah. new by lemoue actor, op UUIMI
14 mo o4d nllda home mirrored tnalde. 1850. Beeutltul 8• earthtone Famlly Membership. Try Made by Steelc•H. equipped. Our dock• heed9Che of cleentng & gear 548•9832 ~~k~~fa.2i~s. Mich .
... 1 7 ........ 752 ,,,..1 553-0175, 8'11-01M. couch ~tth 4 walnut $1500, 760-0499. $150. 648-8480. $95,000 NEWPORT maintenance. Excell. tax i---------, _________ 1 p...w
""'· '"''• """" -YACHT EXCHANGE edvlltll&Qll & rental In-'77KawasaktLZ650N-a•c"-Co Ila Comb. 4 dwr 48"x17W' che lra. Sec . 1145. Homel~htXL-2Chalnaaw. EllmmllSI 714-675--1800 come. Al•o need en contlnentel tire•. 5800 .,.., ·=011;,vert.. FOl'YOUto.t''· Mlnlatur• Scttneu:rer Pup-
plet, AKC regls. Chimp
elred. 3M/1F, 788-8e23
dMk w/bkcue top unit, 675--7768. Used 3 times. $100. $75 O.B.O. 8'12-9702 ~ for 1 ,_ Loencer orig mllea. 840-9008 •• ,.9078 "' -t .. attract hdWd llnllh xlnt (714) 862-0907 $3900 buys • 26' fiber-C 1 83 783 ~.,... --
cond i126 559-5038 White contemporary di· glass navy whale boat, 44' •I 1-2 for Yamaha motorcycle, With i-.---.,--,----1 COS1~•!.M-.11Hll ~~·."·. • · nlng table, Round 48" Moving. Wurlltzer spinet lllE SILE d I e 8 e I p 0 we r 9 d . additional Information. helmet $l50; •HtHl1IU ,vn • ...,. 7 fne N ftl llfJ CREDENZA plus 2 leafs. 2•" ea. No piano, 4·7w· wide. 2·2w See our ad In ctualllld 842-7056. ... ... laMt 9~6070 V1tllln ISJO •••••••••••••••••••••• Pecan, 56", 2 dr, perfect chrs. $185, 875-1174 depth. 3' 1" high. 1600. 8050 I I-::--------,.---::--•••••••••••••••••••••• FAEE: 2 Ktttlfll black w/ cond. $75. 53&-7-482 Frigidaire gu dryer, yet-section • urnlture. 28' 1978 SklpJack good Phoenix, fully race '78 Honda 750 with Fel-VACATION SPECIAL Premium pftCl9f •
whtt• '9:4~~ 1--,.-Tll--llT--l-2-2-1--~ JM~~reA:~I :: ~~~:3~;~y clean S 150. ~~~r~~~o~i.'::'. t~ ~r~~:r: ~~~34e~ulp Incl :~3~~;~ covers. $750. 9~~: 1~1~00 or beal offer ~~e~~:in~e~0~vM:; ~,:'..';-::': #;·
Like,_, 5-46-3642 Dave. ... ... , '-Illa F11 752-0322 '73 l<Z 900. 20.000 rnl. sell. 846-8123 In good CCJJdlton. 8 mo. old approx, 'A Shep King size weterl>ed, natu----I •• 1 .,.._, good 1---------1 See I.JI FlfllU 'A F o • m a I e O o g . Trundle bed frame. $25. 1 IOlld k & ek Never uMd. 4 tulip Ughls. I • Hit B many ex ru. ·-· 1 4 "11Hl Drlrn ISSO t
642-4861 good condition. ~':.... weV:... m~ttr: Cost 1230. sell $99 .!:~•••••••••••••••••• Oat picture ads provide etiepe $1200 559-0111 ••••••••••••••••••••••
2 grey etr1Pfd k11ten• w1th geo..1200 heater. $550. 81s.2153 562•1509 SILE '12 IOlll llLIWlll 11H TtYITl
llttl• white mittens. 1 NEAR NEW SOFA. Earth· Decorator quelltyf lmpor-P11bll .H.IHS Schnauzers Ste. Spring· ~~ 1nter1tate, 450 ml. 414 NllP
W911ce. 646-2802 ton••· Muit 1811• wllt ted rattan LA set 7pc end other games. From er Spaniels $195, Pit oO $5000. 64S-74« Thia one hu • camper
FREE TO GOOD HOME eac:rlflol. $200, Ir .. dal. $950. 646-5388 all. 7pm. $95 to 1-495. 5•8--6469 Bulle $239, MllCed klttlfl• •78 Yamahe 175 Enduro. ahell I AM/FM. (l3'485l·
Adoral>te mixed Sp111fl4 55w 721 dya/evee. $10-$15, Miiitary mecew s~ 9 .. ono ah~". )(Jnt ~~d. OILY ••••• Beau1 AMere plltow back Newport Beech Tennis ... ..,.... ~ .. puppl11, 111 aerlH ot STORE FIXTURES for eolebed nr new xlnt Club Membership avell 1960. All pupplH Incl. $600/0BO. 557-1491 -....
1hote given. Newport Hie Solld wood table/ •HM ... .,.;,,.3 B f c .. fr .. 1111 tnm. 640-00t0 ~-"l -•aw••-.:11118 llarhor ffh'd
Animal Shetter. 125 chairs, antique trunk, cond . ..,.,.,. -1-.-. . ~4~~; r .. •, • Y TWO NANDAY CONURES ~e-'' • '79 H.D. Sportater, cteen, 1e7';'1" Belc=d. t \•~1._1 'h"':' s. e
Me • a or . , C , M . wood well cabinet• & B1•11Hlll ,._,IHI With wrought Iron cage, 9...s.i 12•00. i.-831-1030. reek•. o4112·8922 tvee. •••••••••••••••••••••• SPA prectlcally !"9W· Mu•t 175 complete. 53&-7482 ,p ) 71<4/827-3149 Hun~~C:.::-ch HlgtllSt cuh '"j' ft
15 Moe. Span/Collie mall. 076""-491 deya. N-King meureu only. Dell, no reuoneble offer •79 Yamaha IT250, gd ._., lor y1~ur vell1 o ... If
........ Sho-LI X1nt Bleck wrnunht Iron table ~ Pol1urepedlc firm. refused. 552"9567 II•.., A a-,..,,,, oond, $750 or trade tor '15 Blazer 4•4. Aebullt 5m5~'..2ec .. or 0 ' "· .-.-.. n. ••· c. encl • c:t\at--; $50. MUST SELL I 3 5 0 TENNIS MEMBERSHIP •••••••••o':':loo••••••• Honda 1 8 5 I ATC. .., "
w/tltda. 642-.4174 ...... 2•83 968-8390 12.000 JWTZ Femlly lvPelerno• ' .• ~:> .. nde Upright f// 642-4034 trena . .,~t cond. $3500. LAB TYPE I _.. _.... Mllle .... 1-7570 A•'-.__... ·
ll'llndly. Gdm,:.:. ::n~ •• rtrepl• d 1 8' 3-cu•hloned !lowered membership 11000. 586--5048tno.9584 'll llZlll llQTO rr..h ISll ••• '::'1.~.'l'A·•
............. 957 ,.222 ..._ wttll ,,_ t~~ ~~k $;6 couch. xtnt oond. 951-8659 evea. WIEXTRAS ••oo •••••••••••••••••••••• ~lta ._ _........ ....,. .. ~. · · 8'12-7220 5' grencl piano, lllnt tone, . -· ..,. :or.: ~ M&-2483 University Athletlc Club l rultwood, 13000 P.P. oevt 545-8357 ·..., Dlttun 4)14 Plekup • ••••••:~:s.·-· Free adorable lcltt1n1, Hn full..slie 11 Mt JnN'"' IOTO Memberahlp $700. Home 75'4_1501 I * llTI.-* 1111 ...
Cotti MDII w... ma r... • •••••°:''••••••••••••••• •99-2076; olc 54&-8020 '75 SUZUKI TM100 Get rMI high with thl1 --64$-7817 180. New queen 1lze, 1.31 caret (loose) di•· Llk1 ,,.. Kimball Spinet XLNT CONO, S350. ,
1100. 750-5832 mond. 1 color V81 Apr Femlly memberehlp New-piano & bench lea thin 54a-5o13 epor1y bm. mettlllo 4WD One owr. as. Ut IM I •••• 5 PC PLAYPEN/PIT $9200. Take $3700 pp port Beech Tennie Club. 1 yr. Old. Cell after 8 pm. '71 YAMAHA 80 comsiete w/ahell, AM/ •f ;~';!d,T~ Burgundy, good cond. 831•9278 ~=02 1;1~,~~t~°c,~1 Or. 955-1o4M. RUNS GOOD, 1100. ~~ r ~· gu~. ~"T !<>; Ulll .... !
FAEEPETS 831-e350 $500/080.642-3719 Buullful 1'AC1. GAR· A ti t I 5-46-5913 8UT ... OON'T DELAY! &"lt>o'M~·." !
COffEE TABLE NETS, only 14 u chl John Wayne Tennl~ Club S15iuo1 :, ·~::,port~~: 5 BIKE MOTOACYCLE (1W73386) J1.1at need ,... NEWPORT~•
htaltln IHI 09l'k wood, good cond. 640-8888 ~~~rr:·~~~I~~~-~:!t 673-0892. TRAILER, 2 SPARES. ~~J1 ~~~~ ~I~.·~~ I :::~=-~~~~~* ...................... S40. Me-3•79 ttll n:&I• WI 213181-4-3173 Movtno. Wurlitzer •f.lnet $200. 546-5913 ....... contracu to ..... me. 1~1e 11.• ~.-. Cullom down-flllad 8' I ·1•L" ...... _ 2 ""' -r-• ao11 I 2 ohalrt, paid ROOM DfVIOEA $200. 552_..09 HEATER, forced 1lr, Gel· peno, 4 " .....,., . Vt' ''11 YAMAHA OT250 Diec· No l>tlCk pmt1. due. Aak 14000 or g:9.'·
15200 whll, Hklng Solld oelt, Hice new. Whtie -iA r""", .. nnhfre fter1 & Settler. $75. Maka depth, S'l" high. leOO. tr onto Ignition, spec for Roal M2....aG, Proto lAny Ml lpill ' ••• "
12500. 528-2411 l lOO. &48-3-478 eurroVn'deCl"'t>y3~dl•· otr. 839-96•7 642•3689 ehoc:k1, hardly ridden UM. • A.M ~ f;~;;;;;;;~~~;-;;;t:I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; mond•. UOO. 652...C•09 Engegemerit llnd wedding PIANO 1927 Effington ' 1~50. '42-f'21 LARGEST •••••••mt;• iii , 7
1: :;:-::. ~~ IME Brtlllarit VV82, lemon~· ring Ht -coet $1400, Upright~ ofter. 28' Ericson Fully equlppecj cruise. -.,,, • ...,, II#/ JEEP DEALER • '
bait otter low dtemond, ..,,. 113K never worn, $1000 • "43 6 sell•. UHF, compaM, cover•. ..,1,,.,... ll• In Tt11 Wiit ,
5M-.412o4 lfflll I ll•E tail• 17800. 831'9278 &42-5937 ,,,_,, •• ,._, llH Perteot condition St8.500 •••••~·'oiUa•••••••':T M• Ulld Jllpe OptloN fMIWlt ...,,...._
Ptnb.tl M•Ahl-.r.::-.:11.............. l23·o4587 A1nt: 28' mo1or home, i~ Jaep CJ5, Rene· dltlOnlnt & .n A ..... I Hut. ••:.::da g l au SALE 14 karat gold lacllee Opal "Race Car:.-Rlp•CIM'I FNll!t• '#91 eult, alps 8, tv!IY lolcl9d. with off road tlrel & (t&tM). ,
bookC--' .,,.,.. ___ Fi 1 .,_ nno eurroundld w110 tun •• 2•5937 ••••• cut """'· -· ...... ,. -., """" :.' II bed! rodltng ohlllf, xlnt .. _., r • 091 c:ut Cllemonde S3SO. -aeoioeo. es1_.,74 (1C0vtl1) MHt 4 c ond. A111onabte. (:Nth-28th) 850-1092 Pinball mechtne S f le FWtt: 22' C.... A dbt TI-•'1t Jaap OJ'T, t.>ff roecs • .,, • • _....,.. Cll•lre, t11>te1: dtntng, "Cfrcua" '200. et your course for alt •• I ten. l4001wk1 ~722. ur .. 1 ..,...., AM/FM , • : con.. OOl•fli•ice. Exeo. WANTED: diamond. brll· 842-6937 OR·~ cn11UTV with a Dall" PUot bOat ..&Mure 551-Ma2 64;1-e.IOI ,..,.. ~then 301( ml .. .... ... ....S ctelila. Ct'9dlnla, Exec. 1111'1 CUI 3 c:t, lClnt COlof, ftllU(. \IUl11 J 1 ,.._, ' (a8WT450) 15tei 1•1 h M l
PflllOUITAATAT:lo«a Ol'l•lr•. Oii P•lntfng•. lnolu11on OK. P /P, Avltllon.-Marfne "·-& ,.......... I ad. Each Saturday, the Dally T!f!!~.'!.m'..l.{ff •'81 J-.p CJ'I, .. 1pd,l-~-:"""'~~~P.&~~'
ledl t111, aote & l.CIY9 .mique ..,. ""~ 645-6552 iv. meg. eompue •50 UUll ~tcr S Piiot wlll offer you ad •P~ ·e1 Atratr••m "" sett MJ, AM/l'M aw.o. row a u' 1 u 7 • • u • · ::4 & ~"9 · u_,_1 1111 642"5937 that not only dncrtbft your contained. 0• .,.,._ "'1• ~.n'eur~ .. o.,... 3t~x.-:· ~ .. ::::m .............. Newport BMGh ~thletto. ~llftlll I ......... , ::' 11800. 830-HM'' (tA~l ... Jl"'P'.?'" M .. ooe-.... .:;l;jlli;~ o:;;.;m1 --1111• .... • ...,ig ~ ....., ..., ~qu111>111 c1u1> l'lllM-anun boat, but p oturea It •• -·. ,, .,.,.., .... .. ~ ...;;., .,,
lpotMnorm.r.111: • ftt•tn~ry, phi• lftllC ...... ...... blrlh~ln Nw~ Olf, AIPlf 11111 The price I• guarantMd to .. ~.f!!l!lz .... ft 'rO--OHOOe!f.~ new. i1'1.oe1 l
• a .. r blnnette ht• itema,_ ~ . •llWDIRI '1251 •
97&-7 1 rr.. I le J. buoy your aplrltt -$45 If we ••• CrOM countrY • alflQle -· • • 5 • • t ' t I• • . ~ lf11 bun-bed• •Ith ~ • 311112 Camino Capl· Cttb & matt. 138. 8ue1Mt .., W Tr• alCI•. New paint, oood .. ,., .... , "' ...... dlJ'& • '"-"1111. ·---1 8 J c 1-i 11e. Bdrm 111 .11u. • • take the picture, and 0'1ty S40 tlru. uu1be. ••· an• H.,,.8Ncl., CM ,71 ··--~ .... , 1•1•11t lllU • -••-• r1110 • .,, uen 99 ' L.amp115410. aJW TV F-.t"""O W111C10M °'all If "OU provide the picture for a 5484431 '" 1• ~ a.a.mo I • '::w;;r' i
1 .............. ;:-.... ·' 2082 ....._.on, #212. ttrano ..... ,....... I uo. 50-otU od ••: SWOfdtl. .,._,.., ' ,,,.. ........ r-..-. ...... 1 .::::.J. ' \ _, !NIM (Mllr SD l"rwy a .. _.. v.., -953·M87 I ~ IMIQiial end1 2 column 3" ad. j1tf,,,., ,.,. 1 •• r.,.v .'-"• ._ ._. ... ,.. • •
.. 75H322 111,,.u,,..... ,.,, i I I thOueaftdl' of ooltotllllle: ; , ..... .,.. ... :~~~:i· !m~ Audi -.. '1 111... .. ........ £ .......... ~ ~ ~ bli """" Oranoe Ob ,..,.. I ....... ·••iN••···l'·'fff lumber raell, 11100. ::t•ene. A..a, =---------iKfnOtllt w.ttrbed. oom-4 Mao ~ u.s. 1~. ' ... _ ..... -"· · ir orOl.lftdl, c .M. ""« ga• • For further detall1 abOUt hOW · ID .. •f • --A ™ Otn•tt• Ubl•. •utoller , •••• 1'/ll'IHtt. •to. 15X 8.5. 1200/bll ofr. ' IMWI 1115• a.&-2m 3A o!! M!ftt!On ft. j Dally Piiot bott plct\a'9 adt r.a-"1-• •
blocll formlo. 109._ 4 1100. t4I IM3, 8"-"47 l18P" • prectlc~ new.1 - - -! NSO. •1•1970 Mlle •11 Lw wltMtt, 1tereo, ~ ~~..= • ..,._ * oone. .,,._ 2 TioMte ~"US" oonoen Mu11 1111. no ~ f'OU. llCATa oan work for YoU and to 1(2lL11·t• ~ ,.. "9ff DOOd OO!td. aaooo. :,-: ~~=-i~~
••• .... I ... mr. ... a day tlotceta. Paid offer,...,.,, IQAM7. I l..tdlle' • '· .... "*"I echedute your ad, cell I r .. ,~ ..... "tl:i:t oeo.-..... 141. , ..................... c. ... , .. n Vefour, 1 t31.IO Mll:ltt. .... tor 'MllOIC fllllnO <lord aw. 1.....,, ~n I 842~78 and .. for , ... LW ' ..... .... YI, .. .,, •
., ... "~ ..e -'"' toot••• 1111 I tee .at\. ..._. • •' Member••· t1eo. ,..,. ...w ~ 1 -.;r •' I ...., ""'"'°"" AC, new 1ir••· body C4'•~••• ;•=··~,"~,·~d~i:•a~o~·~•:n~11d. ~~~!!~~ lime w.itlflt In tlM to ; rent prl~OO .J ,....,..LDIO. • ~.,...,.,_, ... lH:,10M. ncle paint. ~" l=l)uy. ~~ 1 ~~2~1. <: C.::L':::""'°' . .... •!!!! _ .. ;.-:.:-'-•-·-=4'Mlfl=======~:;:it=;tt~
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,. Orange Ooa1t DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augu1t 22, 1082
•• 119~ •••••• ~ ... ,,,; ..••.•••••••• '~~.~~ .••..•
ul ......... l.~H ~.'1~.-. .......... lll !'!'!41 ••••••••••• 1.~! ~~.,.,
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·72 BMW 2002. new en-
gine, good Ste<eo, good
cond. $3500. 6't2· 1689
'79 5281 4 speed, leathef.
BBS wlleels E•cetlent
con d S1 3 ,500
6't4-8325. 559-6442
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LmtlJ':t"' ·~~:.o:'! ~7t:.~m>6o• 12, ,. Mu1t ••Ill 113·7011 0t
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.,,, '"'''"' e tracll ... tta 640--1•3• COSTA MESA
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..
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Oflet Good Thfu
Monday, 8·23-82
~-
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ARE VOU 60NNA
INVITE YOUR D06?
NANCY
THIS RUG NEEDS
BEATING, BUT
IT'S A
TOUGH
JOB
IUNDAf, AUOUITll. ttlt · H CINH
MEY, SNOOPY',
WE'RE 601N6
DOWNTOWN TO DO
SOME SHOPPlN6 !
DO YOU WANNA
COME ALON6?
IF ITS TOO MUCH FOR
ME, ITS TOO MUCH
FOR YOU r-------1
Oii lllEllll llllY Ml
8-22.
I IM
READY
IF YOU
ARE ..
At-lD
MVMONEY
·BELT!
By Ernie Bushmiller
THEY'LL NEVER
HELP DO SUCH
A HARD CHORE
·' ,
I'LL TRY
ANYWAY
•
-· -
Fi ' w
,
GARFIELD ®
DENNIS THE MENACE -
1. NE=V~R SAW 9JCH HARD-
HEARTE:D Pf=OPLE !
l
I
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By Hank Ketcham
YEAH, E3UT SHft5 RIGHT!
!HERES NOTHIN' FUNNY
A00UT !HAT 00LL. !
YE6, HE · WILL f YOU 00
AHEAO ANO TRY TO
GET rT ARRANGJEDf
THE 600NER THE
f>ETTEFI\!
NO ! I DON'T WANT At-N
PART OF YOUR eov
LUKE! HE'S A KILLER ...
ANOYOU~IT!
-.
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:
"•. ' .... ~.J
CA~ <rOlJ 5fRR'E. A
CDOPL.E OF BUCJG ~
A CAN OF BAUS~
1HANK6 , FRED ... 1HAiWA5 AP~ GQCDM~!
1E~N15 SURE 15 A LlJT MORE
FUN NOW 1HAI I'M NO LONGER.. WHAi WA5 1fiE PROBU:M ~ "rt;N510N~ NO :X: FOUND 1HAT I 'D BEEN WEARINC7
A 1CAlRl6TBAND FOR A HEADBAND!
GEiflNG 1f.IOSE SPt...rrnNG
HEADACHES ! ·
a i-zz
MOON MULLINS
... WHEN I 1M MEDITATIN<i, I 1M
NoT To BE DISTURBED , MAMIE·-
,AND 1 AM MEDIT,ATIN~, SEE?
I REsPECT THAT,
Pf;T--IHE LAWN
""'~-n.Y'""' CAN W,AIT.
>
IT'S
A
FINE
LINE ...
Mow. W~LL,
IHE~E
IT J5 ...
DOCTOR SMOCK
:t JI.JS~
FOUND OU-r"
.,.-He MOS~
AMAZING .,.-HI NG, UNCL-6
JASPSR.'
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,
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M.OR<SAN ~
USIN' A POWE::RFLJL-
MAGN l~YIN' GL-ASS,
~ DISCOVeReD ,..HA~ PoRes AL-SO
HAVE:. AORes .'
l
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PEOPL.E: ARE: So
DoG<:;oNE HONEST!
ey George Lemont
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Aal YOU QUtQ(
TOR~
Do you twwe ~
refine'? Let's ...
Test t: Place a gum
,,....., ("' coin) °" the
back of your ~
Now. drcp YfNr' twnd
suddenty and try to
grab the .,. ..... while
It lsstlll In the air.
Test 2: ~an
efbow forward wltt\
patm of hend upqrd <•ee lllu1tratlon ebove). Place an
era..,. (or coin) on the
elbow. Now. speedily
bring lour ftXHrm
forwar and egain try
to c:ektl the eraMr In thew.
8°"' tests ~
c;iood coordination:
For Better or For Worse
•
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.~ .. 't '-..WW ( 11 ... C U911110 I e Six ~duc.etlonl Say fa1t: Sit. .,.._.. 1llmy
snakes. Six saucy soft s11k ski rts. She solemn Spanish
$Cholars sat sipping wrsaparllla.
_ WAVE UTI ,.,.... .. _. tbaa OM .. y to rldt tM wavH.
u demonstrated above. Add lines dot to dot.
0
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by Lynn Johnston
,
. .
GORDO
WELL,
A/OTl-l IAIG
CQ«E.S .e4SV
1 AJ 1-11=i= ,
KIOJ' •
SHOE
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,·~t 8tEN PoNCUIN6 ONE
or LtrE 's Ot~ICOLT .--i
QUE~1'10N!> •..
AND I CAN 1f 60
1'0 ~EtV UNT' L-•
I A~K ~OlJ
A6001' 11' !
-... _ -.i
MLIGHTIER./'
MORE
IMPER IOU sf
8·11
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MOW COM£ 1M£ fE.Of'L.E.
ON ''G,tlll,AN~ •~L.AND ''
MAO N£\J CL.01ME.~
1'0 WEAR t\JER'I
WE.£.K ~
By Gus Arriola
CAAJ vou
TUCKYoUI< A !AIL ~ R:DU>J.D.
\
PARroN ME., I'VE.
OOTTA CAU..MV SERVI~.
·' ~'
August 22, 1982
~Save$1°0
~ on a carton of
WUISton-anystyle.
IOO's: 14 mg. "taf. 1.0 mg. nicotN. KING: t5 mg. "1ar", 1 t mg. niCoune. BOXi 18 mg. "ti(', 1.1 mg. nicotine, av. per c191rene. FTC Repon QEt. 11.
THEm
YOURSELF ·
Se<ld In. <IU"llon, ............. 10 "All<." Family Weellty, M 1 l ••lngton ..... ~ New YOltl, N,Y. 10022
Wlt'll pay '6 t0< 1><1btlaned QUfflion6. Sony, we can't an•-otllera.
FOR SUSAN FORD VANCE. daughter
of former President Gerald Ford
An you bringing up your daughter by the
book or by Instinct? -F.D., Gnoen Bay,
WllC.
• t simply do what 1 think is right at the
time. For o ne thing, it's a fallacy tha1 a
chUd gets spoiled during the first year. I
didn't start laying down the law with my
daughter, Tyne, until the 13th month. 1
also strongly recommend a playpen,
Ford's daughter. Bringing up babv. although many women do not. It
teaches ow daughter to entertain herself
and to be Independent. But I make sure she is not isolated - she knows there
are people ln the world other than her parents and grandparents. And I don't
believe in handling babes with kid gloves -chOdren are resilient. I favor naps,
too, and a strict bedtime schedule.
FOR LEROY NEIMAN, artist
Pafonnen regmd the Tony Md o.car • the aiprane
complimmta. What do painters 1triw for? -SA.
Alban)4 N.V.
•I was once told that someone used one of my
posters to cover patches and cracks on an office wall. I
was delighted. Art should be practk:al. It Is for people
to encounter all the time, everywhere, not just ln
museums and galleries.
FOR ERIN GRAV, star of Sixpock
What did you learn by wortdng with the ...., of the llm.
Kamy Rog.a? -E. w .. e..mo. h .
•He taught me that. as an actress, I must watch what
l say and do. One day, for instance, we were sitting
outskle, and my position could have been termed
"unladylike." Kenny said: "Someone could be taking
pictures of you, and· you mJght end up on the front
page of a national scandal sheet." He was right.
FOR snJART OBER, author of Everybody's Gulde to
Tm Shelters (Dial Pr•
WMt • dw biggest ndatake.Americans make when lgur-"'9 .._7 -T.G .• Salem, Ort.
•Most people don't understand the tax system, nor
do they plan ahead financially. The better you under-
stand lt. the fmrer lt becomes. Investors would prob-
ably save $1,000 a year lf they took the time to learn
the system and develop a financial plan.
FROM ntE •ASK" EDITOR
RRST FRIEND: Rkharct Harris told
us why he's Indebted to Robert Mit-
chum. "Very early in my career," says
Harris (to be seen next in HBO Theater's
Camelot). "I was in Night Fighters with
him. When he did publicity for it, he
mentioned me. so my name ~ known
before my face and body. Later, I was In
Mutiny on the Bounty with Marlon
Brando. My part got cut to shreds. mak-
ing It almost nonexistent. I was so upset
that I avoided the premiere. Later Bob
called to say my name was on everyone's lips at the theater. 'How could that
be?' I asked, sourly. In disbelief. After all, I was barely seen. Tlttell you,' said
Bob. 'When the lights came on at the end. the audience turned to the aedlts on
the programs and asked. 'Who Is Richard Hams?'" ... RRST CHOICE:
Because we're often asked which drink celebrities choose to sip, we did a quick
I poll and learned that .loe DlMagg;o opts for orange
juice or Perrier; Jenilee Harrlaon (Three's Company)
loves a low-cal beverage with a sl.k:e of lime: horror·
story author Stephen KJng goes for beeP. &01ch-on·
the·rocks Is the old standby of comedian Jerry Stiller
and Don Stewart (of The Guiding Light). Morgan
Fairchlld and Burt Bacharach wet their whistJes with
whlte wine. while Kathryn
Croeby and Danny Thomu
prefer a drop of llght, mUd
sheny. As can be expected.
Russian ~na Nata.Ba Makarova requests vodka,
novelist Rona .-& bubbles over champagne and
spicy actress Maud Adams can't resist a bloody
mary .... RRST CRUSH: It's something very few of
us rarely forget, and Lynn Redgraw Is no exception:
"What I remember Is that I wanted him to be a pal, as Malcaroua
well as a beau. If you're not pals, you're wasting yow
time." Don Rk:ldes remembers his first love, his first
grade teacher, M1ss Lowden. "She laughed when I
was funny, encouraged me with my work and I fell
deeply in love with her. That lasted a year, untO I fell In
love with Susan, who sat in front of me." Nick Nohe
recalls, "I can't remember who she was, but I know I
was tn seventh grade. We went to a movie and I drank
a six-pack of beer.'' Norm Croeby went head over
heels for the older sister of a friend. "She was 17, I was
12. But the fire died the day I saw her with 'curlers and
Nolte no makeup."
PRO John J. Ke.mney. wnlor vice president, energy
and ~nvlronmen1, Edison Electric lnstJtule PRO Ano con CON Anna ~rgy. director, Public Citizien's Critical
Mass Energy Project
The costs ~led with an acci-
'. ~ J 4 . -.
.. '
dent at a nuclear-power plant
should not be treated any different-
ly than those at a coal· or oil-fired
power station. It Is a cost of doing
business for the electric utility, and
should be legitlmately passed on to
rate payers by public-utility com-
ml9elons. The cdedrk:· utiltty fn-
duttry ts the lln'W! as any other business. The bill to
c:ontUmert, Who receive the beneftts of the product
we ddver. mu.t reflect aD the costs of producing elec-
trktty. regarcllat of the type of generating plant used.
Should Om.umen &or the C:O.t of
Nuclear-Reactor Acddmta Through
Hlghel' Utility Blllt?
{Oulllllll ......... ~ AliMe ...... N.JJ
Consumers are paying for nuclear
accidents through higher bills, but
they shouldn't be. Udllty manage-
ment and stockholders should pay
the price for their decisk>n to build
nuclear plants. They have made a
bad investment; nuclear power Is
e~ve and dangerous. Exlsttng
nudtar Insurance -$560 mllllon
pet' plant -would not begin to covet e major ecd-·
dent, which could cost $14 bllllon Of more! Our best
lnYellment le to phMe out nudear power In favor of
consavlllk>n and other safe alternative*.
' f l
' I
i
i ~ t
! !
I
•
' I
l
j
The Heart-Pounding
Pleasure Of Whodunits
eath seems to pro vide the minds of
the Ang)crSaxon race with a
greater fund of innocent enjoy·
ment than any other single
sub;ect." So wrote Dorothy L.
Sayers in 1934. She was. of
course. thinking of murder -not
the sordid. messy and OCCASionally
pathetic murders of real llf e
but the more elegantly contrived and mysterious
concoctions of the detective novelist.
To judge, too, from the universal popularity of
the genre, it Isn't only the Anglo-Saxons who share
this enthusiasm for murder most foul. From Green·
land to Japan. millions of readers f~I perlectly at
home In Sherlock Holmes's claustrophobic sane·
tum at 2218 Baker Street, Miss MArple's ctufrrnlng
cottage at St. Mary Mead and Lord Peter Wimsey's
elegant apartment in Piccadilly. There Is nothing
like a potent amalgam of mayhem and mystery to
make the whole l.VOlid kin.
When I came to write my first novel in the early
61Js, It never occurred to me to begin with anything
but a mystery, I think partly because Its highly disc!·
plined form provides an admirable apprenticeship
for a writer who aspires to become a serious
novelist. I had always enjoyed the genre -
Dorothy L. Sayers was a potent lnfluenoe -and I
was fascinated by the cha1Jenge of trying to do
50methlng new with the weD-wom conventions of
the detective story: the central mysterious death;
the dosed drde of susped5. each wtth a credlb&e
motive; the an1val of the detective like the avenging
deity of an old Morality Play; the final solution
which the reader himself can arrive at by logical
deduc:non from dues praented to him with decep-
tive cunning but essential fairness.
In my own reading, it wasn't the puzzle whkh
mOlt Intrigued me, and l sometimes think that
f4Wft readers W81ch for every due. note every twist
In the pJot and sniff happOy after every red hen1ng
than we writers Imagine. My younger daughter,
readJng my lataa book, mcrcJy comments: "It can't
be hJm or her; you like them too much." And I
suspect that most of us guess the m~ more
through OUT knowledge of the author, his style,
prejudices and foibles, than through close attention
to each detail of the plot. We are pitting ow wits
primarily against the wrtter, not his vlllaln or hls
detective.
p 0 Jama II the pwudonym /or Brlflllt tMkdlVC nooelbf
Phyllls WIYet. SIM i. the oulhof of nine boob. lndudl'ng th.
J~·aelflng novel lnnoc.n1 Blood and the Miii mY*'}.I TM ~ull Senath th« ~In. which wtll ~ ,..**"' In
~. SIM,....,,. London
So if correctly guessing the identity of the
murderer isn't always the chief attractton, what Is?
Perhaps it is the age-old and universal pleasure af.
forded by a well-told story with a beginning. a mid-
dle and an end, a tale which takes us into a world in
whkh we know that wrong will ftnally be righted.
the gu1}ty exposed, the innocent vtndlalted, and
human reason will triumph. Perhaps it Is the thrill of
vicarious terror and danger as we sit safely by ow
fireside or puD the bedclothes more securely under
our chin.
Above all, in our increasingly violent and irra-
tional world -In which so many of our soda.I prob-
lems seem Insoluble -the mystery offers the psy-
chological comfort of a stmy based on the premise
that even the most unpleasant charact81' has the
right to live to the last natural moment, and that
I,,,.,., a domestic
murder-the contrast
befween an ordered
society and the etuptlon
of violent death.
there Is no problem, however ddftouk. whk;h can-
not be solved by human tntdlgenoe, human ln-
genulty and human courage. I Su.sped that these
are some· of the reasons why I enjoy mysteries.
Patu.ps they me aho the reasons why I choole to
write them.
One of the andllary ~ of reading m~
tertea is dllcovertng MW fads and gaining lntlght
Into ddferent 4nd fateilatlng worlds. h .... been
IOid' thet a good myst.ry ts 25 percent puma, 25
pe:n::cnt c::hana::be1 ization end 50 pe:n::cnt what the
author knows bat, and I, for one, h.rw much en·
joyad lemtng about hone racing &om Dick Fien-
ds, theatrical life from Ngalo Mani\, benking from
Emma Lathen and the art ol bell ~ &om
Dorothy L. 5eY9'1. The Mttlng, too. II o( lmmesw
tmpot1an0e In traJllpOl1tng ut to MOths wodd. I
c.an gain a k.wncr and more '*;c ur.dill...,r
'ding of CaBfomla ltfe and l'1'Kln9 Roe1 Mac-
DoMlcl than from an~ tre"* book. I wale the
bridges of A~m ~ NiedM tt•l11g1 \1111"1
der Valk and swelter in the heat of Bombay with
H .R.F. Keating's Inspector Ghote, while the very
smells and sounds of Paris rise from the pages of
Simenon.
At the risl< of disappointing mystery fiends. I
have to conf es.s that I am not an addict In the sense
that I have to have my daily fix even If the dose Isn't
up to strength or standard. My reading Is dlscrlrni-
nating and. 1 admit. somewhat limited. Much as I
admire thO!le fine wrtters Raymond Chandler and
Dash~D Hammett (and their influence not only on
crtme writing but also on the modem novel has
been signtflca,lO • I am not really an aficionado of
the school of guns. guts and gore. I pnder a more
domestic mwder -the contrast between an
ordered society or environment and the shocking
and contaminating eruption of violent death.
Those writers I most enjoy, Dorothy L. &syen,
Margery ADlngham and Ngaio Marsh. are aD ex·
perts in malloe domestic, and they conform to
W.H. Auden's dictum that "the corpse must shock
not only beclliU9e It is a corpse but also beclllU9e,
even for a oorpse, It Is shockingly out of place, as
when a dog makes a mess on a drawing room
carpet." AD three worked within the conventions of
the genre, yet aD helped to ral9e the mystery from a
sub-literary puzzle to a form with serious daims to
be regarded as a now.I . AD understood the Impor-
tance of setting and atmosphere. AD could create
characters who are more than stereotypes waiting
bke cardboard cutouts to be knocked down by the
detecttw. All set thetr stories unambiguously In
a particular time and place and made some attempt
to combine the mystery wtth the novel of 90dal
rulism. I wou.ld placr Dorothy L. Seyers's The
Nine Taybs high on my list of favorttes. while
Margery Allingham's 7lger In the Smoke is prob-
ably among the best mystaies ever wtttteri. The
opposing chamders of the murderer, Jack Havoc.
and the gentle but lmplemble hero, Canon Avr'll,
make nontenJe of the atticiln\ that the SJU1 ab-
IOlutes of good and ml are, and must always re-
matn, OUblde the mystery's range and that It ii thus
en a1entlaDy trMal form.
It• tnLCatlug that Ill three of my favortta are
women as was. of coune, that phenomenon and
Queen of Cnme, Agatha Christle, a lady I thk\k of
..... novella than~ conjure. whole~
d hand • .Jhe lhuflla "-cm\l)omd c:handln
can outwtl the l....e eye. 8«euM ttu. quertlll of
MnM ...... ID deldl Is preemti*"• I am ofterl
lllMd the qudlon: 'Why .. resp«t.eble middle-
dm ledla 90 good at ~19 nudtt?" It may be
ht llway mayhem .. CM WffY of sublmellng our
... 11111)11 Of' of purging n.dofwll f1 .... of W\Jdl-
1 I I
By
P.O. JAMES
ty or guUt, but I doubt whether we need delve into
psychological theory for an answer. The construc-
tion of clues demands a keen eye for the domestk:
details of everyday life, and in this women excel.
Who was where and with whom and when? Who
ate the poisoned salad and who prepared it? What
woman wouJd wear that purple lipstick found near
the body? Who locked the librarY door and when?
At. what time precisely was that teDtale ied stain first
,noticed on the bedroom floor? And women are
particularly skilled at dealing with the motives for
murder, the tensions, intrigues, jealousies and
resentments which can fester In the dosed circles .
beloved of aime writers and ftnaJly erupt Into the
ultimate atrrie.
A bad mystery Is the easiest of all books to write;
a good mystery is among the most dtf6cult. The
elements of construction itself are formidable. So
much has to be achieved within the 80,000 to
90,000 words which are the average length for the
genre. The characters of the detective, vlct1m and
some half-dozen suspec1'5 must be ftrmly esmbllshecl
and psychologically credible; the method of mur-
der must be feasable and, if possible, original; the
setting must both Influence and enhance the mood
of the story; the denouement -that most dlffttult
chapter of all to write successfully -must be intel-
lectually satisfying as well as exdtfng. The whole
may be likened to one of those Ingenious puzzles:
oddly shaped pieces of wood which, when fitted
together, form a perfect sphere.
To achieve this, careful preliminary planning is
essential before the ftrst word Is written. I usually
make notes, not on)y about the weather, location
and charact.ers, but aiSo about where everyone Is at
the audal time of death. I try to describe the mur-
der realdtraly and I am sometitaies asked whether I
&tghten myself. The answer has to be no. I can be
~tened by the books of others, but never by my
own. Perhaps this Is because, paradoxk:aly, the
writer needs to be both deeply Involved tn and yet
knowlngly detached &om his WOik.
And what of the future? For years now crttics
have propheMd the demise of the mystery, at least
In Its traditional form. One 19th-century attic,
reviewing Conan Doyle, wrote: "In view of the dlf-
ftcuky of httdng on any fancies that an ~tly
frah, anJy this l8rlAlonill bulan-must IOOI\ ! ..,,
come to an end." Certalnly, It lln't easy to tnwnt I ~~
odglrlal ways of murder. whl1e the exotic and 1,'
SOtn1tima bizarre settings ol some modem myt-' ~
tel1el bw wtlnal to the alrnOlt dapalata March •
for new locatk>ns•and fresh ideas ... Death hath ten J ~
thousand several doors for men to take thetr exits,"
(CtHtl#lued} ..... _.. ..............
--I
;
Best Mystery · .Bets
For Rrst Offenders
-j
I/ yotJ'rc dying for some atomoch-duk hlng mysteries IO toke
to the bcoch. . <Kcurl u. p In bed with (do check the clowt/lrst).
cONid« these /ovorUa of Dllvs Wfnn, editor of Murder Ink
and Murderess Ink (\\\:rimOl'I Publfshfllg Co.), companions Jar mJl*l)I /oN. Winn haa brobn ha llat down Into
whodunits by past rnamn and bv current ~ -ond she
shara a few duo about each.
Paat Ma6ten ----------M.rwerY ~: The Tiger in lhe Smoke
Fabulous atrnosphml (fog), lntaadng people (the hunter
end the hunmd), rlwtlng location (London's beck streets).
Gm~ moJe threatening.
Apdt,a Cink A.8.C. M"1'den
.Hercule Poirot's llltk !PY eds .e taunted by a blabber·
moulh rnwdere, a ~ -and no apparent motive.
Nglllo ~ Ouenutw to Death
Surely one of the molt d:ramadc doth 5Ca'la on nlCOl'd:
Bdcw It or not, the piano pedal did It.
DorOCby L S.,..: Gaudy Night
Harriet Vane, the most admired woman In detective fiction,
dllpelches the poison penner at Oxford, then aocepts the
most pretentious proposal ewr uttered (last page) .
.kaMphlM Tep: The Doughier of Time
Richard m acquitted -by a portrait and a ~ed detedive
laid up in a hosp4tal bed.
Raymond Chandler: The Lady in the Lake
'The ne plus uhra for puzzle fans, with more clues than rip-
ples In the lake. even when the body ls thrown In.
o .. hldl Hammett: The Glass Key
The tough·guy novel perfected: Polttlcs, gambling,
cynicism -all washed down with too much booze.
Ra Stout: The Doorl>en Rong
What Conan Doyle would have done with Holmes and
Watson If he'd had any wit. Besides, anyone wllllng to take
on J . Edgar Hoover deserves a hand
Current MCJ11ters .................. .
P.D. Mimes: Shroud for o Nightingole
A detective toJ~IJ In low with. Ditto an author. Medk1ne,
poetry, bteracy revealed through typkal 8rttlsh understate·
nWnt.
Ruth RmcWI: No More Dvlng Then
Insightful study of Inspector and his sidekick under stress,
fro m one who learned psychology at Simenon's knee.
Emma Lathen: Come to Dust
The finest worlt ever from this pseudonym. Cam a droll
look at model husbands. Ivy league traditions and flnan·
dal shenanigans.
-.mma vu de Weterlng: Oumlda in A'""4P'dom
WUI convert all disbellevcrs Into cat lovers. flute players,
1.en enthusiasts. A remarkable companion for a lonely
night.
Dick Fnmdl: Dead Cm
For all th098 who a ave a bang-up finish . Guarmlteed not
lo disappoint you at the end.
Roes Mecl>oMld.: The Ivory Grin
The most adr'Qit dbposa1 of the body extant. though
*>m«what SJUCIC)me. lluthfuDy, The Galton COM has a
better plot but you ought to read this, too, just to Me where
the body winds up.
Aa.o wonderful: The ~ Ann Nat by Petn
DUd111on; The Thlriy-ftrtl of Felwuar1I by Julmt Symoni; n. Queer. of AmMm by R.....il H. Gr-.-, .net n. LOl1'
Good IC.Ill by.-..~
~~.A..-a.-••
WHODUNITS (c:onlinl#d)
observed dramatist John Webster, and most of buffoons def erentia.lly tugging their forelocks to the
them must have been used by now. ApMt &om the · genby; and the denouement took i*:e aim dln-
ublqultous blunt lnstrument, lhooclng, hanging and ner -with the whole cast In evening <"--
throttJlng, the unfortunate vldlms haw heal dis-when the least likely suspect would be unmasked
patched by the prolonged ringing of church bells; ·as the murderer. M:equendy he then~~ kiled
an ldde used as a dagger; a bullet from a revolver himself to spare · the readers the disagreeable
triggered by the loud pedal of a piano; poison post· thought of the public hangman.
age stamps; the Injection of an air bubble Into a The modem mystery has ~ those naive-
vein. A few have even been frightened to death. ties and sirnp&:itles, and thoee writers whose work
But ltlll, the l8ntedonal buslnae flourishes. a will last are those who succeed In the difficult task of
source of Innocent relaxation, diversion and combining the~ tradttiOn of an exciting stcSly and
rewurance to new generations of readers. the the lidlfyJng aadle of n6>nal dec:htdkm wMh the
modem myttay addict is, of course. more psychologk:.al subdeties and moral arnbk.Juities of a
sophiRk:ated than his counterpart in the heyday of good now!. Here we are Indeed, in the words of
the coun~ murder when a cast was not Robert Brownlhg, .. on the dangerous edge of
complete -without the buder; when the llbrery things" where-the ~ " exploring that greatest of
became established as the most lethal room in all mysteries, the human heart, and where there
England; when the detective was Invariably an · may be no neat and slms*? answer in the final
amateur of tmpeccabie lineage and superhuman chapter, not even foe a Hercule Poirot or a rawt
ta)ent, whlle the professional poke weN bicycling Lord Peter Wlmsey. l&J
U.dywltha temper. A ··big bang" heard 2,200mlles
away .. a hdal wave rcill asa ten-story building
dust clouds that rose 17 miles high and circled rhe
globe for months. producing spectacular red sunsets. Tha(s what
hcippened when an Indonesian volcano Clllled K rakaloa exploded 99
years ago this Friday (August 27) By coincidence. Tues·
day the 24th marks the anniversary of the Vesuvius
eruption which. in 79 A D . burled the Roman city of Pompeii Since Mother Nature
can be such a violent lady. you'd think there'd be some way to harness rhal power
safely. There is. but for all the m1gh1 of geothermal energy. 11 sat hest a h19 "maybe"
for meeting world demands lor fuel
Stam hut. Using geothennal energy means tapping into "nature's tf'aket-
tle." subterranean pools that the earth's internal heat turns into steam a nd hot
water. In Japan. over S,000 spas use geothermal water. and New Zealand's
Maori fishermen cook trout in bubbling volcanic springs. Iceland has more fire
than ice-scores of volcanoes. hot springs and geyser~ that faithfully heat
homes and greenhouses year round. The biggest use of geothermal energy,
however. Is for generating electricity-enough in one case to serve a city the
size of Cincinnati. But geothermal's big problem• are location (too far from ~51 cities) and technology (difficult to handle inexpensively).
"Thar's OK. /'//wall ..
Wata bugs. Geotherma/'s real/yo short-distance runner It works where electricity
produced by geothermal steam can be delivered Inexpensively to nearby urban
areas But a Ci ncinnati 1s many miles from the nearest maior geothermal source.
Geothermal'salso go11echnological "bugs .. corrosive chemicals that can damage
pipe and superhard rock formations that may make drilling two to four times as
expensive as conventional drilling for oil or natural gas at stmllar depths.
HIHua ... This doesn't mean geothermal's all wet-just that
It's not so hot for the really ~ jobs: Georhermal provided le111
than J 7 IJOOth• of one percent of America'• total energy need•
In 1981. Mother Nature's other alternatives also are smaJI hy:
Wood's a good burn In forested Vermont and Maine. a fizzle In
tree-spare states. Windmill power has limitations In congested
urban states. As for solar, we're very hopeful-and working
hard on our $30 million venture to convert sunlight directly
Into electricity with "photovoltaic" panels. But America'•
"day In the sun" is still some years off. So while It's nice to get
all steamt1d up over alternative energy sources. the hottaf bet. whUe
they're being developed are still oll, natural gH, coal. and nuclHr. When It
comes to fueling all the people. all the time, they're proven natural resource..
I(• a fact: ,More than 95 percent of America's energy chores last
year were performed by oil natural gos. coal. and nuclear power.
Moblr
H_ow Do Pitchers Spell
Relief? C-O-m-1-C
By Vic Ziegel
There is a garden behind the
home-team bull pen at Shea
Stadium. Tomatoes, cucum-
bers, radishes, carrots and
three types of peppers are usually
available . When the Mets are on the
road , the vegetables are te nded by the
gro und crew. At all other times, the
chdres are performed by amateur gar-
deners in baseball uniforms.
"We ca" water during the game."
says pitcher Craig Swan. "but we aren't
allowed to hoe or weed. We have to
do that before the game starts."
The bull pen Is that Isolated
place for relief pitchers sever·
al hundred feet from most
of the action in a ball
park. The seats are
uncomfo rtable
benches; the
view Is the
numbers o n
the backs of
uniforms.
T h ere is a
telephone in
Nacho men: It's a dirty job, but somebody has to do it.
every bub pen. The manager. sitting in
the dugout, has his own phone . If he
calls the bull pen It's because the starting
pitcher Is struggUng, so we know that's
one call the manager would rather not
ma ke. The bull pen citizens, enjoying
their free time, also would just as soon
the manager stayed off the line. For In-
stance. say a team Is visiting the Texas
Rangers. The Rangers' Arlington Stad-
ium Is well known for the nachos (those
tortilla chips covered wtth refried beans,
cheese and he¥ peppers) sold at certain
c-0ncession stands. It lsn 't unusual for a
member of the bull pen crew to hand a
willing youngster enough money to buy
a few orders of nachos.
A free seat at the ball park and a
snack on the way. And 1here's always
the chance of VJorld Serles money In
October. It sounds like a wonderful Ufe
But sometimes the concession lines
move slowly. And what seemed llke a
comfortable lead, back when the food
order was placed, Is suddenly threat·
ened. There are runners on base and
the toughest part of the lineup Is due.
The bull pen phone could ring at any
moment. Meanwhile. the kid still hasn't
tumed up with the nachos .... And you
thought major leaguers had It easy.
It was such a night--a sudden tum
of events on the field, a long wait for a
hot dog -that cauted relief pitcher Tug
10 • MMn .. 'f WllKt.Y. Augu.1 u . ,.,
McGraw to e nter the game with a
mustard stain on his uniform shirt.
At Mtlwaukee'sCo unty Stadium, the
bull pen Is 400 feet from home plate,
behind a 10.foot·high fence . A radio
tuned to the game tells the players what
they can't see. "You have to come up
with some conversation or you'd go
nuts o ut there," explains Brewer pitcher
Bob McClure, rt!Cently banished from
the bull pen and made a starting pitcher.
"One year we talked about condomin-
iums because we were all into buying
cond os." He remembers ano ther
season when the players decided to
brlng their dogs to the bull pen. On
some nights there were a setter. a re-
triever and two tun-grown St. Bernards.
"It was like a kennel," McClure says.
With nothing more to do than wait
or warm up, It's hardly surprtslng that
mischief occasionally crops up. Mc-
Clure, a good sport, was the victim of
one weJJ-organi.zed prank.
The flagpole at County Stadium Is
directly over the bull pen bathroom ,
and the flagpole cord hangs to within
three feet of the bathroom door. "I hod
to use the bathroom ," McClure recalls,
"and It hod to be 98 degrees that dey.
But I swear It was 115 degrees lnSlde,
like a hot box." When he stepped ln-
lldt , the door slammed shut. Ho
dldn 't gtve the door a MCOnd thought
until he tried to leave. McClurt tumed
the doorknob and nothing happened.
(conllnu.d)
I
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_J
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BULL Pllll (continu.d}
He pulled and pushed to no avail.
Saytng nasty things' dkin't heJp etther.
Whal McClure didn't know was
that hls buddies had pulled the
flagpole cord around the doorknob.
and the pressure of the cord was pul-
ling up on the door so he couldn't
open It. As his teamMates roared, he
tried to escape, sweating all the whl1e.
'1 was tn there for 15 minutes," Mc-
Oure snys, "yanking so hard on that
door 1he flagpc>le almost bent In haJf.
1...ook.ed Jlke they had a big old bass on
'1he end al thllt pole ...
Some bal pens haw ~
... The trouble wtth this Is that the
bul pen ooech, or the IJid*ig a.d\,
gm to JXk 1be cbmnel 11 Wllln up
to the players, their ftnt choice would
be 909nld•ig wlh • good deal al ac-
tion. Not In the bul pen, ehou!tt .
Seems the CIOllC:h's ~ show '5
always the bel game. Rmvas-. Adant.a's Al Hraboeky
pen. "Why Is Krausse throwtng?" the
manager wanted to know.
"Didn't you want him to?" said the
confused voice tn the K.C. buD pen.
"Gracious, no," is not exactly what
~t.Yleana
Mc&aw .. gamN dma:aas. ft
can't be easy b such~ to Ill
on the bul pen bench wllltlng b
the llmtlng 1*Jwr to fal ~ A
mW pitcher al a decade earls, Moe
D:illbo Sy, w a .....mat &dmg
~to --...... Moldy. It had
to do wMh the bul pen phone.
Dartt said.
As years went by, the Drabowsky
legend grew. Some people would
now have us belieYe that .Drabowsky
waited undl Krausse sat back down
before getting back on the phone. "I
thought I told you to get Krausse up,"
.Drabowsky supposedly said. Sony,
but It didn't happen. The buD rwl
pen was never that much.fun. ILi
State Fann agent E. G. Warren, r.. • .u..n.. M. • • . ~·~ ... ,wllSISSlppl. I
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~ Pqeafor tbe State
Flnn .. neseatyou.
J
-~~•
4 mg "11r:· 0.4 me nicorine .r. per cignttt !Jr FTC llltflod.
By ffiQrllyn 1-fM&en
It all started with a small, elegant food shop on Columbus
Avenue in New York City. Two most attractive. charming
young women. Shella Lukins. a onetime graphic artist, and
Julee Rosso, formerly in advertising. decided to com-
bine their talents in cooking and marketing and open a very
special food store, The Silver Palate. Beginning simply with
breads and cheeses. dressings and pates. salads. entrees and
chutneys. they were off to a flying start when everything was
sold out on the very first day they opened. Now their packaged
foods. riinglng from vinegar to pesto walnuts, are beginning
to appear in fin~stores around the country.
What could be more natural. then,, than The Silver Palate
Cookbook. a treat to look at and filled with tantalizing recipes,
menus. tips ....! even delightful food trivia.
Here is a delicious picnic menu garnered from the book.
Only Wish-Bone* blends
new Sour Cream Dressings
with a taste this fresh and
light and luscious.
BORSCHT
6 medlum-stze b.eb. pe.i.d
10 cupe cold water
Juice of 3 medlum..U. t.mone
3 tablespoon• granulated 1ugar
2 teupoona aalt
3egp
l cup milk
l cup dairy aour cream (gamlah)
l cucumber, peeled, Heded and dtced (garnish)
1. Cut beets into ha\ves. Place them In a soup pot with the 10 cups
cold water and bring to a botl . Reduce hear and simmer partially
covered unril beets are tender. 30 to 40 minutes. Skim foam from
cooking liquid as necessary.
2. Remove beets from cooking Uquid with a slotted spoon and cool
to room temperature Grate the beets and return them to theu
cooking liquid, along with the lemon juice. sugar and salt.
3. Return to the stove and simmer for 15 minutes. Remove from
heat and let soup cool for 15 minutes.
4. Beat eggs and milk together in a bowl Gradually whisk 3 cups of
the warm borscht into the eggs and mUk. Pour this mixture slowly
back Into the remaining borscht. •
5. Cover the soup and refrigerate until very cold. Taste and correct
seasoning: the soup should be nicely balanced between sweet and
50UT.
6. Ladle Into chilled soup bowls.· Garnish wlrh sour cream and
diced cucumber and serve immediately. Makes 8 or more urulnga
·For picnics. transpon soup In vacuum container and pour Into
mugs or bowls at picnic site (cor1tlnucd)
On1v WJSh·Bone could take
the fresh taste of lDl sour cream
and make It delusdous!
Introducing Wish·Bone Sour
Cream Dressings.
PetfectJy blended as only
Wish-Bone can. For a fresh, light,
creamy-smooth taste that's better
than delicious.
It's de.luscious!
New Sour Crum & Butter-
milk. Sour Cream & Italian
Hetbs. Sour Cream & Bacon.
Wlsh·Bone makes·
thml ... OeJuscious.
_I
**LIMITED
TIME ONLY -s299s
~~--~~~~---~----~~~Z.,~~~~ ow.·---~ S1.,.,, "'-.-0-utttol ..... fardlihery. -----------~~--~---------~
POSH PICNIC (continued}
SALADE NICOISE
8 new po1a10et, about l lb., well ecrubbt!d
2 lbs. gnen beans, cooked
10 very ripe Italian plum toma•~·:·~s,~tJ~~~ washed and quartered
l •mall purple onion, puled
and thinly 5lked
Vt cup Nk;olse ollvn
•;. cup chopped Italian parsley
P\nch of Mh ~~~~~~~~~~~ l teaspoon ground p«ppeT
'fe cup vinaigrette, recipe follows
6 hard-cooked eggs, •h•lled and quartered
12 ozs. anned, otl.packed white tuna, well drained
2 ou. anchovy flJleta, optional
1. Cook po1a1oes m bo1hng salted water unul umder. but not
mushy. about 10 minutes. drain Quciner potcitoes m10 a bowl
2. Add green becim. tomdtoes. onion. ohves. parsley. pinch of salt
and the pepper Pour 112 cup vrna1grette over vegerables: toss
3. Transfer mixture 10 a le1rge serving ple1tter Anange the hard·
cooked-egy quarters around the edge of rhe pla11er. Flake 1he tuna
over rhe salad and. 11 you use them. anange 1he anchovy fillets 111 a
lat11ce pattern over the runa. Dru.de wuh add1uonal vinaigrette and
serve at room temperature. Makes 6 ro 8 servings
Note: For a picnic. place green bean/poralo rmxture mlo a t1ght-
closmg container Place eggs. 1una and enchuvies m plastic bags.
p lace all m a cooler-tore A~~mble Sdldd at p1cn1c sue
VINAIGRETTE
I tablapoon prepared Dijon-style mustard
4 tablapoooa red wtnt vinegar
1 teMpOOn grW1ulated wgar
in tuspoon salt
•;, ttMp<>On frahly ground black pepper
MJoced par-aley and/or sn)Wed &ah chlva
VI cup olive oU
1. Measure mustard Into a bowl Whisk In vinegar. sugor, salt. pep-
per and herbs to tAste
2. Continue to whisk mixture while slowly dribbling m olive oU until
mixture thickens AdjuSI seasoning to tAste. Cover unlil ready to use.
(Vinaigrette is best when made just before it Is to be used.) If
necessary. whisk again before serving. Makes 1 cup
ORANGE CAKE
8 tab6ftc>oon• (1 stick) .,.,... b1&ttn, eoflcned
~ cup granulated .avar
2..-,Mparated
Gr.led zat of 2 OfW19C1
11"6 cupe unbltKhed 1111-purpoec lour
11,\ ~ bMing powder -
"" t...-bMing IOda \4 tealpOOn l&h
in cup flah Of &ngc Juice
Oranee Glaze. redpt loUow9
1. Preheat oven to 350°. Grease a 10-inch Sundt pan.
2. Cream the butter and gradually add the sugar, beating until bght.
Beat in egg yolks. one at a lime. and Ofange zest.
3. Sift the flour wtd'I beking powder, belmg IOda and salt. Add dry
~ ellenMely with the OJang8 juJce to the ta.tt.r .
._ Bat the egg whim unftl d , end fold ~ it. .....
I. Pow bllla-ir*> it. pewpaed Bundt .,.n. Blllea 30to351 1 ...,
or und 9ct. of aM lfmk ~from the pml'I ecig9I MCf e ca
_... lr'l9lltld In the <**r conws out dun.
6. Cool b 10 n*1uta In '*'· unmold °"'° • rack end drtalil .... Or.,. Glue while warm. Cool bcb.. 912v!ng.
• Moka8to 10~
ORANGE GLAZE
\4 cap ...... or-.,...
,.. cup ••llleted .....
1. Combine orange juice end IUSJllr In a amall sauoepwa and simmer
gently for 5 mlnuta, ttlniOQ ocx.a9onally, until a light tYNP forms .
Maka 'It cup
HELP RAISE $500,000
TO FIGHT
MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY.
EVERY TIME IDU BUY SKIPPY .
OR GOLDEN GRIDDLE~FOR'°UR KIDS,
WE'llGIVEA DONATION TO
JERRY'S~,, lHROUGHnlE
MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY ASSOCIATION.
From today until Labor Day, you have a great opportunity to help
find a cure for Muscular Dystrophy, while at the same time, giving
your kids delicious, nutritious Skippy Peanut Butter or breakfasts
with Golden Griddle Pancake Syrup. You see, every time you buy
· one of these fine products, we'll give
Jerry Lewis
NanoMI Chairman
Muscular Dystrophy
As.sodatlon
a nickel to Jerry's kids. So your
family's good eating will help to raise
$500,000 or more for a good cause .
HALF PRICE SALE
FIVE MORGAN SILVER DOLLAR SET
ORIGINAL U .S. GOVERNMENT MINT ISSUE
MINTED ABOUT100 YEARS AGO.
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c.iy
5'llE: Right n<:IN, you can get spectacular savings on a Bic
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display at your favorite retailer.)
5'llE M'ft Buy one fine point Rolle-rand you'll get twO
Bic Stic pens absolutely free. 1.tlJ!iiiCJ
What 100,000
Women Ought
To Know
By Colleen O'Connor
I n February of 1980. Gella
Ankelsteln learned she
had cancer In both breasts
and was told by her doctor
that she would need an lm-
medJate bUateral mastec-
tomy. After learning that the
alternative was certain death,
she said yes to the operation.
But before surgery took
place. Finkelstein arTanged
to have both breasts recon·
structed by a plastic surgeon
at a later date. "Recon-
struction was what kept my
he.ad together," she says.
Today, breast reconstruc-
tion Is · an Increasingly
popular option for the esti·
mated 100,000 women who
undergo mastectomies each
year. The procedure Involves
replacing a breast (or breasts)
removed ln a mastectomy
with a breast made from a
silicone-or saline-filled Im-
plant.
In the past, breast Implants
did not look or feel natural,
and many surgeons worried
that Implants might rnMk a
cancer recurrence. But In re-
cent years, sdenti6c progress
has created a signlftcant turn-
dety of Plastic and Recon·
structfve Surgeons conduct-
ed of Its members revealed
that of the estimated one mil-
lion women In the U.S . who
had had one or two mas--
tectomles, only 20,000
chose to have reconstruc-
tions.
The reasons are basically
simple. During the brief
2().year history of bre~t Im-
plants, It took some years for
acceptllnce of thetr use In
reconstruction to spread
among surgeons (they were
Initially used for breast
augmentlltlon) and passable
patients. Cost was another
factor: Women were once re-
quired to pay the full fee
from their own pockets
because most medlcaJ in-
surance plans c:Udn't cover It.
In addition, for many
women there has been a fear
of going Into surgery again.
Though reconstruction can
be done during the mastec-
tomy operation Itself, most
surgeonsadvlsethatpatlen~
wait at least six to 12 months
so that the first Incision is well
healed and elastic enough to
accommodate the Implant.
around. The artificial breasts W htie much of the
used today closely mimic na-. _ debate among sur-
ture's handlwcxk; the tech· geons over recon-
niques are simpllfted and in-structlon has quiet·
volve np materlah note¥-ed, a vestjge remains. Some
ly rejected by the body; and still fear Implants might mask
surgeons beJleve that recon--or allow -a recurrence.
struction wtll not Interfere ~1 disapprove of It, period ...
with a patient's recove:ry. says Dr. C .D. Haagensen.
Moreover, the American professor emeritus of surgery
Cancer Society is now train-at Columbia University and a
Ing Its Reach to Recovery longtime supporter of rad.icaJ
volunteers -post-mastec:· mastectomies. 'The plastlc
tomy women who visit the surgeon must cover the Im·
hospital rooms of new pa· plant with a flap of skin. and
dents -to talk to women that means he has left some
about recOnstrucdon. breast tissue-behind. In a
Although the new tech· woman who has cane.er,
nlques mean that most leaving breast tissue behind 15
mastec:tomy pattentt can be bad surgery because you
rebuilt, the number of can't tell wh8rCI In the breast
women who chdoM recon· the cancer ts. The flap may
strucdon Is smal. A 1980-81 contain cancer which has
survey that the Amencan So-been krft behind by the sur·
geon who dJd the opera·
CollimO'CoMcr•o~lodlr tton," he explains.
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UCONSTRUCTION fconcmuedJ
Other surgeons believe there is little
chance of a recurrence. and that In
those cases where the cancer does
recur. it can be detected early with a
manual examination or mammo-
graphy. "The risk Is minimal, and
there's very little danger to life, .. says
Dr. Thomas D. Cronin, clinical pro-
fessor of plastic surgery at Baylor Col·
lege of Medicine. who Invented the
silicone implant. And states Dr. H.
William Porterlield, president of the
American Society of Plastic a nd
Reconstructlve Surgeons: "There
have been very few serious complica·
tlons with br~t Implants."
Although the techniques foT re·
construction vary acx"rding to
the individual.' the general
method Is fairly simple. The
plastic surgeon makes an incision just
below where the new breast will be.
then Inserts the imptant under the skin
and behind the pectoral muscle. The
lower border of the Implant is usually
made level with that of the o\her
breast when It Is in a n upllfttng gar-
ment. A rebuilt breast Is higher and
rounder. a tittle firmer and more Inert,
than a real one. There wiU be some
scarring. but the breast should look
normal under an undergarment.
The ~Jest operation to perform is
on a woman who has had a modified
radical mastectomy, which leaves the
pectoral muscle Intact with e nough
skin so that an implant can be comfor·
tably slipped behind the muscle. If the
woman has had severe radiation
treatments that damaged the skin, or
a radical mastectomy where the sup·
porting muscle and nearby lymph
nodes have been removed along with
the entire breast, the surgery is more
complex. Because the cancer surgeon
usually leaves only a very thin layer of
skin over the ribs, resulting In a caved·
In hollow spaoe beneath the collar-
bone, the plastic surgeon must first
repair the area with skin and muscle
grafts. The most common technique
uses the flap of muscle and overlytng
skin from the back and brings It up
under the armpit and along to the
front of the chest.
A new technique to fiU the hollow
Involves bringing up a p iece of muscle
and skin from the abdomen , after the
Implant Is stripped behind the newly
transplanted muscle , the woman then
receives a "tummy tuck." (Several
surgeons have successfully used a
technique In which excess abdomlnal
fet and tissue are "tunneled up" and.
used for the breast rather than an Mtt·
flcial tmplant.)
The next stage Involves creating a
nJppje and areola, the rOMtte of ttssue
that IWfOUnds tM nlpple. A nipple ls
most often conscrucled from $kin from
the tnner thigh, or from the darker
skln of the labia. whose color more
closely matches that of a natural nip -
ple. lf the areola of the remaining
breast is large enough, it can be
shared with the new one.
In general, reconstruction is a sim-
ple procedure that Involves no vital
organs or bodily functions. The com-
plications are much the same as those
of any operation; occastonaUy there is
Infection or blood cloning. The two
complications specific to reconstruc·
lion are sloughing, where skin peels
off the chest wall as the body attempts
to reject the implant, and contracture,
where the scar around the implant
shrinks and squeezes the silicone Into
a rigid "tennis ball" breast. Although
plastic surgeons have devised tech·
nlques to avoid sloughing, at present
there are no such procedures to mini·
miZe the chances of contracture. Ac-
cording to statistics from the National
Cancer Institute, about 25 percent of
reconstructions using silicone im·
plants result in some degree of con-
tracture. while the Incidence with
saline-filled implants is less than 10
percent.
After studying implants. the Food
and Drug Administration (F.D.A )
proposed that they be placed under
stricter F.D.A. contJol In order to
gathet more information on long-
standing safety and effectiveness.
Almost all women can be recon·
structed, except for those receiving
radiation or chemotherapy. who
should wait until these tTeatments are
completed. It Is advisable to discuss
the reconstruction possibilities with the
cancer surgeon before the mastec·
tomy. If rebuilding seems feasible, he
can prepare for It by leaving a little
more tissue.
Fees vary according to the area of
the country and the complexity of the
surgery. Total expenses may range
from $2,000 to $4,000. Most medical
Insurance plans now cover about 80
percent. If not au, of the cost.
While there are no long--tenn statl.s-
lics of breast reconstruction_!!, effects
on a large number of wofflen, many
henild It as the ultimate llberatk>n In
their fight against cancer. "The ex·
perience of havtng had cancer Is some-
thing you can't quite get rid of," says
Jean ZaJon, author of I Am Who1e
Again (Random House), "but rec:on·
str\lctJon lessens It considerably. f911
1t practk:ally erases the memory." t&J
Women who want more lnformatk>n
on what It's Ilk• to ha11e a reconatruc;·
Hon should contac:t A F.T.E.R. (Ask •
Fn.nd 10 Expletn Rec;onstn.actlon), 350
Fifth Awnue, nn. 608, New YC!fk,
N.Y. 10118; (212) 736-3296. Thie
group of wo~ whctw had recon-
SITUdk>nl will talk wtth thoec who mey
be considering the operation.
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TAKI! llY DATA l...uT -P' EASE
Have you heard the one· about 500 ex-applicadon of humor. He notes, for lnstance,
perts from around the world gathering to talk Norman Coustns's revelation about how
about comedy? Well, the Third International laughter can help cure illn~.
Conference on Humor 1 ••• And seriously, folks.
will be held this week in j one expert told us that it
-where funnier? -won't be long before
Washington, D.C., and f computers will actuaDy
will feature scholarly 6 be able to write )okes.
presentations on such Comedy writer Bob Or-
rib-ticklers as "The ben, author ol some 44
Virago and the Uttle books on humor, ex-
Man: Female Dom!-plains that the t~
nance In American gy Is now available to
Humor." "Com~ Stra-program ln such key
tegles In the Poetry of comedy ingredients as
Anne Sexton" and framework, formula (ex-
"Hamlet as Comedy." aggeration, understate-
But even If Rodney ment, doub&e entendre)
Dangerftetd won't be and funny sounds (ake
able to pick up any new words with k In them).
material, the conference .. Computers are so in-
chalrman, psychologist Rufus Browning, c:redt>ly lntelllgent, fast and accurate," notes
says such a gathering will add to our ever-Orben ... Sometimes I wonder how we were
expanding knowledge about the power and ever able to buJld one without one."
lmagine wolfing down 89
pounds of beef, 71 pounds
of potatoes and 287
pounds of milk. Not even
Orson Welles could do It In
a sirlgie sitting. But accord-
ing to an AgncuJture De-
partment study. that's what
the aventge American con-
sumes In a typical year.
And here's how much of
several other common
foods we Rike In annually
(In pounds,) :
Podl-57 pe>unda.
a...b-1.5.
v.1-!.5.
Alh-14.
F.mt-S5.
Poukry-57.
Cb I 111-17.
lce~-18.
m..tru1t-ai.
tT~.w.-9S.
TB'S ... llQRISK
Ah.ho!J!jl tuberculosis has declined In the U.S. In recent
years, lncrealing numbers of e&deriy are now getting the
disease, espedaJly those In nursing homes. In 1964, 20 per-
cent of TB vk:tims were over 65; today 3D percent are.
TB may lay dormant In elderly people for many years,
Doris Mack, a professor at Purdue's School of Nursing, told
us. But as their Immunities gradually break down, the
disease may become active when they iu-e ex.posed to TB
organisms In the air.
Long-term treatment with drugs Is usually effective.
However, TB ls often misdiagnosed because It mimics other
ailments. A TB epidemic broke out In an Arkansas nwslng
home because the carrier was allowed to roam the halls
freely for a full year.
To combat the growing
threat, Indiana recendy
paseed a law that aD poten-
tial padentl and penonnel
mU1t ~ X-reyad and tatlld
for TB befON being admll-
t.cl lo a n&nng home.
DAii.UiS MOVES AM ._. OI'
Pay attention torught: It could bring you an Academy
Award someday.
Such noted film makers as
Ingmar Bergman, Federico
FeDtni and Luis BuJ\uel often
get Ideas for their movies from
their dreams, reports Mmsha
Kinder, who teaches a course
at U.S.C. on the relationship 0
between dreams and art and
edits a journal, Dreamworla, &rgmcrn 0
on the same sub)ect. mutt <ham o/ Lill Ullmann.
Bergman, In particular, has gleaned ideas from hls
dreams, she notes. H\s famed The Seventh ~al ls based on
a recurring dream about death -a dream, Kinder adds, that
finally disappeared after Bergman finished the film.
KJnder told us that many people dream about movies and
1V these days and that certain $nbo& celebrity names
pop up a lot. For example, Steve McQueen. "He was a very
macho person, yet his last name suggests femininity," she
notes. ..Thls is symbolic of sexual ambiguity."
Oh.
SNAPPY aJRm Next time you're seasM:k or
carsick' treat yourself gingerly
-that Is, try taking a teaspoon or so of ginger.
Thirty-six volunteers who were highly susceptible to mo-
tion sickness
were given (t either a nor-
mal dose of
Dramamine,
two capsules
of powdered
ginger root or
a placebo.
They were
then blind-
folded, put In
a motor-drtven, revolving chair for up to slx minutes (unless
they requested it be stopped) and asked every few seconds
how their stomachs felt.
As reported reoendy, three of the volunteers given the
placebo vomtted, and none of those on Dramamine made It
the fuD six minutes. But half of the people who had taken
ginger lasted the maximum time, and none felt as bad as the
other volunteers.
BIRTHDAYS
(Sun., Leo; rest, Virgo) Sa._ -VaJerie Harper
42; Cindy Wiiiiams 3.S. Mal., -Gene KeDy 70;·
Vera Ml&es152. 1u-s.v -
Gerty Cooney 26. Wiid-
...._ -1..eoNrd a.m-
sta\ 64; Sean Connery 52;
Ruby KMa 72; Van John-
son 66. ~ -Tuesday
Weld 39. s.turcs.v
Donald O'Conn« 57.
l .
l
STORE SHOPPERS SHOCKED
BY MY LOW VITAMIN PRICES!
------------~---~ 3 BIG 'N · :
DEUCIOUS I
HI-PROTEIN I
BARS I
J FREEwnwmnmDJ I
What a delicious way to get the protein your I
body requires daily (protein is not stored in I the body).
These are real energ.r hara with a hi,gh I protein content-2~ of the recommended I
daily allowance in every bar. Carob coated. I No chocolate. The whole family will enjoy
them! I
Check the box in the order blank and re-I
turn it with an order for any of the items in thia ad and I'll include without charge 3 Big 11 'N Delicious Hi-Protein bars.
Oflltf Eapl,_ lep .. Jllbw 22, 1112 I
--~-----;--------~
SPIRULINA
500 mg. Tableta
TM rwturwl ............... , ~ '-Y'O"' dl9t.
9 100-4.50
50 Teb6eta2.4 200-8.50 400-11.00
Hltlt flllllr BRAN 100 tor 69¢
511 Ml T*"1 500 for S2.99
100-8 50TAlll..ETS $335
COMPLEX 100 TABLETS .....
100 MG ~Of-e.1 &2 &e NIACIHAMIOE CHC)t.IHE INOSITCX. PAHTOT!tENIC •CIO &
,.,.,. 100 MCG E....ct1Of-11-•2 BIOTIN & ~ouc AC()
LYSINE
312 mg TM>l9t1
"'""~* IRON TABS 1oor .... 141
IOO tor 1.41
Mail order la not •heckled with the high fixed overhNd of
ret.11 ator•, so Bob Lee can NII fresh, professional
quality vtumlna at fantaatlcally low prlceal
VITAMINS
BY MAIL FROM
LEE NUTRITION
Enjoy 3 Nutrttloue Meal• on The
GRAPEFRUIT DIET PILL
PLAN AND LOSE WEIGHT FAST
Conlalns one°'.,,.·~· cMI ...,, ....... .... , 2 BB I lk able wltlloYt preecnpeion lndulle& modem. .., or •
elfecUve Ooet pl9n 11\M lem you 9nfOY 3 OellO· 200 fol' 5 •
0U$ mMls ll1d ~ evefyday • you toM 9 8S weight. 500 fol' • "S I D II Super Oxide Dlsmuta11 2000 Unit T1blets
50 ... 100 200 • • • r-1 ,00 r-• S.50 r-• 12.50
BREWERS YEAST ~GRAIN TABLETS 2)1) rMli.11 79e 1,000fOf11.99
~t;<;+:.c;LECITHIN ~-s109 soo•otM.15
TifE
MOST
WANTED
POTENCY
HIOH POTENCY
100 lor S00 IOI'
12.19 112.H
VITAMIN B6 IL·TRYPTOPHAN too MO. T A8UTS
100-3.49 500-18.50
500 MG. TAKLTS
»5.75 80-9.95
50 MG. Tabletl I 100MG. Tablets 100 f()(... 100 f()( 1.49
500 for 3M 250 fOf 3M ---BEE POLLEN
TAM
:: 21•
800 tor 11.IO
COO LIVER
OIL CAPS
~88·
IOOC....IMI
::=:.
~~-~u ,...., n...,.o-. T~ 11• . .., ....
SELENIUM
IOllCQ TAa.STS
1~-in '2" _ ......
DOL.a.ml -181.
ti.I. .. --, ....... ~
NTA....,.
QIUCQMTI ...
,~95• _.., .....
t,000tof 11M
BONE .~~ 49'
MEAL 5001*etatorti.1t TAeuTS t,000 ...... fotU:H
HERBAL T.=.. 85'
LAXATIVE IOO , .... IUI
"KEY 4" Tabs .,_...,_ .. ~
·~.... ~ Olllf Ull ... .,. .......
1•"' 79' • •2.99e
BALANCED IO MG.
I : I \~lij~ 9 +;t
'"Ul·~LIX SO Me:•
~------------------, I Spteia/ ~ from eoo Lee I
I 400 UNIT £ COllflAllf AllYWHlM I I VITAMIN 0 100 for 1.59 I I CAPSULES Cl 500 for 7 .89 I
II °""~":!.s.n OftMIO 1000for15.75 11 873S fO ~ r-• WU/12 MAL COUf'C)eC wnM ~ ~------------------~ ~------------------~ I Spteia/ ~ from eoo Lee I
I 500 MG c COllPAM MYWHlM I ·
I VITAMIN 0 100 for 87• I I ·· " • 0 500 for 3.99. I
I .,... J"Z!. linMlll 0 1000 10< 7. 59 I
8133-•o • ·-• ~ MAL COi'"* Mn! OlllD9lt ~------------------~ AL, AL' A GAR UC DOLOlll'n ,,..,.,.. r--. 3J!n ,__,_
.. ~., 38' c.=.. 7~ 100 43• soo ........ 11.11 Tlllilllt
1.000 ...... 11 .. 500 tor SUI 1,00lforS1 .71
~~ H•llaAL KELP DIUll•TIC T .....
·~•s 37• r.=., ~1 49 100 35• -· 1 .000 fof ISM 500fofll.M 1.•••1.•
NATU~TAMIN C :•:_...,. AT f'AKf Y LOW PRtCea
QUNfTlT't '°'"'° ZIOWO IOO WO ICllOWO
100 Si' H• 1.38 1.H
500 2.91 4.49 e.58 ••• 1000 5.48 7.88 12.41 17.91
_ . ._.VITAMI~ .,Ee~ -IOI I u JOll l\I •lll 1-1\1
100 91• 1.18 2.99 7.11
500 4.85 1.88 14.89 37.11
1000 8.41 17.51 "··· .... r .._... .. -n,,,,.,,,.,.,._. ••
Lee Nutrition =:=-:•10ao. I I MAil VOUR OM>!ATO , ..... CINID.-.vtlA
I •MAIHIT. ---.. ~I "Natural f 2" I· cA•NDGI. MAii. 02142 ..... ~ ----m!~~lll!"" _____ .,_ .. *81. Ledllllll. Alllllai.~· "-•·Mey TOTAL I Vt'8Mln• tot :ru..,.._"':it wi... """'· Oolotlllil. °'* I OUANT1Tv size NAME OF PAOOUCT PflllCE
In I C10 dlly, l50 "'9> Mdl ol Vi. 81, •• 18, Nlmt..,.., ,..,.,..llckfd. QlalN, ..,..,.:
' 30 l':t p~ Acid; l50,,... _,,
. HAIR CARE ·=--: . ::::: I I
100 Day s31s 250 Day. ...... 1Ctlr&AI I I
· Suppty Supply t:I 1:S 2.98 · vrr AMIN -~~ 1
1 I -~~-M I
,_,... 100 FOR •1 1 • IOO for M.78 •• I 'l .. ·!!~C ·· ..... 11.n 11.• t:·• ......... uv•Rr....... ( IHJ\'l*rj 1 .::::c. .... :.:::::: ,,, :u: !::::I: N,r 69• to!·!!O.. • D ~i5ft-':~.,,., . • .... .-.......... 11.• *'·• r... -I .... ,..,..., -PR•• I • .... ..uc aao ........ ... 11.•
I•==::::··::::: l~i &;E :ff:i WTMM E ~ .._.....,.,a...-aw.c , ,....,_. · I ;..,.·:::··:::: *'·" 111.11 '"·" a..utvOH · 1~ 100 ..... ~ I AtlONtl Alf I ... ,.,. ......... 11·• 1u: .... ,. 1•.aof•u. r-u• TMll r•~ I 1 L.;;; ... :.; .... ;.~·•~"~··~"~'·~··...;~···;;...~~~".·· .. ~~~·~-:;:~~ ... ;:.:..: .. ::.: .. :.:fLll~:..=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=.licm fl!Il.. I __.
-------------7
al 81 , d-elallrl; I 00 tnC0 folio Add •
c!°PS 171 I 100 2•• CAPS
IOO fof t10.lt
Sears
Most tte ... .e llledlteed Prtces
This Advertising S ctfon Etfectrve Thru
Aug. 24 Unless Otherwise Specified.
Sale starts Aug. 22
DeUvery not Included in the selllng
prices of all Items In this clrcufar.
U. Conv•ill•nt s..nctulrge
for your Purdwses
Nl'L T .... Shirt
'""*""1~ f ensed hln bc>Ys~-6\i.. ·~
3!!
Men'I 1...,ent T'I
T-shirt ce>Mection.
Sitts S-XL .... 3 999 MM-tor
........ _. ~
PNl9lnlll .... 11 Tee1'1911••
"•· 97e u-. 1s•
~ hU on hand suflldent quandUes to meet rNSOf1<>
IC>le conuner delNnd. Sears rnrrws the ~ ID llmlt
quanddes SIOtd ID commerdaf pun:haers.
Hait Sllps
Nylon with lace trim.
()'• .......
u.IWd
Cord Pant Sets
Boys', girts' sizes 3-6X.
Potyester<otton.
Qr:• ....... 69!
Panty Bonanza
Briefs, hlphuggers and
bikinis. 5, 6, 7. 5,or s3
Wov.n Pant Sets
Boys'. girts' sizes 3-6X.
~er<otton.
Qr:• ....... 6 9Z
0rton•Yam
DuPont acry1ic in 4-pfy,
4-oz. sk~ns.
~ s1 ~ ........
Sport Socks
Men's sizes.
~"·" Pq.flll6-.
Jr. Nylon Bags
Totes, barrel bags, more.
§97 .
l'lmtlctter11•n
~d 8. lftak resistant
'1 ... ·
Accent CMln
s 129. 99 Rocker or
S 139.99 Westbury Chair
8
Velour a.th Towel
Cotton-~ster.
jacquard bor~r.
::i. 2 for 5 6
Window Slulde
Ats windows 37"x6'.
Ught tlltertng.
..... 799 IU." a... ........ _,,...
• M••ler
r
ISearsl
~~
Back
Seto
All Kids' Corduroy ·
Bottoms In Stock
Just in time for bac~-to-school.
Select from our entire stock of
kids' cotton/polyester cor-
duroy bottoms and save 25%.
Little girls' and boy~' sizes 3 to
6X, bigger boys' sizes 7 to 20
and .bigger girts' sizes 7 to 14.
All Kids' Braggln'
Dragon® and .
Velour* Tops -
Pair up .corduroy bOttoms with
Braggin' Dragon@ knit tops or
velour tops. All available in
little girls and boys, bigger
boys and bigger girls sizes.
*Cononf pof)'elter or 100.. cotton
Styles shown _. representative
of Sears assortment
25°/o
OFF
·Boys'
Novelty
Tops
SJ." Uttle loyl---2."
M.ff 8lg ~ 2,.)J
Choose your~
featuring E.T., Pac-
Man, Donkey Kong,
Frogg~. Uttfe boys'
SM.L big boys' S-L
----
SAVE NOW
SchoOI SUpptteS
....... S2.H, 20Ckola1t 189 Theme 90ok _______ _
...... St.9' 788
Sols c.lculMIW #58" -----..., •• stJ ... The leg In blue, 8" ..,...,,........,. _____ _
.......... 49•. zoo a.,..,._,.., _____ _ ... -.aa
___ ,.... __ ................ I A: w:: .. t.,.
---~--------------................. -..._ ........ -. ._...__. __ ..... ,#•--•-·-···--t.;...-,, ...... _ .......... , .,
ISearsl .,
.
Use Convenient Seanow,.r_: your·Pu
Our Entire Stock of ~uiy Furs
<11: a jump on wir1,ter and save on a
luxurious furl Our pre-Sea$00 sale
brings you outstanding savings on all
our fur coats and jadceCs. Mtnk. bk.le
fox. coyote and l'l1Cft In radiant na-
touch a
loved one
"• -•r ., -· _,...,.,,. .. ........ _,... .., ............. •\:: .. ~= I!,., ....... . ........ ", .... .. ...........
.
Every dress In our
·a~~ ,department
Romantic dresses. Tailored dresses. 2-pc.
dresses and jacket dresses . Scores of
non-stop looks in easy-care fabrics for
\misses. petites and half-sizes. Come see!
In our Dress Dept .
__ ;: _____ --~ .:-:--__ -· _ __. ________ .... _~ .,._ ._.......... .. ::;.!.. --__....::::.._ ---_..=..-.::.-=---=-:·~--=-::--:-;.~-=~~-~·1'!:-=------.--....
s5 OFF Kids' Tough Stepper® casuals
• Abradon, water resistant smooth leather uppers « water
resbUnt IU8ded spltt leather uppers • Rugged polymer
IOlel • Crush resbUnt toe box. heel counter
S2 t.99 Utde girts' T.-strap. or Kit-S21.99 Little t>oys' sport oxford,
de oxford (notshDIM'l) __ l6.t9 sizes SY.2-3 16.99
""" .-... JI """ ""9-JI $18.99 Utde Boys' Suede Oxford (notshOWnJ _IJ.H
Ilg boys Md lnfllnt *-at CDfllPIAbte uW9-ttwv .iiwe. n
s 10 OFF Roebucks casuals
Fol WOtMn. Soft. supple INther
uppefS. flex.I* man-made soles.
See 04X enttt as.sortrnent roNI
For men. <nat stytr and comton.
Le~r uppers, man~ sotes.
All Roebuelcs are made in U.S.AI
Reg. S2t.99 19" Reg. SJ6. 99 26"
Comf~bfe nylon
and sueded split
leather upper. dur-
able rubber sole.
Whh rtt!W styllngl
teldl'.... 9" ...... J.tt
...... ....,•1.Mg
.,...... 10" .... SM.ft
WI! ...,.,, .........
llWI. .... 110.tt 8"
"""--·
WWUAooe-11 nw •
· Comfortable
Casuals
Regular 514 and 516
9 99-11!?
lhru Aug. 21
Knit tops color-cued to our
pants. Four styles in solids or
stripes of soft, comfortable
polyester and cotton. Misses.
S,M,L
Twlll
Pants
Regular ·1199
$16 '~1
. Ttwu Aug. 11
Elastic waist, slash pock~.
Polyester and cotton in navy,
t>my, khaki, olive. 8-18.
Velour
Tops
999 ReQul•r
$16'"
TNuAl!f. ZI
V-neck or crewneck styles
and more Jncludtng
mandarin-coUared looks
and stytes. Cotton and
.D011~er. s.M.L
In °"' ~,
~
-. -"' ...... ;•·---· ·-............ (...., ..... t• • • ...
I Sears I
Speca.t
purchme 597
Roebucks® Jeans = · 1ot!
M <*IDrl denin jeals. ~ lared
leg stying.
,........, helNda .....
R9g. S17.H -----
SAVE ~6
.
Roebucks® Stretch
m--. Q!' ..
RUggtd. eonav1.ycra• Jaa. Aw podfet.
llrM leg weslltm ~ .
MEN'S SHIRT
S-PfiCTACULAR
Special
purchase
7!7
Speclat
purchme
' 697
~ ......
wescem styte plaid shtrt. Front
and back yokes. pear1 look snaps.
~and cotton~.
FlexjeansTM ·=-14"-19:l
1'wuA-.U
Westem style or
fashion stre1Ch den-
ims ot c~ and "'f-
k>n °' cotton and pofy-
eslef'. Reg. $19.99-$25
Sl0.99-S25 Matur~ ftt Au-,_. , ... ,.. ..... pr.
"'"' Alie-•
Sears Celebrates Roebucks®
· Menswear 35th Anniversary
'"1
' I
1
I
I
... _-. _.........,. .... -.. · .. -.. ~·---...... "'--~-_ ------"~.;=:=-;-~ .. --..::::~T-::.-:-=-r-• =-..JEZ~-=•.-:i:;:~s~as!l!IN'r7ts&!l'l•,....,~P991------ll!I!'+~
I Sears I SPECIAL PURCHASE*
.,........_..,. s.pc. lledro .. suite of oak
and oak ~rs Includes cfts.ser, mirror,
ful/queen ~adt>oard: ........ ft
689!! ....
•100 OFF •·•••LMneitoom ..... 19P-..........
Your choice d corntr chair, arm
<tlalr.4!ft 01 arm d\llNtght ...._a ---=-~---~-_, .. .-....... ~,.._ ... ,,.,.... .. ....... ~,...,. ' ... _ .. ............ ~-................ .... .......
SAVE 1240 ...... ,. 11111p1e uc: Dlftllli rn Set = 99988 .........
Sl..tl allllte of oall INN ~ ,...,.,....._~.._...,. ... ...-..1-tK--~ t.111* ... 4 "'*"' .,. CMl'9 ... _ ~-llrN .... oi--..... ..,. ... Nwl a.Ir .... ----.... ' .........
Security and landscape light-
ing kit has 6 versatile
swfvel lamp heads. plus 6
clear and 4 tinted lens
covers, timer, transtormer
and 100-ft cable.
AblOlute Dre•m C:.rpet
with IM• Important
perfornulnce features
found In our more
expensive S21 .99 Sq. Yd.
Dre•mSu.,........11
• •• t
it t I • '
......... Only
10!!.
• Both cal'p9tl hMfe
Uoa.pewsq.~.
plleW91ght
p llolll c..petl ....
... ol llOlurtoua ...,.. ......... ....
• llottt c..petl ....
b'Mlledwftlt
Seotdl .. ,,
.,....Carpet
ProtectlOr to ,.... ................ ........... .,,._
~In• .,.,.,.. .....
colon
O•lllon.nd I lnlUllmdonutra
Mntress Peel
S.le ~a:._
YOUR J99
CHOICE ea.
Choose from any size
mattress pad at one Jow
prfce. Evolution• olefin
Cc:Ner wltn soft polyester
fill.
... a •••L.-
-·.-.-. .
,,......, .......,., .....
. l .... pktwe-for t...uy
vWwtrtt•
~,, ..
= ,_.' ,. .
!!L..,
Solkf.IUt• ~ wet .,.,,.,ston. 1m..,.cec1
drcuttl. ........
~l!::!'!f*NI
Up to 5 hours per tape. Preset to rec.ord up
to 3 days In advance. Reroote pause/still
control for editing unwanted material.
~ay programming feattJre.
59995 .,.AMI-,. .............
...... ..,, ...,_. -,_. CeMr m.,.... F9IMWJ , .. -lw'I ....... a.-,._, .... -................... ,_ ..... ..,.,.,.,
~·
GOOO NAJ'IOHwtOI SAvE •10 NOANNUAHH
Bl11ek/Wlllte TV
12-ln. dlaQonal me~re pic-
ture Solcf state chassis. .......
1119.tS ....,,.u,,.n
Pro Bowl
Kettle Grlll
::: 49~~ ... .-...
~ ~ ..e. Cor'Mfl. lent~Nd.
SAVE '40 Canister ..
Vac with Po¥fermate®
Powefful 20 peatc HP (.85 HP VCMAJ suction com-
bifled wiltl a ~ bar brush to pc:Nlef out dttpfy
~ clft. Edge ~aning gets those t.ough-to-
clean areas along walls . ............... 14995
.._AM9-H
SAVE '30 Steam-
type Carpet Cleaner
~ ~t sprays hOt solution l.nto f ,'I'' carpets. loosens and ~xt' • • tracts embedded dirt. Dries qu~.
::::.: 13995
... Allf.n
Microwave oven
with Z Stage M•mory
Defrost and roast °' use any 2 funcdons auto-
matically. Cook a Whole meal at one time in
spaaciJS Dl cu. ~ oven. Probe wt1h hold wann tor
up to one hour. Detay start. ,
... 399~.
SAVE s20
SAVE s30
"---2-cyde ....... c.pKlty ..... , _,
Inc.lodes permanent press cycle,
3 water temperatures. 3 water
~= ·29Pr!"
UW.91 a. o.,w n••• 1n.•
a. ........ ...,...-···· _ait,,. ,....""" ..
t J
'40 OFF
14.1 Cu. Pt.
Refllgeai:etor
Preew .............
3999=5 •.
10.41 cu. tt. fresh food
sectJon. manual defrost
~ 90 ru. ft. rreear. Power
Miser slNftth helps save
energy. Durable ABS
plastic lnterl0t Is easy todNn. .
SAVE s70
Craftsman
Drlll Press ._. ......... "
. 99~~
Four speeds. Steel co-
1 umn cast cast iron
work table, base.
· Partly assembled.
Motor extra.
#22615
....... Hlt.te ..
3/8-Hr. 3-5/8-ln. cut
#!7328
Craftsman·
Electrlc .
Power Tools
Your
Choice ·3411 ••h ...........
A. •••• " .. .,, ..............
,, .... Drlll #tM9
L 114.99,, 7-ln. Clrcul• Saw .,..,. ,.,, ...... "'"°
C. SH.ff,, I/ .... ...._ Tll ••• ............. nsm
I D. ····" lhllll Motion .... s.ndmr #tt69
•· SH.99., t/4-HP S.bre Sew, ..U· ............ .n.tl ..... #t071
... Qt ... '-
Drawer and shelf in-
Wded. II 1026 J
•
CUT '100 was S199.99
'
AM/PM Stereo wltfl CWtt• •rid Dolby•
-
Dolby• noi2 reduction sys-9999 tern ~s high tr~ .
noise. 14 watts of power ~r
chanoef. Auto-revrrse .
........ Ct .....
A
c
Al.llJdlt .....
iiiiiety "'-P ........ "z'" -----B . .ll.lll.ln .. ct'W
ifiiliii ---. .... '"·"24" .......
c. "'"' '1 ..... ..... .....,_ ....... " .... ... 4.
0 . e:.1.-:, ............ .
=-"""" '9 •
e,JU".!;:o',._
...... " 3" .. .........
F. J!l.!!!. S..S ......,,, .... ......... ......... 219" ::e--=:"Y· ... .....
G.U9 .. X-C.WO•
w!&iiianter ........ 7~ ...................
Super
Duty
Shocks .
~"14~ ... """'. ............
sAVES2
Flnllec -. ... "
4'1!
-----
25% OFF
n. lw'I Dllllmrd It llet7 ta:
tum 525 amps cad crankjng power.
Group 24. For lrattlldan lnduded
most American-
~ cars, many
Imports. 5249 :t:'~... ex.
t11ruA119 •. n
1
, _sz OFF 1
Heavy-duty-
Pius shocks
Regr-• ···"-· Helps gNe good ~ CC»
C70l Piston rod wiper ring.
For mosr cars. and light
~1'!!
SAVE s5
'
11
I
•
w ... ' 6-ft.Alumlnum .
SteplHcler
1189111• .... "
29~~
Tested strength to
800-lbs. Type 111.-
.42056-
' i .. Easy ·uv1ng Fl•t
or Celft_M White
1nterlor:lia1nts · ...... ~, -·-.,. 99·
Sli:M · ......
..... Alllo.
Washable one coat coverage
when used as directed. 23
colorfast colors. #91 005,
#91955
116." Senll Gloa
#7IOOS I I·"_.-.
.... Allif..
Wenlierbeater
. Latex Flat ·
Regu~r .
St6.ff ·999 .
pllon ..... """'. Of1e coat coverage when used
as directed. so non-yellowing
colors .. #30005
Sl9.ft Gloa
#JIOOS _____ IZ.ft .... --All9-•
Craftsnaan ., -HP Sprayer .
Compressor
~rS669.ft Delivers 7.5 399. 99 SCFM at 40 PSI, ·
100 PSI. ....,
#15821 All9-•
Sychfo IMfanced englM.
Eltclrtc st.art. 2 forward ....
•
•
.....
..
SAVE SK
Flooclllgflt llulb
Std. base. 150 or
75-watt t !!
.......... ....l.;a.
SAVE 5Z1f.
Exterior Bnllh
Weathe~ater 4-ln. ex-
terior brush.
#14008
!NE SS.M
2·St9ftllool
Folding metal has cu-
shioned seat '17 ..... ID." ... .-.,a.
2-Stltch s.w He ..
Olaf to~ straight°' zig-
zag stitches. S
fl!:;. !!!! . ............