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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-04-24 - Orange Coast PilotBren worked hard on Irvine deal It ITEVE MARBLE .,. ............. J'ow' montht ..,, one of the rlchHt m•n ln th• country ttarted to put topther a d.-1 that would mlM h1i'n I01e owner of iM IMnt eo. and'" ee,ooo ~ of land. He was ready to buy up all available stock been offered fl 10 mllllon by Bren few twr 11 per<m'lt of the Jtock. AJthouah the CMt of chanlc\en involved In Bren'• tnuWICtion are nwneroua, a Ud of wrecy hu been 1lapped on the enUre &rTanpment. Efforta to contact Bren and other major 1toc kholder1 proved wvuoce.ful. IUISI CUil Donald L . Bren -father, dlvorc.• and builder -came oloee, apendlna tM>O mUllon to pin control oroi percl'J\t of the company'• atock. The purch ... aave Bren 88 percent altoaether of the Irvtne Co. 11tock. NOt lj.nce the daya of JUI* Irvine Jr. -known aa J .I. -had on-_ peraon owned 10 much of the company. lnaiden uy Bren wu ready and able to make a clean sweep but that 1rvtne family memben refu.ed to put with their 1tock, even at t200,000 a ahare. Joan Irvine Smith - sranddauahter of Jamea Irvine Jr. -tolA:f one reporter that 1he'd Bren, who hu not met with (See BREN, P11e Al) YOUR HDMITDWN DAllY PIPIR SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 1983 ORANGE C OUNTY. C ALIFORNIA 50 CENTS PHRF Cla• G skippers crunch lor a windward position 5 73 joyously set sail for Ensen11da By ALMON LOCK.ABEY Dl9J..._ ......... -·The weather god• did "an ~i face foe the ~73 yacht c:iih sWUns the 36th annual Newport to En1enada race ·~. Inatead of the 1og1y IOUtherly winda preclkted for the atart of tbe race, a moderate 10-12 knot westerly. cot the fleet away in aome Ml!IDblance of order and had many ol. the yachm break:i1\I out aplnnaken for the run down the ccmt within a few minutes after the It.art. There waa the u1ual abouUnc and acreamlng few aea roam near the weather enda of the dual at.arting lines, but at la1t regort there w~re n o 9erious mishaps. The yacht Jubilee, sailing ln Perfmnance ~ Racing Fleet Claaa G re by radio after the race that she had withdrawn after a collision with the yacht Pussycat. Herb Turner, skipper of Jubllee from the Navy Yacht Club of Long Beach, said the rigging on hi1 boat was damaged and that Pussycat 1ustained a bole in her hull. Pu11ycat, owned by John Szalay of Voyagers Yacht Club, Newport Beach. stayed in the race. (See RACE, Page .U) Rockslide hits Orange County SIL VER.ADO, Callf. (AP) -B<>'alden aa btg aa .... automobilea c.wcaded down a hUJside ln Orange ~. pardally blocking a roed and temponrily fordna 60 pecJP1e from their homes, Orange C.OUOty fire oBktala Mid Saturday. A Marine Corps helicopter 1urveyed the damaae from the alr for 1eologht1 of the Envtronmmtal Manaaement ~-. The miCllJ!dea, pomibly cau.ed by late-aeuon ratm, a.. away about two-thirdl of a bill Friday ntpt, blocldn1 Sllverado Canyon Road at s,.,..._.. Drive and briefiy threatenln1 a1x or enen bomee. But Leo Schnelder of the Orange County l'iN Department, aald there were no ~ordMl••· Starting out with their uaual re•elry are the 'The Prospectors' of San Francisco, replete with a Dixieland band. "It• bapperied before,.. he Mid. "Hlatol1cally i-. boulden came down whim It a-tm too wet." WOl'k en-. labored Sat~ to deer the .... Wore )lll'edkted lbowen bit ap1n Oil Ann and Ste•e Humke lc>c>k over damage cau.aed by large rock.a lalling around their SundaJ. Silverado Canyon home. Scramble on to ferry Golden West fliers By JODI CADENHEAD o<-.o.117 ......... Stranded travelers on the now defunct Golden West Airlines have kept two competing carriers at John WaYM Airport hopping thil weekend. The busiest day i.s expected Monday when business commuters take to the skies. Golden West Airlines, one of the state's largest commuter carriers, suspended operatiorus late Friday. Customers were told to re-book flights with Air Irvine and Imperial Airlines. Both were shuttling travelers yesterday and today, although they normally ~ o_perate Monday through "~ esterday it was very hectic," said Air Irvine customer service agent Cheryl Whitehead. "It was a mad.house." Although the scene at the airport looked fairly nonnal last night, officials were bracing for the wont come Monday morning when Orange County buainess executives begin their travel week . Whitehead said more than 40 people have booked Cllghta on the first Monday morning plane that generally only carries about nine passengers. A reservations clerk with Imperial Airlines said that airline was also bus y handling passengers trying to commute to other airporta. Golden West's employees, who a pparently won't be paid for the last three weeks, were working yesterday afte rnoon l n an attempt to re-book flights. Irvine middle school chosen as 1nodel By GLENN SCOTl' o< ... Dlllr ........ Meet ~ne is smiling at V enado · School in Irvine theee days becauae the achool has been chosen as on e of f ive "model IChooll" in the state. The designation was made _by .~ the 1Ute Department o f EducaUon bMed on a review of the 1chool's programs and policies. Venado next competes in a national contest to pick what are 1uppo1ed to be the most exemplary achoola ln thelX>Wltry. "Yoo don't get any money or anythlna, but you get satisfaction when you do a Jot of hard work and 1omebody notices," said Ven.ado Principel John Tennant. The emphasia in the contest ia on innovative programs that establilh the achools as models for othera, according to state Superintendent Bill Horug. T e nna nt figure s it wa1 V enado's T ea c h e r Advis e r CSee IRVINE, Pase A%) Pilot news editor is Woman of Achievement Carol Moore, newa editor of the Daily Pilot. has ~ named a Woman of Achievement for the weatern realon of Women in Communications. Inc. She was nominated by the WICI atudent chapter at Cal State Fullerton aa a role model for her 1ix ~s aa Sunday Edit.or of the · y Pilot during wb.lch ahe WU inatrwnental in pre1entln1 more women's opin1cma Oil the Op-Edit page. "Moat of the 1yndicated oolumnia1s are men ao I aought artlclea from female profeaora a_nd,.free -lance writers to ~ their wbdom and wit.'' lhe..td . (lee MOORE, Pqe AJ) Men, women and atudenll ahare hoaoft f• Seentariet Week. Their 1&orie. are.on P-.86 . • ........ '. I 1' Al °'I? Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, April 24, 1913 WEATHER ... From Page A1 WMther foreoutJng, even In the apace age, 11 1tlll rlaky, IMteorologlltl My. "Laymen think that with all theH aattlllte1 and oomputare we lhould be right 100 pero.nt of the Um.," Hid Chuck Conway, mateorologl1t In charge of th• weather aervtce 1tatlon In WMtwood. ''The fact of th• matter 11, we've overaold the teohnotogy. TheM are, In faot, v.-y valuable toot• that Iner .... our accuracy. But they are by no mean1 a panllOee.'' The AQO\lracy of snort-range forecut1 11 up from 30 percent <40 yeara ago to 70 to 80 percent today. But, aald Conway, that la far from a perfect score. "Sometlmet we Juat can't tell what the weather wlll do," aald lead forecaater Dion Hamilton, who Interpret• the reams of aatetllte data and whose prediction• may affect 10 mllllon people from Bishop to the Mexican border. High-technology and plain old human belnga both play Important roles In the weather service, aald Don Gales. a weather service forecaster. But some forecasters fear the future of weather predicting may be cloudy, because of budget cuts proposed by the Reagan administration. The administration has also recommended selllng weather aatellltea to private contractors who would charge for Information. "I don't know what the quallty of short-term predlcilona will be In the future," said Conway. "Maybe we'll go back to seat-of-the-pants weather predicting. "It's a lot llke the weather -who knows?" RACE ... From Page A1 The start was the usual yachting 1pectacular with the windjammers spread out over a wide area from the Newport jetty to the Balboa Pier, waiting their signal to start. Thou.and• of spectaton lined the ahon!e of the Balboa Penin.aula, the jetty and the bluf& over Corona del Mar to watch the .::ene. The westerly bree7.e, which appeared to increase in velocity befon the laat cluaea started, indicated that this race may be futer than several prevloua rac:iee which have turned into driften. A large number of the early starters could be 11een reaching offahore before setting their bil 0 chutea". Some of the amaller boata were taking a rhumbline course down the c:out. • Normally, the winds could BREN ... From Page A 1 . the media since the late 1970s when he emerged as part. . of a camortium that outbid Mobil OU Corp. for control of the Irvine Co., la •till keeping hla distance. Gary Hunt, a spokesman for Bren, Hid the 50-year.old builder now la arranging to meet the prea but has not decided when or what the mechanics of such a meeting would be. Bren wu a late arrival on the ecene when a group of moetly Detro t and New Y ork buslnemnen were trying to buy the company from the James Irvine Foundation, the non- profit ~p running the firm. .Accord1na to thme cloee to the traDlllCtion. a Dmoit shopping center builder named A Alfred Taubman was attempting to land at leaat 50 percent of the company ltock for hlmlelf but ran into c-;~roblema when Mobil OU u the ante in the b6dding war. Tau6man first offered Irvine family members a chance to buy *It in and later coot.acted Bren through a mutual bu1lneaa a.odate: Bren not only aaved the deal but ended up with the largest amount of atock -34 percenL Taut.nan, though. reigned aa board chairman until last fall when It became apparent to IJ'vlne Co. watcheu that 90lmth1ng was happening. be expected to di.min.iah by the time the yachts r each San Otego, calling for the dedaion of whether to set a course outside the Los Coronadoa Islands or 'hanging on the shorter rhumbline course i.Nide the lalandl. The Prospect.on, a group of San Francisco business and professional men who sail the race every year, put on their usual gala show before the raoe at Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club and continued on the starting lines with a Dixieland band aboard. Battle lines for line honors (first to finuh) were drawn early with two new monohulll, Roger MacGregor's 65·foot Anthem from Lido Iale Yacht Club, and Dennis Choate'a 68·foot Saga from Long Beach 1etting the pace In PRRF·A. Bren suddenly was elevated on the board to share c hairman duties with Taubman. Two Caillornia buainessmen -J .R. Fluor and John Galvin -were added to the board. Insiders described the co· chairman arrangement as "strange" and hinted Taubman and Bren were at loggerhead. on the direction of the company. l,.a.st month, rumors that the Irvine Co. was being aold started to float through the business community in Newport Beach. They w ere. di1miaaed by company officials. At that time. board members denied a sale was in the works. But, according to the Wall Street Journal, the rumon were not false . The publication reported that New York banker Herbert Allen Sr. -an Irvine Co. board member hinuelf - was structuring the tranaaction by early this year. The publication a1ao reported that Taubman and his fellow Irvine Co. stockholders made a cumulative profit between $350 and $400 million off their investment. Other stock.holders who sold out along with Taubman included Henry Ford Il, Detroit indu.trlalist Max M. Flaher, New York retailer Milton Petrie and banker Allen. IRVINE ... From Page A1 Pro1r1m that cau1ht th• It.Ito department'• 1ttenUon. ll'.lch of tho IChool'• MVenth and el1hth gradeni are aaaJ&ned a teacher, who thoy meet with each day w dt.cu. anythlni from penon.l problem• to career planning, Tennant Mid. The proar•m 1bo ta uJled at Irvine Hl1h School, where Venado'1 atudonta eventually will attend. The J>l'OIJ'am, he aaid, la much more helpful than the more common proceaa of attending advt.ory -.iona. Venado allo ofteni proarama for gifted and talented atudenta as well as for blllnguaJ 1tudent1. The IChool at 4 Deerfield Ave. has 730 atudenta, with 15 percent belona to ethnic minorities. Studenta come from Deerfield, Greentree, College Park·The Colony, The Ranch, Oranget.ree and the Marine Corp8 Helicopter Station in Tustin. Other California model achools selected in the contest are from Hillsborough, San Jose, San Raphael and Colton. Aho in the running among the monohulls are Merlin, sailed by a Long Beach Yacht Club syndicate, and two 12-rneters, Jack Baillie's NewaBoy, Balboa Yacht Club, and Valiant, skippered by Ted Ritter, St. Francia Yacht Club, San Frandlco. They wlll be battling not only each other but such apeedr multlhulla aa Bob Hanel s 65·foot catamaran, Double Bullet, Cabrlllo Beach Yacht Club, and Mike Kane's 55-foot trimaran, Crusader, from South Shore Yacht Club. A cabbage in the pot Margaret Hamvay or Irvine works on her entry in the great Sturred Cabbage Roll-of( continuing through today at the Festival of Arts grounds, Laguna Canyon Road. • MOORE. • • From Page A1 The award ai.o rooop1Jel her co1nnu•plty Hrvlc• 1uch u wachfnf En1U1h u 1 aecond lan1u110 1nCI Hrvlnl on the advllory board of . the Oranae County Mental Health AmodlUon. She Jolna Toby MilUpn of UC lrvlne MecUcal Cenier and Karen Peten of the Oran1e County Environmental Management AgenJ:y amona the leVen women from five 1tate1 cited by the national profemlonal group for contributlona to communications. A araduate of San Joee Si.te Univenlty, Moore 1tarted her career u a new1 editor for The A9oci.ated Preae. She wu honored for feature writln1 by the International Auoclatio n of Business Communicators whlle employed at Hunt-Wesson Foods, Inc. In Fullerton and bas won prizes for page design from the Orange County Preas Club Mesa ready for flooding There may not have been any flooding problems last week, but Coata Mesa offtclala said they were prepared for the worst. City crews were dispatched to various areas of the city to check on atorm drain catch ba1lns, Public Services Di.rector Bruce Mat1em u.id. There were no 1erlou. flooding problems reported, he said. Earlier this week officials approved a citywide study of the 1torm drainage system after victim.a of last month's storm complained apout flooding problems. Top prizes for thoee seeking handicap honors are the President of the U.S. trophy for the best oorrecied time in Performance Handicap, and the President of Mexico Trophy for the best handicap time in the International Offshore Rule fleet. 'Fatha' Hines dead at 77 OAKLAND (AP) - Legendary jazz pianist Earl "Fatha" Hines, whoee complex rhythms influenced musicians for more than five decades, ts dead of a heart attack at age 77. Against the advice of his elector. Hlnes played four shows m San Francisoo just a few da)"I All agreed to cut ties with the ago because "he said the bo)"I in Irvine Co. board except Allen, the Nnd needed the money," who remains a member. said h 1s lawyer, Murray Aleo off the tx>ard UI Peter Petersen. Kremer. the president of the Hines, who died Friday, wu Irvine Co. until la1t October one of the moat Infl uential when he suddenly resigned. planista of the 1920s. Jan took a Re~rt that Kremer sold what revolutionary tum because of the Irvine Co. stock he held to Brei) recordings he made with Louis were unconfinned. Armstrong's Hot Five combo, and Hunt, Bren's spokesman, said a few solo aides in 1928. They Earl Hines Kr e mer ' s deal I n g I n t he were called masterpieces then, as transaction is a seperate and they are today. melodies with his left, generated private matter. Hines' complex creationa, hi.a an Influence still felt. &-en, who was raiaed partially use of a single note line played ln Hines helped the careers of in Newport Beach, recently octaves in the right hand, and the such figures u Dlzzy Gillespie. and Billy Eckstine. In the 1930s and '40s, Hines led his own big band, which included Gillespie and Parker, at Chicago's Grand Terrace Ballroom. When the Nnd broke up in 1948, Hines rejoined Anmtrong, then left him in 1951 to fonn hia o wn band and play at the Hangover Club in sen Franciaoo He moved to the i1ay Area in 19~6 and lived alone in an Oak.land apartment at the time of his death. Hines was one of the first band leaders to have a regular radio broadcast, and the show gave him his nickname. As the orchestra play~ ~e show's theme, "Deep F~.~~ announcer would introduce the show: "Here comes Father Hines. leading his children through the 'Deep Forest.' Fatha' Aines, Falha' Hines.'' moved back to the beach city, croaa·rhytbm1 and counter Sarah Vaughn, Charlie Parker p u r c h a a Ing a $ 5 mil 11 on ,_ ___ _;._ _____________ _;;_ ___________________ _ waterfront houae on gated Linda Isle. Ironically, Linda Isle la at the heart of the Irvine Co.'1 biggest public relations controveny. For more than a year, homeowners who lease land from the Irvine Co. and claim to be suffering from enonnou. leaae rate hikes have been fighting the firm· A lawsuit has resulted. The main leaders In the leaaebold flap live tn Unda lale -Bren's new neighborhood. Local community and political leaders told the Ody PUot they were optlmiatic a~llt the aale, lauding a returb of local ownenb.lp to one of California'• moat prhed 11nd·holdin1 corporations.. Cloudy today Coastal Temperatures .. '° .. fl 12 • .. .. 11 11 . .. .... == .. If '° ., n n ~! :: 41 Visit Wallpapers to Go during April and see our exciting spring selections in home fashion. We're especially proud to feature the new Jay Yang collection o( wallcoverings and coordinating fabrics-an exquisite grouping from one of America's leading designers. -.. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Aprll 24, 19&3 WORLD Beirut dead welcomed solemnly If Pastors condemn nuclear warfare By ne AllOela&ed PreH UPPSALA, Sweden -Chrlatlan dele1at.e1 from more than 60 nat.lona on Saturday condemned nuclear warfare and called for the ellminatlon of nuclear weapona wi\h!n five y..,... But at the end of • four-day ChriaUan World Conference on Life and Peece, the 120 participant. failed to q:ree 11 pcm n'on of nucleer weapons went aplnlt their beueta. The deleaatee came from Protestant, Roman Catholic: and RUiii.an Orthodox churches. lnclµd.lng thoee ln the Soviet Union. ... Lingering doubts prevail ANDR!W8 AIR FORCE BASE. Md. (AP) -Ptealdent Reaaan aoltmnly welcomed home the bodJ• of te Americana killed In Beirut with • vow Saturday evenlnc that th• ''cowardly, akul.k.l.na ~" who killed them "wW not have thelr way," Speaklni tn front of a tar1e American fla1 before wooden coffin• draped wlth preciaely folded amaller fla11, the pl"ftldent quoted the Sermon on the Mount In tribute to the vlctlma of one of the wont attack.a on a U.S. embuly ln the 200-year hllt.ory of the forelin service: "It la written: 'Bl-.ed are the .geacemakera,' and they truly were the peacemakers." Membera of the tamWea of the dead aat aolemn·faced, 1ome wtplng their eyea. on three long rowa ut foldln1 ch•lra on the other aide of the cofflna l.bMd up on a black-dr•J*f catafalque. The entire proceedlno took place benHth the atark ateel bM.rnl of Hanpr No. 3 at thla Air Force baae near Wa1hln1ton, forced lndoora by rain. A military honor suard atood faclna the audience at the pl"ftldent'• rt,ht beelde the caaket.. Lebanon'• ambueador to the United Sta tea Khalil Itani, and aecretary seneral o f the Lebanese Forel1n Mtnl1try, Faoud Turk, alao attended. At the opentnc. Turk extended t.o the president and to all Arn- erlcaru "the deep aorrow, we In Lebanon have felt aa the reault of thla crime." The de.ct, he aald, periahed "ln the eervtce of American Idea.la'' -Ideal.a that will "wln ln the end." President and Mrs. Reagan view caske ts nown from Beirut. TOKYO -A poll comm1uioned by the Japanese Fo~ Mlniatry found that only 44 percent of Americans ccnaider Jap&n a dependable ally, the lowest level since a 19'70 aurvey with a1m1lar ftndi.nga, Japa.netie newspapera reported Saturday. 1lle survey, conducted ln January by Gallup, found that 33 percent of the l,574 American.a questioned aa.ld Jap&n wu not reliable, while 23 percent decllned to answer. March for jobs in Britain Olympian, actor Buster Crabbe dies GLASGOW, Scotland -About 60 protesters aet oU ln the rain Saturday on a 400-mile trek to London that the oppoaition Labor Party billed aa a "People's March foe Jobe.' Unemployment ln Britain has risen to a poet- Depreaion high of 3.17 million, or 13.6 percent of the workforce, under the Con1ervative government of Prime Minister MaJ-saret Thatcher. Armenians want justice ATHENS, Greece -About 200 Armenians marched from Athena Cathedral to the Turkiah Embaasy on Saturday to commemorate the 68th anniversary of what they claim wu the muucre of 1.5 million Armenians in eaatem Turkey. Armeniana claim 1.5 million of their ancestors were 1)'1tematically killed ln 1915. Independent historlana aay about 600,000 Armenians died ln ea.stem Turkey u the Ottoman Empire crumbled during World War L NATION Another hurdle j.imped HELENA, Mont. -Montana hu paaaed the first law ln the nation that prohlbita baaing Inaurance rates and benefita on eex dlati.nctfona. The law requires inaurance companiee to uae the same premium rates and benefits for men and women and for married and llngle people. The bill rolled over at1ff opposition from the Insurance industry and many Republican lawmaker• to get through the Leplature. Capitalism pays for Bonanno TUCSON, Ariz. -Reputed o rganized crime leader Joseph Bonanno Sr. de1cribe1 himlelf in hi• autobiography u a "venture capltaliat" who moved to TUC80ll to retire, raiae bia family and "leave my reputation behind.'' But he UY9 law offlCen vldt:rnlJled h1m ln •'The Grand Inquisition." "A Man of Honor, The Autobiography of Joeeph &nanno," publlahed by Simon and Schu.ter with a 75,000-copy initial pram run, went on sale t.hja week ln Tualon and will be available nationwide next week. Spousal rape law siKDed OLYMPIA. Wash . -Gov . John Spellman, calllng marital rape -~ "alarming" and "hidden thing," on Saturday qiied leglalation permitting Weahlngt.on women to file rape _ _cbarlee ap1mt their hUabanda. The governor aa.ld he gladly llped the Jeplation to remove the age-<>ld defen8t of marrtaae ln first-and 9eC:Ond-dearee. rape. The new law lhouJd help reduce domestic vtofence, he said, re-critid.an that apiteful wtve1 might try to ruin their b•iabanda by haullni them to court on rape charges. STATE Passengers terrorized on bus LOS ANGELES -A paHenger who "went t..ber-1e1---'"'K" oo a bua killed another pewnger and wounded two others and the driver ln a alaahl.ng knile attack, a sheriff'• deputy aaid Saturday. Joseph Manning, 23, dMcribed u a transient from North Lu V egaa, Nev., WM arrested a few blocb away ahortly after the attack. and wu booked for lnv~aUon of murder and auault with a de9dly weapon, Deputy Muon Kenny. Deputy John Broumard aakl the atteck occu.rred ln the Florence area about 10 miles IOUth of downtown Loa Angeles at 7:30 p.m. ~y. . Glenn says we're ahead SAN DIEGO -The Soviet Union haa out.q>ent the United Staie. by more than 30 ~ton defeme since the Cuban m.1811le Cz1aia. but the United Staie. ia l1il1 the superior power, Sen. John Glenn said Saturday u be stumped for the ~deltlal candidacy. "The Soviets are a threat to ua, no doubt." the Ohio Democrat told report.en at the Hotel deJ Coron.do after speaking to batGIVM leaden eerlier In the day, but unie. the United Statee builds up lta defeme, the Sovieta wi.tt surpua the nation by the 19909, Glenn aaid. SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) - Buster Crabbe .. a fonner Olympic swimming champion who went on t.o atar Lo moviea aa Tarzan and Fl.uh Gordon, died Saturday at hia home in this ·Phoenix auburb. He was 75. He had "had a little h eart problem over the years," but five minute. before he died he was making plan• to attend an- arthriU• telethon in Nuhville, Tenn., and "didn't have any pain anyplace," aaid hi.a wife, Virginia. Crabbe, who called himself "Kl ng of the Serials," once remarked that he made only one A picture "King of the Jungle." He said the rest were sub-B'a or aerlal.s, Including hi.a movie roles V. Warmington dead at 64 Virginia P . Warmington, member of a well known ttal eetate and building family, who went on to open a fashionable Newport Beach 11ore, la dead at the age of 64. Mn. Warmington died Friday following a lenathy lllneea. Her huabandEdward G. Warmington. heada the Warmington Co. started by hi.a father ln 1926. Private memorial services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Tueeday at St. Andrew'• Preabyterian Church ln Newport Beach. The Wanntnatoru moved to Newport Beach fn 195~. She was active ln the Aaaistance League of Newport Beach and the Junior ~~ railing four sons Mrs. Warmington began looking for new challenges, aaid family memben. In 1966 she opened Gi.mona. a women's store, that she sold aeveral yean ago. The four aona, James, Robert, William and F.dward Jr~are all active ln the real e1tate and building buainea. Survivors al.so include 11 grandchildren. Contribution. may be aent t.o the Cancer Fund at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. Evans dies slowly in electric chair ATMORE, Ala. (AP) -PrUon officlala could not explain Saturday why it took 10 minutea and three jolts of electricity to execute conVicted murdettr John Loula Evans Ill in what bis lawyer called "a barbaric ritual." "John Evan1 wu burned alive ... by the atate of Alabama," attorney Ruaeell F. Canan aald of Friday night'• execution. "John Evans wu tortured ln the name of venftanee and the dilgu.iM of jultke!' Alter the U.S . Supreme Court diaolved a wt-minute atay of execution granted by a federal Judae, Evans' head WU aba\(ed, he wu dnmed ln a white cotton uniform and taken the 25 lt.eJll from h1a death row cell to "Big Yellow Mama," Alabama'• e1ectrtc dWr at Holman Prtloo. What do you like about Ow Dally Pilot'! What dOn't you like! Call the number at left and your m r r p will be ~. tralWC11bed and delivered to the appropriate edit.or. Tbe aame 24·hour anawertna HTVi« may bt used to record In· ten to U. editor on any lopk Mallbo• contrlbutora must Include their name and telephone number for verU'lutioa No circulation 1 calla, pie~. Tell ua what '1 on your mlnd ~--~---,:;e:. ,..-·-1Mr AP~oe as "Buck Rogers" and "Fla~h Gordon" "I made nine of them, mon· than anyone else in t&lkics," Crabbe once boasted o f his serials. "Only William Desmonu made more -10 silent serials. I did three 'Flash Cordons,' two 'Tan.ans,' a 'Buck Rogers,' plus 'Pirates of the High Seas,' 'Rro Barry' and ·Sea Hound.' "We knocked off 13 chapters in five t.o six weeks and didn't allow for much dramatic skill Some say that my acting rose to the point of incompetence and then leveled off " Crabbe a8 Tarzan in 1930'8 and iri 1980 file photo. Crabbe, whose real ftn1t name was Larry, SaJd neither he nor the legendar y Johnn )' Weissmuller, moviedom's first talking Tarzan, ever gavt' a successfuJ rendition of Tarz.an'q· jungle call. Solarlan Tiie Entire Stock I Save 50°/o! 4114" Ceramic T ile Solids and patterns glazed for long-lasting wear Built-in spacers for easy installation' Reg . 17¢-25¢ 8 1h¢-12 V2~. Save 25°/o! 12' Vinyl Flooring From Armstrong and Tarkett Wide selection of easy-to-install patterns. no-wax surface Reg 4 29-11 99 322_8~~ Save $4-$5! One Coat Latex Paint Our own Time Saver, Designer's Touch, The Great One. 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Aprll 24, 18&3 ·Hitler's diary said to he found Now for children ESPADRILLES by • • • By ll:DITll M. LEDERER Al I tr Ill,._..._ LONDON -Ado1 f Hhler coinldtred 4rownlnl J•w1 at eoa and allo had contempt for h1I top a!.-; caWna Oettapo chief Hetnrlcb Hlrnmler • 1'ct.cetdul ama1f animal breeder.'' ~ to tM tint publl1hed excerp\.I of Hl(ler'1 purported d.iariee. T h • Nul leader denounced hi• chief 1>ropa1andl1t, Jo1eph Ooebbel1, tor hi• ''love -1faln and wro~ at one polnt that Ooebbell wu "up to hla old tricka a1aln with wo~en," the Sunday Timem laid ln publJ.ahlng the excerpta. Wtler &190 called the German army leaden who tried to uaa11lnate him ln July 1944 'bw\alera" and aa.ld: "Ha! Ha! Isn't it t.auahable," the S-unday Times said. On Saturday, lta lilt.er peper, The Tims, l&id Hitler "never hint• that he had any direct knowledp of or hand ln organizing the Holocaust" 'deatha of 6 million Jewa. But lt said he wrote that It '.Vi& Jrw. "oould not be reeetUed in the F.ast and ,tnce no other country would accept them, they Chould be .ent to aea and the boata sunk." • A panel of experts assembled by a West Gennan rnaaazlne has authenticated the diaries as \Hitler'• own. But other experts on Hitler have said \hey miaht be forgeries, including West Gennan )ch olara Profesaor Helmut Krausnk k, Professor j:berbud Jaeckel and Dr. Werner Maser. who said, ~'Everything speaks against it." : 'l1le Sunday Times, which bought the British ..nd American rights to the 60 volumes -of diaries :from West Gennany's Stern magazine, publlahed 760 words of excerpts from the documents Saturday evening in it.s early Sunday editions. The paper also d.iacloeed how West German joumal.t.t Gert Heidemann took a clue from Hitler's -pilot and tracked down the diaries, which had been hidden ln a hayloft by an unidentitled former German army offlcer 38 years ago. It aaid the officer turned them over to a West German re9eU'Cher 21;\ years ago. Undated excerpts being published Sunday quote Hitler as writing of Goebbels: "The little Dr. Goebbell la up to his old tricks again with women. Shall lllue a secret instruction that I do not wish to have any more of these love affairs by my cloeeat collaborators, and the party leaders in the Reich." Of Himmler, Hitler purportedly wrote: ''Th.11 deceitful small animal breeder with his luat for power, this unfathomable little penny pincher, will find out what I am about." '!be diaries have been authenticated by Britiah historian Hugh Trevor·Roper, sent by Wlnston Churchill to discover the truth about HiUer's death ln 1945, and American handwriting expert Ordway Hilton of the University of· South Carolina, the Sunday Times said. "I have concluded that theae documents were written by Hitler," the paper quoted Hilton aa saying. -'trevor·Roper, author of "The La.st Days of Hitler," wrote in Saturday's edition of The 'nmes of London: "I am now satisfied that the documents are authentic . . . and that the standard account of Hitler's writing habits, of his personality, and even, perhaps 1e>me public event.s may, in conaequence, have to be revised." The documents. which n1n from 1932 when Hitler began his rise to power until days before he shot himaelf in a Berlin bunker ln April 1945, are currently ln a Swiss bank vault. In an entry dated Nov 19, 1932, the Sunday 'nmee said Hitler wrote: "From now on, I shall record my political actions and thoughta m notes, in order to preserve them for posterity bke every other politician." m. last undated entry was written from the bunker aa the Allies encircled Berlin, probably April 18, 1946, the paper sald. "The long·awaited offemlve has begun. May the Lord God 1tand by us," Hitler was ~uoted aa writing. A few days before Hitler killed himself, the Sunday Timeia said, the diaries were flown from Berlin on a Junker KT·VC plane which crashed near Boemendon, near Drftden, in what ia now East Germany. a.tdemann. 51, began searching for the diaries ln 1980. Boernendorf villagers told him llOl1leOne had retrieved a metal box labeled "property of the Fuhrer" from the downed Junker, the Sunday Tunes aaid. Heidemann "adamantly refuses to discloee the route which led from BoemenKiorf to the eventual Aniinal lovers fight research ATLANTA (AP) -A coalition of humane 80ciety chapters and animal rights groups is trying to stop experiments that is says leave Laboratory animal.a "blinded, crushed , starved, mutilated, burned, maimed and cut up.'' But animal researchers respond that those aocuutlon.a are "abeolutely untrue" and ''patently at.urd.'' On Sunday afternoon, at four of the nation's 1eVen federally funded primate research cent.era, animal right.I activista will rally to make their caae ln another chapter of the ongoing degate over the et.hies of animal research. MoblUutlon For Animals, a Boston ·based ooalltion, baa planned rallies to protest conditibnl at four of the centers, all supported ln part through tax~ distributed by the Nation.af Institutes of Health. -"We want to put an end to part of the thinga the animal• have to go through," aald Dawn Thacker. 1outhern coordinator of MFA and 'orpn11er of the Atlanta rally. Andropov says U.S. is s.talling ~ of tho dlarl•, claimJn, that It hu did ., ht• woWd odanpr pt'Oplo •Ull llVlnl bohlnd lht> iron Cu.naln," the paper uJd H~ learned the ldtnUty of tho C.nnan army officer who had taken the box from the ~ and hidden lt ln a hayloft, the Sunday ~l'Qorted. lt Nld H.eidemann pertuaded tho otfk.'f!r, who now llvee In Switzerland and ,..,Ulfd to be named, to part wtth the document.I for an undlllCloted 1um ot money and an .. urance that tht documen\.I would eventually be pl.aced ln the German Federal Ardlivt1 at Kobleru. Adolph Hitler in 1941 (above) and with his sister. 30 Fashion Island 644-2464 NEWPORT BEACH Westcliff Plaza 548-8684 1~24 White Rain® Hair Spray "1.99 's·o'xV2"* Plastlc Hose Your choice 7.5-oz. • aerosol 0< 8-oz. • • non-aero- sol. Reg .. X·hold, or unscented. Sturdy construction fOf long use. The heat Is on . . so stock up. "MM..c'•fl • Mon. Thru Sat. 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"•11 IEA 12•·a12s· Roi Kendi ...... - I 1 I I 1' .j No recession in pot fields Record amoun t of m.ar"iJuana elzed in 1982 raids By STEVE WQ.ITEIN A11 11111t•,,.._...., SAN FRANCISCO Unemployment hlt the timber lndU1try and heavy ralnl hW1 aome of th• vtneyarda, but marijuana Jrowera in alx . Northern C fornla countle1 reached eorne 'MW htiha 1n 198$. The market value of the Ulepl weed confilclated tn Mendocino, Humboldt, Del Norte, Shuta, Trlni'lt and St.ldyou counttn· WU 0 ficially .UJnaied at about $40. 7 mllllon, accocdlna to 1herllf reports compiled 1hll week. Detectlvel aatd It waa lmpoaslble to determine how much marijuana wu not llelzed by authoritlet, b u t overall eatlmatea were that only 10 percent of the total grown wu aehed. That would put the total ~al harvest at cloee to $400 on in the six counties. "I think there was more marijuana out there than ever before," said Lt. Dennis DeCarll of the Humboldt County 8herlU'1 oftlce. "I thl"k the economy hu a lot to do wtt.h {t. People need the monoy. and they can a•t It airowlna marijuana." He aald 21,412 ,sound1 of marijuana wtth a v ue of '6.8 mllllon wu •lzed tn Humboldt Coun\y ln 1982. Rald1 were lower than prevloua ~ara. he aaid, becau.e of cutbac In the 1heriff'1 staff. "It'• hard to tell how much we dld(l't pt, but I'd gue. we only took in about 0 percent or 10 percent of the total out there," he aald. Trlnitba Co~lff'a detective ve aaid planta contt.mated tn Trinity last year were worth about $13 mtWon. t In Shasta, aheriff's agent Bradd McDannold said the contiacated planta totaled about $8 mllllon. Capt. Gene Lensl"l of the Mendocino County herlff's office said some 11 tons of EXTRA LCNJ °"9f•n.-c:M.I' • marlJ"'ana worth dB.I mtulon were oonllacac.d. t ..Umated U\Jt rer::nted 86 petClr\t to 40 peroen of the total crown tn \he ~t~. ln St1ktyou, SherUf Bud Tjl;lor 11ICl hi• department pu ed up about $2.8 nillUon. Del Norte Shertff'a detective Bob ~ aald h1I officetl "juat acraped e Up of the lceberf when they hauled tn about $ .8 millton worth of marijuana ln 21 raida 1ut yeu. "Lord only Jmowa," the total amount Lona Mid. ••1t ~t be 20 or 30 tlmea that much.' Despite the monYl. Involved, Lalfranchtni aald, •• e don't fNl that our county benefi" a whole heck of a lot from that economy." He said growef. uaually buy farming au~ea out1lde the county, and nted the violent impact growing baa had on the conununity. He 'Mid 10 uaaulta and two murders were directly related to marijuana cultivation. . ,/ , .. ,.... . . I',\\\ EXTRALCNJ UBE SOCKS I •air pck owmt·JW.CAU TUBE SOCKS I Jair JICl -.............. _ 6.97 5.00p, L.C.D. Watches _ 5-function watches in white or goldtone. Metal wristbands. L-- 12.78 Alarm Clock Specials Big Ben>i, Baby Ben, or LE.D. digital model. • Men's Long Tube Socks Over-the-<:all length in acrylic/nylon blend. Plain white or white with stripes. f=its men's 10-13. Your Cho4c• 1.37 Hefty™ Disposable Plastic Plates Plastic foam trays and plates for picnics and infor· mal entertaining. ktt•t thon o solid . Mote thon o JP°'I Orange CoHt DAILY PllOT/8und1y, Aptll 24, 1983 Al 3.0L 2.99 Carlo Rossi Wines Chablis, Burgundy, Pink Chablis, Sangria, Vin Rose, Rhine and Paisano. 5-plece Kitchen Sink Set Dish drainer and other items in a choice,,.t>f colors. Rain fall p attern " An arm and a leg sneak out from under a colorful umbrella that made its debut during a rainstorm in New York City this week. AP Wlr<tptioto Video games invade lives,· • stir . protes t By ILONA ROSS ~ated Pr-Wrtt ... NEW YORK -A Bronx woman stabbed and killed her 16-year-old son with scissors while breaking up an argument between the boy and his two sisters over a ''Donkey Kong" game in February, police said. In Japan the same month, 25 boys, some aa young as 8, were arrested for stealing to support their video game habit. In Britain, a 13-year-0ld boy· stole 321 pounds, about $500, from his family so he could play video games. Parents and governments in several countries are rebelling against games of extraterreetrlal warfare and dott.ehompers that have captured their children's imagination. Some Asian nations have forbidden all video games. e Opponents say th~ games cause psychological harm to children or tempt them to ignore school. but some bans are economic. Brazil, for instance, is trying to boo6t its computer industry and has banned imports of anything containing a microprocessor. That rules out home video games and has created a thriving black market, with Atari products the favorite contraband. Philippines President" Ferdinand E. Marcos outlllwed coin-operated video games late in 1981 after civic groups protested that the country's 3,000 machines were "devilish contraptions that wreak havoc on the morals and discipline of our youth." But video fever still rages in the United States and much of Western Europe. In France, where pinball, or "le flipper," has been long adored, video games have been eagerly embraced. In Rome, the games are popular with elderly Italians. Almost all bars and coffee shops have at least one machine. But in the Netherlands, some parents are upset. ''I wish he knew his school work as well as he knows every video game that was ever made," said Linda Rosenfeld of her 13-year-old !IOn, Jonathan. In Britain, where the 13-year-old boy robbed his family to play video games, Labor Party legislator George Foulkes has proposed limiting players at the nation's 100,000 machines to those over 16. But his description of video game addicts with "glaz.ed eyes, oblivious of their surroundings," who tum to crime in their search for cash to play the games, caused laughter in the House of Commons. Few Asian lawmakers are laughing. Taiwan banned home games. lndoneaia, Malayala and Singapore are closing their video arcades and parlors. Hong Kong tn early 1982 prohibited children under 16 and in school uniforms from it.a 700 video game parlon after parents complained that children were neglecting school work . 99c 1.42 2 for · Video game opponents also have support from medical quarters. Physicians at the Mayo Clinic ih Minnesota aay video games can cause epileptic seizures in light-sensitive people. British doctors have reported similar cases. U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said ~ November that the games had adverae mental a1'i phyalcal effecta on pre-teen-age and teen-age Glade Traah Baga eq. of 10 beaa In heevy-<My 1.5 mA. plettic. Eacti beg. hold 20 '° 30 Odens 2.31 . I 2-way Air Freahner Alpine MeadOw, Autumn Harve1t, Lemon Bl<>Mom, Pine. Powder 9.5-oi.• ·-"' i '"·"*d•R'i•H 12-0&.. Clln LunoMon .... t Handy Plaatlc Housewares Larve Mlectiotl of houtew•re• In Choice of colors. 122 I I children. . "Everything la zap the enemy. There'.• nothlna constructive in the games," said Koop, a pediatric suraeon. But Christy Tavener, activity director at the Shore Haven Nurat.na Home in Grand Haven, Mich,. aaid. "From what we have 1een, It'• totally juat the opposite with the elderly." The Ma. Pac Man pme hel .. develop motor akilla amona elderly padenta. w laid. Want to call? Just ye11 out At Otengt 0o .. t DAILY PIL.OT/8undey, Aprll U, 1983 D Stop the senseless Persecution of Sam The oontlnu.lng t.ria1a of Sam Willett and ht.I family touch on eome at the mo1t bulc t.ues of oW' lmrn1'1"•tion pol1ciM. Wtllett, now 27 yean old, wu adopted by a San Juan Cppiltrano family when he wu 16. For the put two yea.rt the "'8n and hla family have Uved through the tumultuous ~tlona of the Immigration and Naturalization Service b~ucncy almost without respite. , The government want.a to Cleport him to hia native Llberia *8uae. thev say, hi.I adoption occurred too late in life to be .. valid." to· 'kuth and David Willett, there la no question of validity . . . there la only the loving, caring, decade-long reality that Sam ii their IOn. The only validity Sam Willett questions ia the right of hil adopted country to separate him from his su pportive family and send him back to hia place of birth, now a country with which he feels li~e empathy and compatibility. Wll:lett and his family have been given yet another reprieve from thia nightmare. They have until July 18th to legally find a loophole through which he can safely slide into permanent U.S. residency. The entire matter seems heartless and absurd. When thouaanda of aliens are pouring into this country illegally, being given the services and sharing the bounty of our society, it ls ironic that a man who was adopted, nurtured and wanted by a U.S . family has had to fight tooth and nail to remain. Willett works, has a home, parents who care for him and a life which he la being asked to diacard. If the Immigration Service put half as much effort into finding good reaaons for Sam Willett to remain with his family as they have trying to disrupt hia life, this sad story would never have needed to be told. Opinions expre\~td 1n ll'tt' ~PoKe <IOOVI' otr e lhO'>e or the Ocltl'( P1101 Otntr Yl.,W\ .. , pressed on tnos P<l9t' .irl' tno~ of theor author\ .ino arlt\1~ Re.ider comm l'nl •'> 1nv11 ~. Addrn~ Th~ ;:>a11y Pilot P 0 Bo• 1~. C<Ktcl Me~ CA '12b21> Pnon!' llJ o 1>'2·4321 OTHER VIEWS It's nice to hear jt for love and marriage Somebody must be doing something right, or a lot of somebodies are doing somethings right. The government reports that the number of divorces granted in the United States declined in 1982 for the first time in two decades. Last year 1.18 million couples ended their marriages, 3 percent fewer than in 1981, the National Center for Health Statistics said in its annual report. The center said the divorce rate declined from 5.3 per 1,000 people in 1981 to 5.1 per 1,000 in 1982. Still, there is plenty of room for improvement. Last year's divorce rate was three times higher than in 1962, when 413,000 couples ended their marriages for a rate of 2.2 per 1,000. The report also noted that the number of marriages in 1982 roee fOI' the seventh consecutive year. Almost 2.5 million new unions were reported -an increase of 3 percent over 1981, when 2.4 million marriages were performed. "What we're seeing is that both marriage and divorce rates have atabiliz.ed after a peri<>Q. of.1barp change in the 1960s anl'Y- 1970a," said Johns Hopkins University sociologiat Andrew Cherlin. ..-:.t.. -.;. • The aoaolopt' said the marriage rate had dropped in the 1960. because young people were postponing marriage, not rebelling against it. Marriage ages have now stabilized and the rate ii back to normal. be said. Cherlin shares a widely held opinion that the recession haa held down divorces because couples cannot afford to break up. He aaid the drop a180 aignals the end of the divorce frenzy of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Whatevei: the reason, it's an encouraging trend to see marriage coming back in style. The way things had been going for a number of years, divorce was threatening to replace marriage u an American institution. (l{eprlnted b y pe rml11lon of Tbe St. Lo•il Globe-Democrat) l. M. BDJd I No surrender Durina World War II, only about 1 percent of all Jap&N9e 80ldien in the South Padfic ever surrendered. Many we.re killed in .ction.. and suicide. accounted tor many, too. Q. Ia the capital of Mlaouri written St. Louia or Saint Louil? A. Nice try, Y<>Wll fellow. It'a written Jeffenon Oty. Flaure 6.6 percent of all men are left.handed. Only 3.8 percent of all women are left-hanc~ed. Why thla difference? Q. Louie, you HY you like bowllna bet1er than (lOlf? Why? A. Lem fewer bella. Gourmet• eay the female ~ we. much better than the male. Q. Can ~ een be ttntched ~ ~t of lhape? A. That they can, ny the medJco.. .Much of tbe ear la Clll'tileet· It conti.D\MI to IJ"OW, throuabout your lUetlmt. bUemtlJ heavy earrln1• dah1led f ro1n. pltrced lobe• ..... $ually ca asw • woman • ... at ....... look. Q. What kind of cbt9m la It that'a 1uppo1ed to malte you texy? A You mean Scottish chee.e from the Ia1e o.f ~ Story goes that estrogen, the key Ingredient, la abundant In the cattle forage the.re. So it geta lnto the cows, then into the milk. thua Into t he chee1e. That cheffe reportedly was banned in Italy a dor.en yean aao with the otfidal , explanation that it might boost rt.uie Italian birth rate. When New York Yankee• pitcher a.. Rf&hett1 a couple of )'MI'S 8IO WU relieved by BJ.ch Gcmaae. 1por1a writ.en all over t'he cou ntr y aaw flt in commentifta on the plh"hln.r to UM the phrue ''bun Bql' i,o Rlch'a." The bu.man male la not the only one who eenda otehkla to the object ol his atfecdon. pa.. note. Male bet• attract eex pu1Den with Ol'Chid ~. Abou\ OM out of ftw mwdet' vk:thm la kOled by a relative. Obly one In five llUk:idel leevee • J'llOCe. ,,......,,....., ~ _,...., ::-=.: ,...., ...... ....... ..... .,..... ..... ._. ... Papal visit Soviets • worries WASHINGTON -Josef Stalin once aneered at the power of the Vatican by uking, "How many dlvislona does the Pope have?" But Stalin'• aucc::e.ora in the Kremlin don't ah.are hia c:Ontempt for the leader of the Roman Catholic Church. ln fact, my intelligence 1ource1 aay the Soviet leaders fear Pope John Paul II more than any other human being. That'• w~y Yuri Andropov's KGB allegedly tried to have the Pope ......tnaled two yean ago. And that '• why the Soviet hierarchy and their pupQets in Warsaw are ao worred about John Paul'• vl1lt to Poland in June. They're afraid the pontiff's vialt to hia native land will fan the flames of rebellion In Catholic Poland -flames that were auppoeedly stamped out by the declaration of martial law in December 1981. THE SOVIET leaders, as paranoid as any ideological fanatics, believe the Polilh-bom pope'• vilit to Poland in June 1979 helped to in1pire t he formation of the Solidarity movement a year later. They are afraid that equally momentous developmenta could follow hi.a June viait. So the Poliah communist regime ia taking two specific precauttona to prevent the papal vi.at from turning into a political diaaater: , -'Jltie Pollah government is sf1tfng that John Paul's Itinerary include a meeting with Gen. Wojtek Jaruz.elaki, in hopee that this will give the military Q -Jl-Cl-111-D-fRS_l_I -~ regime legitimacy ln the eye. of the people. -The regime 11 trying to di1COurage a meeting between the Pope and Lech Walesa, the acknowledged leader of the outlawed Solidarity . Any meeting between theae two charismatic Polea could strike sparks that would scorch Janu.ellki and inflame anew the Solidarity movement. The Vatican 11 reti1tlng the Polish government's attempt to manipulate the papal visit. John Paul is no political babe in the woods, and he'a not abou.t to give ·the Pollah regime everything It wants. Sources close to the Vatican have lketched out to my asaociate Lucette Lagnado a likely compromile: Pope John Paul will meet with Jaruzelakl u the Po.l.iah govenunent desires -but only at the price of a meetina with Walesa. ON BALANCE, th.i.s may work out to the advantage of the Polish people in their struggle again.st the commuruat regime. Any prestige that may rub off on Jaruz.ellk.l 1rom hill meeting with the. Pope will be neutralized by John Paul's speeches appealfng for "IOCial justice" -a political statement couched ln tenna that are 1till pennimible for a spiritual leader. On the other hand, a meelir1'{ between the Pope and the leader of an outlawed movement will encourage the Poles to continue their fight for freedom. Walesa has al r eady hinted that Solidarity Is ready to re1ume active measures afalnat the government, and he 1 counting on the Pope's visit to be the catalyst for the union's resurgence. Meanwhile, U.S. intellleence experts will be keeping close watch on developments preceding the papal visit - specifically, what happens during the first week in May. Solidarity's underground leaders have called for demonatratlona both on May Day. the traditional socialist workers' holiday, and on May 3, the 192nd anniversary of the Polish conatitution. Solidarity la counting on the regime's reluctance t o use force in suppressing Polish workers' demonstrations during a week that is rev ered by both communists and Poles of all political persuasions. UVlNG IT UP: The Pentqon'1 lavish expenditures on creature co mforts aren't limited to o ur own generals and admirala. Foreign brass hats are treated with equal extravagance. Buried deep ln the Pentagon budget is a $12 million aluah fund earmarked for "emergency and extraouj.jnar y expen1e1." They're'extraQJdlnary, all right. In 1981, at least $1.3 million waa doled out to show vlliting dignitaries a good time in thla oountry. While the Pentagon offidally 1..1.ata $381,055 in outlays from the 1luah fund for "Diatinguished Vlalton," my report.er Rhonda QUA4J}iana found that th.la greatly undentatee the amount that wu actually apent wining and dining the foreign poohbaha. The visitors were respoosibl.e for their own tranaponation to the United States, but once they got here, U.S. taxpayers paid close to $1 miUJon for carting them around in military aircraft. T~ bUla alao covered meala, booze, hotela, laundry, phone calll -even engraving for photo albums. An eight-day arand tour by Japane.e Admiral Tauaio Yata and three aides coet $21,576 in airfare around the United States, plus .3,865.52 for their room, board and ml1cellaneou1 expenses. They stayed ln Neb plush hostelries aa the Stanford Court in San Franct.co and the Watergate in Washington. Four New Zealand military guests of the Army cost the taxpayers $1,572 for three nights at the Stanford Court. One niaht at the Waldorf Astoria ln New York cost $550.23 for four Tu.nilian guests. One dinner for four Spanish mill tary o tflcera and their American hosts at the Windows on the World in New Yock COit $483.06. The Navy 1pent $345.50 on a guided tour of Dtmey WOl'ld IOI' the commander of the Royal Saudi Naval Force1. A Navy 1pokesman would pot aay how many of the 12-rnember party were Saud1a and how many were U.S. e.oorta. Phone split a consumer cost By THOMAS D. ELIAS By now, many oonswnen are well aware that the impending aplltup of American Telephone & Telegraph Co.. the Bell System. I.I aoina to ooet them plenty. Moat expert• predict that monthly lervice rates will at least double and maybe triple when AT&T apinl of1 local operating companlee like California'• Pac:Lfic Telephone. But conaumera haven't yet been told that AT&T a1lo wants a aubeldy from them. Nor do l1lOlt know that local operating companies -ltil.l oontrolled by AT&T until next Jan. 1 -are d<>lna everyt.hlna they can to get ATalr lta aubsicfy. 'nle propoeed gift~ AT&T, of Clllflllll flCUI COW"le, goes by other, far more tecluUca1 names. In California, It cornea in the form of a $165 million rate lncn!ue requeat by Pad1ic, which aays the hike la needed to edjult for a change in depreciation rates already okayed by both the state Public Uttlltle1 Commlulon and the Federal Communication• Cornmmion THE 810 QUESTION ln thla late1t rate lncreaae request la .. why now? .. And the answer la that lf it's done now, It will help AT&T, while lf lt weren't done until next year, AT&T wouldn't be helped. For changes in depreciation rates are a nonna1 occurrence in the world of utility regulation. But aplitups of the Bell System are certainly not. In fact, depreciation rates change every three years, like clockwork. But lt'a never done aeparately from other rate lncreue requests. Pacific fa due for another overall rate change next year, to account for economic lhlfta and the ever-improving technology of the telephone bualnea. ~ part of the pl'Oa!91, rate ~are used to aee that consumera 1peed up paying for old materiel that will IOOD be replaced by more advanced geer. Human 'time' is minuscule ~ .... ':,,.L lmlf---.-,z-z-1--~,. have no ll'Oubla with thia: to them. we oame and l'O l1k.e any other animal •J*:i .. , without m eanm, or dntlnatlon. Yet, even f« t.b09e not reUpualy tncllntd, there le one extraordinary dlffmtGiee tbat rwlsta ... , eclanatkln: MM. alont of all crtature1. cam~ hie own niol'tal.lty. Gtven th.la tremework of time, doea lt not lft.m that our bwnan conoepdcn of • comUc ·~~ te too mWl and tmnporal to fit the r.cta1 la OW' idle of M()od" whittled down to human .ca1e beca\81 w. llrnDtY monot ... ewmlty and liillnlty? DO we thlok of God u a "Itel••'~ beni.-we cannot ,._..,. him ••"pl~'"? . Thi• normally enaures that consumer• pay only for equipment they're actually ltil.l ~Y 1peed up the prociem th.la year? Says Pacific vice president Douglaa Cambem, "Thi• will have no effect on the comumen at all. It mi&ht u well be done now." But that 1tatement downplays the division of property to be made wttl\ln the Bell System at year'• end. The local operatin& companiea wW ,et the equipnent they need t o 1erve their customen, while AT&T keei- whAt it need.a to maintain lta loni distance network. U a new depredation 8Chedule became effec:Uve before year'• end, Pacific'• cuat.omen would ln part be payln1 for 1ear that AT&T will pt. U that equipment lm't paid for by year'• end, AT&T will have to pay for lt. Of the tle5 million worth ot ~uipnent lnvolved In the latelt Pacific request, AT&lf ftpnl to aet about 1& percent, or tH mUlJon worth. A nk:e lift from CallfomJa carwumen to • huee COll>Ot9ticn.. lf lt'• permtu.d. SO PAil, atata r••ul•ton lndlcaw u..y won't alloW tt. '!'be PUC l&lt month coneo.Udated Pacific'• ~Uan adJI• •ient requmt wtih anotW tilepbcm 111111 c:w to be ~ tb.11 ~· But CommliUOMr Pi1iid11a Orftr, wbo "'' h' ..t ~ ~ ~ :'We're >oc+i"I at dm • a• epec:lal .,..,. .... &bat ti» two ~ may J9t be briiUn apart. • hdflc •mta. • U that happeu, .. Pedflc'1 cuatoa>era wW be "7Saa fOC' IUieii&l that A.Ttlf Wtn-Wii Md ..-•rt-hi a J ......... ~ 1AGiiird ....... ~ .. In :3 I dtJ • ...,...,. ":..tiff:-=£' Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Sunday, April 24, 1083 A.'Jt ' Their sp·ecialty is jumping into trouble • By JENNIFER KERR . , ....... ,,... ..... SACRAMENTO -A helicopter full of lk.len cruhea at 11,000 feet near Yo.emit. Nadonal Park. Five Air Force,men, trained In 1>9ramedk and aurvival technlquee, aniv. in a chopper and take 89Ven lnjured people to a hosplt.al. A Japaneee Maman attempta to conunJt auicide on hia ahJp 3&0 milee tram I.and. Two Air Force frogmen with 170 pounda of aear parachute into 10-loot 1wella nearby And keep the man alive unUl he can be airlifted to Midway lala.nd. It may aound like the plot of a televiaion adventure .erle.a, but thJ.a AF-Team la the real thina -the 4 let Aero1pace Reacue and Recovery Squadron, bued at McClellan Air Force Bue ln Sacramento. The 133-man aquad.ron and J4 othen around the world are trained to J'e8Cl.le Injured 10ldier1 or downed fllen durlna a war. In pu.cetime, they-perform what the Air Foree calla "humanitarian" actlvltiea, ranstn a from racui.ng atranded hikers and boeten to helping vicdma ol floodl and earthquakm to removtnc I.he 000 vlcUma of the Novtmber 1078 JonNtown trapdy In Guyana. Tht 41 U ARRS -whic h lnclude1 U p&rare.:wtra and 100 tlJaht crew memben -baa the motW> "That O\h•n May Live." Tb• equad uved 18 Uv.-lut YMr and wu named the Air Force'• outftandina recue equadron. ''The a1r c:rew I.a trained to a•t anywhere ln tht world durlni any kind of WNther In 72 hours. The p&r .... uce crew " trained to ao any place 1n the world and provide medical care until the pereon can be transported to a holpltal," saJd Tech. Sst. James Wll11am, 30, from Lon8 Beach. Two men from tJie unit parachut.ed lnto the Pacific MO milee northeut of Hawali lut Monday to help two Navy pilota who ejected from their jet when It cau,ht fire. The two pllota and one reecuer were found, but Staff Sat. Jeffrey Jones, 26. of McClellan and Kailua, &wall, wu lost. Th e Alr Force i. investigating and cannot dlacuu the matter now. Lt. Col. Hal Jonea of Chilllcothe, Ohio, a Vietnam helicopter pllot who commanda the McClellan aquadron, aaid Friday. Many candJdates for the reecue equad drop out of the one-year training prowam. "Of my c.lasa of 56, oruy 1lx made It a year later." uid Tech. Sgt. Robert Wllliamaon, 39, of Sacramento. "A 70 percent washout rate ls average,'' said Jones. There are eight weeks of bask training in Texaa. often featuring 800 pushupe a day, followed 1 by parachute school in Georgia, acuba diving in Florida, survival training and rock climbing in Waahinston, then medical training and precision parachute jwnpina in New Mexico. "We're the orily military unit that's required to parachute lnto trees," said Williama. The parareecuers wear a special suit to jump into forested areas. It is nylon and padded and Two pararescuemen check o ut equipment before leaving containa a nylon ror in a leg pocket for rappelling d .......... clif Sacramento base on mission . ,__own~~a_u~"""-o_r~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--.~~~~~--....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~··· l#Wlr .... Patrol sergeant Howard Chewning Senior patrol cuts Ojai crime OJAI (AP) -s.ritor citizens in this small Ventura County conununity have found 80mething interesting to do with their spare time: fight crime. In 18 months the Ojai Valley Volunteer Security Patrol, ages 60 to 80, have reportedly helped cut Ojai thefts and property crimes by 21 percent. After the patrol set up mass registration in Ojai schools, bike thefts d ropped from 27 to four a month, said Ventura County Undersheri!f John Gillespie. A task force of the state Criminal Justice Planning Office has dubbed the program exemplary, and similar patrols are being considered by police departments in San Clemente and in San Rafael in Marin County. Until the patrol, crime prevention was "hit and miss," said.Lt. Gary Markley of the Ojai sheriff's station. "It has allowed me to do a better job, truly," he said. From 26, the patrol has grown to 42 members. Eight • women. Though unarmed, they •port sheriffs uniforms. green-and-gold patrol patches. IDI and a apare ae\ of car keys -made mandatory aft.er one member got locked out of a police car. The patrol has held NeiViborhood Watch crime prevention aem1nars. mannea roedblocka anc1 tratfic control for parades, tagged abandoned cars and installed ~ amoke detectora for eenior dtl.zenl. • Howard Chewning, 64, the patrol 8ergeant, said he' was "climbing up the wall with boredom" before Jolninc the patrol. along with his wife, Sall . They bad ~ed to Ojai five years ago when Chewning retired. Jwrt abt weeka before the move, Sally, ;nDW 60, WU robbed of $150 and thrown to the JEl'()Wld by a puree snatcher In Lynwood. "Bbe 1pent five days in the hospital, a month in bed and two months in a surpcal con1et. When lhe joined the patrol eight months ago, "l felt I waa kind of gettina even." lhe uid. '1 haven't cau1ht a purse snatcher r,et, but who knows, we mtaht have deterred one.• . RUFFELL'S UPHOlSTERY, INC . ••• ~ ..... , •• ..tts.r- 1922 HAllOI llVO. COSTA MISA -s.41-1156 CORRECTION In t"• le•r• Adwertl•lng ••ctlon appeerlng In thl • .... ....., on Aprtl 24. ttl•r• I• en adwertl••m•nt tor #11•t•-2 Air Com1proe•or. Tllo ,....., .... .,, ..... ....................... eelo •rlo• •"••n 11 . ""'""t. TIM oonect .. ~ .. -· .. ...... ,.., ,.,, ...... . ... Custom Tailored (j?} (;) SHIRTS -"" '°" pwlC)nilly collar 'n cuff 0r-. f!Porl' ,~ ~. Cot ta Meu 842-1711 '~'""•, ............. .,,.... SPECIAL .. 20-Aprl 26, 1913 "'"""""' ICllart: .99 I hl•t a discoid slla(led body, 111111 so1ri111 dorsal •nd Iona 11owinc •lrll fins tblt *' lib fttltrs. 'follf distlllcllVI bltc• bands that enftanct ., litYel color See mt 1t Aqutlc Trtpltlb where I 1111 Oft W. under the name ''Shlf ~· '°' only • 99. El'~· Secretarta Weu Lanch Spedala Shrimp and Crab Stuffed ~ .......•....... $3.95 Veal Cadet Callfornla •..•.. $3.95. Ch•cba Pnpceu ••••••. t:-rS3.15 Refalarmaaat.o~ Sale! Super Size film developing and printing. • 2.99 12-exposure 3.89 ... 20-exposure 4.99 ... 24-exposure 8.19 ... 36-exposure 3.59 ... 15-exposure disc FHm a 110 or diSc 126 135 Super Sin prtntl 4x5" 4x4" 4x6" Aegulllraa prtnta 3Yax4'1t " 3'1tx3Ya" 3Y1x5" ~ w .ti -~ •' ·'' .,.. ' ' ... .. .. :·. .,. . . ~. ·~ ··: If! ··l w w ?o 'N '° ol di 'iCl en l I I l ·I • Oout DAILY PILOT /8unda , A rll 24, 1813 Scientists studying 'frozen enigma' at undersea :ridge ••••••••••••••••••••••••• SAINTS llMON AND JUDI PARllH .Huntington BMoh p,.,.,,,. UffALLIUJAH •ROADWAY '13" CMt of IO -Dlr9cted by KINT JOHNSON <"~/Dlfeotor, 1ebMU1ne Wwt) Apttl IO • 4 p.m. 9'.00 I p.m. •.oo fl '~~uQUBBN Elletmere llland toward the Eaat Mer 1 • I p.m .... .00 ,-... -81bertan Sea. 1 p.m .... 00 ICI STATION CISAR, Arctic Han• Weber, a veteran arctic Rerreenment1111mwn'l1M10n Ocean -Sdendatl ai UUI ct.olate explorer who la chief 8ClenU.t on the Por Tlotlet lnformetlon, Call ll0-472A outpoet 1-than 250 m1lel frun the expedition, 1ay1 the rnearch will Tk*9ta allO .veltable 11 the door. North Pol• are prob11\1 one of the determine whether CaNda may lay r--------------....;;..;;;.;..;;.;.;..;.;;;;;.;... _______ .....J Earth'• leut-known Ceaturn and claim to the ranee and any reeourcee h r--------------------------bulldinl tvtdenioe to 1Uppol1 Cu*1a'1 may hold. claim to a tarp chunk of the arcdc lee. The Soviet Union hu a permanent 'lbe pemment la apend!na more lee 1tatlon about 180 mUea farther than tl.4 mllllon on the project -west, but Weber aay1 hi.a primary both for tckmtific reeeerch and u part lntere9t II learnina about the Alpha of a five-year-old effort to exert Ridge, which he ca.l.l.t an "enilJ'M," aoveret1nty over the re1lon. The rather than worrying about whoee Canadlant hope to control the land In territory it ml.ght be. advance of any etf0111 by U.S . flnm ''To tell you the truth, I don't ifve a to exploit lh unproven mineral damn," he aald. "That'• up to the reaource1, and u a hed1e asalnst lawyers to decide." Soviet adivlty In the.,._, James Tanner, project manqer for It ltill la not Canadian territory. But ~the Canadian Department of Energy, the red-and-whJte maple leaf flag Mines and Reaourcea, aald In an planted amoni the ~p'• 20 teni.i: Interview in Ottawa that a cla im and prefabricated buUd.lnp, waves would require strong evidence that over a viata of ice -IOlne flat, aome the ridge ia "a natural prolongation" buck.led Into pl'91ure ridaes -and of the continental shelf, not a free. snow that forms new deelgna with standing mountain r~e. ~National Mortgage Co. I/as the program )'OU are loolli11~ for: WE SPECIALIZE I ALL TYPES OF: ;• AP~ ~ every wind. Under the International Law of the The lnunedlat.e goal of the tclentlflc Sea treaty _ which was rejected by effort la to find out more about what Washington but signed by Ottawa- Residential Loans Industrial Loans Government Loans . Apartment Loans Jumbo Residential tif Lundgaarde clears away owdrifts from igloo at Arctic ice oe (above) while entire chilly ~ject is shown in aerial view ltelow. lies below the hue for the Canadian "---da uld o Ex~tlon to Study the Al~ Rl"' ... e '-·•n• wo have 1 yean to apply .... to extend lta offshore economic wne, -wn by 1ll acronym, AR. currently 200 milea, out over the ··-~~~ro:pha Rld1~_11~-a jumbl~1~! ridge. UJauc.-and v-YI 1iretc .... ,. About three weeka ago, Canadian about 8 0 mlle1 from Canada'•· Forces soldiers began work on the camp by chopping and blasting a 1,600-yard runway out of the drifting pack ice. Equipment, food and fuel was carried to the site by aircraft. Working with numbed hands In the 24-hour sunlight. adentiata and support staff assembled their tents and unloaded more than 1,000 barrels of fuel. Fourteen journalists spent three days at the ice st.ation, observing aclence in slow motion. A team headed by Ruth Jackaon, a geophysicist with the Bedford Institute of Oceanography in Nova Scotia, ls hauling core samples through holes ln the ice from the ocean floor more than 6,000 feet below. They are exploding dynamite and fl.ring air gun.a underwater, learning the cbaracteristics and type of rock In the ridge by the way aound travel.a through it. The findings will help detennlne If the ridge was formed by volcanic action, or in a buckling of the ocean floor, or -if Canada la fortunate -as an exterulon of the continental lheU. An answer ls expected by fall. ) IN HONOR OF GA.blDHI . -AND TO PROMOTE WORLD PEACE THE HARE KRISHNA MOVEMENT PRESENTS AN AMAZING FREE OFFER! BHAGAVAD-GITA: GANDHI'S BOOK OF TRUTH "When doubts haunt me, when disappointments stare me in the /au, and I see not one ray of hope on the horizon, I turn to Bhagavad-gita and/ind a verse to comfort me; and I immediately begin to smile in the midst of overwhelming sorrow." With 24 full-color pl•te• In • modem, aoft-cover edition. 3H p99n. Send for your fr•• copy tod•yl -Gandhi "In tit~ mornln1 I bath~ my lntrllect In tit~ st~ndous ond cosmo1onal pltllosoplty of BN01avad·1lta, In comparison wltlt wit/cit our modtrn world 1111d lt1 llt~raturt 1ttm puny ond trlvlaL" -Henry David Tltoreau Th• tource of Gandhi'• 1trength and Inspiration w•• lhagavad-glta, the crown Jewet of lndla't tJmelfft 1pfrttual herttage. Oandhl'• pertonel MCretary once receU*Ct; "Every moment of Oandhl'• ltf• ... a coneclou• effort to llve the rMIMQe of the Oita." r---------------~----------~ l Bhagaved-glte: Gandhi'• Book of Truth I D -· ...... MM .... My,,.. .Mlc .......... holl Trutt I oo .. unemo,.llwe OOPJ ot Mell Order DWtefon, I .., ... , ........ , .,.. ~ o.,t. DP I "" tuo to ~ ,..... ITM ...... •"· I aftd ~ Loi AntNI. CA IOOM I N•mt I I I \\'ITH Ot:R EXPERTISE AND QUALIFIED STAFF WE CAN HAVE A FINANCIAL PACKAGE . . TO SUIT YOUR FINANCIAL NEEDS! (Above Prol'•llU Are Subje~I To Aval!Abllhy A11d Chanse) GARY ANDERSON Asst. \ice President Sales \tanager 400 North Tustin Avenue • Suite 101 Santa Ana, California • 92705 (7 14) 541-2983 I I i • DlllJ Piiat ~ IUNOAV, APAIL 14, 1983 FINANCE 86 STOCKS 88 Bis first Jnnins carries Edison to baseball win. B2. 0 ~ 0 Blockhurger, CdM share Beach Cities By ROGER CARLSON or .. .,..,,... .... Sheldon Blockburger of Newport Harbor Hiah led the way yesterday u area prep tnick and field athletes wen M sharp M the weather at the 18th Exchange Club of Newport Be.ch'• Be.ch Citiea Invitational. The Sailors' aenior mapped meet'recorda in the triple and Iona jum.-, aotna 46-10 ~ in the triple and 22-11 ~ ln the 1orlg jump, eclipmna the prevtoua ltandardl by a total of 33 inches on the Newport Harbor campua. "I alwa)'I knew he wu capable of it," uid\hil ooech, Eric Tweit. "'The triple 11 hil event, thoWrh. and I think he hu a chance to go 4 7-6. U he doel 'he hu a good chance to qualify for the ltate meet. "Re'• ju.It like Corona'• Dave Lawaon. "He works for everything he getl. He hu nm more ltadlum ataln than you would expect in a lifetime." Lawson, Corona del Mar'• 17~-pound lltr'ongboy, waa just one of the Sea Kinaa' weapooa, oo a clay in which they dominated in virtually f!W:rY category, piling up an 84-point l1W'8in of vtct«y. -CdM Coacn Jim Tomfin would 6e hard pre 11 e d to uk for more. Among h1a team'• endeavora: •Lance Martin took the 100 in 10.0 on the traditimally alow Newport track. wu third In the 220 (23.09) and WM prominent in both relays. •Dave Andenon turned a 4:29.44 to win the mile after being ahaded in the 880 dapite a 1:~9.30 clocldna. •LaW80ll doubled. winning the ahot in ~3-2\li and the di9cua in 150-8 ~. - .,.., ............. .., CMfW ~ Corona's big gum_ ~eluded !lave Anderson (left), Dave Lawson (center), Lance Martin (right) and Jon Forte and Vince McCuinneu (insets) at the Beach Cities Invitational track and field meet. •Jon Forte, who m.lwd at 5-8 twice momenta after flniah.lna third in the low hurdles, rallied and took it all at 6-4 on h1a final attempt in the bJati (See BEACH CITIES. Pqe BZ) McGregor still just as tough as always, 3-1 BY JOHN SEV ANO or .. a.1r,... .... never aeem to get a hold of him. Scott McGregor can't explain It. Nor can his catcher, Rick Demi-ey. And as far as the Angels are concerned, McGregor remains a lingering nJ&btmare. The crafty Baltimore left-hander has 15 lifetime dedalona against the Anaela. He hu won 12 of them. McGregor in a puz:zled tone of h.la domination. "It seems every time I go out I see a dlfferent (Angel) lineup. It's just a great challenge every time I face them." McGregor, who grew up in El Segundo, once • owned a 1treak of 12 consecutive victories (Including one in the playoffs) before the Angels finally snapped the string last year in Baltimore. Oh, there were other opportunities, too. But every time the Angels started 90rnething, McGregor would seem to close the door in a hurry. Like in the sixth inning, for instance. Juan Beniquez opened with an infield hit and, one out later, Doug beCinces singled to center to put runnera at first and l!eCOnd. "I don't know. Maybe they think about It. Maybe they think they have to be more aggremive. Actually, he'• just like Tommy John. He chances speed, throw1 the ball over the plate, and getl people out. "I can't explain it." McGrqor got hla 12th, too, by posting a nifty S-1 victory CNet the Ancell before a regular-9e810fl record crowd of 63,073 on Cap Night at Anaheim Stadium. "rve always loved pitching m this ballpark,'' McGregor pointed out. "It has a great mound and my family always cornea out to watch. I get exdted every time I pitch here." The only run the Angels (10-7) could muater came in the aeventh lnn1ng when ~bby Grieb opened with a ground rule double to teft, went to third on a fly ball to right by Tim Foll, and home on a ground out to abort l>y Bob Boone. , The mSior uprilina ended, however, when McGregor induced Brian Downing and Bobby Clark to hit into force plays. And again in the ninth, the Angela had a mild rally aa Clark doubled with one out. But Grich grounded out and McGregor ltrUclt out pinch hitter Fred Lynn to end the game. "You can't wait on him,'' said Rod Carew, who went hitlesa ln four ~ps to the 'plate. "(Aa a hitter) you're constantly pulling the trigger too llOOI\. He haa got a deceptive motion." Center fielder Joh.a Shelby, who went 4-for-~ off TJ, ICOf'ed the fint run when be lin&led to center, went to third on a lingle up the middle by Dan Ford, and came home on Cal Ripken's double play grounder. ~ (U), ln golnc the route, scattered nine bill, allowed one run, 1truck out two and walked none. "He Ju-l makes good pitchea on them. I don't know what it 11 really," aaid Dempeey. "I know the Angela are very aggreulve with him, yet they ''Ira been a mystery to me over the years," said (See TOUGH, Pa1e BS) Morales ' delivers in a pinch PITl'SBURGH (AP) -When the Los Anceles Dodaen need a bit in • ptncb. they tum to JQle Monls. 'Ibe 38-yeer-oJd Mciralea, the Dodeen' oldest pi.,er, stroked a ane-«at, ploch-hit double in the aeventh Inning to give Loi ~ a S-2 victory over the 1lumpln1 Pittabureh Pirate• ymt.erday. Moral•' hit came off loser John OmdeWia, 2-1, and ICOnd •• TfitH•y Cit-el II at J .. ae I ... Split lifts UCI hack to top Deapite la.ing the first game of a frame as Erle Bennett hammered a early exploai~ proved more ~n double-header yeaterday to visiting three-run homer. enoush for a pair of UCI hurlers. Univenity of San Diego 10-1, UC Irvine Mark Chapman then added a t.hJ'ee. Gary Miller 1cattered eieht hit• came back ln the nightcap for a 7-2 run double for San Diego an inning later thro~h five i.nningl, and ace reliever victory and moved back into fint place to complete the romp. Gary Braha abut out the Toreroa the rest in the Southern Califomra Baseball But the aecond game wu a different of the way for Irvine. A.-odation. story. UCI en.apted for seven runs in the The Ant.eaten even turned a triple UC Santa Barbara gave the Anteaters tint inning before the vialton could play in the fourth lnn1ng to get Miller a band, stopping Cal State Fullerton record an out. After Brad Ditto wu h.it out of a jam. With nmnen on tint and twice. by a pitch to lead off, Jim Gaaho tripled second, OSD'a Chapman hit a ground The split gives the Ant.eaten a 12-4 to acore Ditto. Paul Hammond followed ball to third buanan Adam Ging, who conference mark, while UC Santa with a single to drive in Guho. c.aued the oncoming runner anCI then Barbara 11 a half-game badt at 11-4. The And after a walk and another hl\ threw to tint for the leCOl'Mi out. Ant.eaten and Gauchoa aqua.re off at UCI batsman, Steve Haworth cleared th~ The runner on flrat, m~nwhlle, Tue9day afternoon at. 2:30. hues with a three-run triple. DArrln found himaelf stranded between flnt In the opener, the UCI hitten could Kek:hner then hit a towering home run and second and waa taged out in a only manage a acratch run against over the left center field wall to make rundown for the final out. Torero pitcher Ron Applegate. the acore 7--0. The Ant.eaten open a crucial three- Meanwhile, San Diego doubkd a three-'The Ant.eaten could manage only one pine Rrlea Friday niaht at defending nm advantage in the top of the aame hit the remainder of the cont.est but the champion Cal State Fullerton at 7 . Rustlers grab part of lead; Pirates upset Golden West Colleae'• Bustlen oabbed a portion of the South Coaat League ba1eball lead yesterday -but Orange Cout and Seddlebllck weren't quite ., fortunate. Here'• how it went: GWC 3, Cerritoe I Tbe RustJen 8COl'ed twice in t.be tint on Bob GrandataU'a two-run homer, then Eric M.e*hau, wtth the~ of ..., =-Bebe Mahoe and Scott IDllde it stand up. .Meltchau bad a no-hitter tbrouO five innln8I and ltruck CIUr Ilic and -.ralbcl four rn o~ "U"o. Fl bb eeventh aave atlilr ~ up a double play bell with nmDll'I at the oorm after Cerritos tcOHd In tbt •• &IL Aaodler twla 11.tlHllf fru.-tnlM c.ntlOI ...... :.,_..., -Odd• W• Ft a cUihlml .. .. --of dW ~~ whilra ....................... -..... A.lelillillr• ...... DI• aetk •IN retired II ......... ,.. .... ~ through the eighth inninp for the Falcona. Compton 6, OCC 5 The c.ellar-dwewne Tartan JJ6cked up only their thlrd South taut Conference victory in 18 dedltcww behind the oambanaUon of Darryl Harril' .,_t (double, homer and four llBJ) and a sudden lack of control on Uut mound. -Cout took a M -.! into the ninth, but th• leadoU bett.i' Jr•lk•dt relief artlat Bobb Mumon en-.d. lie IS'wd up a walk, a one-out run•MOrfn1 _,., an ln'-tlonal waJlc. tbM\ s.; ma-ct, wblth mnt &be heme. ,~. two-.ND .enai. an tht .uth utW ooc to • i-a .... SD M ... 15, Sad....,_ll 5 i .. er.:.·~rw:.: a~a9Hcl IC wUh a 21.;hlt • . .• "leddlMMll'• Oftll N). vtWll W11 M8rtc Hmkd 1 ... ....................... rya ••rl•I 1l'HJfl1 Coau o.111•••· Does anybody really care? USFL's decline in interest not exactly a burning issue Nobody came in on the noon balloon from Sukatoon and asked me, buL . . •The problem ii not flndlna .xneone who can explain the decline in interest in the United States Footbell Le.aue, but findlnl amneane who CU9I. •Yankee owner Geol"P Stet.nbrenner', fined »<J,000 foe puttfna the knocll on Nadanal LMpe umpirea during 1prlng training, will find the =:. worth it lf it tmprovea NaUonal 1Aque •The atranaeat l'ellCUon by Jerry a. ainDe taking over the Intlewood empire LI bb calm acceptance of the tenible winter put ln by the ~Remember how they wed to pUocly the atart of Aoriee a couple oi ----eo? : .. Lib, yow- mme ta Art 8cftllcbter md yow-bookie 'lflll1a bJI mane)'. •Y-. you be9rd of S..Utoon befon the noon bUJoon end the St. X..... Bl'* . . . You hMrd @out It M the-~tlnc ~t oi OcJl'dAit S.OW. . •Nl'L Comml .. toaer Pete Rosell• could npla1n • delay but not the dilma.J oi the Art Sc:hllchter emit. •Maatc JohMOn calla th• NBA B::foft.. "wlnntn' tllsM," the NBA celll tt J!l'Oflt and CBS caQI It raU,.. time • . • n. llm. who b8ft wattled 5~ mant.61 Md Ml....-. c:ell ll about Ume • •Sport.I bJltory cloel not recionl IMdloc:rtty crataaw llUClb • aumrnadon • tt -With Cblr.r • .....,,._..H"Ma. •It .. ldl1 the ...,,.rd .. ~ ... tbat the Dlerott"""' ............. IOol ... .. .. ....,...,,.,. ..... Dan\ .... ~l • •If~,~~ ... ....., .... .... .•• .,,... ,.,-.... n..--Mll. 'I::: ~:~J.. 1::::::;.,~ .. = . ~ SPORTS COLUMNIST ¥1mKER •Jt la not aurprtainl that 10 JDaD.1 pdwinnaJ bMUtbal1 autbortU. pick the Labn to repeat but it b intrtaulna that they seem to think it will be ..y. •John ll:lway will play football M ~ to tl•et-D but It wtl1 not be with the Bal~ Cotta . . . Art Schlichter can bet an It. •The NFL draft _.. an Apl1 28 at 5 a.m., our time, md ll:l~ will be..-at 0:01 ... U ~ . ' .. e-.. ... ' .. :;.., I ~· .. .... .. : [ .. Swimming medalist Buster Crabbe dies From AP dll_pa&clael SCOTTSDALE. Arts. -a Clarence "Bueter" Crabbe, the Olympic 1Wimm1ns eold medaUat who went an to movie atar fame., ''Flaah Gordon'' and "Buck Roger.." died ysterday at hla home in th1a Phoenix auburb. He wu 76. Kia family said he died ot he.rt failure. Crabbe'• wile, Vl.rjinia.. Mid he had "a little heart problem over the rean," but five minutes before he died he wu buay planning a penonal appearance ln Nashville, Tenn. She wd they celebrated thelr ~0th wedding annivenary 1ut week. Crabbe, a graduate of the University of Southern California, began hla movie career in 0 Kina of the Junaie," but wu best known in films as "Buck Rogera" and "Fla.sh Gordon." Crabbe won an Olympic gold medal at the 1932 Summer Games in Loe Angeles. He won a bronze medal at the 1928 Game. in Am.tterdam. In recent yeus, he promoted swimming as a form of exera.e for the elderly and wrote a book on exe:rdael. - Quote of the day Baseball today 1001 ln the tlr9t pme tn AmeriQln Leque blatory, th• ChJ~ White Sox defeated Cleveland a.2. TM other °'"" 1amea 9Cheduled tor tha' day were ralnod OU\. 1982 -Sandy Koufax .. , a major l~ niaotd that atood fOf' .. ven INIOna when he ·~ out 18 Chk:qo Cubl and~tched the Dodaen to a 10-2 Victory at W ey Jl'lold. TOd.ay'a blrt.hday: DOdaena kher Pat 7.aehry la JL Upshaw ignites Jays' rally Wlllle Up1~aw'1 RBI 11nale 11 capped Toronto'• five-run ei1t\th lnn1na that ~ the 81'49 Jaya to a 6-4 American Leaaue victory over Kanaaa Citl lut niaht. Relief pitcher Daa Qalleaberry 1 errant throw to fint w., the th1rd KaNU Ctty error of the lnntnai, aett.lnai up Upehaw11 liner to center to ecore the winning run , . . Batcll W)'lle~r, Willie Rudolpb ana .._. _,. Roy Smalley delivered RBI '-V~ doubles in the Ne w York Y a.nkee9' aix·run third inning and Sbaae Rawley 1eatte~ elaht hits aa Minneeota fell, 7-4 . . . Milwaukee's Mike Caldwell shackled Texu on tlve hita and Gorman Tboma• and Paul Molitor acored on outfielders' throwing errors to pace a 3-0 victory over UPeHAW Tex.as . . . Pat Tabler drove Ned CoUe«t. aaaistant public ~lationa ~ director of the Chicago Cubs, after the aeaaon opener at Wrigley F ield was postponed by rain: "It fouls up our playoff rotation." in five runs with a bues-loaded triple and a hues-loaded single, while Lea Barker and Ed Glfllll combined on a lix hitter as Cleveland downed the Chicago White Sox, 6-3 . . . Larry HendoD knocked in three runa with a llrat- lnning triple to back the aix-hit pitching of Du Petry as Detroit turned Seattle away, 4-0 . . . Bo.ton's game at Oakland was rained out. Wranglers strike Gold TEMPE, Ariz. -Rookie EE Injuries key in NBA -quarterback Alan Riaher fired three 4 • > aecond-half touchdown pal8eS to give the Arizona Wranglera a 24-3 United lnju.rlee to Phlladelphia'a Moeee m Malone and Phoenix'• Maurice Lucu have given their teama' underdog opponents high hopes for today'a Staie. Football League victory last night over the Denver Gold and a share of fl.rat place ln the Padlic Division. National Bulcetball A.odatklO playoff games. Malone, the league'• leeding rebounder, ia aufferlng from tendinitis in the right knee and an inflammation of the left knee, and ia not expected to be at his productive best for the 76ers against the New York Knicb in the opening game of their best-of-eeverl F.utern Conference temifinal aeries at Philadelphia. Arizona, with the league's worst defensive record, intercepted five pasaes before a crowd of 21,557 at 70,030-seat Sun Devil Stadium and evened Its record at 4-4 in the USFL Pacific Division. Denver and the Loe Angeles Exp~ are a1ao 4-4. Lucu, Phoenix' leading rebounder and aecond-lN<iing acorer, suffered ligament damage in hia left small toe du.ring the SUN' loes to Denver Thunday night ana la not expected to play again8t the Nuggets. With the llCOre Ued 3-3 and 6:38 left in the third quarter, Rb.her and runnlJl8 back Calvin Murray hooked up on a 54-yard pus play with 5:38 left in the third quarter. Murray, who finished with 125 yards ruah1ng on 22 carries, caught the ball at Denver's 42-yard line and weaved his way into the end zone for the game-winning touchdown. BEACH CITIES TRACK ... From Page 81 jump, leading a 1-2 (Mark Palmer) finiah for the Sea Kings. "What I liked best WU simply OW' team'• compeUtivenem," said Tomlin. 'Torte ocmina t.-k like that, Pabner gettJ.na 9eCCOd in the hi&h jump (6·2), Vince McGu.inne&a going from 42~ to 44-2 OD bia last jump in the triple to get aeoond ... " Anderaon. who was up.et by Woodbridee'• Eric Schermerhorn in the 88(}, was happy he could respond with the victory in the m.tfe despite the alow time (for him). ''I know I can run the mile Wlder 4:10," said the C.dM senior. "My goal ta to go under 4:05.'' Aliboush Corona del Mar dominated. there were indeed other 'f.arkling efforts - e.peclal y Schermerhorn of Woodbridge, Marina High aprinter Chip Rish and Fountain \1 alley bwdler Rick Nlchola. Schermerhorn, a 6-0 junior. came out of nowhere to nail Andenon in the half mile in only b1a aixth try at the event and after being tddellned t~ much of the ..an with • ~ injury to hla foot. Hia 880 time WU 1:~9.17, and he WM aeoond in the 440 (48.85) and third in the long jump (20-8). "We don't really know bla potential," aaid Woodbridge c.o.ch George VarYUI. "lt'a h1a fint year ln the 880. He waa a hurdler last year, but with hla speed and ~ country ability, Edison wins tournament in softball we twitched to the 880. It's his natural event." Schermerhom's split was 57.0. Ri1h. who miued a shot to double in the aprlnta when he WU dbQuallfied in his 100 heat for false starting, was a convincing winner in the 220 and in hla anchor leg of the 440, which capped a 44.67 clocking for theV~ Nichol.a 14.85 gave him the high hurdles by one-hwwlredth of a eecond. The only diuppointment was really just a simple aettlement with reality. Huntinston Beach dlstance star Gus Qulnonei, who helped his teammate. clinch the Sun.et League championship Thunday and set a Mt. San Antonio College Belays record with an 8:~.8 in the 3,000 meten Frid4y. finally ran out gaa, settling for second in the two-mile with a 9:27 .~4 aa Mater Det'a Mitch F.ddy overtook the Oilen' star and won It going away ln 9:22.59. * ... ""' a. .. .....,.,. ...... ..... ~ ....... .. 100 -1. Wer1ln (CdM). l0.0: 2. """""' (.,.._ o.I), 10.1t; S. ~' (~ V*V), 10. tt: 4. Nklhde (FV). 10.41; ....... (OoMrt Vl9W). '°.47. 220-1. ~~ 22.53: 2. Pendl9ton (~~ A07; l. Merun {COM}. :n.oe; 4. ..... no1 ~ ...__..n 1 .42: a. Harry<~ ~.t2. ,._ - . ._, ~ Hiia), -.-: 2. 8cllerrnerllorn (Wo9cl'brldge), 49.85; 3. t.tcouln,_ (CdM), 50.IO, •. Spene (FV), auo, a.~~ Dll). ~.11. ''° -1. ~" (Woodbf\doe), 1;11 11; 2. At1deteon (Cdl.f), 1:59 SO; :t 8iffllN (!MM). 1:.M.N: 4. o.1!11Wt (Me1er Del). f!OO.OOc I . "•"'"Y (W .. tmln•ter), 3:00~2. Mlle -1, AnW~ (CdM). 4:29 ... : 2. Mmlne:r (Mater Del), 4:~1.Af: 3. ~ (HI). 1:12.U; 4. Oote (Hewpon HarbOr), 4:• n: " QlrtlUe (MilllCn vi.to>. 4:3a.30. ~ -'· l!ddY (M ... °""' •..U.M; a. ~ (H8I. 1-.21 "4; l. ~ (Mater 0.0. •.tUt; -4. Holllnd (OdM). t:6Ufc 6 ....-mocnine~oa. 121H4 -'· CM MM; I. Or~ E Vlejo), , ...... 3. lorenMn (t.fa1• 4. Yt*"-{1Ag1.Wi 8-lfl), 1UO: ~ Tcrot. ti.la. o:c~~tT:i9'~~ 40. f: •. Arno 11e11 OtetMnt•J, •o.ae:··a: .... {\AIUNI ......,,. 40-6. 440 ,....._~.1. M4Wina (Karman. Marter, ~ ...,.,, 64.17: a. Ootona dlt .._, .... ~ .. ...,..... .......... 4. '°"'**' I/_,, 41.19; e. 01$Hl e!IO V,._,, 48.41. MIM :=ii'· COfOM tMI Mat (,one, ....,._ MoOI h._). Sft,47; I. ~ ~&-............... 4, ~._·~·a. .... -. ua.4. .... -,}..,.'°"" ..... 1.'lt'l'=:.~ =::. ~l'°· (Ila) ca.rn. (Ml). lft4S u -t. --bwaer (NNpOtt ~). n.m• .....-NOOti); f. .,_... ~ "!1!.f!>~•'"mc a...,..........,.~>. Mt'...,," IO-N: ........... (He), Tfn.:e:--~ =='-~ :::: I. tl'I '=!1>. •H: 4' ~ =--"-'" .. .. ........ , (IMM), fllV -1. DIM ~· .....,_ eoatfl. 1Mi .. ,..._ """-'J. tt~··ll:> 4, Pi.1H C'll), \ I t, M.Ue (\.-. ..,,. ..... -t.L.-M~~I;~ JE~o.t.· ..... "T,;;a w~. ~""it al·!! t Off-road drivers compete LAS VEGAS-Several area off-road racing drivers have entered the 16th annual MINT 400 beginning Thund.ay. The race la generally regarded aa the richest and largest u well u the toughest off·roed race ln the world. Offidala of the race are antidpeting u many u 450 · off·roed racing can and trucb to c.b.alleoae the aruelina 100-mlle mountain and deaert courae north of !.as Vegaa. The MINT 400 has attracted entriea from all over the Uni~ Statee and forelan countries and feature• a combination of profeaional race drlver9 from other fonna of motor apona and otf·roed enthusiasta. They'll be comJ:inai In a variety of specially gned oU- road vehicfes, from lingle and two-eeat unlimited racln8 can to modified two-wheel and four- wheel drive trucks . A list of U'8 oompetiton by clata: cv.ae 1-Mb Lund (HuntqtOn ...._, CLA91 t -Wttllam Ollurch (New~ort '=' ~ ..... (Colta ~ 9tan , cw•·~ '*'Y 11w1tt•~. Cl.All 1-9en ...... (lrvlne) CL.Al& 7a-Gatv L Myar9 (NNllOtt 9Mol\l CLAll I-Jett and Joe M•o,.llereon (~ Cl.All t-"-Nl l. .._ (IMflek ... "edrfqva =:lfl•teft; G~ry '~r.::r (HuntllnatOn Jdwl, Wiit ~ 04.AA 1()-0.W. ,_...., TOlll "-"/ (eo.til ..... ): ~ ~~ Mtt~ Jotlfl ~ clel -cCAii1~':~on1 ~ IOoeta ::= llllolWct l~ntl•r (lrYIM); Mitch ~=.tao...._, Holbert grab&_ pole RIVBRSIDS (AP) -Al Holbert ••t a JUveulde mMmaUonal ~ay r9COrd ywterctay t1 be wm UM OQl9 ==-=~=Prix of Holbitrt, • 14·19U'-old from Warrl:!toa, Pa ., &oured ~ ............. ,... .... •• a....~..-. ....... -llil!llltl, •JM I Ill .. at M E~oe111•11_... wm Mia wUla ,,m. ...... ; " I Hendrick, Hernandez hot Oeor1• Hedrick hammored a ,. ...... pair ot holmor1 and &ti._ Henudt1 II capped • thl'ff-run tally 1n the llf th l lnn.lna with a bloop 11Jl8l and atao horn r'9d to jJve St. LOulJ a 0-6 oome-lrom- behlnd wln over San 01010 In the National ~que Jut nJflhl. The Pa.cln!t Ju!nocd In front 4-0 In the eecond lnnJ.na aa Ttm l'lbaery hit a balee-loeded triple and ecored on a aqu«"Ut bunt Quick start lifts '-Edisoll ~)' ErJc Slaow . . Atlee Hammaker pitched 1 three· hitter few h.ll ~ ~t ehutout and Clalll Davl1 d.rOve In throo runa with • homer past Vikes The Edlton Hlaih bueNU team baa built • I and HCrflce fly "' San Frandloo •topped the Chtcqo Cube, 6-0. Hammaker, who pitched eevon perfect 1nnlnO a1aln1t Cincinnati in h11 previous atart, did not allow a HCMMIOet hit unU1 the alxth yt'flerday 2 ~-aa.mo cuthJon for the final playoff alo\ ln the Swuiet Leag\le thank.a to ttl win over Marina at ·. Blair Field and Ocean Vlew'• conquest of Wt!ltml.Nter. Here'• how lt happened: Edison 6, Marina 3 . . . Gres Gro11 drove 1n three runa with • tle-breaklnaf fourth-Inning ~e and Joba Denay acattered 1Jx hlta a1 Phi lphla won its ninth ln 10 gamee, 7.3 In Houston . . . Two game. in the NL were poetponed: Montreal at Cincinnati and the New York Meta at AtJanta. The Braves' Bob Horner Joel a three-run homer when the game ln Atlanta wa.s called ln the top of the ~d with the Braves leading, 3-0. Th.e Cha.rgera erup~ for four flrat-tnnina tallies, knocking out V~ •tarter Jeff Prato, who failed to retire a hitter. Charlie Gueat and Randy Hamilton led off wlth wallu and Todd Naan tripled to left center to aend home two run.e. Todd Mabe waa hit by a pl&.ch and Marina aummoned rel.lever Dave Ernmona. Mabe then moved to eeoond on a ground out and with the runneni moving on the pitch, Steve Overeem bunted down the third-base line. The throw to fl.rat beat Overeem, but Nash lllCOred and Mabe allo beat the throw to the plate. NHL playoffs resume another begins thl.a evening aa the , One aeries will be completed and ~ National Hockey League Stanley Cup playoffa resume on two front.a. In Marina got one back in the second off wlnnina pitcher Jeff Kwolek thanb to a single by Bi11 Dodson, a pair of erron and a sacrifice Oy to right by Greg Neff. Botton, the Bruin• will have the home-lee advantage againa1 Buffalo in the eeventh and deciding match of their confront.Allon. The Sabres rebounded from a 9-0 blowout in Boston last Wedneaday night to knot the eerles with a ~-3 victory in Buffalo Friday . . . In Edmonton this evening, the Oilers and Chicago Black Hawka are paired ln the opener of their best- of-aeven Campbell Conference final matchup. The two teams had nearly identical regular- aeaaon records with F.dmonton earning the home lee with its 106 pointa to Chicago's 10~. The Chargera put single runs on the board in the next two frames aa Paul Elllaon and Enc Conant delivered RBI singles. Marina scored lta last two runa on sacrifice flies by Steve Mojica and Shane Florea. The latter enjoyed a 3-for-3 afternoon for the Vlkinp. Kwolek, who wu victimlz.ed by five EdWn miacuea ln the win, atruck out five and walked five in going the diatanoe. Connors rewarded with dip F.di.aon remains one game behind co-leaders Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach with two key ,:cames this week: F.di5on meets Huntington Beach at Mile Square Park Wednesday night (7), then returns to the same site· Friday night (7) to duel Fountain Valley. Top-seeded Jimmy Connon • struggled to a three-eet victory over Ocean View 8~ West minster 7 Hui~ Pfister in the semifinals oC a tennis tournament ln Las Vegas. AfteJ' eliminating the unseeded Pfl.ater. 6-3, 1-6, 7-5. Connors walked off the court and, fully- cloth~, jumped into a nearby swimming pool, drawing an ovation from those looking on . . . Fonner Phoenix Open winner Jeff MUebell and VJc Tortorici shared an 8-under-par 208 lead after the third round of the Tal.lah.as3ee Open goU tournament ... Manager Billy MartlD of the New York Yankees, who was fined $5,000 by Lee MacPlaaU, American League president, tor a heated exchange with an wnplre said he i.a not going to argue the flne. The Seahawks' second league success of the season was anything but easy, despite a 7-1 lead entering the bottom of the seventh. Westminster parlayed seven singles Into six runs, acoring three times on tour hits after two were retired. Dean Douty, who relieved Jeff Biggins in the seventh, worked the eighth to earn the win, his second of the year. Ocean View won the game in the eighth u Adam Buder walked and raced home one out later as Phil Hillman drove a double to the gap ln right center. Ted Gaulin and Chris Spaniak luhed out three hits apiece to pace the Seahawks' 15-hit attack. Each had a double and two singles. Wadkins' pleasant surprise Sutton's final-hole bogey provides margin in T of C CARLSBAD (AP) -Lanny Wadkina' eyes opened wide when he was informed he had sole control of the lead In the Tournament of Champions yesterday. • "Well, surprise, surprl!e:· 88.ld Wadkins. who was in the clubho use d iscussing his hard-won round of 71 when Hal Sutton 3-putted for bogey on the 18th hole and dropped out of a Ue for the top spot. "I am surprised, rea.11 y, to be leading. considering how I played today. It was very hard work. I didn't expect to be leading: but I'll tAke it," said Wadkins, the defending title-holder in thla elite event that brlnfs together only the winners o PGA Tour titles from the lut 12 months. "No,'' he r esponded to a question, "I've never won the aame tournatnent two years in a row. "But there's a firat time for everything. The big thing about beinS a aefending champion is that you know you can win, you :.l°" can win on th.la goll Wadkins, who one-putted the la.at three bole. he played, finished three rounds at 208, eight shots under par on the ti,- 911 yard La Costa Country Club coune. Sutton, playing a full hole behind Wadkins, was tied for the top until he 3-putted the 18th s hortly after the national television cam eras completed their coverage for the day. Sutton , winner of the Tournament Players Championship earlier in the seuon, had a round of par 72 for the day and was tied at 209, a slngle shot oU the pace. with Jay Haas. Haas cloaed up• with a 3-under-par 69 In the cool, breezy weather. Gary Hallberg, with a 68 that repre.ented the best round of the day, waa next at 210, only two strokes back going into today's flnal round of the cha.e for a $72,000 first prb.e. Gary Koch and PGA champion Ray Floyd were next at 212. four under par and four off the pace. Koch had a 69 and Floyd 72 despite a double bogey-6 on the final hole, where he broke a club coming out of tree trouble, failed to reach the green in regulation and eventually three-put1ed. Jack Nlcklaua, a five-time Stacy dodges obstacles ST. PEI'ERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -GUl'tlng winds and ateady rain were not the only obstacles Hollia Stacy tJICed yaiero.y en route to • 3-under~par 69 and three-ahot lead after three rounda of the LPOA S&H Golf Cl.aslc. The 11-time tour winner and defend1na clwnpion of W. event laid tM IJftDI on the e,023-yard Puldena Golf Club ooune ~te cut differently than the flnt two da)'1. c::at.mina uncertainty for her pu~pme. "They WtH 1lngle cut and much slower ioday," abe uid, Chouah lldmowledaiN! that ibe weather waa ••terrt6J.e•T and had a .,_ter effect en the fteld. .. When you had a 115-or 20-tooter, \houah. U pr..nted t.notMr problem ln edditJon to the w.t},er," Stacy added. ';It wm much men dittkult '° )Jdae the apeed." Stacy finished the day with a 54-hole total of 11-under.par 206. wbile lleCOnd-round l~ra Janet Cole-1 and JoAnne C4mer fell three and five shot.a off her pace, rapecUvely. Lookin8 aheed to today'• final round. she u.kt: "I handle beinC a leader very well. What f1 important to me la tr)'ill8 to play u £ood a aoU u I can." ~O Ann "\Yuh.am Wal We ahota beh.lnd the leader at ~-under 211 and Lori KWlbold wu next at 212. Deedee Laaker, Debbie Meil1erlln and AUce MWer wen! buDcbed at 21S. Th.e adwr. w.t.he.r cawed ~ to II*' on the ~OUoyard Pawiena OoU Club ~ the' ~<s.d lb• lowest. aut ever on the women'• tour Prlday - 2-cJYW-par 14'. ......... ,~C..t•Meil!ll ~ .............. .. ---- winner of this event and tied for the lead at the start of the third round, shot him8eU out of it with a 77 that put him at 214. Nic klaus said the back problem that forced him to withdraw from the Masters wasn't to blame. "My back had nothing to do with it," he said. "I just didn't play very well. I played about as well as I aoored." When asmall boy came out of the gallery and asked Nicklaus for a golf ball, the golfer replied ''I lost them all.'' Maybe he didn't lose them all, but he put one in the water on the fifth and made double bogey. He once made a 12-footer for bogey and seemed to be in various forms of trouble all day. Tom Watson, holder of the U.S. and British Open title, shot a 7 l and was at 219, well out of the hunt. LEASE A· 1983 COUIAR FOR _s199u PER MONTH* Leasing lan't right tor everyone, but may be the answer to Y04K new car needs. LeaM • bta"4 new 1983 Mercury Cougar tor $109.26 per month on a ctOMd end ...... Vlltth no down peyrMnt anct se month frM malntenence & warranty. Come tn and help u. ftnd tM right ..... plan for you. .. --------------------------- Well-rested Lakers open playoffs today Surprising Blazers test def ending champs INGLEWOOD (AP) -Tht injury riddled Loi Ans•IH Lakera, deftndlna National Ba1ketball Auoctatlon champion., are hopln1 that a week'a reet wW be belpf\41 when they open their playoff .euon today at home a1aintt the Portland Trail Bluen. The Laken didn't expect to be facina Portland, which went Into lt• flrat-round aeriea aa an Wlderd<>i lgai.nat SMttle. But the Tr.U Bluen awept their beat- of-three firat-round .erte. ln two games, defeatln1 the Sonka 105-96 in Ge.me 2 Friday ni&ht to gain their flnt playoff aeries victory alnce they won the NBA title in tin, and advanced to the second round agalnat Loa Anaele.. Rams trade draft picks with Oilers HOUSTON (AP) -The Houston Oilers and the Rams swapped flrat -round draft cholcea laa( night, giving the Rams the second pick 1n Tuesday's National Football League draft and the Oilera th.e third aelectlon. The Rama alao gave their fourth-round pick in both the 1983 and 1984 NFL college drafta to the Oilers, Houston spokesman Bob Hyde aaid. Southern Methodist running back Eric Dickeraon la expected · to be the eecond player choeen in the draft, and Dickenon bu Mid he did not want to play In Houston. The Rams are Teportedly interested in Dlckeraon, who pYiced third in Heisman Trophy balloting and led SMU to an unbeaten season last year. SMU finlahed second to Penn State in postaeason polling. Dickenon, who attended high ecbool in Sealy, Texas -50 miles from Houston -and Oilers running back ·Earl Campbell are the top two rushers in Southwest Conference hiR>ry. The Lakera, re1ular eeuon c hampion• ot the Pacific Divlaton, drew a byt in the openlna round of the playoffe,. -Whlfe they were ldle, they were trytna to ftsure out how to beef up their 1quad to overcome On Tl' tfl!d•J' Cltannel • •t J a1S• gap. left by lnjurie. to rookie forward Jamea Worthy and veteran forward Bob McAdoo. McAdoo wu aidellned Feb. 16 when he suffered a broken toe in practice. A ecrew waa put lnto the toe during aurpry March 13, and altbou1h McAdQo waa l'NCtivated a week aco. It wu uncerta1n how much he would be able to contribute during the playoffa. "lt'a getting .better," he laid, "but lt'a still .:>re. My toe la the aize of two toea, and there are only certain shoes I can wear:"' Worthy suffered a fractured left tibia during a game againat PhO!!nlx and had three screwa inlert.ed ln 8W'ler'Y April 12. He will be on crutches for three months. The L~kers' efforts to maintain a champlonah.lp 8quad met with ~ results. Fonner Trail Blazer Billy Ray Bates was dgned to a 10-day contract April 12. But five day. later, Loa Angele. decided lt didn't need a shooting auard and ~eued Bates. Bates was replaced by pow.er forward Steve Mix, who was cut by Milwaukee two weeka ago. The Laken then put guard Eddie Jordan on the injured list with a sprained toe in order to reectivate McAdoo and were counfin8 on reinforcina the team by ligiUng forward ~Ike Banto' -.ho played in Italy this year. That plan fell through laat Sunday, 45 minutes before the Lakera' deadlipe for submitting their 12-man playoff roster. The Philadelphia 76ers atW owne~ right• to Bantom and their aakinR price -two first· round dralt pie~ -waa too steep for Loe Angeles. Scott McGregor TOUGH. • • From Page 81 In the third, Dempeey aingled to center to open the inning. , went to third on Shelby's alngle to right, and acored on Fora•a ground ball to FoU at abort. McGregor, meanwhile, jua~ fattentd up on nis num~er agalnat the Angell. Kia earn run average qaln.t them ia no 2.47, while the Angela, as a , are hitting a meager .222 agalnat the southpaw. "Obvtoualy, there's a mental thins to It, too" McGu:gor admitted. ''There'a an incentive, but I think most of it la just ~home." Added Carew: "He's been tough on ua. The yeani I've been here I can't remember the last time we beat him." * ANG1La *>TU -._..... ~ whO ~ Fridey~ ~ a muacle pull In ... upper left ~ -oi-i .... night oft by ~.._ _,_ ... Mc:NMwa uld,,. alao planned to rMI Reggie again today. holMna wfth tfla '-!!'& two off ~ t~ and .,....,..,_, INt .>a..-. would ti. able to r9Mn IO the llMUP by W~ when tM Al'Ollle ,... DWoft In a tin.I two-oame •. A&ied" he OOUld plnah hit, Jedl90n uld: .. , probably could, but I'd rather not." ... ~moo-a "*...,_the night oft. noting that Ille left·hancs.d McGregor It J*tlculerty tough "on certain laft~" • . . Lllft-Nnded pltol1er ... C>weNMe, wtlO WU lut with Ille Oalcland A'&, hid l>Ml1 pllc:Nng batting prte11oa for the Moel& the .... couple of ~ McH-. Nlcf there'• nothing more to Owctllnlllo'1 appe&ranc• ~ than the r.ct he WW!ted to WOf'k out. • • Going Into lailt night'• geme, the At1Q911 -. -&glng 5.4 """ flllcf 10. 1 lllt9. .. Today't ( 1 o'cloclll) HrlH flnala wlll pit De1111t1 ...... (1-3) 119. 0... QeRa (0-1). It wltl ba OolU'I ftrlt etW1 of the -· Pitching paces Vanguard sweep walked the next three batten to loee hia shutout. Joe Avila picked up the last leVeJl outa to record the aave. Oran99 Cout DAILY PILOT /8undey, April 24, 1813 D • racing results MCOND MCL One mile peoe Almond Ktno (t.lerrlM\) 4.IO 2 IO 2 80 9unMI INdl Medland) a IO Nlltlw Hunter~ a IO 2 40 Allor-St · t Roy, Fuff POClll .. Tfmt! 1.8-2/1. TI-.> MC .. One mite p.oe, a.m Letona (And«IOl'I\ t 00 5 20 3.40 PNaldanllal (Ac*Wl'Nlll 13 20 5.00 Yealdo \Longo) 2.10 Al10 raoed. llronia Rover. La ~1111. ~Demon, ,...., Ntto. Nati.. Skipper f!Me: 1.68 3/1. •IX.ACTA (1·91 paid1102 80 , '°""'" MCa. One m11e ~ 8odallat (Pattlat) 5 IO 2 IO 2 40 Ruetlo &in (Vallandingham) 2 eo 2 20 ,.. Leopetd (Ac:aatmen) S.00 ' Alao recad Time 8q1W1 Baron. Able OolCI. Winter Quote, Patat Onedln Time· 1.57 2/5 fflH Mca.. Ona mtte pace Ptfw Council (Toddl 15 eo 8 80 e 20 Kra&.r• Popc>y (Hyman) t 20 6 eo ...... Manne (C.ogl!M) 7 00 AleO racad: Edwtir, a.tac Adloe, Ooubla 0.., Chief 0uy, T ewtlltl Lad. HoC>la Ring Time: 1:58. • IXACTA (H) paid eea.eo llXTH MOS. One mlle peoa Lord Neutrino (81Mthl 11 eo 4.80 3.eo OutOlly (Kuebler) 4 40 4 .IO Yoong 8-1 (Longo) 3.20 AllO reced: Torpid• Knight, BC Count, lllwnkl. C.U Party. Johnny Mac. Aaron Chip. Tim« 1:58-4/5. az UACTA (5-4) paid 191.20. ISYIJn'H MC .. Ona mlta peoa. Tact w..,. <Lono<>l 1.eo 4.eo 2.ao Tarport Donny (Andarlon) 19.40 e.oo Alot!bum (Todd) 4.80 Aleo raoacl: Crui-ay, Mcl<Mlna, Brambte 8c:l'ambte, Soottllh LOCll, a.. Rowt, Watbfo. Time: 1:58 2/5. az UA~TA (7-~I paid 1109.40. • "'°" ltX (1-1..a-a-6-7) paid 12$,341.80 .tth one winning tldcat (lbt ~). t2 Plolll Six oonao1at1on paid I 1to.IO with 4e wlnnlna 'kllll1t1 (five horN1). 12 Plclll 81• 1Cratcfi conlOlatlon paid I 1~.20 •Ith 18 winning Uckau (tour ~. one ac:ratcn) llCIHTM Mca. One m1e peoa. Daemond (o.omat) • 40 5 40 4 00 c.otaln SllYar. (Andaraon) 7 00 4 20 UgMln 8llm (Bak•) 6 80 Aleo racael. Dente Royal, Tr11*11 CNroar. ltl1h Faden, Howdy Stet. DO-One Mo HlatMlly. OO-Flnl1hed aacond, dl1qu1llllad and pl.cad 11'11. Time; 1.58 215 az UACTA (6-2) paid 162 40 .....,.. Mca. Ona m111 peoa Pr~ Oeboma (Vallandlngham) &uo 12.40 8.eo Frea Tum (Kuabtat) 4.eo 3.00 Mlatat Majaatle (Ancltnon) 3.80 Muter Joka. Winfield Armbro, 0.nall, BnlndlnO Iron, Four Klf'IOI. Time: 1.57 215. az UACTA (4-9) paid 1187.20. TI!NTH MC .. OM mlta peoa. CourllQ90U9 Aed (Kuebtar) 2.80 2 20 OUI Empire Kntgnt (Spr\gg9) 3.20 out Mr. DalrM (Oennia) -· out AltO raoacl: Mac>la Fritz, Bal C1191n9 Time 1:55 4/5. ta UACTA (5-2) P1ld t 17 00 ..., .. Anita YHT'UDA Y't MIUL Tl =~~~~ .. --) L«d'• IAMle~MoCar1on1 1 20 2.eo 2 eo O.W '1 Ote.m W~I uo uo 1.1oou1ion.,., (Oallf'lou_..) 7.20 Al10 raced: Malmaf1on. Min MHh, Deceptive. Regal'• Fancy. l!lural of Song, JullanM, Conaldw .... lrtllJ. Time: 1:H 116. NCOND MCI. t•-' turtonga T SIN lyndrome ~l 21.20 t 1.40 5 eo Thunder of lion l"-'1YI 4.20 3 00 Top Ent1t1alnar ("-drou) 3.40 Alto raoacl: 8«oollurnclludl. Pelf of Aoel, Cllanca'I lm.ge, A Algllt Idea, Mr. HollywoOd, Oenlul, emla )(Ing, Our Larry. Ol1lltuelon Tilnr. I 17 S/5 • DAil Y DOUeLa (4-t) paid I 123 80 THIN> "4CI. 7 luttonga Soc:r1111 (Mcearron) 4 oo 2 80 2.20 Lava 81111 (Oalahoulaaya) 4 40 2 IO P:linl Hiiia (Ohar•) 2 IO Alto raced Liiac Ridge, Au111n .. C W • Troapar. Time 1.22 4/5 • .. llXACTA (6-3) paid U4 00 'OURTH Mca. e•" furlonQ• 8ajoooo (Moeatronl 10 00 4 20 S.20 f.lltt• Ana (0.W-ya) 3 eo 2 80 Straight Story rE1nc.y) 3 40 Aleo raoad'. Dilll. Wotld Idol. Gran' Jeanine, ReltM, Ing Emy. Time t. t7 1/5 .,..,.. AAOI. 1i. ..... ....,..,,..,~ 1.40 Ito 2IO lia6ollllrlll t..... . JO uo Tlall .... fl0.W I !1'91 UO ,... ,..... ,..,... ,..,.,__, Colldla. ..... ~~4/1 .. OAO'T A {t.2) peld .. I IO l(xnt MO-. 1i. ........ Outi.w WOf'¥'1 ('9drouT I 40 I to uo What& ..... lM<ICarron) ) 00 I.AO Dllmoun CT OfO) uo Aleo r109d· Hert» win., Lav-. Cowu, ~. Time 1:411/0 MVlltTM MO&.~ 0-CllY (,__, 11 00 7.20 4.20 COyoearo (,.._oa) I 00 1.10 Jelt/ty'• o.vld (Moeerron) 3.40 Aleo reoed: Otytnp1ad'1 Ion. Oartaolan, 'oyl'I Aalll. nm.. 1:10 :u5. • lllACT• (5-2) l*d 114100 .. "'" llX (1+2-6-6-&) l*d • '11!66 40 with ta wlnf*lO Hc*et8 (lilt hot911). A Ptdl Ila oonao1e11on peld I 114.IO wflfl 7U w1nn1na tlcllall (five hor ... ). t2 fOtck 81• 10r1tcft contoletlon Ptlld ffH.00 with -~ ~(four hot9aa. one eCJaldl). ltQH1'M uca. .... lution01 CNnook P-(Ptnc;ay) 4 80 S.40 2.IO Shan1ltJ1e (Hft'lay) 7 .IO 4.to f.W1""'*"' (Plaroa) a 20 Al10 raced Kangroo Co11rt, Tim• to botode. l'laolmal\. ~ to M\'1io time' 1 16" 216 N9fTH RAC .. 1 1/18 m"11. Noble Tradition (Pe<lrou) 9 40 5 20 4 00 JlmMI (Dalehou11eyoa) 4.oo 3 eo ...... of l(uwWt (Valanlullla) 7.00 Aleo •aced Star ol Dewan, Val Oe Roi. Pandllcuy, Early Settler. Twtl*enham II Tlmr. f'..43 3/5. .. IXAC'TA 13-11 paid 1111.50 Attendat\ce: 4t,S71. Panthers go by air to tunible Express PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Quarterback Bobby Hebert threw touchdown pasaes of 26 yards to Anthony Carter and one yard to Mike Cobb to lead the Michigan Panthers to a 34-24 United States Football League victory over the Los Angeles ExprelS last night. Novo Bojovic kicked a team- reoord four field goals to help ice the Panthers' victory, their third ln a row. Loi Angeles led 3-0 with 4:32 remaining in the first quarter when Hebert, who entered the game as the sixth-best pasaer In the league, found Carter alone· at the 6-yard line, and the fonner Michigan All -American sidestepped a tackler to give the Panthers a 7-3 lead. Los Angeles took a 17-13 half-time lead on a 2-yard run by Tony Boddie and a 22-yard pass from Mike Rae to Kria Hain.el. But Michigan bounced beck on Cobb'• touchdown and a one- yard dive by John Willia.aw that followed a Rae fumble at his own 21-yard line. The former Southwest LouWan.a State quarterback hit Cobb ln the comer of the end zone with lJ 8eC:Ol1da left in the third quart.er u Michigan built ita adv~t.age to 31-17. AYSO signup!! set American Youth Soccer Organization (A YSO) aigng::: Region 117 (Huntington ) wll1 be held Saturday from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. at Talbert School in Huntington Beach. The Teague la open to youths 6-18 yea.rs of age. For more lnfonnation, phone 984-6692 or 963-~77. The Southern California College baseball team received a pair of pitching gems yesterday and came away with a double-header aweep over vialtlng Polnl Loma in NAIA Division 3 action. The V anguarda tallled their two runa ln the first game ln the third inning u Howard Wellema lingled and atole eecond with cme out, scoring on Jeff Haun'• irtple. Randy Connor then~ in 11.aun. LIDO Ricley Gonzalez went the d.ls\ance in the aeven-innlnc opener, ltrikl.nc out eigb"t and not walldna a better aa the v anguarda posted • 2--0 iriUUlph. In the nightcap which sec won 5-1. Tim Fortugno took a Do-hitter into the aeVt!nth inning, but after allowlng a two.out alngle, momentarily loat bia control and UM IUSll TICIETS Excellent Seats Suite Level for Info. C•ll 141-1111 sec put the tee0nd 1ame away with a five-nm axth. thanka ln pert to RBI~ by Dana Jacobi and Todd . The anguarda are 10-6 in conference y. 1978 CADILLAC SEVILLE SAVE MONEY ON YOUR INSURANCE P'\111 vinyl f.ldOry cop. AMl1'M lape pla)'W. leather covered -tin&.,.. & wire wheel cape.(~. A '8995 CadJlJ"1c V&lue ~~~I AvaiJ.lW All a... lli'6)1rt ~,,.,.. .... All h*9,.. TILi. ~ • .cw. ,.. ll .:W'"'a.n MONTM&Y 'AYMIJO .. ,,_.,,,, 1mr:n .... ~~ :::::tf." RABBITT ~ANCE 44 1 Old Newpwt llvcf Newport 9-h, C. 631-7740 N~ 12600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa DJLLJ\j (714) 540-1860 WANTED: Adventurous People SPECTATOR'S FLEET HEADQUARTERS For A 200-Mtle Cycling Adventure Thru Scenic Southern California May 14-16, 1983 Proceeds To Support Programs That Prevent And Control Lung Disease BE A TREKKERI Write Or Call Today For Details· AMERICAN LUNG ASSOCIATION of Orange County 1717 N. Broadway, Santa Ana, CA 92706 (714) 13S-LUNC FOR LIFE AND BREATH AMERICAN :j: WNO ASSOCIATION l··Jb-.w· ' INCLUDING SPECTATOR FLEET INFORMATION 36tb Annual Ensenada Race $15 per penon Lave tbe dock at 10:30 am for startlna area Limited allPI for oat of town entrlel a.;...;;__ ______ ~-----REl~VATION8 (71•)6'5-1662 ---~--~------~-.----..-.. t • 4 •• • 114 Oranp• Oo•••. DAIL v PILOT /lunday, Aprll 14, 1883 Rustlers hold on to win swim c hampions hip The Oolden W•t eou.,. men and women'• l'wtm i.m iook It down to the lilt few even\11.ut Ncht before cla1ml.n.I tM &o..ith Cout Con1erenc. dwnplonahlp ln iht ""Banta Ana pool. Th• Ruadtn ou~ J\&U.rton, 6&1-476 ln the men'• cetqory, whilt th• women nmed out Orani• Cout. '89 ~ ·'8& ~. lndivklually, Oranp C.0Ut11 Bruce Manball wu the unly compeUtor to capture three eventa dw1nl the meet, W1nn1nl the 100 butterfly, 200 fly and 200 lndivtdual medley. ln the ~· he aet a new con.ftNnot ecandard ln the 200 fly, wtnnlna ln l:&e.82. Tammy LaVellt of Oranae Coast swept all five of her evenca dwina the meet, aettJ.ng recorda In the 600 and 100 fl'Mltyle event.. Tht top four flnllhera In each event wllJ compete Thutldar ~Saturday In the Southern c.a11fomla Champtonahlpa at West Valley College. Meanwhile, ln the Pac1.tic Cout Conference championahJpa at Saddlebeck, the Gauch08' men aquad notched the team championship by outdutllna Palomar, &e0-602. The wln revened the dual meet championship by tht Cornet.. Vince V....Uo, who wu an easy victor ln the 200 butterflr yeeterday ln 1:58.7. won the award as the oula\aJ\Clin8 male athlete of the meet. V....Uo compiled three victories during the three-day champlonahip, aetting school and conference reootde In each wln. Llu McL.au1h11n of Saddleback waa voted outatandini women'• athlete. She capped her efforta yeeterday by taking the 100 breaststroke· (1 :10.6) and completed the meet with five overall willl, lncludlna three achoo! records. Sadd leback'• women's team, however, fell ahort of Palomar In the team atandlngs, notching 467 poin\I to the Comets' 506. Pro golf • suinmar1es T of C a.otge Cedle 11.12.12-215 JM C~) 8111 Kretnrt -.n---2115 IAnny W1 kine •7·10-71-208 MMll lye 08-76-71-2115 Jey Hau 10-1o-ee-208 LlnY Rink• ro.a.n-215 Hel l\illon eT-70-12-208 Alea C.--74-10-71-215 Git)' H•llll«9 12·70.88-210 Jim Deni 71·13-72-218 Oaty ICOCh S7·7M8-212 lee Elder 72-71-73-218 llaymond l'1oyd N-72·12-212 9ob 8.cl9y 72·74-70-218 9ot1Dy Clamp«t 12·71-70-213 • C..... 71-70-70-218 IMO AOlll 7,_..72-214 Lee Cllill ~ 13-73-70-218 'UU'f Zoell« 74-12-81-214 Joe Hao-08-TS-12-218 J.c;k NICll'-ts-72·n-214 R8IC>/I lMlOrutn 12·12·72-218 Ctalg •tadler ... ,3-7'-215 =. Oulgley 13-71-72-218 Wt )'M LIM 12-*74-215 'Moody 71·74-71-218 Tom Ktt• •7&-72-218 Jimmy PMCNI 7&-88-73-218 CAMI! ..... , 71-71-74-218 Tom Welton 11·72·71-219 L.PQA ~t MIU NICOiette 74-70-75-219 • ( .. It., ........ P1L) Ktllll ,.,~, 70-71-7S-219 HOiie Stecy 70 Ill 88 208 '"'" LltlJll• 71-74-71-220 Janet Col9e 87-8&-72-208 OH MOf"tn 71·71·78-220 JoAnnt ear,. ~75-210 !d t:ie9ct 76-7tr70-221 Jo Ann WuNln -.ee-74-211 lootl Hoefl 78-71·7t-22S lM1 HwchOld 72-*72-212 Johnn> "4111tr 8t-75-79-223 Marty Olcllenon e&-72·73-213 Tim~,,. 7$-78-75-224 o..dM .._. 8&-72·73-213 8ob 0110.r 75·75-7&-225 Allele Miiier 71-88-74-213 1o11 ene.i.,-n-11-11-225 Debbie Mettttt11n 11-e&-74-213 1111 ~ 71-71-72-228 Altllndr• Rhnrdt 76-7CMl8-214 Tom Wti911()9f 77-71-71-229 K•thy WNtwotlll n.-.7~214 P•)'M Stew"1 T5-7t-74-221 C.thy ~ 72..-.73-21"4 Petty Shelfwl 12.-.74-214 TallehMMe 01*'1 8onlW Btywi1 7._..72-215 Jen Mltc:htll ...... 71-208 Pet 8'eclley ee-73-73-215 Vic Ton0tlOI N-70.70-208 Clint John90tl 70-72·73-215 loll CNt• 7~7-208 C.lhertnt ~ 72 ..... 74-215 Mlle Money 72~210 Sheley H_., 70-a-77-215 Ot9Q ,.__ 70.70-70-210 Myra Van Hoc.e 71·72·73-218 Terry=... M-70-71-210 Sandrt Pllllner 17·76-74-218 ,._, 7'"7"-211 Pet~ •7t·75-218 -.,. -Muffn ·Dllln 71-70-75-"'1• "911 Celdwell ..-.n-211 ' v A111n M.._ 71·72---212 AyWio Ollamoto 71~78-218 • J Curry ....... 75-212 L.-1 Aini!• •71-78-218 Kenny 1<no11 70-71-71-212 ._. Ooldlrnlltl 71-74-72-217 kip Hollon 70*"73-212 Am'/ 8tr1I ... 73-78-217 LOii Gfenam 87-7S-12-212 Oele ~ 88-13-78-217 llfeet Upper 71-71-70-212 = ~ n:::~:::~~~ Gtty """' 71-71-71-213 •• ..,. ~ -7"71-~217 "-Ttn8ro«* e.-72-12-213 ..,_, ~.-..,... U latQ4n 75-e&-12-213 ~ Lodt 70-74-218 CNl1le ~ 71-7$-70-214 Alea Conwtodt 72-71-~211 Dew ~ger 71-72-71-214 ... Bltlodl 7 ..... 75-218 Gt19 ''"ow 70-74-70-214 Jan St~ ee-73-78-211 HllM!TOr_, 70-73-71-214 ~ Poetiftllllt -.n.111-211 .._ .,__ 1" 74-70-214 Roee ~ 71-71-78-218 T';y ";; 7;:7...,._214 JeMMtlt Kerr 72-70-78-211 Mn Belen 1s-1s.ee-215 L.aKt CoM es-111-n-211 Today's s ports on T V, r adio TELEVISION 10 a.m. (2) -NBA PLAYOFF -Atlanta at BoJton (Game 3). lO:SO am. (7) -USFL FOOTBALL -Boston at Philadelphia. lO:U a.m. (11) -BASEBALL -Dodgers at Plt1aburah. 11:!0 a .m . (4) 7 GOLF -Final round ooveraae of the 'tounwnent of Champlona at La Coa\a Couniry Club In Carlabad. 12:30 l>·m. (2) -NBA PLAYOFF-Ponland at Llbn (Game 1). l:SO ~.m. (4) -SPORTSWORLD -Alexia Ar,uello (77-~. 62 KO.) vs. Claude Noel (29-5, 17 KO•) ln a H1htweight bout from Caracas. Venecuela. 1:46 p.m. (4) -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS - Euaeblo Pedroza (34-3-1, 23 KO.) va. Rocky Lockrid1e (27-2, 23 KO.) In a 1eheduled 16-round bout for the WBA featherweight title from Bonnio, Italy. RADIO Bueb&ll -Dodaen at Pittsburgh, 10:" a.m., KA.BC (790); Baltimore at A11fela, 12:~5 p.m., KNPC ('110). Buketbell -NBA playotfa: Ponland at Wbra. 12:30 ,p.m., K.LAC (~70). MUTM COAIT 0.,.,.....,. T.-lt ..... l.GllldlllW... 1111 1. flulllnen •111 • Ofanee 0... ... l 4. lenta AN 141, I .... ..,. MIOfllo 111, • aww- 1 10, t. o.nttoe 81 1el~4~~ (.,,:: ,~,. ._ Cl'l. 1e:41 11. 4 'l'l, 11:41.14, 1 l••t1•r oot:1. 11:11.H : t lollulll (OW), 17:11.47. 100 lrM -I, ldMondt ('I. i7.~t; t. l'ellMrtlon (I'). 47.M. S. NnU IGW). 47.H 4. JOflfl.on (QW), 0 .01: I. Tho"'" (IAI, 4t.4f; I . .JtllCDll (OCCI. 41.10. 200 baok -1. Cooper ('I. 1:15t.151j_ I. llher J'l. 2:04.H ; $. Lund (11Wl1. 2:ot. O: 4, lpenoer (IA), t:ot.•1: 6. Wlllltme (MIAO), :l:08 et: t. l'k*en (OW), 2: 1lU7. 200 brHtt -1 'oreoll ('I. 111M1I ~COW\.~1111.3 llllt'-Y (OOOll f · 11 M, 4 """ j~IAOI. I'll •1 I Hernande• ~Q:'1o I 11 41, ~ JM let (OW). 100 fty -1 M.,9'\alt (OCOI. 1.le.H tconferctnM '"°'g· f lldtr IGWI. 1·01 It: U rett ~ow1. t :OI u . •· o .... c ~P>. QW), l:OI U , I . OleHWHlll oe. 10. •· llllurd C'l. a.out. 400 ft• ,.._ -1. ,...,on: a. Oolden WHI: I . ••nta Ana; •• Ofenge Ooall. rM*'IC COAIT COMPIMNCI TMm •tandlnge! laddlebaotl, 180; 1 . re1omer, 1011 a. OroNtnont, 171; 4. Ian O ago MMe. 2N. too frM-1. Mtldo11ado (I), 47.7; 2. Hugel 11). 41.4; I.~ (rtlolnat), 41.e: 4. OloMbrennet (8). &0.1, I . Oolden (P). &O.a; 8 ~ CCJ0 4i Noot (I). 1 M 2, I 8'11W!' ~ 2 O 1 Ii I OfWn <'lo 2 03 1: •• "-"'""" ti). 1114 .. , • 0-. (0), 1'.M " I Glllllno ,,, l .43t 100 ltreaal-1 lulllven (Pl. I · 17 .I I I. '"'" (0). 2 U I , S W11111rne Ir). 2 24 1, •· \Mnbre (I), Ut.01 t. leNM (a.ctot.baok), UU: t. MoM\lftM (Ii. 1~31.6 IOO fly-I V•e.icHI). Ut7, f;,. 'rlr.r 1~'o.!:~1.1a ~r. 't1! (GI, 2 07,4; I . hnJamln (M :OU, ,,.. Nley-1. ~ (V011ft8, Mol.tuahlln, ~mllrong, ~oOury), 11415.4, 2. P11omar, 1:48 • .!i_~: Gfot"110nt, 1:81.1; 4 Ian .-UV,....., 2·01 I. WC>lme ..-c...eo-..... -T .. m elandlnge: 1. Golden SALE PRICES COOO THRU TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1985 quallty, savings, service . • • 2 CU. FT. oecoraark oecoim around IJQnt $ ••• beel5. He4pS conuin Mel 9fOWtt1 IAC YOURCHOtCI RIHl•ood com110•~ .. rttaln molSturt ns ConseM water. 2 CU FT. PlonNr MIX .. rttJln molSturt and ctnWM water 2 OJ. FT. ltBJ concrwN •NII •n,,.,, f ". J ". 12" . .,,.,,,,,., ,..,.,..., •e.11 .. 9! Rlr ~ imnm. -edglhgS, ltt. brf ... polntS. ., .,,, ... ,.,, ..... '•'3 1 CU. FT. •~•er Manure Jumbo b~9 covtrs • • ! lar9f MU. BUy now and SM. Ii .. 2 CU. FT. K•llo••'• ro11,,.r -•tt'9 ldt3I sftd mwr ~ mulctl. PrOucts sftds. ·sprigs and 5totons from Orytng out YOUR CHOICE f Gallon Plann •• '..!'· ttard'f. "'*"" lalld5UPf plants Wiii add DraltY ~ your i.n or paUo Buy now and SM! w .. 1. 481\.tJ.. t Orante CoMI, 411 14, I 1,;yprue, 1e1. 4 ''*'1oll. JM· I lent• AN. ue. • Mt, ~-lot . ., Oen1tot, 71. IOO ~ l"tl4ly. 1, e>r.,. OOHI, t:H 11 (Oonl•r•noe r-d). I. Ooldtrl Wet1, 1•81.17; 3 C>tP,r..., 1 N 4'. 4 lanta AN. l .ot. ltJ. I. '"'*'°"· I 10.la, t , Ml IA1,;, 1.14 ot 100 Ir• -1 IAVelle (OCC~, 13 27 (MW l'900t~2. Huoo {OOC llUI, 3. ~ WOI. Kil: ' Miion.ti ('). M 3. I. 8-rnatllle llA>. 17.64: I Wolle IOCC), 17.74. 1110 b9ok -1. llltkt (Oyp) 1102.111 2 8111tldtr (QWCI. 1:C>3.tl01 ;, Harper (IAOI, 1;08.03: 4. L.unabeto (SA). t:oe.oe: 15. PuM (OWC), 1 fO 20. 6. Miiie (Cyp), 1:10.12. 100 bf-• -1. Lavalle (0CCJ 1'07 llO, 2 AyllO (QWOI, 1~.t1: 3: Dunning (OWCI. 1· 14 84; 4. Ure (OWC). 1 1& 03, •. &. l( ... eyama \~."41 IUO, I Oruok• (000). 100 lly I lleke (Cyp), 1.010t 2~IOWCI.101 72,I IPll9 (0\Nci: 1·0S N , 4 Laldu. CIAli.. i:o·(.11; I . ltewert (' , 1.CM •7. I lnleidt (OWO). 1 01 200 ''" rel•~ -1 Orene• CoMt, 1·41 II {new r-ctl; a 'ulet10n. 1;47.0I, a. Oo6derl Wa.t, 1.47 41: 4 tent. AN. 1 47 ... I Mt. IAC. 1 41.111, t . CypreH. 1.113,IT , .... Cwtc-..... _ TNm lltndlllgt. : 1. Ptlofntr 808; 2. ~l 4t7: 3. Ian Diego MM&. 480, • Gr~t. 210. 200 rnedleV ,...__ '. Sen Diego M-. 2.02.4; 2 ~tlOmer. 2 08 7, 3 Oro11mon1, 2:07 7 , 4 &addlebeoll, 2:ot.I . 100 fr-1. Mat11n (M). lie 0, 2 Young (8). 18.t . 3 Wellnltr IOI. .., .. , .• Hort '" 17.1; ...... ~"''' ,...,~u. I . 'tooMlll-1 Klfle(I t~.I; Z CMldl (r). 1:0Uj I. 1-J M). 1:0U; 4. WW 'lJ'~· I ~(01. 1.114:•. (P) 1·11,1 100 brwt-1. Md r .,., (I). 1 10.I ; 2 Inn• (0), 1: 11.4; • "°"*1o ( M). 1: 11.4: 4. Annletong Cl). 1:1U; t . ...._.Cr). 1;11 T. I H~ll>.1:11.1. 100 lty-t. Kini ( M). 1:01.1; 2 ...,,,_°"8 (I), 11M. !i t . ~ (P), 1.0i'.2·1 4.-~ (P'). l:OU; 4. Z•Ptl (II. 1:01.0 ; t . WHd (Pllonw). 1. 10.2. 400 fret ~-1. 8addltf>eck U'~ Oloeebrennat, tfuOtr, I. 1:11.1. 1 HO frM-1. 8aunden (8), , 17:03.1; 2. Auld (P), 17: 14. 1, 3 Melone (Pl. 17:22.0: 4. 811GM (II. 17:31.1; 6. Kremer (II. 17:13.lt; 6 Welden (0). 17:153.1. 21 " CUT STEEL DECK. 2H.P Edger STUROY 48" c1101n1.lnk ,.enc Ing .,,"· s·nowooo flA# r11•1.1.1• •s••· J' . .,,.,.,,,, &lttll 'S!! • 1 .. rldllOOd UW' ..... MDINllS Of 50 plus .. Rear Bag Afower RED llolcanlc •ocll St•.P RS>WOOO olomond Frfllll8 Wf1H80ltDB •· ar ,, ••. lladf ot aura IOr1ll iast1n9 reowooa. 1 '~ t I . . " " MA.IOR LmACIW aT ANDINGI AIMftoen L.MalM ... , OMlllOlt W L "94. U 10 7 .Ill 1 6 w "' 9 7 IN i. 9 7 .IN 'A I 9 47t 2 e • ... ff a"' • 13 .3tt 6 ,/ ILU1' OMatON IMlfllOre a e .eoo eo.ton 1 1 .eoo 1 i.. Oettolt 7 7 .IOO t 'Ai MllwullM 1 7 ,aoo ,.,.. TOtonto 7 7 .6CIO 1i. a-lllld 7 • ~7 2 ._ Yori! 7 I .4t7 2 y..,.,...._.. 8elUmore 3, ~ 1 OettOll .. ' S..ttle 0 N11w Y Oft! 7. Mw-ta 4 ~l.0No.Qo3 ao.ton Ill o.iu.nci, Jllld., "*' Toronto 6, KanMI City 4 Mllnuk .. a...t. T-0 T..,.. ...... hlllmore (0. Martinez 1-3) 11 'Allfel• (Ooltt 0-1) 8eattJe (Nun. 0-2) It Oelro11 (l.tort'll 1·2) Mlnneeot• (VIOia 0-11 at New y Ol1I (Quldfy 1·1) Clllc•go (Ooteon 1· 11 " Clav•l•nd (lutcllfle 2-4) Toronto (8tteb a-1 or Qcllt C>-1)) at IC-. City (Renko 0-1) Ml!Mult .. (8uttOll 2·1) at T't-(Hough 1-1) &oaton (Tudor 0-1) at Oelllend (Home 2..(JJ Netlonal LMaue ... ,OMeiaN .. W L 10 3 11 4 9 1 1 9 a 11 4 13 U9TDM9f(IM ..... .7&8 .733 .M:s 2"' .437 4\t ,313 '" no • 7 3 .700 "' 8 4 .892 a 4 .et7 'Al a 1 .4'2 3 4 7 .364 .. 3 11 .214 '"' ,......,.a ..... Dedi9lr9 3, ~ 2 8M l=randeco 6, ClllceQo O Monu.I Ill Cincinnati. ppd .. r llln N.w YOftl Ill Attani., ppd., rflln 8l Louil I, 8M Olligo a ~7.Howlona ,..,.....,_ DN11ere (Hooton O· t) at Pltteburgh (MeWMllme 1-a) New YOftl (8-1-4 MCI Owl~ CM>) et Alla'ltll (Cemp 2-4 and McMurty 1·1) Mon.,.., (Oufllcbon 1·2) al Clndnnall (8er'anyt 1-1) S•n Diego (Haw111n1 0-01 at St. Louie (laPolnt 1.C) . San flWICl9oo {Mc:Oafllgan 0-1 I et CNc:9Qo (Moekau 0-1) PllH•delpllla (C.,lton 3· ll •at Hou1ton (~0-1) Top 10 ( ................ , ~LaAQW GM•HN. Shelby, Bait. 8 32 11 15 .489 8r9tt. KC 12 44 14 22 .461 ~. Cle ' 30 2 13 .433 c-. .,..... 14 511 • 26 .424 llrool!-. Del 12 30 7 12 .4()() Oto.. OM 12 2t 3 11 .3e3 Y-.it, Mii. H M 1 I 2 I .na ~. Bel 14 35 ., 13 .371 ~. NY 8 27 3 10 .370 Thornton. Cle 15 50 6 18 .MO MATIOllAL &AMIU9 ..... " ..... a n 1 14 .eoo 10 ,. t " .4M 11 IO 1 14 . .-oo 1~ 4e I 11 $1 11'3111 11 4t • ;1 1t~ :: 1' H :Jn tt ... 7 11 .JM ,. 72 10 26 ... , ............ O•vl•. 8•n ,,.nol•OO. O; Ov•rrere, ~" ~. It. Louie, 6l .~ ~ 41 c.n.. Montl'MI. 4: -· flNledelphl• 4. ............. Kennitdyo:::~~:,: .. Hf/tldrlOic, 81. l..ol.M. ,,. 111 ~ ~.ta:..._~,,: t>a.: 8811 F~. tt; o.,_, HowlOI( 11: ~~ 11:Ylllfllll ~ •11 ~..:::.. oecn·, ':i .... , ,._, Attlnii,'\.:O; ..._, Dedi9w9 Ml 8•nd•r•on, .,0111rea1, l ·O: Culton, ~ a.1: ~. 8M OlefO, a-1; 8o4o, Olnclr\nau. ,. , • .-.CAN LmAQUI OrkllM .. MMll 1 IW..,...,. liNA'ONU .. , .. " .. , .... 8Mlby c1 • , 40 C.-1b 4000 Fordrf 1011 ~d 4010 All*.n • 4 0 1 0 Ao.Jdt-. cltl 4 0 1 0 fe:l-!b" 4110 ~ab 4020 ~ ... 4010i;>owMloN 4000 _ _, -· 4 0 1 0 CWll rf 4 0 IO Deuer 2b 4 0 I 1 Otldl-2b 4 11 0 He11-.d813«> ao ,o foll• ao 1 o Aodrgl&b 1000 l,ynnpfl 1000 °"""""" 0 s 11 0 Boone • J 0 t 1 T018118 S7 S 14 2 Tot91 311 tt I --~ ........ 8alUrnot9 101 000 010 -3 Cellfomla 000 000 100 -1 o-winr.ia NII --. OP-Calllornl• 3. L08·8•111mo,. t , Callfornle 7. 18-811.tby, Orletl, Ctlltll. 8· °':.i,. • H ltP•IO ~,2-0) II 9 1 1 0 1 Jolln(L.2· 1) 8 14 3 3 0 5 T ·2:08. A-43.073. Tiilen4,llllrtMnO S.ttle 000 000 000-0 ' 0 a.troll 301 000 OOx-4 ' 0 ~ Thomae (IJ MCI a-. "9try and p.,,,...., W-Petry. M L-Moora, 0-3. A-t2,3113. Y..._7,TWIM4 ~ 003 Oto 000-4 I 1 ..._ Y0111 108 000 OOx-7 14 0 o·~nor, l'1i-(3). LYMftdet ~": 8rnltll, ~ and Wyneoer. W-. S-0. L-O'Connot, 1·1. HA-Min-ta, W..., 12~ A-20.141. ......... .,.. .... ~ 000 000 120-3 • 2 ~ ooo 330 00x-e 1 o Lamo. ~ (5) and H1I: a.tiw, ~ (8) end HMM¥• W-8et1ter, S-1. L-Lamo, 2·2.A-10,eet. .,_...,:-1. Mllweull• 000 t 11-3 10 0 T-000 000-0 5 4 C•Jdwell •n" Slmmon1; Honeycutt, Sutch., (9). Tanana (9). Toblk (9) •nd 81.ftdbetg. W-celdwlll. 2-2.. L-Honliydult, 2·1. A-20, 122.' _.,.,.. .. ...,...4 Toronto 000 000 060-6 I 2 ~Olly 020 002 000-4 .. • LAel, Mollttt m. 0..... (9). McLa&.lgMn i•> and WNt1. MlltUnlll.: .._.. ~ •> •no Watllan W-Moflllt, 2·0. L- QulHnberry. 1·1. S-McL•uQlllln (1). A-111,IOe. ,'Fr: "ii ... re 11'•10 m f:.., ~ :. ~ l hi!·i ta=.. ,. tt 1 J . .._. I 1i 1 ....... I I 4 0 1 .lit AfM!e I 1 0 0 0 000 WlltN • 0 0 0 0 .000 ,... ... 17 110 11 " .... '1 ~IO W-4. IRA IMCIMI 11 I I a 1~ 011 IAlllll "" 11 1 11 I· I t' j OottNil1 • • 0 1 0-0 Ii JoM It .. 4 • ,., ,onclll "' " • • w •. ...... 't O 4CMIUO °°"' ..... 11 I • O.i uo Kleon "" •1 • lO 1·1 '·". °"'111 t'it I I I 0-0 1.11 Witt ""' 12 1 • ~ ua TOUilt 111 IU 40 N 10-7 Ut ._ 181*-a,.......,, NA110NAL LmAQUI l.Oe J:ar:• .. ~ *'"" ., ..... 8ulb lttO ~· 4110 ~-1000 ...... d <1001 'nlllmMof tOOO ...._.., 4020 lelcer II 40 2 0 "'"""" tb 4 1 I 1 Gu8rNro ab I 1 11 Park• If 4 0 0 0 ...,...,. 1000 -·b 1010 ,.....,, 0000 Mon!IOnpll 1000 ~ 11> 4000 Peneo 4010 ....... 111~ ~.:.:... 4000 YMglf o 2 0 0 Q p 1 0 O O WeeCfl p 1000 .... pl\ 1000 ~I* 1011 TtlwMp 0000 ~pr 0000 .....,., 0000 ~t 1000 T ota19 I ta 7 I T OIMllll 13 2 12 --~ .......... L.oa .,.,._ IOO 000 too-a ~ 100 001 000-2 ~.Ml-Mor .... (1). f -Aua .. n. OP -Lo• AnO•I•• 1, Pltt1burgll '· L08 -LOI AngelH T. ~t.21 -8a.. ...... Mor ..... AuMllll. SI -L.acy. HA -Ouwrwo (8), ~ (3). 88 -~. (1). 8 -Candelaril. .,....,..., 8f -Ma:l9. ............ " ....... ., ::o"JW· 1-tl t II 2 2 O 3 l 1~ 2 0 0 0 I How9(8.3) 1\t 1 0 0 0 2 ......... ~ (L, 2·1) 1 t I 3 3 9 TllaM • 2 1 0 6 2 f T -2:31. A -1.117. -..a.c...1 Sen Fr....-00 203 000 000-5 1 0 ~ 000 000 000-0 3 , HWllll'WC• Md 8'tinly: Trout, Proty (4). 8NM1• (7). C.mpbetl (I) and J. O•vlt. W-Hamma118t. 2·1. L-Trou1, 14. HA-S.... Frllndaoo, C. Devit (5). A-12,tllll. c... ........ I Sen Olego IMO 000 010-11 9 2 a1. Louie ooo m 20x-1 11 1 Show. w=. u-m. ~<•l-s Klnnedy hrpet, ....,., (4) and Porltr. W-Mar11n. 1--0. L-811ow, 2·1 H~~~2(1).Hwrllll.,_ (1). A-40,IM. ........ , ......... ~ 200 410 000-7 11 1 l40uMon 003 000 000-3 • 0 (l).~-;)o:J =· °w~~ L-N181uo. o-2. A-22,790. ~ U • .A ... ...._. 11. 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L-Plmental 29-0autlfl (OV). 8pel1lac (OV). JoflM (OV) 38-Mulllilly (OV). .,..,....... LAQUINA MAC* CIOl.I' AMOC1ATWOM , ............. ) A lllQl!I -1. CW-Oweton, 7$-14-e&; 2. Ernie ~. 7t-t~: 3. Jack Lund, 90-1MT. E fltQflt -1. C4lt'I """""-'· I,. 115-et Md JoM ~lno. 11-17-ee; 3. AoNrt Ven a.r...ta-1M7. C fllelllt -1. Wfllt Nye, &4-~; 2. W.it Putll, 16· lt-tf •nd Alcllerd Hoel.,t '7·20-67. . 0 llW't -1. °"* JoflM. 115-2441; 2. 0... Wleea. I0-2._..; I. 0.... Shencl.111·24-t17. I! fllgllt -1. °""'* Vl!UllllM, 102~; 2. Lou Underwood, 1'·21-H ; 3. H.,b ~ .. , ....... Nil.JC NOTIC£ Orange Oout OAILV l'ILOT /Sund •• ~::~ JOM ...,.., .. (lpM\) cMf .• ..,.,, ldbatQ 1 8 w•d•n), t · 1, I · 1; To mu tmld Cuoho1tonlll•) d•I. v101or Peool Per~4-4,M,1M. Wemen'• toumMMnt , ....... ettr ..... , ........... MOTi: Rain lorcad pot1po11•m•11t 01 m•toll w1111 M.,tln• Navratllove IHdlllQ ~., 2.() In Ille flrtt .... The IN1dl i. 10 be~ iodlly. CNAl~tmfT ....... °""' ................ ~ ... .. O•IO•n (Pep.,.rdll'i) O•I, Anl1ton (UC IMM), .. 2, ~ ... ,. .._ .• .,...,oot1t1111.,...... Plalt·HHIOOll (Cal 81ete 14*.mlald) dM. ~""'<>r (UC ININI. W .W . W=:nt11"'•Uoe c Cou.tGI ....,_ e .... _ eei 11••• ,,... (lltllC..-.~) Vault -1: M•ltln• (L8CC)., t .H ; 2. Becllw (El Cemlno), U_j S. P~ (OC:CI. 1.2; 4. Wagonw (000), r .ti. Bare -1. MHtlna (L8~.H; 2 . ~ (S C""*'°I. U : a. (OOC). 7.45; 4. ~(LA ValleV). U U-bMtft .._ 1 . ........,. (UICC). 1.9; 2. 84pcller (El Clll'nlno). .. 1; a. Henk• (fl c.....-no1. 7.56; •. POWl9y (OOC). 7.5. Floof -c:IM -1. "*"""8 (LBCC). U ; 2. Btcker (l!I Camino), 1.4; I . W~ (OCC). 1.3; 4. Henly (LA Vl~.111. All-around -1 . .......,.. ( 34.1; 2. 8eclcw IS Celnlno), 33.0: 3. (OCC). 30.16; 4. Wagoner (OCCI. 29.0. TNm llnal•: t . Iii Camino, 116.H ; 2. Orenge C-, 114.10; 3. LA V~. 107.46: 4. 8"" Diego MMt, 104.76; 6.. Long 8Mdt cc. ,..,I , ~of lht Y-: MIC:Nllla ......... (Long Beacll) and Malllone lacker (fl CM\lno). Dual mtel Oh•mplon: Q,.nge Co811 COllega(M~ Mesac•- Klrn Powte~Orang• ~: P•rn•I• _,_(San MMt); waoon-<9'111'19' ~): -"I Henry (LA V~ CllwYI Hanke (El Camino); l..M ~ (()nllga eo-t). Coecll OI the YHr: 8.,bara Wrlglll <er.no-CoMI). T_ ......... Midi Fine~ 21 ~°" 4229 PeMrig )'W'de , .. Aelurn )'tlfda 25 ...... 1 .. 215-2 8edc8 b)' a-22 Punta ~2 ~-1-CM) ~ 1-41 Time of P: I IClfl 83:11 .............. LA 19 24-M 215 22 1~1 C>-40 6-M 2·1 7~ 28!09 RUSHING -L.09 Anfll88, 1111m11t 10-6t, Boddie 10·27, ltHllp S·1S, lt•rrlngton 1~ 3. llolld\lclen, Leo\' 14-104, Miiier 11-42, w..... 1r.-. ~ 1-0. PA881NO -Loe Angelu, R•e 12·22·12M, ~ .....e2·1. Mlohlgan. .....,.,, tll-ff-1 ... 2. A~ -Lot Mglt8a. ~ t-132, EHi• J-41. 8oddle a.S7, wnnama 2-15, Sherrod 1-7. ~. CoOb 15-71. C#1M M7. follOll WIS. ~ 141, ....... 1-0. Artaefte ~:' s .....~ o a o o-a 0 s ,. 1 -24 1' I ~~I I retarles M ak ing America's offices run l f.I,~ :,.~ ~ONY 1n a wotld of lncreu1na numbeor1 ot female docion, lawyen and •1'\11Mer9, there remaiN a IJ'<>Up dedkat.ed t.o a 1upport1ve role. Th•Y .,.. th• behlnd·the-ecenoa people who make pcmible the IU<lCUll of many buall\el9ell. Beilnnlna tomon"Ow, men and women a.era. the nation an<f loally will honor MCretariea aa 0 NaUonal ~tari•' Week" belina. For the bcm, havln8 a aecnitary "UI Uke having aome extra hand1 ana eyea and ean," Larry Apodaca, iroup 1upervt.or for Fluor Engineers and C.Onatructora Mat.ert&la Control Deputment aaid. The aecretary "aeta thinp accompU.hed that I wouldn't have time to," he added. In fact, he's annoyed the week isn't noted on the calendar. Like 'Secretaries are a vital part of any organization. If they're good, you have a good organization.' many buainesses here, Fluor supervisors will be taking secretaries out to lunch "to show our appreciation." What aecretaries do to deserve this attention may range from typing to diplomacy. "When I took my aecretari&l tra.lning tn high school," Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn Hart's secretary Joanne Baade aaid, "they fOCWled on abilities: typing, filing." On the job she said, "I realized that a big part of it is tact. working well with others." Baade ha.I worked for three mayors, including Paul Ryc'ltoff and Jackie H eath e r . Since Hart was may or pro tem and o n the council, working for her was "a natural transition," she ea.id. "I really like her as a person. She's very organized, ~ver too busy to say you really did a good job." Newport Beach, 11 happy with her botaa . She wouldn't trade him for anyone, "unl• lt would be Tom S.lleck." U Mathen were to stve advke to a leCJ'etar)' juat be,1nnint a c.roer 1ho'd advlao her to "be b~·n\inded, to do a.nythlna and everythina. h'1 the only way to lHm." Joy Shaw, owner ot SecretaN.l Off"'-Servi.eel tn Newport Beach, feet. aecret.ariett are a vital part ot any organlzation. "If they're good, you have • good orpnhaUon.11 Having befJn a aeoretary for 20 years before launchina her own buainem, Shaw noted that many of the women ju.at comina up don't reallJe the value of thrir poaltion, aeetng It lnltead aa jult a 1t.eppina stone to a better career. Se.Id•, many "tet their alghta and goals higher than real.latically they ought to." One of the chief '-dvantegea of being a secretary, according to Shirley Gray, teeretary to John Klaarenbeek In the environmental testing department at Ford Aerospace of Newport Be.ch, la "no two days are like It's not a routlne type of thin •. ~des the eecretarlal duties, .ec:retaries may offer Sl.lg8et1tiona to their bo&see. Apodaca noted that "they may see eomethtng I don't eee. U they have advice to give, It's all the better, becauae the more input you have, the better decl1ion1 you make." As secretary to the Newport Beach city manager, Maxine McAlptne recalla the days when city officials were known aa "public .ervanta." "rm very posltive in my belief in havtng the residents of the community like the city hall." She'd like people to underatand "that we have our problems. We're taxpayers." When McAlplne began secretarial work in 1936, there were few choices open to women. U you weren't a teacher, a nurse, or a eecretary, there waan't much left to chooee from, she recalla. Laverne Mathers, secretary to Bill Farley, head of the Crocker Bank Trust department in Today, many new fielda are open to the pel"llOn who begins with secretarial akilla, especially in data proce98ing. she expla.ined. ---------------------Good word from boss could mean honors ~~~ .. The title "Secretary of the Day," along with myriad priz.es, wW be awarded the winner of a conteat duri ng national Secretaries Week. The recipient of the title will be announced at the annual breakfast meeting of Professional Secretaries International at 7 a .m., Wednesday, in the main ballroom of The South Coaet Plaza Hotel, Costa Mesa. George Jett, president of the apace d1vision of R ockwell International Corp., will addrea the group of a~~tely 600 8eCl'etaries and . Participants in the contest are nominated by their employers, who iubmlt ab ort euays extolling their aecretarles. Names of the entranta are blind-coded in order that the judges' aelection be determined solely on essay content. Although prizes wiU not be revealed until after the winner la announced, they are expected to equal or s urpass last year's award.a, which included an all- expenaes-paid trip for two to San .Francisco and an e lectric typewriter. Contestants are all members of t h e Bahia Chapter of the organization, which enrompuees the Harbor area and is one of three club chapters in Orange County. Other secretaries, who do not belong to the club, are not likely to be forgotten either, as most bo sses will exhibit their appreciation with boxes of candy, bouquets of flowers or balloons, and by hosting luncheons in honor of their valuable aaaistanta. Animal Cracke~ of Newport Beach has compoeed a singing telegram especially for the occasion, with these concluding lyrics: "Happy Secretary's 0.y, Don't aak for a raiae in pay." U the telegram is delivered in pel"'80T1, a spedal choreographed tap dance i.I included with the song. A telephone mesaage i1 followed with a printed copy of the aong. "Secretaries' week la a close runner-up to our busiest holidays of Valentine's Day and Mother's Day," a company 1poke1man Man finds a · place w-onian 's world By UREN K.LEIN °' .. 0..,""' ...., Jamea Lynch doesn't uk for any special treatment on the job. But it ian't easy for him to keep a low profile -in his buslneu, he just can't help being highly visible. Lynch, 24, beside beinQ ~ only male in the Reaidential Escrow office of Newport Beach, is one of the few Orange County males who works • a MCretary. ''When I answer the phone, people ult me who r am, .. Lynch •ya. "Some women -.y they're al.ad t.o tee more men ptUnc into e9Cl'C)W I but ame jmt don't want to talk to a..'• Desllite all the attention he pta. Lynch •YI he doesn't -anytb.lnc unuaual about Chi job be hit held foe man ~two,.,.. •1M1 friends think It'• --t,· be •ya. ''They all call ~and eak me for advice ~[" WbU • l ~ the only ma.le ln a woman 1 world? "I'm '-' to ft.'' Lynch eaya .Sib • lftn. "Ii do.n't bother me at all" ,._.an 9Wl\ Id~ lo •orkln1 In what 11 tHdJUoaa~ eonatdertd 1 womu'1 • LJnch ll)"L W'b0e-7~•Y ., hilw '°dial wtdl tnuAl tw 1 mf, ID Che~. ar al lea1t N Xl1 t SnnueadoH, L J ••b H J • la• cloHa't .. '1• r tlWtai.t...,_ He'• MVet' even been on the recelvt.nc end of a pus tram one of b1a two female bomel. Lynch started worklna wlth hb {>l't!MDt boll U a mi r ·~boy four ,.an .,o. Slowjy, he plcked up llCftW1a1 sldlla • be ...,, tlJM tn the office, ~ ~ be bis learn.t a lot -about the acl'OW ~ and about people - -·~· "l ·mJOy ft.•• be •YL But he'• \hLr\k1nc abOUt movlnC up, pertia~Df back to IChool foj IO M OU\ Mcoln• an ..crow oftlcer h.,,,...f, Bu\ wt won1t put him • batt~ In wUh t h e more C:Gn~ oC .......... M1•· a.crow officer.• are prr•r .._..111 finUI. .......... ,.... ....... iHn .... '° ,, .., .... said. "Impersonators of Burt Reynolds, Clark Gable and Alan Alda, who deliver 15-minute comic routines at offices and restaurant., are in hilh demand and are being booked throughout the week." Another local company , Original Singing Telegrams, haa fun roasting the secretary in their message with lines, such as: :·Your boss could've bought you candy or some flowen, "But it seem.a you're always gone out taklng coffee breaks that last for houn." For Secretaries' week, they are offering a 25 percent diacount, plus a fifth of champagne for personally delivered telegrams. Special deals for special peo1r1le Restaurants, florists offer parties, prizes and promotions By CHRIS CRAWFORD 0..,,... Com,,,.._. Secretaries will be special guesta of honor this week in Orange Coast area restaurants during National Secretaries Week. Local re eta uran ta have planned a variety of gifta and activities i nclud i ng complimentary flowers and drinks, 1pedal menus, prizes, contests, and a "Secretarial 01 pl.c8." ~bby McGee'• In· Newport Beach haa proclaimed Tueaday eve~ a.a "National Secretary Night.' Secretaries will receive "You're Our Type" button1 and will be given diaoount pricea on drinks. There will be typing contesta and other games, with free d.innera awarded u prizes. Houlihan'a Old Place, al8o in Newport Beach, haa prepared week-long festivities, including daily drink 1pedala, a luncheon plate 1peclal, complimentary felt-tip pena for all aecretaries, and a fuhion ahow dally from noon to 1:30 e.m. pl'Ovided by the Serendipity ~tore. Throu1hout National Secretarh!• Day. Wednaday, the restaurant will preeent a roee to each secretary. Wedneaday evenlna from 5 to 7 p .m .• a Secretaries' 01ympk:8, con.s.ung of typing and steno testa, wW be held.~ Flrat priR will be • cub prize in the amount of the' aecretary'a wages for a day. Second and third prizes will be special Houlihan'• dinners. CompJlmentary champagne punch will be provided th.rouahout the evenmg. Acapulco In Costa Mesa i1 planning 1pedal dec.oraUona for the week, lncludlna balJoom for A d vertising • seminar set for May 3 Tb• Oran1• County Advertl1Sna Federation wUl ...-nt a ...nlnar, •11ow io BWJd ~~·~=: May3. TM llOlinar, which lncludea euch topJce aa: 1•ttln1 and k"Plnl new bu•h-1 bow 1o promot e tb:..:,.C:uY and marwtCl"I for ty, wW f•tun ~·'~ Leonud B. o.._ and,JoM T. 8~ • ',a.llvauan tor thlr-'Dar • Whkfi .,,... fl'Om • a.m. to 5 p.m.. :.::=,......The ..... ... l'air --.......... ClilD Che ,..... ........ . each aecretary'• chair. A three- course fiesta platter al a diacount price w il l b e available , accompanied by a surpriae gift for aecretaries. Reuben's in Newport Beech will honor aecretadea Wedneeday with complimentary champagne, and Thunday the restaurant wHl pre1ent each secretary with a flower. All durinl the week, guesta will be given foll lapel 1tickere which may be redeemed for $1 drinka durfna happy hours, 4 to 8 p.m. Special contest• will be conducted in two ar e a reatauranta. At the Reuben E. Lee, a drawlnl will be held at the end of the week. with the winner awarded a Kelly Girl for a day. El Torlto wlll feature drawings every day and will be awarding complimentary lWlChes and dinnen. Flowen will be given to all secretaries during the week by Chantecla.ir in Irvine, the Rusty Pelican restaurants, Santa Ana and Newport Beach: a nd La Palme at the Newporter Inn. Complimentary wine will be served to aecretaries and their boue1 at Chalet Bavarian Rest.auran t, c.o.t.a Mesa, and at Alfredo's, South Coast Plaza Hotel. Gulliver's in Irvine will be featuring a special double martini. At Shakey's Pizza Parlor in Costa Mesa, aecretaries will be treated to a special lunch, "All You Can E.at for $2.99." Local floriata al8o att planning for Secretaries Week, which is the aecond busie9t time of year for them (the first being Mother'• Day). According to Ellen Deverich, owner of Airport FJoriat. Secretaries Week ii "like Valentine'• Day every day of the week" and is "worse than Mother's Day" because "bosses are doang the ordering, and they aren't used to ordering the flowers." But, even ao. ahe says. "it i.s a fw1 week.'' Mike F'onhay, manager of Morri'e F1owera, aaid he expecta a lot of oi'den for flowers from both large· and amall busineaees. "It gets better every year," he said. All of the florists are offering an FTD arrangement for secretaries that features a coffee cup holder and plaoe for instant coffee packet.I, spoons, auger packets, enc., in addition to the fiowers. The Teleflora arrangement geared for aecretaries includes a makeup mirror and a decal which stat.es "Nice Work.'' Many of the flomta plan to open early Wednellday by 6:45 or 7 a.m. for boaes who wa.nt to atop by on their way to work. Students share recognition To accommodate th.la group, Saddleback allowa new atudenta to register at any time for a claa Studenta work at their own pace and advance when they are ready. The Bus1n.e9a Leaming Centtt offen retraining for people interested in exploring the uae of various office machlnea being used in today's buaineas offices. The center i1 open to the public and provides the free uae of IBM Selectric typewriters · and other office machlnea. · · There are ~50 studenta CWTentl.y enrolled in the school'• office .dmlnl.straUon programs. J1w · two-year prqp-ama, are offtft'd and tnclude wU'd · proc:ealnl, adminiatration, general office a.kills, 1epl and medk:a1 ottk:.e pn>eedww. • New audio store Newport • opens in I • • • • • I I I I • f l I f I I I I i Ot•n;. Co•1t DAIL.V PILOT/8undty, Aptfl 2'4, 1983 87 IRAlllCDAITITICll $$ REAL ESTATE MONEY $$ t .'lfJ 11 :11. 11 1 1rJ IA•·1 ., 1 Here .,. the etock market aotlvltl•• of publlcty traded Orange County firm• for the WMk ended Friday, Aprll 22. Data provided by Newport 8eourltle1 Corp. THlMOI . TODO I..-&c• 2. read the .. ,.. No matter what you're doing, your hometown newapaper t ~ ; ' I I I ' ' ' • I • 'I I I 11 I I I I I·•· ..... t t lfll• llfh't ' ........ . I •• ,,. 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' •• t' .. , • • :.. 1').l\t' ' .. \1.) .. 9 / . " '. ' ... , ' .. " ... , .I\; 111 ,,., , I. I .4 t J .. t • t I •• t I I) • lfi., \ • J ' \I I I I•' I ,.I)) llJ /If ,.11.4lt .. , •• ·' l • ,. • ,, I• t '·'' .. ., , ' f • ).\ .. ~/ " " • ' , • 1 •• u. ~ o '' I tf .' 1 ,'. 1 I• .. ... 1" • "'' ,., I .) I l " • ,. . ' ... '.. l • , , ' ...... • u • 1·1' ... , •, 1 •I • •. '' ' I.,.. I• 't ' "' • ' Q• --,_,, ... , flt t I • 11 t ~ ,, .... , :• ,, ,, ,. '· "' .. .. ... ...... ' .... ... I ., " . ... ... '· ... ' ... , l tll I ' '· "· " .. . . . 1 ~ 1•)' "I I .. \D.' I ...... t •••••• •I'• /l ' . , .... , . ,. . ,, ... • ~ ~ I ' I· ~ ' • ~ ' I 1. I "• •I._., 11., .41• .. ' .. , .,,, ·'' t• "'' .. , ,, & • , . .,._ ... , •. . ... II U).... 1 , I I h ~ l ' I "' l .. • ' I I. • • \I I, 1 ,., .. ". . . .. . . . I • • • 0 • ' ... . '~ . , . .. ... •• ,. . ' . .. '·' . I I .t .. 1 t I / ' ··t .... '1 Iii 4 •II 'f I J.1• ·~I ' u ,, .. \ . ,. ' ..... ' '·' . I • ,. •I ' • ~ •• '1-1 .ti 1• 1 t ~ t ~ I t I, It ,l • ,. • 1 lt•4 I ••' II I \I !Iii " .. . . , t t 4 !fl I . . . , , ... , ' ' . ,, ... . I I • 1'1'"0 .. , 't • •If t •• ·'' ••f'lt. "'Ill •• ,..., •• "'• ' •• j "' ... , • . ~••t •. ""' ti .. ,. .... ~ ' • •t ' '·'. ... ·< • '· ... " .. ,. ,, .. ! \ •• •I ' '·' ... I• "1 , .. , ·'' Balettreri Machos Lee ·Restaurant officers The National Restaurant AuociaUon named new top of:ficent at Ua annual meeting in Wuhlngton, D.C. New cbainnan of the board I.a Joe R. Lee, executive vice pnsldent of Genenl Milli, Inc., and president of General Mills' Re1taurao t Group. Barrie 0. Machi of Btrminaham. Mich., WU choaen NRA vice president, and 'l'llleoclore l. Baleetreri, president and co-owner of the Sardine Factory In Pebble Beach, wu ntmed treuurer. ••• Sa•tlle B•11er of IPllne bu received a top honor from Carl Karcher l:nterprlAM!I, owner and ~erator of 340-plue Ccl'• Jr. nstauranta in callfomia. Nevada and Antona. HauHr, who joined the company ln 1175 • a cou.nterpenon endbetmnea~in 1181, mensr. the Carl'• Jr. at 1717 M..cAruiur, OUIBI CDUITY BUSINISS lrvine. Her restaurant placed first in the region in the "epeed of eervice" category. • • • Bell & Howell 's lrvine-bued Computer Output Mkrofilm (COM) Division has announced the promotion of Stepba J . talmad1e to the newly created poeltion of central regional sales manager. Talmadge'• previous pe>aition with the COM Oiviaion wu in the Chic:aao area. His 15 yean of experience In the computer industry Include 1ale1 management po1ltion1 with PBS Computer Company, ASK c.omputer Syatema, 3M and Texas bwtrumenta. • • • port Bea c h has moved to larger offices at 4:>00 Campus Drive. The firm la produci ng collateral materials for a L oa Angeles-baaed property management company and a data planning and control syat.ema firm in Newport Beach and has been selected as advertising and public relations counsel for Irvine Hoet Hotel. • • • Joeepai Corey has joined the trust ... department at Flnt Amerlcan Bank & Truat of Laguna Beach. Corey, who will be the bank's eenior truet officer, baa eerved 34 yeara with Bank of America. He earned h1a law decree at Northeutem University Hunter/Korobkln in Bolt.cm and ii u.ted in C o r p o r a t e C o m -the 1983 edition of Who'• munlcatlona of N.;,,;e;..w.,_·--:~;;..::in:.;..;;;CallfornJa.===;::_---l •NEWSALES •RESALES •REFINANC 1 1 1 r 1 , ', 1 t t , , 1 4 I , , ,-. ; .. ' ,. I : • . ' • ' • I • ~ I J' ' I I • I ' . J . ..... ' • I b t ). waler~· 4. read the ...,,.. The., .... ( 7 14) 4 7 b-1066 LONDON MORTGAGE .I•• tH t I \ '' ., .. , ... , " # ••• ... ,., ta In. s.~ ·--t •U• ' '" '" '· --" -'''""'''' ... , ... , ..... .. I fU 'I '" I .. I\ I II II ft• Ii , , • ... " , .. ., , . "' .... ,.. •1« I t01 i•t ''I I 01• "' 0 '" ., .... ' ' . ". ••\ ',,, I • r '"·"'·' .. \ ,., , .. 1 ,., ... .... . '•'"'' We're Making H '\f•f .,, 'I t"I\ , , .. , . ' t\A ' .. ,,. . ,, ~ '1 .,, I I f •• ,' I IU ' ... , , . , ,, ... ' •• t ., ... • ·'J'' •> tA .... _ ,, ·'" LO\VINTERESTLOANS , ,._ •••• 'l",'lJO 'l"i ttO ' ' .... t 0 Ii '"I ,, ,,, ti '.~ .. ' "· ··-1\ '· 1'0 ' .. ,, . , .. ft .... .. " .. , I. • 11 t. ,, t ,,, 1 flq I II\ .. t 0 \i fl. lo-· '" ''·''• . " ... ' , .. ~' "' "lu '.'' 11• tt ••• I •"'• i .... . ,, . .., , .. -°'l • • I " • l·t "• , I .. ,, ,,., •O• 1 HJ! ~· .H1 .. . '"', ... •, •.ou .1 !?O • I . 'GO I ! •• .t.>t • • 1DS I f'f • ... ·\ ,, ". .., .. ~ ... • • •• )(' ' .. ,., , .. .\1• ". • .. .-e • ·10 > , .. '·'·' • •• ,, .. , .. '' "~ . " ·''' '·'"' '" ' OO'f . .. '• , .. Wh•t you need la an answer. What you don't need Isa "maybe." Recognize the scenario? You have plans In hand for that addition to yoyr home. or yoy found a great deal on a new cat Ten days ago. yoy spent the morning at your bank filling out loan papera Now you're waiting . and waiting l.oaM the Quick and Easy W.y ...... , , , ...... . At Huntington National, we want to help make yoyr plans a reality. And we underatand how a prompt. effl.. clent decision can make all the difference. Whatever yoyr p&f80nal needs, we can wonc with you to deYelop the right loan package, Competltlw Low Rat ........................ . We offer some of the best Interest rates around, and we combine them with attractM terms. Our new auto loans, for example, are up to 48 months with a minimum down payment of only 20% . Spectal Umlted Ofter •••••••••••••••••• Act now and take advantage of this limrted special offer. II you open, Of already have, one of our Money Market Access Accounts._. wlll low« 11 ... \ ... ,., ,. , .. , t• I J .. , ' ,. .. .. ... ,.. .. ,.. 0 ' .... ' q,, • "6 ::'J:=~~~~~ the ,.,. on yo41r loetl by ~% . -· ·, "' 41B!iit9~11rl:llii= !IQ'.~~~:--_ You"'"' a deal that's hard to .• '":·~ . · .~ be:;~ lower rate on your . ',. '• .... 1 '.' II C•O j ... ~· ? ... 0 ' ..... , ., u • ... I'' It I ' . !, • , .. ' • 1 '"I ... ,0, ,. . • 11 • . .. ., .. .. • ! ,\\ii . ··-~ • , )t') , .. ,~, 1" f, f I I) . ~' 1,•t.• .:~: . ~ '"., .. • 6 l 1. ,, .ll, •• J·~ 1 ¥ ~ loan plus high money mar· \( ~.:x:-. . ket yielda on the deposits in yoyr fully-Insured Money Market Aocesa Account Cell Lou Cope or Kathy AdkJ .. today tor detalla at (714) 840-1354 or (213) 592-1337. Auto, Home Improvement, and Other Conaumw Loana Let Ua ., ... Yow Plana a llealltyt [I NJ I HUNTINGTON NATIONAL BANK l , ... ·' ..... . " I ~\ / ·'''ij .. 16531 Bolee Chica Street. Huntington Beach, California 92649 · (714) 840-1354 0< (213) 592·1337 'Member FDIC (!} -I ~1 t .... ~. mICES BRFAK ON 1HE ~ Chandl ers Cove T ownhomes overl ooking the beach in beautiful Del Mar. Where the sun shines by day, rhe sea shimmers at night, and the whole spectacular backdrop waits just outside your window. The bank has foreclosed on six luxu rious new townhomes. That's correct. There arc only six. And they may be the six most luxurious ocean view townhomes you'll ever And at liquidation prices. W•ll to wall excellence. The builders and architccu wett very bpcclfk They specified the best. Nothing less. In any room. ln any detail. the kirchens arc done in imported Allmllmo cabinets. The cooktop range• are Jenn•Alr. ;t'hc entry doon are tolld teak. Tnc ctdln •~ cathc!Jral. Thc"dtn n1 l'Ot)m I• (ormal. .The b1tnroom (huum u hrass artd marble. Antique and upgraded. The master bath has a ceramic tile shower. Then· arc dramatic skylights throughout. Cabinet and closet space 1c; gen· crous. Landscaping is complete and lush. The bargain of a lifestyle. Wake up every day to the hush of the sea. Warch the sun fall behind its i;himmer at night. Relax on your balcony and coum your blessings. The architects made Chandlers Cove beautiful. But rhc liquidation mokcs Ir mandatory. Hu"'Y· There are just six townhomn. - @ -... l f \ I I ' I I t .. _ .. -! I ii~ Hoo ij~ ~ 1;~ ;. ·=o *== !i :-..,, -; ~o •: -. •. ~k ij-. ~-3 i~ • ,. ,., ·= i I> !:z : ; ., r> • ;~ i~ ~o !:z Cll z I i .. .. ~----~ ........... Oranoe Cout OAJL y PILOT /Sund 2A, 1NI •· AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE ~'"''°"' llt(lUI. •u oeu ......... 'l'OH 11110""'· Pll(l,I( ,. .. IOUON oruotT AllO (lllCll01U1 uoo .. C.llAlltlt••tH ... l tlO I YfNl Oto AllO 111u111•t ltltl .... ' I Nftll l.w UM Uri Nita U• h i.. ~ ,. I Mrp \.ft UP Clll NI... I.aw ·-.... I' I lilt' '-H wt4 ,.. llltll l .. ..... .... • ' "'•• 1..-..... ,., "''~ Lew ,. I l ' Orano• Oout DAU. v PILOT /8und1Y, APtll 14, 1883 Spinnaker Run ~ ~ures buyers . ' With principal and interest payments startmg aa low as $519 per month, Spinnaker Run has generated high t)uyer acceptance. The one and two-bedroom condominiums, ~ted ju.st two blocks from Dana Point Marina and Doheny State Beach in Dana Point, are priced from ~ $74,900. ' hlcording to Dave Philllpe, sales agent for Elite Development, the low monthly mortgage payment li established by a 7.9 percent interest rate for the flht year of 30-year fixed-rate financing with only & percent down. The rate la set at 8.9 percent the ll6cond year, 9.9 percent the third year and 10.9 s>en:ent for years four through thirty. Furnished model homes and the sales office are open daily. For further information, phone 661-1905. Visitors should take Pacific Coast Highway/ Camino Las Ramblaa exit from the San Diego F'k'eeway. Take the Beach Cities exit and proceed west on Pacific Coast Highway towards Dana Point Harbor. Continue one-fourth mile to Del Obispo and tum right to Spinnaker Run. Bedroom of Sph•••keJ" Run con4minium in 11ana Point. Special Low Interest Financing! This May Be Your ill.t Chance To Buy An Office Condo At Today's Low Price. You Can Own The Building And The land -Not Leased Land. The Tax Benefits And ~ppreciation Opportunity Can Belong To You . Buildings Range From 1500 sq. ft . to 6500 sq . ft. ACT NOW! Jo~c;;6~~~s 751-1400 AIRPORT WEST BUSlllESS PARK 245. FlSCHER AVENUE AT RED HILL IN BEAUTIFUL COSTA MESA ADJACENT TO JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT French I aire at tract Retr..hM*nU with • French fl&lr , and continentel-1tyle entertainment 1et amona Nomian turreu and alat.e ar•y roof• Hminllcent of a French oountry villa&• wW htahliaht VWe de Ceme'1 French Country Faitt-today. The French Country Faire will take place between noon and 4 p.m. at the VUle de Cerl• model complex on Rue CerWe in La una N 1. The ubllc la lnvtted to attend. To reach VW. de C.rilt, ex.it the San Dleao ll'Neway ln araniia County~ at Crown Valley Parkway And drtve: 110uthw•t to Golden Lantem: \Um left on Golden IAntem and left ..rain on Pueo de Colln.u; continue to Bue, Cerlae and the VWe de c.n. modell. For further lnformalion, telephone: 486-3244. 1983 Qr,nge Coui~ APARtMENt SHOW INNER SPACE Saturday, April 30 Sunday, May 1 Anaheim Convention Center 10:00 a.m . to 6 :00 p.m. * Well over 100 exhibits of products and services * Demonstrations * Prize Drawings * Six Dynamic Seminars Featuring ... DANNY COX on "Leadership" DAVID COSSABOOM, J.D., on "Legal W~ys & Means" CLEM MORJN, C.P.A ., on "Tax Strategies" GENE KONSTANT on "Profitable Operations" SANFORD R. GOODKIN on "Apartment Investments" ROBERT PHARR on "Dollars from Energy" Present this ad at the door for Complimentary Ticke ts ht~e~ho~~~i~ii~C~O~U~ITT~E~S~Y~T~O~B~R~O~K~E~RS~~~~~~i~A~p~a~r~tm~ein~t~Ais~s~o~~~~~~~~~~y ~o~~O~ra~n~gie~C~o~u~n~ty~~i grim, lender says ~ Proclaiming 1983 as the year of the too-long delayed housing debate, Leonard Shane declared \hat a decision must be made as to where we stand and where we are going, both politically and ~nomically, in order that the American dream of W:>me ownership and better places to live may survive. With an annual shortfall of at least one million housing units created by a changing economic financial delivery system, the chairman of the United States League of Savings Institutiona and head of the Orange County-headquartered Mercury Savings expressed his concerns over the future of bousing in our country. Entitling hia speech "The Amerial!l Dream_ '.fakes Many Forms -Including l'4ightmares," Shane presented his case at a meeting of the 3,000-member Apartment Association of Orange County. "The overall objective of the national policy of this oountry at this time as It relates to the use of credit and capiial is. to scare credit and capital away froni real estate, away from housing, away from bomeownerahip,'' stated Shane. ''People of great authority have sald this and they said it openly." Referencing to the rationale utill.zed to support th.la change in policy, Shane talked about the concept of "re-industrialization" wl:lich was promoted as a means of putting people back to work by putting new machinery into old factories. However, this alao involved cutting back on the migration of people out of the eut and into the ambelt areas. Thus, according to Shane, laws were written and policies adopted to further diminish the ablllty of new areas to develop. "Deregulation" and, in the financial arena, "level playing field" were two other cliches which be believes contributed to the economic and political shift away from housing. "For 50 years, since the early 1930'1, our national policy was to recognize \hat real estate credit was different from any other form of credit," he explained. "We urbanized this country and suburbanized it by deliberately creating a national policy in which we said better lifestyle, better places to live and homeowneranip were good. We even gave it a name -the American Dream." Shane credits the fact that more than two-thirdl of the people live on property that they own as one of the reasons for the political stability in~ country. But all of that iB ceasing to be a re- ality as housing starts are now falling short of new howlehold fonnations at a projected annual rate of one million housing units per year. "What have we done to the sy stem?" he queried. "We have applied the level playing field. We have said, on contrary policy to what we did for 50 years, that we are not going to do anything JpeCha1 for housing and homeownenhip." The crux of the problem la the foreshortening of maturities. not interest rates, market rates or indices, according to Shane. Thia haa occurred throu8h the advent of money market mutual funds which were created by a loophole in the law. Operating totally outside of the system, money soarket mutual funda have attracted up t.o f quarter of a trillion do1.lan although the concept ii only five y..n old. In addition to hia ~ other concema with tlUa type of investment ve , Shane pointed out that lMt year ~ of the dollan placed in money ~ mutual funds were invested ovene.u. ''Comider the 001U1eQU8DC111 to our COWltr)' of 1llJdnl 4.K of the quarter of a trillion dollln that came out ot the financial inttltuticlnt of Ulla country ~that maney OYW'llllll." be 1tated. "We ,.... Jobi and we were exportlna the . ty of capital.': :i.a 11d of plUfline the loophole, UMt dedldon • ,.,,. IMde to let everyone compete on a "level fle)d.0 Now ~ banb • well u and kmw can offer ftllCIMY . market mutual Jl'Cllftml. Bowevw. from Shane'• pomt of WI doel not ,..,\ve the Med for Jcac·tenn __.,.ID . ..a ...... L~f~Band·aid8 eucb u the t2 billion houalna •~·z~~eoave~m!d.C:: ........ he ....... & ...cum to 1M 1*allftl ftlch be ......... fGlm at a"9dfi ~ ...... that .. inly .... by ... at Cndtt ._...., ........ -... ~--.. •1 lhl• ...... ,.. iredtt .U..*8 ,..,~ ............. ,, ,_. ..... wtthliut .................... { IRVINE ELEGANCE. NEW PHASE NOW FOR SALE Distinctively Designed Homes In Woodbridge. rr ~Woodbridge U-llE IRVINE CDllFW\IY NOW OFFERING EXCELLENl ~ BELOW MARKET FINANCING T here is plenty co appreciate in these new W armington homes in the popular cofurnunity of Woodbridge. Begin ~~th the excellent architectural design detailed with wood, stone and masonry, th~n pay close attention to the special touches, like the tile, capped wood shake roofs and multi,paned windows. Then look inside and you'll _. discover spacious floorplans with an abundance of glas.s, high vaulted ceilings, hand.-crafted oak cabinet:S and oak hand railings-creating a truly unique interior environment. And, finally, you'll enjoy all of the new shopping centers, schools, parks and recreation facilities in the surrounding Woodbridge area~ These are the special amenities that make this Irvine community a grcit ~ place to live. Together, Warmington and Woodbridge create an atmosphere of elegant living ... an ambiance that is ready for you to appreciate! Single-level and Two-story. Two, three and four bedrooms. From •161,000 to $202,000 Siles office open daily 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. 'l'nrn ~ rul'lntit"' Ja1r Suhocqurnt .S.S INIV mt\lh in ,..YllllobolttV at •tmt ex .all !'ri<'r ~. /\II rOfNMl'I °'"" and rttftll10n fldlina ur 1N1tnauncJ bv the Hotr11ooonm ~ "1f • moocbly ~. Asll our •t.. ~ fOf dra&. •• 1 • r I 0 R A 0 A 1~ SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 1983 Patrick and Dazzler in red trimmed yellow windbreakers can face a breeze or light drizzle with ~mfort . Dazzler doesn't like to be cold and (in photo, far right) he dons a plaid jacket by Hollywood Dog Top to keep warm. For sailing Patrick and Dazzler, center, choose a red-trimmed navy sweater and for aafety add a life preee"er made by Super-Safe by Texu Water Craften. A bandana in matching navy blue adds a jaunty touch to Patrick's jeans. • ,. Dog togs These canines are going in style By VIDA DEAN o<tM DMtr Not ..... On a really cold day, Dazzler may show up at work in his jacket faahioned with a faux mink collar. On other days, when there's a chill in the morning air, the 10-year-old silky terrier opta for a lighter weight jacket or a sweat.er when he leaves for work. And why not togs for dogs? "They get cold just like people," says his owner Rebec Gainey of c.o.ta Mesa. G~:rAnis a groomer al Russo's Pet Store in Fashion d and Daz:z.ler goes to work with her every day. "We call him the 'assistant IJMU'l88er'. "Dazzler loves to wear clothes," Gainey adda. "He gets to try on all the new fashions that come into the store." For sleeping, Dazzler w ears a lightweight sweater. "People are turning down their thermostats at night to conserve on energy and they don't stop to think that dogs get cold, even though they are covered with hair." The tiny terrier has a "brother," an English cocker spaniel, Woodlea Di Croft Patriot, known to his friends as Patrick. Patrick is not so much a clothes horse as Dazzler, but then the four-year-old liver roan colored spaniel is a champion and has his macho reputation to maintain. But, should Patrick decide to dress in the latest f.aahion to cover his back and sides, his choice ia extensive. Russo has sweaters in every color, 90lids and multi-colored, parkas, windbreakers, raincoats and even boots to keep the paws dry on a rainy day. One of the most popular styles in the ooutal area is the navy sailor sweaters for the canines that love to cruiae -and there are even life preaervera available in all siz.es. P~ple have their own Calvin K.leins and their Jordaches and one manufacturer came up with jeans for dogs. But. it aeems dogs don't go for thla ' casual attire ao much. "During the holiday aeason, we have a Santa suit for dop. It comes with its own matching red cap," Gainey explained. To add a bit of glitter to a dog's lile there ia a variety of collars available -from plain leather to velvet encrusted with rhinestones. For leisure hours, dogs can chooee from a wide selection of toys -aquea.ky toys, rawhides, tug toys, solid rubber balls and rings. Canine nighttime comfort la assured with foam and fuzzy beds and special car eeata afford comfort and safety when the lamily pet goes motoring. (One of the plaid jackets might look spiffy on a pooch for an outing in the car.) Daily Pilot Photos by Richard Koehler t t ~I I• f I t I . . i I I j Oran" Coalt OAILV PILOT /8unday, ~prll 24, 1183 Erline Garn, Judy Argyros, Nancy Short and Patty Anderson Jerry Richard, Billur Wallerich ond Steve Turner By VIDA DEAN Of .. Delr .... •wt A very smart looking group entered the new Newport Beach George Argyroe home tor the Adoption Guild's 22nd annual patroneaa tea ... Dorotby Yardley In black and whlle with matching hat, Marllya Hausman in putela, JoAn.ne Mix and Barbara Bowle in Adolioa, Erlllle Gara, tea chairman, ln a stunning flower-sprigged two-piece blue (a hat, too) were welcomed by Judy Ar1Yr01 in polka dot by Oscar de la Ren ta. Noey Pettljob.n in a Calvin Kleln red, white and blue was al80 wearing a hat as was Sany Luby, Pe11Y Ogden and Katllrya Tbompaon. • F.qually turned out and enjoying the champagne affair with finger aandwlchea and sweeta prepared by memben were Jady Barry and Ollie Bll1 (more polka dots), Barbara Grut, P•yWa Carpeater, Sara Rego, Patty A•deraoa, co-chairman, Annette Banritl, Nancy Sbort (she's chairman of the guild's Memorial weekend tennis ioumament), and Eve Manllall. The tea benefit.a the Holy Family Service of OC that offers counseling, foster care, medical and child abuse pn>8J'am8. • • • What a house! The Men's Committee of the F&1hlonables "borrowed" the magn.lflcent ($-4 million) No. 1 Inverness home in Big Canyon for its annual ''thank ou'' party. The .rfor sale" home ia perched atop a bluff that look.a over the lake and greens of BC Country Club. Credit, for the 7 ,000-square-foot home goes to Ed1'ard Lobrbacb, architect; Steve Claa.e, interior designer; and Carl Akln, builder, who worked with Steve Tarner. Mary Loa Hopkin• and Jerrel Rlcu.rda arranged the party featuring a fashion show presented by Blllur Wallertcla of Saka Fifth Avenue, South Cout Plaza, and a cocktail buffet. S••Y and Herb S•ttoD, Patty and Georp Breanan and Loa and Mary A.IUI Wells modeled. Others en;<>ying the event include Ernie and Myrna Saftl1, S888y and Roger Luby • • They are going In style Lea and Peso CottOD..t. Claarlea and Non Heater, JoAiM and ueae Mix and BUJ and Raaty Hood and Pat Kendrick. • • • And spealdna of magnificent homes -Roger and Sa11y Lal>y'1 new home "Mal.aon Coq Hard)I" in Newport Beach is really aomethlna to crow about. The Lubys invited frfenda in (they came from as far away aa New York, Philadelphia and Tiorlda) to help christen the home named after their favorite restaurant in France. The theme of the house centers around magnlfioent rooeters, including a round mosaic in the walkway (just past the musician-filled turret on a wing extending out front), the round stained glass window ot a rooeter in the "pub room," an 18th century bronze of a rooster and a Iarse Lallque rooster in the Oriental room (Sasay collecta Lallque and also Becc8rat). Carl Panou of Los Angeles and Bob Traakowkl of Laguna were responsible for the gardens and pool area and Roy Collini and Vitto Cotta were contractor and architect for the home that haa it.a own tree growing through the roof. Sassy wearing a white chantilly lace gown (self-designed) and Roger welcomed gueata including the Tony Vittia, Alu Bowles, Dot and Ralpb Clock, Molly and Leon Lyon, Art Blrtcber, Delores and Roser Miller, Pilar Wayne, ClatlClla and Morey MlrklD, Kitty Leslie, A.a.llette Buwlt1, Jerry Rtcllarda and Bua and Dorla lJabardt plus some celebrities including Tlaa LoaJae ln a red fox coat. • • • Before viewing "The Imaginary Invalid," a 300-year-old faree on the medical profession at SCR a group of First Nighters at.tended a cocktail/- hors d'oeuvre& event In the theater's sceneshop. The board of trustees and benefactors paid tribute to Carler Hawley Hale'• $10,000 gift (the#fourth year of a five-year pledge) to underwrite the• production. Tim l""arker and Sally MartlD, representing CHH, Rena and Larry Koppleman, Erle Wltteaber11 Maurie and Carolyn DeWald, David and IJDda Blukealaon, Peter and Gall Ocba and Brace and BoaaJe Lamber1 were Tim Parker and Sally Martin ·l'H9tQ• TODO ~ thoee preeent. (The Lamberta of Wyndham Leigh donated the gorgeoua neckplece offered In the diamond aweepatakea, now owned by Karen Harrln1ton). • • • Some of the members of Bahla Corinthian Yacht Club enjoyed the 11th annual musical revue featuring music of the 301 so much they returned for another performance. Past members worked with lteat Jobnaon, director, Arlee Higbee, choreographer (ahe'a worked with all 11 productions), and Gene Salllvaa, musical director, for about eight weeka tO bring off the three well attended performances. On opening night._the evening began with a cocktail reception ana those attending included Mary Lou and Roser MacGre1or, Myna Tbompaon, Geor1e Starst•. G~f Valentine, Mike Bran, Eve Mara , Alu Moffat, Kim and Lew Spruance, Dick Dimmitt and Larry Lanford. The performen aeemed to be enjoying the ahow u much aa the audience -and some of them have been in .everal of the shows including Cllatlllle Wel11 -her 11th. • • • The beat of Mi'ke Bermant'• Steel band, el(otLc food and drlnka are promised tor today's "A Night in the Caribbean" set for 4 to 8 p.m. in the Corona del Mar residence of the Gwyn Parrya. The Harbor View Hills Committee of the OC Phllharmonic event ia being planned by the Mmes. Rodney Jones. Raymond Gnber, Robert Jeak.llla and Robert Weber. • • • Seven jazz groups will be playing May 1 at the 2 p.m. 'KSBR-FM South Coast Public Radio benefit at the Newporter. The event will mark the station's fourth birthday and arrival on the harbor area airways aa the result of a booster inatalled on top of HCMlg Memorial. Wine bars and tea service and light refreshments will be served and a no host bar will be .et up. U you like jazz and want to attend re11ervatlona may be called to 831-5727. Marshall Green sings to Barbara Mulligan EFFORTLESS IEDICllli Untfnate ~ lumpt, t>umP.. and bulgee that won't go away with almple diet and exercJM. Peraoneltzed programs to Mf'V9 your needs. Unique Gift Ideas for Mother's Day! ALL V (714) 840-7930 EVA'S FllURE COITOURlll 16452 BOLSA CHICA HUNTINGTON BEACH Let ua uelat you In finding the perfect gtft from our vet1ed -.ct1on Including: PIClllC IAETS Ell.IT IOXD flClm-FUllJ FIE CIYITM. --IOTTlD Rell fUla IMO PmCO.All IY WlllO COMIC IASQJ SU R.OMIS ,umowms WIWM. mctO COMICS TDl>TIOIS cw.: U9W.S hf ·.I lf<I I! 1 ', l\11 111Jfi 50":, OFF I AHi f HOURS: 9:30.5:00 MONDAY through SATURDAY 1733 Wesh:liff Drive • Newport Beach, CA 92660 AddlllOnel ~~ lrvlne l D<Mlr) (714) 642-3290 Let's see ... how can I get them to take me to ~ for my great new outfit? .---- f J Beauty Is Nat Just Skin Deep! Says J. R. Marsella of Cell·Mar Corp .• "The average ~erson is often unawarr of the dam• done to their hair by such detnments as air pollution, stress, ~un exposure, hair colorina and perms. Loss of hair, 1rcyln1. split ends and dry, brittle hair arc only aome Of the problems that concern most of us aboul our halr.'' Explains Mr. Manella, "It's really quite 1imple and lo&ical. A healthy body and tcalp allows for healthy hair. We have researched the market and have found an excellent source of nourishment directed toward healthy hair." Vlta•Hairt M combines 71 orpnk mineral• from the sea, alona with kelp and alfatra. Satisfied cu•· tomen have rc~cd a dec1taM of hair Joa and thic~thlcr and morw manqeable r. Vlta•Halrlsp teecl. lfyou or yO\lr halrdr d n6t MC and · ..... "*'*' .......... ,_ Dltl19•. !Qs•~-~1-T,,,. I feel the difference in your hair w11h- '" three 10 four weeks,·.; c will aJadly return the purcl\a)e pncc. We have bull! our reputation on products that benefit the public, and Vila• Hair is JIUI another In a Iona line of suc:ceatuJ ~ucu. Vila•Halr I• currently bclna matlcctf!d lo health rooc1 atora and beauty aalon• acroaa the nation. · Look ror Vll•·Halr 11 the bu•l- nuMt llllecl bdow; , ...... .. rU~ • Coatdress, coming on strong for 14 to 22 sizes. Free flowing black and while stripes in cool all-cotton. An Amy Adam:, design. 98 00 Gallena ______ _,_ ___ _ Drop shoulder news for 14 1/2 to 22 1/2 sizes. A new direction 1n design by Grace Tone Khaki polyester and cotton with black accents. n oo. Galleria Cotton poplin for 14 1/2 to 22 1/2 sizes. Khaki with black shtctl1ng and a braided straw belt Designed by First Lady, 120 00 • Galleria Secretaries Week is April 25 • Aprn 29 I l t • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Aprll 2<4, 1983 (':t t Nail polish out for your well-groomed dog Jean Lucas presented Athena Award Jean Lucu of Newport Beech 11 the 1983 recipient of the Athena Award By VIDA DEAN ..., .... ....., .... Women have thelr "Joy" and "Chanel.a" and dop have their "Four Paw1" and ''Fl'e1h and aean." Alter a lhampoo a d<>1 rnl&ht 80 for a 1pray of one of the frairancea, but rlaht now ln canine manic:ulw, flnaernail polJah ii not "ln," IA)'a Rebec Gainey, who 6u been an animal aroomer for 33 yean -the last 10 of whkh have been at Ru.o'1 ln 1'uh1on Ialand. A "manicure" conal1t1 of havtna the hair clipped out of the pada and havtni the na11a clipped, llCICOl'd1na to Gainey, who addl a word of wamln8 on clippl.nQ nalla. '"l'he -nalla ahould be clipped, but they have a quick and If they are cut too short It can be painful. A IJ'OOl1lel" can point out to the owner how ahort they should be." Gainey 11 president of the Orange County Profe11lonal Groomer• A11oclatlon that holds re,War meeUnp to learn new technJquea. "We have vet.a for 1peakera and manufacturers lntend to keep ua Informed on thelr new producu. "Groomen are not vetl, but we do see every inch of the dog and we work with them and recognize when an owner should take pets to them." A. a rule, long-haired dop need a bath once a week, but short-haired dogs can go for a monthly bath and grooming. "Doa have a pH factor to their hair juat like people. We uae shampoos that won't dry out the hair and a creme rinse is u1ed after every shampoo.'' Medicated baths are available for problem akin and hot oil treatment.a can stop moiature loea and a Jot of ICI"atch.lng and it conditions the coat." "Some dop need hair styling and clipping," aaya Gainey. quick to point out again, "juat tike people." "The most common problems I see aa a groomer ii fleas (and they will be bad again this year) and the ears. ''There are new products for the flea problem and dop' ears need to be cleaned. Owners often neglect the latter. At the last groome. rs' meeting, ean were the dilcussion topic. They can be cleaned with a half-water-hall vineg~ mixture. A vet abould see the dog if there'• an odor from the eara." All IOrta of eroomin4l products are 90ld at the store -powders and coat conditioners, shampoos, creme rina1 and clippen -and Gainey aaya that although groomera are not vet1 they can recommend any of the on-the-chelf products for oonditiona they ~· • • • FOR CAT LOVERS: Cata go ln for grooming, too. "With two people giving the shampoo lt'1 not dlfticult. U one pel.'90n will keep a hand behind the cat's head, it feels secure and will stand still for the IRVINE TOASTMISTRESS CLUB meets April 25 from 11:30 a.m . to 1:30 p.m. at the Mit.1ubl1hl Bank. For information, call Nancy Sptti.er at 548-3710. NEWPORT BEACH HADASSAH will celebrate larael'1 independence April 25 at 12:30 p.m. at Temple Shir !la Ma Lot ln F.&stbluff. For infonnation. call Lillian Godell-White at 640-1789. CHABAD OF IRVINE Jewish Center will host a wardrobe aeminar April 25 at 8 p.m . with a fashion coordinator for Nord1trom1. For information. call 551-1188. TUESDAY CLUB OF NEWPORT HARBOR meeu April 26 at the Newport Sheraton beginning at 11 a.m. for a ahow of comedy, aonga and baUadi For l"t!9el'Vationa, call Blarw:be Cutt.a at 681-0289. SADDLEBACK STAMP CLUB members will meet at Mercury Savings in El Toro April 27 at 7:30 p.m. For more Information, call 830-5~. SMEDLEY CHAPTER OF TOASTMASTERS will hold a workshop April 27 called Speechcraft in Santa Ana. For remervationa. call Mary A.ndenon at 775-5123. HARBOR VIEW HILLS GARDEN CLUB members will meet April 27 to hear a talk on African violet.a. For information. call 644-6200. JUNIOR EBEI.J. CLUB OF NEWPORT Beech will meet April 27 to celebrate inltallation of new offkiers at the Shennan Library and Gardena in Corona del Mar. For information, call Carolyn Matthews at 640-4397. LAGUNA NIGUEL WOMAN'S CLUB members will elect new offlcere Aprll 28 -at Republic Federal Savtnga and Loan in Laguna NtcueI. For informatklll, call 831-6614. SOtn'H ORANGE OOUNTY YWCA memben will hold their 59th annual meeting and dinner at the Newport.er Re9ort April 28 ~ at 6:30 p.m. For re.ervatiom, call 64.2-3577. ASSISTANCE LEAGUE OF LAGUNA ee.ch will meet at Mom Point for a ltmeheon and ~ llhow April 28. Tk:ke1a, at •15 each,~ available by call1na 497-5977. COSTA MESA WOMEN'S CLUB members will elect new ofticera April 29 at 11:30 a.m. at the clubhou., 610 W. 18th St. For information, call Martha Roth at 968-6867. LA TRA VIATA AND MADAME Butterfly cbapten of the HunUnlten Harbour Guild of the Onnae County Performlna Aria will hast a home tour April 30. JU-tickeca, call 840-1480. C1'l"Y OF HOPE OPEN DOOR Chapter will hold ita annual auctloll pot ludl tn Costa Me. April ao bqlnn1na at 6:30 p.m. Por r.-rvatlona, call 963-201. - ORAN.OE COUNTY SCLERODERMA A.880C'fA TION nwnben will meet at 1 p.m. N>rt1 ao et Senta Ana Coll .... 7or-tnfcnnatton. call Jabet TowmJey at u~. ORANOS OOAST OOLLDlJ: WOMJ'.N will bolt a b9mfit paty cm the ,.,,... April ao wlth d.lnDer at 7:15 pin. TtckeU, at t12.DO, bMMftt ~-at 0CC. J'Cll' f LI I .... tfiGm, call G06-&&3(). fJOUTH OOA8T ORGANIZATION ol PlanMd Pwmtbood wt11.-etat10-.JO a.m. ADl'il 28 for a men' K'lh&p kmdMoft In Che balm o£ Mn. J'rank Trw, 3011 s; ~~hit ... OOLOJGL CADLL cha~ of the ~ "' the AIDlltom lftolu1'oft-~) wt.11 meet noon w~ .. • ,, .. JW.ral la~, 100 Newpwt c.anw Dti••, Newpon ..... VD~ wuh," 1aya Gainey. So much for animal.a. • • • FOR MEN: Moat men do eomething tha1 no female would ever dream of, aaya the makers of Nlvea product.a. Seven out of 10 slap on a atingina after-shave in the miata.ken notion that "If lt hurtl, lt'1 good." The majority of after-ahavea contain aa much u 60 ,percent alcohol. Patting and rubblng that much concentrated alcohol on a freshly shaved akin ia comparable to putt.Ing it on a baby, the Nivea people add. Their new approach to after-shave akin treatment la a moi1turing after-1have created 1peciflcally to care for and recondition men's skin following shaving. It contalna only 16 percent alcohol -enough to give a refreshing Utt, yet replaces moiJlture and the natural ollB removed during the shaving procea. In addition, the new shaving product contalna emollient.a that aoothe irritation and roughness and addl an lnvlalble ahield to protect the skin from sun and wind outdoors. · It's now available at drug stores, supennarkets and diaoount marts. . - "All of her life ahe hal been cont.ributJni to the community," lald Zada Taylor, Athena Award chairman for the dollan for Scholar• benefit aponaored by the Newport Harbor Panhellenk in the Reel1try Hotel. The award, however, wu £iven hued o n Luca•' participation In community affa.lra for the lut 10 yean. Her n om ination wa1 1ubmltted by the A11latance League of Newport Beach and cited lnvolvemenll with National Charity League, Angelito11 de Oro, Childrena H ospital of Orange County, OC Performing Arts Center, RIO and OC Metropolitan Audition Affiliates. Nordstrom presented a fashion show with current Panhellenk members pa.rtidpating a.s models Including Betty Harllne, benefit chairman, Krl1tlne Hoffman, Ruth Ann Bums, Sheila Hoyles, Jo Ann Bernett, Myrna Wright, presiclent Barbara Luak, Betty Behr, Leslie Fallln and Taylor. Oth ers among the 300 attending included Lee Gormley, league president, Eileen Du.Bois, Diane Linderman, Gloria Mooachekian, Mickie Merickel, Barbara Burnham and Betsy Ribley. Athena Award winner Jean Lucas Ebell Club of Irvine won eight first place awards and eight second place awards at the Orange Dl1trict, California Federation of Women'• Clubs, 27th annual convention held at Hilton at the Park ln Anahelm. The 2~-member club headed by Lois Lauer, president, alao won a .Uver award for highHt net gain in membership (small club category). Other awards Included three first and two seconds, Ebell of Newport Beach; four finits and four seconds, C osta M esa Women's Club; two firsts for Fountain Valley Woman's Club and two fi.rsta for Woman's Club of Huntington Beach. Edna J-tagen, CM Women 's Club, was presented an award pm for bringing in five new members and her club won a m e mbe r s hip award as did Fount.aln Valley. Ticket sales have begun for tht- tb i rd annual Cinco de Mayo Celebration planned May 7 by the Cabaret Chapter of the OC Performing Arts Center Live entertainment, Mex.lean food, no hoet bar and a shooter bar have been arranged for the event m Lido Marina Village, Newport Beach. Tickets are $20 per person with advance sales only. Checks may be maile d to Cabaret Chapter, P.O. Box 8388, Newport Beac h . 92660 o r ad ditional infonnation may be obtained by calling 675-6000. where else but Marshalls ... first quality bras at half the famous maker's price the newest in designer fashions ... at Marshalls for less designer shorts comparable in quality at s22 rN~~~~ 12.99 First quality. 100% cotton shorts with elastic waist and cuff styling. Many fashion colors. Sizes 6 to 14. fashion bras pre-ticketed by the famous makers at s10 marsh~lls 4 99 pnce • , A first quality collection of basic and contemporary styles includes underwlres. contours. soft cups: front and back hooks. Styles for full figures. too. In white. nude and fash ion colors from favorite make'* Sizes 32 to 42: B. C. D cups. ND•rshallls .._ ___ _...._'9nu.d Nome& for Lusl------.,.. • • • ~ i ' I Or•!);• Coe" DAILV PILOT/8und1y, Aprll 24, 118' Malcolm and Martha Green J eanette Crawford und Julia Woods • J. Nicholas Secret, Bruce Sumner , Lynn Ne wton and Lee Merryma n Brando's secretary 1s big winner Marlon Brando's secretary Allee Marc bak went home from the Bayou Ball at the Newporter with a new Saint L au rent rive gauch en semble; Catherine Tllyen, a mink jacket and Canlyn and Maurie DeWald can entertain 32 in the Newport.er's Wine Cellar. fJ.I of the above plua a neckpiece from Wy•U1am Lelgb J>iamoad• acquired by a Loe An1elea friend of Aadrey Kapelas were a few of the auction items and pr1zea at the Sound qf Mualc Chapter, OC Perfonnins Aria Center Shari Esayian benefit. More t h an 3~0 att e nd ed t he '100-a-penon black tie affair which had an "Old South" inspired motil created by Cba rlea Paap With weeping willows, 8-foot columns and 12-foot fountain banked with flowers flown In from Holland and Florida. Partyprs dining on the beef filet gourmet dinner lncluded Sbart and Harry Euylan (ahe was chairman)J Malcolm and Martha Green (she's SOM prexy), Harriett and Fred Cox, PaaJa and Gerard Butlaaase, Lock Gee and Ruth Ding, Robert and Wu .. Epy, Maxine and Robert Gibson, A.V. aqd Non Joraen1en, Charley and Nora Hester, Doris and BaH Llabardt, Georgia Spooner, Toren Se1er1trom, E laine and Willia m Redfield and Ulla and Wllllam Hughes. • • • C.Olonel William Cabell chapter of the DAR bolds one fund-raiser each year and the one held r ecently at Santa An a Country Club was a siwwwful one, aays JaJia Wooda, general chainnan. Prizea were donated including a 14-day cn.tiae for two on th e Royal Viking Sea and the sale of Sreasurea and tr inkets were profitable .. Th e JlrOCeflda will go for the group's charities including ~wards and medals for studen t.a and an Indian Center. Members modeled fashions from LorraiDe s.u.trluds, Newport Beach and children modeled styla from Sarah KenCinc. of Carta Mesa. Some attending were Jeanette Crawford, regent, Nola Bennin, who provided background musk, Martl)'ll B,..,_., Laara Bargmbaacla, Sam Du&Je, Jerry llertel, Fay Reber, Betty Rice, Mary Allee ~DIHf, Mary Loa Speed and Dorothy Stepbeaa. • • • High Hopes Neurological Recovery Grou p combined business and pleasure as members cruised Sharon Paisley, Vikki Reay, Mona Martin and Linda Bonacci the bay aboard J. Nicholas Secret'• 42-foot trawler Orea. Talk was about forming a Newport support chapter to help the brain injured at High Hopes, Cost.a Mesa, and the June 24 Rosemary Clooney concert Cund-raiser in Long Beach. The ffigh Hopes bannered Orea came back to Balboa Bay Club l·ust in tlme to miss the rain. Aboard were ee Merryman, High Hopes founder, Bruce Sumner, Lynn Newton, Myke Hungerford, Mauren Bivins, Jan Arc hey, Joan Wllaon, Ron Conti, Yvonne Hndaon and Barbara Humphreys. • • • Ei.ght women, Lacllle Adam•, Sharon Horat, Dot Clock, Barbara Gothard, Cynthia P eterson, CeceUa Nott, Dorotby Bendetti and Peggy Darnell, have formed the nucleus of a support group to Canyon Acres, a live-in treatme nt center for emotionally and physically abused children in Anaheim. In turn, they invited friends to attend a membership coffee at the Corona del Mar home of Hyla Berta. The group known as Friends of Canyon Acres Society (FOCAS) attracted more than 100 including Elaine Basmajlan, Diana BromUey, Esther Cavanau1b, Jean Lucas, Joan Sammis, Kathy Simpson, Judy Slutzky, Jan Vitti, and Lori Warm ing ton. The guests went home with information packets on CA, whtch 1s a 4 'h acre working horse ranch and provides 18 children, ages 6 to 12, with long-tenn therapeuuc envirQnment. ~ Further information on FOCAS can be obtained by calling Daniel McQuald, CA administrator, at 998-3272. • • • More than 200 dropped m at Paradise CaCe for the wine tasting held as a fund -raiser for Saddleback Community Enterpnses. Inc .. a non- profit workshop ser•ing handicapped adults in south Orange County The guests sipped samples from over a doz.en California wineries with the imported and domestic cheeses and breads from C'est Si Bon, Corona del Mar. Robert Ford, president of SCE's board of directors, was there along with Shirley Conger , Jac k and Irene Grant, Ar t Ihnen, dU'ector. and Barbara Barna, chairperson for the event. • • • Members of Las Conchas de Oro are quite pleased over thell' fund-raising dinner held at the Royal Khyber. It was a sell out ( 110) and the money will go to help build Orangewood, the home for abused/neglected/abandoned children Among those planning the event were Sharon Palaley, chairman, Vikki Reay, president, Linda Bonacci and Moaa Marti•. Othen enjoying the Indian dinner and the sounds of "Music By Sound Celebration" were .cc and Claude WltJtney, John and Arlene Littman, Bill and J anice Haatwlt anq Ollvla Johnson. , GORIN 011 lllDGI B'f CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF O!AR MR. GOREN Q. -1 •pe• fear -card maJ-1. What cff1tlt•&.1 a lltlddallM iaaJ-11lltf Aod what do 1•11 DH d to ralN opeaer'1 mas.r wheo It •'clll IN onJy fnr card1 loq7 Pl .... doa't eop out ea •• by Mylq It depeod1 oa par tH ulalp •snem.at. I wollld really lll&e to 1•t an boaHt ud ope• aa1wor. -J.M., Nw· wlch, Coao. IThl1 q11Htloo haa lltoea awarded the weekJy prl.M.I A . -There 1s no need to cop out on either of these ques lions. My answers are thoae thut I have stated aii long as I huvt' played this game. Normally. a biddablf' major !>Ult should contain at lt•u)L I point'> in the suit 1l')t·lf There 1i. one exception 11 ~u1t a., good a .. Q·J 10 x can tw opened Note that this n·~tr1rl1on does not apply to a minor !>U1l. You might have Lo open :i fou r card minor l hut dot•s not ~ontain a single honor card. Indeed, you mlicht t1ven be forced to make 1 convenient bid In a thrtie card minor. You ahouJd try to avuld r1i11ng partner'• major·autl opening bid unle11 you have either four-card aupport or throe card 1upport head1d by one of the three top honora. Don't worry about the po111ib11lty that partner h11 only four ctrd1 in the aull that ia hl1 problem. Ju1t because you open four-card majors doesn't mean that partner isn't allowed to hold rive or more cards in the auit that he bidal By making your natural re1ponse, you will find that, In the long r11 n. you will get to the best 1pot. More intereatiDlf ~ what to do If you open one of a minor and partner responds 1n a major. t:onslder these hands arter you have opened one diamond and partner hu responded one spade: al• Ku IV u 0 AQ.uu1 +Au bl •an IV lls 0 AQ.n1.+Au Both have the same point count and d11trlbut1on Th• diUerence 11 only the location or t hl' honor card In the major su1t1 With hand al, you don't want to rebid one no trump without 1 1topper in tlw unbid major, and you 1hould avoid rebidding a five cud ituit If pos11lblc, t11put'11I ly Ont' or IU<'h poor quality. Tht' obvious rt-bid, thtrefore. l1o lo ratsr parlm•r lo two 11pad1;., !land hi 1s d1rferent Th11 lime your support con11'll• of Lhret• low card'! and you have u sloppn tn Lht' unbid maJor. Now I prerer a rt'h1d uf one no trump. Thr ~trcngth or the h11nd alllo hai. a bearing on your rt' bid cl •Ku ; a OKJ&u +Aua dl •Ku ~a 9 K Jau +AK1.1. With hand rl. raise part nrr!> !>pade re!>pOO!>t' lU two i.padr!>. Hut with hand di rebid l wo dub.,, 1nlt'nd1ng to '>Upport '>pade'> at your next turn. Tht> diHcrence bet ween the two sequences 1s that the latter shows extra values . With whom does the problem lie .. ? DE A R A N N Ann landers the L1m1ts?" Mail your L A N D E R S : I ' m a request to Ann Landers, 12-y ear -old boy and P.O. Box 11995, CJUcago, have been feeling golag. aren't sure, you need Ill. 60611, enclotdng !JO incredibly rotten for the some help. It's available c en ts a n d a 1 o n g, past year. There are W hat's prudish? ln the booklet: "Necking stamped. self-addressed. several reasons. The first What 's O.K .r If you and Petting -What Are envelope. IB that over the past six1r===========================================================;;;;., months I have stole almost $200 from m mother's p\lrse. I don' need any more mone and haven't spent any o it. It just sits m a bo under some clothes in m bureau drawer. M brother knows about this but he hasn't told n.y mother. She would beat me to a pulp il sh knew. My mother has ~n making my life unbearable for as long as. I can remember. S hel flies into a rage at the slight.est provocation. For example, If she finds just! one marble on the floor she hits the ceiling. She insists on "cleaning" my room because she can't stand a mess, and this burns m~ because she puts my things where I can't find them and throws out stuff I want to keep . I d on't remember the last time she hugged me or paid me a compliment My Dad ls aware of the situation but does, nothing lo improve it-1 Lately the subject of. Mom's rage have been my sinking grades. I can't possibly do better In school when ahe ia hollering at me all the time. It makes me nervous. Lately she's been saying, "If you don't like it here, you can move out." I wou ld Say "Happy Mother's Day!" with Hickory Rlrms~Gifts. Give the perfect Hickory Farms1M gift to your Mom on her special day. Lots to choose from, in almost every price range. Let us send your gifts, we11 handle the details. ff ickor1 Farms Of O/.ltO* We11 give you a taste of old-time country goodness." South Coast Plaza gladly move If I had c 191U t.l.'ncr.il ll11'l l orpora1K>n 540-6991 90me place to go. Plea.e!.==========================================================' help me . I'm - DESPERATE IN VA. Dear Desperate: I've been writing tltJ1 column long enou1b to know tbe a uthor of tb11 letter It no U-year -old boy. M y a d v i ce I ~ family coaasella1. Re1ardleaa of wbo wrote It, tJaere It r eal troeble la yoa r family u d tile beat way to remedy It It to coa1.Jt wl tb a t ralaed profenl ona l wllo w lll listen to eve ryone and get a real dlalogae NEWPORT INTERN'L DESIGN CENTtR PreHnt• '83 ART FAIR Sat .. April 30 & Sun., May 1 10.-. At "THE BARN" 2246 B. Newport Blvd. COSTA MESA ll•••Cd•""""" ... ' ·~--L..,._ . CAllNY•::r -...... ·~ .. ..... -T • .-....,L..._ •"'°'a.,...., "'~ . ..,,,..,_ , ..... ·~-·•a~~­, ........... ., . Chief attraction Actresa Su .. n Anton, 1portln1 a fire chier 1 helmet, perchet on an old-time 1team pumper at the New York City Fire Depa rtment Mueeum to promo te the 80th birthday salute to Bob Hope next month a\ the Radio City Music Hall. Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT /Sunday. Aprll 24, 1983 cj High court to ·Study Enquirer libel case LOS ANGELES (AP) - Comedian-producer Marty Inaela aay1 he'1 "somewhat dlaappointed" the U.S. Supreme Court wUl con1tder dropplna two defendant• f rom actrftl-wlfe Shirley Jones' libel IUit aaalnat the NaUonal Enquirer. But he 1ald after the court announcement lt wu "lnteretttn1" the court found the $20 mtlllon law1ult llgntftcant enough to consider at all. "I'm ... anxiou1 for the whole luue to be explored thorou1hly and to get a flnal anawer," he Mid. The California Supreme Court ha.I already ruled ln favor of lngela and J ones, ord'erlng that Enquirer edJ tor lain Calder and reporter John South remain aa defendanta ln the llbel suit, along wlth the National Enquirer Inc. The federal juatices said they will decide, If they flnd they have the authority, whether Calder and South should be dropped as defendan•. Jont• and Inael1 aued over an Ort. 9, 1979, art1de that appeered over South'• name and Mid M i. Jonea wu "driven to drin k" by the biaarre behavior" of lnpla. The arUcle a.i.o •----- u.ld "tnaidera" reported that Inaela ---.---------------~ had "terrorized h i1 1taff, che.ted 1tar11 outraa ed adverUHra and ~Holl ood." --------------------- The atory aarcl JOnH WU 80 Up- aet by Inaela' behavior that "by 3 o'clock ln the afternoon 1he11 a cry1na drunk" and unable to work . The 1uit, contend.Ina that \he article waa full of untrutha, aeelu damaaes tor libel, inva1lon of privacy and lntentlonal lnfltctlon of emotional dlatrea. Inael.a aaid he and Jonea were anxtous to preu forward with their auit becauae "If the aood people ~on't stand together for their dJgntty and !'elf-respect -which 10 many celebrltiea have been afraid to do - then we might as well just surrender everything to the vampires." TDDAT'I CllSSIDID PVllLI I ACROSS t Injure 7 Young ac1ress t4 Whisker remover 20 Bad con- duct mark 21 Subject to a levy 22 Loose-fit- ting shirts 24 Musical drema abbr 25 Volcanic 01/9111ow 2tl Sand exptinaes 27 Printing measure 28 Elevator Inventor 29 Confederate state· abbr. 30 Negative word 32 Banishes 34 Daubed 38S\allon Abbr 37 Glacial ridge 39 Dotawlth figures 40 Dan rapldty 41 Fleshy fruit 42 Large stream 44 Sibling 45 Proaecute 4&Dl1tress signal 47 Blackboard 48 Intervene 2wdl SO Mexican dishes 53 Carriages 55 Cu1or·1 killer 57 Sesame plant 58 Bal11c Ann 80CloMby 111 Gleema through. 2wd• 65 Adjusted 132 More Latin a piano J><*tive t8 Plural 2wda t34 Turning ending 68 Barters prefix 19 Declare 72 Weight 135 Ovtw: poetic again allowances 136 Determining 20 Charity con- 73 Ot>ec:uret feet or tributora 75 Poww 137 To rise 23 F nglltena property 2 wda 3t Girl's 77 Overjoy 139 Red-eyed nickname 78 Ah, me Carp 33 Leave out 79 Wanted 140 Pres1dent1a1 34 Shirt 80 French city monogram features 82 Thorough· 141 Furniture 35 At the fare abbr Item summn 83 Thin metal 142 Out 01 36 Char 84 Chaltera prefix 38 Complains 85 E1\abllshed 143 Watercraft 40 Suelan uateet 144 Sweetish native 87 Soul. French measure 41 Mull1pl1es 88 Siberian t48 Concerning 43 Is earned gulf 147 More 45 M1lt1ory 89 Fltlrcek><* ITanquR greeting 90 Tr1ethard 149 Gin's name 47 Peel\ 92 Cook In 151 Multltudel 2wds cream 153 Restaurant 49 Of tlle nose 93 Indian COin patrons Lahn 95 Wiie's title 154 Baseball 5 1 Bishops abbr. pltches hats 97 "Hasn 155 Sllnlla 52 Turt marks' 54 Perch 98 Backbone DOWN 56 Pitching 99 Endures t Put style 101 Water plant 2 Verb form 59 A flop t03 Brolle apan 3 Man·s 81 Rotor 105 Auspice nickname housings 107 Poetic 4 Arum plant 62 FOOCI fish ··t>e•ore 5 Dof'lates 63 Persia 108 Cape 6 StoretiouMS 64 Settlers 110 Separ9te 7 Looks llxed-66 Nickname 111 Partk:lpat· ly 2 wds for Edwarel e<I 2wd• 8 Smalls>M 67 Pntry 115 Add 1 9 Chopping item aubstitute tools 69 Corelage player 10 Tattered hber 2wd• cioth 70 Bunting 118 Essential 11 We+ght unit fabroc cnarac1er abbr 7 1 D1s101ned 122 Sol1 drlnll1 12 Fragranl 7 4 Falsehood 123-Blecl<bird r951n 76 Accumu· 125 Poetic 13 Doctrines lat es contraction 14 Runs up 2wds 126 Male turkey a tally 79 Libyan 128 Famous 2 wds measure rabbl1 15 Detest« 111 Legal term 129 Football 16 Among 114 Promises Shaped Poetic 85 V8111lte5 130 Settles 17 Strength Ml Tear SEE CLASstfllO SECTION FOR AftSWERS 87 Caate 89 Army leader 90 Female saint 91 General tendenc1ee 92 Emil partlCleS 94 "Keystone State .. Abbr 96 Witness 97 More sugary 98 Leather fastener 100 Comic Caesar 102 Latin arts 104 Skillet t06 Motorcycle attachmer1ta 109 Locates 11 1 Scurries t 12 Fluttered around t 13 WtnQed 114 Nose Comb lorm 1 t6 NorM gobhn 1 17 Teutonic goeldess 1t9 To use ldt1n 120 Comes oeck 121 Wears away 124 Broaelens t27 Hero awa1d~ 130 AlludP t31 Poclure transfer 132 Step 133Cud 136 Complete<l 137 Cobbler s concern 138 Book feature 141 Japanese coin 143 Faulty 145 Small m•et 148 Japanese mile 150 Tea tree t52 Approve ' a announces A Spectacular Callfornla Brunch Buffet pr8S8nttKJ In a beautiful ocean view setting. Featuring .. * Compllmentary champagne. bloody marys and screwdrivers. * Chet carved baron of beef. maple cured ham, assorted seafoods & other hot entrees. * Freshly made eggs and omelettes * Refreshing enthusiastic array of fruits, cheeses. vegetables and salads. * Fresh croissants and pastries. PLUS a selection from our elegant dessert tray. S1Q.95 per person 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. -Begins May 1st Make Mother's Day reservations now. Every Friday night, Ladies Night. Drinks 50' 3901 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar 759-1854 For Mother • with Love· Reservations 833-2770 Champ~gne Poolside Buffet Adults sa.95 Children s5.25 Children under 5 ... no charge Also In our t]Jedite1111neari C/loom Champagne Brunch 9:30 am to 3:00 pm ~ Airporter Inn Hotel 18700 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine Aorou from John Waynie Airport Keep an eye on local governme·nt i n the ff' Inner 4 Aeademy Aw•ftl8 I ••••• \ c. Orange Coa•t DAILY PILOT/8und1y, Aprll 124, 1813 At Omaha Central High School (Neb.), 1tudent Bruce Lockwood ie sung to by aoprano Karen Wicklund (left)~ while Matt McGuire gets a similar treatment (right) from Mezzo-soprano Cindy Oxberry. ~per a Omaha collecting fans ' She's bringing it to the home folks BJ liTH,!_El!,E MAHA, Neb. -Mary Robert hates a certain on commercial and what it does to the image 0 opera. "It ahowa two men who apparently have been to the opera by their wives. A huge man ia stap singing. And the two men are bored to tti.ng in the back playing thla game,'' Robert uiy.. ''TM atereotypee penilt." · Although ahe doesn't like the stereotypes, Robert agreee that many people believe opera ia 1*ing and they'd rather be doing almost anything elle. When ahe became general di.rector of Opera °'°8ha in October 1981, Robert promised to change tl,e situation. Obeerven aay the auccesa her group hta bad in winning opera converts makes Opera O)naha unusual among the nation's opera cdmpanles. l Robert ia convinced that "average" Nebraskans ~ known for their love of Big Red football and a tall tand of com -al9o can become interested ra. Omaha offidalt are even contemplating t to a new market with commercial spots o e cable sport.a channel. • Unless opera gains a substantial following a1'iong the general public, including from the 1 of TV sport.a fans, Robert believes opera y IOOll d.laappear from the American landa:ape. "lt'a been U90ciated with boredom and the e te," Robert says. "We're not the mink coat and crowd. We're juat good theater set to music." ; You needn't even be proficient in Italian. All of ~Omaha'• productions are sung in English, she '1.Y-·Aa Opera Omaha gears up to cerebra~ its 25th 81JJl(veraa.ry next year, its campaign to change opera'• image 1ee1n1 to be paying off. It's a Jr;l'OWina, new and younger crowd that ia abowtna up at the hiatortc and ornate Orpheum Theatre, home of Opera Omaha. ''When you go to tMe theater now, you eee all the tennia shoes you can 1JD88ine, '' Robert says. ~''Thoroughly original. Magical!' • -NEW YORK TIMES LocALHERo· edwards LIDO CINEMA ~~ ... 67J.8350 During the put year, generally one-fourth of the approximately 2,000 people In the audience were in their teens or early 20a. Most of the success seems to come from educational programa In area achoola, programs beefed up considerably since Robert took over as general director. Toun to smaller towns throughout Nebraska al9o have been suoceuful. Last fall's "Don Pasquale" was the first Orpheurn production taken on tour acrom the state. Next year, Opera Omaha plans to co-produce an opera with three smaller communities. Local talent will fill minor roles with professional singers in the major roles. Many operas in the country have various educational offerinp and programs into smaller communities. But Opera Omaha officials believe Nebraska's company differs from others In its emphasia on winning convert.a to opera. "The workBhops are why we're here," Robert says. "For them, the perf orma.nce is the lure, rather than the other way around." Gleason, Olivier working together Cindy Oxberry flirts, while singer Karen Wuicklund (right) hams it up. NEW YORK (AP) - Jackie Gleason and Sir Laurence Olivier are at work in London on "Mr. Halpern and Mr . Johnson," an original drama by Lionel Goldstein for Home Box Office. Johnson (Gleaaon) at the MOVIE RATINGS gravesite of Halpern's FOR PARENTS AND It's the story of an unorthodox romantic triangle that begins when Halpern, played by Olivier , meets recently deceased wife. YOUNG PEOPLE It quic kly becomes ,,,. __ "'_'_ •• ,o......., apparent th_at each man no--=~~:.·:'!:'~ had a different picture of ~ the woman they shared ~.s.::•,0 -unbeknownst to one 1 another -for 40 years. IPGI •ct AO($ •Cl""Tll D ,,.,enl•t 0-.0M<..e Swoo-••9<t No date hu been IM!t for the HBO premiere of ~ lll"'Ac•Eo "Mr. Halpern and Mr. u,_, ",..,.. ..... .-nf"'9 Johnson ... ., ~~' ~ "°"" av.wo·•" TOM SELLECK BESS ARMSTRONG HIGH ROAD 1b CHINA TENDER MERCIES CITY cenTER f'.J •fill fHI (ITY(:(flrt•t OAAlfQ( • l>t UIJ ~ "MAGNmC CIAMIC?' We're alvina you a tecood chance to 1ee a flm you'I want to see ......... wlapln. -L.A. Tl#ta LUXURY THEATRES 1ttMllt1MtSlllllllll1•YS2.IAUlllH10tMnlhe ...... S llliritjij•Xull6i~~ss/i::.~) *( ;;m.11aiu~1<»•)* ·'=='~s. lllCALHERO ''Jl.tcl'/,.761\:d:J" ISl '~fl11!1fo~~· '11• m mi· tltSO l tM It .. J 110 t •U 11•41 l tff l i ts 114' t01U HIGH KDt~ 1b CHINA ca * aARQAIN llATINBBS • Mond1y thrv l1tun11r All '9ffonnafte•• before 6:00 PM ·~ l'9dll ( ....... tt ... Htlaytl -- 1 -----"'!l !Y"~OOJ.. ~e':'.a. --- "PLAIHDAHC•" -_____ ...._.. LAWEWOOO CENTH SOUTH w••• ,,. ----·- ...... '·' ANAHE IM OlllVf IN BUfNA PARi-. .... ., __ ..... _ llM010 .. LINCOLN (ll/:\ I IN .._ __ ............ I llM070 ----~CMOICS" ... --"TMI~ ... --- '"T'HIOATH -"I~ __ .............. C.-11- '"THI OUT_.." --"9AD llO'lr ... '"T'HIWA....c1'"411t -"9L.000 lmACM" ... •e•e•tt1•.•§f•H•!f•er-:"PLMM;:: ... : .... ::!f':'=:C:: ... :-- ......... """ ..... -CM) ... Oiiiiiiiiij;;;::i:::=Ollm:i:::::·="--======~ ~Y'J!*P• ~n-.. -·II- MONflNO -5:00- IPY V'8 AEUGIOH llCOTT 8COM I COMMUHITY <pl~Sword Alld Tiie Sllfe«tr" ( 1982) Lie Hor tley. K11hleen 8ellet' Cl)MOVIE * • * "Guya And Ooos ( 1955) Ft"* SN1r1. JMtt Slmmotls O MOVIE * * * "Stripes (19811 B1• Mwrty Harold Remis -5:15- (!)WHATSHU? -5.30-11 NEWSMAKERS -5.'00-IJ LAST Of THE WILD -6:30- • R>A OUfl TIMES G CAMPUS PROAL.£: VIEWPOINT ONNUTMlON (!) A08EAT SCHULW (%)MOVIE * t * "Winter KMll" (19791 Jtft Bridges. Jahn Huston --6:41-m c.4RISTOPHER CLOSEUP -5:50- (C) THE MAKffG Of RAIDERS Of THE LOST ARI< -e.'00- • CAPTAIN KANGAROO I VARIETY CLU8 TEl!THON P£RSONAl DIMEHSIONS 1iJ YOUnf AND THE ISSUES (!)~VMASS e aNEWS ., AOMP£R ROOM i~MORHIHG ~ ~ AJ«) SUSAH ALAMO ** * "uClllbur" (19811 Nigel Ter- {fu =lllllmson * * * "8'othel, Cen You Spere A Dimer' (1975) Oocumtntar; Direct· ec1 by PhiU~ Mora 0 WOYIE ••• "The Bmte' (1966) George c Scott, ~I• O'Toole Directed llld rwraltd by John HUS10ll -t:30-D SEREHOIPITY 8 0CEAHUS 0 \H>ERSTANOIHG HUMAN llEHAVIOR (!) HERrT AGE Of FAITH CD SPEAKOllT trl PU8UC PULSE QI AGRICOl TURE U.S.A. m HEART Of THE MATTEA CS)MOVE * * "Mountain Family AobinJO(I" (1979) Robert Login, Sunn Damtnte Shaw -7:00- 11 TOOAY'S AEUGION O THATSCAT D VARIETY Cl.U6 m£THON (CONT'Ot ~~ 'W: Ol8()()YPt CMTOOHS VOOA FOR HEAl TM UECT.U. SUNOAYMAaa ucuo m&T 8APTl8l CCl MOVlf t t "Who Hll S-. The Wind?" ( 1977) Gordon PWent. Joee Ferrer -7:0&- (ll CtW¥.D CHAMPUN TAU<8 WfTH JOHN HUITON -7:30-1 FAITHWAYS ~ IMl'f SWAOGART t.W1tA AOQEM ("> TV-t LOOKS AT lEARNIHO @1 UOVO OOllVIE !~~TOMORAOW t • "Coffloy" (1971) Krta Krlttolftr- aon All MacGr aw -8:00- 11 SUNOAV~ D THIS IS TliE LR U BEST Of AM. LOS ANGEW G UOVOOOllVIE (!) RAWHIOE G)CAATOONS I SESAME8TRE£T(R)O LET THERE IE UGHI" JERAY FAlWEU REX HUMBARD lD KENNETH COPEi.AHO (Q)WOVIE ** "Doi And The Bunny" (1980) Animated. -8:30- D OOVSSEY 0 MEETINO TIME AT CALVAP.'t (D FAEOEAICK K. PRICE Cl) THE LAHAVES ~=YOUR BIBLE t * "The Slilmlnder" (19811 Fr an- co Neto, Anthony Quinn. lilMOVIE * * "S1¥birds" (Ho Oetel Animal· Id -9:00- D PRIME Of VOUR UfE 0 VARllCTY ClU8 TElETHON (COHTO) =~~ CISCOIOO fD SESAME m&T IRlO m> MAG«: Of AH1MA1. PMmHO @)rTISWMTEH mOREmP l'C)MOVIE * * "J.O. And The Salt Alt Kid" (1878)Slllmf'lc;lt-. D PORTRAIT Of GRAHOPA DOC -9:30-6 Cll FACE THEHA TION D a! MEET llE PRf.88 U 1ltlS W£EK WITH OAVIO 8fWIClEY 0 DAY Of DISCOVERY (!) LONE RAHOER 0> n4E WORLD TOMORROW m THE LAWMAKERS ®.l KENNETH COPEi.AHO m TO BE AHNOIMCEO l01MOVIE * * ·~ "Wfftlll In The Wilderness" (1976) U MOVIE ** "Ful Moon Higll" ( 1980) Alan Min. A<11m Mun. . A~Ptllff ~ NOW PLAYlN'G --~~ .... .....,eru~. SH S33t COITAMUA 1;1w,,....,.,.,,, 631 UOt COSTA MUI ~ SooAlt Coal! Piil• 546 171 t • ....... ,,.... ~-Y·l­l>OntO OLUllll C<lyC..tet 6l4 t112 WllT-TU UA-ltJ 05A6 a::mm=-...r•UUIT "-*l"-Yllley °'""'"' Mf 24t1 ... S-°""9.0. 6lU770 "°-~ _, ... _ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Sunday, Aprll a• 1813 . , -11:15-rn 8ASEBA1.L -11:30- 1 ~°'Mu.WHITTAKER OCEANUS: THE MAAINE BMAOfMNT (JD FRAOOLE ROCK D MOVIE * *'A "Chu Cllu And The PNlty flasll" I 1981 I Allrl M in. Clrol Sul· nett {2)MOVIE • * "The l.U1 Of The Knoclllemtn" (1981) Gerwd Kennedy AFTBN>ON -12:00- 0 SEAACH fD RAIUI, ROCKS N«> RANGElNI> "1l) INTAOOUCTlON TO ~ m WINOOW ON COMP\ITa.s ®MOVE LT~--HUMAH Cll TMI tilAKNI °' IWDfM Of THILOITMK • :I.MIT Of <MWOA DOC 'flt "Alt OI Conltnl" ( 1M9) ._ Mlloft ......... .,..,, .. "°"~-AOMf.12 ~NTAHOINQ HUMAH ft~ OI La MtllCllt" I 1972) Pttw O'Toole. Soc>hlt lortn. -1:41-a 11.Gl WIOl WORLD Of 8POAT8 -2;00- &AMTY CU• TELETHON g~ t *'~ "Wty, W1y Ovt" ( 1966) Jtlry LIWll. CoMlt Stevtnl G> MOVIE t * t ·~ "The GW1 Ill The Red Velvtl S'#lng" ( 1955) Aly Mllltod. Joan Col- 11111 Cl) MOYIE t t "Thi Uon And The Holle' ( 1952) SIM Cochttn, Sherry JICll· IOll fD AMEAICAH INTERESTS '9 COHTlMPOAAAV HEAL TH ISSUES QIPOAGOll lDMOVIE • • • Penn 01 Pen111ytv11111 ( 19'«) Cltttord Evans. Oeboran Kerr C MOVIE t t ' 30 Is A Danoetous Age, CYJI· lh1a" ( 19681 Dudley Moore. Sul) Ktodall C01MOVIE t * "Paradise' ( 1982) Willie Aames, Phoebe Catea ($>MOVIE * * • "Edge Of Doom" ( 1950) Dana Andrews. Farley GmigQr. -2:30-If) MOVIE * t *II "Ediaon, Tile Man" ( 1940) ~ RH1 JollnJO(I, m COHT8tPOAAAV HEAL TM ISSUES !HlMOVIE *•"The Salam~" (1981) Fran- co Hero. Anthony Quinn -3;00- 6 ATISSUE D OOTOOOA I.ff 0 GAEA TEST SPOAT8 LEGEHOS tD CAll-OfMA CONGRESSIONAl. REPORT m PA0J£CT UNIVERSE (I) BTAATI8 ®I THIS WEE< wrTH OAVIO MNKLEV l MOVE * * "Coovoy·· ! 1878) KriS KriS10fllW· IOI\ All Mac:Gf'IW I ~~~~ PIOl\l7 ...,..,.~ "'°'90T UtMMI t ~ CoftfldentW' (IMO) SIM Allin, Jayne MMdowt tCI ~ t t "J 0 And Thi 8tll Fltt Kid" ( 1978) Slim Pldc1111 ~~ t!l & £BEAT AT n4E MOVIES G MOVIE U 1A "Comedy Ot TtrrOl1" (19e3) Vincent Prlot, Peter Lorie -~ **'"' "Report To The CommlMIOn· ., .. ( 1976) MtQllMI Morlatty, SllMll Blaklly. Cl) MOVIE * * "The Boy From ~llhoml" ( 1954) W~I Roolft Jf , NlllCy Oleon m WALL STAEET WEEJ< '11> PAOJ£CT \HVE."8E Cll PflME Of YOUR Uft 9 P£ASll£CTM O'tMOVlE • * * Mecon COllllly lint (1974) Jeue Ind All/\ Vint Mak BMf 0 AOCl(ONTV $ MOV1£ * •. ., Contllltlfllll Ot~ld•" (1981 John Btluw. 8lllr Btown @MOVIE t * * ,., The Eltphllll Man· (1980 John Hurt. Anthony H~lnt -4:30- 6 THE ROAD TO LOS AHGELE.8 G HOU. YWOOO CLOSEUP (IJ INS~Of ... fii) WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW m EUROPEAN JOURNAL (JJ WElCOME BACK. KOTTER @) BARNEY MILLER r H) SHEENA EASTON IH CONCERT -4:45-ro) HORSE RAC1HG -5;00- 0 LA VEAHE l SHIRL.EV & COMPANY 0 A8CHEWS Cl) WAU. STREET JOURHAL fEIORT f.DA...aUHE m THIS OLD HOUSE (I) M'A'S'H (!l)NEWS (t;MCME * t ')t "The Dat1I Angil' ( 193S) Fredric Mardl, Merle Oberon Z)MOW: • • ~rhe SWOtd And The Sorcerer ( 1982) Lee Horsley Kathleell Beller -5:30- IJC8SNEWS L:-~•uu Ip~ ==.mOM MOY1I U t "McLlnl~r· (1163) JolW\ Wl'(M, MNMll 0'Hlfl ( O!TAU. .. THUADOU EVEIHQ -t.-00-,.~~ The World Uncler The SM" ( 19M) Brllll Kelly, 0.Vkl Meetllum. I PlOPLE'S COURT ntOel AMAZING AHIMAl.8 8A T\MDAY HIGHT MOVIE • • t t Yi "The Mlrecle Worktt" ( 1962) Anne Ballciroll, Pllly Mt. f.~,. &cadrllt" (1968) T1b Hlllller. tk:hll1 CtlourMU I WOR.OWAAI tlmA CllNEWI 0 THE AOCl<FON> FUS OfNBCNEWI m MOTOACVCU WOAl..O 0 OIONHE WARWO( IN COHCERT S MOVIE * • Moun11111 Family RoblnJO(I ( 1979) Robert Logan Susan Damtntt Shaw UMOVIE t * * "Stw Trek II The Wrath Of Khlll" (1982) W1H1am Shtllltf, Rlcar· do Montalban -t:30-D NEWS COHfEAEHCE G 818KEL l EBERT AT THE MOYD • WHV IH THE WOflLD ~Lt.~ CAUfOflHIA HAANE.88 RACINQ -7;00- 11 ~ eo MINUTES 8 B~s ewEVE rr Ofl NOTl ~ ::ws Tl1E CHIU>AEH lM t1!) AU. CREA TVRf.S GAEA T AHO SMAUI '1!> coeuos '1> ORAHGE COUNTY SPORTS SC8E C)MOVIE t * *'" Ooclor ZlwlQO" (19651 Omit Shtrlf. Ger lldtnt Chaprin j') MOVIE '* "A Ll111e Ser (1981) Tom Matheson. Edwatd Her'"""n (Z MOVE * t "The Lisi Ot The Knucklemen" ( 1981) Gtrerd Kennedy * * * ''bCllN'' (19811 Nlgtl Ter-ry. Nicol Willtmlon 1._S) PAPER CHASE -7:30-a .. complete llatlnga In TV l og r---------------------------------..... mMCME -12:30- 6 Cll N8A 8A8KETBAU 0 W1LD, ~WORLD Of ~· • • "Eve" (1968) Celeste YemaU. ....-C_HA_N_NE_l _Ll_ST_IN_GS ____ ..,.. ~~~ (561 l<OOC (Ind I -8:00-'11) INTAOOUCTlON TO MANAGE.MOO '1/)MOYIE * * "The Strange Death Of Adolf Hitter" ( 1946) Galt Sondergaard. ~h * * ''" "T-Mt A RICdle' (1980) MelYyT1 Oou91as. Ula Ktdrove -1:00- 0 VA/fEfV ClU8 m£THON O HEEHAW ti> ADAM-12 fJ KNXT l(BSI C!) KNBC INA( J 0 KILAC1ndt G t<ARC •MlCt 0 KFMHICRSl 0 II.HJ TV tin<! J (Ii) K(SI CAl1f't .__ G) K fl \I Cln(! I Cl) KCOP Tl/ (Ind t W l<(f 1 1PUS1 II!>~OCl tPRS• ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST ACTRESS Vi ii Jililt!M --·-_., ... . . . ~ Meryl Streep 0 On IV B W~· BEAHTOWN 7 z rv u i,; "GolllQ 111 Style" (1979) " HllO George Bums, Art Ctrriey. c (l 1,,..miU 1 0 ENTEJITAIHMEHT THIS WEEK • CWO RI NY Ny G QJl MATT HOUSTON ,, tWlBSI ~~ £ C(SPNJ S IShowltm<') u ~lltQtll 8 l(.tble New~ N_,lworkl ID THE PRESIDENT'S COMMAHO PfM)RMANCE Cl) MOVIE •• , "Rogue lJon' ( 1975) Larry Sey- mour. Alec Dudley Coral Bay has just been Invaded by the razor-jawed PIRANHA ... THE SPAWNING C "'3 A S&l• lllllMllOlll "C'-'IS illLWl ~I005 .. VllO N OR' PLAYIN G "HAIL 'THE KING OF COMEDY'! All those who are serious about pictures, hail THE KING Of COMEDY!'' a .... '"•Hf rwr roo.u SHOW NIC rv 'IRRESISTIBLE ••• a film t~t will itch on the memory." "'<"""' sc111c: .. , flllff lllAOAllNf ''Scorsese's KING Of COMEDY is sensatJon.t." ,.._,_. ,,._,.. UI .,.OAll#l . a-:-f .. , I l ~MATM lMCMI * t "SMl.11 Comtott• (IM 11 KtlUI C.rldlne. Powett loolllt Cl)MCMI :.:~ ~ .. (ttll). ~. P. ~lllltl L.MnQtlon 8Mglll 11973) VOi* of Jal'MI Frlndicul, Jullel Miiie -uo- • ~~OMOMOW ~KUNOFU -1:16- ( 1J CtiAAl.E8 CHAMPLIN TAU<8 Wint JOHN HUITON -H0-1 ~ (JIYOYI! * * t "Mtlvin And HOWlld ' (19a0) IPU5£~ :=:v PfWE TIME (Q)MOVIE * * "I'm Olndrlg Aa Fiii Al I Ctn" ( 1982) Jiit Cllyburgh NICOi WN!llm· IOll l MOVIE * • * 'Wtnter Kiiis (19791 Jeff Btldges John Huston -t'.30-= ~VAHIMP£ (!)MOYIE * • * "The Story 01 Louil PHlllUf ( 1936) Paul Muni, Akim T ll!Wolf m BAOKEH AP.PIJW -10:00-e Cll TRAmR JOHN. M 0. D ICASA8UNCA I~ llETWEEH LIFE AHO DEATH 18 NlEPEHOENT NETWORK NEWS fE) FREEDOM TO 8PEAI< "1l) AMEAICAH PlA YHOOSE m WAU.VOEOAGE CID 0 MOVIE ••• "Conan The Blrblrlall" ( 1982) Arnold Schwlnenegget. Jl/TleS Earl Jones. (~)PAPER CHASE -10-.30-m AOeERT SQ1UU£R G> JtMVr SWAOOART ff) TONY BAOWN'S JOURNAL m 100Cl.U6 'l'CIMOVIE , * • • • "The Deer Hunter" ( 1978) Robert De Niro, Meryl Slreep -10:45-0 SUNOAV SPORTS PAGE -11;00- 6 D 0 Cll t1JJ 3 NEWS 8 WAU. 8TAEET JOORNAL fEIORT 0 CMl.OREH: CAUGHT 1H THE CAOSSAAE Q) JEARV FALWRJ. Sl MAK PflEVIEWS (1l} QER: A CEl.fBAA TION AT CAESARS CS) LOVING FAIEHOS AHO P£fffC1' COUPLES Cf)MOVIE • • " 'J()CI(' Petenon" ( 1975) Jacil Thompson, Jacill WNYet -11:16- 6 C8SNEWS -11:30- 6 SPORTS ANAL 0 PACESETTERS fJ ABCNEWS (!) SISl<B. & EBERT AT THE MOVIES I CH.119t CW.9ff •TNI OllFIM ~HAMY.O 'r.~(tl71)"911 ..... a.=::-1~7 .. 118 -11:41-P.~ Acor11 PtOPe'' (1M1) T Id heMI, Clorll l.eldWMn G YOVll •• ~ "Tiiiy Only 1(111 Thllr ....,. .. (1973) J111111 Glrlllt, KalNftlle Rott -11:60- P. ~ Pre.ldenl'• Allalytl" ~ J111191 Coburn, OodlrfY Cem- -12;00- I 100CU,11 WOMEH 1H CN111 llll99l>ENT Nl1WON( NEWS G)LAMVQO ~INSIDE 008P£L llllU8tC ·=a UP AMEAICAI • • "Foxtrof (1978) "-'" 01'oole. Chal1ot It Rtmpljng • -12:10- H THE GREAT PUASORE HUNT M -12:30- ~~COTTLE. UP CU>8E t t "In Tl/Idem (1974) Claude Alunt, Frri ConverM CO,MOVIE t U "Fort Apache" (1948) JolW\ Wayne. Henry Fonda. -12:45- 11 MOVIE •• "Age Of ConMnt" ( 1~9) JtmM Muon, Helen Mlrrtn -1;00- 0 0ENESCOTT CU VOV AGE TO THE 80TTOM Of THE SEA Cl!NEWS <SJMOVIE * * * ·~ .. AUanllc City" ( 1980) llYr1 LlnelsllW. Susan S.ll'tdon. -1:10- rHtMOVIE * • ''I'm Oanclng AJ Fut Al I Ctn" (1982) Jill Cleyburgn, Hlcol wmlam- IOll -1:30- (.JUl AIJI:, NEWS CJ MOVE * * '~ "Hlllory Of The Wortd -Plr1 I (1981) Mel Brooks. Madelne Kahn @ MOVIE ** "FuR Mooll Hlgh" ( 1990) Alen Ark111, Adam Min -1:45-D ATONEwmt -2:00- f) (I) C8S NEWS NIGHTwA T'CH (!)MOVE ** "Angel's Alley" (1948) Lio Gor- f'Af, Huntz H .. -2:30-(Z)MOVIE * • "The Sword And Tile Soroerer'' (1982) lee Hor1ley. Klltlleen Beier D NEWS 1S1MOVIE -2:41- * "The Burning" (1981) JlllOO Alex· andef. Brlln Mllthews -a~ C,MOYIE • • • 'The Gte9fl ...,,. 1195n ~ stair Stm. Jil Adams 1 16.50 DIMMER FOR TWO ilrJl•;,.1.JSf(I :j,lf,Hh ~11 1/ ~~~' ,,7t.t11r .'\ A.~t· 1rr,., '" t°'' · 11. , • 81•lfi1' "' H,,,,,_, ~\ , ,. Oll>A#W TUiNCl .. 'Y• IHJ. §aetano' ~ (/ faUan f!.uW.ne. 4952 Warner 848-2819 at Bolsa Chica Huntington Beach •, .. . .. '• .. I J • . • . . .... •! •.. .. ., • • • . • • ~ . • . . ~. . . . i 3 -~· :~ Otano-Oo .. t DAILY PILOT/8und•y. Aprtl 14. 1913 RESIDENTIAL REAL EST ATE SERVICES Presenting The Largest Selection of Outstanding Homes Ranging From $115,000 For The New Buyer To The Superb Elegance of Estate Properties .. 1 BEDROOM 3 BEDROOMS 4 BEDROOMS $119,000 100 Schols Plz #3 $239,000 14 Rustling Wind $398,000 1715 Galatea $355,000 1008 Bayside Cove ea $239,900 1100 Essex Lane $398,500 5752 Oakley Terrace 2 BEDROOMS $242,500 302 Avenida Cumbre $407,500 1820 Newport Hiii Dr. $115,000 300 Orange Blossom $243,900 1800 Port Sheffield $425,000 3400 Catamaran $124,750 9 Emperor $249,000 7 Crest Circle $469,900 223 Diamond $126,950 304 Cutter Way $249,000 14 Canyon lsJand $495,000 1308 Santiago Dr. $139,900 1086 Buckingham $259,000 2527 Buckeye Street $535,000 2015 ~acht Mischief $142,500 1523 Cornwall Lane $259,000 679 Vista Bonita $539,000 1221 Keel $156,900 2 Winterntght '$260,000 184 7 Port Sheffield $549,000 817 Emerald Bay $159,500 14 Segura $275,000 906 Aleppo Street $555,000 207 Via Mentone $179,000 124 25th Street $289,000 1 O Morning Glory $580,000 104 Via Havre $179,000 2506 Crestview $325,000 223 Goldenrod $588,500 2609 Lighthouse Lane $182,000 23 Viejo $325,000 330 Cameo Shores Rd . $595,000 5 Point Sur $186,000 3 Bridgewood $325,000 1907 Tradewinds $599,000 1600 E. Balboa Blvd .. $187,000 530 San Bernardino $339,000 1037 W. Balboa Blvd. $670,000 19 Cherbourg $188.950 6 Sea Island $345,00.0 1315 Santanella $675,000 414 Heliotrope $189,000 5012 Corkwood $348,000 422 Vista Grande $725,000 801 Emerald Bay $195,000 700 Heliotrope $349,500 3800 Key Bay $729,000 356 Evening Canyon $195,000 661 Vista Bonita $359,500 24 Shoal Dr. $745,000 23221 Pradera $199,000 3121 3rd Street $369,000 2592 Vista Dr . $769,000 4621 Gorham $215,000 100 Scholz Plaza $372,500 1314 Keel Drive $775,000 1116 W. Ocean Front $219,000 24 Crest Circle $379,000 2217 Channel Road $795,000 4601 Camden Drive $229,000 703 Larkspur $379,000 2105 Yacht Wanderer $895,000 914-9141/2 E. Balboa $234,500 3 Sunrose $380,000 214 Amethyst $925,000 43 Royal St. George $259,000 7 Rustling Wmd $385,000 12 Skysail $945,000 60 Royal St. George $266,900 . 79 Sea Island $385,000 2622 Crestview $950,000 4500 Orrington $270,000 2056 E. Ocean Blvd. $389,000 29 Curl $985,000 7008 W. Oceanfront $284,000 411 Aliso Ave. $395,000 4 Whitewater $1 , 100,000 32 Rue Grand Vallee $425,000 38 Coventry $425,000 11 Rue Marseille $1 , 190,000 1410 W. Bay Ave. $425,000 1222 Somerset Lane $435,000 1120 Goldenrod $1,350,000 1708 S. Bayfront $464,000 2502 Vista Drive $440,000 1Jasmine Creek Dr . $1,350,000 715 Bayside $474,500 $489,000 $1,695,000 2616 Bayshore Dr. 2721 Bayshore Drive 2451 Bayshore Dr . $2,750,000 $517,000 151 o Kings Road $499,000 2581 Bayshore Drive 900 Via Lido Nord $539,000 29 St. Tropez $499,500 12 Rue Marseille $595,000 2720 Queda Way $499,500 211 Opal 5 BEDROOM $749,000 2553 Monaco $565,000 245 Emerald Bay $875,000 601 Lido Park Dr. $695,000 4515 Perham Rd . $137,000 1546 Catalina $950,000 601 Lido Park Dr. $1 ,275,000 2482 Bayshore Dr . $279,500 1601 Warwick $1, 150,000 2727 Ocean Blvd. $324,000 1806 Port Barmouth 3 BEDROOMS $324,500 1034 Sandcastle 4 BEDROOMS $349,000 18672 Via Torino $149,900 41 O Vista Roma $399,000 116 Via Undine $149,900 2414 University Drive $149,000 4532 Goldenglow Way $452,000 220 Via Palermo $159,500 4985 Paseo Seqoyia $187,500 8 Robon Court $459,000 8 Mali bu Circle $159,500 17361 Sandalwood $225,000 26 Tahoe $625,000 121 Via Firenze $164,000 9 Nutwood $238,000 901 Citrus Place $640,000 2641 Circle Drive $174,000 6191 Sierra Bravo $257,750 2221 Francisco $795,000 4 Winged Foot Lane $178,000 585 Vista Grande $259,500 4801 Basswood $795,000 2461 Crestview $179,500 28 Tanglewood $275,000 18911 Via Messina $2,500,000 23 Lagunlta $192,500 47 Bethany $285,000 18 Rustling Wind $2,750,000 900 Via Lido Nord $199,000 915 Chestnut $285,000 17 Wandering Hiii $199,250 2307 Falrhlll $325,000 1948 Port Albans· 6 BEDROOMS $199,500 2609 Raqueta $329,000 1934 Windward Lane $215,000 452 Vista Roma $347,500 1817 Port Carlow $340,000 1727 Plaza Del Sur $225,000 9 Barlovento Court $379,000 877 Sandcastle Dr. $895,000 215 E. Bay.Front 217 $229,000 7 Landfall Court $390,000 1338 Antigua Way $1,950,000 23111 Marvllla Lane $232,000 324 22nd Street $390,000 1857 Port Renwick $2,250,000 6 Oakmont Lane $235,000 2167 Vista Entrada $395,000 500 K Street $235,000 2715 Bayshore Dr. $395,000 2008 Yacht Vlgllant (And we have morel) ..... . ...... --...--. ; \ --.,,.---~--------~ -. ---~ ---- ClASSIFllD D1llyPllDt Sunday, Apnl2~. 1983 Looking for a career in ale ? ee today's Help Wanted ads, classification 5100. CLASSIFIED INDEX .__.111111 -"'"' '" kit -.•n.....,m..._..1 .............. 1 • .....__ =•u..., ... -.-f,i.mr.-l• .... k..._~~11...,,00MO--. .. !ts..._hlt--.. __ ~ .... •• .... •-!!!-•• .... r .... 1a ... 1t...___ -.ln-.-m-..-•u-..-kl.•...__ 1,,,ln::::.1::1t:::•..=...::.:-.-••11:11Ullur:1=..--l:~=~-=--=-=iiiiiiiii1.lmr~ .. !l-· _ ..... a..,m .. "'"'' 191 ie1n11 IMl....,.t am J..,111 10011tan11 1001'inerat 1 "' ......... "=iiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiii~~ 'or TuHd•Y tt1rouo11 UllA Ill ••"I._. ........... 1111 -• Saturday publloallon~ I -.,. I , H 1..., ...,... To Pt.ce Ytw Ad, Cll 642-5678 MAl £STAT£ l,..."" ••• ....... ....,,,, ..... &1 ..... IMatld ... 100. .............. c.,..., __ ., ('oruN1clo!Nat l·o.-. M.- 0.... l°"'n' IU TlWO tuwu•1n V alhiiv u~u"""" 8".h ....... H.itou ........... i....,. .. _ ... lA.tiuow H11 b i....,.r..1<.,,..1 ....... ( .""'"' Mt.......n VttJJ N•~s-.n n.-n S..n l"kmtn\J :;..." Ju.n (. ·~11.-,..1 ~nw An. :,,. .. 1•-h ~ ... ,.., t..avrw ~u,..·1 &r.f\ Tuautt \\ 1.,.1m11U~ .. r M1-'lfk Hom..' "'"'Ill' Ap.11runen1ia e. ..... l'ropttl) 8ua&M9 .,.,,194.., (. •nnrt .. rv LAJ\f t•omml PtoprM'i t·c~WT\U\AUn-. Oupk\ic,..• Un1\t H...._IOboM.,...;j tnn.lt'T'W" ~rop.·rt' lnchu.trtAI Prop1 .~ Lou fur S..W Moi>ot. HonwPorlla Moun\Aln Oewt1 o .. ,,,..c. Ouo of Count) °"' u( s ..... R.nc-r ....... ='~ JU...._ JU. w ....... R£N1AlS H.....,.~ H°'*" Unlut'N&hed H""'" l"l.rnuh.d "' Unlu......i..d c-"'"' Condi> Uni Town~ furn Town-U"I o..p1o ... "'"' 0..pir•n Uni " ............. "'"""1...i A.,.,.,,...,,. Uni Api& P'wn w Uni -_ .. _ H-i..M-1> c-·-s..--1a.11 v ........ -l&lo • fWn\ab '° 5.,.,... •Rwn...-Wanl.f'd Cor-f0t -· ()11 ... -.... au..--.... c:omn.1 iwn .. .. lndUll 11.tn ... 11 ~~ .. .. :~~. ~;:· l:nl!~: nn.t main channel '!kw from mqnifloent 6 UPIJ'.ded 3 bed.room plua bonua room, Monday publlo1tlon1: Br, 8 S. pool home'. e.duoed •t.de>,000. covered p1tJo. Walk to pool, t.ennll, lake. 12:00 noon .. lurday. 11"91 PUOl IAYPlllT One of the beet buys in Woodbrld&e -IW.. 8~ bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 a,. up; 2 br, •147,000 or b'\aU offer. 760-8333. . 1Ult1 1004 IWll llXI! 1019 1012 11114 IU:tt IOJl IO:M 11140 11>41 11>44 . .... jl))() IO>l 11111111111 2 De dn. 2 boat IJ*lel. Reduced-tl,D00,000. I Wlmll UIT l(Jlla and oomctlonl may PllllllU •• IOUIRllT ~oe1 with thl1 oceanfront duplex In be tnlde untu 11:30 p.m. ace.n & jetty v1ewa. MutJle room, 4 bdrm, 3 tor the nut ~·· pub#-...... 000 Oceantron ewport'• best awnmer/winter location. OMlon. ,Ot lundi.y and bath, 3700 aq.ft. •1·"°"• · t . Low down payment and euy t.ermt, Monday publlcaOone, UM IW combl-.....1 wt•L. the maximwn ln -taJ 12:00 noon Saturdey. nciu ut ·-· PIHH Hk for a "kllt Remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath+ l&r,e rec. nn., income maketi th.Lt the perfect buy for number" wnen cancel-beam oeilinp. fumlabed, padc». $420,000. the aatute investor and all for the llngyowld. fllllllll UllOI llUTIP unbelie veable price of $399,500. :g.~ rum New 4 br, 4t,.\ ba, cu.tom French Normandy 760-8333. FAtaw 1.2 prtme ecre hilltop $t,260,ooo. Wiii Ill WELOllE 11'61 ~ 'f04JI ed dfllly and :~~: r.,n err0t1 lmmedla .. 1,..., ly The DAILY PILOT - 111<1• 1ume1 llablllty for the 1oo.e flret IA(X)(rect lneenlon OlllUll OIYI UYPlllT You will enjoy the warm welcome Coron.do Ialt.nd cuat. t>.yfront lot 85' boat feeling of this excluaive Big Canyon IUN Of'iy IOIO •~~· ~~~~~~' dock. Plana avail. Now $370,000 wlterma. h i ome w th many custo m featur es. IUM ::; : :r: ...... "' laJ• POI LIM OOIH ::~ ..... .. 3 br, 2 b&, frplc:, immaculate condo. On llU p-eenbelL Canm. ~I. .12~,000. :.~. ... :~ ••n BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 1J01 Family alze flreplece la :~; focal point. 3 Bdrm 2 13 J: battl home wltfl a kltcflen 1.11 H "~' d . 1,, , ~, I\ t>I'> t>lol u 1i mom wfll loY9. Cebln9b Forec:loeure Brokeraga, 1m raflnl•h•d and a new bflnOlnO ~ & Sellar• :~ dlehwHher lnetall•d. together. Tex 151-8370 · 1m Wall located In a~ ------- U)(l tut neighborhood ot _.. -n 1,1, Coeta M.... Pric.d at ,.._.._ IH1 &Ziii Flur upper In upper Newpot1 Bay ., ... 3 BR, I toe lam rm w/fplc, on lge 1ot W/rwtf QA1'"119· Popular 3 bedroom Monaco Plan -large covered patio. Just reduced to $525,000. 760-8333. llO·IHI c;;/jh/IC C/tr,(r:(.~/t//{' Ull'l lllT MY 217 Via lthac:e. s.wg,60() 4 bf, 3 be, epatttllng In out. T ennle anyone Open Sunday. To Place your .. Fast Result" Serv1cr Directory ad Call Now ::: only 1129,800. Call UI -··· 1800 todllyl 146-7111 16» Open 8atUl'day 1·5 Aclt.~ FOR QUICK SALE hnu Ml .... Pr., 642·5671 Id. JU 2100 not THE REAL E S TAT ERS associated 8 I>~'• ( AS D f A. • 0 0 S ;t /• "" ,.,, t '0 • • 1u1 ~ ~• lot with cute 3 REPO wtth ooean + city 111-1414 bdrm houH In Santa light vi-, 2 Br. 2~ Ba. --------1., ______ _. Ana Ht11c.M. prim• rectucect trom s119 ooo Hunt •-Assoca·ates ~·~ 1~ toS1M.ooo.~'111. ex . _,,,.. .. r•-... c.lf'I. can c:IOM In 4 Hcrltlce to $229,500. days. tnvnedla1• ~ Lotl °' V9Cllnt land. .,.... ...... 1-4 o.a51.n20 R-er.M>353 OoUJ & Co. an.1eoo Open s.vaun 1-5 !.' ' !! ' .! ,... ... ~~ I• I -"' 1•1 -~·!.!! .. ·1 , ' I' ..... I REAL ESTATE IR•DIMlll AnnGl.lf'llttmf'tll.a Lot• &..P'ound -sa,111 • .....,,,...,.curNTS Undet VA tarma. Super """""""&;,_ 300, 1harp 1lngle family 3 3004 Bd,.m, 2 bath. CloM t 1012 tennl1, ewlmmlng and :iou clubhouee. Now onl IPEll TOllJ 1-1 from tinkling courtyard-fountain entry to dnunatic pool & spa this Big Canyon 4 Bdr, family rm, fonnal dining nn home is executive living at it.a best in a lush parklike setting. Spacioua Mstr suite, pvt aecur. system. Aasumable loans & 24 hr. guarded gate. Offered at $649,500. Jeri Hunt. "''"""" .. ............ s...w-•-1a a. '"'""'"UC<\ Tta\l .. I BUSIN£SS ' FINANCIAL _.._.. lot s.i.. ·~ ()ppant.lNUft ..__w.,,w ~· °""""""'-ln.....-nl WW110d •Moftry '° L...oen • Monwy Woni.cl M..._TD• a.t.OYMDT tDCHAfl)IS( ""-Appl"'""" ".......,,,. Bide Mo...nai. ea.--" Eq ... _. Conpu ..... ,-,..... \0 YOtU f\U"n 11 WT c.,.....s. .... H-llold Coooo J.wMly M~UW<Y M_.la.- Mw Wont<d MUiMnil lnHrum"U• °''"' fU.mtlWW". Eqwpmmo ,...,....0...,.. ~~~ BOATS :tunt-r R.rn1 ~· .-.. S..I SpoodlSlu ~Equtp Mo>nt~ Sbpo • Ooclu s--!iuppi-lno"""""' S.Wlboordo TRANSPOltTATION AJnnh """'" ._ .. M'nP'"" M.-lloM ·111~1&15<-onwn Motr" HQMft MVt fnM~ TraYf!l rr"'~ U111H1 AUToMoTNE ~:: 1123,500. Act nowt 64&-2S13 THE REAL ESTATERS ••••l'llw .... ,.., .... ,...... TOP CON8TAUCTK>N In thl• 3+ bdrm trl...,.,el home. Gourmet kit, family rm. tanta1t1c: ocean/ bluff• ¥1•••1 M2!,000. a.tty Vok• & ~~ ~-(211)313-7337 :: MIPY 111\DJ 7010 1011 ·011 101• 1018 1011 1020 •on 7024 102'! 103 GM on 'f04JI awrw Md do Jut1 a Mtti. ftxln ... TWo 2 bdrm unn.. 0000 IHCOMIEI Only 1120,000. C.. now 9-n.6370. \ f >I I I 111:' II .. , . ......... I Cele ), "•* .. I. ........ j{),1 ...... 111•41, ............. , "'· $495,000 ... 210 Grand Canal, BaJ bl. Ila....,_ T ..... I Ill,,..., tHeh $235,000 ......... 32 Canyon Island, NB b11,t11 ......... weM I st-I • $439,500 ........... 517 Poppy, Old CdM S,1111• let, llrJ I II + pt lilM, ...,, $247,500 .......... 325 Aliao, Nwpt Hgta .... le• .... ......,1 .. 11, If .... $325,000 .......... 2012 Port Bristol, NB ......... ,., ., ... a 11, ,..tllf• $475,000 ........ 2507 LighthOU8e, CdM lhlfh I,._, 111, I la $250,000 ...... 2420 Vista Nobler.a, NB .................... ,.. ...... $316,000 ............ 46HS Cortland, CdM ................... , .... "',. $299,000 ....................... 4627 Cortland ............................. ., $629,500 ......... 1601 Reef View, CdM 1 ... ,..,,.. ...... 1.1 111-lMO ROMANTIC SUNSET VIEWS Popular Sausalito Plan in Harbor View Hills. Immaculate 3 bdrm. home with large family rm. and a home gardener's delight of a yard profes1ionally landscaped with expensive muonry and woodwork. Lota of pride of ownership. Asking $347,000 L.H. PlllU• IOUI I Olam.111 YIEW Aul<> l.l.lnc I IOIO View magnificent sunrises from the muter bedroom of thlA, lovely 2 bedroom condo & glorious ocean views to Mexico bun the living & dinlna rooms. Walnut built In cabinets, gounnet kitchen, attached ~e. Adult community, pool, apa & clubhouae. $198,500. Aul<> !Wrvl<81Pana 901) Au"'" w ... ...i tlO'IO ~ ....... "-" -111'1) I wi.. ... 1 °""" 9030 rrw11a llOl, v... ll040 An'Kf'M' l1 ... • '°4) AUTOS ll'OltTm """"""""' Audi """"" llMW CHIW'n o. ...... ..,, .......... ,......,. ""' .......... i...... J ...... ~ ~ ....... '-........ .._ w-............. ::,......,... °""" -· = ....... _ ........ -~ lllTlllTIYI Home planned for p-adoua family Uvinf. 4 bedroorm. family room & fonrial d1nina room. Beautiful pool & 1pa with 1outh expo1ure. Ccmplete priv.cy. 145 feet street fronta1e. Ocean view. Upper Monardl T~. $695,000. SHORECLIFFS 4 BR, canyon & ocean view, ltunnhig. 249 Evenln_i Canyon Rd. Open today 1-5. 1211,aaa FEE VIEW 2 BR+ den , H'vHomes . Seawlnd. 2244 Port Carlisle. Open today 1-6. .... wtl Ocean view & beach acceaa. Cameo Shores $825,000 fee. 4 BR. leue $3,000 per mo. PllllllU ~ lllllLT 5 BR, 1 blk to bay or ocean. $399,900 fee. Owner wtll trade · for smaller home. t&oiaAIYlllt Del Taco site In prime locatlon. Good steady return on Investment. Plus tax write off. Long term triple net leue. .... ,,, 2nd story poaelble on this bank foreclosure sale, Corona Highlands, lender offers fantastic financing. $285,000. -•TWO ...... ONGS !BE STAINES COMPUY 760-1397 2 Br. n-kitchen. new balh, lofced air heat central "1. petlo, Xlnt nanclng. $770,500 Agent 714/840-3475 Spactou1 home & 2 In come unite I pool 9~% H1umabl• 1at good lncomall I Agt 663-1417 573-7761 IUNW Situated on an owrtlmd lot • thla 4 Bdfrn, 3 bath home onera • magnlfl. oent vtew of Ces.llna and the dty ltghta. Pf1oed at $«9,000. Robert HalleY Realtor 9444455 ILlffl llllllT I lllT 4/5BR, bonua room, 3 batha. Free standing home, mint condition. Built-in financing. Seeing is believing. $280,000. Land included. llOIUTllUL Ol•llm lBr, loft, hiahlY upgraded, move in oondftlon. On the water. $110,000. Land included. lllCY lllERlllO IULTll 144-1111 AESIOEHTIAl AUL £STATE SERVICES '"'1·1 4 BR, FR, IRVINE TERRACE, $398,000 LH. See LUCY ROSE at 1715 Galatea Terrace 2 BR, Den, CORONA DEL MAR, $325 ,000. See SUE EXLEY at 223 Goldenrod. 3 BR. FR , BAYCREST, $325,000. See TED PETERSON at 1907 Tradewinds. 3 BR, FR, CAMro SHO~ • $325,000. See EV AN OORKE'IT at 330 Cameo Shora Rd. 4 BR, BALBOA ISLAND, $469 ,900 . See MARCIA MA 'ITHEWS at 223 Diamond. 4 BR, FR, Pool, HARBOR VIEW HOMES, $325,000. See OORA BALDIKOSKI at 19-t8 Port Albani. S BR, CANYON CREST, $249,0 00 . See LINDA MA.RSroN at 7 en.t Orcle. 3 BR, FR, BLUFFS, ,215,000. See KAY PARKER at 442 VJSTA BOMA. 2 BR. TURTLJ:BOClt. m~ •tse,800. See Rrl'A QUIOOLE at 2 Wlntemiaht. O BR. HARBOR VIEW ua.1.s1 024 1 ~00 . See VALEBIS MARSHALL ·at 1034 ~. ·~ llTITI ti tll IUf lllt. Entertal.ner1 paradlM!. Approx. 8,000 tq.f L l...arie lllp, bayskle lawn & p ool. Hl1 & hen bathroom, library, gymn.uiwn. Only 6 years old. Prime loca\lon. Excellent financing available. $4,000,000. J ohn Macnab. HW LllH llLI IHUllH. Fabuloua location on the tumins buin w/two lllps on 61 ft. of bayfront. 5 BRa, family nn + bon1.&1 nn.. Pool & ape in private •heltem courtyard. •1.soo.000 Leuehold. Cathy Schweickert or John Macnab. 111 IUYll · UfLlllll a B.IUML Thia excll&live home WU desjgned & built with your lavtah desiree ln mind. ~ tq. ft. incld. 5 BR, 6 ~ BA. bllliard rm, 3 wet ban, wine nn, total privacy , 1ecurity and breathtaking views from nearly every rm. $1 , 795,000 with extraordinary terms. Please make ~ery effort to view th1a rare opportunity. Dan Bibb. IPHUH LllTlll. Totally cu1tomlzed & expanded New Bedford model w /unobetructed ocean & night lite views. 4BR, 3BA. game rm, wine nn, pool & apa. LoMia of amenities. $795,000 incl. land. Sandie Flx. 111 IHHI. Beautiful 4 BR Venallles. Sparkling w/pride of ownership -lovely view Including ocean! Elegant atmo9phere w/in 1padOU1 room1. Lovely pool/spa area, 1olar heated. Prestige, leCUrity gated community. $725,000. Jane Paquin. 111 IUYll PllYATI ltL-ll·IAI LllATIH. Makes thi• totally remodeled & skylighted 4 BR + FR home, a real exclulive charmer. Exciting lited designer pool, 1pa, 1ubtle fountain in expanaive secluded t>.ck area . Greet entertaining, comfortable living. Drive by -23 ~um then appointment with Tom Allimon. Price $709,000. IUlll If al UL.IMI Right on the ooean 3 BR. 1 ~ BA "oldie, but goodie" ii definitely liveable -w/potential for remodel or-! Near all 1hoppin1. Seller financing available. $53~.ooo. Marth.a Macnab. PllHTI lllLlltll. Trlcldlna waterfall into very private !e& off muter suite. Dramatic 2BR, 2~BA. den & library. Loweet priced ''Miramar'' model. Highly upgraded for the dia:retionary buyer who wanta total privacy. $495,000 Incl. land. Maureen White. II• HPLll. South of the highway. 2 thlft bedroom unita, alwa)'I rented, huge sundecb oo front unit. Well maintained. $395,000. Beverly Morphy. -.1 MIT" LllmL Prest1&ioul HARBOR VIEW HOMES • :S BR. faro nn, formal din nn, plUI beautiful pool & apa. C.omp~tely uparaded -· French doora & wlndow1, plantation 1hutt.era, panellng & new kitchen. Too many amenitiel to u.t. ~.ooo incl. land. Donna Godaball '61•111 11111, Gate-auarded communlty. 2 BR + den. Tut.efully decorated. Cloee to pool & tennb. '369,500. Berit Mitchell. Lllll fl.ILi IPllULI Spectacular 4 or OBR "Z Plan" aoMo In Ule Bluffa. Air coad., formal Dininl nn., family nn., muter 1ult.e, bonua rm, & 2 ~~80,000 LH. Dick TllTLI 1111 llllllll •H•llll. K down for th.la 2 as den home. Garden court, dlnln1 terrace•& aourmet kitchen wlbnaldaet nook. Vaultild CltfUnp & brick tp&c. *21$,000. Barbara Callihan, -.... . --....,,... --·----=----~ ----- --- --. - I I DI Orange Oout OAILY PILOT/lunday, Aprll 14, '88' Eve~y day classified presents a n inte resting variety of merchandise at great prices. And it o nly take a few minutes to scan the cla,ssified columns for whatever you want. Best o f all you can sho p classifie d anytime, anywhere, thanks to the conve nie nce and availability of newspape rs. be sa vvy - shop classified regularly. Shop classified fi rst. l'K:nnou9 .,..... ACTmOU8 ...... MAim STATl-.r MAim STA~ The lollowlng 1*90n1 -doing The IOllowtng per.on la dOlng ~ -llulir.--VOGUE AGENCY, 2tt0 S. SULLIVAN ENGINEERING antlol. Senla Ana, CA 92704 CONSULTANTS. 19517 Vu llt Vogue 8chOole end Aotfttw;y, I Clrcll, H\lftttngton 9eadl, Cellbm6e Ct lllornle corporellon, 211• S. 02648 lklltol, S..... Ana. CA. 92704 Leroy Jam" SuHlvlin, 19567 Tiii• ~ le oonductld by • YUiii Ctrdl. Hunllr19ton hactl, oorpor1tton. Cellfomla 02MO Vogue 8choolil and ~ Thie ~ 11 conducted by 1111 Oenwln \I. Frye, lndMduel. "'9eldenl Leroy J &AIYwl Thie 11lllerlllf!t -fllld Wltll Iha Thie tlll«Nnl -fled .ttlt Iha County a.ti of Orenot Collnty on County Oer1I of O!'enot County on Mllfdl 30, 1883. ""'11 S. 1913. ~ mM7t Publl•lled Oreno• Cout Delly Publl•h.0 Orenge Cont Dall) f>tlc4, ""'11 2, t , 11, 23, 1983. PllOI, ~ 10, 17, 24, Mey I, 1993 1588-83 1t14-f3 All new tiueane .... ~"9 • flcUUoue name, mu11 by law .,. '991stered wlttl the County a.ttL The DAILY PILOT prowldee the fotme . and flltftg Mrvlce• for our c uetomert. If you are elartlng a new buelneH ctll ltw DAILY PILOT for Information end f«m•. 646-4321 &1. 332 Ml.IC M>T1Cl ACTmOUa•-· ..... STATU9JIT Thi following P14'9CM'I I• dOlflG ~-ABC() IHTEANATIOHAL. 4001 WHltrly Pl•c:•. 8u111 Ho. 111, Hewpot1 BMctl. C...omle 92980 Amir Ho111n ICHhlnl, 2110 18th Strwl, °'*Wood Apt., NO. Q 300, Newport 9each, Celllornl e 9HeO Thll ~ .. conductlcl by .,, lncSMdlMI. An* H. Bortlenl Thie ~I -t19CJ ~ the a.ti of Orange County on tAardl 11, 1193 f'ltt* PublllMd Or11191 Cout Dally Plot. Al)#. 16, 23, 30, Mey 7, 1983 118&-83 MUG teTa P\atc M)TICl "!JmOif.W ~.m' T I r;;;;'1:t•~Mft It ltOlnl TM tollowlftf pettoll It dolnt ~ ....._ ... L IMI aYITIMI UO 0 L A I I I 0 O 0 N 0 I , f AIUam1 Itel•. Ooel• .... a. 0 0 ..... A N '( J. 0 l A. I I 0 Oellfornll ..... lNCLotVfllU 11' V-... er.., 64llM L. hoM, "41 Alll*N Cott• ..._, C'.litor111a HlM Olrol1, Ooet1 M1H, Oelllotnle JOllll A l'MUnO, 111 vw.oe ..... CtH ll , OOll• Mell, 01lllo1nl• wr-.... ---It tondwolld by WI IHH 06IM I....,,. ~ .. ~ br., TMI ~ W91 NICI with IN JoM A. 1W1ano =r. = "' °'l"OI County "' ~ ~·c:-Ned w.t!h ... NU. Aprl 74, 1"3 .,,._ Ool.lnty on 1"11bllthl4 Oren~ Colet OIU; ,.,_ Piiot, AlJ' 11, U, IO, Mey 1, 1NI 11'11bll1hed Or1n11 Oo11t Delly 111+4J 'ltol, Apr 17, 14, Mty 1. I , 1113 1---~---------171148 MOC NOTa Nit.IC NOTIC( "°"'10U8 llU ... .. NAm .,.,. ... , T111 1011ow1no ~eon 11 oolno ~ .. T~Ll CM>WN LANOICA,I, 11915 CH h•w 8tr11t, Founteln \111111)1, Oellfomle '27ot H11mon O.vlo Wiiton, t7H5 C11h1w S1r111, l'ounleln \/alley, Celllornll 02708 Tiiie bull,_ It oonduotld by an lndlvlcluel Hermon D WMeon Tiiie IUll-t w .. llllO with IM County CMtll ol Orange COunty on Aprtl t, 1983 Publlehed Oreno• co .. ?C: ---Nll--IC-NO_TIC( ____ Piiot, Atx 10, 17. 24. May \·~S:a ,tcTmOU• .,... .. NA• ITATl•NT l'tBl.IC NOTICE The lollowlng pereon 11 doing ,ICT1'TIOU8 •u•••• ~ M: NAMC 8TATl•NT Tl'UNK IN THE ATTIC, ~ El The lollowlng p1r1on 11 doing Le l'Wme A.,.,, ANNlm, CA t2I07. bl.I~ 11 SYL\ll!!TER J IARRIC!Ll.A, 81MPL y PUT, 18 Tlmbt •llnt, 24212 l.ugllltln, MllililOn \llllO. CA lrvlnl, Calttornl• 02714 ~~-~ld byen Chrl1 t1n1 J Burge . 18 ayN9.ter J 8411,_.. Tlmbtrllnt, lrvlne, Celllotnll 92714 Thi• •lllt-i -lllld with Iha Thi• butlntll I• condUC1eO by en ln<IMduel County Clertl of Orenge County on Chrlellne J . &irge Apt1I 12, 1063. Thi• •t•l-1 w .. ftlld With the Publl•llld Oreno• Co•~'=Y County Cllrtt ol Or•noe County on , Aprllt, 18&3 Piiot, ACri 2•, Mty 1, 8, 15, 1te3 '21Ma 1011-:!3 Publltllld Oreno• CoH t Delly ---.. ---II'-...,,.-----.:;;.. PMOI, AfK 10, 17, 24, Miry 1, 1983 ... ~ ""'~ 1832-83 ,ICTTT10U8 .,... .. ..... , . .,....., PRIMO SURF SHOP. 114-A 22nd Bt., Newport BHcll, CA 92"3. SEA 8UIT 8UIT8 OF CA 1...0., 837 W. 18th St., Ccet.I MMe, CA 92827 Thie ~ II conauctld by e corporetton S.. 8u4t1 of CA Inc. KnelY sunemen. Controller Tiii• tl•t-1 -hied with lhe COUnty Clel1l of Or.,. County on Apt1I 21, 1083 ~ Yl'ubll1Plld Orange CoH t 'OaOy .-ieot, Aj)<ll 24, Mmy 1, 8, 10, 1""-' . 1175-13 rtcnnoua~u MAim ITATDmNT Thi lollow1no peraon la dOlng ~-ALLEN F\NAHCIAI.. 4'21 Tiiier A--, No. 130, Hewp«I hectl. Celllornta 02eeo Allen 0 . lnvnoor, 711 Kthlnge onv.. C«one dll M11. California 92926 TNI ~II QOnOuclld by 1111 lndMd\All ...,0 ""- Thie 118~ -fllld wtth the CcM.wlty ca.ti of ~ County on Aptl 14, 1"3 ~ Publl1"-d Oren~ Co11t Delly ~. ~ 17, 24. May I, 8, 1983 1787-83 PUil.iC NOTIC( l"tcTITIOU8 IU ... H NAMI ITA,....NT (A) UNICOAN IMPORTS: (9) PEGASUS TRADING CO., 1t Minot, ir.tn.. CA 92714, LAMBERT AVEllANA, 18 Nlnol, INlnl. CA 02714. Thie ~ le conducted by an lndMdull lllnber1 Avellana Thia llllt-t ... lllld with the County Cllrtt ol Or llllOI Co!MllY °" April ~. 1983. 't14111 Publl•h•d Orano• COHt Dilly Pllol, Apt1I 24, Mey 1, 8, 15, 1N3 1917.e3 PWl.IC NOTICE ncTIT10Ua.,... .. .... •TATlmNT Th• following pereon 11 doing ~-SOUTHEAST JANITORIAL SERVICE 9678 \111 Enlr1d1, Cypr-. CA 90830 THOMAS J PHELAN. 9579 \lie Entrtda, C~. CA GOe30 Thie ~ .. c:onductad by .,, lndMdual Thomae J Phelan Thll '1•1-t WN fled w1111 lhl County Cieri! ol Oreno• Count)' Aptll 21, 1983 ,.,., .. Publl1h1d Orange CoHt Diii)' Piiot, AfX\I 24. May 1. I. 15, 1083 191~ "8UC NOTICE l'ICTinOUa .,... .. "'lirliO&M eua-M Mm ITATDm.NT MAm STATIWWT Tiie lollowlng per1on 11 doing Titl IOllowtng ~non It doing bu*-'* bu*.-•: DETAILS, 3857 Birch S1r111. l'ANCHO BROOKHURST Suite 548, Newport B11c:h SHOPPING CENTER. On• Civic Cllltotnle 92MO • P1Ga, S"'9 MO, Newport &Mdl, Pemele O'Bryen. 28145 Celnofnla 92et0 P1lm1110 Cr , lagune Nlguel. Jerry Fllld1, 1000 Ctl1tlng CellforiM 92977. Cfoet Rold, LOI ~ Callfomlt Thie bu..,_. It CCH>ductld by ij, 90024...._ ·~---lndMduel. Thll --II oonduc:'8d by 1111 P.,,... O'Bryan lndMdual. Thie l'l•t-t ... Nld with the Jerry F1elde County Cllt1t of Orange Co!Mlty on Thll ~ -,.., wlltl Iha ACri f3, 1N3 County Cler1l of Or-. County Ofl '214• Aclrl f4, 1983. P11bll1Plld Orenge Coelt Dally "2Mm Piiot, AfX 18. 23, 30, Mey 7, 1963 Publlthld Or1ng1 Coell Dally 1799-83 P'llOI, Al)# 17, 24, May 1, I . 1N3 1831-«l NI.IC NOTIC( '1CTITtoU8 WH MAim .,,..,....,.,. Th• lollowlng pe1aon 11 dolno ~-C-AAY DRYWALL. 511 Poppy, Cofone dll Mar, Celfomte 92tU Raymond Wayne~. 51 t Poppy, ecw-dll Mar. Celltomll 92625 Thie bull-la t:onduc:tld by .,, lndMdllll. Reyrnond w Zupll1CX Thie 11•1-I •• Ned wtlh Ille County ca.ti of 0..,. County on "°" 14, 1983 nwm Publl•"-d Orarive Cout Delly Piiot, AfX 17, 24, Mey I, I, 1"3 171tr-63 l'tCTITIOU8 ...... ..... ..,.Tllm#T The 1011-•no ~eon 11 doing ~-CUSTO M A PPAREL ~ EMBROIDERY, 1211 LOClll" A--. Suite F, Cotti Me ... Ctlllornl• 92$2$ LOii l . King. 3141 W . 8111 ROid, No 24, Ant helm. Celllomla 92804 Thie bull,_. le conduc:led by 1111 lndlvldlltl Lole l !(Ing Thie altt-1 WM Nld wfttl the County Cler1l of OrMgl County Ofl Apf1I '· 1083. n1Mn Put>ll1hed Or1no1 Coelt o.tty Plot,~-10, 17, 24, Mmy 1, 1193 ltl)-83 McCOl.MK:al MOITUAllES Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 REDUCE TODA 'V'S IUGH COST OF DYING CREMATION -BURIAL AT SEA San Juan Capistrano 495-t776 "4llOll LAWN-MT. OltWI Mortuary • Cemetery Cr•matory 1825 Gisler Ave Costa Mes. S40-5554 ""'-n•••oM ~llVTNIU ~CHANA. 427 E 1711'1 St Costa Meaa 848-9311 Today the 1\.lmll98 fu The Neptune Soe.i.ty offe11 almp&e and dignlfitd c:remalion With b\mal at tea, mountaint or datrt. $()(Jal $ecvrlty Md Vtter~n• Death Benefit• will cover molt of OUT compi.te tervice coeta. We are the laf819! CTetnation aociet}I in the nation with 21 fully llccnMd offlca to aerve you. , Our MMe. i. available to all. If~ ...ct Immediate~. or Wt\ membetahlp 1nrom.t1on, ..... cal Of writ• to: Mall lo: Tii£ NEPTUN! SOCIETY 2400 W. Co.Mt I IW•w.v . lc8M-...,_par, 8Nch, CA W-1 Cr.MBKR LAGUNA-IPICTACULAR VU LINDIR OWNIR -Wiit' eoeepl l.OW CAIH OOft PAYMIWT I Of'PIRI LOW llfTIMeT MT'lt I••• ..... MUltMew• .._. wtttt .......... ....,... tile J•d, I flre11tlMH, lawetr t.,.-=.,+ tpa plut I ~· *"'"'· MMlr • ..... ........ '"' fa"taallo ~llWI .... a "'bmll. ·--•1-1400. ......... .... UDO llLI -CUITOM AnMl1"11 ~ht, oMMul I ,,..ttaiou. reel.eeftoe tn a fine teoalloft. Telallr MOfdlnaled MoOf with Pr.-.oh dHte, t•YrM•t kltoh•n end "ttrd•n femllr ......._,. A flM 4 Ndtoom MflM fof the ~.a;, burer. 111·1400. Roduoe41 to H.V. HtLL8-8ROADMOOR latr• epeoolal hOmo rot ram1t1 comrort and ~ entortetnl"I. lnctoaecl bftclt oourtrard entrr, "garden wlew" tlwlng room, f11mltf room, gounMt klt.ohon with etrtu"' wtew. Pflw•I• PMt •I•• Jatd. A tnlfy lredtttonel • bedroom home rou'd a. p1oud to own .... Oft aun. 1., P.11. et t1'00 ~lttouM UM, Corone det Met. ~.Good ...umOle loen. asse.aoo . ..,,.... 1 ACRE -HOR8E COUNTRY Only 1 V. JMn old wllh lo11 of room lo rMm l enfof netu,. ph.tt the amenll'" of • n1wl1h ho"'•· low, low oHh down perment ••• low, low lnterHI ral• •.• IMtttutlonel lendof own• and on.. lhls 5 bedroom home wllh a-" and tetme lo"' your nMdl ... " rou'r• a queltfled bufer. lllenf emontt ... lnol. I ftr~lau1 6 NII ftoon ...... .000. ISM400. CLIFFHAVEN VtEW Ramodelod 2 .. 1ory home with olOM-up YU of .. ,, boet•, ooeen and n~. Entertetn enfofably from thla I , femltr room ptu1 prlwet1 pello. OWnet ~~ trnenc:lne.1511.000 , .. BIG CANYON'8 FINEST -POOL New Netlng. Ono-tovef, hlahly upgreded llr'Mdmoor Mft'M. Cethecftal ceHlno•. 2 nrepleoee, conwor11tlon pit. Secluded corner with hendeom• atone Ht•rlor. LOYofJ 4 bed, I be homo on MCh.tdod oomor. Poof+ eopat1te apo off rMetor ....... .,._ .... 131-1400. PENINSULA PT. Com~ remodeled Cape Cod act'OM from Peft. 8tope to .. ,. Oceon l lennla club. IMl,GOO ~ ftf9t T.D. 6 OW help wlttl belenoe. lll0,000. 1751 Pl&u Doi aur. Optn ~n 1-1. VIEW -TRADITIONAL 8poctacu&lw cloM up YU of .. ,, OOMl'I and night llghta. 8pecloue ltwlng room, c="'•t kitchen with breekfHt arN, wtne oellet • •xteMIW ..... dec:ka. Two mMter .uhM +one ramltJ bedroom. Tho ldeel MflM fof entort.lnlng l ..., ...,..,.. --... lend. 131-1400. LITTLE ISLAND -LARGE Qutet and 14tnounded bf .. rtronte. Xlnl '9ftW '9COfd on thaoM 4 bedroom and 2 IMdroom untie. 111 Cry1t1I. M71,000. l7>4IOO. • BRICK, BEAMS, BAY8HORE8 An oppottvnfty lo own In thte pnettoloue ~ COlft"'unltJ· CofntcwtaMe I oom Capo Cod with brtclt petlo a eopento -tor 1utte. Aeeumabll loan of tlt1,000.. Tote! ~ S1 .. ,000. 131-1400. NEWPORT TWNHME W/DOCK Two •torr 3 bedroomt, 21h beth• In • qul1t locetlon. Greenbelt wl1w1 and 1owe11 prtoed In • watertroflt oommunltf wllh boal dock. Good 111umabl• fNftclng. 1210.000.. BAY8HORE8 -TRADITIONAL Wonderf\11 lamllJ ... with a PfMttaloue addrHa. Country French I bod. I ba. LMge ~ ldtohen. llrtdt peUoe end many ~ OWC f'lnt T.O. A mu.t .... sns,ooo ~ GRAND CANAL WATERFRONT c-...c cottage deoorated "' '4moft In" condition with wermtl'I and charm. A Pl'tlOt ........ 2 bed, 2 .. with gourmet ltHchen. Mn dMk I petlO. Dock for 2 boeta.. lh dlJOtd lo .... ooo. 131-1400. UDO ISLE MEDITERRANEAN u.w..t 2'4toty. •bedroom, 4 beth wtth HIUlftMI• note and T.D. Owner wlll oon1lder l1e10/optlon or exchenge. SUl,OOI CHARMING DUPLEX PumleMd. Telte OW9' now Md enjoy • tuM••r of good Income hom · thle Id a 11111 'l...._., '*-9 with I bed + a 1 bed epl. ower a t oar gerage. Good flfttnolftt eftd ••n•r oooperatl••· M1l,OOD. CAU l7MIOQ. COZVCUITOM OM, elt)Mr"4................ .,.. oerpet. ...... petlo Md IMftJ iawy ....._In !Me epectel I bedroom heme on a 4ZXUO lot noer awh 1111....,....... A 11l111u,. lo.__ ewen better lo ••"' Ofttr 1111,000. 111·1400. Dftw bf 1110 Ahb11ne A eel _....._ NEWPORT -NEAR BEACH LowJ 4 t11droom ,._ Wtth ep1ca-.. llght end ...., lntenor. Pttvato petlO, 2 deoll• ~ ... , 1tep1 to poof, tennl• a bMcl\. sua,aoo. llM400. BALBOA llL •AYFRONT VU '•butoH WtD• YllW Oft tho turftlng ......, of ..... ...,.,_.. ..... the boeto ........................... ........ + ........ -.c......, .. ~~=·~r/tin, fer 1 bo•ta. llWPllT 1001 IUYllW -HI Ull 4 Brdm, 2 '4 bath, largf' family room, profu1lonally landecaped, view. '347 .~ .. umable finandnc. 111-0412 I IWllll/ llllT ... ,.,. .......... .. 111-1111 d MIP lltfll · One of a kind Ocean view tri l eve l of fi ce bldg • elevator-deluxe -lit floor parking AND Two penthouse residential condo'• from be.ck street ea. w /large double gurage. Must see to appreciate. Investor terms. Price; $1 ,100,000 or best offer by 6-1-83 Mr. Clark 645-9930 IPEI llllAY 120 Yl1 Llllla hrlll, Llllla Isle. (2-4) .............................. •••••-•••••u•• .. ••u•t 11,100,000 I 4 bdrma, tam. rm., boat dock 111 ¥i. tlJte, U4t ltlt .......... -.. 1111,IOO 3 bdnna, fam. nn., roof/sundeck 2404 Yh1• ...... , ltlfft (1-4) ..... 1141,000 4 bdrms, 21h baths, OONDO, pool #10 Wl1111 IHH1 h•t lttt (1·1) .... 1181,IOO 2 bdrm, den, 2 'I\ ba, pool 1111 w ...... ., .... 1.1. c2-1> ... 111a.oeo 3 br, tam rm, 2 ~ ba, spa. llL[l<SJl@) 67J ,73~0 Lid" Pea!", ·, .. ,, r. llVlll 1DUll Aete IMne Terreoe foui bedrO()f'll hOl'M. On fN lend '•mlly tOOtll wttl'I wet ber. Prlv111 pool, Ille yatd. 8300.000. Ul.11111' '"I llAll 1w.n 111-1111 LUTWI Two houMI In one. big 7 69 1.1. eddllton Idell tor r ... 11...,.. 4 Bdrmt , 3 81. lmmecul•t• Only I 125 000. 751 -3101 t::.SElECT ... PROPERTIES ....... YIOTllWI New 2800 1q ft home. Superb c:r11t1m1n1hlp, bull1 In enttqu., etr'lum with epa. SANDPIPER PROPER· TIES _. Ken Svllldl 21~8-1209 438-t.408 lalMa lalad lOM Wll/'"1111 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!~!~!:!~~~ Old Cepe Cod 200 ft from Ch1nn11. Boet mooring. View Ptvlfflon. 4 bdrm, 2 g11. $1800 per mo. l 20K Tt Prtflew TMH ....... ..... Option money Agt Oall "'1Qh hells, TIM Ital ltteten &40-1538-ener 8. '41·2111 er 141-1112 Catilttua •ac~ 1011 Back !3ay charmer .. OWC at 10% $176,000 -39..;R:;.;2.1ty=•2ba--l-t.C_ll..;500;.;.;:,or~' Back '.Bay lease option $5,000 Dn. $1200 cftor. w/187K av.% mtg. per mo. S • m C r a n • A g 1 . Walk to beach . .investors dream. only 4118-8104, 403-41100, $136,000 N.B _648-_7_530 ____ _ Halec?reSt 3b 2ba VA terrns ... $122,500, 3= ~= :,~obdv,: C .M . end famlly rm 2'~ be. Costa M esa star t e r .. A doll 10% dn. $284,500. house .. $110,000 _9_s_1-_0_399 ____ _ Mesa Verde 5b 3ba .. Assume large VIEW FORECLOSURE l.endef hu taken beck & loan .. $199,000 must NII, thta rtrnOOllld Lake Havasu .. vacataon home assume 11ntutlc C1pl11t1no FHA •725 Pm Bluff• view townhouee. · .,. 10% dwn & owner-lender Regal Park sr CIUzen mobilebome only wtu carry 90% wl• t>e- $29,500 ginning rite of 10% BES·T IN BLUFFS IHT Ill. Lovely 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1 level, wide greenbelt, near pool. .Beautifully Asking $2511,1100 Bkr. 714-493-9315 C.rau ... Iba 1112 2M&LIT decorated. Only $1 59,000 '"' 1·1 1 bdrm hOme In front 2 bdrm r ent e l In r11r. Cteen. queint, ~· 2001 Wl 1222,600. Agt. 642-4e23 "° 1-1 1MI Y. O_,al nr wahr YI•• 1211,GIO 111 Y. hafta llw 2~• Yin 1241,llO HARIOR VIEW HOME Large pool & jacuzzi. Beautiful 1 level 4 bdrm. Conn. din., fam. nn., 2 ba. Will consider lea!!e opuon Yll IWI Tll Ull. $315,000. tfll UT /Ill 1·1 1124 Pert llarcat• HELEI 8. DOWD IUL Tiii, llG. 144-0114 Ill OllYll IEW USTlll IHI UT/Ill 1·1 # 11 11111111 TIH Don't miss this beautHully landscaped 3200 sq. fl. Broadmoor. located in i&te guarded community. An outstanding home oUering 4 BR. library, large living room, dining area, famJly room with wetba.r, and beautiful planked Ooors and new carpets throughout. The extra large lot f eatures a s pa set in park-like grounds with a waterfall adding to the feeling of. "canyon" Uving. $725,000 ttwn IWllll1lllT ....... IUUllUll •• Suburben Uvtng at lta tineltl Spedoll..m home on one acre. ~ and Informal Uvtna areaa, aeparated by unJque two-way flreplace/wetbar struct\&J'e. S200 "I· tt.. Secluded, charmln8 mM'8r tulte. Great woridng kitchen. s.p.naie tervlc. room. MUea of bridle trafla. Contact Gordon L ewla, 769-tHOO, 832-SGlO, or re.tde.nce. Wl-9176. ... ..n Nice lhJ"ee bedroom, one-and-one-half bet.ha, larp Uvtnc room with dinl_DI .,.... Ph» ftrt;llce. Qn1y t102,000. Call J01 Holk.er todaj; , Cadlllec;e lo Go-Carte Whll-the Fed Aotl 'em otf thl mar11411 With 1 Clualtled Ad Cell Nowt 642-5&78 I* ~ • I t 00 • ~ C) ~ • >< C) • ~ • I t ) " ,,~,... .... 11~~T\O, ~riown. ..... -~•,.,. .,.,"UM~ ........ tlOM• In lultl ••••1•11 °" marllel. ~ll,~'; AMWM ood "' on II• I If I la ;.. ~ .=.:a..r....: traol a,,_ I i1, nlot I~ ~it w ' ~ .,_~dftOWC•lnd . 1tluOere througtlovt. TD. 110,tOO Ownr ~UftD('ClfFS DiDl'I ' Delay o.n.. wwoua. Mktne ... ~ Cell c::.:Jodert t141,IOO. ,or an •P· 1'",...,.,....,.,...,,.,-,-q-u_ll_'l....,l~l~r"""'l'."".'b-• Juet llated, ooean. flllTIN~VOLfll polntmant to ... oalt, twnlun nr downtne. c.oyon ~ lt\#WnG Ht t.oo M0-1111 :i~101omo. lu• · lll Tft LMI Wll llmll 1"' ._Inn Tll Oeny & CMtt• ,... ..... .,. -........... ···-171-1111 7I0-11t1 .... , .... ...... --======--1 LAlrlell tq " tlolM ..... •ruu oceAN vu• ..... ,_ dOle 10 OOMn tor 11111 2br I den. J_,.,. Cft. UllftW low prto9. Mt tbe. 0. COLD We LL BANl\eRU ---- Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/8unday, Aprll 24, 1883 DI .. """ ~ .......... ,.,,1 HO~ tMtUll'I In 1100 la. I ftpl't, ~ ~ tea n In WOOdbftdot If· ad.,.._ lelow NI\ .. YIM r9lldenOa for o4tlar 111111•. t11•"'11 tarm1. lo. Orenga Co raeld· Owrw ...._.111 enoa wltll maalmum _._ -·w&Y montNY paym't Of 1100. - -Hl·lllH da, after t , ONN IUNDAY "'4 N 1-12ff Qulln1 I tty In lo. Lao guna, t bit! ..... ,.,. lptolOlll llld lovtl) l •tl'I I Ir a~ la w1 tareoe I Pttlo. A rt• 1111'1 at I 111,llCIO. To ,,,._ =Ml ,ltttc* Tenen .. ' RVMN< dlN Cove. lunMt and ooa1n vlaw1, enUque 1talnad_ •pd be11•I• ~. I fplO't. ape In ON Of tM t '" tllltM llaa bf ... & IVOf"I f~ iiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiili to6arf'°4....,.T . \ . 0wner1-1840-111111 ~-.~~_..,In ....-· Lowell prloed 4 '"· --· -"'"• .. .,_ --------------•I llftlnl llfUI Orut 1trHt, 111per flm ""· l1SIK. I.elm~ lll --1111,111 etr..Vttrett lot & oar· '9W • ILW llYll •O•· Onl'I UH,000 View 1umm1r 111n11t1 OWO. over C1talln1 • View• unwa111• "*'10 and bc*tlng eat .. vltlH In "" bay end ocean. leautlful welt A Pf Tl OARRtll REAL TY ·11~ \I >1 11<>\ \I l~I \I I ' Xlnt !nw9fl•*" w41tl one o6Mn. ltller motivated. --........ IUl'f~-=~ .... ,~.=--., ~ ~i'30 4 bdrm, 1.,. M. ~ IMutlfutty u1>9redtd 3 of CdM'e be9I duplex" Call fHU Ptul Evan•. double ,.,.... Alt up-oodbnOga tOUttl OI POH flo.lllw eat &4CM)S21 &iper ,_... ~ 48f 2 ... Wn"" ~ gredH. ,anoed '/ltd. ::Id In aeittlt= efter.w OMt1 ftow. M-112uoo TWMee, L.liuf'll =~~Ing 11sa. cioftd. 11sa.:S 111142 ...., Pool Ind Pwtc. ~ ,,.ehty painted l wait· 1um1bl• fln111e1no at Point s "· 2~ ea. 11• ooo. c.-StlPMn M1¥-Ooddantal. ts7 o...n.r. =~•ef>O· ~. Extra ioe petlo OPf.H 12-t IUN. LEVl!L.. OCIAN VllW LOT, 10•120 plu• a n ldotellll 2 11V IM, t~ bl, dln9/rm, llCIWd floorl, fplo, gar .. and Nl!W kltotten. OC.an tide o1 hwy. (2.00 yda to ~ & PtlOed home with ,.., ~!!!!!!~~~~~ OMI 91M'dlne, redlcorllt> Nawpof1 ~ I ... t ad and loc*• brand newt Ba. hou11, new pelnt Price lncludH lend • n1w roof, raflnlttled'1--LAAO.....-.,-l-OUPL!X-----t,';1 ratea. Guer. l'Wttt. tadlM dbl Qll. Set-Bun ... Iller. 7eo.te20 + 111.P + 14 tnd unll next lo IUOI· ........ , ~7• ••wtl10 tab ttli. 2·8, 144-2M2• •llQ1 O t .... , mu11 1..a ftM• llftll tvotu' grov.. ANumable t621.000. hardwood floora, toroid Sir, Hr unit + maid• 1•11 .... 1111 air ., .. ,, deteched dbl qtt1, 811 w/frplol, 1 bite to .,_,.. ........ 11111.m l1llL Mpera •ow.... •• ,._ f0.8~ 11nanc1n91 c111 0 S S • LMM ootton. 1000/mo. Mii thll IUl)lf 4 bdrm Don't.................... .. 7•A1lll\1 ~ 7•2 373 °"' w1111 to '°"""'~ 1f11 .... ,1·1 °" garege, large yard. bot\. 1310.000. Agt 121 El Modena. Allclng 845-1112 'pen at I un 1 ·4. Miia '1/.0. 2900 I/\ n. S ISclrm 2 la.~. din-NOWI Mpe any off., ·~ "-,. aurm' .,.,. ""' "' " . · GtMt famlly home eo o H s t/ Ing ar11, 2 oar luxury llltr IMM70t la I~ w/QlllQ8. 141 L.dtM, No. a Ml·llll 1184,000. 64S.I04l •ft LAROE BAYFRONT 3., hwr. 1tto Tthuna T•· 2.r•0~ ~f. i•reo•. 111uee. Try · '°' 1102,eoo. 'Oii dettllll WALKBR•LEE race. 1269,&00 L H. or '46-44lt. 13,000. 11050 Pf mo. Open Houle. 2 Bf. 1'A ... Gall NM• n--• 1381,600 Fu. Agt. Fred Tenore ~1-1211, frptc, oloM lo beeot1 & &Wmltfate 173-MC>t. I BACK BAY, NEW Ll8TINO agt ICMOll. AMum•bll 11t t1 you Ilka oountry. IMng at t.11~. llSK. By OwMfl!~!!~~ IU 011 and privacy you II love 111' 11f Ml-t121 I'." Alklna Utt,000 AKI! AHOFFERI PETE BARRE TI · .. REALTY 1· 3 Ba. den, epa, dock IUT ll'fl 1K •· 1131,000. Agent OcnVu Tri-Ma comunty 7141111-1161 poo111enn1a,,.., bMctt. 4 8'. 2 ea. owe. 1110K. ~. frplo, d~ UllK dn. Aorou frm btllnl ad "'"'8Hi)t ...,.._ pool, teM, clbha' cenel ._. blk to bMctt, 3 Bf 3 81 thlt dttlltlg 3 8R 1¥• bt VA/Con11. tt7110 dwn ...... -U-l......,,,,lfi,.-,..Nu--'7lff=-::-:::I Woodbfidoe Townhome, a & den OwMr MCrlllc4I wtttl lge IMng room and 48', 1'1118&, bf~ BBQ, __ ---bd 2._. be 2 ttory by ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; for IOI 11alue. 1326,000. Frenklln •love~ R-2 '°'· RV IC08ll, or-1 BAYVIEW LIQUIDATION 3 ~ Frpl Ale Oar . up- c I~ d 'I S ti• w . •gt ~ ~ MO!har. 10o. Aat. 8hafTy Colhow Ir. 2'A Ba. II~ down. gradM l;ge yrd brick ~1-tMI OPEN THIS WEEKEND, 6'&-&!27 or ... 7070 ~000 & up. Agent. p It Io'. t 168 :00 0 . 1140,000. Devin RHI FORECLOSURE SALE 7 41161•1161 16t-6()18 Open Sel-&n E1t t9 &42-t3U e.tllde Corldo 2 Bf, 2'.t BAY FRONT LIQUIDA· 1 ' Ba. Muet 1111 lmmed. TION 2 Br. 2'A Ba. wtlh SAT/SUN 1·5 1230 A SANO KEY DR. Harbor V'-Hlll1-48r, 28a. fam rm. Localed on end of cul-<11-aac:. Ap-prox ,... ecre. By owner. M85,000. 780-9133. 8) eppt. -llfUI -rwo 2 bdrm unne. Pw· feet eunny location. $275,000. eo2 Narcteeue llllln Ul/IPT J ASMINE C REEK 3 Bdrm 3 bl. or .. t vtew. nr pool. 4 Atoll. I 1500/mo F/P 1306,000. 111-1411 .. R&"M~ 3 I 4 Br home., U ,000 L I Y I r I I • r I I dwn, fully auumable ltt•/lll-1411 loW. 'Cl'· 640-3888 SHARP 38A 1'1tb1, ,_ ~~~~~~~~I palnllcpt, cop plumb, =Ill ml RV . 1120.000 onr. 6&2-1100 ......... 2 BR 2'.t bt condo Foreclo1ure Brokerage, """' .. ~ bf1nglng 8uy9r9 4 Stfltr9 1"""" eq.n . ........-, ............ Tu 861~70 Pl1oed to Mii ...,,..v- i~ IWTIWJ 3 BR 2ba lrvtne Tll'r-. Price $218 ,000 w/1 16,000 down. 1807 ChubMCO. Prln onty Siu ownw 115--1334 '9ST USTD Charming duplex wltl' ldd-on potentlal. Two l Br unJI•. '225,000 . .8. EllartMn Bkr 72().()7 4C °' 875-2373 , ........ Sill• TUii your boring Income pre> perty or outgrown ~ '"°' With the ~ aqu.. lty for thl• nut rultlc end roomy 4 bdrm 3'Ai be 1-In a WAlcK TO TliE BEACH CORONA HIOH-LANOS locallon• wlll' ep1c11cular view 01 lelerld and hWtlof. Prtcec. BELOW current eppral- HI ., S416,000 , ... Owner hu I tt6,000 equity Ind wtl carry 2nd 144-1111 etliil llM TAillBl. - her $111 •i1He1 11 S1l11 Fer '131 .... ,.,.,,~ "" Huge 4 Bdrm with 3 bdll. Formal dining Ml blly window. f.-nll'I rm, flrepleoa. 8-ltlfuly c:t. c:orattd. 1260,000, ,_. gotilbte. ....... , .... Nervout ownw llUhad the price thouNnclel 2 Bdml, 2 beth condo. HM den, dining area end ~epl9ca. ~ """ lor'll I 121,900, MCrlftoll .... , ..... Seier raducad the P'lcel 3 Bdrm home In grNt nelgltbothood. HM din· Ing, famlly room and fltepleoe. Or9lt .,.. '°' entertaining. l14e,OOO, ..... Ul1W ooml -- Excellent locatlon, S llf.2•11 Bdrm home with large • IMng room and dining. 8707 80VTH BRISTOL Fenced back yerd for ~~~SANT!!!~A~AHA~~~ c:hldl'Wt Ind Pita. Fully ...; lntulattd, gartge door 111'-- opaf* Ind men. A fun 4 bdrm. "1-lia. lnol. fwnlty .... I 139,600. mocr. In .... unit. trpc. ~·.~.. ~.:~·~~· Ml•lltl eet SENATE ST. LJ'9tlrna ~. own In Colage Pllftt 3 Br. 2 Ba. 2 oar o-nioa. copper plum bing. I 106,000. 837-14A.64t-11N A PETE BARRETI REALTY UITllM I UI IAllll/ ..... Derting 2 9dr w/11(1&, RV IOCMI, perfect 1tarter hOft'9 w/roolfl to upend. In mint oondltton. C.11 IMT&IMlll. Br 1-b• pool tlo!M. Cttm kltctlln, lmmao. h*te/out 1116.000 a er. ,....,._ temuy rm. 24d0' Ol'IO'· rww apt I pe1nt In & out. S1M.000 aar ,.,. ...., 1120.000 Pamm&.n .... ,. Prtoe ....,_,, lob Mc. 0 o o k . I 2 I , 0 0 0 Cormlok. 141-8083, down/'271,000. Agent &46-60te llltr. 7141161-1161 NEWPORT BEACH ..... u.ne• Unique & beautiful, Claulc In taste and quality. For someone who demands a large 6 BR ct.tstom home, deslree an expansive view of the Big Canyon Golf Couree and lnllata on the best, we have the home f()( you. WlfllfmT ... ,... Sophisticated seller knows how to "deal." Fabuloua hlghly upgraded totally luxurloua waterfront condo. Owner will aell low down with good uaumable loan °' lease/option at very reasonable terms. IUlffl I Ml.- Just llstedlf Front row unobstructed backbay view, 3 BR + family room. Top quallty, elegant decor. Every appliance & fixture the beat. Security system, aoUd teak kitchen cabinetry. UITl&.lff 1211• Reduced & motivated to aelll Spacious lmmacula1e Lusk bullt 4 BR home with pool, entertainment yard, cul-de-1ac location. A88Ume 111 & 2nd. Owner wlll help finance. ~ llH,111 Great famlty home on choice corner. 3 BA + den & dining room. Could be two muter suites. Near new carpet. Nlcely decorated In earthtonea. Poof..llzed yard. RV access. Prtoed toeeUll a;,.., IUll UK UY l1H,Jll Quiet rural cul de aac near back bay. TradltlonaJ 3 BR home, nicety landscaped. new carpet & new paint. Very aolld value. •• ,.., mlT 1111,IM Loweat prace plan 5. 4 BR, clean, bright & cheertul. Near pool, spa & tennis courts. Owner wtll carry financing. Try 18% down. Move In condition. Call for more detailed Info. ,.. .. ,a 1111,111 Executive llvln~ one bedroom penthouae located In MQ.lrtty guarded adult community. Enjoy vtew of fountain• & beautiful courtyard. FacllltlH Include gym, pool, Huna and clubhOUM. ....., ., ....... Green lawn, wttlt. Nnd & the blue Pacltlol MexJcltt architecture enhenoee thla megntftcent 5 BR ocean front home. Private oommunlty. Hurry, thlt won't lutll _ .. , ...... A oomfo'1abte blend of otd & new. PtTvacy a eeouttty, tre~, tennla a pooe., and a wide prtYN beactt go With thll 3 BR cNrmer In a.y. o..t pttoe a. owner amdoultl NIWPOllT •ACH Of.PICI 2161 UN JOAQUIN HILU llOAD RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES ..... _ ....... Where security Is combined with elegance. Where view Is added for flavor & muted color Is sprlnkled discretely for excitement. Find It all In thla 2 BR. den home behind a gated brick pe11o. ...... ....... Dramatic & archltecturally exciting 2 level 4 BR home. Wood. beams & glass thru-out set off each room. Spacious llvlng & dining area w /entertelnlng In m ind. Lovely pool, total privacy! Uftlm PH,111 Perfect for the growing family thl1 2/story home hea 4 BRS, family room. an expanded lanai, large yard w/spa, nrN carpet• & Is rated ea Jl super valuell Best of all. owner wlll flnancell IMUIYM SH .. Beautifully & tastefully decorated, truly one of a kind In most desirable area. Lush plantlng • extensive use of mirrors, 3 bedrooms. former mod ell 11.lffl SHl,llO Luth greenbelt setting with panoramic view of ocean & back bay! Best Bluffs locatlonl 3 BA Delores plan with lovely neutral decor. Very anxious seller haa made thls a great buyll UOIUY 114' ... Rarely on the market, don 't miss this opportunity to purchue a fee condominium In a moat lovety letting. Walk to shopping -handy to fr"!'ays. One level 3 BRs, 2 baths. CORONA DEL MAR ..... ""'au ...,... Exceptional 4 BR home In dealrable location. t>ouble mahogany doors flank vaulted living room & dining room completed by parquet oak floors. Maximum alze yard for pool plus handeome bonus room provides relaxed retr"t. ......... "~ Perfect IOUth of PCH locatlonl Nice 3 BA • open noor plan. Just enough TLC needed to make It fun. Reallatlcally priced to aelll Submit on term• . OTHER AREAS _.... ., .... LOW99t prtoe view home In one of the moet pr•tlglou1 private gated oommuntt ... along the Paotfto coat. Walk to u.ncty beeCt\ from thla bf1ght & ohMrful 2 BR treehty decOrated home. Th• perfect retirement 1pot & an affordable pr1ce. ...,, .. 1W\D ...... EMtllde Natl ,.... ... .,.., Two 2 BR. 2 bath; one 2 BR, f bath, ptua garttgee, klundry room, patio. Neer partc, doM to IChootl & lhopptng. OWner flnanolnO ott. ed. 2-3tr, den. Ind'"'-l'M1 ~ow. 912-1227, 1118 llCIO to *2211000 t83-Ml2 Ownt. IUNWUll• 110 deg VIEW. Olk "°°''· IMdtd glMe win· dowe, lg end of cui..cs.- MC lot. 3 8dnnt • I reel bU'/ a l 1316,000 10 eeee '°' -wt. BY OWNER 4Br, 48• lam/din rm taa0,000 OWF 6 yr. It 10% 2227 Wlnctwtrd Ln. 543-0318 ...... ---... Income opportunity & more . . . 1 BR cottage front house + 2 BR unit. Ample room for expansion "up" for view. Ideal location. ocean·sJde of PCH. un• 1111t na.- EnJoy the amenltlee of this gate-guarded area In a 3 BR Condo with 2 flreplaces, views, tennis, pool & spa, wetbar & famlty room, skyttghts & 2 decks. Fee land Tool BEACH COMMUNITIES PlmlaA ..... Otd country cmarm with the lat91t amenltJes In this new custom 2/1tory. There are trench doors & windows. CO'Z'f flreplaoes, & a dreamy gourmet kitchen. You're steps to the bay & beach. • un.a •••• Elegant per1ectlon on extra large corner lot with 2 lush patios. Beautifully designed with 2 BR and plane for expansion. Excellent locatlon near beach & marina. Pm111U aan,111 Every now and then one comes acroaa a sleeper • and this Is ltll 3 BR'S woodsy, beam1, fireplace, sauna. Large sunny redwood deck with spa, steps to beach & bay -a "must see." WEIT •• ,..., PlmllllJ ..... Half block to beech. Near new 2/atory 3 BA home. Hu dining room, flreplaoe & large deck, beamed celllnga, tiled bath• & kitchen. condition ts beat you have seen In yea,..I UllMlll Pll,lll Prime location. atepa to private beachea. Fabuloua potential for your dream home In desirable bayfront community. Oen plus 3 BR. uw 1n1.- Lovety home In gate guarded area. Excetlent condition with 2 BR & large den off auMy patio. Low pf1ce ·will nOt lut k>ngll --M~•UY ll .... Ll1ten to the 1urf from thl• 4 BR charrMJ • Comer lot In preetlglou1 prtvate oommunlfy. Walk to pool1, tennlt oourt1, beach. New kttchen, hardwood noon.. ekytttee. Owner wtll • Ulllt tn ftntnotng for reeponetble buyer. .... ..... -.us 11 .... Dramatle' 2 etory epactou. townhom• adutt oommuntty. One BR pg tort, grMt fOf den. offlo. or atudlo. Vaulted oelllng, end urth. Atrium, ~ cb.tbee ~· 11DKIW lnAQllllll----·~ ... D4 Oranee Oout DAILY PILOT/lul\day, Aprll 24, 1913 142 VIA UNDINI 3 IR ,.,. M. 31' lot. Loe lo. patio, tge~r1a• With WOtic .,.., end o1 111anci. ,.. ana. ooo. OWMt t1Mn0tna. 104 VIA co .. DOVA 2 IR a la. a eo. patio.. bMm oeltfnOI, oomp!M kttohan remodel, tnllf· oom, a1ao Git dr & oa•a. fire d•leofor. Cloff to b11ohff, 11nnt1, boat 1toraa• end 111opptng. Fee title 8316,000, owner nnanctng. UNIQUE' VICTORIAN HOME · WITH RENTAL UNIT - or ,ueet houae on prime 70x160' R-2 lot in Eutaide C.O.ta Mesa. Motivated eeller had just reduced price $1~,000! Better .ee thia today. HARBOR VIEW • 1349,000 On fee almple land! Thia 4 bedroom, 3 beth, executive home la on an extra larp lot surrounded by woodsy pines affordinc total privacy & llClUlion. Profemionally land.caped with extended deck, fi.replt and niaht llahtinl· $236,000 worth of excellent aaswnab1e financing. Better make an appointment foe th.is one NOW! 759-1501 or 752-7373. 1535.000 SPYGLASS RIDGE • OCEAN VIEW • bedroom, tamlly home. Beautifully upgraded & land8caped. Lovely pted pool, uled brick 3 car pnee, large lot with play area. 8 ~ ~ ~· 759-1501or752-7373. FANTASTIC VIEW LOT REDUCED '300,000 1.24 acres located at the top offering exclus\ve ocean views, privacy & MChwon. One of the few sites available that la eminently suited for a breathtakln, private es~te. Level & ready to build. 759-1501 or 752-7373. OCEAN VIEW + POOL $719,000 1'h1I U'Uly ~t r-'dence ii fot UllOR who enbnlDe relax.ln8 lwn.&ry Ma way of life. Deaorated in Medit.emmean style w/c:urvea arch ... tee!•ed u,htlna & liberal u. of mirron. The gourmet kitchen feature1 tolld oak cabinetry, Jenn-Aire range, Porw,ue.e tiles & a bteakfut nook w/oc:ean view. Panoramic ocean & night vi~ from LA to C.tal.lna. Pool & .. are encl'd ln pr_ivat.e courtyard. Thia fine home 11 unmlltakably Newpcrt! A9unehle financlna oo fee limPle land. 7ae.1ao1 or 7&2-1313. OCEAN VIEW -CMHO 8HORE8 .... ,000 ON Fii WPl.i U.ND Spedoua eucu11ve f.amUJ home on :cw lot with fabulou.a -~ ar. wttb paa1, . ..-as private~ i.ow.t Jll'bd 4 Ir, e bath Nlllclmce In tbil tww411Pa w. 1oe-1ao1or762-7171. ·--wmt ... DRASTIC PRICE REDUCTION: $12.500 BELOW APPRAISED VALUE AT $189,90011 Our sellers really need to move 80 thelr necesstty is your good fortune! tmagine, a three year old home with 2,200 9e1uare feet of living area with all the amenities, and at th.la price. The large country kiicben comes complete with built-ins, Jenn-Aire cook top, trash compactor and two microwaves. There's a breakfast bar PLUS a fonnal shower and double pullmans. With a large assumable first trust deed this executive home can be youn for a surpriaingly affordable mont.\tly payment. 9032 Adami Avenue, Huntington Beach. 963-5671. 8PRINGHURST TOWNHOME ONE OF HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FINEST Thia townhome has been llO imrnaculately maintained that you'll find it bard to believe that it's ree.lly 7 yean old. The two fireplacel (one in the llvin& room and one in the muter suite) have never been Uled. The kitchen ii apotlesa and includes a double oven and breakfast bar. Custcm wooden ahutten have been built for most all of the windows and do they look good! For thoee hot summer days there's a gigantic br1ck patio with built in bar-b-que. Th.is highly desirable townhame includes three large bedrooms with two and one half baths. Offered at $U~.ooo. 9032 Adami Avenue,' Huntington Beach. 963-5671. ONE HOUR PHOTO PROCESSING LAB -SACRIFICE SALE PRICE OF seo,ooo Our owner wants out and will eell at leas than replacement coet. Refin.a.nce a $42,000 equipment Joan and with only $18,000 down itl youn!! The owner says he will stay and train the new buyer AND will warranty the equipment for one year. Your $18,000 down payment bu ya you the complete store lnv~ntory, all fixtures and operalin8 equipment plus the good will of an already established busine9a. Thia store doell lood bwline9I no)V and with new manaaement could be a real mooey maker. 8032 Adami Avenue, Hun~ Beach. 983-5071. . THE GABLES -HUNTINGTON HARBOUR TOWNHOMES ONLY TWO YEARS OLD Thia Warmll\ltiCll bull~ townhome 18 one of the best valuet we've eeen' in th.la priCe reQ&e. Take a b>k at theR leatwa Lor $110,000, &hen dedde for younel!: Two latp bedroorm (muter suite with retr.t); one and a half bathl; eeparate d1n1na area; apadow kitchen with ,.. mokb'I and BUD..T IN MICROWA~ laundry room; fenced fron1 yard; aQSt an ATI'ACHED OAR.AGE with automatic door opener.1 SeYera1 f1nancinC optlonl ~available, one with only ~down. mi Adaam Aveue, Hun~ a.ch. ~71. 111111'1 Olllll llY TM llWNIT IUOI llPLD llW1 • Theee 2 BR units are well located on quiet street. Assume $110,000 at 11~. and seller can carry. You own the land. Call now, .... Jl ................... lllt HYfHIT IHLHl'YI One of Newport's moat exciting locations is the setting for t.hia beautiful contemporary waterfront home. Three BR including grand master suite wmbrary. Extensive U8e of atone & marble, mitred windows & skylights e nhan ce the magnitude of this exceptional home pier & 11lp-1ecurlty. $4,400,000. Barbara Aune. •IYI llTI A •&11111 Magni h cen ti y f urniahed lncludlng cutglaaa and bronze statuary. Just bring your wardrobe. Thia marvelous & exciting home has an lndoor pool, high ceilings, a view forever, walls of marble and glut. Four private BR suites. Sl,375,000. You own the land. Barbara Aune. Ill lllfll -lllT JllW Magnificent high vtata & view from this superb location ln Big Canyon. This 3 BR, den, Deauville haa a wonderful pool & 1pa for ou tdoor en tertai nm en t . $ 7 85 ,000. Barbara Aune. 11-UW ant • UN llU Enjoy Lido lalea private beaches, clubhouse and tennis while living in thia versatile home. Bright and airy with remodeled kitchen and baths and bay view from living rm, Four BR include very 1paclou1 separate gueat suite. $5T~.ooo. Barbara Aune. a -wm ,.. Cuatom built -for piwut ownen by Ivan . Well.I. Beautiful comer lot. Hilb oeil1nea. lg formal eniry, fonnal dln rm, lg country kitchen w/fflc & ee.ating area. Sparldlna poo . $424,500. incl. land. The perfect family home. Barbara Aune. llHITIYI H•I Beautiful ln every respect. Gorceoue cardena, lg lot, formal din1na rm, 1arden family room, 11 1ourmet k.lt.chen w/channifta break.fut area. Solar heated swtmm1na pool. 3 Bil t308.000 lndudtna land. Blrbara Aune. IAITILIPf llTllll Tbl1 charm1na home bu a COW\tl'1 IUtahen wlth bookcue1 and fireplace. A i*rden livlna rm. three BR Is 2 BA. Owner le on the IM amt. Home 11 Jfie9d to .. ..aw -$257,000. y°" Own the 1lnd. C.U llarWa Aune. . ' ,._,~t r': 1,.._ , . COU>Weu. BANl(eRO Oren~ Cout 9All.Y Pll..OT/lunday, Aptll 241 1913 DI Kenneybunkport? Isn't that the boat that won The Americ~'s Cup in '75? ~ronr~ Oranoe Coe•• DAIL. y PILOT /Sunday. Aptll 24, 1863 I MDROC* 1otS Meea Blutt Of ..1.~n+olty Ill vu, CM 91$-4353 t16&,ow 8at/8un 1-6 11>' Via Cordova (Lido 111e) NI 87M083 '37&.ooo Sun 1-6 **8802 w. OoMnrront, Npt eon. 844-8200 $695,000 81t/8un 2-6 12 S.. Ill .• Big Cenyon, NB 87~ 1286,000 Sat/Sun 1·6 1126 An&Mlm Av, A·3, C.M. 873-4400 1128.000 Sun 1·6 240 Ocean View, Newport Boh S.8-2319 $.400,000 Sun 1-<4 I U plue 'AM IHI Ot O.N *19 Curt Or., Jumtne C~.vu.CdM 840-1515/(819)728-6161 Sat/Sun 12"'4 33 Canyon Creat (Cyn Cret) CdM 780-8817 $198,600 Sun 1-5 #8 Kamalii Crt, Newport CtMI 831-1400 $180,000 Sat/Sun 1·"4 22« Port Carlisle (HVHm1) NB 873-7761 $259,000 fee Sun. 1-6 #33 Rainbow Falla. Trtl Glen, Irv 759-1501 Sun 1-5 '411 Allto Av, Npt Hie, NB 64-4-9060 $28-4,000 Sun 1-6 * •2301 Redlands, Npt Bch e«-7020 $264.000 Sun 1-"4 * 1 Pandora (lrvlne GrVa) Irv e.42-5200 $137,500 Sun 1-4 38 Hlllgraaa, Turtlerocl<, Irv e.44-6200 $239,000 Sal/Sun 12-5 11 Canyon Crst (Canyon Crest Eats) NB 631-7300 $285,000 Sun 1_,.:30 •992 Bayside Dove weal. N.B. 831-1400 $397,000 Sun 1-5 3-459 Windsor C1., CM 645-0303 $179,900 Sun 1-4 3-BEDROOM 22 Lakeshore, Irvine 552-0660 $2-40,000 Sat/Sun 12-5 559 Vista Flora. Bluffs 631-1400 $219,000 Sat/Sun 12_,. -416 Carnation Ave .• CdM 631-1400 $5-49,000 Sun 1-5 2661 Crestview, Bayshores 631-1400 $199,000 Sun 1-4 373 Newport Glen, Npt Sch 5-48-2313 $350,000 Sun 1-4 3202 Washington, Costa Mesa 546-2313 $127,500 Sun 1-4 615 Powell Pl., Newport Bch 548-2313 $250.000 Sun 1-4 1907 Chubaaco. Irvine Ter 67~ Assum $219,000 Sun 1-5 ••#Rue Oeauvtlle J::8 Cyn) NB 770-5454 $515. Sun 1-4 233 16th Pl .. Newport Hghts 64-4-6200 $155,000 Sun 1-5 2221 Mesa Or., SA Heights 644-6200 $299.000 Sun 10-1 20022 Cove. Huntington Sch 963-6767 $116.900 Sun 1-5 •2614 Wlllo Ln (Back Bay) CM 642-6368 S 1'40,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 142 Via Undlne (lido Isl) NB 673-4063 $375.000 Sun 1-5 2520 Westminster, Costa Mesa 751-3191 $132,500 Sat/Sun 1-5 1615 Bonnie Ooone Ter (Irv Ter) CdM 759-9100 $3-49,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 * # 16 Oeodor (Smoketree) Irv 759-9100 $129,500 Sun 1-5 2021 Port Weybridge Pl., NB 759-0705 $2-49,900 Bat/Sun 1-5 319 Flower St (Eutlkte) CM e.42-5200 $139,500 Sun 1-5 2210 Avalon, College Pl< .• CM 548-7153/637-1458 $105.000 S/S 12--4 '40 Hlllgrus, Turtlerocl<. Irv. 64-4-8200 $289,000 Sal/Sun 12-5 47 Hlllgrass. Turtlerock. Irv. 64-4-6200 $249,000 Sat/Sun 12-5 23 Candlebush. Turtlerocl<. Irv. 64-4-6200 $249,000 Sat/Sun 12-5 19961 Carmanla, Huntington Bch. 5-46-2313 $122,900 Sat/Sun 12:30-4:30 400 Holmwood. Newport Bch . 646-7171 $224,900 Sun 1-5 2345 16th St .• Npt Bch 648-7171 $2-45,000 Sun 1-5 •4515 Perham Rd. Cameo .Shrs, CdM &«.-9060 $695,000-tee Sun 1-5 •2001 Galetea Terrace. CdM e.48-7171 $995,000 Sun 1-5 20022 Cove. Huntington Beach 963-6767 $116,900 Sat 12:30,.,.:30 1601 Reef View (Spyglau) CdM 675-$)00 $529.500 Sat/Sun 1-5 a BR plua FAM AM °' DEN 2124 e. Ocean. Pen. Pt 631-1400 $325,000 Sun 1-5 *4512 Hampden (Cameo Shra) NB 760-6333 $549,500 Sun 1-5 88 Harbor Rdg Or, Hbr Rdg, NB 640-8201 (to enter) $699,000 Sun 1-5 * 1227 Marian Ln, Npt Sch 64-4-6200 $359,500 Sun 1-5 •2031 Y9Cht Defender. Seaw NB &M-6200 $410,000 Sun 1-5 1215 Mat1nert Or. We11clltr, NB &44-e200 $455,000 Sun 1:30-4:30 * 2 Twtn Lek• Cr. Spyg11, CdM 844-8200 $595,000 Sun 2--4 1212 P.,,,brol<I ln, W•tcff, NB ~200 $225,000 Sun 1·6 * 1906 Diana. Weetcff, Newport Doh "44-e200 $184,600 Sun 1-5 *330 Cerneo Shor• Rd. (OemShrt) CdM ,,... eoeo *32s.ooo eun 1~ ' This Weekend! • .. , It.It "-cfy di,.•clory with you lhlt •••li"d •• yOtl ,. i.... ... hllftl~ All Ml. loce114Mlt lhhd IMlow .,.. lf.,.crit..d 1,. ....... , chtell lly ed••rll•"'9 .lHw ... " 1,. led•i• 01.IL Y l'ILOT W AMT AOS. l'et'°"' •howl.-,~"-••• for ••I• or ,..,,, .,.. ..,..,.d lo lhl •wh 1 .. 1.,.,,.etlllfl 1,. 1111• cokl-eecll Sehmfey Oftd Sllftdoy 517 Poppy. Old Corona del Mar 720-1149 $439,500 Sun 1-t •2507 lighthouse (Broadmoor) Npt Bch 8'44-6537 $435,000 Sun 1-5 •2420 Vista Nobtez.a (Bluffs) Npt Sch 875-«>00 $250,000 Sun 1-5 35 Canyon Crtt (Cyn Crst) CdM 760-8817 $299,000 Sun 1-5 1903 Yacht Collna, Npt Bch 979-2230 $-410,000 1218 Keel Or .• Corona del Mar Sun 12-5 631-1266 $364,500 Sat/Sun 12-6 2345 16th St .. Npt Hts, N.B. -494-7764 $245,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 *1101 Whltesallt, N.V. Hiiia 831-1400 $475,000 Sat/Sun 1-4 #4 Yorkshire (Hbr Rdg) Npt Ben 759-9100 $2,200,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 * •2935 Java Rd (Mesa VMde) CM 675-5511 $235,000 $at/Sun 1-5 2491 Crestview Or (By.hrs) NB 644-7020 $410,000-fee Sun 1-5 1100 Euex. Westcllsa, N.8 . 6i44-9060 $239,000 Sun 1-5 1411 Kings Rd (Cllff Haven) NB 642-5200 $525,000 Sun. 1-5 223 Goldenrod, Corona del Mer 64-4-9060 $325,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 155 McKnight Or, Laguna Beach 644-9060 $335,000 Sun 1-5 • 11 Hiiisborough (Hbr Rdg His) NB 760-8333 $995,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2109 E. Balboa (Penln) NB 760-8333 $625,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 **721 Bayside Or, CdM 760-8333 $1.250,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 #35 Sl<ysall. Jasmine Crk. CdM 759-1501 Sat/Sun 1-5 118 Via Quite. Udo lal, N.B 673-7300 $595,000 •••7306 W. Ooeantront. NB Sat/Sun 673-7300 $795,000 Sun 2-5 • 200 Klnge Pl. (Cllff Haven) NB 6-45-0303 $1.195.000 Sat/Sun 1·'4:30 • 1301 Dolphin Ter .. lrvlne TM, NB 631-7300 $985,000 Sat/Sun 1_,.:30 * 1028 Weatwlnd Way, Dvr Shrt, NB 631-7300 $835,000 Sun 1_,.:30 ••4810 Dorchester. Cameo Hglnda, NB 631-7300 $397,500 Sat/Sun 1-4:30 *1211 Klngt Rd, Cllff Haven. NB 031-7300 $319,000 LH Sun 1-4:3Q 1907 Tradewlnda, Baycnt, NB 644-9060 $325,000 Sun 2-5 210 Grand Canal (Bat Island) Newport Bch 673-3051 $495,000 Sun 1-5 325 Allao (Newpt Hts) Newport e.ach 675--8000 $247,500 Sun 1-5 464 Gavlota (Bluffs) Newport BMch 64-4-6114 S215,000 Sun 1-5 "4615Cortland (Cameo Hinde) CdM 675-6000 $315,000 Sun 1-5 4627 Cortland (Cameo Hinda) CdM 675-6000 $299,000 Sun 1-5 4 BEDROOM 24 lnwrneas. Big Canyon 631-1400 $1,075,000 Sun 1-4 * *-426 Hbr lat Or., Npt Sch 675-3696 Sun 1-5 2572 Clrcle Or. Bayahoree. NB 64-4-8200 Sun 1-5 •6 Rue Oeauvtlle. Big Cyn, NB 644-8200 $625.000 Sun 2-5 *4533 Perham. Cameo Shra, CdM 844-8200 $649,000 Set/Sun 1-4 3782 Carmel. Irvine 559-8876 $142.000 Sun 11-5 889 a.net• St., Cocta Meaa (819)753-6355 $119,500 Sun 12-4 830 Cameo Highlands, CdM 87~5511 $325,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 * 1717 Bayadere Terr (Irv Terr) CdM 64+7020 1950,000-fee Sun 1-5 1424 Seacrat (HV Hiiie) Newport e..ctl &«-2428 $295,000 Sun 1-5 2012 POt1 ~tol (HVHml) NB 876-eOOO $326,000 8atl8un 1-5 *7oe K-Thanga, Irv Tet, CdM 551-8700 $329.000 8atl8un 1-8 ._. ptue PAM Ml et D9M 111 2217 WlndW9"1 La.. .... '°" ........... , .. .... u ..,,.. ..., ,.., ....., °'i °"' ..... -----•c:.a .. .., 11 • .---- 11542 Occld9ntal, Huntington Bch. tu-m7 t112,100 aun 1-4 * 1948 Port Albans (Hbr Vu) 844-9060 $325,000 1901 Yacht Puritan, Seavlew. NB Sun 1-5 760-1900 $494,500 Opn Sun 1·4 29 Monteclto. Spygtaaa Hiii 760-1-468 Sun 2-5 * •-40 Royal St Geo .• Big Cyn, NB 476-1234 $850,000 Sat/Sun 12-5 1230 Sand Key Or (Hbr Vu Hie) CdM 760-9133 $495,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 #6 Plnehurtt Ln. Big Cyn 631-1400 $795,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2032 Swan Or (Meaa Verde) CM 751-3191 $199,500 Sun 1-5 * 1830 Highland Or, Weetclltr, NB 631-1400 $269,500 Sun 1·5 **2658 Bayshore Or (Byahrt) NB 759-9100 $700,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 #lewis (Northwood) Irv 759-9100 $159,000 * *2039 Bayside Or. CdM 759-9100 $1.200,000 Sun 1-5 Sun 1-5 *6791 Precldlo, Huntington Sch. e.45-0303 $390,000 Sat/Sun 1_,. 202-4 Celvert (Mesa Verde) CM 645-0303 $175,000 Sat 1-4 3461 Wlndeor Court, Coate Mesa 650-3900 $242,500 Sun 1-5 249 Evening Cyn Rd (Shrclfa) CdM 631-7781 $7-45,000-fee Sun 1-5 •#4 Trafalgar (Hbr Rdg) NB 760-8333 $1,495,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 *4826 Roxbury, Cameo Shre. CdM 759-1501 Sat/Sun 2-5 *-4512 Roxbury, Cameo Shrt, CdM 759-1501 S at/Sun 2-5 1730 Port Margate, HV Hma. NB 759-1501 Sun 1-5 **700 Via lido Nord (ldo Isl) NB 642-5200 $41.500.000 Sun 1-5 •2706 lighthouse (Broadmoor) Newport Beh e.44-6537 $435,000 Sun 1-5 1779 HawaH Cr (MV No) CM 979-2390 $169,500 Sun 1-5 •2915 Cutia (Eaatbluff) NB 979-2390 $289,000 Sun 1-5 2700 lighthouse ln, CdM 631-1400 $359,500 Sun 1_,. •3 San Sebastian, Hbr Rdg 760-1900 $1,795,000 Sun 2-5 2774 Mallard ~Mesa Verde) CM 979-2390 250,000 Sun. 1-5 46 Mlulon Bali (Sp~) NB 760-8333 595, Sun 1-5 14 Motro Bay (Spygle) NB 760-8333 $675,000 Sun 1-5 **920 Via ldo Nrd (Ldo Ill) NB 645-0303 $2,650.000 Sun 1-5 6 Malibu Cr (Spygl1) NB 76o-8333 $595,000 Sun 1-5 ••225 N. Star Ln. Dover Shra, NB 8«-8200 $995,000 Sun ,_,. 18902 Flag1tatf. Huntington Bch 983-e787 $192,500 Sun 1-5 9531 Ingram, Garden Grove 963-8768 $124,900 Sun 1-5 * 1716 GalatN Ter, Irv Ter, CdM e«-9060 $398,000 Sun 1-5 * *920 Via ldo Nrd, ldo 191. NB 844-9060 $2,850,000 Sun 1-5 * 16072 Carteton. Ftn vty 77~2~ 1139,950 Sun 1-5 222 Vta Koron (ldo-fll) NB e.42-5200 1749,000 Sun 1-5 •• 14 Bumlna Tree (Big Cyn) NB 831-7800 1849.500 Sun 1-5 **820 Via Udo Nrd, ldo '"· NB 873-1300 S 1,800,000 Sat/Sun 2-4 *7 Carmel Bay Or, Spygl ... , CdM 8«-8200 $785,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 •2315 Aralla, Eutbluff, NB 8«-8200 t 190,000 LH Sat/Sun 1-4 ••1500 ~Rd, CUff Hvn, NB 831-7300 8875,000 Sun 1"'4:30 *1700 OIMXY Or, Ow Sh~ NB 831·7300 '680,000 8aV8un 1-4:30 1268 8ofMl...e l.n, Wwtdtff, NB 831·7300 ~.500 8un 1-4:30 *1400 NotttnaMm Rd, Weetdlff..1.. NB 931.7300 1328.eoo aun 1...&:30 ·~~~o:'· ~a:!,8 ;~:30 *4800 WS"JM Ad., C..., HQNnd1, NI a1.1aoo "80,ooo eun 1..-:30 •~ Omnoton, eem.o 8hrt, CdM e«-eoeo 1850,000.fM Sun 1-6 * 1824 Antlgue Wf/1, Newport Boh. M&-7171 U24,800 8un 1·& 401 Colton, Nwpot1 8hra, NB 840-8208 t174,000 8at/8un 1·11 2840 Catalpe, IEatblut, Npt Botl 651-8700 1249.000 8at18un 1...a ... .. D .. OOM • * 219 Via Ldo 8oud, Ldo 191 760-1900 11.995,000 Sun 1-IS * 1300 Pteroe St.. Coeta Mau 648-2313 1189,000 Sun 1 ... I ... plue 'AM RM or ORN 500 15th St. Crnr Klnge Pl. NB 494-7754 1285,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 20645 Flamingo, MV, Cotta Meaa 645-4419 $225,000 Sat/Sun 2-6 ••35 Rldgellne Or, Hbr Rdg 760-1900 $1,750,000 20291 Cypreu, SA Hts, CM 673-1600 $229,500 1034 Sandcutle, HV Hie, CdM 644-9060 $324,500 ••1800 Jamaica (MV) CM 645-0303 $379.000 Sun 1-5 Sun 1-4 Sun 1-5 Sa 1-4:30-Su 1-4 • *20 Cyprea.a Pt, Big Cyn, NB 631-7300 $1. 195,000 Sat/Sun 1-4:30 •4 Rocky Pt. Spyglua Hiii. NB 631-7300 $1, 105.000 S at/Sun 1_,.:30 • 1727 Pt Barmouth, Hbr Vu Hma, NB 631-7300 $385,000 Sun 1-4:30 ••2201 Alta Vleta, Eatblt, NB 631-7300 $359,000· tee Sun 1-5:00 * 1362 Galaxy Or, Dover Shrs, NB 631-7300 $695,000 Set/Sun 1-4:30 *1918 Pt Cardiff, Hbr Vu Hma, NB 64-4-8200 $396,000 Sat/Sun 1-4 442 Begonia, Old Corona del Mar 675-4000 $549,500 Sun 1-5 • * 70 Hiiicrest (Big Cyn) NB 645--0303 $1 ,395,000 Sun 12-5 I aA plua FAM IUI or DIN •904 Via Zurich Cr, Lido Isl. NB 6-44-6200 $41,250,000 Sun 1-5 CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE aACHELOA 1 BEDROOM 10178 Ascot Cr .• Huntington Bch 968-2297 $71,000 Sun 1-5 255-4 Elden #B102 (Estslde) CM 540-1151 $148,500 Sun 1-5 2512 SA, Eastalde. CM 646-6093 $130.000 Sat/Sun 12-5 2 BEDROOM 32 Canyon ltland (Big Canyon) Npt Sch 640-6222 $235.000 Sun 1-5 ••100 Scholz (PH-10). Vrsls, NB 759-1877 $249,500 Sun 1-5 16 Weetcllff VIiias, NB 673-7771 $187.500 Sun 1-4·30 2 BR plua DEN * # 10 Wiid Goose, Npt Crat, NB 673-7300 $185,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2190 Bosque Springs. t;M 979-2390 $ 129,900 3 HDROOM 2481 lrvtne Ave, Costa Meaa 631-1400 $149.500 315 Alta ln, Coata Meu 751-3191 $118,000 Sun 1·5 Sat 1-5 Sun 1-5 •314 Avenlda Cumbre (Blfa) NB 759-9100 $199,000 Sat/Sun 1-6 •2430 Santa Ana C 1 (E/slde) CM 979-2390 $165,000 Sun 1-5 I aR plue DEN # 12 Mirror Lake (Deerfield) Irv 751-3191 $169,900 Sun 1-5 4-llEDROOM *2404 Vleta Hoger, Blfa, NB 873-7300 $14"9,000 Sat/Sun 1-4 2525 16th St., Newport Bch. 873-2810 $179,500 Sun 10-3 TOWNHOUSES FOR SALE 2 UDROOM 1095 M..a Blf Or. 0cn+Cty lte vu, CM 673-0353 $155,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 3 HDAOOM *104 Aspen, Costa Mesa 644-2562 $129,500 Sat/Sun 2-6 DUPLEXES FOR SALE a aE>ROOM plue 2 al!DROOM -423 Carnation, Olde CdM 675-8370 Open Sun 1-5 i plue I HDROOM **1301-1301~ N. Bayfmt, Balboa ltle 873-6900 '1860,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 4 UDROOM plul 1 M.DtltOOM * * 132 S. Bayfmt, Bal Isle 831-1400 ,1,300,000 Set/Sun 1-5 1oe Opal, Balboa Ille &73-eQOO $435,000 Sat/Sun 1 ... HOUSES FOR RENT wm t11......,....," """'"'' YIOTllll IUll Old world charm awaita \he lucky buyer of um 3 bedroom home on \he oceanside of the Hwy. Just a •tone's throw to the ocean with whitewater views, den, lovely garden •tting and double lot. Laguna at ita best!! ....... Asttwftlr ....... Ulll UAL llTl11 Ul-1111 lllUEl'I IWI 1111 II IUITIFIL PALIS ¥111111 llTATEI FABULOUS 3+ bedroom cOntemporary trt -level home w /elevator. TOP CONSTRUCTION! Gourmet kitchen & family room w/many built-in cabineta. Large patios & balconies from which to enjoy the DAZZLING ocean/bluff views. $626,000. lefty , .... t luNlltea (211) 111·1HJ Orang• 00111 DAILY Pll0T/8unday, April 2•, 1083 TURTLEROCK RIDGE 8EAUTIFULL Y CRAFTED 3 bedroom, 2 ~ ba townhome 3 car gar, formal Dimng room Wet bar, fireplace Breathtaking unobstructed view' Total amenities. Asking $375,000. IWlll HI-HOO . -...... , .......... THREE &llON HY ODEHFROIT Largr Ml'<htnrant'an v1u.. f"..nll&lllK wrf &. U~poe>I .. , .. .,.., Tht' ulllmak howit· for t•nu•rtalnlf\i Or ~lax 1tlu1w by 11\4-~• tro <•ompl4'w -lua1<•n Wit' fla1 lot wrlh room ror 1h1ldrt'n • pla) art·~. gardt'n• or "' 11nm1n11 pool Otlwr t•ncl of ltrl alopt• ,...,.,ply down '" tw .. uttful utt'lln ~at'h In .,.-tun· gatt' auardt'd fJl 1\'"U-ttmotnUllll'.Y Wllh 1JrW wl<· '"'"' h lt'nnta and 'ull .. y lwll I"'"' th1ldr1·n' i-l•y .m·• and clubhouat' An t'lClt llrnl 1n\/l.,.\Jm·n1 ~I 11.t cvrnpt'hhvf' prlC't' of $1, 7~.00(J h" ... le by "" nt'r who offl~rs t'Xttllt'nt hnancln.I( c .. 11 for rnlur bru< hun· (114) •H· UOl . .:'~/.=!. ,Lovely Newport Beach 2Bdrm 2 bath condominium has an enchanting bay and .ocean view. There are many apedal features including mirrored walls ln \he dining area, a , custom eating and entertaining bar, mirrored wardrobe doors. Van Luit wallpaper thru-out Picture · Your Home On This Page I ~ I -and best of all, it has been beautifully cared for. Secure gate guarded community w/pool & a very aped.al clubbouae with weight lraining equipment & other amenities. Do you have a place in the desert perhaps and need nice Newport Beach headquarters? Thia picture ·perfect penthouse la your answer! Juat -~9,500. $170,000 PRICE REDUCTION SPECIAL 10.9% OWNER FINANCING PRICE REDUCTIOI DOYER SHORES FOR QUICK SALEI OP*" Sot., Sun. 1-S 1'441 Galaxy O.ive ....... ,. .... Emt• (l 14) llt-11ll Prtm1: 200 ft Bayfront home on hugt- lstand Point lot Spacious. open & sunny all view home Lge hoat dock(s). panoramic decks. children's play lawn & swim bea"h $170.000 pm~<-r<.-'du<·tlon. low lO 9% owner fin. !or quick ~le. $795,000 (land incl ) 4 Br. Den. Formal dining room, 2 fireplaces, 3 car garage plus large hobby room Pool sized lot, beautifully landscaped Owner wiU assist at financing. Now $389.500 ................ llt1htr 141·1141 Open Sat/Sun 11-5. Owner, 650-0202 . ...... ~~~~_.n,,_1_4 lubm lntall ltll Aaataact•nta Ptneaala 3012 lulans •••!t t• Leu 4124,ltlt Wutt4 5100 Htlt Waatt4 • LUii Ill.ID lfflll Ami Aue 3002 CIRCUS Of 0,prtultin fOlt Ullltntn STIPI Apt Man11g« couple w1 Banking H m e.ytront bldg. 700-1,007 aut11nb Save home, car, etc. Call elll)«lence IOf 97 unit• TIWI II• eq ft ll'Mll lrom I 1.25. Ptiy 12500 -Mecc>onald'• llSSllE Nowt Prewntatl¥9 Action iarden apt Costa M... Position 1vallabte In oor · Prime eo.ta Meu lOca-BASEMENT 11.00 eq It. MUHon Ooll111 Game Noe. ,, NO u•RBOR BLVD Workahop. 951-5847, 818..., + b·~ua +apt: San Clemente Office : :"~~f,~~· t~ aq ft call: Mon-Fri ~~~JO 7 &. 8 O 8 . 71" ruLLERTON . collect. 2-4hre. N 0 'pa 11. e'4 2 . o o 7 e::r11n~~11h 842-7860 642~ 141-1411 JO/II A •ertt!fft, T.D.'sffll WMkd•C-~ulr~ngCall Joan M~~ dlUll1YI 111111-Front olflo• w/1hop Lett I ,,... 3004 .,.. 11 ...... 4111 lfl&lll/011 LL llTIUI ARCH. nnn Meklng temp .... 714-493-565t I MO FREE RENT apace, rH1on1ble. l l&fl I WEEI ,.OOF ~ O.. let. MCty, approll 20 hra/wk I With ahort term 1 ..... Coe1a ....... wned R-2. ATTRACTIVE Ill S In 1at & 2nd M in 50WPM typing. f\11! ..W:. 1U1tea. K.ap 5-46-7249 MASSUSSES /#0UlflJ. nee 1M9 From 519 to 8110 Call c .................. RDERAl your overh••d low .. -fNIMI'\ •ns TO SERVE YOU. ... Robt. Sauter NH/CM Lucy 720-1014 I ~ t If '81 WNIOt tMgl\ I UU111J ftll .,,.,,.Meineke Ole.count RE Brok 8d Aeett ~~ 100!r Dr. Sult• 14: c-.L ... tab ltJ IDE FREE *'m IMTI Mulllere o ...... ,,. •• &42:2111 • 5-4~ ltiDllll New p "°rt Be a c h Commerdlll C-1 W. 1tttl M LARGEST &. MOST ,,.., • 1••1"' ••-·•• 1••• 12 people needed for Equal Oppty Employer 831-3861. St. C.M. Prime location, C I RELIABLE ~..... WIDOW HAS SIS lor tempotary 'pet1/tlme of-Banking i.: r t .. of xlnt terms. 2 Br. 1 Ba. 3 : tOOO'a ol mbre 1lnce • 011m••tc 10 Yeor T.O'e. 110.000 up. Plo flee promotion work al a .-orea ,...,., pr pt1vsle i-.. with i.r-ge 1964 Orowlll or9dll <:tied!. no penalty lhe WESTIN SOUTH WAITED' liCI ft ~~~ ywd. U..aaofftce. ~ W-Mll 972_1000. 24 ho4Jf'I • un1<1w• • .. rk•l•no Call Oenlaon Anoe. COAST PLAZA HOTEL. • .......,: -1474 lhop, ~etc. St#t e P•o.•n "" .. "'""II 873-7311 Mu8t have P'MNnl \IOI-~ ,...,. ,.._ MAKING MONEYI The Dungeon 11 now e Toi.111 .... 1me1u oe. HOUR avallab6e: 11-1, ,. ff1te *DELUXE OfRCES* l6501mo. + ..:. LOST: Collle, F•. 10 yrs Open 5019 Franklln, Hl,000 . _,tall 1·5 or 6-8. $4.50 to 110 up to 4000 eq ft. 1801 ~2 770-6e2t old. "Nidcl", FWd Collet. ~l~;,o d · Cllnencln9t1qwalllted) llAL mlft L.1111 ht for QUllln.d per90f\· Newport Blvd. NB . Forleeae: 1240 s .F.-hi••• Verde. Reward. e co .. 110Coae1 • 0000 ,.,.,.,.000 nel.MU9t8P91Ylnperaon 846-9085 redecorated o;fu·~ 545-9122 Ctlrl1t11n (Charl•matlc), JOtl , ... , .. oc1u1• ~~;;de,. V: ~:.1y. ~mTp":ia~~ll Elldtlng ~nlty for profMaional Individual• who enJoY worlLlnQ with the public. CUSSIFIED &IS 642-5678 BKKR. Chrlellan Butlneu Conatrucilon d11lrea mature, ellpe· SIPllllTtmlf rlenoed Of'lly. bookkeep-Immediate opening In er P/T. Non-amoklng South Orange County. office. Poalllon avlll1ble Long term townhouM June 1. Mtll ~me and proJecl 2 1tory over Refer~ IO'. p 0 Box Spancret• pertllng ruuo- 7878. Newport Beach. lure ~ to: 23181 CA 92660 Laite Center Drive, Suite IMIUIPD 100, Lake For-eat. Calif. Al IMll 2 yra axpenence. 92830-3028 payroll & Job coll IC· OeeL p /.T Wbn oountlng. Full llme Sa-a lat)' commenaurat• wtth Need nice paraon for experience Send r•· cooking, aom• aaperf. aume to PBR. 18012 enoe Good pay, pleu- Skyperk Cir, Irv, Attn Ing Santa Ana environ- Sue Robl9on ment Call ortty 11-11 am SSll-1304 Ulmf Ulll Miii and ..-nbly •xii«-~ 'd 640-M15 Mahn. reapontlt>M par- req -with ..... !<* and Cuhler wanted. own tranap. 2 day ...-. Experteltced. Typing r• NB AIM. quired. Hre 7-4. Maj« 714-642-5743 Stock Brokere nr OC --------·Ofb.-cekwlMM:747 apace. eoo S.F. war• Loet Boye Moto X. 4/20, attractive 5 ft 2"· vlv•· 11""1 _....,. ••.•• ,..,,... cenfundln5daya. SFR. Bulldfng, 895 Town H, let51 mo. utlla pd. hooM. Attr.ctlve ioc.-vie lrvlne Ranch Mkt. clout outgoing widow 0111te1ne11• 0..1...i Condoa. ~ or com-C.,,ter or., 10th Floor, AJC, gtOUnd fir. 1066 B tlon, adj. John Wayne R-•rd, no queat1on1, :t;!·t~==llrvatM C&LL&10nt11tTOLL,•H marlcal property. Non· Coet• Mee&. PIMM oo Airport. Call Judy Eckert, ·-...... Bank of Newport hu _9_5_;S-«>OO_______ No ellperlence nee••· Immediate openlng9 fOf o• lr810AL/•H ~. ~unlExdty. ting C8IW op-c.nino Or., coata MeM. *Port. $.7518.F. offtcaa. &M-0327 1 .. _ .. 0 fl 1 ly owner oocupled 0 .K. not phone. 3 J>lk• E. of Fairview & t .35 8.F./ warehouM. m nuwu very nanc • 1•800 00. not have to be In -~------Aclaima. Ca I I 7 5 1 • 5 9 0 2 0 r Found & free to good MOure Chrlttlan man, 231•8877 eac:row Of lleted. &olcat BABYSITTER WANTED. 754-1040 Mr Tracy <&M-1311. homa Pit Bull puppy, age 42-55. Active and refer'rale welcome. My home. CdM. 7:30 to ------·-....:...-pure bred, 8 mo1. health minded and good 5·30 dally Own trana .. .__ .... --Laguna Be•oh for I••· 554-35&4 Ml\M of humor • muat. ,.,."cl\1 ... now ... 111bl• "'' ~ I ;.... ....... .ft ...._ . • ...,.... • ._ 1500 t 3 ooo n v LUI &all. 7~ • ...., ••. , "'9, ...,... ...... l'lne ~.'tor ~ :'J. Found: Yng fem Golden Call 831-e300. '" 1~11 .,.. 2273 H.n>or BMS. lllYSITRU ·: .. tnl. ... .. nlltlll\Q9 or ofc. Main Rd. ~.•atgr~0v,~r/A&fof811~ me~· p ___ , co.ta......, ca. ~ lidulte, temp/pann. r • 4 ••• 4. I • r to town 4M-1833 &'42~1saa ·~ (71~ Me-3281 Chtrlott•'• Slttera llJ..1111 ":d..iso:,~ Found: Samoyed, vie. lenlcts Hl4 .._M~ M&-3 749 I• .. n i.v.I. FOf gym Of llOf-~=&.Ad~~-•*•ta.lfllllll ••''•*II· -B-AB_Y_S-IT_T_E_R_W-AN_T_E_D Hlca omo. .-ce et Weat a g •. S 3 0 0 0 mo . owner. "ow .. on, TL 1TO~I lor my 7 moa. old 1 17th, CM. Oood tor R & 87M700. LOST: Cockapoo, am 1111 IUm IMP llltl'!llat _.. (deyt) per mo In ~=:n~r,: ... UL latala zta blonde,~ Hgta. 5~~Nn ~~J-' ~ ltlt Wu... st• ~!f~~';':q~lr~:•t~~:1 • Bob '**-'80n. *l550 .... 1900 ft lndu-. d n..-7 deya I week All ~..-· II "'5-1555 Cell 8~ a1r1el ~ 11101 ~LOST. Olamon ring, 11 .._, Cfedtt · plet• Information, c• lin•lt ........ -------- dondo Cir-de "r' Hunt-Su 5th Ave .• So. Cat Major(213) ~ Mickey Shaler. Bkr. RECEPTIOHIS"T for UL'I& l&f OLll PAQFES8IONAL OFFICE. • • P I a z • a 1 Co a m • t I c IMI0-1080 ---lde9I fOf new att~. lngton a..dl. 842-2134· counter. Lg reward. -,-,nt--'1-.;.._ ___ Jl_l_I ~.re~r!T,'~ Ill 1't 15e aq ft. with wtndow. In Lltgune Ntguel. Crown PIHH call 840-9350 --·" ~ti.II I • 4 1 5 I n c I t. I. V"'-1 P8t1lw8y, llpP(Oll. •• 7~129 -· No Wanted: Rider to •ll•rt ~ 9XI*' ·-.-·· .,....1recept. Serv avWt. 164<& aq. rt. ~15. ~ uked. GM expenee EMl Teua ed 1 .... 1 entryl • lt.i.c 11 ::1~~/rwyl Harbor. 1200-2500 eq.ft. West If-.._,., Ill IMclt ~i/L::V:I~ ~~t':i: :::1 •· .,. anc ng. • '= W'9-. lncldl omc.. 8 moa moatly blec:i! Vic Mr• co111n1, a.45-3818. ~ &38-76518AM10 12 N "4 Mi*1 M.11 from '540 mo. Tom. Fl«ld9'Utlca. H.B." RE: (Reta axChani)ed) • Aedec. 2 rm aulte, 500 aq 851..-:28 WAAO. &38-1658 _:.... ___ ;:.__;._ __ I UllEUT And-"-' ......... Sr llfa Mvlng raQU!r9e! &. CPR Pref. Stantng· ~ 17. ..... .., ....... Pravlout Fait food full time tellera with 1 """ ~ ""'• REQUIRED one year ,.. Wa need • bright. ma-Fee for Directory. cent ellperlence In 111 ture lodlvlduel to w<H11 In 1-312~7 phu11 ol commercial th• marketing depart· Ext. C-1~ banking teller tranHc-men1 tor GROUP W •on•m;; ... iiMiia'jjma•iii•iM-11ont CABLE of Newport We can oner you beauti- ful MW Otflcel. 8 lrlandly wOf1I environment, highly competitive 111ary and benefttl. INTERVIEWING BY APPOINTMENT ONL YI P-..Call: Pweonoel Dept. (714) 780-8000 ~ ~Bank ...-_of Illa Nl."\vport Beach. OutlH Include: llPIUll'Tlnft llte typing. llllng. Poeltlon looated al dullng and phonM, etc. headquarter• of fiber· Xlnt company 1>eneflt1. glUI aallboet mfg . ....._ Paid vao1tlon and all vy telephone wort and holl<laya. Clll Now. ti<>-cuetorner contact. Self. weed~. 831-5250 Ing & ~t me1n11,...,.ir CLERK TYPIST up1rlanc• required. Minimum beginning ... 1ary. I 15K dep9I td4l1Q on axperlence. Apply In peraon to Wayne Oevta. ERICKSON YACHTS, OREAT WESTERN SAV· 1931 0-.. AV9, lr'Vtne, INGS le the pl-to alert _Ce11 __ 1. _____ _ yow ~ with e dyn lllLY PUT mlc. growth-oOented fl nanc:lel lnatlCutlon Part time Sat/Sun. ~ AM. D•p•ndlbl• van, Thia lndtvidual wta wagon Of emen pldtup In th• Lo•o Documen truck With lhell necee--0.partment. Cuti•• I Hry Salary plu1 mlJe.. olude llllng, preparln llge. Cell 842~21. aact. real ••l•t• loan docu 34!5, Iv rwne and phone m • n ta , ant w • r Ing _1_or_retum ___ ca11_. _EOE __ _ • ft, t400/mo. 842-4097 1300 eci.ft. front ofcs,.'rs Found female Bo•er/P11 laalatll A rmws ACCOUNTANT Furn. office wlphone1. ,_ drM171n1 door. St.5 Bull mill. Vic. Newport fl-·-lal '"fhlt's lncndillll" 125,000 • dee«. 17th & N-port pat mo. 9 Whittler Btvd. C.M. 975-.521e .... c ""-"''Y _ _. o.gr.. Two YMf'I rMI -.... CM 842-Wa l?~_a!.._~40-9352; eve, ""'""'"'' ._,.,... ....._ ~. j Z:::' . . M4M10111t Found: M. llllh Setter. WI luiwttt ltref11ooh,.Con'ol!y Aocomp4lahed Pwaonnel cooltlng and ~ ell· EOE M/F perlanOe needed. Siert-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Ing: May 25U\. phonH, and ohec:kln doeumentl and '"-lt rtea. Typing of 45 wpm llj lllLY PUT Th• Dally Pilot hH opentngt for part time Route Mtll\llOWI to au- l*VIM oanlefa. Mond"Y hw Frtdey -approx 2PM to 7:SOPM. Mutt have dependab4e •tatlon ... gon • van or WMI ptola4) and ®rren1 lneuranc.. w.kty ~ l110 find Comptlfty a.n.flt• .,. mlltllge and OOiiii , ..... opportunity. Apply at cnuldon offloe SPM to &PM. OrWIOO Ooo9t Oii) Plot, S30 w... ._ ... 00...MaM. N8 ~· 500 ICl ft, 1 b9. ch o k • r ch• In. v I c . t.r lalt flll s.s Olstrilil*' to a.mo.. tno. .; avce .. ful bu•lne11 of-...... ztU Bu1hard/ lndlanapolla ....:~.::;:;-. __ ...;,,;;;,:o;;; lltell'OSt(lltttivefire 3300 INIM, 1,N.8. ·: flca.173-8622. M751mo. Stor11ge l'Y1lll. reuonabta. 083-6738 aa..... RU*1t~••lable 646-9Cl71 1~ ,,_ ·• CO.ta ..._. 250-600 ef. '60 month. up to 5 IOM Found: Yng Fem. Sne-LH &11.~•·Lt•I F1rt Sitt fR·lll'" ""'8 from S1751mo. W of m • r oh• n d 11 •. pnerd. llt• tan, wh1 ctlelt, •• lndd. 779 w. 18th. St. 145-1731 or 845-1741, 1..1guna. 4""'3-414 02 Pa1tanatr veiMI, ~~~IVs ANIMAL LOVEM Care tor Peta In your home.984-e22t 111-tl28 Bob "" Gary . Ideal loo., wdh '*"Y foo4 --~ "" • Waterfront ofo avall In P.......ia Siii tramo. For Info. oel Roy 11111 s llmd•blf txl1tlng yacht HIH ............ SPtRrTUAL READINGS Quinn 213/M4-t710 Plesl1,1M~1ness 0: ••"*'Y· Ideal for~ -Adv!u In all matter1 <& yw ..... for ..... IOO ~ Seated Iller. f'OO mo. Locet-A= -1111 mt !off, manlaige & bu... aq ft. Prim• looatlon. br ~ 1•1U1 ...... • Weet eo..t Hwy. "·8 • n ... Aleo oovnMUno. FONet Alie. Mall. LAaune Call • PnicllJ .,. MZ-11117 ~l'DIU LElS tl158o.SCemlnoAMI ... eoh. t1e.ooo10"BO. (817)535-1443 cw oto epeoe 1350 to ~ a.n a.m. ~7299 e.it 4M-m1 ~~====:=::'.!I ~:. F' ~.ri:. 1 11 ~ ~ ANSIEIS ,.An 1m11M ••••• LMIP a10n OC*'CI out °' MlOO. ....... ....,,.. Uo AQOOl281. MM212 '"'n"""' .... =~-: =: "°"°". ~ 11 'I' old man. Ivy...... ---,... ... ~ OMf't ,..... :=T°'~ Ectuc.atlon. &'ft ", fH -....--_, ,_ • 11gt1t tbd\na..,,... ...,.._--.. .._• lbt. "-""Y. ~to NtiWIMl'9~ctr. blnt.z.J.amp parta. tiiiiiiifiiiiii"-1 -r _.._ -.., the •• cl¥Otoecl. ~ "°°"'to..,.,.,. PtodUct 131•7WU . i terl'll0 ,.._d 1 ~ ~d. '"'• 1na1ucse: lpOftt, 1nea. llW. Ind. ...._ tin. 1--------n• ay .. rowH ......., ~ AlatdlN. fll'tl\. lll-01"'4 ~.: :..-.: & owino. ....... JdOftll ........ , vw.ci tier Mott,,_.• tt11 wtdOw °' attl~ ATTeNTION WOMIN: •11 lilillllH flll .,.. • ~ =~~0:=,. ~-w .... w.I •....,.. ooip, 1t -• ITlll -.cJ MllT u. ._ ~....; tot. ,., .. .,,.... ..._ yre ..mo.. M'N• In· •u.+ ... ml1I •• I... tt.9 tlflht oomp•nton. '°'*' for ..... Gtot1 "-veeton. Jant r9tUM on ,,_, 11n• Wtlt•: p o lo• 111• 000 motflM, ~ i.w.t. "41 •a No ta=.::.." "°"' 111111 ~ ... ~ + equip ' IUPPllH. MfY· ........ IOl11 fl140lf • I ........ MMI ........... Ill I 1 llF .. )'OW own -. a ,. 7? I •• 1n1•a111, ,..... ..... • --•ti I I• _,. '(Oill ~WI M .... btOtlHIM oner1 ,_.,.,__.MW,., .......... ,.. eo..ot~'40oGt74 5 ....... ~ ~~-....,.0 ... ,,... ..... Marrto .. '=•••ti wW • WOIMllrM Wortd utor 1J•rt·tl1t10 for torlol ,._,,., or .. ,.. '°"'- .,...,_-,, ' ,,.. ot l~t rttllt ot ~ W..., ............ ltll1tltd ~·'"''' ft• CAU. MONDAY ltloMt' Oo"'Htlo ·~ .........,,_.....,.._ ..... NMlll •IAll·1 "11<*L'f' Vt•tH~/ 09-tlf ~ Hot c;;;m;; .......... ~~ '*-•~t1ooo " ieoo,ooo N;tlte MI ....,, fii'1 A*l .. ~,• .... ~ ~ • . -·-11M9, '•E• --· -. .. tlfl ............... ~:::.z..· Dr' 0.-, ................. .. ' Olm ... Mo\Wr .. , NO , M, ..... JH41•:.•~I ____!!:. Mir: • ... f ... • • ' LNt ........... Commlulon poellton Mutt hava own boat. Starting: End of M.iy. ....... /W .... 2 Yfl ftM dining Qpetl enct. BreakfHtllunch lhlft. 8tlt11ng.: Nowt Pi.ue oall for an •P- l)OlntlMflt between M P"'· Mondtrr ttwu F l'lday at ~5000 .... 621. "9S'-,.t ., ,...,. ..... -,,.. ...... ,....," 8ar1'11ng .. ,..Tiii Liii ....... •Minimum 3-5 ye1ra conetruotlon prooeallng ~-•Banking background regulred. •)(Int ...__, I bertllflta. LocaWd In allQ&nt ...... pOft Flnenclal Canter. For oonltdtntlol ~ IUbmlt,...,,. to w-.m IUIWd V.P. ... rt .......... 500 ~ OMeel' Dr. ,,o. 80K 1170 -:::..,~ .,.,.., requir.d. ' W• ol'tef competltl,... larlH (1100/mo.) an axcallent baneflta. F Ot Interview appolntmeftt plHH oall batwH 9:~:30, Monday t Fl'tday. ........ 114/1H·4HI 4111 lll&TWDIDI Ufml eo.taMMe ------· II f'IT, ,IT, XI.HT Oomllll!L, WOftl "' oc. ....... ftllr tor oolof I Ille e -1tatt•r. Wiii uatft . ~- \ DI Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/lunday, Aprlt U, 1813 PAULA llUI ULITll KUHAAICH llDIWll Tbt~\·~ .. Everyone at ftemax ot th• Oeo. llktn1 Co. dHcrlbH Sunn u J\ealtor1 \alre thh dedicated, loyal, otporh1nJ:l to honor Ar hardworklnJ -the t anll tu Paula epark of UM &.. Ker Kuhutdl b bw ~ ot Y••r• of ••rvlce are exceptional eervtce " •ppredaled by all. ~uperUle ... nat •• WMIC ................ 11M1M 2M I. 11th It., C.M. llt·1- CURIE .1011181 S•LEY RP,EN Thanks or Coldwell Banker honors A "Yeow:,an" Effort Clarie! 40 demandln& Ouri The sale• ageni, aay "We Last Month. couldn't make It without You're Appreciated! you!" BEST WISHES! OlllWIU UlllR Wa,,i. 111111a:;r ·u:.:~ & qfo,.ia MOIEDIONAI IE(DEUDll WEIK UIOL VII llPll PllYLUI UYDEI We at Coldwell Banker All th• people at Lido uy thank• to your Realty take th l e otportunlty t o endle11 carln1 & ac nowledce the 1rut <MdklaUon.. work & loyalty 1hown by PhyW.. Many thanka for a job well done. ............ 1111 ... :.,-Ull llULn -r.:.~ HlY YlalUt, • 111-lMO VIGii, TIEIEIA, lllllRA llTUllD .llllE, Our thanb & appreciation llllUY I SIEIU \0 Barbara for her eervlce & devotion 1iven to the ataft of Macnab Irvine, Thank you for all your Newport Beach Office We support and hard work. truly appreciate you!!! •• , .. , '"'" llt1lfJ lllRMllLlllll # 2 Ohtt Plua, ............... ltt. 1Ht I.I • '· .. , ..... 110-1 00 1101 ITIOIUI To our "Go-F~r"I 'Ne congratulate you! OlllUllL ... PllPU11ll 1141 L ..... hy .. .... ....... ., Ill-MM TO SHIRLEY. I I Thia la our chance to let you know that your e fforts are muc h appreciated; especially duri ng ••unusual '' working conditJona the put aeveral months . . hang in there! ""• ,...., I "• i!ii We... SIM iti1 We... 119 ltlf !u1!4 ll!! lelt Wet.. ilM iel1 Waat.. 1111 Belt Wut .. Bectnc.l "-nbly & ~ HOU8EKf!EPER-CdM M~ Tr9Ne .... =..... JLuMeeAI Aaolollonlet daring & working with home neadt ~MP-eXPERlf!NCEO -... Pturrlberl needed 3-15 yra Coela Mw dallgn hOme WMll hand toola. ea.ta • & baby91tter fOf 1 e yr rW1 exp. In MrVlca mend•· canter II•• opening tor SIOO 1111 W'Utei "!TOlt IJ1l1 Wut .. 5100 8111 Waat.. 9100~!1 Wut .. 1111 ?; SPEND y t!R DAYS lllEDllTE OPElll&S ~ ... 15-9662 M/11. fOf 07!! d1ally. 845-4788 or Learn Specialty drug etora I• tory. All relerencae wlll front dHk. ryplng eo .....,,..,,. ...,.. 20$ Heklng • raaponelbl• be verified. Mutt have wpm; prolH1lonel ap--w/retall 11a1ee & -._ ..... 1•• ........ & ~ Need telephone sales representatives to Ex.-*'<:ed Rental Cet INTERNATIOWA.l OIL ::;:".=;......, _ _.__ ......,, v-. _._ ~~tlon... a~. ,._... M -...-··~1 ......-..... ~ ..... _ -....... start tonight Ln Costa Mesa office. pereon needed to wrtte OAILL.ERS • Now '*tno ore to work avanlnge end Pltlltr, lfhet Salary MOO to 11000 + contract•. 7·11 Rant • fot rougtlnecb & _,,. 11• ~. IC)rOlC 211 tws/ Familiar with AB Dlok benefit• & room to-. Cer. 880-1180 field 1t1ft. Muet train. ~ .,...,. ~Co .___... •··--· ~. · ..__..... Contact Jan between 9-1 .Floor Covering 8ele1, tf5•~o~eW ::': earn TM..... Or~ nty Airport gm. llH-1801. AlllOC. r..identlel & c:onvneiclel (Fee) 1810 San Mlgull Dr. NB ~~2Tl.t ""-~ Hlgn, 3184 Airway experience, beautllul · M Now l9klng eppllc:atlone. .,.. ..,,...,,....,. A~. C.M. ehowroom, llbaral com-lnuh:am~-· ore Ch.ck Cuhlng Stora. NftportStatlonerelnc •-------- mllllon. Call Mr. Terry - - 11• Muet have caatllar end PMllm=.:.1 We6oll, 714fl51·2324 Order pta c nr'og & ... W• .,. IMklnO • ,_,"' ..._ ..,,.nanca. Bond· IU -FUii Of pert time, couplee pedltlng. ~ & CRT ortent.s "II* ~ Ing required. 850·5282 Plldclng, Handling, and (~,,~~ft~j!;-~ :::. ~"::!,~ ,t;:t Cleta Entry eocper11noe I with et IMlt e montfla o4 for appointment. •Ilk acrMnlng ho1l1ry. ~ I I Ing provided for grHt ~RP .:= tlnanca ~and .... lalltMH Full Time. Englleh ~., I F t tM dellr'9 to rnenega "' CNA'• & NA needed all ~ .,,.t. CR't'8TAL ~~~',u~ or •PP 8tratofle •• A Kendevl1 office. You wlll r.oel\19 lhlfte. Apply Mon thru CREATIOHS. 831-6414 Now accept!"" -.p1ie.. ._..,_...._ ,.._~ complete on -th•·Job Fri. llAM to 3PM. New-1 f b ··•kk .... •Part time •Must be at least 16 •No experience necessary •Pleasant personality •Reliable •Good earning potential 142·1111, Elf. 312, aft. 1130 Full nma non-commllelon •11'"':'""'qu"a-I o"""pp00-rtu0n'it) training In ooneumer and port Conv. Cent•. 1556 PIHM I Ill t on•Y :t' 2.gg ~ ..... poeltlon 1vellebll ., "' commarol•I finance. 8uc 1 A N e Appl .... -,....... 1n 1 &erge Recquetbell I En~. Thin, wflll IW'*'O IM .,.:..:;.:' vi, · · ..-., a.Ill... ~. Nftport 8aecft. IHllHIY SHOP MANA.GEA HMth Oub. Cont.let t. 1 -u ,_ ... / lklll '*I ll'Y to 9"eo-. • MC84 ~ 8oftww"I Aellef tor Boerd and CW. RECEPTIONIST lor L,e· lmmadlete opening for 111 fOf m019 lnfonnetlon. .,_,,. _,_, ttvety meneoe a tnnc:t1 --.. • Of!C Operating Syet. Homa. 2-4 hr lfllfta. &In-guna BMctl t..w Offlca. ASME quellfled eh op 1182·1374 ..._ omc., you wftt take an Liva In or out, to help • DIBOL ~ d 1 y and Mon d • y . PlaaHnt, goo.II typlet, meneger for San Juen AT THE BEACH TEL-1-CIRC HAS IMMEOIA TE OPENINGS FOR PAJH-TIME PERSONS IN TELEPHONE SALES DEPARTMENT OF LARGE ORANGE COAST NEWSPAPER ·Evenings and Saturday mornlng9 •Commission/Guarantee •Must be ambitious, pleasant and rellable •Experience helpful, but wllllng to train •This Is not temporary 642·5678, ext. 312 between 5:30PM-9PM General Office, hHV'f :;.a1w:v:i,:: =~~~~·In brench ; ~r ~.''/::.~ :r~ ;;-~ "°; 831-ill42 ~1f4~e!;i5~~kuplng ~=~~E!:~n~~ phonH. Part time In no"·•moker who e.,. or 831-3404. plication Programmer a... 1..,1111t•M portunlly lor an lndlvl· ' Hvn"'.'ton Baectl. Cell type l50 WPM. epe1, en-At 11ecogiltmd 1McW In wtlO hU fYllam analylee vary active Compeny * IEOmUY * dual with• minimum 1 yr "THE POSITIVE ANSWER" AP-1""110 unclata, end 11 ••II· the~.__ In-........ •.. up. In mto, dlltrlbutlon, nMdl 4 expar. Aep1. Sherp pereon with 70 menegament and 3 yr Gen motlveted. MIJlt tle"'8 1 du8tly, we CM offw ex· No upertenca necelM'Y 1cctg eppllcatlone & High comm. paid on wpm typing end diet•· eupeMelon axpar1anea. ........ ..... yr. leW ofl'loeex'*1euoe callent carMr growth U.8. end overw. aboYe ~Top ... uoh cloelng. Coma phone lklll• to WOftl In Appllcant muet have Telepnone Appt &.nere T I --•-..a-.,.._r--'--""·-In "'·-t Call 8el1Nw9 7M-1477 and a .,..._.._ -.. F• a-Direct':/ ..,.., & banefttt ft-"w.. meke -with ua. A.ale 1klll1 In blueprint read· I lputM -,._, .,,_ ,.,.,.,. ...,, _ .... -·....-·-,... ·-1 ..--... .. ~-1 fa et paced Newpor t 1 1 d 1 A••• ..... ......___. Ana Nedi l'9lebla herd • aa• ·-utlon pedtaoa. Sterttng 1-312 Ill~ ..... ....._ Aalt. fOf ~. Auguat Cepl-Beech RHI Ellete 01· Ing, meter• or er ng, .,... _._ --·· ~ .. ~· Ext. f!-1530 ~719 tal 895-iOlt II w d p I weld UMmbly, general Up lo *7/hour. Start I Netlon•I Compeny, Ex-WOfk• fOf front office. E1tabll1h1d mortg•g• with ~ ca. or rocen ng uem lnlPlcilon & teet, madletely. Enthuelaetlc cellent P<oduct. no ,_ Pflonee. Biiiing, loll o firm Meklng wperteooed Operet"Or /81IH. New Rlltwt upartenoe ~·Con· and en eblllty to IHd voloa, ability to ltllnt on -M/11. for Ae:x variety. Muet type 4 end aggr1ul111 loan If you're looklng for a •Jrtatior ""'9cl daenlng PIT Alllllm T• 1111 t.:t Pgegy •t 2900 workere In the ebova your ... 1 C.11 Mike It 895-45a7 wpm. Immediate open-agent&. move Into ~ compeny neadt eggr-Dally Piiot newepepar WI are lootllr19 for full Secrataty ., ... Call 240-3189. e82·75t0. ~· Good beneflte. Call 7 1 4 • & 4 3 • 2 3 3 O or you ehoulC: lnvaetlgete elw peraon. Top WllQll dHlar In lrvln• arH. end pert time h91C>. Dey Vary fut paoad tnvaet· ---Tl-U-,-1-1-1-1---1 Te...,.,, ,,,... 6-7107 981-1400 thl• opportunity. Call & bonua. Call Je"'H A~!° hr• pr wt!. Of nlgtlt ehlfte evllllebtl. ment banking firm look· SHORTS 10 to 5, T~. Thu,._ end Helrdr"-· C.M. Wad· o • n T • 111 • • t 876-1170 A & eome -Opportunl~ for ad\'an· Ing for eomaone with llUOITllS Set. 18 en hour. 75 Sat. Pfefl0f'Mfolow4ng. *Lw frllllltr* 714-647-7337 Orenge County Felr· kend==· Mull cement. A PLY 2 to 4 uoelMnt offloeMllleand WPM. Corona del Mer 54t.27et or 548-42111 Xlnt ~ '*" conimi.. ground• Swepmaat. heW wNdl, PM. 8119 COAST HWY. detall Otlantad. Good ANO ~f(•KERS We need good~ t Jim 714-e7~ HAIASTYUST llon, min mum 2 yMl'I ..... ......... Parltlng lot ettend1nt1 prefer fight truck w/ LAGUNA BEACH pllone ekRi. and typing• '1 n Ht up appointment• TILE SETTERS & Hper. 111 & 2nd TO. md cuhlarl. Saturdey Clfl'IC* INll. Onfy nMt, RETAIL muet. Sllorthend end from our Coete M.a ~ =~for~·~· , ~ ,._8d'· 851n1-0444. Coeta lent~ CA end/or SuncM!y. ~et: re1ponelbl• pereone IM •••It ,....... word procaulng • +. WILD AND CRAZY H11~ ... ·.~~111~·~·,•~n1g1_!~ HE~'-;.G~~~1:J'eEA ...,., nac•111 -OCF8M Information need llPPfY. Starting ap.. .. NON--SMOKER. Newport Youth oriented oompany ..,,.,, ·-• ....., Hop Sing'• leunory -Pr11tlglou• Bink In Art equ.I ~ ~ booth. 7 AM to 2 PM. PfOJt. $4.7& hr & mllellol. Full tl'in• HI•• Retell BMctl eel 973-0954 IHkl Hit motlvlt•d. club. + Tow TNCk Driver nMOld. ec:captlng appllcatlone Santa Analec.ta .._ Cell btwn t:30-t0:30AM Fabric Stora. Coet• ---•-/lfl.... 2•t11c 0 . ~d~o..'~ng elon + bonu1. Cell o.y.. H~ntJngton Bctl fOf cWwry cMwr. Good .,.. II loc*lng tor VA/ -~ only. Mon-Fri, aak for Mele. M6-9"e7 -•-• ,_., _...,.Ith 751-4222 an. 1 PM. 98&-'505 dttvlng record. ~ In FHA and Convention•! Have lmm'4 ope"lng1 Gr-.i Hyde, clrculetlon. RETAIL 8Alf8..for Otlar· Needed by •m•ll pu-and,_ company juet peraon Mon-Frt. &-10AM. Loan Proca1110ra with Ill' ... mlll ev .. I In order dept. No M2-i$21 11a·1 Lodler, Lido ArM blllhlng and convention opening In thew.. Fix 1WX oparetor. good 'YS*t 1000 N. CoMt Hwy. La-1·2 -~· Full Elm $450 to MOO per aper. nee 1111ry. Com-__..,,..., etora, ~tlma ~t co. In M• m0ta lnlormatlon call Mr. National Compeny. XL.HT for TWX mach.lna with Id\ i· week II,_, tww a eta. -.. _,., XLHT In-...--•1 elof\ VlljO. Megutna Of 8___. 7141834-1417 New Product. Delly Clllh ~· llllng. Wll&I treln, guna • Time P • >Ont Se-1--·1 Cell H ... ,.... poeltton. ~ ~-convention alq)lf help--~ edVlnoe. Call Mra. J _., opportunity c:iom- HcMt lery and Bonua. Imme-~.,,::::.:;::. ~~ Mf. The Heefth 0.. DMllon Call Suanne 87 M. Cell 9-12 noon (714) SITTER (full tkna) In my •· t9M&e7 peny benefttL Cll a.. lift......... :':o=.-~e':. Call Mr. Rountree at ' of JOHNSON & JOHN-..... l1•h1... 951·2918 home for 8 moe. glrl. l56&-3l80 Opetq-1«-JtT, ICAN TEMPORARY Mt.706I btwn t1AM & .... , .. .,......, SON Producta, Inc.,_. llw a.cntary part time, hre Non-lmkr. ~~7~732 •ft TILIPllH HIYIY -E;t._•_e_r-l1_n_c_e_d_W_•_lt_a_r1_/ lndMduel. Exper '*Pf'.tl. 8 ER v I CE 8, 3PM .-deye. Mmn S*90I\ to Mlllt part-Uma 11cratarlal Unlq·-ledl .. clothlnn 11-3 Mon-Fri. p ..... cell llpm. Of 841 -alt ..... / Bueboy. Ptl· Apply, Penonnet Dept, 714-e37-3868 Medlcll MWIPAP« home dellv· ooatllon 8V9lllbla In their llON .... .,. --oettC 714/882· 71134 . Call 11.AYMlll .1fW1LD1 No Ellparlenoa necH vet• Club. Varied day Mon-Thut1, 1:30-1 .... _. Ful/pen time oppor1Un-~~~ ~-: WMtem :.?.'°" ofllce, per90n wtttl ftelr tor fa-7-tAM or &-10PM. It ...... ..... wy. Ho~· ldMI for and evening ehltte In· noon, 1107 Jan1bor LIT tty for financial Ind• or_.__,,, ....... In-June 1, 1 . Thie le an ettlon and/Of rnodallng 8.,,..BrT .. av '* look"""'°'.,. er1ttiu-Student•. Seery. PI T oludlng weekend•. Rd. Nwport BMcfl. for 7-11 Rent A Cu. pendancl worillng wt1JI --·-._.... '""' ldeel altudon for an~ ...,,.nenoahellpM.Aiic>ty GICU =~·~· lllUtlc~""' ......,_ Eve•. Call Cl,,d y, 4H-&787 for eppolnl· H I I I WMtl & dMlll c.a. Onfy phv1lcl1n ep~laJlet In turWIOI. 8end reply to: dlvldual who wante a In pareon: ALEXIA NA· ._... .. :I 682-6828 mint. ou110 ••n ng ••rv c ••i>. people apply. 1 -.. LA Tim., PO 8oX 2723, permanent y.., around RAL Fi for • eaor•t•l,. wit eon. upar .• _.,rv --------=~2 Tedult. 85().1180. ~~d1Cllo_!!gy1 .. ~anltt1llr~I ~ a.ot'l 92893. po11tlon working 24 TUForeeLt FAA.8Hv• IONS.Lanu290n1 eocuate typing, JO 8/H butl would bal h wllllng to TILIPllll Wiii wto'n~.:~t~lnG!~ .• ., -pm. r ..,.., ,..., ln ,,.. -·· houra a weak wrth a .. • end .,...;g eillla. Good tr• n th• r g 1 pereon. 3 poe1t1one avell fOf Mt· ,,_,,_ ,..,_. u .. Ing aelllfy $4.00 per tw. LYll h1ncemant program. NIT/lm Im M llexlb .. achadule. Pr• Baecfl. tllaphone ll,_.., Ilk• PIMM cont.ct. Mr. Mo-ting appte. No ealllng. evening. Plea .. 1 .. 11• T~ ~ Al lhlfta. APPLY NEW· 7eo.2901 Wented ectutta ovs 22 vtoue ott1Q1 upartence ~ec11• needed for cMtall, 111111 motivltOf and 0ermon 644-1380 S.lery. Compeny wnt meelli09 wtth Wendy on CM tllilOlllCe • PORT CONV. CENTER Medlcel wtlO ~ ~ Wltt'I and excellent typing growing advertlelng wo'1c• well under Pf ... Small ProcHelng L•b train. PIT~ For ICJPI, recofder. 494-1917 -95_7-6431 ldcle. 15115 scor A.VI., T.chnologlat. g yr w/ youth. Mull be well M1"'8 requlNd. To apply, oompeny. Exoeltlnt a.. IUl'e. Contact Mr. Byrne. Maka part or full time call Mre. John1on . WE NEED Heve eornethlng you wantj NavloOf1 . t AM to calf**-needed for QtOOfMd, peiaouabta, 1 pleaal ~,_.,,.to: naftt9. Medlcll l Dental. IM4110 Meture Pareon, moetly ~ U's, LYl't I l&'t to 1117 Cluoll'led acte do 3 PM. Mon thru Fri. Newport 8Hoh Lab. =-~~ ~. 8~ ··-I JI•• lnqulfe et reoaptlonl9t cterlc:al. AW"1 P.O. BoK Telephone Sal•• tull or fOf etafflng private duty It Wiii. M2-M78. Me-n94 8MA II Exp•i~H • 2-6pn. IMt.7021 (111111 fOf Plllllll -• .,.. w.... ..... rmt .... 1027 San Juen Cepl· PIT. Sat appointment• and home C#a. U1tle Mm M""9t Mt on• Malnterlenol mu.a. Houre, llP-SMrron). HEAL TH CA."£ OIVI· Advartlelng MJl~'!'t & Par"'anel\t part time itrano. II~. Ca. fOf MMol oompeny. No lllUI Tuffet, along came 1 Ganarel Mecll1nlc•I prax. "'*-'40-0140 8K>H Marttetlng. M2·1* poelllon, conetructlon TIAml Hlllng. Top w1gH & lpldar end reed In the knowtedge. Some IEJt. MEDICAL PART-TIME WKND8 111700 Feirat*S ll'llf /llWf experi ence helpful. Monteuol1 p.,.sctlOol bonue. Cell Edward at .all ~•II Piiot CIH•lfled partenoe In etectrtcal & TAA..aailll'TIOHIST SWAP MEET 81"'9 2IO • 546-9407 ... ' 9711-t 170 IUllTIY Plumblng ~.Mull wort! et hOIT'la; 5 .,,..+ rapt-•tl f*9IOUI k ,_._ ,.. .. ..,.1 15 needed for growing Immediate opening, 1vn1 about Miii Muf· bl IV8leble .. _ 1 • en Improvement oo.; ........ .,... •-' 1 Newport Beach •4 8aout'lty tknl. Mont-.orl Olrtlfl· Ttll9't111 W-" Ml •1 tat'• T""9t and ~ It Inge _, ~ 8'C.i :=: =~·O:.:,~ guer + oomm. Mature, ~ Opc)ty ~ eoency. tiUt 1:.: cat• required. Creetlvlty I Wt ...,_ ~~u~ety:/l:,':'; Donna. Surf and Sand mant required. Back· ~.=·~ Al.ilEMatel ... U. ~ ~ _,.., ~ U/) ~;~111ty • mu et. 21 1•.,11,~ -PllHI• t".r thin". through Hotilt. •94 •• ., --'° lndl* H&P'a. .....,._,. •• -·· .,...... • ~ ~ ............... ~aPhone ~ g1lly Piiot Clenlll•d MA.HAGER ~;;-~11'18111e, conN-~12Cll!OtY,. · 0 o.111 .. ,.~. Lr-!!'!!...~tot~ ~~:..openV'J.4.Call ' ' 'I ,.,............. ~.~be thl Adi. Cell 842·5e78 lrM ....., llpt tellon1, ~aratlve r... -lit) tie-.,_ --,_. -" -•• 844-" 1U • A • .. beatl Pet'l/tlme, ftlixlbll Large me11 order com-~;.r::o., ·F, 10•4 • HIT 1m ::,::::.~r:-m~ ... /Ltpl • IMbr L . .i'>.. tmmadl•t• opening• In ..,....... Pw 'TI:':·Ofl'ICE 548-2t89 USI THI ~tiealmMadoP9'*'Q nD/fi& SI mercl•t fU. tnoom• '°'He.Oort ...cfl f"u /{!Jt'/U.le t.e.phone ulal. •1ng ..... 11/: ._, ,_.. ..._1_, DAIL y PILOT lum:':er~/r:. M~ ~.,. .... :-:: :::.: .,,~": =~ :-=;: t:'.r.diar::J~11~~:1 ~ ~ 0:: !!' ... ..... Expef'd. '°""' Orinot .. FAST dertclt _.,, ~ ~ dilo ~ neecMcJ In 1 their own Ntebllehad ln1urance ptu1 dental ,.qul'9d. o.lt Jlldy on Seturday morni ng• -.... •• ••• Co. Ne&. bollent op. l.ISULr' 1Y91am. ~ aoma doctor omoa. '"'med. rout.a. wa1u,., outgo-Plan. Cell RM!onomloe, TueecSey, A.pt1 28. (714) 11 now Interviewing for Commllelon with gue-ftr I••• .... ..n pomnty for IOlld M\n ~ kriowtad~ WI opening. C all Pa"' Ing, attteotlW perental t7M700. 144-45115 MCutlty ~ c.n. r1ntH and bOnueH. W 18.. Ind good wnll'lga. AlllC SHVICI 1tfonG ,,.,...,. ..._ 17W. twie pweon. ,,.._. oe11 _, ... , _TATE SelntillY clld•tM lhOuld alraady Contact 942·15811 •It New bo•f aalel. Wtlt4 X1nt oCJPIY, ,.._ Mnd NUO El'TM CAeHf f-IN. M-f. 641-7021. .-... rn lle¥I a prov.n ~ 5:3QPM !V!l'li!?· Oluam.d A.cl No. Ht, Dl•ICTO•Y ,_.,.to ,..IOfllli. PO Coml*IY,... peopee lhlllS*IOIJ. Need 1 •· anoe record In the,.... -Usc-th,• 01uly Pilot Delly Piiot, P.O. lo• For Result .. 2S43, Coma ....., to wortl from..,,.. Stst Pweoo•... petla"ced pataon In s•• r-s lllOf9. """""' In the Pw· . f asl R~~ult )('rv1('(' 1580, Colt• ...... CA Servic:e Call CA t2t2t ~ ~ "'.~ .. .! * s u p E R =·==.: ::::. nu. =·1 office, Mon· ~~ ... ~ .-:! d1rtttorv Your 92821 642·1671 M111•11• wanted·APPfY -..., '°' ..., 1fU1 t. ~""" S£CR£TIDY SAKS FIFTM AVENUE H well. 642·~78. wrv1r e ••our Have Jou read today'• tat. JJJ ~~Far"' :!r:iJ:'l.fSMtM $TM* 1n9-:'~oondtttone N\ 33SS Wot St C.M. SELL ldl• 1t1m1 with • spttialty CIH fled A.clef If not, Hemlfton a.wo $ales. ~ ~ ~ Deity Piiot a..lflad Ad. c9H SU $178 Ul m ~·,.. lftlaltng tM '*' Needed tot Chlll t1u9y of.. 114,.,,.....1 fie neaon•1 llllldlng C-. 8E"VICf! STATION AT· t42-llt71• ---In town! ' -.1111111111111111111 ...... 11111111 ....................................................... llll fir» In~. PnMoue fll. 9"0ICet ftMdl ..... trlbutot of ai.otrof\lo T£NOANT. bper. A.*1 perao""er axperlenoe eeeoo.. ..,_,. rap. °' l!w. oomponent1/oomput• IMI atdon, 17ttl & tr· ..,o1111ry. Good dll'toal ..... 111·7720 ~Me .. lrm. me, NI. r.::.'fo: :,"::; ~ ~TYPIST ::::*"'Iara,._ .,. I lllP Lea1aie. =-.:::~ 'I MIDU• olW dll'toal .,._-tor Th r a e ye a r 1 of AaPdf1 _,..,. ._. 8ecntlf1at/0..-al Of· tronlOI ~ In law fir..-. Oen Debra flr»=UllOI ta,..,.,_ ..,.. Ml '* ..- m-1101 ec1 • tYW*io .. .,. wtti Mi I 1mh Ofewo«.-..~ t=":t. .. ,.,. ("'"1 fft 11111 r) Met OlllMftolf....,.. & 11e «UMMd _, ..,..10 Of8lt9e 0ourtete...... IU•r:J::;~:li. =.. ......... '° ....... •'.-rtlllnt ... ...,. II "°" ~..... .... ..... to~~:t! fOOO'l IDr • .., ..., --OOl'llllGC.. ... ..... l'IMllll few .. ,_...... ...,_,. .... Olldl)ll,141-1100 ........... ..... , ........... . lftUili,. ....... .... ............ ~ .................. ,... ...... ... ........... ,. ... ...... OOOtOlA~ O"MI l UW.•Huw 00, flt.0, ... ,.... . .....,c~ M711 ., Newt.,..- KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! "' \ Orangt Colet ~IL Y PILOT /8unc~my. Aprll 24, 1"3 D9 lre111•r lfll!111 M Ciii 1trw "lf Wk 'u1='• 11.u.. 11k11,•m1111••---11•u•i!11.tt1H-. ____ htl lmln' lmk• Jilt ~ Promotlont UNI-L.oWIO '"-**'* Oar ... Ooot Opetetoti, JoM90n a ton: Do own H=t;, Min-up a tr• .. llTlllTD 'alnllnO-OO ,. ~· ....... 11.L'I TI~ IH8TAU.ID That'a ALL you pev lor. m19~..,:~!..~•I o'!!'-~1· ~~ :::.. hetdw:!.!.:._!..!! worti 11 y,. malnt. • , 110 min lod. IOMktlfend lfWt> H •Pl. Nl-1• taperleno.d a prof All klndl. ~ .,,. -.-. -1aeo .... --· -.. ,. tlon. -lend~. 784-,... 16 -1211 8ob 1na1a1rauon. Our work llQnel V•y rWOMbtl ...,._ JoM -..o4l1 IDYii!!.-....,.._--Ctttr..... ...... ~~ llvd. C.M. "'9tl iliifi Oolleot ltllcMnt with l#ge ~o=•~·~~ ~ .. :mr ~"'1e rlll• for el of~ PoOI Ceramlo 'fie• 04* IO day ad In the DAlY Pl OT SERVICE DIECT(IY "1810. a COMM'&. Aemodll/~ oomm. --truck, low .. 1 rate, you buy! uo. ~111 :"'·'Of axpart Hf· w/IMCll. wo:,r:. U::~ :i.~· .... ~~· lu!he'z... 1':l::IJ.~· ~P,li..~::;ti you. ~~.:.:'L.., Int/Ext Paklti11 ~1:!;·:: ,:.::;1 ~ PR ID I!. eon.er Co ft I... ,.... Al•o l\oma/cornm. Im· ._.. ltNlrt OMG 730-7076 (l1f) 41Mlll ---o.11 . 00ntr110tor11 . comm L4'. • •• Topp9d/r&m0Yed. Ctaan provamant• & repair• • ..,... "'""' ,,.. Trtmlll•"" & r9.ld. bldg u,,.n.... LIO~&===· up, new i.wne. 111~7· Incl. r:i~:~~~. 8RIOKWOAK: Smail Jobe. ART'8 PAIHT8 8tump grtnd, ltlW IC*. Ouallt~ oriented. Call 146 8681 646-4644 ~Yd Olnvpa WIN~:Pi~IHO Lio. tl2·7432/8'4-47N Newport, eo.ta M41M. Per~ntl touo~~1/: J.D. Horn fWlnllhlno Free -Jim llll-t810 .64&-3306 for aettme1e. T,.. tttmlramOY-Malnt L.ANOSCA,.NO IMna. iw.. 675-3175 •XP ,... .... Ant.lquaa kit. ~ f MrlM Uo. fe.-320735 ....,., INI ...... lr'l10atlon Jim Nt-012t , ... , ...u..-. ,_.1 ..... Cl!u1H Muonry & Stuooo, new• L~~ ~N~~d.:; !Ina pa1ntk,o. · 14e-oee.1~P'-'=!••T•u111tOf•l-n_g_/ _~--m•lad•l..,aJ C!Matt llfMM MHonry, plumblng, lll UID ... "9u. .... by the )Ob or AOBIN'8 Cl.f.ANING rapllr. All typae. Ou.illy. rat•• Ouellly aaaured. letUa1 in.tructlon. >Ont ,..-. *N•w cablneta, cabinet ~·.::=;~: LIT:."::~111 :.:0:~1·~~:-J>~ ~~. tt1«~7 L..owaat prlOa. ~1-23-45 Fraa aat. Den t63-8721 Huber Aooftng·ell type&. K-8. (211)1tW7'4 facing, barl & formlct 25 ~up. 646-0788 , _ •'-tJ•~...,-=aa BRICKWORK: 8m•ll or ta--::: ~racovar-daCl!e fnlH .... oountertGC* 142-oal1 ... ..,, m-· ""'"" Expartlae Houaetc9aplng large Jobe & repalrt. !!!.!!! 802 &46-97~ __ D!ntll ,, .. aattmai. 54 llgt I !llrur Vao & euppltae Included Local rate. 645-61112 Farthing Interior DaalQn Uo. •411 . Typing/Word Prooeeelnel Ceetrr DRYWAU. TAPING ~l.andacaplng eu.tom bat mlrror11. war· l(ltty Ml-4810 Cwtom Brlcll-8tona HANGlN0/8TRIPPlfla bp rNflM llt-latl . Cluii:*, Wf ,.,...,_ Ras*r·Altaratlone All Tuturea & Aoouttlc H&lffng • T,.. TM\ droba Cloore, tub & Bachalora, clHnlng & Block-Concr..Stuc:co Vlaa·MC 8oott 646-93211 Fraa eat De. #3491042 RaMonable 111•1041 ··~·"'·=' IW1J:: aoor.wlndowt-cablnata Frea eet. Ka-M 873--1603 Free •t. M2.o907 ehower encl. GlaH r•· laundry. Rallabla, Katan Aefa. Fraa Mt. 5-49--94112 Blacll-ldar Paparhang. hlar N!~2!'• T.,~plbuno •• ~ ·-~=-=!! ... ~~--·1--1 P.,,....petlOl-tanoal. DRYWAUJACOU8TICAL Ralph Caballero & Sona plaoamant. 112().()201 540-281t, bet 9, aft 4 Ing & Ramov•I. Ou•l. -•'I WUTI M2··,r·~ ·. ! .. ,.;1&>· N.-A ~ay. A9mod. wr; twl-4413 All ollaMa & A9oalra Compl. malnt, comm/ 1!!4rau QUALITY CLEANING •ma ~only. 494-36111 't90 .,.. cerpentry Uc. 1414891. A.pair/am Jobe. F~. f!uo 552·9662 raa. Tree trimming & r• with. pareonal touch I fL-... ·-L nm • ~ ....... ,,.. __ ,_ Abltty 8lclta 730-1900 •h•IYH, P.,llltone. Lo mov•I. c:taan-upa. Fraa ***HOME A!PAIR BETH eeo-ot33 -ABC MOVING-_, 1'1 A qul4Jt lac1 of.,. .. ttlal WE W"re-WINOOW8 AUlttn I rwt• Steve 7112-1155& lltdrlul •t. ~ aft, 4:30. err:"'~lr; Ouk:ll Caratul e.rw:.. W-441M ....... ht youf anarcw blllt may go ..... n ot...ional 1 1 AEMOOl!l8/FAOE LIFTS ELECTRICIAN. Prtoad Ullll&PI WY. ~oct °:-.=12 lillU UIY uc. T13to4e 6624410 Co10i18&9'. 876-4818 up 210 3 tlmaa •high aa F• -Pf Add'nt-Daalgn-Ramocl. cuetom wood patio•. right, fraa Hllmata on Cln-'•""" Reft 638-lelO · Exp'd, ref•. 990-0719 ••• 1 11.,,._* Pla I -=-t-your pr-t rwtaa In the Quall1y worlt ~~1 Top quality. Low prlca. dec:ka & f9nclM. All gen large°' amllll Jobe. ._,._. REASONABLE RATES • ,_ tttr _ ~ n•xt Mllef'tl yeatt. Are Fr• •tmata _,.,. Fraa eat. UC. 631-2346 home =r Free asf. Uc. 31le821. 87~ OardenlnQ wanted. mow-All typH of work-rH/ GHoodOUSr•£El~~llNrGana Baal quallty. 25 'I' exp. PLASTER PATCHING you going to alt 8'1111 fOf "I.et tt'I 8unthlna In" . . I Cl. a~1 I kl comm! ....... & am Jo~ ,., vwo• Competlttw ratM hla? If not & If would N8HIHE WINDOW Al t RAN Y641-0e22 UC'DELECTRIOIAN no. a g ngf, ra ng. "-M~64t-217.4 97~9711e UCT·11&428 730-1353 Raetuccoe. lnt/axl 30 lllka lnf-•llonyouon..,.,•· c!l~""'INO ·~2-1•~" =1::::.:.-----~--------Oual wonc·Aeu rat• awaaplng, re• utl-..... , """ • yra. Neat. Paul $4~2977 ~ .. -...... ""'""""' ,.. ..... ~.~!"!~!~tLI ot Caget ltrritt Tom 631-60721973-7&44 mataa. 645-7541 GARCIA'S MAINT . 8ldgJ ..... llttla1 STARVING COlLEGE energy, call Don Inman John'• Window CIMnlnO •....-•~-no _ ... UTZ UllllAfl 1 1rtr pk, 11 carptnlry, aleQ, STUDENTS MOVING v EO'I at Fraa alt. 12 yrt aacp. S&S .upl\11 831-4199llc Shampoo & .,..,.,.. Clean. RESID/COMM'UIND. 8paclal-comm/reald plumbing. 497-8831 Hou• alttlng daalNd by CO. Lie. T12'*-438 PUSTOtN (114) HJ ... 11 640-1ot1 4~~g~~ ~= _b;INh~~~~t ~~,".'~o:'~ Ind~/ :1n~~.e.:3 H8~ ~e:'~•·_.sm1 Job• T:~~n~a~m:: ~=·u~~~c?~1 11e':: C .. ltlrltul CftaHlly UC. S97iel)4 642-17 Hal. IN/din. r'IMl15: llvg ElactrlQan: new I repair. )"t.. .... • -G "846-s2t7 TL month• beginning In 145-1211 •ANGELA SPIRITUAL• ..... u. ..... , .. room 17.50; couc::ti 110; All typaa. Low prlcM. Expert Y9fd OlaM-up I ery P Mey. I will care tor pet• Palat!at --LI--I Conaultantl Counaallng Thet 111 contr8d.On w9'Q ttla chr Ill. Guar. allm. pat Llc'd. Free •t. 631·2348 malntananca ~ Homa rapalra, cerpantr;, •nd pay ut111t1 ... C•ll ,. pa1--Pl.--In all matt•n ol llfa oarfotm wortt tNet uoo oclof. Crpt repair. 15 yra Jim So4&-eeN alt. 8'>rn oablne\a, alactrloal, 875-447& after e . -•-1--==~~----~ &7~2495 e7a-9764 lnclud1 BABYSITTING exp. Do work myaalf. ELECTRICIAN JAPANESE GARDENER plumbing, fencing. Don by Rlch•rd Sinor. Lie. J4 llf 0 ~ Ul•llJI or m!t:r~!fag ~~:r'b:~~ ~;c:-Meaa~~ ""'9=~)123 4~e:::;.:==u~ Mtlnl, olaan-up. Fr•• 986-0149 MISSIONARY couple ~~1~.ofh9PP'( ~~E~~~~:= In :~'::i~:.~=•g•. oeneed. ~con- Lovtng care In my tlome. ~~wn ~ ~ lattrtalawt eat. 88f.l&T3 aft. 8'>fn. ~~= == ~ .:'~ Thank you, 983-4114 Drain• cleated from 15. :1~·:~ /~0l~1'"o•i a•~e~ ~.: .=:..:. = ~m· 1 yMr and up. Trudi Mount Unit. Guar. For your wedding th• .MPlllll 1&1111111 Drywall-Stucoo-Tlla Daoernbar. Xlnt ref. c.11 t1wn PAllTDI Mmlnl lrom 115. Rapalr'9 631.f964 tr9ct.Oft and~. ----..,.-----1 Rea. rataa. 645-3718 aoouMlcel beauty o't vol· 839--60311 & more. JB 1148-8090 Newport Meal Ctirlttlan Prompt, neat profaH-guar. Ev/~~ aarne I. --------1 oontllCt ~al I wilt babyall In my home, CARPET INSTALLATION oa & guttw. 813-8498 Mowing, edging, gen'I la-"=-Center. Norma N6-04M lonala/lo rat• 1136-71411 ...,1_,...,..1 .. ~2.,.,..,.. I rt (714) 5 wlttl M) Mon-Sat. lntanta on up. & REPAIRS. 30 Y"I axp. ~ Depandabte ~ ..... T .,., ....,. ._ ..,.... A.AA Sptlnklar/landaeape quMtlona. Contractor'• Tart 831.f118 845-8031 (bet II. •ft 4) Guw ... lg!lr F,. ..... 8rWt 56&-1t14 DUMP JOBS Fedar!tad~ax Service INT/a;; 'i'N.JIM. ••• lmlctl l!taln ~: •. ~2~~873 ~'i'.:~c ~.~~z:. lallew SPRINOS-HINOS.NEW OAACtA'S GARDENING 'C::IK~1~ Home/offloa mppca. 20 )"'I ll(JI. Pool WV, ra-Room 890, Santa Ana, !!!!!:!!!!~----C....t/ Cmntt Opanen. All,..,..,._ Cln-up, baull.ng, color 83l-4871. Custom Painting: lnl/m. molding. Early compl• Tilt CA 92701. LIYI lllLHa Cament·Muonr;-Bloctc Emergancy wv. Lowaat bada. 9C)mklrt. 497~1 HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE Ouallly. Spring Speclal. tlon, malnt. 4 r•palr. 1----::::==== 30 ..._..._ ............. ....... w...._ ,.._ rataitll 18 yra In C.M. Furniture, TrUl'I. Tr.. Dava'a: Moat $10-175 or Fraa •1. Daw 873-2031 F 2~ h UC Tiie &. Muonry: new & ,.. tOl•••lfl-... 'da ara tha ,_ ...... """.. .... --.-t. wort!. UC. #430158 Tom 657-4480 Ambit~ Japanaaa 9&f• ~15 NORM 20% olf IU1 yaar'a. Wiii ,.. Mt ... r MN. . .i All typaa Quellly ... .. anytime. Fun for S.C'y •381057 Rob M7-2e83 denar, eadOlno· tra\'91. 641-092'. 01"'9 ,...,. 2a3800. 64M280 ~"~ eet Uc: 931 2345 · anlW9r to a 9UOCellful Wk. 4120-251 873.-+4 lll concrete: amall or lg• .. ..... mowtng, • apray. HAULING 26 yr-. UC. 403941. kw. SELL Idle llama w)lh a · · • C:: or ywd N6al It'•• H•ve ao1Mthlng to Nit?, Joba. Ramova old, ra-Spttng, hdwe. ELEC. Cultlvatlng, tar lllrlng. Claanupa, ywd/ltaa eve. Find wh11 you want In bonded. Reta. Color 111-Dally Piiat Ctutlflad Ad SELL Idle ltema with • way to t.11 more CIUtlflad ad• do It-"· pleoa W/M/W. 84M512 GA'fE8.-Bob'• 641-3ee7 964-2087 RANDY, &42-7647 Dally Piiot Claatlllada pan. N3--0911 Richard 642-5878. Dally Piiot Clualflad Ad. peoptal HOIOSCOPI BY SIDNEY OMARA Monday April U ARiES (March 21-Aprll 19): Diplomacy get.a you everywhere -know It, don't force l.auea, make conceulona to loved ones. You'll receive aurpri8e package, will relate to home, to decorating, to beautifying 1WTOWldingl. Taun&s, Libra, Scorpio pel'llOn& figure prominenUy. T-AURUS (April 20-May 20): Someone i8 trying to tell you eomething. Cat is let out of bag, you are beneficiary. Pi9ces native helps make wish come true. Co-worker is cm your aide and will prove it. Libra and another Taurus also play important roles. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Relationship groww stronger, you'll become inextrlcably involved If matters are permitted to alide. Some changee are neceau.ry, a eerloua di8cumion, which m.laht involve children. should ,not be postponed. Cancer playa key role. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Get rid of superfluous material. Review facts, figures concerning home expenaea, property values, a diflerent account procedure. It may be necemary to cut expemea. to ltop carrying burden which was not your own in tint place. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You'll get to heart of matt.en, YO}l al.lo ma& new start In a dif1erent direction. "Emphul• on creativity, emotional re.pomes, romance and oontacta with people who further ~ own best interesta. Aquariua and another play wignlflcent rolee. VIRGO (Au,. 23-Sept. 22): Follow through on tint lmpre-1om. You'll know in whkb direction to go Lt you permit intuitive intellect to operate. You'll collect additional pA)'IDellta. including old debta or royalties. Aquarian tiguree ln ecenario. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Element. of timine. luck ride with you. Focus on eodal actMty, unique methods of corrununicating and a travel invttadon oonnecied with ncatlon. Cycle continues high - jtidgment and intuition wlll be on targeL SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Visit individual confined to home, h09Ptal. Give yowwlf time for 8ElCOnd emotional wind. Review facts, dedde to take control of your own destiny. Cland~Une autanment lendt •J*le to We. Another Scorpio playa parallM>Wlt role. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Way la paved for proareaa lnvolvlna sales, apecial uallJ\lnenta, p= atandinl ln community. Moon poatUon t. popularity, fulfillment and luCk where tive ventures, oontata er. ooocemed. Stick wltb number 5. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): You aet your way through friendly penuaaion. Official or 1ovemmental notlce relates to taxes, poulble refund•. opportunity to lncreaae Income. ~t wru be mede -~ uvm, oand!&rw are conoerned. Taurus la Involved. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You are inUUued by ~).,,.. You no kJnaer' will be •dalied with routine1 f.amU1lr patterns. statu. quo. Olrnmunk:ate needa, reech beyond what appean to be a limit. hr ypu. naw • the Ilk)' la the UmlL PJSCEI (J'eb. 19-March 10): Don't permit othera to lnUmldate JOU. Complete tuu, •et rnoD9'• worth ad be r1d of UJmel I Fl ry burdim. You'll be deeltna wl&b dtrect, 111111 ... ve. tnnovataw lndMdualt who wl1l appndale tt lt you aumd tall f« djb1a. Det1 Hit AnUutt1 Mll C..nu I Fualtart MIS Fuaitue .. 25 lu lat Ct!!! !et Doberman pupplaa, 8 Elactrlc i.t air range & ....... Mii Furn for aM. aac: ooudl, 8ftoffwtllM&goldC0UJ;. Ill ti Of>ENHOUSESAT/SUN .... blt/Wt.175. grtlt 1160. uonant (Nez Haaaaltlled 500EL 80rnm coffee ~ . ..,,,, .,.. LOOH euehton. Xlnt c.ta ... TAKE YOUft PICKi 648-6047 ., i1so &.6-5'48 Ins 11400 773-1814 Win 11 q u •• &. ch. Ir. e 0 n d . 1150I 0b0 . .. I °""t 2029 HAR80R Bl.VO ' . . 840-98811 54M737 nuga garage He, .... • --------AKC Min 8chl'ljuzan, wanted· Good uaad y Sun, b•by lteme, altvw Indoor aala, ca.ptt chra, lflot91At<CUIMc>Apao ..,..._&·d~,wlll hM tt ta IOZZ King alza water bed, Cuatom bit bookuaH, jftelr;, f1ac typewrltar, 115 aa. roll top daak, P "P • · 8 8 1·O881 or lor plltowback qn aofa Spav-cf tamata cat, IOng coinptata 1&5. t,~:''O:: =~r ':!: much, mudl rnor.. $23. Elcord organ. '25. 646-8301 alaapar w/ottoman. black Mir, Y9llow 9Y11, 882-3308 $25 $45-8758 Westmlnatar Ave. Neel a. dNma, 135. Kit-. 631-4331 white whlakera, wlll be Sec:1. aoft. $200. 4xll TV Oft aa. Dal Mar & Mont• VlatL 135. LP'a, 1.60 ea. Many ltnn 551' COLDSPOT Rafrlgarato put lo alaap T'huf9day II ahalvat, $45. O•k and Din. rm Mt. 3 lvaa Incl. Moving Sala, batutlful = =. ~~ ='. "'-........ waa•-......... ._ ~whit•) 'ood condition. no home can ba found. l•blaa (2) &. c:offaa t•bla, pada, paean, '450. at. furnltura.~thlng ..,... ........ CM r"' --·· ......,.. 100 ~~ .....,,.. $45 aa. 11' redwoodm· an ll••P aol1, 1200. -••I go 6 ,......, "'""• · & Tack. · .... """"' Lam $75 640-2888 ,._ . , 494-7422. ranltate MU nlc table & benchaa. 70. pa, ... -Glent--Sala"----R9tr1~ig-:,-. -:F:-Uf'-11 .. ....-.... Side by Side Atfrta, xlnt 5 epd woman'• bike & Oak eoflH t•bl• 160 nit e.d ~ -1 Horta for ..... Muat ... 8 Clorld. 1250. 646-1433 1111 f~ man'a bHeh erulHr Ethan Allan t~ bad. ~ ~:£tc. 2038 Sal/Sun 9-llpm. 1822 yHr old r.nna .... 556-1138t Harb 957-8133 blka, 115 aa. Ouaan tll9 $75. 850-3335 · Meyw.PI 642.-0350 Vlata del Sol. MoVlng. Welker. 17 hand• hlgh.,R 11 1250 w 11 &. waterbad w/drwrt, $125. · Moped, blca. bOOb. llC>- O'NI dMpoaltlon, llJpar : rryge r 11· 3 5 •: .·~ h * *' BUY** Oak quHn alze bdrm Klng·n bed, xlnt cond. SAT. 4 SUN. 1874 IOWA pll•ncaa. wtll chr, r<>*- hM!thy. 1750 lnota Tack. D a h w ah r I 1 o o . eat. MSO. Bar etoota.125 Saale X1ra nrm mattraaa NE A R HARBOR mwey bad, more. 714-240 -7338 or M8-6&4a ' . fllllTlll ea.Eva,857.f21l. w/bOll aprlnga.1225. GEISLER. RAIN 0 lnlae 714-240-7051. . MASTERS AUCTION 3 yr old eturdy ~bad &50--0248 can dallwr II _:S~H::'.IN:_E.=...._...,,,_...,,,. .... ~~~==.::-::;::::::;-== A W..-tarn 8ad01e lSW' SEARS ELECTRIC DRY-... .... ~ti aofa. 9Mla 3 N9t bf'own naoaaaary ~Sala Sat/Sun M Changing decOf ~ EA • . M I Mii Wldt T ble • ..... ratM\ fan c:halr. re-•••I. Simco 1375. Uaad only 3 montha. R t Fl 1 Sofa 8 . wood trim. good eond, ua er • . 158 Cof!Mdar, nr Har tan c:ott.. tab6ea. blue 1 Matct11no 8' ... t Strap. 1150 ~:OW-~~ $250 . • $75. 646-5938 ~:~~rng~~~1f f~r ~:~~ bor & 405 (In~ ruet aac. coueh. wall ~t!~~ 1 n • w · 857-4648 K3-405a 8Mut new lfg octagon MC Call C•thy 552-6433 G•r•ga S•la, •II waell. unit&. baby awing, baiby -----·---wuher el••n wofka White Indoor' Wlek u couc:h-qualltyteo.t3Kat Evaa. Sada '60. din. tbl $85 llama, camaru 4 eto-ood i 85 d · • P: lha Broedway 1 yr ago, Kl»tOm amp $176. llkte thaa. 33 CHtlllo, ofl Lhtlttdc Sia g · • ryar, i9;• holatared Furnllufa, natural ... rth tonH, Sell tlllngt taat wnn Dally golf club•. furn. 228 Culver & lrvlna Blvda. I __________ .. ____ claan, worila goocl. 7 • Brown Jordan 2 eNlr'I 1 mcMnQ.--t MC I 1500. Piiot Want Ads. ~ IE. &4&-6690 Sat-Sun aarty tll ..... 'lo Type Illy, 2 yrw, etlOW 548-4415 foot llOOI, 2 round tide 552•1~ proapect, Engl/ Waat, WANTEQ; Sida by Sida tablea, 1 lovtiMat '225• ------,...--•llbctllu... Hll llbctlluetp Hll ...U..U 1111 part. cont, aound. va<y r9ffiD. o;t'cond only pp 1 •Ir cond. unit 150 Dining room group, BroY· -.;;;;;;;;==~=====-===-;;~:=;;:=:::=•....,._ gantte. 11000. 839-'7816 548-l367 • · 87~5112 hlll, t•bl• w/8 chalra, 9119; 171-2209 . NEW MATTRESS SETS· china cabinet, exit 8ullt 1n Tiwmador. u-rwn seo tu11.a:. *. ahapa sa2s. 648-24118 matronle mlcrowav 0-..: $loG King ll25 ' Qnantal dln rm eat oval f!I! IQS oven, xlnt eond. 1225. ANDY 750-5132 . axtalf1lon labla, clllna WANTED: Cocker Spe. M4-4099 . , cabinet & bullet, 1700 ni.t. xlnt ram & llVlno JWt. •ttdall MH 2-7 Sofaa & 5 Sola. obo. Rattan eof•. 2 conda. t45-4798,-;---Rodllng chr, wing ehr. chair•. coffaa table , 79o-1203 8 Dacxuttw Fllloteaoant 873--2523 '3!Sl· ~1 Light FIX1ur" w/tul>M 01 ...... 11-c>C ............. _ • MU9teetla PaNot w/r.w l30 Md\. 642-5652 ;; $3()0. ~B'dim......,~' ~ etu Sofa Bad, off xtra to• wrought Iron ,,..._ ..... 2 ... 7 1,.;00 8 .. • whit•. xlnl cond 1276. 090'· Cal 483--2382 ,,,. 1.u.1 pewra. -ea., -pc " . oo .. caaa Artltt ediu-tabla height lnatalled total 13.75. room dlYdara (3) 175 .._ lllt-top dr•lllng tabla M2-7469 Glrt'a 24" bike, Inc l>lla 3 b42 seo. 5 y.,da of !:•!:!m~!!•i!•!!MelHr::!..---l "" whit• pin• ~. rack $60. 780-973 t att iww off whit• uph. flbftc: " •-"=:: Mlt a.,prox 11SO .n.ta, $10 5PM paid $250, aall 1126. -~ • ea. 2000 lln. ft of 2"x3" DHlgnar 4 plac• He. 644-61.42. Douol• Flt. 10. per fl couch, Oflg 12100. 1111• ~GREEN caah WESTMINSTER A88EY Make offer for anllrt n•w 11150. King tlu fof WHITE aMpl\anta ANTIQUE MAU. etock. 646-9368 wkdy. -tar bad, haatar, frame, w1111 a O.....fled Ad 11751 w...,.,._., Aw. M . ~ 1150, 642-74n Call 642-5a7a GAROEH GROVW: aw103 llbctlluteu a111 IUMIU...... a111 llbc.UU... illl RAEARM8 AUCTION ~ 300 ~.,..fl. reanna • ba .uctlonad SUNDAY Aprll 24th at Stovall'• Inn of Tomor-row, located at 1110 Waa1 l<atella, Anaheim, ~. Pr...,.._ 11AM to 1'M. Sal• baglne at 1 PM. No minimum, no ~. no ewer.. P'l-mlum. F°' furihur Info -7141172-4121. Pro-moted by Utt .. Jcf\n'a Antique Arma Inc. cat .. loge ewll. Maulve oak din table 1250. OU upholet•ad loveMal 1850. Wicker '°'*-•100. M:t .. 115 Ant!Que found -kltdlen tbl ., .. -dn. t4()0. 71()..1711 ' G-REETiNGS f:tr MOMS Tell her how great the Is and how much you appreetate all the llttle things (and aome pretty big things) she'• done for you. Greeting• to Mom• wtll appear . I Mot.Mr'• Day ..., "" and the rat• .,. only 2 lines for t1.oo (Each addltJonal Une onfy 50-) i THE COATDRESS PARED DOWN TO SMOOTH, SLEEK UNE PRINTED PATTERN A884 r rrww . ,,,,,.. Mt \A 1: ,~.--.: '·' ' 1 ••\ t L ' ' :... " ., . ., . , . 'ti COAVA!f' COMA CONYIRT, 4 eod. ldnl ooftd, t•ooo1obo • .... TllO ----------------.............. __,,........-----......-..,.._------.....-- ORlllE COIBT YOUR HOMETOWN OlllY PIPER t •UNDA y I APRIL 24, 1 eaa ---:::::::---- J I NANCY (E by Ernie Bushmiller THAT NEW BOY NEXT DOOR I 15 SO CUTE ---ILL SEE IF I THESE BUBBLES OUGHT TO MAKE HIM NOTICE ME HMM--·HE DIDN'T EVEN SEE THEM CA N ATTRACT Hl5 ATTENTION GARFIELD ® TMERE'5 NOTHING LIKE. A BUBBLE 0ATH TO CURE WHAT AIL~ VOO, GARFIELP DENNIS THE MENACE tHATRAJN N.E:ARL..Y RUINED A ~ DAYl You SHOULD BE THANKFUL.-FOR "THE= AAIN. JUDGE PARKER SIT DOWN, JEANNIE! I 'M 6LAD 'YOU STOPPED BY~ I 'VE BEEN WORKING ON A BRIEF ANp I WELCOME THE INTERRUPTION ! :H& ALSO SAID THAT IF TIM .---.... ft.'JAS REFUSED PAROLE, HE'D f)E COMING BACK lO SEE ME! --------------------- MEY, JON. WMAT MAPPENEP TO VOUGUV5? by Jim Davis YOU WOULVN'T BELIEVE. ME IF I TOLP YOO by Hank Ketcham IHEM APf<.f L s+-#OWERS BRJNG NAY VE:Gf:TASL.SS ! by Harold Ledoux FIRST, I WANT TO APOLOGIZE FOR THE OTHER NIGHT! I SHOULDN'T BOTHER YOU AT BUT I WAS UPSET AND FRIGHT- ENED! I DON'T KNOW WHAT I WOULD HAVE DONE WITHOUT 'rOUR COUNSEL ! BUT THIS MORNING I HAD A LONG DISTANCE CALL FROM HE SAID THAT TIM WOULD BE APPEAR-( ING BEFORE THE f HOME! MEANWHILE PAROLE BOARD I TODAY! LDNC:> JOHN SILVESTE~! JUSTREl.AX,RUSHLAND! THE WORST \HEY CAN 00 IS TELL YOU THE STATE WANTS YOU lO STAY ON /ltS A BOA~ER ! JUST OON'T TRY TO JIVE THEM f ANSWER THEIR QUESTIONS AS HONEST AS YOU CAN ! WITH THAT LETTER 'COUR GIRL- FRIEND SENT, I TH\NK YOU'VE GOT A 6000 CHANCE lO MAKE IT! IF I'M GOING 'TO COMPETI: t"l 1HE NATIONAL 'AIRGUITAR 1 ANAl5 , I'VE GOT 10 PAACTIC.E 8JER4l smRE MON\E~T 1fiAT I CAN! MOON MULLINS • YFEH--SLoWLY, You'LL Bf: PROUt> OF BLJT SLOWLY.. KAYo, MooN--HE1S DOCTOR SMOCK ~ B~EN CL~,ANIN~ our 11 YOUR ROOM ALL PAY! WMEN OOE5 ~~R. BA~ WE "TAKE OFF IN A LEAVE FOR -rnE AIR COUPLE OF WE.E.1<6, LE5 f GUllA~' C001E5T ,CRAZQ~ IT~ ALWAQS 5AD WHEN CDU51N5 MARR<,.> ! by Ferd and To111 Johnson -JUST ME AND A BROOM AND ,A DUST- P,AN 10 BATTLE IH,AT ENTIRE ROOM? ~l -~ ~o FAR W~'Vr= ~of RID ~ ~~~£:-- . f2~INF o~CEMf NTS ! MAYBe r WoN'r EVEN H,AV~ To ST,AF<T oN MY STUFF! by George Lemont HA-HA-HA! HO-HO-HO! HA-HA-HA! Hee-Hee!~ HO-HO-HO/ HA-HA-HA! NESVESR uOKEi W l'f"H A GUY WHO HAS NO SE!lNSI!! OP .Hc.>MO~! • "' ( . , "' ,.,_ : .,fi . . .. , . ,,. ~ , .. , l ,,, .. ' _,,,, . ''/.''' r1.::/! •"11~1/ ;,111 I ,'" . "''"' ~ ,, ... ,,,.,,, "'''' ... AouAAIUS TH~ WATER B&AAKR 4 ·24 ..__ ... ____ _ \.: i ~.HOWHA5"TM£~ ••• I ~· ·~ &N "1'HE N.F. L,. • . ,. · HFSCTeO 'n41! GAMe? .. ---~---------~-------~----~~--- ... _ ...... . -· ....... _, -------·- CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYESt TMre •re •t INtt ti• differ- .as In ••wtnt .._, .. betwun ... end bettom ,.,.11. How .-kflty can Y9V flftd tt.mt a.di enswen wttt. tt.M below. ..i~J.1•u" e1•9 t 6u11\1u.t \1 '4''0 '° , .. l.W\ ''.JP( t' JlfJ0'4t .,, t k 1 ( 6M1U1W U U ••!) t ..t•MOt \! 11•'4'.) I \.a)\;aJ~UIQ ~unif)rWhirl@. •~ ~~~~~~~byHalKaufman~~~~~~- • WORD IS OUTI lnHrt the urne Mven-letter word four tlmet to complete this 2 .... advice on the avoi.nce Of nHCI'"• worry: .,,_ver - -until --• you." P.S.: CHECK·OUT CHALLENGE Three pencil checks have been Inserted In the diagram above. You are asked to distribute five more such checks so that there wlll be one and only one In each ver llcal, horizontal and diagonal row. Remember, there are to be eight checks In all, five are lo be In serted How is i t done? P.S .. Try i i as a par ty pastime Slmply make up some duplicate diagrams ""'°p f\JtJ UMOP "4J•• ·u#OP '411.4011 U""°CJ ..... , UMOt) p.11\0 V#riOP .,.,ueAM vMOP pUOl M · U#riOP ... , .. no. U.01>• .t Ot t lP~J Thi'* of• word thet rtlyrnn with bvbltle. •IQl\011 \I \~Y•IQ '1'0111• YI PIOM ....... .., ... 1 e Chain Ga~I How long 1 string of anlmal na~s can you make using the last letter o( each na~ tor the llrat letter of the next? Example: HorM. elk, koala, etc. e Boote LHrnlntl Alfredo tore pages s, U, J1 encl 32 from• school library boott. How many Mparate sheen of paper did he have? ~°"' \Ill 01 •IUOll •-•I 01 , ... >••t -..11uc111 -PY• .,ooq ... , "'°'I .. 'Ill Jl\01' e Riddle fM This I Which lnHCt la part flower? The forget me·gnat. With what kind of a shoe can you blow your nose? A llss·ahoe. Why were the author's words so trite? Thlll's all he rote. LIKE SO? Which canvas ~bove bNrs ttw most perfect likeness of the sHted model? We'll let you decide . 5 FUNNY FACE! Add colors to this circus scent: I-Red. 2-Lt. blue. 3-Yellow. 4-Lt. brown. S-Ftesh. •-Lt. green. 7-Lt. brown. I -Ott. blue. •-.Ott. purple. 10-Maroon. 11-Lt. purple. SPELLBINDER SCORE 10 points for using all the i.tter• In th• word _,.,ow to form --------two complete words:,. DESIGNER THWN acore 2 Points each for all words of four letters or more -------- found among tM letters. Try tit tare at ... st so '°""'· 6'.tJ ·~ ............. QIH4d For Better or For Worse by Lynn Johnston t-\E.LLO, GRAMMA? ' ITS ME- MlCHAELJ \E.LL HER ABOlYI Yif~~~~J=Jr ! MOM- DO you WANNA IALK Jo HER 9 %% % \HANK HER FOR lHE- SWE.A\ER SHE SENT yCD. lHANKS-""""-~~ FOR\RE. sweA1ER You SEN\ Me. • 'tOU'O "~'l& 6£eN P«o\>O OF M£. 1'0Nl6~1, o~o \ ---"7 "e.tte ·~ W~'f ... eu'f \tl\.tE~ \tlf. \&l~ ~\V\NG, "'>ME I \1' ~\..~ OCC\lftl(Et> 10 ME.1'AA,-\10 ~ott60f1'f.N A\..\.. ABOUT ·ntEM ~ GORDO ® I J , .. ~Pe2SISTENT VANDAL WITl4 TWO e~f'EN ARMS DEFACES WALL/ SHOE 11 bJ.A~ltJG cA* OF 6RAFFI -TOEf11 • WM£N t ~Af OOWN tN 1"E . fM~Ame, t ~~A~O ~OM& COIM6 ~U.. 00'1'" OF M~ .........,_ _ __, f'ocKe"f ONTO ~ 11\lRNEO Aft()\)NO, ~O'J£. ~'" 1'0 1'~e.1'~ft£., WE~ \N6\0!.1 ANO P"~e.o \JV 1~£. C:0\"16 \ 4Sf.f. '? "f ~e F"L.OOR . ---------- NA"fuRAL.~'I, t COUL.0~1'1" 6££ IN 1"E OARK,60 t OEC10£0 1'0 WAl"f, ANO flCK 1"~M UP Af'Tf;R 'IOU KNOW HOW 1l0i eDliOI< HEAOED l~AT rreM~ "fME MO\J l f. \JA~ 0'1eR . by Gus Arriola by Jeff MacNelly LU COJEfZ. ™E INDIJS1R'( AAae.-~T IT; UK£ TO~~A.~ ~ Daily Pilat I DUDUYMDW star ol tM mocJit LoYeskk Were J'OG '-Y M a lddf -0.11., ~Ta. When I was 9, I realiD!d humor was a good defense. At school there was an enor- mously large boy whose main pleasure was throwing piles of mud in the faces of boys who were halt his size -like me. Of oourse, I was worried that one dav my turn would a>me. When ~did. the bully was just about to raise his ann when. In the nick of time, I made a sick, frantic job. My tmnen- tor stopped U;i his tracks. After that. l. beAan working on humor all the time. IACICLYll I 4111 ~ ol 1" Omenl HOlpilM WMllb ........... ,.... Mft ~.r-:f .,._. ~ ..... The mo.I interating was be- ing a ddective's a.Wunt. It was nodUna like what you see on 1V -no karate or coo---~"I did a lot d (aewch and I foUowed' ~ pie. wrklng down where they went. . Only once did I 1ee shots hurt IOrnec>ne. The per· 100 I waa tallina down a dark alley In New 't&k .-tut in the arm, and another p lhot and tetl ro the pound (br- tunlttly, not kiled). Urd then I had wantfld to •an my own ll'ftCY· bul Iller that I ~mymlnd. \ I-. I I ,, ( I I :-- r \~) '~1 "< ·_; ~= L r a:P&.., .. l.o.5 ANGELES -For those ot y0u who can afford the SJ ,500 O'*wa)' fare, starting in June FirstAir will fly you from here or San Francisco to Honolulu and New York like you've never been Down before. Each of FirstAir's three oon- verted 12Ts. done with An Dea> interiors. will carry no ~ than 35 passengers per flight. Each of those 35 will have a private compartment with a queen-size bed and ac- cess to on-board secretarial services. a.ir.(<>-ground tele- phones. stock reports, a p~ tocopying machine. hair· dresser. barber and mani- curist. Wolf1ana Puck. lormer chef al Ma Maison, will be oonsulting chef for FlrstAir, and accesaories will include cashmere blankets. Baccarat aystal and Spade china. Oh. yes, the S 1.500 fee ind udes limo pickup and delivery. cordless headphone and list- ing in a computerized "~ quent Byer" diaty of steady clients' likes and dislikes. . .. Te n 1 W....'s last screenplay. Seem Pfoca of th~ Heart. has been boultht by director Kdla o..td llack and will be set in contem- porary St. Louis. where Williams was raised .... The fil"ll hair-pulling fight between .... CG9li ind u.da Eftll9 on /)ynaJty wu such a Dullilt Ho/ltrtt:lt (r.) """'" """"""" llrOllwT Aon noelt'f about 1bot*. ratings success that a rematch own fault. I often leel that rm was staeed-Instead of usin8 )u!I not talented enoush." ... stunt doub&es, the actresses AU those srories about tenor played the scene themselves. l.ncMno Psvarottl havine a 'nus time, Collins only sul-ning with his protegee- fered a back strain: 1151 time it secrdary. Mn t~ Reiee. was a cracked rib .... LA.'s amuse. not wavate. his top hosts and hostesses are wife. Adm Veroal "I ha~ already planning their parties nothing to be jealous ol." she for the Olympics in July of remarks . . A show~iz pro- 1984. dividing up dales so as moter recently called C-aesar's not to overlap with each other Palace in Lake Th.hoe about and e.xchanging guest lists of staging a 7botsie look-alike local and -out-of-town con1esl -with a switch. The celebrities. -Robert Wtndtkr ~ would choose which female contestant mosr re-- NEW YORK -Both MldlMI sembled o..da I•« Dlmdra. We guess the thought of alJ an Scaa and those women with 5 o'clock 1Hlb are enter· shadows and haity chests suf- ing the "troubled marriage" ftciently spooked the Caesar's phale. Meanwhile, lW and e.xec. He huns up on the ~ I J! .,.... have would-be impresario. reached the divorce -An6aSumtMT phate .•.. After d\Mting with a stunning, dark-haired WMHJNGTON -Q... woman at a party, Sir n t .. • Is toinlnl the I ewe a.iel' asked a compuler l!le.thankl to a Jift bwtander. "Who was that?'' from Pt ~ and Mn. When tokt. "An attress.'' a. pn Word is thlt the OOvier llkied. "An a,,ptrlns Queen lntenmto use her new one. or has she been dl9COV· Hewlett Packard 250 Model ered?" She'• been dbcovered 25 buslness computer to heJp all ri&ht: It WM Dallas's~ man• her thon>t.l&hbttd torta Prlad,al .... JoD 9tlblei. 'TWloring the ~ v...._ now ln thetem'jerker P'ftr to the Queen'• needs ~ ,,,.,, fb. modmly. tt• coWd MIU)' bring the bill to .... ,...., he ~·· ,... 124,000-~It ptOblbty m111f lllml: 'Tm always look· the moll ~ dlplon\a" ..... the pedea pM. It'• my de -Ilia .. t ....... leonW 8redmev a new Lincoln Continental. American taxpayers, however. won't be looting the bill. Hewlett Packard "does not ex- pect to be reimbursed by the Whtt House," says a com- pany spokesman .... We don't know how he loo.ks in a dress. but DaldD Horn' m 's big brother. Ron. was a big help in making TOOlsie. Dustin asked Ron, an economic ex- pert here in the office of the Secretary of the lteasury. for his comments on the early drafts of the script "Most of our discussions were aboul characters and their ~ havior," says Ron .... Waler· gate co-oonspirator a..tee Coleon's born-again ex- perience wasn't the half of it. =-selling author Rutb aaery. In her new book. Th~d to Tomor- row. she claims Colson's body ~ actually taken over by another spirit, ma.king him a Walk-in. Walk-ins. Montgom- ery explains. are here to help the world prepare k>r a shift upon its axis that will take place II the do9e of this cen- tury. possibly after a devliltldn& war. She says Moles, Jeu and Gimhl were some other Walk-ins. Collon. who now wortcs with a rellt- ious oraanizalioo tor pNon inmatet1 Aid tht0u&h a .,a.nan: "As • Ouillian, I -do not believe in wbat she hM podlayed in Mr book ... -K .... McaKa Ond Jen. Olfnbell - be~ In rw1dOm drftlnga ~ ~mt«.i~, Inc., M indlpendent Judging ...... -..... flnlll . . 10Gtnl,..._ SPedlllEdllon Cadmlc O'Oro .. ~ ...... .,..,'° ...... °' .. ':!:ii.~ -t11111111i1a1u.r..,...~~ . Inc.,«'*~ 8W1I~1111 11~Whe!Wlf1 .. kAld OI proNbhd by .._MFednl, .. .,.,9Dc81.._end,....._8"11V. 5. Al ooupoM ""*be ....... by M8f 31, 1983 In ordw '°be~ tor • 11pml!M chwlrtg. The drwing wll ... _.on« iboul Novembef 31. 1983. ~olMn1*'9 .. dlpenduponblU'llbef ol .... ***S. 6. Al pr-. wm be~ Wlnr*9 .. be naifi.d by "1111. Tu. .. "'9' .. ....,.~of .. or'-..,..,.,... One prim to. fsl'lly. No llmtillltlon or.,...., of pri:llla permftled. Winnen 1N1Y be......., to lign en llfflde¥lt of elglbMy.,., ,....._ • 7. For 8 lllt ol prt. wtnner., _.,a ... **" I 111 d, mmped enwlope to· Wll••~.~Q.llill_.._,___11.Y.1.... . "'"''''''"'''"'''''''"m'""""'"""'''''"''''"''''"'mmm .. ~ ...,•soe on CJoee.Up ·. = Nl'f81ZE 1= 11t o..r. t... .............. you tar .. tlLICl9 ._GI coupon. = =.::w.-,.:=.cic::::.~~.::== = ~.80llm&.Clr*lft.lcMll1i2!'4 • l = . Good•ono-.up.Jtlftaltllr.-~ffeud. = Enlilf'me In .. "Golngtn ~ .. Swu~ 1 ttla1.,... Print I= I;; Addlw , - Qly "... Zip ~~ 50 := 50 llllJ 33703l ~ 111111111111111111111mmmm1111111111111mm11m1111111111111- . .. T - A CAUTIONARY TALE OF GENETIC TAMPERING BY ISAAC ASIMOV W e live in an aee when scientists have begun to fiddle with senes. These are danserous things to play with, and we might end up with anything from individual trifgedies to a serious weakening of the human spe- cies. But if we know what we're doing and are careful f!!Very step of the way, we may find we have introduced a new and powerful dimension to medicine and health. Some of the research being Some of the research being done m- votves tampering with a sene that af. feds sil.e. Each of us grows 10 a certain height and then stops. Some of us may wish we had managed a couple of addi· tional inches, but it is out of our hands. One factor that dictates our height is growth hormone. a protein produced by the pituitary gland. If growth hor· mone were injeded into a child at a ''If we are at the attut or an eni of genetk engbw:o Ing, It will .probably talte a long time l.o a>noert that .,,,,., lnlo medical ll'etlllnent. ,, )'OWl8 ase. the child might grow a little taUer than otherwise -however, growth hormone is hard to get and tricky to use. But then, too, the production of growth honnone is controlled by a par· ticular sene in the chromosomes of our Cl!ils, and in that sense the amount pro- duced by a part:iallar individual is determined from the moment of con- ception. MSht not the gene be aJte~ tomehow? . t not a different sene be substitu You can't very well experiment with human ~ an this respect. but yoo can with animals. And that's exactly whllt lcientists have been doing - with ra1s and ma. The various kinds ol rats and mice belona to mated families. but on the whole; rllS are larger than mice. f>re.. tumably, growth hormone ls more ef. ~in l'llS, or exisls ln greater quan- tltY. and a dilerenoe In genes may be responsible. What, then. if the ~ priMe rat gene were injeded into the dewJopina mouse ea ceU? SdendllS tried this recently and, in tome Clllel, the • cell that received the lnjecdon resulted In a blby that rJf!W extnordinarity quickly lor I IDOUR. AJ. 10 weeks an ordinary mouse ~ ~ threHourths of an 1-lt ~ '* 0 ~ ol 6*/Wmllny at ....., ~ SdtOo/ 0/ Mldidlw Oltd tMIWK ol l11 ~ ....... hit mo« rw;ft, The Wlncll ol °""" Ind Odw .,.... {Doll!lfdOY). - ouoce; the mouse with the rat gene. however. weighed one and a half ounres. or twice as much. Except for that, the giant mouse was completely rnouselike. Gene transfer is not the only way that scientists can fiddle with genes. 1llere are, for instance, two genes in human beings controlling the forma- tion of hemoglobin. the protein in red blood oorpusdes thai absorbs OX)'8t?n at the tu~ and carries ii to the cells. One gme, active at the time a human being is developing in the womb, pr<r duces fetal hemoglobin. Once a baby is born. that gene is switched orf and the second gene, which produces adult hemoglobin. getS to work. Adult hemoglobin ordinanly does a better job than fetal hemoglobin, but sometimes that second gene is defec- tive. In such cases a somewhat abnor- mal hemoglobin is formed and, as a re- sult, a peson may suffer from sickle- cell anemia (an inherited blood rondi· lion. occurring mainly among blacks. in which a majority of red blood cell~ become sickle shaped} or from related diseases. There is no way of curing such a disease except by fiddling with the genes. One way of doing so is to deal with that first gene. the one that produces fetal hemoglobin. The gene is still there and exists throughout life: it has simply been put out of action after birth by means of a small chemical change. Suppose it could be put back inlo ac· tion by reversing that change Once again fetal hemoglobin would be formed. and though it might not be as good as adult hemoglobin, ii would be belter than 1mperfu1 adult hemoglobin. A particular chemical known to pre- venl the kind of chemical change that switches off the gene was tested on ~ boons. Once the baboons were seen to have suffered no ill effects from the dosages used. it was tried on two pa- tients with skkle<ell anemia d.Od one with a similar disease c.alled beta- thala.ssemaa. Some improvement was indeed noted, so it could be that the first gene was indeed switched on apin. What do expenments such as these mean for human beings m general? To begin with, they don't mean anything immediate. II we are at the 5Wt of an era of ge~ engineering. an era in which humanity can mold itself closer to its heart's desire. it can. and probably will. take a long time to oonwrt that start into practk:Al, every- day medical treatment. Much remains IO be done. After all, plenty of YQrs passed from the moment the Wright brothers lifted olf their first canvas and planowlre airplane al Kitty Hawk in 1903 IUI airplanes be8an canylne hund~ of ~across the Alianhc a& super· 90nlc tpeedl. And It was decades from the time RobeT1 H. Goddard Oew his first liquid-fuel rocket a mile into the air in 1926 until we started taking close-up pictures of Saturn . In both cases, a half· century of intense and ingenious in· vention and development was required and, inevitably. so were some ca.sual- 1ies And genes. remember. are far more complex than planes and rockets and far more intimately involved with each of us. so the risks acmmpanying error are greater and more frightening. As it is. the successful experiments recently conducted are only limited successes at best. Injecting foreign genes into a developing egg ceU is not an easy procedure. Less than IO per- cent of the mouse egg cells injected with rat genes developed at all, and of those that did. only a minority showed the remarltable groWth effect. And the chemical used to switch on the gene for fetal hefnoRlobin seemed to work, but it is a toxic chemic.al. It can be used once or twice wilt'\out dam'*' mg the patient more than the disease would. but regular use would surely kill him. Of mice and mot: Hopina to find a way to hftp humans grow taller. scientUis vcpen- tMntally mj«ted rat ~ into micr (the bqJser mouse recewed the inj«tt0n) Suppose, though. that the necessary ..,_------------.,...---------------t advances are made over the next half k>w added inches without bringing century or so Suppose that better about gigantism. and that might be a techniques are found for gene transfer game few would care lo play. And and gene manipulation. Suppose we remember that this might well be true learn how to turn genes on and off safe-of any form of gene manipuldlion. It ly or how to treat a gene chemically (or might always be a matter of trying to otherwise) in such a way as to ~ify place a s<>lf ball on a very small green. "There oould be '""""""' and fada in gmea, wllla enormous numben of people llUlblllng upon IGllhlonable genes for their chlldren. ,, its workings at will and as we choose What then? We must still be careful The product of about 3.5 billion ye.ars of evolution is noc to be fiddled with lightly. Let us consider, for in.stance. the p<>S.'ibility of added growth hormone. It seems a simple thing. If !all children are wanted. then one would add senes from tall individuals to the developing egg cells. or trt!al the egg cell 111 such a way as to make the growth-hormone sene \NOrk longer or better. But more growth hormone Is not necessariJy good. There are. otta.Sion· ally, individuals In whom growth hor· mooe is p~nt in abnormally tugh quantities. They grow to heights of eight feet and more and sutler from the disorder als&ntlsm. This dborder Is even more ltrious than tM dwarfism that results from an undmupply. 1'he trick, then, would be to induce a where overshooting the mark would be as bad as undershooting Then, too. genes don't work in isola- tion. We don't know how a change in one gene might affect another. For instance. the productt0n of larse mice gives rise at once to the thought that such techniques might be used in cattle. sheep. chickens, hor$e5 and so on. In that way. we would certainly e.X· ped larger animals, but IS it mere size we want? Would a larger oow neces- sarily give more milk, and if it did, would the milk necessarily be as rich as it is ordinarily? Might there not be a chance that with growth hormone a sheep would produce more but poorer wool, chickens larser but Jess tasty esp, and so on? Of coune. having chanaed one gene. we might go a.head to change another to counteract any insuftk.iencles or disappointments of the first change. That, in tum. might make necessary still another change, and then another. Might It not be that with each addi· tionaJ change there is added risk? We are now able to analyze genes in .some detail, and we can compare the genes of chimpanziea with those of human beings. JI has turned out. to the surprise (and even shock) of th09e do- tng the investfptlng. thal the dlf· ftrenca art' u~ly small. It ls astontshlna that diflett~ so epparent· ly minor can result In ohan8t u lalae and crucl41 as tl\oee between • chim· panzee and a human being. Well. then. as we change more and more genes in the hope of fine tuning a set of improvements. might we be run- ning the risk that after a certain point a horrible change for the worse could take place? Let us go one step further. Suppose we find out how to adjust genes In such a way as to achieve all the improve- ments we want. withd.Jt introducing any apprecMWle disadva.ntages,·so that individual humen beinss are better off In every way. Mlaht there not be, even so, J>fOblems on a world tcale7 Suppose ~ produced a world of 6-#oot-plus lndlviduaJs. aJI strong. healthy and brisht They would have .... er: .. r ExceptJonal value ••• Fabulous ''Envclo~" Dress onlySf698 ru. . • ~nvelope" dress! Superbly styled, from the straight collar and contrasting red plald trlm on front-button placket to the very un- u s u a I ''Envelope" pleats and stylish patch pockets. Tie 1t wltlt the matching sash or wear It ·free-flowing for a more casual look. Made of machine washable woven polyuter poptln In this year•s fashion coiors, Khakl(80) and l"Cavy(42). Stzu e.20. Half ·s1zes 14'1•·24'/a, t2.00 additional. H•ve you ever wanted an affordable dress so unique and excitingly different that heads would tum? Here It ls- thanks to the clever de- sfiner who aeated this MN~ NAME----------- AC>Oft£SS ------------~-~- Oflio fftldittrt °""· CITY PIH•• ffd Hlee ,., t----4 ITATI ZIP • ---Af:, ~., =.: »F.!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~p~r~ov~e~to~~av~e~su~r-~ I prising advantages. ~ Such is the case ~ with nearsighted- ness. It may seem di sadvantaseous. and in youth 11 is. As people get older. however. the lens hardens and there lS a tendency toward farsightedness. If an individual is near- sighted to begin with, his condition can actually balance out the farsighted· ._.........,....._...:.;.;. __ .;.:;...._..._.,.;...;,.."-'L-.-~ ...... -----' ness. and he 1s sud- ~er gen~: the controverSKJI recombmont DNA molecule denly better off than -------------------someone with ongi-to eat more, too. Unless we reduced the nally normal eyes. population . there would be an unbear-Consider an example involving other able strain on our food supply. Kinds of life. Human beings have de- This has happened before. Advances veloped particular strains of wheat that in medical science in the past century grow faster than others and procluce have succeeded in making humanity superior flour The result is that an in- generally healthier and doubling the creasing percentase of total wheat pro- life expectancy. Thts has meant an duction 1s confined to those strains. unusual increase in world population. while other, seemingly inferior strains which is now triple what ii was a cen-are allowed to die out. The desirable tury ago. The increase is suit contmu-strains. however. require a great deal of ing and is brinqing enormous problems water and fertilizer -which may not in its wake. always be easily available Again. 11 a There LS an even more subtle prob-disease should develop that affects lem involved with gene manipulation those particular desirable strains. vast Let us suppose that through great skill quantities or gram might be wiped out and caution we improve lives, bringing and there would be insufficient quan11- aboul advances in both mind and bocly ties of the ocher. supposedly inferior. while making sure that we take into ac-strains to tum 10. That could bring count the worldwide effects of these ad-about a world catastrophe vances. too. There will nevertheless ff we decrease gene variety in surely be a tendency for some genes to human beings then. we risk temble trouble when an unlooked-for difficulty "A gene that lleel1l8 dlaadvantageoua may prove lo ha.De ..,,,,,ulna atloontage& ,, ~ unpopular and others popular lor less than vital reasons. There wiJI almost be fashions and fads in genes, with enormous numbers of people in· sisting on fashionable senes lor their children. On the whole, this might result in certain types of senes being wiped out because they are viewed .., undesir· abte or as merdy unfashionable. Humanity overall mjght posaess a small variety of genes altogether. We mi&ht all become a little more simllar In many ways. This. too, Is dlnem>us. for the ex· lltence of a wide variety of genes is a definJte advant• In the evolutionary 1ame. Some terMS may seem lea de- sirable thlll others. but that ls not MCellll1ly an ~ute-Given different condidons -I ~ enviJ'on. menbll, IOC:ial or cultunl milieu - a aet'M thll teemS disadvant..,ous rTl4Y 8 FIMIU WWU'. AIM. 24 • ,., arises with which the wiped-Out genes could have coped beuer In brief, a ~ c:ies without adequate gene variety has a lessened ability to evolve further and therefore an increased liability to face extinction as conditions change. Does all this mean that we should on no account fiddle with genes? No. not at all. Cienetic engineering of- fers us the hope of curing or p~enting diseases such as cancer, arthritis and atherosclerosis. which have heretofore defeated us. It offers us the hope of cur· ing or preventing mental disorders and honnonal deficiencies. It offers us the hope of encouf18ins a benefic:ia1 evolu- tion of the human species, =·· befately and with minimal · what it would take natu~ millions o years to do al enonnous oost. lt offers us the hope of doing the same for other species and of weaving a stroneer and better ea>k>sicAI balance of life in the world, generally. . It is. however, vital to remember the dlfficult.les that all thl.s necessarily en· tails. At every step. we must take those dlffkuhles Into account, moving elowty and cautiously and always beina pre- pared to r$eal al any stan that the step is a fa1'e one. The atalces ~too areat for anything else. llW ------------------------~--_..--~---------...-~ ....... -.:------................ ...-........................ ~ ( BONUS SAVINGS CERTIDtATE J Get llL80 m ealra sadllp "1••11 oa tlleM famou ...... .......... •Ill praonGood lb I l'l'4Jlllgnl Aldboall11ilglZlr.- ............ QJllPOl1I on f1nll Touch ftllflc SOftlrllt ,_... .......... --~. Oftstln MISll Miil. 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O...lt. ... 1 ... lllll 31.000la , .. ...... -.. m. - MULTIPLE PROBLEMS OF SINGI .E MOTIIERS By Anne Flaherty M uch bas been said about the recent dramalic rise in divorced fathers with child custody (up 95 per· cent since the 1970 census. bringing tJie tolal to 666,000 households~ But it is still divorced mothers who compme the majority ol single parents in the U.S .. heading some 35 million of our 83.5 million households. according to the 1980 census. and today their prob- lems are ex>mpounded by new eco- nonUc woes and social pressures. 1\'ying economic limes and unrealis- tic divoroe settlements (many ol them offer less alimony and chiJd support to the mother than asreements did In the past) mean that money worries are espeda1Jy burdensome for today's di- vorced mother. "Nine out ol 10 mothers set the kids, yd they experience a SO percent drop in income after the di- vort:e, while facing increased financial responsibilities," says Christopher Jenks. proks8or of sodology at North- western Un.tvtrstty ... Divorced women have bealme lhe new underdass. Their emnn. power is still only 57s oent of theft male oounterpans. Vf!rf oft.en suffer acute economic har lhlp tor at least five years after divoftt." Altemptin& to meet the demands of slnaJe pattnthood, while a.t the same time bopJna to make the most of today~ expandlps opportunities for women, can create additional hardship lor the divorced mocher. She feels ui1dtr partkular pmsure to live up to the superwoman ideal. Jack S. Wellnef. M.D., an astOdate faculty member at the Family Institute of Cambridge. Mass.. reports thal "the single mother' is beset by a raft or prob- lems. She is often forced ~o a work situation that absorbs so mOch of her time and energy that there is little left over for homemaking and parenting. A low incorm! makes survival tough. Against this background she must pre- pare meals, shop, clean and provide the necessary discipline and support ror her children." Dr. Wehner also observes that di- vorced mothers can experience other stressful situations, including searching lor new housing, fighting with an ex· spouse and in-laws over property set- tlement and child care, and dealing with legal matters and sociaJ agencies. Says Weltner, "the number and mag- nitude of demands on a single mother often dictate that they will be met poor· ly, if ar all. Most single mothers are aware that they can't do it all." Counseling professJonals note that the mast frequent oomplaint of divorced mothers is lack of time: time for chil- dren; time to maintain the house. or apartment; time to pursue careers and education: time to socialize with women friends and resume a dating life style; and time to be alone. The sec· ond most common complaint is a feel- ing of isolation, especially when P. rot>- lems arise with the children. Single moms often find it tough to discipline their children. Th solve this disciplinary problem and lessen the burden of responsibility, Or. Wdtner aJ18eS1S that the divoroe<t rnolhe' make an .mt chld his c.r-wn duties around the home. · He also 5lJ88eSts that she set support from her extended family as well as dlurdl and social groups that might of.. ler hetp. Friends can be valuable 4)1ies when It coma to tradJng or sharing d\Ud care and domestic chores. Sod.al workers obstrve that one of the best ways a dlVOft'led mother can de4t.ress her lilt style Is by teeklne ac- tive belp and suppor1 from her ex- spoute, not only in reaular financial akl, but al9o In making sure he spends time with the chlldren. This will Uft 10me of the burden off of her Md pant ~r more free tlme. AV FN&v Wooax • MWl.14 • nu l I NEW METRIX COMPUTER-MEMORY ELECTRONIC TELEPHONE I nrernatiooal lClemccrix Co. will release new. advanced . electronics METRJX A-100 lele- phoncs to OONWDC'l'S al just SIO each; three or min at just S9 each. The METRIX A-IOO is a one-piece design unit with no cumbersome base. allowing wuua1 flexibility in both placemen and us.e. Fined with standaJd modular jack; ~res no installation cbarp or roodbly raaJ fees. METRIX A-100 uses pushbutton dial System compatible with both lbuch:Jbne and rotary dial ~ saving consumers the additional modhly fee ~y charged for the ooaw:nicoce of pudlbutklil dial- '"'" Odier advanced blurcs in-clude: -*>mlltic redial which remauben a bmy rumbcr-and n:dials •the~ rA a sinpe tamrl; •n1.111e" swilch for IOW COIMl'Sllioaal privacy; rinp cOdrOI permitting )QI ID "'IUr1t df" )10UI' pbaDe wbcat )OU do not wish eo be discutbed. EYC:n ha.ass ilxlf up when placed down on any aarfaoe. The ME11UX A·IOO will tqlllcc any CXJSUng &elephooe and is at so the perfi:d dlOice as an irapeosiYC "Ible c:K the art" exaen- sion phooe for home . or office. )bu may order the METRIX A-100 by send- ing your name and addrea, plm ap- propriaac paymeol. 10 the address below. Single inStrumed is SJO. three or more at just $9 each. (Limit: fiYC ~ any one ~) An .additiooal SI.SO is requested per unit to help defray. posaagc and handling costs. Pm guarullccd only ~ May 30. Credit card orders will also be ac- cepted; ~ name or card. accowt rumber. and expiration date on the same piece d paper as )'OU1 name and address when ordering. Satisfac- tion guarameied or rerum fof prompt refUDd within 30 dliys. An additional I-year full rq>lacemenl paran1ee will ~ e.cl1 METRIX A-tOO Compulier Memory EJectronic "U:JqJhone Unll. Mail ~order tO: INTERNATIONAL TEl..EMET- RlX CO.. Dept DTH-1612. 390 PlllO R.oed, Hu~. Vllley. ~ 19006. • ..., .__,..,._., c..,.,. ~ -__,,.,_..___ -I jl~"l!~~lflf ifl1· ii~{~f ~li!!~ili 1r''it1t1 1&til ·1•1r &~i1~«1 p~ ,,,.,i,rE1 ~~!:r.t1~1t!"1H~~1~U~!l!lli! 111~~ l 11:·11~1 ~ ~'. &n. , Je~ • '--& -·-n ~1 -I~ I Ill -all h:i~ Hi~ J"" ; :Ti~'°' ~·fl'( f·~!il ~1· ~u~f &11,f~igt &i$¥J rl ai I f•jiRa i;§,.l 11! ;;,;; ,. ~u 1i111;r.l 1·H',~-l! ii I nj' .. ., • ti a. . si( • i J ,, ].;i ir -J ~ Ii. ~ • J1 .. f fl Pf. Giia •Ii !I~ J !1ll ~ii· r J'! tlJ ~( "111 f ~ rti l i f·~. ~!;tf' "! ~ I ll u· . "J.~ ~~] ~ ~ · •le' •!r I • f 1 I M ~ t ~ n § SI i ill !lfl.: ! 'I ~!i. ' ll ~1>-· • - -. ii ;"'< ~ H' . I l --~ I ff, .•• 11--11J I . . e If lliiP.~t. I o :. il I ~ r. •i 1!tjll"';f filttf"-I ~ :~ ~ I 1r .-.Jf'•f f :t!IH I ~ ; ~ ·•···. ~-.1,11 · 1·1' ·u~~ 1 ·. a .. I ' C I ._..Ill • Jo u I , ~ B'. I Q 1 • (1 ' ... 1) ~--l , c q .. nlill m1"111-• H ·_,"· I & ,,11• .• ~ P.' rJ I ~ ~. _ , !•1W l!, I 1 ' 1. #: ~i1'1}~]111 t I .: ·~ ~r. JI "" :.-l~t ai'l~1t!, ' 1· .·' f; , ..• ·-·-.... --~----. - CONFESSIONS OF A BEST-SEUJNG HORROR WRITER HOW WEIRD DO YOU HAVE TO BE TO Kil J. 200 PEOPLE? By Peter Straub I was silting in the book departmenl of a large store in Seattle. near the beginning of one of those public- relallons circuses known as an author tour. Four or five people had been wailing in the book depaftmenl tor me to sign their copies of Shadow/and. the book I was pro- moting. Nothing weird about these sturdy citizens or Seattle They looked like teachers, accountants. insurance agents. One of these admirable m- dividuals was a white-haired woman in her 60's. Somebody's mother; some- body's grandmother. When she go! up to the desk. she grinned at me. "ls 11 really scary?" she asked. "Well," I began. but she couldn't wait. "I hope ifs got vampires in it," she broke in. "I love all that spooky stuff ... Is it just me who's crazv, or 1s every- body else crazy. too? Ifs true that I spend all day. most days of my life. meandering happily through scenes or carnage and destruc-Author Stroub in .arch ol 11upirotion: "/ ~ moll days ... conuersins with ambulatory corpsa and su~aturol Mfl8$. " tion. conversing with ambula1ory corp-t--------------.....---------------..---------------4 ses. flaming clouds and supernatural beings. I have tormented the cit1Z.ens of a town in upstate ~ York (Ghost Story). and I have liquefied the skins of several unfortunate residents of Con- necticut (F'loatmg Dragon). I have per- sonally killed upward of 200 people. In books. I have to do these things. I'm a horror writer. 'tbu want me to spend my life this way. at least a coup~ million of you do -that nice old lady in Sean.le has a lot of company in her affedion for "that spooky stuff." In my personal lite I'm about as weird as a farm-implement dealer with lifetime membenhips m the Lutheran 0.urch and the Republican Party. I live in suburbia. Cheever and Updike coun· try. I weJr a suit and a sttjped tie when I go to the dty. just the way my daddy did. I give directions to strangers and dollars to charities. I love my children and drink enough to worry about it. The picture I want you to set here is that ol an utterly conventional, 4()..year- old whtte American male. Uke the devil. I am lep>n. In facl you have to look at me twice really to see me -the fint time I'm lust a blur of sallttied ex- peditions. Gkn p&aJd suit and Bass Wequns. Commuterville. That's me. Maybe the ~ difference be- tw.n me and all the brave. tired peo- ple trawflna back and lonh between suburbia and Manhattan is that I am in- f'fff'r Stroub Is tht olllh<>t ol #VnOl tJooots. ,,,. dvdiftl hb turm>J Ml Miii-( Flo1u111 OtllOfl /AllNll'flJ What «a1m me? Nearly everything, I might 116 well '°" What'• wrong wilh that? Sldated from the frights and terrors of ordinary employment -quotas to fill. performance records that must be bet· ter. I invent fears and never expenence nightmares. This is not to say that I fear nothing. for without my fears I wouJd be unable to write a word. Novelists must write out of their deepest places. and a horror novelist h~ better keep in touch with every- thing he's afraid of, everything that scares him. II he can keep in touch with his fear. his childhood still lives in him. (A novelist who has lost his child- hood -whu has become entirely adult -has allowed 70 pen:ent of h1s raw material to atrophy.) What tcares me? Damn near every- thing, I m!Rht as well say. What's wrong with char? rm teared of dealh. o1 aettJng okter. of any ptherifl8 of more than three strangers, of failure , madness. violence. laz.lness. policemen, men who tmlle too -11y, fatlaue. watktns under ladders; I'm afraid of IOl1lehoW darnlline my c:hUdren. o1 my own lelf - ishness, of places where truty bid thlnp have happened, of that IUY- behlnd me on the hJthway who has 1ust crossed over all three lanes and now seems to be crossing back again Helplessn~ frightens me. like the helplessness I feel whenever I get a let· 1er from the Department ol the Trea· sury marked IMPORTAl'-4T NOTICE. Some or these fears ate jusl personal. bul I think most of them are common enough to be called banal. Everybody's afraid of disease. death and failure and almost everybody's afraid of the I.RS. Let's take an ordinary situation. You have a 17-yeai-old son whose driving you know to be almost as good as your own. Thts son has ta.ken your car out for the day. promising to come bad< by 7 o'clock Seven o'dock arrives without him. If he isn~ home by 8, you say to yourself. nl /till the little wrttch. By 8: 15 you're Slancing at your watch every~ cond and pacing to the window wdh a good view of the driveway. So what ii he's a reasonably good driver? The roads are full of fools and madmen. How Ions wtll it take the highway patrol to call you with one of those heart..eoppins. bureaucratic questions? M )OU th~ OUN! ol o fwJ 1919 Cutlass. I~ plolt numbe-... 1 Friends. that's fear. Five minutes later when your boy finally appears, ner- vously olferina his rlther ie.Jcy excuse tor noc caUina. you forget alt lbout how it felt when you Wfte su~ he was dead. Now, If I turned myttlf loc>le on thls altualion I would not have to alter it much. Mef all, there Is I tttrnendou$ amount OI teer bullt I'*> dM>le events -any p&rent would ftiel It. I mlaht make the driver who kills children a demon and give him volition· He wonts to murder kids. I might make the car the demon -a haunted car. like Stephen King's forthcoming Chns- tine. Or 11 could be that the teen-agers themselves are driven to smash their bodies and their cars. A 101 of different plots and ideas are hiding in that situa- tion and it doesn't really matter which one I'd finally choose. What gtves the story its punch 1s that every one of us is afraid of getting that call. That's how horror works It just adds a wrinkle to any ordinary situation from which fear can be squeei.ed. The wrinkle -demon dnver or haunted car -provides the imaaery. but ifs the situation that gives you the real tan- tods. I get my ideas from you, that's the truih. and all I do is dress them up a lit- tle before I tum them around and try to entertain you with them. So maybe we're both off the wall, but what I really think Is that every now and then you want the clear adrenaline-rush that comes when someone whispers to you that life can 80 terribly wrona. that faJr- ness and justice aren't prosrammed In. to the structure of the world, that bodies fall. that people suffer. ~ It noc for horror's gaudy. bag of tricks, I think the senre might aive us mott reality than we a>uld stand. Horror, dear ones, is life. Now. why don't you snuade up on the cou.c:tl and ltt me tCT! you a ttory? IW By Rosalyn Abrevaya theY're for a time luncheon. a or baby shower or family gathering, ~can show you how to celebrate the season wilh terrific. decorative baskets and ocher handy ot>;ects. all easily made from oolorlul scrai;>S 9f cloth. Using inexpensave fabric remnants, you C31l create stutfed-an<kl.itched bas- kets to hold bread, plants. candy or a bouquet of flowers. ~ weft as roasters. hot pads. placemats, wall decorations or frames. The sculptu~ look or many of the items is achieved with OO(ton batting put In between two layers of fabric. Detailed instructions. along with ii· lustrations and i>hotos. are induded in the booklet "A Basket 'N Thinp" ('365~ For your copy send Sl.75 plus 25 cents~r and handling to: F Weelr.Jl P.O. iSS Dept. 0 Midtown Sllldoa New \'oft. N. Y. 10018 (In N.Y. State. add sales tax.) fW G"l1E' n. ..._ ,_, « C1l 1 .... sec.... . -i~ 117 ......... P.O .................. c-. .. .. r-1 ...... _.,, .......... b ........ ,., 0 I ............ .. doeed ... I -C. • fDloia: _....,...., ...... ~ ............ __ _ D\;' aAI' 0 1•11.11,. ............... ··--- TollllA.....eE.clm r .......... 1--- ==-n• I . "'II Ji JtrR> .. f ~u·~t ... 111-;s I I!~!! ct~ -I OU\000 x-~ ·=-:! I if ff f ,-t c: · 11 J ~~~~ !r!! .. !:~- ,. i I I I I I II MAIL-IN ltEQlJ'EST f01IM NOT REDEEMABLEATVOUA GAOCER"S Plew .ad me the coapom 1 haw ... ~ below. I haw cndoeed the UPC Code Panela from WU olDELMDNrB-and CHuN KlNO-~ .. • AN INTERVIEW WITH CARL BERNSTEIN "ARRCGANCE WITHIN THE PRESS IS A TERRIBLE PROBLEM.'' Mua: How do yoa reaard jcwaeell .. m--al tbe ldDd of ....... ,...? Bemstem: I'm a reponer. Q: A. NpOltel al ....., Bernstein: I'm a reporter. I by to find out what's really aolns on, but very rarely does it have to do with mal· feasance or misfeasance. What it usually has to do with is what Gov- ernment or public ol6cials are ICUJal. ly doin8· That doesn't necessarily mean it's about nefarious oondud. Q: Sort al •• thd-tb&Kaee "look .. tbe eWDta al tbe dayf Bernstein: Ye.ah. Q: la IM wllke al WlllU.-:, do JWdllillkllMllJltuc~r& ~-,.......,, : rm not OM of thele peo- ple who believe that there's some separate IChool °' reporttns called ~ reportint. All tJ00(1 re- portine is the &&me thina. which Is to N)' the best obeaiMble venk>n of the truth. lfti1"9•'1 ;&Atcppwl e, ID defead di W lwea Ill lbe aewamedlaf Bemstetn: I can only talk about the places where I've worked. Q:la TV DeW8? Bernstein: Generally speaking, I think so, yes. Any time a public .of. fidal would want to sit down and a>ndud an interview about the al- legations that the pres-s has d~ Cllssed, he would be given that <>tr portunity. Q: On tbe air? Bernstein: Certainly. Qi. If JOU Md II to do owr, a. ..... =~woaldllaft ... .. ...... ::J:"s!.re. I thJnk there att a few thi,.. that we would have done dillemlUy, and the major one 1.5 to noc Vilil the grand jurors as we de9crlbe In AU~ Prt!Sidmt's Men. QtWll:YllDt? ~n: I thlnk that the sranc:t jUry aystem ouaht to be MO'Oland. Qs r!k .. ,_do It .... , Bel · We had 1e8aJ ldvke IMt It w.s permielible and I think we ~" the time thll the lnlor!M-don ihll would haw .....aJeed horn It WDilld hm made It worthwhile. But In NCroipEd. I Ju1t WOuldn 't do ft ... Q: Uatlereover reportl•I eeem1to beOll lbe~. DD ,.,. ddall dec.-D wl ... blldua lft per ......... t8dlca ID WlOffl .... llDliee? Bernstein: In almost every circum- stance I can think of, aeneratly speaking, a reporter ought to iden- tify hlmself as a reporter and he ought to conduct himself as the per- son he is. I'm sure that there are some exceptions. ()lt~OD tbe~ ltllDCM't Bernstein: Right, but I think it's something that's abused far too often. It's aometh1ng I've never done tn my life ... I cannot think of the dn:umstanc:es in which I would, allhou8h I can nonetheJess envision times when & reporter posina as IOlnebody ls )usailied. Q:~r .... •11w•a- eem.e1n: Perhapa If you really wanted to 6nd out how tomeotie in • wdfare ~ was being belted, or tomtthlns like that, there milht be 10me )UltffaUon. That JUst IP'ln&I to mind. And I'm still not even awe that that'• le&ldmate. I think It'• aomethlnel thal't tot to be thouflt ebout Vft)' haid. QlDD,.atlMlt ... ._..M ,,,,.,.. SS ....... ~, .. .... ... _ ... ,. h• 1 Million Ol"""the World's A • Slimmest Calculator I Watches To Be Sold For Only 5 15 Apiece In A Mammotl:i Publicity Drive NEW YORK-One mil- lion of the world's slim- mest, famous "micro- chip" Quartz Calculator/ Watches will be sold as part of a publicity cam- paign for only S 15 apiece to the first one million persons who apply in writing to the company before Midnight, May 30. 1983 . These are the same na- tionally publicized LCD Quartz .. micro-chip" Calculator/ Watches to be featured in The New York Times, Cosmopolitan, Play- boy and other leading publications. The slimmest Calculator/ Watches in the world, they are so powerful they never need winding, and are accurate to within seconds per month. The digital display shows year, month, date and day of the week (as well as hour, minute and second) in full quartz digital mode. A built-in .. melody" alarm wakes you in the morning, reminds you of appoint- ments during the day, and even tells you when it's time to put another coin in the parking meter. (It also chimes on the hour.) The calculator is accurate to 8 places, features a sophisticated 16-pad key- board with full computer memory, and performs all standard operations such as addition, sub- traction, multi plication, division, percentages, square roots, etc. It will even balance your check- book and prepare your Income Tax Return. These famous LCD Quartz Calculator / Watches will not be sold at this price by the com- pany in any store. To ob- tain one at this price. apply in writing to the company address (below) before Midnight, May 30. 1983. Each Calculator/ Watch carries a full one-year money-back guarantee and will be replaced by the company, free of charge. if it ever fails to function. There is a limit of two (2) watches per address at this price, but requests which are mailed early enough (be- fore May 25) are permitted to order up to 5 watches. To apply for an LCD Quartz Calcu- lator/ Watch, mail your name and address and this original printed notice together with SIS for each watch desired. Add only $2 shipping and handling no matter how maµy watches you are requesting. Mail to: Carter ~ · Van Peel, Calculator I Watch, Dept. 603-110, Box 1230, Weltbury, New York 11595. 01113 Can.tf & Vin PMI. Lid • (V21220) CAIU. allUllTllN DeN and poulbly even arrogulC:e on the pert of Individual reporters and newt oraanlzatione? Bernstein. I'm not a judgt! of the psy· chology of newspapers or reporters and what the him dtd. what the book did and what the actual reporting of Watergate did. I just don't know the answer to that. Q: Do you feel that eometlma reporter• are overly arrosant? Bernstein Oh yeah. I thmk that arro- gance within the pres..., 1s a temblt' problem and I don't think 11 s !rateable to Watergate by any means necessarih . but I thmk it's al"'ays been a problem I think it's probabl~ a bigger problem than it's ever been I think reporters ought to be a lot more humble than they tend to be I think iournaJist1c tn· slitutions have been the last within the society to open themselves up. while they demand openness of others Q: What do you attribute it to? Bernstein I thmk the ifrc!>S ha:. an awful lot of power and that .-.ome of 1t stems from that Q: Do you think in one-paper towm ~·· a dancer that tboee ~ wW become complacent? Bernstein: I think that two-newspaper towns are almost invariably betler than one-newspaper tov.ns as long & both newspapers can remain somewhat healthy. I think the death of the Siar in Washington. for example has hardl) been a help to journalism m the c1tv Q: Do you t.h1nk new• organlz.a. dona put too much preu~ on I& vadpttve reporten to produce .aorta even t.boup the fKte may not Ju.tlly than? Bernstein I don't thmk thats qutte what happens but I thmk reporters very often reel a necessity thdt. given the investment of time and mone\ on a stOI')'. they have to come up Wllh !lOme- thing significant, and very often when you work on a story there's nothing significant to report. In which case the story ought to be abandoned. And I think there's a reluctance by reporters to do that and also a problem of an ex- pectation by editors, given the re- aour~ devoted to a reporting enter- prise. that there ought to be "some- thing to show for it .. Q: If JOU could have your pkk. of :J 1V DeWa Job, what would It Bernstein: I like what I'm doing right now. which is to say dolf\8 in-depth reporting pieces that tell you \\lhat 's really happening in certain areas. Qt Do JO'I have any anchor .. ~=No. Qt "'*" wUl drcwutancee. If any. do you think reporter• ebould be required to reveal their 90u.teea to edlton? Bernstein. I think 11 an editor has doubts about the verac1t) of a swry. or if he wants to make :.ome mdependertt judgments about how solidly grounded a story 1i.. 11 might be nect.~n for h1111 to know something about lht· sour<.t:l> and perhaps their idenllt1es I can see circumstances when a reporter ought to tell hlS editor who his sources are I don't think its a great problem in iour· nalrsm, I have 10 tell vou I think it's one of the textbook problems that' t.'n rarel} occur!. Q: Hu being a public figure ln· blblted your reporting, and If It bu, bow? Bernstein No. Q: Do you have any problem with people wanttns to get your aut~ arapb when you're out on ... 1gn. meot7 Bernstein Oh. sometimes vou re a hule more con~p1cuous than ~ou d like to be, but at the samt' time J.*OJ>le are 'ery nice to you. dnd you hdH~ d repu tatton for doing a good JOb and I think 1t makes your reporting a bit easier. Q: You tblnk it make. it euier to Id lltte887 Bernstein I thmk 11 mak~ 11 wmewhat easier to get access but. more than that. I think people trust vou Q: Hu belnt a public ftgure changed or lnnuenced your feel- lna• about where the publk' • rlaht to know encb and an Indivi- dual'• privacy betltn•? Bernstein I certairlly have. I think. more sens1ttvity about pnvan than I did before . Q: What advke do you have for reluctant lnd.Mduale who are try· Inc to retain their privacy while reporten converge on them? Bernstein I'm not m the bu.-;mes..., of giving advice Q: You' re eomebody who, ln addJ. don to belnc a reporter. bu been reported oo. What doea It feel like to be on tbe other Ude of the~ book or the televWGD amera? Bernstein I think it's always uncom· fortable. Since the first time that Bob and I were written about. I think both of us havt-been uncomfortable about bemg the subject of stories as opposed to being those who report on them. Q: How do you feel about the ceJebrtty JoUl"DalJM Idea? Bernstein: r think that there could be a loc less reporting about reporters, ~im­ ply because it's noc that interesting Q: PrvfeMlooally. bow do )'OU want to be remembered? Bernstein· As ct good reporter ctnd 50mebody who continued to be a SOOd reporter. IW ------------------------, AHTHONY "ICHA .. DI Dept. 5-PB 866 ... lnaM "oed. llt.O. eoa 14514, c....a.nct, Otllo 44101 I Po.lure 8'a 8 a C C...i»-'1 95 UCll (D ~N.H -II) I OUANTIT'f GE TO I.IV ~ Cl.I AST E:ACAAO Q\llSA SIZE CUP 01110 r•••11•"" ontr •1111 ,.,., t•• ACIO POlllaQtl I P\an(lllP\Q Total •mount enclOMO ""INT NAl.I( --------- AOORESS s s s PAICE • :JO ·-I I I I I Eap I Date __ I I CITY ------------STA TE...::;;=;:::;::::;:~:::;:=;::::;::::... I SIGNATU~E x Z1PI I I I I H I I I I I -~~~~~------~==---~:=.-'=~~ 58IR -lac:y yoke extends all around. Knit jacket from neck down of J.ply sport yam all In one p.ece Oirectlons. sizes 10-16 Ind S2 00 7086-Color 'n· m-tbloider quUt of animal faces. Dnctk>ns. yardages for quilt about 40K58". Tissue transfer of 24 motifs Ind . . . S2.00 555R-SoUd color and pnnl are oa1 .. wd In this quOt of diamonds Owts. paid\ pettans, chctkins for 711t94·~ $2.00 New Ctaft Patterns D 10'h -20~ 4626 8 -20 4921 -Sofr ,acbt tops airy, 4626 -5 pretty, esy chsses and dress Pmted Pattern. Hall SUes vest. Printed Pattern. Misses 5u.es l ()I,; 20'r2 Size l 4J,; (bust 371 S. 20 Slzie 12 (bust 34) chss takes dress takes 2 518 yds. 45 Inch. 3 1/8 yds 45 inch fabric S2 00 Jacket 2 yds. $2 OO 505R-Crocht!t ~ doilies 7ll6-Embodei ~.color of mercerized t>«hpred COiton ful peacocks on linens. tCM!e!s Du-ecuoru and round Transfer of 8 peacocks about 14 ~oval 15x20 In 5x~ 106x1 1 Y4 inches Dtrections .__ ' $2 00 . $2.00 Cnd - • J. • I .... ••• . . • • • • ... • • !~ ~ 9117 8-20 9117 -Gcithered yoke and drawstrtng waist. Printed Panem, Misses Sizes S.20. &ze 12 (bust 34) dress takes 2~ yds fiO lnCh . . S200 900R -Do this channng wall panel in hlet crochet Use bedspread cotton Chan for 35x40" pcinel. fMet dlrectlons in cWed S200 7 426-Ft sh and parrot are foldowrs, flower Is stng6e. Easy em bro6dery touches Transw. dlrwctb11 fa 3 podlolders . . $2.00 SIPPINGLY TERRIFIC SPRING TONICS By Marilyn Hansen I f you're looking bran occasional alternative to breakfast or lunch or want a healthy. refreshing after· noon pick-me-op, try our wtique. quick and easy recipes br blending deHc:ious drinks. Any of them will make a great !real -and most will also provide extra cak:ium and minerals. ar•an ••••• z•y choppt"8 blade; cover, blend or ~ at high tpeed I or 2 minutes. or until smooth 2. While mocor is running. add ice cubes one at a ume th~ cover le«! operung ~ ar hWl speed JUSt until Ice Is crushed. Serve cold. Mokes 2~ CLIPS llOl um CA•llOT NOG ·~= ...... ---allk 2 ~trrkr 11 ~ <-. tllilrll7 .nee.I cmTGta I. Combine all ingredients ln eleclrlc blender or lood prooes:sor using metal ~ ping blade; rover, blend or process at high speed for I or 2 minutes. or until smooch. Serve cold. M~ 2 cups Note: FOf extra fortiflcalion. you can .cid a lab&espoon ot dry skim.milk powder Of a tabtespoon ot "'! bean ~ Uflil .... _,,Milli& •••• Roger Whittaker Winnner of Z8 Gold Record Awards! Just Released! His New Treasury With "Somewhere My Love" Your Very Favorite Songs Are Now Yours In This New _!• ; j;a~• TV Treasury Sweeping America! •n n--....1 •-w! We proudly offer one of the most beautiful IW ........ ftV1 • listening expenences you've ever heard. SOMEWHERE Yes. here on this brand new album are the most · MY LOVE beautiful songs of ~r hfe sung by the international star whose beaut1f ul voice can shr your emotions JrR~~~R ~1ke no other singer in the world. Every single song is a song you love! BLUE EYES CRYING Enjoy Roger Whittaker singing IT'S NON OR IN THE RAIN NEVER ... BLUE EYES CRYING IN THE RAIN ... THERE Go THERE GOES MY EVERYTHING ... and 15 more ES MY all-time taYorites. Read the list on the left. And EVERYTHING wait until you hear Roger's performance .of VAYA CON DIOS ·soMEWHERE MY LOVE"! This beloved favorite MAKING BELIEVE has never :;oun~ed so tenderly bea~tif ul. You are in I 1 ,,.1E YOU for a rare ltsten1ng treat. Roger Whittaker, the man """"• with a voice like a well-tuned cello, has captured BECAUSE the heart of America with his new album. Don't TENDERLY mlss out ... order yours today. RED SAILS OllerMayJlolBeRepeated IN THE SUNSET We believe you will entov this remat1cable Roger SCARLET RIBBONS Whittaker tre..ury as much 0r MORE than any aJbum )(>U've 9\l9f owned or return it any time for full refund. But SENTIMENTAL p1ease order yours now. in~ noc 10k1 in any stont at any JOURNEY price and it may noc be edYertised again. RED ROSES FOR MAIL TODAY• NOT IN STORES .. BWE I ..... y ------------------------"' ...u.r '. 8uftalk lltrlDIClng, Inc., Dept. RW·113 II ETERNALLY 11 360 l.lllCNton ~ STD&Mftl!D New ">f1<,1'4.Y 10017 ' '~ I .,._.Mil mt !he AOOeA WHITTAKER ~on~ I ON THE SHORE 1.11co11c11101111gunneeelhlf1t """*be IN"'°"...-. I HAVE I TOLD YOU I = n.rry IWewrhMrdor)O'IWll,._,"'f~ I LATELY THAT I L1 'EnctoM $7.88. Send Record Album. '1 I LOVE YOU I 0 t EndoM sa.ee. S«M:l 8-Trldt 111pe, Rl!D RIV!R VALLEY I O 1 enao. '9.M. s.nct c...n. -.. I CAN'T HELP rT 1--I If 1'11 ITIU. IN --. ___ _,...;. ______ _ LDV! WITH'°" ~ .. zip-. .......... _ UNCHAINEIUtllOUY •••••••-••••~•,-••••••• Send for this FREE catalog Fln•lly, you can g.t • good Mlectlon of grut-looklng ctothes th•t tltr .,..._,°'~told ltlOl'l In .a..,.. ceny orlty • llfl*8d Mlec:liol'I In your a.. Mild '°' 80P"998 d _,. loolung~ ~IC>flll ITS ALL HERE! * Brano-name shirts up 10 22" neck and 38" sleeve • Slacks and JHn1 to 60'' W81St and 38'. inseam * Jackets and outerwHr lo 11%8 60 • Shoes, boots. work shOeS. and sneakers to size 16EEE YOUI ocOtr trom The IONG-SIZE Co IS GUARANTEED both 8Ef<>RE •nd AFTBI Wur-lng. Waslltng or DrY Cleanina. Unless you are l\llly satisfied. you may wnd It back for a tuN refund or excNngt Ple&N lend the latnl KING-SlZE Co full-c:olor Cat•loO to me at th8 aodrns 1>91°"' lllltT ........ ~-._-c------- ~~~~~~~~~~- Clly ... __ n, __ ~l.nnr;~51ze& 1111 ilClllt -......... lllAOa.I STRAIGHTEN OVERLAPPING TOES WITIIOUT SURGERY ! oarcfs EXCLUSIVE A Dr. Lunleo it's watenteclt So que, ..- CAN YOU PUT OFF OUR AGGRAVATION WITH By John E. Gibson TRl1E OR FALSET 1. How difticu.lt it is k>r you to break a habit CX>UJd depend on whether you're right· or left-handed. Z.. Complete abstinenoe is the best way to break an excessive Qalllbling habit. S. Many people have 'habits of obseso- sional thought that they woold like to break but can't. 4. Grinding your teeth. when you're asleep is a habit you don't need to be ooncem~ about breaking. 5. It ls necessary to break a s!eep- talking habit because it can result in debilitating mental and emodonal ten· sk>ns. I. '1bu can break a nail-biting habit ii you learn to relax and take tile a little easier. 1. The habit of procrastination can make an indlvldual feel powerless and compulsive. ~ I. »w. Results from a University of Mlchipn study showed thal a habit tends to bea>me more deeply rooted in the consciousness of left~ per- ION than In right-handers and. as a c:omequence, requires greater eli>rt to break. Other studies have shown that left-handers are more apt to resent and resist tupSlions about brealdfl8 bad habits. Z.. Fa/M. Studies at London's Institute of Psychiatry indkaled thal oootrol rather than ~ ls the ll10ll ef.. fedlve formula tor copinS with an ~ pmbUna habit. The study c:onduded ihll any attempt to enb'ce mmplete abldnenc.e from pmbtln& would b& ~ to a pmblet- and unenforceable wtabout his cooper- ldon. . S. 7Jw. Many ~ are troubled by habitual unpliemlnt thou8hts Lnvotvtrw ~I e ll"'>nal preoccupllionl and learl that tt)C)' Rf/ they can't control. But lludlel concb:ted ~ behavknl ldat- tiltl II the UNwnlty d Pittlbwah demonltrMed thll an lndMdull c:1n Imm to quietly ium ol the flow d un-~ ~ The method ln-VOIVel 8nl ~ the Word "tlop," then lull ll~lt ' then di)' and, ~ It. In the llUdy, lour to. ol "*P" ... med • eech valoi lrllwlty. The '** ,_ 11 ID tmmrl ' ty IDaa9 lhe ~ oa a hllhlY plllllunlble m. mi 111 .... oa a rt¥lr on a Id. ...., ...... lht coot -- ATION? and hearlfl8 the waves lap apinst the sides of the boat. 4. F•. Studies show that a tooth- grinding habit (bruxing), which ~ oc:x:urs during sleep, can result in sen- ous dental problems. including the painful )aw joint condition Tem- poroll'W\dlbular Joint Syndrome (n.tJ). which affects millions ol Americam. The habit is asaodat~ with pent-up emotional tensions. 5. Falsie. National Institute of Mental Health studies show that ~king (somniloquy) is actually sleep.th~' : Though the speech may be : gart>led and difficult to understand, t I' indicates the brain is mulllns aver problems and situations in a casual and relaxed mann~whkh is likely to have a productive on your daytime thinking. There's no reuon to by to break the habit unless you're distu~ ill8 your sleeping partner or reveal.ln8 thougtdJ and teellf9 lhat may ~ an explanation when you wake up. .. »w. Psythologica) studies con- dud~ by a team ol specialists al Xavier University (Ondnnati) of adult nail blten and nonbiters showed that nail biting results from anxiety and pro- vides I physkal expnssion for ,,. noaune worries either about what mi8ht hlpper1 OI what mltht not hap- pen. U you can break the WOfr)'. ~ the odds are you11 break the naiM>Ulnfl hablt. T. »w. A Qty Unlv'enity ol New 'bit ltudy bind thll • ~ llllY ..... powerte. and~ 111 M\ lndlvtdu&I who is lddlded to • habit that he ii u~ ~ to break. The chronic pt'OCl'llCinllO knows whit he wants to do but ~ how can't tnnl&lle hit ..U.. Into 90-dcin: ~ ..... ,,...... be mo-heCIJlld-.mq ~ he deddel to do IO. He lltibm the dlmoalty In l!'lkif1I bl dedllon to a -.k .m. The ~ ., knowl chit hie hlblt will nat ..... hlm ID llYo6d pmn but only .,.... I. He dolt...U., ~to the...,, dMI he .. buWw ~deer••• tn ttrw 11 che a.t Qt.,_ kq •m Ina I._ ln lllW. IW -. -H someone JOU care for suffers from~ of bladder control ••• ... give them Attmds- prot.edion that really works. U someone you care for suffers from loss of bladder control. you can help give them comfort. security. confi. dence. 1Ran.ks to Attends-an extremely effective disposable brief from the Heme Servlce Group at Procter & Gamble. With Attends. you 11 be giving them the kind of superior wetness protection that helps them feel gdod about themselves. Deueloped for Uee in lloepita.le and N~ Homa Across the country. quality nursing homes and hospitals use Attends. In fact nun;es and aides prefer Attends 3 ---------to 1 CJVer other mcontinence care products they've used. They know Anmds helps them give thei:r: patients the best quality care. Mw; •viac Otter Sl5.80 Oft' oa a C.w of AUaldL If you c:r a loved one is severely incontinent. you are invited to try Attends at $L5.00 less than the usual cost. Just mail the certificate below. A case of Attends will be deliv ercd to your home. Or. if you prefer. you may order vour Attends by telephone. Simply call tolJ.free 1-800-5'3-0COO and ask for Operator 5~. It's a coovenient.. simple. private way lO take advantage of the best wetness protec· lion available today. Call now toll-free l-800- 543-0400. Ask for Operator S.l4. UAttencls• Disposable Briefs r-------------Spedal Money-saving Offer I ,__•c...Mt-a-t.aO.....P.O.e-mv.·a , tt.OW.cs.Ma I I Ot" 90meOfte in my holM ii te'Wftly incontinent ~w eer¥I me a full case oC A~ Oilpoable Brie& at $1.5.00 lets than I lhe~cos. I 0 My cbClck for I iurldOlcd. 0 "'-tbip COD. Bill myC ~-a VISA• ~IJ.50f«C.O.O.~ C'atdl"o----------~rx. .... n. ser-on---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Nlmt~----------------~-~ ----Addret-----------PhantC--~•--~~ -- FROM CRIBS TO CAMERAS DOES IT PAY TO RENT -OR BUY IT? By Ruth Rejnis You already know you can rent an apartment. an auto- ~i~ and a few other famil- iar items. But did you know you can also lease cameras. rotisseries. balloon machines. refri8eraJors. planls, champagne foun- tains. chimney cleaning equipment - in fact, just about anything that is manufactured these days? The rental business i.s boomina as more and more Americans learn they do not have to buy a product to be able to use it. The American Ren1al Associa· lion (A.R.A.) ~ed a gross volume of SS.2 billion in 1981 (the lasl year for which figures are available), more than double the 1975 figure of S2.5 billion. AJlA., the nation's largest trade group in the field, represents 2.700 rental firms. both private owners and some me(Tibers or franchl9e operations such as Taylor RentalS, which is one of the largest in the oountry. The A.R.A. does not include firms thal lease automobiles and aancs, fut. nilure. ClOllUD1es and tuxedol and a tew other spedalty It~ Thoee producu ~nt another huae rental marks. Customers vary ln their reasons br renting. &MM rent betaUM they want or need a produc:i they can't afford to buy. ochen betaUll they have no room to •ore bulky °' seldom-uxd equip- 26 FAMIXWID.U'•~ .. • •• ment. "People are more mobile now," explams Roger Smi1h. director of the A.R.A.'s membership services. "They say, ·1 wanl ii now. I want 10 use it, and when I'm finished. I don't want it anvmore.'" fr you find you need a floor sander. for example. or a steamer for removing wallpaper. there would be little need to purchase tha.1 equipment when you could rent 11 inexpensively for one-time use. On the other hand. some i1ems would be costly to lease ii needed over a loll8 period of time. Take baby fur· nrture. Renting a crib and ma1tress at a nationwide rental chain will cosl you S 16 a week . If you rent ii for two yeal'$.. you will have spent S 1.664 ! You can buy a serviceable, brand-new crib, without mattress. for about $60. How- ever. renting makes perfect financial sense 1f you're taking baby 10 visit his grandparents and would like to have a crib in their house during your stay. Power lawn mowers are one of many gray.area items as far as the wisdom or renting is concerned. They do take up storage space. and the gas-filled ones require regular maintenance. If you rent a mower for $4.50 an hour. using It an hour a week in season, you'll be paying about SI 00 for a summer's use. You can buy a new mower for $I 25 to $1 75. but maybe you ju.st don't want the bother of owning one, no matter how the economics work out. Security deposits are required only on such big-ticket items as automo- biles. some electric typewriters, color televisions and the like. A1 so~ rental centers you will be aJlowtd to take out a damase waiver, where you pay 5 percent of the cost of the lease contraa as protection again.st bre.ak.aie charges. There i.s no charge to you ror normal wear and tear. lf you're renting ror a home office. ask your acmuntant about tax ded~ dons lor ~ bills. Similarly. your health4nsunoc:e plan may reimburse )'OU br ~tal of medical equtpment such as hospital beds, wheelchairs. etc. You can find rental outh!ts in the Yellow f\8es undf!r MRenl.41 Sefvke StottS." 8U1 don't stop there. If you have trouble locating what you want. So directly to retail stores that sell the produd (not department sto~es. though) and ask If they'll rent for a short time. • Sadly for e.lettronic:s bu1ls, home romputers and word proceMint machines are U.IUllly av all able only for outrtaht sale or under Je11e1>U~ a.nangementa. where & few montht• rental must lead to your buylnt the machine. IW iny flower bouquets collect, to cherish, to add w beauty to your home ... he Flowers of the Year RCEUJN MINIATIJRES COLLECTION i.ve/ve indiuidually handcrofted rcelain ·sculptures - arvelous works of art in miniature - urs for just $22.50 each. order by Mmy 31. 19&1 • • One collection pa onln. magllC of finety detailed mlniaf\Ues has alweys fascinated &:ollltden-perhaps man! today than ever before. Now. at a time mfnlabJra am reaching new ~ts of populartty, FrankUn t'DmllPll*l Is proud IO present The Flower.s of the Ymr Porc~lafn ..,.~a Colledion. This Intriguing ex>Hection makes lt possible for you to have a Mlll'-fOUlllCI geirdai In your home abloom with fauortae flowers ewry mon1h of the year ... 12 lowly varieties In all each IBIJlll~ lom.ier at the~ of Its beauty. And you czsn display ~ garden on a small table. a mantltlpiece or In a cupboard. Each month ol the year Is repn>.sented In the cnUectk>n by a t:aolllYal!irlQ bouquet. and each bouquet Is an lnaedlble example old-worid crafbmanshlp. For every peiaJ and leaf of these Mt*lllllllr.a.I bouquets wUJ be palnstaldngfy sculptured by hand' then tdOiduallV aswmbled in a porce1ain contalner. Next. the ~ be pmonaUy painted by a skilled ar1ist. · The result ls a coUection of orl!jnal sculptwvs In miniature that s mna:ztng tor lb remarbble attention to detail captlvattng for Its ~ approach k> an ewr-popuJar sub;ect matter. And ---ach bouquet Is lndMdually handaahed by skilled ~ mastim. each Is a separate and urrique work ol art. llllMy bouqum to c:bann the cdlectM f you'd BM 10 5'mt a coUection of ftne miniatures. these ~ porcela1rl bouquets are a perfect pUc4l to begin. Their rilricalll dctal Is faldnatlng. the Boral Iheme has unlYatlal appeal. he detilJls are captivating and the qUDllty of the sculpture Is rnpec:cabW The atablished cxilMctor will also ftnd It hard to resist t. tnb'hic ~ of thae dalnly mlntatlD'a. In fact, arranged on In end atJle or !JOUped on the dduxa eiagtre that Is included as -1 of the coOectlon. ~ Flowers of IM Year Poradain .... tftS ~ will enchant all who MC It S-.. ach bouquet in the ex>Oectlon 11 IO dlf.esc11t from the ldwl. your frlendl ~ 1h9lk you aoquhd dwn OM at a ame ~ a P"tod of many Y9ll"I. But you can obalr\ dlil coUection if h lmpQr1lld works of art far more .-a.; and conwnlen~ Mf1t to you Ill the 11* of one bouquet each month. the bouquets are IMllllable on/v • • ooUec:aon and Fnankln Porcelait 1. with • tlmlt of one per order. pl1ced ••• )Ult tn.50 ..ch price for each bouqullt II a modat 50 to be bm9d on a monthly t:.as. ~price-~ tor the entlN ~9on. ~add to~~. bookSct the lower portr.yed wt! accoo1pany ~ A Ca1Slk:Mt ol Aulhenlktty wlll be~ wMh ach coleclb1 ~to ~ .... and t.~llhlp. $lrial I Wll ... ht IO craft NM pOICcleln •a.-.;..,.~· eppr,c ... ~ ... ~t bl lfFed 8rid Miiied IO Ftrilln Podlin, C... Ptla4:,;allli 1909l M1ra1.1m. ~----t J ., .......... ,..,.,.,_., ... ~IN,...._..,._,....._ ...,..,......,_,,, .. .... .._ .. r-·---···-·-·--•••••••••-St8SCllPnOPt APPUCAl'l'llC ----------------------------· I I I I I The Rowers of the Year ' ' I I I I I I I A.a. moll bt/ Mov 31. Jsas3. • I \Wt'! to eubecrlbe to T"-FJow.n of U. h Um~ Otw coledloft I»' Ol'CMr I i>otaloln MlnWuraColJec:don COl.-..ch•w Mt l ~tower~ ..t'I • dllll9lt ~ . : ..... The~dbe~a.....end =:. : _...by hind. A..,,_~ wll *>be _ ...... _. t ~ • i-t °'the coldot.. I 1"-9~ nomcnevnow. The ~wll be AddlWll---------1t _.eo .. .alht.-Ofone.,....,......Slwllbe : b99d m.so-~ ..-eo ,...,.,... °" l ~--~--I .,~ ......... -....... ! ........ ... &lai.Zlp ----cm --------,.,.-, -·----·-----------------------------------------------·-------·-----····--.J _Now! You Can St•rt Your Own "Million Dollar" Zoyala Lawn! NO NEED JO DIC UP YOUR l AWN PLUC IN 1~2 'ZO't'SIA Ultel""'1'1 7fJIU!fll »8elow·Z.ro Zorll• Tuea We•r, Te.,, C~outs. Children'• Game• •.. Alter 30 Below Zero Winters, If Bounces 8.ck ~'""· Tltid, And a.wtHull Clo1e1t Thing To An lnde1tr11ctlble t..wn You H•~· EHr SHn! . Poor Soll? No Problem! OQr Famou Zoyaapl.,.areeo~ -~-~to ITOW what.e'rer yocar INlil=-trom b•v1 daye to aandy H~. Yoe caanot i-. 1rs so EASY ANO INEXPENSIVE TO START A MAGNIFICENT ZOYSIA LAWN SI.art yow own m~l. perennial aoyala lawn with .. rew .. 100 ph1p. Ju.t J.t :JOIU' pl~a .-abliab aolid curl. Th«' take ap wa.neplant.t and plq in other pl•· -&o your Mart'• cMain. Pl\lUed uua "'°"' risht Mdl in&o aolid t11rf. Your aupply or plQP ia encDeu Pr>c.r •nd S.rptnr If yoe plant IDOl"t IP' ... t.bAit aita there and •tl'llal•-cU. oo )'OQ-)'OQ mQ n« nWia :J04lf wort and money. It'• th• tim• .ro• cannot ncoftf! So pi....doo'toontu. 1..Uel.and'1 00.e.low-lAro 7.o¥9i• with •Ill' ordinvy t.rf o«.-.d u • "~ain." If wr phap coet a llu.le mON in the besinnln1. iheY nmain, in the loq ntn, the ciftl>' trve bU«aln ror your lawn. Order 1u.ranteed .Temos+' 80,..U ..... llOW, f~ deltHl'J' 6-Mlf_ ....... ,a .......... DOiat. You....._ wUJ be Mal a& tlie.Ulleet ..,._ U.a IO plaat ID ~r .,__ M.,., Z-62 Zopla Qr ... WU pamct9d ~ ~ tM U.S Q<M. and releaMd In co-• opwalion with IN U a. Goll Anoclall0t1. r--------~------------------------, lAIWMD......, UUI,· Dlllit NL·,.,,. ......... r.. l7111 l'INw MM 1M IM c•r:::: tlld 1 .. llftl ... ,_. z.,1111 111~,. di . "'INT llUlf --------- ADDaOI ---------- CIT'f ----------- ITATt l" ----- 1 ~-e11tta., •·• i.r •~.....,..=---1111. ~ , ........... 111) ..... ..,....... • ..._ ............ Ill It•-· Te ......... , .. """" .. ~ .._ l,000 _,.,.....111c1•~M1----.n (Al.e c.M) ....; _______ _ -"•1 0 ~..clff 0 O!Mf't Ct.• 0......... 0 ¥11A AMt. ......... _________ _ I NEW TREATMENT FOR SPINA BIFIDA SIRIKING BACK AT OUR COMMON BIRTH DEFECT ------l)llients." Sl)'I Dr. Thomas f Milhorat. a DeWQSW81!0D at f Downstate Medical Center in 'g Brooklyn, N.Y. '"Wheft. in the I plll, doctors would throw up J their hands. now we're giving real treatment ... "We tell parents that. if everythlna goes weU. their blb6es will have normal lntef. li&enee: the motor function they have al birth will mnain. 40 perant will gain even more function; and they will have control of their bladder and boMls," Md.one says. 'The major1ly of these chil· dren will walk. lf with braces, Ind most of them will lead productive lives." Many advances have rom- bined to prod~ this ma-Pr twmbocL Tubes that drain aas luid from tbe brain. aiDed !hum. hlYe been uted to tral hydrocepb- 1h.11 (Wiier on the brain) that once alUled brain ctam. In mo.a tplna bUlda babies. PhyWal therapy heips para- Jyml chlldren pin control of their bowels, while new 8'11- catheterization techniques 8M chUdrm tbe bladder axt~ trol needed'° pNYft wtnary lNecSlons IOd kidney cflleaR. two lamer kiUen of iplna ~vktiml. Or. Md.one'•~ te1m has tn9llled more thUJ aoo ctiildn!n a1nc1 t97s. rn moll C.-IUl'lflC>nl doee the ..., In the lpine with the beis> of ~ ~ 48 houri of. blbY• ~ ~ ic:ml tbenpy .... an.. dimly lnd-cblon an chart· ~~:=':t~ tlMm1r-~ tlonllld oudooll b ~ ~ spina bilida •ear:m I =swvtv=~=1 to thousands of satvaged lives. the Spina 8ifida AW>Cjarion of America (S.8.A.A.), kx:ated in ~ OUa&o. ~ thal scores of ,z tpina bi6da babtes 80 1Jll- traled f!VfS'f year beca• many doC1on don't know thal the birth deled can now be beaten. "Unbrtunaaeiy, we rome ~ cases ail the time where a baby <X>Uld have been helped and wasn't," says S.B.A.A. director Kent Smith. "We have taken a very strong stand favorina beelment for all spina biflda cues where the pmeits want it ... Ors. McLone and Milhont aeree-They have mounted a media carnpaitp1 to get the spina bifida success story to the public. In small ways. the campaign is already working. After reading about Dr. Md.one in her newspaper. a M1-ouri woman brotl8ht her baby to auc., where, de-- spite the dim outlook oflered by doctors back home, he was suaasfuDy t:rmed. Dr. Md.one Is currenUy iea&ddna ways to correct sphta bUfda even befofe bab6es are born -with the lid ol suqery in the womb. Though why spina bifida oc- curs In the 8nt place remains a medical m)'Slef'y, research· en think pren&al nutrition <X>Uld be one llclor and fur. lher ltUdla in this .. and in the fteld of ~ could hid IOIDe ~ on the bir1h di!h:r'a or1dn. In the memo tirM, famlDa who've been =.et.~..!: in8 the ~t. s.y. Monte Mace. !MllY• ..... "Now SuzY• llllll odw cNldren, md the anty umbdons tbe1l blYe .. mo. in her own mtnd... Fot fwthtr )nbm,t- tion on C*t.a bl8da. coma the~ .. Mod'*"' It (800) '21~141. --rm. dim .., call (312) ..,.. 1562. "' ........ , . .. 990R-Knit jacket from collar down aU In one plfct. tmduding the Nteves. Use synthetic worsted. Directions. Sl2es 32· ~~-*""~ 38 . . . .. • • • • • • • • . .. .. •• 12.(JQ 4"'-Elasbc nips the want al • d ~ Pl1nled Pamm. MiM9 ~ S- 20. Sil:C l2 (bust 341 taka 2 718 )d9.. 60 Inch . .. . . .. . . . . • ... 12.00 MIO-Soft bbiM a.. tall sb1 -1191Y 6alllmlt Pmtm Paa.m. Half s-l<M- 22\\. Sn 14™ (bust 37) ... 3 !/ds. 60 inch $2.00 S...S 12.00 for ..cla ~ add 50 <.-ta wit few poe&.,.r. "-dt-'"'-To: Family Wftlllly ~. Bos M . Old ClwtM• Sta .. N.. VOite, N.Y. 10113. ,_ .... _ ..................... -...... No Down Payment -Below Marbt ftn8llcing You can butld your drMm l'IOme tOday -~ unow SZ>,OOQ. W."9 helped thouNndl ot fatnffiel build affofdlble. quality homee wittt low monthly pevmentl ounng ~ By 8llPPIY!ng the labOr. you !lees> com OOWn white t>ulldlng equtty. YOU can do it. tool Over 5D Floor Plans To Choose Fram ChOoM trom Oll9f 50 exciting dMIQfw ptt,. a full Mlection °' opdonal maMttab like plumblng. hMlng. WWf ~~Out ~«ep lnstruc:donl end QIJMlty. pr.-c:ut ~ ll'lllka building~ own home....., t"9n you'd expect. lt't effo<debla. loo! --------.. c (iill[?i) --· Iii 9-1'°'.._0..... To9J, v..i w. wtnr to ~riow -~ tio.... we G91 blMO ...., OW'\ our own QUIMy llOme Witt! no down ~ --MolllHolftWI '100~1M18. P.O. lol 9'95 .... MIN96'40 ~ ..... -0 ,.. oalor llrodlln Q IO paee. tull COior C:-..00 (Ptaaiit ~ a e1.:ti or f'rlt1IWo/ oroer 1 *AC -----------AOCJMSS _________ _ Cf\' STArt-ll~--- ltoet--1 --.....,...----- Some lo~istance runners have become so obsessed, they face the risk of becoming anorexic. says a new scudy of 60 men who run more than 50 miles a week. Compulsive runners. for whom running is literally life's only source of sa.usfaction, share severaJ characterstics wrh ai iorexic:s. who ~ usually young women who sta.rVe themselves due to an intense fear of beooming o~. "Both are suffering from an identity crisis," sa dinical psychologist c>:iherine Shisslak of the University of Arizona Health Sciences Center and ro-author of the study. 'The two personality types usually come from educated, high-achieving families and tend to suppress anger. Their identities are tied into their external ap· pearaoce." She told us that just a,, the anorexk gains a sense of seJl.mastery by losing more weiattt -no matter how life ihre.atening -the compulsive runner gets a similar feeling by running lon,er distances. ar any cost. In the plilt ~ Y9f1, lodie$. ~ Journal, Play- boy, Cosmopolitan and Famf.. /y Otdr mlpZines have alJ taken surveys on the .ex We ol the American woman. And this June, Simon and Schuster wW ~Sa and dw Moro rled Woman bued on a pastl}' lover like you stay so thin?" -In McDonald's: "Haven't I we McMet before?" Alf'dt,\y Sometimes it's hard for even the best newsman to remain detached and objective. Recently, Marvin Scott. a reporter .and sometime an· chorman on Independent Net· work News. was handed a news bulletin. As Scott relates: "It was 12:30 P.M. I dutifully reported fir~ters were at the scene batthng a blaze m a high-rise building In Fort Lee, ...._ _______ ...;...;;;...;.;;;,;.....;;.;;.;;.. _______ ---.1 NJ. It wasn't until I aot to the address that I realized it was research by the Institute k>r Mvanced Study of Hwnan Sexuality. But ii seems all these surveys are bringing more quesdons than answers. For instance. how many of today's wives have cheated on their spouses? The .JoumaJ survey reports 21 percent; Playboy. 34 percent; the In· stltute, 43 percent: and Cosmo, 54 percent. Even alter ta.kin~ into acmunt the maga- zines diverse audiences, whom to believe? Similarly, some 80 percent of Playboy women consider themselves good at sex. oom- pared to 65 percent of Joumol women calling themselves "~" or "excellent" and 64 percent of the Institute women who Ilsa themsefves u "great.. or ubetter than average." Are Playboy WOOle'I b=? The Jour. rds ·~just shy? Weil, one thing all the IW'· veys ll'leffi to ~ on, we're relieYed to 1'!pOt't.: The majori- ty of wives are JW'l)rislnafy wen •ilfied wkh their tiex llvel (and we mean al home!). U you couldn't find just the right words to approach that beautiful stranser at the party last weekend or that 90rgeous crearure on the way to work f!Vf!!l'Y day, grab hold of the new book IOI Best ()pming lines by Eric Weber. author of How to Pie.If Up Girts. Here are 10me of his sure-to-bowl· thm1-0ver openers: -AJ. a health club: ''You're in such grat shape. this place ought to use you In their ads." -AJ. the runnlfl8 trlC.k: ''Would you mind timing me tor a quarter-mlleT' -AJ. a Bea market: "'lbu look like an expert. ls this stuff really worth $50( -Al. ihe butcher shop (looking vulnerabie~ .. ~ me. but how Iona do you fly a rOlll bed7" -bl the laundromat: "ls a cup o1 thlt ltuff enoughr -AJ. the tennis court: "You must be the pro here." -an the bakery: "How doa . 1·· nune. Luckily. the fire was co~ fined to one apartment located above Scott's. and nobody was hun seriously. This wasn't Scott's first dose ena:>unter. 1Wio years aeo he wu handed a news item about a man just arrested for the murder of his wife. When Saltl saw the name, he told us. he paled sUghtly. The man WM. gulp, IOMeOOe he knew aodally. - f.Bl:AT"'uy Thal bay leaf in your stew or spaghetti may add sptce. but don't eat It -1t could be hazardous to your health . So concludes a recent report in the Joumal of the American MedJcal Assoaation On separate occasions, rwo patients who swallowed bay leaves while eating spaghetti dinners had to be admitted to the hospital in excruciating pain. One needed sureerY to remove the leafs hard center rib, which caused internal damage. Advises the report's co- author. Dr. J. David Richard- son of the University of Louisville: Throw away the bay leaves before serving. •llTllDAYS (All Taurus) Sunday -Barbra Strelsand 41 ; Shirley Mac- LaJne 49. Monday -Ella Fitz&erald 65; Al Pacino 43: 'lalla Shire 37. Tuesday - Carol Burnett 50. Wednesday -Coretta King 56; Jack Klugman 61 ; Sandy Dennis 46. Thunday -Ann-Margret 42; <:uo!yn Jones 50. Friday -Tom Ewell 74; c.eleste Holm 64. Saturday -Jill Oayburgh 39; Wallie Nelson 50; Eve Arden 71. ·-· ~ K<DL ' l I t I ~ I I l-: ! I r t - CMel c...-"' ,,.. ''"'It••• ........ atwmtiqly ... ,.., n4tt. fret Pl11tl11 ....... 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